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.P:IIG812 • The Dally Sentinel
.

Pomeroy • Middleport_ Ohio

- ·-~&gt;&lt;&gt;

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Thurwday, Jan'*J 21,1891

Slates won $246 b~llio~, .mostly through lawsuit added by Conaresa. it will. ,ue a terrible impact on suade Co)IIJ'CII to jive tho Food aad Drug Admlnis-,
settlements, plus new restncttons on tobac&lt;:o ads and the industry," he .aid. Cigarette ·mw~ called tbe tratiO!IIIIe .power to repllllo lobiiCGD aad !!doPt other
?lher industry practices. Federal attorneys have stud- potential federal suit "political."
~
policies me111t to 1:111 youth lmokiaJ.
'
ted the. ~t~tes' ~trategy: .
. .
Administration officials say the lawsuit is i~4n.. · ThC president also bas proposed an additional 55- ·
Admmtstratmn offtctals tnststed Wednesday that dent from Clinton's push to pass robacco le&amp;tslattoa cents-per-pack tax on cigarettes.
the decision was made after they dete1111ined the gov- in Congress, but they acknowledae ,a pending auil
It's unclear how the administration and its allies
ernment has legal ~!oun?s to ~ake its ~se.
could put increased pressure &lt;!!·tlif~nd'Ustry to cut a · will .fare on thi:ir second try in Congress.
•
Tommy P~yne ; ·.semor vtce prestdent of R.J. deal.
. .~., ;&lt; ~~·
·
lisfyear, there was considerably I!IO!'C i'/gmentum
Reynolds. satd . Chnton apparently wants "more
The government released few•,ditatls abcjut the for 1Qb1Fco legi~latjon, i.n part because state lawsuits
money from the mdustry and some political gain from upcoming lawsuit, wh,ch is meant to reco'ver titr\10)- had nol yet been settled . But the deal ,!lied.
.•
the industry. "
. .
Iars spent treating sick smokers in Medicare, tbe
Administration ·officials argue they have a bettet"The federal government already makes more Defense Department Veterans Affairs, federal chance this time because the legislation is less •mbi-:
money per pack on cigaretlef th]ln the companies employee health benefits and other federal programs. tious and doesn't directly tie tobacco penalties to:
make," he said. "The federa~ . government makes 24
It's expected to be months ~efor~ .! suit'is filed. ·
domestic spending.
. .
. :
cents per ·pack, and R.J. Reynolds makes 9 or 10 . A task force within the Justice. ~~e.nt, yet to
Stlll.-'·Republicans fiercely oppose hikirig the cigacents .."
• '
be appointed, will soon begin wbr~ to' cleVlilop the rette tax, arid the industry is sure to renew its fight:
Phtl · ~arlton, a tobacco industry-lawyer, said the
precise legal strategy. Officials .w0 uld' nol say where agailisl new regulations.
'
comr,ames would fight any federal suit " to the last the suit might be filed or· ho&gt;¥ . m~ch mon,~y it might ,
Carlton said the settlement with the states doesn't:
day.
seek.
. .
" ''.
set any legal precedent and that• ••unfortunately, the·
"If there's any federal lawsuit, ~f new taxes ·are . Separately,the adm,i.~ist~rio~ )~lllf{~~~-~~~~5-. pollJ~,!~a;enHy sh~w that suing toba:o.is popular.'~

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By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
AP. Entertainment Wrllar ,
.
· ~OS AN_GELES (AP)- Its a documen!ary about
a gntty subject and almost no one has seen 11.
.But after a showing at this week's Sundance Film
~estival, "American l?imp" could capture a distribu!•on deal. worth big buck.s.- and its creators are hopmg..to mtlk the opportumty. for every .pot.enllal penny.
.. We ,held out sh~wmg ttto any dtstnb~tors to put
11 !n a.!fie~dly stluallon for us as far as gelling t~e be~t
pn~e. satd Allen Hughes, who ha~;eamed wtth h!s
brother to make the fllm as well as Menace II Soctety" and "Dead Presidents."
. " Even though we 've gotten great offers, you don't
know how great they are until you get them all in on~
room."
.
.
.
Sundance, held each year in Utah, is the nation's
top showcase for independent films. Overrun by Hoil~woo~, players~ entertainment reporters and publictsts, 11 s a feshval where buzz leads to more buzz,
whi~h lea.d~ to more hype, which leads to film. studios
paymg mtlhons of dollars for films- somethmg they
. may or may not regret in the morning.

.
for
Mtramax spent a stagger!ng after Sundance critics
h_!:r dan ng
fil.._ including 6!1 pre'micres.
'··
.
.: .
S6. mtlhon for N.e~t ~top, Wonderl~nd," whtch formance as~ drug.addtct;~ "J,ttghiArt," har. star,was . · EVeryone expects film producers to ,HiYe the•t
grossed only $3.4 mtlhon tn North Amencan theaters. back on the ,nse. Now she'~ a cont~pder :for an Oscar ~ ch~kboo~ ready.. Although "Wonderland''. fizzledt,
But for every bust, there are deals hke the reported nomination.
. " , · _, , t •·
··
•
' Miramax has scored with numerous indejlcndept ftlms.
$1 million spent.last ye.ar by Artisan Entertainmt;_llt for
"I'd have to say tl).llj Sqnd~ liu :PIM:~'~~ majiif!ll! pickeiN•P. at Su.ndan"Cc.a!i'd.otlltir festivals.~ .. .
"
"Pi," which grossedJ3.:Z million, making it one Of the role in my life.'' Miu iSii&amp;;~Yl aafq.,••Wljii~ •tHt;l '-'
"~ax is, the kind of QQmpany; w~eil we ,..;_
year·~ most profitab~e indie films. .
year been like? Dunlbf!lui)C¥'d}' bliria.sid~d::.Od ~ber· sonietlli.n• . '(i.e )ove•. we will pro9ably ~ pe .the most:
~tth such. potenllal fo_r succe~, tl's·no wonder the gasted are words tha~,~teetn e,ppr~pnlk:: · , , .~.";
t aggfCSI!!VC, ,11nd passiOnate co!"pa.ny on thq block1'f
festtval was mundated wtth entnes. A ~rd 8~ ~eaSundance , was essentiaiiYi. li'\1~ 'lil;"\~85 wlie,n~~ said,~uiisltjons e~ecuti~e Af!ty brlel. ~· · '. ". '
~
lure films ~ere su~mtlled f~r.the 16 slots m the h•gh- ~obert Redford's Su~dance Insllt~teJ 'htch fosters.
Mtss Sheedy wtll be. m Parle City to help promote&gt;
ly cove~e~ ~ramattc. compelltton. ~t~ers were ch~sen mdependent filmmakl.ng, too~ ,t,~e retns of what .was;l another IJ).Oyie genemttng early e1Jcitement, "Su~
for exhtbtllon outstde the compettllon. The feshval then called the U.S. FtJm ;Festn.ai.!It'adopttd the Sun· Town," a story of Hollywood hustling and double~
also includes documentaries, foreign films and shorts. dance name in 1991.
. ·
· ·
dealing, with Miss Sheedy as a production designer·
At this movie marketplace, films that have no busiIt ·bas gotten so big that.one fesii ~ahi11ih enough and Rosanna Arquette as an actress.
'{' . &gt; · ; .
ness going for so much money end up going for big anyl)IOre.
·
" • •··
With "Sugar Town" lind many other films-tantljlii~
bucks, all in the frenzied hope · of 'finding that next ·
l'hl: .alternative Slamdance, now in ' its fifth year, ingJy· unkoown, the anticipation is building. So is tha:
"Shine" or "sex; lies &amp; videotape" ·or striking a selected,l4 features out of 1,716 entrie~. When it start· ' ttress.
·
·· .
' · · ••
multi-picture deal with the next Quentin Tarantino.
ed, only 43 films were entered. There are still other :. ."We've not allowed anybody to see the film," sail
. While the .festival .provides a major boos~ to fledg- alternative film festiva!s. :
. ..
\'fim Roth, who· directed the family dra'ma '"the· wU; .
hng film producers, 11 can also mark the btrtb - or
But the centerpiece Is Slindance. It starts todaY Salt ~ne," which acquisitions people are watching carerebirth -of a performer's career.
Lake City with tho· pre}l)~ere of ,Robert Al.tman's fully. "I see (the screening) as very nerve-racking. A
A year ago, Ally Sheedy' was considered by many to "Cookie's Fortune," then moves to the nearby ski lot of the crew is coming out. Financiers will be there.
be a has-been actress of the '80s "Brat Pack.'' But resort Of Park City through Jan. 31.11 will feature 114 If it goes wrong, I can just sort of go and hide."
·

Northwest controllers first to get new radar M~snms.: sav.;.9~Q.oy'~. delib~ratelyu~ing

ag~. ~all

By GEORGE TIBBITS
it about a month
Lake
Asaoclatad Presa Writer
Ctty and Cleveland are nextm hne.
AUBURN, Wash: (AP) - New,· more
Although the new system is considered
reliable computer equipment to help fed- faster and more reliable than the 1970seral air traffic controllers across the Unit- era technology it is replacing, it is not
ed ~tates has been introduced first in the immune to gli'tche~ like the one Auburn
Pactftc Northwest.
controllers dealt wtlh on Friday. A battery
All 20 national air traffic control cen- failure during a routine check of a backup
t~rs are to have the new systems by the power supply cut power to the center and
summer of 2000 to replace vacuum-type the new equipment.
·
.
radar display equipment that is prone to
Controllers were able to maintain conb~e~kdowns. The project will cost Sl.05 'tact with jetliners with" a backup radio
btlhon..
.
system, but radar used to prevent calliJane Garvey, adminjstrator of .the Fed- sions was shut down for 35 minutes. Hunelal ~viation Administration, and Trans- dreds of flights were delayed and airline
portatton Secretary Rodney. Slater. dedi· traffic was frozen for an bout. There were
cated the new system Wednesday at the , no reports of planes flying too close
Seattle Air Route Traffic Control Center; together.
which oversees flights over Washington,
Controllers said one of the advantages
most of Oregon and P!'rtio~s of Idaho, of !he .new system is that it's easier to
Montana, Northern Ca)lforma and Neva-. matntam . Parts needed for the old system
are no longer made. · '' .
da.
~The new syste~ will "help ke~p o~r
"The problem was the. co~ponents -:
skte~ the s_af~st tn the world whtl_e ~!If they would bteak and you JUSt couldn't
tra(ftc contmues to grow," Slater satd.
get them anymore," controller Mark Blair
'The Auburn. syste~ was installed last said.
October and atr trafftc controllers began
.lockheed Martin Air Traffic Manage-

Construction worker rescued
after being buried in a trench

ay P.H. FERGusoN
·
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Cold and dirty, a constmction worker who had
been buried for nearly eight hours smiled broadly as he was pulled from a
deep trench to the cheers of 175 rescue workers. ·
' The worker, identified by friends as Arturo Garcia, talked to rescue crews
and clutched the hands of others as he was strapped to astretcher and taken
to a hospital just before midnight Wednesday. He suffered cuts and bruises
and was in good condition today at a hospitaL
"The only thing he said was, 'I feel fine, thank you,"' said Mark Eckstein, medical director of the los Angeles City Fire l'lepartment. "He was
awake and alert and said he was cold."
· Garcia was helping place a 54~ inch pipeline for Mladen-Buntich, a company under contract for the Department of Water and Power, said utility
spokesman Walter ZetsL
The construction crew was placing the last200 yards or a 13-mile project .
wpen the Irene~ collapsed about;. p.m.
. .
Rescue ~orkers had to shore up walls of the trench to prevent a further
collapse whlle crews used a machine called an "air knife," which works like
a big vacuum, to suck dirt out. Others carried dirt out with buckets.
. Garcia had been buried over his head several times during the rescue, and
crews feared they had lost him, said city fire Capt. Steve Resnick. .
. " But when we uncovered his head, he began moving and the crews were
re~e nergized, " Resnick said.
• Officials ~id n?l i~medi~tely know what caused the walls to collapse at
the constructton stte m Pacotma, about 10 miles north of downtown.
: Southern Pacific railroad and Metrolink trains that run on• tracks near the ·
construction site were stopped out of fear that vibration could cause further
collapse of the trench.

shppe~ •:pork.~~~~ thel.f meals .

.

Sijles said his "soul was poisoned."

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Eastern d Meigs girls win, Page 4
Is your
gay? Use your instincts, Page 8
Pressure b Ids on·Yugoslav leader,.Page 6
''

•

Big changes In
NBArosters
leading up to
season-Page 5

•

a1
Meigs County's

Hometown N~wspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 49 Nurnilr!r 181

Single Copy- 35 Cent s

Senators preparing written questions for trial
By LARRY MARGASAK
the Paula Jones sexual harassment ease against him?
justice regarding ainton's efforts to cover up his affair
Aaaoclated Preu Writer
Republicans are in a political bind once the question with Ms. Lewinsky.
WASHJNOTON ·(AP)- Senators are preparing writ- period is complete. The GOP's 55-45 majority will not be
Even some Republicans seemed undecided about the
ten questions for White House lawyers and House prose- enough to remove ainton by the required two-thirds vote. need (or witnesses.
cutors in President ainton 's impeachment trial, possibly · Mean"l"hile, the president's popularity .continues to soar
" I'm more apt .0 cast a vote, yes, the deJlOSilion
the last act of bipartisanship before crucial decisions neKI while the GOP's call for witnesses could extend the trial should be held, than 1 am to cast a vote the witnesses
week on dismissing the case and calling witnesses.
that- according to polls- is widely unpopular.
. should be called. But we'll wait and see," Sen. Robert
The questions will be submitted to O!ief Justice
Democrats were buoyed by Thursday's defense Bennett, R-Utah, said Ibis momirig on ~'Today."
William Rehnquist, who will ask the two sides to respond spe~ches on the. president's ~half, bu~ Sen: Robert TorriThe motion to di~miss and votes on witnesses, proba·
in trial sessions today and tomorrow.
celh, D-N.J., s111d today he ts counsehng hts fellow party bly Monday, probably would end the bipartisanship that
Alternating between Republicans and Democrats, the members not to become smug and declare victory.
has sustained the trial inside the Senate, although political
procedure will be as awkward for senl!lors as the require"I think we need to give out Republican colleagues a · unity already has evaporated iri front of television cammentlhat they sit silently at the lrijll "on pain of impris- ·dignified retr~at out ·of this case," he said on NBC's eras stationed just outside the chamber.
o·nmenl"
"Today."
,
"There's so much acrimony in Washington, tr~cally,
. The examitiation will try 'to narrow the conflicts in the
· Even one of the House managers prosecuting the case and so m~ch division over issues and personalities.... You
record that were highlighted by House prosecutors and indicated that the defense seemed likely to prevail. ain- may dislike Bill Ointon, and God knows he's given us all
the White' House.
· ·
·
ton's lawyers have succeeded 'in "challenging every some reasons to be disappointed. Rise above it,"Torricel. : · Was· t!Je job search for former White House intern phase of the case we made," Rep. George W. Gekas, .R- li added today.
Monica Lewinsky an effort to persuade her to sign a court Pa., told the Lancaster, Pa., lntelligencer Journal. When
Former Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., ill a closing White
.affidavit denying a sexual relationship with Ointon? Who the trial is over, ainton w~ll still he president, the news- House presentation Thuisday that was praised (or its eloa,sked the president's secretary, Betty Currie, to ·pick up paper quoted Oekas as saymg.
quence by Republicans and Democrats alike, asked senapresidenlial gifts from Ms. Lewinsky -the president or
Democrats generally oppose witnesses. Most would tors to give the public a break.
Ms. Lewinsky herself/ Did ainton try to coach Mrs. Atr- likely vote for an expected motion to dismiss the case
"The American people arc now and for some til)le
rie for possible testimony the day after his deposition in without voting on charges of perjury and obstruction or have been asking to be allowed a good night's sleep.

They're asking for an end to this nightmare. It is a legitimate request," he said.
After Bumpers spoke, not all Republicans were echoing the party line on witnesses or the strength of the case
presented last week by the all-Republican House prosecution team.
Sen: Gordon Smith, R-Ore., said the White House
"created reasonable doubt for-me and many of my col·
leagues" on a majority of the contested issues. "It doesn't
mean they can't be reclarified to the comfort of all of us,"
he said, holding open his ultimate judgment.
Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Aia., said, " I don't think we
ought to hear witnesses unless they will add a .lot to the
case. I would want to know what they would say over and
above what they already said" in testimony that is now
part of the written, record developed by Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr.
Bumpers' folksy, storytelling style contrasted sharply
with Ointon lawyer David Kendall, who stood before the
senators Thursday to make strict legal arguments. Kendall
recited Ms. Lewinsky's testimony that "no one ever asked
me to lie and I was never promised a job for my silence."
He asked senators: "Is there something difficult to
understand here?"

High water covers roads, · fo~ces some people
Sam Eblen of Middleport bas· filed as a ·
Republican candidate for mayor.
He filed his petitions last week with the
Meigs County Board of Elections and is the
only candidate to file as of Friday.
Eblen currently serves as a member of
the Parks and Recreation Committee, and
has wotked to: upgrade the village's parks.
A native of Meigs County, ·Eblen is a
veteran of the U.S. Army Air Force, havipg.

''I•P'a;:Hl~l'1':.;;.;~;,.;.F~ir.t~~~!~~~~-i?,!~~ s~~~

t

By Thl o IIOCiatld PrHeavy rains overnight produced
floodwaters that covered rural roads,
and a car fell into a crater left when
pari of one centrll Ohio road was
washed out. One man ·was injured.
Anthony Limato, 23, of
Roseville, wits taken to Fairfield
Medical Center, then ·Down to Grant
Medical Center in Columbus, the
Fairfie.ld County sheriff's office
said. He was in critical condition ·
this morning.
Sheriff's dispatcher Mel · Meloy
said a second ca.r found nearby may

~~;;:~~~~s:·, ~~,h~·~~· and·
by ·
,
did
anyone was ,,..,uc.

li'!!"""'IJI

swollen streams to overflow their
banks. ·
· The western Ohio counties of ·
Preble, Darke ·and Shelby appeared
to be the hardest hit, with authorities
reporting floodwaters up to four feet
deep in some areas.
·
.
· Some evacuations were reported
in Preble County. Sheriff's dispatcher Judy Smith said residents . o( a
trailer park in New Paris and a few
other people in the area had to be
evacuated because of high water.
. Smith said a woman reported the
weight of the floodwaters burst open

homes

·her cellar
door 1l!ldwtiterdASbe
her.,buement
'liiJe!l·
w~tllsll-&lt;&gt;f·
said'.·...
it
coniuig 'lifllhe stairi;" S'!flith
said.
· '· '
movaa aiciWIIv
Smi!h said the.· rain had tapered against I strong current near Cincinnati Tliunidary•
off to a drizzle by daybreak and the recelvec:l 3.1 lnchea of rain.
unaware of any evacuations,
Ooodwaters should start receding if storms tonighl
although
some people may have left
there are no inore downpours. The
Sheriff's departments · in Darke
weather service was predicting more and Shelby counties said they were tlieir homes voJuntarily.

wu

'""'HiGiH\

He is .a retired employee ,of General
Company of OtJio, for which he
A few evacuations were reported
.directed and taught training schools.
elsewhere
in the state.
He also formed a credit union, now ·known as United Telephone
The
National
Weather Service
Credit Union, Inc., based in Rocky River.
said rainfalls of 2·3 inches on
Eblen also worked as a real estate assistant for John White Realty
already saturated ground caused
in Athens, ahd as a building supervisor for Pova and Balli"tine Con·
struction ·eo., Fort Myers, Fla.
·
He served for nine and a half years with the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, attaining the Auxiliary Rank of Captain, commander of the
Athens County unit, and served for three years as a deputy sheriff in
By JIM FREEMAN
·
Southern local Superintendent James lawrence. · school report card, Southern was one of the best
Athens County.
Sentinel
Newt
Staff
"She
had been principal of Albany Elementary overall districts in the region, meeting nine of the
He is a member of the l)uckeye State Sheriff's Association, the
The
Southern
local
School
District,
in
conSchool
in (the Alexander Local School District)." 18 performance standards. The state average is
Disabled Amerjcan Veterans, Chapter 53 of American Legion, Feeney
junction with the Alexander School District and
"She's gotten us off and running,'' he said.
ni~e.
.
Bennett Post.
1·u·s ironic we got this (grant) based on fourthAthens-Meigs Educational Service Center has
Lawrence said Southern was offered a
"M : oals wo ld be to ·m o e the efficiency of the police departapproved a continuous improvement plan facili- $45,300 grant to improve its fourth-grade profi- grade proficiency test scores since we are ranked
ment, improving the maintenance Ialor in an effort to improve the district's fourth' ciency test scores, which are low, along with a with Belpre as one of the highest two school disdepartment, repairing streets grade proficiency test scores.
distrkt-wide improvement plan.
.trict,&lt;; in southeast Ohio," Lawrence said.
and the general appearance of
Meyer was eKpected to be hired at Thursday
"W~ thought by pooling our resources we
According to John Costanzo,. su~rintendent
the business district," Eblen of the Athens-Meigs ESC, four area school dis- night's meeting of the Athens-Meigs ESC in could get · a better person on board,'' Lawrence
said.
tricts received state funding to help in the devel - Athens.
said. "(Meyer) is very familiar with the process
want to work to improve opment of their plans - Southern Local, AlexanSentinE~JI the "Iwater
The action addresses proficiency test scores and has worked with it for several years."
and sewer systems in der, Federal Hocking and Trimble.
and follows the release last year of a state report
"We've got one of the best people in the state
2 Sections - J2 Pages
our community, and to make all
The money is earmarked to go towards out- card on schools which .rates each district based . helping I!S with this,'' he added.
city buildings more accessible side consultant and data analysis costs.
on 18 performance standards established by the
Plans call for two teams at Southern, a K-4
to the public."
Southern and Alexander pooled their funding Ohio General Assembly.
team and a distriot-wide improvement team,
Eblen said that he supports and created the continuous improvement plan
Future report cards will contain a school dis- which will work with the facilitator, he
police officers on foot patrol in
facilitator position, with assistance from the trict rating based on the number of performance eKplained. ."We have to develop a plan and send
the downtown Middleport area . Ath~ns-Meigs ESC and the Southeast Ohio standards met. Each district will be placed in one it to the state by June for approval."
.at nighttime, to allev.iate what . Regional Professional Development Center at of four categories: effective, continuous
. The project is supposed to last five years, he
he sees as a problem with drug Ohio University.
.•
improvement, academic watch and academic said. "Starting the third ,year of the project we
trafficking.
.
"We interviewed three different people and emergency.
have to start showing a certain level .of improveAcc.ordi ng to Eblen, he would agreed to employ· Micbaelene Meyer," said
Overall, according to last year's preliminary ment."
also ·make orderly council meetings a priority and encourage
Lotteries
residents to contact the mayor's
office or ·council member-s
QHIO
In Ohio, nearly 60 percent of in the spoils of their victories puts these initiaBy KATHERINE RIZZO
regarding concerns about the
Pick 3: 0-2·9; Pick 4: 1·5·5·8
Medicaid
spending comes from tives at risk."
. Aaaoclated Prasa Wrltlf'
village.
Buckeye 5: 3-20-25-3 I ·35
Graham and Hutchison introduced a similar
Washington.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Ebjen and his wife, Vera,
W.VA.
But the tobacco lawsuit settled bill last year, but it died when anti-tobacco leg·
and other states are threatening lawreside on Hudson Street, where suits if the federal government doesDally 3: 0-5-6; Dally 4: 7-8-2-4
by Ohio didn 'I use the Medicaid islation stalled in the Senate.
they have lived since his retire- n'I drop its attempt to take a share of
C 1999 Obio Vallty Publishi111 Co.
President Clinton, in Tuesday's State of the
argument; it dealt with fraud and
ment tw.o years ago.
Union address, said the government would initi·
other issues.
their tobacco settlement money.
"Health care costs were not ate its own lawsuit against the tobacco industry,
"It's much akin to skipping the
part
of the Ohio lawsuit," said separate from the ' states, to recoup billions of
,team practices and missing the big
dollars that Med icare and other federal health
Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio
galne then ·showing up to lead the
' Voinovich was one of three programs must pay to treat smoking-related disvictory parade," siate Attorney
senators with pending legislation eases.
General Betty Montgomery told a
Facing tough resistance from the states, the
ordering the federal government
Capitol Hill news conference
Volnovlch
not to take any settlement money .. administration has backed off an immediate
Thursday.
He also cosponsored the bills by Sens. Kay move to ,'reduce Medicaid payments to the states
"You don't get what you didn't earn."
The administration said in 1997 it was enti- Baily Hutchison, R-Texas, and ·Bob Graham, D· as a means of recouping the medical costs of
smoking.
tled to part of any settlement the states reach F1a.
Administration officials now say they are
with tobacco companies because the states were · The administration "never offered the states
trying to recover Medicaid money - at least any assistance · while they were pursuing their willing to strike a deal in which states would
keep the money but would agree to use it for
half of which comes from the federal govern- own cases," Grah~m said:
public
health.
The "Johnny-come-lately attempt to share
ment- spent on smoking-related illnesses.
Telepl!o~c

Southern addresses state·improvement mandate

.

Good Afternoon

Today's

Making their case

Chief defends police officers for stopping car at cemetery

at$499

99

TRIAL- Senior Government atudenta at Eastern High
School conductetl • mock trial for their claaamataa on Thuraday.
Aaron Will; who urved • - defense attorney In tha trial, Ia pictured making o~nlng remarks. Alao pictured are, 1-r, Melody
Lawrence, Stephania Evan~, WHiey Karr, Jeremy Coleman,
Erran Aldridge and Soott Stephana. The trial waa directed and
judged by Arch Rou.

SAVE!!

Middleport

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Jttnuary 22, 10110

Starling

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Montgomery threatens lawsuit, Voinovich pushes bill

20 to 50% OFF

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ment of Bethesda •. Md .• is the prime contractor for the proJect.
. By AUSSA Ro,eSMAN
, ,·' Watson Slid he had yo ,purge hunself byOther improvements under way or AIIOCIIItld P.... Wrltlf'
'· · · ·
vomiting the meal ani! was unable to read
planned by the FAA include a new syste'rit&lt; " HELENA, Mont (AP) -1\vo'Muslims thil&lt;Otan or pray for :40 dtiys. ,,,
· ·
that helps pilots make precision landings who lilY a' Denny's restaurant in Billings , The two filed a r'eligious discrimination
guided by the Global Positioning System, del!berately slippe~ bacon and, h.am into complaint with the Human Rights Bureau,.
and an e-mail system between computers tbetr meals are asking for $1 mtii!On each seeking the apology and $1 million. If the '
on the ground and in the cockpit. That and a written apology.
. . ·'
.
Muslims and the restaurant can't reach a
should reduce the time lag and chance of
Abdussalam Sipes and aarence'Watson settlement, the complaint will go before a
errors in voice communications.
told investigators with the Montana Human bureau hearing officer.
The FAA's announcement came only Rights B~reau that they specifically asked
The bureau agreed with their charge. ·
hours after a single-engine Cessna came for their· meals to be prepared in lcparate
"The fact tbatthe ingredients fur these
within 100 feet of a Southwest Airlines skill~lli to avoid contamination by pork dur- meals are packaged separately aild do not
jet as the two were taking off . from inglunch at the restaurant last Marcb.
contain any pOrk products ... implies that
Austin, Texas, on runways that crossed,
Sipes, whose religion forbids the 'eating these ·products ,were placed in the food
authorities said.
of polk, said the ' men asked for IJI~ls of intentionally," an itlvestigator wrote in a
The smaller plane passed just under eggs and bash browns.
report released this week.
the Boeing 737 with 125 people aboard.
Sipes said he noticed pieces of ham hidA lawyer for Denny's, which has been
"Fortunately,. the captain noticed the den in the food and complained. The man- dogged by charg.es of racism for years, did
smaller plane out of the corner of his aa.er offered them U?'her meal, b~t S,ipes not return calls Wednesday. .
eye," Southwest spokesman Ed Stewart Slid that whe~ he mspccted the gnlled The manager of the Billings restaurant,
said. "He immediately pulled the air- chicken dish, he found a strip of bacon.
R:ichard Gmves, denied the incident was
. plane into .a much sleeper climb."
~They're clai.~ing it's a giant ~inci- intentio.naL
.
· Doug Murphy, a regional air traffic dence _that hii!D- not once buttwtce.Denny's, based lD Spananbu.rg, S.C.,
manager for the .FAA, said the Cessna found tiS way mto both of their meals," said ~tiled a $46 million discrimination suit in
pilot could face diS'cipline ranging:from a the men's attorney, Jeff Ferguson. "They're 1994 fil~ by black ,Secret Service agents
warning to license suspension.
saying it was a comedy of errors."
who complained they were denied service

Twin Sets
Starting

DAN'S-SEASONAL
CLEARANCE CONTINUES

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By ESTES THOMPSON
AaiOCIItld Preee Wrltlt'
•.DURHAM, ~.C. (AP)- Tobacco company execu~tves an_d offictals tn states ~pende~t. on ,'he crop
had nothmg ~ut sc~rn for _Prestdent Chnton s threat~n~d lawsuit agatnst ctgarette makers an.• an
tn~~--d !obacco t~x.
·.
..
• Tlits mdu~try ts under ~tege, , Ke~tu~ky Gov.
~~!Jl Patton·satd Wednesday. There ~a hmtt to what
• l~ts. product can bear, and we're commg close to that
bnht."
.
_Patton was among representallves from 11 tot&gt;acco
states and four companies who discussed Clinton's
speech~ they met in Durham to work out plans for a
S5.1S bllhon trust fund !O assist farmers hurt by the
settlem~nl' of state.lawsutts.
_In bts ~tate of the· Umon ·speech Tuesday night,
Chnton satd the federal government wo~ld follow the
lead of states and sue tobaet? compantes to recover
health care costs of tr:hng ~•ck smokers.
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Tobacco states heap scorn on -Clinton .lawsuit, tax proposals~

.290 N~ 2nd

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COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Officers. who . family and friends.
Browning said Wednesday that his officers
stopped a family car leaving a cemetery acted
properly because they were looking fo~ a fugitive, acted in the interest of public safety because they
Kenton County Police O!ief Mike Browning said. were looking for a potentially dangerous fugitive
The incident happened Tuesday after burial and because they believed it was safest to stop the
services for Harold Thornberry. a Covington car before it was in a more public place.
The· chief said Jamie Thornberry's criminal
nightlife figure. Police were seeking Thornberry's
son, Jamie, on drug charg~.
. record is long.
"Since lumina 18, this guy has committed
Police, with their weapons drawn, asked the
men in the car to get out and put their hands on multiple, multiple felony crimes and has thumbed
his nose at our community and the criminal jus·
the hood.
The actions, which frightened children who . tice system and remains a fugitive today," arown·were in the car, drew criticisRJ..from Thornberry's ing said.

The chief said his officers apologi~ed to the
family for the disruption. But he said they wouldn'I change what ·happened if they had to do it over
again.
Kenton County officers have been looking for
Jamie Thornberry, who is wanted on cocain~
charges and violation of parole, for six months.
The parole violation stems from ·five couniS of
burglary dating back to 1987, Browning said.
After .hearing about the elder Thornberry's
death, the Kenton County police put together a
plan to apprehend Jamie Thornberry, who they
expected at the funeral .

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Friday, January 22, 1999

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!lrtdiy, JI111181Y II, 1~

Basil

The D~ily S~ntinel Clinton's. case for two more years
AP

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-882·2158 • Fax: 882·2157

C,:ommunlty Newsp_aper Holdlngi, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl8her
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

GeneraiM1nager

•:_ ·Wh y d oes
' Amertca
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:dl·scoura· g·e· sav•·ng
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: By JOHN CUNNIFF ·

impeachment should not be affected by the pol!s•
By WALTER R. MEARS
assembling
a two-thirds Senate vote to convtct
An
News
AP Speellll Correapond!lnt
and
urlseat
a
~ident with those ratinp would
WASHINGTON (AP) - Appealing past his
drama.
defy
politicalpavit~.
·
·
•
impeachment accusers and jurors, President Clin.
.
The
same
surveys
show
that
most
people
think
First,
Ointon's
lawyer
argued
in
the
Senate
ton made his case for the future 10 Americans who
like the job he's doing. On trial for that job, Clin· thlll he is not guilty and not impeachable on the the Senate trial should end, and that about twoton said that he has strengthened the ~tate of the perjury and obstruction of justice charges voted third! want OiniOI\ to remain in office to se~e out
union and can make it stronger still in the next by the Republican House over the Monica Lewin' the term that. will end two years from Wednesday.
. In another s)gn that his.stick-to-business_argusky affair. "He must not be removed from
two years.
.
"America is working ~gain," Clinton said office," Charles Ruff, the White House counsel, ment is workillg, Repubhcallll made a potnt of
beginning State ·of the, Union day by presenting
Tuesday night in a State of the Union address ~d .
Then,
it
was
OiniOn's
·tum,
in
the
House
their own agenda, includiq a 10 pe(()CIJI inoome
boasting of prosperity, warning against complachamber,
where
he
was
impeached
just
one
month
·
tax
cut Ointon's program would block.
cency and promising to set about the work of the
.
ago.
The
timing
drew
an
undertone
of
criticism
"The
people's business is going forward in the
2 tst century.
and
led
some
Republicans
.to
stay
away.
United
States
Senate," said Sen. Trent !.,ott. the
To keep his hand in that work, he will have to
.
Since
the
Monica
Lewinsky
investigation
began,
majority
leader.
win acquittal in his Senate impeachment trial, but
that he could not ask of the accusing Cnngress in
joint session, with t5e Cabinet, Supreme Cnuit ~;;-----~
justices, diplomats and soldiers, the government
of the .United Stales assembled for the president's
hour-plus at cente.r stage.
It is an occasion of state and ritual, annual but
exlraordinarythistimeforlheslaleof .apresident -.
impeached and on Senate trial .
Clinton did not speak of that. He did say he
hoped thai a century lienee another president
could look back and say.' "that we put aside our
divisions and found ·a new hour of healing and ·
hopefulness."
He offered a catalog of proposals, some tuned
10 the political center, some to Democratic
domestic priorities. 11 was, Clinton noted, the last
State of the Union report of the 20th century, and
he used it 1o show himself as a president at work.
tending 10 business and looking for more.
He wants 60 percent of an expected $4 trillion
budget surplus over the next 15 years put into
Social Security as a first step toward keeping the
system solvent. That's coupled with a proposal to
put some of the money inlo the stock market and
10 create new retirement account§ for individuals.
He seeks new education aid, tested for results
by Washington; increased defense spending over
the next decade, tax cuts tailored to help cover the
cost of long-term health care, for the disabled, for
child care. He recommends, again, a patients' bill
of rights in managed care. He's got a crime bill to
. I'
[fi
H
h
help hire 50,000 new po tee 0 tcers. e wants I e a year ago, while he was dishonesdy denying it,
And while Ointon didn't speak of impeachminimum wage increased.
·
While it is not a menu 10 Republican taste, it Oinlon has been saying that he would ~o the peo- ment, Republicans did.
"Our country is not in crisis," Rep. Jennifer
does include some proposals that could be a ple's business, putting his scandal troubles in a
beginning .toward compromise, the only way mental box so that they wouldn't intrudenn the job. Dunn of Washington said in the GOP response lo
The polls indicate the effectiveness of that Ointon's address. "No matter what the outcome
things can be done in a divided government anycourse. The latest round s~ggests that well over of the president's situation, life in America will ga
ho'ibe While House billed it as Ointon's ·most 60 percent of Americans approve of 'his perfor· on."
ambitious agenda since his first State of the Union mance in office. They say overwhelmingly that
EDrTOR'S . NOTE - Walter R. Meare, vice
address, in 1993, And it meshes with his dual Clinton is not honest and trustworthy, and just -as
. strategy for winning impeachment acquittal.
overwhelmingly that they are satisfied with the president atld columnlet for The Aaocleted
Pre.., haa reponed on Wllhlngton 1nc!
·
11 is a legal defense plus a political offensive, way things are going for the nation.
d'
C · 1
For all the Republicans' insistence that national polltlct lor more than 30 pare.
display.ed in· an exlraor mary cross- aptto

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· 'AP Bus,neaa Analyet
·
:
NEW YORK (AP) - There is irony ofa monumental son in government
: proposing to help Americans save for thei.r retirement. If only government
· would let them, Americans might do it themselves.
·
: · This has been pointed out so many times it is almost impossible to count
: the number. And by many and varied sources- concerned individuals, aca· demics, institutions and even by the government's own studies.
·
· Allow people to save. Provide incentiv~s to do so. Let people protect
: their savings from taxes: Discourage wasteful spending. Cut government
· deficits and lower its interest expenses and other costs.
: · Then, perhaps, America's households might catch on to the idea that,
: .,ven with a small amount of money, an average rate of return and a period
: of time for the economy to do its work, they could have real wealth.
Steve Moore of lhe Cato Institute and Tom Kelly of the SaverS and
: Investors Foundation, pr~vide a simple illusiratlon of how this mixture can
: produce stunning results that every.household can appreciate. ·
: Moore puts it simply: If your grandparents had scraped together $100 in
. 1926 and the money was allowed to grow at the stock market's average rate
: of return, you would now have acceSs to a fund worth $266,139.
·
·.
Or consider l~is scenario: If your parents placed $I ,000 in a mutual fund
. in 1950, they would now have $217,~. based again on the average long: term rate of return in stocks.
: . Fortunes have been built by low-wage earners saving regularly during
: their work years. You hear about them once or twice a year, and inevitably
. ·the stories are discussed in tone~ of amazement.
Why amazement? The ·growth of the American economy is capable of
doing amazing things routinely. What's amazing is how casually and almost
totally the' reality is all but ignored by government, parents and kids. ·
Savinp receive only token recognition from Washinglon, mainly in the
form of Individual Retirement Accounts, 401(k)s and the like, but the
amounts in any such pllllis are rigidly limited. Otherwise, they are taxed.
And to a peat extent, savings receive only token recogni.tion from fami' lies. Whysave,theyask,ifgovernmentisgoingtopenalizeusfordoingso?
Let us live for the moment; let us spend and enjoy instead.
. That habit is written all over the statistics and the American way of life.
Late last year the savings rate fell below zero, meaning Americans were
. spending all their take-home pay and borrowing to spend more.
_ What do you expect? Economists tell consumers that their spending
keeps the economy afloat. Retailers provide almost irresistible lures, such as
no payments for six months. Lenders shovel money at borrowers.
_. Much of the borrowed money comes right out of home equity, but why
worry when that equity is building so fast? Besides, owners rationalize. they
.: need tax deductions and equity loan interest may be deductible.
- Spending has many sponsors- articulate sponsors trained in the ru:ts of
persuasion. Saving has few but. dedicated sponsors; their funds are limited
· and their message is drowned by the roar of spending.
Americans once had a habit 9f thrift that was thought to be indelibly written on their character. Maybe it is, but it has been layered over by a me~ge
that says it pays to spend and it costs to save.
The' terrible irony now is that the federal government, supposedly exasperated by the inability of Americans to save, proposes that it do it for them.
The federal government -with the most ine~t savings record of all!

l-etter to the editor
Don't quit yet
; Dear citizens of Tuppers Plains.
To those of you who are receiving .free hookups for your sewer; please
remember who helped get it for you, and keep supporting what was·being
done. It took a l?t of time, money, and e~ergy to get where you are. Just
:remetRber, it wasn't done overnight, and it's not finished yet. We still need
your suppon.
Miry L Scarberry
Tuppers Plains

•· t ory
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By The AIIOCieted Prell
: Today is Friday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 1999. There are 343 days left in
the year. .

6~;~~~~~~~~~~~~eH~~~.':~eCnunhandeddownits"Roevs. Wade"

By lan Shoal••
' at.e athlete, one of the best who ever
The San Francisco Chronicle's lived, if not the best. But you &lt;;Quidop--ed page noted the retirement of n.' t prove that by me. All I've seen
Michael Jordan with: "Every fan him do is shake his head at'1\veety
has a favorite Michael Jordan Bird, and then give us a phqne nummoment." ·
ber.
Well, I don't follow sports, so I · Now I want to be fair to the .guy.
probably wouldn't be considerec;l a li's not his fault I don't watch pro
fan. So do I have a favorite Michael basketball. What if I'd ,never seen a
Jordan moment? Should r have one? Fred Astaire movie? If the only time
Do I deserVe one?
I'd ever seen him was when he was
I must at least try to be as loyaliO dancing with the . vacuum cleaner,
his legend as the rest of the Ameri- I'd have been confused. But because
can people, otherwise I could expe- 1· do know who he is, when I saw
rience what pundits call a "discon- those commercials I merely became
nect." What is a "disconnect"? I'm mildly enraged.
not really sure. I think it's similar to
But.! confess I'm still mystified.
being discoitnected, only more omi- Unless they_'re content with just havnous. Not only has your party (i.e. · ing their faces· plastered on a
America) hung up on you,. some- Wheaties box, when . 'asked to
body's thrown away the phone. And endorse a product, athletes usually
the dilmn pundits have hidden all the bestir themselves to do something. A
phone books. We don't want that:· skier will ski, to show the efficacy of
So: my favorite Michael Jordan lip balm on wind-chapped lips. A
moment. Hm. Gosh, they all seem to football player will act mean and
be the same. Whether he's hawking tough, or at lea•t pose with a footcheap telephone rates, or clothing, ball. Joe Montana, in his spot, even
or shoes, hot dogs, batteries, cologne did things that probably required a
or Gatorade, he's always doing the stunt double. Steve White, in his
same thing -- looking bemused. As a ads, tries to act.
.matter of fact, whenever I think of
While acting attempts by athletes
Mic)!ael Jordan, I picture this really are frequently embarrassing, they're
tall bemused guy.
more often endearing. Think of
1 realize that Michael Jordan is Mike Ditka. ·Think of Brian
supposed 10 be a fabulous, passion- Bosworth. Jim Brow~ actually had a
.

if

LikeN Y. Schumer spreads refuse around

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~ecision, which legalized abonion, using a trimester approach.
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· On ·this date:
By Jack Anderson
: In 1901, Britain's Queen Victoria died at age 82.
and Jan Moller
.
: In 1917, President Wilson pleaded for' an end to war in Europe, calling .
Sen. Charles Schumer is
for "peace without victory." By April, however, America also was at war.
barely three weeks into his
: In 1922, Pope Benedict XV died; he was succeeded by Pius XI.
.
U.S. Senate career, but already
: In 1938, Thornlon Wilder's play " Our Town" was performed publicly for he's starting to annoy his colthe first time, in Princeton, N.J.
leagues. At least those whose
: In 1953, the .Arthur Miller drama."Th.c Crucible" opened on Broa~way. offices are in the vicinity of the
: In 1957, suspected " Mad Bomber" George P. Metesky, accused of plant- second-floor suite that Schumer will occupy in
!ng more than 30 explosive devices in the New York City area. was arrested the Dirksen Senate Office Building.
in Waterbury, COnn.
·
It isn't odd to find bOxes or office furnishings
: .fn 1968, the comedy show " Rowan &amp; Martin's Laugh-fn" premiered on in the halls of the House or Senate office buildJIIBC TV.
ings at the stan of a new Cnngress. New members
. In 1970, the first regularly scheduled commercial flight ofthe Boeing 747 are moving in, old ones arc moving out; and othbegan in New York and ended in London some 6 1/2 hours later.
eis are moving into fancier suites' vacated by
·: In 1973, former President Johnson died at age 64.
·
retirement or defeat.
· In 1995, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy died at the family compound in Hyan- " Still, the scene outside Schumer's new office is
nis Port, Mass., at age 104.
unusual -- even compared to the standard chaos
: In 1997, the Senate confirmed Madeleine Albright as the nation's first that greets each new session. Boxes-- filled with
female secretary of state.
papers, books, window blinds and video cassettes
: Ten years ago: In Super Bowl XXXIII, the San Francisco 49ers came -- stretch for twenty yards outside Schumer's
from behind to defeat the Cincinnati Bengals 2t:Ho-16 in Miami's Joe Rob- · door. Schumer's new neighbors say the unsightly
·. jlie Stadium.
,
. barricade has been there for two full weeks.
·· Five years ago: "Schindler's List," Steven Spielberg's drama about the
Other hall-mates snicker at the irony of New
1-folocaust, won Golden Globes for best dramatic picture and best director. York's junior senaiOr foisting his refuse on the
;tu:10r Telly Savalas died in Universal City, Calif., .a day after turning 70.
public domain. For years, New York City has
: One year ago: Theodore Kaczynski pleaded guilty in Sacramento, Calif., been trucking its-garbage 10 pistant jurisdictions,
to being the Uriabomber in return for a sentence of life in prison without most infamously a few years back when a trash
parole. On the first fuh day of his visit to Cuba, Pope John Paul II celebrat- barge sailed the Atlantic ooastlooking for a home.
~ Mass, preaching the message, "Be not afraid."
'
More recently, New York created a stink by
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Ann Sothern is 90. Former Sen. Birch Bayh, dumping its refuse in Nonhero Virginia, just
0-!nd., is 71. Actress Piper Laurie is 67. Actor Seymour Cassel is 64. Author. across the Potomac River fro111 the Capitol.
Joseph Wambaugh is 62. Chef Jeff 'smith ("The Frugal G,ourmet ") is 60.
Schumer's spokesperson, Kathy Levine, is careful
Actor John Hurt is 59. Cnuntry singer-musician TeddJ( Gentry (Alabama) is not to characterize the boxes in the hall as "trash."
47. Rock singer Steve Perry i·s 46.

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movie career. And what
I re'alize that Michael]ortlan is
about all those old light
beer commercial's with supposed to be a fabulous, pas·
the over-the-hill baseball guys? They at least sionate athlete, one of the best
tried to be amusing. who ever lived,
not the best. But
Before his unpleasantness, O.J. Simpson you couldn't prove that by me. AI~
used to jump over Juggage·. When we, as con- I've seen him do is shake his head
somers, see Michael at Tweety Bird, and then give us d
Jordan, what are we
seeing? As near as I can phone number.
figure it, Michael Jordan's television persona is a person with animated characters from
who's mildly surprised to find him- Warner Brothers canoons?
self on television, and would rather
-Is there a Bemusemenl FactOr
. be doing something . else, playing that must be considered before he
nine holes of golf, for instance, or will consent to endorse a ·product?
taking a nap. Is that supposed 10 Do his people bring him products,
make me thirsty for Gatorade?
testing his reactions? If he smirks;
How does he decide what prod- the produ'ct is rejected. If he frowns;
ucts he's going to endorse? Why hoi Mr. Jordan says no. If he laughs out,
dogs and not brown-and-serve right, the salespeople are shown the
sausages? Why Gatorade and not door. I just don 'I know.
·
orange juice? Why batteries and not
Ultimately, I have to admit that!
power strips? Are these products have no favorite Michael Jordan
carefully chosen so they will not moment. I watch him the way he
detract from his image? Or is money watches us -- detached, semi-ironic;
· the sole consideration? Maybe he . bemused -- only without the money;
uses these products himself. Does he
(lin Shollel' new book, "Not
laze about the manse in his Jordan Wet Yet," )IIV!JIIIIIble from 2. ·~-11
line of clothing, Nikes untied on his PubUCIIIont, PO Box 1110, Loa .
huge feet, munching a dog, sipping a ~~:j 1C1~~~-~~-;on-lree
Gatorade as he chats long distance Copy~giiUeotl NEWSPAPER ENTER.
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The boxes contain imponant lilt:§ and materials from Schumer's House office, Levine told us.
" I don 't think the senator's constituents would
appreciate having their mall referred to a5 trash."
That, of course, begs the next question : What
would the good citizens of New York think about
having their letters sitting in an unmonitored publie hallway, free to lhe prying eyes of curious
passers-by?
·
Defensively, Levine said the constituent letters
are .in sealed boxes and weren't out in the hall for
very long -- only a week, tojlf. Everything,
Levine told our associate Kathryn Wallace, would
soon be moved. This was confirmed by
Schumer's rcceptionis~ who said the ttash was
scheduled to go by the end of the week -- per
order of the Senate Superintendent.
· Wanting to get to the bottom of this, we called
said Superintendent"• office, and were told that
they could not comment specifically on
Schumer'strash. But they did note that the Senile
Rules Cnmmittee has strict guidelines governing
all public space in conpessional office buildings.
The rules say that anything. moved into the
hallway mustlle removed by the end of the busi ness day. Ncm-&lt;:ompliarice can·result in corrective
action from the Senate Rules Cnmmittee or the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Yes, even trash disposal on CapiiOI Hill is
enveloped in bureaucracy.
MISPLACED RESOURCES-- Six years ago,
Bill Clinton infamously promised to run "the
most ethical administration in hislory." ·
It didn 't take long for those words to beoome,

.
in White House parlance, "inoperable." B~l everi
though law and order may not be the rule at the
lop, it's being drummed into the minions.
AI the Treasury Department, no fewer than
14,404 employees have undergone "integrity
awareness" training. In the six months ending
Sept. 30, nearly 500 presentations were given,
mostly to Internal Revenue Service personnel;
"that are designed 10 heighten their awareness of ·
ethics and integrity," according to a recent repon
by Treasury's Office of Inspector General.
An OIG official, speaking on condition of
anmiymily, told us that all new Treasury employees used 10 undergo ethics training. Cutbacks
have since forced the OIG to give these briefings
"as opportunity arises." -But despite everything
going on at the White House, our source told us
that the integrity classes do not cover sexual
harassment in the workplace.
·
The training may not have come a minute too
soon. Judging from the same repon, .high crimes
. and misdemeanors· aren't exclusive to the Oval
Office. For example, an agent from the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms pleaded guilty to
"conspiracy and bribing a public. official" for his
role in a scheme to sell resident·alien "green
cards." Investigators caught on after the agent
· showed signs of Jiving far beyond the means of
his modest government salary.
In the IRS, one employee was IOssed out after
. being caught in an illegal refund scheme, in
which the employee and •three co-conspirators
tried to claim $150,000 in false refunds.
Copyright 1880,-Unltld FIIIUre Syndlcete,lnc.

Local· briefs:

IIICH.

I•

) llanonatd la1'/SG'

IND.

c. Dailey

Carey_named chair of subcommittee

Basil C. Dailey, 88, Reedsville, formerly of Huntington, W.Va., died on
Tuesday, Jan. 19, 1999 in The Arbors in Marietta, following an extended illness.
He was bam in Cabell Cnunty, W.Va., on Sept. 12, 1911, son of the late
Emmitt N. and Mary 'J. Luellen Dailey. He was a member of the Chestnut
Grove Baptist Church, a m~mber of the PTL Club and 700 Club, and was a
retired mechanic for the Borden Cn.
·
Surviving are iwo sons and daughters-in-law, Charles E. and Theda Dailey of Reedsville, and Denver and Karen Dailey of Barboursville, W.Va; two
grandchildren and three slepgrandchildren; four sisters, Helen Meadows,
Elsie Jenkins, Evelyn Jenkins and Thelma McComas, all of Milton, W.Va.;
a brother, Donald Dailey of Hilton Head Island, S.C.; and a stepdaughter,
Carol S. Hall of Fort Myers, Fla.
·
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday in the Heck Funeral Home, Milton,
W.Va., with the Rev. Chelcie Gibson and the Rev. James Legg officiating.
Burial will be in the White Chapel Memorial Gardens, Barboursville, W.Va.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 4-7 p.m. today.

Analysis

A man 'WI•.thout' a favor··lte Jorda'n m·ome-n t

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Death Notice-s

r

Comtnentary
'Lsea6lisliea 1111948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• §Cum~~ua 1150'/SG' I

Carl .H. McDaniel

W. VA.

1999 AccuWoather,

0 ~-·- ~-~

&amp;.My Pi. Cioll"1

Ooudj

.-

T-storTM

R~n

Flunlos

Chance of thunderstorms
:extends tl1rough Saturday

'·

By The Aasocl1tecl Press
More rain and thunderstorms predicted for tonight could cause swollen
streams to overflow their banks again, the National Weather Service said.
Some flooding occurred early today, especially in western Ohio, where
rainfalls of 2-3 inches were reported.
·
.
The weather service said ·a warm front draped across the ~tate was
pulling warm and moist up from the Gulf of Mexico.
Another frontal system will bring more rain to Ohio on Saturday, along
with cooler temperatures, forecasters said. Morning highs will be 55-60
with temperatures falling during the day.
The record-high 'temperature for this date at the Cnlumbus weather sta_tion wa8 71 degrees in 1906 while the record low was 16 below-zero in
1936. Sunset tonight will be at5:38 p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:47a.m .
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Showers likely, with a chance of thuncjerslorms. Lows in the
mid 50s. South wind 10 to 15 mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
· Saturday...Showers and thunderstorms. Any thunderstorms may contain strong gusty winds and heavy rain. Continued warm with highs in the
mid 60s. Ch~nce of rain 90 percent.
Saturday night...Showers, with a chance of thunderstorms, mainly
early. Lows in the lower 40s.
·
Extended forecast:
Sunday...Partly cloudy with a chance or rain or snow showers. Highs in
the lower 40s:
. ~- Monday...Variable cloudiness. Lows in the lower 30s and highs in the
mid40s.
· . Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower and mid 30s and highs in
the mid and upper 40s.

State Rep. John Carey; R-Wellston, has been appointed by Ohio
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson as chairman of the finance human services subcommittee.
·
"This is a big job. Ohio has led the country in welfare reform. The""
are many issues that ~e will be examini.ng.
The'subcommittee's first objective will be to work with Governor Taft
on. the budget for the Department of Human Services and other state
agencies," said Carey.
"I want to continue to provide incentives and assistance to help people stay off welfare when possible ."
:
The three-term legislator has also been named ,to the finance and
appropriations. Committee, transportation and public safety committee,
local government and townships committee and the rules and reference
committee.

Announcements:
Reeves fundraiser slated

'
Carl H. McDaniel,
72, Point·Pleasant, W.Va., died Wednesday, Jan. 20, 1999
in the Pleasant Valley Nursing·and Rehabilitation Center.
Born Feb. 3, 1926 in Mason, W.Va., son of the late Verna McDaniel, he
retired after 30 years from Midwest Conveyor of Kansas City, Kan., where
he served as superintendent.
He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II. He served with the 76th
Infantry Division, Cnmp'any K. and the 417th Infantry, and was the recipi. ent of the Purple Heart, the Eastern African Middle Eastern Theater Medal
and the Victory Medal. He was a member of the American Legion Post 23,
Disabled American Veterans,' Loyal Order of the Moose, and Carpenters and
Millwrights Locallt59.
He was also preceded in death by his-stepfather, Kenneth Birchfield; and
two sisters, Nadean Kirby and Jenny Belle.
Surviving are his wife, Gloria Roush McDaniel; three sons, Luke (Kathy)
of Long Bottom, Mark (Marmett) of Culpeper, Va., and Matthew (Edana) of
Bayard, W.Va.; a daughter, Jane Thompson of Athens; seven grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren; two sisters, Josephine Miller of New Haven,
W.Va., and Geneva Bays of Gallipolis; and a brc;&gt;ther, Jim McDaniel of '
Cnlumbus.
·
Services will be I p.m. Saturday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., with the Rev. LouisA. Hussell o[ficiating. Burial will
be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens, with military graveside rites by the
American Legion Post 23. ·Friends my call at the funeral home from 6-9
tonight.

The Chester Cnmmunity will hold a fish fry with homemade cakes arid
pies on Saturday, Feb. 6, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the fire station. Proceeds will
benefit Ray line Reeves, daughter of Ron and Susan Reeves. Donations of
food items are being sought.

Home educators' potluck

::

A potluck dinner for area home educators will be held Sah-\rday, 6 p.m.
at Carleton School, Syracuse. Speaking will be Seth Jones, on Home
Schooling Across America- Statistics that Stack Up. Children welcome.

Game canceled
The Meigs-Miller Freshman game for Saturday, 5 p.m. has· been cancc;led • .

Youth program offered

.

A special youth-oriented service at Lifeline AP\)Siolic Ch.urch will be

held Saturday at4 p.m. Randy Osmond will b~ the speaker. The church is
located in Point ·Pleasant.

Special board meeting
The Eastern Local School Board will meet in special session, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at the administration office for the purpose of personnel·,
finance reports, approval of student enrollment, and any other business
that can be legally addressed.

Organizational meeting set

.

The Town and Country Expo will have its organizational meeting
Thursday, 7:30p.m. in the grange annex building at the fairgrounds. Any, _
one interested in helping with this year's expo, set fpr Sept. 18 and I9, ar~
welcome. For more information, residents may call 749-3020.

Auxiliary meeting announced
The Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, PomeroY,
will meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the hall. Loretta Tiemeyer is president.

Carl H. McDaniel

Immunization schedule

An immunization clinic will be held at the Meigs County Healtb
Carl H. McDaniel, 72, of Point Pleasant,
Depanmcnt on Tuesday, 9 to 11 a.m. and I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multi•
West Virginia, died Wednesday evening, Janu- ·
purpose Center, Pomeroy. Every child must be accompanied by a parary 20, 1999 in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and
ent/legal
guardian, and provide the child's immunization record. For more
Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant, West Virinformation,
call the Health Department, 740-992-6626.
ginia.
iie retired after 30 years from Midwest Conveyor of Kansas City, Kansas, where he served
as superintendent on many projects throughout
the country.
He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II,
serving with the 76th Infantry Division, CnmOXFORD (AP) - Miami Uni- charges.
pany K and the 4171h Infantry, from April 24,
versity officials believe two bl~ck
Snow was president of the Black
... 1944 until Nove!'lber 2, 1945: l;le was a recipi-.
students who led protests against Student Action Association and had
· · ent of the Purple Hean, the Eastern African
racist fliers posted on campus were accused the university of not doing
· responsible for the inflammatory enough to ease racial tensions on the
ment and squad to Kyger Creek · Middle Eastern l'heater Medal and the Victory
· messages. ·
·
southwest Ohio campus.
Middle School, fire alarm.
MedaL He was a member of the American
Allen was one of seven studen1s
· University officials said ThursRACINE
Legion Post 23, the Disabled American Veterans,
.
day
that
the
students
'
fingerP.rints
arrested
for blocking traffic during a
8-:08p.m., VFD to Brewer Road, · Loyal Order of the Moose, and Carpenters and Millwrights Locall159.
were
found
on
fliers
posted
at
the
related
protest.
.
'
Penland, gas leak, Bashan VFD
He was bornFebruary 3, 1926 in Mason, West Virginia. He was preceded
Center
for
Black
Culture
and
LearnBoth
students
withdrew
from
tlte
assisted.
·
.
in death by his mother, Vema McDaniel, and stepfather, Kenneth Birchfield;
RUTLAND
sisters, Nadean Kirby and Jenny Belle; and his faithful "Honey.".
ing on Oct. 30. .
university on Thursday, turned
The fliers attacked blacks and themselves in at police headquarters,
La k' s
Le
He is survived by his wife, Gloria Roush McDaniel; sons, Luke (Kathy)
.6 10
: p.m.,
r m treet,
Ia.
f Lo Bo
Ob' M k M
f Cui
Vi . . M
Felly, Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
o
ng ttom,
to, ar ( armett) o
peper, trgtnta, atthew homosexuals and prompted two were booked and released. Prelimi(Edana) of Bayard, West Virginia; and a daughter, Jane Tho111pson of Athens, days of protests that resulted in nary hearings were scheduled for
Ohio; sisters, Josephine Miller of New Haven, West Virginia, and Geneva seven arrests.
Jan. 29.
Nathaniel Snow, 22, of Cincin "They have not · provided any
Bays of Gallipolis, Ohio; a brother, Jim McDaniel of Cnlumbus, Ohio; three
grandsons, four granddaughters and two great-granddaughters.
nati, and Brad Allen, 21, of Shaker explanation, nor have they admitted
· Producer Darryl F. Zanuck sa.w
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday, January 23, ·1999 in the Crow- ·Heights, were charged with criminal to being in there .or hanging up any
Clark Gable in a 1930 screen test
Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, West Virginia, with the Rev. Louis A. mischief and criminal trespass. They fliers," said Cathryn House, the uniand proclaimed, .. His ears are too
Hussell officiating. Burial will follow in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point could face up to 90 days in jail and versity's safety director and chief of
big. He looks like an ape."
Pleasant, West Virginia, with military graveside rites conducted by the Amer- $750 in fines if convicted on both campus police.
,ican Legion Post 23. Visiting hours will be held at the funeral home on Friday, January 22, 1999, from 6-9 p.m.

Leaders of protests
accused of racist fliers

:EMS units answer 8 calls
Units of the Meigs .C.,unty Emer·
gency Medical Service recorded
eight calls for assistance Thursday.
Units responding included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH .
_6:11 a.m., Overbrook Nursing .
Center, Middlepon, Clara Davis,
yetcrans Memorial Hospital;
• 9:11 a.m ., Stale Route 248,
Mabel Pauley, VMH;
·
· 2:31 p.m., OBNC, Clara Davis,
Holzer Medical Center;
• 10:11 p.m., Welchtown Hill
Road, Minersville, Monte Riffle,
VMH; .
11:46 p.m., U.S. 33, Pomeroy,
Letta Spencer, VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
6:48 p.m., volunteer fire depart-

TRIVIA

Disability lawsuit by Ohioan can
proceed against cruise company

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HONOLULU (AP) - A federal
judge has advanced a disabled Ohio
woman's ·lawsuit against American
.Hawaii Cruises for allegedly denying her full access to its on-shore
excursions.
U.S. District Judge Alan Kay
ruled that the Americans with Disabilities Act supersedes federal 'maritime law, despite the cruise company's claim to the rontrary. American
Hawaii argued that the statute of
limitations for Suzanne Deck's lawsuit had expired under maritime law.
The cruise ship company, whose
parent American Classic Voyages is
based 'lit Chicago, also argued that
the APA, which outlaws discrimina-·

tlW..b................ ........... S27.lO
26 Wect.!I ............................S53.82

DEADLINE WILL BE FEBRUARY 10, 1999.
THIS DATE A PENALTY WILL APPLY.

52 Weeb .................. ........ .SI05 .56
Rltet Outllde Mei1a County

Tax Levy On House Trailers

Inside Melp CountY

ilW..b .. ......................... J29.~
26W..kl ............................$56.68
52 Weeks ......................... .$109.72

RESPONSIBILITY
HOUSE.TRAILER

All owners of house trailers having a status In
the State of Ohio and subject to the tax as
provided above MUST register such trailer with
the County ·auditor on or prior to the date the ·
tax Is due and payable.

TRANSFER- ·

Upon the .transfer of ownership of a house
trailer the cenlflcate- as to such trailer shall
expire, and the original owne' shalllmm&amp;dlately
remove such certlftcate from the trailer.

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OPERATOR OF A
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COURT- ·

lion based on physical and mental
disabilities, does not apply to cruise
ships.
Kay rejected that argument, too.
Deck, of Maumee, Ohio, has
multiple sclerosis and uses a wheelchair or scooter to get around.
In December 1996, she booked
an eight-day voyage aroun'd the
Hawaiian · Islands with American
Hawaii Cruises for $2,395.

Hospital news

Holzer .Medlcal Center
Discharges Jan. 21 - Stephanie
McCorkle, Cora Middleton, Hazel
Rhodes.
(Published with permission)

STARTING FRIDAY JAN 22
ADAM SANDLER
. IN

WATER BOY ,.,

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Every operator of a house trailer ooun or park
of e•ery owner of propeny used for such
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register or all house trailers which make use of
the coun, park, or property.

'Pomeroy

'Gall.ipolis

'Nelsonville

'Lebanon

'Dayton

'Middletown

'Wilmington
•sardinia
'Greenfield

'Hillsboro'
'Springfield
'Circleville

•West Union
• Jamestown.

•washington CH

HOWARD E. FRANK,
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
·.

.
!
'

.

�..

·-~

... . .

\

·Friday, J1nu1ry 22, 1989

points, Juli Hayman had 12, Karr 12,
Damelle Spencer 8, Amber Baker
four, Angi Wolfe four, and Becky
Davis six. Juli Bwley Angie Taylor,
Kristen Chevalier, aod Amber
VanStckle played but did not score.
Rebecca Dalton led N-Y (5·5)
with 14, Amanda Dalton had I 0 and
Amy Dupler 13.
'
Eastern shot 22-49=45 with 31
rebounds (Brannon 10, Karr 6, aad
Hayman 4). The Eagles had 15
assists, (Brannon 5, Hayman 4); two
blocks (Brannon 2); 16 steals

(Jessica Brannon 7, Hayman 4); and
had 12 turnovers with 15 fouls.
Nelsonvtlle-York hit 21-56 overall and had 30 rebounds.
Eastern won the reserve game 20-15
led by Juli Bailey with 10 and
Whitney Karr 4. Sherry Higgins led
Nelsonville with 12.
Eastern, now tied with Federal
Hocking for the Hocking Division
title, goes to Federal Hocking on
Monday.
Quarter lllllla
Nelsonville-York ........ 6-8-12-15=51

=ro=:.lifRTER

Eastern ...................16-14-17-18=65 . :·
Eutero: Jessica Brannon 6-0519=17, Valerie Karr 5-0-214=12. Juli
Hayman 5-0-4/9 =14, Angi. Wolfe 2"
0-0=4, Amber Baker 1-0-213=4, ,
Danielle Spencer 2-0-416=8, Beeky: .,
Davis 1-0-4/6=6. Totals: 2221/37=65
Nelsonville-York:
Rebecca
Dalton 6-0-212=14, Amanda Paltott '
2-0-6/6=10, Emily Hill S-1-013=13 '
Amy Dupler 6-0-0= 12, Elizabeth ,
Newlun 1-0-0=2. Totals: 20·1'
8111=51 . •

· A sluggish first half gave way a
10
•
.
2
J -potnt
second half as the
University of Rio Grande edged
Mo11nt Vernon Nazarene College 9183 in American Mideast Conference
women:s basketball acuon Thursday
night. The victory kept Rio Grande's
ctirrent win streak alive at three consecutive
games. (15-3, AMC 4-2)
Rio Grande
committed 14 turnovers .n the first
half and fell behl'nd 1_ at the
40 39
intermission despite possessing the
lead for nearly 16 minutes. Mount

Lady Marauders roll over .Trimble -72.:.33.
By DAVE HARRIS
Marauders in the first half with nine
SenUnel Corre1pondent
. points.
Meigs used a balanced offensive
It was more of the same i~ the
explosion placmg five girls in double third peiioil as soph,dmore Shannon
figures as the Marauders rolled to a Price led the Marauder charge with
72-33 win over the'Lady Cats in girls seven pomts as Meigs outscored the
TVC basketball action Thursday host 21-13 and had a 54-22 lead
heading mto the final period.
·evening at Trimble High School.
Meigs, playing LIS first game since
Coffey led a balanced Marauder
December 30, 1998, is 5-1 10 the ·scoring attack with i3 points, Price
Ohio Division, and 7-2 overall. added 12, Vming II al\d · Brooke
Trimble drops to 0-7 in the Hocking ·Williams and Dav1s I0 each. Jennifer
Shrimplin was close behmd With
Division and 0-10.
The Marauders jumped out to an nine points, Tonya Miller, Tiffqny
early 17-2 lead at the end of the first Halfhtll, and Amy Hysell added two
period. Tracy Coffey led Meigs in points each and Becky Smith one.
the penod with five pomts, Amber
Meigs h1t 25 of 60 from the floor
Vining and Tricia Davis added four includmg two of three from long
points each. Bobbi Lent scored the range for 42%. The Marauders went
only Trimble points.
to the line 22 Urnes hitting 16 for
Meigs had a 16-7 scoring advan- 73%.
tage m the second period and went
The Marauders pulled down 21
intothelockerroomwitha33-9half- rebounds led by Coffey with seven
time lead. Vinmg paced the

SPLITS THE SEAM - Cincinnati's Mlcllael Horton (center) splits
the seem In the defense offered by Loulavllle'a AleK Sanders ('-ft)
arid Nate Johnson In the first hall of Thursday night's Conference
USA game In Louisville, Ky., where the visiting Bearcats won 81-55,
(AP)

Top 25 men's
college basketball
By The Associated Preas
Jason Terry dtd it all for No. 9
Arizona. He scored a career-high 37
points, made some big steals and
even came up with a successful psychological ploy.
The Wildcats beat Oregon 85-83
Thursday mght in yet another close
game for both teams, and It was
Terry, the senior leader on a team
tha,t starts three freshmen, who got
the credit.
"There is one reason we won this

(See TOP 25 on Page S)

By SCOTT WOLFE

Sentinel Correspondent
Despite Southern cutting into the
lead several times in the second half,
the Wellsto_n Golden Rockets. pulled
away from a 28-20 halfttme lead to
claim a 57-45 win over the Southern
Lady Tornadoes Thursday night. The
Tn-Valley Conference inter-division
game played at Wellston left
Wellston at 5-5 and Southern at 2-10.
Wellston was led by Candace
Robinette with 15, Katie Crabtree
with 12, Mandy Leach nine, Rachel
Henneman mne, and six each by
Dusty Cremeans and Rochelle
Tribby.
Southern had a balanced attack

led by Heather Dailey with 14 points
and 10 rebounds, while Kim Sayre
and Kim !hie each added II. Sarah
Brauer five , and Laraine Lawson
four. Tammy Fryar and Amanda
Ashwonh played but did riot score.
' Southern ztppcd to an 8-3 lead,
but was outscored 14-0 the last 3·30
of the quarter, then fell 28-20 at the
half. Several times Southern had the
chance to cut the lead to five, but
missed numerous lay-ups under the
bucket
Southern shot 2-7 on three-pointcrs, 15-55 on two-pointers and had
32 rebounds (Oatley 10). Southern
had 9 steals (Dailey 5); 5 assists
(Sayre 3); 12turnovers, and 16 fouls.

n.

Tennessee
Ronda 64
Tex,as-Arhngton 68, McNeese St 63-0T

Basketball

Midwest

NCAA Division I

Cleveland St 85 Loyola, 111 57
Derron 60, Ill -Ch•cago 52
•Drake 79, S llhnou 58
Ev~msv1Jie 75, Cretghton 54
N Iowa ~6. W1chna St .5:\
Oakland, M1ch 75, lnd -Pur-Indpls 68
S Ulah 74, Mn, oun -Knnsas Cuy 60
Youngstown St 64, W lllmon 47

men's scores

East
Ball St 64, Buffalo 58
C'amsms 74 R1der 68

Fllrfield 88, lona 74
George Wa,hmgton 67 , St

J,..ong Island U

6~ .

Bonavcn~ure

!i6

Southwest·

Qummpmc 6l·OT

Mount St Mary 's, Md 72 Monmou th, N J 67
Naogara 69. Manh anan S;\

Georgta 68, Arkansas 59
Lamar 76, Stephen F Austin 62
Marquette 90. Houston 64
North Teus 81, Idaho 78
Sam Hou ~to n S1 72 SW Texas 64

Penn 75 Drexel 65
Rhode lslrmd 75, La Sn!le 62
Jtoben Morn5 70 Cent Coonectmu St 60
S1e na 86 Loyola Md 78
St Frunc1s NY 9::\, Wagn~r 77
St Frunm Pa 84, F:urleigh Dickinson 7J
Syracuse 90 Bos10n College Sl

Far West

' 7g Oregon 74
Anz.ona
Am;ona S1 57, Ore11on St 5:\
Bngham Young 74 Fresno St .SO
CS Nonhndge 75, Sacramento St 52
Gonza1a 6' San Fronmco 59
N Amana ffJ Idaho St &amp;4-0T
Portland St 80 Morunna 74-0T
Sama Clara 79 Portland 70
Stanford 77 Washm}!ton St 65
Texas Chmuan 7J Atr Force 69-0T
UNLV 72 So uthem Meth 69 OT
Utah 74 San Jose St 50
Wnshtn~ton 71 Callforn1 a 49

South
Ctncmnnti 8 1 lomsvtllc 55
McNee5e St 7 1 Texas-A rlington 61
M1ddle Tennessee 75 Morc::hend St 61
Murray St 81 , Tcrmessee St 71
N C Olarloue 67, Marquette 61
NE LouJstana 79, SE lou1smna 69
New Orleans 69. LoutSiillla Tech 61
Ntcholls St 70 Northwestern St M
North C.::troltna 7 1 V•rg1nH1. .J7
SW Louu•ana SO South Alabama 48
Samford 78 Campbell 69
$outhern M1ss 74 Hou s10n 57
Stetson 86. Troy St 71
Term -Manm 70 Ausun Peay 69
Tennes~e Tech 70 E Kentucky 41
TulaTX 8{}, Ala -11mrungham M
~ Kentucky 65 Arkansas St 57

Midwest
lnd Pur lndpl s 7J Oaklnnd Mt ch 61
M•cht3nn St 80 lowa65
S U!ah 87, Mt noun-Kilns.u Oty 86-0T
$W M•ssoun St 81 N Iowa 75
toledo 55, N llhno1s 46
Volparaaso 74 C h 1~ago St 42
V1qmta Tech B . Dayton 64-0T
W llhnms 79 Youngstown St 74
Wn. ·Mtlwaukce 69_Wnght St 65

Southwest
lamar 7~. Stephen F Ausun 72
SW Te:u~ 67, Sam Houston St 54
Sout~rn Meth 72. UNLV 62
Texas Olnsttan 114 A1r Fortt 87

Far West
Arizona 85, Oregon 83
BnJham Young 75, Sari Jose St 44
CS Northrid&amp;e 78, Weber St 68
Ca l St -Fullerton 66, Long Deach St 64-0T
Idaho 67 , Nevada 'i I
Loyola Marymoun~ 89, San Diego 71
Montana St 65, E Washmgton 64
N Anzona 101 . Idaho St 69
New Mex11:0 S1 89 North Tt:xns 80
Oregon St 81, An:mna St 51
Pacific 64, UC Jr v11~ 55
Peppcrdine 50, St Mary's, Cal 44
Ponland ic 73 Monmna .58
Smnfor4 94, Wnshtngton St 4.5
Utah St S8, Botse St 52
Wnshangton 87 Cahfornta 7L

NCAA Division I

women's scores

East
St Bonaventure 86 La Salle 72
St Francis, P~ 82 Fauldgh D1 cklnson 69

South
Hclmont?O Sf. Mt ssou rt ~7
Cmcl nnat1 'i I Ala -Hnm1ngham 42
&lt;Jcm~on 70 N Cr~mhnn St '\8
L Kcmudy 76 re n nes~ce Te~.:h 71
11:,a ln!CffiUIIOntd i'!l SW LoUISiana 6()
(~•trHtn

St M

Mcr~.:cr 'i)f

b.:ttrl!tlt lcch 72

Mo~rylnnd

56

Jlltk\uOVIIIC 'It 77 rent 11nnd.l 70

I SU 69 V.1ntk:rhllt '\4
M1ddlc h.: nnc~\l:c Y9 Mnrc hnu~c 72
Murmy St, ~c; l c nnc~scc St 46
Nl·. Luul~mn: • M2 Sl; Lnm~mnu 52
Nnttltwc~ tcrn St ?fi. Nt~.:hnll ~ St Tl~
Sut1th llunJ:. 7fl l&gt;cl':tul 71
ICIIII · Mttr11/l 711 All\lrn l'o.:,ly .t 11

.

'

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Akron Buchtel 73 Akron E 49
Akron Eller 58 Akron Cent- Hower ::\1
Akron F1res tonc S2 Akron K ~n more 49
Akron Garfield 60, Akron N 47
Akron Manchester 80, Fa1rleu 34
Aleunder64, Federal Hocking 44
Alltance 30, Masstllon Jackson 22
Amand~·Oearcreek 69 Circle lillie 48
Antwerp 17 Holgate 27
Archbold 65 Swafllon ~5
Arlington 51, Arcadtn 45
Ashland Crestllt ew 51 S Centrnl 50
Ayerntlle 48 Wayne Trace 44
Batnvm 48 Calvary Chr 44
Beachwood 4!, Cuyahoga Hts 37
Beaver Eas1em 65, Portsmouth Nacre Dame 34
Beavercreek 92 Sprmg South 16
Bellrure St John s 80. Shadys1de 45
Bellbrook 55, Hrook\tlle 49-0T
Bellefontamc 49, Tecumseh 46
Belpre 68, Hemlock M1ller 24
BenJamm Loca n 48, Spnng Cathohc 43
Berlin Center Wescrn Reserve 47, Jackson
M11ton 40
Berlm Htland 70. Tuscarawas Cath 26
Berne Un1on 56. M1llenport 32
Bethel 73, N~;wton 30
Be~tley 69, WashmgiOIJ C H 54
Bluffton 62 Un coln~ t ew 49
Batltins 60, Fort loratrue 43
Bowhna Green 60, Rossford JO
Brook.field 47 B11dger 17
•
Brooklyn 39, Co lumbta 32
Buckeye Local '56, lndt an Creek S I
Canton McKinley 51 , Cle Collinwood 35
Catdtngton 46 , Mount G•le!ld :\1
Carey 49, Rtverdale 31
Carlisle 48, Preble ShawJJee 46
Celina 48, Wapakoneta 27
Cenlerburg 57, Danville ~6
Chippewa 82. Rmman 39
Chnsttan Ccmmuntty 4-4, N Coast Cbr 30
Cm Ameha61 , On Anderson 59
Cm. Country Day _,8, Lockland J5
Cm Finneylown .S3, Cm. Reildlnl .l 9
Cm. Olen Eate :\I, Cin Oak Hills ~0
Ctn Hamson 6.~ . Cin Nonhwest 46
Ctn Hughes 70. Cm Atken 25
Cm Mercy 50, Cm McAuley 43
C1n Mt Nnt~ Dame 52 Cm Srton 34
Cm N Culle&amp;e Hall 67, Ntw M1amt '2
Cm Pnncetot1 88. Middletown 26
Ctn Roger Bacon 5.S, Ctn Purceii -Manan J4
Ctn St Ursula 54, Crn Ursultnc 49
Cm Summa! Coun try Day 50. Cm Seven Htlls
"

l Woodward 46.
Cm Tart 51 , On
Cm Taylor 54. Madema 16
Cm Turpm ~6 On Wes1ern Htlls J2
Cm Winton Woods 46 Cm Walnut Htll s n
O n Withrow 61 . Ctn Mount Healthy 38
Claymont ~1 Cnd tz ~~
Cit B~aumonl 65 Cit St Au~ustlnc ·B
Clear Fork ~6 Loudom••lle 4"i
Clcrmonl Northeastern 44 Wilham5burg 28
Col Hanley 7\ New01rk Cnlh \6

•

Col School for &lt;lirl• 69, Col ~ Academy 63-0T
Columbiana 5~, United 34
Cory·Rawson 45, Vanlue 31
Covmgton71, National Trail36
Dalton 47, Snuthvalle 41
Danbury 66, Onawa Halls 58
Day CarTOII 4!1, Edgewood 33
Day Cham made-J uhennc 59. TrotwoodMadtson 44
Day Chnsuan 87, Xerua Chr 45
Day Dunbar 55, Day Colonel White 41
Day Jefferson 40, Yellow Spnngs 27
Day Oakwood 72, Eatoo 43
DeGtlllff Rtllersu:te 42. Rtdgemont41
Delaware 48, Whitehalll5
Delphos Jcffcrron 60, l1ma Perry 27
Delphos St John's 56 Coldwater 42
Dax1e 65, Maddtetown Madtson 51
E Camoo 50, Tuscarawas Val 28
E Cleveland St.aw J9, Parma 19
E Omton 62, Greenview 36
E Knox 51. Johnstown Monroe 44
Eastern Brown .55, Pc~:bles 51-0T
Eastwood 70, Elmwood 41
Edgerton 57. 1inora 20
Edon 4), Fayette- 22
Fa1rbnnks 54, Tnad 49
Fairfield Umon 77, Logan Elm 49
Fatrland 60 S Galha 45
Fehctty 58 New Rtchmond ~4
Fmdlay 65 Frt.:mont Rou 5 ~
Fort Frye 68, Caldwell 44
Fort Jennmgs 69, Mtller Caty 34
Fm;tona 50, Sand usky .'9
Franklin Furnace Gree n 68. Glenwood"'
Fremont St Joseph 68, Betts111 lle 8
Fro ntter 41 Monroe Central 40
Gnlhpol• s 55 Cheshtrc Rtvcr Val -'i4-0 T
Garnway ~2 LakelarnJ 35
Oarrettmlle 46, Ctwdoo ?t7
Grandvtew 49 , Uuca 24 '
Gtonvtlle 55, Fisher Calh 46
Ham&amp;lton Bndtn 55, Ctn McNtchala.s 44
Hntn1hon Ron 59, Wtltrungton 54
Hamaltoo Twp 42, Canal WincMstcr JS
Heath 64, New Albany 54-0T
Hillsboro .51 , Bethel-Talc 43
Hopewell Loudon SO. Mohawk 46
Hubbard 52. Warren Champton 49
lnd1an Lake 46 Waynesficld..(loWn l7
Jackso n Cent~r 80, Fatrlawn 42
Jolin (WVa) Marshall 59, Meadowbrook 51
Jonathan Alder 53, Ucking Val 41

Kanus Lakota SO. Gtbsonburs 30

Kenton Ridsc: 94. ~non 41
Kinas M11ls Kmss ~6. Uule MtamJ 52
Lakcv1ew 56., l.aBrae 40
Lakewood 68, W. Jefl'mon 47
LavrtllO. Lvlherllfl E. J7
t.eeooolal7. Sovlhem Local 15
L.etpstc 73, McComb 44
lexington 44, Mantf~ld Sr 43
Uma Bath 62, St Mary'• 40
Uma Cath 60, Convoy Ccestvlew S3

. ....... 1721 8

42 t06 120

-·-

Tampa Bay _.

. ... II 30 4

26 94 1$6

~TERN CONFERENCE
Cenlral tHviJ&amp;on

.tu. GE
49 I JS
16 17 9 41 Ill
1625 4 )6104
13 2S 7 33 97

:!!: L I

Ium

2120 l

~I roll

St LouiS '
Nashvtlle .
Ch1cago

liA

122
101!
143
138

Northwul Dlv1J6on

113
43 126 116
IS 24 6 ~6 II~ 1\5
IS 27 4 34 I 12 139

22 19 4
18 19 7

Colorado
Edmomon
Vancouver
Calgary , .

48 114

Atlanti( Division

Ium

:!!: L I fls. GE liA

Ph•lndelphta .......................24 10
NewJerscy
. .... 25 14
Pmsburgb
,.... 20 14
NY. Rangers .
1721
NY lslil.ndcrs ..
14 29

10 58 115 87
S S.5129 116
1 47 122 113
7 41 117 124
3 31 106 H6

Northeasl Division

Toronto
Onawa
Buffalo
Boston

.. , 2716 J 57 1.52 13.1
. 25 14 6 56 \J3 101
... 23 I~ 7 53 119 86
20 16 7 47 116 97

27 9 7 61 127
24 II 1 55 II J

Dall~

Pflormx

Ph1lndt.:lplua 4 WnshtngiOn I
N Y Islanders S P1t&amp;sburgh 2
Flonda 2 N Y R~ngers I
0.~4, Carohna I
Toront 4 St Loun 2
Tamp ay ·' · Nashville 2
Cht go ~ . Montrtal 0
Coklrl\do 4 Cnlgory 2
Anahe1m 1 Phoenix 1-tle
New Jerse y J, Los Angele1 2
Edmon~on J. Son Jose 3-ne

No games throul!h Saturday
Sunday's game

flL."., m.

Alf·Star lame at

,

Per Month

MSRP 14,785. 59500 Cash
Down, 36 Months, 15,000
Cash Down
Miles Per .Year. 595
199"1st Payment
00

~6

89
87

17 19 9 4)113 108 ' '
. IS 18 12 42 104 106 '
... 16 2S 4 16 106 121

Ana.hetm
San Jose .
los Angeles

WilY WOUlD AftYOftE WART TO lEAJE I
POftTIRO?

S999 Sunllre

..

Patlllt Dh'lsiOn

Ot1awn J Boston I

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.-

Southnst Division
................. ,........... 20 18 7 41116112
Aorida
,
.
17 16 II 45 110 115
Washmgton _ . . -· ... 16 23 " 36 100 113

Thursday's scores

NHL standings

$1·99°

Linsly. W Va. 58, Bridgeport 36
Usbon ~5, Columbian&amp; Crestvtew 52
London 47, Mad110n Plains 41
Lonun Southview 52, Akron Covcnlry 35
Loveland 41 , Norwood 33
lutherM W SO, Qc, Gilmour 24
Magnolaa, W Va 57, Hannibal Rtllt:r ~
Mal vern 62, Conotton Val 50
Mansrxld Madtaon 43, A1hland 17
Mapleton 52, Plymouth 27
MarJaretta 62. Huron 49
Marteua 71 . Loaan 4S
Manon Local 72. Parkway 28
Marlon Pleasant 43, Gallon Northmor 42
Martini Ferry 66, Steubenville Cath 27 '
Muon 74, Ooshen 2'1
•
Mu1dlon 79, Akron Sc V-S1 M 21
Maumee 4), Holland Spring. 39 ,
Mau~Me VIII 43, Tot . Emanuel Bapt 32
Maysville 55, W Muskingum 44
McCiatn 60, M•ami Trace 48.,. • •
MechanlcaburJi $2, W Uberly Sal~m 4:t
Medma 531Strongs11tlle 49
Medina 811c:keye 70, Tnway 39
Metgs 72. Trimble J~
Mentor 53 lakewood ~ 1
Mlamlsbtq 69, Mcnroe SO
Middletown Chr S2, Cm Omstllln 26
M1lfdrd 49, Hamilton 41
Milton Umon 45. Grahnm _\0
Mlnernl Ridge :18. McDonald 56 OT
Mmford 66 lucaslllfle Vol S7
Mnutcr 48 New Bremen .a2
Mogadore 61 Waterloo 60
Montpelier 66. Delta 57
N Adams ~I FaJtfttkl :\6
N. Canton 60. Massillon Perry '4
, N Union 42. Butktye Vtll 40

Hockey

2.\
Spnngboro 76 Day Stebbms 41
St Henry 76 Fort Recovery SI
St Marys Cnlh 47, Oak Hnrbor 45
Teays Vlll 42 Bloom-Carroll 35
Tiffm Culvert 70 N Baltunore 46
Tol Catholic 98, Woodward 21
'rol Notre Dame 68. Tol. Wrule J2
Tol Stan 48 Tol Bowsher 44
Tn-Village 74, M1ss1nJnawo Va l 50
Tu,law 65 , Sandy Val 52
Twm Valley S SO, Bradford 25
Umon Local ~5 . Barnesvtlle 43
Umontown lake 52 Nonhwood 3J '
Umoto 57 Hun11n gton Rou 26

By PAULFOY
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Utah
legislators are pushing a bill that
would increase oversight of Olympic
finances.
"The buck stops in the
Legislature," said Rep. Jordan
Tanner of Provo.
His bill to create an Olympic
Coordinating Committee, a panel of
12 senators and House members.
was approved Thursday by the
House Government Operations
Committee and seni to the full House
for considerauon.
The bill would establish tighter
requirements for the governor and
Salt Lake's mayor to review quarterly budgets of the Salt Lake
(

Moooeal ..

200" deposit

9iWo Due at Lease
Signing plus
Applicable Tax
&amp;Tlllll Fees

I

tainly haven't tried to send the kid
back there. "
The job of processing each and
every new contract and trade was a
slow one on the first full non -lockout
day smce June 30, and the expected
signings of McDyess, Divac, Jerry
Stackhouse, Hot Rod Williams,
Christian Laettner and Joe Smith
were , delayed for one reason or
another.
.By the end of the day, there were
56 s1gnmgs and five trades that had
been announced. But the Chicago
Bulls, for example, did not have any
of thetr transactions cleared
General manager Jerry Krause
satd the new player contracts were so

Utah lawmakers seek .bill to pad
oversight of Oly17Jpic finances

Orap;;!~ina

Upper Sandusky 54, Colonel Crawford .;9
Urbana 67, Spnn&amp; ShawRCf:: S9
Valley View SO, Day NorthridJC 28
Van Buren 70, Hardin Nonhcm 29
Van Wert 57, Ehda 44
Vet'5rullcs 52, S1dney Lehman 34
Vincent Warren 73, Athens 45
W Salem Nonhwestem SS, Hallsdale 22
Warren Hardang !19, You Ursuline 51
Warren Kennedy 56, Maplewood 4l
Waterford 47, Vmton Co 23
Wauseon 66, Ubeny Center 48
Wa.11erly 61, Wheelmburg .58
Wnynednlc 36. Norwayne: 26
Weanon (W Va ) Modonna 69 Toronto 64
Wellston 57, Racme Southern 45
Western Brown 64, Gcor,Sttown 43
Westfall 58 R1chmond Dale Southeastern 50
Wtllo-Hill Chr 42, Medma Fnst Jupt 15
Woodmore .56, Genoa 41
Wooster 83. Uruontown lake 50
Wontua&amp;ton Or 78, Mnnon Cat h 21
Xema 40, Fa•rborn 37
You Christtan 42, Heartland Chr 17
You L•berty 54. Newton Falls 41
You Wilson 65, Campbell Mcmonal J I

points and grabbed seven reboupds.
Deana Kilpatrick and Holly Ri"le
added 10 points each.
Rio Grande plays host · to
Cedarville ·College at the Newt
Oliver Arena on Saturday at 4 p.m.
Fans can follow the action on 97.7
FM WOO beginning at 3:35p.m.
Cedarville (10-7, AMC 2-4) dropped
a 107-85 decision to Shawnee Sl6te
· ht . Ri o Gran de leads
on Tuesd ay mg
the all-time series 20-4 over the
Yellow Jackets.
Hal( ili1IJI

Mount Vernon Nazarene .. 40-43=83
Rio Grande ...................... 39-52=91

MVNC: Kilpatrick 2/6-1/43/3=10, Riggle 3n-l/5-112=10,
Nussbaum .3n-218-5/10=17, B1bby
1/5-216-6/6=14, Seiter 5113-0/08/1 0= 18, Trainer 2/4-0/0-4/6=8,
Walters 213-010-212=6, Oyster 0100/0-0/0=0, Smith 0/0-0/0-0/0:0.
Totals: 18/45-6123-29/39=S3
Total FG: 24-68 (.353)
Reboundl: 35 (Seiter 10)
•·-•·ts·. 9 (Riggle 4)
~..
Thmoven: 19
Blocked shots: 6 (Ktlpatrick 4)
Steals: 6
Fouls: 21
Fouled out: Bibby, Trwner
'

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
wait. McDyess traveled to Denver on
AP Bllketball Writer
Thursday, but the Suns were keeping
Antonio McDyess is back to their possibilities open irt case they
being undecided, and it's holding up could woo him back.
several other deals.
"We're interested to hear what
McDyess spent Thursday m led to this," Phoenix general managDenver meeting with Nuggets offi- er Bryan Colangelo satd. "It would
ctals, but the day ended wtth · be shortstghted not to listen to what
McDyess leavm~ McNichols Arena Antonio has to say. Waiting one
wtthout having stgned a contract.
more day can't hurt."
But James Bryant, one of
"We'll get it all wrapped up,"
Denver general manager Dan Issei McDyess' agents, hinted tt's likely
predtcted, but the day's events that the Suns are out of the McDyess
showed that McDyess returning to sweepstakes.
"Phoemx has been calling all day,
the Nu~gets was not a certamty. .
Unul McDyess makes up . hts and their IJ•ggest complaint 1s we
mmd, Tom Gugliotta, Vlade Dovac don't return their phone calls,"
and other free agents will have to Bryant said from Denver. "We cer-

Southern plays at Trimble
Wellston hit 6-17 three-pointers, 1734 two-pomters and had 33 rebounds Saturday at I :30.
Quarter lllllla
with 12 turnovers and 16 fouls.
There was no reserve game, but Southern ......... ~ .... 8-12-13-12:45
Southern's boys' freshmen claimed Wellston ... . ....... 17-11-14-15-57
an exci.ting 35-26 win m the prelimiSouthern: Kim Sayre 1-2nary contest.
·
J P. Harmon led the team wnh 15, 3/9= II, Kinl I hie 5-0·112= II,
Nathan Martm had seven points and Heather Dailey 5-0-4/8=14, Laraine
three assists, Brice H11l had six Lawson 2-0-0=4, Sarah Brauer 2-0- ·
points, Joe Cornell three pomts and 112=5. Totals: 15-2-9/21=45
eight rebounds , Macy Rees had two
Wellston: Candace Robinette 5·
points and a good defensive game.
1-2/2=15,
Katie Crabtree 2-2·
Dally Hill had two points, but a great
212=12,
Dusty
Cremeans 0-2-0/1=6
floor s,ame with two assists and four
steals, and Matt Ash did not score but Rochelle Tribby 3-0-0=6, Mand}
had a team-high II rebounds. Leach 3-1-0/1=9, Rachel Henneman
4-0·112=.9. Totals: 17-6-519=57
Southern is now 6-3 overall.

(Jecause Right }low it's elteap!!
0

Lima Shawnee 6~. CaDtoa62

Mus1llon Chr 44, Mansfiekl Temple Cttr

New Middletown Spnng .5S, lowellville 22
New Philadelphia 49, Coshocton 43
'
New R1egel 62, Foslona Sl Wendehn 42
Newark 58, lancaster 26
Newcomerstown ...7, Strasburg 44
Nonon 77, Cloverleaf 48
Norwalk St. Paul .57, New London 36
Oak (WVa ) Glen 38, E. Uverpool34
Oak Htll 74, Portsmouth W 50 •
Ohio Deaf 35, Llbeny Chr 27
Old Fon 44, Seneca E 35
Oranse Chr 66, Cle ADdrew&amp; 39
Oregon Oay 47, Tol . Whitmer 42
Ottawa-Glandorf 49, Defiance 47
Ottov11le 84, Pandora-Gtlboa 41
Paudhng 33, AllenE Jl
Perrysburg 36, Anthony Wayne J4
PettsvJIIe 51 , Stryker ~4
Pakcton 76, Adena 42
Reedslltlfe Eastern 65, NelsonvJJie:-York 51
Regma 85, Hudson Western Reaervc Aclld 20
Richmond EdJson 47, Steubenville 38
Rusm65, Anna J7
S Olarle!lo'n SE 61, Cedar1111lt 20
S Rnnlje 69, Mathews 56
S Webner 73. McDennou NW 65
Shaker Hts 56. Brush .' 6
Shaker Hts Independence 57 Ri chmond Hts 29
Shelby 61. Wtlltlll'd .52
Soothmgton 66 Fa•rport 4l
Sparta H1gltland 56 Maraon R1ver Val 41
Spt:l)l.:erville .5.\, Ada 50
Sprmg Nonhwestern 60. Spnng Nonheostern

Misti Halley led four Redwomen
in double dig1ts wtth 26 points.
Halley knocked down 10-of-16 field
goal attempts. She had five rebounds
and four assists. Karley Mohler
recorded her ninth double-double of
the season · with 25 points and 12
rebounds. Mohler drilled 11 -of-1 4
free throws. Renee Turley scored 18
points and grabbed 10 boards. Mindy
Pope added 10 points and 12
rebounds.
Tara Seiter scored 18 pomts and
snatched I0 rebounds to pace Mount
Vernon Nazarene. Anne Nussbaum
had 17 points. Amte Bibby tallied 14

i:

Rio Grande: Hopper 116·011
1/2=3, Turley 8/14·0/0-212=18[:
Halley 9/13-113-517=26, Mohle&lt;
7/12-0/3·11114=25, Pope 4/8.0/0::.
212= 1o, Daugherty 1/3-0/1 -1/2=~::
Kendall 0/0·010-0IO=Q, Brown 014;·~
0/1 -0/0=0, Parker 3/6-0/0-0/0=6':
Totals: 33/66-l/9-22129=91
:;
Total FG: 34-75 (.453)
~..
Rebounds: 60 (Mohler, Pope 12~
•-1sts: 14 (Ha11ey, 0 augheny 4 j , ''
~
Thmoven: 23
· ·
Blocked shots: 3
Steals: II (Pop&lt;; 5)
Fouls: 27
Fouled out: Hopper, Mohler
•••••'•
.•

.

McDyess-Nuggets impasse causes ·delays for other deals

Meigs turned the ball over 15 times.' The Lady Sparta~s are currently ;
had 18 assists led by Vining with ranked fifth in Division IU the latest··
four, 15 steals led by Shrimplin wtth A.P. state rankings! Monday' evening ·
four. Shrimplin also had the the reserve gam,e will get underway •
Marauders' two blocks.
' at 5:55.
, ,,. t'
•\.
Bobbi Lent was the only Trimble Ouart,cr liWIIa • , ,
,
player in double ftgures·with II. No Meigs ........... ........... l7-16-21-18=72,
other Trimble statistics were avail- Trimble ........ :......... :.... 2;1-)3-11=33 ·,
able.
Meip: Amber Vining 4-0-3=11 ;
In the reserve game Meigs Brooke Wtlliams 5-0-0=IO,Jennifer, ·
·outscored the host 20-10 in the mid- Shrimplin 3-0-3=9,. Ton~ a Miller 1- ·
die two penods and went on to post a 0-0=2, Tricia Davis 3-0-4=1 0, Becky;
40-34 win. Amy l:Iysell led Meigs Smith 0.:0-)=1 , Shannon Price 2-2- ,'
with 10 points, Lacy Nott had :;even 2=11-. Tiffany Haltliill 1-0-0=2,
to pace Trimble.
Tracy 'Coffey 5-0-3;,,13, Amy Hysell .
In other TVC actiOn Thursday ' 1-0:.0=2. Tota~: lS·Z-16':;72 ;
evening, Al,exander defeated Federal
TriJilble: Bobbi Lent 3-0-5=11,
Hocking 64-44, Belpre downed JesstcaAsh 1-0-0=2, Krystal Weaver
Miller 68-24 and Waterford outlasted 1·0.0=2, Venessa Dunl~vy .J-0-0=2,
Vinton County 47-23.
Shawna. Judson 2-Q·0=4, Kim.
Meigs will host Vinton County on Guffey 1-0-1=3, Krista Dugan 1-0-.
Saturday at I p.m., and then wtllhost P=2, Robin Sutton 1-0-0=2, Amber undefeated Alexander on Monday. Six 2-0-1=5. Totals: 13-0-7=33
"·
•
"'

Scoreboard

Vernon Nazarene, trailing by seven
with 7:52 to play, went on a 12-5 run
to close the half and steal the lead,
The Lady Cougars (9-7, AMC 35) opened the second half with a 7-0
burst to lead by eight points just two
minutes into the final period. The
second half featured 10 ties and II
lead changes until Rio Grande
grabbed the upper hand for good at
the 2:52 mark.' The Redwomen
closed out the game with an 11-5 run
to hold on for the win. Rio Grande
connected on 5-of- 7 free throw
chances over the game's final three
minutes.

NBA trades begin

No; 9 Arizona tops
Oregon; No. 5 UC
Wellston girls ·o utlast Southern 57.;,45:
whips Louisville
basketball. game· Jason Terry,"
Arizona coach Lute Olson satd. "He
did everything that could possibly be
done, not only tn sconng but steals as
well. "
Terry, the Pac-IO's leadmg scorer
at 20.6 points per game, was 5·of-9
from three-point range and 10-of-10
from the free-throw line. He also had
five steals
Then there was the matter of get·
ting into the head of Oregon freshman Fredenck Jones, who went to
the foul line with three second left
and his team trailing 84-83.
.
Terry and teammate A.J. Bramlett

The D1lly Sentinel • P1ge 5

Redwomen defeat MVNC 91·83," capture third straight win~i

Eastern defeats Nelsonville-York 65-51 ··
The Eastern Lady Eagles continued their drive toward another championship with a 65-5 I win ·over the
Nelsonville-York Lady Buckeyes.
Eastern (8-2) jumped to a 24-6
leact early in the second quarter, but
saw that lead diminish to 30-24 at the
half. Eastern recovered for a strong
second half, despite losing ' Valerie
Karr to five fouls.
Eastern again had a great passing
game and good night in the post led
by Jessica Brannon and Karr.
Brannon led the team with 17

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CllJ)IIIIitl«. ,

.

e ~ legislation comes amid
rep'on$ that the Salt Lake City bid
committee spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on International
Olymptc Commtltee members to
secure the 2002 Winter Games.
Tanner said his bill is not a reaction to the' bribery scandal. He said
he has been working on it for 18
months because legislators need
more involvement m Olympic bud-'
get decisions.
He saod the 'Sports Advisory
Cemmmee that advises the
Legislature on Olymptc matters has

"no meat on its bones."
Salt Lake City against any losses.
His bill would preserve and
Leavitt rea(firrned Bangerter's
enlarge that advisory panel, now agreement in 1994, but recently has
made up of city, county and town said the deal ought not be constituofficials and two athletes, by adding tiona!. The city has been wotTied that
all the members of the Olympic it could be left holding the bag Coordinating Committee.
particularly since some corporate
Tanner said the legislative over- sponsors have become jittery over
sight committee would carry enough the bribery scandal.
pollttcal wetght to prevail on orgaOn Monday, critics of the
nizers to curtail the 2002 Games to Olympics threatened to launch a
aven any budget shonfalls.
peti.tion drive unl~ss the governor
Tanner acknowledged the legisla- • and legislature act to protect taxpaytive panel wouldn't have absolute ers from financial disaster.
.
control over the Games, but, "Right
In other bnberr scandal developnow, the Legislature has no teeth. I 1 ments:
think we wtll have .some teeth if we
-The JOC 'delegate from Libya
pass this legislation."
resigned today, the second member
Gov. Mtke Leavitt shares legisla- of the governing body to step down
tors' concerns about the state's posai- • in the w~ke .of Salt Lake City scanhie liabtlity for any Olympic short..\i. ~:
~
fall, his lawyer, Gary Doxey,,told the
IOC · president Juan Antonio
House panel.
Samaranoh told The Associated
Doxey appeared to give the gov- Press that Bashir Mohwned
ernor's endorsement for tlte over- Attarabulsi S)Jbmiued hts restgnation
sight committee, then found himself in person this morning.
Samaranch saJd Attarabulst; an
under sharp questiOning over
·whether the state will have to pay IOC member since 1977, stepped
any Olymptc budget shortfall.
down because of revelatiOns that his
At issue is Salt Lake City's guar- son received college scholarships at
antee protecting the IOC against any Utah schools from Salt Lake City
debts or claims after the 2002 boosters.
,
.
Games. Fprmer Gov. Norm
Fmland's
Pirjo
Haeggman
Bangener, in tum, agreed to use the became the first IOC casualty of the
financial power of the state to protect scandal when she resogned Tuesday.

Top 25 basketball... (Contmued from Page
spoke to Jones bneny and then he 10) won thetr 12th straighl overall
mtssed both free throws badly.
and stxth in a row against
"J told him, 'You're a freshman ; Washington State, which was held to
you're going to miss these shots,' " a season-low in points. Jan-Michael
Terry saod. "But I was JUSt JOking I 'f\oomas had I0 points for the vistting
dtdn't think he'd mtss them both."
Cougars (8 -9, 2-4), who were oulreAnzona 's Roc hard Jefferson got bounded 40-23 and fmtshed 1-for-18
the rebound and was fouled with 2.6 from three-point range.
seconds left. He made one of two to
No. S Cincinnati 81
gtve the Wtldcats an 85·83 lead, and
No. 24 Louisville 55
Oregon couldn't get off a desperation
Pete Mickeal had 18 points and
shot before the buzzer.
I0 rebounds as the vtsttmg Bearcats
"The veterans on this team are (17-1, 5-I Conference USA) dominot used to losing," said Terry, nated the Cardmals '44- 19 on the
whose previous career-high was 30 boards. Marques Maybin had 19
points earlier this season against points 10 lead Lomsvtlle (10-4, 5-1),
Washington. "So when the g31ite is which entered the Top 25 this week
on the line, we take it upon ourselves for the first ume since early in the
to win the ball game."
1997-98 season.
In other games involving ranked
No. io North Carolina 71
teams Thursday, it was No. 3
Virginia 47
Stanford 94, Washmgton State 45;
Brendan Haywood had 12 points
No. 5 Cmcinnall 81, No . 24 and a career-high 16 rebounds as the
Louisville 55; No 10 North Carolina Tar Heels (16-4, 4-2 Atlant1c Coast
71, Vtrgtma 47 ; No. II Mtchtgan Conference) set a Smith Center
·state 80, No. 14 Iowa 65; No 20 record with 61 rebounds. Willie
Syracuse 90, Boston College 51, and Dersch had 13 points for the
No 21 Texas Christian 114, Air Cavaliers (10-9, 1-6), who missed
their first 13 three-point attempts and
Force 87 .
It . was the fourth straight close fell to 3-56 in Chapel Htll.
game for Arizona ( 13-2, 5-1 Pac-10).
The Wtldcats beat Washingtop on a
last-second tip-in Jan. 9, and beat
Arizona State 74-73 before losthg at
New Mextco 79-78 at the buzzer las~
week.
It was also the fifth narrow loss
for Oregon (10-6, 2-5) in the last two
weeks. On Jan. 7, Southern
California's Adam Spanich htt a halfcourt shot at the buzzer to win 85-84,
then the Ducks lost 65-63 to UCLA.
Last week, Oregon beat Washington
State 87-83 m three overumes before
losing 86-76 10 overtime at
Washington.
" We've lost some tough ones
down the stretch. Tonight we really
let one man kill us ," satd Oregon's
Dan us Wnght . who had 13 asststs
Alex Scales and Mtke Carson
' each had 14 points to lead stx
Oregon players in double figure s.
No. 3 Stanford 94
Washington St. 45 ·
I
Mark Madsen. Ttm Young and
Da.vid Moseley each scored 15
pomts as the Cardinal ( 16-2,6-0 Pac- ;

.·...
..
.

'

'

•'
•'
~·

that another of ht s clients, Kart~:
Malone, would be staying with th¢ ~
Utah Jazz for the rest of hts career. .-';.·
Malone and Jazz owner La~~
Miller both were teary-eyed.
~,-:
Malone and M1ller hadn't spokea·~,
for weeks before an intense, lengthY.~
conversation on Wednesday nighr. :'•
They said they emerged from the ·
meeting with a verbal agreement tQ,•
work out a lucrative, long-term deal~
as soon as posstble.
. _:-.,;
The stgn-and-trade deal sendmg..
Scottie P_ippen to the Rockets was
bemg held up because of unspec1f1e&lt;l•
contract language problems. It w~ :
expected to be finalized today.
•
Coach Rudy Tomjanovtch can,
celed the schedul~d first practice that ~
was supposed to follow th@ •
announcement of P1ppen 's arrival.
"I wanted to thank all the fans for .
bemg very warm to me around th~. ·
city the httle time I've been here,""'
Ptppen satd. ''I'm lookmg forward tp • .
bringmg a champion here I cans~ ·:
I'm gomg to have a wonderful caree(.:l
here_"
. ...
The Rockets also re-stgned fr~:
agent Charles Barkley 'for $1 million,~
Barkley stgned hts contract on the
lOth tee at La Quinta, Calif., where.
he was playmg m the Bob Hope ·
· Desert Classic.
'
A full slate of basketball actwn Show."
Rodman
's
agent,
Dwight
Manley,
will be going on Saturday at Meigs
High School's Larry R. Morrison was in Salt Lake City to announce
Gymnasium.
. At I p.m., the Meigs Lady
Marauders will meet the Vinton
County Lady Vikings. The Vikings
Sell·a·bratian .••
are coached by former Marauder and
Middleport native Doxie Walters.
up to $4000 on your
The reserve ~arne wtll be first, and
the varsity to follow.
At 5 p.m., the Marauder fre~hman
will play the Miller Falcons, with the
reserve boys' team playing at 6:30
and the and varsity boys around 8
p.m.

different from past ones that there
was a backlog in the league office.
Silvera! deals went through,
mcluding Latrell Sprewell being
traded from Golden State to New
York, Jayson Wtlliams re-stgning
with New Jersey: and a three-way
trade between Mmnesota, Denver
and Toronto.
Most of the teams opened training
camps, and they will have only a few
days to practice before the regular
season Starts Feb. 5.
Each team will play 50 games in
90 mghts. ·
For some of the players, the small
amount of preparatton ttme will
make it difficult to , get back into
game shape quickly.
Shawn Kemp of the Cleveland
Cavaliers was carrying around at
least 20 extra poun¢; during the lockout.
"This is my lOth season. My condttion is not too bad," Kemp said
before going through practice w1th

Meigs to face
Vinton County,
Miller Saturday

the Cavs.
"I think Shawn Kemp gave every
ounce he could out there today,"
Cleveland coach Mtke Fratello sa1d
" He understands we all have some
work to do. He worked liard. I don't
know how much more he could have
done."
The first deal 10 clear the league
office Thursday was the trade sendmg Latrell Sprewell to the New York
Knicks for John Starks, Chrts Mills
and Terry Cummings.
Sprewell brings a tarnished reputation to a team anxtous over the
public relations nsk He was suspended for 68 games last season and
had his contract terrnmated after he
choked and threatened to kill coach
P.J Carlesimo at a Warriors pracuce.
"I'm not here to JUdge him, I'm
here to coach him," Jeff Van Gundy
swd. "I'm not really thmking about
what happened in the past, I'm really
thmking about what we can do in the
future . He's a talent, he's a competitor and he's a complement to some of
the other guys we have here."
The Knicks reiterated that they
were not interested in signmg freeagent forward Dennis Rodman.
Rodman plans to elaborate on his
future tomght on the "Tomght

...
...

Rescheduled
games po~ted

Tomght the Eastern gtrls are slated to make up a girls' basketball
game at Vinton County at 5.55 p.m.
Other make-up games that have
been rescheduled for another It me are
The Choices Are Yours!•••
Southern's girls at.Trimble Saturday
Choose any new Unibilt Home you'd like from our standard models
at I p m. Southern_'s boys wtll makeor
take advantage of our "Customizer Design" service to create a custom
_up Federal Hocking on January 26 at
plan just for you.
Federal Hocking at 6 p.m. and wtll
make-up
Trimble
February
20.
Choose the options you want from our huge selection and receive
4)
Eastern has had a schedule change
them absolutely free!
No. II Michigan St. 80
in ·boys' basketball as they will face
Choose an optional kitchen design, hickory cabinets, a fireplace or a
No. 14 Iowa· 65
Nelsonvo lle-York &lt;ln Tuesilay Jan 26
beautiful leaded glass front door ...you decide. They're absolutely fr.ee
Morris Peterson scored 19 points instead of Jan. 22.
and the Spanans (15-4, 4-1) overup to the amount of the discount.
came a slow star! to win their fourth Correction
Then have your new Unibilt Home set on the foundation between
straight game and take over first
January 4 &amp; March 31, 1999 and SAVE!
place m the Big Ten. Dean Oliver
In Wednesday's issue of The Datly
and Guy Rucker each scored 12 Sentmel on the Southern-Eastern
Wingett Builders, Ltd.
pomts forthe visiting Hawkcyes (13- boys' basketball doubleheader, omit3, 4-2), who lost for the second tnne
1. Carol Ln. Athena r--'&lt;,.---,
ted from the reserve notes was
after an 11 -game winmng streak.
[740J 592·4119
Eastern's Chad Nelson, ht s club's
No. 20 Syracuse 90
leadmg scorer wtth II pmnts m the
Boston College 51
ilnibllt"Bulldl!r
Tornadoes' 46-45 victory.
Etan Thomas scored 14 pomts and
The Daily Sentinel regrets the
blocked six shots for the Orangemen
error.
Hours: Mon, lues, Thur 8. Fri 12-5, Sot l-4, Closed Sunday and Wednesday
(13-5, 5-4 Bog East), who led 45-19
at halfttme. Kenny. Harley had 14
points for the visiting Eagles (3-13,
0-8),-who were outrebounded 56-36
and committed 25 turnovers.
No. ll Texas Christian 114
Air Force 87
Lee Nation had 26 points and II
rebounds and Ryan Carroll added 25
points and 10 rebounds for the
Horned Frogs (15-3, 3-1 Western
Athletic Conference), who led 53-32
Now this is a REAL Winter.
at halfttme. Jarvis Croff had 28
points for the v1siting Falcons (8-7.
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'Page 6 • The Dally Senti el

-.'

•·

I •.

·- --

w • '"l &lt;fl'• '~ ' ' -'~· • a

l

-· ----··

·-~l't ~

·~·

-

·- -·-- .

, ,

,.,.

••
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

Friday, January 22, 1999

AI brig t steps up·.p ressure· on Yugoslav leader
Jly BARRY SCHWEID

·AP Dlplom•tlc Writer
. WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Madeleine Albright says she \s lin1ng up U.S. allies to_push a series of dell\ands on Yugoslav President Slo)&gt;Odan Milosevic to end "new and unacceptable violence in Kosovo."
~ If he keeps rejecting the demands, she said Thursday, the Serbian leader
runs the risk of a NATO bombardment. "Force is the only language he appears
to understand," Albright said.
Meanwhile, President Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair confi:nned their growing concern with the situation in Kosovo in a 30-minute
telephone conversalion.
A White House spokesman, David Leavy, said the two leaders had agreed
"the Serb actions are clearly unacceptable."
· "They' consulted on the next steps and reiterated it is important for the
~ecurity of the region that the international community insist on Serb compliance, through the use of force if nec~ssary," Leavy said.
Milosevic, meanwhile, backed down 011 evicting William Walker, an American diplomat who headed an international inspection team. Walker had been
threatened with expulsion after expressing horror on inspecting the results
of a massacre last Friday of 45 ethnic Albanians.
. Walker, head of a 750-person international monitoring team, had refused
· to vacate his offices.
•
: : "We are in the midst &lt;!f making it very clear that Milosevic can't choose
. ...,..o the head" of the monitoring group is going to be, Albright said.
·; • "The world is confronted by new and unacceptable violence in Kosovo,"
Albright said. The massacre at Racak "has brought tensions to a razor'.s
1:dge," she said as she prepared for a trip that will involve consultations with
British, French and other allies as well as the Russians on the crisis in the

Serbian province.
So far, the crisis in Kosovo, and the stem U.S. approach tb the Serbian
State Department spokesman James P. Rubin said the Yugoslav govern- leader, typified by Albright in her speech Thursday to the Center for Nationment's ' 'freezing" of the expulsion order did not resolve the problems Milo- al Policy, has not spilled over to Bosnia.
sevic had created.
The Dayton agreements, which ended the war, gave Milosevic a promi"We continue to insist, and NATO continues to msist, that-not only the nent role in-peacemaking in Bosnia " and enabled him to transform his repverificalion mission be permitted and allowed to operate independently and utation from Balkan troublemaker to Balkans peacemaker," said James !;loop- ·
without interference" but also that Milose yic withdraw troops and police units er, executive director of the Balkan Action Council, a group that keeps tabs .
from Kosovo, as he promised in October.
on the trouble(! region. "He has considerable leverage in Bosnia and could.
~s Albright took aim at Milosevic, it was clear that the Clinton adminis- disrupt the situation any time he wants to."
tration - and much of Europe - still looked to the Serbian leader for a soluHooper proposed working with Milosevic "to some extent," but worktion to the conflict between Serbs an(l ethnic Albanians, many of whom want ing also with the democratic opposition. "We would cr~ate new and more
. to separate from Yugoslavia.
effective leaders," he -said. "This could result in a process gradually lead- ·
· But some members of Congress and analysts suggested other approach- ing to democracy."
·
es, including the stationing of NATO forces in Kosovo .
·
The Bospia agreement is holding, and the likelihood of a resumption ·of
Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind., and a handful of other senators have written to fighting is minimal, said George Biddle, vice president of the International
Clinton calling'for an explicit U.S. statement that Milosevic must be replaced Crisis Group, a private think tank.
'
·
with a democratic government.
·
But the conflict could spread to Macedonia, Albania and elsewhere, Bid"No American policy to promote a stable and peaceful Balkan region can die $aid in an interview.
succeed if Serbia remains, as it has since the breakup of Yugoslavia, under
"Must we deal with Milosevic1 He obviously is the president of Se~bia
the grip of a regime that depends on crisis for its continued hold on power," and he is the man you have to deal with," Biddle said.
they said.
But Milosevic is not listening to the United States and the allies on Koso· Morton Abramowitz, a former U.S. ambassador and ex-directoroflhe St;ile vo, Biddle said. So, he said, the best approach is to issue an ultimate and not
Department's intelli-gence office, has ·sugges ted the administration pursue talk to him. "Nothing else is going to work now."
independence for the ethnic Albanians, who make up about 90 percent of
Gary Dempsey, an analyst with the Cato Institute, takes a far different view.
the province.
He says NATO air strikes could further entrench Milosevic by unifying Serbs
Milosevic has been a central figure in U.S. diplomacy in the Balkans for behind him, while giving the Kosovo Liberation Army an incentive to proyears. He was courted for the negotiations that produced an agreement m voke Serb forces even more.
November 1995 to end an ethnic war in Bosnia.
.

.Friday, January 22, 1999

Apostolic
.CbiU'dl ,o iJ- Cbrlot Apootollc
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller
Sunday Scboot -10:30 a.Jil.
Evening -1:30 p.m.

Assembly of God
Uberty Ammbly o!God
P.O. Box 467, Duddina Lane
MaSQn, W.Va. .
Pastor: Neil Tennant ·
Sun~y Services- 10:00 a.m. ~nd 7 p.m.

Ba pt tst
Hope Bapdst Chllt'dl (Soutbt1'11)
Pastor: Jim Diur,
' 570 Grant St., Midd eport
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.
Froe Will Baodll Ctiun:b
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: Les Hayman
Sunday Service· 7:00p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wedneliday Service- 7:00 p.m.

By ESTES THOMPSON

Corp. agreed Thursday to pay into the
fund for 12 years.
·
~aaoclated Preas Writer
. DURHAM, N.C. - Tobacco
Demand for tobacco is expected to
farmers struggling to survive in a be reduced by recent settlements of
stu-inking market would be able to tap claims by states that sued tobacco
into a $5.15 billion trust fund companies to recover the costs of
treating sick smokers. The settle~pproved by the nation's largest cigments, which 1otaled $246 billion, are
arette makers.
·. Philip Morris Cos., R.J. Reynolds being financed by higher prices for
Tobacco Co., Lorillard Tobacco Co. cigarettes and include provisions to
and Brown &amp; Williamson Tobacco limit promotion of tobacco.
The' settlements also included a

provtston in which the companies
agreed to help farmers hurt by lessened demand for their crop.
"It will enable a grower to go to
a lender and show cash flow," Graham Boyd, exe~utive vtce president
of the Tobacco Growers Associatton
of North Carohna, said of the fund.
Boyd said farmers who qualify
under yet-to-be-determined rules may
use the money for operations or to
make debt payments.

"You won 't find any growers tak- the fund in a few months.
The companies reached the agreeing thi ~ and buying beachfront condos." he said. " Most of them owe it." ment after two days of tense negotiFarmers would apply for assis- ations with five tobacco-state govertance to independent boards of nors. R.I. Reynolds had been reluctrustees, but North-Carolina Gov Jim tant to pay · into the trust· and had
Huht, who hosted the negotiations, instead proposed buying more Amersaid many details remain to be ican-grown toba~co to provide a staworked ou~before the pact is signed. ble market for growers.
Reynolds said 'last month it will
Hunt said he hoped that fanners in
North Carolina, the largest tobacco
producer, could get payments from

5 percen1 from $40 billion a year,11go.

The after-tax charges included
$472 million for an aggressive early
retirement and employee buyout program that reduced the company's
work force by nearly 9,000 people,
and $86 million to write off the loss
related to its investment in Korea's
bankrupt Kia Motors Corp.
Ford also took a $73 million
charge for the transfer of its Batavia,
Ohio, transmission plam to a new
joint venture formed by Ford and ZF
Friedrichshafen AG of .Germany to

Recorder posts local (and transfers
· · The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the offi.ce of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton ;
Deed, Richard L. Jr. and June A.
Bearhs to Richard S. and Lori A.
Bearhs, Chesrer;
Deed, Beneficial Mortgage Co. to
Gary A. and. Angela Jones; Rutland;
Deed, Harry N. and Juanita Lodwick to Delmar G. and Vicki L.
Pullins, Chester, 16.5 acres;
' Deed, Clarence G. and Iva L.
lawrence to Neal B. and Judy A.
'-fcMeeken, Lebanon parcels;
·: • Deed, Raymond Carl and Jocile
~ Fletcher to Steven A. Millhone,
L~banon parcel ;
:: Right of way, Lero~ and Judy E.
tfendrix to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District, Olive, 1.521 acres;
: : Right of way, Larry and. Joyce
8ollon to TPCWD, Chester, 41 acres,
~-4 acre;

.

~omeroy

Right of way, George and Mary
Price to TPCWD, Olive, 78 acres;
Right of way, Ruby and Harold
Brewer to TPCWD, Olive, 2 acres;
Right of way, Rebecca S. Ahlefeld
to TPCWD, Olive, I acre;
Right of way, Bobby J. and Paula
J, Fitcp to TPCWD, Olive, .665
acre ;

kight of way, Rocky R. and Carol Hupp to TPCWD, Olive, 29.25
acres;
· Rjght of way, Eugene and Na.ncy
Phillips to TPCWD, Scipio, .547
acre;

Rtght of way, George W. and
Mary Price to TPCWD, Olive, 78
acres;

Deed, Paul and Brenda Holsi nger
to Lena and Charles Bailey, Orange;
Deed, Gordon Proffitt to George
T. Hays, Dwight, Wendall , Kendall
and Kenneth Gabbard, Robert
Williams, Steve Carroll, John John-

mayor's court

Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan pension, $83 ·and costs, seat belt vioprocessed 24 cases recently tn latton, $45 and costs, r~ckless operPOmeroy Mayor's Court.
ation, $83 and costs, open container,
.: .Posting bonds were; Cherri Colel- $83 and costs.
1[,• Mansfield, speed, $75; Diane
John Owens: Cheshire, $108 and.
'l;:oong, Pomeroy, speed, $68; John C. costs, underage consumptio~; Laura
Albright, We st Columbia, W.Va., Wells, seat belt violation, $45 and
$68, no license plate light, $63; Jef- costs; Victona Miller, Racine , fictifrey Thomas, Lancaster, speed, $69; tious tags, $83 and costs; William
1\pril Roach, Racine, speed, $66; Ze1gler, Pomeroy, menacing, $233
Johit Harmon, Racine, speed, $71 ; and costs; Lori Cleland, Gallipolis,
Rqdger Barnhouse, Coolville, defec- failure to co ntrol, '$8j and costs;
tive exhaust, $63 ; Angela Alley, Burtina Kletn , Pomeroy, fatlure to
Racine , stop sign, $63; Jason Fields, control, $83 and costs; Randy Riffle,
Milson , W.Va., stoplight violation, Pomeroy, FRA suspension, $95 and
$'6:3; Michelle Oliver, Gallipolis, Gal- ' costs, fictitious tags. $53 and costs;
lipolis, expired registration, $83 ; Mark Haley, Pomeroy, squealing
Floyd Reitmire, Syracuse, speed, tires, '$83 and costs.
~; Mitchell Dwight, Athens, speed,
$.67.
:Fined were: Davtd Cline, Long
B6ttom, reckless operation, $183
and costs; James Evans, Raci ne,
e)&lt;i:essive window tint, $20 and costs;
L:ori Hatfield, Mason , W.Va ..
obscured license plate, $20 and costs;
Denald Stobart, Pomeroy. DUI. $395
aoo costs. reckless operation, $183
and costs, left of ce nter, $63 and
chsts, di sorderly conduct. $83 and
cp8ts, rsJSting at;rest. $333 and _costs,
OJJ$'ri container, $83 and costs; Davi d
J!a:rk, Middleport , dri ving under sus-

· For More Information
CaD 992-6839

A hearing on the Meigs County Title
XX Comprehensive Social Services
P1an (CSSP) will he held at 10:00 A.M.
on Friday, February 5, 1999, in the
Common Pleas Courtroom · of the
Meigs . County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Public . comments . on the proposed Plan will · he received at this
time.
Michael L. Swisher
'
MCDHS Director
•·

Pomeroy Ftnt Bapllll
East Main St.
Sunday School -9:30a.m,
Worship · '10:30 a.m.

Why suffer trying to figure out the tax code changes?
Leave it to the professio-nals. At H&amp;R Block it's our job to stay

Sliver Rua Bltptlst
Pastor: Bill Little
Sunday School- 10a.m.
Worship- lla.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30 p.m.

' 9-6 M-F

9-5 Sat

DueOV&lt;Ir, l"u.a /Maoler Charge
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Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship ~rviec: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

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Tappen Plain• SL Paul
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
1 Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Cenlral Cluter
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School-9:45a.m .
WOrship • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30 p.m.
,
Enterprise
· ~- ·Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School ·10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Hol111ess

Colvory Pll&amp;rim Chopet
Harrisonville Road
Pascor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Brand New 1999 Chevy
8-Series LS Pickup

..

Btlllel Cbun:b

Township Rd., 468C
School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services·lO a.m.
Su~day

.

.

HO:CidaiiPOrl Chun:b
Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WoBhip -lta.m.
Wednesday Services- 8 p.m.
Ton:h Church

CG. Rd. 63
Sundoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wotthip- 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Cburdl oftbe,liazarioe '
Putor: Orcaoey A. Cundiff
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicos - 7 p.m.
Reedm11e FeUowohlp
Churth oftbe Naurene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30 a,Jn.
Worship · 10:4~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ~ervices • 7 p.m.
Syra..,. Cburc:h ollhe Nuareae
Pastor, Raben J. Coen
WBGS Radio-10:30 a.m. daily 9 a.m. Sunday
WJOS-TV 27-3:30 p.m. Sunday
44:30 Saturday
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Kids for Christ- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Llpyd D. GrimmJr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worshtp - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Chelter Church of the Nazarene
Putor: Rev . Herbert Grate
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Rut..nd ChUrdl of the Nazarene
Pastor: Re.v: Samuel W. Bas~e
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m."
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

.
Harvest Oua.dt Mlnlotrios

·aealh (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye S4Jiivan
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip .. 10:30 a.m.

47439 Reibel Rd., Chestet
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m: &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Plst~:1 C~~~1:rick .

Appe Ule Ceater
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Seoon(l Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sundiy 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Worahip- 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service - 7 p.m.
H-., CluiJtloa F.o,..hlp Chun:h
Sunday servK:e, 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship S~nday , 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service, 1:00 p.m.
Fallll F11U Goepet Cbllt'dl
LongBottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School- 9:30a.m
Worship - 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednc:sd.ar · 1 p.m.
Friday - fcllowslup _scrv1c:e 7 p.m.
The lltlloven' Fettowoblp Mlnbtry

New Lirpe Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Margaret J. Robinson
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Eoddt~~e H.... of Pnyer
(at Burlinatwn church off Route 33)
Pastor: Rober1 Vance
Sunday wors~ip - 10 a. ~ .
Wednesday Jtrvtee ~ 6:30 p.m.

Middleport CommuU, Churtb
575 Ptart St., '-'iddlepon
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30 p.m.
' Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

HOld CGmm..Uy Chun:b
OffRt. t24
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Dyesvlllt Commuolt)' Chun:h
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worsh.ip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Morse Chptl Churtb
Sunday school· 10 a.m.
Worshtp - 11 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

Faith Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 P·~·
MI. OtiYe COmmomll)' C~un:.b

Pascor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service -7.p.m.
United Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy 8~-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m .
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday ServiCe -7 p.m.

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•

l&lt;'ull Gospel Church of the Ul'lng Sal' lor
Rt.338, Antiquity

Pastor: Jesse Morrts
Asst..Pastors• Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Pentecostal Assembly
St. Rt. 124. Racine
Pastor: William Jloback
Sunday School - lO a. m.
Evening · 7 p.m
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m
Mlddtepllrt Ptnterostal
Third Ave.
Pastor· Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School · lO a.m .
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\lices- 7:00p.m .

Presbyterian
Syracuw First United Presbyterian
Pastor· Rev Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - I0 a.m
Worship • 11 a m.

HarrisoD\'IIIe Pftsbytertan Church
Worship ·. 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School - 9 am.
Worship · 10 a.m .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawi,nsky
Saturday Services·
Sabbath School - 2 p.m
Worship · 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermon U•lted Brethren
in Christ Church
Texas Community offCR 82 .
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30.a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Setviccs ·7:30p.m.
Eden United Brethrtn In Christ
2 1!2 miles no rth of Re ed~v ill e
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - 11 u.m.
Sunday Worsh1p · 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth S ~rv ice · ?:30 p.m.

Carleton lnterdenomlnallonal Churth
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Services
Fretdom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor Rev . Roger Wijlford
Sunday Schoot-_2)0 aJnl
Worstup- 7 p.m. , ""
White's Chapel Wosleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Philhp RidenOur
Sunday School · 9:30 a.in.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Folrview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: John Hart
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.
Fallh Fellowship Crust1dt lor Christ
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.
Calvory Bible Church
Pomero~ Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.
Stlvenvitle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Advertise your
PHARMACY}! business each week
We Fill Doctors'
Pre.scriplions
992-2955
Pomeroy

New Ufe Victory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gathpolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services- 10 am. &amp; 7 p m
Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp; You th 7 p.m.

Soutb Bethel New Testament
Silver Ridge
Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School- 9 a.m .
Worsh1p · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce- 7 p.m.

992-5432
Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

Clifton Tabera•de Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 am.
Worship· 7 p m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Fall Gespet Upthouse
3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Fullllne of

Chun:h of Jesw Christ,
Apostolk F•lth
l /4 mile past fort Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday -7:00 p.m.
Wednesday-7 :00p.m.
Friday-7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Theron Durham

Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.

"Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken·

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc.

Rejoldn1 Ult Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlcpon
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 am
Wednesda y Servi ces- 7 p.m.

Hlnisoavllle Commutty Church

Crow's Family .Restaurant

• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brlkea
• Aluminum Wheels
• Nicely Equipped!

•

Chrittloa Fettowohlp Center
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser

Syrocwe Mtaloa
1411 Bridgeman St., SyraclltC
. Rev. Mike Thompson,Pa!ilor
· Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servk.c • 1 p.m.

FoRst Run
Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Wors'hip • 9 a.m.
Thursday Services· 6:30p.m.

Ptori Chapel
Suriday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

I

Flllll Cllapet
923 S. Third St., Middlepon
Pastor Ernie Wengerd
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Coolville linked Melbodtot Parilb
Pastor: Helen Kline
.Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
..__Worship· 9 a.m.
Tuesd!iy Services· 7 p.m.

Portland Fin I Cbun:b of the NIIUftne
Pastor: Mark Matson
Sunday School ·10:30 a.m.
Morning Worship· 11:15 a.m.
Sunday Service • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

•

Faith Volley Tobemade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunda)' Evenina 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Flatwoods
' , Pastor: Keith Rader .
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
~orship · 11 a.m.

~'

. CGm8UIIIIty Church
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Street, Rutland
, Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship-10:30 a.m.
Sunday&amp;. Wednesday Servlce-7,p.m.
DaavDie Hollow Cllurch
310'7 State Route 32S, Lanasvlle
Pustor: Dr. J.D. Young
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday wor~bip- 10:30 a.m.&amp;. 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Bob.Randolph
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

Reedsville
Worship· 9:JQ a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30.p.m.
Flm Sunday of Month - 7:30p.m. service

Episcopal

, Pomeroy Westside Churdt of Chrial
33226 Children's Home Rd.
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Worship - 10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncsda)l Services · 7 p.m.

-..

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- to a.m.
W\)IShip - II a.m.

.

.

Luna Bottom

Gntt Eplsoopal Chun:h
326 B. Mam St., Pomeroy
· Rev. James Betnacki, Rev. Katharin Foster
Re\'. Deborah Rankin, Clergy
Holy Euc:barist and - ·
Sunday Schooiii:OO a.m.
www.frognet.neV-deanery

Pomeroy Chun:h ill Chrllt
212 W. Matn St.
Minister: Danny Bias
Sunday School-9:30a.m. .
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
· Wednesday ·Services • 7 p.m.

Etill Latan
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool · 10 a.m.
·Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a .m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. ·

Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and worship 10:2S

Church of Christ

Monlla&amp; Slar
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday SChool - 11 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

,

,•

Trinity Chun:h

Catt1olic

Brand New 1999
Chevy Malibu

ll'~lll'·-·
~-~;.l,;\
::;::;..~ __.
Putor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
·Worship - 11 a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy

Sacred H - Colhotlc Church
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz ·
Sat. Con. 4: 4S-!5 : 1S~ . m .; ~ass-5:30p . m ..
Sun. Con. -8:4S-9.1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass· 9:.30 a.m.
Dailey M as.~ · 8 30 a.m.

Cannel-8uUo•

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4!1 a.m.
Bible Study We~ 7:00p.m.

·•
Grabom United Melhodtot
'~ Worship· 9:30a.m. (lsi &amp; 2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3rd 8t 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.
"
I'&lt;
•
ML Olive Ualted Melbodlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spira
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Congregational

Antiquity Baptilt
Sunday Sehoot · 9:30a.m.
Wotthip · 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m.

Betblony
Pastor: Dewayne 'Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

United Methodi s t

Chan:h of God of Prophecy
O.J. White: Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worshap · 11 a.m.
Wednesdu Services • 7 p.m.

MI. Morioh Baptlol
Fourth &amp; Main Sl., Middleport
PJ~,stor : Rtv. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School- 9:30 .a.m.
Worship · 10:4S a.m.

Sunday School-10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second SL, Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

Syr.cuJt Flnt Churdt of God
Apple and Second SIS.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunda~ School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Rudoad F... Witt Boptlst
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday S!;hool- tO a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

• Ar.w:M C11111Ht

Our Saviour Lutbtroa Cburtb
Walnut alld Henry Str., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Wor;sbip - 11 a.m.

Sunday
a.in. '
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday S~rvices. 7 p.m. ·

Fomt Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship. ll a.m.

SooWYUie

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
. Rev. Donald C. fritz
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday S&lt;;hoot - 10:00 a.m.

~'

Folth BapUOI Cbu~h
Railroad Sl., Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m. .
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Salem Ceater
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School . 9:1S a.m.
Worship . 10:15 a.m.

1bt: Cburcb of Jesus
Christ of Lattt~·DIIJ Salata
St. Rt. t60, 446-6247 or 446-7486
' Sunday Schooi10:21J-It a.m.
KeliefSociety/PO.sthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakins meeting, 1st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

Reecla~llle

Rutlnd Chun:b of God ' .... 1
· Pastor: Ron Heath
' ·,
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesd&amp;y ' Scr~ices • 7 p.m.

Rullaad
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

·Reorpnized
of Latter Day
'I&gt;
Portland-Racine .
"Pastor: Jerry Singer
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Old Bethel Fret Will Baptllt Ch""'b
2860t St. Rt. 7, Middtepon ·
, Sunday Scbool · 10 a.m.
£venin&amp;· 7:30p.m.
Thursday Servi"" -7:30 . '
.... .t

Rock Sprillp
Pastor: Keith IW:Ier
Sunday S&lt;hool - 9:15a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunda)' • 6 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Hetalock Grove Chun:.b
Putor: Gene Zopp
Sundaf school· 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Mt.lJnlon Bapllot
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School·9:45 a.m.
Evening · 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m~

Pomeroy
Pastor: Connie Fiaru
Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday- 10 a.m.

!.aunt Ctl!r Fret Mtlbodbt Cbon:b
, Pastor: David DeWitt
Sunday School -9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
_Wednesday Service·.7:00 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedn_esday·Service 7:30p.m.

VIctory Boplllllndepeadont
S25 N. 2nd St.. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. ~ee&amp;ee
Worship · 10a.m., 1 p.m. r
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

• Air CondHionlng
• LS Package

H7...l Run Hotlneu Chun:h
Sund~y School- ~:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Servk:e ·7:30 p.m.

LattpvBie Chrilllan Chun:b

- - Hlllllde iloptlll Cbun:.b
St. Rl. 143 juot off Rl. 7
Pastor: Rev. }ames R. i\crec, Sr.
Sunday School- tO a.m.
Worsh1p - lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

~1,450*

Zloa Cbun:.b of Cbrilt
Pomeroy, Hatrisonville Rd. (R1.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.'
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Hlckory.IDU. Cbul'(h ill Chrllt
Ev11111elist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Bapliot Church
.Great Bend. Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Ge11e Morris
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Sunday WorshiP.- tO:JO a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wcdnesda)' 81ble Study. 6:00 p.m.

740·992-6674

Weoteyaa Bible Hollneu Chllt'dl
7S Pearl St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Doua Cd"
Sunday Worship -9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m. ·

BniCI!ord Cban:h of Cbrlot
Corner or St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug' Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday S&lt;hool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

Racine Flnt Boptlst
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wotship · 10:40 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Beuwoltow 1Uctae Cburcb of Chrlot
Pastor:Terry Stewart
Sunday S&lt;boot -9:30a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Rutland Cburdt of Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Fint Bapttot Church
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer Sl., Middleport
Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

up-to-date on the latest changes. That's how we get you
·everything you have coming.

Kmo Cbun:b o!Chriot
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Pascor-Jeffrey Wallace
1sr and ~rd Sunday

Plot Grove Bible Hotln011 Chun:b
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednelday Service. 7:30p.m.

Bradbury Cbun:b o!Chriot
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m.

Flnt Suuthem Ba~tll
41872Pomerdy Ptke
Pt~tor: E. Lamar O'Bry.anl
Sunday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

~ ~-

son and Billy Ray Norris, Lebanon;
Deed, Jam,es ll. Althofto Bette C.
Althof, Salisbury;
Right of way, Bonnie Darst, Russell and Laura Starcher, Samson and
Boneta June Darst to Tom E. Buckley, Meigs;
Deed, Byron L. and Patricia A.
Arbaugh to Charles A. and Gregory
Dan Lathey, Rutland tracts;
Deed, Charlene E. and Robert K.
Hoeflich to Samuel L. and Paula J.
Pickens, Pomeroy parcels;
Deed, Richard E. Ours Jr. to Ethel
0. Adkins, Racine;
Deed, Robert A., Ruger L. and
Susan Ours to Ethel 0. Adkins,
Racine;
Deed, Secretary of Housing and
Urban Development to Irvin E.
Miller, Syracuse;
Easement, Robert ·F. Hawk to
GTE North Inc., Bedford;
Easement, Pauline Lucille Hysell
R to GTE North Inc., B&lt;dford ,
Easement, Larry and Grace Roush
to GTE North Inc., Chester;
Easement, Patty Ann Pickens to
GTE North Inc., Chester;
Deed, Jerry and Donna D. Bentley
to Charles Chaffin, Bedford;
Deed, George and Margaret Buckley to Thomas C. and Bern'ice M.
Weis, Ofive;
Deed. George and Margaret BuckIcy to James C. and Linda A. Britton,
Olive;
Deed, Vallery Perry, Paul E. Perry, Vallery A. Perry to Charles and
Fa tth Cade, Pomeroy;
Deed, R.R. Johnson to Ronald and
Lmda Carpenter, Mary Lou Naftzgcr,
Middleport;
· Deed, James L. III and Christy L.
Shay to Terri L. Stanley, Columbia.

NOTICE

: .:MEIGS CO. KARATE
&gt; CLUB WILL STA~T
WINTER QUARTER
BEGINNING ON MONDAY JANUARY 25TH
AT CARLETON
SCHOOL IN SYRACUSE
AT 6100 P.M.

make a new high-tech transmission .
That deal should be completed during the ftrst quarter.
For the year, Ford earned $22 billion, more than triple the ·$6.9 billion
it earned in 1997. Excluding one-time
factors, Ford's operating profit was
$6.6 billion, or $5.30 a share, up 10
percent from the $6 billion, or $4.86
a share, Ford earned in ·l997.
Ford said it reduced costs by $2.2
billion in 1998.
"The transformation of Ford continued to gain momentum in 1998,"
said Jac Nasser, president

leadinJ C.Uk Rd., Rulland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship ·7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meetmg- 7 p.m.

Worship Service . 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:1!1 a1m,
· Youth- S:30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

To qualify as a martyr,
complete this form.

.Ford's fourth quarter profit shows declin:e
. DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -'- or $1.35 ·a share, on an operating
F'ord Motor Co.'s fourth-quarter prof- . basis, up from $1.6 billion, or $1.27
. it: declined after several one-time a share, a year ago. Most of the prof: c~arges , but ope_rating earnings its came from North American autoincreased nearly 7 percent.
motive operations.
· The figures reported today were
The average estimate of 16 ana· above Wall Street's expectations.
lysts surveyed by First Call Corp. ear• The world's No.2 automaker said lier this week was for operating
it earned $I billion, or 84 cents a earnings of $1 .27 a share.
share, down 42 percent from the $1.8
In early trading today on t"e New
billion, or '$1.45 a share, it earned York Stock Exchange, Ford shares
were down 94 cents to $63.7 5 after
lltuing the 'same period of 1997.
·. · Excluding $631 million in after- rising 75 cents Wednesday.
Sales totaled $37.9 billion, down
·ta:x charges, Ford earned $1.7 billion,

lay off 3,900 employees worldwide
and is restructuring operations
because of lower sales in tl)e United
States and Russia.
Major tobacco states in the talks
were Virginia, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and
Kentucky. Others involved were
Maryland, West Virginia, Indiana,
Florida, Alabama and Ohio.

~\Me oiSUroa Hot'- Ch.m.

Middleport CIIIU'dl of Cllrilt
~111 and Main
Pastor: AI Hamon
Youth Mlniater: Bill Fruier
Sunday S&lt;hoot • 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- 8:15,·10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Tuppers Pltotn Cbun:b of Chrial
Instrumental
Pastor: Terry Stewart

Rut1ond'Ftrst Boptlll Chur&lt;h
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10 :4~ a.m.

Cigarette makers agree to. trust fund for tobacco farmers

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In this space
and support local

Let cliurcli

be a part

.of
your life
Jll'hsqer ~ uneral ;Iltome ..,mr:. •
264 South Second Ave.•Middlepon. OH
740-992·5141
Bruce R. F1sher .. Director
590 East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH 45769

James

:francis FLORIST
Meiss County~' Olde.sl Florist

P•••;,

&amp; fllllltlln
740-992-2644
7 40-992-6296
U!r U1 Send Yoltr

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ave.
Oh

Tltm~ltu

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Searching for a
local church?
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every Friday!

�·...

By The Bend

•

The Daily Sentinel·
Page&amp;
Friday, January 22,199$.

~How
.

do you tell if a' friend i·s ga-y? Trust
your
instincts,
Ann
says
.
Ann
Landers
1W7, Los Anp:lcs nmes
Syndtca\C IU1d Crcatou
SyndteaiC

Dear Ann Landers: I am a 15y"ear-old sophomore girl. I make
decent grades and am a normal
teenager in every way. At the beginning of the school year, I hit it off
~ith a girl who had just moved to
our town over the summer. "Lottie"
and I have the same taste in music
and movies, and we like to hang out
at the mall after sc hool. We've
become great friends in just ·a few
months, and last weekend, Lottie
invited me to sleep over at her
house.

Everything was great until it
came time for bed. Lottie's bedroom
has a double bed, which we were
supposed to share: That would have
been OK, except she stripped completely naked before she got into
bed.
Ann, I have no objection to sleeping in the nude, but this was in the
winter, and it was plenty cold outside. I asked Lottie if she wouldn't
be wanner in pajamas. She replied
that she was more comfortable
sleeping nude and her electric blanket would keep her toasty warm. I
reluctantly ·got into bed but kept
wondering if Louie was trying to
seduce me. Her electric blanket was
turned on so high that I was tempted
to take off my flannel nightshin. I
decided not to, thinking maybe that

was what s he wanted me to do. Lottie made no other moves on l"e, but
I barely slept all night.
I
What should I do? I don't want to
accuse her of being a lesbian, but I
can't stop wondering if she ~s interested in. me sexually. Lou)·e is the
best friend I ever had, and I would
hate to lose her over this: Please tell
me what to do. -- BEFUDDLED IN
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
DEAR BEFUDDLEO: Trust
your instincts. Lottie may be perfectly straight, but I wouldn't bet the
rent. If you want to continue the
friendship, OK, bu't do not accept
any more invitations to sleep at her
place and don't let her finagle an
invitation to stay at yours.
Dear Ann Landers: My 32-yearold daughter is getting married for

.
.
the second time. My daughter and I me it was the expressed desire of her · ding cake." lfshe does notcht;K&gt;se to .·
have a good relationship, but my ex- mother, my ex-wife, not tQ invite be gpcious, go anyway. Th1s IS your
wife and I barely speak. She and my Qreta. My ilaughter receives a lot of daughter's ·day, and her wish to hav'e ·
daughter made all the wedding financial help from her mother and you there takes precedence.
· :
preparations and paid for the whole is obviously reluctant 'to go against · Gem of the Day: 'The real test of
thing without any assistance from . her wishes.
class is how you treat people who .
me.
What should I do? If I attend the cannot possibly do you any good.
I received a wedding invitation, wedding alone, Greta will think I let
Planning a wedding? What's.
but itixcluded my fiancee, "Greta." her down. If I don't go at all, my right? What:s wrong? :·Th~ A~n.
Greta and I have been together for daughter will assume I favor my Landers Gmde for Bndes Will:
the last six years. During this time, ' fiancee over her and will be crushed. relieve your anxiety. Send a selfmy daughter has visited us oflen and Any suggestions would be appreci- addressed, long, business-size env~-:
always seemed comfonable with the ated. -- DAD IN BONITA, CALIF.
lope and a check or money order for;
relationship. Greta is very hun and
DEAR DAD: Greta should have $3.75 · (this includes postage and;
angry that she was not invited to the been invited to the wedding, since handling) to: Brides, c/o. Ann Lan-:
wedding. She asked me to speak to she has been your significant other ders , P.O. Box 11562, Ch1cago, Ill ..
my daughter about the "oversight" for six years. She was not invited, 60611 -0562. (In Canada, send:
and said that if no invitation was however, which means she is not $4.55.) To find out more about AnJl:
fonhcoming. I should not go to the welcome. It would be classy of Landers and read her pas~ columns,
wedding, either.
Greta to say, "Go -- have a good visit the Creators . Synd1cate web'
I spoke to my daughter, who told time, and bring me a piece of wed- page at www. creators. com .

can relieve a

·debtor of fluancial obligations and arrall8e a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for liis or her personal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
hou~~ehold goods .
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Attorney At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Charlie Sheen wants to be taken
senously.
Hollywood's bad boy, whose public
persona has been shaped by his w1ld
partying as well as his movie career, bas
put out the word : He wants to be called
Charles.
Sheen, 33, decided about a year ago
to go the way of Rick Schroder, said
Sheen publicist Jeff Ballard. Schroder,
who went by Ricky whe.n he was a child
star on television 's "Silver Spoons," is
Sheen
now plain old Rick and a star on "NYPD
Blue."

Sheen stars in Friday's HBO movie "Under Pressure" and
credits list him as Charles - 'a more serious-sounding name·,
Ballard said Thursday. .
"On screen he's going with the credit Charles. I still call hm1
Charlie but I've known him since he was 16," said Ballard, who
coincidentally represented Schroder when he was on "Silver
Spoons."
Sheen 's movie credits include " Hot Shots, "Major League ,"
"Red Dawn·: and "Wall Street. "
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hustler magazine publisher Larry
Flynt has been released from the hospital after a bout with pneumonia.
Flynt is recuperating at his home,
spokeswoman Kim Dower said Thursday.'
,
The publisher, who left the hospital
Wednesday, had been scheduled for
surgery this week for a urological problem but his illness has postponed the
operation.·
Aynt 's medical problems also have
delayed his Cincinnati obscenity trial to
Flynt
April 5.
Flynt, 55, and his brother, Jimmy,
49, were indicted l~st year on charges of pandering obscenity,
disseminating material harmful to a juvenile, conspiracy and
engagmg 10 a pattern of corrupt activity.
"
They were charged after a 14-year-old boy allegedly bought
a sexually explicit video at the Hustler Magazine &amp; Gifts store
managed by Jimmy Flynt.

David Bottomley
David M. Bottomley has joined
the United States Anny under the
Delayed Entry Program at the US
Anny Recruiting Station in Athens.
The program gives young men
and women the opporiUnity to delay
entering active duty for up .In one
year.
· Th enlistment gives the new soldier the option to learn a new skill ,
travel and become eli gible to receive
as much as $50,000 toward a college
education. After completiOn of bas1c
military training, sold1ers rece1ve
advanced individual training in their .
career specialty.
Bottomley, a student at Meigs

NEW YORK (AP) - John McLaughlin fans who arc ·
hoC!ked up to cable can get more bang for the buck: He apparently IS heading to MSNBC.
The ringleader of the combati~e pundits on "The McLaughlin Group" will be host of a new nightly public affa1rs program,
an MSNBC executive who spoke on condition of anonymity
told The As socia~ed Press on Thursday.
"The McLaughhn Group ," in its 16th year, IS aired weekly
on 320 PBS stations across the country and will continue.
McLaughlin's new 30-minute show will air weeknights at
8:30p.m. EST, part of a Juggled prime-time schedule for NBC's
cable affiliate. L1ke "The McLaughlin Group, " it will feature

'tough crowd - without
accreditation, zoo finds
itself an outsider

' .

Thurs, Fri &amp; Sat, Jan 28, 29 &amp;30
10-5 p.m.
layaways not included

The Ohio River Bear Company
Downtown Middleport, Visa, MC, Discover, Am . Express

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Don't NeedA
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Call .a Little
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992-5455

Your day of birlh ha•
come apln, lime for
celebrallon a,.P fun.
You're 45 ond 11Ul
alive,

it~

time the parly

Happy Birthday

Bronwyn Inn
Williams!I

have been atudled ·iind
Public Notice
. nvlewed. tt· Ia underetood
at or lielore dolivory of the that In eome aapecla th11e
epaclllcatlone are detailed
completed apparatue.
Each · btd shall be ' In lholr deolgn end aleo that
accompanied by a detailed exceptlone may be taken by
daecrlptlon of the lire· aome blddere. Exoeptlona
apparatus and equipment wilt be allowed II they are
by tho '
which le propoaed to be determined
furntahed Including a copy Middleport Fire Department
of all warrantlaa that will to be equal to or eupertor to
apply to the apparatus · that specified, end provided
Including ·engine and drive they •re listed on a ttPilrtle
llno, pump end related pige entitled. "Exceptlona
component•, booaler link, to Spectlicetiona" . The
ate. A detailed blueprint exception llal ehall re'ler to
ahall alao be provided with the page number and
paragraph of theaa
all bld1.
Each bid ahall be epecillcationo.
The VIllage of. Middleport,
accompanied by a 10% bld
bond
and
100% Ohio reSirvas the right to
performance bond . Each reJect . any or all blda
btd ahall contain a algned received and to waive any
ataloment of the bidder that Informality In the bidding.
(1) 15, 17, 18, 18, 20, 21,
the VIllage of Middleport,
·Ohto Fire Oapartment lire 22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 28,
apparatus opocilicaliona 1999

TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417

e

POMEROY - Women 's AA
meetmg, 7 p.m. Friday, 1608 Nyc
Ave., Pomeroy.

POMEROY
Al co holics
Anonymous study group meeting, 8
p.m. Saturday, Sacred Hean Church,
160- Mulberry, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Baseball
League meeting, Sunday, 6 p.m. at
the Rutland firehouse. New offi cers
will be elected and field li ghts will
be discussed.

the new location , 117 Mem orial
Drive, Pomeroy.
RACINE - Southern Local
School DIStrict board of educational
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday at the high
school.

TUESDAY
Alcoholics
SYRACUSE
Anonymous open discussion meetmg. 7 p.m. Tuesday, Carleton
~MEROY - Revival service s, , School,
Sunday, 10:45 a.m. and Sunday
through Thursday , 7 p.m. First
LANGSVILLE - Salem TownSouth ern Baptist Church, 41872 ship Trustees , 8 a.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy. Paul Brew- Salem Center firehou se.
er, eva ngelist; Marshall Kellam,
POMEROY - Wi~cfin g Trail
music evangelist.
Garden Club, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
POMEROY
Alcoholics the Meigs Museum with Margaret
Anonymous study group mee ting, 7 Parker as hostess. A slide ~how will
_p.m. Sacred Hean Church, 160 Mul- be. presented by Rev. William Middleswarth.
berry Ave., Pomeroy_:___
MONDAY
POM EROY - Veterans Service
Commission, 7:30 p.m. Monday at

RACINE - R.A.C.O , Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.

Monday • Sjdurday 9 am - 8 pm
Sunday 1
·7

HOU STON (AP) - Doctors arc pred icting a Gorom , the linies t, and her brother !kern - are
healthy future for the seve n survivin g Housto n oc tu - f1 ghtin g infection hut all of th e babies are gainin g
plets, saying there arc no s1gns of developmental . weight.
At birth , all seve n were und er 2 pounds. By
probfems.
.
Thursday,
l1 oke , a boy, continued to lead his sib"These children have a good chance ol he1n g
lings
as
the
heavies t, weighting 2 3/4 pound s.
normal," sa1d Dr. Leonard Weisman, chief neonaGorom
was
ju
st
over I 112 pounds.
to logist at Texas Children's Hosp ita l.
The babies, born three months premature. will
Nkem Chukwu delivered eight bab1es. but the
eighth, Odcra , died a week, aft er birth. The surviv - have to remain at Texas Children's .until at least
ing tw o boys and fl\·e g ~rl s are now ofi ven tilators March, or until they gain sufficient weight.
The me di cal bill IS expected to reach $ 1.75 mila"" receiving breast nulk . ·
·
·
lion
.
·
Brain scans revealed no bleed•ng , usua ll y a hall mark o f dc\•clnpmcntal prob lems . Two babies -

372-2844 • www.tompcden.com

•
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20 Yrs. E•P· • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
Bulldo1er &amp; Backhoe

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110

HllpWanted

MEDICAL
ASSISTANT
NEEDED
for an eatabluhed

lnternalJievUcUie
Practke in Athens
Prior bUling
e:rperience
deaimble but not
required.
Send resume
C/0 The Dally
Sentinel
P.O. Box 729-n
Pomeroy,OH

45169
30 Announcements

BINGO
every Saturday \
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst $2,300
Door Prize $300
145 people or
more wUl play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
regular game.
Card of Thanks
The family of
Hayrrwn A. Barnit:r:
with to thank
et&gt;eryone who helped
m any way during hiA
long
iUne11 and death .
AU the beautiful
flower~, card. and
phone caU.. Special
daanko to 1he Nuroes
at Veterans Memorial
Ho•pital, Extended
Care and Holzer
Medical Center.
To Dr.Jiunter,
Dr. Rahman and
Dr. Chabria far their
diligent care.
Ewing• Funeral
Home for ari
impre•sive aervice,
AU the Emergency
unit• far their
prompt reaponoe, Ia
Gerald Powell and
Hal Kneenfor the
beautiful Music.
Rev. Connie Farrel
for her viaitation and
comfarting warda,
the United Methodut
Women for the meal
after the •eroice,
The Legion for the
flog recognising hu
oeroice m the Anny
during World War II
and a very opec ml
thank. to-Jeffrey and
Linda Warner for
jutt beintf t/Jere ".
We appreciate you
all very much and
May •God Bleu Yort.
51

Dean Damita, Gary
&amp; Bev, Keith &amp;
Fran, Graradcl1ildren
and Greatsrandchildren

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Sidi.ng
Commercial &amp; Realdentlal
27 yrs •. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured
Phone 740·992·3987
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Owner: John Dean 112 1 m

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YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

bepn/1,

Doctors issue healthy forecast for seven surviving octuplets

- Paula DIPerna, The New York Times

Wesl VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,

FRIDAY
RUTI..AND - Evangeli sts Mark
and Jennifer Tucker, Danville, · Va.,
fonnerly of Meigs County, Rutland
Civic Center for services, Friday and
Saturday, 7 p.m.

SATURDAY

public golf on earth."

rH

, Public Motlce '
s .. Ied bide will be
received until 3:00 p.m.
January 29, 1899 at the
mayora office, 237_ Race
Street, Middleport, Ohio lor
the following equipment.
One 1750 GPM pumping
lira engine. Speclllcattona
lor lhla equipment · ere
available upon request at
the Mayora office or from
the Fire Chief of the
Middleport Fire Department.
tn eny contract entered
Into between the VIllage ol
Middleport and the
euccellfUI bidder Hahall be
the reaponatblllty of tho
contractor to meat all
requirements of NFPA
booklet 1·901. All required
teal reaulta ahall ba made
available to tha Chtal oltha
Middleport Flra Oapartmant

POMEROY - · Meigs Count y
Township Trustees Association
meetin g, 6:30 p.m. Friday at the
Meigs County Senior Citi ze ns· Center, Pomcror

Brand New 1999 Che\ty
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'~ .. some ofthe best

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Pick up dl..:arded
appllancea, battarlee,
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Public Notice
conaldered and continued
from day to day until finally
dlapoled of.
Any peraon lnter11ttd
mey file written exception to·
aeld account Or to mettars
pertaining to the execution
of the truat, not 1111 than
live daya prior to tho date
1~ lor hearing.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common Pl .. a Cour·l
Probete Dlvleton, Meigs
County, Ohio

. The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special events. The calen!lar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
prinlcd as space pennits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

.
45
·
0*
1'

Srv E N

Fill

Community Calendar

•Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

GOLFlHOTEL
MCitAGES STAIIT AT $ 169

: ;IN THE COMMON PLEAS
I"' ' OOURl 'PRC18Ai'E
. DMSION, MEIGS COUNTY,
•
OHIO
• IN THE MATTER OF THE
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
;t)HIO
: ··Account• alicl vouchara
.0, the following named
}lduclary haa b..n flied In
Probate Court, Melga
:COunty, Ohio, far approval
•net Hltloment:
· ESTATE N0.-25002:'I'hlrtllnth Annual Account
of Richard E. Jonea, Truetn
'Of the Truat CrUWCI By lltm
)/ Of The Will Of Manning D.
Webater, Deceaeed.
: Unlell exceptions are
·flied thereto, aald eccounl
·wm be lor nearing before·
:aald Court on the 22nd day
of .February, 11199, at which
)lmo oald account wilt ba

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

J.

AT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
18" X-Large Four
Toppings 512.99
Fast, Fresh &amp; Friendly
992-9200

·
Legal Notice
The ennual financial report
of
Salem
Townehlp
1)'uet11e, Melga County Ia
complete and the report Ia
av.alleble at the office of the
c:lerk or Truatna me~lng,
To view tha report at the
~Ice
of the clerk en
appolnbnent may be made
at740-68ll-3091.
(1) 221TC

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

St. Rt. 7

'

qa,o5D*

) DAY-2 NIGHT

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
' thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdaya .
9:D0-12:oo Saturday

Free Estimates

740·742·3411

2112/t2111n

11121,. tfn

Public Notice

Imured

G&amp;W PLASliCS AND SUPPLY

will open on Sundays due
to customer request.
Hrs: 4 pm- 10 pm
Starting Sun., Jan. 24th
Closed on Mondays
18" 4 item $12.99
Sunday Only

•II•

ROBERT TRENT JONES
GOLF TRAIL

t-800-949-4444

RACINE PIZZA
EXPRESS

(1) 22

825 850

33334 Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

Room Additions • Roofing

Public Notice

*Brand New 1999 Chevy Astro

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs .• Decks • Garages

Garages • Replacement Windows

WINTER .SALE
20-75$ Off!! ·

Jeanie Howell, EA
Phone 740-992-7036

IDISftRDMI
COIS,.RDC7101
New Construe,lon &amp; Remodeling

• New Homes • Vinyl $1dlng New

tighten up the hierarchy 's juridica(
control over theology teachers.
The Malloy-Monan ar~icle is
accompamed by an analySis from
Father James Conn, a Jesuit and
dean.and canon law professor at St.
Mary's Seminary and Umversity in
Baltimore. Conn criticizes a previous editorial in America stating
that the proposed rules are "wellintentioned but unworkable" and
"could be disastrous for U.S.
Catholic higher education."
Conn says both educators and.
bishops need to ·answer "irksome
questions " on precisely who
applies what powers before th.e
hierarchy discusses the text in'
detail at a meeting nex"t November.
·

•

.
· · UTILE ROCK, Ark.

(AP) F.orgive the folks at the Little Rock
Zoo 1f they seem a little cagey these
dJ!ys.
'
• The zoo lost its accreditation from
t6e American Zoological and Aquariutn Association last July and things
~ven 't been the same. Aquariums
and other zoos around the country al:credited ones, anyway - won't let .
Little Rock Friends of the Zoo members in for free or reduced price.
"We &lt;jon 't necessarily travel
somewhere just to go to a zoo," said
Ann Fox, visiting the zoo this week
with 1-year-old daughter, Audrey.
'~But 1f we're there, it's nice for the
kids."
· Why the bad rap?
. Association spokeswoman Jane
J:lallentine said- there~was mounting
concern over inadequate exhibits,
funding for improvements and the
14ck of a satisfactory emergency plan
should animals escape. In 1997, two
gorillas got into a zookeeper work
~ afea and_snacked on apples and vegetables.
~
·
: The zoo also failed to renew its
tJ.S. Department of Agnculture
liJ;ensc without infonning the association.
: "I hate to say this when we're talkirig about a zoo, but that was the straw
t~at broke the camel's back," Ballentine said. The zoo later got a new
tJSDA license.
: The zoo must wait a few more
months before 11 can apply for accred. irat10n. In the past ycar; the zoo spent
$850,000 on a new lion's exhib1t and
amphitheater ·and has begun work to
improve wastewater drainage.

for 25 years " until they were
revived by the Bevilacqua committee.'
The conflict originated w1th a
Vatican decree on Catholic higher
education titled ~x Corde Ecclesiae, which was approved by th e
pope in · 1990. Throughout the
process, American Catholic educators insisted their schouls were diff&lt;:rent from those in some other
countries due to cultural tradition
and secular law.
In 1996, the U.S. bishops overwhelmingly approv~d a plan to
implement that document in the
Umted States. But the following
year the Vatican rejected the plan
and directed 'the Americans to

Boolclteepms ond PoyroU
Individual, Parlne,..hip and Corporation
Tax Returru
Federal and aU llale•
Houn: Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 4:30
..
Sat. 9 to 12
Evenings and Sat. afternoon by appt. only.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Educators: Rules encourag~d by Vatican would be 'profoundly detrimental'

By RICHARD/N. OSTLING
univerSJt~ rules were written by h
AP Religion Writer
special committee of U.S. bishops
NEW YOR~ (AP) - Just f?ur led by Anthony Cardinal Bevilacdays before the pope arnves 1n the qua of Philadelphia. They received
United States,' leaders of two lead- first reading at a meeting of the full
ing Catholic c~mpuses are wan11ng U.S. hierarchy last November.
that proposed rules fashioned to fit
Malloy and Molian contend that
Vatican dtctates " would be pro- the rules would undermine acadefoundly detrimental to Catholic mic freedom and institutional
higher educati on."
autonomy from outside control,
The protest, in an article by essential qualities they say
Fathers Edward Molloy of the Uni - Catholic• schools have come to
versity of Notre Dame and J. Don- share with other American campus~ld Menan of Boston College, was es as they have risen in prestige.
to appear today in America magaThe priests . are especially
zine, a publication of the Jesuit alarmed over proposed requireorder.
ments. that theology professors
The editor of the magai 1ne sa1d receive a "mandate': from church
the timmg of the article was coinci- authorities, take an oath of fidelity
dental. The pope arrives in St. upon appointment and otherwise
Louis on Tuesday for a two-day show doctrinal and personal
visit.
·
integrity in accord with church
The Jesuits operate 28 U.S. col- teaching.
leges and universities. Molloy, the
Those provisions are drawn
president of Notre Dame and from the canon law code that Pope
Monan, the chancellor and former . John Paul promulgated in 1983.
president of Boston College, are But Malloy ·and Monan state that
among the leading figures 1n those canons, "with the full knowiCatholic higher education.
· edge of the U.S.
and
The controversial colle2e and with Jlood
had
.. i
High School, will repon to Fon Sill
Charles W. Roberts, Jr.
Anny Private Charles W. Robens, in Lawton, Okla., for basic training in
Jr., has entered basic military training June.
at Fort Benning in Columbus, Ga.
During the training, he will
receive instruction in drill and ceremonies, map readmg, tactics, mihtary
customs and counesies, physical fitness and first aid.
·
He is the son of Charles W.
Roberts, Sr. of Racine.

Howell's Bookkeeping
&amp; Tax Service ·

lin.
111..!!1

A

~

~
1/A
~

ft~~~c~~CJcii~c

CREDI7
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo · ·Divorced

•Room Additions
•Remodeling &amp; Siding
•Garages &amp; Decks
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Pafnting
•Roofing &amp; Qutters
•Concrete Work

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

II**

(Free Estimates)

V.C. Young Ill
(Owner- 21 yrs)

(740) 992·6215
"Fully Insured"
Reduced Winter Rates

Snow

Custom Homes ·

Removal
591 ...1897
Cell phone
992-3141
Home
Call Anytime

Remodeling

M&amp;J
"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

30 Announcements

Dave's Garage

BINGO

Forrner-"Velvet Hammer"
.52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

MON. &amp; WED.
.6:30P.M.
RUTLAND

POST 467
STAR BURST
$900.00
$50.00 OR MORE
Pll GAMI

BEECH GROVE
ROAD
In Memory

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

-Complete Auto Service(Lime StoneLow Rates)

(

.

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, .

Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

Top Soli,

HILL'S
SELF STORACE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'.
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
1/4/99 1 mo pd

J.ANDSCAPB
DESIGNS
In Memory af

Richard M.
Friend
May 13, 1931-

]an. 22, 1998
You have been
gone a year
Tlte hartle•t af
my life.
ltlaink of you aften
and wuh you
were here.
1 can elill hear yo11r
laugltter
echo through tl•e
halh of q no_IAJ_
empty hou1e.
Irho..P•t I could not
•u"'itte alone,
But l fortnd the
•trength ir1 your
memory and Love
Bolh I hold close
to my /t eart
I hold in my •oul the
knowledge all of tltia
;.. God's wiU.
1 miu you, my
Darling and l'U
alway•
love you.
Sadly mi..ed by wife,
Shirley &amp; Family

Computer Graphics
Oeslg"s
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio '
740-985-4422..,,....,,

Furnilure Refinuhing
&amp;Repair
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Available

R. L. HOLLON

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK

S~RVICE.
Agrlc;ultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10(25196111n •

GUN SHOOT

Racine Gun Clu'
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday
12:30 pm
Umit 680 sleeve
•737 back bore

892·1100
Out of Area ·
1-800-564-3227
1/201'99 1 mo pd.

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

985-4473
, 7/22/ltn
Pomeroy EaiJies
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progreaslve top line .
Lie. 11 oo-so
11 g n

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, January 22, 1999

••

:·,. ,.,.,,....,
,.

1

~~inLdE•yy,(J~allnu~·~-~y-22~·~
_&amp;_88--~--~~----------------~------~P~o~m~e~r~o=y=·=M=Id=d=le=po==rt=·=O=h=lo~==~=================The===Da=l=ly=Se==n=tl=n=el=e=P=a=g=e~1~~~
;tu.EY OOP
005

We Buy Everything Furniture,
Appliances Etc By Tho Ploco Or

Penson ala

Tho Loll 740-25W989

Slot Machlnas, Like 1Do Winning
Secrets Revealed Sane! $3 oo
To George 10 N Caddo Suite
171 , Cleburne, Texas 76031

EMPL OYMENT
SERV ICES

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CALL AMERICA'S 11 PSV•
c:HICS 1·900-740-6500 Ext
3596,
wwW lhehotpagss2 oom'nslpsy
chlc12~1 him $3 99/Min 16+
Sorv·U 619-645-11434

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Spears 304-675-1429
Babysitter needed t8mo old, my
home Part-time, flexible hrs

Reply DJB, RR2, Box 877A, PI
PI WV 25550

Start Dating Tonight/ Have fun
ple~lng

the Ohio Dating Gama t800-ROMANCE, extenSion 9015

Bus DrlverfCustodlan-FT poal~
IIO'l,. 9 moa per year, 8hrs full
benefits Hartford area, HS graduate or GED, mu5t have COL with
minimum of Classc Pauenger
endorsement Send resume to
SCAC, 540 5th Ave Huntington,
WV 25701 by Jan 31 EOE

30 Announcements
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May
Be Entitled To Receive Your Diabetic Supplies At No Cost To
You For More Information, 1-888-

Computer Users Needed Work

677-6561

Own Hra S20K -$75K !Vr 1·800·
348 7186 Ext 1173 wwwamp·

Now To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens
740-592-1842
Quality clothing and household
llema $ t oo bag sale avery
Thurada~ Monday thru Saturday
90D-5 30

inc com

CREW LEADER,
Land Development Company Is
Looking For A Mature, Reliable
And Competent Crew Leader To
Find Contractors For And To
Oversee Mowing, Weak -Wacklng And Bush Hogging On Company Owned Land For Sale All
Over Southeastern Ohio Some
Construction And Maintenance
E~eperience Ia Helpful Seniors
And Retired Persons Are Urged
To Apply ThiS Is A Pert Time
Permanene1 Position Hours And
Salary Are Negotiable Call Mike

Giveaway

11 puppies. half Collie &amp; Lab, 8
weeks Old 740-985-4231
Beagle Basset Female, Stack &amp;
White, Less Than 1 Year Old, To

Good Homa 740-446·9243 EvenIngs
Collie Shepherd Mix, 6 Months

Old, To Good Homo, 740·441·
0470 Call Aller 3 00
Female House Cat to loving
home 1 Housebroken Has.. Had

Shots and Is Spayed (304)6751359

o 740 266-0081

Delivery Driver /Technlctan
Needed For Home Medical
Equipment Company Full Time,
E~ecellent Pay And Benefits Must

from auctions can 740-992·2808

Housekeeper {Live-In) For Disa
bled Practicing Columbus Attorney Cooking, Cleaning Laundry,
Some Care, Some Driving, 614-

5710

267 5354

Six month old male Bnttany span

Nur•lng ~aaletenta needed to
provide In home services for the
elderly/ disabled call 1·888·242-

PROGRESSIVE, EXPANDING

Local Business Has Immediate

Opanlng For RETAIL STORE
MANAGER AND SALES PER·

Will Give Away Two Mixed Breed
Dogs To loving Home With
Plenty Of Lend, 7--4314

SONS

60

Sharing' Benefits GREAT CUB·
TOMER SERVICE And Compul·

Found Black &amp; White Small Poodle, Named "Fefe" Registered To

M F Cook In 1997 740-446-7558
lost Dog 3 Beagles 2 trl col·
ored 1 black &amp; tan Sand Hill
Road area, Reward , (304)743

6584

Loot Black spayed female German Shepherd $100 raward
(304)675 22n
Mlss•ng Rottweller, 3 Years Old
Male Scar On Left Paw, Name
Bear, Friendly Blue Collar, Hart
aook Keystone Mount Tabor
Area. Reward Offered! 740·388·

0876

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AIJ. Ylrd Slilet M1.11t
Be PaJd In Advance
QEAQUNE 2 00 p m
tho day bofofll tho ad

11 to nm. Sundly
adltlon • 2 00 p.m.

Frfdoy Mondoy adltlon
- 10:00 1 m Sotuntay.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Still Mu11 Be Paid In
Advance Daldllne 1 OOpm the
day before the ed Is to run,
Sund•y I Mondty tdlllon-

1 OOpm Frlday

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Aue11oneering
Services L•ttte Hocking, Oh1o
Appraisals
Farm- Estate
Household- Commercial Ohio L•
conso 17899 74().989-2623
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service
Licensed
166 Ohio &amp; West V1rgm1a, 304·

773-5785 Or 304 773 5447

Wedemeyer s Auct1on Serv1ce

Gallopolls, Ohio 740 379 2720

CommiSSIOns

•Prolll

er Skills Necessary Business,
Team Management Experience
Or D9(Tee Required Please Send
Resume And Flelerences To
~o ao. 2116
Marlena, OH 45750

Sates- Home Furnishing - Fletalt
Experience Preferred Apply Tope
Furniture, 151 Second Avenue
Gallipolis No Phone Calls Please!
Salesperson Needed Furntlure
Store, Full Time Immediate
Opening Apply lllestyle Furniture. 856 Third A11enue, Gallipolis,
1DTo 2 No Phone Celts Please!
TRANSMISSION REBUILQEA
Need Standard Or Automatic Asbuilder Should Have Experience
In Fore•gn And Domestic, Car Or
Truck We Supply Ali Tools
Great Working Environment And
Benellts Call Columbus BOO 848-

7680 Ask For Grog

Radiologic Technician
Want to earn extra money on the
weekends? Jackson General
Hospital has a per diem po5illon
available For more Information
call 304-372 2731, Ext 313 or

264 Submit rasyma to HA PO
Box 720 Rlplay WV 25271
EOE
WANTED: Part Time Position

Available At A Communlt)l Group
Home For People With Mental
Aetardalon In Gallipolis 35 5 firs
/Wk 11 PM ·830AM Th 1030
~M

8 30 AM Fn 7 ~M Sal· 9

A M Sun We Are Searching For
Compassionate Professionals
Wltn A Team Vision To Teach
Personal And Community Skills
To Individuals Wllh Mental Ae·
tardat1on The Work Environment
Is Informal And Rewarding High
School Degree Vahd Driver's Li
cense And Three Years Good
Driving Exper ience Required
Comprehensive Training In The
F1eid 01 MRIDD Provided Inter·
ested Applicants Need To Send
Resume Or letter Of Interest To
Buckeye Community Servtoos

PO Bo&gt;604
Jackson Oh 45640-0604
All Applications Must Be Post •

Marked By 1128199 P[ease Indicate Position Applying For
~qual Opportunl~

140

Employer

Bualnesa
Training

Gallipolis Caroor Collage
(Carsars ClOse To Homo ) eon
TOday! 74D-«6-4367 1-800214-0452 Reg 190-05-12748.

170 Miscellaneous

992-6576
Clean Late Model Cars Or
TrJJcks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Ponuac, 1900 East
ern AYI!nuo, Galli&gt;Ofls

looking To Buy Uoed Hockey
(Ciothu) Equipment For Young
Boy Slta 8 10 740-245-5887

Babys•ttmg available In my home,
Human Services certUied responsible mother of two for more
mformauon call 740·742·3807
Electric maintenance service
Wlrmg breaker boxes, light fn• ·
ture, heat1ng systems and Ae

992-2t67

daclcs &amp; vinyl underpinning All
appliances, Central Air, very
nice Will consider trade, real es-

2 Bedrooms 2 Beth Trailer In
Green Terrace, $350/Mo , Includes .Lot Rent water, Sewer

Will do small carp•ntry and

bile homo, 740-992-15039

Excellent Coodltlon, 740-441·
1913

70x14 Vlndalo, With lot, On
Mitchell Road, $20 ooo, Lot &amp;
Trailer, 740-1143-2811, Or Clll AI·
ltr8PM740-&amp;13--

2 Bedrooms, Nice. Air, Nalural

And Trash, $280 Deposit And

1913 Hlllcreat two bedroom mo-

plumbing jObs, ate , call 304-8754910
Will Sit With Elderly Persona
Daylight Houro Call 740·367·
0280

Dou)&gt;lowldo Repo, Call For VIew·
lng 800-383 888.2

F IN ANC IA L

210

Business
Opportunity

recommends that you do busl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to aend money through lhe
mall Uf'1tll you have lnve&amp;Ugated
the offering
Amazing $ Income $ produceryours free write SA Melbourne

727 Utica Ava Suite 177 Brook·
~n NY, 11203

230

Mlnutasl BOD-383-6662

WV Tlrad Of No? Wa Say Yeo I
304-736-3409
Rent Buster, new 1999 14x70 2or

3 bedrooms , only $995 00 down

enco:JOW96-3887

5676

Factory goof Ill Save thousands,

callt-800-948-5676

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

por mon 1-800-948-5676

Limited otter 1999 double wide, 3

br, 2 ba $1,799 down, $275 00
per mon , delivered and set up

can 1-800-948-5678
We Finance Land &amp; Hom8 With

Relocating? Take Over Pay·
menta, 304-736-7295

340 Bualnaasand
Buildings

All reSt estate adVeltls111Q In
this ntwlpapar ts subfiCt to
the Fedtlrat Fair HooafrVAd
of 1988- make&amp; " llfogol

Commerclai·Ofllce or Retail, 87

to -rtlae ·any pt0ftrar1ce,

Mill St Middleport 1,450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Building 740-

limitatiOn or discrimination
baled on race colo&lt; nrllglon
sex famllat 1111us at r11t10n11
origin,..- ony Intention Ill
make .., • ...,.,
ltmllaflon or dllerlmlnation •

992-6250

dOor)

pre-.

Acquisitions

(nexl

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
lake VIew $32,000 More
Acreage Available, 740-388·
8879

This MWOpapor wil rot
knowingly IICCOj)l

IIC!Yertlsemanttt tor rta1

75ACRES
In The Country, Northwest Gallla

lew Our noodora nltertby

County Boaulllul Rolling MeadOw

lntonned-1111 dMIIngl

Barn &amp; Fencing In Back Yard

'""'!!iP"" In 11111 -.paper

Only $14,500
20ACRES

orf'iYal- on an equal

Hunting. Or Recreation Tracts
Touching Wayne National Forest
Meadow In Front With Rolling

oppor1LI11ty - ·

REAL ESTATE

Woods

On~

$22,000 Land Con-

tract Available Free Maps 1·800·

213-8365.

310 Homes for Sale

440

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths, 1 25 Atn!o,

Real Estate
Wanted

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent
1 Bedroom House, Cion To Rio
Grande College, $300/Mo Water

Sowags, Garbags, Paid, 740-441-

1005

Bv owner, 725 Page Street Mid·
disport, house &amp; 3 lots must 111
to appreciate, wm aall house with--

1 Bedroom Economical Gaa
Heat, WID Hook Up, Near Cinema
$279/Mo. Plus Utilities, Deposit &amp;
Lease ~oqulred, 740-446-2957
2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

Campus, 74D-245-5656

2 Bedroom Apartment 1 112
Baths, Great Locatlonl 15 Court
Street, Gallipolis, Kitchen With
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo ,
Plus Utilities, Deposit, References, No Pals 740-446-9580

2 Bedrooms, $425/Mo S100 Do·
posit, All Ullilllos Paid No Pots,
740-448-1637,740-446-3437
2bdrm apts , total electric. appliances furnished, laundry room
facilities close to sChool In town
Applications available at VIllage

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358. Walk to shOp
&amp; movloa Call 740·448-2568
Equal Houalng Opportunlly
For rent one bedroom apartment

posit Roqulrad Utilities Paid 740·
446-1519
Furnished Upstair&amp; Apartment
Close To Grocery &amp; Downtown
Gallipolis No Pets, Refrences
And Depos" 740-4-46-1155

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·

es raqulrlld, (304)675·1972 oflsr
3 BR. 2 Bath; datschad 2 car ga-

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres, Village Middleport,
secluded and private appoint~

rage, Glenwood, $350 month +

tfaposll, (304)743-8584

men&gt; csll740-992·5896

312 Wetzgal SL Pomaroy 3 B&lt;lrm
House, $350 00 Month, Deposit
Required 1·888-640-0521

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
IIWoWII
Only $199 down large selection
of 2·3-4 bedrooms free delivery&amp;
setup owner financing available,
only at Oak wood Mobile homes
Nitro Wv. 304-755-5885
Amazing only $999 down on
large selection or double wldll,
- free ctellvery &amp; setup ownerfi-

nanctng available 804-755-5885

1

•WAAMYPf•

Two AKC Raglstarad Shar-Pal

Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Con·
dltionlng Free Eallmatesl If You

puppies for sale, ona chocolate
male, ana apricot female, 740·

Don't Call Us We Bo1h Lose!
7--6306. 1·800-29t-OQ98
18" DlrocTV Sotolllte Svotomo$69 00 purchase price with up to
$200 worth of free programming
Limited lime ortar call HIOD-7798194
1994 Pace Shadow enclosed
trailer delu~ee model 7000 GVW
with winch, used only on weekends, retailed new for $8, 100,
sell for $4 995, caii74D-949-2045

Clean 2 bedroom house in Po·
merO)', $350 per month plus deposit, no pets, land contract poa
slble attar a year, 740-898 7244
Nice 2 Bedrooms $300 Deposit
$350/Mo + Utilities, No Pets
7~1-1469Anor5PM

0/cter Home In country, 2 1tory, 3
BR, epprox-lma1ely 3 miles tram
Rio Grandt University, Deposit

required, no pots, (304)675-7624

Attention! New Years Resolution
Loose Weight, Earn Money! 740-

441-1982 Free Samples

Beanie Babies lor sale· current &amp;
rflllred, $5·$10 "Wise• &amp; bears;
cell 740-995-4442, leave mes-

sage.

Church pews for sale, 12 twelve
foot 4 ten foot, $200 each 740-

McCain

Farlfleld

Centenary

Road, 7-·a-442

4-16 7263

Sandyville P 0 , Friday-Sunday,
noon-5pm Other days alter 4pm

304-273-5655
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537 9528
Kerosene Heater, Polaris Ceram
lc Furnace, Propane Heater, Panasanlc Easa Phone, 740 446·

Mlx•d seasoned lirewood, cut
and split, delivered $30 load ,

Now Taking Applications- 35
Weat 2 Bedroom Townhous•
Apartments, Includes Water

Sewage, Trash, $295/Mo, 740·
446-0008

terns 740-742·2485

'"CORfiECTJON"
Ohio Valle~ Bank Will Offer For
Sale By Public Auction A 1976
Mack Truck tT12797, A 1974
John Deere Dozer 1152874T, A

1997 ASVE Low Bo~ Trailer
1060897 A 1995 Prentice 150
KUnckloboom Loader IZ21733, &amp;
A 1973 Vagabond Motorhome

11187 On 2/6/99 AI 10 00 AM
At MJW Moving &amp; Towing ,

'oe

SISto Route 7 N , GaiNpolls OH
Tho Above Will Be Sold To High

One bedroom apartment for rent
quiet dep &amp; ref required

est Bidder · As Is -Where ts •
Without Expressed Or Implied

0ne Bedroom Apt Lalayette Mall
$3.50 oo Per Month Oepoalt

Calling Marton Wilson At 740446·4060 OVB Re serves The
R1ght To Accept Or Reject Any

$30000 304 675-1550

Warranty And Ma~ Be Soan By

Aoqd All Ulllllloa Paid CaiiHO
4-16·2477

And All Bids, And Withdraw
Properly From Sale PriOr To Sate
;:--=.:_-7~""':'--~----1 Torma Of Sale CASH OR CER·

Renters Dream Come True/ Call
304 7
• 36--7295
Tara Townhouse Apartmenta,
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms , 2
flool'l CA 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpoled, Pallo, No Pall, Lease Plus

Valley Refinishing Shop Larry
Philip&amp;. 740-992 6576

All Electric: Appflances, Porche.

Carport, 740 256-6336

lrlc, CA, 10xt2 Outbuilding, Rio
Grandt /Thurman Area 7&lt;40-3792351 Aft8r 6 PM

Keroscene Heater Wlcs &amp; Re
pairs, Siders Equipment Compa-

ny, 304-675-7421

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tractors in Stock. Financing As
Low As 6 5% Fixed Rate On
Qualifying Tractors With John
Deere Credit Approval Car·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway

Between Gallipolis And Rio
Grande On Jackson Pike 740-

Upotalrs ~fflclency with private

60 Round Bales 01 Good Mlxad
Hoy, $12 Each, 740-«6-3413
For Sale. MIXED HAYI ( 7401
286-2959

9770

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Par 100 1· 200 PSI
$37 DO Per 100 ~II Brau Compre.ss6on Ftttlngs In Stock

couple II

are looking, 11 s e
mull see It's $390 a month utiH·

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackeon, Ohio 1 800-537 9528

lies are Included A $300 deposit
11 required For mora Information,
or an appointment, call 740 943S343 and feavt a message

Whirlpool Refrigerator, Side-BySldt, No Frost Harvut Gold,
Worh:s Good, Good Condition

$175 00 74D-4411-4729

1991 CIWy Full Size Pick-Up, V6 Automatic, 53,000 Milas,
$4,900, 1994 Goo Tracker $· ;
Spood 47,000 Milas $5,500 Bot11 • •
Carry Warranty, KC Auto Salas[ !
740-445-8172
(

orc;hard gras~ S2 bale round

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa

•

1891 Toyota _.x4 Extended Cab,

~

'

.r

f 994 Chevy Diesel 4 Wheel

1991 Cadillac Seville 4 door n·
dan loaded with accessories
great gas m•leage car phone,

304-675-2722

1992 Chrysler LeBaron 4 Doors,

Autom A/C Cruise, Tilt 74,000
Milts $2,800 00 080 740-258·
8169

•

'
.BIG NATE

_tlon:..:.:,$-"9-"500=(304=)::.57~6-.:288.:::5:...__ ,
Ohio Valley Bank Will Offer For

IIRAO, YOU 5EEt'l Ll KE
A. NICE KID, 50 I'LL
LEVEL. WITH '(OU
tlATES JUST USI Ill&lt;;
YOU TO C.ET I!&gt;ACI&lt;..
I&gt;.T 11E ! .
WHOA.,

n

Sale By Public Auction A 1989
ChOIIY Aslro Van 1243897 On 2/
13199 AI 10 00 AM AI Tha OVB
Annex, 143 Third Ave Gallipolis,

OH Tho Abova Will Be Sold To
Highest Bidder •As Ia- Where
ts• Wllhout Expressed Or Implied
warranly And May Be Seen By

WHOA~

Calling Keith Johnson AI 740441·1038 OVB Reserves rna

~

'

Righi To Accept Or Raletl An~

~~ld:l.

And All Bids, And Withdraw
Property From Sale Prior To Sale

Terms Of Sala CASH OR CER·
TIFIED CHECK.
=--:-::-:-~-:----

Two 1979 Jeep Cherokees one
runs, one for parts, $700 OBO

1i

II! .... ""---''-"
0I
u'!i!L....l..-'-..!l

.•

740

nus IS T~f

Motorcycles

HIL.L. WE'RE 601N6
TO CLIM6 ..

t 998 300 Honda FourTra~e •x4,
Practically New Must Sell Pro·
fessiona/ Manicuring Table, Black

/Gray With Light Allachod, Call
Ahar700~M 740-441-Q657

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced Transmlniona
and Engines. All Types, Access
i~~~~~~ooo Transmissions,

Now gas lanka &amp; body parts D &amp;
R Auto, Ripley, WV 304·372·
3933 or 1-SOQ-273-9329

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

condition $300, 304·875-8149
1997 Wlldarnosa camper, Fltfh
Wheel with slldo·out, oxcollont
condition, asking $18,000 oao.
304-773-54114.

'

SERVICES

8111

Home
lmpfovementa
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

ers Waterproofing

General

tiome

Main-

tenance- Painting vlnyj__SidJIIg
carpentry doors, windows baths,
mobile homo repair and moo-e For
free estimate call Chet 740·992-

6323

Professional 20yra uperlince
with all masonacy, brick, block &amp;
stone Also room additions, ga·
rages etc Free tstlmales 304-

773-9550

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs Master uctnaed electrician Ridenour

Electrical WV000306 304-6751786

Weal

North

2.•

2•

1e11nc1

41 Mike current

51 Circumvent
55 lpeecller
17 SfMinllll CIIIW S6 Actre.e
18 Realcllnl (lull.)
Piper21 Dried coconut 57 Flah11tlng
meet
m•mmel
23 Sot'a rrobllm 58 Eertlnt bom
(lbllr.

DOWN

.28 'Nrtter Janowitz

281nlppte-ple
1 Govt. houelng
onler
org.
29 Wide 1hoe 11Z11
2 Willer Fleming
30 Like 11101t
3 Weapon
modele
31 Content
4 Hawaiian food
floh
33 Actor Gould
5 Souv..,lr
38 Singer Tut'1111'

6 Inventor

9 --Clear

Thomas
7 Wall
8 Climbing atem

Pasa

Pass

East
Pass
p~

OpenitJS lead: • A

In "The Devtl's D1cttonary,"
Ambrose B1erce defined a cynic as
"a blackguard whose faulty v1s1on
sees thmgs as lhey are, not as they
ought to be"
At tjle bnclge !able, tt helps to have
20-20 viswn (though there are a few
good bhnd players). Not only do you
need to be able to see your cards and,
eventually, those m the dummy, but
you must also try to vtsuahze lhe htd·
den hands
If you w1sh to test your eyesight,
look only at the North and West
hands. South reaches four spades
after the gtven sequence You cash
two top clubs, everyone followmg.
What next?
I like the two-club overcall
because three no-trump mtght be posstble, but I could hvG wtth a threeclub weak JUmp overcall
Thts tsn 't an automauc problem
But tf you count lhe pomts, 11
becomes hkely that your stde doesn't h~ve anotHer side-suit tnck There
are 19 pomts between your hand and
lhe dummy, yet South had sufficient
to JUmp to game opposite a smgle
ratse. He must have a strong hand m
enher htgh-card or dtstrtbuuon terms
And If you nave no other Stde·SUit
tnck 10 come, there ts only one
chance You must lead another club
Now the spothght falls on your
partner Suppose he ruffs low, and
South, havmg a lhtrd club, follows
sutt Wtll the spade kmg serve any
purpose? Nq, 11 won't So, especial·
ly as a vulnefable lwo-level overcall
ts usually made on at least a stx-card
suit, East should ruff with the spade
kmg
You can see the effect Soulh over·
ruffs w1th the ace, but now you have
two trump tncks lo defeat lhe contract. It IS a classtc uppercut

Til EN WAAT? THEN
WE'LL STAND AT THE
TOP, AND SEE TI-lE
WHOLE WORLD,.

Tl-lENWHAT?
TIIEN WE'U.
HIKE SACK
DOWNA6AIN ..

'

o

SA!(ING,

l

WHAT?''

i

'

'

~-------~-~---~~~~~=~~/~~--~~~·~•PL-~~~·~·~-~-~~-~~__J

1

{

ROBOTMAN

I

~

'•
•

t

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•~
•'

•

•

ASTRO·GRAPH
careful that you're not percetved by
Saturday, Jan 23, 1999
fnends as pulling your interests and
Lady Luck wtll g1ve you ample
_
needs
above ev~:ryb!ldy .~&gt;lse'31oday
chances to make your mark m the
They'll resen111 af they thmk you're
W&lt;&gt;rld m the year ahead Dan 'ttake
l!ytng to mantpul~te them
for granted the fact that they'll always
TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May 20) If
be there Act when opportunuy
you
find yourself makmg judgment
knocks because you don 'I want to
calls
based on emouons, let wtser
gamble wtth your future
heads
who are basmg decisaons on
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
hard
expenence
prevail today.
Although a patuntent may be good,, _
- GEM1NnMiY21-Ju-ne 20) Be
your fnend m1ght not be able to
expectant and hopeful today, but
debver what she or he promised
don'tlel your destres overrule your
Solely rely on yourself and you
reason. Oplimtsm has tis drawbacks
won 'I be dtsappotnted Trying to
tf 11's predicated purely on wtshful
patch up a broken romance 7 The
lhtnkmg.
Astra-Graph Matchmaker can help
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
you understand what to do to make
could
be placed m the same categothe maltonshtp work Matl $2.75 IO
ry
af
your
chotce of compamons have
Malc)1maker, e/o this newspaper,
bad
reputaoons.
Remember, we're all
PO Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
JUdged
by
the
company
we keep, so
New York, NY 10156
select
your
pals
wtsely
today
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) In
LEO (J~Iy 23-Aug. 22) Get venorder to capuabze on any financtal
ficauon
from those you behove are
opportun1Ues that might sunound
commmed to helping you wath an
you today, you'll have to be alert By
tmpottant project Persons you can
the lime you ptek up on lhtngs, tl
usually depend on trughl be oa:upted
could be too late to take advantaJC of
elsewhere today
them.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22)
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl 19) Be

Although yo~ mtght be able to do

something constructive wtth cammgs
generated from a second source,
patience wtll- be needed for tl to
develop today.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Should
someone who has treated you rather
badly of late be tn need of your kind·
ness today, JUSt let bygones be
bygones and do whal you can 10 help
~Don'tsloop to thts person'slevel.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) It's
possablc that you could unmteniJonally dtsappomt ' someone who has
been depending on you to make good
on a pantal promise Enher go all the
way or promase nothing to begtn
With
SAOITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec
21) Worldly things have their place,
but so does beauty, love and gen-

erosity Concentrate on acquirmg
these today tnstead of only bemg
matenal-mtnded.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-lan 19)
Smctnty ts what wtll spell sue&lt;:ess
for you today, so even though you're
a good salesperson atthts ttme, do not
promote anythtng thot you have trouble behevmg tn

,

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher ciYDtograma are created from quotatiOns by famous people pas! and preaenl
EliCh litter in thll!l cipher stands lor another Today s ftllHI Y equ•b P

•J

I E C ' X

U H C X

BEPWECW

AWDJCI

JPYEVXHCX

IE C 'X

X E

I E

H C I

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B X H C I
H C I

ZEET

JCBRVNXHAZW.

PHCRDN.'

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(DEC F

TECF·AEVC
KEDC
ZECW)
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I don't like my mustc, but what ts my optnton aga1nsl
that of millions of others • - (Composer) Frederick Loewe
•

~

WOlD
T::~:t;~· S©~4\\lA-~-e~s·
••••
ldltod
CLAY R. POUAN _;;__ _ _
_
~y

Rearrange letterJ of
0 lour
ocramblod words

low to form four words

I
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ZANLOB
2
1 I I 13
P AL E P

1=_~,':
j6 HI y IM N pl7· ·::

L-=~-~~-=~==~-.

.-

Father to teenage gtrl, "I
have somethtng to make you
feel grown up Your very own .

l-l--r5-R,., ,L,_I..,.,~:...,Ir-11 Ct ~.~~~~~."tho

ckucklo quo&gt;ad

by ftll1ng 1n rhe m1!11ng words
1
you develop from step Nc 3 below

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
You'U buNd o big nest rgg whrn
t'OU ,_ wlrh rht classifieds

•-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

"T~EN

••
'•

..l'

ABA member ;
Mao - ·tung ~
Of flowera . r•
Neuter
pronoun
. ...
19 More like a
baokelball
player
20 Actor Eetevez
22 Type of ulcer
23 - Under the
Elmo
24 ltly-bltly
25 (Oive an
opiate to
27 Frenelltrland
32 Had dinner
34 Eldarty
parson
,
35- ·toner
(seesaw)
39Minorclefect
43 Maleetle
'
45 Surfeit
47 Potato
,•
48 Flyln~ saucer , •

52 Exlot
53 Bro'a alb
54 Collector'o
goal

I

'

)

Day

(abbr.
49 litre. l~on
50 Aug. hra.

1
-.1--.J-'-...1.--,.1
L-.J.'-...1..

STOP

10
11
13
18

..

;:-y
8

PEANUTS

oJ

call Ron 740-742 2050

C&amp;C

1986 Ford f.Bird, 740-245 5443

'

~

Van 64,000

French City Maylag 740-448·
7795

1984 camaro call 304 875-4910

~

1

miles 1 owner Excellent Condf·

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Veara Ex·
perlance All Work Guaranteed,

or (304)882-3133

I

ortJe ~4Q-.14&amp;.4537

tablished 1975 Clll 24 Hrs (740)
446·0870 1·600-287-0576 Rog-

1981 Monte Carlo VB Looks and

'

e:.w:.~'&lt; Wl-\1~ 7

J!

Straw And Hay For Sate, Square
Bales, Altizer Farm Supply 740

Runs Good Blue Metallic In col-

..

,.

A..omatlc, /4JC, V-8 Good Condl- • ~
Hon, 740 446 8689
\

S~fart

~

ANOTtff, yl loY TO SPOT
All .VfiSOPtiiST"ATEI&gt;
INVfSTO'-

DO 1-101-\€1-1 f'li:£FU:. Tl'£ Kj(\11) OF
~ Wf\0 O..TE.~:.'S&gt; ro 1'1-1£11{

1997 Foret FtSO V-8 automatic,
towing package, 23,100 miles, •
asking $9900 740-742·2283
,

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
local references furnished Es-

.

THE BORN LOSER

lent Condition! Evenings 740·

1994 GMC

~f~

•

258-6592

Jackson Farms, 740-446 I 104

245-5193

~-'

1995 GMC Jimmy 4 WD, 4 Doors,

orchard grass, alfalfa hay, $14
bale, 740-742·2270
Square Or Round Bales Delano

~

l
Jn
••-'

PLAN ~'Vf lftN
tifA~ING ABOUT.

Exoeljent Condition, Lots Or E~~:.­

Hay for sara. square bales $1 25

baled, 1OOOt hay, tot culling,

ll

miles. Very GoOd Condlllon, ,
Clean, Red on Aed $13,000~,. 1
(~)882-33511
:

ISch, 740-992 2070

Squaro baled hay, 2nd culling,

~'I&gt; LI!Cf TO

'

1967 Timber lake camper, fair

Hat- &amp; Grain

$3,400 stool block T&amp;H 438
C!Wy, wil3rodl' heado all $8,500,
engine only $8,000, call 74D-9492045

8011 740 386

1493

640

446-3659

VPG,APf MY 40l(k) f
· / PL.AN TO Ttl IS Y21C
I~

tlros/8Mhausl, $1250, 740-992· '

790

1993 Rocket Chassis, Track
Ctlamplon In 1997 some extras
W/0 engine and transmlulon,

Coats Prom Dressea, 740·389·

looks &amp; runs good, auto, good

Colorful Buckskjn Stallion, 740-

TIFIED CHECK.

entrance . completely furnished ,
quiet 1urroundtng1, three mlltl
from the Raven1wood Rltchlt
Brk1ge ln Ohio Perfect first apart..
ment for a alngla person or new
~ou

Llvaatock

Stock Car-Dirt LM Stock Car

Clothes $1 00 A Bag E&gt;copl

2 BedrOQms, 1 Bath On f Acre
Private Wooded lot, Total Elec

Mos Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn,

Midway Batwaen Galllpollo And
Rio Grande On Jackson Pike
740·446·2412 Or 1·800 694·
1111

630

capped EOH304-875-6679

1992 Norris 16Ft X 70FT VInyl
With Shingles, 2 Bdrmo , 2 Baths

pacts In Stock New John Deere

McCos And Round Balers 0% 12 Mo s, 1 75% ·24 Moo 3 5% .
36 Moo.. 4 5% -48 Moa , 5 5% -60

New 2·stage John Deere snow
blower. 5 speed, forward &amp; reverse cost $725 new sacrlhce
$550, se(llng due to heafth prob

uta e54, Bidwell Truck Load

Furniture repaW, refinish .and res·
loratlon, also custom orders Ohio

Available Now 4000 SaMes Com-

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

Treasure Cheat 14728 State Ro

74D-256-1588

New 6010 6010, 7010 Serle&amp;

4&lt;16-24120r HIOQ-594·1111

lztd apt lor elderly and handi-

COnditiOn $10 500, Call 74().2455332

Extends 85 Feet, $5 200, R40
OUch Witch, $7,500, 6xt2 Trench
Boll, $3,eoo, Top Con Transient
$4 500, Pipe Lazor $4,500, CJ5

740-742·2283

North 3rd Middleport, 2 br unfur
apt dap &amp; ref 304-882·2588

Oleael

Ball, Extendable Flat Trailer That

(304)675-5162

1983 14x70 Mansion 3BR/2
Bath All electrlc/kltchan appliances curtains/blinds new
wallpaper
Many
updates

modeling 304-674-0126

Axle

Tractors In Stock 7 75% Fixed
Rate John 0Hl8 Credit Financing

TWin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications lor 1br HUD oubsld-

2 Bedrooms , $275/Mo Bladen,
References DepOsit No Pats

Single

tlon, $2,350, 740·643-2916, 7401143-- After 6 PM

2 bedroom mobile home In

Area S28M4o , 8!4-388-9162

Flatbed

(3n•.bb''s Plano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Nead Tuned? Call 111e
plano o, 740-44ll-4525

Security Deposit Required 740446-3481

1988 14x70 Manorwood, 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths, Elec AC, Good

Equipment Now Thru Jan 30.
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc
Midway Between Gallipolis And
Rio Grande On Old 3S (Jackson

Jeep New Top, Excellent Condl

2 Bedrooms Furnished, Raccoon
Crook, Near Cora Depos" Refer·

$11500080 (304)875-2819

Deere Hay Equlpmonlll Flnonclng
As Low As 3 9% On Used Hay

•o

lhlped
18 Th- 1oM
elolhl

Visualize the
position

ll

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1995 GMC Slarra 1500 Sorlu
4li4 80,000 Milas, Loaded, Exce~ •

610 Fann Equipment

7 GenNtn eull
Once,12 Trenopo&lt;ted
To ondwith • truck
Fumlahlnga
13 Slllrtdna rocks 44 Org~n olsi9ht
14 Rlnge 45 F~llne

By Phillip Alder

traal 7~11-7269

FARM SUP P LI ES
&amp; LI VESTOC K

A CUP OF

cylinder, runs great. $900, must
1011. call 740·992-7478 teava
rnaasaga or 7.0.949-2045

0021

~

FIXIN' ME

'

Kimball Organ With Bsnch, Good
Condition Call Anytime 74().441·

$5,000 2,000 Pound Headache

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs
New And Used, Stairway Elevalora, Wheelchal[ And Scooter
Lift&amp;, Bowm8n's tiomecare, 740

1979 Fairmont 14FI X 60Ft Can
Be Seen At k&amp;K Pt Pleasant

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You
Pav Utilities, &amp; Deposit in Porter

Gemeinhardt open-hole flute,

UOO, call 740-985·3655 after
5 OOpm
•

I'M

PAW??

1993 Ford, F150, XLT Pkg, 4x4, ·,
5 Speed, 305 Engine, 47,000 :.;

Musical
Instruments

0% Flnlnclng On New John

420 Mobile Hornea
for Rent

Raclna, 740-992 6039

570

2 Piece Living Room Suite Good

$500 Down on any 14x70 In
stock limited number, tree dellv·
ery eon 1-800-691-8m

once• S30M.1o 740 -379-2929

992-7376

Cond"lon,$150, 74~1

Ground flo9r aplartmenl~ 2 bed·
room with WID hook-upno pets

Call. (740) 448-3302 for appoint
mont

720 Trucks for Sale

1986 Dodge Flam half 11&gt;n flld!-up, '

0615

••

ARE YOU FIXIN'
TO CARVE ON

:

am to800pm,Sundayt.OOto
8 00 p m 740·9~2-2526 Russ
Moore owner:

Stud Service For AKC Golden
Retrlvar, $150 Faa, 740-441·

EriiiiiMt
-··
_,

Vulllerable. East-West
Dealer: South

South

____

38
40
41
42

1 llhllpe

• 76

I.

Reg1stered Mini Plnohers 2 BIT
Males Born Nov 2nd, 740·388·
8082 Ask For Barb

2476

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime location In
downtown Gallipolis No Petal
$300 00 month plus utilities References &amp; Deposit ReQuired

.

'

1997 ChOIIY Cavalier, 2 Dooro, AI.
c Tin, Crulao, 5 Speed, CD Playor, Pollor Mlrrort, Po- Su1111&gt;0f,
Groen, 38,000 Milas, $9.500, 740992-7102

1124 E Main Stroot, on AI 124,

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

tAKQJ8

.o

1983 GMC Truck w/1211 Dump '
Bod, 6 9 dloaal, 5 spaed-2afl'Od •
Single Axle, (304)675-6734

por1 From $249·$373 Call 740992-5064 Equal Housing Opportunities

$375mo plus deposit 304-675-

• 2

Bloodlines, GoOd Markings, First
Shol81740-379·91 tO

Pomerov Hours M T W 1o oo

• 9 2
•AKJ854
• 9 2
South
•AJ853

~

oond 35000 miles, $4500 00 call
304-875-33$3
::;;.:;..:;.:.;;;:::
.;__ '

Four, full blooded Dalmatian pup-

553 Cat Roltars For Bale, 45 Foot
Parts ltallor For Sale, 1962 GMC

tor No Pots $225 00 Month Plus
Rolronco &amp; Deposit 740·4469580

• 7 6 3

91 Buick ~ skylark, very good

pies, 2 maiaa 2 females 740-

Dry Firewood GoOd Hay Chorles

740-448-0~90

5pm

AKC Registered Ron Woller Puppiss Cht~IOnol\lp Bloodtlr\o, Excellent :rempern'ient &amp; Disposition, Flrot Sholl &amp; Wormed, $350,
740-245-5623

5 Court St , Small One Bedrm ,
Kitchen With Stove &amp; Relrlgera·

2308 Jefferson Ave 5 room
house central heat &amp; air

3 BA Houae In Henderson, very
clean. $300 + deposit, Retarenc~

beautiful, $100, 7.0.949-2451

Pike) 740·448-2412 Or 1·600·
594-1111

By Owner 3 Bedrooms, Full
Basement 2 Fireplaces De·

Log House Situated On 1 Acre, 3
Bdmjo 1 112 Bolhs, 2 Car Garags,
Nlcsty Landscaped, $92,500, Call
740-367-D451 Aft8r 5 PM

AKC roglateflld Sht"le, fomalo 5
yeara old, hGu81broken, fixed,

949-2217

2 Bedroom, NeighborhoOd Road,
$275/Mo $200 Dapoatt, 740·
446-3117

3034

AKC Registered ChineN Sl'larPal pups, lots of wrlnklea, flrlt

Eall
• K2
• Q J 10 9 8
• 10 6 5 4

• Q 10

1994 Ctwy Van, Gladiator ABS; •

1994 Ford ExplOrer XLT, Loaded,
E&gt;collont Condition, 70,000
mllu, 113,500, (304)875--2780:
(304}451-1077; Laaw Mnaogo

polo, 1200,

Weot

All Wheel Orlwe; 59,000 mll11,
New Tlrea, Black Color/Interior

Loathtr, (304)675·1637, 8-5PM,
(304)8'15-e914,87US3&lt;1

famll~

• Q 10 3

109K Mlloo, Sharp, 2nd Owner,
$3 950, OBO, Days· 740·048·
8882, Or Evanlnga 740·441·
1799

Pill. malo and female, groat huril·

Grsan Apts 149 or call 740-992·
3711 EOH

out lots for $89,000 740·992·
2704 740-992·51196

lathed Garage 2 AC M·L (Rod·
ney) 740-379-2540

f Year Old Himalayan Cat, 4
, _ ~- Flxod, $180, 7404&lt;16-1262
'
AKC Rogtstorod Airedale pup·

• 7 3

minum Wheels, Cloth Interior,

Pets lor Sale

OI-:12·11

• 9 7 ••

Registered Border Collie Pupa,
Working Parents, lmponed

AnUquaa

Heavy winter clothing. Sam
Somerville's Army Surplus by

acre land, call SOmerville Realty,

740-44&amp;-3385

1 Bedroom Apartment AI Utlhlles
Paid, Bidwell, 740-388·9nO, 740388-8011

560

No
• A K 54

530

Furnished Upttairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean References, &amp; De-

(304)675·3030{(304)875-3431
Red Brick Ranch Style House,
Partially Finished Basement 2
Car Garage, Serious Inquiries

$270 par month, StOO
depos", all utll"loa paid, 740.992·
7806

Rio Grandt, OH Call 740-245·
5121

37Lueu..-nto

1sc..........

1993 God Tracker LSI 4 WD
1 61. 1-4 M~l. 5 Speed, PS, ABS,
AC, AM/FM Radio Caonno, Alu-

BLock, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,

1981 Ford pick up Stopoldo, alx .1

Furnl•had 3 Rooma &amp; Bath, 740«B-9279

11 Acres

We Buy land 30 -500 Acraa
We Pay Cash 1·800-213-6365,
Anthony Land Co
•

EXCELLENT CONDfTIONI/

1 bedroom apartment ror rent In

1993 Aotro Extended Van, Till, ·
Crul11, Air, Aee11 Hllc/1. E1c. •
Cond 15.500.7-40-448-9278

Building
Supplies

Pure Siberian Husky With Pa pers, 8 Montho Old, $100, 7404&lt;16-2398 After 5 ~M

In

Room Kitchen, Bath, Partial Fin-

3 4 BA 2 112 Bath, garage 1

nlshed and unfurnished, security
deposit required no pett, 740~
992 2216

550

I

er Desk, Entertainment Center,
Dresl8rl, Couches , Dinettes,
740-1&lt;18-4782

Buy or 1111. Riverine Antiques,

1 and 2 bedroom apartmeniS, rur-

4ot&amp;-0519

11181 Ctwy Cavalier Loll 0t Partll $950, 740-~6-3407, 740.

992;3147 aft8r 2pm

BOds, Bunk Bods, BOdo, Comput

Apartments
for Rent

For Sale.
Boanle Bablu,
(304)n3-5774

1979 Ford Dump Truck All Now.
Bod, Tireo, Paint Job 32,000 Ac· i
1ua1 Mlas, $2,750 740-448-8470 • , &gt;

New and Uaed FurniturE! Store
Betow Holk:fay Inn, Kanauga, Day:

Graenl City School Dlalrlcl Beau·
tlful Homa Site 7-·3545

3 Badrooms Living Room Dining
740-~ 1·

rangea Skaggs Appliances, 78
VIne Stroot, can 740-448·7396,
1-1186-818.0128

Health Rider, $150, Nordic Track,
$275, Color TV Mon itor $25,
Table &amp; Cahlr Sol $35, ~VA E Y
Guitar Amp $50, or OBOI 7404-16-9709

360

3253

Washers. dryera, r•lrlglratora,

$350 00, Utilities paid (740) 441·
0720

Approxlmately

Nlcatv Landscaped, Surrounded
By Woods, 7-40-256-1614

Qn~U

651anced In acraa 3 bedrooma,
2 baths, central aJr, fireplace 30ft
x 40ft garage, bam wllh 4 &amp;tala,
aleclrlc and frost free water 10
miles from Galli&gt;Ofls $850 month
plus 1 month socumy (610) 5888252

710 Auto. for S.le

Sholl &amp; - · llvN malo&amp;, one
lomala
$200, calf 740-948-2128

Appliances
Recondllloned
Washers, Dryers Rangae Aefrl·
graters. 90 Day Guarantee!

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

1 bedroom furnlaho~ apartment In
Middleport, 740-992·9191

Used single w1de, around $100

Household
Goods

TWo bedroom mobile home In

Mldd~rt.

New bank repo!l, only two left,
never lived In call 1·800·948·

510

French City Maytag, 740·448·
7795

430 Fenna for Rent

mo. Free air skirt 1-800-891-

MERCHANDISE

ALDER

·540 Ml~eelllneout
Merchandise

ora and lo~al
7&lt;4(),992-7811

949-2833.

Qakwood Home&amp;, Barboursville,

Llvlngeton•a
emtnt Water·
Proofing. all basement repairs
done, free• •estlmatea, lifetime
guarantee T2yrs on job experl·

Ished Family Room Call

Two bedroom In country. water
and trash Included, references
and deposit required call 740-

New \8x80 $500-Down $245-per

$200 74 per month with S1150
down Clll1·800-837 3238

24hr Licensed Home Daycare,
Meals/Activities provided State
payments accepted, Redmond

l-40--7

Paid No Pall On Bulavllle Pike
740-388-1100
'

Middleport no pets, 740·992·
6039

New 1998 14JI70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
includes washer &amp; dryer skirting,
deluxe steps and aetup Only

Proteaalonal
Services

Mobile home site available btt·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call

Now 14X70 $500-Down $199-per
mo. Free air, skirt 1·800·691·

em

755-7191 Oak wood Mobile
l:lomoa.

2 Bedrooms, Water And Trash

~.740-4&lt;18-f-409

Good aelecuon of used homes

room RefJo, Pre-Approval In 10

Why Rent you can own your
own home lor 11 low 11 $499
down low monthly paymenta,
owner financing available 304·

460 Space for Rent

Mobile home for sale or rent.
partly turn lor a couple In Gal
Feey 304--117~75

Taking Applications, On 3 Bod·

Two ~room apartment for rent
In Mlddlll)Ort, $200 month, $100,
deposit. we pay water, trash uwage, you pay gaa and electric,
740-992-78015

Gas Furn~co, In Gallipolis, 74D-

3 bedroom mobue home for rent,
no pots 740-992-!i858

6777

FIRE YOUR BQSS
100+ Opportunities to Stay Home
&amp; moko $$$ In 19991 Free Report Call 1 BCI0-41D-2612
X 3001 (24 hou11)

Rererenc11 Required, No Pela,

Double Wide Now $999-Down
$237-per mo Fr.- dollwry &amp; aol·
up 1·900-691-6777
wl111 2 or 3 bedrooms Startlnq at
$3995 Quick dol/very Call 740385-9621

INOllCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Call740-446-4310

Anllques &amp; clean usect furniture
will bU)' one piece or complete
household Osby Martin 740·

water and trash Included, 740·

As Lillie As $500 Down t-606·
9211-3426

~84-"04----------------~·

condllloned $280·$300, sewer

tate, or other (304)675 2359

Full-Time Hair Stylist Needed
Signing Bonus Other Benefits,
Aveda Products Raphael s Hair
Remedies 40 North Court Street,
Athens, Ohio Phone 740·592-

Male Beagle &amp; Kennel • AKC
Field Champion 11 Years Young
Excellent Health, Quiet Obedient
Good Home Required 740 245

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile 110mu air

Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Homo Care Of Elderly Or Handl·
Capped, 740--441·1536

0353

245-5104

Lost and Found

14x80 Holly Park 3BR, 2 Bath

a..

Drivers to transport cars to and

4n9

Three klnens 4 months old litter
trained, also tom cat, 740·985388-1

ders, tools. truck skill, Alao,
quality, shingled, bluebird nest
boxes, $16 ...,, (~)675-6925.

1985, 740-742 2951, Lane Dantats, Ruttand

lis OH 45631 Or Call 740·448·

lei 740-742-1807 aftar!lpm

erycaut~Hm

Dan1els P1ano Service- .,,,,.., 0 , 1 ,$195 00 per mon, free delivery
and repair expert service I
and set up ca111 80Q-948·5878

Free to good home one year,
male blue Australian Shepherd,

Homes 1o Weeks Old, Paper
Trained Outdoor Lovers/ 740·

Handyman·Ouallly Work, lad·

Ridge, Dabble, (304)674-0039

Experienced Professional Phlebotomist M·F, Early Mornings,
Resume To P. 0 Box 33 Gallipo-

Happy Healthy Puppies, To Good

$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublewlde In stock FrH Dellv-

ment And Take After Hours Call
Prior Experience Preferred
Please Send A Copy Of Resume
To P 0 Box 752, Athens, Ohio

Free swtmmlng pool, must dlsas·
aembla, 740-742-2861 after6pm

Good w1111 kids, Good watch dog
(304)458 2218

to a mill just

Be Able To Mova Heavy Equip

45701

Fr" Ftupples to good nome Lab
mhced, abOut 6 wks old 3 males/

3 - · (304)576-4052

Anthony

420 Mobile HolllM
for Rent

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your your logs

call304 675-1957

Anyone Can Win Thousands On

40

ACROSS

PHILLIP

AN N OU ~JCEr.lE N T S

!':~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

•

Jacket . Whelp· Quest· Bronco· PARENT
A mother of five teenagers once told roe that the
secret of betng successfu I wtth a chtld ts not to be tt's

PARENT

�-.

'

•

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, January ~. 1898

Along the River

New book · says Noah's flood really did happen

· . DONATION MADE - Choirs of Angels once ageln wa~mad hearts with the sounds of Christmas at the
Ariel Theatre December 17, 1998. A love offering of $345.00 was collected during the program that wa~
•pllt blitween the Meigs County Unltad Methodist Cooperative Parish and The Ariel Theatre. Pictured
~to right are H. Christian {lcott, Choirs of Angels co-director; The Rev. Sharon Hausman of the Meigs
County Unltad Mathodlst Cooperative Parish; Pam Wisernsn o( Oak Hill Banks, sponsor; Ar:Jel Board
IJIBmbar Herb Moore, producer; Robert D. Gordon, Choirs of Angels co-director.
'

Officers ele&lt;:ted
Bill Osborne was elected president at the recent Olive Township Board of
Trustees organizational meeting. Ernie Barringer was named vice president.
· Randy Boston is the other trustee, and Martha Durst is township clerk.
Meetings were set for the fifth day of each month or by public notice.
They will be held in the garage on Joppa Road at 7:30 p.m., May through
September and 6:30p.m., October through April. The public is welcome at
all meetings, it was reported.
Ch~rter

. TYLER THOMAS HAVt.lES
· TURNS ONE • Tyler Thomas
Haynes celebrated his first
bll1hday on Jan. 3 with a Teletu.bbies party.
.
· The party took place at the
homa of his grandparants.
Attending were his parents, Tim
and Kim Haynes, grandparents,
Robart and Deloria ·Burton, and
Steve, Charley, A&amp;,hley, Jeeele
!lind . Allela Burto,; an~ Carrie
Marshall. Sending gifts but
unable to attend were hie grandparants, Wallace and Waun Ita
Haynes. .
'

DirecTV satellite
te.levision owner
to buy Primestar
NEW YORK (AP) ·- The owner of
DirecTV, the nation's biggest satellite television service, is buying the
assets and subscribers of rival
•Primestar Inc. for about $1.82 biiHon in cash and stock.
_ The deal announced today along
with a pending deal by DirecTV's
owner for a movie channel service
would leave DirecTV with more
than 7 million 'U.S. subscribers and
more than 370 entertainment channels.
.
. , Primestar, which was initially
created to reach mostly rural customers who were·unable to get cable
T:V, has about 2.3 million subscribers to a 160-chanilel TV service. Primestar is based in' Englewood, Colo.
. DirectTV, which has about 4.5
million subscribers, is owned by
Hughes Electronics ~orp. , a unit of
General Motors Corp. Hughes previously announced a deal which is still
pending for United States Satellite
Broadcasting, a pre·mium movie
channel service.
. · Eddy W. Hartenstein, president
ot DirecTV, said the integration of
all three services will create "a POYIerrul platfortl)" for delivering TV,
data and interactive services across
the United States.
. Hughes is paying $1.32 billion in
cash and stock for Primestar's TV
business and another $500 miJiion in
cash for related satellites:
, The deal has been approved by
.the boards of Hughes and Primes tar,
but still must be approved by the
bpard 'of General Motors, the consent of Primestar lenders and government regulators .

draped in memory of member
The charter was draped in memory of Iva Powell at Tuesday night's
meeting of Chester .Council 3-23, Daughters of America, held Tuesday night
at the hall.
Laura Nice presided at the meeting and welcomed Marjorie Fetty who
was present for her mother's memorial. The.charter will stay draped for 30
days.
.
The nagbearers escorted Ella Osborne to the altar where she was presented. her past councilors club pin. Joann Ritchie, Ella Osborne, Opal
Eichinger, new officers, were installed.
Also presented a gift for serving as district deputy was Joann Ritchie .
Happy birthday was sung to Ritchie, Marcia Keller, and Mary Jo Barringer.
Scripture was read, and members gave the Lord's Prayer and the pledge
to the flag. It was noted that Eleanor Leonard was injured in an auto a~ci­
dent.
Refreshments were served by Ertl)a Cleland and Dorothy Myers, and
door prizes were won by Julie Curtis, Gary H6lter, and Shirley Beegle.
Attending were Marcia Keller, Doris Grueser, Julie Curtis, Shirley Beegle, Charlotte Grant, Opal Hollon, Thelma White, Mary Barringer, Enna
Cleland, Jean Welsh, Esther Smith, . Ella Osborne, Mary Holter, Joann
. Ritchie, Everett Grant, Gary Holter, Laura Nice,Opal Eichinger, Dorothy
Myers, Helen Wolf, and Marjorie Felly.

the buds
.. .

..,

.
~;.
l

.
i

.-

c

'•
••
,,' "

.. .

••
•••

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

of next
Sunday's
game
•P.-Bf

'
'
'

Preview

Money-saving
coupons ·
Inside today

F•turad on Page C1

- ..,

$1 '"

+

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
held at the Pomeroy lihrary.
:n-s.nunel Staff
The state has allotted $13 million for child and fam·
POMEROY- Meigs County is seeking additional ily health services in 1999-2000 with graniS to be award·runding lhrough the Ohio Department of Health, Child ed on a competitive basis to the 88 counties for special
,!Uid Family Health Services Program; for expansion of heallh programs.
,
dental services to children and prenatal services for
II is from that fund that the Meigs County Consoryoung women.
·tiurn·will be se~king funds for expanding dental and pre: The two programs were selected for possiljle expan- natal health programs through the Meigs County Health
sion following a summary on health concern$ at Thurs- DepartmenL
,
l:lay's meeting of the Meigs County Consortium, a group
Those two programs were selected for expansion on
of public health and service agen~ rep~c~K~nlatives, the basis of need as shown in a community heal!~ assess·

coollr

301

Detall1 on
IH'Q•A2

V~l. 33, No. 50 .

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· January 24, 1999

County seeks additional funds
for prenatal, ch.ildren services

Lbw:

mt

tmes

•

HI: 40e

•

.

ment survey comIf funding is granted for expansion of !he dental propleted last fall. The gram, Nanna Torres, R. N., director of nursing at tbe
results showed a · Meigs County Heaih Department and the Consortium •
deficiency in provid- coordinator, said that a dental hygienist will be hired, an
ing · a variety .'of oral health tjlsk force will be formed, a dental program
health
services will be bffered in all schools, and a treatment program
because of inade- wi)l be established.
,
quate funding, but
She said that now only the children who come
defined dental . and through the Health Department in other progr1111s prenatal services as about 200 a year- are being given dental care.
The county does participate in a dental sealant proOthers dealt with gram for second and sixth graders in elementary schools. :
the two most urgenL
pro- However, there is no funding to take care of cavities
infrastructure
grams, such as a · which children already have, and sealing cannot take
common data base place until the required dental treatment is given. , .
for the organizations
As for prenatal program, Torres reported that about
...-"'""-'.....,.. involved, collabora- 500 pregnancy tesiS are given each year at the Heald!
tion on programming, and expansion of well-ehild eli~- · Department, and that many of the women need tounsel- .
ics for the underinsured and uninsured.
;
Contlnulld on page A2

~

i~~~~i~i~~

•

~~c~ree~k W~ighty Cpnsiderations:
Highway pa.t rol
studies use of
~!~ro~ 1».v~~Y portable scales "

chosen as
11ew route fQr

Ohio senator he~ps \
·get impeachm~nt:
questions ready
WASHINGTON (AP) - It was a tedious j9b, and
. Sen. Mike De Wine helped do it.
.
The Ohio Republican was one of three senators put in
~arge of stre~linSen. RObert~. D-W.~a.,
mg ~I the Wf!tlen .UrpriNd RepubllclliM Frl·
q,uestto.ns submatted day by announcing,. 11110uld
by thetr colleagues malre • motion
for the latest phase to d/MRIH the
of President Clio- ellton's impeachment
"/am con-

'l'he . state has chose11, Crooked
I!IY KEVIN ,KELLY . .
.
n-sllllllnel Staff
•
Creek, not Cow Creek, as the place
to .build the new $338 million U.S.
'. OALLIPOtiS -The loads hauled on
~S highway.
state highways have beert more within the
! The highway will run from Point legal limit over the past six weeks because
·'J&gt;Ieasant, at the Ohio Rii(Ci in Mason
of stepped-up enforcement and .inspection
County, through Putnam County' to a
by the Hi'&amp;hway Patrol.
·
tria~e worked late v/nCIId that the
junction w~th interstate 64 near .the
ilut patrol ~ffici~s said the extra allen·
h
'h t two-thlrda for
tnlp
t e
01g
border of' · Kanawha and Putnam
lion spent on the weight carried by trucks
Thursday,
along conviction ,,.
'COUnties, Highways Commissioner . through the area is part of a test troopers
with
fellow
Repubnot , _ and that thev ,,. ·.
~am Qeverage said last week.
·have done with new kinds of portable
lican
Sens.
Orrin
nof'llka/y to dwalop, oJ aaJd
The 'road will be built close to the
scales, and to detennine if. weight inspecHateh
of
Utah
and
Byrd,
, . WHt Vlft/lnlan .
cxisting U.S. 35, which runs thrqugh
lion can become part of the patiol's reguFred Tbompson of Who,..aen'ed /tl ,.
lhc Crooked Creek area of Putnam , lar duties.
Tennessee, culling i:IMml»r fcrr four tf-dl•·
State' lavi dictates that vehicles only
and organizing for
ld hi
~.. O!unty.
8Jief!lllri•te ,fo(. tl!e.
1
l ,,.,...,~ Friday and Sat· ~=~h' not~~
. ~~.';li!tb!~~~=~r·;pos;:s~ib~l :e~r~o;~uttt~e!s1'' ~~~~~i:
operiltil. The maxiurday sessions.
....,.
.. ....,.,__, ''" ton
for 'ihf,lilghwiy,
tlie.y had harmum gross weight allowable. is 80,000
i
The rules of the ...,...,., ''':"'"1''"'"'1!''f!ln · ·
rowed their choice to the Crooked
pounds and vehicles found to-be carrying
had commlttad no 'WrOngdo- ·
impeachment trial 11711 but IHH:IIuaalt n• blat
Creek route and a more westerly
more thtin .the allowable weight are lined.
didn't let the sena- for tha country.
route, which would have run
While 'debate over weight limiiS contors spealc; they had
HI• annolmCflmant .N nt •
.through Cow Creek into the town of
tinues between the state and the trucking
to
submit
any
quesl'
.. J R "Ilea
Teays,Valley.
, .. . . , .
industry, public safety officials have
lions in writing, and '"" ' group '&lt;•
Bot~ aiw arc heavily populated.
argued against increasing limits.
Chief
Justice hurrying out to 111' ,.,,.,_ ·
Putnam County ·is the fastest grow·
Trooper Shannon Webb of the patrol's
•lon e~~merea during•
William Rehnquist b,...k to dtHiy that tha lrllll .
in&amp; county in West Virginia.
Oallia-Meigs .Post said overweight loads
read th~m to the WBI over.
·
Each of the two Putnam County
on tractor·trailers and other large vehicles
prosecutmg
team
.
,
u~as had lobbied on behalf of the
impair the vehicle's braking capacity. If a
from the House and to the president's lawyers,
.
.
other. Beverage .said the ·westem
truck or tractor-trailer has to suddenly
SCALE TEST - One Mt of portable -lea evalulted for liH by the State
Among !he questions was one by De Wine inquiring .
route was eliminated because too
stop or face a road situation, it requires way Patrol were teatad laat w•k by Trooper Shannon Webb of the Gallla
s
whether·
Monica Lewinsky's testimony said she. was
ni11ny communities would have been
more time and distance to slow or stop, he Poat th• ecalea are uead to check If tNcka are over tile maximum allowable
advised
by
President Clinton to tum over the gifts he had .
affected.
·
added.
·
weight limit Mt by the atala.
given
her
"because
that is what the law·required."
·.· _ ."This alternative, including its
"Initially, the law was instituted to preThe
answer:
Lewinsky
never said that
·
lnt.Crchange with 1-64, was chosen
vent damage to roads in the 1930s by and ti trooper make checks during the an opport~nity to increase their knowledge
The
question-and-answer
phase
of
the
trial
was
to
be :
oiter the West (Cow Creek) align·
overweig~t trucks, b'ut the problem still week. But looking toward additional cov· and better perfonn for us," added LL
the
final
step
before
senators
dealt
with
whether
to
con:
mont as a result of public comments
exists to large extent today," Webb erage, the patrol ehose to test portable Richard Orau, the 0-M Post's commander.
tinue the case, and, if so, whether to call witnesses.
•
. scales troopers could carry in their cruisCarrying weights in patrol cars may be
on !he effeciS on various communiexplained.
Neither
of
Ohio's
senators
was
willing
to
discuss
how
:
ties received following our 'Decem"It was also brought about due to safe- ers, an!l see if a troopers alone can malce new to Ohio, but is not unknown in West
they we.re leaning on those crucial votes, although both :
ber 1998 infonnationill public meet·
ty concerns, so this is nothing new," he inspections when the team isn't available. Virginia and other states, Webb said.
De
Wine and fellow Republican Sen. George 'wllinovich :
Money derived from overweight lines ·
The testing period ended Friday.
ing," Beverage said in a prepared
added. "In this district, it's a problem
submitted
questions of !heir own.
•
statement.
because we have 10 counties with
"This evaluation allows us to see how goes mostly to the county where the cita'wllinovich
refused
to
give
any
clue
about
how
he
felt
:
. • Although we have received popresources such as wood, stone and coal it's done from a patrol car, as ~n assist to tion was issued, and is often directed to
about the upcoming vote on a motion to dismiss-1ht :
the team, and it allows for more versatili- road maintenance.
·Uiar support for this alignment, it
.almo~t constantly being transported."
case,
but De Wine has said several times that he consid- ·
"Historically, the amount of revenue
will be fully analyzed in an environ·
Typically, enforcement occurs when a ty for troopers," Webb noted . .
ered
witness
testimony to be an .important part of most :
"It's a way and a means to give officers
Contlnuad on page A2
mental document to be completed
team consisting of two weight inspectors
trials.
·
·
·
later this spring.
'"When the document is approved
... by the Federal Highway Adminis'' !ration, additional public comment
will be sought through (the Division By BRIAN J. REED
the Holzer Meigs Clinic, was con- conference roo~. ,
$3,600 per month, accordinJ! to Elections and Educational Servi~:e
structed iii 1956. Amid controversy, ·
'The commissionets have contract· records in the Meigs County Auditor's Center (county school board) remain:
of) Highways' public meeting nma•Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Several Meigs the commissionel'!i voted last year to ed l!'ith Home Creek llnterprises, a Office. That building is owned by J~y the only, county agencies to oc.cupy:
ocess."
pr Construction should start by late County agencies are now located in close the County Home to pertl)a- Pomeroy contracting firm, ·to con- Hall, and once housed t~e Ohto rented spa~;e.
~
the
former
Meigs
County
Home
ncnt
residents
in
order
to
save
costs.
struct
a
ltandicapped-accessiblc
ramp
Bureau
of
Employment
Servtces.
.
The
board
of
elections
operatesthis year or early 2000.
building, and improvements to the
The Meigs County Granis office, to th~ main floor of the building.
According to County Commas- from space on Mulberry Avenue~
Good Morning
building are underway.
which also-operates the fair housing
Accessibility is a major issue for sioner Mick Davenport,, the county which is also owned by Wingett, and;
The building, commonly known as and HUD operations for the county, veterans groups, especially the Dis- will not likely relocate other. ~en- ·for which the county pays $480 per
the
lnfirtl)ary, was Closed to indigent the Veterans Services Office and Lit- abled American Veterans chapter in cies to the County Home bu1idmg, month. The county pays the Vinap:: ·
Today'a GJ:htt I~
residents
.in August, and since that ter Control and Recycling now.occu- · Cheshire, which has demanded buJ may use the n:maining space for of Pomeroy $500 for space for the;·
. • 17 Sections • 1 Pages
time, the Meigs County Commission· py rooms which once housed resi- · improved access to the Veterans Ser- storing county records and other ESC.
~
C3&amp;6
Calendars.
ers have been planning the relocation dents, while the Meigs County vice Office, which until recently items which are now s!ored on t~e ·
The operation of the County'
D3·Z
~I!!Uitl~s
of offices to consolidate the provision Extension Service, which has been . . occupi~d a building on Mulberry third floor of the Anderson's Furm- Home cost !he county $87,288 lasf
~2m!e~
IIU!:I:l
.of services; and, more importantly to located in the basement of the build- Avenue owned by Robert Wingett. · ture building across the stre~t from yea.r, but that does not reflect contri-·.
EJ!Itorly
the coinmissioners, to save ll)oney on ing for many years, has been given
M
The county paid $175 per month the courthouse, and for whtch the butions of SSI and other pension henA12DII lb~ BJv~[
reniS pai~ for office space.
access til !he remainder of the bot- for that spaoe, but the office space on count)' pays a monthly fee of $200. elits paid·to the county by residents.
I· 2liU11110g
The building, located on East tom floor, which includes the home's Union Avenue near State Route 7
Now that the County Home has
The commis8ionCJS plan an open
M
Bt-6
Memorial Drive, adjacent to Veter· kitchen, and the dining area, which which housed the Utter Control and been converted to a County Annex house at the annex building on i&gt;eb~IIOI'IS
0 1999 Ohio Valley Publiahina Co.
ans Memorial Hospital and behind will now be used as a meeting and Fair Housing offices cost the county · building, the Meigs County Board of . ruary 2.

n--rr

Paula Zahn leaving CBS for Fox News
NEW YORK (AP) - Paula Catherine Crier and Jon Scott until
Zahn is leaving CBS News to they left to host a newsmagazine for
anchor a one-hour nightly newscast the Fox network. Zahn will take
on Fox· News Channel , beginning over, and she also will anchor
March I.
another hour of Fox News Channel
Zahn, 42, has most recently programming on weekdays.
anchored the "CBS Evening News"
, Zahri was underutilized at CBS
Saturday edition and filled in for and attracted by the prospect of
Dan Rather during the week. She being involved in breaking 0 ews,
was co-host of "CBS This Morn- said Roger Ailes, chairman and
ing" for six years.
chief executive of Fox News. She
"The Fox Report," the network's also has young children and wanted
evening newscast, was anchored by to get off weekend work, he said.

•pu,. ,.

:1!?,""

Downtown Middleport

Storewide Sale!! ID-80'/. •II!!
I• 28, 21 8 30 ftura, Frl, Sat. ID-11 p.m.

Agencies relocate to former county home

Come to
.: Taylor Motor's and Test Drive
the most popular sport utility
vehicles and place your order

C.DC: Flu season mild so far
. ATLANTA (AP)-- New York is
(he only state reporting a widespread
flu outbreak in what so far has been
'relatively mild nu season aero&amp;
the country, federal officials say.
Since October, 40 other states
have reported some flu cases, the
Cj:nters for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.
: "Influenza is unpredictable. We
. gan't predict whether it will be a
mild flu season for the en tire year or
if it's going to peak later .than
u!ual, " said Dr. Tim Uy'eki of the
Cpc's Center for Infectious Distases.
The season's peak usually runs
·from December to early March.
Flu usually kills about 20,000
Am ericans a year.

TODAY!

a

I

'.

NEW YORK (AP) - What?i 'wid! his 1929 book "Ut of the layers andforms of aquatic life that '
New scientific proof demonstrating Chaldees," said to be the most existed in ancient times.
that the great biblical Fl\)00 really widely read archaeology booft ever
One . telltale clue: Freshwater
did occur thousands of years ago?
published.
mollusks with smashed shells gave
Such is the sensational but specDigging in present-day Iraq at WfY to saltw~ter_ creatures that. ~ •
ulative implication in ~w book .the site of ancient Ur,, birthplace of inla4:t shells, a btolog~cal transmon .
"Noah's Flood: The Ne~cientilic the first patriarch Abraham, the that could he dated Ulrougb.cl\fbon·
Discoveries About the Evel)t 'I1!al llible-helieying Woolley found• an 14 testing of the shell remams..
Changed History" (Simon ct lthclent blanket of waterborne silt
From such research, the sctenSchuster,.$25) by William Ryan and wilhout human remains. It was evi- tists spin this scenario:
Walter Pitman. The authors are derice of . a deadly flood that
Until about 5600 B.C. the Black
Sea was an inland freshwater !alee,
adjunct geology professors at appeared to substantiate Genesis.
Columbia University and senior
But Ryan arid Pitman· say' later considerably smaller than .today's
scientists at the Larnont-Doh.erty scholars learned that this silt layer .saltwater sea and lying .far below
Earth Observatory.
covered only a few square miles. the level of the Mediterranean Sea.
Some biblical fundamentalists Thus it was no more significant Then the sea waters broke through a
have expended great energy searc.b-.' than ma~y other localized f)~s in ' natural dam t~at existed at !he
ing for the remains of Noah's ark. the regton of the Ttgm and Bosporus slratt, the ~aterway
However, before they brealc otit the Euphrates rivers.
•
adjoining present-day Istanbul.
nonalcoholic champagne to celeThe Ryan-Pitman candida~ for
The ·flood was unusually sudden,
brate, they should know that the the great Flood locale is what we powerful and deadly because sea
two scientists see no ~vidence for a know as the Black Sea, .bordering waters were driven by the full force
worldwide deluge in line· with a Turkey to the north. In 1993, Ryan of the Mediterranean. It las!ed a
strictly literal reading of Genesis 7, and Pitman joined a Russian e~pe- • long tjme because all die ~orld's
But geological resea.rcli l:ioes ;: ditiolt on the Black Sea and used the oceans continul\lly pushed m new
find reasQn to believe there was latest . t~chnology to examine evi- . water to keep tlie Mediterranean at ·
indeed a vast, sudden and deadly dence of geological patterns, soil constant sea !~vel.
tlood around 5,600 B.C., close
enough to the possible time of Noah
to fascinate biblical literalists and
liberals alike.
The Ryan-Pitman ~cenario was
VETERANS MEMORIAL MEDICAL CLINIC
first publicized in a B'ritish televi-.
sion documentary in late 1996. The. ·
following year they laid out the
.'
·FREE Diabetic Screening
technical data in ·the journal
"Marine Geology," but that scienWednesday, January 27, 1999
tific .report. avoided the all-impqrtant links with the biblical Flood
8:30A.M. - 11:00 A.M.
that are central to the current book.
Till now the best stab at modem
Screening Test,
scientif1c corroboration of the
Nutrition and Medication Educational lnfor~ation
Flood was the· work of Britjs~
' .
archaeologist Charles Leonard
Woolley, who caused a sensatiol,

----fjoingto

Inside

·

buil~ing

-

n

·December jobless rate up in southeastern Ohio

Regional December unemployment rates

GALLII'OLlS : - The unemployment (8.6) percent; ·vinton -. 10.8 (8.5) percent; . spokesman David Garick.
~~
rate throughout most of Southeastern. Ohio and, Washington - 5.4 (~ .3) percent. ·
The most job growth occurred i.n busiincreased in December, according to mforThe state's average JObless rate. dropped ness, management and health serv1ces, as
in~tion released Fiiday by tbe Ohio Bureau in 1998 to iiS lowest in 29 years, Ohio's well as engineering. About 63,000 new jobs
o'f Employment Services.
·
employment agency said~
were added, putting total employment a
· .With an estimated 1,200 unemployed
. The December unemployment rate was 3.9 record high, said James .Mermis, the
'workers, Galli a County's rate stood ·at 8,2 percent, compared with 4.1 pel'Q:nt !he monlh agencY_'s interim administrator.
,Crcent'for the month- up0.4 percent from before and 4.4 percent for December 1997;
Dunng !he year, the number of Ohioans
tile November rate of 7.8 percent.
The national rate in Dece~ber was 4.3 w?r~ing increased by 32,000, up from S.5
' In Meig5 County, the December rate rose percent, down from 4.4 pe·rcent m November. mtlhon. The number unemployed dropped
lo ·to.6 percent for the reporting periodThe rate for all of !998 in the state was by 29,000 from 255,000.
up 0.7 percent from the November rate of 4.2 percent, the.lowest since 1969's rate of
Among Ohio's 88 counties, last month,'s
9.9 percent. ·
_ .
· 3.4 pen:ent. the OBES said.
jobless rate ranged from 1.8 percent m
Other regi.onal December rates (Noveml'he annual rate is the result of a.continu- Delaware County ~o 14 percent m Morgan
1JC.r rates in parenthesis) were: Athens - 4.4 ing demand for' goods and servaces and County. Ten counties had rates at or lower
(4.2) percent; Jackson • 6.3 (6.0) percent; because fewer people are entering the labor than 2.8 percent, and II had rates at or high· .
Lawrence - 6.0 (6.7) percent; Scioto - 9.0 . market in post-baby boom years, said OBES er than 8 percent.

. ..

'

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' ·1

•

.

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