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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

PI t • t 't
an reinS a eS
leader in union

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Chairman of the Board, Champion Industries, Inc.
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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
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CELLUlAR.

Featured Guest Speakers
Marshall T . Reynolds

· The way people ralle
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USCC Wei-Mort Kiosk
2145 Eastern Avenue

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up for Flower Festival

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.Fate·of R_iverview School still undecided Entertainment lined

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$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 $15,000.
Karr, approved hiring Architect Randy Breech o.f Gallipo· chairwoman Marilyn Powell at 949~s, 21d, of Zanesville, walked in and fired multiple shots with a .22-calKarrsaid Monday that he plans to, use the~ilding as lis to work with the board on the renovation of office 2676.
1ber hill! gun. · , ·
.
· .. .
·
a storage facility fot his fertilizer business. • ne church . space for the district at Tuppers Plains Elementary ::A~fl~ow~er~fest~iv~al~~~to~be~se~lect~-;,.~
Donahue WI'$ 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: ,.,.
.. . . · ·
· ,., ._., ,11"'· · . ..._ '
•
· E'"""*n"sliid,
"'
•·
''
·
•
..,...
,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

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Loaded with . ~ptlons 1 leather Interior, .sun roof, Bose stereo system, alum
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-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

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2475 Scloto.Trail
285-5000

408 E. Huron
285-5001

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900 West Emm~ Avenue
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ll!oo. c- 1M vlllt -

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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."

�.'
•

.....

•

Cotninentary
The Daily·Sentinel

~

'

1,

'

111 Coun St., ,Pomeroy; Ohio
7CG-1182·21H • F.x: 1102·2157

~ooat. ~o&amp;Q!

Publisher

Genen~l M•n~~ger

Margaret Ev~lyn Davis, 74, State Route 124, Salem Center, died Monday,
March 8, 1999 1n the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
~rll Sept. 29, 1924 in Da~ville, daughter of the late Perle and Maggie
Denney GO~, she was a school employee and a homemaker, and ~ member
of the Danv1lle Church of Christ.
Surviving are a daughter, Charhiyne Crisp, and a son, Kenton Davis, both
of Salem Center; a brolher, Marvin Goff of Springfield; and three grandsons.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Ernie Davis· a daughter
Marlayne !Javis; ~nd lw? brothers, Darrell and Raymond Goff.'
'.
. Gravestde se.rv•ces W_JII be 11 a..m. Wednesday in the Danvill~ Cemetery,
w1th Denver Hdl offfic1atmg. Fnends may call at the Birchfield Funeral
Home, Rutland, from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
.
-

Tu~ · -p~,~

CMT~

ROBERT L WINGETT

.

Margaret Evelyn Davis

L.i.Y's Pou

F'~tt AT Otio~ 6

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

local briefs:

j

•

'Esta61lslid illl948

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

Mon~IY· M•:h I, 1. .

DIANE HILL
Controller

~Af11

I ..__ l:wJW I •

~OQ O QOO &lt;l ,)

Forrest Kibbl.e

C&gt;CIIIC&gt;0C'090

ol Columbuo 129'/W I

:New lottery director
·w ants to pump up
\e xcitement in games

0 -

Sulny Pl Cloudy

:By JOHN AFFLECK

AAocllrted Pr... Writer
, CLEVELAND (AP) - Wlren the state's new lottery director looks at

ideas for generating excitement in his agency's games, he ~ ask himself
the following question: Would I buy this ticket?
That's because before Gov. Bob Taft appointed Mitchell J. Brown as
director of the Ohio Lottery in January, Brown's main contact with the lottery was as a player.
.
.,
He would buy the odd Super Lotto ticket, but only when the jackpot
reached up to around $20 million - enough, he figured, to retire on. Now
he'll be trying to get people like himself more interested in the Super Lotto
and other games.
·
. In rtsponse to an ditoriJtl cartoon ill U!St 'Tue.stfay's 'Pfatn1&gt;uier
"Witli tftis cartoon, tM 'Pfatn1&gt;uier is ITU)Cfjng tM s&amp;.oo(funllnj
·. "We're going io do whatever we can to raise money to enhance educacritica[ of Jrui,ge Linton LewiS Jr.'s IIWSt ruent ruling tliat Oftw's le6au 6y imp{ytng t!Uzt JutfgeLewis' lecision grants outfanl(fli. lu;c.- .
tion," Brown said in a recent interview about his plans for the lottery. "I'm
scfwo{ juntfing systmr. is u~onstf.,tutiotull,. Sf{tli 1)ist:rlet 'US. ~p. urlu to rural stulents, • tM .i,ucasvilk 1)tlll()crat sail. "1M sclio•of
going to do whatever I have to do to increase sales, while balancing that so
'Td Stric(wnllias firel 6ac{;,witli an ditoriJtl Cllrtoon of ftis O'Uin.
fonltng strUggle is il6out ~ stulent ill Oftw rtalfllng an tukquau
we don't have problem gambling."
•
'11ie Pf4tn1)ufer cartoon tfepicts Lewis as a lurra forctng tM s!4te ducation ill a safe ani fw11tfty enVironment. •
:
Brown, Sl, comes to his new·job with a long track record as a govern·
ment administrator.
,
legisf4turt to write •I wi({ ensure tliat evuy Oftio stutfent also lias a · St:rlek;[antf caUtl t/U cartocir~ an •wult, rwt only to people ill ~ ' ,
When U.S, Sen. George Voinovich was mayor of Cleveland, Brown was
car, pager arttf 'Tommy !Jlffftser wartfrobe {~ Rirfs ill t/U !Jlitflifalutill' T1lTill soutN:rn Oftfo list:rlet, 6ut ·to af{ tliose ill otfur Oftio communi- :
the city's commissioner of emergency medical services and later was directfistrftts• 1.5 6i({wn tlmts.
tits tliat !Uz!Jt rwt s!Uzrd ill our staU's economic gool fortuiiL •
. ,
tor of public safety. After Voinovich became Ohio governor, Brown worked
Inastatonentissud!frilflly,Stric{f4ni6Ca.stdtliecartoon. cfwrgtng
'11ie cartoon pmentd ~O'IJe was su6mittetf b!J !%p. Strk{wnl's :
as .the director of the Ohio Department of Public Safety.
.
Its .Uplction •sfiows 6igotry againJt peopft ill poortr parts of tM ftate. • . offta.
The lottery he's taking over has seen slightly declining sales in the.last
couple of years.
,
Total ticket sales were $2.J billion for fiscal 1997, $2.2 billion for 1998
and are expected to be about $2.1 billion for the fiscal year that ends June
30.
.
.
Brown hasn't decided exactly ":fat he' ll do to increase lottery sales, and
By JOHN CUNNIFF .
In such an al{nosphere memories of oversimplifying. you might divide improve long-run investm.enl returns : .
new programs or games are prooa!lly at least several months away, but as his
AP
Bulin
...
Anely81
grow
dim, and many of today 's today's investors into (1) those who over a buy-and-hold strategy."
:
fil"l step he's examining all the lottery's operations.
NEW
YORK
(AP)
If
housing
investors
fail
to
recall
that
just
nine
contend
they
are
in
for
die
long
term
Perritt,
a
former
mathe111alics
prp.'
He's looking for ways the agency can be more efficient and studying
other states for tips from their games. Brown also is taking "a real stern is a leadin'g indicator of economic years ago this summer the stock mar- and (2) those who think they can fessor and now publisher of the
activity ll!ld, by extension, of stock ket lost 20 percent of its value in just , time the market.
Mutual Fund Letter, adheres to Ill~ .
look" ~t w~.at he once played - Super Lotto.
.
.
· .
The question ~:.~~~~~fi~trs~t:is~~~~~!·l~ strategy, declaring
, "Tpday people don't get excited about winning $8 mill jon or $12 million, market behavior, what will investors three months:
Or for tha~ matter, that just three whether they really
investors are thfilSC wlto
they get excited when it's $20 million," he said. "So we have to figure out make of the recent decline in new
housing
starts?
years
before
that
it
subtracted
33.5
"
long-term"
means.
stay
in
the
market over ihe Jon~·
r how to inject some enthusiasm into that activity."
Not
much,
judging
at
least
by
the
percent
of
its
value
in
a
similarly.
live
within
a
time
frame
imposed
by
run."
'· ·
Pari of ·the problem, Brown believes, are the huge jackpots being raised
casual
manner
in
which
they've
disbrief
period.
·And
that
until
last
sumage;
unless
they.
wish
to
endqw
their
At
the
same
time
he
must
make'
a'
by the multistate Powerball lottery. Thirteen Columbus area residents
pensed·with
all
other
threats,
real
and
mer,
there
had
been
15
bear
markets
heirs,
"long
term"
could
be
briefer
concession
to
human
nature.
"The
'claimed that game's record $295.7 million jackpot last July. The group
imagined. A quality of self-fulfill- since 1948.
·
than they want to admit.
· ·
best way to weather a stock mar~e! .
bought the winning ticket at a gas station in Indiana. ·
mentguidesthismarket~anything
Why
go
back
so
far?
Some
·
Thesecondgroupispopulatedby
downdraft
is to know who you arc ·
"Our society today is looking 'for that excitement of winning these
is
possible
if
you
believe.
~
· vestors barely remember that last . those who believe.•that foresight or and to determine how much doWn·
tremendously large jackpots," he said.
That belief has seldom been hi - sum er the Standard &amp; Poor's SOO dumb luck will guide their escape side volatility you can tolerate," II(,
.,
.Even though the odds of hilling the jackpot are extremely small, people
er,.,
and never before in history h it index fell 14.6 perceni and the Nas· from a major downturn. The attitude says.
· '
·· who don't win know someone else will, "so the point is you want to particApplying that philosophy to our
ipate. So we have tO be very sensitive on how we deal with the prize pay- involved so many people and so daq composite index plunged nearly is common among those who re,centmuch
money.
In
the
mind
of
20
percent.
This
market
looks
for·
Iy
rode.
a
stock
to
a
200
percent
proftimes,
a smart investor would ask ·
OI!Is on our Super Lotto games, and that's one of the areas we have to take
investors,
the
world
is
tieing
recreatward,
not
back.
·
it.
himself
(I) am I really in this for the ·.
a look at," Brown said.
.
ed,
and
the
new
world
is
abounding
There
are
compelling
reasons
for
For
the
latter,
market
historian
long
haul
or am I kidding mysc)fv:
Brown said he's enjoying the challenge of improving lottery sales but
with
riches..
it
to
rise:
The
affluence
of
ordinary
and
adviser
Gerald
Perritt
has
some
andJ(2)
do
I
really, truly belicv~
added that not everyone shares his feelings. Now that he's a lottery employThis
isn't
the
reality,
of
course,
people
benefiting
from
pay
raises,
.
words,
to
wit
foretell
what
might happen?
ee he can't play its games, which upset his daughter.
any
more
than
the
amount
of
cash
in
the
daring
that
comes
with
a
sense
of
"More
than
50
years
of
rigorous
And,
of
course,
they mu 11$k:
"She said ' Dad, you know they can 'I pay you as much as you would have
a person's pocket is a true reflection new wealth, the automatic invest- academic research has failed to themselves also whether their . nfk
won,"' Brown said. ,
of the world economy. But as long as ments through pension funds and uncove~ one indi.cator that could con- dence is based on substance or is JU
enough pockets are bulging, the ·mar- 40I(k)s.
sistently predict the onset of a bear a nice feeling they have from all the .
kct apparently will ri!!C.
Broadly speaking. and at the risk market far enough in advance to · money in their pocket.
· ·
.
.
.
.
By The AMoel8ted Prna
Today is Monday, March 8, the 67th day of 1999. There are 298 days left
in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
Lemisch --a professor of history at John Jay Col·
On .March 8, 1841, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., the By Nu H•ntoll
lege of Criminal Justice at New York's City Uni"Great Dissenter," was born in Boston.
Last November, over 400
versity -' adsJitional historians as well as social
On this date: ·
American historians placed a
scientists and graduate students keep coming
In 1702, England's Queen Anne ascended the throne upon the death of full-page ad in the New York
aboard. He welcomes more.
King William III.
.
· Times. Titled "Historians in
At that January meeting of the American His•
In 1854, U.S. Commodore Matthew C. Perry made his second landing in Defense of the Constitution," it
toric~J
Association, the signers of the itew petition
Japan . Within a month, he concluded a treaty with the Japanese.
fiercely opposed the impeachmade'' clear that they "strongly oppose the
In 1874, the 13th president of the United States; Millard Fillmore1 died in ment of the president. Orgaremoval of Bill Clinton for the offenses for which
Buffalo, N.Y.
·
nized by . professors Arthur
he is on trial in the Senate. " But they believe that
In 1917, Russia's "February Revolution" - so called because of the Old Schlesinger Jr. and the James
Style calendar used by Russians ·at the time - began with rioting and strikes Carville of academia, Scan Wilentz, the historians he has so abused his presidential powers in the
in St. Petersburg.
claimed that if the president were convicted, the bombing ·of Iraq, Afghanistan and Sudan that he
· In 1917, the U.S. Senate voted to limit filibusters by adopting the cloture presidency would be "permanently disfigured;" should be removed from office. ·
rule.
·
thereby "undermining the Constitution."
The petition cites a violation of the War Powers
Clause of the Constitution (Article 1, Section
In 1930, the 27th president of the United States, William Howard Taft,
People for the American Way tells me it acted
died in Washington.
as a facilitator for the concerned historians, get- . 8). Although Congress "shall have Power to...
In 1942, Japanese forces captured Rangoon, Burma, during World War II. ting a public-relations firm to further spread their . declare War," Clinton only marginally consulted
In 1944, U.S. bombers resumed bombing Berlin.
urgent warning to Congress and the nation. Also; a few of its leaders and did not go through the
In 1965, the United States landed about 3,500 Marines in South Vietnam. it enabled the list price of the ad~$748, to be required stages of meaningful consultation as
. mandated by.the War Powers Resolution of 1973.
In 1986, four French television crew members were abducted in west reduced to $56,000.
··
Also violated, according to these historians,
Beirut; a caller claimed Islamic Jihad was responsible. All four were even· . I recognize some of the sign
the ad as
tually released.
expert chroniclers of the framing of the Constitu- was Executive Order 12,333, Section 2-305, pro·
Ten years ago: In Lebanon,.daily artillery barrages between Christian and lion. Reading them through the yeitrs, I have hibiting assassination, or conspiracy to assassiSyrian forces and their militia allies began in Beirut; at least 930 people . learned that one cannot know with certainty what nate, human foreign targets.
That Executive Order, issued by ·President
were killed before a cease-fire took hold the following September.
the Framers precisely meant by " high Crimes and
Five years ago: President Clinton announced the appointment of Wash- Misdemeanors." Yet in that ad, these scholars Gerald Ford in 1975, says: "No person employed
•Look - the cherry tree hss bBen chopped down.
ington attorney Lloyd &lt;;:utler as senior counsel, replacing Bernard Nuss- instructed us unequivocally that ihey did indeed by, or acting on behalf of the United States GovLet's put it behind u1. •
ernment, shall engage in, or conspire to engage in,
baum. The Defense Department announced a smoking ban for workplaces know the real meaning of those crucial words.
~--~~~~~~~~~~ ·
ranging from the Pentagon to battle tanks.
·
Maybe, I thought, even these distinguished assassination.''
various legal rationalizations for "going. afte(~ i
Following
the
August
raid
on
Afghanistan,
bin Laden, including the "any means
One year ago:.James McDougal, one of the most important cooperating academics were so fearful of Republicans taking
•~ministration
offi~ials
denied
for
months
that
provision of the 19.9 6 anti-terrorism ,act. Wh¥• :
witn~sses ~n K~nneth Starr's Whitewater investigation, died in a federal over the White House and the Supreme Court that
rt~d1cal pnson m Fort Worth, Texas, at age •57. More than a foot of wind- they shaded their previous inteipretations for the one purpose of the bombing was to kill the then, did the Clinton administration deny for :
alleged master terrorist, Osama bin L.Oen. How- months that the bombing was indeed intended to :
driven snow paralyzed travel across the central Plains and Midwest. Hall of greater good of the nation.
F,ame linebacker Ray Nitschke died in Florida at age 61.
· ·
Not widely known, however, is that over 240 ever; when the CIA ~etermined that bin Lad~n kill bin Laden?
. - ·
Though not explicit in the historiiWl Januafy :
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Oaire Trevor is 90. Actress Sue Ane Langdon American historians have· come forth with a call would be at a camp in Afghanistan, more than 70
cruise missiles were aimed at him and his col- petition, it has been widely conjectured that t~e :
is 63 . .Baseball pla~er-turned · author Jim Bouton is 60. Actress Lynn Red- for impeachment -- on different grounds.
bombing raids on all those countries were primar- '
pave 1s 56. Act~Hltrector Micky Dolcnz is 54. Lyricist Carole Bayer Sager
The new petition declares: "Impeach . Bill · leagues in that very camp.
In
the
Nov.
14
New
York
limes,
reporter
ily
ordered by the president to distract attention ,
ts 52. Actress Ja1mc Lyn Bauer is 50. Baseball player Jim Rice is 46. Singer Clinton for the Right Reasons: Not for ·Lewinsky,
James
Risen
quoted
Defense
Secretary
William
from his travail in Congress.
•· :
Gary Numan is ·41. Actor Aidan Quinn is 40. Actress Camryn Manheim but Rather for the Illegal Bombing of Iraq,
Meanwhile, an American air and missile strike: •
("The Practice") is 38. Actress Kathy Ireland, is 36. Actress Andrea Parker Afghanistan and Sudan." This proposed indict· Cohen as saying that the United States had been
("The Pretender ") is 30. Actor Freddie PrinzcJr. is 23. Actor James Van Ocr ment was first circulated during the Jan. 7-10 "going after" bin Laden and his associates. The on Feb. 25 attacked targets 30 miles from downtown :
Beck ("Dawson 's Creek") is 22. Rhythm-and•bl ucs singer Kameeltih meeting of the American Historical Association in lead to Risen's story declared: "One Of the clear Baghdad, and the Iraqi government claims that, :
but unstat~d objectives of last August's taid on · once more, civilians were killed. Innocent civilians. ·
Williams (702) is 21.
.
• Washington, D.C.
. ,.
•
Thought for Today: "If there is any principle of the Constitution that
Subsequently, the pettt1on was published in Afghanistan was to kill Osama bin Laden and as
Nat Hentolf ·•• • nationally renowned '
more imperatively calls for attachment than any other it is the principle of The Nation and In These Times as well as on var- many of his associates as possible, Administration •uthorlly on the Firat Amendment •nd the rMI ·
of the Bill of Rlghte.
·
·
· ·. · :
free thought.- not free thought for those who agree with us but freedom for ious Web sites on the continually churning Inter- · officials now-acknowledge."
Copyrlghi1HO
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
' .:
The Times report cited the administration's
the thought that we hate .... - Oliver Wend~ll Holmes Jr. (1841-1935).
net. According to one of the originators, Jesse

Strickland says 'Enough ·is enough' to Plain Dealer

Quality of se -fulfillment guides the market!

Today In Hi.s tory

A new way to impeach the president:
Berry's World
-

..

~~

necessary/: '

-

Cloudy

f8!t, ~ .• . ~
Showera T·IIOmll

Aajn

A..,.,

·.·.•Snow
.•i.•;·.·. l""
leo

Storm system bringing
snowfall to Ohio tonight

Forrest Charlene Kibble, 70, Reedsville, died on Saturday, March 6,
1999, at Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
She was born on April 20, 1928 in Reedsville, a daughter of the late
Horace and Susie Buchanan Kibble. She was a homemaker, and attended the
Eden United Brethren Church.
Survivors include three sisters: Hazel Barton and Ada Congrove, both of
Reedsville, and Fairy Bell Foster of Parkersburg, W.Va.; five nieces, four
nephews, and several great nieces and great nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her sister, Mildred Kibble, her brother, August Kibble; two brothers-in-law, William Congrove and
Ralph Barton; a niece and a nephew.
..
·
Services will be held at 1 p.m. at White FuQeral Home on Tuesday, March
9, 1999, with Rev. Robert May officiating. Burial will follow at Eden Cemetery.
·
·
·
· Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p.m.

GOP budget framework is opening
gambit, but questions still remain

Man cited In two-vehicle wreck
No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle collision on state
Route 7 near Thppers Plains Saturday afternoon.
LeeS . Powell, 30, Pomeroy, was northbound on state Route 7 when a
car driven by1Patrick A. Newland, 22, Reedsville, pulled from Owl Hollow Road and struck th e side of Powell's 1997 Ford Explorer, according
to· a. Meigs County Sheriff's Office report. Powell's. vehicle then spun
around and slruck a guardrail, sustaining heavy damage, the report said.
Newland's 1993 P&lt;;&gt; ntiac Bonneville sustained moderate damage.
Newland was cited for failure to stop/failure to yield from a stop sigit.

Announcements:
Middleport Youth League

.

Middleport Youth League signups will be held Tuesday, 4:30-7:30
p.m. and Saturday, noon-3 p.m. at Middleport Council Chambers.

Antiques Club to meet
The Big Bend Farm Antiques Club will meet tonight (Monday) at7:30
p.m. at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.

Meeting changed
The Meigs County Genealogical Society will not meet·this week .. The
next meeting will be held on Tuesday, April 13, at S p.m. at the Meigs
Museum. Questions concerning the meeting. may be directed 10 Patty
Cook, president, 992-2447.
·

AA meeting set
AA meeting will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Carleton School, Syracuse.

Revival services set
R e~ival services will be held Wednesday through Saturday, 7 p.m. and
Sunday, 6 p.m. at the Hillside Baptist Church, located on State Route 143
just off Route 7, Pomeroy. Dr. Bill Blount of Farmington Hill, Mich. will
be the speaker and there will be special singing nightly. Dr. fames R.
Acree, pastor, invites the public to attend.
.
·

By ALAN FRAM
vate - say inevitably, many proAssoclatad Preaa Writer
grams would be cut so deeply that
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con· spending bills will either be rejectgressional Republican leaders have ed by the GOP-cPntrolled ConBy The Associated Preas ·
announced the broad principles that gress, or vetoed by Clinton.
- A snowstorm is headed for Ohio tonight and Thesday with accumulations
will guide them as they write a fisAnd that could get Republicans
AKRON (AP) - A newspaper
Districts around Ohio are schedof 7·10 inches possible in some parts of the state by the time it's over, forecal 2000 buaget and a plan for han- precisely what they say they wish story has led to the invalidation of the · uled to begin giving the exams the
casters said.
·
dling hu11e surpluses expected for to avoid: A rep.lay of last year's wriling portion of this month's week of March 15, but have a three' The National Weather Service said the western and southern .portipns of the foreseeable future.
aytumn sp~nding showdown with fourth-and sixth-grade state profi- week window for the tests because of
state will feel the brunt of the storm tonight and the northeast and eastern
The blueprint, which they' will Clinton, in which the president has ciency tests.
varying spring breaks.
sections on Thesday.
·
·
·
try selling next week to rank-and- most of the cards because a veto
"This is one of the most signifi·
The education department is con• Lows tonight will be 20-30. Highs on Tuesday 30-40.
file GOP lawmakers, signals how could cause a federal shutdown. As cant breaches of security that we've sulting with the testing company to
The snow may change to rain in southern Ohio as tempemtures warm on
Republicans will position them· a result, many people from both faced," said Stacie La'(o'ell, spokes- determine costs for the new tests, Ms.
T11esday, but more snow or snow showers are likely Tuesday night through
selves politically in this year's bud- parties think an agreement with woman for the Ohio Department of Lawell said.
Thursday. ·
·
· get battle with President Clinton. Clinton to exceed the spending lim- Education.
The state pays $16.20 to print, disThe reconl:high tempemture for this date at the Columbus weather station
But it leaves several unanswered its will be reached later in the year.
The Xenia Daily Gazette inter· tribute, collect, score and report the
was 80 degrees in 1974 while the record low was 2 below zero in 1960. SunQ: Haven't Republicans suc- viewed students about the tests last score of each pupil's proficiency
questions.
set tonight will be at 6:31 p.m. and sunrise Thesday at 6:53 a.m.
Q: What exactly have Republi· cessfully established themselves week and printed essay qu.estions exam. That's about $4.37 million for
We.ther forecast:
can leaders agreed to?
. now as protectors of Social Securi-· · from writing portion of the exam, the the state's 300,000 fourth and sixth
· _ Tonight ...Snow. Snow accumulation by around dawn one to three inches.
A: A vague framework . that ty and Medicare?
Akron Bea~n Journal reported Sat- graders, said Jan Crandell, assistant
IJ&gt;ws from the upper 20s to the lower 30s. East wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of describes their general direction but
director for the .Education DepartA: Not yet. The polls show the urday.
~w 90 percent.
.
saves specific decisions for later in public trusts Democrats more than
Christie Gilpin, the Gazette's city ment's assessment center.
_• Tuesday...Snow bec9ming mixed with rain early in the afternoon. Colder the process. It says R.epublicans Republicans on both issues~ and editor, said today that the newspaper
Beginning in the 2001-2002
with highs in the mid and upper 30s. Chance of precipitation 90 percent.
will only ulie Social Security sur- that won't be easy for the GOP to had no comment. Xenia, a city of school ·year,' fo~rth graders will be
· ' Thesday night ... Ught snow or rain. Lows 30 to 35.
·
pluses for the elderly, not forgener- overcome.
·
about 25,000, is 15 miles east of Day· required to pass the reading portion
al tax cuts or spending; will reserve
Besides, no one has se~n the ton ..
of their test to be promoted to the
more money than Clinton for Social deti\ils of how Republicans would,
Education . Department officials fifth grade.
Security and Medicare, or debt as promised, · "Lock away every' learned of the newspaper's story on
In Xenia, McKinley Elementary, a
reduction if the two programs are penny of the Social Security trust Wednesday and decided to invalidate year:round school, was scheduled for
_,RAVENNA (AP) - Fire-da111: fire started in ~ third-floor biology not overhauled; will obey spending fund surpluses for our nation's the tests statewide on Thursday, Ms. spring break this week alla received
Lawell said.
aged Ravenna High . School lab because of a short in an exten- limits from the 1997 budget-bal- elderly."
permission to take the tests early, liaid
Superintendents were asked to Judy Lowrey, a Xenia City Schools
rtopened today, ending a week long sion cord. The cord was used for · ·ancing law; will increase defense
Democrats want .to kno'w specif·
ically what they would do with the· administer the reading. math, science administrative assistant.
~reak in classes.
aquarium components, such as the spending and cut taxes.
Q: If it is so vague, why is it money, and how they can guarantee and civic ,parts of the exams as schedThe Daily Gazette asked students
, The fire Feb. 28 caused $150,000 heater and filter.
it won 't be used for something else. uled, she said.
at McKinley about their testing expe·
in_damage at the school's Whittaker
All classrooms damaged by fire . important?
A: Because ·it makes several piv- They suggest Republicans may try
The writing portion of the exam rience and ran questions they were
J!all annex.
will be available except for the bioiotal budgetary and political state- · using it to t~ansform Social Securi- typically is administered on Monday asked 'to write about. The reporter
.. Fire Chief James DiPaola said the ogy lab.
ments that are likely to bdtepubli- ty, in part; into personal retirement - the first day of testing - but was not supposed to print the quesca.ns ' marquee .principles in this investments that people would con- school officials have been asked to tions, Ms. Lowrey said.
.
!"
·
give it Friday sp the.new·exam COl) be
year's run-up to the 2000 elections. trol.
· ·units of the Meigs County Emcr- son, VMH;
They ~ant to be seen as a party that
· Q: Does this help the GOP get delivered, Ms. Lawell said.
gency Medical Service recorded 11
11 :58 p.m. Saturday, Broadway is protecting Social Security and the tax cuts they want?
calls for assistance Saturday and Street, Middleport, Helen Young, Medicare and that wants to cut
A: Maybe,. but here too the
Suhday. Units responding included: Pleasant Valley Hospital;
tax~s and restrain spending. And by
details will be more telling.
· · CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:22 a.m . Sunday, Mulberry promising to not use Social SecuriRepublicans are planning tax
4:04a.m. Saturday, Locust' Street, . Avenue, Pomeroy, Bret Wyatt, ty funds for tax cuts, they want to cuts totaling about $15 billion next
Pomeroy, Dayton Phillips, Veterans VMH;
immunize themselves against year, but swelling to a $700 billion
Memorial Hospital; .
3:59 a.m. Sunday, Edmundson Democratic accusations that to $900 billion price tag through the
t ' • ·-10:43 a.m. Saturday, East Main · Road, Rutland, Richard Lusher,
Republicans want to take away decade.
Street, Pomeroy, William Eakins, Holzer Medical Center, Rutland money from senior citizens and use
They have pledged not to use
VMH, Pomeroy squad assisted; .
squad assisted;
'social Security surpluses to pay for
it to cut rich peoples' ta¥s·.
2:21 p.m. Saturday, Leading
11:28 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
Q: Can they do all that?
the tax cuts. They think they win
Greek Road, Rutland, Harold Car- Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy,
A: That is one of the key ques- the fight over using surpluse.s from IASIFROM IH! PAST [PG·l3)2&gt;1~ 4:40, 7:10, 9:40
Mae Webber, VMH;
tions.
non-Social Security programs if lNAlTU THI~ (R) 2:20, 4:U, 7:20, 9:45
9:09 ·p.m. Sunday, State Route 7,
Take their promise to live within their tax cuts are pitted against .
Tuppers Plains, Mary Fink, HMC, spending caps set by the 1997 bud- Democrats' calls for more spend- II FIVOIII!IIAITWI (PG )2:30, 4:45, 7:00,
(USPS liJ.HO)
Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
PAYIACI (R)
2:30, 4:50, 7:00, 9:2~
get deal. For fiscal 2000, which ing.
Commwalt)' Nnap~pc:r Holdlnp, Jnc.
10:36 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook begins Oct . 1, that agreement
But since sizable surpluses in the
3:00, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45
Nursing Center, Middleport, Lynn · would hold discretionary spending · rest of the budget don 't materialize
Published every afte~fl{iay lhrouah
Friday, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Boston, PVH, Pomeroy squad to $536 billion; nearly one·lhird.of until 2002, they will have to
Obio Valley Publishing Co~ny. Second d•
·assisted.
postase pkl•• Pomeroy, Ob10. .
the overall budget. Discretionary finance the early tax cuts other
Mnnbm The Auociated Ptna and 1be Ohio
RACINE
spending
covers defense and ways . . They 're examining several
Newspaper A.uociltlon.
11:32 a.m. Sunday, Portland .· domestic ·programs, but. excludes . options, such as cutting capital
PottMUicn Send address corredions lo The
Daily ~nlinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
Road, William Pickens, VMH.
automatically paid benefits like gains tax rates, which generate rev45769.
RUTLAND
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Medicare and payments to federal enue initially by encouraging peo6:21 p.m. Sunday, Long Street, debt holders.
ly Carrier or Motor Route
·
ple to sell their property. Democrats
One \Veek. .•••••....•••..•••..•.•.•...•••. .$2.00
All AGIS, AU IIMIS $4.00
Mary Hudson, PVH, Central [)is- ·
That $536 billion is a lot of are waiting to pounce.
One Month .................... - .......... $8.70
patch squad assisted.
OnC Year................................... $104.00
money, but about $25 billion less
,
SINGLE COPY PRICE
'
than is being spent this year. Factor.
• D,aii,...................................... _Js Cent.a
t Subscribers not deairin&amp; to. pay the carrier may
· out one-time 1999 emergencies and
' remit in advance dired to The Daily Sentinel on
',
.
it's still about $15 billion short.
: I three, Silli Of 12 [nonlh buiJ. Credit will be
In order to vote in the May 4, 1999 Primary Election you must be
, &amp;iven carrier e1ch week •
Am Ele' Power .: ...................... 43 Aitd then there are the billions extra
. No sublcriptioa by m•il pcnnintd in areas
Akzo ..................................... .35),
both parties want to spend on
'where home carrier scrviee is available.
registered by Monday, April 5, 1C)99.
AmrTech
...............................
63'1.
defense
and education.
: Publisbft raotl'\la the ri&amp;hl to adjust rate&amp; dur·
Ashland 011 ...........................42'1.
,ing the subeaiplion period. Subscription rile
Vote at your new precinct and ·avoid long lines at the board on Election
Q: So will they keep spending
.chanpa may be impleDMnted. by changing the
ATI:T ..................................... 87',1,
within the $536 billion limit? · ·
:dullljon o[ Ute IUbsaiplion.
Bank One .............................. ss~.
Day by changing your address (if you have moved within the county) or if
A:.Republican leaders insist they
Bob
Evans
.........
:
..................
21),
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
you have changed your name, by updating your registration by April 5,
will find enough savings by cutting
Borg-Warner ........................ .48'loolde Melp Couaty
Broughton
...........................
16~
some
programs,
using
unspent
13 Woeb. .......................... $27.30
1999.
Champion ............................... &amp;),
26 Weeb ........................... .SS3.82
funds and even some of Clinton's
Charm Shps.'........................... 3'1.
52 \Yeeb . ......................... .$105.56
proposals to reduce spending and
The b 0 ard of elections will be open the following additional hours for
btcl Outdde Mrfp County
City Holdlng .....................,.... 26).
raise
some
fees.
Democrats
and
13 w.eu........................... .S29.25
Federal Mogul ....................... so:&gt;
your convenience:
26 Wecu., ..........................$56.68
many Republicans, usually. in pri·
Gannett .................................66~.
~2 w.w ..........................S109.72
March '15- March 19:
8:00 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
Kmart ..................................... 17~.

Newspaper prints article with
proficiency test questions

ee
e sat re~amaged Ravenna High School

-EMS units record 11 runs

!he Daily Sentinel

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?

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Oar •••• tot~cerw Ia all storltl iJ 10 be
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-·-·-·

Stock reports are the 10:30
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of Gallipolis.

'

Hospital news

Vetemns Memorial
Saturday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - none:
Sunday admissions- none.
Sunday discharges - Betty
Young. · •
·
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges March S - Lyle
Hysell, Kenneth Markin.
Dischafl!es March 6 - Mrs. Joe
Potter and ' son .
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. ·Thomas
Diltz: daughter, Oak Hill.
Discharges March 7 - Mrs.
Thomas Diltz and daughter, Tina
Bumgardner, Shane McGuire.
(Published with permission)

March 22- March 26:
8:00 a.m. till 4:30 p.in.
March 29- April 2:
8:00 a.m. till4:30 p.m.
April 5:
8:00a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
You may also register at the foll wing location: Meigs C!luniy
Department of Human Services Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau of
Motor Vehicles, Board of MRI
Meigs County Library, Middleport
Public Library, Meigs County ea urer'11 Office, and all area·high .
--1
schools. You may register on the Meigs C,unty Bookmobile at its
designated stops;
,,
For, any additional information, Call 992-2697 , or slop ~y our
office ai 112 Mulberry Avenue, Pom~roy, Ohio.

•

�'

The Daily. Sentinel~

Sports

Page4 .

Monday, March 8, 189%

•

'Van . _e Clipper' Joe DiMaggio dies at 84
By MARY SCHNEIDE
, AP Sport1 Writer

Joe DiMaggio, the egant Yankee
Clipper whose 56- me hining
· streak endures as one of the most
remarkable records m baseball or
any sport, di ed today at his home in
Hollywood, Fla. He was 84.
·
DtMaggto, who underwent lung
,:cancer surgery in October and bauled
·~ a series of comphcatwns for weeks
• afterward, died shortly after mid; night, satd Morris Engelberg, hts
long-lime fnend and attorney.
At his bedside were his brother
Dommick, two grandchildren,
Engelberg, and Joe Nacchio, his
friend for 59 years
DiMaggto's body will be nown to
Northern California for burial in his
home town of San Francisco,
Engelberg satd.
"DtMaggJO, the consummate
gentleman on and off the field ,
: fought his ill ness as hard as he
played the game of baseball and with
the same digntty, style and grace
with which he hved his hfe," said
' Engelberg, DIMaggio 's next-door
neighbor.
When DiMaggio left the hospital
on Jan. 19. he was mvited by New
York Yankees owner George
Srei nbrenner 10 throw out the cere' monia l first ball at the Yankees'
' home opener Apnl 9. After
DtMaggio came home from the has' pital, a Stgn was placed on hi s bed
; saymg "April 9 Yankee Stadium or
Bust."
' • The New York Yankees ' center
· fielder roamed the basepaths for 13
years through 1951 , missi ng three
· seaso ns to serve in World War II.
~ Dunng that time he played for I 0
· pennant winners and nine World
; Series champions, balled .325 and hit
· 361 home runs.
: More than an~thing it was 'The
; Streak, during the magical summer
• of '41, that nveted a country fresh
: from the Depression and elevated
; him from baseball star to national
· celebmy.
;
He ascended even higher atop the
rank of popular culture in 1954 when

'!.

he wed Marilyn Monroe, a storybook
marriage that failed all too quickly
and left h1m brokenhearted. For
years after she died in 1962,
DiMaggio sent roses for her grave
but refused to talk about her.
His swanky swing and classy
countenan~e ASjllfed wistful lines in
literature d song, including Paul
Simon's ament to lost heroes in
"Mrs. Robinson" from the movie
"The Graduate" ·
"Where ha ve you gone Joe
DiMaggm?
"A nation turns its lonely eyes to
you .
"What's that you say. Mrs .
Robinson ?
':Joltin' Joe has left and gone
away. ''

But his legend stands - shoulderto-shoulder with the likes of Babe
Ruth, Lou Gehng and very few others who could measure up to them on
the sports scene thts century.
He batted .325 lifeume, wit h 361
home runs , won three American
League Most Valuable Player
awards , appeared in II All -Star
games and entered the Hall of Fame
\n 1955 . He played for 10 pennant
wmners and mne \Vorld Series cham-

pions For half a century, he was
Introduced as "the greatest hvmg
player."
DiMaggio's exceptional numbers
don't account fu lly for hts almost
lege ndary place on the Amen can cul tural landscape, the reason why
S1mon sang ab.out him and Ernest
Hemmgway wrote about him. There
was somethmg about the court!y
bearing of this son of ltahan Immi grants that made him special.
" I would hke to take the great
DiMaggio fi shing, " the ancient
Cuban
fisherman
says
in
Hemingway 's "The Old Man and the
Sea." ".They say his father was a
ftshennan. Maybe he was as poor as
we are and would understand."
A handsome man of quiet strength
- unpretentious, proud and intensely private - DiMaggio embodied
the kind of hero parents wanted their
sons to emulate. He had class, on and

off the field.
Though unusually shy, DiMaggio
also could come across as your
friendly neighbor, as he did in his
later years, touting the virtues of a
savings bank and "Mr. Coffee" on
television to a generation that never
saw him play. In more recent years,
he devoted himself to his grandchildren and four great-grandchildren
and to raising money for the Joe
DiMaggw Children 's Hospital in
Hollywood, Fla.
He didn't seek the limelight, but
li ved his life slipping into and out of
it, uncomfortable when u shmed on
him. The story goes that whe~
Monroe squealed delightedly that
she had been cheered by tens of thousands of troops in Korea, and told
DiMaggio he couldn 't imagine what
that was like, he deadpanned, "Oh,
yes, I can."
·
No ballplayer ever heard more
chee rs than DiMaggio did during
The Streak. There was a song written
about II, and crowds walled for him
to come to town. In city after ci ty, he
kept The Streak ahve, gettm g at least
one hit in every game from May 15
until July 17 in Cleveland - 56
games. No one has come close smce.
During an appearance in 1991 ,
commemorating the 50th ann iversary of The Streak, DtMaggto
expressed surpnse u was sti ll a
record.
"There are a lot of great ballpl ayers, '! he said. "One day, someone 's
gomg o come along and break H.
But I v
n sayi ng that for 50
years. "
Pete Rose
12 games short of
tytng DiMaggio during his best chal lenge in 1978.
During The Streak, DiMaggiO
batted :408 with 91 hits in 223 atbats, 15 homers and 55 RBis.
It took a pair of remarkable fielding plays by third baseman Ken
Keltner in the 57th game to stop
DiMaggio. He then immediately
began another streak of 16 games meaning he batted safely in 72 of 73
games.
There was no demonstration of

disappointment that
day
in
Cleveland 's League Park when
Keltner robbed him of two hits. That
typified the stoic D1Maggto, who
rarely displayed emouon.
A rare departure from the
DiMaggio cool was captured on
what is probably the most famous
film clip of his career. It was one of
the greatest plays in World Series
history - a game-saving catc h by
Brooklyn's AI GIOnfriddo in 1947 and a broadcast classic by Red
Barber
" Back, back, back, back, back,
and he makes a one-handed catch
against the bullpen. Oh-ho, doctor! "
Barber said.
The camera caught DiMaggio
kicking the din in an ever-so-gentle
display of frustration as he neared
second base.
DtMaggio arrived in New York in
May 1936, at age 21. He introduced
himself to Yankees fans with two singles and a triple in hiS first game, and
never slowed until retuement.
Before DtMaggto, baseball's
biggest stars were men like Ty Cobb
and Babe Ruth Although hiS accomplishments rivaled thelfs in man y
ways, DtMaggw's sty le was'" sharp
contrast.
Cobb and' Ruth were colorful ,
larger-than-life characters, one a belli gerent, short-tempered man who
played the game wl!h a vengeance,
the other a gregarious, party-going
slugger who set the standard for all
home-run hitters.
DIMaggio was quiet and reserved
wuh a gift for makmg everythmg
look easy, whether I! was an over.the-shoulder catch qf a 400-foot
drive or a home run to the deepest
part of then-cavernous Yankee
StadiUm. He also had a strong, accurate arm rarely challenged by base
runners.

"I was out there to play and give
it all I had, " he satd m 1991 "I
looked at nlike 'I'm doing my best. '
If I got the hit, fme I always felt
good thai I had given my best"
Only twice did DiMaggio bat le ss
than 300. He acc umul ated ],948

total bases and drove in 1,537 runs.
He finished his career with 2,214
hits.
He was the MVP m 1939, 1941
and 1947. He was the AL batung
champion m 1939 with a .381 average and in 1940 at .352. He led the
league in RB!s in 1941 wnh 125 and
'" 1948 With 155. He had the most
homers in the league in 1937 with 46
and .in 1948 with 39.
There were other records , and
undoubtedly there would have been'
even more had he not volunteered for
Army service dunng World War II.
Though bothered by stomach ulcers
part of the lime, he spent 2 1/2 years
m the Army's physical traming program for air cadets.
Paying tribute to DiMaggiO and
fellow slugger Ted Williams m a
1991 White House salute, President
Bush said their m1htary servtce
"deprived them of even greater statistics, but also enhanced their greatness 10 the eyes of Amen cans."
DiMaggiO battled a stnng o!
injuries durmg his career, and seven
times n115sed opemng day. He underwent three operati on s wi thm two
years for bone spurs in his heel s and
bone ch1ps m his ann.
· In 1949, an mnamed heel kept
him sidclmed for 65 games When he
returned to the ltneup, hi s home run
helped the Yankees beat Boston S-4,
and he went on to bat .500 in their
three-game series. It was as tf he 'd
never been gone .
DtMaggio decided to call tt quits
at age 37. It was not a sudd,en dectSJOn .

"The old timing was beginning to
leave me, and my rene,es were
begmmng to slow up," he explained
By the end of hi s last season, he
said, "•t had become a chore for me
to play.
" I found it difficult gettmg out of
bed m the morning , espectally after a
night game," he said. "I was fu ll of
ac hes and pains."
The Yankees won the World
Series in his final year. and he finished wuh a nourish He hit a hpme
run in the fourth game, and had six

JOE DIMAGGIO
hits in II at -bats .
.
DiMaggm was born on Nov. 25,
1914, in Martinez, Calif. His father
operated a fishing boat in San
Franctsco and expected hi s sons to
follow in his footsteps. Joe , and
brothers Vmce afld Dam spent most
of thetr um e playing baseball.
The elder DiMaggio called it "a
bum 's game," but he hved to see all
three of hJS boys become professmnal pl ayers. Dom , the youngest,
played with the Boston Red Sox.
V1ncc, th e eld est, was with ftve
National League teams.
New York actually took a chance
by ;;ignmg Joe. He had been a star
wl!h the San FranC ISCO Seals or the
Pacific Coast League, and once had a
61-game hittm g streak. A knee inj~ry
scared off all but the Yankees. They
signed htm for $25,000- one of the
greates t bargat ns m baseball history.
DtMaggiO earned $7,500 in his
first year, but got $100,000 in each of
hiS f1nal three seasons, makmg him
the h1 ghest-paid player of his time.
He made more than that in recent
years JUSt for signing his name at
baseball memorabilia shows.
Long after reuring as a player,
DiMaggio served briefly as a vice
president and coach for the Oakland
A's. and as a member of the board ·of
dtrectors of the Baltimore Orioles.
When he was not traveling ,
DiMaggio hved alone in his home on
exc lu sive Harbour Island, Fla.

:Las

and five caution flags totaling 22 place start to contend for the lead points leader Mike Skinner, pole"To come in third is like a win to were m 'the top five. I
laps. An etght-car crash on the back- before fini shing third. ·
winner Bobby Labonte, Ernie Irvan us," Gordon said. "We were strug- keep it there."
stretch on lap 131, when Kenny
Gordon was followed by series and Dale Earnhardt.
gling all day and all of a sudden we
Irwin and Kenny Wallace banged
together, was the most significant
incident.
It was a far more entertaining
race than last year's inaugural,
which Mark Martm won and which
Ford dominated. The top seven finishe!;.s_and 13 of the top 14 last year
we~ords, prompting NASCAR to
make aerodynamic changes, trying
to even out the field.
It worked to some extent,
although Burton drove a Ford to his
wm. The next se ven fini shers, however, all drove either Chevrolets or
Pontiacs.
" It's really a difficult track to get
right," Ward Burton said. "There's
not much m between. You 're either
on or you're off."
·
-Gordon , comt ng back from a
.,
39th-place tmi sh two weeks ago in
' j'
Rockingham, was one of those who
were off Gordon strugg led to fmd
hi s groove in the car, though he
' '
steadily moved up from an lith

thanks to a 17-5 run . Rio Grande [ady JacRets ' outburst.
Rio Grande bumped its lead back
stretched the four-point edge to a
seven-point cushion at the half, lead- to double digits with an 8..() surge of
.jts own and led 62-47 with 10:06
ing 39-32.
Karley Mohler ·scored 13 points remaining . Mindy Pope had six
and Renee Turley added six points to points in the run .
lead the Redwomen in the first half.
The Lady Jackets battled back in
Julie Nourse had nine points and the fin;ll 10 minutes, outscoring Rio
Kirsten Rossoui chipped in eight Grande 24-13 down the stretch.
first half points.
Cedarvilt'e cut the deficit to 68-65
Rio Grande shot 51.7 percent after Amanda Porter nailed a jumper
froin the field while holding the Lady with 2:14 to play.
·
Jackets to just 38.2 percent in the
Rio ·Grande responded at the free
throw line by hitting 7-of-10 foul
opening frame.
The Redwomen opened the sec- shots in the remaining minutes to
ond half with a fino storm of offense seal the win. .
Mohler led all scorers with 30
and took a 54-39 lead at the 13:56
mark. Mohler scored 11 poillti..dur· points. She "necked down 9-of-18
ing. the run .
"""--'" field goal attempts and dramed 12Cedarville (16-15) cut the lead to of-15 charity tosses, more than the
seven points with 12:38 to play on entire Cedarville team . Mohler
the strength of an 8-0 run. Heather grabbed SIX rebounds and had four
French scored six points to fuel the steals and a blocked sHot.

: ~- One more win and it's on to the
Division · I
National
: NAIA
' Tournament for the University of Rio
Grande. The Redwomen (25-8) held
off a late second rally by Cedarville
College to earn a 75-71 victory
Saturday at the Newt Oliver Arena.
It was Rio Grande's third win
over the Lady Jackets thi s season.
·The win sets up a rematch with
~aint Vincent College in the AMC
championship tomorrow night in
·.J:.atrobe, Pa. Saint Vincent, the tour:;liament's top seed, ravaged Geneva
:• ~-38 in Saturday's other semifinal
&lt;contest.
::: Rio Grande fell behind early in
· ·the game, trailing by as many as
eight points in the first four minutes.
The Redwomcn then rallied to take a
-~0-16 lead with 9:33 remaining

'

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
- First round
March 1:2 or 13

Secondrot.tnd

Regional a

March 14 or 15

March 20 &amp; 21

Semlftnala
Marctl26

' 181 Botton ColleQi

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Red Sox hire ~
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assistant to GM

.. .. ...

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MIDEAST

c - - - - - - - - - c Santi Bll'bln

L- -·--·----l

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP)
Carlton Fisk, who left Boston with
bitterness after the 1980 season, was
hired as a special assistant to Red
Sox general manager Dan Duquette
He is expected to work with the
club's minor league catchers and
make appearances .
Fisk left the team, then-partly
owned by Haywood Sullivan, after
Boston failed to mail him a contract
by the Dec. 20 deadline in 1980,
allowing him l&lt;l become a free agent.
He spent his final 13 seasons with
the Chtcago White Sox .

I

Rio Grande to the win.
The winner of tomorrow ntght's
game advances to the NAIA Division
I National Tournament in Jackson,
Tenn. , March 17-23. The Redwotnen
have made two previous trips to the
NAIA's Big Dance.
Fans can follow the action on 97.7
FM WCJO beginning at6:35 p.m.

and cle'ilred just one board after the
intermission.
Pattie Schryer added eight points
off the bench for the Lady Jackets.
R10 Grande faces Saint Vincent
Tuesday night at 7 p.m. The
Redwomen defeated the Lady
Bearcats 78-77 on Jan. 18 in Latrobe,
Pa. Mindy Pope had 19 points to lead

Cedarville-Rio statistics
Hlllf ll!tAb

39 ~
36 ~

Cedarville.............. ....... ......... . .. ............... .. .. ....32
Rto Grande .... :........ ..... .. .. .. ................ .. .. .... 39
Cedarville Yellow Jackets
P!aver
l.:R1,
J:1!1.
Porter ...............
. .. ...... ................... .. 6
0
French ............. ........ .. .. .. ...................... .. I
3
Nourse ........... .. ... .. ... .. ................... .. . . 4
0
Rossetti ............ . ....... ..... ...... .......... . .7
0
0.
Shanher. .......... ...... .... .. ........................ .... 3
Martin ...... ...... ......:.. ... .............. .... .
I
0
Totals
23 1
5

71
75

&amp;

EI

14
14

212
3/3
1/3
4/5
0/0
0/1
10/14

9

18
6
2
71

Total FG: 28-66 (.424)
Three, polnt FG: 5-10 (.500)
Free throws: 10-14 (.714)
Rebounds: 38.(Rossotti 12)
Assists: 8 (French 5)
Turnovers: 20
Blocked shots: 4 (Rossott t 3)
Steals: 6
Fouls: 25
Fouled out: Porter, Martm

-·-

Rio Grande Redwomen

Player
kl!1.
Renee Turley .. ...
.. ....................... 3
Carrie Carson ... .. .
............. . .. ... 0
"MISt! Halley ........ .. .. ... .......................... .. 2
Karley Mohler .......................... ..... .... ... 9
Mindy Pope... . .. ... ............ ....... . ...5
Cindy Hopper .. ......................... ... .... ....... 2
Shawn a Daugherty-............... . ........ I
Cassie Kendall .'............... ... .. .. . .. ......... I
Totals
23

J:1!1.
0
0
0
0
0
I
0
0
1

EI

&amp;

2/5
Ill
4/4
12/15
417
0/0
3/4
0/0

8
I
8
30
14
7

5
2
75

26/J(i

Total FG: 24-57 (.42-H- ·
Three-point FG: 1-5 (.200)
Free throws: 26-36 (.722)
Rebounds: 40 (Pope 14)
Assists: I 0 (Daugherty 3)
Thrnovers: 17
Blocked shots: 3
Steals: 9 (Mohler 4)
Fouls: 16

j~st tried.l~
-:~

·~

NBA standings
Ium.

Atlanllc Dh•hlon

l! L fi:I.

Orlando... . ......... ............ 14

4

Miami

.. .... . .. ..... ... ll

5

706

NewYork .. ........ .... ..... . 10
Phlladelphla... ... ... .. ...... .. 10

7

588

ijOSIOD ....... ,., '"" ...........7

7
8

588
467

Washmgton .. .. . . .... . . 7
New Jersey .. , .... ............ 3

9
13

4:\8
188

17. Arkaosu ........ ....... .. ... 22-10
18. WiJCOnlin ........ ................ 22·9
19. lndiana ...... .... , ... ......... 22-10

518
464

20. Tenneuee . ... ... , ........... 20-8

3~

S Nuarene 67, Oklahoma Christian40

21.Iowa ......................... .. 18·9
22 Kan1as .. ... . ... ... ......... 22·9

282
268

Wayland Baptist 67, Oklatloma City 60

373

23. Aonda .. ... . .. ........ ....... 20.8 239
21
24. N C Charlotte .............. 22-10 220
25. New Me11.1c:o ... ... :... ......... .24·8
9S
25
Othtrs rtcehln&amp; YottS: Temple 71. Oklahoma
St 56, Gonu.Ja 53, Syracuse 49. l'eus 47 ,
Mtnnesota 40, Mtsso un
LOUISVille 30. Rhode
bland 27, Tulso 26, Murray St. 11. Iowa St. 12.
Pl.Jrdue 12, Detroit II , KENT 1'1 , MIAMI (OHIO)
10, Cre1ghton 9, VIllanova 7, George Wa5hmston 4,
Weber St ~ . New Me:uco St 2, Penn 2, S1cna 2

EASTERN CONFERENCE
778

n

NCAA Div. I men's scores
1'.

Saturday's regular-season play

,.'
4

Far Wen
Am:ona 87, UCLA 70
Orcg"'t 93, Cali fornia 82
Oregoo St . .59, Stanford 45
Sou thern Cal 84, Anzonn St 7~
Washmgton 76, Wa$hington St. .59

5'
7

7'

Saturday's tournaments
Ill!

,.,..2
8

.813
.684 .
.563

529
.500

4 '~

l

6',

.000

12' l

Philadelphia at Mtami, 1 30 p m
Atlama a1 Orlando, 1 30 p m
WuhinJIOn at Detroit, 8 p m.
Cftica.ao at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Pprtland at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

1\Iesday 's games
Milwaukee nt New York, 7 30 p m
Boston al Charlotte, 7 JO p m
m.
Seattle at Min~ a
Denver at Houston, 8·] p.m
New Jersey at Ol1cRgo, K·30 p m
Pboc!lill at Dallas, 8 10 p m
CLEVELAND 111Utrih,
m
Sacramen to at Portland, I p m
Vancouver 111 Gol den State. 10:30 p m
LA. takers at LA . Cl1wers, 10 30 p m

sg

98

·Top 25 men's college poll

South welt

Far West
Oregon.80. Californta 51
Stanrord 73, Oregon St. 61
UCLA BS. Arttona 77
Washmgton 72, \Y8Jhtngton St 70

Saturday's tournaments
A.mrrlca East Conrerrnct·ehamplonstllp
Nor1heas1ern ~7, Mt:nne 55
AmeriE:~n Mklrall ConFerence

NAIA Dlv.
RIO GRANDE

l·semlflnal~

7~ . Cedarv1l~

71

Dig 11 Conferenct•(hampionshlp
Texu Tech 7 ' · Iowa St .59
Dla; Sky Contuenct•champlunship
CS Northnd 79, Portland St 65
Big Wtst Con
nee-championship
UC Sama Barb:~ra 9 , ng Beoch St . 67

Colonial Athletic A.ssoclatlon·champlonshlp
Old DominiOn 7'. Enst Carolma 67

Allanth: 10 Confrrtnce·championshlp
Rh~ Island 62. Temple 59

ECAC DMdon lll·semlflnals
Moun t St Mnr). NY 7) FDU -Mad1Son :'iS

Mlantic Coast Conftrtnct·scmifinals
Duke 8.\, N Cnrohnn St. 68
Nonh Cnrohna H:fi. Maryland 79

ECAC Dtvlslon 111-nrsl round
Montclnn St 69, Vassilr 62
ECAC Southern Re&amp;innal·nmifinals
Allentown 7.\, Bethany. WVn 66
Delaware Valley 87, Kings, Pn 84

Bl1 East €unfertme·champlonship
Connecti cut 82, St. John's 63

ECAC Women's Tuurnament-semlnn11ls
Ph1la Textile 62, S ConnectiCUt 54
Southampton 70, Albany, NY 64

Bla Sky Conftnonce-chtlmpionshlp
Weber St 82, N. Anzona 75

Gulf Coast Alhlellc Conltrenee-cbamplonshlp
Lou tsinna College 87, Xavter, NO 68

Ria n:n Conftrtnct·semifinab
Uhno1s 79, Oh10 St 77
M1clligan St. 56. W1scon.un 41
,J

NCAA II West Region-championship
Montana St · Billmgs 70, UC Davl!i 62

America East Conftnnct·champloruhip
Delaware 86, Drellei 67

81&amp; ll Confertnc:e·semlnnal~
Knnsns 69, Krm5as St S8
Okiahomo St .59. Teus 57

1':
4

.412

Tonight's games

Early Wednesday Mixed
League (as of Feb. 24)
"fum
Record
.. . ..49-23
Anderson 's FurniiUre .
Tony's Carryout ........ . ....... ... .46-26
Dairy Queen Brazter. ..
..39-33
Mason Lanes Rat Pack .. ...38-34
Meigs Co Golf Course ...... . .30-42
Metgs lndustnes ...... .... ..... 14-58
Team high series: Dairy Queen
Brazier ( 1745)
Team high game: Dairy Quee n
Brazier (621)
Men
High series: Loren Coleman
(530) ; Bill Carswell (492 )
High game: Carswe ll (2 03);
Coleman ( 198)
Women
Hig
eries: Marlene Wtl son
(511 ); argaret Eynon (449)
.High game: W1lson (192). Pat
Carson ( 179)

Normal ,

N•tlonal
Ch.mpionahlp
San Jose, Calif
Marcn 28

'
'

M HH ~

Pope was the only other
Redwoman to reach double digits,
finishing with 14 poi nts. She hit 5-of11 field goal allempts and was 4-for7 at the foul line. Pope grabbed a
game-high 14 rebounds . She also had
two assists, one blocked shot and a
steal. ·
Turley finished with eight points
and five rebounds. MISti Halley
ended her afternoon with eight points
and three steals.
Cindy Hopper came off the bench
to score seven points and snare four
boards. Shawna Daugherty had five
points and three assists in a reserve
role.
Rosso111 led Cedarville 18 points
and 12 rebounds. She was 7-for-12
from the field and 4-of-5 ·at the free
throw line. Rossetti also had three
blocked shots.
Amanda Porter and Heather
French scored 14 points each. Porter
htt 6-of-15 shots from the f1eld. She
also had fcwr rebounds and two
steals.
French was 4-of-12 from the field,
including 3-of-6 from outside the arc .
French handed out a game-high five
lssists.
.,
Nourse , Cedarville's leading scorer and rebounder, was held to only
nine points and five rebounds.
Nourse was 4-of-9 from the field.
She fat led to score in the second half

•

Greensboro,
Nontt Carolina

, " EAST

Sunday's scores

Mason Bowling
Lanes results

March 12 or 13

1-~---&lt;

lndumm 8S, Mianu 72
"'
New York 97. New Jersev 86
Washmgton 103, Philndelphia 9.5.QT
Toronto lOS, Boston 1}2
L A. Lakers 97. Utah 89
San Antonio 106, lknver 96
Sacramento 94, Dallns 89
Minnesota 88, Sealtle 77
Portland Ill. Houston 71

JEFF BURTON

Firat round

March 14 or 15

_!!j ··

CLEVELAND 97, Oolden Stale 80
O..lando 87. De1roit 82
San Antonio 114. LA Chp~s 85
Sacramento Ill, Phoenill99
Houston 107 , Vancouver 92

r d have

S.Cond round

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

Saturday's scores

• " I was just trying as hard as I

R~lonals

Maron 20 a 22

S.mltlnala

tilT~..

Paclnc Dlvl!lon
Portlood .. . .. . .. .. .... 13
3
L.A Lokers . . .. . ....... 13
6
Seaule .. . . . ... .....: .... 9 7
Phoemx .. .. ... .. .. . ........ 9 8
Sacramento .... ... . . . .. ... 9 9
Golden Stale . . .. .. . ...... 7 10
L A Clippers
. .. ...0 IS

~loser.

·q
~

• (Ill) Appllac:tUn

9

ers."

i:ould to get close to then:' so maybe
a shot at one of them,"
Gordon said. "We shou ld have at
least had Ward I knew nobody
wl ou ld catch Jeff, he was just unbeievably fast."
· Ward Burton, who has won on ly
)lnce on the ctrcuit, led for 71 laps
?verall, but JUSt didn't have enough
10 hold off the Ford driven by his
~ounger brother, who led Ill laps on
the day
•
; "I wasn ' t giving him an inch, "
~ard said. " I was trymg to crowd
him as good as I could without
ivreckmg him You don 't want to
!"reck your brother."
1 Burton, who ·nearly cost himself
4ny chance at being among the ·lead~rs when he spun out while trymg to
*et mto the ptts on lap 57 , desperatelY wanted a second victory
: But just as his career has been
overshadowed by that of his brother,
'Ia was h1 s chance"to win under ideal
conditions on the I 112-mile oval.
: " If I want to lose to anybody, I
~ant to lose to my brother," Ward
~id . " But it sti ll doesn 't give me
any consolatiOn."
' Burton averaged 137.535 mph m
~ race that featured 25 lead changes

Rio Grande woinen beat Ced·a rville 75-71 in AMC semifinals

8':

, Gordon had a chance to crash the
iamily affair, and threatened to do so
:when he took the lead on the fourth
1urn of lap 242. But JUSt as quickly as
~e -gamed the lead, he faded to third
)wo turns later and never got any

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy •. Middleport, Ohio

By AHDMW CARTER
0\IP at.tr Writer

Jeff Burton outpaces brother, Gordon to win Las Vegas 400
• BY TIM DAHLBERG
: LAS VEGAS (AP) - The first
Vegas 400 ended up being a
~Ford affair. Jeff and Ward Burton
turned the rerun into a fantily affair.
The racing brothers went head-tohead in the closing laps Sunday, with
Jeff Gordon trailing close behind for
good measure before 125,000
screaming fans at the Las Vegas
Motor Speedway. .
When it was over, Jeff Burton
outlasted his brother, taking the lead
for good I 0 laps from the end and
finishing I .074 seconds ahead of
Ward to win thi s gambling Ci ty's
second Winston ~up race.
"It's a little nerve-wl'ackmg racing against your bwther," Jeff
Burton said. " It complicates the
issue a little bit."
The llrst 1-2 finiSh by brothers
since Terry Labonte beat Bobby at
Talladega
Superspeedway
in
October 1997 came after the two
dueled down the stretch following
the final green nag on lap 236 of
267.
With Gordon lurking JUSt a few
car lengths back, Ward Burton led to
lap 258 after the two went side-byside around the I 1/2-mile speedway Once Jeff Burton made his final
pass on the outside. though, he was
never challenged as he crui sed to hi s
stxlh career Winston Cup win.
"It was two race car drivers gtving it all they had," Jeff Burton said.
"They just happened to be broth-

Monday, March 8, 1999

Bla West Confertnce-c:hamplonahlp
New Mexico St 79. Boise St 69
Conferenc:e USA-champlor11hlp
N.C Char lotte 68, Louisvil le 59

Mid-Eastern Athletic Con ference -championship
Flmda A&amp;M 64, S Carohna St 61
Southeastern Conftr~nce-umlnnals,
Arkansas 84, M1 ssissipp1 St 79-0T
Kcntuck)' 69. Auburn 57
Southland ConFt:rt:nce·r=hamplonshlp
Texas-San Antomo 71 SW Texas 63

IVJ Lrque-championship
Dartmouth 66. Princeton 49

Western Athletic Conf!rence-championshlp
Utah 60, New Mexi co 45

Su~day's regular·season play
.
Ea!t
Wtlliams IOJ, Plymouth St 88

Sufl.day's tournaments
Atlantic. Coast Conference-championship
Duke 96. North CIU'ohna 7J
Hi&amp; ll Confertnce-championshlp
Kansas 5J, Oklahoma Sl J 7
011 T~n Conrue nct -ctlamptomhlp
M1chtgnn St 67 lll mou .50
ECAC Metro NY•NJ · champlo nship
, FDU· Mad1 son M Mtmld m St 54
ECAC South Regiunal·champlomhip
Penn $t ·Behrend 56. G eu y~ burg 52

NCAA Ill
Mid Atlantic Region·seco nd round
Wilham Smllh 62, HartWICk 47
Eilzabl':tl'llown 71, Jotlns Hopkins 5 \
NYU 59, St Lawrence 48
Scranton 7S Gwynl"dd Mercy 64

NCAA Ill Northeast Re~~:lon•second round
Gall3udl"t81 , Coilegt:ofNJ 7 1
Rowan 72 Colb)'-Sawyer .50
Salem St 53 , S Mrune 46
Wdl1ants 72. Bowdoin 58
NCAA Ill West Reg(on•second round
DePauw 67 , Aunm 62
Ht~rdin - S immons 84, N C Wesleynn 62
Pacific ~theran 60, Simpson Iowa 51
St Benedict 76. St. Th,omns, Minn 66
Southland Conference·thampionship
Stephen F Ausun 90. Nonhwcstern St. 11
Snuthwestrrn Athlet1c Conrerrnee·championshlp
Gmmblmg St 80. M155 Valley St 60
Sun Hrlt Confen:ncr·championshlp
Lom sumn Tech 84 Fin lntcmaoonol 60
Trans Am~rica Alhlelic Cnnferencr
Championship
' Cent Florida 80, Jncbonv1 1le St 59
Western A.ttlletic ConfeHnce-championship
Southern Meth 6S, Colorado St 49

Sunday's regular-season play
East
W Connectscut 60, MIT SO

Sunday's tournaments

Mld·Ea!tern Athletic Conterencc-champion~hlp
Rondn A&amp;M 69 Hampton 47

ECAC NY·NJ
Reg\onal·champloruhip
Montclrm St 69 Mount St Mary. NY. 62

Mldwe!ltern Collegiate Conference·champlunshlp
Wi s . ·Gr~n Bay 74, Octrott 54

ECAC Women 's Tournament-championship
Southnmpton 74. Ph1ln l t:llll k 69

Missouri Valle) Conference•(hamplun~hip
Evansvtlle 7.5, Creighton 72-0T

NAJA Great Lakes Rt&amp;ional-champlonshlp
Findlay 63, Cemral St., Ohio 60
NCA.A It
East Rr&amp;ion-c:hamplnn~hip
lndHtnn , Pa 8:'1 Shtppen sburg 75
NCAA II
Grtat Uku ReJlon-championship
N Kentu cky 65, Michtgan Tech 63
.

Southwestern Athletic Confertnce·champlonship
Alcorn St 89, South ern U 83

NCAA Ill
Great Lakes Rralon-second round
Calvin 75 , Baldwm-Wallace 67
Capital 82, Defianc:e 72
Washmgton, Mo 75. Wheaton, Il L 38
Wis -Oshkosh 70. Wts -Eau C\a1re 60

NCAA!!
North Central Re1lon-srcond round
N. DakotlM'St 61, Minn .-Duluth 50
North Dakota S4, AuguStan&amp;, S.D. 62
NCAA II
Northu51 Resion·ehamJHonship
Bentley 54, St Rose 48
NCAA II
South Atlantic Rt&amp;lon•champlonshlp
Kennesaw 76, Fnme~s Marion 12

NCAA 11
Sou.th Ctntnl Reslon-c hamplonshlp
Emporia St 110. Truman St 9J
NCAA II South At~t:lon·c hantpiun shl p
Arkansas Ticll 6T F0u VnlleY St ~ 2

IJI
Clc VA-SJ 97, Cle. Cathohc .56
Colonel Crawford 70, NOrwal~ St Paul 30
Crooksvtlle 56, Piketon 52
Cuyahoga Val Chr Acad 57, Wellmgton 53
Eastern Brown 65, Coal Grove 64
Fon Frye 74, Barnesville .57
Garaway 58, Tuscarawas Val 3S
Grandvtew Hts S9, Johnstown Nonhndge .51
Manon River Val 5J. New Aibnny 61
Newcomerstown 48, lnd1an Vol 40
Richmond Dale Southcnstern 61 . Belpre 57
Rocky Rtver Lutheran W 59. Oberhn 57
W Salem Northwestern 60. Mas s11lon Tuslaw 46 ·
WB)'ncd nlc 49, Loudonvtlle .\ 9
We~tlall 68 Proctorvill e fa1r lnnd 52
W1ckhtte 64, Streeuboro 21
Di,isian IV
C:udmgton 64, Berne Um on 4fi
Cedarville 66. Tn-VillaBe ·B
·ct'nlerb ure; ~4 Oanv11le 78
Dallon 57. Lorrun Cath J7
Ftanklin-Momot: 67, lipp C1ty Bethel 51
Houston 67. Russlll49
Ktrtland 83. Orange Chr 36
lt ck.in~ Hts 61. R1dgt&gt;dale 60·0T
Mogadore 62, Wmdham 47
R1chmond Hts . 75 , N Cons! Cbr 6 .~
Wonhinglon Chr 92. MIU'ton Cmh 44

n

Mld"u:t
Tnrnt yChmt mn 'il

\

'

Dl~lslon

II

!

,

I

,

Bexle y 47, Olentangy 43
Canton Cath S6, Akron Sphng 46
Col Hanl ey 71, Col DeSales 4S
Cortland-Lake\iew 69, Mentor Lake Calh. 59
L1ma Bnth 59. St Mary's M~mona14J
Medma. Buckeye 56, Olmsted Falls 46
Poland Seminary 57. Canfield 47
Shelby 72. Upper Sandusky 64
Tallmadge 48, Walsh Jesu1! 45
Division Ill
Bluffton 57, Elmore Woodmere 5~
Cm Wyonung 46. Greene' ' lew ~8
Cle VA -SJ 49, Warren Champmn 25
De lphos Jefferson 54, Archbold 41
Fairr1cld Unmn 58 Ama nda - Citarc~ek 5'i
Fort Frye 61 Garav.a)l46
Lonun Cl earvu~w 59 Black R1 ver 54
MargnrettD48, Kl'ln~a~ Lakota 45
Miami E 51. Waynesullt: J9
Morra l Ridgedale .52 N Umon 4~
Regma 74 ChallCl 46
Vcrsw lles 49, Batav1a 29
W Sa lem Nonhwe stcrn 57 , Akron Manche ster
You Umlme SJ, New Middletown Spring 48
Dl~islon

Dh ision I

l roy 66 Xenm ~2
Vnndu\ta -Butler 62 New Carhsle Ta: umseh

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Saturday's tournaments
·
Div1s1on I
\
Bea\'crcree k 66 Cm Mercy 45
Ceh nn 46, Fmdla)' 43
Cm Mount Notre Dame 66, Ccrttcrv1lle 4S
Cm Pr1nceton 5!!, Cm Colernm 4J
Cle Ensl Tech 9fl, Rrecks\ tlle 53
Enstln!.:e N 'i9, Mentor 42
Magmr.cat S~ . N Olm sted 46
Mason 6~. Ctn 'Sy cnmort 18
Pnrm:1 Holy Name 82. Berea M

~0

IV

Berlin Hiland 51. Zanesville Rose crruts 48
Colonel Crawford 70, Norwalk St. Paul 10
Ed genon 7 1, Mompeiter 5.\
Fon Jennmgs 59, Ltnoo lnvtew 47
Hope weli · Loudon 73 Ounv.a H1lls JO
Jackson Center Sl , Ansoma 26
K1rtlnnd 47. Wmdham ~6
Lcetonm 70, Sebrtn g McKmley 60
M o g ~ dore 72. K1dron Central Chr 6.'
S Chilrleston SE 52. Ctn, Country Dily 41
Spnng Ct1thol1c 4J Cm . Htll s Chr Acad l~
St Henry 55 Man on Local 47
Van Buren 74 L1bc M)' Benton 47

Sunday's tournaments
Division I
lrol wood-Madison 6 2. Huber Hts Wa)lne 58

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Saturday's tournaments
Division I
Akron Garfield 63, Akron Cem · Hower 51
Brunsw1ck 55, Strongsvtlle 41
Cm Elder 59. Cm. Hughes S~
Cm Moeller 55. Cm St. X11v1er .5~
Ctn Wnhrow 68. Cm S)Cilmore 51
Clc Glenville 56 Pasnesvtll e Rtvcrs1de SO
E L1 verpooi69 Za ne5vtllt: 55
··
Euclld61 , Bnuh47
Hud son 72, B~rton 70-0T
Logan 69, Manella 52
Midv1t:w 66, Westlake .5.5
Wooster 48, Alhance 42
Divisio n II
Canfie ld 85 , Mogadore F1eld 56
Canton S 6.5. Norron 54
Ctn McNicholas 85. Cm Woodward ~!J
Ctn Purcell Man an 4.5 C1n Ro g~r Bacon 40
Cle Benedt cttne 94 Gene va 64
Cople y 69 Wnrrensvtll e 57
K en ~ ton 7 :'l. Orange 65-0T
Keucnng Alter 67 Frank lin 50
K1ngs M1lls Kmgs 50, Sprmg horo 4'i
Marhn&amp;lon 6~ LouiSVIll e 6J
Padua 87, Medma Ht ghland 82
Pamt'svdlc Harvey 63 Ashtabuln Hmbor 52
~ oc k y RIH=r 91, N Ridge ville 71
You Chane y 6 1 You Moone y'il

SOUTHERN OHIO DISPOSAL

SOUTHERN

MEIGS

Boys

Completed Season

Girls

Completed Season

Boys
Girls

EASTERN

Completed Season

Completed Season

Completed Season
Boys

Girls

Offering prompt and dependable service for residential
and commerCial waste disposal needs. Best prices on varNCAA Div. I women's scores ious size containers. Call Southern Ohio Disposal for a
Sa turday' s rt&amp;ular·!ttaSon play
quote. At Southern Ohio there are "No contracts, jus't a
East
St Vuv:t nl 7Q Gl!ne vn 1R
hand shake."
W Connecncut 37 W~ ll e~ lc y ~ l

Bethel.lnd

1

&lt;J

Sunday's tournaments

Sout heastern Confen:ncll'•t:hamplonshlp
Kentucky 76 Ar krmsas 6.1

-- -snulh
Cu mbe rland, T"eu n 76 Lnmbudt 14

Tol Catholic S9, ~nysburg 29
Wadswonh 76, Hudion 67
Wooster 52. Mass11lon Washmgton 43

D{~isiOJI

Thursday, March 11th Regional
Tournament vs Beaver Eastern at
Pickerington High School
Regional Finals Saturday, March
7 p.m. at

Complimenll of:

Southern Ohio Disposal
Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-809-7721

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

·' .

�• .

•

•

..

_.,-~ By
-

•

-~-

•

•

The Daily
Sentinel
.

The Bend

·.. ,..

h~a ·

Monday, March 8, 1~ _

:Mother has hard ·time dealing with her child's sex-ual orie.ntatiC?ti
Ann
Landers
IW7, Lus AnJcb Tin~~ .

Sylldicatc an,d Creaton
SyllloliCIIC

Dear Ann Landers: I recently
decided to "come out" to my fri ends
and family and let them know I am
gay. I am not an in-your face kind of
person and wanted it to be a slow
process, with me cl),oosing the time
and place. I have only told · a few
close friend s so far. ·
Here;s the problem, Ann. I was
den ied the opportunity to choose the
time and place by a clerk at the hardware store. He noticed my · new
'checkbook an&lt;j asked if the rainbow

design was intended to represent the
"rainbow gay-pride colors." I
an swered honestly and told him,
yes, it did.
My mother was with me and
, heard every word. I hadn 't yet told
her about my sexual orientation and
could see that she was taken by surprise. I realize that the clerk should
not have inquired about something
so personal , but I don 't !hink he did
it maliciously.
. Since that time, things have been
strained between my mother and me .
I am not going to force her acceptance, but I would like to regain the
comfortable relation ship we had for
so many years. Ann, should I have
lied when the clerk asked me about
the checkbook? I want to maintain ·
my honesty about this, but I hate

Beat of the Bend ...

.,

By Bob Hoeflich
I agree. The weather is cold and the easy thing ·10 do is stay
home by the lire.
Howeve r, the Racine Fall Fe stival Committee is looking
toward s warmer weather when you might want to getaway from
the house and cabin fever.
lbe committee has planned a public program for Saturday,
April 3, at the Southern High School and you··re invited.
An evening of music has been scheduled by the committee and ·
featured will be ihe Lewis Family of Lincolnton, Ga., the Builders
Quartet from Ripley, and an award winning harmonica player
.from Ontario, Canada. Mike Stevens. The Lewis Family contin- .
·
ues to feature ''Little Roy".
Advance tickets are being sold for the program which will get
. underway at 7:30p.m. , and these may be secured at the Southern
High School office, the Racine Home-National Bank or from
Dale Han, Larry Wolfe, Allen Graham, Terry Coe nd David
Zirkle. By the way, you cap save a little by p chasin dvance
d $ for stutickets . The advance tickets go for $7 for adu dents . The adult and student tickets will each be $1 htgher at the
door. Refresh!llents will be handled by the sc hool.
If you have any questions about the program jusi call949-2031
·
·
or 949-283.6.
Nancy Cale of Middleport is an enthusiastic supporter of all of
the activities invol ving the Point Pleasant High School Band of
which her granddaughter, Jessica Cale is a member.
Many of you know Gary Stewart, band director at the school
and a native of our area, who works out the details of the band
activities which are varied. It might be a good idea to inform you
about now that the annual Black Knight Revue, a musical started
years ago by Stewart and a production that has become quite profes sion al, has been sc heduled at the high school at 8 p,m. on
March 12 and 13, and there will be a 2 p.m. performance of this
year 's musical on Sunday, March 14.
This year the band has been invited for a once in a lifetime trip
to Hawaii and the Hawaii State Travel and Performance Tour and
the invitation is being accepted. The trip will afford stude nts lhe
opport unity to learn about the islands and the gro up will perform
at both Pearl Harbor and at a parade through the famous Polynesian Cultural Center.
· Since Jessica is graduating this year from Point , thi s will be her
last trip with the band . Previously on band trips, she has played
with the band at the Lincoln Memo rial in Washington , D. C. , on a
Bahama crui se and at the Apollo T~eater in Harlem last year.
The group will leave from Port Columbus on March 29 and
wi ll return there on Sunday, April 4. The trip is being made during spring break and undoubtedly Stewart's students are really
lookmg forward to thi s year 's excursion.
I think l' ye now heard it al l. And I'm wondering with so much
evil , hatred , drugs , killing- you name it- going on in the world,
1f Rev. Jerry Falwell 's concentration shouldn 't be o n something a
tad more Important than hi s interpretation of the sex ual preferences of a Teletubby'! Try not to think about it, but do try to keep
....,
smiling .
.

·'•.
..•'·

w~at

it has done to my relationship
wtth my mother. Do you have any
advice for me? - OUTED IN
SAVANNAH, GA.
.
.
DEAR SAVANNAH: Have . a
frank talk wi!h ·your mother l,.et her
know you have sensed the coolness
and i1 has made you unhappy.
Explain to her that your sexual orientation is not something you chose
- it's the way God made you . .
There is an excellent organization
that will help you educate your
mother on this stlbject. Write to:
PFLAG (Parents, Families and
Friends of Lesbians and Gays) , llOI
14th St. , N.W. , Suite 1030, Washington, D.C. 20005 (www.pflag.org).
Dear Ann Landers: Have you
noticed the way some people habitually steer every conversation back to

Manager,

Social Security is at the top of
its c lass. The Maxwell School of
Citizenship and Public Affairs at
Syracuse University recently
rated Social Security as the bestrun government agency.
Social Security was the only
age ncy to score an overall "A"
grade. ·
The a~rnent, called the
"Governni&lt;!nt Performance Project," selected 15 agencies representing an array of services, and
ranked them in five . areas Finances, Human Resources,
Information Technology, Capital
Investment, and Managing for
Results. Social Security aced the
first four categories and took
"B" in Managing for Results .
"There is a strong correlation
between performance and public
confidence
in
government,"
Social Security Commissioner

a

. NEW YORK (AP) - Selling
" Seinfeld" into television syndication proved to be a bonanza for its
star, Jerry Seinfeld, helping him to
become the top-earning celebrity in
1998, according to. Forbes maga·
zine.
Seinfeld and collaborator L:irry
David earned $267 million and $242
million respectively from the $1.7
billion sale Of the recently ende.d sitcorn, placing them' first and second
on the magazine's list of leading
celebrity earners.
Director/producer Steven Spielberg, whose movie "Saving Private
Ryan" is nom inated for an Oscar for
best picture, is third on the list with
$175 million .
He is followed by talk-show host
Oprah Winfrey with $125 million · .
and
'Titanic ' director ~ames
Cameron with $115 million .
Rounding o'llt the top' 10 are actor
' Tim All"'n ($77 million), recently
retired Nsketball player Michael
Jordan ($69 'million), writer and
director Michael Crichton ($65 million), actor Harrison Ford ($58 million ) and the Rolling Stones ($57
million).

Supplement to:
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
The Daily Sentinel

Don't min out on thlte e.
Hardware
• Paint
• Construction
• Banks

• Furniture
• Garpet
• Wallpapttr
•Insurance

And on and ·on while Victim
starts there, her unfinished sentence
in ·shreds, along with · her selfesteem . .My suggested solution?

Suddenly, look at your watch, mut- something similar, do you jump i~
ter, "Ohmigosh, I'm late!" and run with your story? Or do you 4sten
patiently and save your story for
for the nearest exit. .
I'm sure those "Comeback Kids" • another time? If so, you've shoWJI
are unaware of how rude they are. real class.
Lonesome? Take charge of yodr
Maybe · if you tell them, Ann, they
life
and' turn it around. Write for An:n .
will listen. Every.o ne who reads '!his
Landers'
new booklet; "How tp
knows someone who fits the
.
Make
Friends
and Stop Being LoneCLAREMONT.
description.
ly." Send a self addressed, lonj,
CALIF.
DEAR CLAREMONT: I can business- size envelope and ache~
think of more than a few people who or money order for $4.25 (this
fit the description, but of course , includes postage and handling) to:
they dqn 't have a clue. and if they Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
were told, they would not believe it. 11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Your letter; however, just might do Canada, send $5. 15). To find out
more about Ann Landers and read
the trick.
Listen to yourselves , readers. The her past columns, visit Che Creators
next time someone tells you about Syndicate web page at www.crean· incident that you can relate to ators .com.
because you have · e.x perienced

Kenneth Apfel stated. " When we
make government work , public
confidence and trust in governmerit rises. We administer programs that affect the liv es of virtually all Americans.
"This year, more than 26 mil lion people will walk into . our
1,500 offices across the country.
More than 70 million people will
call our 800 number. You can
imagine how important it is to
have effective information systems and financial management
systems so we can handle this
workload. We know our monthly
benefit payments are an important pan of the quality of life of
50 million Americans ... .and millions inore who are protected in
case of death or disability.
"Our goal is to do all of this and more - correctly, to do it
timely. and to do it with the
utmost courtesy and ·-consideration for our customers.
"But it does not just happen . It
takes· the dedicated work of the

managerne~t team and all 65 ,000
agency employees .,. all committed to excellence and results ."
Why a newborn needs a social
security number
Getting your baby a Social
Security Number is an impo rtant
consideration .
,
There are lots of reaso ns you'll
need a So~ial Security number for
y·our c hild . If you become di sabled or die, or if you retire, the
baby will need a Social Security
number to receive survivors, disabi lity. or retirement benefits o n
your earnings record .
You ' ll also need it to claim the
baby as a dependent on your
income tax return, open a bank
account, or buy savings. bonds,
obtain medical coverage, or apply
for some kinds of government
service5 for your child.
Many people arrange to get the
baby's Social S~curity number
while in the hospital. Some don 'l.
While it's easier to apply for a

Social Security number for your
baby while in the 'hospital . you
can apply for one later from your
local Social Security office.
•
When you go to apply · for t.l)e
baby's Social Security number in
person, you need to provide n~l
only your Social Security num ber, bHI evidence .that you are the
. child's parent or legal guardian,
. evidence of the child's age, . identity and citizenship. It would be
easier to g.e l the Social -Security
number in the hospital. Either
way there is never a charge for a
Social Security card and ntlmber.
If you want more information
about getting your baby a Social
Security number, you may want
to request a copy of our leaflet,
"Soc ial Security Numbers for
Newborns. " You can contact us
through our toll -free number, ~800-772-1213.
.
·
This information is also ava(l able by typing www.ssa. gov ~o
access Social Security Online . .

Se.infeld tops Forbes'
celebrity earnings list

1999 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will Le Lere Wednesday, MartL, 1711.

e

themselves? It sounds something
like this : .
Comeback Kid: "How was your
birthday celebration?"
Victim (she has seven seconds
but doesn't know it): "Oh, I had a
great day. Joe gave me an adorable
puppy He's just 6 weeks old ....
Comeback Kid: "Fred did the
swne lhing for me two years ago.
And that puppy grew into the best
and biggest dog we ' ve ever had . We
named him Brutus. He's so strong.
And smart! You wouldn't believe
what I've taught him , Just this mornin~, I was out looking for the paper

i

Social Security gets an "A" as best run government agency
BY ED PETERSON
Social
Security
Athens

• Appliances
• Electrical
• Plumbing
•And more

MJNOUNCEMENEo

. ..
· HOWARD

. ,EICAVII'IfiG co.·
' ll=pg • B•nDM
BullJo•er &amp; Baclrhoe
Se,..,icet
House &amp; Trailer Sites

land Clearing &amp;
, GIJlding

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
for Sale by Lebanon
•Townahlp Truetee •. 1812
, Ford Dump Truck · -with
1971
Snow . Plow,
International School Bua
Mlac. Puah MoWira, to be
aold at Publ.lc Auction at
. Lebltnon. TownahiR Garage
looatlld on County Road 35.
'.Said owctlon to b.e held
!Saturdey, March 20th at 10
.,A.M. Equipment aold In aa
condition, Truatee roaerve
Lthe right to reluM any or ill
~bide. For addiUonal Information phone (740) 843•
, 6155 or can .lnapect at the
lownahlp Garage before
: Auction.
,
• Lebltnon Townahlp •
-'l'ruateea
, Charles Lawrance
Garry SOIIIh
· 'Lawrence .Johnston
(II) 3, B. 15 3TC
Public Notice
., . . NOTICE TO BIDDERS
'·
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF TRANS.
PORTATION
:: .
Columbua, Ohio
Olllee ol contract•
Legal Copy Number:
990202

. UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
' · Mailing Date: 03/01/19119
'· Sealed propotale will be
accepted from all prt'quell·
lied blddera at the Olllee ol
Contract• , ol tho Ohio
· Pepertmont'
or
·, 'rrtintporllltlon, Columbua,
Ohio, until 10:00 e.m.
Wlldntaclay, March 31, 19119
FOR IMPROVING SECTION

005

CRDrr

I

• ·· '

can Argatha 1-304-757-7!34.

Public Notice
MEG·7·12.247,
STATE
ROUTE 7 IN SAUSIIURY
TOWNSHIP, MEIGS COUN·
TV, OHIO, IN ACCORDANCE
WITH PLAHS AND SPECIFJ.
CATIONS BY GRADING,
DR~tl'l~ PAVING_ \!IT_~
ASPHALT CONCRETE AND
BY REPLACING THE DESK
ON STRUCTURE NO: MEG·
7·12247 OVER TOWNSHIP
ROAD 77.
"Tht date HI .lor compleo
tlon of thlt work ahall- be Ill
forth In the bidding propoaal." ,
PJ•n•
and
Speclllcatlona are on Ole In
the
Department
ol
Tranaporllltlon.
GORDON PROCTOR
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(3) 8,t5 2TC
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed blda marked .a e
"Bid lor VIllage ol Rutland
Huerd Mitigation ProJect EleVlltlon ol Houne , PhaM

New To You Thrift Shoppe

9 West Stimson, Athenl
740-592·1842

9:00.5:30.

Custom Homes

wound has
not healed
for months,
our team of
specially trained
doctors and nurses
can provide treatment which can
help you enjoy a
lifestyle that is as
active as possible.

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Public Notice
In the amount ol not Ieee
then 10% or the bid amount
In the favor Dillie efortMid
Vllliiijit of Rutland; Bid bond ·.
shall be accompanied by
proof ol Authority ol the
official or agent elgnlng

bOnd.

(2) 28, 28 (3) 3, 5, 9 5TC

•

Public Notice
Legal Notice to Contractora:
Townahlp
Ia
Sellabury
!eking bldt on Huard
MIUgatlon work. ProJect
conalet ol elevation ol
etructuree, ftood proofing
~rofiHing. ·
For
and
lnlormetlon on bidding call
(74P) 992-8839.
(3) 8, 10, 12 3tc

need to be_ walked, _that turning it
mto a barking machme m the back, Y~!~ i~_ki!!d (t9 tf-.e.~og,_ to )W. nergh;
bors)'! 'bo1:1\'ey · t~m'\; cats mrraculously surv1ve vtruses, ~hat they
need never go to the vet. Do you
dump your children when you move
to another state? Why not?
. What does thts tell us about. the
m~bthty_of p~Qple ~o take the ltme to
tram thetr antm~ls. How many of us
have heard stones about people get~~ng n~. of male ~ats because they
spray, or dumpmg cats of etther
s~x who suddenly stop us tng thetr
lttter boxes? Most _o f the ttme ,.these
problem~ can be solved by neutermglspaymg and behaviOr mod11icalion. Often, the problem IS a curable
til ness , such as feltne cystiti S. . .
I am 'asking you to look at th1s hst
and really thmk about tl belore you
take on an ammal. There are costs
involved- monetary and psychol~gi cal - that must a lways be constdered .

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meig s Soil and Water Conserv ation Di strict Board
o f Superv isors, special execu tive meting . Mo'nday, 8 p .m. at office .
POMEROY - Right to Life m ee tin g, Monday, 7 :30p .m. Pomeroy
Library . Dot Norman , head of Athen s Co unty Pregnan cy Crisis Center, to speak.
RACINE - Rac ine Board of Public Affairs, Mo nd ay . 10:30 a.m.,
munic ipal butlding.
PORTLAND -

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'

. ATWOOD WINNER - Lacy
· Banks has been named as a
recipient of the Atwood Award
lor Excellence by the University ·
of Rio Grande. The full tuition
scholarship Is awarded each
~ear to recognize outstanding
academic
achievement
lor
Incoming students.
; Mark Abel, director of Adtttissions lor Rio Grande, described
lhe scholarship program as a
wln·wln situation for everyone.
i'The student wins by receiving
funds to pay. for their schoollhg
and the university wins too
because of the caliber of the
jncom.lng students."
.
1 Banks is a senior at Metgs
High School and plans to major
Jn the nursing p~ogram at the
University Rio Grande. She is
\he daughter of Albert and
,

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

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE ,...- Meigs Count y Chamber Qf Commerce, Tue sday
noon , Carleton School, Syrac use . Econorni.c Deve lopment Director
Perry Varn adoe to speak on state of th e economy.

1

JoaWII8on

(740 992-4277

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVIG

• Raom AddHIOnt a Rlinodtllng

• NowGoragea
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
• Painting
• Alao Concrete Work
• Patlo.decka • guttering
V.C. YOUNG lll
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
• New Co...,lruclion
·. •RemodeUng
•Siding

"Call Today"
FREE Estimates
(740) 992·5535 or
992-2753

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
10125fi61ttn

Jacks Roofing
&amp; Construction
Rooflng • Repairs
•Coatings
•Sidings
Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks
740-9§2-2068

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday
·12:30 pm
limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore

740-245-5697.

Pom e roy Zoning Appeal s Board . Tue sday. 7:30

POMEROY - lmmuni zat ion ,ciin ic , Tuesday, 9 to II a .m. and I tu
3 p .m . Meig s Count y Health Dep'artment. Chi ldre n to be acco mp anied
by parent/g uardian . Shot record to be presented .

chl~l8n .

E AST M EIGS - Eas tern Band Boosters, Tu esda y. 7:30 p.m. in the
Eastern Hi gh Sc hool hand roo m.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Wchs ter, Po st '39 , Am erican Legion . annual
hirthd ay part y, Wed nesda y. at th e Senior Ci ti ze ns Cent er. Dinn er at 7
p.m .

(304)675·5398.

You~g

Lost: Small Black Male
Dog , VIcinity: Vanco Fairfie ld
Centenary Area. 740-~253.•

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
&amp;I.L VeAl 81101 Mu1t
Be Pllld In Advlnce.
QEAPL!NE: 2:00p.m.
tho day bolo .. tho od
ts to run. Sundly
edition • 2:00 p.m. ·
Frlday, Monday edition
- 10:00 a.m. Slturd-v.

Dllllll .

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio

Computer Graphics
Dealgna
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Service&amp;
•Commercial
.
•Realdentlal
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheater, Ohio

45771 .
74D-949-2271

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10.' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM

740-985-4422

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yonl Solei MUll Be Pold: In
Advance. Deadline: .1:00pm \he
dey before t~e ed 11 to r .. n,
Sunday l Monday tdltldn·

1:OOpm Fllday.

BISSELL BUILDERS,

DEPOYS AG
PARTS

INC•
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions
.
• Roofing . • . ,
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

tracto~a

All makes
d
equipment parts
Factory autho ·
case·
IH Parts Dealers
1 000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolvllle, Oh 45723

FR
614-992-7643
(No Sunda Calls)

740-667-0363
11 0

Help Wanted
~iiiiiiiia-_...

e
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Registered Nurse

80

Auction
and Flea Market :

Bill Moodlspaugh AuctioneerKlg
Services, Ll111e Hocking, Ohio.
Appraisals FarmEstateHousehold- Commercial . Ohio
canoe 17693. 740-989-2623.

:u-

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime aucllon,~r . comp lete
auction . ser~IC9 .
llcen~ed
t66,0hio &amp; West Virginia , 304·
773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.
Wed&amp;flleyer's Auc! lon Servlfe.
Gattlpotts, Ohio 74o-379-2720 .

90

Wsnted to Buy :

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And· Gold Coins, Proofsfts,
Diamonds. Antl~ue Jawelry, G~ld
Rings, Pre- 1930 u.s. Currency,
S!erling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
• M.T.S. Colo Shop, 151 SecOnd
A110nuo. Qattlpotts, 740-446·284~.

'
An!lques, top prices paid, Ai¥prine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Fluss Moore owner, 740-912·
2526.

:

Buytng Standing Timber. 740-2~6 -

6172 .
Clean Late Model Ca rs •Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smllh Buick Pontiac, 1900 E~s!­
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.
·

675-5965.

Musi1Je a regislered nurse in the slale of WV
BCLS required.
Advanced life support cettificatioo willin 6 months.
One year experience in specially (preferred)
Competnive Wages and excellenl benefits.

Join our family of pro{e10ionah to be the retourte for
community health Jert'ice need..
Please submit resume's to:

PLIASAIIT VAlLEY HOSPITAL
c/o PIRSOIIIIL
2520 VAUIY DRIVE
PT. PLIASAIIT, W¥ 25550
01 Fll TO (304)675-6975
ANEOE

EMPLOYMENT
S ERV ICES

·'
110

Help Wanted . :

SSPancers$$ Fun· or part- tlme~ta
yrs . or older. Will train. (740)9126387 afler 12PM. (304)675-5!55
after 6:30PM. Southfork Stiow~ar,
Pt Pl.. WV
•

..

~

SALES CONSULTANT :
JOCK - TRAPPED IN SALES.

•

What's lile like Aller Your .-ghletlc Career? Do You Wake UQ..In
The Morning E~ clted About W.at
You're Going To Do Today Or ...

?:

Imagine Yoursel f Being Par! q1 A
Team Aga in! If You 're Lookfl1g
For A Fresh New Approach":To
Sales Call PiOne er - l eaden(ln
Athletic, Stad ium &amp; ·lndu st tjal

Maintenance Since 1'905. t -80065SI · 12DO www ploneer-mll:co
Fleallstlc tsl Year lr: come Du~g
Training $35 -43K. 1 Year

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

perlence Required. E.O.E.

Ex·
•

•
.,}

~

AVON I All Areas I Shi rfey

Spears. 304-675-1 429.

.~

Adm ission , Concession. Ufe-

985-4473
7

· Llmestqne 1
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

+

We Buy Everything : Furnltute.
Appliances, Etc. By The Piece.Or
The Loti 740-256·6989.

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

FREE

HAULING.·

',

· Wanted To Buy : Ussd Mobi le
Homes, Call 740-446-0175 , 3114-

Ple..ant YaUey Hospital rumndy has
opportunitii!• avaaable f•• RN appUcant•.
Appficant• mu•t meet the foU.WinB quaUficatioRJ.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

WICKS

!

60 Lost and Found ·

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

.

ri~;~l~,r :~~~~·~~u~I:8 ~~~~Q·u~

Ill-Aft
L. Roush (740) 949·1701

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

:

English SeHer 5 Months Oid ,
Black &amp; While , Very Frlendjy,

• LIIWil Cara • Dallga .
• llalatananca • PlanUn1
• lilulcbblg
• Rttl!lalag Wall I Brli:lt
PaUo Conatractlan
Dagrn Certlftad
Ludacape lpeclaUat,

ESTIMATEES
POM ER OY p. m .

10· 11 Weeks Old Female 112
Miniature Collie, Has First Shots,
Been WOrmed, Likes Chlldr~n .
7!0-441·0255.

Dog. (304)675-4999, anytime.

· The Communit y Ca le ndar is published as a free service to non profit groups wishing to a nn ounce meetings and special events . The
calendar is not de s ig~ed .to promote sa les or fund ra1se rs of any type.
Item s are printed as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific. number of day s·.·

1Infectious Disease
Reconstructive a- Plastic Surgery
·Vascular Surgery
c

. Giveaway

2 yr old Cock·A· Poo, Black&amp;
White . Well tra ined, well be ~
haved. Excellent small HouSe

-,-Community Calendar-:-

The Wound Care Center ~~&gt; at St. Joseph's Hospital Is staffed by
eight physicians who represent these medical speCialties:
·
Emergency Medicine
Endocrinology
Family Practice
General 'Surgery

Sat. Ma""'•r
Ph; 740-992·21811 481 S. Thlrd.Avt.
Mlddltport, OH 45780

i.JVo Job 'Too 'Big or
'Too Small

· 3. Too many animals in the
household
.
.
4. Cost of.J.&gt;.et mainte!'ance
•
'5. Ownersnaving' personlll prob!ems
...
6. Jnad~uate fact hues
7. No homes available for litter
mates
8. Having no lime for pet
9. Pet illness(es)
10. Biting.
The 12 Top · Reasons to Dump
Cats:
Numbers one through seven are
exactly the same as above .
8. Allergies in family
9 . House soiling
10. Incompatibility
Okay, ' what can we glean from
the answers of owners relinquishing
pets? Clearly, many owners do not
realistically co nsider what it means
to lake on an animal for life . People
don't check with the landl ord before
taking on a pet? What does thi s say
about peoples' expectati ons?
Do the~ think they dog does nut

a

40

John Bennett

Remodeling

81

Public ·Notice
2" wtll 111 recelvlld by mall
or delivered to the VIllage ol
,Rutland Huerd Mltlgetton
ProJect omce; P.O. Box 420,
337 Main St., Rutland, Ohio
l45775: Boyd A. Ruth, until
1:30 jim Friday, March 19,
19119, upon which time blda
will be optnlld and read
aloud.
Speclflcatlona and bid
forma may be -ured trom
the above · office. A elte
·allowing lor lhla proJect Ia
eciMduled lot 10:30 am,
Thuraday, March 11, 19119,
at the above omee (740)
742-0704. Stett of OhiO
Prevailing Waget and
Beneftta will need to be
uaad lor determlnlld labor
cotUI.
Each bid mutt Ill accompanied by either a bid bond
In the amount ol1 0% ol the
bid amount wHh aurely aat•
lelactory to aloraaald
VIllage ol Rutland or by eer·
tilled check, cathlert
check, caah, or leHer ol
credit u n a toiVent bank

•

Quality clottitng and househqld
Items . $1 .0 0 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru SatUrday

oo-so

· • · ··' ...

,

30 Announcement&amp; ·:

AT-6:30P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300•.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progreulve top line.
uc. 11
11nellfn

Rt. 124 Minerovllle, OH
740-992-4559

Trans~r·

Uncle Bill from Ashlord, WV, father William Scon Bowles, pleUe

Thursdays

•Refilla
•Candlemaking
Supplu.•
•PariU.• &amp;
Fundraloero ,

http/1

Male Companion, With
tation Approx . 85 To 75 Ve•s
Okl. 538 Thl1d Avenue, Gallipolis,
740-446·8983.
l

Club Bingo On

10-6
Sat. 10-4

Endin'g up in a shelter is the best
thing ttial can happen to a pet whom
lhe owner no longer wants. Too
ofte n, ~eople just abandon them
j.vhen thhe is divorce or they move
~ n (ju~t ask the Humane O~ficcr
about t&amp;at !) orthey drive the pets out
to the 96untry and dump them.
: A recent study conducted by the
)'&lt;ational Counc1l on Pet Populatton
·S tudy and Policy, published in the
July, 1998 issue of the "Journal of
Applied Animal Welfare Science,"
sent researchers fo· 12 shelters in the
country to discover why people take
animals to shelters. 1 think we will
:all be surprised to sec the reasons
dlal people feel it is nece~sary to
break the human -animal bond.
The 12 Top Reasons to Dump
.D ogs :
I . Mov in g
2. Landlord not allowing pets

When a

cnic125029t.htm

No Embarraument ...
You're Treated with Respect!

Pomeroy Eagles

Open: Tuesday-Friday

81&amp;-845-84~ .

·.......W-'!'OholpageS2.com'no/ply· :

740 742-8888

: By ARlen Waitt, President
, Meigs/County Humane Socl·
'r ty
}
·

~- r--

Min. Sorv·U

·WORRYING II!

lHqw Do Pets End Up in Shelters?
1

8500 Ekl. 3593, 18+ $3 .89 Pjll

Mon- Frl 8:30- 5:00
Over 40 yra el(perlence

THE COUNTRY
CANDLE SHOP

'

Let Our Psychics Put Your MlQ.d
At Ease Call Nowt 1·900-791 ·

· No CI'Rit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Rapo • Divorced

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
\JOat covers, carpets, etc.

J

Perwonal1

•n•t worry About Your Future

. I

/~andy _ea~ks.
"

Rutland, Ohio

(740) 992·3131

I

1824 Murdoch Avenue
(304) 424-4065
1-BD0-991-H EAL

•

A&amp; DAuto UpholsttrJ ··PiuJ, Inc

Septic "S~11em &amp;
' Utilitie•

i

, of St. .Joseph's Hospital

Cau -oaveHarris or Kathy Williamson at 992·2155

Monday, March 8, 1999

Racine' 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 fun time arcade- games &amp;
" pool table.

740-992·3470

.'

'

guerds, Pool Manager. AM~ ­
sls tan t Manager Wanled At
e
Gallipolis Municipal Pool. Cer 1catk:m Is Required For Litegualllls.
Appllca!lons t.Aay Be Plcked!p
At The Parks And Recreation ·, f.
lice, 518 Seeo11d Avenue , G I·
polis. Ohio. All Applications M.Wst
Be Tu rned In By Friday, Marth
26th.
~..

4VON PRODUCTS ' Sta11 1 r
own business. work flexl e
hOurs, benefits available; Eni9v
limited earning&amp;: Call toll-lree:".t-

888-561 ·2866.

:·

BabysHter needed In RutiW.d
area, call740-742-2257.
..4
Bates Br os . -.muse.ment GjJ .
Must be 18 years or older. Ffte
to. travel. Call 7&lt;0·266-2950 ~F
8:00-4:30.
,..'

�'

Page 8 e The Dally Sentinel

Mon(,tay, March 8, 1999

Monct8y, March 8, 11199

The Dally Sentinel e Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Croa•word Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

·=-

ACROSS

31C-ofl

1 Peallla ar
AllltntiC
• Ski lift
IIIWnltiW.

42 Tnt111Cilno
axcl8rnltloit
41For- '
41 "How ... - -

1D~Hawn

-

COiftPinr omn OTfll
Va~

&amp; Flatbed-Home Most Woo·

'• i o r -Communicattm
t»Pay
•
Bonolit Pael&lt;age

•

Vlcotion
'401 K Retirement
'Soltty Bonus
·o-... eopo~t

Minimum 1 yr Experience Class
A COl, HazMat
H&amp;W1hlddng Co, Inc.

(

onO,W'I

1-800-82S-3580
Randy Stawan, Christina King
Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hrs S20K ·$75K Nr 1·800.
348·7186 Ext 1173 www amp·
Inc com

ROOFER8 ILABOR!RS Unl·
forma Provided, Insurance, Pay
According To Experience, Drlv·
trs Licenu ~ PLUS, Call 814·
444-7366

Flexible Hours
(304)675-5858

Good

Pay

DRIVINO POSmONS
AVAILABLE
Class AOTA
Single Driver, Late Model Ken·

worth• With Reefers West Coast

Carrier
Class B OTA
Team Straight Truck, Lale Model
Fretghtllners With Sleepers Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements ,
800 Mila Radlus~e Deliver·

los
Both PositiOnS
A!least 25 Years Old
Adea&amp;t 2 Years Experience
GoodMVR
Wookly Pay

Health Insurance Avalabie
Wor'&lt; Wall With The

Publ~

For More Information Call 800·

437·8784, Hrs 8 30 AM ·5 P.M
FREE

He~ Tr~lntng

free Home
Classes Will Be Conducted At
Health Managment Nursing Serv·
Ices Inc If 'tbu Are Responsible.
A Self Starter, And Want To Ent·
er Into The Health Care Field
This Is A Tremendous Opportun·
lty Interested Individuals Should
Call Today To Reserve Your Spot
In The Class
Call 740-446-3808
Of
740-886-9031
Opportunities For lmmodlala
Employment May So AvaHablo
EOE

Full Time Desk Clerk, Neat Appearance And Good Phone Skills
Necessary Previous Customer
Service And fOr Office Experl·
once Helpful Apply 9 A M ·5
PM Budget Inn 260 Jackson
Pike No Phone Calla Please
Little John's 110 56 VIne Street,
Gallipolis, Is Now Taking Appllca·
tiona For Part· Time Employment,
Apply Within
Local froJcklng Company Seeking
Qualltleel Truck Drivers Good
Pay And Benefits Send Resume
To PO Box 109 Jackson. Ohio
45840 Or Call 1-740 286·1463
To Sci'Mtdule An Interview
Medical Processor

FTIPT No experience necessary
W1ll train fC required Earn 40K
Call BOO-e63-7440
Medical Processor FT I PT No
E"P Nee Will Train PC Req Earn
40K can 800-663·7440
Need 30 Ladles To Sell Avon,
740-446-3358
Need someone part time to run
errancla, such as Or appoint·
mentslother odd jobs Someone I
can depend on Must have good
reference (304)675·8969 , 6 to
9PM
Now taking applications for Drlv·
ers at Domino's Piz za, Gallipolis
and Pomeroy Stores Only, 740·

Training
Golllpollo ca- College
(Caroors ClOse To Home) Call
Today! 740-448-4367, HIOO·
214·0452, Reg 190-05-12748.
Wanted To Do

COUNTRY CRANE SERVICE
15 Ton Truck Mounted Crane,
115 Ft Tip Height Aerial Basket
Available, 740·367-7554, Page I
740-33!1-()206

Reputable Commercial Roofing
Company In South east Tennss·
see Is Expanding We Need Mo·
llvated Hardworking And Drug
Free Pers onnel All Positions
Available Will Train Will Re·
locate Key Personnel Who Are
Willing To Grow With The Com;
pany Send Resumes To CLA
485, c/o Gallipolis Da1ty Trtbune.
825 Third Avenua Gallipolis, OH
45631

meuage.

Homes for Sale

Nice Immaculate, House For
sate 601 McNeil Avenue, ft
Pleasant, ~ (304)675-7711

Furniture repair restoration &amp; re·
fin ishing, custom built rep roduc·
tlons, Liz &amp; Bennett Roush, 740·
992 11 oo Appalachian Wood·
workS

Spring Valley, 2 story family
home 4 l;ledroom, 2 112 Baths
L1vlng Room Dining Room, Eat-In
Kitchen . Lg Family Room. 740·
245-9337

Furniture repa ir, refinish and res·
toratlon also custom orders Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry
Phillips. 740-992-11576.

Very Nice 3 Bdrms, Bath, LR
Kitchen. Laundry, Fenced Yard,
Utility, Near Clinic &amp; Church
$59,900 oo can 740-446-2601

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your your logs to a mill Just
call304-675-1957

320

Ha11e 3 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·
capped, 740·441·1536
House Cleaning Honest, Aell·
able, Mature Will clean weekly
Free estimates (3041675·1553
Mature Christian Lady, will take
care of you r loved one In their
home Need night shift Call day·
time (740)448-0451
Mature Christian Lady To Take
Care Of Your Loved One In Their
Home, Naod Night Shl~ Call Day·
lime. 74().446..0-451 nm Litchfield
Please Call Again
Taking orders for fill d1rt, good top
soli d1rt available 2118199 S100
per load anywhere In Meigs Co
call740-949-1022 ask tor Jim
Will mow lawns trim, any odel
jobs hauling, 740-!*12-4288

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity
INOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl·
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall unlll you have lnvesugated
the offering
AREA PEPSI ROUTE
Prime Locations (Local) Route
Earns $lOOK /Yr Call Now, 1·
BOO 440 2371
Ell, VENDING Rte • Muol Sell
By 3/Hl Earn $4K -tiMo , Gaur·
anteed Locations $8 5K ReQ
100o/o Finance Available 1·800·
38().3138 El&lt;1 835

Mobile Homes
for Sale

II WoW II

Only $499 down large selection
of 2·3·4 bedrooms free delivery&amp;
setup owner financing available.
only at Oakwood Mobile homes
Nitro WV Help make 2 payments
&amp; move In, no payments after 4
yrs Still In warranty 304· 755·
7191
Amazing only $999 down on
large selection of double wldea,
free delivery &amp; setup owner fl·
nanclng available 304-755·5885
$500 Down on any 14170 In
stock, limited number. free dellv
ary Call HIQ0.69H777
$999 Down on any 98 model
Doublewlde In stock Free De Uv·
erv Cati1-B00-1191-1lm
12x60 two bedroom mobile home
with 100x100 lot in Middleport,
$8500, 74D-992 3194

Homes for Sale

1/2 acre lot, 2·3 bedrooms, elec·
trlc lurnace wtcentrel air, single
car garage Cfeck, $34,900, 740·
949·3037
3 acre s 3 bedroom house, at•
tached 2 car garage, separate 3
car garage, 74o-843-5350

l f~~i;~i'5s;:•dlngbackAICyard.
Carpet)
Nice
$74,500
after 6PM

Gsll

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, $300/Mo ,
304-736-7295
312 Watzgal St Pomeroy 3 Bdqn
House, $350 00 Month, Deposit
Required h888·840-0!!21
For Rent 3BR HouH In New Ha·
ven $250 mo Also, Small 2BR
House In New Haven $1 !50. mo
(304)67!1-1651 Aller 5PM
Charming Coootry cottage 2 Bed·
rooms, Bath, Kitchen, Living, Din·
lng, $400/Mo, Deposit, No Pots,
740.245-!5053
House or rent In Middleport. no
pets. 740 992·5858

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
condltlorfed, $260·$300, sewer,
water and trash Included, 740·
992·2167
2 Bedrooms, On Addison Pike ,
$220 00 Month Includes Water,
$100 00 Deposit, No Pots, 740·
446-3437, 740-446·1637

1971 14"70, three bedroom ask·
lng $5000, 740-992 9002.

8 Miles Out 218, 2 Bedrooms
S2251Mo • Plus Oopooll And Ret·
erences, 740·256·6251, 740·446·
8172

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mobile home, 74D-992 5039
1980 Kingsley 14 Ft x70 Ft wnn
314 Acre Lot Locateel 2 Miles On
Stale Rou te 218, In City School
District, Daytime 740 446 3278
Evenings 740.446·3099
1991 14x70 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath
New Gas Furnace /Heat Pump, 2
Porches, Many Extrasl Asking
$13,000, 740.245-9120.

1972 Academy 12x65 3 Bed ·
rooms, 1 Bathroom Front Bed·
l'oom Home Ready To Move Into
Includes Free Delivery And New
Vinyl Skirting $3,995 Call HOO·
500-3957
Doublewlde Qn Lot, 800·31.3.:..
8862
I,;;JJ#.
Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740385-9621
New 14wlele, 3br!2 bath , $500 ,
$185 permo Free Blr, 1·800·691 ·
6777 ...........
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
Includes e months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer aklrllng,
delulle steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month with St 150
down Call H!Q0.837·3238.
New 4BR, 18wldo, $500 down/
$219 permo Free Air; 1·800·
69t.flm
We Finance L.and &amp; Home With
A&amp; lillie As $500 Down 1·606·
928-3426
1979 ManaJon 1~x70 New Carpet
Good Shepo And Roady To Go.
Delivery Included 3 Bedroom
Front Kitchen S1,1 00 Down And
$154 Per Monlh can 1·800·500·
3957
14x70 Owner Financing Avail·
able, Must Sol 1100-383-8882

330

Farms for Sale

15 Acres. Leon Baden Road
Good House Site All Utllltlaa
Stock Pond $27,000 (304 1927 ·
2936

350

Lots

&amp; Ac:r~~ge

BoautHul 2 Acreo, Contonary Ad.,
Deed Restricted Surro1W!I.Id by
Beautiful - · 740-448-"31!7
3 Acrn MIL With 1994 2 Bid·
roomo, 2 Bath Moblla Home, E&lt;tra
Nice! Great Location ·Will Sell
Together Or Separately Call740441c0187
5 Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
Lake Y!ew, Gallla County,
$32,000 More Acreage Available
740-388-8678

'·

460 Spac:e for ·Rent
Mobile home slie available bet·
ween Athena and Pomeroy, call
740-~7.

MERCHANDISE

Taking Applications For Mobile
Home For Rent In Jackson No
Pots 740·286·4326, 740·286·
2101

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
nlshed and unfurnished, &amp;ecurlty
deposit required no pets, 740·
992-2218
1 Bedroom Ground Floor Eco·
nomlcal Gaa Heat Near Holzer,
WID Hook·Up, Quiet Location
$279/Mo , Plus Utilities, 740.448·
:$57
1 Bedroom, In Pt Pleasant
(304)675-2174, or (740)446·2200
2 Bedroom Apar\~~ent, Adjacent
To Unlv ers jt~ Ol Rio Gtanele
COITj)US, 740-245-5858
2 Bedroom Apartments, Mason,
Utilities Paid, Appliances Fur·
nlshed , No Pats. Daytime
(304)773·5592
Evonlnga
(304)682·3152
2 BA' Full Kitchen. Llvlngroom,
No Pets, Partial Utilities Paid
Close to PVH $325 mo , $325.
Soc Cop. (304)675·5788
2bdrm apia total electric ap·
pllancas furnlahael, laundry room
facilities, close to sch,ool In town
Applications available al. Village
Green Apll 149 or call 740.992·
3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wellwood Drlva
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568
Equal Housing Opportunity
Christy's Family Living, apart·
menta &amp; nome rentals, 740-992·
4514, apartments available now,
furnished &amp; tJ'IfumllheCJ
Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, References, &amp; De·
posit Required, Utilllllo Paid, 740446-1519.
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port From $249·$373 Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
tunltles
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment.
740-4460390
Modern 1 Bedroom All utllltleA
paid excep1 electric Gallipolis
Ferry (304)1175-13711875-3230
Modern 2 Bedrooma, 740·446·
0390
NeWly Remodeled one bedroom
apartment. Prima location In
downtown Gallipolis No Pet11
$300 00 month plus utllltlea Ref·
erencea &amp; Deposit Required.
Coli (740) 448·3302 for APf&gt;Oint·
mont

North Fourtn Middleport, 2 bed·
room lurnlahed apartment no
pets deposit &amp; references. 740
992,0185

king Size Wattrbed, Canor,y
With Mlrroro $500, Cofloe Tab 1,
$50, 740-311 0&lt;100
Prlm•at•r $4i lnslallallon, with
walue special. Free bonus gift,
800-2113-2840

Automobile Profesalonal Paint,
(Enamel) Selective Colora $20
Gallon 740-379-9061
TOBACCO PLANTS FOR SALE
Order Now For May Pl,ntlng
Leave Messagt. Danny De·
wllurst (304)895-3789 (304)895·
3740
Twin Bad Complete, Frame,
Headboard, FootbOard, Simmons
Boxaprlng &amp; Mattress, $40, 740·
446-1064
Wanted to but.,.i!~SS canning
jaro and auppll......,ll Jeff, 740·
742·2012
Waterline Spacial 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Por 100; .1' 200 PSI
$37 oo Per tOO, All Brass Com·
presalon FIIUnga In Stock
RON EVANS ENtERPRISES
~cf&lt;Aon, Olllo, 1-800·537-9528
WOOdb~wlth glass doors, for
houY.. r
e homa, good condition, $275, 4D-992·730t .

XXX lllcloos, tho

bos~

stUI In box,

bargain, must 1011, .. ~. C.O 0,

304-75:1·2970.

510

HoUMhold

550

Building
Supplies

Ooodt
Appliances
Recondltii d
Washers, Dryel'l, Rangea,
I·
gralors, 90 Day Guaran el
French City Maytag , 740· 446·
7795.
For Salt Re-conditioned wash·
era. dryers end refrlgeratofl
Thompsons
Appllance -3407
Jackson Avo , (304)675·7388:
Hours 9-6.
, ,
GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Washers. dryirs, refrigerators,
ranges Skagbs Appli41nces, 78
VIne Slreot. Call 740·448·7398,
Hl6fl.811l-0 I 28

Thrn bedroom, new furnace, New And Used Furniture Slore
carpeted many updates, reter- • Below Hotkia)' IM Kanagua Stop
encee lease and deposit, rent Ana Sea us 74Q.446-4782
$395,
t -614·501·8339 after
730pm
Washer $95, Electric Range $95,
Refrigerator Frost Free $12S,
420 Mobile Homes
Portable Dryer $1215. Kenmore
Washer &amp; Dryer Set, $150 Each,
for Rent
Skaggs Appliances, 78 Vlno
14&lt;65 2 BR. 1 112 balh, no pots, Stroot, Galllpons, 74D-44&amp;-7398
.felerences required, Sandhill
520
Sporting
Rood, (304)675·3834

3 Bedrooms. a Miles From Gall!·
polls on 218, $2!50/Mo' + Dopos·
n, Larga.porch, 740-388·99411

1994 18X80 Sunshine Mobile
Home, 3 Bltdrooms 2 Bathrooms,
Walk·ln Closets Utility Room,
Electric Heat Pump, Refrigerator
And Stove Included, 740·245·
1302

310

3 Bedrooms, 1 1/2 Bath Ranch
Homo, 2 car Garage, Na Nolgl&gt;
borhood, Gallipolis City Schools,
Raccoon Road $400/Mo., No
Pets. 3 References Required,
74(HI82 8048

1964 3 BA, Windsor 10X55, Ap·
pllances lncl $3.000 (304)895·
36081895-3025

VENDING· Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours = Gooel $ Price To
Sell Free Brochure 800·820·
6782

REAL ESTATE

Hou- for ~nt

2BR Trailer, located on Broad
Run Road, New Haven, $270 mo
+ utilities &amp; doposll (3041773·
5881

1992 Norris, 8Ft X 70FT, Vinyl
With Shlnglea,
rms , 2 Baths,
All Electric Applla ea. Porches,
Carport, 740-258-11

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Wml
1 888 582 3345

410

14FT x70FT, 2 Bedrooms, VInyl
Siding Shingled Roo1 Fireplace
In Living Room $9 000 00 740·
682-11238.

Snickers Candy Bar Route, pro·
tected territory 50 Locations
$800·$1200 solid month ly In
come Cost $2995 www vendln
groutes com 1 80Q..963-6123

RESUMES U~LIIIITED Offers
Personalized Resumes And
Much Morel lnlervlew Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 388·
3800

RENTALS

•

Restored VIctorian ~me situated
on 12 acres, Vlllage Middleport,
secluded and private , appoint,
ment, caii74().992..S696

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 2 car garage,
1 acre Heat pump New Ramo·
dellng done, Broad Run, Letart
Ae au mas Are Bel ng Acca pte d -::1304:=..::)8:::B2:::,:·35=1:::B:.,__ _ _ __
For A Full· Time, Administrative -:Assistant In A Well Established, CASH BACK!/! Re ceive Up To
Progressive Business Office In $1,000 Cash Back With The Pur·
Downtown Gallipolis Succesaful chase Of Any Fleetwood Home Of
Candidate Must Possess Public Indiana Or T&amp;nnesaee Brand
Aelatlot~ Skills, Excellent Written, AIIO Recelve A DIRECT TV Sat·
Verbal And Telephone Communi· ellite System Limited Time Orler
eaton Skills Along With A Posl· CaH 1·S00.688-1763 Now!
tlva Team ·Oriented Work Ethic. UNBEATABLE BUY _ Brand
Dutlea Include Typing, Filing , New f999 14x70 3 Bedrooms, 1
CompUier /npul, Word Procen·
mg And General Othce Ofganlza· Bath Home, Vmyl Siding, Shingle
tlon Must Be Able To Handle Roof Thermopane Wmdowa And
M lti 18 T:81 k8 Sl 1
1 Upgrade Carpet Includes Dellv·
u P
mu taneous Y ery, Set·Up, Skirting, Stops 'nd'
And Be Able To Work Without
~
Direct Supervlolon High School Tlo Downs on~ 2 Left AI ~1,900
Diploma Or Equivalent Ia Re· _1·..:.8Q0.888....:...:..:..:._1.:..783:.;__ _ _ __
qulred Prefer Someone With Ex· By owner, 725 Page Street. Mid
perle nee Benefits And Salary dlepon, house &amp; 3 foil, must 188
Conalderallon Will Be Commen to apprectall, will sell house wlthaurate With Qualifications Inter· out Iota for $89,000, 740·992·
lltld Applicants Should Submit 270&lt;1, 740-992·5e96
A Resume To CLA 487, Clo Ga~ 1---'...:......:...:.:..;..:.:.;;__ __
II polls Dally Tribune, 825 Third By Ownor 2910 Moadowbroq~
Avonue GalllpoQa, OH 45631
Dr • 3BR Ranch Brlclc lrnnt New
Roctt Band looking lor good sari·
remodtftd In 1998 {roof, wlndoua lead(304)882·2356
singer &amp; bass istLeave
Call
Steve,

310

Excellent care/ Person In my
home In country! mobile! non ·
smoker/ $800 month! nice
(304)882·3880

°

Reg1stered Nurses needed for a
rapidly growing local Home
Heallh Agency Contact Debbie
Stewart AN , (7401441-1779.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advenlsements for real estate
which is In vlolal:lon of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that an ctweNings
actvenlsed In this newspaper
are available on an equal
baSIS

Business

ol4fi.4040
230' Professional
O'~Drlver Needed. t Yaar Flat
Services
Ex lance. Class A COL Comp 1:=:-:-::--:-:--::--:-~-.,,Pay, nus Program, Late Modal Econom He tlng A d C 011
a
n
ng,
Convonllonal, 740·441·0807 Factory Y
10 Years Parts &amp; Labor
Days. 74o-&lt;141cOS58 After aRM
740 245 9009
PARAMEDICS
l EMT'1
life Ambulance
Is Now Hiring Full
And Part Time For
Gallla And Jadcson Counties
Call740-44&amp;7930
For An Interview
Great Pay And BenefitS

thla newspeper Is subject to
the federal Fair Housing Act
or 1968 whlcl1 makes k Illegal
to advertise •any preference,
MmltaUon or discrimination
based oo race, color, religion,
sex famlllal status or natlonel
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
nmkatlon or dlscrwnlnatlon ~

Well established electrical wiring
contractor has job opening If you
are motivated trained, or experl·
anced In this field please sand
resume c/o The Dally Sentinel,
P 0 Box 729·79, Pomeroy, OH
45789

180

Brookside A,lite. Art now ~Ac·
Gelflo Co • Hunt"'* 88 + Wood· Cll&gt;llng Appi1Ca11ot\a For All Eleced Acres On 'Williams Hollow tric, One Bedroom !ePartments ,
$44,500 Jusl Oft SA 218, Friendly washer /Dryer Hoo~·Up, Water,
Ridge Rd., 15 Acroo $14,500, ·Trash /Sewage Paid, $279/Mo ..
Public Water. City Schools! 740-448-flBt t
Teons Run Ad. 10 Acrll $10,000
Now Taking Appllcollona- 35
• $1,000 Down+ f132 A Month. ,
W111 2 Badfoom Townhouse
'
Melgo Co.: Oanvlle, Briar Aldgo Aparlmerua, Includes Water
Traoh, $3115/Mo , 740·
Rd., • 7 Acres With Pond Or 5 Sewage,
418 0008.1 y It
Acres With Stream 112.000 Or
On SR 325, Nice Wooded 17 Sprlno Avenue· $180 monlh,
Acr01 $18,000, Publ~ Water. Ru- $100"'dopoall: Condor Strul·
tland, Whhea Hill Ad , 11 Acr01 lnlllol: $250 mornn $10Q depoaltj
St4,000 or 9 Acres $12,000 , 7-7·3083
I
' Public Water
•
Townhouse Apartments,'
• + Tara
Calt NOW For Froe Mapa
v'ry Spacious. 2 Bedrooms, 2
OWner Flnanc1ng Info Take 10% ' !'loorl, CA. 1,t/2 Both, F)llty cat·
Oft Ust Price on Cash Buyol
peled, Pallo, No Pota, Loase Pl.a
Securliy'Ooposlt Required, 740·
360 Real Estate
448-3481 ' 740-W&amp;-01 01 ·
Wanted
" Twin ANtra Tower now accepting
We Buy Land. 30 ·500 Acres, applicatiOns for 1br. HUD subslcf·
Wa Pay Cash. 1·600·21 3·8385, lzed apt for elderly and handl'
capped. EOH 304-875-6879
Anthony L.ar&lt;f co.

fAit real estate advertising In

Stylist Needed Full &amp; Part Time
Ploa58 Cal 740-«6-1247

140

Domino 1 Pizza Point Pleasant

7-t-14112

Salesperson Needed Furntlure
Store, Full· Time, tmm1dlate
Opening. Apply Lifestyle Furnl·
tore 856 Third Avenue, Gallipolis.
10To 2, No Phone Calls Please!

COsmetoiOg{SI Need&amp;d Full &amp; Pan

Tuae Paid Vacation Hourly Vs
Commission Free CEU Hours,
740-«6-7267

IRUNERLANO

Goods
For Sale I Summit SoN Climbing
Tree Stand, Si50.00: 1 Horton
Super Mag Croaabow With Ar·
rows. $100 00 , 1 Tradition 50
Caliber Muzzle Loader Wlth
Scope And Sling ~nd Cleaning
Kll $200 00 Alvin o Harohborg·
er 4789 Patrlol Ad Patriot, Ohio
In Cadmus c/o Oa'n J HerStt·
berger

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Main Street, on Rt 1241
Pomeroy Houra M T w 1o oo
a m to 8 00 p.m , Sunday I 00 10
8 00 p m 740·992·2528, ~usa
Moore owner

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Fumace, Heat Pumps &amp; Air Con·
dllloning Free Estimates I 11 You
Don't Call Us, We Both LOlli
740·446·6306, 1·1100-291·0098

11" DlrocTV Sllllllll Syatomo·
$69 00 purchase price wlttt one
month free programming Limited
time offer, call1-800·779-8194
25' Magnavox Color Console TV,
Works nice $80.00 Gibson Wind·
ow Air Conditioner usaa 220
Hook-up Worked good when tak·
en down and Stopped using In
July, $75 00. Sharp VCA·needs
repair $20 ,00 Call In evanlnga
(304)-675·1433
AMAZING
METABOLISM
Breakthroughlll Lose 10·200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Faat
Dramatic Results, 100% Natural,
Ooclor Recommended Free Sam·
P"• Call740-441·1982
Beautiful White Wedding Gown
With Sweetheart Neck Line, Bo·
dice Completely Studded In Se·
quance &amp; Pearls, Puffed Fingertip
Sleeves, In Sequin And Pearl
Train, Size 12, Separate Under·
sotrt Included, $900 Dress, Wilt
Soil For $250, 140-245-9248
Coffee Table, 2 End Tables, $90;
25• Floor Model TV , $30, 10
Spaod Bike $20, 740·368-887.6
DISHNETWORK 18' Mini Dish
Package Starting At Sl9 95, t·
888-1100-3346
Electric Scooters, Wheelchalra,
New And Used, Stairway El8't'&amp;·
1ors, Wheetchalr And Scooter
Lifts, Bowman s Homecare, 740.
4411-7283

Block. brick, sewer pipe•. wind·
ows, lintels, etc Claud&amp; Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121

560

Pets for Sale

1 yr old Mlnl.ture Oaushund.
S150 080 Good with children
(304)675-4989
-~ yoct&lt;atlols with cage. breeding

1boX $200. (304)875·7298

AKC Collie pup, sable &amp; while,
male, normal eyes, $300, 740·
896-1065
AKC Pomeranian, small black
malo PIIPP'I'. $350,740-696-1065.
AKC Pomeranian Throe Fomalqs
7 Months Old $175, One ,o
Weeks $300, Five 2 Weeks
$300, 740-388-8842
AKC Registered Labrador Pup·
pies, ChampiOn Bloodline, Proven
Hunting Stock, Born 1!o4/99,
Wormed, &amp; 151 Shots, MIF, Blacl&lt;,
Yellow, Chocolate, $200, 740·
84~88.

AKC Roglalered Aott Wallar Pup·
pl&amp;s, Famalaa, Champlonahtp
Bloodline, Excellent Tempermant
&amp; Oloposlllon, Sholl Up To Date,
$375, 740-245.5823
AKC Sholtlo puppies, sable &amp;
white, vet checked, champion
pedigree, $300 oach, 740·898·

1085

'

B.V. Bouthlklo Aquorlum
2008 Camden Av&amp;nJe
P-arkersburg.~ 26101
304-486-I 293
Puppies &amp; Kltteno
FuH nne or peta supplies
Golden Retriever AKC, Puppies,
ShOts, Wormed, Famate-$250 00
Male- $200 00 (740)·379·2!124 or
(740)·379-2961

Llvestoc:k

1 Rlglstered Ourocs Boar, 3
Cross Bred Sows For Sale, 740·
379-2370.
18·17 eleven month old ewe
lambs, Cordlre bread, 740·742·
1315
2 Year Relgatered Mare Brok•
Good, 740-379-2020

6 Year Old Quarter Gelding, Big
Strong Pretty, Good Roping " poet, Call After 9 P."!, 7401288-8748
Fresh &amp; Spring Holotel~ Hoflort,
Also AoglstOfed Bulla, 740·288·
2496
~

640

Hay

&amp; Grein

501).700 lbl OUIIIdt', $11, lnalde
11rst and second culling, $13, flrot
year new aeedlng clowr, Urnothy
&amp; orcflortl, $20, Ml1chen Rll , 740949-3059 oftor 4pm
For Salt Ml&lt;od Hayl $1.25 Per
Bale, Jackson, Ohio 740·288·
.29!19

Good Graaa Hay $1.75 Bolt, 740448-1104.

Large round bales of mixed hay
loodod on your truck, 740·985·
3925.
Round bales hay, straw, 1t 00 lb"
never wet, S2Q toad, anytlmo, 740992·2542 or 740-992·!5072
Ra;und Bales Of Hay For Mulch
Or Bedding, $5 Par Balo, 740·
245-5!508
Square Bal111 Of Good Green
Ml•od Hay $2.00 Each. 740,.462412.
..
Square Bales Of Hay For Sale,
•740·379·2639
STRAW For Sale· Wallis Farn\,
(304)675-40117
Top Quality Dairy Hay Second &amp;
Third Cui, Semi Load Only, 937·

686-2822.
TRANSPORTATI ON

710

Autot for .S ale

'88 Chryaler LeBaron~ good con·
dillon, standard Ssp, .a cyllncter
turbo wtnew engine, air, $2000
080, 740-992·5024
91 lincoln Towne car, PW, PS,
POL, Callolle, air bog, cloth In·
terlor. clean, good gas millage,
never been smoked In, reaton·
able priced, serious Inquiries ooty,
740-992·2358 af1er 4pm or leave
mef!88G8 anytime

Registered Golden Retriever Pupplas, Born 114199, Had Shots An~
Wormed, Asking $175, 740·245·
!1086

1988 Dodgo Oll)'lona, 2.5 4 Cylinder, EFI, 5 Speod $400, 740·
379-2758, 740-37if2135

570

t 988 Old a Cutfau 2 Doors, Auto,
Ao, Low Mileage, Good Condition,
$2,700, 74Q.446-4782

Muslc:al
Instruments

Clearance Sale Up To 40% Off
Hummingbird Music, Jackson, OH
740-288-5889
'

1988 Pontiac Lemons, Auto, Re·
built Englno, Now Tlroa, $1,000
080, 740-387·7362

Eplphone Las Paul Black Beauty
Electric Guitar; 485 Sound Kay·
board With Stand, Both Excellent
Coodltlonl740·2-7.

1989 Cavalier Z24 Whlto /Blue
lntartor, New Engine, Runa Great!
$1,800, 740·441-1824 Ltava
M11sage.

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

610

Farm Equipment

8500 IH Disc Chisel Plow, 9
Shank E•cellent Condition,
$3,000, 740-379-2895.
We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tractors In Stock Financing As
Low As 8 99•;. Fixed Rata On
Qualifying Tractors Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn, Your Local John
Deere Dealer Midway Between
Gallipolis And Rio Grande On
Jacksan Pike , 740·446·2412 Or
1·1100-594·1 1I I
Going Out Of Buslneas After 25
Years Hardware, Tractor Parts,
Chalnsaws, Trimmers, Shop
Toola Evervthlng Must Go Big
Discounts Siders Equipment
Compafl\1. (304)675-7421

- - --

Wanted Farm or Acreage to ren1
for 'hunting 100 to 500 acres
with timber and pa~ure preferred
Respond lo ~0 Bo• 223. Scon
Depot, WV 25526, or call
(304)757-5346

Automobile, Profeaslontt Patnt, ._
(Enomel) Selective Coloro $20
Galon 74Q.Slif9081 '

North

720 Truckl for Sale

• II 7 4

• ·,

Weal
•
•
I
•

t

1989 &lt;;hevy Suburtlan, Loadtd,
E•cellent COndition, $8,850, 740446-2532

•

South

I PUT MY FOLDtN• IN A COFFEE CAN
MONEY WHAR PAW_,_
UNDER TH'

t '

,

NEVER

'FIND IT

~OUI&gt;INI'S
IY T~AT

fASGINArtl&gt;
t"INTON
Tt41N6.

I

'
•l

'77 Jeop CJ7, Hard Top, 8cyV3
Spd. 31n lift with 33&gt;12 50x15
mud tires/aluminum wheats.
Sony CD player/200 win amp • • ,
10' MTX apks Bikini lop, half· • '
door $4200. (304)882·25331876· '
8863

78 Ford, Four WlleOI Drive. 52!50,
Good Condition, $4,500 May '
consider trade Day(3041875· • ,
:42:::30:::.::E:::va:::n::lng~(=304:.,::::)6:.:75-:.,48~53==--:- : 1
1966 Ford Van $1.200. Of Troda. : ,
(304)675-371 I
:

THE BORN LOSER

t987 Chavy .314 Ton 4&lt;4, 350 Engine, $3,200, 740-446--1355, Altar
5~M

0\lf.F, 1-'.0W

1988 Blazer 4WO, 6 cylinder au·
tornallc, AC, PS, PB, grea1 shape,
$3700, 740-992·7478 or 740-9492045

DO '(OJ

~11\YL~IP
OON..ITif.:J 7

I

f\~Vf.

t.l:)\1®11-11\r '(OJ~

CD-W~ 00 IDoiD\0

FOU...0\-.1 '100, ~I

• 1988 5-10 Blazer, V-6, 4&lt;4, High :
Mlloago, ·contact Mr George, At .
740 448 5345.
• ...

•

199t Forti Explorer 4x4 'NI, Now'
Englre, Standard. 740-4111-3942. ;
Motorcycllt

'92 Suzuki GSXR, 750 VInCI+
Hlnea exhaust, K4N fllttrl, I
steering atabiiiZir, new rear tlrtf
sprocket, tank bra. pollahed , ..
rrame/customct&gt;alnt, 2 helmets,.
$3700 (304)882·2S331875-8863

BIG NATE

AJJtO Pertl &amp;
Ac:ceesorlll

=-~~~~-;~~~:::

1993 Forti Tompo GL, 4 Drs, Rod,
50,800 Milos, AJC, Poworwlndowo.
Seals, Excell Cond • 13,800 00
740.446-4730
1994 Chev Astro Ext Mad Blue,
Excellent Condition, 4 Captain's
cnalrs, Front And Rear ~lr &amp;
Heat, Dutch Doors, PW Wlndow1
Locka, Mirrors. 130K Highway
Miles. Asking $7 650, 740·379·

ms

1995 Plymouth Voyager, 3 0 en·
gina, air, lilt, cruise, caasene, luggage rack, 54K miles, $9,500,
740-949·2709.
1998 Chrysler Segrlng Loaded!
$13,000
I 995 Joop Wrangler, 49,000
rlhlos. $10,000 (304)895-3747
88 Camaro, V·8 auto, sPoiler, T·
tapa bllsllver ground eflecta,
sharp aoklng $4150, 740·742·
3114
BUICK 1990 Buick LeSabre
31,000 actual mil es New
Brldgestone Tires Garage Cap
(304)773·5186

North

3NT

5 Seaeon-endlng

hurricane
37 - de Janeiro

boakatbell
tournament
6 Hall I ICOrl
7 Causes of

IHieward

11 Biblical
prophet
12 Moot llko the
Throe Sloogee

East

All pass

,I•.,
group
"'
21 Hard to
meno)ll
22 Rubs out
23 Hldeoua giant , '
•
24 Slllate, and
'
lhenaome
•'
25 Rod plgmanl ' '
27 The two
together
2S ApprOlll' '
motely
29 Flrat-round

20 Athletic

a tournament

Counting the
declarer

,..

B'&lt;

&amp;'AAC
nJ!•

P~RENTAL

.r

31 Lolli one'o

lootln!l

33 Expertenced

41 Energy unlta
42Newaman
Koppel

43 ActorNovelle
44 Lorrl role

46 "-It
Ramanllc?"
47 MelodY
48 Actor Sharll

SOMETIMES f LIE AWAKE AT NIGHT, AND I
A5K, ''IS LIFE A MULTIPLE Ci-lOIC~ TEST OR
IS IT A TRUE OR FALSE TEST? '

TJ.!E:N A VOICE COMES TO ME OliT OF TI4E
DARK, AND SA'fS, ''WE HATE TO TELL \"Oll11 THIS,
BUT LIFE IS A Ti-lOUSAND WORD ESS~I(

;
•'
: •

by Luis Campos

PCGWDGXD

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z'wx

XNMCDX

D Z W D

CTAGK,

NWD

R MW RZ

C:GDTCTSP

TSBAEGSRG

NAWKGC

QHGC

Z WI . '

•

·y M C I W S .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "The making of a motion plclure Is an endless
conlen11on ollawdry egos. • - Raymond Chandler
,

'::~:~' S(C~~lA-"t.~s·
...,;.,;;;;;,;;;,._,;,.,...,;; lollltol loy CLAY I. POllAN

WOII
lA fiii

,.' "
'

A Roarrange ,lollora ol the
~four ocramblod ~~
IDw to form lour wOido

....

SLIPHO

' ,a

I

.. v'

I I r I" I I
1-, 1 I'
'I
ES E GE

·

~P-~AN~C~O~I~:',
·
5
·

·

,,...-o_I_s___E. . B_E
. ___
I

.

After a big spree al the mallI
the husband muttered, "They
came, they saw, they------&lt;
A

Compla1e rho chuckle quoted
by ftll•ng In the mtulng words
you develop from step No. 3 below

. V

SUNSHINE

MARCHal

..

Walla Cleaned. Your Painted
WAlls And CeHingo Will Look Uko
Now Alter Clesnlng With Exclu·
siva Machine Cleaning Syatem.
Reasonable All Work Guar·
anteedl Free Elllmalesl Von·
SchradarTM Associa te, CiearJy
Clean, 304-1175-4040

640

Elec:trlc:al and
Refrlgeretlon -

Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repairs Master Licenaed electrician Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 304-675·
1786

I

same goal.
CANCER (June

21-luly

22)

Rc\\,ud -. ure m the offing today for
good r.;c t ' 1cc you perfonn at work.
Howe\cr your !reatest sausfact10n
wt11 come lrom situorioM where
your pnmory objective IS to help
som~mc

you love .

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) You won 'I
need to request ravors today, because
fr~cnd '
hkcly offer lo help you as

"•II

they see fil Be prepared lo gractous·
ly accept whatexer ts offered.
VIRGO ~ug 23·S~JII....22) ~cep
your eyes focused on the end "'suits
you deSt"' 10 ach1cve today, because
you are now m a favorable lrend for
finalizing mauen lhal are of great
consequence 10 you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23)

,

The"'''

.,,
"

'

.

,,v

. .'

WATERPROOFING
,·
UncondiUonaJ lifetime guarantH. '~- c;
Local references furnl1h1Cf. Eatablshld 1111'5, cal 2• Hra (740) •
448·0870, 1-800·287.0578 Rog. : •

Livingston•• B11ement WalerProoflng, all basement repairs
dont, free eatlmatea, lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job e"perl·
.... 3011H 3117.

.:...
·"

1have always gone overboard 1n everything I dtd My
mom told me that a desert can be formed by too much

IMONDAY

The"'''

1

"

"

,I

\

'

'

BASEII!IIT

C&amp;C Genera( Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpentry, dool'l, windows. baths,
mobile hOme repair and' more For
free estimate call Chtt, 740.992·
6323

'

'

UTRZWGA

SCJtAM.I.ItS ANSWERS

..

Tuesday, Man:h 9. 1999
In the year ahead. advancement in
your chosen field of endeavor is very
promising You may be asked to take
on more responsibilities. However,
you'll receive increased compensa·
110n for lhe addlllonal worlc
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20)
Don ' I be afratd logo after ¥&gt;methmg
big loday. You are now m a good
achievement cycle, but it's tmperative
to first concentrate on meanmgful
objectives Try1 0g lo patch up a broken romance? The Astro-Graph
Matclunaker can help you understand
whal lo do lo make lhe relalionshtp
work Mwl $2.7~ lo Ma1chmalccr, c/o
1hts newspaper, IW Box 17~8. Mllr·
ray Hill Slalion, New York. NY
10156.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Laytng out a a!JOll•blueprintwill produce
positive "'suh•, so develop plans
loday that afTect not only the imtne·
d1ate, bul whal you lhink will be
1mportan1 down lhe road.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)
Strong, realistic destres can promote

• r

•I'

Shop lhe clossffied sec110r1.

Appliance Parts And Service All
Na'!le' Branda Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag , 740·448·
7795

.. '

MB

Unhurt · Oas1s - Heron - Ensfgn- SUNSHINE

enthusiasm and postt1ve results, so
g1ve full expression to your highest
asp1raltons today, espectally lhose
that have marenal overtones
GEMINI (May 21-lune 20) When
at comes to situation~ that call for
leamwork or partnership arrange·
ments, you could be exl,mely lucky
1oday
st"'nglh tn numbers so
long as you're all working towatd the

''

" e

Don '1gel Slung by high pnm r

ASTRO-ORAPH

'

•

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
W IN THESE SQUARES

Campert &amp;

erswata~ng

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Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are crea!ed from quotatkms by famous people, pas1 and present
Each 18tter In the cipher !!lands for another Today'.s due U 8qual$ M

•

ROBOTMAN

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•

MotorHom11

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50 Born
52 Puppy nolu
•'- ' I
53 Pod
vegetable

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PEANUTS

.

. .'

38
fr.:'Jlnd
40 Pennleo

7

•• •
•

1989 Ford Thunderbird, Powtr Horntt 8tarllg~t &amp; Campllght
Trallars &amp; Tent Tralltrl,
Ste•rlng, Brakes &amp; Wlndowa, . 'Tiavel
SaleJ &amp; Service, We Also Carry
Crulae Control, CD Player, R•d Truck Accessories &amp; All Your
With Bra In Front Mutt So\1
Hllch Netdll D&amp;L Family RV
$3,500, 740-258-6800
•
Ganlar, 740 148 0800
1990 Buick Rogal G S , 83,000
SE RVICES
Mills $4,300 00 740-441·1318

1991 Cadillac Seville 4 door ae·
dan, loaded with accessorlea,
great gaa mileage ear pl'lone,
304-1175-2722

8 Wlng-ehaped
9 Rockand-

Hayward movie

.w•'

-

,

1989 Pontiac Flreblrd, Excellent
CondiiOn, $4,000, 740-245-5797.

1991 Blue Ford Probe, Air,
Pioneer Stereo Automatic,
150,000 Hwy Milos, Aoklng
$2,900,740-441.0198

13 Meo - ·tuno
18 Shakeopearo

dlotreoa

35 DnllodM

Alrlcen lly
36 Center o1 the

Last week, we leaked at the most
common defenSive sognahng sttua·
!tons Yet there IS more lo cover
Today 's conundrum Should you give
count m a suol a11acked by declarer?
, Last Wednesday, we found that the
answer ts m lhe affirmative tf dummy lias a semtsohd sun, so partner
knows when 10 take his ace (when
declarer plays h1s fmal card m that
sutt) Yel usually the answer ts m the
negattve, you wtll help only declar·
er
I first v.soted the Umted States m
1971, to play bndge m New York and
Chtcago, !hen to sell oce cream m
Omaha! Dunng the Summer Natton·
als m lhe Wmdy Ctty, lht s deal
arose.
•
Afler a speedy auclion to three no·
""''
trump, my partner, Cen Evans, led
f'.O\-Jf.IJER, l Tl-\1 I-lK. \1-\e-&lt; ~
h1 s' fourth-h1ghes1 spade, and we
t-'0\IV~\W
~ ~ r.::E
raptdly raked m lhe first four lncks
fi\OKBID C:.Uii:.IO:&gt;IIY I Evans ext ted wnh a heart
As you can see, ~eclarer needed
four club mcks A pnon, 1he best percentage play 1s to cash the 1hree top
honors , expecung the Jack to drop ,
fine ssmg on lhe lhtrd round •s worse
Thts Sou1h knew 1ha1 However,
when he cashed the club ace and fol·
lowed wnh the club lhree to dummy's
kmg, I natvely echoed, droppmg lhe
seven before the 1wo (My partner
sens1bl:,' played four, e1ght) When
~
I'IIE
the lhtrd round cam e o ff the dummy
~GOT TO
START
I conlnbuted the mne. declarer
£t
I' READtN~ and
asked
my partner about our stgn ahng
THO~E
methods
PERMISSION
Now. 1h1s IS a bluff and double·
fORtiS I:IORE bluff posmon, but Soulh dectded a
C~REFULLY
19-year-old wouldn't be so under·
,--::-tJ"",
handed
(Or else he nouced the per·
0
0
sptratoon lloodmg from my brow)
Anyway, he finessed the 10

" IJ

.,
,,'

Budget Priced Tranamlsslona
and Engines All Types, Accaaa
To Over 10,000 Transmlulona,
740-245-11877

Improvements

4 Susan

34 The beMrl Fot

LliON".

Forti AlngOf c.,.,. Top, $50.00. •
Caii74H82.- Afttr 5 00 PM.

-----'

32 Tuty

2 Slout olrlng

I

1998 Polaris Sport, ATV 583
mllea $4,800 (304)895; 38081
895-3025

1980 Hotlda)' Rambler Gamper 32
Fl. E&lt;ool"nt COndition, With Ntw
Furnaoo, $5,000, 740 418 111183.

1990 f.
outh Voyager, 3.0 En·
glne, Air, It, Cruise. New Tires,
Asldng Sl,, '. 740-367-7480.

3 Olharwlu

By Phillip Alder

I

Home

30Col-

rree rklea, In

o

J

'810 '-

18-ahooped
molding

Opening lead: • 2

WILL

NISSAN Hard to find, 1994 Nil- '
aan King Cab. Automatic, Air, : ~
AMIFM Cassone Powar Mirror.
NawTinll81,000rnltoa

790,

Pass

BETTER'N THAT II

1996 Cili'Jy 5-10 Shortbod Stan- • ~
card . 31,500 miles se,eoo
•
(304)895-38081895-3025.
~

One Of The Areu Large~t Se·
Jectlono Of Late Modol Au1o
Parta Lata Model Motors, Transmlulona, Body &amp; Suapenslon
Parts Best Prices In Tho Region
On After Marko! Shoot Metal,
Fendart, Hood&amp; Doors, Wlndshlolda, Radiators, A C Condon·
oora, Over 100 Cars In Laat 30
Days For Parts, Over 25 Late
Model Repalrablea, Powerllne
Auto Syatomo, 740·S32·0139 Or
U.S. Toll FrH 80D-48l!-1!280 Kltta
till, Ohio

West

I NT

•
1992 Ford Ranger, XLT, V·8, " ;
Auto, AC, Very Well Maintained, -I ,
Good Condlllonl Asking $4,500, •
740-368-8293.

760

DOWN

23 Yellow pigment
28 Above, to
Byron
27 Cut ahort

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

1992 Calcote V.fl, Automotlc, AC,
Concllllon, $4,995; 198e •
ChoV)I Plck·Up, V·8, 80,000
Milos, $1,795. Gook Mol&lt;lrl, 740- • ,

740

• J 9 1 2

• K1 2

~;xceuont

&amp; 4-WDs

• A 8 3

' •J964
• Q 10

ng

58 llomtlnllcllowlt'
57 ··- Nolter"

11811erero

• A Q 10 3

1992 Dodge Dakola Sport 4X4,
$5,1500 (304}1175-6893

V1n1

commune

20 Servile

South
• Q 10 5
• K Q3

1988 Fo«f F·150, 8 ely , atlo, PS, • •
PB, auto, runs, looka good, $2800,
740-247-42!12.

t 989 Chrysler 5th Avenut New
Yorker 318 Motor Top condition
(304)675-11132.

1990 Ford Mustang GT &amp;.0, 5
Speed, $3,500, 74D-843-G832, AI·
tor 5 P.!l

K J 8 2
10 8 1
J 9 6 5
8 4

18-landl

O.rd-

• K8 5
Eaal

1988 00dge Oekota 2 WD' Pick·
UP, Sllndlrl!TIInamllllon, 7&lt;40·
245-8172.

730

-Goo

51 P1aater
Perlo
lngtwdlent
54 Speckled
55 Brown llklment

17 Maneged
1t Author

• A 8 4 3

f887 8 ·10 ChOYY, 81,000 ntlloo,
1886 Do&lt;tao Omnl, ea,ooo mlln,

1982 F150 Cuatom, S4395 or
trade tor Chevy Qr GMC van of
equal vaklo, 740-142·7805. , •

OS,OS.IIt

• A 52

1885 GMC 7,000 Topklek, 3208 -.
cat engine, 5 ~ wllh 22' van
,bO!fy, side door, gpod tlrtl, tool· •
boK, spare tire, very clean truck. , •
740-247·3844.
'

7~.

41Tennl8;yer

...,orde

~103.

1NCHIIIIO CARS FROM $100
Pollee Impounds, And Tax
Ropo's For .Liotlngo Call 1·800·
319-3323 Ext. 4420.

M I W Round Baler Dealer for
this area Fixed chamber, auto
wrap, no belts solid bar type 3
For sale· Rod Stewart tickets on yr warranty on Bars &amp; Bearings,
third &amp; fOurth row, call after 7pm, !50%, lass moving parts. 4X4
7001 $9,900
4X5 10001
1
740-949 3315
$12,000 Excellent Slleage Bal·
For Sola Log Cabin, Khchan TV er Check these prices agalnat
Room, Bedroom, Bathroom, Large your popular Belt Balers, NH
Closet Front Porch New Floor Vermeer. JO, Henton Ke'elers
Covering Throughout, Cherry Serwlce Center, St Rt 87, Pt
Cabinets, Skylight, Window Treat· Ploasent &amp; Ripley Ad (304)896·
menta Electric Air Condition And 3874
Heat , Ready To Occupy, .Move
To Your Location Phone 740· New 5010. 6010 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7 75% Fixed
448-4254
Rate John Deere Credit Financing
Available New 4000 Ser1ea Com·
PRIMERSTAR IDIRECTT.V In· pacta ln Stock New John Deere
credible Offer For Both Call Trlcia
AI I · 877·223·2688 For All Tho MoCoa And Round Baiera 0% •
12 Mos , 175%24 Mo , 35%38
Speclalll
Moo , 4 5% ·48 Mos 5 5% ·60
Mo Used Hay Equipment As LOw
Grubb's PlanO· tuning &amp; repairs As 3 9% Carmichael's Farm &amp;
.ProblamaT Need Tuned? Call lhe Lawn. Midway Belween GaiUilOIIs
plano Of 7~25
And Rio Grande On Jackson
Pike, 740·•48·2412, Or 1·800·
JET
59o&amp;-1 111
AERATION MOT"ORS
Repaired. Now &amp; RebUilt In Stoel&lt; Used J,..lft Truck Forks For Sale,
Call Ron Evans, H~OO·W·9528
Various Sizes $100 ·$125, Per
Sot, 740-379·2757

Klndlewood llr,.place Insert glaaa
door blower and ash pan . beat
Olfor 740-843-5350

630

Male Bo:.:er pup: 4 months old,
asking $100. 740·742·2!!25

For Sale Four Lolt In Memorial
Gardens (740)-448·3849

Kenm ore Automatic Washer
Worko Go&lt;RI S85 oo ,740-448
9441

We Havo A Few 1998 Model
Jonn Dura Lawn Tractora Ltfl.
Robotes Up To $300 Thru Mirth
1. Free Delivery Compare Our
Prlcos. We Aloo Now Have All
Tho 1899 Models In Slocl&lt;. Now
Your Deater For Dixie Chopper
Commercial And Residential Zero
Turn Mowars. Buah Hog Tll!tra,
Finish Mowtrl, Cutltrs. And
Loadera Carmlchael'a Farm &amp;
Llwn, Inc., Local Jo_tm Deere
Cooler. Midway Bot-n Oalile&gt;olls And Rio Grande On Jacklon
Pike 740·446·2412 Or 1·800·
594-1111

-?·

12 Fanatic
14 Faka
15 Hlltorlt:el

a strong possob1lhy that wnhout even
trying, you could be endowed with
extra charismallC mag1c today Every
place you go, lhe party begtns when
you make your entrance
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22) Be
alertloday for finanotal opportumucs
lhrough friends Wtlh whom y.ou have
good rapport. They'"' lhe ones who
could be instrumental in helping you
enhance yoOr bank account
SAGilTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) There could be a sudden allcvta·
Uon of condtltons thai have hampered
your progress In promotmg your
self-inle,.,sls m the past Be "'ady lo
move when you see lhc open wm~

a

dow.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 Jan 19)
Although you may not learn of it
today, persons who are fond of you
and aware of whar you're trying 10 do
could be msrrumenralm help1ng you
further your cause
~
AQUARIUS (Jan _2!l:Feb 1.9.) _
Ideas you m•ght have calegonzed as
bemg unaUatnabl~ could Oash
through your mmd loday, but don "I be
so qu1ck 10 d1scoun1 them Sci your
sighls higher, for they may be trytng
to tell ydu something
•

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

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Monday, March 8, 1999 :

..

--------------------------~-~------------------------------------------~
. ----------------------~.--------------------~

Experts tackle _outbreak of

once~rare

disease in midwest :j

Although Bil Mar is the only plant.to have an outbreak with illnesses traced
Now the sudde.n rise in recalls ~ expertS baffled.
•
~
AP Farm Writer
to i~ products, several others across the t;ountry have had to recall products
"We have explored )ll'hether or not thete might be a new strain or ne"1
WASHINGTON - Lisa Lee, pregnant with twins, had less than five after tests detected listeria.
characteristics in listeria. that's causina it to be more difficult to· control.''\
months left before the due date when she came down with what seemed to • Since September, there have been nine known recalls due to listeria, most· Crawford said. So far, no evidence has been fpl!nd to support that t~ory. ~
be the flu. She was rushed to the hospital last month and .was cured but lost ly from deli meats and hot dogs. One recall wtis for milk.
· Experts also found no evidence that a new scientific-based food inspec~
both babies in the process.
It's an increase from the corresponding penod a year earlier when the Agri- tion program, USDA's Hazard Analysis imd Critical Control Point, has failed;~
Doctors now say the prospective mother from Columbus. Ohio, was struck culture Department recorded just one listeria-related recalL And that recall If anything, they argue, HACCP's inspeetions, which monitor things like tern··
by listeriosis, a disease caused by the bacteria Listeria monocytogenes, a food· was at the end of 1997, the only recall of that year.
perature in th~sing sy,stem, have helped.
~
borne pathogen often found in hot dogs. luncheon meats, soft cheese. even
" It certai nly seems like it's on tho rise," said Dr. Robert B. Gravani, pro·
So, why i . ts ia suddenly popping up?
.
. ~
milk.
fessor of food science at Cornell Univer~ity. He said experts are trying to
"We're sort of eft with no real answer," Crawford satd.
.
~·
Lee's once-rare disease has received tremendous' attention in recent determine whether the incidents are due to better reporting or whether the
For now, he and other experts, remind people to cook hot dogs and eat'
months, especially since a massive recall in December of possibly tainted . listeria really is appeari ng more frequently. .
.
deli meats before the sell-by date. They also say consumers should be care..,
food from a Michigan plant.
Better testing and reporting is the more likely reason. said Margaret Glavin, 'ful not to reheat leftovers more than once. .
~
Bil Mar Foods Co., a meat processor owned by Sara Lee in Zeeland, Mich., associate administrator for USDA's food safety and inspection service. "We
Pregnant women, about 20 times more likely than other healthy adults tct
recalled 15 million Jiounds of hot dogs and cold cuts after a rare strai n of don 't see an uptrend in the number of positives we 're finding," she said.
get listeriosis, should be p'lrticularly careful to never eat raw meat or under~
the listeria bac teria was found in both opened and unopened packages.
· Listeria-was a real problem for the United States in the mid-1.980s, said cooked eggs or food, the USDA recommends. They also should avoid sofi'
The same strain, pattern E. has been linked to 12 adult deaths and fiv.: Dr. Lester Crawford, director ()f Georgetown University's Center for Food cheeses, such as feta or Brie, and avoid food from deli counters. Any lunch':.
miscarriages among 82 illnesses in 19 states.
'
and Nutrition Policy, but the government declared zero tolerance for the ·. meat or hot dogs should be thoroughly heated.
~
Aside from causing stillbirths and miscarriages, listeriosis also can.cause pathogen. Listeria levels dropped sharply, Crawford said.
For Lisa Lee, lt was a risk she says she never knew existed. Luncheo'!'
se ri ous and sometimes fatal infections in people with weakened immune sys·
. " By 1994, the CDC (Centers for Disease .Control) was proclaiming that meat in her has been turned over to the local health department for testmg.
tems: infants, the elderly or patients with chronic.dJSeases, HJV infection or thiS was onl' of the most successful regulatory actions in U.S. history," CrawHer advice for other pregnant women is "ask more questions, be mar&lt;::
ford said.
·
undergoing cancer chemotherapy.
·
infonned."
·
"'
By JANELLE CARTER

Unhappy rail shippers press for more federal oversight ~
By ANJCK JESDANUN
Associated Press Writer
· WASHINGTON- Rail shippers
unhappy with service and prices are
seeki ng more powers for federal rail
regulators despite widespread agree·
ment that deregulation two decades
ago has been a blessing for once·
bankrupt railroads.
Rail companies are now profitable
and have become the torgets of high·
stakes takeover bids on Wall Street.
Gone are the days of standi ng derail·
ments, when trains buckled under
poorly maintained track s even while
standing stilL
Dcspile the recent rail renai ssance, however, many coal, chemical,
grain and other high-volume shippers
left without compet iLive options want
to change the regulatory landscape to
ultimately get lower prices and better sen"ice.
A recent se rvi ce meltdown ar

Union Pacific Railroad gave impetus
to the drive , Shippers and lawmakers
are now closely watching the
impending split of P.hiladelphia·
based Conrail Inc., now scheduled for
June I .
"For pure railroad shippers served
by just one railroad, we are left at the
mercy of the rai lroad or of the (reg·
ulatory) agency," said Ed Emmell,
president of the shippers group
National Industrial Transportation
league. "Getting relief could take
years or hundreds of thousands of
dollars in legal fees."
Remedies sought before Congress
include requiring the Surface Trans·
portation Board to give greater
weight to increasing competi.tion in
approving mergers or settling price
disputes, two of the few areas that
remain under the government's jurisdiction since a 1980 law lifted most
oversight.
'

Shippers say they are trying to foster more 1competition among rail·
roads, whtle the rail companies fear
the move would undo many of the
·gains that came with deregulation.
" What they want is the rates to
come down , ·and when rates come
down, we have less money to put into
the system," said Mark G. Aron,
executive 'ice president of CSX
Corp., which will take over about half
of Conrail's routes.
He said regulators would wind up
meddling again with basic rail operations in deciding such questions as
who would get priority if railroads are
forced to share tracks, a common
method now used to ensure competitior\ in some areas.
The chairman of the House Trans·
portation Committee, Rep. Bud Shuster, R-Pa., is vehemently opposed to
any increased reg ulation, making the
bid a difficult one for shippers.
•
.

Tuesday

:

' .

Nevertheless, railroads are taking CSX and Norfolk Southern Corp. to Besides being concerned about\
the threat seriously.and have-stepped buy'Conrail for $10 billion, carve up potential operational problems, crit·~
up their lobbying. More than 150 its routes and restore competition in ics say the Conrail restructuring wil~
labor and management representa· many marl&lt;ets.
leave much of New England an~
ltves were dispatched to Capitol Hill
But later that _year, Union Pacific New York City without head-to-hea~
to fight the plan Wednesday, a day ran into.gridlock as it tried to absorb rail competitio-n. Jtep. Jerrold Nadler"
after the Senate Commerce rail sub- · routes from its 1996 merger with D-N.Y., plans to push his own fix. in;
committee opened hearings on the Southern Pacific Rail Corp. Angry the next few months.
;
issue. That panel's chairwoman, Sen. shippers got the ear of Congress and,
Congressional auditors recently ·
Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas; although the Union Pacific problems concluded that limited competition iri(
strongly supports 'the changes.
have subsided, decided to continue . certain areas of the country afte~ '!{.
Prior to deregulation, rail compa· pressing lor more competition.
. senes of rat I mergers has lead shtp
nie s needed approval to change
, "We need a rail industry that is pers to believe they are footing~
prices, shut down unprofitable routes responsive to the needs .of its cus· unreasonable costs from railroads. ~
and make other operational decisions. tamers. and that means a raii indusTwo rail giants in the East and twq,
Several rail companies collapsed, try that is n'ot empowered to exploit .in the West will remain following th~
forcing Congress to create Conrail as major portions of its customer base Conrail breakup. compared wtth
a sanctioned monopoly in 1976 out of by exercising monopoly market pow· about 40 large railroads . nationwide'
six bankrupt northeast freight lines. er," said William E. Harvey, global · when the industry was deregulated. ;.
Railroads since then have been logistics development manager at · Railroads insist that shippers - ·
able to make the necessary· invest· Houston-based Lyondell Petrochem· even those served by only one com&gt;
ments in tracks and other -infrastruc- ·ical co·.
pany- already get a good deal, with .
lure to offer better service at lower
Several lawmakers are jointng the average rates having come down 5S
prices. Conrail became profitable drive as the Conrail split approaches. percent since 1981.
'
a~ain . leadin~ to a I997 decision by
·
"Shippers have an awful lot oT

tomorrow; Cloudy '
!-Ugh: ~i Low: 208

release. '

Starring Tom Cruise and Nicole
'Kidman , " Eyes Wide Shut" had
been shrouded in the secrecy ihat
attended all of Kubrick 's later
movies. " He was like family to us,
and we arc in shock and devastated·,"
Cruise and Kidman said in a statement through their publicist.

Hertfordshire police said Kubrick
was pronounced dead Sunday at his
rural estate, Childwickbury Manor,
25 miles northwest of London. The
family said no further information
would be released.
Born in New York City, Kubrick
had been based in England since the
early 1960s. He used studios and
locations in Britain to duplicate Vietand outer space.
In 1997, he talked of his inspira·
tion when he 'accepted the Directors
Guild of America's highest honor, the
D.W. Griffith award.
" Anyone who has everbeeri privileged to direct a film also knows
that, although it can be like trying to
write 'War and Peace ' in a bumper
car in an amusement park, when you
finally get it right, there are not many

""'!'

Middleport mayor'~ court
Sandy lannarelli , president of
Middleport Village Council, conducted mayor's court in the absence
of Mayor Dewey Horton on Thurs·
day.
·
·'
Fined were: Christopher Beckeu.
Syracuse, $100 and costs, open con·
tainer; $100, underage consumption,
$100, consuming alcohol in a motor
vehicle; Angela M. McKinney,
Mason, W.Va .. $25 and costs, expired
.· tags, $25, no insurance, $25, no seat
belt; Harold Armstrong, Middleport,
$25 and costs, public intoxication;
Mindy Patterson, Middleport, $100
, and costs, possession of dru g
parephcrnalia. $100, possess ion of a
controlled substance; Andrea Neutzling, Pomeroy, $15 and costs, speed;
lisa M Craycraft, Pomeroy, $25 and
c9s1s, running stop sign; Shannon
Chapman, Middlcport, $·)00 and
costs, disorderly by intoxication,
$200, criminal mischief, $100, under·
age consumption, $100, ope n co ntainer; Ricky A Matheney, Jr., Yin·
ton , $100 and costs, open container
in a motor vehicle ; Shawnita John·
son, Pnmeroy, $100 and costs, falsi·
fication; Martin L Woodard IV,
Po meroy. $25 and costs , running a
red light. $25. no msurance; Jamie
Lcllmgwe ll. Cheshire, $200 and
costs. driving under suspension; To4d

May s, Pomeroy, $\00 and costs.
trespassing; James D. Priddy. Rutland, $100 and costs, contempt.
Forfeiting bonds were : Sheila J.
Cash, Rave nswood. W.Va .. $47,
speed; Karrcl Lemley, Pomeroy, $60.
speed ; David A. Fife, Reedsville,
$46, speed; Chris S. Laj,llbert. Rut- ·
land, $47. speed; Roy L. Siders , Ga!lipolis, $47, speed; Patricia • A.
Hodges, Poi nt Pleasant, W.Va., $ 150,
co nsuming alcohol in a mo10r ve hicle; Cindy M. Pickens, Pomeroy.
$150, co nsum ing alcohol in a motor
vehic le; Bridget D. Ritchie, Racine.
$60, running stop sign; Catherine

joys in life that can equal the. feel·
in g." Kubrick said .
Over a career spanning four
decades, Kubrick worked infre·
quently and was regarded as a mav. crick talent- to some, a genius.
"He copied no one, while all. of
use were scrambling to imitate him,"
director Steven Spielberg said. ·
War was one of Kub(ick 's great
themes, starting with his first feature,
"Fear and Desire" (·1953), and again
in "Paths of Glory" (1957). The hor·
rors of nuclear war were turned into"
a dark satire in "Dr. Strangelove: or,
How I Learned To Stop Won-Ying and
Love the Bomb". (l964), and Viet·
nam was the setting fo&lt; "Full Metal
Jacket."
·
. Kubrick moved freely between
genres- from a tale of sexual obsession with " Lolita" in 1962, based on
the Vladimir Nabokov novel, to a
nightmarish vision of the future in "A
Clockwork Orange."
Kubrick was a fierce perfectionist
who wouldn 't do one take if he could
do 100. "He gives new meaning to
the word 'meticulous,"' Jack Nicholson said after working with Kubrick

Gibbs, Hartford, W.Va., $47, speed;
Barbara Sue Miller, Hartford, W.Va.,
$60, running stop sign; Steven M.
Sneyers, Columbus, $47, speed; Walter Arnold, Pomeroy, $47, speed;
Timothy B. Marshall, Chillicothe,
$60, running stop sign; Stephanie in .. The Shining."
Mann, Hub~ r Heights, $50, speed.
Common to all Kubrick's work

breakdown with cdnvulsive effects,"
wrote The .Evening Standard filin
critic Alexander Walker, author of a
Kubrick biography.
Kubrick, born July 26, 1928, was
hir~d . by Look ,magazine as a photographer when he was 17. In his
spare time, be learned·fi)m by watch·
ing movies at the J11useum of Modern Art.
_

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' A UTHANKS fOR

can use truckers. We also compete
with barge and pipeline. It's absurd to
talk about the captive. shipper.'.' f'..
Hutchison said she recogniz'e4
that the efforts to expand the regula·
tory board's power .were con\fover:
sial, ''but I think we will have a com·
promise that frees lhe shippers more
and also maintains the ability of the
railroads to be able to invesi." · ·

·•

Jon &amp; Carolyn Jacobs

Marriage licenses
The following co uples wer.e
issued marriage li censes recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck: Richard Allen
Peyton Jr.. 26, and Jessica Vena
Frederic k, 20, both of Pomeroy;.lnd
Mi chael Archer Carl. 42, and Brenda Joyce Walker, both of Ripley,
W.Va.

was a cool. icy brilliance that some
found too emotionally detached, even
as others hailed the director's visual
fl air. In " Barry Lyndon;• (1975),
based on·the 19th century Thackeray
novel, Kubrick insisted l)n sh&lt;;&gt;oting
by candlelight.
" His filmS warn us we are riseri
apes, not fallen angels. creatures
whose proud rationality suffers

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'ihe Daily Sentinel
Reminds p to support p1local bNSillesseslt!

tt'o PMote Your Busbtess ·· ·
9n 'the Small~usiness Directorg·
eau Dave Harris or· WUHamson at 992•2155
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Sports
Eastern Llidy
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Hometown Newspaper

Middl eport • Pomero y, Ohio

voltmw 49 Numbe r 213

S tng le Copy· 3~ Cents

·[Childs returns to ·us.·Route: 33 fight

ISy BRIAN J. REED.
·hntll:lel NM¥8 Staff

to Darwin. That section of U:S. Route 33 was promised

,

by Gov. James ·Rhodes, wilh whom Oliids said he
: · A veteran of the fight for U.S. Route 33 ·win rejoin worked closely.'
Now, Childs is ready to rejoin the fight for lhe com.the crusade, 35 years after he participated in a wagon
!rain to promote the highway project.
pleti~n of lhe roadway ki'Aihens, even if it means taking
: Bill Childs of Middleport met with the Meigs C:Oun· on the Athens-based CASH' group .which opposes the
ty Com111issioners during their regular meeting on Mon- .conslruCtio~ of lhe roadway,
!lay afternoon to Yoice !tis support of lhe commissioners'
"There a,e people trying to oppose this," Olilcls satd.
efforts in encouraging fuqding for a new section of U.S. "I can't im~gine who they are."
.
Route 33 frQnt Athens to Darwin.
.·
·
CASH !Citizens Against Superfluous Hiahways)
Childs r«aaled his lrip to Columbus 'aboard a horse· poses a senous threat to the completion of the highway,
- ~wn wagon wilh Pomeroy Attorney Fred W. Cro\!'. Jr.,
and the commissioners have begun a letter-writing and
Pharmacist Wayne Swisher, an~ Fred Leiflleit, in Apiil, petj~ion campaign to show local support of the road,
1964. The trip was made at a time when President Lyn- which is seen as a ncc;essity to economi~ development. '
!lon Johnson declared Ohio a part of lhe Appalachian
Otilds said lhat Meigs County is in a familiar situaregion, releasi~g signffi1=ant fu~ for highway improve- lion. II is not 1\le first ·time lhat funding fo~ the project .
lllents, an!l a time wheri local b~stness leaders w~re urg- lias been pro!"ised an~ then taken a~ay. .
lng the support of a slate bond tssue for road projects.
"I'm afrud we're m the same Situation that we've
Olilds remembered wbrking closely with Crow and been in a do?-Cn times," Childs said. "The money has
Bernard Full&gt;; on selling the roadway as 1ut important been there .time and time again, and time~ time again,
part of economic development, and recalled lhe cold, it's been taken away. It's time for them to stop-stealing
rainy morning when the men departed in the wagon the money away from Soulheastern OHio."
train, and their visits in Athens and·logan,According to · . &lt;;hilda submitted a letter to the commissioners, which
thilds, tl!e only result of lhe trip was tbe completion of will alSO&lt; be sent to the Athens County Commissioners
~ut. six mileS of four l111e highway from Rocksprings . and the Ohip Department of Transportation, and pledged

to meet wilh state offici~s in Ohio .
and West Virginia, if'necessary to
ensure thai the project is completed.
"I feel fired up about this. I'm
ready to go back to work and gel it
done. I want to see the three of you
cut that ribbon," Olild said.
In other business, the commissioners met with Mike Lonchar, an
arc~itect who worked on the design .
of the Jackson Cwnty Correctional
Facility that reccndy opened. .
··,,
The 'commissioners ~ planning
to seek stale and . federal grant
money for the construction of a new
- 8111
.
.
county jail her~, and Lonchar dis- ~-:.::~::::::= ~n:oo::.:Jlnet Howard!~~=~":=:
cussed the .d~tBI! n~ds for a new day that ha will r.joln tha light for the highWay coniiiJUctlon proJect
·
county faethty suJitlar to Jackson
. . . ,
.
:
County's.
.
The state has made $26 mtlhon avatlable for local.
Acoording to 'Lonchar, the commissioners will be jails, and requires a 10 percent match from local gov-:
hard pressed to meet the upcoming March 15 deadline · ernments.
. . . .. :
for the grant application, because a series of studies and . Pat Holt_er of the Ch~sl~r-Shade H!stoncal As;soc:ta· :
supporting documention must be completed before the !ton met wtth the commtssloners to dtscuss ~ntmutng .
application is filed, and such documents require exten- tm~rovemenl!i at the old ~unty courtho~se m Ches~r, :
sive planning. .
whtch has been the subJect of extensive restoratton:

Gran.ge supports ·U.S. 33 project;
On

' .··s tate·
in ' Sta.t·e
· ·of·th. e
. . addre.
. S. S

COLUMBUS (AP) - Education remains lhe priority of Gov. Bob
will get help under·in
Taft's first two-yeu budget, but Ohio's urban
the spending plan, expected to be close to $40 billion.
Taft planned to preview his budget in his first State of the State SJli'Cch
to a joint session of the Legislature today.
He finished the final draft of the speech Monday afternoon, said Scott
Milburn,. the governor's spokesman. Milburn would not reveal
.
specifics of the speech, but said it would touch on familiar themes.. ·
"It will be very_nuts-111d-oolts. He's writing a lot of this himself," Mil·
burn said. ·
'
Education occupies the bulk of the speech, which is expected to last
!!bout 40 minutes. Taft's plan to recruit 20,000 voluntl!els to teiiCh'children
to read likely will get several mentions. A $25 million proposal tP set up
the program passed the House last .week. and now is under consider~tlon
in the Senate Education Committee. ·
He also planned to discuss his plans for urban renewal and was expecied to announce the creation of a task force to 'study the issue.
."One of the economic development ideas is looking at different Strate·
gies for revitalizing the inner cities," Milburn said.
: ·
'!'aft also was expected to pledge his cooperation with the lawmakers
joining him the House chamber. Republicans hold majorities in both lhe
House and the Senate.
·
.: • "The go.vernor sees the Legislature, obviously, as an important partner.
Jle and the Legislature, though, are servants of the public," Milburn said.
: In what became a tradition under former Gov. George Voinovich, a fel·
~ow Republican, Taft planned to salute several people who will sit with his
wife, Hope, during the speech.
'
• One of them will be Dayton's Kimberly Brown,' the Dayton Daily
News reported today. She will help Taft t!emonstrate lhat education can
transfl)rm the lives of Ohioans who .are willing to study and work, the
·
·
newspaper said.
• After 18 years of living on public assistance, Brown, 37, used the Job
l'raining Partnership Act to return to school and become a licensed practical nurse. Since October, she has been working at a the nursing cente(
where she earns $17 an hour.
'
·
"I love nursing, just dealing with people," said Brown, a single mother of four children ranging in age from 16 to 21."
Brown was selected as one of three special guesl!i for the speech and
was scheduled to spend Monday night at the Governor's Mansion in sub·
urban. Bexley, Taft aides said.

areas

Winter storm rolls · Into Oh lo·, Meigs
Countlans awake to March snow

f=or AP, Sentlnal report.
• Approximately three inches of heavy, blowing March ·snow shut down
§CI)ools and cneated hazardous driving conditions for Meigs County
_mcotori$ts this morning.
·
Eastern, Meigs and Southern Joeal schools were all closoo due to the
snow. Since the local schools have exha~ted their calamity, or snow days
for the year, today'sabsence will he·made up later in the school year.
· The slushy snow prompted the Meigs County Sheriff's Office to iss.ue a

Iev~!!~:;emergency, meaningpeopldshouldnotdriveunlessabsolute-

co11si~ers Jeg islative

stances

'

'

Meigs to participate :
In Great American ·
Clean-Up program

Members of the !Udnc Grange, at~ request of Keith Grange cookbooks available for $12 each.
Ashley, legishitive chairman, suppOrted ilie constructiq_n
With Grange Week approaching in April, the Grange
of a four-lane highway from Darwin to Athens.
voted to have an informatiC!n table at the Racine F1ower .
: Members re·
the idea of a "tw~&gt;-lane superhigh- Festival. Cookbooks will also be for sale. The annual
way" for the proj ~stating they felt it would be unfair to · Meigs County Grange banquet will also be held in April,
·Meigs Cwntians, ho have been ·patient for decades; to too.
hf\vC: to setUe for
thing Jess than a four-lane highway. ·
The Grange also adopted several other Jegislalive
All those present en usiastically supported the four-lane stands. It voted to support elimiriatiDn of real estate tax
concept for U.S. 33.
.
.
· .
. abeyances for businesses to move into ihe state, It '!'as felt
In another local matter, the Grange opposes the insti· that businesses were being given large tax breaks at the
tulion of any tax on Meigs County utilities that crossed expense of the individual taxpayer. They also support a
roilds before lhe tax is instituted..Though members recog· change in U.S. Postal regulations to allow misaddressed
niZed lhat there .is a cost to map these-utilities, it is unfair letter to be delivered if the letter's true destination was in
to tax people after the fact or to tax .an aniount lhat is not the same poSt office as the mistaken address.
"ttOective ofthj!"ttlie OOM,., the i:Ounlj'fb'trtl thlfffilljlpin~."'
Members also suppOI'ICd a cHange ih federal commu-. '
~ · jl')le members also diiCUSSCd the etlrrent 'criticism in nications regulations requiring all businesses to list their
Ohio concerning !he ruling by Perry O&gt;unty Judge I,inton riames on caller ID boxes so that citizens can. refuse to
Lewis who said the Statl! of Ohio has done too little to answer them. .,
.
comply with equitable sch!lOi funding. The membership
Under education, ihe Grange voted to support change
felt there was nearly no essential change in funding to in 0hio law to permit the recall of school board members.
Meigs County schools. II was also pointed out that It was pointed out thai of all the elected public officials in
charges are being levied against Judge Lewis saying that Ohio, school board members were only one of two types
the rural Ohio judge is holding the slate hostage. Ashley . of officials not curren!IY.subject to r«aat Members did
pointed out that it was the Ohio SuPn:me Court, not Judge not see why these officials should enjoy this protection
Lewis, who made the final decision agai~t the state. ·
from their constituents when the Ohio governor does no~
Plans were made for a major community service proThe Grange also voted 1o support a ch'ange in th~ Ohio
ject for this year. II was suggested lhal the Grange contin· .Constitution to require all school systems to follow Ohio
· ue in the theme of working to draw more attention to the minimum standards. Currently, 'the Ohio Supreme Court
Battle of Buffington Island, Ohio's only Civil War ~e. · says thai teacher·boafd negotiations can result in the
Otuck Yost, master, pointed ·out he has signed written establishment of items .below state minimum standards
testimony recently in the name of Racine Orange in sup- thus defeating the purpose of setting the standards.
port of the preservalion movement. This was submitted to
Finally, the Grange supported a.change in Ohio law to
. the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
allow school employees to pennanently nemove students ·
Woodruff Cemetery at Bowman's Run is a private who have attempted or actually assaulted that employee
cemetery thai contains the remains of a Confederate sol· or threatened an employee. Further, the Grange supports
dier mortally wounded during Morgan's Raid. The the ability to ~ive puniti'\e. damages from that student
Grange decided to.adopt the cemetery for a clean-up pro' and his parents.
· &gt;
· \
•
ject with the plans to place a marker to this unknown ConFmma Ashley, lecturer, presented a program on Ohio
federate soldier. Then a dedication ceremony would .be since Ohio became a state in March, 1803. A quiz on facts
planned for later to include other related groups. Ashle)• about Ohio was given. Then members read facts .about the
pointed out that this cemetery would become a point of state that answered the quiz questions. Ashley then
. interest on the Ohio Civil War Trails Commission Jist of reviewed the symbolism of the Great Seal of Ohio and the
sites of interest.
Ohio Hag. She pointed out that much of this information
Rachel Ashley, youth chairman, pointed out that the is now rcqulrect of fourth graders on the proficiency tests.
Meigs County Grange Youth are planning a trip on March
The annual baking contest was held with Fml)la Ash·
20 to Huntington, W.Va., to Walch a professional hockey ley receiving first place and Mary Virginia Easterday sec·
game. The youth groups will pay for the,cost of the tick· ond place in chocolate chip cookies. Rachel Ashley
ets. and carpooling will be arranged. Thene is als9·a youth ~ived first p~ace in youth baking with her sugar coo~·
dance at Fairfield County on March 20. New state youth , tes. Winners W!ll compete on the county level later thiS
directors, Richard and Ada Cummins, have been appoint- year.
ed. The Mid-Atlantic Youth Conference will be in April.
· Emma Adams is reported home recovering from a
Mary Virginia Easterday, women's activities chairman, recent stroke. ·The next Grange ~eeting .will be held April
stated that more ABC quilts and stuffed toys are needed 8 because of Holy Week occumng dunng the first week
for her projects. She has a supply of the new Ohio State of the month.

'

Middleport refuse problell'\S reviewed

who did drive found hazardous roadways, some covered with
By BRIAN J. REED '
·
.
Residents with questions about service may call lhe
blcowi!'il snow. Deputies and troopers were b.usy.bandling numerous minOr
Sentinel Newa Staff
finit at (800) RUMPKE3, ot the village water office.
'
An informational brochure produced by Middleport's
Jean Craig, chairman of the Middleport Board of Pub·
rac:cidents caused by lhe slippery roads.
. A tractor. and semi-trailer accident was reported on state Route 7 near • nefuse service was distributed and discussed when Mid- lie Affairs discussed a contract with Aoyd Browne Asso·
Olester around 8 a.m. It was determined that the trailer dir,l not contain /any
dleport Village Council met in negular session on Mon· ciates, a consulting and engineering firm re.tained by the
hazardous material.
day.
·
village 19 study i':l water and sewage operatiOns, lll!d recA /tuge storm barreling across the
Sandy Jannarelli, council president, presided at the om mend needed tmprovements.
--., _ ~M~t:
'dwesl dumPI'd·up to 8 inches of meeti~g in absence of Mayor Dewey Horton, who 'conAccording to Craig, the contract has involved "count·
in Ohio today, fouling rushtinues to recover from an illness in Israel.
Jess" studies, Y!hich she feels are an unnecessary expense
hour tmffic and. keeping ·schoolMark Reny, a local manager for Rumpke, and Peggy to the village. Craig said that certain terms ofthe contract
• 10 Pages
children home in most parts 'of the
Gill a sales representative distributed copies of the have been discontinued, and a new ·contract approved,
.state.
· br~hure, which will be mail~ tO all refuse customers in but she said that the board will continue to "shop around"
Some areas were expected to. get
Middleport. 11 outlines the services offered by the 6rm for other engineering services.
up to 10 inches by the lime the storm
and policies which apply to resideniial trash collection in
lannarelli said that she had received materials from
ends. The snow was to begin taperMiddleport.
.
Neighborhood Watch, and said that she will be meeting
ing off from west to east at midday.
The village has recently begun to address complaints with Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes and law e~forc.e·
Blowing and drifting sn&lt;iw in
from residents about inconsistent service, discourteous ment personnel to determine guidelines for a Netghborsome areas and a mixture .of min and
drivers and damages caused by Rumpke drivers, and hbod Watch proaram in Middleport.
Rumpke representatives have att~nd~ other council
Council approved the promoti~n .of village foreman
freezing rain in southwest Ohio
compounded the problems.
meetings and met with village officaals m order to reme- K~nny t.;fadden to Street Co!"mtsstoner/Foreman. He .
"This is a very potent winter dy problems reported by residents.
wtll .conbnue to work for both the street department and
storm," said Shannon White, a
Council discussed the current _policy of collecting lhe water department, according to Craig.
Lotteries
meteorologist for the National
refuse in alleys, as Rumpke currently does, and while
Oerk Bryan Swann pr~nted a monthly financial
Weather · Service in Wilmington, ·Rumpke and the village encourage residents to place report, with' account bala es as follows: General,
Ol!io. "This could be our biggest
refuse at the cutb on collection day, it was agreed that ($1,976.75); Street, 58, 95.95; Law Enforcement,
snowfall of the season."
Rumpke will continue to provide alley serviee, but only I ,550.40; Fire Equipment, 7,480.23; Fine Truck,
Snowfall this morning ranged
in those alleys whichPe awessible br a §!llall Rumpke 3,303.49; COPS FAST Grant (~5 .98); Ec()nornic Develfrom 6 to 8 inches in parts of-west·
truck.
~
opment, 27,8!5.72; Law Block Grant, 8,096.53; Refuse,
Dally 3: 4-3· 7; Daily 4: 3-6-0.7
em and southwest Ohio, up to 4
The brochure also provides general information about 32,241.41; Disaste'r Relief Grant, 187.00; Water Debt
inches in northwest counties and 2
materials tbat Rumpke will accept, and what they will
o t9990hK&gt; Yolky l'lobHskina co.
Continued on page 3
L!:::::::::::::::::::::::~to::3~in:c~h~e:s~in~ce~n~tr~ai~O~hi~o~·--~_J not.

Sentinel

·SERVICE

i

•

·e.

Good Afternoon
1------:--...

~

Mtii'Ch I, 111118 ·

:.-AP All-American teams named, .Page 5
·· . .
Ex-wife woes, Page 6
RetJels ·move toward peace accord, ~age 10

l'oday: Wintry lllx .
~Ugh: 301; LoW:.20a

Classic movie director Stanley ·Kubrick dies at age 70 ~:~i::~:~~~:~~~:~~~!~~~~
LONDON (AP) - Visionary.
Obsessive. Brilliant. Secretiv~ . That
was Stanley Kubrick, whose classic
films included "Dr. Strangelove," "A
Clockwork Orange" and "2001 : A
Space Odyssey."
Kubrick died at age 70 on Sunday
before the release of his last film. He
had been at work on "Eyes Wide
Shut" for two years ..The film, his
first since "Full Metal Jacket" in
1987, is scheduled for a mid-year

,

Weather

The Meigs County Recycling
and Litter Prevention Program
will be participating in the
Great American -Clean-Up, a
volunteer Jitter cleanup of vii·
lages and communities all
across · the United States, in
April.
,
· ·
The month of April is Keep
Ohio Beautiful Month, and
locally, the Meigs County pro··
gram is asking groups and organizations such as 4·H, scouts,
churches, and others ·in each. of
lh,e ·five , l!illaaes and Jl~~n­
ships to conduct a volunteer
cleanup in their com111unilies
anytime during April, said
Meigs County director Kenny
Wiggins, who added that partic·
ipants in the "Adopt-A-Highway" program can also join in.
The Mefgs program wiJ.J furnish trash bags, and will pick up
and properly dispose of the bags
of litter collected, Wiggin~ said.
''This is a great opportunity
to help keep your community
and county clean and beautiful,"
he said. To volunteer, call 992·
6360·for more information.
The Meigs County Recycling
and Litter Prevention office has
been moved to il7 E. Memorial
Drive (rooms 8 and 10 West) on
the upper level of the former
County Home behind the Holzer
Mejgs Clinic.
The recycling drop-off boxes
formerly located on Union
Avenue are now. located on
Hiland Road just off the stale
Route 7 bypass.
Earth Day is April 22 and the
Meigs County program will participate in the Meigs County
Family Fun Fest planned for
April 24 at the Eastern Local
School on state Route 7.
.Other future events include
the annual Ohio River Sweep on
June 19; Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 16·21; and the Town and
Country Expo on Sept. 18-19.
Recycling drop-off sites are
conveniently located across the
county, are available -to every·
one, and are to be used for "sort·
· ed recycle items only", Wigg_ins
said.
The ·various compartments
are clearly marked.
"In order for recycling to be
successful, we depend on recy·
cleis to accept, process and mar·
ket the materials we collect, and
we must adhere 1o their guide·
lines."
"Containers shoul~ be lightly
rinsed, with . the caps and lids
removed and thrown away (lids
cannot be recycled)." he said.
"Cardboard should be flattened . Newspapers can be
bagged, bundled or boxed but
must include only what comes
with the Su~day paper; maga·
zines, ~atalogs and phone books
should be packaged toaether.
"With a shortage ·of help, it
saves a lot .o f time when 'you.
package the materials correctly,
and we appreciate your cooper·
ation."
"Let's work together to make
every day 'Earth Day' in Meigs
County, • Wiggins said.

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