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:Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

(Rudolph's outdoors ·experience helps
: :!~~~!~V:.,~~LWrlter
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• 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
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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
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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·
,
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: S, We tbmk h~ s alone and he s been alone, sa1d Ender~~m. leader of the
• outheast Bomb Task Force.
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• 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

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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
'
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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' •

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~ ~~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
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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
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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.

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

,The Daily Sentinel

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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.
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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.
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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

.
?

.

-•

�..

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'f

Edith V. Young Manuel

If Bush falters, McCain may be nominee
'

.·'£sta6lislid 1111948

By ~Orton Kondi'IICkl
Even though he wasn't on. the
program,
last weekend's Conser111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
vative
Political
Action Confc:r·
740-llt:!-2158 • Fax: llt:!-2157
ence demonstrated why Sen.
John McCain (Ariz.) could end
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
up as the 2000 Republican presi·
dential nominee.
The story of the convention
ROBERT L WINGETT
was the fire directed at the GOP
Publlaher
front-runner, Texas Gov. George .
W. Bush, a taste of things to come as the camDIANE HILL
CHARLENE HOEFLitH
paign heats up.
Controller
General M•nager
Without mentioning the Texan by name, billionaire Steve Forbe,'l attacked Bush's slogan of
"compassionate conservatism," declaring that
"mealy-mouthed rhetoric and· poll-tested cliches
are no substitute for a muscular, substantive agenda"
·
Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander (R)
assailed Bush directly, claiming that "compassionate conservatism" amounted to "weasel
words" akin to the "kinder, gentler" conservatism of Bush's father, who lost the presidency.
The early attacks by Forbes and Alexander -and former Veep Dan Quayle, too -· indicl:ate that
: I have been blessed for the pa5t three years by having the opportunity to a prodigious amount of energy and money will be
be a part of a radio minisuy sponsored by the Meigs Cooperative Parish. II spent trying to tear down Bush as he tries to for'
liegan with a six-week commitment to carry on the ministry started by the mulate a national campaign message.
late Rev. Florence Smith.
.
McCain has declared he won't
-: This experience was certainly an enriching ·one for me. Many others have
join
in the Bush-whacking, but his
·tiltd me that it is also an inspiration to them.
advisers
acknowledge
that
, •Jhis program, along with all other u:Hgious programming on WMPO FM ·
main
chance
to
get
nomMcCain's
C)ll)le to end Sunday.
' • .
·
The station is under new ownership and will be changing its formal We inated lies with Bush's either stumli&amp;ve been offered some alternatives for the broadcast on affiliate stations bling on his own or getting clobhX:ated out of our area. This however is not feasible for those involved in bered by his foes.
. Obviously, McCain backers
pteparing the broadcast. Our small rural area is fortunate enough to have a
-- and rightly so ·- that their
thjnk
lOcal station. !.feel that we should be able to reach out to our hometown folks
man
has
a lot of positives going for
'filh religious programming on that local station.
• We are called by the Lord to remember the Sabbath Day and keep it Holy. him, too: his wartime heroism,
What better way to praise God than to begin our Sunday with songs of praise expertise in foreign policy, a reputatio·n for independence, the adoraand words of devotion?
We appreciate the fact that WMPO has been given the opportunity to mod- · tion of the media and the fundraise(ltize and make improvements. However, changing the Sunday morning ing potential that comes frbm
(qrmal~ms to be taking a step in the wrong direction. This is the only being chairman of the Senate
&lt;;hwch ser1iice that some shut-ins can be a part of. Also, what better influ- Commerce Committee.
McCain's 1999 agenda includes
e!ice can we have on our chi.ldren than to .bave their clock radio enlighten
items
that will please economic
thein to the word of our Savior each Sunday?
conservatives
and also Ross Perot
- Christians have sal idly by and let prayer be taken out of schools. We turn
supporters:
elimination
of inheriour heads, as sin become.s common practice. I feel it is time that we take a
tance
and
capital
gains
taxes,
fosstand and not allow religious programming to be removed from our local
r8dio station. If you or someone you know has been tOuched by this pro· tering competition in telecommu~ming and would I!ke to see il continue, I urge you or your church to nications, ·budget reform and
contact WMPO or write to the Meigs Cooperative Parish at PO Box 171, another shot at campaign finance
reform.
Romeroy OH 45769.
.
Instead of pushing for a com:.1esus said, "Go ye into all the world and spread the gospel." The airwaves
prehensive
campaign reform packJf&lt;!Vide us that opportunity. Please help us continue that ministry. .
age
that
arch-conservatives
regard
••
Judy H.lrrleon
as
an
infringement
on
the
First
:
~M
Amendment, Mcqtin may go at
the problem piecemeal, starting
;. I'm about to put my neck on the line, as of the first of January our local with a ban ori soft money plus an
r~io station, WMPO, has changed its format, but I don't underStand why increase in individual hard-money
thC¥ have changed their format to all music. Before the first of th' year, I limits.
This just might pass·· and win favor with coroould count on local news in. the morning until noon, national news every
porate executives tired of being .repeatedly
bQur, and local news again in the evening until 6 p.m.
dunned
for six-figure donations.
;; Now when you listen to the station, all ybu gel is news in the early mornis not a financial base comparable to
Arizona
i~g. before 8 a.m. • that's the local, then national news up until noon. Like
Texas,
but
it is next door to California, where
t6is morning, I didn't hear the national news that much, and at 11 a.m. the
McCain
has
sealed ties in Silicon Valley and, to
*ws was cut off by a song.
some
degree~
Hollywood. Charlton Heston narrat• If I wanted to listen to nothing but music, I'd tune into· a station that ['
ed McCain's Senate campaign ads last year.
Jlked, I listen to those at night, before I go to sleep.
McCain's campaign team is another strength.
; I live on a fixed income and there isn't change for the paper. If I want to
qe what was going on I'd go up to the library and look at the paper there. I
always counted on WMPO radio station to let me know what was going on.
~ Maybe I shouldn't complain, at least they do give the weather and they
t)ature Paul Harvey's commentary, I've listened to him since I was a child.
• I'm sure I'm not the only one who is disSatisfied with WMPO's new By William A. Rusher
obanges. Come on. Meigs County, tell WMPO that you want to go back to
There's an amusing story
t~e old format. News evety hour, daily until noon, national every hour.
(wholly apocryphal, for all I
Martha H•ll know) about a Congressional
••....·
,Pomeroy
Medal of Honor recipient who
keeps telling anyone who will
listen that he didn't deserve the
award.
"
It seems he was a truck driBy The AHOCIIItacl Pr•••
ver on one of the Normandy ·
Today is Tuesday, Feb. 2, the 33rd day of 1999. There are 332 days left beaches on D-Day. Confused
in the year,
and frightened by the gunfire and carnage, he
Today's Highlight in History:
panicked and slammed his foot down on the
On Feb. 2, 1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican accelerator all the way to. the floorboard, intendWar, was signed. The treaty turned over to the United States a huge portion ing to head for the rear: But he got his directions
of the present-day Southwest, including'Texas, New Mexico and California. mixed up as well, and accidentally headed right
On this date:
•
·
toward the German lines. His truck (again, acciJn 1536, the Argentine city of Buenos Aires was founded ' by Pedro de dentally) ran right over a particularly deadly OcrMendoza of Spain.
man machine-gun 0est, knocking it out of action;
In 1653, New Amsterdam- now New York City- was incorporated.
whereupon· he crashed into a tree, and fainted.
In 1876, the National League of Professional Base.Ball Clubs was formed
Thus it happened that he was awarded the
. in New York.
Medal of Honor, "for conspicuollli gallantry and
· In 1882, Irish poet and novelist James Joyce was born near Dublin.
intrepidity in action with the enemy, at risk of life ·
In 1897, fire destroyed the Pennsylvania state capitol in Harrisburg. A above and beyond the call of duty, " and-- despite
new statehouse was dedicated on the same site nine years later.
his protests-· people familiar with the protocol in
In 1942, a Los Angeles Times column urged security mea5ures against ·such cases still rise whenever he enters a room.
Japanese-Americans, arguing t~at a Japanese-American "almost inevitably
1 suspect that there are still a
... grows up to be a Japanese, not an American."
lot of us around, in our 70s and
In 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from the Battle of Stalingrad sur- 80s., who . feel vaguely similar
because we are members of what
rendered in a major victory for the Soviets in World War II.
In 1945,' President Rooseveli and British Prime Minister Winston Tom Brokaw calls "The Greatest
Churchill departed Malta for the s11mmit in Yalta with Soviet leader Josef Generation,': in his best-selling
Stalin.
book . of that name (Random
In 197l,ldi Amin assumed power in Uganda, following a coup that oust- House, oJ998).
According to Brokaw, the gened President Milton Obote.
ln 1996, dancer, actor and choreographer Gene Kelly died at his Beverly eration of Americans that came of
Hills, California, home; he was 83. ·
age. in the Depression, served in
Ten years ago: President Bush met at the White House with Japanese World War 11 , and then led the
Prime Minister Noboru Takeshita, after which both leaders sounded upbeat country vicioriously through the
about U.S-Japanese relations.
40-year Cold War with the Sovitt
Five years ago: The Commerce Department reported thaUIS Index of · Union was •• the greatest generaLeading Economic Indicators rose for the fifth straight month.
tion.any socigty has produced." In
One year ago: President Clinton hnveiled a $l.731rillion budget claiming . a way, I can see what he is talking
·
the first surpluses in 30 years and pumping billions to schools, health and about.
child care.
For one thing, there were
Jh~ government released statistics showing deaths from AIDS fell by heroes aplenty among. my coo·
almost half during the first half of 1997, a decrease attributed to increased temporaries; 26 members. of my .
use of powerful combinations of medicines.
college class alone died in World
Today's Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stritch is 73. Actor Robert .Mandan is War 11 .
67. Comedian Tom Smothers is 62: Rock singer-guitarist Graham Nash is
But military service is a di~e57, Actor Bo.Hopkins is 57. Television executive Barry Diller is 57. Coun- throw; there is nothing fair about
try sinser Howard Bellamy (The Bellamy Brothers) is 53. Actress F'lf'ah it. 1 had enrolled · in the field
Fawcett is 52. Model O.ristie Brinkley is 4.5. Actor Michael Talbott is 44. artillery ROTC when 1 entered
-Actteu Kim Zimmer ("Guiding Light") is 44. Rock music:ian Robert college in 1940 because my dad
DeLeo (Stone Temple Pilots) is 33. Rock musician ·Ben Mize (Counting had been a field artillery JieuCrows)is28. RappcrT-Mo(Gbodie Mob)is27.
tenant in World War 1. But my
Thought for Today: "The great temptation is to have an alibi." - George eyes were weak and I was ruled
Abbott, American lheatrical producer (1887-1995).
unfit for combat duty, so I wound

Letters to the editor

fladio ministry canceled

His senior advisers include former Reagan White
House chief of staff Ken Dubersteln, former Rep.
Vin.Wcber, R-Minn., and former New Hampshire
Sen. Warren Rudman (Ri.
,
His top consultant is Greg Stevens, who went
six-fo,...six in statewide races in 1998. His pollster
is Bill · Mcinturff .and the campaign just signed
former Reagan aide Rick Davis IS day-to-day
manager, depriving Elizabeth Dole of a hoped-for
top operative.
·
McCain'' lead fundraiser, Carla Eudy, filled a
huge treasure chest for Sen. Phil Gramm, R·
Texas, in 1996 and did the same for the National
Republican Senatorial Committee before thai.
lt's·true, right now McCain scores in single or
low double digits in. most national polls. The lal·
est Time/CNN poll showed him running fifth
among GOP voters with just 4 percent support
behind Bush, who had al42 percent; Dole with 21
percent; Quayle, 11 pereent; and Forbes with 5
percent.
Polls less dependent on instant name identification, however, indicate that McCain has hidden
potential. A Zogby survey in December identified
five candi~ates by biography, or "story," without
names.
A just-re-elected major state governor from .a
·. Republican family . with a record of lowering

Today In History

., ..

'
MICH.

IND.

Edith V. Young Manuel, 64, Racine, died Monday, Feb. 1, 1999 inSt.
Joseph's Hospital , Parkersburg, W.Va.
A homemaker, she was born Aug. 29, 1934 in Chester, daughter of the
late Edward and Kathryn Fell Young. She was a former member of the Apple
Grove United Methodist Clturch and the Apple Grove United Methodist
Women in Apple Grove.
.
She is s~rvived by her husband, Joseph Manuel of Racine; two sons and
a daughter-m-law, Tim Manuel, and Sid and Denise Manuel of Racine· one
grandson; four.sisters, Betty McGuire of Columbus, Bernice Bailey of long
Bottom, and Elva Hudson and Jean Roush both of Racine.
·
Services · will be ~ p.m. Wednesday' in the Roush Funeral Home,
Ravenswood, W.Va., With the Rev. Dwayne Stutler officiating. Burial will be
in Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from S-8 p.m.
today. .
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Diabetes Foundation.

.

I ~~tnoftold

130'140'

I•

..

w.~'

¢I

kY.

Inc, ·

Wednesday offers brief
By The Aaaoclllt8d Prea

: The rain should en~ ~ross Ohio tonight but could change tq snow first in
northeast, the Nattonal Weather Serv.ice said.
·
,
: A weak· ridge of high pressure will produce drier air and decreasing
cloudiness.
·
' It will be mostly sunny with temperatures in the 40s on Wednesday. But
rain will move back into the state Wednesday night as a cold front approaches from the west.
·
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station
was 64 degrees in 1903 while the record low was 13 below zero in 1951.
Sunset tonight will be at 5:51 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:38a.m.
·
Weather forecast:
Tonight... doudy with a chance of rain showers. Lows in the mid 30s.
West wi11d around 10 mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. Highs 45 to 50.
Wednesday night ...Piutly cloudy, Lows in the mid 30s.
Extended l'orealst:
Thursday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow or rain showers. Highs
near40.
·
.
Friday... M~tly clear: Lows in the lowe! 30s and highs.near SO.
, Saturday...Mostly cloudy with a chanee of showers. Lows in the upper
30s and highs in the mid and upper 50s.
t~e

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Squads record 11 runs
.,

taxes and improving schools (obviously, Bush)
finlshed first among Republicans with 42 percent,
but a war-hero Senator with a reputation for inde·
. pendence finished second with 22 percent.
Zogby's survey included no woman married to
a former GOP nominee, but the war hero finish~d
well ahead of the flat-tax publisher and two former governors in the survey.
McCain backers say that a Mcinturff survey in

groups in the party.
McCain is ac~ptable to all, but controls none.
For him to win probably requires, as one strategist
put it, "mega-money Forbes going after megamoney Bush and the two demolishing each
other." Based on CPAC. the process may be
underway.
(Morton Kondi'IICa·la ·executive aciHor of Roll
C•ll, the MW8JMptl' of C•pNol Hill.)
.
Copyrtgh110011 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. .

~greatest

generation'?·

My own feeling, then, is thai there was nothing
up being.commissioned a second lieutenant in the
.Army Air Force administration-- i.e., paper-shuf- exceptionally insightful, or heroic, abQut my gen- ·
fling. Seizing an opportunity to volunteer for eration, taken as a .whole. We were simply the
overseas service, I was sent to India, and ended up beneficiaries of an inherited view of the United
as a supply officer in Air Force Headqluirters, States, and of history, that led us to bChave in
India-Burma Theater, in Calcutta. There, I am what we understood to be the traditional way,
almost ashamed to tell you, the mess officer\got when the country was t~reatened. That was the
the· Brdnze Star for serving us shrimp cocktail way our fathers and grandfathers had behaved (or
twice a week.
would have behaved) in similar circumstances;
Looking back on my generation, what charac- and we assumed •• mistakenly, I am sorry to say •.
terized it most sharply was our belief in our coun-· • that the generations .coming after us would fol·
try, and (as a corollary) our confidence that we low suit.
were on the right side in an historic conflict. EarFor thai reason, I think that Tom Brokaw does
lier generations had shared our patriotic pride, but us, perhaps, too much kindness when he 'hails us
we were the last such generation to do so. Cer- as "the great.esl generation." We were simply like
tainly the American forces in Vietnam, a quarter all the other generations of Americans up to that
of a century later, were not imbt~ed with any such point. Ours just happened to be the one called on
ilense of rectitude or mission.
to pass the. severest test. When we pass from the
Moreover, I do think it is true that it was very scene, don't mourn for us. Mourn, rather, for the
largely our generation's faith in Ariterica, and its loss of the ideals we were taught to honor, and for
belief that world Communism had to be stopped which a valiant minority among us laid· down
.
in its tracks, that sustained this country's subse· their lives.
quent commitmeni to the Cold War, from its Copyrtghl10011 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Wllll•m A. Ruaher Ia a Dlatlngulahacl Fellow
inception in 1946 to its end in 1989. If so, that
of
the Cl•remont lnetltute for the Study of
was a contribution to history every bit as signifi·
StlltMIII•nahlp
•nd PoiNic•l Phlla.ophy.
cant as victory in World War II.

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 11 calls
fo~ assistance Monday. :UIIits responding inCluded:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:53 a.m., Overbrook Nursing Center, Middleport; Benneta Boney, Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·
6:47 a.m., South Second Avenue, Middleport, Bill McKinney, VMH.
pending transfer to St. Mary's ~ospital via helicopter ambulance; . ·
.
. 12:56 p.m., Main Street, Pomeroy, Sara L Day, VMH;
3:31p.m., State Route 143, Pomeroy, Georgia Wiseman, VMH;
•4:11\ p.m., Sycamore Street, Middleport, Laura Hollon, VMH, Middleport squad assisted;
4:56 p.m., Willow Creek Road, Pomeroy, Richard DeMoss, VMH;
· 10:26 p.m., SR 143, Harrisonville, Ed James, Holzer Medical Center,
Rutland squad assisted.

MIDDLEPORT
6:01 p.m., .VFD and squad 1o·South Fourth Avenue, smoke odor at. Bowland residence, Pomeroy VFD asllisted.

POMEROY
5:02 p.m., Welch town Hill, Anita Pierce, VMH;
· 9:32p.m., Collins Road, Howard Searles, Pleasant Valley Hospital, Central Dispatch squad assisted. ·

RUTLAND
4:17a.m., OBNC, Jerry Hanes, VMH.

The Daily Sentinel
(liSPS 213-1161)

•.

Commuatty.Ntwtp~per Holdlnp. Inc.
Published every afternoon. Monday throup

Fridly, 111 ~n St., Pomeroy, OIUo, by tJic:
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Reader Sen;ices
Correction Polley

(h1r Mlt.-content-ln •11-atorlt• is to be
If yo• know of ID error Ia • .
'"'"' call the .....,.., ol (740) 99221!!. We wiD check your Information
a•d make • corrrctlon If warranted.
ICC:UI'IItt.

Newa Department•
T~o

moln oumher Is 992-21!!. Deportment ex&amp;e•slo•• are:
Generol Monogor. ....................... E•L 1101

Now, .............................................E•L 1102
or EoiL 1106

Other Services

Advertloloa. .................................ExL 1104
Clmslolloir ..................................E•L 1103 ·

CluJifled Adl.............................ExL UOO

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Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - none.
Monday discharges - Gladys
Parfitt.
Holzer Medic:al Center
blscharges Feb. 1 - .Evelyn
Proffitt, Howard Taylor, Oather
Helm, Mary Vititoe.
'
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Brad
Haggy, daughter, Pomeroy.
(Published with permission)

SINGLE COPY PRICE

MAILSUBSCRtPTtON

HAVE

Hospital news

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................... 42'~
Akzo .................................. ......39

Marvin John Stewart, '"!7· I;ondonderry; formerly of Middleport, died
Monday, Feb. 1, 1999 at h1s res1dence following an extended illness.
Born Sept. 30, 1921 in Hallwood, W.Va., he was the son of the late Rome
and Belva Stewart. He served in the U.S. Navy, and retired Aug. 1 1979
from the Chillicothe Correctional Institute.
'
He is survived by.his wife, the former Mary Evelyn Smith· a daughter
and son-i~-1aw, Kathy and R~n JuHan of Belibrook; a daughter: Mary Bennett of Kingston; sons, DaVJd Stewart of Tarlten and Charles Stewart of
Lancaster; sons anddaughters-in-law, Paul and Debbie Stewart of Chilli&lt;;&lt;&gt;the, and Dana and Barbara Stewart of Baltimore; six grandchildren and
two great-grandsons; a brother and sister-in-law, Norman and Jean Stewart
of Columbus; a sister and brother-in-law, Jean and Enzo Barsotti of Fresno
Calif.; and several niece&amp; and nephews.
.
'
He was also preceded in death by a brother, Robert Stewart· and an infant
sister, Margaret.
·
'
Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday in the Ware Funeral Home, Chillicothe. The Rev. Gerald Erter will officiate and burial will follow in the
Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Kingston. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-8 p.m •.Wednesday.
Military rites will be conducted by the Ross County Veterans Firing
Squad.
·
In lieu of Oowe·rs, memorial contributions may be made to Adena Hospice Service, lll W. Water St., chillicothe, Ohio 45601.
'

Announcements:
Republican meeting
The Meigs County Republican Committee will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m.
_at Carleton School in Syracuse to inventory ticket sales for next week's Lincoln dinner.

PTOtomeet
The Portland PTO will meet Monday 7 p.m. at the schooL

Chartered trip planned

AT&amp;T .... ;............................... 91"1.

Bank One ............ ........... :.....soi.

. Bob Evans .......................:...22"/..,

Borg-Warner ... :................. .. 47"1.
Broughton ............ ,,,,,., ......... 17\
Champion ............................... 9\
Charm Shps .......................... 31Y.

City Holdlng .......................... 27\l
Federal Mogul ..................... 56'~•
Gannett .................................64\
Goodyear ............................. 51 'i.
Kmart,.................................... 17\
Kroger ...: .............................. 64 ~.
·Lands End ........................... 29'~.
Limited .................................34'1•
Oak-Hill FinI •••••••..•••-;;;;;-;;;;-••••• 18~.
OVB .................................... ...41 !&lt;.

One Valley ......................... ;.30')'.
Peoples ................................. 24~.
Pram Flnl ...............................16i.
Rockwell ........ ,.... ,............. 43't.
RD/Shell ................................ 41'4

.. ....... _40~.

Sears .. ,.................
Shoneyts ..........

.. .............. 27!.

First Star . .............. ..86~.
Wendy's... ...........
... 23'1.
Worthington.·
............... %

-*-*-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

'

The Harvest Outreach Chur'ch in Chester has chartered a lius for the
Benny Hinn Crusade in Pittsburgh, Pa. at the Pittsburgh Civic Arena on
Good Friday, April2. Anyone interested in attending may call1-740-985:
· 4485 for more information and seating' reservations.
·

Bedford trustees to meet
The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, Feb. 9, at 1' p.m. at
the townhall.
·

Reeves fundraiser slated

•

· A 47-year-old Racine man was cited for failure to control following ;
one-car crash on State Route l24 in Syracuse around 3:30a.m. Saturday:' Orland ~e Floyd, Fourth Street, Racine, was eastbound on SR 124
a 1~86 Bu1ck whe~ he reportedly swerved to miSs a deer, according to ·a •
Me1gs ~unty Shenff's OffiCe report. He 10;51 control of the car, which went !
off the n~t side of the .road before striking and breaking a utility pole.
The dnver and a passenger, Glenn Young, 341 Portland, were injured
and taken by the Me1gs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans
Me'!'orial Hospita.l in Pomeroy. Another passenger, ~ark Salser, 32, ~
Racme, was not InJured, the report stated.
•
Damage to the vehicle was listed as heavy.
:

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Truck crashes, bums

:1

No injuries were reported following a one-vehicle crash and fire on
Coun!y Road 1 in Columbia Township Saturday around 10:30 p.m.
. M1chael Fraley, 45, Albany, w;15 southbound driving a 1987 Otevrolet
p1ckup. truck whe? he reportedly .swerved to miss deer in the roadway,
a~rdmg to ~ Me1gs County Shenff's Office report. The truck went into a
d1tch, where 1! then caught fire, sustaining heavy damage, lhe report stated.
,
The Columbia Township Volunteer Fire Department responded to the
scene.
·
No citations were issued. .

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Mailbox vandalism reported
Deputies oflhe Meigs County Sheriff's Office took reports of mailbox •
vandalism over the weekend occurring on Lover's Lane Road SR 681 •
Darwin, and Rocksprings Road.
' .
' :

Water service interruption planned

·

. Leading Creek Conservancy District will be installing valves on its
main line in a slip area on SR 143 Wednesday.
'
Water service for the customers on SR 143 from SR 7, Bailey Ru
Road, Ball Run Road, and Wolfe .Pen will have their water service inter-rupted from about 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
•·
Construction is contingent on weather conditions and may be resched-·
uled, officials said. All customers in those areas will be under a boil advisory until further notice.
·
• .
,,

Athens bans couches from porches.
ATHENS (AP) - A vote that
banned cou~es from porches in this
sou!~ Ohio cpllege town ~I more
pubhetty than expected, said a City
Council member who supported it.
~uncil :roted 6:1 MonQ&amp;y night '?
reVISe the aty housmg code. The rev1sion included a prohibition ajlainst
"housekeeping furniture not designed
for. out~r ~ .. that angered many
Oh1o Uruvers1ty students.
Patnck lang. an OU student and
C&lt;)uncil member, cast the diSsenting
vote. Councilman Ed Ba~m said the
couches demtct .from the Cl~y·s ~ppearance and sarutat!on. Four u.n!vers1ty stu~nts SjXJke agamst th,e reVISIOn .and five
c1ty res1dents spoke m favor of 11 before
the vote, he said.
.
. · "One of the things w~'ve ixlmmented on is I don't think a single one of
those students, if they were living at
home, would be able to put an old couch
on their porch or even think ·about i~ "
Baum said Monday night.

Steve Pierson, the city's aide
enforcement director, said complaintS"
from ·'residents led to the legislation.
Pierson said his office has dealt withl
severdl cases of couches 'that have bet'ri 1
placed on porches and have beconiel
infested with vermin and inseCts.
...•!
In Atheno;, which has about 21 (iO
permanent residents, 12,5'19 of the 'urnversity's 19,241 students live off-&lt;:&lt;l)li'i
pus in rental housing..
. ::•
Many students say they are be~
targeted. Patrick Shea, a 21-year-old·
junior from Kettering. is a member of~
the university's Student Senate. He sud'
most students support the housing
revisions, but have a problem .with jh~ '
issue of removing couches from porches,
· ~ ·,
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cedi::

The Chester Community will hold a fish fry with homemade cakes and
pies on Saturday, Feb. 6, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the fire station. Proceeds will
benefit Rayline Reeves, daughter of Brian and Susan Reeves. Donations of
food items and door prizes are being sought.

Rutland trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees will meet in regular session· Fcl,. 9 at 5 ·
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station.

OES meeting set
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30p.m.
Thursday, at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
·
.

Health Department offers list of recalled meats
develojment of meningitis in individlals
wbJ have aCOI11p'Oil1mt immune sy;tem.
Synq:ons of meningitis, an intlammation
of the brain and spinal rord, include natRa.
vomiting and headache. Ifa woman is pregnant, the illness can cause a miscarriage or
result in the birth of a still rom child
'"'"""""· 'according to information
.
. '~""""
from the health departmen~ can cause
severe ~ meningitis and death in
newborn infunis. The incllbation period
ranges from one day to three weeks.

Anyone iutettSed in obtaining a IS of
meal proWds recalled because of wntuni·
nalion with Wk;ria f~DWJ(.)'logmes lweria
may OOtain ooe from the Meig; Coonty
Health Dqm!rnent.
.
The office is open from 8 am. t&gt; 4 p.m.
Mxmy through Frichy and is locatlld at
112 FA'il Memxial Drive, •Dn..........
""'~..,.
Keith little, RS, diratlr of enWonmental heahh,advises t1)31the IN of recalled
products is lengthy.
He said that listaiaiisis~by

ALL aa•a, ALL TIMRI 14.00

***************

~

BIG

Ca ll for Mov1r T1mr.s

~ ~lovies

Rates of Taxation for 1998

1-740-753·3400

.

In purauance of law, I, Howard E. Frllnk, Tr11111urer of Meigs County, Ohio, in compliance with revised Code No. 323 .08 ol State ot Ohk&gt; do hereby give notice of
lhe Ratn of Taxation for the Tax Year of 1998. Rates
In dollars and cents of each one thousand dollars tax valuation.

TOWNSHIPS
SCHOOL DISTRICTS

It I

~LS.D. tl\.

4.30
.4.30

I L.S.D.

ai

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1.70 21.00 , 10
1.70 23.10 ·.so

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1.00

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3.00
3.00

CHESTER

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COLUMBIA

OE
·:
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3.30 1.00 1.00 40.80
3.30 1.00 1.00 39.30

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38.8111021·

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4.30
.4.30

_23-10
3.70 21.00

.10
.10

1.00
1.00

3.00
3.00

3.- . 1.00 1.00 41 .30
3.30 1.00 1.00 42.80

liD

4.30

2.70 33.70

.50

1.00 3.30

3.00

3.30 1.00 1.00 53.80

IL.S.D.
1 LS.D.

4.30
4.30

3.70 23.10
3.70 32.39

.10
.10

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1.00

3.00
3.00

3.30 1.00 1.00 41 .30
3.30 1.00 1.00 50.19

.092323

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4.30

4.20 32.38

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1.00

3.00

3.30 1.00 1.00 50.69

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•••

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4.30

4.20 23.150

.so

1.00

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3.30 1.00 1.00 41.80

.096334

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IL!I.D.
RUTLAND __
, Melga L.S.D.

4.30

3.70 23:10

.10

1.00

3.00

3.30 1.00 1.00 41.30 .085944

37.750520

39.114926 ...
.
38.787743 .•

4.30
4.30

11.111 211.110

1.00
1.00

3.00
5.10 3.00

3.30 1.ocr 1.00 44.10
3.30 1.00 t.OO 148.30

.t09011 .057V01

39:21Q383

41.541578 .,

3.70 21.00

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.150

Melaa L.S.D.

4.30

3.20 21.00

.so

1.00

3.00.

3.30 1.00

.019481 .053858 38.091525

SALISBURY
- lllelaa L.S,D.

AM

1.70 211.00
.20 121.00
.20 211.00

.50

1.00
1.00
. 1.00

3.00
110.20 3.00
uo 3.00

3~

.085505

•o
34.990115

'
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LEBANON

AmrTech ••••••••.•••.••.•••..•.....•..... 62

Ashland 011 ........................... ..46

..

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Man cited In crash

Marvin John ·stewart

·I eo1um~~ue ~t'/41' I

break from precipitation

How great was the

..
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~edneecley,Feb.S

fow states with early Republican contests •• Califomia, Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina --produced similar mutts, with McCain C:OII)·
Ins In second even when his "negatives" were
taken into ~count.
Among party regulars, McCain is considered
an apostate forfavoring aS t.lO.per-~k ~bacco .
tax and campaign finance reform Jeg1sla11on Jut· .
year, but those demonstrations of independence :
could serve him well next year, especially If he ' ·
reconfiims his otherwise-conservative record:
Still, as Weber puts it: '~If Bush doesn't fade
for some Rason, it's hard for him not to be the '
nominee. But he faces big 'ifs.' Being front-run·
ncr means he's got to win everywhere. The Aluka and Louisiana caucuses, preceding Iowa, are
likely to be dominated by religious conservatives
and Iowa will be no pushover.''
Mcinturff has another formulation •• the
notion thai there. are four dominant "slots" in
GOP nomination races. Bush figum to fill the
"party candidate" slot as the choice of the GOP ·
establishment. Forbes fills the "outsider" slot.
.
1\vo others~ the religious conservative slot and
the iight-to-life· slot, are up for grabs among· :
Quayle, Dole and Gary Bauer. Winning the nomination. Mcinturff thinks, requires control o~e· ·
slot and being acceptable to the other dom ......)'t

"lsappoJnted with new radio format

•

Local briefs:

Netices

:comment;~ry
·T he Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

37.487054

•o

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••

LETART

OuvE

.

SALEM

II

Ulnnl

ano:

i ........

SCIPIO
Metal LS.D.
su~

4.30
4.30
4.30

4.20

1211.00

.

.150
.50

.10

1.00

3.00

..

.
'

-

'

t.OO 42,30

3.30 1.00 - t.OO 40.80
3.30 1.00 1.00 49.50
1.00 147.90
~3.30 1.00
3.30 t.OQ 1.00 43.30

• •u•- :· '

........

.,
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-

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38.173778

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....
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1

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4.30 3.80 32.311 .so
LS.D.
1.00
3.00 3.30 '1.00 1.00 10.09 .218272
38.256153 ••
4.30 1.70 132.311 .10
RACINE VIUAGE
1.00
a. to 3.00 3.30 1.00 1.00 57.29
49.483442
11100: VII I AI&gt;.
4.30 2.10 32.381 .10
1.001
. 6.80 3-00 3.30 1.00 1.00 55.39
""'County T 41.01~1 '~ .Real estate raxeo which have nor .,.., PIld at the close ol oach coltectlon carry a panalty of ten parcent. Taxes may be paid at 1h4l offtce ol tho
by mall. Please bring your IIIII taK rec&lt;~lpt; and H you pay by mall, be lin to lOCate your property by taxing district and enclote stamped aeH-add sed198Sur~r or
/&gt;Ntayaaxamlne your lax &lt;Keipt to- th411 h covera all your praparty. Ollica hours are 8:30A.M. to 4:00P.M. Monday through Frida _ Cloled
res
enve opa.
Failure to receive tale ltltamantl "'l' avoid My penalty, lnter811, or charge Incurred lor such delay. Ohio RevisoKr Code 323.t3.~ro.tng ~~a~':'~~tu~i 999
' ~
HOWARD E. FRANK. Meigs County Treasurer
arc •
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own

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The Daily Sentin~~

Sports
Top 25 men 's
college basketball
By DONNA TOMMELLEO
' HARTFORD, c;::onn (AP)
ConnectiCUt coach Jim Calhoun fully
expected Syracuse to come out with
its zone and trappmg defense.
He didn't expect hi s top-ranked
Hw;k.ies, playmg with.outtwo InJUred
starters, to Wilt under the pressure.
·J;Iut the result was a 59-42
Syracuse VIctory Monday night in
UConn 's worst offensive perforroance m 27 years.
· The Huskies, who were Without
lead1ng scorer R1chard Hamilton and
leading rebounder Jake Voskuhl,
were the last unbeaten D1vts1on I
team They saw thelf 16-game B1g
E;ast wmnmg streak end as well as
lherr 31-game home winnmg streak
. Calhoun didn't go lookm g for
excuses

"We did dress five people who
could play Richard and Jak~ dtdn't
make any miStakes so they were no
factors m the game," Calhoun sa1d
"; ., thought the guys on the floor
would do a better JOb
1 "We JUSt played St John 's withQUI (injured lead ing rebounder
Tyrone) Grant and we were lucky to
wm. We had other guys who could
hawe stepped up and tned to stop
penetrallon and h1t shots There's
0otlung wrong w1th our record , but
th~re is something wrong w1th what
happened tonight."

TUMdey, February 21 1191

Tueaday, Februa'J 2, 1999

Syracuse shocks No. 1 . UConn
'

•

The No. 16 Orangemen simply
outhustled the Huskies.
"Obviously I feel bad for Richard
and Jake, two very good kids and
two very good players," Boehe1m
said. " But we just needed to get a
win. I d1dn't care who was playing."
Hamilton, the re1gn10g B1g East
player of the year, has a bruised right
th1gh and is listed as day-to-day. The
6-foot-6 junior is averaging 22.1
pomts and 4.8 rebounds. He was
injured during the SeC1;jnd half of
Saturday's 78-74 victory over No. 9
St John 's.
Voskuhl, a 6-11 jumor, has a
stress fracture m his left foot and is
out indefmitely Voskuhl averaging
6.5 pomts and 7.2 rebou~ds, had the
same inJury in h1gh school and the
latcsl fracture was revealed through a
bone scan on Monday. He w1ll go to
ht s hometown of Houston on
Tuesday for furtlier tests.
Freshman Damone Brown scored
all 14 of hi s po10ts 10 the second half
as Syracuse (16-6, 7-5) won for the
fourth time in five games by shooting 43 percent (23 -for-54) and outreboundtng the Huskies 37-26.
The Husk1es ( 19-1, Il-l B1g East)
struggled all game on the offens1ve
end agamst Syracuse's zone, shootmg JUSt 36 percent (16-for-45),
1ncluding 3-for- 15 from three-point
range
" We would have played the zone
whether Hamilton was there or not "
Boehe 1m said. " We wanted to be ;n
the game late and have thelf guys
looking for Hamilton and he wasn't

there."
The game was tied 25-25 at half-,
time, but Connecticut was JUSt 7-of22 (32 percent) from the field in the
second half as the Orangenien built a
lead of as many as \9 points, 54-35,
with 3:10 to play on a jumper by
Jason Hart.
Connecticut's staning. backcourt
of Khalid El-Amin and R1cky Moore
combined for six points, all by ElAmin in the first half.
.
aWe ,weren'(Shooting well, fine ,
but we still should have ~tepped up
the defense," Moore .said. " The
shots weren't there ton1ght because
they had four guys on the perimeter.
"We didn't have enough guys
stepping up to the foul hne askmg for
the ball. But that's not what w~y we
lost. We just let up on defense
Calhoun couldn't hide hiS disappomtment
"We didn't get any loose balls
and players other than Ham1lton and
Voskuhl are allowed to get loose
balls," he sa1d "We had some guys
out there tomght we can play and
they d1dn't."
The 42' points matched , the
Huskies' lowest output smce JOimng
the Big East as they lost 60-42 to
Georgetown on Feb. 27, 1982 and
was thetr lowest smce a 41-39 overtime loss to Boston College on Feb.
29, 1972. Thm _l owest output this
season had been m a 59-54 VIctory
over Massachusetts.
"We've got to accept the situation
and play basketball, " Connecticut's
Kevin Freeman said. " You can't

_59.;.~2

Towson 64 Boslon U 56
Wesley 56, Neumann 46
Wheeling Iesuu 75. W Vtrgm1 a Tech 57
Wtlke5 6() M1sencordm 51

Basketball
Top 25 men's college poll

South

·'"' : 11te top 25 reams m 11le o\ssoctated Press ' men's
~liege , basketba ll poll

wuh first-place vott:s m
parentheses records through Jan ll. total pomts
?ased on 25 pmnts for a first-place vote through one
po'fm for a 25th-place vote and prt"v1ous ranking

Iwn

Las I
.l!'oLI'U.IDtk
19- J 1,7S6
21-1 1 720

~CINCINNATI

20-1

1.626

1
2

5

181
19 4
20- 1
19·1
18·4
. . 17 5
15-'\
19-l
. 18 5

1.486
1.470
U81
1,178
UU8
1. 140
I JYJ1
1,09Q
1.086

rconnecttcut (52)
2.Di.lkc(l9}

4 Stnnford
j-; 'kentucky
6 Auburn .
7 Maryland
~!' Mu:htgan St
9.S t John 's ..

W ~ nzona .. .

II Wuconsm
1"2. Nonh Carol1na

' I,J, UCLA . . .

1&gt;-5

J

6
7
' 4
8
9

JJ
12
10

II

895

14 t'owa . .
. 15-4 788
16
ll OHIO ST
16·6 702 ll
16 Syracuse
16 6 522
17
fl7 New MeKt co
11-S 500
18
~ 18 Mmncsota
13-5 4l9
19
t 18 Purd~
15-6 '\39
14
.20 Utah
. 17-4 J74
.. 17-7 270
20
I 11 lndtana
'22 Coil of Ch.uleston
19-2
177
:21•.;k:msas .
15-6
175
21
15-4
15 8,
1 24Mtssoun
125 Mmm1 (Fi n)
1'\-5
156
21
Othus rece1ving votes. Oklahoma St 137.
, Kansas 130, f) &lt;lli da 116, Tennessee ll3 Gonzaga
t 54, Murray St 54 Temple 39, XAVIER (OHIO) 12,
• MIAMI (OHIO ) 29 George Washm gton 28. Texa~
j Chmuan 27 lu lsa 26 lexas 22. Mtsms1pp1 21
j Washtngton 19, TOLEDO 15 Clemson 13. N C
Charlotu: 11 V1llano'a 1'\ SW M1ssoun St 10
lktrott 8 New Mex1co St 8 Old Domlmon 5
l LoUI SYIIIe 4. Cretghton 3. S1ena 2 Nonhwestern I

i

Aln -Humsv•ll~ 52, Montevallo 47
AlnbamaA&amp;M 73. Ark -Ptne Bluff 60
Alabama St 54, Mm Valley St '\5
Anderson. S C 76, Lmrstone 68
Appalachmn S1 81 . UNC..Crcensboro 76
Armstrong Atlantic 59, S C -Sprutanburg 44
Auburn-Montgomery 63, Nonh Georgsa 48
Banon 71. longwood 46
Belmont B8 h ckson~ 11l e St 59
Charleston Southern 75, Hagh Potnt 50
Coastal Carohna 63 Elon 47
Da..,1dson 62. Coil of Charleston 57
Dllke 72 Maryland 54 ·
E Tennessee S1 79 Wofford 71
• Emmanucl71 Brcv.ton-Parker 45
Gardner Webb 68 Converse 42
Geor!!m Southern 81 Chattanooga 68
Grambltng St 86 Alcorn S1 74
Greensboro 46 , Ferrum 41
Jac kson St 70, Southern U 68
Kentucky St 87 Lane SJ
Lander 55, Nonh Ron da 48
Lees-McRae B2. St Andrew 's 60
Libeny 84, Winthrop 55
Livmgsto~ 81. Ehzabeth City St 69
Miles 73. l..c:Moync.-Owen 55
N C Wesleyan 73, Peace 60
N1cholls St 59 NE Lo.,nsiana 57
Northwe~le:rn St 64 SE Lou1s1ana 53
Queens College 75. Erskine 56
Radford 68 , N C -Asl1t&gt;v1lle 67
Sou1l1 Flonda 86 N C Charlone 76
Troy St 65 Stetson S9
Va\dostn St 59 West Georg1a 52
West Flonda 84 Lambuth 64

Midwest
Cent MethodiS( 71 BenedKtmc Kan 61
Cettl M1~scmri 64 NW M1 uour1 St 52
Demson 71 La Roche lO
Graceland 84 Mtssoun Valley 81·0T
Lmdenwood 72 Cuher-Stockton 64
Oberlm 92. Wooster 81
Salht Louts 81 Houston 60
W11§hburn 79 Truman St 63

I
'

·NCAA Division I
':men's scores
East
Can1s1us 7'. St Peters 68-0T
Druel69 N~w H &lt;~mps h l rt' 61
Hofstra 77 Mame 67
IOIM1 Btl. Niagara 75
Lnfayeue 96 Ha \erford 62
Mmanoulh N J 66 Wagncrfil
Robert Morns 60 Fatrlc1gh D1ckmson
S1e1M1 9~ Fatrl'ield 80
Syracuse 59 Connecucu1 42

Soulhwest
'\9 M1 sS ISJ1ppr U for Women

Ar~ · Monucello

56

~4

South
Alcorn St 9' Grambling St 62
Appt~lachmn St 70, UNC-Gm=nsboro 58
Ark -P1ne Bluff 109. AlabamaA&amp;M 9 1
Belmont 79 Mtddle Ten nessee 75
Charleston Sou1hern 79. H1gh Pmm 76
Chauanooga 76 Wofford 62
Coli of Cllar\eslon 66 Georgta Southern 41
Coppm S1 82. Howard 77
Davidson
W Caro lma )5
Eru1 Carolma 67. Old Dorrunton 62
Elan 85. Coas1al Caroli na 82
Floncl:! A&amp;M 65, N Caroh naA&amp;T6~
Fum1an 5B E TennesseL": St 55
h cksonv1lle St 84, R onda Atlan11c 73
Loutstana Tet h 97 Texas Pan Amencan 76
Md -E:utern Shore 64 Hampton 61
Mm Val ley S1 67. Alabama S1 6'
Ntcholls St 70. NE LoUI Siana 62
Norfolk St 104 Delnv.are St 90
Northwestern St 81 SE LolJistana79
Radford 101 , N C -Ashev1 ll e 94-0T
S Carolina St 5!1. Bcthune·Cookman .56-0r
1
Southern U 84 Jackso n St 73
VMI 74, The Cnadel 72-0T
Wmthrop 82. Uheny 54

1'.

Midwest '
Butler 80 lnd -Pur llldpls 54
Kansas 69 Kllmas St 46
M1am1 Otuo 6) Toledo 57
S llltn ols 85. Creighton 78

Far West
U!ah 57, New Mextco '\9

':NCAA Division
'
I

:women's scores
' East

Arkansas Tech !l3. Della St 61
NW Oklahoma 1 0 .~ Kan~as Newman ~3
S Arkansas 81 Herxierson S1 74
Sl Marys re)(llS 67, Schremer 60
W TexasA&amp;M77 . E NcwMeXICO OI

Far West
Montann St 76. MontDnn67

Ohio H.S. boys' poll
COLUMBUS-Oh10 (AP) - How a stme panel
ot spons wnlen and broadcasters rates Ohto h1gh
school boys basketbal l learns m the founh of seven
weekly regulllr-se ason polls of 1998-99 for 1M
Assoc1a1cd Press (records through g:tmrs of Jan 31)

Division I
Tum
Ph.
1-Tol Cent Cath {16) 13-0
285
2- Lima Semor (8) 14-0 259
'\. Celi na 14-0
216
4--Tol St John s (2) 11- 11 72
5-Col Wes1 14 I
140
6-Shaker H1s ( I) 10- 1 120
7· E l1 verpool (2)
9- 1
101
8-Cm Oak Htl h 11·2 60
9-Middlcburg Hts Midpark 12-1
46
10-Akron Buchlel 10.2 44
Others rrulving 1l or more point!l: II ·
LOGAN 38 12-Zancsv1lle :n 11-Buvcrcrcck (I)
.U 14-Solon 29 15-Sandusky {I 1 18 16-Cic St
lgnauus 15 17 (lle)-Grove City, Newark 1.'\
Division II
!· Akron Hoban (22) 11-0
294
2-Bclla1re {2) 11-0
219
l·Col Watterson (I) 12 I
lll
4. Eaton 9-0 16'\
S-C1n McNi cholas (2) I l - 1
156
6·Spnngboro (I l 13·0
114
7-Strutheu ( I) II - \
10~
8-Co l Reec hcroft 11-2 68
9-0ttilwa-GI!mdorf 12·2 62
10-McDtrmott NW 12 2 ~5
Olhers rtetivlng 12 or mort points: 11 -Cie
Benethcllne l l 12- Dresden TnNalley (I) 10 1~ ­
S&lt;tndusky Perk..ins 23 14 (lle)·Chesterland West
Geauga Hi ll sboro. Perry (I ) IB 17 (tielPORTSMOUTH, You Chancy 16 19-CI:tESHJR E
RNER VALLEY 14 20 {ue }-Orrvllle. You L1beny
13 22- l'ht lo 12

Adelphi 69 Concord1a. N Y 62
Bates 8M Mmne-Fanmngton 69
Bmgham1on 74 New Have n 59
BuffaiQ 87, Mmm1, Ohm 81
Cabnm 69 lmmaculatil 4l
Cutholtc 64 , W Moryland 57
DiviSIOn Ill
Clnnon I0'\ Co lumb• a Umon \5
!· Bedford Chane! {24) 12·0
Dd aware 66 Non het~~tern 61
2 Sp:trta H1ghl nnd {.S) 12 1
Delaware Sl 60 Norfolk St 54
' · Martms Feny (I ) 12-0 216
Emerson 48 Lesley 42
·
4-Cie VA-St. Joseph (2) 9-2
162
i
Fmrlngh Dick.inso_!l 54 Md ·]ahimore CouniL..-.5-Ct n. Madeira 12-1
J;ti _ _ __
• 1H
6-New Paris Nat ' ITooll 3- l
11~
F-don,aSI
7.l, Aifred61
7F
'"
• mdlay Libeny· Bcnlon (2~ I I -2
95
Gwynedd Mercy 87 Chestnul Ht ll ~2
8·Akron S1 V-St M 7-2 68
1
Howard 9' Coppm St 7\
9 Manon R1~r Valley 12-2
S8
1
1
Mamc 78 Hofnra 57
IO-N LimaS Range 12- 1
49
~
ManhnuanvlllC: 6~. Mount St Vtncent 62
Othen reuivln&amp; 12 ••r rnun puinh· II ·
CHESAPEAKE Yi I 2-Mclamora ii,vcrarecn .22 13·
Mnrywood 60 Beaver 45
M.1 s5 · Lowdl 75 Bryant 61
Bloom-Carroll 21 14-Roct.y Rtver Luth West 20
Md -Eastern Shore 7 1 Hampton61
I.~· BELPR 6 19 16-Hnmler Pam ck. Henry lR J7.
Mercy. NY :'iJ.NY Tech~8
WHEELERSBURG 16 18-Broot.:lyo 1'\ 19Monmoulh N J 71 Long lslartd U 6)
WELLSTON I ~ 20 Clte )- l.ornln Clearv1ew Newton
MOfgnn St ~ll...afaycttc 48
Falls Cm St Bernard Elmwood Place 12
Mount Sl. M.ary N '( 71. Montd :ur S1 61
New Hnmpsh1re 7.5. Drexel 61
Division IV
Psll -Johnlitown 7.5 W Virginia St 62
1-Z.Inesvllle Rosecruns (20) 11 ·0
196
Qmnmpiac 8.\, Mount S1 Mary .s Md 80
2- Ft Recovery (5) 14-0 244
S0t1thnmp~on 61. C W Post 30
l-FI.Jenmngt(11 IJ·O 181
St Franc•s N.Y 57 Robert MoniJ 56-0T
4-St brin~ McKinley (2) 12-0
IM
St Franc1~. Pa &amp;4. Cent Connc('Ucut St 69
'Iii-Berlin H•larK\ 11-1
1~ 7
Sl Pder s 69. Rider 68
Dllh on (II 12-1
1 ~7
Staten !s1and 7S CCN Y 27

l.

8-FRANKLIN FURNACE GREEN (2)

107

South Webster 60. Frankhn Furnace Green 50
Southeastern 55, Urb ana 47
Southmglon 70, Cleveland HtJ LU1hemn East 35
Spnngboro 57, Day Carroll 51
Sprmgficld Cath Cent 41. Tnad 29
St Clairs'tl l\le 66, Belmonl Umon Local 6'
SteubeMille 48, Wetr, W Va :\9
Stewart Federal Hock.ing S4 Glouster Tnmble

ll·O

9-Worthangton Chnsllan 10-2
80
10- Bnstoh&lt;ille Bnsto\9-1
74
Others rcceiYing tz or more point': I I·
Peebles 23 12-LANCASTER FISHER CATH 19
13-Toronto 16 14-PIIsburg Fm(lk\m-Monroe 14

Ohio H.S. girls's cores

"52

Stow Walsh JesUit 65 , Canton Cen1rnl Cathoh c

New Jersey .
Pittsburgh
NY Rangers
N Y Islanders
Ottav.a
Toronto ...
Buffalo .. ..
Bonon ......
Montreal

•' 27 I !I
' 2\ ll
.. 19 2]
. 15 30

6

60 139
51 141

7
4

45

7

Northust Division
27 l lo 6
.. 28 17 J
24 14 8
' 20 19 8
1)8 24 8

~4

127

;

. . JO
Dallrts
. .... .. 25
Phocmx
.. 16
San Jose .
. 17
Anaheim ..
17
Los Angeles . .

122
Ill

tJJ
116 150

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentlnal Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders despite
having several players out with the
flu bug defeated the NelsonvilleYork Buckeyes 54-45 in girls' TVC
basketball act10n Monday evening.
Meigs had fi ve players suffenng
from the flu gug 1ncluding Shannon
Price, Tricia Davis, Brooke
Williams, Tonya Miller, Amber

60144 107
59 ll 7 142
56 126 91
48 119 108
4411l Ill

NHL standings

l

Vtning and Becky Smith. All but
Smith was able to play.
Them Marauders jumped out to a
10-6 lead, only to bave the Lady
Buckeyes battle back and tie the
game at 22-all at the half.
In the third period it was sti II
close as Meigs outscored the host 1616 to take a 38-37 lead into the final
period. Vining scored 10 to pace
Me1gs in the penod, Jennifer

Shrimplin added six more.
But Meiss pulled away m the
final period with a 16-8 sconng
advantage to post the 54-45 wm.
V1nmg led a trio of Marauders m
double figures with 22 points,
Shrimp lin added 17, and Price 10.
Meigs hit 20 of 42 from the floor for
47%, including two of six from three
pomt range.
Me1gs had 16 rebounds led by

Shrimplin with four, 16turnovers, 14
assists with Vining getting f1ve and
10 steals w1th Vmmg once again
leadmg the way with five.
Amanda Dalton was the only
Nelsonville-York player in double
figures with 24 points. No oth.er statistics were available.
In the reserve game, Me1gs held a
20-0 lead at the half and rolled to a
38-19 win. Stephanie W1gal led

Meigs with 11. Amy Hysell added
nme.
Meigs will travel to Belpre to play
the Golden Eagles on Thursday.

Shrimplin 7-0-3=17, Tracy Coffey I' :
0-0=2, Tncia Davis 0-0-l=l v
Shannon Price 2-1-3=10. Totals: 182-12=54
' -, :
.. • I

Ovarter 1Q!l!b
Meigs ......... .......... 10-12-16-16=54
Nelsonville-York .....:6-16-15-8=45

Nelsonville· York:
Ehzabelh ·
Newlon 1-0-2=4, Courtney Cagg 0&lt;.
1-0=3, Lacey Whitlatch 1-0-0=~ . '
Amanda Dalton 8-1-5=24, Rebecca •
Meigs: Amber Vming 7-1-5=22. Dalton 1-0-1 =3, Amy Dupler 4-0Brooke Wtlhams 1-0-0=2, Jenmfer 1=9. Totals: 15·2-9=45
.,
''

t-rr.-

n5

IOC calls for worldwide anti-doping agency at drug summ~t

______

____

__________

Meigs to face
Ga.llipolis in D-11
girls' sectional

If the 992 Exchange Is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallipolis
Toll Freel

Top 25 basketball.•.

DIAL

(Contmued from Page 4)
Utah, which earh~r in the day
ended its seven-week absence from
the national rankmgs, outscored New
M e~ ico 17-1 over a seven-minute
stretch early in the first half en route
to us 12th, straight win.
,
The Utes (17-4, 7-0 WAC) used
stifl1ng defens1ve pressure to force
New Mexico (17 -5, 4-3 ) mto 10 first
half turnovers and an assortment of
podr shots. The 39 pomts were the
fewe st by New Mex1co on its homecourt since a 61 -37loss to San Diego
State on Feh 3, 1984
No. 22 College of Charleston 66
Georgia Southern 4 I
College of Charleston celebrated
its return to the Top 2,5 after a two year absence with a vrctory ove r
Georgia Southern.
, Jeff Bolton scored 13 points on 5of-5 shootmg for the Cougars, who
are ranked for only the second time
.;tn school h1story.
Charleston (19-2, 11 -0 Southern
Conference) won its 16th stra1ght
game, tied with 'No. 2 Duke for
longest wmmng streak in the nation .

992-7834

U).
I'{!/ .Holzer Clinic ... Keeping the Promise!

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that special someone this
Valentine's Day with a message

The Division II Rio Grande girls'
sectional basketball tournament ·will
be held on Monday, Feb. 15 and
Wednesday, Feb. 17 at the University
of Rio Grande 's Newt Oliver Arena.
Jackson, the fourth seed, wdltake
on No. 5 seed R1ver Valley on Feb.
15 at 7 p.m. The wmner of that game
w1ll face top-seeded Waverly on Feb.
17 at 6:15p.m.
Second-seeded Meigs will play
th1rd-seeded GalliaAcademy on Feb.
17 at 8 p.m.
The victors of the Feb. 17 games
wil! be the sectional bracket champions and play winners of the Logan
sectional brackets at Chillicothe
High School later m the month.

Getting here
1s easy\.

'

Meigs-Federal
Hocking boys'
game reslated

Th€ golf istlt.

Tomght's game between Me1gs
and Federal Hockmg has been canceled due to the flu epidem1c at
Federal Hockmg High School.
The game has been rescheduled
for Thursday, Feb 18 at Federal
Hocking High School.

Each of our 18 courses is easy to reach by
interstate. And the best thing is, you can
get from one site to the next in about the
time it takes to play nine holes. It will be
the easiest drive you' II have all day.
One toll-free call gets you championship
golf and hotel acconuwxlations.

•

.
·'

..
.·

-,

•

The Daily Sentinel

The-Dally Sentinel
"Valentine Hearts"
111 Court Street .
.Pomeroy,
45769

Hayman !-0-212=4, Angi Wolfe '3!'
112=7, Amber Baker 4-1-0=l.lr:-,
Danielle Spencer 2-0-112=5, Be4-JC
Dav1s 2-1-112=8, Juli Ba1ley -~
212=4, Amber VanSickle 1-0-0=2~
Totah: 26·1-9112=67
:::,~
_ • ,
Miller: KrlSlen Plant 5-0-2/4-12,
Anna Braglin 5-0-1/2=11 , T~~~ay~
Appleman 0-0-114= 1, Felcia rilfie Ot '
0- 112=1. K1m McCormtck Q.J&gt; •.,
212=2. Totals: 11=5/12=27
.

Seventh-grade Lady Tt;Jrnadoes
return from hiatus to win four

Monday's scores

• Sweethear-ts • Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents•
Teachers • Babysitters • Friends

with eight and Stacie Watson and
Janet Calaway with six each. M1ller
was led by Michelle Havner with
eight.
Eastern
hosts
Waterford
Wednesday, then goes to Trimble
Thursday. ·
Quarter tlWib
Eastern .................. 18-14-18- 17=67
Miller ........................... 7-4-13-3=27
Eastern: Jess1ca Brannon 4-00=8, Valene Karr 8-0-212=18, Juli

..

-·-

Hockey

turnoyers.
Eastern shot 28-for 62 two-pointers, and 2-7 three-pointers, and was
9-15 at the line with 40 rebounds led
by Brannon 12, Wolfe 12, Karr 11.
Eastern had 15 assists (Brannon 6,
Karr three), and 19 steals (Hayman
nine)· Eastern also had just nine
turnovers and four blocks (Karr 2).
Eastern won the reserve game 3916 with ten of 12 players in the scor10g column led by Holly Broderick

By' SCOTT WOLFE
claiming' an impressive 39-33 victory 4-9 in the Hockmg Divis\pn, while tinued with its momentum in the point led 36-27. Waterford got sever- man game was canceled by'
'
Sentinel Correspondent
Monday night at Southern's Charles Waterford drops to 8-7 overall and 6-, early portions of the second round __al inside buekets by Neill while play- Waterford.
Southern avenged an early season W Hayman Gymnasium in Racme. 5 in the league.
and led 18-10, but saw that lead ing catch-up plus got a big three by
Southern plays at Federal
loss to the Waterford W1ldcats,
Heather Dailey began a double- diminish to 20-19 as the Tornado Hall to make it close at the end, 39- Hocking Tlmrsday and Waterford
Southern is now 5-12 overall and
double night with several crucial gals only scored one pomt in the last 33.
·
goes to Eastern.
rebounds and was the benefic1ary of 4:15 of the frame.
Southern hit 12-30 overall, I of 4 Ouarter tlWib
··
several passes from both Kim Sayre
Southern came back in the third three-point~rs, and 11-26 two-pmnt- Southern ..................... 12-7-7 - 13=3~ ' '
and Kim Ihle off the back door cut. round, gaining an initial boost from ers With 14-25 at the line and 38 Waterford ........... ..... 8-12' 2-11=33•'
· Dailey tossed in ten points and had Sayre who started the frame off with rebounds (Dalley 13, Sayre 8).
Southern: Kim Sayre 1 - 1 -2/~7 ,
long
three
pointer
that
gave
SHS
a
Southern
had
6
steals
(Sayre
2);
five
Kim
Ihle 3-6/12=12, Sarah Brauer1!•
a
The Sou~hern JUniOr h1gh Tornadoes' defense gave up only 10 13 rebounds to lead the Tornadoes,
lead
it
never
relinquished.
Although
assists
(Ihle
3,
Sayre
2);
32
turnovers
113=3,
Heather Dailey 4-213=HY,i
0Tornadoes recently boosted their pomts the entire game and placed while top scoring honors and a good
the
play
at
limes
wasn't
pretty,
and
13
fouls.
Tammy
Fryar
2-314=7. Totals: 11-1-,
record to 8-1 at the seventh grade five players in the scoring column . floor game went to Kim Ihle w1th 12
Southern
overcame
numerous
Waterford
hit
16-61
overall,
1-6
14125=39
:::.
level with big wins· over Trimble, Sayre had twelve, Pullins five, Emily points. Ktm Sayre had 7, Tammy
turnovers
with
a
great
defensive
three-pointers,
and
15-55
two-pointWaterford:
Kelly
Hall
1-~\;
Federal Hocking, and Eastern (2 H1ll four, Jess1ca H1ll and Amber Fryar 7, and Sarah Brauer three.
wins) Their lone l&lt;;Jss came at 40-33 Mills two each. "Southern's Sarah Waterford was led by T1ffany Neill effort and 38-24 reb.ounding edge. ers with 24 rebounds (Neil 9). 0/2=5, Ashlee Jones 2-0/2~
Southern outscored the Wildcats 7-2 Waterford had 16 steals (Huck 5, T1ffany Ne1ll 6-0=12, Alecia Hue~~·
to Alexander.
'
Hawley had a good floor game and with 12 points.
Darley tossed in SIX first quarter in the round and led 26-22 !lomg into Yambor 5); ten assists (Huck 5); 17 0=4, Melanie Lang 1-0=2, Bellt:
After being idle for nearly a several rebounds. Brittany Flowers
Arnold 1-011=2, Kelly Yambor
points and Ihle four as Southern the last round. Southern controlled turnovers, and 22 fouls.
month due to bad weather, Southern led Federal with four. ·
Treviously scheduled boys' fresh- 0=4. Totals: 15·l·On=33
In the first Eastern game, rolled to a 12-8 lead. Southern con- most of the final round and at one
placed four players in double digits
to defeat Trimble 47-12. Amber Southern won 3I-14. Sayre led with
M1l!s had her first double-double, a 13 points, Mills and Emily Hill had
12 point-12 rebound effort with one six each, Pullins four and J. Hill two .
blocked shot. Emily Htll also had 12 Cass Lodwick had five for Eastern, By RAF CASERT
few weeks the International Olympic stemming from Salt Lake City's win- tal organizations and pharmaceuticiil
,
points, four steals and nine rebounds. Jess Boyles three, Stacy Smith two,
LAUSANNE, Swttzerland (AP) Committee has been confronted with ning bid for the 2002 Winter Games. companies.
Deana Pullins had ten points, two Tia Pratt two, and Katie Robertson - IOC president Juan Antonio a . serious situation with regard to
Critics have insisted that the
Turning to the drug problem,
assists, and nine steals; wh1le Katie two.
Samaranch opened a world summit allegations of wrongdoing leveled Samaranch proposed the creation of agency must be fully mdependentto
Sayre had 13 points, si~ steals, and
In the second m~etmg, played on drugs in sport by calling for a new ,against some of its members," an international anti -doptng agency have any credibility, an issue whicl!
three ass1sts. Sarah Hawley had three after the htgh school game, Southern drive to wipe out "this odious and Samaranch said today. "We have to coordinate drug testing around the wtll certainly play a major role durrebounds and Jessica Hill had two won 33-20. Hawley had two, Mills unhealthy form of cheating."
swiftly taken all the necessary mea- world - one of the centerpieces of ing the rest of the conference.
rebounds with an assist. Arnold led four, E. Hill five, Sayre 10, and
· On Sunday, Samaranch s31d be
In
his
opening
address, sures and are continuing our investi- the three-day conference.
Tnmble wuh six and McClel!and Pullins 12. Jessica Hill had a great Samaranch also referred to the cor- gatiOns to ensure that Olympic ethics
He said the agency should be would oversee the agency and pro-·
had four.
defensive game. Emily Hill, Sayre ruption scandals which have plunged are respected."
autonomous and run by a board of J)osed that IOC med1cal comm1ssjop
Southern started slow against the and Pullins each had several key the lOC into the Worst criSIS of itS
Nine IOC members have resigned d1rectors composed of Olympic offi- chief Prince Alexandre de Merode
Spartans, but despite outscoring steals, while Mills and Hawley had a 105-year history.
or been expelled for receivmg cash cials, scientists and Tl:presentatives should run the body on a day-to-day , _
them 18-14 the second half, a ten good night on the boards.
"As you all know, over the last payments, gifts and other favors of government and non-governmen- basis.
point f1rst quaner deficit was too
_;_:...._.;;__
_;_
--,
Robertson led Eastern with eight, ,-..,..-----·----- .. - much to overcome, Sayre had 14, Lodwick had six, Alyssa Holter four,
Emily Hill 9, Pul!ins 6·, Mills two, and Jess Boyles two.
324 HOLES OF CHAMPIONSHIP GoLF: 18 COURSI!S ON SEVI!N SITES IN ALABAMA
and Jessica Hill two . Emily Hill and
Mills had SIX rebounds each, while
Sayre had five.
Scoring for Alex were Sams with
12, Grubb and McRostie wtth ten
each.
Aga1n st the
Lancers,
the

Ot:tron 2, New Jersey 2- lle
Wnshmgton 1, N Y Rangers I
Phlladc:lphHI 4. Los Angeles 2
CalgM)' 2, Dallas 2· de
S1 Lou1s 4, Edmonton 3-0T
Ouawa I, V~tncouve r 0
San Jose 5, Chtcago I

Stryker 61 , Nonll Ce ntral 58
Akron East 58, Hudson WRA 31
Southeast Division
Sugarcr«:k Garaway 49, Rtdgcwood 38
Albany Alexander 88, Wellston 4~
23 18 8 l4 127 118
Caroltna .
Swamoil 49 Fayette 3J
•
Aller 48,.Coc1Jsle 40
18 1112 48 117 124
Florida ................ .
Sylvania Nonhv1ew 53, Tal Bowsher41
Amcha 6]. C.n Woodward 40
17 26 4 JS 110 129
Washington
Sylvama Southview 47, Tol Rogers '\B
Tonight's games
Anthony Wayne 62. Holland Sprmgfield 60
. .II 33 4 26 98 168
Tampa Hny .
Symmes Valley 62, South Galha 55
Colomdo at Basion 7 p m
Arcanum 59, Bradford 48
Temple Chnsunn 60, Northmor SS
Toronto at Tampa Bay, 7 05 p m
Arlington 11. ~idgem~Jnl 50
fhornv11fe ~herui.tn 69, W Muskmgum 47
WESTERN
CONFERENCE
Buffalo at Pittsburgh. 7.30 p m
, Atwater Wa1erl oo 54 Garreusvtlle Garfield 27
nfhn Calven 5:\ Mansfield St Peter 29
C11lgnry ut Plioenix:, 9 p m
Barnesvi lle 57 Bndgcport 4'i
Tol Chnst1nn 5J Maumee Valley 37
Batllvta 56. Clermont NE 41
Tol Emmanuel Bapttn65 Bensvdle 11
Wednesday's games
Bellaire S! John s 84 Shadystde 29
Tal Whttrntr 68. To\ Notit: Dame: 48
Colorado at Buffalo, 7 p m
Belpre 40, Vm10n County '\1
Toromo 5J. WmtcrS\'Iilc lnd1an Creek 47
VruJCOU\Cr nt Montreal, 7 p m
Bellj:nmn Logan 65 DeGraff RIVC'mde 15
Tro1v.ood 79 Nonhmont 51
Tampa Bay at Wuh1ngton, 7 p m
Berkshtrc 45. l'erry 42
Troy Chr 68, Suvers 24
New Jersey at Carolina, 7 p m
Bethel 56, Cedarvil le 47
Tusc arawas v,,lley 55, N av~trre Frurless S I
Northwest Division
Toromo :tt Florida, 7:30pm
Bethel-Tate 49, Fehc11y 44
Van Wen Uncolnvtew 62. Convoy Crestview 44 Colorado..... .. .
. .. 25 19 4 54 129 118
N.Y. Is Ianden at Detroit, 7·30 p m
Beverly Fori Frye 56, Shenandoah 39
Versailles .52. Tippecanoe 44
Edmonlon . .
. .. 19 21 7 45 133 124
Onawa at Edmonton. 9 p.m
Blufflon 69. Ft Jennmgs 47
V1nccnt Wanen 64, Logan 49
Vancouver
16 26 6 38 120 142
Ctuea&amp;o at Anaheim, IO.JO p m.
Brooklyn 41 . Cuyahoga His 29
Walsh Jesuit 65 , Cftflton Cent Cath 52
Calg~try .
.. .
.. . 1627 6 38 124 150
Cadtz 60, Jewett-Sc10 19
Warsaw lUvcr Vtcw 46. New Lextngton 31
Caldwell 60, New MfttBrnoras Fronuer 48
Wa~nc 88, Spring South 28
Paclne Division
Canton GlenOak 55, Au$11ntown Filch 45
) Wheehng, W Va ' Cent 58, Tuscarawas Cath
Canton South 49. loutsvtlle :\6
Ce nl H
'
.
Canton Timken 4~ lndiB.n Valley 15
Wlll o· Hdl 4\, Andrews 38
Carrollton 51:1 East Lt verp ool 37
Woodsfteld Monroe Cemrn1 p4. Bealls,1lle 44
Castalm Margnre!Ht 79, Sandusky St Mary 40
XemaChr Sf , R1dgeviHeChr 26
Ccdarv~ll e 54 Ydlow Sprmgs 48
'
Yount. Mooney '\5 Young Wil son 44
Cemerv1\le Sl Xema 43
You Boardman 62 Warren Hardmg 45
Central Catholic 41 . Tnad 29
You Cardmnl Mooney 65 . You Woodrow
Ctn Anderson 62. Cm Mt Healthy 36
W1h0n 44
Cm, Counlry Day 61 Cm Norwood 25
You Liberty 60 Con laud Lakevtew 54
Cut Glen Eslc 64 Cm Weslern Htlls 38
You Ursuline 10, Warren JFK 66
Ct n Landmark 15, On Lockl and 33
Zanesville 40, Cosltocton 36
Cm Manemont.S'\ Cm Deer Park.49 -0T
Cm Seve n Ht l l ~ 19 Cm N College H11ll4
Ctn SummH 63 Ctn St Bernard .~8
Cle East Tech 8~ . Parmn Padu a 20
Col Hnnley 68 Manon-Franldm 52
Columb1t1na 5'\, Southern 42
Co\umb13na Crestview 59, Unued Local 36
Day Meadowd3le 64. W Carrollton 47
Day Patlenou 46, D[ly Colonel White 39
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Delaware Chrtstmn 46. Ways1de Chnsltan 43
Atlantic Division
E Chnlon 6~. Blanchester 61
Iwn
:.!: L I fU. GI liA
Elyna ~2 , Lormn Southv1cw 40
Ph1l adelph1a . . .
,27 10 II 65 \52 96
Elynft Open Door 47. Man sfield Temple 41
Enon Greenon 47, Mmmt Trace 39
FatTborn 44, Tecumseh 'I
Fmrfield '\8 Middletown U
Fayeuev1lk 49 Western Latham 25
Fmdlay Llbcny-Bt:mon 70 Macomb 46
Frankhti Munroe 72. Tn· V1IIage 57
Geno&lt;t,60, Elmwood *6
Hanntbal Rl\ er 6.5 Magnolia W Vn 63
Hubbard 11 Campbell Memonal n
JadcJon-Mt lton 39, Lowellville 24
Jefferson 48. Ham1lton Tow nship 40
John Marshall , W Va 58, Martins Ferry 44
Kenston M, Lyndhurst Brush 51
K1dron Chns11aB 62. Sandy Valley 45
LaGrange Keystone 55. Sullivan Black River 47
Lake R1dge Academy 61, Medina FBCS .l3
Letmnta 64, Eu~alestine 48
Lemon-Monroe 6 , Dar Stebbins 29
Uma Dath 7J,
n 12
L1ma Cent Cal !16, Allen East 41
Linsly, W Va 57, Bowerston Cononon Valley '\0
Lubon 4 '\, Sebring 37
London 66 Spnngfield NE 47.
L&lt;lram Brooks1dc !19, A\'on 54
Mllmfteld Maduon 54 Wonhmgto n Kilbourne
26
Mnntua Crestwood 60, Pcmnsula Woodndge 41
Maplewood 53, Lcdgemont 4'
Massillon Chn suan 53, Carrollton Chnsnan 18
MD.lis1llon W~t~hinglon 67 , Wooster Triwuy 50
McDonald 45. Berhn Center Western Reserve 32
Meadowbrook 55 , Buckeye Trrul .53
Mechnmcstlurs 80, Waynesfield·Goshen 7620T
in
Med1 nn Buckeye 62. Loudonv ille 26
M t~gs .54, Nelsonville· York 45
Mags Easlcrn 67 , Hemlock Miller 27
Men1or Lake Cathohc 58 Elyna Cnthohc 46
M1all\J E 86, Eaton 26
MiamJ V~tl 41 , Tn-Coumy N .\0
Miamuhurg 51, Edgewood 30
Ml&lt;klleburs His Mtdpark -'6i. Clc St Joseph 42
Middletown Chr 37, Day JeTferson 20
Anyone who would appreciate a thoughtful word from you!
M•ddleiOwn Fenw1ck .SS, Oxford Tulawnnda 52
Mogadore 64, Stf'L":t:tsboro n
AU Valentine Heart&amp; will be publi&amp;hed in the February 12th
Mogadore Field S I . Wmdhlim ~8
i&amp;&amp;ue at a coot of only $6,00!
Monlpeher 46, Htlltop 23
· Mount G1lead SO, Manon R1ver Valley 47
MUST BE PREPAID!
N Coast Chrrstoum Academy 32, Heu.m for
Jesus Chnsl JO
New Concord Jotln Glenn ~ McConnel5'-'llle
Morgan 47
Print your message In
New KnoJmllc 6t Ltma Perry 46
New Middletown Spnngfield 46 N L1ma S
tha heart and mall along
Range \2
\
with $6.00 to:
New Philadelphm 47 West Holmes 11
New R1chmond S~ . Western Brow n 47
Oak Glen W Va 66 ~ Lisbon Beaver Local S9
Oak Ht1160. Wa~rly.59 · 0T
Ohio VoUey Chris11].m ~7, G_nw:t: Chris1ian 280ttll';'O H1lls 59. E.verareen 48
Painesville Harvey 4J. Ashtabul:rHnrbor 41
Pandunt·Gilboa 62 Vonlue l9
Parkway 6!'i South Adams 62
Parma Normandy 73 G:ufteld Hts Tn mt y 25
Ohio
Parma"Valley Forge 61 Eucbd ~ 8
Peebles 69 W Umon n
Pemberv11lc F.astwood 64 Konsas Lakota '0
Must be received by Feb. 5
P•qua49 V:tndallo Butler 47
Preble Shnwnee 6\ frPJlklin 56
Proctorville Fairland 82 Coal Grove 32
Rndne Sou1hern ~9 . Waterford 3\
Rnyla d Bud:e~ Loca l 64 Btl lmre 6~-0T
Roct.:y R1ver 42 Independence 41
Ross 60. Kmgs Mtlls !iS
Ruum ~6 . Colwmer 50
S Charkston S£ S~ Urbana .&amp;7
S Euclid Retma 82 Oronre 7
Shaker Hts. 44. Mentor 31
Sou th Poinl 71 . Ironton -~I

.

Brannon .
Juli Hayman was sidelined much
of the night with the flu , but still contributed to the giant win.
Eastern completed the route in the
second half with 35 potnts to Miller's
16.
· Miller shot 11-46 two-pointers, 03 three-pointers, and was 5-10 at the
line with 27 rebounds (Plant 12).
They had st~ assists (Heather
Comptson 4), 15 fouls and 31

Southern girls beat Waterford 39-33, split season series

43 11 8 119

ls 11 7

Tuesday Appleman with one, Felicia
Page one, 'lind Kim McCormick two.
Eastern jumped on Miller early
with a killer pounce, they flew away
with the win. The Eagles led 18-7
after one frame, then turned up the
wtck to 32-11 at the half.
Becky Davis and Amber Baker
did a great job handling the basketball, whileAngi Wolfe did a gfl:atjob
on t~e offensive boards, to share top
rebounding honors with Karr and

Flu-depleted .. Marauder gi,rls .defeat Nelsonville-York 54-45·,_
:

9 8 68 141 96
ll 9 59 Ill 'n
20 12 44 109 115
22 9
28 4

•

The Dally Sentinel • Pagt 5 ;

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

The Eastern Lady Eagles again
showed their superiority by defeating ·
M1ller 67-27 Monday night at
Eastern High School.
Eastern ( 11-2) was led by Valerie
Karr with 18 points, Amber Baker
11 , Juli Hayman with four, Angi
Wolfe seven, Becky Davis eight, Juli
Bailey four, and Amber VanSickle
with one.
Miller (2-15) was led by Kristen
Plant with 12, Anna Braglin with 11,

blame it on (10JUries). The other g1.1ys
are just as talented.
"!think hard w9rk always makes
up fo~ talent. That's the sort of thing
that will help us down the stretch:' '
Ryan Blackwell added !3 po10ts
for the Orangemen, wh1le Etan
Thomas and Al!en Gnffin had _12
each. Han; commg off consecutive
·games of matchmg h1s career-h1gh of
24 pomts, fimshed w1th s1x on 3-of14 shootmg,
. "'At h~lftime1 ~oach told US ,we
weren't'playing as· well as we can,"
Blackwell said. "We slo~ed, things
down and e~ecuted · and d1dn t rush.
Houestly, once we stif[ piJlylng you
don't th10k about who 's here and
who's not. "
.
. Edmund.Saunde~s led the Husktes
With 14 pomts, thelf only. player 10
double figures.
" I told them as soon as the game
was over that) am very proud of the
19-0 start. That, was a trem~nd,~~s,
tremendous JOb, Calhoun sa1d. I ll
probably swt the same guys
Saturday (at No. 4 Stanford) and
maybe some people w1ll be better
players. I'm upset and I should be."
In other Top 25 games, No 22
College of Charleston beal Georg1a
Southern 66-41, and No. 20 Utah
beat No. 17 New Mex1co 57-39.
No. 20 Utah 57
No. 17 New Mexico 39
TURN AND' SHOOT - With Connecticut's Edmund Saunders
Hanno Mottola scored 16 pomts guarding him from behind, Syracuse's Etan Thomas prepares to
as Utah handed New Mex1co Its flfst turn before ttklng the shot during Monday night's Big East contest
In Storrs, COnn., where the visiting Orangemea's 59·42 victory
loss this season in The Pit.
'
handed the H11skies, the last undefeated Division 1team In the country,
thel,r flrtl ,!oss of the season. (AP)
. (See TOP 25 on Page 5)

11 2

•

Karr, Baker lead Eastern girls to 67-27 victory over Miller_:;

Scoreboard
7-Cardmgton Luacoln 12·1

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,,...---

Tuesday, February 2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

]Jy The~ Bend

:·Ford worker dies in explosion at Dearborn plant
.:

.

...

By JIM SUHR

f

·A uoclated Prall Writer
.: ' DEARBORN, Mich. -The explosion rocked the massive Ford Motor
·:Co. River Rouge Complex, then plunged it into darkness. Fire shot up into
-the sky as workers scrambled for safety. .
1
"I thought we were dead because of the way the stuff fell on us and pushed
··Us to the ground," worker Brian Papke said. " It was black and hard to breathe
'and the debris - I didn ' t think we were going to get out of there."
'- One person was killed and 12 critically injured in the exp losion Monday
·ih the coal-powered generating station that fuels the sprawling complex's
·Operations.
· ·
"I haven 't seen something like that since my days in Vietnam," said Jerry Sullivan, president of the local chapter of the United Auto Workers. "I
saw people that were severely burned, sev~re abrasions all over their bodies. It was a terrible thing to see."
Twenty-one workers were initially treated at Oakwood Hospital, said
~p\)keswoman Jennifer George Robinson . Three were released and three others ~ere in stable condition. The rest, including the critically injured, were
transferred to other hospitals because o(the severi ty of their bums.
"Several of these gentlemen were thrown by the blast and suffered var-

ious head injuries," said Dr. Gary Christopher, director of emergency services at Oakwood .
The cause of the explosion at the No. 3 boiler was ~ol immediately known,
Ford officials said. "The building shook, we thought it was an earthquake,"
said An Janes, site manager for the complex, which makes the Mustang model.
A spokeswoman for Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. said gas was shut
off at the complex, a standard procedure, and there was no evidence the explosion was gas-related.
The Michigan Department of Consumer and Industry Services sent two
inspectors to the site, spokeswoman Maura Campbell said.
p" We just can' t make ariy assumptions,',' said An Janes , Ford site manager. "At this point in time , we have no idea what caused it."
Dearborn Fire Chief Jack McArthur said the debris at the scene would
complicate the investigation. "There's a Jot of rubble,• Jot of falldown," he
said. " This is going to be a complex kind of scenario to reconstruct."
The plant generates enough powerto.serve a city the ~ize of Boston, Ford
spokesman Michael Vaughn said. It produces electricity for a complex that
includes six different sites, including assembly, engine, tool and die, glass,
•'

.

stamping and frame plants.
,
Some of the roof of the 78-year-old red brick building, which is listed on
the National Register of Historic Places, was gone and only metal girders
remained.
·
Most windows were broken and blackened, and the ground around the
plant was covered with twisted metal doors, debris and ash.
About 4,000 employees were in ·tlie complex at the time, said Ford
spokesman Jim Vella. About 10,000 people work at the six Ford factories
.still in operation at the Rouge.
.
Authorities searched the building t;,ice Monday, including once with stat~
police dogs, for other victims. Another search was planned today.
The problem at the power station could cause a ripple effect that could
be felt throughout Ford, Janes said. The stamping plant supplies 16 differ:
· ,
·
.
· ·
ent assembly plants.
The I, 100-acre Rouge facility was once the world's largest auto plant. Henry Ford built the plant in 1918 because he dreamed of building a car from
stan to finish in one location.
"This is the worst day of my life;" Chairman William Clay Ford Jr. said.
"It's awful . Everyone who works at Ford i.&gt; an extended member oftlie family."

'Tipper debunks stigma· behind mental illness
By MARTA W. ALDRICH
Associated Press Writer
·. NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Tipper
Gore says people with mental illness
deserve the same 'level of treatment,
insurance and support as those with
physical illness.
:· The wife of Vice President AI
.&lt;;;9re said Monday that research is
;helping to dismantle the stigma 'of
1nental illness and encourage people
~o seek treatment for disorders rang-

ing from depression to autism.
Mrs. Gore, a policy advisor to
President Clinton on mental illness,
spoke to a forum ' attended by about
200 mental health professionals at
Vanderbilt University, where Mrs.
Gore received her master 's degree in
psychology in 1975 .•
The event is pan of a series of discussions moderated by Mrs. Gore
nationwide to prepare for a White
House conference on mental illness

in May.
About5 I million Americans experience a mental illness each year, she
said.
Mrs. Gore announced that the
White House will ask Congress for a
19 percent Spending inc'rease for
programs to help homeless people
with severe mental illness or substance abuse disorders.
"We've learned that getting people off the streets does mean more

than putting a roof overtheir heads, "
Mrs. Gore said.
Mrs. Gore said ho01eless people
with mental illness need a,"continuum of care" including job training,
child care, substance abuse treatment
and mental health services.
The Clinton administration also is
seeking an extra $S. million for an
umbrella of serv·ices called Projects
for Assistance in Transition ·from
Homelessness, , she said.

his sense of humor and his gratitude
for my friendship ·are lovely and
Ann
unexpected blessings in my life;
Landers
however, here is the difference
1997, I.OI.Anttlc• Times
between her life and mine - my dar- ·
S)'nd.icatc, and Crcatt)fs
Synd!CiliC,
ling is married. His wife \las been in
a nursing home for a number of
years and no longer knows this dear
Dear Ann Landers: I would li~e man who has loved her for so long·.
to tell the Florida widow who wrote
We treasure our relation~hip and
so eloq~ently about the relationships make no apologies for it, but we ,
of elderly widowers that her letter
know there are those who don't
moved me to tears. I both $ympaapprove, and this huns us 'both. But
thized with and en~ied her. She, in spite of it, we are deeply grateful
unlike many of us, could at least 'be
for our special friendship.
at peace with her.situation in spite of
I'm sure you wil.l hc;_ar many pros
ihe cold and unfeeling aniiude of her · and cons about such relationships,
beau's children.
but one would have lac "walk the
I, too, am the one who fills an walk" to. truly unders and. -AN
important place in the life of a man I ILLINOIS WIDOW
greatly admire and appreciate. His ·
DEAR ILLINOIS ~IDOW: I
kindness, his concern for my welfare see no reason fpi you to feel guilty.

.

'

me separate products, " satd Microsoft critic Mike Pettit, head of the Washington-based Proje~t to Promote Competition and Innovation in the Digital
Age. ·
The government alleges that under federal "tying " laws, Microsoft's
design forces consumers who use Windows also to use its browser, discouraging them from using Netscape's p(&gt;pular rival software.
Roughly 90 percent of the world:s computers use Windows.
Under questioning by Boies, Allchin acknowledged Monday that he would
"agree with qualifications" that Microsoft.bundled its browser into newer
versions of Windows as a response to the competitive threat posed by
Netscape.
''I'm sure that was discussed, but the original intent was to unify browsing," said Allchin, who wrote a controversial December 1996 e-mail 'in which
· he urged the.company, "We must'leverage Windows more. We should think
first about an ·integrated solution- that is our strength."
Allchin also acknowledged that many benefits for consumers from Windows 98, with the browser already installed, also are available by manually
combining Microsoft's browser with older copies of Windows 95, which originally didn't include Internet software.

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) :--'- It's a
toss-up who was more stanled: Emilio
Estefan or the II Cuban refugees who
found themselves welcomed by one of
f
their favorite mUsicians.
The Cuban-born Estefan, husband and
musical panner of Gloria Estefan, was
jogging Monday morning on trendy
South lleach when he saw the refugees ·
come ashore in . a crude, handmade
boat.
"I saw them come in and I saw them
Estefan
crying and when they touc~.ed down,"
Estefan said. "They were so cold I
brought them a little Cuban coffee just to welcome them to the
land of freedom."
.
Estefan said they were stanled to see him.
"They just acted surprised because they know who Gloria and
me are,'' he said . .
The men, who were taken into custody by the U.S. Border
Patrol. said they left Cuba within the last we~ aboard a small
wooden vessel powered by a diesel engine.

PICTURE YOUR PET
AMONG THE •••
PET VALENTINES!

r

SANTA FE\, N.M. (AP) -The match-up: The Mind vs. The
Mandate. At stake: Prime real estate, shipping not included.
New Mexico lawmakers jokingly propose a no-holds-barred
wrestling match between their governor, Gary Johnson, and Minnesota's new chief executive, Jessie Ventura.
Touting Johnson - a triathlete and expert skier - as a "real
athlete,''· ihe state Senate on Monday passed a gag measure
proposing the match.
Johns!""· a Republioan, has repeatedly said hi§ November reelection itVthe majority-Democrat state is a,man!late for .his conservative agenda.
'
lf Johnson were to win , New Mexico would get Minnesota's
10,000 Jakes, the measure said. If Ventura won, Minnesota would
get 10,000 of New Mexico's sand dunes.
Johnson was dubious. "Aren't I going to get killed"" he asked.
Ventura, a former professional wcestler once known as , "The
Body" and no)V "The Mind,'' wasn't amuSed.
" His reaction was, surely the New Mexico Legislature has
somethi.ng· more important to do than promote wrestling matches,'' Ventura spokesman John \Yodele said.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)
.- Goldie Hawn is getting a pudding
pot to put next to her Oscar.
Hawn and Samuel L. Jackson
on Monday were named _recipients of
Harvard's annual Hasty Pudding
awards, given to performers who have
made a " lasting and impre'ssive contribution to the world of ent, rtainment:" ·
Hawn, who won a best supporting actress .Oscar for "Cactus
Flower;" will lead a parade through
Jackson
the streets of Harvard Square on Feb.
II with male Harvard students dressed
1
in drag.
;
. Jackson will receive his pudding pot Feb. 18 at the opening
mght pe~fonnan.ce of ~~~ troupe 's annual theatrical production,
whtch thts year ts.tttled . I Get No Kick From Campaign."

·OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S) ·
"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 11TH IN
Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

. Owners and

Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings. .·

Recorder posts local/and transfers

-

.

: :Deed. Lawrence Edwin and Sandr~ Fay Halfhill to Sherman D.
.Wh ite, Rutland parcels;
• Eleed , Ronald Bruce and Bonnie
sUe-Denny to Federal National Mortgage, Salisbury;
- .
. .
. Deed , Jennifer Husk to Gwenne
Q ~ Welch, Gwenne D. Grady,
Pqmcroy;
... Deed , Kerr McGee Corp., Kerr
t.)cGee Coal Corp. to American Coal
Go .. Sutton pa"els;
.
; Deed, Heather D. Smith to John
~ · ' Smith , Sunon:
:' he riffs deed, James W. Cleland,
~·t iphanic Cleland. Stephanie H. Clel.tad, Rutland;
; 1'eed, Eric and Joy Day to City
Jllational Bank, Pomeroy parcel:
~ Deed, Southern Ohio Coal Company to Delmar G. Davis Jr.. Salem
pl.rcel ;
•

••

•

. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Magic Johnson apparently isn't
lookmg to go from the hardwood to the baseball diamond.
. His agent said Monday the basketball legend is not involved in
any group planning to buy the Oakland Athletics.
, ·
, "Three months ago, we basically had two telephone discus, stons and passed on the deal,'' said Lon Rosen.
·
· Several San Francisco Bay area newspapers have reported in
the. past few days that a wealthy developer, John Kehriotis, has
talked about the deal wtth Johnson, who owns a piece of the Los
Angeles Lakers, and baseball Hall of Farner Frank Robinson .

PER PICTURE
PRE•PAID

-

Hurry! Deadline
Thursday, Febr~ary 4th at 3 p.m.
'

.

:
'

r------~-------------------,

I . .VALENTINE PETS ·
IPet's Name-......----....:....---'---

lOwner's Name---------IAddress _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
1
1City - ~- - - : - - - - - - - - - - - -

!Amount Enclosed:· --For-...:plctures
1at $6 each. · ·

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

214~STMAIN

POMEROY

992-8887
Aado-Owner• l~urance

Life Home Car Business

now, f',.,JL, •

D... n~

The Daily'· Sentinel
'

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

'

.
Tuesday, .February 2, 1999:

You and your friend have a life
enhancing relationship and are huning no one. If you· are finding it difficult to find acceptance or approval ,
you have mine.
Dear Ann Landers: I' am apostal clerk who, every day, sees
many cards, letters a~d packages
sent·to our mat I recovery·center (formerly known as the dead letter
branch) because people do not put a
return address 'On the items they
mail.
I find it disturbing when mail that
is undeliverable cannot be returned
to the senders to l'et them know it
didn ' t reach its destination . Think of
the thank-you notes, Jove letters,
invitations and condolence cards
that never got delivered because of
an illegible address, And imagine
the hard feelings, disappointment,

misunderstandings and broken relationships that resulted because the
sender didn't take the time to write
his or her retutn address. When there
is no acknowledgment of having
received the gift, the sender ass umes
the recipient has poor manners.
This problem could be remedied
so easily. Return addtess labels are
inexpensive, and it takes only a
minute to affix them. Please, Ann ,
do your readers and the Postal Service a favor by printing this letter. It
really is imponant. -CONCERNED
POSTAL CLERK IN N. DAKOTA
DEAR N. DAKOTA: I know a
little someihing about mail and can
sympathize with you. I hope your
Jetter produces the desire&lt;! rtsults.
Please, dear readers, pay attention to
what this postal clerk is saying. It
takes just a minute to print your

return address in the upper left-hand ture on the kitchen table. -- E.N. IN'
•
corner of the envelope or package or COALINGA, CALIF.
slap on the sticker. Do it'
DEAR E.N.: Some double dom~:
Dear Ann Landers: Here is my psychologists may say the man ~
candidate for the "dumbest robber" wanted to be caught. I say he was·
medal. A friend of mine was hospi- just a dumb crook.
:
talized for ·a couple of weeks. DurDrugs are everywhere. They' re:
ing that time, a young man in our easy to get, easy to useand even eas-:
community entered her home, ier to get hooked on. If you have•
poured himself a drink , put a pot of questions about drugs, you need Ann :
water on to boil and helped himself Landers· booklet, "The Lowdown on ~
to some chicken wings and shrimp Dope." Send a sell addressed, long,'
he found in her freezer. Having a Itt- business size envelope and a check:
tie time on hi s hands and seeing a or money order for $3.'75 (this;
Polaroid camera on the b&lt;Jokshelf, includes ·postage and handling) to:;
. he decided to take a picture of him- Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.•
self.
Box 11 562 1 Chicago, Ill. 60611- :
A neighbor whew"' checking the 0562. (In Canada, send $4.55.) To:·
house surprised the robber. When find out more about Ann Landers;
she walked in the front door, the and read her past columns, visit the ;~
young man ran out the back. You Creators, Syndicate web ·page at:
guessed it -- he left the Polaroid pic- www.crcators.com.

•.

~------------~=---~~----------~--~---------~

Time Out For Tips-\~----~.

Cases concluded in Meigs County Court
: . The follo.wing cases were con- fi ve days jail suspended, one year .di sorderly conduct, $100 suspended, Pomeroy, innerbridge overload, $2i5
:eluded recently in the Meigs County probation ;
costs, one year probation, restraining plus costs; Charles D. Caudill, Dun:~2urt of Judge,Patrick H. O'Brien .
Terri L. Carmichael, Racine, dri- order is s ued ~ restitulion ;
ders, innerbridge overload, $200 plus
Fined were: Jay P. Fisher, Mid- ving under financial responsibility
Roger K. McDaniel: Cheshire, coMs; Howard W. Greene, Gallipolis.
dleport, failure to contrnl, $20 plus action suspension, $150 plus costs, driving under suspension, $200 plus . speed, $30 plus costs; Janet M.
costs; Debra D. Hysell, Rutland, . five days jail and $75 suspended if costs, 60 days jail suspended to I0 Bolin, Rutland, speed, $30 plus costs;
· John A. YanReeth, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus costs; Shirley 'A. valid operator's license presented day s concurrent, one year probation :
Lude, Syracuse, speed, $30 plus within 90 days, one year probation; stop sign, $15 plus costs; hit/skip, speed, $30 plus costs; Penny J, Morcosts; Victor M. Scholl, Vienna, unsafe left turn, costs only; Bobby E. $200 plus costs, 30 days jail sus- ris , Vincent, speed, $30 plus costs;
·W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Charles McConaha, Pomeroy, exp'ired pended to three day s, one year pro- Glenn W. Corlisa, Bethel Park, Pa.,
J. Stearns, Rutland; failure to control, license, $30 plus costs; failure to dis- bation, restitution; Deana L. Starcher, spee~ , $30 p'ius costs; Robert L
$25 plus costS; Ron A Capehan, play valid registration, $10 plus Rutland, resisting arrest, $50 plus l:lope, Albany, speed, $30 plus costs;
Pomeroy, domestic violence, cos ts, costs; Roger L. Stoban, Pomeroy, dri- · costs, one year probation, 10 days jail improper lane change, $20 plus costs;
lb days jail suspended to two days , ving under the influence, $850 plus suspencfed to three days ; Steve R Lynn M. Pinkos, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
?Pe year probation, restraining order costs, I0 days jail suspended to three Quillen, Rutland, DUI, ·$850 plus speed, $30 plus costs; Michael T.
tssued; Herbert L Cossin, Reedsville , days, 90-day operator's license sus- costs, 10 days jail suspended to three Henline, Coolville, seat belt, $25 plus
two counts domesti c violence, costs
pension, one year probation, jail and days, 90-day OL suspension, one costs; unsafe vehicle, $20 plus costs;
~i) days jail suspended to two days o~ $550.suspended upon completion of ' year probation. jail and $550 sus- Joseph P. Stephens, Parkersburg,
each count, one year probation, residential treatment program withtn pended upon completion df residen- speed, $30 plus costs; Edward E.
[estraining order issued; Sandra G. 90 days; speed, costs- only.: seat belt, tial treatment program within 90 Byrd, Batesville, Miss., speed, $30
~outhern , Athens , reckless opera$25 plus costs ; Thomas O'Bryan, days; driving under suspension, $150 plus costs; Kelly B. Hewitt, Washlion, $50 plus costs. $300 forfeiture; · Mason , W.Va., unsecure load, costs plus costs, three days )ail and $75 ington, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
~orothy L. Parker, Pomeroy, failure . o nly;
, .
suspended if valid OL presented Francis M. Vanausdal. Columbia,
~o control, $20 plus cos ts ;
Mark S. Leslie: Middleport, four withtn 90 days, one year probation ; ·S.C., speed, $30 plus costs.
1 • •Laura L. Roush, New Have n,
counts pass ing bad checks, $25 plus
W.Va., two counts passing bad costs on each, rest itution; James C.
Douglas D. Starcher, Lang~ville ,
checks, $25 plus costs on each, resti- Bartimus, Portland , domestic vio- DUJ, $1,000 plus costs, six months .
tution; Debra A Roush , Middleport, Jence, 10 days jail suspended to jail suspended to 30 days. one year
passing bad checks. $25 plus costs, three · days, one yea r probation. OL suspension, two years probation,
restitution; Anna M. Farley, Rutland. restraining order issued; Jennifer c six months vehicle immobilization;
passing bad chec ks, $25 plus costs. Roush, Recdsvtlle, ilisorderly by driving under financial responsibilirestitution; Peggy Mu sse r, Pomeroy, intoxication, $100 suspended to $50 ty action suspension, $200 plus costs,
p~ssmg bad checks, $25 plus costs,
plus costs; Harry J. Rice, Rutland , two years probation, six months jail
restitution ; Curtis Riffle, Middle- two counts passing bad checks, $25 suspended to 30 days concurrent;
pon, passing bad checks. $25 plus plus costs on each, restitution , fi~e reckless operation, $50 plus costs;
costs, restitution; Heather Mattox, days jail suspe nded; Linda Lauder- resisting arrest, costs, 10 days jail
Pomeroy, passing bad checks, $25 milt, Middleport, passing bad checks, suspe nded to three days concurrent;
Our statistics show that mature
P:lus costs, restitution ; Keith Mattox , $25 plus costs, restitullon; Troy A fleeing, costs, 30 days jail suspenddrivers and home owners have
Pomeroy, passing bad checks , $25 Todd, Pomeroy, costs, six months jail ed to IO days concurrent; Gary L
fewer
and less costly losses
pl_us costs, restituti on: John Casto, suspended to 10 days, two years pro- Garretson , Parkersburg, W.Va., speed,
than
other
age groups. So h's
Pomeroy, domestic violence, cosJs, bation ; Tony a· L Hudnall, Albany, $30 plus cos ts ; Everett T Coy,
only fair to charge you Jess for
your Insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save
more with our special
Deed, Delmar G. Davis Jr. to Del- ry Young. Pomeroy tract s;
· The following land transfers were
muJr, Y~)()Jit;ydiscounts.
Deed, SCR Enterprises Ltd. to
recorded recently in the office of mar G. Davis Jr , Sandy K. Napper
Thomas W. Parfitt, Columbia parcel ;
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene and Tara Mele Davis, Salem;
Deed, Gardner L. and Patricia L
Deed, Prentice and Carol Hess to
Hamilton:
· Deed, Ora P. Bass to Ri chard A. Wehrun• to Wendi Krautter and Har- Ptentice and Carol Hess, Bedford.
and Barbara C. Koker, Sutton parcel ;
Deed,' Lawrence Edwin Halfhill
and Sandra Fay Halfhill to Lawrenc
IO:dwin Halfhill and Sandra Fay
.Halfhill , Rutland;

.

Sent~~

.Enhancing relatiOnships for older adults give life joy and happinessj

:In defending its actions, did Microsoft shoot itself in foot?
By TED BRIDIS
Boies noted that the filing came from the company's patent lawyers, who
Associated Press WrHer
aren't involved in formulating its antitrust defense.
WASHINGTON- Microsoft must square one of its bedrock counroom . "What it shows is that when people are off doing the,ir work, not related
defenses with an apparently inconsistent admission by some of its own to thts lawsutl, they know they are separate products,'' Boies said.
lawyers.
Company spokesman Mark Murray said patent lawyers were referring to
' Throughout its antitrust trial , the company has steadfastly denied charges alternate versions of Microsoft 's browser designed to run on rival operating
that it illegally bundled its Internet browser into newer versions of Windows systems, such as on Macintosh or Unix computers. '
.
to trounce a software rival.
The patent filing , in volving online banking, also describes software proIt maintains that it caa't be guilty of "tying" those products because its grams asking the operating system to retrieve data from a particular Internet address- a technique Microsoft says is consistent with its notion of an
browse: is a,component of Windows, not a &amp;eparate software program.
· But m paperwork for an obscure U.S. patent awarded in August 1998- Internet-savvy Windows.
"Anyone who has read the document would understand it supports our
months after the government launched its landmark antitrust case - .
.Microsoft lawyers wrote: "It should be understood by those skilled in the case," Murray said.
an that a Web br2wser, such as Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer,...
Allchin, a senior vice president and top computer scientist, has rejected
t$ separate from the operating system ."
charges that that Microsoft included its browser within Windows to try to
. Justice Depanment lawyer David Boies, who began questioning Microsoft "crush': rival Netscape Communications Corp., whose own hrowser earned
·executive Jim Allchin on Monday, said he likely will confront Allchin with tens of millions of dollars.
the document today. He.said the government learned about the patent.appli"This (patent liltng) certainly"doesn '.t help them because they've come
c,ation over the weekend.
·
,
up with this fictional argument that the browser and the operating system

The Daily

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--------

"

-

·--

....... ---

BY BECKY BAER
Metg's County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/Community Development
. Cleaning the bathroom is a dirty
job, but somebody has to do it. Why
, not make it the responsibility of all
family members so no specific per. son gets swck with it all of the time?
A clean and fresh bathroom is

important because it can be a safe
place to take care of personal needs,
help prevent the spread of disease,
will not attract insects and. will help
prevent the growth of mold and
mil&lt;lew. If each family member
would automatically hang up bis
towels, wipe off the sink, tub and
shower after each use and dispose of
wastes properly, then there would be
very little ~ard cleaning left to do.
Even with everyone pitching in
following each bathroom use, a thorough cleaning will stiii need to be
done at least once a week: the shower stall or· bathtub scrubbed down ,
the toilet ·cleaned and floors , woodwork and mirror washed. As each
person lets the water out of the tub
or shower, sh~ can wipe the sides
and bottom to prevent a ring from
forming . (one of the taller family

members will need to be in charge of
the upper pan of the shower stall).
,Even small children can be taught
to replace their towels on the towel
.holder after each use. It not only
improves the appearance of the
bathroom, but it also allow the towels to dry faster, so theni is less
chance of mildew. Children can help
keep the bathroom clean by emptying wastebaskets (make sure that
there aren't any razor blades or med'ications in them) and cleaning the
mirror and sink tiles. They can even
clean the shower curtain , if supervised. The children can be the fami ly members appointed to gather the
· diny towels when getting ready to
wash laundry and be in charge of
putting out the fresh ones.
Teenagers can be given the
responsibility .of keeping the toilet

cleaned. Demonstrate for them how•:
to wash the inside and the outside or&gt;
the bowl. as well as the rim and seat.:
Strongly caution them on the proper:
use of the cleaning products. Toxic•:
fumes can develop if cleans~rs or:
cleaning products are mixed with;
bleach. Make sure that they read the·-·
warning labels.
Cleaning out the medicine cabi-,
net should be a task that is left to an·
aduli. Don't allow children near the:
medicine chest, because their curios-:
ity of medications (even aspirin);' .
may result in accidental poisoning. ~
With everyone doing their part in'··
keeping the bathroom clean, it will~
not become a burdensome chore for;
any o~e person. It will always 'be:·
safe and will look and smell fresh. :.

Student council's life-or-death contest for lobster canceled::..
.

'
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - .
PETA placed a call for action on
Larry the Lobster lives!
its Internet site urging sympathizers
' The student council at Jefferson to contact the school, 'then it called
City High School has canceled a , ,.the student council members and
fund-raiser for the Special Olympics offered an alternative prize - either
that offered students 50-cent votes to a $50 gift cenificate from a bookeither spare or doom the crustacean . store or a quantity of vegetarian ice
Several students complained after · cream.
,
an assembly Thursday featured the
The proceeds from the contest
Ji ve lobster in a iankful of water with woul~ . have gone to the Missouri
students chanting " kill , kill , kill'"
Special Olympics, which sponsors
Two of the students contacted athletic events for people with deveiPeople for.the Ethical Treatment of opmental disabilities . . The student
Animals, and the animal rights group council now· is considering other
contests to raise money for, the
went to work.

group.
A statement read over the high
school's public address system on
Monday apologized "for any offense
tak.en at the Larry the Lobster fundraiser. The intent was never to be
mean-spirited, malicious or .offensive."
PETA officials said they were
happy that Larry was spared.
"Larry is a symbol of all the animals people eat. We hope people will
take their sympathy fur LatTy to the.
dinner table, because the be" thtng
any of us can do ~or animals' is sim-

ply .not to eat them," said Bruc.;:
Friedrich, PETNs vegetarian cam;:
&gt;
paign coordinator.
Friedrich said PETA will give a;
Humanitarian Awmd to the two .high;
school seniors who contacted thf!··
organizitio~.
.
Missouri Special Olympics Pre,i•.
dent Mark Musso said hi s organization was ·not aware of the fund-raiser
until it was reponed in the media. '
"We have not and will not accept
funds from a project that puts an animal in a hfe-or-death situation,"
Musso said:

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�•

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-.
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•• •

SAR learns impeachment !Food play
from Steven Cuckler

a

--'-.~-·
- -Community

Calendar·--

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
Pomeroy Library. Jeanette Thomas
to revi ew "George Washington - a
Life" by WilliamS. R and all.

•

RACINE Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, F&amp; AM , Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. at the hall. Refre shments.

•

MIDDLEPORT - URG Meigs
Ce nter advi sing day and spring
quarter preregistration Wednesday,
3-6 p.m. at the center in Middleport.
All URG night students are to call to
sc hedule an appointment.

•

TUESDAY
.: POMEROY - ·Salisbury Townshjp Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30 p.in. at
tho township garage on Roc ksprings
R&amp;ad .

'
'
:POMEROY
Meigs County
Health Department immuni zation
clil]ic Tuesday, 4-7 p.m. at the Meigs
Multipurpose Center in Pomeroy.
Chiltlren must be accompanied by a
p!hnt or guardian with a copy of the
ct'Oid's .immuni zation record . For
m&amp;re infbrmation ca ll the health
department at 992-6626.
.
:POMEROY - Eagle Auxiliary
meetin g, Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. at the
hall. Refreshments fol lowmg meet- ·

.

POMEROY
Alcoho li cs
·Anonymous open discussion meeting, 7 pm. Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 160 Mulberry Avenue.

.

SYRACUSE
Alcoholics
Aqo nymous open disc ussion, 7 p.m .
Carleton Schoo l.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Co.mmunity Assoc iati on, meetin g
res~ hed uled from today to Feb. 9,
8:30 a.m. confe rence room . Peoples
Bank.

•.•

:MIDDLEPORT - Mtddl eport
Masonic Lodge 363, Tuesday, 7:30
.P·'!l·. Refreshments.

RACINE - ·Raci ne Grange;
Thursday, at the hall.
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Republican .Committee meetin g
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Carleton
Sc hool in· Syracuse to inventory
ticket sales for next week' s Lincoln
dinner.
SATURDAY
WEST COLUMB IA - Bend
area gospel sing Saturday, 7 p.m at
the United Methodist Church on
State · Route 62 in · West Columbia,
W.Va. featuring the Builders Quartet. the Huntleys and Narrow Way.

Ju,dge issues injunction against Internet porn law
I'HILADEL PHIA (AP) - A
judge has issued a preliminary injunction shielding Web site operators from
prosec ution under a new federal Internet ind ecency law that was to take
eff.,ct today. ·
'
''While the public certainly h a~ an
interest in protecting its mmors. the ·
public interest is not served hy the
enforcement of an unconstitution al
law," U.S. Dtstrict Judge Lowe ll A.
Reed wrote in n decis ion released
Monday night.
When President Clinton signed the
. Chnd On line Protection Act last year.
Reed issued a re stra inin g order
agai nst its enforcement, say ing it
could hinder constttuuonally protected speech.
·
Reed's latest decision acts as
more permanent delay.
The law would req uire commercial Web sites to collect a credit card
number or some other access code as
proof of age before allowing Internet
usetS to view online material " hannful ·to minors." Violators would face
perialties of up to six montHs in jail
and $150,000 ~r day in fin es.

a

Justice' Depanment lawyers now
must decide whether to appeal the
preliminary injunction, ask for a fullblown tria l or agree to allow Reed's
decision to become permanent.
The law's lead sponsors urged the
depa11ment to continue defending the
measure.
"I look forward to a favorable
Judgment at the appellate level - a
day that wi ll be celebrated by mill1ons
of parenl' and grandparents across the
nation," said Rep. James C. Green - .
wood , R-Pa. , who co-sponsored t~c
law.
The Ameri can Civil Liberti es
Union, which filed suit on behalf of
17 clients, also lauded the ruling .
"We' re·thrilled that the judge has
reali1.cd at this stage that our clients
have some very credible fears."
ACLU spoke swoman Emily Whit,
field said.
•
The owner of a chain of gay- and
lesbi an-themed bookstores that does a
portion of its business online
expres$cd· relief at the judge's decis10n.

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CHOCOLATE
on a new meaning for
lovers In this easy dessert
Jacques Torres.
·
mousse. Usc a rubber spatula .t!J
gently fold in the chocolate · until
completely incorporated. The
ehocolate mousse should be the
same color throughout, with no
streaks.
To assemble the moose: Fill
each· shell with the chocolate
mousse; filling almost to the rim .
Place them in the refrigerator until
set, about an hour. Remove from
the refrigerator: Invert the filled
she ll and place on the center of a
plate. Use a sharp paring knife to
trim the ·antlers where they will
stick to the shell. Use .a small
amount ·of tempered chocolate to
"glue" two. antlers to the head of
each moose.
Loosen the eyes from the sheet
of parchment paper. Melt the bottom of each eye with the blade of
a hot · paring knife and stick the
eyes onto the moose head, under'
the ant lers. Fill a cornet with the
sour cream and draw a pupil in the
center of each eye. Place one raspberry, tip side out, in the front for
the nose .
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under each nose.

By DAVID KOOP
Associated PreSI Writer .
ARMENIA, Colombia- Tears in
her eyes, the n'un stared at the statue
of Saint Anthony helping a poor beggar. Around the statue was scattered
what once was the Sanctuary of Miracles church - walls, roof, steeple,
altar, all reduced to rubble. The stat·
ue itself was· unscathed.
. "It's a miracle. It shows that God
hasn't forgotten the poor," Blanca
Gomez said.
Armenia's poor might not agree.
With almost surgical precision, a
magnitude 6 earthquake sliced Armenia in two on Jan. 25, devastating
hovels and aging slums in its poor
south while leaving the sleek hi ghrises of its wealthy north largely
unscathed. The quake's toll mirrors a
society in which a vast gulf separates
a rich elite from a poor majority.
Armenia was ground zero for the
earthquake. Most of the nearly I ,000
deaths caused by the quake were in
that city, the state capital, and
200,000 remain homeless. But in
some areas, little damage can be seen,
"Not one wall fell here," said
. ·Gi lma Geraldo, 45, pointing at t~c
bl oc k of posh condominium s in
Armenia's excl usive Northern Towers district where she works as a
receptionist. "The rich never suffered. It is as if even the earth hates
.us humble people."
' Cracks appeared in the wa lls of
three of the complex's seven buildings and the other four were
untouched. None of the 300 resi(lents
were hurt.
· Electricity and water were quick~
ly restored, sprinklers soon watered

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lush, green lawns and banking
machines soon started pumping out
cash.
In southern Armenia, the quake
leveled entire neighborhoods and
left ~ post-apocalyptic landscape of
rubble, Stunned survivors dig through
the remains of their homes for family members, or at least their remains.
People, blackened with dirt, sleep
in squalid camps or plastic lean-los
on the street and fight for scarce food
and water in camps staffed by harried
workers.
Gerald 's uninsured home col. lapsed, and rescuers pulled the bod·
ies of three of her neighbors from the
rubble. She says she is still in shoc k
and cries at night. But she went back
to work Monday because she ca~ 't
afford to lose her job.
She was amazed at what she saw
when she ventured into northern
Armenia.
" It 's almost unrea l being here and
seeing people watch TV and drink
beers on their patios," she said. .
Eighty percent of the buildings
destroyed in Armenia wetc in its
poorest neighborhoods, according to
Mayor AI varci Patino. ·
The reason the poor sutlered most
was not bad luck, but bad architecture, saiq Arjel Ospina, head .of Red
Cross r~sc ue operations in Armenia.
Homes built with flimsy materials
on weak foundations collapse easily
d~ring earthquakes, while the well made homes of the rich have a beuer
chance of surviving , he said. .
" Natural disasters usually hit the
poor the hardest, " he said.
Among the homeless, resentment
is growing.

People weary from days of digging through rubble and living on the
streets grumble that the best aid is
either being stolen or diverted to
wealthy districts with minor damage.
. "Every day we hear that tents are
arriving from the United States and
Canada, but none reach us . Where
does it goT' asked Alonso Botero,
leader of a camp of ragged lean-tos
in the city's Uribe Park.
The rich have a different set of
worries. Wealthy housewife Martha
Garcia, who lives in the condos
where Geraldo works, recalls with a
shi ver the first nights after the quake.
Despite the high , iron fence that
rings the complex, terrified residents
armed themselves with pistol s and
machetes to protect them selves xom
gangs of poor looters, she said.
"We stayed up all night trembling,
guarding the gates. There was no law
those first nights," she said. "My
father joked that he ·was going to lock
the food in the safe."
The government later sent in
6,000 troops to stop the looting of
supermarkets, relief camps and
homes, and to protect businesses that
dared to ·open. Little violence has
been reported this week.
A week after the quake struck,
Armenia is slowly craw ling out from
the rubble. Stores are starting to
reopen and some neighborhood are
getting electr icity and water agai n.
Authorities are preparing temporary
tent cities on the edge of town.
But in the quake 's aftermath ,
Armertia has awakened to the realization that it is two .separate cities.

Diplomats turn up heat t~ push
Kosovo into conflict resolution
By ELLEN KNICKMEYER
Associated Press Writer
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia - Serb
leaders and ethnic Albanian rebels arc
running out of time to decide whether
they will commit to peace talks,
desc ribed as the "last chance" to
resolve th e Kosovo conflict without
NA'i"O military intervention.
The United States and five European powers have summoned the two
sides to start talks Sinurday in France
aimed at ending II months of fi ghtin g ove r Kosovo Albanians' demand
for ind ependence.
" This is the last chance, and I
would like to make a call for negoti·
ation s in good will to . solve thi s
tragedy," NATO Secretary -General
Jav ier Solana said in Germany.
NATO has authorized Solana to
take military action if the warcin g
parties haven ' t started talk s in a
week and reached a deal by Feb. 19.
The Kosovo Liberation Army
promised an answer on whether it
would take part by Wednesday, U.S.
envoy Christopher Hill said after
mee ting Monday with rebel s in
Kosovo's pmvi ncial capital of Pristi ·
na,
Yugoslav President Slobodan
Mi.losevic's government in Belgrade
announced that the hard-line Serbian
parliament will decide Thursday
whether the Serbs will show up for
Saiurday's conference in Ramboui llct , France.
For the rebel s. the risk of exhausting the patience of foreign mediators
wa.s an eve n greater threat than' a
NATO attack, European Union envoy
Wolfgang Petritsch warned .
" The Kosovo Albanians really
have to sec that they must maintain
· the su.pport of the international com. munity," Petritsch said .
The U.S.-proposed peace plan on

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Quake's ~plit also ·divides
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the table would gi ve Kosovo greater process ahead," Hill said .
Kosovo Albanian polit ical leade rs
autonomy for the first three years it
takes effect; political parties would have agreed to attend the conference .
decide what happens after then.
Howeve r. without the participation of
Ethnic Albanians are by far the • the armed facti ons - the KLA and
maj ority among the 2 million people the Serb government - any conferof the southern Serbian province of cnce would be doomed to fai l.
Kosovo, and most ofihcm want·comIn Belgrade, the government said
plete independence.
the Serbian parliament must be the
· Hill said rebel leaders have come one to decide because "Korovo reparound to accepting at least "the con- resents vital interest for Serbia and·its
ce pl of an interim accord " that stops people."
·
short of their demand for full soverHard:,incrs loyal to Milosevic
eignty. He remained hopeful that the · and ultranationali sts led by Vojislav
Peace process was still on track.
Sesclj hold a majority in the legisla" 1 never like to use 'optimism' ture , which last ye ar reso undin gly
and 'Balkans' in the same sentence rejected foreign mediation over
but I believe we. have a very good. Kosovo.

Pakistan still has reservations
·
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despite promise to sign treaty

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- - - -. Bedford Trustees organize - - - The Bedford Township Trustees held an orga ni zational meeting recentl y.
Elmer F. Bailey was elected president of the board . Regulai meetings were
set for Tuesdavsat 7 p.m. at the town hall.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Jacques Torres' mousse masquerades as moose ·

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Public Employees Retirement, I p.m. Thursday,
li ons. 992-2 161.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, February 2, 1999 .

By The Associated Press
each mold with chocolate and' tap no water or steam comes in conFun is the watchword in the the s id~ (with the handle of an tact with the chocolate, because it
cook ing style of pastry chef offset spatula) to remove any air can cause the chocolate to harden.
Jacque s Torres, visible in cre- bubbles . Invert the molds over the It is important to allow the chocoations like his whimsical Choco- bowl of chocolate and all ow the late to melt completely, or you
late Moose (recipe fo llows) or excess chocolate to drip back into will have lumps in the finished
spiky meringu.e-covercd Porcu- ' the bowl. Scrape the top of the mousse. As soon as the chocolate.
pi ne dessert.
molds clean with the edge of the is melted, remove it from the heat
Those desserts along with spatula and place the molds upside 91ld set aside until ready 10 use.
Fried Ice Cream, Lollipops and down on a wire rack set over a
· Place the whole egg and egg
many other too thsome treats, are baking sheet. The excess choco- yolks in a medium-size mixing
wri tten up and photographed in late will drip from · the molds. bowl and beat with an electric
color in his latest book, " Dessert . When the chocolate has- begun to mi xe r set on medium-high ·speed
C ircus ai Home," (Morrow. harden but is not completely se t, until light in color and thick, about
$28). It 's subtitled, "Fun , Fanciful about 5 minutes later, scrape the 7 miQutes. The egg mixture will
and Easy- to-Make Desserts" and edge of each chocolate shell clean . gain in volume due to the in~orpo­
its carefully detailed recipes are with a f harp paring knife: This ration of air. Keep whipping while
angled for the home cook.
makes 1t ·easier to unmold the the sugar cooks .
Among the · fanciful , include shell s. keeps the .chocolate from ~ Place the water and sugar in a
the Clown Hat, the cr unchy- break ing as it contracts, and gives 1-quart heavy-bottomed sauc~pan
creamy inven tion that Torres calls the dome a clean rim. Place the o'ver medium-high heat. Insert a
"one of my new sig nature
molds on a baking sheet in the candy thermometer and cook the
desse rts." In the easy-to-make cat- refri gerator until completei.Y se t, sugar mixture until ·it reaches 250
egory, he offers Chocolate Truf- about 5 more minutes. Remove F, what is called the soft ball stage.
fl es or Sweet Pi zza - not easy to . from the refrigerator and unmold. Remove it from the heat' and pour
res ist.
·
Some mo.lds allow the cook to just the hot sugar down the side of the
The book is . the companion push against one edge of the shell mixing bowl irito the whipping
volume to the new insta llments of and· slide it · out of the mold. eggs. Be careful not to pour the
" Dessert Circus." Torres' national Depending on your mold, you hot sugar directly onto the beaters,
public TV series that beg ins in may need to lift the chocolate or it will splatter. Continue to
Februar.y. Torres is exccuti'vc pas- from the mold. Set the. chocolate whip with the electric mixer sef on
try chef of Le Cirque 2000 restau- shell aside.
medium-high speed until the outrant in New· York City, dea n of
To make the antlers: You wi II side of the bowl is warm but not
pastry arts at the Fr.cnch C~ linary need two antlers for each moose. hot, 2 to 3 minutes.
In stitute, and recipi ent of numer- Usc a small offset spatula to
' Pour the heavy cream into a
ous cooking awards.
spread some tempered chocolate me.dium- size mixing bowl and
Chocolate Moose
ove r a maple leaf template placed whip to soft peaks with an electric
(the recipe makes 10 ind ividual on a parchment paper-co vered mixer set on medium speed. At
desserts) ·
·
baking shee t. Keep the · thickness this stage the whipped cream has
For the moose:
of the choc.,latc as even as possi- the most volume. If you over-whip
16 ounces bittersweet choco- ble, about 1/8-inch thick. Repeat the cream, you will lose volume
late, tempered
until you have enough antlers for and the mousse will not be as light
For the chocolate mousse:
each moose.
and airy as it should be. If you are
8.9 ounces bittersweet chocoTo make the eyes: Pour a small using Grand Marnier, fold it in
late; chopped
amount of'the tempered chocolate with a rubber spatula, being careI large egg
into a cornet made of parchme,nt ful not to deflate the cream.
5 large egg yo lk s
paper with a small tip cut out. Use
Fold the egg mixture into the
Scant 114 cup water
the cornet to draw small horse- whipped cream. If the egg mixture
Scant 1/2 cup gran ulated sugar shoe-shaped eY.es onto a sheet of is too hot, it will melt the whipped
parchment paper. Fill in the center cream. If it is too cool, .it will not
I and 2/3 cups heavy cream
2 1/2 tablespoon s Grand · of the horseshoe comp letely. fo ld well. Use a rubber spatula and
Marnier li queur, optional
Make two eyes for each moose fo ld gently just until the two are
To finish the moose:
and set aside to finish later.
&lt;:ombined. You should still see
2 tablespoons sour cream
To prepare the mousse: Place a streaks of eac~ in the mixture.
10 fresh raspberries
1-qu.att sa ucepan half filled with Carefully pour the warm melted
5 large fresh strawberri es
water over high heat and bring it chocolate into the mixture. If the
To prepare the moose: Use to a simmer. Make a double boiler chocolate is too warm, it will melt
dome molds to make the moose. by settin g a large mixing bowl the whipped cream. If it is too
Any type of half-sphere or round over the simmering water. Place cool, the ·chocolate will seize
mold will work; if you use a sheet the chopped choco late in the bow l (harden) on contact with the coolof molds, make sure the tempered and heat until completely melted, er mixture and you will have
chocolate is in a wide bow l. Fill stirring occasionally. Make sure pieces of choco late in your,

: Ewings Chapter Sons of the American Revolution mel at the · Meigs
~ounty Museum recently to hear Capital Universily law st uden t Steven
Cuckler of Athens di scuss the history on impeachment by the U.S. Congress.
: Cuckler told of the discussions by the fo unding fat hers concerni ng
impeachment. He stressed that it was co nsidered so important a power that
it: was on~ of the first checks and balances presented for approval by the del eeates.
.
·· Cuckler then tried to give the hi storical interpr~tati on of the phrase "high
crimes and mi sdemeanors" for which federal offi cials, including the presi~nt . can be impeached. He pointed out an 1803 impeachment case where a
f~deral judge was impeached and convicted for immoral beh avior. drunkenness and use.of the Lord's name in vain. As rece ntl y as 1989, a federa l judge
W!ls ·i mpeached for perjury. He also emphasized that one of the items li sted ·
ilt the impeachment charges agai nst President Ni xon was "misleading the
paqple of thc;United States."
·
·
...~ Cuc kler then poi nted out that the foundin g fathers allowed the U.S. Sen- ·
.il~to be the trial court because it ori ginally did nQt·answer di rec tl y 10 the
t\i(frs. However, the direct elec tion of se nators became constituti onal earli er' ltlis century thu s thwarting this idea.
·
: James Lochary·of Amesville, chapter president . presented Cuckler with a
¢:rtificate of appreciation. He th en announced that Cuckler had been accept·
oo as the newest mell)ber of the chapter, based on hi s Revoluti onary War
~estor Daniel Gilliland who is buri ed in Orange Township. Cuckler was
·tlten sworn in as a member .and presented with a membership rosette.
: The chapter is now contacting area high schools concerning parttcipalion
&amp;(high school students in the essay and ora ti on contests on topics of the
American Revoluti on.
Michael Worley of New Marshfie ld presented plan to design a web
pl(ge on the internet for the chapter. Keith Ashley, Willi am Beegle and
M:Yron Jones are to set up the content of lhe site and work with Worl ey.
•!1-fichael Trowbridge was reported ill. Wallace Bradford was reported
baCk home from the hospital.
·
:lceith Ashley, legislative chairman. presented informatton on the incorrecl reporting on the medical findin gs reg arding the paternity of the children
oCrhomas Jefferson's. slave, Sally Hemmings.' He also announced the publi'\nleeting at Meigs High School on Feb. 18 concerni ng the loading dock at
P'1rtland that would destroy the Buffingto n Island Battlefield.
• Dale Colburn reported the progress on the Chester Courthouse. Electric
a~ gas are installed and duct work is in progress. Ceiling repair is planned.
.AM!her fundraising dinner will be held .at Royal Oak on March 19.
President Lochary spoke on the emphasis being placed by the SAR on the
20Qth anniversary of the death of George Wash'ington. A joint luncheon will
be '· held with the Nabby Lee Ames Chapter Daughters of the American Rev olJ~~ion at the Athens Presbyterian Church on Saturday. Feb. 20. Also, a
cha'tlter picnic will be held at the Roy Holter residenc e on June 13 for membei6.and guests.
··The next meeting. will be held Feb. 25.

''The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetin~ and special events. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or;Tund raisers of any type . Items are
ptinted as space permits and ;:annat
ba guaranteed to run a specific numb~ of days .

•

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

..... 8 e The Dally Sentinel

~istory

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Clark,
Margret
Clerk
Winebrenner, Rachel MUla
Owner, Mickle Hollon
·J2:30'pm
McB~de, David MUla, John
Ohio
Chester,
Milia,
Eleanor
Mills
740-985·4422 , ,,.
680
Wiggins, Gladys Wiggin&amp; ·
Roboon, Eleanor Robson,
El•nor Wllilama, Mary
Wllllama, John T. Williams,
Driveway Stone
Glenna Williams Davie,
Marcetle Wlltlame, Gilbert T.
Light Hauling ,
Carrell, Anna John Carrell,
up to 8 ton.
Hettlt Carrell, Margret
DUMP TRUCK
Carroll Finley, Clara Finley,
Pick up dlecarded
992-5455
Cleremont Finley, Cecile
apptlancoo,
batterleo, •
SERVICE,
Finley, Nellie Carrell, Anna
many
motala
&amp;
' •
Carrell, Ida Carrell vo .. ,
Agrl~ultural Lime,
motor
btocka
.
Oamond Voaa, Jr., Chartu
Limestone • Gravel
740-992-4025 8 a!IHI Dm
.
Voaa, Robert \toea, Bill
Dirt•
Sand
VoA, Matta Carrell Stark
..' ...:
Eeterllne, Johnny Stark,
985·4422
Berti
Carrell
Wolfe,
Furniture Refinisloiti.IJ
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Chester, Ohio
Beatrice trene Wolle Ward
&amp; Repair
I0125196/ttn
Bigley, Weaver Wolle, Jr.,
005 - Personals
George Wolle, Roland
Pickup &amp; Deliv ery
.'
Wotla, Rosetta Woll, and
Available
Pomeroy Eagles
Don't Worry About Your Future
Mildred Hamm. You are
Let Our P s ~ ch lcs Put Your Mfntt· ·
Club Bingo On
hereby notlllod that you
At Ease Call Now! 1· 900· 740.· ,
6500 Ext. 3593. 10+ $3 .99 Per' ·
ehva
bAn
nameo
Thursdays
Min. Serv·U 619·645·6434 . Mp:ll
Delenclentaln a legal action
Out of Area
AT 6:30P.M.
www. theh01pages2 .comlnSipsy~
'
endUed Joseph E. Thoren,
l 800 564 3227
Chlc1250291.htm
Main St,.
Jr., Admlnletretot ol the
·
Pomeroy,OH
30 Announcements
Elllle ol Mildrid
I. Hamm, . ~;;;;::;;;;;:':120:199
;;1:m:o.=t&gt;d=·~
deceaaed,
-vo-the unknown
Paying $80.00
DIABETIC PATIENTS: Vou May •. :
helra of Mildred I. Hamm,
per game
Be Entitled To Receive Your Ola- ·
deceaald, et al. Thla action
betic Supplies At No Cosl TO' '' '
$300.oo Coverall
has been aaolgned Caae
You. For More Information, 1-888 Numcer 30265 and ta pend$500.00 Starburst
___._ ..
6n-6561 . Ing In the Probate Court of
Progressive top line.
Megla County, Pomeroy,
New To You Thrift Shoppe
•. •
Lie. It 00-50
9 West Stimson, Athens
Ohlo45769.
1119 n
740·592· t842
...
Tha object ol the
Quality clothlr\g an d Musehold · ·
Complaint Ia to determine
Ite ms. $ 1 .DO bag sale ever~ · ·,,
the unknown helra of Mlldre
Thursday. Monday th ru Saturda~ ."
1. Homm, decaaaed and to
9:Cl0-5:30.
' .
dlermlne the ehere aeordecl
WJth A-Dallr S•n111•.J
each heir purauent to tntoatate aucce..lon. You are
40
Giveaway
',
required to anewer: the
1 Beautiful Black Fluffy Male cat, ..
Complaint within 28 daye
1 Short Haired Blac ~ /Wh ile Fe -· ·
after the tall publication of
male Cat, Both Hand Raised Ffom · '
lhle Notice which will be
Kiitens. Evenings: 74().:167·7460, , ,
publlahecl once each w..k
1 Year Old labrador, Femate:
ll!r elx conacuUve wtake.
CALL
II r
Make S Good Watch Dog, 740 , , •
Llltt · publlcetlon will be
245·9577.
.
mede on Februery 23, 1999,
and the 211 deya for the
3 large Mixed Breed Puppies;, " ,
enawer will commenc• on
Born With StubTall. Evenlngs i· ,
740·367-7460.
that date. In ca" ol your
-...:..,-=------"'
····
llllure to entwer or other·
AKC Registered German Shep·
1
WIN reapond aa reqUII'Id
pard; Female: (304)773-5810 .
:·
YOUR MESSAGE
by t~e Ohio Rulee ol Civil
Procedure, judgement by
Com mercial ' StO'o,ft/oven; 440 :. ·~
CAN BE SEEN HERE
elec. hook-up. 2 female , Bwk, Sr· ,' ·,
dolauH will be r•ndered on
. berlan
Husky:
(304)675 -'' :"
Morell 23, 1999 at 10:00 e.m.
FOR A TOTAL OF
6349:675-1376.
In the "!•gla County
Prob.l\t Court, Courthoueo,
Puppy, About 3· 4 Mon ths Old.•.
$7.00 PER.DAY.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Part German ·Shepherd, Black &amp;
Tao. Pretty Faced, Male , LO'o,!BI
Judge Robart E. Buck

By KATHY GANNON
Associated Press· Writer
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Pakistan has already promised to sign the
global· tes t bati treaty, but the.re are still a host of nuclear tssues that remain
on the negotiating table, a senior U.S . envoy said today.
Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott , who anived in Pakistan on Mon-.
day, would not disclose in detail what·was on his agenda when he holds talks
with top Pakistani offic ials.
But it 's likely he will push Pakistan toward making the same commitment
that its rival India did on Monday -'- to sign the Comprehensive Test Ban
Treaty, possibly by mid - 1999.
· The treatflias been signed by IS I nations ana incluaes a pledge against
all testing_of nuclear dev ices and sets up a global system of sensors to mon·
itor compliance.
·
India and Pakistan declared themselves nuclear powers last May after conductin g underground tests and both arc believed to have missiles capable of
carry ing nuclear weapons to most major ci ties on the Asian subcontinent.
Given that India and Paki•tan have fought three wars in the last 51 years ,
the nuclear tests by the hostile nei ghbors generated fears that an other con"
flagration could escalate into a nuclear war.
Both nations objected to internati onal economic sanction s that were
imposed to punish them for their nuclear tests. However, niost sanctions
against Pakistan were lifted because its economy is so weak_.
Pakistan has said it will not sign oth er treaties requiring it to refrain from (1) 11, 26
pursui ng the nuclear option, unless lndi a also signs.
(2) 2,9, 16,23 6TC

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGIOH
BEECH GRO.VE
ROAD
SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

c-

~.

WICKS
HAULING

J.ANDSCAPI
DESIGNS

Big One
Call a Little
One

...

..

Re L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

..

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club : '·
Nease Hollow Rd. ;
Every Sunday

Limit
sleeve .·
·.737 bark bore :.::

FREE

..

.

--------------··

112•11110

_____

BULLETIN BOARD

- - - - - -. .

'7" column Inch wee.kdayl
'9" colu•n Inch Sunday
OUit OFFIC.

Children. Needs Good Hemet
74().368·8314.

- -- - - - - - - - :·
.'

•

�...

' I

•

Tuesday, February 2, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

---;
1999

Ol11o

The

Puaale

·=-·
. ...-

PHILLIP
. ALDER

41 _....., . . .
~

• Month, In

HiM 2 Openlnga For 24 HOur In
Homo CaAI Of Eklorty Or Hondl·
capped, 7 - 1-t538.

Heallhy Puppies, T()o(lood
t t Weeks Old, Paper

1996 t4x72 2 - · 2 Bathl,
740-246-9834.

Buslrins
.Opportunity
INOTICEI

And Traah, $250 Depoalt And

Buytra, Lowest Rat a In The In·
duatryt Largest Selection In The
Tri-State, Over 50 To Choose

Excellent Condition, 740·441'·
1913.

60

Lost and Found

Found : Basset Hound Very
Friendly, Wblte With Tan Spots.
VIcinity : Kriner Road , 740-446-

7595.

YardSale

70

Gallipolis
a Vicinity
ALL Yard Seln lluat

Be Pilei In Advance.
DfAQLINE: 2:00p.m.

-tho

tht day
ad
11 to run. Sundly
edition -2:00p.m.
Friday. Moncloy adiUon
• 10:00 o.m. Seturdloy.
Rummage Sale: Friday February

5th, 8:.30·2 :30 Grace Uniled
Malhodlst Church, Gallpolls, OH.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

53000, for Doubltwklo, Ul!ld very
lillie; $250. (304)578-2688.
.

STANLEY HOME PRODUCTS

Doublt Wide Now $999·Down
$237-per mo. FrH dollvtry &amp; sat·
~P- HI00-891-677l.

l FULLER IIRUSH 740·423·

Good selection of uaed homes

$150 dapoalt, $300 month, no

the ollor1ng.

elderly/ disabled, csll 1-888·24211404.

Long Term Care, Day Shih. Ohio

"Promotional Sales Products"
Dick Rob8rte, 740·448·7812

(Voles

Ono Full-Time Registered Nurse
Position Available In Oak Hill
~ Community Medical Center's
---.,..-,--.....,:.....,,....,.,...-_ Emergency Department. Ohio LIUtilize Nursing Process While
PrO\IIding Care, Direct /Guide Patlent /Family Teaching, And
Function Within Scope 01 Departmental Expectations. If Inter-

Inside yard sale, Feb. 1st, 2nd,
:lrd, 893 Third. Middleport, Oh.

s.

Auction
and Flea Mar~et

80

Auction February 5th, 6 PM . 241
Third Avenue , Gallipolis large
Load Of Name Brand Tools &amp;

HOusehold Goods. 74Q-256-1270.
8111 Moodlspaugh .Auctioneering
Services, Little Hocking, ,Ohio.
Appraisals FarmEstate·
Hous~hold - Commercial. Ohio License t7~93 740-989-2623.
Alck Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
sen/lea.
Licensed
166,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304-

n:l-5785 Or 304-n:l-5447.
Wedemeyer 's Auction Service.
Galllpol~. Ohio

90

740-379-2720.

Wanted to Buy

. Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Silver "nd Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqulsll1ons Jewelry

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 7-40-446-2842.
Antiques, top prices paid, RiverIne AntiQues , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner. 740· 992·

Buying Standl/1il Tlmoer, 3 Acres.
a up, 140-888-98tlt. .
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks. 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac,-1900 Eastern Avenue , Gallipolis.
wanted To Buy Junk Autos Any
Condition 740-446-9853.

Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes, Call 740-446-0175. 304875-5965
·we Buy Everything: Furniture,
Appliances. Etc. By The Piece Or
The Loll 740-256-6989.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

AVON I Ail Areas I Shirley

spe .... 304-675-1429
Accepung Applicstlons For Li·
brary Page !Shell Maintenance
Min. Wage , All Shills, Bossard U·
brary, 7 Spruce Street, Gallipolis,

Ohio.
Are You Looking For A Warm
And Friendly Work Environment?
Would You Lika To Work In A
Place Where Vou r Etrorts Are
Recognized And Appreciated? If
You Are A Dedicated , Fnendly,
Outgoing Individual Then Scenic
Hills Nursing Cenler is The Place

For'!t&gt;ull
AI Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
We Are Looking For A Part-Time

STriA's For The 2 PM. · I 0 P.M.
Shift.
1 Part -Time STNA For The 10
PM ·6 A. ~ . Stub
Please Apply In Person To The
Front Desk. Scenu; Hills Nursing
Center, 311 euckridge Aoad. Bidwell, OH 45614.
- --

NCIN HIRING
$170.00 PER WEEK/PT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone Operator work For

LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

' Day And EvoQiog_
, Shifts Available

• Full And Part t11110 Open-.g
' No EXIltlrlence NeededWe Train
" HOMEMAKERS
WORK )VHILE CHILDREN
ARE IN SCHOOL
' College SludentJ Welcome
• Prev&lt;&gt;us Applicants Naed
To Reapply
Apply In Porion AI:
I

7 Plno S~881

Galllpol~. DH •
Tues. Feb 2nd.
Wed, Feb 3nl &amp;
Thun Feb 4th
3 P.M. T116 P.l!. Only
Ask For Mr. V,aeman

1

,.

monthwlih$1150

1-800-837-3238·

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

W'l-. Tirad Of No? We Say Yell

992·2218.

7

Rapid Refund!!l Will Pay The Cost
Of Your Rapid Refund And In·

lois, Rutland.

elude A Big Screen T.V. With

::304-:..:..:.:.36-:::..:3409=~·:-:------::.---::---:

Rent Buster, new 1999 14x70 2or
3 bedrooms , onty $995.00 down

t BedroQm, $250/Mo .. You Pay

,$195.00 per. ,.,on .. \roe delivery
aoo set up cal11-600-948-5678.

Ulllliea, On Second Avenue,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURrTY JSSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
' t -888-582·3345

New bank repos, only two left,
never lived In call 1·800~ 948·
5678.

Heat, WID Hook-Up. Near Cinema
$279/Mo.. Plus UtiHUes. Deposit &amp;
lease Required, 740-448-2957.

Downlown, 740-367-0219.
1 Bedroom . Economical Gas

2 Bedroom Apartment, ~djicent
To University 01 Rio Grande

call 1-600-948-5678.

Campus, 740-245-5856.

Used single wide, around $100.

per. man. 1-800-948-6678.

2 Bedroom Apartment, 1 112
Baths, Great Locatlonl'15 Court
Street, Gallipolis, Kitchen With
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo.,
Plus Utilities , Deposit, ~eferenc86, NO Pets, 740-446-9580.

limited offer 1999 dOuble wide, 3

br., 2 ba . $1)99. down , $215 .00
per. mon., delivered and set up

can 1-600-948-6678.

this nt'Mipap&amp;f Is subt&amp;Ct to
lhe Federal Fair Housing 1'1;1
ol t 868 wl1lch makea lllliegel
to advertise ~anv preference,

slOp by and fill out an application.
Pet Grooming Assistant , Must
Work Evening&amp; And Saturdays.
Aesumees Only. We'fl Call You
To Schedule Appointments. Send
Resume To : CLA BOx 482, c/o
The Gallipolis Tribune, 825 Third

As Little As $500 Down. 1·606928·3426.

limitation or dscrlminallon

based on racie, color, rolllion.
11x tamllai status or nattonal
origin, or any lnteltlon to

.. GaMipolls. Ohio, 46631.

- · rotr(

AeiOcallng? Take Over Pay-

350 Lots a Acreage

au_cn .,...,.,...,

112 acre tqt In Syracuse, call 304·

- t o r J18l ntate

Saleaperson Needed: Furntlure
Store, Full-Time, Immediate
Opening, Apply : Lifestyle Furnl·

ture, 856 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
10 To 2, No Phone Calls Please!
Salesperson wanted for lmme·
dlate opening at Don Tate Mo·
tors, 308 East Main Street, Po~
meroy, Ohio. Apply In person.

Must be able to work any shih In·
eluding most weekends . Must
have clean pollee record, good
work history, reliable transportation, valid driver's lice nse, hOme
phone llnd must have black steel
toe safery shoes. $5.75 per hour,
32-40 hOurs per week . Call 740·
669·2874 Monday- Friday, Bam 4pm lor appointment.

3 Rooms, Nicely Furnished Apt.,
Carpet Throughout, centr~l Heat
And. A/C. "II Utilities Furnlshad
I!Xcept Electric . No Pets 740446-2e02.
5 Court St., Small One Bedrm ••
Kitchen With stove &amp; Refrigera-

tor. No Pets. $225.00 Month Plus
Refrence &amp; Deposit. 740-44~·
9560.

REAL ESTAT E

EOE

540 Miscellaneous :Merchandise '··

31 0 Homes lor Sale

Apartments : Co,tage &amp; Trailer

For Rent, 740-368-1100.-

630

740-367-7664.
$69.00 purchase price with up to
$200 worth of lree programming.
Umltad time oHer, call 1-800· 779-

Cond. $5,500, 74Q-448-9278

METABOLISM

t 996 Chevy Blazer LS, BurgundY&lt;

Van: 1991 Chevy, lull size; G-20;
Mark Ill conversion : Looki and

""'great; $5,700;(304)875-2949.

.7 40

740-992-5578.

Square Or Round Bales Delano
Straw And Hay For Sale, Square
Bales, Altizer Farm Supply, 740·

8 t Harley Davidson FL.T; verY
good shape, $10,000, 740-992·'
5788.

TRANSPORTATION

97 Honda 4 Trac 300, 5 hours o~
It, factory extended warranty, ask,

UO Autos lor Sale

Baby Bath Chair, $5; Baby Bod
Mattress; $5 :.:\~Wiaty of Cassette

lng $3,500, 74D-742·1503 or 74()..
592-4530.
..

1971 Super Beetle, All ·New ;
Parts, Fenders, Running Boards,
Chrome Bumpers, $800, 740·446-

Tapes , $1.-$.5~ ea.; (304)675·
t 311; Ahor 6PM.

760

9552 . .

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs ,
New And Used, Stairway Eleva·
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
~~~:,~~~ma~·s Homecare, 740·
Good Condition, 2 ,Piece Llvlog
Room Suite Tan /Brown. Used

Vory L\11101 $2007&lt;40·256· 1337.

une, 825 Third Avenue. Gallipolis,

Riverside Apartments In Middle-

OH 46631 .

port. From $249-$373. Call 740992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor-

Insurance

Crop Insurance, Burley -Tomatoes, ·Corn , Ken Bass Insurance, 1·800-291 ·6319.

140

Business
Training

sage, 74Q-596-5707.

Two

bedroom

house

on

80hx162f1 lot Corner of Pomeray
&amp; Rail Road Street. Mason, wv.
$22,000 00 (304) 882-3604.

170 Miscellaneous .

180 Wanted To Do
Auto Detailing; Buffing; Paint and

Body Wortc; (304)674-0002,
Eldorado Adult Home : long Or
Short Term Care, Private Aoom:
$1,400 Semi Private Room :

Ground floor aptartment, 2 bed·
room with WID hook·upno pets.

Prefer Somalhlng With Bulldlnga
&amp;.Barn , &amp; Sorile Usable Acres,
On Land Contract. 740-367-o:!SO.
We Buy Land &gt; 30 ·500 Acrea,
we Pay Cash. 1·800-213-8365,

Arlttorr/ lend Co.

RE NTA LS

IIWoWII
Only $199. down large selection
of 2-3-4 bedrooms !rea delivery&amp;
setup owner fi nancing available,
only at Oak wood MobiJe homes
Nitro Wv. 304·755-5885 .
Amazing only $999 . down on
large selection of double wldea ,
tree delivery &amp; setup owner tl·

nanclng available 304-755-5885.

4410.
Electric maintenance service .

Worlng. braaker boxes, light fix·
ture , healing systems, and Re-

modell/1il. 304-674-0126
Excellent care elderly person In
hOme : non-smo ke r; mobile ;
reasonable; lady preferred ;

mv

(304)882·3880.
Furniture repair restoration &amp; rellnlshlng , custom built reproduc·
lions, Liz &amp; Bennett Roush, 740.

992· 1100, Appalach ian Woodworks.
Furniture repair, refinish and ra&amp;·
toration . also custom orders. Ohio
Valley Refin ish ing Shop, Larry

-._

Georges PoriaOie Sawmill, don't
haul your your loga to a mill just

cau 304-675-1957.
Handvmsns Special: ·Eioc .. car·
pantry, other repairs &amp; remodelIng; Free Estimate ; (30,)674-

0128.
Older Christian Couple Will Do
Housecleaning, 304-675-8738,
Prolesslonal Tree Service, Stump
Removal , Free Estimatul In·
aurance. Bidwell. Ohio. 740-388·

9648.740-367-7010.
Take Care of the Elderly In

1 Bedroom House, Close To Rio

Grande College, $300/Mo., Water
Sewage, Gar!Jago, Paid, 740-441·
1005.
2 br. houn on 2219 112 Lincoln

Avo. Pt. Pleasant $275. mon .
$275 . dep:: available now; ap·
pllances turn. 304-882-2099 after

6pm, leave measogo.
3 BR, 2 Bath; detached 2 car ga·
rage, Glenwood : S.350 month

$500 Down on any Ux70 in
stock, flmlted number, free dellw·

ery. Call 1-800-691 -67n.
$999 Down on any 98 modal
Ooublewlde In stock Free Oellv·

ery.Call1-800-69t-6777.
1973 t-tlllcrest two bedroom mo-

+

deposit; (304)743-8664.
312 W.tzgal St. Pomeray. 3 Bdrm
House, $350.00. Month, Dopoolt
Requlfod. 1-868-840-0521.
701 Beech Slreet, Middleport, two
bedroom unfurnished ttouse. de ~
posit and teferences, 740·992 -

bile homo, 74lf992·5039.

0165.

1980 Kingsley 1~ Ft x70 Ft. Wlth
3/4 Acre Lot Located 2 Miles On
State Route 218, tn City School

Clean 2 bedroom hou•e -ln Po·
meroy, $350 per month plus dt·
posl_t, no pets, land contract pas·

Dlatrlct, Deyllma: 740-446-3278,
Evenings: 74Q-4.48-3099.

~tile

1982 14x70 SChull:f .mobile hOme,
two bedrooma. twO baths, 7"0·

94 9-3089.
t 983, 141f70 Manolont 3BR/2
Bath ; All eloctrlc/kltchon ap·
pllancoa, curtalns/bllnda, now
wallpaper.

Many

updates;

(304)675-5 t 82
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,

740-446-0390.

t 991 Chevrolet Cavalier, 4 Cylln·
Nascar Collectibles
By Action- Revell· Brooksflel9·
Winning Circle and · Racing
Champions Dale Earnhart. Jeff
Gordon, plus Dale Jr and others.
Large selection Starting Une·ups,
we have eli good players and pro·
tectl\18 covers for dl5piaylng, Mc-

Gwire- Griffey· Marino- E. Smith·
Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment. Prime location In

Shak· K. Bryant and others. ,Can
be seen at Rutland BoHle Gas or

downtown Golllpolls . No Pots I
$300.00 month piUs utllllles. Rei-

by c&amp;lll/1il 740·742-251 1 or 1-B00·
837-8217, aak lor Dave.
,

erencas &amp; Deposit ReQuired.
Call: (7'0} 446-3302 for appointment.

Nordic Track Walk· Fit : Fit One
Cross Country Skier; stair step·

North 3rd Middleport, 2 br unlur.
apt. dep ..&amp; rei. 304-882·2566.

410 Houses for Rent

for Sale

St .tOO . Syracuse, Ohio. 740-992·

I Home.(304)875-6t54.

Real Estate
Wanted

320 Mobile Homes

Like Surprises?
For your surprise gilt send $3.00
to: Collectibles, P.O BoK 105,
Mason,WV 25:280 , and treat
yourself!

Rhillpa, 740-.992-6576.-

360

tunities. •

Wanting To Buy: 15 To 20 Acres,

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres, Village Middl1port,
secluded and private, appoint·
ment, call 740-992-5696.

·Goolllpotla eo..r cot lege
(Careers Close To Home ) Csll
Today! 740-448-4367. t-800214-0452, Rag 1190-05- t 2748.

v-•.

I

House And 5 Acres On Teens
Run Rd., ·"Fixer Upper- $22,500 Owner Financing Ava ilable . Call
Afler 6 :00 P.M. Or Leave Mes-

Now Taking Applications - 35
west 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage , Trash, $2951Mo., 740·
448.0008.

per; 740·992-5181 .

Aftor8 P.M.740-441-0034.
1992 Gao Priam , Autom. Air.

$2,000.00. Good Condition. 7404460-4782.
.
1992 Honda Accord, LX, 2 Door
Cpupe, 5 Speed, A/C , Cruise,

$3,995 OBO, 740-388-9878.
1992 Mercury Cougar, 45,600
actual miles, e~ecellent co ndition,
garage kept, must see to appreel·
ate, wttlte wlth blu e cloth top,
leather seat, $7000 oeo. call

74Q-247·3901 aller 5pm.

Used Kitchen Cabinets &amp; Coun·

$6,500. 741l-142·3172.

$3,900, 080, 740-446-405 t '
1995 Ford Escort GT, 38,000
miles, 5 speed , 2 door, hatch ·
back, CD pl ayer, new tires ,

1997 Chevy Cavalier, 2 Doors. AI
C, Tilt, Cr~lse, 5 Speed, CD Play-

$300.00, ,304-675-1550. ·

Waterli ne Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 1DO; t' 200 PSI

er, Power Mirrors.- Power Sunroof,

One b!!tdroom apartment In Middleport, $270 per month , all utili-

$37 .00 Pe r 100; Al l Brass Com·
pression Fihings In Stock
·

7~806~-~t,;~~r;;~
One Bedroom
$350.00 Per
Roq'd. All Utlllllos
446·2477.
Renters Cream Come Truel Call...

304-736·7295.

l

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson. Ohio. 1·80D-53?-95:28

550

Building
S
upplles

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wmdows, lintels. etc. Cla ude Winte rs,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-2455121.

560

Pets lor Sale

Green, 38.000 Milos, $9,500, 740992-7102.
·
I

740-682:3448-·

1978 Ford F250, 4X4; Completely
rebuilt must see. $7 ,500; OBO ;

(304)773-5798.
1983 GMC Truck wJ12ft Dump
Bed ; 6.9 diesel: 5 speed·2s~ed

haK ton pick·'-'&gt;·

tuna g.oodo aUto, gOod

tlros/oxhouol, 11250, 740·992·
1493.

two bedrooms, two 6aths, 740·

949-3089.

1986 14x70 Manorwood, 2 Badrooms. 2 Baths, Eloc., AC, Good
_COnd_111on, St0,500. Call740-2455332

2 3 bedroom mobllt homaa. air
conditioned, $280-$300, aowar,
water and lraoh Included, 740-

1988 Skyline, 14a70, three bed·
room , two bath . on e owner, air
co nditioning and sk lfl 1ng , very
good cond ition , must be mowed .

2 &amp; 3 Bedrooma, Stove, Refrlg·
erator, water Trash Paid, 5275
An~$350/Mo . In Country, Referenc• &amp; Deposit Required , 1•0·

3 Bedrooms, 1 112 Bama, $300/
Mo.• You Pay Ulllltles, Deposit,
No Pola. 614-386-9162.

1997 Chtvy 4 X 4, L.W.B., 350
With Extras , 16,000 Milos, &amp;
t9,500.0o OBO. 740-446·9266.

'

.'

••

Campers a
Motor Homes

slide-out, excellent condition,.

1

Sls,ooo 080, 304-n:l-5484.

. '(E5, MA AM,M'{ REPORT
IS ALMOST READ'i'.. I JUST
NEED A LITTLE MORE TIME ..

1985 Airstream Tra'llel Trailer 31 '
Ft. , Purchased New, Very Good;
Condltlon, Garage Kept, Used;
Very Little; Twio Beds, Center.

Edllon
11 Reclined
12 AciNu

7 Sun lUll

Silent M8ptbbr.

1t CIA
fllrerunner r
21 Speclded .. 2211e10ng

23 o.ny

AMArave

24H1Qr8'
delightS

LIKE MA'I'8E
TEN 'i'EAR5..

II=

r DUCK DOWN LOW,

--to

Phoenix

-·

:ze AetNa Foch
29 Biblical

30~,.,_,
31hlng
'if1Bw.lle
38 CMnge Into

bone

40Nutuncee
41 Annoying .....

ot2-le
roughly
IItie

..

G Expenalvelur .
411nch elong
47 Bow
49 On lite

connry

52-DMI

•

Ofhjn..·

'.

53

CELEBRITY CIPHER
. by Lull campos

Coto0!11y~~-------bylomouo-.pae
~ Mbiln lhl c:fpher ltlncll for.,._, Todl)"f dw: B 1qUH1 0
'JR

'

COHCXOJRt

11110

LXYYSH

egcy

..

. ,. ,_.
J

U •

WXKH

XSUXAN

CS X R N

XOH

IIBDRZ

D· NHSHNN,

LOY

.. .
.- '
PREVIOUS SOLUTION; "I wonllo a llgh1 the other night and a hockey game broke out.• - Rodney Dangerfield
'.. "''
.

ZUJTWY

Z .

HJNHRWBUHO

'::~:~~, S~tlotll!-~t.~s·
NIIM .... ClAY I. • • • •.
O ltorro,..
lol1wn of liMo
lour ICJGmbltd -.!1 be-

....

WOlD

low to form lour words.

S L I R H.L

F 0 MI T
5
I I 1 I

I

I

~

DO

.

.'

773-9550.

92 Chevy extend cab half ton Sll·
~o~trado , lwb, high miles, lookl &amp;

Residential or commercial wiring,
new ae~ca or repairs. Master Ll·
centtd electrician. Ald anour

Electrical, WV000308 , 304·675· •
1786.

....-.
·-·~~

.. ' ~
'

.'
II

"'

.,
'

__,.;..T..;I;.,..;:L~A-V,__-11 ~
1 17 1 1 ~

After a very hectic hQiiday
seasor my neighbor an.........._ ...__._...__. ... ' . nounced that the easiest way
to make relatives feel at home
0 NE DET
is to - - - - - - - - ·!

I0

r--------,
_

_

_

_

_

_

,, .

..,

·'

6

I

•

.,

Complete tho chuckle quotod
by filling· In rho missing words
you dovolop from stap No. 3 below.

"•
"•
0

•

..
.,.

Window - Enact- Swamp - Canary - OWN WAY
"The best success ·in life," the mom told her kids , "is
to be able to spend your life in your OWN WAY."

SERVICES

go-

••

.'

SCIAM LIT$ ANSWIU

740-448-2e02.

Profeaslonal. 20yrs experience
wlth all masonerv. brick. bloCk &amp;
atone . Al so room additions,
rages, etc. Free estimates . 3 ,..

...._

.}

Low ~ileaga , All Electric Wind -.
OWl, DeluJi.e Interior, NonSmokers . Anxious To Sell. Phone

lroe estimate call Chat, 740·9926323.

·-

JRZJNCHRNXLSH.;

J N

CSXRRJRT

"•
. .....

YWXY

'

·-·

Cantor Bath And Sola Bod. Full)'
Sell Contained. Also 1965 Chavy
Suburban. Fully Equipped, v:6,

ClC Gener-al Home Main·
tantnce~ Painting, vlnyl-sld(ng,
carpentry, doors, wlndowa , balhs,
mobile home repair and more. For

,," '

. ·'

For Sale : 1985 Airstream Travel
Trailer, 31Ft, Purchased New.
Very Good Condition, Garage
Kept , Used Very Little; Twin Beds

7795.

. '
.

4

36 ' Mountaln8er 5th Whee (.
Camper 17' Slide Out Washer 3i
Dryer, Generator, Sell With OJ
Without Ford Craw Cab Dually
Truett. Excellent Condllionl 740-

Appliance Parts And Service; All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experien ce All Work Guaranteed,
French C1ty Maytag , 740 · 446·

.i

~·

1-lER WITH.AN ERASER ..

'

ers Waterproofing.

.

50 Diminutive -· •
IUffbc
' ,.

MA'AM, 'I'OLJ CAN HIT

Low Mileage, All Electric Wind ... ·
ows, Deluxe Interior, Non-- ;
Smokers, Anxious To Selll 740-'.

tstltlshed 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (740)
446-0870, t -800·287·0578. Rog-

__.,"

-'3 Jane Aua....-·

Suburban Fully Equipped. V·8l

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furn ished. Es·

-

:1:7 Engllah

Contained. Also, 1985 Chevrolet'

Home
Improvements

•
-,' '

25 By.,.nme ·:.

Bath And Sofa Bed, Fully Sell--

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

080. 74Q-742-

10Thomn-

· A~nlly

1--.T~II'ij_,1...;;;.,~~-i~nt§:-'-rl--1

PEANUTS

1.997· Wilderness 5th Wheel with

88 Ford Ranger GT, $3,100, 740·
992-5768:

runa good, $5,1500
2574aflor 5pm.

a

'

or

Automatic, Alloy Wheels , Black

a

Now texiO $500-Down $2~-por
mo. Free air. sklrl. t-800-891 -

~

1981 Ford Truck, F·150 , 4WD·

~~------------- 1 ~992~~~~~~~-----------368-9686.

'

$2 ,800 OBO ; (304)882·271
(304)882-3333. '

a

$13,000, 7&lt;40·992-6227.

' ~1

$55~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Truck; $1 ,600 OBO; (304)7735798.

1982 14x70 Schultz mobile horni,

790

1969 Chevy 1 Ton Tru ck &amp;

~looks l

.

(304)875-1088.

Aitbod Trailer; (740)446·3243,

Dodge Ram

C.mplng
Equipment_

T..l Green; Metallic E.C.;

720 Trucks•lor Sale

1966

•

Csmper Top: 94-96, Chevy S-t !r.•

810

1985 Ford F250; 4X4; GOOd ..Work

420 Mobile ttomas
- fot~tnt ·

3933 or t-80D-273·9329.

1997' Chevy Lumina, Excel\.
Cond , Must Selll. Cali For Details!

Single Axle; (304)675-6734.

Houae In Rutland , out of flood
area, no pets, references and de·
postt raquirad, 740-7,.2-2681 .

R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304·372-

780

• -7 2

rust."
This being Groundhog Day, we ·
supposedly get an indication of the
remaining length of winter for the
more northerly climes -- unscientif·
ic, but harmless fun.
. In bridge, hogs are players who
make bids that greatly increase their
chance of becoming declarer, often
regardless of the desirability of the
contract. There has also been one
Hog -- Victor Mollo's Hideous Hog . .
HH made various crazy bids · and
plays, and was especially happy if
,.~0 il-\1&gt;-i t&lt;'f:~S :'ll X f(I(Yf:£-q they resulted in his .winning money
from his archenemy, Themistocles
W~Of~TI
Papadopoulos (Papa).
The British love four-card majors.
That panly explains the opening bill
of Karapet Djoulikyan, a Free
Annenian and the world's unluckiest
player. Don 'I ask about the rest of the
auction -- it's author's license. HH
bid six spades because he thought the
. penalty in six spades doubled wmilil
be l~ss than that in five spades
redoubled.
.
Papa l~d a diamond. The Hideous
Hog ruffed in the dummy, took a
heart finesse ,. ruffed a · diamond,
repeated the bean finesse, took a third
diamond ruff, played a bean to bis
ace, ruffed another diamond, and
cashed his two top clubs.· Dummy
was left with A-K-10-9 of spades,
and East held Q-J-8-7. The lead ·of
any card, ruffed with the spade nine,
16ft Karapet endplayed -- contract
made!

44Hl519.

Rod Stewart tickets for ·sale- 1st,
2nd, 3rd &amp; 41h rows , $120 &amp; up;
Martina McBride &amp; Diamond Rio,
2nd &amp; 3rd rows : cell 740·949 3315 after 7pm.

Quiet ·,dep . &amp; ref

NeW gas tank&amp; &amp; body parts.. D &amp; :

448·2602.

1992 Saturn 4 DO ors, Sunroof,

aflar e )IIOr, 740-698-7244

$11 ,500;080; (304)875-2819.

em.

dar, Good Gas Mileage, EMcellent
Shape, $2,500 , Call Weekdays

.:..::~=-.:.!..------.1 lor Cabinets , $800 , 740-4460ne bedroom apartmen"tt,•;;r,;,,,,,; 924 t , After e P.M.

ties paid, $100 deposit, 140·992·

·,

740-245·6677.
1986 Chevy Cavalier. 4 Cylinder,
4 Speed, Good Tires. Asking
$550, 74D-379-2601 '

CLA 463. c/o Gallipolis Dally Trib-

130

Auto Parts a
Acce11orles

Budget Priced Transmtsslonj
and EnginiS, All rypes. Access
To Over, 10,000 Transminjons,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMEN-TS AT
1986 Coli DL New Munier. Needs
Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs .
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Plugs, Carburotor, $40!) 7~0-.448ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive Problems1 Nsod Tuned? Call the
2979,
from 1279 to $358. Walk to shop · plano Or. 740-446-4525
1987 ,Chevy Colo~rlty $1 ,200,
&amp; movies. Call 740-448-2588.
Health 'Alder, N~rdlc Track, Colotl' Good Condi!IOn, 740-266· 1102.
Equal Hous"g Opportunhy.
TV Monitor $25. P.V.A.E.V. Guitass 'camsro AS,
t-tops ,
Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms' &amp; tar Amp $50 Cast tron Tub. or
$2000, 741)-742-2357.
OBOI740-446-9709.
Bath, Clean. Ae1erances, &amp; Deposit R'oqulred, ummea Paid, 740~ JET
....J ' 1991 Cadillac Seville 4 door se·
448-1519.
•
.
dan, loatied Wlltt accanorles,
.
AERATION MOTORS
great gas mileage, car phone.•
Repaired, NeW &amp; Rebuilt tn Stock.
G\'BCIOUB living. 1 and 2 bedroom
.
Call Ron Evans, t ·80D-531-9528., , 304-875-2722.
apartments at VIllage Manor and

Wanted Assistant Olflce Manager, Good Public Relations &amp; Communication Skills Needed Typing,
&amp; Computer Skills Required. 28
Hrs /Weekly, Send Resume To:

U&lt;.W'~ 51-\1&gt;\00W ...

:':*\~ TI-\\S r.\Om\t-16 .. .

(304177;1-5798.

245-5193.

Pupplos &amp; Kittens
Fullllna ol pats supplies

Til£ 01&lt;QLll{CJI-'D0 !&gt;NN ~6

1996 J-iBrley ~rtster: Completely CuStomized, low Miles; Muat
see to appreciate; $1 t ,000

Jackson Farms, 740-446-1104.

B.V. Southold&amp; Aquarium
2096 Camden Avenue
Parkersburg, WV 26101
304-485-1293

THE BORN LOSER
· ,.\o.lf-IO we:s ~-&lt;1-\\:T~~£~&lt;:.~ ~ ~""r ~~i ~w "''&lt; M.Otl-\~- n~- ""

•oo.

.1304)576-2521 .

p~s Call740-44 t-1962.

Motorcycln

'97 Kawasaki Prairie
4x4, automatic, good eondlllon, $3800~

Hay For Sale: Round Bales;

Breakthrough!!! Lose 10-20 0
.Pounds Easy, 'Quick, ·Fast
Drarnallc Results, tOO% Natural,
Doctor Recommended. Free Sam-

.'

Loaded, 29.000 Miles, 740·258· ,
1011 .
~

Hay &amp; Grain

5 ceriM
• Dt.-cl

By Phillip Alder
The wettest British winter on
record was 1960--61. How bad was it?
Well, the Evening Standard reponed,
"The tanned appearance of many
Londoners is not sunburn -- it is

t 993 Aslro Ex1ended Van, Tilt;

~3659.

640

New Panav

Cruise, Air, Reese Hitch . Exc~

Colortul Buckskin Stallion, 740·

8194
AMAZING

Llvntock

gethsr; yearling bay colt; t 000 lb.
baleS of hay; 740-898·2765.

18" DlrecTV Salolllte Syatomo-

ManY

10 8 4 3

hwln

A K J 10

Disappearing trick

1991 Toyota 4x4, Extended Cab:
Automatic, AJC, V-8, Good Condl:o.
Han, 740-446-6688.

Beautiful leopard Appaloosa
mare with twin phlllles, 4 112
months old, sa11 separately or to-

t Crypt &amp; Plate, $2,000.00.
ory Gardens, Subject To

Player,

t

3 Pllln
4~111

Opening lead: • 3

1987 S-10 4x4, 4 Cylinder. 4
Spead, Good Cohdlllon, $2,900.
740-36Hlt66.
•

t 1/2 Year Old Bay Standard Bred
Filly, $550, 740-367-7221 .

1-80D-291-0Q98.

SHE'S TAKIN'
THrTEACMER
TO SCHOOL

1985 Nlsaan Klngcab 4x4 $2,800.
7~-446-1420 Altar 5 P.M.

446-2412 Or t-800·594-1 1t 1.

•wAAMUPI"
Furnace, Heat P.umps, I Air Conditioning . Free Estimates! If You
Don 't Call . Us, We Both Lose!

WHAR'S
LOWEEZY

,$2,500, 080. 740-oWl\-1397.

We Have From 25 To 39 Used

Deere Credit Approval. Car·
michael's Farm &amp;i Lawn, Midway
Between Gallipolis And Rio
Granda On Jackson Pike . 740·

7~-448 -6306.

co

Tractors In Stock. Financing As

Moore owner.

388·9770, 740-386-1101 1.

$32,000 More Acreage Available,
74Q-388-B678.

740-446-2412 Or 1-800-594·
1t 1t.

6:00 p.m . 740·992-2526, Russ

3 Bedroom Trailer 14x70 Total
Electric , CA On Nice lot. 740-

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew, Gallla County,

whlclo II In violation of tht
law. OUr readero ote hnby
lniormed thtt 11M -.ngo
.w.rtiMd In this ••••pepar
aN IIII'..W. Clr181'1 tqUII
opponunlly billa.

Antiques

BARNEY .

1979 Ford Bronco 4x4, Robull\
Engine, And Transmission, Alpine.

Rio Grande on Jackson Pike .

• Q J 8 7
• K 10 s ·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
8oodh
West Norllo Eul
lA
26
36
46
Obi.
4NT
Pan 5 •
Dbl.
Pus
Dbl.
Pan 5 • ·
Paaa
Pan Redbl. Pus
Pan Pus
Dbl.
e•
Paaa
Paaa Paaa

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDs

Mos. Carmichael's Farm &amp; lawn,

Midway Belwoon Gallipolis And

Low As 6.5% Fixed Rate On
Qualifying Tractors Wlih John

3711. EDH.

273-0297 eher 5pm or 304·3727:l011 aSk for Irene Murphy.

Thil newspaper wtll not
knowingly iccapt . '

Care, 74o-4-11-t 875.

:i!bdrm. apta ., total electric, appliances lurnlshed, laundry room
facilities, close to schoot In town.
Applications ava\lable at: Village
Green Apts. J49 or call 740-992-

menlo, 304-736-7295.

limitation"' clcocrlminatiOn.'

AN Supervisor To Manage Certified Passport Provider Agency,
Call Medi·Home Health Private

2 Bedrooms, $425/Mo $1 oo Oeposll, All Utlllllos Psld No Pets,
74Q-441H637, 740·448·3437.

We Finance Land &amp; Home With

12 Mo.s, 1.76% -24 Mos. 3 5%36 Mos., 4.5% -48 Moa., 5.5% -eo

• 2
• 8 7 6
• 4 3 2-

•AK9

$2.1500.00. Cal 740-446·45-t 4 BoJ
foro 5:00 PM Or 740-448-32411'
Alter 8:00 PM.

pacts In Stock. New John Deere
McCos And Aound Balers 0% ~

Smith And Weaoon Model ·1500
Daimee .270 Cal. Very ,Good ,Condition, $350. 740-379-2601 '

,
·

tion, Auns And Pumps Goo(t ,

Available. Now 4000 Sorlea Com--

Buy or sell . Riverine Anllquas,
1124 E. Main Streer. on At. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours · M.T.W. 10~00
a.m. to 6 00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

=:.::.:....::::.:..:;______

Aate John Deere Credit FinancinG

......

2 Clip

Q J t
+QtJ765

For S,la: 1973 GMC 1 1/2 Ton
Dump TfUCk•7\12~t. ~IUIT!inum
Bod, 427 Rebut~ Motor, Go'od
Rubber,~ 2 Sp. Rear End, 'Ru;ia,
~- $5,000.00. 11169 GMC 1 "t /:
2 Ton Dump Truck, V·8, 10Ft1
Bod. 2 Sp. Roar End, Fair Condi-

1

Sporting
Goods

(7&lt;40) 448-2563
1 Bedroom Apartmanl, All Utilities
Paid, Bldwall, 740·388-9770, 74D388-80t1 .

~ All real estate adVertising In

520

':'"

530

Factory goof Ill Save thousands,

Overbrook Center. 333 Page
Street, Middleport, has part time
positions for LPN 's &amp; STNA's
available for all ahifts and weekends. Anyone Interested please

140-446-9066. '

1 Bedroom Apartment for Rent.
Stove and Refrigerator Furnlshedl·

Each Purchase! 1125·2128199, 1·
eoo- 251 -soro.

EOE

Stove, $too; Csll After 5:00 P.M..

Eut

•• A

12 f1IOhlh ,.,.lnlnQ on
ca~ .
7*982·3787 or740-9ta-3880.
,

'New 5010, 6010, '1010 Sorlaa
Tractors In Stock. 7.75% Fixed

DOWN
1 Former
Yugoalav

Soullo '

•

1-.

West

• QJ

bedltner, excellent -cOftdltlon, ,

'
· 61 oFarm Equipment&gt;

Kenmore Dryer $75: Whlt9 Gas

1 aMI 2 bedroom apartment&amp;, fur·

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,

Daniels ~Lano Service- tun ing
and repl,ln' expert service since
1965, 740-742-2951, Lane Dan-

While Wh~lpool Rolrljjerator
$tOO; Whirlpool Washer $90 G.E.
Washer $85; Maytag Dry.I J $80;

Apartments
for Rent

440

~:::'~''; .·~·~:· and setup. Only

onca.~04-815-3817.

Stcurlty Guonla

992-6576.

At:

OH46666.

~we

•

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes 6 months FREE lor rent.
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,

Llvlnglton''BIItment W1t1ra
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free esttmatet, lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on JOb experl-

ested, Please Send Resuma To:
Oak H1il Community Medical Center, Attention : Bre nda McKenzie,
350 Charlotte Avenue, Oak HIU,

2526.
Antiques &amp; clean used furniture,
will buy one piece or complete
household, Osby Martin, 740·

Us

24hr licensed Home Caycare:
Meals/Activities provided; State
payments accepted; Redmond
Ridge; Debbie; (~)87&lt;Hl039.

EOE

AdvMtct. De1dllne: 1:00pm the
day before the ad 11 to run,
Sundav &amp; Monday edition·
1:OOpm Friday.

"Sao

www.vamoncompony.aom'

Oak Hill , DH 45666.

censure Required. Candidate Will

/Fax)

,

~m.

Servlc~

Licensure Required . Candidate
Will Utlltllze Nursing Process
While ProvJdlng Care, Direct I
Guide Patient /Family Teaching,
And Function Within Scope Of
Cepartrnental Expectations. If In·
terested. Please Send R.e1ume
To: Oak Hill Community Medical
Center, Attention : Brenda McKenzie . 350 Ch8rlotte Avenue ,

86 fenced In acres, 3 bedroomo.
2 bath$, oontral air, llroptaca. 30ft
x 40ft.' glll&amp;(le, barn wllh 4 stalls,
electric and frost free water. 10
miles from Gallipols. $1150. month
plus 1 month oocurlty. (610)5888252

..

91 -Fora Ranger XL'F Supercab,'

fARI\1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

43

---

!'

6,000 . - . bu)' at $12.950 or aaIUino !Hie et f223 t month atao

e5

• es

'

9VB11nlfna Pup/)~119
Toy
Yorkln, Blchon Frla•ll'oy Poo·
r:tlao. V,l De11Yor,740-31Hil81.

Below Holldey Inn Kanagua. Stop
And SH ua. 740-448-4782.

.

57 Pulled (al.)

02-4!2-1111

• A K 10 8
• 4 s2

. EEK&amp;MEEK

1892 Podge 1 'Tdn Dual; 4X4;
Graat work 1ruck;, $10,500;
.(304)nr798- • •
'1984 8·10 4.3 Ut..- V-6, ~callont
·Co[&gt;dltlon, 740 ~-'9864. .

Shar-~ puqllta, !Ott o1 wrtnk)tl,·
$200 &amp; up, 7~2128.
I ~

Washers. dryers, refrlgeri10rl,

New And used Furniture Store

Included.

Roglottred Mini
2 BIT
Males Born Nov 2nd, 740-3118082 llk For Bartl.
' '

0000 USED .APPLIANCES

.430 Farms for Rent

cago

~~~~-_.....,

N

~ steering,

2981. '

Franch City Maytag, 740-448T/95.

992-5264.

mo. Free air, skirt. 1· 800 -691-

pair,

M Hurty-bully
511T- .

'l!l.w.....

1988 F·150 Ford 300, 6 ely., autQ,;
power brakel, air, l'
Good condition•. $2,400, 740·247- 1

one female. one

~ppuances :
Reconditioned
Waahers; Dryers. Ranges, Refrlgrators, 90 Day Guarantlll

pets, water and trash paid, 7"0"

Now t4x7D $500-00wn $199-per

Prolenlonal

ant, 304-675-2063.

rangea. Skaggo Appllancoo. 78
Vlnt Stroot, Call 740-448-7398,
t :888-8 t 8-01 28.

Mlnutosi80D-383-6862.

4353.

2•13 Jackson Ave. Point Pleat-

Household
Good I

51 - tho-ey"

...__

U87 Dodge Dakota V·8. Auto,
. AC, $885; 19H Chevy Plck-Uii. •
V-8, Standard, 80 ,000 Mlloa, •
f1.995, Cook Motora, 740·44&amp;- :
0103.

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Man-Sat
11-6. Fish Tin I &amp; Pot Shop,

2 p)oca living room suit $200.00
vory nql (7&lt;40)448-1389

Two bedroom trailer, wary clean,

Tailing •ppilcaUons, On 3 Bedroom Repo, Pre-Approval In 10

s.

Few Hours • Good
Price To
Sail. Free Brochure. 800-820 -

230

For Sale: Eltelrlc Furnace, BTU

with 2· or 3 bedrooms. Startl/1il at
$3995. Quick delivery. Call 740·
3115-9621 .

VENDING: La1y Persona Drearri.

One Full· Time Registered Nurse
Position Available In Oak Hill
Community Medical Center's

AII Yard Sal11 Must Be Paid In

·

3331 Or- 740-698-5392 , Parties,
Fund Ralsara, Products, EmploY·
mont

Nuralng eaalatente needed to
provide In-home services lor the

3 bedroom mobile home for rent,

no pets, 740-982·5858.

mall until you hiYI lnvutlgaled

510

Required, No Pets,

Doublewldlo Repo, Cali For Vlowlng, 800-3113-6862.

NOT to oond money through the

•

Rtltrence~

From, 1~251-5070 .

recommend&amp; that you do business ,with people you know, and

Needld Experienced Tree CliMbers And Buc~et Operator For
Work Clearing Power Lines In
The Mercerville-Area. For infor·
matlon Cal740-258-1578 .

Green Terrace, $MOIMo:, Includes Lot A101, Water, Sewer

41Poellc-

a

696-1085.

MfRCHAriDISE

U.xlco

1H7 Chtv.S,10; 4X4; New Engino Trano . $1800 (304)•7135J'il),
.
•'

white female, $350 each, 740-

740-385-4367.

2 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Trailer In

8 t/2% lnteffit Rate, To Qualified

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Need 3 Ladles, To Sell Avon!
740.448-3358.

Pay Uillltloa, l Deposit, In Porter
Area $285/Mo.; 614-388-9162.

1996 Schultz 3 Bedrooms , 2
same, Central Air. 2 Decka, 8x10
Buldlng, 304-675-1275.

FINANCIAL

210

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You

AkC Shtltlo pupplea, two blut
merle females1 one sable and

Mobllt home slta avellable betwean Athen• and Pomeroy, call

I

ASTRO-GRAPH
Wednesday, Feb. 3. 1999
Success is possible in the year
ahead in anas where you previously
fell short. Thiough a major transformation you make for yourself, you
· will be more strOng-willed than you
have ever been in the past.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
When you discover that you're more
assenive than you thought in promoting a ·self-interest today, you
might even surprise yourself at how
successful this can be. Aquarius,
treat yourself to a birthday gift. Send
the required refund form and for your
Astro-0.-.ph predictions for the year
ahead by mailing $2 and selfllddressed stamped envelope toAsti!&gt;Oraph, c1o this newspaper, P.O. Box
17,8, Murray Hill Station, J:{ew
York. NY 101$6. Be sure "t o state
, your zodiac sian.
PISCBS (feb. 20-Man:h 20) You
· could gel • new slant on unresolved
·emotional problems today if you
take the lime to evaluate your Innermost feelings. Self-awareness promotes confidence.
ARIES (Man:h 21-April 19) If

you fpply yourself today, you can do
things in ways that will sratify your
e.pectations. Simply be optimistic
and hopeful regarding your endeavors and all will fall inlo place.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) The
ability to focus your forces on a fixed
point today will till the odds in your
favor with any situation thai might
have competitive elements. You've
got 1he edge.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) This
is an excellent day to make your presentation shout something you feel is
wonh telling in hopes of gaining the
support of others. What interesiJ you
should interest .them.
CAN(:ER (June 21-July 22) Keep
things hidden from you could be
quite difficult for qsoc:iates today.
Your natural instinc:IJ for pmbin1 anddetection tre keener than usual.
LEO (July 23-AuJ. 22) Mattera
that require unifio:alion should be taken care of with great ttlention today.
You're now able to discern all the
factors thll' ll enable ypu to btina
them 1o1ether in the right order.
V.IROO (Auf. 23-Sept. 22) If

there Is something that doesn't
require funher study but merely
n:quires action, pu1 fonh the effort
today. The lime is ripe for fulfilling
a personal-.mbition: LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Because people who have had recent
dealings with you admired your style,
nice thins• are now being cin:ula!ed
about you. Enjoy the accolades, for
you deserve them I
SCORPIO (Oct. 24--Nov. 22) Oive
lop priority today to the needs of
members of your own f1111lly. You
should be the moot solicitous and put
outsiden at the bottom of your list II
this time.
SAOnTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) By thinking your way around sit.uations that others are fon:in&amp; on you
today, you'll prove that the mind is
truly miptier than the sword. This
will put you in aood stead.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Be alen today for altopportunity that
could produce material salnl fot you .
in some manner. Conditions are now '
lrendina rather favorably for you in
this realm.

. ·'
..

�••

•

•
•
•

Pomeroy • Middlepo_rt, Ohio

Wednesday

Tuesday, February 2, 1989

FabNary 3, 11180

Weather

Redwomen beat Cedarville, Page 5
Divorce and children, Page 7
Inside:· lncom~ tax guide insert

Today: Moatly -Sunny
High: SO.; Low: 301

: I

-

~

4

Chili Con Came
Cole Slaw
Crackers
Dark Red Cherries in
Red Gelatin
lexas Sheet Cake

:j&amp;¥eet Potatoes
Green Beans
; Roll
Peach Pie

Meat Balls in Gravy
over Noodles
Tossed salad
Mixed Vegetables
Roll
Che Pie
18

Oven Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans '
Roll
Pineapple Upside
Down Cake

23
Carved Chicken Breast
with Dressing
Sweet Potatoes
· Proccoli with Cheese
~oil

Mashed Potatoes
Peas &amp; Carrots
Bread
Creamy Fruit Salad

FreihApple
Rocky Road Pudding

16

17
;

Meatloaf

Bread .

ApplesaUce

Oven Baked Chicken
Pill\8fllo Cheese
Mashed Potatoes &amp; G.ra ·
Bread - Crackers
Harvard Baets
Peachy Creamy Pudding
Bread
Cookie
Banana
,.

23

24 •,',
Scalloped Chicken

B.~i~hChee"
Sweet Potatoes

Salisbul)' Steak
Augratin Potatoes
e Lima Beans and Com
Bread
Pears in Lime Gelatin

f

Cindy Suerkamp, 1'1tness Instructor, (:lnd from tbe Jell) 'Is
shown with some of tbe seniors who have attended tbe Btness
assessment-at tbe Fitness Center al tbe Meigs Senior Center. From
Jell to right; Maxine Lillie, Cindy Suerkamp, instructor, Harold
Hysell, and Rose Corliss are learning how to use the small handheld
weighiS comedy.
.
.

TRIPS
FO~ 1999·
Several one-day trips will be
planned for 1999 if there is enough
interest. Tentative trips are to the
Longaberger Basket factory;
Dresden and Roscoe Village,
Coshocton in early May; the Wilds
near Cambridge in June; a t9ur of
the Cincinnati sites with lunch lind
a cruise on the BB Riverboat in
September; and the Festival of
Lights at Obleby Park, Wheeling,
in December. All trips will cost
under $50.00. Call Alice Wamsley
at 992-2162 if you are interested in
any of the trips: There must be at
least 30 persons interested before
final plans can be made.

1999 Membership
Your paid membership to the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc.
is a measure of suppon for the Multipurpose Senior Center and the services
provided 10 older adults residing in Meigs County. Each paid membership
received verifies to regional, state and national funding agencies that the
Multipurpose Senior Center is providing needed senior programs.
The cost for 1999 will be $3.00 per membership. You may purchase your membership at the Senior Center or by mailing to: Meigs County .
Multipurpose Senior Center, 112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 772,
~omeroy, OH 45769. If possible, please include a stamped, self-addressed
envelope, Thank you for your support.

TOWNSHIP______________________-'-,...-------

' I.

offered
low assistance
income senior
income totax
will citibe
zens (aae 60 and over),. tbat can-

.

~o: =~;:: to go to a paid lnco111e

. Taxes will be taken on
Wednesday and Friday, by
appointment only.
• Due to increased demand for
tllis service, the age and income
·pldellnes win- 'De strictly
enforced. Complicated returns or
reflil'llll tbat require more than
two forms or schedules will be
l:'eferred to a paid preparer.
' Persons using the tax service
must bring copies of th'eir last
ydar's federal and state tax rttums,
tax forms for the current year and
other relevant materials showing
ini:ome for the year.
If you are .low income, and
cannot afford to go to a paid
ineome tax preparer, or bave questions, call Darla Hawley at 9922!61 to m~ke an apJiointment.

a&lt;.&amp;
C.
'Q'J~elel\9

WE HONOR

I
~.- ~P:O:M:E:RO:~:':O:H:.:::::·9:92:·3:7;85::::::G:O:L:D:EN::B:UC:K:~:::CAA:
· :O:·s~,
'r~~~~;.
HOME MEDIC.~-- , EQUI~~~~NT .

Tax Assistance

. · Staning February 1, 1999, free

, • The senior Center serves an evening meal on Thesday and Thursday from 4:45 to 5:30. Two
faltbful volunteers, Nadine Hudson and Pat Noel standing, are shown wltb $Orne of tbe persons attend
log a recent dinner. The public is invited to attend the evening meal, no reservation Is required for tbls
·
·
meal.

212EAST MAIN sr.

........

"S~rving Southe_n i Ohio for over 20

.

Lift Chairs
Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids
Diapers &amp; Chux
Ostomy Supplies
Diabetic Supplies
Feeding Pumps

·

Everything
-fo~tb~

Patient
at
Home

Mastectomy Supplies
Cervical Pillows
Tractor Equipment
Tens Units &amp;

Supplie:.=:-s~-

. Back Supports
Knee, Ankle Braces
Nursing Supplies
Support Hosiery
First Aid Supplies
. Dressings

THE .MEDICAL SHOPPE
f. 16-2206

. 1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
" IJSt Minutes

I

Toll I·,., .,.
1-1:00- I 1.1-:!:!0(,

vm Holzer"

'

BOWMAN'S
HOME OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HO...TAL

~

NTIINT LI,TI

WH . .L DHAIIII

Serving The Comnwnity W'uh Care For 15 Years

SALES; RENTALS
&amp; REPAIRS

ELECTRIC WHEELCHAlRS•~~-­
BATH SAFETY EQUIPMENT
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
HOSPITAL BEDS
UFTCHAIRS
. ST~OUDES
OST!)MY
DIAilllll i. CHUXS

HOME OXYGEN

ll

24 Hr Emerge n cy Se r v1cc
j r l' r / It" r 1
t ( I• ' : 1lf

.

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Republicans work on - fin~ing that Clinton g.ave false testi~ony

By PETE YOST
. Lewinsky after she "came at lne and .
. ument that also says Omton engaged ma
AllaclllttiP!waWrHir
madeaSC~Cualdemandonme. ·
oourse_ of oondua designed to "alter,
WASIDNGJUN (AP) - With Senate Republicans
"She said !hat she would tell people
de!ay, unpede, ?Wet up and ~.~
weighing a fonnal declaration that President dinton provid- they'd had an affak that she was known ·
e~ncc of evidence and testunony m
cc1 fabe granc1 jury testimony, House managers in Ointon's ., the ~ker amon'g her peers. and thai
the sexual ~-nt lawsuit that ~Ia
impeadUnent trial are questioning a White House aide who she hated it and if she had an affair or
Jones filed ag;urst hun, the soun:tS srud
says he heard the president .efer to Monica Lewinsky as "the said she had an affair then she wouldn't
Neither of the two forms of the~
stalker."
•
·
be the stalker anymore."
al ~a finding th~ O!nton corruni~
Sidney Blumenthal's deposition today marks the last of
l'he stalker moniker swiftly became
JIC.IJ~ or~ JUStice, as alleged m
three witnesses called by House Jli'Of'"CIIIlll who hoflll to bol- a lleWS story staple, always attributed to
!he alticles of 1~ent passed by the
ster their case that wilnesm should be questioned on the Sen- unidentified sowces. In grand jury testiHouse. Republicans hope to a1trnct the
ate Ooor. But liCIIIIoB who viewed Ms. Lewinsky's video- mony, Blumenthal denied having
support of at least a few _Democnus.
taped dejlosition showed little enthusiasm "'-lay for hear- passed along the infonnation to anyone
Republi~ Sens. OrJ!n Hatch of Utah
ing her live.
else.
and Ol~mJlla Snowe srud today_the final
House prosecutors who questioned presidential pal \UHouse managers are trying to show
dispas1ti0n of ~ case ~ld include. a
non Jordan 111 the Capitol 011.Tuesday elicited some testimony that Qinton's motive wm to feed a false
Senate ~lion that 01nton comrrutthey felt could help their case for Jive testimony, sources account to his aides that would find its
tedwro~gdomg.
, ..
.
familiar with the testimony said. Jordan, a prominent Wash- way into the investigation of prosecuklr
bite':"'ewed on~ s Good Mommg
ington attorney who found Ms. i..eWinsky ajob in New York Kenneth Starr.
.
.
Amenca," Hatch said t!"' best wa~ w~d
and a lawyer, al~ his aa:ount of a breakfast meeting with
Senate Republicans ~king to . the
be for, the ,;senate to adJourn _the bial With
the fonner White House intern that pta!ecutors have focused end of the impeadunent trial are weigh· back to her hotel after visiting a finding_ that sa~s he did 1_1e ~ ~
on aa:ording to the sounlCS, who spdke on condition of ing a formal declaration that Ointon. her lawyers omce Tuelday.
and he did oomrmt ~!ruction of J~ce.
~ymity.
·
.
· "willfully provided false and mislead· You don't atcuse him of. any Qlminal
As for BII)I11CIIIhal, his value in the Senate trial rests in his· ing testimony" to Starr's grBnd jury last summer, oongres- activity ... (but) recognize the House vote as the highest form of
testimony about a conversation at the start of the Le_winsky siqnal sources said.
oondemnatio~."
·
.
scandal last year iii which ainton said he had rebuffed Ms.
Republicans are laboring over a draft "fact-finding" docSnowe said most senators want a yes-or-no vote on the arll·

'

A representative from the
The Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center is open Monday Athens Social Security Office will
through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to be at the Center on Wednesday,
4:30 p.m. Regularly scheduled . February 10 &amp; 24 from 10:00 a.m.
activities . are quilting, sewing, - 11:00 a.m.
cards, games, and pool. Weekly
Wednesday, Febnaary 10 -the
activities are line dance team prac- Stroke Survivors Support Group
tice with Paulette Harrision, with Lia Tipton, OT, Holze;
instructor, every Monday from 1:00 Rehabilitation, coordinator, will
p.m.-2:00 p_.m. and knitting circle meet from 1:00 p.m. -2:30p.m.
every Wednesday from 10:00 a.m.Thursday, February 18 -the
noon. The Exercise Room is open monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
daily from 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m. (or be held from 9:30a.m. - 11:00 a.m.
people to use the exercise equipFriday, February 19 -the
ment.
·
Arthritis Support Group will meet
The winter · session of the
from I 0:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. with
"Over 50 Exercise Class" will be
Sarah McGrew, RN, coordinator.
held on Monday and Wednesday at
Thursday, February 25 -the
3:30 p.m. through March 31. This
monthly birthday pany will be
class will consist of stretching ·and
held, seniors with birthdays during
bending exercises for strengthening
the_month will be honored.
and mild aerobics for cardiovascuThursday, February 25 -the
lar exercise, cost is $.50 for each
Caring,
and Sharing Suppon Group
session attended. N11w members are
will meet at 1:00 p.m. with Lenora
welcome.
Leifheit, RNC, coordinator. The
discussion topic will be "ICeeping
· Humor in Caregiving."

:
Helen Bodlmer, an RSVP volunteer, ·helps children in tbe
·;third grade class at Salisbury Elementary School wltb a craft project for Christmas. This is part of tbe Seniors In School program
tbat includes information and hands·on projects relating to Meigs
County history.

PhONE NUMBER____________________________

'

BeafStew
ColeSlaw
Biscuit Pineapple with
Cottage Cheese

Meigs Senior Center
February Activities·

Roast Beef ~nd Mashed
Potatoes &amp; Gravy Sandwich
Cole Slaw
Roll
Pumpkin Pie

ADDRESS._______________________________

28

25

.,'

..

Bread
Apricots

25

NAME·------------------------~---------

19

18
· Vegetable Beef Soup

Parslled Boiled Potatoes
Spinach

'

Brown Gravy
OverNoodlel
Tossed Salad
Mandarin Oranges in
Orange Gelatin
Graham Crackers

Hometown Newspap~r

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 . Numbe r 190

Meat Balls in

Cornbread

PII!!Ch,SIIces ·

Meigs County's

12

Navy Beans and Ham
ColeSlaw

Bread .

Sloppy Joe on Bun
Baked Beans
Skin-On Potato Wedgel
Honey Bea Ambrosia'

Chili Con Came
Cole Slaw
Crackers
Dark Red CherrieS
in Red Gelatin
Brownie

11

Butlenld Peaa

and Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes·
Green Beans
Breed
Pears

Liver and Onions

Chicken &amp; Noodles
Broccoli/Carrots
and Cauliflower
Bread
Apple Cheny Crisp

•

..

a1-

5

4

10

t.~~acaroni

Wiener
Mashed Potatoes
Sauerkraut
Breed
Fruit Cocktail

.

BakedStaak
" &amp; Gra
Mashed Potatoes

. Lyonnaise Potatoes
Buttered Canota
· Breed
Tropical Mixed FNit

22

16

: Meat Loaf
Parslied Buttered Potatoes
Spinach
Roll
Coconut Cream
Cheesecake

9

1

11

Ham loaf '
Sweet Potatoes'

' 3

Biscuit
Appleaauoe

Salmon Patty

Pineappl~

9
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoe~ &amp; Gravy
· Buttered Peas
.. Roll ,
.Lemon Cake

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
. Broccoli . .
Bread

FEBRUARY MEN_US

'

•

•

..

Green Bean•

8

2

-. . ....

....

.'.

Oven Baked Chicken
Augratin Potatoes
. Brussel Sprouts
Bread
,.
Peach Slices
with Orange Sauce

Your Senior
Center
Js Here
For You!

THURSDAY

·. Ham Loaf

..

-

2

meal is mfended to provide a nutritional meal at a reasonable cost.
Dollars generated will be used to
suppon the existing lu!lch and
home delivered meal program.

TUESDAY

.

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

Evening Meals
The Senior Nutrition
Program evening meal w.ill be
·. served on 1\resday and Thursday
·with serving from 4:45 to 5:30p.m.
· A suggested donation for the
evenin' meal is $4.00. The evening

I

Tomonow: Cloudy
High: 408; .Low: 208

Reds IW!;IUII
slugger
vaughn
from Padres in fiveman deal -Page 4

American
Legion
donation
makes
Meigs
•
·
•
•
Middle School 8th grade class tnp possible

department says 23 .
made ill in Phio by tainted meat

Good Afternoon
Today's Sentinel
2 Seellons - 12 Pages

7
9&amp;10
11
2
3

Qlendar

Classlftet!s
·. Comics
Eclltorials

Local
Sports

3

Wyther

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 7-9-3; Pick 4: 0-4-5-5
Buckeye 5: 18-23-25-26-33
W.yA.

1

Dally 3: 6-9-2; Dally 4: 3-4-4-0
o 1999 Ohio Val~y Publisbina C'.o.

L-----------..11

Funding for the Meigs Middle School eighth grade .whatever supplemental funds are needed for the trip. _
About 50 eighth graders will' be going to _New York
trip to N~w York City got a boost Tuesday with a $1,000
.
.
contribution from Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American the last week in April. .
They will be traveling by charter bus and will be m
Legion.
.
·
.
Commander Russell Mozingo presented a check to the city for three days.
Emphasis will be on visiting places of culture in the
the trip committee, teachers Julie Randolph, Cheryl Halmetropolitan area, although they will be attending a
ley, and Susan Metts.
. . · •
.
Several-fund raising,projects are underway in~luding Broadway play and appearing on the Today Show. ·
''This may be the only opportunity many of these stuthe sale of maroon and gold porch al\d car flags. Donations are also being accepted; Students will provide dents have to go to New York," said Halley.

Design "York .
proceeding on
new Meigs.
0 0 OT garage

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Ne- Staff
Construction on a new Ohio
Department of Transportation
garage near Five Points may begin
as early as July, according to an ·;
ODOT District 10 official.
.
Last fall, ODOT purchased prop-:
erty in the Five Points area near:
Meigs Memory Garden, alxlut a half:
mile. south of the existing, s~te hi&amp;h-·
gar_•!ge.At the iinje, 01),0T.oft1- ,
""j~~~~~ area _w,as selected for :
,
locati!&gt;n and proxil:ni-:.
. to the planned Ravenswood Con-,
'nector Road.
..
George Collins, ODOT District
The federal centers for Disease
' to administrative assistant, said
Control said the illnesses -began
Tuesday ODOT is hoping to have
.between Aug. 2 and Dec. ·t3. On
the project •eady to bid in May or
June with a construction contract
Dec. 22, Bil Mar Foods recalled
specific meat products. Bil Mar is a
· signed about six weeks later.
Collins said the agency is cur- .
subsidiary of Sara Lee, which
rently in the design phase of the pro-.
recalled several other brands in
ject with state architects doing that . ,
December as well.
The CDC traced the listeria to hotphase of the work. Expediting the , ~
process is that the building is largely ; .
dogs and deli meat handled at the
predesigned with only minor ·
company's plant in Zeeland, Mich.
changes needed to make it fi't the ..
"Our fear is that this outbreak will
available site, he said.
··
extend as more products are ·
The new garage will be big . ;
· added," Hertzer said. "Some of
enough to store 13 trucks inside and :
them have expiration dates that are
include three mechanical bays, a · •
still gO\ld. That will extend the winwash
bay and office space large .:
dow even funher."
enough for the Meigs County sur- .::
·Ohio counties affected by the outveying crew, construction people .::
break are Franklin, Cuyahoga,
and the county manager and his :
Hamilton, Lorain, Lucas, Madison,
assistant.
Mahoning, Mon!gomery, Ross, TusThe facility, including a waste
carawas and Wood.
water
treatment plant, a 160-by-48Listeria has been found in anumfoot storage building 160-48 feet
ber of raw foods, including meats
and vegetables, as well as in
DONATION - On behalf of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, Ruaaell Mozingo pre; and 1,500-ton salt dome, is expected .
aented a check for $1,000 to the New York City trip committee of teachera, Julie Randolph, Cheryl
processed foods that later become
Halley, and Suaan Metts, left to right
Continued on page 3
•..
contaminated.

. · COLUMBUS (AP)- State health officials say there hav~ been 23 confirmed cases of listeriosis, includinstwo fetal and four adult deaths, in Ohio
from contaminated hotdogs and cold cuts.
The adult deaths were in Franklin, Hamilton,l.A!cas andMahoningcounties. Miscarriages blamed on the bacteria occurred in Franklin4111d Wood
counties, ~ealth officials said, adding that the outbreak may not be over.
"We are still very concerned," said Randy Hertzer, spokesman for the
Ohio Depanment of Health. "There is still a strong possibility that these
products are out there in people's refrigerators and free:ters."
Listeriosis is a food-borne illnesa that may cause few, if any, symptoms
in healthy people, but can cause seri'1114 illness in people with weakened
immune systems, the elderly and newborns.
' ._ .,.._,'
• ·hi pregnant women, it can cauie'11iscarriages·or stillbinhsl" •
.
The iii!JCSS is caused by foods contaminated with the bacterium Listeria
monocytogenes. ~ bacterium is unusual, because it can grow at refriger-

. ...

des of.Impel!Chment. After that vote, she srud,_!he Senale necrli
to~zelhatOi~tonc:oounitted'?'ngc;tomgandmakethat ·
finding_ part of !he mdeiible record .
.
• .
White House spokesman Joe Lockhart said such • fin&lt;ling
would ~olale ~Constitution.
.
In hiS deposition, Jordan gave gro~d on testim&lt;_mY from a
year ago that he never had breakfast With Ms. Lewinsky, who
said !he meal_was memorable because she understood,~
to be su~ng she should~ ~of notes she d wntlen ,to Omton. Confronted with a receipt for the ~ Jordan conceded to House prosecutor Rep. ~ Hutchinson, R·
Ark., !hat the brealdast ocamed, but rem~ned adamant he
never Instructed or suggested _that ~ -~ destroy any
love letters, S81d ~ fam11I~ WI!h his testimonr.
. Jo~ also srud for the first b":'e that the former_m~ call~ ·.
him to '!iscuss her affi~VII ~ymg a se~al reiiwonship With
the pres1denllonlan S81d. he liStened to Ms. Lewinsky and auggested she talk to her pnvate rutomey but .....ned he had 119
rea;;on to believe the affidav~t w~ f~ becaiiSC_ he never ·
believed she had a sexual ~lationship_ With the ~~~L
Jordan ~that 01~!00 was directly behind his eff~
to find Ms. lewinsk}: a Job but that lh: _effo~ was nev~
designed_ to buy h~r. ~lienee, sources familiar With !he testimony ~- In the I~tial _days of the scandal a ~ear ago, lordan sru~ ~I _was presidential secretary Betty Cume who asked
him to Irubate the Job search.

Clinton administration, GOP differ on -how to fix schools .The voters have spoken: ··
~epair,
No new h·lg h school for .
t
d
t
.
d~n't kno~
wouldbe~phthalfandhalf.:·
Gallipolis City s u ens :

By CURT ANDERSON
AP Tax Writer
WASHINGTON
(AP)
There's.nodisputethatmany_of
Ameri.ca's schools are falling
apart, · but Presidenl Clinton and
Republicans who run C-ongress
disagree on which schools to fix
first and how to pay for the repairs.
In his fiscal 2000 budget, Clinton is asking for new tax credits
· for bonds that would raise $25 billion for school modernization.
Republicans like the concept
but they contend that too m~ch of
the president's plan targets 10 nercity schools · at the expense of
growing suburbs and . neglected
rural areas.
"Kids in rural America ·and
suburban America need n~w
schools too" said Rep. Bill
Archer,' R- Te~as, chairman of the
House Ways and Means Commirtee "Indeed suburban areas may
ne~d new sdhools the most 1 ince
population growth in suburbs con:
tinues to explode."
Their need for repairs was high lighted when the American Society
of Civil Engineers last year ga¥C
public schools an F in a survey of
the nation's greatest infrastructure
proItblwas
ems.the only sector to get the
lowest ssible grade.
That~eport found a third of all
elementary and secondary schools

need some
with 14 million speech Monday that the credits
children attending class in sub- would help provide money to fix
standard buildings.
up 5,000 schools.
. Almosthalflackedthewiring _ "I
how many
to accommodate computer sys- schools I ve been. 10 where_ there
terns. Some recent examples: A were as _many k1ds back ~~ the
high school track team in suburban house trailers as there were 10 the
Burnside; Ill., held practic·es af a regular classrooms," Clinton said.
prison with better facilities.
"I don't know how many I've
At some New . York • City been in where there were ro?ms
schools, urinals ·were hidden closed off because the buddmgs
behind plywood so b.athrooms were breaking down. "
could become classrooms.
One type of bond would raise
"Our school buildings are liter- $22 billion over two years, with
ally crumb~ing," said Lut~er
tax credits .paying the interest.
Graef, president of .the engineers'
. Half the money · would _be _set
association.
aside for up to 125 school distncts
The report estimated renovation with the most low-income stuand repair of America's schools dents.
would cost $112 billion; with $60 . The other half w~uld be divvied
billion more needed to provide up among the states -_aga10 based
space for an expected 3 million on the number of low-Income stu new students over the next 10 dents statewide - for state offiyears.
cials to-spe~~-as-they--see·fit.. .
Rather than asking Congress for
An additional $400 m1lhon
sharp increases in direct spending would be set aside for certain
-something the GOP is reluctant . needy nat~ve American schoo!s:
·Education Department offiCials
10 do _ . Clinton proposed Monday
i'n his fiscal 2000 budget. the ere- say the _a_rr~ngement should blunt
at ion of tax credits a1med at OOP critiCism that the_ bon~ pr?:
spurring investors to buy two types cecds would benefit pnmanly b1g
of bonds that would raise almost citi&lt;;s - of~n Demo~ratic Pa.rty
$25 billion over two years for tern tory - mstead of addressmg
school repair and modernization.
growth in the suburbs where more
·
Total cost of the tax credits is Republicans hve.
"This proposal would ~~dre~s
pegged at $3.7 billion over. five
years. Clinton told t~e . National both of those problems, sa~d
School Boards Association in' a department spokeswoman Julie

w.

Green. .
"The way we're ~ubmitting the
proposal, th~ bondmg authonty

Republicans. do not _see. 1t that
way. Archer- IS cons1dermg ~n
alternative that would relax c~rt~m
federal bond rules to make exiSh!lg
tax-ex.empt bonds for sch~ol con~truct1on more . attracltve to
mvestors - ~ ,plan he says would
spread the money more evenly.
" We belie_ve all students 10 all
districts, not JUSt the ones the president pic~s, should .have the sam,~
opportum~1es for new schools,
Archer sa1d.
.
. . .
The GOP also IS questiOning the
second part ~f Chnto~ 's proposal
that_ would raise an eslu]Iated $2.4
~1lhon ov_er_ two years by ex~a~dmg an ex1stmg program providing
tax. credits to bond investors _for
proJeots-that~tnclude' . matc~mg
money from pnvate busm_ess.
Such bonds, begun H1 1997,
have not p~oven popular on Wall
Street, mamly because they ~re
hamst~~ng by complex restqclions. T~,ere ~only been a cou~le
of deals, said John Vogt. v1ce
presid_ent of the Bond Market
As~?c~atlon,- . .
.
Our pnonty IS to emphasize
the ex1s
· t'IP~ mumcipa
· · I bo nd mar
. •
ket. We thmk that s an ef_fcci~I(C
part of ~ school modermzauon
program .

·

•

•

.

•

Gallipolis City School District voters turned out Tuesday in much higher
than expected numbers to defeat the
proposed 26-year, 7-mill bond issue
that would have funded a new Gallia
Acadlimy High School.
The issue was defeated by a wide
margin, with opposi ng votes getting
61.8 percent of the vote total.
·Out of 10,274 registered voters,
4,237 went to the polls to cast their balJots, for a robust 41.24 percent voter
turnout, as opposed to the expected 2530 peroenl
Despite the lower millage rate (7
mills as opposed to the 7.4 proposed in
last November's election~ and lower
interest rates (sub-5 percent rates, rather
than~the 5:25~percent-originally proposed~ the bond issue - calling for the
construction of a ne·GAHS at O:ntenary, oonversion of the current high
~hool into a middle school. and other
improvements _ was rejected.
The bond i,-..;ue won approval in
only two of !he 18 precincts where
polling was oonducted. Opposition to
the bond issue was much stronger for
this s....cial election than in last fall's
.---·
general
election, when it failed by only
157 votes.
The issue was put back on the ballot
by the CARE (Concerned Area Resi -

. .·
.
. :~
dents for EducatiOn)CommiUee, wh1~ :;
was headed by Tom WISeman, Bertie :
Roush and &amp;tivaun Matthews. CARE. ·,
through business and private donatiors, ·:
paid a reported $14,000 in non-taxpay- :
er funds to have 'the Issue .ev1ved.
•
Opposition was speat!Ieaded by :
COST (Citizens Opposed,to Selective :
Taxation~ which believed the bond ·
issue w~ too costly and a m?Fe
prehens1ve pi~ for education IS needed .
for all ofGaJIIa County.
··
Following fimilization of the elec- ~
tion returns, bond issue supponers who :
gathen:&lt;l.in th~ junio~ high school gym :
were VISibly disappomted With the outcome.
qty Schools Superintendent Jack ..
Payton spoke to the assembled support- ers after the results were announced, .
concludingbysayingoftheopposition.:
"Forgive them, for they know not what :
they do."
Afterward, Pay~ said, "I . kn_ew :
when all the negative ~prugnmg :
started, people would bebcve !hem .
(COST) without chocking&lt;l';'t the f~; :
Now we're back to the drawmg ~- :
Estivaun Matthews, who Sllld the •
past six months spent on th e N_ovember .•
and special election campru~ was :
"the hardest 1have ever worked m.my :
Continued on page 3
~

com-:

•

•

\
•

•
•

,

·'

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