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                  <text>1'1111 B 8 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TEMPO

s Scoreboard
Southem

Afhland Moplo1on &lt;14, Ashland Cr..1VIow
39,0T
Aurora 56, Shiker Hts. laurel ce
Au111n1own-F~h ~. Younga. Mooney 47,
OT

AtAteunder
GrHn 15, SOutllom 47

Barberton 70, KenstOI'I 36
Bascom Hopeweii·Loudon 79, Bettsville

11
9 11 16 - ·t7
Green
14 12 14 15 - 55
Southern (10·11)- Kad Cummins 81·
1 17, Fallon Roush 1 0.0 2, Tammy Fryar
3 0-0 6, Rachel Chapman 0 (H) o, 8 rtgene
Barnes 2 o-o 6. Amv Lee 5 ...9 14, Tara
Pickens o 0-0 0, Karte Sayre 1
2,
Totals 20 5·9 47.
Green (12·8)- Amber Spurs 0 ·0.0 0,

18"
BeaUsv!De 62, Cameron (W. Va .) C3
Bloomdale Elmwood 56, Tontogany
O!Mgo 45
Bluffton 51 , Ada 47
Bristolville BristOl 57, Cle. Hts. Lutheran E.
48
Carey 71, Attica Seneca E. 52
Cle. Hts. Beaumont 58, Gates Mills
Gilmour 46
Coldwater 70, Ft. Recovery 68
Columbus Grove 67, .Van Wert lincol·
nvlew 49
Convoy Crestview 42, Allen E. 23
Cortlat1d Lakeview 6t, Hubbard 58
Cortland Maplewood 61, Youngs. Chaney

o-o

Emily Holliley 1 0·0 3, Jennifer Cfine 7 5·9

20, Megan Pierce 1 0-o 2. Samantha Jenk·
ins 2 O.Q 4, Jessica Mallett 1 o-2 2, ChriStl·
na Cutver 1 0.0 2, Megan Tackett 7 8·11
22 . Totals 20 13·22 55.
Ohio High Schoot ·otrte a ..kelball
Thunday'e R"ulte
Tournament

ChiHicotl'le 65, Groveport Madison 1a

Cuyahoga His. 85, lakewood St. Augus·
tine 58
Oalphoa Jefferson 71, Spencerville 45
Delphos St. John's 53, St. Henry 49
Edgerton 73, Sherwood Fairview 59 .
Findlay Llberty·Benton 77, Ottawa Hills 40
Fremont Ross 64, Tol. Whitmer 59
Fremont St. Joseph 45, Sycamore

Cln. Seton 63, Cin , Ahderson 36
Zanes\111~

41

Fairfield 61, Millord 41

Gahanna Uncoln 31, Marion Harding 30
Galloway Westland 44, Dublin Scioto 31
Hilliard Darby 49, Cols. W. 47

Thomas Worthington 42, Cols . Whetstone

"

Mohawk 41

W Chesler Lakota Wesl71, Cln. Aiken 10

Geneva 59, Willoughb~ S. 40
Glsbonburg
63, Mjllbury Lake 36
Carrollton 47, E. Liverpool 44
Green 63, Akr. Elms 28
Cin. Purcell Marian 63, Cln. SCPA 1e
Hamler Patrick Henry 60, wauseon 41
Goshen 77, N. Bend TaylOr 38
Haviland Wayne Trace 47, Antwerp 42
Hamilton Badin 80, Cin. Woodward 33
Holgate 57, Hicksville 46
Kings Mills Kings 60, Bethel· Tate 25
MiiiBfsburg W. Holmes 53, McConnelsville Hudson 93, lyndhurst Brush 44
· Kent Roosevelt 49. Solon 36
Morgan 35
Kenton 65, Cola Hardin Northern 27
New Concord John Glenn 54, Zanesville
Kinsman Badger 50, SrOOkflald 35
W. Muskingum 42
Uhrichsville Claymont 45, Lisbon Beaver Uberty 51, Girard 29
Lima Sr. 52, Wapakoneta 29
42
Lodl Cloverleaf 49, Akr. SVSM 40
Division Ill
Mansfield Madison 46, Bellville Clear Fork
Beverty Ft. Frye 66, Barnesville 37
Fellclty·Franklln 45, Ripley Ripley-Union· 42
Mansfield Sr. 64, Massillon Washington 60
lewis-Huntington 35
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 56, Newcom· Massillon Perry 48, Minerva 35
Minster 49, Rockfard Parkway 22
erstown 38
New Bremen 59, New Knoxville 43
Granville 62. Johnstown Northridge 52
New London 55, Moproevllle 53
Jamestown Greeneview 35, Waynesville

DIViliOn II

25
Magnolia Sandy Valley
Ridgewood 41

New Riegel 68. N. llahlmore 50

Newton r:aus 56, Warren Champion 55
Norwalk St. Paul 85, Greenwich S. Cent.

81, W. Lafayetle

Hts. 20
Martins Ferry 50, Bellaire 45
New Albany 62, Canal Wlnchesler 17
W. Jefferson 50, Johnstown .48, OT
Dlvlllon IV
Cln. Country Day 61, Micklletown Christian

40
Ravenna 53, Mayfield 43
Rocky River Lutheran W. 48, Fairview

22

ley45

·

Rtguler StiiOn
Akr. Manchester 57, 1\kr. Copley 47

Alliance 36, Can. S. 33
Arcadia 77, Old Fort 35
Ar~hbold 51. Delta 37

Arllngton 45, MI. Blanchard Riverdale 41

Ohio Hlllh School Bovo au-.r1
Thurodoy'o Aooulta
Cols. Linden 72. Cols. Briggs 55

Mt. Ver'non Academy 63, Fairfield Christ·
Jan 47
Olmsted Falls 68, Amherst·Steele 56
Ptnlnsula Woodridge 55, Rootstown 4 t
Troy Christian 59, Jefferson 21
Wellsville 92, Bowerston Conotton Valley
50
Xenia

Men'• College B•tkelball
Thurtday 'l Seor..

EAST

Boston U, 74, Hartford .46
Hofstra 89, Maine 83, OT
lana 92, St. Peter's 72
Lol'lg Island U. 80, Sacred Heart 74
Mount St. Mary's, Md. 69, Monmouth, N.J.
New Hampsh!re 93, Ore~&lt;'et 85
Pittsburgh 68, Seton HaU .61
Rider 100, Marist 82
St. Francis, NY 9 t , Wagner 75
UMBC 71 , Fairleigh Dickinson 56
Vermont 92, Northeasl~rn 83

$0UTH

Cincinnati 66. Me~his 65
E. Kentucky 75, Tenn.·Martin 62
Georgia St. 90. Jacksonville 82
Jacksonville St. 79, Florida Atlantic 70
Llbeny 57, Winthrop 50
L.oulsiana Tech 58, Middle Tennessee 53 .
Louisiana-Lafayette 100, Denver 69
Murray St. 87, Morehead St. 76 .
Norfolk St . 81, Md.·Eastern Shore 76

Samford 72, UCF 71 , OT

Stetson 76, CampbeR 71
Tennessee Tech 64, Austin Peay 62
VMI 63, Charleston Southern 57
W. Kentucky 69, Fla. International 49

MIDWEST
Detroll 75,111.·Cillcago 62

Butler 80," .Wis.·MIIwaukee 75, OT

Drake 83, Indiana St. 71
Evansville 74, Wichita St. 61
Illinois St. 69, S. Illinois 60

UMKC 62, Chicago Sl. 37
Valparaiso 82, .0akland, Mich. 70
Wrlghl Sr. 67, Wls ..Qreen Bay 48
SOUTHWEST

SW Texas 71, loulslana·Monroe 67

TCU 102 , Fresno St. 88
39
Texas-Sin Antonio 84, Nonhwestern St.
Oak Helbor 59, Lakeside Oant&gt;rry 32
Oregon Cardinal Strltch 55, Northwood 43 74
Onawa·Giandort 52, Kalida 41
Tulsa 78, Nevada 70
Pemberville Eastwood 69, Kansas Lakota W. Illinois 68, Oral Roberts 59
42
FAR WEST
Peninsula Lake Ridge 42, Cle. Andrews BYU 79, Wyoming 83

Marlon Elgin 32, Summit Station Licking

Cln. Seven Hills 46, Middletown Fenwick
34
Crooksville· 79, Beaver Eastem 33
Fayetteville 63, Cln. St Bemard 25
Franklin Furnace Green 55, Racine Soulh·
em 45
leesburg Falrtleki 5Ei, Portsmouth Clay 48
lynchburg Clay 62, Bainbridge Paint VII·

Soolhvlew 68, Rossiord31

35
Cuyahoga Falls 58, TWinsburg 46
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 55, Hudson WRA
67
25

Olvielon I

Cots. DeSaies 48.

S~vanl.l

Tlffin CalVert 54, Foaloria St. Wendelln 15
Youngs. Urautlne 75, Warren Harding 64

Par'&lt;FaiMew 30
Sandusky 72, Fostoria 33
Sanduaky Perl&lt;lns 82. Milan Edison 32

Sebring 51, Lisbon 48
Shaker H,ts. Hathawa~ Brown 62. Thomp·
son ledgemonl 28
St. Marys Memorial 7C, limB Cent. Csth.

44
Stow 47, Nordonla 45
Slrytcer 36, Hllllop 27

SUllivan Black River 55, Mansfield Chr. 38
S~~nfa

No~hvlew

Anthony Wayne 58 .

Brand New 2001 Pontile
Sunftre Sun &amp; Sound

70, Wnlllnouse

Gl'llnd Am SE Coupe

Cal P~·SLO 62, Cal St.·FuUerton 60
Gonzaga 101, Loyola Marymount 68
HawaH 79, SMU 65
Montana 66, Weber St. 63
Montana St. 98, Sacramento St. 82
New MB&lt;~O Sl. 92, Arkansas $1. 71
Oregoo Sl. 83, Washington 69
Pepperdlne 94, Ponland 58 ·
S. Utatl 85, Youngstown St. 58

San Jose Sr. 57, Rice 53
Sootham Cal SO, Arizona St. 88
UC lrvtno 89, Paclf~ 60
UCLA 79, Artzona 77, OT
Utah Sl. 71, UC Santa Barbara 48
Washington St. 63, Oregon 62

Brand New 2001
Chivy~ Pickup

~1),150* ~4,850* ~1,850*
• Power Sunroof
• AMIFM CD Sytiem
• Relr Spoiler

• Air COnditioning
• P-r Door Loclq, CHI.
• Dtlav Wlpere, Tift

• Al.r Conditioning
• AMIFM stereo
• Styled WhHII

Th_..._

EAIT
Bluefield St. 59, Concord 57
Bolton U. 87, Hartford 56
Caldwel 58, Nyacl&lt; -16
Charleston, W.Va. 70, w. Vlrginla st. 49
Coast GUIIrd 93, Kings Polnl 53

Colby·S.W/tr 72. Middlebury 59
Oaamen 82, Albany, N.Y. 55

Colorado COllege !2, Haverford 4~

Davia &amp; Elkins 87, Alderson -Broad,dus 75
Delaware 79, Towson 54
Delaware Valley 101, Beaver 50 . bl:
Endicott 83, Slmmorw; 64
,..
Fairmont St. 82. Ohkl Velley 41
~
Filctlburg St 71, MaSI: College -48 ·

Framingham Sl. 68, W01tlleld S1. 61
Gannon 66. Hllll&lt;fala 47

New England 77, Notre Came, N.H. 52
Penn $1. 101, Illinois 80
Phlil. Bible 88, Naumann 61
SUNY·Ferrringdale 57, Purchase St. 43

Shepherd 76, Glen~lle Sl. 45

H*

Conco&lt;dlt. Moor. 85, St. - 7 2

Creighton 72, Evanavllle 68
DtPIUW 80, Roae-Hulman 55

Jacksonville 58, Jacksonville St, 50
James Madison 75·, Richmond 70
Johnson C. Smith 98, Livingstone 82
Kentucky St. 68. LeMoyne-owen 67
Lee 76, Berry 64

62. Erskine 56
Limestone 78, Coker 68
Llpscorrll 86, C.nlinary 66
Lees·~cRae

Longwood 88, Queens, N.C. 55
louisiana Tech 83, Middle TennessM 64

Lynchburg 68, Emory &amp; Henry 57
Milts 65, Tuskegee 63

Morehead 81. 102, Mu"ay St. 76
N. Kentucky 102, Kentucky Wesleyan 73

N.C. Slalt 74, Georgia Tech 68
Nortolk Sl. ee, Md.·Eastam Shore 58
Old Domkllon ~. N.C.·WIImington 32
Roanoke so, Randolpi1·Macon 52
SE Louisiana 83, Sam Houston St 68
Soulh Alabama 83, Ark.·LIIIIe Rock 57
Soulh Carolina 76, Mlollulppl Sl. S9
Soulhem Wesleyan 79, Emmanuel 71
Nicholls St. 68, Lamar 83

Stetson 61, Samtord -46
Tennessee TeCh 102. Austin Peay eu
Thomas More 75, Asbury 72
Trevecca Nazarene 77, Fteed-Hardeman

rroy Sl. 81, ~orlda Anan11c 73
Me1hodla145

UCI= 61, Me~er 65
Union, Tenn. 79, Ma"ln

Ster11ng 72, Friends 82
Wayne, Mich. 91, Ashland 81
Wlllam. Jewell 79, Avila 56
William Woods 52, Park 38

SOUTHWEST

Arkansas 98, Howard 89
Arkansas Tech 68, Cent. Arkansas 55
E. Texas Baptist 90, u. oltha Ozarks eo
Houstoo Baptist 64, Te)Cas·Pan American

52

SAN DIEGO PAORE5-Agree IO lerms

with RHP Bobby J. Jones on a one-year
contract.

BASKETBALL
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS-Acllva1ed
National 81tkllb1ll A11ocl•tlon

G-F Wesley P.erson lrom the Injured list.
Placed G Anthony Johnson on the Injured
list.

S1tp11en F.Auslln 82, McNaeso Sl. 73
Sui Ross Sl. 74, SChreiner 68
ira&lt;U A&amp;M·Kingsvllla 94, lMelon St 83
Te)Cae Wesleyan 87, Lincoln, Mo. 43

WEST
'Alaska· AnchOrage 64, W. Washington 60
Angelo Sl. 78, E. New Me&lt;lco 00
zona as; UCLA 79
zona Sr. 67, Soulhem C.l 65
rroll, Mont. 85, lewls.Ciark St. 68
lorado Sl. 77, BYU n
.
nv1r Tr, LDulalana·L.afayatta 65
sler'a 79, Chno11an Heritage 69
72, Weber St. 61
ontana Sl. 73, S.cramenlo Sl. &amp;4
tina St.-Northern 81, W. Montana 69
Montans Tach 78, Graal FaUo 87
San Diego Sl. 58, New Ma~co 53
Santi Cll.ra 68, San Francisco 62
'Sl. Mary's. C.l. 71, Son Diego 54
UNLV 73, Air Force 47
Ul-yomlng 38
V{:,
, ~I,. Cenl WaShington 57
~
on 77, Oregon Sl. 70
Wlahlngton St. 77, Oregon 78
Weslmlnsler, Utah 54, Rocky Mountain 50
'

At.R

~'!Etana

GREEN BAY PACKER5-Signed C

Tom Schau, FB Chris Gall, CB Gana
Jouph and WA Steve Vagldts.

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Promo!'

eel defensive line coa!Jh John Pease to
assistant head coaCh.
•

NEW YORK JETs-Named David Mer·
Price offenSIVe ..1111an1 coach. Agreed to
terms with lou Hernandez, iaslstant
s~englh and condlllonlng coach.
OAKLAND RAIDER5-Signed WR·KR

riH defenllve assistant .coach and Eric

Eric Metcalf lo 1 one-yearconti'ICt and OL
JOI'I Harris. Named Marc Trustman senior

IUIIIInlcooch.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Signl&lt;f C8
D1vt1

S.nchez lo • two-year contract.

· HOCKEY
Notloiuol Hockot Llogue

CHICAQO BLACKHAWKS-Signod F
MONTREAL CANADIENs-Rro&lt;alled
LW Franc~ Belanger from Quebec of lhe
AHL. Alllgnod C Eric Cl&gt;oolnar&lt;l and 0
Matthleu 08100IHUX to Quebec.
NASHVIW: PREDATORs-RecaHod

Stave Sullivan to a muftlyear contract.

. LW VHie Pehonen from Milwaukee of the

IHL.

j

BASEBALL
Amerlcen League

'

LTIMORE ORIOLES-Agreed lo

5-Se!lel ZR2 LS Ext. Clb 414

121 ,150~ 120,
• VortlcY.., Aulomatlc
• Air Conditioning
• AM/Fill Sttreo, Tilt

.

NEW YORK ISLANDER5-Recalled
CJason Krog from Sprtngllel&lt;f of the AHL.
Assigned GWade Flaherty to Chicago of
lheiHI..

11r1nc1 New 2001 Chevy
wl'ldo Ext. Clb 4 Doar 4x4

123,l50*
.• Yortec Y-8 , _

• Aulomllllc, Air Condliu.'llntl
AII/I'M Sino, Til

$

Gallia planning tax
~ $ tips program

'

•

tmts
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Roklto team physician and Dr. Orrin Sher·
man associate team physician.

Howard Payne 79, Texas Lutheran 53
INDIANA PACER5-Piacl&lt;f C Tell)'
Loul&amp;lana College 70, DaHas 67 .
Loulslana·Monroe 66, SW Texas 58
Mills on ftle Injured llst. Activa~ed C Sam
Mary Hardln·Baylor 68, Hardin-Simmons · Perkins lrom the Injured list.
61
FOOTBALL
McMurry 77, Concordia, Texas 58
N1tlontl Footbtlll LNgue
New Mexico St. 74, Arkansas St. 65
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Named Kevin
North Texas 60, New Orleans 52
Ramsey defentlve backs coach.
Northwes1em St. 63, Texai·San Antonio
CAROLINA PANTHERS-Signed CB
81
Tony Francis, OL George Hudson, LB
Oklahoma Christian 60, Wayland Baptist Ouaty Renfro. WR Kofl Shuck, OL Tony
56
Washington and DB Jerard White.
Oklahoma City 79, Oklahoma 6ap11at 70
DETROIT LIONS-$1onod TE Terrence
Ouachita 63, Henderson St. 47
McCaskey, TE Leonard Stephens and RB
SW Oklahoma 55, Panhandle Sl. 32
lamont Warren.

1!111111 New 2801 Chevy .

• Automltlc, Air COnditioning
• Klylnl Entry, CD Byttem
•Tnlalv loldecll

reflects on career "

tenna with AHP Brian Maatioows on 1 one·
year contract.

NEW YORK YANKEES-Agreed lo
tenns wtth OF Henry Rodriguez on 1 one·
EYingof 78, Culvor·S1cc:ldon 59
yeor contract. Deslgnalld OF Mike Frank
Fonii&gt;OMt 89, Weslmlnsler, Mo. 68
Grand llllllay Sl. 17, Slginaw Valley St. 6S for aaalgnment.
· OAKLAND ATHLET1C5-Agrood lo
Ill..ChiCago 112. Cleveland St 71
terms wilt1 Art HoWe, manager, on a one·
Lawls 62, SIU·Edwllrdsvllle 58
~ear contract eKtenslon through the 2002
L.lndtnwood 87, cent Melhodlll 57
Loyola, 111. 107, Detroit 94
season.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAY5-Agreod lo
Michigan 80, Iowa 78
terms wllh RHP Bryon Rekar and INF
Michigan Sl. 77, No"hwes1om 68
Carnian Aolla on one-year contractl.
- Michigan Tech 7S, Laka Superior $1. 59
Mlnourl VIIO)' &amp;4, Btnedlcllne,Kan. 55
Nollonal Leogllt
OhiO St. 72, MiMesota 85, OT
FLORIDA MARLIN5-Agreed 10 lerms
with RHP Wea Anderson, RHP Gary
Purdue 87, lndllna .a
Knotts. RHP Blaine Noel and LHP Mlcl)aol
Oulncy 105, 51. Joseph's, Ind. 88
Tejera on one-year contracts.
··
S. Indiana 80, W/a ,~Parkslde 89
NEW YORK MET5-Named Or. Andrew
Sr. l&lt;l~er 77, Cardinal Slnlch 73

SOUTH

Guilford 80, Hollins 61

Bu~nessman

1erms wllh - Soon Ooualuo. RHP
Mark Nu-. RHP JoSh lowora, 1B
Jay GllbOM lnd RHP Colvtn M.oduro on
one·Vftlr canlractl.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS *'!freed lo

BY KlviN

Gallipolis • Pomeroy • pt_ Pleasant • February 18, 2001

conn
r
bid date

IW.Lv

TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF
·GALLIPOLIS When
Gallia County department
heads began planning their
2001 budgets last June, they
already felt the bite of rising
gasoline prices and planned
accordingly.
·
What they didn't' expect
were increased costs of natural
gas and electricity for heating
and air conditioning. meaning
tlris year their spendirig plans
will ·be closely watched to
eruure the bills get paid.
"We 'thought we were
thinking ahead, but now it
appears we will have to move
some 11\0ney around in the
budget;' said )&lt;aren Sprague,
the county commissioners'
administrator.
Rising costs have prompted
. other officials to budget c.arefully, hoping the line wil1 hold
agairut fQture p{ice hikes.
"Hopefully, if IPS prices
dim.\ gf&gt; 'Ylld, we'll be fine;•
Gallipolis Auditor Demtis
Woods said.
Both Sprague and Woods
agreed that meeting higher
expenses has ·been done
through fund trarufers within
department budgets.
Sprague said the county had
$66,439.69 in its supplies line
item that includes fuel purchases for its vehicles in 1999.
For 2000, the amount was
increased by nearly .$10,000.
Contract services, which
pays in part for natural gas and
electric for the courthouse,
roraled $199,883.92 in 1999,
but jumped to $235,035.70 hst
year. Other county buildi~
are heated by either gas or
electric.
"When we prepared budgets
in June, we alloweji for fuel, but ,
· we've been moving .money
around to cover heating and air
conditioning costs;' Sprague
said.
But an agreement with
)3urlile Oil Co. allowing the
county to buy fuel in bulk has
jtelped to saw ~me money,
.

· Vol. J6, No. 1

FOCUS ON EDUCATION

Energy
costs.on
minds of
officials·

Ph M - Celli. A2

Offers to open
on March .14
.

AU. ABOARD- The Ohio Board of Regents' Ohio Success Express Is coming to Gallla County Fri-

day, with stops planned at Gallla Academy and River Valley high schools. (Contributed photo)

.

Gallia .County, l)RG·leaders
brace for.!StJccess:. Express'
..

-~ -•

f ...

.

·~

.. ,.~ ....,.....1~~ .~~ ..-~&gt;1',..,
.

i

BY KR• .DoTSON

.J, ..t'l_...

-"r~,_... ""1f..

._, , l:' ..

l·

..:· • '

TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF
10 GRANDE - Community leaders gathered in the
darkness Friday at the U niversity of Rio Grande to discuss
their role in the Ohio Success
Express' Feb. 23 bus visit to local high schools.
Ohio Success Express is a program sponsored by the Ohio Board of Regents to
encourage Ohio high seboolers to gO to college . .Friday's meeting ~ conducted in darkness due. to an hours-ion(: power outage tng-

·

"'1¥

~- ....
'

r·

1"- •

•

•

'

· ~~ .,..~-

1

· Se~d by a blown

..
.... \

".,,./"

...

,

.

...

transfurm~r near the village ·

of Rio Grande.
.
Tagged "Higher Learrung = Higher Earning," the customized bus and in-school program provides an interactive environment
where students can find information on Ohlo's
colleges and universities. Students can talk.
about their interests and future career options
via online resources and personal discussions
i with college admissions officers and leaders in
their community.

Plnn,.r SUCCM&amp;, AI
~-

.

FROM STAFF REPORTS
POMEROY - After two
decades of waiting, there may
still be skepticism among
Meigs County ~dents that
the Ohio Department of
Transportation will ever build
the Ravenswood Connector
between Five Points and the
Ritchie Bridge at Great
Bend.
But, according to ODOT,
the waiting is ahnost over.
The first phase of the project is among those listed in
ODOT's Contract Letting
Book of Feb. 14, an internal
ODOT publication issued at
ltist a .month in advance of a
bid. letting td keep the
agency's various deparnnents
apprised of upcdming proJects, OOOT's 'Naricy Pedigo
said.
Once bids are opened on
March 14, ODOT's Bureau
of Contraci Sllles will begin
reviewing the lowest offer to
determine if it meets all project requirements.
Contract Sal.es personnel
will double check to see that
required specifications for
construction and for contract

LS 4 Door4x4

Sldln DIYIIII

132,15
• V-1, LNiher lnWior

• Fully , _ Equipped
• Tollllly Loldedl
· Ta&lt;es, Tags, Tllle Fees e~ra. Rellale indudad In aa1e plica o1 new veNcle iSied w11e1t applicable. "011 approved cradil. On seleclad , _. Not '"IX"- klf lypOglliPI'ilcltnm, l'!lcll Good
February 14th Through February t 8th.

....

CHIYaOLIT

WIU.II,_I.

I

___ _____

;._

I

' t
pool to· ~
the market from being grower. "We sold a lot of the pool, and
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
flooded and prices from dropping. quotas are going up. It hurt us this year
RIPLEY- Burley tobacco growers Sales quotas were repeatedly cut in because there was a 45.6 percent drop
in the quota from last year:'
are looking fo.rward to a ,turnaround recent years as warehouses filled up.
Gene Ring, a retired Cincinnati
Part-time 'farmers with small patches
after three .years of declining profits.
postal
v.;orker who has been growing
But their long-term future is clouded of burley who ,didn't own a quota also .
by foreign comp.etition and growing had to pay more to lease one to partic- tobacco for more than 30 years, still
ipate in ·the price-support program. fears the time is near when · burley
anti-smoking sentiment.
Under a government allocation sys- But supply and demand are .'coming won't be worth the bother.
"I can see tobacco drying up in tlris
tem established in the 1930s, growers back into balance.
country;'
Ring said. "It won't affect me
can sell a certain amount of tobacco . "It's looking good for next year;•
a Brown County - I'm of retirement age ~ but some
each year and hold over the rest in a said Chris Koehler,
...

BY TIRRY

.

. BY TONY M. LIAcM
TIMES-SENTINEl. STAFF
POMEROY - "The North wind doth
blow, and we shall have snow, and what will
poor robin do then, poor thing?"
The start of this old nursecy rhyme is a perfect
reminder for bird watchers in Meigs, Mason and
Gallia counties to keep abreast of weather conditions, and be prepared with plenty of seed .and .
unfrozen water for our feathered friends during
winter.
Even though February's cold weather , and .
snow cover can make for a vety pic\Ul'Cique'
scene, it can mean seriow trouble fur. many
backyard birds.
Dropping temperaturei and erratic winter
storms can create a conundnun for many birds
as sustenance becomes harder for them to find.
Although birds Conge in the wild on their
own, the presence of feeden is an important
supplement to their towce of natural fuods.
. Th help aprwi die word ofhow difficult it can
be .for birds to survive during winter, the
National Bird Feeding Society has named feb-

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PI..nneRoH;AI

Rising quotas give tobacco growers a reprieve

. '·

2000 Clclllllc

administration are met. Calculations for financial estimates will also be reviewed
fur possible errors. The review
process takes at least two
weeks.
"Of course, if problems are
discovered with the low bid,
then the next lowest bid
package will be reviewed, as
long as the estimates fall
within allowable guidelines,"
Pedigo said. "Once the low
bid has been determined, a
contract will be signed and a
preconstruction conference
scheduled.
"Because of the enormity
of the project, the preconstruction conference could
last two days, possibly longer,
as the prime contractor, subcontractors, utility companies
and the highway department
iron out plan details;' ·she
added.
By the first of May, construction could be under way
on this first phase, fiom the
bridge itself to the junction of
Ohio 124 and County Road
35 (Portland) near Racine.
Cost estimate for this roughly
seven-mile section is estimated by ODOT at S33 million.
1\vo other phases of the
highway are currently sched-

·.

KINN~

of these guys are going to have to find
something else to do to make a living."
Tobacco is a sideline and not a livelihood for many burley growers.
"I'm mainly a beef cattle Iarmer,"
said Gary Spurlock. "If they lower the
quota, I just raise a couple more cattle:'
Spurlock, who farms near Spencer,
W.Va., brought his tobacco to Ohio's
only market, in Ripley, this year
because there no longer is an auction
warehouse in Huntington, W.Va.

Lo~l bird fanciers u~ecJ tq,be
vigilant during Winter · m. ,9nths
2000 Chevy Bllzlr

D1

. $ Help ~the way:
$$1$

Hooplamanla:
local prep scene
heating up

Dllko llB, S. lllnoiS 00

Stevena Tech 78, St. Elizabeth 3~
Urslnus 80, Rosemont 68
Vermont 61, Norttleaslern 56
W. New England 71, Ru&amp;seli Sage 49
Washington, Met 53, Bryn Mawr 29
We st Liberty 93, Salem-Tel kyo 48
Albany, Ga. 63, Savar:mah St. 53
Belmont 70, Birmingham·Southem 63
Belmont Abbey 89 , Mount Olive 61
Brescia 68, Indiana-Southeast 55
~
Chrlsllan Brothers 56, Harding 55
Clemson 78, VlrQinla 71
Cumberland, Ky. 73, Pikeville.55
Delta St. 74, S . ArKansas 64
Duke 75, Maryland 54
E. Kentucky 81 , Tenn.·Martln 73
Elon 81, Winthrop 64
·
Fla. International 98, W. Kentucky 80 •
Florida 71, ~lssl&amp;slppl 6!
Ftor1da St. 73, Wake Forest 61
Fort Vel ley St. 71, Paine '68
George Mason 55, William &amp; Mary41
Georgetown, Ky. 77, Union, Ky. 59 .
Georgia 91, Kentucky 58

Notes on life:

Vlrlderl&gt;llt 66, LSU 75
Woo/llnglon &amp; Lee !le, 1111. Wolle~ S5
Xavier 81 , Spring 47
MIIWI!IT

Womon'o Coli... laolr-1

81 MONEY

SPORIS

C1

~- - - .. _... .• ~....t!-,. ,_.....

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Morning!

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Wary as National:W'tld Bird Feeding month .
Mace! Barton o(Reedsvill~. who has on occasion given brief seminars on tho proper e?q~ette
of bird feedins to varil!lll orgaruzanons
throughout the coiiricy, said Ft!day !bat National Wild Bird FeediiR month is a very important
issue that local residents should observe.
"I feel that nati9JW bini feeding month will
help bring to light the problem of wile! birds not
receiving enough f\UUtislunent in the winter
months when food ii not readily available;' said
Baito~. "We"all enjofthe beaucy and tranquility
that birds exude ant'should really make an effort
to ·assist these animals in their time of need:'
Barton said that feeders should be filled with
seed until late April or early May because there
is still not enough ~ for birds to forage dur, .
ing the early days of !!piing.
A National Bini-Feeding Society release satd
malting sure that unfrozen water is available to
pirds is just as important as supplying them food. BIRD FEEDER- Gina Wood of St. John's, Newfoundland, preBy using a submersible heater or thermostati- pares to hang a bird feeder at her home In Point Pleasant,

llllenHIIIrds.M

W.Va., In hopes of attracting wild song birds that frequent the
area. (Tony M. Leach photo l

Get all the highlights of
local basketball action
Inside Sports, Bl-8.

Cl••lf!tds
Comlq

ld!torllll

Man1J
Ob!tutdet

Dl-7

!nHI1
M
Dl
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Sporll
Stoclg

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c 2001 Ohio \le11ey f'lrl&gt;llshina Co.

.

�Pomeroy • Mlddlepert • Galllpoll1, Ohio • Point Pl111ant, WV

TRI-COUNTY NEWS BRIEFS
HEAP help

Candy/Cookie promotion to benefit the Mason County
Library was a success, according to coordinator Manha Powrll.
Seventy-one ba~ were delivered to individuals around town.
The b~ contained Holl's hand-dipped chocolates, cookies
and fruit prepared by K&amp;L Catering.
All the packaging materials and labor were donated, there"
fore each bag realized $4.27 for the library. A check $303.41
was presented to Mary Horn, local librarian, Thunday mornmg.

R.IO GRANDE- Retired and Senior Volunteer Prognm
(RSVP) is oll'ering assistance to individuals applying for the
Home Energy Assistance l'mlram (HEAP).
A federally-funded program that pays a portion of heating
bills for eligible households, HEAP is designed to help lowincome Ohioans meet the high cost of home heating.
HEAP makes a one-time payment, accepted by most utility
companies, to help offiet winter heating costs.Vouchen can be
assured to applicants whose utility bill is not listeP in their
name.
.
POMEROY - Actions for foreclosure have been filed in
The household in~ome for a HEAP recipient must not
Mei~
County Common Pleas Court by Beneficial Ohio Inc.,
exceed 150 percent of the federal poverty level. A household
applying for HEAP must report total household income for the doing business as Beneficial Mortgage Co. of Ohio, Elmhurst,
Ill., against J~rry E. Day, Pomeroy, and others, alleging default
past 12 months for all penons 18 or older.
Both homeowners and renters are eligible to apply for assis- on a mortgage in the amount of$56,438. 92; and by Manufac-·
tance. Those living in federally subsidized housing imd whose turers and·Traden Trust Co., Salt Lake City, Utah, against Alan
Riffie, Middleport, and others, alleging default on a mortgage
bill is in their name are eligible for HEAP benefits.
in the amount of$20,893.53.
Applications will be accepted through March 31.
RSVP is giving special a~ention to those 60 or older who
need in-home assistance. RSVP volunteers are available to
come to the homes of these individUals and provide help in
completing the application, photocopying documents, mailing · POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has
been filed in Mei~ County Common Pleas Court by Eric M.
the forms, etc.
For more information on ·assistance, or to schedule someone Priddy, Rutland, and Debra E Pridily, Logan, W.Va.
An action for divorce has been filed by Keith A. Jones Jr.,
to assist in completing the application, contact the RSVP office
Albany, against 'Ginger M. Jones, Columbus. .
·
at 245-7449.
To pick up an application, come to the RSVP office at
Room 215, Wood Hall at the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College. ·
RACINE Southern Local Schools will hold
parent/ teacher conferences for the third nine-week grading
period on Wednesday from 4-7 p.m. Parents may call their
I
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by child's school to schedule a conference.
Parents are encouraged to meet with ~achers and discuss the
the Gallia County Health Departln.ent at Gallia Metropolitan
child's
progress through the first semester and help to establish
Estates on Wednesday from .2-3 p.m.
Children in need of immuniZations must be accompanied by goals for the second semester.
a parent or legal guardian, ~d bring a current immunization
record with them.
Flu vaccine will be available at this clinic.
SYRACUSE - Middleport Literary Clul;l will meet on
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the home of Leah Ord. Gay Perrin will
present readin~ of her own poetry.
I
GALLIPOLIS -The City Commission will meet in special
session Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Gallipolis Municipal courtroom, City Manager E.V: Clarke Jr. announced.
POMEROY - Mei~ County H.eaith Department will
offer a free immunization clinic. on Tuesday fiom 1-7. p.m. at
'D'~Inlng
112 E. Memortal Dr~ve. The child mu~t be accomparued by a
·
POMER.OY - Holzer Hospice's annual volunteer retrain- parent or legal guardian and must proVIde shot records.
The tuberculosis clinic will obs~rve extended hours until 7
ing program was held Jan. 24 in the hospice's Mei~ County
p.m . .to administer free skin tests to local food handlers, club
office.
Areas covered included Introduction to Hospice, Death and members and organizations.
·
Dying, Grief, Fire and Safety Codes, Emergency and Safety
Procedures, Infection Control/Handwashing, Proper Body
·
Mechanics and Confidentiality.
MIDDLEPOR1'- OH KA.N Coin Club will meet Feb. 26
Presenters were Anita M. Moore, volunteer coordlnator; Kdli
at
the Trolley Station in Middleport. The meeting will begin at
Templeton, bereavement coordinator; Sheila Brooks, RN; and
7 p.m., with drawin~. auction, and refreshments.
·
Kim Mitchell, certified nuning assistant.
Meeting
is
itte
·and
open
to
the
public.
New
memberships
Volunteers participating in the program were Emily
Eldridge,junior coordinator, and Don Ann Eldridge,Winnifred are being acc9pted at S10 for adults and S5 for children under
16.1nformation is available fi:om the OH KA.N Coin Glub,100
Marcinko, Roxie Marcinko and Carol Barnett.
Anyone interested in volunteering for hospice can contact Union Ave."Pomeroy; Ohio 45769-1000.
'
.
Moore at 740-446-5074 or ~92-7463.

t:oreclosures sought

Dissolution filed

Conferences set

Immunizations scheduled

Club to meet

Meets 'IUesday

Clinic offered

held

Coin Club

·EMS runs

SelkMdNIIII
Gallia Academy Hi&amp;h School c:lau of 1951

GALLIPOLIS -

II plannlna ita 50th reunion thia apring. Addreues are needed
· for the followina graduates of that year:

Ann Miller (Mn.John Fadely), Ernest Borden, Betty Brown
(Mn. Willi11111 Stewart), Miriam Donnally Smith, Carl Varney
Thompaon, Nell Dean Chapman, Irene Cox, Naomi Dillinser,
Benny Hayner, Dan Saunden, Mary Trotter, Henry Whealdon
and Don Zimmerman.
Anyone with addresses and current p.ames tan contact Helen
Bush at 446-0195.
·

Holiday dosing.

POMEROY - Units of the Meigs Emergency Service
anawered five ellis for assistance on friday. Units reaponded as
followa:
· ·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:26a.m., Ohio 124, assisted by Rudand,Jeffi-ey Lewis, Holzer Medical Center; .
6:31 a.m., Peach Fork Road, Charles Marshall, dead on
arrival;
11:37 a.m., Meigs Mine No.2; Nelson Newell, HMC.
POMEROY
12:27 p.m., County Road 5, Shirley Metcalf, treated.
RUTLAND
10:43 a.m., Danville Portal, assisted by Central Dispatch,
Richard Thomas, O'Blenen Memorial Hospital.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - The Town Hall will be closed
Monday in honor of Presidents Day.
Garbage pick-up schedule will run a day behind.

Greene ulls mayoral race
LEON, W.Va. - Leon resident Donnie Greene has withdrawn fiom seeking the four-year position of mayor in the
town's June 12 election. ·
.
Greene will be seeking the office of town recorder.

Valentine-gram raises funds
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -

The recent Valentine

Syracuse water_
rates on the rise
annual clwge on bill received

IYKATIICr-s CORRESPONDENT
SYRACUSE - Village
Council gave its approval to
the Board of Public Alfairs'
proposal to increase water
rates.
Meeting with council during its Thunday meeting were
Gordon Winebrenner .and Jim
Riille, members of the water
board.
Winebrenner said that the
increase was necessary in order
to keep up with rising cOsts.
New water rates have been
set as follows: for those 64 and
under, $13; those 65 and over,
$11.50; businesses, $26; penons
outside . the village with no
meter,$14, metered,3,000 gallon base rate,S14.35,per 1,000
after, $3.75, per 100 atler, 38
cents; schools, up to 14,000
gallons, $26, per 1,000 after,
$2; churches, $12.75;
Trailer courts, per '?Ccupied
residenc~, $13; apartments, per
occupied residence, $13;
campground, 36,000 gallons,
S168, per 1,000 gallons after,
$3.75, per 100 gallons after, 38
cents; poolS, any above or inground pool except for wad- ·
ing pools, pool OWJ!ers will see

at the end of May each year,
new pool $50, and annual fee
of$30.
·
·
The new tap fee will be
$250 minimum or total cost of
instaUation, whichever is
greater. Water service deposit
has been set at $30. Vacation
rate, per month, will be half of
current monthly charge.
·
All residen~ who operate a
business supplied by the Syracuse water system will be
charged the. current business
rate for- their business and the
current rate for the residence
in two separate bills.
The late fee will be 10 percent of. the. bnpaid balance.
Tutn-on and turn-off fee at
the owner's request or by shutoff notice will be $25.
All accounts are due on the
1Oth of the month. New rates
will be in effect on bills
received on May 1.
Also meeting With . council
was Tomm Wallace of Waste
Management refuse service:
He informed council that the
rate for senior citizens and the
disabled will go down from
the present charge to $8 per
month.

limited budgets, are concerned
about gasoline costs for another reason. One of their revenue
fnNn Pap AI "'' sources includes state gas tax
receipts, and if higher prices
she added.
keep people away fiom the
City departments that fie- pumps, township funding is
, quendy use gasoline, like police affected.
and maintenance also trans"What would really burt us
ferred funds wh~n the spike is if the gas tax collections
struck last summer Woods said decreased;' said Raccoon Clerk
"When gas crePt up, peopl; Ruth Ann MiJlhone. ·
attempted to niinimize use;• he
In Raccoon's case, its trucks
said.
and equipment operate on
"They've been very consci- diesel fue~ which has underentious about it and have had gone a bigger price jump than
to increase their gas and oil line regular gas. This causes, among
expenses:•
other. considerations, · an
Additional funds for file! will increase in the cost o( deliverbe reflected in lite 2001 budget . · ingi~L fOrd·~ roads,
facing its first reading for she said.
·
approval when th~ City ComBut Millhone saiJ!I close
mission meets 'lbesda}l he said. management has lcept R.ac·
The City Building is heated coon in good shape 6nancially, ·
by gas, but Gillipolil' participa· with the trustees performing
tion in the AMP-Ohio comor- ' road maintenance tbermeltiuin to purchase pa hu aa-ved to aave money for future
the city, Wooduaid.
.
equipment buys.
Some pa comumen are pay·
ing "well over" 70 ~enl:l per
100 cubic feet of gu, but .
A.MP..Qhio has lcept the city~
costs several cents cheaper per·
100 cubic feet.
·!'There are other plans and LUMBER CO
programs out there that can
you can sign up with that are
all in the aame ballpark.''Woods
said.
Athearn, Atlaa.
l1'mvnships, working with

Costs

BAUM
'

'

Bachmann &amp;
. Acceaaorlea

Coundl OKs action

N

S¥RACUSE - In minor business Thunday, Syt:~cuse Village
Auto- Owners lruurance
Council:
,
• Approved training for Lavender, Cotterill and Council Pres- , Lire Home Car Business
ident Bill Roush;
A.IJI JZ1 ~,·
• Approved a request to purchase police uniforms;
• Approved the mayor's report in the amount of$599, and the INSURANCE PWS
police report from Rick Smi!h and Scott Barton, who issued 17 • . GI:.'"'C I:.' A
C,
citations and investigated one complaint.
· A a;;,J, 1~. lN •
.Others attending were c?uncil memben ~tie Crow and Eber
· 114 Court Pomeroy ·
Ptckens Jr., and Robert Wmgett, grants administrator.

"":'1t-

992-6677 .

·tunbav 1tinut· ientiaw .PROUD TO ~E. PART OFYOURLIFE. '

'

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All Locations .Of

The Farmers Bank ·

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2341 or ~'~~•''"'' (14t) ltl-2151. W. wUI
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Monday,
February 19th ·
In Observance Of
President's Day

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BUSINESS PLANNING
EDUCATION PLANNING
RETIREMENT PLANNING

. lb•rBankl»-4-·

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530 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

1111..,. ~

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Jim Morrt10n, Certified Financial Planner

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MAIL~

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A Regletered lnveltment AdviHr

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Will Be Closed On

eomctlon Polley
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Reader Services

Sunday, FMru.ry 18,2001

Sunday,February18,2001

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BUCKEYE BRIEFS
SbHient wins pollee praise
KENT (AP) - Police praU.ed a 22--,nr-old woman for
fiahtins back and seteaming for help when she wu attacked
while walking home from class at Kent State University.
· "She did the right thing." police Capt. James L. Goodlet said.
The robbery and asult occurred Thunday night. Goodlet
said ir=stigaron had few clues that could lead them ro a suspect.
·
Goodlet said a man had a knife and demanded money.After
' the victim gave him a small amount of cash, the man pushed
her oft' the sidewalk and onto the ground in a fi:ont }'2fd, then
groped her. She fought baclc and tried to bite the man, who
·was wearing gloves and a black mask.
• He fled after she screamed for help. Police were called after
the woman went home.
·

Judge declares mistrial
, CLEVELAND {A.P) -A man's second capital murder trUl
ended in a mistrUl after a judge learned that while deliberat,ing the case, jurors were given a statement they should not
have seen.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Carolyn.B. Friedland cired prosecutorial misconduct as the reason for the n\i$'trial Friday. He will conduct a hearing in two weeks to determine details.
.
At issue is a statement to police by someone who said
Charles Manhall, 26, confessed to killing Papa')ohn's pizzeria
· manager Rocco Buccieri during a 1996 robbery in Garfield
Heights.
· The statement never was introduced as evidence into Mar' shall's trial.
Cuyahoga County .prosecutors said Friday that they were
not to blame for the statement getting to jurors.
Manhall's fint trial, in 1997, ended in Marshall's conviction
and a death sentence. The sentence was thrown out because of
a ju9ge's error and Manhall was granted a new trial.

Last suspect's trial delayed
LIMA {A.P) - The trUl for the remaiiting defendant in a
. firebombing that killed a woman and four children has been
' moved back to April 23.
Eddie McClellan was scheduled to go on trial Monday, but
Allen County Common Pleas Judge Richard Warren moved it
back to give the defense more time to prepare.
Eight other men, · including accused ringleader Samuel
. Williams, have been convicted in the case. Williams faces the
death penalty. A hearing is scheduled for Wednesday.
McClellan is charged with five counts of complicity to com: mit aggravated murder, complicity to commit aggravated anon
and aggravated robbery with a gun in the March 29 fire.
Prosecutors said the fire was set so the defendants could
. force R.odney Dunley fi:om'the house and rob him at gunpoint
, of dru~ they believed be had stolen. Dunley escaped by leap. ing from a sq:ond-story window.
, Dunley's ~cee, Marian Wright, 33; her children, Marshon' da, 13, and Marquis, 16; and Dunley's children, Rodnina, 17,
, and R.ayis, , ~4, were killed.

:,~ c,

flre,halts inotel renovation ;; ·

, MONROE (A.P) - Fire Friday ni~t destroyed an Ec~no
. Lodge motel that was being renovated.
Motel employees and 10 guests escaped without injury, officials said.
"The fire started on the second floor;• said Monroe Fire
. Chief Mark Neu. "The rooms back up to each other and
there's a service chase for pipes and wires between the rooms.
The fire traveled east to west fiom room to room (through the
service access):'
About 75 firefighters from Monroe, 'llenton, Middletown,
West Chester and Liberty Township battled the fire for four
hours. Monroe is about 25 miles north of Cincinnati.
Damage to the 100-room motel was estimated at $400,000.
The blaze was attributed to a contractor who was using a
~~ to!Ch to heat pipes for plumbing modifications.

Taft cousin pts state Job
WASHINGTON (A.P) -President Bush on Friday tapp«:d
· William Howard nit N, a lint cousin of Ohio Gov. Bob nit,
for a top State Departnient job.
The White House said Bush intended to nominate Taft to be .
legal advisor to Secretary of State Colin Powell.
Taft was born in Washington, D.C.; and resides there.
He is a partner with the law firm of Fried, Frank, Hartis,
Shriver &amp; Jacobson, and previously held several government
positions.
He served as U.S. permanent representative to NATO fi:om
1989 ro 1992, and deputy secretary of defense and general
counsel of the Department of Defense during the Reagan
administration.
. He is a graduate ofYale University and re~eived his law
desree from Harvard University.
.
· ·

Bush plans-trip to Columbus school
COLUMBUS, (A.P) - President Bush
plans to visit an dementary school near
downtown on Tuesday as part of a series
of education events around the country.
Bush will tour Sullivant Elementary
School and participate in a roundtable discussion, according to the office of U.S.
Rep. Patrick Tiberi, a Columbus R-epublican.
Sullivant Elementary has about 350 students, almost evenly split between black
and white children. Virtually all the students participate in the federal free or
reduced lunch program.
There are three homeless shelters in the
school's enrollment area. Surrounded by
apartment complexes, the 37-year-old

school has the highest rate of children
The school participates in Columbuswho move in and out of school in the Reads, in which volunteen tutor children
in reading. Four days a week, ro:ading valColumbus school district.
Principal Maria Stockard said White unteers from the Limited Inc. tutor each
House officials haven't said why the of the school's 75 kindergartnen for 30
school was chosen, but the school's focus minutes.
has been raising its academic. scores, she · The school doesn't dwell on obstacles
said.
children face outside the classroom. said
Thirty-one percent of the school's Stockyard, in her seventh year as principal.
fourth graden passed the reading portion
"The one single factor that has the
of last year's proficiency test, up from 27 highest impact on student achievement is
percent the year before, she said. Fifty- what a teacher does in his or her classeight percent passed the writing test, up room every day;• she said. "We can't focus
fi:om 42 percent, she said.
on all the barriers that people talk about,
Statewide passage averages for the tests about income; thin~ in society, If you get
were 58 percent for reading and 78 per- that in your head, students will never
cent ~r writing.
catch up:'

Oberlin trying to get men Possible company closure
interested in education
looming large in Malta
OBERLIN (AP) - The
Oberlin CoUege senior
walked into her lint art history class of the spring semester
and did a quick head count:
two men sitting at their desks
and 20 women.
Too •bad, thought Meg
Spearman, a senior from
Philadelphia. Men are mouthy
in class and spark vigorous
discussions. "The classes with
more guys are more verbal;'
Spearman said.
The dearth of men gets
noticed outside class, too there aren't many guys around
to date, she said. "That's the
joke on campus;' agreed Victoria Der, another senior at
Ob,erlin.
A historically liberal college
that pioneered racial integration and coeducation, Oberlin
now finds itself- like other
small colleges ·- discussing
how to keep men interested
in the schooL

Harry Dawe, associate
director of admissions at
Oberlin, fueled the discussion
last fall when he organized a
national forum called "Are
Our Boys at Risk?"
In an era when recruiting of
racial minorities and women
is commonplace, Dawe ca~s
the idea of affirmative action
for men "the issue that dare
not speak its name:'
The growing percentage of
women at the nation's colleges and univenities isn't a
recent phenomenon: Women
have outnumbered men on
U.S. campuses since 1978.
Women now make up 55
percent of college enrollment
- about 6.8 million women
to 5.5 million men .
How did men become such
a minoriry? One common
theory is that teen-age boys
are eager to get working and
are more likely than girls to
skip college.

MALTA (A.P) Sally
Bush knows how devastating
layoffi can be.
Her husband lost his job
when furnirure maker Taylor
Woodcraft cl&lt;ised in 1995.
And now Malta Windows &amp;
Doors, ihe company she's
been with for 29 years, may
lay off its 246 worken.
"It's not a happy thought;'
Bush said. "My home is here,
my kids are here, but there
just aren't any opportunities
locally. We'll be a ghost
town.''
The company, a division of
Philips Products Inc. and the
largest employer in southeast
Ohio's Morgan County, said

earlier this week it may have
to close the plant due to a
decreased demand for wood
windows and because of.an
impasse with striking work- ·
en.
In addition, Malta's largest
customer, 84 Lumber, has
told its stores not to place any
more orders with the company, The Columbus Dispatch
reported Friday.
The 216 memben of Local
27B of the Glass Molders,
Pottery and Plastics International Union have been on
strike since Feb. 1. Union
members called a meeting for
Saturday to discuss the company's contract proposal.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS ..
w~·ft

Judge orders disclosure of Witness
interview in Demjanjuk's case

proud to be members of the AGS~
dedicated to consumer
protection. Our certificate
is your Buarantce o(high

ethics and knowledge of
jewdry.

I

.CLEVELAND (A.P) - A Hills, was conVicted bbt later
judge has ordered an attorney cleared in Israel of cl!arges that
for John Demjanjuk, who faces lie was .the sa&lt;liStic Nw death
the loss of his U.S, citizenship camp guard known as "Ivan
as an acclised Nazi death camp the Terrible." ·
Demjanjuk's U.S. attorney;
guard, to disclose the transcript
of an interview with a possible Michael E. Tigar, filed an
appeal this wec;k with the 6th
eyewimess.
The order from U.S. District U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
Judge Paul R. Maria covers an in Cincinnati. He said Matias
interview with camp guard ruling failed to recognize the
Nikolai P. MalagE&gt;n, who in the Israeli court decision.
The Justice Department
late 1970s told Soviet authorities that . he had a fleeting wants to . revoke Demjanjuk's
memory of a "Demedyuk or citizenship because he allegedDemanyuk" who worked as a ly failed to disclose a past as a
cook at the' 'lleblinka death guard at Nazi concentration
camps.
camp.
The Ukrainian-born DemJudges in Israel have previjanjuk
has said he was forced
ously ruled that Demjanjuk's
· Israeli attorney, Yoram Sheftel, by the Nazis to work as a
does not have to reveal the laborer after being taken prisinterview materials. The tran- oner by the Germans in May
scripts, which are heid in 'Thl 1942 and didn't participate in
Aviv, are protected by client- Nw-directed atrocities against
attorney privilege, Israeli courts Jews.
have ruled.
Malia ruled that the interview documents are important
because "they may contain
information as to the identity
and activities" of Demjanjuk
during World War II.
Demjanjuk, 80, a retired auto
worker from . nearby Seven

GALLIA COUNTY

DEMOCRAT PARTY
ANNUAL

KENNEDY

Monday
March 5, 200 I
- 6:30 p.m.speaker:
Robert F. Hagen
State Senator, 33rd District
Ul)iversity of Rio Grande Cafeteria
Buffet Dinner $20 per person
Contact any central committeeman
or O.arlotte Seamon 446-3498

......
Interior ·

·A Series of
Educational .
Classes
for People
Facing Cancer

Troopers
praised for
fiery rescue
COLUMBUS (A.P) - A
lint-year State Highway Patrol
trooper and his field training
officer have received the
patrol's highest honor for valor.
The O.W. Merrell Award
was presented Friday to Trooper Paw Appleman, 25, and
1iooper Chris Chesar, 31.
The two helped pull four
drunk people from an overturned burning car near Cam•
bridge about 3 a.m. Sept. 30.
Appleman and Chesar were
among seven troapers h1_1nored
with the Superintendent's
Citation of Merit "for endangering their own lives while
trying ro save others," said Col.
Kenneth J. Morckel, the patrol
superintendent.

&amp;unbap Q;fmr• -&amp;rntintl • Page A3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, Ohio Point Pleaunt, WV

Flatwhne
'121'111111

Brllllt.

The six-week ser,es will begin

*5•

Reller Pal•
·Travset

'121'81111

Andque
White

·6pm
Dr. •s Dining Room ofHolzer Clinic in
conjuctlon with Holter Medical Center

For more information or to
register, please call Kim Painter
at446-536S
••

O'Dell True
634 E. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·5500

elumber

�_,m_av...;.,__"~nn_,._-i_.en_ttn_el_ _ _ _0=P-Inion

Sunday, February 18, 2001

PageA4

MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

Sunday. February 11,2001

Glenville leader fa cues budget
Galllpolla, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Pleuant, W.Va.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla

Charles W. Govey
Publisher ·

Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advertising Dlreetor

Lltfen to 1M edllor tw wtkrHIII. TMJ tlwdl h 1111 IMif JtJ() tf!OIG. AU,.,.,
tubjtct to •ditint tJn4 "'"" bl tifrwtl.Md
i1Mrt11 tutti tMqitDIN ,....-.:
No unsi£ned kuen wiU k pMblblutL 'lAttin lho..U H in 10011 ,.,,., tldltYIIiltt
ilt ulr, nOl JNmm4lilitt.
·
The opinWM ezpn,.~d in lh• CtJIIUIIII .6rdow,.. tM &amp;OII,.,IIIU of tiN OhiG V.U.,
Publi.lhinr Co. '• tditorUd boGNI, 111'11111 otlurwit1 nMtd.

4rf

lrtt,.,.

•

OUR VIEW

. GLENVILLE, W.Va. (AP) - Glenville State College Presulent Thomas Powell has frozen the Gilmer County college's
budget and ordered $600,000 in cuts.
Powell said the college is expected to have a $600 000
deficit this fiscal year, mainly because of pay raises man.bted
six years ag? by the Legislature but never fully funded. Last
year, Glenv1lle spent $800,()()0 more than it took in.
"We've been di~ping into our reserves to nuke up the difference. Now, were JUSt about out of reserves," Powell said
. Fnday.
Wdtten approval from a supervising vice president is
reqUired for all purchases. Purchases exceeding $500 require
. Powell's approval.
~
Powell said he has implemented a hiring freeze and
. otdered Glenville's vice presidents and athletic 1irector to
cut their budgets.
'
The presidents of faculty senate and staff council have
been asked to appoint a nine-person "committee to review
the cuts and make recommendations to Powell by March I.
"This process will not be easy," Powell said. "However,
once completed it will allow us to operate in the future
without the threat of annual budget reductions."
"Taking care of this· recurring problem will allow us to
devote .more time to developing our academic programs and 1
finding new sources of revenue."
·

Judge reunited with heirloom .

President Bush is right in
promoting military upgrade
President Bush's visit to the West Virginia Air .National Guard
unit last week served as a promotional tool for his plans to
upgrade America's military structure.
H e helped drive home a point that has become painfully
clear to those of us who depend on our armed forces for protection.
,
.
They need help badly.
Reports of servicemen forced to use food stamps to feed
their families that surfaced in the past year were just the tip of
the iceberg in dramatizing the condition of our military.
Most folks would think the people who put their lives on the
line so we can feel safe ·would be compensated well for their
endeavors, even in peacetime. Clearly this is not the case. .
But on a larger scale, concerns have existed for years over our
state of preparedness should forces be suddenly mobilized.
Despite having the best fighting units in the world, the experts
. are no.t comfortable with our current standing.
The threat of involvement in conflict overseas is with us all
the time. Our troops are stationed in hot spots like Kosovo
almost continually to assist with peacekeeping efforts.
Bush, however, raised an imeresting point. Military and
reservists are needed to guard against terrorism spreading into
our borders.
Fighting terrorists, both foreign and domestic, is emerging as
the nation's biggest concern. If our military leadership is convinced our readiness is not where it •hould be, then Congress
is well-advised to make additional expenditure for the armed
forces a priority.
Less than a. month into the new administration, Bush and
Congress appea~; to be headed for ' conflict · over. numerous
issues. But safeguarding the nation against danger is one matter
both sides had better reach agreement.
HistOty tells us that after years of decreased appropriations
because a "war to end all ~an" had been fought, America's mil- .
itary readiness was not up to snuff in the latler part of 194.1.
· For those isolationists who then nursed the foolish belief we
could stay out of the world conflict raging around us, their
notions Were shattered on a Sunday morning in Hawaii.
It took an intensive effort for Americans to get the military
in shape with manpo~er and equipment before the first victories in the Pacific were achieved.
-Ever since, Americans have dedicated themselves to never
seeing Pearl Harbor happen again.
History teaches us many lessons - · if we care to learn them.
This is one that should never be forgotten.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, Feb. 18, the 49th day of 2001. There are 316
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 18,.186l,Jefferson Davis was sworn in as president of
the Confederate States of America in Montgomery. Ala.
On this date:
In 1516, Mary Tudor, England's queen popularly known as
"Bloody Mary;' was born in Greenwich Palace.
.·
In 1546, Maftin Luther, leader of the Protestant Reformation
in Germany, died.
In 1564, artist Michelangelo died in Rome.
In 1885, Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was
published in the United States for the fitst time.
In 1930, the ninth planet of our solar system, Pluto, was discovered.
In 1960, the Olympic Winter Games were formally opened in
Squaw Valley, Cali£, by Vice President Nixon.
In 1970, the "Chicago Seven" d~fendants were found innocent
of conspiring to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic rultional convention.
,
In 1972, the California Supreme Court struck down the state's
deatq penalty.
In 1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, si.tting atop a Boeing 747,
went on Its matden flight above the MoJave Desert.
In 1988, Anthony M. Kennedy was swor(l in as the 104th justice of the U.S. Suprerre Court.
Ten years ago: Iraqi Foreign Minister Tatiq Aziz held talks in
Moscow with Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev, who presented a proposal for ending · the Persian Gulf War. The Irish
Republican Army claimed responsibility for a bomb that exploded in a London rail station, killing a commuter.
. Five years ago: A member of the IRA blew himself up and
wounded nine other people when the briefcase bomb he was
carrying detonated accidentally on a double-decker bus in London's West End.
·
One year ago: Iranians voted in an election that gave reformers
a niajority in the parliament, long a bastion of hard-liners.
Announcer Bob Hite Sr., whose rich voice introduced "The
Lone Ranger" on radio, died in WJ:St Palm Beach, Fla., at age 86.

OUR READERS' VIEWS.
sacrifice and selflessness of our a child passenger safety violaarmed services. But the atten- cion, a young life may be saved.
Dear Editor:
tion should not stop with the This month, as the patrol joins
After reading the letter sent in family .member who officially safety advocates nationwide in
by Ms. Haner about Fairland serves.
observing child passenger safety
girls' basketball coach, Nathan In an all-volunteer force, the month, I want to cover issues
Speed, 1 was astounded.
military has become a family relating to this important subThis woman clearly has no institution. These families must ject.
idea what happened. This lady's deal with many stresses such as Did you know that nationally,
girl showed no respect for one rapid deployments and frequent traffic crashes are the leading
of my players who had previous- family separations.
cause of death for children ages
ly injured her ACL and was J\ccording to a recent Ameri- 5-14 years old?
playing with it.Yes, Coach Speed can Armed Forces Press Service This' sobering fact can be
was mad at the clock keeper and release, about .235,000 separa- linked, at least in part, to the
here is why: he was trying to tions and 750,000 moves occur reality that most kids are
substitute for a player who had in the -Department of Defense unbuckled
or
improperly
four ·fouls, and the scorekeeper each year. ':fhe full ·m,il.itary life restrained while traveling in
did not sound the buzzer for the cycle - recruitment, training, motor vehicles.
substitution, ~suiting in our deployments, retention and sep- The issue of child passenger
player fouling out.
aration - takes its toll on fami- safety seats starts with underWhen our player with the torn lies.
standing the Ohio law that gov- ·
ACL was hurt, a girl (reportedly In addition, the low pay scale ems .the issue. In Ohio, child
Ms. Haner's) yelled out, "She's all has become problematic.
seats are mandatory for children
right, quit whining!"Yes, Coach Competing for a place to rent under four-years of age or who
Speed did get angry, but readers, has made it so hard that many weigh under 40 pounds.
wouldn't you?
·
families decide to leave the ·mil- As you see, the child safety.seat
Coach Speed was protecting itary. Moms and dads who are law in Ohio is pre~ cle&lt;ll'.
his player, and to me, that is part dedicating their Careers to the So, what is the best way to proof a ·coach's job. Ms. Haner, I military instead of to civilian life teet a child in a motor vehicle?
went out to look at the injured are having a hard time providing The simplest and least expengirl, and I, along with everybody, for their families.
sive chil4 safety seat m,odel usuheard what was said. Maybe the I refer ·not only to the chal- ally will work as well as one with
girl's parents should teach her to · lenges of military spouses man- fancy features. The most imporhave some respect for ari injured aging the household alone while tant thing to remember when
opponent. She had no idea if our the service member is away. selecting the child seat that is
girl was ''all right;' and she Even when troops are stateside, right for your family is to choose
should have kept her mouth many must work longer hon~&gt;rs a seat that you find easy to use
shut.
because of military downsizing. and that tits your vehicle. Before
Coach Speed had his players · And the fact that thousands of you buy a seat, try it in your car
leave the court without shaking military · families nationwide to make sure it fits and can be
hands because he felt his players receive food stamps is disheart- buckled tighdy.
would be provoked by the e~. .
·
To do its job, a child safety seat
opposing team. Ms. Haner, if Wtth nearly 60 percent of ser- must be held securely against the
your ·daughter was hurt, would vice members married and vehicle seat back. If the lap part
you appreciate somebody telling about 65 percent of military of the safety belt is not tight or
her she was "all right" and to spouses forced to . have jobs, the 1 the safety seat slides around on
"quit whining"?
quality of life of military families the vehicle seat, your child may'
Coach Nathan Speed cares matters.
'
not be protected.
about his ~Is and he has shown . ·concerned ~o~.ert for Amer- Obviously, it is important for
that he will protect them. ~· tcan ofW~~tYtrgtma. ~onors and eve~yone to be .buckled up
Haner, when you see that gtrls · thanks military families as they while traveling.in a motor vehi.
de, but many ask whey it is so
mother, ask her to teach her serve our na~on.
daughter top show some sport- ' Each . of us should encourage important for children to ride in
manship· and and not to tell at President ,George Bush and the back.
.
opposing players, who are hurt. CongreSs to support the military Foremost in the answer to that
Bobbie ~tdon with pay raises, petter housing question is tl).at an infant or child
Proctorville and support.
.
riding in the frOnt seat can be
. Alice Click seriously injured' or killed by an
Mo~nt Alto, W.Va. inflating air bag.
·
An air bag is not a soft pillow.
Dear Editor:
To do its important job, an air
The media report on soldien
bag comes out of the dashboard
being deployed, but often forget
very fast; faster than the blink on
about the impact the military Dear Editor:
an eye.
has on families.
When an Ohio State Highway
Lt.·Richard E. Grau
It's time Americans notice the Patrol trooper stops!a vehicle for
Gallipolis

Astounding

Needing support

Saving a young life

aaG lloln lt., Point P-.., W.Yo.

SGW71-11113

'•

,,
•

•

I
FAIRMONT,
W.Va. (AP) -Fred L. Fox II says he knew
an antique dealer had acquired an 1800s desk that had
belonged to his grandfather and father, but he couldn't
' affotd to buy back the heirloom.
A group of local lawyers stepped in and fulfilled Fox's
dre~ . They bought the desk for $2,800 and presented it to
the Marion County chief circuit judge this week.
, "I was totally in shock. I had no idea. I knew it was for sale
at an .antique dealer in Greenbrier County. The price was
out of my range," Fox said Friday.
'"As much as I'd like having the desk of my father and
grandfather, I couldn't imagine spending the money for it.''
he said.
Fox's grandfather, Fred L. Fox, had used the desk when he
served on the state·Supreme Court from 1937 to 1952. The
desk was passed down to Fox's father after his grandfather
died in 1952. It was sold when Fox's father died in 1960.
Judges are prohibited from accepting gifts, however, so the
Marion County Commission took the · desk. Fox said the
·commission is letting him use the desk.

Former Pelland store closed
CHARLESTON,W.Va. (AP) -A former pet store whose
owners allegedly failed to feed their dogs has been ordered
closed.
.
A Kanawha County judge Thursday ordered operators
James M. Morton Jr. and Mary Ellen Morton to vacate the
·
store immediately.
• The Charleston Town Center 'mall claims the Mortons
. owed ·$17.0,000 in back rent and hurt mall busioess ,w;th
publicity of allegations that the animals in the store we!'\' 11ot
properly cared tor.
·
An animal control officer took 31 puppies from the store
last Satutday after an employee reported the' animals were
not being fed. l!ight other dog. are missing.
Pedand Inc. stripped the store of its franchise afterwatd.
Maty Ellen Morton faces multiple counts of animal cru~
elty. Each count carries a maximum penalty of six months in
jail and a $1,000 fine.
·
The puppies are being care for at the Kanawha County
• animal !helter.

,

.

FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP) - Consol Energy . will recall
about 130 workers to two north-central West Virginia mines
within a month.
· Some 70 miners are returning to the massive Loveridge
mine on the Marion-Mon~ngalia county border, whic~
closed in June 1999 after an explosion and fire at least 1,000
feet underground.
.
.
"They will be starting to work some time next· week, but
· the long wall looks like it will be producing coal within the .
next two. weel&lt;s," said Rich l!ddy, president of District 31 of,
the United Mine Workers.
Eddy estimates production at the mine will last at least
three months. Once the current seam is tapped out and
some areas are sealed, the mine could be expanded, he said. 1
· "To get all of the miners back to work is our goal;' he ,

said.
Another 50 to 60 laid-off miners also are expected to
return to the Robinson Run mine in Harrison County,
·
Eddy said.

·Police ·protest
pror&gt;osed
city layoffs
CHARLESTON (AP) -A
steady rain didn't stop city firefighters and police Friday from
· conducting an informational
picket oulside City Hall to
protest planned layoffS.
Charleston Mayor Jay Goldman proposed laying off 25
police and 25 6re6ghten .to fill
a $1 million hold in the city's
$52 million budget. On Friday.
officials said fi11'iighters will
keep their jobs but will give up
nearly all of their overtime pay
for the next several months.
About 40 officers and fire..
fighters stood along Virginia
Street, one of Charleston's·
busiest downtown thoroughfares, holding si~ and
encouraging motorists to honk
their horns in support Friday.

'

&amp;unbap ~imrs ·&amp;tnlind •Page All

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

·Delegates to test chamber automation
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -With
a click of a mouse, 18 delegates taking
part in a House technology pilot project
will trade reams of paper bills for a thin
black computer screen.
It's called chamber automation, and it's
the wave of the future for statehouses
across the country, said Technology
Committee Chairman Tom Campbell,
D-Greenbrier.
' , "I'm excited because I think it's a right
step· for West Virginia," Campbell said.
"It'll get us into the technology •ge."
The project, modeled •fter Kentucky's
system, features an internal network that
will provide deleg•tes with the complete
text of bills on the daily schedule ..
"As we consider a bill, then that bill
will come up on the screen," House
Clerk Greg Gray said.

Delegates will be able to follow along
and refer to line numbers, which will
match the paper copies, by scrolling
through the document, he said.
"The goal is to reduce the paperwork
and the cost of printing;• said House
Majority Leader Rick Staton, DWyoming. "In the future, it will even
give members a lot of other features, like
being able to look up fisc•! notes or
check • bill's history,"
Other possible innov•tions: immediate
distribution of amendments proposed
during a floor session, access to the cafeteria menu, printing cap•bility, instant
messaging . for members, and a 'sticky
note' feature to allow delegates to make
notes about bills and store them on a
computer.
E- mail and the Internet will not be

Board of Medicine member:
Doctors can't police patients
BECKLEY, W.Va. (AP) -A
member of the West Virginia
Board of Medicine says docton face a dilemma with the
growing abuse of potent pain
relievers sti\:h as OxyConti.n:
They have no cont;rol over the
drug once a prescription is
written.
"We cannot l'olice our
patients," said Dr. Ahmed
Faheem, a psychiatrist at Beckley Appalachian ~egional
Hospital and chairman of the
board's complaint committee.
OxyContin is a strong
painkiller prescribed for terminal cancer patients and
postoperative patients with
severe · pain. If taken properly,
the active' ingredient in the
drug is released slowly into the
system.
But abusers circumvent the
time-release by crushing the
pills and snort or inject the
powder to get the same kind
of euphoric high that heroin
bring., often with fatal results.
"There should not be an
indiscriminate prescription of
any · controlled substance,
whether it's OxyContin or
anything else;• l'aheem ~:lid'.
"And if that is going on,
then obviously that needs to
be stopped. There's no ques-

~~~

accessible from the terminal in order to
keep people outside the chamber from
contacting the delegates during floor sessions, which is prohibited.
"That's a big concern," Campbell said.
"You want to maintain the integrity of
the floor."
Last oession, the House set aside
S100,000 for the project, half of which
has been used to purchase the 18 systems, which cost about $2,500 each.
Extra money was spent on thin monitors that would "take up less desk space;•
Staton said.
The monitors are adjustable so delegates can read them while sitting or
s~anding .

The software is a gift from Kentucky's
statehouse and has been adapted to fit
West Virginia's system.

Judge freezes S1.4.million
in Keystone Bank money

CHARLESTON (AP) nearly $2 million to her adult ·
Once the patient leaves the
A
federal
judge
has
otdered
a
son
from a previous marriage
doctor's office, however, the
freeze ·of$1.4 million traced and his family, the FDIC
doctor has no control over the
by investigators from the alleges. Faber last year otdered
drug.
failed First National Bank of a temporary freeze of those
For example, an elderly man
Keystone to the husband of a assets.
with cancer may be given a
bank executive.
former
Faber set a Feb. 26 hearing
prescription for OxyContilt,
U.S. District Judge David in Bluefield for 11 members
but a family member steals his
A.
Faber in Bluefield on Fri- of the Cherry and Rapoff
medication. Often, the patient
day targeted money sent by families to respond . to the
will do without the drug
Keystone Mayor Billie Jean FDIC allegations and his latrather than tell the doctor
Cherry to Andrew T. Rapoff est temporary restraining
about his f•mily problems,
before and after the McDow- otder.
Faheem said.
ell County bank's 1999 colInvestigators contend sev"There are a lot of family
lapse. Rapoff and Cherry eral Keystone executives
. feuds out there," he said.
have been married since June invented a scheme io which
Nearly 30 fatal ovetdoses in
1997.
they were paid millions of
southwest Virginia have been
According
to
court
filing.
dollars in mortgage processattributed to OxyContin,
by
the
Federal
Deposit
Insuring
fees in addition to their
prompting Virginia Attorney ·
ance Corp., Cherry funneled six-figure salaries.
General Mark L. Earley to ask
The bank was closed Sept.
the money embezzled
for a meeting with the drug's
from .!&lt;eystone io a bank loan 1, 1999, after investigators
maker to review the way the
fee.
scheme - to accounts concluded that they could
painkiller is marketed.
In a letter to the president of . she held joindy with Rapoff. not account for up to half of
He then transferred some of the bank's reponed $1.1 bilPutdue Pharllll\ L.P. of Conthe money to the accounts of lion in assets. Ultimately, fednecticut, Earley said OxyConfamily members, the FDIC eral regulators concluded that
tin "is now routinely described
said.
as much as $515 million was
as the 'street drug' of choice' in
Cherry similarly wired missing as a result of fraud. '
Appalachia and its illegal use is
a growing problem:•
. Earley spokesman David . - - - - - - - - - -...- - - - - - - - - •
Botkins .said Earley hopes to
invite attorneys general from
~
Pennsylvania,' West Virginia,
Kentucky.MarylandandOhio
to any meeting he has with
Purdue Pharma representa-

Th•

Jo•ent Implant

~.

~n~r

State task force drops
coal·dam inspections
CHARLESTON,
W.Va . about 60 miles of the Big
(AP) -A task force created to Sandy River and its tributaries
investigate coal dam safety in Kenrucky and West Virginia.
Ava King, the DEP's coordiinstead will focus on promoc.nator
of special projeclli, told
ing plans in the community to
respond to floods, sludge leaks the West Virginia Coal Associaor other emergencies caused tion of the cask force's change
Friday.
by coal-related danu.

For Initial evaluations or follow-up I I we
hours at 1423 3rd Avenue In the Huntington Spina
Rehab &amp; Peln Canter.
'
Joint
Implant
Our next clinic date Ia

Friday, February 23.

Surgeons, Inc.

Call (814) 221~1 ror an
appointment.
Robert A. Fada, MD,

FACS

Then-Gov. · Cecil Under- ____,;._ _ _ _ _ _~::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::~
wood otdered the coal dam r
study just before the November election following the collapse of an A. T. Massey Coal
Corp. coal slurry impoundment near Inez, Ky.
The Oct. 11 collapse flooded
streams with 250 million gallons 0f sludge and wastewater.
It killed fish and other aquatic
life and cut off drinking water
supplies to residents along

Bible
Lands
Tour

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM COLUMBUS SOUTHERN POWER COMPANY .
AND OHIO 'POWER COMPANY
Purauant to the COITipilnlea' Capacity end Energy Emergency
Control prog"'me 8PProYI&lt;I by ~ PubHc Utllltloo Co!flmloolon of
Ohio, tho Compenloo horoby opprlae tile public tho atoto of
olootr1o oorvloo In tholr oorvloo a,.o.

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES

October 23 To
November 2~ 2001

Tlto Com,..,l"' oloctrlc powor· ,oupply faallltloo - Including
powor genoretlng plonto, mo1or tronomloolon focllltloo ond
lntaroonneotlona with neighboring electric utility ayatema • are
·expeoted to be adequate to provide reliable electric aervlce to
their .c ultomere. end, at the ...,. time. accomOdate lfkely load
and oapaolty contlngenclea.
Qenleratlng capachy reaerve
merglna of the !a.-n Amerloan Eleotrfc Pow.r (AEP) Syatarit, of

which Columbua lou..-.ern Power and Ohio Power ere part,
taking l"to eccount th.a return of the Cook Nuclur Unite, are
expeottd to be 1'"' or more ~· load throughout 20Cn and Into
poak load porlod of noxt wlnlor 2001/02.
Gene,.tlng-captlclty reHI'Vtl are required to mHI unilxpected

'noruMe In ayatem load, to provide for an effective program of
prewnttve melntenanoe of a•eratlng facllltl••· and to allow ror
l'llnclom ahutdowna •nd lottdlng curtailment• of gener•tlng unlle.

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Approxlmololy 87% of lho l!ootorn AI!P Syotem'o power
oopeotty lo -l·flrl&lt;l, II% lo nucloor ond tho romolndor
lo flydrooloatrlo. Tile ComponiH Hllevo that tholr cool ouppllto
IN lldequete to enable them to mtllftM antlclpa~ed electric
•'"'In' roqul- of their cu-.,. during tho yoor.

.,-ng

• I'

October 23 to Novomto.r 2, 2001 • Come Join ue
with on txperlonet of your life. Soe the City of
Cairo, 14 pyromldo Including the fomoue Sttp
Pyramid, World Famoue Mueoum with prlcolooo
.game from the Tomb of Tulonkhomon. Toke o rldt
on tho Nllo, continue to Momphla ond pau lhru lito
City of tlto Dead. Travol by coach on to Jorutaltm
and vloll Mount Zion, Upper Room, tho Tomb Of
King David, tho old City of Jeruoolom, Domo of tho
Rock, and many mora plocoo. Wo will lravol lo
Bothlahom to vlalttho Birth Ploco of Chrlot, the
Shophord'o Field, tho Tomb of Rachol, ond Doad
Soa Scrollo. We will oeo Gordon of Gothaomono,
Pool of Slloom, Pool of Botheodo, Pllote'a
Judgement Seat, Mt. Calvooy, Gordon Tomb, o otop
In Bethany to ooa tho home of Mooy &amp; Mertho ond
L.azoruo. Drive on to tho O,od Soo, cable cor up to
Moeodo • o fortroao overlooking ,the Dead Sto.
Trovol on to lhe covoe ollha Dead Sao Sorollo, on
tho Jorlcho, worldt oldott city, Mount of

Templlltlon, ond lhe Jordan Volloy to the Sol of
GoiiiH. Thora wo will rtlox wkh a boot rlclo on the
oeo, on tho Capornoum, whoro Chrlat did a lot of
hit ttochlnga ond worohlped thoro. Wo will ote
Mount of Beollludtt, olao Jacob'o Well, and
Mooy't Well. Wo will vlolt Nozaroth, boy hood
homo of Jo..,o, Cono, Chrlot1ot Mlroclo, proCHd
to the Ploln of Jozrool, to Mtglddo, on tho
Ct~oaroa to ooo tho Roman Aqulducl, CruHder'o
Molt, the t1mou1 Romen Thntre, end m1ny, m•ny

more nolllelod. Wo will hove tho loot evonlng luel
to rtlox by tho Modltorronouo Soa. Tho tlneot of
llotolo, food, ond trovel will bt provided. Cool:
$2,551.00 por poi'IOn.
For mora lnlormollon, contact • AAA In
PortemOIIth, Ohio. Phone (740) 354·5814, ook for
Vlokl Boll ot txt. 234. Local (740) 448-32112, or
write to: John Hoffoll, 130 County Lo., Gelllpolle,
OH 45131 .

�Page M • 6unba~ 1timt•·&amp;tnlind

Sunday, February 18, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plaaaant, WV

Deaths

Obituaries

Poahantas 1»oa~ Blackbum

Lorete 'Deedee' Hll

ficMI'qiA1
The bus will visit juniors at
Gallia Academy High School at
9 a.m. and Riwr Wley High
School at 1 p.m.
URG personnel will talk
with students in small groups
following a motivational rally,
said Jamie Abel, OBR assistant
directOr of media and market-

Rev. John jackson, minister at
New Life Lutheran Church;
Leslie Sheea, Rio Grande assistant professor; John Pelletier,
general
m.anatjCr
of
WRYV!WJEH radio stations;
and R. Shawn Lewis, managing
editor for Ohio Wlcy Publishing Co.
Their role is to promote and
encourage higher education in
the community in the months
after the bus visit and be
approachable and available to
answer questions they may
have in the future.
Marty Miller, executive
director of the Center for
Urban Progress in Columbus,
addressed the leaders.
"There are two popular misconceptions that kids have
about attending college, and
t.'tey are that' it's too expensive
and that they have to make all
As to be accepted;' Miller said.
"Our mission is to go into
these 23 high schoolS . and let
the kids know that if you really
want to go to college in the
state of Ohio, you can." ·
Miller said prior n:search was
conducted and focus group,
asked kids who they would listen to and who influences
them.
Trial runs were done in
Akron and Marietta. The program kick-off was Jan. 10 at
Columbus East 'High School,
with Gov. Bob Taft in attendance.

COLUMBUS - Pocahanw "Poca'' Blackburn, 95, ColwnGALLIPOLIS - Doris Lorete "Deedee" Game~ Hill, 98, of
bus, formerly of Gallia County, died Saturday. Feb. 17, 2001 in Gallipolis, went to be with God on Friday, Febnury 16, 2001 at
Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
Aibors of Gallipolis.
Born Sept. 23, 1905 in McAndrews. Ky., she was the daughter
She was bornjuly6, 1902 in Gallia County, daughter of the late
of the late Will and Launa Runyon May.
·
· John and Hattie Smith Game~ .
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Millard BlackIn addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
burn, on Feb.10, 1976; and a son,Jimrny Blackburn. .
husband, William Ted Hill, in 1976; and by four brothers and six
Surviving are two sons, William Joe (Naomi) Blackburn of sisters.
ing.
Colwnbus, and Jack (Iva Jean) Blackburn of Hernando, Fla.; a
Surviving are a daughter, Madonna Garne~ of Gallipolis; a
Rio Grande personnel leaddaughter-in-law, Clara Blackburn of Vinton; 1.1 grandchildren, grandson,William Garnes and his wife, Carolyn, ofPomeroy; four ing small group discussions at
and several great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren; great-grandchildren; Charles and Crystal Garnes; Audrey Han=n- the two high schools are: Kathand two sisters, Mae M. Maynard of McAndrews, and Rosella berg and Chelsea Moss; a sister, Dorothy Garnes Williams of leen Gierhart, assistant to tile
Mincoff of Aat Rock, Mich.
Columbus; and several nieces, nephews, cowins and friends.
president for university relaServices will be 2 p.m. Monday in McCoy-Moore Funeral
She was a member of Providence Baptist ChUrc:h, Buck Ridge tions;Jake Bapst, directOr of the
Home,Vinton, with the Rev. Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial will Road, where services will be held at 1 p.m. on Monday. Febru- Instructional Media Center
beinVintonMemorialPark.Friendsmaycallatthefimeralhome ary 19,2001, with the Rev. Edward Buffington, the Rev. and Project CHAMP; Elaine
from 2-5 p.m. Sunday.
· Everneather Scott and the Rev. Calvin Minnis officiating. Burial Arnutrong, dean of students;
will follow in Buck Ridge Cemetery. Friends may call at Mark AbeU, executive director
McCoy-Moore Funeral H~me Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, on of admissions and financial aid;
Sunday, Febru~ 18, 2001 from 1-4 p.m.
·
Dorm Smith, director of career
CHESAP.EAKB - Shirley May Hagerman, 61, Chesapeake,
services; Aimee Branham,
died Thursday. Feb. 15, 2001 in Cabell Huntington Hospital,
financial aid advisor; Jenny
Huntington,W.Va.
·
·
di d Dyer, assistant director of finanPOMER.OY- Charles "Bub" Marshall, 69, of Pomeroy, e cia! aid; and adsnissions staff
Born Feb. 20, 1939 in Germantown, she was the daughter of
unexpectedly at his residence on Friday. Feb. 16, 2001.
counselors Stephanie Ratcliff,
the late George E. and Thelma Sannan Knore.
.
He
was
the
son
of
the
late
Charles
and
Reba
Marshall
ofBurnShe was also preceded in death by her husband, Bobby Hagerwell, West.Virginia, and was retired fork lift operator at Kaiser Carmela Oliveras and Thmmy
man.
.
· McCain.
Surviving are a daughter, Pamela Cain of Germantown; two Aluminum in Ravenswood, West Virginia.
He was also a member of the United Steelworkers No. 5668 in · Community leaders who
grandsons; a half-sister, Tonya Pfauth of Michigan; and a halfRavenswood, West Virginia, VFW Post No. 7174, DAV Ohio have agreed to participate are
brother, Jack Fread of Ironton.
Chapter No. 53, and American Legion W~t Virginia Chapter No. Jeff Smith, past president of the
ServiceS will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Hall Funeral Home, Proc- 0023.
·
URG Board of Trustees and
torville, with the Rev. Charles Hardy officiating. Burial will be in
He was an Air Force veteran of the Korean War.
president of Ohio Valley Bank;
Union Hill Cemetery, Chesapeake. Visitation was held in the
Along with his pmnts, he w.is preceded .in death by a son and Dr. Daniel Whiteley, URG
funeral home Saturday.
board of trustees member and
daughter, Bryan and Sherri Marshall; and a sister, Margaret Kees. retired Holzer physician; the
He is survived .by his wife of 45 years, Ruby Marshall; three
sons and daughters-in-law, Barry and Judy Marshall of Racine,
· POMEROY-SimonJunior"Hickenbilly"Jones,69,Chester Charles and Pam Marshall of Reynoldsburg, and Randy and
month.
Road, Pomeroy. died oThursday, Feb. 15, 2001 at his residence, Tammy Marshall ofAthens; one daughte~ and son-in-law, Denise
The second phase estimate is
following an extended illness.
.
~d)~ Sava of Atheris;. a sister, Ruth Bass of Cabin Creek, West
$22 million, while the middle
Born May 22, 1931 in Kelly's Creek, W.Va., son of the late Vuguua; seven grandchildren, Rachel Marshall, Joseph Manhall,
and final phase, about five
from PapAl
Simon and Hue! Martin Jones, he was a retired heavy equipment Kristen Manhall, Amber Pick, John Sava, Ashley Marshall and
miles, is estimated at $21.7 miloperator and truck driver, and a member of Operating Engineers . Troy Marshall; and several nieces and nephews.
.
Local 132.
Services will be Monday. February 19, 2001 at 1 p.m. at Ewmg uled to sell in state l;'iscal Year lion. The final phase is under
Surviving are his wife, Linda Jett; two sons, Gregory Ooan) Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. Darrell 2002 (anytime after June 30, design by KordacNemeth of
2001) and state FiscalYear 2003 Columbus.
Jones of Columbus, and Jef!Tey Jones of Sissonville, W.Va.; two Johnson. .
.
.
Phase I of the project was
(anytime after June 30, 2002).
daughters, Angela Jones of Coal River, W.Va. and Bethany Jones
Burial will follow m Cherry Ridge Cemetery.
However, ODOT District designed in-house by the disof Athens; a stepdaughter, Lisa Jett of Pomeroy; nine grandchilFriends may call at the funeral home on Sunday. Febnury 18,
10 Deputy Director George trict's own engineers and·techdren and three great-grandchildren; and a sister-iil.law,EmaJones 2001 from 7-9 p.m.
of Allens Fork, W.Va.
Memorial contributions can be made to the 'Cystic Fibrosis M. Collins, a Mei~ County nicians, working out of the
native, and other high level dis- production department in
He was also preceded in death by his brothers, Chester, James Foundation.
trict officials are hopeful those Mariel\ll. That deparanent is
and Owen Jones; and three infant brothers.
·
dates· could advance on the headed by Saleh El-dabaja,
' Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday in Ewing Funeral Home,
sales \Chedule, should other another Meigs County resiPomeroy. Burial will be in Berruna Cemetery. Liberty, W.Va.
· GUYSVILLE- Ned f Simpson, 75, of Guysville, formerly of projects around the state fall dent.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.
When
complet¢d, the
Cana!Winchester,diedFriday.February 16,2001 athisiesidence. behind for some reason lll.d
Ravenswood
Connector will
·He \vas born December 8, 1925 in Frost.
money become ~ble.
· He was a U.S. Navy veteran ofWorldWar 11, and was a retired
"That's not a promise," said be a ~lane Umited aced!
PROCTORVILLE - Thelma Eileen Jones, 71, Proctorville, farmer. He retired from the Canal Winchester school district as a Collins, "but it's always a possi- highway on a four-lane lightof-way, conneCting U.S. 33
school bus driver. .
bility."
died Friday. Feb. 16, 2001 at her residence.
He was an avid high school basketball supporter, a lifetime
Collins said that one of the with West Virginia's Ritchie
Born Aug. 11, 1929 in Scottown, she was the daughter of the
member of the Coolville VFW. a member of the Canal Winches- recently-completed phases of Bridge, and 1-77 just beyona.
late Earl and Hazel Edwards Murdock.
She was also preceded in d~th by her husbands, Earl Jones Sr. ter American Legion Post, a member of Knights ofPythias, and a die widening of U.S.. 50 in
Athens County was advanced
member ·o f Stewart United Methodist Church.
and Charley Jones.
He
is
survived
by
his
wife
of
54
yean,
Mildred
A.
Ballmer
to sale for that reason.
Surviving are four sons, Earl Jones of Reynoldsburg. Ray Jones
Additionally, consttuction
of Pedro, Roy Jones of Crown City, and David jones of Proc- Simpson; a son and daughter~in-law, Tim and Cathy; a son, Ken~
neth;
a
sister,
Lola
Mae
Lackey;
a
brother,
Howard
Simpson;
five
plans
'for the second phase of ·
torville; three daughters, Wanda Rowe of Columbus; Lois Gail
Bryan of Huntington,W.Va., and Anna Patrick of Proctorville; 22 grandsons, Ned and Deanna Powell Simpson, and jim, Nick, Matt the connector, the four-mile
grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren; two brothers, Eddie and Alex; a great-grandson, Austin; and several nieces and section from Five Poihts to
,
Moqring Star, have been cornMurdock of Rittman, and Dillie Murdock of South Point; and nephews.
He was pfl:ceded in death by his parents; a daughter-in-law, · pleted by the consulting firm of
two sisters, Christine Sparks and Eloise Thomas, both of Glouster.
Nancy
Jackson Simpson; a brother-in-law, Walter Ballmer; and a McCpy &amp; Associates ofAkron,
She was also preceded in death by a brother, George Russell
brother and four sisters.
,
reviewed and approved by
Murdock.
Services
will
be
1:30
p.m.
on
'Thesday.
Febnury
20,
2001
in
ODOT, and are now in
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville, with the Rev. Carl Black and the Rev. Larry Haley offi- White Funeral Home, Coolville, with the Rev. Jane Beatty offi- , Columbus awaitihg a sale date.
Pfual plans for the second
ciating. Burial will be in Miller Memorial Gardens. Friends may dating. Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday. February
1_
9
,
2001
from
2-4
a,1il
6-8
p.m.
phase
received the·required sigcall at the funeral home from 6-9 p,m. Sunday.
ln lieu of flowers, memoriil contributions may be made to the na,tilre of Collins· earlier this
American Cancer Society or the Appalachian Community HosA.
pice program. . ·
CLIFTON, W.Va.- Cora A. Roush, 93, Clifton, died Friday.
Feb. 16,2001 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
'
Born Feb. 11, 1908 in West Columbia, W.Va., daughter of the
are a problem;
late Charles E. and Cora A. Varian, she was ~ housewife and
• Add windbreaks to shelier
attended Clifton Holiness Tabernacle. ·
,
feeders from the elements;
She was also preceded in death by her husband, DallasV. Roush, .
• Use a high-energy food .
flam PapAl
in 1976; a son, Milton E. Roush; and several brothers and sisten.
like suet cakes to give birds an
HOME OYGEN Be MEDICAL EQUlPMENT
Surviving are two daughters, Hilda G. (Deener) Roush Jr. of cally controlled bird bath, birds additional boost to survive the
"We Care For You Like Family"
·
New Haven, W.Va., and Irma A. (Lewis R.) Gilland of Mason, are ensured of a reliable source cold;
W.V...; a daughter-in-law, GladYs M. Roush of Clifton; nine of water for drinking and · •'Iiy wrying the heights of
70 Pine lti'Mt
(740) 448-7283
grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and two great-great maintaining their feathers.
the fecden and s~ad them
grand~hildren; and several nieces and nephews.
. . The National BUd-Feeding out so more birds can use
.· Seivices will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday in Fc:&gt;glesong Funeral Home, Society offers these tips:
them; thus reducing over(
Mason, with the Rev. Larry Gilland officiating. Burial will be in
• Fill feeders every day. but crowding and the potential fOr
Graham Cemetery. New Haven.Visi~tion was held in the funer~ put out only a q~tity of seed the spreading diseases;
• Stamp down snow under~
al home on Saturday.
that the birds can · eat before
Aesoclatlon of Public-Safety Communlciltloris
sundown, especially where rac- neath feeders to help groUnd
APCO Basic Telacommunlcator Class Southeast Ohio
coons, opossum, bean or dear feeding birds .

· Shirley May Hagennan

Charles ·aub' Marshall
a

Simon 1tickenbilly' Jones

Road

lhelma Eileen Jones

·Cora

Roush

Birds

~~~~O~H~~~~~~~~~
,..
PUBLIC NOTICE

Emergency Medical services District (SEOEMS) 'Will be
.Cold, dry through today •r-~~~=~=:-:=::::;:;~r---, conducting
an APCO Basic Communicator class at
fl- - ·.,
SEOEMS Heac;lquarters 3240 State Route 160,

W..,.,.,.loncllll:
chance of light snow In 1he mflllllng,
Sunday...M0111y IIIIMY· High 32 to . then a chanCe .of rain from eatly
afternoon on. High In the upper «le.
37. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday nlght. ..BICOI!11ng doudy.
Low In 1he mid 2011.
Tuesday...Partty doudy. Low In
1he upper 308 and high In 1he 10l!xl8ndlcl ' - - " '
Monday...Mo11ly cloudy wl1h a 508·
.

----------REE HEARING TES1

1
Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
1
'I S'dtt~lfe TM HEARING AID. CENTER I
I
I
I
I
I Call Toll
an
appointment. I
I Thtttftt will bt given by a Licensed Hearing Aid SPecialist. I
·
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
I
I converaltlon 11 Invited to have a W5 hearing ttstto Itt If
lthla problem cen bt helped I Bring thla coupon wtth you for I
· your FREE HeARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
I
I UMWA. UAW 'ARMCO, AND All OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS

--------·-------·WALK-INS WELCOME

e--l~ht?

W'

r:·

1 . . ._

DO yoCI smoke
.
omeone In
r fclmlly .
"CIS S
._ •r
had a heart attclc or I t roae
Does someone In
- r fclmlly have Dlca1hb•etet.~ts?
.,.__

COUPON

•

1"" ., - -

..

· If - · can caniwer v-i to C!II!Y or the
;.i'Ove. ~ may" at rllli or Cl

heart cattGde or stroke.
Dr. Robert Hoi~ hal recelwd lfldCII

trCIIW.r:'..:.:;~~3t'Ja.~=-n~

CALL

ua TODAY I'OR A FREE

INmAL IIVALUATION.

"R•duolnll your rtalr or lfl• UM'IqnafWfl~
21100 "Oiff8raon Avenue, Point Pl . . . .nt, WV

304 675-1675

Gallipolis, Ohlo. The qualifications for the class Is high
school dlploma (or GED) and CPR training. The cost of
the ..............
"Ia•• ·'-all be $125.00 per person. This covers the
cost of the books and materials. The clasS will be held
from March 4th to March 9th. The class times will be
0800 hra to 1700 hrs. (1 hr. for lunch) This ls a 40
hour class and attendance is mandatory for the entire
40 hours.
.
911 Training
The Basic Telecommunicator Class is designed for
Individuals who act as emergency dispatchers for
pollee, flre and EMS crews. The course meets tha
atandards for dlspatch training as required under the
Ohio Sub Senate Bill 5. The APCO Institute
Talecommunlcator tralnlng curriculum is delivered by
APCO lnstructD~.
Preregistration Is required for this class. Anyone
Interested In taking the APCO Telecorrimunicator class
should contact the SEOEMS Training -Department, or
Delores Dalton APCO Instructor.
SEOEMS
Communlcations Supervisor at 740·446·9840
"

SUnday, Febru1ry 18,2001

&amp;~nbmp

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, Ohio • Point Plaaaant, WV

Qtimr)l ·&amp;rnlinrl • Page A7

:Netanyahu gives strong support to Bush, Sharon
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - The
hard-line approach of Israeli Prime
Minister-elect Ariel Sharon and the
Bush adrninisaation 's airstrikcs against
Iraq are the right prescriptions for
• peace in the Middle East, former
Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu
. said Friday night.
"A peace through deterrence and
. strength, is the only true peace;·
Netanyahu said, pounding his fist on
the podiwn and drawing applause
. from his audience at the winter meet. ing of the Conservative Political
Action Conference.
"The election of Sharon is a strong

message that Israel is ready fur a strong
position and a strong defense as a way
toward peace;• Netanyahu said. "And
the strike agiliut Iraq is exacdy the
right kind of policy being practiced."
In an attack Friday, two dozen U.S.
and British warplanes fired longrange missiles ·at radar systems to the
south and nDrth of Baghdad. It was
the first strike outside the southern
no-fly zone since December 1998.
Netanyahu, who was reportedly
being. considered for a position in
Sharon's emerging administration,
encouraged Sharon ·not to be too
quick to accept peace offers from

Israel's neighbors or the Palestinians.
"Some of the most celebrated peace
treaties of our time have led directly
to the most calamitous results,"
Netanyahu said. "The lesson that my
people have learned throughout a
millennium is that peace without
security is nothing."
The former prime minister also
reissued his support for President
Bush's plan for a missile defense system - a technology aimed at striking
down warheads before they reached
U.S. territory.
Just before Netanyahu took the
stage, Bush senior ~dviser Karl Rove

promised the conservative acnvtsts
that the administration was not planning to quietly step back from campaign promises.
"When we talked about a taX cut
during the campaign, the willy-nilly

helped revive l;lrge taX cuts, roused the
party faithful l;IOt to let Democrats
dominate the agenda on taXeS. "It's
our turn;' he boomed.
. Forbes urged Republicans not to be
on the defensive about Bush's proconservatives said, 'Haven't we posed tax cut.
learned that you can't talk about a taX
"This tax bill is very small when
cut without ending up on the wrong you consider it," he said. "Instead of
side of class warfare?"' Rove said. defending what's in this taX bill we
"Then, we won the election. Now should be adding to it."
they are saying, 'It's time for you to
Bush has proposed a 10-year tax cut
drop the taX cut.' When will they whose $1.6 trillion price tag is
learn?''
expected to grow. Democrats call the
Steve Forbes, whose presidential plan too big and too tilted toward
campaign call for a flat income taX high earners.

:Deep-sea robot finds ship's wreckage
• HONOLULU (AP) - A
: deep-sea robot has found the
wreckage of a Japanese fishing
· vessel that sank when a Navy
attack
submarine
tore
: through it while surfacing,
. Navy officials said Saturday.
, ~·All we can do is confirm
that a remote-operated vehi' de has located the Ehime
. Maru;• said Jon Yoshishige, a
, spokesman for the U.S. Pacific Aeet.
YDshishige said the fishing
boat was spotted at 11:25 p.m.
Friday sitting nearly upright
in 2,033 feet of water, approximately 1,000 yards from the
collision site. ·
.'\.. Navy support ship had
, lowered the remotely operat. ed deep-diving vehicle, the
Super Scorpio II, into the
ocean nine miles south of
D~ond Head - where the
crash took place - to begin
' the search on Friday.
- The unmanned submersible
-is equipped with sonar and
.. two video cameras, and has a
: limited recovery capability.
The Scorpio on Saturday
was continuing a scan on the
vessel and the area around it,
. "'(oshishige said. There was no
; word whether any bodies had
', j)ee11- d~~~r.e,d in the SOO-t9n
'· Ehimc
, . Still missing are four high
' school students, two teachers
· and three crewmen from the
commercial fishing training
ve11el, operated by Uwajirna
Pilheriea High School in
southwestern Japan. 1\vcntysix people wm rescued after
the'Pcb. 9 collision.
. Japaneae family members
meanwhile
made
an
anguished and angry plea for
answers about why the USS

M.Ni.

WASHINGTON (AP) A House committee investigating President Clinton's
pardon of fugitive financier
Marc Rich won't give immunity to Rich's ex-wife until
federal . prosecutors decide
whether to move ahead with
their own criminal probe.
Denise Rich has asked the
House Government Reform ,
Committee for immunity
in
from
prosecution
exchange for her testimony.
But the committee will hold
off on a decision, spokesman
Mark Corella said.
"The committee will do
nothing to impede the U.S.
attorney's investigation:' he said
Congressional investiga-

Stocks fall
.sharply on
bad news
~YORK (AP) -Wall
Street' p~unged back into pes-

simism Friday, sending stocks
sharply lower after Nortel
Networks, Dell Computer and
Hewlett-Packard warned that
business will slow further this
year. A spike in inflation and
military action in Iraq
ini:reased the market\ woes.
. "The. market just 'doesn't like
,toda}' at all:' said Dan Ascani,
president and research director
iat Global Market Strategists in
G:iine~ville, Ga. 1
·
I After a ~&lt;;won of heavy trad~ and plenty of reasons for
-.Uin~. the Dow jones indusayerage lost 91.ZO to close
Qt 10,799.82. The Dow was up
p.2 percent for the week.
• The Nasdaq composite .
1ndex tumbled 127.53 to
j2,425.38, a 5 percent drop for
the day and a 1.8 percent
;decline for the week. The
~roadet Standard &amp; Poor's 500
'ndex declined 25.08 to
t1,301.53, ending the week off
'1 percent.
1 The market's losses on Fri:day came latJely from the
. !technology sector after several
. ~ companies issued disap. ~ oudoob for the year.
Norte! plunged $9.75, or .
beady 33 percent, to 6nilh at
$20. After the market closed
Thursday. the liber optics
lnaker cut its profit outlook
-- nioed the lllltllber of its
planned job cuts to 10,000.

Fa!

•

tions have hampered federal
prosecutions before. The
Iran-Contra' convictions of
former White House aides
Oliver North and John
Poindexter were set aside by
courts that said the testimony
they gave Congress under
immuniry grants might have
prejudiced their trials.
U.S. .Attorney_ Mary Jo
White announced she had
opened a criminal investigation into whether money
played any role in Clinton's
last-minute pardon of Rich.
Senate and House committees are also probing that
question, with the House
holding its second hearing on
the matter next month.

SEARCHING- U.S. Coast Guard.cutter Kittiwake, right, joins the USS Port Royal in search of nine
boys and .men from the. Japanese fishing vessel Ehime Maru, nine miles south of Oahu. {AP)
,. '
surfacing drills while investigators try to determine how
the submarine slammed into
the vessel.
A preliminary report on the
incident was expected in the
by
next . few days, according to
Pentagon. officials.
The relatives, spea)dng
released a list of 31
Japanese,
' '
Greeneville crashed 'irifo the Yusuk~ Terata.
"If your blood is ri:d, you'll questions they want ~he Unit190-foot Ehime ManC "
At times sobbina , and understand our pain and sor- ed States to answer. Included
an= questions about who was
shoutin11, 16 relatives "apoke row."
The fishing venel sank steering the submarine at the
publicly about the trag,~~y for
minutea
after the Greeneville time of the collision and why
the 6nt time Friday at a news
conference on the Unil(enity surfaced underneath it during the Greeneville crew did not
of Hawaii campua. ';t'hey an emergency rapid-ascent "do their best" 'to assist sur-,
ursed ofBciala to continue drill. 1\vo civilian llllests were vivors· immediately after the
with the search until all mill- at control stations of the sub- sinking.
marine during the maneuver,
ing bodies were found. ' '
Navy officials have said
The Navy said Friday it is rough seas prevented the sub"lt'l your responsibill~ as
human beings,'' said ~l,lmi barring civilians from sub- marine crew from bringing
Terata, mother of 17 -yeat~o\d marines during emergency survivors onboard.

Still missing are four high school students, two teachers and three crewmen
from the commercial fishing training
vessel, operated Uwajima Fisheries
High School in southwestern Japan.

..

lr

'

Panel won't decide right
away on Rich immun1ty

Execution countdown begins
for Oklahoma City bomber.
DENVER (AP) ~ The
threc-rnonth countd4.to
Timothy McVeigh's exe~ution began Friday . after the
Oklahoma City bomber Jet
the deadline pass for ask.lng
the president to spare his lice.
McVeigh, 32, figured tht~
was no poin,t in asking P~
ident Bush for clemency, s · d
one of his lawyers, R ,
Nigh Jr. McVeigh di4Jl't
believe Bush would spare
him, and even if the president did so, McVeigh had
''nothing t~ look forward to
but solitary confinement;'
.
the lawyer said.
McVeigh could stjll bring
a last-minute court action
alleging new evidence ha( '
been found, but such a move
was considered unlikely.
··
He is scheduled to die by
lethal injection May 16 at a
federal prison in Terre
Haute, Ind.
No federal prisoner has
been executed in 37 years.
. McVeigh is "trying to be a

a retiredVeteransAdministration psychologist and bombing survivor. McVeigh wants
to "capture the headlines of
the United· States and the
world before he makes · his
final exit."
The government has
received 250 requests frOm
victims and relatives who
want to watch McVeigh die,
and is considering a closed- ·
circuit television broadcast of
the execution.
The decorated Gulf War
veteran was convicted of
murder and other charges in
the Aprill9, 1995, bombing
of the Alfred P. Murrah Federa! Building. The blast killed
168 people and mjured more
than 500 in the deadliest act
of terrorism ever on U.S.
soil.
MeVeigh had one month
after his execution date was
set to file a clemency petition. The U.S. Bureau of
Prisons set the execution
dateJan. 16 after he dropped

martyr," said Dr. Paul ·Heath,

all

appeals.~------_!~~=~~~~~;~=~=~=~==~~~~

�Page A8 • •unbap Q:lmrll -•rnlintl

NATION BRIEFS
Online sales posted boom
WASHINGTON (AP) - Internet sales of everything
&amp;om books to cars boomed during the final three months of
2000 even as the nation's economy slowed •harply.
Online purchases rose by 35.9 percent to $8.69 billion in
the fourth quarter &amp;om the third-quarter, the Commerce
Department reported Friday.
Those sales accounted for 1 percent of the $856.2 billion
in total retail sales rung up during the fourth quarter. In the
third quarter, online sales represented 0.8 percent of all retail
sales.
·
The nation's economy slowed to an annual rate of growth
ofjust 1.4 percent in the fourth quarter, the weakest performance in more than five years. The nation's retailers reported lackluster sales at the end of last year because of a number of factors including harsh winter weather, lower consumer confidence, stock market volatility and higher energy
prices.
For all of 2000, online sales totaled $25.8 billion. That
accounted f9r 0.8 percent of the $3.2 trillion in all retail
sales during the year.
Books, cars and clothing are among the online sales
tracked, which started last year. The statistics don't include
sales from online travel services, financial services and ticket
!ales for thing. .like music concerts. The government doesn't
break down its online sales figures by products, regions or
companies.

I

Sunday, February 18, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, Ohio • Polpt Pl....nt, WV

Teen charged .with 11it lisf
MIDDLESEX, NJ.. (AP) -An eighth-grade student who
allegedly compiled a ''hit list" of people she wanted to kill
was charged with 10 counts of making terrorist. thieats.
The 13-year-old girl allegedly compiled a "People2kill"
list with the names and photos offellow classmates.
At a hearing Friday, a judge released the girl into her par~
ents custody and ordered her to rermin under house arrest.
She must undergo mental health evaluation. before her next
court appearance Feb. 28.
If c11nvicted on any of the charges, she faces a two-year
term in a juvenile detention facility.
A school librarian found a copy of the list last Friday and
-notified school officials. They spoke to students and determined she had created the list.
No weapons were found in the girl's locker or book bag.
The girl had no prior disciplinary record.
The list is believed to have been widely circulated among
srildents and posted on an Internet site, a school superintendent said.

Inside:

Pentagon: Air strikes Bush makes Mexico
against Iraq effective his·first foreign visit
8Y ROIIRT BUIINI
N' MIUTARY·WRI!fR

WASHINGTON - The
joint U.S.-British air strike
against Iraq, described by President Bush as routine, was the
biggest blow against . Saddam
Hussein's military in more than
two years and involved two
dozen attack planes armed
with precision-guided missiles,
Pentagon officialS say.
"A routine mission was conducted to enforce the 'no-fly'
zone" over southern Iraq, Bush
said Friday. "It was a mission
about which I was informed
and I authorized. But I repeat,

it's a routine mission."
It was the first military action
ordered by the new president, ·
who inherited an Iraq policy
that has evolved 6om the 1991
Persian GulfWar that his father
carried out to evict the Iraqi
army fiom Kuwait. A key part
of that policy is enforcement of
no-fly zones over northern and
southern Iraq - a mission that
has taxed the U.S. military

while also taking a heavy toll
on Iraq's extensive air defemes.
Iraq does not accept the
legitimacy of the no-fly zo~
The official Iraqi News Agency
said two people died and 20
were injured in Friday's attack.
Bush was in Mexico meeting with President Vicente Fox
at the time the missiles were
launched at about 12:30 p.m.
EST. White House spokesman
Ari Fleischer said Bush gave
the go-ahead on Thursday.
At the Pentagon, Marine Lt.
Gen. Gregory Newbold, director of operations for the J6int
ChiefS of Staff, called the strike
a "self-defetlse measure" initiated by the commander of U.S.
forces in the Persian Gulf. The
number of U.S. and British
attack planes involved- 24 - .
was much larger than in previ. ous missions over northern and
southern Iraq in recent years.
Dozens of suppon aircraft
also were involved. including
electronic jamming and radar
control planes.

WACO, Texas (AP) After a day of diplomacy that
pulled his attention fiom
Mexico to Iraq and back
again, President Bush retreated to the ·sanctuary of his
West Texas ranch.
Bush flew here Friday
night .to spend the Presidents
Day wee~end at his ranch,
located just outside nc;uby
Crawford. It was his first stay
at · the ranch since he took
office in JanUary; his plan was
to be there all weekend.
The president spent Friday
with President Vicente Fox of
Mexico, talking about energy,
trade, immigration and drug
interdiction in a low-key
meeting at Fox's ranch in the
central Mexican farming
community of San Cristobal.
· "Mexico is the first foreign
country I have visited as president, and I intehded it to be
that way;• Bush said. "We are
welcoming a new day in the
relationship between America
and Mexico. Each nation has

OVC girls top Liberty, Page B2
Wahama ladies cage Wildcats, Page B2
Daytona 500 Notebook, Page B6
Outdoors, Page BB

Sunday, Febnalry 11, 2001

a new president and a new
penpecrive. Geography has
made us neighbon; cooperation and respect win . . us

SUNDAY's

parcoers."
Bush visited Fox's mother,
and - with a thumbs-down
at a dominant crop on the
Fox tanch - ·declared he
shares the dislike for broccoli
voiced by his father.
·The president heaped
praise on Fox as "the kind of
man you can look in the eye
and know he is shooting
straight with you:• He said he
felt Mexico deserves some
relief from the annual review
certifYing certain countries'
cooperation in fighting drug!,
and would tell Congress
"I believe there is a m~
'
ment in the country tp
review ·all the certification
process," Bush said. "I
believe that PresidCnt Fait
will do everything in his
power to root out the drug
lords and to halt drug traffick,'ing as best as he possibly can:•

HIGHLIGHTS

SEOAL

thaf.

firmly

Belpre
Nelsonville-York

AlelUinder
Vlnion County
W~n

M8ig•

1VC

ALL

10·0
' 5-4
5·5
11-4
2·7
1·9

17·3
8·11
11-12
8·11
11-10
2·18

1VC

ALL

... H1!ckJn11 Dlvlllon

Trimble-

7-2 12·6
Eastern
B-3 16-3
Waterford
6-4 1o-1 o
Southam
5·5 12·8
Fedenil Hocking
3·7. 9·11
Miller
2;8 7·13
Friday'• Gamea
Belpre 82. Fon Frye 55 VlniQJ) County 75, Federal Hock·

lng!id ' ,

OVP SPORTS STAFF

·

J'V:nay Chrlatillll

Hlrlnan

W"'ama

~

1
' 10-6
4·14
3·16

•·

SOuth Galla
Frld•y'• G•IIIM

0111o

ACSI South Reglonll

Valley Christian
Valley Christian 67

eo, Teays

Regular Sll.on

Hannah 69, Wahama 68 OT
Monday'• Gamea
Ohio Valley Christian at
Wahama
. Hamlin at Hannan

"

'

OHSAA Boy• s.ctlonll•
DIYIU!n II .
At Soll1h w.t.t.r
Mondly'• Oamea
Meigs v. Jackaon, 7:00 .
'

.Tuelday•e Gam,~~~
Portamouth v. Falrland,'6:15
. Gallla Academy v. VInton Coun·
ty, 8:00.
.

Durango.

Wilcillllday'l Glmea
Jackaon·Meig8

warren v.
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7:00

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Or s1 000 Cash Allowance

.

Frldly'a Glmea
Sou1hem v. Syrnrnee Valley, 6:00
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s1000 Cash Allowance

8Y GARY .CLARII

Girl• .
A,. non..-gue
ALL

Wahama
16-4
Ohio V•lley Christian
12-8
Soulh Gallla
4-18
Hannan
.2·13
Frklay'a o,mea

,.

Up to s2000 Cash Allowanc~ ·.;
s1000-s2000 depending on model
Or 0.9% APR Financing* '

ACSIIouth Reglonel

Ohio Valley Chr\1!1.111 38, Uberty
Chr1stl111 34

R111ular SIIMIII
Wah1111a 51, Hannan 26

*Short-term financing for qualified buyers on most models.

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..,rtsnewsto
· theSu~
nmft·Sintliltl
attti-JOOI,
112·2157 or
175-52M.
"

Wildcats edge
Falcons·in ·QT
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Eastem v. South Ga\1\a-lronton
St. Joe wlnntr, 6:15
Trimble v. Gteen, 8:00
'

POINT PLEASANT
Point Pleasant hit 9-of-10 free
throw attempts in 12 extra
minQtes of play to secure a 5856 triple-overtime win over
Gallia Academy Friday.
The win· was the first boys'
hoops win by the Big Blacks
against the Blue Devils since
joining the SEOAL. It also
moves Point into fifth place in
league play
"The three seniors have
never beaten Gallipolis since
they have been in high school,
so that's big:• said Point coach
R..ichie Blain. "To me, the big
thing is that it puts us at 5-9 in
league play. Considering
where these guys started in
November and where they're
at now, to me is awesome."
The third extra set began at
49-49, but Point quickly
jumped out to a four-point
lead after senior guard J.P.
Simpkins nailed a jumper
from tbe left baseline and a
trio of Gallia Academy
turnovers, the third of which
resulted in a Casey Villars
layup.
As they had throughout the
contest, · the Blue Devils
fought back, this time with a
trey by freshman Andre
Geiger with just under two
minutes remaining.
Point's Joey Loomis then hit'

a pair of charity shots at the
I :20 mark to set the lead at
55-52 before Gallia's Dustin
Deckard nailed a point-blank
shot to close the gap to 55-54.
Loomis responded seconds
later by sticking back an errant
Point jumper to give the Big
Blacks a three-point margin.
With six seconds remaining,
Gallia's Nick Dressel missed a
three-point attempt, and · Nic
Dalton grabbed the rebound
for Point. Dalton then hit the
back half of the double bonus
to put the gam~ out of Gallia
Academy's reach.
Loomis was 6-ot-6 from the
charity stripe in the extra
periods, and scored eight of
his team- high 14 points in the
bonus periods.
Gallia Academy earned the
right to play extra frames after
trailing by seven points early
in the fourth quarter. Baskets
byT.J Hill and Deckard, along
with a pair of missed Big
Black free throws, allowed
David Finney to tie the game
with a trey with 20 seconds
remaining in regulation.
"It's all about defense.," said
Point coach Richie Blain. "I
know that Coach Osborne
works it the same ,way. I felt
we kind of gave it away in regulation. Down the stretch we
made some big mental nus-

PluM ,.. RIVIIS, BJ

·'

8:45

~y'ao.­

Ram.

UNDER PRESSURE -Point Pleasant's Nlc Dalt6n (15) shoots over Gal\ Ia Academy's Cody
·Caldwell (32) as Andre Geiger looks on. (Doug Shipley photo)

River Valley v. Scioto Northwest,
8:00

''

Please ,.. Relders, 84

BY DAN POLCYN

Sheridan 68, Trimble 58
Frontlel '7o; Waterlord 58
Portsmouth 71, AleXIIIlder 52
Sllturdlly'I 'G•IIIM
Trimble at Eastern
Vlntoo Co4nty at Logan ·
Wellslon- at Jackaon

·.. , .,~: l)on"'-Due

each scored 10. OJ. Frazee added
nine.
In the second quarter, the Raiders
got the Warriors lead to within four,
24-20, with 3:53 left in the opening
half on· a Nolan basket and with the
help of a couple of Frazee buckets.
That's when Warren regained control of the contest.
Turnovers helped pace Warren on a
12-1 run that put the Warriors up 3621 with 1:58 left untll halftime.
"We had fought back after being

Bi Blacks
be uddle Blue
Devils in OT

.

Authorities recover bodies

J

CHESHIRE - The Warren boys
basketball team was hoping to return
to Vincent Friday night with a league
championship under their belts, but
they would have to settle for sharing
it.
'
The Warriors defeated River Valley
68-54 to finish with a 13- 1 SEOAL
mark.
It was the final home game of the
season for the Raiders.
Warren opened the game up 8-0
before Raiders' head coach Gene Lay-

ton was forced to call
18 points for the
an early timeout.
Raiders in the first
"We got off to a
quarter as Warren led
little bit of a slow
18-11 going into the
start," said Layton.
second period.
"We gave them some
"We
switched
easy buckets. We
defenses," said Laywere trying someton . "We got into
thing new defensivesomething
we're
ly. We ended up givmore familiar with.
e. Payne
ing up a couple o(
Peck
After that, we settled
easy buckets inside."
down and played
A pair of Eric Nolan free throws pretty good basketball."
broke the skid for River Valley.
Also for River Valley (7 -13, SEOAL
Nolan scored seven of his team high 3-11), Craig Payne and Jeremy Peck

Ohio Dlvle\on

Driver killed.In canal mishap

LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - 1\vo bodies have been
rc:covered ~m the ocean since two small planes on training
flights collided and plunged into the water, killing four people. ·
The body of one man was discovered at about 10 a.m Friday, accorc!ing to the ~oroner's office. Another body had
been found shortly after Thursday afternoon's crash about
· 1,000 feet above the harbor.
. "We believe both men are from 'the same aircrift;• said
U.S. Co~~St Guard Lt. Ctndr. Dan Kane. "Their bodies were
found in the same vicinity."
'
The single-engine planes, a two-seat Ces.sna 152 and a
four-seat Cessna t 72, were fiom the Long Beach Flying
Club. Each was on a training flight and carried an instrUctor
and a student, authorities said.
Keri Chisolm, 16, the daughter of Michael .Chisoun,
whose body was pulled from the water Thursday. said her
father "never took a risk, ever." Chisolm, 56, of Huntington
Beach, a retired assistant fire chief, had been a flying instructor for 20 years,'she said.

BurCH COOPER

OVP SPORTS STAFF

TVC

(AP) -Three vans carrying members
of a Chin7se dan~e troupe crashed on an icy highway Friday m?~rung~ killing at least two people and iqjuring 23,
author,nes satd.
.
Three p~ople ~re li~ted in serious condition Friday
rught, hospttal offictals satd. None of the injuries were life!hreateni;ng, $,ey, said. ¥ost of, the victimq;mglng ..in age ,, .
from 16 to 20, were treated and released.
Capt. Mike Dubee of the Washington State Patrol said
some passengers were ejected from the extended vans, two
of which overturned.
'
., ':
,, '' ' .
"':t:h~ are all .quite traumatized," said Fay Coats, an
admirustrator at one of the hospitals.
The 36 members of the Beijing Academy of Dance were
on a three-week tour that opened in Seattle last week and
was to incl"!de performances in Oregon and California. The
group performed in Spokane on Thursday night.
Most of the dancers were on their first visit to the United
States.The troupe had been traveling with 200 costumes and
eight backdrops.
·
"We're sending officials from our .:onsulate to handle this
sad accident," said Lei Hong, a spokesman with the Chinese
comulate in San Francisco.
The accident happened on a rural highway running
through a wheat field 18 miles south of Ritzville or about
60 miles southwest of Spokane.
'
·

'

ALL

Logan
13-1 14-5
Warren
13-1 14-6
Marietta
10·4 12-7
Gallla Academy
6-6 11-12
A1hens
5·9 9·1 0
Point Pleasant
5-9 . 5-14
River Valley
3·11 7·13
Jackson
H3 4-15
Friday'• Gamn
Point Pleasant 58, Ga\1\a Acade·
. my 583-QT
Warren 68, River Valley 54
Marietta 63, Jackson 44
Logan 70, Athens 49
Slltunmy•• O.mn
Vinton County at Logan
Wellston at Jackson
Marietta at John Marshall

RIT~VILLE,Wash.

i

·

Boy•

8EO

Raiden fall to Warren, 68-54
BY

Prep Hoops

Dancen involved in .aash

MIAMI (AP) -A woman spoke with a 911 operator for
neady three and a half minutes Friday as her car sank into a
canal off the Florida Turnpike. She died before rescue workers could find her.
Tire marks indicate that the car skidded onto the shoulder, turned back onto the road, then spun counterclockwise
in~o the water, which runs parallel to the road, Florida
Highway Patrol Lt. Pat Santangelo said. There is a 50 to 70
foot shoulder separating the street from the canal, near Interstate. 75.
Karla · Gutierrez, 32, of Miramar, dialed 911 from her
BMW at ~:09 a.m. and spoke with an emergency operator
until tht line went dead. Miramar is near Fon Lauderdale.
"My car's sinking;• Gutierrez told the emergency worker.
Several rescue units were dispatched at 5:16a.m:
·:The po~ce o~cers and firefighters were very emotionally mvolve~ m this because we were fighting the clock," San. tangelo satd.
·
pivers found the car with the driver's side rear window
fully open, and the passenger's side rear window partially
open.
"
No one witnessed the acCident and there was no indication .that another car was involved, Santangelo said.

Page 81

ASHTON - A couple of Mason County rivals provided some late-season fireworks on the hardwood Friday, as the Hannan Wildcats .cashed in on 7-of-9 free
throws in overtime to turn awayvisiting Wahama by a 6966 margin.
Ryan .Arrowood connected on 3-of-4 with Dustin Jordan and Rex Holley adding a pair of charity tosses in the
extra period to turn away the White Falcon's fourth quarter comeback bid. Wahama erased at 47-39 Wildcat lead
in the final eight ·minutes of regulation before Hannan
turned deadly from the free thrOw stripe in the overtime
period to secure the win.
The extra session contest was the second for both teams
on the year. Hannan recorded a recent overtime cqnquest
against Buffalo, while Wahama was involved in its second
straight overtime outing of the week following a win over
~itt County on Tuesday.
. The cage victory gives coach Wayne Richardson's Hannan crew a sweep of the ~eason series with the neighboring White Falcons. The Wildcats improved til i0-6 on the
year while coach Lewis Hall's Wahama squad falls to '4-14.
Hannan was able to maintain a lead throughout most of
the 32-minutes outing, as Greg Collins, Arrowood, and
Holley provided, the offensive sparkl for the host team.
Collins finished with a team-high 23 points while
Arrowood added 20 and Holley 18. .
Waham.a countered with the scorin8 ofJeremy Hudnall
and Ryan Roush ill the White falconS prevented Hannan
from putting the game away early. HUdnall finished tied
. for pme-high scoring honon with Collins at 23 marken

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

OVC roughs up Teays Valley
BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

WHITEHALL -·
Ohio
Valley Christian advanced to
the ACSI South Regional
championship for the second
straight season after defeating
Teays Valley Christian 80-6 7
· Friday at Liberty Christian
School.
Adam Holcomb scored 1 t
of his game-high 18 points in
the first quarter as the
Defenders rolled to a 19-11
lead. Holcomb scored the first
basket just two seconds into
the game and followed with
three 3-pointers in the quarter for the Defenders.
OVC pushed its lead to 3625 by halftime with a balanced attack in the second
period.
Holcomb added four more
points in the second, Gabe
Jenkins had four and Brad
Bowman scored four fur the
Defenden.
Ohio Valley Christian (136) opened the third quarter
with an 8-0 run that pushed
its lead to 44-27 and essentially put the game away. The
Defenders blew their lead out
to as amany ill 26 points in

'

Plrr·rreeOVC.BJ

----

TAYLOR'S BIG NIGHT - Ohio Valley Christian junior Dale Ta)'lor (20) scored 17 points as the Defenders posted an 80-67
win over Teays Valley Chrtstlan. (Penny Burleson photo)

----~----·----·--

-· ... -- __ \•

�Page 82 • 6unbap l[imr• -6rntinrl

Defender girls edge Libe
Hobbs converted a turnover
OVP SPORTS EDITOR
into a layup with 2:28 to play.
WHITEHALL Ohio
Tessa Hoggerty hit • key
V.Uey Christian hung for a jumper with 2:21 1ft to put
38-34 victory over Liberty the Defendet$ back on top,
Christian in the semifinals of 35-34. Gooch then droined 3the ACSI South Regional of-4 foul shots in the final
tournoment Friday.
minute to seal the win.
The
Defenders
(12-6)
Overall, OVC hit 10-of-16
played Maranatha Christian in foul shots, inCluding 6-of-8 in
the finals of the regional Sat- the final quorter.
urday for the right to play in
The Eogles were 7-for-14 at
the ACSI store championship the line, ond hit only 2-of-5 in
gome Saturdoy at Cuyahoga the pivotal fourth quorter.
Valley Christian Academy in
Gooch finished with six
Akron.
rebounds, six steals and five
Chelsea Gooch and Alyssa assists. She hit 8-of-9 foul
Zirille combiend for 34 of the shots.
Def~nders 38 points. Gooch
Zirille had seven rebounds.
led with 19, while Zirille
Haggerty finished with two
points, three rebounds and
poured in 15 for OVC.
Ohio Valley Christian led by two assists. 1-lannah Beaver
as many as 12 points in the had two points and two assists.
first half, but managed to hold
Bryana Anderson led all
on to just a five-point edge at scorers with 23 points for Libthe half after being outscored erty Christian. She also had six
13-6 in the second quarter.
rebounds.
Liberty Christian (8-11) cut· ·Kim Wheeler, prior to foulthe gap to 28-25 after three ing out, had five points and
quarters of play following a seven rebounds. ··
grinding third period that saw
Hobbs scored five points
both clubs shoot well below and had six rebounds. Erin
50 percent from the field.
Gretz had five rebounds.
The Eagles hit just 3-of-10
Liberty Christian outrefield goal attempts in the bounded OVC, 35-24, includthird, while GVC connected ing a 14--8 edge on the offenon only 1-of-7 shots.
sive boards.
Liberty Christian. battled
Ohio Valley Christian lost to
back to take a shortlived lead eventual state champion Calin the fourth quarter, pulling vary Christian in the state
ahead 34-33 when Shequallda semifinals last season.

from Pip II
mistakes, a couple of poor
decisions that got them back
· in it, and I think at one point
we were down six in the first
overtime."'
In the first overtime, Gallia
jumped out to a six-point
lead on a stick-back by
Deckard and a layup and four
free throws from Trovis McKinniss at the I :07 mark. However, a pair of Stephen Handley charity shots and a Dalton
trey closed the gap to one
point.
After Dressel split a pair of
free throws, Handley's jumper
from the elbow tied the game
at 47-47, which prompted the
second extra period.
The only Big Black points
in the second overtime came
in a pair of charity shots by
Loomis. Dressel's putback was
the only Gallia Academy's
offense in the second overtipte.
Point capitalized on charity
opportunities throughout the
game, hitting 20-of-27 free
throws.
"We've been hitting them
hard," said Blain. "We're actually spending less time on it,
but we are being more intense
with i~ and it's paying off.
We're trying to adq a little
pressure to it in practice, and
it's paying off."

ovc

from,..BI
the period and extended
the advantage to as many as
28 points in the fourth quarter. .
Teays Valley 1 Christian (811) pulled back to within 13
points when both clubs had
junior !varsity squads "on the
floor late in the fourth.
The Defenders connected
on 29-of-48 field goal
attempts in the game, including 5-of-7 3-pointers, and
knocked down 17-of-28 free
throws.
Conversely, the
OVC
defense limited the Lioni to
26-of-65 shooting front the
fi~ld. Teays Valley Christian
was 8-for-1 0 at the foul line.
In addition to his 18-point
outing, Holcomb had six
rebounds, four auim and two
steals.
Dale Taylor enjoytd a
breakout gante with 17 poil)tl
and four rebounds. Gab•
Jenkins pumped in 14 points,
grabbed a game-high 12
rebounds and had four a11i1t1,

Ga.llia Academy hit 6-of-14
'
free throw attempts.
The Blue Devils committed
23 turnovers in the contest.
"It may have sounded like it
was a good ga111e, but we just
turned the ball over," said
G.Uia Academy · coach Jim
Osborne. "We pride in not
turning the ball over, and we
probably had 25 turnovers
ionight, and that's not acceptable. I pride myself in having
teams that don't make those
kinds of mistakes.
"We played well to get
overtime, ond after that we
just didn't play any good at
aU. We allowed them to be the
winner, but we should have
won it.
"I'm really disappointed in
the discipline of our guys. We
·worked so much of the time
and score, 'Jlnd we.'ve not gotten better at it, we've gotten
worse. We do things that we
have done in practice wrong
and we're doing them in the
game wrong. We've said, 'No,
you can't do that in a game.'
We're not doing that right. ·
"I'm really very frustrated.!
know that the kids .want to
win, but sooner or later . the
kids have to make plays. We
can get them to a spot then
they have got to make plays,"
he added . .
"My fault is obviously that
I've not coached t)lem well
enough for them to win."
PoilU lead by a 23-16 tally
at the half, but they narrowe&lt;;l

BY FRANK CAPEHART
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Brad Bowman, Mike Jenks
and Jay Jenkins scored eight
points each. Bowman had five
rebounds and a game-high six
assists. Jenks had three
rebounds and three assists.
John Polcyn had three
points and Nathan Williams
added two points.
Chris Roberts led the Lions
with 14 points. He also had
three rebou11ds.
Evan Young and James Doss
had 10 points each. Young
. grabbed a team-high nine
rebou11ds. Doss grabbed three
rebounds.
OVC. was scheduled to play
the winner of the winner of
Friday's
other
semifinal
between Maranatha Christian
and Evangel Christian Saturday afternoon ,
The winner of the south
regional earns a berth in the
ACSI nm cha1uplonship
me, which il scheduled for
. curday in Akr&lt;m at Cuyahop Valley Christian Acade-

r.

nl)'.

Ohio VnUey Christian lost
to Temple Baptist of Mansfield in Inn season's ACSistnte
tide game.

'

TIMEOUT - Ohio Valley Christian head coach Chip Haggerty
discusses strategy with his ballclub during Friday's ACSI South
Regional semifinal against Liberty Christian. The Defenders
won 38-34 to earn a berth in the regional final, which was
played Saturday at Whitehall. (Andrew Carter photo)

the Point lead to 30-28 by the
third buzzer.
Handley followed Loomis
with 12 points. Villars scored
11.
Deckard finished with 14
points to lead the Blue Devils.
Finney added 10, and Geiger
scored nine on a trio of threepointers. Finney grabbed 10
of the team's 34 rebounds.
Dressel tallied five assists for
Gallipolis.
Gallia Academy heads into
sectional play next week
against Vinton County on
Tuesday. The Blue Devils
close regular-seasoa play at 812 overall and 6-8 in the
SEOAL, which .allows them
to finish fourth in the conference,
The Blue Devils have lost
their last four games going
into the tournament.
"If we don't play any better
than that, we'll pack it up and
play in the s~ring," said
Osborne. "I know these guys,
they've .U played on winning
teams in the past. I know
they're very frustrated, but
again, somewhere along the
line they've got to cake some
responsibility for not making
mental mistakes or physical
mistakes."
..
The Big Blacks improve to
5-9 in the SEOAL and 5-14

Sunday; February 18,2001

overall. Blain commented on
his team's steady improvement.
"If people come and watch
these kids play and can't see
that they are totally opposite
ends of the spectrum compared to where they were the
first half of the season, there's
so.mething wrong. These guys
have worked, and they are
starting to see the benefits of
hard work,". said Blain.
Osborne also commented
on the changing state of basketb.U in Point Pleasant. ··
•: I thought Point Pleasant,
as the season has gone· for
them, they have goite.n better.
Richie's done a nice job, and
in the end, they played hard
enough to win the gome," he
said.
Point will play two . more
West Virgini:i opponents (at
Roane County and at Ripley)
before playing host r6 Hurricane on Mar. 2 in sectional
tournament action'.

ASHTON
Wahama
breezed to a 51-26 win over
Hannan Friday to conclude a
banner 16-4 regular season
slate.
Behind an opening frome
scoring blitz, the White Falcons a big 20-3 advantage that
pretty well
decided the
outcome
early as all
five starters
scored.
The Lady
Wildcats
came bac~ a
bit m the
'-"""'""'-' ....__.. second quarter as bench
players saw plenty of action. At
halftime, Wahama still. held a
sizeable 27-13 lead.
After adding one to th.e
leading margin during· the
third period,Wahama forged a
run early in the final period.
Natalie Roush nailed · a 3pointer and Julia Hoffman,
Kathy Shiltz . and Michelle
Shiltz each hit a basket for a
47-24 margin.
The Lady Wildcats only collected three free throws down
the stretch . .
Seventeen players shared· in
the scoring, 11 for Wahama
and six for Hannan.
Kat&gt; Sayre·led Wahama with
a game-high 12 point$, while
Jessica Bias headed the Han-

...,.

nan list with 11 points.
Hoffman and Blessing each
tossed in six points in limited
action . Roush collected five,
while Michelle Shiltz and
Kathy Shilrz had four apiece.
Nichole Ohlinger, Jessic a
Young and Kendra G.Uagher
had four each. Katie Hendrickson and Jennifer Flowers
had one each.
Behind Bias for Hannan,
Rachel Litderon netted six
points. Heather Miles canned
four, while Jennifer Ball and
Ashley Dye had two · apiece.
Racine Gue had one point.
Bias had 15 rebounds for
the Lady Cats . Littleton
grabbed six. Hannan had 41
total rebounds.
Ball blocked three shots and
Mile had three steals.
For Wahama, Michelle
Shtltz and Blessing led the
White Falcons with 12 and II
rebounds, respectively. Eight
other Falcons shared in the
team total of 49.
Roush
and
Hoffman
recorded five and four steals,
respectively, to lead the team,
which had a total of 19. Blessing dished out three assists.
. Both teams head into sectional action this week. The
White Falcons have a bye on
Wednesday, and will meet the
winner of the Wirt CountyParkersburg Catholic Satrurday.
,
Hanna!) plays Huntington
St. Joe Wednesday at Winfield.

ACI18oultl .........
AIColumbue
Ohio VIlli, 10, TNp Volley 17
11/C
II 14 10 32 - 87
ovc
19 17 10 23 - 80
l1/C(IH)-BrandOnBaacom21-1 5
Alex Convtrae t o-o 2, Jamu Don 2 1-i
5, Joel Lewll 1 0.0 2. Jolin RlcllaodiOn 1 I ·
2 3, John Smiley 1 2·2 • . Evon Young 4 2·
2 10, llm Goode 3 0.0 8, COrio Robe~s 6
2·3 14, Cheyne Bamhouae 0 Q.O o, Joe
Ashley 2 0.0 4. Tol&amp;ll 26 8· 10 67.
OVC 113-11) - Jay Jenklno 1 5·7 8
Adam Hok:omb 7 2·2 18, Ga~ Jenklna
0·1 14, Dale Taylor85-12 17, Nathan Bow·
man 0 0·0 0, John PolCyn 0 3-4 3, Mike
Janka 4 0-D 8, Brad Bowman 3 2·2 8
Nathan Williams 1 o-o 2, Amlt Agrawal 0 o~
0 0. Tol&amp;ls 29 17-28 80.
3·polnl goals-11/C 7 (Doll 3. Gooele.
Roberts 2). OVC 5 (Holcomb 4, Jenklno).
Rebounda-11/C 32 (Young 9), OVC 37
(G . Jenklna 12), Asslsto-TVC 4. OVC 19
(B. Bowman 6, Holcomb, G . Jenkins 4) .
Steals-TVC 5, OVC 5 (Holcomb 2) .
Tumover:s-TVC 9. OVC 16.

7

Regular S111on
Pt. Pl1111nt 1!11, Galli• 5e 3-0T
GA 11 5 12 10 9 2 7 - 56
pp 10 13 7 8 s 2 9 - 58
Gallla Academy (8·12. SEOAL 6·8) Andre Geiger 3 0.0 9, Travis McKinnrss 2
4·5 8, Nick Dressel 2 1·2 6, Donnie John·
s:on 0 0.0 0, Oustln Deckard 7 0·4 14, T.J.
Hill 2 1·3 5 , COdy Caldwell 2 o-o 4, Oat.~id
Finney 4 0-Q 10, Totals 22 6-14 56.
Polnl Pleasanl (!·14, SEOAL 5·9) Nrc Dalton 1 3-4 6, Casey VIllars 5 1·3 11 ,
Stephen Handley 3 6-6 12, T.J. Oeshuk 3
3·5 9, J.P. Simpkins 2 1·2 8 , Joey Loomis
4 6·7 14, Eric Frye 0 o-o o. Jerry StOver a
0·0 0. Totals 18 20·27 58.
. 3-polnt goals-Gallla 6 (Gaiger 3,
F1nney 2, Dressel), Point 2 (Dation ,VII·
Iars).
.
JV-Gallia 53, Point 45 .
G-Ayan Hudson 17, · Cole Haggerty
10. PP-Ashley Pyles 10, Hunter Roush
10.

WirtH 811 Alver V.IIIJ U
Warren
18 16 18 14 - 61!
RlvarValley 11 11 15 17 - 54
warren (14-8, SEOAL 13·1) - Curt
Morris 5 3-8 20, Derek Cole 0 0.0 O, CMa
Hendrick 0 1·2 1, Aaron Coffman 3.0-o ?,
Matt Nuzum 2 0.0 4, Brad Venhl.m 1 3--3 5,
Justin Gum 0 0.0 0, Jeremy ~kerton 4 0·
1 8, Travts Olklm 4 4-4 12, Issac Ward 5'1·
5 11. Tolels 24 15·23 68.
River Valley (7·13, SEOAL 3-11) Craig Payne 4 1·3 10, Dustin Glbb o o-o O,
Dakola Dawett 0 0.0 o, Enc Nolan 6 5-8
18, Jon Mollohan o 0·0 o, Brandon
Mhchem 1 0-D 3, Blake Marcum 0 0-D 0,
D.J. Frazee 3 2·2 9, Scolt Pavne 1 2·2 4,
Clark Walker (I O.Q 0, Forrest ElllottO 0.0 0.
Jeremy Peck 4 2·510. Totals 1912·18 54.
3·polnl goals-Warren 5 (Morris 4, CoH·
man), RV 4 (C. Payne, Nolan, Mitchem,
Frazee).
JV-Warren 60, River Valley 46.
W-een Gumm 30. RV-Forrest Elliott
14.

H1nnen &amp;e, Wlh•m•ll OT

Wahama
9 13 17 19 7 - Ge
Hannan
14 14 19 11 11 - 69
. Wahama (•·1o4~-Smlth 2 0-D 5, Roulh
4 6·7 18, Huc:lnal 8 2·2 23, Parsons 4 0.0
81 Hankinson 1 O.CJ 2, Connoly 1 0.0 2,
McKinney 3 2·3 8, Bamltz 0 2·2 2. Totals
23 12·14 66.
Hannan (10-8)- Henry 0 1-3 1. Col!lns
8 1·5 23, Holey 7 4·7 18, Jorden 2 2·2 7,
Powell o 0-9 0, Arrowood 8 4-8 20. Totals
25 12·23 60.

3-polnt gotl&amp;-wahama &amp;(Hudnall 5.
jRoush 2, Smith) Hanna(\-7 (Colltns 6, Jor·
.dati).
·
Olrt1

ACIIIouth Regional
At Columbul

Ohio V.lley 31, Liberty 34
OVC
15
8
5 10 - 38
Uberty
5 13
7 9 - 34
OVC (12·6)- Kelsey Salisbury o 0·0 0,
Hallie Carter 0 o-o 0, Hannah Beaver 1 0·
0 2, Tessa Haggerty 1 0·0 2, Mlttra
Eemoolll ,o 0.0 o. Alraoa Zlrtlle 6 2-1 15,
Chelsea Gooch 5 8·9 19. Totals 13 10·18
36.
Uberty (8·11)- Ton Pyles 0 0·1 0, Ertn
Gretz 0 0-D 0, Kim Wheeler 2 1·2 5, Anna
Vogt 0 1·2 1, Heather Malloy 0 0.0 0, Shllt
quallda 2 0·2 5, Bryana Anderson 9 5·7 23,
Totalo 13 7·14 34.
3-polnl goals-DVC 2 (Zirtlle. Gooch),
Liberty 1 (HobbS). Aebounds-QVC 24
(tlnlle 7, Gooch 8), Uberty 35 (Wheeler 7,
Hobbs, Anderson 8). Aaaiata-OVC 9
(Gooch 5). llbtrty 5. Sleali-OVC 8
(Gooch 6), Llbe~y 9. Tomovera-OVC 17,
Llboni' 22.
·

BAnLE UNDER THE BOARDS- Po.lnt
' Joey Loomis
{43) battles Gallia's David Finney {42) for the ball during the
Big Blacks 58-56 triple overtime win Friday. {Doug Shipley)

1997 HONDA

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'

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, .wv

&amp;unbn!' ~imrlt -&amp;rnlinrl • Page 83

Prep Scoreboard

Falcons cage Wildcats

BY ANDREW CARTER

Rivals

Sunday, February 18,2001

Pomeroy· Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

,

,
·
:

Ohio High School Boyo Booktlblll
Fridoy'o R-Ill
Akr. Garliald 75, Akr. Ea1t 81
Akr. SVSM 73, Hudoon WRA 46
Arcl"bold 70, Oel1&amp; 49
Mnglon 92, Arcadia 51
Aohland 66, Manatleld Mlldlson 58
Ashtabula HlrbOr 76, Andover Pytnltun·
1ng Valley e 1
Ashville Teays Valley 74, Lancaster Fair·
field Union 61
AuoUntown Fl1ch 87, Youngs. Ursuline 37
Avon lake 64, Rool&lt;y RIVIr 55
Barberton 84, Ravenna 42
Bolavll63, Blllhel Tale 52
Bay VIllage Bay 80; Fairview Park
Fa1Mew52 ·
Buviforaak 58. Kettering Felrmoni41
- . . 45, Pa/1111 Nonnandy 40
- . . Chlntl56, Etyrio &lt;;all\. 50
Bliltwa
Norwalk $1
Bti-Cittrtorl&lt; 83, Mtdlllo"Buclolye 48
Btlmonl UniOn Locol 50, Blmtovllle-48
Btloll W. Branch 85, Conal Fulton NW 82
Balpra 52, Btverty Fl. Frya 55

eo,

llltea 78, N. Royalton 73
Hebron LakeWOOd 100, London 44
ValleyS. 67
Bt&gt;day 5 8 , - Plllnt 49
Hollend Sprtng. 51 , Sylvlnil Soulhvtow Tol. Bowsher B3, Tol. Cent. Cath. 56
Blanchat.- M, Jamettown GrMr'IIVIew 39
Tol. Maumee Volley 66. Oregon Slrllell 53
4S
HudiOr'l 79, Kent Rooaet.~elt fW
Tol. Sco~ 91 , Tol. Woodward 62
llloom.CIITOII60, Clrcle.;llt 39
lfl(ilpendence 6A, Gates Mills Gilmour 47
Tol. Stan 50, Tol. Rogers 46
Bluffton 57, Uma T•"l&gt;&gt;e Christian 50
Jefferson 65, Ashtabula 64
· Tol. Waite 66, Tot. St. Francis 53
Bowling Green 57, Whitehouse Anthony
Jeromesville Hillsdale 58, Oallon 54
Tot. Whitmer 81, Lorain Southview 78, OT
Wayne 4B
Kalida 52, Continental 41
Tontogany Otsego 82, Genoa 54
BrtstoiYIIIe B!lstol 92, Thompson LOOgeKettering Alter 63. Cln. McNicholat45
Trotwood-Madison 75, Piqua 53
montee
Klnsmah Badger 82, Youngs . Uberty 49
Troy CMstlan sg, Xenia Christian 57
Brooklyn 75. Beachwood 52
Llncaster Flther Cath. so, Heath 42
Upper Ar1ington 71, Olentangy 55
Bryan 63, Metamora Evergreen 54
Lebanon 46, Kings Mils Kings -iS
Uotane 79. Spnng. NW 62
Bucyrut Wynlord 59, New Washington
Llbeny Union 58, Sugar Grove Bema
van Wert 71 , Defiance 64
Buckeye Cent. 47
Union 49
Van Wan Uncolnvlaw 59, Allen E. 48
Campben Memorial 63, Warren JFK 57
Lima Christian 89, Bucyrus 38
Versailles 56, Casstown Miami E. 53
Can. McKinley 54. Cie. E. Tech 46
lima Perry 85. McGuffey Upper Scioto Vincent Warren 68 , Cheshire River Valley
Can. S. 77, CBrrollton 137
Valley61 , OT
54
Can. "nmi&lt;en 76, Youngs. Chaney 51
Uma Shawnee 68, CeUna 65
W. Chester Lakota W. 51 , Miilord 42
C111na1
Winchester 83,
AmandaUma Sr. 89, Vandal6a Butler 59
W. JeHeraon 53, Grandview 45
Ciearcreek 61
lodl Clover1eaf 57 . Aichflekl Revere 48
W. Uberty·Salem 43, lewistown Indian
Canlleld 71, Salem 50
logan 70, Athens 49
Lake 41
Car11sle 63, Eaton 60
Logan Elm 58, Cola. HamWton Twp. 3.7
Wadsworth 81 , Copley 58
Centerburg 80, Howa~ East Knox 59
lorain Admiral King 64 , Fremont Ross 50
Wapakoneta 55, St. Marys Memorial 49
Centerville 65, Hubert Ht&amp;. Wayrlf! 52
Lordstown 68, Bloomfield 42
Warren Champion 71, Leavlnsburg
Chardon NDCL 39. Pall!la Padua 38. OT
Louisville 74, Akr. Spring. 47
LaBrae 62, OT
Chesapeake 90, s. Poin1 55
Loulsvme St. Thomas Aquinas 51 , Cuya·
Warren Harding 72. Can. GlenQak 49
Chillicothe Humlngton Ross 67, Franktort
hoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 49
Washington C.H. 89, Plain City Jonathan
Adena 44
Lowellville 60, N. Jackson Jackson·Mllton
Alder 57
Chillicothe Unloto 80, Piketon 44
!7
Waynesville 66, Mid. Christian 38
Chillicothe Zane Trace 45 , Bainbridge
Lucas 87, N. Robinson Col. Crawford 68
Wellington 76.~ Keystone 54
Paint Valley 36
lyndhurst Brush 67 , Mayfield 38
Westerville N. 48 , Gahanna 44
Clrt Aiken 60, Cln. Walnut Hills 27
Magnolia Sandy Valley 78, Can. Heritage
Wester-~ille S. 61 , Hilliard Davidson 49
Cln. CQuntry Day 62, New Mlaml45
Christian 47
·
Westlake 55, N. Olmsted 49
Cin. Elder 67, Cln . St. Xavier 62 , OT
Malvern 67 , W. lafayene Ridgewood 63
Wheelersburg 76, Lucasville Valley 40 .
Cln . Flnneytown ?:6, Wyoming 74
Manchester 71 , Latham Western 55
Whltehaii·Yearling 66 , Pataskala Walkins
Cln. Hills Christian Academy 56, Sl.
Mansfield Sr. 86, Ma~on Harding 58
Memorial 52
Bemard 38
Mantua Cre.stwOOd 68, Mogadore Field
Willard 54 , Upper Sandus~y 25
Cln . Indian Hlll63, Cln: Taylor 51
59
Williamsburg 70, Felicity-Franklin 62
Cln. Loveland 68, Wilmington 57
Ma rl ena 63, Jackson 44
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 58, Franklin
Cin. Madeira 50, Reading 49
Marion Elgin 60, Marion River Valley 48
Furnace Green 41
Cln. Mariemont 56, Deer Park 41
Mar19n Pleasant 76 , MI. Gilead 40
Windham 41 , Atwater Waterloo 40
Cln. Moeller 57, Cln. La Salle 51
Mason 65. Cln. Nonhwest 55
Wooster Triway 89, Sullivan Black River
,Cin. North College Hill 87, Lockland 48
Massillon Jackson 86, Uniontown Lake
45
Cln. Princeton 61, Cln. Oak Hills 59
34
Wonh!ngton Christian 79 , U~ca 73, 20T
Cin . Purcell Marian 55, Hamilton Badin 48
Massillon Perry 72, Wooster 50
Worthington Kilbourne 57 , Groveport 48
Cin. Roger Bacon 55, Day. Chaminade·
Massillon Tuslaw 82, Kidron Cent. Chr. 66
Yellow Springs 92, Miami Valley 79
Julienne 46
Maumee 89, Rossford 28
·
Youngs. Boardman 51, Youngs. Mooney
Cin. SummH Country Day 60, Cln. Land·
McAnhur VInton County 75, Stewart Fed·
47
mark 49
oral Hocking 50
Youngs. Wilson 77, Cle. Uncoln·Wesl 73
Cln. Western Hills 91, Mt. Healthy 61
McDonald 65, VIenna Mathews 47
Zanesville 60, Cambridge 55
•
Cin. Winton WOOds 68, Harrison 44
Mechanicsburg 67 , Ridgeway Ridgemont
Cln. Wllhrow 58, Cln. Tah 45
56
Circleville Logar1 Elm sa, Cols. Hamilton
Medina 53, Br\mswlck 51
Ohla High School Glrll Basketball
Twp. 37
Mentor Lake Calh. 76, Parma Holy Name
Frldly'l AIIUIII
Cle. Benedictine 78, Cia. Collinwood eo
54
Burton BerKshire 34, Kirtland 29
Cle. Cent. Celh. 71. Garfi&lt;lld HIS. Trinity
Middletown 64, Cln . Sycamore 44
Cheste~and W. Geauga 59, Aurora 51
35
.
Mld&lt;lelown Fenwick 67, Franklin 47
Mlddlerle:ld Cardinal 57, Orwell Grand Val·
Cte. Glen~Jtlle 83, Youngs. Rayan 56
Middletown Madison 55, Day. Oekwood
ley 52
Cle. Hts. 70, LakewooO 59
53
Newbury 42, Gates Mills Hawken 39
Cle. Hts.lu1heran E. 61, Cortland Maple·
Milford Center Fairbanks 73, Waynes·
Ndr1h Coast Christian 50, Elyria Open
wood 31
1leld·Goshen 71
Door -iS
Cle. Shaw 72, Massillon Washington 54
Millersburg W. Holmes 48, Loudont.~llle
Orange 50, Wickliffe 48
Clermont Nonhaastem 82, Mt. Orab
41, OT
Perry 52, Chagrin Fans 34
Western Brown 66
Milton-Union 51, Benjamin Logan 46
Streetsboro 66, Hudsol) WRA 41
Collins Westem Reserve 59, Ashland
Minerva 81, Alliance Mar1ington 56
Tol. Baptist 42 , Heritage Christian 35
Maplelon 44
Minster 88, Rocktord Pari&lt;way 79, 20T
Cols. Academy 69. Cols. Wellington SB
Montpelier 57, Llbeny Canter 56, OT
Cols. Beechcroft 71, Cofs. Eastmoor 61
' Morral Ridgedale 65, Cardlngton·Lincoln
W.Va. Prep Baeketball Scores
Co{s. DeSales 60, Cols. Ready 57
52
Friday's reaultt
Cot's. Hariley 54, Zanesville Rosecrans
Mt. Vernon 56, Sunbury Big Walnut 45
Gina
52
N. Can. Hoover 60, Alllanoe 31
Braxton County 63, Richwood 33
Cols. St. Cha~es ee, Newark Cath. 53
N. Lima S. Range 80, Berlin Center West·
Bridgeport 63, South Harnson 30
Cots. Tree of Ule 73, Cots. Wor1d Harvest
em Reserve 40
,
Buffalo 56, Van 31
53
N. Ridgeville 39, Middleburg Hts. Midpark
Doddridge County 63, Uberty Harrison 50
Cots. Watterson 80, Cola. Centennial 29
34 .
East Hardy 59, Tygans Valley 51
Columbia 52, Richmond Hts. 50
New Albany 51. Millersport 46, OT .
Fainnont Senior 91 , Preston 40
Columbiana 70, Salineville Souttlem 43
New Knoxville 69, New Bremen 68 New
Franldon 51, Kayser 35
Columbiana Crestview 73, Leetonia 58
Lebanon Dixie 72, Preble Shawnee 62
George Washington 79, Herbert Hoover
Columbus Gro~o~e 68, Spencerville 62
New Matamoras Frontier 70, Watertord
39
Conneaut 74, Painesville Harvey 54
58
Grace ~hristlan 55, Greater Beckley
COnvoy Crestview 72, Ada 87
New Middletown Spring. 61, Mineral
Christian 49
Cortland Lakevtew oM, Brookfleki 28
Ridge 47
Grafton 56. Philip Bartour 36
Coshocton 46, UhrlchsviUe Claymopt 43
Newark 47, Pickerington 45, OT
Hamlin 49, Cross Lanes Christian 44
Crestview 49, Norwalk St. Paul 40
Niles 90, Warren Howland 54
Hampshire 92, Musselman 36
Cuyahoga His. 43, Rool&lt;y River Lutheran
Nordonla 62. Twinsburg 52
Independence 48, Marsh Fork 42
W. :¥l
Northside Christian 51, Licking County
James Monroe 73, Liberty Raleigh 59
Danville 55, Johnstown--Monroe 83 ·
CMsttan 39
Jefferson 60, Mercersburg Academy, Pa.
38
.
Day. Belmont 78, Day. Patterson ss
Norton 68, M&amp;dlna Highland 39 .
Day. Carioh ?4, Trenton Edgewo~ SS
Oberlin Flrelands 64, Sheffield Brookside
Meadow Bridge 49, Gauley Bridge 23
Day. Col. WMe 81, Day. Meac&gt;owdole.54
61 , 20T ,
Mount V!ew 49, Big Creek 29
1
~ Day. Dunbar 79, Cay. St1Vefl72
Ol'ltarlo 92, Crestline 53
Parkersburg Catholic 59, Magnolia 51
Day. Noohmont 7.4, Troy 83
Oregon Clay 82, Sandusky 73
Parkersburg South 63, Tucker Counry 54
Day. Norlllrldge 53. BollbfOolc 50 ·
Orrv!lle 66, Vermilion 53
Petersburg 54, Moorefield 42
Day. Oakwood 55, Mlddleto~ Madison
Ottawa Hills 53, Tol. C~rlstlan 48
Pocahontas. County 68, Webster Counry
53
'
Ottawa·Giandort 59, Elida 53, OT
28
Day. Stebbins 72, W. ea'rrollton 58
Oxford Talawanda 68, Lemon-Monroe 44
Ripley 40, RavenswoOd 31
Delaware 64, Cola. Franldln Htl. 43
Pandora-Gilboa 61, Van Buren 42
Scotl61, Charleston Catholic 41
Delaware Buckeye \IIUay 84, Richwood
Peebles 68, Seaman N. Adams 56
Tolsia 51, Chapmanville 30
N. Union 46
Plymouth 57, New London 55
Valley Wetzel 61 , MOrgantown Trinity 13
Delaware Christian 00, Sheklnah Chrtsl·
Poitlt Pleasant (W.Va.) 58, Gallipolis Gal·
Wahama 51, Hannan 26
lin 77
~
lla 56, 30T
Boya
Delphos Jefferson 50, Pautdlng 46
Poland 55, Struthers 49
Bellaire St. Johns, Ohio 70, Bishop Don·
Delpl&gt;os St. John's 54, st. Henry 4t
Portsmouth 71, Albany Alexander 51
ahue 67
Dover SO, New Philadelphia 48, OT
Ponsmouth Clay 67, Beaver Eastem 65
Berkeley Spr1ngs 78, Paw Paw 54
DubNn Coffman 58, Grove City 47 .,
Portsmouth E. 83, Ironton St. Joseph 58
Bluefield 62, Tug Valley 41
·
·e. Can. 53. Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 52
Portsmouth Notre Dame 76, Glenwood
Buffalo 68, Van 52
E. Llverpool71, Wheeling {W.Va.) Park 64
New Boston 65
Burch a4, Guyan Valley 65
Elmore Woodmore 58, Pemberville East·
Ravenna SE 84, Streetsboro 52
Cameron 79, Beallsville , Ohio 68
wood 54
Reynoldsburg 67, Dublin Scioto 65, 01:'
Clay-Battelle 87, Notre Dame 61
Elyria 73, Mentor 72, OT
. Richmond Dale SE 73, Williamsport
East llt.~erpool , Ohio 71, Wheeling Park
Elyria Open Ooor 62, North Coast Chr. 38
Westfall 37 ·
64
Enon Greenan 64, Spring. Shawnee .60,
Russia 781 .Botklns 71, OT
Fallt1 Christian 57 , Calvary Chrlstlan. Md
OT
S. Webster 87, Minford 73
39
~uclld 62, Parma Valley Forge 47
Sarahsville Shenandoah 62, Old Wash·
Greater Beckley Christian 97, Grace
Findlay 77, Foalona "(4
lnglon Buckeye Trail 35
Christian 64
Findlay Llbarty-Benton 63, Leipsic 38
Sebring 57, lisbon 41
Hannan 69, Wahama 66
Foelorll Sl. Wandetln 68, Bloomdale EIIJI·
Shadyside 58, Woodsfield Monroe Cent.
Jefferson 58, Hedgesville 53
41
.
wood 67
John Marshall 59, Fairmont Senior 67, OT
Frederick1own eo, Johnstown Northridge
Shaker His. 75, Clo. Sl. lgna(lus 67
Mar.~h Fori&lt; 73. Liberty Raleigh 54
58
Shelby 51, Gallon 50
Martinsburg 84, Musselman 54
. Ft. Loramie 59, Jackson Center 44
•
Sidney 71, Greenville 60
Moun1 View 65, Big Creek 4ll
Ft. Recovery 69, Coldwater 58
Sidney Fairlawn n, Houston 89
Nitro 86, Huntington 66
GaliQWBy Weatlarid 70, Lancaster 65 ·~
Slclney Lehman 75. llpp City llppecanoe
Oak Hill74, Nicholas County 56
Ga~leld His. 81, Perms 54
60
Partcersburg 68, Riverside 61
Geneva 62, Asl\tabull Edgewood 49 ·
Southington Chalker 58, Ashlal&gt;uia Sis.
PlkeVIew 66, Shady Sprtng 68
Germantown Valley VIew 65, Brookville
John &amp; Paul31
Poca ss, Sissonville 42 ·
82
Spring. Cath. Cent. 72, St. Parts Graham
Polnt Pleasant 58, Gallipolis, Ohio 58
Gibsonburg 54, Kanoas LakOII 45
Richwood 83, Greenbriar West 60
.50
Girard 48, Hubbaod 40
Spring. Kenton Ridge 47, Bellefontaine
St. Jooeph 90. Duval 49
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 61, Braaviiie
42
Sherman 61, Chapmanville 52
Meadolll&gt;rook 56
Sprtng. NE 63, NowCa~llle Tecumseh 41
South Charleston 76, Capital 66
Goshen 52, LIHie Miami 50 ·
Spnng. S. 67, Spring. N. 60
Southern Garrett, Md. 59, Keyser 54
Granville 77, Summit Slatlon Llddng Hta.
SpnngbOro 7B, Miamisburg 50
Spring Valley 64, George Wa~hlnglon 60
Stow 50. Cuyahoga Falls 37
Tolsla 75. Wayne 47
50
Greenllalel McClain 55, Leelbutg Fairfield
Str&amp;sburg·Frenklln 83, Berlin HUanct 52
Valley Fayette 62, Fayetteville 48
48
Slrongsvllle 7~. BreckMie 67
Westrnar, Md. 80, Frankfort 67
Greenwich S. Cent. 83, Monroeville 59
Sycamore Mohawk 69, New Rlegel64
Wheeling Cantral75. Oak Glen 69
Hamlllon 66, liberty Twp. Lakota E. 82,
Sylvania Nonhview 84, Perrysburg 50
Winfield 81, Harts 57
20T
'
Tellmadgo '82. Green 43
· Woodrow Wilson 73, Greenbrier East 57
Thomas Worthlnglon 82, Chll l~olhe 45
Wyoming East 78, Summers County 65
Hamlllon Rooe 62, Norwood 54
ThOrnville Sheridan 68, Glouster Trimble
Hamler Patrk:k Harwy 59, Wauseon 54,
OT
58
llftln Columbian 88, Bucyrus 55
Hanowu1on United 74, E. Palestine 64
llpp City Bethel 71, W. Alexandria Twin
Havllancl Wayne Trace ~. AniYMrp 38

Red Wings double up BlueJackets, 4-2
DETROIT (AP) _:. The first 22 games at home
Detroit !ted Wings are not
While the Red Wings have
· unbeatable at home, they're experiehced a turnaround at
· jUst playing like it.
home, Kozlov did something
Vyacheslav J(ozlov scored he hadn't since Dec. 10.
twice as the' Red Wings beat
He scored a goal.
"I feel very good," Kozlov
Columbus 4-2 Ftiday night, .
extending their home-win- said. "that was my longest
ning streak to six games and srreak with no goals.... 1 didn't
. their unbeaten streak in Joe try to put extra pressure on
Louis Arena tO 10 games:
· myself. I just play the galne
"We've been playing a lot and tty to have fun."
.
more methodical or less coreYzerinan, who had an assist,
less," Detroit's Steve Yzerman was one . of the many Red
said . ."We're not making as Wings pleased -to sec Koz!ov's
many mistakes, not turning · score after being a healthy
the puck over. We're not giv- scratch in four of the previous
ing away goals or giving away seven games.
easy chances.
"He's had a tough time
"For awhile there, we were being in and out of the linespotting teams the lead and we up," Yzerman said. "He's
would crY to get it back and always scored for us; he's kind
we weren't able to do that at of a streaky scorer. He's a quiet
guy who is very professional
the start."
Detroit won just nine of its and comes to work every day

no matter if he's playing or
qat.
"Everybody felt for him
over the last month or so. I
knew it was j1,1st a matter of
time before they started to go
in for him."
Detroit's Chris Osgood
made 16 saves, while Columbus' Marc Denis stopped 35
shots.
the Red Wings were only
1-of-5 on the power play, but
they wore down Columbu s
when they had a man advantage.
Kozlov scored the first goal
midway through the second
period when he held the puck
behiud the net, faked a pass up
the boards, then attacked the
net.
. "When 1 went to the net.
they didn 't expect that,"
Kozlov said . "That was a great

play by ·· Marrin Lapointe
because he rook the P.efensemen away from the front of
the net.''
• Bre~tdan Shanahan, playing
his 1,OOOth career game, gave
the Red Wings a 2-0 lead late
in the second with a powerplay goal that fluttered past
Denis .
Quint
ended
Deron
Detroit's hopes RJr a shutout
with" a power-play goal 2:09
into the third peri od.
·
Kozlov gaw the Red Wings
a 3-1 lead on a goal- mouth
scramble with 8: 56 left.
Steve · Ht:inze scored . :1
power-play go,ll -with 1:35 left
to pull Columbus within a
goal, but Detroit's Darren
McCarty scored into an
empty net with 17.8 seconds
left.

EKlY
SPECIAl
Ae
CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

GENE JoHNsoN
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

•

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1996 Fora XLT 4x4

.,

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Sahara

" V~ Englne,Air'condltloner

1998 Chev Venture

Van ·Ext ··· · ·

zooo Honaa Civic

..
1999 Buick LeSabre

�Sunday, February 18,2001
'

Pomeroy • Mldd.leport • Gelllpolle, Ohio • Point PIHUnt, WV

Page 84 • 6unbap U::lmr• ·6rntind

Sunday, February 18, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Tod

OHIO PREP NOTEBOOK

Beutel,

Most coaches don't last 500 games. Almost none chalk up 400
victories.

Bob Beutel hit both of those figures on the some day.
The fustlake North coach ran his record to 400-100 with a
72-51 victory Saturday afternoon over Painesville Riverside. It
gave the Rangers their third straight unbeaten season in the
Premier Athletic League.
Beutel has been in charge of the North program for the Last
2l .seasons.
·
Meanwhile, Steve Williman has guided Findlay Liberty-Benton to a 204-27 record during the last decade including this
year\ 18-0 mark. Williman reached his 300th career victory
Saturday with a 61-46 aecision over Bluffton.
.Williman is 264-80 at Liberty-Benton and 300-151 overall.
·GIRLS AND GOALS: Without a senior on the roster and
after two straight losing seasons, Lexington rebounded to win
its ·conference and go 15-3; Columbus Brookhaven won its
eighth City League title in nine years - losing three league
games in that span - with a 64-40 beating of Independence;
New Albany defcatedt Baltimore Liberty-Union 63-37 to capture the first league basketball championship in school history;
one day after setting the career record at Pomeroy Meigs with
1,258 points, Amber Vining set the single-game mark with 49
points; Athens' Liz Howerth scored 37 points to set a school
record in a game against Chillicothe; and Jessie Fackler scored
34 points - to top 1,000 for her career - and had 15
rebounds in Bellville Clear Fork's 62-49 victory over Ontario.
BOYS' BASKETS: Jeff Thiel ran his total to 1,407 points to
become unbeaten Morral Ridgedale's career scoring leader,
surpassing Dan Weston (1968c71);Randy Nelson set Hemlock

Hannan Trace teams win
in junior high tourney
MERCERVILLE - Han- in the other semifinal.
nan Trace's girls and 8th grade
In the seventh grade boys
boys teams advanced in the game, Southwestern knocked
first round of the Gallia offVinton, 34-3). Matt Elliott
County J.unior High Tourna- and j. W. Sheets had 10 points
ment.
each to lead the Highlanders.
The Harman Trace girls
Bryce Nichols · led the
defeated Southwestern 37-21 Tigers with 17 points.
Thursday to earn a berth in
Southwestern faced Hannan
Saturday's semifinals against Trace in one semifinal SaturBidwell-Porter.
day, while · Kyger Creek and
Kyger Creek and Vinton Sidwell-Porter played in the
played in the other semifinal. · other semifinal.
Jessica Watson led the WildAll championship games are
cats with 11 points. Julia . scheduled for Thursday ar
Gwinn and Stacie Fellure each South Gallia· High School. .
. o1m1 co. Jr. High Toum-nt
had eight·points, ·
Megan Spears scored 11
Thuroday'o Oomn
points and Sara Stanley had six

Hannan Trace

Cleveland

llman hit career miletones

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

J

'

'

37?M:,~thwestem 21

points for the Highlanders.
7th Orlda Boyo
.
Southweatem 34, VInton 31
In eighth gra d e boys actwn,
lth O:rodt Boyo
Hannan Trace defeated Vin- · Hannan Trace 47, VInton 24
ton, 47-24.
Somlfln11o
Chris Temple led the WildBldwoii·Porter v. ::'.:.. Tllco
cats with IS points and Jake
KygerCreokv. VInton
Whiteman ad~ed 15 points.
Hannan Tra: ~=tt!:~ern
Terry Miracle led Vinton
Bldweii·Ponerv. Kr:;rcreok
with 12 points.
SOuihwostel~hv~:nna~"r~co
Hannan Trace played SouthBldweii· Porterv. Kyger Creek ·
·western in the oue semifinal
Ch1mpJan~~hlpa
Saturday, while Bidwell-Porter
Thuroday, Fob. 22
and Kyger Creek sq uared off 6:00. 7:00,8:00

Late Night
McArthur Vinton County's boys edged Wellston
91-87 in three overtimes with the teams combining
for 21 3-pointers.

Big Tumaround
Sylvania Northview lost its opener to Toledo
Woodward, but has won its next 17 games.

Hets the Tops .

Jeff Thiel ran his

total to 1, 407 points to become
unbeaten Morral Ridgedale's career scoring leader.
Miller's career scoring standard with I, 172 points.
HOT SPOTS: McArthur Vinton County's boys edged Wellston 91-87 in three overtimes with the teams combining for 21
.3-pointers; Miller City's girls scored eight points in the last 23
seconds - rwo free throws and a 3-pointer by Renee Steffan
and another 3-pointer by Mandy Lammers with 7 seconds left
for the winning basket - to beat BlufRon 53-52; and Carey's
boys scored the first 14 points and led 18-2 at one point, but
McComb crawled out of the grave for a 64-.54 victory.

TURNING IT AROUND: Sylvania Northview lost its
opener to Toledo Woodward, but has won its next 17 games.
The LadyKats start two freshmen and a sophomore and their
roster includes players who get plenty of coaching. University
of Toledo football coach Tom Amstutz's daughter is a frontline
player, as is the daughter of Bruce Smith, Whitmer's boys basketball coach.
Not far away, Findlay's girls lost their second game of the season but have won 16 straight since, wrapping up the Great
Lakes League championship with a 62-34 victory over Sandusky.
·
FINALLY ... Bloomdale Elmwood's Brian Oestreich scored
41 poincsin a 91-68 decision over Kansas Lakota on Tuesday
night. Then on Friday night- his 18th birthday - .he scored
49 in a 91-70 victory over Gibsonburg. The birthday bash
broke the school single-game mark set in 1974 by his coach,
Doug Reynolds.

The best prep basketball
coverage for the Tri-County Area
every weekend in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel!
Subsaibe • 446·2342

eight at 47-39 before staging
their come-from-behind rally.
Hudnall drained a couple of
treys and John Smith added
from Page 81
ahother three-point goal in
while Roush finished with the fourth period to go with
16 tallies. J.R. Parsons and 6-of-7 free throws by Ryan
Eddie McKinney totaled Roush during the stretch run
·
eight points apiece for WHS, forWaharna.
The
Bend
Area
team
wiped
while Jordan contributed
seven for Hannan in addition out the Wildcats' somewhat
to the trio of double-digit comfortable edge and \cnotted
scorers for the Wildcats.
the score at 58-58 at the conCollins sparked Hannan to clusion of regulation play.
In overtime, Hannan forced
a five-point 14-9 edge at the
first turn before Arrowood the ball into the paint where
and Holley joined in the Arrowood and Holley were at
Wildcat offense in the second their best. Arrowood dropped
in five points in the overtime ·
canto.
Roush and Hudnall kept period with Holley adding
Wahama within striking dis-, four and jordan.two for Hantance in the first half as Han- nan.
nan 'secured a six-point 28-22
Wahama countered with a
couple of treys from Hudnall
halftime advantage.
A trio of three-point goals and Roush in addition to a
by Collins highlighted the basket by McKinney, but it
action during the third quar- wasn't enough as Hannan
ter with Holley scoring six tame away with the narrow
69-66 triumph.
points in the stanza.
Both teams return to action
Wahama kept it 'dose, howat
home on Monday with
ever, as JR. Parsons scored
six, and Hudnall and McKin- Wahama ' hosting Ohio Valley
ney added five each to pre- Christian while Hannan wel- DEFENSIVE STAND - Hannan senior Ryan Arrowood (35)
takes up good defensive position against Wahama's Alan Bar·
vent the Wildcats from run- comes Hamlin.
Tuesday finds WHS ·travel- nitz dUring Friday's game at Ash\on. (Tim Tucker photo)
ning away with the decision
ing to Buffalo with the.Wildearly.
The White Falcons entered . cats entertaining Duval.
the final period trailing by

Wahama

20
20
18
7

Detroit
Atlanta
Ch~go

29
32
35
42

.408
10
.385 11 1/2
.314
16
.143
23

Wntwn Cont«tnct

At Dayton~~
Doytono

Race SundiiY
Uneup determined by COilli:Mnation o1
quamytng speeds, finishes In twin 125
qualifying races and provlslonats based
2000 car-own•r points.
1. (9) em Enlott, Dodge, t 83.565 mph.
2. (~2) Stacy Compton, DOdge,
162.682.
3. (40) Sterilng Martin, DOdge.
" · (31) Mike Skinner, Chevrolet.
5. (25) Jerry Nadeau, Chevrolet.
6. (S) Dale Eamhardt Jr, Chevrolet.
7. (3) Dale Earnhardt, Ct1evroiet.
8. (89) Jeff Burton, Ford.
9. (96) Andy Houston, Ford.
10. (22) Ward Burton, Dodge.
11 . (26) Jimmy Spencer, Ford .
12. (2) Rusty Wallace, Ford.
13. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet.
14. (36) Ken Schrader, Pontiac.
I 5. (01) Jason Leffler. DOdge.
16. (17) Matt Kenseth, Ford.
17. (51) Jefl PuNis. Ford.
18. (3.2) Ricky Craven , Ford.
19. (15} Michael Wattlip, Chevrolet.
20. (93) Dave Blaney, Dodge .
21 . (19) Casey AtwOOd , DOdge.
22. (6) Mark Martin, Ford.
23. (27) Kenny Wallace, Pontiac.
24. (20) Tony Stewart, Poollac.
25. (1) Steve Part, Chevrolet.
26. (97) Kurt Busch, Ford.
27. (7) Mike Wallace, Ford.
28. (45) Kyle Peny, Clodge.
· 29. (44) Buckshot Johes, Dodge.
· 30. (28) Ricky Rudd, Ford.
31 . (88) Dale Jarren, Ford, 182.622.
32. (33} Joe Nemechek, Chevrolel,
182.116.
.
33. (10) Johnny Benson, Pontiac ,
181.995.
34. (5) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet ,

Mldw•l Dlvilllon
W L
Pet
San Antonio
34 16 .680
Utah
33 18 .673
Dallas
32 20 .615
MtMesoia
32 21 .604
Denver
28 25 .528
Houston
26 26 .500
vancouver
18 36 .308
Poelllc Dlvlolon
Portland
Sacramento
L.A. Lakers
Phoenix
Seattle
L.A. Clippers

w

37
33
33
30
28
16

...

~5

16
17
20
25
37

08
112

3
3 112
7 112
9
19

Pet
08
.712
•. 673 2 112
.660
3
.600
.528 9 112
.302 21 112

e

Golden State 15 3e · .2i4 21112
Frldav'a Game•

Phlladolp!11a 108. LA. CIIPf)oro 83
New York 114, New Jersey .104

Orlando 1oa. Houston 93
L.A. Lakers 99, Charlot1e 94
San Antonio 91,.Minnesota 65
Sacramento 117, Denver 84
Vancouver 92, Golden State 79

Seturday's O•m••
Washington at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Miami at Ctlicago, 8:30p.m.
Cleveland at Houston , 8:30p.m.
Charlotte at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m,.
Atlanta at Seanle, ~0 p.m.
Boston at Portland, 10 p.m.
Sunday'• G1mt1
San Antonio at Toronto, 12:30 p.m.
Phoenll&lt; at Philadelphia, 12:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippers at New Jersey, 1 p.m.
Utah at Sacramento, 3 p.m.
Vancouver at Mln(lesota, 3:30 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Indiana, 5:30p.m.
New York at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Washington at Denver, 9 p.m.
Atlanta at Golden State. 9 p.m.

1.,

tft! !!cr~.,s·,. J

NBA
Ea1tern Conference
Atlantic Division
W
L Pet.
GB
Philadelphia
39 14 .736
Miami
32 20 .615 6 112
New York
30 20 .600 7 112
Orlando
27 23 .540 10 112
Boston
23 2e .451
15
New Jersey
17 37 .-315 22 112
Washington
12 39 .235
· 26
Central Division
W
L
Pet
08
Milwaukee
30 19 .6 12
Toronto
27 24 .529
4
21 2e .509
·s
Charlotte
Indiana
' 22 28 .440 8 112

NHL
Eastern Confarence
Atlantic Dlv11ion
WlTOLPta
New Jersey
28 14 12 3 71
Pt111adelphia
30 18 9 1 70
Pittsburgh
26 20 7 2 65
N.Y. Rangers
23 29 4 1 51
P~ladelphfa
30 I 8 9 1 70
PittsbUrgh
28 20 7 2 85
N.Y. Rangers
23 29 4 1 51
N.Y. Islanders
15 35 5 3 39
Northeaat Olvlalon
W L TOL Pit
onawa
32 15 8 2 74
Toronto
28209465
Buffalo
29225164
Boston
25 22 8 5 81
Montreal
20295449
Southeall Division
WLTOLPts
Washington
28 19 10 1 67
Caronna
24 22 7 3 sa
Atlanta
18 29 9 2 47
Florida
16 28 8 7 47
Tampa Bay
15 35 5 3 38
Western Conference
. Central Divlalon
W L TOL 1'11
StLouis
37 12 7 2 , 83
Detroit
34 16 5 4 77
Nashville
24 27 7 2 57
Colcago
23 27 5 3 54
Columbus
18 29 7 4 47

Northweat OMak&gt;n

W L TOL
36 12 8 2 '

Colorado

i

oard

Vancouver
Edmonton

28 19 5 5
66
262491
62
Cligaoy
2022114
55
MIMO&amp;ote
21 25 8 3
53
Ptclflc Olvltton
W L TOL Pis
San Jose
32 15 10 0
74
Dallas
33 19 5 1 12
Phoenhc
27 17 12 2
68
Los Angeles
25 24 8 1
59
Anaheim
16 31 8 S 45
Two points !of a win, one pOint for a tie and
overtime loss.
Friday'a Gamalll
Phoenh:: 2, Carolina 0
Detroit 4, Columbus 2
Florida 2, Boston 1
Pittsburgh 4, New Jersey 4, tie
Chicago 6, St.louis 2
LOB Angeles 4, Minnesota 0
San Jose 2, Nash11llle 0
Dallal 3, Anaheim 2, OT
N.Y Islanders 4, Edmonton 2
SIILirday's Games
Colorado at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Washington at Montreal, 7 p.m.
A.tl11nta at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
New Jerae~ a1 Buffalo, 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
PittSburgh at Columbus,7 :30 p.m.
Vanco uver at Edmonton, 10 p.m.
Suntlay's Games
Boston at Carolina , 1:30 p.m.
San Jou at Minnesota, 2 p.m.
Los Angeles al Chicago, 3 p.m.
Montreal at Oltawa, 7 p.m.
Detroit at Dallas, B p.m.
Tampa Bay at Nashville, S p.m.
Calgary at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Vancouver, 10 p .m.

Penn 59, Cornell 54
St. Bonaventure 61 , Rhode Island 55
St. Peter's 76, Niagara 42
Temple 52, Fordham SO
SOUTH
Cincinnati 73, N.C. Charlotte 50 '
DePaul 57, South Florida 46
East Carolina 71 , American U. 34
Memphis 76, Tulane 61
UAB 64 , Soulhem Miss. 51
MIDWEST
Dayton 82, Duquesne 63
Indiana St. 82 , Illinois S!. 60
looisville 61 , Saint Louis 44
N. Iowa 58, Wichlla St. 49
SW Missouri St. 81, Braatey 55
xavier 63, St. Joseph's 50
' SOUTHWEST
Hawaii 62. SMU 48
Houston 71 , Marquette 52
Alee 69 , San Jose St. 56
FAR WEST
California 82, Slanlord 73
Fresno Sl. 72, Tulsa 58
Idaho St. 56, Montana 53
Long Beach St. 92, Idaho 70
Loyola Marymount 60, Gonzaga 37
Nevada 71 , TCU 63
Pacilic 73, Boise St. 69
Pepperdine 65, Pontand 58
UC Irvine 69, Cal Poly·SLO 63

No.6 W11hlngton Coo" Ho- (18-1)
def. Plain City Jonathan Alder 89-57, pll~a
Newarlc Llcl&lt;lng Volley Soturday.
No.? Warren&amp;lfiMt HeightS (111--1) det.
Bedlon:l85~7. PIIYt Maple Htl. Slturday.
No.8 Cola. DeSales (19·1) del. Cois.
Roady 60·57.
No.9 Conneaut (15·1) def Painesville

Harvey

74·~ .

No.10 Painesville Harvey (16·2)1ostto
Conneaut 74·54 .

DIVISION Ill

No.1 Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (15-11
def. Western Reserve 73·46.
No.2 Andie~ Uberty-Benton (19-0) def.
Leipsic 63-36.
No.3 Morral Ridgedale (19·0) def. Cardington-Lincoln 65·52, plays Sycamore
Mohawk Saturday.
.
No.4 Jeromesville Hillsdale (18-0) det.
Dalton 58·54, plays Ashland CrestView
Saturday. ·
No.5 Chesapeake (19-1) del. Coal
Grove Dawson-Bryant 78-46, det South
Point 90-55.
No.6 Tontogany Otsego {17·0) del.
Genoa 82-54.
No.7 Casstown Miami East (17·2) lost to
Versa llle&amp; 56·53.
No.8 Haviland Wayne Trace (17·1) del.
Antw~rp 68·38 , plays BIIJffton Saturday.
No.9 WheE!ilersburg (19·1) def. Scioto
Ohto Women's College Basketball
McDermott Northwest 89-48,
del.
Friday'• Scares
Lucasville Valley 76-40.
Atlantic Ten
No.10 Wickliffe (15·2) lost to Solon 60·
. Dayton 82, Duquesne 63
55, plays W. Geauga ~turday.
Xavier 63, St. Joseph's 50
.
DIVISION IV
Conference USA
No.1 Ma~a Stein Marion Local (17-1)
Clnclnnatl73, Charlotte SO 1
plays Russia Saturday.
University Alhletic Aaaociatlon
No.2 Cedarvill e (18·2) lost to 5.
Charleston Southeastem 82·79. 20T.
No.3 Cin. Hlils Chr. Acad. (18·2) del.
1 Lockland 76·30, del . Cln. S\Jmmlt Country
Day 63 -49, del. Cln. St. Bemard-Eimwood
Place 56· 38.
Ohio AP Boys Hoop Polls
No.4 Lancaster Fisher Cath. (18·2) del.
How They Fared
Summit Station Ucking Hts. 79·37, del.
Heath 50-42 .
COLUMBUS (AP)- How the top teams
No.5 S. Charleston Southeastern (17·2)
in the Associated Press boys high school del. Cedarville 82·79, 20T.
basketball poll did this week:
"
No.6 Bristolville Bristol (15·2) del.
DIVISION I
Bloomfield 94·59, del. Thompson Ledge·
No.- 1 Cols. Brookhaven (19·0) plays mont 92·66.
Cots. Independence Saturday.
No.7 Cln. Country Day (19·1 ) del. Cln.
No.2 Cleve. St. Ignatius (15-2) loSt to N. College Hill 57-50, del. Hamilton New
Shaker Hts . 75·67. plays Cleve . VASJ Sat· Mlaml62-45.
urda~.
No.8 Minster (15-3) def. Rockford Par14:·
No.3 Cin. Winton Woods (20·0) def. way SS-79, 20T, plays Anna Sat\Jrday.
Harrison 68·44,
No.9 Worthington Christian (15·4) del.
No.4 Toi. Libbev (16·2) lost to Tot. St. Ulic,a 79·73, 20T, plays Berl,:ty Saturday.
No.3 Cin. Winton Wooos {20-Q) del. way 88-79, 20T, plays Anna Saturday.
No.9 Worthlnglon CMstlan (t5-4) del.
Harrison 68·44 .
No.4 Tol. Libbey (16-2) lost to Tal. St. Utica 79·73, 20r, plays Bexley Saturday.
John's 71·67.
No.10 Reedsville Eastern (16·3) del.
No.5 Mansfield Sr. {17·1) del. Marion Pomeroy Meigs 68-55, plays Qlouster
Harding 86·5S.
T,r::;lm;::b:,:~:_,S;::a::;tu:::rd;::a:!y.~--~-._...No.6 Massuton Perry (17-1) def. Woost~~;.2-50, plays Canlon Cent. Cath. Satur- . ~S4qlt~,,J

!coLLEGE HogPs j ( NPREPRHOOPS

181.811 .

35. (55) Bobby Hamilton, Chevrolel,
181.6M.
36. (43) John Andrelli, Dodge , 181 .57EI.
37. (18) Bobby Labonte, Pontiac, provi·
slonal.
38. (12) Jeremy Mayfield, Ford, provl·
sional.
39. (77) Aobert Pressley, Ford, provisional.
40. (21) Elliott Sadler, Ford, provisional.
41. (4) Robby GordOn. ChevrOlet, provt·
slonal.
40. (21) Elliott Sadler. Ford, proviSional.
41. (4) Robby Gordon, Chevrolet, provisional.
.
42. (14) Ron Hornaday Jr. Pontiac, pro·
visional.
43. (11) Brett Bodine, Ford, provisional.

6unbap 11J:imtll·ioenlind • Page 85

o
2

Men'a Collage Basketball
Frlda.y's Scores
EAST
Brown 90, HaNard 82
Canlsius 63 , Loyola, Md. 66
Columbia 59. Princeton 42
Niagara 90, Manhallan 90
Penn 59, Cornell 57
Siena 65. Fairfield 46
Yale 78, Oarimouth 50
SOUTH
No major team scores reported from 1he
SOUTH.
MIDWEST
No major team scores reported from tt1 e
MIDWEST.
MIDWEST
No major team scores reported from the
MIDWEST.
SOUTHWEST
No major team scores reported from lhe
SOUTHWEST.
FAR WEST
Idaho St. 79, Montana 75, OT
Portland St. 73, E. Washington 62
San Diego 82, St. Mary-'s, Cal. 54
Santa Clara 63, San Francisco 52
Ohio Men's College Basketball
Frlday't Score
Unlverslly Alhlelic Association
NYU 78, Case Reserve 66
Wome.n'• College Basketball
Friday'• Scores
.
EAST
Columbia 51. Princeton 49, OT·
. Dartmouth 82, Yale 63
Drel&lt;el 89, New Hampst11re 69
Falrfle!d 59, Canlsius 46
George Washington 56. Massachusetts
41
Harvard 65, Brown 48
Loyal&amp;, Md. 75, lona 45
Maine 64, Hofstra 58

r-1

No .7 Tal. St. John's (16·2) del. To!.
Libbey 71·67.
No .9 Mentor (15-3) lost to Elyria 73-72 ,
OT.
No.9 Cln. St. )(avler (16·4) del. Cin.
Elder 67-62, OT.
No.·10 E. Liverpool (16·4) del . Win·
tersville Indian Creek 75-55, del. Wheeling
(W.Va.) Par1&lt; 71 ·64 .
.
DIVISION II
No.1 Wooster Trlway (19·0) del. Black
River 89-45.
·
No.2 Willard (19·0) d€!1. Upper San·
dusky 54·25.
No.3 Kettering Alter (18·2) lost to Cln.
Elder 60·54, def. Cin. McNicholas 63·45.
No.4 Tallmadge (19-0) del. Lodi Clover·
leal 66·52, del . Green 62·43.
,No.5 Ottawa-Glandorf (16·1) del. Elida
59·53. OT.

·

·

·

J

BASEBALL
American l1egue
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Agreed to
terms wllh INF.QF Melvin Mora, RHP Lesll
Brea, LHP John Bale and C Fe~ando
Lunar on one-year contracts.
BOSTON REO SQ)(-Agreed to terms
with RHP Rolando Arrojo on a one-year
contract.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Agreed \o
te rms with RHP Mariano Rivera on a fouryear contract .
SEATTLE ,MARINERS-Agreed to
terms with RHP Rafael Soriano on a oneyear contract and SS Manny AlelCander on
a inlnor league contract
TE)(AS RANGEA$-Agreed to terms
with AHP Joaquin Benoll, RHP Aaron
Myane and INF Mlchael Youn(l on one·

year

contracts.
Nortlono!Looguo

ATLANTA BRAVE5-Agreod to termo
wflh 28 Ot.litvlo Veras, AHP WlnttonAbrtU,
AHP Derflck LewiS:, RHP Horecio Ramirez,
RHP Scott Sot&gt;koWIIk, P Billy Sylvester. P
Brad Voyles, iNF Wilson Betemlt, INF Marcus Giles. OF Cory Aldridge and OF
George Lombard on one·year contracts.
COLORADO ROCKIES-AgrHd to
terms with RHP Gabe White on a thratyear contract.
HOUSTON ASTR05-Agreed to torms
with RHP Roy Oswalt and INF Keith Ginter
on one-year contracts.
BASKETBALL
N8tlonel B11kttblll A11oclltlon
NBA-Suapended Dalla&amp; Mavericks
owner Mark Cuban for two game• for
entering the playing cou rt during a Feb.. 15
game against the Cleveland Cavalier~. 1nd
lined the Mavericks 510,000; suspended
Cleveland F Raben Traylor fOf one game·
and lined him $5,000 lor throwing a punch
at Dallas G Courtney AlelCander during tne
same game.
CHARLOTTE HORNETS-Placed F
Derrick Coleman on the inJuricJ 11&amp;1.
HOUSTON ROCKETS- Ac!lvated C
Kelvin Cato from the Injured lilt. Placed f.
C Jason Collier on the Injured list.
FOOTBALL
N1tlon11 FOOtblll League
BALTIMORE RAVENS-Named Mike
Nofan wide receiver&amp; coach.
BUFFALO BILLS- Re·slgned WR Eric
Moulds to a Sll&lt;·year contract.
DENVER BRONCOS- Signed CB
Cordell Taylor.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Named
Paul Haynes defensive quality control
coach.
NEW YORK GIANTS-Named DonatCI
Etheridge to the colleg~t scouting dapalt·
ment.
OAKLAND RAIDERS-Named Fred
Pagac llt18backers coach.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLE5-Signod RB
Anthony Gray to a one -year contract and K
Rich Maston to a two-~ear contract.
ST. LOUIS RAMS- Named Man Shel·
cSon defensive assistant and Melvin Foell
college scout.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed QB
Kevlr:-. Nawracaj.
.
SEATTlE SEAHAWKS-Name Jim
Zom quarterbacks coach.
HOCKEY

National Hockey Ltlgut
BUFFALO

SABRES-~sstgned

G Mar·
HOCKEY
N1tlon1i Hockoy Loogut
BUFFALO SABRES-Assigned G Martin Biron to Rochester of the AHL.
CALGARY FLAME5-Signed C Ron
Sutter.
DAL.LAS STARS-Assigned RW T~or
Bo\Jck to Utah of the IHL and F Gregor
aaumganner to IdahO of the WCHL.
MONTREAL
CANAOIENSAnnounced the resignation of Pierre
Ladouceur. vice-president of of marketing,
sales and communications.
NASHVILLE PREDATORs-Assigned
LW Villa Peilonen to Milwaukee of the IHL.
ST. LOUIS BLUES-Recalled D
Jaroslav Obsut from Worcester of the AHL
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Acqu ired G
Wade Flaherty from the New York
Islanders lor a condiUonal ninth-round draft
choice. Assigned F ThOmas Ziegler to
Detroit of the IHL.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF5-Ctalmod 0
Wade Belak off waivers from the Calgary
Flames.
WASHINGTON
CAPITALS-Reas·
s\gned RW Matt Herr to Portland of the
AHL

Your friend for life
get their points off of garbage,
offensive rebounds buckets.
"They're well rounded.
Warren Local is a team that
Page 81
doesn't make very many misdown 8-0," said Lay,ton. takes .. Not often are they
"We had Craig on the bench going to beat themselves.
with a little bit of foul' trou- They've proven · that with
ble. We just had a period their record in the league this
there, no more than a coupie year."
Warren will share their
of minutes, where we just
didn't take very good care of SEOAL crown with Logan.
the basketball. We turned it The Chieftains defeated
over and they got the layups Athens 70-49 also finish 13-1 ·
in league play.
in transition 'off of that."
River Valley will meet
At halftime, Warren led 3622. The Raiders remained Northwest in the opening
down double digits the entire round of sectional play
Wednesday.
second half.
Game time at South Web"Warren is a very good
ster
is set for 8 p.m.
team," said ·Layton. "If you
"Obviously, finishing the
make mistakes, they're going
season
at 7-13, we're not real
to cake advantage of them."
Warren's Curt Morris led happy with that;' said Layton.
all scorers with. 20 points, "We played hard tonight from
that start to the finish. If you
including four 3-point goals.
Also for the Warriors (14-6, do that, a lot of times good
SEOAL 13-1), Travis Ollom things will happen. We tried
scored 12 points and Issac to add some different things
as the season went along. It's a
Gum added 11.
"Curt Morris is an excel- shame, especially when you
lent shooter from the perime- · have an effort like we did
ter and he proved it tonight," tonight.
"You hate to see the season
said Layton. "Issac Ward is a
closing
down. You \vish you
nice post player on the inside,
who can also step out and were back during the middle
score on the perin1eter out to of the season. They're playing
about I 7 feet. BradVenham is with confidence in their
a very good point guard who teammates now. They're play. takes control of things out ing as one unit."
Warren \viii play in the earthere. And then they've got a
lier
game at South Webster
couple of other kids that start
for them and a Couple that Wednesday night as the top
play off the bcr1ch, they know ·seed.
The Warriors will meet the
limitations.
winner
of Monday's Jackson"They go out there and set
good screens and they Meigs game.
rebound the basketball. They

Raiders

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ON THE PROWL - River valley senior Eric Nolan looks ·for an
open teammate durin&amp; Friday's SEOAL finale ~C~~Inat Warren.
Nolan -scored 18 points to lead tha Raldera, who will play
Scioto Northwest In sectional tournament PiiY wednesday at
South Webster. (Butch Cooper photo)

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�•
Page 86 • 6unba!' 1Z:imrt1·6rntintl

Sunday, February 18, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea..nt, WV

champ Jarrett
be hard pressed to .
repeat performance of 2000

promotepa
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. rule out some alterations for
(AP) - The New York Yan- the 500.
kees are running away with
That's sort of like basketbail
another pennant, so baseball considering a change in the
gives their hitters only two . height of the basket just four
strikes the rest of the season. · days before the start of the
The Baltimore Ravens are NDA Finals.
making it just a little too diffiOf course, when the quali-

ry in the Indy 500.
That kind of ra ce is an
anathema to NASCAR,
where officials cringe at the
tbnught of their fans having to
sit through hours of single-file
racm!1.
Therc.'s an old joke that if

cult for opponents co score, so

fying races produced a pair of ont" 'ar is rmining away from

the NFL lets them have fiw
· plays ro make a first down.
Sounds ludicrous, right'
Not in the world ·of
NASCAR, where the rules ore
constantly changing in the
name of competitiveness and
people talk abour the spectacle
as much as the sport.
"We understand \vhat the
race fan wants to see," said
Gary Nelson, director. of the
Winston Cup series, not the
least bit apologetic. "Everyone
has a chance to win, no matter
what. make of car their dri: ving."
Think the NFL believes in
parity? Those football guys
don't come close to the good
' ol' boys, who were still tinkering with their regnlations in
the days leading up to the
· biggest event of the year, Sunday's Daytona 500.
First, NASCAR had two
· thin strips of metal attached to
· the cars after last year's singlefile, no-passing race was
· dubbed The Snore at the
· Shore.
The new aerodynamic
: devices make a bigger hole in
: the air, sapping horsepower,
promoting drafting and bringing back the traditional sling: shot-style pass. But Ford teams
complained the new rule put
them at a disadvantage against
the other three manufactitrers:
Chevrole.t,
Pontiac
and
Dodge.
So, NASCAR took the cars
back ' to the wind tunnd on
Monday to run more aerodynamic tests. On Wednesday,
Nelso11 said there would be no
changes for the Twin 125-mile
qualifYing races, but he didn't

heart-stopping finishes the rest ofrhe field, NASCAR
including Mike Skinner beat- will sunply tht i)W a yellow flag
ing Dale Earnhardt Jr. by with about 10 laps to do, proabout 3 inches - NASCAR claiming "debris on the track"
announced Friday to the sur- that no one else noticed. That
prise of no one that it was way, at least, the cars will be
happy with the gutdelines.
tightly bunched when they
For now.
take the checkered flag.
"We would like to see
" NASCAR is big into
everyone running the same keepi11g it close and equal;'
speed," Nelson said.
said three-time Winstoi1 Cup
Does that sort of attitude champion Jeff Gordon. "It's
make Winston Cup nothing not like CART or Formula
more than wrestling on One, where if you find somewheels, an XFL with carbure- thing during the offseason that
tors? Why penalize a team that makes you two seconds better,
works withm the rules and you've done your job. If somediscovers a way to make its car one has a distinct advantage in
go 2 mph faster than anyone NASCAR, they're going to
else on the track?
knock them back a notch."
"There are (basic) gnideThe governing body is conlines. Those don't change," said stantly tinkering with spoilers
Stacy Compton, who will start and
other
aerodynamic
on the outside of the front devices to prevent one make
row for the 500. "But we have of car from having a clear
some of the best engineers in · advantage
over another.
the wodd working ·on these Changes have been made as
cars. I'm not going to say they late as the day before the race,
stretch the rules, but they find as was done last October in
loopholes. That's all part of the Talladega with the carburetor
game. NASCAR has got to restrictor plate.
"It's frustrating when they
make sure they pull the knot
tight enough and don't let us throw things at yqu at the last
find those loopholes."
second;' Gordon admitted. "If
Still, it's undeniable that you have time to experiment
other series come up with a with it, rhen it's OK."
set of rules at the beginning,of
NASCAR seems particularthe year and let the racing ly motivated to provide excitspeak for itself - no matter ing races this season, when it
how boring it might become. begins a $2.8 billion, six-year
One year, Roger Penske television deal with Fox and
showed up at Indianapolis NBC.
with a Mercedes-powered
"We've got to hold tip our
engine that had significantly end of the bargain with some
more power than any other good, competitive racing," drimachine but was perfectly ver Steve Park said.
legal. Not surprisingly, a
If not, expect the rules to
Penske driver, AI Unser Jr., ran change.
away with a dominating victo-

H~unisch

They have been able to draft
with the Chevrolets, Pontiacs
and Dodges, but not overtake
them on the l01ig straightaways. The Ford teams say
NASCAR's aero package has
made rhem one-dimensional
race cars.
"We're going to have to
make our time in the corners," he said. "You're not
going to see us try to do as
tlut I won, that's for sure," he much .on the straightaways."
Jarrett realizes he and Parsaid Friday .after a victory in
rott
will have to depend on all
an IROC race. "I've got to do
everything exactly right. I've the experience from their past
· got to make all the right Daytona success. So, the $t I
million season opener will be
mov~s "
And he hopes for hot' all about strategy. ·
He breaks the race i11to segwe;~ther, the kind that will
turn the 2 1/2-m.ile Daytona ments. Firsr, he must. position
International Speedway into a himself to be in contention for
slick, mess in the turns. That the final 50 miles. Then, he
would reward handling more hopes there will be enough
than speed, minimizing what car left to go hard to the end.
He also will try to position
Jarrett's crew chief, Todd Parrott, calls the parachute effect himself on the racing surface
as he approaches the highholding back the cars.
"The track got slick yester- banked turns. There, the car'$
day, and that was just 125 drag can be an advantage
miles," said Jarrett, alluding to · because a driver doesn't have
the qualifYing races Thursday. slow down.
" Drag means downforce,"
The temperature then WJS
in the mid-80s. But the fore- he said. "When we enter the
cast says 70 might be the top corner we have to be able to
Sunday, and that probably go high or low or middle, but
we have to stay wide open on
won't be hot enough.
Jarrett's problem, and that of the throttle through the corthe other Ford drivers, is aero- ner."
Jarrett did' get good news
dynamics. The Tauruses just
Friday.
He'll be able to use the
aren't very fast in the straightcar h~ wrecked while finishing
aways.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - Defending champion
Dale Jarrett figures he'll have
to drive the best race of his life
to win the Daytoha 500 for
the fourth time.
But he knows even that
might not be good enough to
. carry him to the front from
31st on the starting grid.
" It will have to be better
than . the three previous 500s

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Pete Harnisch doesn't want to
become the next Denny Neagle.
Unable to reach a contract
extension with ' Neagle last
season, the Cincinnati Reds
traded him to the New York
Yankees· in July rather than
lose him as a free agent after
the season.
Harnisch, 34, will be a free
agent at the end of this season
and figures he'll be traded just
like Neagle unless he gets a
contract extension in the next
few months.
Harnisch's agent, Gregg
Clifton, has talked to general
manager Jill1 Bowden about

We've got
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coverecl ·every·
weekeftd in tlie
Sunday
nmes-Sentinel
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446·2342

an extension. Discussions dealt Jeff Shaw - rhe team's arbitration case is concluded:
could become more serious only proven closer - to Los Bowden thinks highly of Harwhen the Reds finish their Angeles later that season.
nisch. .
final arbitration case, which
Last season, the Reds were
"Right ndw, he's our No. I
involves pitcher. Osvaldo fer- one game under .500 when starter," Bowden said. "He also
nandez.
·
Bowden traded Neagle to the has been a leader in the club" He'd like to stay a Red for Yankees for four prospects on house and on the field:'
The Reds exercised their
the rest of his career," Clifton · July 12, essentially scuttling
s~id. "The initial discussion the season.
contract option on Harnisch
Harnisch could s.ee the same after last season, when he went
with jim was that he feels the
same way we do, which is a thing happening with him.
8-6 with a 4. 7 4 earned run
"I would say if we weren't average. He was on the dis- ·
good thing."
Harnisch is the only proven able to do an extension or abled list for . nearly two
member of the rotation, but something, I would be traded rnonths with a weak shoulder,
that doesn't preclude a trade if pretty soon," Harnisch said. · then went 8-2 with a 3.49
he can't reach agreement on "But that's the way the game ERA after his return. He will
·an extension. Bowden traded is. I accept that."
make $3.7.5 · million truS seaDave Burba- the Reds' only
Bowden said he will have son.
proven starter in 1998 - on more serious talks with Harthe eve of op~ning day, and nisch's agent once Fernandez's

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2110 l!ilate'n Avenue • Gallipolis, OH 4!11131
446-9777 or
446-2484

I

~unba~

ill:lnmHsentmrl • Page 87

'lressel: Buckeyes will be tougher in classroom
COLUMBUS (A P)
Tougher academic standards
planned for Ohio State University should help all students, including those that play
for the football team, coach
'im Tressel said Friday.
Tressel, hired last month to
replace the fired John Cooper,
said his players wil) face challenges in the classroom as well
as on the field.
Ohio State's team · had a
graduation rate of 28 percent,

according to fignres released in
0hio's state-supported uni- Conference universities. Its said Tressel, a six-time Ohio
December by the National versities are backing Gov. Bob overall graduation rate ranks coach of the year.
Collegiate Athletic Associa- Taft's proposal to allow Ohio lOth in the I 1-school· conferStudents coming to Ohio
tion. The university's overall State to increase its tuition up ence.
State now have better test
rate was 56 percent. That to 9 percent during the next
"When I was here in the scores, and include more valenumber is going to change, two budget years. Ohio's other mid-80s as an assistant coach di cto rians and National Merit
Tressel said.
public colleges would be lim- it (Ohio State) was just startin~ Scholars, he said.
"We're going to have to ited to 6 percent increases to make that decision"that they
The pressure to win a
(change) because of the way under Taft's proposal.
were not going to be an open national football champithe complexion of the instituThe goal is to lifr Ohio enrol!Jnent institution, which onship is "probably not any
tion is cha~ging;'Tressel told a State's academic standings, meant they were going to raise more intin1idaring than the
luncheon audience at the especially among Big Ten the bar and they've done that," reality of the competition that
Ohio Newspaper Association's

our young people are going to
have in the classroom," Tressel
said.
Fifty-nine percent of Tressel's players at Youngstown
State University graduated,
compared with 32 percent of
all YSU students. His teams
won four NCAA Division 1-A
championships over IS years.

annual convention.

WVU V. MARSHALL

West Virginia
officials reject
latest offer
from Marshall
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) -West Virginia University President David Hardesty
has rejected an offer from
Marshall University President
Dan Angel to renew their
schools' football rivalry.
Angel ·said Friday that
Hardesty cast aside his proposal for Marshall to play three
games in Morgantown if
WVU will travel to Huntington for one game. Marshall
also offered to pay WVU
$400,000 to come to Huntington.
"I personally went up to
Morgantown and gave them
that offer," Angel said. "And
they declined that. I have no
speculation on what and why
a~d P ni&lt; 110t tloingl t.o get into
any debate over that, other
than that's the best 'deal we're
ever going to give them."
Hardesty was out of town
and unavailable for comment
Friday. WvU spokeswoman
Becky Lo!Stead said Hardesty
is still hopeful that Marshall
can return to Morgantown to
.resume the series.
After a 74-year hiatus, the
schools play in 1997, the first
of a four-game series between
the state's only two Division 1A football programs . The
Mountaineers won 42-31.
The impasse is about
finances. Marshall's stadium
·seats about 40,000; WVU's
63,500.

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WVU says it will lose
money if it plays in Huntington because it can make more ·
than $400,000 to play a road
game with another I-A
school. Marshall believes it
should have the right to host
an occasional game.
Mid-American Conference
schools are paid .$200,000 to
play at WVU. Marshall, whiCh
was paid $300,000 for ) the
1997 game, Wants $4001000
for any future game in Morgantown.
.
WVU Athletic Director Ed
Pastilong first blamed Marshall
. for backing out of an earlier
four-game agreement and has
since said commitments tb the
Big East Conference, plris an·
annu)l 'game 'against "'y!ary::
lariQ, would !Jlake it difficult
to iit Marshall in.
"·
Also, Pastilong has said
WVU sold more season tick~
ets for 1998 when it opened at
home against ·No. 1 Ohio
State compared with I 997
when it opened with Marshall.
.
Efforts have failed am 0 ng
stat'e legislators and higher·
education officials to get the
teams to play each year.
"I was hoping over this past
year to have reached some
kind of agreement where we
could have a football series,"
Angel said. "I would .say at this
point that doesn't look
probable."
I,

PREP FOOTBALL ~

.·~tate tit~e games to stay ~
1n ·Massillon &amp;Canton 'll
MASSILLON ~AP) - The junior year. ,
The OHSAA ruled that'
city where Paul Brown began
his coaching career will be Scott was ineligible, and his
host to three state high school family sued.
Mishler said backers of Masfootball title games next fall.
But some. have questioned sillon Washington High
the selection because of con- School have unfairly criticized
cerns over alleged · recruiting the QHSAA during the ·
vi.olations and the assault of a recruiting investigation.
referee last year by twO fans at
He said he is bothered by .
~ playoff game at Paul Brow it the assault on the referee, "but .
Tiger Stadium.
I really believe they will pre: The controlling board for vent that from happening
high school sports in Ohio again."
lroted 3-2 on Thursday to
OHSAA
Commissioner
award. playoff games to Massi!- Clair Muscaro said the onIon on Nov. 30 and Dec. I.
field assault wasn't a concern
t The Ohio High School in private discussions about
:A.thletic Association awarded where to hold the playoffs.
the three remaining football
Two men, including a high
title games to Canton's Faw- school basketball referee, were
bett Stadium.
sentenced for attacking a ref: Colin Mishler, athletic eree Nov. 4 afl:er a last-minute
director of Berlin Hiland penalty ilwalidated a game!J:Illh School and a member of winning touchdown and kept
~he OHSAA's Board of Con• · Massillon from aclvancins in
~rol, said his concerns were the playoffs. The official's
;hared by officials ac other license ·to officiate games hu
)chools..
b~en smpended by the
: Ma11illon and tht OHSAA OHSAA,
:have been locke~ in a court
Rick Shepas, nthletic direc;bacde for more than a year tor aa1d football coach at Mas:over the allepcl recrultln1 of sillon Washin&amp;ton, said allowUellie Scoct, who transferred ing the playoff pmes to return
Massillon Percy in janu- would be sood for the steel'acy 1999 in the middle of his ntaking community.
~

YDUBWIIT
ISOVEBIII
PIIICII UVE BEEII DIIAITICillY RmUCEDI
IIIEIII Hllm #1111111
ISII Cllllllll MYUIS 11111111.
II COllllllll.mENS.IIIDUl01

:rrom

Call Toll Free /

II •IIOI'Idwtdt IH'Incll of AQCO Corpol'ltiOn, Duluth, GA.

Jim's Farm
EquiPment
.

(140)
\

24th in ·a field of 26 in h4
qualifYing race.The alternative
was a backup that would hav~
moved him back to 43rd anc!
last in the big race.
In a much better starting
position is rookie Andy Houston, a pleasant surprise for.
Ford on Thursday. He'll start
ninth in the 500, and has no
plan to· retreat in his first
points race with a new team.
"I was a little surprised that
I was able to come down here
and run the way I did;' Houston said of his fourthlp}a(,:e
finish in one of the qualifiers.
"I hope to run in the top I 0.
"I think we can do better
than that, but that's a realistic
goal."
Houston , a NASCAR truck
series ace before this year, finished third last year in the
Daytona debut of that circuit,
So, he expects to do well.
"I think we're in pretty
. good shape," he said.
And Houston believes an
impressive finish could serve as
a springboard for this season.
"I think it would be a wonderful accomplishment;' he
said.
Two-time 500 champion
Bill Elliott 'starts on the pole
with Stacey Compton on the
outside of an all-Dodge front
row in the automaker's return
to Winston Cup racing after 'a
16-year absence.

y

wants long term deal with Reds

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

OHIO STATE FOOTBALL

DAYTONA 500 NOTEBOOK

NASCAR looks at
rule changes to

Sunday, F:ebruary 18, 2001

.I

Prior Sales

2000 Chevy lmpela Black M82 ·AT. AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L. PA,
Sportwheels .............................................................................$17,995
2000 Volkowagon BeoUo GL #9655. 25,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War.,
AT. AC, Tilt, Cruise, PL&amp;M, Fog lamp, Keyless entl)l ................$16,955
2000 Ford Taurua SE 119654 • 25,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War. AT AC
TinCIP
.
'
''
, ruse, W&amp;L,PSeats ......................................................
$16,230
2000 Plymouth Neonll9658 • 27,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War., White,
AC, Tilt, Cassone, ................................................................$12,255
Dodge Stratuo/19641 • AT, AC, lilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L. Alloy
AMJFM/Cassette, ........................................................ $14,995
626 LX D Sliver I 9601·15,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War.,
1A~~~~ ~ ~ia~Cruise, PW&amp;L, Cassene .........................................$t5.425
12
Sunllra GT 19579-3,000 Miles, B.O.F.W .......... $15,975
Ford Focu• SE 119497 • 22,000 Miles. Bal of Fact War., AT, AC,
i ' ................................................................................ $14,395
1194911· 2X3, 14,000 Miles, Bai'ol Fact War., AC,

01

3 870

llh•vv ~:.:r!':~,j';;g;j3jj'1ii:ooo·;;;ii~~;·i'i~~i.···a~i·~;·;;!~

·

AT, M;,

Cruise, PW&amp;L. Sport wheels .................. $t3,275
LX 19482 • 16,000 Miles, Bal of Fact war.. AT,
Cruise,
. . ......................................................... $13,745
Ford Muetang 119440·13,000 miles, Green, AT, AC, lilt, Cruise,
of Fact Warranty, AM/FM/CD, Sport wheels ....................... $16.695
Dodgolntropld 195:ZO.B.O.F.W, AT, AC, Ti~. Cr, PW&amp;L, $t5,625
Ford &amp;corl ZX2119828·22,000 miles. Burgundy, 5 Spd, AC,

~~;)~'li~l:!t,!C!r;u~ls~e'p'iP~. Sunroof,AIIoyWhls. AM/FM/CD ............. $12,480
IF
1194115-29,000 miles, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Bal of
PW&amp;L, Sport wheels ...................................$15,195

-19,000
miles, "loaded" ......
l ~~[~i:~~[~[~l9400~
1 :........ $16, 995
1
sport Wheels ...~~ S. ~.~.~.~ ~::.~~:.~. .t.'. ~~i~~:~~~io

Malibu Sliver 1191183· 16,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War., Tilt,
, P Seats, PW&amp;L, AT, AC, Sport Wheels ........................ $f4,995
Metro 19842 • AT, AC, Cassone, .......................... $8,495
Grand Am 19463- AT, AC, Cr., Red, Spoller...... $t 5,100
Chevy Cavalier 119417 • 60,000 Miles, AT, AC, Bal of Fact
~:;·~~rtP Wc&amp;L, Sport Wheels, Sunroof ................................ :.$14,195
"
Grand Prix GT 19398 • AT, AC, Tin, Cruise, PW&amp;L .......
; ...................................................... ............................................... $12,420
Chevy Cavalier Z·24119417.S,OOO Miles, Salol Fact War.. AT,
, PW&amp;L, Sportwheels, Sunroof ............................................ $14,195
Ford Eacorl SE 19632 • 21,000 Miles B.O.F.W. ............. $11 ,615
19!18 l'oro Muatang GT 19875 • 2r,OOO Miles, Cruise, Sportwheels, 5
spooeo., AM/FM/CD. P Seats. Tilt .....................................:.......... $16,705
Buick Aegol Cull Gold 19685 ·AT. AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, Pwr.
1 675
•
COIISOVIO, Sport wl1eels ............................................................ $10,975
Hondll Civic LX 119659 • 33,000 Miles, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise,
PW'&amp;L Pwr. Sunroof, AM, FM, CD, Sport wheels ................... $13,610
Civic LX 119658 ·Sillier, AT, AC, Ti~. Cruise, PW&amp;L, Pwr.
, AM, FM, CD, Sport wheels .........................................$13,910
Ford Eacorl Station Wagon 19462· Automatic, Air, Till, Cruise.
Roar defrost ......................... ........................................ $8,895
119441- 25,000 miles, V-6, AT, AC, lilt, Cruise, Bal
AC. PW&amp;L ......................................................$13,575
Saturn
Door, Bluo/19635 • 23,000 Miles, B.O.F.W.,AT, AC,
Cru1ise, PW&amp;L, Cassone, Sport wl1eels .............................. $11 ,720
Pontiac Flreblrd 19607 • 42,000 Miles, 2Dr., Red, P Seats, ·
A~:~:~~~;·,~5 Spd. AT, Tilt, Cruise, T·Top .................................. $13,795
1:
Sunftre 19577 ·AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM/Cass, .......
.. ............................................................. ...................... ................... $10,290
Plymouth Breeze 19574. AT., AC, Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM/Cassene,
....................................................................................$8,995
Avenger ES 119677 • AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
' ...........................................,....................................$12,775
Grand Prix 119479-Green, GT, 2 Door, Automatic, Air,

11

~=~~~~·~~J:.~;~~~ i.l;~~l9684: ;;,:r:·;;,c;·;i·c~i~~~

~~~;~=~p~~.'i;;~'f9646~ii:r:;,c·::n·~i:·c;~i~~;PiN&amp;i:: ca!~~~~

. . ' ....................................................................................$9,695
Convartlblal9368 • AT, AC, li~, Cruise. PV'I'&amp;L.
... ....
..
.
. ........... $13,995
lntrapld 19872 ·Leather Seats, 3.5 V·6 Eng., AT. AC, li~.

~~~:=-~~:·~·,.; .;;;. ;·.;.;·iis'W485·:·3s:iioo.Mii;;;;:;;.:r;;,c·.1iit:·c:;Ji~:so

wheels .. :..............................:.............................. !. $14,895
Rogol fi533 • Lealher, PW, AT, AC, Cruise, PW&amp;L, P
.............................................................................. $8,250
Sobl• LS 19530 • AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, LAathar
Sport wheels ............................... :............ '•• ' ·" '
Coupe H408· V·8, Suporcharg&amp;d, AT

.,.....

2000 Suzuki Grand Vltaro 4x419333 • 6,000 Miles • Sal or Fact
Warr., 4x4, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Sport wheels ........., ...... ..... $15,495.
2000 Suzuki Grand Vltara 4x419334. 5,000 Miles • Bol of Feet
Warr., 4x4, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Sport wheels ..................... $15,495.
1999 Ford Explorer 4X419676 ·AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Power Seat .......:.................................................................. $18,930
1999 Suberu Legacy Outback AWD 119599- 32,000 miles,
B.O.F.W., AM/FM/CD, 5 Spd, PW&amp;L. Tilt, Cruise. RRack, Spt Whls
$19,530. .
.
1999 Chevy Blazer 19628 • 39,000 miles, 4 Dr., LS Pkg, AT, AC,
Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, P Mirrorll, AM/FM/Cass, Alloy Wheels, Roof
Rack, Rear Defogger ...........................................................$17,795
1998 Ford Explorer XLT 4x419348 • AT, AC, T11t, Cruise; Sport
wheels, AM/FM/CO .............................................................. St 6.350
1998 Suboru Forooter 4X419518 • Leather lnte1ior,.AT, AC, Tilt,
Cruise, AM/FM/CO ..............................................................$1 8,595.
1998 SubanJ Legacy GT ·19633. White, AWD, 34,000 miles .. .'... .
.....................................................,....................................... $16,230
1998 Subaru Legacy Outbock 4X4119516 • 26,000 Miles, Bal of
Fact War., 5 Speed, wl1ite, AC, lilt, Cruise, Sport wheefs .. $18,995.
1997 Joep Cherokoe 4x4 19266- Clullc, AT. AC, lilt, Cruise,
Sport Wheels ......... :............................................................ $1 2,600.
19!18 Dodgo Durango 4x4119413· AT, AC, Till, Cruise, VB Eng,
Sport wheels ........................................................................ $19,995
1997 GMC Jimmy 4X4 119495 • SLT, Leather, P Seats, AT. AC, Tilt,
Cruise ......................................................... ,....................... $17,995. ·
.1997 Jeep Wrangler 4x419329 • 28,000 miles, Sport wheels,
Convertible &amp; More .............. ................................................ $11 ,995
1997 Ford Explorer 4x4 19394·Red/SIIver, AWD, PW&amp;L, Pwr
Seat, Sport wheels, Tilt, Cruise .......... .................................. $16,925
1997 Ford Explorer Sport 119475 2 Dr, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Rf Rck .......
............................................................................................$13,995
1998 Ford Explorer 119407. Auto, Air, XLT, PW&amp;L, Cruise ............. .
.. ...........................................................................................$13,595
1995 Chevy Blazer 4Dr 19679- Black/Silver, AT, AC, Tin, Cruise,
PW&amp;L, P Seats, Sport wheels ............................................. $tt ,795
1998 Ford Explorer 4X2 I 11690- AC, AM/FM/Cass., Sport Wheels.
Rear
.................................................................... $11,
Ford
Cruise. PW&amp;L,
V-8, Bedliner, Tow Pkg., Alloy Wheels ...
.............................................................................................$21 ,950
1999 Ford Rongor XLT 4X419674 ·AT, PW&amp;L, lilt, Cruise,
Flareslde, Sportwheels .................................................... ,.. $16,425.
19!18 Ford Rangoi 4x4 XLT 19296. v6 Eng .. Supercab, Tilt,
Cruise, AC, Sport wlleels .....................................................$14,995
1998 Chevy C·1500 4X4 Supercab 19614- 33,000 miles, V-8, AT,
AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, Bed Liner, Sport Wheels .................. 21 ,965
1996 Nlaean 4x419637 Green, AC, Sport Wheels, Bed Liner
.............................................................................................$11,495
1994 Chevy S.10 4X4 Ext. Cab 119528 • V-6, AM/FM Cassette,
Sport wheels, Rear Flip Seats, LS Package .................. ,...... $9,750.

1999 Chevy C·1500 119484 • 23,000 Miles, B.O.F.W., B' Bed,
AT,AC, Cassone. Sportwheels.............................................$17,695
1998 Ford F·150 119620 • 35,000 miles, 8' Bed, AT, AC, Supercab,
XLT,lilt, Cruise, Flareside, Sportwheels ............................. $17,930
1998 Chevy S·10 Super Cab 19669· AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Sport
Wheels, Sport Stnpes ............................................................ $9,995
1998 Chevy 5·10 #9472· Maroon, Flareside, sportwheels, AC .......
...........................................................................................:. $t1,695
1998 Ford F·150 XLT 19395 Supercab- V-8 Engine, AT, AC, Till,
Cruise, PW&amp;L, 3rd Door, Sport Wheels ...............................$16,625
19!17 Ford Ranger 19622· 22.000 Miles XLT, Flareside.AM/FM/CD,
Sport Wheels·........................... ............................................ $10,995
19!17 F·150 Supercab 19811 .............................................. $15,295
1996 Ford F·250 Blue, 8' Bad, AT, AC, V.,S ·Eng .............:... $8,995
1996 Chevy S.10 Extra Cob 4X219585 ·Super Cab, 2 Tone
Paint, AC, Sportwheels, 3rd Ooor, LS ................................. $10,995.
1804 NIIUn Truck 119476· 48,000 Miles, King Cab, AC, Sport
wheels ................................................................................... $5,595.
1996.Chovy S·10 X-cab 19689 ·Black, LA, AT, Caaoetto, Sport
whoelo, 60,000 mll..............................................................$9,995
19!17 Ford Rongtr 19568 • XLT, AC, Sport Wheels, Rear Slide &amp;
More ................ ., ................................. ............................. ., ..... $9,995

11H Doelgo15 PeN. Vlln llut • 45,000 miles, AT, AC, V-B Eng ..
.... ' ............................................ ' ................,.' .. '''' "''' .... '' .......$19,9&amp;5
1111 Pord WlndNrft312·, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruloo, PW&amp;L .. $t3,230
1H7 Ponttao Tr•neporl Y1n IN81· AT, AC, Tilt, Crulll, Sport
wi1HII, PW&amp;L ............ , ...... ,,., .. ., .... , ....,.,., ........... :............ St 3,975
1111'1 Pard 1410 IOK Yin· 30,000 Mil.. , AT, AC, t&gt;i' Box, V·8
•;::, !\llr Du11 wn..le,:.... ,,.,,,,,......., .. ,................ ,....... 11 a,uao

~1\j":.~r.:,~~~~ ~:.-:~ ::~..~.~:. ~~~~:.~:.·.r;~, $25

tiM Pard Wlndetar tiUI1·, AT, AC, Tilt, CNIII, PW&amp;L .. StMD5.
1111 Dotlg• Grande Clrav•n ~I HIOt·R"r AC, AT, AC, Tilt,
CIUIII, I'W&amp;L, Lift IIIQing door, Floor 11Ck .. , ........... , .. ,.. , ... S12.H5
tiM Dotltt ClrtVIn ltll1 • AT, M;, Tin, Crulol, V·8 Engine, 7

PnNnger ............ ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,.,, ..... ... ................. ..... ll5,88&amp;

1111 Dotlll Ctrtvln IIMM· WM•. 7 Pill, V·l Eng., AT, AO .......
........~ ... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. ,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,$8118!
1111 Doctgl C"1v1n IIM11· AT, AO, ............. :.............. ,. ...SI,HI.

�Page B8

Outdoors
Reed goes from ballpark

Sunday. February 11. 2001

Inside:
Celebmtions begin 'on, Page C2
Jim Sands column, Page C7

OUTDOORS EDUCATION

1

Ohio
DNR
to
offer
courses
to W.Va. hunting grounds
for hunting instructors

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Rick Reed, star pitcher for the
New York Mets, would rather
. be playing baseball in late
October - hke last fall when
the Mets tangled with, but fell
to, their crosstown rivals, the
Yankees, in the World Series.
But, if postseason play does
not happen, Reed can e1~oy
some extra time in the woods
or on a stream or lake.
A product ofWest Huntington. Huntington High School,
ami Marshall University, Reed
now makes his home near
Proctorville, Ohio, in Rome
Township with his wife, Dee,
and Madison, his 6-month old
daughter.
Rick thinks

people about hunting - to
tell people all the good it does.
Ann Lewis, public relations
director with Buckmasters,
said Bushman wants the publie to know that the "overwhelming majority offuuding
of wildlife conservation in
America is provided through
licensing of hunters and
through a federal aid program
(tl)e . Pittman-Robertson Act)
funded by sportsmens dollars."
Pittman-Robertson
has
generated $10 billion since
enacted in 1937. One of the
ways to get the message out is
through the Buckmaster ClasSIC.

Now, during the baseball
season, if Rick and his team
get a couple of days off, he and
some teammates will take a
short h1.1nting break. Turk
Wendell, another pitcher, is a
· favorite partner.
"Turk and I room together
during training," Reed said.
"We met two guys last year two terrific guys -- who had
leased a large parcel of land
down there (ne&gt;r the Mets
training complex at Port St.
Lucie) .
"W&lt; deer hunt there, turkey
hunt and wild boar hunt.
Besides all that land, there's a
99-acre pond or lake.

Ret-d s:~id his father-in-law,
.. They're businessmen, but
hunting "is Paul .Bramnter, introduced they said any rime we want to

cool" and to prove it he him to hunting and shooting. go hunt or fish JUSt give them
showed up last month · in . "And I was one of the folks a ring.We had a great time l'!t
Montgomery, Ala., with a who used to get on others spnng."
bevy of other celebrities for who went hunting," Reed
Reed said about half of the
the 15th Buckmaster National said. "I just didn't understand Mcts hunt, but some won't
Deer Classic.
why anyone would get \'P at admit it.
"Probably only a ' handful
Joining Reed were Mets four in the morning and
teammate Rick White, Tampa wanted to go sit in a tree all aren't afraid to walk into the
Bay· Devil Rays pitcher Doug day.
· clubhouse dressed in ·camo."
Creek, from Martinsburg,
"Folks said, Don't knock it he said. "Heck. Turk and I have
Chicago White Sox infielder till you try it. I did try it. Now bows and guns in our locker
Herbert Perry, former Bosto'!l I enjoy it. Now I know how - unloaded guns, of tourse."
Red Sox star Wade Boggs, to have a good time out there
Reed feels strongly that
entertainer lrlene Mandrel, and I look for,vard to hunting people need to be educated
country music chart-topper season."
about .hunting and the good it
Jeff Carson, rock n1usic's Matt
Reed has a mounted trophy does.
Roberts of 3 Doors Down, buck hanging in his home "Tu rk and I, were not
and pro wrestling's Curt "Mr. an 8-point whitetail buck' he ashamed to tell anybody that
Perfect" Hennig.
took during a hunting trip we hunt and we get letters all
"I ·had a great time," Reed into Canada two years ago.
the time in New York," the'
said. "I hope they invite me . "Yes. I got a nice 8 point- pitcher said. "They say, how
back some time."
at least I thought it was nice," can you go out and kill a
Buckmasters was founded Reed said. "Up there, they said defenseless animal? Yet these
IS years ago by
fellow it was small, but for me it was same people are going
named Jackie Bushman and he . a good start. It's a perfect 8- through the drive-through at
created the Classic as a forum point. I've taken some other Burger King e~ery day eating
to promote hunting.
smaller deer, and I either keep a cow. What's the difference?"
Hunting is more than ,just the meat or donate it to Prokilling animals, and the Classic jeer Venison. I got involved
was established to educate with that a couple years ago."

a

Suncllly. Ftlbrury 11. 2101

SUNDAY MORNING PROFILE

train hunters, especially young
hunters, to be safe and responsible," said Phil King, hunter
education coordinator for th~
ODNR Division of Wildlife.
"These are dedicated volunteers who spend countless
hours conducting the training
that helps keep Ohio a saf~
place to hunt."
Those interested in attending a 2001 hunter education ,
training academy should call
tor trJining academy.
candidates upon arrival at the 1-800-WILDLIFE · and ask
Maude Maynard for registraThe academies will be held academy.
March l6-18 at Burr Oak
"Ohio currently has 1,400 tion materials.
Lodge in Athens County, April . volunteer instructors who

ATHENS- Four weekend
workshops aimed at training
hunter education instructors
are available this year, accordin~;: to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources Division
ofWildlife.
To become a certified
instructor, individuals mpst be
at least 21 years of age, have
successfull y completed a
hunter education course and
complete a volunteer instruc-

6-8 at Mohican Resort Lodge
in Richland County, Aug. 3-5
at Punderson Manor House in
Geauga County, and Sept. 1416 at Camp Cotubic in Logan
County near Bellefontaine.
Each academy pegins at 7
p.m. on Friday and ends no
bter than 3 p.m. on Sunday.
Meals and lodging are provided at no cost to the prospective instructor. A $25 deposit
will be returned to instructor

.J.,

.

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National Wild Turkey Fed.
convention yvraps·up today
•

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COLUMBUS -The Ohio Exhibit hall hours are today
Department
of Natural from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Resources Division ofWildlife .ODNR's
Division
of
will host Mike Beatty . of Wildlife will have a variety of
Xenia and display his record displays and activities, includwhitetailed deer during the ing: an archery range, a comNational Wild Turkey Federa- · puter simulated turkey hunt, a
cion's Convention and Sport "touch table" with informaShow in Columbus, which tion and hands-on artifacts of
wraps up today.
Ohio's indigenous wildlife,
The show, held at the sp,ring and fall turkey hunting
Greater Columbus Conven- scepes, youth and women's
tion Center, will contain more exhibits, a live timber. ratthan 400 outdoor exhibits, tlesnake exhibit and the new
taxidermy displays, seminars state record deer.
and turkey calling contests.
Mike. Beatty will be on

hand to aqswer questions and
display his 39-point non-typical· buck in the Division of
Wildlife's exhibit area on Saturday and Sunday.
A panel of scorers from the
Bu ~ keye Big Buck Club
scored the Beatty buck at 304
6/8, making it the largest nontypical buck ever taken ·in
Ohio and placing it in contention to be the largest nontypical taken by a hunter anywhere in the country.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

•

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180111 liCE CUll
IEWMJ.DID
lAVE Ill. lilY n liED

.

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1992 Mercedes Benz ·1\17~ H .............. GraY: .......... $18,995 ·
1995 Cadillac DeVille -1128002R ............ Brown ......... $10,995
1998 Pqntil!lc Bonneville- t7361T ....... Red ............ $13,970
1994 Ford Thunderbird • 11011211 ...... Gray ............. $5,500
1996 Dodge .Intrepid - t90647R ...... :....... Green ..... ...... $7,995
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Dear
Abby

.

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:;;::.:;...

ADVICE

...:---

Should I
return the
gifts?
DEAR ABBY: A friend of
mine just canceled her wedding that was to take place a
month from now. We already
had an engagement party and
a b.ridal shower for her.
I assumed since the wedding was canceled, the gifts
would be returned. Instead,
my friend asked me how
much I spent so she could
reimburse me, because she
likes my gift too much to
return it. She further stated
ihat members of her family
had refused to take back their
gi(ts when asked. I was too
shocked to resptmd to her
question.
How should I have
answered her question about
how much I spent for her
·gift? (By the way, she . was
engaged once .before but
canceled the wedding before
the shower.)
The gifts from the engagement party were , n,e ver
retUrned -· ·so now . I have ·
given two . engagement gifu
imd a shpwer sift to someone"
wb'ctqey~'~b.t~ied. ~ •
W.h ich !~ads tq another
que1tion -:-. should ~he . ever
become engaged again, must
I give her a third gift? CONFUSED IN WEST
CALDWElL, N.J.
DEAR
CONFUSED:
Since you have already given
two engagement gifts and a
shower gift, I see no reason
why you should feel obligated to give again should your
friend get in the way of
cupid's arrow. Tell her exacdy
how much you spent for•the
wedding gift she's keeping so
she can reimburse you for the
expense. She's trying to do
the right .thing and ·shouldn't
be criticized for it.
DEAR ABBY: I would
like to respond to "Not Very
Graceful in Provo, · Utah,"
who asked how women in
high heels could walk so
gracefully.
When I went through
modeling school in the
1950s, we . v;ere taught to .
walk in high heels by:
(l) Placing the · toe area
down first, followed very
quickly by the heel, so the
whole foot was down at the
same time.
(2) Walking with knees
slighdy flexed.
(3) Pulling our ribs "out of
the· abdomen" (figuratively
speaking) without doing
anything ·special with the
shoulders, not to lean back,
and most imp~&gt;rf'lt, standing
up straight. '
·
If she follows these instructions, she will walk smoothly.
Balancing a book on top of
the head ~an be added later.
I'm sure · models are still
taught these techniques. DEIRDRE
MADDEN,
MEDINA, OHIO
PEAR DEIRDRE: May
I
you for the
inp' · . t 'it 1$etlu ~e • l~t
·, to '
111ber Jllrt to .inake. tt
· . li:o~}!&lt;l~t A ~ ~oint B,: .r
'al•~ Jeaid· lionJ a foot specia~ ,)¥h!) . a~d me to
rerrpd wome,,~that m?re
im!f~rtant th~~ walking
gra~l~!IY in liish heels is to
woar tlioes that tit properly.
An entire industry (bunion
removal~ was spawned by the
popularity of ill-fitting,
spike-heeled shoes.

b.II!aAA

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PROUD OF SERVICE· - In hls home office, Cecil Williams proudly displays a plaque given to him by City National Bank.for his long service to the bank
and the community. (Jeremy W. Schneider photo)
.

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·'·

·M~o,
n
~~~n~
Pu~in~~sm~~reflects
on
·~
~t:i
.~
\~ ~·.o;i~,-~~'
)

.. i

'./

',,

...

;.;

'l.rft.}'ti"'·

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' iiv JIRIMY 'W. IScHNIIDIR

., . ''

TIMES.SENTI~EL STAFF

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AMP., CONLEY,
WVa. ~ Few
people are . able to
•'

reflect on ~ll.e past; " •
especially . wi~h .
their family -· - the repreSentatives of the future.
Mason County resident Cecil
Williams, however, cmuiders himself a
fortunate man because that is what he
is able to do.
Willi:mlS isl}.'ti ~. ltmnge(;to the are~
oi io hard WQrk, lilt life has revolved
around his ability :to set goals and
work ardently to reach theni.
:Williams starte4. · his ' business life
w\len he was 24.
,
"I had came back; ,from Pikeville
College and got . my start in business
opening a truclt mining company in
West Colul1)bia;'W,illjams said. ·
The comp~l)Y ?iniped , C.Pi;! . an!l
trtic!Ceq the proaul:t . to· th~ rivet.
Williams said . he 'b~gaiill.,th~· ,firm
because his father had alsO iriined coal,
owning his busiriess siilc~ the 1940s.
"Like father, like son, I guess;•
Williams said. jo.jcingly! ~ He. said '
throughout the years, his company"
emplayed about 22 people.
Williams worke&lt;l . in the coal business for
ye,ars. but du'r: ~n't
1
eliOUgh. He :md .'his wjfe, Patri(;ja, .
decided to bigin:Jl,llOther.bus@IFss ang
in 1978, ~r F.urniture &lt;:&gt;penftil.
.
Plair operated until 1990, lben a
fire destroyed the :·business.
fire,
however, wasn't ' ian excuse W. quit.
Instead, they ,rebuilt and n~· fWr ,
Furnii:Ure remains a thmling ~~

29

TS

Artist speci
·.AIKEN, S.C. (AP) - While
naiion acljusts to the power sh,ift .
Washington, JoaJt' Pilk ' sees the

, . ,, ~ .. ,,

"'

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in Gallipolis Ferry.
Since 1990, Flair has been operated
by Cecil's son, Kenny - another
example of "like father, like son:•
Oddly enough, Kenny\ youngest son,
Jonathon, alsO works at the furniture

requ1rmg board members to step

down when they turn 70.

Williams didn't just occupy a position on the board, he worked as an
appraiser for the bank until West Virginia law required appraisers to be
st'ore. ,
·
certified.
,. Williams hasn't only been an entre- Williams is now facing another batpreneur, but a community leader. He tie, but this time it isn't with accounhas served on the board of the former tmtl or competing businesses. This
P!-'Oples · Bank, now City National, time, the l&gt;attle is against Lou Gehrig's
since. 1972.
disease.. '
He i'etiied from his positfon on the · Williams said he was diagnosed
bahk bo~ because of age stiplllation with the disease in August 2000 and

.

since then: he said that his condition
"If you don't understand It, I'll
explain it .to you," Williams said.
"Basically, your brain forgers to tell
your muscles what to do. With me, it
started in my legs."
Williams talked about his condition
matter-of-factly, just like any business
owner who has designed a plan for
their business.
"Sooner or later, it kills you. You
either stop breathing or stop swallowing ·. and choke, that takes you out,"
Williams said.
"They say you have about two
years to live after you've been diagnosed. That's how long Gehrig made
it. I know some people that have lived
for 12 or 15 years with it, but, I'll be
lucky to see two years. It won't take
. that long to get me."
Williams doesn't allow the statistics
keep him from living and enjoying life
now, though.
"I have three children, two daugh- ·
ten, Debra Day and Tricia Knight yes, I have a 'day' and 'night' - and a
son, .Kenny. I also have five grandchildren and a 4-year-old great-grandchild. I get to visit with them a lot."
Williams then points to a picture
that hangs on his living room wall.
"It's a picture of five generations of
Williams men;· he said. "A lot offamilies don't have a picture of five genetations.We're fortunate. My father died
in February of last year, he was 93
years old and we were able to get a
· picture of the family."
Reflecting on the future, Williams
said,"I've done a lot, I'm 70 years old.
I have had a good life."

in painting the.powerful for posterity
pie are gone.And Pilk already has more
' paintings Ofl Capitol Hill than any
~ wo~ artist' ,and mbr:e than

&amp;ccluO!Ifadilli!IBrltpolntof
n\ost 'o£the"men~hO'qptul'l;likmt;~~- .
Sbe ltlidia their ¥1 and· ~
• 'tilt~ ·llvlns, ; . ·. ·
,
and me :j)ways looks at their·hand~. , . Fifteen )'ears ago, when· the ·Los
Pilk is on a $hqrt list of artists likelf;: Angeles Time1listed the top four
to be coniidered when it's time to.1 trl!it artists in ' the nation, · Pilk. was
paint portraits of the powerful for ~~' ,,among· them. Mo" recently, The
terity.When a new administtation takes ~n Post called her one of the

Po•·

aver, me says, ''you can bet I'm inter-"

t.

has declined.

most sought-after portrayen of politiested- that~ my hlead and butrer:·. ·:, 1'11 figures in tilt capital.
Washington it a ll1Wn whei:e people's
Her subjeCts .include heads of state,
face1 \lang around lqng after tile pea- ,·tnembers of · Congress and the

Supreme Court, military brass, acton,
the famow and some little known outside their fmilly circles, other people's
,cbildreqahdherown. .
··, ..
·~ · T'!lese day!, Pilk paint5 'in an upper
at her home in Woodside Plantation. When her husband, Jack, retired
li:om the Pentagon in 1998, they chose
the lot for their retirement home in
south Aiken for the way the light
would s~ike !hat room, she said. And
it's good that same window does not
loolt out over the golf course just a
short walk li:om the back of the house.

mom

i~

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career

There is a tug of war between Pilk's
passions - to paint or putt.
As a painter, Pilk does other things,
including delicate flowers above intricate llattenbe~ lace. But she always
returns to what has fascinated her since
childhood - the wrinkles and laugh
lines that map the history of a face, the
feelings people can never quite hide
behind their eyes.
She says she discovered as a little girl
that she could capture that ori paper
with her crayons or pencil. She grew
into oil on canvas.
·
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, wv

Page C2 • &amp;unbap Q:imtf ·&amp;tntintl

Sunda~February18,2001

Sunday, February 18, 2001

Weddings

FAMILY COLUMN
Mad cow disease
and the United States
How can we be sure "mad cow disease" isn't in.. the United States? Mad
cow disease, or bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), gets a lot of press
because there are so many unknowos
about how it spreads, and because of the
devastating effects of its human form, a
form of Creutzleldt-Jakob disease. The
fatal neurological disease is often
painful, and often includes delusions or
hallucinations as part of its development.
Classical Creut~feldt-Jakob disease
(CJ D) occurs at a rate of one or two
cases per million people throughout the
world, including the United States.
However, in !997, a new variant of CJD
(vCJD) was found to be the same strain ·
as BSE, and it's affecting much younger
people than classical CJD. It's believe&lt;! .
that people co ntra cted this new variant
by ea tin g meat from BSE-infected animals.
·

Becky
Collins
GUEST COLUMNIST
Related diseases, such as scrapie in
sheep and goats, appear to come from
diffe.r ent strains of the protease-resistant
protein, or ''prion"- the agent responsible for the disease. Scientists are unsure
about the exact nature of the prion, but
it's very small and heat-resistant. The
vast majority of cases of vCJD have
occurred in Great Britain, where more
than 80 people have died from the disease. Most BSE cases have also o~curred
in Great Britain, where more than
175,000 head of catde were diagnosed
from late 1986 through ntid-1999. At its
peak in j anuary 1993, almost 1,000 new
cases were reported weekly. Today, only
about 60 new cases are reported week-

ly. No cases of BSE or vCJD have ever
been identified in the United States, but
it's not because we're not looking. In
fact, scientists from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture's Animal and Plant
Health [nspection Service routinely
examine animals at high risk for the disease -- those with neurologic conditions seen at food processing pi2nts and
veterinary diagnostic laboratories. The
brains of nearly 10,000 cows have lieen
tested since 1990, and none have tested
positive for BSE.
Besides this and other · surveillance
efl'o~ts, the United States has banned the
importation of arty live ruminants
(cows, sheep, goats and some other
exotic animals) and their tissues from
any country with confirmed cases of
HSE. Also, in 1997 the government prohibited the use of byproducts lflade
from ruminants from being used in any
ruminant feed . ( It's believed British catde got BSE by eating feed with rendered protein that was infect~cl) More
information on BSE can be found at
http //www.aphis.usda.gov/oa/bse/.

Sigman-Loveday ·engagement
BIDWELL -·
Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Sigman of Bidwell announce the engagement of their daughter, Cassandra D. Sigman, to Adam
C Loveday, son of Mr. and
Mrs. 'Albert Loveday of BidwelL
The bride-elect graduated
from River Valley High
School in 2000. She is an
employee of Ames and is a ·
member of Old Kyger

Church,
Her fiance graduated from
River Valley High School in
1995. He is . employed at
Delta Metals of Point Pleasant, WVa. and is a member of
White Oak Church.
The couple will exchange
their · vows at a 2:30 p.m.
open church ceremony May
19, at the Cheshire Boptist
Church.

GALLI A
CALENDAR
Sunday, Febnlary 18

I.;

ADDISON - Preaching ser· .

vice, Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. Rick Barcus,
preacher.

CROWN CITV - Brother Bob
Davit will preach at Good Hope
United Baptllt Chul1lh, p.m.

e

GALLIPOLIS - 'Black Hillery
and My Expe~tnell In Prof"'
llonal !laubalr by Gallla County
HletorlcaVGenealoglcal Society
w~h speaker James Bowles, 2:30
p.m.
Monday, February 19
GALLI POLIS - Gallia County
Animal Welfare League meets at
7:30 p.m. at St. Peters Episcopal
Church.
Wednesday, February 21
SOAR Steelworkers Organization will meet at 10 a.m., Union
Hall Local 5668. If you .are Interested ln your benefits, you need
.to become a member and attend
meetings every third Wednesday
of the month. Refreshments
servad.
Thurldly, February 22
POINT PLEASANT - Tri·
County Group Narcotics Anony·
mous meeting, 7:30 p.m., 611
Viand Street. Use side entrance.

black production of Hello may be obtained by calling
Dolly followed by a nine- (304) 696-6656 or by visitmonth tolir with the musi- ing our ticket office in the
cal revue Eubie, ' and her Joan C. Edwards Performing
own talk radio and music
Arts Center on the Marshall
shows in Hollywood.
U niversiry campus.
Come celebnte the musiTickets are also availa.ble
cal legacy of o;me of the
most legendary bandleaders by calling Ticketma'ster at
of the swing era. Cab Cal- (304) 523-5757 in Huntingloway (1907-1994), . the ton and (304) 342-5757 in
·"King of Hi- De-Ho," who Charleston. You may order
was world-famous for his tickets online at www.tickunique big band round and etmaster.c6m , or visit select
his sea tty vocal style of flam- · Kroger, Waves MusiG, Budboyant jazz. Throughout his get Tapes and Records,
long career, cab never lost National Recotd M'~rt, or
his energy or charisma.
Disc Jockey Records for
Tickets are currently on
tickets.
sale, with prices at $36, $38,
Cab Calloway's 'Legacy of
and $40 plus tax. Half-price
tickets are available for Swing' is sponsored by
youth 17 and under. Groups WSAZ, Clear Channel
of 10 or more receive a 10 Communications and the
percent discount. Tickets Marshilll Artist Series.

supervision provided.
GAL~IPOLIS - Black History
Celebration songfest at Paint
Creek Baptist Church, 7 p.m.

Saturday, February 24
POINT PLEASANT - Black
History will be observed at the
Point Pleaeent Seventh Day
Adventllt Church. Guell speaker
will be Stan Dlcke11on from the
Berea Seventh Day Advantlat
Chul1lh· In Cha~11ton. Ftllowahlp
dinner will follow tht ttrvloa.

HUNTIN GTON In King" and "Jumpin' Jive."
honor of Black Hi story And of cours e, no Cab CalMonth , the Marsh.all Artists loway evening would be
Series is bringing a tribute complete without "Minnie
. ·to one of the world's great- the . M&lt;:&gt;Ocher." The show
est jazz pioneers, Cab Cal- will pay tribute to the Cotloway. Calloway's 'Legacy of ton Club, where the live
Swing' will be appearing radio broadcasts of the Cab
Wednesday, Feb. 28, 8 p.m . Calloway
Orchestra
at the Keith-Aibee Theatre.
launched the bandleader to
Cab Calloway's' Legacy of stardom.
Swing', adapted from its
Cab'i daughter, Chris Caldebut at th e 1999 JVC Jazz loway will be starring as.
Festival, includes original 'lead vocalist. Her career
Calloway
arrangements, began some 30 years ago on
some of which have not the Ed Sullivan Show with
been heard in 50 years. Also an introduction by her
featured 'o n stage will be father. Chris spent many
dan ce sensation Chester years performing with her
Whitmore, who performed father and his Hi-De-Ho
with· the legendary Cal- Orchestra touring in the
loway and who choreo- US, Europe, Japan, South
graphs the shows dance America, and Australia. Her
sequences. The program will career also includes Broadinclude hits !uch as 'Jungle way performances in the all-

GALLIPOLIS - Miracles In
Recovery Group Narcotics
Anonr.moua meeting, 9 p:m., St.
Peter a Eplacopal Cnui'Qh.
GALLIPOLIS - Black Hlltory
Celebration at Paint Crttk Bapfltt
Chul1lh, t 0 a.m. with keynote
tpeaktr Mali&lt; Anthony GarrtH.

· Card lhowera
A card ahbwer Ia planned for
Mlbll Adklna who will oalabrata
her 93rd birthday February 25.
Carda may be aent to: 939 Hon·
eyauckle Road, Cheshire, Ohio
45620.
'
A card shower will be held for
Alberta Thornton who will be cele·
braling her 75th birthday Feb. 20.
Cards may be sent to: 51 Chillicothe Road, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
A card shower wil be held for
Mary (Dolly) Skidmore· who will
celebrate her 85th birthday Feb.
20. Cards may be sent to: 234
Evergreen Road, Bidwell, OH
45614.
A card .shower is planned for
Marjorie Graen who will celebrate
her 84th birthday Feb. 25. Cards
may be sent to: 1253 Sugar
Creek Road, Crown City, OH
45623.

FACTS wams of danger of methamphetimines
When ice
isn't ice

more frequ ently until they
reach the point where they
smoke continuously for days·
or weeks with 'little food or '
sleep. Then they crash. Sleep
When we he ar the word . for dnys. The withdrawal
ice, we UIUAIIy ·thin·k of plmc thnt follows includes
frozen water - the stufF that deprenion, lethargy, and
cool! down drink• and makes IOJnctimel suicidal feellnp;
the road1 treacherous , But Smoking ice can stop the11
1omednm ice isn't ian't ice: f~ding~, 10 often usen repeat
sometime• it's the name for the cycle nf abuse. ·
the smokable form of
Another danger linked to
methamphetimine, and that's· ice is toxic psychosis which
more dangerbus than ice
covered roads.
Methamphetimine (meth)
messes with the brain. It
increases the activity of two
key .
neurotransmitters~
dopamine ond epinadrine. In
low doses, the drug unleashes a surge of energy, alertness, and loss of appetite.
Heartbeat and blood pressure also rise. Smoking meth
delivers a concentrated blast
of the drug to the brain
within seconds compared
with the longer, slower ·
absotbtion that occurs with
lOr _ _.. ,
oral use. The rush is so pow-

~~~;;s.~o~m·i;e users crave .it
dose. They
t
The Community Caier\1 ar is ·
by smoking

includes
hallucinations,
panic, paranoia and sometimes violent, irrational
behavior. Toxic psychosis is
brought on by the high
blood level of meth so with·
in a week of not using, usual· ·
ly the psychosil clean. Some•
times it doesn't. Other risks
include
organ
damap,
inelucliing the same sort of
lung damage sun in crack
smokers. Like crack adclicu,
most ice addicts need help

stopping.
Ice has a twin called crys•
tal. Both are meth.
Next time you hear kidl or
teens talkins about ice and
crystals, don't think ofrofrigerated cubes or Ne\Y Age
jewelry, think danscr. Ask
questions,
and
call
FACTS/New alternatives for
information or help (446·

7866/286-1589)

TH£ BRIDAL DIRECTORY
-Tullio-

"",.w
...,_n• COII••ullllt
Appt.-

:I
I I

I love to write about my lu cky bft• SOllletimes I wake up at night thinking
about how fortunate I've been. If you
remember I wrote about some of my
dose calls a couple of weeks ago- once
when I feU 50 feet after climbing up in
the barn to look at some baby birds.
Luckily 1 fell onto some loose hay my
brother had just put down instead of on
GUEST COLUMNIST
the , hard. rock flo&lt;1r. That hay saved my
1
life I was only nine years old. And then
there was the time I fell off. of a bridge plane, we saw that we were within 20 feet
, I .could not swim and by chance, my of going over the edge. It was probably a
brother saved me.
mile down, if we had fallen . Finally, we
Planes have also caused me some great were rescued, and later discovered the
concern. There was the time when 1 plane had run out of gas.
ahnost fell out of a plane while trying to
I also remember a trip I rook in the
oke photos, and the time when the early 1950s when I went to Mexico. I was
motor stopped in the plane and we taking photos of a group of young boys
almost crashed, but the motor sorted while they waved their machetes. I couldagain when we were just a few feet from n't underst:lnd Spanish so I thought they
the ground. An other time a friend I me t wanted me to take their picture until one
from Texas and I wanted to go to Aca pul- of them hit me on the leg with his
\CO so we paid a pilot $50 to oke us there
machete. I started to run and they ran
in his private plane. This pilot decided to after me. I ron into a store where the
11
show us some thingsu he could do with ~~ner saw wh:lt W3S h;tppening. He
his plane ond then the motor s~1rtcd to qluckly shut ond locked the door after
"miss11 and we almost crashed. When he . me. H ~ s.1 id they wcr:e o.ll drunk, and out
got the pion under cm)trol, he found a of control, and thor they would have cut
small strip of level ground on top of a ,me tp pieces with their knives.
Anoth~r rime that was· scarY was when
mountain to put the planl'! down. It wasn't the best place to land a plane, but it I went to Brazil and took. a trip down the
saved our lives. When we got out of the Amazon River. The guide told us to be

Tawney

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cheeaebrew ·

~nd gold and navy blue and

Magazine checks
out how America eats

IVory.
The wedding party consisted of matron of honor, Kelli
Templeton,. sister of the bride ;
bridesmaids, Lisa Copley and
Tina Lambert, friends o( the
bride; and junior bridesmaids
Allison Templeton, Courtney
Nelson, Mallory Templeton
and Kelsey Nelson. Groomsman Thomas Templeton,
brother-in-law of the bride,
stood in for best man Danny
Harmon, brother of the
groom, who was unable to
attend due to illness.
The guest book attendant
was Amy Keefer, friend of the
bride. Photos were taken by
·
Donna Smith.
Following the ceremony, a
dintWr ;reception ,was h'~)d •at
the Hormbn Park Youth ~en­
ter. The couple now resides in
Point ('leasant.
·

NEW YORK (AP) Americans' favorite food
tastes range from pizza, no
su rprise as most-reached-for
takeout, to elegant asparagus
at the top of the veggie pop
charts, Bon Appetit maga zme says.
The magazine's fourth
annual reader survey asked
about both at-ho me and
eatin g-out habits.The results
summarized in the Marc h
issue suggest some changes
in tastes, along with staunch
devotion to a lot oflongtime
favorites.
Ketchup hos lost ground
to Dijon mustard, vanilla is
still first choice in ice cream
flavors. About 85 percent say
they shop at farmer's markets and over h~lf of responde nts eat a vegetarian en tree

K~mper-Cheesebrew
POINT PLEASANT lr

I •

T O'

t

T

I

Karli · Kemper and Jo~eph
Cheesebrew were united in
marriage at 4:30 p.m. December 31 at the Point Pleasant
Nazarene Church. The dou·ble-ring ceremouy was performed by Rev. John Sallaz.
'{he bride is the daughter of
Mr.a nd Mrs. Marion F. Kemper Jr. of Bidwell, Ohio. The
groom is the son of Mr. and
·Mrs. John "Red" H. Cheesebrew of Point Pleasant.
The bride was given in ·
· ·marriage by her parents wearing a floor-length satin ivory
gown with gold accents and
ivory pearls, created by Lambert and Associate. The matching veil, created by the bride,
featured satin roses with gold
and ivory ·p~.arls with 'ljua&lt;¥u~~
pie layers of 'flowing" sheer '
ivory trimmed in gold.
The bridal party wore wine

wedding

sample of soles reports)
sample of sale, reports)
Weekly charts for the
1 1 "Dinosaur," \Valt Disney
1. "Dinosaur," Walt Disney
nation 's mo st popular videos Home Vid eo.
H ome Video.
as they appear in next week's ·
2. "Silence OfThe Lambs,"
2. "What Lies Beneath,''
issue of · BiHboard magazine. M GM H ome ·Entertai nmen t.
DreamWorks H nml' Enter"
Reprinted with permission:
3. " Playboy: The Complhe
tainme nt.
.Anno Nicole Smith . $450
3. "Me, M yself &amp; . Irene,''.
.Top Music Video Sales
Million Playmate,'' Playboy
Fox Video.
{Compiled from a national H ome Video.
4. "Gladiato r," Dreamsample of sales reports)
4. ' jazz: A Film By Ken
1. "Making The Tour," 'N Burns,'' PBS Home Video.
Works Home Entertainment.
Sync.
5. "Coyote Ugly," Touch5. "Erin Broc kovich,'' Uni2 . "The Up In Smoke versal Studios Home Vid eo.
stone Home Video.
Tour," Various Artists. (Plat6. "Playboy's California
6. "Gone In 60 Seconds,"
inum)
Girls," Playboy H ome Video.
Touchsto ne Home Video.
3. "Saliva!," TooL
7. "Chicken Run,'' Dream 7. "Dr. T &amp; The Women ,"
4. "Live At Madison Works Home Entertainment.
Artisan Home EntertainSquare Garden," 'N Sync.
S. "X-Men,'' FoxVideo.
ment.
(Platinum)
9. "Street Fighter Alpha:
8 . "U rban Legen ds: F'tna 1
E
5. "Britney In Hawaii: Live Th M . ., M
ov1e,
anga nter- ,..C·'
. , b"la T n ·star H Ollle
.e
....... ut,, C 0 1llll
&amp; J'1on:,' ~ Britney Spears.
tamment.
.
(Platipum)
10. "The Sopranos: The ~Vtde?,. .
,
· 6. :'The Complete Video . Complete First Season," ' ; . 9. Hollow Man •. Colu'11Anthology
1978-2000," HBO Home Video.
b1a TnSta&lt; Home V1deo.
Bruce Springsteen.
'
Top DVD Sales
10. "Disney's The Kid,' '
7. "Baller Blockin','' Cash
(Compiled from a national Walt Disney Home Video.
·Money. (Platinum)
9. "Hell Freezes Over,''The
Eagles. (Platinum)
· .
10. "One Last Time Live In
Concert," Tina Turner.
Top Video Rental•
(Compiled from a national
sample of rental reports)
,
1. "Me, Myself &amp; Irene,
FoxVideo.
2. "What ·Lies Beneath,"
DreamWorks Hof!le Entertainment ·
3. "Gladiator;: Dream,
Works Home Entertainment.
4. "The Cell,'' N ew Line
H01ite Video.
5 •t'J-lbllow Man,'' Columbia T;iStar Home Video.
6. "Gone In 60 Seco nds ,"
Touchstone Home Video.
7. "Coyote . Ugly,'' Touchstone Home Video.
8. "Disney's The Kid,'' Walt
Disney Home Video.
9. "Battlefield Earth,"
· Warner Hon1e Video.
10. " Bait," Warner Home
Video. r
Thp Video Sales
(Compiled from a national

Your PI/ 11/oMI
..... JI ...,,

•

•

Ketdtup has lost
ground to Dijon
mltstard, fJanilla is
still first choicl' in ice
cream .fla,,ors.
once 'o r twice a week now.
Craving a co mfort food,
it seems, men and Northeaster ners more readily
choose pasta. Women and
Midwesterners
prefer
mashed potatoes, earning
that food a high ·rating.
A 'clear winner with
everyone, the magazine says,
is Italian food as the cuisine
of choice to make at home
- and it's almoSt as"!fOpular
when eating out.' Chocolate
chip reigns supreme among
cookies.

Sun Board ...
First four-sided, high pressure,
tanning unit with comfortable wave
formed lounge. Open and relaxed
tanning! Non-claustrophobic,
frosted acrylic lounge. No moving
parts, 20 minute tanning!

Call for an appointment•..

(740)' 446-6959
Sommtr lmaal Tqnnlnq SVIop

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

11

}tbldcy &amp;ton

careful because there were large snak~s
along this river. On shore, one man talked
me into going wnh hlln on a short trip
aw:ty from our group to take some photos of d1e b1g snakes. This was in the jungle and I told him, "this is dangerous, let's
get ba~k to our group." He said he was
going to find a snake and photograph it
to send it back home. I went back to ou r
group and when our guide asked where
the other man was, 1 told him that the
man was out in the jungle taking pictures
of the' big snakes. The guide said, "Oh, my
goodness, he shouldn't have gone out into
the jungle because it is very dangerous
out there!" I led our guide out to where
I had last seen the man .There we saw the
man where he had fallen and a big snake,
and I mean BIG had wrapped around his
neck and choked him. H e w:ts dead. The
guide looked at me and soid, "that could
have been you-he had to have fallen,
then the big snake wrapped around his
neck an d chocked him . Those snakes ·are
tfle most dangerous snakes in the \VOrld."
It is unbelievable how many dose calls
I've had. Even if these events didn't ltill
me, I should have died of fright. I can't
help but believe the good Lord has
watched over me for 87 years - I don't
know how many . more years I'll be on
earth for Him to watch over me.

BEST SELLERS

8. E,.," Eminem.

published as a free service to
honprofit groups wishing to
amounce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
Friday, February 23 ·
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items are
RODNEY - Rodney United printad as space permits and canMethodist Church Youth Center is not be guaranteed to run a specif·
open Fridays 7 • 10 p.m. Adu~ . ic number Of c;tays.

In an effort to provide our
readership with current
news, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept wed·
dings after 90 days from the
date of the event.
• Weddings submitted after
the 90-day deadline will
appear dunng the week in
The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society
section must be submitted
within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be sub·
mitted within 60 days of the
occurrence.
All material submitted for
publication is subject to editmg.

A MOMENT WITH MAX
Max

· Relive the days of swing with Cab Calloway's 'Legacy of Swing'
Adam C. Loveday and Cassandra D. Sllll!an

&amp;unbap 1!:imtlf ·&amp;ttttintl • Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

,,

HolZer' Health Hotline
·We're Looking Out for YOU/

'T'Iie .7V(eeting of tlie 'Rivers
'Darling, before tfie meeting of tfie rivers,
Wfien we ran our own free courses,
'Twisting and turning ]and overflowing into
. 'Tfie fields, ofi! it was so mucfi more fim;
We could ease into eacfi otfier's eyes in a breeze,
..Cet our minds drift over tfie oceans and clouds,
and convulse in a fiearty laugfiter forever.
::Now, at tfie meeting point of our rivers,
as our souls are losing tfieii- singular identities,
· 'Darling, it's all so different and silent;
after being blown by tfie windmill of your tfiougfits
all nigfit long, longing for tfie joyce of your voice,
Jfoney, I freeze at tfie glimpse of your lotus eyes,
·:My fieart races lik.e my dreams in tfie winding
Country ro'ads of :Meigs, my moutfi dries and
. speecfi stutters; and I notice, my darling,
You too are lost in tfie daze ojtfie sweet mystique.
·'Tfie meeting rivers, darling, in a sfiort distance
Will merge, drop by drop, and weave into one,
as you and I; leaving befiind tfie geograpfiy of
'Different origins, tfi~ taste of different minerals,
and flow as one splendid river witfi tfie mig fit of unity,
rTfie dauntless pride and tfie taintless love.

This Is why the Holzer.l;lealth Hotline
Is staffed with a speqjUy trained
Holzer Medical Cel\ter .R_eglsterd Nurse

6 um until 2 um, 7 ~ya u week
'

•

riJ:Halesfi rr&gt;atel
Compliments of

Xristy :JVawroclii
admirer of poetry
Ad: your phy•ician about medication coneema
•

.

\

·,

�Page C4 • &amp;unbup 1!imK-&amp;rntinrl

Pomeroy •)Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

•

1ngs

Johnson-Miller wedding
CROWN
C ITY
Frances J ohnso n and J eff
M ·i ller \Vere unit~d in marriage on February 12. 2001,
in Ca ttlesburg, Ky. by Rev.
Martin Gute.
The bride is the daughter
of Mary and Paul D. Porter.
The groom is tl;e son of
Maggie Bundy. The couple

will reside in their home in
Crown City. ·
In attendance were Mary
and Paul Porter; the bride's
children, Je11nifer and Jason
Porter and Bruce Johmon
Ill ; Cheryl McGuire and
Patricia Patterson.
The reception was held in ·
Chesapeake, Ohio.

ce r. Each session of the series
emphasizes one of the obove
copies o r other related issues
such as how to locate needed
coinmunity resources.
A revised and updated 'I
Can
Cope'
curriculum
incorporates
information
about the latest advances in
cancer treatment and stresses
the role of class participants
as partners in the learning
experience. Guest lecturers
provide important background information, then
class members arc encou raged to identitY and find
sol utions for some of the
challenges they face in cop-

Bowles to be featured
speaker at His~orical Society
GALLIPOLIS- James Bowles, a native of
Middleport, will present 'Black History and
. My Experiences in Professional Baseball' Sunday, Feb. 18, 2001 at 2:30 p.m. at rha Gallii
County Histo rical/Genealogical .Society. 430
Second Ave:, Gallipolis.
Bowles, who showed pro~1ise of his skill as a
baseball player by the time he was in the second grade, achieved the distinction of becoming a Cincinnati Reds player in 1957. After a
,stint in the U.S. Ammy, he signed with the
Philadelphia Phillies.
Although it was known that he was on outstanding player, his accomplishments wen! of
little personal satisf.tction because of the prejudidal attitudes and restrictions prevalent at

ing with cancer. Family
members are encouraged to
attend and their concerns are
included in all sessions, particularly those that deal with
communication and intimacy. Improving communication skills has benefits within
the family and i11 the doctorpatient relationship.
Hundreds of people with
cancer and those close to
them have found 'I Can
Cope' to be ·~ ust what the
doctor ordered." Class members are always encouraged to
discuss problems with their
physicians or health care'
providers, while at the same
time taking responsibility for
mu ch of their own wellbeing by learning to better
manage issues such as ~tress,
diet, eXercise, pain con trol
&gt;nd finonciol planning. Participants consistently praise 'I
Can c;ope' and the· facilitators who lead the classes for
giving them the opportunity
to learn and share with others what is often the most
challenging experience of
their liv'es.
'I Can Cope' will soon be
available in this area. A six
week series, eac h session
approximately one hour, will
begin on Tuesday, March 6,
2001 at 6 p.m ., in the doctor's dining room of Holzer
Clinic in conjunction with
Holzer Medical Center. The
dining room is located just

Elvis

right of the emergency room
entrance, and parking will be
available in the hos.piral's
emergency room parking lot.
Over the six week period,
f.1eilitators fron1 Ho lzer Clinic ond Holzer Medical Center will make presentations to
those present for the 'I Can
Cope' sessions. Facilitators
will include nurses, physicians, radiation oncology
professionals, social workers,
and financial advisors.
After the initial session on
March 6, additional programs
will follow each Tuesday for
five remaining weeks. Ses-

sions include "What is Cancer?", "The Effects of Illness 11 ,
"Pain Mp. na.ge men t'' , "Intimacy and Self-Esteem",
"Mobilizing Resources and
Support", and "Celebrating
Life". The public is invited to
attend this unique program
to help assist individuals to
cope with selected aspects of
the .cancer experience. Registration is required. The only
cost is your time. For information or· to register for the
local 'I Can Cope' program,
contact Kim Painter at Holzer Medical Center by qlling
(740) 446-5365.

oel{s"

'I

I'

'

&amp;unbap 'QI:imr• -itrnlinr1 • Page C5

New .,Rugrats' charader voiced by blind actress
B):NICIA, Calif. (AP) - Kuni, the
cowboy-booted, adventurous new toddler in the "Rugrats" neighborhood,
owes her wann and giggling voice to a
22-year-old actress who reads her weekly scripts in Braille.
Dionne Quan, who beat out 14 7
other actors for the part, was born with
hypoplasia -leaving her .with underdeveloped optic nerves that distingtiish
only some colors and objects.
That didn't bother the show's producers one bit. The only modification
"Rugrats" producers made was to adjust
the microphone to avoid capturing the
soft sound of her inde~ finger as it runs
over her script.
.
" I love this medi:t bt.·causr it's vt:ry frt·c
- there is nn ageism, no racism, no sexism, only your voice," said Charlie Adler,
"R ugracs "' vmcc
. d.trecto r.
The challenge for actors who tried
out for Kimi WJS to cre;u~ a uniqut• voice:
::md chJ.racrer, and yet fit in with a show
tlut had ilready been on tht.• :.ir for years,
said c.1sti ng director 13Jrbara Wright.
"The women th.tt create the ll.ugrats
have wondc-1fld ch.tr.~etcrs that rumt

from an innoet.·nt pbCl: ..mel Dionne likewise had tlw ability to pcrt(n·m from the
same kind of innocent pbL·e," \Vrighr
said.
Quan, a sm:tll wo nutl with shou lder-

length dark hair, seemed pas,ionate as she
described her voice techniques during an
jnterview in her parents' San Francisco
13ay area home, where she still lives.
"You can mix and match them with
accents and do aU sort of strange things,"
she explained, gesturing as she slid from
munchkins to viUains to superheroes.
Kimi's voice ''just sort of cante out,"
she said.
"'"
"Originally I made her more sweet;
she is still sweet but also has more of an
edge to her. She is a little bit of a
tomboy," she said.
The Kimi choracter was introduced in
the movie "Rugrats in Paris" and now is
a tCb't.Jiar in the Emmy-winning animated TV show, which premiered on Nickelodeon 10 years ago. (It airs 8:30 a.m.
and 7:30 p.m .. Mo11day through Friday, 9
a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m.
Spnday, EST)
.
"She is fearless and she is \'&lt;tY confid~:nt, and bt:c:msc of th:tt sh..: c.:~n gt:t into
.1lot of problems," said Quan , who's pbnniug to move to Los Angdt's, when: the
sh cm; ·is t:ttx·d . " I thmk ~t's m mu ch fun to
pl.1y hi..'r bcc.1L1 'i~ she is so unlike' 111~ ."
''Rugr:ns" is b.1sed on the childish
nmchicf of s ev~n toddlers, ~~u voiced by
,1dult w&lt;&gt;tnc:n . It was crt.•;lted by Arlene
Klasky. G:tbor Cs upo and Paul Gt:rmain.
\Vhenc..·nT adu1ts an: around, the Rtlgrats

act like real babies, but when they're
alone, they talk to each ochtr in their
own nther elevated vocabulary.
Quan beg:m acting at 14 and has
taped commercials, CD-ROM games
and animated series. She loves the freedom of being just &gt;nother voice on an
audiotape. Casting directors often have
no clue about her disability. (Only 650 of
the more than 100,000 Screen Actors
Guild members are disabled.)
It was a different story when she tried
musical cheater. "A lor of people were
worried about me walking around the
st:ige, which was really no problem once
I learned my way around."
Community theater also was frustrating. She found herself "either playing
somebody blind, somebody Asian or
somebody blind and Asian," she remembers, laughing.
Her script usually arrives the day
before her weekly tnp to Lo s Angeles.
She types tt into l:lraille "' her mother
Lori r~:tds it out loud, then memorizes it
on her trip south .
"Wh~n I \vas just le&lt;trniug voict·over,
learning to read Braille really quickly and
really smoothly was a challenge," said
Quan, "Unlike print, with Braille you
have to read a letter at a time I b'llOSS with
print you can sec tho whole \\'ord but I
have to read as fast as you guys."

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barrett

Barrett 60th anniversary
RUTLAND Charles Marion, and Bob and Jane of
and Florence Hutton Barrett Roseville; and three daughof Rutland w ill celebrate ters and sons-in-law, M arlene
.their 60th wedding ann iver- and Nat Carpenter of Ruesary on Saturday, Feb. 24.
land, Darlene and John
There will be an open Gilliam of' Gahanna, and
house at the couple's home Teresa and Mike Wimbish of
from noon to 2 p.m. and a Johnstown. They also have
family dinner at the Golden 12 grandchildren and seven
Corral in Gallipolis.
great-grandchildren, ' along
Mr. and Mrs. Barrett are wi th · two step-grandc hilthe parents of three sons and d ren.
daughters-in 1 law,
Charlie
The couple request that
and Kathy of Ru tland, Jim of gifts be omitted.

,5eQior are

said, "as happy as a man can be."
For additional infommation, please call (7 40)
446-7200 .

Residents and families of Holzer Senior Care Canter iang
•nd danced the 'night away during the Valentine
celebration held . on Tuesday evening. Excitement
prevailed aa Elvis .performed JailHouse Rock, You Ain't
Nothing But A Ho!Jnd-Dog, Love Me Tender, and other top
hits. It was an event that will be remembered
for months
. .
to come.

CELEBRITY

I

wv

Everything You Need
In A Checki Account

PEOPLE
IN THE NEWS
Paul Mccartney

Bowles said, "I learned a lot during those
years and got to know some great players suc h
.as James Sanger, Gen. James Hartinger, Woodi
Call, Nick Miller and others."
Discouraged and with some regret, Bowles
left,profossional baseball. In 1964, he joined
Goodyear as an employee and remained there
until his retirement in 1994. Currently, he
coaches the l~iver Valley High School baseball

..

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoils, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

PROGRAM COORDINATORS- Kim Painter, left, and Johanna
Lampert,right, of Holzer Medical Center. and program coordinatorsfor the local American Cancer Society's 'I Can .Cope'
program, look over information for the sessions that help
cancer patients and their families.

the tim t!.

team.
Bowles and his wife Linda (Johnson) have
two daughters and two grandsons. H~ is, he

Sunday, February 18,2001

American Cancer Society ·1 Can
Cope' program to begin
6
GALLIPOLIS- Cancer
patients and their families
face numerous challenges.
Suddenly plunged into a
· world of unfamiliar medical
terms, tests, and treatments
such as radiation, chemotherapy, or surgery, many feel
overwhelmed. 'I Can Cope'
was designed co meet the
. needs of these patients and
their families.
Developed .by two nurses
and offered across the country by the American Cancer
Society, ' I Can Cope' provides the kind of cancer educa tion that patients need practical information about
the diseaso that we call cancer, an understanding o( the
various trcatm~;;:nts used to
fight cancer, and strategies for
self-care for those facing can-

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Miller

Sunday, February 18,2001

LONDON (AP) - Paul McCartpey will revisit the highs
and lows of his post-Beatles career - from his musical rebirth
in Wings 10 his 1980 arrest for drug possession - in a documentary to be aired in the United States.
"Wingspan," produced by the musician's photographer
daughter Mary McCartney, concentrates on McCartney's years
with Wings, the oand he ~nd his wife Linda formed after the
Beatles split in 1970, McCartney's spokesman Geoff Baker said
·
Thursday..
Wings produced a series of hiL•, including "Band on the
Run ," "Mnll of Kintyre"·and the James Bond theme "Live attd
Let Die."
'
In interviews recorded for the show, McCartney discusses
his anguish at the Beatles' acrimonious breakup, his decision to
form a "back to basics" band and his family life. The two: hour
program will feature previously un sc ree ned footage of
McCartney and Linda, who died of breast ca ncer in 1998.
" I always thought that you couldn't follow the Beatles.
'Wingspan' is the story and the soundtrack of how we sec out
to do it;' McCartney said.
He also discusses the 10 days he spent il) jail following his
arrest at Tokyo's Narita airport in 1980 for marijuana possession.
"Wingspan" will ai_r on ABC in May, Baker said. EM! is,
releasing a 40-song compilation ofWings hits to coincide with
the program.

Britney Spean and Madonna

(AP)- Feb. 18: Actor Jack
Palance is 80. Actor George
Kennedy is. 76. Singer Yoko
Ono is 68. Actress Cybill
Shepherd is 51. Actor John
Travolta is 4 7. Game-show
hostess Vanna White is 44.
Actress Greta Scacchi is 41.
Actor Matt Dillon is 37. Rapper Dr. Ore is 3.6. Actress
Molly Ringwald is 33.
Feb. 19: Singer Smokey
Robinso n is 6 1. Singer. Bobby .
Rogers of Smokey Robinso.n
and the Miracles is 61. Musician' Tony lommi of Black
Sabbath is 53. Actor Jeff
Daniels is ~6. Talk show host
.Loriann c Crook is '44. Singer
Seal is 38 . . Actress Justine
Bateman is 35. Actor Benicia
DelToro (''Traffic") is 34.
Feb. 20: M ovie director
Rob~rt Altman is 76. Actor
Sidney Poitie r is 74. Jazz and
soul singer Nancy Wilson is
64. Actress Sandy Dunca n is
55. Guitarist J. Goils ofThe J.
Geils Band ·is 55. Actress
Brenda 13lcthyn is 55. Actor
French Stc'wart (' 'Third R.ock
Crom the• Sun") i' 37. Model
Cindy Crawford i&gt; .&gt;5. Actor
Andt·ew Shue
(" Melrose
l'lo ce") is 34. Singer Brion
Littrell of Backstreet Boys is
2Co.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) Britney Spears says
Madonna is her "drea111 partner" but they have no fixed plans
for a du et.
The two pop diva s reportedly have been considering doing
. a record together, but both have said it's still just ~n idea.
"There was only lots of calk. But I would really love.co do it
- . if it was possible to find a time in our calendim wl:\ich suits
both of us," Spears said in· an interview published this week in
the Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet.
T he 19-year-old singer also said she would like to perform
'l"ith M ichael Jackson or his sister, Janet.
·
"But Madonna is my dream partner, d efinitely," she said.

Kirk Douglas
BERLIN (AP) - Screen tough guy Kirk Douglas, at the
Berlin film festival t.o collect an award for his lifetime achievements, said ending Hollywood 's anti-communist blacklist in
1960 was his proudest moment ..
. The three-time Ac'ademy Award nominee- for "Chantpion" (1949), "The Bad ·and the Beautifi1l" (1953) and "Lust for
Life" (1956)- and honorary Oscar winner is being .feted with
~ · ,.~trospective at the Berlin festival and on Friday was to
· ..
receive the Golden .Boar, the event's top prize.
But "the ouo thing in ·my career I' m niost proud of is the
breaking of chc blacklist," the 84-year-old soid at a news conference Thursday.
. .
At tho height of the· Cold War, W.10hington - leu by Sen.
Joseph M cCa rthy - looked for conummists anywhere in
A111 crican socie ty. Fri!;htcncd Hollywood studto heads c&lt;rob-

lishcd a sccr~t bbcklist uf chose named as commtmists in CO I\grcssionollwnrinb" or even just suspected of leftist leanings.
.
Dougbs broke the blacklist in 1960 when he hired Dalton
Trumbo · to write ''S partacus" and Otto Prl!mingcr fo wrote
· "Exodus.''

,,

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sunday, February 18,2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Page C6 • ilunbap Q!:imr• -ilrntinrl

Mother of 9-year-old doesn't want to send him on trip

Anniversaries

Dear Ann Landers: I have been
divorced for eight years. My ex-husband
moved out of the state after the divorce,
and I have not seen him since. We have
a wonderful son who is now 9 years old.
I am currently married to a terrific man
who has raised my son since he was 2
years old.
My ex-father-in-law, whom l have
ADVICE
never met. wants me to put my son on
a plane and fly him halfway across the
country to visit a family neither my son son on the telephone so he can become
nor I know. l have never prevented my more familiar with them. Prepare him
son from seeing his father's family. They in advance for what to expect, and keep
send him birthday and Christmas gifts, the visit short -- no more than a long
but have never made any effort to see weekend. Airline personnel do an excelhim. They have never once called to talk lent job of helping children who travel
to him on the phone. I have uwited alone·.
· If you truly believe your son is not
them to visit, but they say they are too
old to make the trip. (My ex-husband's capable of handling the trip, please consider going with him. His grandparents
mother is 85.)
I absolutely do not want to send mv arc not getting any younger, and there
son J!one on a plane to stay with will not be many more opportunities
strangers . If they truly want to see their for him to have a relationship with
grandson, [ think they should find a way them. In years to come, you'll be glad
you did.
to come here. What do you say, Ann? -Dear Ann Landers: I read thi&lt; in
Sara in Ventura, Cali f.
Dear Ventura: I say, even though the Dick E. Bird News, and it made me
your ex-husb:md's parents havl! not laugh. We can all use a good laugh these
shown much interest in visiting your days. l hope you' ll print it. -- Chicago
son, you should not try to punish them Reader
Dear Reader: I laughed, too!
for your f.1iled marriage.
Take the high road, and send your ·Thanks for sending it on. Here it is:,'
If a messy kitchen is a happy kitchen,
son to see his grxndparcnts. Call your
ex-in-laws, and have them spea,k to yo~u my kitchen is delirious.

Ann

Landers

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Guess

Guess 25th anniversary
TUPPERS PLAINS - An Tuppers Plains. They have two
open reception 111 cell"bration grandd1ughters, Samantha and
of the 25th wedding onniwr- Tabitha Wood of Columbus.
S.1f)' of Michad and Marcia
·Mr. and Mrs. Guess \Wre
Guess ofTuppers Pbins wiU be . married on Feb. 21, 1976 at
held this afternoon from 2 to 4
Tuppers Plains by the Rev.
p.m. at the Tupp~rs Pbms FireEugene Underwood. .
house.
M1chael is the son of Earl
The reception ts being hosted by their children, Michdc and Eleanor Guess ofCoolviUe
Guess of Cincinno.ti, -.Melissa and his wife is the daughter of
Wood of Columbus, Michael the late Charles "Red" and
Guess of Columbus, md Rose Carr.
Mendy and Mark Guess of

celebration will commemorate I 0 years of local observances. These celebrations
highlight the worthy accon}plishments and struggles of
Americans of color as they
labored to make , this land
both free and great. Tl,ese
'stories are presented in two
days of great singing, crafts,
speake rs, and, of course, delicious 11 Soul-food ...
The celebration begins
Friday, at 7 p.m., at Paint
Creek Baptist Church, 833
Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
with a . concert under the
direction of Christian Scott
and Roger Williams; both are
local sc hool teachers, with
proven love and talent for
Gospel musi c. In song, they
will take us on a tour of the
music that embodies the
Black experience, from spirituals through con temporary
songs. The musical selections
will be performed by a comnlunii:y choir and promises
to be ' a-better-get-thereearly event.
Saturday's program begins
at 10 a.m., and will feature

t

I

The celebration hrgins
Friday, at 7 p.m.; at
Paiut Creek Bc1ptist
Clmrch, 83J Third
Avenue, Gallipolis_,
with a concert under
the direction o.f
Clll'istiau Scott cwd
Roger Williams.
Mark Anthony Garrett,
founder and CEO of Garrett
Enterprises, Columbus, as
the keynote speaker. He is ari
outstanding speaker who has
dedicated his life to helping
people by encouraging .them
to Piscover their true inner
potentiaL He has spoke n and
performed workshops on
suc h topics as: Cultural
·Diversity,
Motivational
Empowerment, Goal Setting, "nd Black History.
Mark is a powerful, dynamic,
funny,
~nd inspiratidn~l
speaker, with the ability to
ca ptivate audiences.
· Saturday's program will
also feature local "show and
ccll, 11 tnusical selections , and
local reflections. There will
be a meal served at n'o on and
the public is invited and
encouraged to attend.

MORE LOCAL NEW~. MORE LOCAL FOLK~.

No husband has ever been shot while
doing the dishes.
A clean house is a sign of a misspent
life.
Help keep the kitchen clean -- eat
out.
Housework, done properly, can kill
you.
If we are what we eat, then I'm easy,
fast and cheap.
A balanced diet is a cookie in each
hand.
Thou shalt not weigh more than thy
refrigerator.
Coundess numbers of people have
eaten in this kitchen and gone on to
lead normal lives. ·
·
A husband is someone who takes out ·
the trash and tries to give the impression
that he just cleaned the whole house.
My next home will have no kitchen
-- just vending machines.
Dear An·n Landers: You have
printed letters relating. readers' monkey
·stories, some about .adventures with
chimpanzees. Chim.p anzees are not
monkeys. While both are pr'i mates,
chimpanzees belong to the. Pongidae (or
great ape) family, along with the gorilla
and orangutan. Monkeys are not -apes.
Get it straight.-- M.F.S.
Dear M.F.S.: Thanks for the comeuppance. l needed that.

CELEBRITY FLASHBACKS
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Entertainment highlights
during the week of Feb. 18-

African American History
program to be held .
GALLIPOLIS- On February 23 and ,24, Paint Creek
Baptist Church will ho st the
Annual African American
History Program. This year's

24:
In 1969, the Jimi Hendrix Experience performed
its last British concert at
London's Royal Albert Hall
before breaking up.
In 1970, the John Lennon

single "Instant Karma" was
released.
In 1974, Cher filed for
separation from Sonny Bono
after ten years of marriage.
In 1976, The Eagles'
"Greatest Hits" LP became
the first album _in the United
States to be certified platinum - at least I million

copies sold.
In 1978, The Police
starred in a TV commercial
for Wrigley's chewing gum.
Tlje ad was made a few
months before the band's single "Roxanne" was released
in the United Kingdom.
In .1979, Dire Straits
began its first tour of the U.S.

and Canada.
In 1980, AC/DC vocalist
Bon Scott died after choking
on his own vomit after an allnight drinking binge in London.
IIi 1982, singer Pat
Benatar and her guitarist,
Neil Geraldo, got married in
Hawaii.

MEIGS CALENDAR
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church, sing,
Sunday, 6 p.m. featuring "Higher Calling."
MONDAY
LETART - Letart .Township
Trustees will meet Monday, ·s
p.m. at the office building.
POMEROY - Musical Men·
days at God's N.E.T., Main
. Street, Pomeroy, 3 to 5 p.m.

denominations invited. For
more information contact Betty
Johnson , 992·1640.

WEDNESDAY
.
RACINE - Southern Local
Schools, parenllteacher conferences, 4 lo 7 p.m. C~ll school
for scheduling.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - East·
ern Local School District, par·

conferences,
ent·teacher
The Community Calen!lar
Thursday, 4 to .7 p.m. Parents Ia published as a free' ..rvlca
call school for appointment.
to non-profit groups wishing
,
POMEROY Preceptor to &amp;Mounce meetings and
Beta Seta Chapter, Beta Sigma -special· events. The calendar
Phi Sorority , home of Eleanor Ia not dealgned to promote
Thorrlas, 6::30 p.m. Thursday ..1•• ,or fl/fld.111ae.ra- of ·allY
for P'resldent's Day din~er: type. Items are printed only
Mem~ers to give a fact about a
president. Social committee aa apace permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
hostesses.
apeclflc number of daya.

Free meal, games, and musi-

cal lessons available for youth.
POMEROY Pomeroy
Eastern Star meeting, Monday,
7:30 p.'m. Potluck at 6:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Sisters
Fellowship, Ash Street Church,
6:30 p.m. Monday. Take covered dish.

BED
'

TUESDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County Heallh Department, free
immunization clinic, 1 to 7
p.m., 112 E. Memorial Dr. Child
must be accompanied by a
parent or legal guardian and
musl provide shot records.
Tuberculosis office to observe
extemjed hours until 7 p.m. to
administer free skin te.st to
local food handlers, club members and organizations.

.

MIDDLEPORT - Ladles
· for the Lord, Abundant Grace
Church, Tuesday, 9 a.m. All

Dill F.
e
e
e
e
e
e

STRESS TEST
ECHO CIBDIOIRAPHY
DIIBOIC MIIIIEIEIT
CIOUITERIL COIIIELIII
BLOII PRESSIIE
THYROID IISORDEII
DISEASES OF THE Llll
CRRICIL CARE MEDICINE

OFFICE HOURS: MON.·FRI. 8:30·5:00, WED. e:»NOON

'

Accepting New Patients

Medical Office Builqing • 2520 Valley Drive
Suite 212 • Point
WV

ilunbnp Q!:imrll' -&amp;tntind • Page C7

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

The history of baseball teams in Gallia County ·
r-==--,

There have been a number of
H. Williams, Frank Lee, F. Borden,
' good African American baseball
Bus Lee, Malcolm Jackson, and
teams in Gallipoli&lt; history starting
Shorty Marshall.ln a 1947 game the
with the Dogham Stars who played
batting order was as follows: Foxy
in the WWl era. That team was
Granr, If; Homer Burton, ss; Brock
, organized· and managed py Jud
Borden, lb; Phil Cordell, 3b; Bob
Scott. The Stars' most noteworthy
Gordon,cf; . Charles Green, rf;
victory was a 3-0 whitewashing of
Lawrence Marshall Sr., c; Nick
the famous OHE team, regarded for
Williams at 2b and Brock Borden
most of the years from 1900 to 1920
pitching.
as the premier . baseball unit in the
The Gallians played some tough
, county.
years, Mr. Hill wanted to turn the teams in the 1940's including the
The Stars had a number of good baseball field into a flower garden, so Holden , Bearcats, Pickerington
pitchers including: Jesse Arnold, the team moved to the other side of Creamery and teams from ColumSebon Arnold, Chris Lee, Ned Spruce Street to the ground owned bus, Lancaster, Maysville, Ky., Print'Anderson and Howard Webster. Roy by Mrs. Hortense Epling. She donat- er, WVa. and Charleston. The HoldAlexander wa's the catcher and the ed the field for the team to use and en Bearcatsoften scheduled such
\nfield consisted of: Minnii Davis, Epling Field was dedicated in 1943. · great pro black teams as the PittsCharley Briggs, Harry Downs ·and The Gallians played on Epling Field burgh Crawfords, H&lt;&gt;mestead Grays,
Pete Carr, who was called, "as fast as until 1946.
and the Roanoke Reds . The
After Rev. Guilbeau moved from Bearcats played 70 or 80 games a
·lightning." Outfielders included:
Doc Black, Ned Anderson, and Gallipolis, Bus Lee, Foxy Grant, For- ·year and usually won about 90 per' HO\vard Webster.
·
est Borden Sr., Malcolm jackson and ce m of their games. The Gallians
The next good black team was the Jack Carr took turns managing the I'llanaged to beat the Bearcats on
:Lincoln Cubs' of the early 1930's. team. From 1946 to 1952 the Gal- occasion. Tickets for important Galu'
.Frank Washington was the manager hans played home games at the Ga l- hans' games.were sold by John Johnof this team and they played at the lipolis State Institute. In the last five son's Shoe Shine Parlor, Walgret·n'l;,
,old f.1irgrouods on Eastem Avenue years of the te;tm's existence they Lafayette Hotel, The Spot, Madge's
revery Sunday afternoon.
· played in the Ohio Valley League.
Place and Frog's Place.
. The Gallian's were quite an attrac· In the late 1930's the Gallians
For 1nost games a hat was passed
baseball team was fonued. It was in tion and even had not only a field to help the team. The wives of Galthe early 1940's that the Spruce manager but a business manager as lian players would always fix a big
Street diamond home field was well. It was the business manager meal w entertain traveling guest
established for the Gallians with who lined up the schedule, collected teams between games of a doubleRev. Guilbeau, the pastor at john the ticket sales, set up the dinners header. The women also handled the
Gee AME church as the manager. and paid the bills.
pop concessions. For road trips a bus.
The 1940 team consisted of: Guil- was. donated by Bill Mayes. OccaGames were played on Thursdays
beau, Jack Carr, George Gilmore, sio nally the team would even sell
and Sundays.
.That first home diamond was Frank Washington, Bill Lee, J. seats on the bus for away games .
'owned by a Mr. Hill. After a few Mitchell, C. Saunders, W. Mitchell,
For some of the years in its histo-

James
Sands

l

GALLIANS .- This 1938 Max Tawney photograph shows the Gallians baseball team; This Gallipolis-based team lasted for about 20 years. Two successful blac k baseball teams preceded the Gallians. There was the Dogham
Stars in the late 1910's and early 1920's; and the Linco ln Cubs in the late
1920's and early 1930's.
ry the GaUizli1S competed in the

Ohio Valley Leagc1e which mcluded
at various times New Haven, Hartford, Pomeroy, Racine, Leon, Poreland , Middleport and another Ga llipolis team named the Bees. The
Ohio Valley League was orgamzed in
1938 by S.tanley Evans, Hobart Wilson Sr., and Howard Hardway. The
OVL had several former major
league and minor league baseballers
in it. The league continu ed play into
the middle 1950's.
One of the Gallians, Jack Carr,

ahvays said the highlight of his many
years with th e Galhans (he was m.anager from 1952-56) was when the
Gallians beat in 1954 the Kokomo
Clowns, a traVeling pro team out of
New York. Before one of th e largest
crowds ever to watch a baseball
game in Calha CoUl;ty, Jack Carr
hit a ball into the trees at Memorial Field for a game winning home
run. Some said that homer was the
longest ball eve r hit on that field.
The Gallians were disbanded in
1957.

.Men's fashion takes Beethoven lead-poisoning study
sparks lively de6ate _among 'armonicists'
a traditional turn
CORRALES, N.M. (AP) armonica, also sometimes armonica was popular for hair sample, taken just after his
But, he adde&lt;( this doesn't
NEW YORK (AP) - A glass instrument that called a glass harmonica, for years after Franklin .~ntroduced death at age 56 in 1827, was
Where did he go?
me•n men will return to the
· produces the hypnotic music year:s before the Beethoven it, the instrument was banned purchased at auction for
You know who I'm talk- uncomfortable, staid looks of
of wet crystal is sounding a study was re\eased last Octo- in son~e states after a baby's
.ing about - that casual, tech- old. Chu used a relaxed sil$7,300 in 1994 by Ira Brilclarion call for debate over the ber, says William Z'eider of unexplained death during a
'llo-oooJ· dot-com guy who's houette for his suits and
lead-poisoning of Beethoven.
Seatde. He is among about a concert, according to the liant, founder of the Center of
;been hanging around Fashion paired them with cashmere
The glass armonica, invent- dozon armonicists in the Franklin Institute in Philadel- Beethoven Studies at San jose
Week the past few seasons.
and wool turtlenecks.
(Calif.) State University, and
ed by Benjamin Franklin in United States.
phia.
He's been replaced on
For outerwear, the collec1761,
was
demonstrated
to
"It's
been
kind
of
running
"That was the last straw:' Alfredo Guevara, a surgeon
'designer runways 'by the . tion offered parkas witl\,.fur
Ludwig
·
van
Beethoven
and
around
in·
the
armonica
comGarcia said. "People were that frcm Nogales, Ariz.
~ountry-club gent, a sophisticollars and fur-trimmed
munity
as
long
as
'i;ve
been
Wolfgang
Amadeus
Mozart
scared. It was literally, legally
·c~ted man who dresses up for
hoods, a leather coat with the
when Franklin visited France involved," said Zeiclei-, a pianist banned."'
.work during the week and ·
toggle-type closures (also
during the American Revolu- who took up the :1rmonica six
,doesn't stray. too far from that.
Zcider doesn't buy the
used by Hilfiger), and a parka
tion. Both composers then years ago.
· look in his weekend \vear.
Beethoven arm01\ica theory,
Modern armonicas are saying there's nothing to sub- .
wrote music for the instru• "Men have to pull it and windbreaker jacket done
in
cheerful
"foul-weather
yelmade
ment,
which
created
an
interin the United States by
: together again;' said Tommy
~tantiate it.
"
.
national sensation and G. Finkenbeiner Inc. 'o f
!Hilfiger, who presented his l ow.
A 582-mand Beethoven
Waltham, Mass., where the
Gene Meyeri jackeu ·and
superstition.
:fall 2001 collection with an
The instr~nnent consim of gla11 bawl! n1·e blown and the
·informal presentation Thurs- coats had the lived,in look of
blown crystal bowls, in gradu- electrically ratat~d 1pimlles an:
cracked leather, while his
day at the Morpn Ubrary.
ated size!, nrrnyed nlon~r a built, Lend 11Im and lead~d
The librnry was a fitting sporttwur was 1uoady black
spindle thnt rotntcl while the p_aint an: no lcmger u1cd .in
setting far the soft 1lacks in and white with "lilces" of
player plnce1 moistened fin- them.
caralnel and oliw, burgt.mdy color, ~ith~r across the chest, .
Garcia, 35, said company
gers
on them, In the early his·cashlllerc sportcont · nnd midriff or sleeve.
tory of the humnnent, lend founder Gerhard Fink~nbein­
striped rugby shirts iu th~
Ron Chereskin i line is
glau
stemwnre \vas sometimes cr told her abom historic
' .sportswear tine, and Hilfiger's filled with classic chunky knit
used instead of crystal and armonica lead contamination
traditional red, white and sweaters, flannel slacks, and
leaded paint was applied to ~ and more,
.blue varsity clothes in the mohair and wool jackeu that
!Ome
of the bowls to differenThe armonica was greeted
Tommy Jeans collection. have been updated in a boxy,
in Colonial America with
Both lines are collegiate and shirt style with dropped,, tiate those ~notes.
Recent
California-sponallegation&lt; of witchcraft.
preppy, right dowh to the
shoulders.
sored
studies
of
Beethoven's
People who played it were
corduroy paniS with embroiHis mostly double-breasthair show the coo1poser had a said to have later gone insane.
dered "H" motifs that,trom a
ed suits were the &lt;ame color
concentration
of lead 100
Franz Anton Mesmer, a.
distance, look like little ducks.
palate as the casual wear times
higher
than
is
normal
.
pioneer
in hypnosis and a
Hilfiger, who flirted briefl_y
navy,
camel,
mahogany
and
today, according to the Health contemporary of Franklin,
With rock 'n' roll and hip-hop
olive.
Corduroy
.suiiS
and
Re&lt;earch
· Institute
in i.Jsed it to entrance some of his
clothing, has retUrned to . his
touches of suede, houndNaperville, . Ill. Researchers subjeciS.
all-American look.
stooth
.
check
and
plaid
commissioned by San Jose
In Germany, where the
· "It's my roots," he
bridged the gap between
State University say it's virtu.explained.
work
and
play.
.
ally certain Beethoven had
, Hilfiger was among a
lead poisoning, or plumbism,
An iridescent blue-velvet
:d9zen'designers who presentwhich could explain some of
ied ·their collectioll1! in the ruxedo jacket with an irides·•:
his illnesses, sq:ange behavior, .
:teAts ,at Bryant Park and other cent purple shirt seemed an
,p1aybe his deafness and quite
Ntll).lcS throughout Manhat- aberration from the rest of
possibly his death.
itan as pitt of Mercedes-Be~ the collection, but it was a
Armonicist Mayling Garcia
iFashion Week. The . me1;1 s worthwhile detour that elecof
Corrales
believes
~hows preceded the women'&lt; trified the runway.
( 1 ) NAET (Nambrudlpad's Allergy Elimination Technique) Done
Beethoven's association with a
:collections.
which
run
without the us.e of needlea or shots, drugs or herbs, or .
Everett Hall offered an
lead-glass armonica may have
~hrough Feb. 16.
asymmetrical, placket-front,
homepathy or avoidance.
·
been instrumental in his
: '!There's a new take on the peak-lapel suit. Fashioned in
death. Beethoven was exposed
:classics;' observed Jim Moore, bankers' pinstripes, it could
(a) EAV (Dermel) Tatting - BloMerldlan Stress As.;.esament. ~he
to the armonica before · his
lGQ magazine's fashio~ ,direcBloMerldlan syatsm provides an extraordinary new parspact ~e
find a place in existing
symptoms started as a young
:tor.' .,.It's not retro, tts JUSt
wardrobes. Hall also put tradion the overall state of th:o b~=~·a ~~~'!"~o!~~:~:et:~~e:;;ec~
man, she said.
:mode~ . And there ~re real
tional suiiS in' pinstripes, with
such a p~ten~!:~~~b~:~~em 18 a: Invaluable tool for gathering
Rumors of lead poisoning
;clothes for real men."
a
modern
touch
of
bright
teal
'
were associated with the glass
: The must-have item for
atreaa-related Information. The
stem Is ueed by clinics around the world to help t em
ifall is turtlenecks, both the and violet stripes.

NOW ·oFFERING
NEW SERVICES

Board Certified Internal Medicine
e

SUnday; February 18, 2001

0

=~:"r~t:;:r:.lng
5

:slim, fine-gauge version that

.Quality.Furniture Plus, Inc.
42123 SR 7, Box·250
.Tupper Plains, OH 45783

r(740) .667•7388
1-800-200-4005

:can be worn under suiiS and
:the chunky variety that can
:be w'orn with jeans or c•sual
:slacks said Moore . A turtle'
.
lneck is ideal for casual Fn- .
''days, he added, because a man
:will still look dressed up
:while avoiding the shirt and
ltie. •
I Moore predicted the new
:season will put neat, sbm-6tting clothes that can go from
day to night into men's doseiS.
.
.
• "It looks like dressing up is
: back!" said David Chu Of
; Nal.ltica in his comments to
~the media and retail buyers.

.

.

'

POOLS

Y

1

BloMerl~lan

1 ate patient health and well-baing.
painless sensitivity for Items such as Irritants,

~c~~~~~-,: ::S";.c:-:

foods, Inhalants, molds, pollene, etc. th 1 lght be associated
• search for unknt;»wn areas of stress a m
with disease.
(3) Natural ~lternatlves_ to Eatr~en .Replacement Therapy

Complete Care Chiropractic
1 o Airport Road (Behind Burger King)
·

Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-0100

�Page C8 • 6unbnp l!:iuml- 6rntintl

sunday, February 11,2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleuant, WV

ENTERTAINMENT \
NEWS IN BRIEF
Hany Potter in cyberspace
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Muggles, take note: Harry Potter has made it to cyberspace.
Warner .Bros. unveiled an Internet site on Friday featllfc
ing exclusive photos and news from the upcomin~ 11\0Yl~ '
"Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone."
.
' ·•
Derails of 'the fantasy-adventure, from "Home Alone"
director Chris Columbus, have remained under tight securiry during filming in the United Kingdom.
The 'Website, www.harryporrer.com, includes quizzes,
games, production updates, trailers and movie clips as they
· become available, according to Warner Bros.
The sire links ro various fan-managed Harry Potter Web
pages, according to Kevin Tsujihara, executive vice president
ofWarner's new media division..
"We want harrypotter.com to reach and bring together
fans of all ages around the globe,'' he sald.
The ftlm , based on the first of author J.K. Rawling's bestselling children's novels, stars !!-year-old Daniel Radcliffe as
the child wizatd and Richard Harris as his mentor, Professor Dumbledore.
[n the story, Harry discovers he is among a select group
of wizards when he is invited to .:1 world kt!pt secre-t from
non-magical people, known derisively as "muggles."
The tnovie is set for release in November.

Celebrity profiles go to the dogs
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tom Hanks and Calista Flockhart's looks have gone to the dogs.
Universal Studios claims it has found a terrier whose
shaggy head resembles the Oscar-nominated "Cast Away"
actor and a greyhound whose long face recalls the rail-thin
"Ally McBeal" star.
They also discovered a Bassett hound that looks like the
·late Walter Matthau.
The finds came during an open-casting call Thursday for
a new" Animal Planet Live!" show at Universal's theme park
in Hollywood.
The furry celebrity doppelgangers are being recruited for
a video program that will be broadcast ro people waiting in
line for. the attraction, Universal spokesman Eliot Sekuler
said.
The theme park's scour. also found a bulky St. Bernard
that resembles muscleman Arnold Schwarzenegger and a
Lhasa Apso that sports a floppy hairsryle reminiscent of
"Friends" star Jer:mifer Aniston.

Group to serve as
Arts Centefs resident company
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Peter Nero and rhe Philly Pops
have agreed to serve as one of the new Regional Performing Arts Center's resident companies.
Stephanie W Naidoff, the center's president, said Thursday
that Nero and the Philly Pops wil) have priority access in
schedullng dates at The Kimmel !=enter, . - 450,000-squarefoor performing arts center that will open Dec. 16.
Nero said he was thrilled with the new agreement.
''The sound ,we'll achieve in Verizon Hall is sure to electrifY our audience, ahd the ~usicians in our orchestra and
guest artists will appreciate this beautiful new performing
space," Nero said.
The Kimmel Center will join the Academy of Music to
become one of the nation's largest performing arts centers,
known dS the Regional Performing Arts Center.
In addition to Nero and rhe Philly Pops, the center will
be home to the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Opera Company of Philadelphia, rhe Pennsylvania .Ballet, the American
Theater Arts for Youth, the Concerto Soloists Chamber
Orchestra, the Philadanco and the Philadelphia Chamber
Music Society.

Inside:

COMMU~lTY CORNER
These are exciting days for the Struble family of Syracuse. A week from
today Michael and his son, Evan, a student at Otterbein, will be flying to
Wales where Michael will be presenting
a series of lectures at the University of
Walef • SWansea.
FC!" ·more, ihan 15 years Michael now the exec'utive director of the
Athens County Historical Sociery and
Museum, and the Athens County
Genealogical Chapter of the Ohio Society in Athens -. has been researching
and writing about Welsh cultural landscapes in America with special emphasis
on Welsh settlements and church architecture in Southern Ohio.
Never did he expect that His publie&gt;tions in journals and books would lead
to an invitation to lecture at the University ofWales where he will be a parr
of an exchange program between that
University and the University of North
Carolina.
His schedule will include three days
of lectures, leaving another three days
for traveling around the cbu ntry and
doing more rcsean; h.
Of course, Michael is delig~Hed that
Evan will be going along. He, roo, does
research and writing and will be preparing some articles about Wales for Otterbein's school paper on which he works.
The Ra.cine Star Mill Park is 'a popu,lar place for festivals and family gatherings, what with playground equipment,
shelter houses, a stage, and clean permanent resrrooms right there.
The group of Racine residents who
serve· on the park board and others who
have contributed to the development
"have done good" in upgrading the
facility. We rip our hat to them.
It has also become a popular place for

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY

Classified ads, Pages D2-D7

picture about the old Union Avenue
bridge which was painted with advertisements, the most prominent one of
which was the old Red Anchor.
The picture belonged to Mildred's
late husband, Clifford, who had crossed
the covered bridge many rimes and
shared his memories with a locd

Page Dl
Sunday, Febtury II, 1001

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

r~porter.

A birthday card shower has been
planned for longtime teacher Margaret
Parsons who will be 94 on Feb. 22. She
would enjoy hearing from former students and friends.
.
Having retired from rhe Meigs Local
School District with over 65 year~ of
service, she now resides with her daugh~
rer, Mrs. David Wiseman at 342698
New Lima Road, Rutlan&lt;l 45775. Card1
A letter came in from a Sentinel
reader, Maxine Jenkinson Russell of may be sent to her there.
t
Crooksville, abOiit the new PomeroyBerry Kern is one of those people
Mason bridge to be build in a couple of
who won't be having a birthday this
years .
·
year.
She was born on Feb. 29. Bur if
She said she was' rhere when the old
bridge opened in 1929. One of the you want to send her a card anyway, the
things she remem'f&gt;ered was that Val address is 41210 U.S. 33, Shade, Ohio.
Brown prepared rhe. food and served it
One of those cold day~ while travel- ·
from wash tubs.
I'm interested in 'Compiling a collec- ing through Rutland, a sign outside Joe's
tion of recollections and pictures about Count.~ Marker rea~ "Only 3,5 d~ys 'til
that day so that when the old bridge spnng It made. me sm1le. • '
comes down unusual things about the
day it opened 72 yea!,&lt; ago can be printMary Lou Hawkins makes · traveling
ed · for the enjoymeitt of readers. Have down South Second in Middleport a
anything to sharel · ~
drive of surprise. With the help of her
husband, Eugene, she decorates their
Speaking of bridg~s, did you know hon1e for eve-r y holiday.... an&amp; irl ·
that one of the last covered bridges to ·
between with seasonal things.
come down in Meigs County was the
For Valentine's day it was two large
one on Union Avenue near the interhearts lighted in red ador11ing · the
section of Route 7.
home's front picture window. Mary
Mildred Jacobs, now living in Florida, sent us a newspaper clipping and Lou, despite her handicap, seems -always
·into making life beautiful.

This clwt shows ho;., local stocks of interest fHrfonntd last week.
&amp;ch day~ closing figures are provided by Advest of GaUipolis.

family reunions and other special activities during the year. Those who might
want ro reserve one of the shelter houses need to know fhat libby Fisher has
been 11amed by the park board ro serve
as the rental manger. The charges are
S30 for a large shelter house, and $20 for
a snull one.

I

21 states plus D.C!.
No roaming charges.
No long.distance charges.,

., t .·

•

.

I
'&lt;llo

•

PluH-PniiNM,DI

.

'

....

•

. ..

'

·~~

I

WOuld you lilte to see a stock uJ IOC4/ inierestlisitd? ')'.
If so, conina. News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ~~.'',r'3.

-

• --!"-·

.

•

Mat is a 403(h) tilx
·sheltered annuity?
.

retirement incorp.e because
you save with pre-tax dollars,
and your contributiom grow
tax-deferred.
This means you p~y no current taxes on your contributiom until ,the money is withdrawn, · t.tsually at retirement.
With the uncertain future of
$ocial Security, inflation and

Current Customers- Call us at _
1-888-BUY-USCC to take advantage of these new rates.

tax rates, it is now more

l

Plus, get a

important tl)an ever to take the
initiative yourself to plan for a
comfortable retirement.
The primary .method for
employees to make contributiom into a 403(b) plan is
through payroll deductions,
known in the industry as salary
deferrals. It is convenient and
painless. '
II! addition, the employer
can make contributiom in one
of two ways: by a proportionate match of an employee's
contribution or by a nandan!
contribution ro all eligible
employees which is not depen-

!

Nokia 5185i

I

with earpiece for
only $19.95

c

II

U.S.We Cellular.
connect with
you~

I

K. Ryan
Smith
GUEST
VIEW
·dent upon an employee's elective to participate.
In either · case, employers
must pass certain tests to determine w~ether or not their plan J
is discriminatory.
The compensation limitation when calculating contributiom for each employee is
capped at $160,000. Any
income earned over this
amount is excluded.
A 403(b) plan lets you contribute the lessor of 20 percent
of your salary,$10,000, or what
is ca1Jed your "basic exclusion
allowance.". Some 403(b) plans
even allow for a ucatch up"
provision. ThiS provision lets
an employee contribute more
in some ·yean ro make up for
missed cmitributiom in previous yean. This provision is not
allowed with oth~r employer-

Pinii-MIRIY,DI

'

....,. .....................?
GM ~ • milt (740) 441 2M2, . . U

:l

.

Franklin Rakes, above, from A Crafty Blind Spot In Gallipolis,
hung a new mural blind, Local merchant Dan Martin, the bus~
ness' owner, del/eloped a mural/blind thllt Is new to the area.
"Right rcw I only hBYe 12 scenes to choose from but have
recently found a vendor thllt will allow my customers to transfer photographs that they hBYe onto a blind,' said Martin. 'I

Winter days dUJindling;
spring flowers emerge
POMEROY· The final
countdown to spring has
begun . .. only 30 days of
winter remain. , .
Take a walk around your
home and neighborhood.
Notice the swelling buds
on, your trees and shrubs,
the emerging sprouts of
daffodils and crocus and the
mole activity in the lawn.
· Winter weather with its
snow, sleet and cold may
still surprise us; however, ir
quickly melts under the
warmer Spring sunlight.
Now is the time ro cut
branches of forsythia, pussy
willow, redbud, crab apples,
peach, dogwood, cherry,
quince, magnolias, lilacs
and azaleas to force
indoors.
Sufficient exposure to
cold weathor has allowed
the flower buds to mature
within the l&gt;ud. To maximize flower longevity, force
branches at cooler temperatures (55-60 degrees F),
especially at night.
Cut the branches and
immediately place in a
bucket of warm water.
Bring the cut branches

'---___:r:..:.'_ __;;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~:.._---...:..----"--~-

-

think It's really nellt and something unique that people will just
love. • Martin will celebrate his Or11!7'!!8r anniversary in April. In
1he last 10 months, he said, his business has tripled, promptIng him to expand and open a location in Jackson soon. "This
community has really supported me and 1cred~ their shopping
locally for my success,' Martin said. (KrlsDotson photo)

'

; , . ' GALLIPoLIS -.A 403(b)
: . tax-'iheltered ·artnuity is a spe. cial type 'of retirem~nr plan
that is available only to
employees
of non-profit
501(c)(3) organizatioilS and
public schools. It can be a very
effective W2)' to supplement

.

f

BY KiltS DolSON

II.C;•1-"
"
··l
... ,... j •...'..

LOS ANGELES (AP) -To make it-in rock 'n' n1ll, yml
need a hit. To make it on "Biography,'' yo\1 n~ed a sr0 ry.
M11Sician, actor and rock fan Ktvln Bacun will be the
gm;st host of rhe. weeklong "Hit Makers" series feb. 19-23
on A&amp;E's "Biography," paying tribllte to Rick Springfidd.
Patti LaBelle, Ted Nug~nt. David Crosby and Jimi Hendrix.
u I grew up going to concerts. My best friend's f.1thcr was
a rock promot..:r, S(~ you name 'em and I've pmb:1bly ~ccn
'em· 11vc,
· "IJ aeon s:u'd, "I' m pretty sure I'v!.!' on Iy bcc:n to unc

'

4n.

Any business subject to th e provisions of Ohio taxes is eligible for this
as long as rhe business contributes
financially to the tnining of its incumbent workers.
Eligible training costs include
instruction costs, materials~ equipment, . supplies, instructional media,
assessment, and employee wages during normal working hours while
engaged in the program.
"It's important that people ·know
they have to apply to reserve their
credits," said Call.
Applications can be submitted for
training proposed or completed for
the calendar year, for which the tax
credit is to be claimed and they will be
accepted on a first-come, first- serve

,_

Bacon to host
. 'Hit Makers'

I.

47"1·

nesses receive as much as $100,000 a
year in non-refundable tax credit benefit.
"The Ohio Training Tax Credit is
designed as an incentive to encourage
Ohio businesses to provide necessary
training to incumbent workers," said
.Call. "That non-refundable tax credit
benefit is applicable to franchise, personal income, insurance and dealer-in. intangible taxes:'
"It's a credit not a reduction of qualified training dollars that a small business has accrued throughout the year;·
she .added.
Each business can apply for these
monies for a three-year period. Businesses can go back to 1998 and can
choose any tlu:ee consecutive years
between 1998 and 2003.

•

Notit Stl5i

om riding- on

46";.

CIC introducing
program to area

INVESTING

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rock guitarist Peter Frampton
is getting the Orville H. Gibson Lifetime Achievement
Award, considered the Oscar for the guitar industry.
Framp_ron will receive the award - honoring- a career
that has made a significant impact on the guitar world and
influenced young musicians - · on Tuesday during ceremonies at the Petersen Automotive Museum.
Previous recipients are B. B. King, Emmylou Harris, John
Fogerty, Vince Gill, Brian Setzer and Andy Summers.
In a career spanning more than three decades, the 50year-old Frampton has become one of rhe most influential .
rock guitarists . His 1976 album, "Frampton Comes Alive!" is
one of the best-selling albums of all rime with 17 million in
sales.
·
He is nominated for best rock instrumental perfo~mance
for "Off the Hook" at the Grammys on Wednesday:

c~mc

FRI.
46Y.

Blind-ing view

Achievement Award

show where the pcrfc.,rmcr (Nugent)
buffitlo."

45~

THU.
45Y.

GALLIPOLIS Gallia Counry
Community Improvement Corporation hopes ro introduce · the Ohio
Training Tax Credit program, the
"Lender's Round-Table Resource
Seminar," and information technology
training grants to local small businesses.
Tracy Stewart Call, associate director
of the CIC, recently attended an
information session in Jackson on a
new tax credit initiative and says that
this could help Gallia Counry busi-

Frampton to receive Lifetime

'

45~

WED.
45Y.

TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF

NEW YORK (AP) -What have Destiny's Child, Macy
Gray, O~rkasr and 'N Sync done for Janet Ja~kso~ la_teJx?. -~ _
They re among the acts that will perform during an
MTV tribute ro the singer and actress.
.
.
·
The show, "mtv!CON: Janet Jackson," will air March 13
on MTV at 8 p.m. EST. It is rhe first in a planned series honoring performers who have contributed to pop culture,
music and music video.
·
The acts will perform songs from Jackson's 16-year musical career. There also will be interviews with artists whose
careers the 34-year-old has influenced. for the finale, Jackson herself will take the stage.
·
·
Fans at home can interact with the show through live
opinion polls and scroll through information on Jackson's
career 011 www.mtv.com.

!

TUE.

18

Tribute to Janet Jackson slated

~

MON.

Tax credit info on way

Hal
Kneen
inside the house and have
additional pails of warm
water ready. Re-cut the
branches and smash the
lower couple inches of the
stem gently with a hammer
so more water can be
absorbed Into the bcanches.
Change water, re-cut and
smash branches at least
once a week.
Flowering will take up to
30 days for the woodier
trees and shrubs. Easier
bloomers, like forsythia and
pussy willows, should be
ready within I 0 days to two
weeks. As Spring becomes
closer, the time between
cutting branches to flowering becomes less and less.
To maximize your enjoyment of the blooms, keep

................
I,S

Know company policy
when selecting seed
GALLIPOLIS - If you
haven't already selected
your s~ed varieties for the
2001 growing season, consider these point! as you
make your selections.
Although there are several key factors in selecting
seed varieties for ·any crop,
company guarantee policies are sometimes · overlooked.. Selecting certified
seed is extremely important; however, also be sure
to ask about the company's
replacement policy and
. whether or not the seed is
guaranteed.
Germination rate is
dependent on many factors, including the quality
of the seed and producer
management. When germination problems arise ·
and there is no evidence of
soil insects or negligence
on the part of the producer, many companies will
replace the seed if it is
guaranteed.
Tobacco seed companies
have a wide range of policies when it comes to
replacing seed. Because
tobacco plants are almost

- -··----·--~------------

\

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW
always starred in greenhouses or outdoor float
systems, determining the
cause of low germination
has become more complicated.
As a result, some seed
companies may rake a
detailed look at the management of the facility,
while other companies
may replace seed with few
questions asked.
·
Seed selection in · any
crop should be appropriate
to this geographic area and
circumstances. Furthermore, the maturiry ratings
should be considered in
order to keep harvest time
as manageable as possible. ·
With newly released
PIM•-IIyrne~tDI

�Sunday, February 18, 2001
Help Wanted

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lo1nT!IIIIIogl

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Oollloollo. OH S Aw~ lrl peraon on:
"Monday February 191h

Auction
and Flea Market

30 Announcements
Loll &amp; Found, Vord Sileo,
lncl 'Non!l&lt;l To Do~
Mull Be Pold In Advlnol.
IBIBUNE QfAQUNE:
2:00 p.m. the doy bltore
od loto run. Sundoy &amp;
~onday odlllon 2:00 p.m.
Frtdly
SENf!NEt; QfAQUNE:
1:00 p.m. the day bllore
lhe ad 11 to run.
,
Sunday &amp; Mondoy odlllon
1:00 p.m. Frldoy
REGISTER QfAQUNE:
2 dayo blloretho od lo to
run by 4lo p.m. Saturdoy
&amp; Monday edition· 4:30
Thuroday.
" Deadllnea aubJoct to

Items . S1.00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru SaiUrday

9:00.5:30.

Giveaway

40

GREAT cats for good homes . 1
graY,. 1 black· spayed, neutered,
up-to-date Inoculations. Each one
comes wit h a IIIIer pan and a

week's food. supply. Call 740·992·
5292 evenings.

Lost and Found

60

Found : brown Col lie /S hepherd
mix, remale , Jaclcs Rd:, Langsville,
740· 742·2312.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

FOUND : Cog · Se nd Date Lost
And Description To : Occupant,

PO BolC 355, Point Pleasant.

Personals

005

www.SINGLES.com

(740)2~989

Sat .· Sun.·Mon, 10·5 bring your
!tams down rent a table $4 .00 a
day or $10.00 tor 3 days, tlnsld!f)
let It rain or snow Its dry &amp; warm
inside.

80

-.bsolute Top Dollar: U.S. Silver,
Gold Coins, Proolsets. Diamonds,
Gold Rings, U.S. Currency, ·
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GallipOliS, 740-446·2842.

Auction
and Flea Market

AUCTION E..-ery Saturday 6pm, Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Truckloads 01 New &amp; Used Items Home, Call 741).446·0175 Or 304·
From Se..-eral States Sel!lng To 675-5965.
The P'ubllc &amp; Dealers. One Piece,
Dozens &amp; · Case Lots. Gary
Bowen Auctioneer Proctor..-ille.
EMPLOYMENT
Ohio Flea Market, Just Across ,
SERVICES
Huntington. 1/r{V 31st Street
Br~ge .

TONIGHT!

Have fun meeting eligible singles
In your area. Call tor more lnlor·
matlon . 1·800-ROMANQE, &amp;Kt.

1738.
Start dating tonight! Play the 01'11o
Dating Game. Call toll free 1·800·
ROMANCE e11.t. 1621

LOST· Reward, Female Beagle,
Spayed, Wearing Pink &amp; Purplt
Collar (740)643-034 1
Lost· Siberian Husky, Alfred. Oh.
on 213, neutered male, brown &amp;

wMt. 740·867-3545,
Loat: 8 year old female Jack Flussell, spayed, family member, Harrl·
son..-llle are.ll, reward , 7-40·742·
2927.
lOST : Male Daschund (Weiner
Dog ) Lost On Sailor Road . An ·
swers TO Name •Rusty•. Call

30 Amiouncements

Whitney Reward! (740)- 2 1

I, Stephen Wayne Deaver, am not
responsible for any debts ot Lisa
Deaver as of January 1, 2000.

Lost: Small Pekingese Male Dog. ·
Answers To Cosmo. VIcinity Of
E..-eq}l'een Road. (7401446-0861

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
ser..-lce.
Licensed
auction
f66,0hlo &amp; West VIrg inia , 304·

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Holnor'o Oolllpollollronch, 1708
E;otlorn Avenuo. PINII call

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• Ability To Work Alone Or
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: High Schoal
Dlpl01111 or OED

Human Reeourcea at
1-800-778-8411 by Monday,
Feb. 28, 3 p.m. to schedule
an Interview.

-~

$9.23 - $12.23/ITour
(Including full benefits)

( .allipoli-.. (II I Storl'
Wf Bolli H11111 So Mut/J lb OJ[trl
Rrwonlunr ~ ..~. bot so or&lt; our &lt;Xpr.-...

LETS GET TOGETHER:

v....

• llelllwt21
Of
AgeOrOidor
HEINER'S BAKERY

POSITION ANNOUNCMENT
Po•tlng Dale: Febru•ry 14, 2001

CASE MANAGER
MEIGS COUNTY
CROSS ROADS PROGRAM

S""" u.l ~ 1Iom DDobHI~, I'UI Sid&lt; Oaf', ,.,_,
Days ud llx NarionaJ Holida)'l r.r )Uf, Rctin:mcnl and a 40tK Plan.
Fle"ib\c IChedule wilb a "CaD Do attltudei'I'hotouah trliniq: is pmided
and weer plMnol:ioo ~!Ida ue po11iblc
.

ol&gt;M 6 -

YOU: Oulsloodin8 a.oomer Suvk:c, Motivllioll u.lo CommltmeniiO

'Ieunwoltl: and Pafonnmce. Aa:wl~ Calb Coaad, diciem opemtion ot: the

. cub """"' , , _ clclllilll ond ooctloa · Muat be lble 10
work-..., 6uHipm. HIP Scliool Oiplomo or OBD ,....INd. Condido1cl
mllllt be 18 yn. or okler 10 lpply.

1300.

$1!500 WEEKLY!

Work from
home procuslng VISA/MAS·
TERCARO Invitations! S2 per In·
vitatlonl No experience neededl
Materials sUpplied! FridaY pay·

check&amp;! 1-800·280-6609.

'""ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put It to 'work! $25/hr·$75/hr. FT/ U.OOO WEEKLY! Mailing 400
PT. FREE Info. 600·671·8045 ext brochures! SaUsfacllon Guar·
601 www.lahOmeblz.com
•anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies pro·
"FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS""
Up to $1 8.65 hOur. Hiring for
2001 , lree call tor appHcat1onle11·
amination Informatio n Federal
Hire-Full Benefits . 1·800·598·
4504 eKtenslon ,1515 (7a m·9pm
C.ST.)

vid edl Rush Sell-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5 . Box 1438 . ANTIOCH . TN .

fiOI WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN·
MENT FROM HOME PART·
TIME . NO EXPERIENCE RE·
OU1REO. 1-800·748·5716 Ext .
~101.

S529 WEEKLY mailing letters
.from home. Full or pari lime. No
ellperlence necessary. Easy! Any

hours! Call

4886txl.695

2pm-11""'
Hiring Call Center Communicators
Went.c:t:

CUSTOMER SEf!VICE l
SALES PROFESSIONALS ·
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS

110 Help Wanted

~
~

&amp;

BUSINESS TO CONSUMER
Flxod Work Schedule

POSITION ANNOUNCII•NT
Po•tlng D•t.: P'ebru•ry 14, 2001

Reporting to the Dlreotor of Croa•ro.de and De~n . of
Studente the •uoca•aful cendld•t• for thla poaltlon will
be raepot1elble for daltvary of all urvloea to •nd for the
p•rtSclpilnl~ of the program.
FunOIIana will Include
providing neca....-y orlenl.tlon, aoreanlng IIHI•ment
and enrollment o1 progr11m p•rtlclpentl; working with
allft/faoultytaervlce provider. to lnaure •~.. to aJI
Croaaroada Progl'llm componenle . and oommunltY
Hrvlan;
provide
•dvlalnglaupportlv•
Hrvlcee/•ppllc•llon rahtrrala to enrolled p•rtiCipanl•i
m•lntalnlng enrollri'lanl •nd fallow up rtcord• of
•ulgned participant; working wllh euparvleore to
dellv•r prog,..mmlng to ••ch p•rtlclpant In an lffaotlvt,
lfflclant ma~nner oonalatent wllh polltlvl procedure•
end raqulrementa, attending m.-tlnga or training
.... lone 11 ntc. .aary end other edmlnlat,.tlve dutl"
lltlllgnod.

Reporting· to the Director of Croaaroada and ~n of
atud.nta the •uooautut oandtd.ta ror thll po..Uon will
be reaponalbte fOr dettvary of all earvloaa to end for the
pantolpantl ·of tha• progn.m. prunctlona will Include
providing nec••••rY orlanhltlon• .areanlng •••-•mant
and anr'ollmant of progr•m p•rtlolpant.; working with
etiH/faoutty/aarvlaa provider• to tnaure ace••• to •II
Croaaroada Program componanta and communtty
aarvlcHi
provide
adVIalng/eupponlv.
aarvlcutapplloatlon reterr•l• to enrolled partlalpenta;
m•lntalnlng enrollment and toftow up recorda of aaoh
aaalgnad partlolpant; ~ working with •uparvlaore to
dallvar programming to aaoh partlclp•nt In •n efteotlv•,
atrlclant m~•r oonaletant with poaltlva procedur. .
•nd raqulremanla 1 attending maetlne- or tnlnlng
aeaalfitn• •• nao••••rv •nd other •dmlnlatrMtve dutl. .
•• •••lgned.
Mult hive 1 valid driver•a IIOIInM and retl•ble
tr•napo.Utlon.
DegrH In Socl•l Work, Peyohology,
Educ•Uon or ral•ted ftald ,. p~rred.
One yRr or
axperlanca In providing dlraot ..rvlca• to economlally
vulner~~ble youth and or •dult• preferred . .
'lnt•ra•tad c•ndld•t•• •hould •enl • latt•r of lnlerelt •nd
r1aum• before the da•dllna of Merch 14, 2001. Aeeum. .
will be revlawtd •• received.

AREA
WI offlr you:

Work lrom Home. Mall-order/In·
lernet. $1,200·$6,800 PT/FT. Free

lnlormallon (414) 290·6800
www.horne-bualne,..l)'&amp;·
tema.com

CLAIMS PROCESSOR!
Proctaa clalma from home. $20·
$401 hr potential. Full training.
Compultr wlmodem required .

C,S.T.i

CALL NOW! 1-886·565·5197 ell.
842.

343 DRIVERS NEEOEOIII No

CNH. HHA.

Cerll1~d Homemaker&amp;
To Provld~ In Homa

Needed
Strvlces For Tile Elderly &amp; Disabled In The Maaon. New Haven,
. West Columbia Area. Call 1-888·

E11perlence Needed! Qu!ck COL
.Train ing Program Available. Earn

· $30.000· 111 Year. COL Delivers
1-800·394·2405

4!53·4992

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet USII'I Wanted

4417 ext. 1164.

$2000·"000/mo

Absolulely Free info
Earn Onlln8 Income
S2.ooo- $.000/mo.
WorkfromHomoOol.oom

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Full ond plrt·Ume p o - t tYIIIIable.
Completelrlllnlngprovldld wtth flalble.hourll.

Earn up to $15 /hour.

pmaaon~r!o.adu

241-4108

Am•rlc:.n .. S.•t Buy In Educ•rlon

\

CALL TODAY••• STAAT TO~ORROWI

1-800-929-5753

$450· $1500 Per Mon1h. Pan·
!!me; $2000·$4500 Per Monlh

l'uR Umo - " l O n e - - paollage whlclh
lnctudll Medloai/DII'diii/401KIPd VI qrtlona.

®

SECBETABY II

- _. _ ___ -- -·

llul'l hl¥e hflh eohool dlplomt or M~UIIMiilnt. '
tl:l•~ _ . . ar
4 I
ln,_ .............. F•Is::a&amp; .............. 1 ...
'flf oompu 1 elnllat -=t
1 lw:w...,.. oornpe uln • omoe
........

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ocummunro.tton....,. ,....._

..,

All 11"

,.,..lftd eddl

pl•c•

.

;temueiiUblal:•r.tt.rofl.......
of~

lnd~lt

I Jl4thl

'*'"*" 'on or befoN f'lllwuocy 11,1001,

7am-8pm. 1\Jt-Fr17am-4pm.

Announcama!lt

1-1100.784-8558
www.pcpays.com

polrill._..,_....,
""'Troi*'ll-·

ATTENTION: OWN A COMP(JT.
ER? Work lrom home. Mall-order/
E·Commerce $1000' $7000 PT/
FT. Free lnformallon . www.the·
dreamexpre11.com Phone (800)
648-21!53.

IWtJ.ft no •t*'•ilbL Set OM'!

-~-11

' ""*'&lt;! Cll
1-IIU7N724 ext 164

AVON! All Areal! To Buy Or 1SS.u.
Shirley ~ro. 304·67!5-1ol29. ,
AWESOME

INTERNET

IN·

COMEI Get yoUr lrn 1(110 rtQ)vl

www.TheWDrkiPian.CJt?m

·

...

...... -

,AX NumW: (T40) 24fo4tol
11/AA lmptoy.

A,.,.,.. .,_, lltly lrl • •

'

Ba1ei

Bro• . Amueemenl Co .

·.

JIIOil

.....

7ie

Ia"''" f4leu
"

;e~ ~die

I

WOULD UK! TO THANK AL~ OF THOBE WHO Vlln'ED THE
FUNERAL HOME, HNT CARDS, FOOD, AND FLOWEFII, AND
PRAVID FOR OUR FAMILY DURING THE RECENT DEATH OF .
OUR HUSBAND, FATHER, AHD GRANDFATHER. THANKS TO

REVEREND RICHARD GRAHAM AND REVEREND MAX WELLS
FOR OFFICIATING OVER THE FUNERAL. THANKS TO THE
WAUGH FAMILY FOR SINGING. THANKS TO THE VFW POST
4-464 AND LAFAYmE POST 'Z7 AMERICAN UOION FOR
DOING THE MIUTARV H.ONORS. THANKS TO PAULIN! UNROE
AND ROll NANCII'OR THEIR HILP IN lliMNQ Tltl ~.
THANKI TO MARVLH HANIR, AIX UNROI, AND CHAALII
IIALOW1N ~ IIINQ HONORAII'I I'ALLIIAIIIRI, THANKI
TO DR. WALICIR, DR, M1ZI 1 DR. 0RICOIKI, AND THI
IICONO ,LOOII NUMINO ITMI' AT HOUIIII, THANKI TO
HOII'ICI ,0~ THII~ TIMI AND CARl. THANKI TO
CIIIMIINI ,UNW~ DHAI'II. WI WOUI.D LIKI TO IIITIND
A I"OIAI. THANK YOU TO CHAI!LII AND COHNII IAI.OWIN
WHO OIIYOTIO THIIR TIMI AND IU,OIIT TO OUR JIAII1LY
OURINCI Tl11 L.AIT WIIKI 0' OUR HUIIIANO, MTHIR, AND
QNANOMTHIRI Ul'l. VOU DAN NIVIII KNCIW HOW MUOH
VOU ARI AJI,RICIATID, MAY GOO ILIII YOU ALL,

'11114·~-~

R,,,.,..,.,

~

Pti/N

'ebru•ry

AVAILABLE

Immediate Opening For AN In
Physic ians Office , Compe1ltl..-e
Salary, Benetlt Package , Send
ResUme To : JRI5 , 200 Main
Street, point Pleasant, WV 25550

'FULL AND PART·TIME
OPENINGS
'NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED·

TRAINING PROGRAM
'COLLEGE &amp; H.S. STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply In Person At:
303 Maln Street

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wl1h Mall OrderiE·
commerce . $500·$7000 !1"0. PT!
FT from home. Full training. Free

booklet

Point Pleasant, WV
Mondly, Februal')t 19th
Tuesday, Febru~ry 20th
Wednasday, February 2111

920·924·8400.

www.AchieveDreams.com
Join Bruce from one of the honest
flatbed carrier s at th e large&amp;l
show of the year. Louisville Truck
Show Booth t6292 Tandem
Transpor t Corp. 800·55 1·9067
ext. 140 www.tand.com
Kawasa ki Mot ot Sports Is In
Nee.d Of Qualified Mechanics,
Parts And S~ les Person ne l To
Work In Gall ipolis· Or Pomeroy.
General Setup And Maintenance.
Send Resumes ·To : 4367 State
Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Lega l Assistant· E11.perlence In
Lillgatlonl
Personal Injury/
Workers Compensation . Kelly
Services. Huntington, WV 1·800·

295·9470 Or 304-529·2141
Lo cal Home Hea lth Agency,
Seeking A Full-time Nursing Su·
pervlsor. Applicant Musl Have AI
Least 2 Years Management Ex·
parlanCe Preferred . We OHer
Competlllowe Salary, 401 K And
Benems Package . Interested Ap·
pllcants, Please Call Our Human
Resource Departme nt At 1·800·

533·5848 Or (740)699·2300

3:00pm Until 6:00pm ONLY
Ask For Ms. Willls

OPPORTUNITY

KNOCKS

lmme'dlate Opening For Commun·
ity Support Consultant To Work
In LOcal And Surrounding Areas .
EntrY· Level Posi tion . E~tcellent
Management Opportunity. Guar·
ant8ed Base Salary· Commls·
slons , &amp; Benems . tst Year
$30,000+. Retail &amp; Banking Ex·
patience Helplul. Chetrleaders &amp;
women E11.cel. Minimum
2
YE!ars College Degree A +. We
Train . For Personal &amp; Confl·
dential
lnten~lew ,
CaU 1·843·
857·0522
Overbrook Cen ter Is now accept·
irg applications for fu !l time and
part time tPN 's. all shUts. If you
are interested In becoming part of
winning team, please contact
Jackie Newsome, ADON lor more
Information. EOE

a

'
OWN
A COMPUTER? Pul 11 to
workl $25·$75/hour. Free details.
,_Will traln. www.9 11 success.com

...

Announcement

One Stop Shopping
For All Your Advertising Needs

The American Community
Co1ntal2! us at:

1-800-821-8139
website:

Help Wanted

110
TIChrucal

OWN A COMPUTER?
Put it to work earn S25-S7M'Ir'IPV
Ft. 1·888-671·969011.650
www.adebtfreeyou oom
PARENTS DREAM! Stay Home.
Earn Money Sel your own hours.
Tra1n1ng
Provided.
Vlsut :
www.homew11tlkids com
Pleasant Valley Hospttal Current·
ly Has An Opening For A Medi·
call Surgical Unit Coord inator.
BSN Preferred. E~cellent Pay And
Benetits. Submit Resume To Hli·
man Resources. At Pleasant Val·
ley Hosp ital, 2520 Dm·e , Po int
Pleasant, WV 25550 . Or Flit To

(304)675-6975. MIEOE.
Postal Jobs $48 ,323.00 yr. Now
hiring· No e11.perience-pald train·
lng· great benefits . ca ll 7 days
81)().429·3660 elCt. J·365.
Processing Claims hom home.
$15·545/Hr! Established company
seeks people . Training Provided.
Must own PC. 1·800·935·131 1 11
206

PTS Wireless Resoutces, Open
Interview• · Ramada 1nn· 711
2nd Street. Portsmouth, Ot'tio,
Oh io Room. Thursday February
22, 2001 4pm-8pm. We Are HirIng Experienced Tower Crews.
Great HOurly, Benellt, Per Diem

PaCkage. (734)651Hl839
Southern Gospel Quartet, Look·
lng For Pure Tenor Singer.

(740)245-9342
STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE
$500-$7000/month . PT/FT. Com·
plate train ing. Free Information .
www.creStlme.com . Toll frpe 1·
866-873·3693.
Engineer
E&gt;Jen The Best Structures In The
Word Are Only As Strong As
The Foundations On Wh ich Tl'1ey
Are Built. AI Rockwell Automation,
Our Foundation Is Rooted In Out
People. To Work With Us Is To
Furrher Yoursell And Your Ca ·
reer. So Joln Our Team Today,
And Beco me Part 01 The Reasons We 're The Most Valued
Global Source Of Industrial Auto·
mation.
Manufaclurlng EnglnMr

Ga111po11s. OH
Primary Responsibilities Of This
. Position Include The Oelgn Tool·
lng And Specifications For Pro·
curement 01 Tooling And Capilal
Equipment Candidates Will Also
Be Required To Initiate Engineer·
ing Change Request s (ECR's) To
Correct Detects Or lmpi'OIIe Elfl·
ciences And Quality. In Addition,
Candidates Will Lead Process
lmpro..-emen1 Activities That Op ti·
mlze Product Flow·And Proowlde
Technical Support To Production
Lines.
Qualifications II"'Ciude A
Bachelor's Degree In Engineering
(Prefer Mechanical. Electrical Or
Manufacturing Degree) And
Three Or More Years 01 Related
E11perlence ln A Manufacturing
Environment.
To Ensure Consic:leratlon For
This Position, You Must Indicate
This Corresponding Code GTO I ·
0002962 On The Top Ot Your Resume. Please Forward Your Re·
surne To Rockwell Automation··

Oepl. 774 S. P.O. Box 2066
Mllwaukee, WI532D1·2DB6. Email
{No Anachments, Te11.t Format
·only Please):
resumes@hr.ra.rockwell.com And
' Equal Opportunity Employer
Suppor ting Di..-erslly In The
workplace.

ROCKWELL AUTOMATION
The Village Of VInton Is Now tak·
lng Appllcallons For A ~art-ttme
Maintenance Employee. Appllca·
rlons May Be Obtained· By Calling
After 5:00pm, Herb Moore,
(740)388-9618 Or Jell Dawkins

(740)388-9742

Ellen The Best Structures In The
Word Art Only As Strong As
The Foundations On Which They
Are Built. At ROCkwell A.utomatiOn,
Our Foundation Ia RooleG In Our
Peop le 'To Work Wlth Us Is To
Further Yoursell And Your Ca·
rear So Jo1n Our Team Today ,
And Become Part 01 The Rea·
sons We 're The MOll 1/t!lued
Global Source Of Industrial Auto·
malion .
Ou•llty TIIChnlelan

Gllllpollo, OH
The Primary Responsibility Of
This Position Is To Maintain The
ElectricaL' Mectlanlcal Calibration
EQuipmenl And Tract&lt;lng System
To Ensure The Accuracy Of All
Electrical/ Mechanical Measure·
menl Equ{Jment Used'Througll·
out The Facility. Candidalas In
This PositiOn W~ l Also Interact
With AlllewtiS Ollhe Worklorct
As Well As Outsldt EleculcaV
Mechanical Sales, Repair And
CalibratiOn Businesses As Well.
They Will Preform Routine Call·
bration 01 Electrical/ Mechanical
Measurement Equipment Such
As Micrometers. Calipers, Plus
gages , Ring Gages, Thread
Gages, And Etc. This POsltlon
Will Also Support Continuous Improvement Process [CIP) Actrvl·
Ues That Involve tmprO'Iing The
Gaging methods Used Through·
out The plant.
Oualiflcallons Include A Two
Year Degree In Manufacturing,
Technical, CalibratiOn. Or Equlv·
alvent Certificates Plus Work E~­
perience And A Minimum Of 2
Years 01 Calibration Experience.
Candidates Must Atso Have Ba·
sic Math And Computer Skills
And El&lt;cellent Verbal And Writ·
ten Communication Skills. The
Ability To Solve Ptoblems With
Minimal Direction Is Also Ae·
qulred.
To Ensure ConsideratiOn FO/f
This Po!iltion, You Must Indicate
This Corresponding COde GT01 •
0002945 On The Top 01 Your Re·
sume. Please Forward YoLK Re·
sume To Rockwell Au!Omation ~

Dept 774 S. P.O. Box 2086.
Milwaukee, Wl53201·2086. Email
(No Allacnments, Te111 Format
Only Please):
resumasOhr.ra.rockwell.com And
Equal Opportu[llty Employer
Supporting Diversity tn The
Workplace

ROCKWELL AUTOMATION
Techn ical l'yplst· Position OpenIng For A Typist At T.he Galllpolls
Office 01 Woodland Centers, Inc.
Position Requ ires The Ability To
Type 60 Correct Words Pe r
Mlliute And The Ability To Tran·
scribe From Transcri ption Equip·
ment. medica l Records Terminal·
ogy Preferred. Position Could Be
Scheduled For Up To 40 Hours
Per Week Depend ing On Need.
Interested Applicants · Should
Send Resu mes To Sherry Gor·
don , Manager Of HA At Wood·
land Centers, Inc.. 3086 State Route 160, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Woodland Cen ters, Inc. Is An
EOEIAA Employer.
The Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center is seeking a Lan·
guage Arts/Literacy (12mos) at
· Hocking Valley Community Re sl·
d~ntlal · C~n t e r In Nelsonville,
Ohfo.' Bachelors degree 1 Educa·
tlon with a current certi ficate/license r.equired. Strong back·
ground In re media l Language
Arls instruction Is benellciaL Sub·
mit letter or application. resume,
copies of current certilicateslll·
censes, and 3 leiters of reference
to Larry Kamod~ . HVC RC. 111
West 29 Dri..-e, Nelsonville, Ohio
45764 . Deadline is March 5,
2001. Tl'le AM ESC is and Equal
Opportunity Employer/Provider.

Hlllp Wanted

Tran•port driver for 100 btd
sldlled nursing !acUity Provide
transportation lor physician lp·
polntmtnll . consults, etc. Must
nave good dr iving record , enjoy
work ing with residents and Ia·
mUles . Pos ition us part-ume and
on-call Is requited Pos ition is
temporary at thls time. lntert&amp;ttd
applicants should apply ln person
to: Ro cksprings Rehab Center,
36759 Rocksprings Road, Pomtr·

oy. Ohio 45769 740·992-6606 .
Equal Opporlunrty Employer.
Unlled Talent Stalling Service
AccepUng Applications FOf':
Accounting Clerit,
Admtnislratrve Assistants,
Data Entry Operators.
Industrial,
Legal Secretary/ Paralegal,
Payablesl Recei..-ables.
Aeceptionl$1, Secretarial.
Word Processors.
Please Call (304)372-401&amp;
For Appoinunent
Thartpltt~

Prov ide Individual,
Family, And Group Therapy To
Various ·POpulaUons tn Mason
County. Will Also Pro vi de Case
ManaQSment, Consultation, And
Education Services To Tl'1e Com·
mun lty. Fleltlble Scheduling/ Trav·
et Within Counly Required . Split
Pos ition Between Two Programs
With A Concentration In Adoles·
'cents . Requires MA In Human
Services Field, license Or Ll·
cense Eligible, E11perience In
Add lcllons ·Prelerrad . Preatere
Center, HR/ Mason Thera, PO
Bo11 8069, Huntington, WV 25705

EOEIAA

WE HAVE EXPANDED!

lnfoCI1lon is pleased to
announce that we ha..-e added
a new call-center at our
location in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Wt currently have Hvtral

po11tlon• openl
You can tarn up to S7,our and
weekly bonuses.

Morktt
Jutl tOI'OII

'

1-866-475-7223 Ext. 11101
WORK AT HOME
Mall-order/ Internet. PTIFT $500·
$4500/mo. Free booklet. 1·800-

679·3556 www.EARNHOME,COM

Business
Training

140

Galllpoll1 Career College
[Careers Close To Home)

Call Today! 740-446·4367.
1·800·214.(1452,
Reg 190·05-12748.

150

Schools
Instruction

BLACKSTONE

PARALEGAL

STUDIES. Comprehensl..-e, afford·
able, home study legal training.
Since 1890 . FREE Catalog: 1·
800·826-9228 , wrlte : P.O. Sox
701449 , Dallas, TX 75370 or http:/
/www.blackstonelaw.com

1111!.1 I IIIII 1111 II Mil II II'

441-0114 1·800-498-0076

Kanauga
flnnii."IU'IIuc,

Auctioneer

Earn $90,000 YEARLY repairing ,
NOT replacing, l ong cracks In
Wlndshlalds . Free video 1-80 0·
826~8523 US/Canada, www.glass·
mechanlu::om

EXTRA MONEY?? Work lrom

BLACKSTONE

PARALEGAL

1·600-813-5694.
HALLMARK Style Greeting Card
Ate. 50 Quality Lac's. Loca1 Super
Income 800·277-9424 24 Hrs.

MONEY DELIVERED to your
front door within hoursl New, owir·
tually-unknown
bustness.
www.homewealthOnline.comJrober1
sm ltt'l , Listen to 3·m lnute mas·
sage at 1-800 -404·1475 ellt.
197428. Then call toll-free 1·866·

447-7869 .
Start Your Business Today ...
Pr ime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate .
Spring Valley Plaia, Call 74Q-446·
0101 .

STAAT

YOUR

OWN

BUS! ·

NESS... LOCALLY Pr,oblem ciedlt?
NO probleml Income Unlimlledtl!l
1·888·267·4589.
WORK FROM HO ME .. . Earn
$1500 'pit to $5000 lll·month!!t
CALL TODAY 1·800·895·0219 or
www.workfromhome@247.com

$$ NEED A LOAN? Try debt con·

180 Wanted To Do

solidat io n! Cut payments up to
60%. Same day approval ! 1-877·

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your togs to the mill just ,call

304·67fi· 1957.

Professional
Services

230

1 _76_9_·8_1_68_.·---~---­
TURNED DOWN .ON

SOCIAL SECURITY !SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1·888·582·3345

Reel Estate General

For Sale: Six lots in
Waller 's Hill Subdivision.
Cal l today and ask l or
12018

Now Llatlngl
plenty of room In
Cape Cod home.
vlaw. N188
Chock thlt outl This 4 BR.
2 t/2 bath home Is pertect
for the wnole family.

Looking lor land In 1 nice
location? Just a few miles
out of Gallipolis (Green
Twp.), we hav.e- 2-acre tracts
to B·acre tracts M/L. County

water also available. There
are some restrictions . Cal l
and ask for 12022.
Looking lor land? We

Located on Second Avenue. have it! Available in 5-acr~
Calllo view! 1187
looking lor
I tllo.rdit&gt;lllty and location?
1'
we have them both In
home local&amp;d on Second
Ave . Call to view lhe 3
bedroom. 1 1/2 bath home

1186

tracts more or legs . Public
water available . Driveways
&amp; culvans already present
Give Allen a ca11.12023.
Are you looklnglorvac,.nt
land? We may have
you ne~ . Just a few
from lown are 35

or less in

we have several
plus tract1
building that
All your
available

Plus exua bonuses. call to
booll·abo11e and garden pariJ
todav. New Spring nemsl ·

Announcement

Feb.22
Amvets Poat23

Earn $500 to $900 per week in
your bathrobe &amp; sUppers. Great
opportunity to secure your future.
Low Investment. 1·800·272·0193:
awesomearnlng.com

STUDIES. Home study, approved,
alfordable, comprehensi..-e. _legal
training slnce 1890. FREE Cata·
tog: 8D0-826·9228, write: P.O. Box
701449, Dallas , TX 75370 NA or
http://www.blackstonelaw.Com

FREE BA1HfUB CANf&gt;LE.!.

In ua and trv to be au
We oan ba, and walk th• path

Tiudl Load 111111
Don1 llel Tllft OMI

HR·PTfFT. www.BeBossFree.com

MEDICAL BILLING Un limited In·
come potential No uperlence
necessary. Free Info rmat io n &amp;
CD·ROM. Investment from 52495.
Financing a..-a il able . (800) 322·
1139 EXT 050 www .business·
startup.com

FREE 10YRWARRANTY

Thompson at 0401 318-2&amp;42
or 0401 446-2885

•

ARE YOU CONNECTED? INTER·
NET USERS WANTED! 125·$751

more

w••n Ulka wftat vou lnatllled

·7:00p.m.

INOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bus I·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma il until you have investigated
the offering.

740-446-1066

For mon details. callllmberiV

Maat'IAMm•n

76538·2865.

Township. Call and ask
12027.

••y

tha 11ar1 YOU playMI te ahape
Our uvea, eftal"'l - • n In lhe thin•• we H
In Ooct•a daa.. n anti ,.,. . . ., lltl•n
He aew the hurtln•

$750-$2000 weekly possible. Un·
li mited opportunity. FREE details.
SASE : NMG , 1900 W. University,
Suite 6 , PMB 23C. Edinburg, TX ·

Allen C. Wood, Broker· 446·4523
Ken Morgan. Broker· 446·0971
Jeanette Moore,· 256·1745
Patricia Ross

VERY NICE SALE 'WITH A
GOOD VARIETY OF
FURNITURE &amp; SMALLSIII

really like to
But we oould nev•r go baok when
W• did th• t:hlnga we did beok then
w••ll etqra thoa• preoloue
memorlaa In our lnlnda

Thursday,

•oo

WOOD
HEJILTY,
INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631

Gallipolis, Ohio
,,

Th•r••• eo muoh now. we"d

that vou h•v• left ~lnd
The little thtnga thM •••m • • email
. Ia now like gold In memory•• v.ult
We aherlah ev•rv one that we h.ve Of you
Now wa oan ••• and reoognl-

13000 weekly ! MAILING

brochu res AT HOME ! Guar·
antted .- Free Suppl ies. 1· 800·
283·388'0 ext. f368 {24 h.rs.)

Call Us Today For An lntet\liewt

592·6651.

p.m. ·

.m"'-:1:.
· nn:m·

Th.t: •Upped our mlnde

Business
Opportunity

210

hOme around your schedule part
lime! lull time. E11.cellent lhcomel

FREE ESTIMATES

Hunllftiiiiii.,:V 3.1II

w•a Juet a oall •w•Y
·Whet 'w••d glv• for Juat •om•
time to -v t:h• t:hlnga

FINANCIAL

•Full Benefits
•Weekly Paychecks
•Paid Vacatlon
•Retirement Plan
•Professional Atmosphere

Auolloneor
Proatoo ~1'- OhiO Plea

11, , . ..,

aual 1l)l house cleanings, The
Ba&amp;1 Bonded, Profess;onal, Ae fl·
able , call evenungs (740)2561 131 or 1·888·781·2-412, email :
doobled 0 IKJrekanet.com

75 Est. Locations. (Local) Prcwen
Income. 800·800·3470.

Total Year Round Comfort

Antjagg Agctjon

Mount's Tree Ser..-ice ·r111 TrH
Proftltfon•rs• Buckel Truck
S•r..,iee · Top· Trim· Removl !·
Stump Grmdmg . Frat Estlmattl.
Fully Insured ~ Work•rs Camp.
Bidwell. Oh.•o. CaU &amp; Save 1·800838·9566 1740)368-9648 Owner:
Rick Mount

donors, earn $35 to $45 for 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call Sera-Tee, 740· L------:--:--=--:-~-=----;-------

Benefit shoot for Belh Murphy, da119hter of
Tom Hayman. Beth Is currently In Riverside
Methodist Hospital, Rooln 6117, Columbus,
Ohio. Beth Is CQJ11Qtose.
All proceeds wilt OD to the Murphy fomlly
Will be sliaatlno buck.shots &amp; sluos.
and

180 Wanted 'To Do

AT&amp;f.MCI PAYPHONE ROUTES

URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma

Forked Run Spgrtsmen Club
Sunday, Febru~ry 18,2001
12noon

' 6:30
Friday, February 23,

110

Glry-.

If !If• could oniy bring again.
th• d•y• we took for ur•n.t .d
When to hear vour volo•

.&amp;ewe

Help Wanted

110

lC.OOLoto.

w.nt To ~ Wrtlt "'• Lord 110 Y••re
Ago On

'DAY AND EVENING SHIFT

8580 St. Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35)

'I'Noldollll or New a UIMI
.... I'N:rl . . . . . . . . .

j

•

Blazer• ..Jr.

Who

Hon'jl3maker work while
children In school

mnnxmx

EVIn

.

6~

(GueranleOd Se1aryi
Men and women Needed To Do
TelephOne Operator Work For

Lemley's A~c:;t~on Barn

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

f\

the 2001 1111on. Muat be •It
leaat 18 ,yrs. • Contact us at 74o-

•

NOWH1RING

·Public Slla and Auction

AUCTION

.:

lool&lt;log lor Individual&amp; 1o ''"""!lOr

268-~.

NEEDED 43 people to lost 30 lbs .
by April 11 Brand t"'8W, just pa1ent·
edt I lost 23 lbs in t monthl 800·
570-9628 or www.b61im4111e.com

APPLICA ·

Drillers : P.A.M. Transport. No ex·
parlance needed. 2 week COL
training. $34.000/yr. year plus lull
~benellls &amp; paid training . Drillers
· baled In Mldwesl. 1·877-230·
8002. Sunday 8am·4pm. Monday

~Meton.IPH..

DfriOtor of Humin l'tiiD IOM
UnlwereltJ ollllo Gnuftdl
P.O. IulGI
No ca..na.,OH4M74

tJt ..

1-800-582,.756

ATTENTION:

_,..

ONLINE

TIONS. Find the best driving jobs
or start a high paying career now.
Our placement prolesalonals will
make landing your job easy. 877·
893·2ot!6 www.hookup.com/drlv·
era. .

Earn Online Income
$501). $75001-lh

11M u.w.r.Hy Of Rio Q,_.. lnvllee WllwtkH• tor the poethn of
a.cretary 1 tot .... cn~..,..d• Pfattwm.
·

X

Drivers:

Allln11onll1 WoRK FROM HOME
Earn up lo $25.00·$75,00/hr.I'TI
FT. MAIL ORDER call toll ~N
.
t·877·!MIH738.

CAP'BBQADS PROOMM

Joplin. MO 64602

600.845·9390.

$1.200. $5,000/mo.
1·877·582·1054

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Polling Doll: ftbruooy t3, 2001

.

Lease program . .83e/ml.; owner
operator, .83/ml.; company drivers
starling up to .34/ml. w/lncreaaea
to .39/ml.; pay raises every 6
moo. Bonusea, rider program. Pd.
..-u. 1 Ins. aowallab1e. www.can none~preaa . com can for details t.

Attention
Work From Home

·

'

STUDENT DRIVERS
WANTE0111 .
No Experience Necessary!
No Coal ltalnlng If Qualified!
38K· 42K 1atYearl
CALL 1-tOIH33-t&lt;lll4

DRIVERS· Cannon ExpreSS.

Attention Work From Home,

Wanted

h

'f

APPLICATION AND EXAM 1N·
-FORMATION ·
PoSial
Jobs
-$18 .35+/hr.
1·888· 72~·BP83
x1701 7am·7pm CST
ASSEMBLY AT HOIIEII Cralls.
Toys, Jewelry, Wodd, Sawing,
]\lplng ..• Qroal Poyl CALL 1-800·
795-0360 Ext 201 (241wsi
,

RMPOflllbllt1411 Of tNI (lnlnt tuncltd poeltlon lnoludt, bUt . . nolllmlltf to,
IHOVICNnl ...,_.., HCI'ttllltll. 0..,_1 ..... Mtlnloll •NIMIMI lor
Cnluraedl llrogr8m; rn1rnt.ln ollu dltiiiNe, m~rnt.ln ,_.. ,.......
.....t lludenta 111'1 aom,....._ and vartot.. 1101ptki:n....' dutiM u

Everything you
n-dforthe
newHOUHOr
the new
SpouHinone
convenient

Drtvtrt

Addreuers wanted Immediately!
No experience necessary. Work
at home . Cal 405·44N3397.

lntilra•ted c•ndld•lu •hould aant • letter of lnl.....t •nd

PhyUio Molion, SPHR
Director of Hum•n ReiOUrcll
Unlverofty ot Rio Gr 0ndo
P.O. llox 1100
Ala QNndl, OH 61874

DOmino's Now Taking Appllca·
tions For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
locatlon!J Only.

www.e-commbiz.net

Wanted

110

DATA ENTRY
$-45,0DO!yr. potenllal . Need sell
starters who require "no. super·
vision. Fu11 tratnlng . Set own
hours. Computer w/modem re·
qulred. Call toll free 1-688-523·

I"U .. tlme.

~40)

CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS!

2001 , free call tor apphc:atlonlellaminatton Informa-tion Faderal
Hire-Full Benefits. 1·80,0-598·
450• tKtenslon 1518 {7am·9J)m

t 0 companies olfar assembling mall processing &amp; more l Free
brochure! Sand stamped enowe lope to Rae lj!arloe, Box 951·0H,

RADIO STATION PROMOTIONS

''" 1-800-77H933exl.2070.

"FEDERAL POSTAL JOBI"
Up 10 $18.85 ~our, ~Iring tor

MAKE MONEY AT HOME· lop

Help wanted In adUlt group home.
day and night shift, call 740·9925023.

tKCtlltnt ·Income. Easy claims
processing. Full training. Home·
PC required . Call Physi cian &amp;
Htalthcare Deve lopments toll·

CAI.L 1·888·237-5847
EXT. 1626

LPN Or MA Needed For Busy Of.
lice In Point Pleasant, Experience
Preferred . Please Senti Resume
To : P.O. Boll 657 , ~arboursville,
WV 25504 or FaX (304}522·3612

EARN UPTO 110.00 AN HOUR
S7 .50 An Hour To Slln

CAREER OPP.PRTUNITV I Earn

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Or (740)699·2300

HELPI Work from home. Mall·or·
der/E-Commerce. $522+/week PT
$1000·$4000/wk FT. www.dream·
2bfree.com

843-9-122.

Wttkly Poy &amp; Weekly Elonul
Full H1111h Blnl111s
401·K Plan Alter 1 Mo.
(50% Co. Ma1chi
1 Wetk Paid vacation
Every 6 Mot.
7 Paid Holidays .

Local Hom• Health Agency,
DME, And Privatt Cart Company
Seeking A Full-time Manaoer.
Applicant Muat Have AI Least 2
Years Financial And Management E11.perie001. Medical Experl·
enee Pralerr•d . We Otter Com·
Ptt!tiW Salary, 401K AM Benel111
Package. lnt•resled Appi iCilntt,
Please Call Our Human Resource
Oep1rtmel'jt At 1·800·533·5848

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

Bookkeeper wanted, 20 hours per
week, minimum 5 years e~perl­
enct. accounts receivable, accounts payable &amp; data entry. For
more Information qall Ale11. at 740·

OALUPOUS

$30.000 + 1st year. COL DEL1V·
ERS 1·600-260.0294.

Am.rlt:llll'• S.ar Buy In Educ•tlon

:1:1".:-r!::.O:~h/1 ct,:-C::~~~r M•rch 14, 3001. Reaume•

Go..-ernmenl Jobs S11 .00 ·
$33 .00 per hour poten11al . Paid
Training/Full Benefits. For more
lnldrmatlon call 1·888·674·9150
ext. 3234

ALDI

perlence needed! Quick COL
training program available. Earn

Phyllle M•eon, SPHA
Director of Hum•n Raeouraaa
Un.l ver•lty of Rio Or•nd•
P.O. ~oxiSOD
Rio Or•nda1 OH 4HT4
pnY!•on@rlo.adu
FAX Number: (74DJ 245-41108

Mu.t have a valid driver'• lloenM end reliable
tr•neporhltlon. Dear• In Socl•l Work, Payohology,
l!duc•tlon or reletad fteld p,.,wrad.
One y"r or
experience In providing dlreot ....VIoaa to econom1081Dy
vulneqble youth and or HuiUI preferred.

Full &amp; part-time medical recep·
tionlst &amp; switchboard operator,
medical uperlence requ ired .
days , evenings &amp; weekends ,
send resume to : P.O. 270 ,
Athens. Oh. 45701 .

EXPANDING 1N THE

The Untv.raltv or RIO Grenda •nnounow an opening for
one tull-tlma ampiOW'H for 1 Caae MW'IItllr In the
C'roaaroada Program In O•llla County.
Thll grant•
fundM poaltlon I• avallablalmmlldl-taly.

110

US: Ful benefit&amp; that lnctUde
Major Mtdlcal. Denial. One Week
Vacation after 3 mooltla, Short
And l.ong T"'m Oloability. SICk .
Days and Peraonal Days and Sl~
National Holidays Per Year, Re·
tiremant and a 4011( Plan, Flexible
Schedule wlttl a "Can Do' Anitude! Through TraWling Is Pro..-10·
ed And Career Promotion Posaiblt~lea Are Possible.

Full &amp; part-l1me CMA &amp; LPN po·
sition lor medical otrlce , days ,
evenings &amp; weekends. send re·
sume to : P.O. 270, Athens, Oh
45701 .

Aldlls An Equal Opponunity Em·
player. No Teiaphone Call Pioase/
Apply 1n Parson.

CAREER POTENTIAL
1500 EMPLOYEE COMPANY
IN BUSINESS 18VEARS

CASE MANAQER
qe1 LIA COUNTY
CRQSS AQAQI PAOGR,W

178 Upper Alver Ad.
GaUipolia, 0H

YOU: outatllndlng Customer .
Stfviee, Motivation And A Commlmlllnt To Tea,_k And Per·
lormance. Accurate Cash Conlrol, Efflcltnl Opera11on 01 The
Cash RIQlsters Systemt, CleanIng And StOCking Merchandise.
Must Be Able To WorK Between
6am· 9pm. High School DiplOma
Or GEO Requold. Cand&lt;lale&amp;
Musl Be 18 "Yeart Or O~er
To Apply.

To Make:

The Unlvar•lty of RIO Grande •nnounCII In opening for
one tull~tlme employee for • CIH M•n•g•r In the
Croaaroaca Prognm In Malge. County. Thl• gr•nt~
fund~ poe,ltiOn Ia wallabla lmmRI•tely.

FAX Number:

1·617·

$7 HR. FT+ BONUS

3701 H438 Sian Immediately.
$45,000NR potential. Or's need
people to process claims. Full
training. Must own computer w/
modem. We lralrt. Call 1·888·567·

u.s. DlgeSI

520..8071 2• hour recording.

343 DRIVERS NEEDEOII No IX·

••ch

US: FuU bcoefill 11111 include Mojo&lt; Mcdlc.ll, llonbl, Ooc Week Vlellioa

Experience Required . For FREE
Information Call 1·B00·501·ti832

Help Wanted

110

773·5785 Or 304-773-5447.

11/i:.,

Shift Manaeer

HUDIFHA Mortgage RefUnds. No

(740)886-2266

11 0 Help Wanted

CASHIER/

$987 .85 WEEKLY! Processing

&amp;Itt.

Wanted to Buy

90

(740)441-&lt;!592 or (740)446-4803

Gtnlleman Seeking Companion·
ship From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Friendship. Send Re·
pHil To :· 553 Second Avenue ,
Apanment 403, Ga lli pol is, OH
45631.

DATING

Riverside Auc tion Barn , Sale
Every SIIUrday Night at 6p.m.,
Aucuonur Raymond Johnson

LOST· Black &amp; White Male Tom
Cat, Between Lincoln Pike &amp;
Northup Road , Reward , Call

FREE SEARCH!

START

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

New To You Thntt Shoppe
9 West Stimson, A1hens
740-592·1842
Quality clotl'ling anct liousehold

1pm-6pm
Aid! Foods

Help Wanted

110

Help Wanted

110

EARN $25 .000 TO $50.000/YR .
Medical lnsuranea Billing. Need·

c-

&amp;unbnp tU:imtl · &amp;tntintl • Page 03

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Auctioneer: Leslie A:. Lemley
(740) 388-0823 (Home)
(740) 245-9866 (Barn)
"LJcaneed &amp; Bonded By State of Ohio"
Caah/Approved Check Onlyl Good Foodl
"Not Rttponolble For Accldtnlt Or Loot Proportyl"

Mid-Ohiq :Valley Truck
Driver Training
COL Certification 5 Week Course
Mon &amp; Frt 7:00-3: 30 Weekend
Classes Sat &amp; sUn 8 :00-4:30 1.2 weeks
Financing and Funding
Available Baaed On Eligibility
· "Job pfscement on Cfsss A training" .

Contact Ed Atlams 1· 800· 646·3695
or (740) 373-3966
'I

road
Near
for

B~:~:~r~~anch

?

home with

. 1 bath . kitchen

U111ng room on a level
lot. Approx. t 100 sw. H. ol
living space. Call for your
showing of N183.

~::~~~~~ 0~~~:1ic~~k

EnJoy the many contlorta
and conveniences
living In town in this 1
story home with 2
and a bath . Some
include a strol l
park. ~hopping
the m vies and
,-i~i=~:~~~
are wi hin walking d

Hove o omoll 1imlly? This For more information on
2 bedroom t bath would be home. Give Allen a call. Ask
perfect. Sets on almost one lor 1172
acre of land. Call to v.iew
11 you are looking lor
N1B2
Thla commercial building lnveatment property we
11 tooklng lor a now have o8\loral to offer. Call
~U!IIM!III IO fii111S t760 sq. and aok lor Allen.
Located on the edge of
Call

l or

more

I inlorrrlalic&gt;n. Ask for 15012.

Wo are always glad to help you sell or buy
property.
·Rental property Is alao available.
Give us a coli, we can help.

�Page

04 • &amp;unbap Ql:1mra ·6rntmtl

230

ProfeMional

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point

310 Homea tor Sale

440

310 Hom. . for Sale

Plea~nt,

wv

Sunday, February 18,2001
Sunday, February 18, 2001
440

Apartments

SU NEED CASH?? WE PlY
caah for rtmalnlr.g peyments on
Property Sold! Mortgages! Annul-

ties! Slltltmental Immediate
Ouote•lll 'NobOdy beats our prices • National Contract Buyers

www na-

(800} 490 0731 ed 101

UonalcoollactbUyerS com
SFREE

CASH NOWS rrom
weatthy families unload1ng milliOns
ol dollars, to nelp mlntmltt their
111111 Write Immediately Wind·
fall&amp; , 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
na, LOS ANGELES, CAliFOR·
NIA 90010

A Country Craltsman February
Spectal 10% 011 Hoosier Cabl·
nets Pie Sales Etc Come See
Our Showroom 8 Save 10% On
ArrtPurchase (304)743-1100

1971 t2x8!1 Good Condition, 2
Btclroom, $2000 Firm. Must Be

Moved,

Call

Afltr

7pm,

(7~0f446-7:J21

1971 Scnun.z Mobile Home For
Salo (140)367-7052 COli After

4pm
1971 Windsor Mob•le Home,
12&lt;65.
1400 As Is, Need&amp;
Work,
Must
8e
~oved
(740)446-2517

s

1991 Mob1le Home. 2 Bedroom, 1
Bath Stove. R&amp;fngerator, Back
Porch, 8x121oot, Very Good Con·
'dllton Make Offer (740)446-4E09
Ask For Jim
1992 Mobile Home On 6 6 Acres.
3 Bedrooms, ,2 Baths. Garage &amp;
Barn All Fenc&amp;d In Pond Asking
$45 000 (740)441-0302

ATIORNEYS
DtiiOf'Ce $150
B:tnkruptcy S195
Adoption $225
Not det-il·yourself·klll
CAU 1 600-263-0503
FREE mrormallonl
Bankruptcy N/A TN/KY

1996 1f!K80 MOb1la Home, Vmyl
Siding Shi"Qied Roof. Central Air.
Cathedral Cellmg Through Out,
Th ree aedroom, 2 Full Baths
Musl Move, Call After ~pm
(740)446-8308

CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBT I Reduce monthly
paymeniS Pay one bUifmonth
EASY 10 get started Ftnanc1al
Freedom Chosttan Counsellng,
ext
CC3
800 841 · 9757,
W'ft/W debtccs org (non-proht)

t997 Oakwood Mobile Home, 3
Bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms, Kitchen
&amp; Livlngroom Heat Pump, Wash·
er&amp; Dryer Included Only Asking
Payoff Price Can Be Seen AI
Oua1l Creek Available To Move
Into Nowt (740)256-6997 &amp;
Leave Message

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS liCENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/R EMOVE
BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 1·868·811 0902
GRANTS AVAILABLE TO HELP
PAY ENERGY BILLS· also lnfor
matlon about government pro·
grams! Non-proftl www ConsumerGurdance org or 202 595 1036
ext 10602

2000 Oakwood mobrle home,
three bedroom two bath, must
sell 740·985·4112

Factory Goof 32x60 $10 000 Dis·
count only $1 000 00 Down De·
11very, and setup pa1d by Factory
1 800 691 6777
Final Days, NaUonwlde Inventory
Reduction I (304)736-3409

$73,000, 3 Bedroom I 1/2 Bath
Wood Floors Gas Fireplace
Garage, 1 47 Acres Must See
(740)368-9151

ltmlled Or No Credit? Govern ment Bank Finance Only AI Oak·
wood In Barboursv•lle WV 304·
736·3409

2 Story Hou se In Town, 3 Bed
room, 1 112 Bath Attached 1 Car
Garage, Call
After 6pm
(740)446-4005 Or (7 40)4466608

Lot model clearance, save up to
$8 625 with any home, check us
out were dealing, Cole's Mobile
Homes, US 50 East, Athans, Oh

3 Bedroom 2-t/2 baths 2 Fire·
places 2 Car Garage Much
More Close To Everything,
$90,000 Calll740)441-0310
FORECLOSED GOV T HOMESI
$0 OR LOW OOWN I TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT' FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
800-501-1777 ext 9813
Good clean two bedroom house
in Pomeroy on land contract, 740·
698-7244
Ml Vernon Avenue· 4 Bedroom
House New gas Furnace Central
Air Interior Newly Pamted N1ce
f&lt;1tchen Appliances Basement
Covered PaltO Prices 50's
(304)&amp;82·2447 (304)662 2405
Must Seal Beautlrul 3 Bedroom 2
bath CIA, FR Wtth Fireplace 2
Lots New Roof Refngerator
Stove, ow Large 2 Car Garage
B•g Yard Large Rooms Lots Of
Extras, Relocattng Out Of State.
567 000 Calt (304)773·5454

Must Selll 16x80
Make 2 Payments &amp; Move In!
1 eoo 691 6m
Must sell· 1989 Clayton 14x70 on
1·1/3 acre level lot, price re ·
duce&lt;l 740·742·2726

School

D~trfcl

fHNIAI.S

o..

$271 00 PIUI Uttltles. Le..., Depool! AoQuhd 17~)oW1-151J

2 bedroom apartment In Middle-

New double wldt 3 br 2 bl.

"""""·
coli
1
. -

$998 00 down only $295 ptr
mon can now 1-800-691-6777
New Fleetwood 1·h:70 116 999 00
3 Bedroom· 2 Bath 1·877·777·
4170
New
Fleetwood,
18d0
$19,999 00, 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 1·
677·nHHO
Utility Bills Ge1Ung Most ot Your
Payche ck' Call (140) 446-3093
For Your New Home Today
330

1 ·3 Bedrooms FortciOitd
Homeo From $199/Mo., 4% Dowr1
30 Years at 8.5% APR For List·
lngs.II00-319-3323 El&lt;L 1109

He oooe

One Bedroom ,t.partment On 111
Avenue, Gallipolis Washer/ Dry·
tr Hook-up. S270fmo Plus Ot·
postt Water PaitJ (740)448-4043
Aller6 OOpm

'""' eptn, 7ol0-

410 Firat Avenue , 1 Btdroarn
Apartment•
$215 + Damage
Oepoall , Referencea Required,
(740)884-oiSJI

Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floors, CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted. Adult PoQI &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo, Start $365/Mo No Pats ,
Lea4e Plus Security Deposit At·
qulred, Days 740-446-3491,
Evenings 740 367-0502 740·
446-0101

Farms for Sale

86 lv:.fe Farm For Sale By Owner
With 1500 Sq Feel, 3 Bedroom, 1·
112 Bath Home With Oak Trim,
And Large Kitchen Has A Large
Garage And Barn W1th 40+ Till·
able Acres Excellent Localion
Near Rio
Grande. Asking
$129,900 (740)380-0259 even·
lngs
350 Lots

&amp;

Acreage

80 Acres Of Developmental Land
In Mason County, Has A Natural
Spring, C1ly Weier &amp; A Creek
The Bottom, Already Timbered.
Askmg $~0.000 Call (304)697·
5927

Meigs Co.- Tupper Plains·
SR681, House On 3 Acres, ffee
Gas $36,5001 5 Acres $12,500 Or
16 Acres $20 5001 Carr Rd. 6
Acres$13000 11 Acres$22,000
Or 5 Acres With Large Pole
Building $31,000 Danville, 5
Wooded Acres $!4 000 Rulland,
9 Acres $8.500! Co Water On All
Call Now For Mapsl Owner Fl·
nancing With Slight Mat1cup Land
Available In 42 Ohio Counties
For Sale By Owner 3 Acres Land
Just Past 8 Mile ~oad, On Route
62N, Back &amp; Side Fenced In
Septic, Well &amp; Electric, On Spectacular VIew $25 ooo Firm
(304)451l1916
looking To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land? We Doltl Hurry
On~ 10 loiS Left, 304·736-1295

mo.

S200 0epos11. No 1'111. Rtlor·
ences Required Call After
5 OOpm. (740)446-9342
205·1/2 Popular Slreel, 2 Bed·
room, Full Baument S275.., Ot·
posH, (304)67S·3230
9 Room HoUII, 3 Baths, 2 Klfeh..
ens, 4-5 Bedrooms, $8001mo
Pluo Oeposll (7~0)~46-473-4 Or
(740)441-1337
1
Rent to own on land contra~l­
good clean two bedroom houH In
Pomeroy, 740-896-724&lt;1
$475 Month 3 Bedroom Hou11,
Gallipolis Ferry Area (304)875·
,105
Pilot Program Renter• Needed
(304)736·7295
Ptlot Program. Rentert Nttded .
304-736-7295
Quality 2 Bedroom House, nice
Neighborhood , Gallipolis Areil ,
$400/mo + Deposit &amp; Rel~r~nce
(561)468·3561
420

Mobile Hom. .
for Rent

14x70 Wllh 24 Foot Expando
$325/month + Deposit &amp; Refer·
ance In The Camp Conley Area
(304)675·~77

2 And 3 Bedroom Mobile Homes
For Rent In Porter Area You Pay
Deposit &amp; Utllltlea. References
Required (740)366-9182
2 Bedroom, Water &amp; Trath Paid
Or1 Bula~llo Plko (7~)3118-1100
Beaulllul River VIew Ideal For 1
Or 2 Peop4e, Relerencea, Deposit,
No PelS, Fosler Troller Pork, 740·
«1-0181
Nice one bedroom mobile home
between Pomeroy &amp; Athens, lots
ovatllble also, can 740·992·2115'1

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 Bedroom Very Clean $22!/mo
Can Evenings Or Leave Met·
sage (304)675-4975
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshed and unfurnlahld, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·
992·2218

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 52 WoSiwood
Ortve from $297 to $383 Walk to
shop &amp; movies Call 740·446·
2568 equal Housing ()worlunity
Beautiful Clean Apartment, Down·
town Gallipolis 2 000 Square
Feet, 3 Bedroom, Newly Oecorat·
ed, New Kitchen, Washer! Orver
Hookup, Dishwasher, $600/mo
Kel~ Jo (740)446-9961

Twin RM!rTowers now accepllng
app~catlons for 1 BR
HUD subsidized apt for elderly
and dtsablt~ EOH (304)675·
6679
470 Wanted to Rent

Ctulatv'a Family Living. 33140
New Lima Rd., Rutland, Oh10, 740742·7403 Apartment, t'lome and
trailer rentals Commercial store·
fronts available lor lease Vecan·
cies now

Retail Of Office Space In New Ha·
ven, fl8\\' Bulldtng. (304)882·3,31

4639
Gracious living 1 and 2 &amp;edroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle·
pori From $273-5336. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltles

510

1131
Broyhill Ornene Set Solid Maple
Seals .4 Or 6 W1th Matching Chi·
na Cabinet $700 Ethan Allan
Sectional Cherry Entertainment
Center Pd $6000 Will Take
$1200 OBO (740)256-9324
For Sale Recon ditioned wash·
ers dryers and refrigerators
Thompsons Appliance 3407
Jackson Avenue {304)675-7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vme Street, Call 740 446-7398
1-888·818.0128
Maytag Whirlpool Washers $65
&amp; Up Whirlpool Kenmore Dryers
$60 Each, No Sunday Calls
Pteast,(740)446-0066
Mollohan Carpets &amp; Furniture,
New 2 piece Livingroom Suite,
$299 Recliner $199 Sale On
Carpet In Stock 200 Clark Chapel
Road Porter, Ohto (740)366-0173

cn111

l:mlllJ
II.•

.com

Acer computer, 4 1/2 hard drl11e
17" monitor, printer $700, 740•
992·2179
ALL STEEL BUILDING. Faclory
clearance up to 50% OFF. 40M!O,
50x80 60x100, 100.150 Can Oil·
liver! Doug 1·800.775-1507
ALL STEEL BUILDINGS. Now, up
to 50% off! Pre-engineered with
plans 40x60x 10 was $1 6,500
now $9990 50x100K14 was
135,900 now 111990 60&lt;125•14
was $51,500 now $34,990. 1·800.
246-9640
'
AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFFTANNINQ BEDS
Buy FBCtory Direct
Excellent SeNiee
Flexible Financing Available
Home /Commercial Units
FREE Color Cola log
Call Today 1·800·842·1310
www np etsans com

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
S21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Per 100, AU Brass Compression Fittings In Stod&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jadl:son, Ohio 1-800-537·9528

code ac

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even with
ltSI than perfect crec:lill 1·800
471·90t6 Code ACe www omc
SOIUtlornl com

Zenith 35 Inch TV with Stand
$200 Call(740)446-11 55
550

ATTENTION Prom Dress· "Mori·
Lee' Color· Aubergine (Light
Smokey-Lavendar), Paid $1•5.
Worn Once • Size 18/20, SeN For
$100 Shoes size 9 112. Same
Color, $20 (740)446-7~53

DIRECTV lree mstallatlon, $200
cash back SD0-263 2640

Block brick sewer pipes, wind·
ows lintels etc Claude Winters
RIO Grande. OH Call 740 245·
5121

EZPETRX COM Save up to 50%
on ALL pet medicatiOns and sup
piles. Including Heartgard, Inter·
captor, Fronlllne, morelll FREE
SHIPPING Order online www Ez·
petRx com t-800·84.4·1427

560

Pets for Sale

AKC
Regtstered
(740)446-661 0
.

FirewOOd For Sale $40 A Load,
$70 Cord, HEAP Accepted
(740)256-6663

Boxer

AKC Chow Chow Puppies, 5
Weeks Old, (740)446-3166 Aller
6pm On Weekdays, Anytime
Weekends

FREE DIRECTV SYSTEM lnclud
rng proless•on Installation Call/
details OYer 225 channels Local
networks ava•lable 888 ~75
1100

Flhlno Farm Dozer, 8' Bllde, Hyd
Till. 3 Polnl HI1Ch. 040 RPM PTO,
Diesel, 188 Hrs, $8500 Keefers
Slfvlct Centtr, Stale Route 87,
Pomt Pleasant &amp; Ripley Road,
Phono 1304)895-31174

19Stt Chevrolet Cavalier Au·
tomatic Trensmluion, Aun&amp;
Good Good Condition Ask.lng
S1700 Call(740)441-()634

GIVE THE BEAUTY of oll'er twen
ty varieties of Oregon Dahlias to
your friends fam1ly yourself VIsit
us Ohttp:Jiwwworegondahlla com
Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp; Aeparrs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The
Plano Or 740 446·4525

630

Llveatock

Hardwood
For Sale
Call
(740)388-8627 Or (740)388-

8U.

Horses, Big, Tennessee Walkers
Gelding &amp; Walkaloosa Mare Call

1998 Chevy Lum1na , automat•c
air, !Oa&lt;*t. $8750. 740·949-2203

(740)2~6 15

Palomino Stallion
Reg.AQHA 1M
15 3' H H Work! Champ1on, lm·
pr&amp;SSIV8 BlOOdline NIN Western
Pleasure, Halter, Barrels, Stand·
1~ Stud Fte S250, (304)675·
6440

1--------:--640

Hay

&amp;

Grain

1,,...,.,:-:-,.,--::---.-:-:--:::-c:60 t200 Lb Round Bales Of Hay

Full Blooded Cocker Spanlil Pup$150 Each (740)446-2911ll

Square bales of hay, $1 25 per
bala. 740-992·3644

Golden Retriever puppies. full
blooded, 1St shots &amp; wormed ,
$125, cell740·992·7651

Hay &amp; Bright Wrre Tie Straw Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume 1D1s
count Ava ilable Heritage Farm
(304)675·5124

ao ..

JET

UI&lt;C-PKC Walker Con hounds, 8
Weeks Father, Grandson Of
Noctornlal Naylor $150 Each

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu.n In StocK
Call Ron Evans, 1·800 537 9528

(740)2~956

570

Mualcal
I natruments

1999 Fender Roadhouse Strati·
caster Electric Guitar Teal Me·
talllc Fender Hard Shell Case
$700 060 (740)446-31311

Lmcoln AC Welder With Two
Helmets S 150, 6 Gun Cabinet
With Locking Sliding Gtass Doors
And Locking Drawer, $125, Amana 16 Cub•c Foot Refrigerator
$75, Portable Shower Stall $50,
(740)446-1797 (740)446-()232

Old. r Mo de I WurII' zer PI ano,
Reasonable Prtce Perfect For
Beginner Players (740)367-Q674

Lutlerbein s Gallery NEW LOCA·
liON "If II'S worth keep ing, It's
worth framing• Custom Framing,
ArtworkJ More 48 E Auglaize,
Wapakonela, Ohio 419·738·~709
Mon· Frl 10am -5pm, Sat 10am

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos for Sale

SO DOWN CARS! POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S JEEP'S LOW AS 1291
MOS 0199% FOR LISTINGS,
CALL 1- 600 451 · 0050 ed C·
9812
'71 Chevy Nova, automatic, good
condition, 740"949"2501
'83 Chevy Malibu, V.S, ruSI lree
original parts front t~nd d~tmage,
$500 740 992 68 49
;.:::..·:..=..=·:::.:.·:::.:.;.:;.._ _ __

1:;;

'87 Chevy Monte Carlo SS !-tops,
loaded. 39,000 actual mlles,
$7995. call 740-949·3087
1972 Nova SS, $2000 Or Best
Oller (740)446-7251

610 Farm Equipment

1977 Olds Cutlass, runs good,
new tires, $675 740·949·2510

242 Cell Slightly Used Tobacco
Trays,$ so Each, eu1 100 Gal 10
Free Custom Seeding Available
(740)256-6504 (740)256-!1367

1989 Ford Escort LX, 81 ooo
mile&amp; 4 cyl , Good 011 Gas Looks
Good, Sounds Good, $2000 OBO
(740)3&amp;8-9325

Located In Gallla Co NH489
Hayblne, $2900, Very Good Con·
ditlon, Call 937-.484-5593 Please
Leave Message

1989 Pontiac Trans Am GTA,
350 TPI, Rebuilt motor and transmission, T Tops, Completely
Loaded.
oeo

3pm

1991 Grand Am $1595 1991
$2495 198e S·10 $1695
1988 Astra Van, L1ke New
$2895 1995 S·IO $4395, Other
Cera And Trucks To $5995
COOK MOTORS (140)4460103
1995 Saturn SL2 Sport Sedan,
Loaded, 56 coo Miles $6300
(304)545-0266

Hay for sa)e square bales I mtle
on AI 2 N 304-675·4869

314
r 114 Husky, Some With
Blue Eyes, Have Shots &amp;
Wormed $50 Each (740)3888272

Independent Herbalife Distributor
Call For Product Or Opportunity
(740)441-1982

OFFICE

1999 Camaro Z·28, LoadeD 350,
T-Tops, Leather Seats 5 ,800
MileS (304)675·6839
1999 Chevy Z·24 Trac110n Con
trot, Loaded Low M11ea!)8, Under
Warranty $11,900 080, Call
1740)446-1 299

82 Voltswagon

Rabbl1 J•esel. 4
Door, Standard, 144 000 Miles,
$1500 Call After 5pm (740)2455946
87 Honda Accord 4 Door AU·
tomatlc, With OD Tilt &amp; Crurse
AM?FM CasseUe, Looks Good,
Runs Great $1000 (740)44 11083

992-2259

171 Edomo Troll· 'l'y&lt;1oon
Lakl- 2 Loll $12,1500 HCh Moblle
homo, building &amp;101 $15,000 all lor
$33,000

LISTING· POMEROY Approx. 1
acre with a 1 1/2 story brick stuccO/block
home. 3 bedrooms, equtpped kttchen, &amp; 2
baths All new berber carpet, atttc space,
celltng lans bay wtndow In dining room. In
house vacuum system. Attached 1 car
garage, delached 2 car garage wtth attic

14001 OWN
YOUR OWN
BUSINESS Ho lnlletlon In thlo price
owner It aeillng below value
ltoral shop l tonnlng
lor one low
only vtr;1n11

storage Nice covered front cement porch.

ASKING $81,500

1

CARRYOUT BUIINEBS
CONVIN!INCI:
STOll!!
IALI.. New 11&amp;nn lyllem.

~=~~00.
to ate
operaton 111"101

1188.

1-1~

Coli

COde.

1Jc&gt;11nr11t 387.Q323 or «6-eel(l$
APIPU: GROVE· Approx. 29.935 acrll of
hunttng ground Home site out of ftood
Sepllc, electric and your own water
and a gas well on thla property. Could
free gas 10 your home plua 11nall
1royaii!Eos. What a view ol the Ohio RIVer. Aak
an 81/Bttabie river lronl and lot atao.
I Agent OlYned
ASKING 145,000

A!DUCI!D PAICE-m
clooe to new Fwy, hoopltal,
Clr. WI!M, gaa, 110W11r.

I AdJOining

Plnecretl

Nurolng

jf(

97 Plymoulh Neon Automatic
46,000 Mtles $6000 4 Wheeler
Trailer 6 W1de x8 Long, $400 63
175cc Yamaha, 2 Stroke D1rt B1ke,
$700 Very Good Condition, ATV
Helmet· 0 Neal World · Force,
E88 Blue And Silver Medium,
Like New $80 (740)388-8S7 t AI·
ter 4pm

f!

living room wfftreplace, OFI1 and
ll:rge ufiuty room In this one with fl.tll
battmtnt. Mechod 2 car garage
and dttachod 2 oar garage ao wei

2 Ao
Sctoolo

lft/1

su,soo.oo

Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce............. 992·2259
........................... 992·2259

Hart .................................. 742·2357

'"-tnt

tlnlslltd family room Home a~l on

In Hannan Trl108
JUI1 mll'liAH !rom
could, bl used 'tor atorage. Priced downtown Gallpollo Thlo i1orne
laalllreo a bNltllful landocapod
for a quick Nle. $8S,OOO
lawn. wood polol olovt .00
Lot lor mobile homt oontral air. Localed 1uot oW ~ock
tocatocl 2U08 SR 775 1 acre rrl/1.
LJck Rd on Mabie Dr. in nice
neighborhood Hove a garden tnd
14001 Flit lot IOCBted on Clark
raise some flower! but make eure
Chopol Rd and Sisson Rd 2 lole
10 look allhiO OoiiJohnnlt 81 087·
1 eo more or less $19,500
0323 today lor on appolntmont

or••

L.

,__ .

nghlat ""''"''"
N014 KIIQ 11Z1 FAMILY HbME Grtal2 oty. 4 bedrmo, 2 1/2 batl&gt;o, formal LA &amp; DR, Fam Rm. W/briek
ftrtpl-. ~I Iorge rmo , 13' ~ 25' mostor bedrm w/balh. 2 car lltaontd garage. 1 ~ N; rr\'1 1140,000.
AddMtontlloloval~~.

'4.5

7 40

1988 Chevrolet P1ck Up Truck 2
Wheel Drive. 4 3 Engine Au·
tomallc Transmt5SIOn, Air Condi·
lion, Call {740)446-0425 Alter
Noon

97 Yamaha Wolvertne
$3500 (740)256-6346
750 Boats

&amp;

4x4

Motors

1997 Terry Lilt 22-foot Travel
Trailer, E•cellant Condition,
(7~)446-2350

SERVICES
Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondttlonal lifetime guarantee
Loca l references furntshed Ei·
llbltshed 1975 Call 24 ~rs (740)
446·0870 , 1-800 287·0576 Rog·
ers Watlrproollng

for Sale
199t Chevy S 10 pick-up 2
wheel drive 97 000 m11es 4 cyl 5
sp, tires &amp; shocks 1 yr Old, f1ber·
glass topper new paint $3500,
741).992·7769

16 Alum inum Bass Boat .40HP
Mercury&amp; Motor Guide Trolling
Motor &amp; All Extras $3500
(740)319--2106
One Man Bass Boat, Trolling Mo·
tor &amp; Tra11er $425 (740)379-2706

89 Che¥y Silverado, Topper
45 000 Milas On New Motor &amp;
Transmission $5 000 (304)67 5
7370

730

Vans

760

Auto Parts

&amp;

Accessories
9" Ford rear end, $100, F250 rear
end 355 gears, $600 '88 Ford
F250 front end, complete, $125,
fibefglass topper, 8', $100, 4 vAlite
spoke 8 lug wheels with GOOdyear
tires , SIZe LT 245-75 Rt6, $175
090, 350 Che¥y turbo transmls·
slon $200, 5000 watt generator,
$350 oeo. 740·992·5532

&amp; 4-WDs

1984 Ford F250 4x4 4 Speed,
Flat Bad 300 6 Cylinder Runs
Good S2500 (740)379-9276

~&amp;C General Home Main·
tenenct· Painting, vinyl s1dlng,
carpentry doors wmdows, balhl,
mobile home repair and more For
free estimate call Chet, 740·992·
6323

Livingston's Blllument Water
Proof ing , ell basement repairs
done free estlmatn, tlfattme
guarantee 14yrs on job experl·
once (304)695·3667
840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Res•dentlal or commercial wldng
new service or repair&amp; Master Ll·
censed electrician Ridenour
Electrical WV000308, 304·875·

17116

Four 6 lug Goodyear Wrangler
tires white letters, 245·75·16,
$150 8 fiberglass topper, Ill&amp; 88
Ford, 2 rear ends for Ford truck
3f4 &amp; 112, complele front end ror
88 Ford 3/4 ton 5000 watt gen ·
E!rator, $350, 350 turbo Chevrolet
transmission, $200 740· 992 ·
5532

1985 Chevy 5·10 4WD 4 Speec:l,

2 8 V6, Soltd New Mexico Truck.
$3800 (740)379-9276
1987 Ford Bronco 4WD com
pletely Aebutlt. 6 Cyhndlft 300 En·
gme Transm1sslon, Brakes,
ShOcks Tie ROds, Ball Joints, Ex·
haust System Rear Door, Pamt
$5500 (3tl4)895·3874

I

1988 Chevy PJU Truck 350
Engme
5-Speed,
$5000
(740)682-7189
1988 Ford Bronco ll, 4x4, Runs
Good, New T~res,
$2400
(740)388-9780 After Epm

CARS $29/MONTHI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; AEPO Sl HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO'S @ 19 9% FOR
tiSTINGSI CALL HOO 941
8777 ex:t C 9814

1989 Bronco II 4~~:4 black with
gray tnter1or excellent concJit1on
lns•de and oul needs nothing.
just driven $4900 OBO 740·992·
2932

91 Dodge Stealth ES, 250HP.
5·SpeecJ, Clarton CO Player Tint,
Runs Great $4995 (740)245 5797

D

1997 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4~~:4
red, 88 000 miles, PW PS till,
cruise, 740·742·7200

Street Trike Aepllca llberglass
body, new 8 hp electnc start en·
glne, battery brakes conlrols
seat paint ages 9 thru adult
worth more asking $1800 740
992 3078

0

91 Mazda 4x4 With Topper,
$1500 OBO
t740)256-6504
(740)256-9367

Real

REAL ESTATE

.I

POMEROY· Quality built ranch home, 3
bedroom, 2 baths, central Blr, plastered walls,
hardwood floor In dining

room, fireplace,

garbage disposal, over·elzed heated garage,
A must aeel

RESIDENTIAL Hot,IE OWNERS

St~u

For sale by owner.

'

.

'"

1943

••

Mayberry Atm011phorolllve
within walking distance or 3
community parks, pubUc boat
ramp and tenniS court Large
flat lot with 2 extra lOis
available This 3 BR homo Is
perfect for starters and smalt
famlllos LR, eal·ln kltchon &amp;
large utility room One car
detaclled garage Priced al

·~~~r~~lor cooking.
to the a
claw fool
bethtub, you11 eniO'I !he
pleasant charm and character
this home features
Eye
pleasing
and
extremely
functional,
tha
khchen
features large center isle with
granite counter and Iota of
calilnet space Wood flooring,
9 loot c&lt;!lllngs and rnce b'lm
lend a hand to the victortan
fool Also, 3 BRS, 1 lull and 2
halt balhs, large LR, very nice
formal DR, large deck and lull
basement. Approx 3 acre lol
w~h wonderful privacy Only 3
m1les from Holzer. $180,000
1201

afford
I~~:;~~;t~l,sl~~i~~tto 12oe

By appointment only.

Call

Tappan HI Erllclen(ly 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennens Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800-872-.5967 www orvb com/ben-

992·6268.

dtooralo;d,~1 1~=~,::~

. .

formal entry,
eat·in khch8fl, 4 BRs,
large FR with fireplace,
potenlial downstans for a
BR and 3rd bath). 2 car
garage, attractive multi-level
dack and above ground pool

Spacloue Brick Ranch In
Town 2600 sq. ft. plus a full
nearly completely fmlshed
basement.
Outstanding
woodwork (maple, cherry,
knotty pine) Large rooms 5
3 baths lnground pool.
E«:elleont condlllon. $225,000

non

Sandblasting equipment lor sale,
call 740-992·7546 after 6 30 pm
SAVEl SAVE! SAVEl Heal
Pumps L P &amp; Natural Gas Fu(·
naces If You Don 1 Call Us We
Both Losel (740)446-6308 &amp;
1-800·291.0098

1

.-w:~~lth;,J.;d;;e,iJcl&lt;,;'ng;g~ and professional

IE

I

Reduc9d

to

I

Thlt homo has been well
maintained and Is In great
condlllon. \ 4-5 BAs. 2 baths,
eal·tn
kitchen,
remodeled
formal OR, FR, computer
room, hobby room, 2 car
garage,
awlmmlng
pool,
fenced yard, outbuilding and
more. Located right aero"
~om Addavlllo Grade Schooll

Sawm111 $3,795 New Super Lum
bermate 2000, larger capacities,

used \Jprlghl Plano s1ory &amp;
Clark, $600 080 You p.1uol Pick
Up, Dobby, (3!M)895-3723

1990 WinnebAgo Motor Homt
Low M11eage 38,000 Ml!ll , Self
Contall\ed Sleeps e. Excellent
Condttlon SU,8DO (7.40)4"19256

Ali

Pro-form Crosstralner- Computer
Controlled We•ght; Mulflpte Exer·
CISBS For Upper And Lower, Row·
er And Stair Stepper $899 New,
Asking $200 Or Best Price Call
(740)441-0489

more opllons Manufacwrer ol
sawmills, edgers and skldders
NoRwooo INDusTRIES 252
sonwn1 orlve. Buffalo NY 14225
FREE lnformallon 1·1!00·578·
1363EXT,200·U

&amp;

Motor Homee

810

Motorcycles

t997 Kawasaki KX80 Never
Raced Runs Good $1200
(740)28H146

1988 Dodge, 1 Ton Truck, 7t 000
M1les 4 Speed Runs Good
$2500 No Calls Aller 7 OOpm
(740)245-5175

Campera

'

PlaySIItlon 21 Limited supplies!
To order now, call 1.. 514·831·
5233

Tone World Power Slend $75 00
Asstmbled !740)446·9535

'-'

18it DOd
D
Chill p
ge urango,
tP·
per Red •x4 Loaded Cauette
!has, red HK , raduc•d from A.nd CO, Leather Interior, Third
$7800 to $6800 740·949·20 .. ~ Aow Seat, Rear Air Con&lt;lltlomng,
evemngs
V8 318 Magnum Engtne. '7 000
1 Ton F01d Dump Truck, Newly IM='"':.:s:..S2::,:,1::500.=:;17_:40:::1:•..:•6:...:e8::33=-Rebuilt Excellent Condlt1on
86 lull size Blazer, 3$0 lour bolt
$5500 {740)256-6890
AC Della main motor bored 30
1986 Ford F~ISO XL 300 6 over, 4 sp trantmlllion standard, new 8h10 50 Sidewinder
Cylinder Engine 3 Speed Wtlh llre.s duel exhaust runt &amp;
Overdnve (XM)682·3239
soundt goot2. S2200 740 247·
71
1986 Kenworth W-900, (304)675· 1'::::00==========1506

96 Dodge Dakota 4 Cylinder 5
Speed 77 000 Miles $4000,
(740)256-6346

97 Chrysler Concord Loaded
58 000 M1les $7500 (740)2566346

790

95 Dodge Dakota Sport, AIC, /I.T

93 Chevy Cavalier red 1111 wheel,
ale runs good new tires 52600,
740 247-7100

96 Neon, 4 Cylinder, 63 000
M1les, A1r, T11t Cru•se AM/FM
Cassette, $3200 (740)256-1652

&amp; 4·WDt

V·6, lilt whttl. raised white Jener

93 Butck Park Ave Loaded,
looks &amp; Runs Greal , $5500
(740)446-0744

94 Tempo GL 74,000 Milts 4
Door Arr &amp; CrUise Control
(304)675·4014

Vant

...

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS· Almost everyone approved
with $0 down! Low monthly pay·
mentsl1·600.6, 7·3476 ext 330

,_

o..nor

1 bath, separate laundry

III~IL~.Y RIDGE ROAD· A country setting, Eastern School Dlslrlct, 1.81 acres
an
home 2 bedrooms, bath decking Newer unflnl!1116d 2 car (28 x 32) garage with
and cem1111t floor. TPC water, eiiCirlc and septic on site. Very private,
home atte
"''"'";'"site as It borders Wesvaoo Forrosll.end lmmodlale posae ..lonl ASKING 124,800

Sherrl

_..

'

133111 AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. II you like
lndl'llduiHty··hor• h lsi 3,029 aq
ft more or leu, 3 bedrms, 2 1/2
batho. Kit., LAm, Oflict rm .. and
much more wrap porch ~ont &amp; 2
oldeo. 167 Aoreo lft/1 Rolling
Putur• end 3 Large Bams &amp;
Ftod lOI oi1H, 2 nice pond&lt;.
Land II m01t all clean &amp; h~ IOf'!le
fencing Electric &amp; troat free waler
for
In IIMI bam Ftod lot OHH.
quick
Ao lft/1 In Guyon TwpFormerly uoe&lt;l lor vul calf
ope;allon. Located near Rio Loc"llt on Twp, Road 11812 born.
Grtnde Appolnlmont Only Clll (nood repel~ 2 d~em• tMPIIc ond
Vl~jlnlo• ll Smlt~ 140-«6·580e, el0&lt;1rlo· Great for hunll1)11 or a
gow·a...,y S7o,ooo
1401 2- Groot l-Ion- Sllrtor
homo 3 BR, 1 lll1h w/,1i01111hop
with basomont. Sttoaled on .3
oelol and @lnt1KIIC11on ol St At.
180 &amp; 504.
hal rtmoclolocl
homo on~ put new roo! on
garalli/WOfklhop May ~oo be
commercial Priced@ 1115,000
r.ms
LOOK AT THISIIII
Brick l 'linyt 6 BR, 2 8A homo on Bedroom 2 bath ranch ovtr 111111
private 1 8Q'II lot FamMv room,
wllh 2 car g8f191 .00

MIDDLEPORT· MILL STREET· This one needa work Good lnve61menl wllh potential far rental
oncome. Two bedrooms, living room, kitchen and one balh. ASKING 114,1100

E. Cleland

'

730

89 F-150 XLT Lanai, P U Load·
ed High M•les Body Excellent
Shape Must See To Apprec ia te,
$2000 1740)446-6741

New &amp; Used Electric And Gas
Furnaces For Sate Call For Slz·

',

POMEROY· River view· Out of high water, cute home with 2 bedrooms, bath, living room and
equipped kitchen, basement and aitllng porch ASKING $22,000

Henry

won,

Trucks for Sate

ssooo

(7~)446-7300

140011 A THING OF BEAUTY IS A
,JOY FOREVER. 4 Bodrm, bllclr, 1
1/2 balhs, full basernen1, garage,
formal DR &amp; LR, k~ 3 lovaly
bedrms and bath w/balcony on
2nd, fln~htd 3rd floor Thll home
Ia lmrnaculale w/nrtN carpet
throughout Lots of amenities,
range, dishwasher, refrlg, washer,
dryer, newly remodeled balh
COMMERCIAL LOT ON
Private yard w/ltlnCe can VLS SR 1 NORTH 77 acre mil
448·6806
Boaulllul oqulped Clayton Moljlt
133111 CITY LOT 43' K 170'
Horne 1994 3 bodrm., 2 ballla, I&lt;'
located 39 VIne St
• 7T, 2 polo barns, ana I(Sb
storage. can for more Information.
13381 Lot on Hilda Drive $7500
VLS
I!W1 GREAT STARTER HOME
or lnvntmont property This
love~ two bedroom one and one
haW balh oottage """'d be )ust
fight as a starter or retirement
home. With an eat n kitchen and
ltvlng room h Is iual enough
space Priced to sel It Sa7.5oo
C.llloday lhls one
last ong
4 13311 GOOD NOME IN THE
&amp; CITY· PRICED RIQHT 2 BAI up,
LR, DR, Kit &amp; aun porch on 111
rm
floor, bamt Good gal fUrnace, hot
,st'
, '
suite on water tank &amp; roof. PriCe 11 low
111 floor Including a auper bath rm. $45,000
&amp; clooet 4 Bedrms , 2 baths on 14007 LAND LOTS OF LAND2nd 11001 24'x24' lamtly rm 44.240 AC on Sind Hollow Rd. •
approx 4,QOO oq n. Beautiful 3 W8)er lop. Hu'*ng &amp; wll!llfo.
acre MIL ravlned lot and INa $44,000 or offer.
llream h1wo1Jid be my piHIUrt IO
ahow y011 Virginia 446-6806

720

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES ,
Albany. Ohio Saturday February
24th. 1 pm. We'll Be Having A
Bred Cow/ Cowf Call Sale. All
Cons,lgnments Welcome Hauling
Available (740)592-2322 Or
(740)698-3531

DeLong's Groom Shop, Groommg
All Dog Breeds, 740-441·1602
p~s.

Auto• for Sale

C~t~~aller

AKC Pomerlan Puppies, 4 Fe· SBOOEactl, (740)379-2818
ma les &amp; 2 Ma 1es S2SO Eac n I ;;;;;.;..;;::;;;;..:;_.;.;;;.;;...;;..;;._ _
{740)388-8642
Good Mixed Hay Starling AI
S1 50 A. Sale. Delano Jackson
AKC Registered Boston Terrier farm (30.4)675·1743{740)446 Male Puppies Shots, Wormed
1104
Show Quality $250 O r Will Hold
Wtth Deposit (740)388-9325
Grass t1ay, square bales, cut
right baled right , e•cellent horse
AKC Regis tered Collie Pupa
feed $1 75Jbale Contact Harley
Sable/ Wh ite $150 (740)286- or John Rice, 740·667·3369 or
6148
740-667·3267

FREE grant money &amp; alternal•ve
federal funding! Educa11on, l'lous·
lng purchasetrepalrs debls, bus•·
ness, Inventors wrllersfartlsts
Guaranteed 1·886-519 2775 or
www grants-dot·com com

Huge ln11entory, Discount Prices,
On Vinyl Skirting, Doors, Wind·
ows Anchors Water Heaters.
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Paris, Fur·
naces &amp; Heat P~mps Bennetts
Mobile Home Supply, 74Q·446·
9416 wwworvb com'bennen

Building
Supplies

Like New· Brown Mountain Fur
Jacket· Size 14·16, Paid $80, Sell
For $40 (740)446-4335 (6· 9pm)

LENDER

Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992·8191

1"

4 Cemetery Lots, Oh io Valley
Memory
Gardens
Cheap
(740)366-9023

EQUAL HOUSIIII

SYRACUSE- Cute little house, fi~ rooms, two bedrooms,
room. ASKING $16,000

www opplog

CALl AND RECEIVER FREE EX
OTIC VACATION wllh aetiv&amp;IIOn
Free satellite television system!
Free installation! 1·817·235·5669

710

NEW AND USED STEEL Slot!
Beams Pipe Rebar For Concrete,
Angle Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating For Drains Onveways &amp;
Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Metals

RACINE· A commercial building' ~e~:!d on 3rd street.
story bloel&lt;
1
on approx. 50
x 100 level lot. Additional rear:,,
Public water, eleclric and sewage on site. Haa been
used as a church building
shop. Great lor small bualnell office or mettlng
room. Come see ASKING

800-458-9990

Wanttd· Ulld Dish Network TV
Sy&amp;lams for Info call 7.40·949·
33151tave messa94t

610 l'arm Equipment

{/4o~~~~~?8"oo.J;v:te,

12·
MAPLE
GROVE
SUBDIVISION·
OHIO
RIVER
FRONTAGE· Approx. 2 acre lola • 10
to choose from. Great camping loti.
Call
today
lor
more
dotalla.
REDUCED TO $20,000

for your quote!

Miscellaneous

Avon C1pe Cod Collection For
Solt, Make Oller, (740)3e7-7052
Call Ahar.4pm

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

14170 Soutllem Dream free De·
livery fre§ Setup only $9995 1·
llll8 926·3426

Call today

Buy or sell River ine Antiques ,
1124 East Main on SR 124 1: PI&gt;
meroy, 740·992·2526 or 740·992
1539 RUI' Moore owner

1 Bedroom Apartment In Galllpo·
Us, Utilities &amp; Appllancta lnclud·
ad $375/mo (740)245-•65S

tor Sale

Factory
Direct Prlcing

Antique•

Real Estate General

G)

Mobile Homes

Quali!y ,,....,.
or Llnoal Fool

Washer $150, Wither &amp; Dryer,
Like New $205 Elect ric Ranga
$125 OE Gas Range. Like New
$225, Frost Free Refrigerator
$150, Apartment Size Dryer $95.
Upright Freezer S19S, All Ap·
pllances Guaranteed Skaggs
~ppllences 76 VIne StrHt, Galli
poltS, 0111&lt;&gt; (740)446-73911

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............ 448 81011
GAIL BELVILLE ................................ 441 1201
TRISH SNYDER .......... _.....................441.f466
JOHNNIE RUSSELL...........................31l7-o323
DAVID SNYDER .............................. 441.f466
OUR WEB PAGE IS www vtamlthm.IHtale com
e-fnJIII' vlarealatate4Pzoomnat net

Th1s newspaper will not
know1ngly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is in VIOlation of the
law Our readers are hereby
lnklrmed ltlat all dwellings
adverttsed In this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportUnity baSIS

Lag Home
tullding Components

Household

Blue Cream Pla id Couch And
Loveseat, Navy Lazyboy Recllnef
3 Years Old, Like New {740)446-

Two bedroom trailer and tot.
$1500 down $300 month, land
contract Call for terms 740·742·
7403. Other propertieS available

All real estate adven•s•ng m
this newspaper IS sub/ec110
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 19E8 which makes ~ Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
llmltallon or dtscrlmlnatlon
based on face, color, religion
te• familial status or natiOnal
origin, or any lnten1ion to
make any such preference
11m~at10p or discrimination •

Whutpool Waal'ltr $95, Kenmore

Orytr $75 1 GE Heavy OuW

14 cubic It refrigerator, $100, like
new electric treadmiH, $85 . e~er
else bike and rowing machine
$50 each, 740-742·2352

Appliances
Recondlltoned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Rafrl·
graters Up To 90 Days Guar·
anteedl we Sell New Maytag Ap·
pllances, French City Maytag
740·446·7795

Nice 1 Bedroom Apartments For
Ron! (7~)446-9611

one bedroom apartment &amp; 3 bed·
room mobile home no pets, 740992·5858

Furniture For
Sale
1740)~46-627• or (740)44e1004 Anytime

MerchandiM

Merchandise

Goods

New 2 Bedroom Apartments,
Washer/ Dryer Hookup, Ap·
pllances Furnished References
Required (740)44Hl117

North ThlrcJ, Mlddlepon- one bed·
room furnished apartment &amp; one
bedroom unfurnished apartment,
deposll &amp; references, no pets,
740 992·0165

used

MERCHANDISE

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart •
ments, Clean, No Peta, No Smok·
l ng, References &amp; Deposit Re·
qulred
Utilities Furnished
(740)4411-1519

Gallla Manor Apartments Now
Accepting Applications For 1 BR
HUD, Subsldlted Apanments For
Elderly And Handicapped Equal
Housing Opporlunlty (740)446-

Ntw &amp; UNCI Furnlti.H'e
New 2 Pfece L!vlngroom StJites
$399. euy. sen. Trlda

540

For rent· one bedroom furnished
apartment In Middleport call 740.
992·5231

Furnished Apartment, Utilities In·
eluded, $400 + Deposit, Newly
Docoraled (740)367-&lt;&gt;611

1~1875·1422 •

515 ¥aln Street. Polnl Pleasant

WV

Mlscellaneout

MerchandiM

Main Str"t Furnllure

5~0

540

MI1Cellaneou 1

Goode

Now Taking Appllcatlonr- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmtnll. Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, S3251Mo , 740·

1 BR HOUII In GaiHpolla, $250/

BRUNER LAND
(740)441·1492
Glllll Co.· Kerr Ad . 3·2 Home
On 5 Acres Reduce&lt;llll $6',000,
5 Acres With Pond 525,000 OrB
Acres $21 ,000 Rio Orand e.
SceniC+ Private, B Acres With
Pond $25 000 or 13 Acres At
Oeadend $27 000 Cheshire, 8
Acres $13.500 Or 20 Acres,
$19,500 Clay Township, 17 Aa·
es S20 ocJo Or 33 Acres $31.000
T'ycoon Lake Area, 10 Acres
$12,0001

DQuble Wide! Only $28,900 001
28x52 Free Delivery &amp; 5et
I 668 928 9696

GIR~IIo

(7~)245-6747

port, Hud epproved, 1210 per

2001 Doublewlde Free Setup &amp;
Del•very Maytag Appliances In·
eluded $31 900 AI Fleet wood
Homes 1·888·565·0167

REAL ESTATE

Acc.ao,

t Bedroom Near Holzet, Eoonomleal
h11t1ng, W/0 Hookup,

only $270 per mon call now 1·
1100-691-ll7n

2001
14 W1de Fr ee Setup &amp;
Delivery Maytag Appliances
Included
Only $17 900 At
FleetwOOd 1·888-565-0167

98 Kent 14x70 3 Bedroom , 2
Bath In Camp Conley For More
Information (304)675·3927 Or
(304)675·2058

Rio Grande, 110 Acree, Good

Ntw 16 It wlct $498 per mon

Brookvlew SubdiviSIOn Of Cente·
nary, 2·5 Acres Lots Now Avail·
able Call (740)446-0059 For
Information

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY"? No
offtce vlsll necessary Up to $500
Instantly Call toll free 1 817-EAR·
LYPAY 1st ADVANCE FREE'
Uct750005

SO DOWN HOMES!
SANK
OR NO MONEY DOWNI
CREDIT' FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1 800·338 0020 BXI 9811

Ntw 1'* ff wide 1499 down only
5199 per mon call now 1·800·
691-llm

540

Houuhold

510

for Rent

for Rent

Service•

320

Apartment•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point PIBaaant,

I

4

Newer 2

2"·

etoru,
bedroom,
bath,
6:
large closets, fireplace, convenient
kitchen, large basement
family

&amp;

room,

2

car

oversized

garage,

$111,0001118

appliance&amp; Stay, apprOXImately ~,200
sq.
on
acres In Green Township.

ft.

2+

~-~(7~4~0~)~2~4~5~·5~5~2~3~·~A~s!k~l~ng~$~1~70~,~00=0~.0~0~

FOR SALE

17 ACRES
Rodney, Ohio

Cora Mill
Road
Evenings Only

245·5357
FOR SAL.E

Modem Canvenl•nce•l 2
story home featuring foyer,
LR, DR. eat·ln kllchon with
mud room, 3·4 BRa and 2
112 baths Updated ha1T13
lncluQe baths, wiring, 2
furnaces, siding, roof and
mora $104,9001209

RivER YIEW • Level home site ·Put your home here
in Racine.
JUfit $6,500.

RACINE • Mobile Home lot, pad present
POMEROY - Family home

3 bedroom.

toJ ~~~rc~1

J&gt;JJ,,V&gt;JV

SYRACUSE -Family home,

garage, rec room.

cloiiC

_$1 0,000.

.

3 be&lt;lro&lt;&gt;ms:,l
WANT J&gt;o~•,uvv.

nice yard,

POMEROY • Lovely 2 story wtth attic, 3 bedrooms.

NEED $3,8,000.

80 ACRES
Rodney, Ohio

Before shopping for your New Address ... stop by ours:

Nice Farm

www. wisemanrealestate.com

With Barn
Evenings Only

245·5357

CALL US TODAYII LET'S DO BUSINESS!!

740-992-3325
Bruce Teaford - Broker
Wendi Miller- Allent

David Wiseman, GRI, CRS Broker 446·9555
Carolyn Wasch, GRI
441·1007
Sonny Garnes
446-0621

I

Rlts Wiseman

446·2707

446·9555

(740) 446•3644

[]J

1St

.1 ....1(18

~T\INIT'I'

•

\

�Page 06 • iiunllap ~imu ·6tlllitltl

Sunday, February 18, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Pleaeent, WV

Commerce Secretary assumes final say on census sampling
WASHINGTON (AP) - Commerce Secretary Don Evans is wresting from the Census Bureau the final
call on whether to adjust the 2000
census results. House Democrats say
that could ultimately leave millions
of poor people and minorities
uncounted.
Evans' action Friday returned to
the commerce secretary's office. the
final say over the politically sensitive
decision ro adjust raw population
numbers with a statistical method
known as sampling that could protect against an undercount.
A regulation issued last year by the
Clinton administration had transferred the decision-making power to·
the Census Bureau's director and a

sus," s:- :d House Minority Leader
Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.
The Bush administration "has
clearly signaled their intention to
influence the final decision for what
can only be construed to be motivated by partisan political gain,"
Gephardt added.
Republicans disagreed. Dyke said
the move established the "framework of an open and fair" decisionmaking process.
"Accountability is the cornerstone
of America's participatory democracy. Our leaders must be accountable
to the people;' Evans said in a statement. "I believe the· decision-making authority for the 2000 census
should reside with the person select-

corrunittee of career statisticians at
the agency.
Evans' action, though, returns the
decision to where "Congress has
always intended" it to be made, said
spokesman Jim Dyke.
The stakes are high: The sampled
numbers, if approved, could be used
to redraw ,political district boundaries and redisiribute over $185 billion in federal funds .
Democrats reacted angrily to the
announcement, made late Friday of
a holiday weekend.
"The secretary's action is a perilous step toward disenfranchising
the estimated millions of miltorities,
children and rural residents who
were not counted by .the 2000 cen-

ed by the president, approved by the
U.S. Se~Ute and accountable to the
people."
The Census Bureau now must
recommend to Evans whether to
adjust the figures by March 1. Dyke
said the secretary would then reach
his decision within five days, though
Gephardt ask~d President Bush to
consult with congressional leaders
before any further action is taken.
"That is shameful, and it smacks of
Flor.ida (election results)," Rep. Martin Frost ofTexas, the third-ranking
House Democrat, said of the administration's decision. "Someone who
ran for president pledging to unite
Americans should not start off his
term by disenfranchising millions of

minorities, children and the rural
and urban poor."
Preliminary estimates from a survey following the 2000 census
showed the headcount missed a
smaller percentage of Americans in
2000 than in 1990.
Republicans were especially
heartened that estimates showed
smaller percentages of uncounted
blacks, Hispanics, Asians, and children - groups traditionally missed
in a census.
Democrars, though, maintained
that about 3 million people still
could be left out this year, and asked
the Bush administration to leave the
final say over whether to use sampling to the Census Bureau director.

Calif. college president: lfs time to drop·SAT at requirement
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) - The
president of the University of California ha,s recommended dropping
the . main .SAT as an admission
requirement at its eight campuses,
saying the test is an unfair measurement of students' abilities.
The development could affect the
way high school students in California and across the nation prepare for
college. The University of California
system is one of the nation's largest,
with 170,000 students.
Richard C. Atkinson was to
announce his recommendation in a
speech to the American Council on
Education in Washington, D.C. on
Sunday.
"Anyone involved in education

should be concerned about how
overemphasis on the SAT is distorting educational priorities and practices, how the test is perceived by
many as unfair, and how it can have a
devastating impact on the self esteem
and aspirations of young students,"
Atkinson ·says in a draft copy of the
speech. .
.
Atkinson has asked UC'sAcademic
Senate, which sets admission standards, to consider dropping the SAT I
- which includes a verbal and math
test - and take a more comprehensive look at applicants. The university
would continue to use the SAT II, a
three-part test more closely tied to
subjects studied in high school.
The Educational Testing · Service

says 2.4 million students took the
SAT I in 1998-99, while 442,000
took the SAT II.
The proposal would require
approval by the UC Board of
Regents and could not take effect
·
before fall 2003.
Atkinson's proposal to drop the
SAT, taken by more than a million
graduating seniors last year, drew
strong reaction.
"To drop the SAT would be like
deciding you're going to drop
grades;' said Gaston Caperton, president of the nonprofit College Board,
which owns' the SAT.
Critics say high school grades are a
better indicator of a student's ability
than an SAT · score. Others say the

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
.SHOP THE

Police issue warrant on teen _
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - .
Police were looking for a Vermont teen-ager who was
charged- in an arrest warrant
with stabbing tWo Dartmouth
College professors to death.
Robert Tulloch, 17; of
Chelsea, Vt., was believed to be
armed and dangerous and trav-.
cling in a silver Audi with a
male teen-age companion
who is also being sought in
connection with the homicides, authorities said.
The arrest warrant charges

Tulloch with two counts of
murder in the jan. 27 deaths of
Susanne and Half Zantop,
police said. The slaying. of the
popular professors had shaken
this close-knit community.
. Residents awaited deta;ls
about the case before expressing relief about the warrant.
"I'd be very guarded about
that until they have caught the
person and there is some solid
indication this is the person
who did it;' . said Audrey
McCollum, a neighbor..

SAT is crucial to provide a .national
yardstick - all A's, for instance, are
not created equal.
.
A Massachusetts group that argues
a high SAT score may have more to
do With money spent on pre-testing
coaching than ability said the proposal is a ste}l in the right direction.
"There will be strong pressure on
other state college systems to follow
California's lead," said Robert Schaeffer of FairTest, which advocates less
emphasis on standardized test.
One of the criticisms leveled
against the SAT is that it is culturally
biased and Wlfair to disadvantaged
students. Admissions diversity has
been an issue at UC since 1995,
wiien regents vcit«j to drop affirma-

rive action. Numbers of black and
Hispanic students have fallen at top
campuses since then.
Caperton defended . the SAT as
"extremely fair.What is not fair is the
education system in America which
gives · children unequal opportuni-

ties."
But Atkinson said an overemphasis
on SAT I scores has created the "educational equivalent of a nuclear arms
race," that hurts all involved but .poses
a risk to any institution that opts out.
Jeff Rubenstein, assistant vice president of the Princeton Review and
author of several books about test
preparation,
said
Atkinson's
announcement may prove a rallying .
poipt.

Sunday, February 18,2001

•

,•

pnces surge 1n January

I

WASHINGTON (AP) -Wholesale omy.com.
prices in january took their biggest leap
But on Wall Street, the inflation report
a decade, even as industrial produc- rattled investors who thought it might
tion fell for a fourth month in a row. diminish the chances of further rate
Natural gas prices soared at a record decreases. The Dow Jones industrial
pace.
average fell 91.20 points to close at
Analysts said the figures portrayed an 10,799.82.Bad news from the tech sececonomy that was struggling but not in .tor and military action in the Mideast
re.cession. Inflation has eased recently, added to the market's woes.
they said, and a third report Friday
Economists rejected the notion that
showed housmg construction flourish- the economy. might be coming to face
ing.
the twin evils ofhigh inflation and slugThe reports come as Federal Reserve gish growth. That's because many anaChairman Alan Greenspan and his col- lysts believed Friday's Producer Price
' leagues seek to stave off an economic Index report by the Labor Deparnnent
7downturn. The Federal Reserve slashed painted a picture of wholesale inflation
; interest rates by a full percentage point that isn't as bad as it seems.
: in january. the first time the central bank
The PPI, which measures inflation
· has , q1oved so quickly during pressures befure they reach store shelves,
Greenspan's 14-,year tenure.
shot up 1.1 percent in January, the
· While Friday's mixed economic news largest rise since September 1990. That
could complicate maners a bit for them, followed a mild 0.2 percent increase in
economists continue to believe Fed pol- December.
icy-makers will move to cut interest
"While the raw producer price numrates again next month.
bers seem a bit scary, a closer look shows
"When you add it all together, there is that the spike in prices was isolated
still a bright green light for the Federal mainly to energy, tobacco and autos;'
, Reserve to ease monetary policy;' said . said Jerry Jasinowski, president of the
,Matk Zandi, chief economist for Econ- N ationa! Association of Mannfacturers.

More Local News, More Local Folks!

i?

Serenity House

II"'"'"'"'"' victims of nnm•t!ltirr.l
1-800-942-9577
Trimming

Contact Eric Blackburn
446-2422
Firewood for sale

-

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS

Public Notice

407 Main St.

Pt. Pleasant

Just received a new load
of clothing, plus a load of
furniture.
Also 25% off on QVC
hard goods

446-8727

For More
Information ...

''"'"Irri" County Historical
PROGRAM 2:30 p.m.

Sunday, February 18, 2001
Speaker: James Bowles
"Black History &amp; My
Experiences in Professional
Baseball"
to the Public No
Effective March 1, 2001
Nancy B. Graham, M.D.,
JoAnne F. Vrabel, Ph. D., and ·
Bredga M. Neal, MSW·LISW
will move their offices to
414 2nd Ave, Suite 201,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Call 7 40-446·6530 for
appointments. Before March 1
Call 304-67 4-4690
·

446-2342

or
992-2156

Public Notice

propane fuel, 2-ataga 45e40.
meat, 48" . torka,
Bide will be opened

Middleport, OH

you.

power eteerlng, eld•· on MonC~•Y· M"'rah , , •.,; 1, BUaiNESS OPPORTUNilY, ,Just tho busin'oss tor
A
5th, 2001, .tii:OO •.nl.
radiator repair, welding of different metals, fabricating, arid

ahltl, lolld tiro, with
headllghta, backup
alarm, and atrobe
light.
Bide mull be
recolvod by 4:00 p.m.,
Friday, March 2nd,
2001, at the following
addrell:
OJMV Solid W•ata
Dlttrlct, Forklift'
Quote • .2001 , 1058 s.
automatic
.tranemleelon, 6,0001 Naw Hampahlrt
lilting
cep~elty, Avenue, Walltton, OH

Sotltd bide will be
rocelved by the
G1lll1, Jack1on,
Mtlga, Vfnton Solid
. Wuta
Dl .t trlct,
located at 1058 s.
Ntw Hampthlre
Avonuo, Welleton, OH
45892,
tor th•
fOllowing equipment.
New
Forklift,

Elks Lodge
408 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis
Monday-Friday
12-5 pm

Woodyard's
Mini Mall

Electronic Tax Filing
Get your refund in as
little as 2 days.

Rnl Eetete General

446·8677

Full Time Grill Cook
Apply in person at the

CENTER

Now Forming at
Gallipolis Career College
Call 446-4367
1-800-214-0452

budget

ASK US ABOUT

ELECTRONIC FILING

Breastfeeding Classes
Tuesday, February 20, 2001
6:30 - 8:30 pm
French 500 Room Call 446·5030
for more Information or to register

REAL ESTATE
CLASSES

·eush
stumps
for his

and Business Tax preparation

735 Second Ave .

and Removal

Auto Insurance
Monthly Payments
Problems with your driving
record ; DUI's speeding
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

For Computer, ProfesslanallndMdual

violen.ce call 446-6752 or

CIASSIFIEDS!
Public Notice

&amp;unbap 1!1:imtll· &amp;entintl• Page 07

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

at the Dlatrlct ottlct.
The OJMV Olttrlct
reatrvet tho 'right to
reject any and/or all
~ldo tubmlttld 11 per
thla notice. Ploaot
contact the Recycling
Coordln.tor at (740)
384·2184 txt. 24 Wlth 1
queatlo~a regarding
thlt notlct..
·

aelllng of new radiators, welding equipment,. steel, and
welding producta. Also do machine work. A growing business
I an Increase In Income each year. It comes with approx.
2.5 acres, large 14 1/2 foot tall building that is about 2 years
old, and Is 40 x 60. Also another older building. Mobile home
hook·up, also. Selling because of heallh reasons. Most
maJor compan~ . use our serVIce. $t89,000

t=.bruary·18, 25, 200t '

e~-~~~·

514 Second Ave., Galllpollo, Ohio 45631-0994
740-446-0008 740-441-1111 ~ .
eVBD.•moo.zoomnet.net www.evana-moore.com.
Form.rly Blackburn R.alty ..s.~ SoutMm OIUo For Otutr A Quarter Cent.,.•:

:.C~!~~~~;

[8

Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1816
Sarah L. Evans•Moore, Broker 441-1618
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cera Caaey-245-9430

1104

attic, and a 3/4 basement.
4
cabin• In kllchen, dining room and 1 t/2 baths. 3 really
pretty ftreplacea, a pr8tty stairway and a fronl and side
porcft.
1
$74,1100.00

NEW LISTING! WHAT A DEAL!
Owners .of this Immaculate 1998
sectional ranch are ready to deal.
Kitchen with island and apPliances,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal dining
or familY room, living room, utility.
Over 1Boo sq. ft. of living space.
owners are willing to make their
be someQne else's gain. Call

MAIN STREET- A two story home with a largo toyer, dining
room. living room. kitchen, and a bath downatalrs, and 3
bedrooms upstairs, Has a full basement with a newer
turn.ce and hoi water heater. A beautiful view of the Ohio
Rtver..
' , ·
, $25,000.00

112104

IIALL RUN • APprox. 54 acres of ground for hunting and .an
older mobile ltome with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and a front
porch, Hea a big yard and garden area.
' ~2.000.00

LOVE THE CHARM OF OLDER
HOMES?. Then this IS a must
see large sized rooms, living
equipped kitchen, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. foyer,
laundry.
Extensively
rernodeted ...wtllch lncludea root
replacement,
windows,
heatinWcoollng,
and .mora.
Detached garage and ·storage
building. EKfjeC\Ing a large price.
NOI Try $69,900.00. Within a few
minutes of ehopplng and town.

room.

12100
ANXIOUS! READY TO

MO~E

6 DEAL WITH you

11015 PRICE REIIUCEDI C04Jrntrv
setting close to townl This 3 BR and a
bath offen11 newer carpet, roof and
replacement windows. 168,900

NEW

owner Wtntt An Dtltrl Thl&amp; 3BR and a

. balh ranch on """ a ha~ acre lot offera
featuree lhat Include a ~ge family room,
kHchtn, large sun room aomo hafdwood

flooring and an aHached corport with
encloMd otorago. f48.00G

LOVELY TWO STORY
DECORATED AS
PRETIY AS A DOLL HOUSE • Features a ,SPACIOUS
BEDROOM SUITE W/ smtNG ~OOM &amp; BA111. ON THE
MAIN LEVEL Wife approved kitchen w/ lots of custom

Elegant
Uving in this 3 bedroom
2 bath railed ranch 011, almoSI 5 acres of
enriched countryside boasting a bOuntiful
orchard of various apple, chestnut ad
hardwood trees. Come sea the Smith
custom cherry cabinets In the kitchen
along with the hardwood flooring In the
apaclous living accommodations. Enjoy
the outdoors by the beautifully
land~;caped pool area. $140,000. Call
now!

ITIWAIIT HOLLOW AD • A home with 2 badroomo. and 1
1/2 batt. up end the tlltJ1• d0wnotalrs. Could bil a single
family or llve1n one and rent the othar. Home Ia about 1e
yeart old and haa stucco sheeting and brick on the exterior.
$75,000.00

home
and 3
spacious great room overlooking the
x 40 In-ground pool and 24 x 38 pool
house great for entertaining. An
oversized attac~ed
arid

AC

retrut? Aa.stlng

Huntington, W.Va. and Gallipolis. Oh just
minutes from a new public river port
access to the Ohio River. If nature walks.
hunting and fishing Ia your bag call and

newer

on 31

2 BA and a new detiiChrtcl

garage.

Take walks or norse rides on the lctf'l of

patilll cut through tho plnoi and hardwood•
or juat

entov

tr11 peacefullnna of the

coumy aide. $119,1100
we'll help Y&lt;&gt;U ftnd thlo hill top paradloo.
12074 Thlo lmmlcUIIIt 1nd bnutlful 2 II"'Y homo 11 12011 Hlttrolc homo pl1co Of Ann
locotod In the quiet vlllge of Middleport. Older home that Bailey according ta owner. Thlt
hill bten wonderfully taken care ofl Oak trim trhoughout'.
Hardwood floors. New carpet downstairs. Oak etalrcase,
oak toldlng privacy doors from LA to DR, and oak pocket
doors from fR to large OR. 2·3 BR'a, 1 1/2 baths, one car
2 porches. Corner lot.
I Don't let thfl

beautiful piece of land has 118 .. acre.

111/1. Home haa 3 BR't. Front BR w/flre
place. LR, kitchen, den, uUHty rm, 2 car
anached
ts Insulated. Located In
8 miles from

112071 Quality In-town !lYing In a quaint
nolghborl1ood ooHing 11 found In thll
Brick ranch mlnutee frorya ehopplng,
exercls• gym and walking path. IN

addition to NEW. carpet, NEW Plliit,
~EW Roof, NEW lll!trlor dooiS. ihfl
Jewel hat • now~y re...- 1t1t01&gt;tr1 a
both. A f\111 buement and carport round
out thll steel at $89,900 IIIMEDIATI
P088E8810H

m71·10 ACR!I NEAR RIO GRANDE

RAINBOW ltiDOE· A 2'/• story :horne v;lth 4 bedrooma. 8
rooma, Including a large family room, dining room·kltchen
area, 3 ha~ bathl and· t full bath. Has a large deck and a
back porch. Has a tall 2 car garogo that It attachld. All
altllng on 3.08 acrea of nice laytng land.
$78,000.00

APPROX. 5·6 ~ILES
FROM GALLIPOUS ON
ST RT 7 SOUTH '• ' Coa~ 3
Bedroom rtnch. Antiriot •
woodtd 1.03 ..,. m/1.
Sooludorl II prlvohl. Uvlna

RAINBOW RIDGE· Alwaya wanted 1 farm? Here II apprOx.
85 ICfU of moetly woods, but laye nice. Hat about 10 to 15
acrea tillable, Has a oeptlc with leach, TPC waler av,ollabta,
Hu a road through the middle of th·e property. Haa some
c - . •nd a &lt;IO!c&amp;e foundation already poured with soma
aida wall• up tar onoiJIIh lo ba underpinning far a mobil•
home. A muat _,
, $88,000.00

Laundry room. I.e· Covorod
back patio. Storop bulldlna,
Sovtral lntll trott. XJDI
YOU'LL I.OVB THIS LO.
IIDB YAaD UBI HOUIB.
Shown b)' tppt. NO, 2110

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................992·5892
jERRY SPRADUNG .................................. 849-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING .. ,........................849-2131
BETTY JO COLUNS................................... 8411-204g
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................912-3058

OFFICE ........................................................ ft2 .. 288fS
I

frnd.

· SOUTH SIXTH STREET • A big 2 story home with 3 to 4
bedrooms, dining' room, 1'/• .batha, anclosed porch and
tlittlng on a nice lot. Has an upstalrt and downstalra heating
and cooling system. There Is a 3/4 basemeril ~nd a nice
front tilling porch. Homo has trench doors, a pretty
flreplace, etc.
$41,000.00

built In 1998 Is a one btdlroo"!•
living room and kitchen
offers
seclusion and breath taking views of
nature. This hideout Is located betwHn

dcaiJnc:d oak cabinets. La. dlnlnJ room, 5 mo~ BRs, ,3
additl(lflal baths Fireplace . II\ the LR. Chanh1ng entry
w/stlircuc leadl~a to 2nd level. Laundry room ot1 the main
level. Finished basement, Detached 2 car aariae. On 3.35
Iandtc~ped acres m/1. Lots of planll &amp; trees, plus a
NO.
219
.

I

room,

eat•in

kitchen.

2515

Kerr

Road. Roomy homa saning on
over 12 mostly wooded acres.
Uvlng
room,
kitchen,
3
bedrooma, 11/2 baths, family
rooma plus ovtr 700 sq. ft. of
unfinished space that could
eaally
be
converted
to
l;ledrooms, eto. • that Is situated
ovlf' 2 car attached garage, and
more.
Must see lnslde to

JUST A LITTLE BIT
EVERYTHING! 30 Acres

OF

rnJI,

partially wooded. tillable acreage,
small stream, plus a very well
maintained 3 bedrooms, 2 bath
ranch. Decking, above ground pool, · LOOKING FOR A LOT? Here
detached garage. Private setting are 2 teve! Iota with pubtlc water
and only minutes form Rio Grande. and sewage available. Not for a
For more Information or to make an big price. $14,e.OO for ~em both
lppolntment dOn't hesitate to call and owner Is request1ng your
todayll2105
offBJ, 1207i ·

approclatel 12108.
DROPPED . 53,0001
$45,000. SR 141 Centen1ry PRICE
,,... Cute ranch style home with Remodeled ranch hOme resting on
HvinQ room, dlnlhg area, kitchen. over 1 acre tre~ level tot. Living
bath, den/computer room, large roorrl with fireplace, formal dining
detached storage building and area, 2 full baths, 3 bedrooms,
lamlly room, heat pump, attached 2
morellfl12102
car garage. Lots of updates here.
PRICE DROPPED TO 107,000 Call today to take a peek Inside!
5 fenced rolling acres. Road 12012
frontar. along two roads. e.ox70
rooltlp e uee bUilding With a "IMPOSSIBLE" BUT TRUE; brick
24JI70 upttalrs, concrete block ranch lor undar $1 OOkl Neat and
and baked en~~mel metal aiding: tidy 3 bedroom ranch 1ituated on.
UH tor Btorage, commerdal, or lovat k&gt;t close to hospital, shopping,
convert Into 1partment1. The etc. ,Large silld IMng room open
potontl1l 11 unlimited. Building to tormal dtnlng and kitchen, 2 car
litH. GIVI ua a telephone call oltachtd garage, AND MOREl
tocla~ tor inoro dttallll •20111.
Quick poiHiolonl IliON

2.00 m/lacrtl mora qr lm.

Orun llamtnii!J lohoolo. lema Rt1trlctlano.

NO.UJ

NEW LISTING! CAN YOU
BELIEVE THIS? 3 bedroom
Ca.pe Cod home, spacious living
room with-woodbumlng fireplace,
bath, kitchen with buln·in range
and oven, utility room, 2
detached garages. Very Well
maintained. Oon1 let this one
pass you by. Priced in the 50's.
lt21 01

PRIVATELY

LOTI 01' MOUII ~0~ THI
IIONIVI Llkt ntw Ctpt Cod
homt w~h fUll rw dormer olftrlng
mort IPIOI Ul'llllra. I lA, I
btthl, formal Lll, toytr, ~~~ and
format dining 1rea, Iorge llltd
deoktno trea, lorot tlzod deoklno

morel OWNIIII 1111-0CATINQ
IIA D'IlLio NOW'I -

AVENUE·

WE ARE TALKING IIAJOR
REDUCTION HEREI READY...

over $20,0001 Owner means
business. Quality home that has
low maintenance. Brick ranch
with 4 bedrooms, formal living
room, step-s!IVing kltchert. family
room with fireplace, over 2,000
square feet of living space. 2 car
attached garage, bam, sl1ed and
loads more resting on 2 acres
m/1. Private shOwings ... call to set
up yours! 12050
90 BEECH STREET ... tl1is is the
place -you ought to bel Take e
peek inside and you'll agree.
Roomy 11!2 story home witl1
formal living and dining room, eat·
kitchen open to large family room
with llreplace, 3-4 bedrooms, .
baths, 2 car attached garage ~nd
morel
Immediate possess1on
here! 12024.
ACREAGE ...30 acres 'mil lots ·ol
woods. Ideal hunting land.
Harrison Township. $30,000.00
12106

NEW LISTING! DON'T DRIVE
BY...SAVE TIME by calling for an

LOCATED appr. first. You will be glad that

CONTEMPORARY Home sitting

on over 2 acrea. Lots at room on
the Inside tool Large living room
20x25 with 16' ceiling, master
bedroom and bath In lOft area, 3
additional bedrooms and 2
bath.l, family room, laundry, 2
11vtl decking, anachld garaga.
Shld, bam, and morel 12011.

IGS COUNTY
en rtlr, ovtr a tort tat and much

PJ.MIANT IDLL ROAD,

on this
brick end vinyl sided raised
ranch home siruated on a lovely
treed lot Enough room for your
family here. 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large sized living room &amp;
formal dining , family room wlth a
warm fireplace, one car garage,
concrete drive. J"ust a shan
distance from Gallipolis! 12015

TEODORA

Convenltnc. of city living here!
One floor plan rancher with 3
bedrooms, bath, living room. bath
and more. Be the first to can and
see this neat hmel $ti4,000 12008

you did. Be one of tha first to
view this nice sized ranch home
with over 6.7 acres. Large Sized
living room with wOOdbumlng
fireplace , kitchen with dining
area, 3 BRI, 2 baths, full
basement, large alzld deck and
abOve ground pool with decking.

12101

742·3171

1101 Ill tl4 1t4 100.00 I I• OWNIIII WIU.INQ TO PAY
Ltritl homt t~at oo:.1111 ot 4 PAIIT 0~ IUYIIII CI.OIINQ
btelrooma a btlhl living room COITII OWner wantalo dHI with
formal dining kiiQhOn and moro lhil I Dodroom hOmo lhll II
on tnt tnoldo. Oulllllt lhtrl 11 oltuatod In tho YllltQI ol Cntttor.
1ppro•. t.l4 ooru wllh 1 ~ormll living room with 011
ttooMtiCf pond. Moro coli for llrapllol, !amn~ room, kllohtn and
oompllttlllltlnQI noT&amp;
mort. lolkl homt with tott of
ohariQitr. -

FOil MOllE LISTINGS STOP RY J\ND PICI( UP A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN (QLOR
BOOI&lt;LET OR GIVE US A &lt;ALL &amp; WE WILL MAIL YOU ONE TODAY!

•

�.

(

Page D8 • liunllap ~fmH ·lirntintl

COLUMBUS
Bob
E varu
Farms
Inc. has
announced financi.al teSults for
the third quarter and nine
months ending Jan. 26.
Earnin~ per shm for the
quarter were 33 cenu, equal to
the year- ago level, in part
reflecting severe weather conditioflS vohich alfected teStaurant Stif6 in most of the company's maarketing territories
during December.
Total net sales for the quarter
were $255.4 million, up 8 percent from $136.3 million in
the comparable period last
year. Net income was $11.5
million, compared with $12.3
million a year earlier, pmly as a
result of the inteteSt expense

·program
fromPapD1
basis.
There is $20 million in tax
credits annually designated for
this program for 2001-03.
Application&gt; can be obtained
on
line
at
www.OhioWorks.com or at
the
CIC/Gallia
County
Chamber of Commerce at 16
State St., Gallipolis. Applicatiom are to be faxed to Linda
O'Connor from the Office of
Work Force Development,
Ohio Department of Jobs and
Family Services at 614-9951298.

~es
corn, ·soybean, tobacco and
vegetable seed varieties, producers may want to investigate
pelformance data acroos a wide
range of locatiom or over a
period of several y.:ars, to
ensure the consistency of the
variety.
As always, remember to
select for disease resistance as
well, taking into consideration
the history of your farm and its
on the corn, soybean, alfalfa
f~&gt;rage varieties. The

and other

post-increase
lK·

Livestock prices

Inside:

GALLIPOLIS - Odi~
Producm ID:c· ~~
report for this ~-,

Ohio Villley Bank has branch in store, Page 2
Views inside the news store, Page 2

EXTRA
SUnday,

Febn~ary

18, 1001

"lt:,
.;3

associated with additional debt generates a significant share of quarter,'' said Stewal$. _
ble products were up 1 perr due
attributable to the company's its operating income for the Owens, president and CEO.
cent, and the segment's total
2Q0.30illl
Hf,
share repurchase program.
third fiscal quarter during
"Even though our sales sales increased 7 percent, which
$80-$105, 3?5 41101 ... For the nine-month period, December and also was trends improved significarlJ!v in reflects higher prices and new
$101 Hf. - $IX' 475 12 il.St.
sa4 S90 Hf. sao sa4 eeo-aocw
net sales were sn2.4 million, expected to benefit fiom the January, with a 5 ~t products.
St.
$77-$83 HI.~ . .
mcrease on a same-store p,
Reduced promotional activup 6 percent from a year ago, · timing of major holidays.
FMI
Cldlli .\ (~
The company opened seven we were unable ·to make up the ity contributed to improved
while earni!IS' per share were
Wedneedey of . . 'monll:l) .
$1.10, up 3 pen:ent.
restaurants during the quarter, groimd lost during Decem- operating in~ome, ·which was
Choice - ..,., f71.480, I
helferl,
$74-$78.' .
•·•.
In the restaurant ~ent, which brin~ year- to-date ber;• he added "Fortunalliiy; up 5 percent for the quarter.
Select
Steera,
$12-$74:
"We expect relatively favorsame-store sales for.the quarter ope~ to 15 and the total stronger results on the food
helferl, $88-$71. ,:
' \ '
rose 2.5 percent, including an operating at the. end of the products side offiet a portion . able )log costs to benefit profit
Holatelna - StUll,
average menu price increase of quarter to 454. The target for of the shortfall and enabled us comparisom in our food prod$70.
2.9 pen:ent. Total net sales for the full fiscal y.:ar remains 30 to report flat overall earnin~ ucts segment for at least the
the segment were up 9 per- new restaurants, and tentative per share."
.
,
next year or two;' Owens said
$51;M~m4~:
cent, though its operating plans for a comparable number
Sales and operating income
"Overall, our longer-term
Thln/l.lght $3~~!1··
in the food products segment growth strategies have not sigincome was off 8 percent.
of openings in fiscal 2002.
.$54$60.
-, , 1 ,,.f,''
he added.
As previously reported,
"Disappointing sales during were higher for the quarter. nificantly
a.ck To The Film f )!&gt;'&lt;
same-store sales for the 6.ve- several key wc:eks in December Hog costs in the company~ "In the restaurant business,.we .
week December fiscal period resulted in a higher-than- sausage business averaged $36 are continuing a program of
Clltm $50 ~- '$1G-.
were down 1 pen:ent. The expeCted labor cost ratio for per hundredweight, only steady, sus~le expansion,
. ' . . ,,.
.136 re•taurant segment typically . both the month and the full slightly above the $34
coupled with saong focus on
· Upcqm•IG I!MlCfilll: '' ·•
year ago, and below the se- maintaining a superior dining
Herd bull lelllng prognuri'
available.
High qudly Ai9ll'
ond quarter average of $40. ·. experience for customers in
The "Lender's Round-Table Grant Program (OITP) .
bulls.
.
Pounds sold from compara-.... our existing restaurants:'
Cell the olllce 111448 9688.
The purpose of OITP is to
Resoun:e Seminar" will be
offered to small businesses on assist small businesses in the
March 15 from 10 a.m. to 2 training of their ~nt and
. , immediatdy credited to the money out of your ,403(l?f
p.m. at Bossard Memorial new employees in the manage1employee's acco.unt, the plan once you reach 'the ·~
ment of electronic information
· Library.
·~quuement may mcrease to of 59-112, or upon disabilft.r.
The Sou£1!east Small Busi- and the integration of new
1
.• two years.
or separation fi:oll) leeyi~e.4If
f10111 Pap D1
ness Development Center, the software and elecaonic techll
Also, if there is no vesting you withdraw mo11ey fpr apy,
Procurement Outreach Center nology.
sponsored retirement plans chedule, the age requirement other purpose, ·a ''pfeman!ie
OITP will match a compaand Network Partners will
iuch aso401(k) ~d SIMPLEs. , r employees of educational distribu~on" pe~ty !;'-X ,IJ'PY
provide information on vari- ny's investment in tuition costs
IRS regulationi permit you : titutiom may be as 'high as apply.
,•
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for various technology-trainous GAP-Funding programs.
to change your contribution l 6.
'
The IRS req,ulres you tq
Interested businesses may call ing classes that are critical to
election to a 403(b) plan only ~ Unlike its counterpart, the begin taking money. out of
the chamber at 446-3662 to the success of a company's
once per calendar year. You f01(k) plan, the 403(b) your 403(b) plan no J,ater than
growth but is not for routi,ne
register.
may stop contributing at any ~nables you to have full own- Apri11 following the year yeu
The third program that Call on going training.
time by notifying your ership of your account, which turn 70-1/2. All distributions
Interested businesses are to
hopes .to take to the business
employer, however, you may ii&lt;"structured like an annuity fi:om the plan are subject , to
community is through the contact TJ. Justice, governor's
not participate again for the contract. As long as there are ordinary wms in jhe y.:ar they
Ohio Department ofDevelop- regional representative at 740rest of the calendar year. ·
no employer contribution&gt; are withdrawn. '
. ·
ment and is called the Infor- 775-1373 or via email at gusIn addition, all of an: into the plan, the funds in the · If you have a 4p3(b) re~
·
marion Technology Training tice@bright.net.
emt&gt;lovee's salary deferrals for acoount .are youn to take ment plan account, be sure tO
/
the year are consolidated. upon termination of employ- make the most of it, and conTherefore, if an employ~e mtpt.
tribute as much as you can, as
University of Kentucky pubThday, Sunday, comider participates in a 403(b), and 'a 1 'Yc!u may transfer your often as you can. Steady conlishe$ a tobacco variety com- joining the Gallia County Cat- 401(k) or SAR-SJlP
•rceunt to another 403(b) tributiom over the long. run
parison pamphlet each . year tlcmen's&amp;.sociation at the fair- 3.110ther employer, there ~y" cu~an; SIJCh as your will put .you on the right
with yield scores that have grounds for the annual Open be additional restrictions. '.' · f . t e .mutual fund or imur- track to rellrement. If you are
been measured over a period Steer and Heifer Show. ShowA 403 (b) program may an~ comparry, even if you currendy; employec:l by a iiPn- ·
of time.
mamhip will begin at 11 a.m., require an employee to reach re~ in the same job, by rpmfit, ~h¥itablc or ' religlotis
All of this information is followed by the steer and heifer the age of 21 and complete adhering to special IRS rules. organizatiiln 'an'd do not have
available at the Extension show, respectively.
one )rear !'f service before Thl! flexibility gives you a a 403(b) account 'ijsen~ ~·
4-H beef project exhibiton becoming eligible to partici- wid~, range of investment to your employer,about it. ,_
Office, 446-7007.
Ag new1
are invited to a program on pate in the plan. Ifthere is no choices, a big advantage not ·
· ·
·
·
Thbac:co meetiDg tomor- care and feeding of 4-H beef vesting schedule, meaning allowed with many other
(K. ~)"'n Siniih is 11n l~lltJtrow, Monday. beginning at 8 , projects 00. Feb. 21, ,beginning both the employee's and retirement plans.
· ffltltl txto~livt wilh Smith Pllrt
p.m. at Hannan liace Elemen- at 7 p.m. at the C.H. l\llcKen- ell!-ployer's ·contributions are · Th~ IRS allows you to i:ake nm si Advt.st,I"'-, G4Uipolis.)
.,
tary School in Men;erville. zie Agricultural Center. The
.Producen have the rare oppor- program has something for all
tunity to hear Dr. Will Snell, beef exhibitors, including steer,
tobacco economist fiom the feeder b1f and breeding proUniversity of Kentucky, give ject exhibitors.
his though.ts on the tobacco
amnifor L Hymes is Gallia
situation and ·outlook. Specta- County~ Extmsion Rgelit for agriton are welcome.
:cultull! lmdiUitumlrtSOurm.) .

~

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cpanged;

average1' ·

a

Save~A-Lot

~~- ===
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gives Bend Area a choice

Regions shoppers will enjoy savings
of up to· 40 percent at new food store

;

OMEROY - Now Bendarea shoppers can save up to
. 40 p ercent on groceries at
their new Big Bend Save-ALot Food Store, located at the
former Big Bend Foodland Location, 700
West Main St., Pomeroy.
The store wiU celebrate its grand opening on Wednesday, Feb. 21 at 9 a.m.
"Bend-area shoppers will be pleasantly
surprised when they first vi.sit the store
and qperience Save-A-Lot 's 'value e.q uation' of great food at great prices," said
Bob Eastman of O hio Valley Supermarkets, Inc.
"Because of our unique limited-assortment method of retailing and the incredible buying power of almost 900 stores,
Save-A-Lot offers the highest quality
products - many under its own Exclusive labels - at terrific savings. If a person
spends an average of $65 per week on
groceries, shopping at our new bright,
clean and convenient Save-A- Lot can
mean savin gs of. more than $100 eac h
month ."
Save- A-Lot is the fastes t growing limited-assortm ent grocery chain in the U.S.,
with almost 900 stores in 36 states. That

Money ·

throuSb

fromPapD1

disease potential.
OSU ~ performance data

SUnday, ·fabnwy 18, 2001 '

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

BEF quarterly eam

.

makes Save-A- Lot the sixth-largest retail
grocery chain under a single banner.
The company has achieved its growth
and success by developing a different way
of retailing - its stores offer customers
the most popular size and variety of the
most frequently-purchased grocery items.
The limited assortment of products,
smaller sizes of th e stores and incredible
buying power reduces operating eXpenses .These savings are passed o n to the customer through lower prices.
The smaller store size also makes shopping more convenient.
"Our store size allows customers to
have a quick and easy shopping experience," Easonan said. "That means you
don 't have to search all over to find a par-

ticul3.r item.''
Although it carries a select number of
brand-name items, Save-A-Lot primarily
offers its own Custom-labeled products.
To ensure that these products are as good .
or better than name-brand items, Save-ALot ha.s a test kitchen with a full -time
economist who continually evaluates
everything sold in the stores.

Please SH Store, :Z

IT'S BUSINESS

pesi management, forage qual-

Kneen
fnn

"Hay: · Qwility and Storage;'
ity and cutting management, "Tall Fescue" and "Poisonous
storage of silage and hay, eco- Plants" on the first night.
Then on the second class be
nomics of forage production
Pap D1
and contracting, marketing exposed to "Management and
blooming branches in cqoler, forages, and livestock u - - Maintenance of Grasses and
sunny rooms and change the tion of forages.
.
Leguines;• "Species Selection ·
water in vases every couple of
Cost for the four evening F.or Hay and Pasture" and
days.
sessiom $50 per person. The "Pasture Establishment and
Lady beetles are emetging pre-registration deadline is Renovation."
from their overwintering Feb. 19. Call my office, 992This program is open to the
places within our homes. So 6696, if you are interested.
. publi'c; however, pre-registraopen the windows and let ·
• • •
tion is required: One or more
them out. One of our Master
Hone owners, take time to from the same family or farm
Gardeners has discovered that attend an extemion program may attend for $40.This covers
by opening the top six inches on "Forages For Horses" being the cost of one notebook and
of her west and south facing held on March 20 and 22. This . handout per unit. Stop by our
windows during sunny mid evening program fiom 6-9 office for registration forms
afiernoon daY.' permits lady p.m. will be held . at OSU quickly as they are due in jackbeetles to fly outdoon on their Extension South District office son County Extension office
own.
at 17 Standpipe Road in Jack- by March 15.
son.
.
(Hal Kneen u Me~s County~
Make sure to close up the
This program will cover the ExtttuiOil agent for agritulturt
window at least hour before
sunset or the lady beetles may basics of horse nutrition being and natural resouow, Ohio St.ltt
fly back in as the sun sets and raised on pasture. Learn about. University.) '
air temperatures fall. Lady beetle emergence causes aggravaI.
.. --. . - .
.
tion with many local home.ownen; however, inside household spraying of insecticides
not reconunended by Ohio ·
State Univenity Extension.
· The vacuum cleaner with a
disposable bag is more efficient
and safer. Hopefully this departure of unwanted beetles will
. Everyone should be aware of
be quick. Take some time this
the benefits and the limitations
spring and summer to plan to
caulk those openin~ that
associated with each retirement
allow lady beetle entrance into
your home.
planning alternative.
For information, please call .
Before deciding which IRA .is
992-6696 or stop by and pick
up our revised lady beetle fact
best for your retirement plan, get
sheet.
Dianna Lawson
the infonnation you nerd by
FA!CfS
contacting
me
today.
A Hay and Sila~ Short
740.992-2133. 1·877-376-7576
Course is scheduled for Feb.
e-mail: dl1wsonirjfs.com
26, March 1, 5 and 8 from 6-9
p.m. at. Ohio State Univenity
1111 , ,.,
--...
Extemton South District
Office at 17 Standpipe Road
-ltlollnd........., ...... ~-----NA80/81PC. M
in jackson.
~I idlnl biOICtrt'~nlt , lolad • PtopiN Bll!k.llt-1111\.. AAE HOT Fote INSURED. ARE NOT
8
KOI!POSITSJ.NOIIAIIE MY GII.IIWmED IY111E FINN«:I!I.INST11'1JT10H SUBJECT
This intensive course will
TO RISK AND IIA'r LOSE VAI.UE.
'
cover soil fertility, forage specie
selection, stand establishment,
( !11111111!1• d I•• '1•111 luJ,IJlll,lil!riUil,

a

MANAGEMENT TEAM - Making up the management team at the Big Bend Save·
A·Lot in Pomeroy are, from left, Brent Finlaw, meat manager; Tim Gibbs, manager
on special assignment; Butch Dawson, store manager; Scott Litchfield, assistant
manager; Larry Howard. general manager of poerations; and Cookie Krautter, con·
·
troller. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Eastman family enterprise dates to 1980

STOR.S ONI.V ·

300 Uberty Squall
2?03 Rflh Sbaat Rd.

OMEROY
Pomeroy
native Bob Eastman is president of Ohio Vall ey, Supermarkets, Inc., which operates
four Foodland stores and four
Save-A-Lot stores, including the newest
'Big Bend Save-A-Lot location in
Pomeroy.
The co rporation, entirely familyowned, employs some 250 people and
operates in a six-county, two-state region.
Eastman was born in Bedford Township, son of the late Homer and Bernice
St. Clair Eastman. He graduated from
Pomeroy High School, .attended Ohio
University, and embarked on his g rocery
retailin g career with the Kroger Compa-.
ny in Pomeroy. He began at Kroger as a
stock clerk, but advanced through the
ranks to become a store manager and
eventually a grocery merchandising representative for Kroger's C harl eston, W.Va.
division. He was ultimately promoted to
area zone manager for the southern West
Virginia zone.
H e marr ied the former Sheila Strauss
of Pomeroy, who serves as secretary-treasurer of the company.
EastnJan is an Ohio Valley Dank director, serves as president of th e Rio Grande
College Executive Board ofTrustees, and
is a member of the Shade River Masonic
Lodge, the Gallipo~is Shrine Club, Gallipolis Chamber of Commerce, Gallipolis
Rotary Club and is an initiated member
of the Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity.

an

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Roth? Traditional?
It's your IRA choice.

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NEW STORE- The Bob Eastman family, owners of Ohio valley Supermarkets, Inc .. are 'pictured outside of
the new Big Bend Save-A-Lot In Pomeroy. The store will celebrate its grand opening on Wednesday. (Tony M.
Leach photo)
·

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r

SAVE-A-LOT OWNERS - Bob Eastman, second from right, his wife, Sheila and his
family, owners of Ohio Valley Supermarkets, Inc., will operate the new Big Bend SaveA-Lot in Pomeroy. Kevin Eastman and Brent Eastman, pictured with Bob and Sheila,
help operate the company. (Tony M. Leach photo)

H e has also served on the Point Pleasant Developmental Committee, the Gallia County Community Improvement
Corporation and is a member of the
· National Rifleman Association, The

I

National Football 'Foundation Hall of
Fame, Inc. , Tri-County Job Service Board
and the First Presbyterian Church.
He is a past president of the Foodland
Grocery Retailers.

Ohio Valley Supermarkets
a Pomeroy success #oty
OMEROY - The owner of Pomeroy's new ·
.Big Bend Save-A-·Lot store, O hio Valley
_Supermarkets, Inc., olfrates nine retail supermarkets, as well as a wholesale warehouse; a
bakery and developed real estate.
·
Pomeroy native Robert H . Eastman is the president of
the co·mpany.
.
Eastman opened his first supermarket in 1980 - the
0hio Valley Foodland in Gallipolis. In 1983, his company acqnired Gallipolis foodland and Point Pleasant,
W.Va. Foodland, which were purchased from th e Thorofare company.
Sales volume continued on a positive climb, and in
1984, the Big Bend Foodland opened in the form er
Jones Boys location on Pomeroy's West Main Street, th e
store which will now house the company's newest SaveA-Lot store.
This 1984 acquisition and that of a second Jones lloys
store in Gallipolis, which was closed to increase volume
at the company's other Foodl:ind outlets, were followed
by the 1985 opening of the Ripley, W.V,a. Foodland, and
the acquisitiol;l. of SuperValu. in Point Pleasant in 1985.
That store was reopened under the name 1\.v\n Rivers
Food)and, placing a I'Qoq,Iand store on each side of town
and an excellent business base within the P6int Pleasant
community.
More changes followed. ln J anuary 1989, Ripley
Foodland was converted to a ne\lrly-available fi-anchise
trade name: Save-A-Lot, a low-priced limited variety
.format which has worked well .in an increasingly competitive market, and which has been well-received by
I

,........ History. 2

�..
PACE TWO

Getting ready

Pomeroy bank nation's first in Save-A-Lot
POMEROY - The Ohio
Valley Bank office inside
Pomeroy's new Save-A-Lot
store h the first bank to be
located in any of Save-A-Lot's
900 stores.
OVB opened the office in
December 1998, as one of the
first in a series of in-store
SuperBanks constructed by
OVB. the Pomeroy S\lperBank. has remained open during construction of the new
Save, &amp;Lot store, and will
rem~ere once the new
store~ for business.
" ~e ~Jtcited about our
new :ma:!&gt;ul)clil}gs, which will
alia~ a greater shopping
exp~e
for our custom~ said Katrinka Hart,
senid1"'ttce president ofOVB's
retai~ gmup. "Customers
can . . .eir banking, pick up
groc&lt;:')ie!- and even get a loan
any day of the week in just

BANKING STAFF Ohio Valley Bank's SuperBank inside
Pomeroy's new Save-A-Lot store is the· only one in the Save-A-Lot
operation's 900 retail stores across the country. Staffing the ful~
service branch office are, from left, Michelle Oliver, Super Banker
Ill, Sharon Rinehart, Super Bankert, Pam Johnson, Super Banker
t, and Heath Engle, Customer Service. Tiffany Sayre, Super
Banker, Is not pictured. (Tony M. !,.each photo)

deliver full service banking, of 62 hours a week. The
seven
days a week, for a total Pomeroy SuperDank office is
All of OVB 's SuperBanks

one stop."

open I 0 hours daily Monday
through Friday (10 a.m. until
8 p.m.), Saturday (10 a.m. to 5
p.m.) and Sunday (noon to 5
p.m.) The SuperBank, unlike
traditional bank offices, is only
closed on three holidays during the year: Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas.
The Pomeroy, SuperDank is
equipped with a Jeannie
ATM, safe deposit boxes and a
team of specially- trained
SuperDankers. OVB Superbankers Michelle Oliver,
Sharon Rhinehart and Pam ·
Johnson are trained ta1handle
all banking transactions, from
taking loan applications to
implementing
NetTeller
online banking.
OVD, with 16 offices in
Ohio and West Virginia, is a
subsidiary of Ohio Valley Bank
Corp. Ohio Valley Bank Corp.
common stock trades on the
Nasdaq Stock Market under
the symbol OVBC.

Employee training

New equipment

•

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·~

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FOOD STORES
,.
Getting ready for Wednesday's grand opening at the Big
Bend Save-A-Lot store in Pomeroy are Save-A·Lot employees
Rhonda Young, Juan Tabler. and Mary Jewell. Many employees of the Big Bend Foodland, as well as the Point Pleasant, W.Va. Save-A-Lot store will work at the new Big Bend
location . (Tony M. Leach photo)

Congratulations
Big Bend

·s Custom Brands!
Save•A•Lot Products Are Carefully Selected
And Taste-Tested For Quality And Value.
You'll Like Our Products As Good As, Or Even
Better
Than,
Name
Brands
GUARANTEED Or Your Money
Backl And You'll Spend Up To
40°/o
Less
.Shopping
At
Save•A•Lot. ·That's Savi~gs. You
Can Depend On. Everyday. Why Pay·More?

I

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SAVE • A• LOT

I

on the grand opening.
Colte Ingels and Jennifer Young, both of New Haven, W.Va.,
were busy training on the new computer scanners at Big'
Bend Save-A-Lot in Pomeroy late last week. They are among
the many new employees.who will be working at the store
when It opens on Wednesday. (Brian J. Reed photo)

.
.History

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flam Page 1. ·
the consumer.
Another Save-A-Lot outlet
in Jackson was built and
opened in 1989, which ·coincided with the opening of the
Wellston· Foodland, which, at
~· the time"; was 'considered the
company's largest and most
modern supermarket.
Also in the. 1980s, a larger
main office complex and a
new "Forward Buy" ware- .
, ~house were opened, and a
These new frozen food freezers ere part 'of the state-Of-the art general manager was added to
equipment which makes Big Bend Save-A-Lot one of the rnost oversee the store's operations.
modem supermarkets In the area. The Pomeroy grocery store Eastman's two sons, Brent and
Kevin, became active in run•
opens We~nesday. (Tony M. Leach photo)
ning the company after their
graduations frOm college.
•
The
company
continued
feature Ohio Valley Bank's·
SuperDank, the first bank to expansion in 1992 with the
operate within a 1Save-A-Lot acquisition of the Burr Oak
'
store among the 90o! nation- IGA and its conversion to
Page 1
Foodland. The new 1\vin
wide locations.
Rivers
Foodland, placed in a
Founded in 1978, Save-A"If a product does not meet
compleiely renovated departSave~A-Lot standards for top Lot is a self-distributing comqualicy, we won't carry it," pany. Of the almost 900 stores, · ment store space in Point
Eastman said.
over 80 pen:ent are indepen- Pleasant, gave twice the
The new Big Bend store will dendy owned and operated. square footage for the cuscarry about 1,250 of the most Save-A-Lot stores are supplied tamers of Point Pleasant.
frequently purchased grocery by a corporate warehouse in Doth the former Twin Rivers
operation and the Point
items, including fresh meat, Columbus.
fruits and vegetables, dairy
products, canned goods and
packaged items, fiozen foods
and !\'ore, plus non-food items
like hi:alth and beauty aids.
The Bend-area store will
employ a staff mosdy fiom the ·
surrounding area, made up
mostly of the familiar faces of
employees fiom the former
Big Bend Foodland store, as
well as the Pt. Pleasant, W. Va,
Save-A-Lot, which will be
replaced by the new Pomeroy
store.
"The conversion of Big
Bend Foodland the Point
Pleasant Save-A-Lot into Big
Bend Save-A-Lot will give
shoppers a new, modern SaveA-Lot foanat near . ·the
Pome~.tlttason . Bridge:'
EastllSn said. "J:Jie conversion
of •i£tlhiO..Iacilitf will &lt;ilia
elinlillitL the1i:iod taX foi:West
Virgt'mrdwppers who patronized th?'West Virginia Route
62 location."
The Big Bend location will
have a complete, new refriger,Ji!• '
.
ation system and an impressive
.
new la)'Out. The store will also

Store

froln

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HOME CITY
ICE
CO.
.

Pleasant Foodland were
closed in favor of the larger
and more modern format.
Acorn Plaza Foodland was
opened in 1993 in Jackson
County, Ohio, patterned
under a new modern format
similar to that of the Twin
Rivers and Wellston locations.
The firm's third Save-A-Lot
store . was opened in Waverly
in 1995, at the same time that
the company purchased the
Drown's IGA store, which was
renamed Buckeye Foodland.
In April 1')96, Ohio ,Valley
Supermarkets purchased the•
Ravenswood, W.Va. Foodland
store frOm SuperValu, and thiil
Save-A-Lot store in Point
Pleasant was purchased in
July, 1996.
The company's largest p_ro~
ject to date, the Gallipolis
l'oodland, was opened in late
1996.
.
In 1999, Eastman and his
family "right-sized" the c&lt;impany, selling the A-corn Plaza
store in Oak Hill, WeUston,
Burr Oak and Ravens)Vl&gt;od
stores. The remaining stores'
closer proximity has enabled
upper management to better
oversee the company in an
increasingly-competitive
market.

';UM~~at

CARTER'S
PLUMBING INC.

UP
TO

98 Pine St. ·Gallipolis, OH

118101 FlUDd

Big.Bend
You'll Find Big Savings ·o n
Save•A•Lot's Garden Fresh
Produce And ·
U.S.D.A. Inspected
Chicken, Beef And
Pork.
And We Guarantee
You'll Love Our uali

t\ND TH/\NK YOU FOR
./\LLOWING US TO BE 1\
PART Of YOUR NEW
P-ROJECT
.
..
·ELECTRIC CO.

"

f1 Lot's THT BoyS!

ae,t 1Alishes
Jrom

Save•A•Lot Uses The Buying Power Of Over
' 800 Stores To Bring You Fantastic Deals On
National Brands! Our TEMPORARY AND .
TERRIFIC Bargains Are Different Every
Week So Hurry In! WHEN THEY'RE GONE,
THEY'RE GONE!

Opening '"ruary 21Jt! .
Big Bend Save•A•Lot
700

w. Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ·

FOOD STORES

Mon·Sat 9-9, Sun 10·7

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�.PAGE FOUR

Monday

CommunitY news and notes, AS
Eastern girls take sectionals, B1

TUe~

Hlp: 50s; Low: 401

Details, A3

February.• 19, 2001
•

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Melp County's

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entine

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Hometown Newspaper

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 185

State
slogan
wears out
welcome

We would like to take this opportunity to say
"We're prou.d to have you a1s a part of our
business community... And we wish you
. .continued success in our new store!"
.

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Q__ua[it~

S(&gt;rint Sftop ·

~1
Furniture Jewelry, Inc.

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
·Charles Riffle; R. Ph.

&amp;

VWt _..It: www.lftOIIe.l~ '"'II~ 1;111 com

li"Credlt Terms

Iii' Lay-A-Ways

112 East Main Street

· 2.12 E. Main Street

Middleport

l

l

992-3345

Middleport

992-2635

~==========!

BAD
.

l

.992...;3785

992

Fisher

•

Funeral Home

BER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Ohio

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Route 248,
Chester, OH
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985-3308

'

Middleport
Pomeroy

992-5141
992-5444

OE PLACE
J4,d
Middleport

992-5627

• 'i(

Ewing
Funeral Home

DowNING CHILDS
·MuLLEN MusseR ·
INSURANCE

BroganInsurance

CO~UMBUS
(AP) With five little words, state
tourism officials are hoping
to show that Ohio is much
more than the heart of it all. ·
"Ohio So Much To Discover!" will . become the
state's new slogan and the ·
centerpiece of a new logo
this spring, replacing the 17year-old "Ohio The Heart
Oflt All!"
: "The new one is much
more inviting," said Jim
Epperson, director of the
Ohio Bureau of Travel and
Tourism.
: The bureau spent $2.6
million this budget year to
hire Akron-based STP Com~unications to develop a.n d
c;Jesign the slogan, logo and
~n accompanying advertising
campaign that will include
ielevision commercials, a seasonal travel magazine called
Discover 0 hio and an updated Internet site.
: The bureau's annual bud!);et of $6.3 million . would
stay the same for the next
~o years under Gov. Bob
Taft's proposed budget.
"We're using the ~arne
budget, but telling a ,different
story with it," Epperson said.
He said there will be little,
if any, cost for replacing
materials bearing the old
logo because existing products will be used up before
those with the new logo are
bought.
• "Ohio The Heart Of It
All!" has been the state's slogan since the ~arly 1980s,
projecting what the bureau
says was an image that the
state's geographic location
made it a convenient, allAmerican getaway.
'k.
The idea back then wiS to
build a sense of state pride
among Ohioans, "but recently, we did not see lasting evidence of the 'Heart Of It
All!' as something that was
going to help· us in the
futUre," Epperson said.
In 1998, the bureau hired
Longwoods International, a
Toronto-based research company, for · $300,000 to find
what people thought of
Ohio.
Surveys and interviews
revealed that people inside
.imd outSide ofthe state think
.O,f Ohi~ mainly as a great
place for amusement parks.
Research also showed that
·people believe Ohio doesn't

. ......... Slol•n.·A!

DALE EARNHARDT 1951-2001

•

•1es 1n
• eras
Barnhardt's death
shocks NASCAR
and its fans
Bv

992-2121

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
992-5432

992-2342
Valley

Best

Pomeroy

992-6682

DAYTONA B'E ACH, Fla. - The
Intimidator. Old lronhead. Tough and
unyielding, a winner on the racetrack and
often sarcastic and calculating off of it ..
Even people who knew nothing about
racing knew Dale Earnhardt's craggy,
mustachioed face and his reputation as a .
driver never afraid to bang fenders or
shake his fist at a rival.
Despite those traits and his rough
appearance- or maybe because of them
- Earnhardt was a key figure in the
explosive growth ofNASCAR during the
past 20 years from a regional sport into a
mainstream America powerhouse.
That's what made his death in Sunday's
Daytona 500 so shocking.
. "This is incredible, just incredible," driver Jeremy Mayfield said. "You figure he'll
bounce right back. Your first thought is,
'Hey, he'll probably come back next week
at Rockingham and beat us all.'"
The 49-year-old racer was fighting for
position when he slammed into the wall
on the final turn of the race . He died
'instantly of head injuries, said Dr. Steve
Bohannon, a doctor at Halifax Medical
Center.
"There was nothing that could have
been done for him;· Bohannon said.
The wreck happened a half-mile from

PIMH-Crash.AJ

Watershed project will soon be on its way
The 4ading Creek waters/Jed
OMEROY :!.._ A project for incorporates about 150 sq11are miles
improving water quality within
includittg most of western Meigs
the Leading Creek watershed .
ifA h
C
will soon be , under · way, and Cormty, part o t ens ounty near
landowners in the watershed are being
Albany, and a small portion o.f
sought to participate.
.
.
Gallia Co11nty .

P

In the upcoming weeks, the Me1gs Soil and
Water Conservation District, working in habitat ·of fish and other aquatic life; acid
cooperation with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife mine drainage also makes the water unlivable
Service, will hammer out final· details of a for fish and other animals.
program - the Leading Creek ImproveOther problems in the watershed stem
ment Project - to assist landowners m from farming practices, some of which li1"Y
implementing conservation measures on the•r cause erosion, and allow sediment, manure
property.
t·
. . and other nutrients to enter into streams.
The Leading Cre-ek'~t~'JWCI .f~c~'l:'Jorates ·' 'MQhey .for the Lea&lt;J!ng Creek Improveabout tSO square nules mduding 111ost of ment ProJeCt was obtamed through a fund
western Meigs County, part of Athens Coun- created fiom the United States/Southern
ty near Albany, and a small portion of Gallia Ohio Coal Co. settlement agreement after
Councj. A watershed is .the land region the compahy pumped partially treated water
drained by a river or creek s~tem.
· from a flooded underground coal mine into a
Over the years, sediment filom abandoned tributary of Leading Creek in 1993. The
surface mines and acid mine discharge have Leading Creek Improvement Fund was crealsignificantly altered streams within the wate~- ed to enhance the condition of the Leading
shed. The sediment from abandoned str1p
mines dogs the stre~! , ~ges the
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J?OMEROY
Meigs
countians will have an opportunity to view the video
"Ohio's Bicentennial: A Time
· to Celebrate" and learn about
plans for the county's observance at a public reception
March 1 in the Meigs County
Annex on Mulberry Heights.
' Those attending will hear
about plans for the local observance of the 200th birthday of
Ohio and will be asked to
become a part of the historic
event by sharing their ideas for

Middleport 992-2196

. Pomeroy

SYRACUSE
992-6533

992-2136

Gallipolis

446-2265

Tuppers Plains

local ewatts.

985-3161

VIEWING THE VIDEO - Margaret Parl&lt;er, chairman of the
Meigs county/Ohio Bicentennial Committee, left, and Becky
eaer, 8 commlttell member, view the biCentennial video, whlcll
will have Its initial public showing·March 11n the Meigs Coullty Annex. (Charlene Hoeflich ·photo)

. ......
~·

~

Jim Freeman,
Meigs swco·
employee and .
Leading Creek
Watershed
coordinator,
prepares to
take water
samples and
pH readings
from an abandoned strip
mine located
near Langsville
as part of a
conservation
project aimed
at improving
water quality
and wildlife
habitat within
the watershed's parameters. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

' Prescription bills rise for
elderly
as
HMOs
retreat
Sentinel
.Today's .

-RACINE
949-2210

WATER
ANALYSIS-

FROM STAFF ~EPORTS

·&amp; Supply

Co.

MIKE HARRIS

AP MOTORSPORTS WRITER

BYT1M£S.SENT1NEL
~·- .HoDucH
STAFF

Pomeroy

50 Cenh

The ~-minute video will be
shown , in the community
room i:he annex at 7 p.m;,
after
· memben of the

2 Sadl11111 - 12 ..PI

Calendar
Classifieds

Comics
Editorials
Objtuarjes
Sports
Weather

AS
82-4

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Lotteries
OHIO
Pldr. J: 8-3-9; Pldl4: 5-7·5-5

~ ~ 1-lo-34-42-4s-18

ICiclw. 4-2·5-1-~

W.VA.

Dilly 1:2-8-1 Dlly 4:4-5-9-0

C? 2001 Ohio V..Uey PubfuhiiiJ Co.

SPRINGFIELD (AP) Martha Beery takes 25 pills
every 'day. The 87 -year-old
woman, who broke her back
two years ago, has osteoporosis and emphysem" She
spends her days at her
daughter's house breathing
with the aid of an oxygen
tank.
Beery is one of millions of
Medicare recipients who get
no reimbursement for prescription drugs.
"I don't have any help
fiom anybody," she said. "I
don't know how people do
it.''
Her predicament - and
the thought of old. people
doing without medicine ....
I
~

.

are the crux of a national
·whether
debate
over
Medicare should be overhauled or given a quick fix
proposed by President Bush.
On Jan. 1, Beery and
70,000 other elderly or ,disabled Ohioans were
affe&lt;&gt;tsd
&gt;,
.
.
by health-maintenance cilga"
nizations either dropp~~9-t1t •.
of the Medicare pt2g~~ 011 ,
reducing their serv~ ateis ..,,;:
The insurance ',A;of.n....,ities
'" 1\1
'
•
a. c ·-1"."
tnat run HM.,0s oj:im~ the ., t '
pullback on ihaa\&lt;$ice fed- -b"'
era! . reimbuh~lr~~,t,'~ompe,•
,
.
tltlon,'a' la ck"ot~~lees and
the inability, (9 · n,~_ntai.n a
+';·
network of do.ctors:
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