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Monday

Sunday, .January 31, 1999

PomerQy • .Middleport • Galllj)olla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

_.. -

Februery 1,111111

Weather
•

Today: A..n
High: 408;' Low: 40a
Tomorrow: Aliln
High: 508; Low: 408

Eagles beat South Gallia, Page 5
Women: Cover your assets, Page 8
Origins of AI OS, Page 6 .

Denver Broncos
repeat as Super Bowi
champions, Elway · :
named MVP~age 4

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lmp., achm-llt d'positi.ons begin with ·Monica Lewinsky:
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lor on the spot

, ,:.The story, comin&amp; a~ the time the Senate
is trying ·to lind a way tO end Oinliln's
impeachment trial, dn:w criticism from senatorsirom both parties.
,
"! thought that th!!liming was extreme·
ly unfortw:late and that it was.inappropriate to
come out while the .Senile is conciU!Iing the
president's trial," said Sen. Susan Collins, R·
Maine.
·
·
Starr spokesman Cllarles Bakaly today
denied Starr's office was .the Source of the
story. "We have no interest in interposing our·
selVes in the Senate's business," he said on
ABC's "Good Morning America."
Kendall issued his ststement althe White House before
.driving a few blocks north to the Mayflower Hotel. •
· House proseeutors are questioning Ms. Lewinsky, a
former White House intern and employee, as they enter the
final phase of their attempt to tum the tide and prove that
Ointon should be removed from office.
· With that attempt likely to fail, the senstors silting in
judgment of t~e pres~dent we~ scramblin.g for a way they
·themselves wtll be judged kindly by history after they
acquit Ointon of articles of impeachmenL
·
H~ prosec,utors and White. House law}'ers each had

four hours today to question Ms. Lewinsky about her affair
·with Oin19D and charges that he committed·perjury and
obalructed justice in trying to ooncealtheir relationship.
Her deposition was taldng place in private, presided
over by one Oemoaatic and one Republican senator and
videotaped for viewlqg by other senators.
The process will be repeated Tuesday when Ointon's
ciOIIC friend Vernon Jordan, who helped Ms.. Lewinsky
lind .a jOb, will be deposed; and on Wednesday, when
· White House aide Sidney Blumenthal will be qliestioned.
"I don't want anybody to think there's some big bomb. shell out'there," Rep. .Bill McCollum, R-Aa., one of the 13
House trial managers, said of his expectations from the
Lewinsky testimony,
McCollum, interviewed·on "Fox News Sunday," said
the prosecutors hoped to nail down "beyond a reasonable
cloljbt that the president committed a crime" by trying to
get Ms. Lewinsky to conceal gifts he had given her.
White House lawyers argue that Ms. Lewinsky hastestified under oath to a grand jury, FBI agents and Starr's
investigstors more than 20 times and has said oonsistently
.that !~be. was never told to lie or offered a job to cover up
the affatr.
Barring some startling new·revelation from the deposi·
lions, Senate Republicans and Democrats have agreed that

the final vote in ihe trial. should come Feb. 12..
.
It~ a f,Wo-thirds majority of 67 to convict the~
ident and-remove him from offit:e. ·
·
;
Collins said she did not know if either the perjury qr'
obstruction of justice charge against ainton would get
even a.simple majority vote. She said many senatorl felt"
. the perjury allegation is particularly weak. ·
::
With that in mind, Collins, a moderate,·is leading an
effOrt to approve a "finding of fact" that would put the
Senate on record as saying that Ointon, while not corri·milling offenses thai should l.ead to his removal, lied lllldet;
oath. This "increases the'accountability of our decisions to
our constituents and to future generations," she said Oil
NBC's ~·Meet the Press."
"It does no.t lind him guil!;y, it finds some faciS," Sen..
Pete Oomenici, R·N: M-~ another leading proponent of~
idea, said' on AIJC's "This Week."
Senators from both parties expressed con!:Cm about"the
Senate overstepping its constitutional bounds.
·
"It would be a mistake and without authority for lliC .
Senate to act to find the president guilty of Criminal cort·
duct. Our role is to remove him from office, if he's ~ilty
as charged by the House," Sen. Thad Cochran, R·MIS8.,
said on CBS' "Face the Nation." Sen. Dick Durbin, D-111:,told NBC: "This finding of fact is impeachment lite." ·.

Eastern begins pia~ for new facility:

'

.

llnancing!

By JIM-ABRAMS
. (
•aaoalat.cf p,_ W~
,
WASHINGJ'ON'{111') - Holise proileaa·
tors and the White HOUle legal team ques·
tioned Monica Lewi,.ky under oath today in
the im~ent trial, while President Oin·
· ton's lawyer renewed his complainll in court
that lndependen~ Counsel Kenneth Starr was
violatiDggnmdjury ~laws.
·
Rep. Ed Bry~!. R·Thui., the lone House
prcliCCUtor to quiz Ma. Lewinsky, and presi·
dentiallawyers&lt;lteryi·Milla, Nicole Seligman
and David Kendall arrived this morning at the
· hotel where the eipt·hout,-videotaped deposi·.
tion was !Jeine conducted.
.
,
Before turning to the extraordinary question-andanswer .session, Kendall 1111nounced he was taldng legal
actions ~nst Starr concemina a weekend story in The
New York'Times saying the independent counsel had con- .
cluded,that a grandjuty could indict Ointon while he was ·
still in office.
. "We are fill(lg 10c1a&gt;: in U.S. District Court for the District of CoiUillbiaa motion to ihow cause whyo ... Starr and
members of is staff should not be held .in contempt for
imp11lper violations of grandjury ~·" Ken&lt;!1ill said.,.

By BRIAN J. REED
Bentlnel' N-a St.IH

The Eastern Local School District may condnA one-car accident on State Rou,te 14j Saturday )eft two people ue its capital improvement program by constructinjured, wi)h one of. them transpOrted by air a,mbulllice from the scene to ine a new multipurpose building .at its central
an area hOI!pital, the Qallia·Meigs Post of'lhe State Highway' Patrol
campus,
reported.
.
·
. .
,
&gt;L :ne cli~trict 'sboardkafpprothpriated szoo,OOQfat
Michelle Fort; 17,38699 Gold Ridgc ·Roid, Pomeroy, wtis•taken by the
,..eu meeting ast 'Wee or e construct1on o a
MedFiight hell~ to St. Mary'f H6spital, Huntington, W.va., follow· · new buftding which would serve as a bus garaae
ing the 8:SO a.m. ai:Cident, acconlinl to the patrol. However, neither-st.
and maintenance center and storage building.
Mary's or Cabell Hundngton Hospital, or .Pleasant Valley Hospital in
It would replace a day tile building In Tuppers
Point Pleasant, w.Va., had any record of 'qea~ment for Fort when contact·
Plains, locatC:d across State ~oute 681 from the
ed loday. , ,
.
· , • . .
.
'
former Tuppers Plains Elementary School. That
Adam w. Riffle, 20, 1739 CheSter Road, Pl)meroy,.was also injured b!lt building. which houses the district's bus mainte·

1

refused treaunent at the scene; the patrol reported•. •·
• .,
.fort and Riffle were paaaengeti in a&lt;eat dri~ltby ~g.!d J.,Atkins, 1.8.
33842 Wyllli .Hiii.,Road, Pom~y,;-lht~·w!'ll · 10 uthli0ilri 1\!"!·PorROr&lt;JY-!-¥·
when Atkins failed, to navigate a Jeft:Jiand curve·, lfoopc said. The car
then'jljd,Off tl!o riabtsi~ of the:road, and struck a fence 4lld overturned,
according to the nlporl.
' ·
'
, ·
' The car, owned by Key Motors Inc., 660 Main St., Pomeroy, was
severely damaged, troopers said.
.
.
.
. Atkins was cited for driving under the influence, no operator's license
and speed for·c:Onditjons.
1•

be CXJICnsive for the district to repair. The build·
Well said that the facility will likely be a pol~
ing is also expensive to heat, Well said.
buildins with a cement floor, and will be designed
The funds set aside for the construction will · with space for bus maintenance, as well as storage
come from the district's general fund, and are not for items that are now storpd in the district's ab1111··
related to its iecent building program. ·
doned elementary schools.
The district is required by law 10 set aside state .
Chester Elementary and Riverview Elemen·
fthunds$ ~or capital imp~atedvem~nls,th~ell said, ~d tabry,k~hiMch arch scheduledb .to goedon the au.ction
e
,
appropn_
oar ts project wt
oc m arc , are now emg us to store.tte111s
satisfy that requirement. In addition to capital like folding chairs, tables, filing cabinets and
improvement set-asides, local districts are also other equipment, and storage space in Eastern
required to set 'aside funds for transportation and High School 'and Eastern Elementary School hll!l
textbook purchases.
reached a premium, Well said.
, .Well noted that $200,000 will probably be
· The new building would also be designed with
insufficient to construCI the
of building that restrooms accessible froin outside, to serve spec- ·

200 000

~an~ce~an~d~sto~ra~ge~~!~~~·~~~~~~ithe·~d~~-lllri~"ictiji~an~d~no~

11 1

have been drawn . tatoi'JI a.l athletic events and other·outside activi- ·
sat~"1d~th~at~~i:
:~~~&lt; . ·ties.
•··,
.
. .The next step in building ,the facility will be
ele· ·. the design phase, Well said. A construction sche!l·
·ule has not beeri set. ·
·· '
'' '' ·

Kerosene heater causes .·
Chester home blsze · ·.·
A Saturday morning lire destroyed a
Chester-area household, leaving the
family living there with almost no
belongings. · .
The lire al the 35160 Lakewood
Drive residence of Herbert and Mary :

atabbid to
Good Afternoon ·15-year.Oid
death In church restaurant

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CUYAHOO~ FAUS (AP) A 15-year-old 1girl was stabbed to
de~ while wo,king as a volunteer
in a restaurant run by a chureh,
police said.
Shane A. Partin, 27, of Norton,
was arre~ted ~unday night and
charged with &amp;g&amp;ravated murder in
the death of Cassandra Blondheim
of Cuyahoga Falls.
Police declined .'to discuss
details of the case ext:ept to say
Partin worked allhe restaurant and
knew Ms. .Biondheim. '
"We don 'fknow if they had an
argument or if this was just a
of-the-moment lhing," CUJiah(lgiiJ
falls poiice SJI. Gary Ble•vins
The stabbing happened about
4:30 p.m. Sunday at the Cathedral
Buffet, which is par,t of the ministry
· of television evangelist. Ernest
Angley, .Bievips s.aid.

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the mobile home;
owned by Roger
Rosemary Keller.
The. family, which had no insur;:·
ance, was able to e5cape from the trail· •
er and is staying with relatives.
Oolhing donations and other ilem$ •
are being accepted. Sought are men~s :
clothes (34 pants, large shillS). women's ,
clothes (9-10 pants, medium tops);
boy's clothes in 12 slim (pants) .and"
medium boys shillS and girl's clotheS
size 8, pants, and medium girls top&amp;.
The children still need coats while other"
household items are needed, .especially •
kitchenware and linen. Items can left at •
the .Bill Edwards residen~;e, 45711 ·
Morning Star Road, Racine, 949-2116. "
~::~?F:::~
Firefighters from the Chester \bl- .
hllcl
. at Salem Eleme......,
unteer
tre. 0firefighters
epartment were
asstst . ' .
.,_, • School. The monay will by
Pomeroy
and Pomeroy
F'
· ed
pleyground equipment.
·
and Syracuse emergency squads.
~

~A~~~en~·~~~P~~~~~~~~~~a~~~;•~ft~w~n;~~·~w~~==· :c:~~hw~:E:Iam~e:nm::ry::Sc:h~oo~l.
Clinton s·e nds Congress $1.77 trillion sp.end ing plan ~
DaUy 3: 8·8·2; Dally 4: S·J..S· 7

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after midnight
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By MAf'Tl" CRUTSINGER
new era.
Republicans have rejected in past years - including a and dol)lestic programs and set up new retirement ·
AP Economics Writer ·
Republicans seek an across-the-board 10 percent cut S5·cent-a-pack incre!ISC In cigarette taxes. The presi- accounts to funnel $36 billion annually into individuWASHINGTO,N. (AP) - President Clinton sent in income tax rates, returning $600 billion or more to ' dent would raise $53.4 billion over ,five years from als' s~vings.
. . .
· , .
Congress aS 1.77 tnlhon spending plan today for 2000, taxpayers over the next decade.
is criti·
and froln a new
cl11m on part of the
Chnton 's 2000 budget projects the government wtll :
beginning a new centuty with record.budget surpluses cal to keep the Democrats
$246 billion tobacco settle· collect $1.88 trillion in revenues, up 4.3 percent from .
that he would use ·to shore up Social Security and from creating new spending
ment states won last year.
the current year.
·
.
shower billions in new spending on li range of initia- programs.
Including the tobacco
The $117 billion surplus for 2000 follo~s a project· :
lives from child care to lhc Pentagon.
"I wish this budget was
money, Clinton's budget ed $79 billion surplus this year and an aclual $69 bil·
The.release of Clinton's budget Is tlie opening shot something 1 could say 1 supproposes increJ!sing taxes lion surplus realized in 1998, the first year the govern·
in what's expected to be a bitter struggle with .the . port, but frankly, I am con·
and fees by $82 billion over m~nt had finished i,n lhe black in 29 years.
Republican-controlled Congress over government pri- vinced that the president has
the ned five years. Many of
The $2.41 trillion in total surpluses the administra- ,
reinvented the era of big
the proposals to limit tax tion envisions is about $160 billion below the amount
·orities.
.
Whileagreeiilg wiih Ointoii's golil ofstrengthening : government, having · just
benefits- for corporations - forecast--by- the nonpartisan Congressional Budgel ·
Social Security, the GOP prefers using the bulk of the declared it dead two years
and wealthy investors also Office.
.
.
,
remaining federal surpluses for across-the·board iax ago," said . Senate Budget
have been rejected by Con·
The administration's forecast foresees growth of 2. .
cuts.
'
··
'
Committee Chairman Pete
gress in the past.
percent or above over the next five years with no reces-, ·
Republicans accused Clinton of reverting to spend- Oomenici, R·N.M. "I
Eager to show Clinton sion in sight, even though lhe current expansion is
thrift liberal ways.
, belieye American taxpayers
hard at work despite his already the longest in peacetime history. ·
- -Clinton, proclaiming his budget marks· a-"-new era have given us more of'theirimpeachment travails, the
Economists-caution..the.budget surpluses coulla_,,an,, _, __ -,of opportunity," proposes Increasing spending for the · money than we need, and
.
. White House kept up a ish if the economy starts .to turn sour.
fiscal year that begins next Oct. 1 by 2.3 percent. Even we should return it to them." ·
..
steady drumbeat of announcem'!nls beginning before
Among highlights of OiQton 's budget:
.
with the $39 billion increase over the current year,
Clinton's proposals require approval by Congress, Christmas about budget details.
-.Billions more for the Pentagon over the next five
Clinton's budget projects a record $117 billion surplus, . and it's unclear how caaer the two sides will be to
A£ first outlined, in his State of the Union speech, years although spending wopld actually go down in:
.thanks to the booming·economy.
.
'
· reach compromise given the impeachment battle and a Ointon is proposina using 62 percent of the $4.85 tril· 2000. ·For the entire period, Ointon proposes billions
lion in projected surpluJes over the next 15 years to in new weapons purchases and the largest pay raise for
Clinton's plan forecasts $2.41 trillion in surpluses looming presidential cam,iaign. .
over the next decade, laying .out a vision of plenty the
In contrast to the GOP call for hundreds of billions shore up Social Security.
the military in two decades. .
.
country has not known in 7!) years, before the Great in across· the-board tax c~ts, attacked by Democrats as
Republ_icans agree tha! much of the sul1'1~s should
-'-$5 bill.ion to build ~nd renovate schools and hire
Depression, World War 11 and the Cold War put the a sop to the wealthy, Chnton's budget offers targeted be set as1de for the retuemenl of 76 mlihon baby teachers. Chnton would be part of that for the first bme .
United Slates into a rutofchronic deficits.
tax relief of $36.2 billion over five years.
boomers~ although they disagree with the president on ta.requirements that states upgrade the academic qu~J -,
·
"With this budget, our fiscal house is in order, our
This includes a $1,00(1 taxc:re&lt;!it to help_people.han· the best ~ay to do this.
.
ity of their ~e~kest schools.
. , ,
·
..
·spirit slrong and our resources ·prepare us to meet the die long-term health cate liolts, and a $250 cred1t for
The btJI fight will be over what to do wtth the rest of
-$5 .3 btl bon -for health care mttiaiJ\Ies over the.
challenges of the n.ext century," &lt;711n1on proclaimed in slay-at-home parents cari1!JI for infants below the age the ~jected surpluses.
. · ' next. five years, including expanding acce~s ~o .
his message at the front of a masstve set of documents, of 1.
·
Chnton wants to devole the rest lo support ~edicare lo people below the ·current65,year ehgibtl·.
this year spotting ·black-and-white covers to .mark .the
Clinton's budget also includes several proposals that Medicare, pro~ide lll!ditional spending for lhe military ity age.
,

,

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......

Commentary
\·The Daily Se tineI
'Ut@(Lsfutf In 1948

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1102-2158 • Fax: 1102-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
OeMraiMan~~g~r

·

: · n.. Sentinel "*.,.. ,.,.,. to .,.. «&lt;lfor rnwn ,....,. .,·.

'l)loocl--,.,.,._
.,..,.,_p/ooM_,.,,

1oo. Shott-

brOMI ,.,_,of~

,_,.,_of 1»/ng ~·
IINf oil ""'Y H -..t. Eoclo - l d 1 - . • o~gnoturo,

poo- "'-~ ,... ,.

olfd-

SpMtyo dot•Hthoto'•

"'"'""'""'to·-

rioul- .. - · - fr&gt;; uttw. to ,. ..tftor, Till Sentinol, ,
0/tlo .m; or, FAX lo 7«J.Jft.ZIU.

-y.

Cc&gt;utf St.,

s year, budget
stalemate
could
"
be· best outcome
.

ByALANFRAM
Aeeaellled Preu Writer

.

_

: WASHINGTON (AP) -As President Clinton and Congress gird for battle over how to use the enormous federal surpluses now projected, the best
outcome for the U.S. economy may be political stalemate. .
.
· That's beCause without any action by lawmakers, th_ose surpluses will
aqtoinatically go to reduce the $5.6trillion mountain of debt the government
has accumulated over decades of borrowing. Most economists agree this is
· tilt best way to stre~gthen the economy, because it would pump money from
federal coffers to private investment; helping to drive up living standards.
; In ·the bad old days of seemingly endless budget deficits, gridlock
berween the president and Congress meant no improvement in the fiscal picture. But with the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office now predicting
surpluses totaling nearly $2.&lt;i trillion over the coming decade, the experts
say a standoff this year over cutting taxes and boosting spending would not
be so bad.
" We don't really need anything," June O'Neill, outgoing director of the
Congressional Budget Office, told the Senate Budget Committ~ on Friday
when asked how best to buttress the economy. "If that's the goal, the most
straightforward thing to do is to do nothing."
The saine committee got the same advice a day earlier from Alan
Greenspan, who as Federal Reserve chairman is' probably the .nation's most
influential economist. As he has said repeatedly, Greenspan prefers -tax cuts
to spending as a way to help the economy, but has a favorite that trumps
both.
•
"Far superior to either, in my judgment, is to allow the unified budget
surplus to run and debt to the public decline,"he said. ·
· There_are rwo major obstacles that might block the funds from being used
for debt reduction: Lawmakers' desire to use the inoney for other purposes,
and the unpredictability of the economy.
So far, President Ointon and many-members of Congress from both parties seem ready to set aside most of the expected surpluses to help shor~ up
Social Security for the looming retirement of the 76 million baby bcomers.
Th«;&gt;ugh the parties clash over details, each would ultimately use that money
to help Social Security b,y reducing the national debt- a move that economiats applaud.
·
:'That debate is over. We agree," said ~n. Phil Gramm, R-Texas.
But the Congressional Budget Office said that even discounting the huge
annual surpluses produced by the Social Se~urity trust funds them5elves,
there would still be a $787 billion surplus - almost one-third of the projec!O&lt;J surpluses- in the rest of the budget. It is this money that the rwo partie!~' have rival designs on, underlining their political need to distinguish
themselves from each other and to appeal to their-core voters.
Ointon wants to divide that money among Medicare, new federally subsidized retirement accounts, and defense and domestic programs. He will
provide details of his plan Monday when he _releases his proposed SI. 7 trillion fiscal 2000 budget, which this year will have a black cover in tune with
the black ink it will boast.
"That's the right priorities," said Sen. Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey,
top.Democrat on the budget panel.
Put Republicans want to use the bulk of the $787 billion for tax cuts,
which for years have been perhaps .their favorite legislative issue.
Unless they do, Republicans argue, Democrats will simply spend it to
make government bigger.
.
"That's the problem we've got," said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R·N.M., who like many Republicans is pushing a 10
. percent across-the-board cut in income tax rates. "The propensity is to si'Cnd
it it it's there. "
uTo deny Americans signifi.canttax relief while the government's coffers
are "getting fat is nothing less than highway robbery," said Senate Finance
Committee.Chairman William Roth, R-Del.
All this maneuvering, however, is over estimated surpluses that may
never appear or be even bigger than expected. Should the country's $8 trillion:,a-year economy deviate even slightly from the CBO's predictions,' the.·
si.wof the surpluses could change dramatically.
"There's no way for anyone projecting the economy to be able to say
their
will come true," O'Neill said. "The chances are they
. projections
•\ won't."
;EDITOR'S NOTE - Alan Fram covere the budget and Congr"a lor
The Aaaoclated Preas.
•

.

.Letter to the editor
,·

Better Slick Willie than Ozone AI
:It's obvious that the "trial" of our illustrious leader is a political circus
w,i)h both sides interested in scoring points with the electorate -- both of
which are failing miserably.
:Except with the uninformed, or those who never bother to seek the available
information, those with the ability· to read above a second grade level, and
chose to do so, know Slick Willie Ointon has a serious problem with the truth:
has had, does have, and will-always have, barring a conversion. And that
requires the acknowledgement that the individual is in need of salvation, that
hi~ only hope of change is in confessing his sins and accepting that sacrifice
th~t cleanses him from all sin, and submitting himself to the will of his Saviour.
·Asking people to forgive him and asking som~ "church" to forgive him is
an:well and notablc,-but i4.doesn't change anything~ln the spiritual realm,
nolhing a person can do can change their sinful nature (not by works, but by
grace). And since this person is obviously in the depths of degradation, with
no concern for his fami ly, or the solemn oath of the highest political office
in the land, there is no w~y Slick Willie can be trusted. He has sold this
nation down the river with his "fair trade" policies and peddling high tech·
~oioay to our enemies (China and Iran) along with a number of those ecology mandates that cost us jobs and billions of dollars.
.The only thing worse than letting this "leader" serve his term is having.
Ozone AI Gore take his place. We all know, or should, that Willie has lied
throu&amp;J! his teeth with that dispicable performance under oath . .And no
response about a "personal affair of adultery" please.
'
Willie has perjured himself .. I saw and heard him. I just feel relieved that
thO outcome was -settled before the thing ever really started. Ozone AI would
be Areal tragedy for the country. Slick Willie is bad enough!
·
That's my opinion, and that of many others.
R.E. Weaver
Racine

Monday, February 1,1999

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

r-nnrrrrnnrrnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn"; · •

Notices

Mor.d-r, , . , 'I t, t -

Documenting the Pentagon's waste

Dorothy Leota Bryan

•

By J.ck Anderson, ' ·
high-risk series carne out ·Jut week, detailins often fooled by such ploya in the put, have yet to
and Jan MoHer
·
potential areas of fraud and abuse throu&amp;J!outthe catch on.
.
,1
President Ointon's plan
government.
.
It oould al10 be that thoee ~ponslble dOn't
to boost defense spending
While the Defense Department wun't the only want to catch on. Defense spendmg mCIIII·Jobl;
·by $110 billion over the
agency to earn investigators' wrath, it's the most and jobl mean volel. .
,
next six years sounds like a
deservlns. With a budget of more than $250 bil- .
In fad, thla may be one of the few IIIIUes on
great idea -- until you look
lion a year -- well below peak Cold War levels -- whieh Ointon and the GOP find true bipl!'llsan
at the money_ that the Penthe armed services still swallow about half of all lll'"menL
.
lagon is already wasting.
"discretipnary" money in . the budgeL Djscre- .
Republicans long aao got used to the president
Judging from a recent
.
'tionary money is everything that 's not required by purloinins their favorite them~ -From welfare
audit of the Pentagon if books, no increase would law to be spent; Social Security, Medicare and reform to baiBIII:ed budgets, Omton fought the
be needed if the armed forces stopped wasting the Interest on the n•tional debt; for example, . are GOP before cavirt&amp; in an~ telling voters it's what
money it already gets.
.
non-discretionary.
he wanted all alons.
'
.
•
The administration's byword for this weapons
Everything else -- from bridges to ~ousing proNow the president is doinj the same WI~
boost is "readiness." A decade .of downsizing jects and B-2 .bombers •• falls into the discre- defense. For all the president's Iaults,there's still
from the Cold War has left the U.S. Armed Forces tionary pot.
no one better at sP&lt;&gt;tting a big issue befo~ it hila
depleted, critics say. Ointon -- and many GOP
Judging from the GAO's findings, the Penta- the headlines. In less than a year, presidential pollawmakers -- want an army that can fight rwo gon has taken "discretionary" to a whole new itics will again be If! full swing. Republicans were
wars at once, with bullets left to spare in case level :
hoping to accuse Ointon (and, by extension, AI
trouble breaks out in smaller hot-spots like Soma-- Billions of dollars in payments are undocu- Gore) of selling out the military, returning it to the
lia or Haiti.
mented. Auditors repott a $4 billion difference pre-Reagan "hollow foroe." Now llley'll be left
So Ointon, who never cared much for the Pen- berween checks issued by the Pentagon and cash nibbling at the margi,ns, saying "me too" when
tagon, now thinks it's time the generals get their reported to the Treasury. At least $22 billion jn Vietnam-vet Gore takes credit for a strengthened
share of the budget surplus.
.
payments could not be matched by invoices or military. .
·.
. .
This argument' might be more convincing if the other obligations.
In the process, they're letting the biggest govPentagon wasn't wasting billions of dollars on
The good news is that this is slightly less thin in ernment agency of them all escape the reforms
weapons it doesn't need -- and paying a king's previous years. The bad news is, it's still $22 bil- · that other agencies have grudgingly adopted. Six
ransom to contractors for work that's behind lion paid out for no apparent, docwiJented reason. years after Ointon promised to reinvent governschedule and over-budget.
--"Internal control weaknesses" (read: sloppy m~nl; some agencies really arc working better and
It would also help if members of CDngress bookkeeping) have created a climate conducive to costing leu. But at the Pentagon, it's still businesa
thought more about "readiness" and· Jess about fraud .. With so much money coming in and going as usual ..
.
their own districts. For this year's budget, for out; some Air Force officials simply created a fieYou've heard the UJUmenl; voiced thousands
example, then-House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- titious vendor and began making payments. of times by Bill Ointon 'a antagonists: If a generGa., ordered up 20 C-130 transport jets that the Investigators found rwo casea of this, in which the al or a CEO behaved with -a subordinate the way
Pentagon never asked for--.at $SO million apiece. thieves got away with nearly $1 million.
Bill Ointon did with Monica Lewinsky, he or she
That's a cool $1 billion for anyone who's count-- "We continue to find and report -on overly would be dismissed.
ing.
optimistic program projections and excessive
We can now reveal the corollary: If the presiOther examples of waste are found in the risks in light of the current budget and security dent or a CEO kept his books like the U.S. mili"high-risk" reports put out every so often by environment." Translation: Contractors· over- tary, he'd no longer have a job eith~r.
Congress' General Accounting Office. The latest promise and under-deliver. Pentagon officials, Copyright 1tlllt, Unllld flll~nllyndlcate,lnc.

.

AccuWeathere
·

Dorothy Leota Bryan, 78, Middleport, died Monday, Feb. 1, 1999 in
Holzer Medical Center.
Born March 29, 1920 in Rutland, daughter of the late Stanle~ and Faye
Hysell Whittington, she was a homemaker.
·
~rviving are four Sons and daughters-in-law, Stanley and Gail Bryan of
Romulus, Mich., Albert and Barbara Bryan of Reynoldsburg. John T. and
Della Bryan of Traverse City, Mich., and Daniel and Mary Bryan of Springfield; rwo daughters and sons-in-law, Chris and Ronald Russell of Lorain,
~nd Dottie and Haf9ld ~(I)' of MiddleJiort; several grandchildren, great
grandchildren and ~eat-greaJ grandchildren; rwo brothers, Fred George of
. Rutlaha,
·and Tom
ilukill
Qf• ·Buchanan; WNa.; and' several nieces and
..
.
l
nephews.
·
.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, John A. Bryan, in 1991;
and a daughter, Norma !4y Bryan.
·
•
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday in the Middleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home, with Pastor Thomas Downs officiating. Burial will be in
the Gravel Hill Ccmettry. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-9

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·I eoJumliU8 ia·Jw I

,J.l:m. ~edne5day:

Austin
Lee Gilmore
..
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Austin Lee Gilmore, 2 months, infant son of Troy aqd Beverly C. Wyant
of Albany, died' Sunday, Jan. 31, 1999 in Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
·
' In •addition to his parents, he is survived by three sisters, Kay Ia, Shania
...and Emily, and two brothers~ Dustin and Daniel; grandparents, Milford and
Betty Wyant 'o f Albany, Donna and Ed Savage of Albany, and Byron and
Cindy Gilmore of Columbus.
Services ·wm be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, with the Rev. Ralph Butcher officiating. Burial will be in the Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight .
~ilmore

..

KY.

'••••
nc.

~1999

•

0 ~-~, ~-~

Sunny Pt. Ckiudy

Cloudy

)\•

, , \1'"

-

T4torml

Rein

........
.-.

Fl.111i01

Fae . Kimes
'·

Chance for showers will
continue.through Tuesday
By The Associated Preaa · · · ·
,
.
The rain shoulcl eqd in Obio tl)night and temperatu1es will remain
above freezing ~pder ,&lt;;lou ely sides. ww_s 'Yill be ~5-40. .
On Tuesday, an approaching cpld:frpnt ~hpu1d. produce more rain by
afternoon, the National Weather Service said. Highs will be in the mid40s to low 50s.
Another'!ireak in the"rainy weatbel"is eipecli:d.We4h~day, when skies
will be fair and temperatures in the 40s, forecasters said.'
. ·
The record· high· t'emperature for this date at the Columbus weather
station was 66 degrees -in 1'9&amp;9 wiiile the record low was 3 below zero in
1978. Sunset tonight wjU_,ll~ at s;,so p.ll\: l!Od sunri~~e 'tuesday at 7:39 a.m.
'
Weethe-rtortcast: : 7, ·
' '. ·...
·Tonight... Rain likely earlr. -then cloudy with a· j:hance of sho;wers.
Lows around 40. Southeast wind around 10 mph. Ch~nce of rain ·70 pe~-

Ihl~ Fae Kimes, 85, Athens, died Sunday, Jan. 31, 1999 at her residence.
Born Oct. 27, 1913 in Orange Township, daughter of the late Dana.Emmitt
and Mabel Clair Ridenour Swartz, she owned and operated the Hillcrest Nursing Home from 1947 until it closed, and constructed and operated the Kimes
CDnvalescent Center from 1966 unlit the present.
..
She was a member of the Independent Order of the Oddfellows, Rebekah
Lodge 553, The Plains; Daughters of American Council 323, Chester; the
Order of the Eastern Star, Athens Chapter 175; Ohio AsSociation for Healthcare
Quality; and she was president of Division 1'4 of the Licensed Practical Nurse
Association of Ohio Inc.
.,..
She was·a member of tbe National Association of Practical Nurses Education and Service lpc., a member of the Alfred United Methodist Church, and
was on the-advisory board of the Hocking College School of Practical Nursing.
She is survived by a sister and brother-in-law, Virgie Swartz and Paul Gar·
,rett Buckley of Coolville; a sis,er·in-law, Betty Crouser of Califomiaj and sev·
era) nieces and nephews. '
. She was,also preceded in death by her husband, Harold R. Kimes, in 1967;
'and by a brother, James Robert Swartz.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in the the Hughes-Moquin Funeral
Home, Athens, with Pastor Sharon HausmiiJI officiating. Burial will be in the
West Union Street Cemetery, Athens. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 2-4 and 7, 9 p.m. Tuesday, and on Wednesday one hour prior to the ser-

Local briefs: ;..

Star Grange

._

Star Grange TIS and Star Grange 878 will meet Saturday with a potluok l
and oyster supper at 6:30 p.m., followed by a regular meeting at 8 p.m. The :
junior baking contest will be held. All members are urged Jo attend.
,

Polley changed

••

·

•:

The Meigs County Humane Society will no longer take in stray or abandoned cats and kittens. The service' has been offered by the organization free
of charge, buJ the group is unable to do so due to a lack of volunteers and the
fact that 90 percent of all cats~ kittens received have been euthanized.
The organization continues to help residents wilh Jhe costs of spaying or
neutering cats and to pay veterinarian's bills in .emergencies. Information is
available by calling the Humane Society Thrift Shop at 992-6064.

Fried chicken dinner

4

j

!,
:

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. Racine American Legion Post 602 will hold a fried chicken dinner Sunday,
staiting at 11 a.m. with dine in or carry out, $5. Public welcome.
.

PR seminar slated

!

1

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I

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A public relations and business'seminar will be held Feb. 16, 1-4 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Public Library presented by Bill Coffey of Coffey Marketing and
Communications Strategies and sponsored by the.Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and the Small Business Development Center of Southeast Ohio.
The' seminar will help liusiness owners develop a public relations program.
Cost $15. Call the Chamber of commerce office at992·5005 for reservations.

:
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:
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Trustees to meet

The Orange Township Trustees will meel Tuesday at7:30 p.m. at the home r.
of clerk, Osie Follrod.
•~ ~

troopers investigate injury aecident

·:

Two McArthur residents were injured in a one-car accident Saturday Oll"
Columbia Township Road 13 (Staneart). the Gallia·Meii:s Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
·
•·
Driver Barbara Waswick, 17, and her passenget, 15-year-old Rebecca I.;.• r.
Waswick, were transported by the Meigs EMS to O'Bieness Memorial H~-·
pital, Athens, from the scene of the 10:40 a.m. accidenl, according 10 the ,
patrol.
·
;Both were later treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said.
·~ P!
Troopers said Barbara Waswick was southbound, 10 feet west of TR 12
(Darst) when the car she drove went off the right side of the road and struck ~
tree. The car then slid over a small embankment into a field.
~ .l,
The car was moderately damaged, according to the repon.
,
. The patrol investigated another injury·related accident on Saturday, occur'. '
ring on County Road 36 (Sumner) near Tuppers Plains.
'•
Trena S. Swetnam, 43, Columbus, wa~ transported to Veterans Memorial Hos'
pital by the EMS following the 6:55p.m. accident, troopers said. She was latei' ·•
treated and released, a VMH spokesperson.said.
· ''
According .to the patrol, Swetnam was southbound, Jwo miles north of ·.~
State Route 7, when the car she drove went off the right side of the road and' '
struck a power pole. The car was severely damaged, and Swetnam was cited . ,
for driving under the influence and failure to control.
.· ~

p

a

EMS units log 17 calls

.

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.:· :..

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Units of the Meig; Coonty E11 iClget cy MecJ. Dorothy Jenkins, trealed at the scene;
' n.'
ical SeiVices remded 17 calls fOr ljSlii:itaLt Sal10:53 am. Saturday, m01or vehicle accicent.
·
' . , ,
· · . ·,
lllllay i1nd s.r.tay. Units~ inchxiOO:
dent on Staneart Road, Bart:&gt;ara and Rebef"'' ;
Tuesday...Cioudy w,ith showers likely,in the afterpqon. Highs SO to S5.
ON!lt\Lmsem::H
ca Wmvick, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; :••:
6:14 p.m. Salwday, Village Manor AJ:art·
Chance of rain 70 percent. · • · :•· c
. ·: •.•
.
.
12:58 p.m. Saturday, VFD and squad 1o--,,,
ments, Middlepm. Darlene Johtaln, \etemns Bailey Run Road, brush fire;
Tuesday night ...Cioudy with -a chance of showers: pgssibly changing
· Memoriallb;pilal;
9:47 pm. Surday, Jocks R.ood, Ra~ .. '
to snow 'showers lllte.:tows around-'40: ... ·•.. ·
· ··· . ' vices.
··
·
11:33 p.m. Saturday, Pageville Road, O:rnb\ HMC, Centml Dilp1td1 squad~ : ; ~
.. .. •· · In"lieu of flowers contributions may be made to the Ihla Fae Kimes MemO. Extended forecast:
Austin Gilmore, VMH, Rudandsquad a.sisted;
. SYRACUSE
' · '" ·
Wednesday ... Pal'\IY clOif~Y, . Highs ni_p.stly ,ifj'the 4".
.
rial Scholarship Fund, P.O ..Box 958, Athens, Ohio 45701.
'
d
4:30 a.m. Sunday, Overo100k Nursing
3:40 a.m. Saturday, VFD and squa to• -·),
Thursday... Partly cloudy,:with· a chanc~ •of:shQwenr; then a chance of
Center, Middlejxlrt, Lester Bax1er, VMH;
SR 124, motor vehicle accident. Orland Lee--~ ~
rain or ~now ~bowers. wws 3() to 3S and hi~hs around 50.
·
10:40 a.m. Surday, 0\ildrens Herne Rood, Floyd and Glen Young Jr., VMH, Mark
Friday.:.Mostly clear. U,ws from the .upper 20s the lower 30s and
Prrneroy, Belva Willard, Holzer Medical Cenler; Salser, refused treatment.
: .. ~ .::o
highs_
50_to_.;__ _ _...:.,__ _ _ _·· _ _ _
Paul
Nutter,
66, 4280S Kaylor Road, Tuppers Plains, died Sunday, Jan. 31,
11:33 p.m. Swlday, long Run Road,
11JPPERS PlAINS'
L::....
_ _ _ _ __._·•1999
at his
residence.
LOOg Bot!om, Kristina Westfall, HMC.
6:34 p.m. Saturday,. VFD and squad to .• ;,
&lt;liESfERVID
Sumner Road, motor vehicle acciden~ Treqa_.,....
~n
H~ was born May 16, 1932 in Guysville, son of Gladys Phyliss McGrath .
12:44 a.m. Saturmy, lllkewaxl - . trniler Swetnam, VMH, Cllester VFD assisted;
~
-'
Allan of Tuppers Plains, and the late Charles Nutter. He was a retired railroad ·
fue
at
Hetb MclJtyre ~ ooinjuries te!XIl12:33 p.m. Sunday, VFD and squad to ..
CINCINNATI (AP) - A man Bagwell made sure the shovel of the welder and a member of the Asbury Church.
.
·
ed.
Paneroy
VfD
alXl
S}'llUISC
sq.ud
~
Kaylor
Road, brush fire al Elmer Kaylor res-·· ~
trapped for,about si~_ hOIIfS. wbe)llh!\. rc11ted backhoe was wedged in the
He is also survived by a son, Mark Nutter of Canton; two daughters, Pauline
9:29 p.m. Sunday, brush fire oo Young idence, no injuries reported;
· · ~-~
walls of tht ' trench he was working , trench above his head as a safety daCosta of Canton, and Julie Cicchetti of Canton; four grandchildren; a sister, Road, no injuries reponed.
2:06 p.m. Sunday, Kaylor Road, Pa~l"
in collapsed and buried him under precaution, but the men did not ' Alma Snyder of Tuppers Plains; a brother, Harold Nutter of Tuppers Pl~ins ; and
POMEROY
Nutter, dead on anivaJ .
- '' :i•
. about 12 feet of 'mud re,nained hos· brace or shore up,th~ clay soil walls, seveml nieces and nephews.
.
9-fJ/ am. Saturday, VFD and squad In Slate
pitalized toduy in:serious conllition. . authorities said~
'~.
,
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the White Funeral Home, Coolville, with · .Roures 7 and 143, rootor-vehicle acciden~
James Bagwell, 42, .,Yas working·.... ' Bagwell w . trapped !'tOm the the Rev. Don Miller officiating. Burial will be in ·the Tuppers Plains Christian Adam Riffie and Rcmld Atkins, Jrealed at the
Saturday to r,epair a sewer line on · ch"st .down \n~ \ · as able t\1' breathe · . Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-8tonight.
· ,..,., Michelle Fort, St Mary's Ha;pital via

Paul Nutter

~

_.~.....-

trapped l'n trench for Sl'x hours

M

the city's west sia~ when,the trench and remain alert~&gt;during the- ~escue
collapsed abo'ut 10:30 a.m., Capt.' . effort, Wagner sld.
.

'

MarkFire
Wagner
of'lhe Green
Town·
ship
Department
said. He
;was
freed by rescue workers around 4:30
p.m. and flown' t&lt;i University Hospital.
Bagwell was reported in fair condition Saturday night, but his condi·
tion had worsened . to serious by
Sunday, hospital officials said.
Bagwell had volunteered to help
: a .friend replace ~ sewer pipe at a
· home. When-ho climbed into the pit.

---

Police work ag·a inst individual rights
license?
By Jouph Perldne
·To what lengths may police
. I, for one, think not.
· For similar reasons, the civil libertarian in me
go -- reasonably -· to crack
down on criminals? That is the
also ,has qualms about a proposal by New York
City Police Commissioner Howard Safir that the
thorny question raised by severBig Apple's finest take a DNA sample from every ·
al recent, controversial actions
person arrested in the five bor«;&gt;ughs.
taken (or contemplated) by
Safir submits that "DNA testing and profiling
keepers of the peace in. several
of all those arrested for fingerprintable offenses is
·municipalities throughout the
·the most -effective technology available to assist
country.
'
In Buena Park, Calif., for instance, the local in crime reductiOn."
As for the criminal suspects who are proven
constabulary set up a checkpoint to identify individuals driving with invalid licenses. Officers innocent (or who, at least, are not prosecuted, or
stopped every fifth car during the first day of the · are prosecuted, but ultimately acquitted of
checkpoint. They found 20 motorists driving with · charges), the New York police commissioner
suspended or revoked licenses, or no license assures that their DNA samples would be
destroyed..
whatsoever. They wrote 1SO citations.
But the best way to protect the rights of the
This is one case where yours truly actually
agrees with the American Civil Liberties Union. innocent (Pr the acquitted) is to reserve DNA testRamona Ripston, executive director of the ing and profiling to those who actually have been
ACLU's Los Angeles office, 511ys that Buena Park convicted of crimes, not those who are merely
cops were violating motorists' rights because offi- arrested (more than half of·whom are never actucers "have to have areason for stopping someone ally convicted).
· Then there's the campaign being waged by
like that."
·
Buena Park police disagree. "If we wer.e stop- local police in three Northern California cities,
"'"or hft..n·• HIUI, -n1 )'OIIIIMI'If7 TN crime
ping every car, then we might run into problems," Palo Alto,.Menlo Park and San Pablo. The cops in
,.,. II w-r down. You·,. our of Mep.
said Sgt. Joe Englehardt. "We are operating under these cities have compiled listS of "problem
G.t will! ifNI ptVgram. •
the same laws that you run into with drunk·dri· drinkers and common drunkards," including their
mug shots. They have asked local merchants to . censed drivers; criminal suspects or public drunkving checkpoints."
But it is questionable whether California " volunteer" not to sell them alcohol.
ards.
'courts will agree.
San Pablo Police Otief Douglas Krathwohl
The authorities believe that few people will be
Indeed, in 1987, the state Supreme Court said his city's program was started this past fall in troubled if police seize the vehicles of these
· upheld the legalit)' of drunk-driver check(lOints, . res11Qnse to p_rot!lems caused by a band of drunk- scofftaws for 30 days, take -DNA-samples from
declaring, in its wisdom, that the public interest in ards who patronized the same local liquor stores, these miscreants, or circulate the mug shots of
getting drunk drivers off the road outweighed the using their monthly welfare and disability checks these reprobates to merchants advising them not
privacy rights 0f motorists:
.to buy alcohol.
to sell them alcohol.
But unless these individuals are ex-cons
But there is no comparison between drunk dri-.
But these kinds of measures, ostensibly aimed
vers and drivers with invalid licenses. Drunk dri- who've been ordered to stay away from liquor at enforcing law and order, nonetheless amount to
vers (most of whom happen to _have valid licens- stores as terms of their probatibn, then it is hard to an assault upon privacy rightS.
es) pose a clear and present danger to public safe- see how police can post the names and faces of
And one need not be soft on crime to recognize '
ty, accounting for nearly 40 percent of annual traf· these individuals, whether in local liquor stores, ·that when the government is able to chip.away at
fie fatalities. Invalidly licensed drivers, however post offices or anywhere else.
any of our rights (like privacy) under whatever
Even problem drinkers and common drunkards seemingly reasonable pretext (like cracking down
malfeasant, don't even remotely pose. a similar
threat.
.
have privacy rights.
on crime). it is not long before it finds other seemWhat we are observing in Buena Park, in New ingly reasonable pretexts to further erode those
The _question then is this: Is it reasonable for
Buena Park police, or any other police force, to York -City, and in Palo Alto, Menlo P..-k and San rights until those cherished ri&amp;J!ts no longer exist
abrogate the Fourth Amendment rights 'of law· Pablo is the ongoing clash berwecn law enforce- for all practical purposes.
abiding motorists (whether it is one out of five, or ment and civil liberties. Police in these munici- Copyrtght1 ... NEWIPAPI!A I!NTEAPAIII! ASSN.
one out of however many) to identify those who palities are 'lll&amp;unting on the fact that most lawJaaeph Perldna • 1 columnlet far The San
are driving , not drunk, but without a proper abiding cltfztns have little empathy for unli- Diego Union-Tribune.
·

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·Publi:o.her rn crves the right to adjust rates during the subscription period. Subscripti&lt;ll1 rate
changes may be implemented by changing the
durati on of the sub~eri~ IOn ., ·

MAIL SlJIISCRIPTION
lnalde 'M tfv County
13 W«ks........................... .$27.30
26 Weeks ................... : ........$53.82
.52 Weeks .......................... .S105.S6
R1kll Oulskte Melp Cou nly
13 Wcck.s .......... ... ...............$29.25

26 Wc&lt;Jts ..................... ....... l!16.68
52 Weets ........... ....... ....... $109.72

Reader Services
-.~ccnrectlol1 Pollcyo.r mtin concent1 In all storira is to bt
accunte. If you lmow of 1n error Ia 1
.tory, &lt;all lht oewsroom af (740) 991·
1t55. We will &lt;ht&lt;k your lnlomollon
and make a coll"eCUon If wunnttd.

Newa Departmentl

• The 011ln number Is 992.2155. Depart·
ment extensions •~:
Generol Monager....................... ,.Ext. 1101
Ntwl ....... ... ...................................Exl. 1t01
or ExL 1106

Other Services
Adveltlslng, .................................Ext. 1104
Clrcu tollon .............. ,.................. .Ext. 1103

Ctoulfted Ad&amp; ...:..........................Ext. 1100

,

\

_.;
.,.

-In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the family in care
of the funeral home.

lii•"liil;·,,.a'".n~·•,.lt.e,5. ,
.

~-. pllld lt1IICKIII~III ;;;~ &amp;, loaeJ Nni.n1 - . ~

.,. p u - .. !*1~10·-~ ~-.crtntl.,...ln~ 111111
•• pro•• In 1M ~llfto.-111 J40'm
' · · ''' .'f&lt;,
· . '· •

Austin· Lee GilmoreAustin\ Lee Gil,tnore, two months, infant son of Troy and Beverly C.

Y/y~rif Gilmore, S~te Route 692, Albany, died Sunday, January 31, 1999 at

Veterans Memoriai'Hospital in Pomeroy.
·
·
.
In addition to his parents; he .is survived by three sisters, Kayla, Shania
and Emily; and two brothers, Dustin and Daniel; and grandparents, Milford
· and llett}l Wyant of Albany, Donna and Ed Savage of Albany, and Byron and
Cindy Gilmore of Columbus.
l:fe was preceded in death by great-grandparents, Clara and Clarence
Haning, Mar!l!lret and Clyde Dilcher, Waller and Edna Gilmore, and Milford
and Elsie Wyant; and by a cousin, Charity Gilmore.
Services will be held Tuesday, February 2, 1999 at 2 p.m. in theBigony·,
Jordan Funeral Home, Albany, wit~ the R~v. Ralph Butcher officiating. Bur·
ial will be in the Well ~ Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Joday,
Monday, February 1, 1999 from 7·9 p.m.
·

-Fae Kimes

Am Ele Power ..... :.................43'!.
Akzo .................................... :... 40
AmrTech ............................... 64'1•
Ashtllnd011 ......... .................. 47Y.
AT&amp;T ..................... ....:........... 92~.
Bank One............................. 51 "1.
Bob Evans ............................ 23'1•
Borg-Warner ........................ 38'1.
Broughton ............... ................ t7
Champion .......................... .....8Y,
Charm Shps ..........................3'i•
City Holdlng .......................... 27Y.
Federal Mogul .....................58"1•
Gannett .,................. ,......:...... 64'!.
Goodyear .............. ................ 497.
Kmart ..,.................... .............17'i.

REEDSVILLE
9:24 a.m. Saturday, SR 124, Pauline
Mayer, Camden.Oark Memorial Hospital.
RUilAND

4:01 a.m. Saturday, Russell S1ree1,

Judge refuses to throw out
case of wheelchair mom
SANDUSKY (AP) - A judge
today refused to throw out a child
endangering charge against a woman
who sometimes uses her elec1ric wheel·
chair to cart her daughter around on
busy city streets.
The laWyer for Kelly Dillery had
askod that the case be dropped, arguing
there was no evidence she operated her
wheelchair recklessly.

H'SAU TMI
GLORIA [R)

Kroger ..................... ... ..........65 Y.,.

Lands End ...........................32'7.
Limited .................. .. .............34'1•
Oak Hill Finl ............................ 18

CoflllliilnrAI. The undtr19'11d, Superinltl'll:llfll of lnUJrana~

OVB .......·.................................. 42

•~lhorized

One Valley ...........................,31 '1•

Peoples...... ,...... ,................ ,.24'%.

Prem Fl nl.. ............ ................. 16 i.
Rockwell ;......................... 43'1•
RDfShell .. .............................. 40'!.
Sears ....... .............. ........:....... 407.
Shoney's ............... .................. 2 ~
First Star .................. ............877•.
Wendy's ... :........ :...... ............ 23 ~.
Worthington ........................ t3'~.

· ·Ihla Fae Kimes, 85, of Athens, died Sunday, January 31, 1999 at her resi·
iience:.
.
She was born.October 27, 1913 in Orange Township, daughter of the late
Dana Emmitt and Mabel Clair Ridenour Swartz .
She owned and ope,rated the /iillcrest Nursing Home from 1947 until it
stock reports are the t0:30
closed. She cl&gt;nstructed and operated Kimes Convalescent_Center from 1966 a.m. quotes provided by Advest
until present.
. ol Gallipolis.
She was a member o,f the Independent Order of the Oddfellows, Rebekah 1!.==-'-========;;;;!1
. l.&lt;x!ge 553, The Plains; Daughters of American Council 323, Chester; the
,Q[der of. the Eastern Star, Athens Chapter 175; Ohio Association for Healthcare Quality; and she was president of Division 14 of the Licensed Practical
Nurse Association of Ohio Inc.
·
'·
She was a member of the National Association of Practical Nurses Education a~d Service Inc., a n\ember of the Alfred United Methodist Church, and
was on the advisory board of the Hocking College School of Practical Nursing.
.
'
She is survived by a sister and brother-in·law, Virgie Swartz and Paul Garrett liluckley of Coolville; three nieces, Patricia Swartz Sherman and Janice
. Swartz Trent; both of Columbus, and Teresa Buckley Davis of Fort My~rs ,
f)Qrilla;..f~neph_ews, Larry _and Stev.e_S.wartz~bo.th..oLColumbus, Richard
Buckley of Proctorville, and Richard Dale and Ray Crou!!Cr, both of CaliforPATCH ADAMS (PG13}
1:10 lt130 DAILY
nia; a sister-in-law, Betty 'Crouser of California; 12 grand-nieces and grandMAl1HlEIIAl/IUN 1:101 ·
nephews; a special friend and family, Jerry and Becky Robertson and family,
Dennis, Laura, Bryan and Steve; and all her ·residents and staff whom she
always called family.
·
She was preceded in death by her husband, Harold R. Kimes, in 1967; a
brother, James RObert Swartz; and two nephews, James Ronald Swartz and Ira
"Skippy" Crouser.
' , .
Services will be held Wednesday, February 3, 1999 at 1 p.m. in the Hugh·
es•Moquin Funeral Home in Athens, with Pas,tor Sharon Hausman officiating.
Burial will be in the West Union SJreet Cemetery, Athens. Friends may call at
the funeral home Tuesday,' February 2, 1!199 from 2-4 and 6·9 p.m., and
MIGHlY JOE YOUNO (PQ}
7:0QDAIL.Y
Wednesday, February 3, 19!19, one hour prior to services at the funeral home.
1:ClO I S::lit
In lieu of flowers, contributions may ~made to the lhla Fae Kimes Memo·
rial Scholarship Fund, P.O. Box 958, Athens: Ohio 45701.

-·-·-

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Stocks

heliropter amOOiance.

Stata of Oh•o: O.p.utrn~nt of lnJuf11nc., Cartlte.i. ol

or lht Stile ot Ohkl. hert t1t certlftll lhlt AIIIRICAN

ICDNOMY INIURANCI CO
co~led

of

lrM!ienaoollt, IN, hat

-Mih the IIWI of .,;, llllt epplic.lbll to it and it
during ltlt cum~nt yur to lllllliiCt In thlt tWit itt
appropr1ata but1ntu ol' inturanct Ita "nand tl QOndlllon i1
ahO'olll't by ill annual slltan. nt to hiYI been u foRo'M on
Dtctmber 31, tlilll7: AdfnllttCI 111111 $_1~84 ,750 ,IIe3 ;
Liabilitill $1 ,025 041,601; Surp!UI $4~ 71.1111,322' lr.tOml
6A4 ,3M ,10t : ~Jcpandlluru S~5 . t2 7 , hG : Ntl 111111
431il,709,322: Capitll lS,OOO.OOO In witntll -Mla,.of, I

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Sports

The Daily Sentinel
.

.

·

Monday, February 1., 1999

Page4

beat Falcons 34·19;
Win Super Bowl title again

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sllntlnel Correspondent
The Eastern Eagles utilized a IQ-.2
t!un right before the half to break a
19·19 tie en route to defeating the
South Gallia Rebels 61-49 Saturday
night in boys' non-league basketball
action at Eastern High School.
, Jeremy Casto had a seven-point
first quarter to pace Eastern (9-4)
early, although,all five starters got on
the board as Eastern raced to a 15-8
l~ad . Josh Will also picked up the
pace and Joe Brown also had four
points in the drive.
· In the last two minutes of the
frame , Robbie Rush, who had eight
first quarter points for the Rebels (Ill), cut the lead to ·15-1 0. Then
Jeremy Davis hit a pair of free
thro\lfs to tighten the score at 15- 12 .
: Matt Bess and Rufus Stanley hit
buckets to open up the second round
and give South Gallia the lead 16-15,
16c;n Brown retaliated to put EHS on
tQp. Bess htt another goal to put the
Rebels on top,then Brown came back
with a follow- up jumper to tie at the
4: 15 mark. Eastern's defense ptck~d
up the pace and South Gallia scored
just two the remainder of the half.
Eastern put I 0 more points on the
board as Casto, Brown, Wi II, and
. Eric Smith each hit field goals and
Steve Weeks swished a pair offree
throws in a good effort off the bench.
· Jeremy Davis hit a pair of free
throws with four seconds left to
tighten the score at 29-21.
Eastern picked up the pace even
more in the third round, taking away
Rush's inside game and the inside

Steelers won the 1979 and '80 Super Bowls.
No team has won three in a row. Nor has any quarterback. Sound tempting, John?
"Defi nitely, this will go into the thinking and !J!row a
kink into the thinkmg on what I decide to do next year,''
Elway said. " But I am going to enjoy this win, because
that is what I have been working for. That is what I came
back for."
While Elway has erased all those painful losses with •
his consecutive ~ hampionships, Dan Reeves remains
winless as a head coach in the l;lig game. He has been to
an incredible nine, but the only victories came as a player or assistant coach in Dallas . That was before he took
over the Broncos and failed in the 1987, '88 and '90
games. And long before he guided Atlanta 's amazing
turnaround from 3- 13 two years ago 10 the franchise's
· first Super Bowl -appearance.
The Falcons' sloppy showi ng Sunday should not
obliterate their achievements this seaso n. That is surely
realized by Reeves, whQ underwent quadruple bypass
surgery in December, but returned to lead the team to
playoff wins o.ver San francisco and Minnesota.
•" :rhey all hurt/ ' he said. " It 's a huge disappointment.
You get to thfs g~me for one reason, to wi n. I told them
two weeks ·~go ·how difficult it was going to be and how
bad you are going to feel if.you lose it.
SACKED- Atlanta quamr)lack Chris•Chandler second quarter of Sunday night's Super Bowl In
"They have an awful lot of thing s to be proud of. (left) goes to the turf'lifter being wrapped up by Miami, where the Broncos' 34-19 victory gave·
we·v~ come an awful long ways."
Denver defensive tackle Maa Tanuvaea (98) In the them their second straight Super Bowl title. (AP)
They forced themselves to have to go much too far
against much too good a team on Sunday. The falcons, steep. What it comes dowh io is everyone bemg account- matters. Can Elway ignore that and head lhto Eetirement?·
," !am not going to cross that bridge for a while," he .
who led the league with a plus-20 turnover dtfferential , able for the things out on the field that they do. "
What the Broncos do is beat you in ev~ry element that. said. "There is nothing that feels better than this."
yielded three interceptions, two by Darrien Oordcm, and
..
a fumble . They also saw usually reliable Morten
Andersen miss a 26-yard field goal and Jamal Anderson,
. 11
'
l l
'
'
"
the powerhouse runner, fall short on a fourth-and-one .
Safety Eugene Robinson, arrested Saturday on a
I
charge of soliciting an underccl!ler police officer for sex,
The Denver Broncos won their second consecutive
was beaten on Smith's 80-yard bomb and had a rough
Super Bowl Sunday vs. the Atlanta Falcons. . ·
·
night.
Quarterback
John
Elway
le,d
the
way
in
what
could
be
All of that is devastating against an attack like
his last NFL game. A look at Super Bowl XXXIII ;
Denver's, which got 102 yards rushing from league
MVP Terrell Davis; did not allow Elway to be sacked he barely was threatened; and enjoyed a vintage performance from the quarterback, who went 18-for-29 for 336
yards.
"[ feel pretty great right now,'' Elway said. " It was
unbelievable (to be the MVP) . It's something that I had
,
never done before, and winning the award definitely hit
S UPER NUMBERS
•
'
my heart."
While Elway was at the heart of Denver 's big proJohn Elway
Denver.
Atlanta
duction, Davts didn't even get into the end zone. When
457
337
Total
Yarda
Pass yards: 336
----the Broncos get close to the goal line, they almost always
Attempts:
29
Rushing
hand him the ball; he had 21 toucltdowns rushing this
Completions: 18
season.
336
Paealng
206
H.....,.,._.,...,,_H.......,-..,.....,,
..............
..
Touchdowns: 1
The 2,000-yard rusher watched as fullback Howard
1
Turnovers 4
Griffith scored on two one-yard plunges.
0
Sacks Allowed 2
. MVP- The Denver Broncos' John Elway points
"When you have a guy like Terrell in the backfield, it
t~ well-wishers after holding the Lombardi Trophy makes it easier to catch them off guard," said Griffith,
00:46
Po~aesalon 28:37
alOft following the Broncos' 34-19 victory over who scored grand total of no touchdowns on the ground
,Time
Atlanta in the SuJ:18t Bowl Sunday nlght.(AP)
this season. "Me getting the ball, (the odds) were pretty
: :MIAMI (AP) - It was the perfect ending for John
Elway. Now, is it the end?
. : Elway's not say mg. But if you judge by his performance in Sunday's Super Bowl, hanging around might
si:em like a great tdea.
'
: "I am just thrilled to death that we won," Elway said
after winning his second straight NFL title - and the
Super Bowl MVP award, to boot- in ·a 34-19 ~ictory
o\ler the Atlanta Falcons. "I am thrilled to death ,to be a
P&lt;ttl of this team, thrilled to death I can help them win .
• "This is what we play for. To be able to do it two
years in a row is unbelievable."
: Which makes some people think it would be unbel~vable for Elway to walk away. After 16 seasons, at age
3;_8, to say he 's had enough would be understandable. To
leave a " dynasty," as receiver Rod Smith dubbed the
Broncos, could be too challenging for even Elway.
: "If he leaves, God bless him, " said 'Smith, who
caught an 80-yard touchdown pass and had five receptions for 152 yards. " I'm all for it, if that's what he
decides. But hopefully he will be back, because we need
1\im. We want to make this a habit. "
: Losing the Super Bowl was Denver 's habit for too
leng. The Broncos were 0-4 before they upset Green Bay
last year. With Sunday's romp, they became · the first
AFC team to win consecutive leagJe crowns since the

Broncos r~peat ·

..

Eastern girls roll
t;y Southern 66-32

NCAA Division I
men's scores

.•

Saturday's acdon

--

n.

Eastern was led by senior Valerie
Karr who had 16 pomts and 12
rebounds, While senior guard Juli
Hayman had a nice floor game ani,!
12, poi nts, Amber Baker had I 0.
Southet n was led by junior guard
Kim !hie's nin e points.
Southet n took the upper hand in
the first quarter, defendmg the
Eastern offense to perfection and
double teaming on Karr in the post.
The firsc period was tied three times
and saw six lead changes. Sarah
Brauer had four ~ig points in the run,
and Heather Oatley also had four.
Kim Sayre hit a three pointer in the
waning seconds to' give Southern a
12-10 lead at the buzzer.
_For Eastern seniors Angi Wolfe,
Brt~nnon·, and Karr each tallied two
w5ile Amber Baker hit a key jumper
anl,l two free throws . Southern went
up- 14-10 on a pair of Oatley free
thiow s, but the momentum soon
changed when Eastern junior Becky
Davis came off the bench . .
:Davis hit a three pointer for a 1413: tally, then after a Brauer goal
sparked a 15-2 Eastern run with a
pa[r of free throws and another key
go~l. Juli Hayman htt tWo big shots

R,o atilr

·Reedsvi lle Eastern ( 10-2) earned 10) on Feb. I S at 8 p.m .
top seed m the Southeast SectiOnal
Four sectio nal winners advance to
Division IV girls basketball tourna- the dtstrict a t Rio Grande .
ment draw held Sunday
Should Eastern win . they wou ld
Eastern, as a re sult of a bye . wil l face the Lucasville number four seed
be in the tournament fin als for the bracket winner, then in the finals face
eighth year m .a row, contmumg a the Alexander number three seed or
rich traditi on in the prog rap1 . Eastern the Valley number two seed.
wi ll play the winner of the South
Gall ia (3- 11 )-Symmes Valley (3- 11 )
--:· .•
game on Saturday, Feb. 20 at I p.m. , I .
at Alexander High School
Football
· Number four seed Waterford (8-6)
MIAMI "lAP)
Lawrence
plays number five seed Beaver Taylor, the troubled former New
Eastern for ·the sectional crown on York Giants linebacker, was eleqted
Thursday, Feb. 18. Number two seed . to the Pro Footba ll Ha ll of F~me"bn
Oak Hill (1 1-5) faces the winner of Saturday.
the Southern (4- 12)-Miller (2 - 11 )
Taylor was a first-ballot choice,
game on Feb. 20 at 2: 45. Southern voted into the Canton , Oh10 . shr:lne
plays Miller February 17 at 8 p m.
along wnh . Enc Dtc kerson, Tom
Number three seed South Webster Mack, Ozztc Newsome and old( 11 :4) faces Ross-Southeastern (6- timer Billy Shaw.

S

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ports br1e S

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The new Robert Trent Jon01 Golf Trail
Academy of Golf i~ a CompuSport
Teaching Center, offering golf
instruction that is unique to
Alabama and found few other
places in the world.

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nght before your eyes and, most
importantly, understa nd why the
improvement i~ made.
The teaching system has been used to
help golfers of all skill levels, from
beginners to PCA Tour Players.
The list of golfers who have used
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Nic klaus,
Greg
Norman,
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Pay ne
Stewart,

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.imposed on top
of you for an
immediate comparison qf your

Akron 94. Cent Miclugan 86
BaH St 61. Bowli ng Green 60
Butler 57 . Loyola Ill. 52
Ctnctnnati 73, Ala -U1rm1 ngham 60
Cleveland St 72. W15 -M•I waukee 6K
Creighton 9~ . N Iow a 81
Dayton 91 . Xa\ller 86
0eUOI I 67 W1s ·Green Day 54
E"ansvtlle 76 Drake 69
lnd1ana St. 6 1, Bradley 48
lowa81 . M1cht gan 68
Iowa St 52, Nebraska 47
Kansas 77, Colorado 74
Kent 60. N llltnois 54
Michtgan St. 65, North weslcrn 48
Miuouri 71. Ba)·lor 'i5
Mi ssoun-Kansas Ctty 7l . Ch1tnp.o St 67
Notre Dt~me 81. Pro,·ide net: 61
Ohio St 64. Illinois 6 1
OHIO !16. Mnrshall7.'
S lllinou 60. 11 \ mm~ St. 49
Saint Louu 48. MarqtM!IIe 46·DT
Toledo 6 ~ . E M1chigan 55
w lllmois 79, Oral Robens 7.l
W M1chignn 82. Buff~l o 6'i
Wn;constn 61. Mtnne~ota 50
Wright St. 68. 111.-Ch tcngo bl
- Youngstown S t~&amp;.l. lnd .:&amp;lr ·1ndp ls 42

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The entire lesion is recorded on a takehorQe video ~ with Jive inatructor ~mments. As each Ieason 'pro·
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Arkansas St 70 W Kent uc ky bJ
Oklahomn 72. Texa~ Tc~ h 54
Oklahoma St 66 Te:J.a~ A&amp;M fll
PratrLe Vtew -8.'. Tell as Sou t~:ct n 7l
R• cc: 76. Te:J.a.&gt; Chrl31illn 69
SW Texas 75. ~·kN ee sc: St 67
Sam Huu ~ t on St 88 NE l ..o ut ~111n11 7 ~
' Sooth Ronda 82. Hou ston 67
Te tu n -Pan American 86. Den1'e1 h7
Tens-San t\ntomo 60. N onh wc~ • c • n St 51
rulsa SH, Southern Meth 82
Ucah 64 T~ ,.a~· EII' a so ~4
F~rWnt

Anzona 91 California 74
Cal Poly·SLO l 01. Cal St +"ul krwn HI
Frt:~ no St 9J. Haw;ul 66
Gonlaga 78, San Fra nc t ~ c o ' 2
Idaho H. B o i ~ S1. 72
Momana St. 87. Moman•• 1-'
N AI L/Ona69. ldilhO St .6 1

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Alubuma A&amp;M 95, Mtss. Valley St 80
Alabama St. 69, Ark.-Pmt: Bluff 55
Alcorn St 75. Jack5bn S1 fiZ
Appalachtan S1 67, Georgta So1.1them :'o6
Auburn 85. Georg•a 74
Austill Peay 92 Tennessee St 8J
B e thu~- Cook.man 86. N Carohna A&amp;T 55
Ca mpbt:II 66, Jacksonv• lle 61
Ce nt Aorida 82. Jacksonville S1 64
Charleston Southem 98, Coa.stal Carolina
10T
Chnttanoogn 70. UNC-Greensboro 5~
Coli of Charleston 84. Davidson RO
DePaul 87. Tulane 79
Duke 80. N Carolina St. 61
E. Kentucky 75. E Illinois 73
E. Tennessee St 74. W. Carolma 66
E..1.s1 Carolma 61 Wilham &amp; Mtuy 56
Elon 7J , H1gh Pomt 6S ·
Furman 84, VMI ·51
George M[I~On 82, James Mad1son 78
G~orgta St 76. Sletson 61
Hampaon 71. Delaware St. ~7
Kentucky 86. LSU 62
Lou t ~ ian a Tech 87. Ra lnternauonal68
Md.-Ea5tem Shore 99, Norft.Jik St. 89
Memphis 74. Souther n Miss. 60
Ml ssiUif'IPI 89 Arkansas S l
M1 uiss1ppt St 66. Honda 63
Morgan St. 84, Howard 62
Murray St 81. M1ddle Tenneuee 6 1
N C 0 111rlotte 58. Louis.v1 lle 49
N.C -Wt1 1111 ngton 7.l Rt chmond 65
Nicholls St. 79, Texas-Arhnglon 68
Old Domimon 76, Va Co mmonwealth 72
Radford 86. Ubeny 60
S Carohna St 64, Rorida A&amp;M 59
SE Louistana BJ , Slephen F Austi n 12
SE Mtssouri 72. Morehead St 60
SW Loutstann 78. New Orleans 65
Santford 80, Flonda Atlanuc 73
South Carol tM 69. Vanderbilt 57
Southern U 82. Gr11mbhng St 60
Tennessee 100, Alabama 64
Tcnnessee Tech 75, Tenn -Manin .59
The C.ladel 62, WoffOrd 60
Troy St. 76. Ce nte n ;~ry 67
Vtrgtnia67 , Florida St 60
Winthrop 86. N.C Ashc=\'tlle 79

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East

Army
Lehigh 69
Can1sms 75, lona 73
Cent Conneclicut St. 81;Wagner 69
Colgwe 7 1, Holy Cross 59
Connecticut 78, St John 's 74
Dartmouth 70, Brown 46
Drexel 82, Maine 73
Huvard 76, Yale S8
Hofstra 77, New Hampshire 64
Md.·Balumore County 68, Q1.11nn1piac ~ 8
Mount St Mary 's, Md 50, F&amp;J.rletgh Dickinson
Penn 67. Columbia 51
Piusburgh 60. Mianu 54
Pnnceton 56. Cornell 46
Rhode Island 72, Duquesne 56
Sier~a 84, Marist 78
Sl. BonDventure 74, Temple .59
St. Fra~;t c t s , N Y. 8.5, S(. FranciS, Pa. 84
St Perer's 106. Niagara 103·20T
Svrncuse 76 Seton Hall 62
Vi ll anoYa 9J, Georgetown 90-20T

LF

duate with

1

Eastern, So~thern girls receive
Division IV sectional tourney dates

TRENT

47

'

'·

. '

..

LAUNCHES SHOT - Eastern's Jeremy Casto (20) launches a
shot from the baseline as South Gallla's Robbie Rush jln front of
TO THE HOOP - Meigs guard Becky Smith gets past Belpre•.:
Casto), Justin Cook (43, with only the 3 showing) and Ru us Stanley Jennifer Mollohan on her way to the basket during Saturday's Ohlcf
(far right) watch during Saturday night's game at Eastern Hlgh Division game et Meigs High School, where the Marauders claim8Jt:l
School," where the Eagles won 61-49 to sweep the season series. a 60.36 victory. (Sentlnal photo by Dave Harris)
: :~
(Photo by Scott Wolfe)
2-,618=14, Josh Will' 4-0-7/8=15, Joe
. Dillon 1-0=2, Steve Weeks 0-04/4=4, Matt Bissell 1-0-0=2. Totals:
19-2-17120=61
South Gallia: Rufus Stanley 3-1-

.

212=11, Justin Cook 1-0-0=2, J.R.
Booth 2-0-0=4, Robbie , Rush 8-00=16 , Matt Bess 1-2-4/4=12, Jeremy
Davis 0-0-417=4 . Totals: 19-217120=49

9~ ·

;-1

Meigs girls cruise :§
past Belpre 6Q-36 j
' :."'i

Nevada 95, Nonh Teus 87-0T
New Muico 78, Brigham Young 68

Basketball

.

'

game of Justin Cook. Th~ Rebels
made numerous turnovers "trying to
pound the ball outside and was also
. hard pressed to get a good shot
around the perimeter. Will and
Brown had good third periods as the
score stood 44-32. South Gallia once
cut·the lead to nine, but that's as close
as they came. The final stood 61-49.
Eastern was led by Joe Brown
with 18 points, Jeremy Casto 14,
Josh Will 15, Eric Smith six, Steve
Weeks four, and Matt Bissell and Joe
Dillon two each. South Gallia was
led by Robbie Rush with 16, Matt"
Bess 12, and Rufus St'anley with U .
Eastern hit 21-54 overall on 2-10
three-pointers, I 9 -44 two-pointers
and was 17-20 at th! line with 33
rebounds (Smith 9, Will 8). Eastern
had six steals, te n turnovers, 14
assists (Bissell 4 , Casto 5) and 14
fouls.
South Gallia was 18-3 1 overall
with 3-12 three-pointers, 15-29 twopointers , and 10-13 free throws and
25 rebounds (Rush 6). SG had four
steals, 16 turnovers , three assists, and
21 fouls .
·
Eastern won the reserve game 66291ed by Chad Nelson with 14, Josh
Kehl_II , Corey Young seven, Garrett
Karr seven, and Bradley Brannon
seven. Josh Dury had ·II for South
Gallia.
Eastern goes- to Vinton · County
Tuesday.
Ouarter l21lll
Eastern ............. .. .... 15-14- 15- 17=61
South Galli a ............. 12-9-11-17=49
Eastern: Joe Brown 9-0-0= 18,
Eric Smith 3-0-0=6, Jeremy Casto I·

Scoreboard

a

Division.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

SQuth Gallia 61-49

By BARRY WILNER .

in the stretch , Brannon scored a cou-•
pie off back door cuts, and sopho- '
more Pani elle Spencer hit three,
Tornado · ktlhng buckets from the'
n ght ·corner for a 31-20 lead at the 1
half.
I
Eastern zo ned and trapped
Southern to death in the third frame , I
taking away Southern's pe netration •1
and the dean pass into the passing I
lan es The end result also took away
Southern's outside game, as frustra-1
tion led to bad passes and poor SHS
shot selection. Karr -dominated the I
offense and the boards m the second '
half as she tallied 14 of her 16 pomts
in the stretch. Southern had only
seve n second half rebounds .
After three rounds, tlje score was
52-20 , then ended up 66-32.
Southern was 11-43 overall . 2-8
on three-pointers, 9-35 on twc&gt;-pomters and had 22 rebounds (Sayre 6.,
Brauer 6, Dailey 5). Southern had 7
steals (Sayre/Lawson 2); four assists .
(Sayre 2), a nd 22 foul s.
There was no reserve game.
Quarter .111mb
Eastern ... ............... IQ-.2 1-2 1-14=66
Southern ......... ........... ,! 2-8-0-12=32 I
Eastern: Jessica Brannon 4-01/3=9, Valerie Karr 8-0-0=16, Juhl
Hayman 4-0-4/5= 12, Angi Wolfe 10-0=2, Amber Bake r 3-0-414=10,
Damelle Spencer 4-0-0=8 , Becky
Davis 0-1 -212=5, Juli Bailey 1-il0=2 , Kri sten Chevalier 1-Q-.0=2.
Totalo: 26-1-11/14=66
,
Southern: Kim Sayre 2-1-0=7,
Kim lhle 2-1-2/2=9, Sarah Brauer 30-0=6, Heather Dailey 2-0-4/6=8 ,
Tammy Fryar 0-0-214=2. Totals: 92·8-12=3:1

•

Eastern boys beat

~roncos

By·SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
A thtrd quarter shut-out allowed
the Eastern Eagles to post a convincmg 66-32 come-from-behind victory
over the Southern Tornadoes
Saturday aftern oon in Southern's
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium in
Racine.
' Southern IS 4- 12 o verall and
Eastern isnow 10-2, 8-2 atop the TriValley
Conference
Hocking

Pomeroy •.Middleport, Ohio

Johnstown Northridge 92, Marion Catholic 70
Avon Lake 44, Westlake 30
Jonathan Alder 69. Wellington SS
•
Barberton ~9. Cuyahoga Falls 3S
Oregon St 48, Oregon 45
Kahda 26, Uipstc 24
Bascom Hoprwe ll-Loudon 72, Sylvania
Kansu Lakota 81 , New Riegel63
Northview 52
Pac:11ic 70, long Beach St 59
Peppcrdine 58, St. Mary's, Cal. 44
Kenton 56, BeUefo ntaine 52
Batavia 5 .~. Mariemont 48
Kings Mills Kings !14, Goshen .51
Beaumont 63, Maple Hts. 53
Ponland St 76. E. Washington 69
San Diego 76. Loyola Marymount 67
KJnlond 65. Chagrin FaJis 5~
Bea"er Eastern 67. Symmes Valley 45
Lakewood 39, Watk.ins Memoru1l 29
Beavercreek 78, Spnngfield N 20
San Jose St 82, San D.ego St 57
Lancaster 64, Walnut Ridge 45
Bedford 53. Cle Hay 43
·
Santa Clara 64, Portland 62
Stanford 73, Arizooa S1. 63
Lebanon 70, ·Lnde Miami .55
Bedford Chane! 68, Cleveland Cent. Cath. 3~
UC Santa Barblll'a 76, UC Irvine 61
Licking Heights 89, Hamilton Township S6
Bellbrook 57. Dayton Chrisria.n 47
UNLV 80, Colorado St 77
Lima Ct:nt Cath. 64, Van Wert ~2
Be\01t West Branch 51, Canfield 52
,Bcrlin Hiland 75, Newcomerstown 44
Lima Se nior ~9., Princeton.SB
Utah St 611' New Me:dco St 54
Bethel 46, Troy Christ1lm 45
ValpiU'aiso 62, S. Utah 52
Lima Shawnee 61. Oreenvdl e 56
Bexley 66, Madison Plains 36
Washington St 95, Southern Ca186
Lima Temple Christian 6.5, Vanlue 46
Wyoming 82, Au Force 61
Lansly. West Va 72. Woodsfield Monroe Centrlll " " Bluffton 99, Speocerville ~7
Boardman 60, Pa1~ sv111e Rtventde 29
55
Lo\leland 68, Clermont NE' 54
Botkins 60, Jackson Center 50
Sunday's action
Brookville .55, Eaton 38
Manchester 87, Ponsm~uth Clay 78
Eut
Mansfield Senior 72. Westerv•lle Nonh 65
Buckeye l...otal 72. Manins Ferry 34
Bucknell 56, Navy 51
Manrua Crestwood 65. Garreusvtlle 40
Buckeye Valley 47. Col. DeSales 41
Dartmouth 61 , Yale 59
Calvary Christt an ( KY ) 41 , Landmark Christian
Manon River Valley 79, Man on Plea1ant 57
Delaware 78. Boston U 60
Mason 54, Cm Turpm 40
28
George Was.hmgton 76, Fordham 63
Canal Wtnchester D , Bloom-Carroll 28
Massillon Washington 70, Hudson 54
Harvard 80, Brown 62
Canton MCKinley 53, Cleveland Ht5. 36
McDonald 64. Akron Springfield 50
Indiana 98, Penn S1. 9S-20T
Mentor Chr. 53. Zanesville Chr. J_
,
CantonS 68, Fairless 41
Manhattan 19, Rider 68
Middletown 70, Cln Sycamore 59
Canton Timken 56, Alliance Marhngton 22
Northeastern 71 , Towson 70
M1lbl!ry La~ ]8, Eastwood 2B
Cardmgton 71. Centerburg 69
Rutgen 87, Weu Virg1nia 61
Minster 55, Jackson Center 47
.- CilfTOII ~3. Springboro 42
Vtrmont 80, Hartford 69
Mo~jador~ 82, Wi ndham 75
Catrolllon ~ 9. Eduon 26
N. Adams 65, Lynchburg Clay 60
Cary 52, l'osloria St. Wende lin 50
South
Cas talia Margareua 108, Port Clinton 34
N. Olms1ed J8, F:lirvlew 3.5-0T
North Carolina 75. Georgia Tech 66
Napoleon 68. Perrysburg 65
Cednrville -54. Yellow Spnngs 48
V1rgm1a Tech 87, La Salle 69
Nnuonal Tl !ll i 7]; lW1n Valley South OB
Cent erville 77, Spg S .U
Wa~e Foresf R5 Mr~ryland 72
Chagnn Falls 40, Newbury 29
Nelsonvi lle-York 67, Hemlock Mtll er 60-0T
Cheiapeak.e 4J, R1ver Valley 40
New Carli sle Tecumseh 55, Northmon1.5P-01'
Midwed
New Pans Nat'l Trai l 7J. Twin Valley S9u1h 68
Cin Chri sti iln 4J, Xema Christmn ~5
SW Mi ssaun St. 89, Wichita St 58
Ctn . Hills Chr. Acad. 41 , Cin . Madeira l l
New Rtchmond 50. Georgetown 47
Newnrk 69 Northland 67
C1n McN tcholas 84. Anderson 50
Southwut
N~wark Catholic 40, Col Academy J9
Cm M1 Notre Dame 49, Cln. ~t Unula 44
Ark ·Little Rock 66. Soulh Alabama 5l
C1n Ursuli ne 51 , Ollford Talawanda 4
Newcomerstown 69, R1dge'!"ood 59
Texas 76, Mauachuseus 65
Cle St Joseph Academy S7, Cle. Marshall 29
Newton Falls 68. Miner:ll R1dg~ 55
Clyde 51. St. Mary 's 49
Northridge 92. Mario n Catholic 70
Far Wtsl
Col. Academy 6~. John stown 49
Norwood 45. Rt:Ddmg ·'6
W:.shmg1on 9.'1, UCLA BJ
Oakwood 6.~ . Greenan ]9
Co l Hartley 72. Col Ready S2
Col School for G1rls "48, Marnnatha Christian J9
Olmsted Falls 55 . Rocky RIVer 48
Col Whnehall S6. Col. Tn:t: t.Jf lJfe 40
Orange 70, Newbury 50
Col World Harvest 62. Col. East moor 52
OITVIIIe 77 . Cle East 58
Columbia 50. Oberltn 46
Ottawa-Glandorf 71. Ltbcrty Benton 46
Saturday's action
Col umbu s Academy 64. Johnslown-~,onroe 49
Ottov1llt: 56. L1ma Perry l9
Akron Hobtln 80 , Cle Ct:nl Calh 74
Pni nesville Rivetstde 69. Eus tl;~ke North 55
Day East 71. Co'Vmgton 41
Amherst 68. Bay Villag~ Bay 50
Defiance ."iJ. Hamlt:r Pa(rtck Hemy 47
Paim Valley 47. Weslfa ll 46
Ashland 70. Tiflin Columb•an 52
Delawnre 46, Walkins Memorial 31
Parkway ~9 . Lmcoln\liew 57· 20T
B:.uvm 62. Blanchem:r 55
Delaware Hayes 46, Watkins Memonnl J l
Pauldmg 62. Bryan 44 '
Beaver Eastern 84, Symmes Volley 74
Delphos St John s 6J. L1ma Bath 49
Perry 'i 4. Burton Berk ~ h1 re 5 l
Bellaire 68. Stellbenvllle Cent Cath 52
E Cleveland Show 80. Warren S\ tile 40
Pi keton ·~ Clullt cothe Zcme Tm ce 51
Bellevue 64 Clyde 62
East Chnton 6J, Wnynesvtlle 56
Plymouth 77. Monroeville 58
Berhn Hiland 80. Jeweu-S c10 .17
Ea!ti &lt;Jke North 57. Willoughby South 50
Potm Pleasant. West Va. 54. M ~lfll!'tW 52
Bethei7J . Nonhndge 71
Elyrin 74. Lakewood .l 9
Port slllOuth 61. Lew1s County. Ky 59
BetheFTate 63 . Cm Manemom ~ I
Elyna Mtdvlew 52. St. Augusu ne 26
Raceland. K y 74 Ironton St Jose= ph 71
Bexley 7:\ Ut1ca 52
E\lt:rgreen 63. North Central 51
Ravenna Southeasl1!4. Mogadore Fteld ~R
Bloom-Carroll 76 He: nth 4 l
Reeds~ ill e Eastem6 1. St.Juth Galli.1 49
Fairfield Umon 4Z. Cl rdev1 llt: ' '
Rlufflon 8.\ Upper Scioto Valley 52
Federal Hocking 62 Jkmlock M1lle r 27
Revere 75, N Roya hon 64
Bridgeport 7~ . Cameron. Wes1 Va. 67
F1nd lay 66. Fostona 42
Ridgemont 102. Mechanicsburg 78
Bn stolv•lle Bnsto16J. Fatrpon Harbor,48
Fm ne ~ 1 ow n ~ 2. Ross .-9
Rock Htll 55 . Oi\k 1·1111 40
Crooke. West Va 6 7. Cardinal Mooney 57
Fon Jenmngs 61. Crest view 50
Russell. Ky 8.l lronton 5.\ ·
Cad1 z 5~ . Bellm rt" St John! 51
Frunkll n 47. M1d Ft:nv.ttk 44-0T
Salem Ncinhwest 61. Nunun 44
C;~mb ridge
Coshocton 29
' Freeporl Like land l.l , Stms burg ~l -OT
Sandu sky 72. Oregon Clay 59
Cannl W1nchester 7 5, Amanda-Ciea rcreek 42
Garfield Hts 77, Parma Nonnandy J6
Snndusky Perkins 75 . Norwalk 65
Ca nton Central Catholi c 52, Uhnchsville
Georgetown 58, Clermont NE 57
Sh11ker Ht s 75, Cle Hts 55
Claymont 51
Grandvtew 5J Londo n ~7
Shenandoah 8.5. Bishop Donahue, We ~t Va 5b
Canton McKinley 79, WIH'I'rn Hard1ng 77
Granv1lle
80, I.Jckmg Hc1ghu .W
Smi1hville
49,
Tuslaw
41
Celina 56, Coldwater 47
G re~:nev i ew 47 , Blandlestt:r ~4
Sou th Charleston Southeastern 41. Yell ow
Ches htre River Valley 71 Jackson 45
Greenfield McClain 55 , Frank!on &lt;\denn 54
Spnngs W
Ctn. Country Day S7. Mumu Val 40
Hann1bal Rivi r 65, Woodsfield Monroe Central
South Webs1er 80, Portsmouth East 50
C.n Harmon 71 , Lawrenceburg 56
i2
Southmgton 57, Ledgemonl 17
C111 Loveland 68, Cletmont Nonheastern 54
J~am~on 6ft. Wnlnut H11ls ~7
SpnngbmtJ 80, W~t Cunollto1t 46
Cin. Mason 54, Turpin 40
Hathaway Brow n 49, Laurel 27
St. Clairsvtlle 75, Barnesville .52
Cm. Norwood 4S. Ctn. Reading 36
Helllh 86, Berne Umon 45
St Mary 's 69. P1qua 40
C1n Roger Bacon 60, Cm N Co llege Htll 42
Henry 48. Lima Cathohc Central 44
St Marys 69, Piqun 40
Cih Wes 1~m Hills 86. Amehn 79
Htll sboro 58, Chalh'Cothe 49
Stebbms 62, Mtd. Fenwick 49
Cle. lknedictine 64, Akron Buchtel 40
Holgate 66, linora J~
Stryker 48. Fatrview 44
Cle. Hts. Lutheran East 79. Bloomfield 64
How land 50, Niles 42
Sycamore Mohn.,..k 51 . Bu ckeye Central 40
Clc Lutheran West 88. Brooklyn 86
Hubbard 54. Newton Falls 36
Tallmadge
67,
Ak'ron
Spnngfield
6
~
Ck Orange 70. Newbury 50 ·
Hudson 48, Stow 27
,
Temple
Chr.
63,
S
tal
e
lm
~
Chr
57
Cle. St Ignatius 9~. Mentor 66
Hughe~ 51, WithrOw 45
Tippecanoe 46. Covmgwn 42
Climon-Massie 49, Carlisle 40
Huron 46., Sandusky Pak.i ns 45
Tal. Ltbbey 82. Del . Mtcb SW 61
Co lonel Crawford 53, Morral Ridgedale ~0
Indian Valley 41 . Dover 38
Tol M au~ VOJlley 65. Bettsvtlle 56
Co l Independence 74, Dayton Jdft:non 52
Jomestown Greene"iew 47, Blaochester \4
Tul Scott ~ 2 . Day Patterson 47
Co l Linden 52. Worthington Kilbourne 49
' JI':If~uon Area 57. Madt.ron 27
Tol St. John s 74 Ann Arbor. MICh P•oneer 44
Conneaut .56. Ashtabu la Harbor 50
Johnstown Northndge ~8, Da nville: J l
Tal
Start
6
~.
Loram
Adm
iral
King
.
1
8
Contme ntal4 1. De lphos St. John's 39
Jonathan Alder 5.' , H:nruhon Township 52
Tol Woodward 12. Lornin SouthvieY. 59
Cortland Maplt:wood 67. Ashtabula Sts John
Kent Roosevelt 57. RaYenna 42
Tuscarawas Cent Cath 62 Malvern 6Q
and Paul 50
Kentnn 64. Belll':fonta1ne 52
Umontown Lake 7J Clc Lmcoln· West 48
Cresl\'iew 57, Amwerp 49
Kmgs Mills Km g~ 44 Tu rpm J8
Upper Sandusky 56. Marmn Elgin 54
Cuyahoga H1s. 67. Elyria Open Door S ~
Lakesidt: DanbU ry 62, Maumee Valley ~7
Va lley V1ew 7 ~ . Lemon Monroe 57
Day. Ounbor 64, Tol St Francts 63-0T
Lakev iew 6.5 , Brookfield ~9
Vermilion 69. Manon Hardtng 60
Delnware Omst1an S9, Lake Rtdge Acnckmy 58
Lakota
Ea st 49. Lokota West J6
V
ersadle
'
72.
Ru
~s•a
52
,Dover 87, Byesville Meadowbrook '45
Lebanon 76, Lovl':lnnd "5
Watnn Champion 6J, Root!town 46
Dublin Coffman 60, Upper Arlmgton 57
L.tbeny 41. Badger ~ 5
Washtngt on Court House 72, Miami Trace 56
Dubhn Scioto 53, ChilliCothe 4l
Liberty Ce nter 42. Tol. Notre Dame 37-0T
Waterford 44 8 ~1pr t 4]
EMt Lm:rpool 77. Pittsburgh West111ghousc 48
Ltbeny Un ion 67. Mtllersport .n
Wau seon 60. Oeftance linorn 49
Elida 15. S1. Henry 67
L1ma Pen y 54. Vanlue :tO •
Wnver1 y 56. Green!idd McClmn .'i2
El mwood 51, Ol$ego 45
Lmcolnview 74 New Knm.v11\e 4J
Waynesvtlle 62, Dude 47
El!Chd 6J, Lakewood St Edward 56
Ltllle MIDIIIL 80. Goshen 47
Wes t Geauga 5.l Mayfield 51
Farrell 59. H1ckory 42
Lognn Elm 55, Tt: ays Valley .&amp;9
West Jeffe rson 78. London 6J
Fayt:ttt: 80 Montpelier 60
Loram Brookside 5~ . Elyna Open Door 22
Westt:m HJI I5 86. Amt:lin 79
rm dla.,v 70 Bedford. Mtch 52
Loram Catholi c 69. Henneua f'ire lands 42
Woo1ern Latham 49, Pol1$nKJuth Notre Dmnr 48
Ftsher Catholic 75 Btrnt: Um on 5J
Lyndhunl Brush 64. Twinsburg 47
Westlake 58. A\'{li'J lnke 47
.
. .. Fon Jennings 60. N~w Knox villt: 47
Mansfield Sr S4 P.b1:1on Harding 40
Wi ckliffe 56. Orwell Grand Valk!y 44
1 fOft Recovery 59. Waynt= Trace 57
Mnnlu~ Crestwood 78, Sueetsboro l-1
Willard n Milail Ed1 snn 6J
Fostona 60. Old Fort 50
Mapleto n ~6 . Collins Western Reserve J5
Wilmington 62. Bellbrook. 54
Franklin Furn ;~ce Green W Slt:wnrt ~rn l
Mm'1etla 76. Athens 7.l-OT
Wood
more
68
Oak
!lm1:mr
55
·0
f
Hurking 40
Mari Dn Catholic-57. Wellington ~0
Wooster6."i M a~~1 llu n Ja.:kson 60- 20 T
Franklin Monroe: 6J .-Arcailum ~ ~ Mt~ri on Local 51 Elida 46
World 1-tan ·e st ~~ . Tnmblc 46
Fmnkhn - M o n~ 6l Arcanum 55
M.1yf1 dd 57. Solon 19
Worth mgton Chns twn 70. Grandv1e w 55
r rcmont Ro s ~'80 . Tol Wh1tmL-r ~9
M c Conn e l ~\' 1 lk Morgan 47. Drtsdcn Tn-Vallt:y
·Xenia Chmtt nn 44 lroy Clms ltan 41
Fremont St J(}sCph 78. St Mnry ~ 66
.1 7
Z1neS\"1lle 89 Col South bb
Galhpoh s ~l . Vmcenl W;un n 49
McDonald ~8. Vienna Mtuhews 54-0T
Gme s Mdb Hawken 61 Aurora ."i5
Meadowbrook ~8 . Urichsville Claym om .' 8
Genoa 92 Nonhwood 4(1
Mcdill&lt;! Hit:hlnnd 67. Grctn J~
Green 62. Mo sstllon Perry 56
Md~s 60. Belpre J6
Hnm1l1on 68. Lakota E ~'iO
Mentor Lake Cnth ~ I. Parma Pndun Jtl
Saturday's action
Hardm Northern !i7 Ad a ~6
M1nmi V:.lley 27 Mid Mochson 16
Akron Cm~nt ry 66 Ken more ·' ~
Hamson 71 , Ulwrt"nccburtt :'i b
Muklleburg Hts. M1dpark 50 Deren ~ .1
Akron Ellel f)6 i\k•on El m ~ 4~
Hcbtl,'ln· Lakewood .19 W11tknn Mcmonal 29
Mtlan Edtson 59. O:.k Harbor 41
Akrun Hoban 61. M.t on Rud\tel ~ 7
H1ghltmd 70 Ct:nll:rburg ~8
MtllcrC1ty 57 Kalldn 41
Akron St Vincent -Sl Mt1ry :'i 5, Cle CVCA 45
H111Hlrd Dorby ."i l . Westland .t5
Mmstcr S4 Frankli n-Monroe ·' 6
AlOOny A l e ~a [l de r 76. V1 nto n County !2
H•lhurd Oovtdson 49. Vondolia Bulle r 48·0 T
M o ~ t\dore 57 Akro n Firestone ~5
Al ~ n East ~ 8 . H:'lrdin Northern .' 7
Hilltop ."i4. Lihm )' Ct:nter 52
Montpelier 60. Fnyeue 21
Amanda-Ciearcreek
69.
Untolo
52
Hudson WRA 47. Peppt:r P1ke Unwenity 42 ·
MotTol Ridgedale 64 Manon Ri" er Valle y 46
66.
Bn)'
V•
llngc
Bor
~b
Amhmt
HUron 17. Mansfield M11d1son 67
N. O l m~ ted 47, FaHv iew 4 ~
Antwerp 78 A Re( O\Cry 47
ln dmn Valley 57. M ~p.no h a Sandy Valley 'i l
N R.ov~ lto n 68. N Rtd~e\llle 4\
Archbold 59. Hilhop ·' 4
Jackson Mtlton 66. N. Ltma S Range M-OT
New Bren-.en 70, L1ma Sha.wnt( -1(]
As hl-:~bul&gt;t Edgewood ~9 . Chardt.Jn ..n
Jd h:uo n 72. Ashtabul01 Edgewood .59
New Ptnl:nlc lph1a ~l Cambridge 40
Attica Seneca Ea st 6.\ . New L ond o n~ -Jcflcnon Area 72. Ashtabu ln. Edgewood ."i9
Ne11 R • ~ hmo nd ~ Cin Cou ntr)' Ony ~ 4
1\\'on 72. Nonh Coas t Ch1 I
J ero me~ ville Hill sdalt: 62 lll 01c k Rl \'t:r 4.l

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

·so.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent ·
Mci.gs jumped out to a 13-6 lead
after the first period and coasted to a
60-36 win over Belpre in girls' TriValley Conference basketball action
Saturday afternoon at Meigs High
School.
Jennifer Shrimp! in paced Meigs
(ll-2 overall &amp; 9- 1 in the Ohio
Division) in the opening period with
six points as Meigs took the 13-6
lead. In the second period, the
Golden Eagles (7-7 &amp; 7-3) stayed in
the contest until a technical on coach
Dave Wilcoxen late in the half.
Shrimplin added six more pomts m
the period and Meigs went into the
locker room with a 30-19 lead.
The second half was all maroon
and gold Mejgs behmd Amber
Vining (six), t;lecky Smith (5) and
Tricia Davis (4) outscored Belpre 16II and took a 46-30 lead into the
final eight mtnutes.
It was more of the same tn the
final penod as Me igs outscored the
· Golden Eagles 14-6 to post the 24
point win .
Meigs had three girl s in double
figures led by Davis with 13,
Shrimplin added 12 and Vtping II.
Other Marauder scorers were Brooke
Williams with nine, Srullh seven,
Tonya Miller four, Shannon Price
and Tracy Coffey two each.
Meigs hit a blistering 23 of 30

from two point range for 77%, b~t:
managed only one of 12 from three.:
point range for 57%. Metgs went to·•
the line 16 times and hit II for 68%~
The Marauders pulled down 21.;
rebounds with DaviS grabbing silt"',
and Shrimplin five. Meigs had 17~
turnovers, 15 assist led by S~jth.~
with·five, and 13 steals led by Vmtng,
andSmithwiththreeeach.
. : ,~
Afton Thornhill was the onlY.:
Belpre player in double fig4res with-,
10. No other Belpre statistics wer~
available.
Meigs won the reserve game 34_-_
26. Amy Hysell led Meigs with 17.• :
Angie Hinzey scored eight f~r_,
Belpre.
.
Meigs will travel to Nelsonvtllr.
on Monday before a rematch witlt.
Belpre on Thursday at Belpre.
. ..
Quarter Mab
Belpre .... ................. 6-13- I 1 -6=36 ~,
Mei gs .................... 13-17- 16-14=6Q. ·~
Belpre: Michelle West 1-2-0=8 ,
Mi chele Bt own 3-0-2=8 , Cheri'-.
· Thomas 2-0-0=4 , Rac helle Morey 1,:,,:;
O, i=3. Afton Thornhtll. 5-0-0= 10,
Jennifer Mollohan 0-1-0=3 . Totals: -- .
12-3·3=36
Meigs: Amber Vining 5-0- 1= 11 , ..
Brooke Williams 4-0- 1=9, Jenmfer •.
Shrimplin 4-0-4= 12, Becky Smith ~- :::'
1-0=7 , Tricia Davis 5-0-3=1J._ ,,
Shannon Price 1-0-0 =2, Tony a
Miller I -0-2=4, Tracy Coffey 1-0-, ,
0=2. Totals: 23-1-11=60
..

OU beats Marshall 86-73
ATHENS , Ohio (AP) - Shaun
Stonerook and LaDrell Whitehead
scored 24 points apiece and Ohio
Umversity took control early 10 beat
Marshall 86-73 Saturday mght.
Stonerook, a transfer from Ohio
State , hit S-of-14 shots from the field
mcludmg half of hi s four three-point
attempts and added 12 rebo un ds
Whitehead, a transfer from Wyoming
who is second in the Mid-American
Conference in sconng. scored six
points as the Bobcats ran off 18 of the
game's first 24 points and never
trailed.

'

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'

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'-

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.!

949-2210 (RACINE)
992-6333 (SYRACUSE)

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0

Ohio (14-6 overall , 9-3' MAC) : '
built a 46 -28 lead at halftime while" '
shooting 55 percent from the fi eld.'
The Thul\denng Herd never got clos- .
er than 13 after the brea k.
· ' ··
· Sanjay Ade ll added 20 points and
Patrick Flomo scored 10 points on a '•
perfect shooti~g ni ght. Flomo hit all ·,
three of hi s shot s from the field
all four of hi s free throws.
·
Travis Young scored 20 points, · •
J.R . VanHoose 15 and Cornelius·· '
Jackson had I0 for Marsliall (I 1-9, 6" ·
6 MAC).
. .:

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

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: Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

~

Monday,, February 1, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

R·ecent deaths from news and entertainment
•

•

I

I

'

The film spawned a popular phenomen11n that
: By The Aleoclated Prell
stretched over two decades, with actors portraying the Mirra Komarovsky
Yemon Berg 3d
characters as victims of society in a series of films.
NEW YORK (AP)- Mirra Komarovsky, a sociolo, NEW YORK (AP) -Vernon &amp;erg 3d, an artist who
1 1e group went on to make several films for Warner gist and expert on education, family and gender, !lied
also was one of the first Naval officers to stand up to the
Bros., including "Angels with Dirty Faces," "They Saturday. She was 93.
military after he was discharged for ~ing homosexual, MUisE. Godwin Jr.
Ms. Komarovsky was cred' ed with initiating the
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Mills J?. Godwin Jr., an Made Me a Criminal" and "Crime School" with stars
• 4icd Wednesday of complications from AIDS. He was
like
James
Cagney,
Humphrey
Bogart
and
John
modem
analysis of gender ro s with her 1953 book
Virginia
governor
who
played
a
influential
two-tenn
: 4:7.
Garfield.
"Women~in
the Modem W d: Their Education and
· , Berg was given an " other than honorable" discharge crucial early role in the state's fierce resistance to school
The actors moved to Universal and changed their Their Dilemmas."
from th; Navy as an en~ign in 1976 after an investiga- desegregation, died Saturday. He was 84. ·
In 1970, Komarovsky ired after 32 years on the
(Jodwin, 'elected for his first term as governor as a name to "The East Side Kids" in the 1940s. Hall aod '
tion revealed he was in a gay relationship.
· He sued, and the armed forces later adopted a policy Democrat in 1965 and as a Republican in 1973, went to original costar Leo Gorcey made 49 comedy films as Samard College faculty, Sh etumed to the scbool in
"
1978 as chairwoman of its women's studies program. o
iJf generally granting honorable discharges to hOmosex- the House of Delegates in 1948, moved to the Virginia "The Bowery Boys" after World War II.
Hall
later
appeared
in
the
fllms
"A
Walk
in
the
Sun"
In 1991, she received the Distinguished Career
Senate
four
years
later,
and
remained
there
until
his
• \13ls.
in
1945,
"Gentle
Giant"
in
1967,
"Herbie
Rides
Again"
Award
of the American Sociological Association, of
In 1978, a federal appeals court ruled Berg and anoth- . 1961 election as lieutenant governor, 1 !
In the Senate, Godwin was ~ principal architect of in 1974 and "The Escape Artist" in 1982. He starred as which she had been made the first female president in
· cr officer were unfairly discharged, but didn't reinstate
.
· them. His discharge was upgraded to honorable as a Virginia's so-called "massiv_e resistance" policy to producer Jesse Laske in Ken Russell's "Valentino" in 1973.
Her other hooks include "The Unemployed Man and
school integration. At one point, he declared there would 1977.
result of the legal action.
His Family" (1940) and "Women ifl. COllege: Shaping
, Berg, a graduate of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, be "no compromise on our principle of total segregation
New Feminine ldentities" '(1985).
went on to become a prolific artist who documented life in Virginia. "
Wllllam E. Huat
The state abandoned massive resistance in 1959.
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Dr. WiUiam E, Hunt, a
~ith AIDS in sclilptures, paintings, photographs and carGodwin later said that Virginia needed time to "adjust to retired neurosurgeon at Ohio State University who Leon1rd C. Lewin
'. toonlike drawings.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) - Leonard C. Lewin,
devised a widely used sys!em for the clinical evaluation
what inevitably had to happen."
. ltkhanl Harold Freyberg
Godwin's first term as governor was highlighted by of brain aneurysms, died Tuesday of heart problems. He whose Vietnam-era satire on the dangers of peace resurfaced three decades later. to fuel the conspiracy theorie·s
NEW YORK (AP)- Dr. Richard Harold Freyberg, a the creation of Vuginia's system of two-year communi- was 77.
Hunt was best known for the Hunt-Hess classifica- of paramilitary groups, died Thursday. He was 82.
leading rheumatologist who helped organize the Arthri- ty colleges and implementation of the ~te sales tax.
His 1967 satire, "Report From Iron Mountai11," was
tis Foundation, died Jan. 23 at his Florida home. He was
Upset by the liberal drift of the national Democratic tion for weakened blood vessels in the brain, called
94.
party,: he was persuaded to join the GOP and ran for intracranial aneurysms. Named also after a resident who the supposed report of a top-secret study group that conworked with him, Dr. Robert Hess, it is the most widely cluded world peace would be catastrophic to society.
While serving as director of the divjsion of rheumat- another term in 1973 as a· Republican.
Debate immediately raged about whether it was real,
used classification of aneurysms,
ic diseases at Manhattan's Hospital for Special Surgery,
From
1973
to
1988
he
was
the
principal
investigator
and
the parody hit The New 'York Ttmes' best-seller list
Freyberg also was chief of the arthritis clinic at New Hontz Hall
in
1968.
'
LOS ANGElES (AP) - Huntz Hall, star of more and director of the national Spinal Cord Injury Research
York Hospital.
.
In 1972, Lewin confessed that he had concocted the
A 1948 meeting with colleagues and Floyd Odium, than 100 "Bowery Boys" and "Dead End Kids" films in Center based at Ohio State.
He was on the American Board of Neurological report.
an industrialist afflicted with rheumatoid arthritis, led to the 1930s through the 1950s, died Saturday. He was 78.
"Report from Iron Mountain" went out of print in
Hall was one of a group of young actors who came to Surgery, and was a faculty member at Ohio State Unithe fourtding of the Arthritis Foundation, which was
launched with a $500,000 fund-raiser led by Bob Hope. Hollywood to make a film version of the Sidney Kings- versity for 37 years, retiring as 'a professor emeritus of 1980, but a few years ago Lewin discovered that a white
The foundation moved to Atlanta in 1977 and today ley play "Dead End" in 1937, two years after he starred surgery in 1991. Hunt was the chairman of its dil!ision supremacist group in Arkansas was offering copies of
of neurological surgery from 1964 to 1989.
the book as a genuine government report.
operates with a $110 million· budget and 700,000 mem- in the play on Broadway.

:victims of AIDS-tainted hemophilia Human AIDS traced to chimps il1 Africa
Air Force primate center in New Mexico 14 years ago.
By DANIEL
HANEY
The chimp version of the AIDS virus is called
AP Medical Editor
medicine still fighting for justice
CHICAGO (AP)- Mystery solved: The AIDS virus S!Vcpz. It is extremely rare among chimps in U.S, labs,
Q,

~ Have

we wanted to provide some fmancial relief without them
having to sue," Esnouf said.
..
But in New Jersey, the quest for justice drags on as
the manufacturers try to get the courts to declare unconstitutional a 1996law erasing their first line of defense:
the two-year statute of limitations for filing product liability claims.
The manufacturers argue that the taw is unconstitutional because it narrowly targets them, not allowing
lawsuits against hospitals or other nonprofit agencies
that handled blood-clotting products,
Superior Court Judge Douglas Wolfson in New
Brunswick, who oversees all hemophilia-AIDS litigation in the state, ruled the law constitutional in September 1997 when the issue was first raised in a victim's
trial. The companies have appealed the ruling.
"We feel confident that the legislation will be
upheld," said Elena Bostick, executive director of the
Hemophilia Association of New Jersey, which lobbied
for the law.
Nationwide, about 200 lawsuits .are still pending,
including t\"O dozen in New Jersey that should benefit
frqm the M!IY 1996 "revival law," and 60 in New York
State, which enacted a copycat law in December 1997
·
·
that the industry plans to fight.
While the ·companies also are appealing one $2 million jury verdict against t~em, most victims whose cases
came to trial couldn't win because they did not sue within two years of learning they were infected with HIVsomething many wanted to keep secret.
"We couldn't tell anybOdy because we were so afraid
for" the boys, recalled Mrs. Kelly. "We found out the
same day that they were both infected."
Rich Vogel, who learned clotting products infected
him with HIV in 1985, said that suing the manufacturers
is "the only way they're going to learn a lesson, from a
big monetary loss."
While the 42-;year-old freelance photographer has so
far remained healthy, the infection cost him his first mar· riage and a chance for children. He fears the slightest
sign of illness might be the onset of AIDS.
"It's almost like (the manufacturers) didn't learn anything from the '80s,'' he said. "We don't want this to
happen again."

came from chimps.
,
Experts have wondered about the origin of HIV ever
since the epidemic emerged almost rwo decades ago.
The uncertainty launched a variety of conspiracy theories, some suggesting that AIDS-was a government plot,
created purposely to kilL
Now, research presented at an AIDS conference Sunday provides what scientists say is convincing proof to
the contrary: The virus got its start in the forests of
Africa when humans caught it from chimpanzees. In
fact, they say the virus has spread at least three times
from chimps to people.
"This is absolutely evidence to put (conspiracy theories) to rest," Dr. Constance Benson of the University of
Colorado said.
Even scientists who scorned those theories have been
unsure where AIDS actually arose. Some suspected
chimps, while others thought monkeys or other primates
could have been the source.
,
The latest discovery was made by Dr. Beatrice Hahn
of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who
tracked HIV's ancestor to a virus that has long infected
one of the four subspecies of chimp that live in Africa.
She said, "We conclude that this subspecies is the
source of the human AIDS virus,'' which now infects
about 35 million people worldwide.
Experts believe that HIV - the virus that causes
AIDS - is a recent affliction of people. At last year's
Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Dr. David Ho and others from the Aaron Diamond
AIDS Research Center at Rockefeller University presented evidence that the virus probably first infected
humans in the 1940s or early '50s.
At the opening of this year's meeting, Hahn made the
case that this event almost certainly occurred in west
equatorial Africa. It could have happened when someone was bitten by a chimp, or a hunter was exposed to
contaminated blood while field dressing an animaL
Hahn said her team nailed down the connection by
analyzing frozen tissue saved from a chimp named Marilyn that died from complications of childbirth at a U.S.

finalists, will be packaged as a virtual book on the Diet Coke Web site.
"The beverage industry is a very
crowded field and every year the big
beverage companies plan a vast array
of promotions," said John Sieber,
editor lind publisher of the trade publication Beverage Digest. "Any promotion that stands· out and draws •
atteotion 'to the brand by definition is

contributing an originil story for an
Absolut vodka promotion, the writing world has a long history with the
world of advertisement. A major reason newspapers started book review
sections, at the i1JrD of the century,
was to create space for publishing
ads.
But the Diet Coke campaign is an
especially blunt presentation of the
printed word as commerce. And not
all publishing houses think that's a
good idea.
"We tend to be a bit traditional,''
said Laurie Brown, vice president of
marketing for Farrar, Straus &amp;
Giroux, whose writers include
National Book Award winners Alice
McDermott and Edward Ball. "It
will always depend on the book and
the author, but generally the house
thinks of itself in a slightly dilferent
way and probably wouldn't partici-

NEW YORK (AP) -In an era of
, mega-bookstores and mega-market.ing, when \"any complain the written
:word is being peddled like a soft
:drink, The Coca-Cola Company and
•several publishers have decided to do
:just that.
: Starting today, purchasers of 12d 24-packs of Diet Coke and caf- successful."
·
:fem ee Diet Coke will find colorTodd Putman, a Coca-Cola execu,, ;rul book ets enc d1 a xed like a tive, said research indicates Diet
;.straw on a juice box ' ch will con- Coke drinkers may be better educat' tain excerpts from a new work by a ed and more affluent than other soft
~popular writer, among them Elmore drink consumers. They also tended to
: Leonard, Barbara Taylor Bradford read marc books.
"Across the board, our consumers
: and Lisa Scouoline.
~
With 40-45 million such packages said they liked empowerment stories,
•planned, that means an enormous underdog stories. They also were
looking for thrilling stories and mys; potentia! readership.
-' "I think it's terrific, It's a very cre- teries," said Putman, managing
~ative idea," said Scottoline, author of director for carbonated soft drinks.
: "Mistaken Identity" and other legal
From Walt Whitman endorsing his pate."
None of the writers involved with
:thrillers. " I love being in grocery own brand of cigars to John Irving
•stores. I want to be in gas stations.
the Diet Coke campaign are being
: My goal as an author is to be read."
paid- although Bradford said she
will do some promotion, And,
: " I think all of us around New
unlike Irving, none have tailored
~ York City publishing brightened up
&gt;when we heard about this," said
their work for the product.
!Cathy Hemming, executive vice
Philip Levine, a Pulitzer
; president and publisher of HarperPrize-winning poet, likens the
•Colhns. " It's unusual to have
Diet Coke booklets to the poc:ms~f!'f­
- the
. opportunity to reach that many conthat appear on subway
in
: sumers.,
New York City: Not the most dignified way to get your work read,
' Diet Coke drinkers also will
; have the chance to submit 500but better than not being rea~t
all.
; word essays, fact or fiction, on
"I don't think I'd have any
• "Living Life to the Fullest." The
objeCtions to having my work
: contest, which ends March 12,
used by Diet Coke," Levine
: offers an all-expense paid trip for
mused. "But I would also expect
· two to New York City, "the chance
some
remuneration. They must
' to live the life of a best-selling
......
..
~
make
hundreds
of millions of dol-,
author." '
Iars and I make a pittance.
: The visit will include a tour of
They're using it to promote their
: HarperCollins and meetings with
rotten drink, so maybe I can get
: profcssiOIIal e\litors to discuss the
some
subsistence from them to
; winner 's writing. The winning
promote
my rotten career."
· story, along with those of the 24

.

perhaps because these animals are removed from the
wilds as babies and so are never exposed to the virus
sexually. Until recently, it hap been isolated only three
times.
Hahn's discovery of the fourth began when a colleague cleaning out a lab freezer ran across Marilyn's
specimens and sent them to her. The researchers performed various kinds of genetic analyses that were
unavailable at the time the chimp died.
Marilyn's tissue was found to harbor SIVcpz. The
Alabama team used molecular analysis techniques to
study Marilyn's virus plus the other three examples discovered earlier.
They found that three of the four ,are about as genetically similar to the human AIDS virus as t!ley are to each
other. They include one gene, called vpu, that is also part
of HIV but not the other AIDS-like viruses that infect
monkeys.
~
All three samples were found to have come from Pan
troglodytes troglodytes, which is one of the four subspecies of chimp in Africa, These animals lives in
Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Congo and Central
African Republic, the region where AIDS is thought to
have started.
The fourth sample was much less like HIV. and it
came from another -subspecies of chiff!p that .is native to
East Africa.
There are three major groups of HIV in people, codenamed M, N and 0. M is the variety that has spread
around the world, while N and 0 are seen only in westcentral Africa.
The natural habitat of Pan troglodytes troglodytes
perfectly overlaps the area where these three groups
were first recognized. The researchers believe that ·each
group arose from a separate chimp-to-human !ransmission of SlYcpz.
Hahn said a French team, headed by Dr. Phillippe
Mauclere of the· Pasteur Institute, recently found three
!DOre chimps infected with S!Vcpz at a game sanctuary
in Cameroon. One sample has been genetically analyzed, and it too closely resembles HIV.

a Coke and a ••• novel?

:By
HILLEL tTAUE
· Associated Press Writer

·'1

,j

'

bers,
Freyberg co~wrote "The History of Rheumatology,"
published in 1985.

By UNDA A. JOHNSON
Anoclated Presa Writer
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Bobby Kelly died in his
' father's arms, unable to bounce back again from the
·AIDS virus he contracted from medication meant to stop
'internal bleeding caused by his hemophilia.
Newly graduated from Seton Hall University, Bobby
was just 22 when he succumbed to an AIDS-related
infection in October 1992,
1\vo years later, Elaine and Robert Kelly buried their
;oldest son, Dennis, a 35-year-old warehouse manager
with a wife and 5-year-old boy, killed by AIDS con-tracted from tainted clotting medicine.
~ "Our lives are destroyed now," Mrs. Kelly said last
week. "They could never give us enough money to
nlake up for the toss."
, • But the Kellys and other hemop~iliacs and their families do want financial compensation- enough to persuade blood product makers to ensure that there's never
another catastrophe like the one that left half the country's 16,000 hemophiliacs HIV-infected in the early
1980s and gradually killed most of them.
:
Hemophilia is a painful, usually . hereditary disorder
· in which sporadic bleeding episodes destroy joints and
damage organs.
Victims and relatives claim' the four drug comp\ nies
: that sold freeze-dried clotting proteins - derived from
: the blood of thousands of paid donors from prisons and
·U.S. and Haitian slums - delayed taking expensive
steps to purify that blood in order to keep their profits
high.
The companies have denieq that, triggering years of
court battle~. Many families sought justice, but faced
such difficult legal hurdles that they dropped their lawsuits and accepted a $100,000 settlement offer, relellsing
the four drug companies from any future claims.
Nationwide, 5,836 of the 6,136 eligible patients or
their families had been paid as of December, with the
- rest delayed by red tape, said Guy Esnouf, spokesman
:tor the four manufacturers: Alpha Therapeutics of Los
:Angeles; Armour Pharmaceutical of Collegeville, Pa.;
; Baxter International of' Deerfield, tiL, and Bayer Inc. of
Pittsburgh.
"These people had been injured by our products and

,,

account., I had exactl~ $300 •in· the
This is what can happen when a date, I have bought 14 house plan the pantry or the dining room It is
sugar bowL
" · wife is a world class dumbbell and a books and have concluded that most very inconvement, and ,also unsafe,
Ann
UnknQwn to me, ,our, $600,000 , trusting r moron with a brainless architects must be inen. No woman to have to dodge foot traffic while
house was listed in h1s gtrlfnend's lawyer : ,who may have been in would put the bedrooms and bath- you cook
Landers
1~7. L.•l'ultek:s limc:s
name. Due to a huge error on my cahoots with her husband's girl- rooms at one end of the house and
3. We need m the house storage
S~ ndtUle ancl CrUlMS
allort)ey's
.pan,
there
;.vas
nothing
I
friend.
SyndiUW:
the laundry room at the other end, space for paper goods, books, vacucould do about it. My husband's
I hope every w1fe who reads this attached to th~ garage.
um cleaners, brooms, fans, serving
$100,000 bonus from work was will learn something from what I
If I may speak to all the architects platters, foldtng chatrs and card
Dear Ann Landers: Recently, deferred until after the divorce. ·I have written. I sure wish I had read out there, I suggest you cons1der tables, seasonal decorations. large
you printed a letter from a woman was ordered by the court to pay such a letter. a few years ago. - NO these things when you draw up your roasting pans, exercise equ1pment,
whose husband had moved out, bag $10,000 to "equalize" the d1vorce NAME, NO CITY, . NO STATE ne~t house plan :
,
winter blankets, eJ&lt;tt a pillows and so
and baggage, when she wasn't when he had thousands h1dden AND NO BRAINS
I. The laundry room should be on
home. Welcome to the club.
away
,
DEAR NO NAME: You did next to the bathrooms and near the
4. We need more one story house
After 30 years of what I thought
I had no money for "asset search- more good today than you will ever bedrooms so we don 't have to catry plans. Many older people who can
was a pretty good marriage, my hus- mg" and d1dn't know where to look. know. Because you wrote, thou- 40 pound loads 100 yards to and afford large, even luxunous, homes
band vanished. He didn't leave a It was an incredible mess, and I paid sands of w1ves• are &gt;going . to make from the laundry. Don't put it next to do not want to chmb sta1rs.
note. What he left was unbeltevable a big pnce for my ignorance_,
sure ' what happened to you w1ll not the garage unless the t!edrooms and
I know I can htre an architect to
chaos and a wife who didn't know
Within a , year, my ~~,hu~band : happen to them. My thanks as well baths are on the second floor and draw my house plans to specificawhat hit her Of course, there was died unexpecteoly. )lis .wife go( it '· as my condolences,,
there 1s a laundry chute.
tion, but maybe this will help ottier
another Woman, and she went With aU. Our children got nothing, She, • Dear -Alin Landers: When we
· 2. A kttchen is not a h1ghway. women down the line. - FUTURE
h1m. Before he left (with all my immediately sold the home and retire, my husband and I plan to Nobody should have to go lhrough BUILDER IN LOUISIANA
good Jewelry), he emptied our bank promptly disappear~d.
","
bt:ttld a new, house in the country To the kitchen to get anywhere except
DEAR LOUISIANA: I hope all

By Alden ,Waltt, Pres!dent ·
"Meigs CountY Humane Society

NEW YORK (AP)- Success for actors is
nice, but it comes with a h~avy cost, says
•
Lin&lt;fa Harn1lton.
You have been feeding your dog,
"Never create a legend, my dear, because
even increasin~ the amount that you
either you have to live up to, it or you have , ' provide. ·But" the dog never gams
to hve it down," Hamilton tells the Fe!;&gt;. 6 ,
and in fact, appears to be
edition of TV Guide.
.,weight. You may have
"~co&lt;ltipg,'' lhlit 1s, the dogs
Either way, she said, the a~or neve:- will",
Ham1lton's past roles mc,IUde Catherine •• rubs
hind · end on the ground.Chandler, tragic heroine of the television
Your pet may be listless an&lt;,! with no
series "Beauty and the Beast," and Sarah
gloss to the coat. There is defimtely
Hamilton
Connor, the pumped-up mother in the "T~r., somethmg wrong. That somethmg is
mmator" f1lms.
very likely intestinal parasi!es,
Of the recent breakup of her marriage to ''Titanic" &lt;tirector James
which can cause. vqmiting, diarrhea,
Cameron, Hamilton said, "There's no contact between us a[ all, imd
depr~sston, a cough, a pot-belly
I'm extremely well and happy w1th my life. I am not destroyed. Actuappea~ance, malnutrition and
ally, I was delivered by God when he left,"
'
evep,death. ,
Have your pet checked at least
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Nick
once a year for parasttes and more
Nolte says there's good reason for the si~ ~ , · ' often ,if ~e~she ,is young, or if you
year delay between when he got the
, nqtic~ any o( these slgns. If you
screenplay for "Affliction," and when' he'
haye JU~t gotten the dog - whether
stepped 10 front uf the camera to film it'.
f,rom th~ ~u~d, a breeder, a friend,
Nolte tells the PhilaBelpliia
or acquired as a stray - immediate·
Inquirer in a story published Sunday that
, ly take t~e dog in to be checked for
he wasn't mature enough for the role In
worms. Remember that young pets
the early 1990s.
'
are more severely affected by
"There were areas about the vio. mtestinal pari1$ites. But for dogs of
lence that I d1dn't get 10 the largest
any age, there are h1ghly effective
N~:tlle
, sense," says Nolte, who in the film pl~ys
.treatments .for intestmal parasites
Wade Whitehouse, a bearhkc man burdened with the legacy of famionce your pet is d1agnosed as having
ly violence and alcohol abuse
them : ll'itestmal parasites are insidi"I understood 1t from the dysfunctional family (standpoint)," he
ous, because they can lead to maJor
says. "But I really didn't understand violence as ' part of us·from a· • ':deWhtati.o'n_an'd:d~ath --'-" and 'they're
genetic standpotnt ... that there is thiS vmlent energy that ex1sts tn us.
bften invis1bt~. Som~ o(these para"I needed to understand that we are the k1ller - that's part of us, "
sites arc visible to the naked eye,
he says.
although they are not consistently
shed 10to the feces. Some tapeBEAVER CREEK, Colo. (AP) -Though he hung up his skis
worms shed packages (segments) of
years ago, former President Gerald Ford is glad to be back tn ColC'ggs consistently into the feces and
orado mmgltng w1th friends.
D)~Y b,e spotted by the owner But
Ford, 85, and his w1fe, Betty, 80, were among the dign1tanes who
not always.
opened the 1999 World Alpme Sk1 Chatnpwnships Saturday night at
Forget the over-the -counter
VaiL
.
.
wormers, wh1ch are often meffecttve ·
"Of course, we don't stay out as late as we used to," he said. " But
we enjoy people, and there are a lot of mce people here ··
The Fords live seven months a year m ~ancho Mirage, Calif, ahd
Blue Moon rose
five months at Beaver Creek in a house they bUtlt almost 20 years ago.
Sunday, and another
Ford IS called ''The First Cit&gt;zcn of the Yatl Valley," a tttle that
clearly'g1ves him pleasure.
coming in March
"Betty and I don't exploit it, of course, but we feel good that's the
MIAMI (AP) -A blue moon
way people thtnk about us," he sa1d.
rose Sunday, but don't worry if
you missed it .
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Pans Barclay .says hts goal is to succeed
,.
· A.n~ther· blue moon· w1ll be
as a television show creator. Not a gay show creatoO:or black show :~ming
10'n the n1ght of March 3I.
creator- JUSt a powerful creator.
·'
'' . 1 :
,,
'
:r.wo;:blue
,rfioons in one year
Barclay, who won an Emmy last year for dtrecting (\BC's "NY'PD '
h~a_ppefts tv~ry 20 to 40 ye_ars.
Blue," is one of only a handful of black televtslon dir'1tors A~d &lt;hc:s,
,
;T)Je
last time was in_ 1961.
gay, making h1m even more of an anomaly.
; .
·'
.
'
Tne
te~m ' " blue moon" refers
"There are no black people who are m a postttOn to really run a ,
to
the
occasional
occurrence or
show of influence in the coun\ry," said Barclay, m,,Sunday's E9~ ' .
·lwo,._:
f
ull,
moons
in the same
Angeles Tomes. "OK, maybe Oprah Wmfrey"
month,
·
which
usually
happens
He says being open about his sexuality has ui'timatcw been a good
roughly one() · every 33 months.
decision.
·
,;f'
~·. 1.
The
last {ult' 'i'oon was Jan ; 2.
"I realized I _empowered people to make it an ls.sue by n'Qt'j;,.!l_tfg1
' · '; .'1\h~ · , s.licond , full mopn in a
open about it," Barclay says. Now, he says, he tncs to encourilge
mohth' '1s1 catle'd a bluq moon,
actors and behmd-the-scenes people "to be o~rr about 11 and no! be, .
regardles,~ o.f tint. '.
so cagey."
· • . . "'~

"

9

'

" •

I

The Daily Sentinel
• Sweethearts ·• Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents •
Teachers • Babysitters • Friends
Anyone who would appreciate a thoughtful word from you! ·
All Valentine Hearh will be pubU.hed In the February 12th
lnue-lit a coot ·of only $6.001

~~~~ ~--··-·-----~~~~~~~~~~~________ _.,.._ ...
Print your meaAgt In
the heart and mall along
wtth $8.00 to: ~

The Dally Sentinel
"Valentine Hurte"
·111 Court Street
, ,Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Must be received by Feb. 5

Umlt 20 wordel

ROME (AP) - Pope John Paul
II IS about to star m a mus1c v1deo.
Sony Classical and Vatican Radio
announced plans th&gt;S week for the
v1deo, saying it will be a spm-off of
their jomt release of a music CD
tttled "Abba Pater "
"Abba Pater" w1ll combme
"original compositiOns and arrangements of contemporary musical
forms Wtlh hve recordmgs of Pope
John Paul II deltvenng prayers,
homilies and chants ·in f1vc - lan-guages," Sony satd Abba IS AramaIC for father, pater 1s father in Lattn.
The CD is sched uled for release
In March, ahead of Holy Week and
Easter, accordtng to the Vat1can
Thc_Qapa!Ecordtnli = in.1_ati_n_,
Italian , French~ Engltsh and Spamsh
were chosen f10m Yat1can
- Radio 's exhaustive arc hives of John
Paul's 20-year papacy
One of the II tracks, whtch features the pope chanting the Pater
Noster (Our Father); also will be
produced as a mustc v1deo. The
video wtll be featured on the Vatican
Web site and Sony Classical's Web
s1te.
The CD co ver w1ll be adomed
with pictures of the pope. accordmg
to Sony. It w1ll come wtth a booklet
that includes the papal texts and
more pictures of the pope.

and simply prolong the anima't's of adult wonns. There ts a high mormlsery. Forget your grandfather's tality in young animals, and less m
old "remedies." Effecuve treatment adults.
Hookworms are
for all ktnds of wonns must be pre- highly contagious and also transmltscnbed by your veterinanan. Most ted by the oral fecal route, although
parasites are diagnosed by a micro- they can be transmitted through the
scopic fecal examtnatton using van- ' . skin by contact with contaminated
ous chemicals to help concentrate feces, such as througr the feet of
the population of parasite eggs. The pups and humans. Common sympvet will pr~spribe treatment depend- toms arc diarrhea, us~ally with
ing on the' type of parasite causing ' blood, weakness, anem1a, and occathe problejT!. '(r.tonthly . heartworm sionally coughmg.' It can be fatal tn
preventtve ,-,d~ugs ,,contain gQod
you~g animals and sometimes tn
wormers and effectively worm the adults if left untreated for long peridog each month.) '
ods, Puppy hookworm can be proIntestinal parasites are normally a fouQd and r:equirc strong supporttve
result of an unclean area. If pets , care. Severe hookwonn mfection
have access ' to their own or other can cause marked anemta, mtennltdogs' feces , the chance for parasites tent bloody diarrhea, dull, dry hair
is great. If the pets' area is kept coat, and weight loss. Young and
clean, especially at a young age, the adults dogs who are lmmuno-comchance of parasites is reduced. What ' promised or suffer with another disare the worst offenders? Common ~ase are most at risk. Wh1p wonns A
paras1tes of dogs and cats are round- highly contag1ous mfect1ous wonn,
worms, hookwonns. wh1p worms, it lives in moist areas, and when an
and tapeworms.
infected avimal passes 10 the feces
Roundworms are common, high- these eggs may survive the environly contag1ous, and are spread ' ment for up to five years. Climcal
through the oral-fecal route. Most signs are that of colitis: straining,
puppies and kittens are born with mucous diarrhea wtth occasional
them. Common symptoms are dtar- blood, chrome weight loss, and
rhea, sometimes· with blood, a dis- sometimes anem1a and an urge to
tended abdomen, patn, dull coat, and defecate small volumes frequently.
occasiOnally coughmg or vomitmg The
th1s par-

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occur). Prevenuon or tapeworms is

difficult if your dog is a good rode'rlt
and rabbit hunter and may requir,l:
tape wonning several times a yea(.

Fleas are controlled by repeated
treatment of the skin, and the environment where the antmal stay~ •
with tho se monthly anu tlca prevcntauves such as Top Spot and Advati,
tage.

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tapewonns 1n the dog's stool, around
the anal area, or elsewhere. They are
small, wh1tish wonns, quite shoit_.
When they're dried, they look like
grams of nee. '
,_
Tapeworms are spread by 1nge,.;.
tion of raw meat, or the larvae Of
fleas Antmals who run loose
become infected by eating carrion Qr
small am mats they k1IL (anemia ca~

Secrets Around town!

,;omeroy, Ohio 45789

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seizures. Sometimes you can see

' I

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astte may dtsgu1se tts actual mci:
dence. It may rcqu1re several fcciO
samples to demonstrate the egg to ~
ffiiCfOS COplC exam.
• •
Tapeworms are less serious thail
othl:rs but can have detrimentirl
effects on your pet. Symptoms are
' less noti ceable but include weiglil
loss, 1rrttab1ltty, constant appettt~
shaggy coat, colic, mild diarrhe,,
and 1f left untreated for an extendeil
period may result m emac1atton anil

'

614·992·4233
800·795•111 0

Pope John Paul to star
in music video and CD
Remember that special someone this
Valentine's Day with a meeeage in

the architects and folks out there
who are cons1dering building (OJ
buying) a home someday will clie
th1s column You have made some
splendtd suggestions that are wortO
heeding.
:
Have trouble sleeping at nighl
and don't want to get involved m
novel? "A Collection of My Favorite
Gems of the Day" is the perfect bedstand mate. Send a self addressed.
long, business stZe envelope and ~
check or money order for $5.25 (this
includes postage and handling) t.O:
Collection, c/o Ann Landers, P&lt;l
Box 11562, Chtcago, Ill 606:(1;
0562 (tn Canada, $6.25 ).
,
To ftnd out more about Ann Lan:ders and read her past columns, vis{!
the Creators Syndicate web page ~

·-' ~-~·~·~· ne . Society: Inte-rnal ~arasites, or Worm$

J

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL .,VALENTINE

Monday, February 1, 1999

'I A;

Wives need .to w~s. ~·__up .c.qn_
cernitig matters in·case-of a divg&gt;rc~

1

{]M

Page 7

.

'• • ,. • '

1220 ~ AYI. a.lpn, Obio 45714
740-423-7521
See Uoyd Boner, David Riggs
Ernest Shuler, owner
M-F 8-7
Sat9-4
Closed Sunday
Redman&gt;
,
Cleyton
Homes
Norrt1
,

'ihe Dally Sentinel
Reminds ~ to support ~local businesses!!!
ito Promote your Business
911 'ihe Small Business .Directorr·

eau Dave Hturis or

Williamsoll at 992·2155

�Monday, February
Page

8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1, 1999

Pomeroy • ~lddleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

~-----,-========110 Halp Wanted
·-"'
.
lltr Cln&lt;Si(trd&lt;

February 1, 1H9

U m1~

Is as En&lt; • n1.

Acc epting Applicat ions: FuJI·
• TlmaJPart-Time E mp loyme nt , ~ply In Penson AI Kipling, ShoOs •

Forty years later, fans still flock to annual Buddy Holly tribute
Feb. 3, 1 95~. JUSt after perfonning at
the Surf They took off from . the
CLEAR LAKE, Iowa (AP) - It nearby Mason Cny airport m the
has k come known as " the day the tntddle of a snowstorm , bound for
mustc dted " But for thousands of anot he r concert m Moorhead, Minn .
rock 'n ' roll fans, the mu stc li ves T heir four-seater plane crashed in a
and IS drawmg them to a northern corn fie ld ahout five m tles north of
Iowa d ance hall for the 40t h Clear Lake. ktlllng them and thetr
anniversary of the deaths of Bu ddy pilot
Holly, Rnchte Valens and J P "The
The Surf. as tt has for the past
Btg Bopper " Rtchardson.
two decades, wtll mark that fat eful
·~we' re not celebratmg that they · ntght wnh a concet1 next Saturday
crashed," satd Scou Anderson, who fcaturm g Bobby Vee, Holly 's band
owns the Surf Ball room I ll C lear th e , C n ckets, and other fam ous
Lake . ..We ' re ce lebraun g the tr names from the ltme. As usual , the
music. Their mustc li ves on and I " Wm ter Dance Party" IS a sell out .
thmk that's what people co me back wnh tans from around the world
for. "
snatchmg up all 2.200 nckets
The three ri sing stars were kd led
Pau l Ktng of Northamptonshlfe , •

By MARY NEUBAUER
Associated Press Writer

General enrollment period
offered again .f or Medicare
BY EO

PETERSON
Social Security manager, Athens
If you are ellgtblc for Medtcarc but delayed st gnmg up for Part B
at age 65 , you can do so now dunng the annual "general enrollm ent
pertod'' for Medteare from January I until March 31 , 1999
Retirees who deCi ded not to st gn up fot Medt care 's medtcal msurance when they first became eltgtble or those who had the medtcal
tn surance at one ltme, but dropped 11 , can take advantage of enrolltn g
durmg thiS three-month pen od .
Medicare 's medtcaltnsurancc he lps pay for doctors' VISit~, outpaltenl hospllal treatment an~ other medtca l servt ccs and supplies not
covered by Medtcare 's hospl'talmsurance (Part A)
The cost of the medtcal in surance premmm ts $45 50 a month m
1999. However, retirees who delayed signing up whe n they were ongmally el\gtble wtll have an addiuonal 10 percent add ed to thelf pre, mtum for each full I 2-month penod they could have been, but were
not, enrolled. If you st gn up at any ttme from January I . 1999 to
March 31 , 1999, your coverage wtll begin July I, 1999.
You may not have to pay a premtum penalty or wan for a general
enrollment penod tf you or your spouse are sttll workmg and you
have employer's group health msurance
If you arc•t_ntcrested m enrolling in Medtcare's medt ca l insurance
or would hke more mformatton , you can call Soctal Security 's
natiOnal toll -free number, 1-800-772- 12 13
Changes for 1999
,
There ' s a new limit on taxabl e earnmgs lor Soc tal Sec umy tn
1999 and tlt s $72,600 The tax rate for Soc ial Sec urity and Medtcare
remams unchanged ~~ 7 65 percent
: The other Soctal Secunty changes workers need to know a bout are .
the increase for a quarter of coverage and the mcrease in earnmgs
limits for people who are sull workmg and rccc tvin g Soc tal Securily
benefits A worker wtll need to earn $740 m 1999 for one quarter of
coverage.
For those people drawtng be neftls and sttll workmg m 1999 the
e armngs hmns have tncreased For peopl e 65 through 69 m 1999the
earmngs lt mtl IS $15 ,500 and for those under 65 ll 's $9,600 When
those hmtts are exceeded your monthl y benefttmay be affected . To
fmd out about the Soc tal Secunty changes for 1999, call l-800-772121 3 and ask for the factshec t, "Soc ial Sccunty Update" for 1999

'
Excepts from statement
by Kenneth Apfel, CommJSstone r of Soc tal Secunty
·
Today we ' re only a few months f10 m the new millenmum I thmk
ll 's fau to say that one of the Ve t y flf Sl challenges we 're gomg to face
I in the new millenmum is the Year 2000 computer bug
Why ts thts tmportan t' Well , to us, successful reso lutiOn of tlu s
I issue 1s paramount to Soc1al Sec unty hecause 48 m111ion Amen -

cans-48 million Ameri cans co unt on us each and every month fot
all or part of thelf finan cta l sec unty
·
As we all know by no w, the Year 2000 computer pro blems, or
what we call Y2K m the techte busmcss. IS a systems calendar glllch
that can affect 'computer systems worl dwtde. Computers use two
dt gll systems to lfack.ralendar dates On January I. 2000 some computers could read that dnuhl c zero not as 2000 but as 1900 If not hI ing were done. computer sys tems could ma ll unction or posSibly even
shut down .
Now, as you can tmagmc. gtvcn our stzc m Soc tal Secunty, we arc
very rehant on com pulers And I'm proud to say that the Social Secunty Admmt stratton has been mthe forefront nf c fl on s to resolve thiS

very cnu cal1ssue Th1s admtm stratJon knows JUSt h o w Important tht s
ts for real Amen cans Our baste mt ss ion m Soctal Securny ts to get
the n ght heneftl payment to the n ght person at the n ght 11me Th ose
48 mtlllon Amencahs who recet ve benefit checks each and every
month co unt on us gettm g the JOb done and done n ght
,
Because so many Ameru.:ans count on Soc tal Secunty, we need to
he ahlc to de lt ver
.

Eng land, IS makmg it hi s sixth consec uu ve Holl y tnbute .
" We do tend to revolve around
Buddy Holl y, n's true," said King,
53, who run s a construction buStness. " But we get to know the local
people and the families and the
arti sts . It's a pilgnmage, really
We ' re overawed by the whole
thing "
Holly: a rockabtlly smger from
Lubbock, Texas, whCISe real name
was Charles Hardm Holley. was JUSt
22 when he died But he had record ed dozens of songs, mcludmg the
htlS " That'll Be the Day," " Peggy
Sue ," and " Rave. On "
Arll sls fro m Bob Dylan to Paul
McCartney have said their muSic

was mlluenced by his style. In hts
1972 htt " American Pie ," Don
Mclean de scribed Holly 's death as
" the day the mustc died "
Thete are shll Buddy Holly fan
clubs , magazines and books, Web
sites full of Holly tnvia and movies
and musical s based on his hfe. A
statue of htm 'stands in Lubbock and
the city ts butlding a pennanent
exhtbit.
•
Many of the real detatls of the
story bear an " urban-myth " quahty,
seemingly too fantastic to he true·
- A young bass guitanst who
performed with Holly m Clear Lake
gave up his seat on the j)lane to
Rtchardson, who had the flu , so the
' 'Bo pper " I"Ouldn ' t have to nde tn

SON BORN '
Chuck and
Kathy Williams Buckley of Mid·
dleport, announce the birth of
their first child, a son, Garrett
Warren.
' The Infant was born on Jan.'
22 and weighed 7 pounds, 12
puncea.
Paternal grandparents are
Wilma Jean Priddy Buckley of
Middleport and the late Charles
Buckley.
Maternal grandparents are
Randy and Denise Williams of
Langavllla. Great-grandparents
are Helen Bailey of Racine and
Ronald and Wanda Williams of
Langsville.

•

DILLVN OHLINGER
DAUGHTER BORN - Steve
and Amy 0hlinger, Pomeroy,
announce the birth of a daughter, Dillyn Paige, Dec. 18, at the
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital In Parkersburg,
Va.
She weighed. seven pounds,
10 ounces and · was 20 inches
long.
Dillyn has an older sister,
Shelb.y Nicole. Her maternal
grandparents are Rick\and Carolyn Collins, Pomeroy and Jack
and
Charlotte
Satterfield ,
Pomeroy. Maternal great-grandmother is Olive Satterfield, Middleport. Paternal grandparents
are Bill and Donna Ohlinger,
Pomeroy.

w.

The restored Surf Ballroom
remains true to its early roots, with
' 50s-style pmeapple wallpaper and
bright, feather-patterned carpet m
the entryway.
Karen Lien of Mason City was I 8
when she went to the Surf for
Holly 's concert The next morning,
she heard on the news that the
singers had been killed.
· "I think my mouth just dropped
o pen ," she said "We couldn't
believe it."
Lten is now a 58-year-old grandmother and her boyfriend from the
concert is her husband. She avidly
collects Buddy Holly memorabtlia
and wishes she had saved her ticket
stub from that ntght.

Garden Club looks to spring activities and · plant~ngs
!

.

mgs were dtscussed when the RutFor the program. Mrs Atkms
land Garden Club met recently at the talked on the whtte br~as ted
home ol Betty Lowery.
nuthatch.
It was voted to send donatiOns to She satd that there are 22 spectes of
the Wahkeena Nature Reserve, the • the nut hatches or upside down bird
' Ohto Association of Garden Clubs's in the work but that there are only
Foundatt on, and the Mohtcan four tn North Amenca. She satd they
can be whtte breasted, red breasted ,
Schoo l.
A Valentme' s Day part · was brown headed and pygmy but that
pl anned lor the Overbrook Nursing most are the whtte breas ted
Home. The club members wtll also nulhatc h.
attend an open house Feb. 14 at the
Mrs. Atkins said ll IS the only
Rulland Methodt st Church. It will hlfd that can move down a tree head
honor Marcta Denm son on her btrth- lirst. Favonle foods are sunflower
day and ts bemg hosted by her fam- sees , pine seeds, fur and maple
ily
seeds, nuts of oaks, beech and histoFlowers were provtded for local ry trees along wtlh berries of the
churches by Betty Lowery, Paul1ne Mountam Ash and Jumper
Atkins, Mrs Dennison, and MarThe male wtll take a seed in his
JOrie Rtcc . The travehng pnze fur- beak and encircle a tree to attract a
mshed by Dorothy Woodard was mate, she satd.
won by Eva Robson. Mrs. Atkms
The female wtll create a next of
will provtded the one for the Febru- lwtgs, grass, bark, animal fur m a
natural tree cavny or old woodpeckary meellng.

er ho le or occastonally in a nestmg
box The female will lay eight reddiSh brown spotted eggs which
hatch m 12 or 13 days. and in two
weeks the young are ready to leave
the next.
Mrs . Rtce's top1c was on on toxtc
plants especially as they become a
potential hazard to children She
satd that homes to be safeguarded
without gtving up plants.
Being able to tdentify plans is ·
important just as teaching chtldren
not to eat plants. They also need to
be kept out of the reach of children.
Parents should also keep their fami ly phyStctan's telephone number
handy along wtlh) lie'fftson Control
Number.
She listed plants whtch should be
kept out of the reach of chtldren as
the pencil tree cactus, amaryllis, narcissus bulbs, and the shamrock
plant. Chemical treatment of plants

can also be potentially dangerous.
Mrs. Woodard talked on how to
tmprove soil. She satd that the first a
gardener needs to know what type of
soil they have because different
kinds require different supplements.
Some of the most common
amendments are compost made at
home 1 redwood and mushroom compost, leaf mold, manure , pearlite,
vermiculite, and soil polymers. She
suggested checking components of
commerc tal amendments before
'
makmg the purchase.
Clotine Blackwood won the hostess gift.
The hml for the month was: keep
your Afncan violets bloommg
longer, prettier and more ab~ndantly
by sucking ·a few rusty nails in the
sml.
The l&lt;ebruary meeting wtll be at
the home of Mrs. Dennison.

Community Calendar------The Communlly Calendar IS published as a free service to non -profit
group s Wishing to announce meetmg s and spectal events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type Items are
pnnted as space pennits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a spectftc num ber of days
'

office buildtng.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Saltsbury Town ship Trustees, Tuesday, 6 .30 p.m. at
SYRACUSE - Sutton Townshtp -the township garage on Rockspnngs
Trustees , Monday, 7·30 p m at Road
Syracuse vtllage hall ,
•
POMEROY - Eagle Auxtliary
POMEROY Mei gs Band meeung, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m at the
Boosters, Monday, 7 p.m m the hall Refreshments following meetband room at Metgs Htgh School
in g

MONDAY .·
CARPENTER
Colu mbt a..
Town ship Trustees, 7.30 p m. MonRACINE - Racine Chapter 134,
day at the fire stauon
Order of Eastern Star, Monday, 7·30
p.m. at the hall . Refreshments
RACINE Ractne Vtllage
LETART Letart Townshtp
Council , Monday, 7 p m at the
Tru stees , Monday, 6 p m at the
mumctpal bmldmg

Critters, celebrities, newcomers
play big roles in Super Bowl ads
By SKIP WOLLENBERG
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - A desperate lobster A goggled mouse T,)wo
cute pups.
Add those cntters to the star- studded cast that Super Bowl adverll sers pressed mto servtce Sunday to catch the eye of TV' s big gest
yearly audtence
Celebnlles. mustcal scores and the Internet al so played a role m the
ads on the telecast. whtch saw the Denver Brocos trounce Atlanta's
Falcons 34- 19
More than 30 advertiSers patd an average of $1 6 mtllion for each
half-mmute commerctal slot. accordm g to execultves at Fox Broad·
casttng Co. That was up 23 percent from last year 's record $1 3 mtlli on.
The sponsors were expecting about 130 mtlhon people to tune in
for at least part of the game , wluch usually deltvers the btggest audtence of the year for any smgle program.
Anheuser-Busch Inc, the nation' s bigges t brewer and the Super
Bowl's btggest advertiSer, introduced some new critters to go along
wtth Its lamtliar frogs and hzards.
A lobster headed for a restaurant's bothng pot grabbed a boJtle of
Budwetser and used It to keep the chef and others at bay whtle he
crawled out the door
There was a Dalmatian puppy, passed qver as the new ftrehouse
dog, havmg the last laugh on hts sibhng m another Bud ad when they
pass by two years later - the reJected pup now rides on the beer
wagon pulled by Clydesdale horses .

$150 for ll months
Web TV or Computers all at local call!
UNLIMITED Personal Access, Personal E-Mail Account
&amp; 10 meg of Personal Web Space! Regular rate ts $16.95 per mo.

Guaranteed No Busy Signals!

1-888-657-0977
'Pomeroy
' Lebanon

•Wilmington
•Sardinia
' Gree nfi~ ld

' Gallipolis
• Dayton
'Hillsboro
'Springfield
' Ctrcleville

Carleton School.

POMEROY - Friends of the
Ltbrary, Monday, 7 p m at the
Pomeroy Ltbrary.

Dragon ' Internet
Full Unlimited Access
as low as $12.50 per Mo.
GARRETT BUCKLEY

the band's old bus all the way to the
next concert. Wracked by guilt over
joking with Holly about the plane
crashinll, he avoided the Surf for
decades before finally returning for
a concert in 1995 ·' J lost some great
friends that mght ," Waylon Jennings
told the crowd at hiS Surf performance.
- A legendary crooner might not
have gotten his start wtlhout that
tragtc mght. At Just 15, Bobby Vee
fil~d m at the Moorhead concert
after the plane crash. It was hiS first
pubhc performance and a record
agent in the crowd liked the band 's
sound . Vee has since produced more
than 25 albums w1th hits mcludmg
"Take Good Care of My Baby. "

ALFRED - Orange Townshtp
Trustees, Tuesday, 7.30 p.m. at the
home of Osie Foil rod, clerk.
SYRACUSE
A lcoholics
Anonymous open dtscussion , 7' p m

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Community Association, meeting
rescheduled from today to Feb 9,
8:30a.m . conference room, Peoples
Bank.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masomc Lodge 363,_, Tuesday, 7.30
p.m. Refres hments .
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Mtddleport
Literary Clvb, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Ltbrary Jeanette Thomas
to revtew "George Washington - a
Life" by Wtlllam S. Randall.

A dozen Jamaica-bound travelers .
kicked off charter flight for rowdiness
'

NORFOLK, Va. (AP)- A dozen people became so unruly on a charter
Jet from London to Jamaica that the captain made an un scheduled stop and
left 1hem stranded at a Vlfgtnta airport
" About 12 passengers consumed qutte a fatr amount of alcohol and
became somewhat unruly," satd Norfolk InternatiOnal Alfport manager
Wayne Shank ,
,
None ol the travelers on the Atrtours charter Jel - SIX Engh sh and Irish
couples - face any charges.
The trouble apparently began with shoutmg and a dnnk thrown by one
passenger on another traveler.
"The chtef lltght .a ttendanl attempted to settle them down with no success, so the captam dectded to dtvert the atrcraftto Norfolk," Shank told The
Vtrgmtan-Ptlot
The passengers who were left behmd were quesuoned by atrport pohce
and FBI agents.
"After thorough mvesttgatiOn, 11 was determmed that there had been no
direct interference with the fltght crew and the local U.S attorney declmed
to prosecute," Shank said Interfering wnh a lltght crew is a federal charge,
he satd.
Pauy Schlosser, an FBI spokeswoman m Norfolk, satd the passengers
made the1r own arrangements to leave.

.More ThanA
Tax Season Remedy.
ALifelong Plan.
J.n'l h time You wort wldt lite 1\tll-time, yeor 'round '
tlx and investment profenional? After all, I can

handle everythina ftom dtio yeor's
tu mum 1o investmenll
for lite nnl ceniUry.

And&lt;IiiCover lite difference

belween a tox prq&gt;am" and a tu profenional.

'Nelsopville
• Middletown
•washington CH

• HDVESI.
FINANCIAL

!!CA\I!C€S

Changing 1'1¥ 11'&lt;1)' A,.,.lca ,,...,.

•west Union
•Jamestown

Karl K~bler III, CPA
(740) 992-7270
s-iclllof'llnd~HO VtiiiiMitmnt~ IIIIC •63)) NorthS.HitlnNr 16l, Fou.-floor

ftCtftftftftCftCft~ft
~ JD COISftiUC710N ft

f;;r

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
;, Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
~
CommerCial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insured

f;;r

Phone

A
li!.!l

Free Estlmstss

ll!!il

f;;r
,;

~

c~~ftCtftCftri~iS
APPALACHIAN
, WOODWORKS
Furniture Reflnialaing

&amp;Repair
Pickup

&amp;p.&gt;livery

Available

8111-1100
Out of Area
1-800-564-3227
1/20oW 1 ... pd

,;

.

Don't Need A

Big One
.call a Little
One
Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
up to 8 ton.
992·5455

.,

Forme,.._ ''Velvet Hammer''
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phnne: 740-843-5572

'

. ..

I Pa rt-T1 me STNA For The lC· . ..
P.M·6 A MSh'fi
· .. •
4

Please Apply In Perso n To T"'e
Front Desk Sce nic H1lls Nurslog •
Center 3 1 1 Bu ckrldge Road B1d· 0
well, OH 456 14

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

J

-=--=-----:::--::--..,..-'--1.. '

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

HILL'S
UlF STORAGE
5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
1/4/i91

mo

••••••

I

SenJiees
House ·&amp; Trailer Sites
Clearing &amp;
.,,LandGrading
Seplic Syllem &amp;
Ucilitieo

&amp;I

pd.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wilson
(61 992-4277

Announcements
DIABETIC PATIENTS: You May

•Room Additions

BISSELL BUILDERS, IN(.
· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

•Remodeling &amp;Siding

Garages • Replacement

•Garages &amp; Decks
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting

WI n dows

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614• 992• 7643

•Roofing &amp; Gutters
•Concrete Work

(No Sunday Calls)

(Free Estimates)

V.C. Young III

2/12/112/tfn

CIEDI,. PROBLEMS??

(Owner- 21 yrs)
elon (ERAC) lormerly
Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
known u the Environ·
Repo • Olvo~ced ·
.mantel Board of Review) by
"Fully Insured"
a pereon who hao a party to
Reduced. Winter Rates
'a proceeding before the
director by filing an appllt,
No Embarrassment ...
within 30 deye of notice of
You're
Treated with Respect!
the ~nel acllon. Purauent to
Ohio Rtivlutl Code SacUon
Pick up dlecarded
3745.07, a final action
appllancee, batlerlee,
laoulng, denying, modify·
many metlle &amp;
dteapproval ol plana and lng, rovoklng, or renewing a
PUBLIC NOTICE
motor blocke
Sealed btde for the pur- epeclflcatlono. "Draft permit, llcen.., or variance
740-992~5 8 am-I m
chao• of a four (4) door four Actlona": are written atate- which Ia not preceded by a
wheat drive (4WD) aport mento of the 'Director of propo"d action, may bo
utility vehicle will bo Environmental Protec•tlon'e appealed to the ERAC by
Public Notice
received by tho Metga (Director'o) Intent wtth, filing an appeal within 30
County Commlaolonere at r..pect to the teeuance, daya Of IIIUince of tho ftntll re .. rved 50% of the
their office, c/o of the Melgo denlol, otc. of a pormtt, ectton. ERAC appeala muot remelnlng
pollutent
County Courthouoo, Third llcenae, order, etc. lnter- be flied wtth: Environ- uolmlletlve capeclty for thl
Streel, eoted peroone may oubmlt mente! Review Appeelo IIJIIm ugmont ldantlfted.
Floor, Second
Pomeroy, Ohio 457811 until wrlllen aommento or Commlaoton, 236 Eeot Town
Ftnal epprovet of pleno
12 noon, February 8, 18911 requeet 1 pubic meeting Strut,
Room
300, end opeclftcallono, Tllppera
ond opened at 1:oo P.M. on regarding dreH octlone. Columbul, Ohto 43215. A Plelna/Ch .. ter Woter
thll dote and ·at llld offtco. Comment• or publtc copy of the eppeal muat be Dletrlct, Reedovllle, OH
Bldo wilt be opened ond meeting requeete muet ba ilerved on the director 1. _ deto 01/14/18911.
B A I K R U . . , . C l ,can r elieve a
raad aloud for the following. eubmltted within 30 day• of within 3 daye after flllng tho
Thll final ectlon not
Bpeclflcatlona lor aold vehl· notice of the draft action. appeal with the ERAC.
debtor of financial obligations and arrange a fair
preceded by propoood
cia can be oblelnod from "Propoaed Actlona" are Flnol leeuance of NPDES action and le oppealablo to
distribution of assets. Debtor• in bankruptcy may
the
Meigs
County wrlllen ototomente of the
Pa~~!\ern
LOCI!
School
ERAC.
Ollkay
Ridge
Roed
keep uexempt" property for his or her per sonal
Emergency
Medical Dlrector'o Intent with
Waterline Project.
Services,
POB · 748, 111pect to tho Jesuanco, Diet., SE of Stile Route 7, , (2) 1 tTC
use . This may inc1ude a car, a house , clothes, and
Mulberry Height~, Pomeroy, denial, modification, revo- Reedovllle, OH Ioaue Dllt
houaehold goods .
Ohio
45789.
Phone cation, or renewal of a 02101/18911
(740)992-661 7
Public Notice
permit, llcenae, or variance. Receiving watare: Eaot
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy cont act:
All blddara muot u.. lhetr Written comments and branch of Shado River
PUBUC NOTICE
own bid form. Bide aha it be requ .. tl for a public Facility Doocrlptlon: Due to the weather condiWilliam Safranek, Attorney At Law
sealed and marked aa "BID 11\lltlng regarding a School, Permit N. OPT00046 tloM• the - k of Januory
FOR 4WO VEHICLE".
propooed octlon may be
This ltnal ocllon not
·(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio
The
Melgo
County oubmiHed within 30 dayo ol preceded by propooed 11, 1999, the Molgo Houolng
Commlaatonera roaerve the notlca of the propoood action and le appeatoble to Authority will-reopen the
The receiving ~ppi!CIIIlon Intake one day
right to raject any and/or all acllon. An edludtcatton ERAC.
bldo or any part theraof and hearing may be hetd on a etream 11 a etate reeource tinly. HouMholdo lntoraotto waive any lnformaltty In propoaed action II a hearing wator, therefore, the eel In opplylng lOr Sectton 8
hea Rental Aaalatanca may pick
any proposal.
·
requeot or objection ta director of Ohio EPA
up an application on
(1) 25 (2)1 2TC
received by the OEPA wtthln rooerved 50% o f t h o Tlleaday,
February 9, 18911
30 dayo of taouance of the remaining
pollutent between 9:00a.m. and 4:00
Public Notice
propoood acllon. WrlHen aaalmllallve capacity for tho p,m, ONLY. Appllcallono
comments,
requeats for atreom eegment ldenttflod. ' can be obtained at the
COUNTY: MEIGS
public
meetlngo,
and
Final leauanco of permit Houolng Authority offlca
PUBLIC NOTICE
located II 117 E. Memortol
The following appllcottona adJudlcotlon hearing re· to lnatall
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Eaatern Local School
• 7 (th b lldl
and/or vartllad complaint• qu11t1 muot be eent to: Dletrlct,
Cheeter
Twp.,
OH
Ortve,
room
"
•
u
ng
were received and lhe Hoartng Clerk, Ohio Envi- laaue Date 01/15/18911
Roofs • Decks • Garages
directly behind the Melge
following draft, propoaed, ronmental Protection
Holzer Clinic) on the date
Facility deacrlptlon : and time apecllted.
Insured
Free Estimates
or final actlono were laaued Agency, P.O. Box' 1049,
Jean Truaoell
by the Ohio Envtronmentel Columbus, Ohto 4321&amp;-1049 woatewater
Appllcotlon no 06-501111
Executive Director
Protecllon Agency (OEPA) (Telephone: 614-644-2129).
"Final
Actions"
are
actions
final
action
not
(
)13
Thle
lao! wook. "Actlono: tnctudo
the adopllon, modlftcatton, of the Director which oro preceded by proposed 2~c'
or repeat of ordero (other effective upon 111uance or a octlon and le appealable to ~~-=-=====:­
(Lime Stonethan emergency ,ordero); elated elfectlve dote. ERAC. SeWigl treotmant
Purouant
to
Ohio
Revloed
facility
lor
High
School
the
loouanca , denial,
Low Rates}
modification or revocauon Codo Section 3745.04, a expanaton. Tho receiving
of licensee, permits, lea111, flnal octlon may be ap- stream Ia 1 etete reaource
•New Homes
variances, or certlflcetee; pealed to the Environmental water, therefore, the
•Garages
and the approval or Review Appoolo Commto- Director ol Ohio EPA haa
•Complete
Remodeling
Limestone;
Stop &amp; Compare,
age
50,
the
other
was
stx
umes
more
ne
s
s
.~
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
Gravel, Sand,
There 1s no cure, and dru g thera- likel y to gel it if he were a n tdenuAP Medical Writer
ESTIMATijES
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
CH ICAGO (AP) - Fo ll owin g a py tend s to lose effecttveness over cal tWill than if he were a fraternal
985-4473
twm .
landm ark study of more than 11,000 ' ume
614-992-3470
, 7122/tfn
Tanner satd envtronmental fac-.
A genetic cau se 1s mos t common
twms, rcseatc hers reponed today
that most ca;c s of Parkmson's dts- t'n . the approxiln ately 10 percent of tors most h kely to play a role in typO~l~l~O:-::'N':"I
cnsc ar c not due tO a gen etic defect ' peopl e wtth the disease who are tcal P~r~mson's include exposure to · ,.chemical
s
such
as
peslt
ctdes
and
hut ,tre caused by fdctot&gt; th at arc ' diagn osed before age 50, Tanner .
satd
lrkcl y c n v ~ron mc nt,d ,
~:~btcides, dtel and tobacco smokIn 1997 , researchers tdenltfied a
· Fot the flfsl ltm e. today we c an
The apparent
tective effec t""'o_........." DUMP TRUCK
'"Y that for people wnh Parkmso n;s long-sou ght ge ne defe ct that can
Hollow
nd
Jtse.tse dt ag nosed al tet age 50 . 11 s cause a form of Parkinson's, but the smoktng was found 1 he tw
SERVICE.
proportion of cases arising from the in prevwus t ese arch~ Tanner satd.
m o~ t commonly ca used by env,u onShe and Dr. J. William Lan gston,
Agrlc;ultural Lime,
mental factors," sa td Dr. Ca10line de fec t was unkn own before this
pres
dent
of
the
Parkin
son's
In
stt
Limestone
• Gravel
study
1
fanner of the Park mson' s lnsutute
In
th
e
new
study,
researchers
lute
and
sen
tor
author,
satd
the
proDirt.
Sand
1n Sun nyv.tle. Cahf.. who led the
stud y pubhshcd tn today' s Jou rn al tracked do wn more than 17 ,000 tecuon ts probably real, perhaps
985·4422
nf the Amcncan Mcdr cal Assoc ta- men enroll ed tn a World War II-era caused by smokm g's stimulau on of
the
liver
to
produce
en
zy
mes
that
Chester,
Ohio
twm regtstry The researchers found
l ln n
1
0f251961t1n
The env rro nmcnl al f.tctors arc 16 1 twtn palfs tn whi ch at least one neutralize so me toxin th at would
otherwiSe
provo
ke
Parkmson
's.
brother
had
Parkm
son
's
disease
and
unl-.now n but may mc lu de c hcmr c :.~ l
" But the re are about 2,000
Pomeroy Eagles
c x po~U!CS, d1ct and smokr ng - the data on the pairs was comp,lete
Among
the
I
61
sets,
tll
erc
were
chemtcals m ctgareHe smoke, so we
Club Bingo On
last ol whtch paradoxtcall y seems to
Th
d
lc "&lt; n the nsk o l dcvc loptn g 16 m wtltch Parkmson 's had struck still have a bi g JOb ahead of us m
mt
ght
actuurs
ays
findmg
what
chemteal.s
before a~e 50. Of the four sets of
Computer Graphics
P.rl l-.1nson·s: she sard Tuesday
ally
be
protective,''
Langston
said
AT
6:30
P.M.
identt
cal
twms
who
have
exactly
At J c.t~ l I null ton A me n c~ n s
DeSIQ'lS
Maln,St.,
h.t\t: Pa.rkmson\ , T mnCr sard, m ak- the same ge netiC mate n al - both " And we don't recommend smokAll Landscaping &amp;
mg to prevent Parkinson 's diSease."
Pomeroy, OH
hrothcJS had Parkinson's
I!H~ rt second o nly to Al zheimer's
Lawn Services
An
expe
rt
not
mvolved
tn
th
e
Paying
$80.00
Among
the
12
fraternal
pau
s,
d 1 ~ ~ .p,c rn trc qucm:y as a dc gcnera•Commercial
per game
who share only hall the lf geneti c study satd tl presen ts a compelhn g
11, c tlt ~e ~ sc of the brm n and n c 1vcs
•Residential
reason to searc h for betler treat$300.00 Coverall
p 1 rk111 ~0 n U 1U !-.cs slow dctcriora- matcnal th e t e were only.. two m
Owner,
Mickle Hollon
men
IS
,
smcc
the
dt
ugs
now
avatl$500.00
Starburat
110 11 ~ d the ncrvc!i ' abt ht y to control wht ch both brothers had ParktnChester,
Ohio
able may lesse n symptoms bu t don 't
Progressive top line.
son's...
l h~o· musdc!i It usuall y sw n s w ttll
740·985-4422
Lie. II 00-50
Rescarchets ca lculated that tf rca ii,Y attack th e d iSease ot pre vent ·
-. 11 u \\ tremors th e n progrcssc!i t o a
11 19
412,....,'"
d
tsabd
it
y
1.l
:li
W::.n.l
one
twm
develo
ped
the
dt
scasc
hy
-. lnrtl11n g gm t and lll CI C•Hi iOg weak -

(740) 992·6215

WORRYING!!!

n11

·SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

New Construction &amp; Remodeling
740-742-3411

WICKS
HAULING

Study: Most cases of Parkinson's disease not inherited

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

FREE

1-.-l·.-H....
TRUCKING

GUN SHOOT

Racine Gun Club
Nease
Rd.
Every Sunday
12:30.pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

·-

L------...:.
''

Oet ectrve - Pr ivate Investig ator
Trarnees Good Wages, 6 1-4 523- -

621!0

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimso n. Athens
740-592-1 842
Qual it y clothing and househo ld
lterns $ 1 oo bag sale ever y
Thur sday Monday thru Sat urday
9 Oil 5.30.

DRIVER .CHOOSE
YOUR FLEETI
• Reg 1onal Fleet · Ho me w ee •
kends No East M'est Coast
•
• Na t1on al Flee t -O ut 7 Days ,
Home 2, Out tO, Home 3
-,
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"BuUd Your Dream" '

(7401 H2·31JI
r-_ _....______., i - -....~"!"~~--,;:

Public: Notice

Remodeling

.

Sizes

Hours
7:00AM · 8PM

Custom ~:tomes

Bu/Uo•er &amp; Backhoe
·~·

I

28870 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1
• 740-949-2217

Slug &amp; Shot Matches

' I

At Sc en•c Hills Nurstng C enter.,'" '
We Are Look 1ng For A Part-Tune ·' 1 •
STNA s ForThe2PM ·10 P.M ., '
Shrtt

ANNOUNCEMENTS

-Complete Auto Seroice-

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
YOUR MESSJmE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
'$7.00 PER DAY.

Are You Looking Fo r A Warm
And Friendly Work Envlronmenl?
Wou19 Vou Like To Wo r k In A ...
Place Where You r Eflo rts Are
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Yo u ~re A De dicated , Frienc! l)'
Outgo1ng Individual Then Scenic
..,
Hllls Nursing Cen ter Is The Place ·••
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· •

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

:

Owner: John Dean

~iiiiiiiiiiiiiilmfll. TX UOJI • 972.1170-6000 • Member srpc
I

740·992-3987

A

Dave's Garag

--

Giveaway
Puppy. Pall Co llie . 9

1

~~~~1~~1d, To Good Home. 740·

~:::: g~~dL~~~cdnoro:g~m,a;g:
245·9577.
6mo old Half Rotwelller/Hatf Do-

• Co Onve rs ·Star1 With a 27 35e /Mr Base , 29 ·37e / MI Wit h ,
Bonuses
,
• Owner OperatiOns 81 - 82e All :
M1tes, EKce ltent Insurance, Tolr, ,
Fuel Tractor Purchase Progra ms
• 95 % No Tou ch On -The Job '
Tratmng For Recent School Grad,- ,
'
uates Talk To Our Dnvers•

berman Female Pup, E•cellent
Tempermenl (740)446·1091
Adorabl e Male Hus ky/Poln1er
M" Pup. 3 Months Old, (304)713·

HI00.46Hl345
www.roehl.net
Or1ve r Nan /Flatbed

ALL OTR DRIVERS

5972

Reg ional &amp; Long Haul

28 To 33 CPM

Free Puppie s to good hOme
(740)367·0624
Happy Heallhy Puppies, To Good
Homes t1 Weeks O ld Paper
Trai ned Ou tdoo r Lovers! 740 ' 245-5104
Found· Male yellow kitten 12 wks.
Lic ense Bu reau on M ulberry
Ave , Po meroy ar ea, 740-985-

3363
Pupp1es

to giveaway, 740-992·

!172

Red male Doberman, needs room
to run, call between 10am-2pm or

Co mple1e Benefits
010 s Welcome
CX Roberson
1-800-473-5581
wwwrobersontrans com
Due To Company ExpansiOn,
We Are

NOW HIRINGIII
WHAT WE OFFER:
Rap1d Advancement, Pleasant
Workin g Condrtrons, Flexible
Hours, Solid 39 Year Old
Company, No Layoffs,
$1,400 Per Month To Start

WHAT CAN YOU OFFER?

alter 7pm, 740·843-5480
Registered Pers1 an Cats.
Good Home, 74Q-256-6107

CALL MONDAY ONLY

Rottwel le,r mix pupp1es to g1 vea·
way, one male, two females , 740·
992 -5747

60

9 A.M.·5 P.M.

To A

Lost 'and Found

74Q.446-4553

An Equal Opportumty E'mploysr •
Farm Help ne ed ed must have
exp er ience w1 th horses, call
Sou thside Fa rms (304)675· 1993
Fmance

Found 1 Trl Colored Older Bea·
gle, Bland on Mercerville Ad 740·
256·1595.
Found O n Tuesday, Dol l Near
GallipoliS Post Otf1 ce On Second

Ave 740-:256·8176

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ALJ. Vard Sales Must
Be Paid In Advance ,

PEAPUNE: 2.00 p.m.
the day before the ad
Ia to run Sunday
edition - 2:00 p.m.
Friday Monday edition
- 10:00 a.m. Saturday

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

;

All Yard Sates Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day belore tha ad Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition1:00pm Friday.
lns1de yard sal e, Feb 1s t 2n d,
3rd, 393 S Thi rd, Mtddl eport , Oh

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Auction February 5t h 6 P: M 24 t
Thtrd Aven ue, Gall tpo lis La rge
Load 01 N ame Brand Tools &amp;
HousehOld GOOds, 740-:256- 1270
Bill Moodl spau gh Auctto neenng
Servic es . Utile Hoc kmg, Ohto
Apprarsa lsFarm ·
Estate ·
HousehOld- Com mercial, Ohio L1
canse ff7693 74()-989-2623
A le~ Pearson AuchOn Co mpany
lull 11me aucu onear . co mplete
auclfo n
serv ic e
li ce nse d
t 66, 0hl o &amp; West V lrgmta , 304·

773-5785 Or 304 77 3-5447

Wed em eye r's Auwon Ser vice,
Gall lpohs, Ohio 740· 379·2720

90

Wanted to Buy

Comp lete Household Or Estatesr
Any Type Of Furniture Apphances, Anltque's , Elc Also A.pp ra1sal
Avarlablel 740·379-2720
Abso lute Top Dollar All U S Sll·
ve r AM Gold Co1ns Proofse ts,
0 1am ond s, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pr e- 1930 US Curren cy,
Sterl 1ng, Elc AcqUISitiOns Jewelry
M T S Coi n Shop, 15 1 Seco nd
Ave nue, Galhpol1s 740-446·2842
Antrques, top pnces paid , Rwerln e Antiques Po meroy, Oh jo,
Ru ss Moore ow ner 740· 992·
2526
An tiques &amp; clean used lurn1ture ,
will buy one pre ce or complete
house ho ld Osby Mar tin , 740 ·

992·6576
Buyrng St andmg T1ml:ler. 3 Acres
&amp; Up 740-886·9861
Clean Late M od el C ars Or
Truc ks, 1990 Mod els Or Newer
Sm1th Burck Pontiac, 19..00 Easl ·
ern Avenue, GallipOliS
w anted To Bu'jl Used Mobile
Homes, Call 740-446·0175 , 304 ·
675·5965
We Quy Ever yth ing Furniture,
Apphances, Etc By The Piece Or

The Loti740·2S6·6989
EMPLOYMENT
S ERVICES
11

o

Help Wanted

.AVON I All Area s I Sh irl ey
Spears 304-675·1429

BRANCH MANAGEMENT

TRAINEE

-

Amerrca n Genera l Fin ance, A
Leader In The Financial Serv1ces:
Industry W1th Ove r $9 Billion lri
Ass et s An d More Than t ,300
Branches Nattonwrde. Has An lmmed1 ate Need For A Branc h
Mana gement Tra m ee In Our
Jackson Otftce

,
,
•
'

Ind iVIduals Will PartiCipa te ln An
In te nsive 0 11 ·The ·Job Tralntn g
Pr ogram D esigne d To Prep arE\
You For Br anch M ana ger Re sponsrbl lr tles The ~ 8 Mont h
M odu lar Tramrng Program In·
structs You In Al l Asp ects O f ,
Manag1ng Cred it Exten sion , Ac·
cou nt AdJust ment, Business Deve lopment And Pe rs onne l Staff

lng
Applicant s Fo r Thrs Entry Lave ~
Opportun tly Shoul d H ave Fou r
Yea rs Post H1gh School Educa -·
!to n, Tra1n 1ng Or Wor k Exp eFI·
ence (Sales Expe rrence P re ferred), Strong ~fltten An d Ve_rbal Commu ntcatlon Skills, And A
'Val 1d Dn ve r's Li cen se ~u s t Be
Ope n ,To Re loca uon AM Have
The De sire To Ass ume Manage ·
nal ResponSiblltty
,
Amerrca n General Fmance Offers
A Co mpet itive Benefits Pa ckage
Includi ng Med ical Dental And A•
401!k) Ptan For Immed iate Con
s1dera t10n Plea se Send Your Re ·
sume To Am erican Gen eral
Frna nca , PO Bo:.. 702, Jackson ,,
OH 4564 0 0702 Pleas e VISII Ou r
Web Stle At www agflnance com
Equal Opportumty Employer
'

:
,
,
'

,
,
•
1

'
,

Housekeepmg/ Laundry Super - vtsor nee ded for 100-bed sk ill ed
nursmg and re hab fac ll rty Pos l·
lion 11 lull t1me and excellent bene· • .,
l1ts Candidate must be wrlhng to "' ~~
work w1th staH scheduling pr oP.~ .,_ .. ~
Jem solving, ew.ce lle nt comm uni.,.:.~
cator, knowledgeable ol Regula lor"'&gt;'-~
Compliance as well as re lated re~,t.&gt;t
qUJred documenta tiOn Interested' " ~
candrdates shOuld sub mit resume- ·. ! (
to Rodspnngs Rehab lltl at lon ~11.
Center, 36759 Rocksprings Road, ' '
Pome roy Ohio 45769, Attn Usa
J Yehl Admrn1s1ra1or
~~

'+'A '

L PN's :.&gt; R avenswood Cente r, a ~
leader 1n long 1erm care Is see k-~ -~
lng c:a1 m g and com passi ona te , "',
nurses lor full and pan 11me posi·
,
tl ons Pay begins at $8 per hr ~ •
wit h an excellen t bene fit s pac ~·
age If yo u wan! 10 JOin rt qu ality
... ..
dnven team , call or wnte us at
"•
Ravensw ood Cen te r 200 S ~ "'
R ltch te Ave Ravensw ood , W\J ,
26164 , (3011 )273 93 85 , A Gen ests-Eidercare Faci lity. J:qual Op ·
portunrty Employe•

A
&lt;

Need 3 Lad 1es, To Sell Avo n!
740.446 3358

'

Needed Exper1e ncM Tree Climbers An d Bu ckel Opera tor Fo r
Work C lear rng Power Lines In
Th e Mer cervi lle Area , Fo r tnlor·
matron Call7 40·256 1576
Nurs ing aullt! nts n ee ded to
prov ide In-home serv•ces tor t M~
elderly/ disabled, call 1-888-242- ~ ,
8404
•.~ .. .

"' ..··~

One Full Trme Reg1Sterea Nu rs~• . , ...
Posrl lon Ava ilable In Oak H il l ' ,,
Co mmu nit y MMica l Cent en .. ,...'"•
Long Term Care , Day Shift Oh to 1
Lrcen sure Required C and id at e
... .
W rll Ut lll ll ze Nursi ng ·Pr oces s'· · '
Wh ile Prov iding Care Dlrecr J..·..... ...
G uide Patre nt ! Fam il y Tea ch~ ng'CI'
And Functi on Within Scop e Ot ., ,1
Depa rtmenta l Expectations ll In ·: • '' :
IAreste d Please Send R es ume..• ~ •11 •
To Oak Hill Commun 1ty Medica ~ ... • ,:....
Cent er , AttenhQn · Bre nda M ~-. ~ .
Kenzie, 350 C harlo tte Av~nue ,
OakHIH OH4 5656
• • ' :':I t~
: . ,tf•• l
EOE
, • .)• ":,
-----~

.

�-.

.'

.'

;

.
..

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel
1,1999

The

Ohio

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

1 ..Htary

38A-37 Dutch town
3t Hangman'•

operatlon

a-man
Cle•n Olllce and Commercial
Building In Elaanorl8uffalo Area
Part limo - 20 to 38 hrs week dlfter4nt ahllt tlmea Permanent
pari tlma job - mala or female,
4

(30•}768·7290, leave message
witlr best time to call bad&lt;

Computer Users

~eeded, Work

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

two baths, 740·

Rated As A Top Mome Business
For The Future Process Claims

On Your Computer For Doctors
InteractiVe Home Ti'alnlng.

CLIENTS PROVIDED _
B00-933-1809 Ext. 284

1983. 14x70 Mansion: 3BRI2
Bath, All electric/kitchen ap·
pllances, curtains/blinds, new
wallpaper.
Many
updates ,

$11,500;0BO (304}675-2819.

One Full-Time Reglstarao Nurse

•••••••••••••••
STANLEY HOME PRODUCTS

,988 141170 Manorwood, 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Elec AC, Good

PoeUion Available In Oak Hill
Community Medical Canter's

3331 Or 740-698-5392. Parties,

5332

lnccom

Emergency Department Ohio Ll·

censure Required. Candidate

6 FULLER BRUSH 740·423·

Condition, $10,500. Call740-24!5-

wn1 menl

Function With in Scope Of Departmental EJCpectatlons II Interested, Please Send Resume To
Oak Ht• Community Medical Center, Attention Brenda McKenzie,
350 Charlotte A'v'enue, Oak Hill,

Oli 4!56!56
EOE

II

Overbrook Center 333 Page
Street. Middleport. has part lime
positions lor LPN'S &amp; STNA's
available lor all shifts and weekends Anyone interested please

stop Ill' and 1111 out an application

Pet Grooming Assistant, Must
Work Evenings And Saturdays
Aeaumeea Only We'l l Call You
To Schedule Appointments Send
Aeaume To ClA Box 462, c/o
The Gallipolis Tribune, 825 Third

Avo.. Gallipolis, 0111o, 45631 .

AN Supervisor To Manage Certl·
fled Passport PrO'v'lder Agency,
Call Medi-Home Health Private
Care, 740-441 -1875
Salesperson wanted for lmme·
dlate opening al Don Tate Mo·
tors 308 East Main Street , Pomeroy, Ohio Apply In person

VENDING Lazy Persons Dream.
Few Hours = Good S Price To
Sell Free Brochure 800·820-

4353.

ProfeMional
Services

230

Wanted Assistant Office Manager, Good Public Relations &amp; COm-

munication Skills Naeded.'Jyplng,
&amp; Computer Skills Required 28
Hra /Weekly, Send Resume To

CLA 463, c/o GaUtpolls Dally ~lb­
uno, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,

Situations
Wanted

Opening February elderly lady,
non-smoker mobile/reasonable,
send reply CW28 c/o Poinl
Pleasant Register, 200 Main St ,

PI PI ,WV

130

140

BuslnMs
Training

O.lllpolla ca- Coffoga
(Careers ClOse To Home ) Gall

Todayl 74D-«6-4367, 1-600214-0452, Reg 19D-0!5-1274B

170 Miscellaneous
Uke Surprises?
For your surprise gift send $3 00
to Collectibles, P 0 Box 105,
Mason,WV 25260 and treat

Interest Rate To Qualified
Lowest Rate JriiThe InSelection In The
so. To Choose

Call For VIew-

Daniels Plano Service- tuning
and repair, experl service since

1965, 74D-742-2951, Lana Dan-

le ts, Rutland

Double Wide New $999-0own
$237·per mo. Free delivery &amp; set-

up 1-900-69H777

Llvlngaton•a Baaemant Walar·
Proollng, all basement repairs
dona, frat.. estimates, lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job experi-

ence. 304-8115-3817.

Good selection ot used homes
wtth 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

$3995. Quick 'delivery Call 740365-9621
Taking Applications, On 3 ~ed·
room Aepo, Pre-Approval In 10

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSf?
No Fee UniiiS we Win!

Now Taking Applications- 35
Wast 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water

-

0tfiiW-.

HmllaUon or dfscrimlnatlon
baled on race, color, rollglofl,

lllllwlllcltflfnvlolotfonolfht
low Out- "" hereby

per mon ' 1·800-~·5678

Limited otter 1999 double wide, 3

br, 2 ba $1,799. down , $275.00

per mon , delivered and set up

2 Bedrooms, Full Basement, CIA,
SldlllJI, New Roof, &amp; Many Other

N ice Features! Located At 109
Pleasant Street, Pt. Pleasant ,

W.Va 740·441-0128 For An Ap·

polntment

Creek, Near Cora No Pats. De-

Mo, You Pay Utilities, 1 Deposit,

callt-800-946-5678.

Pay Utilities, &amp; Deposit. In Porter

2 Bedrooms, Waler And Traah

Paid No Pats. On Bulavllle Pika.
740-3611·1100

3 bedroom mobile home for rent,

Trailer for rent In Racine, 2 badrooms, porch, carport, excellent
condlllon, $300 per month plus

ulllltlaa, $300 deposit, 740·949-

2217

949-2633
Two bedroom mobile home In
Mlddleporr, no pets, 740·992·

5039

We Finance Land &amp; Home With

As Lillie As $500 Down 1-606928-3426
Relocating? Take Over Pay-

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

333 Third Avenue Gallipolis, 2

1!.2 acre lot In Syracuse, caU 304273-0297 after 5pm or 304·372-

651anced in acres, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, central air, fireplace 30ft
rt 40ft' garage. barn wlllt 4 stalls,

Story House, 740-441-D432. 614-

7306 ask f&lt;lr hone Murphy.

656-3485

180 Wanted To Do

5 Acres Blacktop Fronlage &amp;

3 BA, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, Brick

Lake

plust month sacunty (610l 5888252

Auto Detailing, Buffing, Paint and

Ranch Additional 2 car garage
Acre Lot, Sandhill Aoad , Pt

Body Work; (304 l674-0002,

Eldorado Adult Home Long Or
' Short Term Care, Private Room
S1,400 Semi Prl\la te Room
tt , 100 Syracuse, Ohio 740..992-

4410

Electric maintenance service
Wiring, breaker bOJC&amp;S tight fix·
lure, heating systems and Remodeling 304·674-0126
Furniture ref inishi ng &amp; repa ir,
pick up &amp; deiJver'y available, 740·
992· 11 00 out of area 1·800·564-

3227, Appalachian Woodwork•

Furniture repair, refinish and res·
torauon also custom orders Ohio
\lalla~ Refin ishing Shop, Larry

Phillips. 740-992-i5576

Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
haul your ~our togs to a m111 Just

P~ssant,

(740l44Hl818

4BRI2Bath, 1 112 Story House on
1 acre: Full Basement, Large
Front Porch, Central Air , Dishwa&amp;her/RefrlgeratoriGas Stove,
Rural Water &amp; Well , 2 Car Garage, PJcnlc ShelferiBBQ, New
Septic/New Hart Roof , Located
Near Letart, WV, Prlvale

(304}273-2260

Onlyll740-448--3365

By owner. 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 lots, must .._
to appreciate will sell house without Iota tor $89,000, -740·992·

2704, 740-992-5696

Handyman Quality Work , lad·
cters, tools tr uck, skill , Also,
quality, shingled, bluebird nest
bOxal, $16 """"· (304l675-6925

Owner Flnancmg AvailabJe. Call
After 6 00 PM Or Leave Mas·

Have 2 Openlnga For 24 Hour In
Home Care Ot E:!derly Or Handicapped,

740-441-1536

sage, 740-596-5707

Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres, Village Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint-

ment, call 740-992-5696

Two bedroom house
on
80ftx162rt rot Corner of Pomeroy
&amp; Ra11 Road Street Mason, Wv

$22.000 00 (304l 682-3604

Straight Skirts, Slacks And Jeans,
$1 50 Each, Straight Dresses

$3 50 Each, 740-446-3635

Will Take Care of the Elderly In

Thalr Home (304}675-6154

FINAN CI AL

210

BuslnMs
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busi ness ~rh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll you ha'v'e Investigated

the ollorlng,

BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Loeat Vondng Route
For Sale. Must Salll
Coli 1-000-4011-11219
VEHDINCl RTE. FOR SALE
$50K Pot'l Income, I6K Req NO
GIMMICKS! 1-80D-925-7379, 24
Hro

Ready For Animate Only
S14 500.00 20 Acre Hunting
Tracts W/kcess Rd To Wayne
National Forest Mostly Wooded, Only $23 000 oo Land Con~acl

AvaN-. Free Maps An-

Meigs Co Danville, Briar Ridge
+Goff Ads 7 Acres with nice
pond $12,000, 8 acres $13,000 or
remote

$10,500 Rutland, Whllll HMI Rd ,

just oft New Lima, 11 acree

$14,500 or 9 acres $12,000. pub-

Galllo Co. Just oil SA 218,
Friendly Ridge Ad , 15 acres
$14,500 Grear Homesite &amp; Hunt•

tng, Public Water, City Schools!

Teens Run Ad, 10 acres $tO,OOO

Call nolfW for tree mape+owner II·
nanclng Info Take 10% ott liar

prtca on cash purchases!

RECREATION LAND
South 01 Galttpofls. Naar Crown
City, 35 Acto atcraatlonal ~acts
Of land Close To Crown City Wlf
dllfa Anta Own YOur Own Hunllng

·Owner Financing Available 5
Acre Lots On Teens Run Ad ,
Starting At $8,000 Call After 6 00
PM Or Leave Messa!j!e, 7o40·

Amaz ing only $999 down on
large selection of double wldes ,
free delivery I setup owner ll·

380

narx:l"'l available 304-755-5885

Wantlng To Buy. 1!5 To 20 Acres,
Prefer Something Wllh Buildings
&amp; Barn, &amp; Some Usable Acres,

ery cau t-600-1191-6777.

$999 Down on any t8 model
Doubfewlde In alock Free Dellllery Call 1-6D0-69Hin7.

59e-5707.

Real Estata
Wanted

On land Contract 740-367-&lt;12110
We Buy Land 30 -soo A&lt;:rta,
we Pay c..h i·too·2fil'·l3es.
MltiJfJoi L.oild ea. I '
HENTALS

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo•

1980 Klngaley 1~ Ft x70 Ft With

Stata Route 218, fn City School
District, Daytime 740-446·3278,

Ewnf"'ls 740-446-3099.

tt3,000, 740-99H227.

410 Hou111 lor Rent
1 Bedroom House1 Close To Rio

Grande Coltego, $300/Mo . Woter
Sawage, Garbaga, Pakl, 740-4411005

1988 Skyline 14x70, three bedroom , two bath, one owner, air
conditioning and skirting, ve'ry
good condillon, mull bt moved

'

1 Bedroom, Economical Gas
Heat, WID Hook·Up, Near Cinema

Campua, 740-245-!18!18

2 Bedroom Apartment, 1 1/2

plied, Patio, No Pels, Lease PIUS

Sacurfty Dopooft Rtqulred, 740446-34111 .

3711 EOH

3 Rooms , Nicely Furnished Apt,
Carpet Throughout, Centlal Heat

And AIC, All Utilities Furnished
Except Electric No Pels 740-

448-2602.

5 Court St , Small One Bedrm
Kitchen With Stove &amp; Refrigerator No Pets $225 00 Month Plus
R•france &amp; Otposll 740·446·
9580

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, e2 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to !hop
&amp; movres Call 7o40-446·2588 .

2 br hoUse on 2219 112 Lincoln
Ave Pl. Pleasant $275 mon

$275 dep: available now, appflancae fum. 304-882-2099 o11ar
eprn,taavemeseago

98653

Good. $5.ooo.oo. t see GMC , 11

South
•KQ952
•AJ543
oA

I•

tion, Rune And .Oumps Good ,

• Q

Nordic Traclc Wafk-Fft; Ffl 0/tf
Flod Stewart llckell lor aa~- 1at,

Seuth

BARNEY

2nd, 3rd &amp; 4th rows, $120 &amp; up:

j

1

..

I

I

CAN rBORRY A
CUP OF SUGAR,
MIZ SMITH?

1

'J

I

•

Used 1\ltchen Cablneta &amp; Coun-

ter Coblnots, $800, 740•4489241 , AllerS P.M ' '
,
VCR, $50.00; (304}675-81122, af'-~

11r5PM

WHAT ARE YOU

FIXIN' TO MAKE,
HONEY?

NOTHIN' ll I'M JEST

PRACTISIN' UP FER WHEN

I GET HITCHED

•

I

Upstatrt sfflcloncy with private
entrance, ~O!ftlljotefy fWrllahad.
quiet aurro'undlnga, three mnea
lrom the Ravenswood Ritchie

In Ohfo Parioct lint apart-

ment for

a single per40n o'l' new

couple. ff you oro looking, ft'e a
must see. trs $390 omontll, uttNIIes are lncltlded A $300 dopoalt
Ia required For more Information,

/

or an appol,tment, call 740443·

•

P,.

Tt4tn

A MO,AL IN
ALt, T~t SCANI&gt;AL6

S'PII'I, IS

Of 199!' 1

Tt4f JOU,NeY OF
/. Tt40USANP
MILt.f Je61N6

755•7191 Oak wood Mobile

Hoowa

-

v/ITI-4 A

460 . spice for Rent

SINGLe TttiPP.

Moblfi homo alto ayaltabfa botween Ath•na and Pomeroy,

740-365'438{.

call
'

'I

MERr.HANDISE

510

Household'
Goods

2 piece living room eull S2oo oo
Verynfcef(740l448-t389 •
Appllancea :
Flecondttioned
Washers, Oryera, Rangll, Refrl·
grators, 90 Cay Guarantee!

French City Mayleg, 740·••e•

GOOD US!D' APPLfANClS
Washera, dryers , rafrtgarators,

ranges Skaggs Appllanceo, 78
VIne Street, Call 740-446-7398,
1-668-818-0126

Sporting
Goods

520

$1,200,

102.

AIIC Mlntaluro Pinscher: Female,
Black and Tan: 7mo. old $2~0.
(304)eJ'8.2444
'

Cavalfor Loll Of Now
740-448-3407, 74Q-

'84 Fl.ur Tho: aoo' Honda. $2500~
112 12 horse Wizard rkll"'l mowor, 1
$450, 740-9112·1!480.

bll&lt;:k _ , (740l-

1

set

to

appreciate;

Se,ooo. l'

AKC Roglslered•Minl Dtchshund
puppfoo, long and ahort hair;
,brHdlng pair ol Coci!Aielfa, 74Q992-9989.

(304l68!!·11218.
'
,tt98 Harley Sportallr, Complllo- ;

RogfJttred ~ ~"' l')lpo
piH, Ch.tiritpforiahlp -Ina, E•

(304l~579e.

ly Cultomizad, low Milas, Must •
se• to appreciate, $11,000. :

AI((:

cell ant Tempermtnt &amp; Olspoal·

//

f

/

81 Harley Davldeon FLT, very '

lion, First Shofo &amp; Wormed, $350,
740-245-5623

good shape, $10,000, 740-992;
5788

AKC Shattta puppt,., lwo blue

BIG NATE

97 Honda 4 Trac 300, 5 hours on ;
It, faciOry extended warranty, ask· ,

merle lemalaa, on•1l&amp;ble and

each, 740·
·

OCI'Nt'\}\f:t&gt;IT I

tomatic, good condition, $3800, 1

1982 Hll~ay Davldaon Sportalor, l
tOOOCC: Bfg lank, .black, Iota of
chroma. SIS Super E Calb. Muat •

AKC Roglattr Pomertnfan 8

se~o

[ w~ WJP~t&gt;~&lt;&gt; ro~t- "B~C&gt; f-N\) ~

'97 Kawaaakl Prairie 400, 4x4, au740-992·5678.

months old . 3 females , two wlth

white female,
eee-toee.

WE'LL
WIN I l:T:S

tng $3,500, 74D-742·te03 or 740- ,
92-4530.

garage llopt, mus1 eaa
ale, white with blue

IN THE
&amp;AG 1

Auto Part• &amp;
Accsssorlea

760

fhther seat, $7000
7oto-2•7-390t alter eprn

WE SIMPLY CANNOT
LOSE WHEN I'M

WEAII:IN(:, MY WORLI)·
FAI'IOUS \.UC.IC.Y
SOCK~!

\\1
\\1

Ill
•
540 Mlscellaneoua
Merchandlee
"WARMUP!"
Furnace, Heat Pumps &amp; Air Conditioning, F.ree Estimates! 11 You
Don 't Call Ua, We Both lose!

740-4ol6-8308, 1·600-291-()098
1 Crypt &amp; Plate , $2,000 00. Mem-

ory Gardens, Sublect To Ottar

740-367-7664

#Ph

Full Blooded Malo Peklngeao 5
Months, Aft Shots, Good With
Children, $150, 080, 740·4483447,

PEANUTS

Guinea pigs, one female, one

malo $35 for pafr, coge Included.
992-eB:jO

I-IE~E VOIJ ARE ..
SEVEN COOKIES..
ONE FOR EACH
DAV OF THE
WEEK ..

Shar-Pot puppies, klts ol
• Valentin• Puppies I 'I
Toy
Yorkles, Blchon Frlae Toy Poa.
dies, WHI Do-. 740-379-9081

AMAZING
METASOLlBM
BreaklhrOU0hl i! LOll 10-200

FARM SUPPL!ES
&amp; LIVt:STOCK

Puppies &amp; Kittens
~~~
F 11 H f 1

u nao pe"upp-

Complete Satellite System Bol,

Dish, Cable. and Ramote EXcetl.
condition (740l 388-9060

Electric Scoottra, Wheelchairs,
New And U11d, Stairway El9\la·
tors , Wheelchair And scooter
Litts Bowman's Hamacare, 740-

446-7283

610 Farm Eq'!lpment
0% Ffnonclng On New John

tam, $50, call 740-992-7200
avontngs

For sara ?:yr old, 12HP MTD Rid·
log Lawn Mower, 381n Cut, $400,

(304l674-D050
Good Condlllon, 2 Piece living
Room Suite Tan /Brown, Uattd
Very Uttlal S200 740-256-1337
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs,
Problems? Need Tuned? Cart the
plano Or 740-44EH525

1965 Ford F250 4X4, Good Work
Truck $1,800 OBO, (304}7735798.

594-11 t 1

looks &amp; runs good , auto, good
tirei/exhaust, $12!50, 740-992·

Pike) 740-448-2412 Or t-800-

5' brush hog, $350: '81 Chllvrotot
plcl&lt;up, llaavy duly, PS, PB, $850,
740-985-4240
New 5010, 8010, 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7.75% Fixed

Rate John Deere Credn Financing
New 4000 Sarles Com-

o" .
12 Mo I, t 75% -24 Moo U% •

pacts In Stock, New John Deere
MoCoa And RoUnd Baiera

38 Mce . 4.5% -48 Moo .. 8 5% ~
Mas Carmichael'S Farm &amp; lawn,
Midway Between Gallipolis And
Rio Granda On Jackson Pike

1986 Ford Truck, ~-150 , 41'/D.
$2,800 OBO: (304l682-2771 or
(304l662-3333
1987 Chtv S-10, 4X4, New Engina &amp; ftans $16.000 (~4l77357PBl
1987 Dodge Dakole V-8, Auto,
AC, $895, 1988 Chevy Pick-Up,
v-e, •Auto, 60,oo0 Mlleo. $1,995,
Cook Motor$, 740-448-o 103

1987 S-10 Pick-Up, New P2•e
60Rt4 Ttrae Chrome Mag

ny, 304-87!5-7421.

Wheels Jensen CD Sound Sytem Amp W/12" Wooters Call

740-446-7375

1988 F·150 Ford 300. 6 ely , auto,
I

7S09,

1882 Dodga t Ton Dual, 4X4,

Grfat work truck, $10 500

Kelvnator Waiher, G. E. bryar,

740-742-2397

Lilt Chair, Lfko Now. 740-4483588

(304}n3-5798
Baby Colvu, 740·388-8e24 No
Sunday cans Please
Beautltul,opard Appaloosa
In phllllll , 4 112
mara wit

monthl okl ott llPiralely or togetfllr; yHrii1!11J&gt;lJ COII;oiooo 11&gt;.
-

olllay:

1eeee-21m,

.

t993 Ford, F150, )(lT Pkg, 4JC&lt;l,

5 Speed, 305 Eng ine, 47,000
miles Vary Good Can d1!1on
Clean , Red on Red S13 000

(304l882-3358

.

11184 &amp;to 4 3 Lller V-6, excellent

Condition, 740--446-911114

SERVI CES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Loca l references furnished Ea-

labllshad 1975, Call 24 Hn1 (740l
446-0870, 1•600·287-0578 . Rogtrs Waltfproolfng.
Applla.nce Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years EX'perlence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag 740 446-

ms.

C&amp;C General Home Maintenance- Painllng, vinyl aiding,

carptntry, doors, Windows, bttlha,

::a

mobile home repair W}d more, For
estimate call Chet, 740·99:2·

Professional 20yrs eJCperlence
wllh all masonery brick , ~lock &amp;
stone At&amp;o room additions , garages , etc Free esllmatea 304-

773-9550

.

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or commercial wiring,
new Hrvlce or repalrt Mastlf Ll·
canaed eractrlclan Ridenour

Electrical. WV000306 304-6751786
.

- ,,
'

-

~----~-----·1
810
Home
Improvements '
Uncondltlon~l llfetrme guarantee.

Farma/1 - 140 Tractor wttl'l eultlva tors . has just been res toted,
Keroscana Heater Wlce &amp; Re ·
pairs, Siders Equipment Compa-

&amp;Goller

Ballutoroo
9 Allowance for
waate
11 Like a owamp

Pass

...

East

Redbl.

Dbl.
All paso

Jerry

Paso

28&amp;&amp;&amp;
29 Act Hke a

'

.

I

ASTRO·GRAPH.
•

1Uesday,Feb. 2, 1999
A number of unique situations
could come your way in the year
ahead through individuals you know
only casually. Some might have real
ment, but thoroughly tnveSiigate all
possible ramifications before you
gettnvolved.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19)
Keep your slingshoc ready lo fire a
bull'o-oye should you deal with any
llll'l!e orpnizationloday. Business situations could be a little more com·
pliclled than you onlicipate. liying lo
pa1ch up a broken romonce? The
Aslro-Graph Matc:hmaker can help
you understaod what to do to make
lbe 10lalionship work. Mail $2.75 10
Matc:hmaker, C/o this newopaper.
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) Evett
though companions may make a
number of demonds on your time ond
lllenttoday, don 'tlook for them to be
cooperaltve with you in exchange.
Their thoughu misht be oole1y 011
themselves.
ARIES (Man:~ 21-Apnl 19) You

' "

. "•

woK
31 Lalli
'
' I
33 Steppacl on •·
38 Superlative . ,u

to me

My Chn5tmas competitiOn was
msp1red by one of Robert Sheehan's
articles in The Times Apparently the
deal was shown to htm by Sally
Brock. She has won two world championships, the Venice Cup 10 1981
and '85. Here is an excellent piece of
declarer-play by Brock dunng the
1984 Women's World Team
Olympiad in Seattle, where Britain
lost to the United States in a nail-biting final
How would you have tned to
make stx hearts doubled after a
trump lead?
The bidding was. well, supply
your t&gt;wn adJeCtive! North,' Sandra
Landy, dectded to bid tactically.
apparently bemg jlusbed higher and
higher The Swed1sh • East's fourspade btd was somethmg, as was
West's deciSion to pass at that june·
tw'e
The textbooks recommend leadmg
a trump when the opponents are sac·
nficmg That is usually good adv1ce
(because normally declarer gets tncks
only from a crossrufO, but 11 wasn't
best here
Plannmg to estabhsh dummy's
• club suit, Brock (or Horton ,' as she
was then) carefully won the first tnck
wtth dummy's heart ace. She followed wtth a club ruff, ~ dtamond
ruff, a club ruff, a dtamond ruff. and
a club ruff, gelling the bad news.
However, the lhtrd dtamond ruff
brought forth the ace from West. So
declarer trumped another club tn
hand, cashed the d1amond kmg, discardmg dummy' s spade, ruffed a
spade m the dummy, and conceded a
club tnck to West's ace for a juicy
plus 1210
Note tha11f declarer wms tnck one
m hand, the contract cannot be made.

-·

' ...

23PrellnM , •
24 nny pertlcle
25 Manufaclu~,
77 ChlnaM
(comb. form) · : ·

Opening lead: • 10

From her to him

12 Spun (a
- -.
baton)_
··
13 Grovel ridge • •
18 Bleil
•· '
20 Cold Adriatic - • '
wind
· ~.
21 Solution
l&lt; ' "''J
'•
22 Friend ot

uufftx

.. .~.

animal
41 Aclrftl

.. '

40 Two-footed
Lamarr

42 Laot letter
(Brit.)

43 Hawaiian
food lllh
44 Fr1111ront
ointment

• •.

i'
, ,.

·•.
..,,•
'•

-.
r

460-kpellk

47 Marah plant ·: ,
48 Mary Baker -'u
so Draft org.
"
52 Above (poet.) •
53 Elploll

..•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.·

by Lull Campos
CIMtKtv CIPWr ayptogmna .,. oreat.d !rom qootallooa by llllfiOUI peop6e put and pret«''l
Ead'lletter in the ciphltr standi lor another Toct.y'• cliJe E .,quala C

'M

FSOR

PI D J S

R N S

TMUNR

D Cl R • '

..

NDEJSL

W 0 A ' W

OMUNR

DR N S t

uwvs

w

R D

..

IDAOSL

AWOUSITMSCA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "My l~e needs edltong "- Mort Sahl
"For me, hie has been either a wake or a wedding" - Peler O'Toole

'=~~~~~ s~ ~.ill-'\l&amp; t. ~s·
ClAY I. 'OI&amp;AN

_ _ _ _.....;...__ Ntt..l

WOlD
OAMI

'

low to form four words

Q.l WW0 N

--..M,.......,.A
_W..,..-S_P.....--11 ~"'~,
s 1

~

•I

.

..

I

.
.

".

"The best success tn life,"
the mom told her ktds , "is to be

I

~~~~ ~o-s_p.~nd your ltfe tn your
l--.~--r~-T~-,~r--r.l6.-.-j G) Complete the chuckle quoted
RACNA y

,I '

--

~,

Rearrange lo11oro of ~
four ocromblad -do _.

0

~

'

.•

·•.

,-,
'

1493

1987 F 250 Dlesel4 X 4 Super
Duty XLT Lariat: 143,000 Miles,
Black $8,500 00. 740-2!18-1579

$4,000 080, (304}87!5-3624

7 Novollot Jong

LETTEiS TO

ttee Codga Ram hall ton ptc.&lt;-up,

740-446-2412 Or t -800-594·
1111.

740-448·0390

cablne1s for sale remote
jeep, one small kllchen

1 Knllewound
2 Vlllaln In
Othello
3 Olthe dawn
4 Amar. aoldlora
5 Double curve
6 Furry
otole

-'

Single Axle, (304l675-6734

1689 ,Chtv S-10;4X4; Air, Auto ;
Runo Goo~ 160 Thou Mffu,
Good 'nreo, Aftllr IPM, (304l675-

Call . (7•0l 446-3302 ror appointment

23 Playwright Nell
211 Everyano _
27-Paulo
30Liklap_eraon
wllh a oore
throat
32 Having o meal
34 Very early

by flllmg 1n the m•nmg words
L-.l--L-...I.-.l-....1..--1 you develop
from step No 3 below

1983 GMC Truck wJ12ft Dump
Bed, 8 9 diesel, 5 speed·2speed

••·

441·1268

Dbl.

North

aa

I MONDAY

power ateerln'g, PQl!Jir brakes, air,

Bollt While $250 oo For s.t 140-

••Paas

West

Pass

You'H build o b.g nest egg when
you SCM with the closslfieds

g09d ll!lnqt wn. J;!.4oo. 740-247-

Nawly Ramodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime location In
downtown Gallipolla No Petal
$300 00 month plua utllllles Ref·
erences &amp; Deposit Aequlred

DOWN

(2 wdo.)

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Deere Hay Equlpmentll Financing
As Low As 3 9o/. On Used Hay
Equipment Now Thru Jan 30
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Inc.
Midway Between Gallipolis And
Rio Grande On Old 35 (Jackson

_;.:_:=------- 1 Avallab'For sale· Sqott amlfm stereo ,..
ceiver with Fisher Speaker Sya:

and environ•

I

Poundt Easy, Quick, Faet
Dramatic Re•utts. 100% Natural,

2006 Camden Avenue

a

,__,

8184,

Parkarstiurg. wv 26101
304-485-1293

J

20 S..n Frenclaco

$200 &amp; up, 740-849-2128

18" DlrecTV Sl..lllte Syst•m•·
$89.00 purchase prJce with up to
$200 worth of free programming
Limited lime offer, call 1·S00.779·

Doctor Rtcommandld Free Samples Caii74D-441 ·11162.
B.V. Southllde Aquarlum 1

milO I

49 Pall, 11 time
51 Drenched
54 Coercion
55 Affirmed
56 Tollloa
57Proporlld

By Phillip Alder

capped EOii 304-675-8!179

B~dg&amp;

45 Map abbr.
46 Unrollned

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

par, 7oto-992-et8t.

3315 after 7pm,

• 6
• 10 8 4 2
• A K 10 4 2

65

Rubbar, 2 Sp Rear End. Runs

1.

Furnlohod Upetslra 2 Roome &amp;
Batn. Ctaan, Rfftrellcoa, &amp; o.potfl ReQuited, Ullllloi Paid, 740448-1519

(304}1175-e162

Aluminum

Bed . 427 Rebuilt Motor, Good

fzed apl. lor elderly a~d handi-

Equal Houalng Opportunity

Ground floor apt~rtment , 2 bed·
room with WfD hootc-upno peta

Dump TJuck· 12Ft

• J 10 4

A
K 10 9 8 2

knot
40 UMd 1 ...lr
tool
42 Pueblo Indian

participant)
10 Eutem
Dhlloaophy
12 ...lflghter
14 Tonnlo player
Andre
15 Cll- up
(lllll'a rlghta)
11 -voyor,
17 BaMba alai
19 Order of
Whalell

East

Far Sate· 1973 GMC · 1 112 Ton

Twin Alvars Tower now acaeptlng
appllcallons for tbr HUO subsld·

2 Bedrooms. $4251Mo. Stoo De2bdrm. apls , total electric, appliances furnished laundry room
facUlties, close to school In town
Applications available at: \llllllga
Green Apts. 149 or call 740·992·

• Q7
tKQJ973
• 7

2nd &amp; 3rd 'rows: calf 740-948-

Flooro, CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Car·

ea. No Pats 740--446-9580

740-44e-1637, 74~3437

• a78a

O EEK&amp;MEE~

Martina McBride I Diamond Rio,

Tara "liownhouse Apartments ,
Vary Spacious. 2 Sed rooms, 2

BathS, Greal location! 15 Court
Street, Gallipolis, kitchen With
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo ,
Plus uuuuaa Deposit, Raferenc·

posll, All Urllltlea Paid No Pets,

Ol-30·19

12 month remafnl"'l on foa10, calf ,
14().8112.3787 or 740-992-3880. .

large setoctfon Starting Llne-upa,
we have aft good players and pro-

MOdern 1 Bedroom Apartment,

blfo home, 740-992-5039.

314 Acre LOt Located 2 MNes On

1 Bedroom, $250/Mo , You Pay
UUitles On Second Avenue ,
Downtown, 7-t0-367.()219

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

ver~

down large selactlon
ol 2-3·4 bedrooms lree delivery&amp;
setup owner fina ncing available
on l~ at Oak wood Moblkt homes

$500 Down on any 14x70 In
stock, limited numb•r. tree dlllv-

(740l 446-2563

11 + acrea

er,

Traitor Hook Up On 5 Acroe Located On THna Run Ad, $12,500

Nitro Wv 304-755-5885

1 Bedroom Apartment for Flent.
Stove and Ralrlgerator Furnlshedl

$279/Mo , Plus Utttntas, Deposn &amp;
Lease Required, 740-446-2957.

8365.

IIWoWII
Only S199

992-11216

on SR 325, nice wooded 17 acloe
$18,000 clly water Near Carpent-

Paradlao Only $29,000 oo Land
Gontrads Avail- HID0-213-

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Will Oo Ironing In My Home,
Shirts And Blouses $1 00 Each,

owa, Fenced In Area WIShed

nlshed and unfurnished, security
deposit required no pets, 740·

-233 Near Gallla 7 Acres, Mead

lic water

$22,500 .

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·

EXCELLENT CONDITIONII

Uppe~

440

In Galla COunty, Off Stale Route

8365

Houae And 5 Acres On Teens

0128'

County,

thony Land Co , Lid 1-800-213-

Red Bnck Ranch Style House
Partial!~ Finished Basement, 2
Car Garage, Serious Inquiries

Ruh Ad . 'Fixer

Gsllla

COUNTRY LOTS

call304-67!5-1957

Handyman&amp; Spacial Elec , carpentry, other repairs &amp; remode lIng Free Estimate, ( 304)674-

View,

$32,000 More Acreage Avellable,
740-368-8678

,
'

b1dllner, excellent condition ._)'
8,000 mllea, buy at $12,9eQ or at-. 1
surne leaH 11 $22.3 a month also ,

Winnlng Circle and Racing
Champfons Dale Earnharl l Jeff
Gordon, plus 'Dale Jr. and 1others.

992-5264

430 Farms for Rent

'

98 Ford Ranger XLT Suparcab, .

By Action- Re\lelf- Brookoflold-

pets, water and trash paid, 140-

electric and frost free water 10
miles from GalllpoUa $650. month

yoursettl

Rtntors Dream Como TrUaf Call
304-738-7298

$150 dspostt, $300 month, no

ments, 304-736-7295

By \'IOO&lt;fS, 740·256-1614

$350 00 Ptr Month . Deposit
Req'd All Utllltlae Paid Call 740446-2477

Two bedroom trailer, very clean,

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths, 1 25 Acres,
Nicety landscaped Surrounded

en: N,too, 740-

Cross Country Skier: atalr step·

77(W5

Two bedroom In country, water
and trash induded, references
and deposit required, call 740·

992·5768.

One Bedroory&gt; Apl lal.tto Mall

For Sale or Rent: 2BR Trailer;

For Sale. Electnc Furnace, BTU
53000, lor Ooubktwlde, used 'v'ery
Illite, $250 (304l576-2686

B8 Ford Ranger

$2!50000 Coli 74Q-446-4l514 Be·
tore !.oo PM or 740-446·3248

no pata, 740-992-5656.,
HUD ApprO\/Od, (304l773-5878

trail 7-'1288.

837-8217, ask for Devo.

1913.

Used single wide, around $100

Garage, Fenced Backyard, Vinyl

388-9686.
2 Bdnns, Furnished, On Raccoon

448-3727,

1985 GMC Jflm1y 4 WD. 4 Docin.
Excellent Condition, Lots Ot Ex-

tfee paid, $100 deposit, 740-9927806

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,

Factory goof I! I Save thousands,

31 o Homes lor Sale

And $350/Mo In Country, Rafartnce &amp; Deposit Required, 740·

Heifers, 3 Reglat1r1d Limousine
Bulla Call Alter 8"00 PM 740·

1

be seen •• Au1land Bottle Gas or
Ill' calling 740-742-2511 or t-600-

$200 74 per month with $1150
down Celt-600-637-3236

callt-,600-948-5676

REAL ESTATE

erator. Water &amp; Trash Paid, $275

For Safe: 8 Roglltortd Limousine

•

One bedroom apartment in Mid·
dlt!X)rt, $270 par month, all utili·

Why Aent , you can, own your
own home tor as low as $499.
down low monthly paymentt.
ownar llnanclng available 304·

5676.

.,. ""?"'tee. on an .cfUII
_.unlly bolla

&amp; 3 Bedrooms, Stove, Refrig-

4.3189

2 Ton Dump Truck, v-e. 10Ft
Bed, 2 Sp Rear End, ftlr Condi-

2 Bedrooms, 2 Balh Trailer in
Green Terrace, $350/Mo., In·
eludes Lor Rent , Water, Sewer
And Trash, $250 Deposit And
References Required, No Pa.ta,
EICC&amp;IIent Condition, 740-441·

New bank repoa, only two lett,
never lived In call 1· 800· 948·

-fnlhll--

992-2167

COlorful Buckakln Stallion, 74Ch

Shak- K. Bryant and others. Can

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,

end sat up call t-800-948-5678

lr1fonMd that .. ctw•lnga

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobi&amp;e homes, air
oondltloned, $260.$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·

Nascar CotllctltMa

$300 00, 304-87!5-1550

5343 and leave a message

oo

llllv8rlllemlrt far

849-3089.

t.tlxad seasoned tlrewbod , cut

and apllt, dellvorod, $30 toad,
740-742-2263

tecttva covers for displaying, Me·
Gwlre- Griffey· Marino- E. Smlti'I-

Area $2115/Mo., 614-3611-9162

Rant Buster, new 1999 14x70 2or
3 bedrooms , only $995 00 down
,$195
per mon. free delivery

ThJa n&amp;WIJJ•perwfll not
k""""llllf ICCopl

1982 141170 SChultz mobile home,
two bedrooms, two baths, 740·

One bedroom apartment for rent
quiet .dap. &amp; ret requl,ed

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You

Each Purchase! 1125·2128199, 1·
800-251 - 5070

llmltltiOn 01 cb::ttmlnlllono.

trances, No Pets.7.W.256-1044

Sewage. Traah, $295/Mo , 740-

~

New 18x80 $5oo-oown $245-par
mo Free air, skirt t-800-6918777

etude A Big Screen Tv With

origin. or any fnlonlfon to
mlka any auoh

14X60, 2 Bedrooms, AIC, W &amp; D,
Stove &amp; Ratrlg .. Small Porch, Ro-

No Pats. 614-388·9162

Rapid RaiUndlll Will Pay Tha Cost
Of Your Rapid Refund And In-

ltlC lamllallltaiUI

poett required, 740-742-2661

3 Badroome, I 112 Bathe, $3001

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ACAO$S

could be in for a big dtsappointment
today if you've been counting on
another 10 handle something compli·
cited for you Be prepared to fend for
· yourself.
TAURUS (Aprtl 20-May , 120)
Don't aqend any social get-together
today if you're less than enlhralled
about it If you 're 1n lbe wrong mood
for il, you could make all otlten pre·
sent feel uncomfortable.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Although yof! fii&amp;Y be full of crea1ive
ideas today, don't begin any projecu,
especially those that may require
sleadfaslness. You dbn 't have the slamme to complete what you stort al
thiS lime.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Take
extra care when perfonning any work
of a mental nature today. porticularly in "'Bards to the degree of concentra~on you're giving it. Anyt~ing
le11 than full attention could couae
errors.
LI!O (July 23-Aug. 22) Old obligations should be taken care of before

usumina any new ones, so manage
your reooun:eo wilh exlreme care
today and avoid ony more debit
•pending.

(Aug. 23-sept. 22) A
clash wills is possible today with
assertive or dictatonallypes because
you youBelf could be unyielding.
lmmedia1ely walk away from any
hint of a confrontation.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You
could make things a lot easter on
yourself 1oday if you ride lbe tide.
Should conditions restrtct you from
doing lhings of your own choosing,
'
just wail for lhe next wave.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Any
proposals brought to you today, especially by someone whose repu1auon
may be queslionable, must be ana_lp~d in rtunute detail. What looks
good on the surface could lack substance underneath.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov, 23-Dec.
21) This ts one of !hose days when
ony thoughtless behav10r on your pan
could be blown way out of profX1r·
tion, so be careful. You could be held
accountable for the smallest of infi'ac-

tions
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Someone who has copted one of your
ideas may auempl 10 lake credtt for
ils conceplton loday. lcllh1S person
know that you don't cons1der plagiartsm to be a smcere fonn of naucry

Doctor - Depth - Outdo- OptiCS- OTHERS DO
A fnend won 't go for counseling She says a Psychta·
tnst ts someone who doesn't have to worry as long as

OTHERS DO

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FEBRUARY 1 I. "

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:Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(Rudolph's outdoors ·experience helps
: :!~~~!~V:.,~~LWrlter
,
.
.
.
• MURPHY N C
II h .11 • · · -Its been almost a year smce Btlly Stiles got the phone
:n ~n~'thnever forget. The sheriff asked him 10, bring a tract?r up !he moun' d debre ~ede found a gray, l989 NJSsan ptckup stuck m·the mud and
surroun
•· eral agents
• Th e1 k y bel
d E·. R be
.
.
onge to riC . ? rt Rudolph, wanted m the bombmg of
:
. • .P C up
• a~•nnmgham, Ala., abort1on climc
• Rudolph is still a f g t' d -1 · $I 11
ard d
•.
.
u 11ve. espt e a m1 ton rew
an one ofthe most
: mtenstve, expensive manhunts '" U.S. history.
· FBI agent Woody Enderson says the fed~ral and ~tate Jaw enforc~ment
agenctes hunung for Rudolph believe he sull IS .htdmg somewhere m the
: 530,~-acre Na~tahala Nauonal Forest, a rugged, remote area at North Car; ob~~ s western t!P·
,
,, .
: S, We tbmk h~ s alone and he s been alone, sa1d Ender~~m. leader of the
• outheast Bomb Task Force.
..
• h' But he concedes the expenenced outdoorsman holds an advantage over
IS .~ur~uers
' He s been up here 16 or 17 years and we don't know all the routes he

I '

Monday, February 1, 1998

h'm outwit manhunt.'

has travelell and the ~laces he's been," he said. "But now we can say we do
know some of them.
.
Task force leaders refuse to say what the manhu'nt has cost but it easily
has run into !he millions of dollars. Sev~ral helicQPtcrs ~sed·il•. the search
are parked outstde the agents'Jarge command post in near6y Andrews
On Jan · 29' 1998 ,.an exp1oston lc'JI
· 1tceman I'nd mat1119d·a
·
·
' ed a po
nurse
at the New Woman All Women Health Care in Binningham.
·
That n'ght
R d0 I h t d
'd · M h b
1
~ od d
' . u P ren. e a vt eo •n urp Y· ought a large cache of
o an supplies, and vaniShed.
I_nitially sought as a material witness in the bombing, Rudolph quickly
became the pn'!'e suspect Charges were filed after nails and other evidence
were found tn hts home in Murphy, hiS, pickup and a rented mini-warehouse.
l,.ater, he was cha~ged m three Atlanta-area bombmgs, includmg the 1996
Oly~ptc park bombmg tn Atlanta~ •n whtch a woman died.
Smce Feb 9, 1998, the day ~Illes towed away Rodolph's pickup, thete
has been JUSt one reported Slghung of Rudolph.
That .was July, II. when health food store.oymer Geprge Nordmann told
authonttes Rudolph had come to hiS home '" neatby Nantahala and taken
SIX months' worth of food and supplies, along with his pickup.

p_ The . llhunt and !he more than 200 agents who poured mto the area ini:

lially thnlled and tmpressed sqme residents.
· Feelings have changed
'
'
f "We'tO'oonstanlly cracking jokes ~bout how Rudolph has managed to ourit them" said Jerimi McManus a waiter at ShoeBoolies CafliL in Murphy
'R
'
'
.., from little·
, udo1ph-ftas
really become a legend.
It's funny how someone
' J~·~urnlwtown is beating the FBI's best people."
'!'!'' ·
·
• : When he towed away Rudolph's ptckup, Sttles remarked; "Nothing in thi&amp;
couniy has ~er been this big "
•
~· ~ !'IPW he Y.iews the matter differently. "Nobody says too much of an thin .
about it these days," Stiles said.
•
y g
'{he m~obunt has brought notoriety· to a Jiule-known area.
•
'' ' "Now if someone asks where I'm from, I just·say it's near where they're
iobliins for.Snc Rudolph," said Mandy Ellison, 21, who was in her first year
.tbardner-Webb University in Boiling Springs when the Rudolph manhunt

beg'ti' •

&lt;·

~

~ ~~ison spoke at the Lake's End Grille, a popular lunch spot just a cou-

pie of miles from Rudolph's boyhood home in the commumt of Nantahafa, about20 nnles from Murphy. On the restaurant's counter is stack of blue
tr-shirts Will\ the words; "Eric Rudolph; 1998 Hide-and-Seek Champion ...

i

~ll them 'Cut your hair and get a

brutes, but really no one is doing any- to look for a friend he Wllllted to warn
one any service by encouragmg them that police mtght arrest anyone who
to hve on Lower Wacker Drive," said ignores the 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. lockout.
I ohn Camper, a spokesman for MayNearby, piles of ratty blankets and
or Richard Daley. "We treat the poor ~stray office chair were sufrounded
and the homeless as well as we can.. by a cardboard box that contained
Even so, many in the underground foam plates, orange peels and leftover
wondered where they would go.
nee. Meanwhile, pigeons pecked at a
"It's kind of unfatr, kickmg us out few scattered bread crumbs on the
of here. But if that's what the gov- unne-tmged concrete.
etnment wants,· I'll do what they
"Me myself, 1 got a rough Slluawant," James Marion said Friday, as · tion," sa•d Evans~ who left Lower
he sat in a. chair on Lower Wacker Wacker to Jive with.'~ friend in the
drinking a cup of coffee amid bundles Cabrini-Greeri housma project seven
of blankets and other belongings he months ago. "But it's worse for these
was watching for friends.
guys They don't have nowhere ·to
Marion said he's been ltving there go."
since he was released from a Veter·
Advocates for the poor quesll2r
an's Admmtstration hospital etght how many of the city's 5,424 shelter
years ago.
beds are available on any given night
'Til just pack up my blankets a11d _ and whether people who've Jived
what I can carry," he said. "A tooth- on Lower Wacker would even stay
brush, mouthwash, cologne."
there if they were available.
About three blocks away, Tony
"They choose to Jive down there
Evans descended from the sunshine because they don't want anyone to

job,' so to speak,'' said SISter Connie
f;&gt;riscoll, who heads the St. ~~rtm
~ePorres s~elter and ~us on the city's
homeltSHask 'force .. ,,·
,
,: .TIJ.e ~ew rules ~qn't .help ' tile
jh:liigE:ol"a cityjhat h~ bUn accused.
of shuttling the homeless to sites
unseen durmg big events, mcludmg
lhe Democratic.'National Convenuon
in 1996.
I
·
'
', "lt's,all in an effor.t'to try to ~tde
the problem of homelessness," said
Dame) Tardiff olithe Ch1cagci Coalilion for the HoM'eless. "It's liappening all over the country. They're try~ng to make the issue faceless."
), P~ul f=olgan,.a spokesman for the
:Suilding Owners and :Managers
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PEt i'V ALENTINES!

~ }'OU~ ~PECIAL PAGE{S)

Cristini claims' to h;v~' iined ~Pat
least $10 million from private
inVestors willing to buy and mend the
plant, though he won't name them.
For now, he presses on with his
campaign to salvage some history in
his own way. He likens h1mself to
Robin Hood, protecting "!he little
guys" from a city he constders a pillagmg Shenff of Nottmgham.
"'\Ve're defendmg something we
think is an honorable cause," he says.

· Also a speeial section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

THE.·D AILY SENTINEL

Apartment fire leaves 4 dead in Lima
burns and smoke inhalation.
Wireman died at the hospital
shortly after arriving, while Sholler
and Hernandez were dead on a~J
at the hospital, Ladd said.
Joseph Sheller, 25, dted about 5
p.m. Sunday at Mtamt Valley Hospttal in Dayton, where he was being
treated for burns. HIS wtfe, Stephante
Sholler, 24, was treated at St Rita's
Medtcal Center.
Poll ee amvmg at the burning
house helped Joseph Sholler out. HIS
wife goi out by herself,

Donald Sholler was the son of the
Sheller couple, wh1le Hernandez was
Mrs. Sheller's daughter, Ladd said.
Wtreman was a visttor to the apartment, Webb said
'
Firefighters haven't determined
what caused the fire. Webb said
investigators are looking into whether
a grease fire on the stove got out of
control.
Some firefighters suffered mmor
burns but weren 't senously InJUred,
Webb satd.
, ~ .. ,,,
Lima is about-70 mt Jes southwest·
of Toledo.
' ""'
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Overbrook Center receives positive .
report from state department survey

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five days revtewmg the center's operatiOns , medical records, and talking
with residents and their famthes
about the center's operations.
Less than 10 percent of all nu rs·
ing centers tn Ohw are found to be
deftetency free , which places Overbrook Center among the best centers

PER PICTURE·
PRi·PAID

Hurry! Deadline
!Thursday, February 4th at 3 p.m.
•

Ir-----~--------------------,
VALENTINE PETS
I

in the entire State in 1999, according
to Overbrook AdmtnJStrator Dav•d
Snyder.
"The excellent survey results are
a tribute to the hard work, dedtcation,
and canng attitude of our staff in giving our residents the rest serv ices
posstble," satd Snyder.

Peoples Bancorp announces
increased earnings for 1998
Peoples Bancorp Inc ., based 10 Manetta, has announced its 25th consecutive year of increased earnings. Nettncome for the bank for 1998 totaled
$1 0,045,000, an tncrease of 16.7 percent from 1997's net income of
$8 ,605,000.
.
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Rollen E. Evans, prestdent and chief execuuve officer, said thaHlle earn-!:
togs are the result of new technology, in vestments 10 new markets and the
.
_ •
acquisition and transitiOn of several new operattons
P~opl 7s Bancorp Inc. is a bank holdtng company whtch operate~ several
substd•anes 1ncludmg The Peoples Banking and Trust Co., with branches in
communiti es tnclud10g Pomeroy, Middleport , Rutland and Gallipolis.

1Pet's Name

1

1Owner's

1

Name

!Address

ICity

I

IAmounfEnclosect:

I

For -plcturesl

1st $6 each.

-

I

L--------------------------~
Deadline Thursday, February 4th at 3 p.m.
•
Mall or bring the entry form:

,The Daily Sentinel

. . ' •'

111 Court St.

...

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

loss 59-42

-Page4

•

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Volume 49 , Number 188

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Single Copy· 35 Cents

Prosecutors question Jordan on knowl·edge of affair
a fifth and final time on June 9.
Today marlced !he first time Jordan, a Washington
WASHINGTON (AP) - Vernon Jordan entered the attorney and longtime Ointon friend, had testified since
Capitol to undergo questioning today in the Senate August, when Ms. Lewinsky began cooperating with
impeachment proceedings against President Ointon, fac· Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr.
ing House managers looking into his effOrts to get Mon- .
In contrast to Jordan, Ms. Lewinsky gave the grand
ica Lewinsky a job and lawyer. •
jury specific details that linked Jordan to conversations
The presidential oonfidant was being que5tioned pri- about gi(ts she received from Ointon, destroyed notes to
vately in a room normally used ·by used by the Senate the president'and a false affidavit in which
Intelligence Committee. Sen5. Patrie~ Leahy, D:Vt., and she denied an affair.
On Monday, in the fi..Sl time she was
Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., followed minutes later by Sen.
. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, rode upstairs in an elevator to !he exposed to possible questioning by Oinroom where Jordan was to be interviewed under oath .by ton's lawyers, MJ. Lewinsky gave testimony !hat closely tracked her earlier grand
House prosecutors and lawyers for !he president
DeWine was accompanied during Monday's deposi· jury account, according to sources familiar
lion of Lewinsky by two staff attorneys and his chief of with the testimony wh9 spoke on condition
staff- all women. He declined to discuss details of what of anonymity. The sourCes were not associated with the House prosecution team and
WIIS said.
Prosecutors are interested in precisely how much !he worked outside the White House. Ms.
former White House intern told Jordrn of her relation· Lewinsky's lawyers declined comment
The differences in testimony arc imporship with the president
tan!
because Jordan arranged a job for the
As senators for the first time today got access privately to Ms. Lewinsky's vidcotspcd deposition, prosecutors fonner White House intern at !he same time
were to focus their questions on some of the discrepan- she WIIS preparing the affidavit in December 1997. The
cies that emerged after Jordan testi 6ed to a grand jury for two actions are joined in the impeachment article ICCUS·

ing Ointon of obstruction of justice.
Some examples of the discrepancies:
-According to grand jury testimony released by
Congress, Ms. Lewinsky said she showed Jordan some
gifts she'd rec:eived from the president; Jordan didn't
recall being shown any.
-She said she thought Jordan was instructing her to
destroy drafts of notes she'd written to the president. He
denied ever telling her to destroy documents.
-He said he had no reason to doubt '
her denial of having had a sexual relationship with Ointon. While she didn't directly
contradict Jordan's account, she did say she
told him she had had sexually explicit
phone conversations with Ointon.
In addition, Jordan said he remembercd skimming the affidavit she filed in the
Paula Jones sexual harassment case against
Ointon, but not discussing it wi\h Ms.
Lewinsky. And through his lawyer, Jordan
said he did not recall any reference to sexually explicit phone calls.
Ms. Lewinsky said she told Ointon's friend she was
concerned about some of the language ,in her affidavit

because it could cause the Jones lawyers to ask her lf
she'd ever been alone with t~e president.
Ms. Lewinsky's recollection is filled with other spe;
•
cific detaiL
k'egarding the phone calls, she said the topic arose
after she told Jordan she was worried someone mighl
have eavesdropped on her conversations with Clinton~
and Jordan IISked her why.
. •
In the same conversation, the fonner White Ho~
intern said, she showed Jordan some gifts Ointon had
given her.
When prosecutors questioned Jordan, he said he'
never had breakfast with Ms. Lewinsky. She said other·
wise, describing details of what she and Jordan ate - ,
testimony corroborated by a restaurant receipt signed lty
Jordan.
Jordan's deposition is the second of three such sessions, as !he Senate edges closer to the end of Ointon 's
impeachment trial. The trial is to resume Thursday, and
unless the depositions yield new infonnation, the Senate
will proceed to closing arguments and final deliber.atioas
that could meet the lawmakers' target for ending the trill
by Feb. !2, or sooner. Videotapes of the three depositions
could be made public if a majority of senators vote to~
so, or the witnesses could be called to testify Jive.
c

4

Supreme Court·to provide courthouse security grant
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Stlltf
The Ohio Supreme Court will provide at least
$46,000 in funding to Meip County to beef up
the county courthouse security system.
Mike Canan, security officer for !he Meigs
County Court of Common Ple!IS, met with the
Meigs County Commissioners during !heir regu·
Jar meeting on Monday to discuss the grant, '
which represents $23,000 infunding for common
pleas court, and the probate and juvenilt courts.
The grant represents state efforts to improve
security in county courthouses, and will be used,
Canan said, to purchase courthouse security
equipment such as a portable mefal detector and
ner.
panic alarms in county offices.
.A cheer . went up u .members of th~ lo&lt;:al
.•
Canan said. that the. courthouse wiiS recently
Groundhog Day club made the; annountemenl,
surveyed
by lht U.S. Marshal and the Stq!reme ·
shortly after dawn. If Phil had SCC'n his shadow,
Court,
and·
noted 'that the building was lacking
it would have mellllt six more weeks of winter.
even rudimentary security measures, such as fire
"We will feel winter's wrath, but spring is
alarms and adequate door Jocks.
coming." said Bill Cooper, president of the lnher Punxsut.wney Phil
Canan's department recently installed surveilCircle, the club that stages the annual midwinter
and friend
lance cameriiS in the courthouse, but other recom·
festival.
mended measures, including limited access
It wiiS !he same cheery news in Ulburn, Ga., where Georgia's groundthrough one erttrance, are impossible to take
hog forecaster, Gen. Beauregard Lee, also failed to see his shadow. Ooudy
because of the building's design.
skies shadows away when the !1-year-old rodent cam~ out of his small
The only handicapped-accessible entrance is
mansion at 7:34 a.m., said Ruth Lctowsky, a spokeswoman for the Yellow
through !he courthouse elevator.
River Game Ranch, where Gen. Lee Jives.
The building has five other entrances, includThe Groundhog Day tradition is rooted in a &lt;Jennmsuperstition that if
ing
a fire escape, and Canan said that limiting ·
an animal casts a shadow on Feb. 2 -the Christian holiday of CandlemiiS
- bad weather is coming.
In the 110 years since &lt;Jennan farmers began the festival in Punxsutawney, the morning of Feb. 2 has evolved into an elaborate show of
hoodwinkery.
.
By JIM FREEMAN
In years past, members of the club voted the night before whether or Sentinel News Staff
not Phi] would see his shadow, rain or shine. Despite overcast skies last
The Pomeroy Police Department is getting a
year, the club announced the shadow appeared. They set off fireworks to
new home, the village auditorium, after seeking
simulate a sunrise.
and getting approval from Pomeroy -Village
This year, club members insisted, !hey did not decide what Phil's deciCouncil Monday night.
sion would be until they actually approached his burrow.
Council approved, by a 3-2 vote, the police
An announcement this morning estimated the crowd at just15,0Q0. Bad department moving into the auditorium which
weather and a Groundhog Day in the middle of the week ~ept attendance
is currently used as a meeting place for groups
down, but !he crowd wiiS full of enthusiasm for Phil.
including dance troupes, Pol)leroy High School
Mike Simmons made a four-hour trip from the town of Tunkhannock
alumni and others. The auditorium also serves
to be here. Asked why, he said: "I have no idea. For the absurdity?"
as the polling . site for the Pomeroy Second
"It's wmething unusual," offered his friend, Sandra Peoples of ScranPrecinct.
to~. "Something you can say you did once."
Plans call for the police department to install
"And only once," added Simmons' wife, Jackie.
partitions for dispatchers, office space and
interviewing rooms,. according to Police Chief
Jeff Miller, who approached council Monday
MARION (AP)- Spring may be just around the comer, i, groundhogs
night with the request. The stage area will serve
have any say in it.
·
as the police chiers office. The department was
Ohio's groundhog, Buckeye Chuck, didn't see his shadow Tuesday
given $6,000 to do the work which will be done
morning.
by police officers.
According to legend, that means spring is nelfr. Superstition says a
Miller pointed out the department's current
shadow means six more weeks of winter.
space in the Pomeroy Municipal Building is too
Groundhogs Punxsutawney Phil in Pennsylvania and Gen. Beauregard
small and makes members of the general public
Lee in'Georgia agreed with Chuck's "forecast."
·
share space, a cramped area just inside the
The Legislature designated Buckeye Chuck the state weather grounddoorway of the department, with suspected
~~~
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criminals.
Incidentally, the calendar says spring starts March 20.
"The layout of the police department puts
drunk prisoners, Joe Public and everyone else
Prosecutor says defendant tried to kill himself there at the same counter," Miller said.
CLEVELAND (AP)- A former high school coach accused of sexually
The new design will ensure that someone
abusing players tried to kill himself stopping in to pay a parking ticket will not have
rather than face a two-year prison
to share a small space with drunk driving sussentence, a prosecutor said.
peels, or worse, he explained.
Thomas Boylan, 34, of Oeveland,
tried to inhale carbon monoxide
from a car in the garage on Monday
Z Sections • lZ Pages
at his Oeveland home, said ~istant
By ANDREW CARTER
·
County Prosecutor Dominic DeJBalNewt
Staff
OVP
so. A neighbor stopped !he attempt.
So you want to know what's going on in
Boylan was taken to Deaconess
Ohio's-state
government, but you feeHefl on-theHospital under police guard and WIIS
outside?
If
you're
a computer user linked to the
treated. He wiiS held today in !he
·
loternet,
your
problems
might be solved. Last
Cuyahoga County Jail.
Thursday,
statehouse
leaders
unveiled a new web
He WIIS scheduled to appear in
will
provide
users
with
the text of all leg·
site
that
court later Monday on charges of
islation,
including
analysis
of
each
bill and its fissexually abusing players on the
cal impact.
·
•
Parma Padua Franciscan High
"I
think
that
anything
that provides more in forSchool girls' basketball team.
mation
for
constituents
is
good," said Rep. John
Lotteries
Boy Jan was charged last year with
Carey,
R-94th,
of
Wellston.
"Our constituents
6ve counts of rape and 12 counts of
omo
want
to
know
how
legislators
vote and this progross sexual imposition involving
Pkk3: 8-3-1; Pk:k4: 3-7-5·2
vi
des
them
with
direct
access
when
they need it to
two girls. He had agreed to plead
see how legislatorS are voting on key legislation."
Btldieye5: 4-11·17-20-32
guilty to two counts of sexual battery
'lt
W.VA.
The web site allows. computer users to gain
and one count of gross sexual impoaca:ss
to infonnation by either entering the bill's
Dally 3: S-9-1; Dally 4: 2-4· I· I
sition and face a two-year sentence
number
or doing a key word search. To locate leg0 1999 Ohio \lot~y Publiohi"' Co.
to avoid a trial, lawyers said.
islation concerning "ed~;" simply type in

Ohio groundhog,predicts early spring

1

Syracuse hands
#1 U. Conn first

access through one door would be .virtually requirements next year.
impossible without changing the architecture of
Canan also said that a courthouse security
the building, which he said the surveyors are con- committee, made up of himself, Lcntes, Sheriff
cemed about maintaining.
James Soulsby and Pomeroy Police Chief Jeffre~
Canan said that no serious security breaches Miller, will also be fonned to address security
have taken place in the courthouse to date, concerns.
.
although hunting knives have been removed from
Susan Oliver, executive director of the Meigs
courthouse visitors who apparently carried them County Council on Aging, received a writ~n
in inadvertently. State Jaw prohibits the public commitment of $8,000 cash from the county's
from carrying weapons into the building.
general fund and a commitment of in-kind set, ·Prosecuting Attorney John Lcntes and Canan vices based on square footage at the multipurpose
both agreed that security problems were possible, senior center to assist in applying for grant fundeven in a county as small as Meigs, and that tight- ing for various programs.
'·
ened security is required to protect members of
The commitment is made annually by !he com•
!he genentl public liS well as county employees.
missioners. The commissioners also appointed
"We are not immune from someone coming Commissioner Mick Davenpori to replace Fred
into this bulllting with a gun," Lcntes said, noting Hoffman on the board of trustees of the MCCoA
that durin&amp; the co~ of a week, "a lot of irate at Oliver's request.
:
pl:aple'con\e.thioug'ii'tlrt!Se doott."
i ) T h e board met in executive session with
Canan said that the state grant may not be u
partment of Human Services Director Michael
for salaries, but said that the commissio
Swisher to discuss personnel, with no action
should consider the placement of a part-time being taken.
&amp;eeurity officer on staff once the security system
, The co111missioners also approved payment of
is in place. Canan is currently the only staff mem- bills in the amount of $94,771.15 and approved
ber responsible for security.
payment of $1,950 for dues in the Ohio Human
A~ditional funds may be available at a later Services Directors Association, at Swisher's
time, depending on the participation of other request.
counties, Canan said.
Present, in addition to Davenport and Lcntes,
The security measures are currently only rec- were Commissioners Janet Howard and Jeffre~
ommendations. but he said that they will become Thornton, and Oerk Gloria Kloes.
•

Good Afternoon

Today's

Miller said work on the project will start
immediately.
.
As indicated by the vote, support for the project was far from unanimous. Council President
John Musser and councilmen Dave Ballard and
Larry Wehrung voted for the measure while
council members Geri Walton and George
Wright voted "No." Councilman Scott Dillon
was not present to vote on the request.
Walton suggested council and the police
department wait pending a school funding decision for the Meigs Local Board of Education by
the Ohio School Facilities Commission which
may give the village more building space in the
future.
Wright said he hated to see all the space in
the auditorium taken, but said he would support
the use of the stage area alone.
Mayor Frank Vaughan commented to council, "I hate to see giving it up as a place the publie can meet. .. but it's your decision."
Musser commented that the benefits of
expanding the police department "far outweigh" the faults.
Meanwhile the police department was given
until May 1 to complete the project so the old
department can be used May 4 by the Meigs
County Board of Elections as a polling place.
Miller ~ommented that the partitions could be
removed at a later date and the room restored to
an auditorium in needed.
In addition, council addressed the replacemeni of the late fire chief; Danny Zirkle, who
died Dec. 2, 1998.

Council met in executive session with acting
Fire Chief Chris Shank, who was approved by
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department. The
problem is that a village ordinance requires the
fire chief to Jive inside the village; Shank lives
outside of the Pomeroy corporation.
After coming out of executive session, council approved a motion to change the ordinance
to read that either the fire chief or the assistant
chief must live in the village. This means
Shank can be fire chief if the department elects
an assistant chief who lives within the village.
Musser briefly remarked on an Ohio Department of Transportation grant that provides
funding for bicycle and pedestrian paths and
asked for permission to conduct a feasibility
study on a bike path from the parking lotto Nye
Avenue.
"It is something that a lot of people have
been talking about for a long time; especially
from the parking lot to Nye Avenue," .he said.
In other business, council;
-- Approved a $300 contract with Meigs
County Emergency Services for disaster assis·
lance;
-- Approved Vaughan attending a $40 Ohio
Municipal League luncheon with state Jawmak.
ers in Columbus at his discretion;
-- Extended the application· deadline for a
prospective water/sewer plant trainee to Feb.
12;
·· Approved the purchase of police uniforms.
The next meeting will be held Feb. 15, 1
p.m . at the municipal building.
,,

-New -legislative web site-gives Ohioans greater access

the word "education.'' However, users should try site will allow for better oommunic~tion be!ween
to be as specific as possible with the key word lawmakers and voters. Senate Prestdent Rtchard
search since mutliple pieces of legislation may Finan said the site will provide the public with a
include the same-terminology. To aecess the w~b •better idea of how a bill becomes law.
site, simply type www.leglslature.state.oh.us m
"I think they are going to have a better undeiyour browser's address field.
standing of how the legislature . wor~," said
In addition to information abOut current and Finan.
.
past legislation, the new Ohio legislative web ~ite
According to officials within the Legislative
includes news updates from the statehouse, a hst- Jnfonnation Systems office, roughly 85 percent of
ing of members in the House and !he Senate and of the bills from the previous two-year session of
how to contact them, and information concerning the General Assembly are currently on the site.
Ohio state government. Other infonnalion oon- Some bills from the 123rd General Assembly;
tained within web site centers around !he state's which began in January, are also available. Users
executive and judicial branches and Ohio's leg- can expect new legislation to be posted on !he site .
islative agenices, such as the Legislative Scrv_ice within a day of being introduced. House and Sen- .
Commission, the Legislative Office of Education- ate committee hearings and votes have not been
al Oversight and the Capitol Square Advisory and posted yet.
Review Board. A brief history of state governThe new Ohio legislative web site has cost
men! in the Buckeye State is al.so featu~ed.
about $700,000 to develop and maintain in the·
House Speaker JoAnn Dav1dson satd the web current two-year budget cycle that ends June 30.
'

------·--·-

,

Pomeroy Police stake out new home:

"FqU PETS ONLY" ·
WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
;, , ·: fEBRUARY 11TH IN

.&lt;,]

Tomorrow: P. Cloudy
High: 408; Low: 30a

Sports

Meigs County girls teams post wins, Page 5
Enhancing relati.onship~, Page 7
Ford plant blast kills one, Page 6

'

.. ,.,, A·M QNG THE •••

ers of everything from simple JUnk to
-of all things - vintage Packards.
"We want to be reasonable and
senstt1ve," to llie tenants, said city
planning and development Director
Paul Bernard.
Some believe that at least part of
the plant should be turned into a
museum. Bernard says the city isn't
averse to that idea for a sliver of itbut mainly, "the City's desire is to
develop the area to stabtlize the
community," he says.
Don Sommer leases I 8,000 square
feet to house 45 classic cars- 20 of
them Packards butlt from 1930 to
1956 - that he has acquired with his
son.
"It is very tragic that it's on the
verge of being torn down,'' says
Sommer, president of American
Arrow Corp., a Clawson maker of
parts for vt.ntage ~auiilniObiles. "I
think'it' d be arwdilderfui' museum for
the entire SQHihe~st 1')1ic,h(gan area."
•

said building
owners and mangers "feel bad about
the .situation. But on the other side,
we've got tb gain control of the.
aecess to tbe buildmgs."
Studs Terkel, a writer and Chica· ,
go historian. ·said Lower Wacker
should remain the -haven it's always
been.
·•
" If it weren't for the wann grates
, we would've had 80 frozen corpses
down there during the big blizzard,"
said Terkel, who was' among about
300 who attended a rally ·opposing
the lockout Friday.
"It's not too hard to become
homeless. One or two bad breaks, a
serious illness - bang - suddenly
you're homeless."

PIC'JU~RE··

Caretaker struggles·to rescue
Packard plant from demolition
the city acquired it through tax fore·
closures.
Wilen Cristmt got voted out as
property manager, 11 insp1red htmand thus began hiS sit-in.
He sued the city and refused to
leave the plant even for Thanksgiving and Chrtstmas, seeing his children - ages 14, II and 9 - only
when they visit on weekends. Wtth a
refrigerator bui no stove, he gets by
on any food he can have delivered.
''I'm here for the duration." he
promises.
Packards were the car of chmce
for 1930s movie moguls and tycoons
Dunng war years, the mdependent
automaker supplied the military with
trucks and other equipment.
But after World War II, Packard
lost its prewar momentum - and
Cad1llac had overtaken 11 as the marketleader m elegant cars Out of step
and doomed, the plant was shut
down 10 1956.
Once a prototype for futute auto
plants, the sprawling building has
become a warehouse of sorts as 11 has
been shufned among owners through
the years.
Decades of natural wear and
neglect have taken a weary toll
Wmdows are shanered, often used as
target practice by vandals. The roof
IS rotung and porous.
The city ts worktng to help relocate tenants, among them mechanics
and small manufacturers- and stor-

Ass~iation of Chicago,

1

~,

Today: Cloudy
High: 50s; Low: 30a

l'ebrultry 2, 1IMIO

By LAURIE KELLMAN
AIIOCiatld Prate Wrltlr

r•••--------------------YOUR PET
~ r-\

Weather

•

'AIaska
,.
shivers
Longtime haven for homeles,~.may be memory
.,·n b/•tter
*b
k
U
,
r
,
rea
.
0
'd
CO
I•
Of

By MARTHA IRVINE
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO - Just 30 feet
beneath the city's ritziest shops,
restaurants and offices lies the secret
underworld of downtown Chicagoa network of dank, cavernous road·
ways that have been a haven for the
homeless since the Depression.
Then, thousands of men, women
and
children nocked to the so-called
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Hoover
Hotel. More recently , the
Associated Press Writer
.
most
hardcore
of the homeless have
An outbreak of blllerly cold air
made
their
home
in the subterranean
- even by Alaskan standards nooks
of
Lower
Wacker
Drive.
has the 49th state shivering.
ButthiS
week,
the
city
gave in to
Sure, January IS supposed to be
busmess
owners
who
have
been
comcold in Alaska. But atr temperaplammg about the mess and stench.
tures have dropped to mmus 70
New rules that took effect Friday
degrees Fahrenheit m the state's
allow
property owners to Jock gates
mterior, with windchtlls plummetevery ntght to block off concrete
ing to mmus 100 m the coldest
loading docks and "heat10g grates,
weather m a decade, the NatiOnal
Jeavmg scores of homeless people no
Weather Service reports.
place to sleep
"Every activ1ty " a dangerous
"We come across lookmg hke
acttvity now tn northern Alaska, "
said Lee Kelley, meteorologtst in
charge of the weather serv1ce office
m Fairbanks.
" Whether we get a new record ,
we'll know in the next two days,"
he said
•
. Alaska's current low record is
By JIM SUHR
mmus 80, set at Prospect Creek on
Associated
Press Writer
Jan 23, 1971. Kelley satd typtcal
DETROIT
- Ins1de the cavwinter lows 10 the state range from
ernous
hulk
of
the
Packard Motor Car
minus 30 to minus 40: "People
will function fa.rly well in that type Co.'s landmark factory, tons of scrap
ttre share space With junk, vtntage
of temperature range."
cars
and Dom1n1c Cristini - a man
Chandalar Lake, Alaska, reporton
a
lonely miSsion to save the tated a low of mtnus 7 I on Thursday,
tered
butlding from demoliuon
and readmgs of mmus 40 to mmus
.Holed up in an office IOStde the
70 are expected to perstst through
, plant smce November, Cnstini eats
the weekend.
A blocking pattern 10 the atmos- there and sleeps there - refusmg to'
leave 10 protest of clly e.j'fons to evict
phere IS causmg fngid air from
87 tenants by today
Siberia to spill into northern Alas"I'm going to giVe everythmg I've
ka, Kelley explained, and as it
got
to save this building," says the
spreads further to the Southeast the
38-year-old
Cristint, hts graymg hatr
cold wlil begin affectmg more
pulled&gt;ll))O
a
ponytail, an earring m
populated areas, such as Fairhanks,
hts left ear
where lows are expected to reach
Detrott offictals want to tear down
between mmus 50, and minus 65.
the building 10 make way for an
Indeed, the cold prompted Gov.
mdustrial park. In a move toward
Tony Knowles to postpone the
demolitiOn,
the City Council voted in
inaugural ball scheduled for SaturNovember to replace Cnstini as prop·
day 10 Fatrhanks A spokesman for ert y manager.
the governor sa1d the ball was postTo him, II doesn't make sense to
poned out of safety concerns for
eltmmate one of the last vest1ges of
those who planned to attend,
the dawmng of the automouve age
including children who were to
The building arose in 1907, a year
perform.
before Henry Ford Introduced his
, " Yes , we 're used to a lot of Model T. By the I 930s, 11 was humcold. Howe,er things start breakming along as the natwn 's premter
ing at minus 40 and below," Kelmaker of luxury catS
ley explained ni a telephone IDler" I want to save thts history tor my
view.
kids and my ktds' ktds," says Cnsti"The smaller atrcraft that sernt , whose Packard Motor Properties
vtce the vtllages as a hfeline will
had been managmg the 3.5-milltonbe grounded by the cold," he sa1d
square-foot property smce 1997, after
''All these places are already tsolated •. but they become totally cut·
off, thatmcludes medical ntghts."
He explamed that the cold
LIMA (AP) - Burnmg grease
affects engme hoses on the planes,
may
have caused a fire that ktlled a
(uel now and othct ~omponents
man and three children 10 Ltma,
Larger planes, such as Boeing
authorihes said Sunday.
737s and MD80s can ny at temThe fire started around I I 30 p m.
peratures down to about mmus 65,
Saturday
·in a duplex apartment The
Kelley satd, but one landing can
children
were
found inside two bedcreate tce fog that closes a.~ a1rport
rooms, AsSIStant Ftre Ch1ef Dav1d
mdefimtely.
Webb satd
· "Fuel oil begins to jell at m1nus
The children killed were Crystal
40 and that ts the maJor heating
Wtreman, 10. Heather Hernandez, 5,
fuel for interior Alaska," he went
and Donald Sholler, 2, satd Carol
on . "By minus 45 the fuel wtll be
Ladd, a nursmg superviSor at St.
jelled and so o~erat10g diesel vcht·
Rtta 's Medical Center. They had
cles, heating buildmgs will become
more and more dtflicult."
In addllton, the beads on the
mcs of cars are beginnmg to break
as the rubber becomes rigid in
mtnus 70 degree cold and can chtp
and shatter, Kelley said "Com1ng
to work today I saw several ' ChiThe Ohto Department of Heath
cles With nat tires ... to get a flat at
has completed its annual survey of
these temperatures is a ltfe-threatOverbrook Center, 333 Page St. in
ening situation."
Middleport, a 100 bed nursing care
Coping with the cold means a center. The center. tt was reported,
whole d1fferent set of clothmg at
"was found to have no deficiencies "
minus 70 and_below compared to
a mere m10u s 40, he sa1d.
The annual sur-..ey process which
' "I know I_wear _a lot of clothes
is
conducted
by the Ohio Department
when I come to \l'Ork, lots of layof Health on all Ohio licensed nurs- ·
ered clothing," he said. For examing centers, is mtended to determine
ple, a·glove covered by a he5vy
compliance
with state and federal
outer shell glove covered by a mitoperating
regulations
that pertatn to
ten .
all
facets
of
patient
care
provided by
: So, is there any good news ?
the nursing center.
Maybe for the rest of the country.
In a release from Overhrook , it
John Lingaas, warning coordiwas
reperted that the annual surveys
nation meteorologist at the Fatrare
unannounced
and c: an be conbanks weather service office, says
ducted
by
the
ODH
anytime between
at this time 11 looks as if the cold
air will rema10 over Alaska rather . n10e ancl 12 months after the prevt ous survey An mspecti on team of
than spread south.
three to four surveyors spend three to

Tuesday

.
?

.

-•

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