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•

Page 12 • The Daii.Y Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

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Thursday, January. 8, 1998.

Saving history - Nati.onal Arqhives collects . our pastfor generations to come

By HOLLI$ L•. ENG LEY
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON, D.C. _: George
Bush was writing for history when
he drafted his jpeech announcing the
Jan . 16. 1991. coalition attack on
Iraq !hat opened the Persian Gulf
War.
Unfortunately, he wasn't writing
for the National Archives.
If he had been, he never would
have used his customary fell-tip
marker. whme ink fades much more
quickly than most fountain pen inks.
"It would be a great breakthrough if someone would invent a
felt-tip pen that tlidn't fade," frets
Catherine Nicholson, the Archives '
senior conservator. " Bul we're not
there yet. ''
It 's Nicholson's job to make sure
everything in the Archives' 4 billion·
plus item collection - from the
Declaration of Independence to
Harry Truman's Wbrld War I letters
to Bess- remaj'W readable for gen·
eratlon.s to come.
That means that Bu.&gt;h 's draft
speech will be part of the new
" American Oriemals" exhibit for
onl y a few months of the show 's run
through the end of 1998.
Twelve months of even the low
l1ght of the ex hthlllon space near the
Declaration, the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights would be too much for
the felt -tip ink. An 1864 note from
Abraham Lincoln to Gen . Ulysses S.
Grant is writtc in more stable ink
and will remain on display for the

entire year.
"American Originals" is a thrc;e- .
year-old exhibit whose documents
change ye3fly. Among the more than
7,0 newly installed originals:
~ The Louisiana Purchase
Treaty of 1803, which doubled the ·
size of the young United States.
- The list of charges against
West Point cadet Edgar Allan Poe in
his 1831 court-martial, which he
brought on himself after finding
intolerable the food and the living
conditions at the New York military
school.
- A 1918 wartime letter home
from France by Capt. Harry S. Truman tq his girlfriend (and future
wife) Bess Wallace. The fu,ture president -was commanding officer of an
artillery battery.
- A so'ialled Death Book· from
the World W:iNl Nazi concentration
camp at Mauthause n in upper Austria. The names of the prisoners ,
each inked in neat handwriting, are
paired with their national or ethnic
origin, prisoner number, date and
place of birth. "J uden " (Jew) runs in
an uninterrupted column down the
open page under the "ethnic origin "
category.
- The first issue of MAD Magazine from 1952. used hy a Senate
committee investigating juvenile
delinquency.
- The pblice report documenting
the arrest of Rosa Parks on Dec. I.
1955, in Montgomery. Ala. Parks'
arrest for dt'sobeying the orders of a

bus driver to move to a rear seat
sparked the protests that became the
Civil Rights Movement.
Stacey Bredhoff, Archives cura•
tor for the exhibit, works a full year
to find and prepare the documents
tlisplayed in "American Originals."
One recent day before the exhibit
opened, she stood next to the document case and talked about the Lincoin note. In it. the president tells the
genpral, who has Confederate forces
unaer siege, to "hold on with a bulldog grip , an(! chew and choke, as
much as possi~le . "
"He was at the White House,
telegmphing Gen. Grant, who was at
Petersburg. Va. The siege went on 10
long months," Bredhoff says, marveling at the piece of "Executive
Mansion " stationery with the 16th
preside~! 's spidery bwt legible handwriting and at his straightforward
and brutal language.
"We ' re very familiar with the
famous speeches," she says, ·:but
this is a kind of little masterpiece."
Forklnately for the nation, the
masterpiece survives and, for the
next year, anyone can read it. Lin coin did not wnte with a felt ·tip pen.

Herd
in action
ithin the MAC

1-6-13-27-36

en tine
Vol. 48, NO. 11!6

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t •. ,:

State e·ducation budget r-----Eivis lives (?)-----.
voted out of committee

""''
f.

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Harry Truman, shown here In hl1 ftl uniform, wrote long letters to then sweetheart Bess Wallace
back in Missouri. Although Bess burned moat of their correspondence; a 19181etter Is on display at the
National Archives.

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Taxpayers also caught a break.
The committee salvaged a budget
mechanism created to give taxpayers
relief when tax receipts exceed projections or agencies spend less than
anticipated. Lawmakers had wanted
to drop the tax break for a year to free
up money for school building aid and

Still 0 there have been some
encouraging signs since the House
last voted on a school-funding solution.
Last summer, it was Gov. George
Voinovich's proposal to let voters
&lt;;lecide whether to increase the state

mtsston s.

..

Clinton'·s Medicare expansion
proposal stirs doubt for some

"

By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton hopes to relieve Americans'
retirement anxiety by expanding
Medicare to early retirees, but it is not
clear his plan will make a difference.
Public opinion polls show more
than two-thirds of workers would like
to retire before 65, but many doubt
Medicare will be there to help pay
their medical bills. The younger the
worker, the larger the doubt.
Politicians and policy wonks tell
us we're living longer. therefore we
should work longer and rely less on
costly social programs like Medicare.
Yet Clinton says the nation can afford
to expand the federal health care safety net to pre-Medicare retirees who
arc priced out of the private health
insurance market when they need ·it.
most.
The administration acknowledged
the change would help very few people- perhaps 300.000 out of I mil lion uninsured in that age category.
-' Republican congressional leaders
oppose the change.
Mixed signals. Hazy goals. Not a
promising formul &lt;t for the president's first major policy initiative of
1998
The nation c~nnot alford Medicare
in its present form. "so it 's difficult
to· understand why we should make

.
it even more unsustainable through
this type of expansion," said Martha
Phillips, executive director of the
Concord Coalition, a policy organi zation which advocates eliminating
federal budget deficits .
In announcing his proposal, which
will be part of the budget he sends to
Congress next month, Clinton said
more 55- to 64-year-old Americans
are finding themselves out of work
and with 'nO health insurance.
"These people have spent their
lifetimes working hard, supporting
their families, contributing to soeicty,'; Clinton .said. "And just at ~he
time they most need health care, they
arc least attractive to health insurers
·who demand higher premiums or
deny coverage outright."
. .
For the most part, the numbers
support Clinton's theme.
In 1988. 44 percent nf preMedicare retirees had health insuranue from a previous employer. By
1994. the number had fallen to 30
percent.
There arc an estimated I million
unin sured men and women hctween
the a•cs 'of 62 and 64. Clinton would
~ivc "them access to Medicare but
~ harge a rl)onthly premium of about
$300,that post-65 seniors do not have
to pay.
Even at that price. most uninsured
individuals in this age group won 't be

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a new emergency fund to help cashstrapped districts by siphoning ofF the
surplus.
.
Under tl\e new version, the school
aid would be capped at $200 million,
with any surplus above thtlt going
back to taxpayers when they file their
1998 tax returns.
Legislative leaders, meanwhile,
continued the search for a comprehensive solution to the state's inadequate and inequitable school-Funding
formula.
On Thursday, Democrats succeeded in inserting language that
would create a separate education
budget for primary, secondary and
higher educatian beginning with the
next two-year budget cycle in 1999.
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson,
R-Reynoldsburg, told reportet:S that
an increase in the state sales tax was
again.being discussed .
This time, the tax might be scaled
back to a half-cent, Davidson said.
Senate President Richard Finan,
R-Cincinnati , satd the budget bill
could be reconfigured to provide the
basis for the Legislature's response to
the Supreme Court.
The bill could modify the way the
state pays for public schools and
define what the Legislature considers
an adequate education. But the price
· tag for the changes and any tax
increase needed to pay it would be
left to another bill, Finan said.

9:30-5

guards, board a Laurel Ltn1uu·
sine Service limo en route to
anoiher visit. ~lso pictured is
chauffeur Ernie Miller.

Pomeroy as of .8 a.m., with the river hood that there could be some Oood
expected to rise, cresting Saturday at damage, but ii won 'I he significant,"
40.7 feet at Racine and 43 feet in said Robert Ruse. Findlay's se rvicePomeroy. wh ich would put the river safety director.
in to th e Pomeroy parking lot. Flood
Still, it marked the city 's fifth
s tag~ in Pomeroy is 46.5 fee t.
Oood
within the past year.
State Route 124,about 2- l/2 miles
"At
this point, we' re all just shaksouth of Long Bottom, was rcrion.cd
ing
our
heads. We ca n't believe it ,"
do ~c d due to h1gh water.
Ruse
said
.
In the northwest co rner of th e
Seve
ral
township and cou nty
stat~.:. SC\'Crll l days oi· dr ivmg r~lin s
roads
m
A
lien,
Eric, Hardin , San~,;u nllnu ~d tu cause man y nvcrs to
dusky,
Wi
lliams
and
Wyandot counoverOow their banks.
ti
es
were
closed
temporarily
because
Hardest htt in the reg ion was the
of
hi
gh
water
on
Thursday
..
Findlay area. where tl1c Bl anchard
'
.
River had risen by midni ght Thursln 'Sc ncca County, a small section
day to 12 .2 feet , 1. 2 feet ahnvc llood of U.S. 224 southeast of Tiffin was
stage . High water levels cl osed sev- closed.
eral road~ 111 low· lyin g urcas bu t
So nM ny road&gt; were filled with
~.:au s~d

nn ma1or damage ."

watr.:r in 'iou thcrn and southeastern

"Yes, it 's ·a nand. hut it 's not a Olun that some sc hools had
mt ica l sit uauon. There is th e likch· do sed Thu"day.

to

be

Hall faces move to another hospital
Hall had hcen kept at the T11nothy
B. Montz Forensic Unit o(Twin Val·
· Icy Psyc hiatric System in Columbu s
for more thail a year.

ol Mcnt :t l Health spokesman. said
raticnt -con fiUcn tluil 'ty ru les pn,hihitcd hun from say ing when Hall will he

In September~ Walton found Hall
in w m.pcten t to stand tri al on ntnc

rC4UC!-. tcd

cou nts of uwoluntary

rnan ~ l nught c r

for alle ged ly u &gt;~ng a lighted cigar,·lie
to start the fire at Ohto Rtrcr l'trcworb

nc&lt;~r

Scottown on Ju ly 3.

1\196. Eleve n people were injured 111
th e fire .
Sam Hi hhs. an Ohi o Dcp&lt;~rtmcnt

mpvcd or 1f the transfer already had
occurred. He &lt;atd the department
the move.

State law rc4ui res patient&gt; to he
pbccd 111 thl' least rc~tr ictivl: -"'C Uing
hn the ir treatmen t Hibh ~

.1~,;4 ui rcd

"'"1. He ." ltd Appalachian Psyc hiatn c
Health Care Syste m IS a less rc&gt;trlc se lling than Moritz, hut the
ward s f hcrc th e patient s arc kept arc
locked.

IIVc

Hollister makes·candidacy offi~ial

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992-3671

right, "Elvis," along with
WMPO personality Tom Payne
and salesman Jered Stewart,
who posed as Presley's body·

Minor floo.d ing reported in area

On Dec. 30, J.udgc Richand Wal ton of Lawrence County Common
Pleas Court ordered that Todd Hall.
25, of Proctervillc. he moved to the
Appalachian Psychiatric Health Care
System hospital about three miles
north of Cambridge.
•

Quality Carpets at
Affordable Prices

Anderson's ••

Store..Ho~rs

The
Middleport
and
Pomeroy communities joined
the long ·Jist of areas claiming
posthumous sightlngs of Rock
and Roller Elvis Presley. In a
. tongue-in-cheek tribute to
"The King" on Thursday, his
birthday, Lite 92 FM in Middleport conducted a contest promotion encouraging listene.rs
to spot Jeremy Hartson, sport·
ing a white jumpsuit and sideburns, in various local busl·
nesses. Prizes were awarded
by~. particlpa.llng merchants,
while Ebtis Presley songs and
trivia gamas were broadcast ·
on the local radio station.
Above, a group of customers
and employees of the Ohio
River Bear co:, Middleport,
posed with "Elvis." 'They are,
front,from left, Marilyn Poulin,
Robyn Hunt, Susan Baker,
owner, and Sandy Hannin!;l;
back, Lynda Gilkey, Eva King,
Nancy Cale and Dee Brown. At

....,._

Installed with

Monday thru Saturday

l

able to afford .it, experts said.
" When you look at the aggregate
picture, this bitr doesn't do much."
said Paul Fronstin, a health careeconomist with the Employee Benefit
Research Institute, a non-profit, nonpartisan public policy research orgll·
nization. "We're having a big debate
for very few people who could paten·
tially benefit from this program ."
From AP, Staff Reports
Soon, though. the first of the
More minor Oooding was possible
baby boom generation will move into as officials throughout Ohio kept a
this zone of near retirement and their close eye on swelling streams.
sheer numbers are expected to aggraMore rain, including periods of
vate the problem and fuel even more he avy showers, were forecast today
debate.
.
in pans the state .
Inte~est groups and pohcy experts
Southern Ohio counties were
· have been increasingly focusing on expected to sec mostly cloudy skies
the 50-something and pre-Medicar~ today with a chance of showers and
years in anticipation of the hoo!l'lers' cooler tem.pcraturcs. No rain is forearrival - espectally where health
cast for the weekend.
care is concerned.
Within the last. 24 hours, about
" Among individuals who .are .three quarters of an inch of rain fell
already retired and among current across Meigs County as of 9 a.m.
workers. one of the key issues that today. Emergency Medical Services
drives retirement anxiety is medical Director Robert Byer said.
·
expenses," said Paul. Yakoboski , a
Ea rl y morning thunderstorms
senior research assoctatc who coer- forced smal l creeks from their hanks
dinates the Employee Benefit and temporaril y noodcd low-lying
Research Institute's annual Reti rcroads.
ment Confidence Survey. "They worThe Ohio River wa&gt; at 3~ feet in
ry most about having sufficient mon ey to take care of medical expenses.
It's as simple as that_"
Last summer, the American Asso·
IRONTON ( AP) - The man
(Continued on
found incompetent to stand trial for
starting a fire that killed nine people
at a southern Ohio fireworks store
will be moved to another state men ·
tal hospital.

Installed with pad

Installed with

. SJ

addition to regular services, the
church offers a Teens Hour,
Kids for Christ, and adult Bible
and praise program. Pictured in
costume at the young adults
Christmas program are from the
left, Kevin Knapp, Jeremy All·
man, and Amy Allman.

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CHRISTMAS OB!&gt;ER'VED
Christmas program was presented by the children and
young adults at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church located on
Route 124. The choir directed by
Jan Lave~er provided back·
ground
uslc. About 120
attended t e choir presentation
at the 'church on Dec. 31. In
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sales tax by a penny per dollar to raise
$1.1 billion more for schools.
A coalition of conservatives and
Democrats quashed the idea and
Democrats comphiined bitterly about
being left out of the process.
Not this time, said Rep. Vernon
Sykes, D-Akron.
"It's a strong bipartisan ·step,"
Sykes said after Thursday's vote. "It
wasn't a plan being forced without
input."
The work was left over from last
year 's negotiations on the state 's
two-year budget. The Legislature
had held off debate on education
spending in the second yejlf because
o! the uncertainty regarding the
state's response to the Ohio Supreme
Court's ruling that said the current
method of paying for education is•
unconstitutional .'
The proposal increases education
spending for next year by trimming
other govct;nment spending by $100
million. The committee a~cepted an
amendment that eases the burden of
budget cutting on 19 boards a'nd com-

II

Anderson's

s

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
'cOLUMBUS - House leaders.
from both sides of the aisfe say they
hope a committee vote on neKt year's
education budget is a sign of things
to come.
''I'm very pleased there was
bipartisan support." Rep. Tom Johnson, R-New Concord, said Thursday
after the House Finance Committee
votcd '29-2 in favor of the $5.23 billion spending plan.
.
A vote in the full House was tentatively scheduled for Monday. The
legislation 'would then head to the
Senate, which hoped to vote on the
budget by Jan. 15.
Johnson saip he hoped for a similar outcome when the House votes
on a wider-ranging proposal designed
to meet an Ohio·Supreme Court mandate to fix the way the state pays for
public schools.
Whenever the proposal is developed and presented.
"I don 't know what that might
be," Johnson told reporters. "And I
don 't thing any011e else does at this

I·

Will peace~cqme to·the South Lawn?

2 Sec1lons, t 2 Pages, 35 cents
• A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 9, 1998

&lt;el1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Comf)any

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Retirement Hand-

Sure, he persuaded Israeli Prime wants to be an ·'America Reads ' valMinister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO unteer." Clinton explained when
chief Vasser Arafat to shake hands they arrived at the Education
on the South Lawn. But •can Presi- Department. "Only one thing has to
dent Clinton bring Buddy and Socks he done : Dick Riley has to teach him
together''
to read ."
Apparently not , judging by a
On their return, Clinton spied
chance encounter Tuesday that . Socks on the South Lawn, his leash
ended with Soc ks taking a swipe at · attached to a tree . He walked Buddy ·
Buddy 's nose while the yelping over for what has been a rccomLabrador tried a rear-guard action mended campaign of scent therapy.
against hi s feline foe .
Clinton would pet Buddy, t~en try to
While Clinton insisted that the pet Socks with the same hand .
peace process would continue. usuBut a hiss ing Socks responded
ally reliable White House sources with an arched back, and Clinton
report de.cp and possibly irreconcil - ended up struggling just to keep
ahle divisions.
them apart .
Clinton took Buddy along to a
" Making
progre ss."
he
surprise birthday party for Educa- announced determinedly.
. ti on Secretary Richard Riley. " He

Pick 3:
~

The National Archive' is in
Washington, D.C., on Pennsylvania
Ave . NW between 7th and 9th
Streets, one block north of the
National Mall. h is open 365 days a
year. For more informatinn call I
(202) 501-5000.

If your New Year's resolutions
planning for your retirement
or enjoying your current retirement
more, you can use the newly published "1998 Retirement Handbook"
a comprehensive, easy to use retirement reference source. Produced in
large type, the "1998 Retir~ment
Handbook" has more than 600 pages
of information and step by step
exercises that give retirees the
power to plan and control their lives.
The annual book provides a listening of the most current health,
state, and national agencies and
organizations Serving retirees and
their needs. Government documents
about retirement benefits and ser.vices, including Social Security and
Medicare, are reprodu~cd in large
print.
·
"1998 Retirement Handbook"
was written by Robert and Catherine
Bennett, who retired to pursue their
dreams.
Copies of "1998 Retirement
Handbook," ($49.95 + shipping and
handling), are available from Melrose Plantation. Lancaster. Virginia
22503, call80 )·711 4620. e-mail to
bennett@MelrosePiantation.com or
visit www_MelrosePiantation.com.

Ohio Lottery

MEIGS COUNTY'S FINEST - Meigs County's law enforcement agencies were well represented at Thursday night's annual Girl Scout
Cookie Crunch at Trinity Church In Pomeroy;
From left, Bill Gilkey of the Middleport Police
Department, Mark Nor!"an of the Pomeroy

I

'
r

Pollee Department, 1:1111 COgar, representing the
Big Beod Girl Scouts, and Dan Leonard of the
Melga County Shariff'• Department chowecl
down during the two-minute timed event. The
event kicks off the annual sele of Girl Scout
cookies. See additional photo on Page 3.

CHILLICOTHE (AP)- Lt. Gov:
Nancy Hollister has annouhced her
· candidacy for the congressional seat
now held by Democrat Ted S~ick land .
_,
Hollister. a Republican from Mari·
etta, kicked off her campaign on
Thursday with an appearance in this
southern· Ohio city and by turning
over her filing · petitions in
Portsmouth.
,
She is opposed in the race for the
· GOP nomination by former· Rep.
Frank Cremcatis of Gallipolis;

Michael Azinger, a Marietta insura nc~ agent: and Tom Sharpe. a Bel·
pre educator.
.
" If we do not win thi s scat back
in thi s clectton cycle. it is very likely that liberal Democrats wi ll hold it
for years to come." Hollistcrsaid. " I
believe I am the only Republican can·
didate who can win tl1i s scat in
November. ··
Stri ckland , who has no announced
oppositiOn for the Democratic primary on May 5, held the sca t from
1992-94 before Cremean s won it for

one two-year tcnn. Stnckland, of
I ucas ville, won the scat l-.lck in
1 ~96.

Holl ister. a former mayor of Mariett a. was elected lieutenant governor
on a ti cke t with Gov. George
Voinov ich in' 1994. She replaced
Mt kc De Wine. who won a U.S. Senate .scat the same year.
The 6th Congressional Di strict
covers 14 counties across southern
Ohi o. stretching from Washington
Cou nty in the southeast to Warren
Cou nty in the southwest.

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F.riday, Jan~ary 9, 1998

'.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•'

Commentary

I

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Page2
Friday, January 9, 1998

OHIO Weather
Satunlay, Jan. 10
AccuWeather• forecast for daytim, condtttons and htgh

•'

'Esta6fislid in 1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614·992·2156 •·Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

The Stntlntl nlcomes letts,. to fhe editor from reade~'on a broad r1111~ of topka.
Short /ettors (300 words or ltu) hovttho best chonce ot being publllhed. Typod lit'"' are prtfened and all may U edlt.d. Each should Include a signature, addre.. ,
and cMytlme phont number Spe-cify a ct.te If fhtfe 's • nleren~ to • previous article
or ~tter. Mill to. Letters ro the Editor. TIN Sentinel, ' " Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio
45761; or, FAX

to 614·992-2157

·

What they are saying
elsewhere around
~ .~

'

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
With government economtsts
predtctmg a budget surplus m 1998,
there 's a lot of talk about what Congress and the prestdent should do
wtth the e•tra money Cut ta•es?
Increase spendmg on soctal programs? Buy a few btsc utts fur
Buddy, the ne ~&lt; first huund?
We thmk ta• payers would be best
served tf the bonus money was spent
on fi ghtmg what co~ld soon be our
btggesl national secunty concern
cyber terronsm
Online anacks by com1Juter hack' ers wuh bad mtenttons ts a threat no
longer JUS! the stuff of Hollywood
thnllers E•perts beheve that computer secunty programs -- m both
the federal government and Amencan mdustry --are sadly lacking, and
they warn that the Untted States ts
becommg mcreas mgly vulnerable to
debthtaung cyber auacks
A prestdenual commtsston study-

mg the problem recently
concluded
that the $250
mtllion per
year the government
spends on
computer
secunty
research
should
be Moiler &amp; Anc!erson
mcreased to $1 bilhon, and the
Whue House is busy developmg
strategtes for strengthenmg the
nauon 's computer defenses
Spending $1 btlhon a year to
guard agamsl cyber mtrusion may
seem hke a lot But constder that an
18-hour power outage over a large
secuon of the country -- somethmg a
sktlled hacker could concetvably
perpetrate -- could cause as much as
$4 btlhon m damage
And that 's just the ltp of the teeberg

A stmulated "information warfare" attack, conducted by the Rand
Corp. al the request of U.S. intelligence officials about 111(0 years ago,
provtded a hornfymg ghmpse ofJUS!
how serious our computer secunty
shortcommgs could tum out to be
In thts hypothetical scenano, a
terrorist-hacker wreaks havoc
, throughout the world wnh a few calculated strokes of a keyboard ·
"In the scenano. an adversary
auacks computer systems through- ·
out the Untted States and allted
countnes, causing accidents, crashmg systems, blocking communtcation, and mciung panic," reads a
General Accounting Office report
revtewed by our assoctate Aaron
Karp. " For example, m the scenarto,
automattc tellers at two of Georgta 's
largest banks are anacked The
anacks create confuston and pantc
when the automatic tellers wrongfully add and debt! thousands of dol lars from customers' accounts

I

1 11;(.

: , lfy·tJ1e.Assoclated/Pre\s '
Re~;ent Ohtu cdnonals of statcwtde and nattonal tntcrest
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Jan. 5
Lasl June's Supreme Court ruhng that struck down a poruon of the Brady
Act created maS&lt; confuston about who actually was responstble for conducting cnm mal background checks on hand gun purchasers Some states,
, mcludmg Ohto. argued that the federal government should conduct the
.cxpcnst vc checks, the US Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Ftrearms countered that the JOb belonged to the states
Smce then, as a result, perhaps 10 perce nt of Ohto gun purchasers have
not been checked for felontous background
· That dnacceptable sttuauon changed late last month, howeve r, when Oh10
Anorncy General Betty Montgomery and the U S Departments of Justtce
- and the Treasury forged a sound compromtse
Under the new plan, handgun buyers who agree to a voluntary background check by the Bureau of Cnmmal lden!tficatton can expect to be
cleared for purchase wtthtn two days (qutcker than the standard ftve-day
·wait) tf nothmg appears on thetr record dtsquahfymg them But the names
·of those .who do not consent to the check
wtll be turned over to the
Franklm County Shcnff's Department for background scrutmy.
Thts mtmmum effort wtll save some hves and see that pubhc safety ts not
compromtsed easily by those wtlh cvtl mtenttons
The Marion Star, Jan. 2
You don 't use those stmky old rest stops anyway
The Oh10 Department of Transportatton ts talkmg about closmg down
half of the state's non-mterstate "pnmtttve" rest stops- you know, the ones
wtth hand-operated dnnking pumps, non-flush tot lets and assorted perverts
- wuhm a year
Closmg the stops would dtvc:rt $1 2 mtlhon a year to swanky rest stops
along mterstate htghways
Whtle the money would be beller spent on repamng roads or updaung the
state's remamtng non-nushtng res! stops, thiS IS a good COSt-savtng move
So he mtroduced a Taxpayer Dtvtdend Act that would place all revenues
over the Balanced Budget Act targets mto a spect al fund for ta• cuts, Ia•
reform. defictl reduction or debt repayment
Mr Bochner leans toward ta•paycr rehef, and we agree By sumulatmg
greater economtc. growth and greater tax revenues, tax cuts could gtve us
more bang for the buck But reducmg the nat10nal debt or craftmg a longterm ltx for Soc tal Secun ty also would be responstble uses for federal sur
pluses

-Barry's World SUf'e~. LARG-E.
PO.OJL.~-C~EESE "fiZ.%.A IH\\t-\
EVE~Y1"t\\~&amp;" '10&amp;.1 O~PEftE.'O.

,At-tt&gt; ii'\E(E
GoeS ANO'lt-\ER
NEW "teAR'S
KeSOL-ll'\1 o !1.1 '·

\

q-M~.

0J\\&amp;~tnllill~t~rr.97
l•oNIII551'!iiCII '""'

"A freight tram is mtsrouted .
causmg a major accident mvolvmg a
high speed passenger tram m Maryland. Meanwhtle, telephone servtce
ts sabotaged nrWashmgton. a maJOr
atrplane crash ts caused m Great
Bntain; and Catro, Egypt loses all
powet service
"An all-oul anack IS launched on
computers at most \ U S ) nul nary
mstallattons, slowmg down. dtScountmg, or crashmg the system s
Weapons systems destgned to pmpomt enemy tanks and troop formalion begm to malfunctiOn due to
electrontc mtecttons "
Indeed, the Defense Department
is among the most vulnerable of federal agenctes An esltmated 500,0()0
"outSide 101ruders" crack the
DOD's computer systeills each year
At a mtntmum, these hackers cause
tens of mtlhons of dollars m damage At worst, they could polcnttally
hmder the mthtary 's ahthty to carry
out Important miSSions
But the Pentagon ts not alone . A
recent report by the Oepartment of
Justtcc's Office of lnspcl'tor Genetal
concluded that Justtce's "comput er
secunty program was not eflecttve "
The report dtdn't get any more spectfic, warn10g that a "detatled dt sclosure
could compromt se the
data contamcd 10 the Department's
computer systems "
Smularly, mosl of the teport
tssued by the prestdento al commtsston exploring cybcr sccunty Will
remam classofoed A ftvc-persnn
steenng comrntl!ee headed by Anorney ·General Janet Reno was gtven
access to the cummisston 's lind10gs,
as were members of the presodent 's
Cab10el and Prcstdent Chnton htm self.
The report should be useful readmg for most Cabtn61 members, •mce
the maJonty of federal agenctes
under thetr supervtsmn arc
descnbed by experts as havmg woeful computer secunty programs
Look for cyber secunty to
become a front page tssue thts year,
as federal offictals beg10 to wtse-up
to the grave consequences of conltn ·
mng to tgnore tbe problem Let's
hope tt's not already too late.
Jack Anderson and J~-Moller
are writers for United ~·eature
Syndicate, Inc.

Global warming theory is c«;»
.
By William A. Rusher
Prest dent Cltnton and Vtce ·Prestdenl Gore, backed by the envtronmentallohby and most of the medta,
have labored long and hard to gtve
the tmpresston that sctenusts are vtrtually unantmous tn regardmg the
so-call ed "gree nhouse gases" as
maJor contnbutors to the alleged
problem of "g lobal warmmg " DIS-

cnhghtenmenl

on

thts maner,
went unre-

turned
In addtuon , careful
sctenufic
tcsponscs
to the contentton
s of
sc ntmg SC ICOII S(S arc treated as ISOthe
glohallated oddballs whose doubts can
wannmg
safely he dtsregarded
thconsts arc
Thus, late last month , a lea!l edtRusher
now begiO tonal m the New York Ttmcs
ntng .
to
declared natty that "Few sc t enu ~ts
douht that the warmmg of the earth's appear, and they arc dcvastatmg For
atmosphere. caused by carbon dmx- example . one of the most promment
tdc and other greenhouse-gas cmis- exponents of the global·warmmg
hypothests IS Dr Mtchael McCrackstons, poses a gtganltc threat "
"Few sc tentt sts" ' And ye t, en of the Office of the Unned States
accordmg to a Gallup Poll. only 17 Global Change Research Program.
percent of the memhcrs of the Mete- Recently he undertook to counter
orologtcal Soctcty and the Amencan what he called " Ten Lead10g
Geophystcal Soctety tlunk that glob- Myths" of those who reJect the
al warmmg tn the 20th century has hypotheSIS
been caused hy greenhouse gas
What he dtd not anllctpate was
emtsstons Are the other 83 percent that hts own statements would be
of the members of these two learned responded to, m tum, by Dr Sallte
soctcltcs -- organ tzaltons dtrectly Bahunas and Dr Wtlhe Soon, both
concerned wnh the subjocl at hand - of the Harvard Smuhsontan Center
- to be dtsmtssed as oulstde the for Astrophysics, who arc re~pec­
mamstream '
ltvely a sent or sctcn ttsl and a vtsttRepeated phone cal ls 10 the edtlo- mg scholar at the George C Mar.
nal board of the Times, seekmg shall lnsmute tn Washmgton

Thus Dr. McCracken asserts that
"Most cltmate sctenltSls agree that
the chmate ts changmg and wtll
change much more .• The recent
round of IPCC (Umtcd Nattons
Intergovernmental Panel dn Climate
Change) assessments !los mvolved
hundreds of authors and thousands
of revtcwers who have worked to
develop an unbtased , measured,
documented , and pccr-rcvtewcd
result "
The omphcatton ts one of overwhelmmg agreement wllh Dr.
McCracken's vtews. Yet Drs Baltunas and Soon quote the most recent
IPCC report ( 1995) as saymg that
"Overall, there Is no evtdence that
extreme weather events or cltmalc
vanahthly has increased tn a global
sense, through the 20th century" It
adds that the computer model results
that global-warmmg theonsts rely
on "cannot be constdercd as com pelhng evtdence of a clear causeand-effect ltnk between anthropogcntc forctng " -- t.e , human
mfluences -- "and changes m the
earth surface temperature." They
demohsh Dr. McCracken 's other
maJor contenttons wtth equal ease.
Then there is "Hot Talk, Cold
Sctence," a small but powe~ful book
by S Fred Smger, published by the
Independent Institute of Oakland,

.

~

011198 by NEA, lf\c:
- ----~--..:....__--~--------

----

:Today in history

By The Associated Press
. Today " Fnday Jan 9, the nmlh day of 1998 There are 356 days left 10
;the year
Today's Htghhght m HIStory
On Jan 9, 1968, the Surveyor VII space prohe made a soft landmg on the
.moon. endmg the Amencan sencs of unmanned exploral tons of the lun ar
surface
On thts date
In 1788. ConnecliCUl became the fifth slate to tattfy the u s ConslllU~ t10n

In 1793, Frenchman Jean Pterrc Bl,mclwd. usmg a hot-atr halloon , flew
:between Phll adelphta and Woodbury N J
' In 1861 . MtSSISStppt seceded from the Umon
In 1913, Rtehard Mllhous Ntxon . the 37th prcstdent of the Untted States.
1
was born m Yorba L10da, Cahf
In 1945, dunng World War II Amenc.m lorces began landtng at Lm. gay en Gulf tn the Phtltppmes
; In 1957. Anthony Eden restgned as Bnttsh pnme munster
. In 1964, anu-U S notmg broke out tn the Panama Canal Zone, resuhmg
·m the deaths of 2) Panamantans and three US soldters
· In 1972, rcclustve bllhonatre Howard Hughes, speakmg by telephone
'from the Bahamas to reporters m Hollywood, satd Clifford lrvmg s purported biOgraphy of htm was a fake
In 1980. Saudt Arabta beheaded 63 people for thetr tmolvemenl m the
November 1979 ratd on the Grand Mosque tn Mecca

"

By George R. Plagenz
mcludmg
ment on adults that worries BuechnThe nyer for the church ptcntc me
er -- and me, and perhaps you.
gave the ttme and place of the ouung obJeCt to
Coarseness m alltts forms lowers
and some other detatls ., such as the barrage
. the tone of adult hfe and soctety m
when the cgg- throwmg contest and ot four-ktgeneral
the one- legged race would take ter words
I! "affects everybody's personal
place
that
aUt tudes and values," as psychoanaThen there was thos strange assaults
lyst Ernest van den Haag says. Thts
request to the church people who our senses
happens because, accordmg to van
- would be ancndmg 1h.e ptcntc "No and senstden Haag, " any model of actton ,
bthttes on
swcanng please'" tt satd
such as nudity, whtch ts auracnve to
One can only guess that some the World
some part of the average petson wtll ,
members of thts pansh had been Wtde Web,
when presented often enough, influupset by sweanng they had heard' at televtSton
ence attitudes and make what ts
prevmus soctal functtons of the or on the
Plagenz
modeled more acceptable "
church The ptcntc co mmmee had street
To tell those who object to violent
dectded that a remonstrance of some
Fredenck Buechner, the wnter, programmmg or vulganty on telcvtsort was called for
lecturer and' Presbytenan mtntster, ston or the Internet to "turn off your
It cou ld be that some parents m put tl best when he satd , "The tenns televtsion set or PC tf you dun 't ltke
the church Objected to havmg chtl- 'adult movtes ' and 'adult entertam- tl, but let me watch tf I want to" ts
dren _e•posed to bad language It ment' tmply that. whereas the young hke say ing to a motonst who obe) s
could also be true that the parents must somehow be protected from the speed laws, "If you want to hold
themselves dtd n01 want to be sub- these thmgs, adults will stlt,piy take your speed down to 70 miles an
Jected to profanity
them m strtde. Perhaps the reverse is hour, that 's up to you flo what you
We make a m t sta~e. I think, when • closer to the truth
want Just don't try to keep your felwe assume our speec h peeds to be
"The young seem to have a low motonsts from go mg 80 or 85 if
cleaned up only to protect chtldren. knack for commg through all sorts they want to 1' '
That seems to be the reason behtnd of heady expenences. Paperback
The porn! ts, of coarse, how fast
recent calls for censonng some of prunence and vtdeo venery are less other dnvers go affects OUR lives
the language and matenal on the apt to lum them on than to turn them and safety, so we ought to have
Internet
..,
elsewhere "
somethmg to say about tt
The truth ts that many adults -It tS the effect of adult entertamA' lot 'of people feel that way

.

•

-

•

-

Nolan P Carter, 85, Galhpohs, dted Thursday, Jan . '8, 1997 m the Pleasant Valley Care Center
Born Aug. 20, 191 2 in Walnut Townshtp, Galha County, son of the late
Ernest Westley and Eda Augusta Pope Carter, he was a reured teacher, and
the retired owner of Carter Tractor Sales m Galhpoh's
AU .S. Army Atr Corps veteran of World War II, he was a member of Grace
Untted Me!hodtsl Chur~b
SurviVIng are hts wtfe. Geneva C Rees Carter, a son, Steve Carter ofGalhpohs; three grandchtldren, and two brothers, John Me mil Caner of Patnot, and Marvm Carter of Dayton
Servtces wtll be 2 p.m Sunday m the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
wtth the Rev. Davtd Hogg offictatmg. Bunal wtll be ui Mound Htll Cemetery Fnends may call at the funeral home from 5-8 p m Saturday
A mthtary flag presentauon wtll be conducted at the gravesue by VFW
Post 4464 and Amencan Legton Lafayette Post 27

• IColumbus l3a• I

35'

P. Carter

' WVA

Rob"ert E. Freed

COOKIE CRUNCH WINNERS - Winners of the annual Girl
Scout Cookie Crunch Thur$diiY evening were, from left, first place
- Mark Norman, Pomeroy Pollee Department; Dan Leonard, Meigs
County Sheriff's Department; ahd Bill Frazier, Middleport Church
of Christ.

Robert Emery Freed, 74, Mtddleport. dted Wednesday, Jan 7, 1998 at hiS
reSidence.
He was born May 19, 1923 m Ironton, son of the late Mahnda "Brown"
Yoke Freed and Dr Glenn Freed
"underwrite " coverage sold to mdtContinued from page I
He was a member of the Pomeroy Gun Club , the Loyal Order of Moose ctallon ofRettred Persons sent a con- vtduals, whtch usually means anyone
Lodge 731 m Potnt Pleasant, WVa. the Amencan Legwn Mem tt Post 142 sullmg firm to dcle munc e•actly wllh a pre-extstmg condtllon such as
m Waverly. He was also a prev10us member of the Mtddlepon Chamber of what kmd ofpn vate health tnsurance a htstory of heart problems could be
Showers T·storms Ram Flumes
Commerce, and was a member of the Central Chnsttan Church m Ironton was avatlable to mdt vtduals m lhts demed coverage Insurers use other
Via Assoc,sted Press GraphicsNet
He rettred from OVEC' s Kyger Creek Plant m 1985
techniques to weed out "htgh-risk"
age bracket
He IS survtved by hts wtfe of 56 years, Irna June Ferrell Freed, sons and
"What we found \\as a hule sur- beneficianes such as usmg shdmg
daughters-m-law, Thomas Elhott and Sand) Freed of Columbus and Glenn pnstn g and shockmg," satd Tncta premtum scales based on age, gender
Edward and Man anne Freed of Waverly, daughters and a son-m-law, Don- Smuh , se ntor federal health care lob- and health htstory
na "Penny" Partseau of Well ston, and Mary Maltnda and Larry Mustard of byts l for AARP, the natton 's largest
l;he survey was conducted by
Waverly, a SISler, Helen Henry of Harrell svtlle, N C, and 21 grandchtldren scmor's orgamzat10n "For many Wtlham M Mercer Inc , a Vtrgtnta
and 15 great-grandchtldren •
By The Associated Press
,
people. the product just t s n ' t~­ health care consultmg ftnn .
He was also preceded m death by a son, Robert Francts Freed, a grand- a~-!./
A rush of cold Canadtan atr wtll send Ohto's temperatures plungmg
At least two other orgamzauons
son, Jason Mustard , and a brother, Dr Donald Freed
tomght. the Nauonal Weather Servtce satd.
Far from a comprehenstvc mar ct lire conductmg thetr own assessServtces wtll be 2 p m Sunday tn the Mtddleport Chapel of the Ftsher survey, the anai) SIS ts nevertheless ments of msurance pohctes marketHtghs on Saturday wtll be m the 30s and on Sunday, in the 20s
Sktes wtll remam cloudy over the weekend, Wtlh snow showers ltkely m Funeral Home, Wtlh Roy McCat:[y offictaung Bunal wtll be 10 the Rovervtew one of the few auempts made to date ed to the 55-to-64 age group
Cemetery, Mtddleport Fnends may call at the funeral home from 5-9 p m to quanufy state- by-state what he alth
Reports from the General
the north
Saturday
.
msurance opt tons are really ava tlable Accountmg Office, Congress' tn vesBy Saturday mght , the mercury wtll have dropped tnlo the teens
In heu of nowers, contnbuuons may be made to the Amen can Heart Asso- to near-rettrees
The record-ht gh temperature for this date at the Columbus weather stattgauve arm. and the Katser Famtly
ctatton, Metgs County DIVISIOn, 10 care of Nancy Campbell , PO Box 177,
twn was 65 degrees m 1946 whtle the record low was 5 below zero m 1979
Some findmgs
Foundatton, a non-partiSan health
Racme, Ohto 45771
• PremiUms range rrom $228 a pohcy thmk lank , could figure 10
Sunsettomght wtll be at 5.24 p m and sunnse Saturday at 7:53a.m
month for a 62-year-old woman m future debate and posstble Captlol
Weather fo,.,ast:
. Tomght Partly cloudy Lows 30 to 35 West wmd 5 to 10 mph
Flonda wtlh a $3 ,000 annual Htll heanngs on Chnton 's proposal
Saturday Partly cloudy Htghs m the mtd and upper 40s.
deducuble to $1.372 per month for " lntorrnauon about tndtvtdual pohMervm J Roach, 76, Mason, W.Va , dted Fnday, Jan 9, 1998 tn Pleas- 60- to 64-year-ulds tn Los Angeles
ctcs ts dtfficult to come by," satd TnSaturday ntghl . Partly cloudy. Lows m the lower and mtd 20s
ant
Valley Hospual
'
Extended forecast:
• There arc very few msurance cta Neuman , dtrcctor of the Katser
Born Aug 13, 1921 m Plymouth, WVa, son of the late George Hamson plans destgned spec tlically for thiS Medtcarc Polle y ProJect ''It ts well
Sunday Mostly cloudy. A chance of snow showers late Htghs m the upper
and
Maggte Batley Roach, he was reured from the Ohto River Co
known m many states. p'eople 10 old30s
pre-Medtcare age group
He
was a co-worker of the Worldwtde Church of God, and a U S Anny
Monday Mostly cloudy wuh a chance of ram or.snow showers Morn• Most states allow msurers to er age groups face htgher premiUms
veteran of World War II.
II they can buy a pohcy at all "
mg lows around 30 Htghs m the lower 40s
He was also preceded 10 death by Ins wtfe, Betsy M Roach, SIXbrothTuesday Partly cloudy wtth a chance of snow showers Morn mg lows
ers, Verme Roach, Wyatt Roach, Clarence Roach, Earl Roach, Albert Roach
10 the mtd 20s Ht ghs m the upper 30s
and Ernest Roach, and five ststers, Lorene Mtller, Ivy Roach, Leona Dower, Lt z Poor and Effie Crawford
Surv1v10g are three daughters, Grace M Braden ofWhtte Sulphur Spnngs,
W Va, Marguente "Cookie" Henson of Galhpohs and Regma Carol Ohse
PALM SPRINGS, Cahf (AP)- Resort m South Lake Tahoe, where
of Parkersburg. W.Va., four sons, Norvell "Buok" Allen ofHunungton, WVa ,
They
knelt and whtspered prayers at he was on vacatiOn wuh hts wtfe ,
Gary W Allen of Green Cove Spnngs;'Fia , Melvm "Jtm " Roach of HunlPLUMlREE, N C (AP)- VIO- 10 Ottawa, Canadao's capital ctty, and mgton, and Calvm Lee Roach of Pomt Pleasant, W Va , 17 grandchildren and hts nag-draped coffi n, hundreds of Mary, and thetr chtldren - daughter,
la Webb has hved near Roanng repatr crews were summoned from five great-grandchildren, a brother, Cec tl Roach of Potnl Pleasant, and two them, mcludmg hts wtdow - mourn- Chtanna, 6, and son, Chesare, 9
ers who ftled mto the hlllc church for Bono plowed mto a pmc on an mterCreek smce she was a teen-ager, her the Umted States to help clean up the ststers, Evelyn and Bontla, both of Potnl Pleasant
fo rtunes nstng and falling Wtlh the damage from heavy tee acc umulamedta~e slope and dted mstantly.
Gravestde servtces wtll be I .30 p m Monday tn the Metgs Memory Gar- hours
II
would
have
been
a
somber
Bono's wtdow made an unanfl oods she and other mountain rest- tiOn.
dens, Wtlh Btll Wtnter offtctallng Fnends may call at the Foglesong f unerSoutbem Quebec, mcludmg the al Home, Mason, from II am · I p m ~onday
sccne m all resJY~ if--IIGF!'al"tne--tmtmeed-vtsti"IITihe-four-hour vtgtl
F-·~-rl.enl-'!)(&gt;et whe!t lie1Jvy rams fall
presence of Sonny Bono
Thursday mght Wearmg a long black
But
tempest tn the Plumtree Montre' l area, was the hard'est htt.
"The streets here look h~e bombs
In one of htS hfe 's many mean- coat, Mrs. Bono knelt before the cascommunity may have put her family
grunoes, a btg-gnnmng tmage of the ket and clasped her hands m prayer
al rock bottom Her house crumbled htl them, wtlh trees lymg all over the
place." satd Mal]orte Northrup, who
and washed away mto the creek.
No IO)Urtes were reported foll owmg a two-car acctden t on Ma10 Streettn songw nter/comtc·tu rncd-co nscrva- before gomg back to a pew, where
tt ve congressman radtated from a she sat lor about 10 mmutes
"It's been bad up here before, but \\Ia§ "dtsplaced after her sentOr ctlt- Rutl and Wednesday evemng
As she left wuh famtl y fnend
never tht s bad," Mrs Webb. 89, satd 7en 's home tn Montreal lost power
Shannon M Ennghl, 16, Rutland, was makmg a left turn mto a parktn g large color portraot behond hts
Forecasters
satd
frceztrig
ram,
mahogany
casket
Bruce
Herschensohn, a co nservatt ve
Thursday
lot when her 199 I Mercury was struck m the rear by a 1988 Chevro let CorIt wasn't too long ago that Bono commentator who ran agatnsl Bono
She and her daughter lost of all accompante4 by strong wmds, could stca dnven by Donna J Gtlmore, 22 Pomeroy, accordtng to a Metgs Counshared btllmg wtth adommutt ve ac tor for US Se11ale, Mrs Bono
thetr possesstoris as up to I0 tnches he expected m southern Quebec ty Shen ffs Department report
ol ram tell m the western North Car- through today
Both vehtcles sustam ed moderate damage and Gtlmorc was ctted on a known as Tattoo. or look a guest spot embraced, ktssed and shook hands
A hnle more tee was expected tn charge offatlure to mamtam assured clear dtstance
on The Love Boat " But as the wuh mourners outstde
al ma mountams between Tuesday
Mame , where Gov Angus Kmg
nat ton pays tls respects to an unhkcThey began hntng up outstde the
ntght and Thursday
ly tcon, the guest hst at St Theresa church more than two hours before
The story was the same across the declared a stale of emergency and
Roman Cathohc Church was stnctl y the vtgtl Some people drove three
East from Alabama to Canada as,a urged people to check on thetr elderp»httcal A-list
hQ.Urs to thts desert resort. 100 mtle s
masstve storm system brought ly netghbors to make sure no one was
SHS financial aid workshop
Speaker M the House Newt Gm· east of Los Angeles
branch-snappmg tee to Quebec and left m the cold
A student financtal atd workshop wtll be held Monday 7 p m 10 the South- gnch was among the pollltctans
In Augusta, Mamc, the slate capClutchmg Sonny and Chcr dolls,
Mmnc and fioods across the South ern
Htgh School cafetena m Racmc Jtm Wayne of Sunncr &amp; Assoc tates, e•pccted today at the funeral of Donna Berry of Vtctorvtlle satd she
ital reSidents were awakened shortcast At least 16 people were ktlled
Some 800,000 customers lost ly before dawn Thursday by the crack Portsmouth, wtll be avatlabl c to help complete FAFSA form s The workshop Bono who dted Monday 10 a skun g used to enJOY watchtng "The Sonny
clcctncny m eastern Canada, 220.000 ul tee- laden tree ltmbs that plum- ts sponsored by Home NatiOnal Bank and the SHS GUidance Office For more acctd~nt at age 62 Dozens of mcm · &amp; Cher Comedy Hour" dunng whtch
bers of Congress planned to attend the droopy-m ustachtoed Bono played
tn ~)'lame, nearly 100,000 m upstate meted to the grou nd wtlh a roar At mformauon, call Shtrley Sayre at 949-261 I
tomes,
th
e
sky
ht
up
wuh
the
fl
ash
of
the
scrvtce, as dtd Cahforma Gov the bumblmg stdektck to hts sharpNew Yotk, 43,000 tn New Hampshtre
Eastern
Local
Board
shortmg
out
clectncaltransformers
Pete
Wil son and a Cabmct represen- tongued. stnkmg wtfe The vancty
and I0.000 m Vermont
The
Eastern
Local
Board
of
Educauon
wtll
meet
Wed
nesday
m
the
EastLate
Thursday
afternoon,
New
latt
vc
of Prestdcnl Clinton
show ran from 1970 to 1974
The slow-movmg system, whtch
ern
Htgh
School
hbrary
Wtth
a
work
sesston
at
6
p
m
and
an
orgamzauon'(ork
Gov
George
Patak•
dtrccted
Ftlltngly,
ll
was
all
to
be
on
" It was her glamor. hts sense ol
htt the southern Plams earlier m the
al
meet10g
at
6·30
p
m
wllh
regular
meeu
ng
to
foll
ow
.p'tate
pnsons
tn
two
upstate
eounucs
tclcvtston,
wtth
Bono
co
mhumor,
the way they worked togethnational
week. caused htgh wind. at least one
to
open
thetr
acuvuy
centers
to
restmandmg
hts
~Q
tggcsl
audtcncc
smcc
cr,"
sa1d
Berry
tornado, hghtnmg , thtck coastal Jog
dents
lei!
wllhout
power
They
were
hts
days
w1th
Cher
After
the
servtcc,
"
I
followed
htm throug h hts
and snow as well as tee and ram Nme
among
dozens
of
shellers
opened
m
pollee
"ere
to
cscort
.
thc
funeral
changeover
mto
pollu cs I can' t
people dted m fl oodmg on Wednesthe
northern
,
central
and
ca~tern
Hospnal,
Syracuse
squad
d&gt;Sts!cd,
cortege
to
the
hunal
sue
at
Desert
behevc
he
was
succcssl
ul tn poii Uiitts of the Metgs County Emerday and Thursday on the Southeast ,
rcgtons
ol
upstate
New
York
4
37
p
m
,
East
Matn
Stree
t,
Mcmonal
Park
m
nearby
Cathedral
ttcs,"
satd
Eldon
Dmcr,
62.
of Sunt
gency Medt cal Servtcc recmdcd SIX
tncludmg five m one Tennessee counOthers
lost
far
more
than
thetr
Pomeroy.
Fred
Beaver,
refused
treatCuy
Valley
"B
ut
people
talk
real
good
calls for asststance Thursday Untts
ty A weather-related trafftc acctdent
power
ment,
Pomeroy
squad
asstsled
The
two-term
Rcpuhhcan
conabout
htm
.
(Ronald)
Reagan
dtd
11 .
respondtng mcluded·
ktllcd a North Carohna man, and m
Just
across
the
Tennessee-North
POMEROY
gress
man
dtcd
at
Heavenly
Skt
I
guess
he
could
do
11.
too
"
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Canada, st• were ktllcd m traffic acct4 52 p m , Overbrook Nursmg
5 34 a m , Stale Route 7. Tuppers
dents or as they !ned to heat homes Carolma lme from Mrs Webb, m
Center
Moddlcpnrl, Mcrvm Roach,
Roan
Mounta10,
Ten
n
,
Margaret
Platns. Herman Carson, Camdenwhere electncoty was cut
•
Veterans
Mcmonal Hospt tal. Central
lookmg
at
her
SISWhuchead
stood
"Ciark Memonal Hosptlal,
A state of emergency was declared
Two men were cued m separate whe n he struck from behtnd a veht ter-m-law's tratler and a netghbor 's,
Dtspatch
squad asststcd.
I 43 p m , Water Street, Syrac use,
auto
acc tdents on Thursday, accord cle dnven by Chnstma Clark, 33,
6 34 p m, volunteer lire departpmmed together at a rtse tn the road' Rachael Cundtff, Pleasant Va lley
The Daily Sentinel•
ment and squad Ill Ea&gt;l Mam Stocct , mg to the Pomeroy Pohce Depart- Mason , WVa
The acctdent took place tm East
motor-vehtdc acctdcnl. Paul Bush. men t
(USPS 211-960)
Maul
Street
Paul Bush. 57. Pomeroy was ell·
refused treatment. Steven H,ttten ,
Veterans Memorial
Ltght
damage was reponed to
Pullll~h~:d ~ v~ r y aflcrn&lt;lllll Mond1y lhrou~,:h
VMH , Central Dtspatch sq uad .tsstsl- cd fur failure to ytcld after he turned
Am Ele Power .....................so"!.
f ruJ.1 y I ll l ourl Sl .,omcroy Ohm b~ the
Cl.~rk'
s
vc
htclc and no damage 10
Thursday admt sstOns - Cora ed
m front of a vchtclc dmcn by Steve n
Uh1• V•l l ..,~ Puhl~ ~ hmg Comp:~nyi(Hmm u Cu
Akzo ........................................86
Pctnc\
Jewell,
Pomeroy
;
Edna
Searls.
BtdHatten , 25, Galltpolts Ferry, WVa
l',•nM•'V Ohto 4~ 7 t,') l'h ')1):! ~ I % Second
AmrTech .............................. eo'Y.
RUTLAND
d ;1~s JlOS ill~c patt.l :11 rnmcroy, Ohtl'
well
Ashland 011 ......................... 51"1.
5 06 p m , Rutland Ftrc Soa11on , Bush, accordmg to lhe pohce report,
Thursday dtscharges - Margery Dtanne Walker. PVH
AT&amp;T .....................................62'•
was turmng 1010 the parktng lot of
Mrm ht'l 1 h1 1\!&gt;Mlc JJictl Pr~s s , md the Ohlu
Bank One ................... :......... 51 "!.
N~w~p•rxr A~stK nt•on '"
Douglas
Dollar General store at the tunc of th e
Bob Evans ............................ 20~
Holzer
Medical
Center
accident
POS11\1A\TEN St•nd ad•lrt""S cmrr!cllnns In
Borg-Warner ........................... 51
Discharges Jan. 8 - Eva Mtlls,
Th~ Duly Sc nt tnd Ill {'ot~ rt St Pomno...
There was mode rate damage to
ROBIN WILUAMS IN
Broughton ..........................16'!.
l)hu' -1~ 71JIJ
"The
Catcher
tn
the
Rye,"
by
Glenn
S1mpk10s,
Teresa.
Trusse
ll
,
Bush's
ve htcle , and heavy damage to
Champion .............................16Y.
FLUBBERPG
Robm FISher, Rtchard Lakm, Mrs J D Salinger was firs.! publtshed Ill Hatten's
SU8SCH I PTION RATES
Charm Shps ......................... 4~.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Oy Carf"lrr- or l\1()1or Rout~
Ralph Dtxon and daughter, Ray- 1951
City Holding ..........................42'·
Shannon Pctne, 19, Mtddlcpon,
446-0923
On~ W~d:
S! 1111
Federal
Mogul
.......................
40\
mond
Davts,
Angela
St
Clatr,
Davtd
was
cllcd
for
assured
clear
dostancc
On{ o\l.mth
SM 711
Gannett .................................59'1.
Cold and st nus remcdtcs account
Ont Y~tr
$11M Oil
t:mn
Goodyear .............................60"!.
Birth - Mr and Mrs Chrtsto- for about 60 feet ol shelf man averSINGLE COPY PRIC,E
Kmart :................................... 11 'I•
age drug stOre
pher Mqody, son, Cheshtre
D uh .... .......................... .. ................... 15 Cents
Kroger .................................. 35'1.
(Published
with
permission)
Lands End ............................34'&gt;
Sullscrthcrs ntll dcs111ng to pay the camer may
Limited .................................. 26'1.
rcm11 rn ~d\ancl' dm~ct to 1 hi! Da1 ly Sl'ntmel
Oak Hill Flnl ........................... 12
on,, thr1a: SIXor 12 mon th bam Crrdtl wrll ~
gtven carnc t c~ch week
ova .........................................35
One Valley ............................ 37Y.
No suhs~ nr••• • n lly 01~11 pc=rmt llrd rn !l.fe •s
Peoples ..............................., ... 42
"hen hnm~ ~;:~rrt~:l scrvu:c rs avatlatJic
Prem Finl ............................ ~ ... 24
l'uhllshu rc~cr v~ s lhr nght lu adjust ut~s dur
Rockwell ............................... so~.
JAg the subsntplton peuod Subscrtplton rate
AD/Shell ............................... 51'·
ch~nt!cS mlly he tmplcmc:med by chan~tmg the
Sears .....................................45'1. '
dumt10n of tht" subM:rtptwn
.Shoney's ................................ 3~·
Star Bank .............................54Y.
"AIL SUBSC RIPTION S
lnskf~ Meigs County
Wendy's ................................ 22'.1
1'\ Wu~h
$21:\U
Worthlngton .............. ,.........16'Y.

~
~

Clinton's Medicare expansion

,·'"'~,~~. ~~

Springlike daytime highs
become thing of the past

Mervin J. Roach

Nation offering its· respects
to unlikely icon Sonny Bono

Slow-moving.storm system
· leaves misery in its wake

Two-car crash investigated

'"

Cahf. Dr Smger's crcdcnuals arc
formtdablc He ts prnfessm emcntus.
of envtronmental sctencc at the Untverstly of Vtrgtma, a dtStongutshcd
research profe ssor at the ln stuutc for
Space Sctcnce and Technology , and
h ~s rccct vcd, among man y other
honors, the (Ftrst) Sctencc Award of
the Bnttsh Interplanetary Souc ty
The three secttons of hts hook arc
cnutled, m thoroughly hustnesshke
fashton , "Overvtcw The Sctcnltftc
Case Agmnst the Global C'lunatc
Trea(y," "Unlintshcd BustiiC&gt;S Set·
cnttfic Issues to Be Resolved." and
"Epilogue What to Do About
Greenhouse Effects "
Nobody who reads the Stnget
book wtll hereafter doubt that the ,;,
ts a senous sctenttftc case agaonst
the global-warmmg hullabaloo, or
that 11 ts anythmg less than overwhclmmg The world ts beong hus. !led duwn the road to tll -advtscd and
ulumatcly harmful dect stOIIS hy spcctal mterests that arc fundamentally
hosttlc to the growth of human ccoimmtc actiVIty, wtlh all the Iauer
portends for the greater happmcss ol
n1ankmd .
William A. Rusher is a Distin· guished Fellow of the (' laremont
Institute for the Study of States·
manship and Political Philosophy.

America's adults nee~ to clean up their act
.

Nolan
.

Cyber systems. arerdangerously vulnerable

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

about "cyberhhh · They don ' t
watch tl themselves or allow thetr
children to watch tl Butt! other people are watchmg and allowing thetr
chtldren to watch, they know tl wt ll
have us effect upcm us all -- adults
and chtldrcn altkc
I! IS hkc the atr we breathe. No
matler who pollutes the atr, we all
must take 'the polluuuu mto our
lungs No one has h" own pnvate
supply of atr.
The cultural an we breathe collecttvely ts no dtlfercnl 'llte qualtty
of that atr. IS detemuncd nol by our
own personal mmal standatds but by
what the maJonty au.cpl' or allows
We may dtsagrcc wtlh tins cultural
ct&gt;nsensus, but 11 ;uornuuds us We
can not escape It any more than we
can escape the wtnd tha• hlows
In van den Haag\ words, " II others are protected from hann thereby
-- and tf soctety ts censnrshop ts as
JUSllfiable as a speed lnntl ts, or prnhtbttmg the keepmg of !tons •n cuy
apartments."
George Plagenz l~ a syndicated
wrlt4er for Newspaper Enterprise
A~iation.

,,

Meigs announcements

EMS units record six runs

Citations issued in two accidents

Stocks

Hospital news

- NO,I.CE-

2h Wtds

SSJ 1'12

52Weeks

SltiS.5r,

Rain Outslrlt Metes Count}

13 w~eks
20 Weds
52 Weeks ,

$l9l~

SSMJH
. $111972

-·-·-

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

SYRACUSE CURBSIDE
RECYCLING PICK·UP
THIS WEEK

MEIGS COUNTY RECYCLING &amp; LITTER PREVENTION

�Sports

The Daily
..

sconng stx pomts or better. Jennifer

Shnmplin led the way with 13 points,
Mehssa Werry added eight, Tracy
Coffey, Tangy Laudermalt and Canssa Ash each added seven and Amber
Vi nang scored sax .
Meags hat 22 of 51 from the noor
for 43% and etght of I~ from the hne
for 62%. The Lady Marauders pulled
down 30 rebounds wath Becky Smtih
grabbmg SIX, Werry added ftve .
Metgs had 22 turnovers, 13 assasts
wath Smath and Ash gelling three
each. The Marauders had 19 steals
with Smith gettmg ftve and Shnmphn four. Tracy Coffey and Sma!h
each blocked a paar of shots.
"We have a lot of people wath
equal abilny,that enables us to wear
people out," Maniuder coach Ron
Loga n saad "I though Meltssa Werry and Amber Vinmg both played
well as !hear first starts. Becky Smith
dad a good JOb on the boards I was
really happy wtth the way we played
after the loss at Belpre Monday
evc mng

'

By The Associated Press
Karl Malone sozzled and Shawn
Kemp fizzled
Malone scored 39 pomts and
passed John Havlicek on the NBA's
career scormg list as the Utah Jazz
beat the Mal waukee Bucks 11 6- I09
Thursday naght.
"Karl as \Ike nobody else,'' teammate Jeff Hornacek sa ad ''He docs
thmgs that nobody else can do "
Malone , whose 500 consecull ve
starts are tops among acllvt playc"·
was 13-for- I6 from the field and I3
for-15 from the foul hne . Has free
throw 2:04 anto the game gave ham
26,396 career pomts, pass mg
Havlicek for eaghth place on the
· career hst.
"Records aren't sometlung that
JUSt happen," Malone said "You've
got to plan and prepare your whole
career. Then good thmgs happen.··
• Bad thmgs happened to Kemp an
his first game agamst Seat!le smce
: the SuperSonacs traded ham to Cleveland last summer
Van Baker, who went from Malwaukee to Sean\e m that three-team
deal, dommated Kemp as the Somes
won at Cleveland I09-84
Baker scored 25 pomls and held
· Kemp to nan e. mdudm~ 2-for-1 I.
shooting from the field.
"Thas was probably the worst
naght of my nane years (an the
NBA)," satd Kemp, who demanded
to be traded last season because of a
contract dasputc.
•
The Sonacs amproved thetr NBAbist record to 28-6 wath their seventh
straight victory. It was Seattle's mmt
lopSided wan ol the season
"It was over with quackly," torward Qetlel Schrempf saad . "I tbmk
we pretty much took all the suspense
out of tt."
"
Elsewhere m the NBA, New Jersey edged Orlando 89-87, Sacramento downed Dallas I03-92 and

EHS alumni game
set for January 17
The annual Eastern Hagh School
Alumni Basketball game wall be
held on Saturday, Jan. 17 at6 p.m. at
Eastern Hagh School.
Practace will be held on Sunday.
Jan . t I at 6 p.m. Everyone ·is urged
: to attend.
, For more information contact Tim
: Baum .at 985-3301

Sophomore Belinda Hay~s hit a
two point shot from the paint after
Juli Orlowski missed a three pointer ·
from the elhow wath 2.5 seconds
remaining in the game Thur&gt;dfty
night to give the Vinton County
Vtkings a hard-fought 56-54 tnumph
over the Eastern.Lady Eagles. Van ton
County is now 6-1 in the TVC Ohao
Diviston and 8-2 overall, while Eastern drops to 3-3m the Hocktn1 Davasion and as 4-3 overall.
Although a close game .11. e
way, Vinton County led by 2-5 po1nts
mucH of the game. Each ttm• ' vever, Eastern clawed back to
d
led on several occasaons goan
;n
the stretch.
Eastern had a three poant, 50-47,
lead with two manutes to go in the
game. Vinton Couny hu a free throw
and three straight tames Belinda
Mayes found the hole in the Eagle
HANDS TO THE BALL- Meigs front-liner Tracy Coffey (45) and defense, basacally sconng uncontesl·
MJIIer's Beth Lanning (3) and Christy Halasz (40, with only the ovis- ed.
ible behind Coffey) battle for the rebound as Miller's Kristen Plant
Eastern was down three P&lt;&gt;ints
(11 ), the Marauders'' Jennifer Shrlmplin (far right) and another
· Marauder watch during Thursday night's TVC contest at Meigs High wath 1·30 and ·Eastern went to the
School. The Marauders won
56-26.
(Sentinel photo by Dave Harris) man. EHS made several steals and
-- Vmton County fouled each time.
Eastern got four free throws going
down the stretch from Ktm Mayle,
Jess Brannon, and Juli Hayman to tae
it at 54-54.
A Hayman steal and ensuang layup try resulted an the last foul, where
By SCOTT WOLFE
u l,loards, but we JUS! dtdn't finish it at she hat two fouls shots wath 26 secSentinel Correspondent
the otlensive end."
onds. Tied at 54-54, Vinton County
A deadly fngad 16 percent shooSouthern had 36 rebounds (Kam got the ball the final time with 13 sectng mght overshadowed a good !hie 7, Ktm Sayre 6); ten steals, five onds remaining. Eastern dropped
Southern Tornado effort as the Nel- assists (Sayre 2~ Caldwell 2), 17 back half court to a 2-3 to keep from
sonvalle-York Lady Buckeyes rolled turnovers, four charges (Caldwell . foultng, allowmg Orlowski enough
to a one-stded 54-28 wm Thursday two) and 19 total fouls.
room to penetrate for the three point
mght at Buchtel
Nelsonville had 31 rebounds attempt. The miss set up the Hayes
Nelsonvallc-York is now 5-3 both (Adams !0), II turnovers, and 22 game wanner.
overall and an the league, whtle louis.
·
Eastern started out in a man then
Southern drops to 1-7 overall and an
N-Y won the reserve game 28-27 went to a 1-3-1 zone early in the
1-5 an the league.
led by Amy Dupler with 9. Southern game, sparking an EHS drive from a
Overall. Southern hat 8-50 from was led by Katie Cummins with II I0-2 delicti to a 14- I2 score at the
the tloor, tncludang an 0-12 three and Fallon Roush stx.
end of the period. Eastern finally
poant shooting game, and 12-24 night
Southern hosts Trimble Monday. swatched two a 3-2 zone to try to preat the lane. Meanwhile, NelsonVIlle Ouarter tl!tilh

N-Y girls get 54-28
win over Southern

vent the three point shot as Orlowski lit up the nets with five three pointers as VC took a 33-29 halftame lead.
Eastern cut the lead to 44-42 after
three, then VC came back for the 56·
54 win.
,
Eastern hit 19-5.7 for 33 percent,
hit 0-1 three·pomters , and was 16-30
for 51 percent at the line wt!h 36total
rebounds (Karr 16, Jessica Brannon
15, Mayle 6). Eastern had three
blocks (Jess Brannon 2, Karr one), II
steal~ (Brannon 4, Mayle 3); 17
turnovers; eight asststs (Evans 4), and
16 fouls.
The Eagles were led by Karr's 16
and Brannon's 15. whtle Stephame
Evans had a good noor game and
rekandled her touch for nine points.
Behnda Hayes had 20 poants for
VC, while Orlowska had IS and
Heather Hayes ten . ·
VC hit 23-49two-pointers, 5-M on
three-pointers, 3-7 on free throws.
had 26 rebounds (Hayes 6, Goodlan
4), I Block, II steals, 17turnovers, 12
asSists (Goodlin 6), atld 24 fouls
Eastern's reserves, 5·2, won the
reserve game 42-27 led by Sarah
Clifford with 13, Damelle Spencer9,
Baker 7, and Cinda Chfford 6. Yinton County was led by Jessica
Caudill with seven. and Casey Jones
wath sax
Eastern plays at Waterford on
Monday.
Qjlarler l2lllli
Eastern
12-17-13-12=54
Vinton County
14- 19- I I= 56
Eastern: Stephanac Evan&gt; 2-05/8=9. Valene Karr B-0-0= 16. Amber
Baker 1-0-0=2.' Juh Hayman 2-02/5=6, Jessica Brannon 5-0-5/.1 I= 15.
Kim Mayle 1-0-4/6=6. Totals 19·0·
16130=54
Vinton County: Jult Orlowska 05-0= 15, Heather Hayes 4-0-2/4= \0,
Amy Jewett 3-012=6, Beltnda Hayc&gt;
10-0-0=20, Megan Goodlin 2-0Ill =5. Totals: 19-5-3n=56

By TIM PUET
Associated Press Writer
Bonzi Wells didn'tlook at first as
though he was going to break Ball
Slate's career scoring record, bvt satd
a talk wath the former record-holder
made a difference.
That man happens to be the Cardmals' coach, Ray McCallum, whose
mark Wells surpassed when he hat
two free throws with 14:48 to play
Thursday ntght m a 75-69 vactory
over Ohio.
Wells finished wath 27 points and
now has 2,124 potnts. McCallum
scored 2, I09 when he played for the
Cardinals from 1979 to I983.
Wells mi ssed his first four shots
and fimshed wtthjus! stx pomts mthe
first half. At that pomt, he turned to
McCallum for help
"I started out real slow and it dadn' t look hke I was going to get the
record, ,but'coach calmed me down an
the second half, " he.satd.
" I thought he had the record on
his mind a little too much to start the
game and he couldn't get a rhythm. "
saad McCallum, who ltke Wells
played for Muncie (Ind.) Central
High School in the same city where
Ball State as located. "In the second
half, he calmed down ."
"Now I can joke with coach
McCallum and tell him that he's only
second-best," Wells JOked after the
game.
The victory made the Cardinals
( 11-2 overall, 5-0 conference) the
only team without a defeat in MidAmerican Conference play.
Sanjay Adell's "24 points led the
Bobcats (2-11, 0-5), who rail ted fran
a 10-point defictt to pull within 7069 with I:35 remaining. Wells
banked a turnaround jumper otl the
glass from the rtght of the key wath
31 seconds remainmg to make it 7269 and followed with two free
throws
Eastern Michigan, which had been
the only. other team unbeaten an
league play, lost 72-64 at Maami of
Ohio Akron whipped Central Machi-

~~;:4~~~~~:e~~ i~i;~:~~i~~~

Ratsr•

)

New

Astra

cmerst1n

Bran• New IIJ!ll4lllar ·
want nrtn mvy

gan 76-49 to take sole possession of
first in the conference's East Division.
In other MAC games Thursday,
~nl edged Western Michigan 65-63,
Northern Dlinois nipped Marshall6968 and Toledo got past Bowling
Green 68-56.
Miama's John Eslick had 23 points
and 19 rebounds, both career highs,
as the RedHaw~s (8·4, 2·2) won their
23rd straight home game and
snapped a two-game wanning streak
for the Eagles (7-5, 3-1 ), who got22
from Earl Boykins.
Jami Bosley with 23 points and
Jtmmal Ball with 16 paced Akron (7 ·
6, 3-2) over .Central Michigan as the
Zips became the only EastDiviston
team wtth a wmnmg recond an conference play.
Jerry Glover had II for the
Chippewas (3-10. 1-4), who fell
behind IS-O and never recovered.
Central Michigan's coach, Jay
Smith, was disappointed. "!thought
we came out soft to the man," he
said. "You did not see the Central
Michigan team that's been competitive the last three or four games."
Mike Perry's tip-in with 2:21 to
play put Kent ahead 61-59, gtvmg the
Golden Flashes (5-10, '2-3) the lead
for good against Western Michigan.
Kyrem Massey &gt;cored 18 points
for Kent, which helcj on in the final
17 seconds as Ed Norvell missed four
straight free throws . Saddi Washing·
ton had 21 for the Broncos (9-4, 32), who were unable to keep a 35-26
halftime lead.
Northern Illinois ended Marshall's
22-game home wmning streak. The
Thundering Herd's coach, Greg
White, said his team was nat.
"You can't play basketball.wathOijl emotion." he .said . "Tho streak
was a tine thing. (But) walking out
there wath (Marshall) on your Jersey
doesn't mean anythang. You still
have to play 40 minutes."
T.J. Lux scored 25 pom!s and
grabbed 17 rebounds to lead the
Huskies (7·5, 3·2). Carlton Kiqg

By DAVID DROSCHAK
CHAPEL HILL, N C.. (AP) Mall Harpnng, Georgia's Tech"s star
and consummate team player,
watched No. I North Carolina's
teamwork with envy -!hen paid the
Tar Heels the highest comphm~nt.
"They're unselfish. They have
good talent, but they really make the
extra pass. They don't force anything,
they really know each other 's ·
games," Harpring satd followtng has
team's 96-75 loss Thursday night to
the Tar Heels (1,6-0, 3-(} Atlantac
Coast Conference).
"They know what Jhcy can do and
can't do. No one tries to go above and
beyond what they are supposed to do.
They really know thear roles ."
Harpring, the ACC's leading scorer and rebounder, said very few
teams catch his eye like the'Tar Heels
did.
"I probably could count them on
two hands tn my lour years- teams
that I thought were-teally, really
good," he said. "This as definitely
one of them "
A season ago at this time, North
Carolina's proud progmm was reeling, off to its worst ACC start in
school history . .One year later, the
same cast of characters IS beginnmg
to 'rewrite history.
The Tar Heels have now won 32
of their last 33 That's the best 33. game stretch for North Carolina
FOULED ~ Marshall forward Derrick Wright (left) Is foul~ from since the mid-1950s.
behind by Northern Illinois center Steve Determan In the first half
"To be a part of hastory ts special,
of Thursday night's MAC game In Huntington, W.Va., where the Thun· especially with a program like this,
derlng Herd's 69-68 loss ended a 22-game home winning streak. (AP)
but we just need to concentrate on
scored 19 for Marshall (5·7, 1-4),
which has lost four straight
Casey Shaw's 21 points led Tole·
do- (8-4, 3-1) over Bowhng Green.
Tony Reed of the Falcons (5·7, 22) was the game's leading scorer with
26 pomts.
The victory broke
six-galJie
winning streak by Bowling Green in
the series and was the Rockets' first
at Bowling Green since the 1990-91
season. •

a

Saturday's games

Basketball

what we're doang nght now," said
Antawn JamiSon, one of three Tar
Heels wt!h 20 or more pomts Thurs·
day night.
Elsewhere an the Top 25, 11 was
No 5 Anzona 94, Wa.~hmgton State
81; No I0 UCLA 90, Or~gon St. 72,
IllinoiS 76; No. II Iowa 64; and Wake
Forest 70, No 24 Clemson 66.
Jamison, who scored 20 points,
satd he 'll never forget the shame he
felt on campus after last year's
school-worst 0-3 stan mACC games
"Mentally,that is always going to
be in the back of our heads," lama·
son satd. "I think that's really good.
It as helping us out a whole lot. It's
making us more hungry, especially m
ACC play."
Vince Carter led the way wa!h 22
points, while Shammond Williams
added 20 as the top-ranked Tar Heels
put on an offenstve clinic, shooting
55.9 percent and recording assists on
23 of the team's 38 baskets.
"We hung an there, but they're a
fabulous team," Georgia Tech coach
Bobby Cremins &gt;aad "We've played
some good teams, but they are the
best team we've played. They've got
it going."
The wm was the first a!Jhe Smtth
Center smce a Dec. 16 vtctory over
Hampton -a span of 23 days.
"One thing I was concerned about
wa&lt; that we were home. which could
mean we were less intense," coach

ljill Guthridge saad. "We had intcnst!y. Thas team always comes wa.th
their work clothes on."

... ~&lt;=Co=n=tin=u=ed~f~ro=m=P~ag~e-4~)------------------------------~-

~MVifzer

cle. '
·Another mdication that Switzer
wasn't coming back was when quarterback Troy Aikman, who com·
plained openly about a lack of discipline on the team !has year,
announced before the regular season
ended that would come back in 1998.
Cratics of Switzer pointed out
that Aikman wouldn 'I have made
such a statement unless he knew that
Switzer's fate was sealed.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Alhmllc Dhbion

W L &amp;1.

Iii

~76

2~

S4l

1''

21 II
. 19 14

6:\6

t8 II
19

17

IM
16

17
16
21

I}

, 28
~

"
12

281

Ctntrul Dlmion
21 II

Ch 1~:ago

Atl.ml:l

20
lU

CLEV ElAND
Charluuc

""4

IJeUOII

Milwaukee
1 uronto

-·-

-,,

m

22 II
20 l l

lndmna

667

621

2

ll

621

11
18

60j;

,,_2,

45 ~

7 11

19

441
II H

I~

10

1

'

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwnl D1vls.ion

W L &amp;1.

22
22
..................... .17
16
10
6
l
Padnt

II

6

824

t1

7M

10
11

677
'iY4

LA Lakers
Phoemll

'

'i',.
ll
lb',.
19'

Dhi1~ion

2t\

Scanlc

667
667
54ti
500·
2t16
176
061

II
14
16
25
2!
10

"

J&gt;ortl.md ................. ..

m

20

Sac r:mll'nto

IJ
7

LA Chpr~er11
Golden S~o~h:

2~

2M

21

2\ I

Thursday 's scores

,..2
1\''
19
'"

Seaule II}J, CLEVELAND H-'

Sanancnto !OJ , OaiiiL&lt;; 92
lnd1ana 87. Houston RO

Fullback Daryl Johnston was
interviewed last week and said one of
the reasons the team collapsed thts
year was because of lax discipline,
such as Swt!zer allowing players to
report late for practtce.
Swttzer himself even said aller the
Cowboys' final game, "I told Jerry he
ought to fire the whole damn bunch
of us."
Jones, however, didn't take
Switzer's advtce'. Instead, he came to

an agreement wath Swatzcr much a,
he did wath Johnson, who got a $2
mallfon goodbye package and thanks
for wmning two Super Bowl rings
Switzer leaves wath one Super
Bowl rang an his four.year stmt wtth
the team and a recond of 40-24. How·
ever, the Cowboys were I7- 17 an
Switzer's last two years.
Candidates to replace Swttzer
mclude George Seifert.

Mnmesotn Dl New Jersey, 1 :iO p m
lloston at Orlando, 7 JO p m
Toromu at CLEVELAND, 7 JO p m
Golden Smte :u Ctm;ugo 8 JO p Ill
lnduma at D:lllas. 8 :W Jl m
U1ah at Houston, 8 :W p m
Satr:~ n ~e mo nt S.1n Antonto. 8 XJ p.m
Portland :11 Mtlwauket, 9 p m

MAC men'~ standings
On• rail

W L £d. .W Lfd.
)26007
2 l ., OOR

4

~
11250~

0

10002

Wtslt:m Ol"lslon
. l 0 I 00

Boi,ISI ...
Toledo .... .
E. Mcchlgnn
W Mochogun
..
N llltnou
C Mtchig4n , . .

J
2

,)

I
I
2

1
I

3

2

6 m
4 667
7 36J

10

nJ

6

4~:'i

tO

167

II 2 1141&gt;
.750 8 4 667
6AJ7 6 5 .W5
.600 9 4 692
600 7 S .58:\
2.~ :\ 9 .250

Thursday's scores
Akron 76. Ctnl. M1cbipn 49
Doll So 75, OHIO 69
Ken16~ . W M1C:hi,a~~6l
Miluru 72, E Mu::higan 64
N JllmOJt69, MARSJ1ALL 68
Toledo 68, Bowlin&amp; Gft:en S6

14 1111 2
1~21 K
1~24 'i
'l2'i K

40 114 12\
\t\ 11 2 126
l'i Ill llO
26 7'i 120

NllrthruM

Moncre.tl
Piusburgh
Bus!On
Onawa
QU'ohna

On·ukm

24 II&gt; I&gt;
22 14 )(
20 16 tl

14 11• )(J'J
li2 121 10'\
4tl Ill 106

. 11120 ~
16 2.\ 6
I~ IIJ t1

4J 104 104
lH 114 12H

-·-

Buf1.1 lo

An.tlk'mt
S.m JuM:
h lmtllllnu

12

Vo~UlllUVlf

IH 'I

S

Plkll.'lll"

u.,,

lH 99 IOlJ

Tonight's games

.11: L I &amp;

I~

11 IIWJ 121)
11[11 114

1
l C.m1lma '\ (11c)
Mnnlrcal tl N Y. hl,mikr&gt; 2
W ,,slungmn 'i, N Y K:mgl'U 1
v.u1UJUvt:r4 Cnlurmln4[11C)
Bu1r.tl112
i\nj:clcs 11 11c1
W.L.~Innj!.IUn . 1 p m
T:unpa 8.cy .11New kr.o;cy 7 '\()I' 111
Ph~m,_ .11 Chll.ll!O H l() p1n
IJt.olrnll m J),,u.• ~ K 1011111

Plulalklplua .11

(i[

!iA

211 10 7 61 I.W (J2
26 11 K 601411107 ,
l~ I 'i fl
~6 1'\6 114
I'J IX 1 4"i 120 117
14 21 7

,l l 12U 114

,,•

P111I,\!Jdph1~

Ctnlral OlwiiJon
Onll:as

•

n

Thursday's S&lt;ures
Bush•n

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

'

122.J
122'&gt; 7

, , 22 I

Cll}:olry

116 IIQ

42 119 121
11&gt; 104 112
\1 'N 117

'\'1

Yfl

'..15

'\:'i ll.ll

12:'i

Flomla 111 C.ll!l.U'Y, Yp m

&amp;lmnntnn !II An.1hc1m 10 lO I'm

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~7

A•ron Munches1cr 71, S.mlly V11l JIJ
AmMda-CI~:ar c reek 61, Fwrtield Umon 'iK
Ashland Crestview bO. Plymoulh lK
Beaver E:~ldn 66 Ponsmoulh W 2~
Belpre ~I r-c:deral Hockmg 50
BenJamin Lognn 6S Gr.lhum ~4
Berbn H1land 42 . Laktland 2R
Buckeye: Tnul64, Bamcsv•llc ~IJ
Buckeye Vul 45, M1 Gtleild 40
, Canal W1n1:bester 50, Lvg~m Elm 4K
Cnrdinglon ~9. Sp;111n Hl{!.h lnnd 44
Ccncerburg 97 Lm:as ~7
Ch ~~hm· R1vcr V,1l M. P1·u n Pl~.1sun 1 . W V:1

.W

10

Chippewa tl(), Htllsdl1le 4'i
Cui IJa.-chl.:mll Stl, C&lt;1l Cemcnnml 11
Cnl Bmuklla\CO 02. Col Whcnlortt: 4H
Col lilt.lcJlCOllcl\i:t 4H , Col E.1Sin'IOOf 44
Co! Manun.Fmnkhn 46 Col W~!,l 42
Col M1ftlm K6, Col Erun ~
Cor. Nonhlund K6, Col Lilldc:n-'-·h:Kmlt!)' 21

We mal&lt;.e cellular simple.

Col Wo~lnuiRIJ gc64,Cu l Un ~tts4l
Coldwncer 71. Parkway 41
Danbury Lukcscdc Kl. Maumee V111 .J6
O.tov1llc "iN, Johnslown Nunhrul~c 'i4
l),dnw.1re 01r ~I OhiU Dc .•f 21
E Cnnton 61l F,urltn S'
£. KIKIJt .S7 , WuriiiiiiS.Iun l:hr 42
Emlv.tlOt.l K2, G1bsunburg 16
F.lyciiCVJIIc 09. W Umon flK
f'ronkhn· Monrue ~ I . Tn·VIIIage ''
ff(OIOOI S! Ju5l'ph ~ I Uh.l J·url l'
Garaway () I , New~:olllenltlWII 4'\
GrJrltlv1ew "i9 W l!!fft.-rsun '\ l
GranvJIIt&gt; f&gt;N Mrllcnpor1 '\~
Grc-c~v1ew \9 Blan\!hesrer 2~

Cellular with ail-day

'
battery (S300.01
value.)

Sign up for
United States Cellular
Service and receive
500 FREE Local Minutes!t

(;fl"t~ ln

41\ lklltfnn11unc ~
Hanuhnn Tw11 . 47, Bloom-Cnriun"-&amp;1
He~ull 'i6 Fisher Culh -12
Hebnm Lak~:wnod ~. I.Andnn .W
Hol~u h: l6 Wuy ne Tr.11:t lO
ln&lt;han Crctk J6 C:athz '\~
Ironton 60. Poosmnuth 411

• 10 numbl!'r mtmdry
• Call umer
•1 hOt.rS lalk lllllf, 16 hoUI\ \tallfby
117 1161

1

¢~
(W1lh actl'lrJIIOO
1300 01 Y.1thoull

Ja~.·tu.un 62, Galhpohs4J
U:x1ngmn~i1 . A~hl.111d 11

Uba'ly Umon ~0. Dc:mc Uncon l&amp;

Uckmg Val ~4. Mmhron Pl.me~ 1()
Lug.an ~8 Alhcns 50
Umdon~1\le ~~ . Medutn Bud.eye 12 ~
Lu..:asv1lle Valley ~9. Oak Hrll ~I
Lynchburg Clay 84, I..D!ham WeSiern 2.~
M a lvern~ . Jeweti ·SI.'io 42
Map let on ~3. New London33
Mant:l!n61, Warn:n l.oi:ul ~I (OTJ
Mnnon Hanhng 49, Manslicld Sr 47
Mc1g~ 56. Miller 26

South

EllSitrn Division '
Conr.

.ut 12.a 11 9

•"

Ohio H.S;·girls' scores

East

Atl.tntn m Washmglon. I p 111

OHIO .............. .

6~. WJs~:mu m

2tl Jh K

17 Ul
1-l 22

T1flin 81 . Nucre D.1n1e Ohm .J'

K"i. MuttJic Tl·nn . 14

St

w .ulungton
NY Rangers
F1onda
N Y Islanders
Tampa Hny

21 ., 1-1

L11s J\n~t:ks

M7
91

Non..confer4!nce
Cuy 4:'i H1ram 44
RIO GRANDE Ml, M1dw.1y

B()slon College 94 Pruvcdclll't' 7J
Connt!1:11CUI 101 St John's olS
HnwanJ U 9M, Hampeun U 79
hma 6S, Mnnsr 49
La Sa lle 61 fOJdham ~7
Mnssachuscns69, Temple :\6
Rut~s 7l. Stlon HuU 49
. S1 Peter's 7~. Ruter 71
SyrJCUst 76, Georgt:lown 60
VC'flll(lnl ~6 Nonhtasttrn ~2

LA Cltppt!rs :11 lktron 1 p nl
Scaulc .11 N!!w York, 710 p m
Mmnu Dl Vm~ouver . 9 p m
,
CharJoue a1 L f\ Lakcn. 9 10 p m

MARSHALL

llhm)l~

27 11 2 16 127
24 10 H 16 12M

Culill'lldll

Grov~

Midwest
Mtdu~an

Jtrscy
Phlladdphl.l

~w

NUL standings ,.,,

Mid·Ohio Conference

Clrn:mnilll 61 M!!m[lln~ ~"
E

.W L I fiL lit: !iA

Sh1wl'll!t S1 8M. Urb:um 60
Walsh 7:\. Mulut'll! 63

NCAA Division I
women's scores

Sunday's games

.

lnd · Pur -lndpls 91 , Ashland R7
N M1ch1go.n 71 , F1ndlay '\9

South
. A.labam:1 Sc Th. Art.·Pii'IC Bluff 67
Au~lln Pl!lly 7~ E Kcntu~:ky 66
Campbell R1, b.:ksonv11l;Sc M2
Coastal Carnhna96, Charleslon Snuthern MO
Coli of CIMtlcscor\ ~. Samfonl 411
Gt•mgla S1 9:'i, An lulcnltll10nal9'\
UJunvlllt: 7' DePaul ~7
Mnrthtad St Kl . Tt ntiC~S« Sc 72
MurrJy St II t lndmna-South(.tsl 6'\
N C Cllarlouc 74. Sou1h Aondit64
N C . f\shtv•ll~ ~l R:lllforJ ~0
NW Loumuna 70. M ~ Necse Sl 60
Nor1h C.1ruhnu %, GeorF•a Tech 71i
Suuch Al.1bmn.1 6t:l Ark · L111Ie Rock 49
Suulhcrn Miss 6'\ , Hnum111 "'
W Ke111ud;y 70. New Orle.ms OJ
W:~kc ftlrcSI 70 Clcmsml hb

Hockey

rlldf'i~ Oin~iun

Atlanll( Ohlsion

Ium.

Great Lakes Intercollegiate

Ponlaud S! 70 hblw Sl ~'i
Utah St 10. Pa~:tlh 62
Wy,)mtn~ 6~ T~•a.~·EI Past'-Ul

Saturday's games

Ktnl. .. . .

Mid-Continent Conrerence
Youngstown S! 77. Oml Robc:ns 69

Far West

LA L..1kmtuLA Ch~n . IO ~O pm

2 JlJ
4 JH

Ohio women's college scores

Or:al Rnlxns 1~ . Youn}:SiuwnSI ll l

DetrOit, 8 p m
Portland :11 Mlnn~soln. II p 111
Ml:mu :tl Den\'er 9 p m
Clwlom: at Vuncouver, 10 p m
S.m Antonw nt PhocmA, I 0 JO p m

J

Moun! Sr Mnry.:..,."W._ 79, Sl . frllnC1s. NY 73
New HnnlJISIIITc 6~. DclXiflwc.62
No11hensu:m 69, Hanfoid 6t Rober! Moms 66, Monmouth. N J :58
S1ena !Ol Ouv1dson 89
S! Frm'ICIS. P:1 64 Wagner61
Tuwsun al M:une, ppd ICC
Vcrmonl ~lJ. Ooscon U ~5

SW Tc=llas S1 70. Te lo:.• ~-Arlm~con li2
Suulht.'f'nMelh Kl SanJnseS1 72
Texa~ Omsuun Yl Fresnu Sl 76
Tuu-Pan Amem:an 101 , Juc k~onv J IIe 7H
Ttus-s .• , Anlont u 99. Stephen F Aumn 6~

Golden Smte 111

Akron .
M1:1m1 .
Bowling Green

h:mn 90, Ruter 6!'

Lamar 90. SW t..om~l.mall7 12 OTJ
Nunh Tuas Mil, UC lrvmC 711

Scanle al Bpslon, 7 p m
Waslungmn nt All.mm. 7 :lOp m
Chu:ago a1 New York, tt I' m

Ium.

Anzona S! 17, WW!hlnJIOa 76
Monlilna 7'\, N Amono 64
WIIShmgton S1 64, Artzona61

(OT)

Southwest

Tonight's games

I

Far West

.

f111rk1gh D1ckmson 110, long Island U 100

W1dn11 S1 61 N luw.l'fiil

U1ah 116, M•lwaukL'C 109

Bran• New
Gr•n• sr•n Or C1upe

Slephen F Ausun 84, TtiUI!I-Snn An1un10 71
Tc:xas·Arlmglon 71. SW Tuu S1 ~
Youngsmwn S1 77 , Orul Robc:ns 69

Mo - K .m ~:r; Cuy KR ...NE llhno1s 62
SE M• ~snun 6L) T~~~ Tct·h ~I
W llhnu1s 12. ('Jm:a~to S1 li7

N1.'W J~:noey 89 Orlando H7

'$12,650*

East

1

4~

Southwest

bfber·NCAA
Division I men's scores

4

~14

Spnn&amp; Shawnee 61 Spnng Northeastern 44
Slrasburg 4~ . Tus&lt;:lli'QWIIS Cath J7
Symll'll"! Vn.l 47, New Bo.slon 24
Teays Val ~2 . C1rclev111e ~
Tree of Lift 58, Col Welhn~lon '\8
Tu5law S2 Tuscnrnwru Val 4~
Umon Local6l, S1 Cla~rsYJIIc 44
Urbana 57 Tecumsc:h 42
Utcca 411 Bedcy 41
Vmton County S6, Recdsv1llt E.u!ern 54
W Libti1)1·S.1Icm 51, RuJgemonl \1
Wapakoncla "D. Ehda 49
Wushmglon CH 76. Jonuthan Alder 46
WillerfonJ ~2. Wdlslu{l J1
Wilynesfic:ld·Gosllen S7, De(jruff RiweDI~ ~ ~
Weanon (W V:l.) M~doniUI 63, Toronto 52
Wellsville ~8 . Beaver Lo!:a148
World Hn.rve§14R Mnrannlha Ou 40
Yo11 Wilson J5, E. Uverpool30
Znoc Trtu:e: 54, Hunung1nn '\7

Mo ·Kansas Ctty' 56, NE Uhnou SO
N IllinOIS 84. MARSHALl fi8
NOire Dame 7~. M1a1111 47
OHIO 70, Ball So ~8
SW Mu.soun Sr 71, Cre1ghton 52
Wis ·M!Iwaukte 61 Buller ~9

Ball Sl " MARSHALL. 1 p m
Cent M1ch1gan a1 KCm, 2 p m
E M1ch•gnn a1 Bowlmg Green. 7 p m
N llhn01s 111 OHIO, l p m
Toledo 111 Mmrru. 1 p m
W M1dug:m al Akron '\ Jl m

NBA standings

3.9°/o APR Up To 41 Months!**

S21,95U*

Top-ranke-d North
Carol-ina defeats
Georgia Tech 96--75

Scoreboard

Michigan's Woodson
plans to try NFL draft

SJ9,950*

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5
•

Ball State.d·owns
Ohio·75~.69; Herd's
win. streak ends

s
•
s
•
~~an~ ;:~g~~r a!~ ':~~e~_~/~~~~~~ ~i~i~~~~lle-York 12}i~i;~i~~~! ou rce says Wltz~r
•
h.d
WI 11 reSign
as
ea
coac h of cowboys
thr~~~ecca

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wells breaks ·Cardinal scoring ·mark

Friday, Janua,.Y 9, 1998

Darcy Cook led Maller with only
favc pomts, Beth Lannmg, Jenntfer
Browmng, Angie Lucas, and Bruney
Merkle added four poants each
Mailer hat 10 of 38 from the field tor
a cool 26% massing thetr only three
pomt att empt Miller was sax of I2
from the lane for 50% The Falcons
pulled down 25 rebounds wath Cook
grabbang I0 and had 35 turnovers
In the reserve game Meags posted
a 41 -3 1 wtn. Shannon Pnce led the
wanners wath I2, Amy Hysell added
I0 Machell e Heavner scored eaght
lor Maller
Quarter ll!1l!!l;
Maller
8-7-7-4=26
Meags
I0- I0- 18- I8=56
Miller: Beth Lannm g 1-0-2=4.
Jennafer Brownang 2-0-0=4, Darcy
Cook 2-0- I=S,Angae Lucas 1-0-2=4,
Bntney Merkle 2-0-0=4, Jamae Brunton 1-0-0=2, Clmsty Halasz I-0- I=3
Totals: 10-0-6=26
Meigs: Amber Vanang J-0-0=6,
Canssa Ash 2-0-3=7. Jennafer Shnm1
phn 6-0-1=13, Mehssa Werry 2-04=8, Brooke Walham s 2-0-0=4, three point hne , hittmg 9-20 free
Southern: Cynthia Caldwell 1-0•
Becky Smtth 0-0- I= I, Tangy Laud0
Dalton led the winners
crmalt 3-0-1=7 Totals: 22·0·12=56
with II poants. Amie Adams had 10. Nicole Benson 1-0-3/4=5, Erica
Southern was led by Ktm Sayre Arnotti -O-l/2=3,PattyLawrenccOwtth nine pomts and a good Ooor 0-112= I Sarah Brauer 0-0-112=1·. ~
game, wh1le Nacole Benson added Totals: 8-0-12/24=28
years ago.
,
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
five and Cynthaa Caldwell four.
Nelson~ille·York: 'M. McCielJones was not immediately avmlIRVING, Texas (APJ - Barry
Nelsonville shot out to a 12-5 land 3-0-112=7, T. Cntchfield 3-0able
for comment because he was tn
lead , then after a freezang second 0=6.A. Dalton 3-0-114=7,Aii Shafer Swatzer as bowmg to owner Jerry New York for NFL meetings, and
penod dropped to 24-8 at the half
3-1-0=9, ~· Dalton 2-0-7/10=11, A. Jones' wishes that the Dallas Cow- Switzer did not answer his home teleCoach Alan Cnsp sa ad, "I thought Adams 5-0-0/2= !0, A. Standall I-O- boys need a new head coach.
Swatzer, 61, has reached an agree- phone .
we played a good game, but we JUSt 0=2, A Dupler 1-0-0=2 Totals: 21·
Sources told The Daily Oklament With Jones !0 Step down as
couldn't put It an the basket We had 1·9/20=54 ,.
homan
on Thursday in a copynght
coach, a source wathm the organizaten steals and dad a good job on the
story
that
Switzer and Jones have
lndaana beat Houston 87-80
tiOn told The Assocaated Press on
reached
a
pact
regardmg the remamSuperSonics 109
Thursday.
ing
years
on
his
contract, wath an
Cavaliers 84
The source, speakin~ on conduton
announcement
expected
an the next
Seattle's Gary Payton scored 25
of anonymaty, said that Switzer and
poants on 9-for- I2 shoo tang and held
Jones came to the agreement !has two or three days.
Switzer, who replaced Jimmy
standout rookac Brcvm Knaght to four
week. But tt was not clear whether
Johnson
four years ago, had saad that
poants and fave assists.
Swatzer will remain with the team as
any other player out the;e." Marshall a consultant. He still has several years he would not stand an the way tf
Wesley Person scored I5 pomts By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
coach Bob Pruett said
tor the Cavs. who lost thear ~evemh AP Football Writer
left on a contract at $I malhon per Jones is eager to make a change.
Charles
Woodson
made
has
The fact that Swltz~r was not prestraaght io Seau\e Cleveland hasn 't
year.
Others expected to announce thear
beaten the Sonacs at home sance baggest move of the football season
Switzer recently' bought a home in sent for a major news conference earwhen he passed preseason favorite decisions today include. Florida wide the area and also owns a restaurant.
lier this week when Jones announced
1993
Peyton Manmng to win the Heisman . receiver Jacquez Green; LSU running
Jazz 116, Bucks 109
He had to pay the pnce for the the signing of offenstve lineman
At Salt Lake Caty, the Jazz shot66 Trophy. Has next bag move was back Kevan Faulk and offensave lane- Cowboys' 6-\0 season and failure to Larry Allen to a stx-year contract was
percent from the field and attempted ex ted to be passing up his final man Alan Faneca; West Vtrginia run- make the playoffs for the first time m· a sagnal that Jones' good fraen4 was
ning back Amos Zercoue and Arizona seven years, although he brought the no longer a member of the inner cir38 tree throws, one less than their seaso for the NFL. ... '
By most accounts, Michigan's State safety Mitchell Freedman.
season·hagh.
Cowboys a Super Bowlta!le just two . (See SWITZER on Page 5)
Hornacek scored 20 poants for the aii-Am 'ca cornerback was set to
Jazz, whale reserves Shandon Ander· JOm mor than a dozen underclassson and Bryon Russell each had 17. men who already have declared
Terrell Brandon scored a season- themselves avatlable tor the Apn\1819 draft
hagh 29 points ,for Milwaukee.
Projected as a top three draft pack,
Nets 89, Magic 87
At East Rutherford, N.J., Kerry along wath quarterbacks Manning
Kanies had a season-high 27 points and Ryan Leaf, Woodson intercepted
and a carec r-htgh 12 rebounds as eight passes, including one in the
New Jersey snapped a two-game los- Wolvennes' Rose Bowl win, and also
scored four touchdowns.
·
mg streak.
Woodson,
a
6-foot·
l,
198-pound
Keath Van Horn added 19 potnts
and Jayson Wtlliams grijbbed IS junior, had an II a.m. EST news conference scheduled today at Schemrebounds for the Nets.
Rony Seakaly had 25 poants and bechler Hall to announce his deci12 rebou nds for the tnJury-nddled sion.
" A year hke this is kand of hard
Magac, who lost for the lOth time an
to
top
off, isn't it?" Woodson 's broth·
12 games
er,
Terry,
told The Detroit News.
Kings 103, Maveyicks 92
On
Thursday,
Marshall wide
. Olden Po\ynace set season-highs
recetvcr
Randy
Moss
satd he 's on hts
wuh 26 potnts and 1'6 rehounds as
way
to
the
NFL.
and
so dtd hoeSacramento extended 1ts season-best
backers
Antl)ony
Sammons
of Clemwannang streak to four games with a
son
and
Takeo
Spakes
ot
Auburn
and
vactory at Dallas
North
Carolina
cornerback
Robert
Denn as Scott scmed 23 pomts and
Samaka Walker matched a career- - Willaams. Te.as running back R1cky
19'11 PIRIII£
hagh wllh 20 lor the Mavs, who Wallaams, however, made a surpnse
Brand 1gg7 C~evy
played for the tarsi tame sance snap- dectsion to stay in Austm for hiS
~
Blmr
AI
8111
van
pang thear I5-game losa ng streak sen ior season and play for new coach
•
Cruise
Cooltol
•
•
Wheel
Drive
•
150
H1'11,4Llter
• Power BerMs
•Au!lmaDc
•TV
Mack Brown.
Tuesday by beating Denver.
, 4liO t/oiiJlc H
• Cusllm Cloth
Engine
•AirColllillon
• Power Door l.odu
•
'M!o
Cassette
Player
"Money can't buy fnends, fun
Interior
• AutomatiC
• Air Cordtion
• AM/FM Slea!o
• Real Air/Heat
• ~ Gaplillns Ollirs
and loyalty," said Ricky Willtams,
•Alull'ioom l'llleels
Pacers 87, Rockets 80
• Air Condllon
• 4 Wheel Anl-lodl • Cu11Jm Cloth lntel\or
• PoWill Windows
• Rear Sola Bed
•l08&lt;1ed!
• AM/FM Cassette
At Houston, Jalen Rose scored 18 who led the nation m rushmg ( \,893
BrakaJ
• $tykld Wheels
• Power l.od&lt;s
• f'lbe~ass Alrini'!J
•lit
Stael1ng
•DuaiAiibagl
yards)
and
sconng
(25
touchdowns).
•
AM!fhl
Cassette
• Wei Eq~ppedl
points as Indiana beat the tnJuryBoards
• Power Steemg
• t.I*BJ!
.-'Cruise Cooltol
The mad dash to the NFL is m the
plagued Rockets, the Pacers' IHh
•
r~
Statllr9
homestretch as many of the nation's
wan an 14 games.
The Pacers, off tO' their best start top JUniors are passing up !hear final ·
ever an the NBA, pulled wathin a half- year of ehgtbihty for big bucks m the 1
game of Central Dtvision-leading pros. The fihng deadline for under·
classmen is today.
Chacago.
Moss, 6-5 and 210 pounds, caught
Kevan Walhs had 32 p0intl and II
rebounds for the Rockets, who have 96 passes for 1,820 yards and finished fourth m the Heisman Trophy
lost seven of \0.
Houston played without injured ballotmg. The redshart sophomore set
Mo!Mily • Saturday 9 a.m. • 8 pa. • Sunday 1p.m. • 8 p.m.
stars Hakeem Olajuwon, Charles a DivisiOn I·A record with 25 touch....... lllfW.._MIII ..... it . . tiiiDt~-._. .......... "'Ql ...... CH.Ot . . . . IIIOOikPIIMIJ:iiii....,WIIJW...,IIII.*...,.. ........ _
Barkley and Clyde Drexler. Reserve .down catches.
'
"Randy Moss will have more
Eddie Johnson also wasn't available
1&lt;1 1 1 11\ 11 I ::till::_!_' III II
\I.!.!:: II I..:'_' 111-,1,
tmpact next season an the NFL than
q~cause of an inJured right elbow,

-Malone reaches
milestone in Jazz
-win; CavEIIiers lose

Friday, January 9, 1~

Vinton Cou·n ty g
past Eas·tern 56-54

Marauder girls· roll
over Miller 56-26
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meags outscored Maller 36- 11 tn
the second half and went on to
defeat the Falcons 5&amp;-26 an garls' TnValley Conference basketball actaon
Thursday eventng
Meig&gt; as now 4- I on the season
and 5-2 overall and Maller drops to 19 overall and 0-7 an·the TVC. Metgs
will host Well ston on Monday
evenang The Marauders played !hear
third straaght game wathout Trtcaa
Davas who ts outwllh a senous ankle
. sprain
The Marauders wnh an aggresSive
defense forced 35 turnovers. Metgs
hmated the Lady Falcons to only one
field goal an the final nane and half
minute , and on ly three an the second
half
The two teams started out slow.
Meags held a 6-2 lead at the 5 45
mark of the farst penod Maller came
back to lie the score at SIX and at caght
before Tracy Co ffe y scored wath
three seconds Jell to g1ve Mcags a I08 lead after the farst pcnod
The Falcons took thear only lead
. (I 2- 10) of the naght at the 7 03 mark
ol the second pcrtod on a bucket by
Jennakr Brown mg. But the Maraud ers outscored the Falcons I0-3 'the
rest of the farst half and took a 20-15
at the half when Me lassa Werry hn
one of two free throws wath I :0 I left
on the clock
The Marauders went on a 9-3 run
to start the second half to take a 29\8 lead when Tracy Coffey came up
watha steal and hit Amber Vanmg for
a lay -up wath 3 43 left an the penod
Me1gs ended the penod wath a 9- · 4 run and to outscore M1\ler 18-7 m
the period and take a commandmg
38-22\ead heading anto the final penad
Meags outscored Mtller 18-4 an
the ftn al penod to post the 30 poan!
wan Brttney Merkle hat a short
JUmper wath I 20 left an the game to
gave Maller thetr ftrst field goal smce.
the I 05 mark of thard penod
The Marauders had a balanced
sconng attack wath nme garls in the
sconng column and SIX of them

Senti~,!~!

Belmont79. Wm1hrop 71
Co:u!D.I Carol1na 77. Charleston Southern 6H
()av1dson 81, Wofford 69
Delawm Sl 59, Norfolk ,SI 49
Fla lntcmauonal 80, Men:cr :\4
JackJonV1Uc Sl 81, Campbell1:'i (0T)
LoU!S!Ilna Ted! 100, SW Louimtrw :;()
Memphu 81, Sou11tem M1u 61
N Carohna St 7:\. Clem10n 51
NW Lotusi:w 68, McN«se St 6~
North CQrolma 69. GteorJ.Ja Tech 4!
RDdford 81 N C ·Asheville go
• ·
Samford 7J, Coli of Cluvlciton 68 (011
Ttoy St 117, Stellon 78
Vorairua 86, t'!l&gt;"l'bnd 110
W. keruud.y 86. South Alabama60
Xav.n 8~. V~rsinil Tech"

UNITED STATES ,

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.Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•
Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel -'

By The Bend

'

.....,

.

Friday, January 9, 1998

'

Suicide watch over Kaczynski
again ·pitches trial into chaos
1
By RICHARD COLE' '
Associated Press Writer
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
Theodore Kaczynski is in the
Unabomber 's vision of hell hooked to an electronic heart monitor in a cell for the suicidal, a camera watching his ev~ry rnove.
Kaczynski 's mental health - the
issue he has fought so hard to avoid
- is at center stage in his strange
case, a day after authorities say he
tried to hang himself with his underwear and then sought permission to
defend himself at a murder trial
where he is accused of being the antitechnology Unabomber.
Pro~ecutors and defen se aucirneys
were .to confer today with psychiatrists who will examine Kaczynski.
They must report to the coun on
whether he is competent to stand tria! at all and whether he can represent
himself.
Experts · say that process could
lake Up lO tWO weeks.
The trial that was supposed to
have opening statements on Monday
is on hold after a bizarre week of surprises from the 55-year-old professorlurned-hennit.
Only minutes before the presentat ions were to start again on Thursday, Kaczynski said he would rather
defend himself than submit to his
attorneys' mental defect defense. He
delayed the trial Monday by trying to

LISTENING TO PROCEEDINGS - Cheyne Kehoe listened to
Assistant Prosecutor Richard Moyer while describing a videotaped shootout, background, during the second day of Kehoe's
trial Thursday in Wilmington. (AP)

fire the lawyers.
· Outside, court, defense auorney
Judy Clarke denied her client was
sabotaging the lrial.
·
"That is absolutely not the case,"
she said. "This is an unbearable situation for him. He has lived with this
fear all his life. This is not manipulalion, this is not cunning, this is not
an auempt of someone to escape legal
process."
·
If U.S. marshals are correct,
Kaczynski apparently reached the
depths of despair sometime Wednes.day night at the Sacramento County
jail. He had been on a partial suicide
watch since Monday when marshals
warned deputies that Kaczynski was
depressed, Undersheriff Lou Blanas
said.
He had been a model prisoner for
Ig months. But when Kaczynski
arrived at court Thursday morning
and changed from his inmate coverails to dress clothes, marshals noticed
that he wasn't wearing underwear.
He also had a red mark on the
right side of his neck.
Deputies found the briefs in a
plastic bag in Kaczynski's cell.
Blanas said they were in a "stretched
condition," like they had been used
to hang something .
Defense lawyers refused commen I and it was unknown whether
they knew about the apparent suicide
auempt before the hearing. Prosecu-

tors didn't learn about it until later
and a source who spoke on condition
of anonymity said U.S. District Judge
· Garland Burrell Jr. also leanied about
it Jlfterward.
Anthony Bisceglie, who repre sents Kaczynski's brother David and
mother, Wanda, said he had no doubt
the act )Vas a suicide auempt.
"The family is just devastated,"
said the auorney, who has called the
prospect of Kaczynski defending
himself "federally assisted suicide."
"ll's pathetic," Bisceglie said. "I
don't know what to compare this to."
While the apparent suicide.atlempt
grabbed the_most auention, the true
disruption of the trial came when
Kaczynski agreed to undergo psychological tests to prove he is competent to handle his own case. He had
resisted for weeks government elfons
to have him examined by psychia-.
trists.
Jurors were out of the courtroom
when Kaczynski asked to represent
himself. The judge then sent them
home with instructions tefavoid news
coverage.
Kaczyns~i. a brilliant math professor who retreated to the Montana
woods and became a recluse, is
accused of being the anti-technology
zealot known as the Unabombcr
whose bombings over 18 years killed
three and injured 29.
~
Clarke and lead defense lawyer

•

WILMINGTON (AP) -A sher- · al nextmomh on similar charges.
iff's dep~ty testified that he fired first
Clinton County Prosecutor
at Cheyne Kehoe in a videotaped William Peelle said the videotape,
gunfire exchange that was broadcast which was recorded by a dashboard
nationally.
police camera, shows Cheyne Kehoe
Clinton County Sheriff's Deputy drew his gun first, shot from mside
Robert Gates testified Thursday dur- the car almost point-blank at Harker
ing N'choe's trial that Kehoe drew and continued to shoot after leaping
first.
out of the car.
" I said, 'Watch it,' " Gates said.
Prosecutors played the videotape
"I ye lled 'Gun I' at my panner several · for the jury on Thursday.
times."
Police said Chevie Kehoe was driGates said while he and State ving the Suburban when Harker
High.way Patrol Trooper .J. Harold sto~ped . it ncar this southwestern
Harkerstruggled with Kehoe's broth- Oh10 town on Feb. 15. The vehtclc
er, Chevie, during a traffic stop last . - had expired Washington state license
February, Gates looked t!1rough a plates.
,
..
window of the brothers' Chevrolet
Harker satd"Kehoe·refused te,g&gt;v"
. Suburban and saw Cheyne Kehoe Harker a dri ve r's license or other
pull a gun from under a garment on identification .. While the two were
the front seat and take aim .
arguong, Chevtc Kehoe auempted to
"Everything slowed way down in get out' of the vehicle and usc the door
my mind. like it was going in slo~ to pm the trooper to the car.
motion." Gates said.
But defense law yer Jeffrey
The deputy said he fired into the Hos'kin s said Kehoe pu!led hi s gun
vehicle and thought he hit ·Cheyne only atier Gates drew his- weapon, did
Kehoe. who was in the front passen- not [Ire from tnstde the car and fired
ger's seat.
outside only to escape in safety.
Kehoe jumped out of the vehicle,
Hoskms sa1d Kehoe planned to
took a professional shooter's two- ·tesufy that he drew hts gun only after
handed stance and fired repeatedly at being threatened by the deputy.
the officers before he fled on foot ,
Cheyne Kehoe s urrender~d in
Gates said.
Washington state in June and told
Kehoe JUmped hack into the vehi- authorities where to find hi s brother
de and drov~ down the road, where in Utah.
he allegedly shot it out a few minutes
The prosecution's case was
later with a Wilmington police offi- expected to conc lude today.
ccr before escaping.
In other trial developments ThursNo one was seriously hurt .
day, an Arkan sas prosecutor lestifyKehoc , 21. of Colville. Wash, ing for the defense said Cheyne
was charged with allempted murder, Kehoe in June voluntarily gave a
feloni ous assault and carrying a con- 140-page statement linking his brothcealed weapon. Chevie Kehoe, 24, ' er to the January 1996 homicides of
also of Colville, faced a separate tri- a gun dealer. his wife and her 8-yearold dau~hter.
·

sggso

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7

175 N. 2nd Ave.

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992·7028

99

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I!Z Ftr• ~ri'ISIIr XL -

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Ill rty•I•I'IJI,r VII

'Was $11,950

Was $t6,950

,...,•.

Middleport; 'oH

of Experience, and I' m glad you
wrote. Incidentally, I received a ton
of mail from readers who agreed
with you.
Gem of the Day (Credit the
Prairie Rambler): Pupils at an elementary school in middle Ameri ca
we re asked hy thcor teacher to write
50 words or less on the effect of oil
on fi sh. One 11 -year-old wrote.
"Last night , my mother opened a
can of sardines_It was full of oil, and
all the fi sh were dead."
Send questions 10 Ann Landers. Creator~ Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Bl vd., Sui te 700, Los Angeles. Calif.
90045

wondenng if it will do any good ."
What their friends think is enorcommented Fleming.
mously important in these early
She emphasized the importance years. so arm your chi ldre n wi th
of talking to children. and li sten in g informati on. not scare ta~ ti cs.
to them, and the need to set stan- advised Flcmmg.
dards of right and wrong .
She said that during .the high
Remember that youn g people school years, teen's want lO discuss
learn by obse rvation, she said . not- their concern s and the way they
ing that love, support and praise arc solve problems and make decisions
essential in any recipe for growi ng with adults.
·
up healthy and drug-free .
Listening is perhaps more imporShe stressed, however, that rules tant than talking at that point. along
must be set and enforced, that par- with disc ussing potential effects of
ents need to be specific. consistent, long-tenn alcoho l and other drug
reasonable and always wi lling to usc, including diminished chances
discu ss.
of gelling a job nr college admisBeing involved with your chil- soon. She advised talking freely with
dren's lives and educating yourse lf teens about the possibility of the
first about drugs was recommended fatal effects of combining drugs.
by Aeming.
"Raising a child is one of the
Statistics show that children·most most important roles anyone will
often begin illegal use of legal drugs ever perfonfi. and the one with the
(alcohol and tobacco) at 12 or 13, least preparatory training. Whether
although the choice to begin usin g -the government, schools and comcan start at 9 to II. The pre-school munities provide an environment
and early elementary years prov 1de conducive to no use of illegal drugs
the best opportunity for parents to and no illegal usc of legal drugs,
provide a clear no-use message. This prevention will continue to have its
should include repetitive practice on roots in the home," concluded Flem)low to refuse offers of alcohol and Ing.
other drugs in different situations. ·
said the director.

. 1996
OLDS
ACHIEVA

1
PONTIAC
TRANSPORT
VAN

$10,995

f~mily.

SlociiNIInber 9004A

Community CalendaF-rThe Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and spec ial events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales' or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

Was $12,950

I~) Far• fiSH rtrk••
SiodltUnber 7TI421A

'

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7

415 South Ottirdl Strret · Ripley. WV 1-800-822-&amp;117-372-2844
illllllllt51..., 9 a.a : 8 p.11. • Stmday 1p.m. - 8 p.m

who has not been taught to make
good decisions will not automatically be able to make them at some
magical age . Raising a drug -free
c~ild must begin with conversation.
How early? As early as preschool or
before."
Through the Department's Head
Start
prevention
initiative ,
Dreschoolers across the state are
being taught about alcohol and other
drugs, said the director.
"Although children can') at that
age understand the molecular structure of cocaine, 3- and 4-year-olds
can learn that some things are bad
for them. Can children begin to learn
about drugs this early? The best parallel is that this is the age at which
parents begin to teach children 'how
to cross the st(eet.
. "Study after ~tudy trying to pinpoint the solution for keeping children drug-free arrives at the same
answer: Children whose parents take
a stance on alcohol and other drug
use early and talk about it often are
400 percent more likely than their
peers not to use drugs. I'm not talking about a hyped up, one-lime. let's
get·it-over-with chat that leaves you
sighing with relief as you wa\k away

'414 :
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Stoc:Uunber 7Ti279A

women 's reslroO!DS have ·closed
stall s. No decent man could usc a
~rinal in front of a little girl , to say
noth ing of the trauma to the child
herself.
· In cases where they arc among
strangers, the father should ask a
femal e who works in the pl ace
(wai!rcss, sales clerk, poli cewoman.
etc.) to take the child to the ladies'
room .
As a doting auntie to a nephew.
and a' fanner little girl who was
taken everyw here by her daddy. I
can assure you· that th1 s is the stan dard operating procedure and virt ually always works. -- No Name. No
Initial, No City
· Dear N.N.N.I.N.C.: Thanks for
the input. You sound like the Voi ce

MAZDA

I! ICI!IJ C·!Ill Tl' CUI. VII

l!!i nrry I-IJIII414Pk~••

booze over a relationship with their
children, but my husband 's did . ..
Sad and Defeated in Lisle, Ill.
Dear Lisle: People do not
"choose" addiction. They become
victims. How sad that your in-law s
did not seek the help they needed
years ago. It may not be too late.
Instead of turning your backs. on
them, why not at least try once again
to get them to seek the help they
need ? (Alcoholics Anonymou s
works wonders -- and I recommend
AI-Anon for you.) It would be an act
of generosity and just might turn
them around.
Dear Ann Landers: Are )'ou
CRAZY?? Littl e girls should
NEVER use a men's room . Boys can
be taken to a ladies· room because

$8,999

Stoc:to Imber BBIIIA

'was $12,1150

t.

Friday, January 9, 1998 .

Military News Updates

.. -- -- ..
$9950 sg 950 SJO 950 · SJ0,950
' Was $11,950

Page 7

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

1!1!1) l:lryslrr LIIS

Was $~50
1!1!4 cury s-10 rtr~u,
Sallltrnber7Til!IA

.

- - - - - - - - - -.Sermonette--------;__

$7,950

Was $14,1150

...

Sal! Jtmbe&lt; 7C3I68

Sloc:k lmbtf 7C3758

COMMERCIAL CARPET

Now $

I

$5950 $7,950 $7,650 $8 950

1!1 ID Tnrkrr 414

KITCHEN CARPET

99

l!m lilt~ ltsl•rr CISIII

.

.

In Ohio, as in other states, alcoMiddleport's ·Faye Wallace was holand other dru~ use by sixth and
right there among 'em for the Sugar eighth graders continues to grow,
Fleming reports.
Bowl Game over the holiday.
She said that the drug of choice
While Faye feels bad that the
Buckeyes failed to make the win for young people in Ohio is, for the
column, she loved being in New second consecutive year, marijuana, ·
Orleans and seeing 1111 of game -rather than ·alcohol. Nationally,
action and, of course, a lot of other arrests of 13 and 14-year-olds for
mariju~na-related crimes rose 500
interesting sights.
As Faye puts it, yep, it is a small percent between 1990 and 1995 .
Fleming said that because of
world. While in New Orlean~ she
these
factors, Governor George V.
saw Danny and Carol Crow of
Voinovich
insists on the inclusion of
Pomeroy and Mike and Donna Morsuccessful
alcqhol and other drug
Big thank s are due to members of ris, former residents now living in
prevention
effons
in the Ohio Farni'
the Meigs County Retired Senior Aorida, and their daughter.
ly
and
Children
First initiative,
Faye went to New Orleans with
Volunteer Program ·for tending to
whose
overarching
goal is school
their knilling during the holiday sea- her son and daughter-in-law, Bruce
readiness.
"Part
of
readiness for
son.
and Gloria Buck Wallace, also forschool
is
readiness
for
life," she
Members of the group kniued mer Meigs residents, who, I believe,
said.
some 200 pairs of miuens for under- live in the Lancaster area these days.
"Providing your child tools to
privileged chil.dren .of the county
allow
him or her to make infonned
and although the demand for gloves
Mrs. Edna Life will be marking
decisions
begins at birth. A child
and miuens hasn't been all that great her &amp;8th birthday Friday.
so far, they 're bound to come in
Mrs. Life would love to hear
handy one day soon.
from Meigs County friends on the
It's amazing that some of the occasion, I'm sure. Her address is
women kniued more than 50 (l3irs of 39090 Success Road, Reedsville,
The Coming Judgment .
appointed ... " And Kim explained, allow Him to be Lord of our h ves.
Father. thank You for forg ivemiuens. Some, of course,' came Ohio 45772.
By Bonnie Shiveley
"Nobody will escape that judgWith Jesus as the t:entcr of their ness. Bel ie vers jn Jesus won' t h'ave
through with only a few pair. At any
I don 't believe I've ever known
ment!"
'
·
·
lives, Chuck and Kim enjoy peace of to tremble before You. I pray every'
·rate; il waso~t-great.gesture-on-1181'1· of -. anyone--wh11-- li~~s.on-Su.cess- !1-.oad~ ~~beauliflll-ear.ly-summe!Cda)b
'l--.liWI'.IIIt.aarl d~~-meanc~&amp;-~? -~m~liM--Ihei¥--loog.. s!ruggl&amp;c Tiley--- ooe--.willc:teeept Jeg~pe--thc---~ ·
l•.-~--all1;i~witbthe ialent-to-do-the- ·but-Fve-had· a ·lot of fun with the
.
in · 1992, means that we agree with God about recommend that if anyone is going coming judgment. Amen.
project. They also gave of their time road's name over the years.
Chuck and our sin and tum away from it forev - into the New Year without the Lord,
Scriptures NASB . Write Bonnie.
and that's no small consideration
.
the family pel er. We believe that Jesus is our Sav- they accept Him now. because judg- P.O. Box 95 1, Xen ia, Ohio 453&amp;5.
either during a busy time of the year.
Another holiday season has gone
headed to the ior and place our trust in Him, and ment day IS coming.
Making the mittens were Delores 3fld due to lack of time, I didn't get
veterinarian
Will, Leona Cleland, Jane Walton, a chance to view the outdoor decora·to get the
Dorothy Downie, Joan Wildman, tions at the Bill Thomas residence
dog's shots.
Dorothy Davis, Artis Wagoner, and below Wahama High School in
While .makRuth Moore. If somehow you Mason County.
ing a left turn, a truck -broad sided
helped but aren 't on my list, do let
Thomas' decorations are alwah him, slamming into Chuck's door.
me know. Your efMrts are certainly. ·in a class by themselves and I hate Soon an ambplance transported him
308 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
appreciated.,
'
that I didn't get over to see them this to the hospital.
(614) 992·6614. (800) 837·1094
season. I'm told they were beuer
Chuck applied for disability from
Saturday 9-4
A big celebration is planned for than ever. How good can you get?! work , but it was slow in coming.
Mon.-Fri.
Bills piled up while he had reconSaturday, Jan. 10, at the Racine
Sunday 1-5
9-8
I had my car washed Monday so structive surgery on his shoulder. He
American Legion Halt The occasion will mark the 75th birthday of you can blame me for the raindrops had therapy five days a week. His
Elizabeth Willford and all friends that have kept falling on your head truck was totaled and he had his
and family members are cordially ever since. However. I can live with wife, Kim , had to decide whether to
invited. The party will be from 6 to the rain beucr than I can l"ith icc ani! sell their home or lose it. The) tried
snow. Shucks. I don 't even want to to recover some of their fi nancial
g p.m.
go skiing. Do keep smiling.
losses through the other driver s
insurance company, but soon
learned that the driver of the vehicle
wa5 immune from insurance liability.
The could recover nothing. PhysMichael F. Freeman
Finkenbinder has graduated from
ical,
financial and emotional losses
' Michael F. Freeman has joined the supply management inventory
were
tremendous. ·
the United States Army under the apprentice course at Lackland Air
After
much prayer and consultaDelayed Entry Program at the U.S. Force Base in San Antonio, Texas.
tion
with
their. pastor, they decided
Army Recruiting Station in Atheqs.
Students were taught property
on
court
action.
The date kept being
The program gives young men or · accounting, customer and bench
pushed
back
for
one reason or
women the opponunity to delay stock support, mission capable
another.
For
five
long
years , they
enlistment. into the Army for up to (MICAP) procedures, equipment
.Juura
struggled.
Finally,
their
case came
one year before reporting to basic management , effective warehousing
military training.
' techniques, and procedures for oper- before,a judge and jury.
Kim said, "Going to court was a
Freeman. a student 31 Southern ating materiel handling equipment.
real
hard thing _to do, to tell our story
High School, will report to Fort He is scheduled for an assignment to
Benning in Columbus, Ga., .for basic the 56th Supply Squadron at Travis before the judge and eight jurors. We
knew we didn ' t do anything wrong.
Air Force Base, Fairfield, Calif.
training in June, 1998.
We
hoped to be compensated for the
He is the son of Peggy L. and
He is the son of Peggy Freeman.
lost
wages, the truck, our home."
Syracuse, and Mike Freeman, Fayel_- stepso n of Ronald L. Mullins·ofRutOnly
The
trial last three days. Nerves
land. He is a 1997 graduate of Meigs
leville, N.C.
8,000 miles.
qn edge, Kim trembled on the witHigh School.
Brian M. Finkenbinder
ness stand. On the last day, during
Air Force Airman Brian M.
lunch break, she reflected to her
The change in the year again
points up that, indeed, we are ere a ·
tures of habit.
How many limes thus far have
you written 1997 on a check, letter,
business paper·or whatever since the
new year began? You don't need to
count and you don' t need to tell me,
but I'm sure it has happened to a lot
of us and how long does it lake for
us to get on track? A while, me
. thinks .

$9950 SJ0,950

Was $13,950

by Bob Hoeflich

, VICes.

SJJ,950. SJJ,950- •SJ2,950 .• SJ4,65U

WINTEQCLEAQANCE ~ALE
WAS $7.99 sq. yd.

\

.. ... . ..,_ . ....
Was $13,95)

Every holiday and birthday celebration was a disaster, and after 20
years of this, we finally stopped.
We could not leave the grandchildren with them, so the kids didn'I get to know them well. (And I
had good reason not to leave my
daughter with my father-in-law.)
Ann , I know alcohol addiction is
·a disease. Both my husband's minister, the treatment program and the
local social worker said my husband
"did what he could. I tried a linle
longer and got nothing but frustration.
I never understood how anyone .
could choose not to have a relationshir wi\h his or her parents, but I do
now. What I Can't comprehend is
how parents could choose a boule of

Use of drugs by children has once
again topped the list of what surveyed Americans view as the most
serious. problem in thi s country,
according to Luceille Fleming,
director of the Ohio Department of
Alcohol . and Drug Addiction Ser-

Beat of the Bend ..

Moalr r.arle

·-·

.

Drugs use again tops list of problems

en

INGELS CARP

ARMSTRONG VINYL

of me. I was the wrong religion, the
wrong nationalit)l. and from the
Ann
wrong pan of town. Every time she
drank , which was often, I heard her
Landers
. 1997. l.ol Atltt.lu .TimClo
nasty comments .
Synch catt and C reto l t~u
Meanwhile, my father-in-Jaw
Synd1ca~ .
couldn't keep his hands off...ime.
'
When one parent sobered up, the
Dear Ann Landen': When I read other started drinking . Their names
the lener about the grown son who appeared in the paper for DUis and
no longer wanted to see his parents, "drunk and disorderly," but that did
I was sure it was wriuen by my in- not embanass them enough. to · stop
laws. My husband, too, told his par- drinking.
ents he no longer wanted a relationDuring our marriage, we were
ship with them -- i'f they continued called on to slop fights, pick them up
to drink. Consequently, he has and put them to bed, and take them
incu!Ted the wrath of. his father, his to the hospital after drunken falls or
mother. his sister and an aunt.
overmedication complicated by
When l manried my husband 25 alcoh'ol. We have been through interyears ago, his mother didn't approve ventions with them 10 no avail.

By RICHARD WHITMIRE
schools, students in urban ar"lls are schools are seeing a payoff in lndtana, Nonh Carolina, Tennessee,
Gannett. News Service
twice as likely to have a new teacher improved test scores.
Texas and West Virginia.
WASHINGTON - A grim new with only an emergency or temporary
"The slates that made significant
Texas, for example, is making
report on urban education shows license . Most urban schools have an gains between 1992 and 1996 are also progress eliminating tile test score
more than half of city fourth and especially difficulttime finding qual- the states that tended to gel good gap between minorities and nonmieighth-graders failing to meet mini- ified math and science teachers.
grades from us in terms of stale edu- norities.
.
mum . national standards in math,
• Urban teachers continue to face calion policy," said Lynn Olson, speHowever, no state has _solved all
Teading and science.
.
serious discipline problems, with cia( projects ~ditor for Educatjon the pieces of the education puzzle, the
The repon from Education Week half reporting thill physical conflicts Week.
editors said in a telephone interview.
comes as both the White Hovse and among students are a serious or
The publication issued a similar
One state, New lersey, was awardCongress are poised to push In ilia- moderate problem. That compares report on standards last year, which ed an " !'(' for its math standards; only
tives aimed at urban education, with with about 30 percent for nonurban awarded states letter grades for mak- one state, Illinois, earned that grade
the White House proposing new con- teachers.
ing progress -in raising standards.
for its English/language arts stanstruction money and higher stan- G The news in the Education Week
The seven states cited for making dards.
dards, and congressiomil Republicans report is not all bad, States devoting 1he most gains between 1992 and
pushing voucher programs.
the most resources to reforming I 996 are Colorado, Connecticut,
Despite isolated success stories,
most of the II million children in
urbnn·-sehools are not doing well,
according to the study of America's
75 largest city school districts.
"Despite all their effons and some
of their successes, urban schools arc
fighting a war they cannot win ," said
Education Week Publisher Ronald
Walk.
Witliout major help from the fed eral government, state legislatures
~
and the public, urban schools stand
lillie chance of recovering, he said.
The challenges urban schools face
include:
• Only 43 percent of the fourthWas $9,950
'I was ss,9so
Was$7,950
' Was$9,950
grade~!&gt; score at the " basic" level or
l!l!lli 1'11r• Asflre
1'-14 Meil'l
above on reading in the federal
' Sloc:Uunber 7T1~38
National Assessment of Educational
Progress. In math, only 42 percent of
eight-graders meet the basic level and
only 38 percent meet the basic level
m sc1ence.
• America's poverty continues to
concentrate in urban areas: in many
., Was$11,1150
., Wll $1t,1150
cities the child poverty rate doubled
Was $12,950
between 1970 and 1990.
1!1 Uny
• Compared with nonurban
. Slocllltrnber 815&amp;\

... -- ....
$3950 $4,950 sz950
..
..

•

.Coup,e's~ drinking· ruins relationship with son and.wife

Quin Denvir have defended their
decision to present a mental tllness
dcf~nse, insisting they have an ethi· cal obligatiorr 10 put forward the best
defense possible 'for a man facing
potential execution.
They have said thai Kaczynski is
a "high-functioning" paranoid schizophrenic who has been mentally ill
most of his life. Clarke said his very
reaction to being labeled a madman
proves the point.
To be competent, a defendant
must show an understanding of the
charges and the capabi lily to assist in
the defense.
The apparent suicide auempt and
Kaczynski's refusal to accept what
may be his best defense wi II be issues
in his competency examination, psychologist Paul Maniuizzi said.
But neither necessarily shows that
Kaczynski is incompetent, said Mattiuini , who does competency tests
for courts in the Sacramento area.
"It may well be that being taken
.. seriously and having his day in court
are more .important to him thim life
itself," he said. "And that may be
rational ."
Added Lauric Levenson, associate
dean of Loyola University Law
School and a former federal prosecutor: "You can be extremely troubled but not incompetent .. . Whether
he's found competent or not may
depend on what kind of mood he's'in
when he's examined."

Deputy says he fired
.:
·
first at Cheyne Kehoe f Report fmds urban schools lag on standards

The ,D.aily "Sentinel

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, DAR, Saturday, 10
a.m. Pomeroy library for the purpose of filling out annual reports.
Officers and commiuee members
urged to auend. Next regular meeting, F~b. 1_4.
PORUAND - Lebanon Township Trustees, special meeting, Saturday, 5 p.m. at the township buildmg.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Disabled
American Veterans located on State
Route 7 below Middleport will meet
Monday. Dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. with a meeting to follow at
7 p.m.
·
POMEROY - . Big Bend Farm
Antique Club meeting, Monday, at
7:30p.m. at Meigs. High School.
RACINE - Student financial aid
workshop Monday, 7 p.m. in the
Southern High School cafeteria~'Jim
Wayn,e of Stinner &amp; Associates,
Portsmouth, will be available to help
colnplete FAFSA form'' For more
infonnation, call Shirley Sayre at
949-2()11. The workshop is sponsored by Home National Bank and
the SHS Guidance Office.

"You know, this is a teiTible thing
to go through . If it's this scary to gel
on the witness Stand and give your
testimony before this judge and a
jury of your peers, l j•st ~annat
understand what il would be like lO
stand before God and give your testimony to Him. And God knows
everything we've done - right or
wrong." Later that day they lost the
case. According to Ohio law, the driver was immune from all charges.
The ju\lgment of the traffic accident made a strong impression on
Kim. The Bible slates in Hebrews
10:30-31, "'TiiE · LORD WILL
JUDGE HIS PEOPLE. ' h is a terrifying thing to fall into the hands of
the living God." (Emphasis mine.)
Acts 17:30-31 warns us," ... God
is now declaring to men that all
everywhere should repent, because
He has fixed a day in which He will
judge the world in righteousness
through-' a Man whom He has

USED CARS

1995 OlDS ACHIEVA ................................................... ONlY $6,999
19;6 CHEVROLET BERETTA ..........................................
ONLY $9,499
..
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1994 OlDS CUTLASS SUPREME .................................~ ... ONLY $6,800
1994 CHEVROlET CAMARO ......................................... ONLY $8,999
1t92 FORD TEMPO only 45,000 miles~ ••• ~ ............................ $4,700
1996 GEO METRO #3973A ............................~ ............ ONLY $5,495
1994 CHEVROlET CORSICJ. .................................~........ ONLY $5,400
1995 FORD MUSTANG·only 14,000 miles .................. ONlY $11,995

Bankruptcy does not mean that
you can never again finance a
new vehicle. Call me for details
on how you can drive a nice car
now. Ask for Mr. Barcus

'TIMo,Toft,lllt_t,... l'ltOttllood.ton.y .. ,....._.,tiii. Nol-lo&lt;~. --

•
•

�'•

• Pag~

Friday, January

8 • The pally Sentinel

Pomeroy

~

-Frld,_y, January

Middleport, Ohio

,.

9,

Pomeroy • ..,iddleport, Ohio

· The Dally .Sentinel
'

9,

005

io Page 9
'

Personals

SOAP OPERA UPOATES NOWIII

I'

845-8&lt;:14.
'

'

St1rt dating tonighl l Have fun,

? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Worship · IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday services · 7 p.m.

A;:Jostolic
Chor&lt;h or Jesus Christ Apoototlc·
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor: James Miller

.

Scnool . 10:30 a.m.
.,
. 7:30
'

I '

1:

Assembly of God
P.O. Box

~46:;7~,;~~~~i~~

"

Mason, W.Va.

, Pastor: Ne il Tennant
Sunday Strviccs- 10:00 a.ll). and 1 p.m.
Thursday Prayer Meeting - 7 p.m..

Harrisonville Road {)
Pastor: Rev. Viet of Roush

Middleport Chur&lt;h or Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Harlson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship · It a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.
Rose of Sh1ron Hoi laesa Chun:h

Worship- 8:1.5, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.

Leading Creek Rd., Rutland

Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Dewey King

Sunday school· 9:30a.m.

Keno Church or Christ
Wot&gt;hip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Sunday worship -1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 1 p.m.

Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
.Is! and 3rd Sunday

· Pine Grove Bible Holiness Cnun:h
112 mile off Rl.325 ·
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley

Bearwatlow Ridge Chur&lt;h of Chrlsl

Baptist

Paslor : Te~ry

Hope Baptist Chur&lt;h (Southern)
Pastor: Rlduqd Oliver

570 Grant k Middleport
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worship · ·II a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scl'\lice - 7 p.m.

Free Will Baptist Church
Ash Street, Middleport
Pastor: les Hayman
Sunday Service -7:00p.m.
Sunday Scnool · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service -7:00p.m.
Rutland First Baplist Chun:h

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy first Bapti&amp;t
East Main St.

Sunday Scnool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

Stewart

Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
We't1nesday Services · 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Chun:h
75 Pearl St., Middlepo~ .

Zion Church or Christ

Pastor: Rev: John Neville
Children's service -10 a.m.

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.143)
Pastor: Roger Watson

Worship. 7:30p.m.

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wmsnip · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicc.s · 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Sunday Scnool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plain Churth or Christ
Instrumental

Pastor: Scot Brown
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Comm un ion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youlh· 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Launl ClifT fne Melhndlsl Church
Pastor: David DeWiu

Sunday Scnool - 9:30a.m.
Wor5hip · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Setvice ·7:00p.m.
RuUead Community Church
• Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty·
Sunday Scnool - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Bradbury Chur&lt;h ~r Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon

First S'outhem Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Wor.;nip . 10:45 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Rutland C~urch or Christ
· Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Wednesday Services ·7:00p.m.

Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Finit Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6t h and Palme r St., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship : 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
, Wednesday Service- 1:00 p.m.

Co rn er of Sr. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Ministtr: Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger

Racine First Baptist
Sunday Scnool - 9:30a.m . '
Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Little ,

Sunday School · IOa.m.
Woronip . II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorgaolzed Church or Juus Christ
or Lauer Doy Saints
Portland-Racine Rd.

Bradford Church of Christ

Pas1or: Jerry Singer

Sunday Scnool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedntsday Services - 7:00p.m.

Hickory Hills Chur&lt;h or Christ
Evangelist Joseph B. Hoskins
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m. , 1 p.m.
Wednesday Scf\licc:s · 7 p.m.

·

Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servius - 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baptist Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 124, Racint, OH
Pastor : Daniel Berdine

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worsnip · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study -6:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. R1. 7, Middleport
Sunday Scbool · 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services- 7:30

KHilllltlllpllsi'Chun:lr
S1. Rt. 143 just off R1. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m .
Worship - ll a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

VIctory Baptist lndependonl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Wollinip . IOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sef\lices - 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
R~t.ilroad

St., Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Wmsnip - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen.·ices - 7 p.m

' The thurch or Jesus
Christ or Latter-Do; Salnb
St. Rt 160,446-6247 or 4-46-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20·11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11 :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Servict 9-10: 15 a.m.
Homemaking meeting, lsi Thw-s. - 7 p.m.

Dexter

Lutheran

Pastor: Woody Clll

St. John Luc•enn Chur&lt;h
Pine Grove
Rev. Georg'e Weirick

Worohip · 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

.Langsville Christian Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m.

Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
Hemlock Grove Church
Pastor: Gene Zopp

Sunday scnool - 10:30 a.m.
Wor.;hip - 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Reedsville Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm

Pastor : Ariu s Hurt
Sunday Schoo l - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

MI. Moriah Baplisl
founn &amp; Main S1., Middlepo~
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday Scnool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a. m.

Our S1Yiour Luthen10 ChurCh
Walnut and Henry Sts., Raven~wood. w_.va.
lntrim pastors: Rev. Rober1 Hupp
Sunday School · 10:00 a. m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

St. Pout Lutheran Church
Corner Sycamore &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. George Weirick

Sunday School.- 9:45a.m.

Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.

Worship- 11 a.m.

Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

United Methodist
Gl'lhanr Viill!d"llfelliodnfwo"hip - 9:30a .m. (lSI A 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Setvice . 7:30p.m.

...C:,Ii.,trm,.t.C'hnn-h of Christ In

Christlon Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes

MI. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worsnip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

Sunday School · II a.m.
. WotSnip . 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
- Wednesday Services · 1:30 p.m.

Church of God
Mt Moriah Church or God

Meigs Cooperitlfe Polish
Northeasl Cluster
Alfred

Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Sa!terfi eld

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.'

Paslor: Sharon Hausman

Eveni ng -?·p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wo~Ship · II a. m., 6:30p.m.
Chnler

Pastor: Randy Barr
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Worship- 9 a.m.

Worship· II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Setvices - 7 p.m.

Syracuse First Gburch of God

Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolpn
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Apple and Second SIS.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.

Evening Services-6:30p.m.

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Scnool · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evening- 6:00p.m .

Rulland fne Will Bapllst
Salem St.
' Pastor: Rev. Paul Tay lor

Sunday Scnool - 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Lung Bottom
Sunday. School - 9:30a.m.
Wonnip- 10:30 a.m.

Church or God of ProphOJ:y
OJ. While Rd . off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday Scnool - 10 a.m.

Reedsville
Worohip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:.30 p.m.

Worship - ll a.m.
Wednesday Services -.7 p.m.

Congregational

First Sunday of Month - 7:30p.m. service

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Trinity Church

Tuppen Plains St. Paul

Cathol ic

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and Worship 10:25

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

. S1cffil llurt Catholic Church

·161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Pa.liitor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz
Sat Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass- 5:30p.m,
Sun. Con. -8:45-9: 15 a.m.,
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass-8:30a.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Tuesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Episcopal

Centnl Clusler
Asbury (Sy1'11&lt;11H)

Grace Episcopal Chur&lt;h
326 E. Milin St., Pomeroy

Pastor: Chad Emrick

Sunday School ·9:45a.m.

Rector: Rev. D. A. duPlantier
Holy Eu~harist and

Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Sunday Scnool10:30 a.m.

Church of Christ
Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Main St.
Pastor: Neil Proudfoot
Sundav School - 9:30 a.m.
Worshi-p· 10:30 a.rn., 7 p. m~.

Wednesday SetviCes · 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Church ofChrisl

33226 Children's Home Rd.

, Weilnesdoy Services· ?•p.m.

. Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Vemagaye Sullivan
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo"hip - 1.0:30 a.m.
Mlaer~vllle

Peart Chapel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wo,hip · 10 a.m.

Christlln Fellowlhlp Center
Salem St., Rutland
PaSior: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School'· 10 a:m.
Worship· 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Robert E. Robinson·
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.

·Hobooa ChrisUan Fellowohlp Church
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
wedn··•
· "rvtce,
' 7:00 p.m.
~Y

Rock SPri np
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 9:IS a.m. ·
.
Worship · 10 a.m.
·
Youln Fellowsntp, Sunday· 6p.m.
Rutland
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wors h.IP · 10:30 am
. .
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Coffee hour following

Enlerprise
Pastor: Keith Rader

Holiness

Sund•y Scnooi - 10 a.m.
Wmship . 9 a.m.

Danville Holiness Church
31057 State Route 32.S,langsvlle
Pastor: Dr. J.D. Young

F111h&lt;oods
Paslor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
WotShip- II a.!".

Sunday school ·9:30a.m
Sunda y worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service - 1 p.m.

Sunday School · II a. m.

Forest Run
Paslor: Chad Emrick

Church or Jesus Christ,
Aposlollc Faith
1/4 mile past Fon Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William va·n Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday· 7:00p.m.
Frida¥·7:00p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Worship -9:30 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Friday • fellowsntp service 7 p.m.
The Bdlrven' Fellowahl~ Mlnlslry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Margaret J. RObinson

10:15 a.m.

Snowdle

Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m..

Sunday Scltool· 10 a.m .
Worship- 9 a.m.

Sunday, 2:30p.m.
Horrtsoavllle Community Chur&lt;h

New Ufe Victory Center
3173 Ot:orges Creek Road, Gallipolis, OH
·
Pastor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services- 10 a. m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Y~uln 7 p.m .

Pentecostal
Pentecoslal Assembly
St. Rt 124, Racine

Pastor: Theron Durham

Bethany

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m. .
~ednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Oewayne Stutler

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship -"9 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

EndUme House of Prayer
(at Burlingham church off Route 33)

"' Cannel
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4tn,Sun)
MomlngSIIr
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School · II a.m.
wo.,hip . 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rober1 Vance

Middleport Penlecoslll

Sunday wo.,hip- 10 a.m.
Wednesday servia -6:30p.m.

Third Ave.

Pastor: Rev . Clark Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.

Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl St., Middleport

Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

Pastor: Sam Anderson

Sunday ScnooiiO a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
.Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sutlon
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship. - 10:45 a.m. (1st &amp; 3rd Sun)
Pastor: Brian Harkness

Follh Valley Tobenacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor : Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service. 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
wo ..hip - 9 a.m.
Wedne"'ay · 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Syracu1e Firsl United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
.Worship - It a.m.

. Harrisonville Presbyterian Church

Syncuse Mlulon
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracust
Sunday School · 10 a.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.

Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Middleport Freabyterion
Sund1y School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

H1ul Community Chorcb
Off Rt. 124

Cool•llle United Melllodlst Parish

Pastor: Edsel Hart

Pastor: Helen K.Jine

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Cool•llle Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se"olh·Doy Advenllsl
Mulberry HIS. Rd., Pomeroy

Dyesvllle Community Cbun:b
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worsnip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C
Sunday Scnool - 9 a.m.
wo .. hip' · 10 a.m.
W.dncsday Setldccs ...to.a.m,_ _

Pastor. Roy L..awinsky •
Saturday Services:

Sabbath Scnool - 2 p.m.
Worship · 3 p.m.

Mone Chapel Chun:h
Sunday school · to a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
_~ Wednesday ~rvj~::..7,~.1!L .

Hocldngport Chur&lt;h

- · Un1 t ed Brethren

Folth Gotpd Chur&lt;h
Lana Bottom
Sunday Scliool -9:30a.m.
wo ..hip. 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Grand S1reet

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship . II 0.01.
Wednesday Services · 8 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd.63
Sunday Scnool- 9:30a.m.
w 0.,hip . 10:30 a.m.

ML Hennon United Brethren
Ia Christ Church
Texas Community off CR 82
Pa&amp;tor. Robert Sanders
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m .

ML Olive Commualty Chur&lt;h
PastOr: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service· 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church or the Naunne
Pastor: Gregory A. Cu11diff
Sunday School · 9:30 a.tn.
wo ..hip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
~rvices

R~oldng Ule Church
SilO N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wms hip- 10:30 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Filth Full Gotpet Chur&lt;h
umg Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School -9:30a.m.

Salem Center
PaSior: Ron Fierce
Sunday School-9:15a.m.

Wednesday

Stlvcnvllle Word or Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday Scnool9:30 a. m.
Evening . 7 p.m.

Fotth Cblpd Open Bible C..,n:b
923 S. Third ,St., Middleport
Pastor Michael Pangio
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Thursday sendee, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Chad Emrick
Sunday School · 9 a.m .
Worship - 10 a.m.

Worship ~

Colval')' Blbie Church "
Porileroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev ..Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worohip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sc~ice -'7:30p.m. '

Appe Ure Cnter
'FUll-Gospel Church'
Pastors John A Patty Wade
603 Scccnd Ave. M""'n
773·5017
Service time: Sundoy 6:00p.m.

East Lellrt

Uberty Christioq Church

Rutland Chun:h of God

Forest Run Bapllst

Sunday Scnool - 9:30a.m.
W01ship · 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Sunday Even ing : 6:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 6:30p.m.

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

·

C1l•ory Pilarim Chapd

Sunday Sch'l"l· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
1'11ursday Services· 6:30p.m.

· 7 p.m._

United F1lth Chlll'&lt;h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Raben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service. 7 p.m.

Eden Untied Bnthreo In Christ
2 1/2 miles north of Reedsville
on Stale Route 124

Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School · II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service· 7:30p.m.

Ful Gotpel Uplhouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday f&lt; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

Reedsville Fellowship •
Church or lhe Nuenne
Pastor: Mark A. Dupler
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo1Ship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servtces · 7 p.m.

play Ohio's datltlq game, 1-800~~~CE , OXItnllOn 74(1.1 .•

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Sand-

Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm ,Jr.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worsnip. 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday SerVices- 7 p.m.

Chnler Churi:h or.tile Ntrunne
PastOr: Rev. Herbert Grate
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Rutland Chun:h or the Nozam~e

upon a Judgment therein
rendered , bel ng Caae No.

97·CY·121 In said Court, I
will offer for sale at the front

door of lhe Courthouse In
Pomeroy, Molgo county,
Ohio, on the 6th day of
February, 1998, at 10:00
a.m., the following Ianda,

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wmship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Portl1nd Fint Church of••he Nazartne ·
Pastor: Mark MaiSOn

Worsnip · 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School · 6 p.m.

. ...J.,-'-""""1

Public Notice
land bounded and deacrlbed
as follows: On the Norih by
State Route No. 338, on the
East by lhe lands of Carl
and Dolly Wolle and George
Hayman, on the South by
township ditch, and on the
West by the county Rood
running form the Ohio River
to EllJI Letart, conveyed by
Hiram Jonas Wolle lo Corl
Wolle by deed doled August
24, 1949, and recorded In
Book 164, ,at Page 156 of
said Deed Records.
Relaranca Dead: Volume
19, Page 203, Melga County
Official Records.
The, above described real
estate Ia Identified In the
Office of the Malga county
Auditor •• Parcel Noe. 98·
00719.000 and 08·00720.000.
Also a 1988 Clayton
mobile home, I.D. 143362,
Ohio Certificate of Title
15300041830.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
49277 SR 338, Racine, OH
45771
REAL ESTATE APPRAIS·
EO AT: $20,000.00. The reel
oatato connol bo oold lor
less than two-lhlrds of the
appraised value.
TERMS SALE: Cash on
delivery Ql dead. Sold
subject to accrued real
estate !axes and mobile
home taxes.
James M. Soulsby
(1) 2, 9, 16 31c
Public Notice
SHERIFF 'S SALE,
REAL ESTATE
CASE NO. 97-CV-073
PACIFIC CENTRAL
MORTGAGE, INC.
Plaintiff
vs
EMORY L. O'BRYANt, el ol
Dalendanla
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
In pursuance of an
QRD.ER.-- SAL.E,.. t&lt;k _ b10
· dlrectd from said Court In ·
tha above-entitled acll'on, I
wilt expoaa to solo ot public
auction the .111• Court Houoe
(Basement) on Fridey, Fob.
6, 1998 al 10:00 A.M. oluld
day, the following described
real estate:
Situated In Section 16,
Town 2, Range 13, Sollobury
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio and being mora
particularly described as
follows, to wit:·
Commencing at the
northeast corner of lhe
northweot quarter of lhe
northeast quarter of aald
Section 16; thence by de~d ,
West 935 loot; thence S. s•
45' .E. 300 feet; thence Weal
421oot to a ml~o rail found:

GttYour
.
.
With AD,~ll~;, S&lt;,,fntllitl

..•.

BULLETIN.BOARD'
·.
5700 cQiumn Inch weekd~:~.ys .
1
9oo column inch Sunday
.

-~

·"

CAll OUR OfFICE ~l

15$ .

Racine American Legion
Post 602 will have a Steak
Dinner with trimmings
Sunday, Jan. 11 at the post
starting at 11 · ?.
Cost $5.00 . Public invited.

'

Filrvlew Bible Chur&lt;h
Letart, W.Va. Rt. I

NEW RIVER BAND
Appearing Friday 8:00-t 2:00

Pastor: John Hart

Wednesday ServiCfS · 7 p.m.

mobile

home, located at 49277 SR
338, Racine, OH 45771 . A
complele legal deocrlptlon
or the real oatate 11 11
follows :
The following real estate
situated In the Township of
Letart, County of Meigs, and
Slale of Ohio, ond being 1
part of Lol No. 235, In Town
No. 1, In Range No. 12 of the
Ohio Company'e Purchooe,
commencing in the County
Road running from Letart to
Apple Grove, at o stone In
lhe Northeast corner ol the
properly of Hiram J. Wolle
and Mary A. Wolle, thence
South along George
Hayman's Wesl line and
Hiram J , Wolle and Mary A.
Wolle, thence South along
George Hayman's Weal tine
and Hiram J .. Wolle and
Mary A. Wolle's East tine a
distance of 120 feet to •
stake; thence West 60 feet
to a stoke, thence Nort!l 120
, feet to a stake In the North
c; . line of Hiram J. Wolle and
Mary A. Wolle's land at the
county Road leading from
Lotarl to Apple Grove,
thence east along the South
side of tho County Road
loading from Lelert to Apple
Grove 60 feat to a atone tho
place of beginning,
containing 0.16 acre,
conveyed to Hiram J. Wolle
and Mary A.. Wo!Je to Homer
L. Pickens end June
Plckone by deed dated
March 7, 1923, and recorded
In Book 124, at Page 618 of
the Deed Recorda of Meigs
County, Ohio, and the!ealter
conveyed by Homer L.
Picken• and June Picken a,
his wile, to Carl Wolla and
Colly Wolle, by deed doted
June 28, 1926, and recorded
In Book 128, at Page 598 of
sold Deed Records.
The following described
real estate eltuated In the
Township or Lelart, In the
County of Meigs and State
ol Ohio, being a part of Lot
No. 235 In Town 1, Range
No. 12 of the Ohio
Company's Purchase, and
being about 1·1/2 acres of

White's Cbo}iet Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Samuel 8a.5ye

Other Churches

Sunday Scnool - 9:30a.m.
Woronip- 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study -7:00p.m. ,

H11'\'est Outreoch Mlnlslries
47439 Reibel Rd., Chesler

POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

Flllh Fdlowshlp CruSide for Chrill

Members and Guest Invited

Pastor: Rev. Mary McDaniel
Sunday Services: 10 a:m. &amp; 6 p.m.

Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Frar\klin Dickens

SIGN UP NOW FOR
CLASSES
*Quilt Classes
*Beginner Sewing Jumper
*Piacemat
*Table Runner
Call for Details

oavi..Oulckel Agency Inc.
INSURANCE

.L =.-::::::
IIIJ! -

GENCIES Inc.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
Briggs

992-2284

THE FABRIC SHOP

8r Stratton

Master Service TeGhnlclan
KEROSENE HEATER REPAIR

St.

Rt. 248, Chester, Oh.

I

~ -1--~--~M~~~2~~~-----~~~~~~:::3:3:08:_____~~99~2~-29~5~5______._P~o~m~e~ro~y~--------------------~~~~~~!~~~•hSp«wlc.~·

J-----BIII_a_u_l_ck_e_I_992
____77
__
TIME FOR SPRING
CLEANING?

Clean out your basement or
enlc with the help of the
CLASSIFif:~ SECTION!

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

~it~tr ~ uneral ~01111 ~nc.
2M Soulh Stconct A...ue

Mlddltport, OH 015780

in a hurry... TRY

St~-$141

Bruce A. Fl- • D t 510 Eat Mlln SlrHI
Pornoroy, OH 4571t
Jomn R.·~~Jr••

R!fiL nMI!
SAVI!RJ;.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignity and Seniice Always•
Established 1913

992·2121

SNOUFFER
FIRE

&amp; SAFETY

.&amp; SERVICE
992·7075

SALES

'.•'

614·992-7643

O ' Delllumber Night

University of Rio Grande
vs. Cedarville
Sat.,Jan . 24, 1998
Game time 7:30 p.m.
Free Tickets

Public Notice
!hence s. 18° 40; E. 213.44
loot lo • mine roll found at
the polnl of beginning of the
tract herein described;
thence continuing S. 18" 40'
E. 309.44 feel to an Iron pin
sat (paa1lng a mine rail
found at 213.85 feat) lhenco
s. 63° w. 304.65 feet to an
Iron pin ael In the center of
the public road; thence
along tho U.S . Route 53
rlghl·ol·way N. so• 53; 45"
W. 320.99 feet to an Iron pin
HI; thence N. 61° 21' 28" W.
234.02 feet to the point ot
beginning containing 1.8658

Public Notice
Jan. 1,1997 ......... $8,135.13
Fund Balance Alter
Adluatmente ........ $8,135.13
Fund Caoh Balance,
Oec. 31, 1997 ..... $23,700.77
SPECIAL REVENUE
REVENUE REifEIPTS '
Taxes ..................... 15,602.65
Licenses, Pormltt and
Fees .......................... 100.00
Intergovernmentol
Receipts .............. 67,487.79
lntereat .................... 1,841.43
Other Ravenue ...... S7,985.50
TOTAL REVENUE
RECEIPTS
•• •• n•
EXPEND.

Llcenaes, Permits

and Foea .... ......... ... ... 100.00
Public Notice
tntorgovernmentel
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
Recelpll .............. 98,592.76
HEARING ON THE
lnlerost... .................. 2,811 :12
TAX BUDGET
Other Rovenue ...... 57 ,985.50
•·
TOTAL REVENUE
Two copies of the tax
RECEIPTS ....... $181 ,398.89
budget for tho Southern EXPENDITURE DISBURSE.
Local School Ol'atrlcl of General
Govarnmen 1........ 22 ,815 .88
Racine, In Meigs County,
Ohio, are on llleln I he oIll co
1y
5 547 56
of the Treasurer, Dennie E. Public Safe ........... '
·
Hill of said district.
Pubic Works .......... 77,783.54
Hoalth ...................... 6,274.89
These are Ior pu bll c capna
" 10 ut1ay....... 68·,322.51
lnspecllon; a pu bllc h e~rIng TOTAL EXPENDITURE
'
on sold budget will be held
DISBURSE
$180 744 38
it the soulhern Local
.......
'
·
School Dlltrlct, Board of .Total Recelpte Over(Under)
·~~~l~~~[1~~e:;
$654.51
Education o Ill ce on Ih e;
an4......
Otbat
_
-.,rJanuiiry26; f998·8f
Sources Over (Under)
o'clock p.m.
Dlsburoaments and Other •
Dennie E. Hill ·
Treasurer Uses ............. ............. $654 ·51
Fund Cash Balance,
(1) 9, 16,23 3tc
Jan. I, 1997 ..... $100,522.39
Fund Balance After
Adjustmants .... $100.522.89
Put;llc Notice
Fund Caah Balance,
Doc. 31, 1997 ... $101,176.90
COMBINED STATEMENT
(1) 91tc
OF RECEIPTS,
DISBURSEMENTS, AND
CHANGES IN BALANCES
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYPE AND SIMILAR
FIDUCIARY FUNDS
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
ENDING
DECEMBER 31, 1997
LEBANON TOWNSHIPS,
MEIGS COUNTY
Governmental Fund Types
GENERAL FUND
REVENUE RECEIPTS
Taxes ................... ,... 6,306.86
Intergovernmental
Recelpto .............. 31,104.97
lntereot ....................... 969.69
In Me!JIOry
TOT. REVENUE
RECEIPTS ........ $38,831 .52
EXPENDITURE DISBURS.
In Loving
General
Government ....... 22,815.88
Memory Of
TOTALEXP.
DISBURSE ......... $22,815.88
Total Receipts Over(Under)
Dloburae ........... $15,565.64
Tolal of Rec. and Otlter
Sources Over (Under)
Disbursements and Other
1-9-97
Ulll ........ ,............$15,565.64
Fund Cash Balance
Sadly missed by

CARROL
NEIGLER

30

family and

Announcements

BINGO
MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST_

$1,050.00
$50.00 OR MORE ·
l'ER GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

RUTLAND
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD

GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Factory Choke Only

H.
WAGNER
Jan. 9, 1921·
Jan. 7, 1978

CHARLES

The lord called
you home .20 years
ago when we were
all so young. We
think about you
every day and all the
things we never got
to share as a family.
You never got to be
with us when we
started our own
families or had a
c,hance to know
your grandchildren:
We have only
loving memories of
the short time we
shared together and
we share those with
the grilndchlldren.
We love and miss
you very much.
Your children:
Jackie, Rollin I
and
Allee

~

Rottweiler. 304-675-1696.

Female. Call Before

2 yr . old, lull blooded, female

' 3 Month Old Female Pan L.. b
Pan Doberman Good Wi lh Children, 614-446-3523.
8 Weeks Old Mixed Beagle Puppies , 614-379 ·9455 or 614-446·
7300

Joe Wilson

(614) 992-4277

Black male Puppy AbOut 3 Month
Old, To Good Warm Home. 614·

441Hl517

Free- Mixed pups. Please give
usa home. ::1)4-67S.S466.
Lahsa Apso Mixed To Giveaway,

Spade, All Shots, Appro&gt;. 15 Pds.
9 t.lonfls Old. 61H46..J7t4.

Nine mon th old labrador, black
and wh ite, sho,s, dogholJS&amp;. !o
country home with chi ldren: 61'4 ·
146-2140.

614-992-5344

"BILFPRICE
USED !IRE
SALE"
Cash

Pup~)¥,

8 P.M. 6t4-441H18e4.

Pine Grove Rd.,
Racine, OH

Puppies. 6wks old. par! German
Shephard. 304-882-2558.
.
Puppies, mother part Shephard!
Chow, lather Pug, 6wks old. Call
belween 9-4 304-675-2647.

&amp; Carry

MO*Jing MuSI Giveaway : We
Need A. Good Home 112 lab, 112
Chow Dogs, 1 MuiU -Color Female,

Dealers Welcome!

1 Red Male, 1 112 Years Old, 614·

SNOW

REMOVAL
Driveways,

60

Chapter 7

Call To Identify, 614·388-8293.

Chapter

Call Anytime

For Information Regarding
Bankr).lptcy contact:

Home

William Safranek,

614-992·3141

Attorney At

Cell Phone ·

614-592·5025

591·1897

245--5323

BANKRUPTCY

Parking Lots, etc.

13

lost and Found

Found : 1 Dog ShOcking Cotta r,
Found: Coon Oog While &amp; Brown
Yellow Col la r. With Ta(ls. No
N3me On Cora Mill Road Vicinity,

614·379-9042.

Found : friendly, fluffy, mo stly
gray, female cat. Stalthouse

Road ~roo. 304-675-3862.

Law
Athens, Ohio

Found: Male •Boxer. Circle Drive.
Can Be Recla ime d A! An1mal
Shelll!r.

Found : set of car keys , tOwer
parking lot in Pomeroy, call to 10.

SAYRE

CELLULAR PHONES

TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

360~ Communic~tions

"
JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
•

....

Reasonable Rares

113 W. 2ND ST.

Joe N. Sayre

n.e.

(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

Sandblasting
Antique Tractors, Cars
-._.&amp;.Etc. -

WICKS
--H·AUliNG

32337 Bailey Run Ad
Pomeroy, Ohio·45769
(614) 992-7546

Roger Coates

SUPERIOR AU'O BODY
STATE ROUTE 681
DARWIN, OH
(located behind Whaley's Used Cars)
We understand the Investment In an automobile
today and our qualified staff, all ASE certified, will
restore your auto to the pre-accident condition.
Our main objective Is to give to tbe customer the
highest quality of repair .work possible with . a
guarantee.
Guarantee Color Match

C. All Types Insurance Claims
Give Us A Call At

992-1359

Owner &amp; Operator, John Davis

Mabile Home Furnaces
and Beat Pumps.

r:::¢"''=-

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

985-4473

il'

Furnaces $28

00

00

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
land Clearing &amp;
· Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates
t2118/lfn

FREE
Pick up discarded
appliances, batteries,
many melals &amp;
motor blocks.
614-992·4025 8 am-8 m

a month

Heat Pumps Installed •38

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

(614) 992-3838

- Easy Bank Financing -

a month

Free Estimates
WV01021

MOBILE HOME
HEliNG I COOLING
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
HID0-872·5967
139 f

Herb Corner

Pat's
located at Dan's
290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, OH

614446-9416
OH

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK ·

Pat Arnold
Distributor
VItamins, Herbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss
Products 1111 m 1110

SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE
•Room Additions
· New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ANNOUNCEMENTS

. 005 ·

985·4422
Chester, Q,lio
I0/25/96Mn

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
AU. Vard Sal.. Muel
Be Paid In Advane».

PUQUNE: 2:00p.m.
lha doy bttoro lntld
" It to

run. Sund1y

ldillon. 2:00p.m.
Frldoy. Mondoy ldillon
· 10:00 o.m. Solunlay.
Pomeroy,

• &amp; Vlcln"y
All Yard Salta Musl Bo Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad li to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition1:00pm Friday.

80

Persona Is
LOOKING
FOR

ROMANCE?
1-900·269· 1245 Ext 97B9 $2.99
!Min. Must Be 18Yra.

SPORTS TRI~IA
SCORES/SPREADS &amp; MOREl!!
1·90M63-5900' elll.7021 . ngg,
min. Mu8t be 18yra. Serv..lJ 619845-84:14.

c

Auction
and Flea Market

Ohio Valley Ban~ Will Oller For
Sale A 1996 Sea -Ooo Jet Ski
And
Trailer,
Se,ial

ROBERT BISSELL
CONsTRUCTION

A. Free Computer Estimates

.B.

70

~Middleport

992-5042

NOW OPEN

lost bur year old Persian, y ell~.
Meigs Jr. High vicinity, 614 -992·
5602.

ELIM HOME

614·992·3470

Owner Operator

1525.

Under New
Managmnenl

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Gravel, Sand,

Free Estimates

lost: Female Wh ite, Med. Size;
long Haired Dog, lost Near Raccoon Creek Bridge, 614 ·256·

l/27fTFN

Middleport
Private Care for
Elderly &amp;
Handicapped
Daily or Contract

Limestone,

614·992-2155.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

614-71)2-2138

friends.
In loving Memory
Of

M&amp;J

L&amp;L TIRE BARN

lie: res .

Prior lnelrument Rofarence: Volume 300, Page 323
Current Owner'a Names:
EMORY L. O'BRVANT and
JOYCE L O'BRYANT
~..,ll!fiS'UR~E ....... $157,928.50
Property Addrese: 34753 Total Recelptl Over(Undor)
Oleburoe........... $·14,911.13
ROCK SPRINGS ROAD,
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
Total of Roc. and Other
APPRAISED AT:
Sources Over (Under)
TERMS OF SALE: 100% Dlaburaamonts ond Other
down on day of aole, caoh Usal .................... $-14,911.13
or certified check.
Fund Cooh Balance,
COHEN, GREGG &amp; LAURITO
Jon. t, 1997 .......$92,387.26
JEFFREY V. LAURITO
Fund Balance Alter
Adjuatments ...... $92,387.26
·Attorney for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 1288 Mid City Fund Cash Balance,
Station
Dec. 31, 1997 ..... $77,476.13
Dayton, Ohio 45402
TOTAL
513/223·4332
(MEMO ONLY)
Supreme Ct. WOOl4652
REVENUE RECEIPTS
(I} 2, 9, 16 3tc
Taxes ..................... 21 ,909.51

1 Year Old Mixed Collie &amp; ·Border

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, ()hlo 45769

Sunday Calls)

Giveaway

Collie

"Build Your .Dream"

;

&lt;

740·742·3411

Miller, et al. , Defendant&amp;,

Fmdom Gospd Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roger Willfont
Sunday Scnool . 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 6 p.m.

FREE ESTIMATES

pO

NOTICE OF SALE
By vlriue ol 'an Order of
Sale Issued out of the
Common Pleas COJjrt or
Meigs Counly, Ohio, In the
case of the Home National
Bank, Plalnlllf, v1. Terou

and

Replacement Windows

Room Additions • Roofing

Free Estimates

Public Notice

tenementa

Gar~ges •

Roofs • Decks • Garages

614·9~2-322Q
1m

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Dirt

40

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Limestone

.Carleton l1tenlenomlnotlonal Chun:h
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Jeff Smitn
Sunday Scnool - 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday or Wednesday Night Service•

Pomeroy Churth or the Nounne

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

Gravel· '

Silver Ridge
Pasloc Raben Barber
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.

SUNSft
CONS'fRUCtiON

S&amp;L ·

Soul.. Bethel New Tallmetil

Syncuse Church or the Nounne
Pastor, Rojlert I. Coen

#ZZNDI348K596
&amp;
1MDCOMJ17TA621386, A 1992

. Olds ·

Cu11ass.

01G3WHS4T8N0374604
Ford

1989

Bronco,

Serial
&amp;

A

Serial

#IFMEUt 5N5KLB47903. Public
Auction Will Be Held AI The OVB
Annex, 143 Thi rd A11e.. Gallipolis,

OH On 1124197 AI 10:00 A.M. The

Above Will Be Sold To Highest
Bi&lt;lder -As Is · Where IsMWllh oul Expressed Or Implied Wa rranty and May Be Seen By Calling Ke itt1 Johnson At 614 -4-41 ·
1038. OVB Reserves The AigiTt
To Accept Or Rejecl Any And All
Bids. And Wi thdraw Property
From Sale Prior To Sa le. Terms
Of Sale : CASH OR CERTIFIED

CHECK.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer. complete
auction
urvice. licensed
166,0hio ·&amp; West Virginia, .304773-5785 Or 304·773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absol ute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sit·,
ver And Gold Co 1ns, Proofsets,.,.
Diamonds, Amique Jewelry, Goldl
R1ngs, Pre-1930 U.S. Cu rrency.
Sterling. Elc. Acqu1S1!10ns Jewelry
· ~ . T. S . Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis. 614 -446· 2842.
Ant1ques, top pnces pa1d, R1ver1ne Antiques, Pomeroy. Oh1o.
Russ Moo re owner, 614 -992 ·
2526.

•

Antiques- no Hem too large or 100•
small. Al so estates , appraisals,
refinishing , CtJstom orders. 614 ·

992-6576.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,.
Sn:uth Bu1ck Pontiac, !900 Easl·
ern /werlJe. GallipoliS.
&amp; 0 Auto Parts Buy ing
wre cked or s·alvaged 11eh icles .

J

304 . 773·5033.

Wanted To Buy: Old Case Trac -- : ·
lor For Pans, 61 4-388·9181 Any - ·
time
·

.

•·

Wanted To Buy : Sli ding Glass' !.
Patio Doors With Or Without t .
Frames, Must Be low Pr1ced Can :

.

R"'JJI''e. 614·388-9181 Anyllrno.

Tie logs, 10-15 in diameter, 8'8" in •

length, $220 pe r thousand , ~
straigh t !~ucks only, 614· 949 · , ·

3061 alter 6pm

·

We Buy Aulo's In Any Con'd1tiOn,
Call 614·388-0062 , Or 6 14-446 -

PART.

______ ..
EMPlOYMENT
SERVICES

11 o

.. .

Help Wanted

· NEWYEAR
NEW CAREER
Factory Branch Outlst Has Nu merous Openings, -No Experience ,:
Necessary. Call Monday 12th, ..
61-4-446-7441.

.' .

172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, .Oh

'

/

.

1-000·283-5900 oxl. 7022. $2.99/
min. Mull be t8yro. Serv·U ~tQ·

-------------------------------------------------

�Page 10 •·The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, OHio

Friday, January 9,
p
'Middl rt Ohl
~~~::~~~----~~-----!----------------------~o~m!e~ro~y~·~~~ep~o~,~~o~------------~------!Th~e~D~a~l~ly~S~e~n~tl~ne~I~•!P!ag~e~1~1:
·NE;A Crossword Puzzle·
ACROSS

AVON

I All Areas

I Shtrley

Spears 304-675 1429

Babvsttter Needed 'for Weekend
"\ Ev0111n9s 614 446-7548
Babystner Wa n ted

Home bus mess one of a ktnd

relurbtshmg statnless steel cook
ware needs sell mottvated person

Cheshue

Area ApproJ 3 Hours Per Day In
Afternoon References Requtrad

614 3e7-7862

wtth good motor sktHs to lake

aver

my bustness Established 11J83
area requtred 400 square foot

$38 ooo tncludes equipment, tn
ventory and accounts Generates

Ctmputer Users Needed Work

own hours $20k to $50kiyr 1
60o 348 711!~ 11 50&amp;
Cosmotolcrglat Needed, Gaur
anteed Wages Pcud Vaca11on

Free CEU HDUr FuU &amp; Part Want
ed Other Beneltts Included 614
446 7267

DIETICIAN
Reg1onal Health Care Consultmg
Company Has lmmedtate Open
•ng For Full Ttme /Part Ttme Otell
ctan Mu st Be Regtstered &amp; L1

censed Elccellent Wage Pac~
age Fu Resume To 614 833
4465
Earn $50 to $200 1n one day lnv

ue your !nends over to your home
lor a prolesstonal Glamour Por
tra11 party Call BOO 487 5'!87 or

800 426-8J63

'

Easy Work! Excellent Pay I As
semble ProdUcts At Home Call

Toll Free 1 sao 467 5566 EJCt
12170
Ellper~enced Ttmber Culler N99d
ed, 614-682 7318

Home Heallh Agency Hmng

CNA s And HHA! Startmg At
$6 09 Per Hr Full Ttme And Part

Time Pos111ons Available Send
Resume To Health Management

10 to 20 thousand per year 'Sen
ous mqutres Send SASE to

SSCS
45769

AI 3 Pomeroy OH

14K70 3 Bedrooms. 1 112 Baths,
Excellent Cond1!1on 3/.4 Acre
Ground, North Gallla Area 614

&lt;46-1400
MUST SELL. 14X60 3 Bedrooms,
2 BAJhs Owner Ftnancmg Ava11
able 30&lt; 738-7295
1980 14x60 Mob1le Home For
Sale Gas Heat Gas Stove. Call
Alter 5 00 614 446 7641 614

1981 Friendship Mobile Home lot

Send Response To CLA 503, C/o
Gallipolis Dally Tnbune, 825 Third
AYei"'IJe Gallipolis OH 45631

For Rent Or Relocate Good Con
dtr 1on Owner Mov1ng Out Of
State, Call614 379 2619 Alter

NEED A LOAN? Mortgage Auto

Consolidation Apply The Easr
Wa,y By PhOne Fnend ly

loan

614-388-9635

7 00 PM

ltvtngston s basement water
prooftng all basemant repatrs
done rree esttmates, lilenme

guarantee 10yrs on JOb expen
enca 304 675-2145
Payne's Cuslom Tlmbtrklg
Ronald S Payne Jr
Select ~arvesters ollarge ma
ture hardwood &amp; htgh quality
veneer ttmber Free Evaluauons

WVDOF CO&lt;lllied 304 576-2014

Counry No Phone Calls Please, In
Me1gs Counly Call 614 992 7900
EOE

Now Takmg Appl tcaltons For
Service Techntclans And Install.
trs Must Be E P.A Cert1f1ed And

All real estate atlvert tstng In
thiS newspaper •s subject to
the Federal Fa1r HousmgAct
of 1968 which makes tltllegal
to adverttse "any preference
lim tatmn or d1scnmlna110n
based on race color rehgton
seK tamtltal status or national
ongm or any tntenlion to
make any such preference
IJmttalton or dtscnmmallon ~

Have One Year E1tpenem:e Ap
ply In Person Between 9 00 &amp;
1 1 ;CO A M At Comfort Atr Sys
tems 407 Thtrd Avenue Galltpo
lis No Pl'1one Calls
Need lady days &amp; ntghts 5 days
lor house wor~ coo~1ng
takmg care ol w11e 304 675

a week
6132

Need Lead Gu1tar Player Call
ti14 446-6964 614 446 2659

Thts newspaper Will not
k~owtngly accept
adven1sements tor real estate
which 1s •n v1olatlon of the
law Our readers are hereby
mformed that all dwellings
advertised m thts newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
opportun ly basts

Stratght

Now acceptmg applicatiOns All
postttons lull &amp; part ume Gtno s
Pt Pleasant &amp; Gtno s Mason ..
Pleasant Valley Nurstng and Re
habihtauon Center has openmgs
tor certthed mJrs1ng asststants
Both full lime and part t me post
11ons Must be able to work'-12

Con1ac1 Ang1o

2 Baths, Starttng A.t

3 Bedrooms.
$~19/Mo

SUNRISE
loaded W th GE

Appliances

Slarting At $299/Mo
EAMIIJ. ..
4 Bedrooms, 2 large Baths ,
Startmg $359/Mo. Umtled Ttme
Ofler Only At Oakwood Barbours

VIlle WVA 304 736 3409
Dtscount Mobtle Home Pans &amp;
Accessones
Vtnyl Sk~rtmg
$299 95, Ancho rs $5 00, Awn
tngs, Doors Wtndows Plumbmg
Suppl1es Water Heaters Furnac
es ltberglass Steps, Call 61-4
446 9416 Bennen s Supply t391
Sa fiord School Rd Gall po i•s

304-£7!&gt;5236 AAIEOE
Small mobile home maintenance
company tn need of person to do
drywall repau spray textlJre ce1l
tng repair and drywa ll closures
WorK Will be tn OH IN KY. Ml
and PA Must be W!lltng to work
away !rom home Send worK hts
tory and I !lie about yoursell to
El!le Mobtle Home Matnt 36655

SR 7 Long Bottom OH 45743
Wanted For February Or M~rch
Three (3) Operato r&amp; With Cos
metology Managers ltcense TQ
Work In Galhpol•s Two (2) To
Ft~e ~5) Days Par Week Your
Cho!ce Salary Term!i Negotrable

Reply To Box CLA 4t3 CIO Galli
polls Datly Tflbune 825 Thtrd
Avenue Galhpohs OH 45631
Wanted OTR dflver expen
enced M or F wtrh clean COL and
Hazmau endorsement Must be
able 10 pass DOT and drug test
Salary negotiable contact 614

992 7363
Wanted someone 10 ltve 1n lor
room and board some wages
61-4 902 5077
We are lookmg for two self moll
vated goal onented peopte 10 JOin
our sales stat! If you are nterest
eel ple~se apply 1n person to
Don Tate Motors Inc
3)8 East Mam Stroot
Pomeroy Ohto 45769
Equal OpportlJnlly Employer
We Ha~e The SOLUTION To
Your New Vears RESOLUTION!
Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Days
614 441 1962

180 Wanted To Do
Furmture repatr rehnrsh and res
roratron also custom orders. Oh•o
Valley Relmtshtng Shop larry
Phillips 614 992 6576
Georges Portable Sawm U don t
halJI vour logs 10 the mLII Just call

304-£ 7!&gt; 1957
Housecteanrng Call 304 862

Bank Repo s Call 1 800 522 '

2730 X 1709
House and properly approlt 4a
cres Ideal starter home Beech

Sl, Pomeroy OH 304-862 2077
Hovse for sate or trade Owner
llnance 3bedrooms crty water
leon area 304 586 2462 or 304·
586 4374
House For Sate Jerry s Run Near
New Toyota Plant (West Vtrg r
nta) For Delatls Call e 14 886

8702
Ktlchen dmmg room, 2 bedroom
bath !JVtng room front &amp; bac~ lull
length porches gas furnace ctty
water outbuilding garage 112
mr le East of Ractne 614 949
2116

2796 or 304 882 2896
Need Quality House clean tng?
Call 614 441 -0 449 Trustworthy
Ha References
alJia Elderly Care and Ser\IIC
es will do personal care respne
servr s errands light house
kee q,g_: Expenence and Nt A
trammg . ~ferences Fee accord
rng to 1me and serv1ce 614 949
2329 tl no answer leave me&amp;

NEW CONSTRUCTION

Beau

boUr&amp;VIIIO, WV 304 736 341)9
FIRST TIME BUYERS

E·Z F1nanc1ng
2 or ~ Bedrooms
~round

$200 Per Month
1 600 251 5070

Free"" lree sk1n t6x80 3 or 4
bedroom S1 350/down, $2001nl0

Call1-800 691-11777

LIMITED TIME ONlY! 48A, 2
BATH $! ,449 DOWN $249
MONTH Free alf &amp; s~lrung Only
al 01kwood Homn Nitro, WV

304 756 5885
Mob le Home 2 Garages On lot
Posstble Land Contract 614 256

1744

N'O"T'i'C'E
Amertca s largest tac tory outlet
has plJrchased local mobile
homo deatershtp All tnventory
musl be sold Wllhtn 30 days
Save thousands Call now for
tnfo FREEDOM HOMES of Nttro

wv 304 722 7127

New 199B 1411.70 three bedroom
1ncludes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes sktrttng deluxe steps
and seii.Jp Only $187 08 per
month wtth $1075 down Call 1

600-837 3238
New 28J~60 3 or 4 bedroom
$39 995 Free dehvery 1 800

691 6777
NEW BANK REPO S Only 3 !ell!
304 755 7191

304 736-7295
New do1Jblew1de I PlJrchased
wont Ill on my lo1 must sell w1ll
deltver &amp; set up at no charge
304 7'12 7148

ONLY $499 DOWN
ON SELECTIVE SINGLE WIDES
Free Oel1very &amp; SetlJp
OAKWOOD HOM ES NITRO
304 755 5885

Spec tal fmanctng avatlable 304

992 5333 614 992 1064 614

736 7295

SNOW PLOWING AVAILABLE

446 1529

21 0

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO V~LLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend• that you do bull
nen wtlh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 lJntll yolJ have tnvest1gated
theoffer!nQ
Commercial bu tldtng + lot lactng
2nd St 1n Malon, WV CuHently
making SS$ u sleeping rooma

Two bedroom house 601t 100 101

!arced 1n S20 000 6t4 992 5532

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
$499 DOWN
on aU SJngle !W!COOns

$999 DOWN
on all rooltt secuons

um11ld T me Only I
FREEDOM HOMES ol Nlho, WV
:104- n2 7127

kitchenette} Shown by appolnt-

12x65 2 Bedroom Mobtle Home
Wl!h Front &amp; Back Porc h 814

IT19f11 3Q.I-ll75-4975 evenngs

367 0508

(6rooms, 2balhs l hall ba1hs

Land Contract 10% Down Ca ll
For Free Maps

ANTHONY LAND CO, LTD
1 800 213·8365, www countr~

tymecom

360

Real Estate
Wanted

Ac rea ge wanted wtth or wtthout
home m Gallla County 614-9 Q2-

6737
Buytng Standtng Timber And

41 o Houses for Rent ·
1 bedroom house In Pomeroy, no
pots 6t4-992-5858
2bedrooms refr~gerator &amp; stove
$265/mq plus depos!t 304· 773
91711eave message

Mo,

Depos!l
leave Nama II

614 441 t519

3 Bedrooms, Fenced Yard, At
tached Garage $475/Mo City
Schools Reference &amp; Oepos.t1
RequarGd 614 446-9555
Chatham Avenue Galltpotts
Newly Remodeled 3 Bedroom
Ho.me, CA, Gas Hee.t,j3251Mo
Deposit &amp; References 614 446

4043 Aher6 P.M
N1 ce two bedroom house •n Po
meroy, newly remodeled new
Windows $350 .monlh plus depos
1t no pets available tmmedtately

614-£98-7244
Rto Grande Area 3 Bedroom
Bath &amp; 1/2 S"90/Mo Oepo!ut Re
qwed WJO Hook Up, 1 888 840

0521
Texas Rd 2 Bedrooms Base
ment, $235/Mo, $1 SO Depostt
Refe rences No Pets 614 446

4880 Aller 5 00
Two 3 Bedrooms $350/Mo In
eludes Water, Trash Sewage
$350 Depostt, Contracted For Not
less Than 4 Month s Gathpohs
Cl!y School Dtslnct, See At Corn
er Of Rand Ave And Perch St

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobtle homes
$260 S300 sewer water and
trasl'1tncluded 614 992 2167
2 Bedroom Mo.blle Home $2401
Mo S17S Deposit References

Call Aller 5 PM 614 446 4316
2 Bedroom Tratler Furmshed AI
Lente l S200/Mo Oepos•t $100

614 379 2187,

5858
Street Galhpohs OH 614 446·

7398

2 Bedroom Trailer In Small Trailer
Park, References &amp; Deposit Ae
qwed 614...-46-1104

dlepon no pelS, 6t4-992 5858

73e 7295

Ntce clean 2br tratler mce deck
lots of space &amp; land, no Inside
pets partly furntshed depostt
6mo lease $275tmon1h 304

675 4218
Tretter For Rent 2 Bedrooms
614 446 4110
One bedroom apartment In Mid

Special Ftnanc ng Avatlable 304
Tht Enter1alntr Hu Arrtved!
1411.80 3br 2 bath, comes With
2r TV htgh fiVe VCR surround
sound speake,.,
$14S51Down

S2t9/Mo
' Once In A Lile!lme Deatllt
Only at Oakwood Hornet

diepon, 614\992 2178
Two bedroom lfatler $200 month
three bedroom house, S350
month, must have refefences taH

614 992 2911!

As lmle As SSOOJOown
~nd

$150 Per Month

Free Delivery

1 600 251 5070
Westwood Home Show Used &amp;
Repo Sale As lltlle As $500 00

Oown And S15MAo Free Oeliv
ery 1-800 251 5070
New Double W1de Repo $999 00
Down Free Deli very And Se1 Upl
304 736 7295

Brand Newr Great G•lt l CO/VIdeo
storage umt Black and cherry
Neo.rer out ol box S125 Holds up
to 940 d1scs also ho lds rapes

300 Thru 2 ODO Gallons Ron
1 600 537·9526

ed 513-574--2539
Upstalrl!l 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur
mshed, Clean. No Pets, Reference
&amp; Oepost t Requtr ed 814 446

1519
Upstatra and Downstatn apan
ments Avatlabia 91 Cedar Tralle,
and Cottage At Porter (614) 388-

~~~~-FUri;Ji~!d---~
100

450

Oinene Se~ Electm: Stove Uvtng
Room Sutte S30 Sleeper Sola

$50 614-245-5064

Apartments
for Rent

1 &amp; 2bedroom furnl,ahed apartmenta, Mason area Perfect for
retirees 30-4-773-5186
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

6t4-446-ll390
Now Tak•ng Appllcattons- 35
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse

ApSrlmen!S $295/Mo

0006

'

614-446

One bedroom apartment tn Mid·

dlepor! al u•itiea paid, S270 par
monlh, $100 depo s!l 6t•·992·

1806

'

ready 10 go 304-675-5771

Musical
Instruments

Vickie, 6t4-446-2897

446-9952

1988 Dodge Dakola V6, AUIO

882 2621
1995 Ford F-150 2 WD, Wiih

cab, loaded, $18,600 304-675-

2793

Harley Dav 1dson Barbe $300,

Earcornforsale 740:247-3042
Hay· Mtlled squar~ bales. easy
access $1 15 per bale 304 89&amp;-

Top $3,500 090 614 256 1176
Evenings 6t4·256·1687

3590

MIXed hay large bales, St3 304
675-1365

a1r, 88,000 miles, askmg $5500
614-985-4449

TRANSPORTATION

Monument Sale au 1tw1g Bust
ness I Johns Monuments 1!3 Off
Un\11 Stock Is Sold 130 Bulavtlle

1981 Montt Carlo 350, 350 Turbo
Transmission E1tce11ent Body &amp;
lntenor Many New Parts $1,600

614 44Hl63e
1966 Doage 600, nice depend
able car, PS, PB automa", an'llfm
cassette, $1299, 614 949 2045
1986 Ford Escort Exp, Air
Cruise, Ttl!, 5 Speed low Mtle
age
$1 700 61A 441 1601
leave Message
1986 Plymouth Reliant K good

t990 Bronco Z 4WD V 6 XLT

1g91 Chevy Blazer 4)14, au10mat
tc B!r power windows crutse ex
celltnt cond111on 88 000 mtles

ask1ng $7500, call614 949 2401

19111' FOI~

I'Wf·l1~4'"ft

P-Z50

loaded I S Wheel Tratler H ttch &amp;

Tool Box, 614 446·4816

1996 Grand Cherokee 4x4 Jeep
Black Wtth Grey lntenor 13,200
Mtles, AMtFM Cassette, S21,500,

1 868 265-2123

OBO 304-£7!&gt;880t

1gge Toyota Tacoma SX .4x4
Regular Cab Bt~ght Red 4 Cyhn

460 Space for Rent

Pnncess Bean1e Baby $35 Reg
tster to wtn draw•ng Jan 1511'1

1989 Beretta GT 6 Cyhndef, Auto
AM IFM Cassttte, 6 DI&amp;C CD

dar, 5 Spelid, Air, Big T1re Pact&lt;
ego, 814 446-8088

Mobile home sue ava tlable bet
ween Athen s and Pomeroy call
614 385-4367

Plddler s Place Man S1

Player 140,000 M los 6t4 446
4854

740

1989 Grand Pnx, PS, PB, au
tomattc 00, amtlm fltereo, ~real

1993 Suzuki GSXR 750 Purple

Buy, Sell, Trade
Used &amp; Antiques
FlJrnlntre

Mason,WV

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

Appliances
Recondtt•oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relu
gratofs, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty May1a9 614 446

7795
Otnn1ng Room Su te Four C1'1alr
Bullet Chtne~ Cabinet. $900 (614)
Frost free refngerator two door
top freezer, look s &amp; run s great,

$150 304 675 1616
GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dry ers refrtgerators
ranges Skaggs Apphances 76
Vme Street Call 614 446 7398

liS OhiO 50% Oil Gill Shop And
Most FurnttlJre Mon Tues Wed

10 4 On~
Polly'l New &amp; U&amp;od Furniture
We l'lDW have Arrrrf Surplus !II
2101 Jefferson Ave

Open 9 30 500 Mon-Sat
304 675 SOFA (7632)

.Antiques

Buy or sell R1verme Anttques
1124 E Matn Streel, on AI 124
Pomeroy Hour s M T W 10 00
,; m to 6 00 p m S!Jnday 1 00 to
6 00 p m 614 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Elec1r1c Furnace $395, 1 Gas

1990 Cadtllac OeVtlle, Excellent
Condtlton, V 8, Fully loaded And
lots Of EktraS, New Tires $4,995

304 773-5341

18 Hole Mtnaturt Golf Course,

614-&lt;46 2683
614 446 9585

WARM UP H1gh Elfic1ency Na1u

Aulo A11 New T1m1ng Ball 98 000
Mtle s $1,600 DBO 614 2581233

rat And LP Gas Furnaces, llle
t•me Warranty On Heat Exchang
er If You Don't Call Us We Botiol

t990 Olds 98 Regency 3 8 V6
Loaded$5250 (614) 245-9880

Gift Shop 1 8mtles
Sandhill Road Mon Fr1 5pm 6pm
Sat 11am 7pm Sun 1pm 6pm
304 675 4123

Losel" Free Esllmalesl ~dd - On
Heal Pumps Only Shghly Higher
Call Us Today 1997 Is The
Twenty Seventh Year In The
Heattng &amp; Coohng Bllstnessl 814

Water Turtle, Wuh 350 Magnum

6x32 Olhce Tra iler $5,000 614
446-4782
AVON
lndepilndan1Repreoen!allVe
I Sell Avon In AI Areas
Olal614-44t -t3t2 Anyhme

12,600

h~e

lion, $5,6DO 6t4 446-9664, 6t4
446-4580
1991 GEO Storm G S I auto, atr,

790

19g1 Thunderbird 3 8 V 6, sun ...
root new tires loaded $4 800

$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Com
Jl"8SS1on F1tlings In Stock

304 675 5596

wood For Sale, $35 A Load W1ll
Deliver 614-388 8010
Wtth

Bench, 614 379-9047

550

Building
Supplies

Block bnck sewer p1pes wmd
ows, lintels, etc Claude Wmters

R1o G1ande OH Call614 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop Pet Groomtng
Featunng Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Ad

304 773 5103
1995 5aturn 5~2, AlJIOmattC, Atr
Crutse AM tF Cassella Trunk
Release, $12 0 Call After 5 P:M
(SertolJs lnqutrtes Only!) 614

446 4015
1g95 Jeep Cherokee Sport 4
Door Green 1990 Dodge Omnt

614 379 9047

614 446 023t

1 gg7 Chevy Cava Iter 2 Doors
Alf, AMIFM Cassette, Au to

AKC black female Cocker Span
tel, 5mos old shots up to date

Trans, 24 ooo !.11ies, St2 ooo
OBO 614-446 7558

wormed S200 eech 6t4·843·
5556
AKC Golden ljlelrlever Pups Per
ents On Premtses Shots &amp; Vet

A Need A Car? No Credit, Bad

Credil Bankrup!Cy, We Can Help
ReEstablish Credit Must Make
$150 Weekly. Take ~-lome, Down
Paymen1s As Low A1 $99, To
Ouattfy For Thts Bank Fmanctng
614 ~1-0607

CARS FOR S1001 Trucks, boa!S

Checked, 614 ~79 2839

4 wheelers motor homes, turn!
ture electrontcs computers etc

AKC Male Mtntature Ptncher 3
Years Old Excellent Pedigree &amp;
Heallh.AH Shots Current btra

by FBI, IRS, DEA Available your
area now Call 1-800-5t3 4343
Ext 5-9368

Small, Askmg S200 614 448
6861
AKC Reg Garm4n Shephard
12wks old ,

ITI&amp;Ie , blackltan ,

sho!S &amp; wormed 304-576·2209

1g60 -1990 Cart F0&lt; $100111
Seized And Sold
Locally Tha Monllt
Trucks, 4x4'' E!C
1·600·522·2730, X 3901

7 Jacob's twin

8 lucr,'a trlend
9 Gar ahneaa
to Tal Mahal site

6 Child WilCher

11 A lot

t9 H8vi:lllnner
4it Mine
(2 wda)
2t Searches tor
23 Maroh plant
25 Romantic

exploit
26 Indian

maid
71 Optical

East

Instrument

All pass

29 To whom-

-concern

31

Clock part

32 Merely

34 last one to
llnlsh

36 Abetted
41 Racelved

44 Turnpike

sights

46 tc~ coatl11ga
47 City In

Nevada

48 And others
(2 wds.J

49

M111ourl'a
neighbor

51

Fodder-

storage
structure
52 Study at the

taatmlnute

53 A Chaplin

J

56

Language

suffix

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

C.aebriry Cipher crypiOgtamla,. created !rom ~tiOiil by lamoua peop11 put 100 present
Eedllec1tiin the dpher atandl lor lr10Ctler Toeily•ctu. 8«1Ufb F

'VHRFIX

D H V

IFXXIJ
RNVG

KJIHGIVG

FAJIYNKACPIZ

G W1

CRSNJGHAG

HRIJCYHA

ZCJIYGNJ,'

LIJAHJZN

LIJGNXFYYC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "F1im IS a baHieg&lt;ound love hate actiOn dealh In a
word emot1on • - (D!feclor) Samuel Fuller

'~:~:~;~' S©~&lt;!l\\-"c~S&amp;
::::
POLlAN_.::.__ _ __

----_;;~ 14110~ ~y CLAY I

0'11-om-rango hotlllrr-o~ fho
four scrambled words be-

ktw

to form fo.~ Stmple words

r~

T A NG E M
ESACE

I 1 I 1· I
3

I
.

CUYJI
5

j

1

I

I

,.

I
./::
..:
~

Granny taught us to have •
k1nd na!ure She says that we
should g1ve 10 fnends and lend to

:;.S-r1-ll ; r ~~~~~~:e- the

.._,_ _,___.__-J.·---'·--'·'--'·
1

8

1 COLORED

chuck le quoted

by lolttng tn the m•ssmg words
you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED lETIUS 1
IN THE SE SOUA~ES
GET AN5WER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Bemoan - Quack - Fresh - Pagoda - GROUND
Overheard 31 pohhcal rally "The one who slings mud
usually w1111ose GROUND "

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

IFRIDAY

JANUARY91

I

l AA9
PR£Th' 1&lt;\ln\
1\VLWOIJT

256-11731

tMil-1\\A

S~Ml.T

SERVICES

smoked m NADA $10 800 sell
$8 900 304 67!&gt;:1:173 aller 6pm
1994 Ponttac Grand Am 2dr, unt
ed windows headltgllt covers
tea l green exc cond $5 800

HIM THI5 PICTURE

1973 Cobra 30 Ft 5th Wheel
Travel Tratler, $1,500 080 614

810

e~om

4 --world
Turns
5 Baking pit

r

14E DOE5N'T SEE
ENLISTED MEN?

Access Over 10,000 Tranamls·
•ons, &amp; Clu1che$ 6t4-245-5677

Wa1er11no Special 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1' 200 PSI

Concord, all pow
sealS 4 new tires
new battery, 28
damage, never

I WANT TO 5MOW

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS·
SIONS, Uaed /Rebu1l1, All Types,

$3 300,61 .. 742 1400

199-4 Chrysler
er dual power
r ae &amp; ptnton
30mpg
no

3 Fulurell Bs '

UN5CRAMBlE IHTER5

Jackson, Oh10, 1 800·537 9528

We now have je rky seasontng
ongm al
ter1yaki &amp; caJun
$4 99ea Crawford's Markel,
Henderson V'/V

A1tACKH

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

R1pley, WV 304-372 3933 or 1·
600 273 9329

1992 Pon11ac Grand AM Blatk
AC Crutse Ttlt Looks &amp; Runs
Excellent $3,900 Ask For Amos
614 446 8172 614 256 6251

North
3 NT

1995 YZ 250 Runs C!lreal, $2,600

1991 Honda CIVIC 71 000 ongtnal
mtles runs very good n1ce car,

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

ffss

~.614~1t00

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

.Jackson Oh10, 1-800 537 9£28

'&lt;ESr MA'AM .. I D LIKE
TO SEE THE PRINCIPAL.

new

304 882 36t3 Leave

760

2 Grafting twig

__;Eir,6..:N.:,I.,;;:..;EI:...::ETI

1

1995 Honda 4 wheeler,

West

PEANUTS

0185

Upright, Ron Evans Enterpr~sas,

AKC Boxer pups etght weeks old
two lemales lawn c:olored ta1ls
docked, dew clawi removed ,

Pump, &amp; Hea101, $250 All 614
446-4515

Wtth Polished Fr.. me, Matchmg
Helmets &amp; Jackets Lots Of Ex
tras • Excellent Pnce l 614 441 -

N•w gas tanks 1 ton truck
Wheels l radiators D &amp; A Auto,

4 000 PSI Hot &amp; Cold Water
Pressure Washer, 18 HP, Honda

75 Gallon Tank, Wtth Metal Rod

1991 Butck Regal Good Condt

SELF' I 11 POWEII:LBS
TO STOP Tr' YES ,. I'f'\
ABOUT TO HAVE A

message

1990 Dodge Shadow • Cyhndsr

NOOGIE

CAN T COtrTROL M'f·

Motorcycles

••c cond $4,000 304·675-5403

$150 304·937·2733

Stand Wllh Lighl 2 Oscars Fe
male &amp; Male, Red Tail Catf•sh

446 2205

I

740-367-Qttl

446 6306, 1 800 291 0098

$3,500 0 B 0 Call Day (614)4463500 Evenngs (6t4)256-1674

Eng1ne Ask1ng $3800 614 3880&lt;13

~14

Ae~nold1

Wooden Table, Chalfs

530

ear $3299, 6t4 949 2045

UH-DH I M STARTIN G TO GET THAT
fAl'\ILIAI'. FEELING
AGAIN

lo1ilaS $13,500 (814) 446-7912

304 773-5651 Mason WV

1987 Cava her Z 24 V6, 2 8 auto,
good t1res runs good $1 500

RIC. NUF

1995 Chevy &lt;x4 Shorlbed 4 3
V8, Auto Air, Bedllner, Reese
Hitch, Ami Fm Cassette 31,500

cond $1,1100 304-£75-3018

3677554

THE BORN LOSER

Htgtl Mileage, $4 000 Excellent
CondttiOn, 614-379 2409

PRIMESTAR wmter spec1al Out I
st tlln g home watchmg antenna
channels &amp; VCR rentals, spectal
mstallatton prtce hrst month free

R &amp; S Fumllure

~

1989 Ford Ranger XlT 4x4 Ex·
tendod Cab excellent condtlton,

SieeplnQ rooms w1th cook tng
AI so trailer space on nver All
hook· ups Call alter 2 00 p m

Tratfer Space For Rent In Gall a
County Ca mpers Welcome I 614

L~CTU~~ STANI&gt;IN6
/lOOM
TONIG~T
ONLY

Hl89 GMC Sa fart Full Custom

71 o Autos lor Sale

Pi

- ~~G~TS

Van. $4,300 61&lt;-446 4222

Coml11on $19~ 614 446 9708

Pleasant WV No phone regis
tratton please

ANIMAL.

1 SIB&amp; Tovot1 4x4 brand n1w
llrH, very good shape mochanlc:.lly, nry dtpendlble $2,950

080. 304-675-6293,

Sln!w 304-1!75-5086

FRANK &amp; EARNE~T

1g97 Ford Ranger 411:4, 89 En gtne, Standard Trans Camper

Hay SqlJare Batt $1 75, Round
Dry Or Wet Wrapped Straw Wire
Tte By load, 614 448-3845

37 long sarment
38 Prayer book
39 The one here

By Phillip Alder
The Bnush have Some strange
saymgs, hke "safe as houses "True,
many houses are safe, but we've also
seen a lot fall down, some because of
faulty constructwn, others from the
&lt;!,estrucuve force of earthquakes or
hurncanes OccaSionally a bndge
contract that looks safe w1ll fa1l Tins
could be because of bad d1s1nbuuon
of the opposmg cards or !o faulty
declarer play Whtch of these two ts
applicable m !oday's deal?
South crwsed mto three no-trump,
hts openmg b1d showmg 21-22
pomts (As a cunoSity, d1d you ever
see a hand before wnh no card
between a four and a Jack?)
Wes! led the spade queen Judgmg
that tf West were longer lhan East m
spades, Eas! was more hkely 10 be
longer than Weslm dtamonds, declar
er look the firs! lnck wnh h1 s kmg ,
played a d1amond to dummy's ace
and led a dtamond back East's hean
dtscard regtstercd aboul c1ght on the
Rtchter scale S1ruggle as he m1gh1
from !here South couldn't wm more
!han e1ght tricks Was South unlucky
or dtd he m1splay?
South staned wt!h etghttop !ncks
two n&gt; ea€11.. su~- T~ mnlfl. l~t~k­
would ev1dently come from d1a
monds And there was a perfect safety-play avatlablc South should have
staned w1th the dtamond kmg from
h1s hand If nenhcr !he I 0 nor the
queen appears, declarer continues
wtlh a low d1amond toward dummy,
plannmg to finesse 1he mne 1f Wesl
plays the rcmammg low card And 11
West discards on !he second round,
dummy s ace 1s played and a low diUmood led back loward the Jack
Ellher way, Sou!h gets three d1amond
tncks
So, South miSplayed

1994 Ford F· 150 411:4 302 au to,
50 000 miles exc co nd 304

Alfalfa mixed hay m barn $15

33 Optic covering
35 Deceive

Canter ole
ahleld

Safe as
houses

1726

6t4 446 6399

614 992 3725

IT,
!!

FL 1 InCh Spread, EaSI Tool Box-

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Pomeroy Thnfl Shop now buy1ng
Lev1 1eans toys ch1 ldren s cloth
mg must be m eacalleot cond
tton Tuesday thr olJgh Fnday

..

IF YOU AIN'T TRIED
DON'T KNOCK IT

1994 Font 4811.102 Step Deck 10

$2D a roll Morgen Farm Rl 35
304 937-20t8

28 Actreaa Gan
30 Oppoolta of
acto

Opening lead a Q

II

1988 KW -COE -91 Cal 425 C
13SP 355 Rears 010 Truck
Loaded, 8t4-258-1728

Grubbs Ptano tunmg &amp; r;;~:~~ •l•· iJi@iE[).R;;;;;;db.ii;"~;;;j
Problems? N86d Tuned? r.~
nd balls mtxed
p1ano Or 614 446 4525
hay, newrweL 304-682-2077

Ptke Gattipolts, Oh10

ZNT

LA%Y
WHELP

Runs And looks Good

Deal of a hfet1mal Take over pay
menta 1997 Ford ptc:kup club

Mag1c Chef Electrtc Range Euro
pean Burner Almond Excellent

South

es Excellent Condtdon, 614 256-

Hay &amp; Grain

DOWN

Vulnerable Both
Dealer Soul,h

$2.850 Or Trade, 614 256-1424

610 Farm Equipment

garland .
25 Opening

(2 wda)

•AK

BARNEY

see locally Call i 800 268-6218

7

3
• AK 3 2
+KJ 42

Ava1latje ~511-1069

720 Trucks lor Sale

10

South
a K4

Upton Used Cars At 62 3 Mtles
South of leon WIJ Financtng

640

3545

• 8

Helpl Reealabl lah Credl!, Must
Make stso Week, Take Home tD
To 20% Down t2 Months &amp;
12,000 Mllltl, Warranty "vatlabte,
This ta Bank F1nandng, 614·4468172 Or6!4-3e4-00&lt;2

responsible party wanted to make
tow monthly payments on ptano

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

8972
• Q 10 9. 8 5

• Q J

Need A Car, No Credit? Bad
Credit? Bankruptcy? We Can

PW, Pl, $13900 614-446-1i365

locust Fenced Post $2 60 Eacl'1
Nord1ctrack Sequ10 Model Wtth
ComplJter Mount $150,6.4 446

108

p1on a1 KVDP $320~ 4 9922679

$750, 614-446-&lt;1053

Ropatred New &amp; Rebu1lt In Stock

East

so·

Good Heavy Duty G E Washer

Call Ron Evans HIOO 537 9528

Actress Weld
22 Facilitate
24 Hawaiian

Jr Oragster, 94 Jegs 1
WB ,
Salisbury clutch, tach, TF w1ng,
two runner·ups and track cham

245-5747

JET
AERATION MOTORS

20

225, 6 Cyl, 46,000 Milos, A1
TransmisSion $250 Bolh (6 14)

Steel Ut1l1ty Cab V-8 Automattc
Heav~ Duty Suspenston Factory
Tow Package, Alumtnum Wheels ,

Holmer Humtdtfter Used Very ltt
tie $60,614 446 8152

Root

Dodge Motor, Good Cond1t1on,

Nic e Holstem Spnnger He1fer
Close Up, Wetghtng Approx
1100 Pds, Freshening Soon

$100, Good Hotpomt Electnc
Cook Stove S85, Chest Drawers
$65 Each, Dresser $75 Dryer
$65 All In Good Worktng Condi!IOnl 614.a79-2720 After 6 PM

15 Watercraft
16 Mormon State
17 Vaoe
18 Fiddler - -

Easy Bank Ftnanclng For Used

Atr

Two bedroom two m1les north of

440

CFA Htmalayan kittens 2 males,

FOR SALE CONSOLE PIANO

Rooms
Ctrcle Motel Lowest Rates in
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
Ctnemalt, Showt1me &amp; .Disney
Weekly Rates, Or Monthly Rates,
Construction Workers Welcom e
514·441 5698,614-441 5167

$225 OBO 614 446-

570

9088

One Bingle bedroom apartment
house 10 upper Galllpohs, ulllt!Jes

Rto -Gtande Area large 1 Bed
room Apartment, $350/Mo De·
post! ReqUired All Utlllltes lnclud·

AKC Slbertan Husky PlJps, large
Type Blue Eyes, Rare Color,

Dark Teal Secttonat, li.llcellent
Condition Asktng $300 614 388

Grac1ous llvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rtvers•de Apartments 1n M1ddle

paid 1345 per monlh, 614 992
2178

$300 350 each call 614 698
1085

Evens Enterprtses Jackson, OH

&amp; movtes Call 614 446·2588
Equal Hou:stng Opporrumty

Ren1 S325 per Uonlh Deposl!
St50 Call 614 256 t972 Evening
Or614 446 8677Days

blacks, blue merle in vet
ch.ecked ucellent pedtgrees

Wormed, &amp; ShoiS, $75 Each, 614368 8922

Golf Clubs 100 Sets lktder $100,
300 Wood / Medal Onvers Under
$100 Club Butlder Repatred, 614

located In Eureka On State Ro
ute 7 Two Bedrooms Gas Heat,

AKC Shelland sneapdog s (Shel
lies) pupp1es sable and whtte 5

$150
8627

• commander

Credll Problems? We Can Help

Vehtcles, No Turn Downs, Call

Concrete &amp; Plastic Sepuc Tanks

Frrewood $40 A Truck Load Delivered Ca11 SU-446-4362 No An
swer leave Message

tunltJQS

614 446--4551

Dalmatton Fult Blooded Pupptes

BEAUTIFUL ~PARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
EST~TES 52 Wes!Wood D"ve
110m $260 IO $334 Wal&lt; 10 Shop

pori From $23e·S304 Call 6t4·
992·5064 Equal HolJSing Oppor-

Females,- 4 Bl,ick Mates, $200

Call 614 992 6636 aller 8 pm
COs &amp; tapes not tncluded

Fast Trak II exercise wal~mg ma
chme $150 twtn size, soft stded
waterbed mattress wtth a blJnkte
board, $85, c:all 614 949 3232, tl
no answer leave message

Furnace 1oo 000 BTU $690 614
446 6306 1-600 291 0098

PageVIIIe on SR 681 , Meigs Local
Schools, $350 month, 6t4-698
72.5

Nitro, WV
304-775-5885
WESTWOOD HOME SHOW
Used &amp; Repo Sale

Boo ts By Redwtng Chippewa
Rocky Wolvertne Sorel Tony
lama G!Jaranteed Lowest Pncos
Shoe Cafe Galhpolts.

Apartment m Pomeroy 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms bath &amp; half, washer/
dryer hook· UP no pets, 1300 a
month $150 deposit, 814 667·
3083 alter 5pm

Movtng Sale Used Furniture
Store 130 Bulavttle P1~e Galllpo

441 0181

304 875 4548

3636

920 Fourth Avenue, Galltpolts 2
Bedrooms Water &amp; Trash Patd
$235/Mo, 614-4.&lt;41 0573

Beauttful Rtver VtfiW In Kanauga
Foster Mobtle Home Park, 614

Baby bed dresstng tat:tle car
seat stroller sw1ng, playpen

3711 EOH

1 60().499 3499

S:DOIMo 614-441 0573

24 Bulb Woll Bed $1 000 614
&lt;46 6982

Electnc stove wnh storage draw
er, works good $Hl0 ti14 985

304 773 5751

920 folJrth Avenue Galltpolts, 2
Bedrooms Water Trash Pa1d

14 Moalem
AKC RegiB1ered Lab, 2 Chocolale

2bdrm apts , tq1tal electrtc, ap
phances lurmahed, laundry room
lac1httes d ose to school 1n tOW'n
AppltcaiiOns avatlable at Vtllago
Green Apts #49 or call 614 992

245-9680

3bedroom 1n Mason No pets

New dolJble Wtd9 repo SQQg
down Fr~o deltvery and setup

sage

FINANCIAL

NO SINGLeWIDES

3 bedroom mqbiie home m M1d

'SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

er Level 2 Roc Rooms Wet Bar
F P 1 Bath 2 Car Garage Ap
po1ntmont 614 797 4468

Wayne Nattonal Also Land In
Jackson Metgs Athens, Sctoto,
Ross Pike ColJnttes We A llow
Doublewides Modulars Cabtns
Most Sttckbudt Homes

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent..

;::_29:_4;::_0:..__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Ca1hedral LA. 3 BR 2 Ba1ns low

S12,900, S1.290 Down Next To

able 304 736 7295

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

446 3703

OH SR 35 /SR 233 5 To tO Acre

Kanauga 6t4 446-7473

Owner mOVIflg Make 2 paymems
move m assume loan no pay
ment tttl FebrlJary 1ggg 1 304
722 71.&lt;48 or 304 722 7140

Rtver Frontage Galltpohs Brtck
Ranch
Wrap Around Deck

OHSR32
GALLIA COUNlY

MUST SELL 141180 3bedrooms
2baths owner flnanctng ava11

Pomeroy land contract three or
four bed room house wtth two car
garage Flortda room vtew of nv
er Dale E Taylor Realty 614

Free Est1mates Call 6U-4A6
.4514 Or Afl&amp;r 5 PM Call 61-4

2 Bedroom Apartment , 76 V1ne

3 Bedrooms 1 Bath , Ranch Mid
way Galhpot s · Ato Grande, $4501

tlul Two S1ory Colontal 414 Thnd
Avenue, Gallipolis 3 Bedrooms 2
112 Batls LA &amp; FA Formal Dtmng
Room Oak Tnm F•replace Much
More Home Ellgtble For Tax
Abatement $179 500 304 273

1

New On Market P tke County
Beaver 5 + Acres Reslncted Just

FAMILY
4bedrooms, 2 large
baths, starting $359/mo ltmtted
ttme offer only at Qakwood Bar

3653

BUY HOMES AS LOW AS
$4,000 1 5 Bdrm Local Gov't &amp;

2 bedroom apartment In Pomerov,
utthues paid no pets 614 QQ2-

3 Bedroom House 434 Fourth
Aven.Je Gallipolis 814-446-3845

3 8edroomsL..2g Ne1l Ave • Galli
polls Sto~e Refrtgerator, Washer

Large Deck S120 000 614 388
9352

2 bedroom apartment m Pt
Pleasant $275/mo HUD accept

NEWLMD
Stan OH Right
&lt;Mn Yoor &lt;Mn Land
In Soulh&lt;l&lt;n Oh10

DREAM HOME SERIES
ENTERTAINER
3bodrooms
2baths, slarhng a! $219/mo
SUNRISE Loaded Wllh GE ap
pltances slartJng at $29Qimo

Like New I 1994 Sultan Eiectnc
Heat Pump, 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths.
$17,900 Leave Msg 614 446

40 Acres Wuh 4 Bedrooms Tn
level House 4ti Ft x388 Ft Barn

message

ed 61&lt;-446-2200

NEW YEAR

RENTALS

DOUBLE WIOE DISPLAY SALE
$999 DOWN
SAVE $1000
Free Delivery &amp; Setup
OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
304 755-5885

Large livtngroom, large Kllchen
1 Acre Ga!ltpolts Ctty Schools
$6 7 000 614 446-4323

4 Bedroom Ranch Full Basement
Fenced Yard Near Rto Grande
614 245-9620

l~ve

2566

9621

3374 SR 141 Galltpohs, Three
Bedroom s Tw o Baths ll~tng
Room Dmtng Room Kttchen
laundry Room Detac~ Garage
level 3110ths Acre MIL Eltcellent
Condttton 614 441 0852 Ap
potntment

5054

691 6777

1985 Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Balh

446 9289

1bt garage apt tn Mason, WV
Uvmg room, kttchen bath, qutet
street references &amp; depostt

In New Haven 1br furntshed apt,
deposll &amp; relerences 304·882·

Large selection 01lJsed hOmes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starling at $2905
Outck del ivery Call 614·385

NaTural Gas Heat $305/Mo, $200
Deposit Utilities Not lnciuded
Relerences Required Call 614

CUfl!y DepoM Required, No PelS,
614-446-2957

Doub le wtde 10% down, $196!
mo Free dehvery &amp; setup 1 BOO

Cr edttl $35 000 In Gall1polts
ArCla 614 367 0403 Page 11
800 395 '233"7 P&lt;.no 1576
'"tf'&lt;.r

! Dryer Hook Up Warm Mormng

Call For Free Maps + Owner F1
nancmg Info Take 10'% Off Ltsted
Pnces On Cash Purchases 1

LandWithTimber614-682 7318

2 Or 3 Bedrooms ArolJnd $200/

0% Down Wl!h A Job &amp; Good

1 Bedroom Unita Newest &amp;
Cleanest In The Area Near Holz
er $269/Mo , Plus Ut1l1ttes &amp; Se

$280/mo Uhll!les paid 304 773

Country Bu1ldlng lots BeaullflJI,
pen Flat Meadows Starttng At

pRE AM HOME SERIES
ENTERTAINER.,.

F~rsl Ttme Buyers E-Z Fmancmg

310 Homes for Sale

Acres

available 304-75!&gt;5566

00

Roush Asst Ouector ol Nurstng

10

Close To Jackson County Line,

--~
!~o.lldaJ&amp;.an·~~~"~~~~~~~~~~ t··~l.lll.~=l~8~2':~~"::50~7~0====..:
kends Must be a certtfted nurs
1ng assiS1an1

$10 000

last Onel

1998 Doubtewldt Aepo
Never hved 111, 0Wt1er financtng

OhiO

HVAC

Acres $7,500 Or 19 Acres
S18 000 County Water Teens

985-3902

1ng stongled mol :1:14-1175-1275

CUSTOM SAWING"
Band Saw$ 1!lift &amp; Plan&amp;r
3 Mtles out ltevtng Rd West
Columbia Henry Brenneman

Galllo Co Gallipolis, Neighbor
hood ~d, tO Acres LoiS Ot L""el
S19 000 Or 22 Acres Wl!h Pond
NOW 12&lt;,000 Fnendly R1dge 8 5

1983 Commodore trailer 14x70
three bedroom total electnc w1th
central atr lJnll, must move ti 14
1996 Schult 3bedrooms, 2baths
c/a, 2 decks, bulldtng v1nyl std

Professional
Services

230

1 and 2 bedroom apa('lmenls. furnished and lJ'nfurnished, security
deposit requtred, no pets, 614

Mtlg• Co. Danv ille, Ntce 17
S18,000 Or 9 Acres 992 2218
117 000 Coun~ W.!er

Run,

long Est Card And GUt Shop

220 Money to Loan

BRUNER LAND
740.775-i173
Acrea

446 6766

Nurs.ng Servtces, Inc PO Box
1165 Gallipolis OH 45631, Or
Stop By Our Olllce, At 762 Sec
ond Avenue Gallipolis OH To
Ptck Up An Appllcatton In Gallta

Needed Seamstress
Seams 61-4 388-9310

13 Water vapor

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondttlonal 1ileume ~uarantee
local references furmshed Esla~IShed 1975 Call (614) 446
0870 Or 1 600 287.0576 Rogers

ASTRO-GRAPB

Wa1erproohng
Appliance Parts And Servtce All .
Name Brands Over 25 Years Expenence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag 614 446

7795
C&amp;C General Home Mam
tenence· Patnttng , v1nyt s1dmg,
carpentry, door!, wtndows baths
moble home repa1r and more For • •
free esttmate call Ct1et 614-992
~323

McCoy's Constructton Commer·
c•al JRestdent~l Free Estimates,
Wtll Be 0pera1tng .Under Th ts
Phone I Only, 614 446-1923
Pager II 1 800 W JA BEAR Ptn

12845
Triangle Aemodehng Masonary
(Stucco, Slone Etc .) Carpentry
(Rough And F!ntsh), l•le (CeramI~ E!&lt;: I Orywal, Roofing 614-367-

7351

840 Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon
Retidential or commerctal wlrlng,

new IOMce or ropalra Mas19r hlcanaed electr~ct~n

RtdGnour

Elec!riCOI, WV000306, 304 6751786

Saturday, Jan l 0 1998
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
Try to be pan of the group today by
makmg cooperauon your buzzword
If you're cool and tnd1fferent, you
could make olhers feel as uncom·
fonable as you do Trymg to patch up
a broken romance? ThcAstro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand
wha! to do to make the relahonsh1p
work. Mali $2 75 to Malchmaker, c/o
th1s newspaper, PO. Box 1758, Murray Htll Statton, New York, NY
10156
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) A
change of routme today could help to
refurbiSh your outlook Plan somethmg soc~nl , not obligatory, that

ground AvOid ou1s1de mflucnccs
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Do not sell
your 1deas shon today even 1f a negauve associate g1ves you many reasons why lhey won'! work If your
expenence tells you 1hey w_!)l, Implement them
VIRGO (Aug 2~-Sept 22) Today
you possess all the essential skills !o
maneuver around obstacles that block
you from your obJecuves You won't
need help from others
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) It may
prove necessary for you to alter your
plans a b1t !o accommodate an unexpected development tod~y Do not
pantc; everythmg w1ll work out JUSt
fine
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) A
proJect on wh1ch you've spent much
ume and effon should no! be aban- '
doned today, even tf tt stans to' look
bad on paper Check u agrun from
another angle
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
art.
21)
In sucky sttuattOns today, use
CANCER (June 21-July 22) It
your
dtplomacy and chann to lessen
should be smoo!h salling m your
the
predtcament
Respondmg forcedeahngs today tf you quietly orches'
fully
could
muddy
the waters more
trate your mtenuons from !he backwould energize mstcad of cxhaus!
yo u
PISCES (Fe b 20-Marc h 20)
Today. someone m1ght anempt to
make you feel scllish because you
wtsh 10 spend umc on your own mtcrcsts AciUally, he or she IS the culpnt
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) If
someone al!cmp!s (O g1ve you wellmcanm g adv1ce 10day, Judge tt by
your own standards to dctcnmnc !Is
credence and then proceed as you sec
fil
'
TA.URUS (Apnl 20-May 20)
Today, when 11 com~s to makmg
money, you ' ve got a !ouch others
may admue Be sure to earn your
rewards, get-nch-quack gambles
could m1sfire
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Select
your cDmpaniOns.thoughtfully tDdal'
and you should have a p1c!ure-perfect
scnpt. Remember, 11 only takes one
bad brush stroke to smear a work of

.,

�---~,-·

~

- -

..

,

.

...

_ _ _ _

M ___

-

- -

-

-

-

--•-&lt;To

•
'

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'

By ELIZABETH WEISE
USA Today
SAN F'RANC ISCO - A young
man carefully pans his digital camera.
capturing images of the Macworld
Expo floor as he slowly rides up the
escalator.
That moment said it all.
Despite financial setbacks, plunging market share, disorderly corporate transfers and more than two
years of continuing predictions of the
company 's death, users .of the Apple
Macintosh arc st ill in love.
Yes. attendance at the 1998 installment of the largest Mac trade show,
here through Friday. is down close to
I 0 percent. according to IDG Expo
Management. which puts on the
show.
True , the booths are a little less
ti ghtly packed in the three and onehalf acres of the north and south halls
of Moscone Center.
Nevertheless. the believers have
not lost faith, wandering the fl oor to
draw confidence about the future as
much as tu shop. Too often relcMtcd
to a couple of shelves in computer
~
stores. here the c&lt;pected 68,()(](] vtsitors arc awash in the lure of Mac
parts, software, computers and publications offered by 455 exhibitors.
'Tm li ke a kid in a candy store."
said Glen Warner, 37, who docs cryptological maintenance for .the Navy
and is stationed on the USS Carl Vtnson in Bremerton, Wash. He drove 15
hours through the night to get to Macworld by Tuesday.
Cup of mocha espresso in hand. he

L~ttery

Friday, January 9, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Rocky sales, competition ·fail
'

---

waves aside a disbulieving "You did
what 0 " from a friend. "Sure. Macs
are cool," responds the man who
_credits natural disaster with bringing
him into the Mac fold.
"We were stationed in Homestead. Fla., when Hurricane Andrew
came and ~ my PC," he said.
''Yes 1" He pumps his fist in the air.
ll's clear he feels the loss of most
of h~possessions in the 1992 disastcr was a small price to pay for an
excuse to buy a Mac .
Why'' "Beca use Macs are easier
to use. Just better. When arc you
going to get one ?" he asks, as if the
reasons should be obvious even to the
uninitiated.
If a PC is a Ford Escort. then a
Macintosh is an origmal VW Bee tle.
It 's not just a tool. It's something peopic dote on. love unreservedly the
way they love local sports teams or
favorite bands. It 's beyond logic.
Microsoft has Windows users. Apple
has Mac people.
Their dedication is unfaltenng.
"They alw ays preach doom and
gloom for Apple, but it's loo good ~
machmc to fail.." said Jant cc Nesbit.
office manager for Valley Software in
Merlin , Ore. She sports a T-shirt
tnscribed "Mac: The Power to Crush
the Other Kids, .. encrusted wi th buttons that read " I am a Mac Addictand there is no cure."
Though owner Robert Loeser's
shop also stocks Windows products,
he tells Valley Software customers he
prefers the Mac for its ease of use:
"We lean Mac, but If they're coming

.

in for a PC , we won't push."
plot," Warner said, .denigrating the
He and others like hiln must have PC-based game as a matter of course.
. been doing some serious leaning. In
Nearby, a steady crowd .flowed
his keynote speech at the conference, around Gibson's booth, signing up
Apple interim CEO Steve Jobs told for the 12,000-member group and
the throng that Apple had shipped scarfing up T-shi~ "BftiUG"
. 133,000 of its fast new G3 series on the front and "Tie-dyed in Berkecomputers during the final 51 days of ley by Dead Heads" on back.
the quarter, beating company predicGibson considers the mood of the
. tions of 80,000.
conference "calm. Nobody's going
Those numbers may· not bring around screaming 'We're done for.'
Apple's current U.S. market share of
4.5 percent (down from 7.3 percent
Instead, they're not-so-quietly revat the -same time last year, according eling in the casual announeement by
to industry analysts Dataquest) into Jobs at the end of his keynote address
, double digits. But maybe they don 't Tuesday that Apple plans to report a
have to. said Hal Gibson. executtve $45 million profit next week, its first
director of the Berkefey Macintosh in five quarters.
Users Group .
"It's a kind of 'Take that!' to all
"The Wind ows people always , those people who keep asking me if
pick on the fi gure unmercifully. ,But Apple will ever make a profit," said
people keep their Macs for fove to si• Chery l England of MacAddict magyears . PC users buy new ones on the azine .
average of every two years," he said.
But few seemed to be discussing
"Macs last three times as long. They the flip side of the coin - that
have 10 sell three times as many PCs Apple's revenues arc expected to be
to keep up."
$1.6 billion for the quarter, down
According to Apple's figure\, 22 from last year's $2. I billion.
million of the 28 million MacintoshThe angst that seemed palpable at
es sold worldwide to date are still in last year's Macworld has been
use. In fact. Warner's famil y gels replaced with a quiet sense of
along fone with a 3-year-old Perfor- endurance. Attendance may be down,
rna 550. and he's happy using the but the people who are here are in it
PowerBook 1400 laptop he bought at for the duratton. The Mac may not be
last year 's Macworld ..
quite back, but the free fall has endAs he watches the action on the ed.
large screens above the Bungie game
"They love the company," Engcompany booth, he has occasion to land said. "They love !heir machine.
long for a desktop model that does They even love .that six -color logo.
games a little better. "They wrote All that is still in place."
Marathon- which is Doom with a

utomakers note

--··~·cl...-·ng-'9 'l- ~

-··mood
jYieigs

By DAvE PHILLIPS
The Detroit News
DETROIT- Boris Hlushchenko drove his 1998 Jeep Grand Cherokee just three months before he tired of it and fell in love with the fancy
but rugged Mercedes-Benz ML320 sport,utility. ,
.
It was the first Mercedes-Benz ever fonhe 52-year-old insurance under·
writer from Livonia, Mich.
"The ML320 looks smaller than the Grand Cherokee, but it's actually roomier and plush," HlushGhenko said. .
Competitive prices, savvy marketing and hot new products such as the
ML320, Porsche Boxster and Audi A4 helped German aulomakers attract
legions of new buyers and post a 17 percent surge in combined sales · ·
enough to score the iitdustry's biggest hit last ·year.
Other successes that marked 1997 for the auto industry:
• High volume Japanese cars - Honda Accord, Toyota Camry and
Honda Civic- continued to woo record numbers of consumers with th~ir
practical, affordable appeal.
• Ford Motor Co. profited from Americans' passion for full-size sportutilities. Dealers still can't get. enough of the Ford E• pedition and its
ups!a)e cousin, the Lincoln Navigator model s, even after Ford boos ted
·:apa~ty at the Michigan Truck plant in Wayne. "Expeditton sold heyond
our wildest expectations," said Paul Morel, Ford 's brand manager for
trucks.
• Chevrolet C/K and GMC Sierra. Ten years old and in their last year
before a major redesign, GM's full-size pickup trucks proved resilient in
a segment that showed a rare dip in sales - 3.4 percent - last year.
• Chevrolet Cavalier. With sales up 9.4 percent. tbe venerable small
car made its best showing in 1.0 years and scored a rare appearance in the
top 10 best-selling vehicles for the year.
·
But the year included some misses. Vehicles that fell short of the mark
included:
• Cadillac can claim the Catera achieved the best ever initial launch
of an entry-fevelluxury car. But its ad campaign was widely panned and
the Catera struggled all year to reach.GM 's 25,000 sales goal- aided
by discounted leases for General Motors Corp. employees- and couldn't stop surging Lexus from selling a record 58,428 ES 300 sedans.
• Plymouth Prowler..Two years after its official debut, Chrysler man'
aged to build only 424 Prowlers la&lt;t year. Sales rotated just 120. Dealers
hope an early arriving 1999 model (there's no 1998 model) and a new
color, canary yellow, will deliver meaningful quantities of the hot rod and
put some siule into Plymouth showroom sales.
• Eagle. Chrysler Corp. killed the struggling brand after failing to convince consumers it was a
·
alternative for ·
·

eountu

• Featured on page C1

unba
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Virtually every one of the winners ·
used the first check to pay off debts
that had accumulated during a decade
of mediocre cotton harv~sts . " It went
right to the banker," Maxine Terry
says. Her husband, Vernon "Bunny "
Terry, was among 18 Terry relatives
who shared in the winnings.
The onl y real splurge was by Shad
Rasco. w~o works at McMurry College .in Abilene. He bought a Milsubishi 3000 Spider GT convertible
for $48,000. Ever practi ~al, the local
farmers sti·ll remark on the 27,year-

· - --'i&lt;•H..tfltmf tiJWfr'w!w~piW':rli4~l~e:tlfavagun"-"""~~t..IM-

million Texas luttery jackpot a year · Stiver Star cafe.
.
ago, that 's plenty good enough.
But thts year ofprospenty also has
They were . and still are . farmers taught a harder lesson : No amount of
and secretaries. sod busters and col- money can tnsulate them from reahton gin feeders. Now, they're all mil- ty.
.
lionaires, at least on paper.
Last week. Peggy Dtckson, the
" I sure don't feel like a million-: - woman who organt zed the lottery
airc," says Rex Beauchamp, who had pool. died of cancer. AI age 48, she
just opened the Circle D conve- was dtagnoscd wtth an mope rable
nience store when he added hts $10 bram tumor ada~ before Thanksgtvto the lottery pool last year. "I still ing. exactly one year after winning
work 60 hours a week."
the lottery.
But Beauchamp is out of deht. his
Dickson. a bookkeeper for her
store ·bought a~d paid for. And hoth famil y's business, Terry's Gin, was
his daughters ' co llege loan s arc the common denomtnator among lotcleared off the books.
tery wi nners. She Was the one who
"It 's changed my life. I guess." he decided to start a pool on a lark.
says. " Before I worried about Soc ial because the jackpot had climbed to
Security being there when I got old . nearly $50 million. It was the only
I ~uess I don 't worry about that•too time the group bought tickets. And
m~ch no more ."
J those who joined thcpool give DickMore than anythi ng. this first year son all crcdn for thetr gooc.'..f6rtune .
of prosperity has taught' the " Roby
. More than 200 people a uended
43. .. as they have cpme to call them- her funeral last Friday, two days after
selves . just how much sweeter life her second lottery check arrived in
can he when anything is suddenly the mail . The check. like her future
possible
lottery winnmgs. is being.handled by
Each mcm"ber of the pool won her estate.
nearly $1.1 million , paid out in 20
" I remembe' her walking in here
yearly. after-tax checks of $~,U&gt;66 . the day she bought the tickets. She
The payments arc more ttlllltltwtce was wearing a blue dress . I don't
the annual median household income think she'd ever been in a liquor store
here in Fisher County, but only about before ," says Jim Carson, the owner
$5.000 more than the annual house- of Longhorn Liquors in nearby
hold. median income nationwide.
Swcei;)Vater.
Dickson plunked down $420 in
"It 's not really enough money to
call yourse lf rich." says Vance Lakey. small hills and asked for 420 lottery
a crop duster who took his wife and tickets . Carson kicked tn $10 of his
four daughters to Germany lhts nwn .
Christmas. " Buill is a comfort."
By midnight, they were nch .

By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmea·Senttnel Stan
MIDDLEPORT - Recent donations arc -boosting
efforts to establish the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College in Meigs County.
Friday afternoon, Ohio Lt. Governor Nancy Hollister
presented a ceremonial $10,000 check to the Meigs ·
County Community Improvement Corporation during a
brief press conference at the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport in Gallipolis.
The check represents a gran! from lhe Governor's
Office of Appalachia an~ will assist the CIC in renovat·
ing another recent donation: the former Holzer Clinic in

Gallla-Melgs
reports
fatalities up by four In '97

"She touched the lives of 42 oth- son wants to fly on the Concorde to ticket was just the first sign ol a new
The dollars from the harvest will
er people," Carson says. "She Paris and travel to Nepal to see run of d~sperately needed good luck. rol~ over three or four times, to the
changed their lives. She changed my Mount Everest.
Roby once was a thriving town of gins, seed and fertilizer suppli ers,
life, my children's lives, my chil"I guess I'm enjoying life a lot . I,200 people with a shopping district, stores, banks. even the restaurants .
" In a town like Roby," says Kevin
·
in ore," he says.
three cafes, a movie . theater and a
dren's children."
Carson went from wor~ing 80
Carson not only won a share of the motel. Today, the town population Brinkley, an economist with the
hours a week and carrying $180,000 jackpot, he also won a $460,000 com- has fallen to 616 people. Almost National Colton Council of America,
in debt to a work week that includes mission from the state for selling the every storefront is boarded over. The " thai's huge."
While the cotton crop may have a
time fbr at least two rounds of golf, winning ticket. And his lottecy sales theater is long gone, the motel grown
effect on Roby than the lotgreater
a bridge game and Friday night pok- have exploded since then. He is now over with weeds.
tery:
it's
clear that the first winnings
cr. His blood pressure dropped 60 the II 3th top seller among 17,500
But this year brought a bumper'
sparked
an
urban renewal of sorts .
points . .although he still takes his Texas lottery retailers , up from cotlon crop, after 15 p&lt;?Or years
Homes
are
spruced up inside and
medicine.
5,534th.
bedeviled by boll we,evil infestations.
out.
Thurman
Terry
replaced his carWhen he retires in five years. CarFor many here-!he winning lotlery
Beneath soft blue skies, the red
peF.Seyeml-heuse!HfFC·weBa'lg
new -.
~· --· -~~~ ~---~-.......::-r.rieltlS"are-plc~otro-n: The
two gins in Fisher County are work- coats of paint. Don Campbell-is coning overtime to process more' than sidering building a new house .
New trucks are everywhere.
50,000 bales of cotton - twice the
Replacing hard-working pickups
The following land transfers were LCCD, Scipio;
yield of last year's crop - before'
was
the most common splurge among
year's
end.
recorded recently in the office of
Right of way, Theron David
lotlery winners.
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene Workman to LCCD, Salisbury;
Hamilton:
Right of way, Lee E. and Eva R.
Deed, Jean Trussell and Jeffery Bumem to LCCD, Salem;
Todd Roberts, Chester parcels;
Deed, Thomas and Madeline
BY
Deed, Ralph R., Jean, Robert E., McClung to Diane Snow, Pomeroy ..
Donald E., Georgiana and Marilynn parcel;
MAX HILL MOTOR SPORTS AND KEY MOTORS
,
Trussell to Jeffery Todd Roberts,
Deed, Daniel and .bnet Goeglein,
6 14 -992-3878
614 -247 -4861
Chester parcel;
Kathy Fausnaugh, Amy a.nd Jon
Ba m -6 pm
After 6 prn
Deed, Jimmie Allman to Ralph D. Lastinger to Frances Goeglein, Saland Mary Janice Lavender, Sutton- isbury;
Syracuse village parcel s;
1. "23" T/altered Former Dave Camp Car, Proven
Deed, Clara Haning, deceased, to
Right of way, Clinton and Shirley Bonnie C. and Clifford E.J. Whit·
Winner Complete Minus M/t, Light, Go Fast, Built For
Jude to Leading Creek Conservancy tington , Scipio;
Small Driver .......................................................... $4500
District, Salem;
Right of way, Clara Haning,
Right of way, Diana L. Imboden deceased, and Lyle Bruce Haning to
to LCCD, Rutland;
MilfordoC. and Betty P. Wyant;
2. Splitzer Red- 257" Long, Complete Minum M/t Was
Right of way, Patricia A. and LarDeed, May L. Bonnaud, May
BBC &amp; Pg, Rlin 5.30 At 130 MPH With Mil~!·
ry M. Bissell to LCCD , Rutland ;
L.M. Bonnaud March to Eric Y. BonRight of way. Harry Yarbrough to 'naud, Meigs;
When New Was Tad, Built For Small Pilot... ..... 7900
LCCD, Rutland;
Deed, Jeffrey L. and Crystal E.
Right of way, Randy W. and Sher- Baughman to Ronald and Ginger ~ ~----­
Pro Street Cavalier Z-24, Won Several Times In
ri L. Hart to LCCD, Salem;
Denney, Salem;
Right of way, Jcfffey T. and
97 " "''trr'\J'no, Complete Minus M/t, Thbe Chassis, 12
Deed, John V. Sr. and Donna
Dawnettc Welch to LCCD, Scipio;
Marie Bogard to same, Lebanon;
Bolt, M/t, Fuel Cell,·4-link•. :................................. $9500
Right of way, Catherine Colwell
Right of way, Jim Farris to
.
to LCCD. Salem;
National Gas and Oil Corporation,
Right of way. Carrie Wears to Rutland, .752 acres;
4. 1969 Camaro Blue/white Stripes. Complete Minus .
LCCD, Rutland;
Deed, Sonia M. Mendoza to JerMit, New 5.13 In Dana 6n. New Gm Front And Doors,
Right of way. Clifford C. and Bon- ry L. Jennings, Bedford parcels;
Weld, Deden~ar, H!irst, Noid ............................. $7500
nie c. Whittington to LCCD. Scipio.
Deed, Todd B. Grover, Connie L.
Right of way, Howard Glisipie to Smith, Connie L. Roush and Tom
LCCD, Rutland;
Roush to Robert P. and Louise A.
5. 28Ft. Pace Trailer, Ha112-3 Jr. Dragsters Or 1 Long
Right of way. Donald Ray Jr. and . Luke, Rutland, 20.69 acres;
Dragster, Or Altered, Red, Lay Down Rear Door, Side
Edricess Karr to LCCD, Sci'pio;
Deed, Doris E. Ragan to Barbara
Right of way. Hilda M. Collins to J. Hatfield, Columbia, 12 acres.
DoOr, Red •••••••••••••.•.•••.•.••.•.•
:~ ..............~.................. $2995
p
llllll!"'"...

GALLIPOLIS - A total of
nine fatal accidents were investi·
gated in Gallia and Meigs cOunties
during 1997 by the Stale Highway
Patrol, an increase of four fatalities over 1996, according lo local
patrol statistics.
Five of the fatals were in Galli a
County and four in Meigs County,
said Lt. Wayne McGlone, commander of the Gallipolis Post.
Three of the nine crashes · were
alcohol-related, a 24 percent

ON NOW AT QVAUTY FVRNlrvRI
DINING ROOMS, LIUING ROOMS AND BEDROOMS ON SAL£!

B-ball
Results

will feature
relative of Martin
Luther King as
keynote speaker

• Page B1 •

• Ftttutld en P1g1 C. •

•

·-tmes

Details on
pageA2

Mostly cloudy

entitttl

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • J-anuary 11, 1998

''f~

-~;,~:;~: .. ·

."'~·-- vol. 32,':N~l4:eJ

Middleport , the site of the proposed branch campus.
The clinic earlier !his week donated the building to
the CIC with the understanifing the building be used to
house the branch campus. Holzer Clinic operated an outpatient medical clinic at the !50 Mill St. location lor
over 15 years before moving last year to a new facility
built by Holzer Clinic ad Consolidated Health Systems
near Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
The Meigs County CIC now faces the task of renovating the interior of the building, tearing out walls and
transforming medical examining rooms into classrooms.
Meanwhile, the University Board of Trustees has
given a green light to continuing preliminary steps

toward the Meigs County branch ,
atcording ro Dr. Barry M. Dorsey,
URG/RGCC president.
If research shows a sufficient
number of students will enroll to
make a branch campus a viable venFUNDS DEUVERED- Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister, left, end University of
ture, the board is expected to give ils Rio Grande President Barry Dorsey llilened aa Ellzeblth Schaad, the
final approval during its February regional economic development representative lor Gov. George
meeting to begin offering classes in Volnovlch, made Introductory remarka prior to the prennlltlon ot 1 certhe spring quarter beginning in emonial check to renovate the former Holzer Clinic building In Middleport Into a Rio Grande branch campus.
March.
Commerce provided the impetus for the proposed
A Sept. 9, 1997, meeting in
Continued on paQe A2
Pomeroy sponsored by the Meigs County Chamber of

Fifth grade students
DARE to stay off drugs

River laps at Pomeroy
Main Street; Crest
.expected this morning

By JENNIFER RICHTER
Tlmee-Sentlnel StaH
From Stan, AP Reports
GALLIPOLIS- More than 100 fifth grade
POMEROY/GALLIPOLIS- An all-too-familiar scene- water lapping
students at Washington Elementary School
at Main Street in Pomeroy - once again has the attention of a community
received a special honor on Friday when they
accustomed to flooding.
became the firs! graduates of the year for the
The Pomeroy municipal parking lol is under water, and decorative light
Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.)
posts, some of which were damaged during the heavy March 1997 flood,
have been removed from the promenade area.
,
program.
.
The program began in the Gallipolis Local
Pomeroy's new riverfront amphitheater, dedicated jus! three months ago,
School District in January 1991 and still exists
is also submerged, allhough it was designed lo withstand high water levels
at
_th~ levee area. __ ·.
~"""'~e~~~~fo!~~:~~~elr;,~~Tn~t--H~~ereaching
nearly 1,500 students each year.
··
McGlone
fifsf yeiil,lfle program '(inlyni'et witli
The Ohio River, swollen from ~~Da1Mi!IM6fli'
last week's heavy rains, was· ..
nine fatalities, none of the victims
fifth graders but by the 1,992 lo 93 school year,
wore sealbelts.
.sludents · in kindergarten through sixth
expected 10 crest at the Belleville Updated state highway
Overall, troopers investigafed
began to get instruction from Gallipolis ·
Locks and Dtijn at Reedsville at l iAformation Is available
1,4S4 accidents in 1997, up 247
DARE officer Pafrolman Wayne Sweeney. ·
a.m. this morrling at an est imated by calling _
1 888_20H·
from 1996.
Sweeney atlended an intense two week
38 feet.
Racine Locks and Dam report· ROAD (1·888-264-7623).
"In light of the increase in traf!raining to learn how to leach s·tudents about
fie fatalities iri Gallia and Meigs
drug abuse resistance education. He is the only
ed 44 feet yesterday morning.
counties, the post will strive in
city officer cenified to teach the students in the
Last March, the river crested at 50.8 feet in Pomeroy.
A spokesman at the Belleville locks said Saturday that the river was
1998 to reduce those totals,"
city's elementary schools througho.ul the school
expected to peak in Parkersburg, W.Va., at 7 p.m. Friday. The National
McGlone said.
year. Sweeney explained the reason that an
Weather Service anticipated the water leve l at Parkersburg to reach the fl ood
In addition, the post will work
officer is chosen to teach the program is
on increasing the use of seatbelts,
because it shows children that police officers
level of 36 feet.
Three state routes in Meigs County were closed on Saturday: 338 at
which McGlone said will be
are their friends and police officers are able to
Antiquity, 124 north of Porlland and 124 near Reedsville, at the entrance to
accomplished through public
leach these classes easier because they have
awarenass and. education, and
first hand expertise of the subject matter.
Forked Run State Park.
In Gallia County, SR 141 south of Cadmus was closed to traffi&gt; on Satstrict enfo~cement of all traffic
DARE lessons ft;&gt;cus on four major areas:
urday, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
violations.
providing accurate information about alcohol
Concentrated
enforcement
and drugs; teaching students decision making
Dispatcher Bill Brown said all other state routes were open, although the
efforts will be carried out through·
skills and self-esteem; showing stu~ents how
post fielded calls all through Saturday about any road-closings.
Updated slate highway information is available by calling 1-888·20Hout the year in an effort to curb
to resist peer pressure; and giving them ideas
accidents.
for alternatives lo drug use. After completing
ROAD (1-888-264-7623). The toll-free number was established for traveler
OF COMPLETION - J.B. Burchette Ia
"Special emphasis will be
the course work, according to DARE data,
convenience, a patrol spokesperso n said. The public is urged to use thi s
pleased
with
his
certificate
of
prolect
completion
during
number for information and to free up patrol dispatchers who must handle
placed on speed, left of center,
studies show thai there is significanlly less
DARE
grad!latlon
ceremonies
on
Friday.
l!urchette
was
one
emergency
calls, the spokesman said.
failure to yield, DUI and seatbelt
substance abuse, a decline in truancy and
of
the
113
Washington
Elementary
tilth
graders
that
suc·
Water
was
also receding slowly from Gallia County roads, mainly along
enforcement;'' McGlone said.
school vandalism, improved sludenl work
cesslully completed the 17 week DARE course.
the
Raccoon
and
Symmes creeks, that were covered in the wake of last
During 1997, troopers at the
habits, reduced gang activity, a mcire positive
In grades kindergarten through second, the children
week's heavy rainfall.
Gallipolis Post made over
altitude toward police officers and better relameet with Sweeney during four sessions that are 20
The Robert C. Byrd Locks and Dam reported the Ohio River was at 42.2
arrests, while 261 drunk drivers
tions with teachers and school officials.
minutes
long
during
each
semester.
The
third
and
forth
feet
in its lower gauge at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, with the crest forecast for 7
were removed from the roads and
DARE focuses on saying no to drugs and other subp.m. Sunday.
2,025 citations were issued for
stances. Eight ways to say no ·include: saying no graders meet with Sweeney in five sessions each being
In southeastern Ohio, most roads were open Friday except in Athens
violations of the stale's mandatory
thanks; give an excuse or a reason; broken record; 30 minutes long each semester.
Since
fifth
graders
are
the
emphasized
group
.to
County,
where floodwaters had closed seve ral major roads and most of the
seatbeli and child safety laws.
walk away; change the subject; avoid the situation;
county's schools.
The majority of fatal crashes
give the cold shoulder; and everyone in the group teach, they meet once a week for 17 weeks t~ complete
Continued on page A2
All but a few roads were reopened in Vinton County, but no major probcould be preve nted, McGlone sai d,
should agree to say no together.
.
terns
were reported, the sheriff 's department said.
if drivers followed three basic
rules - always drive at or under
the posted speed limits and obey
traffic regulations; always wear a
will follow the opening of the Wai-Mart store
not considered weal.thier
. "\?u 're able to capture those dollars," he
properly fitted seatbelt and use a By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmee-Senllnel
Stan
in
the
Gallipolis
Marketplace,
the
TJF
still
by
the
st~te,
and
contmues
satd.
If you set astde taxes for_ as long, as 30
child safely seat for c~ildren; and
GALLIPOLIS
_
Tax
increme
nt
funding
means
that
Wal·M~rt
and
other
enterprises
to.
recetve
payment
of
years,
you only pay for th e proJeCt that s des·
never drive if using alcohol.
that will be utilized in Gallipolis serves as a covered by ctty legtslatwn will pay properly
extslmg ~tllage and edu- tgnated.
vehicle for funding public improvements and . taxes, Graham noted..
catw?al atd. In return, the
"The city's getting enough money to build
doesn't deprive local government units of
"TIF is not really a tax break," he said.
addtttonal tncome tax rev- a road, the schools are gettmg a better deal,
money, the executive director of the Gallia "Wai-Mart ',Viii sta.y pay taxes, but will pay
enue. generated by new and it would be of benefit to the downtown to
Today's ~bati-.S.adbttl
County Community Improvement Corpora- into a fund to be administered by the county ·
JObs ts shared by the ctty create another access road," Graham added.
12 Sections • 9S Pages
lion said.
auditor. You don'! really abate any !axes -lhe
wtlh lhe schools.
.
Initially suggested as an escape route for
C2&amp;4
R. V. " Buddy" Graham said the TIF agree· companies pay their taxes into a public fund, Graham
TIF, covered by Ohto the northern end of the city in the wake of the
ment approved Dec. 29 by the City &lt;;ommis- and the fund is appl ied to public infrastructure
R~vtsed Code Sectton March 1997 flood, Graham said the access
sion and the Gallipolis City Board of Educa- thai will benefit the firm paying the taxes."
5709.40, becam7 effecttve '" December !996, route took on additional urgency because
tion after extensive discussion will create a
The city schools, the primary beneficiary of and had been dtscussed by Graham wtth the flooding had affected operations at the Borgfund to finance a proposed alternate access property tax revenue from the Wal-Mart, have commtsston smce Aprtl 1997·
Warner Automotive plant, spurring concerns
route to Eastern Avenue thai he said ultimate- agreed to an exemption of the property from
A local fund to fmance the access route can from the manufacturer's corporate leaders.
t,y benefits the county's economic well-being. the tax rolls as the money is directed into the be kvcraged wtth state and federal dollars,
A green light on the Wal-Mart construction
" Prompted by. the anticipated increase. in fund, Graham said. .
. . .a . ~ng speed the construct ton process, Gra,
Continued on page A2
traffic along the stretch of State Route 7 that
With the exemptiOn, the school dtstnct ts
noted.

Land transfers posted

Inventor, Reduetion Sale

·~--·--

HI: 40s
Low: 20s

Donations provide boost to
URG Meigs·county branch

brought prosperity to·many in hard-hit farm town

By DEBBIE HOW~ETI
USA Today
ROBY, Texas - Prosperity here ·
began with a winning lottery ticket.
It 's not the kind of prosperity that
lets you build a mansion and snack on
caviar. it's the kind that lets you go
to sleep without tossing and turning
over unpaid bills, the kind that lets
you take a real vacation once a year.
the kind that lets you trade a pickup
with 250,000 miles on it for one that
has never been driven.
· For the 43 people in thi s West

~,eoHege ---··-­

IUC.\fj ('.\ItS I•'Oit S.\1.1•:

CIC director says 'TIF' does not deprive local units of fun~~ng

Good Morning

6. 32 Foot Goose Neck With 24 Foot Floor Good
DragsterTrailer, Lay Down Door/side Doo~ ...... $1900
7. 1986 Suburban Great Tow Vehcile, Front &amp; Rear Ac.
And Heat 2 Wh.;l Drive 70k Act Miles .............. $6995
8. 1987 Gmc, With Lounge, New Brakes, Roters, 8.2
Thrbo, 5+2 All New Rubber, With 93 Interstate 44 Ft.
Will Haul2 Cars, 6.5 Onan ................................ $29995
9. 477CI, BBC ........................................................ $5000
10. 355CI, SBC, Ran 5.96, in 3100Lb Car .......... $2500 •
REDUCE.D PRICES FOR PAC:KAGE DEALS
KEY MQTORS AREA'S

•

.

.'

.

I

The United Fund for Meigs County Inc., was award· building on the museum property inlq a combination grant has been awarded to the Fre nch Art Colony Inc.,
GALLIPOLIS - Five tri-county non-profit organito help underwrite a hands-on visual and pcrformmg
ed
a Gannett Foundation grant of ·.:;;~::.,;:.;;.:;;,;;._~;::,;;;,::,..,;,;,...;,.;,; orientation and dining room .
zations have been awarded a total of $10,280 in grants
arts program for physically and mentally challenged
$2,000
.toward
the
organization's
genThe
·award
to
the
Point
Pleasant
by the Qannett Fo~ndation, it was announced today by
Artists Series goes to help with the children .
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Publisher Robert L era! campaign fund-raising goal of
$20,000.
The
United
Fund
program
for
$16,400 cost of sponsoring a series of • Twent~-six different non-profit organizations in .the
Wingeit.
.
Meigs
County,
founded
in
1993,
is
cur·
performances of West Virginia musi- three counties served by OVPC newspapers had ftled
The Gannett Foundation is a private foundation
applications by the November deadline to request 1997
sponsored by Gannet! Co., Inc., a di11ersified news and rently' providing fi'\ancial assistance to GANNEnFOUNDATION cians in the fields of jazz, harp, classi·
fund grants , according to Wingett. Applications wt ll be
10
non-profit
Meigs
County
organizacal
chamber
and
Celtic
music.
information company which owns OVPC newspapers,
A $3,000 grant from the Gannett Foundation was accepted again this year, Wingett said, with the '98 alloincluding the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant tions .
made
lo the University of Rio Grande to help enable cation available being aboul $15,000.
In Mason County, the West Virginia Slate Farm
Register, The Daily (Pomeroy) Sentinel and Sunday
The Gannelt Foundation, in cooperation with lhe
elementary
and secondary school students, who lack
Museum a11d Point Pleasant Artists Series were awardTimes-Sentinel.
Ohio
Valley Publishing Co., hap awarded $9,000 in disfinancial
resources,
to
attend
summer.and
college
edu·
· Grants are made annually by the foundation to non· ed Gannett Foundation grants .of $3,000 and $1;100,
aster
grants
during March 1997 to organizations admin·
&amp;ttio n programs for academic and cultural enhance·
.
.
profit·organizations mostly in more than 100 communi- respectively. ·
istcring
flood
reli ef in Meigs, Gallia and Mason coun:
The $3,000 gran! lo the Farm Museum will be used ments.
ties in the United States and U.S. territories where Gantics.
Also in Gallia County, a $1,180 Gannett Foundatlon
to assist in the renovation of an existing 50-by-128-fool
nett .has newspapers and broadcast operations.

(J ·

... ..

•

'

•

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