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P~~ge II • '"" o.lly Sentinel

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PGA

Murphy in four-way tie for Michelob Championship lead ~

day

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"I fed like I am playing some of my best golfiight
now," he said after finishing his round with a 25-foot
pun for birdie on the ~60-yard, par-4 ninth hole, the
most difficult hole in the opemng round.

No. 156, and time is running out for both of them
to climb into the top 125 and retain their pbying
privileges without having to head back to qualifying
·
school.
"I putted awesome," Beckman said after his -23putt round, which included 30-footers for birdies
three holes apart on the front side.
"Basically, I was trying to 2-putt both of them,
and they went in," he said. "Sometimes when you
don't try to make them, you make d-iem."
Damron seemed somewhat mystified by his play,
coming as it did on the course where he withdrew
in frustration after making the cut in 1998. •
"Traditionally, I've had a lot of trouble reading
putts here," Damron said, explaining that two years
ago he left certain he wouldn't figure the greens
oui. "Today, every putt seemed to do what I thought
it would do."
Early on, Pate and Hayes seemed destined to have

Murphy was I under at the turn, but said hitting
a 2-iron within 3 f~et on rhe par-3 second hole, his
11th hole, "kind of got me excited."
He followed with two straight birdies and then
another at No. 9 that tied him with Robert Damron, Steve Pate,J.P Hayes and Cameron Beckman.
Others, however, including two of the biggest
names in the field, struggled on the 6,853-yard
River Course at Kingsmill, where the humidity was
high and !J'mperatures were in the upper 80s.
Norah Begay Ill had two double-bogeys and shot
76 in his first round ever as a defending champion,
the wor.;t first round for a defender here. And twotime winner David Duval, coniing off a victory in
last week's Buick Challenge, was 3 over after four
holes before rallying for a 70.
Begay and Duval, though, don't have their future
at stake.
·
Beckman IS No. 149 on the money list, Murphy is

Jackson 41, River Valley 6

Gallia Academy 35, Athens 0

Nelsonville-York 35, Meigs 7

Frtdlly, October 8,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - Sean ,Murphy's
year on rhe PGA Tour h;u included a lot of distractions. There was a laws~it against a sponsor, the
death of his grandmother and a flood in his house.
"I feel like I had more forest fires going than the
state of Montana there for a while," Murphy said
Thursday after shooting a S-under-par 66 to grab a
share of the first-round lead in the Michelob Championship.
·:Most of them have been put out now."
And now, recently engaged and trying to turn
around the string of poor play that has caused him
to miss the cut in 14 ofhis lastl8 events, Murphy is
feeling better abour life -and he showed it Thurs-

Eastern 63, Federal Hocking 8

•

the lead to themselves. Going out in the third grou~
they put their 66s up and remained clear of the fiel4
until the three late finishers joined them.
::
Hayes, who played wirh Pate, was 1 under at thO
turn before hitting a 3-irdn close on No. 2, begin~
ning a stretch of four birdies in six holes.
:;
"It was nice to at least have somebody rha t I call:
watch make some putts and know that it could bci
done," Hayes said. ~·sometimes you wonder if it can
b~. done if the guy you are playing with isn't doin~

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Details start on
PageB1

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Miller 53, Southem 21

Point 17, Warren 0

Highs: 40s Lows: 30s

Guyan Valley 36, Hannan 0

Wahama ~. Gilmer County 13

DebllllonPIIpM

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tmes

1.25

5

If.

Keith Clearwater, who gained his spot in the field
Wednesday, was at 6 7 with Frank Lickliter, BiOi
Andrade, Kevin Sutherland and Perry Moss.
1
Curtis Strange, a Kingsmill resident who has neve~
won here in 19 starts, opened with three consecu..:
rive birdies, but faded to a 70. It was his first round
under par in his last six over the 6,853-yard layout!

Ohio Valley Publishing co.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • October 8, 2000

Lentes responds
to special prosecutor notice

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OHSAA

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Association members to vote on limiting transfers!
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COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- It
took Pat Diulus two st:asons to
turn the dormant girls basketball
program at Regina High' School
into a sute chain pion.
He did it with hard work, a
knack for molding , talent mto a
cohesive unit ani:! something
schools often bendit from transfer students.
Ohio's open enrollment law
allows students living in one
school distnct to go to school in
another. But schools that feel
slighted by losing star athletes are
pushing for change.
Representatives from each of
the Ohio High School -Athletic
Association's 81 5 member schools
are voting this month on a set of
bylaw changes that would force
student-athletes to sit out a full
season if they transfer to another
school after they begin the ninth
grade. Exceptions would be made
for transfers prompted by a school

closing or family move.
If a majority approves, the
changes would take effect Aug. 1,
200 I - making things a linle
tougher for student-athletes who
will have to judge what opportunity is best for them before they
reach high schooL
"Our member schools that we
serve have pretty much come
across loud and clear that there's a
lot of concerns student-athletes
are jumping schools, particularly
as juniors and seniors," said John
Dickerson, an OHSAA assistant
comnusstoner.
The Legislature enacted open
enrollment in 1990, hoping it
would force educators to improve
acaden1ic programs to become
rnor,: competitive.
Some say it has put a burden on
athletic programs - in public
and private schools - by forcing
coaches to recruit out of fear of
losing the best players in their dis-

trier. OHSAA member schools
are not permitted to recruit :lthletes.
Dale Creamer, principal of
Brookville High School and a
vice president on the OHSAA
board, sa1d a survey showed that
1,000 students , transferred from
one school to another for athletic
reasons last year.
"Most wanted to play for a better team or have a better chante
at a college scholarship," he said.
The bylaw change could have a
profound impact on coaches like·
Diulus. Four of his five starters
from last season also played for
him at Garfield Heights Trinity,
where he won girls state basketball titles in 1990, 1994 and 1996.
But Diulus said a rule change is
needed to create parity am 0 ng
high school teams, even if it
means some schools will no
longer be dominant.
"When we left, right away a lot

of kids transferred over, and been recruited by Washington
there's no question that if that High and was, therefore, meligirule was in effect two years ago it ble. Scott's family sued and got a
would have been a problem," preliminary court order allowing
him to play last season.
Diulus said.
State Sen: Eugene Watts, who's
Scott earned Division I AllOhio
special mention hon'ors and
had run-ms with the OHSAA
before over low academic eligi- a scholarship to Akron, while the
bility requirements for a-thletes, OHSAA placed Massillon Washsaid new bylaws could conflict ington on probation · and forced
the school to forfeit any playoff
with open enrollment.
" I think when you're trying to game receipts until 2002.
develop better competitive modIn July the fifth District Court
els and give parents more choices, of Appeals upheld Common Pleas
th!S kind of goes against the Judge Richard D. Reinbold Jr.'s
grain," Watts said. He added, ruling in the case. Earlier this
"Why shouldn't a gifted athlete month, the judge issued a gag
go where they think they can get order, preventing the parties from
- better coaching, for example?"
discussing the case while negotithe OHSAA is in a legal fight ating a settlement.
with the parents of Jessie Scott, a
Before the ruling was issued on
football player who transferred Sept. 15, the lawyer for the Scotts
from Massillon Perry to Massillon said the case hadn't been settled
Washington in January 1999 in because Scott's parents thought
the middle of his junior year.
the OHSAA's bylaws regarding
The OHSAA ruled Scott ·had athlete transfers were ambiguous.

.

"Why does the association ·
choose to pursue ~omeone lik~
Jessie Scott when we see othe~
students transfer to other schoo ls~

There's no consistency," sai_q
lawyer Beth Raies. "I do thin~
that· there is a problem dealing
with high school athletes char
attempt to transfer and treating
them different than other stu•
dents who wish to transfer."
:;
OHSAA Associate . Commis~
sioner Deborah Moore sai4
changing the bylaws will makC
the rules uniform for everyone. ;:
"People are fed up with trans~
fers for athletic reasons. They,
don't believe most of the transfer}
are for edUcatiomil purppses," sh~
said. "Tightening up the transfer
rules is meant as a remedy to tbi•
thing. If athletics is important to
you, you must decide by grade
nine."

Steelers go back to basics with BetJis to .beat Jags ;

f

PITTSBURGH {AP) - The
Bettis, 28, doesn't want to leave
Pittsburgh Steelers went back to Pittsburgh -"Hey, it's a running
basics to get their first victory of back town," he said - but the
the season. To do that, they went Seeders have not made a big push
back to Jerome Bettis.
to re-sign him.
Bettis, in the last year of his
"It's sad, because every justificacontract and seemingly in danger tion they use (to judge a running
of being phased out uf the. offense back) is based on statistics, and it's
when traming camp Started, has
not fair to judge a running back
re-emerged as the player that b~sed just on. ~tatlstics ," Bc:ttis said
defd1ses must contain to stop the of the talk that his career is on the
Steelers' offense.
downlide .
''I'm not a wa&lt;hed-up player,"
When the Stcder" wt..·re winsaid Bettis, who wa~ expected to ning, his statistics ( 1.431 yards in
split time with Richard Huntley 1996. I,C.hS yard1 111 .l ~97) wore
at running back but instead has far better than the last two seagotten most of the carries .
sons, when he gained slightly
· Bettis was a seemingly forgot- more than 1,000 yards cJCh year
ten man in thl' Steclers' offen!'le on teams that went 7-9 Jnd 6-10.
lm season. despite rushing for
Coincidence' Not re;~lly. With
more than I .000 yards for a Kordell Stewart unable to throw
fourth consecutive year. In a sea- consistently in 1998 and !999,
. son that reflected the 6-10 team defenses frequently stockecl c1ght
he played for, Bettis had only two defenders aroLmd the line of
100-yard' games and was held · scrimnta.gc to take away the one
under SO yards five t1mes.
reliable element of the Steelers'
This season, Bettis already had offeme, B~ttis' runmng. ,
one 100-yard game (133 yards,
''I'm just like any other running
ohe touchdown) against Cleve- back; if I can't get td the line of
land and nearly had another one scrimmage, I'm not going to be
(97 yards, two touchdowns) in the able tO' help you," Bettis said. "But
~teelers' first victory, 24- 13 Sun- if I can get to the line- of scrim"
day at Jacksonville. He also had 77 mage, well .. ."
yards and a touchdown two
Bettis reahzes his future in
weeks ago against Tennessee.
Pittsburgh is uncertain, but he is
With 315 yards and four touch- convinced he still has a future downs, BettJs IS ahead of his pace maybe four or five more seasons
of a year ago of 232 yards and no -in the NFL.
touchdO\vns throu gh four games.
" I still consider myself one of

the better running backs in the
..,¥illlle," said. Bettis, who has rushed
for ·more than 1,000 yards in all ·
but one of his sewn NFL seasons,
However, if this is his last year.
in Pittsburgh, at least he's going
out running . .The Seeders (1-3)
rushed for 209 yards against Jacksonville and, as the on ly NFL
team Wtthout J touchdown pass,
an: rdying on th~::ir runmng gante
as much as they did when they
were winning consistently.
"We've made a cmmnitment co·

run the ball. and it is a beautiful
thing," Bettis ;aid. "There were
times (against Jacksonville) that I
wasn't touched until I was well
past the lin e of scrimmage."
Of course, running against the
New York Jets (~-0) on Sunday
might not be quite as easy, especially if Kent Graham or Stewart
- coach Bill Cowher sti ll hasn't
SJid who will start at quarterback
- can't get the ball downfield.
The Jets haven't allowed a rushing touchdown or a run longer

than 16 yards this season.
-·
"They know how to stop the
run," Bettis said. "We might not
get a lot of big plays, but we've
got to stay with the run because
we're going to haVe to· be able to
run the ball to be successful
there."

With

ZERO "0"% Finan. .&amp;--·
Monthly Payment

Finanee Charges
Term

$20,.
9.24%
•
$417.50
$5,050.00
60 Months

$20,.

,,_ ,._.,"' Apprcciatloni
Pastor
LcsHayman

"0"%

$333.33 .
"$0"
60 Months

From the
Congregation

Putor Lea Hayman
With Much

Appreciation

t

BOXING

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· Arum, Kushner banned from fi,~
HURRY... SELECTION LIMITED
matches in Atlantic City
T Applies to 2000 Model Bonnevilles, Grand Ails,
.

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EAST NEWARK , NJ (AP) Bob Arum and Cedric Ku shner
could be banned from sr.1gmg
boxing- macche-. 111 Atla1Hi c City if
stJtt.' ~:pmin g rl'g uLJt ~n ' .1g rcc
th c1 r . tdiJII \~ JOil "l o f hrdwn· nuke
t hem unflt f( w

o,_. l '.Jt!n

Arum and Kushna It S Nov. 1 meenn g.

as soon as

I ' 11]1 1·

:

rt

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1

BY BRIAN J. REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

of the·
Ash Street
· Church

Bv

TONY M. lEACH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY
Images of swashbuckling pirates
and courageous
adventurers were conjured
up over the weekend as
the Nina, a replica of the
ship first used by C::hristopher Columbus during his
1492 voyage to North
America, docked at the
Pomeroy Levee fqr a
week-long visit.

P

Pomeroy Mayor John Dlaettnar
and Councilman · John Musser,
who coordinated the \'Jina's visit,
were among those who greeted
the ship 's captain and crew on
Thursday afternoon, as spectators
lined
the promenade
and
amphitheater, hoping; to catch a
glimpse of the famous replica.
Iluilt in Bahia, Brazil by the
Columbus Foundation, the Nina
is an exact rep lie~ of a Columbus
era " caravel," a Portuguese ship
type used by Collii\Jbus andother
early explorers. The ship was built
entirely by hand and employed

+

designs and construction · tech- . -~r;;:;~~~;
niques dating back"to the 15rh ,I

1

The ship, 93.6 feet in length,
was designed by John Patrick
Sarsfield and Jonathan Morton
Nance, and cost around $500,000
to build.
The replica has been touring
continually since 1992 as a "sailing museum" to educate the public and school children about sailing ships of this era. ·
"We always get an excellent
turnout," said Ed Schneider, second mate aboard the Nina. "Most
individual&gt; won't pass up an
opportunity to see such a unique
vessel."
"People are always asking if
this is the actual size of the original,': added Schneider. "I feel that
history books don't offer a realistic perspective of the size of these
ships. The small size, I believe,
'really showcases the hardships
that sailors of this time had to
endure."
Unlike the harsh living conditions that were prevalent on most
ships ·of the era, the replica is
equipped with more modernized
amenities, such as World War 11style pipe berths for the crew to

Mill

HISTORY LESSON - Ed Schneider, second mate aboard the Nina,
delivers an oral presentation Friday morning to students of Metgs
Local High School. While in port. thl) general public will have access
to the ship, for a walk-aboard, self-guided tour. (Tony M. Leach photos)
sleep in, ~n icebox which holds believed you."
"This has really been an
1,000 pounds of ice and a small
incredible experien ce," added
propane stove for cooking.
O'Meara.
"One that I will never
"It's a good deal of hard work,
c
..
but 'i t . is also a tremendous target.
The Nina replica was featured
amount of fun," said crewman
john O'Meara. "If I was told 20 in the production of the film
years ago that I would be part of
the Nina's crew, I wouldn't have
Please see Nina, Page Al

MHS homecomi.ng court

Good Morning!

Onl~5.
Bowling Green State and Miami University enjoyed a rainbow oyer their
soccer game Friday. (AP photo)

Flll out coupon below and
The
Daily Sentinel • Ill
,..

~lasslfleds

1---------------------------------,Your Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
IAddress:, _________________________

1Phone: _______________

Cll!3
D)·7
1n1ert

Calendars

:Mcssagc: ______~----------

County
~~··-* '"'dge
. ..

"homec oming" them e.
It has been I 0 years smc e
RIO GRANDE - "A celecomments
were made that led
bration of success" is how Jake
Bapst, coordinator for the Ohio• to OACHE's creation.
Past board members will be
Appalachian Center for Higher
Education , describes the seventh joining current board members
annual OACHE conterence and others in a disruo.;sion about
Oct. 19-21 at the University of OACHE 's programs, trom conRio Grande/Rio Grande Com- ducting rhe Access and Success
study and the form al creation of
munity College.
"] particularly appreciate the OACHE to present activities.
" I am so pleased former board
work being done by so many
members
will be joining us for
local school distncts to make
sme that Appalachian students this homecoming Conferenc t&gt;."
have an in centive ro cnminue to said Dr. Lynn Willett, president
succeeJ and move toward high- of Mu skin gum Are.1 Technical
er education," said llapst, who is C.ollegc and a founding m emlwr
also director of Rio Grande 's niOACHE .
"Their participation speaks to
Media Center :111d ProJeCt
tht&gt;ir tru e love and con cern for
CHAMP.
the Ghio Appalachian region.''
More than 25 breakout sesWillett said. "] invite everyone
s i on~ are on the ag;cnda .and can
wh o ha~ e.ver attended an
be previewed on the OAC:HE
OAC HE conferen cl' to jOin m
web site. WW\\.'.oach~-.o rg . A speon thi ~ "Pl' lld l occl sio n ."
cial fe;-~tun· of rhi"' yl· ,u \ confC rPlease see OACHE, Page Al
ence is wh;1t organi zers ca ll the

I.

Grand Prixs, Montanas, Regals and Centuries.
LIMITED TIME OFFER

POMEROY -Just prior to
a Friday deadline, Meigs County Prosecutor John Lentes filed a
response to Judge Fred W. Crow
lll's notice of intent to appoint a
special prosecutor to investigate
Lentes' handling of a drug case.
Lentes now says that Crow
cannot act further on the case
until a ruling is issued from the
Ohio Sup.reme Court on documents. that Lentes filed earlier
this week.
The response comes almost
two weeks after Crow filed the
immunity from · any fur tht:r
notice, alleging "possible crimicriminal prosecution , and . a' h e
nal activity" in the way that
PleaSe see Lentes, Page Al
Lentes handled the forfeiture of

FROM STAFF REPORTS -

CiAHS homecoming court

i~~

personal and real property in ~
drug forfeiture case against Fre?
Priddy, and the disposition a.id
return of that prop erty as thr
result of the settlem ent of a sub~
sequent civil suit filed by Priddy
and his wife, Barbara.
As a term of that agreement,
p ersonal property was to be sold
to satisfy federal and state
income tax debt , and the real ·
property was to be retain ed by
the county.
Crow, in his 11 ·-page docu.
ment, filed Sept. 27, alleged I G
individual points of misconducl
on Lentes ' part, including allegations that the county illegally
paid Priddy's $13 ,000 fine using
.forfeiture· money, that personal
property was improperly sold,
that Lentes offered Priddy
unconditional and perm anent

OACH E to stage
conference .at URG

century.

'Cburcb: ________________~-----------

Plo..,t'( lltor' ,l'ikl'd rhl' ( -,J'I. t llo
C o ntrol Co nHlH S\l o n to rt.:vokc
the li cen 5es, ba ~ t.· J wn t c~ nm o n y
th 3t Arun1 JIHi Km hnn g.J\'t: dur-

l

that Crow must
await ruling

•Pastor's Name__________-'-----

· ll n.: n -.&lt;.: ~

' • I. .

From the Congregation of
the Ash Street Church

~ntes Y~naintains

_______ _

hthJ il r..' \'

ing IBF head Bob Lee's tr1.&gt;l
Th l' co mmlli'ilo n co11 ld cn no;; ld-

Graham again practiced with
the starting offense Thursday, and
is likely to get the start Sunday,
although Cowher said, "He still
isn't 100 percent yet."
Stewart, as he did Wednesda~
also took some snaps with the
starrers.

Save ABundle
Financed
Finance Rate

SHIP
EXAMINATION
- Dorris Arnold
and Stacy
Wood, juniors at
Meigs Local
High School,
examine a
"ship's boat"
aboard the
.,
Nina, an
authentic repli·
· ca of Christopher Columbus·
caravel, which
is in Pomeroy
' this week for a
six-day visit.
Because of the
absence of constructed docks
in the New
World, a "ship's
boat" provided
the only transportation to
shore from the
anchored mother ship.

Ship replica creates waves of excitement

.

Vol. 35, No. JJ

_ _ _ __

---" '- -- -.-----------•• All Mlljor Credit Cards_ Accepted

THE QUEEN AND HER COURT - Senior Gretchen Qraig (fourth from _leff) was named
Galli a Academy's 2000 homecoming queen during the annual ceremomes held Fnday at
Memorial Field . Pictured from left to right are Dustin beckard, Jod1 Merry, Ike Stmmons,
Craig, Alle n Skinner, Jamie Allie, Nick Tipple, Heidi Cody, Matt Bush and Jenmfer Eblm.
(Doug 1ShiRiey photo)

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Comics
Editorials
M!lneJ
Obituaries
SJ!Orls
Stocks .
Tem)!D

M
~1

AS
81·8
~1

Cl-8

C 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

MHS HOMECOMING COURT- Making up the MHS homecoming court were, from left.
Derric~ Bolin, who escorted Shannon Price ; Adam Shank, who escorted Cara Ash; queen
Andrea Krawsczyn, escorted by Nick Dettwiller;, Tiffany Quails, escorted by Carson Midkiff; and Bethany McMillin, e scorted by Ian Story. Flower girl was Allison Dettwiller and
the crown bearer was Jacob Dunn . (Charl e ne Hoeflich photo )

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Paga A2 • 6unbq CJimn-6mtinrl

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VALLEY NEWS IN BRIEF
opportunity to attend a NISOD conference dunng the conung year.

planned

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GALLIPOLIS - A Ladies of Harley benefit poker run for breast can:cer research has been scheduled for Sunday by the Gallipolis Chapter of
· · the Harley Owncn Group.
•: Registration will be 11 a.m.-noon at the Gallipolis HOG Clubhouse
~ at 1900 Prospe&lt;:t Church Road, Bidwell. A SlO donation is requested.
ParticipanB will leave the clubhoUS&lt;! in group at noon . All motorcy:
~ des and riders arc welcome. An)'lne wanting to donate but unable to
attend can rna~ a donation at Baxter's Harley-Davidson.
! The event will also katurc an auction, door prizes, lingerie and
• leather, and food.
:. For more information, call B:oo:ds Harley-Davidson at 46-6336,
~ - Club DirccrorTony Beck at 446-3096 or the clubhouse at 446-4662.

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Board to meet
GALLIPOLIS -The Galha County Local Board of Education will
meet in special. semon Monday at 7 p.m. in the adrrumstrative offices,
230 Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
·

Worbhopset
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Hospice of Gallia Counry is sponsoring a
holiday grief workshop on Nov. 9 at 2 p.m . at the Wyngate of Gallipolis assisted living facility
Refreshments will be served and the workshop is free •nd open to the
public. For more information. call 446-5074.

Bid accepted

Pass testing

GALLIPOLIS - A bid of $29,712 from Shelly Co., Thornville, for
pavtng was accepted by Gallia County commissioners following an
RIO GRANDE - Dick Derty and Gerald Shook, instrunors orf
opening during Thursday's regular business session.
. Tech Prep Information Technology at Buckeye Hills Career Center,
Shelly was th&lt; only bidder on the project and comnumoners unam- · recently passed examination requirements to become Certified Cisco
mous!y approved the quote following a review.
··· · Network Associates (CCNA).
Commissioners :Uso approved a. 2-year renewal of the county EmerThe examination cover&gt; 60 objectives associated with local and wide
gency Management Agency contract for townships 3 nd villages.The ser- area networks, with special emphasis on Cisco router and switch convice is offered at no charge.
figuration, as well as network design.
A Title 20 county profile was signed at the request of Jerry Barnes.
" This was the most difficult test that I have ewr taken,"Detty said. "I
duector of the county Department of Jobs and Family Services.
feel very fortunate to have passed."
Comnussioners also issued a support letter on behalf of Area Agency
To date,_ four of the 20 instructors who attended the C!'co Regional
on Agmg Distnct 7 for a proposal to provide emergency home repair Academy 111 Manon 111 1998 have passed the exammauon.
for low-mcome homeowners age 60 and older 111 Gallia and surroundShook and Detty have also passed a skills tesr, which conSisted of ·
mg counties.
building a router and switch-based nNwork, and met all requirt!ments in
their teaching areas for the Certified Cisco Academic Instructor cerufi-

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GALLIPOLIS -

Gallia Academy High School Choir Boosters are

::: taking orders for ~Iue Devil or Blue Angel clothing.
....
-.
Gn sale are long ($20) or short ($15) sleeve shirts, sweatshirts ($30).
:: sports shirts (S25) and hats ($12). All embroidered clothing can be per• sonalized for $3. Orders placed by Dec. 1 will be ready for Christmas
gift-giving.
:
Order blanks are being handed out at all home football games. ·
:
Boosters are also taking orders for blankets this year. These blue fleece
: blankets will fit a twin bed and can have the devil or angel embroidered
~ o nto it. Cost of the blanket is S45 \vithout bemg personalized.
Order blanks arc being handed out at all home foo tball games. They
:
•• will also be distributed in the-schooTs. To order or obtain a form. or for
•-; more information, contact Annie Roach at 446-2252 .

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Dinner slated

-

. . EWINGTON -A spagherti dinner sponsored by Vinton American ·
;:_ Legion Post 161 and Auxiliary will be held in the Ewington Hall on
::: Oct. 21 fiom 4:30-7 p.m.
~ · The cost is $4 for ages 12 and adult; $2 for ages 7 -II ; and free for ages
• 0-6.

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Contest starts

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GALLIPOLIS - VFW Post 4464 Commander Keith Jeffers has
· • announced the start of this year's Veterans of Foreign Wars and its Ladies
: Auxiliary Voice of Democracy scholarship contest.
: Local students have an . opportuni~ ro compete in the 54th annual
-audio essay contest and win scholanhips and awards.
: During the many yean VFW and its .ladies auxiliary have been
: involved with the Voice of Democracy, more than 7 million high school
: studentJ have participated.
: Interested students .need only write and then record a thrte-to-fivc
: minute audio/enay while expressing their view of the p•triotic theme
•" What Pr1cc Freedom?"
·
: The local VFW is awarding $225 to local winners and :ill stnte win: ncrs rccdvc at least a S1,000 national scholarship, but could win the
:S25.000 first place award.
: A tmal of 139,000 in national scholmhips are awnrqed to student
:·national finalim .The deadline for student entry is Nov. \ .
, For more information, students should contact their home school ur
·call the loc:U VOD chairman, Jack Richards, at 446-3461 ,
.

Deadline nears
, GALLIPOLIS - The final tbte Jo pay delinquent taxes in Gallia
:Cou nty is Oct. 20, County Treasurer Steve McGhee aQnounced.
• Delinquent tax bills were mailed Sept. 13. Failure to receive a tax bill
·will not avoid such penalty and intere.t, McGhee laid.
: Payment may be sent by mail and must be postmarked by Oct. 20 to
:the treasurer's office.
·
Also, payment may be made in person at the treasurer's office in the
' co urthouse fiom 7:30a.m., to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
If the taXpayer's address has changed, they are asked to indicate the
new address on the back of their tax statement. Remember to bring or
·mail a complete tax statement with the payment for a paid receipt.
For more information, contact the treasurer's office at 446-4612.

cation.
C1
According to a report by the Ohio Assooation of Communiry Colleges, information technology occupations are projected to be in Ohio's

: · ·Sunday, October a, 2000

Sunda~~ober8,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

Clean~up

Day

VINTON -Vinton will have a clean-up day on Oct. 21 from 8 a.1TJ.
until noon, Mayor Donna [)eWitt announced.
. .
•.
A twck will be parked at the entrance to the park for residents to
bring trash for disposal. No tires, ,batteries, paint, etc., will be acceptfld.
Any individual, group or organization wanting to volunteer to pick
up trash along the highway and streets in the village that day are
encouraged to arnve at the park between 8 and 9 a.m. Gloves, tr.ish
bags and safety vests will be available.
'
For more information, call 388-8327.

.Advisory
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers !'lams-Chester Water District has
lifted a boil adv1sory 111 Orange Township for the following roads: Ohio
681 ro Alfred, the west side of Tuppers Plains, Townsh1p Road ~67,
Marcinko Road, Kaylor Road, Elberfeld Road, Dcnrz Road, Keebaugh-Follrod Road , Weatherman Addition. Alfti:d Road, Gurhfie
Road, Mudsock Road , Tu cker Road and Carr Road.
Results of a sa mple taken on Thursday are considered sa fe.

Immunizations scheduled
GALLIPOLIS -Free immunizations will be pru,·idcd by the Gallia
County Health Department Tue,day from ~-7 p.m. at Fruth Pharma·cy
on Second Avenue,
,
Children in need of inuuumzations must be accompanied by J plrem or legal guardian, and bring a currem imtnunization record ,·&lt;.ri£h
th.e m.
.,

PIKETON (AP) - A plan to keep a uranium
ennchment plant on "standby"· until a new adv.mced
technology is. dev.:loped will protect energy supplies, .
natmnal secunty and P"""nt dev2Statingjob loss, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said.
: About 1,400 of the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
• Plant_'s 1,9!Xhrorkers were told in June that they would
be laid off Within a year as production ended. The rest
?f the work fooce would be phased out by 2006.
Richardson said Friday that the development of a
gas centrifuge technology to enrich uranium for
nuclear reactor fuel will allow the Piketon plant to stay
open and, along with its sister plant in Paducah, Ky.,
compete in the energy market.
"I'm here to say you have job security and the nation
will continue to have energy security;' Richardson said
to the applause of several hundred workers at the Piketon plant. "You were there for us when we won rhe
.. Cold War, now we're going to pay you back."
The shut down '""uld have had an enormous
impact on the already depressed economy of southern
Ohio.
"It's a great boost for o~r morale." said Julie Gaiun,
37, an 11-year. plant emplo)"'&lt;.
The Clinton adnumsrraoon plan calls for kecpmg
the P1keton plant in a "standby" mode and eventually
employing centrifuge technology there.
Gas centrifuge once was the government's top
· ·choice for replacing the 1940s-era gaseous diffusion
process used at Piketon and Paducah. The new tech,nology uses only a fraction of the energy

Mason County Airport receives $463,086 for improvements
FROM STAFF REPORTS

WHEELING, W.Va . - The
West Virginia Aeronautics Commission has approved a request
of S463,086 for improvements
and upgrades at the Mason
County Airport.
According to Benjamin E
Roush , fixed base operator of
the Mason County airport, the
request was approved during the
commission's meetmg on Oct.

5.
Roush ottended the meeting
on behalf of the Mason County Commission at the Wheeling-Ohio County Airport .
The scope of the project, as ·
outlined, would build a parallel
taxiway approximately 1, I 00
feet to runway 25 at the Mason
County Airpor~ The airport is
located just off W.Va. 62, about
three miles north of Point
Plemnt .
In addition, the airport lighting 1ystem will be rehabilitated.
P.:ou!h ui&lt;l the curre nt lighting
system i! flawed due to age md
normal ~ttrition.
Rolllh nid the proj~ct will
greatly enhance safety and provide for easier a"e11 to the
runway fo; a larger aircraft.
"The lighting system has
been in need of renovation for
some time," Roush said. "At

times, airtraft have been prevented from landing due to the
failure of lights to respond when

Roush said.
The total cost of the project
will be $463,086. Of this
amount, 90 percent will come
from AlP fund which are set

aside fron1 avia tion fuel taxes,
passenger fares, etc.
The West Virginia Aeronautics
Commission funds 5 percent
and the local share is 5 percedt.

requested."
Acco rding to Roush, during
peak times, the parallel taxiway ,..----:-:-:-------------------~
will
allow
for
more
takeoff( landing opportunities
without compromising safery.
"One of major benefits of the
project is that it will allow
!
Mason Counry to become more
competitive in the industrial
development of the cou nty,"

LET• ON
SCHOOL ..
FALL FESTIVAL

SATURDAY
OCTOBER 2·8t~ .--~~
p.m. - 9:00 p.

ALL At

PPHS homecoming court

Energy Department plan would
-offset uranium plant layoffs

top I 0 occupaoons, havmg the highest projected growth rate until 20SJ6.
Electronic Commumcation Sy-;tems and Business/Computer Tei;hnology, taught by Shook and Detty, are Tech Prep programs designed to
train workers to fill th1s mformation technology workforce shortage.

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Lentes
from Page AI

)las maintained since the case first
·began, that Lentes did not provide
accurate records as to what property was seized and how it was
disposed of
In his notice, Crow said that
Lentes has "failed repeatedly . to
satisfy the court's o rders to
account for vast amounts of property confiscated and controlled by

: the state."
Le.n tes has maintained that
those records were included in a
' discovery response filed in the
• case months ago.
Hundreds of vehicles, farm
: equipment , livestock, jewelry and
: real property were seized in 1999

The lay&lt;:)f!S, planned as a cosr-curting move by the
the plants, had raised concerns about
company that
maintaining the nation's supply of enriched uranium
and about a program that salvages uranium from former
Soviet warheads and rurns it into ~u;l for power plants.
The centrifuge technology was abandoned when
the Energy Department determined that laser technology \vas the wave of the future . However, Y"ars of testing raised questions about whether laser technology
would work in commeocial production.
US.Emichment Corp., the private company now in
charge of the government's nuclear fuel production.
subsequently said it was negotiating to · acquire the
Andrea
Williamson,
rights to the classified centrifuge technology.
escorted
by
Kyle
Morris Brown, general manager of the Piketon
Roach , was crowned
plant, said that planned layoffs would be offSet by the COURT- The Point Pleasant · High School homecoming court included, left to 2000 PPHS homecomneed for workers to keep the plant on standby, prepare · right: . Shandalia Meadows, Mandy Utterback, Andrea Will iamson , Tiffany Bar- ing queen· during Friday
for the centrifuge operations or clean up Cold War-era nette, Lindsey Scarberry and Kila Meadows . Escorts, left to righ t, . are Joe night's halftime break
contamination of the site.
Doeffinger, Heath Dalton . Kyle Roach , Ryan Herdman, .Scott Thornton and Brett at the Point vs. Warren
The - Energy Department sa id its Oak Ridge Doeffinger. The crown bearer and flower girl. pictured front, are Michael Musgrave · footbal l game. (Dan
Polcyn photos)
National Laboratory in Tennessee will manage the cen- and Rylee Sayre.
trifuge project and dcvdop the technology, which
could L1ke five Y"ars. A building at Piketon would be ·
refurbished to house the dl:'monstralion project within
a year of its development.
USEC said in June it was going to shut Piketon am!
AI
upgrade the Paducah plant over the next several ycm
because high costs n1Jde it impractical to continue pro- "1-192," w h1ch st:~.rrl'd (;l!rarcl
duction at both plants, which were operating at only 25 Depardieu . Its voyage from R.io
·Uno. Valcnc a to Costa H..1ca,
percent of capacity.
where th e mo~ie w;ts fil111 ed, represents the first time that a dis"(Lentes) docs not assent to covery caravel rcplic:J has made a
during the drug case investigation
successful, unescorted open oc ~an
by state and local agencies, but as the appointment of a special prosp assa~e of any considerab le disthe result of the settlement of the ecmor,'' £he prosecutor said in hi s
taJKe.
civil lawsuit filed by the Priddys, Friday response. "Further factual
A small admission fee is being
most of the personal property was and legal issues shall be raised in charged to offset the touring cos ts
to be sold to satisfy their state and future filings in this matter once of the sh1p. Price' are S4 fo r
the Ohio Supreme Court acts on
federal tax liens.
ad ults , $3.50 for sen ior citizens,
The county was to retain only the ·previously filed affidavit."
and $3 for students. Children
Lentcs said that he was not
Polly, of the Karat Patch Diamonds-N-Gold,
the 70 acres of real estate near
under 4 arc admitted free. Guided
allowed, by law, to ctnnment on
Rutland, Lentes said in July.
located at the Ohio River Plaza, welcomes
30-minute tours can be arranged
In his most re cent notice, the documents · filed with the for groups of IS or more.
you to stop by and see our new selection of
Crow gave Lentes until Friday Ohio Supreme Court until the
T he Nm a's next scheduled
A. I. Root Candles.
afternoon to request a special higher court rules on the matter. stop wi ll be furth er up the Ohio
These quality candles come in colors and
However, he said in his
prosecutor. or said h e would
River in Marietta. Eventually, a
response that Crow has no
fragrances to suit everyone.
appoint one him self
transatlantic · voyage to retra ce
authority
''to
pre
side
in
these
pro••failure of the prosecutor £0
Columbus' seco nd journey to the
· request a hearing shall be con- ceedings until the ChiefJustice of New World will be undertaken.
"Double Your Romance
strued as his assent . to the the Supreme .Court rules on the
The Co lumbus Fo{.ndation
or warm Your Home"
appointment of a special prosecu- affidavit flied by the state."
operates a website dedicated to
Crow, meanwhile, refused to
tor, and the court shall proceed
the ship , www.thenina.cmn.
comn1enton
the matter on Friday,
forthwith to call a grand jury into
session and appoint a special prm- and as of 4 p.m., had not flied further paperwork in the cJse . .
ecutor;· Crow wrote .

OACHE
from Page AI
Keynote speaker is Dr. Robert
Lawson , noted educational consultant and public speaker.
O ther speake rs include Willett;
Dr. Lawrence Dukes, president of
Southern State Commun ity Col:· [ege; Dr. Barry Dorsey, pre sident
· . t&gt;f Rio Grande; Or. C harles Bird,
• ;,ice president for regional high er
_education, Ohio University; Dr.
~: 3ames Bryant, past vice president
~: Tor regional higher education at
::.OU ; Dr. Joe Bukowski, president
: • ~ f Belmont Technical College;
:: br. James Chapman, preSident of
~: :Shawnee State University;
~: • Bob Evans, e ntrepreneur and
member of the Ohio
of Regents; Suzanne
::fJitz&gt;~er&lt;•ld, dean of Kent State
:-t.Jniversit]r-E,ast Liverpool; Dr. Ed

runs

. Florak, past president of Jefferson .
Community College; Dr. Jane
Full erton, director of education
initiatives and grant devdop1.nent,
Oh io Board of Regents; Dr.
Elaine Hairston, former chancellor of the Board of Re ge nts; Dr.
Laura Meeks, president of Jefferson Commun ity College; Dr.
Carson Miller, president of\~hsh­
ington State Community Gallege ; Dr. Wilham N api er. special
assis tant to the president for government relations, Ohio State:
University; and Dr. C live Ver i.
former Shawnee State president.
All are form er or current
OACHE board members.
An Appalachian crafts fair, open
to th e public, is set for 11 a.m.
until2 p.m. on Oct.10 as an addition to conference activiti es. The
fair, also held on the Rio Grande
campus, is open to the pubhc and
will include, among other items, a
. quilter, a s£one carver, a spi nner, a

Nina·

from Page

weaver and music by the Bluegrass Pi ckers .
The Bluegrass Pickers will perform a song, demonstrate their
instrun1ents and explam the origins of the songs.
Confer~nce 1nvitations h ave
been mailed to all K-12 schools
in a 29-county Ohio Appalachia~!
re gion . as wt'll as K- I 2 sc hools in
West Virginia. For inforq1anon,
contact 13apst at -24Sc7411.

CD 81. Cassette, leather and Cloth
Interiors, Very Low Mites

$16 900 ,

sTARTING
FROM
.

Grand
Silver

Elect

~\!7@

,

County

6unbap -Gttme~ 6tnttnel

I

t

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our mala toncern In allstorle~ Is to be
ucunte. If you know of an error In 1
stoey, coli the neworoom 1t (740) 4-46·
:IJ4l or Pomeroy: (740) 99l-l155. We will
check Your laformaUon and make a
correction If warnnted.

+
"·

Ooportrnonlo
Golllpollo
The · ••In aamber lo ~~6·130.
NIIWI

Oepartmal extentlons are:
M•n•lll•l Edltor ....................... ExL 118
City Edltor-..............,_,, ........... Ext. Ill
ur.,trle......... :............................ ExL 110
Sporti ...................................... ExL Ill
New1 ............................................ ExL 119
To S.nd E-Mail
pltribune@elnk.anet.wm
Nowo

The

'

main

tuportment

Pomaray
number Is

992·2155.

Department exlenslons are:
General M•n.,.r ............- ..... EMt.IIOI
News ............:............................. Ext. II Ol
................................................ or E1t 1106

or
1997 GMC Jimmy
4 Doors, 4x4, Well Equipped

$15,900

White with Taupe Lea.therlnterior, CD a.nd
CiU~Sette,

Low Miles,

Condition

1999 Pontiac
Bonnevillle
Aluminum Wheels, Beige, CD, Low Miles,
Ex:pe.ct The Bestl

Residents from Holzer Senior Care Center

T
WAS

s1 9.goooo

$20,900

(lisPs 113-UO)

s15 90

WAS

Ohio.·
Entered u accond dus mallln&amp; mauer at
n~

7

the Ohio

POSTMASTER: Send addresa concctlonl to The

Sunday-Timu

Sentln£1, 82!1 Third
Ga!llpollt,Dhlo 4!1631.
SUNDAY ONLY
SUISCillmON RATES

Ave .,

By Curler or Motor Route

One Wcet. .... ,...... ,........................'........... ,....... S1.25

One Yoar ............ ............... ,.................. ......... S6S.OO
SINGLE COPY PRICE

~~l¥rl·p·ti;·bf··~·~·i·i ·~·~~i·n~d..i;·;;;~·!~~

home C1rrlc1 Kr¥ke b anllable.
The Sunday Tlmcs·ScniiMI will not be.ruponslbl'
for advance p~ymen11 made 10 canlcn.
Pubtilhcr reacrves tile rl&amp;hl 1o adjuat ratu durin&amp;
the aubJctlptlon period. Subscription rate chanJa
may be lmplrmcnted by chan&amp;in&amp; the duration of
the subscriptio n
Dall1tad Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Jnlldt Galli• County
IJ Wcclu .
. , .. .... . ..
... $27 .30
26 WeeK.!! .......... , ..................................... $53.82
52 Weeks ................................................... Si05.56
· Ratu Oullldt Gallla County
JJ Weeki.................................................... $29.25
26 Weckl .......................................... ,............ $56.68
52 WceU .................................................. $109.72

..

Holzer Senior Care Center visited the Amish
Creek and Bertin, Ohio. The day was spent
.,.tt::., touring an Amish home and eating a family
tlrrae
CJll •

00

1999 Pontiac

1997 Buick Park Avenue

Company. 5t(\Ond clw posOI&amp;e paid 11 Oallipollt,

.

$16,900"

C0111•••1tJ Ntw1111per Hokll1111, lac.

P~bliahed tvery Sunday, 8l!l Thlrd Ave.;'
Oall!pollt. Ohio, by the Ohio Valle~ Publishlna

Pomeroy, Ohio P011 om«.
Me•btn The Auoclatr:d Prea1,
Newspaper Alloclttlon.

.,

.Avere.Qe Miles, CD Player. Tilt,
Cn.tise:, Power Windo'W's ·

1998 Ruick
Park Avenue

LYSKILLED IN THE ART OF CARING"

~

...J''""'~

Wins honor
: GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Bill Harnetty of Gallipolis, an instructor in
.Hocking College's back country horsemanship program, was among five
_instructors honored for excellence during a recent statl) development
week luncheon.
' Others who were honored included Kathy Garza of Bremen, nursing;
:Neil Hinton of Logan, drafting and design; Gail Jordan of Athens, indus·trial ceramics; and Tom Landusky of Columbus, culinary arts.
: Each award winner received $1,000 and a plaque, and will have· the
,...,._
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iiunbal' ~imr&amp; -&amp;rntintl• Page A3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Montana Wagon
·

Duet Air, Rear Audio,
Extra Nice

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Page A~

Sunda~~ober8, 2000

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

iounb•p Ol:imrl ·&amp;rntiad • Page A5

•

•

Octobarl,

junba)J trimts • 'ttditttl
'Esmb6slid 111 1948
825 Tl'Mrd Av .. , ~"poU•. Ohio

111 Court St., PorMro,, Ohio

7.&amp;C).44&amp;.2S42 • Fu: 148 3008

7160-992-2151 • Fax: "2-2157.

Ohio Valley

Pu~lishing c:;:{

Vaughans

Lf-6% SaiD THeY'D

RaTHeR Be Ki$$eP SV

AL 6oRQ, coMPaReo"1"o
' 43% W~ 'D PRefeR
'Tc ~Ki$-;;eD B'l{
Gtec:&gt;RGe W. 6USH••·

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
·
R·. Shawn Lewis

Managing Edhor

Larry Boyer
Advotrtlslng Director

\

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

f

Urun ru Ill• nlilor tuT wlcorrWJ. TlwJ JIW.,ld IH lfon 111411 JOO ...on&amp;. A.U Idlers un 111b,J«I
l&amp; Mili111 fUUI """' ksiftlltll al'lll ii'U:ltuMISdtlrr:u IIJ!alt,kpfto"' 11umber. No
kntn wiU
h" ldlisMd.lAU.Cn sho111d be in grHNI UnU, lllidnssinr issvn, IWl penwt.JitKs.
Thll ()plnWttr rxprrurd in rJu ["OIMmn ~lowtur !llll COIIJI'II!IIJ of lhll Ohio )'o-lkJ Publish if~~

""'iK"''

Co.'s

niilurn~l#Nard,

11nWn uthll,...isr twiN.

Safe kids
Laws need to rfjlect
protection at bus stops
• T h e Flor ida Times-Union, 011 sexual, prcdarM.' m1d sc/i,1,1J f,u_,
Parents hav~ e no u~h on their minds rh elie days wirhour hJving
to won der if a convicted "iexual pred:uor lives at their ch ild's bus
stop.
But there's rea&lt;&gt;o n for concer n: No law s t"xist to help prt:Vt"nt the
possibili ty.
... Sexual pre d:uor i ~ :1. court-designated term that .lppli~:s to 2.J02
Floritlia m co nvi cted of tht' most heinous sex crm1es. Fl onda also has
17 ,572 sexual o tlen dt"fs convicted o fles~e r c nme~ .
Preda tor~ .md otft• nd e r~ who lrc out of j ail must n::gister with
Juthoritirs within 48 hours of moving to an Jrea. By law, authoritil's
must notifY communines .1bout sexual predarors (a lthough not "t'Xual otTendas). All (Lty -cJre ce nters. publi c and priv::Ite sc hools withIn a mile also must bt· co nt,1cted.
Bus stop~ Jren 't coJmde rt:"d m the law. After being told of th e Fort
M yen case.'. ~t:l tt" Sen . Ji m H orne o f Orange Park vowed to sponsor
J. bill designL·d to fi :x th,it pro blem. H o rn e's proposal must still be
1roned ou r..
Regardle'\S, Horn e 11, o n rhe nght tr:1c k. Jacksonville school otEc..: ials J o not ch ec k th~: proximity of bus sto ps to ~~x ual predators a'i
.l, prdctice .... Of co urse, no Ia\\' can guarantee that a sexua1 .prcdator
woll't harm another child. A predator .. cou ld drive to a bm SlOP
from miles away or abduct a child as he walks home.
... Besides. the No.1 job ·of any school district is to protect its stud e nts.
•
T h e Herald, E vere tt, Wash., 011 t/1&lt;· First Amendment: ... In
Washington state, there is a law from the '60s titled tht' Scenic Vistas
·Act (SVA). which controls signs visibl e from certain state roads and
highways , even if the '\ igns arc posted on private prope'rty.
Monroe rt"si dent D ave King ran across that law when he posted
three signs on h1s rented property. nght next to U.S. 2. For King, the
signs are a fornl. offTee speech, which together read, "Caution: Srare
Sponsored Hwy of Death:·
To the Department ofTramponacio n, the 'i lgns aR· a violation of
the SVA and sho uld be remO\d .The SVA is in place for several rea'iOns, but not necessar ily for restricting frec .spcech. With our it, ad vertisers could post a :-,igu on public property (or pay n:sidents to post
s1gns o n pnvate propert)l) and the h1ghways would be li tterc·J with
di·s rracring ads - hardly v.rhat we n ~ed on already dangerous
stretches of highway.
But must \Ve really ~tifle citizens' sign.;;, poswd 0 11 privatt: property, that are 'i imple, L'asy to read an CI (Seem ingly) hardl y di-;tracting?
There ~re plenry of billboards aligning bmy .;;tn.·et'i rh ar have more
word .... picturl's ,md distracting qnaliti r.:'i tlun th e '\h(i rt ph ra~e d ecorati ng thest' ~ 1mple yd low an d bl~ck signs.
Bm the DOT is sti ckin g tO the law and hJ~ turned the case ove r
to th e ~tate Attorney "Gcneral\ officl'. ... King has received a letter
from the DOT. warding him that he could be fin ed up to $1,11011 per
day the s1gm rcm.un posted....
It\ a sha me ,that the DOT deci ded it needed to crack down on
t ~ i s private l iti zen .... The state Department offransp o rtation sho uld
spend more time tackling pertinent i'is Ue'&gt; - like decrea~ing rhe
number o f traffic ac(idents o n U.S. 2 - rather than bullying resi· dent~ for har mles'i ofTen~e'i ....

TOD AY I N HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
1
'-

:· Today IS Sunday. Oct. H, the 2H2nJ Lh y of21liiii.T here .lfe H4 Jay'
kft in the ye,lr. The Jcwi'ih Day of AtoncnH'nt, Yom K1ppur, begms
~t su nset.
: To day's Highlight 111 History:
; On Oct. H; l H71, the Grea t Chicago Fire c:ruptl'd v..'h ile another
lleadly blaze broke o ut in Peshtigo, Wi s.
: On thi s date:
In 1869, the 14th prosident. Franklin Pierce, died 1r1 Concord,
N .H.
In 1 H91 ), Am~ncat1 ,\VLltlo n hero Eddtt' R.1ekc:nbacka was born in
Columbu,. Ohio.
In I ') I H. Sb~· Alvm C York ,tlmost si nglc-han dedly killed 2'i German -;oldiers and (aptureJ 1J2 m the Argonne Forest tn France.
In I Y34, Bruno H auptnMnn wa~ indt cteQ for murdn 111 th~.· dcJth
of t h ~.: infant \Oil of (Jurlt:.., A. Lindbngh .
In 1944, ''The Advencurn o:f0z7ie and Harrier" mad-.: ,i c~ debut
on CU' lta J 10.
· lu 1945. Prt::,iJentTruman announceJ that tht: '1C:Lfl't oft hl· .tcornLC bomb would .be ~han:;d only with Brit3111 and Can ~d,1.
In 1956. Don Lar'ien pncht&gt;d the only perti:ct gallle in a World
Ser ie.s to date a' the New York Yankees be,Jt the llrooklyn I )oJgm,
2-U.

I

In 1970, Sov1e~ ,Juthor Akxander Solzhcmt.-.yn w.1s n.1111ed w inm;r
of the Nobel Prize for htt"rJture.
In 19H2, all labor organiz:;mom 111 PoL1nd. mclud111g ..,ohtLmry.
were b:mned.
In I '1~5. the hija ckers of the lraha n.cruJSL' sl11p A&lt; hdlc I .1urn killed
Ameri can pa'i~cngc.:r L~:on Khnghoftl·r
Jt&gt;n ye~ro; ago: Israeli police op('nt.!d tin.: on nor111g Pall'~tmi,lll'i on
the Tcmph: Mt)llnt m Jermalcm. kililng J 7

October 8th ·- October 14th

Dick ana Ruby vaughan woula like to take this time to thank you~
th.e customer., for aoing business with us for the last ZZ years.
Thanlcs for letting us serve your neeas in the past and we are
looking forward to taking care of your grocery ana
catering needs in the future.

NATIONAL VIEWS.

~-h,p.s:

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O -UR READER'S VIEWS

2) The pro secutor indicated in court that:
induct&gt; delivery if the mother's life wa s 111
dan ge r' T he baby wou ld he born alive from he was not going to prosecu te Pr iddy fo(:
any other crimes. Even murde r.
.
~::
a C-st·ction.
Dea r Editor :
3) The pro~ecuror, in exc h an,ge for asset~
Let\ not confuse the issue . Mr. Wise. Th e
We, the H o lzer Hosp ital School of Nursagreed
to not prose-cute Pr iddy and others .~:
intt·nt
of·
the
r~uti3l
birth
abortion
is
to
ing Ckm of I 1J50, want to publtdy thank
dclivcr a ckad baby. Th ert' is no need to (.'O I 4) According to the prosecuto r, s"om eo n~
Ho lzer Medi cal Center CEO Charb L
Iapse the sku ll by mbbmg th&lt;' baby in th e . bought 1.000 cJrs for $47 each. Does til)
Adkins Jr., Down Halstead, Apr il McLain,
ba ck of th e hea d J n ~ "'u cking our its brains paper k now w ho bough t them, what
Borlllit' Mc Farland and Mr1ri annc Campbt' ll
to expedite delivery. The inten t of the late- bought. h ow he was selected, o.,vho set t~
an d all othns who had a pJrt in making our
ccrm abortion procedure parrial birr:h pri ce ind under whose law co u ld the pros~
50th a n niva s;~ry so ~pec i .d .
;....;,
abortion - is t o prevent the "oops" ~l div ­ cu ter se ll them?
~
It wa' fu nny that W S/\Z - TV announced 1t
cry.
D oes anyone out there want to kn~:
rhat morning on th e t•a rl y n ews an d rh e hmTh e ''oopo;;" de livt·ry i"i one where th e what the other poli tical allegations were? ·t;'
'
pital switc hboard was j;Immcd with call:-,
J bo rti o ni ~ t h.ts delivered the child exce p t
T he paper certain ly does not wane yo u ~
until noo n . '' If there \ ,t n ur'i t's'tc: uniou, \\·hy
·
)::
th e h ead &lt;1 nd i'i preparing to ki ll her. when kn ow.
wasn't I invited ?"
rhe moth er gives on e bi g... pmh and the head
· Robert Snowd-'4
The bufTer and welcoming program \\'J.'i so
'
pops out. Now, the abortionist h as a living
R utla~
in fopn&lt;~ l , it lll:ldc m feel at homt·. Havi u g
chi ld in his arm s. and he says, " Oops."
.,.,.,
Mrs. Cha rles 1: . Hol zer Jr. there to accept
So Congressm an W ise's amendment has
our class gift o f the Footprints plaque was
.•.'
no m ~: di cal validity. The aim of the parcial
••
·n ice. Nice to S(..'e her looki ng so young and
birth abortion is to kill a late-term chil,d D e a r E ditor:
~
pretty.
not save lii s/ hcr moth er.
I j ust wanted to say to M r. Lemes, C h ucDawn gave a tour of th e h ospital, the ER
SO w hen you hear Bob Wis e making Knight an d M r. Crow, wh at goes arou nd alsO,;
Department, OB suite, pediatr ics and the
excuses about the reason hl· voted for co n - co mes aro u nd.
~
cardiac cath f..1cility were except iona l. The
tin uing partial b irth abortion - just say
R emem b er the d ea l yo u three m ade wic~
de partnlt'nt p eno nn cl explained special
"C) ops " - t h ats
' not n~ h t.
Mr. Kayser in the Will iam LeMaster case~
things. All ove r then: wen: signs of a stafr
B etty Stover That wa~ an election year, too .
::
rhM took p ri d e in their work, appearance
Point Pkasa nt
I do n 't blame :iny of you for p utting
Jnd su r roundin~l'ii.
Willtam Hl pri son for setting up a d rug deaf~
A big tha"k yo u to the Gallipolis loca l golf
but what you three hid from the j ury wo ul~
club that pick e d up th e chec k for our lu nch.
h av&lt;: made a great c hange in the mind of rh e
We had a tour of the '·old Holzer H ospiD ea r E dito r :
Jury toward William.
.
.:
-tal" on Fi rst Avt:nuc . It hJd been rcnovatcJ
T he fim re hearsal of the Big Bend ComSo . w hat goes aro un d will com e badt·
to apartment housmg.,but parts still looked
mumty Banq for this f&lt;dl season wi ll be Oct. aru u nJ . Seve n years is abouc right. It 's li ~:
fa miliar. Like the old Elt. And lookms up to 0 from 7 to R:30 p.m. in the Meigs H igh
the itch.
· ..~:
tht: second floo r w h ere a con fu sed patient Sc h ool band room. We reh earsc ever Mo n'
Anna M . LeamoJMt:
once hung; by his ha n d~ from the sill w h ilt: d,ty evening, cxccpt for tht' fi rst Monday of
Po m er&lt;St.
we as .swd ent llurse-; begged him not to c:1ch m onth. Roge r Wi ll i,m1s of Middleport
·~··
j ump. H e let go :1nd landed in the bushe'i will tak c ov1.:r the con d u ctor's durin thi'\
~·
bd o\v. We got a strl'tci in an d rushed hi111 to year.
••
the Elt , what' he w,1s fOund to be only
The nthcr band members .md I, along
Dear E ditor :
·:·
b ruio;e J.
with M r. Williams, would like to in vitc :1 !1
The most impo rtant issue facing oii
In th ~: ~:vc.:n in ~, a weiner ro:1st wao;; pbnm:J rt•~o.idenr~ of the M e igs-Ma so n area, tet·nage r-;
nation is th e moral decline ,
.':
on rhe rivnbank. I n d t: ml~nt \\'e ather droVl' co !&gt;.enior citizcm, to jo in m. ·Community
Tlw most important cause of this decli~
us mside at Barb;lr,J Nu ll \ hou se. With the Uand mc mbns art· a very divn'ii.' group.
is hard core pornography that is flooding o~
linens. o;; il vcr. go urnH:t fi:lOd :md live enter- Th ere arc h i ~h sc ho ol stu dt'nts an d ~evcra l hom t~s anJ co mm uni ties. Our federll
tainment, it wa' a ditTerr.: nt l'Vt'n t . Of courst:. retired m en ~m d wom e n , :1nd iu bcnvce n ,
obscenity laws are not being enfo rcedi
Mr. and Mn . Ur&lt;1 ndeberr y and othero;; in pen.Qn:-, of t'Vl:r agt•.
Ohscc nc mater ials are n ot protec ted speectf:i
tow n. wil l tdl you th ."H Barb \Va"i a co,1ch ro
I know then· ctre folk'\ o ut thCre who
The harm done is showi p g up in fa iled
M arth a Stewart.
pbyeJ in their high 'ichnol hand " and would marriages, sex u al use of children rape sexu~
Atte ndin g \vcrc Claribel Tho m a~ Hert·n- lib: to be abk to play in a band again. Hctc.: 's all y tr:unm itted diseas t·s , unwed ~o th ~rs an~
stt· in. Anna Jc.u1 M m.: hcll Ba kcr, Kate W:tlt en that ch:111 ce. Get that in stru me nt o ut o f tht·
abo rtwn s.
~·
Tuttlt·. jane Stcbb1m l'l'lffa. Marga Hamil - close t or borrow it back from your 'iO n or
Our co untry will ris e or fall, as ot ht{;
ton Smith, Becky Allman Cro\V, Joa nn t.:
daughtn and co m e to rehearsal M o nJay cou ntrie s have in the past, by the decline
HaywouJ Whitchcad, Ehna Fredcrici cvenin p:. Student"i, if vo u 'd lik...· a cha nce to its morals.
•:
Houck. Ann I )c~ughn t v Landrum , Ali ce play in another b,md .'yuu come, too~
Wm e to Mr. Bush and M r. Gore and asR
C:tdl c Beaver, Nnri11..1 j~·,1 n Hann a Smith,
La rge inst rum t·nts and pt~rcussion equl p- them for their views on this subject.
::·
La ura Dexter I hvi~, Wand.1 Koe hl er I !.tin e~, 111l'IH will be av~11bblc. D o n 't worry ,tbollt
M r. Albert Gore. 2410 Charlotte Av;;·
Mary Ann l're.,ton \X/~menon, lhrhan Waltt:r bc1ng out of pract ice. Rehearsab are easygo- N ashvill e, Ten n . 372113.
•
Null, Donn a .Jc.ln Br ur lto n In galls, Wan da ing and friendly, an d you' ll gt·t back 111 shap ~:
Mr. George llush , PO. Box 1902, Ausiii;:
Spmluck H es' an d M;~ry M cDamel Martin. before you knov.· it. ·Mo st·of all, we love to Texas 78767 - 1Y02.
:.
I )d o re~ Wykk Pt•rkaLJ and . Ern c'itiu e Cor- make mmic and have fun d o ing Jt .
Evil wi11s because goo d peop le do notif~
win Spricgel &lt;~rc dccea-,nl. 1
For quc~cion~ or m ore infor mati o n , ca ll ing.
.• :
M.M. Martin m e &lt;Jt Y1J2-7536.
Mr. and Mn. James L. Davis(p
If you an: ·,t former h md mc:mba and h ave
Galli poiji
\O IIl l' 111 mi c, we 'd like to hJvc it back. D rop
it o ff at th e band room o r ca llm ~: to arrange
a pick-up.
'
Dear Editor:
I l:opL' wt''ll ~L·e many of you on Monday '
Dear Editor :
•
~
·Uoh Wt'it' h.t'i l'Oil\1'\te ntl y voted agaim r t'\'l'lllllg.
All of a su dd en, as he see ks th e pteSJdenc¥,
the abortto n pru cnlurc that Jeliven ,1 chi ld .
Jeanne Bowen AI Gore has discove red "se ni or citizens" a~
&lt;Ill yxct:pr the he-ld , \Vh ic h 1~ tht:n st.tbbed
Syrarmc is wooing ·t heil' vote with his words. Worcb
,1n J tht· br.1 in'i ~ucl.-cd ou r in order ro ki ll d1e
of Soc ial Sec urity and Medi ca re refornz,
chdd.
pn..:sc npti o n dr ug (OSt rdicf, et. a!., ad nattOops, rhen we hc cw Bob Wise say1ng hc
SC ll!ll.
~
, voted fOr an "anH..:Jid rit cnr'' rh:1r wou ld pro Dear Editor:
Yt:t, in truth , for th e past seven years
. cect the life of th e moth er.
.1 hi ~ letter co nce rn s Bri &lt;lll J. R l'cd's covn- AI has been sdent while squatting in hill
In &lt;.,omc cJse' of toxemia of prcgn ;mcy :tnd .tgc of th e ~p p oi n t m cnt of a o,;pt~LI:li pro~~l""\.1 - White House office d'o ing noching- ·noth:.
severe di ,1bc:tic ni~i~. a ba by i'i Jdiwred prc- wr.
1
mg. th at is. except se lling overni ght lodging
m;Hurcly. Tht'l Jdn-r:ry 1~ not an abortiou.
ll.tsJCally, Mr' Reed's art icl e s.1id th,lt the 111 the Lmcoln bedroom to the highest bid:Wh:n\ imporr~IIH l'i dut these occur J'n the judge m;Ike.;, 16 .lllcgacions of (Lt'ntL'"' ') (Oil- der, ~olicitmg fumh from the Holl ywoo;l
thm.l trime'\h:r wh cn the haby 1.., mu;li ly wrll duct .111d pm~ible cri m inal off~.:mco;;. T hl' bJI- ,lJJd n~L·cba clitt·. ai:d , o h yes, negotiatinJ
enoug:h dcvelnpl·d to be able w \un·tve.
.mcc of the ;1rt1clc tht•n o.;;~y~ that tht: JUdge ~ ~ c.unpo11gn contn buuons from tht: Buddhi~
In rht"i c.1 ~c. the o;cp:LrMion df tilL' b,tby · pohtJ cally mOtiV,ltcd in nuklllg tin, knm\ 11. nuns 111 C.1li tOrnu, :-tn d Ch1nc:se governmcrk
fro JII tlw 111otha I' ,111 ernergency nh..'.1'1Urt·
Something J\ wrung \\ nh . ri!J., prcturL'. otfi cial~ from Uciji ng.
~
to ~top till.' JII.Iternal tktl'fior.llion ..~o proWhy I"~ the Judgl' the b,ad guy? Wlur wt·r~·
A~ to se ntor Clttzcn issues during thot
lifer J'&gt; ag;lill\1 thJ'I.
th t· ,dlq.!;;ltiom? Wnuld 1hc rL'dd)r' h e lllt~.:r­ p~1 st 'il'VC II yearll 1 \Vt' ht·ard " not a peep fro4I
In the.· rri~ I " CI'-e\, rill' lll t.:r hod of dell very t'\ted to know 'Ollll' uf thc111 ?
r1
tht' Vl'~p ." Phoncv!
•
l"~ not thc ~,Ifill' ,\.., in p.uuJI birth &lt;l honior{ .
1) The prowcut6r p ,ud the ddl•lltLlnt'~
Bob M u rp'?'
Wh,lt donor would take th ree day'i to $1 'i.IJOII tine.
·Vinton

Saying thanks

~'R&amp;&amp; et»te&amp;'R7

,,

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DEE. &amp; DALLAS
LIVE SATURDAY OCT. 21ST 5:00-8:00 P.M.
-

(J/,uckwa90#f, ~~; $~ poialo ~~4 g

lmluui kaM $3.00 /;z.om. 4:00 iG 7:00

U.S.D.A. Assorted

PORK
CHOPS

...

c

.

.........

Band swings again

P.[J~Jfk •

On Vaughans Parking Lot

Ji!i

It comes around

j

Lb.

BCIIIards

Fresh Chicken
'D rumsticks or Thighs

PORK SAUSAC:E

c

1 LB ROLL

LB.

Russet

POTATOES

....

Important rssue

•••

i»

Dairy Charm

Deli Sliced

ICE CREAM

BOILED HAM

s · sg

c

LB.

1/2
GALLON

. ~

...•.
.•.
'

Not a peep

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Roundys

BROCCOLI CUTS

&lt;

2/S

Omitting details

a;:

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12 OZ. PKG

12 OZ. PKG

408 General Hartinger Par.l atvay
Middleport. ~hio
992~3471

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-Page A6 • •unbal' ltimr• - ~ntinrl

John Z. Dillon
Allen Edward Ball

PROCTORVILLE - U.S. Air Force Col. (retired) John Z . Dillon,
70, Washington, D.C., formerly of Proctorville, died Friday, Oct. 6,
2000 in Washington.
Born Jan. 29, 1930, he W2S the son of the late Floyd and Garnet Dillon.
Surviving are his wife, Hden Dillon; two sons, John Dill~n and Greg
Dillon, both ofWashington; a daughter, Kristen Stinson ofVirginia;
three grandchildren; and a sister, Eloise Singer Shaver.
He was also preceded in death by a son, David Dillon. .
Serv1ces will be Monday in Washington. Burial will be in Arlington
National Cemetery. Local arrangements are by Hall Funeral Home, ·
Proctorville.

POMEROY - Allen Edward Ball. 98, 32734 Highland Road,
Pomeroy, d1ed Thursday, OC!. 5, 2000 in Rockspring; Rehabilitation
Center, f'omeroy.
Born Oct. 23, l '101 in Pratts Fork, son of the late Leonard and
Em.eta Dains Ball, he was a retired carrier for the U.S. Postal Service.
Sumvmg are a son, Edward (Hazel) Ball of Pomeroy; a daughter,
R1ta lew" of Pomeroy; four stepchildren, linda (Jeff) Workman of
C~rpenter, Bdrbaril/ Stahl and Charles (Lon) Sprouse Jr., both of Middleport ,. and W1lliam (Maria) Sprouse of Wallingford, Conn.: three
grandchildr,·n and three great-graudchildren : and a number of stepgrandchildren and step-great-grandchildren .
COLUMBUS - . Eva Mae Johnson , 94, Columbus, formerly of
He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Ada Bails Ball; his
Meig;
County. died Friday, Oct. 6, 2000 at Laurels ofWorthingtbn . .
seco nd Wife. Freda Warner Ball; his son-in-law, Frank lewis; and a
\tepd1lighra and a stepson.
She was a member of the Bradbury Church of Christ. She was a
retired
sales clerk for F &amp; R Lazarus Co.
Serv1 n" mU be I p.m. Monday in Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
She is survived by her great-niece,Anelle M cClosky; great nephews,
Bunal Will be Ill Asbury Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home._~ tm111 6-9 'p.m . Sunday.
Thomas and Paul Headley; and many gr&lt;at-gneat nieces and greatgreat nephews. and great-great-great nieces and great-great-great
nephews.
.
She was preceded m death. by her ~usband, leland E. Johnson , a
Thomas Anderson ;,and a mter, Myrtle Comstock.
brother.
C ROW N C ITY - Ann.1 Mac Fulks. HI&gt;. C rown Cit\·. died SaturServices will be 11 a.m . Monday in Rutherford Funeral Home, 2383
d.ly. &lt;.)n. i. 2000 in Hol?e r Mcdic 1l Ccnt('r.
·
·
High St. , Columbus, where friends may call an hour prior to serN
llm n M.l\' 31, 1914 in (;rown Cm·. &lt;.bught&lt;r of the late Elijah John"on J ud l•L·urgu Johnson Rucker. she \YJ\ dw tOr mer O\\'nt:r of Fulks vice. Burial will follow at Forest lawn Memorial Gardens.
M .~rb.·t Ill Cr(1WII &lt; ~If)' ~ nd \\',\.;, &lt;Jhio T\.l\\'ll!~hip clerk for se\'t•ral years.
Sh e \\'.~'- .1 llil.' mber o t (~ nod Hop~ ll1pt1~t Chllrch.
Sh e \\,1'• .I I.,o pn..-et.·lkd m death br ·her hu sb.md. Arnold Fulks;' a
Jaugh tn. (~ ...·nrgu Y No~{! ..·; :md two brothl'r.;,, Wendell Johnson and
W.t h.: r Jolm .. on.
Andrea Krawsczyn was crowned the
. Sur\'1\' lll~ two """· John C:. (M.1rgaret) Fulks and Eddie (Mary Jo)
2000 Meigs High School homecoming
h1lks. both of &lt;' rown City: .1 d.mghter. Sharon (Ray) Jeffers of Galqueen
in pre-game ceremonies Friday
hpohs; .1 so n- i11 - l.nv, lZ1&lt;.hard Nogle of Crown C ity; sewn gra ndchilnight at the Meigs Marauder and Nel·
l~ft'H , SI.'Vt.' ll grL".lt-gr J.ndrhildren .1nd r\Vo grcJt-g.reat-gra ndchildren; a
sonville-York
Buckeyes game held on Bob
&gt;~ster, Emm.1 lee Waugh of Bidwell: and ,11bro'ther, Merrill Johnson of
Roberts
Field
in Pomeroy. The daughter
LinJllJ.1 , M.ic h.
of Bette Hobstetter, Celia McCoy and
~ervic,·s will be 2 p 111. Tuesday in Hall Funer;tl Home, Proctorville,
John Krawsczyn was escorted by Nick
With the R ev. Ralph Workm.1n officmmg. Burial will be in Swan
Dettwiller.
Creek C emelery. Friends may call at the funerdl home from 6-9 p.m.
Mondav.

Eva Mae Johnson

Anna Mae Fulks

MHS homecoming queen

•
nes

GAlliPOLIS - Nellie Mae Arabugh Ingles, 91, Washington Court
House, d1ed Thursday, Oct. 5, 2000 in Hol zer Medical Center.
Born Oct. 29, 1908 in lawrence County, daughter of the late Henry
and Emma Brown Arbaugh. she was a homemaker, and the former
owner and operator of Ingles Grocery St"ore in Waterloo.
She \Vas a chJrter member of the Mcllamels Crossroads Pentecostal
• Church.
·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Riley C. Ingles, in
GALLIPOLIS -Janet E. Donahue of Gallipolis, went to be with
• 1974; a son, Fornest Ingles; eight brothers, Emery, Leonard, Alva, Bill, the "Lord" on Friday, October 6, 2000 at Holzer Medical Center, fol: Emmitt, Pearl, Almer and Curt Arbaugh: and a sister, Annie. ·
lowing an August 5, 2000 automobile accident.
• Survivmg are t\vo sons, Ralph Ingles ofWaterloo, and Orville (PhylShe was born June 1, 1951, the daughter of John F Donahue, and
• · lis) Ingles of Patriot; three daughters, Marcine Ingles (Carey) DaughVirginia Donahue Blazer.
: erty of Washington Court House, and Darlene Ingles , Knapp and
She was retired from Gallipolis Developmental Center.
• Shirky Ingles Qack) Miller, both of Patriot; a daughter-in-law, June·
Janet was blessed in her life to have had two loving Dads - John F
:; Ingles ofWJSconsin; and 18 grandchildren, 30 great-grandchildren and
Donahue, who preceded her in 1952, and Garfield Blazer Jr., who pre~
· e ight gn:Jt-gn:Jt-grandch ildren.
ceded her on February 11, 1981.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday in Willis Funeral Home, with Pastor
She was also prec@ded in death by two sisters, Donnie L. Donahue
Ma11uel Aldridge officiating Burial 'viii be in Flag Springs Cemetery. in 1949, and Judy F Blazer in 1993.
VisitJtlon wa s hdd in. the funeral home OM Silturday.
She is survived by het beloved mother, Virginia A. Blazer of Gal'
lipolis; a sister, Vicki (Jay) Haskins of Vinton; two brothers, Rick
(Christi) Blazer of Gallipolis, and Michael (Marlene) Blazer of Bidwell;
•
a niece, Brandi Haskins oNinton; four nephews , Brad Haskins oN inCOLUMBUS - Dorothy I. Kimble Maier, 75, Columbu s, di ed Friton, Mike (Angel) Blazer II of Bidwell, Brian (Vicky) Blazer of Bid: day. Oct. 6, 2111111 111 Mount Ca rmel West Hosp ital , Columbus.
well, and Nathan Blazer of Bidwell; a very special friend, Betty
; · flor11 Nov. 21. 1924 in Smokin. Pa .. da&lt;.t ghter of the late Herbert and Williams of Gallipolis; and her loving cousin, Rita [\evJult of Gahan: · Mabel Kmg Kimble , she was employed by the state of Ohio in the na.
• , Public Worh Dep.1rnn e nt.
Follow1i1g the automobile accident, Jahet n.~co ntmittcd her h eart .to
: Surviving ,Jrt.· her husband Jos&lt;..·ph Eugene Maier; two daughters , the " Lord" and gave Hm1 praise for giving her a st•cond c han ce.
: Mdody ll,&gt;t&gt;&lt;.lll (George Kinney) and Vi cki Sharp, both of Columbus;
There will be a graveside service at Mound Hill Cemetery 011 Sun" .~ o;on, Jo.;.cph M:1ier of Columbus: nine gr:1ndchildn:n and two great- day, October 8, 2000 at 2 p.m., with Mike Blaze r II offimting.
granddli ldrcn; a brother. Hl'fbert Knnble of Grove City; and seve ral
In lieu of flowers, please se nd a monetary gift to the Hospitality
: meet'S and nt:phews.
House, PO. Box 3406, Huntington, West Virgin ia . 25702, in memory
Sh e was ;-tl&lt;oo preceded 111 de ath by a sistcr,V1rginia Kirchner.
of Janet E. Donahue.
Services will be J p.m . Monday 111 Fisher Funeral H ome in Pomeroy.
if not a monetary gift , we reconnnend that you reach out lcwingly
Burial will be in the family ce metery on Peach Fork Road. Fr iends to families who hJve loved ones in Intensive Care Units .
n\ay call .It th,· funeral home from ~-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
· Arrangements are byWaugh-1-lalley-Wood Funeral Home.
Janet was extremely proud of her Irish heritage, and of the traditional Irish blessing, which is:

Janet E. Donahue

Dorothy I. ·Kimble Maier

Audra G. Rollins

May rhc road riu ro meet yo"

BIDWELL - Audra G. Rollins, 80: Bidwell, died Friday, Oct. 6,
May tllC wi11d be alu1ays at yo"r back
2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
May the s 1m slu.r1e 011 ym~r face
Born Feb. 27, 1920 in Elmwood, WVa., daughter of the late David
11J e raiiiS fall soji "P"" yo"r fields a11d,
and Pearl Sullivan, she was a homemaker.
Umil we meet again.
She was a member of Old Kyger Freewill . Baptist Church and
May Cod hold Y"" i11 tl~e palm ~f His l1a11d.
attended Clark Chapel Church.
Janefs favorite scripture was:
Surviving ·are her husband, Steve Rollms , whom she married 'Feb.
Isaiah 40:31 - B .. r tl1~y that waif 14pon' the Lord shall rc11ew their
24, 19~0 in Gallipolis; five daughters, Ruth (Larry) Bond of Pataskala,
strCil)?tl•; they shall moum 11p with witJ)?S as ea,~?ies; they shall"'"· at1d llOf be
Prisc1 1la (Karl) Barlay of Columbus. Nellie (Pa ul) Whitehill of Groveweary; and tl~ey shall walk, a11d nor faint.
purt. Debbie (Mark) Coughenour of Rucland, and Mary Rollins of
Cambridge; four sons, Jim (Amy) Rollins of Lockbourne, David
(CHris) R:ollins of Galloway, Larry (Shi rl ey) Rollms ofWest Jefferson,
and Ronme Rollins of Grove C1ty; 16 grandchildren, three stepgrandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and thre~ step-great-gran'dchildren;
two brothers, Everett Sulhv.m of Dunbar, W.Va., and Earl Sullivan of
Columbus; and three sisters, Roma Ann Stump of B1dwell, Edna
Badgeley of Eleano r. WVa., and Eleanor King of Columbu s.
She was also preceded 1i1 death by two grandchildren, Robbie
•Oxygen Concentrator•
•Monthly Vlalta
.
Rollins and Herbert Webb; and seven brothers ancj a sister.
•Portable Oxygen
•Free Delivery &amp; Set Up
Services will be II a. m . Tuesday in Willis Funeral Hpnle, with the
•Nebulizer•
•Reaplratory Therepl-:ta
•CPAP/BIPAP
•We
Bill Alllnaurancea
R ev. Ri ck Barcm and th e R ev. lu cian Nelson officiating. Burial will
·24 Hour Emergency Servtca
be in Gravel I till Cemetery. Fnemls 11uy call at the funeral home from
70 Pine St.
2-4 and 7-'J p.m . Monday.
'
740 446 72BJ
1 BOO

4~8-68&lt;14

':!:llli:r.ltnl•l:

MOUNTAIN BRIEF.S

VALLEY WEATHER

Lost ring surfaces at center

Snow showers still possible
The National Weather Service
says that although it may be
unusually early for snow to be in
the forecast, some flakes could fall
Sunday.
Unstable and moist air moved
into the •rea Saturday night as a
trough of low pressure rotated
around low pressure over the St.
Lawrence Seaway. The trough will
drop across the area during the
day Sunday, with the chance of
precipitation continuing into
Monday morning.
Morning lows Sunday will fall
into the 30s, with highs Sunday
berween 40 and 45 .
Drier air will begin to ntove
into the area ·Monday as the
trough moves to the southeast
and high pressure that was over
the Plains on Saturday moves in .
Cool temperatures will remain
for the beginning of the work
week, with highs in the low 40s
to low 50s.
Sunrise Sunday will be at 7:36

From
Simple to
Simply
Magnificent
in 10 ISSOrtment

. KINGWOOD {AP) - How does a 20-yea;-old high school class
nng turn up at a senior citizens center?
That's what Melissa Groves, director of admissions and social services
, .at .~~artland of Preston County, wanted to know.
. ..
It had been 10 the facility for wo think three or four years, and we
7 ·~~pt thinking someone will claim it," she said. "We thought obviously
. , e penon who lost tt had no 1dea they lost it at Heartland since they
never checked on it."
'

a.m.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

We offer the finesr granites

Nellie Mae Arbaugh Ingles

!~Su--nda--~y~,Od---o~be~r~a~.~~o~~~~----------------------;P~o:m:•:ro~y~·!M:Id~d~~:~rt~·~G:•:II~I~:=I:a~,O~h:lo~·P:o~·l:m~~:•=a=sa~nt~,~WV~-----------------------=•:u:nb:a!~~~~~n~·~~~-·~rn~t~in~ri~·~P~a~ge~A:7~

Sunday, October B. 2000

Pomeroy ·.Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio ·Point P...aant, WV

or colors

and coundess designs. We
can provide the memorial
that's right for you. Come
talk to our coun..,Iors. We'll
help you select a memorial to be
cherished.

Weather forecast:
Sunday. .. Cloudy with a chance
of rain or snow showers. No snow
accumulatibn. Highs 42 to 47.
Chance of precipitation 50 percent.

Rick Spiker, owner of the 198d Central Preston Senior H1gh School
(&lt;lass, also was caught up in the mystery;
: "I knew it was missing. but I looked all over the house and couldn't
: •.find it, so !just gave it up as lost,"" said Spiker, the ring'~ owner.
1 . An adnurustrator at Heartland found the ring when she cleaned a
,safe last month. Groves, who was determined to find its owner, hung
the nng on a chain around her neck.
:· ." I .~ecided I was going to 'go steady' with this person until I found
1 . Jllm, she wd.
·
Her mother-in-law, scouring a 1978 Central Preston High School
: yearbook, spotted four boys in the sophomore class with the initials

Heart Matten.••
WHh

Dr. Robert Holley

QUEsTION • I am 32 yea"' old and
have already had four-way bypass
surgery. Since the surgery I have felt
much better. My family physician
told me there is no special treatment
now that the bypass is complete. Is
there anything I can do to prevent this
from happening again? I really don't
want to be cracked open again.
ANSWER • I can certainly
understand you not wanting to be
cracked open again . Bypass:surgery is
very _traumatic and no one wants fo
go through it. The · sad part is that
many of these bypasS surgeries can be
prevented. Now, something cause'd
your vessels to clot or become
bloclced and if you don't determine
the underlying cause, you are very
likely to have this happen again. In
fact, failure to treat the underlying
cause of a previous event is the
leading cause of another heart attack.,
sbOkc or death. Patients that have had
bypass surgery are,at extremely high
risk: of a heart atttack, stroke or
sudden death. Most patients that have
had bypass have a heart attack, stroke
or sudden death within 6 years. The
bottom line is you need to determine
what caused the problem in the first
place and then treat il so it will not
happen again. Sadly enough, only six
to eight percent of patients that ha~
had bypass surgery are being treated
properly to prevent a re-occurrence.
I have had several patients come to
the Cholesterol Center after bypass
surgery, and at that point I conduct a
complete workup to determine the
underlying cause. [ then devise a
personalized lreatment program to
help them dramatically reduce their
risk of having to race this radical
procedure again.
·
Doctor Rob-rt Holl~y is til• ar-IIS

I.

I

:I

f ·"RS."

·, She soon found Spiker through his brother-in- law, a Preston High
,School graduate with the same initials.
~; Spiker believes he may have lost the ring while at a Baptist Church
1numstry at Heartland.
.. " I never thought I'd see it again," he said.

.,

'·
, • CHARLESTON (AP) -

MARTINSBURG (AP) Habitat for Humanity, known
for its chanrable work building
housing for the poor,' is seen as a
threat to property values in a
Martinsburg ne~ghborhood .
A city counCilman, who says
his neighborhood · •ncludes
homes that are valued at more
than $100,000, may sue to block
corutruction on five lots donated to the Christian group.
" If we find out for a fact that
our property values wtll be
affected, legal action is always a
possibility,'' said Councilman
Glenville Twigg. "One of ou r
major concerns is that' (H abitat)
screen their clientele and train
them to be good ne1ghbors."
In a letter to the editor of
The Journ al of Martinsburg,
Twigg praised ··any chantablc
organization fi)r good deed s, bm
it see ms hypocritical to help five

families knowmg the action Wlll
probably hurt dozens of other
families.''
Habitat for Humanity Internauonal, a nonprofit housing
orgamzanon, cla~ms to have
. built more than 100,000 houses
in more than· 60 countries including 30,000 m the United
States- si nce 1976.
Da,~d Miller, vice presidenr
of the local affiliate of Habitat,
said the property was given to
the organization last yea r on the
con dition that Habitat use it for
home site.s. The donation does
not p ~rnu t the property's sale.
Miller sa1d H abi tat is a\\'!ore of
neighbors' concerns and msists
th,· homes w1ll fit into the
neighborhood.
· C harles M nKk. whose f.1m ily
owns 16 lots in the Martinsburg
area, says H abitat's lots dri\'c
Jway pmennal developmenr.

joins in lawsuit

• ~ money.

I

First Data Corp. now owns the business, but is not 'the subject of the

~~awsuit. Candidate' debates scheduled
l: \m
I I

CHARLESTON (AP) - Debates between candidates for state
' Supreme Court, governor, U.S. Senate and Congress will be broadcast
West Virginia Public Broadcasting's television and radio and a Web
1 \ site.
I
'
,I •.. .The debate series is sponsored by West Virginia Public Broadcasting
;and the League ofWomen Voters.
.. The first program is scheduled for Oct. 15. The candidates for state
'Supreme Court will debate for a half-hour beginning at 5:30p.m., fol11owed by the 2nd Congressional District candidates in an hour-long
·
,.debate beginning at 6 p.m.
The gubernatorial candidates will square off at 8 p.m . for one hour.
: An Oct. 22 broadcast pits the Republican and Libertarian candidates
l for U.S. Senate against each qther at 7 p.m.

only choltsurol sptclallst, or
therothrombotic
Dluas'e
Sp~cialist, which means ~~~ has luJd

I,

For answers to your medical questions
about heart attacks and strokes, maH them

to the Robert M. Holley Cholesterol
Center allhe address below.
CaD today for • free he•rt att.ck
end stroke risk assessment.

~

•

t

, .,

:

' !

Phone 740·992-2588
Vinton 740·388-8603
GaUipoliiJ 740·446·0852

boards of educauon.
"Our Number One job is to
make sure every child in West
Virginia gets a good, fair and
adequate educanon," Spencer
said Friday. " 1 think we have a
lot more important issues than
that issue."
In spite of the ·governor's
request for prompt acrion, the
proposal is not part of the agenda for the Board of Education
meeting next Thursday in
Petersburg,
a
del'artment
spokesman said Friday.
Whether the board will take
up Underwood's request is
unclear.
" It has to be considered fairly within the context of the
board 's rule s and policies." said
board member Gary White.
who said he is not opposed to it.

I

ld•ntifyillg and tr.ating all the
various risk factors that leiul to Q
heart attack or strokt. Doctor
olley operates the Robtrt Af.
Holley Cholesurol Ce1111r, locatNl
In Point Pleasont.

Near the Ma1on Bridge

CHARLESTON (AP) The agenda for next week's state
Board of Education meeting
doesn't include Gov. Cetil
Underwood's request that members take up a resolution to post
the Ten Commandants in West
Virginia's schools.
In a Sept. 25 letter to state
schools Superintendent David
Stewart, Underwood asked that
the board "immediately" consider his proposal.
Underwood said both the
Bible and its Ten Comm~nd­
ments should be displayed in
public schools as historic documents. He asked the Board of
Education to develop a policy
and advertise it for public comtnent.
Ronald Spencer, a board
tnember for the past year, said ·
the suggestion, if it is considered
at all, is best left to county

West Virginia and 42 other states are suing
: ,to reclaim more than $8 6 million in money orders .
: .. States filed a lawsuit in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New Jersey against
: 'New Valley Corp.. which was known as the Western Umon Telegraph
• :Co.
The transfers often went unclaimed and senders did not receive
:&lt;refunds. The money belongs to 31.000 customers who transferred
. :
1 . money before Jan. I, 1990, state officials say.
l · New Valley went bankrupt in 1991 and is accused of failing to noti- '
!:fY the missing owners about the n1oney.
; ·· The lawsuit seeks to force New Valley to determine who is owed the

aJUciDI tnJinins, and is.an UJnl't ;,

520 W. Main St. - Pomeroy

s~

•·

Call for Ten Commandment Habitat housing lots stir
opposition in Martinsburg
resolution not on agenda

•

I

t

Putnam papers drop suit

WINFIEL!i) (AP) - A lawsuit filed by two Putnam County newspapers in O ctober 1999 regarding legal no{ices has been dismissed.
Putnam County Circuit Judge O.C. Spaulding signed the order
Wednesday after The Putnam Democrat, the Hurricane Breeze, the
: Charleston Daily Mail, The &lt;;:harleston Gazette and the Putnam
! County Commission agreed to drop the case.
:, The t\vo Putnam County weeklies filed the lawsuit in protest of a
. county commission decision mandating th ~t all county offices publish
~legal notices in the higher circulation Charle"on newspapers so more
• readers could be reached . The Daily Mail and th e Gazette were
' allowed to join the commission as defendants in June.
: The weeklies argued that state law reqi1ires publication of such
nonces m county papers.
~! The comnussion later rescinded the order and declared that each
COunty office COUld make its OWn deCISIOn about wh1ch newspaper tO

2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304-675-1675

~

e:·

jl

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes O.D.

Refractive Surgery

use.

Fire ruled acddental

I
1

WILLIAMSON (AP) - A downtown fire that destroyed three
: ,buildingS and caused about $1.2 million in damage has been listed as
an accident.
' City fire officials have traced the cause of the Oct. 1 fire to electri. cal lines feeding a breaker box at the tear of Alb ert 's Army Store.
Investigators found that deteriorating insulation contributed to the
· f~re, which started in the rear of the building and spread to the second
floor.
' "In this inCident, there was no reliable way that th iS particular prob•lem with the electrical service could have been foreseen in a timely
:manner to prevent this fire," said the report prepared by Rob ert C.
, Phillips, Williamson 's assistant fire chief.
.
.
.
l . "The wiring's insulation could not have been detected prwr to Its
; .inevitable failure, which caused the arcing of the wires against the con-

It's hard not to pick up a newspaper today or watch the
without hearing about refractive surgery. "Come
our free seminar and find out whether you're a
candidate." the ads proclaim. The Idea of reducing or
possibly eliminating the need for glasses or contact lenses
is appealing to millions of Americans.
At the present time. there are two major surgical means to
correct vision .. The first. radial keratotomy, has actually
been around ror decades. In this technique. a series of
radial incisions of varying lengths and depths are made on
the cornea. As the cornea heals, It tends to flatten. This
usually results In a lesser prescription. The newer
technique, just approved by the FDA In 1995. Is called
"exclmer laser photokeratoplasty." Here, a laser Is used to
carefully "sculpt" the corneal surface In an attempt to alter
eye's strength.
If you're considering this type of surgery, take the time to
learn all you can about It first. A good place to start your
Is with an eye doctor familiar with this surgery.

i,

duit."

:~

I

_

'

· Montgomery man sentenced

CHARLESTON (AP) - A Montgomery man· convicted for the
: September 1999 slaying of a Marine sergeant has been sentenced to at
' least 17 years 111 pmon.
·
! Kraig Davis, 22, was shot twice in the head inside a C harleston bar.
: Christopher Davis, 23, was charged with first-degree murder and the
: malicio us wounding of Kraig Davis' brother, Kenneth . The three were
not related.
. Duri11g his trial, Christopher Davis said the shooting was in selfdefense.
According to "\vitnesses , the sho oti ng followed a fi ght between two
groups of people playing pool at the bar.
.Grant Lovester l ewis. 34, of Charlcsto.n also was clurged with murder, nulicious wounding and two nlisdemeanor 3Cc&lt;.•ssory charge-s. His
trial is set for Oct. 30.

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes 0.0.

l

224 E,. Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Toll Free

Court won't hear appeal
•
I

A factory-trained hearing aid
specialist will be available to give
these free tests at the address below:

!

'

"Rdudn• JIOIU" ns

Free Electronic hearing tests will be given on
Tuesday and Thursday October 10 &amp; 12, 2000
at Beltone Hearing Aid Center.

CHARlESTON (AP) - The state 'Supreme Court o n Fri d.1 y
uphdd the felony conviction of a M orga n Co unty mag tstrate accused
of faking a 1999 as~ulr to obtam workers' cmnpcnst~tion benefi t!&lt;.
Bonmc I.,. Riille was convicted of two felony counts of work~·rs'
t.:ompensation fraud and five misdemeanor co unts of tlhng false polin·
reports.
Riffie w .1s sentenced ea rlier this yt"ar to . fin· years of ~ upciTist•d pmbation and ordered to payS 1,000 in lines and court costs. She a!In w.IS
ordered to reimburse $1,700 to the state Workers' Compensation
Fund.

The tests have been arranged for
anyone ·who suspects they are losing
their hearing. Such persons can
generally say they can hear but
cannot understand words. Testing
with the latest c·omputerized
electronic equipment will indicate
whether you can be helped.

HEARING LOSS
OR JUSli WAX BUILDUP?
AS PART OF OUR.FREE
HEARING TEST, COME IN FOR
A VIDEO OTOSCOPIC EAR
CANAL INSPECTION.

Everyone, especially those over 50,
should have an electronic hearing test
at least once a year. If there is a
hearing problem, a free electronic
hearing test may reveal that newly
developed m~thods of correction will
help, even for those who have been
told in the past that a hearing aid
would not help them.
Beltone's electronic hearing test has
just been improved!!!
Using a
technique called "Loudness Growth
Profiling", we'll develop your own
personal comfort profile. This new
technique, along w.Uh Beltone's
exclusive computerized fitting
syste~, helps assure your hearing
comfort.

''Seeing.. lis Believing"

Call 7 40-446-1 7 44 or. .,.
Toll Free 1-800-634-5265

For An Appointment to Av,o id Waiting

•

�NATIONAL BRIEFS
GOP:·I.et citizens make decisions
WASHINGTON (AP)- Republtcans want Americans to make
thetr own decisions about such programs as Social Secunty and
Medtcarc while the Clinton-Gore adnumstratton pushes for more
governmental control, Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio. sa1d SJturday
"There are, two very different viSions of Amenca 's future." Portm2n satd m the GOP's weekly radio •address. "As Rcpubhcans we
put our trust and fanh tn the wiSdom of Amenca 's fanuhes to make
their own cho1ces ••

On Soclll Secunty, Repubhcins want to let younger workers set
mde a pornon of thetr payroll taxes m personal savmgs accounts
that they control Republicans also want to allow older Amencans
to choose, the1r health coverage. from vanous plans mstead of a
"one-Size-fits-all government plan" under Medteare, Portman sa1d
"Some tn Washmgton beheve that the status quo 1S fine and we
should mnply pour more money tnto the current systems," he sa1d.
RepublH.ans also want to dedtc:ue 90 pt.'rcenr of nc:xr yea r's buJ~
get surplus to paymg down the nanonal debt. Portman said.
l~entocrats have accused Repubhcans of barkmg b1g tax , uts that
~J'!e r 10 ye:trs would consuml? much more th.1n H) p~..·rl:cnt of pro-

J~ted surpluses GOP preSJdenttal nonunee G,·orgc W Bush has
'~ampw1wd ,1 10-year tax cut exccedtng S I 3 tnlho n
.On edu(,HIOn, Repubhc:tns want more lool control .md want
federal dolbrs to go dtrectly ro local school dmnu.., \dHie C lmt on
and Gon: JU~t want to c.:xpJnd Washmgton (Ontrol. ht" 'i,ll d
"They thmk Washm~;ton kno\\ s best," he &gt;aid "We kno" p.m·nt,,
teacht"rs .1nd local school boJrds know b('ttcr There: IS no on~..·-~tZt"­
fits-all program for Amenca\ ch1ldren"

Rare books stolen from Harvard
BOSTON (AP) - f-orty-one cmtu ne&gt;-old Chmcs,· boob and
two scro lls worth o\·er S 1 mallton arl.!" nussmg trom H.tn·ard- Yt"nt. hmg L1brary. "h1,h hous&lt;'S the largest colkc tton of Em A&gt;l an books
outstde ASia
A rare book spec1altst at the Harvard Umvemty-owned library
di~overed m March that the books and scrolls among the
library's most pnzed possessiOns - had been snatched from their
protected perch m the rare book room.
"These are works of huge !llStonc and hterary Importance,"
Nancy Clme, bead hbranan of Harvard College, told the Boston
Globe 111 Saturday's ed1tton " It's very dtfficult to estimate the1r loss"
When she learned of the theft, Chne .contacted the FBI Neither
the museum nor bw enforcement authoritieS pubhcly acknowledged the theft or ISSued a statement
ThiS summer, however, the collectton was registered 111 the Stolen
Art File, an FBI Web Site des1gned to alert potenttal buyers to pur]omed utworks
Neither mvesngarors n01; Harvard oflietals will say much about
the mvesugat10n's progress or how tht! works were stolen
' The umverSJty now faces the challenge of developmg suffietcnt
s.:curtty procedures that don't 1mpede the cc1mal purpose of a
IIUJOr research hbrary. allowmg people to nunc the vast sta cks on
th.etr own

Ex-offidal wins release
:PROVIDENCE, R.l (AP)- A former c1ty tax offictal who was
conviCted tn a pubh c corrupnon scandal and then bec;:ame g ravely
1ll was granted compasswnate release from pnson Fnday
A few weeks after Rosemary Glancy reported to pnson on Aug
28, the '-+7-year-old suffered hver fa1lure. She was taken to a federal
pmon hospttal 111 Texas, then moved to a commumty hosp1tal 111 the
Fort Worth area
US Dtstnct Judge R onald Lagueux n:duced Glan Ly's nearly threl' vear ~entem: e tu ume '\erved, clcanng the way fo1 her tn
return to Rhode Island. Her fanuly plans to bnng her Rhode Island
l{osp1tal
·"Th1 s IS wh,tt ~vayone's ' been praymg for," Glancy's attorn-:y
Kevm BnstO\\ sa1d "T hey\:~.,· been pr.tyn1g for Rosemarv\ hcald1
Jl)d pr.1ymg she wouldn't spend her la&gt;t days with people sill' d1dn 't
know"
Outs1de the cmmhuuse, her brother, tohn Glan cy, tl1.1nked thme
who helped sc.:curc her Jeic.:,\se

''I'm hopeful that thiS process w1ll be done qmck.ly and filf whatever t1me Rosemary h.1s left. that she can come h01ne ," h..: SJ id
The federal Bureau of Pnsons WJII pay for her return, 13nstow
siid
Glancv was the only one of the SIX people caught up Ill the scandal, known as .. Operanon Plunder Dome," w mamtam h~r mnocence She was convtcted of attempted extortiOn, mail fraud and
c&lt;lnspnacy to sohCJt bnbes 1n exchange for tax breaks The five others pleaded gmlty

THOSE OBLIGAriONS SHALL
NOT BE GEN6RAL OBLIGA·
TIONS OF THE STATE AND THE
FULL FAITH AND CREDIT, REVENUE, A~D T&lt;\XING POWER OF
THE sgTE SHALL NOT BE
PLEDGED ro THE PAYMENT OF
DEBT SERVICE ON THEM
THOSE OBLIGAriONS SHALl BE
SECURED BY A PLEDGE OF ALL
OR SUCH PORTION OF DESIGNATED REVENUES AND RE·
CF,IPTS OF rile S rArE AS THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY AUTHORIZES, IN CLUDING RECE IPTS
FROM DESI G~A l ED TAXES OR
EXCISES, OTHFR STATE REVENUES FR0'-1 SOURCES OTHER
THAN STATE [AXES OR EXCISES, SUCH AS FROM STATE FNTERPRISE ACTIVITIES, AND
PAYMENTS FOR OR RELA1 ED ro
THOSE REVITA LIZATION PURPOS ES MADE BV OR ON BEHALF
OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTAL,ENTITIES, RESPONSIBLE PARTIES,
OR OTHERS TilE GENERAL AS·
SEMBLY SHALL PROVIDE BY
LAW FOR PROIIIBI riONS OR RE·
STRICTIONS ON THE GRANTING
OR LENDING or PROCEeDS OF
OBLIGATIONS ISSU~D UN DER
DIVISION .(B)t2) 01· rillS SECTION TO PART! ES TO PAY COSTS
OF CI.EANlJI' OR Rl MrDIATION
OF
CONlAM II\Af' ION FOR
WHICII TilEY AR I IJI~ li.RMI\o I IJ
TO BF RFSPONSllll l
[C) FOR Pt 'RI'oq \ fll- rill
FULl A'ID Tl'viiLY PAYMLN I m

Sunday, October 8, 2000

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

Page A8 • itunbap l!:tmtt -itrntinrl

DEBT SERVICE ON STATE OBLI·
GATIONS AUTHORIZED BY THIS
SECTION, APPROPRIATE PROVISION SHALL BE MADE OR AUTHORIZED BY LAW roR BOND
RETIREMEN I FUNDS, FOR THE
SUFFICIFNCY AND APPROPRIA·
TION OF STATE EXCISES, TAXES,
AND REV ENUES PLEDGED '10
THE DEBT SERVICE ON THE RESPEC1IVE OBLIGATIONS, FOR
WHICH PURPOSE, NOTWII HSTANDING SECTION 22 OF
ARTICLE II OF 1 HE OHIO
CONSTITUTION, NO FURTHER
ACT OF APPROPRIArlON SHAll
BE 'IECESSARY AND FOR
COV(:NA~TS TO CON rtNl E THE
Ll:.VY, COLLECTION, AND APPI I·
C ~TION OF SUFI·ICIENT STATE
CXC ISCS, TAXES, ii'ID REVENUE&gt;
I0 rill:. EX rEN I 1\ EloDED FOR
THOSE PURPOSES MONEYS REFf.RRrD TO IN SEC fiO'J Sa OF
AR ri CLE XII 0 1 [HI:. OHIO
CONSTITUTION MAY NO'T RE
PLlDGED OR USED FGR TilE PAY.
MENT OF DEB r SERVICE ON
THOSE ORI.IGATIONS
AS USED IN TillS Sf CTION,
"DEBT SERVICE" MEANS PRINCIPAL AND INfERf:S T AND
OTH£· R ACCRETLD AMOUNTS
PAYABI EON Till {)BI.IGATIONS
Rill RRFD ro
( [)X II DIVI'&gt;ICIN'&gt; tBJ AND (C I OF
I ill\ '&gt;ft 110\i '&gt;11.\1 I 111.1\.IPLE\11 'II Ill I'\ rill \11'-'\l R ~Nil
IO I il l I~ II ' I I'ROVIDfD BY
1111 C,I '-I RAI •\ \ \IMBIY BY

Sunday, Qctober 8,

their drunken dnvmg standard to

0.08 percent blood alcohol content Clinton, who ts expected £O
Sign the leg~slaoon, has s.11d the
lower hnut \\ouid save 500 ]1\·es of
the 15,000 h1ghway deaths each
year linked to alcohol
"TI)ts groundbreaking measure.
whtch I have long advocated, .will
save hundreds of lives a year and
represents a maJor vtctory for public safety and Amcncap families all
across the country," he satd
The transportatlon bill ts the
fifth spending bill to clear Congress
of the 13 reqmred for the 2001 fiscal year, which began Oct. 1. Clinton on Fnday signed a bill keepmg
fi:u.ral agenc1es open through Oct
14 so budget negooators can keep
working Wlthout fear of a government shutdown
Opponents of the 0 08 s~1ndard,
mcluding the restaurant and alcohol mdustnes, say the measure

AUDITOR'S
DISPLAY NOTICE
There w1ll be a delmquent land
list contammg the descnptaon of

the property as 1t appears on the
tax ltst, the name of the person in
whose name the property 1s lasted,
the amount of taxes, assessments
and penalties d1e an unpa1d as of

Augu11 2000 settlement Sa1d liSt
· sba11 be published twice wJthm
the next sixty (60) days m the
Daily Tribune, a newspaper of
general C1rculat10n in Gallia
County, Oh10, m accordance w1th

Sect1on 5721 01 of the Rev1sed
Code of the State ofOh1o.
Each person charged with real
property taxes and assessments of
public utlllly property taxes on a
tax duplicate 111 the hands of the
Gal ita County Treasurer may pay
the full amount of such taxes
before suc h date
To avo1d add1tion'al Interest
charges on December I, 2000, the
taxpayer may enter 1nto a wntten

agreement w1th the County
Treasurer to pay one-fifth (115) of
the delinquent taxes, plus all
cu rrent taxes pr10r to the day
mterest IS to be charges.

Larry M Betz
Gall;a County Audl!or

LAV., INCLUDING PROVISION
FOR PROCEDURES FOR INCURRING, REFUNDING, RETIRING,
AND EVIDENCING STATE OBLIGATIONS ISSUED PURSUANT TO
TH IS SECTION EACH STATE OB·
liGATION ISSUED PURSUANT TO
THIS SECTION SHALL Mi\TURE
NO LATER THAN THE TH IRTYFIRST DAY OF DECEMIJER OF THE
TWENTY-FIFl H
CALENDAR
YEAR AFTER ITS ISSUANCE, EXCEPT THAT OBLIGATIONS ISSUED
TO REFUND OR RE liRE OTHER
OBLIGATIONS SHALl . MATURE
NOT LATER THAN TilE TlllRTY·
FIRST DAY OF DECEMBER OF THE
TWENTY-FIFTH
CALENOAR
YEA R AFTER THE YI:AR IN
Wll lCJI ri IE ORIGINAL OBLIGA·
TION TO PAY WAS ISSUED OR ENTEREDINTO
(2) IN TilE CASE Of TllC IS·
SU!INCI: OF STATE OBLIGA·
TIONS UNDER THIS SECTION AS
BOND ANTICIPATION NOTES,
PROVISION SHALL BE; MADE BY
LAW OR IN THE BOND OR NOTE
PROCEEDINGS FOR THE ESTAB·
LISIIMENT, AND THE MAINTENANCE DURING TilE· PERIOD
THE NOTES ARE OUTSTANDING.
OF SPECIAL FUNDS INTO
WHICH THERE SHALL BE PAID,
FROM TilE SOURCES AUTHORIZED FOR PAYMENT OF THE
PARTI(L' LAR BONDS ANTICI·
P~HD
Til E AMOl 1N r IIJAT
Wot LD HAVE Br EN SI 'FFICIL:NI 10 PAY THF PRII'.CI PAL

would penalize soc1al drmkers
while 1gnormg the b1gger problem
of repeat offenders who drtnk
heavily
Eighteen sbtes and the DtStrtct
of Columbia already have 0.08

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PINNnt, WV

itunbap l!:imrl -ltrnttntl • Page A9'

Actor Richard
Famsworth
dies
of
self-inflicted
gunshot
wound
&lt;-;;) .-

Clinton.congratulates Congress
over drunken-driving stanCiarcl
WASHINGTON (AP) - PresIdent Clinton is congratulating
Congress for sending him legislanon th&gt;t would set a naoonal standard for drunken drivmg.
The. p=on was tucked mto a
compronuse $58 billion ttansporboon spending bill for the new fiscal
year that sailed through Congress
on Fnday The bill, approved 34450 by the House and 78-10 by the
Senate, also lS loaded With pre-elecnon highway. mass tranSit and avtanon proJecrs for every state
Begmnmg in 2004, the leg~sla­
tJon would gradually w11hhold up
to 8 percent of federal h1ghway
fimds from states that failed to drop

:.

2000

Ri:~~~~N, N.~.

.
rnswort was, attling
ter1111nal c2ncer during the film

tng

0

.,
.
f The Strught Story," a

mov~e t~at

euned him an Oscar
nommatton
fi h
d d for best actor. His
gf1 t en
d e Friday w1th a selfth ieee gunshot wound.
The two-time Academy Award
~~nee took hiS life at his New
eJOcoh rdanch as he had lived it
-Wit
ignlty, said his fiancee,
Van Valin.

bws, and in Massachusetts a level of
0 08 1s cons1dered evtdence but not
woof of impattment Thirty-one
sta~ define drunken driving as
0.10 percent blood alcohol content

tuF:rnsworthh, 80, . a former
s n man w O was mvolved in
filmmaking for m
ha
ore t n 60
• years, was nominated earlier this
year for the Osc&gt;r, becoming the
olde•t
person ever nominated in
h
t e best-actor category.
lincoln County Sheriff Tom
Sullivan released 2 sutement Fnday night saying Farnsworth died
at 5:35 p.m. at his home in Lin1 about 20 miles northeast of
con,
Ruidoso. Deputies did not release

funher derails.
Van Valin, Farnsworth's fiancee
f 11
o
years, was 2t the actor's
home when he shot himself.
"I was JUSt in the other room
and 1 heard the shot," she said.
"He was 1·n 1·ncredible pain today.
He was gomg downhill." ·
Van Vahn said Farnsworth was
diagnosed wtth cancer several
yem ago. She said the disease in
'recent yeat:S left him partly paralyzed and unable to walk.

Van Valin said that when the

Center.
actor was working on ""The
The actor couldn't move his
Stratght Story;' he fought through legs, but the mood was Joyful as
the pm.
his daughter and Van Vahn drew
"He was very illm that mov1e, p1ctures on hiS toes.
b ut p h enomenally h e rna d e 11
"He was a very pnvate and
t h roug h . H e d 1.d n ,t want t h e prou d man w h o ch ose not to disworld to know he was Stck," she cuss hts health tssues. He had
said
reached a level of pain that he was
The
last
time
MISsy unable to get beyond," Missy
Farnsworth, 52, saw her father Farnsworth said by telephone
was in June at the Universtty of from her Hollywood home
California-Los Angeles Medical
Van Valin said Farnsworth

would be buned in Hollywood. '
·
d ~
Farnsworth was nomm2te 10r
th
~ hi5
10
an Oscar " year r
portray111
al of Alvm Stmght
Straight Story." He played an
,
Iowa man who made headhne&lt; m
1994 for ridu1g his lawnmow~r
more than 250 miles co see his
ailing, estranged brother.
The actor said the depth of h1s
performance came from 1115
respect for Stratght

"~he

Ballot Langu.oge, Exp'-naflon At!lllflllln)w ond RMolutl
'
on lor ""-&lt;-ment to the Olllo Constitution P111f10Hd by the ~rol AIHmbly of Ohio to be Submltt.d to tho Votars ot the Ge...,..I Election November 7 2000

·

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems with
your drivtng record; OUI's
speeding tickets , etc.
Same Day SR·22's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency
446-1960

Seremty House
serves 111ctims of domestic
violence
call 446-6752 or
1-B00-942·9577

Resi.df\lntial

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
BREASTFEED(NG CLASSES
with HMC Lactal1on
Consultants Cheryl Frazter
and Debbie Perroud
Tue!\day, Oct. 17, 2000
6:30 • 8.30 pm
French 500 Room
Call 446·5030 for more
informtion or to register
for the class

Democrat Headquarters
Now Open!
Hrs: M-F 12 p - 5 p
Signs and literature for all
candidates available
2nd Ave.
(Old Thomas Clothiers)
446-1739
Pa1d for by Gallia Co Democrat Party

2-2 BR
apartments
2-1 BR
apartments
2 BR Trailor
VILLAGE OF
RIO GRANDE

Charlotte Seamon, Treas

Vinyl Sale $7.95 yd
MOLLOHAN CARPET
"' .
202 Clark ChapeiRd.
Porter, Ohio 45614
At. 160 N. 1 st right past
554 Junction ·
446-7444

446-2422
DAYDREAMS&amp;
NIGHT THINGS
740-441-1611
3626 State Route 141
Gallipolis
Would like to Thank
all our customers for a
successful 4 years
and many more years
to come.

THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN
PAYABLE ON THOSE BONDS
DURING THAT PERIOD IF
BONDS MATURING SERIALLY
IN EACH YEAR OVER ri IE MAXIMUM PERIOD OF MATURITY
REFERRED TO IN DIVISION
(0)(1) OF THIS SECTION HAD
BEEN ISSUED WITHOUT THE
PRIOR ISSUANCE OF THE
NOTES. THOSE SPECIAL FUNIJS
AND INVESTMENT INCOME ON
THEM SHALL BE USED SOLiiLY
FOR THE PAYMENT OF PRINCIPAL OF THOSE NOTES OR OF
THE BONDS ANTICIPATED
(E) IN ADDITION TO PROJECl S
UN DERTAKEN BY THE Sl!ITF,
TI1 E STATE MAY PARTICIPATE
OR ASSIST, BY GRANTS, LOANS.
LOAN GUARANTEES, OR CQNTRIBUTIONS, IN TilE FINANCING OF PROJECTS FOR PURPOSES REFERRED ,TO IN TillS SICliON fHAT ARE UNDERTAKEN
BY LOCAL GOVERNMENTAL
ENTITIES OR BY OTHERS, IN·
C~UD!NG. BUT NOT LIMITED
TO, NOT-FOR-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS, AT TilE DIRECTION
OR AUTHORIZATION OF LOCAL
GOVERNMENTAL
ENTITIES
OBLIGATIONS OF TilE STATE IS·
SUED UNDER THIS SEC1ION
AND THE PROVISIONS FOR PAYMENT OF DEBT SERVICI' ON
TIIEM, INCLUDING o\N1 PAY MENTS BY LOCAL GOVI R\1.
MEN fAL ENTITIES, ARt NOl
SUBJECTTO SECTIONS 6 AND II

Green Elementary
Fall Festival
Thursday,
October 12th
5:30-8:30
Food, games,
auction, hay ride

CONSTI [11 fiON I HOSE OBLI·
GATIONS, AND ' OBLIGATIONS
OF LOCA L GOV ERNMENTAL
ENTITIES ISSUED FOR THE PUll·
LIC PURPOSES REFERRED TO 1:-.1
THIS SEC1ION, AND PROVISIONS FOR PAYMENT 01 DEBT
SERVICE ON THEM, A:-.ID TilE
PURPOSES AND USES TO WIIICII
THE PROCEEDS OF !'HOSE
STATE OR LOCAL OBLIGATIONS, OR MONEYS FROM
OTHER SOURCES, ARE TO BE OR
MAY BE APPLIFD, ARF NOT
SUBJECT TO SECTIONS 4 AND 6
OF ARTICLE VIII OF /li E 01110
CONSTITUTION
(F) TilE POWERS ~ND AUTIIOR·
11 Y GRAN I ED OR CONIIRMW
BY AND IINDFR TI-llS SECTION,
AND TilE DETERM INATIONS AND
CONFIKMAIIONS IN 111/S SLCTION, ARE INDEI'ENDLN I 01 , IN
ADDITI ON TO AND NO'l IN
DEROGATION OF OR A LIMITATION ON, POWERS, AU'IIIORI fY.
DETERMINATIONS, OR CONFIR·,
MATIONS UN DER L!'WS, CHAR·
TERS, ORDINAr-.CES, OR RESOLUTIONS, OR BY OR liNDER OTHER
PROVISIONS OF TilE OHIO
CONS11TU liON
INCLUDING,
WITHOUT ll\41TATION, SEll ION
36 OF ARTI CLE 11, SECTIO'IS 2i, 21,
~m.AND tJOf ARIICI.l VIII, AND
ARTICI I S X ~Nfl XVIII \NIJ DO
NO I IMP/lilt A'JY PRJ \ 101 SlY
ADOP ll.IJ PROVJ';IO~ 01 I li E
01110 CONS'! I rt I [JON OR ANY

1

To adopt Section 2o of Article VIII of tbe Constitution of
tbe State of Ohio.
This proposed BIJ.Iendment would:

NOTICE
Addav1lle Rinky Dink
ASSOCiation will be holding a
meeting
Tuesday, Oct 1Oth
at 6:00pm.
Elect1on of new officers ...
all members please attend.

TAKING
APPLICATIONS

(Proposed by Resolution of tbe Genenl Assembly of Obio)

(740) 339-0194 or
(740) 446-2422

-

PUBLIC NOTICE
Gallia County
Conservation Club
meeting October 11
Dinner at 6:30 pm

&amp; Commercial

Contact Eric Blackburn

740-446-7283

'

' 'I

enabling tbe environmentally safe and productive development
and use or reuse of publicly and privately owned lands, including
those within urban areas, by the remediation or clean up of
contamination; and addressing by clearance, land acquisition or
otherwise, contamination or other property conditions or
circumstances that might be deleterious to tbe public health and
safety and the environment and water and other aatural resources,
or that preclude or inhibit environmentally sound or economic use
of the property.

•

•

•

OFFICE OF litE
SECRETARY m STATE

OFOHtO
I. J. Kenneth Blackwell. Sec n:I.U) of
State do hc rt:by certll) that the IOrc~o­
tng 1s the full text of the constitutional

amendment proposed by the General
As~embly

and filed HI the omce of the
Secretary of State pursuant to An1cle
XVI, Sccuon I of the Const1tutJon of

the Stale of Oh1o, together With the hallot language and explanallon ccrtdicd to
me by the Oh1o Ballot Board and arguments submitted to me by the proponents and opponents ofth~: .1mcndment,
a._c; prescnhed hy law

1'1 TESTIMONY WIIERI.FORE,
I have hereunto subscnb~d my name
at Columbus, Oh10 till &lt;; 7tl1 day of
SC'prcmhcr, 2000
J Kenneth Blackwell

StCRFTARY OF STATE

4. Limit the total outstanding principal amount of all state
obligations Issued for conservation purposes, whicb shall be
general obligations of the state backed by the full faith and credit,
revenue, and taxin&amp; power of the state, to two hundred million
dollars (SlOO,OOO,OOO) and tbe principal amount or all new
obll&amp;atlono isoued within a oln1le 81cal year to Ofty million dollan
(5!0,000,000) plus tbe principal amount of obllaatlons that In any
prior R•cal year could have been but were not luued wltbln the
Ofty million dollar (550,000,000) flaeal year limit.

5. Limit the total oulltandlna principal amount or all atate
obllaatlon• luued for revitalization purpoau, which ahall not be
aeneral obllaatlona or tht atatt and aball not be backed by the full
raUb and credit, revenue, and ta1lna powir or tbe 1tate but which
would be aecured by a pledae or de•lanated atate revenue• and
receipt• •• the General A11embly autborlze1, to two hundred
million dollan (5300,000,000) and tbt principal amount of 111 new
obllaatton• laaued within a 1inale Dacal year to fifty million dollan
(550,000,000) plu• tbe principal amount or obllaatloDI that in any
prior R•cal year could have been but were not laaued wltbln the
fifty million dollar (550,000,000) fbeal year limit.

JANETS HAIR GO ROUND
Perms &amp; Highlights $5.00 off
through Oct
New healthy options
ClASH wrap perms, and new
CHUNKY foiling, both create
texture &amp;body.
Operators
Terri Roush &amp; Carrie Miller
Call 773-5404
for an appointment

If adopted by a maJonty ol the electors
votmg on th1s amendment, the amendment shall take effect 11nrncd1ately

2. Specify "conservation purposes~ as meaning the conservation
and preservation of natural areas, open spaces, and farmlands and
other lands devoted to agriculture, Including by acquiring land or
interests therein; tbe provision of state and local park and
recreation facilities, and other actioos that permit and enhance the
availability, public use, and enjoyment of natural areas aad open
spaces in Ohio; and land, forest, water and other natural resource
management projects.

3. Specify "revitalization purposes" as meaning providing for and

Chicken &amp; Rib BBQ
Sun. Sept. 8
Syracuse Village Hall
Servmg starts at 11 am $4.50
Sponsored by Syracuse VFD

LAW PREVIOUSLY ENAC1 ED BY
1 HE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
(G) OBLIGAT IO NS ISSUED
UNDER THIS SEC riON, TII EIR
I RANSFER, AND TilE IN I LRI:ST,
INTE RES r EQUIVAI.FNT. AND
0 riiER INCOME OR ACCRLTED
AMOUNTS ON THEM, INCLUDING ANY PROF! r MADE ON
TH EIR SALE, EXCIIANGI:, OR
OHlER DISPOSITION, Sl/ALL AT
ALL TIMES BE FREE FROM TAXATION WITHIN THE STATE
EFFECTIVE DATE

~

l. Authorize the stale to issue bonds and other obligations to pay
tbe costs of projects for environmental con!J,ervation and
'
I1
revitalization purposes.

Hunters Safety Course
October 28 &amp; 29
noon ti15 pm
Registration
required ... Call
Noreen Saunders at
446-4612
Need to Sell!
Nice furnished 12 x 60
Vindale Mobile home with
extended living room,
central air, new furnace,
nice flat over 1/2 acre,
-in lot on St. Rt. #7
Crown city
Price Reduced $28,000
Phone 446-2361
or 886-5462

EXPLANATION OF STATE ISSUE 1
(As prepared by the Ohi11 Ballot Board)

PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

Driveways, Parking Lots,

Medicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other
breathing medicat1on billed
to Medicare. Save money.
Free Home Delivery. Call
Bowman's Homecare

T~ Soil Fill Dirt Bank Run
elivered or Picked Up
Min Loader
CHG $35.00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co.
1-740-446-1142
Monday · Saturday

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

6. Require that the obllaations mature no later than December 31
of tbe twenty-Ofth (lSth) calendar year after iuuance, except that
obligations issued to refund or retire other obligations must
mature no later thim December 31 of the twenty-Ofth (l5tb)
calendar year after tbe year in which the oriRinal obligation to pay
was issued or entered into.

"'
'v
-:;,•,
•••
A"

•~·
:If'

••

_,

•~·•

.,..

...-::
.~

-~

........
....
......••.
••

7. Determine and conftrm that state and local governmental
participation in and financial assistance to environmental and
related conservation, preservation and revitalization projects are
public purposes, authorize the state to participate or assist in the
financing of those projects undertaken by local governmel)lal
entities or by others, Including not-for-profit organizations, and
specify that these activities would not be subject to the lending aid
and credit prohibitions of Sections 4 and 6 of Article VIII of the
Ohio Constitution.

I. This amendment allows the passage oflaws permitting the state to ISsue
bonds and other obligations to pay -the costs of projects for environmental conservation and revitalization purposes.

.

. .

Argument for State Issue 1
State Issue I would allow the State of Ohio to issue $400 m111ion in
bonds for the conservation and revitalization of land and water in our
state

Issue I seeks to Improve and preserve the quality of hfe for all Ohioans.
2. This amendment defines ''conservation purposes" to mean the conservation and preservation of natural areas, open spaces, and fannlands
and other lands, devoted to agriculture, including by acquiring land or
mterests in land; the provision of state and local park and recreation facilities, and other actions that permit and enhance the availability, puglie use, and enjoyment of natural areas and open spaces tn Oh1o; and
land, forest, water and other natural resource management projects
3. This amendment defines "revitalization purposes,, to mean providing

for and enabling the environmentally safe and productive development
and use or reuse of publicly and privately owned lands, including those
within urban areas, by the remediation or clean up of contamination;
and addressing by ckarance, land acquisition or otherwise, contamination or other property conditions or circumstances that might be
deleterious to the public health and safety and the environment and
water and mher natural resources, or that preclude or inhibit environmentally sound or economic use of the propeny.
4 This amendment limits the principal amount of state obligations for
conservation purposes that can be outstanding at any t1me to no more
than two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000), and lim1ts the
amount that can be borrowed in any one fiscal year to no more than
fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) plus the amount that could have
been but wasn't borrowe&lt;l many prior fiscal year up to this fifty million dollar ($50,000,000) limit. The bonds and other obligations issued
for conservation purposes would be general obligations of the state,
backed by the full faith and credit, revenue, and tax mg power of the
state.
5. This amendment limits the principal amount of slate obligations for re·
vitalization purposes that can be outstanding at any time to no more
than two hundred million dollars ($200,000,000), and limits the
amount that can be borrowed in any one fiscal year to no more than
fifty million dollars ($50,000,000) plus the amount that could have
been but wasn't-borrowed In any prior fiscal year up to this fifty mil·
lion dollar ($50,000,000) limit. The bonds and other obligations issued
for revitallzation purposes would not be general obligations of the state
and would not be backed by the full faith and credit, revenue, and laKing power of the state. They would be secured by a pledge of desig·
nated state revenues and receipts as the General Assembly authorizes.
amendme~t requires that the obligations malure no later than
December 31 of the twenty-fifth (25th) calendar yeur uf\cr issunn~e.
except that obligations luued to refund or retire oiher oblisations must
mature no later than December 31 of the twenty-fif\h (25th) calendar
year after the year in which the original obligation to pay was issued
or entered into.

6. This

7. This amendment determines and confirms that state and local-govern·
mental panicipation in and financial assistance to environmental and
related conservation, preservation and revitalization projects' are public purposes; authonzes the state to panicipate or assist in the financ·
ing of those projects undertaken by local governmental entities or by
others, including not-for-profit organizations; and specifies that these
· activities would not be subject to the prohibitions against lending aid
and credit in Sections 4 and 6 of Anicle VIII of the Ohio Constitution.
To the extent that state obligations are payable from state General
Revenue Fund resources, the1r 1ssuance would be subject to the five
per cent (5%) "cap" on state debt service under Section 17 of An1cle
VIII of the Ohio Constitution. Pursuant to Section 5a of An1cle XII of
the Ohio Constitution, money raised from motor vehicle related rev·
enues could not be used for the payment of debt serv1ce on obligations
issued under this amendment.

AREAS AND FARMLANDS, INCLUDING BY MAKING URBAN
AREAS MORE DESIRABLE OR
If adopted, this amendment shall take immediate effect.
SUITABLE FOR DEVELOPMENT
AND REVITALIZATION, TO CON·
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.
TROL, PREVENT, MINIMIZE,
CLEAN UP, OR REMEDIATE C'ER·
TAIN CONTAMINATION OF OR
YES
SHALL THE PROPOSED
POLlUTION FROM LANDS IN THE
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?
STATE
AND WATER CONTAMINA·
NO
TION OR POLLUTION, TO PRO·
VIDE FOR SAFE AND PRODUCTIVE
URBAN LAND USE OR
read
as
follows:
ISSUE I
REUSE,
TO ENHANCE THE AVAIL·
ARTICLE Vlll
TEXT OF PROPOSED
Seclion 2o. (AJ IT IS DETER· ABILITY, PUBLIC USE, AND ENCONSTITUTIONALAMENDMENT
MINED AND CONFIRMED THAT JOYMENT OF NATURAL AREAS
(Amended SubstJtuJe House Joint
THE ENVIRONMENTAL AND RE· AND RESOURCES, AND TO CRE·
Resolution Number 15)
LATED CONSERVATION, PRESER· ATE AND PRESERVE JOBS AND
Proposmg to enact Section 2o of VATION, AND REVITALIZATION ENHANCE EMPLOYMEN1 OPA11icle Vlll of 1he Constllulion of the PURPOSES REFERRED TO IN Dl· PORTUN11IES I HOSE PURPOSES
State of Ohio relating to environmental VISIONS (A)( I) AND (2) OF THIS ARE
(I) CONSERVAriON l' l 'RPOSES.
and related conservation, preservation. SECTION, AND PROVISIONS FOR
MEANING
CONSERVATION ~ND
THEM,
ARE
PROPER
PUBLIC
PURand revital1zat1on p~rposes, mcluding
PRI
SERVArlON
Of NA II IR1IL
POSES
OF
THE
STATEANDLOCAI.
authorization of the tssuance of generARI.!IS,
(li'FN
Sl'M rs AND
al and other obhgallons of the state to GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES AND
ARE NECESSARY AND APPROPRI- b\RMLANDS AND OriirR L~NDS
pay costs related to those purposes.
ATE MEANS TO IMPROVI. I Hf· OLVOHD 10 •\(,RilTIII R[. IN·
'
Be 11 resolved by the General QUALITY OF LIFE AND 1111: GEN· CLL 'DIN(, IIY A( ()I 'I RIM• I liND
Assembly of the Slate of Ohio, three· ERAL AND ECONOMIC \'if-1.1 • OR 11'1 H Rl ";1 S lllr R~ IN: ~R!l\ I·
fifths of the members elected to each BEING OF TilE IIEOPI L m !IllS SION 01 STAre AND I.OC AL P!IRK
\ Nll IUTRI· ·1 11 0'&lt; I ACILI rt [S,
house c:oncurr'mg herein, that tht:re STATF.:·1 0 BI.Tll K E"&gt;Sl Rl II II
ANI&gt;
OTIIF:R ACIIONS TIIA1 PCR·
shall be submitted to the electors of the PUBLIC HEAl til. S~l LTY. il'iD
Ml
I
~ND
I:NIIA NC'E TilE AVAIL·
state in the manner prescnbed by law at WELFARE: TO PROIECl WML·R
1\BIIITY. PI 'Bl.IC LISE, liND EN·
the general election to be held on AND OHlER NATURAL R"·
J())
w · Nl OF NATURAL AR[AS
Novemhcr 7, 2000. a proposal~cnact SOURCES: TO l'ROVIDf I OR 1111
.liND
OI'LN SPACES IN 0~110, AND
Scct10n 2o of Article Vll~f the CONSLRV!I rJON '\Nil PRI Sl'RvAConst1tut1on of the State of Oh10 to llON 01 NATURAL AND OPEN LAND, fORES r, WATER, AND

+---,--

OTHER NATURAL RESOURCE
MANAGEMENT PROJ ECTS:
(2) REVITALIZATION PURPOSES,
MEANING PROVIDING FOR AI'\D
ENABLING HIE ENVIRONMENTALLY SAFE AND PRODUCTIVE
DEVELOPMENT AND USE OR
REUSE OF PUBLICLY AND PRI·
VATELY OWNED LANDS, INCL UD·
lNG THOSE WITHIN URBAN
AREAS, BY THE REMEDIATION OR
CLEAN UP, OR PLANNING AND
ASSESSMENT FOR REMEDIATION
OR CLEAN UP, OF CONTAMINATION, OR ADDRESSING. BY
CLEARANCE, LAN I&gt; ALQUISITION
OR ASSEMBLY, INFRASTRUCI U R~ . OR OrllER'IYISE. THA1 OR
OTIIFR PROP/· RrY CONDlliONS
OR CIRCt IMSTANCI:.S rlii\1 MAY
~E DELI: I LRIOLIS TO 1 HE PUBLIC
H~ALIII AND SAfETY ANIJ TilE
cNV IRONMF'IT AND Wi\1 ER AND
0 IllER NMliRAI. RFSOlJRCES,
OR I HM PRLCLUDE OR IMIIBIT
I.NV IRONMENTALLY SOUND OR
I'CONOMIC IISF OR RFUSE 01·
HIE PROP! RTY
(81 lllE GtNf.RAI. ASSEMBLY
1-tAY PROVIDE ll\' LAW. SUBJECl
TO II IE I.IMITATIO'\S OF A'10 IN
ACCORDANll. WITII fillS SEC'·
TION FOR lllf ISS! W•Kf OF
BONDS AND OTlll'R OBI JC , \liONS
OJ 11/E STAll I OR rill. l'l RPOSI"
OF PAYING em rs OF PROifll S
IMPLEMENTING THOSE PURPOSJ'S

• Issue I will help keep our state's drinking water, rivers and streams
clean, preserve and protect wildlife and the1r hab1tats, and expand
outdoor recreational opponunities for all Ohioans
• Issue I will reduce the number of polluted mdustrial sites and clean
up brown fields (property left abandoned due to real .or perce1ved con·
tamination) to stimulate economic development in urban areas and
private investment in our state.

• Passage of Issue I w1ll not let polluters off the hook for the damage
that they have caused. Polluters can stJII be held accountable and be
reqUJred to pay for cleanup.
• Issue I will not require a tax increase but can be paid otT with current
liquor profits and general state revenues.
• Passage of Issue I is anticipated to generate other sources of invest·
ment, mcluding funds from the federal government and the private
sector for local goverf!tnCnts to use to protect the environment and to
preserve greenspace
How does Issue I work?
Two funds of $200 mill tOn each would be created The conservallon
fund would be used to preser'r'e open space, mamtam local watersheds,

and develop bike paths and other recrea11onal trails The rev1tahzat1on
fund would suppon brown fields cleanup and redevelopment, as well as
urban renewal. Eligible projects would mclude s1te acqu1S1lion, demolition, and pollution cleanup.
Issue \ would contribute to a clean, safe and healthy environment for
all Ohioans, leaving a 1egB.cy that future generations deserve.

Vote YES on State Issue I.
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT FOR
STATE ISSUE I
Senator James Carnes
Senator Eric Fln11erhut
Senaior Roben Gardner
Senator Anthony La tel I

Representative James Mettler
Representative Kirk Schuring
Representutlve Mike Sievens
Representative Erin Sullivan

Araument In Opposition to State Issue 1
Issue I proposes a Constitutional amendment Io ~flow the state to issue
new debt of up to $400 million evenly split for land conservation and
land revitalization purposes. The $400 million can be reissued, without
a vote of the people, as it is ret ~red and the fund would operate in per·
petu1ty. The new debt authority, similar to a person gettmg his/her debt
limit raised on a credit card. is unnecessary considering the following.
Issue\ is a poorly targeted program that w11l have lmle 1mpact on urban
spraw I, farmland protection, or urban revitalization. This program
would conserve less than I% of Oh1o 's farmland and open space at a
cost of hundreds of millions tn taxpayer dollars
According to the LegiS lative Budget Office (L BO), the cost ofrepaymg
the $200 m11110n for conservAtion purposes over 20 years could reach
$303 million LBO also estnnates the cost of repaymg the $200 mlll1on
for revJtalization purposes ove1 20 years could exceed $308 mdlion
The allocatiOn or funds for land conservation and land revitalization
should be subject 10 the pubhc budge1 process, which wou ld allo:v for
the approval of projects before the allocation of fundmg, therefore, the
issuance of new debt IS not necessary The State should not be g1ven
the authonty to issue new debt for a program that 1s a token attempt at
conservat1on and revitalization

Vote NO on Issue I.
COMMITTEE TO PREPARE ARGUMENT AGAINST STATE
ISSUE I
Representative Bill Taylor

Senator Lynn R Wachtmann
\1) NOT MOR E 1ItAN TWO HUN·
DRED MILLION DOLI ARS PRIN·
C IPAL A viOL INT or OBLIGA·
TIONS ISS I ED UNDER THIS SEC·
TION l'OR tONSI.RV~T IO N Pt;KPOSFS MAY Bl Ol 'TSTANDING IN
II CCO RDANC I' WITH THEIR
ri· RMS AI ,\'11 ONE TIM E NOT
MORl IIi/IN FifTY Mil LION
DO l~ c\RS PRI NC II'Al AMOUNT
OF TltOS F Olll.IGilflO'IS. PL US
Til~ PRINCIPAl
AMOUNT OF
IIIOS~ 01111 Go\TIO'IS Tll~T IN
I'-\ I'RIOR fiSCA l YEAR COULD
/1 II [ Ill I.~ 131 T \\ FRF NOl ISSl'l-D III TI II'J lilt rli"T\'-Mll·
I ION-DOl I \R ll~l AI 1 tAR
LIMIT, M ·\ \ Ill ISSI IEll IN ANY
I"ISCAL 11 IIR [ltOSE OBI tGA·
ri O\S Sll Ill /If td \I R..\1 CJ fl .
110 \Till'-'01 1111 ST.\11 •IND
1/11 I t II I \I ill \ \ID tRI DII'.
Rl VI "\ll \'\ll I 1\I'IC o POll l"R

S[.'\lt Sll!\1 L Ill
10 111F PA \ ~11 \. r OJ·
DEBT SERVICT ON TI II.M AS 1'1
BEC'0~1ES l&gt;l lt. ALL AS PRO\'IDED II' TH IS SF CT ION
12) NOT \tORI Ill \N ·1\\ U Ill~ ­
DRED MILLIO~ DOLL •\RS I'Rl'J·
Cl P~ I AMOl \ T 01 Oil I IC \ I'ION~
iSSL1ED LI 'IDI"R Ti llS SrCIIO:-.o
FOR RC\'Il illll •ITION Pl 'Rl'OSI S
MAY Ill, 0111 S IANIJI \IC, IN '-C·
CORDA'ICE \\l l lllllflR TI: RMS
AT AN\ ONI TIMe NO I ~IORF
T11AN Fll T\ ~JILliON DOll \R\
PRINCIP~I 1\101 ~ r 01· TIIO't
OBl.IGArlO'IS, PI l 'S 1111 PRI'JC I·
PALA~tUl 'II 01 t110SL OBIJ&lt;,A·
TIONS THAT IN IINY PRIOR riS·
CAL Yl'AR (0 l 111J Ill\\ I ~U 'J
Bll'l \1 I Kl NO I IS~I'I I) \111111'\
111[
FlfiY-~tllllON - DOII IR
ll~C.\1 \ l. ·IR liM! I \I\\ Ill I~·
Sl FD I'I \'IY ll~ C II \I ~R
Of

liiE

PL~DGED

-------·----

�-

Pege A1 0 • ioanbp Q:imrf·iorntlntl

•

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plu..nt, WV

U.S. embraces new Yugoslav leader. setting aside concems
WASHINGTON (AP) - The dence-minded Montenegro and conununist, and I also know that
Clinton
administration
is demands for the prosecution of he does not believe that dealing
embracing Yugoslav President- Milosevtc tOr war crimes.
with Ser~ policies includes
elect Vojislav Koscunica as a
"! know what President Kos- dhn~nsing and the devastademocrat who offers new hope tunica has said, and I know him tion of the rights of those that are
for Serbs, serting aside concerns to be a Serb nationalist," S&lt;·cretary not ethnic Serbs."
that Slobodan Milosevic's succes- of State Madeleine Albri~ht said
In the strongest show of supsor has had little regard for U.S. Friday as Mi!oSL·vic's reginw port for Kustunica, the adminispolicies in the Balkans.
crumbled amid J " ' ' " public tr:nion sig1uled that it intends to
Those policies include partu:i- upnsmg.
move quick1y in concert wirh
pation in UN. administration of
Tint she quickly added, "I also · European allies to remove the
Kosovo, support for indepen- know that he is not a former eco nonuc sanctions intposed to

punish Milosevic.
"Now is not the time for the
United Sutes or our allies to
retreat from the Balkans in complacency," President Clinton said.
"Now is the time to stay the
course and stick with people who
have won their freedom, the time
to build the economic and civil
institutions that will allow
democracy to endure, reconciliation and cooperation to develop,

Inside:·

'

Suhday, Oc;tober 8, 2000

and the economy to grow."
Despite that assertion, Albnght
wuned that the lifting of sanctions might be reconsidered if
Milosevic nunages to carve out a
role for himself in the new government. Milosevic, in finally
conceding defeat late Friday,
promised to return to politics
after a rest.
Kostunica '· has said he won't
extradite Milosevic to face war

to

.,

Meigs falls N-Y, Page 82 .
Miller difeats Southem, Page BJ
Prep Footbijll Scoreboard, Page B4 &amp; B6
NFL Notebook, Page B7

sation frotn~errorist states and

would forc'e states to pay costs
when a crinunal is released from
prison and commits a crin1e in
another state.
It passed 3 71-1 and is expected
to be approved by the Senate
early next week.
Reauthorizing the Violence
Against Women Act has been a
top priority of the Clinton
admin,istration, whi ch estimates
violence against women has
decreased 21 percent since ' the
law was first passed 111 1994.
The bill more than doubles
funding allowed in the previous
~ct, which expired with the start
of the new fiscal year Oct. 1. It
provides nearly S1 billion over
five years to help prosec utors
track down donfestic abusers,
$875 million to expand shelters
fot battered women and $140
million for grants to stop violent
c'imes against women on college

The nteasurc · increases the

The act "hJs b~,.·,:n ,l!ld must
remain J po\vcrful tool 111 the
fight Jga in'\t domcsw: violence,

stalking and sexu.1! assault," said
Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y,
noting that domestic VIOlence is
the No. 1 health risk for women
between rhe ages of 15 and 44.
The measure is also expanded
to include programs to prevent
dating violence. With that inclusion, said Rep. C01istance Morella , R-Md., · a chief sponsor, "I
hope we can begin to recognize
that young women are falling
prey to violent relationships in
their ea rliest dating experiences."
The sex traffic king legislation,
sponsored by Rep. Chris Snuth,
R-NJ., provides $95 million over
two years to combat trafficking in
wome n and children,. what has
become the third largest so~rce of
income for intern;Hiona] organ·i zed crime after drugs and guns.
More than I million wome.n and
chi ldren are victims of trafficking
every year, with an estimated
50,000 entering the United
States.
Th e legislation, sa id Smith,
"th rows the book at those who
would co mmit thl'se heinous
crimes and would nuke money
off of the exploitation of women
and children."

WASHINGTON (AP) not see are the intera ctive offerWould-be rivals of a merged ings of co.ntent . providers who
America Online and Time are not Time Warner's partners."
Warner urged official intervenJohn Froman, execurive vice
tion Friday to ensure the deal president of merchandising of
doesn't
curtail
consutner . choice for instant messaging
and other new Internet ser-

punishment, up to lifl! imprison-

ment, for those convicted of running
trafficking_ operations,
authorizes grants for rehabilitation and shelter programs for victims, gives relief from deportation
for victims facing retribution if
they returned home, helps foreign
governments trylng to stop sex
trade activities and sets up a
process for cutting off nonhumanftarian aid to governments
that tolerate or condone traffickmg.
Sen. Sam Brownback, R - Kan.,
author of the Senate bill with
Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn.,
said it would be "a model piece of
legislation around the world, to
begin to deal with some of the
darker parts of the global economy."
,
Also included in the package is
a measure making it easier for terrorist victims to collect damages
from nations that foster that tcrronsm.
American courts have awarded
former hostages and families ·of
terrorist victims multimilliondollar judgments agamst Iran and
Cuba,· but the administration has
· so far blocked th'e freeing of
frozen assets to those winning the 1
suits.

Albnght ami uth~r U.S. officials pmnted out that thiS country
does not alway.s agree with every

SUNDAY's
•

government with which tt tnaiu-

tain"i rebtions.
It's "anybody's guess what the ·

HIGHLIGHTS

BY BuTcH COOPER

'

soid State Dep.Ittmcnt spOk&lt;·snun

Prep Sports

Richard floucher.

CO!llp.lllies · like Ti111e Warner
sti ll hold \e:1sing monopolies for
set-[(&gt;p boxe&lt;&gt; tllilt elLiblt.:o interactive IC.Jturcs on televisions.

Nelsonville· York
Wellston
Belpre
Vinton County
Meigs
Alexander

HoonUI7:00P.M.
OPEN
Friday, October 13

4:00pm till 10:00 pm
Saturday, October 14

9:00am U111 0:00pm
Admission
Adults SS.OC
12 &amp; Under Sl.OC

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
'"FALL FESTIVAL''
OCTOBER 7
OTHER TIMES CALL740·_245·91~47.
AFTER 6:00PM

Area rron-1eagua
.

S I 0,1100
deductible, meaning ir\ \vonh up
. to S2,801) per fJmily, wer year. The
candida te makes when he's in a ad docsn 't mcntton th:~t 2rl perdead even race," said Dan Schnur, cent of S10,()(J() i11 tt1itio11 is.
a Republican strategist not con- olrc.1dy deductible. 111ean•ng tlut
nt:!cted With the Bu\h campa1gt1.
(;ore IS on ly gtving f:uml!L•s ;m
u Jt's not satUf;)(IO!l, but tt''i n.ot
cxtn SHOll per year.
that far ofr"
Thl' .thm:t :td is a rc&lt;~potHC to a
Democrats still doubt [lush\ COP att,ICk ..,pot on prc&lt;.,ct i){tion
commitment. "We're happy to sec druh~ .md 1'\ .11ring 111 '\t.ltc'i \Vhcrc
him wasting h1) llloncy," \t~Id the ICxJ 'i governor\ argu111em has
Core spokesman Mark L1biani.
111.1dc inru~1ds : Florida, TcmH:..,~ee
Bush, who says he won't cede and Nevada.
to

ALL

Wahama
3·3
Hannan
1·6
South Gallia .
0-6
Friday's Gamea
Wahama 60, Gilmer County 13
Guyan Valley 36, Hannan 0
TodaY,'a Game
Gauley Bridge at South Gallia.
late
• This Week's Games
South Gallia at Clarksburg Notre
Dame
Buffalo-Putnam at Wahama
Meadow Bridge a1 Hannan

No . ,1 Logan (7-0) def. Marietta,
48·0
No. 2 Portsmou1h (7-0) def. Miami
Trace, 62· 26
No. 3 ParkerSburg (7·0) def.
Hoover, 75-22
No . 4 Jackson (7·0) del. River
Valley, 41·6
.
No. 5 Ironton (6·1) del. Coal
Grove, 51·0
No.6 Gallipolis (6·1) def. Athens,
35·0
No. 7 l=ort Frye (6·1) lost to
Beallsville, 28·13
No. 8 Point (5·2) def. Warren, 17·

•

0

UTBACKS

No. 9 Miller (7-0) def. Southern,
53·21 .
No. 10 Eastern (6·1) def.&gt; Federal
Hocking, 63-8 .
Others
Ross SE (6·1) def. Piketon, 14·10
Cheshire Naval Academy (7·0)
del. South .Nebraska Polytechnic
Institute: 3·0

Gore's 62-ce nt-per- day figure
assumes that "most taxpayers"
ea rn less than $20,000 per year.
It represents a tactical shift in
Gore's ad strategy, which had

up

0·2
0·2

5·2
4-3
3·4
1·6
3·4
0·7

Miller
2·0 7·0
Eastern
2·0 6-1
Southern
1-1 3·4
Waterford
1-1 3-4
Trimble
0-2 3-4
Federal Hocking 0·2 1·6
Friday's Games
Nelsonville-York 35, Meigs 7 ·
Miller 53, Soulhern 21
Eastern 63. Federal Hocking 8
Vinton County 27, Alexander 20
Wellston 45, Belpre 22
Waterford 20, Trimble 14 OT
This Week's Games
Meigs al Alexander
Southern at Waterford
Miller at Eastern
Wellston a1 Nelsonville· York
Federal Hocking at Trimble
Belpre al Vinton County

Rio Grande, Ohio
Go North 1/4 mile on Route 850from
Rodney Pike Exit .
TurnLeftat4·WayStap .
Follow SIQns ForTaylo~s Berry Patch

announcer says.
But that's misleading because

of

1-1
1-1

ALL

The OVP 10
How They Fared

tlegrounds to protect his lead in
the st;ltc. Fabiani s:tid there were
no pL:ms to air ads 'in the sta te,
The Bmh ads criticize Gorc 1s
education and prescription drug
plans, and arc already running
elsewhere in the country. The
decision to increa~e the buy was
made in a Fnday night meNing,
thus the ads won't begin airing
until Wednesday, sa1d one of the
officia Is.
The new Gore spot, called
"Trickie Down," will air in 15
states and goes after Bush's $1.3.
trillion tax cut.
"Almost half goes to the richest 1 percent. What tnckles
down? An JVerage of 02 cents a
day for most taxp ayers," an

Core\ pbn \Votdd Jllake 2:)

2·0
2·0

Hocking Dlvlolon
TVC ALL

Cal ifornia like IllS father did,
hopes to force Gore to siphon
money from other campaign bat-

percent

ALL

TVC

Gore attacks in
Bush in new TV ads

revolved around positive messages. Core is now applying his
popL\Iist pllch to the heart of
Bush's campaign platform, suggc!;tlllg their conteo;t jo,; a choice
bdween "us"____.,_ average Amcri cm' - :md "them'' - the rid1.
The second Gore ad. airing in
13 sr:w:s, promotes Gore's pbn to
m.1kc it c&lt;JSier tn p:-~y c ollege
tuition .

SEO

Jackson
4-0 7-0
Logan
4·0 7-0
Gallia Academy 4·0 6-1
Poinl Pleasant 2·2 5-2
Athens
1·3 2-5
Warren
1·3 2·5
Marietla
0·4 1-6
River Valley
0·4 0·7
Frtday'a Game~
Gallia Academy 35, Athens 0
Poinl Pleasant 17, Warren 0
Jackson 41, River Valley 6
Logan 48, Marietla 0 ·
This Week's Games
Logan at Gallia Academy
Athens at Point Pleasan1
River Valley at MarieHa
Warren at Jackson

Cir(uit Ciry S~nrc&lt;&gt; , said cable

•

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Trying to
tie Republican George W Bush
to trickle-down economics of the
past, Democrat AI Gore released a
new, populist ad that accuses Bush
of favoring the wealthy over
everyone else. Bush increased his
presence in vote-rich California.
The Gore ad, which includes
several questionable claims, is one
of three new spots that will begin
airing Saturday. They are the first
Gore ads to attack his White
House opponent, though the
Democratic National Committee
has aired negative spots on the
yice president's behalf
Republican officials, mean while, said the Bush campaign
plans to spend $1.8 million over
the next two weeks to pierce the
Los Angeles· media market for the
first time. California and its 54
electoral votes are criti cal to
Core's election strategy. thus Bush
is trying to show that he's serious
about making the state competitive.
Polls show Gore with a healthy
lead in the stato, but R.epublican
say they made progress in the
handful of areas outside Los
Angeles that have been airing
Bush ads. The . new buy puts
Bush's California ad budget at
about $1.5 million a week, said
the GOP officials, whn spoke on
~ondition of anony•nity. I3y contrast, California gubcrnaton;t!
candidates spent more than S2
million a week m 1998, and
major ballot proposal c.1mpaigm
this year will cost SSO million.
"It's a scnous commitment. It\ ·
the kind of buy that a statewide

SEOAL

Ohio Dlvlolon
TVC

OPEN SATURDAYS
SlartiiiC)
Stplember 30 lhi'OUQh October 28

Boys Soccer
Saturday's Match
Poca at Point Pleasant. late
Tuesday's Matches
Oh1o Valley Christian at Ironton
St. Joe, 5:00
.
Point Pleasant·at St. Marys, 7:00

2000

LEGACY GT SEDAN

2001
LEGACY L SEDAN

WAS$23,749

PW, PL, TILT, CRUISE, FULLY
LOADED

12063 RIO RED, PWR SUNROOF,
TILT, CRUISE, LOADED

Eagle~ dominate Lancers

rdationship' wdl turn out to be;'

vices.

They urged the ·government
to intervene with conditions
that would ensure the merged
company ' would give others
access to its networks and not
thwart the ability of new services to operate with each
other.
"There are no other companies that, when combined,
would enjoy similar d11minance
in both conduit and content,"
Louis Meisinger, executive vice
president and general ·counsel
of the Walt Disney Co., told the
House Commerce telecommunications subcommittee.
The merged business could
use its wejght to keep other
content off its cable systems,
Int ernet services and new
entertainment 'offerings like
two-way interactive TV, he
said.
He said unless Congress or
the federal regulators intervene, "What consun1ers will

PageBl
Suncl.y. October 1. 2000

·House moves against violence Rivals seek conditions on
.against wqmen, sex trafficking AOL-Time Wamer merger .
CrllllpUSL'S.

'

crimes charges in Th~ I Iague.

Football

' WASHINGTON (AP) -The
House approvod a sweeping anticrime bill Frday that includes
more than S3 billion to fight viglencc against women and seeks to
protect foreign women brought
into the country by the international illegal sex trade .
The catchall legislation also has
provisions that would make it easier for victims to collect coJnpcn-

\

NOW

Girls Soccer
Thursday's Match
Point Pleasant a1 Capital, 7:00

Volleyball

Monday's Matches
South Webster at Ohio Valley
Christian, 6:00 ·
River Valley at MarieHa, 5:15
Tuesday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5:15
Ohio Valley Christian at River Val~
ley, 5:30
Trimble at Southern, 5 :55
Eastern at Waterford , 5:55
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 5:55

RVHS boosters meet
1\lesday nigh~

CHESH IR-E River Valley
High ·School athletic boosters
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. iri
1
the school cafeteria.
'

OVP SPORTS STAFF

STEWART -They scored
quick and they scored often.
When Eastern got the ball,
they spent little time getting it
to the endzone as the Eagles
defeated Federal Hocking 63~ on Friday.
Eastern didn't take long. to
score their first points.
Less than two minutes into
the openii:Ig quarter, senior .
Brad Willford ran the ball in
from 15 yards out to help put
Eastern up 7- 0. That play was
setup by 41-yard run by junior
RJ Gibbs.
Willford and Gibbs combined for a good portion of
the yards gained by the Eagles
.on the ground. .
Willford finished with eight
carries for 137 yards and three
touchdowns, while Gibbs 1had
136 yards on I 1 carries ahd a
touchdown. ·
~
.. We thought we coula ·run
the ball against them," said
Eastern head coach Scott
Christman. "We did b~tter
dian I thought we would,'Our
line really executed really' well
and running backs ran hard.
We had a few explosive plays."
Eastern made it a 15-0-game
with 4:08 left in the first quarter as junior quarterback' Garrett Karr handed the ball otT to
Chris Lyons on a reverse· for a
25-yard score.
i
Karr had 38 yards on 3'- of-5
passing · and 61 yards rushing

PleiH ... Ellstem.

Pa~

bullies
Gilmer

•

'

GLENVILLE
Gilmer
County's spirits were high Friday
night, but Wahama proved to be a
homecoming spoiler as the White
Falcons
thumped the
Titans, 60-13.
Wahal11a
again
· relied
solely upon its
running game
as the Falcons
tallied
486
yards on just 48
carnes.
Big
Hankinson
yard-gainers for
151 yards
the
Falcons
were Brandon

L,__..:;:;:._ __J

Hankinson
with 151 yards
on 13 carries
and
Eran
Branch, who
rushed 10 times
for 113 yards
for his second
straight 1DO-

Branch
ll.3 yards

yard game.
Wahama
.
ured &amp;a to
open the game. Shilo Staats
received the opening kickoff and
returned it to the T-itan 40 yard
line. The White Falcons needed
only two and one-half minutes to
. score as Robert Brinker capped
the drive with a 16-yard run .
Hendrik Olszewski booted the
· BOUND FOR GLORY- Eastern junior wideout Chris Lyons ·has eyes for the end zone against Federal
Hocking. Lyons scored on a 25-yard run as the Eagles won, 63-8. (Bryan Long photo)

81

Wahama

Please see Wahama, Page BS

"

DefenSe the ·order of the day for Big Blacks
BY DAN POLCYN
REGISTER SPORTS STAFF
POINT PLEASANT
When it comes io football,
everybody loves offense.
After all, what does "NFL
Primetime" mostly show as
highlights'
The 80-yard ~ombs and the
63-yard runs get plenty of air
time.

Real football aficionados
know that defense is just as
important and that yes, destruction can be beautiful, which is
what Point Pleasant proved in
Friday's 17-0 victory over Warren Local on honiecoming.
Point's hit squad held the Warriors to zero ~ushing yards
on 25 attemptV·ana gave up just
59 yards through the air as the

Big Blacks improved their season . and quarterback Travis Ollom to
record to S-2 overall and evened drive the ball to the Point fivetheir SEOAL ledger at 2-2.
yard line.
The Warren offense only
A pair of procedure penalties
gained five first downs.
pushed the Warriors back, then
" I thought they played great," the Big Blacks got tackles for
said coach Steve Safford of his loss by Kevin Thompson, Matt
defense. "They made key big Warner and Josh Burris. Warren
play after big play:
lost enough yardage on the
"The only time that they real- sequence that they punted on
ly threatened, they had the ball fourth down.
down at about our five yard line
Point's defensive front eight
and they self-destructed and had kept constant pressure on the
about three straight penalties Warren offense, with I3urris,
then \Ve made a couple of key Thompson, linebackers Enc
sacks and kept them out of the Frye and Matt Warner, and ends
end zone," he added.
Justin Carr and R.D. Knopp a4
multiple
tackles
Warren's best opportunity to . recording
score can)e .at the beginning of behind the line of scrimmage.
In the fourth quarter, Point
the sec&lt;J nd quarter, when Warren
used a 42-yard punt return and
Please see Point, Page Bl
runs by halfback Brad Venham

LIGHTNING &amp; THUNDER- Point fu llback Andrew Dennis (23) heads
upfield accompanied by offensive lineman Adam Ball (74) during the
Big Blacks 17-D win over Warren. (Jan Haddox photo)

Raiders· Blue Devils bury Athens for homecoming
,,.

fall to

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Jackson
BY R. SHAWN lEwiS
OVP MANAGING EDITOR

CHESHIRE - T.J. Mustard 's four touchdowns topped
a hot Jackson attack on a brisk
Friday night at R.iver Valley.
The speedy senior scored on '
runs of 12, 4 and I and caught
a 21-yard scoring pass to lead
the I.ronmen (7-0, SEOAL 40) to a 41-6 victory.
R.aider senior Jared Taylor
continued his quest to become
the school's first 1,000-yard
rusher, gaining 116 yards on
27 carries. Taylor has 753 yards
through seven games.
"We played wirh a lot of
heart," said Raider head coach
Larry Carter. "We had "'
chance to take the lead (in the
first ha!D , and a couple of
penalties took us out of it."
It was a back-and-forth contest in the first quarter, with
both offenses having their way.
Jackson, ranked No. 5 in the
latest OVP 10 poll, marched
64 yards on 11 plays with its
. first possession. Mustard's first
touchdo"""'6Jpped the drive.

Please ne Relden, Pap Bl
'

'

.

REVERSE- Gallia Academy sophomore Cole Haggerty (22) takes the
Inside handoff from classmate Jesse Reitmire during Friday's SEOAL
victory over Athens. (Doug Shipley photo)

GALLIPOLIS Big plays!
Get your big plays here !
Following a scoreless first
quarter, Gallia Academy exploded for 21 points over a six and
half minute spa n tn the second
quarter and cruised to a 35-0
victory over Athens Friday.
The I31ue Devils (6- 1. SEOAL
.4-0) celebra ted homL'COming
with their 12th consecutive win
against the Bulldogs. Athens hasn't beaten Gallia Academy sin ce
19RR.
I
Senior fullback Ike Simmons
rushed for a game-high 121
yards on just 10 carries and
scored two touchdowns in the
th ird quarter.
Simmons increased his season
rushing total to 726 yards with
his third I 00-plus yard perfo~ .
mance of the ye&lt;\L He had I 02
yards against Ironton and a
career-high 204 yards against .
Warren.
Junior quarterback David
Brodeur connected on 4-of-11
passes for 144 yards and two
bombs fur touchdowns.
Brodeur hit senior Dustin
Deckard for a 54-yard score
with 3:43 to play in the second
period to give the Blue Devils a
14-0 lead.
Junior josh Perry linked up

with I3rod eur for Gallia Academy's third touchdown of the
second quarter when he took a
pitch-and-catch play 69 yards
for a touchdown and" 2 1-11 lead
at the I :34 mark.
That was the back-breaker for
Athens, which had played fairly
even with GAHS through the
first 1H minutes uf thl' game.
Gallia Academy's tlrst touchdown came with fdH to play in
the second quartor when junior
halflnck !:lobby Jones sprjnted
up the middle from 10 yards out
for hi s fifth rushing tally of the

season.
Jones' run capped a 52-yard
drive that took 2:22 otr the
clock. Jo nes finished with ·23
yards on two carries.
In the third quarter, Gallia
Academy defemive tJCkle Clayton Wood pounced on a loos.t'
ball at the Athens 1Y vard line
afte r Bulldog fu llb ac·k · Jason
Sparhawk coughed up the ball .
Simmons ' b&lt;illed hjs way for
five yards on first down and then
shook off no less than five
Athens tacklers on a 14-yard
run for a touchdown w1th 11:10
left to play.
Athens (2-5, SEOAL 1-3)
failed to move the ball on its
next possession, which con-

Pieese. su Devils, Pap B4

�•
•

•

, Page B2 • 6uahf llimn-6tnlinrl

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

'

wv

Sunday, October 8, 2009

MEIG'S FOOTBALL

.·,

'•

Tough Buckeyes spoil homecoming for_ MeigS
IYDAVEHARIIII

ball at the six, and Jeremy Roush scored on the next play.
The Buckeyes came right back however and put together a eight
play, 70 yard dnve that was-capped off when Jason Meade "ored on a
quartt.S&gt;ack keeper from a yard out. Bateman's kick was true to give
the Buckeyes a 21-7lead with 8:33 left in the half.
_ The Buckeyes added another touchdown with jLISt 57 'seconds left
m the half when Josh Stalder scored from 32 yards out. Bateman's kick
gave the Buckeyes a 28-7 lead healing into the locker room at the
half.
.

OVP CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY - Things started going wrong for Me1gs before the
luckoff~ and continued into the game as the Marauders dropped a 357 deCISion to Nelsonville-York Friday.
•
'
. It was homecoming Fri_day evening for the Marauders, and the festtvttles went long and Me1gs was penalized five yards to start the game.
The Marauders kicked off and Chase Elliott ripped off 11 yards and
quarterback Jasper Bateman 40 yards to the two yard line before the
fans could get setded in their seats.
Two plays after a five-yard N-Y penalty, Elliott scored from three
yards out. Bateman added the extra point to give the Buckeyes a 7-0
lead with 10:49 left in the period.
. Meigs drove to the Buckeye 43 -ya rd line, but Kyle Hannan's pass was
p!Cked off by Steve Blatr off a deflection . On first down Adam
VanDyke fumbled and Adam Bullington recovered for Meigs at the NY 33.
Meigs drove to the Buckeye seven, but Bullington was stopped a
yard short of the first down on fourth down after catching a Hannan
.1enal.
The lluckeyes put together a nine-play, 95-yard drive ond score d
when Bateman hooked ' -'P with R yan Horrocks from 22 yards out.
Once Jga!n Bateman added the extra point with 39 seconds left in the
penod.
.
:
Meigs took the kickoff, and o~ second a~d 11 from their 22, H~n­
: ,nan hooked up with Matt Stewart for a catch and run for 65 yards to
the Buckeye 13. A pass interference pen;tlty on the Buckeyes put the

interceptions. Richards also threw
the only touchdown for the
Lancers with !':08 left in the
game with a 47-yard scoring pass
to Clint Sears.
on five carries for the Eagles.
. Sears finished with three recepTouchdown runs by Willford tions for 81 yards, while Keith
' (fou r yards) and l&lt;arr (87 yards) Lewis had three ,catches for 76
; and a two yard pass from Karr to yards.
Brent Buckley gave Eastern a 35"We thought we could pass it
0 halftime lead.
out into their flats," said Richards.
, Karr's touchdown rlln was a big " If we can get' em to come up on
; one for the Eagles.
. their flat and send it on deep. We
; Only down 21-0 midway rud a pretty good job of it. It's the
. mrough the second quarter, the best offense we've had all year.
~ancers drove the baU to the EastThe kids really rud a great job on
~rn three-yard line.
offense."
, - A fumble on second-and-goal
While Federal Hocking had ·•
: ~ave the Eagles the , ball back.
same success in the air, the Eagles
: t'hree plays later, Karr hauled the held the Lancers to 38 yards on
ball for his 87 -yard score.
the ground.
·
,
Later in the second quarter,
In the 'thi1 quarter. Willford
Federal Hocking got the ball to broke_ loose, on an 80-yard scor. the Eastern two-yard line, but was ing run at the 9:51 mark.
still unable to punch it in.
Touchdown runs by Cacy
"It was key mistakes:' said Fed, Faulk and Gibbs gave the Eagles a
era! Hocking coach
Dave 55-0 lead at the end of three
Richards.
quarters .
Both of those drives by the
"In the third quarter, we're just
Lancers were set up by big pass- running.powers and dives and our
log plays by senior quarterback kids are running hard and breakSteve Richards.
ing tackles and going for long
. " They thought they were gains," said Christman. " We were
embarrassed on the long pass and trying to run the dock in the
they wanted to make up for it," _ third quarter. You can't tell a kid
said Christman on stopping Fed- to fa ll down."
eral Hocking deep m Eagles' terFaulk had 29 yards rush ing on
ntory.
three carries.
Richards finished 12-of-28
Eastern had eight players rush
passing for 193 yards and a pair of .for 25 or more yards in game as

Eastem
f•omPIIpB1

The Buckeyes closed out the scoring in the third period when
Stalder scored from e1ght yards out. Bateman's kick was true and N-Y
held a 3?-7 win.
·
Stalder led the Buckeyes with 114 yards m 14 carries. Elliott added
64 yards on 10 carries and Bateman added 68 on just three carries.
Bateman was 7-of-10 in the air for 84 yards. Meade was 1-for-4 for
22 ya;ds. Horrocks caught three passes for 61 yards. Luke Katterhennch two for 23 and Russell Fox made two receptions for 19.
Roush led Meigs with 63 yards on . 17 carries. Hannan was 1 1'-of-19
paSSing for a career-high 15~ yards. Bulhngton caught six passes for 32
yards. Stewart pulled down lour for 110 yards and Derric k Fackler had
one catch for 16 yards.
•
Andrea Krawsczyn was crowned Meigs High School's 2000 Homecommg Queen before the game, She is the daughter of Bette Hobstetter, Ceha McCoy and John Krawsczyn and was escorted by Nick
De~tW!ller.
-.
·
Meigs (3-4,TVC Ohio 0-2) will travel to Alexander this Friday. Nelsonvtlle-York (5-2, TVC Ohw 2-0) will host Wellston.

the Eagles finished with 463 yards
as a team on 44 carries.
Other 25-plus yard rushers for
Eastern w~re Brad Parker (3-28),
Brandon Browning (5-26), Steve
Soulsby (4-25) and Lyons (1-25). ·
Browning capped off the Eagles
scoring on the night wi th a two
yar~ run in the fourth quarter.
Eastern had 501 total offensive
yards on the night.
" They've got some nice backs,"
said Dave Richards. "There bigger and stranger than us. I told
the kids at halftime, 'We beat th,is
. team pretty bad last year. (Eastern)
lifted all year. They lifted and they
lifted hard. I told (our kids) that's
a result of working hard in the
weight mom."
"The only thing we've guaranteed so far is a non - losing season,"
said Christman. "These kids that
are on this team this year have
never had that.We;ve always been
below .500."
"(Eastern's) a .. ice fdotba ll
team ," added Richards. "Their big ·
and strong and very well coached.
Their a heck of a ball team."
The Eagles (6-1,TVC Hocking
2,0) will face their stiffest test of
the season when they host div1- •
sian-lead er Miller (7-0, TVC
Hacking 2-0) on Fridav. Miller
defeated Southern 53-2 1. Fnday.
Federal Hocking (1-6. TVC
Ohio 0-1) will be ar Trimble.

MD

• • RACINE Scoring s1x
• ; rouchdowns and going over
f. I,~OO, yards for the season,
' MtUer s Chfton Cox rushed for
~ • 278 yards in leading the eighth: : ranked Miller Falcons (7-0) to a
.;,3-21 Tn-Valley Conference
; win over Souther!) friday night
• at Roger Lee Adams Memorial
; ·~eld. Miller remained undefeat~
: •il in seven games (7-0) and is
in the Tri-Valley Confer• · ence.
•
::: Very seldom do fans get to see
: ~ch a natural talent, so smooth
: :'!"d fast, putting on a clinic such
:;as the one put on for the fans by
: :~ox Friday. Rushing for nearly
~;as 1~13ny yards as some players
• ;4unng a single season, Cox's
: &lt;!'xplosive speed and deceptive
; .s:tutter-step caught even the
O:fastest Tornadoes off guard and
an their heels .
· , · Cox had .18 carries for 162
· yards at the half and ended the
game with 278 yards on 32 carries.
Southern had only 25 yards
rushing at the half, but gained
:t 53 yards in the air on a 13-for19 passing performance from
&lt;jUarterback Jonathan Evans.
-~· Southern
matched Miller
{~uchdown ,for touchdown · in
fn exciting first half. .Division
Miller's playoff hopes rode on
~ - fine thread for the first 24
rninutes, but Cox brake out of
ibe gate, and Randy N elson
fueled the fire with two key
l!tterceptions in the second half.
:: It was those turnovers and a
S.outhern fumble that killed
:Southern's momentum. Each
:~me the Falcons converted the
· The tempo of the first half
~as set by Southern's defense.
which repelled Miller's opening
&lt;!rive with a stop after Cox set
:liP a first and goal situation.

falls to powerful Miller in TVC play

Southern nailed Cox at the line
for no gain, one of only two
times the speedster rushed for
less than three yards. Cox then
picked up five to set up a third
and five situation, followed by
an incomplete pass and a spirited goal line stand by' Southern
that stopped Cox at the one
yard li ne. Southern's Tyler Little
made the initial hit to halt Cox
after a four-yard gain, and SHS
took over on downs .
Southern pushed toward their
own 47 ~ya rd line, but stalled
and Matt Ash got olf a good
. punt. It didn't take long, however, for Cox to generate some
offense. On the fifth play, Cox
broke loose and tan\bled 48
•
yards for the game's first score.
·Followed by a Dustin Brown
kick. the sco re was 7-0 with 31
seconds left in the qu arter.
Southern countered an the
next possession as an Evans to
Brandon Pierce pa ss of seven
yards, followed by an Andrew
. Coffman kick tied the score at
7-7 at the 8:18 mark of'the second quarter.
Cox cu lminated an eight-yard
drive at die 5:00 mark with a
26-yard scamper and his second
score. Brown's kick . split the
uprights for a .14-7 tally.
It was evident that Southern
had no rushing game against the
brawny Miller line . Sa, the Tornadoes went to the air on seven
of the eleven plays in its next
sco ring drive.
A five-yard
Evans-to-Aaron Ohlinger pass
made the score 14-13 at the
(06 mark after the PAT kick
failed.
It took only two plays for the
second half plot to unfold.
Against a highly-pressured pass
defense Evans' first pass fell
incompiete and the second was
picked off by Randy Nelson,
who in turn scampered 35 yards
for the score just 24 seconds

plays after' a 44-yard run set up pomt conversion and a 33-21
the score at the 3:15 mark . The score early in the fourth penad
PAT run failed, making the at the II :49 mark.
Minutes
score 26-13.'
later, Cox's next touchdown
A Southern fumble, recovered ended Southern's glimmer of
by Dennis Keller. and a Jeremy hope as Miller started to put the
Compston int erception set up , game out of rea ch ,
')1 -21.'
other Miller scoring opportuni- Miller scored tw ice ntore for
ties , which now ca me &gt;t regular the 53-21 finale .
intervals as Southern's momen Miller shut down the Southtunl faded into the chilling ern passing game in the second
atmosphere with the warm half, as Evam completed just 4afternoon air. Cox scored three of-12 passes for 89 yards. Overmare tim es (40 -yards , 5-yards, all, Southern was 17-of-3 1 p ass16-yards) in the next six min - ing fur 242 yuds.
utes .
Southern (3-4) goes to WaterIn the meantime, on a play set fo rd next Friday, while Miller
up by a 40-ya rd Evans-to- Bnce travel s to Eajtern far the T.VC
Hill connection to the one ya rd ~ lw wdn\\~n and pl ayoff previc\\'.
line , Matt Ash pounded through
the li ne for a score. The fak~
kick attempt ·e nded with an
Evans-to-Brandon Hill lwu-

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MENTOR AND PUPIL - Southern head coach Rusty Richards and
senior quarteroack Jonathan Evans (3) watch the action during Friday's game against Miller. (Scott Wolfe photo)

into the second half (I I :36) .
Little blocked the Brown kick,
but Miller led 20- 13.
· Just two ·plays later, an exclamauon point went up behind
the Miller playoff banner, when
Nelson picked off another
Evans pass and rambled 25 yards
to the 25-yard line, where .
Southern . again held on four
downs.

Nelson's presen ce in th e
Miller
defensive
backfield
diminished the once- flourishin g
S HS passing game. Southern
werit 0-for-4- passing on the
next possession, gaining 10 yards
on t-he ground for its only first
down , before being forced to
punt.
Four plays later Cox burst
through from five yards, three

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Point
fromPapBl
snuffed out Warren 's fi nal
·attempt at a scoring drive with
the heat being tumed up by Burris, Knopp. Frye and Carr.
On fourth and long, Derrick
Watterson kno c ked down an
Ollom pass to end the threat.
"We tried to send them a lot of
different looks that they hadn't
seen and put a lot of pressure on
him," said Safford in reference to
O ll om's passing performance.
The Warren signal-caller finished the game 3-af-14 for 59
yards. Many attempt' never made
it into the statistical column
because O llom ended up on the
ground before he could find
recetvers .
The victory marked the second
shutout pitched by defensive
coordinator Dave Rawson's crew
this season. The other was a 60-0
win aver Riv.er VaUey.

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That crew also field league we'.e pack, on track ," said Safford.
leaders Logan· and· Jackson well
The game's fmal score came at
below their season offensive aver- the end of an 11 - play drive in the
ages, givi ng up just 28 and . 19 third quarter, which ended with a
36-yard Brian Sang fidd goal.
points, respectively.
Point was able w burn more
Point (5-2. SEOAL 2-2) broke
into the sc oring colun1n quickly. than 7~1 12 minutes of clock in
on the opening kickoff, warren the fourth quarter after being
fa iled to cover the kick, and John_ pinned at their own six by a WarBonec utter covered the live ball ,ren punt, but 15 pbys later Warat the five-yard line. Two c unes ren was left without suflicient
later. Bonecutter plunged in from clock to mount a serious thn:ac.
Bon ecutter gamed I 59 ya rds on
one yard out on a isolation play.'
a
seasonhigh 29 carries fo r the
T he second Pomt sco re was set
up by first quJrter Watterson's Big Blacks. Warren was ,1blc to
mterception, which he returned co ntain him som~what, h o lding
to his own 45. Five plays -later, his longest run to 19 yards .
Andrew Dennis added !8 yards
Bonecutter slipped past tackle"
for a five-yard touchd own . The on 14 ca rrie s and Beck ner had 40
biggest chunk of yardage in that yards on five rushes. Jeremy Notl
drive came on a 30-yard run by rounded out the total (2B3 ya rds)
with eight y.uds.
Justin Beckner.
Venham led Warren (2-5 ,
After that drive, the l::llg Blacks
were unablt: to sustain any big SEOAL 1-3) with 12 yards on six
carries. He also caught two passes
drives until the third quarter.
"Ofl:'ensively, it just wasn't one far 51 yards.
Point will play host to ,A thens
of our better performances. It was
kind of an ugly win, a great next Friday.
defensive win, but a win, and

·.

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BOXED IN BY BUCKEYES- Meigs tailback Jeremy Roush (21) looks
for room to move against Nelsonville-York during F:riday' s homecoming
game at Boo Rooerts Field. Roush.rushed for 63 yards on 17 carries
and scored the Marauders' lone touchdown in the 35-7 loss. (Dave
Harris photo)

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Page 84 • &amp;unbap ¢imrl ·&amp;tnlmtl

''•

Gellla ACIIclemy 35, Alheno 0
).thens
0 0 0
0-0
l&gt;aJiia Academy 0 21 14 0 - 35
•
•

p-

Scoring aummary
Second Ouart"'
Bobby Jones 10 run, Clayton 5aun·

ders (6:38)
G - Dustin Deckard 54 pass from David

l!rodeur. Clayton Saunders kick (3:43)
G - Josh Perry 69 pass from David
flrodeur. Clayton 5aunders kick (1 :34)
,
Third Quarter
G -lka Simmons 14 run, Clayton Saun·
~ers (11 :10)
G- Ike Simmons 50 run, Clayton Saun·
~ers kick (5: 4 1)

Team StatiatiCii
A
First Downs

Rushes-yards
Passing yards
lotal yards

16
47·153
51

204

~omp -att-int

5-13-0

Fumbles-lost

1· 1

Penalties-yards
l'unts-avg.

4·30
6·33.5

(9:51 ).
E- Cacy Faulk 9 run, kick blocked (3.32}.
E - R .J . Gibbs 9 run, Roger Chadwell
kick (: 19).
Fourth Quarter

E - Brandon Browning 2 run, Brad Pari&lt;·
er run ( 1:35).
FH - Clint Sears 47 pass from Sieve
Richards, Steve Richards Nil (1 :06 }.
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards

Comp-an-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

Punts·ailg.

Ea•••m

27
44·463
38
501
3·5·0
2-0
13·112
0·0.0

2· 1
6-57
1·40.0

Puolng: Jackson--Ryan Tiplon 2·6·9·
33·1 . River Valley-Craig Payne 3·4·0·
26·0.
Receiving: Jackson--T.J. Muslard 2·33·
1. River Valley-Caleb Tipton 1·26. Nick
George 1·3, Jared Taylor 1· (·3 ~
Point 17, Warren 0
0
o· 0 0 - 0
14 0 3
0 - , 17

Warren
Poin1

G
10
28·223
144
367
4-11·0

Individual Stotlotico
Ruohlng: jackson--T.J. Mustard 17·
149-3. Ryin Tiplon 3-77·1, DaVId Swish·
er 8·67- 1, Colin Trimble 3-33, Jon Ferris
3·19, Curtis Green 2·10, Nick Starkey 1·
4. River Valley-Jared Taylor 24·114·1.
Clarl&lt; Walker 9·22, Blake Marcum 1·6,
Nick George 1·3, Craig Payne12·(·23} .

Individual Sllltistics

Rushing: Eastern-Brad Willford 8-1373, R.J . Gibbs 11·136·1, Garrett Karr 5·61·
1, Cacy Faulk 3·29·1. Brad Parker 3·28,
Brandon Browning 5-26-1, Steve Soulsby
4-25, Chris Lyons 1-25-1, Caleb Tolliver
3·9. Kevin Keaton 1-(-5) . FH-Seth
Oltum 9-10, Eric Needs 4-8. Steve

lluohlng : Alhens-Shawn Hewttt 21·86,

Passing: Eastern-Garrett Karr 3·5·0-

..lason Spart1awk 6·6. Chris Hewi« 12-41 .

38 . FH"-Sieve Richards 12·28'2· 193.

Scoring summary
P -

First Quarter
John Bonecutter 1 run , Brian Sang

kick(11 :1 8}
P - John Bonecutter 5 run , Brian Sang
kick (6:42}
Third Quarter
P - Brian Sang 36 FG (1 :22}

Team

Statis~ics

w

pavld Fulks 1·(·2}. Lance Spires 1·5,

Jeremy Roush 1-2. Ricky Bngner 1-1,
Corey Champlin 2-8, Joshua Pugh 1-1,
Sebring 1-5. Gallia-lke Simmons 10· 121·2, .Bobby Jones 2·23·1,
Oav1d Brodeur 1-2 4, Jon Lawhorn 2-2 ,

~eremy

Receiving: Eastern-Ben Holter 1-27.
Jeremy Connolly 1-9. Brent Buckley 1-91. FH--Ciint Sears 3-81 , Keith Lewis 3-

76, Brat Chilcote 2·22. Seth Ollum 1·18.
Cody 8all1·(·4).

Jesse . Reitmire 2-11. Dushn Hall 1-3,
Tony Moore 3-12. Clarke Saunders 1-5,
Cole Haggeny 4·12 , Mike Warren 1·9,
Justtn Cantrell 1• 1.
paning: Athens-Davtd Fulks 3·10·0·
· 29·0, Corey Champlin 2·3·0·22·0. Gal·
Ha- David Brodeur 4·11·0·.144·2.
. _:Receiving: Athens- Lance Spires 1·.10,
llrad Hartley 1-19. Shawn Hewitt 1·0,
Jeremy Sebring 2·22 . Gallia-Jon
lawhom 1-9, l'ke Simmons 1-12. Dustin

Packard 1·54·1 . Josh Perry 1· 69-1.
·
Eastern 63, Federal Hocking B
:Eastern
15 20 20
8 ~ 63
0 0
8 8
Federal Hocking 0
Scoring summary
First Quarter

Brad Willford 15 run, R.J . Gibbs kick
&lt;10:12}.
'E -Chris Lyons 25 run , Brad Willford run
.14:08}.
Second Quarter
~ - Brad Willford 4 run , kick failed
,, 0:39}.
E- Garrett Karr 87 run , 'R.J . Gibbs kick
~5:32}.
.£ - Brent Buckley 2 pass from Garrett
Karr, R.J Gibbs kick (3:40}
Third Quarter

E - Brad Willford 80 run, R.J . Gibbs kick

G - Evans 93 'KO return, Page kick
(6:14}
W - Enn Branch 7 run, Hankinson pass
from Clark (:38)
ThirdQuorter
W - Bradford Clark 30 run, kick taitad
(6 :22)
G - Evans SO punt retum, run failed

(2:09)
W -

FH
12
29·31
193
224
12·28·2
4-1
6·60
2·12.0

Individual Statistics

Jackson 41, River Valley 6
Jackson
7 14 13
7 -

River Valley

6

0

0

41

0 -

First Quarter
Mustard 12 run , Patrick Boothe·

kiCk (8:24} .
.RV -Jared Taylor 4 run, run failed (3:06)
Second Quarter
J - David Swisher 5 run, kick failed
(4:01}
J - T.J. Mustard 21 pass from Ryan Tip'
ton , Tipton pass from Michael Holdren
(2:29}
Third Quarter
J - T.J. Muslard 5 run, kick failed (9:55)
J - Ryan Tipton 64 run, Patrick Boothe
kick (7:06}
Fourth Quarter
J - T.J. Mustard 1 run, Patrick Booihe
kick (10:34}

First Downs
Aush_es-yards

16
37·359

Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int

33

Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

Punts-avg .

392
2·6·0
1·0
9-66
3·33.7

25·0
59
59
3-14-1
1·0
8-48
6·35.2

14
53·285

·3
282
1·3·0
0·0
5·45
4·33.5

Individual Statistics
Rushing: Warren-Brad Venham 6·12,
Derek Wetz , 1· 5, Josh Hall 3-3, Justin

run, kick

f~iled

fourth Quarl8f
W - Eran Branch 23 run, Adam Rickard
kick (1 0:57}

W- Justin Jordan Ei5 run , Adam Rickard
kick (2:56)

W- Jusbn Jordlan 80 INT return (:00)
Team Statistics

w

G
7

10
48·486

First Downs
Rushes-yards

29·59
63
122
4·11-0

0

Passing yards
Total yards

486
0·2·0

Comp-att-int

,.,

·,.o

Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards
Punts-avg.

4·35

2-38

47- 122
' 26
148
3·4·0
4·1

W - Bradford Clark 55 run, kick failed
(11:04}
W - Brandon Hankinson 60, Hendrik
Olszewski (6:28)

Second

Quarter

Justin Vernon 6 run, pass failed

son 13·151-1. Eran Branch 10·113·3,

Tolal yards

Bradford Clark 5 · 109- f, Justin Jordan 1-

Comp·att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards
Punts-avg .

3.96
0·6·1

65· 1, Robe~ Brinker 15·52· 1, Ryan
Mitchell 2·1, Anlhony Mitchell 2·(·2}.
Aaron Faulk 1·(·3}. Gilmer-Lilly 9·45,
Reed 3-1 8 . Evans 5-18, T. Dennison 1-3,

1-0,

s
12
25·50
242
292
17·31·3

0

0·0

1· 1

13·115
2·29.5

12· 100
4-32.2

Townsend 5·(·17}.

Individual Statistics
Rushing: Miller- Clifton Cox 32-278·6,

Passing: Wahama-Bradford Clark 0-2-

Randy Nelson 2·31, Adam Blaney 5·36,
Justin Vemon 5-33-1 . Chip Hook 3-18.

Jac .

Dennison

Page

5·(-8).

0·0·0. Gtlmer-Townsend 3·9·2·58·2,
Page 1·2·1·5·0.

Southern-Man Ash 8·19-1,' Joe Cornell

W- t 7. Andrew Coffman 1-7, Jonathan
Evans 5·7.

Receiving: Wahama-none . GilmerPassing: Miller- B.J . Humphrey

0-5-01-0·0, Randy Nelson 0·1·0·0·0 . South·

ern-Jonathan

59·0. Poin1--Jeremy Non 1·3·0·( ·3}·0.

Wahama 60, Gilmer Co. 13.
Wahi,Jma
7 21 12 20 60
Gilmer Co.
o 7 6 0 - 13

M -

(1 :08}

Rushing: Wahama-Brandon Hankin·

Individual Statistics

Guyan Valley 36, Hannan 0
Hannan
0000-0
Guyan Valley
21 15 0
0 36

1·(·3}.

S - Aaron Ohlinger 5 pass from
Jona1han Evans, kick blotked, (1 :06)
Third QU8rt8f
M - Nelson 35 INT return, kick
blocked (11 :36)
M -Ciifliln Cox 5 run, run failed (3:15}
M - Clif1on Cox 40 run, Brown kick
(1:28)
s
Fourth Quarter
S - Matt Ash 1 run, Brandon Hill pass
from Jona1han Evans (11 :49}
M - Clifton Cox '5 run, Humphrey 1wo
point run (7:55)
M - Clif1on Cox 16 run, kick failed
7:14

Individual Statistics
Rushing: Hannan-Kir1&lt; Murray 8·34,
Shannon Gay 3·7, Stacy Cooper 1·2,
Corey Henry 7·84. Guyan-n/a.
Passing: Hannan-Greg Collins 5·18-3·

75·0. Guyan-Brett Hudson 6·9·0·180·3.
Receiving: Hannan--Core~ Henry 3·50,
Shannon Gay 1·,0, Chris' Kelly 1-15.
Guyan-nla.
Miller 53, Southern 21
Miller
7
7 19 20 . Sou1hem
0 13 o 8 -

53
21

'

First Quarter

13-1 9-3 -2 42-3,

Matt Ash 0·1·0·0.
Receiving:

Miller- none. Southern-

Justin Allen 2·25, Brice Hill 4·98, Matt
Ash 4-18, Joe Cornell 2-38, Brandon Hill
2·45, Aaron Ohlinger 2·12·1, Brandon
Pierce 1·7-1 .
Nelsonville- York 35, Meigs 7
N-Y
0 - 35
14 t4 7
Meigs
0 7 0 0- 7
Scoring summary
First Quarter

N·Y - Chase Elliott 3 run, Jasper
Bateman kick, (10:49}
. N·Y - Ryan Horrocks 27 yard pass
from Jasper Bateman, Bateman kick (:39)

Second Quarter
M -

Scoring summary

Evans

Jeremy Roush 6 r,_.n, Adam

Bulilnglon kick (11 :37}
N·Y - Jason Meade 1 run, Bateman

Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-art-int
FumbleS·IOSt
Pen(\lties-yards

Pun1S-avg.

•

N-Y ·

M

18

11

30·269
84

3-4·80

375
8·14.()
2·2
4-32
2·33.5

238

Passing: N-Y-Jasper Beleman 7·10·0·
84·1, Jason Meade 1·4·0· 22·0. MeigsKyle Hannan 11·19·1·156·0.
Receiving: N·Y-Ryan Horrocks 3-61,
Luke Katterhenrich 2·23, Russell Fox 2·
19, Sieve Blair 1·3. Meigs-Adam
Bullington 6·32, Matt Slewan 4·110, Der·
rick Fackler 1-16.
Around the Region

Beallsville 28 , Fort Frye 13
Buffalo 45, Pocahonlas County 14
Cabell Midland 13, Spring Valley 3
Caldwell40, Frontier 0
Chesapeake 17, Fairland 0
Chillicolhe 47, Franklin HIS. 14
Clay County 37, Roane Cpunly 10
George Washinglon 45, St. Albans 0
Hurricane 34, Winfield 14
·
lronlon 51, Coal Grove 0
John Glenn 41, New Lexington 27
Morgan 16, Philo 7
Nitro 21, Logan 7
Pain! Valley 40, Zane Trace 14
Parkersburg 75, Herbert Hoover 22
Poca 28, Magnolia 14
Portsmou1h 62, Miami Trace 26
Princeton .39, South Charleston 0
Ripley 7, Sissonville 6
Riverside 50, Huntington 6
Ross Southeastern 14, Piketon 10
St. Marys 13, Ravenswood 10
Sou1h Poin1 44, Rock Hill 13
University 28, Parkersburg South 9
Wayne 62. Scott 22
Williamstown 20, Doddridge Counly 18
Wesffall13, Frankfort Adena 12
'
Wheelersburg 16, Waverly 14
Woodrow Wilson 25, Capital 14

Chicago

pm

Wodnooday, 0&lt;1. 4

·.enes

Saturday, Oct. 7
:-voaldand (lito 7-4) at New Von&lt; (Clemens
"~). 7:38 p.m. fNBC)
t..
Sunday, Ocl. I
.:"'• New Voft( (Pettitte 20-9) at Oakland (Heredia
,16-11), 8 p.m. (FOX), if necessary

•

National League ·
San Francisco va. New York
Wedn11d1y, Oct. 4
•· San Francisco 5, New Vorl&lt; 1
•
Thursday, Oct 5
~ New Von&lt; 5, San Francisco 4, 10 Innings,
'IBries tied 1· 1
,
Saturday, Oct. 7
San Francisco (Ortiz 14-12) at New York
(~eed 11·5}, 4:18p.m. (FOX}
'
Sunday, Oct. 8
· '~ San Francisco (Gardner 11-7) at New York
(B.J.Jones 11-6), 4:07 p m. (ESPN) or 8 p m
(FOXJ, (beComes night game if Athletics-Yan~ees Is over)
'

St. Loula vs. Atlanta
Tu.esday, Oct. 3
St. Louis 7, Atlanta 5
Thursday, Oct. 5
. St. Louis 10, Atlanta 4, St. Louis leads series

~-0

19-10}, 1:07 p.m. (ESPN), i1 necessary
Monday, Oet. 9
Atlanta at St. Louis, 4:07 p.m. (ESPN) or
&amp;:18 p.m. (FOX), if necessary (becomes night
game If Glants-Mets Is over)

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
American League

(NBC)

Tuelday, Oct. 1o
Seanle at Oakland-New York winner, a:12
~ . m.

Wednesday, Oct. 11
Seattle at Oakland-New York winner, 4:09

.

Friday, Oct. 13
Oakland-New York winner al Seattle, 8:12

p.m.
Saturday, Oct, 14
Oakland-New Yofl( winner at Seatue, 7:42

11."'·

4-26

~

Sunday, Oct. 15
: Oakland-New York winner at Sea1tle, 4:09.
.p.m., If necessary
,
Tuesday, Oct. 17

:..

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

&lt;

•.

PRO SOCCER

•

St. Louis (Ankle! 11-7) at Atlanta (Maddux

Major Lugue Soccer
Playoff Glanc•
Quarterfinal Round
,-- ·-· -- (Seeding In p•renthesea)
Kansas City 7, Colorado 1
Kansas City 1, Colorado 0
Kansas City 0. Colorado 0, lie
Kansas City 3, Colorado 2

j

Los Angelea 6, Tampa Bay 0
Los Angeles 1, Tampa Bay 0
LoS Angeles 5. Tampa Bay 2
Chicago 6, New England 3
Chicago 2, New England 1
Ne;w England 2, Chicago 1
Ch1cago 6, New England 0
New York-New Jersey 6, Dallas 0
New York-New Jersey 2, Dallas 1, OT
New York-New JerSey 2. Dallas 1
Semifinal Round
Kansas City vs. Los Angeles
Friday, Sept. 29
los Angeles 0. Kansas City 0, lie
Tuesday, Oct. 3
Los Angeles 2, Kansas City 1, OT

•

i Wahama

some ,o f his own magic. After
Olszewski had blasted the kickoff
to Gilmer's 7, Evans sphtWahama
up the middle and JUSt kept on
~
Page 81
running ... 93 yards later, he had
~ extra point to put Waham,a up the- home team on the board .
The White Falco ns were not·
~y seven.
• To open the second frame, finished with the first half either.
:Gilmer punted and Woh ama After four ftrst downs and eattng .
:broJght the ball out to their O\\'n nearly six mmun..•s off the clock,
;115. On the firsr play of the series, Eran Branch scored on a seVl'll~he entire Titan defense thought y.Ird ru sh to givc Falcons a 21~hat Falcon quarterback Bradford point halfnme lead .
In the third quarter, mort." of
:flark had handed off to Brandon
the
sa me for the visiting fJicons,
ifiankinson, but in rea li ty, Clark
lad ran the ball ~5 yards for the as a 30-yard Bradford Clark mn
cappe'd off a seven play, 66-yard
=ouchdown. ·
~ After the Titans had advanced drive. After O lszewski's kick
. t~rntory,
.
'Into Wahama
WJhama sailed wide ri ght , the Falcons
lot the ball back :IS Falcon se nior were up 34-7. Later. Aaron Faulk
imcrc l·ptcd ;1 Titan p:1~~. but d1c
~efender Joey Young recovered a
fitan fumb le. After a seven-yard Falcmls co uld lltlt get the cngmc
.ain by Hankinson and a five- runni11g for this dri\'e and Adam
rd penalty against the Falcons, Rickard punted the ball .1\vay ro,
ey were sitting on the Titan 40 who else, but John Evans who
ard line and Hankinson c:une was waiting o n th ~ fifty yard line.
H e split the Falcons once again,
Salling.
.
this tim e cutting to the sidelines.
~ Hankinson broke a few tackl es
end ran the sideline sixty yards for He wasn't caught and he placed
touchdown. The PAT kick was s1x mort' points 011 the board for
tood and Wahama had a cushy Gilmer.
After th e Titan kickoff, the ball
1!-venty point lead with 6:28 left
lh the first half. Well , TitJti se nior was placed on the Falcons' Own
~ck returner John · Evans had 33 .Then, on the next play, Gilmer
"en e11ough and decided to work County w;1 ~ penalized ~ifrc~·n

JERRY BIBBEE

1

from

.

'•

2000 ESCORT ZX2
4 Cyl., 5 Spd., All Power, S/R Package, LOADED
$1 ,500 Rebate Available

(Note: Three points fol' a INin and one point
for a tie. The winner in the quarter and semifinals 'Hill be the first team to raach, Of eiCC89d
11ve points The third Qame ol a series will be
decided by penalty kicks if each game has
ended in a tieoril the series is 1-1-1.)

WOOLO SERIES
(FOX)
Saturday, Oct. 21
National League at American League. 8 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 22
,NL at AL B p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 24
Al at NL. 8 18 p.m.
Wednesday, Oc:t. 25
AL at NL, 8:18p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 26
AL at NL, 8 18 p.m., if necessary
Saturday, Oct. 28
NL at AL, 8 p.m ., if necessary
Sunday, Oct. 29
NL at AL. 8 p.m. EST, il necessary

Monday, Oct. 9

'
Saturday, Oct. 7
St. Louis (StephenSQn 16·9) at Atlanta (MillWOOd 10·13}, 1:07 p.m.(ESPN}
'
Sunday, Oct. 8

at Wahlngton, D.C.
K·ansas City vs . Chicago, 1:30 p.m.

a

2000 TAURUS SE
V-6, Auto. Air COnd., AM/FM/Casane ,
All Power Equip., Spoiler, Etc. $1,500 Rebate Available

Nashville 3, Pmsbur!l!' 1
s.tutday a GamiS
Los An&lt;,jolel ., Buf1alo, lale
Montreal a1 Toron&amp;o, late
Dalas 11 Ottawa, late
Boston at Philadelphia, late
Washington at Carolina, tate
N.Y. Rangers at Atlanta. late
Chicago at Columbus, late
· Colorado at Edmonton, late
M1nne!;ota at Pnoentlc late
Nashville vs P1nsburgh at Omiya, Japan,

1982FORD
CAMPER

lale
l"oday'a Gamtl
St Louis at Anahe1m , 4 p m
Vancouver at Tampa Bay 6 p.m.

Champion•hlp

Saturday, Oct. 14

San Fra(l(;iSCO at St. louis-Atlanta winner
OR St. Louis-Atlanta winner at New York, 4:1 8
. p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 15
San Francisco at St Louis-Atlanta winner
OR St louis-Atlanta winner at New York, a
p.m .
Monday, Oct. 16
San Francisco at St. Louis-Atlanta winner
OR St. Louts-Atlanta winner at New York, 8:18
p.m., il necessary
Wednesday, Oct. 18
Sl. Louis-Atlanta Winner at San Francisco
OA New York at·AUanta·S1. Louis winner, 4·tg
p m . if necessary
Thursday, Oct, 19
St. l ows-Atlanta winner at San Francisco
OR New York at Atlanta-St. LOUIS Winner. 18
p m .. 11 necessary

New Yolic at San Franci sco, B: t a ' p.m
(FOX), If necessary

3, New York-New Jersey 2, Chica·

go :Mn&amp; series 6-3.

Sundly, Oct. 1S

.

New·Yoft( 4, Oaklanc:l a
Friday, Oct. 6
A New Yoft( • . Oakland 2, New York leads
2-1
·

'j):m.

Chlc8.go

Thursday, Oct 12
St Louis-Atlanta winner at San Francisco
OR New Yo111: at Atlanta -St Louis winner, B:18

p.m.

Ollkllnd va. New York
Tu•day, Oct. 3
Oakland 5, New Yori&lt; 3

•

Chicago 3. New Yorit-New Jersey 0
s.tur,gy, Stp4. 30
New YorX-New Jersey 2. ChicagO o
Fridly, 0&lt;:1.6

St Louis-Atlanta winner at San Francisco
OR New York at Atlanta·St. Louis winner, 8:18

Friday, Oct, &amp;
\,• Seattle 2, CNcago 1, Seattle wins ~ries 3-Q

w. New York-Hew Jersity
Tundoy, Sept. 2t

(FOX}
Wednetday, Oc:t. 11

Chk:ago vo. - ·
'llltldoy,OcL3
Sea111e 7, Chk;Ogo 4, 10 lnnlngs
Wodnndty, O&lt;f, 4
seame s. Chicago 2

,,

Frld.ty, 0&lt;1. 6
Kansas Clly 1, Los Mgelel 0
Kansas City 1, Los Angeles O, mini-game.
Kansas City wins series 5_...

Netional LHgue

-lconLooguo

11·19·1
1·1
4-35
4·24.3

Individual Sbotloflca
Rushing: N·Y--Josh Stalder 14·114,
Chase Elliott 10·64, Jasper Bateman 368. Brandon McQuaid 3·14, Adam
VanDyke 4·4, Jason Meade 2·3, Charlie
Blake 4·2. Melgs.Jeremy Roush 17·63,
Josh Eagle 2·14, Chris Jeffers 2·9, Adam
Bullington 2·7, Tyson Lee 3-4, JonathOn
Larkins 5·2, Kyle Hannan 2-(-6), Derrick
Fackler 1-(·13).

Seattle at Oakland-New York winner, 8:12
p m., if necessary
' Weclnraday, Oet Ul
Seattle at Oakland -New York winner, 8:12
p.m., lf necessary

AtAGIMCe
DIVISION SERES

158

4·30

Devils

PRO HOCKEY
National Hockey League

Entem Conferenee

Atlantic Division
W L TOLPts. GF . GA
NewJersey ........... , 0 0 0
2 B
4
Philadelphia ......... 1 0 0 0
2 6
3
1 3
3
N.Y. Islanders .... 0 0 I 0
N.Y. Rangers........ 0 0 0 0
0 0
0
P1t1sburgh . ......... 0 1 0 0
0
1
3
Northeast Division
Buffalo .
1 0 0 0 ~ 2 4
2
Boston
.. 0 0 t 0
1 4
4
4
Ottawa
.... 0 0 1 a
1 4
0
Toronto
... 0 0 0 a
a 0
B
0 4
Montreal ......... a 1 0 0
Southeast Division
Tampa Bay ...
0 0 1 0· 1 3
3
4
Florida ................. 0 0 0 1
1 3
0
Atlanta .................. 0 0 0 a
o o
0
Carolina ............... 0 0 0 0
0 0
4
Washington .......... 0 1 0 0
0
1
Western Conference
Central Division
Nashville
.... 1 0 0. 0
2 3 1
2 5 5
Detroit .... ,............. 1 1 0 0
5
51. Louis ................ ! . 1 o 0 2 5
0 0
0
Columbus ..... ,....... 0 0 0 0
0 2
4
Chicago .............. ;.0 1 0 0
Northwest Dlvl•lon
1
2 2
Edmonton ............ 1 0 0 0
2 7
9
Vancouver ............ 1 1 0 0
1 2 2
Colorado .............. o 0 1 o
4
0 3
·Calgary ................0 i 0 0
a 1 3
Minnesota ............ 0 1 0 0
Pacllic Division
Anaheim ............... 1 0 0 0
2 3
1
losAngeles ... : ...... 1 0 0 0
2 4
1
Phoenix ................ 1 0 0 o
2 4
t
Dallas ...................o a 1 0
12
2
San Jose ..............0 t 0 0
0
1
4
Two points tor a win, one point tor a fie and
over1ime loss.
• Thursday's Gamel
Philadelphia 6, Vancouvel' 3
Buffalo 4. Chicago 2
Ottawa 4, Boston 4, tie
Detro1t 4, Calgary 3
Phoenix 4. Sl. louis 1
Friday's Gamel
Los Angeles 4, Washington 1
New Jersey B, Montreal 4
Vancouver 4, Florida 3, OT
N.Y. Islanders 3, Tampa Bay 3, tie
Edmonton 2, Detroit i
St. Lou is 4, San Jose 1
Anahe1m 3. Minnesota 1

TRANSAO'IONS
AUTO RACING
TREADWAY RACI~ -St gned dr1ver
Davey Hamilton for the 200 1 Indy nacmg
Leagve season
BASEBALL
American league
ANAHEIM ANGEL S-Sent LHP Juan
Alvarez ¥d OF Jeft OaVanon outfight to Sail
Lake ot the PCL
CLEVELAND lNfliAN S- ·S,,n \ RHP Chw;
NiChl1ng and IN F-OF Ch&lt;ln PPrry outrrghl to
Bulf.alo ol the lntornal1o nc~l Lcugue
Nalionat L-eague
COLORADO ROCKIES A~tlt,'i1ted RF
larry Walker. RHP J:;lm Tl1omson and LHP
JoSh Kahnowskt h om tilt:' CC·d&lt;W disabled
liSt
LOS ANGELES DODGERS ~ F1r ed Davey
Johnson manager

VB, auto transmission. Air conditioning,
tilt, cruise, extra clean

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
LO S ANGELES LAKE AS - ·S1gned G Bnan
Shaw to a two-year cont,acl Named EuqPn1~
Chow as director of community retnt1ons
NEW JERSEY NETS-- Named Tr,lvrs
Hyland video coorOmator
FOOTBAll
1
National Football League
NFL-Fined Minnesotd V1ktngs DE
Talance Sawyer $7 ,500 lor an 1!!ega1 h1l con
Detroit lions quarterback Charlie Batch on
9130.

1998 FORD F1SO
4X4

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
BUFFALO SABRES-Placed G Dom tmk
Hasek on the lntured reserve Acquired G
Peter Skudra off waivers from Boston
CALGARY FLAMES -S1 gned 0 M1ckt
Dupont.
LOS ANGElES KINGS-Aclivated F
Zlggy Palffy from injured reserve . Assigned F
Brad Chartrand to Lowell of the AHL.
NEW YORK RANGERS- Ae -ass1gned LW
Johan WitehaU to Hartford of the AHL.
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Re-signed G Steve
Shields and RW Todd Harvey
tAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Reassigned 0
Marek Posmyk to Detrott of the IHL. Activat ed D Bryan Muir, D Paul Mara, D Andrei
Zyuzin and 0 Petr S'o'obOda from injured
reserve.

COLLEGE

COASTAL CAAOUNA - Nanmd Warren b.
Koege l ath letic director. effec tive Jan . 1.
INDIANA- Announced junior F Tom Gey-=r
has quit the mm1 s basketball 111am.
VALPARAISO- Announced the resignation ol Jay Spoonhour. men's assis ta nt bas·
~etball coach. lo become men's basketba1l
coach at Wabash Valley
&amp;
JEFFERSONWASHINGTON
Announced the ret1 rement of John Luckhardt,
athletic director. Named associate athletic
director Dick Soudan Interim athletic director.

yards for roughing Wahama's pass- five yard gain was no\ the last
er and Wahama now had the score of the night for Jordan
.
pigskin near mid(1eld. After a either.
For Wahama's defense , Eran
short gain by Robert Brinker,
Eran Branch scored his second Branch had ten tackles, which
TO of the night with a 49-yard n13de tlus his stxth ga m~ with at
run. The bck again failed and \:ast ten tJCk.le". ,lnd...Tykr Roney
W:dmm was ahead 40-13 at the •lud fl\'1..' tat kk ~. tn \\·h11.. h tlm.:r..:
Wt'rl' for !osse~ .
conduston of the third quarter.
In .u.lditiotl t() I l.1nkin . . on .wd ·
Anthony Mitchell opened up
the final quarter for the Falcons Branch, Bradford Cl.!rk averaged
when he intercepted a pass from almost 22 ya rd ~ pc.:r carry and
Ju stin Townsend. The interception R.nberl Hrinkcr ran the ball 1'i
placed Wahanu deep mto G ilm~ r timCs for S2 ·ya rds . For Gilmer
terriwry and llrauch tallied his County, fi-cshm,\ll Jacob Lilly had
third touchdown of the game nine ca rri~.:s for -J.5 y.m.h and Hill y
when he ran fnr ::!,1 yards. Adam Reed C;lrned thrL'L' times for 1H
Rickard's point after kick was yards. J.lmes 1-luffin nn , linn J'.Jgc,
:llld John E\·,\l)~ l ,llt g ht tht• t"nur
good.
Wah.:una now had thc-tr seLond p.l~'L''I ti:&gt;r (;iill lL'I' ( .lllll liY !i. n )-t.
l~ •. 1n.J 1\ \,Hd'. rt.''Jll.'' tn·L· I\
strtng pl.1ycr~ in :md on \l'Ultlll
N•..'\t \\'L'l'k. till' I .dl Oil 'I LlkL' llll
.1nd fifteen, r.tn a revn~l' t(.) the
the
mmh-r.1llkc.•d Hut't:do Bt ..,on~
kft and Ju ~ti n Jordan was too f.1st
for ·t h e Tttan defen.;;e. that sixty-

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tt•mn ·iltlllinrl • Page 851

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

•

Teom Sflltlotlc:a
First Downs
Rushes-yards

&amp;unba~

'

kick (8:33)
:
N·Y - Josh S181der 32 run, 8elornM
kick. (:57)
ThlrdaN·Y - Josh Slafder 1hroe yard run,
Bateman kick (7:26)

(5:00}

19
47·396

Non 5·6.

Casey Ouvall1·8 . Poiht-Justin Beckner

SecondQuarl8f
Brandon Pierce 7 pass from
Jonathan Evans, Andrew Cottman kick ,
(8:18)
-M - Clifton Cox 26 run, Brown kick

s -

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards

Huffman 1-34, Page 1·13, Evans 2-11,

Receiving: Warren-Brad Venham 2-51,

kick (:31}

Team Statistics
M

Reed 1-5.

Passing: Warren-Travis OUom 3-14-~-

M - Clif1on Cox 48 run, Dustin Brown

5·45
3-27

Gum 1·2, Travis Ollom 14·(·22}. Point-

9

RV

Eran Branch 49

(1 :03}

John Bonecutter 29-159-2 .. Andrew Den·
nis 14-78, Justin beckn~;tr 5·40, Jeremy

· Scoring summary .
First Quarter
W - Robert Brinker 16 ruh, Hendrik
Olszewski (9:19}

Team Statistics

J

5

p

6

Scoring summary

J - T.J .

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-in1
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards
Punts-avg.

hyperextend'ed elbow and had his
nght' arm m a slmg ,during the
la,t ter stages of the game.
'•'•
The rea) scare came late in the
fromPap81
'
fourth quarter when Saunders
consumed over four minutes went down with an apparent
':but was hampered by 20 yards in . neck injury and had to be
yenalties.
removed from the field on a
: Followmg a 34-yard punt by backboard by Gallia County EMS
•enw r Dav1d ·Fu lks, the Blue technicians.
bevils needed JUst rwo plays to
Saunders was taken to H olzer
Score the1r tinal touchdown.
M edtca. l Center whc:re he was
: Simmohs ear ned rw1ce for 57 treated :md later released.
~ards, w.ith hrs second carry covDoctors have ckarcd both
!'ring 50 yards for h1s II th to uc h- Klsbs and Saunders to pby thi s
'down of the se ason at the 5:-+ I \\'t.'t.' k .
.~narkc
Senior ught end JdT Mulhns
.; Earlier 'in the week. GAHS was lost for th{' re st of t he VL'ar
'head coach Brent Saunders had after re-aggrava tmg a stre ss. t~r.l c­
)lred1 cted that the game would be ture he suffered Ill the preseason
~1ghtl y comested early on. but
Mullins had succc·ssfu l surgery
~eheved hi s club cou ld pull away
\Vcdnesday to repair th e fr:-~cmrc.
in the end.
Doctors placed a screw 111 h1s left
: ''I've- watched Athens for quite foot durmg the procedure.
1 few years now, and they're sort
Gal1ia Academy limtted Athens
· of strugghng," he sa id. " Their tal- to Just 204 yard, of tota l offense.
Cot level's not \vhat it was quite a Shawn H ewitt led Athens wah 86
few decades ago. I talked to their yards rushi ng on 21 ca rries .
Chris Hewitt came off the
soach (Les Champlm) about
before the game, and he and I are bench in the second half and
rushed for 41 yards on 1~ carries.
pretty honest Wlth each other.
The Blue Devils amassed 367
: "He said, 'hey, my kids are
going to play you hare!.' I said, I total yards, including 223 on the
know they're gomg to play us ground.
Eleven different players carried
hard, and that 's what I've been
t'elling folks. That's th e way the ball for GAHS as the lopsided
they've been playmg everybody. sco reline allowed the coachi ng
They play them hard for a quar- staff to gie the Blue Devil junior
ler or a quarter and a half, and va rsity-squad a good run.
A horde of clean Jerseys from
then they go flat."
., Overall. Saunders was less than both sides hit the field wah five
l:uppy with his club's perfor- and a half'minutes left in the th~rd
mance against Athens, but d1d see quarter and played out the
remamder of the g~me.
~orne bright spots.
Gall&gt;a Academy goes head-to:. "We wanted to establish the
head
with fellow SEOAL heavyrunning game, and we d1d that I
fhought pretty well at nmes," he weight Logan ' th iS ~veek. The
)aid. "We didn't play real. but we Chieftains (7-0, SEOAL 4-0)
;rnade some big plays and we crushed Marietta 48-0 Friday.
"We knew our schedule and
played some· good defense at
we krft:w early in the season that
times.
7·: "But that's the way thi . . g;mJe 1s; our three toughest league games
i~rn_etimes you look good, ~orne­ would be our last three leJgUe
games," Sa under~ S31d. "We' re g!Jd
'times not so good."
0: The Blue Devils were b1tten by to b~.:.· 6-1 rtght now, and wcrcn 'c
,the inJury bug again Fnd~y with very far from bcmg undefeated.
"But we've got. probably, the
junior Nathan Kiskis and Clayton
best team we'll fa ce tnl:he reglllat
~aunders both leaving the game
~eason 11l'Xt \\.ieck."
·
"'dth inJUries.
: KlSkl s apparently suffere d a
'

.
'
..

Sunday.~ober8,200j.

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

Richards 10·7, Cody Ball6·6 .

1' -

Pomeroy • ~lddleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD

...
•
••

l

.

'

2000 WINDSTAR SE

••

V-6, Auto, Dual A/C, .Quad Seating,
All Power. Equip, 4 Door $2,500 Rebate Avallble

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Sale!
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8-12 Saturday

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x 38 Dura Torque 6 ply ...... ..... .. ............................................. $329.00
x 38 Dura Torque II 6 ply ................................................... $224.00
x 28 Dura Torque II 6 ply ........................ ...... ........................ $229.00
x 38 Dura Torque 6 ply .................... .'...................................... $269.00
x 24 Dura Torque 118 ply .................. , ........ ..... ............. ........ $249.00
x 28 Dura Torque II 1'0 ply ................ ..................................... $350.00
x 30 Dura Torque II 1 0 ply .. ..'. ..... . ........ ... .............................. $389 .00
x 26 Dura Torque II 12 ply .. .. .................................................. $694 .00
x 181mplemenl Rib 4 ............................................................... $29.95
.25 x 28 Rib Implement 10 .................................................... ..... $375.00
2.4 x 16.1 AWTlV 8 ........................... ..................... ............. $149.00
2.4 x 38 Trac Sure Grip 6 ............................................................. $249.00
4.9 x 36 Trac Sure Grip 6 ................................... ........................ .. $145.00
6 .9 x 38 Power Torque 8 ............................................................. $299.00
x 16 Triple Rib 4 ply front farm ........... '......... ..
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•Jt•r·r·v
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•
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~

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• coverage, every weekend in the
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�•

'

. . Page B6 • 611nbap llimftl-fHntinrt

Sunday, October 8, 2000

Pomeroy '· Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea88nt, WV

•

0

OHIO &amp; WEST VciRGINIA PREP SCORES
•
•

AroundOhla
Al&lt;t. eucnttl e1. Al&lt;t. C e n t - 6

Akr. Coventry 17, ~Memonal
14
Akr. Manchester 47, Magnolia Sandy
Valey 0
Al&lt;r. N. 54, Keumooe 6
Al&lt;r. SVSM 38, Youngs. Rayon 6
Amailda-Ciearcreek 21. Fairfield
Union 0
Amheosl Steelolo7. Bey 6
Anna 34, World Harvest o
Ansonia 54, Arcanom 26
Anthony Wayne 42, Perrysburg 0
Ariiogtoo 27, Cory-Rawson 0
Ashland Cresl\liew 60. PlyrnotJth 0
Ashtabula 38, Andoveo Pymaluning
Valley 17
Ashtabula SIS. John &amp; Paul 20, Fairport I 9
Attoca Seneca East 32, N. Bahimore 0
Atwater Waterloo 22. Ravenna South-

east a

Aurora 15. Wickliffe 14

Avon 28, Oberlin 0
f'o,von Lake 41 . Wes~ake 0
Barnesville 40, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 0
Bedford 40 , Parma 0 ·

Bedlord Chane! 39. Parma Hts. Holy
Name 14

Bellaire 24, Belmont Union Local 15
Bellaire St. John's 31 , Buckeye Trail 7
Bellbrook 15. Brookville 7

Bellefontaine 27. Spring. Kenton R1dge
7
Bellevue 5 ~ , Galion 22

Bek:Mt W. Branch 49. Minerva 20
Benjamin Logan 13, Spnng. Cath. 0

Bethel- Tate 14, Batavia 7
Blanchester 15. Clinton-Massie 0
Bloom-Carroll 27. Circleville 14

Blulflon 56. McGuffey Upper Scoolo
Valley 0
Brooklyn 21 , Gates Mills Gilmour 7
Brunswick 23. Med1na 6
Can Cent. Cath. 35, Chardon o ·
1
Can. GlenOak 27, Uniontown Lake 24
Can. S. 26, Alliance Martinglon 8

Can. Timken 17, New Philadelphia 14
Canal Futton NW 14. Carrollton 7
Carlisle 35, Preble Shawnee 28
Cedarville 28, E. Clinton 6

Centerville 26, Beavercreek 0
Central Ohio Christian 27, Tal. Christian 9
Chagrin Falls 28, Orange 6
Cin. A1ken 28, Cin. Tah 0
Cin. Anderson 44, Cin. Harrison 22
Cin. Colerain 34, Fairtield 28

Cin. Country Day 33, Cin. Landmaol&lt;
Chr. 6
• Cin. Elder 21, Cin . Moeller 7
C1n. Finneytown 20, Cin. Taylor 19
Cin. Hills Chr. Acad . 32, Clermont NE 0
Cin. Madeira 19. Cin. Mariemont 6

Cin. N. Collogo Hil 54, Cin. L~ 0
Cin. Oak Hills 7, Cin. Sycamcn 6
Cin. Po.wcel Marian 20, Hamilton Badin
17
Cin. RaacJing 13, Cin. Indian Hill 10
Cin. St. Xavier 34, Cin. LaSalle 12
Cin. SUmmit Cowotry Day 26. New
MiamiS
Cln. Turpin 34. AmaNa 6
Cln. Walnut Hills 40, Cin. Woodward 0
Cln. Westem Hills 17. Cin. Withrow I 2
Cin. Winton Woods 12, Cin. Glen Este
7
Cin. Wyoming 36. Cin. Deer Pall&lt; o
Cle. Collinwood 42, Cte. S., t6
ae. JFK 20. Cle. E. Tech 6
Coldwater 35, Roddord Pari&lt;way 6
Cols. Academy 40, Danville 20
Cols. ~hcroft 13, Cols. MarionFranklin 7
Cols, Brookhaven 51, Cols. West 12
Cols. DeSaies 28, Cols. Watterson 23
Cols. East I 2, Cols. Centennial 9
Cols. Eastmoor 20. Cols. Linden 13
Cols. Independence 54, Cols. South 0
Cols. MiHNn 41 , Cols. Boggs o
Cols. St. Charles 21 , Northland 0
Cols. Walnut Ridge I 2. Cols . Whetstone 6
Columbiana 42, Lisbon 23
Columbiana Crestvie'tt 26, Salineville
Southam 14
Conneaut 39, AShtabula Edgewood 0
Cor11and Lakeview 27, Youngs. Wilson
6
Coshocton 54, Cambridge 12
Covmgton ,42. W. Alexandria Twin Val~
ley s 7
Cuyahoga Falls 35, Ravenna 8
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 38. Loraon
Cath 10
Cuyahoga Hts. 38, Lutheran West 12
Dalton 34, Doylestown Chippewa 6
Day. Carroll 39, W. Carrolllon 7
Day. Chaminade~Julienne 45 , St.
Barnard Roger Bacon 23
Day. Colonel White 50 , Day. Jefferson
14 .
Day. Dunbar 56, Belmont a
Defiance 14, 0-a-Giandorf 10
Delphos Sl. John's 41 , 51. Henry 14
Dover 36, Uhrichsville Claymont I 3
Dublin Scioto 60, Thomas Worlhington
8
E. Liveopoof 28, Richmond Edison 0
Easdake N. 7, Willoughby S. 3
Ealon 33, Day. Oakwood 22
Elmwood 22, Woodmere 13
Euclid 21 , Lakewood 3
Evergreen 41, Swanton 18
Fairbom 24. Spong. North 21
Fairview Park Fairview 33, N. Olmsted

27

Cin. Mt Healthy 22, Cin. Hughes 7

Raiders
from Page 81
Down 7-U. River Valley (0-7,
SEOAL 0-4) fired back behmd
Taylor's hard- nose running. He
carried four times for 50 yards on
the scoring drive, includin g a 43yard scamper down the far sideline. Taylor ca pped the 11-play,
63-yard sco ring drive with a
•four-yard scoring run .
• The extra point f:ulcd, howev:er. as holder Clark Walker ·was
;' ~:Uiubk ro lunctlc the snap from

. ~...

' .- ,..(~J1t L'l

rh e R:ndt"r~ budt SO lllL'
: : mome-ntum llL~ ar thl' L' nJ of t he
: .. fir"t qu:nt~r. rak1 ng po.,scsSHHl .a
· · rhc1r -1-1 . The combination of .1
.
....J ackson tan:'llJ.ISk penalty anti a
·· • : rhrt'L'- \·arJ T.Jv!ur run brought the
·... : . b:11\ to, the lr~-mmcn 48 , bt~t then
. · · tlo e \\'loeel, fe ll otT.

I

1

.

.

Findlay 41 , Lorain Admiral King 0
Fostoria 20. Napoleon I 4
Fostoria St. Wendelin 22, Fremont St.

Musilon Tuslaw 30, Zoarville Tus-

Joseph 6

Franklin 28. Lemon-Monroe t3
F&lt;8deriddown 26, Centeoburg 21
Gahanna 67, Newall&lt; 21
Garfield HIS. 29, E. Cte. Shaw 13
Geneva 21. Ashtabula Harbor 6
Germantown Valley View 62. Day.
Northridge 6
Gib$onburg 50, Genoa 12
Grafton Midview 49, Oberlin Forelands

14
Granville 3, Liberty Union 0
Green 35, Lodi Cloverleaf a
Greenfield-McClain 20. Bexley 7
Greenwich S. Cent. 14, ColOns Westem Reserve 0
Grove City ~o. Groveport 0
Hamler Patrick Henry 7, Bryan 6
Hannibal River 47, Bridgeport 6
Haviland Wayne Traco 52, Edgerton 0
Heath 13, Licking Heights 0
Hebron Lakewood 12. London 7
Holland Spong. 27. Maumee 20
Hubbard 15, Youngs. Liberty 14, OT
Hudson 49, Bartlerton 21
Huron 19, Castalia Margarena 13
Independence 9, Columbia 3, 5 OT
Jamestown Greenevlew 31, .WaynasWie 0
Jefferspn Area 35, Painesville Harvey

8
Johnstown 2. I , Norlhridge 14
Jonathan Alder 31, Wesl Jeflerson 11
Kenton 33, Lima Shawnee 26
Kings Mills Kings 31 , Hamilton Ross
28
Lakeside Danbury 62. Manon cath . 22
Lancaster 40, Galloway Westland 0
Lebanon 49, Goshen 14
Leipstc 34, Van Buren 13
Lex:ington 49, Vermilion 0
Liberty Center 2a, Lima Cent. Cath. 0
Lisbon Beaver 50, Oak Glen, (W. Va.)

11
Logan Elm 36, Canal Winchester 22
lorain Clearview 3_4, LaGrange Keystone 22·
Loudonville 43, Medma Buckeye 14
Louisville 34, Akr. ·spring. 6
louisville S1 . Thomas Aquinas 19,
Warren JFK 12
Loveland 49, Cin. Norwood 6
Lowellville 28, Vienna Mathews 0
Lucas 23, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale I 0
Macedonia Nordonia 23. Kenston 20
Mansfield Madison 47, lima Sr. 41
Mansfield Sr. 34. Ashland 0
Maria Stein Marion Local 27, Minster 3
Manon Elgin 8, Marion River Valley 7
Marion Harding 43, Orrville 7 .
Marion Pleasant 45, Delaware BUICkeye Valley 33
Martins Ferry 19, Indian Creek 6
Marysville 44, Whitehaii-Yearting 14
Mason 16, Cin. Northwest 7
Massillon Jackson 4 7, Wooster 8

But River Valley was whistled
for consecunve illegal procedure
calls , lost seven yards on two rushes and four yards on a swing pass
from quarterback C ra1g Payne.
The end result: fourth-and-31 at
their own 35.
The score remained 7-6 until
late in the second quarter, as both
defenses established thei1Iselves.
Then Jackson turned to running back David Swisher, who
smoked the Raider defense for 64
yards on five straight carries. The
bruising junior finished his oneman show with a 5-yard TO run
at the 4:01 mark. But the extra
pomt went wide left, leaving th e
score \3-6 .
R1verValley's attempt to answer

mistake. M usrard ran for three of
his game-high 147 yards, setting
up second-and-7 at the Raider
21. Then quarterback Ryan Tipton rolled left and found Mustard
alone in the end zone with 2:29
left in the half.
· Raider fans got a 5care late in
the second half when Taylor
limped off the field with a so re
ankle. The injury (arced the tailback to sit out the final series of
the half.
Taylor and his teammates
answered the second-half bdl. but
the tough Jackson squad apparently had already taken its toll.
"They were big, and they wore

\vas shonlived as Payn e and T aylor

The Ironmen scored on rhbr
first two possessions of the second
half, the first comjng on a Mu stard fum-yard run . The second
tou chdown came on a slash in g

mis~ed connection on a

hanJutT
th e Raider 24 on their second
play of the ens':ling possession .
The Ironmen jumped nn the

,H

us o m

111

MHibury Lake 24, Oregon Str~ch 7
MHioiSburg W. Holmes 46, Sullivan

Black River o
MHierspool 43, Beme Union I 2
Mineral Ridge 30, Western Reserve 14
Mogadore 35, Peninsula Woodridge
21

Mogadore Field 20, Mantua Crestwood
17
Morral Ridgedale 49, Cardington-Lincoln 12

Mt. Gilead 36, Gallon Norlhmor I 2
N. Can. Hoover 37, Alliance 6
N. Ridgeville 37, N. Royalton 20
Navarre Fairtess 13, E. Can. 10, OT
New Bremen 30, Fort Recovery 16
New Carlisle Tecumseh 20, Enon
Greenon 0
New Middletown Spring , 41, N. Uma
S. Range 0
New Paris National Trail 23, Union City
Mississinawa Valley 14
New Richmond 59, Hillsboro 0
Newark Licking Valley 35, Madison
Plains 13
Newcomerslown 45, Sugarcreek GarawayO

22

Sycamore Mohawk 47 , Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon 6
Tallmadge 14, Norton 13
Teays Valley 27, Hamilton Township 26
Thornville Sheridan 28, Crooksville 6
TIHin Calvert 14, Carey 7
TIHin Columbian 69, Bucyrus 0
Tlpp City Bethel 30, Bradford 8
Tlpp City Tippecanoe 36, Casstown
Miami E. 12
Tel . Rogers 34, Tol. WaHe 6
Tol . St. Francis 49, Tol. Bowsher 0
Tot. St. Jphn's 39, Tal. Libbey 0
Tol. Start 22, Tal. Woodward 6
Tot. Wh~mer I 0, Fremont Ross 0
Toronto 33, Malvern 0
Trenton Edgewood 61, Day. Stebbins

Niles McKinley 24, .Canlield 16
Nordonia 23. Kenston 20
Northmont 28, Sidney 21
Norwalk St. Paul 16, Monroeville 9
Oak Harbor 8, Clyde 7
Olmsted Falls 35, Rocky River 0
Ontario 50, New Washington Buckeye
Cent. 7
Oregon Clay 33, Sandusky 0
Orwell Grand Valley 26. Kirtland 25
Ottawa Hills 51 ." Summerfield (Mich.) 6
Painesville Riverside 21. Medison 14
Parma Hts. Valley Forge 22, Panna
Nonnandy 0
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 20,
Delaware 14
Perry .28, Chestertand West Geauga 6
Pickerington 15, Westerville North o
Piqua 32, Greenville 6
Reynoldsburg 18, Hilliard Dalby 14
Richlield Revere14, Wadswonh 12
AiHman 33, Jeromesville Hillsdale 0
S. Cha~eslon Southeastem 41, Tri·

Twinsburg 33, Lyndhurst Brush 14
Upper Arlington 61 , Lewis Center
Olentangy 7
Umana 36, Spring. Northwestern 6
Utica 35, Howard E. Knox 21
Van Wert 27, Elida 14
Vandalia Suber 42, Troy 17
W. Chester Lakota W. 42, Middletown
14 '
Salem Northwestern 34. Apple
Creek Waynedale 18
Walsh JesuH 42, Trotwood-Madison 21

run by Tipton, who reversed field
and scrambled 64 yards to pay
dirt.
Mustard closed the scoring
with a !-yard run with 10:34 left
in the game.
"They're a tough team. They've

gor four guys who can hurt us,"
Carter said. ''But we weren't
intimidated by them . 'Pe played
hard and hit hard''
The coach _said Taylor's ankle
was OK, although "Jared's sore
every Saturday."

0

w.

r

•

Satellite.

Sun

Sun Fade or Sun Outages

occur when a satellite, the receiving equipment
and the sun are all in alignment. Energy from the
sun can overpower the signal from the satellite
which disrupts or interferes with reception. It
depends on which satellite the sun is in alignment
with, as to which channels will be affected.

Eaot

WUhlngfOn C.H. 35, ar.O&lt;Mew Hta. 7
Wauseon 53, Mon1peNer 6

W L Tpta. PF PA
Be
I . .. .......................... 4 f 0 .800 90 39
~s ................... 3 I 0.7!50 119 82
~·- ........................... 2 2 0 .500 T.l
78
;,·NowEnglond .................. 1 4 0 .200 79 91
\ 'NYJels
~

Wayne24,Xaria21 , 0T
Wellington 42, Bwoklkle 9
Westerville South 28, HI!Wd D a 14
Wilmington 43, Little Miami 13
Windham 29, Rootstown
Wooster Triway 13, Beilvilla Claarfotl&lt;

7

Worthington Kilbourne 24, Dublin Coif·
man21
Yettow Springs 30, Troy Chr. 0
Youngs. Ausrintown-Fitch 27, Youngs.
Ursuline 12
Youngs. Boardman 20, Warren Hatding 7
Youngs. Chaney 17, Poland 6
Zanesville W. Musklngum 34, Dresden
Tri-Valley 14
Around WHt Virgin"'
Beaver Local. Ohio 50, Oak Glen 11
Beol&lt;eley Springs 20, Hancoclt. Md.• 14
BridgepOrt 7, Robert C. Byrd 6
Cameron 61, Hundred 6
Fairmont Senior 18, Buckhannon~
Upshur 15
Fayetteville 14, Midland Trail 7
Fort Hill, Md. 40, Hedgesville 6
Foanktort 43, Beall, Md. 16
Gilbert 28, Williamson 14
Greenbrier East 21, Wyoming East,7
Greenbrier West 40, Webster County
14
•
Independence 9. Summers County 6
James Monroe 41 , Sherman 20
Jefferson 26, Musselman 9
John Marshall 46, Weir 18
Keyser 35, Hampshire 6
Lawis County 25, East Fainnont 18
Uberty Raleigh 34, Big Creek 20
Lincoln 6. Liberty Harnson 0
Matewan 38, Burch 20
Morgantown 54. Norlh Marion 16
Mount Vi~w 12, Iaeger 9
Oak Hill 27. PlkeViow 0
Oceana 38, Whitewood, Va. 6
P.a~n City 28, Wlrt County 6
Pendleton County 37, Meadow Bridge

Temessee at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
ln&lt;lianapofis at New England, 1 p.m.
Washington at PhNadelphia, 1 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at Atlanta, • :os p.m.
Denver at San Diego, 4:15 p.m.
Oakland at San Francisco,4:1 5 p.m.
Seattle at Carotina, 4:15p.m.
Clevetand at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
Baltimore at Jacksonville, 8:20 p.m.
Open: Kansas City, Dallas, St. Louis
Monday'• a.me
Tarfl)a Bay at Minnesota, 9 p.m.
~•u··

----------------

Ritchie County 24, Sooth Harrison 0
Shady Spring 32. Bluefield 14
Soutflem Md. 20, Preston 15
TUICker County 21, Grafton 14
Tug Valley 46, Duval 20
•
Tyler Consolidated 21, Nicholas Coun·
6
.
Valley Fayette 40, Mount Hope 6
Valley Wetzel 34, Clay-S.ttelle 0
Van 34. MaiSh FOil&lt; 24
Westmar, Md. 49, PeteiSburg 13
Wh..llng Palk·33. Brooke 0

Steelers face
-· undefeated
J-E-T-5 today
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) - Dame Fortune has cast
-· her lot with the New York J ets
. · .and ignored the Pittsburgh Steel" ers this year.

The tailback is one of many
Raider starters who play ironman
football, seeing action on both
sides of the ball.
Jackson hosts Warren m
SEOAL action next week, while
River Valley travels to Marietta.

...

,;,. The Jets have been the NFL's
surprise team, going 4-0 without
, , being overpowering. They need.,; ;ed to rally to win three · of those
games , and they got some fortuMike Alston's
nate bounces fumble, .Chris Watson's two bobbu.~ .,.Q11t, .p1Ulk returns, Antonio
~-~gharn 1S missed interception
!:hat became· Wayne Chrebet's
~ouchdown grab.
•• But they've
•
also seized those
Opportunities and rung every
bunce of fortune out of them .
~. "They are not 4-0 by any
~egree of lu ck," Steelers coach
flill Cowher claimed.
~ Pittsburgh is on the other end
Bf
' the spectrum and the stand'ngs. The Steelers are 1-3 and
~ice were victimized by poor
~fficiating. Calls from the lea gue
ffice notifYing the Steelers they
ot some bad calls didn't assuage
he pain.
, If things remain positive for the
jets and negative for the Steelers
pn Sunday, their game at the
Tvteadowlands should be no con!est. But bear in rrlind that the Jets
are 1-12 against the Steelers, who
haven 't exactly been terrible in
~000

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CINCINNATI (AP) -Twice chise history.
"I reaDy believe this team's just
a season, the Tennessee Titans get
their noses rubbed in it.
fighting ourselves," said Smith,
On Dec. 4, 1997, Corey Dillon whose 51.5 passer rating is sect).lshed for a rookie-record 246 and-worst in the American Conyards aainst Tennessee, breaking ference.
Jim Brown's 40-year-old mark.
The Bengals' only chance of
The Titans haven't been allowed pulling off an · upset Sunday
to forget.
before another Jess-than-capacity
Every time they play the crowd rests with Dillon, the focal
Cincinnati Bengals, the Titans are point of a revamped offense.
bluntly reminded of their place in
When defensive coordinator
NFL history - the only defense . Di~k LeBeau replaced Bruce
ever to let a rookie rush for that Coslet as head coach two weeks
many yards.
ago, he decided to run the ball
"That game a couple years ago more often. The BengaJs went
up there when they embarrassed with two tight ends last Sunday
us is still fresh in our minds," tight and gave the ball to Dillon, who
end Frank Wycheck said.
rushed for II 0 yards on 22 carries
Those who weren't around get · against Miami's respected defense.
to share in the misery of the
The Bengals lost 31-16, but at
rnoment, courtesy of videotape . least were cotnpetitive for the first
and leng memories. It ca me up half. They haon't scored in ei ther
again this week as the Titans (3-1) of their last two games.
"It looks like they've simplified
prepared for their forst visit to
some things in the run gatne,"
Paul Browp Stadium.
'.' The coaches always remind us Titans coach Jeff .Fis her said.
of it every time we get ready to "Sometimes that's the best thing
play them," said defensive line- you can do, j mt trim down your
man Henry Ford, who started . pion and usc two o r three differthat record-setting game. "He's a ent runs and just block 'em."
big part of their offense."
Coming Sunday: more Dill on.
At this poin t, he's practically the
"We have to put a stop to him
entire offense. With Akili Smith first," Ford said. "That's ou r nuin
and his two rooki e receivers objective. Then Wc.!'ll work our
going throu gh maj or growing way around everything else."
pains, the handoff to Dillon is the
Shamed by that unforgettable
246- yard game, the Titans have
Bengals' only dependable play.
And even that's not enough.· made sure thrre would be no
The Dengals are 0-4 for the fifth more career moments for Dillon.
time in the last 10 years and have He managed a combined 99 yards
scored only 23 points, the worst in two ga mes last season, with the
season-opemng output in fi·an- Titans winning both.

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Pittsburgh also must slow down

,•

Instead, Eddie George and in . Cincinnati. Pi ckens strained a over the game.
Steve McNair have had the big . hamstring last .w eek and was
"Carl needs ro resr the hamgames, leading the Titans to four . slowed in practic&lt;;.
stri ng," McNair said. " H e doesn't
consecutive wins over the BenWith upcoming games against need to rush himself to try and
gals. Both are coming off their Jacksonville, Baltimore and Wash - play against his old team. We need
biggest games of this season.
ington, the Titans would like the him 011 down the road."
Tennessee pm together three luxury of resting Pickens for most
SO-yard drives and another that of the afternoon while George,
covered 98 yards in 19 plays last McNair and their defense take
Sunday in a 28- I 4 victory ove r
the New York Giants. McNair
threw for 293 yards, George
rushed for a season-high 125
yards and the Titans held the ball
for nearly 43 minutes.
GALL!A CQUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS
They were back in form- for
GALLIPOLIS, OffiO
'.
one week .
"We've got to go out there and
do it week in and week out,"
HOURS:
8:00A.M. TO 5:00P.M. EACH DAY
Wycheck said. " It was pictmeFREE ADMISSION AND PARKING
perfect last week agaimt the
Giants. We gave our defense so
INSIDE AND OUTSIDE DEALER SPACES
much rest they were eager to
come back in and m ake plays.
OUTSIDE ( Ill FT. FRONTAGE SPACE) S6.UU PER DAY
"That's really the formula for us
FOR INFORMATION: 740-245-5347/740-446-4120
getting back to the Super Bowl."
The game ;11nounts to a homc comin·g for receiver Ca rl Pickcm,
"OUR 27th YEAR AND STILL GROWING"
who played hi s f1rst eight st·ason s

The New 2001 Model Gravely's are in!
Stop and See Our Selection of Walk Behinds and Riders

sac ks.

'has been a highlight of the quick
~tart. Martin was selecte d the
;league's top offensive player for
:september.
: ··we're fortunate to have won
~hcse first four football games.
'm'
•we re now IH~ rc near t here yet,"
:Said Martin , a Pittsburgh native
:who roqted for Dallas as a you ng:ster. Marrin has rushed for 331
:y:~rds and two
touchdowns,
'caught 18 passes, w1th two scores,
~nd thrown for a TD. " It's one lap
:,o far, and we're not takin g any:th ing for granted. We're grateful
~t o have been fortuna te to be 4-0,
;l,u t 1t is just the begi nnmg of
;iwhat we hope to attain ."

three of his sacks came against scored just three touchdowns in
Pittsburgh. The other defensive three games, none on the ground .
end, Keith M cKenzie has four The Packers left with a 29-3 vicsacks, three in the team's victory . tory.
over Cincinnati.
The game will mark a homeBut turnovers and injuric~ have coming of sorts ' for Clevela nd
plagued the young Browns.
linebacker Jamir Miller, who
11
We had turnovers L'lgJ inst Bal- helped Arizona to its playoff
tinwre," Cleveland coJch Chris appearance two years ago, then
Palmer said . ''We were down went to the Browns as a free
inside the red zone three times . agent . Miller has had little good
We fumslcd , and w~ had an inter- to say about the Cardinals or their
ception, which definitely hurt fans.
us."
"Som~timt· s you can he:.r a pin
With the Jo ss of Rhett. the drop there," Miller said. "But AriBrowns have eight players on zonJ. is J transi~ nt state, Jnd th e
injured reserve , al1 of th~:m on people who move there, the ir
offense.
loy:·drics lie with ot he r teams
Second-year quarterbac k Tim already. so they don't tend to ba ck
Couch should be-rdicved to face the team as much as they sho uld."
a defense that has allowed oven
Now, he &lt;lid, he's ill a real foot sputtering offenses to look good. ball city.
Green Bay, for example, ca me to
'Tm 111 :1 good si tuation here,"
Arizona two weeks :~go h.:wing Miller '"id, "and I'm happy."
·

Titans hope to.keep Bengals downward spiral on course

~urtis Martin, whose versatility

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CHllttOllil

Charter

:' "We have played pretty solid
for three weeks and played good
football last week," Cowher said
of a 24-13 win at Jacksonville.
!·we had two disappointing and
trustrating losses and we're a
o/oung team that was not able to
£&gt;vercome and take advantage of
~he opportunities we had. The
)nost important thing was we
;kept things in perspective. We're
~xcited to put ourselves in posi1:ion to win the games."
•
~ To put themselves in position
~gainst the Jets, they must slow
'ilown New York's revitali zed ~ass
~ush. That could be difficult with
'lin offensive line that has yielded

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Cleveland, Arizona hope to get on the right foot

New Or1eans at Chk:ago, 1 p.m.
Pit1sbu'gh at N. V. J91s., 1 p.m.
areen Bay at Detroit, 1 p.m.

20

tv

......................... 4 0 01.1)1) 88

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Neither gained 72 yards in 11 carries and
The Cardinals are hoping movteam has been able to run the caught six passes for 72 yards in ing Pittman into the lineup, along
Centro!
balL Neither has been able to stop last week's 27-20 Joss to San with finally having rhe starring
~more ....................... 4 1 o .800 110 55
amessee .....................3 1 o.750 a~ e. the run.
Francisco.
offensive line together for the
'''\~and ·-·······--···········2 3 o .400 u 10•
The
resistable
force
meets
the
· Pi1110nvile ................... 2 3 0 .400103 113
Cleveland is 2-3, but has lost second week in a row, will rev up
Sburgh ...................... 1 3 0~ 64 75
movable object when the Cleve- two in a row, outscored 48-tO in the rush. ·
:~ .Cincinnati ...................... 0 4 0 .000 23 105
land
Browns play the Arizona the process. The Cardinals are 1Oolo
Wtot
"The running game is a battle
~rd .........................3 I 0 .7!50109 80
Cardinals
Sunday
in
what's
bound
3,
but
·
with
home
games
against
of wills," Arizona quarterback
:.,
aCity .................... 3 2 o.eoo 111 93
'Cenv« ..........................2 3 0 .400 152 130
to be a sweaty encounter in the the Drowns and Philadelphia the Jake Plummer said, " They know
I Seattle ........................... 2 3 0 .400 i1 1OS
heat of Sun Devil Stadium. ·
next two weeks, think they can we're going to try to run and we
• ••San Diego ......................0 5 o .fXX) 86 156
NFC
Both teams will have new start- climb back into the NFC East know they're rrying to stop it. It's
Eltt
ing running backs, the Browns by race.
always that way every week '''=t
W l T Pet FIF PA
N.Y. Giants .....................3 2 o .600 88 85
neceSSity and the Cardinals by
"The
coming
two
weeks
are
who wants it more and who co nPf1Uadolpl1io ..................3 2 o .600 121 70
choice.
WasNng1on ...................3 2 o .600 87 82
critical," Arizona coach Vince trols the line of sc rimmage.
t I ~~las ·-·-·····••• ................ 2 3 0 .400 f12 111.8
Cleveland starter Errict Rhett Tobin said, "because they're both
"We've got to try to establish
Arizona .......................... 1 3 0 .250 71 108
i~ out for the season after tearing .home games and they're games if the run and of!" of that the playC.ntrtl
MiMeS&lt;Ita ..................... 4 o o 1.00 95 11
ligaments m his left foot in last we can find a way to win thetn. it action, the movem ent, and throw
I OetroJt ................. ,,., •., .. ,3 2 0 .&amp;OQ 84
96
" Tampa Bay .....................3 2 0 .BOO 127 67
week's 12-0 loss to Baltimore. He will get us back to .500. In this the ball downfic!d."
Green Bay ......................2 3 0 .400 fl3 80
league, you've got to get to .500
Plummer has bee n sacked only
Chlcego ......................... 1 4 0 .200 75 130 · will be replaced by rookie Travis
Prentice.
·
Wtot
before you can do anything."
four
times, and the Drowns love
St. Louis .........................5 0 01.00 217 145
Arizona
has
repla
ced
rookie
Arizona
ranks
30th
in
rushing,
to go after the quarterback.
AIIan18 ........................... 2 3 0 .400 95 159
• San Francisco ................ 2 3 0 .400 142 159
first-round pick Thomas Jones, Cleveland is 29th.The Browns are
Defensive
end
Courtney
"11 carolina •.•...................... 1 3 0.250 78 73
averaging just 2. 7 yards per carry, 30th in defense against the run, Brown, the rop pick in the draft,
" New Orteans .................. 1 3 o .250 55 82
Today•• Glmtt
·
with Michael Pittman, who the Cardinals are 29th.
has 12 quarterback pressures. All
Buffalo at Miami, 1 p.m.
,

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McDonald 42, N. Jackson Jad&lt;son-MittQn 0
33, GnadeMutten Indian valley 22
Medina Highland 30. Al&lt;t. Copley 24
Mentor 30, Oeveland Hts. 12
Miamisburg 61, Spoingboro 0
Middleburg
His.
Midpaol&lt;
I 2,
.
Brecksville 6
Middlefield Gardinal33, Newbury 20
Middletown Madison 27, OllCie 7
Milford 14, Lakota E. 3
Milford Center Faiobanks 27, DeGoaft

CrultyN. 20
SanduSky Perkins 54, Port Cllnlon 7
Sandusky St. Mlr(s 7. Milan Edison 6
Sarahsville Shenandoah 25, Woods·
field Monroe Cent 21
Shadyside ~9. Bishop Donahue fCN.
Va.)
Shaker HIS. 49, Elyria 7
Sha!on (Pa.) Kennedy Chr. 41, Brook·
fleld14
Shelby 28, Willard 7
SheiWood Fairview 17, Defiance Tlnora 14
Sidney Lehmen 42, Veosailles 6
Smithville 33, Creston Norwayne 14
Solon 35, Mayfield 0
Sparta Highland 40, Richwood N.
Union 7
.
Spencerville 12, Allen E. o
Spring. S. 36, Fainnont 35, OT
Spring. Shawnee 21, Spring. North·
eastem 14
Sl. Clairsville 12, Buckeye Locel 0
St. Marys Memorial I 3, Lima Bath 7
St. Paris Graham 27, Milton-Union 7
St. Vincent-St. Mary 38, Youngs.
Rayen6
Steubenville 28, Zanesville 21
Stow 39, Kent Roosevelt 13
Strasburg-Franldin 15, W. Lalayette
Ridgewood 0
Streetsboro 55, Garrettsville 7
Strongsville 28, Berea 0
Struthers 42 , Girard 21
Sunbury Big Walnut 41, Mount Vernon

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Page B8 • itunbap 1:im~ -ittntinrl

I

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Sunday, October 8, 2000

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

Postseason baseball is high drama at its best
I know it's football season and th~ Blue measly $15.8 million, was only $800,000
Jackets are in the first week of their inau- more than what Kevin Brown made
gural NHL season, but the baseball play- pitching for Dodgers. Unfortunately, neioffs and postseason moves are the hottest ther Brown nor the Twins made the playoffs.
topics in sports.
For me, nothing compares to the
Other managers from Phil.1delphia to
drama and excitement "'of postseason Los Angdes were not as lucky as Kelly.
baseball.
· These unfortunate souls were given their
The best baseball move in the past walking papers. The Reds' Jack McKeon
SPORTS DOCTOR
week didn't take place on the field. It was was not treated with the respect he
the Minnesota Twins extending manager deserved for all he had done for the fran'Tom Kelly's contract. Kelly is a patient chise.
.
Mariners are taking advantage of their
It's difllcult to justify firing ·a manager opportunities and the White Sox inexpeteacher and qualiry manager who will
turn the Twins into contenders in the · who had d''hvercd a winning record and rtt~ncc.
conipctitive t~ams over his tenure.
next two years.
Piniella has Seattle playing a .solid
I always figured they tired you for not National Leagllc brand of basebaU. They
· He will do in Minnesota wlm Jerry
Manuel has clone in Chicago. Like winnmg . .It would be difficult to name hit and run, sacrifice, and play for the sinChicago. Minnesota has stockpiled an another m:mager who could have done a gle run and not the big inning. It's the
array of young 'talent over the pJSt few ' better job than what "Trader Jack" has same formllla for success Joe Torre hJS
done in Cim:inn.1ti.
seasons.
used in New York .
Lofty expcc!:ltionsjust obscured McKThe Twms have a cadre of young arms
Torre brought the National League
with Brad Radke, Mark Redman and eon's accomplislnncnts. "Che Griffey trade s~ylc to the junior circuit. Like Torre,
Eric Milton. Tra,les with the Yankees for forced Jack to deliver a divisional cham- Piniella has pushed all the correct butveterans like Chuck Knoblauch have pionship to kce.p his job. The problem cons in the postseason . His counterpart,
given Minnesota some prime talent for with the J~ed s was their starting pitching Jerry Manuel, has r:,iJecl to at~us t to
and not McKeon or Griffey.
the future.
Pinidla 's more aggressive style.
I
,,·ondL'f
if
SL·atrlc
manager
Lou
Budding st&gt;rs like Matt Lawton and
Chicago's big gum, Frank Thonm,
Cristian Guzman are on the \·erge of Pinielb fdt a sigh of relief when he first Magglio Ordonez. Carlos Lee and l',llll
becoming impa~t players for the Twins. heard of the Grdtey trade. I guess having Konerko haw also failed to deliwr the
The future is right around the corner for a pbye!Qlike Junior Gin focus too tnuch big hinhat could haw changed the sencs.
anemion on winning and the manager.
Minnesota .
around. Th o mas, a MVP candidate, is 0
Pmiella has quietly praised the job for- ffH 7 in the first two g:mws and has
Kelly hasn't been to the playoffs since
the Twins won the World Senes in 1991, mer Red Mike Cameron has done ill stranded nine runners.
but he has the support of his players and Griffey's pbce. This year, Seattl e was a
One of the most questionable moves in
team
without
Griffey.
better
thl' organization. Over the past eight seathe series was Manuel's decision not to
The young White Sox find theti1Selves · pinch run for the hobbled Herbert Perry·
SOJIS h~ has a 529-709 record. It may
seem less than impressive; however. it's in a 0-2 hole in the best of five division- in the late innings of game one.
difficult to compete when you manage a al playoff series against Pini eUa's more
Manuel's failure became apparent
expt:!rienced
Mariners.
team with the lowest payroll in the major
when Singleton singled and Perry co'!ld
The Sox are pressing themselves into only advance to third . A pinch runner
leagues.
This past ·year, the Twins' payroll, a an early exit. The· more seasoned

Sam
Wilson

U.S. SOCCER

Crew's Mc~ride may miss
match against Costa Rica
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Brian McBride. a
startmg forward for the U.S. national team, is likely
to miss the Americans' next two World Cup qualifl;ers because of a blood clot under his armpit.
• McBride. on loan to Preston North End in England's first divtsion from Coluntblls of M".)or Leaglle
Soccer. sustained a slight inJury during· a Sept . .~3
game against Sheffield Wednesday.
Weight training aggravated the inJury and .1 clot
fOrmed under hi~ armpit, Preston spokesman John
· .Elooth said Friday.
"We don't select the U.S. cea111, hut our umlerstanding is that he'll be out of action for at least two
months," Booth .said.
· The United States (2-1-l) is secon d in its World
Cup regional sem.ifinal qualifYing group with se\·en
·poi nts, two behind Costa Rico (3-1), three ahead of
Guatemala (l-2-1) and four ahead of Barbados.
Only the top two nations advance to next year's
regioml finals. The Americans can clinch advancement by beating Costa Rica on Wednesday at
Columbu s, Ohio. [f they tic or lose, the probably
would need a tie or win in thm final qualifier of'the
semifinals, at Barbados on Nov. l S.
For Wednesday's game, the Amcncans already arc

missing three pbyen; who are suspe nded: midfielder? Eddie Lewis, Claudio Reyna and Ernie Stewart.
In addi tion, coach Bruce Arena will be starting a
three-game suspe nsion imposed by FIFA, soccer's
governing body. ·
.
McBride returned to Col unlbu s on Wednesday
and doctors removed the blood dot ofThursday.
C rew spokes man JeffWuerth sa1d McBride is tak~
mg a blood-thinning m edicJtion and lus been
cle ~ned by doctors fo.r cardiovascubr training.
U.S. Soccer Federation spokesman J im Moor-

•

ignored.
·
Maddux, a four- time Cy Young Award
winner has a career 10-11 record in the
postseason. His postseason difllculties
should be noticeable after he gave up six
runs in the first inning of last Tuesday's .
gotJIC against the Cardinals.
Maddux lasted just four innings and ..
gave up a total of seven runs with five of
them earned.
Maddux 's postseason performances do
not measure "P to Whitey ford, Bob
Gibson, Catfish Hunter and Sandy ,
Kouf.1x among oth~rs.The truth is that it ..
In s been Tom Glavinc and John Smaltz
who h;:~ve been the primcti.me performers for the Draves in Octolwr.
M:tddux nnl st take some of the blame
fur tll~..· Br:wcs winning: just one cham pi-.
onship sin ce he arrived in '1992 .
I guess that it just ~eems ironi c that
ML"t.;; .
Bonds has been criti cized fi:)r hi~ kss sports\vritcrs continue to harp on Barry .
than stclbr pcrfornlJnccs in hi~ four pn.'- B() tH.l"&gt;' f:~ih rrl' to deliver in thl' playoffs ·
white ignonng Maddux's lllcdiocrity. ·,
vimJS trips to the ployofr&lt;.
,
like the young White Sox, Bonds h.IS \ 1.uldux will make it tn the H all of,
prcss&lt;.·ct too much 111 his c:1r!icr tnp.;; to ! ~ :llll L', but hi\ reput;1tion JS J big money
the postseason. He hit only .200 wnh pnchl'r j.., lnrml'd by his postse:1son perl'ittsburgil in the early '90s and With the ._!Ornun n·s.
This hcc.llliL' obviou s vvht!p CJrdin:tls
Gi.mts against the Marlins in 1'N7.
This y(.'Jr he sec1ns more f{KuSL'd un rn.HDgl'r Tony LlRu ss,l d.cci ckd to save
the field and obliviom to l11s doubters. Ins .1cc IJar ryl Kilc to pitch the second·
More importantly. he's tollowed by Jell- ga nw ag;nmt Glavinc. He sen t rookie '
Kent and E lhs Burks in the Giants' lllle- Rick Ankie1 against Maddux in the
opener.
up.
1t \\'as.a gamble that ha s paid off with a
Opposing pitchers now have to pick
2-0
series lead go in g into Saturday .
their poison if they decided to pitcb
around Bonds. Kent may be the reason night's game in Atlanta. It was a state - .
ment that St. Louis was more concerned
Bonds ~o better in these playolrs.
For aU the talk about Bonds' postseoson with Glavine than Maddux.
failure, it seems ·p eculiar that the trials
and tribulations of Greg Maddux are
•

NEW YORK (AP) - The
New York Yankees used Orlando
Hernandez's playoff experience
and Oakland's lack of it to move
within one win of the AL championship series. .
H ernandez, pitching without
· his best stuff, won his sixth
straight postseason decision, and
· the Yankees capitalized on the
Athletics' shoddy defense to win
4-2 Friday night and take a 2-1
series lead.
"This is what we ·strive for,"
Yankee s _manager Joe Torre said.
" We've been here before and had
' taste of
success and we hke the

I

Wll111ll1g."

Written off by many after losing the opener to Oakland their eighth straight loss dating to
the regular season - the twotime defending World Series
champions will send Roger
C lemens (13-8) to the mound in
Game 4 Saturday night against
roo kie Barry Zito (7-4).
"We've been a lot crisper ballclub since the postseason starred,"
Torre said. " Hopefully we are on
our way to doing so mething special this year."
·
Hernandez battled through
seve n tough innings - with help
from his defense - before turning the game over to closer Mariano Rivera, who saved New
York's 1Oth straight postseason
win at Yankee Stadium.
Rivera tied Dennis Eckersley's
record of 15 postseason saves.
"For the first five innings my

1

Vancouver court convicts McSorley
VANCOUVER,
British
Columbta (AP) - Morey M cSorley was found guilry of assault
with a weapon on Friday for
stnking an opponent 111 the head
with a sttck during. an NH L
game.
McSorley had contended that
his hit that sent Donald Brashear
sprawling to the ice was an accident. Brashear was left with a
COilC USSlOil.

The trial is the fli'St for an onice attack by an NHL player si nce
Dino Ciccarelli, then with the
Minnesi?ta North Stars, was sente nced in 1988 . He received one
day in Jail ond a S I ,000 i!ne for
hitt ing Toronto's Luke Richard~
lOll with his stick.
McSorley hit Bra~ltcor Feb. 21
during a gamL' belween Bosto n
and Vancouver.
Brashear's h~ad struck the ice

•
day but would not comment on his condition.
"B,ian received an elbow to the biceps while
playing for Preston and cot~ ldn't continue," Moorhouse sa id. " I lis status for next week Ius not been
determined."
•
McBride, 28, scored for the United States in its
cruc ia l 1-0 wi n over Guatemala in a World Cup
qualifier on Sept. 3, his 13th goal in 45 international appearances. H e 1nissed th e first two qualifiers this
summer because of a fractured cheekbone.
McBride scored the only goal for the U.S. team
that fimshed last in the 1998 World Cup in Paris.

C~~cinnati among eight

1
'

starts.
Hernandez's
half-brother,
Livan, beat the New York Mers
on Wednesday for San Francisco
to go to S-0 in the postseason.
The Yankees couldn't mount
much offensively against Tim
Hudson, but took advat1tage of
two errors, a couple of defensive
lapses and two infield ( hoppers to
score their runs .
"We certainly didn't hit it very
hard or far," Torre said. " We benefited fro111 the opportunities they
· gave us ."
The A's, who have eighrplayers
who are 25 years old or younger,
insisted that they wouldn't be
spooked .by 'playing at Yankee Stadium. But their play in the field
indicat~d otherwise.
"We knew we were coming
home to our' crowd, and our
crowd could be very overwhelming to the opposing team," New
York's David Justice said. "I don't
think they're afraid. I think they
just made a couple of misplays
that we took advantage of."
Bernie WiUiams led off the sec-

TRf-COUNTY NOTEBOOK

1

OOMPD volleyball
leagues begin Oct. 23

•

•

GALLIPOLIS Registration is underway for the 0.0.
Mclnryre Park Distri ct's men's
and women's volleyball le agues.
The entry fee is $125 per
team. The registration deadline
is October 20, with play beginning October 23-24.
Matches will played Tuesdays
fro m 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the
GDC gym.
•
For
informatiO n, contact
Mark Danner at 446-4612, ext.
~56.

Smart money saved
is smart money earned.

CiAHS 7th grade
team beats Logan
· GAlLIPOLIS - Gallia Acade my's seventh-grade football
team defeated Logan, 34-20.
Shaphe n Robinson and Luke
Haislop each scored two touchdowns and Brad Caudill added a
fifth score for the Blue Devils.
Quarterback Todd Saunders
hit R obinson for a 20 -ya rd
tou chdown in the first quarter,
then found Haislop on a 25~

.•
•

· Firstar's Premium Smart

ond inning with a double for
He spent much of the game
New York and Paul O'Neill fidgeting on the mound, tugging
chopped a one-out infield single at his hat and jersey, as he strugover Hudson's \lead for his first gled to get the ball down in the
strike zone. He induced only two
hit of the series.
Glenallen HiD then hit a chop- infield groundouts before getting
per that Hudson was able 'tO field. · double plays to end the fifth and
But the 25-year-old right-hander seventh innings.
"I thoughr he straightened
threw home with no chance to
catch the speedy WiUiams. Giving himself out in the 'sixth inning,"
up the easy our at first ended up Torre said. "He felt so badly about
costing Hudson when Derek how he pitched in the first five. I
Jeter hit a two-our infield single sensed he was very frustrated·. But
that shortstop Miguel Tejada he perked up after the sixth
couldn't backhand cleanly to give inning."
He was helped by ste rling
New York a 2-llead.
NewYork added another run in defensive plays by Justice in left
the fourth with help from a bad field and Sojo at second base.
With a runner on first and one
deciuon in the field by Oakland.
With Luis Soja on first and no out in the fourth,Jeremy Giambi
outs, Scott Brosius bunted in hit a drive to the wall in left-c enfront of th e plate. Catcher ter.Just ice tracked it down, crashR t mon Hernandez, 24, went for ing into the wa ll as he made the
the tough play at second, but his · running ca tch . Hernandez pomthigh thrO\V hit off Tejada's glove, ed out to Justice in acknowledg- ·
sending Sojo to third on the menr of th e play.
Soja is scarnng at second
error. Jeter gave New York a 3-1
because he is steadier defensively
lead with an RBI forceout.
"We just didn 't execute than Chuck Kn oblauch. But Soja
tonight. It was as simple as that," made two defensive m1scues m.
Oakland manager Art Howe said. the first two games - including
"We didn't make the plays we can tripping over his own shoelaces in
..
embarrassing fashion in Game 2.
make .
.
He was solid this game, making
Sojo added a run-scoring single
a
nice
turn oli Eric Chavez's douwith two outs in the eighth, his
fourth RBI of the series. A's cen- ble-play grounder in the fifth, and
ter fielder Terrence Long slipped lunged to smother Long's
after fielding the ball, and was grounder and start a double play
in the seventh. Sojo pumped his
helped off the field.
Hernandez did the rest for the fist and the normaiJy •stoic YanYankees, proving once again that kees ran joyfully off the field.
Jeremy Giambi gave Oakland a
he is New York's October ace.

1-0 lead with an RBI single ·in
the top of the second. The Athletics' other run came on Long's solo
homer in the fifth - the first
home run by either team in the .
senes.
Hudson allowed fo~r runs three earned - and six hits in
eight innings. H e walked two and
stru ck out five.
Notes: Hudson was 7-0 with a
1.16 ERA in his last seven starts
of the season .... Oakland's No. 2- .
7 hitters went 0-for-19 .... The
Yankees have gone six games and
53 innings without a home. run,
since Hill hom ered at Tampa Bay
on Sept. 28. -.
Mariners 2, White Sox 1
SEATTLE (AP) - The Seattle
Mariners used a squeeze to
sweep.
Shutting down· the highestscoring team m the 'm ajors for the
third straig ht game, the wild card
Mariners beat the C hicago White
Sox 2- 1 on pinch- hi tter Carlos
Goillen's bunt single in the bottom of the ninth inning Friday to
\vin thelf AL playoff series.
The Mariners won with one
out when pinch-runner Rickey
Henderson scored on Guillen's
safery-squeeze bunt.
John Olerud led the inning
with a hard liner off the stomach
of KeUy Wunsch. The reliever
scrambled to pick up the ball, but

·;,

threw it wildly past first basema11, .
Frank Thomas.
'' ....
Olerud· reached second on a
play scored as a single and an 1
error. Henderson, baseball's career .
stole n base lang and second o.n
the all-time runs list, replaced .
Olerud , and Keith Foulk~ ·
relieved Wunsch :
Henderson moved to third on ~
sacrifice bunt by Stan Javier and ,
David Bell drew a four-pitch ,
walk.
Guillen batted for Joe Oliver. .
With Chicago's infield and outr
field pbying in, Gutlkn dragged • · .
sharp bunt between the moun~ .
and first .When the ball rolled p.1st
a lun ging T h om~s; Heruler\Ur:l ,

easily ~cored.
Jose Paniag-ua got the victory
by striking out Magglio Ordonez .
for the final out in the ninth , •
Arthur Rhodes pitchc•d 1 1-~
scorckss innings before PJniagua
entered.
Wuns ch rook the loss.
Se le allowed three hits and
th ree walks.

·~~~-~---.

· Auto-Owners l'n8urance

7u '1!D. 1&gt;"~"-

u.s.

Cooper said.
.
Vchr said last week that the cost of bidding for
the Games- estimated at nearly SlO millionalso wasn't part of his pledge to raise private
money tO\VJrd bringing the GJmcs to Cincinnati.
If Cincinnati is picked "the U.S. bid city, several million dollars more wou ld be required for
· tht.! thrct.!-year intcrn:1t10nal effo rt to win the '
G:1mcs and tJxpayers would be asked to support
that, Vciir said.
·
"It IS our belief that the city, c oumy, sta te Ohto and Kentucky - should be involved in
~upport111g this effort thJt ha s trcmcndou' potenti,Jl L'Cnuoltli~ benefit to thi s co mmuniLy," sa id
Vl'IH, .I rornll'r Cincinnati city (0 \lllCillll ;In.
1
Vc-h r crwi -;1nns events occurring from Ckvdand
to Lexin gto n. Ky. , and lmmvtllc , Ky. The Cincin~
11.1ti group lllust sub nut its b1d by Dec. 15 to the
U.S. Olympic Committee.
Cinc inn .1 ti i" competing with '\t'Vcn other U.S.
mcrro po lit:tf1 art:' JS- Da11a~. Houston, Los Angele s, New Yo rk City, San Fr.1n cisco, Tampa and
W.Jshingt o n-Lblrimore co b~ the n:ttion's
;tnce .
'"'minee for the 2012 games. The U.S. Olympic
Offi cJ.il \ of Cinnntutt, \Vhen:: t.lXpayers ~H t' Cn111mittl'c will m a k~ its p1ck in the f:'lll of:2D02 .
.J iready oh!JgJtc·d to p.l\' .lbo ut SH OO million ir11
r hL· Jnt l'rll;Jtto!Lli OlympH: Commiucc will
tWO Ill'\\ rro &lt;ip ortli \Lld!ll rlJ",. Were criticJ! ofVL·hr.
~t: lt'c r the ho~t nty 111 200j .
''I'm "ure Int en.'Hc d to know whJt the co . . t '. ,1n~,
Vehr "'"I revenues for the S2 btllion-plus budlfrespeciive of the SSOIJ,IIfl[) 011 the tab le," M.1ym get to npnatc the Games \VOLlld come froiu three
Ch ,Jrle ~ Lu ken \ J Jd. "It m1 ght be J till'lL' to t.lkc .1 so urces : money p&lt;1id by bro:rd c;Js tt'r' Cor teiL·vt 'i l0 !1
closer lho k .lt 1t.''
r ights to the Olympic game'. worldwtdc and U.S.
"We shouldn't be bltndsided, and the CJtJ 7Cn \ co rporate ~pnnsorships, and Olymp1c ti c kc c s:tlc s.
shouldn 't be blmdSidcd," V1 cc Mayor M1ncttc

control was terrible and my team
was encouraging me, Hernandez
said through a translator. "After
the fifth innil)g Mr. Torre puUed
me aside and said stop battling
yourself and pitch your game."
El Duqu~ allowed two runs ,
four hits and five walks, needing
130 pitches to do it. The Cuban
defec~or had a sub-.500 regular
season, but improved to 6-0 with
a 1.24 ERA in seven postseason

Life Home Car Business

after M~orley hi t him. He
briefly lost consciousness and suffered memory la pses. He returned
to play after seve ral weeks and hos
full y recovered.
McSorley, a defcnscman testified he didn't intend to hit Brashear in the head. He contends he
was instead trying to hit him in
the shoulder to provoke him into
fighting.

c1t1es vying for 2012 Games

i&gt;unbD!' QI:Imtt -iltntinrl • Page 89: :.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaaant;Wv

Yanks double up lfs; Seattle washes .out White Sox

•

wotJid have scored easily from second on
the play. The Sox lost the game in extra
innings on home runs by Edg-.1r Martinez
and John Olerud. Perry's run would have
broken the tie and possibly given the Sox
a VICtory.
It 's apparent that Manirel still has a lot
to learn about managing in the pomcoson. He has treated the first two games
like the regular season. LaRussa, L'inielb
and Torre have not hesitated to sit superstars, and change lineups ~md strategies.
Manuel, like his tt:.:tm, is getting au
education in playoff bose ball. You have- to
manage differently in the playo!Ts.
A great deal of attention has bc·c11
given to the f.1ilure of super..;taro;;~ in rill'
p!oyoffi. San Francisco's ll,u'ry 11"' u Is
silcnu:d his critics by going 2 tOr J \\'It h
Olll' I~I in the first gJmc ag;1in.;,t the
'

...,.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

house s:1 id USSF doctors evalu:1ted McDridc on Fri -

OLYMPICS

CINCINNATI (AP) -The leader of an effort
to lure the 2012 Summer Olympics to Ctncinnati
says taxpayers would have to pay for any buildings. roads Jnd other infrao;trunure n'ecded for the
Games. but he won't say what that would cost.
Nick Vehr. president of the. Cincmnati 2012
~nc. org::mization, had sa id for months that private
interests would P"Y for the Summer Games, if
Cincinnati is sdcctl.!d over compe ting cities for
the event.
A tax watchdog group, Coalition Opposed to
Addttional Spending and Taxes, estimated Thursday that it could cost taxpayers S5 billion to build
the needed Olympics Infrastn.lcturc . Vein S;tid hL·
thought it woutd not c o&lt;;t that mu c h, but hl·
declined to give an e"&gt;tJm,He.
Vehr savs 1t will cost $7 ..1 rntllton for the effort
to be selected as the U.S. city in order to compete
with foreign cttit·s for the 2012 Games. Ctncinnati 2012 hJ 1'5 J!n.:ady rai lie d S5 mlllion and nc~ds .'
S2.5 millton mOt\', Vchr s:l id. Hi" oq;amzatton is
no\.v Jsktng count ies .:t nd c itie~ in the CinctnllJti
area to e.1ch con tnbutc $500,000 toward th at bal-

Sunda~~ober8,2000

yard pass play. Haislop also
caught a 35-yard pass for a score
and Robinson scored on a 40yard run. Caudill scored on a
54-yard run in the fourth qu•rrer to give the Blue Devils a 346 lead.
Logan rallied for two touchdowns in the ·final period.
GAHS (4-0) plays host to Oak
Hill Tuesday.

GALLIPOLIS- Andre Getger
had three touchdown passes,
and o ne on' the ground, as the
Gallia
Academy
freshmen
defeated visiting Logan , 50- 0 on
Thursday.
Up 6-0 111 the second quarter,
a Cody Ca ldwell 40- yard punt
return set up a Geiger 11 -ya rd
TD run. Geiger then threw a
pair of TO passes to Caldwell
from 20 'and 24 yards out to give
the Blue Devi ls (5-0) a 28-0
halftime lead.
Quarterback Ni ck Croft,
returning from a broken foot,
took snaps in the firsst and

ATTENTION

AEP

INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy
992-6677

.

GAHS eighth graders
fall to Logan _

Blue Devil freshmen
crush Logan

-.

fourth quarters. Craft drove the Tigers, 15-7,9- 15 , 15-4.
Felicia C lose led Gallia AcadBlue Devils down the field in
emy
(7- 3) with eight points,
the first quarter as Mike Davis
ran in a TD from seven yards while Kayla Scites added six.
out for the first score of the
game.
ln the third quarter, a Brian
Burton fumble rec'overy set up a
34-yard TD pass from Geiger to
LOGAN -The eighth grade
Caldwell. Steve Pullins opened C hieftains j umped out to a twoup the fourth quarter scoring tou chdown lead in the first
with a 40-yard interception quarter t o defo:at th e Blue Devreturn for a TO. Later in the
il s 22-6 .
fourth after a Nathan Woods
Logan got anothe r score in
fumble re cove ry, Jake Bodimeis the fourth quarter .
ran in a TD from 42 yards out.
The Blue Devils' sco red on a
five-vard run by Jefr Payton in
the fourth quarter.
The Devils (3 - 2) will travel to
Athens next week.
MARIETTA - The Gallia
Academy eighth-grade volleyball team lost to host Manetta
15-8,4-15, 15-1 on Thursday.
The Blue Angels were -led by
Amand a Lewis wtth 10 se rvice
points and Ashley Jones with
seven.
Gallia Acade my plays ho st to
Jackson on Tuesday at 5:30p.m.
Th e Blue Angels also lost in
the seventh gra de game to the

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�Outdoors
W.Va. f~ll mast survey produces high numbers

Inside:

Page 810

Sunday, Odober

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HUNTINGTON, W.Va. 'Ntghc nme te~nperacures are takmg a . detour rmo the 40s. Make
no trustake. Fallts here.
.
And Wtth fall come huntmg
seasons of ~U sort,s - squirrel,
deer, bear. w1ld boar, turkey. rabbit
and grouse -just to name the
mo~c popular.
.lt_s t1me to check the West Virgmta D1Vts1on of Natural
Resources annual mast repo rt,
and to .put it as simply as possible
- it's great!
"In all my years with the
department, this is one of the two
best surveys I hJ.ve ever compiled," said Jim Pack from his
office in the DNR's Elkins Center. .
Pack is a wildhfe biologist with
DNR's Wilcll1fe R esources Section ' Among his many responsibilities is conducting .the annu al
mast survey.
Mast is a collective term for all
those food stuffs produced in the
forest s~ch as acorns, beechnuts ,
hickory nuts and walnuts. Also
included are soft mast fruits such
as wild grapes, sassafras berries,
dogwood berries and wild black
cherries.
Most hunters, and especially
veteran hunters, recognize the
importance of mast conditioni,
and they ask the DNR for the
information. As a result, the division, in cooperation with the
Division of Forestry and other
cooperators, have annually surveye&lt;L-the state for the past 30
years for abundance or scarcity of
important mast species.
"We had 360 sites this year covering all regions of the state,"
Pack said.
The DNR used wildlife managers and wildlife . biologists,
foresters, retirees and interested
' sportsmen. Even one DNR commissioner volunteered his time to
collect data , Pack said.
This information· is compiled at
DNR headquarters in Charleston
and at the Elkins Center, and
made available to hunters and th e
media.
lt's Impossible to write about
the 2000 mast survey without
mentioning th e " drought of
l 999 " and its impact on w ildlife
in this state. However, ample r:J.in€all this spring and summer produced a bumper crop of forest
foods .
"Statewide, the crop of bee chnuts, walnuts, and hickory nuts IS
outstanding," Pack said. "Mast
from these sp ecies more than
doubled."
When compiling this da ta,
DNR biologists measure it two
ways. First they compare the current year's reports a.gainst the pre-

vious fall . Then the information is
compared with the state's 30-year
average mast index. But either
way you hack it, mast survey 2000
is outstanding.
·
"White oak and chestnut oak
acorns were rathe r ;carcc in 99"
Pa ck's re port sa id, "but the yield
p1cked up this year for these
species (44 percent for white oak
·

and 86 percent for chestnut oak).
The index for yellow popular
increased 30 percent.
"Most understory trees and
shrubs produced more mast than
last year. Hawthorne and crabapple are about the same. Only sassafras and grape produced less
fruit than in 1999. Our common
apple crop increased in quantity

and were much larger because of
ample rainfall."
Black and red oak production is
up 21 percent, and scarlet oak is
up 30 percent.
Biologists have divided the state
into six regions.
Region I is the Eastern Panhanclle. Region 2 is the Monongahela Nation:d Forest. Region 3

2000 FORD WINDSTAR

Some walleye , sougcr and saug-

eyc are being taken on nunnowand gru b-tipped j1gs.
Boating anglers are hitting the
shorelines up and down the nver
using crankbaits, buzzbatts. 1pmners and rubber worms to catch
some nice black bass.
\=a tfi sh
arc
be-ing
taken
through'o ut the river while t1 11ng
cu tbaits, chJCken liver and mghtcrawlers.

comprises the south central and . the importont mast species surloutheastern counties. Region 4 veyed except wild cherry had a
is the north-central counties.
higher yield than last f.1 ll , and all
Region 5 includes the western species had hi gher than normal
and Northern Panhandle coun- (produ cti on)."
ties. Region 6 is Cabell, Wayne,
All thi s is good nt·ws for West
Lincoln, Putnam and Mason Virg(nia wildlife, but it co uld
counties.
make more difficult for the
"Southwestern counties had a hunters. Wh en ga me anima]s c;~n
good mast year," Pack wr?te. "All find food anywhere thev wander.

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2000 FORD FOCUS SE

Abigail
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2000 RANGER EXTENDED XLT

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1998 RANGER FLARESIDE

1999 FORD F150 4X4

1999 FORD TAURUS SE

XLT, AMIFM CD, LOW MILES
SALE PRICE

XLT, AUTO, AIR, LOADED
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AUTO, AIR, CRUISE, TILT, LOADED

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AS LOW AS

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1999 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

1999 MERCURY TRACER LS

1998 RANGER FLARESIDE

SIGNATIJRE SERIES, TOUR.ING PKG, LOADED

AUTO, AIR, POWER WINDOWS,
LOCKS;·AMI!'M
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1997 F250 4x4

2000 FORD E350 CLUB WAGON

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1998 FORD RANGER SC

1998 RANGER 4x4

4X4, XLT, AUTO, 4.0 ENGINE

XLT, AUTO, LOW MILES

SALE PRICE

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515,75000

2000 FORD RANGER XLT .

$13,95000

1998 FORD CONTOUR SE
SPORT, LEATHER, MOONROOF, LOADED
SALE PRICE

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1999 MERCURY COUGAR SPORT
V6, AIR, POWER WINDOWS, LOCKS, SPORT PKG

SALE PRICE

515,950°0

1999 FORD F150 SC

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524 95000

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· Fire drills
.· guarantee
.great escape

AUTO, AIR, AMIFM CASS, POWER LOCKS 4X4,AUTO, AIR, 4 DOOR, POWER EQUIP,
SALE PRICI:
GLASS TOPPER
SALE PRICE
$14,15000

Fishing looks
good at Beech
Fork and on
the Kanawha

crankbaits and spinne rs. .

Sundllf, October I. 1000

ADVICE

521,95000

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The
West Virginia fishing report was
release d Thursday by the Division
of Natural Resources.
Acco rdin g to the weekly
rep ort, Beech Fork Lake is at
summer recreation level.
Lake and tailwater arc clear. For
more info'rmation call the Corps
of Enginee rs recorded message at
525- 5092.
Saugeye and hybrid stri ped bass
are going Jftcr minnow- a~d
grub - tipped jigs, while blac k bass
will hit buzzbaits, plastics and
spmners.
Ca tfish are being caught o n
mghtcrawlers. chicken liver and
small gizza rd shad .
Fishing th e tai lwater of the
Londo n Lock and Dam .is gvod
for smallmn,uth bass while uStng

Cflebrations begin on Page C2

2000

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. DEAR ABBY: When I went
to the mo"ies with my mother as
a young boy, she would sometimes
cover my eyes with her hand and
ask, "Can you tell me where the
exits are?" She made it a game that
was fun, but she was serious about
teaching the lesson. I've always
remembered it, because it's a very
important one.
No matter where people are,
everyone needs to know how to
escape safely if fire should break
out. That's why I've joined the
non- profit National Fire Protection Association in its public safety efforts during Fire Prevention
Week 2000. NFPA's campaign is
called "Fire Drills: The Great
Escape!" Its goal is to encourage
.reople everywhere to plan and
practice their own fire drills, espe- '
cially in their homes, where eight
'out of 10 fire deaths occur.
. When was the last time you had
a· fire drill? Please, take a few minutes to walk through your home
'with your family and identifY at
·I Wt two escape routes in case a
fire blocks one of them. Then
practice using them, and choose a
specific place outside to assemble
and make sure that everyone is
safe and wait for the fire department. Also, if you haven't done it
lately, test your smoke alarms to be
sure they're working.
Abby, I hope your readers will
take this message to heart. Fire is
fast - so f.'lst, you may have only
a few moments to get out. However. if you react quickly, you can
survive a fire. Fire drills really are
the "Great Escape." Planning
ahead and practicing carefully are
the keys to survival. SEN.
ED:WARD M. KENNEDY,
NFPA HONORARY CHAIR,
FIRE PREVENTION WEEK

2000
DEAR
SENATOR
KENNEDY: That you are lending your name to chis lifesaving
effort is terrific. Too often, lessons
about fire safety are learned the
hard way - in the aftermath of a
tragedy. Every year, more than
4,000 people die from fire-related
injuries in the United States the great majority of them in
homes. In an effort to combat that
loss, the National Fire Prevention
Association has spearheaded "Fire
Drills: The Grear Escape!" - a
multiyear public safety campaign
to highlight the importance of
planning and practicing fire drills.
National Fire Prevention Week
runs from Oct. 8 to Oct. 14.
Across North America, fire
departments will be teaching
these important lessons. Please,
readers, plan and practice your ,fire
drill today. It shouldn't have to
take a tragedy to get people co pay
attention.
DEAR ABBY: I recently
became engaged and am looking
for just the right dress. The issue I
am having trouble with is char l
have a rather large tattoo of an
orchid on my chest. I'm not sure
if it . would be appropriate co
expose the tattoo at the wedoling.
I also have other tattoos on my
wrist .a nd shoulders that may be
exposed.
Our families are not formally
religious and they have seen the
tattoos before, but I'm afraid of
looking cheap or tacky with a
huge flower climbing out of the
bust of my dress.
NEEDS TO
Any ideas? KNOW IN SAN CLEMENTE
DEAR NEEDS TO KNOW:
Only thi s: Wh en in doubt, cover
up!

'

HELPING EAR
-Woodland
Centers Crisisline worker
Susan Marcum;
LSW listens to
a client in need.
(Kri s Dotson
photo)

Woodland Centers takes
a different approach
· ... -

BY KRIS DOTSON

,-TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

G

ALLIPOUS - Woodland Centers Inc. is a
community mental health centerestablished in
1974 co ·serve the residents of Southeastern
Ohio.
Woodland provides a comprehensive program of mental
health/ behavioral health services that include individual,
group and family counseling, community support services
(ca..'ie n1anagement), med/somatic services, and diagnostic
assessment.
Woodland Centers Inc. maintains clinics in Gallia,Jackson and M eig.; Counties. Gallia County residents utilized
approximately 36 percent of ITS services.
Wooclland offers 24-hour, seven-days-a-week emergency mental health services, including Hotline, Crisis
Assessment and stabilization and crisis residential.
The Crisisline service is designed to provide telephone
crisis intervention and informacion referral service:
"Crisisline receives calls from residents of all age groups
with a variety of problems or concerns," said Cindy
Rutherford, Crisisline worker.
The Crisis Residential Unit is a 9-bed unit which provides a safe environment where the client can receive services to stabilize mental stature, resolve a crisis or obtain
needed respite. ·
A major purpose of the unit is to prevent hospitalization.
In 1999, the Crisis Unit provided 1,990 bed days for an

~anted:

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"They seem very sensitive to individu als and families in
crisis. It gives our clients a more p~ro;;on al experience," she
added.
The staff also' consists of clinical psychologists, social
workers, psychiatric riurses, mental health cOunselors,
trained others and six Ph.D. and master level psychology
students froni Ohi'o University.
"Woodland Centers has served as my placement for
completion of a graduate imermhip in Mental Health .
Counseling;' sa1d Mary Ann Zerkle, counselor trainee and
outpatient therapist.
"Wo rking here has not only increased my knowledge
base and experiential background, but has helped me to
develop pride ·in the team effort of scatr comi ng together
for the benefit of the client, This experience has been
invaluable," she said.
"A primary goal ofWoodland Center, Inc. is to bring
support and assistance to thos e in distress and ro prevent
n ~w problems from arising," said Barbara Wolford, ~ss6ci­
ate director.
Fees are determined by taking into consideration
average of 29 clients I)lOnthly.
income and number of dependents. Woodland provides
"I enjoy my work and have the privilege of working services regardless of an individual's ability to pay.
with many other human service providers such as law
"Sometimes, health insurance policies cover the expense
enforcement and hospitals to meet the mental health needs of services," said Wolford. "Whatever the needs, we are
of persons in emergency situations," said Susan Marcum, dedicated to making quality service acc essible and affordLSW-crisis worker.
·
able."
In FY 2000,Woodland provided 926 face-to-face emerThe center is funded by a number of sc urces.
gency contacts, 1,582 bed days in the crisis residential unit
The greatest portion of revenue is earned from a conand averaged about 500 calls per month to the Hotline.
tract with the Gallia-Jackso n-Meib"&gt; Board of Alcohol,
Wooclland is a behavioral health care organization that is Drug Addi ction and Mental Health Services.
able to help both chose suffering from mental distress and
· Woodland C enters Inc. has continued its efforts to
their families because of a unique multidisciplinary secure additional funding from ocher sources such as mane
approach.
aged care, EAP contracts, grants and insurance companies.
Its diverse staffhas
What's changed over the pa.c;t twenty five years in men~
two full time psy- tal health? Plenty.
.
chiatrists. Dr. Mar"The improved , psychotropic medications combined
lin
G. Thomas with other mental health therapies has probably influenced
Schauland, medical the changes the most ," said Malcolm Orebaugh, LPC,
director, is certified executive director.
Bass player
"It's enabled so many peopl e to remain active in society;'
by the American
Daniel Carney,
Society of Addie -' he said.
drummer Chris
tion Medicine and
"In 1987 the Gallia~Jackson-Meigs area averaged 70
Robinson and
the
Ameri can people a day in .state inpati em faciliti es and today we avergultarist;vocalist
Osteopathic
Board age about 8," said Wolford.
Trey Zuspan, othof Neurology and
One of the unique features ofWoodland is the1r crisis
erwise known as
unit. " lt allows us to reduce hospitalization ·and
residential
Psychiatry.
The Disasters,
"I enjoy working an opportunity for observation and diagnosis," she sai d.
will be among
with
families in chis
"It helps With thea transition back into society."
the entertainer
area. This is one of
Woodland also has cnsls debriefing o;;ervices available to
the 'Readstock'
the most dedicated help with community and individual traumas.
festival Oct. 21
mental health staffi
at the University
What would peo~le be surprised to know about Woodof Rio ,Grande's
I have ever worked land?
·
Lyne Center. The
with,"
said
"Th e volume of pati ents we see.'' 'lid Wolford.
ail-day music
They saw over 2500 unduplicated individuals in FY'
Schauland.
fest, which will
Dr. Ali Slim will 2000.
run from 10 a.m.
start this co n1ing
One of the future goals lor Woodland is, "to integrate
to 10 p.m., is
Monday, and Dr. th e serviceo;; we offer wlth other heal th and human s~:rvi ce
being held In conNancy Graham is provi ders so that we can serve the citizens better and help
junction with the
still working with to eliminate the stigma of me ntal illness."
Gallia Reads;
children through
Wh o needs Woodland'
Make a Differ·
M ore than 54 million Am ericans (I in 5) have a ,,;ental
the Southern Ohio
ence D\IY camConsortium.
disorder in a given year, although only about 8 milliOn (16
paign. Bands and
"I've only been at percent) seek treatment according to the National Mental
entertainers of
Woodland for a H ealth Association.
all kinds are still
short
time but l
Thirty-thq usand Amencans comn1it su icide annually; an
being sought for
have be en very additional 500,000 Americans attempt suicide aqnu ally.
thi;1 festival. For
wi th the Ninety pereent of suicide victi ms have ,, mental illness.
impressed
information, call
flexibility of the
The Ohio Counc1l of Community Mental Health and
(7 40) 446-2342,
agency
and
their
Recovery
O rganizatiom said tha t recent research shows
ext. 18 or 20. ·
desire to meet that between 50 percent and 80 percent of children ami
(R. Shawn Lewis
client's needs," !laid adolescents with severe mental distu rbance'.) - many of
photo)
Teressa
Julian - whom ;)re not being treated- retain their di~ability into
Goebel, LISW.
adult li fe.

tending to

Local bands

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· Page C2 • 6unbap ll1mrs-6rntintl

Sundl~~ober8,2000

Sunday, October B, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, Ohio • Point Pluunt, WV

Weddings

Engagements

•

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••

Celebrity: Five questions with Joan Jett
NEW YORK (AP) - First
lond of thing you can learn.
"I thought the Bl~:~ckheart.s was great to write on
she was a Runaway, now she's
The
advantage is, you stick.
bathroom walls. Draw a heart and fill it in."
with the Blackhearts. She's
to what you believe in and
Joan Jett, a 40-year-old rock· rarely get pushed out of what
er who wears leather and is
you want to do. Then again, I
I . Why rock 'n' roll?
and spiritually., I wanted to wonder sometimes about
bald (for the moment) by
Jett: I grew up in a world mark. it· for myself. I' m con- being strong-headed. I'd like
choice,
that
told girls they couldn't centrating on staying healthy, to JUSt be a little bit more
Jett joined the Runaways
when she was 16 . It was the play rock 'n'· roll. My parents having peace, being happy, open to making mistakes and
first all-girl teen rock 'n' roll taught me I could be any- remembering what is impor- not worrying about it so
band (the female version of thing in the world l wanted tant, taking in p,oture and much. Aggressive, tough and
the Ramones) to gain promi- to be . That made me con- animals, spending time read- defiant may describe me, but
nence, playing from 1976 fused. I figured out it was a ing, trying to understand the that leaves the impression
social thing, what women universe, where science and I ' m mean and I'm not. Peo.through 1978 .
She formed Joan Jett and were allowed to do. At a very the spiritual meet.
ple expect me to have fangs .
5. How would you characthe Blackhearts in 1980. "I young age, I decided I was
Love Rock 'n' Roll," the title ·not going to follow women's terize yourself?
On the Net
Jett =' I think. I was born
song- · of the band's second rules .
The Joa,n Jett Web site IS:
2. Did you audition for , strong-willed. That's not the http:/ /w ww.joanjett.com.
album, be came a huge hit
"The Ro cky Horror Show"?
two years later .
Jett: I read the scene where
"I thought the Blackhearts
was great to write on bath- Columbia freaks out at Frank.
room
walls.:·
she
says, 'n' Furter, and they had me
explaining how she p1cked si ng . They ca lled me back
the
c horeo-grapher
the name." Draw a heart and and
showed m e a coup le of steps
fill it in."
Jet t and th e .131 ac khearts to see if I co uld follow d irecare &lt;Hill together, so it won't tion . I've nt:ver danced . I' m a
be a stre tch when she makes perfe ctionist. I expected to
her Bro adway d e but pbying get the dance sreps right the
a rocker named Columbia in first time .
3. Will you wear leather?
a revival of "The Rocky
Jett
: My cos tume will
Horror Show" at the Circ le
in the Square. The show is probably be leather, latex and
fishnet. Probably combat
sche d.uled t o ope n Nov. 15 .
"I have so l o parts in a boots . will be the heaviest
couple of songs, and they 're thing I'll wear.
4. Why did· you shave your
going to try to put in a
head?
rhythm guitar· solo," she says.
Jett: Shaving my head was
The first time it was on
a
mil1ennium ritual, to not
Broadway. "The Rocky Horror Show " lasted 32 perfor- let it pass as just another
. mances 1n 197 5. The film New Year's Eve . A lot has
version, "The Rocky Horror happened to me 111 the last
Picture Show/' became a culc coup le of years, personally
classic.
"I'm a fan, very much so
Jett says, while taking a
break
from
a
dance
rehearsal. "It (the film) canie
· out right at the time of the
Runaways . I'd say it was
pretty instrumental in me
figuring out who I was , It
was a very formative time in
my life ."
Still I am puzzled,
Joan Jett and the BlackWfietfier it was 'Dad's muscled Jyranny,
hearts' mo st recent albun1 is
Or worldly prudence,
1999 's "Fetish" on the
Blackhcart Re co rds label.
&lt;Tfiat fie forbade me

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Heather Nicole Whaley and Jason Andrew Harris

Jennifer Marla Stover and Philip Andrew Bonzo

Whaley-Harris engagement

,Stover-Bonzo engagement

I

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If:
,.,...-..
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:;;::

Mary Teresa Byer and Julian Scott Hill

Byer-Hill engagement

--·-...
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SYRACUSE - Mr. and M~s.
;': ·Bob E. Byer of Syracuse and Mr.
J• · ·.md Mrs. Roger E. H ill ofR~cine,
:;:. ~Ohw announce the ehgagemcnt
- . :and forthcunung marnage of
W. • ;the~r chudren , Mary Teresa Bye r
~&gt;and Julian Scott Hill.
~ • • The open chu rch wedding will

be held at the Hea th United
Methodist C hurch, 349 South
Third Avenue , Middleport, on
Saturday. Oct. 21. at 1:30 p.m.
Music will begin at I p.m . An
open reception will follow at
Carleton School , Syracuse.

POMEROY
Donald
"Eddie'' and Coleen Whaley of
Porneroy :umounce the engagement uf t~e1r daughter, H eat her
N1cole Whaley, to Ja son Andrew
Harris, son of Lawrence Harris,
Sr. Bartlesville, Ok. and Tom and
Penny Evans, M1ddl eport.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Anthony and Helen
'Corsi of Pomeroy and the late
H erbert and Evelyn Whaley. Her
fiance's grandparents are Hel en

Willi am s of fl anlesville, Ok .,
Glenn and Kathryn Evans, Middleport, Lawrenc~ Harri s, Sr.,
Nowata, Ok . :ind Genny Ravellette .
Heather is a senior at Meigs
H1gh School. The prospective
bridegroom
graduated from
Meigs High School in 1999 and
is serving in the U. S. Navy.
Th e wedding date has not
been set.

GALLI A COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

Anonymous meering. St. Peter's
Epi,copa l Church, 8 p m.

Sunday, October 8
CADMUS - Cadmus High
School reunmh, noon. Cadmus
Community Center.
.

.
- Preaching ser' ''KeADDISON
.1t Addi son Freewill Oapti,t, 6
p.m. with R1ck BJrcus preachmg

GALLIPO LIS - Choose To
Lost! Diet Group, 9 a.m. at' Grace
Umtcd MethodiSt Church. Fur
mformation call 256- 1535.
GALLIPOLIS - AI-Anon
meeting .lt St. Pt:t~r·s Episcopal
Church. H p.m.

(;ALL ! POLIS
Bnl."•,lle
c;AJ I:IPOLIS Ne\\' l.1fc
t 'hurc h Sunday school. 9:30 a nL, · Luther.In Church 12 Step Splflwor\hlp scn·ice 10:30 J.m and(, tual Growth Progr&lt;Jm, 6:-tS p.m.

, p 111 mth Rei'. llob Hood.

·
·,
:
•

C:.d,-,"."

Boo~rt.•r s

will

llll't:t

:.t 6 p.m. in

1\ '&gt;''"' Church "dl cc·kbr.ll~ tlH.· ch mr room. ThL' booste rs will
f l.trvL'St Sund.ty.. sp~·(t.d gw..·"'t!'&gt; . ~hscu\~ f.dl fund r:-~i~ol.'r'i :md plan~
tndudl' L.twrl'nt:l' BurdelL~ Mts~ fin th~o.· V,1nc ty ~how.
·
(;,1111.1 County K .1t~· S.nwdcn. ;tnd
tht· Cherry Ridge ll.\llJ. T lw eel- , .c:ALLII'OLIS - Oh1o .tky
chr:ltton bqpn~ at 10 :45 ;l. lll . ;\tlf.l Youth Works mec•ting. 7 p.m. at
lUlu luJc with !unrh.
(iood New' Baptist Church.

v.

c;AU.. IPOLIS - Holzer Med ica l Center Di.1betic Support
GJPLIP willmL·ct from 2-4 p m. ill
th e· hospital's French 5011 Roo m .
Fe.llllrcd speaker will be Roger
Spark1 who will di1cuss insuli n
p11mps. For 111fo, call 446-5080.
GALLIP O LIS- There will be
. J.n, mformal mee-ting regardmg

the March 2001 Holy Land trip
, at the First Baptist C hurch , Gal. bpohs at 2 p.m. Call 446-2607 for
information.

•••

Revival
TH,Ult .MAN - The Rev.
Ht.'rm;w Stcwnn will pn.·arh
revival ~nviccs at Vega Church
from October R-13. sunday n1ght
service begins at 6 p.m. MondayFr iday services begin at 7 p.m
Wally H ale will provide singing.
For information. call 1-R77 "54011 00.
.

MIDDLEPORT - Ten-foot
sr.1le model of Noah's Ark wdl be
presented by Bobby O'Connor at
Sdv•c r Run BaptiSt Church, I 0
J

Y 10la Hatfi eld celebrated her
82 nd birthday on Oct. 2. Cards
may be sent to her ot 760 Third
Circle. Ap3rtment 104, Riverpork
Pla ce, Vero Beach, Fl a. 32962.

v 'JO!a Mooney cc!e br:Hed i1er

rn.

9Rth b1rthd.1y on Ou . 2 CJrds
nuy. bt• :-.l.'nt to her .lt 771 -l Stdte
R ou te 7 ~outh. c;,,lbpol~;, Ohio
45631.

•••

N .~r-

(n tl~·..,

Anonymou" l"n -Coumy
grnup lllt:&lt;-'tlllg. r1 11 Vr ,lfld '-;£..
I 1() p.m
M~tllb

111

N.m._~HIL .. ,

An&lt;mvmom mc,.;trn~. 7 _,11 f' 1
\r ~'·t t'r"' bp! 'itop.tl ( .hun-11
1

•••

I Ut."HL:t), Ot

(.ALIII'OLIS

toh1

1989 and " a 1993 Shawnee
State University graduate with a
Bachelor Science D egree · In
Natura] Scienres with e mph ~s 1s

in athletic train ing. H e is a certified and li censed arhle1ic trainer and is currently working with
Lake Ho spita l System as an ~.th­
letic train er in Cleve land. The
couple 'wdl

be

residing · in

Cleveland area .
The wedd1ng ceremony ~~ill
take place November 4, 2000' .lt
2:30 p.m . at the ' Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis .~ A
re ce ption wdl follow the cc~c­

Choose from our large "IN STOCI"

St. Mary's Hospital, 2900 First
Avenue , Huntington, W.Va. 25702
Rm. 5125 .

•••

leleCIIOn Or IPICIBI Order

your own color choice I

BUY I.
FlU

Lane

....--···.........
····-··

PI 1111111• II

nlllllnn flllrlo 111111

Lane·

499 .

'

'lct ober 13 .
" [614) 221- 6331

for an appointment.

•

~
I

a

MONDAY
RUTLAND Rutland
Towmhip Trustees , 5 p.m ., fire
station.

-

Our

--.
..... _
...... _
"--···

..-·--llftll
..

(nformatio n

available

from

Tammy Jone s, 992- 6 7 43.

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

WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE
Sripio
Township Truste es. 6:30 p.m.

Yf.s saga ofgallantry is far more appealing
10 an insurgent mind tfian sage,
I dared to plant a drumstick. tree
'Rig fit in tfie backyards of my sfiacfi.;
'Tlourisliing in tfie fertility of my fiearl,
'1fie tree grew fiale, almost to my fieigfit.
Wfien tfie young tree sweet~ moimed
In tfie arms of spring winds, I fiad goose-bumps,
Wfien tfie cruel Indian sun poured fire balls
On fier tender fiead, wom1s crawled in my stomacfi;
'Dearly so, tfie tree brancfied into my deep soul.
On a dire mor~soon day, tfie bickering
1'fiick. clouds weeped tfirougfi tfie cracks
Of rny old Indian sfiack.,
Yfnd got rne ill, stealing my ,9lee away;
"fever rose above my fervor
'Tor tfie beloved tree, ar1d lasted forever.

members
have

In tfie silence of r~igfit, tfie tree murmured
Witfi tfie devilish winds to awaken rne in friglit,
On laboring to close my languid eyes,
I did envision tfie rfiytfim of my fiearl beats.
'Rejlectin.9 in tfie pulsating #ow of blood,
In tfie brar~cfies of my darli11g tree.

Join .now
for lf2 off!

TUESDAY
POMEROY C HOI CE
Hon1e Educators, Tuesday, I
p.m. at Roy Oak Resort.

ln tfie middle of ecstasy, tfiefear, tfie confitsiim .
'Dad's words of providenc~ reverberated, and
'Rolled as ropes on tfie pulley of my tfiougfits;
'l11 tfie weakness of tfie moment, l vented
'1fie trutfi of my soul to my eartfily 'Dad;
!)[/as my poor soul, tfie sweet tree was rooted out.
:Now, whenever l WGI!der
In tfie vacant backyards of my sfiacfi.,
'Tond memories fly yonder
Over tfie reminiswice_of tfie missi119 tree.

1-888-3-FLORINE

fiJ{alesfi rratel

www.888·l·florine.com

illhl-lllllltlllt

ilrtllf--

Wt:dnesdJ)\

PJ gevillc

rown

hall .'

5

1-800-200-4005 or
(74o) 667-7388

,.

.
The Community Calendar is published as a free
service to non-profit
groups wishing , to

CHESHIRE DAV 53,
Cheshire , Monday evening,
dinner at 6 :30 p.m. with meet ing at 7 p.m.

unr

M:~:~~z:~:~:-

Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

Potluck dinner.

announce meetings and
special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers
of any type. Items are
printed only as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be priqted a
specific number of ,d ays.

RACINE - Ra cine Board
of Publi c Affairs, 8 p.m. Monday at the municipal building.

·--

Hours:

Joint

MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Fcllliw sbip. Wedne sday, noon ,
Middleport Church of Christ.

CHESHIRE - DAV. #53,
located at 28051 State Route 7
in Cheshire will meet on
Monday with dinner at 6:30
p: m. and the meeting at 7 p.m.

FIRIW-.U

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits , we offer
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

F·

SUNDAY
RACINE Apostle Dale
Luffman will speak at the
Portland Ra c1ne Bran c h of
RLDS Church Sunday at
10:30 a.m. A potluck dinner
will follow. The publi c is invited to attend.

RUTLAND Ro se of
Sharon' Holiness
Church,
revival services through Oct.
15 . Rev. Jack Dolin, speaker.

Specialized Care for Total Knee
and Hip Replacement

a1ragic 1a!e

MEIGS
COMMUNITY CALENDAR

POMEROY - Home coming will be held Sunday at the
Carleton Church, Kingsbury
Road. Dinner will be served at
noon and the program will
begin at 1 p.m.

8

Seminar

"
1

'Trom planting a drumstick. tree. ·

(;r:~ndc.

11111111111111-

Erm ML·aigc is recovering from
in a c.u accident. Cards may be sent to ht!r at:

SHADE - Heidi Sue Huff- Wes Brown of Pennsylvania,
man and Allan Pritchard Barr Andrew Barr of Texas, and Jim
were united in marriage on July 1 Dorman and Jeff Werth of Colin Denver, Colo.
orado.
The bride is the daughter of
The bride is a 1995 graduate
Mr. and Mr;. Leonard Huffman of Meigs H1gh School and I a
of Shade. The bridegroom is the 1999 graduate of Philadelphia
son of Martha Barr ofYardley, Pa.,
College of Bible. She is a teacher
and the late Edward Barr.
at Front Range Christian School
Pastor Richard Powell officiatin Littleton, Colo.
ed at the lakeside ceremony. NupThe bridegroom is -a 1989
tial music was performed by Debgraduate
of Pennsbury High
orah Branson.
Tammy Hawk of Athens was School and a 1993 graduate of .
IS
matro.n of honor. Bridesmaids . Penn Srate University. He
were Tami Stange of New Jersey, working toward a graduate
Donna Barr of Pe_pnsylvania, and degree at Denver Seminary, ·J nd is
Melissa Flom and Michelle Barr employed by ICG Communications.
ofTexas.
Best man was Edward Barr of
The newlyweds .are living in
Pennsylvania. Groomsmen were Englewood, Colo.

mony at th e Umvcr).Jt y ot l.tto

~PL'Jker.

Our next clinic date is

from

Portsmou th East H1gh School in

Joint Implant
Center

i\11/HL'Ill•.'·

(;h ur ch. 2n d Awnll L' . 1111 ~·Ill
C.dl MJn!yn L\."~.: tor rrlhlrrrrrnnrr . 4-t()-0451 .

( ;Allll'OL I S H cl on: ry
(;roup

grad uated

Th.:e

TOI'S cl ub

l'OINT PL.F.ASAN' I

Philip

Ill. . .

i1~juriL''I ~u~t ,1ined

The Community. Calendar

•••

Fn·q

ager in Cleveland.

..............
......,..
a

Buy A
QUEEN Size
Set For .·
A full Size
Price!

Huffman-Barr wedding

tion as an executive team nian -

sagg

Lane·

Elobc• C :rnml1&gt;h w1ll cekbra'te
her birthd.1y Octobc·r 7 Cord'
111:1y be se111 to her at 1335 State
H.o ut e 21H, Ci.IIhpolis, Ohio
4'i6.11 .

Card Shower

Monday, October 9

thl'

with her emphasis in tt•xtilcs,
mercha ndising ,
m a nagcme1u:

Mr. _a nd Mrs. Allan Barr

employe.d with Target Corpora-

M.ny Dubbms \VIII cekbra tc·
hc·r H7th birthday Octulwr 7
C.mi!' n1:1y be ~l'nt tt&gt;: l..f74 c.,m ~
p.11g11 R u;~d, Bidwe ll, ( ll11o
4')(!] 4-'1444 .
.

p Ill.

C;A LLIPOLIS -

to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fun'd raisers. of any
type. Items are printed as
space permits and cannot be
guaranteed to run a specific
nu.mber
of days.
'

Lane

and fashion. Shl: is currently

CENTENARY - Centena ry
A M arriage and Famjly EnrichUnited CllfistLm Church \\'Ill m~nt -.L~mina r will be held arVinhold re1·il'al Onobcr 'i-1 (I With tOll llaptl st Church Oc;ober 15Rev·. Mmhe.w Sm1th preaching. · 18. Sunday morning session will
Smgmg will be available everv b~ &lt;.J:J0-1 0:30 a.m. Weekday sesmght.
· SIOns w1ll be 7 p.m. nightly. Nursery provided. Dr. Donald Joy,

C l&gt;..OWN CITY ~ Larry
Haley will preach at Good Hope
llapmt ' Church II a.m ..md 7

lllt' l"t~ · at

is published as a free service
to nonprofit groups wishing

CALLI POLIS- GA HS Choir
IUO GRANDE -

:
·

Frances Rou sh celeb rated her
90th birth~ay on Oc[. 3. Cards
m:~.y be sent to: 145 Wind~ur
IJrive, Gallipolis, Ohio 45&amp;3 I.

GALLIPOLIS Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Stover, Gallipolis
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Bonzo, Portsmouth, announce
th e engagement and approaching marriage of their children
Jennifer Marie Stover and Philip
Andrew Bonzo. Jennifer is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Crossen of Gallipolis,
and the late Audrey Stover
Adkins. Philip is the grandson of
Mrs . Agnes Bonzo, . the late
Gilbert Bon·z o and the late
Ruth and Charles Ramey of
Portsmouth.
Jennifer graduated from Gallia
Academy High School in 1996
while participating in the post
secondary education program
with the University of R:io
Grande and also graduated in
June 1996 with an Assoc iate of
Arts Degree . She is a spring
2000 graduate of The Ohio
State University with a Bachelor of Science Degree from the
College of Human Ecology

6anbap lliVJtJ-.,ntind • Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Plaaunt, WV

Qualitv Furniture Plus
·

42123 STATE ROUTE 1 • TUPPERS PLAINS, OH 45783

TUPPERS
PLAIN S
Tuppns Plains VFW Ladies
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7 p.m Jt
the hall.

1 , __

3

SUCCESS

GALLIPOLIS
St. Peter's Episcopal Church • 541 Second Avenue • Tuesday 6:00 pm
Wednesday 9:30 am
JACKSON
Comfort Inn • 605 East Main • Monday 6:30 pm
Saturday 9:3'0 am

w.,,,.,,

ewoo
Witch~n lnt~tlli\IOilil.lnc All r~cfou reu:r'l'1!d
WEIG!!;iTWATCHERS 11th~ r~1•1t~r!!d utdem•rl&lt; oiWio!•ahtWud&gt;tn lnt~m~to oll~,lrJC:

Valid It PJf\l(iplUiliiDUtl0~1 lor 1 h m•l~d tim~

Compliments of ·

Jennifer 'foreman
Yfa'mirer

�.(

P • C4 • li&gt;unba!' t!:im~-li&gt;rnttnrl

.

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

AnniVersanes

Sunda~~ober8,20PD

Gallia County Elder Coalition to hold
Elder Abuse prevention training session
The Calha County Elder
Coalition serves to bndge the
serv1ce gaps for older adults
at-risk of abuse. neglect or
exploitation. The recent formation of this group was made
possible through a grant from
the Ohio Department of
Aging, wh1le the Area Agency
on Aging District 7, Inc.,
Regional ,Long Term Care
Ombudsman program. was the
driving force behmd the
development of the coalition.
The mission of the Galha
County Elder CoJlition JS to
sustain a !ugh yuahty of hfe
for older adults, and prorect
their nghts ro safety and chg- GALLIA COUNTY ELDER COAUnON - Some members of the Galntty in th~ least r~stncti\'t' se t- lia County Elder Coalition include: · Rrst row, left to right, Geneie
tlllg through educati.on. advoCJCY anJ ( ummunlty .lctton .

Parunpatlng organizatwns
Include : c;:dll:t Countv Sher-

Iff's Department. Gallia Cou nty Health Department, Gallia·
County Probate Court. c;allia
County sl'OJOr Cuizc:n~ cl' llrer, Holzt."r Medtcll C:c:nrer,
Holz er Senior CarL'. Area

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Little

Little 5Oth anniversary
MIDDLEPORT Bill and 1983. and pastorc•d the S.Iver
: Lora Maxine Lmle celebrated Run BaptiSt Church from !983
: !heir 50th wedding anniversary unttl I ')99. His wife graduated
on Saturdly. Sept. 30 .
from Holzer Hospital School of
The two were married on Nursing m 1948. and worked
·Sept. 30, 1950 at the Rurland
~here "' a surgiCal and ped1atnc
. Methodist Church, with Pastor
nurse before retiring in !993.
. Lawrence Schmidt offictaring.
They ha,·e two sons, Douglas
: They are the children of Mr. and
: Mrs. Fred (Jewell) Little and Mr. William Little and Keith Robbin
:and Mrs. Royal Clayton (Sylvia littl e. A ~ urpmc celebration was
held by the fimuly at the Iron
: Gail) Herrmann.
Gate
Restaurant in Pomt Plea;Litrle retired from the former
: ({aiser Aluminum Company in ant, WVa.
i~--------------

Bowles 4Qth anniversary
..

: · POMEROY -

Robert and

.~ary Bow\es celebrated their
:40th wedding anmvcrsary on

:bet 1.

·

- • Mr. and Mn. Bowles were
~nur ried ~n Oct 1. 1960 at Tup-

pers Plains. He JS retired from the
Chessie System Ra1lroad.

Mrs. Bowles is the daughter of
the late lloyd and Ora Sinclair,
and her husband is the son of
Josiah and Ednh Howles . They
have a 'on and daughter-in-law,

R obert and Diana Dillon Bowles,
and two grandch ildren, Nicholas
and Jt•nny Bnwl es.

Eleam, ·Holzer Senior Care
Center; Shelia North, lob arid
Family Service; Barb Epling
and Amber Coriell, Area
Agency on Aging Di~trict •7;
Marissa Fulk, Galha/Jacikson/ Meigs Board of Alcohol,
Drug Addiction and Mental
Health
Services;
Angela
McMillian , Family Seni'or
Care; Ellen Gibson, Holzer
Medical
Center;
Judge
Thomas Moulton and Greg
Shrader from Gallia County
Probate Court and Dennis
Salisbury, Gallia County-Sherifl's Office..
·
For information on the
coaltion, call Elswick at 1888-841-2227.

Plantz , Gallia County Senior Center; Debbie Eleam, Holzer Senior
Care Center; Sheila· North, Job and Family Services; Angela
McMillin, ·Family Senior Care ; Ellen Gibson , Holzer Medical Center;
and Barb Epling, Area Agency on Aging District 7. Second row, left
to right, Dennis Salisbury, Gallia County Sheriff s Office; Amber
Coriell, Area Agency on Aging District 7; Marissa Fulk, Gallia, Jackson, Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiciton and Mental Health Services ; Jean Niday, Gallia County Senior Center; and Kave Elswick,
Area Agency on Aging District 7.

reserve a space for th e tr;linAgency o·n Aging Dtstrict 7, mg, call Ellen Gibson, Hol zer
Scemc H1ll s Nursing Center. Medical Center Social SerHofzer
C!tnic,
Serenitv vices at (740) 446 -5903.
House, Gallia County Huma~
A me eting was held SeptemSen.·ices,
··
ber 19, at the Semor Center in
Gallia / Jackson / Meigs Board Gallipolis. Coalition mt:mbcn
of "Alcohol, Drug Addiction arrendmg this meeting· includand Mental Health Services, ed, Elswick; Jean Niday at1d
NAACP.
Gallia ' County Geneie Plantz, Gallia County
Human Services, the Arbors,
Council on Aging; Debbie
UnJverstty of Rto Grande
Social Work program, Family
Senior Care, Alzheimer's
AssoCJation and others.
The coalition is planning an
Elder Abuse Training session
Prenatal Clinic
on Wednesday, November 29,
Providing
2000, in the French 500 room
Prenatal Care!:·y
a t Holzer Medical Center
To Ohio
from I unril 4 p.m. Dr. Wayne
Residents.
Wheeler of Southern Ohio Call 4&lt;kHI!~Z,ll
ForAn
Medical Center will be the
Appointment
keynote spea ker. The -purpose
of rhe training, according to
Kaye
Mason-Elswick ,
Ombudsman program director, Area Agency on Aging
District 7 and coalition member, is to educak con1munity
,proft:ssionals working with
older adults on how to recognize and report elder abuse .
Registration fee will be $5. To

MORE LOCAL NEWS. ·
MORE lOCAL FOLKS.

Schedule tor Sundlr, Oct. 1t1t ·
.lJoorl op.. At IZ:fJO PM .-"

**

Gallia County Health Department

Til llllHR

iJll

1:45, 4:30, 7:40, 9:55

- " " ' t:lf "' 2:20, 4:30, 7:20,~:45
~!er)Jeniler~LoB!a~

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

BRN n111 '""~ 2:15,4:30, 7:30, 9:1S

ledy) Killian IW, .lesle lilalloro. Gmle l.litJn •

UBRAHO NAME

Rt.l, Gallipolis Ferry,.WV

675-1371

ALL AGES, All TIMES 84.00

e First Annual Jack and Margaret Burdett Lecture Series
For the first annual lecture series, the Presbyterian Church of Point Pleasant is pleased to
announce the 2000 year series relating to

"Children and Character"

If vou haven't, it could be a maner of life or death.
In support of National Breast Cancer Awareness Month,

.O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
and

Radiology Associates of Athens
are offering a limited number of

FREE MAMMOGRAMS

• Be 40 years of age or older
• Have not had a mammogram
during the past three years
• Have no health insurance,
including Medicaid or Medicare
• Have a referral from your physician
before rna king an appointment for
a mammogram

ST

.' In 1936 the Gallia Times did
' · ~orne feature pieces on a rural
pastor, Charles L. Thayer. In the
middle I 930's Rev. Thayer was
. the pastor of five Methodist
churches in southern Gallia
. County: Clay Chapel, Chambersburg, Ohio Chapel, Swan Creek
and Bethel.
Said the Times, "Many of us,
not cognizant of the true situa. tion, are inclined to look upon
the lot of the rural preacher as
being a soft snap, his duties consisting mainly of prea ching a little, glad-handing a lot and subsisting upon the fat of the land when
: :Vi~iting or making pastoral calls.
: Nothing could be more erro: ·Qfous."
·&gt;The Times then went on to list
:-:Thayer's weekly activitit:s. "He
.: has three preaching services every
:: Sunday and sometimes four, two
:prayer meetings weekly, with fiye
: l:adies Aids on the circuit - two
:of which he atrends n1onthly.
: J'here are now two flourishing
• Epworth Leagues and before the
: !'tnnual Conference in September
: pe hopes to have similar active
:organizations in all five churches.
:Weekday activities are taken up
:with pastoral calls on the sick and
: afilicted, with funeral sermons,
:visits to schools in the communi. : ty and receiving friendly VISits in
· 1\is own home. In between times
; there is much reading, study and
; preparation - of sermons and
: addresses."

. ,.

~..Loretta
-.

Thursday, October 12- Sabrina Rollens, M.A., Kanawha Valley Pastoral Counseling
Center, Charleston, WV
"Relationship Parenting". Ms. Rollens will discuas those relations that
parents have with their God, parents and spouse and how those relationships
·impact the way they "parent their children".
Thursday, October 19- Rev. Hilda Alsop, M.A. Kanawha Valley Pastoral Counseling
Center, Charleston, WV
"Boundaries and Parenting". Rev. Alsop will focus on those areas that require
boundaries and appropriateness of those to various ages or stages of growth
and development.

CLAY CHAPEL -

All that remains of the Clay Chapel Methodist
Church are the steps. In the 1930's the pastor of the circuit of five
churches lived at Clay ChapeL The parsonage was just up the road
from the church. The Gallia Times wrote about rural church life in the
1930's.

in the 1930's, the conference
brought expertS from various
fields together to discuss the
building up of the rural community Besides church leaders, there
were persons from scouting,
county extension, grange, farm
bureau, schools, businessmen and
elected officials .
In the 1930's many rural
churches were struggling to surviVe. The phenomena of persons
driving out of the rural communities to attend larger churches in
the cities and bigger villages
began in the 1930's with the
development of good roads. The
1930's were the beginning of
modern school consolidation.
The number of one-room
schools in Gallia .Coun,ty would
shrink during the 1930's from
over I 00 to about 25. Schools
were basically centralized and
consolidated by the strong arm of
the state. Rural churches were
basically allowed to fend for
themselves with ministers who

The film told Lynn's rags-toriches story. She grew up in
poverty in Kentucky, gave birth to
her first child at 14, and made it as
a country star against the greatest
of odds. Her career has spanried
40 years, and her greatest hits,
"Coal Miner's Daughter," "You
Am 't Woman Enough" and "The
Pill ," rank with the best of country music.
Alrhough the movie faded to
the credits with lynn as a happy.
successful star, she's had some trying timt' s m the past two decades
lnd is just now giving her care~r
her full attention .1gain.
Lynn spent many hours qring
for her ailing husband, who had
heart problems and complications
from diabetes. Eventuall y, his
hearing and vision failed.
"My husband was my priority," she says. ''I'd sleep in a couch
right by the bed. If he made one
grunt, I was awake. Not · one
move did he make that I wasn't
awake.
"You know, I'd still be doing it
if he was here."
After Mooney died, she left
their home in Hurricane Mills
~nd stayed with a friend in
Nashville.
''You watch TV and whatever's
going on that day, and you just

DISHNetworlt

don't think about things," she
says. "I looked at one of my
friends one day, al\d I said, 'I've
been up here a couple of months,
haven't I?'
"And she said, 'No, you've
been up here a year."'
She returned to performing
bte in 1997.
"Still Country" is her first solo
album since 1988, alth ough she
collaborated on an album with
Tammy Wynette and Dolly Parton in 1993.
It's impossible to listen to the
songs without being reminded of
Mooney, JUSt as it's impossible to
speak w1th Lynn for more than a
fe,v minutes without her mentioning his name.
,
Her voice is more fragile and
emotional now than on her classic hits.
"This record is morbid, and 1
really didn't realize that when we
were doing it," she says.
Songs "On My Own Again"
and "Table for Two" are sung with
Mooney in mind. Lynn co-wrote
the touching "·I Can't Hear the
Music."
"That's what my husband said
to me," she says. "I didn't know
that he couldn't hear, couldn't see.
"I did take him two weeks
before he died and got glasses and

DICOITAl OY!"~IT'£

0111y

_. . ._.. . ,._ G
S]499'

.I

"A Cordial Invitation is Extended to the Entire Community"

Rio Grande or with lay prcachl."rs.

One such rural Gall~a preacher
of the 1930's saw rural church
work as "discouraging.'! "There is
no chance to do anything spectacular. It is all humdrum work
made possible and pleasant only
by the exercise of a per5onal
prayer life."
The Clay Chapel Methodist
Church, the premier Methodist
church insouthern Gallia County
up until the 1930's would survive
only 20 more years. Both Clay
Chapel and Swan Creek buildings have been torn down. Bethel
and Chambersburg church structures still stand but neither is a
part of the Methodist denomination. The lone survivor is Ohio
Chapel which did effect a merger
of sorts in dte 1970's to become
the present Christ United
Methodist Church.

hearing aids and a leg. H e never
put · them on. I should luve
known (he was dying).! gtless this
is something you don't want to
know You just don't want to
know, and you don't give in to it."

Kate (Boggs) Duncan, wife of the late J.S . (Red) Duncan, anfl
retired night supervisor of nurses at Holzer Medical Center, wiil
celebrate her 80th birthday, October 16. Her children are request~
ing that friends send cards to her at: 5302 Ashbrook Road , CrosS
lanes, WVa. 25313.

~ ~J~lLY ENRICHAfBM

~

7~~. .

October 15-18 .
VINTON BAPTIST CHURCH

,~~ ,

222 Main Street, Vinton, OH

'[f

740-388-8454

DR. DONALD JOY
Director of the Center for the Study of the FamUy
·
WUmore, KY
SERIES TOPICS:
"The
Seasons
of a Marriage"
9:30a.m.
10:30 a.m. "God's Design for Man~ Woman, &amp; Marriage
(Includes "Bonding)
7:00p.m. "What Has Gone Wrong with Creation?"
(Restoring Relationships)
Men: 7:00p.m. "Creation Revisits Conception:
"Innate Differences- Male &amp; Female"
Tues: 7:00p.m. "Empower Your Kids to be Adults"
(Beyond Adolescence) .
.
"One
Family
That
God
Empowered'"
Wed: 7:00p.m.
(Ho\'1' God Can He lp Us Today)

Pastor Marvin Salee Inultes Eueryone to Attend
Nursery Provided

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This lecture series will be held at the Presbyterian Church,
8th &amp; Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV
7:30p.m. to 9:00p.m.

were receiving c.:qllege training ar

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Thursday, November 9- Panel Discussion I Open Forum
Panel members include: Rick Handley, Vickie Hall, Rev. Tex Fry,
and Debbie H ussell
Moderator; Dr. Ray Boggs

CELEBRATION

Lynn still mouming her
husband's death
.

Thursday, November 2 -Emma Sue Smith, M.A .• A.B., Director, Special Education
Cabell County Schools Adjunct Program, MSU
"Being Enriched by Acceptance of One". Mrs. Sinith, a known educator in the
'
ar.ea of special education, will provide ALL parents a perspective
that can
enrich all families.

Call the O'Bieness Community
Relations Department

Monday- Friday

.\JVl-Uivtl"\11

According to ·Rev. Thayer the
ulary of the rurai preacher is
much less than the city brethren.
His house does not hav. all the
amenities that come with city life.
"llut we have learned to be content in whatever condition we
find o"u rselves and do most of 011r
worrying about the other fellow
who is out of work and needs
creature comforts and faith in
God."
Stated the Times: "It takes a
philosopher to be a rural minister." We note from the April 16,
1936 Gallia Times that Thayer's
preaching assignment for that
Sundly April 19 was as follows:
Swan Creek, I 0:30 a.m.; Ohio
Chapel, 2:30 p.m. and Clay
Chapel, 7:30 p.m. On April 12,
Easter Sunday, The Chambersburg Sunday School had presented an evening pageant. There
were 117 people in attendlnce.
The other four churches had very
small Sunday schools. .
Rev. Thayer was a frequent
contributor of news to the Times.
In 1937 Thayer suggested that
Gallia County follow the practice
adopted by other counties of having a sherifl's deputy on amotorcycle escort all funeral processions. At another time he suggested ways that persons should talk
to those who had been the victims of serious accidents. He
became the first Gallia County
preacher to encourage people to ·
listen to the radio. It was in 1936
that the Methodist Church began
its first national radio broadcast.
The 12 minute program every·
Tuesdly morning, "Hymns of All
Churches", was broadcast on 70
stations nationally by Columbia
Broadcasting. The sponsor was
General Mills.
Rev. Thayer was active in
bringing to Gallia County the
"Rural Life Conference." Held at
Rio Grande College several years

100 PlAN
... .. ,mo• '~"' '"' o

To receive a certificate:

(740) 592-9300
8:00a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

Thursday, October 5- Dr. David Johnson, Director, Pastoral counseling, Cabell
Huntington Hospital, Huntington, WV
"The Goals of a Healthy Family". Dr. Johnson will present a perspective and
provide insights into elements that contribute to a healthy family.

Thursday, October 26- Emily Wilson, Psychologist, LMHC, Affiliates in Psychology
and Therapy, Huntington, WV
''Adolescents and Transition". Ms. Wilson will provide in&amp;ights into the
expectations and challenges of adolescents and the role of parents during these
transitions.

To qualify you must:

James
Sands

:-:: NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) lnugine switching on the television some lazy Saturday afternoon and seeing your iife story
on the screen .
Not on'ce, but repeatedly.
That has been the experience
(If country singer Loretta Lynn,
¢e subject of 1980's "Co,J!
Miner's Daughter." The film is a
P.ainful reminder of the death of
l!er husband Moom:y Lynn 111
I 996 . The couple were married
for 47 years.
: "Do you kno\\" rhat dJd- gum
niovie is playing all the time'"
says Lynn, w,I10 is p1umoting"Still
Country," her firsr •lbnm in 12
y¢ars. "It seems like once a
n)pnth, they start play-ing it."
·· Sissy Spacek won an Academy
A~vard for her performance as
Lynn. Tommy lee Jones portrayed Mooney.
"I can't watch," she says. "1
t~rn it off."
For Lynn, 65, most conversational roads lead ro Mooney. He
pushed her into a singing caree r
arid was the inspiration for ~ome
o£ her . greatest songs. Ba ck in
1966, Lynn warned "Doo" (her
nickname for Mooney) - and all
"Don't Come Home
men A'brinkin' (With Lovin' on Your
Mind)."

'Ifirougfr. fr.is profession, cotmnunity invo[vement anrf rfeiication to fiis cfi.urcfi anrf
famuy, tfr.e fife ofJact'Burrfett was an em6orfim£nt of service.
:His generosity lias ena6ferf tfr.e Point Pfeasant Presbyterian Cfr.urcfr. to esta6[isfr.
tfr.is fiving memoria[ to tfr.e 'Burrfett's anrf tfr.e va[ues wfr.icfr. guiaerf tfr.eir fives.

jmulla!' Q:im~ -li&gt;rulintl • Page C51

'It takes a philosopher to. be a rnral minister'

(Thriller) Jml Spader, Malisa TOOI!i, Ernie l1llOSQ1

FLAIR

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point PleM8nt, WV'

·; Sunday, October 8, 2000

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PIHunt, WV

Sunday, October 8, 2000

•

COMMUNITY CORNER
' yet?
lchve you voted
Not on candidates buc bridge
des1gns.
Last week pictures of the three
proposed designs for the new
Pomeroy-Mason bridge were
primed in The Daily Sentinel and
the Point Pleasant Register.
Readers were asked to let us
COMMUNITY
know their preference ,so that we
can present that information to
the Ohio Department of Trans- such an addition to the beauty of
portation which will sooh make a the Bend. Granted the construedecision as to whe[her an arch. . tion price may be somewhat.
truss or cable design .,;ill be built. higher for Ohio and the mainteJust jot your preference down nance a little costlier for West Vir01i a slip of paper and either leave ginia, but think of the aesthetics.
tt or mail it to the Sentinel or
Driving into Pomeroy you
Register. Yes, every vote counts travel down Main Street and see
ami I'm told the input could be a lighted buildings reflecting on the
fa ctor in the final decision.
water. you raise your eyes to the
Two of the designs are just hills and see a lighted cross, and
ordinary looking bridges. The just maybe, by 2003 you can look
thtrd IS a cable design similar to ahead and see a bridge with lightthe one at Huntington which has ed cables spatming the Beautiful
bt·en dt•scribed as "just beautiful Ohio.
.tt mght " because the cables are
li ghted_
If you were on the parking lor
A lighted bndge would be in Pomeroy during Srernwheel

Charlene
Hoeflich

•

A MOMENT WITH MAX

Max
Tawney

build a big factory and hire
about one hundred· people o(o
work there. The three men sold
it for $180,000 and · each
recieved $60,000 so they decid~ .
ed to enjoy life for a few days in
Hawaii. I took their picture, got

told them I would send them
the photos of them at no charge.
I told them I was also a farm boy
In 1975, I was on my \Vay to until I turned 18 and got a job,
. Australia to see my daughter where I could make some
: Nancy, who had lived there for money in the photographic
. four years , to see her play profcs- business. They said, "We are glad
: siotul golf. She was almost as to meet you and would yol) like
~ good as Tiger Woods. But she .to spend 4 or 5 days with us and
· sttrt·ly didn't make as much _we will pay all the bills?" I said,
mont'y as he n1akes.
"You got a deal! I am sure I can
I always stopped in Hawaii for trust you hard working men but
a day or rwo to rest as I would I will pay all of my bills and you
be five more hours on the plane pay yours."
before we would reach Australia
So I spent four happy days and
and H.1waii was halfway to Ausnights with the nicest fellows
tralia. I was sitting in a restaurant
anyone could ever meet. And
: in Honolulu having lunch and
they ended up paying for all my
·.. next to me were [hree farn1ers
bills. They were a lot older than
from Tennessee .They saw I had a
me so they let me book the
camera and wanted me to take
tours for those days. [ had the
their photo and I told them I
pleasure of them telling me how
would be glad to. I asked them
much
they enjoyed meeting me
why they were 111 this beautiful
country away from their farm S Jnd each one of them offered
me $50 for being their guide. [
111 Tennessee. They said they
were celebrating Js they hJJ said, "You pur that money b"'k
owned a big budding and a mtp
ufl.1nJ thJt a large company \\'J S
lJJtcrc~ rcd 111 buying the bnd to

111

your pocket I owe you for

paying all my bills, I am going to
send you all the photos I have
taken on iheo;;e tours ova all

pur sue c o untry radio.

Ferrell was rehearsmg with his new band to go
o ur on th e •oad for a radio tour when he wsa
asked to pqf.orm in the October 14 concert.
" It worked out just perfect," he says , "because
that means I'll be doing my first concert with
!his band in my hometown 1 I am very excited
?bout rcturnmg to Portsmouth to perform for
m y man y friends and family."

...

F111e speakers were present at this
year's Gins' Time Out, sponsored
by the Holzer Medical Center Wei~
ness Department. The program
was held on Sunday, SeptemlJer
24, 2000, at the Gallipolis First
Church of the Nazarene Family
Ufe Center. Speakers and topics
included (pictured left to right):
Jamal Hadand, · MD, Ot&gt;estetrics/Gynecology Department at
Holzer, who answered questions
and concerns of those attending;
Cassie Graham, Gallia Academy
High School Senior who presented
"Teen Talk"; Jennifer Stallings,
MS, RD, LD, HMC Nurition Ser·
vices Department · "Living Life in
the Fast Food Lane"; Nancy
Gooldin, MSN, RN, CS,- "A Funny
Thing Happened on the Way to

Being ij Teenager"; and Suzanne
Mize, MD, Cardiologist at Holzer.
Over 75 women attended the special program that concluded Ho~
cer Medical Center's monttHong
celebration of Women's Health
fv'lonth in September. For more
information on special programs
spOnsored lly the HMC Wellness
Department, call Bonnie McFarland, Wellness Department Director at (740) 446-5679.

IT ON (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 8:00 FRI &amp; SAT
7:00 SUN·ntURS

Hawaii and you will owe me
nothing," which I did. They said,
"Rentembcr we are farme~~ and
you know what that means, we
need help when we travel." So
you see when traveling alone be
nice to people; it will pay dividends.
So I got on the plane to Australia and spent sorl1e happy days
with my. daughter Nancy and
watched her play golf and si)e
was good at it. I saw her win
many

tOJ.lrnaments

and she
made good money. I was very

proud of her, and it was a pleasure to be with Nancy and meet
all of her friends. It is a pleasure
to see how people live in different parts of this world.

Rick Ferrell rrtlmrs to Portsmouth
October 14 to tire Vern R~ffe Center for
tire Arts at 7:30p.m. witll special gurs't
Raclrel Proctor, a native of Clwrleslon,
Wva., aud local band 1erry La11e H,lll.
Local fans will have the opportunity to hear
cuts from Fem:.[l's upcoming album prior to the
concert, stnce WPAY radto has copies of two of
the songs from the project.
Tickets for the show are $10 111 advance and
$12 if purchased atthe concert. Doors open at 7
p.m. Ferrell will be on hand after the concert to
meet friends and family and sign autographs. A
special t-shirt will also be available at this con-

On the way back I stopped in
Fiji Islands and beautiful New
Zealand. I really enjoyed touring
that part of Australia meeting
people and seeing those wonderful animals that live in that
part of the world. The more you
see the. tnore you want to go
back again and again. But whe11
you hit 87 hke me your travel
days are over. But I have large
pl\otos of my world travels
hanging in my jewelry store at
422 2nd Avenue. Stop in and
look the-m o,v er sometime . I
watched the last days and the
dosing · of the Olympics in
August on TV, and it was wonderful. The United States dtd

VINTON - A Marriage and
Family Enrichment seminar is
,.,being held at Vinton Baptist
:!:Church
Sunday-Wednesday
JE:October 15-18. Dr. Donald Joy, a
.._ •well-known national speaker
::W:from Wilmore, Ky., will be the
~series speaker. Session times will
:. be Sunday morning 9:30- 10:30
. .a.m. and 7 p.m. nightly. His wife,
.. . Robbie, will be participating as
- .cospeaker during the 9:30 Sunday
. ·School session .
Joy is the director of the Center
~ .. ·for the Study of the Family in
Wilmore, Ky. In 1998 , he com,- pieced a 28-year career as Profes' sor of Human Development and
•· Family Studies at Asbury Thea• ' logical Seminary, Wilmore, Ky. He
is a distinguished lecturer and
, author of 16 books, most of them
=-.:dealing witR relationships , human
;:'':~dcvclopmenr and the family. His
; ·· "resear~h . in tnoral reasoning of
--: children continues to cake him
., into parenr and school confer~ ences as a consultant and speaker.
:;;:; ·He has been a frequent guest on
:_:: Dr. James Dobson's well-known
::; : radio talk shm'{. "Focus on the
;.~:Family." His tape, "lnn~He Differ~!: ences Between Males and
~: :Females, 11 is the seventh m~st
, • :requested tape.
:: : Joy ha~ lectured on more than
; ::thirty college and university cam:: :puses and has conducted training
;. :conferences for counseling pro:: : fessionals. He is in demand for
•: :workshops with specialists in the
:: health care, social work, counsel;:, ing and nllnistry services.
-: , ' Joy expresses his mission as:
.::: "My present calling and focus is
·::· (a) Announcing remarkably sim;:: :pie and positive solutions to com-

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Thor•"" are o·ther differences, roo, 'Vale11cia
oranges are harvested in early spring and summer, so they're mostly available from late February through November, They tend to have
very few seeds, They're usually medium to
large size and have a round to oval shape,
Sometimes the skin is tinged with green, but
not because they were picked before they were
fully ripe. Rather, Valencia oranges sometimes
begin to turn green again just as they're reaching full ripening.
The phenomenon, called regreening, o,ccurs
because the oranges are ripening in th e
warmer months. The regreening begins at the
sten1 end .
Navel oranges are almost always seedless.
They're generally larger than Valencias, but
also rend to have a round -to oval shape. The
peel has a more pebbly texture and is general~
ly thicker than the peel on a ValenCia orange.
Navel oranges are known for their ease 111

l
t

,
I

••
••

Phone:

Eveq; healthy person arrives on

Subscribe today:
992-2156 or 446-2342

this planet with a dream' that
emerges by the adolescent and
young adult years: Somewhere
there is someone with whom I
can share my secrets and who will
join n1e in an exclusive 'community of two' to face the future,
That yearning, retlecred in Creation, is for 'two to become one,'
in the image of God and the mystery of a three-in-one Trinity."
Nursery will be provided.

refrigerator, use a vegetable crisper where you
can control the temperature so it's a bit
warmer, In the refrigerator, oranges last for
two to three weeks.
Not surprisingly, oranges are chock-full of
vitamin C. Navel oranges tend to have a bit
more, gram for ·gram, with about 57 milligrams per 100 grams of fruit (about 2/3 of a
large orange), compared with 48.5 milligrams
of vitamin C per 100 grams in a Valencia
orange.
Either way, you can count on getting 60 to
80 milligrams of vitamm · C whenever you eat
an orange. That's a lot, considering the recommended daily amount for women, is 75 milligrams and 90 milligrams for men,

(Becky Colli11s is Callia Caullf)''s E.-.:re11sia11
ageut for ja111ily aud CMI Sltm er scicrue s, _OIIio State
Uuiversity.)

It's never too early to start
safety training!
Call the Holzer Health
·Hotline for information on
health care concerns you
might have.

As an adult, you could make a house payment, two car
payments, spend a few ,days at the beach, etc.

Meigs County Health Department
Tobacco Risk Reduction Program

11

Holzer Health Hotline

I

Dr. Bitner

You could buy about 42 CD's, 12 Pairs of Adidas, 6 pairs of
Rocky Boots, . 1.6 pairs of American ~gle jeans, 70 Pizzas, etc.

a

intiniacy and meaning as follows .

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The physician has another office location, - ,
2828 First Avenue , Suite 304,. Huntington, WV
·and appointments can be made by calling, (304)
522-7990.
'
Shojaei and his wife, Mahnaz, have two sons,
ages 7 and 9. The fam tly currently. resides in
Huntington.

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plex ·personal, family, and social
traumas. (b) Working with couples, families, and young adult
teens in identifying "deep
hungers" and discovering God's
design ro fulfill the hungers and
sanctifying the means of satisfying
them. (c) Providing these teaching, consulting, counseling, or
lecturing/preaching service$ in a
wide variety of settings as proposed and executed by the invit-·
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' Joy sees a person's hunger for

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The average cost of a pack of cigarettes is approximately $2.50.
If you smoke one pack per day, that's $17.SO per week,
$70.00 per month and $840.00 per year.

Dr. bon and Robbie Joy

ALLIPOLIS -What's the dif•
ference between navel oranges
GUEST COLUMNIST
,
and Valencia oranges?
'
They're just different varieties, but peeling and sectioning. The navel orange is
they're close enough that they can be harvested in the winter, making it commonly
from November through May.
used interchangeably for snacking or in available
The best storage temperature fnr oranges .is
most recipes. It's ·not recommended 45 degrees to 48 degrees Fahrenheit . Unfortu'· that navel oranges be cooked for long nately, that's a bit too warm for the refrigera: periods, though, becau~e they tend to tor and mu ch too cool for room temperature.
Still, orang•·s, like most dtrus fruits, will
: get bitter. Add them m the last five
keep at room temperature for about ot week to
~_ minutes of cooking and you'll be fine.
10 days. If you prefer to sron· them in the
-'
:
•

Wh Live In
7?
• •

. 10-A Airport Road •

Dr. Jalll Shojael

675-~551.

FAMILY COLUMN
An orange is
an orange,
navel or not

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Jalil Shopei, MD, a physician in the Pleasant
Valley Neuro-Physiology Center, was recently
board certified in the specialty of neurology by
the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.
"This achievement is certainly reflective of
the interest and dedication Shojaei has in ,Llis
specialty," praised Brian Colfack, Pleasant (Talley Hospital executive director.
' Shojaei received his medical degree from
Spartan Health Sciences University in St.
Lucia, West Indies (1988). He attained his bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the
University of South Florida in Tampa, FL
(1981).
· Shojaei was a neurology resident at the Medical College of Pennsylvania Hahnemann U niversity Program in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
(1993-96) . He also served transitional internship, emphasis in internal medicaine, at the
Crozier Chester Medical Center in Upland, PA
(1992-93) . In addition, he finished his neurology residency at the Medical College of Pennsylvania and Norristown State Hospit:ll (1992).
Shojaei is an associate member of the American Academy of Neurology. He is certified in
ECFMG - ftEX .
The Pleasant Valley Hmpital Neuro-Physiology Center is located in the Medical Office
Building, Suire 013 , adjacent ro rhe main facility. Appoi,ntments can be made by calling, (304)

.

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6unbap t!:imet -&amp;rntinrl • Page C7

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

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Also Tanning Beds

Rick Ferren·plays Portsmouth concert
Ri ck Ferrell returns to Portsmouth October 14
tu the Vern Rtffe Center for the Arts at 7:30p.m.
'"'h special guest Rachel Proctor, a native of
Clurlcston , W.Va. , and local band Terry lone
H.tll.
Ferrell grew up m Portsmouth and was inspired
by the ,success of fellow Portsn1outh nattve Earl
Thomas Conley, who had moved to Nashville to

I

One Stop Shop
For Spas!

their names and addresses and

-

October 8, 2000

Maniage and Family Enrichment
:.seminar slated for Oct. 15-18

Girls' nme Out held

R1verfest, you know about the Association.
problems with yellow jackets.
They were everywhere except at
Frienru of Addie Petrel who
one Vendor's booth and it was will observe her 93rd birthday
there that John Musser learned next Sunday have planned a card
the secret. Yellow jackets and
shower for her. Cards may be sent
cucumbers are like oil and water,
to her at Box 185, Racine.
they don't mix.
On the table at the booth were
Myron Duffield is again this
cucumbers sliced lengthwise and
year planning a variety show to
nary a yellow jacket.
Speaking of the festival, Muss- take place on the weekend after
er who chaired the event, said his Thanksgiving at Meigs Middle
committee ·was delighted with School. G,ood directors are always
the turnout. At one time Saturday out there looking for talent, so if
•fternoon, he said it wos estimat- you can sing or dance, or even tell
ed that more than 5,000 people a funny story, you might want to
were on the parking lot.
give him a call.
' Incidentally, winners of the
The shows contribute signifiducky derby were first and seccantly to the community. Not
ond, Ken Utt and Dmidle Peckonly do they give local residents
man who received $100 saving
bonds from The Farmers Bank an opportunity to show their taland Peoples Bank, and Dave ent for others to enjoy, but it proBo\\'en, third. ;.,ho received a $50 vides a way to bring in needed .
savings bond from City National. money for the ans and other proTwl·nty-two other prizes were jects . Today we give a tip of the
awarded in the successful fund hat to Myron for his community
raiser of the Pomeroy Merc~anrs i1w·olvemt&gt;nt.

c.:..~unday,

From

$699 to $1499

/YOUR CHOICE RING OR PENDANT'\

One Carat Diamonds
From

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1/4 CARA1' ......... •~ ........... '299

DIAMOND PENDANTS
So8tairts

ReJ

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1/4 CARAT .........'t!} ........... '299
1/2 C~RAT ......... '~ ........... '699
1CARAT ............ '~0 ........ '1999

DIAMOND EARRINGS
ReJ

Sale
1/4 CARAT......... '~ ........ ,.... '75

1/2 CARAT......... '~ ........... '388
1CARAT• .......... 1 J,r.l9 ........ '1350

1/2 CARAT ......... ' Vf:l) .......... '699
!CARAT ........ ,... ' 9........ '1999

Over $5 Million of diamonds
alone have been sold by
~cquisltions.

To our loyal customers in the
past decade ...

Thank You

Christmas Lax·a·way

()lJI~ 10°/o DOWN ·

FINANCING

llQt.\d

No Interest ForOneVearl
• Ho Additional Discounts Available

2am,
7 days a
week

Jt.cquisition fine Jewe
r-i~~

~740)

992·6626
Fax: (740) 992 ·0836

1-800-462-5255
•

.'

9:30· 5:00 Dolly ,
9:30 - 6:00 Monday
9:30 - 7:00 Friday
9:30- 4:30 Saturday

Ask your plrysician about'
medicatipn concems

'

- - -' -

�•

••

•
Pomlf'Oy • MICICIIIpon • OMIIpOIII, 0No • Point

wv

October 8, 200CI

-.

Inside: ·
Classified ads, Pages D2-D7

••

' 1 I

,

Pilge Dl
Sundllf, Odob•r a. ~oao
••

Fx1eo partidpant

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

lfllat's going on atyourcommunityhospitals?

'

This chan shows how local stocks of illterest perfor-med last week.
Each day's closing figures are provided try Advesr of Gallipolis.

Hospital System

AEP

f

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.

39}..

38'·

38

36'h

finn1n

FRI.

spotlight

Akzo

AmTechiSBC
~land

AT&amp;T

4,.'1~'"1I

Inc.

(

t

,'.;f

BY DuNSTAN PRIAl

I

AP BUSINESS WRITER

1'1.1..

Bank One
Bob ·Evana

Champion

Shope

City Holding •

Mary's Hospital

HOSPITAL
Perinatal Loss
Support Group
Tuesday, November 7
A support group for those
who have experienced a
miscarriage or ectopic·
pregnancy, stillbirth or
infant death. Meets first
Tuesday of each month.
Cabell Hm1tington Hospital
Room G405 o!Tthe atrium
(304) 526-2049
Sharing Support Group

Monday, N~mber 6
Sharing is for Tri-8tate
women who have been
diagnosed with
gynecologic cancers.
Meets first Monday of
each monU1.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Room G403 otT U1e atrium
(504) 526-2297

Parent1J18 Preemies
Support Group
Each Friday, 6 p.m.
Parents who have a
premature infant in ilie
Neonatal Intensive Care
(NICU) are asked to take
part in a support group.
From 6:30 to 8 p.m., an
infant CPR class is
provided for those parents
whose infants are being
discharged from the NTCU.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Thii-d Fl()()r Conference Room
Call (504) 529-7146 and 88k.
for er,Sta1 Welch.

Diabetic Topia1
November28
Asupport group for people
with diabetes and their
family members.
Cabell Huntington Hospital
Private Dining Room One
(504) 526-2286

Joslin Dlabetell Center's
~Jlro8ram

Mondays- October 9 &amp; 25
2-3:30 p.m. or ~7:30p.m.
(choose one)
This progran1 will introduc~
you to the Joslin Diabetes
Center and its five key
points of diabetes management: monitoring, meal
planning, medications,
exercise and risk reduction.
$5 per person.
Open to the public.
Physician referral not necessary. Class size is limited.
St. Mary's Hospital RoQm 1024
(Joslin Diabetes Center)
(304) 5266907

Sibling CJaooes
Tuesday, October 17,
5:30-7:30 p.m.
Future big brothers and
sisters tour the maternity
floor, watch a videotape
about sibling rivalry
and learn to care for the
new baby. Bring a baby doll
to practice holding, feeding
and diapering.
(504) 52~BABY

Baby Care Class
Tuesday, October 10, &amp;8 p.m.
General baby care, feeding,
bathing and safety tips for
parents-t()-be and
grand parents-t()-be.
(504) 52~BABY
Infant CPR Class
Tuesday, October 17, 6 p.m.
Parents-t()-be and grandparen ls-t()-be are welcome to
attend and will receive
a certificate of attendance.
(504) 52~BABY
For a tour of Cabell
HuntllJ8ton Hospital's
Mother/Baby Suites
and Nlll'!lel'Y, please call .
(504) 52~BABY.
Pre-~ Education

Breast Cancer Screenings

·,

,.Wedoeaday, October 26
·8 a.m. - ·3 p.m.
Regional Center For Women's Health at
Cabell Huntington Hospital
RESERVATIONS REQUESTED
(304) 526-2270

'

Arthritis Support Group
lbursday, October 12, 2 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 2109
(504) 526-m6

Reikl Class
Thursdays -October 12 &amp; 26,
6 p.m.
Reiki is the practice of
transmitting healing enerKY
ilirough the hands.
$10 per person, St. Mary's
Hospital Room 2101
(504)75UY175
America's Walk for Diabetes
Saturday, October 14,
Huntington
Sponsored by the American
Diabetes Association
(504) 52&amp;-1216 (SL Mmy's
team) or 1-80Q.25+WALK

. Diabetee SuppOrt Groijp
Tuesday, October 17,7 p.m.
"Easy and Quick Preparations
for ilie.Holidays"
St. Mary's Hospital Room 2109
(504) 52~1216

For those who have been
diagnosed with kidney
disease requiring dialysis,
CHH's Dialysis Center
· otTers a pre-Uialysis
education program.
Call (504) 52~2000,
ell. 5093 and ask for
Denise Boudreau.

Mondayt October 23
9 a.m.-Noon &amp; 1-5 p.m.
.St. Marrs Hospital Clinic (1 east)'
. . REGISTRATION REQUIRED .
,%,(304.) 626-8900

{~Pleasant Valley Hospital

Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative participated in the first annual Gallia County Business Expo last month
in Gallipolis. Forty-three local businesses set up booths, like BREC's in top photo, staffed by Shonda Danner, displaying information on their individual businesses. A total of more than $4,000 worth of prizes
were given away at the close of Sunday's activities. In photo below, Lynn Srumn of Addisl)n, right, won a
13-inch colm television given away by BREC's Danner, left. (Contributed photos)

Kmart

B:reastfpffllng Cl8!lll
Tuesday, October 24, ~ p.m.
Certified lactation
consultants teach our
breastfeeding class;
(504) 52~2258

'

St.Maey's H08pital
Breast Cancer Reunion
Sunday, October 22
2to 4p.m.
Speaker: Jane Kurucz will
speak regarding "Advances in
Breast Cancer Treatment."
St. Mary's Room 2109.
Free and open to Ule public.
American Red Cro88 Blood
Drive at St. Mary's Hospital
Wednesday, October 25,
11 a.m.4 p.m.
1\vo locations: 6ili floor
classroom AND Soltis
Conference Room (2109)
(504) ~26MM

A.W.A.K.E. (Alert, Well and
Keeping Energetic)
Sleep Disorders Support Group
'lbursday, October 26, 7 p.m.
Free and open to the public.
*REGISTRATION REQUIRED

St. Mary's Hospital 6th Floor
Classroom
(304) 526-1880
Boy Soouta ofAmerica
Medtcal Elploren' Poat 18110
Every second and last
Monday, 7 p.m.
Free and open to any male or
female aged 1+21 interested
in learning more about the
medical field
(504) 526-1228

Diabetee CJnes (lpODIOI'fld
by the JOIII.n D!abetel Center).
Physician refemll needed.
(~)526MCK
~ Cbi for ~nners

Mondays and Thursdays,
6:30.7:30 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital School of
Nursing Gym
$1 per class
(504)~70

Depteaalon Support Group
Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 2101
(504) 5.26«l01

Alil'ctic8
Mondays·&amp; Wednesdays,
6p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center, Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or
$3/non-members
(304) 675-7222

YopOern
Wednesdays, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center
Multi-purpose Room
(504) 875-7222

TldebJ ·

Mondeys, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center, Multi-purpose Room
$5/session
(504) 675-7222
M.E.IUC.S.
Ewlry Tuesday in October,
7p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Persoffilel Conference Room
(504) 675-4S40, ElL 1471

Heart-To-Heart Cardiac

Mason County Health
Department (Oct. 12),
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Buxton Conference Room
(Nov. 27)
(504) 675- 7997

appointment only
Foot assessments by
Jeffrey Shook, D.P.M. .
St. Mary's H~ital Clinic (1 east)
(504) 526-8908 to IICbedule
appointment

Yop for Bepners
Every Tuesday, ~7:50 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital School of
Nursing Gym
Free and open to the public.
(504)~182

TOPS (Take OII'Poundl
Senelbly)
~ry Tuesday, 4:30.- 6 p.m.
$20 registration fee
St. Mary's Hospital 6ili
Floor Classroom
(740) 64M763

•ean.cerme• Cancer
Support Group
Every Second and Fourth
Tuesday, 5 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 6144
(504) 52&amp;-1037

Trensttlona Grief
Support Group
Every oilier Friday. Call for
specific meetinf$ dateS.
(504) 5~1810

Lupus Support Group
Every third Sunday, 3 p.m.
St. Mary's Hospital Room 2109
(740) 867-4877

Thursday, October 12 &amp;
December 14, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center, Multi-purpose Room
(504) 67!). 4S40, ElL 2005

Cameo l.adtes Breast
Cancer Support Group
Thursday, October 12 &amp;
Monday, November 27,
6:30p.m. (Oct. 12), 7 p.m.
(Nov. 27)

14'1.

Arthritis Support Group

30'1.

Premier

~/Grief Support Group

Thursday, October 19 &amp;
November 16, 6:30p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
'Hartley Conference Room
(504) 675-7400

31

15}.

Nonetheless, Citigroup was
willing to pay such a hefty price
tag because, despite operating in
relative anonymity, Associates
First Capital is the largest publicly traded finance company in
the United States and tne fifth
largest consumer finance company in Japan.
·
Formed in 1918 to help
finance Ford Model T's, Associates Fint is a market leader in
each of its numerous business
lines, including issuing credit
card&lt;, providing home equity
and mortgage loans, and leasing
trucks and heavy equipment.
A typical consumer might
interact with Associates First in
a variety of ways.
Rural Iowans, for example.
might head to the local T ldCtor
Supply outlet in search of an
expensive piece of farm equipment. A financing deal would
likely be arranged so the farmer
could pay off Tractor Supply
over time. The farmer might
also be issued a TractGr Supply

' 15}.

27

'Z1

30'h

30'1~

29'1.

9

: at.

sY.

Rockwell
•

Alzbelmer'a Support Group
Tuesday, October 17 &amp;
November 21, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley N:ursing &amp;
Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road,
· Point Pleasant, \W
(504)' 67!). 5236

+

Rocky Boot

+

Shell ...

Wai-Mart

t
eY~.

9

· Would you like ro see a stock of local interest listed? If so, cpnract
News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

"'

LIVESTOCK
United Producers Inc. market
report from Gallipolis:
Feeder Cattle
200-300# St. $1 05-S 114 Hf.
$90-$1 0 1, 325-450# St. $95$114 Hf. $84-$96 475-625# St.
$~1-$96 Hf$74-$86 650-800#
St. $72-$84 Hf. $65-$86.
Cows
Well M~scled/Fleshed $41$46; Medium/Lean $37-$40:
Thin/Light $32- $37; Bulls
. : $44-$52.

NEW YORK - Millions of
Americans own credit cards
issued by . sue}] well known
companies as Texaco, Radio
Shack and Office Depot.
It's a safe bet, however, that
few of those card holden were
familiar with Associates Fir&gt;t
Capital, the giant lending company operating comfortably in
the background of those household names.
Until this past week, that is,
when financi21 services conglomerate Citigroup agreed to
pay a huge $30 billion to
acquire the Irving, Texas-ba&lt;ed
consumer and comn1ercia]
finance company.
The deal was the fourth
largest U.S. acquisition this year,
and the first not to involve big
name technology companies,
according to CommScan , a
New York financial data compa-

ny.
1St.

1

Peoples.

Aphasia Aaaoc:laUon &amp; Stroke:
Suppbrt Group
Tuesday, October 17 &amp;
••
November 21, 1 p.m:.
Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road, Point
•
Pleasant, \W
(504) 67!). 5250

SIIJIPOl'l Group
Diabetic Foot CHntc
Every Tuesday, 1 · 5 p.m. by

23

Thursday, October 12 &amp;
November 9, 3 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness
Center, Multi-purpose Room
(504) 675- 8659

puts

Back To The Farm:
.ol: .
Cow/Calf Pairs $525-$1 ,i50;
Bred Cows $475-$660: Baby
Calves $20-5380: Goats $,?0'
$83
11
Upcmning specials:
..:
1
Graded feeder calf sale Mbn- .
day at 7 p.m. Cattle will be
weighed in Sunday, starting 31) 5
p.m., and Monday until no~
Herd bull leasing progqrn
available. High quality An$1s \
bulls.

Please see Deal, Page D8 ·

BY DIAN VUJOVICH
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION

DEAR DIAN VUJOVICH: I

INVESTING

have a 5-year-old son and would
like to begin a college savings
plan for him. The problem is, I've
heard that there are lots of different programs available, but l don't
know what they are or which is
best. Can you help? ·- Elise, via

·Be aware of
distribution rules
Bv K. RYAN SMITH
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

drawals upon reaching the age

GALLIPOLIS Retirement plan lump sum distribution ru)es are more complex
th~n they were several ago,
making it more important than
ever to carefully decide on
what you will do with your
money before your employer
cuts you a check.
lf you are a ~ecipient of a
lump sum distribution, there
are three choices with respect
to accumulated balances in
. qualified retirement plans.
First, if your employer
allows, you may choose to
leave the funds in your
employer's retirement plan
until a future date. Most' plans
will allow you to come back at
any time and ask for your
accumu lated balance or to
begin taking mandatory with-

Second, you . may have your
lump sum transferred directly
to an IRA rollover account.
The distribution will be transferred directly and it will be
reported to the IRS on Fl)rm
1099 as a distribution.
The receiving IRA rollover
account tru~ree will report that
a rollover contribution has
been made on Form 5498,
which is required to be sent to
both you and the IRS by May
31.
Therefore, the distribution
report is canceled out by the
contribution report, so no tax
is currently owed.
Your employer will have to
supply an election notice to
you within a reasonable time
before the lump sum is due to

e-mail.

of 70 ~j.

Please see Money, Pap DB

Consider crop residue
for fall cattle feed

Mat's the best college
savings plan out there?

1

I

DEAR ELISE: With the 'cost
of college and techni cal schools
on the rise, the sooner you can
begin saving for your child 's
future education, the better.
For example, according to the
figures on a cardboard calculator
from 1\merican Century, if your
child is 5 today, the average cost
of a four-year in-state college
education when he or she is 18 is
projected to be $88,662. An out- ·
of-state four-year college education is estimated at $132,143. Pri' vate coflege costs cou ld average as
high as $192,221. Those figures
are based upon a 5 percent annual increase in the costs of tuition 's,
fees, room, board and other
expenses over the years.
To have S I 00.000 by the time
your child is 18 means making
lltmonthly investments of $315, if
the average annual return on that
investment is 10 perc ent, or $425
per rnon£h if the money is .earning you 6 percent per year,
according to American Century.
While making a $300 to $400

l'

per month investment for one
child's future education might
sound like a huge nut to crack (it
may even sound impossible), particularly when you are young and
just beginning a family, d11n't let
those figures blow you away.
Instead, think of them · as ·cost-ofliving guide posts that show, in
black and white, how the costs on
everything typically rises over
tin1e.

Then understand that any regular monthly contribution you
make to an investment program,
whether it be $50 or $500 a
month, is a good habit to get into.
And while the cost of a future
education may look huge today,
you won't nee.d· that entite
amount aU at one time. So, don 't
let the figures scare you out of
saving for the future .
Although there are a number of
ways to save for college, from
merely earmarking the monies ~n
an account you've opened to setting up accounts specifically for
your child, here's a thumbnail
overview on three popular longterm educational investment programs available. Please note there

is much more to these programs
than outlined, so m ake sure do
more homework:
• UGMA/ UTMAs. Those are
Uniform Gift or Unifimn Trmt
for minor accounts and 'are set up
in a n1inor's name With the cusco-

Plus• su Funds, Pa11 D8.

GALLIPOLIS - .. Cattle producers with access to crop residue
may consider utilizing this
resource as a source of cattle feed
this fall, which would give p.smres ,1 rest prior to winter.
J

Crop residue. such as corn

Jennifer
Byrnes

stover, can provid e adequate
nutrition to several classes of catGUEST VIEW
tie. With average or better body
condition, cows in ntid-gesrarion
are particularly good cal1didates · tnore cautious with first calf
for grazing residue.
heifers. Recall that first calf
One acre of residue can yield heifers arc. still growing and
approximately 60 aniri&gt;al uni t should be ted and managed difgrazmg days for , an averag:t: ferendy .than cows.
I ,000-pound animaL
Once the grain has been conNaturally, cattle w&gt;ll comume sumed, fir&gt;t calf he ifer&gt; should be
the grain first, then the husk and removed fium such a residuekaves. and finally the cob&gt; and feeding program . L 1kewise, coke,
- stalks. OSU Extenston Beef Spe- grazing corn residut· may re1i&gt;ain
ciabst Stephen Boyles indicates on th e program beyond grain
that cattle consunllng gi-ain in the consumption, however,
tht'y
residue will probably take in a must receive supplemental forage
diet of abovt&gt; 7 percent protein OT' concentrate to meet tl~eir proand as high as 7(1 pcrc·em Total rein anJ energy rc·quircments.
Digestible Nu trien ts:
Moveahle elt•ctn c fencmg can
Such a di et exceed' the protein increase the utilization of crop
and energy needs for a cow in residue by up to 511 percent. Elecmid-gestation. Therefore. when tri c fence provides control over
grain is present in the manure, the amount of area grazed. whKh
only vitamin and nuncral supple- force~ the cows to co nsume the
mentation is necessary.
entire plant. not only reducmg

However, when tht' grain has
been consumed, it jo; important to
supplement the cmv~ with about
5 pounds of average qtr.Jhty ,1Jti&gt;l
fa hay per day to meet their
nutritional requirement,,
As al~ays , producers should be

waste and trampling, but alsO
reducing the ch.n'lct'S of tOundc.·r.
Fields should be ~razed .1~ &lt;&gt;oon
alter h.1rw't a&lt; pm,ibk and fie· Ids
with dramagc or comp.&gt;rtton

Please see Byrnes, Pa11 D8

�Sunday, October a, 2000
110

Help Wanted

Domino's Now Hirtnv Drivers For
Pomeroy &amp; Gallipolis Locations
Only.

I

110

Pomeroy • Middleport • GalllpolltJ, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV
Help wanted

Local Trash Service Hiring COL
DtiYtrf loader, call for lnutrvlew
{740)388 9686

005

Pupptes 112 reg bl lab. 112 lull
OatmaliOn 4 male, 4 female All
pups are olack w11n some whne
markmgs on stomach Are ready
now have tleen w01meo Call
304·675·7222 ask lor Karen or at·

FREE OATlNGI
~ww SINGLES com

LOSE 3 TO. 5 LBS WEEKLY! AS
SEEN ON TV. FAT TRAPPER
Sa 95. METABOLITE 1000 $9 '9 5
BACKED BY THE NATIONAL
DIABETES RESEARCH COUN·
CIL 1· 800·804·0436 COD MC I
VISA www losewe&gt;ghlnu

ter 7 pm 304 675-2925

60 Lost and Found
Lost read1ng glasses. fftday dur·
mg Sternwheel Ff!Stlval or foott&gt;all

game. call740.992·6159.
STAAT DATING TONIGHT•
Hav-e fun meet1ng ehgtble smgles
m your area . Call for more mtormat1on 1·800-AOMANCE. el(t
9735

30

70

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Announcements

Garage sale· Oct 7-8. 143m
Harnsonv11le adult clothmg lurntture washer &amp; dryer. m1sc

.. .., stead And Downtown Or esaen
•
.,. -.-: 01'110 October 31
·
..... Everyone Will Aece•ve Two Lon·
~ ·.. gaberger® Mugs 4.nd Other
Vanous Pnzes wm Be G1\len
~ Awtty Cost· $50.00 Call Foi More

•

InformatiOn '

Pt. Pleasant

''
t

New To 'rou Thrlrt Shoppe
9 West Stimson . Athens
74oH92·1842
OuaUty clothing and noustho-ld
11em1 $1 00 bag salt tvtry
Thur•aay. Monaay tnru Stturday

B!ll Moodlapaugh Auctioneering :
buylstll tS!atts , cons ignment
auction· Thursdays , 6pm, Mlddtaporl. Oh iO &amp; WV License, 740·
99H707. 740·989-2623.

·our Pltce Or ~rsr

. tO Wtt~ O ld Pupp lu, Brlta.ny
Sp1n1tl &amp; Boratr Co tll t Mi x .
1 740 1387~24

smooth. 740-949·2693

·K111ens a Black , 1 Cal ic o_ 1
Wh1te 7 Weeks 0 11:1 . Blue Eyes.
17 40)388-8595
Pa llets , Galhpoii S Dally Tntlune
OII1Ce lOCateel At 825 Th1rd Ave·
Tlue Galhpohs P1c k Up At The
Rear Of The 8UIIdmg, F1rst Come
F1rsr Serve No Pnone Calls

Absolute Top Dotl ar : U S S11ver.
Gold Coms. Proolsets, D1amonos.
Gold R1ngs. u s Currency,·
M .T.S Com Shop, 151 Second

Avenue. GalhpOIIS

740-4~6·2842

Neeel Cash. I Buy ATV 's, Stiver
Gold Co1ns. Snotguns. R1ffle s PHi·

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"* Due to the adyertjsjng
deadline. we do not haye a
detailed list yet **
There will be furniture,
glassware, antiques and
collectibles, misc. items,
household things, etc. A good
variety of items! NICE 'SALE!
Auctioneer: Le1ley A. Lemley
740-!188-0823{home] or 740·245·1!866 {barn]
Llcenaed and Bonded by Slate of Ohio
Cath I Approved Check
Food
"Not RetpoDilble for Accldentl or Lon of l'rlont,rt•vl"f
' ' NOTE: SALE IS ON THURSDAY - NO fRIDAY SALE
DU[ TO FARM FESTIVAl AND FlEA MARKET'
· Public Sale and Auction

LARGE TOOL

Mrs. Shirley Boster of 553 Firat Avenue. Gallipolis
Being no longer able to maintain her home due to
health problems has moved to a nursing home. We
have been consigned to sell her penonal property as
listed below.
·
FURNITURE· Like new sofa. Table w/ 4 chairs. 3 pc·.
Cherry nntsh coffee &amp; end tablea, China Hutch.
Kenmore 19 1/2 cu. aide by tide Refrigerator.
Westinghouse Electric Stove. Like new Sears washer.
Hotpotnt dryer. Zentth color lV, VCR, White sewtng
machine, Alr Conditioner. Microwave w I stand. Fan. 3
Drawer chest. 2 Upholstered chairs. 2 Dining room
chairs, Regulator clock, Pictures. Small kitchen
appliances. Set of Corelle dishes. Brass what-nots. Step
stool, Lots of Pots and pans, Silverware. Lots &amp; Lots of
Glassware.
LAWN &amp; GARDEN - Hand tools. Weedeater. Lawn
Mower. 2 Step ladders. 2 Metal storage cabinets {feed
sacks) Bicycle. Lawn Chairs.
Auctioneer's ·Marlin Wedemeyer #3514 {740) 379-2720
Raymond Johnson #8040 {740) 256-6989
Licensed and Bonded tn Favor of State of Ohio.
•• REFRESHMENTS •• .

AuctJoneers Note: Lots more boxes of household ltems
to be unpacked. This wtll be a short sale. Be on time.
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of Property

TUESDAY OCTOBER
5:30P.M.

Take US 50 &amp; 32 w..t eleven mlles west or Athens,
Ohio and exit onto 50 west towards McArthur.
Auction Is a quarter mlle on len: Signs posted!

I

In Memory
In Memory

Renee Lu&lt;..ct:&gt; 1
22. 1978

~c~~.l~

cttanged my hfe
man stole your hfe
11 wtll soon be ten years
S1nce I started gfieving
those tears
For ~he loss of my httle girl
Has changed my life
Changed my world
No sorrow greater could
there be
Th an the loss of a child,
a part of me
But Jesus guides me
every day
So I may be wtth you
one bnght day

'R~

.J{enry
'Beacfi
.Yf precious 0/IC
from us is gone
Yf !JOice ll'f foved is
stilled
but stillfiis memory
·
on and Jl'itfi
us alll'ays ll'ill.
toofi you fiome
Oct. 9tfi, 1964.
Step daugfiter
· Jrfild red Jacobs

~

press, Craftsman 0" radial arm saw, B&amp;D
circular saw, Pro Tech mitre saw, 10" Band saw,
Craftsman 1 H.P. router, Craftsman sander,
Poulan 250 A Chain saw, oscillating spindle
sander, Master Mechanic 6" dual light bench
grinder, router, Craftsman 6" planer, Craftsman
8" drill press, 16" direct drive scroll saw. Sears
10" band saw, work bench vise, mitre saw,
Sears a ir compressor, Craftsman sander.
Craftsman 16 gallon shop vac, Craftsman
seeder. B&amp;D work bench, Craftsman vise', small
vise. sev. hand tools. socket sets, tool boxes,
drill bits, draw knives , wrenches, nut &amp; bolt
cabinet, madic. axes, sledge nammers , drill
press stand , lg . amount of C clamps. hyd jacks,
Stanley level, ladders. window fan, 2 round
kerosene heaters, Coca Cola clock, 13" LXI
color TV remote, hand made b\lskets, saw
horses, tables, cats &amp; etc, Kenmore Master
Flame gas grill, Craftsman wagon, pius much
more.
GRAVE LEY 'S
2 Graveley Super convertible tractors w/dual
wheels, Graveiey accessories, snow blower.
iI
~u1mitaltJrs, ~"'L
12 ga.
rifle .
AUCTIONEER NOTE: If you need tools don

miss this sale/

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson
Auction Ca. #66
\
773·5785 or 773·5447
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH ID.

In Memory

·-

;;;:;::;:;:~:;:
in Loving Memory of
June L. Griffin
In loving memory
of our dear
Mother and wife, on '
her birthday, Oct. 8th.
We miss her loving
presence, more than
words can say. She
was a Godsend to our
family, and. will never
be forgotten. but live
on lhrough her loving
family.
So Sadly Missed By.
Husband, Ernest,
and children : Larry.
Errol, Roger.
Pam &amp; Debbie

Mad Order
(888) 82HM;86

J-l.&lt;:w:ated In Gallipolis, Ohio 01\ St. Rt. 7 just
soutll of St Rt 35 tum at Gun Shop. Go to

ATTN AT HOME MOMS Mike
$15 /hr p!tln •1 Industry On IJne
tram1ng Guaranteed www mom.
saMotMrs _oom 1-88-353-1953
'AVON ! All Areas 1 To Buy o'r Sell.
SMiey Spears. 304-675·1429

Avon · Earn 40 % For Chnstmas
Oniers (740}446-3358

HUO?FHA mortgage refunds. No
expenence requtreu . For FREE
mformation call 1-800· 501·6832
ext 1300 .

AUCTION

-~t.ac€~V

We have over
200 JObS avallatlle immedJate!y
Full ana pan tune available
EARN up to $15/hour
plus reterral bonuses.
If you need work right aw{lf,
Celt 1.aQ0.929-5753
Call today, etart tomorrow I
Clvte Oevelopmerlt Groupl
M111enn1um Teleservces

Directions: South of Point Pleasant, WV offRt 2 toke Hannan Trace Rood 1. 1
mile to Guyon Creek Rd. Go .07 miles to sale site. Follow Slons .
SelllnQihe Estate oflhe late William TrtppleH.
John Deere Crowlar Model MC, l Cylinder • M. F. Modal 90 Tractor • H. H. # 4 7 8
Hayblna • H.H. #68PTO Hay Baler • H.H. #SS Pull type rake• M.F. 3 Pt. Pillman
Mower • Wheal Rake • 3 Pt. Post Hole Dtooar • Fertilizer Spreader • 8' Lim•
Spreader • 5' 3Pt Brush Hoo •_5' Pull Type Brush Hoo • l Row Tobacco Plant•r
• Gravity Bed on Runnln9 Ganrs • Dearborn l BaHam Plows • Hay Elevntor •
LoyDutPiow •Ground Driven ManuraSprltCider rouoh • 1 Row 3 Pt
Cultivator • N.J. 17 Row Corn Pickar For Porta Only • H1t0d Gate • Metal Silde·
In Truck CnHia Rock• • Appro&gt;&lt;lmately lO Bundles ofSiaba • Satellite Dllh PIIll
a Small Amount of Mtscallnnaoua
TERMS: CASH DR CHECK DAY OF SALE WITH POSITIVE I.D .

AUCTIONEER: EDWINWINTER#334

We are auctioning off the Contents of Mr. and Mrs.

Homer Green of RoseVille , Ohio. They are auctioning
the Hems due to movtng to a smaller llvtng situation
and were lifetime collectors. Due to the volume of this
auction it was moved to tout auction facility, · Very
brier IJstlng below, lAterally thousands of pieces to be
auctioned In two days. If you are a coUector, shop
owner. or Internet seller, this Is an auction that you do
not want to miss. The McCoy aAd Hazel Atlas pieces
and many others were collected for over 28 years. Two
truckloads still arriving after listing. This home was
packed wall to wall.

AUCTIONING SATURDAY
Crock . bowls, McCoy bowls, happy face mugs and
banks. McCoy Items - vases w/ birds. pine cone tea
set. Ivy tea set. Grecian: Many noveltY pieces, lambs.
quail planter. planter w I birds. goose planter. fawn
planter. several wishing well pieces. Dutch shoes,
clock wall pocket, arcature planter. double tulip vase,
trl~le lily vase. mlssHe decanters, mugs w/ animals,
vases : noraltne planters. brush pieces, hull gtnger
bread boy bank, Currier and lves dinnerware. Sets of
drinking glasses collectible. souvenir glasses, Iris
jardiniere and white hazel atlas dishes, Iris and
Herringbone. many hazel atlas pl~ces, Crooksvtlle and
other dishes. stone jugs. hull pottery. shawnee pieces.
Robinson Ransbottom. some Depression and more.
AUCTIONING ON SUNDAY
Four piece depression bedroom suJte, oak two door
chlfferobe . new oak corner cabinet. two other china
cabinets, cherry open hutch. mahogany china cabinet,
new china with broken arch top and mirrored back,
two oak sets of chairs, set of mahogany chairs. 4
carved matching chairs. cedar chest. tWo carved love
scats W/ matching chairs. granite magic chef' gas
stove, blue and while granite table, wrought Iron patio
furniture. mahogany table and 6 chairs, falnllng
couch. CONCRETE ITEMS, buck deer. lamb . fog.
ram. two lion~. bird bath and bench: several handing
lights, shawnee 'cornware. two dark crystal lunch
boxes. two Disney on Ice lunch boxes. COOK(E JARS
OVER I QQ. brush h.umpty dumpty as Is. hull ginger
bread man. McCoy and others churn. green pepper'.
train engine, betsy baker. bobby baker. hobby horse,
Iamb on basket. pineapple . monkey on stump.
slrawberry. apples. frontier family . monk. Dutch treat
barn. qulgley ptg. honey bear, coffee grinder. chiffonier,
Icc cream cont, pear, cookstove. boy on football. hocus
r3bbit, happy face, grantti coffee pot. polar bear. hen
on nest. Oscar by Robinson Ransbottom green hat.
and MANY MORE ...

Note: We will auction items that are not completed
on Saturday on Sunday at well. Thit te a large
volume

auction

I

Tenna: Maatercard or vlaa, ca•h and chccka w1
poatllve ID. II% tee waived for caah and checko.
Food ovaUoble. lnoide with cleon reotroomo.
Heated IJidoor bulldlnll wltb aeatlna.
Auctioneer: Mark Hutchlnoon 740·8118·8708
Licen1ed onc1 Bonded 1ft Ohlo
Portner: Frsllk Hutcblnaon 740·1192-4349
Email que1ttono to mhutohln@troanet.net ond vtew
1ome picture• at www.fl'oanet .net/-mbutchiJI
Plcturao will be labeled u, a3, eta.
Next HJah ~ty Auction Ootober 28th at 11100 a.m.

·11em1 too numerou1 to
Auction and enJoy the evenlfti,
Relrelhmlftla Avallable
T£RMS: Caah or check with positive ID
.
AUCTIO~ItR: RODNitY HOWl,RY
·
•ft&gt;r more lnlormatlon, phone 1·800-1114-8190 or
1-740-889-7111 or 1·740·694·1780

AMVET bulldlll£ Watch for Auction Silins
ANTIQU£S OR COLLECTIBLES
70 Cookie jars:
McCoy, Rosevme,
Treuurecraft, Hall, Metlox, Abcllaon, Marcrest
and 11\lU\y more.. Watt pottery, Ma,iolca/ca Calli.
USA, Meakin raised wheat dishes, Hull art, Red
wlq, Czechoalovakla, Hull, Hall, Copenhaaen
snuff •tofte jar, Brush, Jewell tea, fiesta, Royal
copley, and assorted planters, West Moreland,
flreklnjl, Fenton, Iris, Vasollne, Red Ruby,
&amp;rrest Green, Bubble lllass, Black Amethyst,
Oy1ters Ill Pearls, Manhattan, jadeite, O&amp;ure,
Amber jars, Nov. SO, 1BIJB blue mason jar,
Shirley 'n.mple and Tom Mix marbles, quilts,
81110rted t&amp;ranlteware, 1918 "Merchant of Venice"
book, war books, and mise books, Ice cr&lt;,an,,-1
candy and misc. Items, Rockwell plate, Brownie
refle.x e&amp;mera., Carnival and Crackle glass, wood
.,...,. mold, 18SO watch, restaurant dishes, and
swlp, ladles hats Ill boxes, thimbles, Pomeroy
forest ·areen lllaaa &amp;rut lots more.
TOYS
Aaaorted dolls, some International, doll high
chair Ill baby bed, Mechanical monkey, nn To)'S,
Trucks, Car w I driver Ill dojl, 1949 football
Qame, Gilbert microscope set and wood spinning
top.

FURNITURE
Treadle sewlq nut.ehlne, .Mahoaan, slant top
ball II claw feet desk, Oak libraJ')' table, Kitchen
cabinet, Walnut drop leaf table, Oak claw feet
·chair, Plant stand, floor lamps, and etc...
MfSCELLANEOUS ·
Mo-ped bike, Christmas lawn decorations,
Loweey double keyboard orjlan, Several sets of
dlahes, Mise Chaira, lamps, 3 pc Chiefs carving
aet, Chicken and rooster collectibles and lots,
lots more ....

All Sells To Hlqhcst &amp;!ddcrll.cqlldlcu of Price!·
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2000
@ 10:00 A.M.
Situated on early picturesque Meigs County
Farm located at 41144 Keebaugh·Follrod Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
DIRECTIONS: About 12 miles south of Athens. Oh &amp;
1 miles north of Pomeroy, Oh exit U.S. At. 33 onto
State Route 681 east (near the tiny village of Darwin,
Oh) travel 6 miles to keebaugh-Follrod A·d. and follow
1-miie to long lane leading to farm and auction.
8·FARM TRACTORS· Late Model Tractors, Antlqu$
and Restored Tractors I
Excellent 1966 4 WD Diesel JOHN DEERE 75$
Tractor w/Belly Mower &amp; JD 52 LOADER, hydrostatio,
canopy, turf II res. only 1166 hrs. Outstanding 198$
JOHN DEERE 2350 diesel Tractor w/canopy, 2238
hrs. 1960 FORD 801 Powermaster Tractor. good
rubber, 3 pt. ALLIS CHALMERS "CA" Tractor. nearly
new tires, PTO . 1945 JOHN DEERE "A" Tractor
completely rebuilt w/best parts available. JOH1'4
DEERE "A" Tractor completely restored w/rare road
gears. pulling tractor. Oliver 60 &amp; A. C. "WD" tractor$
.
both in as-is condition.
VERY GOOD .QUALITY FARM EQUIPMENT: 1991
New Hoiland 408 Discbine Mower Conditioner.
1990 John Deere 375 Round Baler. 1988 John Deere
326 Square Baier. Ford-New Holland 254 IWD rotor
Tedder- abt 3 years old. Sperry 327 pto spreader. t30
bu. Heavy duty Brush Hog 307 mower. purchased
new in 1988. 3 pt. post driver. Hay elevator w/eieC::
motor.
MACHINERY STORED OUTSIDE: J .D. &amp; Ford 3 bt,;,
plows : J.D. disc; 3 pt. sickle mower; 3 pt. s1ngl~
shovel plow: cultipacker. also "as·is" farm equipmen&gt;.
TROY BILT " Horse" TILLER w/8 hp Kohler Engine'
used very little. COMMERCIAL ELEVATOR w/ele~
motor, will elevate 2·stages. Craftsman 3.5 hp
shredder/Mulcher; 4 new rolls woven fence; truck loci
box.
Outstanding HORSE DRAWN Fringed Top
SURREY &amp; SLEIGH: Completeiy restored 2-seat
Fnnged Top Surrey by lhe "The £irighton Buggy Co.
Brighton Station. Oh". Restored s1ngle seat horse
drawn cutter SLEIGH.
·
BOATS &amp; WATER SPORT Items: tB' Bass Trophy
BAYLINER Fiberglass Sport Boat w/125·hp U.S.
Manne outboard, equipped w/l1ve wells. fish l1nder~
trolling motor an a good boat trailer. 20' GLASTROM
"SEA RIDER" {Bow Rider V125] Fiberglass Boat
w/ 175·hp Mercury outboard on a SHORE LANDA boat
t~aiier. equipped w/depth finder. CB radio, 15' Newport
fiberglass SAIL BOAT &amp; boat trailer. New (never i~
water) SPORTS PAL CANOE w/mast &amp; sail.
KAWASAKI Jel Ski 440, Several water sk1s: m1sc.
boat accessories: large hand cable winch. 3 &amp; 4
WHEELERS, SKI MOBILE, GOLF CART, DUNE
BUGGY, GD·CARTS, MO·PED; Pantera "Arctic Car
Ski Mobile . Honda "Big Red" 3-Wheeler w/Grass
Seeder, Honda 125 Four Trax 4·Wheeler Good
Harley Davidson Golf Cart. Honda Odyssey Dune
Buggy. Gareili Oil Injector Mo-Ped. 2·Go Carts.
·
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS· N1ce OAK
SiDEBOARD ~/beveled mirror &amp; ging~rbread crest.
2.-heads, carvmgs &amp; applications; Viclorian closed
s1de baby cradle; 2-e&lt;:rly sleds; nice #770 heat1ng
stove. approx. 50 n1ce Sol1d Kumtort" folding chairs ·
8 wicker chairs w/upholstered seats; oak archlteclurai
bookcase: 2-cedr chests: painted kitchen cabinet
w/flour bin : 60's baby buggy &amp; stroller: old hats tor
ladles; small "Radio" red wagon: pony collar m1rror·
·
Arnold milk shake machine:
OLD ADVERTISING SIGNS:
50"
Prest·O·Utli
~attenes lin s1gn. 50" vertical. Seiberling Tire tin sign.
5 Seiberling·''" t1re s1gn: 5 vertical Delco Battery
Serv1ce s1gn 1n frame. 5' E Mark Edison Battenes t1n
s1gn. Flange Sealed Power Authorizer Service sign
Box after Box of DISNEY, FISH.ER PRICE &amp; BARBIE
items: Most from the 1970's. Severa l Fisher Price'
Toys (Castle, Barn, Holiday inn. Mov1e Viewer. F1sher
Pnce dolls and other 1 lem~) . Several Barb 1e '
access~ries. Cabbage Patch Dolls: boxes games:
Children s books lots more! Also a good select1on of
MODERN Items; J~nn·Air slid in elec range: Nordic
Track Exerc1ser: adJuStable weight machine: Thermos
gas patiO gnii; new steel exhaust hood Warm
Mornmg coal stove ; Christmas decoratio~s
Machine. organ; stands &amp; tables : lawn &amp; 'pa t 1o
furniture, sot goods; unmentioned 1tems. Very br ief
listing.
.
.
TA1 flnflf"'' Q ulltrl•t 111101 will 111
dlzf'ltty
nfd In tt!tttp '"""' Bttm IV/II f&gt;t•vldl 1Mi11r In t:fiH

.,,..,,,

Wv. is seeking a choral director
for music ministry adult. youtt't,
children and tlell eMirs candidate must havt 5lrong choral
and leadership Skilfs end tl(ptrience in working with cttoir&amp; Salary commensurate w1th experl·
ence. Send resume to : Music
Task Foret, PO Box 26, HuntlngtonWV 25706

$25 00-$75.00/t'lf PT/FT

$987 85 WEEKLY! Processing

TERMS OF SAI.E - CASH OR PRE-APPROVED CHECK ONLY

In loving
Memory Of

ATIENTION ALL STUDENTS

•n

Terme: Cash or good check day of auction , positive id ·
required. Home cooked food by Alfred Methodist
church
OWNER: BEN &amp; DORIS EWINQ
AUCTIONEER: OTTIE OPPERMAN 740·385·7185

l

110

Wanted

110

Help Wanted

BURGER kiNG
CAREER OPPORTUHniES

We Seek Carter Onented lndl·
Yiduiils, Strive To Achieve Tht
Bes1, Customer Satisfact1on And
Team Work , If You Have A Desire To SL.cceed With A Goal Ori·
ven Team Oriented And Growing
Comp~my Wt Offer Health, Dental And life Insurance. Prescription Card And Bonus Program,
Paid Vacations, Management
Apparel, Advancement From
Within. Apply In Petson At : Burger King Restaurant, Located In
The Ohio AIYM Plaza Ot Mail Resume To. Burger King , 65 Upper

Olivo" 372 DRIVERS NEEDED.
No tXpet'Ktnce necessary. 14 day

COL 1r1lning. No cost tuition if
qualified Start at U5kt$40k firlt
yoar. Catlioday t ~958·2313.
Dr'-s·Fialbld
llodk:ol

c--

F..,.Otoy Onot

' $2.000 Sign ·On l!oouo
• Ouabty Home Time

' Lale Model Equipl110f11
CDL·A &amp; 3 Mo's. OTA
ECKMILLEA
800-611~36

www.eckmiler.com

River' Roao, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

From Gallipolis, Ohio, at the intersection of State Rt. 7
and 160, (Pine St), take State Rt 160. Go nonh·west
approximately I mile. From the intersection of State Rt
160 and Jackson Pike (Holzer Hospital), go south-east
approximately 1 112 miles to 1591 State Rt. 160. The
Candle Company.

11D Help Wanted
111

,,.,,

\··,.II~~LI•SI,\11

II'&lt;

I I I I~ I "~t ,
f, '. ~ I I''.
~ l .. ' . . (. . _ ( N ·\ . .
• Work In lh• baotlacllltl•o • Make your own ochodule
• Eam Premium Wages • Health tnauranco
• Voc.tlon Bonelli•
HOSPITALS • NURSING HOMES • PRIVATE DUTY
•• r l'. \

Do You or Your Loved Ones Need Assistance with
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I.,ROFI~W!IIIEIIOII&gt;n'ElfALR.SQUALIFIED,
CARING HEALTH
rr
TO FIT YOUR PARTICULAR NEEDS.

110 Help Wanted

.
HOUER SENIOR CARE CENTER

Holzer Senior Care Center a 70 bed skilled nursing
facility in Bidwell, Ohio is pl eased to annouRce a
new wage scale for RNs and LPNs who choose to
work in their team centered environment. Holzer
in the staff who

provide quality of care to our residents. Currently
we are looking for caring, compassionate and
skilled nurses to join our team. Interested nurses
are encouraged to come to the facility, take

a tour

and talk with residents, families and staff regarding
how it feels to be a member of our team.
Please call Jean Lambert, Director of Nursing

DRIVERS WANTED OTA AND
REGIONAL 29 CPM all miles
Untoadmg pay. Personalized dis ·
patch Home ollen Holiday/vacatiOn pay. ~OU( , 100% health in·
surance. 98% no-touch freight.
Auigned ·2000'&amp;· Triangle
Transpottahon 1·513-821·5912 .

Drivers: 3 weeil paid truck driVer
!raining. No 81(perlence needed .
New pay mcrease! $34 ,000/ 1st
~ear wlfull benefits. Call today. 1·
877·230·6002. Sunday -Friday
9am lo 5pm P.A.M. Transport.
www.Oirdnvers.com

Help Wanted

DIMI:
$32000·$42,000 tsi'I'Nrl
No ExpofOI!f1CI Nocessary1
W.Nood372
Srudent OrMIK&amp; NOW!
Let Us Teach -,:)u How
TollnvtATrurl&lt;

Now rs ~r Chance To
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15 Oay COL Tra~ning
TwtiOn Aetmbursemenl
It you Ouai'Y!
Get Slarlod TO&lt;Iayl

CALL
1-800-~·2405 E~eioced call
1·800-958-2353
EARN $25 .000 to $50 ,000/ VR .
Medical tn~urance Billing Assts·
lance oeetled Immediately! Use
your home computer, get FREE
internet. FREE LONG DISTANCE.
Webslle . E-Mail. Call Now! 1·300291·4683 Oopl. 1109.
EARN TO $500 PEA WEEK PTI
FTI Service new and established
Fuller Brush customers m local
area . No door to door required .•
FREE staner supplies available.
Call Ind. Olst. 800-892·2987.
'

NO Cost To You.
If '100 Ouai'YI
1·8000·394-2405

I ~=~·:~:;;,,::.~!building. Baautlfully remodeled In
II
1112
Acral • Ideal location to put dream home along St.

At. 124. $100,000.00

CANDLE SUPPLIES AND EQUIPMENT
Vo.tive Cherry Candle Boxes, Sid Cherry, Ribbons
and stands, (2) Heat sealers, (2) Oift wrap dispensers,
Wire cooling racks (2), Ribbon stands, Mise Candles,
Heat lamps, Salt &amp; pepper shaker candles.

• Lot In Racina, utllltlea available, have flguraa
aet·up. $8,500.1113
Impressive Family Home near ·School. 4 BR, 1 Bath,
Large lront porch, a treasure. Must aee to approclatal
$47,500. 1104 .

MUCH MORE TO BE LISTED
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/ POSITIVE ID

aa a rental or make a home for l3~raett. 3 BR, 1
,_,,.., fenced yard, garage and ahed.
,soo. #101

FINIS (IKE) ISAAC, AUCTIONEER
RoGER L. FETTERLY, AUCTIONEER

L.C. AND BONDED BY STATE Of OHIO
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

Call Wendt at Teatora Real Estate
(740) 992·3325 Call
toall)ll
•.

110 Help Wanted

"notice of Position Uacancy"
Position: W.I.C. Clerk

Real Estate General

Type of Position: Part-time, 21 hours per week
Minimum requirements: Associate Degr&amp;e with
minimum of IWo years experience w~h "iinedical
office/clinic setting preferred. Computer experience,
typing, good oral and written communication skills.
Must hold a valid Ohio driver's license. Date
Available: Immediately. Rate of Pay and Benefits:
Clerk I pay rate as per Gallia County Health
Department salary structure 2000.
Duties: See WIC Director for copy of job description.
Data of Posting: October 5, 2000
Deadline of acceptance of applications: October
13, 2000. Submit to Sandra Walker, RN/WIC Director.
The Gailia County Health Department is an equal
opportunity employer and service provider.

WOOD liEJILTI', INC

Real Estate General

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631
Allen C. Wood , Broker - 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker • 446-0971
Jeanette Moore,· 256·1745
Patricia Ross

740-446-1066

O'BLENESS
.MEMORIAL
O'BLENESS HOSPITAL
REGISTERED NURSES
PART-TIME
FULL-TIME
MED/SURG
ICU
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital has immediate part~time
openings. We offer a very competitive salary range,
individualized orientation, as well as excellent education
and other related benefits. Applications can be picked up
in Human Resources, 55 Hospital Drive, Athens, Ohio,
45701. ·For more information call (740) 592-9227.

EOE
11

110

o Help Wanted
www.infocision. c1 nn

Join Our Team
ould you like to have a job that you enjoy.

earn competitive wages. and also make a

real differencellnfoCision is the recogn ized
leader in the Call Cen~r industry-come be
a part of something special. We care about
our people and our "no send home" policy
proves it
We offer: .
• $7 an hour with full benefits ror
full· and part-time employees

...
Ill

c·~

t1

RUTLAND ST • A large 2 story home with 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, 2 baths, a dining room, living room, kitchen, and a full
basement. Has a front porch and upper balcony to watch the
Ohio River go by.
Make ua an oller I
$42,900.00
ANNE STREET- A one story home with vinyl siding, ne••erf
windows and a part basement. A really cute home with 3
bedrooms. 1 bath sitting on approx. 3/4 acre. Has newer
drywall everywhere inside. Great Starter Home I
$19,900.00
CROUSER RD · Approx. 1.8 acres with a ranch style home
that has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, large eat-in kitchen, living room,
and a big !amity room. Has a partly fenced nice back yard, a
storage building, rear deck, and newer windows . Nice
appearing home.
$58,000.00
CHESTER AREA - Nestled in the pines is this 3 bedroom, 1
bath home. There is an extra commode in the full basement.
Out back is a large porch and there is a 2 car garage. Sitting
on apprmdmately 1.48 acres, 1his is a real buy!
$70,000.00
MAIN STREET • A commercial building with a business
storefront downstairs and 3 apartments upstairs . All have
newer furnaces and the downstairs looks, nice. Great rental

potential. A business downstairs and let the upstairs pay for
the building.
·
$59,000.00
BEECH STREET • A charming 1 1/2 story home with one
bedroom upstairs that has been remodeled recently and has
lots of storage and closet space. Downstairs there are 2
bedrooms, dining room, living room, kitchen, and bath . Has a
part basement, privacy fenced back yard, and is sittin~on a lot

that approx, 50 x 112

NOW $37,900.00

UNCOLN STREET· A 2 story brick home w•th big stone
la~~:;;1t~i.l~o:~n~t,~h•e corner. There are three bedrooms, dining
lr
1 1/2 balhs . family and a sun room. A full
I batsel'llet11. and a large garage with an attached carport . Has
carpet In some rooms .
$74,000.00
LOT FOR SALE IN POMEROY· Older building on prOIJert•iJ
Possible land contract. In need of repairs.
$4,500.00
WANT TO OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS? • Here's the
for youJ An established Army Surplus Store. Comes i
approx. 5 acres. a 3 bedroom ; 1 bath home &amp; about a
acre pond. This store Is bulging wlth merchandise and so i
the extra..&amp;tock areas. Must see to appreciate. Owner ·
give new owners pointers on operation.

• Paid vacation every six months

$179,000.00

• Seven paid holidays
• 40 I (k) pian with comp:~ny match

Attention builders or
mobile

home owners.

Vacant Land just minutes
from the hospilal &amp; town .
Approx. 9 acres MIL. Call
for the location &amp; price .
112020
LOlli Lotsl lOIS! From 2
tor tho whole family
home thal offers 5 acre tracts to 6 acre tracts
'bettroc•ms . 2 baths, FR . K, M/L. Just a lew miles from
, DR, and a 2 1/2 car Gallipolis . Some restriction.
County water available. Call
garage. Call to view #178.
Investment property and ask lor #2022
priced to aalll Two story Homesltaa In Guyon Twp.
home has 2 bedroomE! Available in 5 acre tracts
(upstairs), 1 bath, liv. &amp; din. more or tess. Public water
ms ,
kitchen,
basement. Ask for

and available. Driveways and

#177. culverts already present.

Broker owned.
Affordable
rental
Investment. This home
offers 2 bedrooms, 1 bath .
living room, kitchen and Jull
basement.

Gi.ve Allen a call. #2023
Full city lot In Gallipolis.
Interested? Give us a call.
Listing
#2026 .

Priced in the owned.

20's. Ask for #176. Broker Are you looking for a
owned.
vacant land? We may have
EnJoy the many comforts what you need. Just a few
and conveniences Of living
In town in ihis 1 1/2 story
home with 2 bedrooms and 2
baths ., Some comforts
Include a stroll through the

• Monthly incentive programs

Come in and see for yoursell1

on....

372 l l r M n - No e_..
onco -saryll 14 day COL
Training No eost TuitiOn i1 Quail'*! Start at~~ first yean
Gallloday ·80().394·2405 .

Wanr Your COL?
We Can Help1
$32,000-$38.000 1sr Year1

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Partial list : Armoire, Cedar chest, (great piece) Old
Friction toy, Stamps, Coins, Old silverware, Jewelry
box wl jewelry, Watches, Jeweled Elgin and more, Pair
of oil lamps, Shoe shine kit , Liberty Bell lamp, Ruby
Glass, Haze Atlas, Old Bali jars wilh Zinc lids, George
and Martha Items, Cardina ls throw pillows, Wicker
picnic basket, Tins, Cook books, 2 old kitchen tables.
MISCELLANEOUS
Beautiful Executive type office desk, exc. condition,
(6) 6'x2' storage units, (4) shelving units, (2) kitchen
tables, (2) 8' Folding tables. (I) 6' folding table, GE
Radio/record player, Royal electric cash register,
Microwave oven - Kenmore, 42. cup coffee maker, (2}
Coffee makers, (Toshiba, grinds &amp; perks), Wood stool,
Christmas lights, Mugs and Misc. Glass, Large Candle
Co. Sign, Over load Springs for a Ford pickup, Hand
saws, tools, several speakers and stereo systems.

at 740-446·500 I .

W

110

110 Help Wanted

NEW WACE SCALE!!

Senior Care Center takes pride

Help W.nted

Drtvn:

Owner: Thl'l')' Hanning
DAN SMITH, RACINE, OH AUCTIONEER
OHIO #1344 WV #616
CASH, POSITIVE ID, REFRESHMENTS
NOTE: TERRY HAS BEEN A COLLECTOR
FOR YEARS ..
HE WANTS TO CLEAN HOUSE.

110

Downtown church in Huntington.

uplo

www.WorkAtHomelnlo com/120

I

•

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! 120·$-401
hr. potential Processing claims Is
euy! Traimng pJovided MUST
own PC CAll NOW! 1·888·5655)97 ext. 642

Help Wanted

AttentiOn
:Work from home

Auction
and Flea Market

Le1111 Lemley. ltmlty's Auction
Barn . 740·318·0123 . 740·241·
9866, Fu ll StrY IC t . RtltrtnctS
,...,a liab le, ~ l ctnatd &amp; Bonded . •

Giveaway

Free tiQtr k1ttens. 2 fluffy. 2

Sli·S33 HOUR! GOVERNMENT
JOBS' HIRING NOWI PAID
TRAINING FULL BENEFITS
CALL MON ,· FRI 1·800·449·
4625 81(1 5600

WORK FROM HOME

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls.
toys, jewelry, wood, sew1ng , typmg ... Greal pay! CAll 1·800·7950380 Ext. 1201 (24 hrs)

lnd1an
Corn Fodder Snacks, Square
Hay Bales

80

Border Collie. {740)388-9033

Wanted to Buy

Help Wanted

""'"ATIENTION•••

8 m1fes on ROute 2. N Oetotter 7

(740)41.6-4223

Frtt Puppy To Gooc:l Home, 112

110

....... --····-··-

1450 00· $1 .000 00 WEEKLY
Matl~ng tellers tram home. No experience necessar~ FT/ PT Help
.n eeded tmmedtalely Call 'Sun·
dane&amp; Otstnbutors· 1·800·889·
3449 EXTENSION 22124 hrs).

· 1 1, Severa l AI'IIQues .

9 OO·l30

'

90

IOI.s . {740)245-5747

deoendent Sale&amp; Con.!ultants.

40

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

YJded 1

&amp; VIcinity

Sponsored Bv Allonda Reed,
lisa Stewart And Pat Boyt r, tn-

.

R1Yers1 de Auclion '8arn . Sale
Every Saturday N1ght at 6p m
Au ct1one er Raymond Johnson
1740)256-6989 - - - --

Yard Sale

==========

Bus Trtp To T~e Longaberger !'Home Off1ce. Manufactunng Cam·
pus. the longaDetger !: Home-

~

R11:k Pearson Aut:lion Company.
l ull 11me auc tton eer, complete
auct1on
serv1ce
licensed
•66 .0h10 &amp; West '~hrgm1a, 304·
773·5785 Or 304·773-5447

110

.

ElT:C7686

Auction
and Flea Market

Personals

Help Wanted

CLERICAL Entry LeYell General
Ollicef Computer/ No E•perience
$n B2 TO $18 57 Hour. Benefits
&amp; Pa1d Training 1·11111-942-0245

•
ANNOUNCEMENTS

110

6unbap G:imri - 6tntinrl• Page 03

miles from town are 35
acres ":'ore or less in
Townshtp. Call and ask for
# 2027 ·
We have several 5

park, shopping or going to · plus trocu available
Ihe movies and the schools building that dream hom a.

I

Calll-866-475-7223

. .

Ext. 1904

SOUTH 4TH· A two story home with an apartment up and
an apartment down. The upstairs as 3 bedrooms and the
downstairs has 2 bedrooms, central air, and a dishwasher.
Live in one and renl the other.
$64,00.00
DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................982·5692
JERRY SPRADLING .................................. 949·2131
CHARMELE! SPRADL.ING ........................... 949·2131
BETTY JO COLLINS ................................... 949·2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................... 992·1444
OFFICE ........................................................ 992·2886

.

.

All your utillttes are available

Wtlhtn walktng dtstance. and each lot ttas road
For mer~ information on this frontage. Restricted. Near
home, G1ve Allen a call. Ask Holzer Hospital. Ask for
tor #1 72 .
#2028.
Buy as rental property or to live ln. Home has 2
bedrooms. 1 bath, living room and kitchen . Ask for #175.
Broker owned.

We. are always glad to help you sell or buy
·
,
property.
Rental prope(ly Ia also available.
Give us a call, wa can help.

�•

Page 04 • &amp;unbaP ~1mrs ioentmrl

Pomeroy • Middleport ·Gallipolis, Ohio"' Point Pleasant

wv

Sunday October8,2000

Sunda~~Obaf8,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

ilounbaP ~m1rs iomtmtl • Page OS

I

110

Help Wanted

FuU tlmel Pat t me o.n a Ass,
1n P.lteoed Send Resumes To
CLA 505 Clo Ganpo s Oa y T b
una 825 Th rQ Avenue Ga rpot 5
Ohio -IS831

GoY t a Pot\11 Job• Now H ng

110

Help Wanted

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 YR
Now n ng No expe ence Pa d
a n ng G ea bene s Ca 7

da~s 800 429 3660 ••

Wanted To Do

180

566

Ct pe I Upho 1le

~

210

9083 811

70 7am-7pm CST

GROW NG BUS NESS NEEDS
HELP Wo ~ om home Ma o
ae E Comma ce $522 week
~T
S 000 $4000 wee~ FT
www Asp ngD earns com 4 4

299

230

Professional
Services

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

310 Homes lor Sale

6x72 8 Hl•wood I 2x20 Porch

C een ng

VEND NG ATE MUST SELL H
a c oca 10ns Ea n 8 G $$twk
$8500 F nanc ng ava ab a
800-240-8608 E• 2"03

Gua an eecl wo k W h Fabulous
Res s Fo a F ee Es ma eCai 304)675 &lt;040 Today&lt;

FREE NFORMATION

n Oh S • 0 to $2 80/h BonolSI Pd Tianng Fo JOb nto &amp;
App ca on
8 a 942 0200 ex
4822
GOVT POSTAL JOBS Up o
$ 8 35 nou Fu bene s No ex
pe ence &amp;qu ed Fo aPPJ ca on
and e~t&lt;Jm nfo ma 10n
888 726

Business
Opportunity

210

Business
Opportunity

3 Bed{OOM 2 Bath C A May

Ron lot $17 500 (740)&amp;13-2918

cau

Apartments
for Rent

540 Ml8C8IIaneou1
Merchandlae

House For Ren 2 miles om R 2
n G enwood 3 b w 2 ca a
ach6d garage $350 00 a month

damaoo 0op

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

IIOB LEHOME aN"'N"'E;;R;;-S-

S EEL BU LO NGS New Mus
Se 30~t401! 2 was S 9 200 now
$6 990 40x&amp;Ox 2
S
now $ 0 97 50w. OOx 6 was
$27 590 (\()'1\1 ' 9 990 601t200l 6
was $58 60 now $39 990 800406-5 23 ex f49

wu e •oo

o y 0 scout'! P ces
On V n~ Sk ng Ooo &amp; W nd
ow&amp; Ancho 1 Wa 1 Hea e &amp;
P umb ng &amp; Elect ICI. Pa 1 Fu
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Benne s
Mob t Home Supp y 40 446
94 6 www oNb comlbt:nne

Huot nven

~ 743-8584

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

98S Aedman 14lll60 2 bed oom
Bath New y Pa n ed Ou s de
J.,lkt New ns de S ove And Fie
..ffidge ato nc uded $8500 Te e
.. McClaskey (710)'4&amp;-1706

Seno s
FamlyPo as

PSYCH CS TAROT READERS &amp;
ASTROLOGERS NEEDED FOR
MAJOR TV PSYCH C
NE
WORK FROM YOUR HOME OR
OFF CE MAG KAL 800 3 0

440

917 OouOMI W de 24•-48 3 bed
oom 2 ba h unde p nn ng
blOCk&amp; d &amp;Connect biOdcs $6000
740)256-6522

P H-0-TO-G.R A P 11-Y
Mo n S Photography
5 ManS
Now open for bosmess
Wedd r.gs

Prolesslonal
Services

230

NSTANT
CASH
OWEST
RATES CHECK OUT THE RESr
Up o $500 INSTANTLY 1 877
EAALV PAY LIC:ilcc700:l6

410 Houses for Rent

o an appo10 men

30d 675 7279
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TV ISSI?

8645 Ex 45

No Fee Unless We w n

RES DENTIAL HOME r!NNERS

-888 582 3345

om
ons

REAL ESTATE

en

MERCHANDISE

AJ ea esta e advertising n
th s newspape Ia subJect to
he Fede a Fal Hous ng Act
of 968 when makes it ega1
o advert se any preference
mia onordsc mnalon
based on ace co or rei glon
sex fam a status o national
ot wn o any intent on to
make anv such pre e ence
m aklno dsc mnalon

510

Houaehold
Goods

Tappan H E f c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See

JET

Hea f1ump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems: F ee 8 Yea Wa an y
Benne s Hea ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 8 2 5967 www o b com/ben

AERAT ON MOTORS
Flapalred New &amp; Rebu It n S ~

Cal Ron Evan&amp; 1 800-537 9528

826 8528 US/Canada www g ass

e~-~~~
Ike~~
514 Second Ave , Gallipow Ohio 45631 0994
7 40 446-0008
7 40-441 1111
www evan8 moore com
evansmoo®zoomnet net
FomuJrly Blackburn Realty
Southern Ohao For Over A IJu:arJ!"r Cent1try

me ha x com

Real Estate General

q[ rlmitt lil
446-6806

*

~~~

959 C a k Chapa Ad
B dwe l Oh o 456 4

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

knoWing y accept
advert sements fo ea estate
whch s n'Vloalonof he
aw Ou eade a are hBfeby
n o med hal a dwe ngs
ad-vert sed n h s newspaper
a e a-val ab e on an equal
opportunity basis

EARN $90 000 YEARLY epa ng
NO
ep ac g ong c a s n
w ndsll e ds F ee Cleo BOO

7"0)44~

nan

Th s newspape w not
compu e
303

Wood Bu ne So a lovesea
Cha Fu S ze Chevy Van Seas,

r-.jeed We And Sep c? No Down
Paymen Aequ ed La ge Se ec
on 0 Homes Ca
800 948
5678

B anch Off ce
23 Locus St

Gal po s Oh o

45631

New Bank Rep os Make 2 Pay

men s &amp; Move n No Paymen s
A e Fou Vea s Oakw od Ga
po ~ 740)446-3093

FINANCIAL

21 0

•

FREE DEBT CONSO DAT ON
App ca o w se
e Redu e
pa men s o 65
CASH N

Busmess
Opportunity

CEN T VE

www detl cs o g ca
85

OWN A COMPU ER Pu
o
wo~ $25 o$ 5pe hou wo~ng
I om home Aeques FREE de a s
www 9 su ess com

oe

New &amp; Used Fum u e
New 2 Pace
ng oom Su es
S399 Buy Se Ti ade

OFFER
aoo 328

Murdock s Fac ory Ou e
of Homes
64 Ex 47 C oss l anes
Save housands A d splay
modes mus be sold
866 88 B85

29

R&amp;D s Used Fu n u e &amp; Ap
p ances An ques G ea Se ec
on P ced To Se
Come And
B owse Co ne 0 Aou e 7 &amp;
Add son Pke We Buy Fu ue
740 36 0280

n e na
ona Company Expand ng Se
yo own schedu e Be yo ow
bos $500 $ 500 mo pa
me
$2000 $6000 mo u me FREE
Y OAK FROM HOMf:

CASH CANDY ROUTE Do
ou ea $800 da 30 mach nes
a d a dy $9995
BOO 998
:VEND
FL A N2000 033

NFORMAT ON

800 354 82 6

ATTENTION DEVELOPERS 32
,.c es M L App ox ma e 'I 0
Ac e lake w h sand Mob e
Home W h Add On $99 500
740 388 8678

Real Estate General

BRUNER LAND
740-441 492

Meigs Co N e La ge Home
Mas e s e 3 Mo e Bedrooms
With H so c Townsh p Schoo
house $82 000 La ge Poe Sa
On6Aces$3 OOOor 6Aces
$23 000 On SA 68 Home on 6
A es $40 000 Dan e WOOded
5 Ac es Wa e Paved Road

Henry E Cleland Jr

992 2259

Apartments
lor Rent

OFFICE

Acceptmg Appltcatwns
I Bedroom Apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or Disabled
or Handtcapped
Eligibility Based on Income
Handicapped Access1biltty
Please Call (740) 992 3055
TDD# (800) 855 2880

p operty o an a o epa serv ce
Redu ed o $35 000

11095 Count y sanlng ciDSe to
own Th s 3 B~ba h offers
M oo~ . . .,
w h he
conven er1(1 8 hlf!Newe
cape
~
emen
w ndoa ,
s arte o
e eml\: orne Reduced to

11051 The anaw•r to 111 ou
dream• end w th n your
m11n1l Many poss b as w th
h s beaut fu 2 slory home II
ofle a 3 BA 1 BA LR w/fi ep ace
OR
ha dwood
oo ng
k tchen enc osed

$59 900

11055 Br ght 1h ny and new
looklngt Th s br ck &amp; v rry anch
NEW ca pet w ndows
nau a on can a a and
rurr1aco. Mo a han 1800 aq ft of
and a 28x40
l 'd-.toiChl9d. lbiOJ:k shop Ca today
to f nd out add one de a s
$781100

Sherr! L Hart

742 2357

Office

992 2259

t 0 000
Ga a Co 37 Parce s To Choose
fil'om Ke Ad Home On N ce
Settng SA es$ 0000 Ao
4 ande 0 Ac es W ll Pond
$25 000 6 Ac OS $ 9 000

a ached ga age one ca
de ached garage AND add ona
n aw quane s w h 2 bed ooms
one bah k chen
nb) oom w
ca port Reduced to $79 000

Chesh e 6 Ac es $9 000 o 37

Ac es $40 000 C ay ownsh p
a es $22 000 Ty oon a~e
Aea OAcesS 2500
Jackson Co Off SA 7 6 N ce
la ge Fe ds Pus Woods 5 Ac
es$ 70000 2A es$24000
County Wa e Oakh 5 Ac es

992-2259
CARRYOUT BUS NESS
CONVEN ENCE STORE

12015 PR CE REDUCED FOR
QUICK SALEI WHY RENT WHEN
YOU CAN AFFORD YOUR OWN
BRAND NEW
Beau u

12018 The benefltt
cHy n 1 nol~hloo~!!.?'&gt;d
Letths3

loca ed

$

3500o 2A es$ 8000
Land A a ab e n 42 Cou ~as
Ca Now Fo Maps We

F nanceOu P ope esW hA
"0 Pe cen Add On Cash P es

12024 Over ook ollng country
mtldowa om th s peace u h
op sett ng wh e bask g n he
sun bes de you own p a e poo
n add on o he 4 Bed ooms and
3 Ba lls
he home offe s a
spac ous g ee oom o e oo~ ng
he 20x40
g ound poo and
24~t36 poo
hO sa g ea o
en e a n ng An o e s Zfld
a acllad wo ca ga age and
soagebu dng ocaedon 7AC
MIL rounds h s showp ace ou
Sl59900

Ooood

Equa l Housmg
Opportuntty
12027 Local•d n Danville h s
o a enova &amp;d
2 story elfers

v

Real Estate General

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY OCTOBER 8, 1-3 PM

POSSESSION

Just Reduced to

$67 900

Mot vated se e En oy qu et subu ban 1fe c ose o
town 1 1 2 story home s tuated on ot and a ha I 4
BA f n shed att c ful basement fenced n ya d
wood bu n ng- f ep ace newe oaf appl ances
Included Ca Barb Blame o Dan W ebaugh 0
add tonal nfo o o schedu e a p vate v ew ng a

PORTLAND BUFFINGTON LAND NG s an
execut ve subd v son des gned o ho se
ave s and boa e s You won be eve he
fea u es Access to he beau u Oh o fo boat
ave s 00 boa dock
d ng ng p en c
she e dng as and muc~ mae Ce an
es c ons app y La p ces and a!Jt\lage vary
acca d ng a he part cu a amen es Lot # 0
2 57 aces pus sha e ot # 2 Land
$6 000 mp ovemen s $7 000 Man enance
und $3 000 P ce to Lot # 0 $27 500 p us
o # 2 sha e

BOO 484 6130 4399

PR CE REDUCED POMEROY Condo
S ee
nvesto s Th s wou d make a g ea
en a p openy A 2 story home w lh 560 sq
tt 5 ooms 3 bed ooms 1 rna h po ches up
a d down Sma bu n ce back ya d P ced
gh at on y $ 8 000

Sluss Realt y Company
739 Hurdmg W y \\ sl Gal o OI
4..J.Il { l
(419) 4fi8 I H 1 (800) 484 fi 130 I!IJ!

---------------------J

3 bed ooms and a bath W th a
b gh new kitche n wood floo ng
new w ndows s d ng and a
oof a you need to do s move
n Ca o add ona de as and
aca ion $59 000

2 BA home on
Fam y com
ng oom w ep ace DR and
age u ty oom n hs one with
u basemen
Attached 2 ca
ga age and detached 2 ca ga age
as we old be sed o soaga
P ed o aqucksae $85000
N3349
MMED ATE

I

DEXTER n the county He e s he one
Ou e seU ng anch type home 3 bed cams
bah equ pped k c en ha dwood 1oo s n ce
v ng com on s ng po ch A n good
cond ton Pus new k chen cab nets sa e e
d sh washe &amp; drye a I b nds &amp; d apes stay
77 ac es o nea y eve g ound ASKING
$55 000
PRICE REDUCED SYRACUSE A o w lh an
Oh o R ve v ew but ou o ood wa e s A
pertect pace o a new home modu a o
a e Loca ed on SR 124 n he c ly m Is
and c y wae sewe and eec cava abe
Th s ot has been educed 1o $ 2 000

POMEROY LINCOLN TERRACE
2 s ory w h tu basemen L v ng oom k chen ba h
2 bed aoms some emode ng f on s n ng po ch Lot 43 x 245 Owne may cons de a and
contract MAKE OFFER $ 8 900

Sp

o e

12038 New L II ng N Cl 3
bid oom 3 bath br ck anch
w h a fu basement can a hea
anda onanaceo and n he
coun ry Ca now $74 900
12041 New L II ngl 53 ICFII
m,ll n Charo 1 1 Like •r••
Btlul ful V IWI Q Ill bu ding
1111
12042 New Llallng N ce 1993
Mob e Home 2 bedrooms ba h
bay w ndow ga den ub gas
funace 8 x 2 add on B x 24
f on deck and 8 1t 2 ea deck:
A so nc uded s washa drye
efrige a o gas stove and ce a
a cond on ng No and ncluded
mob e mus be mo ed

3

bedms
bah SAc m/ OUET
OCAT ON ce a a bott e gas
u nace ny ga age &amp; bu d ngs
$58 000
13383 Sl Rl 2 8 4 BR
bah
home w h de ached ca ga age
wa e on ac m/ MAKE AN OFFER

POMEROY BUNKER HILL 95 aces w th a
1 2 story ame home Fenced o pastu e
ba n and shop Roya es on a and gas we s
2 ponds 7 ooms 3 bed ooms n home
vacuum ots of k Iehan cab nets F ee Gas
ASKING $130 000

13380 ATIENT ON Owne w ng

o sha

e~

&amp;ew(;ls

whbe
cus om b
un s V S

he now
mao
as
medo
homes o doub eWlde

13387
REDUCED
PR CE
$ 65 000 00
PERFECT FOR

THE FAM LV Also conven en o
mos
e ery1h ng
S o es
Schoo s Hosp a Cus om bu 3
b&amp;d ooms 3 ba hs
t:lnng
oom
&amp;
w app ances
basemen
apartmen k che
ng oom
bah Fon &amp; ea deck 2 ca
attached ga age A mos 4 ac as
o pak kegou dsw socked
pond &amp; gazebo VLS

Co P ced ose

12005 lmmscul1te Br ck Ranch
with 2 bed ooms one ba h a ge
vng &amp; dnng oom ea n
k tchen ova s zed one ce

(4000 A and 9A es

CROSS POINTE
APARTMENTS

a sed anc with 4 ca bssement
ga age Partee fo nves ment

back porch $H.OOO

SC Re\1664

440

New And Used Fu n u e So e
Be ow Ho day nn Kanagua Buy
A New Bed oom Su 1e And Ge
The Man esses F ee New H de
a Bed So as $399 We Se
G ave Mon ments And Vases

BA

11032 W1nt tht conv1n ~nee ot
llv ng In town AND lpiCIOUI
v ng •ccommodltlone? Then
th s s 1he house ro vou W th
almost 4 000 squa e fee of I ow ng
space
wh ch he udes 6
bedrooms and 4 ba hs 11118 home
es a on an ove s zed co ne ot
ocated n Gall pols nea schoo e
shopp ng chu ches and he c ty
park $1 0111100

1112028 Lowe n one and e he
othe he p pay you mortg1g1 2
story house w th 3 bed ooms and
a bah AND a mob e home w h 2
bed ooms and a ba h a se up
and eady o go On y $55 000

-.2030 Immaculate home
wall groomed lawn
beautiful backyard view
In town
liv i ng
and
watarlronl property all
rolled Into ONE! Th s we
ca ed fa 3 bed oom
fu
bath and 2 ha ba h home
has ha dwood oo s and
map e wood h oughou 2
wood burn ng f ep aces
hand c atted sta ned g ass
des gned doo s and a fu
d y basemen
Ha d to
be eve but th s home s
at
$89 900

RENTALS

J{
j

'

.

12041 Ntw L It ng N Cl lol on
SA ~4 w h 24 x 30 bu dng
AND a 3 bed oom
2 bah
mob e home a se up end
eady o you $29 900

--~~
'

·~:r-

M 873 REDUCED PR CE

ac es c ose o new Fwy hosp a
shop c
Wa e gas sewe
Adonng
Pneces
Nusng

Home

-

www.Evans-Moore.com

40

ac

11

�•

•
Page D6 • titunbl!' ll:imtt -tittnllntl
570

540 Miscellaneous
• ·
MerchandiH
•
• WANT A COMPUTER? Bul no

Pumpkms. Corn Maze Puzzte at
Taylor 's Berry Patch 2864 Kerr
Ad . Open Saturdays Noon-7 :00

!740)-245-9047

Ri cl'lards Brothers Fruit Farm·
Apples &amp; Much Morel 24 M iles
Nort h 01 Gallipolis On County
Road 46.(7-!0128&amp;--4584

4(1&gt;62 Was $14,880, Bell $6,950:

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

50xiOOWas $32.100, Sell
$12.900, Never Put Up!

Besr Offer! 1677)398·3662

Block. br~ck sewer p1pes. wtnd·
ows , lmtels, etc . Claude Wrn~ers,
Rro Grande . OH Call 740-245·
5121

610 Farm Equipment ·
1000 Gallon D&amp;Laval Cooler With
2, 3HP Compressors And C19
Automatic Washer, 80ft of 2 Inch
Glass Ptpe ltne W1th Glass Milk
Recetver Jar And Milk Pump
With 3HP Delaval vacl!uum
Pump. Delaval Clear V1ew Milker.
All Equipment In E!tcellent Condition . Call Eve ni 1gs (7 40 )2455047

Pets for Sale

AKC Datmalrons pupp1es. beau·
hful spots, 6 wk old babies . PupPY layaway plan available

s125.00 304-937-2929.

AKC M1nature Pood les. First

ShOts, (740)379-2639

1964 2000 Ford Tractor. looks
good and runs good 4200 {304)·

AKC Reg1stered Female Ch1nese
. Pug , 8 Weeks Old . Shots &amp;
· "wormed $350
(7 40)388-

oo.

630

• CKC reg . Rat Temer puppres. 6
wks Old, shots &amp; wormed , $125,
• call after Spm, 74(}:'843-1005_

Livestock

.

- Extra · small registered mrniature
• York1e. blue &amp; gold 10 months,
:. $350 . 740-985·4149.

8001 1:1 Bales. Barn Kepi, $15.00
Each , 12001b Second Cutting,
$25 .00 Each, ($20 Large Quanti·

: Full Blooded Male Chihuahua
· Puppies. F1rst Set Of Shots, 8
Weeks On 9t t'3100 $200, Firm ,
: 740·256•6390 . 740-446·2122

Ires) (740)37g..2768

Hay lor sale square bales 1 mile
on At 2 N.,304·675-4869

Mystrc Poms Reopenrng~ any
bre ed dog groomrng available.
Also show qual1ty and pet Poms
• available for sale . 740·949·3416 .
r

~

Hay lor Sate. Square Bales &amp;
Round Bales. (740}386-9033
Hay For Sale · Sq uare Bales,

~. Rat Ternor

puppres , tails
.. ·docked, 1 s1 shots &amp; wormed 6
.. wks old SlOO 00 304·675-7946
ca ll belore 9pm.
" .Wh1te Toy Poodle. a Months Old
: S1 50, Apricot Toy Poodle Puppy,
8 W..ks Old, (740)446-3398

•

3087.
1952 Pl.,.mouth, 32000 actual
miles, No Dents! No Ruslll304)-

576-2532.

1$85 Chrysler Flflh Ave . 1371(
miles, runs 'goo d, garage kept!
(304)- 773-9509 afiBr 4,30

1986 Lincoln Town car, an power,
leather interior, good condition,
tiOK miles. S2800 , 740·593·
7390
1988 CorsiCa. For Parts Ooty, Engine Rr.ms Good, Four Good
T&lt;es. $400 080,(740)441-1015
~988 Monte

Carlo SS, T-Tops ;
CO ; New Rubber, Can be seen at
Empire Furniture. $6000 .00 Firm,

call (740)446-7538

1990 Olds Cutlass Supreme, V6
AutomaiiC , Excellent Condition
Inside &amp; Out, $3500 OBO

$2500.00. (740)256-&lt;l354.

1991 Ford Tempo, 60,000 Miles.
One Owner. Asking $1500. {740)

(740)37~2639

1995

Che~o~y

Blazer lS new

transmis sion. wneels. ground el·
lects

package. clean &amp; nice TlC

asking $13.500.304-675-5544.

1996 Ford Escort, 33.8 40 miles.
auto, minor rear damage. $2900:
1998 Chevy Cavalier, 73,000
miles, auto, cJd, sunroof, llood ear.

$4,100.

1993 Saab. 9005. 4 door, 16
78,605 miles. 5 speed.
minor front damage, (parts avail·
able). $1995 .
1995 Ford Taurus Sho, 49,000
mires. front damage . $3.400. 740992-1506 days, 740·949-2644
~o~alve.

large Roll Balas of Hay $15, Detrvery Available, (740)44~1052

eves·.

Straw : Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
' Round Deli~o~ery &amp; Vol ume Dis·
count Ava itable. Heritage Farm .

1996 Ford Probe. air, tilt, crurse ,
loaded, rear spoiler, books for
'$7000 , se ll for $3995 firm . 740·
992·6824 .

(304)675-5724.

Condition .

WS6

r

86 Ford Tempo, looks Good,

6465.

.

SERVIC ES

810

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnished _ Es·

Miles. (740)441-0564 Or (740)
«6-0038

1975. Col 24 Hr&amp;. (740)
446-0870, Hr00-267-0576. Rog""'iShod

2000 Kawasaki Bayou 300 4x4
tour wheeler. red &amp; black, $4200.
199&lt;11 Kawasaki Bayou 300 4x4
b.Jr wheeler, tw&amp; &amp; black. $3000.
740-992·1 !506 days or 740-949 -

ers Walerprooting.

Public Notice
Public Notice
Salem Townllllp ~ Deptrtment ol Natural
11ocept bkla on 1M 200t Aetourcea, Dlvlalon ol
mowing contract 1111 lllneral
Attourcta
Octcller 30, 2000 at 4:00 management The ptapDIId
Pll. All blelt nHCI to be coal
mlnlnt
anel
IICICII- to 1M clelh ofllce. reclamation operttlon will
u.t of~ anelllat bt conducttel In lltlge
of etrnatarlaa can be County,
Columbia
obttlntel from the Cltrkt Townllllp, Frtellont 7, 25,
olllae. Biela will be opet ttCI anel 31. The propa ..CI
on Octabu 30, 2000 at 7:00 unelergrounel mlnlnv . , . .
Plllllhe Seltm Fire Houtt.
t anel
T N - hiYI 111e option to encompeIt located on the Y....
reject any anclall bkla.
Mlllt, Ohio 7 112 minute
(10) .. 1"5, 22, 3 tc
U.S.G.S. quaelrtntle map,
2.1 mllea •••t ol Point
Public Notice
Roell. Ohio. The application
propo••• to expend the
LEGAL NOTICE
arta lor lull coal extrac:tlon
Southern Ohio Cool mining by Iongweii and
Comptny, Melgt Mine No. 2, room anel pillar mining
P.O. Box 490, Athena, Ohio -(longwtll ciiVtiOprntnlj.
45701, h.. aubmltteel an
The application It on flit
undtrground
mining at tht office of Melga
eeljactnt artt application to County recordtr, lltlt•
Coal
Mining / and Counly Court Houa•,
Reclamtllon ParmH Numller Second StrMt, Pomeroy,
D-0355-6 , to the Ohio Dhlo 4578t for. public

All types of masonry brick. bloclc
&amp; stone . free ealimates. 304·

;:.2&amp;«:::.....
-:-"'-:-ng.:•::-·-::~::--­

773-9550.

2ooo

CARS FROM s291Mo. ImpoundS/ ·
Polaris 500 Rem ington.
repos Fee . so Down/ 2 4 mos . Camo Edition. Wench. Accesso·
019.9% . For listings 1-800-3 IY· ries, l ow Hours, Sell For Payoff.

3323.2156.

S15,500. (H0)446-

Moton:ycles

AU types of remodeling, room ad·

dittons, roofing, garages. Free es-

(740)441-1415.

tifr\ates, 304~773-9550.

-:-::-:--:-::--:-~-

720 Trucks for Sale
1976 Ford lTD all original. like
new inside/ outside. Low miles,
garage kept 25 years . $20,000;
080 (304)-675-6984 080
1977. Ford Truck Runs good and
good Cod y, St .500. 1986 Forel
Taurus, runs good . New tires .
$800.00 Nice lull size pool table
$500. {304) 458-1732

1993 5· 10 Blazer. Automatic 1 Air,
CO Pla yer, 73,000 Miles , New
Brakes, P-40)446-Q425 After 12

Noon .
1994 GMC Z-71. 350. Power Eve~
rythlng , New Brakes. Tires Looks
Good And Runs Good. {740)446Q947
1995 GMC Sonoma pickup, spa~
Cial package, air, carpet, clean inside and out. like new , 60 ,000
miles. pnce negotiable, 740-949·

4 Wheeler For Sale. 1996 350 4·
wheel Drive Big Bear. like New
Condllion With Extras . $3800.

(30-4}6Js-3560
97 Kawasaki I&lt;DX220 Oirtblke.
Excellent Condition, Priced Right,
11 40)446-4604 (740)379-2844
$2200. (740)367-7524

1:-:---:-::~~~:..:...--::-­
tionda 250 4 · Wheeler, Excellent

Condition. Call(7401256-1267
Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer for
Sale By Pub llc Auclion A 2000
Polatls 325 1145426, at 10:00 am.
on 10121100 At Ohio Valley Banlc
A
nnex, 143 3rd Ave ., Gallipolis,
Ohio. Sold 10 the highest bideler
"as IS~ where is" without expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be see n by calling the Col~
lectron Departmental (740)441~
1038. OVB re se rwes the rig ht to
accepiJ reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw Jtems lrom sale prior to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK.

I=:-:--::---'....;:-':-'-:-:----

2069.
750 Boats &amp; Motors
99 Dodge Oakola Exrenaed cao.
for Sale
V-6 A /C. Red/ Silwer, 12 ,500 ,
Miles, Payoff, $14,900, 78 Blazer
4x4 , 68 GMC Pickup, Make OHer.

(740)446-4913
730

1987 Sea R~y. 23 Cudely Cabin,
V-8. 260 Mercury Camper, Pa ck·
~ge With ,;Trailer, E.11cellent Condi·
lion, Q@€' Owner. Harold Davis .

(740))146-0416

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1985 Cheily 4x4, 305 frve speed,
beelliner. extras, 33" radials,
$4900 080. rerlatlle !ruck. 740 992-7458 .
1988 Toyota Pick-Up, 4x4, $2000,

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

760

840

Residential or commerci~l wiring,
new service or repairs. Master li·
censed electricia n . Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 30-4~675·

1786.

www.comlcl .com

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Tha City of Galllpollt Will
hold 1 public hearing on
October 24, 2000, at 7:00
p.m. In tht Municipal
Courtroom, 518 Stcond
Avenue, Gelllpollt, Ohio.
Catt 11- Botrel ol Zoning
Appeal•- Walmart Storea,
Inc., 2145 E11tern Avenue,
vartance for a wall mounttd .
tlgn In a General :
Commercial Dlatrlct
Cate 12- Botrel of Zoning
Appealo- Gtllla Property
Inc., Lynn Angell, 234 Third
Avenue, verfanca for 1 frH
•tanding tlgn In a
Neighborhood Commercial · I ~:~~!~le
Olttrtct
l1
Octoller 8, 2000.

1-::--::--:-:---:--'-_:_.:..:...:..:....:._
895-3319

NEW YORK (AP) the day higher, but home to bid for those uiariy vulnerable.
~ ~ Stocks fell sh•rpiy 1 soon turned lower as stocks," said Charles
The pattern continFriday, pushing the . mvestors grew defen- White, portfolio man- ued Friday.
• Nasdaq
composite . sive before the barrage ager at Avaur AssociShares ofVeeco tumof
profit
reports
ates.
Jndex to its lowest level
bled S3~.97 " to S67.56.
expec ted over the next
Concerns
about
&gt;} ince May, as profit
a 34 percent drop, after
profit
. worries again rattled three weeks . Investors third-quarter
semiconductor
are increasingly wor- reports, which begin in the
, !echnology shares and
ried that companies earnt!st next week. have company warned of
,an unexpected drop in
disappointing earnings
··unemployment rekin- won't meet W•ll Street ·dogged the market
and a UBS Warburg
forecasts.
since early September.
dled fears of inflation.
analyst downgraded the
" People want to get Warnings of poor earn The
techno lo gystock from '' buy" to
focused Nasdaq com- out of the tech nology ings have provoked a "hold."
posrte index fell 111 .09 names and nobody's series of sellotfs , with
A similar warning
high-tec h issues partie, ·10 3,361 .01, only about
from software compa ny
'150 points above this
Marimba sent its shares
year 's lowest close at
plunging nearly 50
3.205. 11 on May 26.
' percent, down $5.50 to
For the week, the Nas• 1$5.63 .
daq fell 311.81 or 8.5
Leading the Dow"s
p~rcent.
decline was J.P. MorThe
Dow Jones
gan, slipping $6.38 to
rndustriai average fell
S153. Hom e Depot
l ~8.38 to 10,596.54. its
lim·est
close
smce
August, giving the blue
chips a loss of 54.38 for
the week. The Standard
&amp; Poor's 500 fell 27.29
to 1,408.99, giving it a
loss of 30.3S for the
week.
"The
market
remains nasty and nervous," said Alan Acker_man, senior vice presi:.aenr at Fahnestock.
.~There are not many
"Who believe we've hit
~c bottom yet."
:.:: The market opened
·:--._--------~---&lt; • Re•l Eat.te G•n•r•l

In the

2 New CJ ,J eep Front Fenders.
One rear Seat. HOOd Grill Cavity

KANAUGA- Great business
county I
location . .

304-675- 1564.

Real Eatate Gener•l

.

E

fireplace , extra storage space, firepl~c~, Over 2,000 square 1/2
s1ory
co':lpl
1 car built-in garage, nice treed feet liVing space. A~ached 2 r~eled hom~ . M

li

J: 0t u~~~ees. L~c
room, family room

level
and
large
area.

Deta~ed 24
kilch~ garage, Side _deck

bedrooms, family room, lrvrng
room. covered front porch and 1999 SECTION~L-JUST
more. M2059
UKE NEW... Liv
, fully
COMMERCIAL 2 St
equi~A\)
n,
3

f1o~
and shop, retail, ole. 011 street
w ith newer oak ~binets &amp; co~crete patto. Nice level lot pari&lt;ing area. Call for more
ceramic tile llooring deck off being approx. 116 x 160 information. ll2044
dining area 2 1~11 bath ii2065
anached I ~ar garage. 16 s~ LIKE NEW RANCH ... Only 6 2 LOTS ONE PRICE $14,500
Looking 32 swimming pool &amp; detached yrs young with a large sized Each
lol being a~prox.
style hom~ on a 30 x 30 garage, so much IMng room and kitchen plenlilul 66' 166 · wale~.
electrrc . &amp;

with

1

bath.

x

32 building lhat is ideal for

Jot? Then read on ... neat morel You'll be impressed as wtth
cabmet
space,
3
comfortabte home with soon
as you
view
this ~rooms eac h with own walk·
living room , format dining immaculate home! 159 Kelly 1n closet. ~er 1.7 acres and
nice kitchen with extra Drrve! 112080
complete With second water
space, 3 bedrooms, NOT
A .GREAT
BIG lap and septic for mobile home

laundry room, 1.5 baths and PRICE ...asking
518 000 00 2
- large
aHached
garage. bedrooms mobile
·h'ome with
ConvenieritJy loCated to church, nice sized screened-in porch
lsc:he&gt;ols,, grocery and morel silualed on nice lor. Slorage
offer they can't refuse.

shed with covered patio area

o~erlookmg Raccoon Creek.
Ntce ptace to come to on
weekends or just simply live
all year around. 12089c

~~ge 1 1 a~a~lable.
,;CJ71~g 0 5 · a easy to

NEW LISTING- Vacanl land. 16 Acres m/1. Green
Twp. with a beautiful view. Very near the newest home
development Priced to sell. #280

MUST SELL! REQUESTING YOUR OFFER ...
needs to sell IMMEDIATELY due to health reason1sl
ranch with large kitchen &amp; dining area, living room wilh
lrreplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car anached garage.
covered front porch, nice easy lo maintain lot. QUICK
POSSESSION! M2081

Must

atta~hed garage
and morel Pncacy fe nce
surrounds above ground pool.
Nicely landscaped. el us show
11 to youl ~
GREAT RETREAT all year

PRETTY LOT... PLUS a 14 x
70 mobile home with 2
bedrooms and beth. Storage
building with covered patio &amp;
deck overlooking Raccoon

Nice C ree"mow. 12089b

Asking

TO

DEAL!. ft066

$72,900.00 IS THE NEW
ASKING PRICE FOR THESE
TWO HOMESI
2 Story
spacious home wilh 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs. Second

one l]_ome pa~· the mortgage
payment #2033
NOTHING TO DO HERE
EXCEPT
MOVE
IN!
Immaculate ·bi-level consisting
of living room, dmmg area,

kttc~en, 3 bedrooms, n1ce
famtly room and large laundry
room and g~rage . Rear deck
and fenced-ln. lawn . Lots of
updates on th1s home. Expect

C~e~l Lemley

142·3111

.

'

acres with fencing, barn and

CHESTER VILLAGE. This one cellar Like newer 1996 14'x70'
won 't last long. 3 Bedrooms, mobile home complete with 2

formal living room with gas baths, central air. Additional
fireplace , family room , kitchen inCome from extra rental site
and laundry. Ntce solid home with septic and water well. Call
w1th character To make an Cherty for an appointment to
view this properly today! 12070
appointment call today! 12090

potential. Priced at $81,500.1620

2 FRs and 2 1/2 balhs. 2 porches. 1 car
garage. New l'oof, brick &amp; vinyl siding.

Commercial lot located next to Ohio
Rlvor Plaza with opprox. 140 ft. of

$155 ,500 11225

road frontage on Eastern Avenue.
Priced at $100,000. Call for detalla.

2807 SR t24 ... $94,900.00
$79.000.00
lmmediare
Possession! I 1/2 Story home
that offers newer roof and hot
tub, dining room, kitchen, den,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths and
more! Let's go look! 12069

Bi-level home that consists of

4 bedrooms. 3 balhs, living
room, formal dining, kitchen
and more on the inside.
Outside there is approx. 8 .94
acres with a stocked pond .
More call for complete listing!

112078

full basement with outside entrance,
large 2 car gara,99, huge garden spot,
20 )II 36 outbulrding and much more .
Large BR upstairs could be made into 2

nneeded. $77.500 11227

BtaUUiully

9791 SR 7, 5- Large
along the river offers great views, great
living
space and great . outside
enjoyment. Over 3200 sq. ft. of living
space plus a full basement arid over

1600 sq. ft. of decks. 3-4 BAs. 3 barhs,

story

homo

features 4 BAs, 2full baths, LR, FA, OR
and eat~in kitchen. Very nice woodwork,
hardwood floors and beautiful staircase.
Garage, several outbui ldings and 4
porches. 3.56 acres, m/1. $163,900 1212

n

Cedar Street.. With some T.L.C., this
spacious 3 BA home will make a great

1789 Addloon Pike·
Potential!! .Lovely seHing
FREE
gas to the property is included with this
raised ranch with vaulted ceilings in the
LA, OR and kitchen , 3 BAs, bath, full
unfinished basement on approx. 12

buyll LR, DR, kirchen and 1 1/2 baths.
New

windows ,

$39,000 #213

hardwood

floors.

&gt;fiJ.U\JU 1616

11621

dining rooms, eat-in kitchen
open to large family room wilh
frreplace. 3-4 bedrooms, 2.5
baths, 2 car aHached garage
and
.
mo:el Immediate
possessron here./12024

735

Beech

~lid dle110rl·

Investment prope11y cons1sting at
4plex with each unit have 1 bedroom

and 1 barh. $45,000 f130

;.;.;.w

6024 St. ~t. 71 Soutfi~
USTINGI

Very

well

home; Nice carpel throughout.
Equipped kitchen, 3 bedrooms,
large level lol with apple trees
shrubs.
Sells
lor
and
$55,000.00 112091

~-

105 Edomt
Tycoon l.akell

in the
Lane, you'll
th is spacious
home that
offers wonderful privacy, while not
sacrificing convenience. 4-5 BA home
w1th 3 baths, LA, large FA, med1a room
and indoor
I 13 acres include pond
$245,000 #132
and creek

New Home on 4 Acres This newly
constructed home rests on 4 acres of
land nea Raccoon Creek, Vaulted
ceiling accentuate the great room effect
in the LA. DR and kitchen. 3 BAs
(master BR also has vaulted ·ceiling)
and 2 full baths. Large deck. Priced at
!!.2!~~~1 ·133

li

maintained 25 yr. old ranch

,-

33322 JACKS ROADI 20 plus
the
eye
here!
Great
room
conststlng of kttchen w1th custom
made cabinets. INtng roomand
dimng. 2 full baths, c;pvered front
,,fJrch. rear deck . large detached
pole garage &amp; m1sc. sheds. This IS
JUSt lor starters come and see the
rest 12086

NEW

Featuring
Convenience
Affardabililyll large FA w ith vaulted
ceiling and open to the kitchen is very
Inviting. Large LA and also Includes a
study. Newer furnace, central air and
root Great back yard overtooks
Memorial Field. $75,000 1233

LA, FA, OR and den. Nice eat-in
kitchen. 2 car garage. $360,000 1203

$189,000 1215

Attention lnveatora.. . we could have
the property for you located in the
Village of Radney offering large lot, 2
bedroo ms, 1 1/2 baths, LA, den, eat-in
kitc hen in good cond11ion. Priced at only
$38,500 . Now may be the time to add
to
portfolio or a chan ce to begin a

r:oo-i:oo

hme! Call at once.

COUNTY
,:

neighborhood. $79,500 #618

Sunday) Qctober -r stfi

a big pricel Nor a bil 12073

----

5 yr.
lovely
brick ranch offers L~. OR , FA with gas
log fireplace, 3 BAs and baths, nice size
lot with fenced in back yard located on a
dead~end street in
a family oriented

$19,000. round. Ou1et country setting home IS 1 1/2 story w;th 3 This
place you ought to
with frontage along Raccoon. bedrooms/6 Stall Horse barn bel Take a peek inside and
1994 . Home with . relaxing and over 1 acre lot. Good you'll agree. Roomy 1 112
w~h road
oversiZed screened 1n deck. 3 garden spot. Lei the rent from story hme wilh formal living &amp;

country harpe tha~ offers lots of hv1ng spac.e.and extehs~v~ remodeling Including a new kitchen with beautiful cherry cabinets
~ hardwood floonng, 4 bedrooms, .royer, hvmg room, dlntng room, family room, 2 baths. Lots of road frontage with several
l!llabl~ a~d ~asture acres ~on~ with some wood land . Pond &amp; fencing, frontage along Raccoon Creek. Way to much to
menbon 1n thts ad. Owner wtll dtvide into 4 parcels or se ll as whole . Must call for complete listing. I2063

'

m~ .

r

WANTING

43

504 4th Avo. 3 BR

61 Court Street- Located on the corner
· of 3rd and Court, this commercial
a
building offers a total of 9,060 sq. ft. of
bedroom! This 4 BR home offers

. room, drnrng room. k1lchen basement, covered front porch.

ca r

491.02 .

REAL ESTATE

PO Bo• 614 • P.lploy, WV 25271

IMPROVEMENTS GALORE! 'NIIh 2nd kilchen in basemen!. Owner has moved our and
Neal roomy 3 bedroom, 2 bath Covered rear patro. Approx. 3 wants rt soldl $30's You will be
home situated on large 1.079 acres ~nd lois more comes Impressed with this onel/12037

double

solidated volume came
to 1.37 biUion shares,
compared with 1.40
billion shares in the last
sess•on.
The Russell 2000
index fell 11 . 65 to

..&amp;1~

PRICE
DROPPED
TO
$44,900.00 Just nol your
typical ranch. Try thiS cure A- NOT CALUNG TO VIEW D...MUST SEE! Vinyl sided 2
lrame on lor srze_. 3 bedrooms, THIS
RANCH ...
Ideally bedroom home that rests on

12075

advancers by a 2- to - 1
ratio on the New York
Stock Exchange . Con-

t-1'1'1111:appi0111Cil,l'llt.Mt

.

M&gt;aths. Cental a ir!

#2061

decks. Partial basement with high
ceilings and outside entrance. 2 car
garage plus 15 x 25 outbuilding.

space for a large family or also perfect
for an extended family. Large LA,
formal OR, kitchen with breakfast area,

a~re treed .tot. living room, With th1s
e loved to own lol. kllchen, fam1ly room, laundry, OWNER

bedr

and ftoor plan featu res 3 BAs, 2 1/2
baths, LA, FA , DR and eat-in kitchen
plus a solarium room surrounded by

Wooded 20 acres,

hllp:llwww.apploa.com

t5568 SR 1~1... 1 1/2 story Approx. 5 acres
home complete
wilh 3 fronrage along Raccoon bedrooms, 2 full baths, living
hD?k-up. Call for complete bedrooms, hvrng room, krtchen, Creek and SA 325. Public room &amp; d1nrng room, nrce lot,
hsling 1nforma11onl 12088
covered lronl porch, blacktop water
available.
Nice detached shed &amp; shelter area
drrve, detached garage. 112034 roll1ng/level
acreage . with bath &amp; deck ove~ook1ng
,
$15,500.00 12071
Raccoon Creek. l2089
O_NE OF GALLIA COUNTY S BEST... 165 acres complete w~h well maintained barnS/buildings &amp; silos, and a georgous

~EI

S~ee I

297 Ouly Road· Outstanding design

1-800-458-9990

wants your_ offer •mr:nedratelyl v•.·ew. Uving room, kitc hen , 2 1tv1ng room, kitchen, bath, locate~ close to hospital ~nd s~~ll easy to . maintain lot:
~ Neat Chilf'mmg ~orne 1n to~'!· 3 bedrooms and morel 12084
large detached 2 car garage. shopping.! .4 Bedrooms,. liv1ng Uvmg
room,
kitchen,

lawn , concrete drive . Ask1ng car garage, 2 acres, rn ground
I
,
$88,000 and requesling offers! pool, barn &amp; shed. M20SO
i roo~ ,
12095
IMP
.
.
nd bath upsta~rs
R~s~,:::.
E
...
l~sr~e
an~
rncludes
3
bedrooms and
0 11
9

'outnumbered

Real Estate General

sell ... make an offerlll209

.· ~::~

rree l»rochurt or 104-plll
$12 oolor CCIIIOJ whb n- plw
for ..,. 60 moclel boma.

'"

third-quarter results .
Two other h1gh-profile
companies,
Internet
portal Yahoo! and cellular phone
maker
Motorola , are
also
expe"aed to release
their results.
Declining
issues

I

ror our

.'

~ l!f~ __ ;:..

wage and pTice increas- pointing earnings and,
es, shows signs of investors overexposed
in some of the more
reawakening. ·
"Today many traders volatile stocks looking
feared the Fed may to run and hide are
move to increase inter- causing this.''
Next week, some of
est rates as a result of
the
unemployment the country's biggest
nuinbers ," said ·Acker- companies, including
man. the Fahnestock General Motors and
General Electric. will
vice president.
But
White ,
the begin reporting their

Modem ConvenienCes is found in this 2
story home featuring foyer, LA, DR,
eat·in kitchen with mud room. 3-4 BAs
and 2 112 baths. Updated items include
baths, w iring, 2 furnaces , siding, roof
and more. $114,900. Owner anxious to

~-

y our

going on in the markets," he &gt;ald. ··1 think
earnings
Jrsappotntest rates higher if inflation , whic h is driven by merlts , fear of disap-

Real Eltata General

lovely home plus plenty of room to rolm. and enjoy
BEST OF BOTH. From your front porch view
beautiful country side and the pond. Walk In and
the living room, dining room, and a lg. be~~~~~~·:;.
custom designed kitchen w/lola of Smith oak
Ceramic tiled floor. A private bedroom suite &amp;
the main floor. 2 more bedrooms on the second
There could be a 4th bedroom, 3 full baths.
basement wlpoured walls. 2 car garage. All setting on
acres m/1. in a custom built home. Green E~";,j~~~:
You Can Not Built This Home for the ASKING
Shown

'

looking ro purchase a home
lhal has quality lhroughout.
Low maintenance brick ranch,
4 bedrooms. Newly carpeted
ATTENTION PLEASE! OWner 100
Ad.. 1 112 story
lormaiiiVIng room. slep saving NEW PRICE $48,900.00 has )usl dropped the prrce on vinyl
home al the ed e
k1rchen, fam ily room wilh What a good price on this 1 lh1s home lo $34,900.00_1 And of Gallipolis with an excelle~l

Ayatar malyst, downplayed
the report's
Impact.
"You con 't blame
thiS morning's unemployment report for
what
we're
seeing

WHERE FUN AND FANCY MElT
533 ARBUCKLE ROAD Invest in your future with

loa home )'dND\Iftd. 'Call

IIIIU'f

e-mail us for Information on our listings:
bigbendrealty@dregonbbs.com
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Ruth Barr........................................ ,.446-0722
446-4618
Cheryl Lemley ................................. 742-3171
Judy DeWil1 .............................. 441 -0262
Dana A1ha .............................. ...........379-9209
J. Merrill Carler......................... 379-2184
Kenneth Amsbary ............................. 245-5855
Tammie DeWil1 ......................... 245-0022

level mdicates a shrinkmg of the labor pool
that
could
force
employers to pay higher wages to keep and
retain workers. And ·the
Federal Re se rve has
•lready warned it will
. cmninu~ to pu sh ipter-

- k llobi'"T""·
·. -~fio)"·,jj
Pod&lt;., 1ho fl&lt;~ilr ' - · ·
:1 andpi1WIYIP
• )'OUr very own kJfl
·1 cabin. Or llveln 1

Give Ol!e of our Agents a call Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

if

down for the third
quarter.
The market's Ia test
decline followed
a
Labor
Department
report that the nation's
unemployment rate fell
to 3 .9 percent in September
ancl
total
employment rose by
252,000 after · two
months of declines .
Analysts had been
expecting a higher
unemployment rate. A
decline in the jobless

,•.•.•..,

Luvc lM ~rt

Real Eatate General

~'9 Z'e~Ut 1(~, 1~ee,

NEW
BUT
LOCATED. Brrd&lt;Jvrnyl Sided bi·
level, oversiZed livrng room &amp;
formal dining area, eal-in
kitchen. family room wilh

also weighed down the
blue -chip average,
falling $2.68 to $51.06,
after rival lowe'!i sa1d
its same-store sa les,
those from stores opt"n
at least a year. wuuld be

live For

Best value in

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

•

'·

410

e4ed 114 ~ut At

•

.-selloff pushes Nasdaq to lowest level since May

Buy, stll or Trade

1960 Monte Carlo For Parts For

,.

_s_u_n~
__Y_._~~o_ber
___•~·~--~----------------~--:P~om::•:ro~y~·~M=I=d=d=~~po~rt~·~G~a~l~llpo~I=I•~·~O~h:lo~·~P:~~nt~P:I~aa~-~n~t,~WV~----------------------!•:u:~~~~p!ll:~intt~s:·titt
~n~t~in~ri~·!P~ag~e~D~7

leiarl, WV,(304)695-3319

$250, 080, lo ran . wv. (304)

1990 Plymouth van. nice concll·
llon. $1800, call740-992·3886.

Electrical and
Refrigeration

•.

1979 Olds For Pans For $250,

OBO,

{740)441-D239

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenen ce· Painting.• vinyl sielin g,
carP:Bntry, doors, windows , baths,
mob1le home repatr and more. For
free estimate ca ll Chet, 740·992·
6323.

99 ·h4 $3500, Honda 95 4x2

.'

ffHTURED HOffif

1990 Winnebago Motor Home ,
l6• Mileage. 38,000 Miles. Self
Contained, Sleeps 6 E•cellent

Classic, 1100 miles. 1999 Harley
Davidson Sotnail Standard 3500

Doesn't Run, 2 Engrnes, You Tow

:·~
- ----~~~~======~'----------~--------•
Reel Eatate General
Real Eatata General
•

Motor Homes

trasl $16,000. (304)-882-3715
1996 Yamt~ha Tlmberwolf 4
85 Dodge Omnl. $250 , needS bar- - $ 2,000. 304-882-2555.
rery. (740)446-:IJ40
2000 Hartey Davidson Uttra Glide

Drive, 305 V-8. Automallc, Air,
(740)446-0425 anernoons.

740-992-2737.

7.4 0

'

campers &amp;

790

86 Toyota , 4x4, 111,000 miles,
New
Tires .
$1800
OBO,
(740)367-7256, before 1pm oral-

1999 Black VW Beelle well
Equip. 33,00 miles . lots of ex·

1992 Fireblrd. V-6 automatiC, air,
Hop. good clean car, $2850, call
74()..742·2357.

1993 Plymouth Acclaim $3300,
1985 New Yorker $950, 1994 Cor·

3765.

terepm .

1992 Chevy Truck, 4 Wheel

(304)882-2529.

Joints . 740-2,5-5677, Cell: 339-

tt9o4 Conversion Van . Power
loclcs, Power Brakes , Power
St. .ring , Power Windows . A/C,
TeNMslon , VI~ Player, Citizens
Band Radio, Radar Detector, Ra·
d10 WJTape Deck, Built-In Cooler
(740)44&amp;-Q196 $8500.

2&amp;«0Y85.

86 Ponliac Parlsienne, 4 dr. 51 •
dan , V-8 , comfortable, depend·
able. tires &amp; other parts recenrtv
replaced $1 ,000 . firm 304-67S·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

ludfll Ptlca~ TrantMIIIIOns
All Types, Acceu To Over
10,000 Transmissions. CVC

(740)2M-1365

per cha rged model, 122,000
miles, $2100.
1997 Dodge Intrepid, 59,000
..... minor I. lrt domago. $6.300.
740-992-1506 days , 7•0· 9"9·

It Away Please! Paid $oil50, Asking $300 . Includes Engines.
(740)388-{) I«

Sun~~~ober8,2000

760

a 4-WDa

HUt3 Ford F-250, XLT 4x4 , 7.3
Dltlll, Standard Tran1mi11ion,
$t0,500 '080, Call Evenings,

1988 Toyota MA2 . 5 speed. su-

446-1069

1995 Camaro. To sell as is. 11:

200 large Round Bales of Wheal
Straw, Still Containing Gran). 200
large Round Bales Of 1st Cutting
Hay. Call Evenings (740)2455047.

: Delong's Groom Shop. Groomrng
All Dog Breeds, 740-441· t602 .

'87 Monte Carro Super Spar!,
39,000 actual miles, t-tops , load·
ed, ex~Henl condition, 740-949-

"""$4600.(740)446-7413

Hli{&amp; Grain

640

l250/ea .( 740)667~24

.

1993 Ford Probe, 105-K, Excell.
Ssp.,
$3,000.

(304)-5,76-2752 /

B1g Trme Albert UKC Aeg•steted,

AOIO.

Condition !

Charolais Bull Catf 1 1 months .
trom Regtstered Stock; $650.00.
Round Balas 4•5' $18.00 Ashton .

Coon Hound, Black &amp; Tan Pups,

lOw as $291
mo. Police Impounds and repos·
sessions. 2&lt;11 moa 019.9%. For
li stings cart 800·719· 3001 exl.

1990 P{onliac Fireblrd. Blaclc ,
Auto, Al(t AMtFM Cassette. like
New Trres , Good Condition.

Sm Yanma r diesel tractor, 3 pt.
hitch wrlh 4 loot mower 52000.
080 304·675·7 162

· ----------

1997 Monte Carlo low mil11,
winterized. below book value ,
ftC . c:ond. 3[).1-67~7961

(parts nave been replaced) ,
5.400

Sale

440 John Deere Crawler, Good
CondJIIOn,
$4500 00
Firm,

PM.(304)·576-2816

_.. Blue heeler pupptes. frrst shots &amp;
• wormed. $100 , pl~ase call after
5pm , 740..742-1103.

710 Autoa for
$0 DOWN C~RS! As

(740)446-9235 (740)446-4738

John Deere 111 Aidi ng mower
11 Hp 36" cui, Looks and runs
good $625 .00. Call after 6:00

AusHa r(an Shepherd puppres.
• pu're blooded, shots &amp; wormed,
740· 742-3304 after 6pm.

730 Vans

1992 FOld EllpiOrer. Eddte Bau.r
Sanas, loaded, lah skte damage.

576-2389

(740)245-9216

AKC York Shire Terrier Puppies
- {S ilky) . Perfect G1ft . Parents
.. Weigh 4-5 Pounds. Delivery Possrbie. (740)379--9061

Autos for Sate

dr, hordlop,lrori damage. 5,700.

TRANSPORTAl ION

Felten Fruit Farm ~ Red and
apple~ off of At.
1C3 south ol Carpenter, 3/4 m1te
up Twp Ad 14 . Saturday 9·5,
Sunday noon·S. reasonably
pnced at $8 a bushel

All Steel Bu11ding Clearance.
JJx36 Was S8,690. Sert S3.990;

.

54&lt;47

o

1998 Geo TraekM, 5,910 mtlel, .t

Golt1en OeHoous

Building
Supplies

71

Atteronoot Required. (740)245-

Vegetabletl

~M .

Hay &amp; Grain

Trallor. 3 8edrrom1, Batn &amp; 112•
l~uge Yard. No Pall , Oaposlt 1

Fruita &amp;

580

Waterltr1e Spec1at 314 200 PSI
S21 95 Per IOO : P 200 PSI
S37 00 Per 100. All Bran Com·
pressiOfl Finli'IQS In StOCk
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio, 1-800-537-9528

9325

640

hogany wood and finish . Elt:al·
lltnt ('X)n(tltionr t-(304)-n3-sss.J

Wanted older modal Direct TV
systems w1tl'l old aces cards. will
pay rop dollar, Wolf•e. 7•0-'9493315, leave message.

560

· Musical
lnatrumenta

Story &amp; Clark, Spinel Piano, Ma-

cash? No credit Okt SICVN Crect11
OKI 0 do*n: laptops 1\'ailable.
R&amp;establ•sh your credit! Call
now!!! 1-888-247~3818.
•

550

Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpolla, Ohio • Point PIH..nt, wv

ANXIOUS IS NOT THE OWAD
FOR THESE EXTREMELY
MOTIVATED
SELLEASI
34260 Crew Road... over 2
acres come with this 6 year old

cape cod style home, fully
equipped kitchen, formal dinin g
and family room, foyer, forma,
living room, 2 full baths , master
suite, den, too much to mention
in this small ad_ 12094

9allipolis

Come see for yourself the beautiful view of the Ohio River
and surrounding countryside that comes with t~is well cared
for 2 story. This home offers it all-fantastic view in a private
setting, cozy glass front living room, dining area open to
kitchen, 3-4 bedrooms, all with lovely view of the outside, 2
1/2 baths, 1 car garage attached, 24 x 32 detached garage
and a "wonderful for entertaining" 28 x 52 deck with built in
planters. Priced to sell at $155,000. Come view this lovely
piece of property with hostess Carolyn Wasch, and you just
might decide to make it yours II

Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.
(740) 446·3644

David Wiseman, Broker
.'

NEW
I .
Looking for a n1ce
place in Green Township? Then take a
look at this new lisitng located at 4933
SA 141 offering nicely remodeled 2-3
bedroom, 2 1/2 bath home with large
dining room and living room, 2 car
garage, above ground pool plus 2
storage buildings. All htls priced at
$79,900.
Call
today. for
your
appointment 1602

•

NEW USTING In Spring

Areal

Delightful tri -level. Very cleanli!!!Q._osat.
3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, large
remodeled eat-in kitchen and family
room with fi replace. Brick exterior
means no-wasted weekends painting.
N ice yard with patio, porch and view.
Oversized one ce.r garage. #214

They don't print money here, but you
can sure make a lot here. 5 unit mobile
home park with 7 mobile homes
included . Gross income is very good.
All utilities are paid by renters . Good
location along Jackson Pike. Call Dave
for more Information . 1120

•

~!rei

,#, ..

NEW LISTING!! N ice Home with Elbow
Room 24 acres of elbow room . Great
place to hunt, take walks, build a pond,
or just enjOy your pHvacy. Beautiful
cedar home has a wonderful floor plan
with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room
-with a stone fireplace. large eat-in
kitchen with breakfast nook, step down
family room with huge window wall and
vaulted ceiling and rec. room . Extras
include in ·ground pool, outbuilding and
sunset view. If you're tookng for a very
nice house with some land . call us
today I Green Township. t205 •

home has been very well cai'ed tor.
Three levels allow you to have your
own space. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
nice kitchen with dlnhlng area, large
living room with fireplace and family
room. 1 car garage attached . This is
w~ry
nice
liome
in outstanding
condition. Spring Valley Subdivision.

1121

613 &amp; 635 Oliver Street, Middleport·
Investment property consisting of 1
LISTINGII
Easy... Easy
to
bedroom, 1 bath log home and 2 trailer afford ... easy to maintain ... easy to get to
rots.
x 55 lot. sso;ooo 1126
town. Vinyl sided ranch on tbe city's
_ _40
__
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.... edge 1s easy to owh. 2 bedrooms, living

room, kitchen and bath . Large side

yard. -$54,900 1207

Before looking for your New Address, Check out ours at...

www.wisemanreolestate.com
David Wl81man, QRI, CRS Broker 446·85155
Carolyn·Wasch 441·1007
Sonny O•rn••
Robart Bruce 446·0621
Rita Wlaaman

446·2707
4411·115511

(740) 446·3644

�.,
•

Peele Dl• 6uabq t:imH-6entinel

-

'

SUnday, October

Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpolla, Ohio • Point Plnznznt, WY

••
8, 200Cl
'••

.,.

~nds

fnWII ..... Dl
dian (i.e., an adult) in control of
the money until the child reaches
the age of ltllljority in their state.
Whafs great about these kinds
of account!~ is that monies in
.them can be used for anything:from college education to the
.:down pay~ on new cars,
::homes, or whateVer - once the
~hild becomes an adult. There is
:)!so no limit on the amount of
:money that can be invested . in
'"them each year, as there would be
"if you were opening, say, an Edu&lt;ation IRA. On the other hand,
:each year there may be tax conseijuences on the account. Also,
)ome earnings may be .exempt
:from federal income tax, and
:some taxes at the child's or their
yarent's nte.
• • State 529 Plans. Named after
:Zhe 529 section of the Internal .
:Revenue Code, monies in these
).ccounts are earmarked to pay
:expenses at qualified and accredited colleges and institutions.
: One nice thing about "these
programs is that the monies in the
• :accounts can be tnrisferred to
another member of the family. So,
jf the child this account was orig?nally set up for decides not to go
to college, monies can be used to
:"fund another sibling's education·.
: As for taxes on earnings in
: these accounts, they'll be deferred
until the monies are withdrawn.

• Education IRA. Decide to
open an Education IRA and
you're only able to contribute
SSQO per year to it until your
Dl
child is age 18. And eligibility
begins to phase out if your adjust~ be paid. You will then instruct
ed gross income is $95,000, or your employer with respect to the
$150,0090 for those filing jointly. distribution.
When it comes time to take
This sort of "direct rollover"
this money out, earnings will be can be accomplished either by the
taxed as ordinary income. Again, company sending the distribution
if you don't follow the rules directly to the IRA trustee or by
regarding this account, there may having the distribution check
be penalties to pay. Like the 529 ltlllde payable to that institution.
Plans, these accounts are transferYour third choice is to ask for a
able to other family members. check in the amount of the lump
Understand, however, that if sum distribution. If you elect to
you'd like to set up both an Edu- receive the distribution in cash.
cation IRA and a 529 Plan for the your employer is required to
same child, you won't be able to withhold· 20 percent of the
make contributions to both in the amount for taxes.
san1e year.
Thi1 means, for example, that if
For more information about you are due S100,000 in a lump
college education com and plan- sum, you will receive a check for
ning, American Century's nifry
cardboard calculator is free for the
asking by calling (800) 345-2021,
weekdays 7 ·a.m. to 7 p.m. CST.
The Federal Student Financial
Aid Information Center's tollfree number is (800) 433-3243,
weekdays 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. CST, or . problems should not be grazed for
VISlt
their
Web
site, long periods of time.
www.fafsa.ed.gov. To learn more
OSU Extension advises that proabout. the cost of college, check ducers planning to feed corn
out www.collegeboard.org .
residue, should check with their
Dian Vi~"ovich 's most recent books NRCS/SWCD office to make
include "101 Mutual Fund FAQs" sure that such a feeding program is
(Chandler ·House) and "10-Mim•te not in violation of their conser\laGuide to tire. Srock Market" tion plan.
(Macmillan). To learn more about
For information about feeding
mruual funds, visit lrff Web site at; crop residue this fall, call the OSU
www. dianifrmdfreebies.conr.
Extension office at 446-7007.
Ag news
Tobacco producers - The
that specialize m consumer Phase II Tobacco Settlement inforfinance.''
mational meetings are scheduled
Millions of other consumers deal for Monday.
more clirecdy with Associates Fint.
The first meeting will be held at
A young couple, for instance, the Senior Resource Center in
might obtain a home equity loan Gallipolis beginning at 10 a.m.,
through A5sociaies, and an inde- and the second, at Hannan Trace
pendent trucker might rent a trac- Elementary School in Mercerville,
tor trailer through the company's beginning at 8 p.m.
heavy equipment leasing business.
All producers are encouraged to
"By definition, Associates First attend.
isn't trying to be a household
Additional assistance for setname," sald Moshe Orenbuch, an tlement applications will be
analyst at Donaldson Lufkin &amp; Jen- provided by OSU Extension on
rette in New York.
the following days: Oct. 17, 6-8
Apparently, it doesn't need to be. p:m., and Oct. 20,8 a.m.-noon.
The company is expected to have
Both sessions will be held in the
about $1.7 billion in profits this large meeting room at the Ag Cenyear from its global operations, ter, therefore, participants should
which include 2,750 offices in the
United States and 13 other coun.
tries. In 1999, Associates earned
$1.49 billion on revenue of $12.1
billion.
The acquisition by Citigroup
was universally praised by analysts
on the basis that a merger will only
serve to strengthen two already
powerful
entities. Moreover,
because the companies have considerable .overlap, especially in their
consumer finance units, duplicated
services can be eliminated at a cost
savings to the combined company.

Money
flam .....

Bymes
from Pa1eD1

:-----------------------------•

Deal

fromPapDl
: credit card for future purchases.
: The finan cial details of both the
: long-term finance agreement and
: future credit card transactions
: would be handled by Associates
: First Capital.
: "The customer probably h:U no
idea that Associates First lS
involved," said Joe Bruyer, who
, manages a Tractor Supply store in
:Council Bluffs, Iowa.
The same is probably true of the
Texaco, R.ldio Shack or Home
Depot card holder.
In fact, 80 percent of Associates
First's credit card business is done
through partnerships with retailers
that deal directly with consumers,
said company spokes11tan David
Sandor.
"The Associates brand is not
necessarily front and center. It's
usually the partner's name that the
-consumer sees;• Sandor said. "But if
:you're in the oil business, you're·
:probably most competent in mat:ters dealing with energy. so many
:companies prefer C-.J outsource to
:qrganizations like the Associates

Save ABundle

park at the rear of the building and Thursday, most of us away from the
enter through the meeting room. river were anticipating a killing
Producers can also stop by the frost by Sunday. Late ordered and
Extension office anytime for assis- arriving plants, an early frost, and
tance with the application.
every kind of trouble imaginable in
Please call first, to ensure that an
agent will be in the office.
The tobacco banquet is set for
this Tuescby. Dr. Phil Hunter of the
University of Tennessee will be
here .t o address the participat:Jts on
the high incidence of tobacco
viruses this year, as weU as provide
a research and production update.
If you would like to attend,
please call the OSU Extension
office on Monday at 446-7007.
Pepper producen - As of

Volume

Louis W. Cennamo
Local Appointments
For Your Convenience

1-614-221-0888
Will The Lawyer You
Pay Appear In Court
With You?

170 billion
lunches have
been served
through the
National School
Lunch Program,
since it was
enacted by
President Truman ih 1946.
Students are
served lunch,
breakfast, and
sometimes a
snack through
the program ,
many at
reduced or no
cost. Here, children at Middleport Elementary
School lined up
for a chicken
sandwich and
other tempting
foods for their
lunch on Friday.
This week is
National School
Lunch Week.
(Tony M. Leach
photos)

BY KATIE CROW
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

,

00 unc

'

'
.·

1·877·345·2880

system. The theme 'is "Team Up
for School Lunch ."
Established in 1946 by Congress . and Pn:s id~llt Harry Truman, the Natioml School LtJnc!t
program has cunrl'ntratcd on
helping children grow and be·
healthy, and most importantly. to
give children the· nutriti\J n they
need to "tay alert in the cia~~ room.
"Nothing is more important in
our national life than the welfare
of our ch ildren, and proper nourishment comes first in attaining
thjs welfare," Truman sa id , in
signing the National School
Lunch Act.
According to the U.S. I lt'p;t rt-

Today begins
National School

Lunch Vf.i&gt;ek ·
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Get 2,000 B
Minute ·or
o .n.e

M

IDDLEPORT
- Pizza, "Tater
Tot:;"
and,
always, fish on Friday. All
of us remember the school
lui1ches of our childhood.

'.

.'
:-•.

. ·. ':~...

'

Audiovox

MVX480

~·· ···.

....•
,.

..

Today begins National School
Lunch Week to recognize the
National Sc hool Lu nch Program ·
and its role in the public sc hool

Piease see Lunch, Page Al

Clinton speaks to Ohio Democrats by phone

ChiMicoihe
In-Touch Wireleu &amp; Moro
34 Eost Welar
1740)779-6999
Gallipolis
USCC Wai·Mart Koosk
2145 Eastern A.veliue
1740)441·1066

JockiOft
ClmicPiw
408 E. Huron
1740!288.0011

'

New llooton
U.S. Cellulor
New Boston Shopping Center
4010 AhodH Avo.
1740)458-8722 .

Porllmouth
Hilhop Conter
2736 Scioto Trail
1740)355-0058
Wovetty
USCC Woi-Mart Kiosk
900 West Emmit Avenue
1740)947.0069

AIM, OIIM 1M vfllt OM of our Wai-M1rt loc.tlons: New Boston, Jackson.
Fpr your convenience we have over 80 authorized agent locations.

Outside con~ultentl ere IVIileblt upon request.

»id Kena Hudson:\pokeswoman tor the Ohio
Democratic Party.
Supporters still forked over $5,000 per co uple
fi" brunch and $98 a piece for the rally afterward , The Ohio Democrats ~aiscd more than
$375,000 Saturday..1crording tn .1 written st;~te­
ment released aftu the c\..:enr.
Former Sen. Joh n Glenn went fmrn being
there co introduce the president, to being told
he would be the featured speaker, to introducing Clinton when the president called in.

included a fund-raiser for his wife's Senate campaign and remai"ned in Washington thmughout
COLUMliUS- Ohio Democrats said two the day.
·
fund-raisers produced $375,1100 despite Presi"The president has been up early this morndent Clinton canceling his appearance because . ing making telephone calls on the Middl e East,
working on the Middle East," White H ouse
of unrest in the Middle East.
In bctwet:n .Jiscussi ons with members of hi s spokeswoman Nandra Chitre said. "He feels he
national security team and lsraeh Prime Millis- needs to stay in Washington to continue to
ter Ehud llarak and Palestinian leader Ya.sser work on these issues."
Party organizers were already at the Aladdin
Aratar , Clinton 'till l(mnd a few minutes to
Shriners'
Complex in northeast Columbus Sataddress the Ohio Democrats by phone Satururday morning when they got word from the
day.
He also had to scrap a trip to Indiana that White House tha t Clinton couldn't make it,
BY KATE ROBERTS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Classes could resume
Wednesda at school
where roo collapsed
Chillicothe
U.S. Callulor
750 Weotom Ave.
1740)702·4872

'•' ' ('

nt·.

Council OKs
paving bids

-

I

For more Information call:

-

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Number 9S

LUNCH TIME!

I~o You Have Diabetes?

Attorney

s1

Hometown Newspaper

SYRACUSE

t'

ZERO "0"% Finan
$20,000
"0"%
$333.33
"$0"
60 Months

Mel1s County's

a

f¥.e you having trouble controlling
blood sugar with diet and exercise?
You may be eligible to participate in a research
study and receive AT NO COST:
e Active diabetes medication
e Glucose monitoring supplies
e Study related medical care and testing
e Diabetes and nutritional education
A research study is looking for patients who:
e Have been previously diagnosed with diabetes
e Are NOT taking any diabetes medicati~n
e Are 20·78 years of age

Odober 9, lOOO

•

between has ltlllde for challenging year. As for the European corn
borer situation and company
acceptance of ·our product, no
news is good news.

With

Financed .$20,000
9.2(%
Finance Rate
Monthly Payment $(17.50
Finanee Charges $5,050.00
GO Months
Term

Details, A3

$80,000. When you til~ your 'nported as taxable on the 1099. taxes when you file your We
income we return at lhe end of Ill Older to avoid this taxatic;m, the return.
the year, you must pay any addi- full $100,000 must be rolled over. . If you have company stock iit
tional tax due on !he ..distribution
This means you will have to your retirement plan, there afe
(in exceu of the 20 pen:ent )UU a,dd back the 20 percent that was different tax implications you
already paid).
.
withheld to ltlllke the distribution may want to explore before maltIf you were 50 years old or complete. The 20 percent that ing any decision. Se your UX
older as of Jan. 1, 1986, you may was withheld can lhen be "recap- advisor for more details.
;:
be eligible for favonble tax rreat- r d " when the tax return i$ filed
What does all this mean ~o
ment such as 10-year averaging. f!~lhat year.
_people who expect to receiye
Otherwise, taxation at your ordiOr, a portion of your distribu- lump sum distributions? Decinary iQcome tax nte, plus a 10 "tton can be rolled over. If, as in sions about their distributio.ns
pen:ent early wilhdrawal penalty our example, you roll over only will have to be ltlllde before die
may apply.
the $80,000 YoU actually receive, check is acru~lly cut.
::
If you choose .the third option, the $80,000 would' not be subject
It also means that bot" employyou may still roll the distribution to taxes until withdrawn from the ers and employees must be mote
into an eligible receiving plan rollover account.
aware of all the alternatives availsuch as an IRA rollover account
Since the 20 percent or able. Your financial advisor o~n
or another qualified retirement $20,000 that was withheld was provide information on the ~~
plan provided you do so within not rolled over, it will be subject course of action in your individ60 days of the distribution.
to ordinary income tax plus ua] case.
In this case, 100 pen:ent of the penalties, if applicable. You can
(K. Ryan Smith is an investnrtht
distribution, that b the full wid!lpture" the part of the 20 executive with Advest Inc. in its GnlSI 00,000 in our example, will be pen:ent that is not really owed for lipolis '!ffice.)

Monday

Meigs society news and notes, AS · .
Browns, Bengals fall in NFL action, Bl

Tuesd_,-

HIIh:50s;Latw:50S

CLEVELAND (AP) - Classe'
won't resume until at least
Wednesday at East High School,
whc-rt! officials and t'nginl'ers plan
to Cake at least t\VO more days to
investigate the cause of Friday's
g;yii JJia~itllll roof collapse.
" I h.we been meeting throughout the weekend with members
of my "tatf tO determine how,
when .md where classes may
resume for the East High School
co nirmrni ty," Uarbara Hyrd- Uen nc' tt, chief executive of the Cleveland Municipal School District,
"')d Sund:1y.

"We are working hard to
resolve a number of issU~s by
early in the week," sh!! said;t,
6istritt co mn1uni carions 1·1 c hief
William Wendling said il was
unlikely the collapse had any
effect on the rest of the building.
The rest of the school's roof was
designed ditfercnt!y and built
with different m,ltL'na]..,, he '&gt;aiJ.
Five people who were in ;1
room beneath the bl)'l11 ~ufft·rt·d
minor inju ries tfom the c.wc-111,
which occurred JUSt betore noon
Friday alter several days nf heavy
winds and rain .

Please see Clinton, Page Al

Today's

Sentinel
Sections - n

Pages

1

Calendar
Classified•
Comics

A~

B2-4
B~

M

Editorial~

Obituari!,!S
S11orts

A3
Bl, 6

W11~ther

A3

Lotteries
omo
Pick J: (&gt;-11-5; Pick 4: 3-4-0-4
Super Lotto: 1-5--\h- 29-12-40
Kicker: 4-J-4-t)-(,...6

W:YA.
Daily 3: 6- 6-9 Daily 4: 1-3-5-.l
~

't~ ~01~1

Oh111\'Alkv

l*ul•h~hlllt&lt;:-

Cn

C0111tUittt:C.

SYRACUSE- Svracusc Village Counci l mer ,.;irh Robert
Wingett, grants administrator,
during its regular meeting
Thursday, and accepted bids for
the village's paving projects.
The bid for asphalt materials
was accepted from Tom Mayle
&amp; Sons Construction Co .•
Bartlett, in the amount of
$40,475, and a bid for laying the
blackmp was accepted from the
Shelly Co. ofThornville.
Wingett said a grant ha s been
received in the amount of
$49,854, with the vi llage paying
the difference.
Wingett said that the paving
of College Road, :md Fourth
and Sixth streets, will begin
around Oct. 25.
ln other business, council dis- .
cussed liability insu rance, and

Clerk/Treasurer Sharon Cotterill said the t.'Xilitlng pn\icic~ do
not mclude rcpl.trL'IllL'Ilt co.;;t&gt;.
for vehicles insurc·d .
Council wi ll take the matter
under consideration. Cotterill
also dis cussed the
Public
Employees Retirement Systein
with council nwmbcr&lt;;.
Cotterill said she h ad bc,·n
advised th :u dll' berm .1lnng
Roy Jones Road needed imme diate- repair, .wd the m;lttO.:T was
referred to tin· \'i IL1 gl' .. rn:·cl

She added that the water
board has raised water tap fees to
$250.
Trick or Treat night was set
for Oct. 26 from 6-7:30 p.m. A
siren wi ll sound to begin and
end the festivities, and council
discussed and strongly encouraged parents to park their cars
and walk with their children,
rather than drive children from
house to house.
Cou neil cited safety concerns
&lt;lnd urged parents to act responsibly and us~ good se nse when
accompanying their children.
Mayor
Larry
Lavender
encouraged members of th~
ordinance Lommittee to begin
studying ordinances.
Residents were reminded not
to place yard sak signs or any
other signs over street signs.
Lavender asked co uncil to
study the ordin ance on the collection of barhagl' ,md rubbi-;h,
and exptu11ed that Jt will t.tke
two to three month~ before rlw
project could he completed.
Fo llowin~; the me eting, council di~cmo;t&gt;d the garbage onli n;mce, but no action wa" taken.
C.:ounc\1 a}m:.
• Awhorized the · Third
Wednc..;dav Club to U'i.l' the
municip.1\ building (or theJr

Please see Village, Page Al

Doctors turn to rocket
scientists for health help
E.Kh dcvic~· would co ntain .1
monitoring ~y"itL'11l dt.''il ~lll'd t1) computer .-hip to IW&lt;lrJ everYfo ll ow cxpcr im l'nts on tilL' thing th.1t i&lt; happ c·ning wrth ·a
intanational sp.tLl' ,.r,uion could p:tticnt. t!·om bc,hidc: monitor
be rr.msformcd ro &lt;1Ho\\" doctnro, rc.H.lings ro lab fl.''\t results to
accc~s to a p;1ticnt\ cmin· medmedJC;"Jtion Information.
ical history over the Internet.
All till' lllformation would hL··
Doctor&lt; ,l t the· CJe,·dan.d \ent to a co ntinuall y updated .
Chnic are p.1rtnenng \vith co m- database that any of the patimt \
puter expert~ at Ch.·\-el.md's . caregivers co uld t:lp into from
NASA Glenn Rcle"arch Ce nter any loc.:uion around the world
to (:kve'l op the system. -, hey· tlur ha:-. Internet .tCCt'SS.
believe it could reduce medical
The C:"lin ic will apply for ·
mtstakes that krll tem . of· thou - more than $1 million in feder.1l
~.1nds of hosp1tal p.ttil' llt' L'Vcry g r,lllt rnoJH.· y l P devl'iop the
yt.tr and injure nH)l"l' tlun J mil- proJtTt. II the llH •Ih.'Y L"OI11L'S

CLEVELAN!l (AI') -

A

lion .
"The idt'.l j., e\..,L'Illi.llly that
ev~ry medical deYin:. in theory.
co uld jack into ,\ll Internet

receptacle." &lt;aid Dr.
Mock! is of the Clinic.

Roger

throu~h.

thl· ~)'litl'lll "'oLild be in
place within two y~..·ars, M.1ckli"'
said.·
Computer .,ciemisr., at NASA

Please see Help. Page Al

Outgoing Miss America earned
raves from homel.ess veterans
)'

BY JOHN CURRAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

rcvic,,-, ti·om .uivoc.ttc'i. 111 the tic\J.
"On C.1pitol HilL in tht· c&lt;Jmmunitics. with our
po~t...,, ,he was just Cmr.tsnc:· . . aid Stl'\'e Thom:-~ .... a
. . pnkL·-.m.m fur thl' American Legmn. tht nation's
l.lrg;l~..,t \'ctcram organization.
In No,·c tnbcr, .Prco;;itkm. &lt;. :lmron ..;,1luted her
dl'ort.., .It ,1 Vctn:ms D.1y t'Vt'llr.
In Fdwtury. she urged Kenwcky l.nvmakers to
~l·ck fl·tkr.ll money for her home ~t.lte 's .)50,()\)()

ATLANTIC CI TY, N.J.- Every conrmder tor
the Miss America crown adopto;; a c~m~c- be it ht er:1cy,AIDS advocacy or Jnoth-.-r sol"ial issue.
Some do so became it's a pagc;mt re-quirement.
Not Heather French, ,t he rciguing !\~iss America
who spent much of her ye,tr lobbying lawmakers for
more support tOr homek•s-; Vt'ter~m;,;. Her p!Jtforlll
ran mu ch deeper tlun pagcJnt protocoL
\'l'tl'f.llh.
"It wasn'tjulit .1 platform fOr me." Fn:nch, 25, rhe . In M arch. "hc ,J..,kl'd th.tt Si:iO,OtlO ofthc·Dcp.utdaughtL'r of a V1rtnam vetl'ran , '&gt;clld Sunday Ill ,m lllL'Ilt of Hou•dll~ and Urb.m Devel opme nt bud get
intc-rvil'\V looking hack on her reign. "Bein~ .1bk to be dL'\'OtL·d tLl hnmdL''' \'l'tt.:r,ul\.
show Amcnca that we haven 't t:tken ore of our Vl't~
In 1\.~ .1~.... lw rod e .1 mnrnn-..,.rk through W.l'ihmg~:r,m~ the w.1y \' c should h.lVe, it w ,t.., vny t'lllotion ton. 1).( ., dunng _.1" 1-\. niJmg rhundcr"' r.lll)' to CO illal."
llll'lll Ol'.H c pn..,n lll'r' of ' ' ,1r .md \'et l'r ,\11\ .. n ll 1111\..,Jng
Appc.1ring ,It ... bdtero,, ..,pct~king to f!;l"UUP' .111d lob - 111 ,il lll1 1l
bying Congn.·..,:-. for hl·ttn progr.1111~ durin ~ hn
2.0,000 - mik -.l-nwmh tnur, fn•n l h c,1rnt'J r.l\'t.'
Please see Veterans, Page Al

'

,

...

'

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