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•

•
•
•

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 .

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•

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
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111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-G92·215e • Fax: m-21S7

Community Newsl?aper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
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DIANE HILL
Controllar

..

..,.IN'Nd,..,.
publ,_;

TIN Sentinel ltllclomH,.,. to liN «1/tot trom ,...,..
IN. Sholl - . . . (atJO or - ) how ,,. ,_, .,.,.. or belnfl

l')JJN,.,.,..,.

of top-

,..tu,.,

ptWPerNd Md . , ,.., h Nlfwt. &amp;ell Mould lnc/uM • •
11Mi ,,., MHJ ~ phtJIM n&amp;llftb«.. s,w:tfy • dllte
~to 11 preW.U. atfJcle or ,.,__ .,.II to: ,_.,.,. to the editor, TIN Sentinel, 111 Courl st,
, Pomeroy, Ohio a,_; or, FAX to 1......,.,161.

"then'• •

The
consumer's dilemma
.

!Jf.JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bualn... Analyat
NEW YORK (AP) -Consumers must keep spending in order for the
U.S. economy to remain strong. So long as consumers spend rather than
save, the U.S. economy cannot retain its exuberance.
Well, which is it? Should we spend or save?
. These conflicting opinions, publicly endorsed every day by economists
and government officials, do more than confuse Americans about their palri·
otic goals. They cai!SC them to tune out and live for the moment.
• -Fact: The economy remains strong because consumers overall spend
every nickel landing in their hands. This keeps business busy, joblessness
low, home-buying strong, stocks high, cruises booked.
•" It is another way of saying confidence is high, and why politicians and
Wall Street's commission salesmen dismiss ariy negative or critical remarks
from doubters as "the perpetual voices of doom."
Those doubters have a point - in fact, many points - an&lt;l.eventually
their message will get through. Eventually, they say, consumers will run out
of stuff to buy and cruises to take. Even shopping can become boring.
..· What then? What will keep th~ economy going if the consumer starts to
save rather than spend?
·. Exports? Not until Asia, Brazil and half a hundred other countries emerge
from their problems. There's the surplus; government could use it to pump
qp the emnomy, but those funds already have been overcommitted.
What then? Reality in terms of fewer j&lt;lbs, lower homebuying volume,
slower retail sales, less active plants. And, a recognition that we cannot
simultaneously fulfill both national goals, that of keeping the economy mov·
ipg and saving enou,gh to finance fundamental economic improvements.
.. Without inve~tments in improvements, which come from savings, there
'"~not be strong productivity growth, which every Economics 101 course
~sis the basis for maintaining and improving living standards.
Perhaps a bit frustrated that students can grasp an abstract concept often
last on people with real money, William Dunkelberg, economist, professor,
and business adviser, offers this very basic explanation:
· "Suppose," he says, "we were all farmers and we ate everything we grew
year after year. Our consumption would be equal to our income, which is
- w!'at we produce. The only way we can raise incomes is to produce more.
·· "But unless we support one of the farmers to give up food production and
bUild a labor-saving tractor, we can't increase our productivity - that is,
prOduce even more food per person.
"To support the construction of the tractor, we all need to contribute
Stlrne of the food we gro* rather-than eating it ourselves. This is called sav·
ing. The more we save, the more tractors we can build and the larger our
incomes can be in the future.
... "But if we don't save, we can't invest in new productive equipment or in
education. 11\is means worker productivity will stop growing and wages will
s19p rising."
' ,
It comes down to a decision about whether we want to live well now at
the expense of the future, or do without some things 0ow so that we'll have
lhem - and more- in the future.
At the moment, it's obvious the spenders have a powerful majority.
They've got superior spokesmen. A salesman makes commissions now, not
in the future. A politician gets elected by spreading the money around now.

letter to the editor
Urges veterans to help save un,arked graves
Excuse the frequency of my contact, but help from all Meigs County vet·
erans' groups is urgently needed. As readers have seen from the Jan. 29 edi·
ticin of this newspaper, a Feb. 18 meeting at Meigs High School will be held
to"determine whether the U.S. Army Corpi; of Engineers will allow a loading dock to be built on the site of "the bloody ground" on the Buffington
Island Battlefield- the site of the heaviest action between the 10,000 sol·
diers of the battle. Federal government records show at least 54 U.S. veter·
ans buried in an unknown location on the battlefield, and local historical
documentation indicates 105 veterans buried there. Most local Civil War histqrians feel these bodies are on this site.
The Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War is the oldest veterans' orga·
nization in the State of Ohio. We not only concentrate on Civil War veterans
but pledge ourselves to honor all veterans of our country. We now plead for
o~r fellow veterans' organizations - American L,egion, VFW and DAYto come to our aid to keep graves of U.S. veterans from being desecrated by
permission from any arm of our own U.S. Army. Though some may say that
tllis is all worthless past.history, remember that Meigs County just buried its
last World War I veterans and our World War II veterans are quickly passing. I am sure our current veterans would be outraged if the graves from
- those wars were turned into paving material. Don't 411 U.S. veterans deserve
t!!" same respect by havmg their final resting place protected?
· The company planning to mine the battlefield has said that they would
;watch for bodies as they bulldoze. No one with any common sense would
)lelieve that ability exists to accomplish such a foolish actioit:
: f urge all local posts of the American Legion, VFW and DAY to send rep1res_entatives expressing outrage at the idea of allowing thi.s loading dock.
'
KeHh D. Aahley
·
Rock Springe
PISt Commander Brooka-Grant Camp 7,
Sona of Union Vaterana of the Civil War

tr"oday In History
Itt Tht AHocl81td p,..••
' Today is Wednesd~y. Feb._3,_the 34th day of 1999. There are 331 days left
In the year.
: On Feb. 3, 1959, a plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa, claimed the lives
pf rock-and-roll stars Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson,
, In 1690, the first paper money in America was issued by the colony of
_ tfassachusetts. The_cum:ncy_was used to pay soldiers. fighting a war against
~uebec.

..: In 1865, President Lincoln and Confederate Vice President Alexander H.
Stephens held a shipboard peace conference off the Virginia coast. The talks
~eadlocked over the issue of Southern autonomy.
• In 1916, Canada's original Parliament Buildings, in Ouawa, burned

4ovrn.

,

: ~n 1917, the United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany,
wh1ch had announced a po!Jcy of unrestncted submarine warfare.
: In 1924, the 28th president of the United States, Woodrow Wilson died
i~ Washington at age 68.
'
• In 1930, the chief justice of !he United States, William Howarcf'Taft
resigned for health reasons
•
: Jn 1987, the San Diego Yacht Club celebrated the victory of skipper Den·
rris Conner and the "Stars ann Stnrcs" over Australia to sweep the Ameri~·~ Cup seril:s.
'

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Sentinel • Page-3

-111.-D~Iy

Knoxville

i~

Announcements: . . .

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'EstiiD{Metf In 1948

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

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home to

Corpse~ U.

By Jack And-n
Bass and his students beJian research projects one reason, alona with DNA, that police are
and Jan Moller
.
on the corpses; putting them in all types of condi- becoming more accurate in murder cases.
In the Tennessee woods,
None
of
the
l,SOO
bodies
that
have
been
tions and charting the rate of decompo&amp;ition. If
a tall fence topped with
you've ever wondered how police can pinpoint throut~h the Research Center are left 10 entirely
barbed wire and razor wire
time of death in a homicide or unattended death, decompose; in fact, no body stays on the farm
hides dozens of grisly
or how skeletal remains are identified, you know longer than a year. Every quarter, UT students
scenes from public view.
something about the research conducted on the participate in a very different kind of "clean-up
party." Students put on rubber gloves and canvu
Bodies lie in shallow
Body Farm.
graves, float in ponds, are
"The first question asked at the scene of a the area, accounting for every bone of every body.
crumpled in t:ar trunks,
crime,, Bass says, "is not 'who is the victim?' Then the bones are included in the Skeletal Data
sprawled out on pavement or stacked iq coffins in but, 'how long has that body been there?' How Base, the only one of its kind in the world. This
the work shed. Federal Bureau of Investigation can you answer that question without knowing data bank is why detectives can determine race
agents and various federal, state and local police what bodies look like as they decompose?"
and sex when only a skeletal fra8ment is discov·
departments have investigated the site, and know
At any given time, about 20 bodies are seal· ered. The theory that our bones and skulls are get·
who is responsible for the carnage. But rather tered on the premises, with students as well as ling longer? Born of Body Farm research.
than make an arrest, they pay him for the privi· federal law-enforcement types like the FBI or the
All of this has made Bass quite famous. Whel)
lege.
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms care· Australian or British police are stumped about a
homicide, they call Bass. When North Carolina
This three-acre plot of land in Knoxville, Ten· fully monitoring rates of decay.
nessee is not the crime scene for a niultiple homi·
Current projects include research on bodies engineers needed 10 know the minimum meuurecide, but it may be the strangest classroom project left in cars. Two donated vehicles •• an Oldsmo· ment of a human skull while constructing bars in
in the world.
bile from the school and a Chevy from the state - jail cells, tl)ey contacted Bass.
Commonly referred to 8s the "Body Farm," it - were stuffed in literally every compartment with
In addition to his continued work at the farm,
the
70-year-{)ld Bass still assists in about SO muris the laboratory for the University of Tennessee's corpses. An early research note: Airtight trunk
der cases a year. And as the fame of the Body
Anthropology Department. From it comes most space can preserve the dead for much longer.
of the available knowledge about decomposition
Another project involves the rate of decay in Farm spread;, helped by the recent novel of the
rates in every imaginalile burial site, as well as bullet wounds. Bullets of varying size are insert· same name by bestseller Patricia Q,Jmwell, Bass
body identification met~.
'
eo into bodies and then analyzed over the course has had to hire additional help 10 field the calls.
cOpyright 1M, United Feature Synclleata, Inc.
The project is the vision of Dr. William M. of several months.
Bass, but it's made possible by the dead •• about
This research is shared with the world and is
I,SOO of them over the years.
..-----------~-----------------'-...,...-------,
Bass came to the University of tTT" lil'"' "~.,.lim\ n"'l"lle••n•
Tennessee in 1971 to head the IIUI.ME
Anthropology Dep/!rtment. In his
spare time, he also helped the
Knoxville medical examiner's
office. ·
In his years as a teacher, he had
studied plenty of skeletal remains,
but he wanted to learn more about a
subject that forensics students never
hear about in the classroom, yet are
expected to analyze as professionals. "In my years as a professor or
student, seldom did I study a mag·
got-covered body," Bass said,
"(But) that's the kind of thing
detectives come across all the
time."

He got his chance in 1972. The
medical examiner's office had an
unidentified body and didn't know
what to do with it. Bass asked if he
could keep it. A university-owned
sow farm, bought from an insane
asylum, was made availa~le.
Soon it was known all over the
state that a Tennessee professor
would take unidentified and
unclaimed bodies. The corpses
began piling up, Bass told our associate Kathryn Wallace, and ihe
Body Farm was born.

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Clinton budget surplus estimate won't hold up
An AP Nawa Analyala
specialists say so.
ed a year ago. The CBO projects a ty of long-range forecasts and the
By WALTER R. MEARS
"There is no •way for anyone pro· $107 billion surplus thjs year.
difficulty of undoing tax and spend·
AP Special Corraapondent
. jecting the economy to be able to say
The congressional projection is ing commitments.
WA~HIN&lt;!TON (~) - Prest· their projections will come true, that surpluses will add up to nearly
"It is not as easy to reduce out·
dent Chnton IS forecastmg decades because chances are they won't," $2.6 trillion over the next decade. Jays as it is to increase them, and the
o~ f~deral budget surpluses, $4.8~4 said June. O'Neill, completing her Clinton's budget projects the total at reverse is obviously the case in
tnlh?n. worth by 2014. - prec1se tenn as director of the CBO.
about $2.4 billion.
taxes," he said.
'
preda.ct1ons that come w1th only one
Federal Reserve , Oaairman Alan
"Our estimates, optimistic as
That would be as true of the new
certamty. .
.
Greenspan said it is impossible to they sound, are more conservative retirement accounts Ointon seeks as
They w11l be off the mark.
"confidently project large surplus· than those of Congress," the presi- of the tax cuts Republicans want.
~y ~ow much, a~d whether the es" over the next 15 years, given the dent said.
It's · happened before. Ronald
proJections are too h1gh or too lo~, uncertainties 'of budget forecasting.
And longer, by five years, to Reagan's 1981 income tax cuts did·
d.epends on the economy, the -dec~He noted that two years ago, the reach the $4.8S4 trillion Ointon's n't produce the economic surge and
s1ons of at least two future. presa- Office of Management and Budget budget calls the total reserve by increased revenue~ his administra·
dents, and what happens dunng the projected a $121 billion deficit in 2014. He wanl!l 62 percent of it, tion expected,
ahd deficits
next ::even Congresses.
, the 1998 budget, which turned out to $2.764 trillion, used for Social Secu· increased, A post-Cold War peace
Clinton's 15-year .plan forecasts be "a $191 billion error."
rity funding, 15 percent for Medic- dividend was supposed to ease bud·
~urpluses far excee~1~g th~e pro·
The Congressional BudgefOffice aid needs, 12 percent for a new sys· · get pressures a decade ago, but did·
Jected by the admamslrat1on and · said that its five-year projections tern of government-aided retirement n 't, in part because of economic
Co~gress 15 f!IO!'ths ago.
were off by an average of 13 percent savings accounts, and II percent for downturns.
'The predtctaons art that for the annually. At that rate, the CBO could "mili!Bfy readiness and other criti·
As for long-range forecasting, the
. next quarter century, whatever the be $250 billion off in 2004, which cal national needs."
last major overhaul of Social Securiups and downs of t.he b~smess cycle, exceeds the $2~4 billion surplus it ·
That would be all of it, colliding ty, in 1983, was supposed to keep
.the general trend IS gomg to be for forecasts for that budget year,
with Republican plans for tax cuts of the system solvent until 2057, but
surpl~es ~very y~ar for the next 25
I' Estimates for more than five
up to $800 billion · over the next came up 25 years short.
years, Chnton ~aul.
years into the future are even more decade.
Clinton and Republican leaders
There's no disagreement on the uncertain, "the CBO report said. .
"The number of prQposals to get agree that gap should be closed
upward t;end; the d1rector of t~e
The projections have been miss· rid of the surplus almost rivals Mark using the surplus, although they are
Congressional · Budget Office s~1d ing on the down side, first by fore· McGw.ire's home run record," at odds how to use the funds.
that only a cataclysmic recess1on casting deficits, then by minimizing Greenspan said. Not really; that was
EDITOR'S Note • Welter R. M..ra,
would undo su~pluses.
.
surpluses. The administrati~n fore· 70. But it made his point about com·
But translatmg trends 1nto num- casts a $79 billiof\ surplus when the peting claims for the money. He told ylee preeldtnt 1nd cotumnlll ror The
AHoclatod Preu, haa reported on
bers s!retchmg 10 and 1.5 years current budget year ends on Oct. I; the Senate Budget Committee cau· Wllhlngton 1nd national polltlea for
ahead IS educated speculation. The that is $25 billion more than expect· tion should rule, given the uncertain· moro lhon 30 yura. ·

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IM'/4o'&gt; I •

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~••••
,.,._
Cloudy

Showers

r.atormo

Flll!iel

Snow

lee

'

Showery conditions return
to southern Ohio Thursday
By The .(Saocl•ted Prwa '
V
CloudS and
will return to Ohio tonight in advance of a rapidly
~n.

approaching'l;{))(l.front, the National Weather Service said.
: The rai11 could change to or mix with snow in northwest Ohio Thursday morning. The lain-snow mooure will spread into eastern Ohio before
ending later on, Thu!!id&amp;Y·
.,
', ,
· Temperatures wilJ.fall into ' the mid-30s tonighl and fC\X)ver to only,
about 40 dc;arees ori Thursday. Skies will clear from west to east as high
pressure builds in the region, fo~ters said.
•
· The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus we.ather sta·
lion was 63 degrees in 1890 while the record low' was 1Q below Zero in
1985. Sunsetton(ght will be at 5:53p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:37a.m.
·WeatJler forecast:
IItmi~~~~~~~GJ;~;r~~~~a4g~o~~~~~~~~~witb
a chance
rain C..."hance
showersofafter
wind
10 to 1Sof~ph.
rain
40 percent.
,
'
Thursday... Cioudy with a cHance of rain 'showers. Highs in the mid 40s.
Chance of rain 30 percent. .
'
Thursday night ... Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 2_0s,
Extended forecast:
•
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs near SO.
•
•
Saturday.... Mostly cloudy with a c~ance of showers. Lows in the mid
~Os and highs in the mid 50s.
,
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s and
40s.

voters

"' ~r\tlnu«ffrcili, 'p1ge 1 ' ' '
life,» was visibly affected by the voters'
decision.
"We worked so hard," Matthews
continued. ''Too many people listened
to the wrong thing. The children are the
losers ... we are in a bad situation, and
the peopl~ don't seem to care."
"People ·don't want to come into a
community that docsn 't take education
seriously," she added.
When asked where the initiative
would go from here, Matthews said,
"It's dropped. The people have spoken."
Cindy Graham, also of the CARE
Committee, said, "It is the hope of the
members of CARE that all citizens of
Gallipolis will understand the impo,...
lance of words, that they will consider
deeply the statement that was oonveyed ,
to the youngsters of the community."
Issue supporter Francis "Odie»

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rus that consisted of black
always be an object of mockery and contempt.
women doing bad impresBut is this Clinton a vicious beast that must be
sions of Motown. Did
destroyed for the sake of future generations? The
village isn 'I buying it. There's a difference
ancient Greeks object? Did
the Vandellas sue? Then
between, "I did not have sex with that woman,"
and "I didn't kill them, I swear." And the village
there's this: What drove the
Republicans to their present
knows it. They' re fed up with the movie too. It's
gone on a little too long.
state of self-destructive
high dudgeon? Who made
The consensus among the gasbags.seems to be
that choice, or did it make
that this crisis is one of the final battles in a cui·
itself? Republicans are
ture war, The vulgar Huns of the '60s are spitting
upset tfiaflhe American people aren't as outraged at the gates of \he wist &gt;and tasteful Mandarins
by President Clinton's behavior as they are. They who know what'~ best for the village. And the
don't quite know what to do about it. They monster feels no shame! The monster just won't
stormed the Clinton castle with firebrands blaz· die. The Mandarins must become as Huns to stop
ing, vowing to kill the monster, only ·to look the insidious lack of rectitude that is creeping into
behind them and see that the village remained the quaint little village they oversee. I know I'm
behind;-leiVing- them to face the monster alon-e~mixing metaphors like a crazy person here. But so
·
(Democrats, of course, have been cast in the role are we all.
. of mad scientists. They must defend the doings of
When Federalist Papers meet oral sex com·
their creature even as they survey.the damage he mon sense flies out the window. Well, 1 have a
has wreaked. Who are the media in this mixed recommendation: lthin'k the Republicans should
metaphor? They' re the heartless movie producers abandon the impeachment process and sue the
who brought this monstrosity to the screen in the American people. We just don 't get it. It's our
first place.)
fault. We're crude vulgarians who like Buffy
And the villagers? Well, they 'd probably be a more than Shakespeare, and don't hate Ointon as
lot more upset if the monster had thrown some much as we should. We must pay.
perky gals off a parapet, or bitten the heads off a
(lan Shoalaa' new book "Not Wei Vat," Ia
few dogs. But so far all his activity has been con· available from 2.13.111 PubiJmtona, PO Box
fined to the castle, and they figure what the mon· · 1810, Loa AngaiH, CA to071. The toll-trw
ster d~s in the castle is between him and his number II 1·1100oft2·13111.)
bride. Sure, they 'll joke about it. The monster will Copyrtgh11Nt NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

·•

Rain

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
IIUIIde Melp County
13 Weeks.........,,, ............... .l21.30
26 Weeks .......................... .SS3.82
S2 Weeks .......................... $10556
lbta Outlldt Melp County
13 Wceb ........................... .$29 2S
26 Weeks ............................Sl&lt;l68
'lWeeu .................. ,...... .SJ09.12

Reader Services
'

Correction Polley
Our mala COUctrn Ia all 11orle! Is to be
II:CUnte. n you kaew or •• error Ia •

stocy, call tile newsroom at (740) 992llSS. We wiD c•ock yo•r lafonnallon
aad make a COI'ftCtlen lh•arnn~ed.

Newa Departments
The ..... nnabtr b 992-lU5. Department t¥tt•••••re~

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-~ ·

Athens-Meigs ESC

.

The Governing Board of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Cen·
ter will meet i n regular session Feb. 11, 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy office
located at 320 1/2 E. Main St. Regular meetings have been scheduled for
the second Thursday of each month, 7 p.m. alternating between the
Athens and Pomeroy offices.

Carey open door meeting
State Representative John Carey (R·Wellston) will bold an open doors
session Monday, 2-3 p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse in Pomeroy.
Carey meets with constituents on an individual basis to discuss their concerns regarding state government.

.Dance to be held
Tuppers Plains VFW will have a round and square dance Saturday, 8 ·
to 11 p.m. True Country will provide the music and Ronnie Wood will
be the caller. The public is welcome.
'

Revival announced
Revival services will be held at the Church of.the Nazarene, State
Route 124, Reedsville, with Ron Roth of Springfield, evangelist, doing.
prophecy preaching. There will be special singing every night and a nuri--,
ery will be provided.
;

right~

'

&amp;my Pt. Cloudy

Donald "Don» Larson, S7, Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Feb. 1,
1999 in Pleasant Valley Hospital, following a brief illness. ·
Born June 15, 1941 in Cincinnati, son of the late Oaarles and Marie
Hornsby Lucicial, he was a senior consultant for the Pick Family Co. in
A!lanta, Ga., and was a member of American Legion Post 23, Point Pleas·
ant. ·
Surviving are his wife, Susan Mason Larson; a son, Cody J. Larson of
Pennsylvania; and two brothers, Steve Hornsby and Gary Hornsby, both of
Oh10. ·
Gravesi~e services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens, w1th Brother Isaiah Crump Jr. officiating. There will be no visita·
lion. Arrangements are by the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasant.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by American Legion Post 23,
Point Preasant:

Appeals court rules "Megan's
.Law" is unconstitutional
Opening statements to sta~
WARREN (AP) - An appeals
The infringed
include the
court has ruled' unconstitutional a chance to live and work anywhere in alleged teen killers case ..•
law requiring convicted sex offend· one wants and the chance to be left

.. .

'

Meigs County Right to Life will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Public Library.

Georgia Thompson 'yViseman, 83, died Tuesday, Feb. 2, 1999 at her resi·
dence in Pomeroy.
.
Arrangements will be announced by Ewing Funeral H!)me in Pomeroy.

.,
I

Donald 'Don' Larson ·

Georgia Wiseman

·I Colu-l:sa'/41' I

Struck dumb on a daily basis
By lan Shoal••
According to the Associated Press, a Turkish
nationalist group is calling for Disney to pull
uMulan" from the screen, because it shows Huns
in a bad light. I wouldn't have thought an invad·
ing horde from a couple thousand years ago
would need a support group, but what do I know?
I'm struck dumb on a daily basis.
In any given group, I wonder, who decides
when the group should take offense, and at what?
Take "Mulan," for instance. I would imagine
there 's a sizable population of perky gals out
there, gals with spunk, gals with spirit, with
smiles as wide as a Montana sunset. Did they
approve of the depiction of Mulan in the Disney
motion picture? Somewhere in the world is there
a disgruntled perky gal who's tired of the way
perKy gals are always shown as cartoonish Barbie
types in movies, or played by Meg Ryan or Doris
Day? They might ~onder: Where's the Meryl
Streep of perky gals? Femmes fatales get Barbata
Stanwyck, or Bette Davis ·· we get Karen Valen·
tine, and we have to marry Fred McMurray or
Steve Guttenberg in the last reel. It seems to me
that perky gals would have a legitimate gripe. But
if there is a Gals With SpunK Liberation Society,
we've never heard from i~ even though experi·
ence tells us thai there are perky women out there
in droves. Yet some group can claim offense.for a
tribe of Jean and hungry barbarians defunct for a
thousand years. What's -the point?
Disney's "Hercules" employed a Greek cho-

I

Right to life meeting

ers to tell local police their whereabouts. _
The ruling on the state's
"Megan's Law," which was upheld
four months ago by the Ohio
Supreme Court, was issued Monday
in a Lake County case involving
Daniel Williams, who \vas convict·
ed in 1986 lor rape:
,lake County ,Prosecutor Charles
Coulson'. said the decision would be
appealed, meaning lhe law could be
headed back to the Ohio Supr~me
Court.
.
Jay Wuebbold, a -spokesman for
, the state's high cour), said the com·
• munity. notification issue involved
in the Lake County case hadn't been
raised in other appeals courts. .
The ruling by the 11th Ohio District Court of Appeals said notificalion provisions in the law infringe
on privacy rights protected by the
Ohio Constitution.
"Singling the offender out by
name and by ad~ress and calliqg
him a 'predator' needlessly
infringes on the right · of individu·
a ls," Judge Robert Nader wrote for
a 2·1 majority of the court.

alone, the decision said.
The ruling only governs cases
involving sexual predators in the
court's jurisdiction area in lake,
Geauga, Ashtabula, Portage and.
Trumbull counties.
The law was pattered on a New
Jersey law enacted after 7-year-old
Megan Kanka was raped and murdered by a convicted sex offender
living in her neighborhood.
In ·a dissenting opinion, Judge
Donald Ford argued that "question·
able legislation does not unavoidably lead to the conclusion that a
law is unconstitutional."
In its ruling Sept. 30, the Ohio
Supreml: Court ruled 7-0 that the
law does not violate the Ohio Constitution, though it was applied to a
man whose conduct had occurred
before the law went into ·effect in
1997.
Ford
acknowledged
the
Supreme Court ruling didn't touch
on the community notification pro·
vision, but said the court's unani·
mous ruling "has sent a strong indi·
cation of the statute's constitution, ality.''

NEW PHILADELPHIA (AP) The trial of a 13-year-{)ld accused of
killing his 5-year-old playmate will
start Thursday, even though two
motions are pending.
For the past I 1/2 weeks, Tuscarawas County Juvenile Judge Linda
Kate has been holding hearings about
whether the boy's alleged confession
or a search of his house will be heard
during the trial.
Although opening statements will
be Thursday, the motion hearings will
continue on Friday, she ruled on Tuesday.
,
On Friday, Kate will allow a
defense witness to finish his testimo·
ny on the motion to suppress Harris'
July 15 confession, The other pending
motion is 10 suppress a search of the
Harris home on July 2.
Defense attorneys accuse police of
coercing Anthony Harris to confess
and that his mother, Cyndi, felt pres·

sured to allow her home to he
searched without a warrant.
Harris has been charged with mur·
der in the stabbing death of Devllll
Duniver on June 27. Her body was
found a day later under storm debris
· about tOO yards from her home in thi1
town about 20 miles south of Canton!
On Tuesda9, Ms. Harris testified
that she thought a voice stress test h~
son took w.S routine for police whd
were questioning witnesses.
She said she didn't realize her soh
was a suspect even though she teolr.
him to the police station at the request
of officers.
~'
During cross-examination, prose·
cutors questioned Ms. Harris abonl
her son's alibi for the day that Devan
was killed.
If convicted, Harris could fact
juvenile detention until he's 21. .J:W
cannot face the death penalty becall8tl
he was 12 at tlie time of the slaying.

Taft picks new top utilitY
regulator to replace Butler:

From AP, OVP Staff Reports
1989 appointment to the PUCO. by
COLUMBUS - A former state tben·Gov. Richard Celeste.
"
utilities regulator will get another
Current PUCO Chairman Cfllii
chance to watch over Ohio's water, Glazer, also an independent, said he
electric, telephone and natural gas will serve out the remainder of. hill
companies.
term as a member, which expi~
·~passing" test, the prosecutor said.
Alan Schriber, a member of the April tO, 2001.
•
' When the inspector returned later
-that day with the ·vehicle, Oemon5 Public Utilities Commission of Ohio - ·Schriber was appointed to his fi,.t,
gave him an official vehicle inspection from 1983 to 1989, will get another PUCO term by Celeste. State law p~
repon that said the yeh\cle had passed five-year term, Gov. Bob Taft hibits more than three' members 'Q.f
inspection and motioned for the inspec· announced Tuesday. Schriber also one political party from serving on the
will serve as chairman of the five- commission at the same time.
. •,
tor to give him the money, Allen said.
The prosecutor said the inspector member commission.
Schriber, an independent from
gave Clemons $30.
Veterans Memorial
Neither Clemons nor the prosecu· Cincinnati, will fill a vacancy that will
be
created
when
Democrat
Jolynn
Tuesday admissions - Lloy~
tor's office could be reached for comment Thesday night. Oemons' tele· Barry Butler's term expires on April Bolin, Pomeroy.
Tuesday discharges- none. .:·
phone number is unpublished, and a to. Ms. Butler, who sought reappointHolzer Medical Center
~,
recording at the prosecutor's office ment, was one of four finalists for the
said the office was closed for the JOb,
Discharges Feb. 2 Ms. Butler, who practiced law in Smith, Stormie Davis, f'ied Georg '
night. There was no answer to calls to
Gallipolis in the late 1970s and early Mrs. Brad Haggy and daughter.
a listing for Michael Allen.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. James Se;:
There was also no answer to calls to 1980s, represented the former 92nd
,'
the Ohio EPA in Columbus or to House District of Gallia, Meigs and gent, son, Oak Hill.
(Published with permission) •
MAJITA Technologies in Cincinnati. Athens counties from 1983 unhl her
MAJITA is the oontractor that runs the
E-check program in the Cincinnati area.
The E-check emissions test was
begun as a way to meet federal clean
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded six caU~ '
air standards in counties that.the U.S.
for
assistance Tuesday. Units responding included:
'c•
Environmental Protection Agency
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
•u
found out of compliance.
10:19 a.m., Beech Street, Middleport, Ollie J. Milton, Veterans Memoii":
al Hospital, Middleport squad assisted;
... '
11:06 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy, Lloyd Bolin''
VMH·
· '
is located on old Route 35 in the
•
7:20
p.m.,
Riverside
Apart111ents,
Middleport,
Sandra
Gwiortniewfci,:
Rodney area.
C' l
He said no decision has been VMH;
11:10 p.m., Gold Ridge Road, Pomeroy, Ruby Castile, O'Bieness MemO';·
made on what will happen to the old
''
garage whep it is vacated, but noted rial Hospital.
.
POMEROY
.
.
·-~
that ODOT's intent is to sell the
7:51 p.m., state Route 143, Georgta W1seman, dead on arrival, Centra) ;
building to recover some of the con·
Dispatch
squad assisted.
•:. !
struct ion cost.
RACINE
'' '
Funding for the new building
10:03
p.m.,
Broadway
Street,
Daisy
Sayre,
VMH.
·
·"•
came from the sale of the old ODOT
' •.:
central office in Columbus. Pro·
ceeds from the sale are being used to
construct three new garages, it was
reported last fall .

E-check employee indicted on bribery
and record-tampering charges Tuesday

CINCINNATI (AP) -An under·
cover
at an E-check testing
••• facilityoperation
resulted
In the indicfment of
O'boililell's
of tbe loss ~as,
an E·check employee on charges of
"The iSsue was defeated th(ough a pro- . bribery and tampering with records
gram of gre¢, deceit and misinformacharges, the Hamilton County prose·
lion."
cutor said.
Hobart Wilson Jr., retired executive
Ronnie Clemons, 29, of Cincinnati,
editor of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, was indicted Thesday by a Hamilton
commented, "I think it's a shame. County grand jury on one count of
There was no better time to do this. bribery and one count of tampering
People should see the facilities ... it's a with records. Oemons oould be sen·
miracle the children can learn.
tenced to nine years in prison if con·
f'The kids have to have better facili· victed' of both charges, Prosecutor
ties," he added. '
Michael' Allen said in a statement
Green Elementary Principal Marvin released Tuesday.
Oemons inspected a tampered vehi·
McKelvey gave his impression on the
cle that the Ohio Fnvironmental Protec·
defeat.
"It's deV8Stating. I feel badly for the tion Agency had sent as part of an
undercover operntion to the E-check
children," he said.
facility in the submb of Blue Ash, Allen
a&gt;ST CO-{)rganizer Bill Bahr said said. Clemons told an undercover
today the group is not pi~ ,with the inspector posing as the vehicle owner
bond issue's defeat, but felt the public that it would take $1,0CWJ to repair the
agreed with a&gt;ST's contention that an vehicle before it oould·pass the test but
overall plan for educational improve· thatthe owner could pay $30 to another
men! throughout the county is needed. employee at the facility to assure a
"No one should be happy when a
school issue is defeated," Bahr said.
"But we're pleased it will all!)w time 10
develop a plan that meets the needs of
Continued from page 1
everypne.
to cost around $3.8 million, includ·
"Our next step is to get more people ing site preparation and all strucinvolved ·and see where they can go tures, Collins said.
from there," he added. ''The schools are
The building will replace a
really where we need to start to make garage built in 1953 that is now
this county a su=, both educational· functionally obsolete, according to
ly and financially. The only good lhing Collins. The existing site is located
that came out of this is that we can on about 4 1/2 acres of ground and is
move forward."
surrounded by houses, leaving no
room for expansion, he explained.
Last fall, Colli11s said the building will be landscaped, planted with
trees and fenqed.
Am Ele Power ..................... 42'~•
He noted that the new Gallia
Akzo ......................................39'4 , County garage, similar to what is
AmrTec:h ...............................61 ,, proposed for Meigs County, was
Ashland 011 ...........................46Y.
A,T&amp; T.....................................92 ~. constructed in abOut eight months. It
Bank One ..............................49l
Bob Evans .............................. 23
Borg·Warner ........................47'1•

H0Spl•t8 1 news·-'-

Wi11

EMS logs 6 calls~::

New Meigs ODOT garage

Stocks

Grand Openin
·Loan Special

Broughton ............................. 17Y4

Champion ............. .................. &amp; ~
Charm Shps ............................3':1
City Holding ..........................25'.1
Federal Mogul ......................57Y.
Gannett ................................ 64'~•
Goodyear .............................. 52'.1

..

POMEROY FOODLAND

____SuperBank
,

64,.

Kmart ..................................... 17'h.

Kroger .................... ..............
Landa End .............. .............. 30~.
Llmltad= ............................ :.36'.1
Oak Hill Fin I .......................... 18..
OVB .........................................42

One Valley.................. ,. .........31 '!.
Peoples ................................. 24,,
Prem Finl ................................. 16
Rockwall .......................... 45'1.
AD/Shell ............................... 41 ,_
Sears ..................................... 40'i.

7.99'%'
'

Shoney'S ................................. 2~

First Star.............................. B6'~
Wendy's ................................ 23'.1
Worthlngton .......................... 13'1.

-·-·-

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

'····~
""' ' ' f""
:~-..IJ
~

'

MIOHTY JOE YOUNG (POl
l:OCIICWLV

, Ji·,·

~ '. •
ALL Aaaa, AU TIMia M,OO

•••••••••••••••

~BIG

f..Jitl~rMnv1r

~ ~lovies

1-740-753·3400

Tm'IS

Maximum tam or 41 month lind minimum loin amount ors 1,000.00 .vaia.ble with credit """""...·,
(Elaompl« Amount IINnood S$,000.0thl1.99% - 41...,1hlypo-orl122.01.
'

Thb _..,....2+99

992-2357 700 W. Main

Stn~tl

•

·'

�.. ' .

•

ports

.

WIRinHd1y, February 3, 1999r - - - - - -

- The Dally .Sentine~

'

By ANDREW CARTER
Tribune Newa Editor
'The Universi,ty of Rio Grande
nearly blew a 10-point lead down the
stretch but managed to hang on to
win 78-77 against Cedarville College
Tuesday night in Cedarville. Yellow
Jacket guard Amanda Poner missed
an 18-foot jumper at the buzzer to
allow. the Redwomen to escape with
tile victory.
: The first half was a war that featured eight ties and nine lead changes
as Rio Grande slugged its way to a
31-25 halftime advantage: With the
scc;&gt;re tied 23-23 at the 6:04 mark,
R.io Grande pieced together an 8-2
~n to lose out the half. •
Rio Grande point guard Misti
Halley recorded the J,OOOth point of
~er career with 4:33 remaining to

By JOE KAY
. CINCINNATI (AP) Ken
G:ammm. Steve Fmley. Kevin
Brown. Joey Hamilton. As the list of
cleparted San Doego Padres grew,
outfielder Greg Vaughn grew a lottie
more cunous about what was ~oo n g
Of! wnh the . defe~dmg Nauonal
League .champoons.
He was shocked when he got· back
!Tom the dento st Tuesday and learned
he was the latest to go.
. The Padres traded Vaughn and
pon ch:hlt specoalost Mark Sweeney to
the Cmconnato Reds for often-onjured
outfielder Reggoe Sanders and two
mmor leaguers .. Vaughn , who set a
club record by bmong 50 homers last
season, couldn't comprehend the

I'

·Ma~.linesque move.
,
I JUSt came from the dentiSI. I
thought tl'tey'd slipped me something, that it wasn 't real ," Vaughn
saod. " I had to pinch the other side of
my mout~. to make sure I wasn't
dreamong .
The trade allowed Reds fans to
dream a lottie. Ge~eral manager Jim
Bowden has acquored 16-game :-von~r
Denny Nea~le and now a 50h me-run hotter 10 the offseason, fiJI.
tn
e biggest holes in a rebuilding
team geared towards a new stadium
for 2003.
"Thos allows us to compete, "
Bowden said. "I think that )l'ith the
moves we made, we can compete.
I'm not saying we can overtake

Akron Cem.-Hower :'1. Akron N 82
Akroo Hoban 64, New Philadelphia 47
Alexander 76, Hemlock MtUer 62
Arhngwo 58, Van Buren 50
Ashland CrC"sl vtew 93, Mo1.1n1 Gt lead 49
Athens 64 Jackson 39
B eav~r Local 82. lndinn Cret'k 66
BenJamin Logan 59. Graham 46
Bcrhn Ht lond 82. Rtdgewood .'i6
Bexley 74. Whitehall 66
'
B1g Walnut 90. Watkins Memorral J7
Blufrton 80, Cory-1bwson H
BoWling Green 6J. Holland Sprtng. 61
Canfield 79, W. Branch 56
Camon S. 40. Claymonr J7
·
Cedarv ile 72, Spring. Shawnee 6 1
Chesapeake .54. Coal Grove 42
Cm Amelia 88, Cin Wcstem Brown 46
Ci n Hills Chr Acad. 63, New Richmond 56
Ci n. Hughes 62, Cin Mt Healthy 59-0T '
Cm Ll Salle 60, Ham!lton Badin -'5
Cm Norwood 65, Cin Loveland 48
Cr n Roger Bacon .55, Dtt) Chaminat.lc-Juhenne

Basketball
NCAA Division I
men's
scores
I ,
East
".Bo!&gt;t On College 81. Seton Hall 66
• Georgetown 76. Pittsburgh 58

Mnri st 63. Ride• 47
Mtch1g.:1n St 70 Penn St 68

South

: Aa. l~emat10nal 57. W. Kentucky .'iJ

'.' Florida St. 77. South Flortd!l66
""M orehead St 8.5, Tenn -Martm 69
Murray St 81. E Kentucky 66

•• · N. Cnrolin:. St. 51. Georgia Tech XI
South Alabama 79. Arlwnsas St. 7J

.

'

Midwest

'

49

E Illinoi s 74. Au~tul Peay 70
SE Mm01m 61 Tennessee St 54

Southwest
Arkansas 69. Tennessee 52
. OklahonmSt.SI.IowaSt 72
' Te~tas Southern 69. Pnune View 61
''

Far West

- Loyola, Md 96 Den\'er 92-0T . •

NCAA Division I
women's scores
•.

East

,..- j\mencun lmemational 62, St. Michael's 45
•' .Anna Maria 92 Nichols 43
Auumjl11on 68 St Anselm 58
" Dnbson 65, Wheaton, Mass 56
' Benlley 79, Pace SO
Bethany, W Va. 89, Waynesburg 67
Bowdom 67, Colby 6J
bndgewater, Mass 67, Filchbu.rg St. 64
Brooklyn 48, Purchase 16 •
Bryant 89 Merrimack 7J
Clark U 75, Springfidd 65
Co lby~Sawyer 76, New Englomd Coli 55
.ro Colgate 6.3. A.rmy 60
.. Cortland S1 68, Oneonta 62-0T
Curry 77, Wentwonh Tech 60
.• Domanican, N.Y. 70, Mol lor 56
.&lt; E Connccucur 84, Cotmecucut Coli 66
1 E. Nazarene 62, Roger W11lmnu 30
: Eln'ura 68, Ithaca 63
1 Framinsham St 15, Mass -Roston 58
• Geneseo St. 78, Buffalo SL 68
• Gettysburg &amp;0, Frnnklln &amp; Marshall 55
1

1

:., Gustav
g~~~~ ~~~~~~~"J~~~h~n!~~~'&amp;UJ:~~r:!n ll
Adolphus 46, Rochester Tech 19-0T
• Keene St. 88. Hnrtw1 ck 60
.. K1ngs, Po 92, Delawnrc Valley 59
i.a ~aile 67, Temple 57
Lehigh 64, Colum bto 51
! MIT 57, Coasr Gu&lt;1rd 46
~ Mercyhursr 88. Ashland 86
1 Messiah 65, Juniata 54
1 Middlebury 70, Clarkson 52
• MOl'avian 56, Albnght 50
• Muhlenberg 76, Ursmu s 65
• RPI 75 Va~sar 46
"' Rhode Island Coli 67. Albenus Magnus 47
Salem St 6' W01cestt'r St J6
St John Fisher M Rochester 5-'
.• Sr Lawrrnce 85 , Pntsdam 40
• St Thomas Aqumn.~ HO Nyack 46
• St. Vinccnt90, Malone 61
I Stevens Tech 82. Sr Josrph s L I ~2
J Suffolk 7J. Elm5 ~0
.
~ Uu ca 55. New Palt z SI
J Villanov:~ 68 Se10n Hall 5J
11 WashingiOn, Md. 12. Brvn Mawr 31:1
~ West Libt'ny MI. Westminster Pu 60
Westfield St 67. Massaclm sens Coli J4
Walliam Snlllh 48, Ham1Uon 20
.. Williams 84, Smith 58
Worcester Tech 62. Mounr Holyoke 45

.,

South

J Bluefield St 78 Tu~~ulum 74-0T
~ East Carolma 80 N.C -Wdnung1un 60
4 F.ayeuev1lle St 61 , N C Central 61
., F~d- t-lardcman 76. Bethel. Tenn 47
«~ Furman 77. W Caro!ma 60
" Georgetown Ky 66 Brcscia ~l
' Ja~T~t s Modtson IU R1'c:hmond 74
~ Johnson C Smt ih 94. Virgmia St 78
·, Murray St 77 E KC"ntucky 'iS
~ Ptkevdle 56. A!icC' Lloyd 55 ·
; Randolph-Macon 76 Va WC"s!eynn6l
~ Roanoke 65, Emory&amp;: Henry 52
;, Shaw 58. SL Pa~J's 50
~ Tenn. Wesleyan 84. Bryan 42
·
": Tenn -Mamn 79. Morehead St 77
; Union. Ky 87, Ltndsey W1lson 76
,~ Winston-S:IIem 85, St Augustine" s ~2

•
~

.,

!
,

~

Southwest

~

:

4hio men's college scores
North Coast Conference

Earlham 80, Kenyon ~~
; Wooster 101 Oberlin 52

.• Amerioan Mideast Conference

! CC"drtnll llt' 87. RIO GRANDE M
~ Mt Vernon Nnr.arrne 75 Urb.-mr~ 67
~ Oh ~o Domimun 79. Shawnet St 71
._ Wabh 66 Ge11C'va .5'i

f.U.

210
2-Cnstaha Margareua (6) 14-1 . . .
169
3-Manon Plea.sanr m 1]-I "". . . .
.149
4-Amanda-Ciearcreck (2) 14-1 ................ 120
5-Lorain Cleamew (2) 14-2.. ............... ., 10~
6-S Euclid Regtna 11 -2 ............................ 99
7-Akron Manchester (I) 12·2 ....................... 86
8-W. SalemNWI2-I ..................... , ...... 85
9- Morral Ridgedale ll·J ............................56
10-Rocky Riv. Luth. Wesr IJ -2 ................. ..41
Othen receiving 11 or mort points: 11Cassrown M1ami Eost (I) 40. 12-Homler Pamck
Henry .\5 1.1-ALBANY ALEXANDER 27 14Bluftton 19 15-New Middletown Springlield 15

Division IV
Iwn

f.U.

1-Ber\tn Ht land (20) IS-O . .
238
2-S .~ Charlesto n SE (3) I J-1 .... .
. .. . . 202
-' -Bascom Hopewell-Loudon Il- l .. .. .. .. .. . 185
4-Lakeslde Danbury IJ-1 .......................... IJ5
5-Cm. Hill s Chr. Acad. {2) 15..() ..... . . . ..... 120
6-N. Rob 'n Col. Crawford 1~ - I ~ .. .. .. . . ...972
?-Zanesville Rosecran s 11 -L......... ..............65
8-Cin. Sumll\ll Country Day 13-2 ................... 49
9- Van Buren unk ................................ .43
!0-Bork.ins 14-l. ....................................... .38
Others rec:elving ll or more points: II ·
Amwerp )5. 12- Mompelier 28 l.l-Danville 25. 14~bria Stem MarioR Local 17. I 5-0uovilte ll

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Akron Manchesrer 76, Rhtman 29
Alliance 40, Canton Timken 27
Archbold 65, Penisville 47
Athens 54, Lancaster 49-0T
Ayersville 58, Fon Jennings 52
Bellefomame 46, Graham 33
Bexley 82, Worthingmn Chr. 47
Canton McKinley 49, E Canron 37
Carding! on 59, Sparta Highland S I
Cen1erburg 65, New Albany 40
Ctn Co!erair1 57, LJma Sr. 3~
Cm Finneytown 67, Cin. Deer Park J3
~ ------

324

----

HOLES

OF

..

CMAMPIONSHIP

GOLf:

~HL standings'

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlunlic Dlvbion

•

·

:r..m
n 1. r
Ph11odelplua ................ 27 !0 II

fll. liE .GA

ON

48J2( ' JJI 1
4.1 113 131 '

Southea!l D.tvlslon
1
Carolillll .... .............. 2.~ 18 8 S4 121
Florida .. ,..........1....... 1817-12 48 117
Washmgton
. . ..... , 17 26 4 .18 110
Tnmpa 811y. .. .. ,. ... .. II 34 4 26 98

-·-

118

124
129
171

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W ..................................L TPu GF GA
Detroir ........ 1""" ......... 24 21 4 52 143 128
St. Louis ............ : ...... ,J9 18 9 47125117
&lt;Nuhvllle ........ : ............ l827 4 '40 113 156
Chlcoso .. .
,
14 27 8 36 110 155'
Norlhwut Diwlsion
Colorado
.
26 19 4
Edfnonton ,.... ,r .: ...... , 19 ~I 7
Cals1uy ... ,_ .. ,
..... 16 27 l
Vancou\er . .
16 26 6

56
45
39
]8

PadOc Division.
Dallas ...... .. ..... .. ......... .10 9 8
Phoenix ......................25 12 10
SanJose ....................... l620 12 ·
AnaheLm ........................ l7 22 9
LosAngeles ................. l728 4

68 141 96
60 127 99
44 109 115'
4.' 118 119 ,
]8 117 135

96
60139 122

JJl 120
I.U 124
126 152 .
120 142

It was a brutal, physical night for
the Southern Tornadoes: but it may
also have been a "gut check" for the
boys in purple.
On Tuesday night, Southern,
coming off a golden opportunity,
home-court Joss to Miller, was on the
menu as easy prey after Vinton
County defeated Wellston last weekend. Southern didn't like the menu,
however, and put up a good fight,
despite losing a couple key veterans,
in the process as Vinton County

t

TheSday's ·S&lt;6res

Colorado al Buflalo, 7 p m,
Vancouver at Momreal, 7 p m
Tal)lpa Bay t¥ ,Wdhington, 7 p m.
blew Jersty at Carolina, 7 p m
Toronto at Aorida. 7 30 p' m•.
N Y Islanders at Detroit, 7 JO p m
Ottawa r~r Edmomon, 9 p 1m . ·
Olicago at Aoaheim, 10 30 p.,m '
'

55 146 126
45 127 ·IH
34 116 ISO
61 160 142
60 144 107
56 129 97

'

SEVEN

IN

..

ALABAMA

1s easy. ..
•

The golf isn't.
...'

•

..

I

I)

-...-,;..

qhio H.S. boys' scores

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20~

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:.r
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HAMPTON
COVE

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NATIONAL

CAMBRIAN

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Huntsville

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1.1~

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SILVER

RIDGE ·

nipped the Tornadoes 69-59.
Seniors Troy Hoback and Jerrod
Mills went down with injuries as a
result of the physical beating the
bulkier Vikings unleashed . Despite
the losses, Southern stayed close and
placed nine players in the scoring
column. Nick Bolin Jed the"way with
14 points, Kyle Norris added 12,
Mitchell Walker eight, Adam
Cummings seven, Chris Randolph
five, and Josh Da.vis six. Vinton
County was 'ed by Aaron Ward with

Fam~r

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MAGNOLIA

OX MOOR

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'

double with 17 points and -14
rebounds. Nourse was 7-of-IS frotd
the field.
·•
Kirsten Rossetti, who had just six
points and five rebounds against Rio
Grande in the previous matchup this
season, had 12 points and seve'!·
rebounds oH Tuesday. Rossetti was'
3-of-8 from the field and 6-of-7 at·
the foul line.
c
Amy Manin and Heather French
had eight points eac h. All of Martin's
points came in the second half.
Rio Grande (18-4, AMC 7-3), 'rate
17th in this week's NAJA Division I·
basketball poll , heads to Centraf
State Thursday night before returning home Saturday for a 2 p. m~·
matchup with Geneva College.
.. ;,

She was 2:C of-6 from three-point
range and finished 4-for-9 overall.
Halley finished with eight points.
four assists and four rebounds.
Rio Grande's woes continued to
center around turnovers and poor
free throw shooting. The Redwomen
turned the ball over 22 times and hit
just 13-of-27 free throw attempts.
Rio Grande missed 8-of- 15 foul
shots in the final eight minutes of the
game.
Porter finished with a game-high
•20 points. She Jed Cedarville's second half surge woth 18 points in the
final frarrie. Poner hit 9-of- 16 shots
from the field. The sophomore also
had three assists and two rebounds.
Julie Nourse, who has been a
thorn in the Redwomen's side for the
past two seasons, recorded a double-

(See RED WOMEN on Page 6) ··

steals (Brown 3); 21 turnovers, 16
assists (Jeremy Casto 6); and II
fouls.
Well ston was 9-25 on three-pointers, 23-44 on two-pointers. 3-6 at the
line with 18 rebounds (Luts 6,
Armpalu 6); nine steals (Ewing 3);
seven turnovers, ten assists (Ewing
3); and ten foul s.
Eastern lost the reserve game ~346 Jed ~y Thile Thacker with II. For
Eastern, Garrett Karr had 14, Chad

;·E

Eric 2-1-0=7, Steve Weeks 1 -Q.i~
Josh Broderick 2-0/2=4. Totals 19-G!&gt;
012=56
- .
• •:3&lt;
Wellston: Jon McDonald . 3:'3::"
0=15, Scott Sturgill 0-1-0=3, At'dtf
Armpalu 10-011=20, Randar Lu1s. l ~
1-212=7, Brett Ewing 1-2-0=8, Josh
Eastern: Erron Aldridge 0- I -0=3, Davis 0-1-0=3, Morgan Stevens lMatt Bissell3-2-0= 12, Joe Brown 6- 0=2, Kyle Stewart 7-1-113=·18:
0= 12. Jeremy Casto 2-2-0= 10, Josh Totals :ZJ-9-3/6,76
Will 2-0=4, Matt Caldwell 1-0=2,

Nelson 12, and Chris Lyons II.
Eastern was 9-25 at the foul line.
Eas.tem plays at Mill~r~riday.
\ ,
Quarter .ll!tilb. .
Eastern ..................... 13-18- 10- 1=56
Well ston ................ 15-20-24-17=76

'

16, Joslt Patterson 10, Ryan Caudill
10, and Gabe Ward 10.
Southern got off to a cold stan
and went down 16-8 , then 41 -24 at
the half. The second half. the
Tornadoes came back to a 49-3 6
third period deficit then cut into the
Viking lead 69-59 at the buzze r.
Southern missed a few easy shois
down the stretch that would have fur.ther pressured the Vikings.
Southern hit 18-40 two- pointers,
2- II three: pointers and was I 7-25 at

the lone with 33 rebounds ( Bolin·6,
Walker 10). Southern had 17
turnovers, had 13 steals, 6 assists,
and 13 fouls. Vinton County had a
23-50 two-poont noght, was I -2 on
three-pointers, and was I 9-33 at the
lone with 25 rebounds ( Patterson
II). VC had 13 turnovers , nine
steals, eight assists, and 22 fouls.
Vinton County won the reserve
game 58-50 in overtime. The game
was tied 50-50 in regulation. David
DeAioia had 15 for the winners,

Jason Eherts 14, and Travis Bethel
13. Southern was led by Garret Kiser
with I0. Jeremy Fisher nine,
Brandon Hill nine, Matt Warner nine
and Jonathan Evans eight . .
Southern goes to Waterford
Friday.
Quarter tl!.IBb
Southern .. ................. 8-16-12-23=59
Vinton County .... ...... 16-25-8-20=69
Southern: Chris Randolph 0-05/6=5, Mitchell Walker 4-0-011=8,
Benji Manuel 0-0- 112=1 , Kyle

Norris 2-2-212=12, Josh Davis 0-0618=6. Adam Williams 1-0- 012=2.
Adam Cumings 2-3/3=7, Nick Bolin
7-0:0=14, Jerrod Mills 2-0-011=4.
Totals: 18·2-171Z5=59
. Vinton County: Aaron Ward 3-1 -·
7/10=16, Jesse Reynolds 2-1-0=7,
Casey Nice 2-0-113=5, Zach Gill 10-0=2, Josh Patterson 5-0-0=10,
Ryan Caudoll 3-0-4111 =10, Tracy
Kirby I-O-I/I=3, Garth Fri 2-02/4=6, Gabe Ward 3-0-414= I ()l
Totals: 21-2-19-33=69
'' 9:.

needs liver transplant to combat rare disease
prayers of the entire NFL are with
him."
·
Lagattuta said the disease is difficult to diagnose and can go undetected for years. He initially thought i1

mighl be a gall bladder problem
when Payton told him in October
that he had felt ill for a few months.
The liver problem was diagnosed
within the last two weeks.

Lagattuta said Payton has signifi- oames bile from the liver to the
cant bile-duct blockage. To aid his intestines.
"It's amazing, I can eat anything I
digestion and give him adequate
nutrition, a plastic tube was surgical(See PAYTON on Page 6) ·
ly insened between tthe vessel that

a

Getting
here
•

Each of our 18 COUilieS 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'll have all day.
One toll-free call gets you champioru;hip
golf and hotel accommodations.

and Well ston scored on both posses"
sions to lead 32-3 1. Then, Wellston
came down arid hit a three pointer
after Eastern got a five second call.
The 7-0 drove on that st retch changed
. the entorc com plexion of the game.
After three rounds the score stood
59-41 , and 76-56 for the 'finale .
Eastern hit 6-13 three-pointers,
and was 19-47 on two-pomters ·and
was 0-2 at the line with 33 rebounds
(Will 8, Brown 8). Eastern had four

By RICK GANO .
transplant at !he Mayo Clinic, where
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP)- Walter former Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy
Payton, gaunt, tearful and barely Tucker received a lover.transplant in
resembling the dashing, durable 1996 for the same disease. Tucker
Chicago Bears' Hall of Farner who was on a waiting list for four months.
rushed his way into the NFL record
Lagattuta said 88 percent of peebooks, got to the point quickly on pie who recetve a liver transplant are
Tuesday:
alive after a year, and the Jong~ term
He has
rare lover disease and survival rate is " very promising." He
needs a transplant to Jive.
said most patients can return to an
"To the people that really care active life if they receo ve ~ transabout me, just contonue praying," plant.
said the 44-year-old Payton, who
Patients in Paylon's condition surchoked up when he embraced his 17- vive an average of two years without ,
year-old son, Jarrett.
a transplant, the doctor said .
The disease, pnmary sclerosong
Doctors say he won 't get prefer·
cholangitis, afflicts ju~t three in entia! treatment because of his
I 00,000 people, said Payton's physi- celebrity.
'
cian, Dr. Joseph Lagattuta. The cause
News of Payton·'s illness sobered
of the disease, which blocks the bole . those who knew hom as a muscular,
ducts, is unknown , but isn't related to fearless player.
alcohol , steroids, hepatitis or
"We're all humans and regardless
of how rich we are, how fortunate we
immune deficiency, he said.
Palients· in Payton 's co ndition sur- are, whatever we maybe, things like
vive an average of two years unless this happen," said retored Bears fullthey receive a liver transplant, back Roland Harper, who blocked
Lagattuta said. Symptoms include for Payton .
Bears owners Ed and Virginia
fatigue and jaundice - yellowing of
the pigment of the eyes and skon.
McCaskey ossued a brief statement
Asked if he was scared, the NFL's saying they were "devastated to hear
all-time rushing leader snapped: that Walter is sick."
'
"Am I scared' Hell yeah, I'm scared.
" He's a very dear person to our
Wouldn 't you be scared? "
'
family and the entire Beats organiza"But it 's not in, my hands any- tion. We'll do all we can to help
more," he added. " It's in God's Walter in hi s current battle."
hands."
Said NFL commissioner
In 13 years with the · Bears, Tagliabue: "The Jove,
Payton's trademarks were hos vaulting goal line leaps· and a punishing
running style. He stiff-armed and
barreled past tacklers on the open
field almost as often as he dodged
thetn.
Rumors about Payton 's health
spread last week after he appeared at
a news conference where his son
announced he would play college
football for Miami. Payton said those
rumors prompted his disclosure.
"We wanted to get everything
straight before things got bad," said
Payton, who wore sunglasses and an
NFL jacket and bluejeans that couldn't hide his thinness.
Payton is being evaluated for a

N.Y. hl(lflders at B~on. 1 p,m
Vancouver at NY. Rangers. 7·30 pcm
Montreal at Philadelphia, 7:30pm.
New Jersty at St Louis, 8 p m
Nuhvil,lc: at Calgary, 9 p.m.
· ..
San Jose at Ph~i x . 9 p m
Chicago at Lo!'*ngeles, 10:30 p m.

SITES

Turley's hands with 15 seconds left.
French picked up her fifth foul to
send Turley to the foul line. Turley
missed both charity shots allowing
I he Yellow Jackets to race the length
of the floor. Porter's shot with time
running out caromed off the back of
the rim and the Red women survived
xet another dicey encou nter with
Cedarville.
·
Turley led Rio Grande with 16
points , hitting 7-of- 11 field goal
attempts. She also had eight
rebounds , three assists and two
steals.
.
Karley Mohler and Mindy Pope
each had · 15.'\ points and eight
rebounds . Mohler was 7-of-17 from
the field , while Pope knocked down
5-of-9 field goal chances.
Carne Carson added II points.

rally propels Wellsto.n past ·Eastern 76.-56

and sharpshoot ing skills, while
Wellston relied heavily on early pepetration and the presence of 6-foot10 Estonian exchange student Ardo
Armpalu.
'
Wellston also began to air things
out, but Eastern never wavered and
Jed much of the second quarter.
Ahead 31-28 woth 1-:45 in second
quarter, Eastern began 1ts tail spin .
Eastern turned the ball over two
straight times on the Wellston pres, ..

NFL Hall of

Thursday's games

.

win 78-7~

Vinton County gets 69-59 win vs. injury-plagued Tornadoes

Colorado .l, Bonon 2 '
Toronro 3, Tampa;Btly 0
Piusburgh S, Bufralo 3
, ~algary 2, Phoenrx 2-tie

65 I ~2

Newlersey ................ 2715 6
Piusburgh .................. 24 15 1
NY Rangers ......... ...... 192~ 1
NY Islanders ........... .. .15 30 4
•
Northeast DMslon
Toronto .......................... 29 17 3
Ouawa ..
..... 27 IS 6
Buffalo.
.. . 24 I5 8

COURSES

&lt; I '20 20 . 8
Boston ..........................
Momreal.. .. ............... .18 24 8

The Eastern Eagles put up a great
fight early; but miscues led to their
demise as the Wellston Rockets
blitzed to a 76-56 inter-divison TriValley Conference win.
The game was closer than the
final indicaled and halted Eastern's
five game wi~ streak, stifling one of
the hottest streaks in southeastern
Ohio. Eastern started out strong and
kept pace with Wellston early. The
Eagles .were using their quickness

Tonight's games

Hockey

18

0

fl&gt;

1-Wuuse.on( IJJ 12 -0 ......
2-Shelby (2) 15-t
1-WAVERI.Y f.ll lti·O
-l.fohrnd ~minMy 12) 1-1-1
5-Lima UathCI) Il - l
6-Hnmilton Badin (1) 11 -1
7-Chcslerland W Gc:ruf a 14·1
M· Mt:di na Buckeye (I) .l·l

•

"To stay competitive, you've got
to distribute the dollars around If
you put it all into one guy or two
guys, you ' re goi ng to have a hard
time stayin g competitive, " Towers
said.
The Padres also got middle
infielder Damian Jackson, 25, ·who
ha. spent the last three seasons at
Triple-A, and Josh Hams, 2 1. who
'pitched for Class A Burlington .
Jackson batted .261 in 131 games for
lndoanapolis last year, struck out 125
times in 517 at-bats and made 44
errors at shortstop.
The Reds needed a power hitter
- they hit on ly 138 homers last sea·
son and traded aoet Boone, thcu·
leader with 24, to Atlanta. But
Bowden had figured they cou ldn 't
afford one until they got closer to
their new stadium .
. When the Padres called last
Thursday and offered Vaughn .
Bowden lobbied managing executi ve
John Allen to increase the payroll
over $30 million and make lhe deal
possihle. Allen upprnvcd.

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Bowden said the Red s can afford
to keep Vaughn for the entire season
if fans buy more tickels now that he 's
here . Otherwise, they ' ll look 10 trade
him in July for prospects who fit into
the rebuolding.
Bowden had repeatedly tned to
trade Sanders, 31 , who had a breakthrough year in 1995 but struggled in
the playolls - 138 with 19 strikeout s in 29 ar-hats - and has n't done
much since He played in on ly 81
games on 1990 an&lt;r So in 1997
because of vanous inJun es.
Last season. he hit .268 1n I35
games with 14 homers. struck out
137 time s in 481 at -hat s and was
slowed by inJuries to Ius back, ankle ,
hand, ham stri ng and robs . He thinks
San Diego provides a chance 10 stan

over.
"I just felt it was time for me to
go somewhere else, I guess. "
Sanders said. " I jusl felt it was hest
for me to move on .There's no bod
hlood or anything. It 's JUSt some·
thing that I'm glad haprx;ncd ."

NEC

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Marysville 42, Delaware 40
I .
McClain 62, Clinton-Mauie 4A
MilfOrd 55, Lalwta S. 46
Minster ~2. Russia 36
Nnpoleofl 51 , Hicksville 45
Neweo~utnwn 56 Frerport Lakclond 26
'"
Northridge 49 , Li cki ng Hu 43-0T
Ottttwa-Giandorf 63, Bryan 22
Pery sburg 62. Ross ford 27
Piketon 7~ . Zone Trace 66
Reynoldsburg 46, Newark 4J
Richmond Dale SE 47, Huntrngton 42
Ridgedale 63. N,. UniOn 41
Rtverdale 45, Htlrdin Nonhern ]5
S Central 64, Plymoulh 22
Sandusky Perk.ins 61 , Seneca E. _,4
St Henry 80, An~onio 40
Tecumseh .\8, Troy 29
liftir1 61 , Belit'vue 44
Tiffin Columbian 61 '. Bellevue 44
Tuscarawas Val 51, Dalton 1J · ?
Thslaw 43 , Orrville 27
'
Um oto 51 , Aderi11 ] I
Upper Arlington 50, Chillicothe 23
Van Buren 12. Elmwood 46
Van Wert 59, Convoy CrrstvLew 48
Vanlue 42, Arcadia J9
,
W. Salem Nonhwestern 48. SmithVJIIe JH
Wndsworth 9]. Cloverleaf 40
WDtk.ins Memonal47, Big Walnut 36 ,
Wauseon fJI , linora ~8
Westerville N. 58, Htlhard Dtl'lltdson 45
WeSifoll 71, Pllint Val. 62
Willilrd 57, Ashland 32
Woodmere 52, Oak Harbor 30
World Harvest ~4, Welhngton ~9

'

1-M:.son CJ9) 16-0 ...... ... ..
2.19
2- Pickw n@tOn ( I ) 16-1 .
202
-:l- Wom1er (1) 1.5-0 . "':
. "':'18.f
4-Tol Cent. Cnth 14-0 .
. .. 146
5-Pnrma Hts. Holy Nalllt' (2) 15-0
...... n1
fl. You Botwdman 12- 1. . ...... . . ... ..
.. 86
7-Wnd.tworth 1 2-2 ~....~ ......... ,.... ,............ 84
· s-Enst ltlke North 12-3 .......
. ..... / ....... ...611
9·Cln. Princeton 15- 1 .......... ,. . . . . . . .. ... 64
lO· Benvercreek I I J 14-0 ...... ... .. ......... . . .. 50
Olh~rs rrc:rhing 11 or mort polnls: II ·Grove
City 27 12-Newark 15. I J- Massillon Wash•neto n

Iwn

Non-conference

.

Division III

Cm Amison 65, Cin Thrpin 39
.
Cin Hughe! 61. Cin. Walnut H1lls 30
Cin Modem' 57, Cin Indian Hili5J-OT
Cln Mariemorlt 56, Cin Readrng 54
CJ n. MI. Healthy 51 , Cm Western H11ls 40
Cm. Mr. Notre Dame 40. Cm. Mercy 35
Cln. Pnnceton 45, Lakota w 28
C! n. Roger Bacon 44, Cin. Ursuline ~2
Ci n. Seton 6], Cm McAuley 51
Cm St. Ursula 52, Ctn. McNicholas 50
Cm Taft 98. Cm. Aiken 30
C'in Winton Woods 54. Cm. Woodward .J6
Ci~ Wyoming .l 9, Cin Taylor ]5
Cl'!'ar Fork 72, Omano .\3
Colond Crawford 68, Moh&lt;twk 48
Col Academy 49, Mnranatha Chr. l6
Col Bttchcroft .'i9, Col East 58
Co l BrookhB\'C'n 7J, Col Centennial 28
' Col Eustmoor 62. Walnut Rtdge 41
Co l. Independence 6.l Col Wrs1 54
Co l MLfllln 58. Col. Linden-McKtniey 18
Co l Northltllld 69. Col. Whetstone 26
Col. South 46. Col. Bn,gs 34
Col Tree of l1fe 57. Col. School for Gtrls 41
Col. Watterso n 48, Teays Val 37
Crestli ne 44, Galion Northmor 39-0T
Day Chri suan 62. Spring ShaY.·nee 41
Delphos Jefferson 53 , Columbus Grove 4.~
Edgerton 60, Stryker 38
Evangel Chr. 47, Grace Haven 29
Fairv1ew 56, Paudling 47
Findlay Heritage Chr. 37, Urb11na Grace Chr. 32
Fort Jennings 58, Ayen ville 52-.,._
Fort Loram.Je 54. New Bmreen 53 .
Fostorra St. We11dclin 55. Marion Ca1h. 43
Gahanna 52, Grovepon 42
Georgetown 55. William~burg 17
Granville 55, Uti ca J9
Grove" City 85, Dublin Coffman 67
H11mi1Lon 48, Cin. Sycamore 40
Heath 80, Lakewood 44
Hillrard Darby 56. Thomas Worthington 45
Hopewell-Loudon 74, Upper Saodusky68
Huron 77, Port Clinron 49
•
Jonathan Alder 57, LAndon 46
Kalida 75, Spencerv1lle 42
Kan~as Lalr:ota 48, Old Fort J6
Kenton Ridir 84, Sp\'ing Northwestern ~8
L1berty Union 48, Berne Un1on 29
Licking Val 49, Johnstown 27
Losail 49, Galhpohs 4J
l.AJcas 46, Mandleld Cbr 28
Manche ster 76., Rinma.n 29~
Mansfield Sr 65, Bucyn.u 59
Manon Elgm 59, Kenton 51
Marion Harding 45. Le11.m!ton 44
Manon Pleasant 52, C¥ey 48-.?T

Division II

~ W1lberhlfl't= I 16. Asbttry 90

,,.

9-Cortland Lakevtew 14-1 .. . . . .. .
41
IO·Oimsted Falls l]-2. . .
. . .. . ..18
Othtrs rtctivlng IZ or more points: 11 -You
Mooney 37. 12-Uppc:r Sandusky 36 1.1-Pembervtllr
Eastwood 34 14 (lte)·Ctn St. Ursuln, Vtnnilion 20.
16-Co l Hartley 19. 17-VINCENTWARREN{IJ 18.
18-Dresden
Tri -Valley
16.
19-ByeS\ ille
Meadowbrook IJ.

:rum
1-Cie VlllaAngC'la-SJ(II) Il-l

kick"start the Redwomen's run. She to within 46-44 with 12:30 to play.
reached the millennium mark on a Amanda Porter scored four points
1ypically athletic move to the basket during the Cedarville rally.
from the right side of the Jane and
Leading '6,1-60 with 7:44 left in
was fouled by Cedarville's Charity the game, the Red women seemed to .
Cole in midair. Halley completed the put .the game ou t of reach once more
three-point play to give Rio Grande a . when they went on a 13-4 outburst to
26-23 lead. She had 999 career on crease the gap to 74-64 with 3:0 I ·
points entering Tuesda~·s contest.
left. Following a jumper by Carrie
As the second half got under way, Carson that gave Rio Grande the 10it appeared Rio Grande was on its point cushion, Heather French
way to a blowout victory. The drained a long three-pointer that
Redwomen quickly stretched their ignited a 13,4 outburst the Yellow
six-point lead to 12 points with 15:20 Jackets.
·remaining. Renee Turley.'s layup
Amanda Poner hit a driving layup
gave R1o Grande its largest le~d of with 31 second s left to pull
the contest at 44-32.
Cedarville (Il - l 0; AMC 3-7) to
However, substitute Amy Martin within one point at 78-77. Back-tokeyed a 12-2 Cedarville comeback back turnovers, first by Rio Grande's
with six points over a two minute Halley then by Cedar\'ille's Julie
span that brought the Yellow Jackets Nourse, put the ball in Renee

Secon~~quarter

Ohio li.S. girls' p'oll

Iwn

J

J

er to compete, to be rlght there. Then
all of a sudden now, it's like it's a ·
whole new team."
In that sense, it's reminiscent of
. the FJ.orida Marlins, who won the
World Series in 1997 and lhfn
slashed their payroll . Jhe Padres
haven't done it to the same extreme
and insist !here's Jittle,similarity.
General manager Kevin :rowers
said the Padres traded.Vaughn in part
because they didn't think they could
afford him after this season, when
he ' ll make $5.75 miilion in the final
year of hos contract. Sanders makes
$3.7 million this season and has an
option for tne same amount in 2000.

Division I

Far West

" Azus:1 ):l;x:ifk 7J Fresno Pne~fi c 64
• Concordm Calif. 90. Cal Bapt1 ~ 1 52
Norre .Dame. Caltf. 57. Mrll s 25
~ Sem rle Pxlfic 85. W Oregon 82
~ Southern Ca l Co li 62. Westmont 4J

••

Houston or Atlanta or Los Angeles.
But I don't see why we can't compete on a daily basis with the next set
of clubs."
The question .in San Diego is
whether the Padres will be in shape
to compete for another World Series.
A few weeks after they got swept by
the New York Yankees, the Padres
got voter appro.val for a new baseball
stadium that seemed to indicate a
bnght future.
Vaughn is wondering about the
franchise's direction.
"I think all the players were misJed," Vaughn said. "Everyone I' ve
talked to is a little disappointed in the
fact that all we were told is if we got
the stadium, we could be kept togeth-

COLU MBUS. Oh1 o fA P) - How a stme pane: I
of spom wrtteu and broadcasters rates Ohto htgh
school gtrls baske1bnll team s m the founh of six
weekly rcg ulfU' season polls or JIJ98-99 lor 'The
Associated Preu {records through tnme s of Jan ' I)·

E. Tel( tU Hapnst 105. Trxas Cull 4S
., Texas Southrrn 72 Pra~r~e Vit"w 62
• Texas-Dullas ~6 Dall ils 48
• W1le y 54. SW Ad ventist 24

•

Ct n Scv~n Htlls 86, Cm Landma rk Chr 17
Ct n St Bernard5l , Ctn CountryDay4S
Cm. Walnut Hills 62. Crn Sycamore 57
Coldwater 70. Van Wen 51
Col Beechcrofl 105. Col. East 50 ·
Col Brookhaven 89. Col. Centennral 60
Co l Easlmoor 62. Walnut Ridge 52
· Co l Miffiin 55, Col. Linden-McKinley 52
Col. Nonhland 71, Col. Whetstone 68
Col. South 67, Col. Bnggs 65
Col. St. Charles 70, Col. Hartley 56
Col. Tree of Life 59, JOhnstown 49
Col. WestS I, Col. Independence 78
Columbus Grove 55, Conttnental 53
Danbury 66, Tol. Emmanuel Rapt . 55
Defiance 92, To! Woodward 55
DeGraff Riverside 65, Waynesfield-Goshen 60
Delaware 65, Marysv1lle 48
·
Dover 55. Canton TimkCfl 49
Dublin Scioto 52, 0\eniBnltY 42
E Lh.crpool 75, Buckeye Loco\ 40
Eastern Brown 8.l, Manchester 65
Evergreen 65; Hilltop 61
Fairbanks 69, W. Liberty-Salem 58
Fairfield 77, Lima Sr. 76-0T
Fllyeueville 6J, W. Union 60
Fmdlay Hentage 01r 78, Day Temple Chr. 57
Fort Frye 54, Shenandoah 42
Frontier 61, Honnibal River 55
Georgetown 49, Cm. Glen Este 43
Gtbsonburg 80. Ot~ego 77
Grace Haven 68, Evangel Chr. 52
Granvrllc 57, Millersport 46
Grove City 56, Dublin Coffman Sl
Groveport 68, Gahanna 61
Hilliard Darby 68, Thomas Wonhington 57
H111inrd Davidson 62, Wes1erville N, 52
Indian Lake 74, Ridgemont 61
Indian Val. 58, Carrolltoa 57
Kenton Rtdge 74, Spring Northwestern 66
Ltberty Center 57, Swamon 4.5
Licking Hts 41 , Fi~herCath JB
L1ma flarh 63 AllenE 50
Lima Perry 59. Sr Mary '§ 38
l:.mcolnvttw .58. Spencerville 41
Llltle Minll\l 74. Bellbrook 60
Logan Elm 60. Circleville .~8
Lynchburg Cia)' 58. Latham Western .52
Malvern 78, Canton He!'ltage Chr. 67
Manon Elgin 67, Spana Htghland 45
Manon Pleasant 6 1, Upper Scaoto Val. 46
Marlington 66, Salem 54
Manins Feny 67. Wellsv11lc .54
Mason 6]. K1ngs Mills 61-0T
Massil lor1 71 Orrvtlle 47
Maysyille 68 Crooksville 59
Mdlt~rmo11 NW 7], Gleriwood 54
Miami Trace 90 Hamilton Twp. 65
Mtddlctown 81 . Lakota E 48
Mtltord 56. Cin Andeuon 40 ·
Millbury Lakr 64. Elmwood 46
Mmvera 76. Akron Spnng 57
Morgan 54. Sher1dnn 52
Moun1 Vernon 5J Franklin Hrs 4'i
N Balttm orc 64, Northwood 52
N College Htll64. Cm Summn Country Day 46
New Albany 63. Donv11le 58
Norwalk 97. Huron 96 20T
Ohi o Vol Chr. 79. S Golha B
Oregon Clay 66. Findlay 58
Oregon Sni tch 47, Tol Maumee Va l. 4J
Ottawa Hill s 77. To! Christum 76
P011kersburg (W Va.) South 71. Vmcent Warren
Pt~tn c k Henry 82 McComb 61
Peebles 71. Rtpley 57
Perrysburg 78, Anthony Wayne 64
Ponsmouth 66. lromon 5-'
Ponsmouth W. 71 , Ponmsouth E. 58
Rock Hill 66, Beaver Ensrern 52
Sa11dusky 80, Fremont RllSS 69
Sandusky Perkins 59, Oak Harbor 5J
Sebring 42, Ltsbon ]9
Shelby 70, Bellevue 5 .~
Spring Northeastern 61, Urbana 48
Sprir~g Sou1h 83. Fauborn 48
Steubenville 74. Richmond Edison 44
Strasbur&amp;61. J r\\ett..Sc~t:r 47
Sylvnnia Southview 68, Rouford .56
Sylvnn1a Nonhview 54, Maumee 45
T1ffin Calvert 97. Carcy 62
To! Whi!ITlC'r 72, Fostona 57
Tn -Valley 52. Ph1lo48
Tnad 8R . Mech an i csbu ra~ 58
Upper Arling10n 72, Chil!iturhe 4J
Village A:cad ~0. Torah A.cad 41
VInton Co 69. RactllC' Southern 59
W. Holmes 59, Coshoct6n 12
W Jefferson 71, Madrson Plains 68
W. Muskingum 72. New Le~ington 49
Warsaw River View 62, John (;leon 59
Waterford 68. Nelsonville"- York 54
Wet non (W.Va ) Mndonna 67, Cadiz 56
Wellston 7fJ. Reeds\'llle Eastern 56
Wtllard .5 1. Gallon 42
World Harvest 80, Wellington 54
Worth1n11t0n Kilbourne 50, Westerville S 41
Yellow Spnngs fJI. GI"C'enon 48
Zanemlle 73. Reynoldsburg 69

Midwest

~. Capiull 89. Heidelberg 62
"', Cardinal Stmch 70. Robert Mom s '8
j Cent rnl St , Oh10 94. Spaldmg 40
,: E. Il linois 70, Aus rir~ Peay 65
~ Earlhum 52 . Kenyon 51
: LakC' Forest 71 lawrence 65
., Millik.in 8J. Carthage 7J
., Mi uouri 74, Nebraska 66
• Mount Union 56, John Carroll ~.S
"' Musk.ingum 66, Ohto Northern .52
;: North Park 82. Rockford 7J
• Northwestern, Iowa 86, Dakota Weslyn 64
~ Olivet NazarC"ne 64, St Franm, Il l 57
~ Onerbcin 99, Manena 56
~ RIO GRANDE 78. Cedarville" 77
II Ripon 46. St Norbert 39
• SE Missouri 74. Tennessee: St. 71
·
Shawnee St 87, Ohio Dominican 52
11 Spnng Arbor 114, Michigan-Denrborn.47
.. Urbana81 Mounl Vernon Nazarene 68
,• Wheat on. Ill ~ 4 Elmhurst 45

•4•

.

'

The Dally Sentinel• Page-5 -

Redwomen weather Cedarville's second-half rally,

Padres trade Vaughn to Reds for Sanders
~

~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Olilo

-· ....•. ..

I
&gt;

.,...___ ~

· .. -.- ~·-r- ..

----------'--------------------:------1
'•

�..

·1'"~- - - -~-----:-...

:hge 6 •

.. . . . .-

.

made exactly I 00 three-pointers in
12 games. The Warriors have twice
hit 15 in a game .
Everybody.'s coming to the real ization that it takes three 10 tango:
Oak Hill hit 17 -of-39 three-point·
ers - and.still lost to Wellston 7468; Kade Dillon nailed a three-pointer a1 the buzzer 10 lift Bucyrus over
Tiffin Columbian , 62-61 ; .with seven
seconds left, Greenwich · South
Central's. Brad Grose made a threepointer for a 69-68 win over Ashland
Mapleton ;· ·and Frederickt'own 's
Chris Braddock beat the buzzer with
a three-pointer to send the game into
overtime before Clear Fork's Dan
Crider hit a three at the overtime
buzzer for a 49-47 victory .
. BIG
NUMBERS:
Daniel
Hannan scored 40 points and
added 17 rel;&gt;ounds in Pomeroy
Meigs' 68-45 win · over Henilock
Miller; Upper Sandusky 's Lyndsey
OeWiu notched 37 poims in a 79-46
triumph against Bellevue ; lana

Butler had 35 points, 15 rebounds · was forming outside the Highland
and nine blocked shots in Fin~lay gym shortly after school ended and
Liberty-Benton's 52-47 win over the game was sold out by 5:30p.m.
Kalida; J.R. Atkinson's 30 points in
Columbus West, gunning for its
an 81-72 OT loss to Cuyahoga second straight20-0 season, lost for
Heights included six three-pointers; the first time in 15 games when it
Columbus Beechcroft's Delano , squandered a five-point lead with 20
Thomas recorded 29 points, 16 seconds left to lose to . Columbus
rebounds and I 0 blocked ·shots in a Walnut Ridge 78-77. The Scots hit a
Columbus p~ir of three-pointers while West was
78-68
win
over
Whetstone; Zanesville's Andre missing a foul shot
Hodge had 14 assists in an 89-66 win
FAST STARTS: Bluffton beat
over Columbus South; Columbus Spencerville 99-37, thanks to a 46-8
Watterson seven-footer Mall Seibert first-quarter lead in which the Pirates
had a career-high II blocked shots in missed only two shots. The 99 points
a 67-57 win over Columbus St. was a school record.
Charles; and Fremont St. Joseph
Not too far away, Van .Buren's
guard Melissa Geller et a school girls scored 40 points in the second
record with II assists in 63-49 win period of an 89-58 win over Old
over Old Fort.
Fort; Michelle Estell had 16 points in
SHOWDOWNS: Junior Seth the opening quarter and 33 in the
Hoyng scored · 19 points · to help game in Amanda-Ciearcreek 's 70-52
defending state champion Sparta win over Ashville Teays Valley;
Highland beat previously unbeaten Pickerington h~ld Newark (0-2 vs.
Cardington Lincoln 59-49 for brag- the Tigers, 13-0 vs. everyone else)
ging (ights in Morrow County. A line without a field goal in the first half

'

'

By H.W. SINER
.. Going into the 1999NBAseason,
here's a look at the Central Division.
ATLANTA HAWKS (50-32 in
Center
Dikembe
1997-98}:
-Mutombo ( 13.4 points per game,
11.4 rebounds per game, 3.4 blocks
per game) was the NBA's Defensive
Player of the Year. PG Mookie
'Blaylock ( 13.2 ppg. 6.7 assists per
.game, 2.6 steals per game} was on
' the NBAAil-Defensive second team.
·PF Alan Henderson (14.3 ppg, -6 .4
rpg) won NBA honors as mostimproved. SG Steve Smith (20.1
'ppg) knows how to score . But coach
Lenny Wilkens' Hawks need some
more assists.
· CHARLOTTE HORNETS (5 13'1): It's a shon season. So SF Glen

Rice (22.3 ppg) bener heal fast He's
out for a month or so arter elbow
surgery. The new center is moody vet
Derrick Coleman ( 17.6 ppg, 9 .9 rpg).
He might be a bigger headache for
coach Dave Cowens than surly PF
Anthony Mason ( 12 .8 ppg, 10.2 rpg) .
The backcoun is OK. SG Bobby
Phils (10.4 ppg) is a top defender. PG
David Wesley (6.5 apg) can play. But
depth might be another Cowens
worry.
CHICAGO BULLS (62-20):Who
are these guys'! Michael Jordan
retired. Sconie Pippen is gone.
Dennis Rodman? Forget him . Coach
Phil Jackson left soon after his Bulls
won their sixth NBA title. Rookie
coach· Tim Floyd inherits SF Tony
Kukoc ( 13.3 ppg), SG Ron Harper

Miami Heat
'

on the way to a 62-19 rout; and Van
Buren's girls haven' t won a conference title in 24 years but are '13-0
overall and 5-0 'in the league. ·
FAST FINISHES: On "'Friday
night, freshman Mall Will tossed in a
,15-foot jumper with a second left to
give Tipp City Bethel a 66-64 victory over Tri-Village. Fast-forward 24
hours and this lime Will threw the
inbounds assist to John Plunkell who
hit the winning shot in a 73-71 win
over Dayton N onhridge.
Dresden Tri-Valley is 14-0, thanks
in large measure to the heroics of
senior point guard Andy Slaughter.
He hit-two free throws to force overtime in a 61-60 win over West
Muskingum; a shot at the buzzer to
give Philo its only loss, 37-35; hit
another shot with three seconds left
to beat Crooksville 45-44; and hit a
foul shot with 1.5 seconds remaining
in a 46-45 win over Maysville.
Due to football · playoffs and the
weather, Tiffin Calvert had onl'y

played four games by ·Jan. 14. But
the Senecas ran off eight games in
the next 16 days- winning all eight
- to get to 11-1. Included were five
games in eight days .
MILESTONE: Dave Merchant,
once an Ohio State player, is now
recognized more for his coaching
d
accomplishments. He ran his recor .
. to a 300-204 in his 24 seasons with
Friday's
71-58
victory
over
Loveland. His son Brady, quarterback of the Division II state-champi- .
on football · team and headed for
Harvard, had 28 points, 10 rebounds
and 7 assists.
·
LONG
NIGHT:
Beaver
Eastern's boys beat Portsmouth
Notre Dame 89-75; -the other numbers wtre mon: r:emarkable. The
teams combining for 99 foul sh!)ts
Eastern was 37-for-58 aod
Notre Dame 29-for-41.

m~y

'

.

(9.3
ppg}
and · center
Bill
Wennmgton. Forwards Roy Rogers,
Chuck Person and Martin Muursepp
were brought in. Guard Bubba Wells
is another addi tion. They don't seem
like defending champions.
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS (4735): Coach. Mike Fratello's you ng
guns are back. Center Zydrunas
ll gauskas ( 13.9 ppg, 8.8 rpg) and PG
Brevin Knight (9.0 ppg, 8.2 apg)
were NBA All-Rookie first team
stars. Forwards Cedric Henderson
( I0.1 ppg} and Derek Anderson ( 11.7
ppg) made the NBA All-Rookie second team . Vets Sean Kemp ( 18.0
ppg, 9.3 ·rpg) and Wesley· Person
(14.7 ppg) did well. Even so, the
Cavs need to improve on scoring,
rebounds, turnovers and fouls.

DETROIT PISTONS (37-45}: SF ·
Grant Hill (21~ 1 ppg, 7.7 rpg, 6.8
apg) can't do everything. So PF, Loy
Vaught and cen(er Christian L.aettner
were imported to help. But Vaught is·
coming off back surgery; and
Laellner will be out until March with
a heel injury. PG Joe Dumars, 35, has
played in 980 games for Detroit
Coach Alvin Gentry needs to shore
up that spot, too. Center Brian
Williams (16.2 ppg, 8.9 rpg) and SG
Jerry Stackhouse (15.8 ppg) are
good. .
INDIANA PACERS (58-24): ·
Larry Bird was the NBA Coach of
the Year in his first season. No wonder. His team was 12th in the league
in points scored and fifth in points
allowed. SG Reggie Miller (19.5

ppg) is a threat. Center Rick Smits
(16.7 ppg, 6.9 . rpg)' and SF Chris
Mullin (I L3 ppg} back him up. PG
Mark Jackson set a Pacer mark with
713 assists . PF . Dale Davis is the
team's all-time rebounder. Import
Sam Perkins will come off the bench
to play up front.
~
MILWAUKEE BUCKS (36-46):
The new Bucks coach, George Karl,
likes rookie · PF Robert Traylqr, a
Charles Barkley-type. Milwaukee
can use such strength and agility. SF
Glenn Robinson averaged a teambest; career-high 23.4 ppg. SG Ray
Allen had career highs in scoring
(19.5 ppg), rebounds (4.9 pg) assists
(4.3 pg) and steals (1.35 pg). PG
Terrell Brandon (16.8 ppg, 7.7 apg,
2.22 spg) runs things. PF Tyrone Hill

(10.0 ppg, 10.7 rpg} had 24 doubledoubles.
TORONTO RAPTORS ( 16-66):
The young Raplors allowed I04.2
points per game, more than any other
team in the NBA last season. So Pf
Charles Oakley, a solid defender,
was brought in. Import center Kevin
Willis is also physical. Plus, Toronto
acquired center Michael Stewart. SG
Doug Christie (16.5 ppg) was the top
scorer. Coach Butch Carter also
counts on PF John Wallace ( 14.0
ppg) for points. SF Tracy McGrady
(7.0 ppg) and PG Alvin William s
(6.0 ppg) help some.
Copyrightl999 NEWSPAPER
BNTERPRISE ASSN.

have inside track -to win NBA Atlantic again

Miami foul less and still play aggressive defense? That might boost coach
Pat Riley's squad. Center Alonzo
Mourning (19 .2 ppg, 9.6 rpg, 2.24
blocks per game) niust stay healthy
and play smarter. Even so, he had 24
double-doubles. PG Tim Hardaway
(18 .9 ppg, 8.3 apg) was an All-NBA
second-team star. At small forward,
Jamal Mashburn ( 15.1 ppg) was reliable. Vet SG Terry Porter was
brought in to contribute in the backcourt. Forward import Clarence
Weatherspoon can become · a factor
up front
NEW JERSEY NETS '(43-39):
Cemer Jaysnn Williams (12 .9 ppg.
13.6 rpg)_was re-signed after an AllStar season. PFKeith Van Horn (19.7
ppg) was an NBA All-Rookie first-

team pick. Coach John Calipari also
has SF Kendall Gill (13.4 ppg) and
center Rony Seikaly up front. His
backcourt features SG Kerry Killles,
a three-point specialist, and volatile
PG Sam Cassell (19.6 ppg, S apg).
The· imports are center Jim
Mcilvaine and guard Eric Murdoch.
To improve, the Nets have to get better shms, play stronger defense and
foul less.
NEW YORK KNICKS (43-39):
Expect more scoring. Butwhat about
rebounds? And defense? Coach Jeff
Van Gundy has a younger, more athletic team. If the pieces fit, the
Knicks can be tough. Controversial
swingman Latrell Sprewell has talent. So does emerging forward
Marcus Camby. Like them, Dennis

Scott and Kurt Thomas are new in
New Yqrk. Vet center Patrick Ewing
(20.8 ppg) must make way for SG
Allan Houston (18.4 ppg) and
Sprewelllo shoot The point guards- Charlie Ward (5.7 apg) and Chris
Cpilds-- are unproven.
ORLANDO MAGIC ( 41-4 J ):
Getting to 600 career wins wasn 'I
easy for coach Chuck Daly. Orlando
·players missed a total of 277 games
last season due to injury or illness.
Anfernee Hardaway (t6.4 ppg) is
back at point guard after a knee ailril,ent limited .him to only 19 games.
SG Nick Anderson (15.3 ppg)
regained his &lt;?ld form just in lime.
The frontcoun has two hard-working
p(~yer~: I'F Horace Gram (12 .1 ppg,
8.1 rpg) and Charles Outlaw (9.5

ppg, 7.8 rpg). Newly arrived center
Isaac Austin (13.5 ppg, 7.1 rpg)
might boost the scoring.
PHILADELPHIA 76ers (3 1-51):
Coach Lat;y Brown is a ~ood
teacher. He d beuer be. The Stxers
doq''t have much. Forn.ow, Brown is
lryt_ng to talk sense mlo hot-shot
Allen Iverson (22.0 ppg). The fiery
pomt guard led the team m seven calegories. Rookie .SG Larry Hughes is
a ·top prospect. Up front, Joe Smith
(14.6 ppg) and Tim Thomas (11.0
ppg) are paired as forwards. The cent~r. is Theo Ratliff. Among those
brought in to piay are Matt Geiger,
Harvey Grant and George Lynch.
But quality, not quantity, remains the
problem.
WASHINGTON WIZARDS (42-

40): Problems away from the court
foiled the Wizards. The impact of
injuries was just as bad. The arrival
of SG Mitch Richmond (23.2 ppg) is
designed to steady_ the situation for
. coach Bernie Bickerstaff. Now PF
Juwon Howard (18.5 ppg, 7.0 rpg,
3.3 apg) will team in the frontcourt
with SF Calbert Cheane (12.8 ppg)
. Y .
and center Terry Davts. Ous Thorpe . .
can _also play . up · front. For
Washmgton, poml guard Rod
Strtckland ( 17 .8 ppg, 5.3 rpg) led the :
. NBA 1n asstsls (10.5 per game) last: .
season.
Copyrightl999 NEWSPAPER ,
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

:Sca·ndal-plagued SLOC sees Romney as possible new boss
· By KRISTEN MOULTON
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Min
~ -l«&gt;mney, a millionaire venture capitalist with Utah roots, is the front.rynner to take over leadership of the
·l&gt;esieged committee organizing the
· ~002 Winier Olympic Games.
• - Romney, who has dabbled in polides while helping to build Bain
: c;apital Inc . in Bosto n, has been
approached about the job, a so urce
k'nowledgeable abouphe search for a
n'ew ·. Salt
Lake
Organizing
· Gommillee chief executive officer
.·~aid Tuesday.
. While Gov. Mike Leaviu is not
yet ready to say Romney is the per· son who will help steer the committee away from the scandal enveloping the Olympics, he and SLOC
chairman Raben Garff are preparing
. to announc~ a reorganization of the
:commtllee.
. Among the changes could be
. expand in~ the committee's boa~~ of
\J'Uslees · to add more votces, as

payton...
(Continued from Page 5)
want, as much as I want, and i still
can 't gain any weight ," Payton said.
In his final season with the Bears
in 1987 , the 5-11 Payton was listed at
202 pounds.
.
, Ask~d how much he weighed
1
now, Plf)lton wouldn '1 say.
Instead, he replied : "You want to
)lick me up?."
· : · It probably wouldn't be that hard .
A · first-round draft pi ck from
· J~ckson Stale in 1975, Payton carried the load for mediocre Bears
·r.ams early in his career before lead ihl! Chicago to its only Super Bowl
·~wearance, after the 1985 season .
· ' Selected to nine Pro Bowls and
inducted into the Pro Football Hall of
.Fime in 1993, the player known as
:: sweetness " holds NFL career
.;¢cprds for yards gained. ·16,7 26, and
carries,. 3.838.
.
. He posted 77 I 00-yard games and
·1.0 I ,000-yard rushing seasons. Hi s
,27.5 -yard
rushing . performance
against Minnesota in ,1977 still
stands as the NFL record for most
rushing yards in a ga_me .
' ·After retir&lt;ng from football ,
Payton co-owned an Indy-CART
~uJo- racing team and ran a restaurant
and other businesses in lhe Chicago
area. He served on the Bears board of ·
~irectors and joined ¥roups seeking
NFL franchises .
·
·

•

•
•

well as changes in the ethics policy, members Spence . Eccles and Veri
said Vi cki Varela, Leavitt's spokes- Topham , two prominent executives
woman .
that were enlisted during Salt Lake's
The reorganization wou·id include bidding for the games to watch over
a new executive committee of the staffers now blamed for excesses,
board that docs not include longtime said another knowledgeable source.

R d

6 WOmen. •• (Continued from Page 5)

Around the AMC on Tuesday,
Assists: 12 (Halley 4)
league-leadin g. Shawnee State (20- 1,
Thrnovers: 22
AMC
10- 1)
thrashed
Ohio
Blocked shots: I
Dominican (9-14. AMC 5-7) 87-52.
Steals: 8 (Hopper 4)
Saint Vincent ( 15-7, AMC 9-2)
. Fouls: 15
thumped Malone (11-9, AMC 5-6)
Cedarville: Gombis · 4/9-0/090-61. Urbana ( 18•4. AMC 8-2) 0/0=8, Rossoui 3/8-0/0-617=12,
defeated Mount Vernon Nazarene (9- Nourse 7115-010-3/4=17. Porter
II , AMC 3-9) 81 -68.
8/14- 112-112=20, French 113-216- ·
.Hruf l.2tlb
. 0/0=8, 'Schryer 0/2-0/1-0/0=0, Cole
Rio .Grande .... .................... 31 -47=78 111 -0/0-0/0=2, McKinnon Oil -Oil Cedarvi lle ........................ ..,25-52=77 0/0=0, Jones 1/3-0/0-0/0=2 , Martin
Rio Grande: Turle&gt;' 7110-011- 317-0/0-2/2=8. Totals: 28163·3110..
217= 16. Mohler 7115-0/2-1/4= 15, U/15=77
..Pope 519-010-517= 15, Carson 213 Total FG: 31-73 (.425)
2/6-1/2= II , Halley 318-D/0,2/5=8,
Rebounds: 41 (Nourse 14)
Hopper 0/1 - 1/3-212=5, Daugherty
Assists: 14 (Gom bis ':n-~
1!1-0/0-0/0=2, Kendall 316-0/0. Thrnovers: 19
0/0=6. Totals: 28153-3/12-13127=78
Blocked shots: 2
' Total FG: 3 1-65 ( 477)
.
Steals: 9
Rebounds: 44 (Turley. Mohler,
Fouls: 23
Pope 8)
Fouled out: French

The reorganization also likely will
add a chief operating officer to
SLOC's management ranks so the
job of organizing the games can
remain on track while the new chief
executive works to restore faith in
Salt Lake's ability to manage the
games.
Roger Jackson, who hOld a similar
job during Calgary's 1988 Winter

Games and serves on the IOC
Coordination Commi~sion overseeing preparations for 2002, is considered the front-runner for that chief
operating officer job .
Former Senior Vice President
Dave Johnson, forced to resign on
Jan. 8 because of his role in the bid
effort, had performed much of that
job.

Romney, a Republican who
unsuccessfully
challenged
Massachusells
Democrat
Ted
Kennedy for his U.S. Seniue seat in
1994, would replace Frank Joklik,
who stepped down as chief executive
during the Jan. 8 ,housecleani ng . .His
father was the late George Romney,
governor of Michigan.

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that epecial someone this
Valentine's Day With a message in

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Big Bend
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Supermarket

Divorcing · parents should put · away anger
.

.

4

toss of self-est~em, poor academic
performance, behavioral regression
and a hos\ of other physical and
· emotional disorders. . ·
'
l'HI. lAs An&amp;clc~ 1i~1
·
Long after the divorce -is
Synd icate and Crutnrs
final, children of divorce qften have
Syndiu.IC .
trouble e ntering into commiued
relationships of their, own, fearing
Dear
I just read a ter- their relationships will end as their
rific booklet entitled "Stepping Back parents' did. In addition, a Princeton
From Anger." The booklet was print- University study showed· that chiled by the American Academy of dren who live apart from one of their
Matrimonial Lawyers 10 help par- parents are more likely to drop out
ents protect tl)eir children from of school, become .unmotivated and
some of the harmful effec s of have a child before reaching the age
divorce. Here is an excerpt
of20.
·
Every year, more than I million
Here are . I0 tips for divo·rcing
American couples gel divorced. For parents:
those men ahd women, it is often the
I . Never disparage your former
most emolionallr exhausting and SP,ouse in front of your chil?ren, .
expensive experience they will ever Because chtldren XJ,now.. they ar~,­
~ave. For their children, it can be . "jiart Mqm" and "part Dad;" 'the criteven worse .
icism can baller the child's se lfImagine you are 6 years old, and esteem.
suddenly, the two people you have
2. Do not use your childrep as
always relied on most are at each messengers between you and your
other's throats. You believe you are former spouse. The less the children
the cause of their anger. To make feel a part of the battle between their
inauers worse, you find yourself parents, the beuer.
alone and bewildered because the
3. Reassure your children thai
two people you usually go to for .· they are loved and that the divorce· is
comfo!1 are too wrapped up in their· not their fault.
•
· ,
own anger and grief to be of much
4. Unless your ,former spouse was
, help.
a molester, encourage your children
Divorce makes its mark orr chil- to spend time with him or her. Do
dren both in the short term and the everything you can to accommodate
long term. Young chiloren whose the visitation.
parents are divorcing often suffer
5. At every step during your
from depression, sleep · disorders,

Ann
. Landers

.

divorce, remind yourself that your
children's interests, not yours, are
paramount, and act accordingly.
6. Resist the temptation to let
your children act as your-caretakers.
Let your peers, adult family mem-·
bers and !llental health professionals
be your counselors · and sounding
boards.
.
· · 7. If you have a drinking or drug
problem, get .cotinseling right away.
An impairment inhibits your ability
10 reassure your chi ldren and give
them t)le attention they need at this
difficUlt time.
8. If you are the non-custodial
parent, pay your child support. The
loss of income facing many children
after divorce puts them at a disadvantage that has a pervasive effect .
''on the rest of their lives.
'' 9'. If you are the custodial parent .
and are npt receiving chi ld support,
do not complain to your children . It
feeds in10 their sehse of abandonment and further erodes ·their stabi lity.
10. If at a ll possible, do not
uproot your children. Stability in
their residence and school li fe helps
buffer children from the trauma of
their parents' aivorce.
For a free copy of thi s booklet ,
write to the American Academy of
Matrimonial Lawyers ,' ISO N.
Michigan Ave., Suite 2040, Chicago, IlL 6060 I (www.aaml.oig), or
call toll-free, 1-877-4-THE KIDS.

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1!-------------:J

Barbie the world's favorite doll
passes:·milestone: sh-e's 40
'

By RACHEL BECK
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Can it be
that Barbie - with her perfect figure, big smile and long list of careers ·
-is having a mid-life crisis?
The world's most famous blonde
is turning 40 in . March, and like
many of her middle-aged p.eers,
she's trying to reinvent herself: Barbie in 1999 will have a talloo and
hang out with friends who have nose
rings.
"Barbie just isn't as cool as she
used to be," said Marian~e _ S.ZY'II~n ­
ski, editor of Toy· Tips magazine in
Milwaukee. "But she's working
hard 10 get back in wltll' the cool

·Enjoy the services of OVB Superbank

crowd. ''

Barbie has been ageless since she
hit store shelves in 1959, always fit
and trim with the ideal body, hair
and of course, bust line.
Mallei Inc. isn ' t even call ing thi s
a birthday, but rather an anniversary
of the world's' best-known and bestsell ing dolL About $2 billion worth
of Barbie dolls and accessories are
sold each year.
But big sales in the past aren ' t
guarantees for the future.
"Kids are changing the'ir tastes.
They just don ' t play with dolls as
much anymore or they stop playing
with dolls at a much earlier age ;"
said Eric Johnson, a ,professor at
Vanderbilt University's Owen Grad--·
uate School of Management in
Nashville, Tenn. " Of course, this is
making Barbi.e nervous."
Look at Missy Schmidt of New
York. At age 8, playtime consists
mostly of compuier games and
dressing up with makeup and hair
accessories. · Barbie only ·comes out
when she's with a younger friend ·o r..
.
'
'
COUSin .

{fM

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7 :.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Hannan gets recognition for exhibition vs. Miller

:;D-ismantling of Bulls places NBA Centr~l title up for grabs

By H.W. SINER
.
Going into the 1999 NBA season,
here's a look at the Atlantic Division.
• , BOSTON CELTICS (36-46 in
1997-95): Coach Rick Pitino is the
·ke)'· to Boston's future . He fired up a
~o ung roster last season. PF Antoine
:-walker (22.4 points per game, 10.2
. rebounds per game) is a rising star.
Now he's joined by rookie SF Paul
Fierce. A year ago, SG Ron Mercer
-(15.3 ppg) made the NBA AllRookie · first team. PG Kenny
,Anderson (I 1.2 ppg, 6.3 assists per
.g~/)le) was a solid midseason pickup.
But the Cellics are looking to
upgrade at center, where Andrew
:· QeClercq plays. Tony Baule was
imported to help inside:
MIAMI HEAT (55-271: Can

,,

'

Wednesday, _February 3, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~Marauders'

· · Lots of teams are living large
·from three-point land.
· Unbeaten
and
top-ranked
'zanes'vi lie Rosecrans and No . 9
':Worthington Christian in boys
'Division IV, for example.
. In last ,week's 77-53 win over
. Newark Catholic, Rosecrans .hit a
·1chool-record 16-of-30 lhree-point'ers. ihe starters were 15-of-25 ,
:including Adam Garber's 6-of-8. Just
.two nights earlier, the Bishops hit 13
, ~9mbs behind ' the arc in an 81 -38
·rout of Buckeye TraiL
, On the year, Rosecrans is 94-for~42 in II games.
- . Worthington Christian, long a
bastion of distance shooters, has

..... ...

'.

The Dally Sentinel

AP Sports Writer

_,..

•

0

..

-- --

.

"Barbie i.s· fun sometimes, but I
have a lot of otber things I like to·
play with more," said Schmidt, during a recent trip to Toys R Us in New
York.
But Barbie isn 't retreating to her
Dream House to soothe her woes. A
veteran of more than 75 careers in
the past 40 years, Barbie is once
again recreating herself.
Just last year, a few dolls in the
Barbie line were transformed with

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bodies that bener· resembled the
For the first time. Barbie dolls
average woman, ' with smaller ·will be paired with CD- ROMs. New .
breasts and a more realistic shape.
for 1999 is Working Woman Barbie,
Now, as Barbie tjlrns 40, her look . who comes with a play laptop and
\urgs 'decidedly younger. Among the. cell ph9ne: as well as a re~l COdolls Mattei is showcasing at next ; ROM that allows a 'child 10 create
week's American International Toy her own business cards and stationFair is a line of hip Generation Girls, ary.
"We want Barbie to represent a
which includes a doll with a nose
ring, and Bullertly Art Barbie, with lifestyle brand for girls, not just a
brand of toys, " said Anne Parducci,
a butterfly tattoo on her stomach.
She's also plunging even deeper senior vice president of Barbie marinto the high-tech world . There kcting for H Segundo, Cali f.-based
won't be a pink Barbie computer un Mattei. "We· want to make sure we
the market anytime soon, but Barbie capture girls in the many ways they
is expanding her interactive offer- are spending their lime now and in
ings with seven new . ~tles this year.
the future ."

---------Community

Calendar~-.

'

'
THURSDAY
Thursday at the Middlep ort
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
Pub!
ic
EmployMasonic
Te mple .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, ees Retirement , I. p:m. Thursday,
Pomeroy Library. Jeanelle Thomas Senior Citizen s C-e nter. Rcserva- FRIDAY
The Olive
tions, 992 -2161.
' REEDSVILLE
to review "George Was hington ' .
Township Tru stees . regular mee ta Life" by William S. RandalL
POMEROY
Al coholi cs ing , Frid ay, 65 :30 p.m. ar the
RACINE . Pomeroy -Rac ine Anonymous open di scuss ion meet-' tow.nship garage on Joppa Road .
Lodge 164 , F&amp; AM , Wedne sday. in g, 7 pm . s·aned He art Catholic-S-A-'fURDAv--- ~
WEST COLUMBIA - Bend
7:30 p.m. at the hall . Refresh - Church, 160 Mulberry Avenue .
·
area
gospel sing Saturday, 7 p.m at
ments.
RACINE Ra•i nc Grange , the United Methodi st Ch.urch on
Stale Route 62 in West Columbia,
. PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town - ' Thursday, atth'e hall .
W.Va. featuring the Builders Quarship Trustees, regular session , 6 :30 ,
tet, the Huntleys and Narrow Way.
SYRACUSE
Me
igs
Count
y
p.'m. at Page ville town hall.
HARRISONVI LLE HarRepublican Commi11 cc ·meetin g
ri
sonv
ille
Lodge
4
11
.
SatuJday,
MIDDLEPORT - URG Meigs Thursday . 7:30 p.m. at Carleton
· Center advising day and spring School in Syracuse IU inventory 7 :30 p.m . at· the Masoni c HaiL
quarter preregistratibn Wednesday, ticket sales for next week ' s Lin : Degree wo rk : refres hment s.
3-6 p.m. at the center in Middle - coin dinner.
MONDAY
port. All URG night students are to
OORTLAND - Portland PTO
MIDDLEPORT __: Ev an ge lin e will mel M ond ay. 7 ·p.m. at the
call to schedule an appointment.
Chapter 172 , OES : 7 :30 p.n1. sc hoo L

I
t

Coca Cola C\a....·."'. Food land

· BARBIE AT 40,· The doll with the perfect figure, flawless fashion
taste and more tt)an 75 careers; Is about to..c hange once again. With
little girls playitig computer games and seeking other forms of
entertainmen~, Barbie is transforming her~eH to meet c.hanglng
demands.
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~:::f:!tlmes iljii tiJ~. ,r:/;i;Y(S':··
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·.··•·

.ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- Suzanne Vega,
who addressed the issue of child abuse in
her 1988 hit song "Luka, " is once again
using music to highlight a serious problem.
The singer, with guitar in hand, went to
New York's state Capitol Tuesday to push
for anti-stalking legislation.
"The way to change things is not only
by writing songs, it 's real)y by pass ing the
laws because that' s·where you ge i the protection from ," she sa id.
Vega
The Grammy -nominated si oger said
she had been stalked several times, both
before and after becoming fam ous . Once a death threat forced her
to wear a bulletproof vest during a performance in England.
At a news conference, Vega sang and delivered most ly lt ght hearted remarks.
"I had thought abo ut doing a cover of 'I' II Be Watching You ' by
Sting, but it occurred to me that it might be inappropriate and I did n't know the chords ," Vega said.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)- A jury has been chosen to hear
misdem eanor assault and battery charges against Gary Coleman ,
who is accused of punch ing an autograph-seeker.
The, former child star of the NBC series " Diff' rent Strokes,"
which ran from 1978 to 1986. has pleaded innocent.
Bus driver Trac~ Fields said the 30-year-old former actor, who
now works as a sec uri ty guard, agreed to give her an autograph.
She claims he becfme angry when she asked him to personali ze it
for her son.
·
Coleman 's anorney, Adam London , said Tuesday that Ms.
Fields is tryi ng to exploit his client's stardom to "gain fam e and
fortune. " Ms. Fields also ~as filed a $1 milli on civ il lawsuit against
Coleman.
If convicted, Co leman could be sentenced to a year in jail and
ordered to pay a .$ 1.000 fine, and could lose hi s security guard
license, said poli ce Lt . James Mct nerny.

NASHVILLE, Te nn . (AP) - You mi ght be a redneck if you
host the TNN Music City News Country
Awards three years in a row.
Jell Foxworthy, the . comedian known
for hi s " You might be a redneck " jokes, will
return to host the live country music awards
program in 1999. And Foxworthy has
already signed up for a third year in 2000.
" h takes enormous talent to singlehandedly keep a 2 112 hour special moving," TNN's Brian Hughes said Tuesday.
'
~
"They tried to impeach me, but they
··..
can't keep a man down ," Foxworthy joked.
Foxworthy
The show is set for June 14 at the
Nashville Arena. Nominations will be announced Thursday.
The TNN awards show is distinguished from the two oiher
• major _country music award shows because fans ~ote f&lt;Or the winners.

.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gary Sinise is making sure he won't
be typecast - he's playing both a hero and a villai n in two upcom·
·
ing roles.
In-the Dimension Fi lm s productio n " Reindeer Games, " whi ch
begins shooting next month , Sinise wil l play a con artist who gets
Be'n Arfleck to rob a casino, accordin g to Tuesday 's Daily Variety.
Then in "Mission to Mars ," a big-budget movie by Disney,
Sinise will play the leader of a team sent to rescue astronauts who
confront a mysterious beacon on the red planet.
Sin ise was nominated for an Oscar for hi s portrayal of a legless
lieutenant in " Forrest Gump." Last year he won an Em my for hi s
portrayal of late Al abama Gov. George Wallace.
•
•
•

NEW YORK (AP) - He's conquered film ; stage and televi: sion . Now John Lnhgow has decided to chart .untested waters with
a·singing career.
'
.The star of " 3rd Rock From the Sun" is releasin g his first
album next month, "Singi n' in the Bathtub." The collection of
swing style tunes will be aimed at children.
\'he actor said singing to. kids is n ~tura l for him .
•
" Back in the early 70s when my first soq. was born, I taught
• myself lo play gui tar because l loved the idea of playing and
- singing for my ow n baby, " he said . "Ever since then I' vc always
sung for kids in classrooms, at bene fit s.and iu mu sic fe stivals.''
Lithgow even wrote one of the songs for th e album .
'" Big Kids' recollects when I was a very lillie kid ·and bi g kids
terrified me. I fi nd it comp letely amazing how children identify
• with thi s song, " he said.
'
The new ·album is set for release March 9.
, L_--------------------------~----------------

:

P.BS ordered to pay nearly $47 million to
Monkees band member Michael·Nesmith
Bt ROBERT JABLON
things expanded com mercial spots
Associated Press Writer
to corporate donors ..
: LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Nesmith, 56, . was the hat- and
P\iblic Broadcast in g Service must s ideburn ~-wearing member of the
P4Y nearly $47 million to Michael Monkees', a 1960s music and TV sitNesmith , a member of the 1960s com sensation.
band the, Monkecs, and hi s defunct
Nesmith 's company, Pacific Arts,
c&lt;Vn pany (0r defraudtng him 111 a made a deal in 1990 to distribute the
hqme video dealt hat sank the fi rm
PBS Home Video Line. He licensed
• A federal jury decl\led Monday the PBS trademark and obtained
thiu PBS went behind Nesmi th 's home video rights to dozens of prob*k to steal the home video right s gram s from their producers.
to; such popul ar fare as "Sesame
·· Pacific Arts spent $8 milli on
. Street" and the Ken Burns docu- break in g the market, convincin g
mentary " The Civi l War " wh il e stores to gtve up shelf space for thi s,
p~mis in g to keep his fa lterin g r"inn
pulli ng up ki os ks in Wai -Marts.
a Roat .
things li~c that," said Bruce Van
; Jurors rejec ted PBS ' breach-of- Dalscm. a Nesmith lawyer.
c&lt;)ntrac t lawsui t that claim ed
By 1993. the videos were se llin g
Nesmit h owed the nonpro fi t corpo- wel l. but Nesmith's company was
r.:t ion millio ns of doll ars They lo"ng mcincy be cause of the hi gh
u~hcld a co unterclaim o f fr aud , costs . He dec ided to se ll the rights to
b(each of cont ract and co nt ract the ~cc umulated vi deo library,
imcrfere ncc
wh tch could earn up to $ 15 milli on
; " It's li ke catching your grand - and all ow him to pay off roya lti es
fl'\Oiher stealin g yo ur stereo,.. and ot her busine ss debts. the lawyer
Nesmilh sa id through a publi ci st said.
_
·
"f:&gt;" one hand , you're happy to get
PBS agreed in writi ng to help
tl'(e &gt;tereo ack. On· the other, yo uire hi m recapitalize the busi ne ss ~ r. if
s'!&lt;f to find out _you' re grandm a' '\ • that failed , cooperate in slowl y
tl1ief. "
wi ndin g down the company to avoid
; St u Cantor, a PB S spokesman . disrupti on, Nesmith said.
-~ ----.;id·the associat ion ofpublic tel'~cc-;
v i~
- ~=WI1ile meetinj! with Ne smith and
sihn;stations will appeal.
hi s staff to reassure them of their
; ' :PBS firmly • be li eves that th e good faith, PBS officials were. busy
fact • and the law in the case merited. soli c"iti ng a dozen ot her. potential
a ~ rulin g in our favor and we are distributors·, Nesmith said . They also
f\&lt;lnkly shocked at the verdict ," he co nvinced the producers of the
said , reading a statement from P.BS shows to terminate their distri bution
hj,adquarters in Alexandria. Va. .
contrac ts with Pacifi c Arts en masse,
·:: The case is the latest controversy Nesmith claimed.
~er PBS ' aggressive new moneyPBS obtained the video di stribumaking Jechniques. In the mid - li on rights, split !hem _wit h Turner
1:990s, as Congress threate ned deep Home Entertain ment and now reaps
funding cut bac ks, PBS turned to the $27 mi lli on per year from -the busimarket place. offering among other ness, Van Dalsem said .
.b

r

'

Beat of the Bend .....
By Bob Hoeflich
Th ere's an old expression, ..Time Changes Things" which a lot
Of li s lean on pretty heavily from time to time- and it works if we
wait long enough.
·
· The advice for the last few year~ has been "exercise, exerci se,
exercise" as a health measure. Now ti me has changed things .
"They" are now saying that there 's no need to run 20 miles a week
or wre stl e the exercise equipment every day. Nope. Now the word
is that in the course of a normal Jay in your life, yo u' re gening
plenty of exercise by climbing steps, walking a little further from
your car to the work place and just doing the chore s that face most
of us on a dail y basis,
.
.
Now isn't that special! I hope you aren ' t holding a lot of stock
in the companies that are manufacturing exercise equipment. With '
the latest advice to come down the pike, I have a fee ling the '
demand for the equipment is goi ng to go down hill.
I was there and I did that.
' "i even remember where , but I don ' t remember "when". I' ll bet
you do.
A reader phoned asking what year the Ohio River froze and was
used for icc skatin g Res idents walkl'd across the river to West Virginia and it is said thai at times automobiles were even taken onto
the frozen river.
It was in the 1930's-(io yo u kn ow the year7

A friend of yours- a lifelong res ident of Racine- has been havin g some health problems.
Following her dismi ssal from a hosp ital she is now at the home
of a daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster, Route 7,
B. F. Goodric h Road, Maricua, Ohio 45750 and cards and notes
will reach her there, in care of Waid Foster.
She is Ora Hill and Ora will be observing bcr 87th birthday on
Fe bruary II .
Hey there, sports fans, maybe you can give Bob Hartet&gt;bach,
former Meigs Sheriff and an area law enforcement officer for
years, a helping hand .
Bob is looking for photos of Bob and Charlie Blackwell, well
known Pomeroy High School football players in the late 1930's. If
you have either or both, Bob would like to borrow rhem to get
copies made.
He needs them to help round out his picture collection of athletes over the years. Bob has over 500 8x I0 framed photographs
of well known athletes both locally and nationally and some are
autographed. Among hi s collection are pictures of Jack Dempsey,
Joe Louis, Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.
And don' t think storage isn't a problem for Bob. Five hundred
framed photos do require a lot of space . Maybe one day arrangements will be made for hi s collection to be on display for your
v1ewmg.
If you can help Bob in his attempt to locate the Blackwell pictures , he can be reached at 992-5716.

Public relations workshop i
planned at Pomeroy Library :

ftftftftftftftftftG

The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce and the Small Business :
Development Center of Southeastern Ohio will be sponsori ng a public rela- -.•
tions workshop on Feb. 16. The -workshop will be held from I to 4 p.m. at ·
the Pomeroy Public Library, 7 West Main St .. Pomeroy.
•
As a part of the workshop, Bill Coffey of Coffey 'M~eting and Com·
munications Strategies will define 'public relations, describe what_PR means ·.~
to a business, discuss business image and the pijblic's perceptton of that •
image, review how_the process can be managed and help develop a persor&gt;- · ~
al public relations program.
Cost of the workshop is $15 and reservations are to be made by Tuesday
at 992-5005.
·
.
.
The SBDC of Southeast Ohio is pamally funded by the US Small. Business Administration and the Ohio Department of Developmen1. II provides
free business assistance to new and existing busi nesses. Information on the
program may be obtained by calling 740-593-1797.

m-CDIIftiUCftD.
Homes &amp;,Remodeling

New
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding

Commercial &amp; Residential

For the

handyman

. your
-,n

family.
We have,·,,.,.,,

News policy

what you

In ~ n effort to provide our readership with current news. the ~unuay
Times-Senti nel-will not-accept we.J----+~H--dings after 60 days from the dat e of
,.LOSe
the event.
· .
.,,-, t
Weddings subm itted after th e 60day deadline will appear durin g the
week in The Dai ly Se nti nel and the
Gallipo li s Dai ly Tribune .
All club meetings and other news ·
articles in the soc iety section must
be submitted within 60 days of
occ urrence. All birthdays must be
subm i11ed within 60 day s of the
occurre nce .
All materi al submillcd for publi cati on 'is subJect to editing .

MASON,
W.VA.

;:.

~

~
.

II ILL'S
SUF STORAGE
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45n1
740-949-2217

Knussman hugged his attorneys and
hi s wife, Kimberly, who wept quietly.
" Even if we lost, it was a big win
because we brought forth the treatment that I received in thi s process
and we made those people accountable," Knussman , 41 , said.
.
Knussman, a 22-year state police
veteran, sued the agency, three superiors and an administrator in 1995 ,
alleging gender discrimination.
Knussman , who claimed he was
told only mothers are considered
" primary care givers," said he was
hi s newborn daughter's primary care
giver because his· wife was near
death from childbirth complications.
"This verdict sends a clear message it 's illegal to deprive fathers of :
their rights," said Knussman's attor- '
ney, Sara Mandelbaum .

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· BPM

RUTLAND, OH •
AMERICAN
LEGIOI
I~ECH .GROVE
· . ROAD
'GUll SHOOT
SUN.,l:OO PM
.

t/4/f19 1 mo. P&lt;f.

Don't.Need A

APPALACHIAN

Big One
Call a Little
. One .

WOODWORKS

Help Wanted
, Is

aoomlng
now

home

1

ltachnlclans and

Fo~r-"Velvet

Near the 338 &amp;

1998 Martin

Str~et

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ,

1-800-564-3227
1!21Wf1

WICKS
HAULING

"Build Your Dream"

of Area
mo. pd.

(61

.

like you
apply at .or ·
to:
Green Valley Homea , Inc.
30921 Lake Loran Rd.

OH 43138

Public Notice

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Pick up dl-rci.d,
applla-, battarlu,
many metll• &amp;
~ motor bloeka

Don't Worry About Your Future
Let Our Paychfca Put Your Mind
At Eaoo Call Nowl 1-900-7406500 Ext. 3593. 18+ $3 .99 Per
Min. Serv-U 819-645-8434. hHp:/1
www.lhehotpagoa2.comtn8ipoychlc1250291.htm

m ·J

ship From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Friendship. Send Re·
plies To: 553 Second Avenue.

PUBUCNoncl
Due to lhe wuther _
conditione the - k of January
11,11199, the Melge Houelng
Authorlly will-reopen the
appll9ilon Intake one day
only. · HouHholde lo(eretll,
ec:t In applying lor Slctlon 8
- 1 Aulelllnct may pick
up an application on
Tuaad.ay, February 9, 11199
· be-n 8:00 a;m. and 4:00. ·.
p.m. ONLY. Appllcatlone ·
can be obtained at the .
Houelnti Authorlly omce
iOclled at 117 E. Memorial

Apartment t403, Gallipolis.
45831 .
.

an-6561 .

New To You Thrift Shoppe

dD~190:4'..f;.~.:1::!'
" NOTICE TO BIDOERS
Seeled propoula ~- ~~~~
INO
••
"VIllage of Rutland Bell HoiDr Clinic) on the elite
Field Lighting Project• will end tlmeepectfled.,
· New Homes • VInyl Siding New
be received ot the Clerka J•n Truaull
· Office, ATTN: Kimberly Executive Director
G8r8Q8S 0 R8p I0C8m80 WI n dOWS
Willford, P.O. Box 420, 337 (2) 1,3
Room Additions • Roofing
Main Street, Rutland, Ohio ',..!.2T:.:C::.,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _
11
45775, until . 10:00 a.m.,
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
Tueeday, February 18, 11199
upon which lime blda will
FREE ESTIMATES•
be opened and read aloud.
Sptclllcatlona and bid
forme mey be aecurtd from ·
the above office by calling
(740) ·742-2121 or writing to: I
VIllage of Rutland, ATTN: !
Kimberly Willford, P.O. Bo• "''"'""
420, 337 Main otreet,
I
c an reliev'e a
Rutland; Ohio 45775. (740)
742-2103.
debtor of financial ~bligations and arrange a fair
(1) 31
(2) 3,5, 7 4TC
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may

keep "exempt" property for his or her personal'
use. This may include a car, a house~ clothes, and
household goode .

Mixed Colllll!t &amp; Shepherd Female

I ~~;::;;;;;;;;~(~N;o~S;;u;n;d;a;y;C;a;l;ls;)====~~
BIIKRUIIIBCY
r

.

Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Fo~ lnfonnation Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

PER PICTURE ·
PRE·PAID

Insured

740-742-3411

.

·z. .z...

_EXCAVATING CO.

I
I

·-

''meetene
""'""
Bulld.,nr &amp; Backhpe
se,iceo
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy1tem &amp;
Utilitieo

1

!

.

.~

~~, ~~~!~(~~~~~~~shop·
Commercia l' stove/oven: 440
alec. hook-up. 2 tamale, Bwk, Si·
berlan
Husky;
(304)675 6349;675-1376.

Months Old,Puppy,
Doberman
To Country
Femate.
Home3
ontyt740-«H&gt;t1a.
Puppy, About 3-4 Months Old,
Part German Shepherd. Slack &amp;

Tan . Pretty Faced , Male, Loves
Children, Needs Good Hamel

I
I

992-3131

--~--1

-------------------------..1

·Re L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK ·
SERVICE.
Agrh;illtural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
·olrt • Sand
. '
985-4422 '

· Chester, Ohio

446-3897.
Rare Bantam Chickens, 740·4461127.

Lost and Found

Found : Basset

Hound Very

Friendly, While With Tan Spots,
VIcinity: Kriner Road , 740·446·
7595.

Chapei!Owl Hollow Road area.
(304)675-7740.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Sileo Mull
Be Paid In Advance.
DfAQL!NE: 2:00p.m.
tho clOy bolont the ad

toto run. $Undoy
actldon- 2:00 p.m.

Frldoy. Mondoy•odltlon
-10:00 o,m. Siltutdoy.
6 Chairs, Ligh ted Hu tch, Other
MISC . 740-446-0968, See At 37
Madison Avenue. Gallipo lis. Saturday 8 Sunday.

Rummage Sale: Friday February
5th , 8:30·2 :30 Grace United
Melhodisl Church, Galllpolls, OH.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Ylrcf 81111 Muat Bt Peld In

Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
dey before the ad 11 to run,
Sunday
Monday edition·

a

1:OOpm Frldoy.

and

Deadline Thursday, February 4th at 3 p.m.
Mall or bring the entry form: ·

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

The Daily Sentinel
1H Court St. · eroy, Ohio 45769

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Meln St.,
Pomeroy,OH

Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Prograaslve top line.
· Uc. I 00-~lll!m!l

' I

DESIGNS
.Computer Graphics
Deslgf'\S
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohio

Flea Market

Auction February 5th, 6 P.M. 241
Third Avenue , Gallipolis. Large·

l oad 01 Name Brilnd TOOls &amp;
Househotd.Goods, 740-256-1270.
Bill Moodlspaugh AIUctloneerlng
Service.&amp; , little Hocking, Ohio.
Appraisals·
Farm· Estate·
Household- Commercial. Ohio LIcense 17693. 740-989-2623.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auctioneer, comple te

auCtio n service. licensed
•ss ,Ohlo &amp; West Virginia, 30~.773-5765 Or 304-773-5447.
Wederneyer't Aucllon Service,
Gallipolis. Ollto 740-379-2~20 .

s

OFFER
EXPIRES

Puppy, Very Friendly, Good W1111
Kldsl To Farm Home Only! 740·

M

T

- ®
- - -

w

T

F

- - - - - - -

~ ·

•

r------------~-----------------,
1Print one .word in each space .below. Each initial or 1
group of figures counts as a word. Count name 1
1address or phone number, if used. You'll get better I '
I results if you describe fully, give price. The Tribune 1: .
1reserves the right to classify, edit ~r reject any ad .
1: ,

I
I

I.
I . ..

IN a m e - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - 1
I
I
I Address
I
I

I

I

I

1Phone
I

I 1
I
I
I 3.
I

I5
I
I

7. ·

I 9.

I

I

2. _ _ _ _ _ _ __.....

I.
I·

I
1
I·

6.
8
·

I
,I
I

1a·---'-----'---

I.
•·

H ~----.....:::=-1-2 .~....;;;;;;;==..;;;~==

I
1 1 3 . - - - -- - - 14.
.1

I 15.

For Additional Words Plaou Attoch
A Separate Piece 01 Paper:

I
I
I

1..

I
I
I

Mail or bring this coupon with payment to:

1..

I
I

THE DAILY ·SENTINEL

I

I

111 coJRr sr.. POMEROY. oHIO 45769
·
MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE

I

I

..

I.

Classification:

1

·-Auction . ---•--~

I

1999
s
- I 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 to 1l 12 t3
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
FEBRUARY

740-388-8314.

Furniture, LR, OR, BR, OR, Tabie,

r----------------~---------,
VALENTINE PETS

$6 each.

Free Estimates

: .....

(Over 15 Words-20¢ Per Word, Per Day)
NO REFUNDS!
Offer good w•th coupon only.
Photo Copies Not Accepted

740_367_74£0.

· SUNSET HOME
CONS,.RUC,.IOI
'

nlctures

3 Large Mixed Breed Puppies,

lost : Silver &amp; Gray Male Wei·
maraner Dog , In the ~ckard

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages

s1.50 A DAY FOR
15 Words

Born With StubTall, Evenings:

60

New Construction &amp;Remodeling

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

Lhnited
Time

Giveaway

40

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

ONLY

$600

Rate

9 West Stimson, Athens
740-592-1842
Ouallty clothing and housl!lhOid
Items. S1.00 bag sale every
lhursday. Monday thru SattKday
9:tl().5:$0.

A
DAY

S~ial

DI~BETIC P~TIENTS: You May

Be Entitled To Receive Your Ola·
betic Supplies At No Cosl To
You. For More Information, 1·888·

614.·992•7643

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)
"FOR PETS ONLY"•
WILL BE PUBliSHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 11TH IN

OH

Announcements

30

t

For

Personals

005

BISSEll BUILDERS, .INC.

.

614-992·3470

ss2-42n

Gentleman Seeking Companion·

401

,Pet's Name
!Owner's Name
1
Address

-~-~\

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand, \ ·
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Joe Wilson

Fill

7411-082-earn-a

CLASSIFIED
AD SALE

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

Remodeling

· M &amp;J

881·11·

Two to Four Day

Umit 680 sleave
.737 back bore

Autc&gt; Service-

Custo~omes

Classified Ads Section

12:30'pm

124 split in the Great Bend

~complete

Available
Out

Hammer"

52954 State· Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Furniture ReflnilhinB
. &amp;Rep'*
. Pickup &amp; Delivery

Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
up to 8 t~n• .
992·5455

GUN SHOOT
Radne Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday

Dave's Garage

Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

. 985-4473

Yrs. Exp. • lns. Owner: Ronnie Jones

'

'

PiCTURE YOUR PET
AMONG THE •••
PET VALENTINES!

- -1-}' 1-1-1~'-'--'-"

HARDWARE

FI'H E.tlmatea
Owner: John Dean

110

need .j;'or_.
J..!:.

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

CftftCCftfttt;tft~Hft

Denver fans in their ce lebration of victory caused property
damages totaling about $160,000. Talk about ge tting carried away.
Do keep smiling.

LOS ANGELES (1\P) - Who is
the father of Yoshiko's baby?
It's a m~s tcry ·at the Los Angeles
Zoo, where 'the 8-year-old chimpan zee gave birth over the weekend.
Keepers say they didn 't know
Yoshiko was pregnant and aren't
sure how she got that way. All three
of her eli gible mates have had .
vasec tomies, the. zoo said Tuesday.
Three other males have n' t had
the procedure, the zoo sa id. Still, 44year-old Toto has never shown any
interest in the opposite sex, while 4year-old Glenn ' and 2-year-old Ripley are too young to be monkeying
around.
The surprise birth was di scovered
KAYLA CHANEY
earl y Sunday when an ass i.stant
keeper arriving for work spotted
TURNS FIVEKayla
/ Yoshiko cradling · her offspring,
Chaney celebrated her fifth dubbed Toshi.
·
birthday with a party at her
"The baby looked_l ike she had
homa il) Tuppers Plains on Jan.
just been born ," Mark Atha said. " It
12. '
A Rugrats theme was carried )Vas a total shock."
out in the cake, decorations and
place settings .
Attending i!Jd aendlng gifts
besides her parents, Roger and
Pamela Chaney, was her sister,
Angela, Tuppers Plains; her
grandmother, . Ada Congrove;
Hazel Barton and Forrest Kibble
of Reedsville; Amanda Parker of
Tuppers Plains; Whitney 'Dutcher of Wellston; Jim, Wanda, and
Keith Brock of Little Hocking;
Fairy Foster, Jessica and Clara
Lamm and Lisa and Brandon
Franco of Parkersburg, W. Va.

~

li.!!J '

Did you know that Mrs. Eminelene Hendrix of Nichols Road,
near Middleport, has undergone knee.replacement surgery at Pleasant Valley Hospital7
She got through the operation fine and Monday was moved to
. ' the Pleasant Valley Hospital Rehabilitation Center. Her room is
138-B and undoubtedly, she' d like to hear from you and especially
since she will be marking her 8 1st birthday anniversary thi s Saturday. Of course, you are aware thar the hosp ital and the center arc
in Point Pleasa nt.

Chimp defies zoo birth
control, gives birth .

Cr
CJ

Phone 740.992-3987
-..

-OIERT BISSELl ,
CONSTRUCTION

Iii':.
Ucensed &amp; Insured ll!!l

27 yra. exp.

Paramedic awarded $375,000 in
Maryland parental leave ·case
BALTIMORE (AP) - A state
police paramedic who sa id he was
denied parental leave because his
wife wasn ' t " dead or in a coma "
was di scriminated against because
he 's a ma~. a federal jury ruled in
awarding $375,00 in damages to the
man Tuesday.
The jury agreed with Kevin
Knussman 's claims that he was
deprived of his 14th Amendment
right to equal protection and was
illegally denied 1.2 weeks of leave
guaranteed by the Family Leave Act.
Attorneys representing the Mary. land State Police said they would
file a motion asking U.S. District
Judge Walter Black to examine the .
yerdict to make sure the jury followed instructions correctly. Then ·
they will decide whether to appeal.
After· the · verdict was read ,

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 3, 1999

Wednesday, February 3, 1999

L-----------------------------

I.
I·

�P,age10 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 3, 1999

Wedne~ay, February 3,1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page f'l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

001·

~ ~
NEA Cro••word Puzzle

BRIDGE
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 A.,..W.
7 ROede
120newhola

cen.-

13 SMrcll out
14 Bou..,.ed

Lab Pups AKC, 6 Woako, ChO·

Needed Experienced Tree Climb-ers And Bucket Operator For
Work Clearing Power Lines In
The Mercerville Area. For lnlor-

Rent Buster, new t999 1"'x70 2or
3 bedrooms , only $995 00 down
,$195 00 per mon , free delivery

ma11oo Cal 740-256-1576

and set up call-1101).948-5676

RN Supervisor To Manage Cart!·

~Rtlques ,

top prices paid, River·

,ne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
~Uu
~

Moore owner, 740·992·

A_ntlques &amp; clean used furniture
will buy one piece or complete
household , Osby Martin, 740-

J19H578
Buying Standing Timber, 3 Acres,
&amp;Up,740-888-9861
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Tr~,.~ctc:a, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East-

ern Awnuo. Galllpol~

fwo Dashound puppies, male &amp;

lomala, 740-992-4135
Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Any

Condlllon 7&lt;10-446-9853

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Homes, CaJI 740-446-0175 304·

675-5965
We Etuy Everything Furniture
Appliances, Elo By The Piece Or
Thl LOll 740-256-6989

fled Passpon Provider Agency,

Call Midi-Home Health Private
Care, 740-441·1875
Salesperson Needed Furntlure
Store , Full -Time, Immediate
Opening, Apply Lifestyle Furni·

tura, 856 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
10 To 2, No Phone Calls PM&gt;asel

Salesperson wanted for lmme·
dlata opening at Don Tate Mo·
tore, 308 East Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio Apply In person.

EOE
Must be able to work any shift Including most weekends. Must
have clean pollee record, good
work history, reliable transport&amp;·
tlon, vahd driver's license, home
phone and must have black steel
toe safety shoes $5 75 par hour,
32·40 hours per week. Call 740669-2874 Monday- Friday 8am4pm tor appolntrnant

Wanted Assistant Office Manager. Good Pul!l~ Relallons &amp; Communication Skills Needed Typing,
&amp; Computer Skills Required 28
Hrs 1Weekly 1 Send Resume To
une, 825 Third Avenue. Gallipolis

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Slfoa,., 304-t75-1429

OH 45631

130

brary Page /Shell Maintenance

Min Wage, All Shifts, Bossard Ll·
brary, 7 Spruce Street, Gallipolis,

Ohio.

Are You Looking For A Warm
And Friendly Work Environment?
Would You like To Work In A
Place Where Your Effons Are
Recognized And Appreciated? U
You Are A Dedicated, Friendly,
Outgoing Individual Then Scenic
Hills Nursing Canter Is The Place

For 'ro!JII

AI Scenic Hills Nursing Center,
We Are Looking For A Part· Time

STNA's For Tho 2 PM ·10 PM
Shift

1 Part-Time STNA For The 10
Pt.t -6 AM Shift
Please Apply In Person To The
Front Desk Scenic Hills Nursing

Center, 311 Buckrldgo Road, Bid·
well Otf 45614

AVON

~AOOUCTS

Slarl your

pwn business, work flexible
hOurs, banelils available, Enjoy
limited earnings, Calltoll·free 1-

888-561·2668
Clerk!Treasurer Assistant needed 20/hr per week Accounting
and computer skills prelerred
Salary based on experience. Apply at Pomeroy Library through

February 121h

2 posiUons needed· experienced
dishwasher and experienced
housekeeper, part time hours, call

lor lntervM&gt;w 740·992-6228

Full &amp; Pari-Time, All Positions
Open, Gino a at Mason, (304)n3-

5536, after 4PM

HouaekeeplngJLeundry Super.
via or needed for 100 bed skilled
nursing and rehab facil ity Posl·
tlon Is full time and excellent ben·
eflts Candidate must be willing to
w011( with stall, scheduling, problem solving excellanl communicator, knowledge ol Regulatory
Compliance as well as related re·
qulrad dOcumentation Interested
candidates should subm1t resume
to Rocksprings Rehabi litatiOn
Center, 36759 Flocksprlngs Ad ,

Pomeroy Ohio 45769 ATIN Usa

740.446-3358

NOW HIRING
$17000 PERWEEKIPT
(OUARAANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Telephone Operator Work For

LOCAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
• Day And Even1ng
Shifts Available
• Full And Part T1me Opening
• No Experience Needed·
WeTra1n

'HOMEMAKERS
WORK WHILE CHILDREN
ARE IN SCHOOL
' College Students Wetcome
' PrEMOUS Applicants Need

To Reapply

Appty In Person At
117 P1ne Street

GallipOlis, OH
Tues. FeD 2nd
Wed Feb 3rd &amp;
Thurs Feb 4th

3 PM T1!6 PM Only
Ask For Mr Wiseman
N:..rtlng auletanta needed to
provide ln·home serYices lor the
elderly/ disabled , call 1-888-242

Buslnns
Training

180

Wanted To Do

Eldorado Adult Home: Long Or
Short Term care. Private Room
$1 ~"'00 Semi Private Room

$1,100, Syracusa, Ohio 740-992·
4-410.
Electric maintenance service
Wiring breaker boxes, light fhc·
ture, heating systems, and Re·
~ling

com

Detective • Private 1nves11gator
Trainees Good Wages. 614·523

6290

(304)862·3880
Furniture repair restoration &amp; re·
finishing, custom built reproduc·
lions, L;lz &amp; Bennett Roush, 140·

992·11 oo. Appalachian Wood·
workS

Furniture repair, refinish and res"'
toratlon, also custom orders. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry

Ph!Kips, 740-992-8578

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your your logs to a mill just

caU 304-675-1957

Handyman&amp; Special Elec , carpentry, other repairs &amp; remodel·

lng, Free Estlmata, (3041674·
0126
Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·

capped, 740-441·1536
Older Christian Couple Wllf Do

Houseclaanlng, 304-t75-8739
Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal, Free Estimates! In·
surance, Bidwell, Ohio 740·388·

9846, 740-367-7010.

Will Take Care of the Elderly In

Their Homa 13041675-6154.

Ortver Nan JFlatbed

Regional &amp; Long Haul

26To 33 CPM
Complete Benolrts
OIO's Welcome
CXROiler&gt;on
1~J'3.11511

www robersontrans com

llniiYIIIIII&gt;Ie on on oquol

opportunity bull

310 Homes for Sale
2 Bedrooms, Full Basement. CIA.

Garage, Fenced Backyard, VInyl
Siding, New Roof, &amp; Many Other
Nice Features! Located At 109
Pleasant S1reet, Pt Pleasant,

WVa. 740·441-0128, For An Ap·
polnlmont.

Two
b1droom
house on
80ftx1621t lot Corner of Pomeroy
&amp; Rail Road Street Mason, Wv

Mobile Homea
for Sale

Nitro Wv 304-755-8885

Amazing only $999. down on
large selection of double wldes,
free delivery &amp; setup owner fl·

nanclng avallabMI 304· 755-5685
$!'i00 Down on any 14x70 In
stOck, limited number, free dellv·

ery Call1-800·661·67n
ery can 1-800-691-em

New 24x40 3 Bedrooms, 2 BathS
Del &amp; Set $25,900 With Central
Air, Financing Avallabe Mt State

Homes 304·675·1400 Or 740·
446·9340
12x60 1969 Richardson 2 Bed·
rooms, 1 Bath, New Etectrlc Furnace, &amp; 200 Amp Braker Box,

$3 000, 740.3811-6236
14x70 Mobile Home. 2BR/1 Bath,
E&gt;cellant Coodltlon: (304)875·
6638
1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

bNe ~orne. 740·992-5039
1980 Kingsley 14 Ft x70 Fl. Wllh

1982 14x70 Schultz mobile home,

recommends that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have lnvestfgated
the offering

$11 ,500,080. (304)675-2619.
1986

Skylln~

14x70, lhroe bed·

room, two bath, one owner, air
conditioning and skirting, very
good condition. must be moved,

Baths. Central Air. 2 Decks, ax tO

Buidlng, 304-675·1275

IS 112% Interest Rate, To Qualified
Buyers. Lowest Rate In The Industry! Largest Selection In The
Tri-State , Over so To Choose

From, 1·600-251·5070

Homes, 304·675·1400 Or 740·
446·9340
Double Wide New $999·0own

"Promotiona l Sales Products•
Dick Roberts , 740-448 -7812
{Voice /Fa~e } ' See Us At
www vernoncomparrtcom•

$237-per mo Froa dallwry &amp; sol·
up 1·600-891-&amp;m.

Daniels Plano Se'"rvice· tuning
and repa ir, e.~:pQrt service since

$399-s Quick delivery Call 740·
385-9621

iels, Rutland

Schult 14x70 2 Bedrooms · 2
Baths, 2x6 Wallo Vinyl Sl~lng 1
Shingle Rool Save $2,000 Del &amp;

1965, 740·742 2951. Lana Dan-

Llvlngaton 'l Buement W•tera
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free esllmates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job e~eperl·
ence 304-815-3887.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1$817

Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

Sel For $22,900 Mt Stata Hornea,
304-t75-1400, Or 7&lt;10-446-9340
New 14x70 Norris 2 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Dining Room Wllh Patio

Doora, $24,900 Dol &amp; Sll French
Clly Homoe, 740-446-9340

1·6118-562·3345

Taking Applications , On 3 Bed room Repo , Pre-Approval In 10

Mlnule$1 600-383-6962

REAL ESTATE

New 14x70 $500-Down $199 per
mo Free air, skirt. 1·800· 891 ·

310 Homes for Sale

67n
New 16x80 $500· Down $245-per
mo Free air, skirt 1·800· 891·

1f2 acre lot 2·3 bedroom,, alec
!ftc furnace w/central air single
car garage large deck, 740·949·

New 1999 1411170 three bedroom,
Includes months FREE lot rent
Includes waSher &amp; dryer, ltclrllng,
deluxe atepe and setup. Onfy

By owner. 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 lots. must sea
to appreciate, will sell hOuse with·
out lots for $89,000 , 740 ·992·

2704 740.992 5896
Run Ad.. ·'Firer

Uppe~

$22,500 •

Owner F•n anclng Available Call
Arter 6 00 PM Or leave Mes ~age.

740.596 5707

Restored VIctorian home situa ted
on 12 ICfl l, V1llaga Middleport
s ecluded and pri vate , appo intment. call740-992·5696

eal1-800-946-5876
Used Homes 1985 Holly Park

14x70 3 Badroms, $12.900. 1967

OQ.wood 14x70 2 Bedrooms,
$12,900; 1975 12x60 Nashua 2

e1n

e

$200 74 per monlh wllh Sll50
-n Call-1101).637·3238.

Oakwood Homaa, Barboursville ,
WV Tired Ot No? We Say Ytsl

304·736-3409

Used Homes 1987 14x70 3 Bed·
rooms, $10,900 , 1990 Sunshine

14x60 2 Bedrooms, $12,900

24x44 Used Secuonal 3 Bed rooms 112,900, frAnch City
Homes, 741)-446-9340

DOwn Payment

f..O Problem I 1125-2128/99, 1-1101).
251- 5070

s

Baths, Great Location! 1 Court
Street, Gallipolis, Kitchen With
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo.,
Plus Utilities, Deposit, Referenc-

es, No PelS, 740.446·9560 •

2 BR lurnlshad garage apt In
Clifton. W\J very nice: $250

State Homes Pt. Pleasat,

5040.

We Finance Land &amp; Home With

As L111le As $500 Down. 1-806·
928-3428
Save ·Save · Save All Display
Homes On Sale AI French City
Homes, Gallipolis, Ohio (These

Prices Good On Display Homes

Del""' .270 Cal Very Good Co"'
dllon, $350, 740-379-2601

•'

(740)446-2460
570

530

Antique and collectible gtaBSwar•· Flo/ bhJe plate, pitchers ,
etc.: quilt top, ladles vintage hats

&amp; gloVes, 740-992-4522.

Buy or sell Fllverlna Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, on Fll 124,
Pomeroy. Hours M T.W 10 oo

a m to 8:00 p m , Sunday 1.00 1o
6'00 p m 740·992 2526 , Russ

Kimball Organ With Bench Good

Condlllon, Only $250, Call Anytlmo, 7&lt;I0-44Hl021 .

590

For Sale' GE WaaherJOryer,

$200 (:l04)875-6968.

Moore owner

plus $100 deposit, (304)773·
2bdrm apts , total electric, appliances turnlahed, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage

Green Apts 149 or call 740·992·
3711 . EOH

dltlonlng Free Estimates! If You
Don't Call Us, We Bofh Loael

740-446·&amp;:l06, 1-800·291-()096.

1 Crypt &amp; Plate, $2,000 00 Mem·
ory Garden1, Subject To Offer

740·367-7684.

1934 F12 Farmall tractor, all steel
wheels. call 740·742·3027 'bel·
ween S-7pm

power steering, power brakes, air,
goad condition, $2,400, 740-2&lt;17·

•KQJ

•

work

truck;

Automatic, Alloy Wheels Black

Chevy extend cab hall ton Sl~

2574-i5pm.
•'
For Sale 1973 GMC I 1/2 Ton

740.388·6676
COUNTRY LOTS
In Gallia County, Off State Route
233 Near Galla 7 Acres, Mead-

9560
Apartments: conage

&amp;

Christy's Family Living, apart·
menta &amp; home rentals, ?40·992·
4514, apartments available now,
furnished &amp; l.l'lfurnlshed. •

City, 35 Acre Recraallonal TraCis
Of Land Cloae To Crown City WI~

Furnished Upstairs 2 Room1 &amp;
Bsth, Clean, References, &amp; De-

dUfe Area Own Your OWn Hunting

Peradlse Only $29,000 00 Land
ConlraciS Avalabla 1·600-21 :l8365.
Trailer Hook Up On 5 Acres Lo-

cated On T"ns Run Ad, $12,500

·Owner Financing Available. 5
Acre lots On Teens Run Rd.

Starling AI $8,000 Call After e:oo

PM Or Leave Message, 740·

596-5707

360

movies Call 740·446·2588
Equal Housing Opportunily.

&amp;

poall Required, UIINIM&gt;s Paid, 740446·1519.
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apanments at VIllage Manor and

Riverside Apartmenls In Middle·
port From $249-$373 Call 740·

992·5064 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltles
Ground floor aptartment, 2 bed·
room with WfD hook·upno pots

(304)875-5162

Real Estate
Wanted

•
Wanting To

Buy. 15 To 20 Acres,

Prefer Somalhlng With Buildings

&amp; Barn, &amp; Some Usable Acres,
On Land Contract 740-367·0280

Wo Buy Land. 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay Cash 1·800·213·8365,
AnlhonyLandCo
RENTALS

2 br house on 2219 1f2 Lincoln
Ave Pt Pleasant $275 mon
$275 dep , available now, appliances turn. 304-882-2099 after
6pm. lea~ message

312 Wetzgal Sl Pomeroy 3 Bdrm
House, $350.00 Month Oepoell
Required 1·688·840-0521
701 Beech Slrael, Middleport, IWO
bedroom unfurnished house, dePQSI1 and references, 740·992·

0165

For Rent 2 BR House in Point

Pleasant, (304)675-4256 allor
IPM

House In Rutland, out or flood
area, no pets, references and de-

required, 740-742·2661

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mObile homes. air
conditioned, $260·$300, sewer,
water and trash :ncluded, 740·

992·2167

3 Bedrooms, 1 1/2 Baths $300/
Mo . You Pay Utilities, &amp; Deposit,

No Pets. 814-366-9182.

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, You

Pay Ulllltios, &amp; Deposit, In Porter
Area $265/Mo, 614-366-9162.

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment Prime location In
downtown Gallipolis No Pets!

$:!00.00 month plus utllllle&amp;. Rei·
erences &amp; Deposit Required

Call: 1740) 446·3302 lor appoint·
mont
North 3rd Middleport, 2 br. unfur
apt dep &amp; rei. 304·662·2568.
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash, $295/Mo, 740·

446-0006
One bedroom apartment for rent
quiet ,dep. &amp; ref required

$300 00, :!04-675-1550

One bedroom apartment In Mid·
dleport, $270 per month, all utili·

ties paid, $100 deposit, 740·992·

Bed, 427 Rebuilt Motor, Goo~
Rubber, 2 Sp Rear End, RuM

One bedroom furnished apart·
ment in Middleport, also one bed·
room furnished house In upper
Renters Dream Come True1 Call ..

304·738· 7295.
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

Floors. CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, Patio. No Pets Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required, 740·

446-3481,740-446-0101 .

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications for 1br HUD subsld·
lzed apt. for{.llljderly and handl·
capped EOH 304-675-8879
Upstairs efficiency with pri'Jate
entrance. completely furnished,
quiet surroundings, three miles
from the Ravenswood Rllchle
Bridge In Ohio Per1ect first apart·
ment for a single person or new
couple II you are looking, It's a
must see II'S S390 a month, utiliIlea are Included A $300 deposit
Is required For more Information,
or an appointment, call 740·8435343 and leave a message

Homes

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

MERC HAN DIS E

Two bedroom trailer. very clean.
$1 SO deposit, $300 month , no
pets, water and trash paid, 740·

992·52&amp;4

.

430 Farms for Rent
65 fenced In acres, 3 bedrooms,

30"
x 40ft.' garage. barn with 4 a1811s.

2 batha, central air, lireplaca

electJ1c and frost trae water. 10

miiPirom Ganlpolls 1650 monlh
plus I roonlh SOClJrlly (61 0) 5866252

440

Apartments
for Renfi

Household

°

mare with twin phllllea, 4 11~
months old, sell separate}y or to·

gelher, yearling bay coil, 1000 lb
bales or hay, 740-898-:2765.

Firewood, Delivered Call 740·

Colortul Buckskin Stallion, 740·

256-1922.

446-3659

For Sale Oak Roll-top Desk from

Oak Expross, (304)875-6843

Nice Young One Year Old Appaloosa Colt, After 6 P.M 740-441·

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

0279
Sale !Trade· Pollad Heralord Bull,

plano Or 74o-4MI-4S25

1 H2 Years, Good Sire, Gentle,

Allor BPM 740·256-1558

Health Alder, Nordic Track, Color

Monitor $25, PV A E Y Gul·

Hay &amp; Grain

640

Hay For Sale ; Round 8-lea,

(304)576·2521

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Aebulft In Stock
Call Ron Evans. 1·800·537·9528

n95

0000 USED APPLIANCES

Square Or Round Balas Delano
Jacl(son Farms, 740-446·1 t04
1

Nascar Colectlbles
By Action- Flavell- Brookstleld·
Winning Circle and Racing
Champions Dale Earnhart, Jeff
Gordon, plus Dale Jr and others.
Large selection Starting Line ups,
we have all gOOd players and protective covers for displaying, Me·
Gwira· Griffey· Marino· E Smith·
Shak· I&lt; Bryant and others. Can
be seen at Ruttand Bottle Gas or

by calling 740-742·2511 or 1·600637-6217, ask lorDaw

Nordic Track Walk· Fit: Fll One

Pat At 1-877-223-2688 For More

Details

TRAN S PORTATION
71

o

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

1985, S· IO Blazer, 5 speed, 4
wheel

drive,

$1,800

firm,

(304)675-39:WS75-3446

1986 Chevy Cavalier 4 Cylinder,
4 Speed, Good Tires, Asking
$550,740-379-2601 .

$2,500,080, 741).446-1397

740-367-0166
'
1993 fiSirO Erlended Van, Till;
Crulae, Air, Rease Hitch Exo.

1998 Chevy Blazer Ui, Burgund)',
Loaded, 29,000 Milas, 740·256;
1011.
: Von· 1991 C~evy, lull &amp;lze, G-20,

Mark Ill conversion; Looks and

runs gr..t $5,700:(304)875-29411.
740

I"'

~ME.

- AA.V€ BfEt-1 ~

'97 Kawasaki Prairie 400, 4X4, aulomallc, good condition, $3600,
740-992·5576
19111 Harley Sportsler, XLS:
Runs Great: $4,000 (304)682·
3604

r-s N.l- \1\E ~""'

i«&lt;D'l -(,() 10 \1\€.

W.U.!

tue:TOt\~~

Wi-.1/Et. ~I:&gt;ITIQt.l~
CNY.£tl e,'( ThE
~~~~ 1-U.i'fUI
. / , ""J'-.k

1998 Har1ay Sportslor: Completely Customized, Low Miles, Must

97 Honda i Trac 300, 5 hours dn
II, factory exterided warranty,t ask·

lng S3 500, 7411'142-1503 or 740592-4530.

7!10

BIG NATE
WE'VE GrOr EM ON
THE ROrES\ r -wt-::&gt;
ON A MAJOR ROLL
OUT T tiERE I 1'1 y

A\Jto Parte &amp;
Accnsorles

LUCKY SOCKS WERE

Budget Priced Transmlaslona
and Engines, All l)tpea, Accesi!
To Over 10,000 Transmlaalona,

KNOCKIIII' 'EM I&gt;Ei'D'

740-245·56n

A Auto, Alploy, WV 304·372;
3933 or 1·800·27:1-6329
780

.,

Camping
Equipment

Shape· $2.500 , Call Weekdays

$2,000 00 Good Condition 740·
4460-4782
1992 Honda Accord, LX, 2 Door

Coupe, 5 Speed, A/0, Cruise.
$3,995 OBO, 740·388-9876
1992 Mercury Cougar, 45,600
actual miles, excellent condition,
garage kept, must see to apprecl·
ate. white with blue cloth top,
leather a_.at, $7000 080 call

$3,900, 080, 7411-448-4051

560

1969 Cavalier Automallc, $2,395,
COOk Motors, 7411-446-0 I03.

5121

8 AKC German Sheppard Pup··
pies, have had 1st shots, $200

(304)675-7810

AKC Collie puppies sable and
white, certified normal eyes, $300
each, ?40--696· 1085
AKC Miniature Pinscher, Female
Black and Tan, 7mo old $250

I'M TMINKIN6 OF STARTING
A DISCUSSION G~OUP..

Campers It
Motor Homes

s1e.ooo OBO. 304-n:l-5484.

(304)576-~444

AKC Register Pomeranian 8
months old 3 remales, two with

black laces! (740) 3888842

T~AT

COVLD 6E YER'(
INTERESTING ..

AKC Registered Female Rottwell·

080

AKC Registered Mini Dachshund
puppies, long and shorl hair,

1986 Nl88an pickup,
runs good , $875 080

breeding pair or Cockatells. 740·

,

~

speld,

M&amp;J Auto, 740-742·4510

Suburban FOlly Equipped , V-81
Low Mileage, All Electric Wlndl
ow&amp;, Deluxe Interior, Non t
Smokers, Anxious To Sell! 740l'

446-2602.

Mountaineer

5th

Whe,il

Camper 17' Slide Out Washer a

l'R&lt;fEG~ION~L 8E~T

Dryer, Generator. Sell With Ot
Wlthoul Ford Crew Cab Ouall~

SAN1)E{2 1

00 '10\J AAVE i.IJ~1111t-1&amp; YOO

Truck, Excallenl Condltlonl 740'
441-0519. .

SAN\l€!1?!

ASTRO·GRAPH
Home
Improvement&amp;

"

BASEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnl1hed . Ea·

tabllohed 1975. Call 24 H11 (740)
448·0870, 1·800·287·0578 Rogers Waierprooftng.

Appliance Paris And Service All
Name Brands OVtr 25 Year• Ex·
parlance All Work Guaranteed,

French Clly Maylag , 740·448·
7795

-

f

carpenlry, doo,., wlndlowa, baths,
mobile home rapai' and mort. For
lroe estimate call CMI, 740·1192·

tenance· Painting, vinyl aiding,

New And Used Furniture Store

Guinea plga , one female , one
lor pair, cage Included

Below Holiday Inn Kanagua Stop male S35
992·5930
And See Us 740-446-4762

Snar-Pel puppies lots of wrinkles,

720 Trucks for Sale
1989 Chevy 1 To n Truck &amp;

$200&amp; up, 740-949-2128.

Flalbed Tra!Mir, (740)448-3243

fiVafentlnt Puppf&amp;slfl
Toy
Yorkles. Blchon Frlse Toy Poo·
dies, Will DoiM!r 74o-37H061 .

Ford F250, •x4, Complttoly
rebulll mull ••• 17,500, OBO,
1304)77:1-5798

6323

'

Professional . 20yrs experience
wiVl all masonery, brick , block a
atone Also room additions, ga·
rages, etc Free •a11matea. 304-

n:l-9550.

840

Electrlcaland
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring,
new seMce or repelra, Masler U·
censfd eleclrlclan . AldW~OUr

Eloclrlcal, WV000308. 304·8'15·
17116

Thursday, Feb. 4, 1999
Lessons you've learned from
experiences, bolh bitter and sweet,
w11l provide lite framework for some
new successes in lhe year ahead. It
could be a lime of exciting and
rewarding happenings.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)
Today may be lhe day when you'll
get a chance lo spend some time with

someone you' vc recently met who

AKC Registered Pomeranlans, 1

696-1065

'
By Phillip
Alder
In many sttuations, we tend to be
careless, mcorrectly thinking nolhing
can go wrong So we unnecessarily
break thmgs, mcludmg ourselves. For
e&lt;ample, when you lift heavy objeciS,
do you always keep 'your back
stratght and bend at the knees?
At the bridge table, we are care·
less too because we tend to assume
suas will divide fa"orably Yel it JS
su1c1dal not to provtde for bad sphts
whenever possible -· as in this deal
Some of the auctton mtght surpnse you, but 11 is logical Soulh IS
1oo mong for a sunple overcall,
whtch should be hmtted to a bad 17
points. So, he starts with a 1akeou1
double. In reply, North ts nearly
worth a jump to three clubs, wh1ch
would promise 9-11 pomts. Then,
when' South bids two spades, he IS
showmg a hand with some 17-19
h1gh-card pomts. Suddenly North
has the values for game, but wh1ch
game? He lransmits exactly th1s roessag~ by cue-b1ddmg lhree hearts.
After a heart to East's ace and a
heart to Soulh's king , the overconfi·
dent declarer ,Immediately leads a
trump honor. Yet here 11 1s fatal Easl
wms wtth h1s smgleton ace, cashes
the d~amond ace (though thai ISn't
necessary with this layout), and
r.eturns the hearl queen. Th1s promotes a trump Irick for West· one
down
As Ea,st ts marked w1th the spade
ace from his opening b1d, South
should cross to dummy's club ace at
tnck three, then lead a 1rump through
Easl Here, lhe spade ace falls on low
cards. Thts allows South to ruff the
third heart high, draw lrumps, and
dnve out lhe diamond ace.

13 Rankle

over ·

cergo

0

23 Tot.l
~
24 Out of bed 25 FlahlnggMr
27 Roman
bron•
32 Paid golfer'
34 SJ&gt;oiut
'I
35C~tor ·

the home

;

IMm

39LMiutd
43 -Arlbllt

411aN

47 Decotata

enew

... ,

... GoV«&lt;IIMMII •
llclualng org.:
49 Comparlltve',
ending
••
50 Paarl, e.g. 52 -TlnTln , •
(movie clog):

53 Hall a acora-

54 Sugary lutllx

you'.., very anxious lo gel lo know
better:-FiRO- your- best shot Know
wheRO to look for romance and you 'II
lind it The Astro-Graph Matchmak·
er inslandy reveals which signs arc
rt&gt;manlically perfect for you. Mail
12 75 lo Maichmaker, c/o thts newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
Slation, New York, NY 10156
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Should you need anylhtn&amp; from a
puck to a bicycle pump today, first go
lo a ROiiable assoclale who has been
helpful lo you in lbe past She or he
can be of considerable assistance lo
you again.
ARIES(MBR:h21-Apriii9)Aiign
youmlf with someone today whose

objeclives closely parallel yours and
bolh of you stand an excellent chance
of ach1eving your aims teamwork
will double your odds.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Only
if both managemenl and worker
receive something of value for their
input 1n any

labor

agreement, can

long· tenn success be realized by
each side. Do your pan to comply
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) It
shouldn't be necessary for you to
j)ecomc agresslve ilt_order IO -~~
your way with others loday. Persons
you have dealinss with will sense
your slrenglh and resolve.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
your male hu a special wish lhatls '
within yQur power to sranl, make il
come true today. This loving aesture
will nol readily be forgotten .
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) ShaRO
your day with fr1ends whose companionship you enjoy, or if you feel
soc•ally obligated to some pals, invne
lhem to your place. In either case,
your ltme will be well spent
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) The
mosl precious belongings we possess

are our family and friends. Today you
mighl be counting your blessmgs for
lhose m your life. You are lucky

indeed!

1

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) You
could be tempted today to adjusl your
standards to put others at ease How-

ever, if you do everything m accordance with your htghest ideals, exiraordinary things could happen .
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
Although you mighl do your ulmosl
today to conceal-your-tender mchnaa

lions, you won'l be able to slop yourself from d1Splaymg certam charila·
ble and compasSIOnate behavior
lowards olhers.
.
SAOIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Without askmg, someone who
cares a greal deal aboul you may pull
off somelhtng on your behalf lhat'll
make a difficult JOb much eaSier Be
ready to show your gratitude.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19)
Even 1f 11 IS a mystery to others,
you'll msunceively know how to

, bnng somelhins that appears to be
beyond everyone's reach a reality
today. Go figuROt

.

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher Cfyp(ogranw ... C. . .led from quotationl by fBmOUI

people{ pae1 and prnent

Each Jitter In 1M cipher atand!l for another Tocily'a clue Y squall

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FNXAIHVAFN
PREVIOUS SOLUTION. "In prepanng lor bailie I have always l1&gt;und that plans,
are useless, but plann1ng ts Indispensable"- Dwight D Eisenhower
.,
.,

TIIAT DAILY

..

PUIIUI

Ofour
Rearrange loHtrJ of
scrambled wordt

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low to fcrm four worda

RE F l Y B

I

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AV0 ET

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.....,,..F_,fl_.;::.E..,.,;.l_C,_-1! ...!,

"You r shoes are on lhe
I
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wrong feet ," the rrom Informed
.I
•
•
.
her son "Weii ,Mom "he
. - - - - - - - - - - . . . , grmned · these are the only

5

16

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flll•ng 1n

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word~

PR INT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

..
.

.
•

•

I I

IWEDNESDAY

ROBOTMAN
I JJST ~Itt '111\r. SEll\\·

C&amp;C Gen~ral Home Mahll
1997 Chevy Lumina, Excoll
Cond , Must Selll Cen For Dtlallsl
740-862·:J4l6.
1998 Plymoulh Breeze, 4dr..
Aulo Trans.: PS/PB: Loaded ,
7,500 mllea: $9.~00 . (304)675·
4849 altar 4PM

1~ ~~~layer...,(.

pllltlahmenl

Pass
Pass

Pass

You'll build o big nest egg when
you - wirh !he clossi(ieds

Contained, Also, 1985 Chevrol'

Schnauzer Puppies, 740· 446·
4815.

female, 2yrs old; 1 male puppy,
dob 11198 (:104)n:l-5052

Pass

Vary Lillie, Twin Beds, Cent,r

1995 Gao Metro, two door. automatic, gas saver. 50,000 actual

er, $200, Also, 12 Fl x12 Ft Dog
Kannel $100, 740-379-26611

Pass

Condition, Garage Kepi, Uot(

Cassette, 71,023 miles, $3700.
neg .. contacl (304)875-8914,8751637,675 3401

1985 Ford Ranger pickup, no
rust, runs good, .automallc, $975

2•
3•

,

1993 Ford Tempo: 2dr , automat-

$2995 080

P8RR

PEOPLE WOULD
FROM ALL OVER TO
Ll STEN TO ME ..

Ic; power door locks, AIC, AWFM

mllee

Db I.

1985 Airstream Travel Trailer 91
Ft , Purchased New, Very Goo4

810

9 Th- (pre!.)•

player.

•..1..-L.....L-..1..-L.....I vou develop from step No 3 below

1993 Cavalier Automatic, $3,295,

firm. 740·992·3342

a J.....,'aahtp'·

8 W1nted (II.)
7 Hoc~

22 Moat plaeaent

L. . . . . .Y

1992 Saturn 4 Doors, Sunroof,

1994 Caprice Classic 350, auto,
positive track duel pipes. $5200

IIRM
3 lndlapoaad
4 Wild plum
5 Reedy for •
good cry

East
1.
29

(304)875· 1066

1992 Beretta Automatic, $2,650,

Pets for Sale

1 Naval atltlr.
2 Long, long

._[....,;.I

740-247·3901 after 5pm

Block brick, sewer pipes, winD
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters
Fllo Grande, OH Call 740· 24!5·

North

Teal Green, Metallic E C , $550

36'

forte

DOWN

181-found
Ill
19 Vlalgoth king
2D Talut off

Camper Top 94-96, Chevy S·10,

Balh And Sola Bod, Fully Sollj

1992 Geo Prism, Autom Air,

-pon•

58 Fatnecl
qulntuplela

time

•

'

1997 Wilderness 5th Wheel with
slide-out, excellent condition~

AHer 6 PM 740-441 ..0834

Building
Supplies .

Motorcycles

1991 Cadillac Seville 4 door &amp;e·
dan, loaded with accessories.
great gas mileage, car phone.

2nd &amp; 3rd rows, call 740·949·
3315altar7pm

550

LOSER

.THE
........._- -

('

m-1&gt;-W..~

790

1991 Chevrolet Cavalier, 4 Cylinder Good Gas Mileage, Excellent

Welerllna Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Par 100, I' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100, All Brase Com·
pression Flnlnge In StOCI&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, Ohio, 1·600-537-9526

I

Cond $5,500. 740-446-9276

1986 Co~ OL Now Muffler, Naoda
Plugs, Carburetor, $400 740-448·
2879

A6d Stewart tickets for sale· 1st,
2nd, 3rd &amp; 4th rows, $120 &amp; up,
Merlina McBride &amp; Diamond Rio,

Secllonal Solo, Very Good Condl·
lion, $150, Naulral Shades, 740·
446-2311 .

BAN~

1979 Ford Bronco 4x4, Rebuilt
Engine, And Transfnlsalon, Aiplnf
CO Player, Many New Parisi

New gas tanks &amp; body parts D &amp;

Autoa for Sale

304-675-2722

1·666-1118-0128.

Kenmore Drye1 $75, While Gas

:J'

Bales, Altizer Farm Supply, 740·

245-5193

AKC Sheltle puppies, two blue
merle tamales , one sable and
white female, $350 each, 740·

Stove, $100 Call Aller 5 00 PM,
740-446-9066

tlon, Runa - And Oumps Good,

Straw And Hay For Sale, Square

Washers, dr~era refrigeralors ,
ranges . SkeQgs Appliances, 76
VIne Street, Call 740·4,.8·7398,

$100 WHirlpool Washer $90 G E.
Washer 585. May!ag Dryer sao:

Ton Dump l'(uck, v-e, 1ol't
Bed, 2•Sp. Rear Erid, Fillr Condl·

aae to appreciate $11,000
(304)773-5798
•

-~--~G~ood~s~----~~~99;2;~~9~;,;,;.1~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~-~
Registered
Miniature -1

":'"
Appliances
Recondit ioned
Washers, Dryers, Aanges, Refrl~
gralors, ito Day Guarahteel
French City Maytag, 7"'0-448·

White Wh irlpool Refrigerator

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshed and unfurnilhed, security
deposit required , no pets, 740-

992·2218

510

Beaullful Leopard Appalooea

446·7263

PRIMESTAR 78 Channels For
Only $22.99 A Monlh, Please Call

$350&lt; 00 Por Month Deposit
Raq'd All Ullllllas Paid Call 740.
446·2477.

Tlcke1s 1o N'SYNC Concerl In
Charleslon lor March 7, (304)1182·
3652.

New And Used, Stairway Eleva·
tors, Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts, Bowman's Hofl1ecare, 740-

~

1967 S-10 4x4, 4 Cylinder, 4

Tapes, $1 ·S 50 ea : (304)675·
1311, Altar 6PM.
Craftera look! 3/8' &amp; 112' oak and 630
Livestock
maple plywood, various OIZae, cal~
740-742·2629 " " - 5-7pin
1 112 Year Old Bay Sbtndard Brad
Aly, $550, 740-:!67·7221 .
Electric Scooters. Whe8tchalrs,

One Bedroom Apt Lafayette Mall

2 Bedrooma, No Pets, $23!5Jt.to ,
$100 Deposit References , 740·

no pelS, 740-992·5858

ol Cassene

per, 740-992·5161

740-365-438)

3 bedroom mobile hOme for rent,

ss; Variety

7606.

755·7191 Oak wood MO)'IIO

1913

Manrass.

58 Whirlpools
57 Having

Don't do something
careless in playing

Speed, GOOd COndtllon, $2,9()((

620 Wanted to Buy

Baby Balh Chair, $5, Baby Bed

Cross Country Skier; stair step-

2 Bedrooms. 2 Bath Trailer In
Green Terrace, $350/Mo , In·
eludes Lot Rent, Water, Sewer
Raterences Required, No Pets,
Excellent condition , 740·441·

446-2412 Or 1·600-594·1111.

Fullllno ol peta auppiM&gt;s

tar Amp $50 Cast Iron Tub, or
08017~9709.

Why Rent • you can own your
own home for as low as $499.
down low monthly payments,
owner financing available 304·

And Trash, $250 Deposit And

Puppleo &amp; Kittens

TV

2 Bedrooms, $275/Mo, Bladen,
References, Deposit, No Pets,

740-256-1568.

Parkorsbur]l, WV 26101
304-465·1293

740-446-0390

Galllpois, 740-992·9191

Clean 2 bedroom house In Pomeroy, $350 per month plus de·
posit, no pets, land contract pos·
slbte after a year, 740-698·7244.

Deere credit Approval. Carmlchael'a Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
Between Gallipolis And Rio
Grande On Jackson Pike. 740·

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,

Now Taking Applications- 35

410 Houses for Rent

pas~

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358. Walk to shop

Oualllylng Tractors Wllh John

2006 Camden Avenue

Trailer

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

e.so;.

B.V. Southll~ Aq,.rlum

For Rent, 740-388-1100

ows, Fenced In Aroa WIShed
Ready For Animals Only
$14.500 00 20 Aero Hunting
TiaciS W/Arx:ass Ad. To Wayne
Nallon8l Forosl Moally WOOd·
ed, Only $23,000 00 Land eo..
1rac1 Avallablo Frae Maps. A"'
1hony Land Co.. Ltd. 1-SOil-21:18365
RECREAnDN LAND
Sou1l1 Of Gall~ls. Near Crown

pies Call 740-441·1982

51- Rico
55 Followed

Opening lead: • 9

Dump Truck· 12Ft Alumlnu,

$2,500.00. Call 7411-446-4514 a.~~!~'gg
or 7.40·448·3218

West

48

MILK II

"

South

2a

AN' AGLASS OF

••

verado, twb, high mlles, look• •
r!I"S good, $5,500 080, 740-7:12-

740·448·2412 Or 1·800·594·
1111.
We Have From 25 To 30 Uaed
TractOrs In Stock Financing As
Low As
Fixed Rate On

CARE FER
ACOOKIE

Wllh Extras, 18,000 MIIAI, I
19,800.00 080. 7&lt;10-446-9268 .

Oood $5,00000 1969 GMC 1 1/

' Court St , Small One Bedrm.,
Kitchen Wllh Stove &amp; Rolrlgera·
tor No Pets. $225.00 Month Plus
Refrence &amp; Deposit 740-446-

equlptMnt
41Partola41C.Icu-

I

1997 Chevy 4 X 4, L.W B.. 350

Mos. Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn,
Midway Between Gallipolis Al'ld
Rio Orande On Jackson Pike.

5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew, Gallla County,
$32,000 More Acreage Available,

33 Cancelllllon

36 Da,_,.ll'a

'

42 c:.m..
44eom-pt.
45 r ...nla

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East

$10,500 ,

3 Rooms, Nicely Furnished Apt ,
Carpel Throughout, Central Heat

350 Lots &amp; Acrnge

K

•••

,..., • Peuula • Puatl

• K 10

Relocating? Take Over Pay·
men18, 304-736-7295

METABOLISM

• A Q 10 8 7 2
• A 7 4
• 7 3 2

weight
29 Flraenn
qwnera' org.
30 Cheat10und
31 Secret

.

•••

r

36 l'llng
40 Cityln "--I
41 King lOft!*

28 Trytoloae

South

12 Mo.s. 1.75% ·24 Moo 3 !% •
36 Mos .. 4.~'11 ·48 Mos , 5.5% -80

Braakthroughill Lose 10-200
Pounds Easy, Quick,
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended Free Sama

• 9 6
• 10 5

388·9nO, 74o-3!ls-eo11 ..
AMAZING

Eiost
a A

t98652

Only) 7&lt;10-446-9340

And AIC, All Ulllltles Furnished
Except Electric. No Pets. 740·
446·2602

West
• 9 53 2

Q J 10 7 4
• K3

92

New 5010, 6010 , 7010 Serlll
Trac1ors In Stock. 7 75'11 Flxod
Rate John Deere Credll FlnBitCing

movie
23 Wolf down
26 Ann bone

•A9864

$1,995, Cook Mo1ors, 740·446·
0103
1986 F-150 Ford 300, 8 ely, OU1D,

(304)773-5798

610 Farm Equipment

lllrel11nd

• Q J 3

J2,600 OBO: (304)662·2771 ,0r
(304)882·3333.
'~
1987 Chav.S·10, 4X4: New En·
gino &amp; Tr•na. $1600 (304)773·
5798)
1967 Dodge Oakola V·8, Auto,
AC, $695; 1988 Chevy Plck·Up,

Great

Available New 4000 Series COMpacts In Stock New John Deere
McCos And Round Balers 0% a

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

• J 54

•.;;;296:;:.1;;_---.----1992 Dodge 1 Ton Dual; 4X4;

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Merchandise
"WARM up1•
Furnace, Heal Pumps, &amp; Air Con·

Truck, Sl,800. OBO, (304)773·
5798.

V-8, Standard, 60,000 Mlla1,

For Sale
or Trade

02~-llt

Nortll
• 86

1986 Ford Truck, F-150, 4WO;

Musical
Instruments

Antiques

1

..

a

co late &amp; Slack , tat Shot&amp;
Wormed , Call After 5 00 PM .

00\
_7&lt;10-446-.;_.;_18'-'3.:.7._7&lt;10-446-.;_.:....:343...:....7...:...._ 54} Miscellaneous
1

Badrooms, $3,995. 19111 Windsor
14x70 2 Bedrooms $8,995, Ml

wv,

Smith And Wesson Model 1500

2 Bedrooms, $425/Mo $100 Deposit, All Utilities Paid No Pe1s,

446-~17

I 112 story house, 6yrs old 3BRf
2Bath. LIVIng room 2 5 acres on
Llnle 16 Ad • {304)675-6296 after

3037

per mon •• delivered and set up

1983, 14&gt;70 ManSion 3BAI2

Air, Financing Available Mt State

Professional
Services

Limited offer 1999 double wide, 3

br , 2 ba $1.799. down , $275.00

Sewage Garbage, Paid, 740·441·
1005,

STANLEY HOME PRODUCTS Doublewlde Aepo, Call For View&amp; FULLER BRUSH 740·423· Ing, 6()().3113-6662
3331 Or 740·698·5392, Parties
New 24x44 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths
Fund Ralsera Products, EmployDel &amp; Set $26,900 With Central
ment.
230

per mon HlOil-946-5679

1 Bedroom House, Close To Rio
Grande College, $300/Mo , Water

1996 Schultz 3 Bedrooms, 2

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Used single wide ar,mnd $1 00

2 Bedroom Apartment, 1 112

two bedrooms, two baths, 740949-0089
Bath , All electric/kitchen appliances, curtains/blinds new
wallpaper
Many
updates,

Utlllles, On Second Avenue,

Downtown, 740-36Hl219

State Route 216, In City School
District, Daytime 7"'0-446-3278,
Evenings· 740-446·3099

Slow and Relrlgorala&lt; Furnlshtdl
(740) 446·2583
1 Bedroom Apa~rMnl, All UHIIIM&gt;a
Paid, Bldwen. 740.388·9no, 740.
388-8011
1 Bedroom. $250/Mo , You Pay

cal 1·1101).948-5678

3/4 Acre Lot Located 2 Miles On

1996 14x72 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
740 245 9634.

Buelnell
Opportunity

5678

304·875·1400, Or7&lt;10-446-9340

$13,000,740-992-6227

FINANC IAL

Hous e And 5 Acres On Teen s

ALl OTR ORIYEIIS

lnlorrnodtholai-IQI

$999 Down on any 98 mode'f
Doublewlde In stock Free DeilY·

304·674-0126

Excellent care elderly person In
my home non-smoker; mobile;
reasonable, lady preferred,

210

ollho

law Out .,.derll 118 hofeby

of 2-3-4 bedrooms free delivery&amp;
setup owner financing available,
only at Oak wood Mobile homes

5PM

inc

knowingly ia:opt

II WoW II
Only S199. down largo selection

Auto Detailing; Buffing: Paint and
llady Work, (304)674·0002,

Qyerbrook Cen ter, 33 3 Page
Street, Middleport, has part time
poslllons for LPN s &amp; STNA 's
available lor all shills and weakenCI!I Anyone Interested please

Computer Users Needed , Work
Own Hrs S20K S75K fYr 1-800.
348· 7186 Ext 1173 www amp-

--rorrNI"In-lnlhls-'IIlio . _ . _ will not

320

No Fee Unless We W1nl

Avo

*rlllallonordllcrlrnlnllk&gt;t"

$22,00000 (304) 662·3604

(Careera Close To Home 1 Cal
Today! 740-446-4367, 1-800214-0452, Reg 190-05-12748

8404

stop by and flll out an appi~tlon

sex lamllalstltus ot natiOnll
oriQin, or any 1 - 10
make any luch pi lfiNI'ICI,

Galllpoill e.- College

J Schaaf Yehl Adm1nlstrator

Need 3 Ladles To Sell Avon!

Factory goof Ill Save thousand&amp;,

333 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, 2

Crop Insurance, Burley -10·
matoea , · Corn. Ken Bass Insurance, 1-800-291-6319

Accepting Applications For Ll·

ol1868 wtWch mak• ~ lllogill
10 -~· ·any pref8r8rt00,
limitation or dlscrlmlnallon
baSed on race. color. rollglon,

Story House, 740.4-41-o432, 814·
856·3485.

Insurance

140

New bank repos. only two taft.
never lived In call 1-800-948 -

whlch

Socurlly Ouordo

CLA 463, c/o Gallipolis Dally Trib-

EMP LOYMENT
S ERVICES

All realastate advar1111ng In •
IIlia rteiiiP- II OlA&gt;IOd 10
IM Federal Fair Housing M.

t Bedroom Apartment for Rent.

1985 Ford F250, iX4, Good Wort&lt;

1
15 ~'"!"·
18 S..eagle
17- Paulo
18 -Claire, Wla.
21 S.rllt'll

37Youngpt

.:i

:-:

SCIAM.J.ETS ANSWERS ,
Shn/1- Mot1f • VItal- Denote- VISIT THEM
After a very hect1c holiday season my neighbor announced that the eas1est way to make relat1ves feel at
home IS to VISIT THEM!

FEBRUARY 31

�. r
•.
•...• •
&lt;, •

~..912• The Dally Sentinel

..

repair scam turns consuirte.rs into felons

'.IJ KALPANASRINIVASAN
·AaiOCiated Press Wrller
· WASHINGTON - The Rev.
Sq1omon Bradford and his wife
th~lUght they found the answer to
their financial problems: a business
.'promising to fiK their credit record for

·s:z.so.

· ··Based on the advice of the credit
repair company, the Bradfords went
to ihe bank and got a loan for a new
'hO}nc - something they had been
denied in the past.
: ·.:But they also unwittingly com.initted a federal crime: substituting
':th¢ir Social Security number with
1\ilother number so their credit record

•

Wednesday, February 3, 1eH

.

~red it

I

Pomerov ~Middleport, Ohio

would
comeisupnoclean.
: . ''There
'free lunch," says
Bradford, a Baptist minister in
Columbia, S.C., who realized some- ·
lhing was wrong when the credit
·rtP.air company gave them a different
•8;acial Security number to usc.
·"There is no quick fix ."
: Bradford, who is blind , said his
disability makes him particularly
'wary of people who might take
. ·~d:vantage of him . "One thing I
· &lt;lori't like is being preyed on," he
"'aid.
· ·'But thousands of consumers,
e.il~er to believe promises that they ·
cjln "erase" their bad creiJit, have
follen for credit repair scams which
]ICt_ually turn them into criminals by
all~ising them to use a false identifi·
'Calion number to apply for credit.
The Federal Trade Commission
·and National Association of AttorIT!'Y,s General announced legal action
against 43 such scams operations
Tuesday, and warned consumers
against handing over money to businesses that claim to provide "brand
new" credit files.
. ·"They prey on people who are
plagued by poor c.redit- people who
inay be desperate to develop a clean
cr.,dit history so they can get a loan,

get a job or· buy a car," said Jodie
Bernstein, director of the FTC's
Bureau of Consumer Protection.
Oklahoma Attorney General Drew
Edmondson. who chairs NAAG's
consumer protection commiuee, calls '
these cases "just the tip of the iceberg" for a fraud being' spread far and
fast on the Internet and in newspa- ·
pers.
The operation works like this: ·
Businesses seek out consumers who
have been denied loans or credit
cards based on poor credit histories,
sometimes sending letters to people
who have filed for bankruptcy. For
anywhere from $29.95 to $400, the

sumers with instructions on how to numbersinsteadoftheirSociaiSecu· general estimates that» much as Legitimate companies also can coun·
develop a new credit identity, through rity number in credit reports or loan $400 million in fraudulent loans and sel consumers on how to fix errors in
a process called "file segregation ."
applications, enabling them to start a ·credit has been established across the their ,report and how to rebuild their
The companies then sell con· fresh, new credit record.
country, a costibat often is absor~ . credit but they can't simply erase a
1
sumers instructions on how to apply
The office of the Treasury's by the business~s providing credii.
poor 'credit history, warnS Susan
to t. :c Internal Revenue Service for an inspector general for taK administra·
Aside from file segregation, oth· Grant, director of the National Fraud
employer or taxpayer identification tion has already conducted I08 .inves- er credit repair
operations have. Information Cen'ter, a program of the
number. These numbers are intended ligations of individuals who sold or. • managed to ,defraud consumers ~y National Consumers League.
primar!ly so businesses can set up a used the employer itlentification promising to cl~tn up credit histories
"If it 's not inaccurate, it can 't be
tax account for their filing purposes. numbers to defraud creditors, result--· for exorbitant prices. In 1998, con- fixed," she said.
And in fact, the IRS on the applica- ing in 58 indictments or guilty pleas sumers on average lost $775 to tele1
tion form offers this warning: "An . on charges including misrepresenting marketers promoting fraudtilel)t qed- 4
•'
EIN is for use in conhection with a Social Security number, mail fraud ' it repair services, up from $568 in •
&lt;
l
your . business activities only. Do and conspiracy. The office is inves- . 1997, according"o the National Con- .
NOT use your EIN in place of your ligating an additional205 people.
sumers League.
.
'.
For writing brillilnl'openllll, Q..a
Social Security number."
The scams are expensive for both . In fact, consumers can obtam
Vlctorllo tmahted comploer Artlov
But the scam operations tell con - bus 1·nesses and consumers. The Trea· mformauon about their credit htsloSlllll•u but olighted lyricist w. 5 •
~·
GObert for woundina hCr with wools.
d
•.

"'am

TRIVIA

.;co~m~p~a~n~ie~s~p~ro:m~i:se~t:o~p:ro:v~i:de~c:o:n~-..:':um~er:s~to~o~e:x:a:ct~ly~th~at;..·.u~.s:e~th~e-~su:r~y~·s.t:a~x~a:d:m~in;is~tr:a~tio:n~i~~s~pe:c:to;r ~ry~·~a~nd~co~rr~e~c~ti~!l;!'c;c;u~ra;c;ie~s~fo~r-~f~re~e·~~~~~

'PEPSI '&amp; .·

P0 WELL'S

MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

ROlE HOURS

••••ythru
s.....,

24PICK

$. 99

IAII-10 PM
291 SECOIII» n.
·

Accepts Credit Cards

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TOLIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU FEIRlf~RY 6, 1999

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

.,.

FOR DETAILS

PRODUCTS
12 PK. CANS
..

')

~

. •.,'!!

'.

Mayor's court
.Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan
recently processed 38 cases in
Pomeroy Mayor's Court.
Forfeiting bonds were: Jonathan
!4~A1phreys. Pomeroy, speed, $71 ;
Ruth Anderson, Wellston, speed. $63;
Frances Gould, Pomeroy, failure to
appear, $45, no child restraint, $270;
C~ny Haning, Cheshire , no turn signfll ; .$63; Kenneth D. Rockhold,
Reedsville, open container, $83; Eri c
Shuits, Racine, expired tags, $83;
Jacquelyn Payne, Middleport, headlight violation, $63; Charles Shoeppnet, Athens, speed. $20; Peggy
Stevens, Middleport, speed, $65.
.fined were: Christina Holloway.
Pomeroy, unsafe vehicle, $83 and
costs; Richard Ward, Middleport, no
l(&gt;:ense plate li ght,· $20 and costs;
Travis O'Bryan, Mason, W.Va.,
speed, $64 and costs: William Milliron, Middleport, speed, $67 and
costs; Dana Gi lli spie, New Haven,
WVa .. excessive window tint, $45
and costs; Joseph LeMaster, Long
Bottom, fictitious tags, $83 and costs:
Chiistopher Reitmire, Racine , fictitiotts tags, $83 and costs; Melissa
Johnson, Bidwell, speed, $64: Ronald
F~, Syracuse, failure to control. $83
a~~ costs, resisting arrest, $330 and
co~s.

: ~ick Laudcrmilt, Racine , disord~gy conduct, costs· only : William

Priddy. Pomeroy, DUI , $395 and
cools, defective backing light, $40
and costs: Steven Oldaker, Middle~ol1, operating under DUI suspension, $150 and costs , fictitious tags,
$83 and costs: Roger Carpenter,
Langsville, speed, $65 and costs;
Eddie Dill, Pomeroy. speed, $66 and
costs: Jason Goodnite , New Haven,
W.Va .. improper backmg ; Mallory
Deett: Racine, speed, $69 and costs ;
Bradley Smith. Bidwell, driving
under. suspensio n,· $83 and costs:
JoAnn ·Hamson. Bidwell, fal sification , $183 and costs: Bobby Stewart,
Bidwell , DUI, $395 and costs, dri '
ving under suspension, $83 and costs.
reckless operation. $183 and costs,
open container, $83 and costs. disorderly conduct, $83 and costs: Harry
Leonard. Houston. Texas, DUI, $395
an&lt;!; costs, speed, $44 and costs .

'

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Str1p Steak.,.~·······t
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USD~ C:OICE BONELESS BEEF ~EW YO~~ .:. , .

HORMEL CANNED.

12 OJ.

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$129
Ground Chuck ••••••• ~.
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79 C Franks •••••••••••••:. .21.1
BAR·S BRAND ·

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6Lb. lox $299
51 1ce aeon •••••••••••
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69
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FINAL TOUCH

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Attions to end
~arriages filed
The following actions 10 end marri!lj1e were filed recently in the oflice
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Lar·
ry Spencer.
·
Di ssolution asked - Li sa Ann
Counts, Racine, and James Preston
C&lt;1Unts, Middleport; Mystic Mae
Colburn,.Pomeroy, and Bradley Neal
Colburn , Pomeroy ; Michael Lowell
Bing, Racmc, and Sue Ann Bing,
Pomeroy: Rose Mary Yoho,
Reedsville , an-d Lawrence HaroleiYoho. Belpre : Rachelle E. Diddle,
Sytacuse, and Chad R. Diddle,
Racine :
Dissolutions granted - Penny
Sue Priddy and William Robert Prid·
dy ~Rollie D. Stewart II and Michelle
Dawn Stewart; Margaret·Lynn StoryScb~ab and Thomas Schwab.
Divorces granted - Dwight E.
Sturgeon from Terri L. Sturgeon ;
Allen Lee Pape and Carol Ann Pape :
Deanna Faye Le mley and James
Ryan Lemley ; Steven Edward
Tr.usscll and Mi chelle Rose Tru ssell .

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UNITED FAMILY PAK

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PEPPERIDGE FARM

$ 9,

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WHITNIY'S
GRANULATED
PINK SALMON
SUGAR

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(Asst. Yar.)

29.~. .

UMIT 12 PLEASE. ADD. PUACH.

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or Red. Fat)

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$3''
11 LIS.

Win A
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The Daily Sentinel
February 3, 1999·

."·

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