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'
Marine Cpl. Roben Sinnett, son
of Sandra Kirkendall of Albany,
recently · panicipated in a bilateral
exercise with the Kenya military
while on a six-month deployment to
the Mediterranean Sea and Arabian
Gulf with the 13th Marine Expediti omiry Unit aboard the ships of the
USS Boxer Amphibious Ready
Group.
.
Conducted in Mombasa, Kenya,
exercise Edged Mallet 99 was a
four-day humanitarian assistance

Our
~trength?
...,..._.,....-7-_._ _._,

II seems today that we are constantly faced
with various concerns that ""IUire an inner
strength to help us through difficult ti,mes.
It doesn't matter whether our problems are
related to health, finances, or family Issues,
it Is impoitant to know that we do not have
to face these oituations .alone. By developing
a relationship with God, we can take comfort
in knowing that He will be our soun:e or
strength ·whenever we are faced with a
crisis. Attempts to find strength through the
use of alcohol or drugs, wiU only mask our
problems for a few hours; whereas, God's
strength is pennanent Difficult situations
require a strong opiritual strength and we
should be spiritually ready for whatever
adversity comes our way. Trusting and
finding our strength in God is important in
our everyday lives.

'

KAITLYNN HARTENBACH

·
. God ;, our refuge ond Jtrength,
o ~IJI present help in trouhlt.
KJV l'lalms ~:t

E. T. come home
-if you can

TURNS TWO- Kaltlynn !;Iizabeth Hartenbach, daughter of
Steve and Pam Hartenbach of
Pomeroy, observed her second
birthday on Feb. 15. ··
A Telletubbies themed party
was held with a a theme cake
being served with Ice cream and
a brunch.
VIsiting during the afternoon
were here maternal grandparents, Gene and Wanda Imboden
of Syracuse; paternal grandparents, Bob and VIola Hartenbach,
Pomeroy; godparents, Joe and
Marty Struble of Pol)leroy; and
her godmother, Kelly Shears of
Racine.
Also attending were Kim Jlnd
Jordan Vlerheller of Rac:'ine;
Roger and Ryan Imboden of
Athens; Minnie and Paul John·
son of Middleport; Jim Knolhoff
of Athens.
~ending gifts and catds were
her older slater, Anna · Marie
Hartenbach of Middleport, Gary,
Debbie, Jessica, and Andrea
Grueser of Pomeroy, her godfather, Skip Imboden of Gallipolis,
and Chad Imboden of Athens.

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operation held at a
Am6~~~~c~:~Ready Group.
•
in Mombasa, Keny~~;
Sinnett is a 1995 graduate Federal Hocking Higb School. He joined exercise Edged Mallet; 99 was ~
the Marine Corps in October, 1995. four-day humanitarian assistance
operation held at a local hospital. I~
Charles Marti•
Marine Cpl. Charles' 0. Manin, a addition to providing medical ancl
1995 graduate of Meigs High dental attention 10 nio01, than 1,400
School, recently participated in a ·Jocals. Marines and Sailors frorq
bilateral exercise with the Kenya Manin's unit distributed Proje~
military while on a six-month Handclasp materials, wl)ich incluct
deployment to the Mediterranean ed medical. and hygiene suppliel!!l.
Sea and Arabian Gulf with the 13th They also volunteered time to ma'kl
Marine Expeditionary Unit aboard ·repairs at the hospital and to ren~
~
the ships of the USS Boxer vate two loca~schools. ·

News Hotline 992-2156

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ifPil'11VOI. Not valid With any othtr'offer. 1ft stort for .
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rfetalts. Offer l!fllis Maith 31. 1999.

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93 Mill Street
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740-992-6657
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Today'• tltm.-JI:aatbwl
· 18 Sections • 14-Pages
C4&amp;5
DJ.7

Comlq

Insert e

Edltodals
Alon1 the River
Obltuarle!

A4
Cl
A6
B1·8

Sports
o ·t!l99 Ohio V.ltey Pub!IJI!ins Co.

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Flooded

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chur.ch
get$ new.
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By KEVIN KELLY
Tlma•s.mJMI·bfr
GAWPOUS- Now that il has a Main
Street Gallipolis ·designation, the city's
·downtown hopes a aeries of.steps it will take
under the program's guidanoe will l'CSult in
more activity and promotion in the area, a
Oallia County Otaniber of Commeroe offi·
cia! said.
"Basically, it means the goal will he a
rCvitaliud central business district and
ii!Feosed pride in the downtown,"
explained t.WJe,n,.
the chamber's ' .

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By JIM FREEMAN .
Tlmea-Sentlntl
·
ALFREO- :~~~r;morc than eight moqtha after it:
was wiped out ••
· flash; flood, the Orange Otrirs-·
tian Oturch is
a return. .
·
The 160-year-old
which~ ~ear the Meip:
County community
· ·
'
of Alfred along the
Athens-MeiJ!II coun-.
. 1\'!15

lllistant direi!W

Vl8iiON FOR THE DOWNTOWN.._ Now that H haa a
Glllllpolla de•
lgnatton, tha clty'a downtown, a.en tram
Ohio hlatorfcal mal'Dr ,t tha City Park
In lnlat, Ia ctrattlng a davtlopment and vlalon plan tor the future. ·MarJaan Butch·
ar; abOve, GaiDa CoUnty Chamber of ComlMii:a a1111ant dlractor and tha local
Main 8trMt'a axRuttva dlractor, aomlnee materlall from the Ohio .Main ~
organization.
address those ideas, but in the finst year, the to ael up a business; rathci than have to go to
group looks to craft a business assistanoe four or live places," Butcher added.
In the future, Main Street Gallipolis will
plan to help small operations "get off on the
· focus on attractina more residents to the
right foot in the downtown," she added.
. "We look to be·a one-!jtop center to pro- downtoWn · and addressing any .resulting
, COntinued
A2
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vide all the jnform~otlthey'd n~ inc;mler

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des;tro:yed on
· 28,. .
when the
rain-swollen East
. Shade River left its
banks, sweeping the
building off its foun·
dation.
Now, thanks to
offers of money and
material donations,'
work has started on
a new dlurch being
constructed· wliere
the ruined l!.uilding
once stood. The
.
footel!i and founda- Jim DMmr, a membDr Df the:·
.
Orange Chrtatlan Church locat·
tton have been eel near AlfNd, 8XIIml- plumb-'·
poured, and some lng -rk tor tha riiiW church.preliminary plumb- building curnntly under con·:
. mg completed.
rllrucllor\. A 110-ve-r-old ehllrch..
Jim Oeeter, a loeaWd at the elte waa deetroyect
church member who In 1 flalllllood lalteumll'ltr.
lives nearby, said
,
Friday, that permits have been obtained and the IICrvices:
of a builder secured for the projeet. Oeeter's wife, Bren-· ·
da, has bad seven generations of her family attend ser-:
vices at the church over the years.
•
He anticipates the new building being under roof
within two months.
· "It's not going as quick as we would have liked,•;
Deeter said, adding that the new building will be a little
larger than llle old building and is being built with
accommodating handicapped parishioners.in mind.
.
Parishioners, under the direction of Charles "Skip"· .
· Continued on page A2

chool District sells Chester property

By BRIAN J. REED
church; which currently ilaes the lot as a park- the lot might~ purchased by a gravel mining space to ACCESS/Head Stan as a center for'
activities. That building and the Chester build·
.
Timn-Santlnal Staff
.
. ing lot by virtue of an easement from the · company.
The. school board now has the option of ing were both constructed as high schools in
. TUPPERS PLAINS - The Eastern Local school district:
School Oistrict sold one of two abandoned
Karr purchased the parcel with the school readvertising that property for sale ar a lower ·the 1920's, aitd were convened for el~mentary ·
use when Eastern High ~hool was construct·:
·
•
school buildinJ!II at an auction on Saturday, but building for $30,000, twice the minimum bid minimum bid:
ed
in 1957.
_
The
two
school
buildings,
alo~g
with
the
will retain ow"ership of another property IICI by the board. The church was able to pur'
Board
member
Mike
Martin
conducted
the·
Tuppers
Plains
Elementary
School,
were
abanbecause no bidder offered the minimum. price. chase its lot for the $15,000 minimum, in that
doned by the school board in 1998 due to the iuction on beh41lf of the school distric~ and '
The school board sold its two pieces of real ·it was the only bidder for the, parcel.
estate in Chester. The building and propetty
No biddens offered the minimum bid of consolidation of the elementary schoo.ls into a board members John Rice, Greg Bailey, Roger
on the south side of State Route.248 were sold $400,000 tor the 7.7 acre Riverview School new K·8 building next to Eastern High Willford and Rick Sanders were also prcsen~ .
in addition to Superintendent Oeryl Well,.
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to Tom Karr of Pomeroy, and the propetty · lot, which includes the newer elementary · School.
Treasurer
Lisa Ritchie and Prosecuting AllOr·;
The
lx!ard
uses
the
Tuppers
Plains
building
adjacent to tlie United Methodist Oturch, on . building and a wooded lot There. had been
ney
John
Lentes.
the nonh side of the highway, was sold to the speculation in the Reedsville community that as an administrative headquartens, and leases

Strickland blasts editorial cartoon
'

·Congressman says newspaper shows bigotry against people In poorer parts of the state

.J

GALLIPOLIS - Sixth Oistrict U.S. Rep. Ted the Lucasville Democrat said. "The school funding invited the editorial staff to come to southern Ohio
:~irickland has taken issue with a March 2 editorial car· struggle is about every student in Ohio receiving an and "see fillil·hand some of the intolerable condi.i
loon in the Plain Dealer critical of Judge Linton Lewis . adequate education in a safe and healthy environment" tions plaguing our school children."
Jr.'s most recent ruling that Ohio's sehool funding sys· · Strickland called the cartoon an "insult, not only to · In 1997, the newspaper ran a CJiriOOn whic~ r!
tern is unconstitutional.
·
people in my rural southern Ohio district,' bu\ 10 all depicted Lewis seated in front of a mobile home
. The cartoon depicts Lewis as a
those in other Ohio communities that next 't o a man In bib overalls carrying a pig and a •
dunce forang the state legislature to
~ave not shaRd in our state'l econom· shotaun. Above the mobile home is a sign that "'
. reads: "The Hon. Judge Roy Bean Linton Lewis.
write "I will enSure that every Ohio stntc good fortune."
.
dent also has a car, pager and tommy
'
Strickland represents a 14-eounty Jr., Edyoukat ion Zar of Ohio by dickree. of state
Hilfiger wardrobe like kids in the High- Rep. Strlcklaild'a letter to- the . district, which · includes Oallia and supreme court."
4wis, a Perry County Common Pleas judge,
falutin' districts" 1.S billion times.
Pl•ln Dealer • Page A7
MeiJ!II ~ounties, in southern Ohio. The
ruled Ohio's method of funding public education
In a statement issued Friday, Strickland blasted the Pliin Oealer is published in Cleveland.
cartoon, chatging jts depiction "shows bigotry against.
"I am very disappointed that the Plain Dealer con-. unconstitutional in 1994 in the case of OeRolph L.,.-~;;;~rliij~~;;~:p;;;;fciC"'t;jOaiiijitiiij;j~-;Jl
examining
to provide
for all
people In poorer parts of the state.''
tinues to use cultural stereotypes to poke fun at rural vs. Ohio. The Ohio Supreme Court uphtld Lewis'
schools.
"With thiS' cartoon, the ~lain ~?ealer is mocking~ . Ohioans who are simpl~ fjghting to make sure kids get ruling in 1997 following an appeal by the state.
FOllowing the failure of a state ballot issue last )1-!ay
Lewis ruled Feb. 26that the state has not done enou&amp;h
school ~pding debate by amplymg that Judge L.ewi':f• what they deserve- an adequate education," he said.
to
fund
increased
educational
dollars,
the
state
is
still
to
provide
equal funding for the state's students.
decision arants outlandish luxuries to rural students,"
In a letter aent to tho Plain Dealer Friday, Strlcllland

l nsl•cte

Visa· MC· Discover

Vol. 34 , No. 4

Downtown Gallipolis ·explores
g.rowt" options under-program·

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740-992-3148

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Easte.r n Local

Good Morning

Calendan

The Shoe Place

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execittive diteciOr, '
·
Oallipolii wu named ' Mafn Street com·
munity in Decentber 1\fter applying anti competing for the designation' with other communities. The program has assisted cities and
villages with a resurgence in activity in their
downtown ~ when commeraal developmeill occurs away from the area.
Having urtqone trainin~with the Ohio
Main Street otganization, a full day work
plan development session is scheduled for
Monday at the l..eMAiquiS Reatauran~ 'slarling at 7:30 a.m. The aeminar will open.with
its lVII board of directors, led by James
Mullins, identifying issues with the downtown, and the local Main Street's commit·
tees will develop input for the vision of the
downtown and future decisions. .
The Main Street designation comes as
the chamber anil downtown continue
. exploring options i~ attracting business and
people back to the area. Butcher said she
expects M!lin Street will yield results
because it is an o.ngoing commitment
"This will give us a vehicle of following
through
on development plans," she said.
Cr.
~
"They
expect
to see a huge increMO in
• At least one regulator agrees. The
pedestrian
traffic
in the area as a result of
&lt;:Qmptroller.of the currency, John 0 ..
what the program will develop over the next
Hawke Jr., who ovel!iees nationally
few years."
.
chartered banks, told a House subMain
Street
follows
the
conoepiS
of
orga·
committee hearing Thursday the
nization, promotion, design lind economic
rilles should be scrapped.
·
.~cillfing in achieying its ps; Butcher,
: "It is my judgrneni... that the pro· ·
said. Committees Jtave bee~ created. ·to
jJosal should be promptly . witllarawn," Hawke said.
·

Chw!Deds

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FIRE &amp; SAFETY EQUIPMENT
172 N. 2nd Ave. ·- Middleport, OH 45760
2653 St. At. 141 - Gallipolis, OH 45631
Robart Curry, Mof11191r
740·992-7075
MoWt l'llont 441-5248
740·446-4178
Jorro4 Douglas. Strvi&lt;e Tlllhni&lt;ion
8011-353.0837
MoWt l'llont 591-1841
Fox 740-992-4589

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate, joining a torrent of criticism
from people worried about privacy,
asked the Clinton administration Friday · to withdraw proposed antimdney-laundering rules that would
track bank customeis' habits. .
· By ab 88-0 vote, senators supported legislation directing bank reg!llators to drop the proposed rules. .
Tlie measure lacks force of law,
because Senate Ocmocrats blocked a
binding vote on its adoption.
"This is such a broad-reaching
regulation that it infringes on our.
~Qll!ltitutional rights," Sen. Phil
n••mm.
ch~rman of th• Senate
· ""'s ki
" !Iee,._.,swu
...,.!1--,•an . · ng--.,..~.
UJmmt
on I e
&amp;~nate ·floor,.:('he ..Texu Republican
main~~ that·the rule5 would viola,te t1te Fourth e.ntendment prohibition against unreason~le search and
seizure.
. ''If you ever wondered whatever
happened to the people In the former
Soviet Union who used to run tHings
th~re and now are permanently oul of
work, the answer is they're all in the "'
Clinton administration, an~ they're '
running the banking authorities of
this country," said Gramm, a cosponsor of the Ieglslalion.
In the House, the Banking Committee adopted an amendment to a
b!g financial aervices bill Thursday
that would kill the proposed banking
rides, which are knowq as "Know
'(pur CUstomer."
• Privacy advocates, conservative
gioups, ordinary people ·and the
option's bankens have complain~
, that ll)e rules would transform every
bank teller into a spy .for Big Broth-

JVlii/Street J3ooks

Beauty &amp; Tanning Salon

•

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for'l)ouaes Oil the jllopetty.• ' '
Julia Houdashel~ whO ~
housing projects for the IIFncY; ~ ·
last month that some residents in the.
area ncar the ptopole!l .subclivlsl9n
h~ objected io what l!he _peroeiVI!d ·
as public housing" ~hut ·
Houdashelt noted lhat these wt!C ~
.rental UJiits; IDstead, lbcy Will be pri.'
NDW1111~, 1~ from Palrk:ia Oark, for S21,(XX). The &amp;&amp;ency to waterways and bea•l$e the lay of the
~~.:;..'"--'.:;:::..:..:::;..J vately·owned houses, subject to.
has 111 optialto buy the second perc:e1, 81 a CXllll of $15,®, · land is Dl-suited for such a developwhich will remain in effeCt lhrougti the 'Cud oflbc year.
· menL
strict subdivision regulations. . ·
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•
Houdashelt silid that'aliiSiruction on the' first 1101*1 iii·
· Lots w1Jl he sold by the agency to q\lallf)'ing h!lmebuyThey also say that the development will likely cause
ers, who meet income guidelines, anc1 homes will be con- problems for the village's sewer system.
.
t.he development could begin as soon as this spriJii,· but:
.stnicled on eac:h site. Oepending on'income level, pur·TrishMcCollough,directoroftheCAA,saidFriday.that McCollough did not
if the time'lehedule h!ld c:lwlaed. ·
chasers will receive mortgage subsidies to assist them in she was aware of the objections of Weber and Jenkins, and · In addition to t)le Rutland pmperty; CAA wiU. also
meeting the purchase prioe of the land and home.
of,others, but said that the agency has 1101 chang«&lt; its plans develop sites on Bulaville Pike and .81 Oeerview &amp;11*1 in
Weber and Jenkins told the commilllionens thai they feel foi the land it has purchased.
Galli a County, and will eotisidet a similar ·Jiroili•li in Syra'
. ihat the land is inapfl!'Opriate ·for. use as a residential Subdi"The land has been purchased and the plans of the IIJ!"ncy QL1C, Houda$helt said,·although no ptoperty has been~.. ·
·
. vision, beauSe of flooding problems and potential damage . have n~ changed.• McCollough sii.d. "We plan to aeli six chased there.

•

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Middleport
Merchants ~~~

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Main Street focus:

to Withdraw new rules

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B,uoMyM bdle llllnl • P~ge in

Gallipol is· Middl eport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • March 7, 1999

By BRIAN J. REED
TlmNoiDntiMI StaH
RUILANO. Despite nstng objections, the
. Oallia/Meigs Community Action Agency plans to proceed
with a housing development in Rutland. ·
1\vo residents of the commwiity, li&gt;uane Weber and
Stephen Jenkins, mel with the MeiJ!II County Commissionen a week ago to discuss their conoems abojlt the project,
i'ibich Calls fur the construction of six homes on approxi·
milklly four aaes of land in the village. ,
The tinst.of two parcels of adj&amp;oejlt land was ~ in

·I¢~\'olthfllOO.OiwMoul)
.

pageA2

GaiUa·Meigs CAA proceeds with housing
deVelopment plans \despite objections· ·

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Inside

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

A cellular offer to
get pumped about.
$60 in free·gas/·

By The Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API
E.T., come home.
A 4-foot tall statue of the title
character of the movie "E.T. The
Extra Terrestrial" was taken early
Sunday from •atop the Extra Terrestrial Auto Oetail shop.
,Shdp owner Ellis Terrell, who
has bee.n nicknamed "E.T." since
the film was released in 1982,
said the plastic statue was half- Daughter born to couple
filled with cement and strapped
Jeff and Kathy Moore cif Russelland bolted to the shop building.
spoint announce the birth of a .
" It wasn't an easy task. Who-. daughter, Jolene Marie, born on Jan. ·
·ever wanted this wanted it bad," 2. She weighed eight pounds, 13
Terrell said Thursday.
ounces and was 20 inches long.
Terrell installed the statue six ·
Mr. and Mrs. Moore had another
DILLON MAHR
~onths ago after a friend bought daughter, Kayla. Paternal grandparSON BORN - Ryan and Carol 11 at a garage sale. He fried a . ents are Freddie and Della Moore of
Mahr announce the birth of their police report and printed fliers Cheshire, and the maternal grandthird child, DUion Andrew, born· askmg ·anyone wllh mformauon parents are Leland and Margaret
on Jan. 30 at the Holzer Medical about the missing statue to con- Parker of Pomeroy.
Center. He weighted eight tact him .
pound, eight ounces.
American Express encourages
"E.T. Phone Home' $500
Mr. and Mrs. Mahr have two reward ," the , riters say. Terrell travelers to be especially aware of
other sons, Steven and Bran· plans to post them around the cancellation policies for hotels in
don. Maternal grandparents
vacation and convention areas and
Include Bonnie Smith of Middle- Ohio State University campus, in cities hosting high-profile •
port and the late Odell Smith. near his store.
"It's probably hanging in a events, such as the Oscars or the="
Paternal grandparents are Eve- ·
Super Bowl. These popular events
lyn Jewell of Rutland and the dorm room or a frat house right increase demand for rooms and
now," he said.
late Rufus Jewell.
may set special deadlines.

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Alo ng the River

Do We

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Friday, March 5, 1999:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis; OH • Point Plea18nt, WV

Regional

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Sunday, March 7, 1998

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·ANN ARBOR, Mich. · (AP) Southern ·Michigan got hit with
another blast of winter as ·heavy
snow was falling in many areas Friday night with up to a fool of snow
expected by midday Saturday.
Southwest anct southeast Michi- ·
gan were under a winter storm warn. ing until Saturday morning, with a
forecast of 6 to 12 inches. H,eavier
accumulati!)n was e1&lt;pected along
Michigan's southern border, getting
lighter moving northward.
· At 10:30 p.m., Friday it was

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I Toledo lmv t
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By The Alaocl• Preas ·

A winter storm warning was in
effect' for · far northwest Ohio
through ' Saturday night. A winter
weather advisory for snow and
blowing snow was.in effect for the ·
Northwest:
.Snow and windy conditionshit
KY.
the Northwest. There was also blow·Inc.
ing and drifiing snow across· norJh·
·em
Ohio. A mixture of rain and
.
snow changed to snow across the·
Sorth and rain changed to snow in
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the afternoon in the South.
Snow
leo
SUnny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
Showers T·stofmS
Rain
Fllrrioil
The state had early highs in the
30s north and 40s south.
Skies were mostly cloudy Saturday night early in the West with flur·
· Sunday: .A chance ofsnow flurries in the morning; otherwise becoming· ries. becoming partly cloudy. Snow
showers will be likely in the North· plirtly sunny. Colder with highs in the mid 30s.
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Extended forec•t
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. east. Aero~ the east and south there
will be a chance of snow showers.
, Suaclay nlgbt: Mostly clear. Lows in the teens to near ;!0.
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· ~oeday: Becoming ~loudy. Rain likely, mainly during the night. Highs 'Overnight lows will fall to between
15 to 25 &lt;legrees.
· in the lower 50s.
Stormy weather In Eaa.t
1Ueeday: Rain likely during the day, changing to light snow at night.
Much of the eastern United States
~oming lows in the lower 40s and daytime highs in the mid !lOs•
:~o; : Wedllelday: Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers. Morning . was poised to get rain and snow Sal'
:~sin the mid 20s and day1ime highs in the lower 40s.
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snowing across southern Michigan
near the Ohio line.
The snow forced can~llation of
some flights at Detroit Metropolilan
Airport', al;lout ·4Q miles north of-the
Ohio line.
The snow caused a U.S, Airways
flight that just . landed from Pitts·
burg~ to go off the taxiway and get a
wheel caught in the.mud late Friday.
Airport spokesman Mike Conway
said the approximate!)' 70 passengers were brought to the terminal on
buses and no injuries were reported.

urday ·as a strong storm system
pushed its was across the region.
A low pressure system centered in
eastern Missouri was expected to
spread precipitation from southern ·
Michigan and western New York
through northern Mississippi.
The center of the storm was
expected to move up the Ohio River
and reach New York City b)l late
Saturday night. Heavy snow was
possible in central and northern New
York.

:~Natlpnal Weather Service state forecast

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: ., Sunday: Mostly sunny west. Mostly cloudy with flurries ending east.
:-Highs 25 to 35.
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Extended forecast
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Suday ~t: Dry. Lows 15 to 25. .
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Moilday: Dry. Highs 45 to SS.
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; ~ 'I'Iaday: A chance of snow north and a chance of rain or snow &amp;QUI h.
1 Lows in tllo .20s. Highs in the 30s north .to the lower 40s south.
, . Wed.-,: A chance of snow. Lows 25 to 35. Highs 35 to 45.

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. GALLIPOLIS -A Jackson man was recently arraigned in the Gallia
Pleas Coun on seven counts of illegal.processing of drug
· 'd'qcuments.
! ·· Jerry Denham pleaded not guilty to the ch31J!es. GBllipolis attorney James
A. Bennett has been appointed to serve as his attorney.
&gt; • Sond set was set at $5,000, pwn recognizance by Judge Joseph L. Cain.
•A prettial hearing has been scheduled for Tuesday, April 13 at 9 a. m~
· In oiher court action, Brian Fellure, 22. Crowri City, has pleailed guilty
to a ch31J!e o( complicity to burglary.
·
• ~ The court ordered that.a pre·sehtence investigation be conducted by the
:Adult Probation DePariJrtent ,and the matter be continued for sentencing.

' 1County CQ!llmon

=Area men serve as association officers

·: ' GALLIPOLIS - Don Pope and Jim Baughman, both from Calha Counhave been sel.ected for officer positions with the Ohio Tobacco Growers
~ssociation, based in Ripley.
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: Pope was elected a director and Baughman was chosen to fill a director's 0
"Vacancy dUring the association's annual meeting Feb. 23. Gary Moran of
:t,rowriCounty was elected president·for 1999.
: · 'J'he grower's association was formed in November 1997 to encourage,
;promote·and'develop a channel of communication to inform tobacco grow-ers on issues such as production, marketing, programs and strategies.
: For more information, contact the Ohio Tobacco Growers Association at
:P.o. Box 126, Ripley, Ohio 45167-0126.

:ry,

.• Children Services . l!o'
aoard to meet

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liorewi.d e 10% lavingt

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•lipolis .

:Free immunizations slated Monday

Many I terns Reduced 38-48-58%

:• GALLIPOLIS- The Galli a County Health Depanment will providOfree
•Immunizations at the K mart Pharmacy in Gallipolis on Monday from 6-7
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!p.m.
j· Children in need. of immuniz,ations,msut be accompanied by a parent or
;legal guardian, and bring a current immunization record with them.

Limited Time

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S ERVICE.B

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:: roup p ans SOUp, San WIC supper

INTERNET SERVICE
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GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Children Services Board will meet

~Tuesday at noon at the Children Services offices, 83 Shawnee Lane, Gal-

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1•800•378•644u

WILKESVILLE -A soup and sandwich supper sponsored by the Wilton
;civic Association is scheduled for Friday. March 12 from 4-7 p.m. .

• Free Activation

:NelgfJborhood Watch meets Tuesday

•.Free Setun ,
-ONLY $17.95

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: CEN1ERVILLE - The Raccoon Townsh1p Ne.'ghbo~hood Watch Will
: meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday m the Centerville Commumty Build mg.

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Other discounts available
·call: f·800-378:.e440

:KCMS plans parent-teacher conferences

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CHESHIRE- Parent·teacher conferences at Kyger Creek Middle School
11feschcduledforMonday,March22from3-6p.m.,andonThursday,March
25 from 2-6 p.m.
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Principal Ron Paxton requested that parents call the school office at 3677721 to arrange for an appointment time. ·

. ,.IS G00d ~''II t'~ note .anmversary
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l&gt;recipltation was expected to be a January's storm. · . •
rain-snow mix in some areas, mean·
The · airline had booked 3SQ
illg some of ·the heavy _snowfall Detroii area hotel rooms foqiassc~;
could he washed away.
gers or crews that lllighi be strandlld
Northwest Airlines canceled 73 overnight. ·
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flights from Detroit . Metropolitan
Observers al~!ly arc tracking
Airport to l'thin out the schedule" another storm behind tlus O'!C,
and prevent gridlock on snow-cov· · expccted.to hit the region late Monered
as
during day, into Wednesday.

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Southeast Ohio zone forecast

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Not'gullty plea entered to charges

Winter storm war~ing ·saturday

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-;- Tri-County Briefs:. Business

Michigan -b f.acing fOr niore sn~W,

ahlo weather

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Continued from page A 1 . :
Domigan of Coolville, are currently . meeting in a neighbor's house after
, ""' 1 meeting for months in a ten't. Meeting in the tent was "not 'too bad,"·accord' - ing to Deeter.
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'· · :.; .. Addressing concerns that the new building may be flood prone, he indi. 'If' ; cated it will have a atronaer foundation and be higher off the ground . .
, l ' "It lliood·160 yeara ill tile !lillie place," he said, "maybe it will go anotll·
.. ' ... er.160 yeanl ne Ollllil'(gatioft, in September, '1988, celebrated the church's
· '· 1501h anniversary.
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~. Across the road from the church, the flood leveled the Orange Cemetery,
, ;2~")1catly pushing over the tombstones. Before long, area residents, with assis·
· -&lt; lance from the Logan Monument Company, repaired the damage to

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GALLIPOLIS - Goodwtll lndustn~s 1s holdmg an open house Tuesday
. at.10 a.m ..to celebrat71ts first ye~ anmversary of the opemng of the Good·
. Wll'l' store.m Galhpohs at 252 Th1rd Ave.
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Meetmg .the n~~s of the Gallt~hs commumty, Goodwill Indust~.es of
Southern Oh1o In~. 1s very ap~rec.'au~e of yo~r su~port thiS past year, sa1d
Ja~es R. Greenhill, the orgamzauon s e~ecuuve drrector.
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. ~nng1~g people With disabilities mto the w~rk force, Goodwill Industnes longltme fcx;us has taken on even greate.~ 1mport~nce s1~ce the 1990
passage of the Ame~ca~~ ~1th D1sab1ht1~s Act: h~ con~nued. The act protects people w1th disa.?lhUes from d1scnmmauon 10 pnvate sector employment and other areas.
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. _Go_odw.lll, a ~O?·profit organlzaUQn, IS ~ed1cated to the vocational rehab1htauon, Job tnumng and employment of diSadvantaged perso.ns who depend ··
UJ!On the pubhc for support.
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AlthouJh the flOod destroyed the church, it is perhaps ironic··that one

!he few i~ salvaged from the debris was an .old Bible stored under the

- i)Uiplt. The book escaped almost unscathed, with only water damage to show
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lor ita lulll!lltuous trip. The pulpil. also, is being restored so it can serve the
t-- new church.
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The experience has been a spiritual one for Deeter.
"It has shown me there is a lot' for us to do. We have came into contact
. with a t~mendous amount of people," he said. 'It has tegenerated not just
' us, but a lot of other people."
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ch. Alah, IIJOUpsh and individuals have donated money and supplies for the
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urc enoug to construct a serviceable new structure, Deeter said.
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"It'S been phenomenal," he said, referring to the support of the communi.
However, the work is not done, he pointed oUt. .
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"We've gotten a lot of offers for. labor," ,he said. "Soon we will be taken
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them up on their offers."
One of our goals is to bring people together at the new church, he said,
noting that plans are being made for a open house and dedication.
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Main Street focus

Continued from page A~
housing needs. In design issues, the group also plans to work with the a':allipo~..
lis Historic Preservation Review Board in helping businesses and property
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ers make decisions that preserve the 19th century ambiance of th~ area's
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Gallipolis was chosen to joih Main Street because some of tlth:e ~~~~~~~·~
: . : factors were already in plare, Butcher said. The public-private p;
• 'port for revitalization was a plus, she explained, and much of the
~- requested was on hand.froril the City's past applications for downtown rev1
italiza_ 'lion fundS through the Community ~velopment Block Gran\ Program.
' ~With a development plan in hand by next year, Main Street Gallipolis
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to serve in an advisory role in promoting the downtown, she added.
, "Managing a dow!ltown is like managing a mall- you sell it and promo11e
:;:- 'it as an entity," Butcher said.

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Reacler Scrv1ces

(USPS !U-1110)
Com111unlty Newspepcl- Hoidlnp, INC.

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~blis~d every Sunday, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Oh1o by tile Ohio Valley PubJish ina COmpt~ny.
O.r .... eo-.. .. II llorla lllo bo Second class postage paid at Ga llipolis, Ohio
Entere d as ~cond class mailina: maUcr 11
.,....... If , .. " - of •• error Ill • · 45631.
Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office .
....,., ....... ~ 81: Gllllpolll:
Mcmbn: The Associated Press and the Ohio
f740) 44i-l34Z; or P uroy; {740) Hl- Newspaper Association.
.
Pa~tmalll:er: Send addless correaions to The
...., I CWIIC£11NIIwlm•ted.
~unda~ Times-Seminel, 825 Third Ave., Oallipo..
hs, Ohl04.5631 .

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Correction Polley

U•. Wtwll'_,_,.._.. ....
" - • Department
O.lllpolla

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SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSC!liPTION RATES
BJ Curler or Motor Ro.te
Tilt ....
11 446-2342. DeJNOnOne Week.. .... ...........................SI .2l
One Yea.r...................................$65.00
Elleaollwo
ExL UJ
SINGLE COPY PRICE
.
Mo"!''l• £dllor......................... ExL 118
SundaJ ..................................... Jl .OO ·
CIIJ Edllot............:.................,.. ExL Ul No sut.crip«ion by mail permitted in areu where
Ufwlylo,,-................ ~............. ExL UO home carrier Mrvke is available.
Sport&amp;.... _,,,;,,,,.. ,,................. ExL Ul . The Sunday Ti!'ftn·Scntincl will not be reaponii·
ble fOf IMfvtncc payment. made to a~rrtcr1.
Hn&amp; ...........~ ..- -.... - ...............ExL 119
Publilher
rCMrVca the ript to adjust rita durin1
TosendE-MaJJ
d11 tublcription period. Subscription 1111c dumps
• ? . .llt@nftkutl.co•
l'l'lly be lft1&gt;1Cmented by changing the duradon of
the aublcription.
o.u,. and Sundl)'
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
..... Depin b?teolt
IMide C•lll• Count)'
13 W..b. ......... ........... ....... .S:I.7.30
Tilt IIIIi ••IIIIer
1155. Depon26 W..k.l ............................ $33.82
. . .tftlf!&amp; liM Art: ·
!2 Weeb ............................ SIOS.$6
Rat• O.tlklc G•lll:ll Coanty
GMon? ~r.:._
.£11. 1101
13 Weeb ............................$29.2l
- . ..... - ............- .....................Eat. 1101
l6 W..b ............................ .S$6.158
or Ext.lUMi
l2 W..b ...........................SI09.7l

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•••bor,.:

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Sel~·ci From These Fine Names: Gibson, Peavey, Aria,

Eplphone, Alvarez, Bentley, Cra·te and Others ••• ·
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A beginning, .
A St4rt,
· A birth of the heart
ne chilJ 'within, .
Ilove.

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. Every GUITAR, AMPLIFIER:aPA·SYSTEM
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Gibson Guitar &gt;st~ ring ·sets l/ 2Price· (Limif 6sets)

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A~ with ~ .n.ew. ~ . Ahd. a:. 4' ·
)aci!ZZi, a queen•size bed and ·othe~
home-like features, all backed by
the compassionate and highly
skilled physjcims and nu,rses at
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. Holzer
Medical Center.
.
. View the
·difference during our Maternity
,·· and Fmmy Ce~ter· Open House
on Saturday, March 20th, &amp;Om
1:30pm tintil4:30 pm.
.~&gt;!'

Banjos, MandQUns 8 Violins also..............i. 40'/o OFF

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st 255°0.New·
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. . Alto.saxoph one .-or
......................
..881500
$75000 ·.New
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DO
Trumpet or Trombone For........... 485s5fo00
. Cl.~4!
• t For
· •••••••••••••
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. 8385.00
. New
s64000 New Flute For........................................... 8415°0
s695. 00 New p·accoIo For............................
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All band Instrument Mutes •• ~..~.................. 1/2 Price

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Plan to

For more information,
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please call 740-446-5030.

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Holzer ,Maternity &amp; Family Centt;r '
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis,.Ohio 45631

Drum sets, Cymbals, Drum Thrones &amp; Cymbal Stands: .Pric~s Slashed

Electric Guitar Pickups ......~ ................ 40°/a OFF
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330 SECOND AVE. GAlliPOliS, OH 446-0687 .
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DRUM HEADS 40% OFF (Limit 4)

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a~end

and enjoy
refreshm~nts and favors!

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PIANOS 35% Off -.PIANOS 35% Off - PIANOS 35% Off - PIANOS 35% Off

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pome:r
f:

GALLIPOLI ~- Business consultani and former president of a
Cincinnati bank, Thomas J. Dix, 'will
present "Ohio River Scenic Route ~
Ohio, A National Scenic Byway" at
the Ohio Valley Visitors Center's
annual luncheon at the Holiday Inn;
Gallipolis, on Monday, March 29 at

noon:

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. D1x has charact~nzed h1s educauonal and professional career as a
blend of hard w~rk, persistence a~d
p~yback 10 the form of commumty
serv1ce.
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He fully supported h1s way
through undergraduate and graduate
degrees at Oh1o State Un1vemty.
MAKING CONTRIBUTION - The Malgs post. At the presentation were, from the left,
Marauder Band racelved a check lor $1,000 Ellla Myers of OES~ Jerry Hawley, first vice
Upo~ grad~ation.' he en.tered the
from Russell Mozingo, commander of Feeney- commander; Mozingo; Toney Dingess, band ·'
banking busmess 10 Detroit wnh the
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Bennett Post 128, American Legion, on Friday. director; and Meigs Local Superintendent Bill
Nat1onal Bank of Detroit, advancmg
Buckley.
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his career with increased resp&lt;&gt;nsiThe check was given by tha Ohio I;ducatlon
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bilities in Cleveland, and eventually
Support Group (OESG) on behalf of the legion
in Cincinnati as president of a south''
ern Ohio bank.
Smce 1978, he has successfully
the development of the new machi®
man~g~d his o~n consulting pra: t•ce, · RIO· GRANDE - "Co.;,munity Industries of Gallipolis.
prov1dmg a w1de range of bus ~ness teamwork" is the best way to describe
The students, along with profes- will not eliminate the need for opef'
.l
~ervlc~\mc Iudtng strategic bus mes~ the efforts of Rio Grande Communi- sors Keith Saunders and Brett Jordan, ators at the company,
ty
College's
manufacturing
techno!are
helping
Rockwell
build
a
machine
According
to
Jordan,
the
deS
Iii!
man:•• · Pb a~mng, bveknture cabpll~
that will assist the company in its project will allow st~dents t\l gam
sourcmg, usmess ro erage, usl- ogy students.
ness/real estate financing, load placeFour students in the professional assembly line process. The machine, valuable experience they can tak,~
ment and municipal financing.
studies program at Rio Grande are from start to finish, incorporates with them into their professional
In 1991, he affiliated with JBF finding out what it takes to design, such classroom skills as drafting, careers.
"Many college graduates have no
Associ~les,' Washi~gton, D.C.. plan and develop a machine from the basi~ electricity, technical math,
expandmg h1s consulting pract1ce by ground up as they work on a design industrial controls, and welding and
(Continued on A&amp;) lJ
networking with over 20 profession- project in conjunction with Rockwell fabrication. The professors stress that
als, utilizing their international expertise for enhanced strategic planning
cap~city.
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· In 1996, he founded Ohio River
Trails Inc., a not-for-profit corporalion, that initiated and is sponsori~g
the Ohio River Scemc Route -Ohro
(ORSR-0)
In Jun~ 1998, ORSR-0 was
,awarded the covered National Scenic
Byway designation , which represents Ohio's first National .Scenic
Byway and the nation's longest at462
Tuesday
miles. One ofORSR-O's major goals ·
is 10 enhance economic development
along the·Ohio River route through
:
Wednesday
. heritage tourism.
·
Dix also serves on several boards
of directors.and is active in conimu'
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Accounting
Ill
nity and hiitorical interests.
1
Tie.
Oaff
Thursday
For more information and to make
reservations for the luncheon, call the
_r;~cat
e~cave
'Ohio Valley VisitoF~Center of GalFriday
lia County at 1-800-765-6482.

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Students assist Rockwell with project

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COnSUJtant
WI•11 spea k
tO Q"VC
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·commentary
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Junbav

~imes· · Jentinel
'F.sttmflslid in 1966

825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ot:tlo
. 740 44~2342 • FIX: 44~3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1182·2158 • FIX: 0112-2157

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Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc .
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publleher

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Larry Ewing
Managing Editor

Diane Hill '
Cqntroller

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. Sunday, Merch 7, 1""!

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It's like wiping the· slate cleanttl£':..

By ROBERT WEEDY
.
bett~r and _better through edu~ation, social engi- in. spite of my wrong acll?ns and has a pl_an
The ·emerging .dominance of
neenng, sctence, and reason dtd not pan out.
w~ll en:Wle me to love Him, have a relati~nsli P
Post Modernism in the American
Today's conservatives are discussing the wtth. Htm as a daughter or. II?~· then He brio~, a
. culture · leaves many wondering
premise that we no longer ha-.:e a "moral majori- ~altng of _lh~ n.umerous dtvtstons w~ ~ay ex~how ·such a new model gained
ty" in our culture. ·
·
nence. Gutlt ts JUdged as gone. God ts n~ lonter .
accepta11ce when there ~xists no
Should conservatives tune out, turn off and viewed as. a tyrant who expecta of us thmgs w~
validation for the thought patterns.
drop out and enter their personal fortress to pro- ~not d~hver, but the one ~ho enables, who,P!O·
In reality there appears to be a
teet their family from the barbarians of todar? Is vtded Hts only Son to ~hver u~. Recogntz!Rg
reluctance toward -substantiating
there any hope in working th"!ulth the pohtt~al that_.truth puts us on the nght pathway. 'Rebelh~n ·
ideas with reference points or historical experi- process to make it a safe envtronment to rruse agrunst God is gone.
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ence. It is like wiping the slate clean and starting . children?
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Where do ~au fi~d ~ untty when dtvemty Is set
over. It would be useful if we had a grid to look at
Should other approaches be used smce the free? When diversity ts honored and ~~enta­
the American culture so others could know why political process has failed them? It is evident that lion is promoted, can m~, or all the king s men
they look at it the way they do.
these folks are frustrated after 30 years of effort to put Humpty together agrun? · ··
.
Since.Post Modernism rejects the possibility of bring morality back to center stage, but the Po~t
. Very, very few _have the confidence that man m
absolute truth, it follows that tolerance is very Mo.demistsays, "What's the problem?" •
htmseif has what tl takes. I~ recent decades !Dany
highly regarded. 'l'he only thmg not tolerated is
Lest we get the idea that we are in a hopeless . in places ·of power ha~e twtsted truth an4 ht~n
intoierance, thus anything goes. One idea is as situation, and throwing in the towel is the way truth to degrade God m the mmds of Amencans
good as another, one lifestyle is ,---~--~------------------::;;;;;
equal to another, one.set of values
is as good as another set of values.
There are : no standards by which
ideas may be measured.
PUNISH
What ough~ to be of concern is
.the embarking on such "free thinking" without a basis .of support:
Thinking something does not mean
it is correct, workable, feasible, or
right. Matters are not the way they
are because I say they are. The universe workS the way it does by
design, and the design follows certain laws. Man can go t~ the moon
and back as long as those laws are
obeyed.
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Nor can we arbitrarily decide
that man hjiS no responsibility or
need to follow Jaws concerning
relationships, health · matters,
ethics, or civility.
If the above does not elicit concern, consider the impact Post
Modernism is having upon the atti- .
v
tudes of people:
.
We have fragmentation · into

YOVCAN'T

ME

WITHOUT ARST

'·

·Guest column

Patrol offers tips
to help older drivers

LOOION6 AT THE
VIDEOT.4PES...
ANI&gt; I D'MAND

UVE
WITNESSES!

I

Submitted by Ll Richard E. Grau
GaiUpolla Poat, Ohio Stitt Highway Patrol
·
Older drivers are becoming a larger percentage of the driving population. Unfortunately, the percentage of older drivers involved in traffic
crashes is also increasing.
.
Nationally, between 1976-1996, the number of drivers age 70 and over
increased from 7.2 million to 17. I million.
·
Crashes involving drivers age 55 and older rank only behind drivers age
16-20 as the largest percentage by age group involved in crashes in Ohio.
· In 1997, the most recent year for which complete statistics are available,
drivers age 55 and older were 'involved in 91,312 motor vehicle crashes on
Ohio roads.
·
groupswerather
a coming together,
·have than
images
and
Older drivers can be safe drivers by making a few simple adjustments to · smaller
sound bites rather than .logical and
(heir driving behavior. Research indicates mature drivers rank lower in
reasoned discussion, we have multiple perspec- out, we need to consider that the beginning of a so that their own non-belief system would be preaggressive actions including·speeding, followi~g too closely, and drunk
live~
rather than tested premises. Cynicism and new era is the best of times to review where we eminent. Those in the so-called entertainment
driving.
pessimism
about the fulure are in full swing. got off track in the first pl!lce. Those who have industry are at the top of the list. This needs to be
However, mature drivers rank higher.in comprehension errors including
Optimism
used
to be the mark of the younger been to the fountain of truth best understand the exposed and truth once again given its rightful
confusion .in congested situations and 111isunderstanding of signs. . .
folks,
today
it
is
pessimism.
situation. Th.e open mind of the Post Modernist place in our culture.
·
Many mature drivers do make necessaty safety adjustments in their driWhen Dr. Francis Shaeffer of the L' Abri Fe!- can be a positive if we distinguish between people
Instead of feeling intimidated imd ridicul~d.
ving behavior based on their own experiences and skill levels.
Automobiles provide a sense. of independence, convenience, and a prac- lowship in Switzerland wrote ·in the late '60s and and ideas. We can love people- and not wacky people of faith must decide to come forward and
early '70s that America was rio longer a "Christ- ideas.
present witness to the truth.
tical mode of travel. It is important though to acknowledge •.and work to
ian
nation,"
many
were
offended
and
disagreed
·
An
excellent
spot
to
begin
is
in
presenting
an
The other .mindsets are wholly inadequate .to
overcome, the safety problems associated with driving as related to
with
that
conclusion.
·
·
aecurate
view·
of
who
God
is.
Our
culture
has
sueeven
begin to meet the deep;felt needs of Ameriincreased age:
·
·
·
Shaeffer
had
pointed
out
'
h
ow
modem
thought
ceeded
in
distorting
and
misrepresenting
God's
.
c
ans
today.
The me.dia bias against people of faith
The safety problems of mature drivers are rooted in the process of
had
abandoned
the
idea
of
truth
with
tragic
connature,
thus
many
Americans
~re
ill-informed
and
the
politicians
disregard of them, except to be
aging. The changes that occur due to aging affect vision, concentration levsequences
in
every
area
of
cultur~
from
phi.
about
who
He
is.
·
elected,
must
be
strenuously
challenged at every
els, and reaction times.
.
·
Josophy, to art, to music, to theology, and within
If all · that is considered is someone has the opportqnity~ Permission is not needed to speak the
The driving errors often committed by mature drivers reflect these
society as a whole. Some 30 years later we can al! intent to get me, to punish me, to take away joy truth boldly, we have already. been told to be salt.
changes and include failure to yield, wide turns, and improper backing.
from my life by imposing unworkable rules, then .and light-in a land of need. To do.Iess is.disobediThis is not to say older drivers.are unsafe drivers. Rather, it means older see how right he was. .
Today's
Post
Modernism
comes
to
the
conclu.I
am not very inclined to pursue a relationship ence.
·~
drivers should be more aware of safety, be honest about driving skills, and
sion
that
the
gods
.set
up
by
Modernism
do
not
with
such
a
one.
Robert
WHdy
Ia
•
eolumn111t
lor
the
Sunday
adjust dri~ing practices accordingly.
.
·
work. Modernism's promise that things would get
On the other hand, if I Jearn that He loves me Times-Sentinel.
.
The following is a checklist of tips to help older drivers stay safe.
•
l;le alert of the surrounding cars on the roadways, and maintain
a safe distance between you and the car in front of you.
•
Be on the lookout for other cars, and ensure the vehicle's mirrors
By JOHN CUNNiFF
equal in size to companies in the botFrom disclosures statements, they total equtty m a company ts under
are properly adjusted. Do not wear glasses with side pieces that
AP Business Analyat
tom 20 percent of the New York . found institutions managing at least $100 million,
·
could obstru"' your view.
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Could
the
Stock
Exchange,
was
12.2
percent.
·
$
~00
million
ofsecu~ties
raised
their
The
fact
is;
$5
millie~
dollars, or:s
•
Drive the speed limit, and stay in the right Jane whenever possble.
relative
weakness
of
small-cap
stocks
A
return
of
that
size
was
deemed
percentage
of
the
equtty
market
from
percent
of
a
company
wtth
$100 mtlDo not drive too slowly because this can be just as unsafe for you
be
blamed
on
the
growth
of
institunoteworthy,
since
it
was
nearly
50
26.8
percent
in
1980
to
51.5
percent
!ion
in
market
value,
is
h~dly
a !arge
and other motQrists as speeding.
. ·
tiona!
investors,
such.
as
mutual
percent
highl:r
ihan
that
provided
by
through
1996.
·
mvestment
for
some
mstttut10nal
Scan the road for signs and signals. Know the signs by shape, and
funds? It begins to look that way.
the big-caps, or stocks whose market
They also found that duri_ng .the investors. And amounts. much I~
. know what the standard symbols mean. Drive during non-rush
The evidence suggests that the value was equal to those in the top 20 same penod, the 100 largestmslttu- than that can be constdered n~thours
growing
power of institutions is hav- percent of Big Board stocks.
tiona) investors grew in market share sances.
whenever poSsible, and try to stay on familiar roads.
ing
an
adverse
effect
on
the
ability
of
But
something
happened
from
from
19 percent to 37 percent.
As a consequence, many small
•
Do not feel pressured into making a turn or passing until you are
smaller,
sound
companies
to
obtain
1980
through
1996,
when
the
big.
Not
only
have
these
institutions
companies
are currently selling · at
sure you can do it safely. Go as slowly as necessary to stay in ·
investor
recognition.
caps
returned
15.9
percent
and
the
come
to
own
an
ever-larger
percentlow
price-earnings
ratios .relative to
· your
And it may be construed to mean small-caps 13.3 percent. Something age of the country's equities, they their potential, and some .large coinlane when turning, and be sure to use turn signals. Recommend
that
the tendency of .·insti.tutions to had made the small-cap advantage also have a decided leaning toward panies are selling at far beyond their
•
If you are taking medicine, even non-prescription drugs, ask you
invest
in large companies can mean · disappear.
the largest blue-chip stocks, which traditional valuations.
·doctor or pharmacist if it might affect your driving.
share-price
premiums
for
the
largest
That
"something"
appears
to
be
have become especially popular.
The large companies· provide
Night driving presents its own set of challenges. Be sure headlights are
while
small
size
can
the
growth
of
institutional
investors,
This
choice
qf
large
companies
institutions
with liquidity, or the aJ?ilcompanies,
kept clean, and Jearn to briefly look away from the glare of approaching
result
in
undervaluation.
"
including
pension
funds,
which
tradiover
small
is
not
necessarily
because
ity
to
buy
in
and buy out without disheadlights. In the event that night driving becomes too difficult or dangerSince
the
early
1980s,
it
has
been
tionally
and
because
of
market
limiportfolio
managers
see
inherent
extra
rupting
the
market.
Similar activitY in
ous, limit your driving to daylight hours.
.
,generally accepted that because of tations concentrate their investments value in the big-cap companies; their small stocks could cause prLce
Every person in the vehicle should always wear a safety belt. Safety
buying habits have .as much to do volatility :and disruptions.
.
belts can prevent serious injuries and .even death, and keep occupants from their swifter growth, small stocks in the biggest and best known.
overall
provided
a
greater
return
than
Paul
Gompers
and
Andrew
Met·
with
Jaw
as
with
value
analysis.
The
size
factor,
as
differentiated
being ejected frolJ1 the vehicle in the event of a crash. .
·
large stocks, It was hard to argue with rick, faculty .research fellows at the
Institutional investors are pro- from financial considerations·such as
Before grandchildren visit, ensure they will be protected in a child
the
statistics.
National
Bureau
of
Economic
scribed
from owning more than 5 profitability, is exacerbated by die
safety seat if they will be traveling in the grandparent's car. Children in
From
1926
through
1979,
·
the
Research,
arrived
at
that
conclusion
percent
of
a company's shares, a lim- decision of many newer investors· \O
safety seats will be protected, and will be Jess of a distraction to driving.
mean
annual
return
for
small-caps,
after
correlating
patterns
traced
by
itation
easy
to obey when investing in choose highly · promoted mutual
In Ohio, child safety seats are mandatory for children under four-years
defined as those with' a market value · stocks and institutions.
.· General Motors but not when the funds rather than individual stocks. ·
of age or who weigh ~nder 40 pounds.
.·
.
.
There are several ways to get travel and safety information from the
Ohio State Highway Patrol.
.
·
In February, the Pauol unveiled a new non-emergency, toll-free telephone number for the entire state, 1-877-7-PATROL (1-877-772-8765).
That number will not replace 1-800- GRAB-DUl or cellular 'DUI to
lucinogens and inhalants.
. Potter says the shorter stays are
By Jack Anderaon and Jan Moller
report impaired drivers, but serves as another way to reach the Patrol on a
WASHINGTON -- It seems fitting in today's .
But so far the main beneficiaries of the media the result of hospital policies
local level.
·
·
political climate that one of the most high-profile blitz have been the firms overseeing the project. In and shrinking funds, not some
Also remember, the Highway Patrol's t-888-2-0H-ROA,D (l-888-264administration initiati~es in recent years will pri- the first year of the campaign, two public-relations amazing new rehab program.
7623) number is an excellent way to check .Uavel conditions throughout
. marily benefit an induS!fy that's hardly in need of firms, Porter Novelli and Fleishman-Hilhird, have
"The admission criteria
Ohio.
. government help: Spin-control. ,
taken in SiO millio.n, and one ad agency, Ogilvy &amp; handed down by the HMOs
The Ohio State Highway Patrol is committed to keeping the roadways
Last month, despite advice from a growing Mather,.has collected nearly $130 million.
maj(e .ac,:essing appropriate lev•
in Ohio among the safest totravel in the nation. I hope mature drivers will body of experts to just say no, the Office of
One source close to Fleishman.Hillard told us els of care extremely difficult," Potter diplomatishare in the responsibility of ensuring safety on our roads.
National Drug Control Policy launched a $I bil- the firm is expecting to collect $50 million over cally told our associate Ashley Baker.
lion advertising and public,relations campaign -- the life of the campaign, but ONDCP officials
Potter's program remains one of the lucky
the most expensive crusade in government histo- declined to confirm ihe figure because the con- ones, .however. At least they're still in business.
ry to curb teen-age drug abuse.
tracts must be renewed each year.
·
As funding for ihe "war on drugs" continues 'to
. By The AaaoclateciPre.. ·
.
.
The linchpin of this campaign will be a series
What's good for the spinners may not do much. rise, hundreds of drug and alcohol prevention ahd
Today is Sunday, March 7, the 66th day of 1999. There are 299 days left of prime-time TV ads, and the government will to help the kids, unfortunately. Social marketing - rehab programs are shriveling or dying.
in the year.
·
provide an estimated $175 million in matching - or using mainsuearn marketing techniques to
"I don't believe (ad campaigns) are effective,"
. Today's Highlight in History:
funds to the print and broadcast media that run sell societal change -- is a relativ~ly new advertis- said Harvey Oaklarider, a licensed clinical psy- .
On March 7, 1849, horticulturist Luther Burbank was born in Lancaster, them.
.
ing technique. While proponents cite a number of · chologist for the Drug Abuse Treatme11,1 Center in
Mass.
"There is every reason to believe that this public health victories in developing countries, Arlington,' Va. Oaklander has been treating drug
On this date:
absolutely will turn around drug abuse by young- such as a 32-fold increase in condom.use in India, addicts since the late 1970s, when penalties (or
In 1850, in a three-hour speech to the U.S . .Senate, Daniel Webster sters," boasted retired Gen. Barry McCaffrey, social marketing has been noticeably unsuccess- possession ·and use were far Jess stringent than .
endorsed the Compromise of 1850 as a means of preserving the Union.
who heads the ONDCP. "You have to educate ful in the United States. Despite a decade of anti- today. "The more they make (drugs) forbidden,
In 1875, composer Maurice Ravel was born in Cibourne, France.
them by getting the message on high-profile tele- smoking propaganda, for example, more than the more tempting it is. The most effective way
In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell received a patent for his telephone.
vision time."
4,000 American teens take up smoking eve~ day. (to curb use) is to give community support to famIn 1911, the United States sent 20,000 troops to the Mexican border as a
Many of the fool soldiers ·in the war on drugs ilies under stre5s: Kids should have.a parent there
The federal government is not · the only one
precaution in the wake of the Mexican Revolution.
using the airwaves to SP!_ead the anti-drug mes- are dismissing the ad campaign as a feel-good · when they cbme home," Oaklander says.
.
In 1926, the first successful trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversation sage. In 1996, The Partnership for a Drug-Free way for politicians to )QOk like they're doing . Not everyone in the PR ·industry .is optimisti.c
took Jl!ace, between New York and London.
.
Am erica, a private sector group, consumed $265 something about a problem that nobody's really abotil the campaign either.
.
Irf'f936, Adolf Hitler ordered his troop$ to· march into the Rhineland ," million worth of donated broadcast time and print sure how to solve. And while teens are getting
: "The fact that it's a negative message doesn't
thereby breaking .the Treaty of Versailies and the Locarno Pact.
lectured by theirtelevisions, tlie hard-core addicts stop the desire todnvestigate," said Pat Jackson,
space. .
Iri 1945, during World War' II, U.S. forces crossed the Rhine River at
McCaffrey's campaign comes near the end &lt;!f who need help the most are having a harder time editor of PR Reporter, a public-relatiotis uade
Remagen, Germany, via the damaged but still usable Ludendorff Bridge.
a decade that saw teen-age drug experimentation getting treatment.
publicatio~··
·,
In 1965, state troopers and a sheriff's posse broke up a a march by civil skyrocket before leveling off in 1997. Federal
In Jess than a decade, Marti Potter, adminisua"Communication merely puts the ideas or
rights demonstrators in Selma; Alt. ·
drug-abuse data show tpat between 1991 an~ tive team leader of the Pathways drug and alcohol products in people's mind. You need to go oneIn 1975, the Senate revised jts filibuster rule, allowing 60 senators to 1996 first-time use more than doubled for man - treatment program in Maryland, lias · seen the on-one with t~e potential drug user, you need wlimit debate in most cases, instead .of the previously required two-thirds of juan~ quadrupled for heroin, nearly tripled for average stay for an adult in her inpatient drug ents, you need community." ·
,
senators present.
cocaine and crack and more than doubled for haJ, lre~tment program shrink from 28 days to seveh. Copyright 1-, Un"ed Feature Syndlct~te, tnc.

-

l---~~~--------..!!lli~L~~~.J~~~~~~---_!~~~=~~!J

.I

.I
' I

·i '

'

Institutional size .may depress small stock v~l~atio~s '

.

I

I

Anti-drug .campaign benefits

P~

·f irms

Toda_
y In History ·

.

'

,I

•

Sunday, March 7, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport e Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

PageAA

.
..

Prosecutor mentioned in Youngstown mob tri~l . resigns .

Jonatltan Rosenbaum was fi~ed m next week to appoi]lt a succe.ssor. • self" from the mob' after he was elect- everts overseemg the mvesbgatton ts
Van Brockliit was shot in the thi~h
1997 after a Judge accused htm of ,
"It's the best that he restgned.'
ed, Strollo said.
~boye reproach . .The pubbc ~til look br a masked gunman as he stood Ill
sh,oddy .work. Last Sep~her, Roben Cronin said. " We don 't need an attorPossible misperceptions about Van J~edly &lt;;&gt;n ~ything he d~s •. Ingram . hts law office Apnl I , 1996. The
Ruggen was asked to qutt because he ney distracted by these allegations." Brocklin's role with Strollo caused satd •. pomttng out that his chent has shooting resulted in a mistrial forTur~as too close to the people he w~
Van Brockiin c~me under attack him to step down as special prosecu- admttted no w~ongdotn~.
nage. who eventually pleaded gutlt)'
Van Br~kh~, who dtd not return and was sentenced to three years to
tndtctmg, Judge Maureen Croom this week after he testified at a mob tor, acc(lrding to his att5mey, Jerry
satd.
trial in U.S.
Ingram · · · ·· .
phone
15 years in state prison.
·
The
. District Court in Cleve•
·
ki calls Frtday, · Will
· h.conunue
· t
1 co~rt land. Bernard
..
county common peas
'~Bernie the Jew" Alt"It's an issue of public perception. wor . ng as an attorney tn ts pnva e
Judges who appotnted Van Brockhn shuler, 68; Lavance Turnage, 26; and The public has a nght to know who- practice.
last October
Jeffrey Riddle, 38, are accuied .of
C
.
'd accepted
Th . dthe restgnauon,
.
rontn sru . e JU ges Wt 11 meet doing mob leader Lenine "Lenny "
.
.
· .
·
Strollo's dirty work.
.
..
.
'
V 10,
•
Van Brocklin testified for proseTh
·
.
cutors Monday. about how Strollo · CLEVELAND (AP)·- A couple .
f ·
·
worth. $IO, and the 39,369 ttckets allegedly' had ht' m s.hot ,·n the leg ,·n
o 10vestigating celebrated murder said after reviewing evidence in the
. Y eAaaoc.lated Preas
with an interest in unsolved murders
d
k
·
. ·· The followtpg• nu~bers were showmg two of the numbers are each .1996 10 delay Turnage.'s uial on rob- wants to raise money to help dear the ~ an too an interest in the case that ·:the strongest weight thei;e
sei«:ted 10 Fndlty s OhiO and West worth $1. .
.
bery and felonious assault charges. II!Je Dr. Sam Sheppard in the 1954 Sheppard case when he moved to is in this case leads to Sam Shep. · Vugmta lotteries:
The Ohto Lottery wtll pay o~t
Defense attorneys then asked Van slaying of his wife.
Cleveland 20 years ago.
pard.:'
. . omo
$325,789.50 to wtnners 10 Fnday s Brocklin about his ties to Strollo: Van . Sheppard was convicted. and
Avrea said he and his wife are
Pl.ck 3: 7c4-5 .
Pt.ck 3 Numbe.rs dlttly game. Sales In Brocklt' n at first refused 10 answer but
convinced that Dr. Sheppard was ·One fatality reported
p 4
p k
3
N be
1d
served 10 years .for killing Marilyn ..
By The Asaociated Prell
" · tck ' 4-9-6-9
.
tc
· urn rs
tota e
then admitted he was the mob Sheppard but was acquitted in a retri- mnocent.
One person has died so far on
$1,495,402.50.
.
. .
leader's business attorney during the al. His son, Sam Reese Sheppard, 51.
"We're o~nraged at the way the
Buckeye 5: 8- 16-24-26-37
There was one ticket sold_naming ,
In the other datly. g~me,Ptck 4 1970s.
·
Sheppard family has been treated.'' Ohio roads over the weekend, the
Calif., has
sued the state A. vrea sat·d. He sal'd the 'oun dratsmg
··
I
State Highway Pauol said Saturday.
a~l fi~e numbers . drawn in Friday N
. urn b~rs payers
wagered $444 ' 230
Strollo, who has pleaded guilty to of
to Oakland,
clear his father's
name.
. ntght s Buckeye 5 drawing and it's and wtii share $166,600.
racketeering and is cooperating with
Peter and Barbara· Avrea of Cha- effort might be the first of several.
The weekend fatalities are count' worth $100 ()()() the Ohio Lottery
Sales tn Buckeye 5 totaled r.~
·
.
Ajudge has set an Oct. 18 trial on ed from 6 p.m. Friday through .Sun: said.'
' '
$368,551. Players will share '""eral prosecutors, testtfted Wednes- grin Falls have booked a 125-seat the wrongful imprisonment lawsuit day.
·
• Th · · . ...
h d $212 369
day he helped bankroll Van Brock- restaurant in nearby Mentor for a filed by Sam . Rees~ Sheppard. He
The dead:
•
ewmmnguc ...etwaspurc ase
• ·
I'10 •
f) ·
·
r Mah
$50
A ·1 17 f d ·
: at Jungle Jim's Market in Fairfield
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
s success u campatg.n oor . on-a-person prt
un ratser. cotild collec t an estimated $2 million
FRIDAY
near Cincinnati.
Lotto drawing was $16 million.
mg County prosecutor 10 1984. ,
Sam Reese Sheppard and his attor- if he can prove his father innocent of
MOUNT GILEAD· Kerry SeaTh
141 B k 5 · k ·
WEST VIRGINIA
Strollo satd that he could not ney, Terry Gilbert, have agreed to the beating death at the family 's sub- volt, 36, of Marengo, a pedestrian
'th c"'e w;re
uc eye. ttc ets
Daily 3: 2-0-6
remember asking Van Brocklin for attend, Gilbert said Friday night.
urban home .
.
0
by a car on a Morrow County
Wt
our
the
numbers,
and
each
ts
D
·1
4·
3
favors
during
his
four
years
as
nros.
P
eter
Avrea,
49,
a
retired
busiCuyahoga
County
Prosecutor
Bt'IJ · struck
·
·7
·
worth $250 The 3 775 tickets show
at Y · · 8· 1·
·
· ·
'
roM.
·
·
'
C h 25· 4' 9 11 13 20 23
ecutor:Van Brocldin "separated him- . ne. ssman, has made a 25-year hobby M
1 t k ff · J
~~ci~n=~are~
. a s . -- - - ~-~-------~-~~~------------~as-o_n_.~w-'_o_oo__o_·-~-~~~-n_an_u_a_ry_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
CLEVELAND (AP) - Alleged
mob ties have promp!ed the resignalion of an anti-crime task force' prosecutor, the third to be forced out of
1office in as many ·years in
,youngstown.
·&lt; , Gary V:an Broc kl tn,
' 51 , restgn
· ed
iifiday ~s a prosecutor with the
.Maboning County Fraud Task Force.
· 1
'""'ht'ch 1·n ves1tga
es pu bl'tc corruption.
II.

-1!'\h • .W.
a,

·

Couple plans fund-raiser to help Sheppard ~.

118. lottery SelectiOnS .

-Tri~C9un.ty

~

Briefs:-

(Contlnued from A3)

·

Volunteers sought for planting project
CROWN CITY -Volunteers are being sought by the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources' Division of Wildlife to help plant 5.000 red oaks on
a portton ~f the new Crown City Wildlife Area on Saturday, March 20. .
. The trees are being planted in an effort to reforest the area with high qualtty•. nut-producing trees for wildlife habitat. The I 1,171-acre wildlife area is
Oh10's fou~h largest state-owned wildlife location, consisting of forests and
grasslands 10 Galha and Lawrence counties. The area was once surface mined
for coal by Barrick Gold Exploration.
·
·
.Tho.se int~rested. in volunteering for. ihe planting should contact Mark
,
: . H~mmtng.' wtldhfe. ar~a manager, at 740-682-7524, or .Keith Morrow, Dis' ·!net 4 asststance wtldhfe manageme~t supervisor, at 740-594-221 I. Volun. ' teer~ are asked to provide their name, address and telephone number when
calhng :
. · . Tree planting will start at 9 a.m. Participants should meet at the 'former
..ft11n10g complex office on Rocky Fork Road. three miles west of State Route
fl8 near Mercerville. They should also bring a sack lunch and their favorite
· shovel or planting bar.
.

__ [CE

for

anytime

.Civil War author to speak in·area
· · PORTSMOUTH - Civil War author Dr. James McPherson will speak
on .the ".B~ttle Cry of f\reedom" as th~ final presentation of Shawnee State
· Untverstty s Ctvtl War Senes: Fmdmg the Past 'in the !'resent, at the
:Portsmouth Publ!c Library on Friday, March 12 at I :30 p.m.
. · McPherson wtii also speak on "Prelude to Armageddon: the United States
on th~ Eve of the Civil War" the same day at 6:30p.m. in the Flohr Lecture
·Hall tn the Clark Memorial Library on the SSU campus. A question and
.answer period will follow.
.
.
· · For more information, call the Portsmouth Public Library at 740-353-6502,
ot the.Clark Memorial Library at 740-355-2267.
.

CIIASS

seroice, guaranteed

_9/J,eshire area man injured in act;ident :

, ADDISON-: A Cheshire ~rea man was injured following a one-vehicle
acctdent on Addtson Townshtp Road 729 (Oliver) Iatc Friday, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
·
·
:Barry A. Yeauger, 29, 27222 Old Route 7, was not treated at the scene of
the 11 :30 p.m. accident. according to the patrol.
Troopers said Yeauger was southbound, seven-tenths of a mile north of
· County Road 1 (Addison Pike) when the pickup truck he drove slid off the
.right side of the road and struck an embankment. The pickup then overturned
and came to rest on its side, according to the report.
.
• . The picfUP was moderately damaged. Yeauger was cited.for driving under
.the 10fluence, failure to control and a.seatbelt violation.
·

'·

Theft reports under investigation
. GALLIPOLIS -Two theft reports are under investigation by local law
enforceme)lt.
,
• James Wilburn, 122 Vine St., Gallipolis, inlormed Gallipolis City Police
pn Friday that the basement or his residence was entered sometime Thurs~ay night by unknown persons, who removed a rod and reels, arrowheads,
a nng, crowbar, saws, necklaces, tomahawks, a knife and a drill.
., Ivan,G. McGuire, 6308 Hannan Trace Road, Crown City, told the Gallia
~ount~ Sheriff's D~panment early Saturday that unknown persons entered
hts restdence somettme between 7 p.m. and midnight Friday and took .over ·
20 miscellaneous firearms.
.
. Both reports were referred to the departments ' investigators.

Two ticketed by police early Saturday
· : · GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police early. Saturday were
. L.oretta L. Davts, 33, 3971 Morgan Lane, Vinton, for a financial responsibthty assurance Vtolauon and speeding, and Donald · L. Drennen, 19, 43
· Gar(ield Ave .. Gallipolis, for disorderly conduct.
.
'... On Friday, officers cited three people each for disorderly conduct. They
were Larry HiU, 1644 McCormick Rol!d, Gallipolis; Judy Cook, 39, 555Addison Ptke, Galhpohs; and Crystal Clonch, 18, Buckeye Hills Road, Thunnan.

Four cited for underage consumption
RACINE - Four people were charged with underage consumption fol·•ltlwing a call to Morning Star.Road near Racine on Saturday morning, accord:·ing to the Meigs County Sheriffs office.
:·• Cited were Christopher Ball, Pomeroy, Robert Writesel, 20, Racine, Amy
.: Hamson, 20, Pomeroy, and Vicki Adams, 18, Portland.
,
·•.,.· Writesel was later transported to the Gallia County line, where he was
::airested by the Gallia County sheriffs office on a warrant there.

over the last 135 years. And
As a Fir.star customer,
expect from Star Bank,
smce

··bamage to car reported to deputies
· POMEROY - Diana Ash of Syracuse reported that her 1995 Plymouth
. 1\leon had been damaged while parked at Meigs High Sc!tool.
. According to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department, the left rear taii.J[ght lens was kicked out and the left rear door had also been damaged.

·AEP property stolen from job site
. RACINE- Cross arms, insulators and several other items were reported stolen from•an AEP job sit~ at a gravel pit on Hill Road, according to the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
•
· Workers at the site had advised that the items were stockpiled at t~e site
:for a job underway at the pit.
'
·

Firsrar le(s yvu bank how you

.Information sought on wounding of dog
· · LANGSVILLE ~ The M~igs County Sheriffs Office received a report
Jast week from Dave McDonald of Langsville, that his full -blooded bloodhound had been shot in the head· and back.·
He reported to neighbors that a I 978 to 1980 while or yellow Ford truck
had been seen d;,lving slowly in the area. Those with information are asked
lo ~ontact the Slienffs offtce.
.
.

Underwood to address Mason chamber

.,

•

wan~ wltct~ you want .

want, whether it's
many branches. Best o(
of your accounts. In fact, the
always been foremost.
And now
.
.
Firstar...still the Bank Without

and neither will any
name. Star Bank has

.

. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - West Virginia Goy. Cecil H. Underwood
will be the guest speaker for the 53rd annual dinner of the Mason County
ChAm~er of Commerce .on Thursday, March 25, at the Moo~e Lodge at 7

.

~~

Tickets for the dinner must be purchased in advance. A large crowd is anticipated, and it is suggested that tickets be purchased as soon as possible,. Tickets are $25.per person and are available f.-om t~e chamber office, 305 Main
St. . Point Pleasant.

.

jflltlhav tt&amp;an-jfmti...l • Page A5

•

.

�\

~
•

)

/

Sunday• March 7' 1999

·
J
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,
OH • Point Pleasant,
WV I

Little common ground in Social Security d~bate_:
By ALICE ANN LOVE
A..oclated Press Writer

.Charles J·. Burris
• GALLIPOLIS- Charles J. Burris, 91, Gallipolis, died Saturday, March
6, 1999 at his residence.
Born July 9, 1907 in Apple Grove, W.Va., son of the late Charles and Lou
0. Ritha Nibert Burris, he was a retired self-employed carpenter.
Surviving are his wife, Georgia F. Rife Burris, whom he marrjed May 10,
1930; and a sister, Esther Pierotti of Gallipolis.
He-was also preceded in death by two brothers, Bill and Harold Burris;
and two sisters, Carry Burris Wallace and Erma Burris Watts.
Services wtll be 2 p.m. Monday in the Willis Funeral Home, with Pastor
Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral hC!me on Monday from I p.m. until the time of the

r .•
I

service.

Gertrude L. Hall

' I

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Gertrude L. Hall, 87, Point Pleasant, died
Saturday, March 6, I 999 in, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
· Born Feb. 5, 1912 in Mason County, W.Va., she was the daughter of the
·late Charles and Augusta Ann Taylor Robinson.
. She was also preceded in death by her husband, Harley J. Hall, on Feb.
19, 1996; two sisters, Anna Mayes and Ethel Shivley; two brothers, James
and Elmer Robinson; and two nieces and fou.r nephews.
: Surviving are a daughter, ~arjorie E. Holliday of Point Pleasant; two sons,
the Rev. Robert H. (Shirley) Hall and Charles (Lynn) Hall, both of Point Pleas·
ant; and eight grandchildren and eight great-~randchildren.
.
. Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday m the Concord Cemetery, Henderson, W.Va., with the Rev. Emmett Rawson offidating. There will be no
;visitation. Arrangements are by the Crow-Russell Funeral Home, Point Pleas-

I.

ollllt.

B~sil Lawrence Haynes
: MIDDLEPORT- Basil Lawrence Haynes, 74, Middleport, died Satur- '
ilay, March 6, 1999 at his residence, following an extended illness.
: Born Sept. 28, 1924in Elklick, W.Va., son of the late Robert Kyle and
Eva Ruth Holesapple Haynes, he was a former coal miner, and was retired
tram Foote Mineral Co. after 26 -years of service.
; A U.S. Marine Corps veteran of World War II, he was a member of the
feeney-Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion in Middleport, and the
!./FW Post in Mason, W.Va.
: Surviving are his wife, Doris Haynes; a daughter, Karen (Dennis) Salis·
~ury of Gallipolis; three son, Larry (Terri) Haynes of Middleport, Gary (Marsha) Haynes of Gallipolis, and Randy (Tamra) Haynes St. ·Louis, Mo.;
.ihree stepdaughters, Kathy (Jerrjr) Strickland of Middleport, Christy (Kevin)
Dixon of Apple Grove, W.Va., and Carol Hubbard of Rutland; six grand·
~hildren ; three great-grandchildren, 14 stepgrandchildren and 13 step-great·
grandchildren, a sister, Kyle Tingler of Baltimore, Md.; and several nieces
and nephews.
: He was also preceded in death by his parents; his first wife, Erma Sigman Haynes; four brothers, Robert, John, Earl and Byrl Haynes; a sister, Beulah Conrad; and a stepson, Ronald Dailey.
.
.
: Services will be I p.m. Monday in.the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport,
with Tom Runyon officiatin!\. Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sundav. .

of

I

:William G. 'Bill' Shobe
. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- William G. " Bill" Shobe, 58, Point Pleas·
:ant, died Thursday, March 4, 1999 at his residence. .
B.om Feb. 14, 1941 in Mason County, W.Va., son of the late Otto A. and
:Myrtle M. Jackson Shobe,_he was a retired boilermaker.
. A U.S. Army veteran of the Vietnam War, he was a member of the Boil·ermaker Union Local 667 of Winfield, W.Va., American Legion Post 23 in
:Point Pleasant, and Loyal Order of the Moose Lodge 731 in Point Pleasant.
· He was also preceded in death by a brother, Lowell A. Shobe.
. Surviving are a brother, Leonard (Shirley) Shobe of Point Pleasant; and
·a sister, Shirley (Charles) SatterhQ!m of Utah.
· Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleas:ant, with the Rev. Dennis Weaver officiating. Burial wiil be in the Forest Hills
:Cemetery, Letart, W Va. Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday
-from II a.m. until the time of the services. ·
Full military graveside rites will be; conducted by American Legion Post
;23, Point Pleasant.

Henry 'Bus' Suiter
.

.

· CHESAPEAKE- Henry ·"Bus" Suiier, 80, Chesapeake, died Tuesday,
March 2, 1999 in the Mariner Health Care Center.
: Born June I , 1918 in Chesapeake, son of the late Asa and Olive Kite Suiter, he was retired from General Motors, and was a U.S. Army veteran of World
War II.
: .Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Monday in the Rome Cemetery, with
~hmster Ttm Gamer officiating. Friends may call at the Hall Funeral Home
Proctorville, from 4-6 p.m. Sunday.
'

WASHINGTON - After more
than a year of ~ledges .on Social
Security, Repubhcan leaders and
President Clinton have put competing
plans on the table, starting in earnest
the debate over the retir,ment program's future.
.
But their common g.round is lim·
ited: Both sides want· to use today's
. big . budget . surpluses to prepare
Soc tal Secunty for the flood of agmg
baby boomers expected to leave the
system short of cash a decade·from
· now.
· The differences are over how
much of the surplus to co~mit right
-away 7" and how to use tt. And the
incentives to compromise may· be
few
·
Clinton's
plan, essentially preserving Social Security's original
benefit structure by promising money froin the general Treasu~ in the
fut_u~e, has proved popular 10 pubhc
op101on polls.
. White House officials say they're
wtlling to pursue a btparusan comPro-"'1'se "Our goal is unequivocally
m .
to pass
legislation," said economic
adviser Gene Sperling
But Democratic ailies such as
labor unions, seeing an issue that
mighi help their party win back controt of Congress, are urging Clinton
not to give up too much 10 the conservatives who insist something 111 ust
be done to curb the program's rising
costs:
"There still continues to be this
very big chance that nothing gets
done " said AFL-CIO chief of staff
•
Gerry Shea.
Adding to the potential for _a
Pohttcal standoff, Repubhcans thts
week announced a plan to counter
Democrats' accusations that they're

100-458 8844

.,

Jackaon, OH
740-286-7484

residents are stupid, backward people
'
who should be satisfied· with crum·
bling schools.
.
Morwver, you attempt to trivial- .
etev.lri, Ohio 44114
ize what is at stake in the school
I must tak~ isaue witll your glib editorial cartoon of · funding debate. We are not talking
Manili 2, 1999, depicting Common Pleas Judge Linton about giving kids luxuries like cars
l:.ewis as a dunce mandatitia new cars, pagers and ao~ pagers. But we do want our stu,dents ·to li~ve
'Tommy Hilfiger wardrobes for sllldents from lesS 1 ·tries, cafeterias and modern textbooks. It may
'wealtl\y areas of the state. ·
·
· ·
cume as k surprise to you, but there are schools in my
This follows an earlier edit'orial· cartoon in which southern Ohio congressional districi that do not have
Your paper depicted Judge Lewis holding court in front such "luxuries,"
.
·of a mobile home with a man nearby wearing bib over·
This tetter will no doubt do little to change your
hils and holding a pig. To emphasize what you perceive views on the school· funding issue or toward those of
to be rural-ignorance, the sign over the mobile home us in southern Ohio. Regardless, I would like til invite
-reads, "The Hon .. Judge Roy Bean Linton Lewis, Jr. the Plain Dealer editorial team to come down to south·
'lldyoukation zar of Ohio by dickrte of state supreme ern Ohio and see first-hand some of the intolerable .
court."
·
conditions plaguing out sch90l children. I would well _suggest that _it. i_s t~e Plain Dealer, n~t ~udge come the opportunity to show you schools that are
LeWIS, who Is exhtbtttng 1gnorance: -rour deptct~on of over one hundred years old, or fat! to me~t the local
Judge Lewis is tasteless, humorless and offenstve: It · fire code, or' have classes in conyerted 'shower stalls.
smacks of the very bigotry ~ would expect a paper hke • P,erhaps if it were your children _who were &amp;?ing to
yours to condemn, not proliferate. I would remmd Y?U school in these deplorable condihons, you would not
that cultura' insulll! are every bit as repugnant as ractal see fit to mock the school funding' debate. ·
·
religious insults.. Your cartoons seek to perpetuate
·
·
· Slncerel.Y
·ariogant and condescending attitudes about_ihose of us
Ted Strickland
wi)O live in rural areas·. The clear message ts that rural
Met)'lbar of Congr•••

1

Missouri educato_
r ·ready to take .over in Ohi~
COLUMBUS(AP)-SusanTave
Zelman won't be looking for things
to do Monday when she takes over as
the state school superintendent.
Zelman deputy commissioner of
the Misso~ri Department of Elemen· ·
tary and Secondary Education, comes
to Ohio just 10 days after Judge Linton Lewi~ Jr. o' Perry County Com·
moo Pleas Court ruled for the second
time that ohio's method of funding
public schools is unconstitutional.
. She also' faces a debate over
whether vouchers should be used to
help students go to private si:hoo!S
and .whether tougher academic stan·
dards are needed for Ohio studentathletes.
"There is a tot going on, but with
challenge comes opportunity," said
Zelman hired in December by the
State &amp;ard of Education. "We need
to all work together to resolve school
finance issues."
Zelman and the board have be~n
put in charge of writing a new school
funding plan for the Republican-controlled Legislature, which has complained since the Ohio Supreme
Court ruled two years ago that the
school funding system was·unconsti·
tutional.
·
· '"I'm not afraid of leadership, and
I like challenges. My goat' will be to
bring the parties together and ptit this
school-funding case behind us," Zel·
man said.
Zelman replaces John Goff, who
retired Dec. 31 after 3 1/2 years as
superintendent of public instruction.

z.er.

She . will earn. a base salary of
~rt. Bart~an, who hired
$135,000 a year and can make up to man 10 Mtssoun to help ove~ bud·
$15,000 more in bonuses based on geting and _aocoun~ng, descnbed ~e.'
performance standards.
. as energeltc, dedtcated and persts·
Before going to Missouri four tent.
.
. .
years ago, she woikd!l for the Massa"I hired her wtth t~e ~dea she
chusetts Department of.Education for woul? ~~llen!!e our thmktng, an&lt;!
seven years and was a professor at she did, he satd. .
Emmanuel College in Boston for six
She has · g~ .tdeas ~nd knows·
years.
what . education practices ha~e
Those who know her say she will worked aro~nd t~.e country, . satd
up to the- .challenges she faces in Bartman, ~tssoun s commtsstoner
Ohio.
of education: "That's what attracted
"Her expectations are high, and me to her."
she can be somewhat demanding," ·
Coming from out of state won;t
said Gary. Sha~ exec~tive director hurt ?-elman...said state Rep. ~r!IS
of the Mtssoun Counctl of School Brading. cbatrrnan of the House EduAdministrators. "She's a tough lady · cation Committee.
,
who can handle the pressures of the
••During th~ search ~roce5;5, I
job."
rememher .she d1~ a lot of mvest!gatRep. Scott Lakin of suburban ing on her own t1me about the sttuaKansas City recalled her persistence lion here in Ohio," said Brading. R·
in going over the education budget' Wapakbneta.
· .. .·
with lawmakeJCS. line by line, to make
" She k~ows f!ia~.she ha_s a ~•&amp;Job
sure each tlen\ got the money she 19 do here tn Oht~, he satd. ·.11ook
deemed ~pprnpriate.
.
forward t~ her takt~g pharge f~m t~e
"She _fights for thin~," ~tn start. I thtnk s_he wtll make a bt~ dif·
said. "I've never ~ad the tmf.'esston ference ~e.re m t~e state 0.~ Ohto tn
that people push her around.
the pubhc educallon arena.

.

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Basil Lawrence Haynes

GOLD WEDDIN&amp; BANDS

In 11111, the Plein DNfernm a cartoon whlcli depleted Lewle seet8ct_ln front ot a mobile home ~·.~to
a man In bib overall• carrying a pig and a shotgun. Above the mobile home Is a.sign that reads. Jlte
linn. Judge Roy Bean Unton LeWit, Jr., Edyoulultlon Zttr ot Ohio by dlckree ot state tupreme court. .

A1)

Proudly

students are involved with every
aspect of the project, they- often
dh&lt;ide their duties according to their
specific talen!5. According to Jordan,
a couple· of students are. 'focusing
mainly on the drafting, while another works on machine design and
maintenance, and another identifies
problems and solves them.
As Saunders explains, "It makes
them work as a team."
The students expect to complete
the project by June, with emphasis on
planning and design during the winter quarter and working toward completion in the spring.
As for future projects, the tech- ·
nology professors says nothing is out
of the question.
Rio Grande Community College
is always looking for companies
who are willing to work with the stu'
dents on design projects.
As Jordan said, "We want to give·
our students the opportunity to learn
how the manufacturing process really . works before they graquate.

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. WASHINGTQN (AP) -. As · enoug~ to pay for even 90e
School dtstnct tn suburban WashmgPresident Clinton seeks backmg for teacher.
&lt;- ton was slated to get abo~t
a second year of money for his
In Ohio, alloc;ations range !rom · $2~0,000. Hunter satd she could~ t
100,000 new teachers program, the about $5 million in Clevel~nd to e~llmate ho": ma~y teachers the disadministration gave the nation's nearly $236,000 ill !"'e~~rk ~n cen-_ tnc!, could hue wtth t~at money. .
si:hools Friday an estimate of ho.w tral Oh(o. Other Ohto cttte~ t~clud~
. The botto~ hne ts assunng o~~
mucn they will get this year.
Columbus, $3,060,896; C10c10natt, chtldren learn 10 better classrooms,~
. In July, the federal government $2,552,723; Dayton, $1,495,538; she told a new.s conference. where
will send the states a total of $1.2 Akron, . $1,417,960:
and ·the
Educatton . Depart~ent
b'illion for their school districts. Youngstown, $868,006.
announced. the esttmates. We
·Congress approved the money last
Schools can use the money for wpuld wel~me the mon.~y and we
~ear to hire about 30;000 new teach· training to help .aides and others would pu~ tt to goo~ use.
·,. rs in the.early grades.
.
become fully,certtfied to teach, satd
In Ohto, ~ll.ocat!ons range from
'F. Clinton's goal is to help school · Barbara Hunter, a spokeswoman for · about $5 mtlhon 10 Clevel~nd to
~istricts nationwide hire and train the Alexi10dna City Public Schools nearly ~236,000 10 Newark tn cen;100,000 new teachers over . seven
The U,OOO-student tral Ohto.
years to cu.t pit)lil-teaeher ratios in
•he first through third grades. The
inational average now is 22 students
l)ier teacher, and he wants that
.
.
•~educed to 18·o,..fewer,
:.: ·Democrats will try to add a secWe fillturo A - Soft BW..I C•tact .__and
bnd year of financing to the educa·
1ion bills currently mo~ing through
Tarlc Salt C•tact ... el ..a.: AaiiJawdllil
•
.COngress.
at onlY $44.96 per six Jll1dt
; The district-level estimates
(EYe f!ZIIm andjlltlngfou not Included)
;issued Friday - based on formulas
Vblm CXIIIIIS ftJr 1111101- All types of conlllet llllleS fitted
-that include School enrollments -Dilpolia IRdlnltment of eye dilel1101
pnge from $61 niilli9n for the New
~York City schools to less than
lilllllilb
11•t1
·$12 000 each for Delaware's Sussex
:CO~nty schools and Polytech School
'District.
. ,
.
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Hospital news

'T ~~;~~c~~l~~"~~~a;A~;;;~~ -

Uke Family"
Since 1984

The Editor
The Plain DMIIr
Attn: Brent Llrkln
1101 Supartcir Avenue

POMEROY -: Eight calls for
assistance were answered by units of Hall, treated.
MIDDLEPORT
Meigs Emergency Services on FriI
1:15
a.m., Broadway Street,
day. Units responding were;
assisted
by
Central Dispatch, Viola
CENTRAL DIPSTACH
Young,
Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
11:15 a.m., Brownell Avenue,
RACINE
with Middleport unit, Ruby Enyon,
8:48 a.m., State Route 338, JF
MIDDLEPORT- Basil Lawrence fiaynes, 74, of Middleport, died ear- Veterans Memorial Hospital, later to
Young,
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
ly Saturday, March 6, I~ at his residence, following an extended illness. Ohio State University JJospitals via
RUTLAND
Born September 28, 1924 in Elklick, West Virginia, son of the late Robert MedF!ight;
2:22
pJll.,
Red Hill Road, assistKyle Haynes and Eva Ruth Holesapple Haynes, he was a former coal minI :44 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili·
ed
·by
Central
Dispatch, Freddie
er, and retired from Foote Mineral Company after 26 years of service.
tation Center, Clima Layne, Veterans
Neece, Veterans Memorial.
A U.S. Marine Corps veteran of World War II, serving on the USS Bal- Memorial:
timore as an anti-aircraft gunner, he was a niember of the Feeney-Bennett
2:36 .p.m ., East Second Street, .
Post No. 128 of the·American Legion in Middleport, and the VFW Post in Sara Day, Veterans Memorial HospiWET BASEMENT?
Mason, West Virginia.
tal;
.• . '
Pie is survived by his Wife, Doris Haynes of Middleport; a daughter and
7:49 p.m., South Third Avenue,
DRY SO.LUTJON. ,,~:
son-in-law, Karen and Dennis Salisbury of Gallipolis; three sons and daugh- Elden Walburn, Veterans Memorial:
"Hl·DRY"
ters-in-law, Larry and Terri Haynes of Middleport, Oary and Marsha Haynes
10:50 p.m., High Street', Garnett
P~MANENT
of Gallipolis, and Randy and Tamra Haynes of St. Louis, Missouri; three stepWATERPROOFING
daughters and husbands, Kathy and Jerry Strickland of MiiJdleport, Christy
FROM THE INSIDE.
and Kevin Dixon of Apple Grove, West Virginia, and Carol H!lbbard of RutVeterans Memorial
land; a sister, ~yle Tingler of Baltimore; six grandchildren, three great-grandNON-TOXIC
Friday admissions · - Clima
children, 14 stepgrandchildren and 13 step-great-grandchildren, special nieces, Layne, Pomeroy ; Lavada Woodyard.
www.hl-dry.com.
Connie Miller ofBaltimore, Maryland, and Judy Riggleman of Baltimore, Middleport.
IT WORKS.
'
Maryland; and several nieces and nephews.
Friday di scharges · - Robert
1-800-934-0424
p He was preceded in death by his parents; his first wife, Erma Sigman Dempsey.
I
Haynes; four brothers, Robert, John, Earl and Byrl Haynes; a sister, Beulah
Conrad; and a stepson, Ronald'Dailey.
.
Services will be I p.m. Monday, March 8, I999 in the Fisher Funeral Home
in Middleport, with Tom Runyon officiating. Burial will follow in the Meigs
Memory Gardens in Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2l-'11t ·,, .,. I .111 . I H'\1
4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday, March 7, 1999.
l' ... l i; tll ' t' l

.

·~1 For You

Strickland's letter to the Plain Dealer

:

Jtambv cmu....-nltbui • Page A7. ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant. WV

answer eight calls
-Meigs squads
-

(Jarrison L. 'Gary' Thomas

.. COLUMBUS- Vernon Lee Wilson, 76, Columbus, formerly of Hunt.mgton, W.Va., died Friday, March 5, 1999 in the Monterey Care Center, Grove ·
.City.
: Born Aug .. 7, 1922 in Huntington, he:, was the son of the late Dennis and
-Ruth Morrison Wilson.
·
Surviving are a sister, Garnet (Donald A.) Blake of South Point; and two
:nephews and a niece.
: Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Rome Cemetery, with
. the Rev. Doug Virgin officiating . There will be no visitation. Arrangements
'are by the Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville.

Ctl•nton s·ay.s
TO ready
t.0 ac
. . t I., peace
. ew
'"Oft 48/.lS

.

real world experience with the manufacturing process. This project will
give them the experience they need,"
: GALLIPOLIS - Garrison L. "Gary" Thomas, 50, 2875 Mellon Circle, Saunders said.
"This is exactly the type of project
~ooster, died Thursday; March 4, 1999 at his residence.
·they
·will expected to work on when
· Born Sept. 3, 1948 in Charleston, W.Va., son of Forrest and Delmia Noe
Thomas of Gallipolis, he was an interior designer. He was a graduate of Gal- they gradu.ate. They have to design it
and really make it work."
lia Academy High School and Ohio University.
.
Rio's technology students are also
· He was the owner of Neil's II Furniture Co., which later became Thomas
getting
the opportunity to help the
Galleries. He had been an instructor at the Wooster Business College. He was
community
through their involvea past member of the 20-30 Club, past president oflhe Optimist Club, apast
ment
with
the
local business. . ·
l)lember of the Wooster Chamber of Commerce and Main .Street Wooster
'
Accprding to Saunders, "We (the
and past president of the Interior Design Society of Northern Ohio. He was
college)
and Rockwell have a good
a member and deacon of the Central Christian Church, and was a U.S. Army
shared
relationship."
He says the proveteran.
ject
would
have
cost
Rockwell 's
: Surviving in addition to his parents are a son, Lee E. Thomas, of the hom e;
employees
valuable
time
if they had
a special friend , Carol Middleton of Wooster; a brother, Keith (Linda) Thomas
to build the·machine, and outsourcof Clendenin, W.Va.; a sister, Janeen (Andrew) Easton of Gallipolis; nieces
ing
the 'Project would not have been
~nd nephews; and local relatives, Mildred l)lomas and Rosethel (Earl) Tope,
cost-effective. By working in con~oth of Gallipolis, and Laura Thomas of Ashland, Ohio. .
junction with Rio Grande, the com· Graveside services will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at the Calvary Bapti st
pany is able to keep cost down and
Cemetery, Rio Grande. There will be no calling hours. Arrangements are by
free
up employees for other important
the Mcintire, Davis &amp; Greene Funeral Hom·e, Wooster.
projects.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Hospice of Wayne County
While the Rio Grande technology
Inc., 2525A Back Orrville Road, Wooster, Ohio 44691 , or to the Central Christian Church, 407 N. Market St., Wooster, Ohio 4469\ :

:Vernon Lee Wilson

Sunday, March 7, 1899

•
.
.
d
And because Clinton's plan would
eyeing money- for ta~ cuts- that ally benefit both Soctal Secunty an
d
h' •
t Six:ial Security's ;
1
0 noktng b~cu
rightfully belongs to Social Security. Medicare;" Sperling said.
.
say its claims 00 :
The Republicans would lintit the
Republicans have their own pollt· costs, epu ans
·
•
possible uses of the portion of the ical,ly potent complaints about Clin- future budgets co~!~ crowd out mon- :
budget surplus that comes from ton s plan. .
.
ey for other pnonues. ·
. ,
Social Security taxes. The money
The prestdent wants to use $3 tnl " It doesn't make the tough dect; '
would ~ave to_be used to overhaul th,e .lion in surpluses over the next 15 sions you're going to have to make,,~ :
program, or, 1f lawmakers couldn t · years to pay d~wn the national debt, satd Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa; :
~gree on changes_
, it would automat· push economtc growth ·and thus
For their part, Repubhcan leaders
1cally be used to help pay down the mcrease future tax revenues. He h
h
win support from
·
I
deb
td
k
the
money
for
Social
ope
t
ey
can
nattona , t.
wou . earrnar . .
.
moderate Democrats to divert some· :.
Chnton s. own rescue plan also Securny and Medtcare by p!acmg Social · Security taxes into pe~sonal :
. calls for usmg · the surpluses· that IOUs from the general T~easury tn
.
t th Americans could mvest .
· · ' s trust 'aund ts.expec·
t the programs
·
' trust
funds
accoun
s a1market on their own. :
· I Se~unty
Socta
.
· ·.
. in the stock
ed to run.m the near term, whtle baby
The government ':"ould mvest the
·If . d . ..duals could grow such·
boomers are still working.
rest, about $700 bilhon, m t_he stock
·t 10 ~~~en Social Security checi\S :
But Re~ublicans say Clinton's marker. for Social . Secunty .. But ~~~~~g;:·reduced. During the transi- :
plan doesn t hve up to hts own Repu'bltcans, backed by bustness tion, surpluses would likely be need-:
rhe!~nc;
..
.
, groups, argue such government ed 10 pay benefits promised to currentr
He s runnmg around saytng he s mvestment would expose the finand
t'rees unable to profit fromi
the one saving Social Security," said cia! markets to harmful pohucal ahn near rett
,
senate Bd
c
·
h'
'
fl
·
teaccouns.
..
u g~t. ommtttee c ~trman m uences.. _ ,
.
Pete Do~ntCI, R-N.M. But It's the
AlA
GOP plan he satd, that would ·:toc,k .
#¥,
.
,
away e~~r penny ... for our nauon s
elderly._
\~.
.
It
:
The t~sue nses beca~se the go~·
ed to get an update to the state of play,
emment s bu get surplus m 2000 will
WASHINGTON (AP) - The . in the region," State Departmen(
come solely from~tal Secunty tax- NATO alhes stand ready to force an
J
p R b'
ld'
·
· 1en t repressiOn
· " of Koso.
spokesman ames , u 10 1o 1
es. Chnton
would end some of the en d to " vto
. . "
'
h . Albamans
. 'fS
e~p~cted. $133 bllhon') about $50 vo set ~tc
t lerb'1: re f uhs· reporters.
He said that at the London meet-.
btlhon- on other proga1ams mclud· es to stgn a peace pan aor t e . Alb . h d Clark
ld dl
5
ing defense, education, Medicare province, President Clinton says.
mhg,
ng 'bt :"'. .
wou k scusg.
1
'd'
d
A
Cl'
k
F
'd
S
.
t
ree
posst
1
tUes:
a
peace
eepm
an? new government-so bst tze .
s mton spo e n ay, ecre- force, should both sides sign an
retuement accounts.
tary of State Madeleme Albnght
d . , 'k
. th S b -f
1
1
h
h
d
d
f
L
d
f
A
·
,
accor
;
atr,tn
es
agamst
er sthe
·
·
·
·
Ad_mmtstratwn officta s say t _at ea e or on on rom sta aor the ethnic Albanians signe but
spendmg would be m""e up to Soctal unscheduled meetmgs on the Koso- S rb d • . d N •·:ro· . a t"on 1-f
· ·
T
·.
. 1 emtssary
c 1 on
.
Secunty
m later years,
after mcome
vo ·tssue wtt· h prest'dentta
the Ss bon. 1, kan ,... .. seremoves
d ·
1
B b D 1 B · · h · ffi · 1 d U S
e er s rna e aggresstv
tax~ star\ pro uct~g_a s~rp~b;~o. ~ ~ e, wts I o ~~~a~ ~ATO' . the grouod, and neither side signs.
ey a so clomp am t e . as
Y en. es ey ar •·
s
Clinton commented on the Koso·
not yet spSe11~ out s~ec~ftc steps to sup refmfiecommander.d
.
vo situation during a White House
0. tcta1s cauttOne agamst sug- news conference with Italian Prime
t~prove acta 8ecunty s ong-term
fmances, and have no exphctt plan . gesttons that an emergency prompt· M' .
M ·mo D'Alema
.
.
mts 1er ass1
.
for Medtcare, the also-overburdened ed the change m plans. .
.
Some anillysts have accused the
hea,l,th prop-am for the elderly.
~ole, the_l996 Repubhcan presJ- president of threatening NATO mili· ·
What s mtssmg ts a complete dentta! nommee and former Senate t
t.
. ·t ..., slavt·a only
·
· · 1ea der, meCFn·day wt.th et h- tarybacton
,
ptcture
of how surp1uses an d even m3Jonty
k · agams .ugo
0
debt reduction will be used to actu· nic Albanian leaders. Albright "want·
ac away.

1

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NEW YORK (AP) - The Dow
Jones industrial averag~ soared
268.68 points to a new record Friday
and cracked through 9,700 for the
first time. Stocks were ignited by a
government employment report that
calmed worries about rising interest
rates.
The blue-chip .average closed at
9,736.08, topping its Jan. 8 rccor!l finish of 9,643.32 and bringing 1999's
rise to 6 percent.
·
'.
· Other indexes also rose sllarply,
but none set records.
"You've · gone from lethargy to
euphoria in this market over the last
few days." said Larry Watchel, a market analyst at Prudential Securities.,
"I'm sure at sometime next week the
Dow · will he sweeping up. toward
10,000."
In the last two days, the Dow has
risen more th!ID 460 points, or 5 per"
cent. That's the average's biggest
two-day advance in points ever, surpassing a record of447.98 on last Oct.
15-16. The gain is not close to a
record in percentage terms. For the
week, ·the Dow gained 429.5 ..
Prior to Thursday, stocks had been
struggling amid uncertainly over
whether oompany profits will juo;tifY
the market's huge rebound since early
October, when the Dow dipped below

7,500.

1/1/99

12/1/98

2/1/99

4/1/99

3/1/99

Y2K computer problems abroad
could cause disruptions In U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) - While
the United States is working to
avoid pote~tial problems. from the
Year 2000 computer bug, 11 may not
be immune from such troubles over-

The inflation-sensitive bond mar- 7/8.
·
.
kct also soared on the report. The
While techOQlogy stocks were •
price 'of the 30-year Treisury bond, ' mostly higher, they failed to keep •
which was up more than 2 points in pace with the gains in other sceloiS.
early trading, rose 1 11/32 points or 'After leading the market rebound in·
$13.43 per $1,000 in ~- value.
recent ' months. technology ,shares
yield, which moves in the oppos1te ha~ been battered lately arrud condirection, fell to 5.60 percent from ccms over profits and slowing per5.69 perce'nt late niunday.
sonal-computcr sales. ·
The surge on Wall.Strccl followed
· "The technology stocks are up
big gains overnight in global. financial today, but they have really lost the1r
markets. Japan's main market index · primary_l~rship f?le in this ~ar­
climbed 5 percent on the best day of ket,'' sa1a Ricky Hatnngton, lechmcal
trading of this year. In Lo,ndon, the analyst at lnle~te/Joh~~ Lane in
Financial nmes-Stoclc Exchange 100 Olarlotte, N.C. The gams m the tech
index gained 1.7 pei:ccnt, while main stocks are a little bit disappointing,
market indicators rose 2.S percent in given the gain in the Dow.'~
Frankfurt and Paris.
. Advancing issues outnumbered
Blue-chip stocks led Friday's rally declincrs by an 11-to-5 margin on the
on Wall Street. All 30 Dow compo- New York Stock ·Exchange, where
nents rose, with the biggest. gains composite volume totaled 1.116 billion
coming in mM, up 7 318 at 178 318. shares, up from Thursday.;
and American Express, up 5 9/16 at ·
The Standard &amp; Ppor s 500 rose
118 9/16.
.
28.83 at 1,275.47, and, the ~eeh_noloAlso . strong were stocks in the · gy-heavy Nasdaq compos1te mdex
financial sector, like banks and bro- rose 44.22 at 2,337.11.
kerage firms, which benefited· from
The NYSE composite index !lise
the diminishing likelihood of an i~ter- 1239 at 603.14, and t~e !'rnencan
est-rate hike. Citigroup rose 1 7/16 to Stock Exchange composite mdex.rose
61 3/4 and 01ase gained 3 1/2 to 86 8.89 at 707.41. ·

!is

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getting off to a slow start, .China is
rac.ing toward a March 31 deadline,
he said.
Among the possible fallout areas
cited by Gershwin: .
seas.
•Foreign· strategic missile sysFailures by computers abroad terns may experience computercould still cause disruptions here related problems. "We do not see a
because countries the U,nited States problem in terms of Russian and
relies on for imports lag behind, ,Chinese missiles automatically
administration officials told the Sen- being launched or nuclear weapons
ate Special Committee on the Year going off,'' he said, but Russians
2000 Technology Problem.
may have . trouble with the early
Most industrialized nations arc warning systems that monitor formaking progress, the officials said eign missile launches. The Pentagon
Friday·. But developing countries arc · has invited Russian officials to moofurther behind, in many instances itor U.S. missile launch warning • INSURANCE
because. of inattention to the prob- data from mid-December to midFull Una ol
lneurence Product•
Jem, scarce resources and little time January to bolster their confidence
+ Flnancllll
left to make critical repairs.
that America is not attacking.
Servlcea
"It is becoming increasingly
•The vulnerability ,of Sovietclear that tliere will be Y2K-related designed nuclear : reactors is
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failures in every comer of the globe, unknown because records on the
some of which could prove harmful equipment used to make them are
't6' U:s:· inte\'ests," testified Jacque- poor or nonexistent.
lyn Williams-Bridgers, the State
Department inspector general. ·
The problem exists because
many computers use two digits for .
'dates, and the fear is that many systems will treat 2000 as 1900 and
malfunction.
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Bobby Labonte wins pole for today's race
'·

By MIKE HARRIS
That was a disastrous afternoon You've gqt to use the gas. You;ve got
LAS VEGAS (AP)
Joe for the OM teams , with only seven - to do everything, and that's what
Nemechek likes - Las Vegas Motor time series championllale Earnhardt makes it go fast . I think.it's a driver's
Speedway and he says he'll be a lot breaking inio the Ford dominance.
race track."
Waltrip', the seventh of 52 drivers
happier being able to run with everyTwelve months and two aerody body elk in today 's Las Vegas 400. namic rules changes later, it appears to _take to the oval on Friday, set the
On a day when General Motors the pendulum might have swung the target that the drivers were shooting
at most of the. cool, sunny afternoon.
entries 1urned the tables on the Fords. other way. ·
Nemecbek's Chevrolet was third in · "I think (t~Jwoilers) make a dif- Labonte wa~ the 51 st driver in the
qualifyin~ at 170,072 mph, follow- ference,' ' Nelli!!J~ek said. "They are qualifying session.
.
ing the Pontiac of pole-winner making the cars closer to each other.
"That was kind of tough to sit
Bobby Labonte at a track-record I know my car, since they put them through for so long, knowing if you
JJ0.643 and 'the Monte Carlo of on at Atlanta,(in Noyeiii!Jer). my car did indeed get ' to · Bobby, be was
~ichael Waltrip at 170. 159.
has run a lot better. It jti,~ feels more . go_ing to he tough to beat," Waltrip
Close behind were the Ford of stable.
.
\.
sa1d.
surpri~ing Totli Hubert, a former
"It's still going to·be_a tough race. . Waltrip. ~ho w as 14th in a Ford
Winston West river and Winston The same guys are going to be up ,here· last yel!f, was asked aboUI the
t;:up crewman, 1 ~t· 169~88 and ·the front, but I think it's gbing to be a feet''(!~~ c~ sin~e NASCAR's latChevy of Winston Cup points leader better race on the track .' Las~ year, if e$t r , chan~ - at the end of the
Mike Skinner lit 169.822. Hubert someone got around the back end of 1998 ason
raised the rear spoilwill be making Only ,his (ourth.start your car, you were struggling to hang ers on I the entries.
and first on an.oval ,tr~ck.
' . on. This year. I think you ' re .going to
" DI!In't -.ye havo'a 'big spoiler last
· A year ago, a Taurus driven by see side-by-side racing because the year?'' 'he asked·wlth a deadpan face.
I5ale Jarrett won the pole, and Ford cars are stuck beUer." .,
" I lgjow .what..it was, I had a Taurus
d(ivers, led by Mark Martin ,' took the
Nemecbek-is very ,happy with the las_t-!)oear, and that thing didn't need a
lop seven spots .and 13 of the top 14 . change.
· big s~iler. " .
in \he inaugural Winston Cup race on
"I like this track ," he said. " h 's ·
Lalibnte, who was 19th in last
the I 112-mile oval. '
fast You' ve got to use the brakes. year's ,tac~, said, "We're different

'

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Completely· b1 ~
'The Uttle one!,.

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propammabJe
~::..... _d igital bearing
aid system!

.......,1099::"

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~ dtgtteny.

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.•

By.Thel\aaoclated Preas ·
·
•, . .'
·
' NASCAR Winston Cup schedule, winnc~ in parcotheses. and driver point standings:
;
Feb.. 14 - Daytona 500, Daytona Beach, Aa. (Jeff
Gordon).
.
,
Feb. 21 - Dura-Lube 400, Rockingham, N.C. (Mark
·
Martin).
:· Mar~~ 7 - Las Vegas 400.
.
March 14- Cracker Barrel'500, Harnptqn, Ga.
March 21 --:-" TranSouth 400, P!U'lington, S.C.
• March 28 - Primes tar 500, .fort Worth, Texas.
April II ..,... ~City 500, Bristol, ,Tenn.
April IS - Goody 's 500, MartinsviHe, Va.
: . April25 - Diehard 500, Talladega, Ala.
. May 2 - California 500, Fontana.
May 15 - Pol)!iac Excitemeni 400. Richmond , Va.
, May 30 - Coca-Cola 600, Concord, N.C.
: June 6 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Del.
· June 13 - Miller Lite 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
June 20 - Pocono 500, Long Pond, Pa.

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from where we were last year. What
we Jiad last year -wasn' t going to
work anyway. We had to change
something, whether it was the spoilc~ or not.
"The lap I ran tod ay for qualifying , the car stuck really good, I was
able to pick up the throttle' real qui ck
. and the car didn't push up or slide. 1
thought, 'This could be good." '
The pole was the 14th of
Labonte's career.
The fastest 22 qualifiers broke the
mark ~f 168.224 set last year by
Jarret .
...~.
Ro ding out the top I0 were the
Fords of Ricky C.raven, Jeremy
Mayfield, Jerry Nadeau, Jarrett and
'teammate Kenny lrwm, ..
Jeff Gordon, the two-time defend ing series champion and a Chevy dri ver. was I I th ·at 169.205. Martin was
13th and Earnhardt was far off the
pace in 44th.
Only the top 25 on Friday locked
up starting spots, with the rest of the
drivers forced to choose between
standing on thei.r first-day laps or try -

'

ing again tpday. Besides Earnhardt,
the non-qualifiers on Friday included
Rusty Wallace',- who is second in the
season points. Wallace was 37th in
qualifying.

-·-

Here is the following is the starting lineup for today's NASCAR
Winston Cup Las Vegas 400 at the
Las Vegas Motor Speedway with dri'ver 's listed with car number in parentheses, name, make of car, time (in
second s) and speed (in miles per
hour):
I. (18) Bobby Labo111e , Pontiac, .\ 1.645 seconds.
170.643 mpt1.
2. (7 ) Michael Waltrip . Chevrole t, J I.7 J5.
170.159.
'
~~ ·. (42)' Joe Neme chek, Chevrole t, JJ. 7.5 1.
17v.u73.
~ (19)Tom Hubert Ford, 31.767, 169.988.
S1 (3 1) Mikr Sl::inaer, Ch evrolet , ·31798,
1691!2
4; (.58) Ricky Craven, Ford, 31.838, 169.909.
· 1. (12) Jeremy Mayfield, Ford, ·31.856, 169..51 J.
8. {9) Jerry Nadeau. Ford. J 1.886. 169.353.
9. (88) O.k Josmt Fonl. 31.887-. 169 J 48.
!0. (28) Ktil.n y Irwin, Jr., Ford, J I.89J, 169.316.
11 . (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrole t, J 1. 9\ 4,

t69.m

12. (5 ) Te rry Labonlc, Chevro lel, 31.952,

169.004.'
1:\, i6l Mark MoRin. Ford. 31.957. 168.977.

14. (94) Bill Blioll . Ford, )1.966 , 168.929.
1 ~ . (43) John A.ndrtni . Pontiac. 31 :971 , 168 .91H.

16 . (3 3) Ken Schrade r, Che vrolet ,

.~2 .017 ,

168.660.
17 . (16) Kevi n Lepage, Ford, 32 .019, 168.650.
18. (2."i) Wally Dallen6ach. Che vrolel. :\2.066.
168.40.' .
.
19 . (?91Jeff Bu rton . Ford . 32.072. 168.37 1.
• 20 . (20 ) Tony Stewart . Pont iAC, 32.084. 168.038.
21. (45) Ri ch Bickle, Pontiac. n089. 168.282.

22 . (98) Rick Mast, FOfd, 32.091 . 168.27 1.
23. {41) Da \'id Green, Che\'rolet, 32.124.'
168.099.
24. ()0) Denike Cope. Ponti ac. 32.136. 168.036.
25. (l l J Elhott Sadler. Ford. 32. 148, 167.973.
26. (26) Johnny Benson. Ford, .\2.148 , lfi7.91.l
27 . (53) Kenn)' Walhc~! . Chevrolet, 32.154.
1.6 7.942.
.
28. (II ) BR"II Bodioe. Ford. ~2 . 160. 167.910.
29. (9 1) Ste\'e Gri ssom. Chev rolet. 32. 180.
167.806
JO. (22}Ward Burton. Ponti aC. 32.2.12. 167.5 :\3.
3\. (97 ) Chad Little, Ford, 32.237. 167.309
32. ( 4) Bobb y Hami lton, Chevrolet. 12 . 2~4 .
167.421
H

(40) Ster ling Marlin, 0\evrolet .\2.2)8,

167.400.
34. (1 01 Ricky Rudd. Ford. 32.258. 167.400.
35. (001 Buckshot Jones. Ponuac. 32.278 .
107 .29'7
36. (60) c~offrey Bodine, Olevrokt. J2 30 1.
167 177.
37. {lrRu sty Wallace, Ford, provisional
.l8. (3) Dale Earnh ardt. Chevrolet. pnwision"'l.
39. (23J Jimmy Spenca. Ford. provisional.
40. (36) Ernie ln·an . Pontiac , provisional
41 . {I) Steve Park, Olevrolet , provis iona l
42. (90) Stanton Barren, Ford, provisio nal.
43. (66) Darrell Waltrip, Ford, past ctlampions
provis ional.
'

Winston ~up · aQ·n.o~~~es ~winners, ~la~e &amp; driver standings

'

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Nemechek says he has chance to contend in Las Vegas 400

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on 5~of, IO shooting antt dishing. o ut ,
, II assists.
·
: Morris Peterson added .
for Michigan State (2814).
Wisconsin (22-9)· ·got 15 points
from · Andy ,Kowske; I but its backcourt was practically nonexisterit: Ty·
Calderwood had _two ·points, while
bOth 'Mike (\elley ·and three:~int
specialist Jon Bryant were scoreless:
K~wsk'e scored seven con~utive '
points as' Wisconsin took .a 18-8 lead
with 1-l :52 left in the"first half, and
the Badger fans were ~ensing a
repeat of the . upset i~ January that
gave Michigan State its only conference loss. They . started heckling
{;leaves, the i:p-Big Ten player .of the

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, , a~~~1ilini, who led 79 •76 wilhn
2-.5' st;clmds left, ~aw the .Buckeyes
make 'the front end of 3 one-and-one
'situation. Bur the Buckeyes 'inten,tionally missed the second,shot to set
'"
·
up u,e gam~- tying opportunity.
. The potential game-tying shot
.~issed t~e mark, a~d th~ I!lini ye~oc~:~~~~;~~~~~;r~·show the
CHASING tile.too" ba~ketball ara Illinois forward Demir Krupa lila
·IN PURSUIT - Auburn•• Chrla Porter (left) an~ Kentucky'a Saul
earne~ a be~h oppos1te M1ch1gan ',Badgers just c why he's taken (left) and .Ohlo SUit~~· Jason Slngl•n during Saturday's Big Tan Smith acramble for the looae basketball In th~ aecond haH of
.State m today s thamp10nsh1p round. Michigan State to its .best ranking &amp;el'llflnal round In Chicago's United Center, where the llllnl won 7!1- Saturday's SEC tournament semifinal game in Atlanta, Ga., where
In other tournament action:
. since a guy named Magic Johnson 77·after t!le Buckeyes missed a last-second shot. (AP)
the 14th-ranked Wlldcata won 6!1-57. (AP)
~t ~t?~~~t~·J'~· S~u~e~ost was wearing ·the green-and-white. ~7~0!!'}~fr~·om~-~trhe~fi'!el~d:'I:,A~ub~u~r'!n.-:tr~a'!:il'!ed~·l"by~'l'L'!e'!xi'!n'!gt~o'!n~dr'~'!ri'!n'!g':llhe:"""r'!e"'g-:ul~"ar...,se"'as"'o"'n-."'o"'ns'l'h;,.ip-.--------..;.--"'ib~u~t"'~G!\"u,;.e_v_ar_a_m_ad"e-lw-o'"'l'fr-e-e~'~t'"hf-o-w""s
· . .
• · ·• . ,
He scored all six of his first-half 10 or more points through most of after Auburn started out with 17·conMaryland, which swept th~ Tw wjth 12 seconds to play to help
Heels by a combined 30 points in the Charlotte win its first C-USA tourna'
,TraJan Landgon, but that d!dp 1 pre- points in the lasi 10:36, including a the gam,e. an&lt;! ~~'laY have •ost itself a secutive victories.
_-:e~tthe top-ranked Blue De~ds from jumper that tied the teams at 22 at the top seed in the NCAA tqumament.
Five players scored in double fig- regular season, lost to North men1 in three tries. Charlotte lost to
-~st~g a iho~ at t~e ~tlanuc Coast half.
·
'
Ken\uc~y (24-8) advanced to ures.for Kentucky, led by Turner and Carolina in the tournament for the Cincinnati in last year 's final and .
00
.
erence c ampiOns 'P·
While Cleaves vras taking care of · t~ay's final to meet the winner of Scott Padgett with 13 apiece. Turner, seventh consecutive time . The Marquette in the 1997 final.
Charlotte, the fifth seed, had to ·
. · Co~ey Maggette, ~freshman mak- the Badgers offensively, · his team- tlie other semillnaJ between No. 22 who had a career-high 24 points in Terrapins haven' t made it to the title
! 0 ~ hts first start 10 place of the mates ·were shutting them down . Arkansas and Mississippi State.
the quarterfinals, also had . seven game since 1984, when Len Bias .play four games to win the toumatDJured hLa_hngdon,
The Badgers, ·who were ' Th
.
24 . scq_redh 17fi of hhis
If de'ensl·vely.
•·
· e W1ldcats
set the tone from the assists and four rebounds.
helped them win their second ACC ment and beat No. 7 Cincinnati 551
10
SEC player of the year Chris crown .
52 In Friday's semifinal . The 49ers
season- g .· pomts l e. ust a shooting 62.percent when they toOk · opening· tip, hilling their firs! three
as Duke beat North Carohn~ State the 10-point lead, scored just four attempts from outside the three-point Porter, double-teamed throughout
Steve Francis scored 31 to lead ha~e won seven straight games.
83 "68 Saturday m the -semtfinals of points in the last II :52 of the half.
arc a11d building 'a 17-6 lead when the day, was held to 12 points on 4- fv'laryland. which made just one field
Second-seeded Louisville (19 - ·
the AC::C tournam!lnt.
.
They· missed 14 of their Jruit 16 Heshimu ·Evans scored on .a fast- of-11 shooting. Doc Robinson and goal in the first eight min~tes- of the 10), which won eight of its las.t II
· · The _Bl~e Devds (3!-l)_ extended shots, finishing 10-of-29 (35 ~r- break lay-in with 14:25 r&lt;lmaining in Jay Heard paced the Tigers with 14 second half, damaging the Terrapins' games, CO!lld still earn an at-large
the natiOn s longest wmmng streak cent) from the floor in the first half.. the first haff ' · ·
points each.
.
hopes of extending their seven-game NCAA bid.
·10 26 10 beatmg .the ~olfp_ack .(! 8- They started' the stcond half 0-of-8; · Though ,K~niucky made only 4:
Kentucky improved to 12-0 at . winning streak.
The 49ers, who ted 36-26 at the
131 f~r the lOth time to thetr last 11 . going a total of 10:14 Without ·a bas- of-17 attemp!$ from outside the arc Georgia Dome, which has become
.The Terrapins also got 12 points half. made three three-pointers in a
-meettngs. ,
. " .
ket at the end of the ·first half and the rest of the way, the damage was the next best thing to Rupp Arena 'for . apiece from Laron Profit and two minute stretch to build a 54-35
' M11ggette _s previOus high wa~ 22 beginning Qf the second.
·
done. Auburn, playing in the touma- the Wildcats.
Terence Morris and II from Danny lead with 12:43 to play.
Michigan State, meanwhile, 'inent semifi~llls for the first time
No. 1!1 No.-th Carolina 86
Miller.
The Cardinals answered back,
pomts agamst North Carohna- .
19
Greensboro,- Elton Brand added
jumped on the Badgers at thjl start of since-1991,
,Clearly out of its ele- ·
. No. S ll:faryltin4 '19
· The Tar Heels combined 6-for-9 connecting oti three consecutive
pomts after a slow start.
.
the second half. Charlie Bell hit ment against a _team' that has won 22
At Charlotte, N.C., Max Owens · shooting from three-point range with three-pointers. in an 11-2 run that
No. 1 Michigan St 56 ·
bac k-to-back t hrec:-pomterstostart
.
a of 23 tournament games, including powered several key runs and the an 18-11 rebounding edge to buil&lt;\ a milde it 56-46 at the 7:26 mark.
N 19 w·
1 41
A c~·lstons n ·
b d 12-0 run, and the Spartans were eight in a row.
15th-ranked .Tar Heels earned a shot 40-34 halftime lead. They took.-ed'nLouisville cut it to single digits on
ICago, once was
a. never in .trouble again. Cleaves
The Tigers missed 17 ofJheir first at a third straight ACC championship trot with a 16:4 run, cappe(\ by a a jumper by Tony Williams that
t
· enough . Mateen Cle~ves .wasn t banked in a shot during the spurt, 20 shots and fell behind 26-9 when with an 86-79 victory over No. 5 short jumper from Owens, that made made it 61-52. Galen Young, the
•\&gt;Out to let No .. 19 Wlsconstn beat and also fed Antonio Smith for' ·a freshman .De.smorid Allison connect- Marylan.d on. Saturday.
·
it 36-29.
tournament MVP, made two free
h1s No. 2 Mtch1gan Stale Spartans 1
·
''
again.
ayup_.
.
..
, , ed on his second.' trey just past the
Third: seedcd North Carolina (24The trend continued in the second throws to put the 49ers baok up 63W1_sconstn, wb1ch ~"! sho~ _a sea- midway point in the half.
8) shot 53 percent, including a 9-of-.. half, which North Carolina opened 52, but Williams made his fourth
Cleaves rescued the to seeded
Spartans early, then made~ team- son-h1gh 62 _per~ent !n 1ts wtn over
The o~ly t!Jing .that kept the game 16 performance from . three-point ' by making two of its first three long- three~pointerofthe day and Marques
~tes look good the rest of tho-way Iowa on Fnday, fimshe4 . 1:7-or~58 , from turmng \DI'o-a total blowout was range, apd held off a late --1'1.\IY by range attempt~. boosti~g its l~ad to Ma~bin made a layup under the -baswith quick, crisp passes they turned· (29 percent). . · ·
, .... ... ~: • ·· ·-- ··!&lt;eoll!cky's ~, shootmg from the second-seedep . Maryland: ,·.Til~ . 48-34 on a three-pointer~ ,Okulajl!.. kettomake it 63-57 with 2:32 to'go.
itito easy basket after easy, basket.
No. 14 Kentudiy 69
. foul hne. The ..yildcats m1ssell 10-of- Terrapins '(26-S) cut a'· !!3-polnt . Maryland mis~ II of iis first 12
· Nate Johnson .scored on a jumper
Michigan State's defense took care
No.4 Auburn 57
. , . IS berore makmg 9-of-12 down the deficit to four before losing in the shots in the half and turned it over that made it63-59 with 39 seconds to ·
of the rest ·holding No l9 Wisconsin
At A-tlanta, Ga., Auburn was the stretch to secure the victory.
·
conference semifinals for the eighth five times, clejring the way for the play. Young then missed the front
scoreless 'for 10:4 2
the Spartans · best team in_ the Southeastern · After the . openin~ ' 'minutes, conseculive time. .
Tar Heels to open .the half with a 24- end of a one-and-one, Louisville got
won 56-4! in the Bi Ten tourna- Conference dunng the regular sea- Auburn got as close as s1x pomts on ·
Maryland used an 18-6 run in the 7 run . Owens scored the final seven the rebound-but couldn't convert.
ment semifinals.
g
son.. But the SEC tournament . two ,occasions, tile last coming when .last eight minutes to help trim Nonh points in the surge to give the Tar
Cameron Murray 's three~point~r
The Spartans, who tied a school belongs to Kentuc~y.
. Doc Robi~~ol)'s&lt;&gt;tl1re.e-point~r sliced , Carolina's lead to 78-74 with 47 sec- Heels a 64-41 lead with .12:06 . wa5 shon, Maybin got the rebound
Th~ No. 14 Wildcats, who ~ave · Kent~c~y .s lead to 51-45 •wllh 7;01 onds remaining . But. Owens helped remaining .
.
but turned the ball over when he
.record with their 28th victory and are
looking for a No 1 seed 1·n the won i~wo strrught touf!lament titles rem81D\Dg.
..
.·
. the Tal: Heels seal it by making all six
North Carolina-Charlotte 68
stepped on the line.
,B!-11 A,l~~on tnt a hanging jumper of ~is free throws the rest of the.way.
Louisvilfe 59
·
The Cardinals were forced to foul
NCAA tournam~nt, will play a~d .SIX of the last seven, mov~
Illinois, a 79-77 winner over Ohio V.:lthtn .one VICtory _of another cham- in ·_the fane' as 'ihe shot clocked .ran
Owens, a sophomore guard, finAt Birmingham, Ala., Diego from there. Williams led . Louisville
State in the other semifinal Saturday, . p1onsh1p by defeating No. 4 Auburn o~t, ~!chael Bradley. scored on a ished with a career-high 23 points. Guevara scored 16 points and North with 19 points and Murray, named to
in ·the finals today. It was the 69-57 m the sem1~nals ~aturday.
d~ve and Jam.al Magl01re put back a Ademola Okulaja added 19, Jason Carolina Charlotte ·earned . an auto- the all-iournamentteam, had 13 . ·
Spartans' 17th straight victory.
!he cold-shooting Tigers (27-3), m1ss by· Wayne Turner to push the Capel 13 and Bnindan Haywood 10 matic bid to ·the NCAA tournament
Kelvin Price, also named to the
. The knock on Cleaves is that he !~Slog · ~o lCentucky f?r the ·second margm back to 57-~. Kentucky led . as ' North . Carolina advanced to the with a 68-59 win over Louisville on all-tournament team; scored . 12
c~n ' t play in the United ·center, time th1s season, fellmto_a double- ?Y at least-IQ the rest of the way for title game for the I lth time in 13 Saturday in the · Conference USA points for Charlotte aqd Young had
II points and a game-high nin~
shooting a dismal 8-of-45 in his pre- dtgti hole less than s1x mmutes mto 11s 14th consecutive victocy .ove years . The Tar Heels will need to toumameni final.
vious three games here. But he took the game. and never recovered. /
Auburn since 1990.
beat top-ranked Duke today to win
The 49ers (22-1 0) nearly squan- rebounds.
Shooting only 30 percent (21-ofThe W1ldcats won 72-62 in
eir . ACC-leading 16th champi- dered a 19-point second half lead,
care of that theory, scoring 14 points

200

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'

NCAA men's
college basketball

.C hange In payroll lobs

!500

B

.Duke, Kentu~~,
:1\llichiaan State~
Illinois cl·a·im.: wins

Unem
. .::_pl_:oyme=:::_"'.:.___ _-{;~
5.15' -

Section

:conference tournaments coJntltJue

U.S. employment
rises slightly

. .

There have also been fears that the
fast-growing economy would spur ·
inflation and force the Federal
Reser-Ve -BOard to boOst interest rates.
But a jobs report from the Labor
· Department helped· dampen those
concerns on Friday. The unemploymeni rate edged up slightly to 4.4 percent in February, while average
hourly wages - long considered a
barometer of inOation - rose a mere
·
1 cent to $13.04.
"This is a sign that the economy 'is
truly not overheating," said Brian G.
&amp;!ski, chief investment' strategist at
George K. Baum &amp; Co., in Kansas
City, Mo. "If the economy isn't running on all cylinders, nothing should
happen with interest rates."

1

.I

arts

Dow s~ars 268 points to a _
new rec~rd high

HIQh 1,711.12 Netcllqit ..........
t,7311.~ Low 1,11111.41 Pet change +2.14 -

C1o11e

'

'

.

Sunday, March 7, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoiis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

'

'

.

!un~.Jt .Jisave Mart 350k, Sonoma, Calif.

July ~-c J;psi 400, Daytona Beach, Fla. '
Juty.:6 -Jiffy Lube 300,. Loudon; N.H.
Jul~5 -Pennsylvania 500, Long Pond.
·. Aug. 7 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis.
Aug. 15- Frontier at the Glen', W'ltkins Glen , N.Y.
Aug,.22- Pepsi 400, Brooklyn, Mich. •· ·• .
Aug. 28- Goody's 500, Bristol, Tenn. ·
Sept.~S ~'Southern SOO, Darlington, S.C.
_'
SeptA l ,- Exide NASCAR 400, Richmond, Ya. ·
Sept. 19 ;- New f:lampsbire 300, Loudon.
Sept. ':!6- MBNA Gold 400, Dm•er, Del.
Oct. 3 - NAPAAutocare 500, Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 10 - UAW-GM Quality 500, Concord, N.C.
Oct. I 7 - Winston 500, TallAdega, Ala.
Oct 24 ..,.. Pop Secret 400, Rockingham , N.C.
Nov. 7 - Dura-Lube 500, Phoeni~.
Nov. 14 - Jiffy Lube 400, Homestead, Aa.
Nov. it - NAPA500, Hampton, Ga.
Driver standings

1,

1. Mike Skinner,'3 15.

'

2. Rusty Wallace, 286.
3. Ken Schrader, 280.
4. Bobby Labonte, 263.
5. Jeremy Mayfield, 263. ·
6. Kenny Irwin, 259.
7. Michael Waltrip, 258 .
8. Mark Mtll'tin, 250.
9 . .Wally Dallenbach, 239.
10. Chad Little, 238.
.
I I. Jeff Gordon, 231 ,
12. Jeff Buggp 22 8
13. Dale Jarrett, 227.
14. Robert Pressley; 227.
15. Johnny Benson, 227.
16. Bobby Hamilton, 214.
17. Dale Earnhardt, 2 10.
18. Tony Stewart , 206.
19 . Bill Elliott,205. ·
20. Terry Labonte, 200.

'.:
•

.

·

' I

l LJerry Nadeau, 200. ·
22.Emie lrv~n . 197 .
23. Rick Mast, 192.
24. Geoffrey Bodine, 188.
25. Ricky Craven, 182.
26. Darrell Waltrip, 182.
27. Kyle Petty, 180.
28. Dave Marcis, 176.
29. Ward Burton, 170.
30. Kevin Lepage, 161.
31 . Ted Musgrave, 161 .
32. Brett Bodine, 161 ..
33 . Kenny Wallace, 161.
34. Ricky Rudd, 151.
• 35. Steve Park, 146.
36. Joe Nemechek, 146. ·
37. John Andretti , 140.
38 . Jimmy Spencer, 128.
39. Sterling Marlin. 119.'
40. Derrikc Cope, 109.

·

�Sunday, March 7,1999
Sun.day, March 71 19Sl9

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

·~su,. Ohio State, lllirioi·s cap~ure wins

l

tournament, all present and account·
ed for in Saturday's semifinals. So
where's No. 3? Indiana is limping
back to Bloon\ingtpn, the latest
upset victim of lowly Illinois.
The lith-seeded lllini (I S-17) got
career efforts from Lucas Johnson
and Fess Hawkins, · and Cory
Bradfprd scored all 15 of his points
in the second half Friday as Illinois
beat 17th-ranked Indiana 82-66. It
was the second upset in as many
nights .for Illinois, who beat No. 23

·"

'

·~).

.

' I

NANCY ARMOUR
, CIDCAGO (AP) - Michigan
~tale made il - b~ely. Ohio State
rolled. easy and loose as can be.
Wisconsin had a scare and made it,

tpo.

. .

.• Seeds I, 2 and. 4 in the Big Ten

Tni}S America Athletic Conrennce-stmiOnals
Cent. florida 80, Georgia St. 6.S
Jacksonville S1. 93, Campbell 89

.. '
WtS1ern Alhletie Confcrmee-semiftnab

ISBA standings
•

f''

•

Atlantl&lt; DI•IMn

lillll

'

!ill .

ll!l.l.cl.

Orlaodo ................................. t)
Miarni ................................... l2·
Phil.delpbia ............... ,.......... IO

•

7 .563
7 .500
9
12

.400
.200

6

9

~.~-~-~~~-~;~ion5

JDdialla .......... ......
Milwaukee ............................ 9
Odroit .................... . ....... :10
Adlllta ............. ...........
.. .... 8
VELAND ,...................... 6

i

nto ......... _. ....... ............. ~
rloU~ -------·............... ;..........4
~cqo ................................. .4

"t

688
~
6'3
6 .625
8 .SOO
8 .429
10 .,\33
II .267
12 _lj()

1
1
3

5~
6 ,~

7

-·~

' '

: .. WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwut Dl~ldon

•

Ium

ll! L lei.

Utlh :..................................... l3 .l
MillllCSOII ........... .................. IO
6
Hdt.15ton .................................. 9 7
Antonio ............................ a 8
. ~IlLS .......... ........ .................... 6 12
De8vcr ..................... ... ............ .5 11
Vaaeouver
....... .4 12

'

sae

•

•
hclfte .Divl1ion
Poftlllld ,............. ~................. l2 3

L..,.

.813
.625
.563
.500
.JJJ
.294

l

•s
8

8'~

9

.800
.667
.600

'-

Laken ..........................12 6
Sejnk .................................. 9 6
Pheenb.-................................... 9 7 . ~3
Golden State ...........................7 9 .438
Satramento ..... .......................-.7 9 .438
L.A. Clippcrs_....... :............. :.... o 14 .000

I

!ill

.250

1
'1

1
l

3 ~1

5'h .

s'

II \',

Friday's scores

I

. _.OOideo Stale 101, lndiana 83
"•Miami 89, Philadelphia78
.
.._'-Wuhington 86. Ollrloue 85
~BOlton l02. Denver 94

I
I

~,...._~lando

89, Toronto 84 ·
...,Milwaukee 88, New York 87
~-.Utah 106, Dallas 95
~'Portland 97, Minnesru 85
~~ L.A. lakers 103, Seattle 100

'

I
I

.

' I
I

'

I I

'•
:•

I
I

'

They played Saturday •

~ -&lt;iolden State at CLEVELAND. 7:30p.m.
~ •Detroit 11 Orlando, 7:30p.m.

I
I I'
.
I

.:L.A.
Clippen at San ~ntonio. 8:30 p·. m.
• ,Sacramento at
9 p.m.
Phoem~ .

I

: ~Houston _
al

Vancou\ler, 10 p.m.

:'

Today 's pmes

•

) 11

Di..,l!ion II
AkrOn Hoban 68, Canal Fuhon NW 51
Avon Lake 61 , Garfield Hts. Trinity 50
Clyr\e 58, Sandusky Perkins SO
Col. Bcechcroft 75 , Col. Centenninl63
Col. Easrmoor 6'2. Lancaster Fairfield Uniori 47
Col. Wanerson 88. Col. St Charles ~8
Col. Whiteha11 81. Bexley ~5
Crestwood 80. Akron N. 6.5
Dres,dcn Tri- Valley .~8. Dover 35
Elida 70, Lima Both 64
Galion 67, Wilhu-d ~2
.
Graham S6, lippccanoe .51-0T
Uma SRawnee: 79, Ouawa-Glandorf 62
Oak Harbor ~.S. Bryan 39
Olmsted Falls 83, Keystone 44
Pelf)' 77, Mentor Lake Cath. 65
Porumouth .58, Greenfield McClain SO
Roc:k Hill 59, HillsOOro 5.5
Rossford 67, Napoleon 65
Sandusky Perkins 50, Clyde 38
Shelby ~6; Clear Fork 50·
'
S1. Clairsville 56. Rayland Buckeye Loeal 40
Stow Walsh' Jesuit 88, Tallmadge 54
Strulhen S I, Wamn Hnwland 30
Urbana 64, Spring. Shawnee 61-0T · '
Vermilion 64, Norwalk Sr. 63
W. Oe:auga 7~. Chardon ND-CL 33
Wooster Triway 65, Canton Cem. 46
~ You. Libeny 43, Hubbard:39

.-.Miami at lndill'IJ, 12:30 p.m.
• ~~w Jersey at New York, 12:30 p.m.
'" ..Wl!h!Df,IOn at Philadelphia, 3 p.m.
'...801:100 at Toronto, 3 p.m.
:-L.A. Laken &amp;I' Utah, 6 p.m.
.IISaa Aatonio • Denver. 9 p.m.
. '"Dallas •r Sleramento, 9 p.m.
)finnesot:a·at Seanle. 9 p.m
)iouston at Portland, 9 p.m.

.I

.
.
Nf:AA Div. I men's scores
-~

Friday's tournaments '

0T

., Atlanllc 10 Confen!nce·semlftnals
.Rhode: Island 94, Geofge Washington 78
~Temple 76, Xavier 64

•

~At'-ntk

~

69
. Cuolina St 66, Wake Forest .52
onh Cuolirra 78, Georgia Tech 49

'·

'
I' I'
I

,

I

c..t Contennet·qulrterflnals

oryland 93, Florida St

·
·

•"'

Bi11.Z Confennet-qu.rterllnals
1Canw TI, Nebraska 53
"'Kansas St. 84, Missouri 74
~klahoma St. 60, Oklahoma .57
.,ew 82, Colorac.lo 76

.I I :
I

''

I

fI

:

.. . Bit East Confennce-snnlfinala
.Connecticut 71 , S)IT&amp;Cuse 50
'St. John 's 62. Mi1mi 39

•

"

~

81&amp; Sk' Confnenu-semtnnals
Ariwna 73, Portland St. 56
ebrr St. 93 , Montana St. 7J

•

" .Bl1 Ten Conlennc:e-quarttrfinals
Illinois 82, Indiana 66
MichiJan St. 61 , Nortllwestcrn 59
Oh1o St. 87. Michigan 69
~isconsin 74, Iowa 60

I
I

'

I
I

I
' I'
I'
I '

'

•

., Big West Conftn!nce·umitinals
I oise St 71. Long Beach ~t 58
New Mexico St. 78, UC Santa Barbara 67

.

.

•
Confertnce USA·seminnals
(.ou1nil1~ 77. Ala.· B1nningham 68
!i'.C. Olarloue S5 . Cinci nnati .52

'
Mid-Eastern Athletic Confertnct-semifinal§
Aorida A&amp;M 62. Morgan St. 56
~- Carolina St 61 . N. Carolina A&amp;T 58

:
PalrlollAq:ue·chaimp'-oruhlp
Lafaye«e 67. Buem.tll 63 ·

'

Soulhu!llem conrnentt-quanerfinals
Arkansu 75. Florida 74
Auburn 93, Ala;bama 51
Kentucky 83. Miuiuippi 7.\
Miuinippi St. 62. Tennessee 56

Southlaftd Conftrtncf·~eminna ls

SW Texas 92. McNtt~ St 82
Texas-San A11tonio 77. Lamar 63

Souotwbtem Alhlftk Confe"ncf-umiilnal!l
Alcon'! St. 73. Miu . Valley St. 61
Southern U. 67. J~~c:klon St 66
Wtttfm Alhhtk Confertncf-.temlf'lnals

New Mexico S7. Southern MetR. S6
U1ah ~ - Tulsa 61-0T

: NCAA Div. I women's scores

•
I

II
I
'

Friday's toumomenll ·
Amerka Easl Confercnct-Mmlrtn.lt

Maine 66, Vennont 61
Nonhl!utem 76. [MxeJ ~2

111 Sk:r c.tennct .....e~nn•ts

C.S Northridae 83,-N. Mzona 6S
Pottland St. 64, Mornana 5I ·

Nashvill e
Chi cago ..

DIYision I
Celina 59, Bowling Green 40
Cle. Heights 66, Cle. Easl Tech 60
Cle, S1. Ignatiu s 96. Cle. John Mnrshall 50
Cuyahoga Falls 49. Akron Buchtel 47
E. Cleveland Shaw 71. Cle. Collinwood 56
Fairfield :57.-Hamihon 49-0T
Fremont Ross 63. Sandusky 50
Lakewood 44. Medina 41
Uma Sr. 72, Defiance 59
Mansfield Sr. 64. Ashland 46
Mentor 93. MadisOn 76
N. Olmsted 55, LakeWood St. Edward 54
Parma Hts. Holy Name 76. Parma Normandy
-74-0T
· SOlon 73, Warren Hardiog 51
Spri ng. Soulh .59, Cin. Princeton 57
.Stow S4, Akron Firestone 47
Tol. Cenu:al Ctuh. 93', Tot. Whiuncr 81 -20T
·Tol. Libbe y 74. Tal. Rogers .57
Tol. St Frnncis 58. Oregon Clay JJ
Tol. St. John 's 61. Tol. Scott 4.'i
You. Rayc:n 70_. Camon McKinley 60

l'l

4'&gt;

49

Dl\'islon Ill
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary 68, Smithville 43 ·
Ashland Crestview 77-, Milan Edison SS
Bedford Chanel79, lkrkshire SO
Bluffton 67, Kenton 45
.Brooklyn 91, Columbia 69
Bucyrus Wynford 72, Upper Sandusky 31
Coldwater 62, Uma Cent. Cath. 50
Doylestown Chippewa 57, Akron Manc~ster66
E. (]jnton 48. Grernview 45
Elmwood .'i9, Kaqlu Lakota .5.'i
Elyria Calh. 83, Lorain Clellf\/iew 51
Evcrgrec:n 86, Delta 60
Findlay Libe:ny-Bcnton 48, Milbury Lake 47Girard 69, Maplewood 49
Hawken School76, Cardi nal 45
Huron 61, Collins Wellem Reserve 47.Louisville Aquinas 55, NeW Middlet own Spring

-·-

WESTERN CONFERENCE

(See BIG TEN on B-3)

~

" I rtL
liE liA
70 19Q 160

...'....... .32 25 6

TI"IERE IT GOES! · _:_ Ohio
State's Mlc,hael Redd (left) cauees Michigan's Josh Asselin to
lose control of the basketball
during Friday night's Big Ten
tournament quarterfinal gaine In
Chicago, wher.e the Buckeyes
won 87-69. (AP)

6.2 171) J.'i6
SO 148 204
421 36 196 ,

............ 22 3~ 6
.. ........ 1737 8

Northwut Division
Colorado ..
.. ...... ...... 31 24 8
Edmonton ... .... ...... ...... 25 28 10
Calgary ............................ 22JO' 10
Vancouver ......................... l9 3~ 9

70 174 158
60 175 164
54 161 17-7
47 I.S2 198

PaciOc Division
Dallas.....
.. ........~9 12 10
Phoenix ......
.. ......~022 10
Anaheim ....................... 29 25 9
San Jose ........ .......... ....... 22 27 14
Los Angeles ...... ........... 2_f J5 5

88 177 122
70 ISJ 146
67 J69 153
58 141 148
~ I l.W 168

..

GM BED LINERS

Friday's scores
Boston 4. New Jeney I

·

Buffalo 2. Dallas I
Edmont on 2. Pittsburgh 2-tie

They played Saturday
· N.Y. Is landers at Philadelphia. I p.m.
Tampa Bay at Montreal. 7 p.m. .
Toronto at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Edmonton at Washington. 7 p.m.
Carolinn at Florida, 7:30 p.m.
Chicago ar San Jose, 7:30 p.'m
Calgary a!' los Angeles, 10 p.m.

1998&amp;
Older Trucks

Full Size 8 Ft. -or 6.S Ft. Bed
Limited Quantities While Supplies Last

SMITH'S GIC TRUCK CENTER

Toda)"s games
New Jersey at N.Y. Islander's, noon
N.Y. Rangers at Boston, 3 p.m.
Colorado a1 Pittsburgh . 3 p.m.
St. Louis 111 Dallas. 3 p.m.
Phii!Jdclphia at Buffalo, 6:30 p.m.
Detroit at Anaheim, 8 p.m.
N.aslwille at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Chicago at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

~

'.

14

Detroit 7, Phoenix 2
. Calgary 5, Vancouver I
Anaheim \ Nashville_2

135 Pine SIIR1. 160

GoUipolil, OH

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTlER THE SALE

JERRY .BIBBEE
:It's the Dealer Behind
The Deal
.
That
'l'he BEAL DirCerencel
'

.

Martins Ferry 71 . Monroe Cenll'al 47
N. Lima South Range 63. United Local 59
Oak HarborS~. Bryan 39
Ontario ~6. Mohawk 44
Patrick Henry 6J ,. Paulding 56
~onford 67, Napoleon 65
'kua1lles 49, National Trail 47
, Wauseon 58, Swanton 32
Wa)·ne Trace .54, Archbold ~0
You. Ursuline 63, Mlncral Ridge JO
Di,isiOn IV
Berlin Hil and 91 . Jewen-Scio ,l~
Botkins 57. Fon U:tramie 55-0T
Bri stol 56, Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 50
Canton Heritag~ Chr. 71, Le:etonia 47
Carey ~9 . Van Buren 37
Cin. Count!')' Day 8.\, Fayeneville 6?
Cin. Seven Hills .591Georgetown 43
Cle Independence 70, Lutheran E. 59
Colone l Crawford 51 . Mansfreld St. Per~r ·s 33
Defiance Ayersvillc 70, Penisville 6 1
Delphos StJohn's 64, Ottovill~ 49
Edgerton .51!. Montpelih 53
·
.Fan Jenmngs Ql , ConVoy Crestview 69
Fort Rec;ovcry 58. Moria Stein Mari on Loc:tl 52
Fremont St Joseph 48, Old Fon 46
G1bJonburg 95. Ottawa Hills 57
Gilm our Acad . 49, Southington Chalker 46
Holgate 6.\. Fayett e 41
Koll ida 6l McComb 44
K1dron Central Chr. 61. Elyria Finr B11pr 49
Lakeside Dnnbury 66. Sandusk)' St Mary's"·'
Uma Perry 68. Spencerville S2
L1ma Temple Chr. 56, Arlington 47
Lucas 68, Pl ymouth 52
Minster .52. New Bremen 42
'N U ntral8 1, Edon 77-20T
New Kno,.vil le 66, Ada .51
Norwalk St. Paul 76, S: Central 61
Pandora-Gilboa 44, Continental 41
Sebring McKin lc)' 45 . Berlin Center Western
Reserve 26
Tiffin Cal\·crt 70, New Riegel 62
- Vanlue 70. N_Baltimore 34
Wayne~fie,l d-Goshen 5l., Hardin Monhern 45
WoodmQre 69. Oregon Stritch 47

1999 FORD WINDSTAR SE

·,

1998 FORD CROWN VIC LX

V-6, Auto, A/C; All Power, Leather, Pwr. Sliding Doors;

V-8, Auto,,Leather, Climate Control, Pwr. Seats, ABS, Loaded

Etc. 2.9% APR Financing Available.

Save-Save-Save

Floriclo A&amp;M 5l, Howanl 40
lloqua 67, M&lt;Wpll St. 52

MlJMurt Vllley Con.teren«·semlflnals
Crr:iJhlon 76, Indiana St ~
l E:.,..uville 39, SW Missouri St. $$

1995 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

1996 FORD E150 CONVERSION VAN

V·B, Auto, NC, Tilt, Cruise, All Power EquiP.

Auto, NC, Tilt, Cruise, Cass., All Power

Sale Priced 810,110

Sale .Priced 814,810

1998 FORD TAURU$
V-6, Auto, NC, All Power, Etc., Price Includes Ford 5 yr./60,000 Mile Warranty

$14,110

1998 FORD CONTOUR
4 cyl, Auto, A/C, Casa, Much More. Price lncludta Ford
5 yr/60,000

~lie Warranty.

812,11p .

NUL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl•nlic Dttlsktn

l"w.'.'!"•ri.!"!~lk. &lt;:..fti.-·Nmuhh
. AI ........ St. 60

' """'SI·"

S. Belt ~tnnce-Hmlfl,..s

Aa. ~I '76, W, Ke:MUdcy 6'
Louili~n~ Ttch Ifill, ArkanSa1 St e7

'

adelphia................ .. J O 19 13 73 188 146
N.Y. Ranacn . .-...., .. ...... 2628 8 6Q 115 174
45 1.. 7 190

Nor1hea!t Divi!ion
0Uawa ...................... ........ 3518 8
Toron!o ............................. 35 22 .5
Buffalo................ ... ..... .. .29 21 11
80&lt;1on... ........................ 27 2S 10
Montru.1 ................. .......... 2, 29 9

78
73
70
64
.59

179 130
200 181
1611 138
162 145
152 163

Southtast Dlvlllon
C.-olina .......................-... 28 23 12 68 162 15.$
Ftaida ...... ............... .
22 23 16 60 1$1 166
Wuhintlon ........ ____
26 31 ~ ~1 163 16S

The Vikings .improve to 12-10
with the win while the -Big Blacks
ended their season with a 9-12
record. Five s'eniors donned the red
and black for the tina! time in the
high school careers. Jon Casto, Brent
Rollins, Scotty Stewart. Doug
Boyles, and Scott \Goldsberry all
played.1heir. last hardi&gt;rood game for
the Big,Blacks after stellar careers.f

ry.
The Trojans led 112-10 after one
period. PHS was on top 25- 16 during the,halftime intermission. After
three periods, Portsmouth was on
top 43-31. The Tigers narrowed the
gap to six points midway through the
,final period, but couldn't get any
closer.
Brandon Lee paced the li'gers with
17 points. Ryan Weller added II.
Ray Robinson tossed in 18 for PHS
while Maurice Clark had 16.
Greenfield hit 18 of 41 field goal
attempts (( 14 of 29 and 4 of 12) for

J:JIJ.
0
I
0
0
0
0
0
0
I

-·-

Point Pleasant Big Blacks
Player
·
Z:»L J:.gt
Jason Pyles .............. .................. .... 7......... 6
2
Brent Rollins ............................. ..............0
I
Ryan Litchfield ............... ,.... ,.... ................6
0
Doug Boyles ........................ .................. ..3
0
. Scott Goldsberry .................................... .'!
0
Scott Stewart ...........................................0
I
Jon Casto ............................ .:. .... .. ..........0
0
Totals
16
4

18 =
16;

62
55

EI

l!.i.

0
8-9
1-2
0
4-6
0
0
0
13-17

EI
2-2

14
19

9
4

8

'·

4

2
2

62
&amp;

0
2·3
6-9
0
0
1-2
11-16

20
3
14
12
,2
3
1

l

55

L---------------------4:J,#..,

--.....-~-------:=-~--=-=----,·..·'
FishDelivery
ForWillPond
Stocking
Be: Tuesday, March 9
·
Pomeroy - R &amp; G Feed &amp; Supply Company
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Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, March 10
Bidwell - Brown's Trustworthy Hardware
2:00- 3:00P.M., Phone (740) 446-8828
Gallipolis- Quality Farm &amp; Fleet ·
4:00-5:00 p.m., Phone 740-441-1221

43.9 percent. The Tigers were 10 of
17 at' the foul line. GHS had 30
rebounds, eight by Lee, 14 personals , 3 assists, 17 turnovers, one

,

...''

blocked shot and two steals.
Ponsmouth hit 25 of 49 from the
field for 51 percent. The Trojans
,,
w~re 24 of 43 from the twos and one
of six from the threes. At the line,
' ,.
Minimum order of 25 fish
the Trojans were seven of I0.
Portsmouth had 25 rebounds ,
WE FURNISH YOUR HAULING CONTAINERS
eight by Rodney Cameron, 19 per· To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call: 1·800-247-2615
sonals, six assists, two by Joel
(orders do not have to be plac.ed in advance~ .;
Stanley, 11 turnovers, six blocked
shots, two by Sliannon McKinley,
FARLEY'S FISH FARM
.
·~
and six. steals, two by Ray Robinson . .

,.

A. . .

~

CASH, ARKANSAS 72421

Girls
League-1998-99 final Overall

Il:im

~L~L

· c;Warren Local.. .. l3 1 21
Marietta................ l2 2 18
f-Logan ................ 11 3 15
f-Jackson .............. ..7 7 13
f-Gallipolis ............6 8 11
.f.River Valley .... ,..4 10 • 6
f-Athens ................. 3 II 7
f-Point Pleasant ....O 14 2
c·league champion
f-finished season .
x·eliminatedifrom .tournament

2
5
7
9
10
14
14
19

This week's agenda
Thesc!ay

Div. II regional: Warren Local
vs. Circleville at 6:.15 p.m.
(Zanesville H.S.)
Wednesday

Div. I regional: Marietta vs.
Pickerington
at 6:15 p.m.
(Fairgrounds Coliseum, Columbus)
•

1998 GMC SAFARI

Note: The list of future games may not be .complete, as some makeup dates may not be reported to the local media at press time .

Front &amp; Rear A/C, iilt &amp; Cruise, 8 Pass., PW, PL

8

(Continued from B-2)

~ounded Indiana 51 -26, including

DI"VIIJOniV
Beaver Eastern ISJ, O•k Hill .S
Danville 49 , Cardington 48
Reedsville Eastern 50, S. Wehner 38

N. Y~ l•landen ................... l9 37 7

Pyles emerged as the game's lead·
ing scorer with 20 points·, while
Litchfield had 14 and Boyles 10.
Thompson led the Vikings with 19
points, while Steve Shockey had 14.
Litchfield garnered a game-high II
rebounds.

Ripley Vlkinp
Plam
ht,
Steve Shockey .................................. , ...... ?
Kevin Thompson ....... ......... .... ............ ..... 4
Adam Canter .. ......................................... 4
Seth Harper .... :........................................ 2
Justin Southall ,.. :..................................... 2
Derek Snyder................ ...... ........ .'............ 2
Chad Spears ............................................ 1
Chris ~arker ...... ...... :.....:.... .... ................. !
Totals
23

15
14

14
12

'
Hoosiers
(22-1 0). The lllini outre-

...., . . . . . . ...... . J~z~ ~ ~ ~"~
c.ar.n..,.,.,fWII . ' ~
~'j"IIIJh ,........................32 20 9 73 193 169

~ Ctlaaiel•
Douo~t 93, s ..1.. 76
Wit.-Orten Bay 70. Cleveland St. 68

tioned five point lead heading into
the final quarter.

'

ATHENS· Rock Hill upset topHillsboro was led by Bryce 'Miles
ranked Hillsboro 59-55 and with 27 points. Shaun Evans tossed
Portsmouth eliminated Greenfield in 12. The Indians were 23 of S6
58-50 in Friday night's Division II from the field for 41 .1 percent. HHS
District tournament play at the was 17 of 41 from the twos and six
Convocation Center in Athens of 15 from the threes. At the line, ihe
Indians were three of seven. ·
before 2,47S fans.
Rock Hill, now 13-9 on the year,
Hillsboro had 30.rebounds, seven
will battle Portsmouth, 17-4, at 8:15 by Miles', 15 personal fouls, seven
p.m. Friday in the lower bracket assists, four by Steve Whitely, six
finals with the winner advancing to turnovers, three blocked shots and
next week's ' regional tournament at four steals, two by Cam Marsh. ·
In the nightcap; a bad· second
Ohio University.
In the upper bracket final Friday, period proved costly for the Tigers
Washington Court House, 15· 7. will as Ponsmouth posted
. a 5.8-50. victotangle with Northwest, which owns
an · impressive 19-3 season record.
That game is set for 6: 15 p.m.
In Friday's semifinal opener,
Rock Hill jumped out to a 16-8 first
Boys
period lead. The Redmen were up
13-24 after two periods, and 47-41
.League·l998-99 final Overall
toing into the' final stanza.
'
~L~L
• Hillsboro, whqse only loss was to · fum
Creenfield in regular· season play c-Logiln ................ l2 2 16 4
(62-49) rallied in the final period to f-River Valley ...... ll 3 IS 7
lalce a 53·51 lead with S4 .seconds f-Galllpolls .......... 10 4 12 9
Marietta ............ ......6 8 9 ' 12
~ft, their only lead of the game, but
turnovers and missed foul . shots f-Warren Locai .......6 8 6 15
proved costly as the Redmen took f-Point Pleasant ....S 9 9 13
ldvantage of each Indian mistake, f-Athens ............... ..5' 9 6 15
f-Jackson ...... :.... .~ ... l 13 1 20
~ontrolled the boards and connected
en several free throws in the closipg
fridiY's wt.a,
. -.
feconds to ice the victory.
West
Virginia
Class
AAA
~­
Rock Hill was 22 of 46 from the
tiona!:
Ripley
62,
Point
Pleasant
55
field for 47 "percent. The Redmen
f.-ere 19 of 32 from the two-point
"llw played Sa!urdav
.rea and 3 of 14 four the three-point
DIY.
I sectional: Logan vs.
eircle. At the line, Rock Hill was 12
Marietta
at 7 p.m. (Athens H.S.)
ilr 16. The Redmen had 33 rebounds,
'even by Jeff Fraley, nine personals,
This week's agenda
five assists, two by Fraley, 13
Sa111rday
iurnovers, two blocked shots by.
Div.
I
ElSE
district: Logan·
~rian Tennant, and seven steals,
Marietta
victor
vs.
Zanesville-East
three by T. J. Dillow.
Liverpool
winner
at 3:30 p.m.
: Fraley scored 21 points and
(Convocation
Cent~r, Athens)
tlillow 16 to lead the Redmen.

•'

UC SIMa Blldlara 78, Idaho ~9

Mkl-luttm Athltdt c.ntemtcHtmlnnall

tWo minutes to clairn the aforemen.;.

Ouarter tmall
Ripley ...... ............................................. 15
Point Pleasant. ."..................................... 13

tournament...

Ill Welt Conte~..un ...ts
Leal Ieith St. 88, North Texas 68
Celonlll Athletic AIIOd~·Hmlftnall
Eatt Cwlina 116, Richmond 111 -.JOT

and then the locals took their final
lead.of the night on a Litchfield field .
goal. Point tied the game at 37-all
with two and a half minutes left
when Rollins connected from
beyond the arc-the last tie of the
game. Ripley responded by out scoring the Big Blacks 7-2 over the final

•

DIYlUon I

Division Ill
Zane Trace 52, Crookavllle 40

seconds of the second when
Ryan Litchfield grabbed an offensive
rebound ·and put it back in. He was
fouled on the play and convened the
free throw to give the Blacks a 16-15
lead. The teams traded baskets for
the next three minutes before the
Vikings scored seven straight points
to turn a one point Big Black lead
into a six point Viking advantage.
That run was not your typical run,
however. Kevin Thompson converted a three point play to give the
Vikings a two point lead, and then
the Ripley quintet . scored four
straight points from the foul lirie to
make it a 27-21 game. Those four
free throws were the result of a Point
Pleasant foul and subsequent techni cal foul. Litchfield stopped the run
with a basket at the 2:32 mark, off an
assist from Brent Rollins, and then
he closed out the scoring with anoth·
er bucket . to make it a four ·point
game a1 the half.
.The Blacks overcame thai defici1
and took another one point lead with
five minutes left on a Jason Pyles
trey. Thompson scored agai n for the
Vikings to give them a one point lead

flig Ten

Newark~- Grove City ~2

Division II
D1y. Chaminade-Julienne .'i 2, Cin. St Unula 44
Hamihon Badin Sl; Cin Roser Bacon 33
Uule Miami 57. Dunbar .55

.

~arly

Portsmouth, Roc.k Hill advance to district finals

•
•
•
•

Friday's tournaments

Pickennglon 76, Galloway Westland 39

That founh quarter started very
slowly, with neither team able to
score in the first two minutes of the
quarter. Doug Boyles finally broke
the ice when he convened a conventiona! three point play with 5:41 left
in the game. That play cut a five
point Ripley lead to two points and
the local fans were on the edge of
their seats wit~ anticipation.. But,
Derek Snyder hit back to back baskets-his only two of the ~vening.
Adam Canter fol~owed With two
more to push the v1s1tors lead to 10.
And that, as they say, was that.
The contest was in stark con.trast
to the Big Blacks' performance on
Tuesday against Roane County. In
that game, the locals came out of the
locker .room on fire, shooting 92%
from the noor in the opening quarter
while building a 17 point lead. Last
night! the locals shot only 40%' in the
openmg e1ght. mmutes of actiOn and
fo~nd th.em~elves down by .seven
pomts with JUSt over three mmutes
left m the penod.
Point ,fought back to within two
points by the end of the quaner and
took their first lead of the game in the

.'

Ohio U.S. girls' scores
~

.·

SEOAL basketball standings

(740) 446-2532

~!&lt;'.:'

'

·

gets 62-55 win over Big Blacks

' RICK SIMPKINS
By
t.8 Con'eeponctent
: POII'IT PLEASANT ' - The
~ipJey .Vikings continued their dom- 'inance of the Point Pleasant Big
lllaclcs in post season play last night·
when they defeated the locals 62-55
iio the finals of the Region 6, Section
1~ tournament that were played in the
P~HS gY,m.
.
· The Vikings, who have defeated
the Big Blacks in the last three sectiona! championship games, will now
face the Capital Cougars in the
regional finals on Tuesday at West
Virginia University Tech. The
Coug'!l'S won the Sec.tion . 2 crown
with a 90-47 win over Herbert
Hoover. The winner of .the
Ripley/Capital game will get an invitation to· the big dance in Charleston
in two weeks.
The Vikings broke open a close
game with an 8·0 run over a two
minute span of the fourth quarter.
That spurt turned a two point ball
game into a 10 point Ripley lead.
l)le closest the·Big Blacks would get
the rest of the way was six points and
that was with just I :09 remaining.

set a si:hool record -for turnarQunds,
routed Michigan 87-69. ·
· In the eatly semifinal. Michigan
State (27,.4) met Wisconsin (22-8).
Though the Spartans aie No. 2 in the
cou)ltry and have won ·I6 straight;
they needed a noater from Mateen
Cleaves with 37 seconds left to hold
off Northwestern for a 61 -59 victory.
"They d~served to win the game
and we won the game," Michigan
State coach Tom lzzo said. " I feel.
very fortunate that we got the win. I
don't think, we did the things to
deserve thf win·. So'!\Ctimes.the~ say
you: ve got to be I ucky. We were outplayed."
.
tndiana coach Bob !(night could
say the .same thing about the

33 127 223 ·

St. Louis ...................... 26 25 10

.Friday's tournaments

2~~

TampaBay ....................... l442 5

Ium
Octroi! ......

Ohio U.S. boys' ·scores

h

4 .7$0
6 ..625

~YO&lt;k ...,........................... 9
Boston ....................................7

Wuhln1ton .............................6
Ne,:r Jersey .............................3

. 76~

•

Minneso(ll on Thursday. . ·
.
"We go into each game ·with a lot
of confidence, knowing we can play
. with each team that comes up," said
Johnson, who had 1.7 poims ~ "I
·wouldn't consider us a Cinderella
team because we're looking to just
take it game by game."
I And as a reward for its Sl!rprising
success, Illinois gets to play Ohio
State (23-7) in the semifinals. The
lith-ranked Buckeyes, whose 11game improvement in the Big Ten

Ce ntral Division

Colorado S1. 70. Rice .52
Sot.llbem Melli . .54. New Me11.ieo 45

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.

Vikings win West VIrginia Class AAA sectional title

~ipley

.-ombav Gttm.-.-entbul • Page 83

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

Phon·e
7 40-992-2196 .

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

,.

~2-7 on the offensive boards. Larry
Richardson scored · 1'9 points and
~.J. Guyton had 15 despite 5-of-13
shooting,. but leading scorer Luke
R;ecker was held to seven points.
~early 10 under his average.
• Guyton cut Illinois' lead to 56-48
dn a three-pointer with 8:36 left, but
Hawkins and Johnson made two free
throws each, and Sergio McClain
c!Pnvened on a three-point play to
give the Illini a I5-point lead. The
J.loosiers never threatened again.
: "Our team is not a team with
ll"eat stamina. We got a lot out of the
last few games that we played, and
il's almost like we ran into a wall,"
Indiana coach Bob Knight said. "We
were not a very good team today,
$d we're no( a real good baSketball
team to begin with."
: Johnson finished with 17 points
IV&gt;d Hawkins had 16 for Illinois,
both career highs. Damir Krupalija
tiad 10 rebounds. .
: " It seemed like everything was
(~ling pretty well for us," Bradford
said. "We · have nothing to lose.
that',s the mentality we came out
-tith."
.
• It's been a long, tough year for
t~e Illini, who lost all five senior
sfllrlers from last year's team, the
lilg Ten's co-champion in the regulir season. They lost close game
lifter close game, and didn't get their
first conference victory until late
Jl.nuary. ·
·
- ~ Unless they win the Big Ten tourn4ment, they'll miss getting a posts~son bid to either·the NCAA or the
Nl.T for the first time since 1991 -92.
:·. That won't be easy, especially
since they'd have to win four games
in four days to do it.
; " You can't worry about that,"
coach Lon Kruger said. "These guys
~~te encouraged about the fact that
they 're still playing."
•
.'

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'
t

1998 GRAND AM

'

.-

I

'

,.

�•
Page

B4 •

J1unbt c-....-adbul

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

• Sunday, March

7, 1999

Lady Eagles move on to Division iv regional roun,d

.

By SCOTT WOLFE
T-S Correspondent
Dominating the inside game and
hitting clutch free throws down the
stretch, the high flying Eastern Lady
Eagles. stifled the South Webster
Jeeps 50-38 to Claim the Division IV
Southeast District crown at the
University of Rio Grande Friday
night. Eastern, now 21-2 duplicates a
feat it accomplished in !995, making
a trip to the Regional tournament and
becoming pan of Ohio's "Sweet 16". ,
Eastern advances to the Regional
semi -final game at Pickerington
Higti School next Thursday at 6.: 15
where it will face another
Southeastern Ohio team in BeaverEastern, 18-5 and also known as the
Eastern-Eagles.
Beaver-Eastern
defeated Oak Hill 63-48 to advance.
Valerie Karr carried the Eastern
Eagles on her back down this last leg
of the tournament trail , then Juli
Haylnan broughl them home with a

'

,,

II

great night at the line. Hayman hit 10
of 12 free throws in the clutch gomg
dowri the stretch to open up a close
game, then seal the Eastern victory,
Going into the match-up, the marquis labeled the bout as an inside
game versus a quickness game. Post
play and heighth won out in favor of
the Eagles. Although 6-1 senior post
Valerie Karr was the beneficiary in
the scori ng column, great team play
sparked the Eagle attack. Karr ended
the night with 28 points, scoring 14
of the first 16 points of the game m
an unstoppable effort. Karr towered
above the much shorter Jeeps, headand-shoulders above her opposition
so to speak, and scored at wi ll.
Eastern took .no prisoners as another
senior Jessica Brannon, made some
great assists to Karr, then sophomore

I

,I

,•
DIVISION IV DISTRICT CHAMPS - Eastern's girls' basketball
'•team continued ita aeaaon by beating South Webster 50-38 in the
: Division IV district championship game !'riday night In Rio Grande . .
· In front are (L-R) Amber Baker, Becky Davis, !(rist11n Chevalier,
&lt; Amber Vanslckl!land Danlelle Spencer. Behind them are Juli Bailey,
~: Jessica l3rannon, Valerie Karr, Angi Wolfe and Juli Hayman. Absent
' was Angie Taylor.
~

'

-

i~ 49ers, Louisville move {o C-USA final

:jUNCC tallies 55-52
~ win over Cincinnati

'
''

, I

I,
I

I
I

I

!

'

:·: By JENNA HALVATQIS
·:
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP)
,· When the Conference USA tourna:; ment staned, no one knew how many
.; teams might get into the NCAAs.
';
Only No.7 Cincinnati was a lock
:• for a bid, while at le.ast three other
.; teams were hopeful.
·
~ 10ne of those three - either
' Louisville or North Carolina
~ Charlotte- played its way off the
,' bubble and into the tournament, and
•! the two met in Saturday's C-USA
:: final. The winner earns an automatic
' bid to the NCAA tournament.
~ " We're on a mission right now to
. ': play hard and cut down . the nets,"
:• Louisville's Nate Johnson said.
The second-seeded Cardinals ( 19·:
:: 9) advanced to the final with a 77-68
,• win over Alabama-Birmingham.
; Fifth-seeded
North
Carolina
. ';Charlotte (21-10) earned the right by
'• upsetting top-seed~d Cincinnati 55.; 52.
'
'As far as the NCAA tournament
;: gcies, the game between Louisville
'• and UAB had the most on the line.
: . Tile winner was probably in, the
· loser had to play. the waiting game.
;
Louisville did that once already
'•• tiJis seaso n and didn't want to do it
~ again. The NCAA lifted the

'·

'..

'

Cardinals postseason ban on f'eb. 5,
and they responded by winning eight
of their last 10 games,
.
· Against UAB ,' Johnson scored 18
points to help Lousiville's chanc.es.
"It's been a long road and we're
glad that we've gotten a second
chance," Johnson said. · " We just
.wart to play our way into the tournament now."
UAB ('20-11), the_third seed, will
now play the waiting game. The
Blazers won 20 games a year ago,
but were bypassed for the · to urn ament and .ended up in the NIT.
"We're hopeful, " . UAR ·c oach
Murry Bartow said. " I think it
depends on this league and the strength of the league. ~~the league
gets four, I think we're one of the
four. If we get three, I think we prob. ably aren't."
North Carolina Charlotte probably didn 't need to beat Cincinnati
(26-5) for a bid. The 49ers wanted
the victory for respect more than
anything else.
Galen Young hit two free throws
wit~ 1.9 seconds left to . help .
Charlotte beat No . 7 the Bearcats for
the second time thi s season.
(See CONFERENCE USA on B-6)

Area cage standings

·Ibn plaved Saturday
Division
Ill district semifinals
Thun
~ L
~.of
·, Chesapeake ......... 18 4 l4471152
Coal Grove vs , Brown Eastern -3
·: Wheelersburg ...... l7 515021331
p.m.
~ Logan-x.. ........ .... . l6
412391050 · · Westfall vs. Fairland-4:45 p.m.
' Portsmouth"x.. .... .17 4 14771164
Piketon vs. Crooksville-6:30 p.m.
: River Val1ey ........ 1·5 712661103
Belpre vs. Southeastern-8:45
\o Greenfield ....... ,... 14
8 12251197
p.m.
, Fairl~nd-x ...... .. ... 14 812891212
This week's slate
~ Rock Hill ~ x.. ....... l3
913571324
Thesday
' Gallipolis- ........... 12 9Ioii!J072
Division IV district finals ,
~ Meigs .... .............. IO, , 1212201253
(At Ohio University)
1
1211161068
• Marietta-x .. .. ........ .9
North Adams .vs. Waterford-6: 15
'; ifoint Pleasant ....... 9 13. 12941283
p.m.
.
~ ll.the ns ... . .. .......6 15 1118 1264
Green vs. Peebles, 8 p.m.
' Warren Local ........ 6 15 106011.61
Friday
~ Jackso n,...... .......... ! 20 975 1258.
Division II district finals
'.•• x-Siill in tournament
(At Ohio University)
Washington CH vs. Northwe st
Friday's ID!W
6:15p.m.
'•.
Roc k Hill 59 Hillsboro 55
RockHill vs. PortsmoUih , 8: 15
' Portsmouth 58 Greenfield 50
p.m.
•

1998-99-all games

(See LADY EAGLES on B-5). ,;
rr

GRAND OPENING
Fri.dwy &amp; Saturday 9 a.m. til 7 p.m. •
March 12-13-14

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Mon, Tues, Wed; Fri 9-5 Thurs 9-8
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AU other hours by appointment

BATTLE FOR THE BELT- I.M. Krazy (left) and the ASWA brings Its show II! the
: Mr. Insanity take their light to the. ring Saturday as
'

::L ady Eagles~ ..

Quarter 12t111
South Webster ...................................... 12
Eastern ......................... :......... :.:: ........... 14

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)' - The
• Ohio
High
Sohool Athletic
'• Association on Friday ordered Huber
Heights Wayne to forfeit its Div(sion
' I tournament victory against New
Car li sle Tecumseh.
• · OHSAA com missione r Clair
Muscaro said Wayne used an ineligi-

ble player in Wednesday 's 54-43
decision . "
Tecumseh will play VandaliaButler at 5:30 p.m. today at the
University of Dayton Arena in a sectional fin al of the Sou thwcSI Di strict
tournament.
~==:-r==

.: ~t-~:t~~
: ~.::::~==~:...

•

•••

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

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12

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·
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New Phone# 1-740-667-0363
54 yean at our' old location the otate needed our property for
Highway US 50.
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We are now stocking parts for all makes of tractors' and equipment.
We are still factory parto dealers for CASE IH, David Brown and
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Eastern Eagles
Player
Jessica Bra nnon ..................................... 3
Valerie Karr ... ,.. ,,...... .... .,., ......... ,, .......... 12
Juli Hayman ........................... .. ........ .. ..... 0
Amber Baker .. ,........................ ......... .. ..... I
Angi Wolfe ......................... ...... ............... O
Totals
16

'

End-of

South Webster Jeeps
Player
~
Amanda Rawlins ............... :.................... : I
Abby Hughes .... .. ........ ..... ...................... 5
Lindsey VanDusen ...............~ .................. !
. Totals
7

also o~rates a wrestling school iG
conjunction with the ASWA. Ovef
the nine-year history Of the schoolj
he has had SO!Jle 800 try-outs ana
trained more than 100 wrestlers whO
come from
. a wide range of bacll··
grounds.
·
. •
\'We 've had bodybuilders, foo~
balr players and just regular guys/
he said. "What I look for in guys is l
-..;illingness to li sten and learn. The~
have to be coordinated, be able oo
walk and chew gum at the same tim~.
but they also have to be fair! y athle~
ic.
"But a lot of it (their potential su~-

-

Eastern-S.Webster stats

·: Wayne forleits tourney win over Tecumseh

''•

"We come to you, you don't have
to come to us," said Moffett. "We
bring in younger guys and have some
wilder matches. We like to show
some new faces and new talent to our
fans . People who coine to our shows
say independents are more exciting
and more unpredictable."
Originally, ASWA put on its
shows. to help with, fundraisers for
schools. Eventually, as the popularity
of the organization grew, · Warner
Cable in the Akron -Canton area
began running ASWA shows on its
cable system.
Moffet, who is the owner of LOL,
a tee-shirt manufacturing company,

&lt;continuedtromB :4l
.
.
: great win . It's what we've all been mark, sandwiched .around a Jeep Eastern patie~tly worked the ball and one. At this point, Eastern went to its
. )'laiting for."
time out. The only non-Karr, no,n- often hit the weakside guard, normal- triangle and two defense, completely
: · Pulling this reporter and The inside score of the first quarter carne ly Juli Hayman for a basket cut catching the tired Jeeps off guard and
: itthens , Messenger reporter Paul when Baker swished a 10-footer score. Hayman drew two fouls and forcing a state of. panic.
·
. Scarmaek to the side, coach Brannon from the shallow depths of the left hi1 3-4 at the line, then Hayman
The Jeeps fouled often sending
: continued, "This ,was destiny! In the . elbow for a 14-12 Eastern lead. rifled a tremendous post feed io Eastern to the line. There Karr and
· eighth grade these senior girls knew South Webster ended the frame on Brannon underneath for a 24-17 EHS Hayman weill 8-10 to seal the-win' as
; )hey'd be here. What's funny is, five two travels . The tally stood at Karr lead. Van Dusen again tightened the Eastern inched steadily away from
: .years ago, Coach Wolfe and I put 12, South Webster 12; the scoreboard score with a long three off the ball the unrest of a 42-38 game to the cel· ;five ¢ighth graders on the bus and Eastern 14, SW 12.
screen ai the right wing, 24-20 at the ebration of a 50-38 district champi: took them to Vandalia. We got them · About the defense; Paul Brannon 20 second mark. A big momentum onship, the second in school history,
: :in as cheerleaders for our. 1995 added, "We showed a 1-2-2 most of builder came when Karr hi.t a bucket Hayman's clutch foul shooting kept
· )'egional game. They got to see the the game and were successful with it m the buzzer to give Eastern a more going imd going and goings, espe&gt;action from behind the bench and got most of the game. Like we talked comfortable 26-20 lead. Karr had 16 cially draining the Duracell energy
from the Jeeps. EHS went 8-0 down
: ~o expenence what it (regional tour- about last week, we knew we had a at the half.
• :nament) was like. They sai d back trian'gle-and-two to fall back on if we
Both clubs started cold in the third the stretch.
Brannon added, "At the first of
: then, 'We'll be back."'
had to, but we didn't want to show it round. EHS Went 1-5 with a turnover
..: Paul Brannon continued. "We if we didn't have to. Late in the game, and . South, Webster 1-6 with a the year, we were a horrible foul
: )mew what we had back then. These we used the triangle-and-two, and it turnover as the score stood 28-23 at shooting team . I told the kids it
: senior girls are not quitters. Tonight threw them off offensively."
the halfway ma,rk of the frame. Both ·would be a shame to lose a game by
:::you could see it in their·eyes. There
Toward the end of the first round, teams began to show fatigue , making one point; because of this. Since that
··' ;was no way they were going to lose. Karr began to draw double and triple mistakes they normally don't make,
(EASTERN ends on B-6)
~- 'l'hat ·whole experien~e was destiny." teams, so Eastern pulled Karr out to but maintaining enough defensive
· : The Jeeps set the pace early, rae- a wing and put Brannon in the post. intensity to remain competitive. Karr
·. )ng to a 7-2 lead and prompting a The maneuver began to open up sparked a victory !~rive in tile final
; ·time out from Eastern coach shots for other players inside, but as stages of the third round by scoring ~~~'l'i'....,,...;;--.-.:..,,..;..--.."'"'"'r-4:,
• :Brannon. Eastern then settled down. the game became more physical, si~ of the last eight points going
~::Karr had already sqored a short Eastern fell short on a couple bang- down the stretch. The last goal gave
' ·.:, banker from the paint, th.en scored bang plays ,that could have broken EHS its biggest lead at 37-28; how- ';
. another immediately 'after the time the game open early.
ever, a Hughes goal at the buzzer salout. Both clubs exchanged turn~vers,
Paul Brannon' added, "That's the vaged some hope for the Jeeps.
f'
then Baker fed . Karr in the post to thing about Eastern . .If you stop
The fourth round resembled a ,
; pull EHS within one at 7-6 at the Valerie, someone else at Eastern will chess. match. No one panicked.
4:40 mark. Although tile three point- heat you. Jessica (Brannon) hit, a Eastern became very patient. SW
;~ef kept South .Webster close,: the couple big goals, Amber Baker hi\ a was content to stay back in its varia'., ,~ also may have .led to their big shot, and Becky Davis came .off !ion of zone and junk defenses to I
';'demise. The Jeeps lived with it for a the,bench to give us some good min~ contain Karr and Brannon. Angi
·.,.while, liut later hit the die end of the · utes. We were able to give Angi Wolfe hit a free throw to push the ·,
:·;:"live or die by the three" expression. Wolfe a break, put Danielle Spencer count to 40-33 at the .5:20 mark. SW :
. ·:- The Jeeps could not get the ball in and not lose a thing. We wanted to came up with two steals as they
: · 1nside, so theY, settled for the outside change the offense a little to show · picked up the full court pressure with '
: ;uifecta. On two straight possessions ihem you had to beat all .five of us." Hughes scoring on a steal for a 40-35
, · : ·Van Dusen missed trey's, while Karr
Karr go~ the initial goal of the sec- tally. Hayman drilled both .ends of a
·:·:polished her inside finesse with two ond half off a rebound, then Brannon bonus' lo push the score to 42-35,
':·more buckets at Eastern's first lead 8- hit a follow-up jumper for an 18-12 then VanDusen pulled the trigger on
; : 7 and then 10-7.
lead, the biggest of the night. Van another three p.ointer, 42-38. Eastern
· • · VanDuesen tied the score . with a Dusen hit a rocket shot to tighten the missed both ends of a two shot foul
::'three at 10-10. Karr and Hughes score 18-15, then Brannon canned a and South Webster came up dry in a
. : exchanged two-pointers at the 2:32 reverse pivot from the · left · block. bid to cut the lead to two or possibly

'

...

Times-Sentinel Staff
,
RIO GRANDE- Wrestling fans
in the tri-county area, let 's get ready
to .... get loud and rowdy! Sorry. I
can't use the other line because it's
copyrighted .
Despite that, it should be a great
evening for local wrestling officinades Saturday, March I~ as the
American States Wrestling Alliance
(ASWA) brings its show to the Lyne
Center in Rio Grande.
ASWA, based in Shelby, Ohio,
. just north of Mansfield, is a nine year
old
independent ' organization.
According to ASWA head honcho
Mike Moffett, the group now mainly
runs house · shows in the Buckeye
State, but previously held shows in
West Virginia in its early days. He
said that his organization differs in
its approach to the business than its
larger counterparts like· the World
Wrestling Federation and World
Championship Wrestling , because it
appeals more to the fans on the local
level.

gullrd Amber Baker and Juli Hayml(n
combined for successful post e~try
ppsses that led to ~ores..
.
:
_Br~nnon _ended the mgbt Wtth W,
. pomts, while Hay-man added ~0
without a field goal! scon ng all IO•of
her pomts at the hne. Baker add{d
two to account for the sconng. _ . •
South Webster had no. ms1d~
~ttack and no guard penetratiOn! ltymg or dymg With the three·pomter.
Lindsey Van Dusen led . the . chllll!e
and kept her club close w1th SIX ~
pomters ahd 23 total. pmn(S. A;bby
Hugh~s was ~ext With 13 pom(s.
Amanda Rawhns added two pmnts.
The Eastern defense held the rest of
South Webster SC';'':"Iess. .
, ,.
After the .exc1tmg WI~: E!"~m ·
coach Paul Bran 0on· satd, Th1s IS.~

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ASWA to bring wrestling
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:~

Eastern beats South Webster:
50-38, captures district crowo

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Page 86 • ~ 11lmu.-Jindbul

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

March madness is
Upon Us full force

~

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March 7, 1999

cess) has to do with their drive," he
added. "I can give them everything
they need, but it!s up to them .to
apply it."
Several graduates of the ASWA
school have been featured in the PWI
500, a list of the top pro wre~tlers
released annually by Pro Wrestling
Illustrated, the most widely read
wrestling publication in the U.S.
ASWA will bring a more "hard. core" brand of wrestling to the area
on Saturday. 1be feature bout of the
evening's card is what's known as a
"triple threat barbed-wire match"
between three of. the organization's
hest light heavyweights. Champion
Kid Collins takes on the volatile Mr.
Insanaty and fast-movmg, acrobatac
newcon:aer I.M. Krazy.
.
Colhns, who has been an
. wresthng for I4 xears, got mto the
busmess by assasung a New Jers~y
promoter an brmgmg shows to Ohao.
He has worked for both the WWF
and WCW during his career and, in
1992; was offered a full time contract
by WCW, but turned it down due to
family obligations and because of his
love for tlae independent scene.
Both Mr. Insanity, a native of
Shelby, Ohio, and I.M. Krazy, a
native .of the Bucyrus area, came up
through the ASWA wrestling school.
Insanity began his career in 1996,
while Krazy got into the business
just nine months ago. Both are hun'
gry to move up in the business.
,
. Eastern ..•

"These kinds of independent
shows are more e~citing than going
to WWP or WCW shows because,
for the simple fact, we are going to
try to get to the big time/' said
Insanity. "We're willing to do anything po~sible to get there, so why
not go all out now? At the level w~'re
at now, we want to go to the ne~t
leyel, so we've got to go all out every
night, every time we wrestle someone."
1
In addition . to the triple-threat
match, fans will get to see the ASWA
heavyweight title-holder in action .
The Prince of Polyester defends his
belt
against
Jimmie
Lee.
I~cidentai!Y· "P~l',". as..his fans call
ham, ~as.. st~ym altve ,,ong before
WCW .• Dasco Inferno started has
lame gag.
•
. . The d~rs open at.6 p.m. Saturday
wnh bellume set f'!f 7 p.m. a~ Lyne.
Center. Advance taekets are $8.00
each and, €an be obtained at Lyne
Center and at Criminal Records in
Gallipolis and Point Pleasant.
Tickets at the door the night of the ·
THE CHAMP - ASWA light heavyweght champion Kid
show are $10.00 eacli
lakes on contendeJ11 Mr. lnunlty and 1.~. Krazy In tha futur~t match
College s(udeaits with valid 10 of the ASWA house show Satu~day night at the Lyne Center In R!~.
receive a one dollar discount. ,
Orandjt.

Tlle:a&amp; 8&amp;ntla111 Corre&amp;pondant
March Madness is upon us in full force. The
.problem is that it's so difficult to be excited about
a tournament that no longer gives Cinderella a
chance for a happy ending.
. In the NCAA tournament Cinderella may
make it to the dance, but she is destined not to
waltz with the prince. Her coach i~ turned back to
a pumpkin long before midnight.
In the 1980s the NCAA tournament gave us North Carolina State, Viilanova, and Kansas. These teams were given no chance of winning the title
when the parings were announced. Each was a low seed that defined the
odds and cut down the nets at the end'of the tournament.
In the ca5e of NC State, the Wolfpack had to win the final game of the
ACC tournament just to make the big dance. 1 watched as coach Jim Valvano's team performed miracle after miracle against Pepperdine, Virginia,
Georgia and eventually Houston. The last second victory against Phi Slamma Jamma is still shown on ES.PN highlights. Titeir victory let us believe
that let us believe that every team that mad th 1
h d ha
.
.
e e ournament a. a c nee to
. wa~hee ;990sttle
. ha
..
.
ve ~ho.wn ~s that only a few team_! ha'{e a le!Ptamat~ s~ot at
th~ tatle..At !he begmmng of the season Duke ~lislhe'favonte to wa~· at all.
It s no su~nse that Andrew Ca~er went on a hmll last Thursday to pack the
Blue ~vtls to.go all the way thas year. After all, how could any sports expert
go agaanst them~
.
•
11_1~ problem as that e:-ery year th~rc are only six or seven teams that have
a l.e~atamate shot at the IItle. NCAA basketball has become the kingdom of a
..;.;.;.;..;..,.;..;;..;.;;.;F;;;;;..;;;;;;;.;.;;;;;.;;.;.______________~-:-~------.....-''~
· ·
pnvtl~ged few. Marc.h Madness should have a sign. "Cinderella's need not
.Basketball
announced two days after Marquette before this year.
apply · N~t once d~n~g th~ .decade has a Cinderella cut down the nets. With
MILWAUKEE
(AP)
( 14-15) lost in the first round of the
For his career, which included ·
the exceptaon of Cancmnata an I992, none have made it to the final four.
Marquette fired basketball coac h Conference USA tournament.
coac hing at Siena and Oswego State,
It doesn't get any easier for the underdogs because the toP, programs conMike Deane after finishing with its
Deane, who had two years left on Deane was 290-157, including 100:
tinue to dominate recruiting. Yes, Mike Krzyzewski is a great coach. But it
first losing season in his five years. his contract, led Marquette to four ~5 at Marquette.
doesn't hurt to have Grant Hill making special visits to a highly coveted Mr.
Deane's
departure
was straight seasons with at least 20 wins
Basketball in Michigan to persuade him to go to Duke. I wonder if coach K
had anything to do with Grant's visit?
,
Let's sec how Krzyzewski would go with a level playing field. Let's see
how far he could take this year's Mount St. Mary's team in the tournament.
(Continued from B-5)
It doesn't hurt to have the best talent in the country. Talent makes any time we have shot for at least 20
coach look great. Does anyone really think that Phil Jackson could do any minutes a night until someone went
better than Ray Floyd with this year's Chicago Bulls? Michael and Scottie 5-for-5. At first we only had one girl .
made Jackson's job much easi~r. ·
.
doing this, but last week we had
What I remember about last year's tournament is Bryce Drew and the eight girls go 5-for-5 . It sure paid off
Valparaiso Crusaders defying the odds to make the sweet 16. For a brief tonight."
moment they hel~d to remind .us what we love about the college game.
"Going into the tournament we
Most GM"Ct,rs &amp; 2 Wheel Drive
They helped to rekandle our faath about how the little guy still had a chance·· knew with four seniors and so much
C~r &amp; Light Duty Trucks
at the impossible. Valpo allowed us to dream the impossible was possible for to build on, we knew we had just one
Dutv Ttucks
just a short time.
chance. We couldn't start over; we
**All Prices Are Subject to Sales Tax**
One reason I watch more professiomil basketball than college is that the couldn't go back. This was our one
magic has been removed from the college g~me. I want to know that sOme- . shot. There was no beating these
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT,,992-6614 HOURS B:OO AM TO 5:00 PM MON-FRI
day a Gonzaga or Miami of Ohio may one day do what Villanova· did in . girls tonight. They found a way to
win ."
·
1985 against Patrick Ewing's Georgetown.
Eastern hit 21-37 two-pointers
The NCAA tournament has become the terra firma of the powerful programs. Not even Dick Vitale's enthusiasm can change this reality. I feel like and overall, was 17-25 at the line
those fans who just waited for the Bulls to make the finals because the sea- with 31. rebounds (Hayman 8,
son really didn't mailer. If that's the case, I might as well as keep watching Brannon 5, Karr 5). Eastern had ten ..
(740) 992-6614 ~· 1-SOD-837·1094
assists (Hayman 5); six steals
. ·
.
·
. the professionals.
This year I am going to cheer for the·Kent State Golden Flashes. They (Wolfe, Baker, Brannon two each);
have never won a division, conference or tournament title before their vic- eight turnovers and eight fouls.
Playing but not scoring for
tory over .Miami last Wednesday. The tournament really matters to them.
Eastern
were Becky Davis, Danielle
They should be fun to watch. I know they won't win, but I can still hope and
Spencer
and Angi Wolfe. Doing the
dream.
same for South Webster were Annie
Baker, Nikki Fannin, Katie Grim and
(Continued from B-4)
Jenny Messer.
,
South Webster was 7·28 on threeThe 49ers have had a hard time ran down court and hit what wou\d pointers for 25 percent and 7, 15 on
getting anyone to acknowledge their have been the game-winning three- two-pointers for 48 percent and 14first win over Cincinnati, a 62-60 pointer. But a referee said he had 43 overall (28 percent). SW was 1-1
victory aided by a referee with a stopped play, waved off the shot and at the lin~ with 20 rebounds, losing
quick whistle.
·
the 49elli hung on for the win.
the battle of the boards 31-20. SW
' . Trailing by two with 17 seconds
·This time Charlotte didn't need had three assists, five steals, 10
to play in thatgame,e_incinnati got a ariy outside help.
· turnovers and 17 fouls.
rebound off of a ~issed free throw, ,
. Eastern plays at Pickerington
(C-USA ends on B-7)
Thursday at 6: IS p.m.

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

24•

8

I '

' I

' I

•

Big-time wrestling... (Continued from B-S)

By SAM WILSON

•
r,'

Sunday, March ·7, 1999

TIRE BAI.ANCE
UROTATE

8

24•

. DON 7A7E 070RS,
30S E. MAIN st POMEROY, OHIO

•

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

C~USA semifinals .•.

lALES
· from the hardwood ...
By G. SPENCER OSBPRNE
Tlmea-Santlnal Staff
.

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

"First of all, there was not inadvertent whistle today," coach .Bobby
Lutz said. "We have tremendous
respect for Cincinnati and their players, but we beat them today."
All the 49ers wanted to do was
prove they could beat Cincinnati
·again. They failed in the first
remat~h. losing to the Bearcats 82-69

Elementary School
and Tuppers Plains,
At Eastern High School betwe.en
Basketball ,¥outh Chester and Tuppers Plains, ~he .
games will start. Eastetn High. School alumni games
. with five games being 'will be played on Saturday, Marc)) 13
at' Eastern High School.
1be 'women's contest .will start at
action will begin
March 13 at.9 a.m., and 7 p.m., Yfith two men's games to fol- · .
finals will begin on Sunday,, lbw. ·
.. •
lrlar•ch I4 at noon.
Practice for , the games will be
tlie games will be played at todfy at 6 p.m., at Eastern High
E~stern Elementary School.
School.
·
For more information call Tim
t·:·At Bidwell, the Bidwell-Porter Baum in the daytime at 985'3301 or
B'aseball Association will hold a Eastern
athletic director
Pam
'
.
Rinky-Dink
tournament
on Douthitt at 985-3329.
tliursday, March II at Bidwellli'o,rter Elementary.
At Ri ~ Grande, the District · 13 .
• A drawing for pairings for the All-Star Games will start on.
· four-day tournament will be held on 'Monda' March 22 with the girls'
Monday, · March 8 at 7 p.m. at game? 6'p.m. a~d the boys' game at
Bidwell-Porter Elementa· y.
.
appro .mately 8 p.m.
·
· . The entry fee is SJO. This ;o
A nission is $4 atahe door.
paJ.able at the draWing.
- ; senior all:stars from Division
•. for more information, call Larry I a .~ II schools will take on senior
. J{~mper ar446·2133.
all-stars from Division III and IV
:·
schools in both games.
,: At Belpre, the Belpre Junior
Between games, the boys and
Bj&gt;sketball Tournament will run from girls will have their own three-point
FJiday througll Sunday, March 28.
shooting.&lt;:ontests. The boys will have
:; The entry fee for this double- a slam dunk cbntest after the shootelimination tournament is $50 per ing contests. .
·,
t~m .
.
All-district awards will be passed
· •: The tournament .Js for fourth- out between games.
grade boys' and girls' teams,· fifth-. - glade boys ' teams, and sixth-grade ' Gallia Academy eighth-grader
b¢ys' and girls' teams.'
·
Cody Caldwell finished the 1998-99
:. For more information, call ·Mike season with a 10 points·per-game
a&amp;ker at423-7363, Rich McNulty at• average while ·helping the Blue
4~3-604.0 or Rick. Plummer at 423- Devils complete an undefeated sea·
1181.
. son.

.it~:~~~i~:~!

.

'&lt;

TH!DIAU

(Continued from B-6)

AR!IO

last month, but did it Friday to
advance to the conference finals for
the third straight year. '
"It's a good 'feeling to know that
no matter what anybody says, we
beat Cincinnati and proved we can
play with anybody in the country,"
Young said. ·
·

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warr., 2 DR, AT, AC, tilt, crulae......................................... $12,995
97 MERCURY SABLE S/W-AT, AC, lilt, cruise, PW, PL .. $11,995
96 NISSAN SENTRA 17823·AT, AC, PW, PL, til~ crulse ... $9,995
93 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 17166-AT, AC, AM/l'M ....:............. $4,995
94 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 17790-V&amp; eng., AT; AC, tilt,
cruise, PW, PL.............. ~ ...................................................... $5,995
94 DODGE INTREPID 17B01·V6 eng., AT, AC, cruise, tllt.$4,995
93 FORD ESCORT 1780$-AC, AM/FII...........................:.:..$4,995

PW, PL, Pseat, sport whHia, roof rack..........................$16,995
96 FORD EXPLORER 4X4 4D.R 17822-Gre.en, AT, AC, 1111, •
cruise, PW, PL, roof rack, sport whHis ...........,..............$16,610
96 GEO TRACKER 4X4 #7825-31 ,000 miles, AT, AM/l'M cass.,
spo-rt whaels .........................................................................$9,795
97 JEEP WRANGLER 4X417786-22,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
warr., AM/FM.......................................................................$13,995
97 NISSAN KC 4l&lt;417717·11,000 miles, Bal. offact. warr., AC,
cass., sport whaels ................................................... :.......$16,875
98 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4 4 DR #7738-20,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
warr., AT, AC, lilt, cruise, swocrls ...............;........... $21,965
97 FORD F150 XLT-Super Cab, 3rd door, AC, PW, PL, till,
cruise, sport wheel&amp;......................................................... $16,975

97 FORD RANGER SPLASH #7802·Red, AM/FM, CD, bedilner,
sport wheels, 26,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr.................~
97 FORD RANGERXLT #m3·28,000 miles, Bal. of fact. lilt.,
bed, AMIFM cass., sport whHia, rear slider ...........$9,995
RANGER XLT tm1·22,000 ml.les, Bal. offact. warr.,
AC, rear slider, sport whHis .... ~ ...............................$9,995
96 FORD RANGEl! XLT·Biack, AT, AC, V6 eng., Ult, cruise,
whHII............................... ,........................S10,5t5
97
S10 m&amp;1·23,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr., Black,
AM,IFM, aport whtela ........................................~.. ~ .............. $8,995

V6, auto, air, maroon,
MSRP $19,187

V6, auto, air, LS, Torch
Red MRSP $20,1115 .

,,. ~

PL ................................................................,...................... $11,400

97 DODGE INTREPID 17814-Green, AT, AC, Hit, cruise, PW,

96 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4.4DR #7824-Rsd, AT, AC, Ill~ cruise;·

1999 BUICK

,150

miles........;..................:...................:....................................$10,960

95 HONDA CIVIC EU7816-31 ,000 miles, AT, AC, cruise, PW,

414'1 IIPOit no.nY VEIICLD ·

GeGil.

Ust ...... . .... $19,545
GM Rebate ...... ..-$750
'
Schey Discount . ..·$1,500

I:.~~~ .~,.:~air.~~~sij;·;;'A'T.'Ac:Ailifu·;;:·30:ooo··. $6,900

cruise, PW ................................................ ;...........$12,820.

(740) 992·6614 • (800) 837•1094
, Mon.·Fri. 9 am·l pm; Sat. 9 alll·4 pm; Sun. I pm·S pm .

tJst ..... : .. ... $14,121

PRICE

PL, P seat ......;.....~...:.................,..........................................$6,995

. POMEROY, OHIO .

Air conditioning,

Clll

SATURN SL2 #7820-4 DR, grHf1, AT, AC, tilt, crulse .. $6,995
PLYMOUTH DUSTER 17810.V6 eng, AT, AC, till, sport

97 BUICK SKYLARK 17641-32,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr.,
AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW....................................................·... ~$9,495
CHEVY CAVALIER LS 17736-4 DR, AM/FM, cruise, AC, AT,
Interior....... ,.. ,..........................;................................. $1 0,995
CHEVY LUMINA LS #7698-AT, AC, til~ ctulse, PW, PL, P
seats, sport w~eels.... :........................................................ $7,995
FORD TAURUS S/W #7753-Green, AT, AC, 1111, cruise, PW,

Conference USA...

P-rwtndowt,lackl &amp; '"'·
cruloe, CO ptaytr

MONEY DOWN
PAYMENTS-UNTIL JUNE 1999 w/Approved Crecllt
.or~.... &amp;~ayments Clearly Marked on Windshields
•Credit Applications Are Now Being Accepted For Processing

AM/FM cass ....................... ~.....................J ........................... $9,995

45769

ril
~,.

Aulomollc....
CUMtte, rear defrost

FANTASTIC
THAT WHEN
YOU COME IN
AND SEE THEM
VOU'U.SAY

NISSAN TRUCK 17576-Biut, caaa., sport wheela.......$7,495
FORD RANGER 17895-28,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr., AT,
case., bedllntr, aport lllhHia...,......... :........................$9,995
F150 #7758-29,000 mlltl, Bal. of fact. warr., AC,
1cass., tilt, cruise, PW, PL..................................................$13,595
..~ tonctnF150 17780-18,000 miles, Bal. oflact. ~arr., AT, AC,
wheels, crulae, tlb .................:......·...........................$16.095
FORD RANGER XLT 17769-Sport wheels, rear slider,
toneau cover ........;.............................................................. $8,995

1111

97 DODGE CARAVAN 17821-Green, left aide sliding door, AT,
AC, tilt, cruise, PL............................................................. $12,720
98 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE·Left aide sliding door, AT, AC,
V6 eng., PW, PL, 1111, cruise, 30,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
·
warr..................n ... ..... ....................................., ••• ~ .............. $17,695
98 FORD WINDSTAR GL 17645-Red, AT, AC, 1111, crul•, PW,
PL, rearAC, aport whltlt ..................................! ............... $15,495
92 CHEVY CONVERSION VI\N 17699-AT, AC,tllt, crul•, PW,
PL, 4 captain chalrt,·roof rack, aport whHia..................$8,995

. . ...

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WY

AIon the River

Sunday, March 7, 1999. •

Reds ·win, lose split-squad games; lndi~ns ~~ffer two lot;ses !,

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· lly !he Aaaoe~ Pma
•
- On the field: ·
Jtm Abbott ts anxious for his next
- Florida Marlins pitcher Alex
plate appearance.
.
Fernandez threw two scoreless
Abbott, who pitched into the third innings and 29 pitches in an 8-1 win
inning, fliedout to ~nter field in the over Tampa Bay at Melbourne, Fla.,
11~ond _on Fnday i~ his fi':"t at-bat of his first outing since surgery to repair
tlie spnng as a Mtlwaukee Brewers a tom rotator cuff. The game was his
.s~lit squad beat the San Francisco first since the NL championship
Gtants 3-0.
series in October 1997.
· ''l'm' going to try to go up there
, "Awesome," he said. "!felt real.-yith a little more.. ~ssive inten- I~ good. I ":as able to IQ~:ate my
uon from now on, satd Abbott, who pttches, and ·tt was good to be out
.was born without a right hand and the~ with different uniforms facing
played exclusively in the AL before you. It's a step in the · right direc•this year and rarely batted. "In the lion. "
American League, it was ~ust kind of
- At Kissimmee, Fla., Mark
·fun to go up .there. Now, I have to Wohlers' first appearance of 1999
ch~~ge my atutude a httle btl;
was much like his outings in 1998.
Just making contact tsn t good
The Atlanta Braves reliever faced
·enough. I have to ·try to do something eight batte!ll in the third inning of a
up there. I certainly don't expect to 7-4 loss to Houston, allowing four
set the world on fire;.butl'm 'goingto earned runs, three hits and two
be more aggressive."
walks.
.
'
. Abbott, who quit baseball in . Jle· fanned his first batter, Ken
1997, but retu~ned late last season Caminiti, on a changeup and ended
and went 5-0 wuh a4.55 ERA for the the · inning by striking out Carl
Chicago White Sox, is pegged as Everett with a low fastball . Craig
Milwaukee's No.4 starter.
Biggio· and Ricky Gutierrez hit twoAgainst · the Giants, he allowed run singles. .
two hits and walked one before
"The results were.n't there, but
reaching his pitch limit in the top of I'm not going to worry about the
the third inning.
results,': Wohlers said. "I think how
Milwaukee scored all its runs in I felt. on the mound, the way I han·the first inning against Mark died myself, and the pitches that I
Gardner. · .
· made; I feel good about."
Fernando Vina led off with a douIn other games:
.
Dodger's 5, Cardinals 4
.ble, Jeff Cmllo walked, Jeromy
Bumirz blooped. an RBl double and
At Vero Beach, Fla., while Davey
Marquis Grissom hit a two-run dou- 'Johnson won his debut as the Los
ble.
.
·
Angeles mana$er, fans were disapG~rdner ~llo:-"ed three hits and a pointed Mark McGwire didn't play.
walk m two mmngs. .
The Dodge!ll opened their 52nd
Etic Plunk, David Weathers, Jeff - an.d possibly last - exhibition
Granger and Rod Henderson com- season at Dodgertown with
bined for f\ve.-hit relief for Johnson's favorite offensive weapon,
Milwaukee.
a three-run .homer, this one by Paul
Elsewhere:
LoDuca. Rupert Murdoch's Fox
- After bursting on the scene Group is considering moving the
with a 20-strikeout game and win- team's spring site to Arizona.
ning the NL Rookie of the Year
".I'm very disappointed McGwire
award, Chicago Cubs pitcher Kerry didn't at 'least make an appearance
Wood was . rewarded with a for the fans," said long-time
'$690,000, one-year contract.
Cardinals backer Charles Swisher,
The deal is by far the largest for a 72, who came from Pennsylvania to
player with less than one year of see the game.
·
'.
.
major league service. Wood, who has
Blue Jays 8, Yankees 6
169 days in the major leagues and
At Dunedin, Fla., Hideki Irabu
made' the minimum $170,000 last has a shaky spring debut for New
year, will not be eligible for salary· York. While he allowed just two hits
arbitration until after the 2000 sea- in three shutout innings, he struggled
son.
with his control, throwing just 26 of
The 21-year-old right-hander was 48 pitches for strikes atd falling
13-6 with a 3.40 ERA and 233 strike.- behind 10 of 12 batters. ·· .
outs in 1998.
Royals 9, Indians (ss) 3
- At Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
At
Winter · Haven,
Fla.,
Baltimore Orioles second baseman Cleveland's .new infield combination
Delino DeShields·found out he won't of Omar Vizquel an4 Roberto
need surgery to repair a fractured Alomar executed its first double
bone.in his left thumb.
play. Jermaine Dye doubled and
DeShields, injured during an homered for Kansas City.
intrasquad game Thursday, will wear
· Phillles 7, Indians (ss) 6 . ,.
the cast for about seven days before '
At Clearwater, Fla., rookie
replacing ir with a splint, but it will · Marlon Anderson had three hits and
be ~-4 weeks before he can begin two' stolen bases. Bobby Abreu
baseball-related activities and anoth- added two doubles and drove in three
er 2-3 weeks before he can return to runs .
the lineup.
Twins 6, Reds (ss) 2 ·

.Reds give well-traveled
tewis second chance
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SARASOTA. Fla. (AP) - Mark
Lewis was considered one of the
nation '.s most promising high school
players a decacte ago. He's back for a
second
go-around with the
Cincinnati Reds, · still trying to ·
achieve that promise. ·
The stardom once predicted for
Lewis has eluded hiin si nce the
Cleveland Indians made him the sec•
ond overall choice in the 1988 ama, teur draft out of Hamilton (Ohio)
Hi gh School.
But he has never given up.
"! expect a lot out of myself and
to be honest with you, lthoughtl'd
be a better player than what I am,"
said Lewis, a .266 hitter in seve n bigleague seasons. "So I have to keep
working hard. I feel I'm capable of
doing more than what I've done. ll's
not going to be for a lack of trying."
Lewis arrived in camp on Feb. 15,
six days before position players had
to report. He was in the batting cages
ltss than two hours after his plane
landed.
.
"If you don' t 'work hard , eventually somebody's,goiQg to 'pass you
by and take your position," said
Lewis, 29.
. Nobody unseated Lewis last year,
when he played 142 games as
Philadelphia's e'veryday second
baseman. But he finished with a .249
average, his second-lowest, after hit-

ling .189 through May.
With Aaron Boone destined to
play third base and Pokey Reese projected to start at second, Lewis
appears bound . for reserve duty. He
excelled ih that role ·!Nith the Reds in
1995, when he platooned with Jeff
Branson ·at third base and hit ·a
career-best .339.
"In my opinion, you get'the best
results (from him) when you don't
th.row him out there every day," said
Reds manager Jack McKeon.
Lewis maintains an ideal backup's approach.
" I want to help this team win. I'll
do whatever it takes," he said. "If
that means I have to be a utility player, then that's the way it is. I've done
it before and I've had no problems
with it."
Most of all, Lewis says he won't
let up.
"When you get a chance to play, .
you want to take advantage of it.
That's the whole idea," he said.
"You can't ·get to the point where
you ' re satisfied with being a utility
player."
That won't happen with Lewis,
said Branson, his best friend on the .
team.
"Mark is not going to lay down at
all," Branson said. "He's never
going to be satisfied, even if he hits
.320 with 20 jacks (home runs)."

. Lyne Center slate
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RIO GRANDE - Here is this
. week ·s· schedule for events at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center. .
•

Fitness center, I!Ymaslum
lUill racquetb!!!! courts
• Today- 5-9 p.m,
,. ·
• Monday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
· Tuesday- 6 a.m.-IOp.m.
· · Wednesday- 6 a.m.-.10 p.m.
• Thumlay ·- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Friday- 6·a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday - 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, March 14 -5-9 p.m.

-~

Today- 6-9 p.m.
Monday - 6-9 p.m.

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Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday --'- 6-9 p.m.
Saturday....,. 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, March 14-6-9 p.m . .
Home athletic events ·
Tuesday - Men's basketball in
AMC tournament-timeTBA .
Friday - Softball vs. Otterbein ·
at 2:30p.m.
Saturday ....: JV baseball vs. OU.
Chillicothe &amp; Lakel~dommunity
College (round-robin a es at 10
,a.m., I p.m. &amp; 3 p.m.)
Sundlly, March 14 - Baseball
doubleheader vs. West Virginia State
(N &amp; varsity) at noon
.

At Fort Myers, Fla.. Terry
Steinbach hit his first exhibition-season homer in two years, a two-run
shot. Eddie Williams, a non-roster
invitee trying to make the seventh.
major league team of his 17-year
career, also homered.
· Reds (ss) 5, Rangers 4
At Sarasota, Fla. Mark Lewis singled borne-the winning run with the
bases loaded in the lOth. Lewis also
had an RBI single dunng a three-run
fourth ~ the Reds overcame a 4-0
deficit. · ·
.
Tigers 8, Pirates 6
,
' At Bradenton, Fla., Karim Garcia
hit a go-ahead homer in the eighth
inning, and Ben 'Candelaria also
homered.
Athletics 17, Angels 4
At Tempe, Ariz .. Mo Vaughn went
2-for-3 with a run scored and two
RB!s in his spring debut for
Anaheim.· After Vaughn's two-run
single in the second inning put
Anaheim up 4-'1, Angels knuckleballer Steve Sparks .was unable to·
hold the lead.
Mariners 8, Cubs 2.
At Mesa, Matt Mieske hit a tworun homer and run-scori ng double
against his form.er teammates.
Diamondb.Jlcks (ss) 10
Wliite Sox 6 ·
At Tucson, Ariz., David Dellucci

was 2-for-3 with.a triple, stole a base
and threw a runner out at the plate
from left field .
·
Ptldres 4, Brewers (ss) 3 · ·
At Peoria, Ariz:, Gary Matthews
Jr. hit a two-run homer, connecting
off Reggie Harris in the eighth to tie
the score at 3. Mark Parent hit a
bases-loaded single over a drawn-in
outfield against Brian Passini in the
lith to win it.
Red Sox 4, Boston Coli. 3
·

.1991 Dodge
Dakota 2WD
'

2.5 Uter, 5spd, White w/gray,
Cloth Interior, A/C, AMIFM CD,
Local Trade

'15!J66 Mo. w/'50000
Cash or-Trade &amp;
Credit
I

At Fort Mye!ll, Fla., Creighton
Gubanich hit a three-run double in
the fifth inning. The Eagles used aluminum bats while Boston used
wood.
•
Mea 8, Expos 4 .
At Jupiter, Fla., Jack Nicklaus
opened Montreal's exhibition season
by tossing out. the filllt pitch, and
then the Mets defeated Montreal
with eight runs in the final two·
innings.

1992 C•dlll•c
'
Eldorado
4.1 V-8, Auto, Gold w!C....m
LAIIher, A/C, Sttreo-&lt;:1118-CD
Player; Pwr. Suri Root·

4.8 V-8, ~o, Red w{r~n

.

•2 7,000 Mo. UJ!' 1500""
· Cash or Trade &amp;
Apprflved Credit

Section

C:

Sunctly, March 7, , . .

@hio's tornado/flood safety campaign:
'Sm·art .Recovery':

An ongoing ·effort to lessen

··
the impact of disasters in Ohio ·

Statewide
tornado
drill .
scheduled
March 10

By .JILL WILliAMS
, •
,
Tlmle-Sentlnel Stllff ·
.
GALLIPOLIS- lri the wake of the floods of 1997, Ohio developed Sm-.rt Recovery, a mitigation program and partnership with the
Ohio Emergency· Management Agency, the Ohio Department of Nat.
.
. urat· Resources; the federal Eniergency Management Agency, and
COLUMBUS ..,.. In an effort to
Ohio's 88 cout'!ty emergency management agencies. Smart Recovery is
increase Tornado and Flood Safety
an cmgoing effort to lessen the impac:i that disasters have on O~io's resAwareness Week. Ohio will hold a ·
idents, their proper!)' and businesses. '
··
..
statewide Tornado Drill on
An imponant comJ'(ment of the mitigation program ·is consideralion
Wednesday, . March 10, at 9:50
of purchasing a flood i.nsurance policy. ·
a.m.
. Local EMA Director Terry Hemby stated that maintaining a fll)od
The Emergency .Alert System
insurance policy is one of the most important things, you can do to pro·
tests are held twice a year, with the
'teci you!llelf.
·
.
sec:Ond bcitiglleld in Oc:tober,
Flooding is not covered by a standard homeowner's ins~rance polOn the anrag~; Ohl9 is subjecticy, and most fonns of federal disaster assistan!!C are available only . ed to 16 tol'iladoes a year, resulting
whcin the pre!!id~l\t declares a major disaster. Approximately 90 percent
in five tornado-related deaths. In
of all disaslers are not' presidentially declared'.
.
1998, there were 24 c:onfinned torBuildings in flood hazard areas have a 26 percent chance of being
nadoes in Ohio with one fatality
flooded during a 30-year mortgage. In 1989, Gallia COunty COmmis·
and 17 injuries.'
·
siotielll began participation in the National. Flood Insurance Program, .
Tornadoes develop from severe
whichJIIIows hQmeqwners, business owners and renters to purchase
thunderstorms and are usually preflood insurance throu'gh a federal subsidy.
ceded by very bcavy rain and large
Oallia COunty is required to adopt specific floodplain management
hail. The most violent stonns are
regulations based upon flood information contained in the "Flood
capable of major destructipn with
Insurance Study - Gallia COunty, Ohio" and accompanying .maps.
wind speeds of 250 miles per hour
A peimit must ·be obtained for all prQposed development within a
or more. Damage paths are often
designated flood plain· area, which allow local officials to determine
in excess of one mile wide and 50
thai the proposed development is free from flood damage, and that it
miles long. ·
EACH YEAR 1111 Ohio .Cominlttll for Sevare conteat entrlea come lrom an over the atate ttch
does not increase \he flood hazard to others.
Tune into radio, television or a Weather Awa.....- aponaora • atatewld• "Tornado ·aprtng. The overall winner lit 11H waa· Katalyn
All new residential structures and substantial improvements to
weatber channel to keep informed Safaty Poater Contell" Open to an chlldran In flrat Holzehuh, • third gradl atudent from slit.·~111*
existing structures in the.designated flood hazard' areas must elevate
of the storms progress.
.
to alxth gradea and apecl1l eclucauon, thoueanda of Elementery School In Circleville.
the lowest floor (including the basement)' to or above the 100-year
The safest place to be during a
flood elevation
. ·
.
tornado is underground .. If a base·
No development ~an occur in fll)odways which would result in any
mentis not available, go to a small
increase in the 1100-year flood elevation. •
room in the middle of the builqing
. early spring rain season
'
. · ·-.. 1·•, '• ,
· A complete description .of· the county's floodplain regulations or
With the
·
·
and crawl under something sturdy ·
permit requirements can be seen at the &lt;iatlia County Floodplain . to protect yourself from flying underway, Ohio will recognize· the
_q
·
.!Cit ·
{fJce.
For
regarding
city
or
village
floodplains,
contact
week of March 7-13 as
0
debris.
officials
entities.
Tornado/Flood
Safety Week, as
Never try to outrun a tornado in
• 40 percent of flood deaths occur In motor vehlclae.
designated
by
Governor·
Bob Tart,
a car. If you see a funnel cloud or
attempt to drive
Into a flOoded roadway.
Never
.
.
hear ·a tornado warning issue .on allowing for public awareness of
the
natural
hazards.
the radio or by siren, get out of
• Even If the vehicle' In front of you auccaaefully crossOver .the past three years Ohio
your vehicle. and find safe shelter.
a water covered road; It Ia beat to find a11 alternate
es
. The following classifications has been hit by major spring flood·
are used 11&gt; grade the stonns: weak ing, due primarily to rainfall and route or to waH. If you g" atuck, you are rlaklng your own
tornadoes (FO/FI) ·llAXOunt for 70 . warm temperatures combined with life and the llvea of rucua personnel.
pea:tent of all tornadoes, and cause tb9, l)lelting of several inches of
·
5 percent of storm-related, deaths, sni)w.
• Moat of the deatha due to flooding In Ohio In the ~at
The
lhree
types
of
flooding
gen- 10 yaara Jl•v• baen motorlata driving In flooded road·
. ·wlndsJl"ds are 10$3 th.JO U 3 mph.
.with sto11Jts 'ltlljting Tto 10 min- erall)"i!ptiont'i:(l in Ohio' ai-F' gen· waya or persona refualng evacuation r~PC~ueata. •
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utes: ·· stf!)ng tornadoes (F21F3) eral flooding, ,.-hi ell .oci:un. after
long-term
heavy
rain,
snow
niel!
or
,'
llAXOUnt for 2 percent of all torna• If you live In a low-lying area or near a creek, pay
does, and cause 30 percent of all a combination of the two; Dash
lornado deaths, windspeeds are 113 flooding, which is life threatening cloae attention to water lavale during heavy ralna and be
·
to 206 mph., with stonns lasting 20 and OCCU!ll very qUickly; and urban prepared to move qul~kly to higher ground.
and
small
stream
flooding,
a
more
minutes or longer; violent torna• Navar let children play near craeka or storm dralna.
does account for only one percent subUe flood threat which occu!ll
when
rain
falls
in
rural
areas.
of all tornadoes, causing 70 percent
According to the Ohio Commitof all tornado deaths, windspeeds
•
tee
for Severe Weather Awareness, and potentially hazardous venture. lanterns or torches. Do not handle
. l)leasure greater than 206 mph and
Often during emergencies, local live electrical equipment in wet
most
flood-related .deaths occur
last for one hour or more.
health
departments and county areas. Electrical equipment should
when
people
attempt
to
walk
or
The National Weather Service
emergency
management agencies be checked and dried before return·
asks that in order to be prepared drive into a flooded area, when It is
for tornadoes and severe thunder- difficult to recognize the dangers of provide information on where to ing to service. Broken utility lines
a water covered road. Often drive!ll find safe drinking waler. To assure should be reported to appropriate
storm~. take time during safety
'
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of
trucks and four-wheel drive that drinking water is not contami- authorities.
awareness week to make a tornado
nated,
w~lls
sbould
be
pumped
out
Anytime
before
flood
waters
vehicles
are
swept
away
by
high
pi an for your family, friends and
co-workers. By planning ahead waters due to a false sense of secu- and water should be tested before become a potential threat would be
drinking.
· a.n appropriate time to learn a flood
.
"you will lower the chance of injury .rity.
GALUA E.MA ,DiriiCior Tarry Hamby examlnaa a county flood
.
Flashlights.
should
be
used
to
evacuation •route from your home, ·
Returning home after food
or death in the event that a tornado
manag11111ent map,
··
·
waters recede can be' a devastating examine buildings, rather than business or school.
strikes.

•
'

· Ltat11tr Interior, A/C, Ste,.o, '
Can., Pwr. Seett-WincloW• ·
·Lock•Mirrora, Tlh, Crulaa,
Local Trade, 87K mll81

Wlndciwa-LocJtaoStaq.MJrrore,
. Tilt, Cndll, IOK mllea,
. l.c!C•l Trldl

Nicklaus, r~~~:overing from hip
replacement surgery, entered the st)ldium in a golf c,art and !Walked to~
mound aided by a cane. His low
strike was handled easily by ' Ex~
catcher Chris Widger. .
Doubles by Roger Cedeno an4 .
Nto ' Bruce highlighted a four-ru~
eighth that tied the score, and Nc;,w
York 'scored four .more runs in th~
ninth, highlighted . by Yohanny
Valera's two-rim double.
•
·
•

1994 Ford Crown
Vlctorl• Ll ·

•

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'24800 Mo. w/'150000
Cash or Trade &amp;
Credit

March 7-13: A focus on public safety
.

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Mefflifries of the flood of 1997,linger for southern Ohio residents
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'

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From AP, T·S Staff R~porta
.
ty about the plight of r.;sidents who had lost
GALUPOtlS ;-''TWo ,years ago !his belongings to the floodwaters brought in
past week, the worsl flooding seenj in . donations from around the country.
almost three decades turn~ II fe aroundl for Churchee and relief organizations who
a number of southern Ohio residents. , , , either ·rf.!iuill homes or demolished some in
For over two weekS, Gallia and Meigs the fl~plain' were in evidence for months
counties were in a state of emergency deal- after the flood.
ing with the after-effects of heavy rain ori
Two years later, effects of the flood
March 1, 1997, that flooded already satu- · remain in Vinlon, even after the damage
rated ground, caused creeks and streams to had been repaired and life .had returned to
jump their banks and sent residents scurry- normal, And although Vinton has weathing for drier, safer spots.
ered big floods in the past, eyes still .check
The effects of the flood were more wide- the Raccoon's ·level arter snow melts or
spread during the first day, when rescue heavy rain moves into the area .
·workers batlled the elements to get people
. As a result; efforts to mitigate flood
oui of their homes in various parts of Gallia · damage in the area by freeing the·creek of
. County. .One motorist ·whose , vehicl9 debris are attracting attention on the federal
became disabled in high. water near Crown level. The Galli a County Otarnber o'f COmOty .was quickly. taken to safety after sher· merce is assisting the village and Hunting·iff's deputies navigated the water's treach- ton Township Trustees in getting a cleanup
·
. erous flow .tq g'et the veliicle. .
project ·started.
One of several fatalities attributed ·to the
Heavy tain at this time of year brings
. flooding in Ohio occurred in Gallia, when a back bad memories for employees of a
Kentucky man drowned in his car as he Cincinnati recreation center which had to
attempted to cross lligh water on State function as an emergency_ shelter when.the
· Route 7 at Eureka.
.
Ohio River flooded two years ago.
Similar stories of people helping one
"You . gel kind of skittish," Marlene
another surfaced throughout the next few Trapp, director of the Ebersole Community
days, but the flood's major impact was seen Center on Cincinnati's east side, said last
in the Vinton area, where the Raccoon week.
Creek soon rose to flood stage and effecThe ceoter's carpeting got ·soggy during
tively cut access to the cbmmunity for a week of housing people who managed to
almost live days.
rescue some wet possessions from their
Emergency operat!ons were set up in the homes in early March 1997. About 40 peo. village hall, th~ grade sehool and local, ple spent nightS in the center at the peak of
churches, with supplies eoming In for a the ordeal, and mtiny more ate meals there.
lime by four-wheeler from Bidwell along
"It was squishy on days, ev~n though
the old railroad .line, which :was high we didn't have any actultl flood damal!SI
We had everything that everyone dragged
enough to escape flooding.
• When the water began recedin8 a few In," Ms. Trapp ~d.
.
days later, the grim task of. picking liP. the: , High-water mar\\5 from the flooding are
pieces beg11n. Federal and state emergency . still visible on some southern Ohio buildrelief was promise!! by Vice President AI 'ings.
Lost homes have been. replaced in New
Gore, who briefly toured Vinton and spoke
Richmond,
a"village of 2,500 people on the
to residents. for months afterward, publici-

#90126 • 4.()(J()R, AUTO.. 4 CVL.. Alii.
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The wont noodlng ' " " In •lmo•t rhrH ~»cades IIII'Md life •round for • number of aoulhtm Ohio real~nrs In Marcil 11»7•
Ohio River about 20 miles east of Cincin· months.
largely .spar:¢ the boyhood home of Civil
nati, but the cleanup continues. City
A total of $180 million in federal and War general and later president Ulysses
employees were called last week to remove state loans and grants went into repairing or .Grant.
some trash and debris still littering the replacing damaged roads, bridges and
Friends' and employees helped Middeler
riverbank from the flooding.
homes.
clean up and restock swiftly enough so that
Some New Richmond residents resent
'The floodwaters encircled the Cincinnati he was able to reopen within a week, comthat authorities, citing safety needs, forced Reds' baseball stadium, turning it into an pared with two or three weeks f()r some
them to evacuate and refused to let them go island. The river flooded homes ' in low· other businesses in the region.
back into their homes as the 1997 floodwa' lying Cincinnati riverfront ne'ighborhoods
Middeler inherited his father's store in
ters fell.
and covered parking lots.
1980 and learned recovery lessons from a
People weren't told how long they
Joe Middeler, 48, owner of Point Pleas- 1964 flood. He went into the store as soon
would have to be out of their houses and ant Food Market about 25 miles east ()/ as possible after the 1997 flood to begin
were kept away even when-they only want- Cincinnati, rushed to move as much of his Scraping up mud so it would wash away
ed to start salvaging items and scraping inventory· as he could save to upper levels when the water receded.
mud from walls and floors, Hazel Davis, a of his store. But soft-drink vending
He still operates with a wary eye on the
New Richmond village council member, ·machines and bags of ice were among the river.. 'You're always best off being presaid.
casualties at the store his family has opera!· pared for the wo!llt," Middeler said. "That
The Ooodwaters washed away roads and ed since 1950.
way, when it doesn't happen, everything
bridges in some areas, forcing ·detours for
Nearby, the floodwate!ll surrounded but else is easy."
'
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Sl(nday, March 7, 1999

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

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,Page C2 • .-Jillbav ~=•-.-mtwl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallll~&gt;lls, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

.Sunday, March 7, 1999:

•

•

•

''\

\

. Chrlatlna Pooler and Marshall Miller

-POOLER-MILLER---- --SISSON-HAYES

Mr. and Mrs. Leonard R!llney

Fiftieth anniversary planned

.Golden ·anniversary planned
' GALLIPOLIS - John K. and
l'lelen M. Russell will celebrate
their 50th anniversary with an o(len
reception on Sunday March 14, from
2- 5 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
The reception is being hosted by
)heir son and daughter -in - law
·lohnnie and Carol Russell of Bid-

· Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lute

The couple will receive guests
between the hours of 2 and 5 p. m.
The Russells were married March
12, 1949. They have two granddaughters, Tina M : (Carl) Moodispaugh, and Millissia D Russell both
of Bidwell.
The couple tequests that gifts be
in the form of cards only.

POMEROY Robert and
Linda Lute, 37632 West Sh'ade
Road ; Pomeroy, will celebrate "
their 40th wedding anniversary at
an open reception, Saturday,

March 13 , 2 to 4 p.m. at the Mt
Hermon United Brethren Church.'
The celebration is being hosted
by their two children, Kevin Lute
and Kim Proffitt .
·

Ohio Bicentennial Commission to grant legacy scholarships "
OMEROY- The Ohio Bicentennial Commission is granting legacy
scholarships again t~is year and area
students are encouraged to apply.
March 22 is the application dead- .
line ·for the 1999-00 legacy scholarship progmm and scholarship win ners will be announced at the end of
ApriL
The Ohio Bicentennial · Legacy
Schohirships are designed to encourage the serious study of Ohio's past
in a 'w ide range of academic disci-

·~ell

Bicentennial in 2003 .
.
Ohio universities .
"Legacy scholarships· afford stu- . ApplicatioQs for the · Lega~y
dents the opportunity to research . Scholarships should be made in the
projects that will help all OhiOjlns form of a research proposal and
,
better understand the · state's histo- include a curriculum vitae.
ry," said Stephen C. George, execuAt least two letters of referen~e
tive director of the Ohio Bicentenni- also should be ·sent to the Ohio
al Commission.
-Bicentennial Commission, Stat~ ·
George ·said ' th~ Commission House Rpom 021 North, Columbq~, .
intends to use research done by the 43215 .
scholarship recipients to produce . For the complete criteria, students
exhibits, books, and educational should visit Ohio Bicentennial web
materials for the state's upconling site at 222.ohio.200.coin. ,

plines. The scholarships cover full
in-state tuition for the 1999-00 academic xear. supplemented with a qneyear stipend of $9,000 to $12 ,000.
s·tudents enrolled in a master or
doctoral program iu an Ohio college
or university are eligible to apply.
Over the past two years , ihe Ohio
Bicentennial Commission has provided 13 scholarship and stipend
packages to 10 Ph.D candidates and
three master' s students. The legacy
Scholarships have benefited ~everal

.'

People magazine at 25 years old:
pio
of 'infotainment' media
~FVVERIKNA DOBNIK ·
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - When People magazine first hit newsstands 25
years ago, it was easy reading, a
who-did-what-when - and pssst,
with whom - in a go ssipy whisper

far from Page One Oews.

managing editor of The New York
Times until last year and former
executive editor of Th e Philadelphia
Inquirer.
The· bottom line: It pays.
"It's hu ge money," said People .·
managing editor Carol Wallace:
· Eac h week, Tim e Inc . sell s 3.6 ·
million copies of People. Every page
of advertisin g costs at least
$138:.000, leading the industry with
about $626 million in ads last year
, alone . The magazine rakes in $1 billion in revenues.

,,
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I

i'

liI
II

I!
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HERBS FOR
•coLDS &amp; FLU*
STRESS REDUCTION
..GRI!I!N TI!Au
HERBAL SAGE TI!A CO.
UICATIIIII.

. But the whisper grew louder,
leaving its roots in a " people " page
in the back of . Time magazine to
become Time Inc .'s No. I' putilication, and paving the way for today 's
personality -craZed media .
The success ofih e weekly and its
Still , it 's more than money, Walformula are clear in this week 's 340- lace said: " At the same time, it's not
page anniversary issue.
a bad thin g to entertain while show'.' The media have become addict- ing readers what makes people in
ed to. soap opera stories," said the news tick ."
Howard Kurtz, media critic for The
The formula shows up in magaMr. and Mrs. Clarence Weddle
Washington Pos t. " And you can see zin es, new s p~pers and television
·a People-style approach in alm ost awash in .instant fame , spun with .
every corner of the med ia market- embarrassing detail s that the most
place."
·
staid soci ety can '.t res ist.
" Washington used to be consid What Pe ople launched in 1974
PORTLAND Clarence · and
They have a son, Cl'arencc Wed- .
Glady s Weddle o f ·Portl and wi ll die , Jr.. a daughter-in-law. Joyce with Mia Farrow on the cover was ered hopelessly boring by the likes
observe their 56th wedding anni ver- Weddle, a grandso n. Robbie · Wed- the cult of perso nality, whether · of People magazine," said Kurtz,
famous or obsc ure , as the ultimate who in his book "Spin Cycle " anasary on March 22 ..
dl e, and seve ral step-grandchildren .
audience seducer. Since then , that lyzes President Clinton 's press
concept has increasingly powered machine. " But in the era of Bill and
Man shot to .death at condo association meeting main stream news.
Monica, Paul a and James Carville,
.
"
More
and
more
papers
are
it's clear , that the Beltway culture
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - A ma·n compl ain ing that someone stole hi s
has
going
for
goss
ip,
for
the
celebrity
of
also been bitten by the cel ebrity
garden hose shot and killed a fellow tenant at a condominium association
·
.bug."
the moment
," said Gene
Robens,
meeting 'police said .
'
.
Juan Manuel Rodriguez, 55, barged into the meetin g Thursday ni ght,
according to neighbors. He pull ed a gun and fi red several shots. killin g his
66-year-old neighbor, Arsenio Arabitg, poli ce said .
.
·
,Ji.odriguez' then walked nex t &lt;loorto the ·buildi ng he li ve d.in , fired another shot into the air and ranted some more.
.
,
" He was yelling. saying, 'I•don' t care ! He bothered everyone t'" said Jean
Salas, a neighbor.
'
Neighbors said Rodriquez compl ained about a mi ss ing gard~n hose and
apparently had been drinkin g.
A police officer using a cellular phone talked Rodriguez out of the apartment He was charged with murder and other offen ses. ·

Couple to mark·anniversary

Jesalca Kerr and Chris Stout

Anniversary t9 be noted

GALLIPOLIS - Leonard and sonagc by Re\1. Andrew Perry. ·
Nancy (R~ssell) Rainey will be eelThey are the parents qf one
ebrating their 50th wedding anniver- daughter Paula (Josh) Deweese of
sary on Sunday March 14 with an Atlanta, Ga. and one son Paul
open reception from 2 - 4 p.m. at the (deceased) and daughter-in-law
French Art Colony.
Diana Beaton of Shelbyville, Ky.
They were married on March II, · They have six grandchildren. The
1949, at the Cheshire Methodist Par- couple request that gifts be omitted .

'-'r· lind Mrs, John Russell

RUTuND DIPT 8TORE
41 ....... - ·
IIUTLAND-,OHIO
IIOIIIAT 8 . . .71'11

TaT42t00

KARR-STOUT-CHESTER Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Karr, Chester, announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Jessica
Michelle, to Christopher Ryan Stout,
son of Mr. and Mrs . David Stout,
Syracuse.
The bride-elect will graduate in

1.----~-------------------~

September from Marietta Memorial
School of Radiologic Technology.
Her fiance is a teacher and coach in
the Meigs Local School District
The wedding will be an event of
June 19, at6:30 p.m. at Mt. Hermon
United Brethren in Christ Church,
Wickham Road, Pomeroy.

POMEROY -The en gagement
and upcoming wedding a nnou~ce ­
ment is being made by Chri stina
Dawn Pooler of Columbus and Marshall Mathew Miller of Logan.
The bride-elect is the daughter of
Roger and Barbara Bissell of
Pomeroy, and Don and Shirley foot er of Bradenton, Fla. Her fiance is
the son of Judith Miller of Logan
and the late William H. Miller, Jr.
The wedding will be held on May

• .. GALLIPOLIS- Once gairi the
Ariel Cultural and Performing
, Arts Centre in Gallipolis proudly
_. . presents the Ohio ·valley Symphony as it performs Beethoven .
and Tchaikovsky March 13. at 8
p.m ., featuring pianist Angelin
Chang.
' · There will be special guests in
the audience the second Saturday
in March explains Ariel Board
President Dr. Dan Whiteley .
"Exposing our young peo ple to
eulture .and the arts is a priority
::for the Ariel Boar!! of Directors .
:;we applaud music teachers for .
~ -s haring their talents with our area
; youth through the gift of music.
We also would like to contribute
; o the future so we have invited
ballia County piano teachers and
)heir student s to the next ' O.V.S . .
toncert March 13 as our guests ."
~ Whitel ey cont.jnues, "To see a
:Professio nal mu sician , like world
l:la ss con cert pianist Angelin
£hang , on stage with a top notch
(,rchestra in their own backyard is

an experience not many children Prix - Musique de Chambre) ,
have the chance to witness. It is Indiana University (master o f
our honor to give them thi s music with di s tinguished peropportunity." ·
former certifi cate ), and Ball State
Award
winping . pianist, Univer siiy (bachelor of arts Angelin Chang has graced audi- French, magna cum laude ; bac he- ·
ences in concert performance s on lor of music - Pi Kappa Lambda).
television and radio in Europe .
Piano Concerto No. I in C
Asia, North America and South major, Op, 15 was written in 1795
America . Since 1996,' Ms . Chan g by German co mpose1 Ludwig Van
bas been Artist in Re siden ce a t Beethoven .
.
the John F. Kennedy C enter for
The Russian composer Pyotr
the Perfprming Arts .
·
ll ' yi ch Tchaikovsky wrote Sym She w·as also the first Ameri- phony No. 5 in E minor, Op . 64
can awarded fir st prize s in both betwee n May and Augu st 1888,
piano an&lt;l chamber musi c durin g while working on two oth er pro the same ye ar from the Conserva- j ec ts . A "fate" theme underlies all
toire Nati onal Suprieur de four movements in thi s sympho Mu s ique de Pari s. Dr. Chan g · ny; at first pre sented as a qui et
teache s on the pian0 faculty . at fun eral marc h ; then a searc hing
Rutgers - Th e State Univer sity o f express tve slow movem ent ; th en
New: Jersey.
a s a ballet waltz ; and finally as a
She earn ed her d octor o f triumphal qui ck march .
musica l arts from Peabody C on The public is encourage d to
servatory o f the John Ho pkin s .stop by th e Ari e l and s it in on
Univer sity and al so hold s degrees · symphony rehearsals the Thtirsfrom th e Pari s Con se rv atbire day and Friday before the co ncert
(Premier Prix - piano;, Premi er from 7 ,p.m. - 10 p .m. and Satur-

Bichard Kiley, "Man 9f La Mancha," dies at 76
•

WARWICK. N .Y. (AP) - ·
The show ran for more than · s ide of Chic ago, the son of an
Ri chard Kiley. who wa s Broad- fiv e years on Broadway - mo re Iri sh Cath o lic railroad statisti way's ori ginal "M an of La Man - than 2 ,300 performan ces - - and c ian. His grandfath er used to
. cha" and per'formed dozen s of toured all . ove r the world . Kiley re cite o peras and qu ote Sha keother dramatic and musical roles played Don Quixote twice more spea!! .
in movies and te levi sion since the on 'Broadway; .in 1972 and 1977 ,
In u 1970 int erview with th e
1950s , has died . He was 76 .
Hi s career s panned four New York Pos t, l1 e said t·hat after
A dire ctor of the Lazear-Smith decade s , with mo vi e credit s landin g the lead in hi s high
Funeral Home in Warwick con - in cluding . "Lo o ~ing for · Mr. school play, he d iscovered actin g
firmed the ac tor ' s death this Goodbar, " the re cen t " Pa tch wa s " a wonde rful way to co mmumorning. but provided few other Adams," and th e te levis ion mini; nicate with out a one -to-one relati onship ."
detailS. It wasn ' t immediate ly series , " Th e Th ornbird s "
Kil ey 's family planne d to
On a national tour of th e play ,
clear when he died.
Kiley was best known for "A Streetcar named Des ire' ' from mak1 fun eral arran ge me nts late r
playing Don Quixote in the 1965 1948 to 1950, Kiley replace d today · in Warwick , . 43 . miles
musi cal "Man of La Man cha ," An thony Quinn in the ro le o f northwest of Ne w York City,
and singing its be st-known hit , ··Stanley Kowalski.
where the a ctor liv ed.
Kil ey was born o n the so uth
"The Impossible Dream ."

.Create

•

~
wfthout negatives
· in minutes!
Make enlargements
·ease. Zooni in.
Remove red-eye .
Even add borcjers.
·It's easy. with the

IHla,·eyour animal spayed or neutered during the period
~·eb1rU•11rv 14, 1999 to Mar ch 14, 1999 and r eceive a $10
lr~·ba·te form the Gallia County Animal Welfare· ·League.
the form below and send it w.itlt a paid r~
!(~~t to:
GCAWL
.
' · .
· . ':
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P.O. Box 216
Gallipolis, OH 45631

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-ADDRESS MIDDLEPORT , OHIO

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f'. · .•Everyone Is Invlt6d•

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totbe

Health Fair and
Open House
.
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attbenew
llo1!crt M. BoDey eM,' tero1 c-w
2SOO Jelfabi A -

F'INAL
WINTER
CLEARANCE

Point pletnnt V/V

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"Reducing Your Risll ofibe Une '/NGflld" ·

Gallipolis

F«IDDftlalut • d oaoll6'7H67'

1ZM0

·AS CASH*

Indoor Gliders
Curios

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45760

8 :30A.M. TO 5 P.M .

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Quafity ![1lrniture P us

Pleasant
Valley

- APPOINTMENTS -

Hospital

(740) 992-4226

MONDAY - FRIDAY

(WALK ·INI WICCOMI)

*See Store For Details

r-F-'1-i\a_n_cl_n_g-Av_a_ll-ab-le1
90 Day Lay-Away

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day from I p.m. - 4 p.m. ,
Tickets for next Saturday ' s
concert are available at Haskins
Tanner and That Special Touch or
by calling Bob and Sheila Oehler •
at (740) 379-9445 . For more
information call 446-ARTS .

OFFICE HOURS -

992-5490

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University of Rio Grande in 19&lt;18·: :
He r fiance is a 1993 graduate o~
Caldwell
High School
and
receiv ed a bachelor ' s degree in
economics from the University o(
Rio Grande in 1998.
'
An open church wedding will
take place at the Middleport
Church of Christ on Saturda~,
April 17, 2:30 p.m. Music will '
. ,at 2 p.m .
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begm

788 NORTH SECOND 'STREET

Ask about our different packages
available on each sheet
by at tfie Office for 1Jetails
100 EM&amp; ')JW.,.Se.

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RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
Sisson
of · Rutland
announce the engagement and
approac hing marriage of their
daughter, Melisa Marie , to Daniel
Ray Hayes , son of Debbie Hayes
of Marietta and Lawrence Hayes
of CaldwelL
The bride-elect is a 1993 graduilte of Meigs High School and
received her bachelor 's degree in
elementary education from the

"Offering full-Time

Kodak
Pldure

Special while Coupons Last
·$3.00 Per 8x1 0 Sheet

.448-8311

8 at the Trinity United Methodist
Ct.urch, Logan. ·
Pooler is a a graduate of Eastern
High School. Reedsville, and Hocking Technical College, ~elsonville .
She is employed as a dental assistant
at Worthington .
Her fiance is a graduate of Logan
High School and Hocking Technical
College, and is employed at the
Metal Powders Specialities in
Logan.

MIDDLEPORT CLINIC

k &amp; L C&amp;terlqg
' Cat«ing for all Oa:asions
Custom
From eook outs IAl black tic atTain
Choose your own monu at a reasonable price
We c:an supply china &amp;: linens or paper &amp;: plastic
Appdiun, P•rty Tr•y• to F'ove Course Meals
We'd love IAl plan II: serve your next event

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:Ohiq Valley Symphony ~o perform at Ariel Theatre

·-

tvialler

Be a responsible Pet Owner.
Help reduce pet overpopulation .

Mellsa Sisson and Daniel Hayes

!f_umiturt, Carptt, ~ppCU111US
42W State gu,. 7 • 'I'uppm f'Udns, 011
(740} 667-7388 • .1-800-200-4005

Mon-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9-6 • Sat 9-4

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: Page C4 • JltmbQ 'Ctmn-Jitntiaul

Sunday, March 7, 1999

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

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Beat of the Bend ...

Nutrition researchers .modify food pyramid for older folks
By DAVE HOWLAND

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By Bob Hoeflich

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vitamins, minerals and water.
A group of nutritionists at Tufts
University is recommending that
healthy people 70 years and older
drink more water, eat foods that are

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Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The generation that raised its kjds on the four
basic food groups may be lacking
some of the basics of good nutrition:

Perhap~. some good news for yo u if you are planning
on furtheri ng· your education-and es pe c iall y, if yo u 're
headed for a medically related field .
·
The Women 's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial Hospital
has co mpleted plan s for a warding scholarships this spri ng
for those entering medi ca lly related areas of s tud y. App li ca tion s for the group's scholarships are n ow availab le at
the auxiliary counter in t.he ho s pital lobby . At lea s t sc ho l:
arships a re t o be prese nted . Deadline for · the re turn of
applications is 4 p .m. on April 12 .

March I was th e wedding date fo r former M.eig s re s ident , Sh eryl Walters , wh o liv es in th e Nashvill e area th e se
day s. Sh e ryl chose the Marc h I wedding d a te so that it
would be on the wedding anniversary d a te of her moth er,
Mrs . Betty Stewart and he r hu sband , the lat e Red S tewa rt.
Many of you will remembe r Sheryl, o ne o f th e singers
with the popular Cros sove r Band which pl aye d at many
location s here over the years. ~oining Sheryl in th e voc al s
.w as her s ister, Sandy But c her. Oh , a nd by th e way,
Sheryl 's g roo m was Stan Garl and.
Incidentally , Betty received a ha lf dozen c a J.I s fro m
readers addressing her on th e find of a co upl e o f be e r bot tle s found a long the b a nk s of Ohi o by . her gra nds on ,
Michael Stewart. Th e bottles we re a part o f ihe Wilder muth Brewery which fun c tioned in Pomeroy ma ny years
ago , the callers advised.

more rich in .nutrients and increase
the amount of liber in their diets.
To make their point, the nutri- lionists have proposed for seniors a
modified version of the fooo pyramid , which replaced the basic (our
- the mi lk group, meat group,
bread-cereal s group .and vegetable, fruit group.
. The new recommendations,'to be
publi shed in the March issue of The
Journal of Nutrition, are aimed at
helping seni ors live healthier lives

whi le slowin g the onset of medical
problems ass ociated w1th agi ng,
incl uding heart di sease, osteoporosis
· and hypertension .

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The death penalty for Wilford Berry; the fir s t ca rri ed
out in Ohio in 36 years, was given a s you probabl y note d
wide media coverage.
Berry had been on death row for so me I 0 years and
asked to be put to death. And today , it is not uncommon
for prisoners to be on death row for years on end without
their death sentences being carried out. Pending appe a ls
apparently play a role in thes~ long delay s.
I don :t know if laws have changed or what but tho se
delays .have not always been there and especially for
Meigs Countians.
It wa s i.n 1926 that three Pomeroy men were sentenced
to the electric chair for the death of James McCumber. On
March 25 McCumber disappeared from hi s home on Wyl hs Hill in Pomeroy .
On March 21, ministers of five Pomeroy churches
asked their congregations to help find McC umber. The
search was unsuccessful but on Mar c h 24, John Ratcliff, a
tena nt farm e r at Five Points found McCumber 's body at
the bottom o f a cistern on hi s pl ace.
Richard Rhoade s, John Hedricks and John Bryant we re
Jailed within an hour, charged with murder. On M ay 3,
Rhode s wa s co nvi c ted of first degree murd e r by a jur y.
On May 6 , Bryant was g iven a jury trial and fo und gu ilt y.
Hedri c ks pleaded guilty to the c harge and refu·se d the ser vices of a n a ttorney .
.
On May I 0, all three were se ntenced to die in th e elec tric c hair by the late Jud ge A. P. Miller. The electrocu ti o ns took plac e o n Se pt. 2, 192 6 less th an si x m on ths
after the murder.
A~d yo u thou g ht the . wheels ·of justice turn s lo w ly. Do
ke e p s milin g.
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Applications up at many colleges nationwide

made."
The new food pyramid mOdifies
the original I 992 Food Guide Pyramid, which is based on guidelines of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
and the Department of Health and
Human Services.
The new pyramid includes
roughly. the same minimum number
of daily servings as the original : six
or more se rvings of breads and
grai ns, two O( more servings of fruit,
three or more of vegetables, two or
more servings .of meat, three servings of dairy products. and a small
amoun t of fats and sweets.
Because older people need fewer
calories and generally eat le ss, the
researchers recommend a hi gher
concentration of nutrients ·with each
serving. At the grocery store, that

-------Meigs Community
The Community Ca lendar is pub-

li shed as a fre e service

to

non-profit

group~

wish ing to announce meeting s and special e ve nts. The calendar is not designed to promote sales
or funtl raisers or any type . Items are
printed as space perm its and cann ot

be guaranteed to run a speci fi c numMiddleport 's Opie Cobb has been return e d to hi s home
following a couple of months ' hospitalizati o n and is get ting along relatively well. Opie at 90 still read s the new spaper with the help of eyeglasses.

RACIN E - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, Monday, 10:30 a. m.,
municipal building.

SUNDAY
POM EROY - Service of healing at Grace Episco pal Church.
Pomeroy, with holy communion,
Sunday, 5 p.m. in add ition to the 11
a.m. service. Public ·in vited.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservatio n Distrift Board
of Supervisors, special eXecutive
metin g. Monday, 8 p.}at office.
POMEROY -

Ri!ht to Life

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TUESDAY
SYRACUSE
Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, Tuesday
noon , Carleton School, Syracuse.
Economic Development Director
Perry Varnadoe to speak on state of
the economy.

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POMEROY .-

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. Sunday, Marcb 7
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numbers of the Air Jordan XIV were
tested, and none were found to contain lead paint at level s higher than
federal guidelin es, Nike spokeswoman Vizhier Mooney said.
Ms. Mooney said the paint supplier did not adhere to ·Nike's policy
on banned substan ces. She sa id Nike
has severed its ties to the supplier.
The Cons umer Product Safety
Com mi ss ion sa id the shoes should
be taken away from ·children itnd
returned to the sLOre for a different
pair or a refu nd .

:• :• POINTPLEASANT,W.VA.. ; • Narcotics Anonymous Tri - County
: :ZCJroup meeting , 611 Viand Street,
p.m.

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

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• :•: GALLIPOLIS - Knights of
~ :: &lt;:olumbus annual St. Patrick's Day
; • l·breakfast at St. Louis Church hall
: :_; tmmediately after 8 a.m. and 10

":..ril.rn. services.
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GALLIPOLIS- Canaan Baptist
·: )2 hurch family ni ght, 7 p.m . Special
:· ~ :singing by Darren Buck and Seth
· : ·Montgomery. Garland Montgomery
preachi'ng .

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ADDISON - Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
.fi p.m ., with Rick Barcus preaching .

';Oit tAe ~ etdd tfJ«d, .
a, t4d of ~d.~~·

of fJ/UJie44iflll4t ~·
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~Dee C4le ~(Jilt

·Halesb Patel, MD, FACP
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.2 6 5 1fle4-t Utt-t(J,tt- St't-eet

Atl..ett-4-, IJI..t(J, 4$70 I
(740) 592-2671

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. GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Medical
(:enter Sibling Class, I -2:30p.m.
l Jnfant and Child CPR class, 3 • 5:30p.m .. French 500 Room. CaU.
: )146 - 5030 to register.

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; : KANAUGA - Worship service at
· Silver Memorial FWB Church, 6
; 'j:l.m.,·with Rev. Charles Neece.

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Monday, March 8

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• GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
: :Anonymous Miracles In Recovery
1proup, St. Peters Episcopal Church,
::7:30p.m.

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Guardian Angels

Harvey, Louisville, and even Rio
Grande.
In the Williamson tournament
Rollyon's beat Williamson 93-58;
Pikeville 96-48 and Wayland 11167. Wayland was led by former New
York Knick player Chuck Ritter. In
the three games Bevo scored 128
points. The all tournament team
included
four
players
from
Rollyson's: Francis, Wiseman,
James, and Lambert. It was in this
touniament that Bevo used hi s
famous plastic worm out of bounds
play.
:
It was just three days after this
tournament that Bevo Francis left- ·
Rio Grande College even though the
term had not yet ended.
In the next few days Bevo sig ned
a contract to play with the Boston
Whirlwinds, then owned by Abe
Saperstein of Harlem Globetrotter
fame. Francis wa~ paid $17 ,()()() for
the year which included 153 games
all across the country.
Rio Grande College coach Newt
Oliver was · signed to coach the
Whirlwinds at $I 3,000 per year.
Also on the Boston team were former Rio Grande players AI
Schreiber and Wayne Wiseman. The
Whirlwinds played against the GloThe 1954 Rollyson·s team from Ironton Include\!, front row, Hannon, Sands, McMackin, Ripbetrotters as well as against teams
. perger and Rollyson; back row, Lambert, Wiseman, Frances, James and Fairchild. This taam
from the area that .they were in at
won the Williamson, W.Va., Tournament the weekend before Bevo Francis left Rio Grande College as a student.
·
any given time.
In t~e fall of I 955 Boston played
and Bill McCullom of Louisville. Armstrong had 27. The all -stars Boston team to play .for the. Clevein Gallipolis against an All-Star
Also on the roster but not playing used 14 players including Gene land Pipers of the AAU and later the.
team from southern Ohio. On the that night were Harvey Babetch of James and Jim Rollyson . Also play- same team in the ABL. In fact FranBoston team that day' were: Francis, Bradley and Cal Christianson of ing were Gallia Countians; Wayne cis was on the first and only champiSchreiber and Ripperger from Rio Toledo and theRochester Royals.
Evans, Brock Borden . Bill Car- on of the ABL ·as the league folded
Grande, Jim Gerber from Bowling
in its second year, thus ending FranBoston beat · the local all -star . rithers and Bill Johnson .
Green, Ted Armstrong of Michigan team 109-55 . Francis scored 30 and
After another year Francis left the cis pro career.
State and the Philadelphia Warriors.•

Gallia Community

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Immuni zation

a, .t o«,d
. \

McGuire, Sweetwater · Clifton and
Vince Boryla. Players from Ironton
included: Bill Hannon, Don Sands,
Jim Rollyson , Glen Fairchild, and
Fuzzy McMackin .
Rollyson's was undefeated in the
.Ironton City League in 1954. They
also won ·the Huntington City
League that year arid competed in
other
tournaments
both
as .
Rollyson's and as Persinger's Supply. In all, counting the Williamson
Tournament, Rollyson's was 41-1 in
1954.
Rollyson's beat Ponsmouth VFW
for the championship of the Ohio
Valle.~n a game played at Memorial Field House in Huntington.
Officials ruled three of the
Rollyson's players were ineligible,
thus leaving Rollyson's with only
five players. Jame s and Jim Rockwell were ruled out under an incredible rule that said that because the
pair made their living in basketball
(they were both high school coaches) they could not play in that particular game. In other years Rollyson 's
played in the Jackson tourney and
the Lima open .
In the 1940s and !95's there were
quite a number of prestigious basketball tournaments held in West
Virginia and Ohio. For instance in
1955 the St. Albans basketball tourney drew the following fine players:
· George King, Eddie Solomon, Charlie Slack, Earl Lloyd, Leland Byrd,
Moo Moore, Jim Gerber, Char)ey
Tyra, Dan Swartz, and Francis.
The tournament annually drew
teams made up of former collegians
from Marshall, West Virginia, Eastern Kentucky, Morehead, Morris

; , .: The Community caiendar Ia pub· 446- 4889 or 367 - 7475.
. , •Uahed •• a free service to non·
: • :profll
groups
wishing
to
· ; •nnounce meetings and special
: - :events. The calendar Is not
• :- aeslgned to promote sales or
Thesday, March 9
: ·!fund-raisers of tiny type. !lema ara ·
· :~ printed as space pel'llllts and can- ·
GALLIPOLIS - AlCoholics
:·:not be guaranteed to run a specIIAnonymous
meeting, St. Peter's
number of days.
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Episcopal Church, 8 p.m .

POMEROY -~roy Zoning
Appeals Board, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

Mary: What goes up and never
comes down?

1-800-462..:52 55

The many teams that Bevo Francis played for after he left Rio
Grande C9llege was Rollyson's of
Ironton. Bevo joined the Rollyson's
team in late March of I 954, follow. ing the completion of the · Rio
· Grande season. It was Bevo'ssopho. · more season, which turned out to be
· his last season there:
Bevo played with Rolly son's
· Venetian Blinds in the Williamson,
: · West Virginia semi-pro tournament
·· In April of 1954. Al so joining
Rollyson's for thi s tourney were
other Rio Grande play ers: Wayne
· Wiseman and Bill Ripperger.
Rollyson' s was a pretty strong
team, even without the three Rio
Grande aces, as they had two former
Marshall players Eddie Lambert and
Gene James, and several former
.Ironton High School and Ironton St.
Joseph players from the middle
1940's when Ironton was .one of the
· hotbeds of basketball.
Gene James was a member of the
Marshall team that was national
NAIA champions in the late 1940's.
Gene "Goose" James played three
years in the NBA ; two of those years
were with the New York Knickerbockers. New ·York then had such
players as AI McGuire, Dick

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Web ~ ter
Post 39, American Legion, annual
birthday party, Wednesday, at ~he
Senior Citizens Center. Dinner at 7
p.m.

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BOSTON (AP) Colleges close to 3 milli on high school gradaround the country are reporting a uates next year, up from 2.6 milli on
Mike: Yoor age.
surge in applications thi s year, in in 1990.
pan because the Internet is making it
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easier to apply.
These days, high school seniors
· can apply to many colleges electronically. Some schools even waive
their ·application fees - typically
$35 to $60
for students who
apply online
11
1t
Other
ools let students fill in
t!)ci
plications on computer
sere ns and then print out a copy and
mail it in the old-fashioned way. In
some cases, the colleges and the students .split the application costs.
" From the candidate's point of
view, it is a much easier ballgame
and the Internet has facilitated that,":
: · said Martyn McGrath Lewis , director of admissions for Harvard University, which saw the number of
applicants rise almost. 8 percent this
year over last.
Harvard does not accept applications over the Internet but posts its
forms online for students to fill out
and mail in .
Yale saw its applications rise 10.5
percent this year; Un iversity of Cal.ifomia: Riverside was up I 4.6 percent to the highest number ever;
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
Troy, N.Y. , was up 13 percent; and
· Temple University in Phil adelphia
: : was up a whopping 23 percent.
.
Many of the students who applied
;
: : to Temple this year used an electron ic application, said Tom Maxey, vice
president for enro llmen t management . The Web, he sa id , " is certai nly giving us and our colleagues a lot
more exposure."
It used to be that prospective
applicants le arned about coll eges by
Snow is beautiful, but
weather brings new
send ing away for brochures or porhealth concems •.. sprains, fractures, frostbite,
ing through hefty guidebooks .
N ow, most un iversit ies have
over-exertiOn, hypothermia, etc. Call the
Web pages that describe everything
Holzer Health Hotline if you need help with
from admissions poli~ies to recre·
a ti on facilities .
·cold weather maladies!
Even without the Internet,
sch.ools would probably be reportin g
a jump in applicants. The number of
high school seniors has been
increasing about 3 percent annually
in rccen t years.
Ask your physician about medication concerns
Experts predict there wil l be

Sands

• Before changing their diots ,
seniors should take time to ~valuate
their current eatin~ habits. I.:ich!l"stein satd they mtght only ~ a
minor change in habit ~ such ·as 1!ating whea(bread ihstead of white .or
eating more green vegetables .
" They should really tako a look
at their diet and see whether over a
few days they're getting an adequa_te
number of servings in each category," she said. " Then I person,lly
would suggest that before they ,.go
down the vitamin aisle that they tlllk
to their health care provider."
The nutritionists based their recommendations on studies gathered
within the past 20 years along with
recent
recommended
dietary
· allowances produced by the Food
and Nutrition Board of the National
Academy of Sciences.

Lead content prompts recall
of recreational shoe by Nike
BEAVERTON, Ore. (AP) Nikc is recalling 110,000 pairs of
Little Ai r Jordan XIV sneakers for
chi ldren because of hi gh levels of
lead in the red pa int trim . '
Nike said Friday that · it disc overed the problem after a customer
complain ed that the paint was peel Ing and that a child may have swa llowed a p1 ece.
The rec all appli es on ly to the Lit
.t!c Ai r Jordan XIV in size s 2C
!hrough IOC wi th red trim and the
model' nu mber 132549 I 02.
01 hcr colors , sizes and mode l

By:

Jamea

PORTLAND - Portland PTO,
Monday, 7 p.m. at the school.

"Le
. .t • snow...
. l et Jt. snow... l et . snow ..
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EAST MEIGS - Eastern Band
Boosters; Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in the
Eastern High School band room.

ber of days .

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min B-12.
Fortified cereals and orange juice
with extra calcium, as well as pills,
could help compensate for deficien-

Calenda~"---------.--

clinic; Tuesday, 9 to 1f a.m. aM I to
3 p.m. Meigs County Health Department. Children to be accmnpani ed
by parent/guardian. Shot record to
be presented.

meeting. Monday, 7-:30 p.m.
Pomeroy Library. Dot Norman , head
of Athens County Pregnancy Crisis
Ce nter. to speak.

HOLZER DEi\.LTII,
HOTLINE

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translates to 'choosing darker, more
nutrient-rich vegetables and cereals
fcinified with vitamins.
.
Seniors should also consider eat: ·
ing foods with more fiber to keep
their intestines healthy. For example, someone could eat an apple
instead of just having a glass of
apple juice.
The modified pyramid also
stresses the need for water - the
equivalent of eight 8-ounce glasses a
day.
Seniors are · at greater risk for
dehydration than younger people
because their bodies are less effective at letting them know when they
need water, Lichtenstein said.
Lastly, the new pyramid is topped
with a nag suggesting that some
might need supple ments of calcium
and vitaminsD and B-12 . .
According to the study, many
.seniors do not get enough calcium,
in part because they drink less milk .
Limited exposure to the sun can cut
back on vitamin D, and many older ·
people do not properly absorb vita-

"This pyramid is especially
designed to give them a little more
guidance on how to optimize their
diet," said Alice Lichtenstein, a professor of nutrition at Tufts who
worked .on the study. " It's not suggesting that radical changes be

•••

:
CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take Off
: :Pounds Sensibly) meeting, at
• X::heshire United Methodist Church,
: •J0 - II a.m. Call Ann Mitchell at
, } 88 - 8004 for i~~!'"ation.
GALLIPOLIS - Overeater's
Anonymous at New Life Lutheran
Chtirch, 7 p.m. For information call

Our Babies Are
Getting Sick When:
They Don't Have To.
Please Give Them
Their Shots.

GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose
Diet Group open house 9 a.m. at
Grace United Methodist Church.
Low calorie refreshments will be
served . For information call Linda
· Martin at 256 - 6239.

•••

VINTON - Dean Petrie teaching
series on Revelation, each Tuesday
at Vinton Baptist Church, 6:30p.m.

...

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
FCE Homemakers , 10:30 a.m.,
C.H. McKenzie Agricultural Center.
Potluck lunch . All welcome to
attend .

*** .

GALLIPOLIS - GAHS choir
boosters meeting, 6 p.m. in the
choir room. All choir parents
should attend.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - PERI meeting, 3
p.m., at Gallia County Senior
Resource Center. Dr. Todd Ragan
speaking.
~

...

...

Wednesday, March 10

•••

VINTON -Vinton Baptist
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
teaching series on "The Jesus I
Never Knew" by Philip Yancey,
each Wednesday, 7 p.m . Nursery
provided.

•••
Thunday, March 11
•••

POMEROY- Narcotics Anonymous Living In The Solution

Free Vaccines for
Gallla County

7 days a week • 6 a.m. until 2 a.m.

446-4612 EXT. 292 ·

. . . . . ..

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m. St.
Peters Episcopal Church.

•••

•••

EVERGREEN - Springfield
Townhouse church service , 7 p.m.

•••

•••

. GALLIPOLIS - Miijlcles in
Recovery Group Narcotics Anonymous meeting, 9 p.m., St. Peters
Episcopal Church.

•••

MERCE RVILLE - Revival at
Mercervi lle Miss ionary Bap.t ist
Church M arch 8- I 3, 7 :30 p.m.
nightly. Dr. Curtis Sheets will be the
evangeli st. Special singing each
night.

•••

KANAUQA - Hoe Down at
AMVETS, 7:30 - 10:30 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Promise Ke~p­
ers breakfast at First Church of the
Nazarene, 8:3.0 a.m. Food, fellowship and guest speaker.

:Karat rratcfi
Diamonds - N Gold ...

•••

Let us take care of all..your jewelry needs!

We offer

•••

201-B 6th Street
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
Phone (304) 675· 7600
www.gallipolis.convkarat

GALLIPOLIS - &lt;;;~Ilia County ·
Ministerial Association Lenten Sermon Series, GraCe United
Methodist Church, noon. Father
William Myers and Bill and Jane
Lang from St. Louis Catholic
Church to speak on fortitude .
Lunch served by St. Louis Catholic
Church members to follow at I 2:30
p.m. Child care provided.
RIO GRANDE - Community
Health Fair at University of Rio .
Grande Student Annex , 10 a.m. - 2
p.m. Sponsored by the Holzer
School of Nursin g, BSN students.
Door prizes; screenings, refresh·

Tuxedos
......._
From $3995 and up

ABRIC~SHOP-

110 WEST MAIN • 992·2284 • POMEROY, ON.

BIDWELL - Revival seryices at
Garden Of. My Heart Holy Tabernacle , March II - I 3, 6 p.m. ni ghtly.
Special singers . Speakers include
Danny Logue on the lith, Donald
Swick on the 12th, Charles Glassburn on the 13th .

At the

GALLIPOLIS - Divorce.suppon
group at First Church of the
Nazarene, until April 29. Morning
session at ll a.m ., evening sessiori
at 7 p.m. Nursery offered for
evening session only. Call 446 1772 or 446 - 3504 for information.

Don't Miss The Prom.
First Rent Your
Tuxedo From THE
FABRIC SHOP,
Then Be Fashionably
·Late.

THE

Friday, Marcb 12

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Narcotics Anonymous meeting Tri County meeting, 6 I I Viand Street
(use side entrance), 7 :30p.m.

~eda~ ~utio:/tld4""""Mil ~
Gallia County
Health" Department

•••
•••

BIDWELL- Garden Of My
Heart Holy Tabernacle prayer service, 7 p.m.
·

, p;;e 'llted«4t~~
·~tJ~,. ~ .

...

•••

Reviv'!i

Saturday, March 13

PORTER- Bible study at Clark
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.

Z'a~ eem, 1~ 'Ntedtdtie ~

• f1amu

ments.

•

•••

HENDERSON, W.VA . - Western
square dancing, 7:30- 10 p.m.,
Henderson Recreation Building .

•••

Group, Sacred Hean Catholic
Church, 7 p.m .

Calendar:.___------~-

D
'

I

Board-CariiUad lntamalladlclna

M.M. All•, MD, boanktrtified ia iaterllll medi~iae, bu receatly ·
joiaed tbe mftlieal sllff at Plasnt Valley Hospilll,
.
Dr. Alam bas 14 years of experience in interaal medicine and was recendy
associaled with Marshall Uoivcnity'spulmonuy medicine fellowship program.
lib extensive intemll medicine experienCe inc!udes1pecial interest in
cirdiology, pulmoouy 1J!Cdicine, cudoainology and neurology.
Dr. Alam's offi~:e Is lout!!~ at138 Maia Stne~ New Haven, WV
(tlrt fortrrn of!iu of Dr. Dtut 7mrl) ud aU appoiatmeats raa be made by
ullia1 (304) 881·31J4 or (l04) W.JIJ5. Roan are Moaday to Friday,
9Lll. to 5 p.m. Walk~• welcome.
Dr. Alam and bis wife, Reshma Jabeen, reside in Mason County. They have a
young son and an iofantdaughtcr.

Special services/Screenings :· · ~.
. II' Pre-Employment &amp; Annual Medical Check-Ups
II' Diabetes, Thyroid &amp; Other Endocrine Diseases
II' High Blood Pressure &amp;Cholesterol Management
II' Diseases OfStomach, Liver &amp; Kidneys
II' Diseases Of The Brain &amp; Seizure Disorders
I"' Diseases Of The Heart &amp; Lungs
II' Screening For Sleep-Related Disorders
II' Immunization &amp; Pap Smears
II' Breathing Tests
v' Treatment OfArthritis
v' Cardiac Stress Tests

- APPDinbnants -

(3041 882-3134

or

(3041 882-3135

Pleasant Valley Hospital

�I

•

·Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Pa9' C6 • JJ~ ~tmn-JJenthul -

Travels with Max

Sunday, March 7, 1999·

Nancy Reagan reminisces in refurbished -presidential suite

band's favorite Atkins Royal Briar suite with the help of Reagan 's was the fastest trip we've e~er
By JEFF WILSON
. It was an education for me to see
Associated Press Writer
aftershave. The Reagans were the office, which happens to be,across made ," Mrs . Reagan laughed.
It was all she needed, thougl).
and learn about Mexico and meet
LOS ANGELES (AP)
first to stay in the suite when it the street, and the staff at the
They
moved to the Bel-Air hou~
Ronald
Reagan
Presidential
many of its first class people. And 1 Ronald
Reagan's
famous opened in 1984.
after leaving the White House .
mean first class.
"Where's the rest of me?" scene
Mrs . Reagan paused at the 47 Library in Simi Valley.
Hotel director Tim Groves sai4
The suite is stocked with Rea1 stayed with Jose and his parents in the 1942 classic " Kings Row" photographs chronicling the couthe
suite has appealed to a wide
for three days; what . a bea~ul
was playing· on a television while pie's lives during the White House gan books on night stands in the
Nancy Reagan reminisced about years . One showed them floating two l&gt;edrooms. There are presi· variety of people, from Elton
home they had in Acapulco. H" par·
better
days in the presidential in their canoe Tru Luv at their dential coffee mugs , a bowl of John , who stayed for a month, to
ents treated me like I was a
·
jelly beans and even a Gideon former President George Bu~J\,
sador from the US.
suite at the Century Plaza Hotel.
Santa Barbara, Calif., ranch .
Bible inside the armoire in the head s of staie and Fortune 500
"
The
memory
that
comes
first
"I'm
old-fashioned,
I
know,
Here are some of the places we
CEOs.,
.
master
bedroom .
toured : Puerto Vallarta, Taxco, to mind is my husband standing but I thought it would be so
Hollywood even used it for the
on
"the
balcony
and
throwing
those
·
romantic
if
he
was
playing
a
15
vtdeos
of
There
are
also
Gu~dalaJara, Mexico City, Texua·
can, Cholulua, Pubela and many
paper planes," laughed the former ukulele ," Mrs. Reagan said, Reagan movies, including " Knute 1996 comedy " Celtic Pride ."
And th e suite is sure to be a hit
Olhers.
first lady on a tour of the 8,000- recalling the photo taken on their Rockne, All American ," •" Bedtime for Bonzo" and " Hell cats of with Republican bigwigs.
I saw to it that Jose was well paid.
square-foot suite.
25th wedding anniversary.
" We're not saying this is a
ldon 'tknowhowoldJosewas atthe
Sure enough, on_ one of the
" I don't have a ukulele, " Rea- the Navy ."
~y MAX TAWNEY
Republican
stronghold or any Mrs
.
Reagan
fondly
recalled
many walls, there's a framed pho - gan told her thin day.
A letter from old Mexico recently ttme of his fatal auto crash but he
thmg
,
"
Grove
s ·said . " We ' re jus(
the
day
the
suite
's
sec
urity
featograph of the Gipper dispatching
" I said, 'That's OK, you can
informed me that my dear friend must have been around 30 His fam·
acknowledging
the history here."
tures helped her put one over on
a paper plane over the side of the hum, "' she laughed.
Jose Rodriguez had been killed in an ily sure has , my sympathy and he
The Reagan suite, whic h takes the presidential pre ss corps.
auto acci dent. I met this very intelli - will always be in my memm:ies of suite's balcony.
She had found a post-pres id en·Mex
ico.
_
-_J.--'f'he
hote
l
recently
refurbished
up
the entire 30th floor of the
old
gent young man in Acapulco many
1
have
traveled
to
old
Me
co
the
presidenttal
quarters
where
hotel's
tower,
is
surrounded
by
an
c
y
hom e in nearby BeJ, Air and· ·- - - - - - - - - - - years ago.
Reagan
stayed
when
visitinD
Los
outdoor
terrace
and
floor-to-ceilwanted
the president to see it.
: I asked Jose if he had a car, he more than any other foretgn co ntry.
"
Wh
at
she
didn ' t want was the Lucinda: What did King Arthur
I celebrated my 85th birt day
Angeles in the 1980s, now calling ing windows with panoramic
•aid , he did.
·Ronald
Reagan
Suite.
Also
a
vtews
of
the
Pacifi
c
Ocean,
Bevmedia
to
follow
them up there .
to hiscou~
·
it
the
: I then asked htm if he would like January 27th wtlh a few o f y
So
JUSt
before
a
Century
P1aza
favorite of other celebrities, the erly Htll s, Hollywood a,nd downMarilyn: I want you oil to go Ill •
to take me on a tour of old Mex ico. friends and 1 think my world trave
speech,
she
told
the
president
and
are
about
over.
But
when
they
bu
suite
is
now
available
to
anyone
town
Los
Angeles.
knight school.
He answered "I would be glad to."
The tower was built with secu- Secret Service " we're going ,"
· Jose had just graduated from col- me up on Mound Hill my· happy - for $5,400 a night.
eagan didn't attend the suite 's rity in mind , including reinforced and she quickly hustled them
lege and it was three months before memories of my trave 1s ·m 70 for,
h
dedication.
Alzheimer's disease concrete walls, bulletproof glass , . down th e private elevator to a
he would enter medical school. He eign countrie s will be buried wtt
me however, al) my travel photos
has silenced the Great Communi- a private elev ator and secured waiting statton wagon. The pres iwanted to be a doctor like his dad.
stairwell. It also has a private dent cro uched out of sight in th e
I asked him what hi s charges wtll be here for my family and cator, who turned 88 on Feb . 6.
It took two years to redecorate kitchen and personal butler ser- back scat and they were whis ked
would be and he said, "No charge." friend s to look at and admire.
the Reagan rooms , down to details vice .
off to Bel-Air unnoti ced.
He wanted to practice speaking Engincluding
bottles
of
Mrs.
Reagan
's
Bennet!
Hall
Images
created
"He raced through the hou se ,
·
·
lish with me .
Max Tawney is a longtime Gal·
Tubereuse
perfume
said
, ' All right.' and we left It
and
her
husthe
theme
for
the
redecorated
I said, "You ha ve a deal " and lipolis businessman and frequent
away we went . I must say it was I0 contributor to the Times Sentinel.
of the happiest days of my hfe.
Gr~: What newspaper do cattle
OCTOIIR 5RT (PG) 2:1S, 4:40, 7:15,1:40
read?
Slef:!hanie: The Doily Mcos.
IWTIUTHEPAST (PG ·I3) 2:15, 4:4G, 7:t0, 9:40
WASHINGmN (AP) - A sim- for the screening, officials said.
ple screening test for blood in the
About 129,000 Americans, most
AIIALTIE THIS (R) 2:20, 4:45, 7:20, 9:45
bowel can reduce by up to one-third past the age of 50, are diagnosed
the .death rate from colon cancer, the each year with colorectal cancer, and
second leading cause of cancer ' about 56,000 die each year. lt .is the
death in the United States, a study second most common cancer killer,
says.
just behind lung cancer.
The finding , to be published
The fecal occ ult blood test used
Wednesday in the · Journal of the in the Minnesota research hils long
National Cancer Institute, is prompt- been a common part of physical
ing a national campaign to encour- examinations.
age people over age 50 to take the
Using a card with small inserts,
test, because they account for most patients collect specimens for tlie
of the 56,000 U.S. colon cancer tests at home. Fecal specimens from
deaths each year.
several bowel movements are placed
Minnesota researchers monitor- mto the insets, and the self-sealing
ing the health of 46,000 volunteers card is then mailed or delivered to a
. Get A Jump On Spring
since 1976 have found that those doctor 's office where a chemical is
who take the fecal occult blood test applied to each specimen. If the
each year have 33 percent fewer chemtcal turns blue, it is evidence of
New Shlw Cupet $15.95 sq. yd.
deaths from colon cancer than peo- blood.
l•stllled l•oluding Pad
ple who do noJ.take the test Those
If the test is positive, patients
tested every other year, the study then undergo a full colon examinafound, have a 21 percent reduced tion with a fl exible tube, Bond said.
Commercial Carpet $4.95 sq. yd •. ·
rate of colon cancer death.
Thi s exam, called a colonosc!lpy,
"When you have a positive test will find any evidence of cancer or
for blood, the likelihood of finding a of precancerous growths call ed
Burber Cupet $7.95 sq. yd;
growth in the colon is about 35 per- polyps.
'
cent," said Dr. John H. Bond, the
Removing the polyps, performed
study's
co-author.
"About
9
percent
during
the full colon exam, stops the
In Spring Colors
MAX TAWNEY; LEFT, Is shown with his friend Jose in Acapulco,
will have cancer, and the rest will , growth from becoming cancer in
Mexico.
·
·
have significant precancerous most cases, he said.
MEIGS C::..t.RPFI' .1: inX:ORATING CEN,.'I..,'ER,..
Court-ordered bagpipes are the punishment
polyps in the colon.''
"Thts type of cancer is preceded
Bwineaa Rt. 7-Hobaon Rd., Middleport, Ohio
An analysis of the long-running in 95 percent of the cases by slow ly
FORT LUPTON. Colo. (AP) 882-8l'78
study in 1993 suggested th.at annual growing polyps ," Bond said. " By
.,
They don' t take requests at thi s
tests could reduce deaths from colon taking out the polyps, one \'an
Open ·Mo,...Sai 8:30-5:00
after-hours club·and there's definite cancer, and now the new analysts reduce subsequent development of
'
'
ly nn karaoke The DJ is a police
shows that even biennial tests can cancer by 90 percent"
officer, a nd he 's ready to bounce
have a dramatic effect, said Bond, a
anyone who dances or ta lks.
professor of medicine at the UniverEmploy in g something li ke the
sity of Mmnesota and a staff physia'·ersion therapy in the movie " A
cian at the Minneapolis Veterans
Clockwork Orange," Munic ipal
Affairs.
Judge Paul Sacco requtres people
" It is
very valuable way to
convicted of violatmg the c ity 's
identify people who are healthy and
noise ordinance Lo listen to mus1c
have no symptoms, who neverthe~
they don't like.
less have a developing cancer in
The noise scofflaw s - most of
their colon."
whom got in trouble for playing
The results confirm findings
thei r s tereos tou loud - gather once
from two earlier studies in Europe,
a month. on a wee kend night, to lis- ·
he said.
ten to court-se lec ted songs. The
Prompted by the research results,
offenders arc mostly young, so there
federal health agencies on . Tuesday
is a heavy dose of lounge music.
announced a new campaign to
Durin g the most recent sess1on,
encourage all Americans over 50 to
the group of seven heard one of the
take the fecal occult blood test
judge's own jazz compositi ons,
"The good news is that we can
''I'm Sleeping in My Car."
prevent many deaths from colorectal
Seventeen-year-old David Mascancer through screening," said Surcarenas was apparently scared
geon General David Satcher. "If
straight
'
you ' ve celebrated your 50th birth" I' m not going to Jam no more,."
day and have never been screened
he said. "I took my stereo out
for colorectal cancer, start now."
already. I dqn 't want to be hassled
Under a program that went into
no more. "
effeci
last year, Medicare now pays
Court · coordinator
Patri ce

":page

'

r

I'

a

"

,,
I

'''

.I'I

Redeanh, wh o suggested the onehour m~ sic treatment , said she got
her first playlist by a.•king her 17year-o ld " what the kids would
hate. "
The worst se lec tion was the
" Barney" theme so ng, said Ryan
Bowles, 21 , addi ng, " If you laugh
they ct te you for contempt "
The DJ policeman . Joe Morales,
said there'ssomething ann oy ing for
everyone, and it works . He reca lled
having problems " with one kid three
or four times. He came here once
and he hasn 't been back."
Most of the offenders are rap-lov ing tee ns. But not aiL
·
"Th ere was a guy who was 45
who got a ticket for li ste mng to Bob
Seger, " the judge said.
Sacco, who is 45 himself and has
been playing blues guita.r since he
was I 0 , said the point he is trying to
make IS that " it's wrong tO Impose

IJv JACKIE HYMAN
' . ·WEST HOLLYWOOD, Calif.
(~)-If there's one thing you can
l:Qunt on from former · teeri star
tifollv Ringwald, it's to do the unex·

peCted.

·

·

. After a string of hit films ("Pret·
ty in Pink," ~'Sixteen Candles"), she
left Hollywood to spend four years
!n France, shooting films and falling
in love.
· Since returning to America three
years ago, s hc•s chosen many of her
roles by quality rather than size.
Now, in the capital of filmdom,.
she's performing not in front of the
earner~ but in a Pulitzer Prize,winning play, "How I Learned to
Drive" by Paula Vogel, co-starring
with Brian Kerwin through April 4
at the Mark Taper Forum of the Los
Angeles Music Center.
"Not that many plays come along
of this quality for a woman. It's a
great love story, complete with all of
, ~if~: tragedy," the 31-year-old actress
~id over breakfast at the tiny
tJeights Cafe in West HollywoOd.
) ; She wore her hair lucked beneath

a French;&amp;tyle maroon beret, a New York. Also I'm
ly, ,; with Gabrielle Anwar
rclninder--6f her love affair with that . working with somebody
and Sean Aslin.
rou'n!rY. She plans to return to Paris different, ~rian Kerwin. "
" I really , look more at the
this summer (o( a long vacatio~ and
The play cuts back
project (than the size of the
to vi•it her boyfriend of seven years. and fonh in time as it
role)," Ringwald said. " If
really do feel like, when I'm in tells
the sometimes
it's a good project, I don't
France with my bo· 'end and his · funny, ~metimes painful
care if I have two lines, I
family, it's so gro Jing; it puts . siory of a young woman
want to be involved. If I' m
everything in perspective," Ring- whose uncle makes sexunot sure but the character's
wald said.
al advances wkile giving
fantastic, I' ll look at it, but
" I'll be here and get so obsessed her driving lessons.
·it's really hard to be good in
with something having to do with
" My character ... feels
a bad movie."
· of place," said Rmg.
Ringwald
my career, and then I geqhere for a o~t
"I love film, " she said.
week and I can't, imagine why that wald. " I relate to it so much . I' m not "It's hard to say I love it.more (than
was so .important," she said.
referring directly to the incest, I'm theater). ·There's certain things you
After Paris, she, moved to N,ew referring to the vulnerability, the can do on stage th at appeal to me as
York. That was where she first per- feeling a little out of place.''
an actor. But if I were to' direct,
formed in "How I Learned to
"It (the play) doesn't really have which I hope to do someday, it
Driv"" for six months off-Broad- a message but it's great to see this would be film .
way.
character come through fire relative, "There's also something nice
"I was worried when I said I ly unscathed. It's a very positive, about directing, that it's not based on
would go back and do it (in Los very funny show, believe it or not," your personal appearance, " . she
Angeles)," she said. " What if it 's she said.
added.
not fresh and new any more? I had to
Her upcoming movies include
" I like to eat what I like to eat,
be connected to it to do a good job.'' "Killing Mrs. Tingle," a Miramax· and I like to drink red wine. I want
She said she's having no trouble. Dimension film with Helen Mirren. to be healthy, but! don't care about
"There are things that come to me She has also filmed " Hearts and all the vanity issues.! want to -have a
·. during ,the rehearsal · period that I Bones" with Keifer Sutherland and woman's body, not a boy's body, an
,can 't believe I didn't think of in Daryl Hannah, as well as ''Kimber· anorexic body.

"l

Web cartoons are a·n imating.TV's
future
.
'

..

'

·, NEW YORK (AP) - Can a lillie
~ink donkey find success and happipess on television? That depends on
~ow she fares on the World Wide
y.'eb.
' Cartoon
Network,
which

mated or live action," said Jeff Mor- '
ris, Showiime's senior vice 'president
for pew media.
The campy · "WhiriGirl," a
hybrid of " Wonder Woman" and
".Max Headroom," pits its raven-

unspools toons nonstop for cable TV
yiewefll, is now using its Web site as
• proving ground,. for animated
shorts. Ne~ online cartoons that
~lick with the point-and-click crowd
dould soon find· themselves
tlploaded to the television big time.
~ Visit Cartoon Network Online
(www.cartoonnetwork.com) and this ·
week you'll fin.d two episodes of
'l Pink Donkey and the Fly," as well
ols !he firsi · installment of "B.
Happy." Each ' is Cheeky, riotously
j:Oiorful and sufficiently, well, ani· . Pity Kitty's fish. .
.
gram content that adapts to every
lnated 10 be a reasonable facsimile
"We're· just scratching the sur- media platform, b(oadcast and Interface of interactivity in these first net alike. .
.
Pf cartoons as you'd view them on ones,
but our goal is to make good '
Can WhiriGirl rise to this chal010ur TV set.
.
,&lt; - ~at's more, these "Web Pre- interactive entertainment," said Sam lenge? A bodacious super-heroine
lniet'e Toons" come with a comput- Register, creative director of Car- who should "dress more warmly, she
er-centric twist: interactivity. Mouse toon Network Online . ."lf you want arrived last Friday ·on Shqwtime in
' cady? You can choose how Pink to just watch a cartoon, shut your its first originai.Web series ,- with
, prospect, of course, of a " Whirl' ankey inight reach th-e apple dan- computer
off and turn· on the TV· and the
Girl"
spinoff.
·
·
oJing from a distant branch. You can have a cartoon pushed at you."
"
Point taken. Still, when push
"Some m!)n,ths down tqe road
decide if B. Happy, a "bluebird of
h
&lt;
h t
·
we'll take a look at whether we want
~appiness'" with a nasty streak, comes to s ove .or t e oon tmpre·
ihould succeed in his mission 10 · sarios, it all comes down t6 preuy to develop it as a television pr!lject
much the same thing: Create pro- on our (cable) network- either aniteep the bully cat from gobbling

P

•

"Townies," her most recent telovi·
sion appearance. was in the Lifetime
TV.,movie "Twice Upon a Time," in
which she sang a duet with her
'
father, a musician..
" I .used to sing with his band,"
the actress explained. "My first performance was in front of the state
fair in California when I was 3 1/2. I
had no doubt I was going to be a jazz
singer when I grew up." ·
"When I was 8 or 9, my family
got involved with community the·
ater in Sacramento, my brother and
sister and I. Then I became focused
on acting," she said.
After making her professional
stage debut in the musical ''Annie,"
Ringwald played her first film role
at 1;3, in Paul Mazursky's "Tern-

: LONDON (AP) - Richard E.
i)rant is dressed in what he calls his
l'l8th-century grand fop gear" to
play Sir Percy ' ~lakeney, the gallant
and enduring anstocrat who leads a
dangerous second life as the Scarlet
~.IJ;npeme\.
·
,
r; -In tight breeches and white stock~gs, the 6-foot, 2-inch acto( also
wears 2-inch heels. "They're JUSI to
annoy people who are height·
iinpaircd," he deadpans.
t · Television is preparing yet anoth·
~r screen retelling of "The Scarlet
fimpernel, " based on the Baroness
Qrczy's tales of derring-do and double-dealing set in 1792 "near the eliof the French Revolution.
: This version, a co-production of
~&amp;E in the United States and the
I;!BC in Britain, with ~me A~s­
llalian money as well, wtll have tis
~erican premiere on A&amp;E Sunday
at 9 p.m. EST.
: The $9 million sequence of films
eontirlues with two further two-hour
movies, which can be viewed
ipiiependently. Their air dates have
not yet been scheduled.
1 Besides Grant in the title role, the
~.St includes American actress Elizabtl)h McGovern ("Ragtime," "Ordi,

max

•
nary People") lis Str
Percy's French
wife, Marguerite, and Englishman
Martin Shaw as Robe~pie_rre's da~, tardly he.nc~man, ~hauvehn, who JS
Marguente s one-It me ·10ver.
" The baroness raises nothing of
the kind," says producer Julian Murphy. "They are very pure books."
· This first'. of three movies w.as
shot largely lfl the Czech Repubhc,
standing in for 18th-Century Paris as
it did lasl year in the Liam Neeson
film of "Les Miserables." Both films
used the rural town of Zatac, wtth
" its extraordinary rundow~ old center," as Murphy descnbes 11.
On this particular day, cast and

crew have relocated to Wrotham
Park just north of London. Here, taking over the same state!~ home used
nearly ~ d,eca~; ag~ tn . Kcn~;th
Branagh s film Peter s Fnends, an
elaborate intrigue starts to unfold
whereby ~he · vi~wer discovers the
Ptmpernel s true tdenllty well before
the other characters do.
The story has been told and retold
since " The Scarlet Pimpernel". was
published in 1905 by Baroness
Emma Orczy, a Hungana~-born
Enghshwoman. The baroness ~ovel
was rejected by so many pubhshers
that she and her husband, Montagu
Barstow, produced 11 as a play . .

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pest." She received a Golden Globe
nomination.
She said she. steers her Fareer by
instinct. " I really don 't think it pays.
to have a grand plan. You have to do
what makes you happy."
Although Hollywood legend
holds that youthful stars have a hard
time when they grow up, she's made
a relatively snioolh transition.
,
" !think there's a period in everyone 's life when they struggle in their
career no matter what their age i ~."

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" I' m ·not overweight but if I
starved myself, I couldn ' t have a
boy 's body." '
As for the future, " Writing and
directing arc the main things, (and)
having a f~ ly.... I imagine when I
stan directing, it woulil be something that I've written, but I want to
wait until I'm ready."
After the short-lived series

'n
pursuit once more of the ever-popular Pimpernel
•

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MitCh 7, 111111

haired, spandex-clad champion . ~~=ALL~U.=A=:r=s=u~.oo=:44:8:01123::~~
against the world's vilest · media
megalomaniac. Morris said the net·
work, which acquired the two-yearold online c6mlc strip, has ordered
28 animated episodes. A five-minute
chapter will be posted each friday
(\\'Ww.showtimeonline.com)
to
accompany that evening's sci-fi
block of Showtime cable fare.
Even before Cartoon Network
F1tl Conl•d•.nt
and Showtime took the plunge,
dozens of Web sites were embracing
animation, and no wonder. Animalion can look good, even great, on
the Web, .Simple shapes, fat lines,
·
· can
bold co1ors and hmited
malton
f
rtabl
f
lh
com o
y con or(ll 1o e "'
... eb's
current technical limitations. By
·
.,.
·
" s1reammg
con 1ras1, I't ve-ac 1ton
video" available on many Web sites .I
an d JUmpy
as your I'
·, •__ _
1Aook s Has f·uzzy
·
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•
unt arnet' s smm horne movtes.
""IIIIIP
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else: ·
" You' ve got guys go ing around
now with IS-inch speakers in a
small ca. with a 1.000-watt amplifi er." the •judge sa id . "Maybe the
ordi nance will he lp them save the11

•

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Mark W. Nolan, MD

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sunday, March 7, 1999

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shoul\1 be harvested.
GALLIPOLIS - Tlje two educaThey also recommend related tim tiona] programs scheduled 'for this ~er stand improvement practices to
)lleek focus on the topics of timber · help you achieve your ownership
marketing for land own'ers and forage goals and advise you in environmen'
management for beef, dairy and tal protection practices. Although
sheep producers.
ODNR can provide limited markel: If you own forested land, at some ing assistance, you may want to conpoint you have probably wondered sider hiring a consulting forester
about the marketability of the timber who, for a fee, can provide marketon your property. Many landowners ing services from timber volume and
Ill'• not able to negotiate or verify value e~timation to sale c;.!osure . .
Landowners usually fidQ. that payoffers, for their timber because like
lhost people, they :are not trained in · ing aconsultant to assist tith timber
forestry or timber marketing, and marketing not only pays for itself, but
therefore have little infoft11alion on in most cases results in greater silliswhich to base their own price.
faction for the seller and better en viSome may 'also .wonder abo'ut the ronmental resul~. To learn more
environmental effects of a timber har- about marketing .~our timber, or getvest. These are common problems ling the help that you need, attend the
and questions that• arise when workshop ori Monday, or call the
landowners consider timber sales. Extension office at 740-446-7007 and
These issues will be addressep at a request a fact sheet.
The second program this week, dn
timber marketing program. ~cheduled for Monday, March 8 from 7- the subject of forage management, is
9:3~ p.m. at the C.H. McKenzie Agri- scheduled for Thursday, March II ,
cultural Center.
beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the. C.H.
-For those who have little or no McKenzie Agricultural Center. For·. experience in woodland manage- age specialist and author of "South.ment or timber marketing , it is very ern Forages," Dr. Carl Hoveland of
important to seek the assistance of a the ' University of Georgia, will be
professional forester. The Ohio hefe to. discuss ways in which beef,
Department of Natural Resources dairy, and sheep producers can maxtODNR) · Division of Foreslry imize their use of fescue. Other
employs foresters throughout the issues that will be covered include
stale w.ho will, at no ·cost, provide
· (Continued on D8)
assistance in selecting trees that

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,__,ELLU

Bruce joins
Wiseman
ReaLEstate
sales .ataffGALLIPOLIS - Robert Bruce
has been added to the staff of Wise:
man Real Estate Inc. as a new sales
representative.
Bruce and his wife, Diane, are
from Columbus, but have resided in
. Gallipolis for the last 25 years. He'
graduated 'from Ohio State University in 1974 and has been a local business owner for the last 21 years.
From 1966 to 1969, he served as
a lieutenant In the U.S. Army and

AWARD WINNERS - AEP's River Trans- .· Sonny Haynes; river traffic manager; and
portatlon Division won Ita third Fuel Supply Steve Edana, human resources manager; third
Homecoming award. Calabratlng the accom· .,row, Ron Young, managing director-trans- ·
pllahmant were, from left, front, Chuck Ebetlno, portatlon; Mike Welsend, safety and health
senior vice president-fuel supply; Keith Dar· supervisor; .!ohn Reynolds, retired port capling, River Transportation Dlvl&amp;ion general taln; Sid Glbbeaut, mate; Diana Harbrecht,
manager; and Charlotte Roush, h.uman senior administrative secratllry; and Tony
rasource representative; second ro.w, Bob Bumblco, director-human resources service.
Taylor, port captain; Hank Tulodzleskl, malnte- delivery/fuel supply.
• nance manager; Ray McKinney, second mat~;

AEP.'s river transportation unit
recognized for stressing safety

LAKIN, W.Va. -American Electric Power River Transportation Divisi'ln (RTO) proved recently that safety and productivity can coexist in the
workplace.
The division, headquartered at
Ohio River milepost 257, won AEP
Fuel Supply's 1998 Homecoming
award. Charles A. Ebetino Jr., senior
. vice president-fuel supply, presented
. the award recenUy at the company's
· annual safety meeting' in Lancaster.
The division also won the award in
1990 aiid 1996.
.
Homecoming is a bronze sculpture depicting an employee returning
horne safely to his family. Fuel Supply presents the award each year to
its mining or transportation operation
that exhibits exceptional perfonnance
in safety, in combination with l\n
overall safety and health program that
promotes· continuous improvement
and employee involvement.
"Our Homecoming award is a
symbol of v;hat we are trying to
accomplish in our safety and health
program," said Ebctino. "All of.our
effor·ts a~e focused on liringing
employees home safely every&lt;day.
"And, since Fuel Supply operations 'traditionally rank among the
best perfonners in the nation in
tenns of safety within their respective
industries, -the Homecoming award
signifies a truly outstanding accomplishment. "
The division's 333 off1c;e, towboat
and maintenance employees com-

.

pleted 1998 without experiencing a lion tons--is I 1.4 pe'rcent above the .
disabling injury. In addition, on Nov. division 's best previous year. ·
14, employees reached ·the one mil"The AEP River Transportation
· lion work hour mark without a lost- Division maintains an exceptional
time accident. Each day the division safety program for their employees,•:
extends its record-setting safety per- said Joseph Saboe, commander of the
. fonnance , which today stands at 423 U.S . Coast Guard's Port of Hunting; .
days and 1.329,368 work hours.
ton (W.Va.). "Congratulations ar&lt;
The United Steelworkers of Arner- ·due for their outstanding perfor~
·
ica Local #14811 represents the divi- mance. ·
sian's hourly employees, and the
"I look forward to our continued
local union officials and safety com- partnership in promoting the safe;
mittee members play an integral role environmentally sound transporla"
in the division's safety program. ·
tion of vital fuels and other com:
"We are always seeking opportu- ·modities on our rivers needed to keeP:
nities to enhance our safety perfor- our nation going."
mance," says ·Keith Darling, RTD
· Darling says employee involve-:
general manager, "We reali ze that a menl is the key to worldng safely. .
safe workplace is a productive one as
"W,e want our employees to pro-.
well. The reward comes whe·n our vide input and suggestions on ways:
employees return home to their ram- of doing their jobs safer and more
ilies safe and healthy at the end of efficiently," he explained . "Removing
their towboat assignment or ·work barriers to safe work perfonnance is:
shift."
one of the keys to our effort, and the
The ·division's accident incident best way to do that is to listen and.
rate for 1998 (number of disabling respond to employee concerns:"
'injuries per 200,000 hours worked) ·
"Our employees are experts a~
was zero, as compared to the mar- what they do and we work cooperaitime inland river towing industry tively with the company to establish· .
average of 5.2 for this safety measure. safe work practices," explained Ron,
The record-setting safet y perfor- Greathouse, the division's union safe•
man ce took place within the context ty committee chainnan. "We want to
of a record.-breakin g production year. · be the best at what we do, and tha(
During 1998, the division transport - includessafety."
.
ed 23.5 million tons of coal for AEP
Another highlight for the divisioO:
System generating plants. In addition, took pl ace in June last year wher(
it moved some 4.5 million ton s of Darling acceptecj, the U.S. Coas~
coal, stone and other aggregates for
(Continued on D8)
outside cusiomers. '!J!e total-- 28 mil-

Socially responSible investin-g .

• Activation Fee

{On Rate Plans of $20 and Above)

Robert Bruca·

(Continued on D8) .

$L9195 Includes.: ·
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'

Timber, forage topics
at seminars this week

•

s1~~ggs

SUndlty, MII'Ch 7, 111!'

By ·l:fAL KNEEN
maple, oak, hickory, beech, ash, dog • • Cicadas." Give the extension a call at
- . !'OME~OY- This is the year for wood, hawthorn,' magnolia, willow, 992,6696 br drop on by for your own
the return o( the 17•year ~riodlcal hollies, apple, peach, cherry and copy. Copies will also be available at
cicada for Meig•r-~~orthern· Gallia, • pellf. Other sm~ller planis preferred ' the four Meigs County public
and Jackson-wuntie5:'This insect is include: Rose of Sharon, rose, rasp- libraries.
J ;5 inches 'in length; bl~k in color berty, grape, black-eyed Susan ,
Has your family been farming the
i.vith reddish-orange eyes with cleaf SP,irea, rhododendron, vibumum,
san'le rami for the past 100 years?
---~~~an~d~i~o~range veins. The adul!$ junipers and arborvitae.
in May through July.
Control tactics are varied, but ar~ You are ·eligible to become recog: Tile _..::-__ ,_ cicada is recog- most important to young plants new- nized as one of Ohio'&amp; Outstanding
ru~~ by its loud ~uuing SQ~d [hat ly planted this year or in the past few Century Farms. This award is sponIS ~to dele~ ·predators and. to years. The loss of substantial num- sored .by. Ohio's Country Journal,,,
attract fe"!al~ cicadas. The fell!ate-· bers..oftwigs impair tbe fonnation of Ohio Department of. Agriculture and
c1cada causes the expectant damage- --- ~essliry plant food resources need- the 'Ohio Historical Society. A two!O the small pencil:size twigs of over edtor·survival. Prevent egg laying on page application fonn is available at •
270 species of plants by laying her the twigs by using 'netting (maximum the·exten~ion office.
Jertili~d eggs into the stem. In six to .of quarter inch mesh) when the first
) 0 weeks, the egg! hatch and the 'next male . song is heard. Make sure to
Reminder to potential private and
J.~nerations of young nymphs fall to enclose the bottom of the ~et.
public pesticide applicators that the
I~e ground wtth !he.weakened tw1gs
Secondly, delay pi8J1ting of trees Ohio Department of Agriculture will
o· complete thetr hfe cycle under- and shrubs until later in the summer be testing in Meigs County on March .
:groUII
r the next. I 'I years. .
or (all. Prune out flagging twigs in 9, starting at 6 p.m. at the Meigs
- The adult· ' •
do not bite,"&amp;ut which eggs have been laid within County Extension office loca!ed on ·
.)Ire a nuisance and hazard as they three weeks of damage to reduce root Mulberry Heights Gust behind the
flutter m large numbers as we try to damage in forthcoming years. Week- Holzer Clinic); Pomeroy. Please nolienjoy the pleasures o.f being outdoors ly spraying with;chemicals; such as . fy the extension.' office of your inten·~the late spring and early summer. · carbaryl (Sevin) or chlorpyrifos tion to take the test so the state
:, The local "brood" last appeared in (Dursban), may be used to control inspector can be ready for you. My
~982 and its immature nymph Guve- adult cicadas in home orchards and office will liave an open discussion
nile fonn) have been feasting on plant around the yar.d: Remember that concerning indlviduat ·pestidde quessap found in root systems of trees and · bees are sensitive to these chemicals tions starting at 4:30p.m:
shrubs. Mature nympl')s will emerge__ especially when plants are in flower.
(Hal knaan .Is Malga County;• .
from the soil and climb up onto the Ro)low chemical label directions.
extension agent lor agriculture
For further information , Ohio · and natural resources, Ohio State
stems and trunks ?f pi~to trans·
fonn themselves mto mature adu lt State University .Extension Entomol- University.) .
cicadas in May and early June. , agist Dave Shetlar anp Celeste Wei. After mating, the female cicada ty have written a new fact sheet, enti_will seek out i.ts preferred trees, like tied "Perio,dical and ' Dog-Day'

Paging

ne

D

Pe·
riodical ·c·icadas.'to rfaake
.
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.

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Section

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· GOES TO .STATE COMPETITIQN - Members ·of the River Valley High School FFA team that want to the state competition In
Jhe agrlcuHural sale&amp; division -e, from left, Beth Walker, Raehel
Fallon, ·Jimmy Fitch and E.rln Shillington. The team· placad second In the district competllion.

River Valley FFA chapter
~dvances in competition

By MARK SMITH
GALLIPOLIS - Socially responsible investing is a
relatively new concept in the securities industry. To help
you understand more about this approach to investing,
we have provided answers to the mosl frequently asked
question~.
.
~
What is socially~ponslble Investing and wh~
we bearing the te ~used now? Socially responsible
investing is an inv · tment philosophy that allows individuals to invest:in a manner consistent with their own
values and beliefs about social and environmental
issues. They can invest in companies that have policies 09nsistent with their
own beliefs and values or in mutual funds thai invest solely in such companics.
There are ~wo approaches to selecting socially responsible investments:
Companies whose products, services and methods are socially and environmentally sound can be actively soughl ("proactive selection"). Conversely,
companies can be"avoided if they engage in pobr social· or environmental
practices ("passive selection" or '.'screening"). .
Socially-conscious investing has shown a marked increase in popularity.
The current wave of "e.thical investing" started in the early 1980s, with the
anti-apartheid divestiture movement, when .American corporations with
Soulh African operations found themselves the target of investment boycotts
led by church groups and public employee pension fun.ds . Eventually,
awareness expanded to issues such as the environment, nuclear arms and
family values. ·
.
What are some or tbe criteria used In socially responsible investing?
Are there mutual funds tbat emphasize different social aspects? Exampies of companies that might be avoided using passive selection criteria
include those with significant revenues from nuclear power, weapons, alcohol, tobacco, gaq~bling, or South Afri~. Some investors even avoid U.S.

CHESHIRE - The River Valley High School FFA Chapte r recently participated in the agricultural sales and job interview district competitions at
Gallia Academy High SchooL
,
·
.
'
The job interview contest is a mock interview complete with a restime,
cover letter and followup letter. Jaime Van Sickle, a senio~at RVHS , placed
first iii the agricultural business job interview contest. Scott Payne placed
sixth in tfte agricultural science division. Jodie Stout placed ninth in the agriGALLIPOLIS- Many producers of tobacco, corn, wheat, hay, veg~ ultural production division. Van Sickle proceeded to the state competition,
· etable crops, elc., have applied for the 1999 Disast~r Assistance Proheld March 6.
. In the' agricultural sales competition, a four-member team uses public gram.
If you have not applied for the program and have a low yield and/or
~pealdng and customer relations to sell the product of their choice: They each
participate in three areas - a written test, customer relations '!r phone sld lls, pOO""')Ial_ity in 1998, please contact the office. Fanners will be eligiand a product demonstration.
.
. . ble for compensation either for losses suffered to the 1998 crops (sin: This year 's team, Rashel Fallon, Jimmy Fitch, Erin Shillihgton and Beth gle year)_or losses in any three or more years between 1994 and 1998
Walker, placed second in the district. B~lh Walker was the first high indi- (multi-year) .
vidual in the competition. The team also proceeded to the state COm!'!'tilion
All fanners will get a specia125-35 percent premium discount on
i:m 1)1arch 6.
crop insurance coverage in 1999. T~s incentive is the first element
' .11·
1

Treasuries because the monies could be used for defense purposes.
,
Companies that are sought for ·investment (proactive selection) can
. include those with positive records in community involvement, the environ:
· men!, occupational health and safety, consumer protection, ·product safelY,
etc.
.
.
There is a range of socially conscious mutual funds available to inveslom
Details of a particular fund's emphasis and investment approach may bC
· found in the fund's prospectus. Investors should read the prospectus care;
fully before investing or sending money.
·
•
What are tbe advantages and disadvantages of investing In sucli
funds?Socially conscious funds appeal to individuals who wish to invest i~
a manner consistent with their own values and beliefs about social and en vi•
· ronmeniat issues.
·
Although socially responsible issues have performed well recently;
investors should l1e warned against expecting too much in the future basecj
on historical returns. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and
socially responsible stocks have not been tested through an entire markei
cycle. As with any mutu al funds, investment return and principal value .will
.fluctuate and shares, when redeemed, may be worth more or less than theit
original cost.
How do Investors Dod out about these funds und the criteria they
use? Investors should ask their broker or investment advisor for more infor;
mation on socially conscious funds . The fund 's prospectus contain detailed
Information about inV-estment objectives, risks, charges and expenses.
·
Cun investors make money by confining their Investments to sucfa
funds? What kind of track record do they have? No guarantees can be
made as to the future success of aey particular investment vehicle. lnvesto...S
. should consult their investment advisor regarding the track record of any
particular fund. This information is also contained in the fund's prospectus;
(Mark l!mlth Ia an lnvaatmenl executive with Advaat Inc. In Ita G._
llpolla ofllce.)
·
I
:

Last day to pur~hase crop insurance is March 15
of USDA's plan to strengthen the crop insurance.portion of the fann;
~afety net for future years. Remember, the last day to purchase crop:
·
tnsurance ts March 15 . We have a li st of agents in our office.
We still do not have the infonnation available to calculate payments.:
We know the')ast day .to purchase crop insurance is March 15 and we:
hope to be ab le to calculate payments prior to this date. ·
If you have any questions, please contactlhe Gallia-Lawrence coun-:
ty FSA office at Ill Jackson Pike, Room 1571 , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631,:
or call .1-800-391-6638 or 446-8687.
·

�•

,

.
·-

'

Sunday, March 7, 1999

Page 02 • JJuub-g ~imH-.-eutbul

Sunday, March 7, 1999 _
----'---~

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

!!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~70
Public Notice

&amp; Fol'llllt'l Bank. GK.u:ikli::o"'llnea==

for the Hlotorlc llollrd Will
~ lfnaiiZtd ond 11110 rulea
lor lht Board.
Morch 7, 1999

-· .
•

If..
..
"

SWAPS

-aM-110-

Toclo{s ·Home:s~-------------.E~:::::i~-:=::::--1
BED 2

.... ,

1s~x10'6

SNAPS 1335-210]
By Today's Homes .

:; '

~c. l

.......,

"'

,;, :r

-

l'lliiCH

L·

"
"

FAMILY

I
l

MASTER
SUITE
mx12'0

.22'6X 179

ANNOUNCE MENTS

005

BED3
11~X 10'3

-~-

LMNG
1!0 X15'0

GARAGE
23'0 X22'0

"

""NO
POliCH

DEN
11'3 X10'3

I

Personals

tatlo n Approx. 65 To 75 Years

740-4,16-8983.

SWAPS !335·2101
OVERALL DIMENSIONS: 70'-0'X 62'-0'
LIVING: 2194 square teet
GARAGE: 650 SQUare teet
OPT. BSMT: 2134 square feet
OPT. ATIIC: 1242 square feet

Master suite's isolation makes
~waps _model ideal for privacy
'

· If you are searching for a floor

plan that isolates·1he master sut te for
maximum privacy, you might want to
cpnsidenhe 2,194 square foot Swaps
(3-35-210). The master sui1e and the
secondary bedrooms are on opposite
si9es of the house, This arrangement
a! so provides privacy for any
ovemigh1 guests and tones down the
simnd of teenagers playing their
music a bit louder than you appreci ale. The eye-pleasing exte ri or,
trimmed in brick and fronted by a
railed-porch, will be a welcome sight
1o visitors.
: Immediately to the left of the
eutry, is a sinal\ den that can be. easily converted into a home office.
There is room enough here for a comp(ner desk, chairs and filing cabinets.
11tis room is iso lated 10 leave you
undis1urbed as you go about your
~ark. A half-bath is located in the

outer hallway.
The two·sccondary bedrooms are
actuall y mini-su ites. Eath boasts a
fu ll bathroom and plenty of closet
space. These rooms can serve as
guest quarters, or provide a private
hving space for aging parents or old:·
er ch ildren still residing at home. A
convenient. utility room is down the
hall and features a built-in ironing
board and taplc fo r folding clothes:
The family room/kitchen is an
open area with multiple sky li ghts to
. hrighten the spacious breakfast nook.
Kitchen features indudc an island
cook top, separate oven and walk-in
pa ntry. A formal dining room is ncar
enough to make servi ng meals almost
effortless. The comfortabl e living room has
a large bay window, and a big comer
f'irepl.ace. Family and friends will stay
_:nug on long winter evenings while

watching tel ~v ision, playing board
games or just discussing the events of
the day.
The isolated master suite is quite
generous. Ameni1ies here include a
long vanity wit~ twin basins, private
bathroom, linen storage, and a sizable
walk-in closet.There is also private
access to a covered back porch.

The two-car garage, facing front,
has an abundant storage area that can
be transformed into a workshop for
do-it-yourself projects.
For a s1udy kir of the SWAPS
(335-2100545) send $14.95, 10
Today 's Homes, 33127 Saginaw
Road E., Couage Grove, Ore. 97424
(Specify plao name &amp; number for
kit) . .

~asy-to-master glass etching·
~echnique can be do,n_e at home
B~ POPULAR MECHAN'tcs
For AP Special Features·
: If you ' ve ever stopped to admire
an etched glass door, window or mirror, you know that the effec t is both
u~ique ~nd stunnin g. The combinalion of clear polished glass wtth a del ic)ltely contrasting frosted geometric
or pictorial design enhances just
about any setting. What you may not

k~ow. however. is -that you can etch

glass - righ1 in your own home or
shop - with a few simple, easy-toni~ster techniques.
· : Glass etching involves frosting or .
alirading the glass surface to create a
dull , non1ran sparent area. The three
niost common methods for getting

nam'
es
Assoc ··at'on
I
.
new J"u.nl'or member

POMEROY
E· R
f
nc unyon o
Pomeroy is a new junior member of
the American Angus Association.
Junior members of the organizalion are eligible to register cattle in
1he American Angus Association,
a~d to take part in Associa1ion spansored shows and other natio nal and
regional events.
: The American Angus Association
i~ the largest beef regis1ry association
in the w0 rid, wi1h over 31 ,000 active
adult and junior members-.

the job do_ne are acid-cream etching,
sand bl astin g and dtamond:burr
engravmg. Each of these techn tques
can be approached wtth a modest
mvestm_ent ol ume, space and cash.
Etchtng glass not only makes an
enJoyable pn~ect , but the results add
character to your home. Whether you
choose to etch an entry door, stdehght
panel , bathroom wmdow or mmor,

you_ have the ability to transform
ordtnary archue~tural and destgn fe_alures wtth_diStmct_ly personal delatltng. When choosmg glass to etch,
keep m mmd tha~the best matenaliS
one:q uarter-mch thtck plate glass or
lamma~ed safety glass. Standard oneetghth-mch 1h1ck wmdow glass can
be used but the results wtll not be as
good.

Safety tips for the farm, workshop
1
GALLIPOLIS _ This time of
year, many farrne_rs are spending a
great deal of time in their workshops
_ preparing equipment for spring
planting, making repairs and providing maintenance to ~quipment that
has been neglected since the busy
days of summer and fall . ·
Keeping safe on the farm doesn't
end in the work shop, .either. Here are
some tips from the Gallia County
Farm Bureau that may keep you or a
loved one safe in the workshop:
Make sure you have enough
space to complete the JOb. Also make
sure you have adequate li ghti ng and
ventilation.
• Keep a first -aid kit.and fire ex tinguisher on hand.
'Keep all of the proper guards and
shields on power equipment. Also, try
10 use clamps and vices where pas-

sib\e to hold items in place.
• Before climbing a ladder, place
the base about a quarter of the entire
ladder's length away from the waiL
And never place a ladder in fiont of
a doorway unless the door is locked
or guarded.
• Check all power cords regularly
to ensure insulation is intact and that
inner cablin g is not exposed.
• When welding, wear gogg-les
with side shields as well as a welding shield or helmet
When working on farm equipmcnt, make sure that the equipment
is turn ed off, all rotaling .pariS have
stopped moving and safety" locks are
put in place. Jackie Graham, Gallia
County Farm Bureau..,safety chairman , reminds you that service and
maintenance tasks can lead to serious
injury.

Quality oloJnlng and 1household
ltema. $1.QO bag sale every

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday
9:oo-s:30.
40
Giveaway
1 Eight Month Old Male, Part

By The Pltot Or·
The Loti 7ol0-2!58-8989'

.. 1o:OO 1 .m. Saturd8y.

EfviPLOYr,IErH
SERVICE:S

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
110 Help Wanted
All Vord Bol-l MYot lo Pold In
Advorico. Dtodllno: 1:OOpm !lot
•••••••••••••••••

dly before lhe ad It to run,
Beagle /Part Dachshund, Malee
· Sundey • Monday edition·

Good Rabbit Dogs, 740.245-5597.
10· 11 Wooko Old Female 1/2
Miniature Collie, Has First Shots,
Been wormed , LlkBa Children.
740-441-()255.

2 yo old Coak-A-Poo, Black&amp;
While. Well trained, well be -.
haved. ExCellent small House

·Dog.(304)675-4999, anytime.
B ,month o_
ld Gray Tabby Cal &amp;
acceseottes. (304)674-0126.
e'ngllsh Sauer 6 Months Old,

Black &amp; While. Very Friendly,
740-245-5697.

Female. spayed , Laasaapso
Dog, for older couple without

children. (304)875·5396.

Free Puppies : Park Husky And
·Pari Shephard , All ' Blue Eyes ,

740·446-3687.

large Male Rat Terrier, 16
Months Old, Make Good Squirrel
OOgs, 740-245-5597,

60

Lost an~ Found

Lost In Greer Road VIcinity:· Vel·
tow Female Lab; Black Female
Lab. Any information, call:

Mate Companion, With Transpor·

we euy Everything: Furniture,

Appllai\COO, 'EIC.

ocltlaft -'2:00 p.m.
Fri&lt;!IY.Monclly odlllon

www. thenotpages2 .comln&amp;'psy~

Old, 538 Third Avenue, Gallipolis.
STORAGE

New To YoiJ Thrift Shoppe
9 Woat Stimson, Athena
740-5112· t842

Found: fema'le Beagle, between
Tuppers Plains Water Co. and

chlc12SQ291.htm

Wantod To B~y: uood M!lllll•·,
Homes, Call 740--1-48·017S, :W.· ,
675-!5985-

the lilly btlortlllt Ill
Ia to '""· Slo*J

Don't Worry About Your FuiU.re
Let Our Psychics Put Your Mind
At Ease C8 11 Now! 1·900·740~

6500 Ext. 3593, 18+ $3.99 Per
t,jln. Serv-U 619·645·8434. http://

••

AIJ, Yord Boltl Mull
I t l'ltklln A--pf!DLINE: 2:00 p,m,

877-8561.

EHS, call740-985-3560.

80

'

. SALESCONSULTANT

1:00pm Frjdoy.

JOCK- TRAPPED IN SALES?

Auction
and Flee Market

The Morning Excited About What

Bill Moodlepaugh Auctioneering Yo\J'reGc&gt;ngToDoTodayOr...?
.:
services. Little Hocking, Ohio.
Appra isals'- • Farm- . Estate- Imagine Yourself Beln_
g Part Of A
Household· CommerciaL OhiO LI- Team Again!. If You're L09.k lng '
cense f7e93. 740·989-2623 . .
For A. Fresh New ARPfOICh To~
Sales Cell P.loneer - Leacfere lfll
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
A.thllllc, Stadium &amp; lndullrlll
ruu . lime auctioneer. complete
Maintenance Since 1905. 1· 800·
aucllon
service.
Licensed
659-1200 www p!onllhmfl co·
166,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304·
Realistic tat Year Income Qurln(
n:I·S78S Or 30-I-773-S447.
Tra ining $35 ·43K. 1 vaar Ex~
perle nco Required. E.O.E.
.,
Wedemeyer's. Auction SerVICe,

Gallipolis, Ohio 7ol0-379·2720.
90 Wanted to Buy

•••••••••••••••••

Complete Household Or Eatatesl
Any 'JYpa Of FUrniture, A.ppllanc-'
es, Anllc:eue's, Etc. Also Appraisal

•

••DRIVERS••

HOMETIME
GREAT BENEFITS AND PAY
LET OUR FAMILY BE A ..
PART OF YOUR FAMILY
t Earn Up To .35e ~lie
· t Layover And Stop Off Pay
• Safety Bonus And Awarclo · '

Avallabkll740-379-2720.
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·

ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry,_Gold
Rings, Pre·1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions JewelrY

t Paid Health !ljfe lnsu!:Bnce
t 2 Wks VacatiOn
16 Potd HOlidays
t otq1K /Profit Sharlng .
• Passenger Program

Anllquas , top prices paid, RiverIne Antiques, Pomeroy. Ohi o,
Russ Moore owner, 740·992-

2526.
(304)875·6440.
,
.
Buying Stendlng Timber, 740.256- ·
Lost: Pair ol Tommy Hllflger e
17.:::2 ·:.__ _ _ _- ' - - Glasses, Pt. Pl. Area. Reward . .:;.:
1304)875·5726.
, Cleen Lale Model CBIJI Or

t

~;

UD.,_S$1 Full or port-timo. 11
yro. or older. Wilt troln. (740)w.!8S87 after 12PM. (30-4)875-59S5
aft« 1:30PM. Soulhfor1&lt; s,._,

Pl Pt., wv.

Applications For Part-Time Main·
tenance Workers Are Being 4c·
cepted 8~ Real Ealate Management Company In Jackson. Pereons Need Ability To Remove
Oebril, Cltan lntertor &amp; Exterior,
palrl To Residential Propartles.
Mull SO Dtpe-. Neal, &amp; Energetic. Compensation Negoti-

to travel. Call 740-268-2950 M-F
8:00-4:30.
Company DriYoR OTR
1

'S0111111B CommunicatiOn
'New .Bonaflt Pad&lt;age
'PaldV8cation
'410KRoUrofilont
'Bolaty Bonus

·
Available Wt Aro AG(OWing Faml~
Come Grow WHh Us
Hln1o Tnoctllng Company

'DlteCI Dipostl
Mlrilmum 1 yr. Experience Class

ACOL, HazMat
Haw Ttucklng co.• Inc.

1-~~3 _

1 Tract of wet land
6 Exchanges
11 Angl'f
16 Hair ol1he head
21 Degrade
22 Lawful
23 Terre-, Indiana
24 01 hearing
25 Delaware's capital
26 Unaccompanied
27 Bul'f
28 Hang in folds
29 Sweet fruity drink
30 Toreador's loa
32 Microorganism
34 Kind ot cheese
36 Turl
37 Dissolve
39 London or New York
district
41 Type
43 Ocean
44 Makes inquiry
45 Const~uent part
4d Tralfic ndise
50 Uppity one
-52 Scared.
55 Birtbright Sillier
5J Linear measure
59 Had reveries
63 Grain lor grinding
64 Abundan1\y
66 Gridiron player·
68 Wands.r
69 Two perfonners
70 Make lace
72 Wall painting
73 Bravo!
74 Female sheep
75 P~t in a cage
76 Evil spiri1
78 Swamp's cousin
79 Submissive
80 Twist together
82 Flivver
·
83 Give in
85 Biblical leader ol1he
Jews
86 Cakes and 87 Demand payment
I rom

1 "-, I'm Adam"
2 Dwelling
3 "Bolero" composer
•
4 Dir. letters
5 Flavoring plan1
6 Skiing-course _
7 In the money: hyph .
wd.
8 In 1he past
9 Pain
10 Glossy
11 Smoke_s1ack
12 Tried lor office
13 Ins and14 Cooks in water
15 Succession
16 Boys
.. 17 "-'-Town" ·
18 Stupid
19 Silk cotton
20 Toboggans
31 Not new
33 _Curved bone
35 Clobber uhlairly
38 Tantalize
40 Beginning
42 Unhearing
44 Cain's victir:n
46 Illuminated

47 Ge1 brown In 1he
sun ·

49 School dance
· 51 Spoken
52 See eye-to:eyEI\,
53 Unhappy look
54 Bolt
56 Shea(
58 To twice the degree
60 Bitter drug
61 Contused light
62 Journeys
64 Unmixed
65 Sweet po1ato
67 Walked on
69 Eat
71 Bauble
75 Cheat
76 Copenhagen
natives
77 Recess
79 Burrowing animal

81 Cleanse
82 - -de-s~c
· 84 Notable lime
85 Labyrinth
87 Discover
89 Fruitless
90 Headless nails
91 Mathematical
pro poll ion
92 Newlon or Azimov
93 Wes1em Indian
94 Bite .
-95 Of birds
96 Get bigger
97 Path
98 Not at all wordy ·
99 - Park, Colorado
101 Wild duck
103 Dawn goddess ,
104 OHice worker
107 Ember
. 108 Weather outlook ·
110 Take malicious. detfght
111 Hom
113 Hit
114 Bruce and Spike
116 Not loud
117 Wildebeest
' 120 One of the
archangels
122 Frizzy hairdo
124 Removed the rind ·
126 Regret
128 Diners
129 Stares
open-mouthed
130 Winlrey of TV _
131 Landlprd's oHerlng
133 More wan
135 Stormed
138 Wave 1op
139 Draft animal
140 Weasel's cousin
142 Part of M.I.T.
143 Indian gannent
145 Threesome
147 City In Alaska
150-Tiny
152 One-1housandth o1
an inch
154 Fuss
156 Commercial vehicle

01111,WV

~GAL NOTICE TO

Public Notice
ochodu\ad board meeting
on Morch 23, 1999 at 8:15
p.m. The Ga\lla SWCD
bo_ord of auporv\aora
ruorvoo tho right 10 accep1
or retec1 any or oll bldo.
Morch 7, 21, 1999

BID
ho Gallla Soli ond Wo1or
Conoorvatlon Dlo1rlct Ia
oc0optlng bide lor tho aoto
of a 8.5 foot Tyt no-1111 greln
drill. Thlo unlllo 1 pull type
drill with 'one Ill Of
Public Notice
h~ullca. Tho drill hao
p td 32118 acreoln Gallla
PAOiiATE COURT OF
CoUnty. Tho drill moy bo
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ond bide will be ESTATE OF ADEUNE HAR·
ICCI~Ied until 4:00 :·m.,
RISON SNOWDEN,
Marc 23, 1899 11 tho IIIII
DECEASED
I=CD office ot 111 Jackaon
CIH No. 30782
p I e, Sullo 15eth Galllpolto,
DockeJ 14, PIQI 155 ·
0 H 45831 or ca (740) 44e- ·NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
8 173. All bide Will bo
DF FIDUCIARY
0 ponod 11 tho nlgulorly ,_Revlltd Code, Dec. 2113.08

Public Notice
"On February 23, 1999, In
1hor Mol!• County Probo1a
Court. ••• No. 30792,
Alberta Montgo~ry. 4588
Old SWbl Route 56, Athf!!L_
Ohto 45701.- woo appointed
Exocu1rtx of ·tho 111111 of
Adtllno Horrlaon Snowdon,
dectaHd, toto of P.O. Box
183, Ru11ond, Ohio 45n5.
-·
Robert E. Buck,
Prt&gt;bato Judge
Judl1h R. Slaoon, Cltrk
(2) 28 (3) 7 2TC

Domino's Pizza, Point Pleasant.
Flulble Hours. Good Pay.

(304)87!H5858.

-

TRUCK DRIVERS
"Me)orTruddna Coor4&gt;any lo
Lool&lt;lng For OfR Cofl1&gt;any
· Dr1Yi11 And Independent

Contractom,To Find Out Morit.
CDml VIIH Our Recruiter.

Greg lelnl, At The Ramada Inn,
Gateway (6007 Rt eo Eaat),

Huntingoon, W.VA
During Tho Following Hours:
Monday, March 8
2:00 P.M.- 7:00 P.M.
ltJaaday, March 9
10:00 A.M.· 2:00P.M.
And 4:00 P.M. -8:00 P.M.
No Phone Cal~ Please E.O.E.

Drlvare: Make a turn tor the bet·
llr!11 No experience necaasary.

14 day COL Training. Free Tl)ltlon
Available. Earn $30,000+ lat
year. 1-888-253-8901 .
DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAit..AaLE:

-C-AOTR:
Single Driver, Lata Model Ken worth&amp; With Reefers. West Coast
Carrier.

Class BOTR:
Team Straight Truck, late Model

Frefghtllnars With 'Sleepers. Must

Have Air Brake Ehdoraements,
800 Mila Radius, Home Deliver·

•••

Both Positions:
Alleast 2S Years Old
Atlaaet 2Years EICpl!rlenco
GoodMVA
Week~ Pay
Health Insurance Available
Worlc Well With The Public
For More Information Call 800-

437-8764, HIS.8:30 A.M.-5 P.M.
FREE

FJee Home .Health Aide Training

Classes Will Be Conductad At
Health Ma,nagment Nursing Serv·
Ices, Inc., II )bu Are Responsible,
A Self Starter, And Want To Enter Into The Heallh Cart Field
This Ia A Tremendous Opportun Ity. Interested lndlvlduala Should
Call Today To Reserve Your Spot
In The Clan.

Call740-+16·3808
Or
7oi0-88B-9031
Opportunllies For Immediate

Employment Ma1 Be Available.
EOE

.

HOLZER EXTRA CAR_E
Needed Immediately, Homemak·
era. Sitters, Clerical, Peraonal

Caro Aides (All Shifts) For Holzer
Extra Care, A Newly Established
Private Duty Care Agency: Per·
sonal Care. Aides Should Have
Either Completed The 75 Hour
Couree Or Have One ( 1} Year
Previous Home Health Expeflence.

-

Colf'!Midllva Wages Ollered: .
VIcki Notdngham
Holzer Extra Care
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
tOOJacklooPikt

l'ubllc Notice

-

LEGAL NOTICE
J Noll co of the Cl1v of

Ph0nl: 740~5105

EOEIADA Elfllliol'or
Lady To Move ln. Wlth Older

Invalid U.dy, And He~ Take
Ctro 01 Her. Room, Board &amp; Small
Bolary, 7oi0-258-67S3._

Somt

law Otflce In Jackson Selkl
Fleaumea For An Entry Level Part

/Full·Time Clerical Position. No

..
•'

Legal Experience Necessary.
Perton Must Be t1ign Scnool
Graduate, "'bit To Use Word
Procesalng &amp; Databaae Pro grams, Dependable, Energetic,
Willing To Learn New Methods .
Salary Negotiable. Hours, Ftexl·
ble. Fu Ataume To 740·288·

2660.

C~ossword Puzzlt~~ Answer

on Page

B~4

AI Shlfto
ALSO NEEDED:
ASSISTANT OIRECTOR OF
MEDICAL RECORDS
RADIATION THERAPY
TECHNICIAN
HOLZER FAMILY PHARMACY
CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRE·
SENTAnVE
. Competitive Wogo ,fond Beno11t

ous lead sln"tr

&amp; baulst. Call

Steve, (304)882·2356 . Leave
tnllll.ge.

Mature Chrlatlin lady To Take

care Of Your Loved One In Their

Wanted: Bab'y sltter In my home
for 2 children ages 2 &amp; 3. Mon.
day tnru Friday, from 8AM ·

.430PM.Coil (304\675-2t44.

Well established alectr_lcal wiring
contractor has job opening. If you
are motivated, trained, or.e»eperlenced In this field please aend
resume c/o The Dally Sentinel,
P.O. Boll 729-79 , Pomeroy, OH

4S769.

. WORK FROM HOME
.
FT / PT FrH Information . Call 1-

I

180 Wanted To Do
COU.NT~Y CRANE SERVICE
15 Ton Truck Mounted Crane,

I t5 Ft. Tip Height,

Ao~al

Baskel

A.vellabla, 740·367-7554, Page II

740.339-0206.

Excellent care/ Person In · my
home In country/ mobile/ non·
smoker/ $800 . monrh/ nice .

(304)882-3860.

Furniture repair restorauon &amp; rellnlshing, custom built repro duc·
tlons, Liz &amp; Bennett Roush, 740·

992-1 t 00, Appalachian Woodworks. ·

If Interested, Ptease Contact:

Furniture repair. reflnlsn and .restoration. also custom orders. Ohio
Valla~ Refi nishing Shop, Larry

Rosie Ward

Now taking applications tor Drivers at Domino's Pizza. Gallipolis
and Pomeroy Stores. Only, 740·

OTR D(lver Needed, 1 Year Flat
Experience. Class ACOL Comp.
Pay, Bonus Program, Late Model
Conventional,
740·4"1·0807

Days; 740-441-0558 Alter 6 P.M.
PARAMEDICS
&amp; EMT'o
Life Ambu~nca
Ia Now Hlnng ft!ll
And Part nme For
GaNii And Jackson Counties.
call7o10-448-7930
For An Interview. •

Groat Pay And Benefits
Progressive ·tong -Term Care

Facility Specializing In Skilled

P~lllps,

740.992-6576.

·'

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your your .logs to a milt just

call304-875-t957.
capped,

741l-441-t536.

House CteaMtng: Honest, A ell·
able, Mature . Will clean weekly.

Free estimates. (304\675-1553.

.House Cleaning: Honest, Reliable, Mature. Will clean weekly.
Free estlmetes.(304)675-1553.
Mature Christian Lady, will taka
care of your loved one In the ir
home. Need night shift. Call day- .

locate Key Personnel Who Are
Wil ling To GroW With The Com·
pany. Send Resumes To ; CLA

465, c/o Gallipolis Dally lrlbune,
825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, OH
45631.
Resumes Are Being Accepted
For A Full- Time, Administrative
Anlatant In A Well Established,
Progressive Business Office In
Downtown Gallipolis. Successful
C•ndldate Must Possess Public
Relation Skt1111, Excellent Written,
Verbal And Telephone Communi·

eaton Skllta Along With A Posi-

tive Team -Oriented Work Ethic.
Duties Include Typing, Filing,
Computer Input, Word Process Ing And General Office Organization. Must Be Able To Handle
Mulllple Taalct Simultaneously
And Be Able To Work Wltnout
Direct Supervision . High School
Diploma Or Equivalent Is Ae ·
qulred. Prefer Someone With Experience . Benefits And Salary
Consideration Will Be Commen·
surate With QuallllcallonS. Inter·
ested Applicants Should Submit
A Resume To: CLA 467, c/o Gal-

lipolis Dally Tribuna, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

112 acre lot, 2-3 bedrooms, eltc·
lrlc furnace w/centralalr, single
car garage, deck, 134.900, 740-

New 1898 ~ 4x70 3 Bedrooms, 1

3 Bedroom, 2 Ball\, 2 car garage,

Root, Thermopane Window&amp; And .
Upgrade Carpet . Includes Dellv-

949-3037.

.

1 acre, Heat pump, New Remo·
dellng done, Broad Run, Letart.

(304)882-3518.
CASH BACKIII Recolvo Up To
$1,000 Cioh Bock With Tho Pur-

cheH Of 1,rfy Fleetwood Homo Of
Indiana Or Tenneasee Brand .

car gorego, 740.843-53!50.

UNBEI\TABLE IUY - Brand

Both Homo, VInyl Siding, Shlnglo

iry,

Very Nice 3 Bdrma, Batn, LR ,
Kllchtn , Laundry, Fenced Ylrd,
Utility, Nee~ Clinic &amp; Church .

to awocleta, wiN toll houoo without lots lor $88,000, 740·992- $59,900.00. CiJII 740-446-280t.
2704. 7ol0-992·589e.
320 Mobile Homn
Nice, Immaculate, Hou11 For
tor ~I•
Sale. SOt McNall Avenue. Pt.
- · wv.(304)875-7711 .
$500 Down on any Ux70

Bot-Up, Skirting, Stopo And
AI $21,900

In
stock, limited number, frH dtltv-

1;800-886·1763.

Reatored VIctorian home altuattd
on 12 acres, VIllage Mlddlaport,
aecludtd and prtvatt, appoint·

By Owner: 2910 Meidowbrook

men~

,.,_led
owl, door, aiding, AJC, Carpet).

Spring Valley, 2 atory family
home. 4 Bedroom, 2 1/2 Baths,

ery. can 1-800-611Him.

Kitchen. Lg Family Room. 740-

S85oo, 740-992-3194.

Tie Downa. onty 2 Loft

Dr.; 3BR Ranch. Brick lront. New·
~
In 1998, (roof, wind-

AlSo Roctlvt A DIRECT TV Sat- Privacy fenced baolc yard . Nice
ellite Syatem. Limited Time Offer. landocaplng. $74,500. Call
Call1-800-688-t783 Nowt
·
(304)875-5143, after 6PM.

ery. Cal•t·800-691-8m.

$999 Down on any 98 model

call7ol0-992·5898.

Ooublewlde In atoclc . Fret Oellv·
12x60 two bedroom mobile home
with 100X100 lot In Middleport ,

Uvlng Room, Dining Room, Eat-In

~9337

BULLETIN BOARD
Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
• violence
call 446-6752 or
1·800-942-9577

, AREA PEPSI ROUTE
Prima Locations. (Local) Route
Earns $100K /Yr. Call Now, 1·

800-440·2371 .
Eat. VENDING Rte • Must Stll

By 3118 Earn $4K +/Mo .. Gaurantaed Locations. $8 .5K Req .
100% Finance Available . 1·800·
Notice of Bicycle Concession
Proposal Request: The West VIrginia Divis ion of Natural Aa- ,
sources, "Parks and Recreation
Section will accept proposals
from qualified prospective vendors tor operation of a bicycling
concession at Blennerhassetl Is·
land l'tlstorlcal State Parle . C.OP·
les ol the proposal may be obtained by contal::tlng Superln·
tendent Donna Smllh . Blenner· .
has&amp;ett laland Histo~lcal State
Park, 137 Juliana Street,
Parkersburg, WV 26101-5331.
Proposals will be accepted

lhrough March 22, 1999.

Snickers Candy Bar Route , pro•.
tected territory. 50 locations .

Leath~~~!~m Boots

.. All

380.3138 Ext.835.

Reg . $149.00
SalePrlce$59.00
Large Stock
Englneer .......... ... ........... $49.00
Wellington ... .......... .........$49.00
Loggers ......................... $50-55
Harness .................... ..... $59.00 .
Carolina-Georgla-H &amp; H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER AND
SOUTHEAST OHIO
EMERGENCY

6782.

.

Professional
Services

Economy Healing And Cooling,
Factory 10 Years Parts &amp; Labor.
74[).245-9009.

RESUMES UNLIMITED Oilers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared , 740-388-

3800.

.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

Help Wanted

MEDICAL SERVICES .
HEARTSAVER CLASS
Saturday, March 13
9 a.m.-1 p.m.
First Church of Nazarene
Family Life Center
$5 .00 per person
Open to the public
Call 446-5313
for more information

ELECTRONIC FILING

WANTE.D :
.Experienced
PRINTER

Key manage ment responaibilities include budget devel·
opment, fiscal management, d eve1oping and implement·
ing an e ffective quality a tan ranee and patient 1atisfac·
tion monitoring proce11 a·s well as the direct supervision
of all auigned staff.
·
The oucceooful candidate will be licenoed R.N :, BSN preferred , and be BLS and ACLS certified with 4 to 5 yearo
progressively ·m ore complex project and people manage ~ ·
menl experience. A minimum of 2 year11 experience in
Emergency, Urgent Care or comparable aetting and a
minimUm of 2 years management experience is required .
STAFF SONOGRAPHER - We have an excellent opportunity for u part..:time Staff Sonographer to work at our
satellite ambulatory ct re fa cility in Wave rly, Ohio opening in March of 1999. Thia position is responsible for
non- in y asi\' ~ vaacular/cardiac teeting through ultrasound skills or other non-invaaive teat'ing modalitiet.
Interested candidates may submit their resum~ to ·

Human Reoource Development, ADENA HEALTH SYS- ·
TEM, 272 Hoopital Road, Chillicothe, Oh'o 45601, (740)
779-7562, Fi\X (740) 779-7902, or TDD (740) 779-7933.
Jf you have any queation a requarding the position please
call Eric B. Perdue at 740-779-7894.
Equal Opportu,nity

2 Years

Must Have

UPHOLSTERY

Experience &amp; Excellent
People Skill_s.

740-441-1700
KIM

foam and quality
craftsmanship. Call
446-3438 for a tree estimate.
2205 Graham School
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Now accepting Visa &amp;
Mastercard.

CROP
INSURANCE

This number Is expected to rise to 14 million
people by the middle of the next c~ury.

For more information on Alzheimer~&amp;

Disease Call
SCENIC HILLS NURSING
CENTER'S
Specialized Alzheimer's Un~.
446-7150
For any questions or a tour of the
facility contact Pam Jon&amp;$ or
Tara Wallace •..

Deadline March 15

TREASURES

Call Jim Allie

Has A New Shipment Of
Russ Bears. Come on In

TRUE or FALSE?
A.n estimated 4 million Americans are
afflicted with Alzheimer's DISease.

TRUEI

30% Premium

~

Reduction

Rio Grande
Baseball
Association

Local American

&amp; "Make someone Ha~'PYII Agrisurance Agent
With A Russ Berrie Bear"
46 Sta1e St., Gallipolis

446-1795

Why buy new furniture
when we can make your
furniture as good as new.
We offer a large s_E~lection
of sample fabrics, new

Lower your home &amp;
business long distance by
up to 50%
You get 7.9 Cents-Per Minute
ALLDAY... EVERYDAY...
NO RESTRICTIONS
740-245-5633
800-535-6039
Leave your name and address &amp;
I will send you an application
Start ~aving In 1,5 days

F

A

or

Q

.

uote

will Be Having An

379-2789

We are seeking an individual to plan, direct, organize

wen

GRAHAM'S

COLf:~IBLE
1

1

.
.
.
.
.
ENA
.
·Health System

ASK US ABOUT

1

come. Cost $2995. www.vend lngroutes.com, 1-800·963-6123.
VENDING: Lazy Persons Dream.
Few ·Ho.u rs =o Good$ . Pri ce To
Sell. Free Broc hure. 800· 620·

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

For compl91e, Pro1esslonaltndlvlduat
and Business Tax Preparation

~IN~F~UR~N~IT~UR~Ed
lr.I=IFA' ONS BY
lEe=s~w~
62. AOlive
St.

$800-S t 200 solid monthly In-

and manage the occupational &amp; urgent care operations
at thia aite . This individual will e njoy a unique ritatrix
organizational struCture which fo cuees on a team
approach to management. AA a working manager thi1
position will interface daily with the ttaff, phyaiciant
and Adminis,trative DireetOrs ohhe Emergency and
Occupational Medicine Department11 located at the
Health Syotemo main campue located in Chillicothe. This .
individual will he responsible for the clipical and admini•trative management leadership aa
aa ongoing
strategic planning and development of these services·.

Available. Will Train. Will Re-

d'-POf'l. hOuse &amp; 3 IOta, must 1M

Accounts . 1-888--488-6574

Registered ~uraes needed for a
rapidly growing local Home
Health Agency. Contact Debbie
Reputable Commercial Roofing
Company In Southeast Tennessee Is E11pandlng. We Need Mottv,._ted , Hardworking And Drug
Free Personnel . All Poslllons

By owner, 725 Pogo Stroot, Mld-

.tachtd 2 car garage, Hparate 3

$10!5K Potential. Just

VARIED POSITIONS
CLINICAL MANAGERS . We _are currently recruiting a
Clinical Manager for our Urgent Care/Occupational
Health Servicee located at our satellite ambulatorY care
fa cility in Waverly, Ohio .
'

Soewen, RN.,(740)44t-t779.

310 Homes tor ~le

Restock Olsp"Ys, $9,950
Investment For Inventory &amp;

And Rehab Services Has Re warding Position Open for
Friendly, Outgoing And Dedicated
RN~s. Please Apply In Pirson At
•Scenic Hills NUrsing Center, 311
Buckrldge Road, Bidwell , OH

45614.

-

lhe olforlng.
·
ABSOLUTELY NO SELLING!

-""'"--l'-7.-40.;.)44!1-04
_ _5=1·::::::::;=:;::l.,__~1~-88:8-:.582·3345
110

..

3 acr11, 3 bedroom house, at-

recommends tnat you do buat·
ness with people you know, end
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated

230

Have 3 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·

310 Homes tor Sale

RE:AL E:S1ATE

190 Wanted To Do

Rock Bond looking IO&lt; good oorl·

Pl'*"ffll.

. 44!1-4040 .

Drlvora

. -·

CST' I

Time Paid Vacation. Hourly Vs .
Commission Free CEU Hour,,

740-446-72!51.

-'

RN'a
LPN'1

HOLZ£R MEDICAL CENTER
I 00 JIICI&lt;BO~ Plkll
- Galllpol~. OH 45631·1563
Poone: 740-+16-51 05
TOD /Fax: 740-+16·S106
EEO /ADA Employer

Public Notice
Hlttorlc
Galllpollt,
Preurvotlon Boord 10 be
hold at 7:30 p.m. 11 1ho
Chamber of Commerce, 18
Stott Strtt1, Gallipolis,
Ohio.
C•*• t1 - Hlatorlc Board •
Warren Woodyord, P.O. Box
42, Crown City, Ohio, olgn
approvol
lor 354-358
Second Avenue In H\atortc
Urbin Square Dtontct.
·
C111 112 - Hlotortc Boord •
Flrotar Bank, 25 Court
Street, Galllpolle, . Ohio •
elgn epprovalln ori Hlatorlc
Overley DlotrlcL
Addlllonal dlocuoolom otll
tht Miller Property, Oocar'o,

NEEDED IMMEDIATELYIU

Director Of Humarl R·asources

Gaiii&gt;Oilo. OH 45831-1563

Public Notice

MyStery Shoppers needed na·
llonwldel Must have fax or email.
Visit www.&amp;!lcond·to·none.com Or

Coinputer Usera Needed, Worlc

0l'n Hrs. $20K -$75K !Yr. 1·800.
348·7186 Ext. It 73. www.amplnc.oom
Cosinotologlst Noedod Full &amp; Part'

-.

Exp. Nee, Will Train PC Req. Eam
-40K Cd 800-663-7&gt;140. '

Bates Bros: Amusement Co.
Must be 18 years or older. Frel

--

/Ass~ned Equip.
Satenlte Communlca¥Q08
t Ded~1ed Runs

SUNDAY PUZZLER
DOWN

Nece ..ary. Previous Customer
Strvlce And /Or Office Experl·

Help Wanted

a::.I:•&amp;O:'JA!;,'i!fc:&amp;Tuf

Randy Stewart, Chrtatlna King

88 Exclaim
89 Actor Kilmer
90 Lively
93 Actress Hayes
95 Triumphant cry
96 Newspaper
100 .Reckless
101 Bon- (witticism)
102 Sitter
104 Ach~se
105 Legal matter
106 _O ne-- time
107 Escapade
·109 Luau tare
i 10 Thug
111 Oneol1he
Simpsons
112 Fiendish
115 Yellowish, as skin
117 Semblance
·
1t 8 - Security
119 Row
121 Secluded place
122 Fishes wi1h a hook
123 Envelope part
125 Close
127 Sleepless
129 Palmer's game
132 GOP member:
abbr.
134 - ol the moment
136 Salty drop
137 Repaa1
141 Chimpanzee
142 No1ions
144 Word In recipes
146 School jacket ·
148 Decompose
149 Shrimp
151 Andes animal .
153 Jelly fruit
155 Open
157 Facilita1es
158 Weird
159 Sea duck
160 En- (In a body)
.161 White sale ~em
·162 Training exercise
163 Portals
164 come inl

And Good Phone SkiHo

pearance

110

able. For Application Phone: 740- .Holzer Medical Center, Gelllpolla,
288-3872, Or 1-BOo-388-8194.
OH, -A Rapid~ Goowlng, 249 ·BoO 888·957-3206.
JCAHO Accredlled Acute Care
AVON PRODUCTS: Start your Hoopllal With A 23 -Bed CARF 140
Business
own business, work rtexlble Accredlled In ·Patient Rehab Unit
·Training
houra, benefits available; Enjoy Has The FOllowing Full nme /Part
Nmll•d earnings; Call toll-free: 1- Time /Per Diem Positions AvanGolllpollt Coreor College
888-661-2868.
(Career&amp; Close To Home) Call
Today! 740-446-4367, 1-800Babyaltter needed In Rutland
214-0451!,
Reg ftlo-05-1274B.
om;
area, call7o10-742-22!17.

1-etJO.I2WMO

ACROSS

FUll Time Deak Cterk, Neat Ap-

call (734\688-1838. No laos.
Paint tn1ollor, Paflorm Minor Elel&gt; Noed 30 Ladles To Sell Avon.
trlcal, Corpentry &amp; Pl.umblng Ra- 740-4-48-3358.

Van &amp; Flatbed-Home Most Wee·

t Tuition Relmtlursem&amp;nt

Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buk:lc POnllac, 1900 East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Wanted

Home, Need Night Shill, Call Dayonce HelpfuL Apply 9 A.M. ·S
Umo,
740-448-0451 Tim LKchlklld
ROOFERS
/LABORERS
UniP.M. Budget Inn, 2eo Jackson
P1eaao Call Again.
forms
Provided,
Insurance,
Pay
Pikl, No Phont can. Ptoa10.
AVON I AU Artll I Shl~oy
According To Experience, Crlv·
ordoll lor fil dirt, good lop
Spootl, 304-675-1ol2tl.
Little John'o 110 S8 VIne Stroot, eoo ll&gt;tnso A PLUS, Call 614· Taking
ooll dirt available 2/18/99. $100
Golllpollt. Ia Now Taking Applica- «H36e.
per Joad anywhere In Meigs Co.,
Admlaalan, Conclltion. Life· tions For Part-Time Empi01Jment,
guarf;lt,·Pool Manager, And At· Apply WIINn.
Salesperton Needed: Furniture call740-949-1022 ask fOr Jim.
alstanl Manager Wanted At TM
Store. Full· Time, lmmedlite
mow lawns, lrlm, any odd
Galllpolla Munk:lpol Pool, Ctrtlll- Local Trucking Company Sttl&lt;lng Opening, Apply: Ltfestyll Furni- Will
jobS, hluUng, 7ol0-992-4288.
II Rlqtllod For Lllaguardo. Qualified Truck Drivers. Good ture, 85e Third Avenue, Galllpotll,
Applications May Bt Plcktd Up Pay And Benefits. Send Resume t0To2, No Phone CaHs P\88sel
FINANCIAL
At Tho Parks And Rocrntton Of- To: P.O. Box 109 Jackson, Ohto
lice, 511 ·second Avenue, GaUl- 45840, Or Call 1-740:286·1483 Stylist Needed Full &amp; Part Time
Please Coll740~4247 .
polio,,Ohio. All Apptlcatlono Muot To Schedutt An Interview. ·
210
Business
Be Turned In By Friday, March
Thornton
Greenhouses, 740.247·
MedtcaJ PIOCIUor
28th.
Opportunhy
4334 needs men and women Ia·
FTIPT No oxporlanco necessary
bor workers for greenhouse work,
WIA toajn, PC required. Eam 40K
INOTICE!
$5. t5 per hOUr.
Call800-663-7o140
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

"Mileage or R......,ue Pay

--~~----------~- ~·~~------~-----·:
310 ~ames lor ~le
310 Homealor ~~~ •

·

Medical Proceesor FT /PT No

,.

••••

Help WMIId

What'o Lifo Like Aller Your Ath·
letlc Career? Do You Wake Up In

' M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
. Avenue, Gaii&gt;&lt;JIIS, 740-446-2842.

Uncle Bill from Ashford, Wv. la- . Lost: Smatt Black Male )'ou
ther William scon Bowles, please
Dog, VIcinity: Vanco ·. Fairfield
call ArtJatha 1-304-757-7134.
C~ntenary Area, 740·446:-6253.

W.nted to Buy

90

Galllpolit
&amp;Vicinity

DIABETIC PATIENTS: You M11
Bo EnKtled To Receive Your Dis·
botlc Supplies AI No ·coot To
You. Fot More lnforO)Atlon, 1-888-

Public Notice
VILLAGE OF CHESHIRE
LEGAL NOTICii
INVITATION TO BID
ONii TON CAB AND
CHASSIS AND DUIIPBODY
So•l•d Propo""lo will be
reclavtd by tho vlllago of
.Chtohlre, OH. 45820, until
April 5, 19W II 8 p.m. Bide
wlll be publlcolly road and
pr11onttd by the clorlt/lrealurer at that Umo during the
rogilfir vltlago council
m11tlng.
lnotructtono for Blddore: ·
Bide are to be ooaltd and
morkad "Blda for Truck"
·and oddrooetd to vlllago.
Speclllcotlono lor Cab,
Chooolo, and Dumpbody
w_ltl ba avallablt 11 1he
hOmo of:
Vlllogo Clork/Tre11uror,
.
Jennifer Horrtoon
201 B.A. 564, Chaah\re, OH
Phone (304) 387·7831,
Tho
Vllloga
Council
ruorvta tho right to accept
or rtltct any or all bide.
JonnHer Harrlaon
Clerk/Treasurer
~ch 7, 14, 21,28,1899

~~~le

30 Announcen'lentl

------...

110

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

Organizational

ERN

Meeting

Nursing Home

~onday,
· March 8, 1999
At 6:30 P.M.

AUTO SALES
Insurance

On

Come In And See Us.

with return of premium rider
We Are Now Open Late,
If you d.on't use your policy,
till 8:00 P.M.
you will receive back 80% - " ,.,...
Mon., Wed., Fri.
your premium every 10 .,,.,... r
We Carry One-Owner,
15% discount tor husband and New Car Trade-Ins, Good
wife policies witl'l the same
Miles, Serviced, With Our
daily benefit.
Ronnie Lynch
The Lynch Agency
,It

338 Second Avenue
Ga\llpoli~. Ohio

At Rio Grande
Elementary
some
with us at

30 Day Warranty.

95

The Auc.t ion

Example:
Bonneville,

Thursday Evenings
6 : 30 p. m.
Something For Everyone

I
Loaded' 41 ,000 Mi es

b=~~~s~-s~~=~~=4~~=~1
4

2 35

LeMARauls BISTRO

FREE

&amp; LOUNGE
446-2345

Termite Inspection
Are you concerned that your
home may have termites?

Italian Night on Monday
Mexican Night on Tuesday
Weslern Night on Wednesday
Cajun Night on Thursday
Racihe Pizza
Express
Vine &amp; Third
~
949-4900
Weekly Special Tuesday Only
Family Night
·Buy any pizza, any topping,
get second one at half price.
Bring the family in for a
tun time
Arcade games &amp; pool table

At. 7

Pizza Express

992-9200
18" 4 Item Pizza
only$12 . 99
Dough made fresh daily
Also try our Hot Sub·
Sandwiches, SpagheHI &amp;
Lasagna dinners. Hot Wings,
Taco Salads and Che.f Salads .

Call EXTERMITAL
for a FREE inspection.
_
_
7 40 446 2801
Serving Gallia County
for over 40 years.

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work
20 Yrs.

Amvets-

~~~~~~~~
Pool Tournament

.

Racine Pizza
•

Express
Starts 6:30 pm
Fri. March 5tti
10-16 yrs old.
Sun March 7th '

16 yrs. &amp; older
_will be 8 weeks long.

Exp.

Licens~ Bonded

740-G88-9515
388-:8030
EDTO BUY:
Old Volkswagon,
Beetle or Super Beetle
(740) 367-7566

For More Information 446·2342 or 992·2156

•

•
\

�'

•

0

Jhdav CimH-.,nitbul
Sunday, March 7, 1999:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~
- 420 M~-Hom..
'
320 Mobile Homes
:J20 Mobile Homes
330 Farms lor Sale
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
350 Lola &amp; Acreage
410 Houses for Rent
Hou-lor Rent
for Rent
Pa~ D4 •

for Sale

for "-le
iiHI

15 Acres. Leon Baden Road.
Good House Slle. All Utilities .

· 14FT •70FT, 2 Btdrooms, Vln)ll

Stock Pond. 127,000. (304)927-

Siding, Shinglod Roof , Flropilco
In Living Room. $8,000.00. 7•o-

1994 18x80 Sunahlne Mobile
Home; 3 Bodrooml, 2 Ballvooma,

eea-G311.

Walk·ln Cloaota, U!lllty Room,

1- 3 eR, Windsor. 10X55, Appll.lncoa Incl. $3,000. 130•)195·

Elletrtc Heat Pump, Refrigerator

1302.
1972 Academy 12x65 3 Bed·
rooma, 1 Bathroom F(ont Bed·
room Home Ready To Move Into,
lncludea Free Delivery And Naw

1871 1•x70, thfM bedroom, alk·

ng IISOOO, 7o10-992-9002.

..1173 Hlllcreat two btdroom mollllo l'lomo, 7oi0-911N0311.

Vlnyt Skirting. $3,995, Call

1-800·

3 Acres MIL With 1994 2 Bed·
rooms, 2 Bath Mobile Home, Extra
Nlc:e! Gre'at Location • Will Sell

Together Or Seperately, Call 740·
441-j)167.

!5QO.:IIIS1 .

IIWoWII
Oaty S.i9. dcwn Iorge selection
of 2·3-4 bedrooms ''" doliwlry&amp;
, letup owner rtnanclng available,

Ooublewlde On Lol, 800-383W2.

only at oakwood Mobile homea
6 move In, no payinant1 after 4
304 ~ 755~

Hou11

3 Bedrooms, 2 BathS, $300/Mo.,

304·73&amp;-7295.

385·9621 .

New 1-4wlde; 3br/2 bath; $500 :
Amazing only $989. down on $185 po&lt; mo. FrM alr; 1-800-691llrgt llltctlon of doublt widtl, em.
lrtt delivery &amp; aetup owner fl ~
New 1999 14x70 lhree bedroom,
lllldlgavaltable 3G4-7M-1188S,
Includes e months FREE lot rent.
lncludn washer &amp; dryer, skir11ng,
i 9H Schultz 1:h811 mobile llomi~ delullt steps and setup. Only
lhrM bodraam, tlec1r1c atove $200.74 per month with $1150
&amp; refrigerator, new carpet - ..Caii1-BOO-ll37-32311.'
throughout, - kilohen lilt, Ilk·
lng IISOOO, 7&lt;10-a.&amp;-m1 a"fflma.· New 4BR; 1Swlde; &amp;soo down/
$219. par mo.: Free Air ; 1-800·
1880 Kingll.ly 1• Ft x70 Ft. Wllh 69Him.
3/4 Aero Lot Loca10d 2 Mile&amp; On
Sl.lte Roulo 21a, In Cl!y SChool We Finance Land &amp;· Home With
QlalriCI, Dlylfma: 7.0...8-3278, As Little As $500 Down. 1-606·
Evonlnga: 740-4*3099.
9211·3426.
1891 1-4x70 2 Btdiooms, 1 Bath, 1979 Mansion 14x70 New Carpet
New Gal Furnace /Heat Pump, 2 Good Shape And Ready To Go.
ll'orctles, Many Extraal Aaklng :

D•llvtry Included 3 Bedroom

$13,000, 7ol0-2&lt;15-9120.
1992 Norris, 18Ft X 70FT, Vinyl
With Shingles, 2 Bdrms., 2 Baths,
All Electric Appliances, Porches,
¢arpon, . 7&lt;10-25H338.

Front Kitchen, $1,100 Down And
$154 Par Month. Call 1-800·500311S7.
Financing Avallablo, Mus! SOli. 600-383-8862.
14x70 Owner

'--:-11:-:0:--:H::-e-71p~w=-ant-:ed--:-.--'

CAD OPERA I OR
Local Company is seeking a CAD
operator for release 13 . Minimum
requirement of associa!e degree.
Experience preferred.
Offering
co~petitive wages with excellent benefit
package.
Send resume to:

110

110

l_ENA,.
Health System
Adena Regional Medical Ce nter, a 238 h~d acute care
facility, is currentl y seeking the followin g nursing positions :

Malernity Service• • Part time positions available. One
year hospital ex perie nce retJ:uired .
MedicaUSurgic al Departme nt• - Includes full time and
part time positions a~J.ailable in various Med/Surg areas
throughout the Hospital. New grads a.re welcome to

apply.

.

·

these Emergency positiona.
Equal Opporlunit'y Employer

l'lea.!ant ¥alley Hotpital currently ha.!
oppor1unitie1 aMUable for RN applicanr..
Applk?nll mwl ""'el the foUaUJin(J quaUJicalio.,,

Must be aregistered nurse In ltie state of 'IN
BCLS required.
Adva~ !He support car1ification within s·riiJnlhs.
One year elpelillflCS in spec~ (p!efatred)
Competitive Wages and excallen1 benefits.
Join our family of profeninnou to be the re1ourte for

community health oe,;,ke .uerlo.
Please submit resume'a to:

PLWllll VliUY IOSPIIAL
c/t.PIISO.EI

We ore HCR·MonorCore! Two
of the notion's premier long·lerm
core compan ie s hove recently
combined
tO form HCR·
M.anorCore! Currently. we hove
ouhtondlng coreer opporlunitie~
ovoiloble ot Heortlond-VIclorlon

Vtlloge!

Interviewing
For.

HCR·ManorCare
Card of Thanks

Fpr Sale Or
On Shaded 112 Acre Lot 3
Bedroom•. 2 Full Bath1, Central

Rani

Alr,740o44&amp;-e8t8.

Applications Fo.r Mobllt
For Rent ln·Jack1on , No
7•0·211·4328, H0·288-

Assistant Managers!
An excellent opportunity for entry to midlevel, career oriented managers awaits you
in our Gallipolis, OH locations.
*Opportunity for Rapid Advancement
Mail or Drop off Resume:
Golden Corral
307 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Thank You Finis

In Mernory

Card of Thanks

In Loving Memory Of
Earl F. "Bill" Glass
On His Birthday
3-9-1813-12-98

Th&lt;&gt; Family Of

/ti been almo•l one year

Adeline Snowden
wUit.e• ro expresa

appreciation and
thaW.. to everyone
for their prayers,
kind wordo of
·&amp;ympatiJy, cardR,
flower~, food, and
phor~e call•.
We wilh to extend
opecialthar~k.

to
Bradford Church of
Chmtand
Doug Shamblin,
Birchfield Funeral
Horne, !he Emergency
Squad, and anyone
wlao helped
durirl{l our lou.
}ol~r&lt;

&amp; Albertu,

Jeff, Ca.rolyr~ , Amber
&amp; Admn
Melanie, Miclwel
'&amp;Rebecca

See You There, March 13, 1999
at 7:00P.M.

1ince we had lo tay
goodbye to our {mnd.
It wa1 the harden of day•.
Tmoe can go so quickly
btd our world stood dill.
life would never
be the wme
wil/wut our dear Bill.
Memorie• now comfort "'
like a ... rm llllltlrn!r rain
aud we kuo,. 11010 .
you're happy aud free
from all·pain.
·So ·uutU the titroe come•
for u• lobe
together again.
Happy Birthday wiloVf!
. cwd min you .dear friend.
S11dly miued by wife,
chUdren aud
grandchildren

'~Ike"

Isaac

. Auctioneer Finish "Ike" Isaac
Phone: Feed Store 740-388-8880 (11-4)
Antique Shope 388-8389 (10-5)
Licensed and Bonded Ohio #3728
Terms: Cash or Approved Check
Not Responsible or Accidents
or Lost Items.
0

•

Public Sale and 'Auction

Antlqae &amp;
Collectibles Aactlon
Friday. March 12.
6:30P.M.
. Lemley's Auction Barn
.8580 St. Rt. 588
(Old Rt. 35),
Gallipolis, Ohio
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLES: Art Pouery
to Include: Hull, Roseville, Rookwood, Weller, Brush,
Shawnee, McCoy Cookie Jars (Football Player, Globe
WIAirplane), Also, 4 Old Quilts, 9'X12' Oriental Rug,
"Peanuts" Lunch Box, 2 Hummels, "Shoo Fly". Swan
Childs Rocker, Stoneware, Alacite Alladin Lamp,
Advertising and Paper Items from Gallipolis &amp; Galtia
County, Green/White Granite Coffee Pot, Railroad
China, Louis Marx(1954)'Streamline Train in Original
Box, Other Electrical Train Items, Several Pes. of
Depession Glass, Old Framed Pictures, Country
Antiques Such as Wheat Cradle, Old Tools, Country
Store Items (Scales From Old Store at Kyger, Oh.,
ETC.), Sewing Notions (Buttons, Baskels, ETC.),
Whiting Davis Mesh Purse, Wolverine Toys, Other-Old
Toys, Dolls (Barbie, Sleeping Wind-Up Doll), Fenlon,
Occupied Japan, Landon &amp; Knox Political Buttons,
Red-Wing Pottery, "Beanie Babies" (Old &amp; New),
Much Much More...
BAKELITE JEWELRY: Beautiful 3-Strand
Bracelet, Unique Butterscotch Necklace, Green &amp;
Carved Wood Pin, Unusual Red Shamrock W/Berries,
Several Bracelets W/Carving, Earrings, Very Unusual
Green Pin With Matching Buttonhole Ace. , Others!
Please Call I'or More Info! ·

LONGABERGER BASKETS: 198~oliday

Hostess, 1992 &amp; 1994 Easter Combos, 1995 Easter
Basket, 1994 Father 's Day Bus. Card &amp; 1996 Father's
Day Address Card Baskets, 1995 V.I.P. CombO, 1997
Collectors Club Welcome Home Combo, 1997
Inaugural Combo, Others
Auciioneer: Leslie A. Lemley
740·388-0823 (Home) or 740·245-9866 (Bam)
" Licensed &amp; Bonded By State of Ohio"
Cash/Approved Check Only
"Not Responsible For Accidents or Lost Property!"
•• Auctioneer 's Note; This Sale Has A Good Variety
of Quality And Unusual I!ems! Comc_Out and Spend
"Some Green" For Your Special Shamrock!
There Will Be No Auction Frjdav. March 19 Due To
The Second Sale From A La111C Esta1e Op SaL Ma[ch
20! Watch For Ad!
·

CITY IM/TS proudly presents:
The Original

lho Fede&lt;al Fair Housing Ad
ol19118 whleh malces " Illegal

llmllatlon "'dlscrlmlnallon
color,

baaed on race,

seM tammalstatus or natiiinai

origin, "'any tnrentton to

I

make any """" pnr1ere1 tee,
limltatlon or diacrlmlnatlon.•

1111a newspaper wll not

kn&lt;l'olo1ngly accept
~dvenlsements for raaleslate
wnlch ls tn violation of the

o.. reatlere are heraby
Informed thai all &lt;lweillnge
advertised In lhla newspaper
are available on an equal
law.

·

NEW YORK CHIPPENDALE$
-Wednesday, March 24, 1999 • 8-ll pm
578 State Rt. 7 North • Gallipolis, OH
Call for Tickets • (740) 446-4801
I

•

Apartment,
.T9 University
Of Rio Adjacent
Grande
CjlmpUI, 7&lt;10-2ol5-15858.

ANTIQUE &amp;
COLLECTIBLES
AUCTION

'2:,Be,droom Apartment, 1 112
llolhs, Groot Location! 15 Court
Strati, Galllpolla, Kitchen With
l!tove &amp; Relrlgerator S•9s/Mo.,
f'tus Ulllltlla, Depoan, Reterenc•s. No Pe1a, 7«l-44&amp;-4928.
2 Badroom Apanmanll, Muon,
\JII,I IIIto Paid, Appl!anceo Furnfohed, No PolS. Dayllma
(30.)713-5!92.
Evenings
,!304)882-3152,
:2 BR, Full Kllchon, Llvlngroom,
.No Plla, Partial Ulllltlea Paid.
.Ciooe lo PVH. 1325. mo.; $32S.
.Sac.Dep. (301)87S.578tl.
2bdrm. apts., total electriC, apPtlancea lurnllhtd, laundry room
«a~;IUtlll, cloa to school in town.
AppllcaUona available at: Village
Green Apts. t49 or call no-892·

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1999

10:00 A.M.

COLLECTIBLES
Toys- Big Shot Pin Ball game- Rails of Fun marble
game- The new Erect-or the A.C Gilbert Co. 1936,
Mail Pouch &amp; Coke Thermometers, pocket watchesunusal Elgin 17 jewel w/gold watch chain- Waltham 7
jewel traveler~ Wa!lham old Turnip &amp; Elgin 15 jewel,
vmtage clolhtng, Winchester carving set, seddle
carbtne holder, Pr early hand cuffs, Fire Chief's badge
Deputy Sheriff's badge, lg. csrved Ivory pipe, Folk Art
bird house, cast iron frog door stop, 1947 Who's Who
in Baseball, bronze man on horse, Venus by Canova
Stalue, Viet. dresser box- comb· brush &amp; mirror :
beautiful shipment of picture frames from England: ·
"The Climates, people, industries &amp; productions of the :
Earth print, Star Twist sewing cabinet Winchester ·
pellet rlfie, elephant swinging clock, G~rlch sign, :
adv. tins, adv. boxes, old pi~ture's &amp; frames , singing :
Cowboy guttar, plus much more.
·
•

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Maaotiw.
Res. n3-5785 or Auction Center n3·5447
NO BUYERS PREMIUM II
Terms: Cash or check w/ID. Out Of State buyes · i
must have bank lttter of credit unlesa known to • !
auction company. Advertised lnforinatlon Ia
. believed to be corrtct but not guaranteed,
announcement• made day of sale take
precedence over written material.
Not reaponalble for accidents or loaa of property.

3711 . EOH.

•

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET' PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wnlwood Drive
from &amp;279 ro 13S8. Walk to shop
&amp; movies. Call 740·4•6·2588.

Equal Houllng Oppor1unl1y.
C&amp;rilly's Family Living, apart(Mnta &amp; home rentals, 740·992·
4514, apartments available now,
l unfurnlohed,

APPLIANCe&amp;
Washore, dryers, rofrlgeraroro,
ranges. Skaggs Appllencoa, 78
Vlno Slreor, Call 740·~•6· 7396,
1·868-818-0128.

New And Used Furniture Store
Balow
Kanagua.
Stop
And seaHoliday
us. 740Inn, 48~782
..

notified.

The real estale including all structures maybe "iewecll
.,
on tile 8th day of March, 1999, between the hours of 1
p.m. and 3 p.m., and on. the 12th day of March, 1999,
between the hours of9 a.m. and 11 a.m.

Waoher
$95; Eleclrlc Range S95;
Refrigerator Froat Free S12!S ;
Portable Dryor $12S; Konmori
Washer &amp; Dryer Sot, $150 Each;'
Skagge Appllancto, 78 Vlno 540 Ml•-llaneoua
Slreol, Galilpollo, 7ol0-448-73118.
"""
Merchandise

l==i========T---.;..-----'

w.

9 Pc. Cherry Frenchstyle, D.R. Surte, 5 Pc. Wood Dlnet
sst, Table &amp; 4 Chairs, Beautiful &amp; Fancy 1960's Br.
Surte, 5 Pc. Br. suite, 3 Pc. Hard Rock Maple Br. suite,
Hardrock Maple Bunk Beds, Chest &amp; Dresser, Rollaway
Bea, Twin Size Br. Su~e. Sofa's, Loveseat, Swivel
Rocker, Recliner, Childs Rocker, T.V. Stand, Coffee
Table, End Tables, Gibson Refrigerator, White Westing
House Upright Freezer, Chest Type Freezer, Sharp
Microwave, Kenmore Wesher &amp; Dryer, Amana Washer.
Maytag Dryer, Metal Cabinet, Metal Shelf's, Old Banjo,
Collection of Milk Bottles Blue &amp; Clear, Sewing
Machine, Basket, Cow Cookie Jar, Lamps, Oil Lamp,
Linens, Curtains, Books, Quilting Frames, Sm.
Appliances. Tupperware, Toys, Suit Cases, Christmas
Decorations, Pots, Pans, Iron Skillets, Iron Kettle,
Silverware, Eureka The Boss Sweeper, Small Homelite
,XL Chetn Saw, Sev. Box Lots will be sold &amp; much more.

Auctlonaer•s Note: Good Clean Furniture ·
. &amp; Appliances

Open

$49.95 ea. Re1. $69.95 ea.
2. Fiber sl••• Tub &amp; Shower. White or color. $159.95 lo 1175.00. Handicap Showera only
t59.9S R81: $199.95.
3. St..! a.... Fibers!.,. Tubo. White or color $69.95 ea. Reg. 189.95 to $129.95.
One pc. color commode'•· 199.95 to $149.99, Reg. 1299.95. Some premium colora.
Lavatory Bowl. Round and Oval. Vit,..ous China. While and color. 129.95 ea., Reg.
$69.95 to tl29.95. Some premium colors.
·

Tub .W.U Surrounds- While and colora with grab ban and ohelv.. $59.95 - Reg. $79.95.
New pal!erna of Etilboaoes,llish Glou Bath and Shower TUe Board. 20 patterns on dil
1 .•• I 0.0 5 to •'14,95 • reg. 'I
• 95 ,
pay
• 8.95 lo .24.
.
Wood and Hardboard PanelioJ. 3000 r.c•. on dioplay. 114" x 4xll Mindy Board Panel•
(Newcul Cedor) (Summer Cloud) (Gar and Siripe) (Grey Cedar) (Counl;y Oak)
(M00-"-L)
95
1 •6 95 to •12
'"'6'" • ·
• · ea.
10. l/8" 1o 5/32" All wood Panels. (Wood G'raino) (Floras) (S1ripoo) $9.95 to 112.95 ea.
ll. 1/4" Hardwood Panelo (Oak) (Birch) (Maple) (Cherry). Example Lakeohore Birch
$17.50 ea.
·
·
·
12. Hardwood Plywood Unfmiohed Panels- (114" Luon t8.95) (1/4" Birch $18.95) (1/4" O~k
$19.95) (112" Oak t24.95) (3/4" Birch S29.95).
'
·
13. Solid Oak Ca•lnt!· (7' !o 16') 50¢ lin. ft. Ba.. 70¢ lin. ft.-Pine Paint Grade Baoe 35¢ lin.
fl. ·
14. Pine Boat:da (Grade 2) (6" x 12'- 14.95) (6" x 16' - 15.95) (8" x 12'- 15.95) (8" x 14'$6.95)
IS. Pine NO.2 Yard Stained(~" x!O" x 8'- $5.00) (2" xiO" • 10'- t7.00) (2"xl2" x 8' •
ta.OO) ( 2" x 12" x 8'- t 4.00 Each).
.
.
16. Steel S1udo for lnoido Wallo- 98¢ ea . Reg t2 .98 ea.
.
17. Wood Eye Boom• (I) 9" Heishr ro 30' Lon1 (I' lo 12' - 50¢ Un. f1.) (13' to 30' 90¢ lin. ft.)
18. Yord Sloined O.S.B. Board. From 314" lo 1-1/4" thick - 4'x8' Only 107.pes. to 10, tS.OO
19. Primed Wood Sidlnt!. Grey Wood grain Embo11ed '8" x 16"long 1!9.95 oq. Sold in 6 pc,
bundle• M.OO ea. Al•o U2' X4'x9'.
Black Felt Paper -!Sib. wt,. $7.95 per roll or two for $14.00
Porma (R) Foam lnonlation Board. Vinyl Both Sideo. 112" x 4' x 8' $4.25 oa. or buy 40
pc. bundle• $4.00 oa. Also 112' x 4'x91•
·
Round Aluminum Porch Columno- Whiro and Brown. (10" xiO' t69.95) (12" x!O'
J89.95) (12" x 9' t89.95) (8" x8' $49.95) (6" x 9' $39.95)
.
· Ponno Country Corner- (Crafro) (Fiowero) (Wallpaper) (Yard Goodo) (Piclureo and
(500) on diaplay. From 8" x 1~" to 22" x 28" in Solid Oak and Maple
Frames $2.99 to $29.95 ea. New 11hipment ofwaUpaper jull arrived. Price• from $3.99 to
S8.99 Oouble Poll (Framed Solid Oak 11" X 14" Pictul-e&amp; $7.95 ea.
two for·U4.00) (8"

or

1o:oo 11-m. - ?

Real Estate General

Real Eetata General ·

2S LOCUST ST.· GALLIPOLIS

F. Canaday, Broker· ·
.Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383
Ronald K; Canaday, Broker
Audrey

.

Apartment,

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY: 8 RENTAL UNITS
ON 6 BEAUTIFUL, PARTIALLY WOODED
ACRES ... NEAR CITY ON ROUTE 588. PRESENTLY
FULLY OCCUPIED.
CALL SOON FOR AN
APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS PROPERTY.

Modern 2 Bedrooms, 7•0·4.46·

0390.
NeWly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment. Prime location In

downtown Gallipolis. No Polal
$300.00 monll'l plus Ullllllea. Rtf·
eren981 &amp; Deposit Required.
Call: (740) •48·3302 for appoint·
""'nl.
North Fourth, Mlddllporl, 2 bod·
room furnished apartment. no
pa11, deposit &amp; reterancel, 740992-()165 .
Brookside Apll. Are n'ow Accepting Applications For All EII!IC·
trlc, One Bedroom Apartment1,
Washer /Dr~er Hook-Up, Water.
Trash !Sewage Paid, $279/Mo.•

VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE: LARGE 2 STORY
HOME PLUS 1 STORY HOME PLUS 2 BEDROOM
MOBILE HOME. ALL PfiESENTLY RENTED. NEAR
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE CAMPUS. ALL
FOR $76,000
LOOKING FOR A COZV HOME IN A CONVENIENT
LOCATION? WE HAVE ONEI 3 BEDROOM
RANCH HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM, EAT-IN
KITCHEN, UTILITY ROOM . CARPORT, FENCED
BACK YARD. GAS FURNACE. CENTRAL AIR
COND ... FENCED BACK YARD.

740-446-9811

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION. SPACIOUS BRICK HAS
3 BEDROOMS, 1 1/2 BATHS, GARAGE. IF YOU
ARE LOOKING FOR A HOME IN A CONVENIENT
LOCATION. CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT
TO VIEW THIS ONE I

Tak ing Applications - 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
4partmentli, lncludtl Water
Sewage, Trash , $31!/Mo .. 7•0·
448-0008.
.

Now

S~rlng Avenue- $160 monlh,
$100 deposit; ~ondor ' St.r tettraller. $250 month, $100 deposit;
740-611-3083.

NEW ON THE MARKET! BEAUTIFUL RAMBLING
BRICK TWO STORY.
FEATURES OPEN
STAIRCASE. 5 BEDROOMS, 2 BATH$, 2 CAR
GARAGE. ONE ACRE LOT. A GREAT PLACE TO
LIVE AND SHOW OFF YOUR ANTIQUES.
1 1/2 STORY FRAME HOME. · 3 BEDROOMS, ONE
BATH. FULL BASEMENT, 22'X24' GARAGE. ONE
ACRE LAWN. JUST LISTED!

'Bessie.£..

left you

l~»~mondoH&gt;n-ttl-~~h•~·

banqs _qraue alone, :nt!~-1.1
you .Morn. I rnus you
tn)' sidt. •
Your'Da
'Btssit

N•w Home-Green Twp. 2.44 Acres.
Tum key, just move ln.
Call for
appointment.

·
LANDLOTS
Falrll•ld Church-Pleasant Hlll:5 Acres t . Greal home slfe. Green Twp.

SPRINO IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER .. AND IP
YOU WOULD LIKE TO ENJOY SPRING AND
SUMMER IN THE COUNTRY THIS YEAR, CALL
FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS MOBILE
HOME LOCATED ON ROUTE 775. MOBILE H_OME
AND .LOT $18,000.
LAROE COUNTRY HO,ME HAS 6 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS. ATTACHED GARAGE PLUS SEPARATE
GARAGE. F!fiEPLACE IN LIVING ROOM AND
FAMILY ROOM. SURROUNDED BY BEAUTIFUL
TREES. ONE ACRE LOT, NEW LOW PRICE I

Four City Lota·Commerclal or home s"e.
Horrloon Twp.-40 Acres +. Secluded, Private, Wooded.
Jackt.On 'Pikl Ar••Nice building lot. Cloeelo Grocery Slores, Churches.

LAROE 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS NICE FORMAL
LIVING ROOM. FAMILY ROOM . 1 1/2 BATHS,
SEPARATE GARAGE. LOCATED ON ROUSH LANE
NEAR CHESHIRE. HOMES ARE SCARCE IN THIS
AREA, BETTER CALL SOON!
I

0'

$4.00

:

Unlltr 12 Fill W/Adult
BUY* SELL'TRADE
1-77 E:o:itl70 ToRt. 21
uft, R1. 14 ujl FoUow
To R1. 4, Left on Rt. 4

I

to Expo Ctr.

I GIJNS, KNIVES, .
MILITAIUA
Old Dominion ~how•
Info: (540) 238-1343:

.

.

lome For Sale by Qwner .

'":~:: femlly home features . 4 ·BR, 2 1/2 baths,
fc
living room, dining room, eat~ln kltciHin
w/fllreptlace,large family room, Spring Vallay.
·
Prlc:ed below appraisal.

1

245·9337
-

1163-4 bedrooms, 1 bath, and on 1 1/2 lots located in
Eureka, city schools, priced In lhe low $30,0QO.
IUI0-2 bedroom home, t bath, frame ranch In Rio
Grande and
City Schools, 2 acres more or less.

446-3636

Bedroom. All ut11111a1
paid eiCcept etectrlc. Galllpolll
~.rry. (304)875·13711117:5-3230.

Modern 1

reason

0

Realty

Apartments In Middle·
pori. From $2•9-$373. Call 7•0·
i~2 - 5064 . Equal Housing Oppor-

on tfiis ~ur 'Bi'rtfidr1y
:Mardi 8, 1999
I went down memory lane
to tlie cemetery as you and
I fiad
IJ years. I
limrere·a a wfiile al your
· and 1 belieued tfiat I
couertd every
1 don 't
· rtcaff wfiere 1
&lt;T!ie
place, time,
aff I saw

"BigOne"
It$
Here
Anyway

~anadayq ~

~lveralde

1 Bedroom
tol0-448-0390.

~

lnttrtt.itt Fair &amp; l•po
Sat. 9-5, Sun 9-4 ·

Real Eatate General

Gt:adoua living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and

Modern

SHOW
Mar. 13-14

~~

• No motOrized IHle vehicles or animals
• All ferm related consignments welcome
• Consignments accspted Friday March 19, 1999
From 12 Noon-6:00 PM and
Saturday March 20 from 8:00 AM until Sale 11me
• For more Information call rn-5696,
875·5463 or n3·5785
•. Purchasars must presant.tax exempt
number or pey 1811. No Exceptions
• Ceeh or check with proper 1.0.
·• Not responsible lor accidents
• All sales commi&amp;sions go to the
Meeon County Fair ·
,
Financing avall8bla through West VIrginia Farm ·
CredH,ACA.
All financing subject to approval by West Vlrglnle
Fsrm Credl~ ACA.
. AUCTIONEERS
RICK PEARSON AND EDWIN WINTERS

f&gt;oslt Roqulnld, Utitlllea Paid, 7.0.
..,a-1519.

ltrl)~los .

GVM

Maintenance
"Mike ..
Is "50" Today!
"-"Love, Your Si3
~&amp;Family

Rt. 82 N. Of Point Pleaiant, WV
Saturday March 20, 1999

Frame•)ov~r

x 10" 14.98 ea. or rwo for $8.00). ·

(Parkersburg)

AEP~

MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

Whirlpoolt.· Ca1t Acrylic. Over 50 in stock· aome premium color•. 1499.95 to $1099.95.
E.xample • 60" x 42"x2l" Churchhill· white only· $499.95. Reg. Sl395 .00.

MINEUL WELU, WY

.

773-5785 or n3-5447
Terms: Cash or Check with

I to I • 110 Th•n· or Su•.

30 Announcemente •

~

Auction Conducted By
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

"*""hod

Furnllhtd Up1talra 2 Rooma &amp;
Bath,.Clean, References. &amp; De·

&gt;

Repaired, New &amp; Rel&gt;ulh In S!Oclc.
Can Ron evan&amp; 1-B00-53H!i28.

Located at the Auction center on Rt. 33 ln Mason W.V.
will be selling the estate of Dorthy Murphy from Mason,
W. V. along w~h another partial, estate from Belle, v.

lor Rent
I•II•IM ""rial • ' ' " ' ' ' • Clo1t01t• • SwPllf
"::1nd-:"':2:":bod:':-::r~oom~a..;,pa_rlmln..;,_..,ll-,""fw-- III. FREE (I) Bidet Commode with purchaoe of (I) other commode. Example - White 2 pc.

:!! ·Bedroom

,

PUBUC NOTICE

Sealed bids will be received until 10:00 a.m. on
5
• thc rca1 cslate Iocated
I Ih day of M arc h, 1999, ,or
514 First Avenue; Gallipolis, Ohio, known locally as
Davis Hall, .and more particularly described in Volume
146, page 375, Deed Records of Gallia County, Ohio.
Said real es1ate is owned by Holzer Hospital Fo;~.~~~~~~~~
and will be sold as is. Each bid should be hand
or mailed by certified mail to Charles L Adkins, Jr.,
President, Holzer Medical Center, 100 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563.
The Board of Trustees of Holzer Hospi1al Foundation
reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
Bids will be opened and tabulated at 12;00 noon on
15th day of March, 1999, and the successful bi~ldc1rl

' :-,

/llshlll and unlurnlahlll, securJIY
depoall required, no poll, 740992-2218.
1 Bedroom Ground Floor Economlcal ~a 1 Heat Near Holzer,
WID Hook-Up, Qulel Location
$279/Mo., Plus Ullllllea. 1•o-..re-

AERATION MOlORS

Public Notice

Household

Apartments

JET

--~.

W•II1ton, Ohio ,.,.,,.,

EEO/AA Employer

Located at the Auction Center on Rl. 33 In
Mason, WV.
FURNITURE
.
Super nice 12 pane pine &amp; cherry corner cupboaril &amp;
mah. double pedestal DR table w/matching set of 12
mah .. Chipp-en-dale chairs. Super carved side board,
country vi«t. cherry side board, Viet. wal. wardrobe,
sm. mah. breakfront, 54" oak roll top desk w/ralsed '
panels, lg. oak secretary bookcase, Acantus carved
rnah. secretary, fancy serp. front dresser, beautiful
wal. ornate pump organ, 3 pc. wal. 1920's poster BF!
suite, mah . Hi-boy w/serpents on mirror, 9 pc. mah,
DR suite, 3 pc. mah. BR suite w/shield mirror, Queen
Ann wal. china cabinet, Viet. country corner shelf,
mah. 1 door wardrobe, oak 1 door wardrobe, 5 pc BR
suite w/great factqry paint, oak refractory table w/6
carved high back chairs, tressel table w/6 chairs &amp;
server, oak Morris chair, early rocker w/needlepolnt
seat &amp; back, w~sh stands, round oak table, square
oak table, set of oak chairs, oak rockers, blanket
chests, 3 stack mah . bookcase, mah. secretary boo~
case, 2 Viet. oval M.T. tables, French stool, mah.
game table w/lg. clawfeet, 3T' x 62" leaded &amp; stained
glass window, oak hoosier style kitchen cabinet, oak
Hi-boy, 4 drawer spool cabinet, one drawer wasH
stand, wal. viet. corner shelf, 4 door ice box, oak wall
telephone, Stakmore folding card table &amp; 4 Pierce
carved back folding chairs, fainting couch , Esso gas
pump, early poster rope bed, wal. viet bed, wicker
baby buggy, wicker childs chair, Eastlake tall bed, 4
ladder back chairs, buffet, &amp; more.
.
GLASSWARE
.
Items of special interest-signed Galle lamp, signed
Handel table lamp acorn handle, brass hanging lamp
Cranberry shade w/rose &amp; apothecary drug jars,
Leeches- honey &amp; Tamarinds. Gone With The Wind·
lamp, conslgner says these . are 3 sm: Tiffany lamp
shades not signed, slag glass banquet lamp, beautiful
hand painted Nippon-dresser box- perfume bottleS··
Tankard &amp; 4 glasses, copper luster pitcher, 2 pc:
Pilgrim glass, 2 cutgl;~ss vases, Hummels- Soldier
Boy, Be Patient- We Congratulale &amp; others, 4 blue cup
plates, early Mr. Peanut Jar, Bleeding Heart miniature
lamp, Alfred Meakin iron stone tea leaf pitcher;
miniature stoneware Whiskey jug, Donnaghus jar,
Orphan Annie cup &amp; Ovaltine cup &amp; more.
SPORT PLAQUES
Mickey Mantle- Joe Dimaggio- Nolan Ryan· Mark
McGwire· Sammy Sosa- McGwlre &amp; Sosa- Michael
Jordan· Pippen &amp;· Jordan- John Elway- Dale
Earnhardt- Jeff Gordon.

DISHNETWORK 16' Mini DISh
Package Slarllng At 119.9!, 1·

opponunl1y baals.

440

Ml-lleneoua
Merchandise

Moore owner.

Hooro 9-11GOOD USeD

to advenlse "any p-nce.

540

~ Marchllndlae

· Merchandise

Antiques

MERCHANDISE

For Sate; Ro-condtllonod washera, dryers and relrtgeratoro.
Thompsons
App n'ance-3407
Jecks.on Ave ., (304)875-7388;

AH rea1111a1a -Ising In
lhla newspape~Ja subjecl to

general secretarial, clerical
(tec:hniical assistance for faculty for the .Scl~oo'l~
Liberal Arts, Humanities and
registering students; s.c~J'~~·~~~
(claJsses; maintaining fiscal records and
·,
ltio:nist duties for the departments.
,.
Must have high school diploma or equivalen~;
IAl&gt;socialte Degree preferred. Must have know!- ~
and .demonstrated use of computers,
IWI)fll processing, e-mail, interne! usage. Goo4
and written communication skills and pre~
1vu1n~ office experience preferred.
All applicants must submit a letter of int1ere!ttl
resume including the names of three refte,.;l
on or before March 15, 1999 to Mf.
Mason, PHR, Direclor of Human
IRe:sottrce:s, University of Rio Grande, MCSPRio Grande, OH 45674; fax number 740-:
1245-~190 1[): e-mail pmason@urgrgee,edu
.

va

home 1lte available bet·
and Pomeroy, call
7&lt;10-385-1387.

nas.

IR(~spons:ibiliti,es include, but are not.limited

540 Ml-'lanecn•s

540 Ml-llaneous

Buy or 1111. River ine Antlqull .

grarors, 90 Day Guorentoet
French City Maylag, 7•0·446-

0

Merchandlea

1124 E. Main Street, on AI. ~2~ .
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 8:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p.m. 7•0-992·2526. Run

Appl
lancll;
washaro,
Dryora, Reconditioned
Rangaa, Rofrl·

fiti7.

The Auction House will be reopening on
Saturday, March 13, 1999 at 7:00 P.M. to
take care of all your auction needs. We will
ta)dng consignments every weekday and
Saturday the day of the sale until6:00 P.M.
Ike, Reanie and the crew would like to
thank all of our customers for bearing with
while we were closed.

""""'
·
530

ween Athena

510

540 Ml-llaneous

Jiuttbv Cimea-.jlentbul • Page 05•

For Sale: 1 SUmmll SOH Climbing
TrH Stand, 1150.00 ; 1 Horlon
Super Mag Croubow With Ar·
rowo, $100.00 ; 1 Tradition 50
Caliber tr.tuzzl1 Loader WUh
Scope And Sling And Cleaning
Kit, $200.00. Alvin D. Hershbtrg·
or. •789 Patriot Rd. Patriot, Ohio
In CadMUI. c/o Dan J . Herah·

Goods

america's CBest CBuy In 'Education

ISUC'S AUCTION HOUSE
VINTON, OHIO

• SIGN-ON DONUS &amp;12 Hit SHim!

Dctve-W, Columbu•. OH 43215.16141 464·2273. eoe

\

Goode

Tretter, IOCited ·on Broad
Townhouse Apartments,
Spacioul, 2 Bedroom1 , 2
Run Road, ~" Ha..n. $270.mo
+ ulllltlta &amp; deposit. (304)773· Flo&lt;n, CA, 1 1/2 Bath. Fully COr·
peloid, Polio. Nc Pels. Laose Plus
~1 .
Security Dtpoiii .Requlred , 7..0.
:i Blllrooma, 8 Mllea From Galll- ~·. 740-4e8-0101 .
polii ·On 218, $2150/Mo., + DeposIt. Large Pcn:h, 7&lt;10-31&amp;-9948.
Twtn Rivera Tower noW accepting
appi~IIONI for ~ br. HUD lubskf·
-8 Mlltl Out 218, 2 Badrooma lied apt. tor. eld•rly and hindi·
$225/Mo., Plua Depoaii,_And Ref; CII&gt;Pid- EOH 30&gt;1-e7!!-t879.
"'"""''·
74Qo448.'
. a172. 74Q-2S8-8251,
'
460 Spa~ for Rent
· New Mobile Home

540 MlacellantOus
Merchandlee

Sporting

lor Rent

, .. Bedroom, in Pt. Pleaaanl.
j304)87!-2174, or(740)441-2200.

KfGISTfKfD NUitSfS
Experience In long-term core preferred. In e~chonge
hr your warm and compassionate attitude, we offer
good pay . excellent bene.f 1 l ~ pockoge· including
comprehensive Insurance. AOI(k). pa id ho lidays/
vocations, and the satisfaction of working for one of .
the notion 's lagesl and mo~t re$peded health core
providers. For Imme dia te con~idero ll on . send
your resume. apply tn person or call: HEARTLAND·
VICTORIAN VILLAGE. Human Re100&lt;ee•. 920 Thucber

•

520

420 Mobile Homes

The University of Rio Grande invites appl'~~~~,~~~ for the position of Secretary II in the
of Liberal Arts, Humanities and Soci3!

.

2520 VlUEY DIM
Pl. PLElSllll, WV 25550
OR FAI 10 1304)675-6975

·:.~~~~-......1

TWO rATHS...
ONE fUTUKE.

1

fl Registered Nurse

Resource Developmenr , ADENA HEALTH SYSTEM , 272
Hospital Road, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601,_ (740) 779-7562,
FAX (740) 779~7894 if yo u have questiOns requardmg

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPWYER
Help Wanted .

HelpWanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital

Surgery- Full Time, day shift. One year of surgica l eKperience preferred.
Emergency Ser'w'ice• • Includes 2 full time evening s~ift
positions co nsisting of 2 8's and 2 l2 's .and l pari u?"e
pOsition cohsi sting of 2 days und 2 ev emn.gs. We requtre
one year of emergency services/t ria g~ ex perience or +5
years of Med~S urg experience .
Qualified ca n'didates should submit 11 resume lo Human

P.O. Box6Z
Jackson. OH 45640
· 110

1395, 1-614·501·8339 alter
7:30pm.

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

2BR

SECRETARY II
SCHOOL OF LIBERAL ARTS,
HUMANITIES, SOCIAL
SCIENCES

enees, lease ·and deposit, rent

'

REGISTERED NURSES

CAD Operator
·,

420 lloblla Hornee
for

or rent in Mlddltport, no
2 &amp; 3 bodloom mobllo hom.._ Ill
Ctllrmlng COuntry Collage 2 Bad·
7&lt;10-992-15858.
BeaUtifUl 2 ~cre1. Centenary Rd.,
740-441 ~1 482
conditioned, $280·$300, aow11,
roomo, Bath, Kllchtn, Living, Din· 1 '"'~~M~ob~ll~e~H~om-.,.ea-~ water and trash Included, 7•oDeed Reatrlcted. Surrounded by.
lng, $&lt;400/Mo., Depo&amp;ll, No Pall. 420
Glllll Co.: Hunters 68 + Wood· Beautiful Homes. 740-446-2927.
992·21 87.
_1o10-2~s-so53.
lor Rent
ed Acres On Williams Hollow
$44,500. Just 0" S.R 218, Friendly
312 Wetzgal St. Pcmeroy. 3 Bdrm
2 Btdroom1. On Addl1on Plkt,
360
Real Eetate
Ridge Rd., I~ Acres $14 ,SOO,
Hou&amp;t, $350.00 t,lonth, Depoall 14x65 2'BR, 1 112 balh; no peto; $220.00 Month, InclUde• Ware;,
Wentld
Requlred.1-888-IW0-0521 .
retarencea required : Sandhill $100.00 Oepo11t, No Pl!lta, 7•oPublic Water, City Schools!
Road; (304)67:5-:llla..
Teens Run Ad. 10 Acres $10,000
..r8·3437, 740-446-1637.
We Buy Land: 30 ·!SOO Acru, For Rent 3BR House In New Ha·
- $1 ,000 Down + $132 AMonth.
Wo Pay Cash. 1·800·213·8305, •en S250. mo. Also. Small 28!1
Anthony Land Co.
110 HelpWanled
House In New Haven SHiO. mo.
Melgt Co.: Danville, Briar Ridge
(304)67!-1851 Aller 5PU.
Ad ., · 7 Acres WUh Ponj:t Or 5
Acres Wllh Stream $12,000 Or 410 Houses for Rent
New Haven, 2 Bedroom Home,
On SA 325, filce Wooded 17
Acres $18,000. Public Water. Ru- 3 Bedrooms , t 112 Bath Ranch garage. ftvtr frontage. ReferencHome, 2 Cor Garage, ·Nice Neigh- 11. deposl!, &amp; Lease. (304)93•·
tland. Whites Hill Fld ., 11 Acres
borhoOd, Gallipolis City Schools, 7&lt;162.
$14,000 Or 9 Acres $12,000,
Raccoon Road $~OOJMo ., No
Public water.
Three bedroom. new furnace,
Pets , 3 References Required,
c::arpeted, many updates, rtler·
740·882·6048.
BRUNER .._..
' •uo

ANNOUNCEMENT

5 Acrea Bla cktop Frontage &amp;
Lake VIew, · Gallta County,
$32,000 More Acreage Available,

Good llltctlon ol used homes
wun 2 or 3 bedrooms. sranlng at ' 740·388·8678.
$31195. Quick dtiiVt\)'. Call 740-

NHrc WV. Help make 2 paymenll
warranty.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

And Stove ln,:luded , 740·2-45·

- 5.

yr1. Stlllln
7191.

2936.

Sunday, March 7, 1999

"

1162-3 bedroom home, 2 baths, family room, living room
wllh wood floors, oak cabinets In kitchen, In Gallipolis City
Schools. Call about lhls one today.
1181-LOG HOME-3 to 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, lull
basement, 2 k"chens, Oak cabinets and trim, large slone
WB fireplace, and located on 5 acres M or L just t 0
minutes from Holzer Clinic. Call today.
1501Q-Commercial property localed in Vinton-Two one
family dwellings lind one IWo family dwelling. Good
inveslmenl property.
I

1159-Home located on Srale Aouta 218 has 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, and 5.9 acres M or L. Just listed, call about this
one.

1157-Brlck home w~h 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
car garage, and 9 acres M or L, located in
Green/Gallipolis School district. Call for more
Information.

1156--Home In Gallipolis City school dislrlct, 3 bedrooms,
1' 1/2 baths, attached garage. Cell for appolnlrrtent.
1155-3 bedrooms, 1 bath, In city school district, loct1ted
on 1 acre M or L. Call for more lnlorma11on.
1153-IN GALLIPOLIS-3 bedroom -I balh, lullll ~~~~~e~i
car port, Immediate pOssession. Call for an a1
to see.

12010.70 acres, more or less approic 30 acres wooded,
utll. available, mineral rights.
•
12014- Residential Lot(s) In Gallipolis
I201CI-Vacant land In Morgan Twp., 8.40 acres, M or L,
approx. 7.4 acres are woodland. Call lor Information.
FOR

RENT-TWO BEDROOM
HOSPITAL

SCHOOL~EAR

APARTMENT-CilY

�•

Pomeroy • M L .Golllpollo,
540

Mlecel1neoua

560

MMctwlndiM

-

De

"'"'"' (3041195-3789 (304)895
37&lt;40

AKC P()meranlan tmall black
malo po.m $350 7&lt;1Q.a96-t085

TWin Bed Complete Frame
Hoodbolld Footboard Simmons
Boqprlng &amp; MatUtSI S.O 740

AKC Pomeranian Three Females
7 Monthl Old $175 One 10

.4. 1064

Weeks

$300

Flwe 2 Weeks

$300 7&lt;t0-388-M42

Wanted to buy glua canning
Jars and suppUaa call Jeff 740
742 2012

AKC Registered Labrador Pup
p6as Ct\amplon BIOOdlne Proven
Hunting Stock Born 1/4199
Wormed &amp; 111 Sholl M/F Black
Yellow Chocolate $200 740

-

Waterline Special 3/4 200 PSI
$2t 95 Por tOO 1" 200 PSI
$37 00 Par t 00 All Brass Com
proo&amp;lon Aitlngs In SID&lt;*
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Ohio t-800-537 9528

AKC Roglslolld Roh Woller Pup
plea Females Champlonahlp
Bloodline Excellent Tempermtnt
&amp; Dlsposlllon Sholl Up To Dote
$375 740-245-5923

WOlFFTANHING BEDS

Ton N.HcrNt
Buy Direct And SAVEl
CorM'ootclal .tiomo
Unlll From $t99
low MoniNy Paymonll
FREE Color Catalog
Coli TOOAY I 800-7.1 HJ t511

AKC SP'Ietlle Jiupples sable &amp;
while vet checked champion
pedigree $300 etch 740 898
10115

B V BoutMidoAquortum

Woodburner with glua doors for
ll&lt;&gt;uoo 0&lt; mobl" homo good condillon $275 740-992 7301

2006 camoen A-.nua
Parkl-'11 WV 28t01
~~t293

~&amp;Kittono

FuM I~ of Pill ouppllts

550

Building
Sup pile•

Block brick sewer plpll wind
owa lintels etc Claude Winters
Rio Grando OH Call 740 245
5t21

560

Pets

for

Mutlc.l

570

Sale

A.KC Labrlldore Retriever Yellow
1 Black Sire 1 Da,. on premia
u $250 (30~1~58 2~~3 altor

Order Now For May Planting
Oann~

for

lnttrumentt

TOBACCO PLANT$ FOR SAlE

Leave Mttltge

Pelt

sale

Now Open Sundays 1-4 Mon Sat
t1 8 Fish Tank &amp; Pot Shop
2413 Jack1on Ave Point Plea•
ant 304-e75-20113

Golden Retriever AKC Puppies
Shots Wormed Female $250 00
Mal• $200 00 (7401 379-252~ or
(740)-379-"298t

1 yr old Miniature Oauahund
tt 50 OBO Good with children

Male Boxv pup 4 month&amp; old
aa&lt;~ng $tOO 7&lt;10-7~2 2525

2 Cockatiels wHh cage breeding
"'" $200 (~)875-7298

Roglslorod Golden Rotrlover Puppkls Born 1/4/99 Had Shots And
Wormed Asking St75 740 245
5098

!*)87~989

AKC Collie pup sable &amp; white
male normal ayes $300 740
69e-t065

Cloaronco Solo Up To 40% Off
Hummingbird Muolc Jacl&lt;oon OH
7&lt;10-216-5888
Eplphone Leo Paul Black Beauly
Electric Gullar ~85 Sound Key
board With Stand Both Ex..llont
Cordtlonl7&lt;t0-25HM7

610 Farm

Wanted Farm or Acreage to rent
for hunting 100 to 500 acrea
wtth tlmbor and pastute prolorrod
Respond to ~o Box 223 Seen
Oopot wv 255211 Ot coli
(3041757 5346

Pygmy goato 4 dooa and I ba

viiHava From 25 To 30 Uoad
Tractoro In Stock Financing Ao
Low AI I 98'11. Fixed Rat• 0~
OuaHiylng Tractors CormlchMro
Farm A Lawn Your local John

Deere Deater Midway Between
Golllpollo And Rio Grando On
Jackoon Plko 740 4~8 2412 Or
t -80().5114-t 111

1 Aaglatertd Duroca Boar 3
Croll Bred Sowa For Salt 740.
379-2370

18 17 eltvtn month old ewe
!ambo Cordlro brood 740 742
t315
2 Year Aelgatered Mart Broke

Good 7&lt;10-379-2820
3 Ho- 7&lt;t0-387 722t

bltl7~110

640

Hay l

Grain

500-700 lbl outlldt S11 lnoldo
IIIII and oecond cuttlng $13 IIIII
year new Mlc:llng CIOYir dmothy
&amp; orehlrd t20 Mitchol Ad 7&lt;t0-3059ai1M~

710 Autot

Fr11h &amp; Spring Holstein Hetrert
Also Rtgllllfed Bulla 740 288
2496

11188 Dodgo Daytona 2 5 4 Cylln
dtr EFI 5 Spood 1400 740
3711-27511 740-379-2t~
1818 Otdo CuUa11 2 Ooo11 Aulo
AA Low Mlltagt Good Condition
$2.700 7&lt;40 ue 4782

For Sale Ml.od Hayl $t 25 Por
Bale Jackson Ohio 740 288
2959

1_, ·1180 CARS FIIOIU500Pollee Impounds And Tax 8t Lincoln Towna cor PW PB
POL C8111tle 111 big clOth lnr
Ropo 1 For Llollngo Cell t 100
terlor clean good gu mileage 319-3323 ExLnever been amoktd In reason
198e Honda Accord .s Doors 5 lblt priced lnquirlel only,
7&lt;40-992 2358 ahor ~or 1•Spood 1879 Ponllsc Bonneville
mal'·ge.,.,..,...
Clton Cal $1 000 7&lt;40 448 1434

710 Autol for

Good Groll Hoy $1 75 Ba" 7&lt;10448-1104

lntortor Now Englno Runo Groall

740 441 t82~ leave

Maasago

1~90 Buick Rogal G S

83 000
Miles S. 300 00 7&lt;t0-441 13t8

t889 Chevy Suburban Loadod
Excollont Condlllon $8 850 740448-2532

1990 Ford Mu&amp;tang GJ 5 o 5
SpOod $3 500 7411-&amp;43.Q632 At

11( 8 ~M

t990 Plymouth Voyaoor 3 o En
glne Air Tilt Cruise New Tires
Alklng St 700 7&lt;t0-387-7o480

3925

Oh, look at the
~ifference

Autos for Sale

88 Chrysler LeBaron good co,..
dltlon standard !5sp 4 cylinder
turbo w/new engine air 12000
080 740-9925024

t99l Ford Tempo
~ Dr1 Red
50 800 ~ AJC, PowoowlndOw&amp;
Stoll Excclll CoRd 13 600 00

G"

From

Your Klcla

Santi Rose

eftii'J'
.... piMH don't

1981 Cadillac Sevllle 4 door se
dan loaded with accessories
great gas mileage car phone
31Jo1.6752722

s~.

"40"

STRAW For Sale Wallis Farm
(304)875-4087

710

at,

hetween "4" and

Square Baits 01 Good Groan
Mlxod Hay S2 00 Each 740-«6
24t2

1188-2822

t99t Blue Ford Probe Air
Pioneer Stereo
Aulomallc
t50 ooo Hwy Milos Asking
$2 BOO 7&lt;t0-44t.()t98

pout, you're

turllln8 JO • tun
let It Ill bini out
Ot will UI)'Wlty).
Hastn Birthday
Amy

Blackbum Realty
514 Second Avenue
Glllllpollo OH 45631

96 Goo Matro 2 Door 4 Cylln
dar AUIOm
AIC Caaaette
53 000 Milts S. 200 00 7&lt;10-2568487 740-256-63&lt;40
1996 Noon whitt with spoiler 2
door auto air amlfm cas11tte
28 ooo mites $5 500 7~0 7~2
3135

88 Camaro V a auto spoiler T
tapa bllallver ground effects
sharp asking $4t50 740 742
3114
BUICK t990 Buick LaSa~re
31 000 actual mllea
New
Bridges tone Tires Garage Cap
(30417j3-5t86
Automo~ll• Profeaslonal Paint
(Enamoll Selective Colors $20
Gallon 7&lt;10-379-9081

7~().448-4730

720

t993 Mlllublshi/Miroga Pearl
Yellow Auto A c Radlo/Caa.
a~te Sun roof Spoiler Low
M~es
Excellent Condition
~700 (~)875-t283/87!1-t371

cat angina 5 speed with 22 van
body side door goOd t res toot

Trucka for sale

t985 GMC 7 000 Topklck 3208

box spare tire vary clean truclt
7&lt;10-247 3&amp;14

f994
Cadillac
Fleetwood
Bt'augham 24 000 Actual Miles 3
Year Cadall!c Certified WarrantLoaded Uko Now 740.«6 425

t987 S tO Chevy 87 oo milts
1988 Dodge Omnl F 000 miles
7&lt;10-992-4569

7~205

t988 D
e Da~' 2 WD Pick
UP Standard Tr
:tlaalon 740
245-9172

7-.ooo&amp;
Fax 740 448 0006
Residence 740-441·1111
evansmoo@zoomnet net

t988 For&lt;l F t50 8 ely auto PS
PB auto runs looks good $2600
740-247"""292

BIG BEND REAL'TY, INC.

Real

1-800-585-7101 or 44~-7101

1992 F150 Cullom $4395 or
trade tor Chevy or GMC "'an ot
oqual voluo 7&lt;10-742 7eD5

1988 s to Blazer V 8 4x4 High
Mileage Contact Mr Ga.orge At
74Q.448.5345

t992 Ford Ranger XlT v 6
Auto AC Very Wall Malnlalned
Good Condition! Aoklng $4 500

1991 Ford Explorer 4x4 V-6 New

Engine Standllrd

140-388-8293,

F 150 4X4 6 ely 4 sp runs
good $2 000 7~0 992 340 t 740.

NISSAN Hlld to ftnd 1994 Nil
san King Cab Automatic Air
AM/FM Cassette Power Mirror
New Tires 8 t 000 mile&amp;

730

Vans

332-41109

740

&amp; 4-WD•

Hines exhaust K&amp;N filters
&amp;teerlng stab111zer new rear tire/
sprocket tank bra polished
frame/custom paint 2 helmets
$3700 (3041882 2533/ti75 8963
1998 Polaris Sport ATV 583
mires $41!00 (3041895 38081
895 3025

78 Ford Four Wheel Orlvo 5250
Good Condition $4 500 May
consider trade Day(3041675

3 R,aclng Go Carts lots of Part&amp;
(304)875-1789

~230 Evonlng(~)67~853

'-"'I'~

~~~

";(_.

Q/J

446•6806 ~'lfJh 4
388

Main Office
8826
958 Clark Chapel Rd
Ohio 45614

*

446 4618

MAiiKETr

PRICE REDUCED- POMEROY Wotzgalt St 1 story houM wKh
living room dining room kitchen bath 2 bedrooms downstairs
UpstaltS has nice elze dormer bedroom wth extra storage Extra tot
lor part&lt;lng Great buyl Now Only $28 900

l

1 Year W•ITIInttd Home In Middleport· Llvlng Room 4 BR bath

k~lt~ch:etn~~;~:~

stove refrlg washer &amp; dryer Lots of Closeta Moatly
Roof in 98 Control M FA Gas lumace Outbuilding
lot Circular dnve Excellent buy n mid-40 s

RACINE Comfortable home lOcated on 4th St 2 BtOIY home 3 BR
bath LA Dr kit wJstove &amp; DW vinyt sldmg Porches SOme grapes &amp;
strawberries Very n ce yard In the 30 s Will consider otter
Pomeroy Butternut Ave Building wlbasement &amp; 2 floors Outsk:Je
to each floor kitchen bathroom m surprisingly good
Large additional ot across street for parking A great buy
right person Worth $45 000 Take $22 000

l ~~;1~~~
I

NEWLY ON THE
NIFTY &amp; IN THE FIFTIES!
OWNER MORE THAN
ANXIOUs TO SELL Enjoy
all the conveniences be ng
close 10 town In lhls 3
bedroom home Large lwlng
room dlntng area kotchen
lamlly room or formal dining
2 Balhs nice de1ached
30 x32 garage Approx 1
ace lreed lawn and morel
Be the ftrsl to view this one!
11078

SYRACUSE Well bu It home 4 Yrs old 3 BR 2 botho lR DR kit 18
eat 1n w/bar &amp; oak cabinets OW range ret Included Utlltly rm
HP/AC Stg B dg Very nice home t yr warrantod

POMEROY Condor St 2 story home with living room large eat In
kitchen 3 or 4 bedrooms 1 bath cellar room good tor storage Hu a
parch on lower and upper stories 2 window air conditioner~ 1tay
$38 000

.Vt N,,,. d L1'11r1r , 1

1

~r~)pPrly

IS sdluhJ C,1 Ill~ tn(l.ty'

Henry E Cleland Jr

IS THIS WHAT YOU HAVE
BEEN LOOKING FOR?
Almost new home situated
on 2 acres m/1 and tn the
Low $60s Prlvale wooded
setting 3 bedrooms 2 baths
cathedral cellongs newer
furnace Lo1s more Be one
ollhe flrst1o look a11hls one
$113 900 00 11087

992·

• 742·2357

TUOOR STYLE RANCH
made with 1he family In mind
Large living room &amp; family
room w th formal donlng area
Ealln k lchen 3 bedrooms
2 full baths Resting on a
few easy to maln1aon acres
1978
NEW! ACREAGE! 12 1/2
ACRES M/L Mos11y all fla1
land 1hal borders Symmes
Creek Owner will consider
doing owner financing

,079
FARM 173 Acres more or
less
Lots of pasture &amp;
wooded land along wl1h
several llllable acres of good
crop
land
Tobacco
allo!menl Older 1 1/2 slory
1arm home
Large barn
5437 Lincoln Pike 11074
1 ACRE LOT M/LI Publtc
wa1er &amp; sewage avarlablel
Restrlc1ed $7 900 00 11045

933
FOURTH
AVENUE . .,1100 00
All
the Clly conveniences
comes with this home
Living room dining room
kitchen 2 baths 3 bedrooms
&amp; more Detached 1 car
garage
wllh
carporl
Excellent cond~tOn Don I lei
lhls one pass you byl 11068

113
VINTON
CRT
$44 800 00
Well
constructed 3 bedroom
home hvlng room kolchen
bath
Newer roof
Quick
possession!
Walking
distance lo s1ores school
Church etc

,080

CUTE AS A BUTTON Must
see tnslde lhls almosl new
home Larger lhan appears
from lhe exlerlor
3
Bedrooms 2 full balhs nice
kitchen with oak cablnels
living room dining area
auached 1 car garage and
plenly of a&gt;cterlor room being
approx 1 6 acres Let us

.•

I I 0

I

~ --~
.
'

.....

~

LOOK HERE AT THI$ ONEI
Asking price Is can you
believe $36 900 001 Ranch
slyllil' home wllh aUached
garage family room large
kitchen and living room
basemen!
Excellent
loca11on ne&gt;ctlo lown lei us
show II to you 11037
LIKE
SOME
EXTRA
INCOME TO HELP MAKE
YOUR MTG PAYMENT?
Then ptck up lhe phone and
call to sse thts almost new
home just a few monutes of
lown You wrll be Impressed
with this home large lamoly
room hvrng room dining
kolchen 3 bedrooms 2 lull
baths &amp; lo1s of extras
oncluded Collect lhe rental
Income off the garage
apartmenl tncluded Call for
delallsl 11085

NEW
LISTING!
AFFORDABLE
RUSTIC
STYLE HOMEI $45,000 00
3 Bedroom home wtlh
counlry charm
covered lronl porch
some finishing work Ternfic
buy do some work &amp; gain
equtly Over 1 acre

11009

18 ACRES MIL
READY FOR BUILDING!
This property loca1ed tn
Morgan
Township
has
-alleet of road lronlage
With
u11111les
available
$16,900
NO WAITING HERE YOU
CAN
MOVE
IN
IMMEDIATEL'I: and best of
all owner •• willing to deall
Wanls sold nowl Nice ranch
beautiful red
oak
with
hardwood flooring 3 Baths
full
walk ou1
basemen1
Plenly of garage space here
with the attached oversized
2 car garage plus metal
detached 24 x32 butldlng
Over 4 acres freed lawn
11028

&lt; '

i

'

)

•'

- '

'

I.
11006 sTOP RENTING
NOWI Check ou1thls 1991
14x72 Mansoon Villa mobtle
home offerlng 2 bedrooms
2 baths and central heal
Lot nol tncluded
Call lor
additional delatls

INVESTOR IN MIND
1/2 story 3
bath Investment
offers great 'C8lurns
savvy lnveslor
Prtced
$29 900 Don 1 pass on thos
~· Call today lor complete
reoral hiStones
11008
IN
TOWN
LIVING 1us1 a phone call
away Burld your own home
on the 34 acre which
spreads over several coty
lots
BONUS Take
advanlage of ct1y lax
abatements Coly schools
water and sewer Pnced al
$19 900
Call lor more
Information today

12011 WOODEO 11 Ac m/1
M 000 Located on Koti.por
Hollow Ad 1996 Mobile home 3
bedrms 2 balho Heal ~ump &amp;
C A Good wlndowa and many
extras on this custom built unit
$49 000 00 VLS 448.a600

• DOTTIE TURNER
REALTY

.2.P.5.fotQRTJi SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760
- .:iolll
GENERATION
SERVICE
GARAGE
OPERATION READY FOR
YOUI
Several extras
Include hoists lifts aor
compressor and fools
3
bay servoce area wolh large
parts and retatl floor room
Call lor detarls

Commercial Property
11100
NEW
USTINQ.. "Commercial Property 1 6
Acres M/L Localed at 1he
BUSINESs
OPPORTUNITY-BUSINESS juncllon of SA 35 and SR
OPPORTUNITY-Ye~ you 325 near Rio Grande Ohio
can have your cake and eat
CONVENIENT
MART
I · ~~~~~~~Witth1hlsover
20 years rn
craft cake &amp; PRIME LOCATION-Localed
outlet offers a In the Vollage of V nton thts
onventory
of C.Mart offers a pnme comer
decoralmg suppl es cake &amp; lol allhe 1unc11on of SR 325
candy molds candles and and SR 160 with many
mosc
craft supplies 1oo e&gt;ctras Eslabllshed over a
numerous to losl II you have decade the business has a
a sweel tooth for opportun11y Class 2 food preparalton
with
ea1 on
lhen call today for add 1tonal permol
capabtlttres
The Genecal
details
Store almosphere lends
Four
Lott near olself lo homelown charm
Galllpoii- wllh lhe conveyance of
Uattng 11012. The Gaeollne, Groctrlea and
Call
former Mtller Funeral Home Gerogo Facllniea
offers fronlage on Second today lor complele d81atls
Ave as weH as Thord Ave all
consls11ng of 4 + Ctly Lois
Call lor Map and detailed
1nforma11on

NEW
USTINGI
FARM Ranch home wllh
23+ acres Acreage flat 10
shghtly rolling greal
pasture or crops Fencing
pond large 75 x78 barn 3
Bedrooms ranch home Call
lor complete llstongl 11080
AWESOME
THROUGHOUT: this brl!lhtl
and cheery 2 s1ory
lhat was deslgnld wtlh the
famtly In mind 4 bedrooms
3 112 balhs forrnal dining
room
&amp;
living
room

comb nation

overs1zed

family room well destgned
k Iehan basement decking

""~~~~:2~,;

attached 2 caur·~
Manicured
locallon Within mlnules
hosptlal
and
shopping
lmmedlale
possessoonl

11083

I

RACINE~ood Condition-This 1 1/2 S1ory
Stone Hom&amp;-3 4 bedrooms ltvtng room buln
In knchen dining room lronl sitting porch
Rear enclosed porch Shed cellar FAN G
~eal carpet roof 4 yrs old Large lot on a
good slreel ASKING $48,000 MAKE AN
OFFERII

VACANT'~~~:~~~:;~~

BALL RUN
Super nice ranctt.home lhal
Is 2 yeara young
3
Bildrooms 2 full ba1hs lull
basemen! 2 car attached
garage securHy system 9
aetes more or less ol land
Very nlcel 11070

MIDDLEPOAT-2 S1ory Older Brick Bulldlnr1l
woth Commercial area downalalrs
apartmen1s upolalrs ASKJNQ $30,000

NEW USTINQI BUILDING
SITE
IN
CHEsTER
VILlAGE 2 lots combined
lor one aile Won llas11ong
$13,000 00 11077

PRICE REDUCEDII
Approximately
24 56 Acres
McNickles Road Letart Twp Possible
GAS II ASKI~G S23.000

SYRACUSE-Level 50 xl 00 Lot wllh River
View and older 12 x45 Mobile Home
2
bedrooms living room ktlchen and 1 ba1h
Floors are carpel and vinyl heat Is FAG F
ASKING $12,500

WE NEED USTINCSJ/1 WE NEED LIST/NGSJ/

YQUR
OFFER
JUST
MIGHT BUY THIS super
nice cape cod slyle All
American Home
3 4
bedrooms
2 full ba1hs
family room with French
doora off dining area lhat
leads to super nice deck
Over 2 acres
Make your
appolntmen1 al oncel 11140

COMMERCIAL
LOOKING FQR A LOT?
BUILDING 112 West Main ~!lllider any or all threel
Stree1
Pomeroy
'ml!il' slart al apprO!&lt; 1 6
$45 000 00 2 Large sales
acres to,.. over 2 acres
areas office area restroom
Public
water
servlcs
lola of s1oraga area upetalrs
available
Reslrlc1ed lor
and on main level Call for
your protscllon $12 000 00
more Information 11084
&amp; less 11081

TOWN
CONVENIENCE
WITH
COUNTRY CHARM This
large 2 alory home has 3 4
b8drooms
1 f/2 baths
basemen! and delached
garage
with
overhead
workshop Thera s a front
enclosed sun room wllh a
sidewalk
flowing
to
a
gazebo
for
family
enlertslnlng
Jusl call to
-11107S

13011 SHINING &amp; SPOTLESS
Move Into thiA mint condition
home 3 bedrma bath LA &amp; OR
Lovely carpet classy kitchen
w/nlce cabinets Carport cement
drive Out buildings Located In
Green Twp Call VLS to buy this
desirable home 448 6806
~

, I

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12998 CONDOMINIUM Styt sh 2
bedrms 2 baths laundry rm
t t 04 sq ft just like new Wslk to
the park &amp; stores Fee for water
trash sewer &amp; maintenance
Elec H P &amp; CA. Parking area
VLS 446 8806 $71 000

'
12818 CHARMING VICTORIAN
HOME 4 5 bedrms 3 baths kn
formal DR &amp; LR crysta l
chandeliers throughout full bsmt
with complete kit stona WBFP
BR w/gas fireplace
Garage
Landscaped tot
Exclusive
\'Iewing w th Vlrgmla L Smith

Home

SERVICES

810

One Ot The Areas largest Se
loctlono 01 late Modo1 Auto
Parts Late Modal Motors Trans
millions Body &amp; Suspension
Part&amp; Beat Prices In The Region
On After Market Sheet Metal
Fenders Hoods Doors Wind
ahlalds Radiators A C Condon
aora Over 100 Cars In Laat 30
oays For Parts over 25 late
Model Repalrablea Powerllne
Auto Sysltma 740 532 Ot39 Or
U S Toll Froa 800 482 6250 KIUs
Hill Ohio

Home
Improvements

IWIEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llletlme guarantee
t.:ocal references JUrnlahed Es
tablllhld 1975 Call 24 Hra '740)

448 0870 1 aoo 287 0578 Roo

.,. Watarprcoflng

Appllenc• Parts And ServiCe All
Name Brands Over 25 Ylatl Ex
ttod
parlance All Wor k Guaran
French City Maytag 740 446

Walla Cleaned Your Painted
Wal~ And Ctlllngs WIU Look Like
New Atter Cleaning With Exclu
alvl Machine Cleaning System
779
~
Reasonable All Wor~ Guar
c&amp;C Gtntral Ho.rne Main ant,tdl Fr•e E1llmatnl Von
tanence Painting vinyl siding scr.radef'"' Associate Clearly
carpentry doors windOws both• 1 .C:::ill=:;;n~304;;;..S:;7,;;5-&lt;4040..;.;;.:.:;.._-:-­
moblte home repair and more For 1 •
troo soumate call Chll 740 992 840 Electrical and
6323
Refrigeration
Llvlngaton • Btllmtnt Watar
Proofing all basement rtpalrt
done free aatlmalll lifetime
guarantee t2yro on lob oxperl

1

Rtaldlntlat or commerelal wiring .,
new 11rvw. or repairs Master u
censtd electrician Ridenour
Eltclrlcal WV000306 304 875 ,

---------:-~========~~·~~~.5~:::·::3:·:7:::::::::J~t~7~88~----~

Campara &amp;
Motor Homea

Ia Oreau Very wen
3 bedroom hOme wl1h
balement hardwood flool'l 2
garage nice yard The llvlng
has parquet flooring
llrooplaoce and a view of the river
wonderful This Is the
room to relax In $82 000
tor your peraonal
Priced to 1111 MOO
I

35

1980 Holiday Rambler Camper
Ft E•cellent Condition With New
Furnace $&amp; 000 7&lt;10-«6 9683

Low maintenance newer 4
bedroom home with 3 baths LA
FA 2 kitchens and more plus 24 x
33 garage/building and 2 barns
One bam Ia eo X 120 with two
attached aheda and 11 only a few
years old The other bam Is older
but functional The majority of the
Is pasture land with some
hom!!altes 3 &amp;81)arate
ftelda fenced 10 15 acres
:;.-;,;;;,.;;;.
tor more Informal on

Hornet Starlight &amp; Campllght
Ttavel Trailers &amp; Tent Trailers
Sates &amp; Service we Also Carry
Truck Accessories &amp; All Your
Hllch Needs! D&amp;l Family RV
Center 740446-0800

I

Tho Old Saying •n t Choopor tn
the Country"' appll11 on thll
ru1Uc r1nch 4 5 miles from R1o
Grande th is hom' boasts !5
bedrooms 2 kttchena lvlng room
den rec room and a large
kitchenldm ng area PJus outs de
there s an lnQround pool and a
wonderful country view Priced
1
appraised value at
$t:!4,9•11 II Don t let this bargain

GAIL BELVILLE;..................................

:iii·l.WA;t

~3014 "ON CHAROLAIS
WAKE UP WITH A SMILE and
Mve e great day llvJng In a lovely
suburban home Enjoy outSide
ltv ng too F shlng boating Ice
skating &amp; garden Formal en1ry
living rm &amp; Dining rm Great rm
with fireplace spiral sla(rcase and
windOws frOIJl tl'le floor to the
'Ceiling Lower level entertainmll'll
rm 3 decks 2 car
IMMEDIATE
one
of our
exclus ive
Qfferlngs May I tell you about
others too? VIrginia 44&amp;=6806

128~3 MAQNIFICENT VIEW
REDUCED FOR A SPRING
5 Acre Mil
629
SALE
Charoials lake Drive Thla 14
room masterpiece Is available
Offer ng a formal entry llv ng rm
fireplace family and game rm
w/2 gas log flreplac4a Beautiful
equipped kijchon oak cab nets by
Sm th plus work Island pantries
Enjoy nature from the Solarium
Formal dining room with a v ew
Glass enclosed ba~k porch First
floor laundry
4 bedrooms 3
baths More living area In the
fmlshed basement 2 car garage
w/overhaad storage Cable new
TV antenna on roof top for great
recept1on Artl!itlcally landscaped
lawn With many trees and rock
gardens AI these eldras steal
the show V rglnia L Sm1th 388
8826 or 446 6806
12t85 YOU MIGHT BE
OVERlOOKING THE BESTI All
brick ranch 3/4 bedrma 2 1/2
baths format LA &amp; DR fam rm
2Jig windows Loads of cabinets
&amp; storage Full divided baSement
2 woodburnlng fireplaces fenced
yard gar &amp; carport att c storage
1 Ac m/1 fronting on the beautiful
Ohio River City schools &amp; very
close to town VLS 446 6806

Nestled
amongs1
forest on two
s des th s beautiful h lltop meadow
setting offers a v1ew that
seemingly goes on forever on the
other two Sides Perfect sunset
v ews can be enjoyed fromt he
deck of this outstanding country 2
story home Only three years old
this home has features too
numerous to be Include In th s ad
but believe us t s worth a ioolt
Hardwood floors dress this 4
bedroom home up with a country
fla1r Plenty of space In the
gorgeous kitchen s highlighted
with a vaulted ce iling 3
bathrooms full basement barn
and 20 acres are JUS! a few Items
on a long list of amenities Call for
Information Green

~4&amp;6806

Located n
Green Twp 2 story w/many
amenit es Instantly ~ppeallng for
a growing family 2 1/2 baths
formal DR LR I replace In LR l ull
divided &amp; finished basement
vacant Pr ced to sell Call VLS
388-~826 S1 08 000 00

can easily become your
dream home 3 spacious
BR s large LR parlor 4 gas
lore places random w1dlh
hardwood floors
Kotchen
equipped w/new stove &amp;
new refngerator Covered
fron1 porch
Wtld flower
garden Situated tn a small
cQmmuntly on a large lot
Priced 1o sell!

WII.LOW CW~

KU.~JUSt off Rl

&amp; 33 close to Pamtda
slyle home with 2 baths equipped
kt1chen heal pump newer carpe1 and a delached 2 car
garag~slttrng on approx 2 acres
$50 000 00
CROW S SUBDIVISION-s Potnls Area-A split entry home
with 3 bedrooms 3 balhs family room wl!h fireplace dtnlng
room garage and a beaullful In ground swimming pool All
on approx 1 acre
S85 000 00
HYsELL RUN RD -20 acres of vacant land !hat needs some
attention lo make ol a place lor a home or would make great
hunting land
ASKING $20,000.00

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

Ford Rongor Campar Top $50 00
Col 7&lt;t0-51H238 N1tr 5 00 PM

EUNICE NIEHM

,til~~

MEIGS COUNTY
TRAILER ONLY-1971-12 x65
bedrooms steps underptnnmg
MOVEDII ASKING $5 000

I

810

Home

VIRGINIA SIIITH BROKERI.:.............. 31381&amp;84118SI2828

130011 DELUXE ELEGANT 2
STORY BRICK HOME
3
Bedrooms 2 1/2 baths lg LR
formal entry and d nln~ rrn with
crystal lighting Sunken family
rm w/woodburner New carpet
new kit w/eat In area 2 car
attached garage Only the best Is
offered m this attractive home
The many extras will areal the
show Th s s your chance to own
a lovely Immaculate home
VIrginia 448-61106

,

I
LIVEABLE $19,900 00 ,
Small one slory home 2
living
room
bedrooms
k~chen bath AI the
town Not a lol s1UI avetllatlle I
m lhls price ran9e1 11038

Branch Offtce
23
S1

810

Auto Parts &amp;

Budget Priced Tranamlnlona
and Engines All Types Access
To Over,~o ooo Transmissions
740 245-oon

790

a

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

118 LINCOI,.N PK POMEROY
Roducod to t99 500 Ideal lor a
•aad &amp; Breakfast rest home or
group home 4 ety brick 518
bedrma 4 t/2 baths Parking
area
Handicap ramp &amp; lift
VACANT: VLS 4ttl 1!1808
13007 OXYER RD COTTAGE
Neat for a retreat 2 bedrma 1
1/2
dlv basement
'ie:SS•oeFree gas 1 Ac
..
$4&amp;000

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKE!R
11001
LET
THE
WHISPERING
PINES
CALM your senses wtth thts
bedroom
2
bath
3
unrbutl1/modular
home
Bathe on the master balh s
garden lub overlool&lt;ong your
own p1111ate pool A 4 car
delached
garage
and
attached 24x24 shop offers
.!he handy rnan plenly of
workong room Bask In the
warmth of lhe sun room
year round overlool&lt;lng a
marncured lawn Call loday
lor local on and addotlonal
de1arls

Motorcycles

92 Suzuki GSXA 750 Vance+

77 Jeep CJ7 Hard Top 6cyl/3
Spd 31n lilt with ~3xt2 50xt5
mud tires/aluminum wheels
Sony CD player/200 watt omp
10" MTX spks Bikini top hall
door $420P (304!882 25331875
8963

11/

7&lt;10-448-39~2

87 Toyota 4x4 regular cab &amp; ~
bed rough topper bedtlner 4 elY
5 sp runs good $2 000 84 Ford

t998 Chovy S tO Shortbed Stan
dord 3t 500 miles $6 8QO
(3041895-38()8.995 3025

Motorcyclll

Acce11orlea

tornatlc AC PS PB great lhlpa
$3700 7&lt;10-992 1•18 or 7&lt;10-9492045

blgbend@eurekanlt.com

"'"'.'.·.:·.:·:.:·
.'.'.'.'441.0262
...
379 2184
245 0022

1998 Harley Oavldaon XL 1200
Excellent Condition low Mllaa
Many EXtrlll 740 4~6 2~11
l.aaYe Maasago

1988 Blazer 4WD 8 cylinder au

e-mail u1 for lnformltlon on olir listings:

Judy DeW1tt
J Mcmll Carter
Tamm1o DeWitt

1918 Fo&lt;d van S1 200 Or Trodo
(304)675-37tt

760

Campara

--~M~o~tor~H-~~~·~~~---~~m~~~~~~~~~~=~w~-~-~-l----lm~p~~--~~-nw~­

740

5~M

t998 Chrysler Sogrlng Loadedl
St3000
199! Jeep Wrangler 49 000
mllal $tO 000 (304)895-3747

790

730 Vtnt &amp; 4-WDI

t987 Chovy 3/4 Ton 4x~ 350 En
gino $3 200 740 448 4355 Ahor

s.

Ford Thunderbird Power
S111rtng Brakll ~ Wlndowa
CruiH antral CD Player Red
Wlth Bra In Front Must Seat
$3 500 7&lt;t0-25HBoo

Round Bales Of Hay For Mulch
Or Bedding $5 Per Bare 740
245-5506

Ti'uckl for Sale

1969 Pontiac Flroblrd Excellent
Condition 000 7&lt;10-245-5797
1~19

Round bales hay straw 1100 lb
nevor wot t20 load anytlrnl 7&lt;10992-2542 or 7&lt;10-992 5072

710 Auto• for Sele

(~)875-lt32

Large round bales of mldd hay
loaded on your truck 740 985--

Top Quallly Dairy Hoy Second &amp;
Third Cut Soml Load Only 937

Sale

188i Chryoltr 5th Avonu• Now
Vorktr 3tl Motor Top COndition

1t88 Pontiac l.emona Auto Re
built Engine Now Tires $1 000
080 740-317 7312

S1 &amp;oo

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH o Point Pleasant, WV

710 Autotlor Sell

710 Autoe for 8111

for Sale

Sunday, March 7, 1999

198i CIVIIItr 224 While /Blue

TRANSPORTATI ON

8 Year Old Quartor Gelding Big
Strong Pretty Good Roping Proo
pact Call After 8 ~M 74Q.2861748

-

- -

Equipment

o..

Used Lilt Truck Forks For Sale
Various Sizto S100 Sl25 Por
SaL 7&lt;10-379-2757

LIVMtock

•

Sunday, March 7, 1999

• Point Pleasant, WV

830

FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO
Responsible Party Wanted To
Make Low Monthly Paymento On
Plano Soo Locally Call 1 BOO WI HI'VI A Few 1988 MOdll
268-8218
John
re Lawn nactora Llh
Robolao Up Tb $300 Thru Mirth
1 Free Delivery Compare Our
FARM SUPPLIES
Prlc11 Wt Alao Now Have All
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Tho 19e9 Mod•l• In Stock Now
Your Dealer For Dlxll Chopper
Commorelal And Rosldontlal Zero
Turn Mowen Bush Hog Tllltra
610 Farm Equipment
Finish Mowers Cutttra And
loaders Carmichaels Farm &amp;
Lawn Inc local John Deere
Going Out Of Bu1ln111 After 25 Dtolor Midway BttwHn GalllpoYears Hardware Tractor Parts
lia And Rio Granda On Jackson
Chalnsaws Trimmers Shop Plkt 740 4~8 24t2 Or t 800
Toots Everything Must Go Big 594-1111
Discounts Siders Equipment
Co-ny (304)675-7421
630
Llveatock
New !5010 6010 7010 Serial
Tractors In Stock 7 7!5% Fired
Rate John O.Ore Clldlt Financing
Avallablo Now &lt;4000 So•les Com
pacta In Stock New John Deere
MoCot And Round Balers 0%
t2 Mos 175%24 Mo 35%38
Moo 4 5% 48 Moo 5 5% so
Mo Usod Hoy Equlpmont AI Low
As 3 9% Carmichael 1 Farm &amp;
Lawn Midway Between Galllpollo
And Ala Grande On Jackson
Pika 740 448 24t2 Or t BOO
5~ 1111

~

•

•

11014
New Llellng
Trad tlonal 2 Story Offers 3
BR one bath Complete
Kitchen with dishwasher
stove relngerator washer
dryer woth recenl updales to

POMEROY-Umon Ava-l;las has lots of Updates- Her&amp; s a 3
betjroom home wtth newer roof and vinyl sldrng Would
make a great rental or starter home
$12,500 00

furnace and Windows

Perfect place to butld you home or pu1 a mobtle hOme Water

&amp;

12880 TUIIff.QF THE CENTURY
HOME Great family home or
business location Or) 3rd Ave 3
P
bedrooms 1 112 baths
Basement handicap ramp
$81 000 VLS 44&amp;6806

13017 A HOME WITH ELBOW
ROOM Located n the city on a
quiet dead end St 4 bedrms 2
1/2 baths B rooms very lg LA
This home can accommodate 2
famli es Extra large tot VLS
~46 1806

gracious
home Is ln\lltln; you In 3 BR trl
level 2 1/2 baths LA OR eat 1M
kit
FA w/wbfp Insert 2 car
attached garage &amp; rm above
Fenced area &amp; bern stocked
lake 5 AC m/1 2 miles from
freeway on SR 325 N VI.S
com1ort1blt Living Not Far
From
Town Located on
Portsmouth Road this 4 6edroorn
home has features that only more
expensive houses have The large
I vlng room Is accented by a
walnut fireplace and the formal
dining room Is plenty big Theres
also a very niCe kitchen with loads
of cabinets and complete ly
equ pped plu,s a pantry First floor
bedroom plus a den 2 1/2 baths
family room plus rec area In
basement 2 car garage Large
screened In porch Security
Much more $150 000

13012 RIO GRANDE VICINITY
Huge 2 story home w/4
bedrooms 2 1/2 baths extra lg
kit Formal d nmg room &amp; LA
Fam Am Also Aec Rm total
10 rms Pal a &amp; 2 1/2 AC m/1
Dial 448 8806 Right Now the
most mportant call you II make
this year VLS 446 6606
12004 Vory nlco 1 •c lot w/2
road frontages AccesJ to boat
ramp Very nice lot to bulkl or to
set your mobile home on Clt:~se
to town

RAINBOW RIDGE-Beauttlul lteld with approx 7 acres

All

~nd elec1nc ava lable

localed on a double lol wall
above Raccoon Creek 10
Vinlon Affordably Prteed a1

$9 000 or MAKE OFFER

~OTS FOR SALE IN POMEROY

Older building on property
f'osstble land contrac1 In nsed of repairs
$4,500 00

$3900o

~bURTH STREET..Syrlcuet-Handyman s Speclal-$tltlng

~" a mce Iotts an older home with 3 bedrooms and one bath

k 'has a 2 car garage on back Front and back porches Fix It
ASKINO $15,000 00

~p or jusl use the lol

•SITTING ON THE RIVER Is two larger lots and one small lot

REDUCED $85.000 00 IS
THE NEW PRICE FOR
THIS NEAT HOUSE lhat Is
lull of hlslory
Lo1s of
updallng Ioyer living room
dtnlng kttchen den
8
bedrooiT)s 2 full baths All
cedar lined closels 2 car
garage &amp; loads more
11048

wjlh a.n older home Including approx 80 feet of, rover
f!Ontage Easy river access with these lots sdloln 1he boal
ltl'vee A Great butldtng site on lhe Ohio River Check 1hls
$20 000 00

oln

BornE TURNER, Broker............................912·5882

JERRY SPRADLING
CHARMELE SPRADLING
•IJETTY JO COLLINS • .,.
BRENDAJEFFERS,
I

1 . ..:

•••••• 948-2131
94i-2131
94i-2049
912·1444

13023 SAY HE""O" 10 I good
buyl All briCk ranch 3 bedrms
forma h\ltng &amp; d nlng rm Fam ly
rm wtwoodburner k I mud rm
patio full basement 2 car garage
Great yard Gas heat Put this
home on your w sh I st Call
Virgin a «6 8806/446 4802

13028 PURCHASE !2 AC 11/L
and thlo OEliGHTFUL BRICK &amp;
V(NYL home w/4 bedrms 2
bathS lg family rm
24 •28
lnground pool 34 x15 81ack1op
driveway extra septic system &amp;
water tap lor a mobile home
Or.nbulldlng Landi Some c eared
&amp; wooded Call for Into VLS
446 6806

13005 TWo home• for the price
or onel Each hGme had 3 BAa
an d 2 baths
Homes are
connected w/large deck Price
reducld to $60 000
13028 Ntw ll1llng 17 IOrtl
mtl of v1cant lind St1rcher
Rd Call lor
detoMs

Call for an
appointment

12eu/ CHOICE OF THE
COUNTRY QENTLEMEN Real
value tar someone need1ng plenty
of space 4 large BAs 3 baths
LA forma OR kit wftlu It n BBO
fu 1 basement w/dlvided rms 2
wood burning FPs central a~r
large garage
36 acres m/1
Mineral nghts
PRIVATE
LO&lt;;i\TION Approx 2 500 sq ft
$13UOO
«6 8806

Not SO Small luxury at a not so
Big Prcall Recently remodeled
and located on ~pprox 1 2 acres
this ovety b level offers on the
t rat floor IMng room dmlng area
open to nice kitchen 3 bedrooms
and one bath On the lower le\le
your tam1 y will love the oversized
family room 1/2 bath and ample
storage area Priced at S79 900
you can t afford not to check th s
te13

-the Got
Tht F~=~~~~~~1
Housel!
e
1 2 story
traditional home that Is bound 10
please your tam y :3 bedrooms
(all very good s ze} 2 1/2 baths
formal living room and d l~ ng
room eat In k tchen and family
room w th fireplace PLUS second
tam ty room and rec room In
basement PLUS \lery ni ce
lnground pool with pat o PlUS
gorgeous nvor vOW Only a
10
1

:~~~~~ tnm~:;'~ c~d~~

and

:

for your family

~~~~~j_______~_j~~~~~Slil~~l.

[B.
" ' o•

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(7 40) 446-3644

.
OPPOOUVI•JY

E Mall Address w1seman@zoomnet nel

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Garnes 446·2707

Carolyn Wasch • 441-1007

•

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Monday

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Page DB. Jlllllbq Cbaue-Jimtbltl

Sunday,.~arch 7, 1999 ! ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Qalllpolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

~~~~~~~~

Soybea(I.~Q_rn product~on posted ·;
recor-d year 1n U.S. ·dur1ng 1-998 · .. 7

Tomorrow: Wintry mix
High: 30s; Low: 20a

Meigs County's

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an reinS a eS
leader in union

27

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customer respons.lble for 14~ for each additional mMe.
·

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(740) 44():-3672

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U~ITED STATES

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Chairman of the Board, Champion Industries, Inc.
J. Ho-well Kelley
Pmidmt &amp; CEO, Premier Financial Bancorp
Light refreshments will be served.
Seating is limited. Please call today to reserve -your space.
Please R.S.V.P. by calling Lori Young or Heather Jones at
'
(740) 446-8899 or (800) 446-0226
Advest, Inc.
416 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH45631
'

.

CELLUlAR.

Featured Guest Speakers
Marshall T . Reynolds

· The way people ralle
around here~

&lt;

ParumotO

ChiHk:otllt
In Touch Cellular
32 E. Water St.
17401 779-t999

JICClonlc Plaza

Clri.
Unhod States Cellular
Z..no Plaza Shopping Cantor
1084 N. Bridge St.
775-4141

Ntwa-.
llrittd Statal Cetlulw
Now Boston Showing Center
4010 Rhodu j\vo.

llolMpolis
USCC Wei-Mort Kiosk
2145 Eastern Avenue

{7401 44t-t066

up for Flower Festival

1m

a month

\

.Fate·of R_iverview School still undecided Entertainment lined

1

CaU ToU Free 1-800-521-0084

$20.95

· Thursday, March 11, 1999 - 7:00 P .M.

Each grapples with its sl!p.r;e of Mitch's ravages: more
than 9,000 dead, thousands lnore homeless, '!lld as mucli
~ $10 billion in infrastructure damage.
In liaht of the crisis, Central American leaders fault
Ointon~ trade policy as halfhearted ·
Ointon submitted legislation to O&gt;ngress last week
providing enhanced trade benefits to Central American
and Caribbean nations under the so-called Caribbeaii
Basin Initiative.
Diplomats from those nations, who have long pressed
for the same free-trade benefits that Mexico received
under the North American Free Trade Agreement, said
Ointon's latest CBI enhancement does not go far enough
to build markets for Central American exports and, thus,
restore jobs in the region.
·
Worse, Nicaraguan officials said, Ointon doomed the
controversial trade package by sending it to O&gt;ngress separate from the more politically popular direct-aid request.
Nicaraguan President Amoldo Aleman beseeched Oin,
ton in a letter last week to throw his "credibility arid pri:s:
tige" behind the CBIIegislation.
·
"Without that," said Nicaragua's ambassador to the
United States, Francisco Aguirre SIICa&amp;a. "I don't think i!
has a snowball's chance in Hell of being approved - · even
in its diluted form."
·

mbus Subu. rb .haS S8C0.nd
homicide' in it,s 189-y
' e,ar history

PLAresults

•

Single Copy - 35 Cents

The Fitstem LOcal School Board wi)l wait until its regAccording to Eastern Local Superintendent Deryl
ular meeting on March I 7 before deciding the fate. of Well, the board took no action to readveriise the sale of
Plans for the sixth annual Racine
RivervieW Elementary School.
·
the Reedsville property, and will wait until next week to Area O&gt;mmunity Organization Flower
The building and nearly eight acres, !ocated near determine what action will be taken, but said that the Festival were discussed at RACO's
Reedsville, were slated to be sold at auction on Saturday board "still feels that it's worth more than the minimum February meeting.
·
morning, but no bidder offered the minimum bid of bid.'' .
.
The festival wi!l be held Sat4!$y,
J.4QO,OOO set by the school board.
·
.
While the board has not specifically cited gravel April24, from Wr-m. to 6 p.m. af'Star
DUBLI.N (AP) - Police in this Columbus suburb said Uie shooting .c '1\vo pieces of real estate in Chester, one on which the deposits as a reason for the minimum bid of $400,000, Mi)l Park with 1\ 'P,arac:le kicking off th¢
.death of a man early Sunday was the ~cond homicide in the history of the · Chester school building sits, and another located across Well has said ,in the past that there was interest from at event at 10 an\. Prize money of $50,
1:cx1mnnunity,,, which was fouhded in 1810. The other slaying occurred two
State Route 248, were sold Saturday. Tom Karr of least one gravel company in purchasing the site.
$30 and $20 will be given to the top
years ago atth~ same site.
Pomeroy purchased the. school buildijtg and surrounding
Letart Sand and Gravel Co. currently operates a mining ·three parade floats. Anyone may enter,
. Spencer Donahue, 24, of Wars11w, was sh.o tto death at about 2:15a.m. property for $30,000, twice the board's minimum price, business on property adjacent to the Riverview· property.
but to be eligible for the prize money;
at an Amoco station, said police Lt. Mike Epperson.
and the Chester United Meth.odist Church purchased the
The board met in special session following the auction, floats must be d~rated with flowers.
Donahue entered a convenience store that is part of the station and
property across thr, street, adjacent to the church, far the .and in addition to approving the sales the church and to For more information, call parade
asked the clerk to call 911, Epperson said. He said that minutes later, Jason
minimum bid of $15,000.
Karr, approved hiring Architect Randy Breech o.f Gallipo· chairwoman Marilyn Powell at 949~s, 21d, of Zanesville, walked in and fired multiple shots with a .22-calKarrsaid Monday that he plans to, use the~ilding as lis to work with the board on the renovation of office 2676.
1ber hill! gun. · , ·
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· .. .
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a storage facility fot his fertilizer business. • ne church . space for the district at Tuppers Plains Elementary ::A~fl~ow~er~fest~iv~al~~~to~be~se~lect~-;,.~
Donahue WI'$ pronounced dead at the sce::e: ~b;
y ~p;;ar;a~rn;:ed;l~:cs;;fr;o;m~;t:;h.c:j,~~cu~rre~n~tly~uses~~th~efi~~~~~t·!as~a~pllfking lot, School, and on the planned construction of a bus garage ect from Southern
senior
,,.,
'"~~~~:=~'li~ow:.nship
Fire
Department.
and
held
for.
tbat
plir
:
i~~~~
b~ui:ld:in~g,~
·
~w:hl:·c:b~is~t~o~be~b;ui~lt~be~b:i:nd:Eas
=
tem
.
and Cass .w~e·ilequaintances but
Yif: ,.,.
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· ,., ._., ,11"'· · . ..._ '
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· E'"""*n"sliid,
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,reported
entertainment
&lt;;:ass was arrested and charged with voluntary manslaughter. He was
include The Middleport aoggers, folk
. being held Sunday in the Franklin O&gt;unty jail.
,
singers Steve and Beverly Pottmeyer,
•, &lt; The only other slaying in .Dublin's history Occurred at the same gas stath~ Back Porch Swing Band,
thin, Eppersqn said.. A clerk was shot and killed ther:in a
Jobber)'.
juggler/ventriloquist Mike Hemrnelgan
Diocese w nts to
and the True O&gt;untry Band. A kiddie
Increase 8 larles for
tractor pull will b\1 hetdat2:30 p.m. and
the Carmel Church will provide chilCathOIIC·SChOOI faculties
dren's games throughout the day.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Plans for the Flower Festival will be
Cleveland
Catholic
Diocese
has
finalized
at the March 23 meeting at
Today's
developed
a
financial
plan
for
its
Star
Mill
Park.
.
1 Section •·10 l'lges
elementary schools that would raise
In other business it was noted the
I =~~~~====L=~ teachers' salaries but also increase
group will be presenting four $500
I·
the cost ·of tuition.
scholarships to Southern High School
1=JCQI~a=ss~ift~ed=s===~7~&amp;:8::::: The plan replaces the tuition subseni&lt;irs. The spring yard sale will be
I·
sidies and multiple-child .discounts
held May 20-21 with all proceeds
that
members
of
a
patish
receive
applied
to the scholarships.
2
with a finan~ial aid system similar to
Donations are appreciated and pea- '
that used by colleges. Parents who
pie wishing to donate should contact
--'SiiZlpol!!&lt;lrtsH.._ _ _ __.:4:!!&amp;1!l·&gt;l.:s_ aren't ·eligible for financial aid
Frank or Delores Oeland at 949-2071;
I 1
would pay the entire cost of tuition.
Dale and Kathryn Hart at 949-2656; or
"Everybody knows we need to
!:&gt;avid and Ann Zirkle at 949·2031.
Lotteries
do something," said Sister Carol
Pick-up.service is available.
Anne
Smith,
the
diocese
's
secretary
Dale Hart gave an update on the
owo
for
education.
The
diocese
had
99
Cross
Miltmacine Museum project
Pick 3: l..o-4; Plck4: 3·3-3-9
vacancies amana its 3,500 teaching
Frank Cleland gave the prayer
Saper Lotto: 13-21-28-29-33-JS
positions
at
the
beginning
of
this
Martin,
a
member
ot
the
E•atwn,
Local
Board,
Ia
pictured
before
the meal with David Zirkle leadKicker: 2-2-4.0-1·5
school
year,
a
record.
conducting
the
auction
of
real
:eltate
for
the
school
district
on
Saturday.
Tom
ot
Pomeroy
and
ing
the
Pledge of Allegiance to adjourn.
w.yA.
.
The
diocese's
144
elementary
·
the
Cheater
Unltad
Methodlat
.Church
purchased
two
pieces
of
property
In
but
another
Fifteen
members atte~ded the meeting
D.Uy 3: 6-0-0; Dally 4: 4-9-1-4
schools
may
each
choose
individualpiece
of
~and
at
Reedsville
remained
unaold
when
the
•uctlon
was
finished.
Alao
pictured
ara
with
President
Kathryn Hart officialC J~ Ohio Valley P\lhliAhkl&amp; Co.
ly whether to adopt the plan. ·
Tteaaurar Ull Ritchie and Supa.rlntandant_Deryl Wall. ·
,,
ing.

Bruce joins staff

Mark, Ryan and Bryce Smith of Advest, Inc. cordially
invite you to join us for this informational meeting
to learn about the di.rection of Champion lndusrdes, Inc.
and th.e current financial condition and expectation of
Premier financial Bancorp.
.

Newspaper· ..

United States h!IS determined the region is
and Tit1per Gore, wife of the vice president
Pl'lll Wrlfllr
.
. ·capable of " beginning to receive their
"Without rebuilding sdtools, homes,
· WAS~GTON (AP)- Ma!Qng a pilgrimage to the nationals" although deporta!ions are not
roads, crops and jobs, it can lead to llespair
sites ofH11nicane Mitch's worst horrors, President Ointoli expected to begin immediately.
.
and corruption," H~mer said. "The peoproffers Centtal Americans hope for their reconstruction·
· In the meantime, Ointon's lrip was '
pie need to' realize that the United States
· so that despair does not tum into political trouble for the scripted as a neighborly show of compasstands with them."
region.
. ..
sion, solidarity. and assistance - as much
Ointon brought to Nicaragua onty a
• The president embarks- without his wife, sidelined . as the president could muster while his
small grab bag of U.S. aid: ·
by a recurring back problem - today on his four~ay, $956 million emergency aid package
-$10.6 million from the Agency for
four-nation mission just as 15,000 Guatemalans and Sal- remained tangled in dom~tic spending
International Development to repair, equip
vadorans in the United States illegally become eligible for politics on Capitol Hill.
and staff health clinics.
.
deportation. He bas turned down pleas for an extension of
On the driedt cracked mud at the foot of
· -Another S1.5 million in Alb money
the halt in deportations that was institute&lt;! after last fall's Casitas Volcano, he was laying flowers at
for the International Red Cross to build
devastating storm and expires today.
the impression left by the body of a small
4,000 temporary homes starting this
But Ointon's first stop- at the only home left stand- girl. victim of the Oct. 30 landslide that
month. ·
· ·
ing after a wall of mud.slid down Nicaragua's Casitas Vol- killed 2,000 people.
-$1.8 million frQm the Siate Depart&lt;;aDO in October - promises to underscore that many of
In a nearby Posoltega, Nicaragua, VISIT - Preeldent Bill ment to find and remove the civil-war-era
those illegal immigrants have nothing to ao home to.
schoolyard, Ointon was meeting with Clinton 111vea tht Wl\lte . land mines remaining in Nicaragua and
. 1b have them return now "would cause us tragic prob- homeless, jobless and- many of tl)em- Houee Monday momlng. Honduras. Mitch's floods and mudslides
!ems of stability," warned Salvadoran President Armando hopeless survivors still living in plastic Clinton will be apendlng complicated the problem by shifting
Calderon Sol, who will greet the Ointons in San Salvador tents four months after Mitch moved on. the next four daya In mapped areas of land mine deployment.
tonight. In advance of their arrival, Calderon b.teJded for
"Peopl,e are losing hope and you don't Central America
Similar packages for El Salvador, Honthe United States to reconsider an extension of tlld stay on want an uncertain future," Hammer said,
· duras and Guatemala would be announced
&lt;;leportations.
· ,
laying out the goals of Ointon's lrip, which follows on arOinton's subsequent stops in those nations, officials
White Hiluse spokesman Michael Hammer said the . separate official missions to the region by Mrs. Ointon · said.

· Permo.

1616 Eastern Ave.

~ometown

By'·$ANDRA SOBIERAJ

Lea.. toraaiRHeaa

8

.

~ltld

Loaded with . ~ptlons 1 leather Interior, .sun roof, Bose stereo system, alum
wheels, VB engine, Pwr seats, pwr windows, tilt, cruise, factory warranty, still
remaining and much more.

·.
·•aza•
lllonllll• . ...... ......., .

-Page _4

President Clinton. vi -its Central America

T
_ imber, forage topics of seminars ·
(Continued from 01)
.
.
.
·
.
·
·
managing fescue toxicity, stockpiling cai,Jons for equ1pment and s.tructures, p._ m. at the stockyards on Jackson
fescue. and the persistence of endo- please call !he OSU ExtensiOn office P1ke.
at 740-446-7007.
.
.
(Jennifer L. Byrnes Is Gallla
phyte-free varieties.
By learning to maximize the profBeef producers·- A smcere thank County's extension agent lor agrlitability of fescue in the pasture you to those w.~o attended the beef culture and natural ·resources,
fields, producers can take advantage program ~:m Understandmg the Ohio Stale University.)
of the abundance and persistence of Reprod~cuve Cycle and Pregnancy
4his forage. This program helps pro- ,of Cow last Tuesday evemng. Pro.ducers manage the effects of high fes- gram evaluatton results turned out
cue concentrations, and make the great and y_our paruc1patJOn.J1nd supTOLEDO (AP)- A union leader
most of this resource.
port of th1s meeung . and of other .
This ·meeting will wrap up local E&lt;tens~on programs 1s very inuch suspended after an assembly line
walkout at a !eep assembly plant was
winter livestock programming, so apprecmted!
please join other producers for this
Sincere thanks to the beef pro- reinstated following a meeting
final meeting and capitalize on the gra~ s~nsors - Farmers Bank of between DaimlerChrysler anQ. Unitopportunity to speak. with forage Galhpohs, Producers L1vestock Asso- ed Auto Workers official~ .
specj_alist Dr. Carl Hoveland.
c1at1on, Sunset Valley Angus, D.r. B1ll
Pesl~e
testing is scheduled for Crank, River Bend Vetennary Hos:
·
, ,
pita!, the Graham Blessmg Farm, R10
Wednesday arelt-IO, l999,from 3- General Hardware, and the Gallia
6 p.m. anhe C.H. McKe~ZJe Agn- County Cattlemen's Association. Specultural Center. If you are mterested cia! thanks to the association directors
in obtaining a license, please call the who helped in the organization and·
ExtensiOn office as soon as poss1ble promotion of this meeting. The supto arrange for study matenal~.
p&lt;in of these organizations and indiBeef producers- The Oh10 Beef viduals made this program possible
Expo is s~ heduled for March 18-2 1 _ thank you!
"! the Oh10 Expo Center m Colum- . Beef' producers - Producers
bus. H1ghhghts w1ll be the trade Livestock Association of Gallipolis
show, breed shows. and sales; OCA will hold a meeting om bull leasing
Jumor Steer and He1fer Show, and' the on Monday, March 8, beginning at 7
judgmg contests. For more mformation, please call the Ohio Cattlemen's
Association at 614-873-6736.
(Continued from D1)
Tobacco producers - If you
. have not picked· up your grant appli- ·spent a one-year tour of duty in Vietnam as an .intelligence officer. He
also earned two Ohio teaching certificates in speech communication
Producers Livestock Market and general science, and has substireport from Gallipolis for sales con- tuted in the local schools since 1984.
ducted on Wednesday, March 3.
Bruce attended Hondros College
Feeder Cattle.
this past fall and received his Ohio
200-300# St. $82-$95, Hf. $74- real estate sales license at that time.
$94, 300-400# St. $82-$89. Hf. $70The Bruces have two children:
$8 1; 500-650# St. $71-$84 Hf. $65- Alexis, a junior at Gallia Academy .
$74 650-800# St. $65-$72 Hf. $59- High School 1 and Maxwell, a freshman at Ohio University.
$66.
Well Muscled/Fleshed $35-$45:
River transportation
Medium/Average $30-$35 ;
(Conllnued
from D1)
Thin/Light $25-$29; Bulls $40Guard's highest · environmental
$46
achievement award. In its class, the
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $350-$560; Bred division received the William M.
·Cows $325-$650; Baby Calves $65· Benken Award for Excellence in
Marine Environmental Protection.
· $170; Goats $20-$160.
Darling put the 1998 record-set' Upcoming specials:
ting
year in proper perspective: "As
, Special PLA Herd Bull leasing
outstanding
as 1998 was in terms of
: program meeting at the Gallipolis
safety,
environmental awareoverall
· PLA, Monday; March 8 at 7 p.m.
• For free on-farm visits, please call ness and productivity, our best years
are the ~hes still 'to come."
. 446-9696.

·j

Mid d leport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 . Nu m ber 2 12

ILE

I

''The Yankee Clipper''
Joe DIMaggio dead
at age 84

•

/s .r; '

°

lder1t; and J11mes Rentz, Coldwater, vice pres~~'"'· Directors, standing from left, are John
Grimes, Hillsboro; Paul Hill, Bidwell; Henry
Bergfeld, Summitville; Jim Winter, Ashville;
Kevin Hinds, Newcomerstown; Jay Clutter,
Celloa; Dan Miller, Luckey; and Jotm King, Tiffin. ·

.NCAA tourname~t pairings set, Page 5
Dealing with child'~ sexuality, Page 6
Beat of the Bend, Page 6

Toder: Snow
High: 40a; Low: 20a

WASHINGTON (AP) _Favor- ty from eatlitlr estimates but still 3 pared 10 $2.43 in 1997 and $~.71 in
~e record percent h1gher than 1997. Most of the 1996. Likewise soybeans, whjch had
able weather helped produ
production dechne was m hard red .
$7 35 · 1996 ol around·
soybean and corn crops last year, but winter wheat ·
~~ne; 1 · 10
' g
'
a drought followed by fierce storms
Those numbers may not fare bet·,1 'ISlyear.. . led C .....,85 l•t
,.
th Agn'cui
·
e pnce cns1s
on.,... ~
hurt cotton p\rtvl
__ uc 10n, e
.- terinthe comingyeareither. Inasep- last ear to ass a $7 billion emerture Departmen~ reported today.
arate report the Agriculture Departy ·d p ka
· bel fanners
Soybean pro'd uction for 1998 ment said the area planted in· winter gLency akt pahc ge to" ·npthe com.
.
awma ers ave vow.,.. I_
.
.II. b h 1 the high
totaled 2.76. b• ton us e s, .
- wheat this year is expected to tota1 ·
·
then era ·insui-anc~
est on record. Last year's figures are 43 4 million acres down 7 percent mg year to strfiertnhg . tecpt 'anne;., ,•·
· 3 percent h'1gher I han 1997 which had from
· 1998 and .the
' smallest since. . as aI wayheto u 1er Iproat cotton
•·
••· •
pro1
set a record with 2.69 billion bushels. 1972
d n
r an;~
bales sig .
Com also had a good year with .. H~rd red winter wtteat planting ~fiuonlwtas•.. · hm11h10n18 7 ' ;
· estimate
·
d a1 9.76 b'llion
ower
prod uct1on
I
areas are down about 5 percent. · m
b 11cantf y199
1 I an e· ·
0
bushels, up 6 percent from the 1997 Most states have planted less wheat, aMes
re hit
· tat
crop. Last year's com crop ranks sec- except for Nebraska Texas, Min- b dany hcottond s es we ,
o·nd behind the record 10.1 billion 'nesota and New Mexico. Montana's /ll ro,::rbt an
bushels produced in 1994.
planted area for 1999 is the smallest. 0h ow
Y two
While soybean and corn had
· . 1937
a urncane.
.
.
record years, the 1998 wheat crop- sm~:rme~ selli~g ,Jheat soybeans . Peanutdproductmn -1 at !!3fr~~
1
which included varieties harvested in and com were hit hard thls year by 110 n pound s- IS up b percth 199 ;
7
·
d
fall
·
t'mate.d
·
·
.
.
1997
an
percent
a
ove e
o
both. spnng an
- IS es. I .
low prices. Corn pnces, for msta~ce,
at 2.55 billion bushels, down shJ!ht- . were
· $1.80 to $2.20
crop.
' .·

ANGUS ASSOCIAnON · DIRIECTORS
These Angus breeders wers elected to serve as .
1999 dlrectors.and officers of the Ohio Angus
Association during Its recent annual meeting
in Plain City. Officers sitting from left lpclude
Fred Penick, Hebron, chairman; Brent t:nglls.h, ·
Elida, treasurer; Vernon Hall,_~_reenvllle, pres-

Much 8,1000

Weather

·Hilltop Center

2475 Scloto.Trail
285-5000

408 E. Huron
285-5001

.WIVI!Iy
•
USCC Wei-Mort Kiosk

900 West Emm~ Avenue
947-0069

'

456·8122 or (8001824·7775

ll!oo. c- 1M vlllt -

.,..., WII-Mort locotltw: Now Boston, Jackson.
For your COII\Ionitnct we 11tve over 80 authorized egent locations.

I

Charges in. connection with last week's fatal .
iccident in Meigs O&gt;unty arc expected to be ·pre- ·
sented to the Mtigs County grand jury whon 'it
r:neets later this week, a ·spokesman for the Gallia-Meigs Post ·o f the State Highway Patrol said.
- Troopers are to meet prior to the grand jury
session with the Meigs prosecuting attorney's
office to discuss the case and specific charges,
the sjlokesman said.
· .
, Jerry M. Matney, 47, Beaver, died at the scene
Qf a Thursday morning collision on State Route
124 between the car be drove and a tractor-trailer driven by Franll M. Colwell, 43, 34272 Crew
Road, Ponieroy. Troopers said Colwell was wes.tl?ound, just east of Wilkesville, when the rig he
drove slid left of center an,d litruck Matney's
eastbound vehicle, according to the patrol's
report.
. A pickup truck behind Matney's car, driven
by George McGraw, 54, 44930 SR 160, Vinton,
swerved off the road and ~truck li fence, troopers
said. No other injuries stemmed from the accident.
·
"We should kJ\ow something by ·Wednesday,
because the grand jury won't meet until March
11," the patrol spokesman said.
: "We have submitted the paperwork and .the
prosecuting attorney's office wants to meet with
~s before, presenting the case to the grand jury."
. The 7:10 a.m. accident occurred after
overnight snowfall and dipping temperatures
sliclted up surfaces jlllll after daybreak Thursday.
, The crash marked the first fatal accident in
Meigs County for the year.

I

Senate·committee will
investigate "lax security"

DONATION ..::::'A donation of $1,000 was given to the Pomeroy Elementa,Y School
Saturday througl\ a special prog~am conducted by Mlzway Tavern and 'the Ohio Edu.c ational 5!-tpport Group, Tha money, according to Cindy Johnllton, principal, will go
for field trlpa and ·other apeclal proJects at the school. Hera, Johnson accapte the
check from Ellis My.,. ofthe OESG. Pictured with them are Mlzway repranntatlv••
Brenda Moore, Bred Lechler and ·Teran Lechler.
·

By WILUAM C. MANN
Richardson said the administra. AsiOCIItad Preea Writer
lion was still .assessing the extent of .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Energy the damage. He added, " the message
Secretary Bill Richardson today is clear. We have to tighten security al
pledged the administration's full ' all of these installations. That has
cooperation with a Seriate commit- happened.,"
tee's investigation into allegations
Edward Curran, director of coun·
that lax security in a weapons labora- terintelligence at the Energy Departtory allowed China to steal technolo- ment, said in a statement it was
gy that improved its nuclear weapons unclear how much the Chi nese
capability.
weapons programs may have been
"We will not tolerate the theft of helped by unauthorized procurement
our secrets," Richardson said on of sensitive information.
CNN.
"The Energy Department's
Sen, Richard Shelby, R-Ala., national laboratories are the world 's
national
security
chainnan of the Intelligence O&gt;m· · pre-eminent
rnittee, said Sunday that allegations research facilities, " Curran said.
of Chinese spying at New Mexico's "They have long been, and remain,
Los Alamos National Laboratory attractive to foreign intelligence ser·
"will certainly" bring more hearings. yicos."
The panel already is investigating
The department, in charge"of U.S.
, commercial teChnology transfers that civilian and military nuclear proRepublican leaders contend could grams, said the administration has
help ~i nese upgrade their mis- created a counterintelligence office to
site forces.
·
combat espionage.
"We have been on top of this lax
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said
securiiy for a number of years. We've the incident involving China could
been pushing, we've been prodding have been expected.
the administration to do more, to
"It doesn' t surprise me at all that
tighten up security," Shelby said on the Chinese are spying. You know,
NBC:s "Me~tthe Press."
that kind of thing is fairly routine," ,
"I think 'they are beginning to, bu't McCain said on " Fox News Sun... they waited a long time," he said. day."

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