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offers the Patient a variety of healtheare services including physician
referral, PVH class/seminar regis·
· · servtce
· re........
•-•
trabon,
commuruty
literature and brochure; fulfillment,
physt"ct'an relall"ons s-·"- bureau
. • ........-.•
surveys, health nsk
apprwsals and•
printed health infonnation.
. The Pleasant Valley Hospital
HealthLine Jelephone number is
(304) 675-2828 and will be available
to take calls on Monday. March 1.
HealthLine is a center staffed by
registered nuraes 24-hollr1i a day. It
can save you time and money while
helping you make the right choices
about health care.
"The convenient Pleasant Valley
Hospital HealthLine is there for our
patients day or night to help with
questio~s about their' health and to

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. _
·Or. Robert Tayengco, board-certified
in internal medicine will serve as the
physician liaison for• the new Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Line
.
.
•
G. Sellards •
accordmg to. Mtchael
.
PVH execuuve dtrect~r.
TayenF ?btai~ a ~belor s degree m bu~logtcal SCt&lt;:n~es
!'mm the ~~bl! Institute of Medicme
m the ~hPI?mes 986). In 1990,
he receJY~ h~ medtcal de~ frot,n
the ~e mstttute. .Followmg hts
graduation from medical. schoo!, Dr.
Tayengco served as chief restdent
~ '1993 to 1996 at Elmhurst Hospttal Center, Elmhllr1it, New York.
He currently Jw:l an ollice at 11 North
Second Street tn Ma;wn.
Dr., Tayengco wdl 0~ !)le
operations of the HeallhLtne, which

'P"·

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Loll Jean Cund~

HMC names
Cundiff as top
Jan. employee
GALLIPOLIS - Lois Jean Cundiff, Central Supply manager at Holzer Medical Center, has been named
January Employee of the Month,
according to Charles I. Adkins Jr.,
president and chief executive officer.
Cundiff, who was born in
Paintsville, Ky., began work at HMC
in June 1971. She graduated from
practical nursing sehool in Westerville in 1970 and previously worked
at Harding Hospital in Worthington
from 1967-1971.
Upon arriving at HMC, Cundiff
began work as a member of the Cen1s
tra upply staff. In May 1972, she
was promoted to supervisor of Cen1 d h · De
be
traI S upp Y an I en m
cern r
.1978, she w.as named acting director
'b'l '
o f the depanment, a responst 1 tty
'I 0ctober 1980• w hen
she . he ld unt1
.
th
·
d
·
h
she was en name assistant to t e
.
t
f
C
1
S
1
1
1995
d lrec or o entra upp Y· · n
•
· name d ·mtenm
· d'1recsh e was agam
tor of Central Supply, and she current IYh old s Ihe Ill· 1e o f Centra1S Ui&gt;'
·pi• ma a
i
n ger.
C un d1·rr an d h. er h us band Ra 1Ph
currenII Y rest'de ·m Langsv1'IIe. Sh e
has three sons, one daughter, II.
·grandchildren and two stepgrandchildren. She enjoys listening to
music, gardening, and working with
!lowers.
As employee of the month, Cun.dill received a $ 100 U.S. Savings
Bond, a reserved parking place designated in her name, a complimenlary meal in the hospital cafeteria, her ·
picture iii the hospital lobby, and her
name engraved on·the 1999 Employee of the Month plaque, also displayed in the lobby.

Federated finishes
Fingerhut buyout

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

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Monday
Merch 22, 11100

CINCINNATI (AP) - Federated
Department Stores .Inc. announced
Thursday it completed a '$1. 7 billion
tender offer to buy a direct online
marketing company to help build its
catalog and Internet sales.
Federated, the Cincinnati-baied
retailer that operates the Bloomingdale's and Macy 's stores, is paying
$300 million in cash and $1 .4 billion
in debt for Fingerhut Cos. Inc., Federated spokeswoman Carol Sanger
said,
Federated announced the 'Ileal
·Feb. I I. Fingerhut is to keel' its beadquarters in suburban Minneapolis
.and will function as a subsidiary of
Federated.
Fingerhut's e•pertise is handling
orders through catalogs and the Internet. It als9 does database management and direct marketing.
Federated already has the Bloomingdale's By Mail and Macy's By
Mail direct mail catalogs and the
Macys.com Internet site. .
·
A year ago, Dayton Hudson Corp.,
another large department store chain,
purchased direct-seller Rivertown
Trading Co. Dayton Hudson said
Rivertown's direct-selling cxpe1tise
would put it in a good position
whenever Internet retailing took off.
Federated has an nual 'sales of
·more than $15.8 billi on.

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assi.st. the~ in making key mcdk:al cere.
.
. .
deciSions, explained Dr. 'hyengco.
&lt;:aJI the Heal~ tf YO? or a
.
.
hafiDilly ~ are liCk or if you
When you call the Pleaalllt Val- 1be
ve queatiOIJa about your health.
.
ley Hoepital Healthl.ine. a nurae will
. nw. wiD ask for aome. mbtalk to yo\1 about health care. If you matioo, 10 be or abe can aastst you
·
or a family member are ill, the nurse WI'th your Jll!!l!lem.
will help you determine how to best · Se1111ible' p of the aew .service
eare for your problem.
can help yoo aet the care you need
The·nurse may give you adviee to and ai!IO saveoyou money. If the aitfollow at home or make an appoint- uadon is life tllreateniiiJ or you have
ment with your primary care physi- been dlrected4P ao to the E'.nierpnc:y
cian. If the problem seems to ~~~a physiclail, go tbae
require immediate eare, die profes- immedi~.
•
• .
'
sional may Sllggest you go to the
If the sttuation 11 not life threatEmergency Care Center:
: ' 'fmiiiJ,or if you
. 're not lUre it really
Also, the Pleasant Valley Hoapi- . is• ~aeucy, calllbePieasantVaJtal HealthLine nurse Will call you Icy Hospital H"'ealthLine.
.
back in one or two days to make
1be ~-t Valley Hospttal
you are feeling better and help deter- HealtbLine cag help you choose a
mine whether you need additiOIW . )!IIYsician. It'' tan provide informsliOn on basic'health issues and med-

Tomorrow: Cloudy

~lgh:40s;LcnN:20S

Dr. Robert Teyengco
icalions and register you for semi~
and screenings.

Davis·Quickel
Agency•. Inc.
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lnaur•nce Pt'aclucta
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~m~y~I~rv~i~n~s~ai~d~a~;r~s:la:u~g:ht:e:r
-·J:;;:::ea~lt: 1-800-378-6440
house is what is

. . -..:m GRIFFV'S
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- S,prlng Houra.o:Mon- Fri.
6:~ pm • 10:00 pm
Saturday &amp; Sunday
12:00 pm- 10:00 pm
TEAM RATES .
Also faSt pitch softball
G.eneral ~ai11nger Park .

KE1TERING (AP)- At least four arrests we.re made at a Ku Klux
Klan rally on Sunday in this Dayton subur~. but no serious problems were
l._reported, police said.
Allout35 robed Klan members rallied for abo~tt two hours outside the
Kettering Government Center on Sunday afternoon, A fC\f scuffles and
fistfights broke out among the mostly young ·an!l white .anti-Klan demonstrators and Klan sympathizers, but there were no serious injuries, police
said.
One juvenile was an:ested before the rally for trying to jump a security
fence, and three women were taken in custody after a post-rally fist fight,
•
·
police said.
Klan members punctuated their speeches with Nazi salutes and cries
"white
" while counter-demonstrators walked up and down the

,Joins salon staff
GALLIPOLIS - Staci Roush has
joined the staff of Summer Image
Hair, Nails and Tanning Salon.
She specializes in the latest cuts
and styles, foil highlights, perms, hair
color, children, men, pedicures and
waKing. She is available evenings and
weekends. Walk-ins are welcome.
For appointments, call 446-6959.

New 99 MONTANA'S
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Diqnosis and treatment of eye diseases
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cers from
jurisdictions were on hand to prevent any serious problems.
Calls to police seeking more details about the arrests were not returned.
More than 1,200 Miami Valley residents gathered in an ei~~:,:~~ZI
school' gymnasium around the same lime Sunday afternoon to
diversity in an effort to counter the Klan event. The counter-rally was
organized by city officials and' involved singing, dancing, prayer and discussion.

Good thru 3/31198 '0nly

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COiinri'ERiPOiNT- Ellzlbath

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• elgn during the prot!lat eg1alm11t. the rally of the Klu Klux
at the Kettering Govemment 'C4!nter Sunday. Though
~here · )lilere four erretitl, there were no major lncldentl.

:school board hires fifth
grader to fix Y2K bug
. MAYFIELD HEIGHTS (AP)FiKing the Y2K computer problem
will be elementary for a aevelandarea fifth -grader.
The Mayfi'eld School District has
voted 3-2 to hire Brian Hug, a student at Center Elementary School,
to make sure Mayfield's classroom
computers don't malfunction when
the year 2000 arrives. He'll be
the minimum wage, $5,15 an hour.
The Y2K problem refers to the
possibility that· the internal dating
mechanism of computers will read
Jan. I, 2000 as Jan. I, 1900, .and
malfunction.
The boy's mother has declined all
interview requests for her son. She
·told school officials that would
mean too much pressure for the boy.
Teachers at. Center Elementary
wrote a letter to administrators suggesting the boy be hired. They were
impressed with his computer skills
and his willingness to help around
the schooL

Good Afternoon

•

0(18'Y"lS· Sentine

-ADDRESS788 NORTH SECOND STREET .
'

MIDDL.EPORT, OHIO 45760

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MONDAY • FRIDAY IWAU · INI

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Calendar
Classlflec!s
Comics
E!liloda!s

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Local

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Soorts

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Weather

3

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Lotteries

-OFFICE HOURS

Pleasant
Valley

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Plck3: 5-,1&gt;.;3; Plck4: 5-1-8-3 '
Super Lotto: 4-8-22-27-34-35
Kicker: 7-7-0-8-2·2

WILCOMI)

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D11ly 3: 2-1 -8; Dally 4: 2-9-5-7

APPOINTMENTS -

Hospital

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Iran for $100 million

The unempl_oyment rate throug~out much of southeastern. Ohio
fell modestly In, February, the Ohto Bure~u of Employment Services reported Friday.
.
Ohio's unemployment rate was 4.2 percent for the month, up 0.2
percent from January, state employment officials said.
.
In Meigs County, the jobless rate fell 0.2 per"l:ent - from 14
perecent in January to 13.8 percent in February.
The OBES reported Gallia County's rate at 9.8 per~ent for February, down 0.5 p'e rcent from January.
Other February unemployment rates (January rates in parenthesis) were: Athens- 6 .S (5.9) percent; Jackson - 8.6 (8.7) percent;
· Lawrence - 7.8 (7.9) percent; Scioto- 10.5 (10.5) percent; Vinton
- 13.7 (15.1) percent; and, Washington- 7.5 (7.5) percent
"Overall, we saw some gains in service sector and construction
employment during the month, but this was largely canceled out by
some temporary layoffs in the auto inc!u~!JY and food production,''

.

nattonat rate, which went up slightly to 4.4 percent.
The state. jobless rate also was 4.2 percent in February 1998.
The number of Ohioans with jobs was 5.58 million this February, up 10,000 from January. .
.
The number. of workets unemployed was 244;000, up from
237,000.
·
·oelawaie. County had the lowest unemployment rate ai 2.3 percent. Morgan County had the highest at 16.7 percent. Of the state's
88 c9unties, nine had rates less than 3.5 percent, and nine ha~ rates
higher than 10 percent.

JObleSS rateS

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By WILUAM C. MANN
AIIDClated Pree1 Writer
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The last-ditch attempt to
find a diplomatic solution in Kosovo won't delay preparations for NATO airstrikes against Yugoslavia if the
peace effortcfails, Qinton administration officials say.
Whatever the outcome of the mission by special U.S.
envoy Richard Holbrooke, the administration is feeling
heat from members of COngress to Hoi brooke's effort on
one hand and to the bombing plans on the other.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright announced
Holbrooke's mission Sunday. She said he will tell
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic he . "faces a
stark choice: to halt aggression against the Kosovar
Albanians and accept an interim settlement with a
NATO-led implementation force or bear the full responsibility for th~ consequences of N'ATO military action."
"I don'tthink this will delay the preparations that are
going on in NATO,'' White House national security
adviser Sandy Berger said on CBS' "Face the Nation."
"The preference is to find a peace agreement that will ·
bring stability to KosoYo, peace to Kosovo and rights to
the Kosovar people. If. we can achieve that, with the
imminent threat of force, that would be a g!)od result.
But .If not, ... NATO is prepared to act."
Berger added: "I think we owe it to the American
people, we owe it to our military people, our allies, to
make that final attempt" B.ut he said tonight's meeting
in Belgrade will occur "with the smell of exhaust fumes
in the air from the aircraf!."
.
. . A timetable for possible airstrikes remained in doubt,
although Berger and Albright hinted they would not
come unlit after Hoi brooke's mission.
·
One potential complication was the visit to Washington, beginning Tuesday, of Russian Prime Minister
Yevgeny Primakov. Berger said Primakov, who opposes
NATO action, would not be asked to postpone the trip. .
President Clinton spoke Sunday about the situation
'with French President Jacques Clrirac, British Prime
Minister Tony Blair and German Clrancellor Gerhard
Schroeder. The White House said he was reaffirming
NATO unity against Milosevic's continuing military
campaign,
Criticism of the administration's activities began
even before Albright announced the planned HolbrookeMilosevic meeting.
"It's too late to send another emissary to Milosevic,"
said Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn. "Look, we have
been threatening him·since Christmas of 1992 ... warning him that if he attacked Kosovo, we would respond
with force ."
·
"Great alliances and great countries don't remain
great if they issue threats and don't keep them,'' Lieberman, a member of the Senate Armed Services Commit-

sound technology and are conducted
· by a registered or register~ ,eligible
ultrasound technologist. A board-certified physiCian reviews the results of
each test to ensure accuracy of ·the
""" ·
results before the findings are mailed
to each individual. Individuals whose
screening suggest further evaluation,
-.
are encouraged to seek appropriate
·
~:;:;:;::!:;:;;:!:;:;;:!:;:;:;:~I follow-up care with their own physi1.::...................................,.........,,...........................,..... ............. , ....... ,., cian.
·· Anyone interested in either the

tee, said on "Fox News Sunday."
Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey, ranking Democrat on the
Senate Intelligence Committee, worried about intervening "to try to basically end .a civil war."
. Speaking on CNN's "Late Edition," Kerrey said: "I
·am very pessimistic we will be successful with airstrikCii
to get that done."
Senate Majority Leader .Trent Loll, R-Miss. , planned
to introduce legislation today seeking to bar the Pen.tagon from spending money on operations in Yugoslavia
without congressional authorization.
1Wo Republican senators, Jon Kyl of Arizona and
Pete Domenici of New Mexico, said they would vote for
the measure, and they predicted passage. .
"It does tie (Clinton's) hands, but that's the idea,''
Kyl said on .Fox. ·"The administration has not .come forward with a convincing plan.... To simply bomb at this
point without any strategy is not a good thing for the
United States or NATO to do."
·
But Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering told
CNN the administration has "contingency plans to follow on, so that these are not a one-shot military operation."
Holbrooke, who arranged a cease-fire last October,
already met with Milosevic this month but came away
witllout a commitment.
En route to Belgrade, Holbrooke pllnned to stop in
Brussels, Belgium, to meet with NATO Secretary General Javier Solana. NATO also is sending mediators to
Milosevic.
·

vascular or osteoporosis screenings
must register at least 24 hours in

~~~~~&lt;xi.~;~~~~;
~~si~~~:~~, ~
appointment for the tests.

The tests are offered for $35 each.
Comparable tests offered by hospitals
and imaging centers would cost
between $300 and $500, it was reported.
·Life Line Screening is the nation's
leading provider of health screenings.
By offering the public non-invasive,
painless, ultrasound screenings, Life
Line helps patients identify their risk
for stroke, the presence of vascular
disease or osteoporosis early enough
for their physician to begin preventa·
tive methods.
The Meigs County Council o~
Aging is located at 112 East Memori al Drive in Pomeroy.
Also available at the screening site
will be free information on the identification and control of risk factors,
how to recognize the warnirig signs
and symptoms of stroke and other
vascular diseases as well as helpful
information regarding osteoporosis.
Fot additional infonnation on Life
Line Screening or any one of their
stroke and osteoporosis detection
tests, residents may contact the
agency at (800) 407-4557.
.

Akron to spend $600,000
to point people downtown
AKRON (AP) -The city plans to
spend $600,000 for signs directing people . to new ·downtown attractions, .
including the lnventotS 1-lall of Fame
and the Canal Park minor-league ball-

park.

AP
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Area residents wm have the oppo~·
tunity to have preliminary health
screenings to detect risk for stroke on
Tuesday, April6, in a testing program
offered by Life Line Screening in
association with the Meigs County
Council on Aging,
· The screening will include three
primary health screening, a Carotid
Artery Screening Test, Abdominal
Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) test, and an
Ankle Brachial Index (ABI).
On that day, Life Line screening
will also offer a bone density screening for women which tests for the
early detection of osteoporosis.
According to a release from Life

~~~~!rC:O~nf~:h~o;~s~i~e uf::;~

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Oppo. sitio.n stirs to both peace
mission, bomb_ing plans in Kosovo

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over Kentucky

Anderson said in an intervi~ · at his home
terrorist organization operating in Lebanon. " It countries alleged to sponsor terrorism that ~ll or injure
. about!O miles outside Athens, where he teach. says Iran is the party's sponsor; "providing it U.S. citizens.
with funding, direction and training for its terSuch lawsuits seemed to get a boost last Octobe.r ·
: : ATHENS (AP) - Almosl exactly i 4 years since the • es journalism at Ohio University. ,
i:lay he was taken hos!age in Lebanon, Terry Anderson
"The Jaw says that the U.S . government is
rorist activities' in Lebanon."
when Congress required the Treasury and State depart:aii&lt;J his family are set to file a $100 million lawsuit supposed to help us in pressing our claim, said
ltsays that as a hostage Anderson ~as mcnts to help recover damages, But an escape clause
apinst Iran. The former Associated Press correspondent Anderson. Confident of winning a judgment
fed a poor diet of bread, cheese and rice; was empowered the president to bar such help "in the interbeaten, taunted and humiliated; was regularly est of national security."
says Iran sponsored the captors ..yho kepi him blindfolCI- . ilgainst l.ran, he said "tl)e biggest obstacle to us
· receiving any money is the White House/'
threatened with death and falsely promised
One way of collecting is to go after assets frozen i'n
,ed and shackled for more than six yean. . ·
· . Similar lawsuits only became possible in'recent years
The lawsuit also mimes as plaintiffs Anderrelease; heard his fellow captives beaten and the United States. ,But the administration is trying to
itnd at least three have won millions of dollars in judg- son's wife, Madeleine Bassil, 49, and their.
· one die; grew so depressed he beat his head bl&lt;ick this avenue.
_mentsc• Anderson, ·now. 51 and teaching journalism at daughter, Sulome, who seek redress for emoagainst a wall until he bled.
U.S. government lawyers are fighting the family of
Ohio University, also expects to win, His case was to be tiona! distress and their long separation from
Iran's U.N. ambassador, Seyed Alisa Flatow, a coilege student from New Jersey killed
nled today in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.
Anderson.
Mohammad Hadi Nejad Hosseinian, denied Friday that in a 1995 bus bombing in Israel, who won a $247.5 mil; But like the other plaintiffs, he also expects his lawSulome, 13, was born three months afte( her father, Iran had supported the hostage-takers and said U.S. lion judgment against Iran. The same goes for three of
~itit to bC&lt;;ome a challen~e to the .U.S. goyernment.
then AP chief Middle East correspondent, was taken courts have no jurisdiction over foreign countries.
. Anderson's fellow hostages, who last August won a $6'5
• The Clinton administration has thwarted claimants captive in Beirut on March 16, 1985, ash~ returned from
In a faxed reply to questions, Nejad Hosseinian said million judgment against Iran.
:Crom collecting .millions of dollars awarded by U.S. a morning tennis game.
.through a spokesman that Iran .condemns international
The families of three Cuban-Americans killed in
:courts, .even though the damage claims are against coun•
Held longer than any other American in Lebanon, he · terrorism and that there is "no shred of credible evi- 1996 when Cuba shot down their private planes won a
:ttles the State Depanment labels as sponsors of terror- was freed 2,454 days later, on Dec. 4, 1991. The family dence'' that it finances Hezbollah.
$187 million judgment. The U.S, government gave each
1sm.
.
·
·
is seeking $100 million in compensatory damages 'and
lmn as well as Cuba, Iraq, Ubya, North K:orea, Sudan $300,000 in seized Cuban assets but has battled their
and Syria are listed by the State Department as state attempts to get more .
: In October, the president issued a blanket waiver of a unspecified punitive damages.
:requirement that federal agencies help obtain that
. Named as defendants are the Islamic Republic of Iran sponsors of terrorism.
Plaintiff lawyers in these cases said the U.S. govern ~
money. ·
and its Ministry of Information and Security.
Foreign countries used to be largely · immune from ment has raised a variety of objections, including possi: , "Much of our argument is likely to be with the U.S.
The lawsuit says Anderson's captors were members lawsuits in U.S. courts. The Antiterrorism and Effective
;government, rather
than
the
Iranian
government,"
of
Hezbollah, oi Party of God,
"a politico-paramilitary Deaih Penalty
Act of 1996 allows legal action against
Continued on pege 3
.
.
.

r arrests·reported

056

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rr&lt;oad~~~~~~·~·N;az~~i~sc~u~m:.h~as~g~o~t~:to:·
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..:~~~~~~;~~Ji: :::t~1.Ti~~;~;inte~~ ~~:~!~tr~~~.~~,:~:,~!E~; :ai~ . i~. ~ .~ :ws
p
Woolf. He said more than
Jaw .enforcement
state increase was in line wltn an increase in the''

Staci Roush.

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Final Four with win

Meigs County shows 0.2% change Regional February

Wins designation
OAK HILL - Kell&lt;Jra Strickland
of Oak Hill, a MOdem Woodmen of
America representative for the OhioEast area, has attained the Fr.atemal
Insurance Counsellor (FIC) design a- .
tion.
The FIC title is an educational
designation that. can be earned by
career life underwriters associated
with frate~nal insurance societies.
Strickland .devoted more than a
year to meeting the examination and
career development criteria set by the
Fraternal Field Managers Associa·
tioil. She completed the academic
requirements of tiM: FIC program
throitgh correspondence with Modern
Woodmen's home . office in Rock
Island, Ill.

.Tf

Southeastern Ohio jobless rates released :::uC:,:~~~::c,:

1\Aiddleport

AGENCIES, Inc.
Qui~~ 992·6677

; I

-AP Metlonel Writer

INTERIII SERVICE
1..80-371-6440

Agri~ulture €ommissioner Tom-

I

By ARLENE LEVINSON

81RVICEB

• ,Free Al;llvatlon
• Free·Setup
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OILY Slf!ts

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Hometown New&amp;f?aper

)former hostage Terry Anderson set to

llb.

good enough to stay with us, we
probably would be out of business,"
Walls said.
Recently, a proposal to build a
$100' million pac)dng plant between
Macon and Savannah was put on
hold by the packer, said Fred Sandrock, head of the Sun belt Pork
Cooperative of producers from Geor~~b.:acaroti~as, Tennessee and

f

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohi o

Vo lume 49, Number 222

sure

A~ a result, the selling price hit an
all-time low of 8 ,ents per 100
pounds of pork .sold last year1 the
lowest since the Great Depression.
That compares with 47 cents in previous years, The current market rate
is 27 cents to 30 cents a pound.
The state Board of Natural
Resources added to state hog fanners' woes recently with a ban on new
permits for hog farm o(lerations
exceeding 2,500 hogs until rules are
established for waste management
. ''We are trying to ride it o·ut," said
hog farmer Chuck Walls of
Gainesville who has a 700-hog farm
near Commerce.
"We've lost somewhere around
$150,000 last year, and it will take us
about a
a half to
it back.
been

Meigs County's

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Hog producers begin processing own meat 1or sale .
PINE MOUNTAIN, Ga~ (AP) ident of the Georgia Pork J&gt;roducers
Faced wjth an oversupply at large Association.
slaughterhouses that kept them strugThe Stricklands are also diversigling to stay ·in business, hog fann- fying by selling mulch, hay and
ersMikeandTerryStricklanddecid- wheat to help pay for their feed bill
ed to take mijtters into their own that averages $7,000 a week.
hands: They began processing th&lt;:ir
Still, the brothers are uncertain
own meat for sale to area business- they will be able to remain in the
es.
pork-producing business.
· The brothers, who fann .near this
"Over the last six months, we 've
west Georgia town, grow about 6,000
· $ 00 000 ·
borrowed over I ,
JUSt to stay
of the state 'sannual marketable hogs in business, " said Mike, 35, the
on their 500-acre fann .
younger of the two brothers . .
While the Stricklands continue to
The Stricklands' breeder herd of
produce hogs to be s.old for process-- 300 hogs is the average size of most
ing, they are supplementing their
of the state's hog fanns. The largest
business by going door-to-door sell·
hog· farm operation in the state
ing hogs they processed, inspected
belongs to Goldkist with its combiand readied for sale.
nation
of farms totaling 20,000 breedPhil Williams, owner of Pine
Mountain's Supervalu grocery, er hogs.
.
While
too
few
slaughtering
plants
responded to their local sales pitch
are a ma;or reason , a decline in
and sells their pork products in the
"
exports to foreign markets has helped
town of 1,500.
So did McGuire's Family Restau- to push the supply of hogs past
rant, which boasts of serving pork demand.
chops, ribs and ham that are truly
home-grown .
In J991l, Georgia's hog farmers
marketed a million head of hogs for
$134 million in gross receipts compared with $222 million in 1987. Ten
years ago, the state had 4,000 hog
farmers. Now there are 400.
"We just have too many hogs
going to market. A lot of producers .
are going out of business now," said
Rogers Bernard, executive vice pres-

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Sports

Eastern honors athletes, Page 5
Ann on National Alcohol Screening Day, Page 6
71 st Academy Awards winners, Page 6

.Physician liaison riamed .for PVH~ Healt, Line

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"As we're becom ing ·more of a cultural and entertainment hub of the
region, we have a lot of people coming
into downtown who are unfamiliar with
our streets and attractions," said City
Planning Director Warren Woolford.
Some Akron residents who don't gp
downtown often don't realize how .
much. the city has changed, he said.
The signs will help to "frame"
downtown, \Mlolford said, with signs
letting motorists know when they're
entering and leaving the central busi-..
ness district.
If the downtown signs work well,
the city may expand them citywide.

�,....A2

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'Lsta6flsfua m l948

...

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
• FIX: 1182-2157

740-~·2150

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Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L. WINGETI

.-

Publisher

..
•\

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man~~ger

DIANE HILL
Controller

rr.. Sentinel MMom•• ,.,.,. 10 tiN «/Hot from , . . . , . on • twrHHI,.,.. of,....
loa. S/IOt1-.. ( 3 « 1 - or -1 h• .. tn.- .,._of,.,.~.

lOft-.,.

Typed
pro- lltld •H .,.y l&gt;o td/lod. &amp;oh Mlould , _ • .,..,.,.,
•tid ..., MKI Uyt/IM phoM nlln'lbM. SpHify • ar. If th.,.'e • ,.,.,.,_ to •,..
WeNte Mflcle or,.,.,. , . , ro ,_.,.,.. ro rlt• «&lt;lfor, nr. Sentinel, 111 COurt St,
PGnNrcy, Oltla 451G; M, FAX to 740-.:1-2157

:..Wheelchair mom trial
:·forces city to answer
..tough questions
'

• By JOHN SEEWER
Auoclllted Preee Wrllar
SANDUSKY (AP) - Kelly Dlllery was as surprtsed as anybody by the
• glare of the televiston cameras shmmg m her eyes.
The woman who uses a wheelchatr to take her and herS-year-old daugh: ter around town dtdn't set out to be ~n inspuatton for the dtsabled But that
; - is what happened
1 '· The altention placed on her child-endangermg trial last week, though,
I '
, •, also put a spotlight on the ctty of Sandusky.
And tl wasn't the type of publlctly wanted tn this Lake Erte shoreline
;
• ' • town that depends on tourism to drtve its economy Summerttme visitors to
: Cedar Poml amusement park and the Lake Erte tslands turn the ctly into one
: of the lOp destmations m the Mtdwest.
'
Critics of police and prosecutors who handled Ms Dillery's case have
i ' charged that the city ts msenstllve
i ' They said Ms. Dtllery, who has muscular dystrophy, shouldn't have been
! ' · arrested for strapping daughter Kelsi to her lap and riding in ctly streets And
• · after Ms. Dtllery was found innocent, her supporters churned the deciston
: proved the city dtdn 't do enough for the disabled
:
So far, city leaders have defended thetr efforts but they are trymg to find
I , out whether they are tn compliance wtlh the Arnertcans wtlh Disabilittes Act
the federal law that sets requtrements for provtding access for the dis' abled.
;
Jim Sennish, the city's recently appointed ADA coordinator, is compiling
• informatton on how the ctty has responded to ADA requtremenls in the past.
'
"We dtd not comply with all aspects of the ADA but we made a good
effort," he said "I think the picture of Sandusky that has been painted hasn't been accurate "
He satd the ctly fat led lo produce two reports that are required by the
ADA- a report on accessibihty m city buildings and sidewalks and a plan
that shows how the ctly wtll correct any shortcommgs.
But he added that the city clearly addressed the ADA requirements in the
past
"We dtd not document what we dtd," he satd. " It's our biggest mistake."
Sandusky Muntctpal Court Judge Erich O' Brien, who presided Over Ms.
• Dtllery's jury trial, satd the ctly needs to tmprove access for the dtsabled, but
' noted that ilts probably no different from most cities
" I think Sandusky's gotten a bad rap," O' Brten satd "It could have eastly been any other community."
,
Disability rights advocates have promised that they will keep a close
watch on the city 's efforts to review the accesstbtlity issues.
,
" We'll be back because Sandusky has a long way to go," said Mary But,. ler, ~irector of the Center for Independent Living in nearby Elyria "We ' re
afratd that thts ts gomg lo contmue."
Many of the advocates aren 't in the forgiving mood because they believe
: ' ctty offictals unfatrly singled out Ms Dtllery.
"What happened to her has been harassment," Butler satd.

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scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in California.
The research team studied Antarctic ice cores
to ascertain the relation between greenhouse
gasses and climate m the past. These ice cores,
excavated "from far below Antarctica's surf~.
are like time capsules. Each layer contains tiny
bubbles of atr trapped in the ice when it first
formed, tens or even hundreds of thousands of
years ago.
Based on the conventional scientific wisdom
on global warming -- advanced by Knauss, Gore,
et al. •• penods of rising carbon dioxide levels
should have been followed by Increasing pl,ane-

activity.
.J~ ~
Yes, this possibility must be profQundly ~~sap­
poinlina. 10 politicians, lik~ our vice_ presu~rit,
who beheve that conaumpt1on of fosstl fuels ts;a
public evil unmatched by any othet (save 1fr
maybe "urban sprawl ").
;•
And It must be a real bummer for Knauss aqd
other scientists who have so many lectures, :110
many papers and ao many research grants rid!tig
on global warming's 111thenticity.
•:
But tl should be a comfort to the vast majority
of Americans, who would bear the brunt of pu~l!c
policy -· mandated by government, driven •I!Y
questionable science •• limed at mitigating l~e

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ol Columbua 12"'141'

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Mitchell Barnhart

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~l;ance

Copyrlg1111- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASStt·

J-ph Perklna Ia a columnist for The San
Diego Union-Tribuna.
•

Scientists seek patients for Alzheimer's test

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
We all have occasional lapses
A final test is stmple: Read a sponsored study wtll give 7!!0
AP Medical Writer
where we forget where we parked paragraph's worth of information paltents ages 55-90 etlher high·dqse
WASHINGTON
(AP)
the car or can't recall someone's and wait 30 minutes Someone with vitamin E, the current Alzheim~r's
Alzheimer's disease is one of the name That's normal, parltcularly as healthy short-term memory usually medtcatton Aricepl or a dummy pnl.
scariest threats of old age, particu- people age or expertence stress.
can spout back the information, but Results are exP!'cled by 2003. f;or
larly fnghtening because so far
Depression also can cause memo· the mildly cognitive impaired have information, call 1-888-455-0655. or
there's no way doctors can protect ry lapses, and forgetfulness is a stde trouble, Buckholtz explained.
check the Internet at -rww.mem'opeople at nsk.
effect of some drugs. Doctors can
Mild cognitive impairment does- rystudy.org. Study sties are in ~8
That may be about to change.
'
offer tmmedtate help for those prob- n't mean you're definitely destmed states and Canada.
Sctentists have JUSt dtscovered lems.
for Alzheimer's. Studies show that
Why those choices?
that a memory problem called "mild
Mild cognitive impairment is a every year, 12 percent to 15 percent
NIA-funded scientists discovered
cognittve impairment" can be an more persistent memory problem. A of those patients wtll progress to m 1997that high-dose vtlamin E ~
early warnmg sign of Alzheimer's golf lover makes a lee time on Tues- Alzheimer's - in other words, up to slow by about six months the
-and they're begmning three huge day but by Thursday, he leaves hts 45 percent will have Alzheimer's gression of moderately sev~re
studies 10 see tf certam drugs could golfing buddies waiting in vain on withm three years. In contrast, only Alzheimer's. Vitamin E is an antioxprevent those pattents from ever get- the links
I percent of healthy P.o~Je over age idant thought to limit damage f~om
tmg Alzheimer's
A pattern of such forgetfulness 65 get Alzheimer's each year.
"free radtcals," molecular damage
This leiter ts being wrillen m support of the proposed upgrade to US 33
"ll's very excthng." satd Nell can mean mild cognitive impairment
The cause of Alzheimer's is not that has been found in Alzheimer's
•· , between Athens and Darwin. I feel it wtll be of great benefit to the cittzens Buckholtz, chtef of the dementta - as long as doctors rule out other known. But 4 milhon Americans pattents' brains.
, Qf Metgs County to have this tmprovement completed and 11 wtll provide the branch at the National lnstttute of dementia symptoms. The mildly have it, a number expected 10 jump
Aricept mhibits the breakdown of
impetus to the job creation so desperately needed m this area
Agmg. But "I don 'I thmk people are cogntlive impaired don't have such as the baby boomers age. So neurol- acetylcholine, a brain chemical vital
II has been proven thai economtc development does not occur m areas really aware of this concept" of mild symptoms as dtfficulty complehng ogtsts want a way to at least delay for nerve cells to communicate with
where there ts a sub-standard highway system Metgs County ts economi- cogntttve tmpatrment.
normal datly activities, problems Alzheimer's onset.
each other.
' cally depressed and until the infrastructure is improved we will see very lit·
So the NIA ts trymg to get the with reasoning or mabtlity to comThree new studies are huntmg
Also, test-tube studies sugg4sl
.. tie growth. Economic development ts absolutely essenllal for the improve- word to people over age 55 that if municate, Dr. Ronald Petersen of the such a therapy in patients diagnosed acetylcholine could decrease the
- ment in the quahty of li fe for the rest dents of Metgs County Our unem· they're getting abnormally forgetful, Mayo Clinic r~ports this month in with mild cognitive impairment:
buildup of Alzheimer's·related brain
• ployment rate ts almost triple the state average and approxtmately one-half they should see a doctor
'
Archtves of Neurology.
•A National Institute on Aging- plaques.
, of our citizens who are employed are in jObs located outstde of Meigs County (the maJOnty of wh1ch are m Athens County).
Over the last few years great emphasis, both on the Federal and State lev•• els, has been given to requinng able-bodied welfare recipients to go to work
frosts
created a martyr.
' I share m lhts phtlosophy but Meigs County is greatly hindered in this effort By Jack Anderson and Jan Molter
On Feb. 18, environmental activtsls from
One reason the U.S medta has done little more
Monsanto's probdue to the Jack of JObs here No amount of welfare reform wtll create jobs
- • We need JObs m order to tmplemenl real wel fare reform. We must look Greenpeace dumped four tons of soybeans on the than poke and prod at the story is that there are no lems don't stop there
: toward economtc development to expand existing business and recrutl new front steps of Bntish Pnme Minister Tony Blair's bodtes. Most of the concerns about genetically Together wtlh a handful
official residence at No 10 Downmg St
engmeered food -- or "frankenfood," as the Euro- of other firms, the com··· busmess to our county to provtde JOb opporluntltes.
But
these
weren
't
JUSt
any
soybeans
They
peans have taken to calling it -- are about what pany is aggressively
I strongly support any' project or program that helps foster economic
buying up seed compa• growth I feel certam that the proposed construction of the Route 33 Athens were a genetically engineered vanety produced m•ght or could happen.
by
chemical
giant
Monsanto,
and
they
have
"My
biggest
concern
is
that
if
there
are
health
•
nies
-- spending $8 bil' to Darwm proJect wtll do that.
caused
a
stir
among
a
Bntish
populace
already
effects, we have absolutely no way of geltmg 10 lion over the last four
Michael L. Swisher, Director
Meigs County Department 01 Human Services spooked by lhe outbreak of mad cow d1sease the source of the problem," said Brtll Bailey of years on such ventures
some years back
The Center for Ethics in Toxics in Gualala, Calif. What's good for Monsanto might be mixed news
Three days later, a Monsanto spokesman "There is no way of tracing the effects that may for farmers, however.
:
despondently complained to the London Observ- or may not have flowed from a genetically modtThe company aggressively enforces its se~
;t•By Tho Aasocllllod Pross
er that "everybody over here hates us."
fied food"
patents, sendmg company representattves Ullo
:•: Today ts Monday, March 22, the 81 st day of 1999, There are 284 days left
But thts little stunt -- typtcal of the kmd that
Experts estimate that between 40 mill ton and contract farmer 's fields to make s~re they arerl't
:: in the year.
have made Greenpeace famous (or notorious) -- 50 million acres of U S farmland are planted with replanting the seed Accordtng to Progressive
~
On March 22, 1895, Auguste and Louis Lum iere showed their first movie may tn fact be indicative of things to come, not genettcally engineered crops, mcludmg 45 per- Farmer, a trade publication, Monsanto has alrea~y
' - to an mvtled
audtence m Parts.
JUSt in Bntam but here in the United Stales.
cent of all cotton, 32 percent of soybeans, 25 per- brought legal action against hundreds of farmers.
.
• • On tht s date.
Monsanto is in the forefront of a group of sev- cent of corn and 3-1/2 percent of potatoes
Monsanto is also m the process of patentmg:a
l ' In 1638, religious disstdent Anne Hutchmson was expelled from the eral chemical makers now lransformmg themBut the unique, cutlmg-edge nature of these powerful new biotechnology called the Terminll·
i ' Massachusetts ·say Colony
selves mto " life-sctence" companies Their goal new products has left Washington regulators slow tor. Seeds produced by the Terminator ~lant will
•:: In 1765, Bntam enacted the Stamp Actio ratse money from the Arneri· ts to transform the way farmers farm -- and by to catch up. Nobody is really sure, for example, be sterile, meamng farmers would have to pSir'1 ~can colontes. The Act was repealed the follow1ng year
extenston, what the world eats. Not to mention about who gets to monitor these new industries. chase an entire new seed stock each planting~~·: • In 1820, U S naval hero Stephen Decatur was ktlled m a duel wtlh Cmdr turntng a ttdy profit m the process But while Rtght now Junsdiction ts divided between three son.
~~
• :James Barron near Washmgton, D.C.
these efforts are allowing some farmers to grow federal agencies -- the Department of Agrtculture,
Yet
while
the
British
complam
-leadtng
pi
: ' In 1882, Co ngr~s outl awed polygamy
more food in Jess time than before, tt also rai ses the Food and Drug Administratton and the El'IVI- least one supermarket chain to remove all gen~d­
• • In 1894, hockey's fi rst Stanley Cup champtonshtp game was played; the troublmg quesltons about the role t)lat govern- ronmental Protectton Agency -- and none of them cally engineered foods from tiS shelves ·- Mcn)l home team Montreal Amateur Athleti c Assoctation defeated the Ouawa ments and consumers will play m this new mar- have found much to complain about
santo officials say tl's all JUS! a big mtsunde~­
ketpl ace.
l ;~s,3- 1
Yet a healed debate over the safety of these standing arismg from anxiety over mad cow &lt;(is·
, : In 1933, dunng Prohtbt tton, Prestdent Roosevelt stgned a measure to
So far, the foJd -safety debate that's dtvided foods ignited last August when world-renowned ease
:
; ~ make wine and beer containing up to 3 2 percent alcohol legal.
Britain has had hule spillover in the United scientist Arpad Pusztat went publtc wtth research
"Because of genetic engineering's enormoljs
: , In 1945, the Arab League was formed wtth the adoptton of a charter in States. Whtle Blatr is overrun by soybeans, most mdtcating that laboratory rats fed a specific kind potential, it is going to generate anxtety, " PhUip
• ,Catro, Egy pt
Americans are blissfully unaware that the food of genetically engineered potato had suffered sig- Angell, dtrector of communications for Monsanlo
:
In 1946, the Brtltsh mandate m TranSJOrdan came to an end.
they're eating may have ongmated tn the lab of a ntficant damage to thetr tmmune systems.
told our associate Ashley Baker " It is our res~tl~ ; In 1972, Congress sent the proposed Equal Rtghts Amendment to the chemical giant
, The government-funded research institute sibility to understand people's concerns."
'
l ; Constttuti on to the states for ratificatton It fe ll short of two-lhtrds approval
Genetic engmeertng is a process by which a fired Puszlat on the grounds that he vtolated proIs 11 then yourresponstbility to act on them, we ,,
; needed
gene from one spectes ts tmplanled tn another, tocol by publicizing his ftndings But press asked? " Absolutely (But) the -market, broadly
! Ten years ago· National Football League Commtssioner Pete Rozelle giving new traits to the recipient. Fo~ example, a reports alleged that Pusztai 's qutck extt was the defined, will ultimately determine the success. ol
: anllounced plans to rettre Fawn Hall, Oliver North's former secretary, began cold-reststance gene from a flounder can be result of Whtle House pressure. So instead of this technology "
~ two days of test1mony at North 's Iran-Contra tnalm Washmgton
tmplanted in food crops to help farmers beat early making an exampl e of Pusztat, the government Copyright 1-. Unhld fllltur• SyndiCIII•, Inc. t.

l!ro-

Chemical companie~ get in the seed bi*

ay ~ Alaoclated Preea

A homemaker and member of the Protestant fatlh, she was born Jan. 26,
• Nliithcast Ohio is expected to see snow showers tonight, but skies will
1935, in Acme, W Va., daughter of the late Jess and Laura Farley Anderson.
clear ac~ the tot of the state.
She is survived by two daughters, Sharon Sue Pterce and Norma J. Mills,
•trni;[~~~,:~~:!. will remain below normal readmgs, ranging from the both of Racine; four grandchildren; one great-grandd,aughter; several nieces
:-,
in e north to mid-408 south.
and n¢phews.
Overnight
will be in the 20s.
She was preceded'in death by her parents; her husband, Orvtlle; three stsHighs will be i the 40s on Tuesday.
ters, Zelpha Stewart and two infant ststers; and one daughter, Kim Jarrell.
The reCOrd high temperature for this date attlie Columbus weather staSemces will be held Wednesday, 1 p.m. at Roush Funeral Home m
tion was 82 set in ·1938. The record low was 6 set in 1885.
Ravenswood, W.Va. with Pastor Lloyd Sayre officiating. Burial will follow
Sunset today will be at 6:45p.m. sunrise Tuesday "will be at 6:31 a.m.
m Letart Falls Cemetery.
.
Weather forecast:
Frientls may call Tuesday, 6-9 p.m. and one hour before serv1ces at the
, , Tonight. .. Partly-cloudy. Lows 25 to 30. Variable winds 5to 10 mph.
funeral
home.
Tuesday...Cioudy with a chance of light rain. Highs in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain·SO percent.
Tuesday mght ...A chance of light rain. Lows near 40.
Extended forecast:
Albert "Rab" Oldaker, 84, Mason, W Va., dted Saturday, March 20, 1999
Wednesday ...Mostly clear. Highs in the 50s.
in Holzer Medi~al Center.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain showers. Morntng lows
Born Nov. 3, 1914 in Buffalo, W.Va., son of the late Verna Lucille Oldakto 40. Highs in the mid 50s.
'
er, he was rettred from the lawn mower factory m Genoa, Ill. AU S. Army
Friday...Variable cloudiness with a chance of rain. Morning lows 35 to
veteran of World War II, he was a member of the Stewart-Johnson Post 9926
Highs 50c_tcco .::S.:.
5.:-,=-=-c=-:::--::--'----...,-~---::-::---' of the VFW m Mason.
Surviving are hsi wife, Ada R. Lieving Oldaker; a daughter and son-inlaw, Patty L. and Rodney E. Reeves of Albany; a son and daughter-tn-law,
Harry D. and Kay M. Newberry of Kirkland, Ill.; six grandchildren and four
Units of the Meigs County Emer·
4:11 a.m. Sunday, Gold R1dge great·grandchtldren; and several nieces and nephews.
gency Med1cal Service recorded 16 Road, Ruby Casteel, O' Bleness
He was also preceded m death by a grandson, Wtlliam J. Newberry, and
· arlls for assistance Saturday and Memorial Hospital, Central Dis· a sister, Lillian Lucille Gibbs.
Services wtll be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
Sunday._Units responding mclud_ed: patch squad assisted.
with the Rev Bennie Stevens and the Rev. Ranktn Roach officiating. Burtal
CENTRAL DISPATCH
RACINE
·· : • 8 a.m. Saturday. Pomeroy Pike,
1:44 p.m. SaturdaY., Bashan will, be in the -pnion Cemetery0 Frtends may call at the funeral home from 69 totught.
..
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·&gt;-~na ·Marcnlkd, Holzer ' Methdal "Road, Randy f'riend, VMH; ,-:o.,
. (:enter;
Mtlitary graveside rites will be conducted by the military.
6:13p.m. Saturday, Apple Grove· 5:02 p.m. Saturday, Vance Road, Dorcas Road, Chad Wolfe, VMH.
' Harrisonville, John Eblin, treated at
RUTLAND
tbe scene;
12·58 ~.m. Saturday, Mam Street, Ray Jumor Roush, 50. Letart Falls, died Monday, March 22, 1999, at his
, , 5:17 p.m. Saturday, Goose Creek Stacy McKmghl, PVH, Centrai'Dts- home. Arrangements wtll be announced later by Ewmg Funeral Home,
,Road, Pageville, Harold Hudnall, palch sqll8d asststed;
Pomeroy.
· O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
9:34 a~m. Saturday, state Route
7:12 p.m. Saturday, Portland 143, Stella Adkms,' VMH, Central
Road, Shirley Powell , Veterans Dispatch squad assisted;
Memorial Hospital, Racine squad
12·38 p.m. Saturday, County
Ada Marte VanMeter, 89, Portland, died Saturday, March 20, 1999, at her
assisted;
Road 1; Mildred Morns, HMC.
home.
10:29 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
SCIPIO TWP VFD
A homemaker, she was born April1, 1909, in Racine, daughler of the late
Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy,
3.50 p.m. Sunday, Mount Umon Thomas Sr. and Belle Birch Holt,er. She was a 42-year member of the Free~err1ice
Hawk, Camden-Clark Road, brush fire, no injunes report- dom Gospel Mission Church in Long Bottom where she served as secretary
Memorial Hospital;
ed
and treasurer. She was a clerk at Durst Store m Sttversvtlle and worked at
12:57 p.m. Sunday, Lmcoln
TUPPERS PLAINS
Hams Farms in Portland. She was a 4-H advisor for the Stiversville Stitch. Heights, Denise Smith, refused
5:44p.m. Saturday, Locust Grove ers Club for several years.
'treatment, Pomeroy squad asststed.
Road, Mtsty Newell, O'Bleness
She is survtved by three sons and a daughter-in-law, Harold F. "Tub" Van'
POMEROY
Memorial Hospital;
Met~r of Chester, W.Va., Gary E 'Scrap" VanMeter of Joppa, Ala., and
10:34 a.m. Saturday, Cave Street,
2:23 p.m. Sunday, Bashan Road, Ronald M. "Mac" and Jean VanMeter of Pomeroy; three daughters and two
Maglene Russell, VMH, Central Mtsly Newell, O'Bleness Memortal sons-in-law, Jean M. "Mick" and Charles H. Fttch of Portland, Geraldme C
' Dispatch squad assisted;
Hospttal, Central Dispatch squad "Gerri" Northway of Portland, and SharleeA. "Chuck" and Michael J. Evans
assisted.
of Portland; a brother and sister-in-law, Thomas Jr. and Evelyn Holter of
F.lre reported at LTV Steel Racme, 19 grandchildren, 34 great-grandchtldren; four great-great-grandCLEVELAND (AP) - A fire at children; several nieces and nephews.
(USPS 113-M)
C--"7 N._,...Holdt..,la&lt;.
LlV Corp.'s Oeveland Works steel
She was preceded in death by her husband, Charles; one mfant son, two
plant
caused
$300,!XXJ
m
damage
to
stslers,
two brothers, two grandsons, two daughters-in-law, and one son-in...bllobeol '"'Y afte""""', Mondoy tJuou&amp;h
trailers used as offices.
Jaw.
Friday, Ill Court 51 , Pomeroy, Ohio, by obe
·Ohio Ydloy PublillliiiJ Compooy• . _ d•
No one was injured m Saturday
Semces wtll be held Tuesday, 1 p.m. at Roush Funeral Home m
- - pold • """""r. Oblo.
night's
fire.
About
40
firefighters
Ravenswood,
W.Va. with the Rev Roger Willford Sr. officiating Burial will
-M-., Tht
Pnu and oho Ohio
N-por-lion.
follow in Stiversville Cemetery m Portland.
responded to the fire
• ~ P•awzltl. Send addR• comcta0111 to 1be
"Every single tratler burned to the
Fnends may call Monday, 2-4 and 1-9 p.m. al the funerllilil!me
,• .. o.ily Scauncl, Ill Court St , Pomeroy, Oh1o
f: , 4~769 SUBSCRimON RATES
ground," said Ass•stant Ftre Chief
,.,..
Mike Darnell. Darnell said the trailer
By Cantor or M - R One - k ... .. ......... .. .... $2.00
complex was about 100 by 150 feet,
•
One Monlh •• ••• •••• .••. •• •• S8 70
and was not near any other butldmgs.
One Year••. ················- ·····....... Slot 00
SINGI,E COPY PRICE

Albert 'Rab' Oldake·r

~ Meigs

EMS logs 16 calls

Ray Junior Roush

Ada Marie .VanMeter.

, The Daily Sentinel

-oct

Daii)I, ....................................... 3.S Cerns
S11tJicribtl1, not delinn&amp; 10 pay tbe earner m1y
runt 1ft advaace d1rtct 10 1bc O.•ly Senlmcl on

a three, •ix or 12 lftOalll buil Cred11 w111 be
Jivtn curicr eiCb wcct

~:Today In History

No

IUblcripliOD

by IDIII pcrmil&amp;cd tn II'UJ

where borne earner lenllC:e tl IVIIIablfl
Pubhlber ruen~es the n&amp;flt to ldJUII ralet dur-

lnJ the IUt.cripllon period Sut.:ripllon r1te
chlnps ny be nnplernented by da•ncana the
-duradon of the aut.cript10n

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Gannett .................................65'/,
Kmart ............................. .......... 17

Reader Services

.

•

Mitchell Barnhart, 89, Guysville, d•ed Saturday, March 20, 1999, at
Bethesda Hospital in Zanesville.
He was born Aug. 8, 1909, son of the late Lod and Argosa Barnhart. He
worked for Carthage Township and was a former Carthage Township
Trustee
Surviving are three daughters, Carolyn Lee of Virgima Beach, Va., Dar·
lene Barnhart Butcher of Little Hockmg and Bermta Barnhart Eilts of
Zanesv11le; five grandchildren; five great-grandchildren; two brothers, Roy
Barnhart and Forest Barnhart, both of Guysville.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Esther Barnhart, and by a sister,
Rosie Justice.
Semces Will be held Wednesday, 1 p.m at White Funeral Home IR
O:Jolville with the Rev. David Cogar offictallJig.
Friends may call Tuesday, 6·8 p.m. at the funeral home.

of light rain slated Jessie Anderson Jarrell .
Yvonne Anderson Jarrell, 64, Pomeroy, died Sunday, March 21,
region during Tuesday 1999,Jessieat Rockspnngs
Rehabilitation Center m Pomeroy

'

~

·.· Supports upgrade to US 33

I

MICH.

•

supposed role that human activity has in hea•ti~g
up the planet
,•
The only way to achteve such a public poliey
goal, as I previously wrote, is for the govemmert
to use its power to tax, to regulate, to artificially
dampen demand for foss1l fuels (by doubli~
tripling or even quadrupling the cost of gasoli~e
and electricity).
1
But it is hard for global-warming alarmis~ lo
advocate such government policy in light of the
recent scienttfic research contradicting thl:ir buic
premise.
:
t
No, Mr. Gore, no Dr Knauss, the sky is not
fallmg.
,

1

Laura L. Albrtght, 65, West Columbia, W.Va., d1ed Sunday, March 21,
1999 at her residence.
Bom June 24, 1933 m West Columbia, daughter of the late Wilbur Fran·
cts and Ruth Virg~ma Wheeler, she was a homemaker.
She was also preceded tn death by her husband, John Gilbert "Big John"
Albrtghl, m 1989; and by a brother, Harry Ray Wheeler.
Survtving are two sons and daughters-in-law, John Randy and Sharon G.
Albnght, and Terry E. and Rut hanna L. Albright, aU of West Columbia; 'two
grandchildren and two great-grandchtldren; a sister-in-law, Sally Smith of
West Columbta; an aunt; and several nieces and nephews.
Services wtll be 1 p m Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va., wit)! the Rev. Clyde Ferrell offictahng. Burial wtll be in the
Kirkland Memortal Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9
p.m. Tuesday.

Tuaaday, March 23

'•

lary temperatures.
But the Scripps team's examination of ice
samples from three epochs·· 13,000, 140,000 and
240,000 years ago (periods of transition between
ice age and planetary warming) found that the
complete oppostte occurred.
First the Earth warmed up Then carbon dioxide levels rose.
"
11 so happens that the Earth h311 been in a
warming period since the last Ice Age ended
roughly 10,000 years ago.
And based on the findings of the Scripps scienliSts, it is quite conceivable that recent nses in
planetary temperature and carbon diox1de levels
(if they have in .fact occurred) are attributable
almost enttrely to forces of nature that control the
planet's climate and almost not at all to human

Death Notices

Laura L. Albright

,.r
•
•

: : Letter to the editor
:i

1

Are we to.blame for global warming?
By Joeeph Perltlna
In a paper published two
springs ago in the scientific journal Oceanography, John Knauss
offered his perspe&lt;:live on " the
politics of global warming."
What might be seen as a "por·
tent of the future" of the debate on
this environmental issue, he
lamented, was a commentary piece authored by
yours truly.
My column concerned the presidential
prospects of AI Gore, who had just been swom in
to a 5econd term as vice president
Arnong Gore's liabilities, I wrote,
was his extremism on environmental
tssues -- such as global warmmg. •
Of all the putative threats to the
ecosystem, I wrote (and Knauss
quoted), the vice pr~ident perceives
global warming to be the most dangerous of all, notwithstanding the
fact that the overwhelming maJority
of climatologists disagree with him
Gore's proposal to attack th1s
non-problem, I continued, is to puntsh Americans using fossil fuels by
forcing them to pay a "carbon lax,"
which would drive up the costs of
both gasoline and electricity.
" You will note that a scientific
mmority has been translated by
Perkins to be 'the overwhelming
majority of climatologists,"' wrote
Knauss.
~
But then, he added dismissively,
" precision of speech has never been
a hallmark of a presidential cam·
paign."
Knauss is among the legion of
sctenlists who have much invested •
- in research grants, lectures, published papers (in scholarly journals
such as Oceanography •• m global
warmmg
Thus, anyone who challenges the
global warmmg orthodoxy -- that human consumption of fossil fuels has increased atmospherIC carbon dtoxtde levels, which, m turn, has precipitated a dangerous planetary warming trend -is dealt with by global-warming apostles like
Knauss with extreme preJudtce.
But what are Knauss and his fellow globalwarming adherents to do when hard scienltfic evt·
dence comes to the fore that contradicts thetr
basic hypothesis-- that all those gas-burning cars
and SUVs and electnctly guzzling office butldmgs and homes are causing global warming?
For that is precisely the dtlemma they face
now in the wake of an arhcle published m the
March 12 issue of Science. The article is coauthored by Hubertus Ftscher, Martm Wahlen,
Jesse Smith, Derek Mastroianni and Bruce Deck,

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

llond8V, ... oh a. 1 -

.

,I

'

: Monday, March 22, 1999

Correction Polley
O.r ...ta coace,. Ia all IIOriol II IAI be

ecante. If yo• bow of •• error I• •
lflory, eoll Ill&lt; aewaroo01 at (740) 991·
1155. Wt will &lt;heck yoar lotfonnllloa
lid m1kt I fOITKtloB If WIITIIBttd.

·

Newe Dep•rbnenta

. n. ..... •••btr •• m-ZJ55. Dtport.cat u.te.siols 1rt:

_ Qtaerol

Ma••• . . ..

.ElL 1101
Newl .. . _ ... ... .. ... .......... ElL 1101
or ElL 11015

Oth11 Servlcea
• Ad•trilalaa..................................EIL 1104

Kroger ................................ ...67'1.
Umlted .................................36"t.
Oak Hill Flnr.......................... 17'.1

ova .........................................42

One Yalley ............................34'1•
Peopl88 ............................ .,... 22'.1
Pram filnl ........................ .. .... 14 ),
Roc:ltWell ......................... .45~.
AD/Shell .............................53'1•
Sears ............................ ......... 44),
1

Local briefs:
Ovflrnlght burgiBIJ' probed
Thieves targeting the Hilltop Grocery Store on state Route 124 near
R9tland overnight took cigarettes and an undisclosed amount of cash,
aC(X)rding to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The burglars disabled an alarm system and entered the store sometime
between Sunday evening and 5:30 this morning, Soulsby said. Deputies
and agents .with the Ohio Bureau of Crtmmal lnveshgatton and ldenlifi·
cahon were examinmg the scene thts mornmg, he satd.
Soulsby asks any areJI residents who may have seen a strange vehicle
in the vicmny to contact the shenff's office at992·3371 .

Announcements:
Craft and antique shf?w
The Me1gs Band Boosters will sponsor a craft and antique show in the
Meigs High School audttorium Saturday and Sunday. The event will be
held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, and from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
on Sunday there will also be a chicken noodle dinner served in the cafeteria. Dinners can be eaten there or taken out.

Services announced
A special serv1ce will be held at the Clifton Tabernacle at Clifton, W.
Va. Saturday night at 7 p.m. Handley Dunn will be the guest speaker

Special services set
Dr. Brett Ridgeway will be speaker at special services, March 28·31 at
the Victor Bapttst Church in Mtddleport. Sunday services will be held al
10 a.m., 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. and Wednesday 7 p m A nursery will be provided. The Rev. James Keesee invites the public.

Special meeting
Rutland Village Council will meet in regular session on Tuesday at
7:30 p.m., at the Rulland C1vic Center, in order to dtscuss the FEMA hazard mitigation grant.

Computer classes

Computer classes will begin thts week at Eastern High School. The
courses are How to Navigate the Internet, Mondays, March 19 through
May 17, from 6.30 to 8 p.m., at no cost; How to budd your homepage,
Tuesdays, March 30 through May 4, 6:30 to 8 p m , at no cost; Office
97/Word, at no cost, April 17 from 9 am. to noon, and Print Artist, a
course about makmg cards, letterhead, etc., Mondays, April S through
April 26, 6:30 to 8 p m., with a $10 fee for supplies.
Each class has a capac11y of 25, on a first-come basis Information and
regtstrallon are avatlable by calhng Nancy Larkins at 985-3329.

Hunter education course
A free Ohto Hunter Education Course will be held March 29, 30 and
31, 6-9 p.m and Apnl 3, 9 a.m. to noon, at the Pomeroy Gun Club. The
course is mandatory for prospective first-time hunting license holders. To
regtster, call Jim Freeman at The Daily Sentinel at992-2155, ext. 102. or
at 949-3403, evenings. Oass size is limited to 25

Signup scheduled
Syracuse Baseball Association Will have sign up Tuesday and Wednesday, 5 to 7 pm. and Saturday from 10 a.m until noon, at the Syracuse
municipal buildmg

Special services set
John Elsw1ck wtll speak at the Mt. Olive Church, Long Bollom, on
Wednesday, 7 p m

Post to meet
The Tuppers Plams VFW Post 9053 wtll meet Thursday at 7:30p.m .

Senior citizens to meet
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens Oub will have a meetmg and luncheon, 10:30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. Thursday at the town house.

c_arlng and Sharing
The Caring and Sharing Group will meet at the Senior Cnizens Center,
Thursday, 1 p.m. to 2·30 p.m. Becky Baer Will present a program on well·
ness.

Terry Anderson
Continued from page 1
ble compllcattons m dealing wtth
these countnes, wtlh whtch tt has no
formal relations. Iran, for example,
holds U.S. property m tis country,
JUSt as the U.S. government has custody of Iranian property in the United Stales.
Sandy Berger, the president's
nattonal security adviser, dtd not
respond to repealed requests for
comment on the pohcy. The State
Department had no public comment
Anderson has httle expectation of
getting any money e1ther, but
explams: "If we don't file a sutl,
whenever Iran and the Umted States
sellle accounts, we won 't be s111ing
at the table "
Sttll ongoing is a 1994lawsuu h1s
altorney Stuart Newberger ftl ed
under the Freedom of lnformallon
Act to obtam government docu·

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Offering prompt and dependable service .for residential
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·
Stock reports are the 10.30
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-·-·-

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of Galllpolla.

Rocksprings Rd.
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.

•••

ments regardmg Anderson's captivt·
ty, mcludmg efforts to obtam hts
release.
After h1s release, Anderson and
hts wife wrole uoen of Ltons," a

book about their ordeal. In 1992 he
left the AP and endorsed Clinton 's
first pres1dential campa1gn, taught
JOUrnalism at Columbia University,
was host of a radto talk show and
wrote a syndtcaled column.
Last year the faintly moved to
Ohto Anderson serves on the board
of the nonprofit Committee to Protect Journalists, whtch works for
press freedom worldwode
An ex-Manne and Vietnam veteran, Anderson also ratses money to
butld schools m Vtelnam through the
Vietnam Chlldrens' Fund. He has
been back to Bet rut and thts summer
plans to take a group of journalism
students there.

Humans faked out by. geese decoys

CLEVELAND (AP) - A plan to
fool Canada geese ts fooling humans.
The Cleveland Museum of Art,
hopmg to keep geese away, has
placed plastic dead geese decoys in
liS lagoon. The museum thought real
geese would see the fake geese and
think the lagoon 1s dangerous
It's too soon to tell tf the decoys
are keepmg geese away, but the counJessie Yvonne Anderson Jarrell, 64, Pomeroy, dted Sunday, March 21, terfeit carcasses floating m the
1999, at Rockspnngs Rehab•lltahon Center m Pomeroy.
A homemaker and member of the Protestant faith, she was born Jan. 26,
1935, m Acme, W.Va.,' daughter of the late Jess and Laura Farley Anderson.
She ts sumved by two daughters, Sharon Sue P1erce and Norma J. Mills,
both of Racine; four grandchildren, Joey Jarrell, Shannon Pierce, Roy Pierce
Jr. and Arnos Mills; one great-granddaughter, McKenzte Pterce, several
meces and nephews; and a special friend, Charles Shain of Pomeroy.
She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Orvtlle, three sts·
ters, Zelpha Stewart and two mfant stslers; and one daughter, Kim Jarrell.
Servtces wtll be held Wedn~y, March 24, 1999, at 1 p m at Roush
Funeral Home m Ravenswood, W.Va. wtth Pastor Uoyd Say{e offictalmg.
Bunal wtll follow in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call Tuesday, March 23, 1999, from 6-9 p.m. and one hour
before servtces at the funeral home.

Jessie Yvonne Anderson Jarrell

.

lagoon look real to humans.
The museum says police have
been gelling calls from people asking
tf those are dead geese floating in the
lagoon.
"There's been a lot of concerned
calls," satd museum spokesman Bill
Prenevost.

�-.....,

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

5

.

·

.

Page 4
Monday, March 22, 1999

Spartans make first Final Four trip since Magic Johnson era ·

Michigan State rallies to beat UK 73.;.66:
By R.B. FALLSTROM

..
•
•.

•

••
•

.'
·!'

'

:: :. BLOCKS SHOT ·- Ohio State's George Reese (right) blocks the
.:.:shot of St. John's Lavor Postell in the second half of Saturday's
: NCAA South Regional title game in Knoxville, Tenn., where the
• .Buckeyes' 77-74 victory put them In the Final Four for the first time
: llince 1968. (AP)

• •

~. OSU ends 31-year Final Four drought

::B uckeyes get 77-74
~win over St. John's
.•

. :. IIY STEPHEN HAWKINS

I
J

•:
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) :· One season after finishing last in the
•: Big Ten, Ohio State is headed. to. the
;·. final Four.
: : Guards Scoonie · Penn · and
: ~~chael Redd combined for 42
• pomts and 13 asststs as OhiO State
~· beat St. John's 77-74 Saturday for
:: the NCAA South Regional champi:: onship, sending the Buckeyes to
their first Final Four since 1968.
; : "It's just really, really hard to put
: into words the feeling shared by all
: of us, " said second-year Ohio State
- · coach Jim O'Brien. "It is hard to
imagine that we have put ourselves
in this position. This is as goo9 as it
. gets for the time being."
Penn, who didn't play on last
year's 8-22 team, had 22 points and
eight assists against St. John's and
was selected MVP of the South
Regional. Redd added 20 points and
five assists for the Buckeyes.
"It's been a tremendous season,"
said Penn , who scored 26 points in
Ohio State' s win over top-seeded
Auburn in the regional semifinal s.
"You can take away the MVP and I
wouldn ' t care . When I receive an
individual award, it goes to every
guy on the team ."

Penn was the only new starter this
season for Ohio State (27-8), having
followe~ 0' Brien from Boston
College to Columbus. He sat out last
year because of transfer rules after he
and the coach·had pa!ticipated in the
NCAA tournament 10gether in 1996
and 1997.
Ohio State never trailed, but had
to hold on as St. John's (28 -9) - in
its first regional final since 1991 got within a point in the final minute.
The Red Storm was down 76 -74 with
under I 0 seconds left when Erick
Barkley lost control of the ball and
had his only turnover in 37 minutes
of action.
"I lost the ball," said Barkley,
slumped over in a chair in the dressing room, his right hand covering his
eyes.
"We wouldn't have had a chance
to be in the game, much less have a
chance to win without Barkley," said
first-year St. John's coach Mike
Jarvis. "Hopefully, he will wake up
tomorrow and understand ."
Redd grabbed the loose ball and
dribbled to the other end of the court.
Fouled just before the buzzer, he
ended the scoring with a free throw
(See BUCKEYES on Page 5)

ST. LOUIS (AP) ...:. Michigan
State finally acted like a No. I seed.
Facing an early 13-poinf deficit
champion
against
defending
Kentucky in the Midw~st Regional
final, the Spartans shrugged instead
of panicking and earned their first
trip to the Final Four in 21 years with
a 73-66 victory Sunday.
The link to Michigan State's last
glory days, 1979 NCAA championship hero Magic Johnson, was
among the Regional-record crowd of
42,519 as the Spartans (33-4) ran its
victory streak to 22 in a row.
But this group is new to the spotlight,. so no one was bragging about
denying Kentucky (28-9) its fourth
straight appearance in the Final Four.
"I don ' t think we have .the swagger yet, not like Kentucky," coach
Tom lzzo said. " Maybe we can have
a swagger in the showers. but I hope
by the time we're out, reality sets in,
This is a stan."
Well, maybe not JUSt a start .
" It's probably as good a day as
we've had at Michigan State in a
long, long time ," Izzo said .
' Michigan State made three of its
first 15 shots to fall into 17-4 and 196 deficits and at one point was getting outrebounded 15 -7. It was
enough for point guard Mateen
Cleaves, involved in a brutal headon-head collision with Oklahoma's
Eduardo Najera on Friday night, to
reach for the aspirin.
"When they were up 17-4, they
(the headaches) staited coming back
a little bit, " Cleaves joked.
The spunky Spartans turned it
into a one-point game at the half by
going to a little-used weapon, the
three-pointer. Michigan State, which
averages four three-pointers a game,
was · 5-for- 11 in the half. The
Spartans shot 49 percent for the
game and flexed their muscles
underneath after the break, ending
with a 33-29 rebounding advantage.
"!don' t reall~ know how we got
back in,' nor do I care," said sixth
man Morris Peterson, Y;ho had 19
points anp hit six key free throws in
the final 28.9 seconds. "I'm just
happy we did ."

Peterson, perhaps the best sixth
man in the nation , also had 10
rebounds . fie realized the enormity
of the situation each time he stepped
to the line in the closing seconds, and
hit nothing but net on all six free
·
throws.

"I wasn 't ne'rvous," Peterson

said. ''A lot of things started going
through my mind, and I realized this
was a once-in-a-lifetime situation. I
just wanted to take advantage of it ."
Andre Hutson and AJ. Granger
each had 14 points and Cleaves had
10 points and II assists. Granger was
instrumental in the first-half comeback, going 3-for-3 from three-point
range.
It was a flat final chapter for
Kentucky seniors Scott Padgett and
Heshimu Evans, notorious by their
absence of production. Padgett· had
II points on 3-of-8 shooting and
Evans, after
12 ·
in
three

Miami nt Utah. 8 p.m.
Dtn vcr at San Anl omo. 8 : ~0 p.m
Toronto fi t Chicago. tL \0 p.m.
Golden S!mc ml'onlil nd. 10 p rn

NBA standings

NCAA men's tournament

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division

ll'

Icam

Miami .
Orlando ..
Phii!KieiDhia .

. ...... 18
. 18

L

ltL
7~ 0

6
8

692

I
4
4

. : ...... 14

10

58J

New York .

. ........ .. . 13

II

577

Washing1on

10
... 8

14
15

~1 7

4

20

167

Basion .
New Jt:r!iey

Indi ana .. .
Milwauker ..
Alhmta .
Detro it .....
CL EV ELAND ..

Centf al Diwi~lon
... 17
7
.. 14 10

Charloue .... .

708
58 .~

.14

II

560

. ...... \4

II

560

. .12 II
. .. I I 12

522
4711

Toromo .. .

............... 9
,,_... 8

-·-

Chicago ..... .

.\4R

GETTING A GRIP on the loose basketball Ia the game In St. Loula, where the Spartans' 73-66 vicobjective of Kentucky's Scott Padgett (left) and tory put them In the Final Four for the first tine Jn
Michigan State's Morris Peterson In the second 20 years. (AP)
half of Sunday's NCAA Midwest Regional title

.

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J . (AP)
- If Michigan State coach Tom lzzo
was
hoping
defensive-minded
Temple would give him a few hints
on how to handle No. I Duke in the
Final Four next weekend, he can fo&lt;get it.
The sixth-seeded Owls not only
failed to get John Chaney to his first
Final Pour in 27 years of coaching,
they struggled as 'much as everybody
else this season against .Mike
Krzyzewski 's Blue Devils in losing

the East Regional final 7 8-61
Sunday.
Duke (36-1) will take a school record 31 game winning streak into
the national semifinal at St.
Petersburg, Fla. , against No. 2
Michigan State on Saturday. The
Spartans defeated defending champion Kentucky 73-66 in winning the
Midwest Regional and earning 'their
first Final Four berth since 1979,
when Magic Johnson led them to the
title.
Duke and Michigan State (33-4)

14
II

.WI

:\20

Utah ....
Houston .
. San An tomo ...
Minne50ta
Dall a~ __
l:knver
Vancouver .

19

ltL

7' :
9'.

640
640

)

11

538
.•46

5':
10':

7 18
~ 20

280
200

12

12

P~tcilic Di''i!k&gt;n '\
....... l 1!00
IS 9 .667
.. ... t 2
11 .:'il l
.. ......... 12 n 480
....... 11 15
421
... ........ 10

14

417

........ 2 22

·uR J

Saturday 's

!.ill

9

9

)

"
.1

7

••'

Monday, March 29·1inal

Semifi nal wimk' rs , 9:18p.m.

NCAA women 's tournament
East Regional
Saturday's stmifimtl scorts
A.t Greensboro Coliseum, Cretnsboro, N.C.
Duke 76. Old Donunion 63
·1en neu~e 6K. Virg_1nta Tech 52

•

Tunlght'J .final
Tennessee 0 1-2) vs . Duke 127-6), 9 p m

•

17 o

~cures

Mideast Regional

York 96, Boston 78
Washington II ] , CLEVELAND 8~
Indiana 94. Miami 89
Mil waukee 83. Atl anta 77
Dallas 104. Sacramento 90
Houston IOJ. Phoena 9.\, OT
San Anton io 92. Vancouver ~8. OT

Saturday's semifinal scoru
At Shoemaker Center, Clnclnm1ll
Iowa Stale 64, Connecucut 58 •
Georgia 67. Clemson .54
Tonight's nnal
Iowa State 115-7) vs. Georgia /26-6). 7 : .~ 0 p.m

Sunday's s.:ores

Midwest Regional

LA Lakers 115, Orlando 104
Chicago 95. Boston 91. OT
Toronto 8S. New York 81 . OT
L.A. Clippers 100. Mi nn"sou 8~
Detroit 104. Utah I0 I. OT
CLEVELAND 88, New Jc:rfley I!~
Chnrloll e 94. Mtlwnu kee 87
Denver 102. Scall k 9!1
Portland 9 1. PhtiMklphta 7&lt;;

Saturday '!! semifinal scores

AI Redbird

Normal. Ill.
~9

Rutgers 53 . Te:r.as Tctll 42 •
TonigJ,rs' final
Purdue i] I. I I\'S Rutgersl29-.5). 7pm.

West Regional
Salurday's ~ mifina l !! rOn~sAt l os Angelf!l Sport.s ·Anna. los AnKeles
Louistana Tech 7J. LSU 52
U(: LA 11 Colorado Slate M

Tonight's games
W;uhi ngton at lndiaM. 7 p m
Toronto at New JrrSty..7·]0 p m
Atlunta at New York. 8 p m
Sacramento at Houston . 8 : ~ p.m
L.A Lake1s at Dal las. 8 JO p m
De troit at Milwaukee. 8:.\0 p .m
Vancouver at Ph oeni~ . 9 p m
Philadelphia :11 Seaule 10 p m

IJ1 U! S1an:~

Tonight 's final
Tech (29-2) vs UCLA 1211:7). Mid

The Final Four
Friday's .seminnal.s
AI San J o~f Art&lt;na , S11n .lou. Catir.
Em t chilmpwn n Mideast ~.· hampwn . 7 or 9· \0

TUesday's games

.J'

Ar~na .

Pnrdne H2. NOr1h Cnrn lm..1

pm

M1d wcst chilmpton

\! Wr ~ t

, h:unp•ron 7 nr 9-lO

''Duke has 10 great players, not
two or three," Temple point guard
Pepe Sanchez said. " When you face
a traditional college team, they have
. one, two or three great players .at
mos t."
(See DUKE on Page 5)

District 13 all-star twinbill tonight
The District 13 all -star bas ketb ~ll
games will be held today at 6 p.m. at
thG University of Rio Grande's Newt
Oliver Arena.
The girls ' game will start at 6
p.m.The boys ' game will start at
approximately 8 p.m.
Both games will have 20-minute
•

halves.
In both games, the Division I and
Division II all -stars will take on players from Division I'll and Division IV
schools.
Between games , there will lw
three-point shooting contests for boys
and girls and a slam dunk contest.

EASTERN CONFEREl'/CtAOanllc Division

lfllll

ll' L I fl&gt;.

New J ~ r~y .......... 1 ... .18 22 M
Pinsburgh .... ,.............. 35 22 12
Phillldelphiu ... .
.. ] I 22 17
N.Y. Rangers
..... 29 31 10
N.Y. lslande u .
...20 42 9

l.i[

84
82
79
68

201
210
205
19.1
49 162

li.!.
169
182
171
19.\

74
69
64
37

-·-

Stale tournaments

181
178
179
'14_5

Ium

Central Dhlslon
, W. L I

Detroit' ...
34 30 6
St.Louis ....................... 29 2911
Na5hville .......................... 24 .\9 1
Chic&amp;I!IO ............................ 21 39 10

eta. Gf

.&gt; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

14
69
55
52

To get a current weather
report, check the

'·

Jeff Burton wins TranSouth

to Beth Barber; Most Spirited,
Varsity cheerleaders:
Kim Lyons, Brad Willford, Ben Wolfe, J os h Broderic k, Jos h Will , Matt
Jessica
Kimes;
and
Most Marcinko, Theresa Baker, Rachael Chad Nelson, J.R. Wood, Bradley Caldwell and Joe Brown. Coachis:
Outstanding Cheerleading award to Lees, jessica Kimes, Tri sha Shields, Branno n, Corey Young, Du stin Howie
Caldw ell.
Statisti~:
Rachael Lees .
Staci Grueser, Beth Barber and Kehler, Josh Kehl
Stephani e Evans, J oe Bail~.
Joe Bailey then presented awards Jess ica Bartels. Advise r:· Angie
Varsity boys' basketball: Jeremy C hasatie Hollo n, Roy J o hn ~Q!l .
to members of the Eastern Juni or Rigsby
Casto, Erron Aldridge, Joe Dill on, Alison Rose and Mark Griffin .
varsity squad, foll o wed by head varReserve
boys' · basketball: Beau Baile y, Matt Bi ssell , S.teve Manager: Nick Weeks
::
'
sity mentor Howie Caldwell, who Garrett Karr, Jeremy Co nnoll y, Chris Weeks, Eric Smith . Matt Boyles,
honored members of thi s year's var•'
sity squad. Senior members ho nored
were Joe Dillon, Jeremy Casto, Beau
Bailey, and Erron Aldridge.
.,
The Bryce Buckley II 0 percent
award went to Josh Broderick ; Best
Free Throw Shooting, Matt Bissell ;
Most Rebounds, Josh Will ; Coaches
Award, Eric Smith, Jeremy Casto,
and Joe Dillon ; and Most Improved,
•
. oJ
Jeremy Casto and Joe Brown.
.
Matt Caldwell and Josh Broderick .
were All-TVC , All-Academic ; Joe
Brown was All-District 13 and first
team AII-TVC; and Josh Will was
AllcTVC, All-Academic, first team
All-TVC; and District 13 Hon orable
Mention .Dan Will gave the benediction .
Hf~arm~
Pictures will appear in .Tuesday's
edition of The Daily Sentinel.
Eastern Awards :
Varsity girls' basketball : Kri sten
Chevalier, Juli Bailey, Becky Davis,
Angi Wolfe, Juli Hayman, Jessica
Brannon, Valerie Karr, Da nielle
Spencer, Amber Baker, Whtiney
&amp;
Kart, Angie Taylor and Amber
VanSickle.· Coaches: Paul Branno n,
Dave Weber and Dan Spencer.
to
Reserve girls' basketball: Janel
Ridenour, Tammy Bissell , Janet
Calaway, Stacie Watson , Whitney
Karr, Holly Broderick, Tiffany
Spencer, Juli Bailey, Kr.isten
apvo~nr;
Chevalier, Sarah Clifford,Angie
Taylbr, Amber VanSickle and Sara
Mansfield. Coaches: Paul Brannon ,
Dave Weber and Dan Spencer.
BELTONE HEARING AID CENTER
Statistics: Michelle Buckley

There's nothing else in between."
Roush general manager Buddy
Parrott said the team had the crash
cart ready and was planning a lengthy
brake job.
· Moments later, Burton learned
he ' d finally won at Darlington , where
he 's come so close and run so well
the past three years. He had finished
. second to Jeff Gordon the past two
Southern 500s and led the most laps
here a year ago before getting passed
19 laps from the enll by winner Dale
Jarrett.
At last, it was his turn.
"I' II take it any way we can get
it," Burton said. " We had the best car
out there, so even if it stopped raining, we deserved. to win. "
Burton won $161,900 and \ook the Omission
series lead for the first time in his
In Monday's summation of the
career. He's seven points ahead of
Southern
sports banquet, Mitchell
Gordon, who is trying for a record tying third straight Winston Cup title. Walker was riot listed as making
honorable mention All-District,
Associated Press.
(Continued from Page 4)
Since that time the Distri ct 13
team was released and Walker again
Temple had hoped its aggressive
After falling behind early,
earned special mention honors for
2-3 matchup zone, which had not Langdon ignited a 17-2 spurt by hithis contribution to the Racineallowed more than 55 points in any ting four straight · shots, including
Southern basketball program this
of three tournament games, would three straight three-pointers.
·
season ..
· prevent Duke from reaching its 12th
"Give Temple credit. Early they
Kyle Norris, Chris . Randolph,
Final Four, its eighth under made it an ugly game. We couldn't
Kim Sayre and Kim !hie were also
Kfzyzewski and first since 1994.
get ariy penetration and I couldn't get
named to the Tri-Valley Conference
The plan was to pack the defense the ball on the side, " Langdon said.
all-academic team .
inside against Duke center Elton · "Then I got so.me looks, the first one
Brand and to dare either Trajan went down and every time I got a
· Langdon or anybody el se to beat look I felt good re leasing it. I think
· them over the top .
my teammates knew I was feeling
Langdon did just that in scoring it"
Duke is ilow two wins away, frqm
23 points. He hit 6 of 7 shots from
· 'the field , including his first five capturing its third national title this
' three-pointers. That forced Temple decade, a crown most experts con(24 - 11) · to extend its zone and ceded to it months ago.
· opened things tip for everyone else,
" You don'.t get a cha~c e to play
especially Brand, who had 21 points for the national championship until
· you get to the Final Four,"
on 8 of 10 shooting.
" Against Duke, we knew Krzyzewski said . " Now we can talk
Langdon was goin·g to hit shots, you about winning the nattonal champijust didn't know how .well ," Chaney onship."
said after losing his fourth regional'
Duke won national titles under
· final , his third at the Continental Krzyzewski in 1991 and '92. The
Airlines Arena. "He was coming off Blue Devils won in ' 91 by pulling
· screens , turning and shooting over a off one of the biggest upsets in
6-foot- 10 player and that just doesn 't NCAA history, knocking off prohibi-.. ~Yl\•/'~,',\'~,
happen that often . We just didn 't tive favorite UNLV in the semifinals _. · -"'- 'If
know how well he was going to do before beating Kansas for the cham- '.1 ··•
it ' !1
pionship.
The loss was the worst of the seaTe.mpl e
guard
Rasheed
son for Temple, which got 19 points Brokenboro~g~ said anyone playing
apiece from Mark Karcher and Duke needs to concentrate on stopL amont Barnes. The 85 points were ping Brand and Langdo n.
· the most given up by the Owl s in 3~
"You can 't stop all of them , and ·
• : NCAA tournament game s under that's what we tried to do," he said.
: :. their 67-year-old coach.

166 225

219
178
194
191
216

1)8
167
172
160
186

Boss'S Bllt'I'HDAY?

FATHIR1 S DAY?

McmtiR'S DAY?

HIR Bllt'I'HDAY?

YOUR ANNIYIUARY?

GRADUAnoN?

'

/

AlliiOR DAY?

AN "I'M

SORRY.
I'LL NIVER DO IT
AGAIN'' PRISINT?

A·THANKSPOR
IYIRYTHING" GIFT?

Give them what they REALLY want.. .the greatest
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'

Golf TraiL You can' give a 3-day''g olf and hotel
package for as little as $159:
ALABAMA'S

•

Tonight's games

, Thesday's games

1·800-949 4444
• Three 18-hole rounds, two nighi&gt; holel, Sunday lhrough Thursday.
Per person .

Bosed on double occupancy. Carts no t included.

(Continued from Page 4J

.

: : ; ith seven -tenths of a seconf including four three-pointers, and
·: remaining.
grabbed nine rebounds for St. John's,
;-.: Both Ohio State and St. ·John 's which got within one game of the
: : ~lew scoring chances in the closing Final Four in Jarvis ' first year.
seconds.
Bootsy Thornton had 18 points and
:- · St. John 's, which !~ailed by as Barkley 13 .
many as 13 points earlier, was down
Earlier in the second half, Ohio
just73-67 with l :24 left .when Bohan Stale twice built 13-point leads, only
Savovic traveled in the backcourt. to· have St. John 's quickly get back
But the Red Stonn was unable to within six points.
Savovic's open three-pointer,
capitalize when Reggie Jessie travcled.
after getting a pass from Redd, put
No one scored again until Ron the Buckeyes ahead 61 -48 with 9:06
Artest's driving one -handed s ~qt left.
with 48.5 seconds left. Penn hit twlt--Postell and Artest followed with
free throws at the other end to extend consecutive three-pointers for St.
the lead back to six . .
John 's, which forced four turnovers
Ohi o State then failed to put the in le ss than four minutes. Ohio State
game away when Redd and Brian had just four total before that.
Ken Johnson , Ohio State's 6-foot Brown both missed the front;end of a
bo nus.
II ce nter who finished with 12
. The Buckeyes had a 75-71 lead points, sco red inside on consecutive
when Redd missed, short, and Artest possessions to put the Buckeyes up
drove for a layup at the other end . 53 -40 with just onder 14 minutes
.
Brown missed with 19.2 seconds left.
left, and Chudney Gray hit the first
The · Red ·Storm re sponded with
of two free throws to .make it 75-74 seven straight points, including a
seven seco nds later.
layup and a three-pointer by Postell
" St.. J ohn 's refused to just go in a 37-second span .
away nicel y and made a furi ous
After scoring .nin e points in the
comeback," O ' Brien said."! thoug ht fir st seve n minutes of the game,
we played basically well for 38 min- including a three-point and fourutes, and were happy . to be able to point play, Penn was held scoreless
the rest of the half. But his back court
hold on.,.
Penn made the second of his free partner pic ked up the slack.
throws and then was on Barkle y
Redd . who hadn't scored since a
when the St . John 's freshman made dunk for the game's first score, had
his huge mi stake .
15 points in the .final II :46. That
" I'm not even sure what hap- included a three-pointer from the top
pened," Pe nn admitt ed. " I know the of the key 'at the buzzer to give Ohio .
ball was bo unci ng freely and got into State a 41 -33 halftime lead.
Ohio Stale never trailed after
Michael' s hand s."
Ohio St ale sho t 54 pe rcent fron1 scorin g th e game's fir st li ve point ~.
the field and wo n despite gelling out- on the Redd dunk and Penn 's threerebounded 45-28 .
_
point play, as St . .,john 's mi ssed its
Lavor Postell scored .24 points. fi rst seven shots.

·:90

San Jost at Montreal. 7 p.m.
N.Y. Ran,.ers M Tnmpa Bay. 7 : 0~ p m
Phil_adelphia at Turomo. 1 : ~0 p.m.
Cru-olin a ot St Louis. 8 p.m.
Cnl1ary at Edmonton , 9 p.m
Buffalo nt N~:w Jtr1Cy. 7:.\0 p m
Chica!!o arl'•mburfh. 7:.m fl m.
Dnl l :~s at Phnc: nt, _9 p m

Sentinel

GA .

208 182
197 18.\

Ohio H.S. girls' state finals

.II

17.\
183
184
246

WESTERN CONFERENCE ·

Division II
164
Cle. lkn~dic ri ne (20-6) vs. Philo (22·J),
Northwest Dh•lsion
Thursday. fl p.m.
Kettering Alt ~ r (19-6) vs Col Beechcroft (20- Colomdo ........................... 35 16 9 79 197
Calgary
.... :......17 .32 10 64 185
4), Thut$dr.y. 9 p.m
·
Edmonton ..................... ... 26 .H 10 62 192
Final. Saturday, 2 p m
Vancouver ........................ 20 39 II 51 167
Dl"ision Ill
PadOc Diwl§ton
Coldwater ( 17-8) vs. Ci n. Madeira (24- 1),
x-Dall~ ..... .
.. .....4.1 14 12 98 200
Thursda)' II a.m.
...... 34 24 12 80 ' 175
Bedford Chane! {24-0) vs. BEVERLY FORT Phoeni x..
Ana~im .......... .'...... 31 28 II
73 184
FRYE (2~- 2). Th1,1rsdmy 2 p.m.
San J~ ........................... 26 28 15 67 156
Final: Sa turday. 1'1 a.m.
Los Angeles ....................27 .18 5 59 16.1
~-clinched playoff benb
·
Dl-viJkln IV
Wonhi ngton Chr_ (22-3 ) vs. Ed&amp;erton (2 1-4),
Fri day, II a.m.
SatUrday's scores
... Berlin Hiland 125- 1) vs . Fort Reco very (24-1 ),
San Jose 2, Boston 2-tie
Fri day. 2 p.m.
Nashvil le I, Pittsburgh 1-tit
Final. Sa turday. 5 p.m. ·
Chi caao ~-Colorado 5
"
Washing1on I. Momreal 0
Toront.o .l. New Jersey I
OtUiwa .l. St. Louis 2
Edmon1on 4, Vancouver ~
Saturday's action
t.os Angelc1 4. Fl orida 3
Di vision I
Sunday 's scores
Pickenngton 46. MilSon :lO
Calgary 2. N.Y !J ia nd ~Ys I
Pitlsburgh 2. N.Y Rangr rs 2· 1i ~
[)j,·i.ston II
Philadt:lphia 5. Dr!troit 4
Dayton Chllnuna.dc-J ul1t nne 42. Lim a Until _\4
O.tca!o 4. Colorado .l
Boslon 4. Was hington J
Oh·lJion Ill
-DallaJ 3. Caro lina 2, OT
Ckv e. Vi lln An gela-St Joseph 67 . C:~ss t ow n
Phoenu 4. Los An8elu I
Munni E 52
Florida 5. Anaheim 2
Di•·is-ion I\'
Rascom Hopewell-Loudon 61. S. Charlenon SE

First, reserve girls coach Paul
Brannon awarded members of the
reserve . girls basketball · team.
Brannon then hnored members of the
championship .Lady Eagles basketball squad. Eastern finished at 2 1-3,
claiming .the Tri-Valley .Conference
Hocking Diyision, the . Division IV
Sectional Crown and District Crown .
Angi Wolfe, Valerie Karr, Jessica
· Brannon, Angi Taylor,and · Juli
Hayman were presented senior
awards.
·
. The Most Improved award went
to An.gi Wolfe; Most Rebounds,

~ ~ Buckeyes ...

209

89- 20,\ 146
81 216 !96
77 180 1~ 2
7.1 181 159
65 16.\ J 78

Toronto ........................ J8 26 S
Buffalo ... ................. ........ J 2 B 1.\
Boston ............................ .\1 1711
Montreal .......................... 28 J2 9

OlviNon I
E Liverpool (2.1- 1) VI. Shaker Hts. (24-1),
Friday, 6 p.m.
Cin. Moeller (19-6) vs. Mansfield Sr. (22-.' ),
Friday, 9 p.m
Final: Saturday. 8:30p.m

served as master of ceremonies.

Valerie Karr; Best Defensive Player,
Amber Baker; Best Free Throw
Shooter, Juli Hayman; and · Most
Assists, Jessica Brannon.
Special 1,000-point awards went
to Valerie Karr and Jessie a Brannon.,
Karr scored I ;133 points in her
career: Freshman 12, Sophomore
3!8, Junior 347, and Senior 456.
Brannon scored 1, 189 points in her
career: Fresbman 226, Sopohomore
321 , Junior 287, and Senior 355.
Karr was also honored for being
District 13 Player of the Year and
North South Representative , AllOhio
First Team,
Tri- Valley
Conference Player of the Year, AP
All-District first team , and Tri-Valley
All-Academic.
Hayman was 2nd team All-TVC
and 2nd team All District 13.
Brannon was First team All-TVC,
All-District 13 lirst team, and AP
All-Di strict.
Next , Angie Rigsby presente'd
cheerleading awards to members of
her vars ity squad: The Most
Improved cheerleading award went

.

Northe1111 Division

Ottawa ......................... ....40 20 9

Division Ill
Bedford Olancl 58, Akron St.V-St.M 44
Souahcast Division
BEVERLY FORT FRYE 6] , Grnndvi ew Hts. 59
Carolina. ................. ...........10 26 14
Ci n. Madei ra 77, Cin. Finncytown 62
· florida ... .................... 26 26 17
Co ldwa)er 68, Huron 57
Washington ................... 29 35 6
Tampa Bay .
.. ........... 16 47 ~

The Final Four
AI Troplcana Field, St. Pettnhurg, Fla.
Saturday's stmlfinals
OHIO STATE (27-Sl vs. Connccucut 02- .2.1.
5:42 p.rn
Dul.:e {3 6- 1) vs. Michigan Slate (_B- 4}. ]0 minutes aft er fi rst game

N~ w

Charlone at Orlando. 7 .\0 p m
Bos1on :11 CLEVELAND. 7 JO pIll

Sun(by's ·nnal
Stale 73. Kentucky 66

played in December, with the Blue
Devils winning 73-67.
However, Coach i&lt; has his team
on a roll , winning II of their last 13
games by 20 or more points. The
other two wins were by margins of
15 and 17 points.

NHL standings

Division II
Philo 56, Washington C.I-t 5.\
Cle. Benedictine 60. Struthers 5J
Cots. Beec hr.T
. ofl 49 , Lima Shawnee 48
Kct11.Ting Aller 6.\ . Cin. McNicholas 60-0T

Saturday's final
Conneclicut67, Gonzaga 62

5' :

760

"
"9

Division I
E. Liverpool 69. Spri ng . South 63
Cin. M ~ ller 59, Benvmrcek $7
Shaker Hts. .59. You. Rayen 36
Mansfield Sr. 63. Cleve. St. lgnmi us 46

West Regional

:{

6

16

Ponland 20 ...
L.A. Lakers ..
Scaule ............ .
·Pboeni 11 ........ .
Sacramento ... .
Go lden State ..
L.A. Clippers .

L

Sunday's final '
Duke 8~ . Temple 64

Midwest Regional

,..

Midwt-st Division

ll'

Saturday's regional finals

S11turday's final
OHIO STATE 77. St John 's 74

~&lt;

Hockey

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

J

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Icam

p.m
Sunday, March 2H.nnal ·
Sc= mifinal winners , 9 p.m.

· The 1998-99 Eastern High School
winter sports banquet was held
Saturday night in the high school
gymnasium, honoring ·members of
the boys ' and girls' varsity and
reserve basketball squads and cheerleaders . Booster president Tim
· Dillon gave the opening welcome,
. while Dan Will gave the invocation.
A buffet style meal was prepared
for the athletes and their guests.
High .school librarian Jim Huff

Duke...

.

By TOM CANAVAN

:Eastern honors basketb~ll players, cheerleaders at banquet .

DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) With a flat tire, no brakes and sparks
flying from underneath his Ford, Jeff
Burton 's Darlington dream looked
done.
That 's when a few drops .of rain
changed his luck:
"I ihought that was the end of it."
.•
: - ~aid .Burton's car owner, Jack Roush.
· , ' 'There are so many different ways to
:· lose one of these, I didn't think that
:: ~e wouldn't run another lap. I guess
. : when it's your day, it's your day."
: •,: Burton's car, covered in a black 99
·: 1arp at the mouth of tum one, was
.• inore ready for the garage than victo:! tY lane. Its tire was at a 30-degree
: ang le and Burton knew there was no
:; hope of winning if he had to fir~ it up
gam.
.
·
"It's up to them," he said, urging
the clouds to pour. " We ' re either
going to win or finish dead last.

Duke rolls to 78-61 victory over Temple
.

East Regional

Mi c hi~ml

11

Blue Devils win East Regional final, draw Michigan State in Final Four

South Regional

8
9'
14

shots.

There were a lot of misses for
Kentucky after a 7-for- 10 start. The
Wildcats were 9-for-24 in the second
half and shot 45 percent overall.
" We got off to a very good start
and for once we were the team that
got a little too excited," Padgett said.
As for the winners, there were ho
worries abo ut the next opponent:
top-ranked Duke on Saturday at St.
Petersburg, Fla. The Blue Devils
beat Michigan State 73-67 on Dec. 2,
holding the Spartans to 38.7 percent
shooting.
Connecticut plays Ohio State in
the other national. semifinal.
" I don' t even care about the next
game right no w," I ~ zo said. "There
are 37 games there's been pressure
on this team an.d I'm going to enjoy
this day. I love Duke, they're a great
team, and I'll deal with them tomorrow. "

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By PETE IACOBELLI

Scoreboard
Basketball

first 9:42, battled foul trouble and
went without a 'point the rest of the
way.
"He was off to a great stan, "
Smith said: "! think that hun us."
Seven of Padgett 's points came in
the final I :42 and his second three-'
pointer in that stretch, with 18.8 seconds to go, cui the gap to 69-66. But .
in the final six minutes he also
missed the front end of the bonus and
the second of two free throws in
another situation.
Padgett had a career-high 29
points in the second round against
Kansas, and scored 14 of his 17
points in the second half on Friday
night against Miami.
"Every time I came off a screen,
they switched everything," Padgett
said. "When I tried to get to the
paint, they switched to a big guy and
fronted me. I also . missed two or

: Monday, March 22, 1999

.
..

HEARING LOSS •••

or maybe iust EARWAX Buildup...
Video Ear
Inspection Camera
Comes to Beltone

Where: 1312 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis, Oh
Day: Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday
Date: March 23, 24, &amp; 25, 1999
Time: 9:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.

Call now to schedule your

740-446-·1744 or Toll-Free 1-800-634-5265
HEARING.AID CENTER
Where:
Day:
Date:
Time:

1312 Ecutern Avenue, Gallipolis,Oh
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Thursday ·
March 23, 24, &amp; 25, 1999
9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

WE PROVIDE
SERVICE IN OUR OFFICE
OR IN YOUR

.,•

\..

'

h

�.

I
'

yTheBend

·Monday, March 22, 1999

The Daily· Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mlddl!!port, ~hio _.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7
110

Pagel

IIIAAH EXTIIA CAlli II
lnde!&gt;*ndom C&lt;lnnetora -

Monday, March 22, 1999

=.~·National Alcohol Screening Day is planned for A'pril.

n

,.. ,

.

• •·

• • ·- Dear Ann Landers: Nearly 14
·:,.million people in the United States ·
· one in every 13 adults .. abuse
alcohol or are alcoholic. In addition,
·~f.tiere arc countless more who binge
·''drink or who may be on the verge of
: t)eveloping a serious problem.
·.-. The National Institute on Alcohol
. - Abuse and Alc oholi sm and the
-- Nati onal Mental Illness Screening
: Project are offering the fi rst-ever
.~ National Alcohol Screening Day on
T hursday, April 8. There will be

country, 500 of them on colleges
campuses, offering free, anonymous
screening sessions for a range of
alcohol problems.
Thi s is an opportunity for anyone
concerned about themselves or a
loved one to seek education and
advice in a non threatening environment. The program can benefit college students who wonder how
many drinks are considered a
"binge." It can help if your spouse
drinks too much or you have an
alcoholic family member and are
concerned about the ri sk of inherit·
ing the illness. The screening can
steer you in the ri ght direction if you
notice thai drinking is interrupting
your producti vi ty at work or school.
At the screening, participants will
hear an educati onal presentation on

alcohol · problems and complete a tell my readers about National Alcowritten self-assessment SUC'Iey. Titey hoi Screening Day, lbursday, April
will have the opportunity.to talk one 8.
o n one with a health professional ·
Readers, especially college stuand will be given the names and dents, if you have any questions .
phone numbers of support services regarding alcohol , or if you know
and treatment facilities in the area. someone who could benefit from
All screenings are free ancj anony- this anonymous . screening, pl_ease
mous.
call 1-800-697-6700 t&lt;X!ay to find a
Ann , please u~ge your readers to site in your area. It could save your
take advantage of this unique pro- life or the life of someone you love.
gram. They can find a site in their
Dear Ann Landers: In a recent
area by ca lling 1-800-697-6700 case, the Florida Supreme Court
today. No shame, no guilt, just hon- ruled that parents alone make the
es t questions, honest answers and a decision 'whether or not grandparhelping hand. -ENOCH GORDIS, ents may see their grandchildren .
M.D., DIRECTOR, NIAAA, PART
I am a pastor and counselor in
OF TilE NATIONAL INSTITUTES Florida. For years, I have been privy
OF HEALTH
·to the horror stories of seniors
DEAR DR. GORDIS: Thank whose grandchildren are used as
you for givi ng me the Qpporlunity to bargaining chips in an effort to con-

,a, with 2,000 sites
.

trol ~ealth and influence relationships. Since nothing is more precious to seniors than .their gcandchildren , the threat goes like this: "If
you don ' t agree to do this or that,
you will never see your grandchildren again ." If the grandparents
don 't cave in, the result is often total
· abandonment.
Florida is filled with .happy
retirees with good relationships, but
there are also hundreds of seniors,
. who are forgotten and warehoused
in nursing homes or t~ailer parks.
Their only conneption to family
members is the outdated pictures of
grand kids whom they never get to
know. This is a tragedy. Everybody
loses.
DR. R.S., RIDGE
MANOR, Fl:A.
· DEAR DR. R.S.: Thanks for the

,

Custom' Homes
,

words of wisdom. I hope the chil·
dren who are neglecting t)Jeir elder·
ly parents will ask themselves,
"Could this be me?" The answer IS
"Probably."
Drugs are everywhere. They're
easy to get, e~y to use and even casier to get hooked on. If you have
questions about drugs, you need Ann
Landers' booklet, "The Lowdown on
Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope ll!ld a check
or money order for $3.75 (this
includes postage and handling) to: .
Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill .. 60611 0562. (In ·canada, send $4.55.) To
find out more about Ann Landers
and read her past columns, visit the
Creators Syndicate web page at
www. creators . com .

- Bmitwas&amp;~piwhoch~ed
· . ] he audience with his exuberance in
• 'JluUing off a stunning first: winning
·• as best actor in a foreign film for
" Life is Beautiful. "
• ;: Benigni, who wrote and directed
·&gt;· "Life is Beautiful," also became the
first .filmmaker in 50 years to direct
·, ,'his own Oscar-winning performance . In 1948, Laurence Olivier
, directed and starred in "Hamlet,"
· h he won t he best acung
·
:· for wh1c
. Prize.
.
" Life is Beautiful ," a tragicomic

meaning to the label supporting
actress: as Queen Elizabeth I, Dame
Judi was on scree n only briefly, yet
still took home an Oscar statue.
" I fee l for eight minutes on the
screen I should only get a little bit
o f him ," she said with a smile.
" Shakespeare," which led all
contend ers with 13 nominations,
also picked up Oscars for original
screenplay, art direction, costume
design and musical or comedy
score. Madden's film imagined a
.young Shakespeare suffering from
writer's block, and falling in love
with the beautiful woman played by
Paltrow.
Meanwhile, " Saving Private
Ryan " was another curiosity. Spiel·
berg and the cinematographer both

A second-time directing winner Pacific, was. shut out . entirely
Spielberg was honored for · despite seven nominations .
·" Schindler's List" in 1993 - he
James . Coburn won the first
earnestly expressed gratitude to all Oscar of his long _career - ~ the
fam ilies who lost sons in World War alcoholic , abusive father in "AfflicII, and addressing his father, a vet- tion."
eran , said : "Dad, this is for you."
" I've been doing this work for
The movie also took prizes for like over half my life, and I finally
cinematography, editing, sound and got one right, I guess, " said the 70souml effects editing.
year-old actor, whose dozens of
The last time Oscar voters split films include "Our Man Flint" and
between best picture and director "The Magnificent Seven."
was in 1989, when "Driving Miss
· " Some of them you do for
Daisy" won for best picture and money, some of them you do for
Oliver Stone for "Born on the love . This is a love child," Coburn
Fourth of July."
,
said.
"!;Iizabeth," another best picture
The most controversial moment
nominee , won just one award, for of the ceremony came and went
makeup. The fifth contender, "The quickly, as director Elia Kazan Thin Red Line," Terrence Malick's revil~d by some for naming names

-stepped out to accept a lifetime
achievement award. Many members
of the audience applauded heartily,
some stood, while others, like actors
Nick Nolte and Ed Harris, sat silently.
Host Whoopi Goldberg kept tile
show's tone light and irreverent.
She changed costumes repeatedly to mimic film characters, getting
the show off to a rousing start when
she came out. in full regalia as Elizabeth I to a rousing ovation, then a
laugh· when she announced with an
accent that was more Bette Davis
than British, "I am the African
Queen ."
She joked about being the last
Oscar emcee of the century and millennium, saying: "I am the last 20th

cannntap=s.··
~o~pointhef~w~o~n~:bu:t~~:e~fil:m~d~id~n~·t~.____1~;co:m:e~b~a;c;k~m~o~v;~;a:b:o:u:t~~~=II~i:n~th;e~;d:u~ri:n!g~ili=e~H:o:ll~y~w:o:~:-;b:la;c;~;~~t;e:ra~~c:e:nt:u~~fu~x~:·~·~~~~~;~
said his desire was " making love

with everybody."
. If Benigni 'at times was difficult
to decipher,. so, too, was the ceremony.
" Shakespeare in Love" did pick
up best picture, but director John
Madden was snubbed. The film 's
leading lady Miss Paltrow won, but
her leading man Joseph Fiennes
·
d.
wasn •t e ven nommatc
And the award to " Shakespeare's" Judi Dench gave new

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
A vtewlng for cloelng
Edw•rd•llood, alia known
11 TR 413 • Cheater
Township, will be held~
~:~~:;.:~~~:..~'::111 be
held Aprll19 at 1:00 p.m. In
the Commlaoloner'a otllca
at
theirKloea,
r-ularClerk
meeting.
Gloria
Malg•
County
Commlaalonera
(3) 22 141 5 2 TC

. Public Notice
PUaUC NOTICE

Public Notice
Thll notice will run once

Public Notice
Route 7 1nd V.rloul In

Public Notice

111111, of which llld
: ~~'z:.:!"l~~H~= :::! ;:!:,~ek!~:he ~~ 'Q~~~r:.• H~!~Y~:: ~tt;;:; . Defend1n11, M1b1l M.
P11rmen,
DICIIIId,
N1tlone1 'Bink will Offer for -publlclllon being on the Monroe, Margin, · Noble,
Unknown
helre,
devl1111,
ule It public euctlon on 1tth dey of April, 181t. Tlll VInton 1nd W•lhlnglon
legltlll,
IXIOUIOfl,
IXIOUI
the Blnk perldng lotlhl fol· Difendenta will hi VI Counllll, Ohio, In
lralhlawner~of:
.
lawl119 vehlcl11:
lwlnty..lght d1ya from lhl ICCOrdiiiCI with plltll end
Sllullld In the Vlll1ge of
111111 Pontile Grind Prix
d1y of 1111 publlcltlon In tpeclftotrtlont by 1pplyl119 Mldll1port rn the County of
Vln 11G2WJ14T8MF2220
which to 1n1wer llld llllrO·RelleciiVI Fill Dry Mllga end Sttrte al Ohio:
11114
o
Tricker
oamplllnt.
·
. Pevement Mlrldng Ml.. rlel
1
Vln 10
11 1nd beginning
MARK E. SHEETS, Hellldly, .lor center 111111, edge llnll onKnown
the !Ill . . . of lhl roed
12CNB.J18Y7R115017334
Shiite I Seundere, ttl end 11111 01111.
lndlng from Middleport to
111110Chlvy8-10
LocutrtStrwt, P.O. aax325,
"The dill Ill far. Rutlond, Ohio, on the New
Yin f1GCC81425L21515e1
Gllllpolla, OH 45831
completion of thla work
Hill Rold II the North line at
186 Dodge Dyllllty
Telephone: (740) 446-11152
thlll bl 11 HI forth In the Phillip
Jan11 11nd; thence
Yin f1B3BC5137KDII48710
lleglatrellan 10038525, bidding propoNI." Pion•
North
1-1/4
3
111112 Ford 150 Pick-up
Allamey for Plalnllffl
and Speclflolllone 1r1 an chllna 1nd 58 IInkeWill
to
1
Yin 11FTDF15Y2NNA42071
Defendlnl moy obtlln 1 file In .the Dtplrtment of eteke 11 ll1lph Spooner••
11177 Hond1 ~ M~cle copy at the Comptolnt flied Tnl~~~porllllon.
corner, thence
Yin IC8750K272t387
herein from the office of Gordon Proctor, Director of Southwell
North 72 dtgre11 Elll
11188 OMC Von
urry Spencer, Clerk of Tnl~~~porlltlan
· liang
11ld $poonar'a South
Vln 110KDM111Z4JB5010111 Coude, Melge County (3) 22, 28. 2TC
line
7
chllne
1nd Ill! llnka to
The term• at the Hie ,,. Courthou11, Pomeroy, Ohio
1
ataka;
thenat
South 2
457111.
ci1h.
Public Notice
deg-•
Wilt
7
choln•
1nd
Thl H01111 Nlllanel Blnlt (3) 15, 22, 28
71llnkl Ia the North 111111 of
fiiiNII lhl right tO reject (4) 5, 12, 111 lTC
NOnCE TO BIDDERS,
· llld · Phillip Jon11 lend;
ony or 111 bide or to 1'lfiiOVI
STATE OF OHIO, .
thence North 72 degree•
any unit from the 1111 It
Public Notice
DEPARTMENT OF
Weal
II cholna 1nd 22 llnlut
1ny 111111.
TIIANBI'ORTAnoN
Ia
th1
r,l•ce of beginning,
Arrongamenta m1y be
LEGAL NOTICE
Columllul, OhiO
119 3.5 ecn1.
·
conteln
m1d1 Ia ln1pect 1ny of the Spring Cleenup of Olive
Offtce at ContriCia
lllvlng
end excepting the
abciVI n1mld vehlclll prior Townlhlp will begin U1re11
IAgll Copy Number:
11m1
fiiii'VIIIan•
made ·by
to the nit by calling 740- 21, Wetrther Permitting.
· 1110221
v.a.
Horton
In
hlo
d11d
11411-2210.
Anyone hlvtng flowera or
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
d1ted Jenuery 8 , 1114,
H01111 Nlllo1111l lllnk
diCOr~llone they wl1h to
Melling Dille: 03/15/11811
excepting 1110 on.h1lf ecre
George uwrence
- . 11 laked to reiiiOVI
Blelld propo1111 will be IOid by Morthl RUtlll Ia
. Collection Olllcer
them prior to 11111 dote.
accepted from 111 pre • ·Luclnd• Dodeon off the
GLJdm
Th1
Olive
Tawn1hlp, quellfled blddere 11 the ,S authWIII corner of the
(3) 17, 19, 22, 26, 28
TrultNI will not be r81pon- · Office of Contrecta of the preml- herein' deearlbld,
(4) 2 arc
1lble far nowera or diCOfl· Ohio Depertment of the Nme being conv•yecl
IIane lltl on cemetery Iota.
Tr•n•portltlon, COiumbue, by P.l'. Ezl11 end wife to
Public Notice
(3) 19, 21.22 3TC
Ohio, u~lll 10:oo 1.m., W.A. Henlln, Tru1111, by
Wldlllldly, April 14, .181t
d11d lilted M1y 25th, 1877.
PUBUC NOnCE
PubliC Notice
for Improving llollan ATH· Alto excepting aut of the
13-15.273111d Vlrloul, Slltt
A viewing for cloelng
lloula 13 and verlaua In 1bove daacrlbed preml111
rlghi•Of•weya on TR 147•
NOncE TO BIDDERS,
.one 1nd 0111-faurth ocr~~
Dlld End Raid, TR 451STATE OF OHIO,
Vlrloua Vllll,ll, Alhlna, (1·1/4) 1old by Eve llnyder
DEPARTMENT 01'
Gillie, Hack ng, Mtlge, end Nell Snyder, her
Old Stele Route 11112 (. 40
mile), TR 384- R-• Raid,
TRANSPORTAnoN
Monroe, Morg1n, Noble, huabend, Ia G1orge
and Til 451- Grehm Rolcl,
Columllu1, Ohio
VInton end Wuhlngtan Sprlngllon and recorded In
OfftceofContrlcta
Countln, Ohio, In Volume 92, Pege 523, Melg1
Ill In Scipio Townehlp, will
bl htld on Aprllt 2, 1tllltl, 11
Llgol Cof'Y Number:
eecordence with plena lnd County Recorde. ·
the following tlmt1:
11110220
lpiOiftotrtlan• by applying
end thll Defendenle,
10:00 o.m.· Dead End ROid
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
llllro-lllfllallve Pol yeller Mlbll M. Purm1n, ,
10:18 1.m.· Old Stele Rte.
Milling Dele: 03/11/181t
Pavement Merklng Materiel Deo1111d, Unknown helre,
892 (.40 mile)
Silled prOJIOIIII will bl for center linea 1nd l•n• dtVIIIII,
llglllll,
10:30 a.m.· llllvll Road · accepted from ell pre· !Inti.
executora,
eKecutrlxee,
10:45 a.ln. Gr1hm Rold
qu1llfled blddere . 11 the
."The dele 111 for edmlnlllrtttora,
.
Aleo, Commla•lanera will Office of ContriCII of the completion of thll work ldmlnlllnlrhiu and
view the, rem•lnlng .10 mile Ohio Depertment of lhtll bl 11 Ill forth In~~ 111lgn111 be required Ia
of Old Sttrt1 Route 1192 for Tntneport1tlan, Calumbue, bidding propoul." Pl1n1 111
up 1ny lnterallthey m1y
dedlcetlan end far nemlng Ohio, until I 0:00 e.m., and Sp•clflcotlana ert on h1v1 In Hid pr~ml111 or bl
Wldnelldey, April 14, 1111111 flit In ·the Depertmtnt of forever b1rr1d, lhll upon
"Schick lloed".
Commllllonera wtll mlli for Improving llollan ATH· Tnln~porfatlon.
of uld Dlflndante Ia
lithe Solplo Fire HOUII 111 7·3.5111 1nd verlou1, 81111 Gordon Proctor, Director of failure
pey or to ceu11 to be paid
· 11:50 e.m. before beglnnlr19 Route 7 end verloue In Tnlnllporflllon
11ld ludgment within three
the vlewtng. A heerlng on verloue vt111g11, Alhlne, (3) 22, 28 2TC
d1y1 from Ita rendition thel
111111 roed 1 will bl held 11 011111, Hocking·, Melge,
an Order of S111 be IIIUid
1:00 p.m., Apr11 12, 181t, In Monroe, Morg1n, Noble, 1___;_P=u=bi::.IC:..::N:::o:::ti::::C:;:e___
to
the Shariff of Melg•
tht Commllllaner'e office VInton end W11hlngtan 1·
County,
Ohio, to 1ppre111,
llthllrregulor111lltlng.
Countlae,
Ohio,
In
NOncEOFPUBUCAnDN edverllae In the Dally
Olorfl Klce1, acoardono• with plana end
Stephen D. Mll11,
Sentinel and 1111 eald reel
Clerk epeolflclllone by lntlelllng
Allomey 11 uw
allele,· thll the prem1111 be
Melgl County' 111lud pev1ment1111rklra.
18 W. Monument .Avenue
told free end cleer of 111
c 11mmtlllon1,.
"The dill 111 for
Dayton, Ohlp 45402
clalm1,
lien• 1nd lnterell of
complltlon of thll work
(3) 15 22 2 tc
Mabel M. Pellman,
ahell be 11 eat forth In the Decaaeld, Unknown hllra, 1ny of the pai1l11 herein,
'
Public Notice
·bidding prapo11l." Plent devl1111,
legltua, lhot the procelde from the
1nd Speclflcltlone .,, an IXICUiora, IXICUt, lnd II •••• of 1.1ld pramllll be
In the Department of d•c••••d, 111 helre, 1ppll1d to· the Plelntlff'•
IN THE COURT OF
Treneporflllan.
devltlll,
feglllll, fudgmlnl 1nd for euch
COMMON PLEAS·OF MEIGS Gordon Proctor, Director of IXIpUtOrl, IXICUtriXII, other relief to which USDA
COUNTY, OHIO
, . Treneportlllon
llurel Development 11
admlniiii'IIDfl,
entitled.
·
DIVfd Spencer, II 11.,
(3) 22, 28 2TC
odmlnlllretrlxu end
Plelnllfll
S1ld
Dtftndenta
ere
ualgn111 1nd whote directed Ia the Campl1lnt
C111 No. 18 CV 110
Public Notice
1ddrt1111
unknown, wheraln notice under the
will hereby llkl notice lhll lair
calllctlan preotlce
Jlllrey L Thornton, 1111.,
NOncE TO BIDDERS,
on the Februery 10, 18111, oct Iadebt
given.
·
DitiGALndNOinllnCE
STATE
OF
OHIO,
USDA
llurel
Development,
LE
Selcf
Dlfendent1
will
tiki
DEPARTMENT OF
flied 111 complelnl In notice lhll II be required Ia
Dlft!ldlnlt, Thom11
TRANSPORTAnON
Foraclaaura
and
eald Camplllnt on
Clel1nd, wholl lilt know
Columbue, Ohio
Mlrahalllng of Uene In the 1n1wer
or
before
the 24th dey of
pl1ct of r11ldance le 2
omce of Canlrlall
Common Piau Court of Mey I 8lt or
Judgment will
Sunlit VIew Ava., Troy, NY,
Llgll Copy Number:
Malgl County, Ohio, being
bl
randlt'ld
eccor~lngly.
12110, 1nd The Unknown
1110211
Can No. 111-CVo012 1g1ln1t
USDA Aural Development
Helre of F. D. Wolfe, lrl
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mebal M. Purmen, ·
Plelntlff,
hereby notified IIIII an the Mllllllfl Dill: 03/15/11811
D-••ld, Unknown halre,
Sllphen
D.
Mll11,
Attorney
10th d•r at December, 111118,
Se•IICI propou11 will be dtvlu••·
leg11e11,
Devld Sp1noer ond Und1 accepted from 111 pre· IXICUtore, IXICUI preyl~g (3) 22,28 (4) 5, 12, 111,26
·
Spencer, Plelnllffa, flied qulllfled blddere 11 the for ludflment In the emount etc
their complelnt to quill IIIII Office of Conlrecte of the of St1,1110.M with lnllrtlt
to the real eltlle cllecrlbld Ohio Depertment of thereon 1ccardlng to lh•
In 11ld complaint 1nd other Tr1neportetlon, Calumbue, term• of the noll from
relit! In the Court of Ohio, until 10:00 1.m .. December 18, 1111 until
Common Pine of Melge Wldnndey, April 14, ·1 • peld and for forecloeura of
County, Ohio, beerlng c... for Improving uctlon ATH· 111d Mortgeg1 Dlld an the
No. II CV 110.
7.0.000 1nd verlout, Stile following d11crlbed reel

11

lila-•

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...'"' ~--------------~---------------~~---------~

Miller Homes

·' :mo Woshinglon Ave.
'

Belpre, Ollio 45714
740-423-7521

See Uoyd Bonar, David Riggs
Ernest Shuler: owner
M-F 8 -7
Sat 9-4
Closed Sunday

Redman&gt;
Clayton
Homes

'ihe Daily Sentinel
Reminds gou to support your loccrl businesseslfl
ito Promote Your Business
9n 'lire Small.Business Directorg•
ecrll Dcrve Harris or
WiiHcrmson crt 992·2155
'·

I

.

"Build Your Dream"

·• .

1998 Martin Street
•·· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wilson
(740 992-4277

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

-·~····

'.

WITH THE

CU.SS81F8EDSI

D11r• Glrtlftlll

.......-c:r.Jt;••allal,

'

Linda's Painting

Take the pain out of
...."'"' HauUns
painting, and let me
Bulldo~er &amp; Backhoe
do It for you
Seroice•
•·
House &amp; Trailer Sites
INTERIOR
.
'

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Before 6 pm Leave
message. After 6 pm

Septic Sy•tem &amp;
Utilitie•

740-985-4180
Free Estimates

(7..0) 992-3131

005

CAlL 1·111·101· 1100 lOlL
FREE
•I

~$ar

Personals

$$Dancers$$ Ladles 18 or
call 740·992· 6387 or 304,.615·
5955 alter 8:30PM . Wtd .• t~ru
Sat. Southfork Showbar 7 t.

O.o.n't Worry About Your Future
Let Our Psychic• Put Your Mind

AI Ease Call Nowl t·800· 740·
6500 Ext 3593, 1B+ S3.98 Per
Min. sarv-u 6t9-&amp;&lt;5-8434. hnp11

Mon- Frl 8:30 - 5:00 ·

Plea$am,wv.

ACF Industries; Crane ~Mrto r.
Industrial Experi•n ce ..Required
(Cab operated overhead crane) .

www.1hoholpagesl!.com/ns/psy-

Over !40 yra experience

949-1701 .

You( Area . Market Dl•tr lb utlon
Spedallsts. Inc.
:-;

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ehlc t250291.hlm

742-8888

no longer be responsible lor
debts other than m~ own, 3·
18·99, Wlliam E. Tipple.

Apply In Person. 2300 Third Avo·

I will

nuo, Hullling!On, wv.

an~

HOWARD
·EXCAVAtiNG CO.

,.·• L...._ _ _ __.

BISSELL BUILDERS,
INC.

Don·s
Heating &amp; Cooling

New Homes • Vinyl
. Siding •New Garages
• Replacement Windows
• Room AddHions
• Roofing

Remember

FREE ESTIMATES

"Done right the first time"
"Priced right aU the time"

614-992-7643
(No Sunda Calls)

e•h•·

401 (k) . Polnl Pleasant NurSino &amp;
Rehabllltlatlon Center, State Aouls
62 N., Point Pleasant, WV 25550.
A Genesis Eidercare CenJer.

30 Announcement•
Far Delicious Homemade Cancty.

Need a friend In the business
Call me at (7 40) 7 42-284.2

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Admission /Acti vities Olrl'ctor.
Full· Time Comprehensive
firs Package Which lnciWSea

Princess VIdeo Has New Ship~
ment Of Adult Movies &amp; Movies
For Sale, 740-&lt;41 ·5167.

Cakes

&amp;

EOE.

Pies, Call Ceria, 740·

446·9968 Da~a : 740·258·6983
Evenings &amp; Weekends, Now Tak·
lng Orders For Eaolerl

Now To You Thrln Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athena

740-592·1842

Gotch a!
Happy
,,

40th

,, L_.J~!!!!!L..J'

Computer Graphics
Designs
All Landscaping &amp;
Lawn Services ·
•Commercial

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

Road
Racine, Ohio

• NfJU! Conolruclion
• Remodeli"ff
• Siding
• :No Job '10o 'jl(9 or

29670 Bashan
45771
740-949-2271
Sizes 5' x 10'

•Real~_e'l_tlal
Own~le Hollon

Quality clothing and housenold
Items. · $1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM

-~halter, Ohio ·
74()..985-4422 .

II"

""

3

St. Rt. 7 Bewteen Five
Points &amp; Chester
We Now Custom
Grind Feed

Call

1740) 992·5535 or
992·2753

Giveaway

Phone Calls Please;

2 Cats To Giveaway, 10 Month

Old. Yellow Tiger Malo, 6 Month

Old All Gray Female, Both Long
Haired, All Shots, 7~245-9100.

985·383~

1

3/15 1 mo.

SAYRE

Card of Thanke

TRUCK~NG
, Hauling

Limestone &amp; Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N~ Sayre

,,.

740·742·2138

.

S/11199TFN
Carpenter• Building America

Haning's Home
Improvements
Wood- Vinyl-Metal
Slding, ~offit , Paint,
Me~~~~ ~.~~in.~1 ~io~~ ~:'!J,e
Building., Decko, Etc.

Birthday
Bra~l
Love,
Mom"'"'"'"

Free E•timateA

~

.In Memqry

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

..

']'ou Jl.((

'Davit£ ana '1Je66i£
Jlupp,
'Doai£ Cltfand,
MiRf, 'Betty, Cfiris,
'Brlttney ana MiR!y
Mefiau

1ij

(Ume StoneLow Rate~)

.
.

Carpaliler ·

B. Haning
(740) 698·1713

740-992-3470

A Spiritual :
Birthday Message
To My Wife Moni,a
June Andreoni··
Through
Our Lord }esm

Jack'.J Roofing
&amp; Construction

Sweetheart, you;
have left an ·
everlasting love in
my,heartfo.r you
that wiU never
leqve t1Ul . until I am
wat' h you once I
again and I pray
God tlaat we both
will be with him in
Heaven forever.
I love you and will
not rest until we
·are together again.

1

Your husband,
Orlando }oe
Andreoni

Roofing • Repairs
•Coatings •
Sidings • Painting
·Drywall -&amp;

• Plumbing
Free Estimates

Joseph Jacks

740·992-2068

py: 740-992·2149.

R. Lt HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
, SERVICE ·
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp; Almodtllng

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$8.00 PER DAY.

.'

• New Garagta
·
• Eli'Qtrlcal &amp; Plumbing
• RoOfing
• Interior I Exterior
• Painting . ·
• Alao Concrete Work
• Patjq dacko &amp; guttering
V.C. YOUNG Ill
,,, 992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Gallipolis, Ohio 4563t ' ·

740~

DISPLAY HOMES
NEEDED

:'

Far Vin~l Siding And Replace·
Free To Good Home 1/2 Golden
ment Windows. 10Q'Y. FinanCing
Retriever Puppies, 7 Weeks Old,
No Application Refused PmtS, As
740·379·9447,
Low As $891Mo. Before. And After
Maple Table And Chairs, 7.40· PlcNres Plus Advertblng Rlghls.
Release Are .Required 1·80D-"536·
446·338S.

· Stop In And See
An Old Friend
Mike Drehel
Sales ·Representative
Larry Schey

AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Sterburat
Progr. .slve
line.
· Uc. I OD-50 11n1J11n

Fan'Wiy Home Health Plus, Inc.
750 First Awnue

Ferry, Wlla. (304)675-7115.

5695 24/Hr.

Puppies , Retriever /Shepherd

·Mixed, 74D-388-a.t3.

Three 4 month. ok:l Collie pups, 2
sable &amp; white , 1 black &amp; white,

Easy Wor~l Excellent Payr 'As ·
semble Products At Home.,Call

Toll Froo 1·800·467·5566 Ex!.
t2170.
.

740-742·10t6.

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

top

Phone ('740) ::l~j-()()/1

;.::::::;::;;,:::,:.:::.,_________ , Equipment operator needed, wag·
60 Loat and FQUnd
es based on oxpe~once, cell 740.
992·24781or lnteNiew.
Found: white dog With light brown ==~.::..::.:.;::::.:;:::::__ __
spots, collar wl.th bell , Zuspan E:qJerienced HVAC Technlclln &amp;
Hallow vlclnlly, caii74D-992-e7t0. lnslallor'Gaod Pay &amp; BenefHo,

740-446-t637.

. ROBERt BISSELL
CONStRUCtiON

Dave's Garage

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

Fonner-"Velvet Hammer"
52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843~5572
Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

-Complete.. Auto Seroice'

~~73
7

.......

DEPOYSAO
All

Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Deale rs.
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coo/~I::...?H 45723

740117. .18

and Flea Markel

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

Don't Need ABig
One Call a Little
One

Looking Forward To Seeing My
Friends And Old Cwtomers AI

JERRY BIBBEE

Auction. third ol April, old
can Legion. Middleport, Oh.
=-=====~,:.:.:;-;__!
Bill Moodispaugh Auctioneering.
Complete Auctioneering Servic·
es. Consignment auclion· Mill
Street, Middleport Thursda~s .
Ohio License 1769 3. 740 • 989 ·
2623.

Rick Pearson Aucllon Company,

DRIVEWAY STONE

full lime auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
licensed
VI 1
166,0hlo &amp;
est rg nia, 3° 4•

w

John Bennett

Light Hauling up
to 8 ton

Sale• Man"Ker
. Ph; 740-992·2196 481 S. Third Ave.

992-5455

Mld~ltpart,

OH 45780

n3-5765 Or 304·n3-5447.

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 1 P.M.,

Crown Clly, 740·25H989

Furnllure Warehouse And De •
ery, lmme"iata Opening, Fuii·Ti ·
Apply : Lifestyle Furniture, Tlfd
And Olive, Gallipolis , No Ph~e
Calls.
4
Gener.'at Office /Sales . Expl!lfl·
enced Preferred . F u,I I·Time~­
mediate· Opening. Apply: Life&amp; e
Furniture. 856 Third Avenue,
1·
llpolls, 10·2, No Phone Calls. :,.

INSTRUCTORS/TEACHERti,O

t

Needed In Gallipolis For A~8 ·
WEiek . Summer Youth Tra in g
Program, 1 June To Aug usl): o

~e:~l~y~~~ ~~~~k~l:a:~~gjA
~~
tlon Flight Subjects . Visit

GUN SHOOT

90

PROBLEMS

Or Call HITek At 1·80Q.397·64

WORRYING!!!

Every Sunday .
12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, ,Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre· 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
.Avenue, GallipoliS, 740-446·2842.

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

Racine Gun Cl1b
Nease Hollow Rd.

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!
Call Now

Antiques, top prices paid, River·
ine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740·992·

\ 2526 . .

Clean Late ModBI Cars ()I
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East·
ern A~~enue , Gallipolis.
J &amp; 0 Aut o Parts. Buying
wrecked or salvaged veh icles .

(304)773-5o33.

Marty's
Power
Washing

.

want To Sell Your Sluff? Call Riverside Auction And let Us Sell It

Homes, Decks

BAIKRUPrCY

Painting
Interior &amp; Exterior
15Yrs. Experience

742·1701

...

Med ical Processor FT J PT~a

EKP. Nee. Will Train PC Req.

40K Call 800-663-7440.

1

Mothers &amp; Others Earn $ 9
Part· Time $4,000 + Fu ii· T ' e
From tt_ome. FREE Cassena.
:~
532·25r9. '

NEEDED lMMEDIATELYIIt',

Galli~ls-.

OH, A Aapldly Growing, 249 ~d

Certified Surgical TecMologlsl'l;

EXCELLENT WAGE AND BEoi)E'
FIT PACKAGE
~

••

Help Wanted
If lflterested, Please Contact

AVON ! Al l Areas I Shirley

Spears, 304·S75-1429.

Babysitter Needed For Shlft And

Same

'1.

rn

t

JCAHO Acc red ited Ac ute~a
Hospilal With A 23 · Bed
F
Accredl1ed In -Patient Aeha
nit
Has The Positions Avallabl In
The Operating Room For ~Ia ·
tered Nurs es And Expe rl eJijce

110

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

Buy,from the Classifieds!

~

Wanted To Buy:· Used Mobile

EMPLOYMENT
S ERVIC ES

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact :

Shop st home...

meroy, OH 45769 , ATTENTiqN o

Carol Greening, DON.

Holzer Medical Center.

c:n relieve a

debtor of financial obligations and arrange il fair
diotribution of assets. Debtors in bankn~ptcy may
keep ..exempt" property for his or her. personal
use. This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
houoehold goods .

•
!'•

LPN posl!lon available tor
right candidate. Rocksprings ~ ·
habilitation Center is a progrts·
sive ICF/SNF center with an ,tx·
cellent rep utation for dellver.ltlo
exceptional care to the gerl&amp;G-Ic
·populati on . This positio n is ~'a r t
ti me with excellent benefit P.fitk·
age. If you're Interested in jolrf,g
our Nursing stafl. call 740:9i2·
6606 or se nd ~ou r resurOE(:to
Rocksprings Aeha.b llltallon-Gin·
ter, .36759 Rocksprings Road, ~O·

R&gt;r You, 740.2~89 .

Homes, Call 7•0·«11·0175, 3a.675-5965.

&amp; Mobile Homes

r

Wobsllo AI WWW.HITEK.ORG. •,

Wedemeyer's Auction Service ,

Gallipolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

1012-

•r•

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays

·

Carpenter needed, wages bl~ed
Abandoned Female House Dog, on oxperlonce, colt 740·992·2478
Needs Good Indoor Home, for lntarvklw.
Ph!tase· C811, 740-~3226.
Cook, Wait&amp;tafl, Bartender. Must
Four small puppies. two males. be 18 or older. Apply: LaCanijna
twa females: also Chow mix pup ~ MeJCican Restaurant. Galllp'olis·

696·t0t7,

~vonne Seffers
~.
· wl.sftes to t/ianR_
r
everyont for tMir Mfp,
' '•
Rjnanus, pra!J&lt;rs,
•"...
ffowers, C4r){s ana
visits auring t!iL foss
of our 6efovei
Mother ana ljranny.
'11i4nt!Jou to tlil
' '. Sacrea :Heart Catfiofre
Cfiurcft for all tMir M{p
\I' .•
in getting mom's
servia arrangttf.
'·
'To tlil Wiu wfw got
tfiinos ruufy, to tM
•
~. ·
Cfwir,•tJo".fatfwSctrlwfi:.
••
· fortM
'1/,pS!"''J Serviq,
;
to !fatMt 'Bamtt
l.
foraoingMr
funtral Mass.
'To !Fatlilr :Hein.t; for
6eing so faitfijuf ana
Rjna to visit mom
ana 6ring Mr
••
'Peau atul Cnur.
'To 'Pomtroy 'EMS,
'&lt;' ' Jlofur '£'1&lt;, 'To Meigs
Stninr Citiurr.s ana
r.'
'
tlitir
Staff. To a£( Mr
,_,
Jlomt Jlea{tfi Jl.id"es,
• ·"
t . you were all tlear to Mr. .
''. 'To 'Passport ana Meigs
Co. on ~ing. to P'lf9y
SteVtrr.s wfio afways
'
was
wonaerjuf to mom.
''
SM (ovd !JOU Cots!
'Because of a((
of you sliL was a6/t
to rtmllin in Mr own
fiomt. 'To 'liJV, Luna at
Jlofur for 6ein9 witfi
mL at the fwspitaf. 'To
,
'Dr. Miu for Mr
, • Rjnanus ana wonatrjuf
care of mom. 'To all of
Mr :Jrilntls at tM
Mapft.r, 'To '£winos for
,,
your '}(jnanw •na
Compassion in
'•
arrangin9
Mom's Servia.
May ljoa 'lJ(m

,,

SHADE RIVER

FREE Estlm.ates

40 .

Free elx week old puppies,

'l!i£ 'famif!J of

,.

"Call Today"

Home Health Agency Now hllrlng

For Full &amp; ·Part Time PosiUons.

Agency Will Tra in For The PCA
Positions. Must Have Hlgl'l
School Diploma, GED Or Some
Sunrl1e Memorl•l G•rden : · Experience Caring For The E!ltter·
Pkla&amp;e Remove Grave Blankets. . ly. Vou May Pick Up An Apr)flca·
Vase Onty.
tlon Or Send A Reaume To: (No

·SHADE RIVER IG
SERVICE

'10o Small

NSAI Songwriter Country Gqapel,
tooklng For Band To Put t~~usic
To Lyric s For Demo Tape , 7~0 ·

367·nss.
'
ATTENTION RN'S, CNJo'S, ~
. PeA'S lSECRETARIES
f

8:00.5:30.

.LINDICIPB ·
DDIGNS '·

e.

Do !Ivory Star11 March 23, t

C81114ow To Reserve A Route In

RUtland, Ohio

Jeremy L. Housh

.,·~
====-=~~
CLEAN HOUSE

llle

St. Rt. 248 Chester

AI Least 18 Ytara 01 Apr nd
Havw UN Of An ln1ured Yt
.

Patio CoallnlctlGa

'dt's love over war, the Bard over blood, as 'Shakespeare' tops 'Ryan'
• · LOS ANGELES . (AP) - The film set mostly in a .Nazi concentra· ·; .A:cademy Awards were a lot like a li on camp , won additional Oscars
Roberto Benigni acceptance speech: for foreign film and dramatic score.
long, fl!ll of surprises and some" Thi s is a moment of joy and I
times difficult to understand .
want to ki ss everybody," Benigni
. Four-plus Oscar hours Sunday enthused in accepting the foreign night - the longest ceremony ever language Oscar, after he bounded to
- narrowly favored the Bard over the stage by wa lking acros s the tops
" blood and love over war, as the of the chairs.
, romantic romp " Shakespeare in
He planted kisses on both che eks
·. .Love " reaped seven awards, includ- of prese nter SopHia Loren. Fittingly,
· ing best picture and best actress for it was Miss Lore n who was the only
Gwyneth Paltrow.
. other performer in a foreign IanThe violent World War II epic guage film to win an acting Oscar,
· ··saving Private Ryan " won five for " Two Women " in 1961.
·
Oscars, including the directing . Later, when he picked up his act .: ·award for Steven Spielberg in an ing award, Benigni burst into a frac; · unusual - though hardly unprece- lured-Engli sh riff on joy, gushing
· . •dented - split between best picture about how " iny body is in tumult "
and best director.
and "everything is in a word that I

In Tho Ohlo Voloy ArM.

...... c... .• 'tip

.

Mui

To Deliver Tl'le New Champion
Publishing T...phont Dl,tdlritl

...........
,.....
....................

Remodeling

81

g~;·OOO~_;sc~r~e;en~i~ng~s~i~te~s_:ac~r~o~ss~th;e~--------------------------------------------~--------------------~--------------------------------------~----------------~---

,.

Help Wanted

Evenings, 740-.4-4t ·9842.

Ba te$ Bros. Amuaement Co .
Must be 1B yea rs or older. Free
to uavel. ca n 740-266·2950 M·F

B:00-4:30.

Rosie Ward

=~·
::

Director Of Human Reso~

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTE"
100 Jackson Pike
;
Ga•lpolis, OH 4563~-1~ - :

Phone: 740-&lt;46-5t05 , '

TOO/Fax: 740-4-46·51Cif! =~

EEO /ADA Ell'!lioyer

!

�~age

Monday, March 22, 1999

8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9'

:ALLEYOOP
BRIDOII:

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

One-ACROSS

U....thrw
34 DuU
37Pa.IOacMn&lt;IO "llte Cfan of
the Cayt Bur"

1 tldloota-

7Cun.llll

13 - l n a r 14 Exlrwme

330
:LPN Position available lor the
• "~"' candidate Rochprlngs Re·
"htbHitatlon Center Is a progres·

~~~-- ICF/SNF Center wltn an ex·
t.~~Utnt reputation lor delivering

"ffcep11onal care to the geriatric
1
1

dbpula.tlon Thla postllon It part

ume with excellent benefit pack·
:-,11!1 If IOU re Interested In joining
~~ Nursing Staff, call 740 992·
! &amp;e06 or send your resume to
'1'klckaprlngs Aahabllllation Can
tar. 36759 Rocksprings Road
Pomeroy Ohio 45769 Attention

C!ato1 G-lng DON

Reputable Commercial Roollng
Company In Southeast Tennes
see Is E~;panding We Need Mo·
livated Hardworking And Drug
Free Personnel All Po&amp;lllons
Available Will Train Will Re
locate Kay Personnel Who Are
Willing To Grow With The Com
pany Send Resumes To CLA

465 c/o Gallipolis Oal~ Tribune,
825 Tnlrd Avenue Gallipolis OH
45631

RESUMES UNLIMITED Offers
Persona lized Resumes And
Much Morel Interview Materials
To Get You Prepared 740 388

3eOO

NOW HIRING
1170 00 PER WEEKIPT
(GUARRANTEED SALARY)
Men And Women Needed To Do
Tele!&gt;none Open~lor Wcrk For
LOCAl. RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS

' Full And Part Time Opening
• No Experlenoe Needed• We Ti'aln
• Homemakers Work While
Chldr8n Are In School

• College Stt.&lt;lenls Welcome

Apply In Person At
17 Pine Street

..

rues March23- 25th

Wed Marco H&gt;tn

In Home Hea lth Agency Send
Resume To CLA 469 cio Gallipolis Dally Tribune 825 Third Ave
nue Gall1polls OH 45631

140

Business
Training

Gelllpollo CorNr College

taM Til&amp; PM On~
Ask For Mr Wiseman
Nursing Management Pos1tlon -

Holzer Senior Care Center Is
't:urrently Accepting Applications

For An RN Prelerably BSN With

310 Homes for Sale

Wanted To Do

Carpentry From Frame To Finish
Decks Porches Additions Re

models Call Joe 740-441 1316

Previous Long Term Care /Oirec
tor 01 Nursing Experience The
Successful Candidate Will Pas
seu Experience In Leadership
Quality Improvement /Assurance
Excellent Communication And
Follow Up Skills As Well As Fo
uCUS On Resident Outcomes And
Teamwork Interested Individuals

Check This Out Save $$$ Interior
/Exterior Palnllng Root Painting
Pressure &amp; Hand Wash House
Mobile Homes Neat Work Guar
anteedl 20 Years Experience &amp;
References Free Estimates Call
Now To Get On The List For This

Snoufd Forward Their Resume To

Electric Maintenance Service
Wiring Breaker Boxes Light F1x
ture HjJatlng Systems and Re
modeling

Andrea CUne Wilham&amp; Admlnls
tralor Holzer Senior Care 380
Cok&gt;nlaJ QriYa Bidwell OH EOE
Overbrook Center Is currently ac
ceptlng applications for Director
of Social Services The Ideal can·
dldate will have a BSW and be II
censed We offer a competitive
salary and benef1t package Send
resume to Administrator Over
brook Center 333 Page Street

Middleport

onto 45760

No

Year 1999 304-875-1327

Professional Positions
Gallipolis Developmental Center
An ICF /MR Is Recruiting For A
Part· Time Permanent Dietitian
Current Licensure And Annual
Renewal As Issued By Ohio

Board Of Dietetics Required
Also Recruiting Providers For
Professional Services To Rest
dents For The Period 711/1999
8/30/2001 The Areas Of Proles·
sional Part Time !Intermittent
ServiCes Are

Cnaplaln (Cethollc Faith) Psycnl
atrial General Acllvtty Therapist

1 (Life Guard) Language Oevel·
opmMt Spfl'ctallst (Speech And
Audiology) Pharmacist Physician
Specialist (On Call)
Interested
Person /Parties
Should Submll An Application 1
Leiter 01 Intent Together W ith
Appropriate L1cense Certiflcat•on
Or Other Credential Information
And Salary flequlramants Or Fee

Scne&lt;iuteTo

Human Resources Department

2500 Ohio Avenue
Gallpolls OH 45631
Phone No 740..4-46 1642
Fax No 74D-446-t341

TDD 740 446-2958

Friendly Outgoing And Depend

830AM

-430~M

STATE TESTED NURSING AS·
SIITANTS NEEDED Appllca
tlof'!s are being accepted for
those Individuals who are inter
ested in becoming a State Tested
Nuts.ng Assistant for our facility
Please apply In person to Rock
springs Rehabilitation Center

320

Used 121160 Good Condition
$3 900 Del1vered &amp; Set Up 1

THE HOME HELP DESK Wo 011·
er Phone Support And In House
Supportl Just Call Us At 740

800-251 5070

441 9666

1964 Windsor 14•55 3 Bed·
rooms Appliances And Dinette

HOUSE CLEANING

Must Be Moved, $2 000 304
695-3606 304-695 3025

Honest, Mature Female To Clean
In Gallipolis Point Pleasant Area
Will Work Around Your Schedule
Reasonable Rates 740 446 4502
Jeannie

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mo·

bile nome 740 992·5039
1976f14X60 Hollypark Trailer
Total Electric 2BR Price Re·
ducedl For more Information, call

House Cleaning Jobs Honest
Reliable Have references In the
Mason/New
Haven
Area

(304)n3-5543 after 4PM

(304)895-3996
New Construction Remodelmg
Rooting Sldmg Windows Decks
Room Addlllons Pole Barns Fast
Free Esllmate51 304-675-5242

304-67! 4637
Will Do Spnng tiousecleanlng
Wmdows fCarpet Etc Call After 4
Will mow lawns trim any odd

jobs hauNng 740 992 4286

Hour Interested Applicants Need
To Specify Pos ition Ot Inte res t

And Send Resume To
BUCKEYE COMMUNIT¥
SERVICES
~0 BOX 804
JACKSON, OH 45&amp;1He04
All Applications Must Be ~ost
Mertuld By 3/25199 Equal Oppor

tunlfyEmptoyer

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

$32 000 More Acreage Avallablf
740-388-11676
BRUNER LANI)
011111 Co Hunters 68 + Wood
ed Acres On Williams Hollow

$40 000 Cash Price Just Off SR
218 Friend~ Ridge Rd 15 Acr11
$14 500 Public Wat
Scnoolsl Teens Run Rd 10 Acr
es $10 000 $1 000 Down + $132
A Month
Danville, Briar Ridge

Ad 7 Acres Wllh Pond Or 5
Acres Wllh Stream $12 ooo Or
On SA 325 Nice Wooded 17
Acres $18 000 Public Water Au·
tland Whites Hill Rd 11 Acres

$14 000 Or 9 Acres $12,000,
Pui:IIC Water:
Call NOW For Free Maps +
Owner Flanclng Info Take 10%
Off Ust Prlco On Cash Buys!

360

Real Estate
Wanted

1985 Oakwood 2 Bedrooms .2
Baths All Electrk: 740 256 6011
1990 t4x70 trailer two bedroom
one bath ralngerator stove and
central air Included must move

Business
Opportunity

INDTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus!
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated
the offering
VENDING Lazy Persons Dream
Few Hours • Good $ Price To
Sell Free Brochure 800 820

1993 16 Ft x80 Ft Nice 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths New Carpet
Front &amp; Back Porch E11ceilent
Condition Must Be Moved! 740

441 1269

We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 600 213 8365
Anthony Land Co

ville Realty (30•)675·30301675
3431
3 Acres With Double Wide In
VInton No Flooding Will Sell On
Land Contract With Down Pay

Professional
Services

menl $29 000 74().256-8793
1972 Academy t2x65 3 Bed
rooms 1 Bathroom Front Bed·
room Home Ready To Move Into
Includes Free Delivery And New

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?

Vinyl Skirting $3,995 CaD 1·800500 3957

No Fee Unless We Wmi

1 888 582·3345

Doublewide On lot 800 383·
6862

-

REAL ESTATE
31 0 Homes for Sale
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths "Brick Home
Full Basement With Fireplace 2
Car Garage 15 Minutes From

Holzer Hosprtal $60 000 1•0 368
8352

Buy A Home Rent A lot 1st
Years Rent Pak:l 1 800 251 5070
For Details
Bank Repo Mobile Homes Single
Wide &amp; Sectlonals Financing Lit

tlo As $500 Down 740-742.0510
Good selection of used homes
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at

3 BR 2BA 2 Car Gan~go I Aero
A Mull Soo Letart (304)862
3518

$3995 Oulck delivery Call 740
385 9621

333 Th ird Avenue Gallipolis 2
References Required cat! After 5

PM 740-441-o432
UNBEATABLE BUl - Brand
New 1999 14x70 3 ~drooms 1

"'ew 1999 14:c70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer skirting
deluxa steps and setup Only
S200 74 per month with $1150

down Call 1 800-837 3238

Baln Horne Vinyl Siding, Shingle

446f409 740.446 3547

ery, Set Up Skirting Stops And
Tie Downe On~ 2 LoR At $21 900
1·1100-686 1763

41 0 Houses lor Rent

Shape And Ready To Go
Dollverv Included 3 Bedroom

By owner 71i!5 Page Street Mid
dleport house &amp; 3 lots must see
lo appreciate will seK house with

~no~~"·.:$1 tOO Down And

Call 1 800 500

out lots for SS9 000 740 992
2704 740.992 5696

141170 Owner Financing Avail

able MuSI Sell 800-363-6862

For sale by owner In Pomeroy 3
bedroom 2 bath big front porch
close to school nice yard excel
lent condition must see to appreciate asking $33 000 call 740

-

Why Fmance Long Term? 7
Years Only New 3 Bedrooms 2

Baths Under $300/Mo
251 5070

992 7725

1 800

DIRECT TV Installed With 3
Months Free Programming At An
Unbelievable Price I 1 877 223

2688

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at vmaoe Manor and
At~Jarstde Apartments In Middle
port From 1249·$373 Call 740
992 5084 Equal Housing Oppor·
tunhHis

DISHNETWORK 18 Mini Dish
Package Starting At $19 95 1-

888·800-3346
Firewood $35/load delivered,

Modern I Bedroom Apartment

740-742-2263

74().446.()390

For Sale i $et of Squaretwo Golf

Modern 1BR all utlllllts paid

Clubs $125 (304)675-6986

ew:cept electric S250+deposlt
Gallipolis Ferry ~rea (304)875

Grubbs Plano tuning &amp; repai rs

Problems? Nood Tuned? Call the
plane Or 740-448-4525

13711875-3230
Clean EffiCient 2BR Referenc

JET

•• Oeposll No Pels (304)675
5162

AERATION MOTORS
Repelrad New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evane 1 800-537 9528

Now Taking Applications- 3!S
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water

Motorola Cellular Bag Phone

Sewage Trash, $315/Mo, r4o

$120 Trllronlcs Electronic Oog

446-0008

Training Collar $400 Homellte
980 14 Inch Cut 011 Saw With

Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

Flocrs CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully Car
petod Patio No Palo Lease Plus

Carbon Blade $850 Honda Gen
erator EX 1000, Runs Excellent1
$400 Call740-367.o260

security Deposll Required 140

New &amp; Used Furnaces Gas

446-3481 740-446.0101
450

Furnished
Rooms

460 Space for Rent

Mobile home site a-vailable bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call

740-385-4367

2BR House Ren1 or Sale 4th

MERCHANDISE

3 Bed1ooms 2 Baths, $300/Mo
304 736-7295

Comfortable 4·5 BR 2BA In Bend
Area available April 1, with dec·
orating allowance (304 )675·

2q4

•

510

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

New And Used Furniture State

Below Holiday Inn Kanagua Stop
And See Us 740 446 4782

House In Rutland out at high wa

Used Carpet (6 Rooms) Kitchen
Table With 6 Chairs Encyclopa·

ter no pets deposit and refer·
ence reqUired call 740 742 2661

dla World Book With Child Crall
Bedroom Suite 740-1146-1304

Hou11. New Heven excellent to
cation 3 bedrooms 2 baths new
car~! $300/rnonth $200 depos·

Washer $95 Dryer $95 Refrlg·
erator $95, 30" Electric Range

2539

Year Warranty Whirlpool Wash
er &amp; Dryer Set S150 Each
Skaggs Appliances 76 Vine

II 1304)882·2052 or (304)682

Remodled House In Gallipolis
Mature Couple Preferred Call

Leave Message 740.446-3845
Three bedroom home In Middle·
port corner lot lanced In yard

$375 plus deposit 74() 992 3f94
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
conditioned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash Included, 740

992·2167

2 Bedrooms In Porter Area De
posit &amp; References Required No

Pels $285/Mo 740-381Hlt62

$95 Phllco Freezer, $75 Ken
more Washer Like New $225 1

Street, Galllpoll&amp;, 740-446-7398
520

Sporting
Goods

10 Brand New Browning And
Gennlngs Compound Bows Very

416, Mise Steel Booms 1•0
643-2916 After 4 ~M 740 643
2644 After 6 ~M
Closeout Sata Everything must
go Discounts up to 50% only 2
weeks left to save on all hard
ware saws trimmers tools
mowers tractor parts &amp; oil
Siders Equipment Company

Henderson WV (304)675-7421
Massey Ferguson 185 Diesel
Tractor Massey For·guoson
Detsel, John Deere

John Deere 1010 Gao Ford
Oresel 740.266--8522
630

Livestock

1 Year Old Hereford Bull $500
304 895-3472
740 992 4011

740·25&amp;-6510

3/4 200 PSI

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
XXX videos lho best, SIMI n box
bargain must sell sample C 0 0
304-752 2970
550

Building
Supplies

Block brick, sewer pipes wind·
ows lintels, etc Claude Winters,

Rio Qrando OH Call 740 245·
5121
Pole Building Specie~
24 x42 •9 4• two 10 )(8 overhead
doors 1 3 entry t• lnsutallon tn
roof seamless gutter painted
steel sides and roof erected

price $6999
30x48 x9' one 14 119 sliding door
on gaf:je end ol building 1 3 e,...
try seamless gutters painted
steel sides and roof erected

price $7779
40 ~;641110 two 12JC10 sliding
doors one on each end of build
lng 1 3 entry painted steel sides
and roof, seamless gutter, erect·

od price $13 647

Eggs

$ 75

Horse Barns Garages Any Style
Any Size Free Esllmates 740·

384·4587
560

Pets for Sale

900 lb Round Bale Hey For Sale
$15 Each. Can Haul S17 Each.
740-388 86-15
Good Grol s Hey $1 75 Bale 740
446 110.

Large Round Ballo Of Ml•ed Hay
$20 00 Each, Call Aller 8 00 PM
740-245-9047
Square Bales Of Good Green
Mixed Hay $2 00 Eac:h Round

Belos $18 Each 740.446 2412
Mixed Hey $1 75 A Bale 740
368--8358
Top Quality Dairy Hay Second &amp;

Third Cut Semi Loed Only 937
866 2822

710

Autos for Sale

319 3323 Ext 4420

Mobile home tor rent In Racine
no pets 740 992 5858

540

Pels 740-446 1104
Route 7 Crown City 2 Bedroom
Trailer $225/'Mo + Deposit WB

ter Paid 740-2-9 Alter 6
Trailer For Rent 740-446-1279
440

Apartments
for Rent

t and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pets 740

992 2218

t Bedroom Apartment In Mason
Stove &amp; Retrtgarator Utilities Fur·
nished A/C Laundry Room Call
lng Fan Garbage Disposal Very

Nice! No Pets 304 773 5352
304-882 2627
1 Bedroom Ground Floor Eco
nomlcal Gas Heat Near Holzer
WID Hook Up Quiet Location
$279/MO Plus Ullllttes 740 446-

2957

2 Bedroom Apanment AI Gatllpo

liS Ferry

wv

304-675-2548

2 Bedroom Apa rtm ent kl Cente
nary Appliances Furnished Uttll
ties Paid Except Electric Clean References &amp; Deposit Required

$300/Mo. 740·258 1135

2 Bedroom ~partment Adjace nt
To University 01 Rio Grande

€ampus 740-245-5858
2bdrm apts total electric ap·
pllances furnished laundry room
facilities close to school In town
Applications available at Village
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992

371 I EOH

Christy s Family Living apart
ments !railers and home rentals

1 Year Old Daybed With Trundle
Upgraded MaHresses $300 740

256-1426
12 pc brass $75 oo
2.36

(304)882

12 Pc 01 Brass $75 For All
Bowls Nases Etc 304 882 2436

u•

Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment
Across From Park AC No Pets
References Deposit S325fMo

740 446 6235 740-446.0577
Furnished Upsta1rs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath Clean References &amp; De
posit Required Utilities Paid 7.t0.
448 1519

AKC Mala Choc Lab Housebro

AKC Registered Chinese Shar
Pel pupa $200 or trade lots of
wrinkles 740·949 2126

B Y Soutnoldt Aquorfum
2006 Camden Avenue

Perl&lt;ersburg wv 26101
304-485 1293

time offer calif aoo-779-8194
1985 JD 540B Skldder excellent
condition with chains t974 Mack
300 /6 spd with rear mount G
model Prentice Knuckle Boom
call 740 992 7421 after Spm

PUIJIIIes &amp; Kittens
Fulllne of pets supplies

Black Poodle Full Blooded I t/2
Old All Snots Neutered S1oo
1997 Kawasaki Jet Ski 1100 cc 3 Mary COrdell 740-388 8669

Seater Alum inum Trailer Life

Jacket, Excellent snepel $5 500
740-992 3537
2 Ooubfe Door Commercial Coot
era Coldrln $450 Master Built

$1 250 304-675 7269 9 30 AM
9PM
3 Ton Miller Air Conditioner $300
Wllllamaon Fuel 011 Furnace

$300 Dinette Sot $75 Go·Carl
!15 HP Roll Cage Big Tires Front

&amp; Rear New $1 200 f Veer Old
Aaklng $800 740-446-3545
4 000 PSI Press ure Washer Hot
/Cold Unit Honda Engine 740·

366-8803

•

A Troybilt Ro totlller 8 HP 304

675-2131

Alyce Prom Dress Coral Blue All
Beaded Size tO (Sizes Run

Small) Purse $200 00 740 441
0705 After3 OOPM
AMAZING

METABOLISM

Breakthroughlll Lose 10 200
Pound&amp; Easy Quick
Fast
Drama tic Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free Sam

Automatic Washer Bed• Cheat
Drawers Computer Desk, Couch
Color TV Dinette Set Portable

O"""r, Youth Bod 7•0.446-97•2
B t 16 Wheel Horse lawn Tractor
36" Cut Rear Discharge With

Snow Blade &amp; Cnalns $500 Fltrn
740-441 1061
Brand new bicycle parts all sizes
&amp; accessories electric llove
• t 990 Toyota Corolla pee deck
preacher curl bench 740 992

6141

1987 Mercury Gran Marquis
$500 1986 Chrysler 5th Avenue
$500 Ford Temp (Wrecked)

$300 740 388 0640
1989 Chevy Corsica Will Make A

Good work car $700 304 773
521W

ken $300 (30&gt;1)675 6046

OlrecTV S•telllte Systems
$69 00 purchase price with three
month free programming Limited

room fireplace full basemen(
home $500 +deposit April 1st 2
pies Call740-441·1962
bedroom all utilities/cable paid
Christy s Family Llvmg apartments home &amp; trailer rentals
740-992--4514 apartments avail
able furnished &amp; unfurniShed

740-992·3679 after 5pm

Breeder Cockatiels Gray /Cinna·

mon 304 882 3436 Aller 5 30
~M

C FA Persian Kitten Shed dod
Sliver Mele $200 (304)675
5771
CKC Registered Toy Pekingese
Female 8 Weeks First vacclna
tlon Wormed $200 740 256
61~2

For Sale CoJIIe Pups Motner &amp;
Father On Premises Father Ot
Pups Is From Champion Blood
Line Beauttful Pups! Call Anytime

740 448 q32

Full Bl ooded Eslkmo Spitz 4
Males 1 Female, Mother &amp; Fa
ther On Premesls No Papers

$50 740-448-3261

FuU blooded pit bull puppies male
and female no papers parents on
premises St75 each 740 591
0861
Garmil.n shepherd pupa Regis
tered wormed and ahoiS slx

weaks Old 740.91!5 3741
Siberian Husky Pups Rare Col

oro Moat Blue Eyad, $1 00 oo
$200 oo Depending on Regl&amp;tnl
lion A,utomotlve Paint $20 oo

Gelk&gt;n 74().4M!.6827
I

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
500 Gallon Field Sprayer 36 Fi
Booms 740-446 3848

84 F 150 Ford 4x4 some rust 6
ely 300 4 sp runs good asking

THE BORN LOSER

,..

.,

li~ &amp;£1-1 1\ (.Qt.l(,,C.OU~ 51\\'(1::..

,..Wf\.t\1 S\\OULP WE OOTC&gt;t»-,'{ iO.,

---~~~WII'I'It~,eoi ::nlf\6
I~ fl~'( 1\.u.E I

(.()fi\.I'I\E (&gt;10~IE.
IT~ ~IV(&gt;..L 'Z

r

93 Chevy Silverado auto 4 3 V·

7 40

I "

I

6 air 44 000 mt•s $12 500 7407•2·2574 aflar 5pm

0

=

0

1995 XLH 1200 Harley Davidson
Low Milos Candy Apple Red E~
cellent Condition S6 200 OBQ
3().4 675 382.

0

0

~

•

0

0

==
~

•

0

0

=
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0

0

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0
0

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0

=
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0

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=

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.

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D

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1990 VZ f25, Excellent Condl·
lion $1200 Call After SPM
(304)675 6651

•

Cl

0

MotQrcycles

0

0

0
0

0

BIG NATE

3!50X Honda 3 wheeler good

condition $550 740-247 29tlt

750 Boats 1o Motors
for Sale
11 Ft Aluminum Semi V Boai
1994 17Ft Aluminum Tra cker
Pro Deep V Boat Trailer 1995 60
HP Mercury Tracker Power Tilt
Outboard Trolling Motor 16 000 1
6 HP Evenrude Gas Motor
Brand New Tank Line Motor Is
Excellent Condition! 740~367~

8172

Nice 2 Bedroom Trailer Refer·
ences &amp; Dapoait Required No

9278

740-446-4929

1964 Chevy Chevette Runs $350
740 388 9708

AKC l.ab puppies, proven gun
dogs references 3 generations
here shots wormed vet checked
black &amp; yallow $150 IO $200

1993 Chevy Astra van Loaded
With Extras! 98 000 MileS LOOkS
&amp; Runs Greall $4 900 740 448·

Pollee Impounds
And Tax
Repo s For Listings Call 1 800

AKC Cnocolato Male Lab 3
Montns 740 446 2460 Aller 5
~M

$1,300 OB0740.256-1233. ,

1960 ·1990 CARS FROM 15110

8 00 p m 740·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner
Mlecellaneous
Merchandise

Pain~

With Trarlor $300 304 674 01 f3
TRANSPORTATION

1983 Chevy 4 X 4 $2 800 00
E110mngs 740 379 2467

arences 740 256 6251 740 446

2045

$1500 740 992·3401
Grain

posit Bo Ready I st Week Of April
740 368-0583

3 Mala Chinese Pugs, $100 Oe

Automatic ~

1991 Ford E•plorer 4x4 V-6 New

Precision Post Frame Bdlra. Inc

pOLE BYILO!NOS

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

1978 Ford Van 351

1989 Cutlass Cierra ale auto
cassette good cond ition new

tires $1600 OBO 740 992 72q
1989 Ford Escort , $500 OBO
(304)675-7930
1989 Olds 1983 LTD Bolh Need
Work, Cnaapl740.245·5393
1989 Toyota Camry
MUes 740-446 4589

88 ooo

1990 Lumina Below loan Value
90 000 M1tes Runs Greatl $1 950

Neg 740-446-1127

PEANUTS
1

I TJ.IINK I LL

7927

•

740-245-5677

Shop tht clol!l(itd SKiioo

U S Toll Free BOO 482·6260 Kttta

Hill Ohio

1990 Thunderbird 119 000 Mnes

Campers 1o
Motor Homes
Ft ~

,

SERVICES

All Power One Owner Good Con

dillon 12 500 00 740-446 2075
1991 Bonneville excellent condl

lion PB AC 3 6 engine $3 700
740.949 2045
1991 Ford Tempo 86 000 miles 4
door PW &amp; POL air, amlfm cas

ootle asking $2300 740 742
1334

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

tabllsned 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 1 600 287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

1992 Toyota Cellca GT Loaded
New Tires &amp; Rims 740-245 151~

Appliance Parts And Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perlence All Work Guaranteed

1993 Cnevy Corsica , V 6 AIC
3 1 Liter New Tires Asking
$3 200 740 388-D413

French City Maytag 740·446
7795

1993 Grand Am GT Loaded
Runs Groall Asking $5 600 1986
Caprice Runs Greatl Body Good

$1 200 Or Best Offer HO 6621324
t994 Chevrolet Corsica 6 Cylinder 4 Doors Loaded! 1 Owner

46 000 Milos 740-258 6011
f 99S Buick LeSabro Custom 4
Doors, Blue Loaded S1o ~oo,
740.882 7512
199S Chevy Silverado Z71 •
wo, Off Road Package 53 ooo

C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence· Palnt1ng vinyl siding
carpentry doors windows, baths
mobile hQme repair and more For
fret estimate call Chat 740 992
6323

LAREDO CONS!
Complete Home Remodeling Sid
lng Windows Rocflno Room Act
dltlons Fully Insured Free Eat

740.SI14-4587

Livingston s Basement water
Proorlng all basement repalra
dona free estimates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job exparl

4.ctual Miles Asking S16 000,
1994 Geo Tracker 5 Speed, 4

onoe (3o.4)895 3687

WD A&amp;klng $5 000 740 H&amp;4959 30&gt;1525-1875

84

t997 Hon,da Accord L)( 4 Doors

Bleck Wrth Gold Package P/W

AJC Cassette Has 58 ooo Miles

304 S82 23•3 Daytime 304 882·
2283 Evenlngo

ASTRO-GRAPH

Unconditional lltellme guarantee
Local references furn l she~ Es

1992 Plymouth Acclaim 215 4 Cy
IInder, Auto Look&amp; And Runs
Greau $1 200 304-674 0001

Electrical and
Refrl eratlon

Reslden a r commercial wiring
new serVIce or repairs Master u
censed electrician Ridenour

Electrlcel WV000306 304 675
1788

Tuesday March 23 1999
Matertal acqut$tlton wtll be trend·
tng tn your favor m the year ahead
However, thai does not mean you

don t have to do your part m brtng·
tng tt about Be dthgent as you butld
your stockptle
ARIES (March 21 Apnl 19)
Watch your words carefully today,
espectally when you're around sen·
Stttvc people A thoughtless remark or
causltc comment could leave a scar

difficult to heal Trytng to patch up a
broken romance 1 The Astro-Oraph
Matchmaker can help you understand
what to do to make the relattonshtp
work Matl $2 7~ to Matchmaker, c/o
thiS newspaper, PO Box 17S8 Mur·
ray Htll Statton, New York, NY
101~6

TAURUS (Aprti20·May 20) Pen·
ny ponchers could try your pattence

roday, so select your companions
w1sely when mvolved m activities
that requtre a cash outlay
GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Be
espectally careful of your demeanor
•and behaviOr today when tn the pres
ence or

those who could

tnfluence

your career You'll be cnttcally eval
uated on

what

you

do or say

tcanl today could tum out to be of the

CANCER (June 21 July 22) In for
mauon you share wtth others loday
should only be told to those who are
dtscnmmatmg tn what they tell oth

greatest Importance, so be cognizant

of all the mtnule delatls, espectally tn
financJalmvolvements

SAOIITARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Tolerance wtll set the tone today

ers from your expenence wtth them
The wrong type could mtsrepresent
your words

Lli_O (July 23-Aug

especially m attempts to mamtam
harmony Place all your emphaSIS on
seetng the good tn others and the least
on Cl' ' • rn
l
' . ORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)

22) Thor·

oughly research any Investment 11ps
offered to you by someone else

today Takmg somethtng at face val
ue could end up taktng you to the

Tasks and responsJbJIJttes can't

be

wtshed away today lnslead of mere·

cleaners

ly moantng and groanmg about what

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sep1 22) Be
sure you can back up any commit-

needs to be done roll up your sleeves

make to anOlh-

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Ltttle purchases could have a way of
totahng up to a large , unmanageable
sum today so be senstble about your
spendtng habtts and avmd sausfytng

ment or promtse you

and swmg 1nro acuon

er today If you fatl to hve up to your
word, your reputation could be badly damaged
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl 21) Before
undertaktng any JOb or lask aSSigned
to you today, be sure to a•k a lot of
quesuons to fully underotand whaltS
expected so you don 1 commit any

e~Ctravagant

whtms

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) It's
always kood to be aware ofdctaals m
cnt •cal Sltuauons H owever, ml pu.:k
m g ts another rnalter Don t become
obsess!\ 1 tn the po mt of att ackmg
every I •
1camnglcss atem today

cnucal errors
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) The
very thmgs that appear to be tnstgntf·

•
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poem

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by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptogram 1re creatad from quota Ilona by famous I)G09Ie pas! and prMent
Each letter 1n the cipher IIHnds for another Todays dtw V «/(JJIIS Z

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Did you ever feel like the whole world was a tuxedo
and you were a paor of brown shoes?" - George Gobel

WOlD
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The average man who does
not know what to do w1th hiS life
wants another one whtch w11i

r--::o:-:R::-::F:-:E:-:-:N-::z:---.llast . - - - - - -

lf-n:,6--rl

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tho chuckle quoted

by t,Jitng •n the m•ss•ng words
you develop lrom step No 3 below

UNSCR4MBtE lETTERS 10
6 Gfl
ANSWER
1
•

Ratoon · Cream- Stood- Voyage - ADVERSITY
Don 1g•t stung by hrgh prlctl I

Auto Systems 740 532 0139 o~

1993 Jayco Bunk House 22

agcy
50 Chick's
mo1her
52 Bualnass ,
abbr
,
53 Medieval

SCIIAM-li'IS ANSWERS

One Ot The Araas Largest Se,
lections Of Leta Mode l Auto
Parts Late Model Motors Trans.:
missions Body &amp; Suspensto11
Parts Best Pnces In The Region
On After Market Shaat Metal
Fenders Hoods Doors Wlnd J
shields Radiators A C Condensers Over tOO Cars In Lasl 30
Days For Parts Over 25 Late
Model Repairable&amp; Powerllnfl

$7 000 OBO 304 773 5846

goo lip

28 Twill
30 See 7Down
34 ActorMoore
35 Thread·
winding
machine
36 Actor Brynner
38 Tahlnlbllse
39 Hurry
&lt;10 Conform
42 Hinge pointe
1
44 Resided ' 1
49 Dam-bulldii\G

&amp; PRINT
NUMBERED lETIERS
IN IHESE SQUARES

li-IE MILK

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Access
To 01Jer 10 ooo Transm isslona,

790

name
24 Antonna
26 Barrett of

L.-.L.-..1.-...L..-.L.-..1.-.J.

I USED ALL

EAT 6REAKFA5T..

Auto Parts 1o
Accessories

760

Pass
All pass

By Phillip Alder
Who clatmed the foll owmg? " To
say the trulh, reason and love keep Itt·
tie company together now-a-days "
No- trump contracts have two
thmgs that keep company together
sun establishment and enlnes
Wtth that hmt, how would you try
to make three no-trump here? West
leads h1s fourth·htghesl heart Would
you prefer to be m four spades?
The deal arose dunng a German
patrs tournament a few years ago
Most of the field fint shed m four
spades, but fatled losmg one spade,
one heart and two club tncks
Thts unnamed declarer found the
best hne m lhree no trump He
planned to get nme tncks vta five
spades, two hearts and two dta
monds But to collect tAat many
spade tncks he needed a dummy
entry So, at trtck one, he played dum
my's low heart and won wuh hts ace
Next, he overtook the spade km g
wtth dummy ' s ace and conunued
wtlh the spade Jack to drt ve out the
queen
Wtth dec larer s queen JaCk of
hearts m the dummy com btnmg to
produce a later enuy and wuh borh
mmor suus unde1 control , the defend·
ers were powerless to take more than
one spade, one heat! and two clubs
Note also that tf dummy had had
queen-empty·thtrd of heatts 11 would
sltll have been correct for South to
wtn the firsttnck w1th the heart ace.
playmg West for the kmg
That was a tough question at lhe
begtnmng the only real clue bemg
the hyphenallon of " now a days " It
was spoken by Bottom m Shake·
speare's " A Mtdsummer Ntght's
Dream"-- a forward·thmktng fellow,
lhatl3an1 1

lo 4-WDs

Engine Standard 740-446 39&gt;12

lo

..

II

!1072

Pass

Keeping
everything
together

'

Saturday Mercn 27tn 1 ~ M Will

Hay

I SHORE WAS
SUPRISED
TO SEE
YOU IN
CHURCH

AWAKE

Pass

East

Opemng lead • 5

1e·

Be 5elling 15 Cows With Calves
By Side All Consignments Wei·
come Cattle Will Be Accepted
After 4 PM Friday, Athens Live

640

IT KEPT

ME WIDE

4 Factory Chevy Steel Wheels,
Chrome Beauty Rings &amp;
Chrome Center Caps $250 740,..

1990 Full Size Dodge Cargo van ~
Needs A Little Body Work &amp;

5504

BARNEY

1996 Cllovy S·10 Standard Shon
Bed Cassette No AIC 31 soo
Milos, $6,800 304 895 3608 01
304 895 3025

96 Chevy heavy duty 3/4 ton,
454 automatic both hitches
31 ooo miles $18 900 740 992 t

Weal

Pass
Pass

+

2•
2NT

1992 GMC Sonoma Exlende~
Ceb v 6 /IJC, Loaded $3 796 00,
1988 Nloan Pickup $1 •ss oo ,
1991 Cavalier $2 395 oo CooM
Motors, 740-446-0103

Vans

South

boredom
7 Moat In needr
of aweeplng8 Map abbr
9 Doclora' org
1D small horN a
11 Attendant
12 ObsolesceQt
secretary
18 Jar cover
22 Mark l'Naln'o
real flrot

Speake
4 Actroaa
Joanne
5 Long-nosed
fish
6 Feeling of

1 Exllngulsh
2 Newapaper
magnate
Murdoch

Squad"
31 OVer: preflx
32 Kin of mono33 32Across

I

11

DOWN

29 "The-

1992 Dodge Dakota Dleoel En'
glne 5 SRH&lt;I New Tires 2 Delta

Registered Yearling Paint Stud
Overo Sorrel/White St BOO AI &amp;a
Siberian Husky Pups 740 643·
2589

Wanted Nubian Does, 740·446·

numeral

$9000 (3o.4)675-3753

730

51 Expand,ao
pupllo
54 Irks
55 Coaling on
teeth
56 Despot
57 Knowledgeable

24 Dynamic
lull-In
25 Onetime
Runlan ruler
27 Abhor

Stepslde Pickup 5 Spd 44000

$3700 740 992·7478 or 740 949-

stock Sales 740 592-2322 740
898 3531

s3

miles Like New garage Kept

245-91!51 Aller 6 PM

Men"

particle
21 Ia mlol8kln
23 SOndlel

1992 Chevy Full Size SilveradO

Side Toot Boxes Trailer Hitch,
Front Stainless Brush Guard
$4 500 3().4 675-201.

-·~
province

17 ltahopl

20 Chltrged

'

Champion Hill Segunatta AlSo
A I Bulls 740-379-2796

Buy or sell Riverine Antiques
1124 E Main Street on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M TW 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to

$225/Mo , Plus Deposit And Ref

379-2928 After 6 P.M

1988 Bla.zer 4WD 6 cylinder eu·
tomauc AC PS PB great shape,

nice/pampered

K 98

96

HouM lnltlalo
48 Workero
aun
47 Opp. of NNE
48 · - - Klng'a

18 Lutmo.

1984 Chevy Truck Perfect Body,
V 6 New Tires • Speed, 740·

R.eglstered Angus Bull Sired By

2yr old Nubean Buck All very

• 3

4

A 9 53

553 Jackson Plko 740.446 6308
80Q.29f .()098

Goats Nubian Soonen Toggen·
burg, Lamancha Doe/Babies
Milkers, Newborns Wethers

•7.

EEK&amp;MEEK

720 Trucks for Sale

1985 F 150 4x• 300 8 Cylinder;
New Tires $2 600 740.368-9708

Mathews Signature Red Target
Bow 60 lb 29• -30" Draw E11cel

Antiques

LT9000 Ford Dump Truck .With
67 000 Actual Miles New Tires
VIbrating Plate Temp Fits Cat

• Q J
• 3 2

glne 4 Cyinder, 740.245--5890

Llmousln Bull Call Aller 5 PM
740 245-5273

740 ·742· 4011 or 1·800 396
3028

530

553 Cat Roller $40 000 Cat 215
$32,000 1982. GMC Oleaol
Flatbed Truck $5 200 1990

• A J 10 9 8 2

1998 Pontiac Sunfire SE AJC Tlh
CO Player With Equalizer 6
Speaker Sound System 2 2 En·

Wnh NC $500 00 740-446 9991 '

Cnoepl 15 Minutes From Galllpo
lis, 740.379 2601

lent Condition, $400 740 379
2601

Qalllpolrs Ohio 740·448 2412 Or
1-8000-594 1111

$9 500 00 OBO 740-256-WII

(304)675·1928

Washers dryers refrigerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76

Vine Slroet Call 740 448· 7398
1·688-BfB-012$

John Deere Tractor Financing
7 99% Carmichael&amp; Farm &amp; Lawn
Your local John Deere Deater

1998 Cavalier LS 4 Doora Au··
tom AJC Rear Defrost AW FM
&amp; Cassette 22 500 Miles Aqua
Blue With Rally Wheels Price Is

We Are Professional t nstallatlon
And Service Supply We Sell
Wholesale To The Publlo We
Stock Janitrol Heating And Cool·
tng Equipment Duct Work Reg
lsters And Related Materials For
You To Install Your Own Or We
Can Arrange For Lawrence En
terprlses To Install For You II
You Don t Call Us We Both lose!

Jac1&lt;son OhiO Hltl0-537 9526

7795
For Rent With Option To Buy 4
Bedrooms Stove &amp; Refrigerator
Dishwasher Furnished Fireplace
/Large Deck Fenced tn Yard To
tal Electric $525/Mo Deposit
304 675 7873

3 9% Used Planters 5% New

Butcher Hogs For Sale Ready To
Go Will Haul To Butcher Shop

pression Fittings In Stock

Appliance•
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers Ranges Refrl
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 448

8 99% Financing, Uud Hay
Equlpment Financing "'' Low As

0098

$21 95 Per 100 1' 200 PSI
$37 00 Por 100 All Brass Com·

Household
Goods

15 ·20 Used Tractors In Stock

4 H pigs for sale Rick Colburn

Waterline Special

43 Title role
45 '5Da Wh!UJ

15==11Bplrltualllla'

Elec1rlc, Air Condlllonlng, New As
Low As $200 553 Jackson Pike
9 5 740 446 6306 1 800 291

peo. t.s. suppLy

House In Petrlot HO 379-2928
After a ~M

St , Now Haven , WV (304)882·
3121 mornings, (304)882 3274,
Untilt1PM

$515 +deposit HL&lt;I honored

1979 Mansion 14x70 New Carpet

A548

Granda Cal 740-446-3617

RENTALS

740 992 4514 April lSI 2 bed

Windsor 70Ft X 14Ft AJC Wal
nut Panel•ng Very Nice 740

Roof Thermopane Windows And
Upgrade Carpet Includes Dellv

Baby Bod , High Cnalr Cor Seat,
Stroller And Walker, 3Q•·675·

Mobile Home Lot Available In Rio

1996 14X80 Mobile Homa 3BR
2BA. Large Covered Porch Lot
95)(105 A 1 Condition Somer

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Weatwood Drive
from $279 to $356 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740 446 2568
Equel Housing Oppor1Urity

Room For Rent In 2 Bedroom

8 Miles Out 218, 2 Bedrooms

1992 Norris 16Ft X 70FT VInyl
With Shmgles 2 Bdrms 2 Baths
Al l Electnc App liances Porches
carport 74D-256-6336

740-245 9009

Mnslve Training In The Field Of
MR/00 Starting Salary $5 50 I

0888

$10000 740 667 6630

1600-4816334

SchOOl Diploma /GEO Valid Drlv

740-367-0583 740-245 5672

FINANCIAL

Economy Heattng And Cooling
Factory 10 Years Parts &amp; Labor

er 1 License Three Years Good
Driying E•perlene'e And Ade
quate Automobile Insurance
Coverage B C S Otters Compre

1978 Schultz 14x60 2 Bedrooms
Very Good Conditlonl Air Condll
tlonlng Underpinning Extras!
1980 Bayview 3 Bedrooms 1 112
Baths Fireplace On 3110 Acre, 3
Outbuildings Loc ated Graham
SchOOl Road $18 000 740·441

Will Do Babysitting In My Home
Galllpqlls Ferry Area AQy Shift

STNA s Wanted Call Laura AI
Medi Home Health Private Care

We Are Searching For Compas
slonate Professionals Wllh A
Team Vision And A Desire To
Teach Personal And Community
Skills To Individuals With Mental
Retardation The Work Environ
ment Is Informal And Reward ing
The Requ irements Are High

Mobile Homes
for Sale

tuer? Need SOme Home PC Sup
port? We ll We Can Help! Call

230

Openings In Meigs County
1)32 Hrs /Wk 6 A M SatTIYU 8
A M Mon Sleep-Over ReqJired
2) 25 Hrs/Wk
8 AM -8 ~M Sat/Sun
5) Emergency Rel18f
(SUbstitutes) Hours
Scnedulod As Needed

Beeutllul Homes 740-446 2927

446·1295

Having Trouble With Your Camp

210

Acreage

House In Gallipolis 3 Bedrooms
CA $375fMo + Utilities 740

686-1763

Have 3 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care 01 Elderly Or Handl
capped 740-441 1536

tea. EOE

WANTED Due To Recent Ex
panelon, B C S Currently Has

7427 Or 304-675-7465

largest Home On The Market Come See Our Mammoth 32x80
Home WHh Up To 5 Bedrooms
And 3 Bathrooms Th is Home Is
Unbelievable Starting At $475
Per Month Call Now At 1 800

Georges Portable Sawmill don I
haul your logs to the mill just cal!
304 675 1957

6606 Need dedicated caring
hard working people to join our

'

Large Brick Ranch Home 2 78
Acres 4 Bedrooms 2 112 Baths
lnground Pool All New Upgrades
Through Out The Home 304-675

245-9337

Furniture repair refinish and res
toratlon also custom orders Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop Larry

4353

Ohio 45831

Klneon Drive 3 Bedrooms Living
Room Kitchen Bath Laundry
Carport With Utility Fenced Yard
74D-446-2801

Spnng Valley 2 story tamlly
home 4 Bedroom 2 t/2 Baths
L1v1ng Room Dining Room Eat in
K1tchen Lg Family Room 740

992 1100 Appalachian Wood
works

36759 Rocl&lt;sprlngs Road Pomer
oy Ohio 45769 pnt 740 992

Wanted Chlisllan Lady In Galli
polls Rare To Occasionally Baby
sit 6 Year Old Boy In Her Home
On Snow Day&amp; School Holldays
And The Occas1ona1 Parents
Night OUt SaM Resume And Re
frances To CLA 468 cf~ Trib
une 825 Third Ave GallipoliS

New carpet Low $30 s (304)882
2052 or (30&gt;1)882 2539

mont call740-992·5696

Furn ture repair restoration &amp; re
finish ing custom built reproduc
tlons Liz &amp; Bennett Roush 740

Scenic Hills Nursing Center 311
Buckridge Rd Bidwell OH Is Now
Accepting Applications For
able LPN s (Part T1me Days &amp;
Evenings) Please Apply In Per
son At The Front Desk Between

House New Haven e11cellent
location 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres V1Uage Middleport
secluded and private appoint

PM 304 682 2046
The State Of OhiO Is An
Equal Opportunity Empl~r
And PI"'OIider ot Services

House For Sale By Owner Price
Under $200 000 00 A Doctors
Home Excellent Cond1tion Shown
By Appointment Serious lnqul
nos Only Please! 740-44&amp;4559

Reduced Price 333 Third Ave
nue Gall1polls 740-441 -o432

Phillips 740.992 6576

phone calls please EOE

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
wh1ch Is In violation of the
law Our readers are hereby
lflformed that all dwell1ngs
advertised In thts newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

(Careers Close To Home) Call

Today! 740 446-4367 1 600.
214 0452 Reg 190 05 1274B
180

lo

Beautiful 2 Acres Centenary Ad
Deed Restricted Surrounded by

Meigs Co

Ace Tree Service Complete tree
care 20yrs exp &amp; Insured tree
estimates 614 441 1191 or 1
8Q0-508 6887

Thurr March 11th

limitatiOn •1 dlscnmlnatlon

based on race color religion
sex familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any sUCh preference
limitation or discrimination •

350 Lots

7~1-14112

10 Yr Cartllled Nursmg Assistant
has opemng tor two elderly pea
pie In her hOme 1 74D-7422119

Gallpolls OH

Aller 5 PM 304-576-2345

RN POSITION AVAILABLE

' Day And Evening
Shifts Available

Itt Acre Farm Mason County 3
Bedroom House Basement Can
tral Air /Heat 2 Large Barna
Outbuildings, Good Country
Kitchen Good Hunting Area CaU
All real estate adver11sing In
this newspaper Is sliJject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes tt Illegal
to advertise "any preference

540 Mlscellaneoue
Marchandlsa

Farma lor Sale

author
41 Wine bllrrel

The philosophy professor told the class that a person s
true nature IS not found 1n prospenty but 1n ADVERSITY

""
.,

�I

•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 22, 1999;

Tuesday

~~==~======-=~==~~~----------------~:
well aware of the help and comfol'!
"Mr. Sponagle came running up
,.
'
Beo.t of she canprovide asa newauxiliary theroadwakingus aswewe rein Meigs County · Humane Society · to begin:
me mbe r.
bed . My father asked Mr. Sponable
!
tlae Bend
Recently Shirley Hunnell Miller ~~a~~=~s ~~~; !~t~e.;.·~Y~;~~~~ euthanasia program with Ripley Animal Shelter:
If you ' re on the prowl for Easter
items, you might latch onto a good
de al at the gi ft . shop o f the
Women 's Auxi liary in the 1obby o f
Veterans Memorial Hosp ital.
The shop'has a· variety of Easte r
theme artic les and effe.ti ve this
Friday, March 26, ·the auxili ary will
stage a 30 perce nt off sale at the
shop effec ti ve through Good Frid ay . Ap ril 2.
.• The auxi liary nas voted agai nst
hold ing a ny more raffles in the
future but are wrapping up the ir
fin al two whic h include a fill ed
Easter bas ket and an afghan . Wi n·
ncrs wi ll bo dete rm ined on Apri l 2.
Also on Good Fr iday.heg inni ng at
9 a.m .. the a uxiliary wi ll be holding a bake sale in . the hospital
lob by. Fallhfu l member. Libby
Fisher, is creatin g a bunch of color·
fu l Easter candy ' fm the sale.
Meanwhile , the grou p has welco nlcd a new mcmbcr: Sa.ll y Ebe rsbach. into the org an izati on. Sall y
has spent a lot uf time ove r the pa st
fe w years in the c~ tc ndcd care uni t
o r the hospit al having had several
re latives as res ide nts there so she is

of the Flatwood s Road , Pomeroy, and he told my father his wife had
had asked for info rmation about a drowned. (Bai ley recall s that the
tragedy that occ urred on the Ohio Sponagles ' small daughter also
River near Pomeroy back in 1926.
drowned.) The B. &amp; 0 . excursio n
A former res ident, Clarence R . had turned into a tragedy.
Ba iley, Springfie ld, Ohio, picked
"When I was a boy in the 1920s
up on the request and directed a let- the Ohio Ri ver would freeze over
ter to Shirl ey telling her about the and tWO team s of horses would pull
traged y as well as some of his other a load of coal from Ohio to Wes t
experiences in Meigs County .
Virginia ·
"In 1936 on a Sunday night my
He writes .. in part :
''I have read Bob Hoe flieh abou t girl friend and I watched the Ohio
the cap sizing of the skiff in 1926. I River ice break up. I later married
was ll years old. I remember the my girl friend , Doll y Erl ewi nc.
ni ght as Bill Spo nagle was goin g to
"When the Pomeroy - Mason
meet his wife. He was a neighbor. bridge was buil t the re was no use
"T here was an exc ursion on the for the ferry boat and the last day it
·B. &amp; 0. Rai lroad in Wes t Virgi ni a ran, my gra ndfather took my
that weeke nd. T,he river was rough ,cousin (Robert J. M~ In tosh) and
and the ferry boat quit runn ing. me for a ride on the ferry. My
The train came in after dark some- gra ndfat her was a relative of
time between nine and eleven. A Valentin e B. Horton who dcvc lman offered to brin g eve ryone that oped coal and salt ind ustrie.s in
wanted to co me to Ohio. In those Pomeroy ." .
days, some of the ladies wore ankle
Bai ley was born and reared on'
leng th dresses. The r-iver was very Ebenezer Stree t in lower Monkey
rough when they too k off. The Run and graduated from Pomeroy
train le t · off the pa sse nge rs in Hjg h Sc hoo l in 1933 .
·Mason . W.Va. Tl1ere was no pl ace
And ' tis the season for jelly
for the passe ngers to stay. Everyone wanted to come home as quick beans. Somehow they don' t seem
as possible . About the middle of as tasty as th ey used to . Do keep
the ri ver, the skiff turned over.
. smi ling .

- ------Community
The Comm)J nit y Ca lendar IS
puhlished as a free sc rv i c~ to
no n-pro fit gro ups wis hi ng to
a nnounce mee tings and spec ia l·
eve nt s .. The ca lend a r is no t
des igned to promo te sa les or fu nd
rai se rs of a ny type. Items arc
printed as spa ce pcrmrt s and can no t be guara nteed to ru n a speci fic number of da ys.

Calendar·--~----

MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Free
Wi ll Bapt ist Church, rev iva l se rvices, Monday through March 27.
Jame s Arthur, spe aker.

T UESDAY
·RAC INE - RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park . New
members welco m e .
POM EROY - Me igs Loca l
Board of Educati o n reg ular mee tRAC IN E - So uthe rn Hi gh . in g Tuesday, 7 p .m . at the distr ic t
Sc hoo l Board of Educa tion, 7 ce ntral office on th e seco nd fl oor
p.m. Mo nday, a t t he hi gh sc hoo l. of the Pomeroy Muni c1pal Buildmg.

The Meigs County Humane Society, as of April I , 1999, is now
resuming a service about whi ch several of us (and, I include myself
among them) are ambivalent but
which apparently is greatly needed
in thi s county. The necessity for the
service te fl ects. I think, one of the
most serious problems in lhe county
- what to do about surplus cats.
Let me explain the service and
how it · works and then look at the
philosophical issues that arise.
Once a week - twice a week. if·
necessary - and beginning in April ,
we will be pay ing a person to transport relinqu ished cats and kittens to
the Ripley An imal Shelter in Jackson County, West Virgini a. People
surrendering ca ts/ki ttens will be
required to- sign a · rel.inqui shme.nt
form and give us a dona tion of a
mini mum of $5.00. The kittens must
be eight weeks of age or we will not
accept them.
·
You should know, however, that
th is donati on reall y amounts to a
euthanasia fee · bec a u ~e 95 percent of
the ani mals will be promptl y put to
sleep. Killens under e ight weeks do
not do well with the form of
euthanasia used at Ripley.
The Board of Directors of the
Meigs County Humane Soc iety has
agreed to resume this service (disco ntin ued for several months)
because we think it is more humane

than the -alternative means some they did not take lhe molher cat tct
people will employ to get rid of cats the vet after she h,ad that first litter?:
and kittens. There are people (many
Regardless, the problems of cat~
of • whom. profess to have great and ki ttens remains and transportin~
respect for life) who will drown kit- cats to Ripley is one - let us hope;
tens (m aybe kee p the mother, temporary - solution. But can 't WC(
although never give a lhought to . do better?
· !
preventing the next litter).
I ask those of you out ihere who)
You know this is true. Some peo- fee l as I do to help us. Convince&gt;
pie will p~tlje litter in a box , dri ve your re lati ves, friends, and neigh•
out to a county road and dump them, 'bors· to · take a&amp;vantage of o ur!
box and all (one member of our Spay/Neuter Program (rememberi
board enc&lt;luntered just such a box). we pay one-hal f the cost) to hav~t
Others, the cruelest of all, wm use their cats (of either sex) sterilized. I~
the kitte ns for target practice or as you have extra money, contact a vet
prac tice prey for hunting dogs.
and donate the cost of spay/neute~
Gi ven these scenarios, transport- operation for an indigent cat owner.•
ing the animals to be humanely Take responsibility for a box o(,
euth anized looks pretty good. How- dumped kittens - even if 'thal
ever. let's face it; this "service" is means they end up with us.
:
NOT the most productive use of our
In addition, I invite anyone willl
volunteers' time and it is not a ser- an idea of how to alleviate the. s ur~
·'vice we nam.,...ith much enthusiasm plus cat problem to contact me abou~
·when people 1lSk what the soc iety ideas you have f9r an alternati ve td
"does for animals." We are, after all , our service. Although we do not
a "humane'' society, and many of us . seem to have the means or s uppo~:~-.
are cat owners. We find it pain ful to we need to build, staff, and operate 3'
come into the Thrift Shoppe to be cat shelter, we can come up with
greeted with the purrs and meows o f other solut ions to cat overpopul~~
needy, loving, cats and kittens and tion. It could be that you~ idea __:
know that withi)'t 12 hours they will ingeni ous, untri ed. creati ve be dead .
works. We have funds set aside for
1
In addition , ~orne of us question just this purpose. Contact me with
the whole no(i on of our takin g your ideas.
:.
responsibility for other people's irreI can be reached at work at 593-&lt;
sponsibility. Are we assuaging them 4687
or
on
E-mail
at
of their well-deserved guilt because waitt @ohio.edu.
;

'Tomorrow: Ught Rain
High: 50s; Low: 30s ·

•
Meigs County's

Day Sale

~ BRIAN J. REED

developmen~ or because of the potential of starting
Council tabled discussion of combining the positions,
another economic development program in the village.
and took no action to hire Cheri Johnson in either posiA new use for $27,000 in old economic development
According to Custer, new economic development lion, although Councilman Bob Pooler encouraged lhe
funds was discussed· when Middleport Village Council funds would be available to the village if an economic village to advertise tHe position of park director before
met in regular session on Monday _evening.
·
development program were started.
hiring Johnson for the pos ition.
Pat Custer, village grant writer. has prompted discus·
Councilman Steve Houchins said that he would not
The position of park director is already on the village
sion among coun~l members about using the funds, left support the ·bike path project, because there arc more ordinances, but has not.been filled for several years.
over from a state-funded economic development office pressing needs in the village, such as street and other
Jean Craig encouraged the recreation committee to
in Middleport, to help finance a feasibility study for a infrastructure improvements. Custer noted that the use consider activities other than athletics for children, and
bike path between Middleport and Pomeroy.
of the economic development funds is strictly limited.
also·said that events in the park for adults might also be
The Village of Pomeroy has allocated its half of the
''Thestate will let you use these monies for develop- well-received. '
funds for lhe study, $7,000, which would fund env,iron- ment projects, but they're not going to let you put them .
Council also discussed mowing at the parks, and
mental studies and other .work required to apply for the ' in the general fund so that you can blow i~" Custer said. decided to solicit volunteers to assist with .park maintestate grant. The path would span from the Nyc Avenue
Council authorizc:Q ·a letter to the Department of nance.
Eblen and Johnson also discussed a $26,000 gra,nt for
area in Pomeroy to the marina in Middleport, but the Development to examine possible use of the funds, with
study must be 'completed in order to apply for the grant Councilman Roger Manley voting against such a letter. which the village has applied. The grant would be used
funds.
.
. .Wilh warm weather approaching, council discussed · to fund repairs to park restrooms, picnic shelters, basCuster said that she had spoken to some.one at the plans for the village parks and recreation program.
ketball courts, and playground equipment.
Ohio Department of Development; who had encouraged
Sam Fblen an\! Arnold Johnson of the recreation
Word of grant approval is not expected until April.
the village to request the release of the funds for other committee, proposed the consolidation of ,the positions
Police Chief Br~ce Swift and · Council President
economic development uses, because the fund was of pool manager and park director, and suggested that Sandy Jannarelli discussed the status of a new Neigh"dead."
Cheri Johnson, Arnold Johnson 's wife, be hired for both borhood Wat~h program in the village. Swift said that he
Custer said that the Department of Development has positions. She was pool manager last year.
would be meeting with Prosecuting Attorney John
indicated that using the money for such a study would be
According.to Arnold Johnson, the pool manager posi- Lentes to discuss the program, and said that a public
an appropriate use.
lion pays $2SO per week, and $50 extra would be paid meeting would be held soon for those interested in parCouncil members and Oerk Bryan Swann have for the park director position. The park director would .ticipating.
expressed concern about using tlte funds for the study, be responsible for overseeing park maintenance, and the
Those interested in volunteering for the new program
· ' -either because the project would not relate to economic reserv;~tion of picnic areas, ball fields and ·tennis courts: · were asked to call the Middleport Police Department.

BOSTON BUTT

TONY'S ITALIAN STYLE
.
'

•

Pork Roasts

c

COUNTRY STYLE
PORK RIBS 79C LB.

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CHICKEN

LA T

BROOKLYN (AP) - The Oeveland suburb which pioneered the
requirement to wear seat belts has banned the use of cellular phones by
· d(ivers unless they have two hands on the wheel.
The measure was approved by a ·5-2,city council vote Monday night.
' The Ohio Municipal League called it the first of its kind in the stale.
."Everyone's been talking about it, but nobody 's done anything about
Maybe we can stimulate interest nationwide," said Mayor John M.
' Coyne, who prides himself on making his city the first to require the use
, of seat belts.
Police Chief James f . Maloney said motorists wouldn 'I bJ: pulled over
fOf vaing a cell phone as a primary offense. But drivers weaving in traffic
.
would be cited, he said.
The ordinance makes it a minor misdemeanor punishable by a fine to
. use a cell phone While driving unless both hands are on the steering wheel.
Exceptions are allowed for calling emergency crews, using the phone
when the car is in the. "park" position or if a speakerphone device
is used .
.

4/$

' 7 oz.
Limit 4 please

CHERRY OR

Judge won't release suspect's mental records
CLEVELAND (AP) - A judge refused a request by prosecutors to
release the mental records of a suspect in last week's sidewalk shooting
death of 15-year-old girl who had spumed his advances.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard J. McMonagle
refused Monday to release the re\X)rds of Scott Strothers, 21, of Shaker
Heights, agreeing with the Cleveland Clinic that th~ records were governed by doctor-patient confidentiality.
James Malone, an attorney representing the research hospital, said the
clinic was not trying to obstruct the case, but had a legal obligation to its
patients.
.
Assistant Prosecutor Steve Dever said his office wanted the records in
case Strothers claims he was mentally ill at the time Penny Chang of Shaker Heights was killed on March 16.
Strothers has been held in the county jail on an aggravated murder
charge. The victim was shot while walking to Shaker Heights School and
·
police ssid Strothers had been infatuated with her.
Gerald S. Gold, who represents Strothers, would not comment on a
possible insanity plea. "We have no plans other than to appear at the
arraignment and enter a not guilty plea," he said.

Pfe ·Filling

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21

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FRESH HEAD

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Lettuce

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$ ·59

5 LBS.

LIMIT 2 .

Tomato .Juice
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COLUMBUS (AP) - A report commissioned by the state calls on
.Ohio's politiealleaders to stop fighting a court 's school-funding ruling and
.l·worli with educators to find an acceptable solution.
Two newspapers reported on the study which was to be released today
to the State Board of Education.
·
Th~ report by Achieve Inc., an j ndependen~ nonprofit, bipartisan organization, says it would take extraordinary will by elected officials t6 break
through the school-finance impasse, but they should do it.
It says the focus needs to be returned to teaching and learning, The
Columbus Dispatch and The Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
Former Gov, George Voinoi~ich commissioned the study last November. The report comes as the state prepares to appeal a Perry County judge's
finding that the state has failed to come up with an equitable plan to pay
for education.
A si x-member team re viewed
Ohio's newly enacted laws aimed at
. improving student performance and
school district fiscal management.
lt. found Ohio's academic standards don 't provide enough detail to
1 Section - 10 Pages
ensure that students learn what they

STOKELY

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Limit 2 please

UNITED VALLEY BELL

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$ 89 ·

SUNBEAM

PEPSI &amp; MT. DEW

Big Bread

Products

79c

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Gallon

Limit 2 Please
24 pk cube

$

Good Afternoon

1.------------,
Today's

Sentinel

~~5~~~~~~~~~
~

99

•
'

'

Jean Craig, chairman of the Board of Publ ic Affairs
updated co uncil members ori the search for a new consuiting fi rm .to assist the village in seeking gran t and
loan fun ds for improveme nts to the village water and
sewer systems.
Craig said that Floyd Browne Associates, the vil!age's c urrent consullant, has proposed almost $75 ,000
in stud ies before any other work can be done .
Craig said that she had mel with representatives of
another firm, Leighty and Snider, In c., to discuss the vii!age's needs, and will be meeting with John Anderson
and John Musser o.f Pomeroy later this week, to seek
advice on funding sources.
.
Street Supetvisor Junior Madden inquired about pay
raises for village street workers, and counci l noted that
pay increases for village employees were incl uded in the
appropriations ordinance which wa5 approved last night.
Coundl also:
- . Approved the annual appropriations ordinance for
1999;
- Authorized the sale of four cars forfeited to the
police department, along with excess village equipment;
- Approved the payment of bill s, with Pooler voting
no.
Iannarelli presided over the meeting in the absence of
Mayor Dewey Horton. Also presen~ in addition to
lannarelli, Houchins, Pooler, Manley and Swann, was
Council member Rae Gwiazdowsld. ·

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Lotteries

•

OHIO
Pick 3: 7-9-6; Pick 4: 4-6-9-6
Buckeye 5: 5-6-11 -22-29
W.yA.
...J
.

PRICES EFFECTIVE MARCH 23, 24TH, 1999 unt-.,

Daily 3: 0-7-2; 1Jti19'4i' 0-8-1-2
0 1999 Ohiu V.lley Pt..1hllshing Cn,

..
'

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentlnal N-• Staff
A request for funding assistance to repair the
London Pool in Syracuse was tabled by the
Meigs County Commissioners when they met in
regular session on Monday.
'
Bill Roush and Larry Lavender, members of
Syracuse Village Council , requested $8,000 in
funding from the county for the r epairs, which
would include new diving board equipment and
plumbing repairs.
In the past, the commissioners have provided
funding ~sistance to both Syracuse and Middleport for their pool operations, with the reasoning that the pools are used by residents
·
throughout the county.
. Commissipner , Jeffrey ·Thornton, who
presided at yesterday ;s meeting, said that he hail'
been fold that such use of county general fund
money was illegal, but said that the commissioners were pursuing the reestablishment of a
parks district; and that grant funds would be
.sought through that agency.
In other business, the commissioners authorized Michael Swisher, Director of the Meigs
County Department of Human Services, lo enter·
into an agreement with Sojourners, a private

firm wh ich provides inpatient services and foster-care placement for at-risk youths .
Swisher, Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes
and Juvenile Court Judge Robert Buck met with
the commissioners to discuss the .proposal,
which will cost the county S12,000.
The agency, based in McArthur, will assist
children's services caseworkers and the Juvenile Court in placing children in the facility in
cases where there is a risk of suicide, and in
placing others in foster homes in Meigs County
. when the need arises due to home ci rcum stances.
The center will be e~pecially useful, Lentes
said, in cases where suicide is a potential risk,
because of the required evaluations which must
·. take place.
·
The nearest facility avail~bl e in suicide-risk
cases is in St. Clairsville, according to Buck.
Tourism Director Karin Johnson introduced
the commissioners to Sarah Alexander, an artist
who will oversee the creation of a mural on the
City National Bank. building in Pomeroy.
The $30,000 project will be funded through
the Ohio Arts Council and the Ohio River Border Initiative. The mural will feature historical
representations from both Meigs Cpunty and

•

\

Without clear standards, teachers
have no shared mission on what to
, should.
teach, assessors have no clear idea
about what to test, and students get
mixed messages about what they're
supposed to learn, according to the
study.
"There's a lot of confusion about
academic standards," Ohio Superin. tendent of Public Instruction Susan
Tave Zelman told the Enquirer.
" We have to get really clear and
explicit about wh at we want school
districts to 'do," s he said . .
· The report was joinlly sponsored
by the Ohi o Department o f Education, the governor 's office and the
Ohi o Business Roundtable .

Mason County, W.Va.
Dorsey Johnson of Columbia Township met
with the commissioners about a reduced telephone toll rate between the 698 exch ange and
the 992 exchange.
Commissioner Mi ck Davenport said that . he
would contact the. Public Utilities Comm ission
of Ohio regarding the rate, and he and Thornton ·
also discussed the possibility of a toll -free telephone number for the courthouse, to serve residents in the Columbia Township area, as well as
the Tuppers Plains and Reedsville communities,
fo r whom a call to Pomeroy is a toll call.
The commissioners reviewed a letter from
Jean Trussell , Meigs County Grants Administrator, about a matching funds grant from the Ohio
Department of Development, Office of Housing
and Community Partnerships, whi ch would create a farmland preservati on pl an for the county.
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District will also assist in the program, designed to
preserve land for farm. use.
. An informational meeting about th e program
will be held on March 29 at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
County Annex , next to Veterans Mem orial Hos·
pita!.
·
Al so present was Clerk Gloria Kl oes.
MEDIA BUlZ -An effort to strengthen
regional support of U-S. Route 33 from
Athena to Darwin has l!agun, In antlclpa·
tlon of a Rally Day event set for April 9.
The Melga County Commlasloners Invited
members of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and others active In the campaign In support of the proiact to apeak
with a reporter from The Athans Nawa on
Monday afternoon, so thst local officials
can explain the Meigs County "aida" of the
Issue. Pictured speaking with reporter
Andrea Gibson and photographer Ed
rick are Bill Childs, who was active In the
original puah for the road In the mid·
1960's, Steve Story, a member of the
SEORC Highway . Users Committee and
the Chamber of Commerce Highway Commlttae, and Economic Development Director Perry Varnadoe: Paul Reed of Farmers
Bank, Tourism Director Karin Johnson,
and County Commlasloners Janet
Howard, Jaffrey Thornton and Mlck Dav·
enport also participated In th,a interview.

van-

Study: More details needed
to help students learn

PLEASE

US NO.1

·

s use
of cellulars by motorists

"'

THANK

. HEAD

.

nd s

WHILE SUPPLIES

REAMETTE
Macaroni &amp;·cheeie Dinner ·

$ 99

Single Copy - 35 C e nts

Co.mmissioners consider pool funding request ·

,

LEG QUARTERS

'

S.ntiMI Nawa Staff

white-sided dolphios were stranded,,
said aquarium spokes woman Susan .
Knapp. Of _those, 20 pied, 24 were .
euthani zed .and three were tagged ,
and released back into the ocean . ,

Prices Good ·Tuesday, March. 23rd 8 Wednesday, March. 24th only

NO RAINCHECKS

•

Fate of economic development .fund discussed by Middleport Council :

'

.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49. Number 223

a

Aquarium and volunteers from -the
Cape Cod Stranding Network kept
watch , but said there were no new
strandings Sunday.
From late Thursday evening to
sundown Saturday, a 'total of 47

District 13 all-star results, Page 4
No more maternal matchmaking, Page 6
Time Out for Tips, Page 6

Todliy: Chatnce of Rain
High: 50s; Low: 40s

Dolphin strandings
end in Massachusetts- as mysteriously as they began.
.

WELLFLEET, Mass. (AP) - A
flurry of dolphin strandings that
took the li ves of 44 of the sea mammal s has ended as mysteriously as it
began.
Experts from the New England

March23, 188e

Weather

outhern Board considers

all field advertising

The board also accepted Alan Crisp's resignaBy JIM FREEMAN
tion as reserve girls' softball coach and approved
Sentinel News Staff
The Southern Local Board of Education, meet- Jeremy Hill as a replacement coach. Ron Hill was
ing in regular s~ssion Monday night, heard a pro- hired as a tutor for a seve re behavior handicapped
posal on selling advertising space on·the football student for the remainder of the school year with
board member Dave Kucsma abstaining. .
field fence .
In other personnel matters the board approved
Head Football Coach Dave Barr said the
advertising would benefi t the school 's football a leave without pay for school nurse Joyce Thoren
and accepted April! and May 27 as niake-up days
program.
following
school closings on March 9 and 15.
The board took no action on the proposal , but
A
su1J1mer
school intervention program will be
wanted to see written guidelines concerning the
held
June
2
1
to July 19 for those ele mentary
size and content of the advertising. No beer, .
tobacco, or other inappropriate advertisements school students needing assistance with reading
or junior high students needing assistance with
would be allowed, it was noted .
In personnel matters, it was noted that Karen math or scie nce. Superinte nde nt James Lawrence
Hill has transferred into the kindergarten position said the classes will likely be held at the junior
vacated by the retirement of Suzanne Sayre effec- . high school in !l.acine.
In other business, the board:
li ve the 1999-2000 school yet~r.

-· Appro ved a tentative li st of seniors for
graduation that have met both the State Board of
Education and South ern Local Board of Ed ucati&lt;tn requirements for graduation.
. · - Tentatively approved a con tract with th e
Athens-Meigs Educational Service Ge nter for
psyc hology, speech therapy, and other services for
the 1999-2000 sc hool year.
- Approved a letter of endorsement of the
U.S. Route 33 project from Ath ens to Da rwin.
It was noted th at the Southern Local Academic Banquet wi ll be April 29, 6:30 p.m. at Southern
High Schoo l. Tickets wi ll be $7 and State Representalive John Carey Jr. will be the speaker.
Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill,
board President Bob Colli ns and boa rd members .
Ron Camm arata, Marty Morarity, Doug Littl e and
Kucsma.

Portland youth recognized for aviation pQster
Although many youngsters like airplanes, fe w take
their passion as far as 10-year-old Chance Collins of
Portland.
Collins, a fourth-grader at Syracuse Elementary
School, recently entered a 1999 International Av iation
Art Contest in which he drew a poster dealing with aviati on.
His poster was se)ll to the Ohi o Department qf Transportation 's Office of Aviation for state judging.
The son of Bob and Bev Collins, he created a colorful , freehand poster of a rural airport with a short
airstrip, an old hangar and a windsock.
Vintage ai rcraft are show n parked at the field while
in' the sky oth er planes are perfor ming aerobatics.

Last week, he was n,otified that he had won first
place· in category one in state-level competition.
iji~ poster has been forwarded to Washington, D.C.
to participate in the national competition.
Chan ce has flow n in vari ous types of ai rcraft over
the past three years alo ng with his father, Bob, who is
currently pursuing a pilot's lice nse. ·
He is also partici pating in th e Yo un g Eagles program
in which young people gel to take their fi rst airplane
rid e along with learning abou t aviation.
.
He remains acti ve in Oying th roughout the summer
mo nth s.
·
His sister, Merri , 8, also received a certificate of
achievement for _her entry in the-contest.

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