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Page 10 • The Dally.Sentinel

Tuesday, January 27, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Survey of elderly disputes many myths of aging
,

To .get more in tunc with ·Oid0r • depressions and helplessness ·are
adult assues, personnel of the Area common in about 15-25 of those
Agen~y o n Aging, assi~t~d by Ohio over 65.
Una vcrslly students. n tentl y c~nThe number of those over 65 who
due ted a survey on I ~ quahues, , say they used a computer ''&gt; esterneeds and acta vi ties ol senior citiday" is roughly 2.4 malhon
ze ns.
It is fa lse, that once we reach the
An emphasis of the survey conage of 80, we become much less
ducted an e1ght Southeastern Oh1 o
concerned about keeping up with
coun1 1cs inc luding Me igs was on
what's happemng -in the world. the
dctermi nm g whether Amcnca is in
results
show. saad Collms.
tunc with lis elders.
Other results
Glenda Collms. R. N, planna ng
--Those over 65 " ho say their
and deve lopme nt dtreCior for the
health
statu s ts excellent tend lo hve
Area Agency. said that the survey
rcstall showed that "overall saltsfac- an urban areas.
tion wuh li fe remains fairly con-- Watching TV is the most com:-.umt" for se nior Clll zcn.s.
mon acti vity for those 65 or over.
-- After emotional support ,
Accordmg to the resu lts. 93 perce nt of those over 65 saad they look the most common assastance those
forward to eac h new day. and that over 65 rece ive from lhear fa mil ies
is fi xing th ings
the y enJOV mce ung new people
Feelings of lone liness. boredom,
--It is not true that the olde r we ·

get the more we think life is worse
than it was 20 years ago
--As people age they say descnbc
their health as excellent or good .
C
. d
-- ompare to those 65-69., those
80 and older arc Jess concerned
about their physical health .
--They thi nk their doctors understand the iss ues invo lved wllh ag mg.
-- It is fa lse that most elders do
not feel comfortable ask ing the If
doctors to ex pl am things to them
-- Most pet owners are men.
--Our fear of bei ng robbed or
mugged decreases with age.
--Those who say they arc least
sati sfied .with thcar Jives hve 111 suburban areas.
--Eight-fi ve perce nt of the people
over 65 fee l they arc more fortu nate
lhan others .
-- It is true thm men over 65 tend

to be more active as volunteers than
women over 65.
In the needs assessment survey
done tn Me1gs County by the Area
,Age ncy on Ag ing, 48 perce nt
responded wi th the following
results·
--25 perce nt andicated that they
arc aware of the role of the Area
Agency on Ag mg,
--54 pe rcent noted that the availability and access to services for the
elderl y are eas ily accessible,
-- 29 percen t felt that the availahillly and access to services for the
elderly arc somewhat accessible.
-- 67 perce nt said that gettmg
mformalion about services is not a
prob lem.
-- 38 percen t fe h that homemaker
se1V1ces is somewhat of a problem
and 54 percent sa1d 11 IS not a prob-

lem and that gelling home re pairs is
not a problem,
, --7 l percent said gettmg transportation to the grocery store is not a
problem and 4 percent sa id u is a
definite problem, while 67 percent
said transportati on to medical
appointments is not a problem. and
58 said gelling adequate hcalth care
i s not a problem,
--7 I said getting enough food and
nutrition is not a pro blem.
--29 percent felt tax dollars should
fund in-home homcmak tng and
health care such as informati on.
Fifty people 111 each of the eight
countacs were surveyed w11h a total
of I5 I surveys be ing completed and
returned.
Most people answered the questions based on their own si tuation.
They said SO!IlC of the serv ices were

\

Ohio Lottery

Kentucky
slips past
Vanderbilt

Pick 3:
022
Pick 4:
~542

not a problem 1f they had family or
neighbors who were helping out.
They also sa1d when they have
called the Se nior Center in each
coumy or the Area Agency on Aging
they dad rece ive useful mfonmation
to help them with their special situa-

Buckeye.5:
5-15-22-25-27

Sports on Page 4

•

lion.

Coll ins saad that the Area Agency
on Ag ing offiCe has a Se nsiu vity to
Ag ing Workshop that is available.
· 11 prov 1dcs hands on ac tivities that
let you experience se nsory losses,
mobt lily change&gt; and day to day
cha llenges faced by many older
adult s:· she s:ud
Vol. 48, NO. 199
©1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

•

and Goodyear rcprcscnt all vc Dave
Fulton.
The D i ~t 1n C t1 vc Scrv1cc Prngram
sponsored by the Guodyc;u Tire and
Rubber Company. crKoun:tgcs d! stnct supervisors to evalu ate thc1r
natura l resource consc rva11on program on an annual has1s.
Thi~ year marks the 50th anmversary of Goodyear's sponsorship of
the prog ram. D1 ~ 1 r ic t prog1ams arc
rated in a number of t~ rcas of scrv1cc
to county landow ners and reSidents.
incl udm g delive ry olt ec h ~ica l ass is-

tancc. conservati on cd uca taon and
IIJ fonnatl on prog ram., and ove ral l
progrom pl annmg. Th1 s ye:1r 37 of
Ohi o\ d1 st nc1s rated "supenor'. 41
rated "exce llent " and c1cht earned ,,
"good" ra tin ~
"'
The OFSWCD was organ11cd "'
1943 to stren gthen the natu ra l
resource conserv at ion programs or'
Ohm's 88 county-based SWC Ds.
The annual meeting gives Sotl and
Water Conservation Di strict supervisors and their staffs an opport unity
to gam new instghts into local pro-

Informa tion on the workshop
may be obtmncd by calling Glenda
Cu llin s. 6 14-374-9436.

known as Athen s Rehabalitataon Serv1ccs. to deli ver these services in
partnershi p with Heallh Recovery
Services across the f1 ve cuunt1es
served by the agcnc1cs.
The grant wa ll enable the tra ining
ce nter 10 target two dist inct groups
in the region: persons who arc alcohol/drug dependent with an addtlaonal physaca l or behavioral dtsability and dru g/alcohol addicted
women who receive pubhc assistance .

Doctors being taught dangers of over

"Thas project will stren gthen the
connecti on between substance abu se
treatm ent and vocallo!l31 rchab,Jitall on," said Nancy Bloomlicld , SCC
director of vocational se rvices.
It will "serve as a model for other
rural collaborations as we work to
help people become more self-suffi cient," she added.
The training center provides job
placement and j ob coachmg assistance to physica lly and behaviora ll y
challenged people in the reg ion.

pre~cribing

gram deve lopment as well as learn
about natur.tl resource management
olle nngs av:ulahlc at the co unty.
state and federa l leve l
Others allcnding the three day
mcct wg from Mc1gs County were
Superv iS ors Marco Jeffers. John
R1cc and Thomas Theiss; staff members Opal Dyer. Blair Windon and
Jana s Carnahan. District Conserva·
11 on1o1 Mike Duhl. and SWCD Auxah ary mcmhcrs Janet Bolin, Jackie
Jeffers . Sheil a Theiss. and Daana
Duh l

With on-the-job trainmg. sclecllve placement . career exploration
and extended follow-up services, the
!raining center placed over 85 people last year.
The trainmg center will usc the
grant to ad d two vocational counse lors to their current staff of two
full -lime job placem ent specialists
and two part -tim e j oh coaches.

PRESIDENT CLINTON delivered his State of the Union speech
Tuesday night In Washington. See additional stories and· photos
on page 5.

.1

FLOOR MODEL SALE

GETIING INFORMATION • Michelle Harris and Christy Causey
of Eastern High School take notes af a career Information session at the Adult Career Center of the Tri·County Vocational
School duflng a recent.visit there by Eastern students.

The Dally Sentinel
Valentine Hearts
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

ex citing moments in the Houst!

chamber. "
Most bwmakers emerged from
the House chamber eager to comment
on Stx.:ial Security. Saddam Hussein,

trade pohcy nr other points of the
president 's speech. and for the most
part found themsc lvc!'i :-iiCI!rcd away
from the substance of the address and
tow ard dtscussion of the behav1or of
~h e congressional audiencl! .
Ohao Jegaslators said they were
aware that Congress was be~n g
watched fo r signs of d i~respect in
hght of the last week 's reve lations
that a specaal prosec ut or was Jook mg
into as yet unproven cl aims that Clin ton had an affair with a White House
intern and then asked her to lie about
it.
But there were few s1gn:-i of reaction to that when the president and
the Republican-dommated Congress
were gathered m the :oi~une room on
national television to t! x e rcis ~ a consulutional requ~remen t.
•
"I hope the press would report
that he got a polite but cool recepuon:· sa ad Rep. Make Oxley. R-Oh1n.
" It wasn't John Elw ay bei ng
greeted in Denver. but all in all the

pre" dent was we ll rece ived ... said
Rep. Steve LaTourette. R-Ohi o.
"Eve r)hody main taaned their
civility. I thi nk that's unportanl. " said
Rep. Dave Hobson . R-Ohio.
··Thi~ is the pn::-,1Jen t\ ni ght tn
address the stal e of the union. It 's nut
the slate of the pres u.Jency: · said Rep.
Deborah Pryce. R-Ohio.
" ) thought it 's what we would
ex peel for the presadenl nf the United States . Anything Je&gt;s than 1h1s
would not be appropn atc." added
DeWine
·· 1don 't th1nk o no: h~ got st;.li-t ~d.
J)&lt;nple were th inking ahnut (the alkg :..~tlon s . ) I kn ow I wasn't." said Rep.
John Kasich. R-Ohio. " It W&lt;IS his
speech. People wanted to hear what
he had to say ..
II there was any undercurrent
from the GOP side of the nlll m. 11
wasn't apparent to the Ohi o Democ r.&lt;.II S.

' " ) th ought it was nnl tern bl y difContinued on page 3

VISITS COLLEGE • Southern High School students Involved
in school/work partnership programs recently visited the Washington State Community College. They stopped for a picture in
front of a college building.

OFF TO HOCKING COLLEGE · Thirty-four Meigs High School
students In Sohbol-to-Wo~k progr,ams boarded o bus Tuesday
morning for Nelsonville where they visited Hocking College and
the Adult Career Center of the Tri-County Vocational School. The
trip was a part of the observance of Ohio School·to-Work Week .

Free Gift with Demonstration

CO LUMB US !AP I - After
of bc hind - thC · IO~e nes ncgtlll:l uons. lawmak ers prepared to release
dl!to.ul s of :1 new SL'hOt)I-Jinanclll(; ~y:-.tt! m that would ask voters to incrl'ase
the sales tax and cut some busi ness
propert y tax bre:aks.
"' It 's :.t polit Jcal ~.:o m p ro m Jse'...... . . .
Senate Minonty Leader Ben Espy. DColumbus. told reporters Tuesday.
" I' m not sure it 's the hest plan in the
world ."
And whether it wtll satiSfy the
Ohi o Supreme Co urt ' s order 10
w e~ ks

SINGER SEWING MACIIM PRICES
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#Q~E MSR $1 299.99

Sole.$229

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#14U595 MSR $1 599.99 Sole $1199

#9217 MSR $699.99 Sale $469

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THE FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy
740-992-2284
• To Qualified Applicants

workpl ace mentoring. job shadowing. loday's rapidly changing. technologyWhile most School-to- Work activyou th apprenticeships and coope ra- dnven market place and the cumr&lt;t- ities are di rec ted at high school stu lti ve pressures o r an increas ingly dents. Brewer said !hat locall y prouve education.
Th is week. Jan. :!6-Feb. 2. has global market place are creating an grams on careers are being initiated
been proclaimed Oh1o School-to- unprecedented need for a hi ghl y - in middle schools.
She sa1d that tn Apnl a career day
Work by Gov. George V. Voinov ach skalled and adaptable workforce.
··Th1s week senes as an opponu- program will be held at the Meigs
to highlight the importance of linking
classroom and work ex perience. It nit y to recogm ze and celebrate Middle School in Middleport. As a
WJII culminate next Monday wi th a Sc hool-to-Work as a critical link part of Ihat day's actiVIties. Students
state-wide "Groundhog Shadow between successful learning and pro· wall he taken into businesses to
observe J)&lt;Ople 111 their work place.
ductave citizenship.""
Day."
Brewer talked about fundin g for
The shadow day experience wiII
The governor explained that shadmvolve '\hado win{' with an ow day ts an intlwtive of Amenca's School-to- Work rece1ved by the
employee or employer for all or part Promise, u nationwide call to action county. One gr.mt. :-ihc! sa1d. Jeals
uf a day.
for America's youth led by Gen. Col- wi th ge nder equity 111 the work place
In signtng the proc lamation, Gov. '" Powe ll.
and lrad ltaonal careers lor men and
Voi nov ich said "The demands of

women . Tho~c fumh arc hcm g li\CJ
to enh ance non-gender ...:art:er aware-

ness
Anoth er " a partnershi p grant
"h'.s real ly a 'partnership' hccause 11
has to involve- the ~ t udents w1th bw·.t ness and tndustry, organ iLed labor.
and commun1t y age ncies," explaint?d
Brewer.
School-to-Work IS descri bed as a
syste mit· change for ed ucation, an
approach thai enhances th e way we
prepare Ohao's youth to meet lhe
demands uf a h1ghly sk illed wmk force. an effort 10 build puhlic-pnvatc
p:lrtneP.. hl fl s. she concluded

www.eurakanet.com/-fabrlcahop

By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus l;!ureau
COLUMB US - Se nate Republicans are pinning their hopes of ousting state Sen. Mike Shoema ker. DBourneville. on Portsmouth businessman Lee Thatcher, who has
twice fai led to win an Ohio House
seat.
Thatcher. who was defeated in
1994 and 1996 in runs for slate representative against Rep. Bill Ogg. DSciotovi lle. confirmed Monday ih al
he will run for the I7th Senate Di strict s~at held by Shoemaker.

99

Sale $2519 99

I'

\
• Sewing Machine Repair
• Scissors Sharpened
• lbxedo Rental
j

rework the' way Ohw pays for puhlic
cUw:at1nn. wdl . Espy saH.J he wtnJid
leave that for the ro un s to decide.
Espy said s~ n a tc D~ m ocra t ~
reac hed tcn tattve ag.reCilll!nt w1 th
Republ icans on a plan that wou ld
raise Ihe state sales tax hy a half-cent
on lh ~ th)llar:· cut bu sinl! s ~ property
lux hreu ks. ancrease the amoum ol
muncy SJ)&lt;nt per pupi l and all ow
local hoards of educa tion to swap
property t aXt:\ for an int.:OIIll! tax. of
up to I percent . A propo.sal 10 give
homeowners a· $ I!Xl property t.ax

credit is still an opt1on. Espy added.
Se nate Pre"dent R1chanl Fanan.
R-Cincinnati. would not conlirm 1ha1
a dea l had been reac hed.
··ro me. hegn tiatwns are ~t i ll
going on,'· Fin.an said th1 s morn1ng.
" We had an agree ment not to comment. and I'm not go in g to comment. ..

_

House Speuker JoAnn Dav1dson.
R-Jttynold sburg. could .. nut he
reached lo comment . She di d nut
return a phone call to her oflice.
Dav idson hau told rep&lt;)rters earli-

~r

in the day Ihat she hoped to ha ve
schnol -lumJtng. leg1slatinn lntroJucet. l
1n the House today.
Espy apparen tl y irritated other
kg1.., lall ve l eader~ by rdc:.h ing de t1, \-..
ol the compromi se earl y. ruinn g
plans lor a joint an nounceml!nl th it
couh.J have pre-.cntecJ a UlllteU fro tt
lor the prn po.sal. The lac k of suppr 1
hy conservat ive House Rep ublica• s
and Ot!moc rats in both houM'
doomed Gov. George VtHnov Jch ,
st:hool -funding: proposal last summt:·.
Most of the $5!XJ million or s· •

ra i ~cd ann uall y by t ni..Tea~ in g the
s.tlcs tax initiall y wou ld he used fo r
school hui ltling ron,tnKti on, Espy
....tid. The share g01 ng toward school
uperatums wouiJ graJ ually mnea . . e
over four yea r....
[,py saiJ Rcpuhlic,tn-. thU agree
to ... Oilll' key Demm.:r~tti c u~ mand -..
Among them: requ1ring bu, ineo,;'e' to
pay a largn i ha1e ol 'L hoo l ta xc'.
red ucing da .. s .., ,~,L'.., in 1-.inJcrga ncn
and ll r... t-grade m !=M)nr tll'ltrtt h amJ
cxpand1 ng all -day kindeaganen 10
poor and urban schoob .

I&lt;l):!.hl nnw. the ' talc guarantcl':-\ th rough a IIII X ol state and loc.a l I.ax es - pe r pupil spe ndm ~ ol $3.66.1.
b.py . . :uJ l .,wma l-. ~ r . . want to r:u-.c
the ligure 'to $~.063 nc&lt;l \Choo l yea r.
wnh mll.tt1on.1ry mcrca'l"' humpmg
that ligurc to 't-t.-l l-t 10 four year ...
The rourl gave the Lcg J... IaiUre
until March 24to revamp the ..,tall' \
..,c hool funJtn g -.y~ tcm by 1; Uaranh;c in g an aU c quate cducat 1on to all ~ t u ­
Jcnh ami le ~\t: nin g the reliance on
lo~a l proJ)&lt;rty t.txcs.
Cont inued on page 3

Ohio GOP pins hopes on Portsmouth businessman to unseat Shoemaker

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#CM1 7 MSR $349.99
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as "any type of prog ram which coQ-.
nects the classroom to the wo rk
place:·
This, she ~a id , includes Jobs for
Oh1o Graduates (JOGS). Occupational Work Ex penence (OWE)
Occupall onal Wo rk Adj ustment
(0WA) . Tech Prep programs. work
stud) and vtx.:ati onal programs. all of
wh1ch are in place and growing in
Meigs County.
All three Meigs high schools are
mvo lved 1n numerous programs
which emphasize the work-based
learntng ..:omponent. said Brewer.
These include rea l world expenence.
on-the-jnb training. in ternshi ps.

Ohio lawmakers are reported close to school-funding deal

• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents •
Teachers • Babysitters • Friends

Print
r message in
the heart and mall along
with $6.00 to:

A surprised Glenn gave a thumbsup and ac knowledged the hearty
applause of his colleagues.
Glenn. who is retinng at the end
of this year. said the White House
forewarned onl y that the address
would include a reference to the
space program.
"That was a maj or surpri se. I didn't kno,w it was going to be like th at
tonight at all ... he said .
A s ~ed to compare that speech
with the others he' d attended over his
career, Glenn grinned. paused in a
moment of pretend concenirallon
and said "I liked this one gooderest
of all. "
" He got a great recepuon from h1s
colleagues, both in the Senate and the
House," said Sen. Mike DeWine, ROhio. "I think it was one of the mmt

School-to-Work program thriving' in Meigs County

The Daily Sentinel

Anyone who would appreciate a thoughtful word from you!
All Valentine Hearts will be published in the February 13thissue at a cost of only $6.00!
MUST BE PREPAID!

By KATHERINE-RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Repubh '
cans were cordial and Congress'
most famou s Ohioan was beaming.
Tuesday nt ght's State olthe Union
address - the 24th and final such
speech lor Sen. John Glenn included a brief tribute that caught
Ohio 's senior senator a bit off guard .
"Th is October, a true American
hero. a veteran pi lot of I 49 combat
missions and one . li ve-hour space
Oight that changed the world. will
return to the heavens ," President
Clmton sa id . invoking the most
famou s part or the countdown from
Gknn's history-making 1962 launch.
"God speed, John Glenn ."
" John. you witl carry with you
America's hopes . And on your uni ·
form . once again . you will Carry
Amenca's tlag. marking the unbroken connection between the deeds of
Amenca's past and the daring of
America's future," Ointori said .

SINGER*

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Sehoul-to- Work . a program of
partnership between sc hools and
husinesses ge ared to preparing high
sehoul student' for employment. IS
thriving in Meigs Cuu'nty.
Carol Brewer, work study coordi nator for the Meags County Educ~­
tional Serv ices Center. heads up the
local activities in the School-to-Work
program in Me1gs County. She works
in conjuncti On with Marcia Key of
the Washington County Career Center. reg ional coordinator. in developing activities
Brewer describes School-to-Work

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that special spmeone thls
Valentine's Day with a message in

A Gannen Co. Newspaper

. ACCEPTS AWARD •• Joe .Bolin, center, accepted a superior servtce award for the Meigs Sotl and Water Conservation District from
the Ohio Federation president Robert Carroll, right, and Goodyear
representative Dave Fulton.

antibiotics

By MARY PEMBERTON
wrotc , l2 million antibiotic prescrip- phlet ex plains !hat children rarely
Associated Press Writer
uons m 1992 for respiratory mfec - need antibiotics for colds, cough or
BALTJMORE (AP) - Instead of t1ons - 90 percent of whi ch arc bronchiti s, sore throat and smus
tnfcC(I Oil S.
writmg prescnpllons for anllhtollcs. caused by a virus. not bacteria.
pedi atricians arc bcan g taught to
Antihi otics arc onl y cffcciiVC un
" There is increasing pressure on
treat some childhood illnesses with hacteri al anfections. such as car us for a quick fi x. They want their
old -fas h1oncd rcmcd acs· bed rest . infecti ons. pncumoma. bl oodstream ch aldren to get bcller quickly, " said
plenty or nu1ds and patience .
ml cc tions and memng11is.
Dr. Daniel Le vy of the Maryland
The idea is to cu rb the overuse of
Albanese ts d ~rcctan g a two-year Chapter of the American Academy
anlihi OIICS, bl amed for muc h or the $250.000 pilot program'" Balt imore of Peda atrics. " But God gave us a
emergence or dangerous. drug-rem- fund ed hy the Ce nters for Disease wonderful immune system to comtan! bactcna.
- -Control and Prcvc n11 0n aimed at hat mfcc ti Oil&gt; . What happens is that
"We have a acal puhlic health m - changing the practice . If success ful . most peopl e get hcllcr on their
sas on our hand s... Dr Bcrnadclle the program could go nati onwide
own
Twenty-two phys a&lt;ians an BalliBesides overuse of antibioucs.
Albanese . a John s Hopkins School
n!' Puhhc Health pro fessor. :-.md Fn- more and fi ve surroundin g counties drug res istance has hecn bl amed on
day.
wall he taught about the paopcr usc the failure of some patients to take
Ahout 50 mall ion tames a year. of anllhtollcs.
thear medi cine pro perl y Some
J m:tor., 1n the Ullltcd States preThe program ab o see ks lO ' hange patients stop takin g their medication
scrihc ;.ulllhiotu::-. when they ~h ould - . patient s' expectations of a cure-all. once they feel hc11er hut be fore the
n't, usually l o~ vual mfcc twns such Pamphl ets outline the dangers of the anl ccll on has hccn knocked out.
as rold tll llu . Alh;lnc. . c :-.an..l. A study improper usc of ant1hi\111o and the cnahhng the IJ;ur..h cst ge rms to surpuhl"hed this fall lound doctors ri se m rcSistanl hactcria. The pam- \'1\'e and multipl y

2 Sections, 12 Pages, 35 cents

Glenn singled out in address

Southern .Consortium for Children receives grant
The Southern Consortium for
Children has rece ived a $99.302
grant from the Ohio Department of
Alcohol and Drug Add1c.11 on Service s (ODADAS) and the Oh1 o
Rchabilllallon Scrv1ces Comm1 sswn
(ORSC) to mteg ratc voc all onal
rchahditalion with alcohol and drug
treatment services in Athens, Hockmg. Meigs, Vinton and Washangton
co unt1 c~ .
.
SCC will contract wllh Empl oyment Training Ce nter. formerly

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 28, 1998

MeigS Soil and Water Conservation District receives award
The Mcags Soil and Water Conscrvauon Di ~t nc t rcccJvcd a Superior Se rv1ce A"ard rati ng at the 55 th
annual mcc tmg of the Ohio Federation of Soil and Watc1 Consc n·atlon
Distncts (OFS WCDJ held rcc,c nll y
in Co lum bus.
The award " part of the DistmcII VC Scrvtcc Goodyear Conse rvatiOn
Awards program .
Joe Bolin . chairman for the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservat ion
Dtstrict. rece ived the award from
Federation prcs1dent Robert Carroll

•

a1

lnterac uve lcc hni ques explore
lacts. myths. slcrcotypcs. allitudcs
and practical communication tips.

Partly cloud.y tonight ;
low s J.n the mid 30s .
Thursda y , cloudy, chance
of rain . Highs in the mid
50s.

wSl )
I

" I plan on pulling out the pct itions
at the end of thts week ... sa1d Thatcher. "The next week or the week aher
that I'll have an announcement( about
running for the seat) ... He cu rre~tl y
works as the vice-president and geneml manager of BCS. Inc. a retail and
commercial bill collection agency in
Port smouth.
·;r m sure it ' ll be a difficult rJCe,"
said Thatcber. He 'declined to answer
questions about his platform Qr strategy against Shoemaker s.tating he will ·
wail until oflicially announci n ~· for
the seat.

'

In I994. Thatcher captured 45 percent of th e vote in the 92 nd House
district race aga in&gt;! Ogg. He fared
slightly better at the polls in I996 -grabbmg 4 7 percent of the vote in the
House district which encompasses
Scioto County and the western part of
Lawrence County.
Teri· Geiger. Ohio Senate CEO.
said yesterday that Thatcher is "the
person we've talked to about t-iling
for Ihis race ." She predicted that
Thatcher would face " no serious
challenge" fo r the Republican nomin ation to. square off against Shoe-

maker 10 Nove mber. The li ling deadline to run in the May primary is February 19.
Beca use Shoe maker --a I996
appointee -- has never been on the
ballot in the Jive southern most countic:s in his spmw ling eight-county district, Senate Re pu bli cans clea rl y
desire someone from that part of th e
di strict to chall enge him . They tried
to Jure former Congress man Frank
Cremeans of G'lil ipolis and slate
Rep. John Carey. R-Wellston. into the
race, before turning to Thatcher.
Shoe maker is well-know n in the

north6m por11on of the dl\tnct as a
long-ti me Ohio House m~ m her. He
served e1ght lerms in the Hou se. representmg Ross. P1ckaway and Vtnton
Counties. before beang appointed to
the Se nate to replace fanner-Sen. Jan
Michae l Long. Hi s father Myrl Shoemaker. held the House seat belme
h1m and also served as Lt. Gov. under
Gov. Richard C~ leste from I983 to
1985.
'
Earlier th is month. Senate President Richard Fi nan, R-Ciricinnati.
sa id R e pu blican ~ are sizing up the
Shoemaker seal as a race Jhey may

l11 ghllght for VICiory in ll)9X . He
mcnt1oncd the shght Repuhlic.111
lt:aning in term s of party reg i.. trat lon
in t h ~: dJ,trict 111 ... uying that " II \
cl early o ~.e that we wall lnok very
.. trong at
II Senate Repuh l1can' dclermine
that ousting Sh.oema,cr is a lop pri·
onty and target the race for an inllu\
of resources . then they could w~1~c .111
expen~ive campaign on Th~t t cf,L._r',
behalf.
In I996, more Ihan·s I mi ll ion ".Is
!&lt;!pent on th~ camp.tig.n of Lai-.L· c~HIIl ·
' Continued on P'l ~r -'

�p

Wednesday, January 28, 1998

Commentary
.

__

The Daily Sentinel

-

Wednesday January 28, 1998

FHIC has taken its mission to absurd

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The crowd at Ebenezer BaptiSt
111 Court Street Pomeroy, Ohio
.
Church
n Atlanta where V1ce Pres
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157
1dent AI Gore announced an adm111
tstratton 11111Tallve to add $86 m1llton
to the $'16 mtlhon already spent on
c1v I nghts enforcement annu ally
looked dcctdedly d1ffcrent than 11
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
dtd when Dr Mart1n Luther Ktng Jr
prcs1dcd over the same pulp11 1n the
ROBERT L WINGETT
1960s
Publisher
In Kmg s day the congregatiOn
was predommatcly black fo ght ng a
htstortc hallie for a more cqullablc
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
place n soc ely Last week Gore
General Manager
Controller
peered over Kmg s old lectern at a
rac~ally mtegratcd asse mbl y gath
The Stnltntl welcome• l•ners to the tldltor from r•MJm on • b«Hd range of topA
ered to honor the assassmated
Short lett•,. (300 words or leu} t..ve the , .., ctttnct of t»fng pubHahtd Typed '-t
leader s battle for cov I nghts
,,,. are ptWferrtd and 111 m.wy be edJttd &amp;ch thould Include 1 llgrYtufW addreu
lnd dlytlme phoM number S,.cify • date If th.,., • • t'tftrtnce to 1 prevlou• a';f#c/e
Gores good 1nten t1ons as 1de
or ,.ner. M.JI to WttJn to the Edltot. Tht S.ntlntl 111 Coun St Pomeroy. Ohio
there s reason to wonder ol
however
45169; or: FAX to Bt4-99Z-2157
the admm!Strauon s efforts o better
enforce ctv I rt ghts laws will mere!)
perpetuate tl c ere 1110n ol st ll y
law, and rceul11 ons across t))e land
tl c hkc ol whiC h hacc I clpcd to tm
1nl11e K ng s proud lcoacy
Twcnl) 1\AO m !!ton of the xtra
dollars ts expc ted 11 go to the
When E1 I n I s II h td dt mm on over the Massachusetts colony the Department of Hou&gt; ng and U1bnn
land and wddhlc c en! all ) hc longcd to 1hc Km 0 1 he coloniSts were h" Dcvel &gt;pmcnt for bol stcrtn pro
grams under the Fa1r HouSTng Act
suhjcc ts The\ VC!c o 1cllllf n the Kmg lor permi SSIOn for all kmds of com
monpl cc act vii e He al st assessed taxes aeatnst the colomsls w thout
l;Onsultue anp m: a\ wa~ In ~ noht Hi sovcrc1un
Due 1J hcsc unla 1condlltons the colontst s !ought a war of mdepcndence
tQa nslthc klnndorn I the old" orld and ere ned a ocw fo1m of go,ernme nt
m winch We the People under God were sovcrc gn
Under th s new govanm&lt;nl tl c peop le had I berty to do whatever thetT
conmcncc vuu ld a ll o~.&lt; them I do as I&lt; ng as They cmmmttcd no offense
agamst another c I!Zen In othCT \AOTds no VICtim no en me That ts what the
Constitution savs The gmcrnme nt was gran ted no other authonty to regu
late or control the actovot1c ol po1va1c CIIIZCns go1ng about the IT dally ltves
It guaranteed them ccrtam 1n 1ioen thlc rtghts hfc ltbcrty the pursu11 of hap
pmcss 10 keep and bear arms t 1 h n c a stand ng nul lila (nO! the National
Guard) to own property free speech lree asse nbly and free assoctat on
these lh1ngs come to mmd
The men who pen ned the Constllutton knew first hand the tyranny pas
s1ble at the wht ns of pnnc•pall!cs and powers and put these thmgs mto
the Constnut10n to protect We the People from our own government oth
crwtse the sovcre1gn states would never have ratified 11 bemg unacceptable
to free cn1zens who had JU St fought a "ar to get them
These nghts allowed the coloniSts to conq uer the new world and to take
the nsks nvolved m devclopmg what was to become the greatest natiOn m
the world They knew that the n sks th at they took were thetT own and took
them glad ly because ts was thetT luturc and thctT ltves we1ghed m the bal
a nee
But somethmg went wrong Due to a fmaneml cr s s (Great Dcpresston)
and a couple of wurld wars (these e\ents were man pulated by the same
pnnc Tpahltcs and powers menuoncd above) our pres dent declared a slate By Joseph Perkms
Douglas Gray started up hts com
ol cmcrucncy Thts cond1tton pre cmp t\ many Cons lltuttonal safeg uards and
grants the exec uti ve branch of government great po~.&lt;crs Smce 11 was never puter serv ccs fmn seven years ago
r pealed "e ha e been continuous!) under thiS condtuon smcc 1933 They wllh a $1 500 personal loan and one
htmself Today San
ha c used t to abol 1sh the gold standard for our currency and to estabhsh employee
The I eden! Reserves control ol our med um ol exchange The powers alsq D ego based Gray S)stems 1s a
' the Supreme Court 10 change the ve nue of our courts from common law grow ng $5 m1illon small bus mess
tC 1n 1 tu 10n) to Admnalt) La~.&lt; (Contract) ThiS was necessary so they boast ng 18 employees
Gray Systems IS the k1nd of
could 1 hhsh the corporotc Un ucd States ol Amcnc a (not our elected go\
crmncn l) They ha\c used tlus lu a~omp!TSh that wh tch \\as not posstble m norTI) owned con pm ) that
pohllctans of both partie&gt; md at all
under tl c tOO!&lt;i iJiut on i!Ovcrnmcnt m~.:dd l ng mto our cH:ryduy lives
Y u cc the l!Ovcrn ncr t ha n aut! onty to regulate our lt vcs unless we leve l or gmc rnmcnt wou ld hat! as
ntc1 1110 1c Jnlract" lh 1 We were dece ived mto thmklng we had to have a S UCL:CS~ story
They wou ld c te the ilrm s cxpt
1 dr vc1 I n.:n t.: to opcratt.: a H: l lk Ont.:c we sumcd the contract tc the
ncnual
growth
il o n $16 000 tn
!1 en c ppl1c 11on they could rc•ulate ouo dm ng Once we s gn a hunung
revenues
111
199
1
to
$ 1 2 md hon m
'' en tppi!L all n the~ can c ulatc hun11ng Why" The game 4ocsn t
1995
to
$4
6
n
llh
on
l os t yc tr a'
bel 1 1' tl c K11° Snm la1 ly once we Sl~ ll a W 2 W 4 or 10401 they ha\c
pr
ma
fat:JC
~o:\ldt.:nLc
I the hu me ss
11 c u!hor I) I&lt; w ihhold taxes Th&lt;y lake Soc al Sccun ty money Irom us
opportunll
cs
a'
aT
iahlc
to m1n n
k 1 ' n1.2 they Lan OC\Cr dell\ 1 &lt; n thc1r end of he lOn trac t
tiCS
M1 Ed 1JT 11 \"' us n 1 pic 1 ure to pen that We the People have he en
But 11 s worth takm~ a closer
lulled 10 slee p h) prospc1 &gt;IY md u sovcrc1~nty ha&gt; hccn undenntncd by the
look
at how the cnt cprc ncunal G1ay
scry elec ted 1f11 11is we ch c tr defend 11
built
ht&lt; hustncss
I he olu ll H "lc all) 1mplc hu Tnot \C IY sa l fh c who have report
ht s local hank would loan
Smcc
cd hcsc thm '&lt; 1 II ted 1 pcrs&lt; n1ll y cla1m their Ct lhlltuiT Onal hhertv have
htm
no
more
than $1 'iOO to net h1
ht.:cn th ' ~.: II n I m t-o 1 t.: O\c rnm~..:nt d 1 ~ nl orrn Jt Jon cam pat n~ and
n mv ha\c I sllh 1r c y ll\c One musl Simp ly c 1nccl ur nulldy all ex sl com pany ofl the eround he had to
n coll r llh hch a&gt;\\llhan\ hranchol "''crnncnt Bclore JumplnQIOTJOY turn to tu cnd~ hu 1 t.:sli acqua n
lett! c e o nllv It! I nk 1 Yet IC0 tTdks I the d IUIIIII task I !eel the tanccs 1nd otha mvc t r to r 11 c
opc1 11m2 cap tal 01 e ursc he had
1 n~.:
1 1 v.h 1 '-~.: c llh mu t clwc c.: 1 I Ilow our '-.:O n s~ lcnt:c or th e
unu 11 I lUI 111! p&gt;cudo \C nn cnl Tc ulll n Tile Bible says He who to pay a ht her 111 erc&gt;t rate a nsk
ll" esc let I 11 cc It 1 1nc 1 pen OUT c)Cs tnd look ar JUnd or ts 11 prcm u n of ~ ts to 111 1 \ sto1
than he wou ld ha c h td h.._ cc urcd
H { I lit.:
We I
I
calc the Jcn c I the Un11cJ States but the return to our bank l10anun ~
Gray dcuded t' cniCI the hur
~ n Itt I n II 1 n ol
We hchc\c that" true patnotosm
geonancr market I r L n putcr ~d
Lei We the Pc pi c
v1cc~
mdud IH! I ~.:al a1cu network
W1 h ) UI rr~.: ]IJH: c
cah 1ng ,oft" arc tratnuJo
(LAN)
ucc 1207
and
computer
m~:untulJ.nl.L
thou h
Kerm1t R Polan
he
laLkcd
an
e:-:tensl\~
h
u:k
round
V1cnna V. Va
111
computer
He
d
d
ho\1
ever
h 1vc
James M Smtih
the
bu~tnt:"is
sa\'
y
to
h
rc
co
mputer
Rae me

~

Letters to the editor
We can no longer sit and watch
without saying something

The FHA
whtch protects
the nght of
every Amer can
to l!\c m any
netghborhood
they can afford
w thout regard
to race as a
welcome
b) product of
the CIVIl r ght s
era But a hou:.
ng ove rstg ht tn vesttgator who
spoke w1th our assoctate Kathryn
Wallace beltcvcs that the bureau
crats who run the FHA ha-c man
:wed to tran sform noble mtent10ns
nto stll y and abustve acttons
For Instance one fun~.:tlon of a
eroup called the FaiT Housmg lmua
II\ c Com mmee ts to compolc a hst of
\Cd oten verb aQc
word s and
phrases not to be used tn housmo
advertisement Ccrla1n oflcnsi\C
w Jrds arc obvtous But the usc ol
other less p01ntcdly doscrnmnatory
words ha'c rcsu hcd m lines and
cllall ons lcvTcd by HUD
A W!sl:onsln \\On an was uh.:d

lOT nad vcrte ntl y using d1samunato
y lanQU tee 10 scck mg a Chn &gt;tTan
handyman a:-, a ten mt 11 an apart

ment m her home
Don t advertise that your home ts
wnhm walkmg dtstance of any
thmg Th1s dtscnmmates agamst the
diSabled and can result m a cttat1on
Stm larly any reference to good
ne1ghoorhoods or schools ts furbtd
den because 11 tnfers that other
neighborhoods tn the area are not
good and d1s11ngutshes between
famthes wnh and wtthout chtldren
Master bedroom os mappropn
ate because H UD bureaucrats
beltcve tl sa reference to slavery
Wh1!c thts govern men t financed
comm tttee IS almost coomca ll y
hyper se ISilt ve to anyth ng that
m1ght mfcr preJUdice several home
O\\ ncr groups around the country
arcn 1 laugh ng at HUD s enforce
ment of the Fa~r Housmg Act
Some of those who ve been pros
ecutcd and ftncd argue they were
onl y excrCtSII12 thelf freedom of
speech The Berkeley Three three
homeowners m Berkeley Calli
were threatened w11h Jatl umc and
I ncs of $100 000 each lor protcsltng
the conversum ol 1 ne~ehbot hood
hotel mto a home loo ccovcnng
drug addicts
HUD JUstof C&gt; ots ac tion as a way
of protectmg tile nghts of the diS
ahied
diS
IS
def10cd as
add iCtiOn
tlco
holi sm
AIDS and
mental til
ness and
behoves
that such
prote sts
tren t pro
toctcd
under the
F~rst

Amend
mcnt
Stmtlar
ly a sen10r

We are gra teful that Amc Tea has
come a long way s nee the days of
governme nt abetted segregatiOn
But the fight for CIVIl nght see ms to
have made a strange departure from
the dream once envTStoncd by Dr
Kmg

experts IO Se rVICe
h s chents wh le
he was on the
lcarmn g curve
Gray
Systems has con
tracts Wtth several
pn vatc sector
compames
Tncludtng Xerox
Perk1ns
md
mmonty
owned Max1c Corp
But the hul k of It s hus ness comes
h om f.!1\C nmcnt a c1c 1 c~ 1nclud
' '" the &gt;Ia c ol Cal ofornoa the US
Postal Sc1vtcc the Navy and the
DepartJICIII I Vctcr tns Affa"
Gr~y S)' em ha he en succc s
lui n w nn111 2 n 11! ons ol do ll ar
wo rth ol government co ntracts
hecau co l the qual 1ty ol lls seT\ tees
But the ladts 11 also has u.on th ose
con tract&gt; hecause the company hap
pcm to he mn onty owned
Indeed Gray Systems wa
Jcccntl) a~.&lt;arded $ 1J m ll10n on
contrac T&gt; Ill m tl c VA 1ltcr hcm 0
ccrllilcd hy the Small BuSiness
Assoe~at1 H s 111 8(a) cance l n Gra)
Systems has won mm lar co ntrac ts
lrt m the c l) !I Sao Dtcg&lt; md the
stil e C Jldnrnl3 th rou" h m1n onty
u nt act1 ng p1 o,,..r nms
Yet thac ts 1 w c.lcnm :: cam
pI gn I II the federal state and local
levels 11 do away wtth pt Jgrams
th 11 tar el m1non1y owned ITrn~&gt;
I kc Gt ty Sy~tcms lo g &gt;Vcrnmt.:n t
{:On tra~.:h 1 he rat on ale 1s thnt hu 1
nc3s ow ner~ nl Ill colors sht uld
compete lor e&lt; vcrnmcnt co ntracts

on equal fooling
Thts " a lu gh m111ded pr nc1plc
With wh1ch most Amcncans 111clud
tng yours truly ph losophllally
agree But Gray and other m nonty
entrepreneurs opcrllc under real
world co nd lions
And the rcal11y ts that tithe co'
emmcnt the lar est purchaser ol
goods and sc rv1ees 111 thiS co untry
makes no cflort In reach out to the 5
percent of U S lu ns that arc !wncd
by H!Spantcs the 4 percent that trc
ow ned by hlack 1nd lhe 4 percent
that a1e 1wncd hy Aswn Amcrllans
the n 1111nont~ husmcss owners w1ll
rccmc 1 dt proporl!&lt; nately sm tll
share ol &lt; \et nm ~.: nt prot.:urcmcnt
As 11 h tppen&gt; San D1cg' pn
v de&gt; a case stud y In 1 9~.n the
As &lt; t.: tied Genu al Cnn tr ILIOn
mad~.: up m Jo.;t ly of wh t~.: &gt;wncd
t.:onstrU&lt;.:I ton u mp 101cs v.on 1 led
cral l aw~u ll 1 amst the t: lty that
stru..::k de wn 1 umtr \t:l m pr l!!r un
tl 11 set h1r1n c-o tis l r 1mn nt}
owned ltrms on L mstrut:t10n p11
JCCIS
Sm..::c then the pcn.:cnlleC c I
white lwncd u nstrut:t l )11 cnmp 1
n cs th 11 h vc b10u ht on m ntl!lly
sutx: )nlr~Ktors
v 1luntanly
hs
Iallen Irom 21! perce nt to 6 percent
The A snctatcd General C&lt; nlrac
It rs attnbutcd the Iall Jll to hard
econ 1m1c tlllll: s 1 1r the lot:nl ..::on
strucl!nn Industry aflcc lmg wl11c
and n 1111 Illy ltrm s alike But m
fall San Dtc o uty ~.:on~t ru ct on
contr Kts ncrcas~.:d from $63 mill on
tn l~':llto $405 mti!TOn 111 199(

By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Chnton
Pl ans
have hce n '" the
Gannett News Serv1ce
smcc
W'\SHINGTON - The tunmg works
November lor a
~m.tld not ha\ ~ hl:cn wo1 :-.c
Ju&gt;t days hcfurc allegation&gt; ol a mtltlar) campatgn
real I rc pre !dCnll al sex scandal h I 10 force Saddam
Hu ssc tn t1 g1ve
lh~..: news last w~..:ck one m mulac
wcopt ns
lured hy Hollywood showed up on UN
111
spcctors
lull
m n 1c screens ar JUnd the nat10n
Wtckham
In the 1o1m Wag The Dog a acccs to s11cs
th&lt; ught to he h1d111g
young f!ITI accuses the pres dent ol
mukstmg her 11 an Dval Office places lor Iraq s
biOlogical wear "'
lnteroom In the tawdry talc current
:rhts 1s when.: the ~lmtlarlttcs
ly cnvc lop1ng the Wh tc House B1ll
hctwc.:cn
the lll O\ IC and what s cur
Chnton " accused of havmg sex
1ently
Ding
on 111 Wash111etoo end
w th a 21 year old While House
and
a
far
norc scnous prohlcm
m c1n
he
'"
I he movoc s em ball led prcs1d nt
UN 1n s pcclo~&gt; say they have
1s rescued lrom pol111cal doom by
eood
reason to heltc1 c Iraq 'ecrctl)
war - not a real war but.t.~n ~ h: ad
s
produung
b•olo~1cal weapons
one whose sce nes arc created on a
These
weapons
can he as portable
Hollywood sound stage Albanta has
and
deadly
as
the
ptnl stzcd nuclear
developed a su t~.:asc SIZC nuclc a1
bomh
1n
Wag
The
Do2
bomb the story goes and IS try1ng to
Le ft unchallcn2cd Saddam soon
sm uggle 11 tnto the Un1ted States
The cnsutng war dTSITacts the m ') ha\e the capabll11y to lob
nat tOn s attent on away from the art1llcry ~.hells ladcncd wnh deadl y
prestdent s sex ual mi sconduct long tox ms at h s ne ghbors or g1vc ter
enough for h1m to wm re clcc tTon ronsts the means to carry out gcmt
warfare attacks on Clvtltan targets m
and presumably escape JUSttcc
the
UnTied States
In rea l hfc Waslungton talk of
C!tnton cannot wall for the sex
mdllaT) act1on preceded the sexual
mTSconducl charges that ~wlfl Blfl allegauons that engulf htm to play
I

out before ordcnng U S forc es 11110
act1on As salac tous and llllli al!ng as
the charges aga111st h1m arc th y arc
far less tmportant to the nal!on and
the world than the outcome ol the
showdown that looms between Sad
dam and what rcn1a111s ol the coal!
110n th:ll defeated h m n the Pcr&gt;oan
Gulf War
Y JU wou ldn t know 11 Irom the
lcgu ns ol reporters t:hasmg the 'iCX
story and the reiat vc pauc I) ol c Jv
cragc news organ zatu ""' arc g vtng
the possohd 11y ol renewed mTIIIary
conll 1cl hct\\ CCn the Un 11cd St tc&gt;
and Iraq - or the UH scq u n{:CS ot
our mat: ll m
That s e&lt;ll to he TC\ erscd
Potcnually the ltvcs &lt;J till us tnds
of Amencan nuhtary peos&lt; nne! arc
at stake 11 there IS another sho !ling
war With Iraq And .m IIH ns ol
Ameneans may be put at nsk 11
nothmg ts done lo wope out Sad
dam s stockpile and hts abtluy to
produce b•olog•cal weapons
There JS good reason to fear what
Saddam "oil do w1th these weapons
In the past he has used nerve gas
on Iraq s Kurd1sh mtnonty ktllmg
hundreds of men women and chtl
dren He also used 11 agamst Irantan
troops durmg the Iraq Iran \\ar

IToledo I 42'

s '

Even 110y pa101 chtps c 111 he haz
ardous when IT tvelhng tl h t ~h
speed A p1ccc ol pa1111 ah lUI the STZC
ol a gram ol s til struck the three
layer wmdshtcld ol the space shuttle
111 1983 and gouged a crater m the
wmdow s outermost layer 1 he dam
age cost $50 000 t J rcpa11
So to 76 year old Sen John
Glenn D Oh1o who II become the
oldest Amencan m space when he
Otes on the Shuttle later thts year we
say good luck and watch out'
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
an wnters for Umted Feature
Synd1cate, Inc

I am not prepared to ascnhe th1 s
dtspanty to dtscnmmattOn agamst
mmonty owned co nstructiOn firms
I thmk 11 IS more a matter of assoct
at1on Busmcss owners tend to work
w1th those wnh whom they share
somcthll1e tn common whether 11 he
school JICS party affiltnt on club
memhcrsh1ps nc1 ghborhoods or
perhaps even ethntc hent tgc
I person tlly Imd nothtng wron 0
w11h thts when we rc talkme ahoul
pnv tic compan1cs dung husmcss
w11h other pr vatc compantcs With
no tax dollars mvolved Alter til the
Flfst Amendment guarantees the
lrcedom or assoctatton
But when tax dollars arc tnvnlvcd
money raosed not on ly lr Jill while
Amencans but also I rom mmonues
c.:ompames wm nm g government
~.:ontra t.:t s COJOY no ahsolutc Ireed&lt; m
of associatiOn
That " not to endorse quota pro
grams that n.:scrvc a luL:d pc1u:nt
age of government t:On t acts lor
mmonty owned I rms whether &lt;r
not they arc quaiTfTcd
But 11 a snt til 111101 my \\ned
hu s ne ss like GTty Systems
dcmonsttatcs Tis ah !tt y t co mpc
tcntly prO\tde ~erta m golds' r sc1
voces they should nut he closed &lt;ut
ot government ~.:ontr acts merely
because lhCIT owners lack the
school club nctghborhood ot oil cr
ndvantagcous (.;onnectJOns ol 111 n
mmonty husmcsscs
Joseph Perkms 1s a colummst
for the San D1ego Umon Tnbune

G vcn the even more deadly array&lt; I
bwl JgTCal ~.&lt;eapon&gt; he s th&lt; ught I '
be devclopmg Saddam s )()0 may
expand hiS deadly rc tch lar he yond
the M1ddlc East
But Cltnton s ex prnhlcms
threaten to gtvc Saddam the 11 ne he
needs to produce and st lckpll c
enough h10log•cal we tpons - the
poor mans nu clear homh - to
change the h tlancc of power
throughout the rcg1on
Congressoonal Republtcans who
long have clam&lt; red for Clmton lu
usc the nuhtary 10 destroy Iraq s h o
log teal wcap&lt; ns now sh JU!d d l so
puhltcly AI Gt rc too must speak
up 1n support Jf qu1ck mll1tary
acu m agam't lr tq
On!) wuh the vtce pres de nt and
the Conercss hehond htm wtll Chn
ton he able to diSpel !cars at home
and abroad that an attack &lt; n Iraq at )
th s t1mc ~.&lt;ould he an 111empl at real
ltfe 1m11atmg art
The allegatiOns of a sexual al la1r
!hat threaten hos preSidency may
drag on lor monthlcThat s too much
tome to gtve the Iraq dictator
If Clmton docsn t act soon to
w1pe out hts htulogJcal weapons
Saddam - not Hollywood - wtll
wag the dog

•

' s

PA

Youngstown
IND

W VA

KY

It now turn s out that at lc tsl three
co lh s10ns have occurred m recent

space hiStory that have destroyed
US and Sovtet satellllc&gt; Tile var
cty ol obJec ts o hll ng the Earth
ranges lrom do;cns ol obsolete
satellites to a glove lm t hy Amcncan
astronaut Ed Wlutc dunng the fTrst
US space walk 1n !Yo'i Other
astron tuts have dropped !lellls as
we ll tnclud ng a camera tnd a
power sncw dnvcr

Ice

Sunny PI Cloudy

Cloudy

Rain forecast for northern
Ohio tonight and Thursday
By The Assoctated Press
-...
Ram wtll move mto nonhwest
Oh o 1on1 eht m tdvance &gt;I an
tppro tch mg co ld front torecasters
S Td
Lows w tl~be maml y 1n the 30s as
cloud&gt; budd over the state the
N tllonal Weather Serv 1ce &gt;atd
The lront wTII push across the state
on Thursday Some r nn wtll accom
p my lis passage Wtlh the ra1n more
scattered acn1" the south
Colder mr will !titer 111 behmd the

front and the ram wt II taper off as
&gt;C mered llumes m the west m the
afternoon
Mommg h ghs n the 40s 111 the
west wTIIlall 1nto the 30s m the after
noon Temperature&gt; 111 the east ahead
of the !rant w II reach 50 degrees
The record ht gh temperature for
th s date at the Co lumbus we 1ther
tal! on was 66 degrees m 19 14 wh le
the record low was 15 below zero tn
1963 Sunset tontght wtll be at 5 46
p m and sunn se Thursday 11 7 43
am

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (A P) - lnd ana Assoctahon
Ho~ market trend for Wednesday
Oh1o dTrect ho pnces at se lected
buym g po1nts Wednesday ts pruv1d ,teady
Summary of Tuesdays aucuons at
ed by the U S Department of Agr
cu lture Market Ne~.&lt;s
Eaton FarmerstOwn Lancaster
Barrows and g1lts steady to ITrm Wapakoneta and Caldwell
Hogs 50 cents to 4 00 htgher
demand modemte to eood w11h mod
cr tte movement
Butcher hogs 72 50 43 50
Callie steady to I 00 lower
U S I 2 230 260 lbs country
Slaughter steers chotec 60 00
pomts 36 00 37 00 lew 37 50 plants
67 00 se lec t 55 00 63 00
37 00 38 00 lew 38 50
US 2 3 230 760 lbs 17 00
Slaughter he1lers chooce 60 00
67 00 se lect 50 00 63 00
36 00 2 10 2"1,0 lbs 29 00 32 00
Cows steady to 3 00 h1gher all
Sows mostly steady
U S I 3 300 400 lbs 22 00 2"1, 00 COWs 45 ()I) and d IWO
Bulls ste tdy to 2 00 h1 gher all
few 24 OQ 400 500 lbs 23 00 24 00
5(}() 600 lbs 24 00-27 00 lew 28 00 bulls )4 75 and down
Veal ca lves steady cho1ce 70 00
Some ove r 600 lbs 27 50 29 00
lew 30 00
and down
Sheep &amp; l1mbs stead) to 4 00
Boar&gt; undt:r 275 1bs 19 00 20 00
few2l00 over175 1b 1600 17()()
lower ch01ce wools 73 50 and down
Esl!m lied recetpts 35 ()(){)
Ieeder lambs 7 1 00 and down aged
Pnces from Producers L1vestock sheep 40 50 and down

oh j 0

One-vehicle crash causes injury

GOP. ••Contmued from page I

I) Sen Rohert G trdncr R M td!Son
w1th much ol th II mt ney llowtn 0
Inm G 0 P collers However mo &gt;t
I th 11 110ney w IS spent on 1 llood
1t telev1s1on commt: rCI al s th ll m!'d
n the expensove Cleveland teleVISIOn
n trket
For hTS part S h oemak~r •aod he
expects In be at the lop 11 ny hst ol
G 0 P tar ets They prob bly have

a eodz liT&lt; n dollars thai they d m I
know wh tl to do wllh md there s a
lot 11 lolks who would like to gel
M1ke Sl1oemaker qu et on thts edu
cat1on de tl he s nd
He &gt;ad he expects to be he JVII y
outspent and hIS set a lundraTSIIl
oal ol $2(Kl (XHl lor hiS ruo He cur
rently on ly has 1bou1 $72 (K)() banked
tor 1998

Divorces and dissolutions
The lollowtng tcl!ons to end mar
nage were hied recently m the olltce
ol Met~s County Clerk ol Courts Lar
y Spencer
D1vurc e gr; nled
Judtth Anne
Kern and T mothy D tvod Kern J tn
1 1 Btlly Scarbrou h !rom Bobble
0

Scarbrough J m 21
DISsolution granted
Conn1e
Laratne Romme tnd Larry Vmcent
Romme Jan 26 R1ch trd A Raley
and Amanda S Raley Jan 16
Kathryn Nell Wolle and Kevm V1c
tor Wolle Jao 16

Couple issued marriage license
lfnthony A Lon 28 Waverly
and C hn st1 e D Lambert 23
Langsville were TSsued a mamaee

license recent ly m the Me1ns Coon
ty Probate Court ol Judge R 'bert
Buck

The Daily Sentmel

Stocks

~USPS21l %0)

Am Ele Power
Akzo
AmrTech .............. .,................ ..
Ashland Oil
AT&amp;T
Bank One ................... .
Bob Evans
Borg Warner
Broughton ........... .
Champion
Charm Shps
Coty Holdtng
Federal Mogul
Gannett
Goodyear
Kmart
Kroger ...............,.... ..
Lands End ...........,........... .,
Limited
Oak Htll Ftnl
OVB ............ .
One Valley
Peoples ......... :.,
Prem Fin!
......................... .
Rockwell
RD/Shell
Sears
Shoney s ............ ..
Star Bank
.............
Wendy s
WorthTngton1 ...............

SURSCRIP'I ION RATES
8) Carr t'r or Molnr Roult
k

h

-·-·-

s29 z.•

w~;;;=:;;;;=:;;~s~~~~'f'ij
z

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

Cash A Bahr 72 Middleport dted luesday Jan 27 1998 tn Belpre
He wa&gt; bt rn Apnl 20 1 92~ 111 Alfred son ol the late Maynard L and
Sh ~rley Bentz Bahr
He ow 1ed and oper ted Bahr Cloth•ers 1n M1ddlepqrt lor over 40 yea"
111d ""'aft rmer member ot the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club the M1d
dlcpon Chan ber ol Commerce and the Kn•"hts ol Pyth1as He was a mem
ber ol the M ddlepon Commun1ty Assocoal! on se rved on the Moddleport
School Board and w IS a member of the Mtddleport Church ul Chr Sl
He 1s sumved by daughters and sons 111 law Chrt st ne and Charles
Wdl ams of Galhpoh&gt; tnd Candace and George Pope ol B1dwell ststers
and a brother 11 law ElSie Conroy and Wilma and Milford Ohl n~er all of
Colu 1 bu&gt; a brot her and SISter tn law Wllltam and Kay Bahr ot Bidwell
a mother n law Marth 1Ch 1lds ot M1ddlepo11 s x erandchlldren brothers
tn law md " ters 1n law B1ll and Joan Ch1lds of M1ddleport Dorothy and
Ralph Gtbbs Jr ol New Haven W Va and JaniS Falkner ol B rm neham
Ala and se\ era! n1cces and nephews
He was preceded 111 death bX hTS ~tfe Nelle V Ch ilds Bahr m 1996 1
SISler Gladys Casper and a brother m law Jack Conroy
SeTV!ce&gt; wt ll be held Fnday I p 111 at the Middleport Chape l ofF sher
Funeral Home w11h AI Hart son offic1atong Bunal will follow 1n R1verv1ew
Cemetery Middleport
Fnend&gt; may call Thursday 7 9 p m at the funeral home Memonal con
tnbut1ons may be made to the Mtddleport Commun1ty Assoc1a11on PO Box
9 Middleport OH 45760

Lee M. Bing
Lee Meredllh Bong 66 Pomeroy d1ed on Saturday Janu try 24 I~9H at
Holzer Med!lal Center tn Galltpolts followmg 111 ex ~ended dlness Hew IS
a ret red coa l moner
He was born on Aprtl 16 1931 m Hemlock Grove so n ol the late Lee
and Aureha Bnckles B ng
Survovmg are hTS wtfe C trolcne Bmg Pomeroy two daughters Regma
D1llard of Long Bollom and Sheila C B ng Pomeroy two so ns Thomas
Btng Co lumbus and Dale F B ng Pomeroy lour brothers md mters tn
I a~.&lt; Dale and Alma Myers Belpre George and Flora Bmg Lane osier Emer
son and Bonnte B1ng Galhpolts and Carl and Aloce B111e Galltpolts a brmh
er James Bmg Wellston two Sisters and brothers tn law Darlene and Vcr
non B ng Pomeroy and Cled th and Joe Caldwell Akten S C SIX grand
ch 1ldren and several n1ece s and nephews
A memonal servtce lor lamTiy and fnends w1ll be held Sunday 2 p m
at the Mtddleport Church of Chnst wtlh AI Hartson ofl)coatmg

Donald L. Moore
Donald L Moore 7 1 ol Howe ll Htllm Pomeroy d1ed on Tuesday Jan
uary 1 7 199H tl the Rockspnngs Rehabtltlatton Center tn Pomeroy
He w 'a past tru stee 111 Sal sbury Township and was a member of Car
penters Loca l 050
He was born on December 9 1926 tn Syracuse soo of the l 1tc Leon and
Ethel Qu11ien Moore
SurviVI n are h s w1!e Belly Fredenck Moore ol Pomerm a son and
daughter 111 taw John aod Lone Moore Pomeroy three sons Donald Moore
and Thom" Moore both ot Columbu&gt; and Gerald Moore Pomeroy two
daughters Paula Collm s of Cleveland and Mary An n Moore Pomeroy a
stepson and h, wtfe Danny and J me Russell Pomeroy three stepd tu ~h
ters Dorothy Nevd le MadiSon Debr 1 Russell ol Rac111e and Lora Stone
Columbus three brothers and SISters 111 law Lloyd and Ruth Moore Charle&gt;
and Mar) Moore Tupp&lt;;rs Plams and Bob Moore Syracuse 1&gt;osier Mar 1e
Cunn111gham ol Syracuse 21 gr tndchtldren 14 great gra ndchildren and sev
era! meces and nephew&gt;
BeSides hiS parents he was preceded m death by three brothers Moms
C trl and Gera ld Moore
FuneTt! serv1ces woll be held on Thursday January 29 1998 at I p m at
the Ewtn Funeral Home on Pomeroy wllh Rev Mtke Thompson olftetat
~~~ ~ Bunal wtll loll ow at RockspnnJs Cemetery
Fr ends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 7 to 9 p m

Meigs announcements
Trustees to meet
The Rut! nd Tt wnsh1p Tn slees
w1 11 meet Fndav 6 p 111 at the Rut
land F1re Stall 111 msle td ol Tuesday
Southern Local Board
The Southern Loca l Bo 1rd ol
Educ Iton wo II meet 1n spec 1tl ses
Sit n Mond ty 6 30 p m m the South
ern H eh School caleter a Ill R~tne
to consllkr a cc ntnct wllh OAPSE

Local 451 and 1 con&gt;truct on bo 1d
"'ue lor the May 5 elcct1 m
s

)\'letgs Repubheans
The M~•-s County Republ c m
Com m ltee w II meet n sp&lt;e1al se&gt;
SIOn Monday 7 30 p m tl Carlton
Sc hoo l m Sycacu&gt;e {O diSCUss the
upco m n Lincoln 'Omner All
Republtcans welcome

--Court news-Sutts filed
Ed11ur s note A l lwsu 1t outlines
the cnevances ol one parly eam I
1111 ther It does not est bl•sh 0 U II or
nnucence
Sears Roebuck &amp; Co S dem
Mass seek $4 441 J5 pluscosts and
Int erest from Scon D Hauber Long
Bonom on an outstandmg cred1t
account
Deborah S Cleek Pomeroy et al
111 il su 1t I!led t a nst Moton st~ ln:-;ur

ance Company Columbus seeks
payment on umnsuredlundennsured
motonsts pol1cy lollowmg 1June 30
1995 motor veh1cle acctdenl
Judgment "sued
Farmers Bank &amp; Sav ng s Comp 1
n) Pomeroy rccetved a $22 715 46
foreclosure and sale JUd 0 ment from
Charles Neutz l n et a! " " Mc1gs
County Common Pleas Cour1

Glenn named in ... Conhnued from page I
lerent than Jthcr reccpl on&gt; I v~ seen
n the c h unher ' 1d Rep Ted
StncklancJ D Oh10 01 course II
WI&gt; II he hacko cver)hody \lnmd
but I thmk c\eT)body conducted
themselves wo th the proper d1 n tv
tnd deme mor
S Jrnc ol them e\on st lOd 1 p and
applauded lor ' IT ous parts ol hiS
peech added Rep M ucy K tptur
D Oh10
Rep Ste'e Chabot R Oh10 s ud
That &gt;hould not h 1\e been 1'urpme
I tffink we have "' obi 0 af1Qn to be
ciVIl and respoctlul ce rta nly to the
otl~ee
he sa1d
The lawmakers had ' ubstanttve
p01nt s to make bout the speech too
Several ad they \\ere glad to
have the chance to den onstrate a
Ullted !runt 011 the SUbject of
weapons lnspecttons 1n Iraq

Hospital news
Veterans MemorJHI
T"esday admtsstons - Bobby
Wh te Dexter
Tuesday dtscharges - Wdltam
Kennedy
Holzer Medtcal Center
Qtscharges Jan 27 - Trac1
Eddy Jewel Vanco Neddte Cooper
Birth - Mr and Mrs Earl
Dulaney son Jackson
(Pubhshed w1th permtsston)

Rep Rob Portman w os dts 'P
pomted 1n "hat he dc'cn~ed a' a
troublm downpl1y n ol Amer c 1s
dru prohlem Clinton s ud th 11 dru
u ~t! rs on the d~dtn e wh Lh 1s l~~.:tu
1il y naccur lie 'a d Port nan who
has made th ll area nne '' h" trca&gt; &lt;I
expert st.:
Oxley "' hed one I I ' I o"''
11 ve pnonnes - Superlund rd&lt; rm
- had been ncluJed 1n the speech
But Rep Sherrod Bnwn D Oh1o
had nothtn 0 but prase I thou hi II
wa&gt; the best Stale 1 I the Un on he s
ever g ven Brown s 1d He s rc 1!
ly spoken 11 the heart' mel the
dreams ol the Amencan peopk - h s
Mcd can: e"pan~10n whu;h 1s volun
tary and pays lor tlscll h s educ 111011
pro0 ram - he spoke to what the people of thts coun try were askmg .for

Meigs EMS logs 3 calls
Umts of the Meoe s Coun ty Emcr
ency Med cal Serv ce recorded three
calls I&lt; 1 asststance Tuesday Umts
respo nd1n 0 tncluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
7 15 a m East Letart Road Eill
abeth Stover Veterans Men , ntl
Hosp llal Ra me squad ass1 ted
0

Additional science, math
classes may be required
By JIM FREEMAN
Senttnel News Staff
Addtl!on tl suence and math clas
es wdl likel y be reqmred 31 Southern
Htgh School as a result ol a new law
eovernme academK al:cou ntab1hty m
Oh10
~hoh school Pnnc pal Gordon
FISher meetmg wuh the Southern
Lac 11 Board ot Educat 1011 Monday
n ght'" Raune outlined how Senate
Bill 55 w II al fe ct the sc hool wh1ch
currentl y requ iTes students to com
pkie 0 0 class untts lor grad ual TOn
~0 state requiTed un1ts 111 addllton to
Ill elect ves
Under SB55 students Will need 21
tc dem1c untts lor gr.tdualton Wllh
15 ol those determ ned by the slate
Instead of comp letmn Two un11s
each ol math and &gt;oc tal &gt;tudTes stu
dents wtll need three un11s The one
unit ol sc1ence now requ~red will
become two un11s and ulumately
three tor the class ol 2&lt;XJ4 and
be) ond In add tl!on students wdl
need an addmon tl un1t ol lmguagc
lme art&gt; or buSJhess techno logy
F sher cxplatned
We have kmd ol met some 'I
lh~&gt; he sa1d
The d slncl alrc 1dv meets the
Eng! sh requ remcot&gt; &gt;I SB55 hy
reqt11rmg students tn complete I&lt;
ye r ot En il &gt;h and !Ire dy oil ers
lm ua e and other dasses
Que&gt;llnns the bo lTd ol educat on
will h ve to !JCe nclude Does the
t.J lrK t have c!OOU h st tit to met!! s..::1
ence and the math reqUirement&gt;'
Wha happens to related classes
ndud ne 1ndustrral arts '01.: tt onal
a multure home econonucs bu&gt;
ness education and others ' Doe&gt; the
d st r cl have rooms av ul ab le lor the
1dd11!0n 11 ciJsse"
The number ol requiTed cl "'e'
"'" 1ncrca&gt;e Irom 10 to I5 unll s
\\hdc the number ol electiVes wdl
decrease trum 10 to s1x umt&gt; he &gt;Uill
mar Zed
One problem '-'llh the le.t&gt; lal on
po nted out by sc hool olhcta" '
that the.: statt s not a'~lstm .. With
lund no the add1t onal requ red class
e:.. lll ltd n summers~.: hoo l tor ele
meotary schoo l &gt;t udents
The bo trd appr "cd the pure ha c
ol a mndul r cl ossroom lor the T11ie
I rcadTI1 0 proeram at Letart Falls Ele
mentary lor $ll 704 (ron Modular
Bu ldmu Consultants ol Columbus
Supenntendent J un es L 1wrencc
saod the classroom would be pur
chased With state T tie I lunds not
Irom the dtstmt general luncJ The
buddm 0 can be moved tl a new bUild
n_ 1s comtrtl(.;ted ht: noted

non prof1t educational founaa~on
I

He presented the diStrict s 1eeds
b dec! I JT the upcom n sc h I ye r
Jl $5 05M ?(Xl t huJ el wh ch I e
, ud matches the cl!stnct s tnllctp II
~:d mcnmc:

We ve been "' the I&lt; tn Iund I JT
but now were c tlln e
ouT he sa1d
However It wil l be close he
1dded s ty 11 0 11 m 'Y he a whde
belore the d!StrTCt c tn tdd tny new
pn cr un . .
s x years

Personnel 11 Iter&gt;
In personnel m ltcrs the bo trd
opproved the I '"' "m subsi llule
lcat:hers It r the remur t.lt:r nl the
sehoul ye r OITVT 1 Cunmnl!haol
mu&gt;~c Rt hyn H 1wk husmess Rt y
Johnson he tlth educ tl on
Also tpproved pe ndmJ back
eround l:he..::ks V.l:rc suh~ lltuh: hus
dnvers C T Chapman and W 11! tee
MOTTl&gt; and subs i!IUic cu&gt;todTtn
Charlene ll la&lt;k
In other bu 1ne" the ho trd
Approved selhne old de&gt;k'
from Purtlmd Ele nentary School 1m
$10 each People mterested 111 pur
chasmg de,ks ore tsked to c dl SuJl"r
111enden t J 1mes Lawrence at the
h1eh school
Appointed board member Do'"
L1ttle " le &gt;lal! ve hat&gt;on Wtlh the
Oh10 Sc hool B&lt; ard Ass()CI IHJn
Thankcd Joseph St 1lur 1 I "
donal n0 15() &gt;tuden t C licuialor&gt; II I
c "' ul $1 079 to Letart F til&gt; Ele
mcntary
Md 1n exec ut ve r.;es ... l m to d "'
cus"i personnel matter' amJ &lt;.:ontr ct
ne otmtmns
Set 1'peu II bo trd mee11 n I "
Munday 6 10 p m 111 the ht 0 h sc h&lt;HJI
~.: lkkna to vott: on a~.: mtr ~t:l \VIIh
OAPSE Loc tl 451 1nd to tpprove
rcmlult m IL th( nz ne- 1 s&lt;.:honlton
true! ' n hond ssue I JT the M TY )
h II ''

Pr~o: \t: l\1 w~.: rt.: L awn:nu.:
H II
h trd PreSident B h C '" ' " 1nd

ho mlmt:mher D 1\t: KuL m 1 Lllll:

R n C mmar t 1 nJ M trly M 1r Iff

ly

MAKE IT ARULE
USE WANT ADS.
AHANDY
TOOL

1

Out&lt; I the I' n lund
1 rc 1rcr Denn11Jtlll l rep&lt; rtcd Ihe
rc: ... ult of a d IrK 111 tnu tl lor ~he
d lml 111 n the II\IJICI will not
h ve t&lt; 1111 the!&gt; olund

\.,

OhiO ;~:tmucd from page 1
But l1wm tke" h 1ve s ucJ Ihey
wan t vott.:::rs h appruvl: any nne 1 ~c
n taxe m.l bIl l( t 1 uc., n ust d e 1r
th e Lcol l!lurc by hh -1 I&lt; w n
spot Tn the May pnmary
H&lt; u e M no 11 y Ro&gt; B &gt;0 s D
Andover u n l~rn eJ Th t Ht u e
m~.:mhtr ... were t..1 "i~.:U""'" a pl ln
un I r 10 the 'ne o 1111ne by E py
But B
sa1d H u e Democrat
vere maklnc- no promrsc..,

----~" IJ
«S( a
Car Problems!••••
No Problem
COME TO

Car Car-e ()()et()r-~ I!VC

SWEDISH STUDENTS and
other Scandmav1an Europea~ .
South
Amer1can
As1a~~
Russ1an exchange students
arnvmg August
Have own
spendmg money and nsurance You proVtd'e room, board
and superviSIOn Cah AISE
today to become a hosl lam•ly
at 1 800 SIBLING or VISit our
web at http 1/www s1bhng org

........____.

4 41 p m Paoe Street M1Jdle
port Je m Null H&lt; l&gt;er Med cal Cen
ter
9 3.8 p m Eden R d 0 c Rood
Reedsville Lovella Turner Cam
den r1ark Memona l Hosplltl
Reedsville squad as\! sled

AtSHS

.

Amencan Intercultural
Student Exchanae

'

A Pomeroy man was lllJUred m a one vehtcle ac'(Jdent Tuesday on
County Road 36 (Sum ner) the Gall a Metp Post of the State H ghway
Patrol reported
T1mothy L Curlts 33 39561 Keebaugh Road relu&gt;ed treatment at the
scene of the 6 09 p m acc1de nt 1roopers s ud
Curt s was northbound a mtle north ol State Route 7 111 Chester Town
sh1p when hiS p1ckup truck went oil the nght STde ol the ro td tnd struck
a lence
The p ckup conllnued on rolled 'ncc and came to re I on Its I res
accord 1n" to the report
The p1ckup was se\ere ly dama 0 ed and Curt iS was cned for failure to
control

Cash A. Bahr

MICH

GLENN S~ MISSION
Last
week we reported on the millions of
pteces of man made space JUnk
orbllmg the Earth creat10g unpre
dtctablc hazards for our astronauts
Only 8 000 of the est mated 15 m1 l
!ton man made ObJects wcl10g the
planet arc rout ncly observed by the
Pentagon s space survc 11iance sen
SOTS

Despite sex allegations, Clinton must act against Saddam now

dy The Assoctated Press
r, "" I \\ c In Ja\ Jan 28 the 0 Xth d 1\ ul 199X There arc 137 day&gt;
kit 11 the 1car
1 d y s ~h c hh gl 1 n ~hstnry
On J 11 °8 IYX6 Ihe pace shulllc Challcn crcxplodcd 7"1, seconds after
I Itoll I om Cape C tna\CTII ktll n~ all seven ere~.&lt; memhcrs
On thiS dale
In 1147 En 0 i11 J K1n 0 Hcnf\ v Ill J1cd he ' 1s uccccded hy hts 9
Y"'r, ld s o Ed" tTd VI
In !196 I ngl I '' c 11' S r F anm Drake chcd olf the coast Jl Pana
Ill
hC' V. I hllh; d ll
In I X" C 1! 11 "' lut1 nary Jme M 111 \\ 1 b llltn Havana
In I X7 1 I 1 tncc w rendered 111 the Fflnco..P U&lt;s! tn War
In 19112 the C arn c c In I tote "" stahlt hd n Wash111oton DC
In 190&lt;! the Un led Stales end d direCT c nil I J\Cr Cuba
In 191 'i the C as Gu tTd " 1 created b) an All ol Congress
In 1916 I u D 13 anJc1 "" appo ntcd hy Poe&gt;tdcnt Wilson to the
Supreme Coun bel on me 11 s l1r t'kw1 h nemhcr
\\
In 1945 doo ' "Wor ld War II /\II Ted &gt;uppl e he~ 111 rcach1ng Chn a o~c r
the new ly reopened Bwma R ad
In 1n2 It 1!1 n an1 1 terror sm I rcc rescued US Bngad1cr General
Jam&lt;s I Do11cr -11 da) s 1ftcr he llld bee 1 kldn tppcd by the Red Bngades
Ten )C "' t '-N1c tTJ ua s kfiTst cO\Ctnmcnt md Contra rebels be~an
thclf IJrst lace 1' face peace talb mecung 111 S~n Jose Costa R1 ca The
Supreme C ur of Canada struck down the na 1011 s rcstnct!VC abortiOn law
A 13 day standolf n Mar on Utah between pollee and a polygamiSt clan
ended 111 uunfirc that k !led t state correc11 ons officer and senou61y wound
cd the group s leader Add am Swapp

The Dally Sentmel • Page 3

Death Notices

AccuWeather®lorecast lur dayt1me conJH o 1

ctttzens group 10 Provtdence R I
was slapped wtth a federal lawsutt
for protestmg plans to locate drug
addtcts and alcoholics m the r public
housmg unlls

Minority firms deserve a fair shake

Today in history

OHIO Weather
Thursday, Jan 29

'EstaD{ISfiLtf In 1948

I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh1o

Page2

' "Good Ito nest People"
- Name Brands at Great Prices Ke(lys • Brtgadters • Umroyals Goodyear
Mrcheltn and Generals

2 and Wheel Alignment (Computer)
Brakes • Shocks • Struts
BOB W MAIN
992·4484
POMEROY
1/4 Mile down river from Pomeroy Bridge

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Wednesday, January 28, 1998

Sports .

Sent¥.!~1

The Daily

Wednesday, January 28, 1998

,Clinton's

A

Mohammed's buzzer-beating shot lifts,UK past Vanderbilt
•. By TERESA M. WALKER
NAS HVILLE renn (AP)
Kentucky s NaLr Moham med and
coach Tubby Srmth beheve the shot
wen{ 1n before the cloc k exprred

the buzzer Tuesday mght. hftmg No
7 Kentu ckf over Vanderbilt 63·61
"Thr s JS very devastatmg." van
Breda Kolff sa1d
"I thought the clock staned on

Vanderbilt coach Jan van Breda Kolff
JUS! WIShes college basketball had
mstant replay
Mohammed Orpped the bal l off
the backboard and mto the basket at

Scoreboard
Basketball
NBA standings
EAS r ERN CONFERENCE
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I r.tnk l n 61 Rl ~~ Hultn 11 IJo.
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21

24

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w l ~ I uthcr Ill 64 Mnut\1 s~ntr ll ~ :!

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Sou t hwt&gt;!i l
[..t.: lllUrllc 111 126 SW AJ\•111

Far West

u~~t•l.:nlal

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Wtlnuii!Oitm 6'i Ohtu w~ ~ l cyn11 ~
Wmc11~ " 77 Ot.tt LilLI: 69

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

Snulh
Ap1 tit• ht n S1 11 D t v u l ~nn pptl ~ H 1w
E lilt &lt;11, 90 Amttn I'~: ty KO
K.ntud,y (,I V Hllkrhtlt 61
l t'itlk 72 YII !! IIILI [ ,;dt6K
Ot tl Rni'!Crl\ 71 lkhlltlllt 6(1
\\ th l llrnl 62 Vtr~tmt S'i

Midwesl
Crcl~lnnn 7~

W tdlll t St 72 {0 I )
lt•w1S1 !l.C. rcx :!..~K2
Mmncsolt 'iK Wr s~u n s tn 4H
Nnnhwc:stern 7 1 OH-..Jgu S1 40
X wl ~.: f 91 Duqutsnc 71

NCAA Division I
women's scores
Easl
1\ lhn ght 70 Wrdcnu "i~
All~nt uw n l)() I DU M !dt s•m \lJ
n ru t t:~ Pnrt 61 S Cunnc~ll ~ u t 61
ll u11 tit' St 72 Um.kpun St "'iO
( ttltoh• u h("l Vtll l Jult• n
Cltr l &gt;tllt ~--' PubJtmSt-1 ~

( nih) 74 New I nqltn•l 'ill
DmJucsnc ')'J Vtrt:tlll 1 1 .~ 1 llh
I r 11111111!11 till St 7'J I IlLhhm t: St ~6
l rmkltu &amp; M tnh llb/1 NtM ll Utrn~ Mtl 61
Gc n ~~co S1 91 I mJmut St -l 7
Gr~cll Mt1 unt 1111 71 St J •~&lt;' ph Vt "i'
ll mulhln 71} St l...twr&lt;Jh.c 77
H t!lWI ~ l 74 Urmm NY 'i'J
H l ~l;r l urJ 711 n ryu M IY,f -1 1
Htlly ( m , \ 72 N wy 6 1
J••hn' H''I'ktn•ltl ~ Mtr) ltiJ..W
Kcclk: S1 70 Plynk &gt;ulh S1 !'16
Kr11g1 jl 1 67 l)rcw '&gt;f1
L IlK ISler Uthlc 'itt W 1l Jill! lUll Bhk 17
Uhm tl 17 John J t)' lS
I "Y' It f\.hl 70 M mq .u
L yw mn~ S9 Yltl kc ~ "'i7
N 11 trc!h N Y 90 1\l!rtd M
New Rlkhelle ~() Old w~ ~ tbur y .U
Otto:••ttta St 71 Rm sdl Stg~ "\(1
Phtl t PhtttnK y7~ Lnu. lu P t Ul
1&lt;1'1 CH U11 ~ 141
Ri&gt;l'. util i R unttli' II
S t~ r~J Ht 11 1 66 N~:w H t\1!11 ~!i
Sl rlllt ln74 IA:IIw tr.:Vtlli1
Sl..ttht ll&gt;rc 74 Mtddkht f ) 7 1
S1 Jnlm '67 Pt11 \ hur~ h ~7
Sl ll om \ 1\ljUIII I\7 ! r.tl.. }ll l'" i '\"'
S t Vutuu171 P111 J ltn, tn..,nflll
1
luntl y ( &gt;1111 'i-1 W"tii.IJ St '~
W ''hlltclull Mtl 7 ~ Ut ,mt' ~I
Wt~t u;'l~r St (Ill Blllt:r.:"' tit r M "' ~M
'n tl.. l't ~-l (j tlltudd XI

Suu lh
li~

Akron Ou\htd 69 Mtlen ( c nt Hower 60
toT I
Akrnn I (JX Akron N 6 1
Akron G trltciJ 70 Akrun FHI!stonc "i9
Aki- 10 K~n ll kl fl! -10 Akron Eller lH (01)
Akrnt Sr V St M I Ol Hutlsll n Wt' stc rn Rc
scrvt ~7
Antl.t ~"i lln l..ut ~ -llJ
ArdtboiJ (I 1 Htlllup-14
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l\'ht thui1Huht&gt;r71 hli~I , IIIAI~t67
l\\ l\11bul S1 J 1t111St 1'•1100 \\tllnHtll

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Av, n 9~ I tr t n l\ n1tk,1d ( 7
II trh• n un I00 Kt ,1111 W
lltl l VI I (1~ I l llllh ll (l{) 101 )
lk 1vrr• 1n k .I ~ Cc nkrHik -II
1\t ll tlfl S1 J 11 II '70 lt II &gt;I IIII v tl q
lk l n •nl Unt t•n Ln1 d(J~ ltdl{ ~2
ll~rll n (\n1• 1 Wr.:, 1lrn Rnc t V\ ~6 J t ~ k ~ tut.
Mrll nl 1.1
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llc1hcl fllchO Htll ' ll11ru~l
ul ~ hup ( W vI) Oon ~Ilk: 'J6 Urhl p; purl 7K
Ul nom (mull 62 Am ntl 1 (i~ l fLf~lk 'it.
(01)
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lire I.." til /"i l kr~ 1 \~
C 11 lhtttl)!t (l-1 John fl1tr ~h 111 W V 1 &lt;iii
f..lll1 1
~ H 111 11!1d'i~
( 1111 111 :0. "i H 1 I 1(1\lry "it
l ltntd?h 11 ) 11 ltll !d
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(It trll't ND (I 'i 1 I' U1ll t I' ttlu t lt~
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l11t I ld, r 'i l St H, llr) .; ~
ltn Cilcu I ' i t.: (I' K lltt:~ Mill• 1\ 11 ~' (l()
ltn l nulttuk&lt;.lll h•J &lt;.m Htll,(ltt Altd
!.. 111

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l11t I til M\ M ouul H ~ 1hh1 hI
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{ll {ulnl
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u~ l ~t t 1 1 (k lmuln\\ l\1~ .1
l k (d,m!lt.:H? lk ll h d ,41!
(k H t) 117 &lt;.k S•tt! Ill

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BII J!t:~ 7-l \\ il n111 Rtl j!~ 70
Urmk l1 1\~ t 7~ (II \\h~L\11111 71
&lt;.lntllliiii~'J (&lt;•1 1\n dl~lll

Win

In other games rnvolvmg ranked
teams Tuesday. 11 was No 9 Connecticut 63. Provrdence 56, and No
24 Xav1er 93, Duquesne 71
No. 9 Connecticul 63
Prov1dence 56
Kevm Free m.m returned after
m1ssrng one game wJth a sprmned
wnst and had 17 pomts and II
(See TOP 25 on Page 5)

(j-

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c

MORE TH~ 8 0 ~A~ C -~~ES
\Y§RE PASSED IN ~yo

X.J S l'•11111 6'J
l'rtlLIII \ il k: ! 11lmd (){) S G til II ''J
K1\t:IIII I IH w (,~I ll~ I '7
Rl\e t u tSnt ll~l)IIW W ILrlltl~(l
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S ttlhsl til, Shtlll ttd••tll Kf• ~h nlc111 1\11 •tk (tJ
Sdlftll t: '\1'1 Unllu141
Sltlll) ~l tl~K ! H lllllhtii&lt;IILI77(( )J J
Sit 1kcr B1 ~ 10-1 1 1) 111 W
'\pn11J! V lilt: )' A~ tJ 7tJ I nth U11 (d
Sprlllj: Nurtlt 112 I uth 11 '\1
Spnup Sl l.lllt 7'&gt; K ~tlutn~ l llfll\OIII h l
Stut~llllllc h i lhll ttrl 'il
StHIIIj:q tlk IJ~ N l&lt; nytlt 111(1J
Stru t ltt~r, 7 1 Gu tr&lt;l .l 1J
Snt: trLrn k (, tr 1w I) h2 N~WIIIIIIc \hlwu "i1
lol ( h ll \lt lllllll (llltV.tHtll s 4h
lol ltLl lllltd B tl'l'll D tnhtu y l tkL ' IliL61!
lol ~ l1u111u Vtl ll 1 llt J!lll"iHtl h"i l
lr~ ll l lll l olj! l•u 11'\lo ~ 1 111111 htlfl'\4( 2 01)
1 \\111\httf h~ l iuh.n(l l
Vulltll~ll"i~ l&lt;tllt LI IIl-lh
Vulu1 !oi-l &lt;. ot) l&lt;t w"mh7

Pu m~w y M ~: t j!~

Coll~gc

ul fll Prllv l\k nu: 'O
H trlh ul '11 H tr' trJ ~1
I on 1 10() '\t I r t lld~ N Y 69
M whtll 1n6 I urhcl;l &amp;0
S t u~ J Hr.: 11 1 K/1 l uu Co tfli: LI ILIII St 79
St~n 1 7~ M trl\1 1l
S llnt v\nturt/9 l 11nlhtm6l

JU ,L IItWt) (t11 'i7 Stra,hur)!"iU
l'lulu.lclplu 1 "i -' W Hni111C s 'i'
N(\1, ft tdH I L~t J 7-4 I dt ~ tl y H
&lt;&gt;1kGI~n W v, 711 Ht . hl W IIII EJtMIII-17
Otk Hdl 7' lh dbtun 70
Obcrhn ~ I Wdlt nt:hl 1.;x
Olun V 11 Chr C. 1J S) IIIIIIL"" V tl -'I
O~ n D(1nr 62 I tkt Rtdgt -II&lt;
Or In!!~ IC:. K ~ t\ 1 H ni.I\CVdl
() ~~ ~~~X ""I NonliWI I ttl 71
P utll'WIIk R1vm ttlc -17 Asht th11l1 -In
P trm 1 Huly N tllk ~6 Mrnh r L th ( t1h -16
Par1111 Hts V tlky I t'rl!t 1-4 P rm t 'i I
Ptrmt Nnrtll lmly 1JJ Gnltr.:ltl HI' WI
1\n hl.:rvtllt: I L\1 Wl~11) f1l Wo~&gt;tlntu t L 'i(J
Pcrr y,hi rl! "iO S) lv tlllt St1u1h1 t ~;w -ll
I' J ltnd~ 1 Ntlc:~M~Ktnk v -l '\

Nnn-conrerence act1on

(w11ln1t ~

,

But Maddux drove mto the lane
and mrssed an IS· footer, and Turner
responded by hlltmg two free throws
w1th 13 seconds to go for a 61 58
lead before Maddux's three lied the
ga me yet agam
" We would've hked to have had
li ve more mmutes," van Breda Kolff
sa1d "We wanted to see the best team

n

lU

71

M tl u n~: 1{7 Mt Vent! 11 N lltrl!nc 711

Easl

a turn over

N~"

M1d-Ohw Conrer t'nc t'

1\nn y hK

1111 ltJ S lllth AI tb tll tt

N~"l'htl

Obcrh n 1XI Kcnylln 7~

NCAA Division I
men's scores

H trn Hnj:h

\1, V I 40

North Cnast Conference

11 New York 7 1[) p m
Phtlttldph 111 Atl t u 7 '\Opm
Orlumh '' H m&gt;h n K lO 1 m
l nrunto tl Dt:nv~; t 9 1 m
Chtc tgtl tl l'tt nlttU 10 p m
Gt,ldcn St lc Ll s, \Ill( I 0 r rn
Mtnnc:sot t 11 V 111n uvn 10 p nt
M d w:~ukc ~

•"A I t

N H1J!!cl tlk 71 llruu ,w tl k 6-l
Alh 1111 7-! Mtlkr'l""1 () 1
N(w M t! tll\111 , , It 1 11 1 1 ~ 1 7'i 1'11.k n ( 11 y

Ohio men 's college scores
Allanll&lt;

Maddux finrshed wllh 19 pornt s 10
lead Vanderbilt wh1le B1lly DrSpaltro added 17
Vanderbrlt mr ssed two chances to
beat Kentucky '"the fi nal mrnute
At1ba Prater h1t two free throws to
pull Vandy w11hm 59·58 WJth 36 seconds rema1mng. and P.tdgett threw a
baseball pass past Cameron M1lls for

LET

N~w

tW Wlulltcr Ul

Dttl.jUc~nc

" I can't remember ever tak rng a
shol that looked anyth1ng lr ke th at,"
sa~d Mohammed. who had spent
f" UCh of the game on the bench rn
fou l trouble
Vanderbrlt ( 14 6, 3 4 Southeastern
Conference) has lost to Kent uc ky
( 19-1 8-0) II strmght games But the
Com modores drd somethrng to Kenlucky that no lea m ha s done thrs season, outreboundrng the Wildcats 37
32, a far cry from theJr 71 -62 loss on
Jan 3 m wh1ch they were be aten on
the boards by a 57 18 margm
Kentucky had a tough t1me m
pulling out Jt s nrnth strarght vrctory
The W1ldcats never led by more than
four por nts m a seesaw game where
they swapped the lead 15 umes and
had theJr lowest pomt total thiS season
"Ne1ther team II seemed to me.
pl ayed panrcul arly we ll but I th1nk
both teams played therr hearts out
tomght," Smith sa1d
Sheppard led Kentucky w1th 20
pomt s while Scott Padgett added 12
and
Jamaal
Magl01re
II
Mohammed who played only 16
mmutes, fi nrshed w1th erght pornts

N l.t:W t ,h lll~C l nnl 114 Wtync ~ l t dJ (wslt~n

Wlutwnrth 6I Whtlm 111 41i

X tV Jr.: r 9\

·I"

7X

f&gt; tr.: Luther m 'i9 I &lt;wt ~ &amp; Cltrk 49
f&gt;uml l 1111\&lt;t 9-1 M l ~lll '7'i

W tshtnglon 11 llusto u 7 p 111
..Indian I II l1h1i tddplu 1 7 10 11 Ill
Orlmdo ~~ Det r •t t 7 ~0 I'm
' N~w 't'wl.. II Mt IIIII Kr Ill
L 1\ Cltppn~ 11 S m 1\niut 1U H 10 11 tn
s~ ttllc tl lJ t Ill I I' Ill
Nev. knq tl I A Utkcrs I() 10 p n

'f.t

~ t .J I

\zu s 1 Puull ~ b4 Cnl lJ tpl 1 4 ~
CS NunhrrJ~t: 86 C.tl Puh SLO 7'i
C tl Stt l ~ I A M PorttOIIJ P lt tr IH
I r~~ n n P t ~; fi l 66 Bmlt iJO
Ill tho H E Was htngt t~ n f&gt;lJ

Tomghl 's games

Uu ~ l..ndl /0

Tt:xa •AII.M~r:

RIOGRANOERO Ol~t o0..1 1 tll1t~ml!l

lntl 1mt K~ Wnshmgto t K4
Charlotk 110 Phocm )( I I ~ ( 2 OT)
Mtl ..., tukt'c K1 D~; t rull HI
Mm nc~u tt II\ All lilt 1%
Homton ll'i I A ( hj l ( "ll!r~ H1J
D;~ ll ts 1&lt;4 CLEVELAND 77 ((JT)
N~w Jcr ~~:y 120 Dcn\~:r K7
Gtt ltlcn St II~; K2 l' nlll mtl 1 K
C ht ~; tgo 10\ V u ~~.:o u\ cr K\

thu rsday's

~~ Wtndh 111147
Gttl' 7l Klll ''' Lt~ l•1 t.J 7
Gr ul\tllc hl lk111c Umnn "iX
H u ull nt IJ tlhn ~0 O n St )( vtt=r 4(1
H tmthou N(w M1 t ttl "-1 C. m St Hc:rn tnl ~ 1
Htn llnN I III t mfl"i ltmt l (mpkCltr 'il
H~ 11h 7~ I 1hcrty lJnu111 67
ll 1llmJ Spn •t: / 4 M wn ~"t' -12
Hubhlld 71 S lt:m60
I tl \'" \l,liUd S I dw 1d 117 M tplt.: Hi s 7'
I m l&gt;kt lf:J A l hc t s -N
Luh. l' lc:r l 1 d1~r C 11h 6 1 Ltd mg His 4!1
I h l1uu !l(J C dullthlll 1C rnlvtr.:w 72
L ~ bU ll llc 1\H I -I uu ~ k ~.:yc Ltll: II 61
L 1g tnHI Pmnt (W V 1) Pic ts ttll61
! JJI ~II llct rY tt'W6~ l trd mds -1)(
Lor~ 11 1 M,tlvtcw ~b KcyMu•tc 4-1
!Aut;M IIc "I Ct u nn ftmken ~0(0T)
LU llS&lt;;~ Nurthml ~c -14
M thwt 7~ L tkd mJ 6M
M llll'hl!\1cr 11.1 Cuy thng r V tl Chr 4 1
M 11111 1Crl',!Wl"\lJd 7l M ug:ttln r~ &lt;i4
M trlrns Ferry 94 Stcu~nv lll c C tth ~~J
M I S~ tll o n Chr 6ol Mtl~~l.IM( Chr S6
Md)nn tid -IK l nwdlvtllc 16
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~tate

of the Union

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

~essage:

Stay the course

By DAVID ESPO
mention of the cns1s that has gnpped the Wh1te House
Associated Press Writer
for the past wee k
WASHINGTON (AP) - Politely looking past Whrte ' Clinton has demed charges that he had sex w1th a forHouse turrn01l , Republicans are eager to contrast the1r mer Wh1te House mtem and tned to cover 11 up, and
own electJon·year plan for tax cuts w1th Pres1dent Chn- never mentroned the subj eCt as he stood before a House
ton 's call for more spendmg to buttress a "smaller gov- chamber packed w1th lawmakers, Sup reme Coun Jus·
ernment but a stronger natton "
ttces, Cabmet offrcrals and guests
" B•g government or fam1hes? More !axes or more
Loll touched on the explosive subject only m passmg,
freedom?" IS the chOice confronttng the country, Senate when he warned Iraq• Pres1dent Saddam Hussem that
MaJOnly leader Trenl Lott countered Tuesday mghl m a " desp1te any currenl controversy" the GOP-controlled
hrgh-tech GOP response to Clinton's pnme t1me State of Congress will "vigorously suppon the pres1dent" m
the mon address
defendmg Amencan mterests
cpubhcan proposals - to 1m prove educatiOn, day
Htllary Rodham Clmton sa1d today that she was
re opportumtJes and crack down further on cnme thnlled by the recep110n g•ven her husband's speech,
are "s haped by our commitment to famrly, to farth and wh1ch she called " a tnumph a 100 on a scale of I to
to freedom," tho.Mrssrss1pp1 Republican added
, 10 "
WhJie they clashed freely over pnont1cs, Clinton and
' It proved agatn last mght th at the people are rea ll y
most Republicans found common rround tn avmdmg pleased by what th e pres1dent has done the last f1ve

years and want hrm to contmue h1s agenda," she told
ABC's "Good Mommg Amenca •
As IScustomary, the P.ageantry of a State of the Umon
address marked the litckoff of a yearlong struggle
between the partres
c;hnton and V1ce PreSident AI Gore arranged to fly to
the natmn's heanland today to push theu proposals for
expandrng Med1care, safeguardmg Soc1al Secunty and
usmg an mcrease m lhe pnce of crgarellcs to help
ex pand chrld care, educatiOnal opponumt1es and other
programs
Congressronal Republicans scheduled theu fr rst hearmg of the year on a top pnonty - leg1slatmn to tame the
Internal Revenue Serv1ce
PohtJcal reactiOn to the pres1dent's remarks fe ll along
predtctable hnes
Democrats, heartened by the forceful demals Cl mton
uttered Monday about the Momca Lewmsky affa11,

Clinton's
mission:
To change
the subject

Politi~al

By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
WASlUNGTON (AP) - Th1s
JOint sessron of Congress was more
mterested m the state of Btll Clinton 's presidency than htS evaluation
of the state of the nallOn But these
are lawmakers as well as poltllcJans,
and before he was done Clinton had
them wrapped up m pohcy
Th e preSident gave a typ•cal Clinton speech. or more so It had every
aspect of a legiSlative laundry hst,
also typ•ca l of Clinton He had
something to propose from makmg
"th1s cap1tal c•ty great" to rncreasmg the capacity of the World Wrde
Web A thousand fold, to boot
But he had nothtng to say about
lhe trouble he IS m, about the allegation s he had sex w1th a former While
House tntern and then tned to cover
11 up Even Clmton 's cnt1cs
expressed wonder al hrs dernng-do,
m the m1dst of a S£3ndal , to make a
length y appearance before the
natton and try to c!Jj)nge the subJect
" I don 't know 1f I could do 11 rf I ,
was m the same SituatiOn," mar.Jeied Ho•1se Republican Wh1p Tom
DeLay of Texas "The entJre world
JS watchmg "
The stage was set to perfectron,
as 11 always 1s on these state occa·
SIOns
In walked the Cabmet, to take
front-row scats In came the drplo·
matte corps, one- envoy dressed m
fez and while robe In marched fJVe
of the black robed JUStices of the
Supreme Court In star·studded uniforms, lhe m1htary chrefs of staff
assembled In the balcony sat the
first lady, m a salmon·colorcd, h1gh
neck su1t Around her sat the pres•·
dentJal guests
It was clear from the stan that
Clrnton was gomg to have nothmg
to say about Toprc A, alleged adul
tery, whrch hangs over Washrngton
So h1s aud1ence settled m to hear
hrm talk poltcy PohtJcal nvals have
long ago acknowledged thnton 's
sk1ll at laymg out a jX&gt;hllcal agenda
persuasively - even when th e
TelePrompTer fa•ls, as rt drd m a
health care speech to Congress m
1993, or even 1f he waves so enthu
sJastJcally 1hat he knocks over a
glass of water, as he d1d m the Stale
of the Un1on address of !994
He d1dn 't knock over any water
glasses thrs t1m e, but he d1d dram
four glasses, movmg them from h1 s
left s1de to hJS nght as they were
empt1ed

applauded h•s proposals
"There" tremendous umty m the DemocratiC party ·
around Clinton's agenda, sard House DemocratJ c leader
D•ck Gephardt of Mrssoun, " makm g li MOs work for
pat1ents, expandrng chtld care to workmg fam1hes and
stnvmg to make college as umversal as h1gh school "
House Speaker New t Gmgnch, R·Ga , crcd rted Chnton w1th a good, workmanlrke speech," but took sharp
1ssue w1th one pres1dent1al statement ' One thmg I
emphaticall y d1sagreed w 1th was hrs statement that the
greatest health threa t to our young people 1s tobacco
The greatest threat to our young people rs crack cocatne
and he rom ·
•
Gmgnch sa1d m a bnef mterv1cw l.1v.makcrs V(Ji l
pass tobacco leg,slatiOn th1s year, but .. as vague on what
11 would contam He was emphatic m say mg Repubhcans would oppose Clrnton's attempts to take any adil1
tJOnal revenue and spend 11on fe der.JI programs

theater, off-stage drama
meet in Clinton's 'State of the Union'

I An AP News A na /YSIS
• lor;,
to Am enca 's
schoolrooms, reduce

PRESIDENT CLINTON gave a typical Clinton speech, or more so. It
had every asped of a legislative laundry list, also typical of Clinton. He
had something to propose from making "this capital city great" to
Increasing the capacity of the world Wide Web. A thousand fold , to
boot.

The leg•slators had advance
cop1es of his speech, and whenever
he reached the bottom of a page the
rustle was heard through the House
chamber
L1ke anyone, poht•c•ans. rehsh
flattery, and Cli nton was generous
w1th 11 Over and over. he thanked
Congress, saymg rt can be proud of
reducmg defiCits to the vamshmg
ptlrnt "Together we ended the old
welfare system," he sa1d , lcltmg
Congress bask He pra1sed the law·
maker.; for easmg the phght of some
1mm•grants facmg depurt atJOn They
clapped m apprecJatJOn
He offered trrbutes to lw o Ca llfomra congressmen who had recent·
ly d1ed, Democrat Walter Capps and
Republican Sonny Bono
He warml y mentiOned h1s 1996
nval, Bob Oole, and quoled h1m on
Bosma He offe red a "God speed·
to John Glenn, who plans to re·enter
space Glenn , taken aback, rose and
gave thumbs up He ha1led H1llary

Rodh am Clmton as one of the
nallon's expe rts on ch1ld care
He quoted Ch1ef Justice Wrlham
RehnqUJsl, a Republican appomtec,
on tire need for f1llmg JUdiCial
vacancres Re hnqt~~ st , JUdJcJously,
sat w11h arms crossed
At th at, deco rum relaxed
" Vote,"
chanted
De moc rats,
needhng Senate Repu blicans for
blockmg act1on on most of Clinton's
JUdgeship nommces "Vote," they
shout ed, "vote. vote, vote "
If there was any s1gn of the controversres surroundmg Clrnton, 11
came m the •P.,piause E1ghty- nme
t•mes applause mterrupted Cl rnton,
but It was Democ rats who drd most
of the clappmg Republica ns mostly
looked dow n, studyr ng the text
The Democrats rose from th e1r
seats, Republica ns stuck to theirs It
wa~ a speech, not a lovefest but 11
served Clmton 's purpose For the
mOJllent, he had changed the sub·
jeC!

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WAS HINGTON (AP) - ·
In matchless po hucal theater, but
w1th an off·stage drama that defied
Whrte House scnpts, Pres1dcnt Chn·
ton boasted of a slrong state of the
umon and Amerrcan leadership - as
he defended hrs own aga mst scandal
He d1dn 't speak of the scandal m
h1s address to Congress and the
natJon For th1s hour and a quarter, 11
was Clmton m hiS element - the orator, catalogmg hrs pohc1es and plans,
accorded the customary ovatiOns as
he appr~1sed the State of the Un10n
But one passage on Amenca m
the age of mformahon and a global
economy could as well have applied
to h1s SJtuatJon, m the tumult of ail egallon&gt; and h1s vehement den1al th at
he 'd had a sexual affa11 w1th a White
House mtem and tned to get her to
he about rt under oath
" Rarely have Amencans hved
through so much change, m so many
ways, m so short a trme," Clinton
sa1d " Quietly but w1th gathenng
force, the ground has shifted beneath
our fe et "
Certamly under hiS
In a weeks-long: bUJidup to h1s
Tuesday mght address before the JUSt
reconvened Congress, he had dehv·
ered prev1ews of h1s proposals for
1998, des1gned to cla1m the imllatJve
and set the agenda before the. Repub·
hcans came back to the Caprtol
But that str&amp;tegy was eclipsed by
the shadow Of scandal
Republicans already had heard
most of what he wanted, m lime for
advance rebullals There was httle
new busmess to co mmand new
attent 1on, and there was the Momca
Lewmsky case to d1stract It
So beyond hiS long hst of propos·
als, the quest1on was what effect
those accusations and grand Jury
proceedmgs begun earlier m the day
would have on h1 s standmg and h1s
ablirty to get what he wants done m
Congress
The Republica ns who control 11
were pohte - sJlent when he spoke
of pohc1es th ey oppose, but JOlmng
1hc stand1ng applause on other
pornts, a half dozen !Jmes when the
speech turned to balancmg the federal budget
Votes w1ll be another matter
They want tax cuts that Chnt on
opposes And the formal GOP
response by Senate MaJont y Leader
Trent Lott mcluded th JS passage
" We have only JUSt begun the
d1 f!Jcult JOb of stoppmg brg govern ment, makmg It more respons1ve
· and - pe rhaps hardest gf all rcbUJidrng the trust you used to have
1n you r elected oftJCJals "
On a day that usually would have

begun With talk show cheerleadmg
for the State of the Umon, H1llary
Rodham Chn ton was on the ""
defendmg her husband aga mst what
she ca lled a ' vast nght-wmg con·
sp~racy" to undo hrm
" Nonsense," retorted WhJtewa·
ter spec1al prosecutor Kenneth W
Starr, who has added the Lewmsky
matter to h1s portfolio
It wasn't supposed to be thrs way,
not w1th the economy expandmg
through seven years Without reces
SIOn
Not With Clmton prom1smg the
first balanced budget smce 1969
Not WJlh unemploymenl at a 24-ycar
low and pe rsonal mcome nsmg Not
w1th well are rolls at the lowest level
m 27 years, cnme down f1ve years
runnmg, mOat1on m check
W1th all that to boast about , ~c
d1d m openmg hrs address, Clin to~
used h1s previews for a head stall,
but also spent them ea rl y They
mcluded an expanston of Medrcare
to let people buy that fedcra,l health
msurance before they' re 65 Federal
educatiOn a1d to add 100,000 teach-

. grade school ci,JSs
srzes, tax cred rts and subS1d1es for
ch1ld ca re, envrronmental tax breaks
fo r busmess, and more
He proposed th.tt proJected bud
get surpluses- whrch some Rcpub
hca ns want to usc to cut t.IXes - be
reserved, every pen ny ' until
SQCial Secunty 1s reformed to keep
the system solvent beyond 2029,
when the crush ol rct ~r c cs will
exhaust Its trust fund
Save Sacral Sccurrty first ," he
sa1d
On one 1tem. at least, he coul d
cla1m polrt Jcal solrdanty, and d1d, m
warn1ng Iraq s Saddam Husse rn that
" you cannot defy the w1ll of the
world " and dev elop weapons of
mass destruct1on
There was, as always the nt ua l
of welcome. the cry ol the doorkeeper to herald the prcsJdcnl ot the
Umted States the applause as he
makes h1s way dow n lhe arsle ot the
House chamber
That may belle the mood, but Republicans wcren't gomg to he
seen snubbmg the off1cc Bad rv
bad politiCS

State of the Union

:ttJ ·~ ,,_:tt- •
Highlights "!J.froro
PNI!den ..Clintpn's
&lt;f
l
oftlie Uiil.on acldi'Mi: "
•
Federal deficit
Botmed he would
submll a bolanced
budget for/ 999, three
rcqu~red

years carher than
by hu dtal with Congress

Healthcare
Open Medicare
toA mcr~ cans aged 55
to 65, pass w nsumcr
health care protcct1ons,
such as confidenttal medJcal records

Chlldcare

Defense and
foreign affairs
Include roland,
Hungary and the
LZ&lt;e&lt;NI&lt;CJ&gt;UDIIC as new mr:mben ofNATO,
ren€!W Amenca s commJiment to the /M f,
approve nuclear te!it ban treaty,
pay Sl bdlron US debt to UN

Educat1on

P 3 bdlwn 10 hm·
new teacher~. wuh a
goal of rcducm,; class
SIZes mgrades one to three, create
tax crcdru to pay bonds H-h1ch would bruld
and rellovare publtc ~clux&gt;l5

$2/ 7 bi/lw11 for a
chrldcare mrltatlve
duublmg 1hc numba
of cl1g1ble k1ds lo 2 million

Tobacco
RaLH pn CI of crsarutn

by $I 50 a pc«k

pt nalw whau o

Tllltes
Family offour carmng
less 1han $35,1100
would not pay federal
rncome tax

The environment
$6 bdl10n t11 ra.x cuts
and rt:~tarch and
drvdopmcnt fundmg
to cui greenhou.'ie gas emrssrOns,
1mpro ~ c

rw11011 .\ waterways

cvmpanrc s for Wlltmutd
morh turg to A:rds

1e

2000

Sac ral Secunty
U'it 'iu rplu ~ [rum
defiwto w vt S&lt;JC ral

Sn umJ fim

The M•llenn~um
Seck a fam•ly fru ndly
mttrmr cre.tll£ al/11
ctllfury n 1earcl! fiuui ,

han human clomng

GOP response calls for government that takes less
By AlAN FRAM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hopmg to wrest control of
th e electron-year legJslatJve agenda from Pres1dcnt Chn ton, congressional Republica ns responded to the State of
the Umon speech Tuesday by calling for tax cuts. more
local control of sc hools and a government that takes less
from Amencans
" B1g government or fam1hes? More taxes or more
freedom?" asked Senate MaJonty Leader Trent Lott. RMJss, contrastmg GOP plans wllh Clinton's m the
natwnall y telev1sed Republi can respon se to the presrdent's annual address to Congress
Lott spoke after lawmakers returned m fo rce to the
Capttol for the stan of th1s year's congressJOnal sesSJon

csts th roughoul the world "
Loommg over the evenmg's speeches were 3\:cusatrons
In a stnkr ng demonst ration
that the prcs1dent had an affair w1t h a one t1mc Whrte
of
how
Republ icans hope to d1cHouse mtem and then tncd to cover 11 up
tate
thrs
year s agenda Loll bare
W1th an eyc-grabbmg v1deo screen behmd h1m Oash
ly
mentroned
the mlt ratrves Clm
mg 1mages of the Consti tutiOn and p1les ol tax forms, Lott
ton
touted
Those
rncludcd ca lls
barely alluded to the problems thrcate'nrng CIJ~ton s prcsto
boost
spcndmg
for schools,
tdency In what seemed to be an oblique 1cferc nce, he sa1d
mcrease
avaJ
iab
Jhty
of
ch1ld care
Repubhcans have scarcely begun the JOb of " rcbulid1 ng
and
Med1carc.
and
nol
to spend
the trust you used to have 111 your eleGtcd off1cJals "
any
budget
surplus
untrllaw
mak·
He also touched on the Wh1te House cns1s m ISSu mg
ers
agree
on
how
to
bo
lster
Socral
a blunt warnmg to Iraq
Secunt y lor Baby Boomers, who
"Let me make one thmg clear to Saddam Husscm bcgm rct1nng In a decade
or anyone else who needs to be told, " Lott sa 1d " Dcsp1 tc Sen Trent Lott
Instead, Lott focused almost
any current controver.;y, thiS Congress wil l v1gorously
support the president m full defense of Amenca's mtcr· excluSive ly on hiS own party '.s accomplishments and

Americans see reassurance By MICHELLE BOORSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
Am crrca ns who watched PresJ·
dent Cli nton's speech were scekmg
reas.~ ura ncc, not only about the state
of the UJi1on but the state of the pres·
rdency And for many, 11 was there
" lthm k he looks ultra-confident
He's paosmg, he's got a d~rec t
gaze," Betsy Frost, a 32-year-old
s1Jversmnh, sard as she walched
Clinton's speech Tuesday mght at
her heallh club m downtown Boston
" I thmk the average Amencan rs
watchmg to see how he's actmg
under all thiS pressure "
Ray Kramer, a 43·year-old arch• teet, went further
" It was amazmg," satd Kramer,
who watched the address at hrs
home m Boulder, Colo. " You have
to admire someone who would get
up and make a speech m those err-

cu mstances" ·
But Amcncans saw other thmgs
m Clinton, too - fatigue, cockmcss,
worry, hogw.ts h, msprratJon, even a
great sun
"I'm d1sgusted w11h h1m," sa1d
Matt Davrs, leamng back m ll rs rechn
er rn h1s Mdford, N H , home whde
h1s two children slept upstairs The 36·
year-old Jail guard wanted the pres1dent to address accusations he had sex
w1 th w1th a Whtle HouSe rntem and
then pressured her to he about 11\\
"I'd respect h1m 1f he apo~;ted
I'd say, 'There's a man with a backbone,"' Dav1s sard
In 72 self-assu red mmutes, Chn ton talked about everythmg from a
balanced budget to savmg Sacral
Security and a htgher mmrmum
wage. There was nothmg about the
all egatto ns that have domrnated
headh~es for days

and some other things

~ve rywh ,
cncans were
lookmg a d lrstenrng In a Manhat
tan d1ner A bowlmg alley rn Cleve
land A n ~ apart ment bUJi dmg 111
Montgomery, Ala, a condom mrum
m Sun C:1ty, Anz, and 1n the liVI ng
room of a house m P1kev 1lle, Ky
Many speech-watchers lauded
Clmton for av01dmg the toprc of 24year·old Momca 4wrnsky, some·
thrng they sa1d IS relevant to h1s hfc,
not those of most Amencans But
even as they spoke of the content of
Cl rnton's speech - ch1ld care, the
conflict wrth Iraq - they turned the
talk to the controversy surroundmg
h1m
"From educat1on to grants to
reducmg the class SIZe, he's wonder·
ful, I thmk," sard Gerald Marete, 40,
a c•vll engmeenng student at Sacra·
mento State Umversr ty m Sacramenta, Cahf "If you ask me about

goals He descnbed past GOP Vlctoncs 111 cutt1ng t.!Xcs
and overhau li ng welfare, la1d out Rcpuhli c.m pl.u" lor
th e year and saJd Kcpubilcan proposals ' arc sh.tpcd hy
our comm rtmcn t to !amrl y. to f,uth and to freedom
Other Republicans also unde rlined thw parl y s till
fcrcnccs w1th the preSid ent
,
Rep John L1nder. R G.r who heatb lite llousc
Rcp ubi1 C.ms campa1gn comnnttcc s.uu ( l1n tun
believes 1n an rntru srve fede ral government
" In contrast, Repubilc.lnS behcve the Amcnc.JII reo
pic should m.1kc the decrSions th .lt affec t thw l1rnil~e s
every day L1ndcr s.11d
" Two years ago. the preSident smd the cr., ol h1 g !!.OV·
crn mcnt was ove r but he s .rpp.11cntl y ch.rngcd h"
mrnd , sard Sen Don NJCklcs, R Okla

the scandal, 1t's domg ~ dr sscrvrce to
the Amencan people - diStract rng
the preSJdent w1th th1s kitchen table
d1scussron"
In one suburban New Jersey
household, one fa mrl y was trymg to
foc us on the pres1dent as a leader
Steve Fab ran, 36, a chemiSI from
Canerei, N J , cla1med h1s attent1on
was on Clinton's words about the
country's future, not on "all those
accusatiOns"
The
president
appeared clea rly m control, not " l,1ke
he was try mg to h1de anyt hrng"
"He looked real confide.nt, very
strong, vefy handsome
I wrsh I
had h•s su1ts," Fab1an sard
After a week of bemg to ld by the
medta that Cli nton was battling to
PARKER, rlgiU, and
Clark, both of Hope, Ark.,
save h1s JOb, many Amencans
seemed anx10us . for cv1dence that watched President Clinton's State of the Un ion address at the home.Jlf
a friend Tuesday. The two are supporters of the pres1dent, who was
the nail on 's h1ghest office and the
borJI In their home town. (AP)
pres1de nt were still afloat

�r

..
,,

, Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Meigs tops South Point 84-69
The Meigs Marauders put some, (3 of 4). J. T. Humphreys and Way- . arid round (Roush, O'Brien, Beha),
impressive numbers on 1he boards !an McKinney were perfec1 ~ of 2's, South Poinl finished the half strong
and · rame home wi th an 84-69 non - and Neil Giles hil a e lut c~.sa fety as 10 cui lhe le~d to l9-34.
league boys basketball win over the Meigs hit 13-of-15 fo ul shots in the
South' Point climbed back into the
South Poinl Pointers Tuesday nigh! at last round: hitting 23-30 overall.
ga111e in a big way with a 21-point
South Poinl.
Mergs coach Ch ri s S\out praised scoring outburst in the third round to
Meigs is now ~-4 overall and 6-3 his cluh for a strong fin ish and cred- lead. bul Meigs held on 56-55: Led
in lite Tri-Valley Conference Hocking ited his tea m with good team bas- by the potent foul shooting a11 ack.
Division.
ketball. S1ou1 said. "We were a li ttle Meigs scored 28 four1h quar1er points
Meigs pulled off the big win slu.ggish afte r not playing Frid&lt;~y. but lo secu re the big win.
d~o,pilc lo'\ing the servi ce~; Of\latting
lhe kids adj usted we ll wi1hou1 Brad
.I Meigs hit 23-49 two-pointers, 5poi lll . guard Brad Davenpon. who in 1he line up and got the job ·done ." 15 three-pointers. and was ·23-30 at
Meigs shot out to a lead of ~0- 1 J 'the line wilh 37 rebounds (Hannan
sick wilh the nu anJ did no) play.
The Maruuders were led by Daniel in the first quarter '" Colin Roush II. Humphreys II ). Meigs had 14
Hannan, who tossecf in a game-high JO ined !'Iannan. Humphreys, und assists (O'Brien 6. Rodriguez 4). 19
25 points. includi ng a i3-pnint founh McKinney on the sco ring Merry-go- turn overs. and 19 fou ls.
quar1er thai opened up a one-point round . Stele Bella hil a hig threeSouth Point hil 28-1\2 two- pointMe i g~ lco.1d and. turned it into a minor
pointer and Ange lo Rodrigue£ added ers. 2-14 three-pointers. was 7- 16 at
blowout.
a licld goa l in !he stin£ing fir st peri- the line with 30 rebounds (Vic kers 6.
Hannan hil 5 of 5 fre e ihrows od allack.
Conwell 7). South Point had 2 1
Although Meigs Iii up the nets turnovers, four u&lt;sists. n fouls . and
going down thL' streiL'h to lead a
sharp-'\hoo1ing hml or Mar; ludcP~.
with three. 1hree pointer&gt; in the sec- six steals.
St:LJfl O'Brien hit \orne clutch ,afetie~
Meigs hosts Alexander Friday.
Quarter l!!lllb
Meigs
20- 19- 17-28=84
IJ -21 -21-14=69
South Point
'
Meigs: Colin Roush 1-2-0=8:
Sean O'Brien 1-1-5/6= 10. Steve Beha
By BOB BAUM
and on and nn." he suid . "Thi s week 1-3-1/2= I ~. Angelo Rodri guez 3PORTLAND . .Ore I API - The
has ht'en pre11y tough. and I th ink 0/ 1=6. J.T. Humphreys 7-.1/4=17,
Go lden State Warri u" w nlti hartily
everybody. iridnding Spre. will he Daniel Hannan 8-9/10=25. Way ian
McKinney 1-3/5=5. Neil Giles 0w~tit for toda y to corn~ and go.
h:1pP,y to ge t it over with ...
Finally. the Warrior phryers were
Smi th and Co les said they hope 1/2= I. Totals: 23-5-23-30=84
South Point: J. Lynd 2-0=4, J.
to ha\' e thei r ch:mce to testify at an
Frerick. dean of the Fordham Law
Smith
6-0= 12. J. Vickers 7-1-5/8=22.
arbitra tion hea rin g over \\' h~th~r the
Sc hool. decides In reduce Sprcwe ll \
C.
Cornwell
4-1/2=9. N. Nesler 4- INBA and !he tcarir exce"ive ly pun - penally.
Leighty
5- 1/2= 11. Totals:
0/3=11.J
.
ished Lrlrell Sprcwc ll for chohi ng
The NBA suspended Sprewe ll for
and rhrealeni ng to ki ll coach P.J Car- a ye:1r and the Warriors terminated 28-2-7/18=69 .
lt•,imn.
I he remain in~ three years of his con "Thai is defi nitely something we · tract. costing him $25 million. The
wa nt to ~et over wilh ." Golde n ha"hne&lt;S of the penalty worries
State'&lt; Dickey Simpki ns said. " !hen some players.
we ci.ln li ve our li ves and play our
"That'S a real roncern, espedally
basketball."
for someone who has a temper. like
The hearing hegan in a downtown
I do," Coles said. "Sometimes you
Portland office building Tuesday. just lose it. I'm not condoning what
bu l Muggsy Bogues was the lone he did . but I th ink the punishment
player to teslify. 01her Warrior pl ay- was too much."
·
ers an'd Carlesimo were to make their
Witnesses say Sprewel l. upse t
appearances before arbitrator John with what he saw as t:on~tant criti·
Feerick today.
cis m from Carlesimo. :lltaded the
" I think I'll be happier lo get it coac h at a Dec. I practice. choki ng
over with !han Spre wi ll. " said him anti ihre,rtening to hill him.
Sprewelf\ good friend. Joe Sm ith .
Sprewcll lcfl the gym. hut ca me back
Brmho Coles agreed.
20 m i nut e.~ later i.tnd attacked Cnr·
··u see m ~ like· it \ been ~oing on les imo :I!Win.

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS

Top 25 hoops.. .&lt;continued from Page 4J
·rebounds for the visiting Huskies ( 183. 8-2 Brg East) They wnn despi te .
leading scorer Richard - Hamilton
shootin g ~-for- 1 3 and fini shing with
fqur po.int&gt; and coach Jim Cal hou n
being ejec ted with 8:47 to go after
picki ng up his 'frond and third technical fou ls of the game.
Jamel Thomas had 26 poinls Cor
the Friars (8- 10. J-6). who tied the
•ame on four fre e throws
. when Calhoun was ejecicd and lhen had nne
field goal !he rest of !he way.
~

No. 24 Xavier 93, Duquesne 71
James Posey scored a c"'eer-high
25 point s and matched his career high
with 15 rebounds as I he Musketeers
( 13-5, 5-J Atlantic 10) avenged their
only home loss of the last two sea-

PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
PRODUCTS
2 LITERS

,

c

R.C. COLA
PRODUCTS
2LITER

U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
Lb.

PRINGLE
·POTATO

CHIPS
6-7.5 OZ.

Eve n though I kept tel ling Eddie
that I had forgouen all about the others and he was the on ly pnc who
mallercd. he persi sted in questioning
me . II felt as if there were another

perso n in bed w ith us.
ten six leuers. and yo u never printed
Here's my &gt;uggestion to "Second any of them. My position is that it's
Place ." Remember that your hus- bc!lcr to slay single than 10 li ve with
ba.nd loved you enough to marry someone without benefit of maryou. Forget about the rest. Experi - nage .
ence comes with knowing what
Females who are fooli sh enough
· .nakes your partn er happy. Time is to li ve wi th a so-call ed " lover" arc
~ nur best ally. -- Bee n There in
fair game for big trouhle, li ke. for
Kansas
&lt;Thstance, haltering . If the lady is nol
Dear Ann Landers: Well. here good enough 10 be honored as a
goes anolher 32-cent postage in vest- respectabl e wife. the consequences
ment 10 get your allention. I' ve writ- of a comm on-law arrangement are

•

I

D1a

FOLG.ERS
COFFEE

I

[?lmmwDmmlli murnwG

EASTMAN'S

University of Rio Grande
Thurs. February 5th- 7:30 p.m.
WIN:
•Cash

• Groceries
• or a Foodland
Shopping Spree

FOOD LAND
We Sell Money Orders
We Wire Money
Postage Stamps
Aim DeveiOP.ing
Pre-paid Phone Cards
Foodland Gift Certificates
Carpet Cleaner Rentals _
Columbia Gas Payments
Lottery Tickets

Golden Ripe

Oran

T-Boneor

(except Buckeye)

Porterhouse
Steaks

Gallipolis Foodland Only
•Ohio Valley Bank
"Superbank" Services
•Greeting Cards
•Floral Sales
•We accept credit cards

1

------·-·----··---·----·---·---

14.25-15.25 oz.
Limit 12 Please
Add . Purch 39¢

• JACOB SMART
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
Jacob Smart recently celebrated
his third birthday at Chucky
Cheeses in Parkersburg. Attending were Tabitha and Arik Harner, Barbara ;md Lawrence ~blin,
Penny Clark Smart, Pam , Ed
and Samantha Smith,Josh
Clark, and Jeff Smith.

Limn 12 w1111 additional purchase.

Lb.

Food land

TIDE ULTRA
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

•

Dozen

Un

Turkey Breast

Lb.

Valley Bell

Orange
Juice
Velvet Super Dip

Mai.APiayForPqMI
.-I GetUp To $5 Bac:lc.

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$499
BOUNTY WHITE
PAPER TOWELS

SINGLE
ROLL

9c

gc L

oz.

n A Ban
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This Week
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$300
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Stop In The Store
For Details

__, ..............4oW..

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OFFICIAL MAIL-IN CERTIFICATE

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HURRY1 OFFER MUST-BE POSTMARKED BY 2/2/98.

:

·1

Snyder's

MIDDLEPORT - llte Middle port • Li'terary duh. Wcdncstiay. 2
p.m. at th~- home of Be tsy Parsons.
_Middleport . Mart ha Hoover to
rcvi.cw ''Fina l JuLigmcnt' ' hy Richard ,
North Pauerson.
·

I

SYRACUSE - Su uon Town&gt;hip
Trustees. spct: ial meeting. Wcdncs·
day. 7:30 .P 111. at I he Syracuse
Muni cipal Building.
THURSDAY
AA meeting
POMEROY Thursday. 7 p.m. at Sa~rcd Hearl
Calholi c Church on Mulhcrry
Avenue.
SUNDAY
CHESTER - ·Evangelist Denni s
. Mosley. Groveport. '10 preach and
sing. Sunday. Harvest 0utrcach
Church. li p.m.

Hunger Blaster
Potato Chips

Pepsi ColaProducts

.

Blue Bonnet Spread
.

l

~

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Buy qne Get One 1

FREE
umnonetree,withlhiscoupon

.

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5 Qt. Pall

sa49

$279
2ooz.bag

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99

6 Roll
Tide Ultra 2 100 oz. Ultra
Tide Liquid Soft N Gentle
Powder
1

Bath Tissue

•s•• •s•• .ggc
92·94 oz. box

·United Valley .
I
I
I
I
I

Gallon

Ice Cream

ment.

MAXWELL. HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE

Large ·

Lb.

WEDNESI)AY
EAST MEIGS - Parentlicac her
confcrcncl's \Vrdncsday. 4 to 7 p.m.
in the E:astcrn Lot:al School Distri ct.
Call student's sc hool for appoint POMEROY - The Meigs Coun Emergcncy Plannin g Com millee ..
rc!!ular met: tin!! Wednesday. II :~0
a.~l. E m~rgcn:·y Operations and
EMS Tra inin g Cent er. . Pomeroy.
Business to include LEPC wmpliancc award. hat ·mal plan cx~o:n.: ise.
new LEPC projccls anti EM/\ hud-

·.·

Flavorite 5-7 lb.

Community
Calendar

39·44 oz

12

J{ere 'For Your J{edltfi,'J{~re 'For Your .Lifetime!

c
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Pork Roasts

4 ROLLS

STOKELY'S
VEGETABLES

.

Holzer Clinic ...

Vegetables

............i'opol..1-p..,..

~........................... ......,..,..,..................................................,.....~-

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·0060

Stokely

Boston Style

LIMIT 6 PLEASE

1~ .992-7834 ~I

Jfolzer Clinic Conti11ually Strives rrD _'Provide You __
Witfi 'Better Yfccess % Jfealtfi Care!

Chicken Leg Quarters

CH·ARMIN WHITE BATH
TISSUE

2/$1

6.50Z

oz

C

112 Gal.

STAR KIST
TUNA

Call the number above and you will
reach the main information line at
the Gallipolis Clinic without a long
distance charge!

Chiquita Bananas

U.S.D.A. SELECT

-Tyson Holly Farms

9
9
e Ju1ce... . ..,____. . . . .,.

UNITED VALLEY BELL •

J
. r•r•~

to be expected.
'iercd .. And whcr.c did yu u gel the
If sex is the main attraction . that · rloti on that man needs 1cspcct more
loo shall pass. Man rs objec ti ve: !han he needs love ·• He need, boih.
woman is subjective . Man is realis· Your ~ig naturc docsn"t match your
tic :· woman is rdcal istic. Man is leiter. You don· ! sound ve ry
nomadi c; woman needs roots. Man "savvy·· to me .
needs re s~c t more th an he needs
love . -- Savvy in Savannah
Send qu.:stions to Aim Lander... Crc Dear Savannah : Although you .llm&gt; s ( ndicale. 5777 W Cen tury
don"t ~:orne ri ght out and\ .ay it. your !ll\'(1. . SUi lc 700. Los An~clcs . C rlrf.
leuer slrongly suggests ihat co m·
mon·law wives deserve to get hilt- ~0045

Lb.

36-39

:..T...T...T...T...T...T...T...U ...T..T..T..T..T..T...T...T...T..T...T. T
. ..T..T. T
. ..T..T...T...T...T...T...

Page
W~dnesday, January 28, 1~98

Asst.

MASON, W. VA.
773·5583

If The·992 Exchange Is A
Free Part Of Your Telephone
Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic In Gallip.olis
TOll FREE!!

l

Dear Ann La.oders: This is for
"Second Place in Buffalo," who
wus a virgi n when she married. She .
· worried that her husband compared
her to hr s previous lovers and her
lack of ex perience pul her way down
. on the li st. P!Casc tell her that the
gift of virginity is very special and
she has a right to he proud of it.
Having many love r~ docs nOt
make a person talented in bed. A
good sex ual rc)alionship comes
from the love. respect and fami'liari ty of someone who is import ~n t to
you . It onl y get:-. hcuc r with time .
I'm sorry to say I was mil a virgi n
when I married my hushand 15
years ago. The rncmoric ~ of my past
lovers have fadcti. They seemed
important at ihc lime. hul afl cr all
these years.' I no longer rcmcmhcr
what attra&lt;.:tcd me to them.
Please !ell "Seconti Place" to forgel ahout the other women her husband slept wilh. They don' t ntallcr
n'ow. I guarantee thai he lakes pride
in th e facl thai she waited fur h.im .
Not man y women do ihcsc day s.
The major regret in my li fe is that I
failed to hang ont o my vi rginit y umil..
I met my hushand . He is a wonde rfu l man and the one who trul y
deserved !hat spec ial' gift. -- Kay in
Upstate N.Y.
Dear Kay: Your frank and hone&lt;!
lener will he much appreciated hy
those who have «ivcd themselves
for marriage. Keep readin g for
another one:
Dear Ann: I am writin g in
response to "Second Place in Buffalo." Her hu sband had had several
bed partners before they met. She
was tolally inexperienced and worried ·about hei ng compared to the
women who had preceded her.
My husband was a virgin when
1c married. I was a widow and very
expe rienced. I loved "Eddie" so
much that the other men in my life
..ever ent ere d my mind . But Edd ie
was ohscssed with the &lt;hough! of the

-LIMIT 2 PLEASE

'
I
$119
huc k R . 5 ······~ .

•

HA~DWARE

Nick Bosnic had 16 points for I he
Dukes (8- 12. 3-5), who had 28
turnovers and were dominated inside
in all owing 90 point s for the fifth
lime !his :-:cason.

.

.'a , l\dll" ~t,·

PICKENS

son'\.

~~

1'101 7. l ••.1 1\0fck \ T•mn

' mJi\"Jil' ~n.J (', ,.~ , ..~,

men I h ~\1 been with . He became
downright weird. Every time we
made love, he wou ld ask for details
of my previous partners. Who was
· the biggest '' Who was the be.st? Did
they talk during sex? What did they
..ay?

Warriors want involvement
with Sprewell i_ncident to end

Get an early
start; stop by
and Rent Our
"Blue Luster"
Carpet Cleaner
for a complete
carpet finish.

Ann
Landers

2/$

298 SECOND ST.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, JAN. 31, 1998

The Daily Sentinel
7

Past lovers aren't important - making-·good ·use of time together is

.12 PKS C~NS

STORE HOURS
Monday thru
Sunday
8 AM·10 PM

w'"

TIME FOR
SPRING
CLEANING.

By The Bend

Wednesd~y. January 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.'

Pll[e ·water

EASTMAN'S ·

s

Big Bend, Buckeye, ~allipolis,
Ohio Valley, Twin Rivers

.ODLAND

Gallon

0
·II

SUP:&amp; "MARKETS
"

,

We Reserve the Rlghtto limit quantities • Prices effective Thru Saturday·Jan. 31, 1998. USDA Food Stamps &amp; WtC· Coupons accepted. Not responsible tor typographical or pictorial errors.

.

�I "

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, O,hlo

Wednesday, January 28, 1998

Wednesday, January 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Tiramisu is lush, rich, and P.erfect for Valentine's .Day:
John C. Wolf, D.O.
. Associate Professor .
of
Medicine

Three-wheeled bicycl.es only
safe at very slow speeds
Question: I' m 81 ycnrs old and
physica ll y active. I recentl y had a
hicycle accide nt and sustained a broken coll ar bone and several broken
ribs. I want to get back to riding
again and am thin king about gett ing
a three -whee ler. Woul d these he
sa fer than my bicyc le''
Answer : Transportation. whether
on foot. horseback. on two or threewhee led bicyc les or by motonlcd
\ Chicles is pote ntia ll y dange(OUs.
We don't gc ncr.dl y think about these
risks bl'l' au sc nf the numbe r of ti mes

rics. interact with the road. This
point "f balance is constantl y changing '" the speed and rate of turn
changes, thereby requiring momentto-moment subtle adjustments of the
ricjc r. Though this constant balancing act· has exact ing requirements, it
is success ful ly mastered most of the
Lim e.
A three-wheel bicycle doesn't
lean in a turn . At slow speeds this is
very stabl e and safe. As the speed
increases or the turn becomes more
abru pt, however, a potentially dangerous situati on develops. The tende ncy to ti p over can 't be compensated for by the rider leaning in the
appropriate direction. In thi s situation. it is relative ly easy to exceed
the sa fe limit and tumbl e off the
th ree -whee ler instead of sa fely
negotiating the turn. In fac t. thi s
became suc h a serious problem with
th ree -whee led-all -terrain ve hi cles
that the federal government crea ted
reg ul ations th at elimin ated them
from the market. Three-whee led
bicycles arc onl y sa fer by the extent
to whi ch their riders limi t their
speed.
If you nrc prese ntl y unable to ride
a reg ul ar bi cyc le. then a 'threewheeled one may be a use ful form of
transportation - but it must be used
with good judgment and at very
· slow speeds. If ft' s usc is primarily
for exercise, then consider walking,
~wi mmin g or exercise equipment as ·
a safer allcrnati vc.

we :-. ul..'cc:-.sfull y tra ve l to ot her
place:-. without inJury.
A:-. yo u can att~.s t , usi ng a bi cycl e
JS not :1 n sk. frcc ac ti \,ity. The most
~c r iuu s injury. death, occ urs to ahout
·xoo l11cyclc riders each year. Most of
Jhe ... c tragic even ts arc the res ult of a
hicyck -rnotoi· veh icle coll is ion.. and
1rw nv t)f the \'it:t im s arc c hildren.
Oftc.n t hc~c acc ide nt s result from a
traffic error commtttcd by 'the htcy clist. not t h~; opc r;.~tor o f the mntur
\•ch icle . A ~ you can attest. though,
h i cycl i s t ~ &lt;.'&lt;.\ n. and ofl~n do. s u s t ~1i n
serious injuries wi thout the involvement· of another veh icle.
A three-wheel bicyc le is saiC r
th an a two-whee led ·one in some si tuati ons. whil e it is dramaticJII _v less
so in others. Since the broad triangular hasc makes, the three-wheeler
hard to tip over•. it is. quite ohvious· ly, more stabl e than a two-whee ler
when standi ng still .
The situatiow can he di fferent.
however. when moving. The ~.:e nt e r
of gravity of th e bicyc le and rider
"Family Med icine" is a weekly
combi nati on is fair ly high. When . column . To submit questions . write
turnin g a two-whee led bicyc le. the to John C. Wolf. D.O.. Ohio Uni verbicyclc and ride r lean into the turn . sity Co llege of Osteopathic Medi Th is changes the angle at which the cine, Grosve nor Hall . Athens. Ohio
bi cyc le whee l and the forces it car-·· 45701.

By DINAH ENG
Gannett News Service
Tiramisu - the Italian dessert,
known for its delicate m ascarpon~
filling, became part of the nation's
food ' appetite in 1993 when Tom
Hanks, playi ng a widowe r re-entering the ·dating sce ne. anxiously
asked, " What is tiramisu'" in. the
movie "Sleepless in Seattle."
The cohfecti on traditi onally
includes lady fingers (or sponge
cake), mascarpone cheese, espresso
and brandy.
One renditi on is a French interpretati on, using Kahl ua (a CQffeebased cordial) and sponge cake, ereated by Eric Perez. pastry chef at the
Rit z-Carlton, Tyso ns Corner in
McLean , Va.. a suburb of Washington , D.C.
The fillin g's all -import ant mascarpo ne cheese (Itali an cream
cheese) can be expensive, dependi ng
on· where you shop . In Washin gton.
D.C., a gourmet shop charges $8 for
an 8-ounec container, compared to
$3.99 for the same amount at a local
Safeway.
TIRAMISU
(Rec ipe from the R i t z ~ Carho n .
Tyso ns Corner. Mcl ea n. Va .)
Makes I0-12 servings
Preparation time: 2 hours 15 m i n ~
ute s
C hillin g time for asse mbl ed
dessert : 2 hours or longe r
Ingredients
'
Pastry cream:
. 2 cups whole mi lk
2 eggs
one-t hird cup granulated sugar
one -eighth cup corn starch
Boil milk . Mix eggs, sugar and
corn starch toge ther. Ad d egg mi xture to mil k and bring to full boll
again . Let coo l and set "' ide. (May
be made a day ahead and refri gerated .)
For the sponge cake :
one-half cup whole milk
2 ounces butter (one-half stick)

6 ~ggs
..
3 egg yolks
·
I and one-fourth cup
,g ranulated sugar
Pinch of sail
I and two-thirds cup
cake Oour, sifted
3 teaspoons baking pow. de(
one-half teaspoon vanii Ia
l:leat milk and butter
together unti l butter is melt ed. Se t aside. Whip eggs
and egg yolks with sugar
until li ght and thick. Fold
into egg mixture sugar, salt,
cake nour, bakin g powder.
Add vanilla. Fold in hot
milk in three stage s. Pour
into greased· and Oourcd 9inch cake pan. Bake at 350
deg rees for 25 to 30 minutes.
Cool cake. Slice off onehalf inch layer and use for
bonom of tiramis u. (May
be made a day ahead and refri gerated )
For the coffee syrup :
4 cups water
I and one-half cup ground
espresso beans
I. and one-quarter cup granul ated
sugar

Bn ng wa1cr. esp resso beans· and
sugar 10 a hoi! for two to three minutes. Pour through a strainer or sieve
lined with coffee filter to catch
grains. Cool.
Us ing a pastry brush. li berally
hr,ush roffcc syrup onto top of
coo led sponge cake. (Lady fingers
brushed with co ffee syrup can be
substituted for the sponge cake.) Set
as ide.
For the cheese tilling:
16 ounces mascarpone cheese
(room temperature)
one- half to three-quarters cup
Kahl ua (to taste)
I teas poon va nilla extract

ANTICIPATION.

I

We're about to
give birth to a brand
new perinatal unit

Officers sworn in for
Meigs Soil &amp;Wat-er
Joe Bolin of R- utland and Marco
Jeffers of Albany. recently elected
supe rvisors of the Meigs Soi l and
Water Co nservat ion District, weresworn tnto off1cc by Oh10 Supreme
Co un Chi ef Justice Thomas J.
Muy~ r during the 55 th Annual meetmg of the Oh to Fcdcrauon of Sod
and Water Conservati on Di stricts
(OFSWCD) held 1n Colu mbu s
recen tly.
Elec ted to three year terms the
.two ncv: offi cial s JOined Thomas
Theiss .. John Rice and Charles Yost
111 ad mma stcn ng the Mr ags SWCD's
n:ltura l rc . . ourTc rn n..;c rvati on programs.
The Oh to Fcdcrat ton of So il and
w~.u c r Consc:rv:.uion Distril:'t S was
orga nilcd in I Y43 to further th e natura l rcsnun.: c ro nscnat io n mis!-. ion
of the state\ HH cnuntv-hased
SWCD's. As s u hd i vi~ ion s ~f state
gml'rnln ~ nt. soil ;mct water ,_:onscrvat Inn Jis triciS have '"""' authont v
to as•d.;t landow ne r~ ~ ith a wid~
ran ge of soil. water. woodl and and
wild l1h..' conserva tion objcl: ti vcs .

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.._"i 1Nsu~e.o e,N\OR CI'TI7.!1-N

~U'-' .

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o,scouN'T

JONES'

Ta&amp;SBMGE

GALLIPOLI$, OHIO 45631

-'to.P

(614) 367·0266
1·800·950·3359

.'{r\n'l

BISSELL.BUILDERS, INC.

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP .

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

AND
MORE .
.

Public Notice

one-fourth cup sugar
2 ge latin sheets
2 cups cold water (enough to
eovcr gelatin sheets)
I cup ,heavy cream
Beat room temperature mascarpone cheese by hand to soften. Add
kahlu a. Stir gentl y. Add vanilla
extract. Gradually stir in sugar. Set
as ide.
Soak two gelatin sheets (avail able in goutm ct food shops) in cold
water (enough to cover) for two to
three minutes. The sheets do not di ssolve. but become malleable. Wnng
water out of sheets.
Plilcc gelatin sheets with pastry
cream in ·microwavabl e bowl. Place
in microwave at full power lo r one
minute.
In another bowl , whip 'the heavy ~
cream to a soft. whippin g cream
consistency.
While pastry cream is still hot,
quickly fold into the cheese fillin g.

(-

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~

·,~.,.
-~,.

1,- . ;

Add whipped cream and fold until
well mixed.
Pour fini shed mi xture onto top of
sponge cake (or lady fingers) in a
greased spring form pan. Refri gerate
two hours or longer until dessert is
~ ct.

For the cocoa powder:
one, half cup ground espresso beans
one -half cup granulated sugar
2 1caspoons cocoa
Combine the ground cspressq
beans. sugar and cocoa in a bowl.
Remo~c tira.:Oisu from spring
form pan. Before serving, sprinkl~
top of tiramisu with c~coa powder
.mixture. Optional: sides may be decorated with lad y lingers.
Nutritional analysis per serv:
ing: 716.7 calori es; 35.2 grams total
fat ; (9 .5 grams saturated fat) ; 11 .5
grams protein ; 86J grams carbohy'
dratcs: 291 milligrams cholesterol ;
235 milligrams sodium .

techniques and our own very special brand of traditional warmth
and caring from a first-class,
committed group of nurses and
physicians.
In all, undertaking this
renovati ~n project is our way of
saying that quality maternity care
and the future of Athens and
Athens County families ·has never
looked brighter.

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
thai on Saturday, January
3t, t998, at to:oo a.m., a
public sale will be held at
211 Weal Sec.ond Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio , The
Farmer's Bank and Savings
Company parking lot, to sell
lor cash tho following
collateral:
199t CHEVROLET S-10
BLAZER
IGNCTBZ8MDt63330
The . Formers Bank and!
Savings
Company,!
Pomeroy, OhiO, raaervea the ,

Public Notice right to bid at thiS aale, and
to withdraw the abova .
colleteral prior to sale.
Furt.her, The Farmers Bank
and Savlnga Company
reaervae the right to reJect
any or all bid a aubmttted: ~
Furtber, ihe above
collateral will bt aold In the
condition It Ia In, with no
expreaa or lmpllad
warrantlas given.
For lurthar Information,
contact Shalla at 992·2136.
(1) 28, 29, 30 3 tc

(No Sunday,Calls)
Public Notice

New Construction &amp; Remodelin.g

740·742·3411

S&amp;L

YOUR MESSAG.E
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7:00 PER DAY.

WICKS
HAULING

Ivy Carter to exhibit at FAC
The French Art Colony galleries in
Gallipolis. wi ll be fi lled witb the
works of Ivy Carter in "Spirit Works"
- A View of the African American
Experience" January 3 1 - Ma_rch I.
The exhi bit is sponsored by Willis
Funeral Home.
Ivy Carter. of Columbus, received
her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from
Ohio State Uni versity and continued
on, gcuing her Master's dcgre!' from
Way ne State Uni versity.
Additi onal co ntinuing education
ror Cart er has take n her to a res idency
at Bcrkslnre School of Contemporary
Art in Mass&lt;.~c hu sc tt s. and as far as
Saskatc hawan, Canada. fo r a Landscape Workshop.
Ms. Carter has done in numerable
one person a1u.J group ..:xhihitions
throughout the yc:1rs :md has received
seve ral awards/g:rants/hc&gt;nors.
In 1996. Ms. Carter wa, li sted in
Who's Who nf -A mer ican Women. an
Pictured is "Through A Glass Darkly, Black Unity," by Ivy Carter
Encyclnpedta ol Amcncan Culture and of Columbus. Carter's works will be on display at the French Art
Htstory. . .
.
..
. Colony in Gallipolis January 3t through March 1
Ca rter~ YICW ol the Alm.:an Amen·
can cxpCricncc sprin gs from both her l'n ll ~c ti vc and richer. more tactile texture.
indi vidual cx pcricne-cs in thi s counlry.
Carter inv ite ..; the vieWer to partake 111 her "spi rit ,
"Sometimes my p a inl i n g::~ make a polilical or so~.: i a l · works" and li nd their own particula r enjoyment.
sta tement ahout this lire here. Other times, sim ply do an
Fre nch Art Colony Ga ll ery hours arc Tuesday
enJoyable vtcw of blacks throughou t the diaspora. Thi s through Friday 10 - ) p.m. aiul Sat urday and Sunday !includes 'realities' versus 'my ths'." Carter stated.
5 p.m.
Caner works wi th oil s. acry lics. and collage . She
All FAC program ming is orfercd through support of
fee ls the cOtl)bination of ihcse medi ums hrings about a the Ohi o Arts Cou ncil.

TOPS was organized whe n fou r
Mil wa ukee housew ives gat hered
around a ki tchen table. eager to
share mutual support in their com mon goal or se nsihlc we ight loss .
They l1ad no idea that tillS meeting
on Jan uary 21. 1948. would eventually blossom into .m orga nization of
almost 300.000 .nemhcrs in over
11 .100 chap tw worldwide.
Begi nn ing this month . and
throughout I'I~K. TOPS members
everywhere relebratc the theme

"TO PS-- As Good As Gold ." It co rresponds to the tradi tionJI gold of a
50th anniversa ry. as we ll as to
TOPS' golden gui de lin es of senSib le
we ight loss throug h meal plan ni ng.
cxcrl:isc. and encouragement fro m
fe ll ow members .
· To learn more abou t TOPS. visi t
our website at hup://www.tops .org
or to lind out ahou t chapters ncar
you. or 10 lc:irn more about TOPS.
call Ja net Thomas at (740) :167-0274
ur tol l-free at 1-H00-932-8().77.

- - - -·society Scrapbook
Fe b. 26.
Beta Sigma Phi chapter meets
AHcndiOg were those named and
Jane Brown was welcomed as a
Carol
McCu llough. Jane Walton,
new member when Preceptor Beta
Powe
ll , Carol Adams. Donna
Jean
Beta Chapter of Be ta Sigma Phi
Byc
r.
Joan
Corder. Norma Custer.
Soronty me t recently at the home of
Ve
lma
Rue,
Ann Rupc. Elea nor
Clarice Krauuer for a salad supper.
Thomas,
and
Margaret
Stewart .
Martha McPhail presided at the
meeting with information on Beta
Sigma Phi convent ion to be held
May 1-3 being held i.\ Columbus.
Several thank you notes were read Riverview Ga rden Club meets
·The Riverview Garden Club met
and it was reported that the sorority
recently
at the home of Frances
cookbook will be given away at the
wi
th Gladys Thomas . and
Reed
next meeti ng.
Weber
as co-hostesses.
Grace
Charlone Elber feld reminded
Devotions
.were given by Theda
members that dues are now payable .
Soc ial chairman, Ruth Rifnc Haskins who · read "Thumb le
thanked the h'ostcss and reported Thump." Delores Frank welcomed
that a lasagna dinner ~ill be held on Wendy Hannum and Weber read a

, "

ABLE Learning Centers open on regular schedule

O'BLENESS

Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Drive. Athens, OH 4570 1
614-593-5551 • www.obleness.org

•

•

ital we can all ·
proud of.
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,Phone: (614) 446-4759
(740) 441-1191

20 YRS. EXP.

BANKRDP,CY
Chapter 7

Chapter 13

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio
Custom Homes

thank you from lhc Bogg s fami ly fo r
the contribution to the Heart Fund in
m~mory ()f Tom Boggs .
Mem bers were reminded to take
fru it for tray s to the nex t tnecting.
Feb. 19 at the Hickory Hills Church
of Christ
There wi ll be a. guest speaker at
that meeting on hou se plants . and an
auction wi ll be held with Mary Alice
Bise as auc1ionccr.
Refreshm ents were·· served to
those named and Janet Connall y,
Marilyn Hannum. Marlene Putman,
Max ine Whitehead. Janice Yo ung,
and· Ruth An ne Balderson . Marilyn
Hannum received a bird feeder as
the door prize.

Quality Work Guaranteed

Free Est. • Fully Insured

Remodeling

M&amp;J

-

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CELLULAR PHONES
360° Communications

•
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1M

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
113 W. 2ND ST.

1-614-992-9057

614-992-3470

~-'

J'ull)llnsured J'rce EstimAtes

TRUCKING

This mon th. TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Se nsibl y) ce lebrates 50
years of h~ l p in g people take ofT and
keep off weight through sensible .
eati ng , exercise. and group support
"A fiftieth anniversary is an
important mil estone, representing
stahil ity, endurance, and a prove n
track record," satd Janel Thomas a
representati ve of TOPS. "And that's
eve n more significant in the wc. 1 ght ~
loss lield. which has see n so many
fad s come and go."

The learning centers of ihc Adult or who may want to prepare for takBasic and Lncr~cy Education ing the GED (Genera l Educational
(ABLE) program have returned to Development ) test which will be
regular schedu les.
given again in Meigs County in
Lcarnin~ ccnlcrs arc located at April.
1
Information on days. time and
the Middleport_ Library (992-~0H).
the Pomeroy JTPA Oflicc. 99 ~6247 locations of classes may be obtained
and the Racine United Met odtsl by ca ll ing 992-05808 or 992-6247.
Church.
.
The Meigs County ABLE program
Both day .and evening class ·, are is operated · by the Meigs County.
offered at no charge to adu lts who Educational ~ Service Center, 992may want to brush upon basic skill s 3883.

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

PUBUC NOTICE
1977 RV
The VIllage of Middleport
VIN MSOCA5J025519
will offer lor sale to the 1990 ISUZU 4X4
hlgheet bidder,
tho
VIN JAACR11E5L7254341
lollowlng vehicles:
1991 TOYOTA 4X4
1986 Dodge Omnl· Serial
VIN JT4RNOtPSM0012855
11 B3BZ1 8C2GD151 963
1994 CHEVROLET VAN
1985 Chev. Celebrity·
VIN 1GBEG25K9RF171495
tG1AW19RtFG136818
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding.
1988 OLDSMOBILE
1982 Fo rd EacortVIN 1G3WR14W7JD357108
Roofs • Decks • Garages
2FABP0524CX239447
The terms of sale ara
1982 Chev. Cavalier 4/D
cash.
Free Estimates
1G1AD69GOCC139620
The Home National Bank
1984 Chlv. s ,to P/U 4x4
reserves the right to reject
1GCCT14BXE2114864
any or all bids or to remove
Sealed blda Will be any unit from the oale at
accepted at the Middleport any lime.
Pollee Dapt., 237 Race St.,
Pat's Herb Corner
Arrangemants may be
Middleport, Ohio 45760 until made to Inspect any of tho .
Located at Dan's
February 2, 1998 at 4:00 above named vehicles prior
290 N. 2nd Ave.,
p.m.
to sale by calling 949-2210.
Middleport, OH
Vehlctea can be 111n at (1) 2t . 23, 28, 30;
the above addreaa and will (2) 4, 6, 11 , 13 etc
Pat Arnold,
DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
bt sold "Ilia".
Terma of aalo: Cash upon 1-- -P-u_b_llc_N_o-tl-ce-Graveldellvery of title.
Distributor
The Middleport Pollee
NOTICE OF VOLUNTARY
Limestone
Dept. reaervea tho right to
DISSOLUTION
VItamins, Herbal
rajsct any and all blda.
Pursuant to Section
Sand- Dirt
Supplements,
(t) 26, 28 and (2) 1, 1998 3 tc 1701 .87 ofthe Ohio Revised
Natural Weight Loss
614-992-3220
Public Notice
Coda , notice Ia . hereby
given that Meigs Health
1 mol)d
Products,,..,, ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
Services, Inc . flied a
on Saturday, February 14, Certificate of Dissolution
1998 at 10:00 a.m., the with the Ohio Secretary of
(Lime Stone·
McFEE RcrOFING
Home National Bank will State on December 15,1997.
Low Rates)
offer lor sale at public 11) 21, 28; (2) 4 3tc
&amp; PAINTING
auction on tho bank parking
. Specializing tn:
riot the following vehicles:
New Roofs, Roof Repairs,
1986 PLYMOUTH FURRY
Gutters, Interior 8
Lilllt
lhi•gs
VIN 1P3BB26P7GX5S91 81
Exterior Painting,
art Worth 11/o/
t986 BUICK LESABRE
Drywall Repair.
VIN tG4HR3737GH4256l'4
lowest
rates during the
Limestone;
lht Classi{itd Stclion .'
winter months of
Jan.-Feb.-Mar.
Gravel, Sand,

TOPS celebrates 50 year mark

SWORN INTO OFFICE - Joe Bolin, left, of Rutland, and Marco
Jeffers of Albany were sworn in as s upervisors 9f the Meigs Soli
and Water Conservation District by OhiO&lt;Supreme Court Chief Jus- ·
tice Thomas J . Moyer at the annual {lleetlng of the Ohio Federation
in Columbus.
_

Rt 124, Minersville, OH
(740) 992·3980 1/12/981 mo. pd.

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

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•·

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179 Rand St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Rick Johnson
Owner

Come Smell the Sweet Scent af Cauntry Candles

'"

\

ACE TREE SERVICE

Tues. 10-8, Wed.-Sat. 10-2

2/12/IZ'Ifn

Public Notice

COMPLETE TREE CARE
Top • Trim • Cable • Removal • Crane • HaiillnQ"-• Stump Grinding •

Triple Scented Candles
Crocks, Cakes &amp; Refills

614-992-7643

20 Y rs. Exp . • Ins. Owner: Ronnie .Jones

Recentl y, we made a big decision.
We 're going ahead with an all
new maternity unit at 0 ' Bleness
Memorial Hospital. We see it as
an investment for the future, an
investment in our area's families
. and families-to-be.
The rooms will be state-ofthe-art, a real showcase environment for you and your baby. Best
of all, it 's a place where we can
practice the very latest birthing

Another important goal is to provide
in formation and ed ucation program s
on natural resource conserv ation and
- manage ment topics for a wide range
of county res idents.
Accord mg to Joe Bolin , chairm an
of the Meigs SWCD boand of supervtsors. watershed protection initlati vcs will be a major focus of soil
and water conservation districts in
1998. Waters heds include all of the
land area ihat drain s to a stream,
ri ver or lake . Rai n· water and snow
melt runoff fro m city streets and
parking lots . fa rm fi elds and live ~
stock feed lots, co nstruct ion si tes.
mined land and vtrtuall y all oth er
lan d su rfaces an nually de li ve rs mi llions of tons of sojl. fertili zers. animal waste. sa lt and other pollutants
_to su rface water supplies.
This pollution. know n as nonpni nt source pollut ion. can be most
cllcc tivc ly addressed th ro ugh wa tershed plann ing. Nonpoint source pilllutiOn is today the lanzcst sour~.;c of
water quality problem; in Ohi o.

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POMEROY, OH ..

.614-992-5479

Middleport, Oh.

3127fT FN

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SEVICE

NOW OPEN

Limestone Hauling
House 11o Trailer Sites
. Land Clearing 11o
Grading
Septic System llo
Utilities
. Estimates

•Room Additions
·New Garages
.
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

SUPERIOR AUTO BODY

(614) 992-3838

12/18/11n

992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

30 Announcements

RUTLAND
AMERICAN

LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT

SUN., 1:00 PM
Factory Choke Only

'

110

L&amp;L TIRE BARN
Pine Grove Rd.,
Racine, OH

STATE ROUTE 68t
DARWIN, OH
(Located behind Whaley's Used Cars)
We understand the Investment In an automobile
today and our qualllled stall, all ASE certllled, will
restore your auto to the pre-accident condition.
Our main objective is to give to the customer the
highest quality or repair work possible with a
guarantee.

A. Free Computer Estimates
B. Guarantee Color Match
C. All Types Insurance Claims
Give Us A Call At 992-1359
Owner &amp; Operator, John Davis

614-992·5344

"HALF PRICE
USED fiRE
SALE"
Cash &amp; Carry
Delilers Welcome!

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages

•Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

Help Wanted

FREE
ESTIMATEES

PHARMACIST

005

Full-tim e and part -time St a ff Pharmac is ts
needed imm e diate ly to joi n esta bli s he d com prehe nstve computerized Pharm acy Depa rtm ent
in a 246 -bed J CAHO a ccred ited "ac ute ca re
hospital with 23-bed inpatient reha b unit.
Exce llent wage a nd benefit package .
Send resume (o: Rosie Wa rd
.
Director of Human Resources
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
1oo Jackson Pi ke
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1-1563
Pho ne (614) 446-5105
Fax: (6 14) 446-51 06
EOEIADA Employer

DIRECTOR OF
PHYSICAL THERAPY
STAFF PHYSICAL THERAPIST ·
SIGN ON INCENTIVE
A Director of Phys ical Therapy as we ll as ·s taff
Physical Thera pists a re needed immediate ly to
provide inpa ti ent , outpatient ·a nd home health
physical -therapy services in a 246-bed JCAHO
accredited a cute care hospital with a 23-bed
inpatient rehab unit.
Excellent wage and be nefit package.
Send resume to: Rosie Ward
Director of Human Resources
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gall ipolis, OH 45631-1563
Phone: (614) 446-5105
Fax: (614) 446-5106
·'

Personals

Bored Oh1o Housewives • ·s 1·
Ext 4587 18 ,
Serv·U 619-645-84:34 $2.99/Min.
900·285~9077

Gentleman Seeking Companion ship From Nice Female For Ta lks
· Wa l ks &amp; Friem:lship . Send R e~
pl1es To: CL A 309 . c/o Ga ll ipOlis
Daily Tribune. 825 Third Avenue .
GallipoliS , OH 45631

985·4473

L1sten To Umque Persona l Ads
From men and Women Who

7122/Hn

SIGN ON INCENTIVE

EOE/ADA Employer

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Want To Koow You

1-900-285-9245
Ext 7393 2.99
Per Min

SNOW

Must be 18 Yr ~ .
Serv·U (6 19)645·8434

REMOVAL
Driveways ,
Parking Lots , etc.
Call Anytime
Home

614-992-3141
Cell Phone

SPORTS!

SCORE 51
SPREADS!
1-900-285-9371 Exl , 5701 $2 99
Per Mm Musl be 18 Yrs
Serv·U· 619·645-8434

Siarl dating lonigt11! Have fun ,
play Ohio's dal1ng game, 1-800·
ROMANCE, extension 7484.

30 Announcements

591_.1897

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio ·
10/2SJ96/t1fl

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
llo Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer 11o House Sites

.Reasonable Rates

Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138

How To Destroy The Oe sue For
C1garenes Complelely Test Pmv·
en! Ru sh $2 .00 To WHBJ 39 4
Sm ilh Str eet . Penh Amb oy . NJ
08861

40

Giveaway

4 Female cats , \lery lovmg, to
good home only. 304-895·30 17
Beaut1ful Black &amp; While K1ttens
Need A Home. 740·367- 7445 .
English sener , 4 years old, male,

nuniS good. 741l-992·2822 .
Horse manure . you load . 304 -

895-3703.

To Good Home: 3 Heallhy Cahco
Ki11ens, 74Q-446-3117 .

60

Lost af Fou nd

Found Shnne Club Area : Great
Wtlh Children, Long Ha1red Black
&amp; While Female Dog Approx . 1
Year Old, Plus 1 Bla ck Female
Puppy, 7 4 0 • 446~7503 , 740 ·4464479

Lost Purse: Lost Between Odd
·l ois And S1tver Bridge Plaza. Reward! ,937·588-5006, Or Local
740·245·0603 ,

�h

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, January 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 28, 1998
:ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentmel • Page 11

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ALL Yard Sales Must
Be Paid In Advance
QEADLINE 2 00 p m

tile day before tile ad
.. Is to run SundAy
edition 2 00 p m
Friday Monday edition

to oo am Satunley
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Rad10 Account Executive
tmmedl8te Open ngl
We Are Look ng For A High ly
MotiVated And EKper anced
Sales Repre sen tat ve Who Is A
Self Starter And Has A F'roven
Track Record Please Call John
Pellet er At 740 286 3023 Or
BOO 232 1896 Jackson Cou nty
Broadcas lng 295 E Main Street
Jadl:son OH 45640

180

lull

t me auct onear co mplete

L ce nsed
N66 Oh o &amp; West V g n a 304
773 5765 0 30• 773 5&lt;147
auct on

se v ce

Toll Free (1) BOO 218 9000 Exl
H 2814 For Currenll st nos

House and property approx 4a
cres Ideal starter home Beech

Furniture repa~ refm sh and res
tora on af&amp;ot.'l:Ustom o ders Oh o
Va ey Rein sh ng Shop La ry
Ph II ps 740 992 6576

:m 736 7295

New Repos Never LlveCI In Only
2 Lell Free Delivery &amp; Set up
Call Finance Line For Free Ap
proval 1 800-948 5678

Quiet Country Sanlng wrth beau

tlful mobile home forced to sell
F nan c1ng available 304 755
~566

~180

Wanted To Do

Care For The Elderly In There
Home 20 to 40 Hrs Weekly 15
Years Experience (740)446--2427

New double wide repo $999
down Free delivery and setup

Single Parent Program Spec al
f nancmg on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
~omes Payments u low u

Lose Up To 30 lbs In 30 Davs

dav before the ad Is to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
1 OOpm Friday

A ck Pearson Auct on Company

From Penntes On $1 Del nquent
Tax Aepo s REO s Your Area

We Have The SOLUTION To
New Years RESOLUTION!
740.441 1982

Auction
and Flea Market

GOV T FORECLOSED Homes

S Pomeroy OH 304 882 2077

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm ttle

80

BUY HOMES AS LOW AS
S4 000 1 5 Bdrm local Gov'l &amp;
Bank Aepo s Call 1 BOO 522
2730 X1709

Ma so n modular home on 100/
100 tot three bedroom two full
baths arge lr/dr combo klt/fr
combo with work ng I replace uuH
ty room comes equipped with
stove refrigerator dlsl"'washer
and garbage disposal central air
two car garage and storage build
ng nc uded pr vacy fence m
back split ra I In f ant two porch
es 740.949-9004 after 6pm

NEW CONSTRUCTION

Call now 304 755-5685

t/2 Balps LA &amp;FA Formal Din ng

Room Oak Tr m F.replace Much
More Home Ehg ble For Tax

Abatement $179 500 304 273
2940

Ant ques no tem too large or too

320

992 6576
Beane Babes Would Ltke To
Buy Ret red

Bean~~!

FINANCIAL

Babes BOO.

65&lt;14834

MUST SELL t4x80 3 Bedrooms

2 Baths Owner F1nanclng Ava11

Cash Patd For land In Gall a
Cou nty Blackburn Realty 740

210

C ean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks 1990 Models 0 Newer

Sm tih Bu ck Font ac 1900 East

etn Avenue Gall po s
J

&amp; 0 Auto Part s Buy ng
wrecked or salvaged veh cles

304 773 5033
TIMBER We pay cash 101 t acts
of t mber If nleres ted n sell ng
your t mber please let our p o
le ss anal forestry sta ll manage
you 1 mber fo nc o me w fdlfe
and a place to en oy the out
CIOOf S Superlo Hardwo ods ol
Ohm Lumber Co PO Box 606
Wellston Oh o 45692 (740)384

4577

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
ecommen ds hal you do bus•
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma t untl you have nvest gated
he offer ng
Beauty salon n Ohio tully
equ pped lwo work stations well
establ shed cl entele For lea se
senous nqunes only S14 667

3816
COKE /PEPSI II
Excellent Locat ons $1 200 t
Wkly Potent al 100&lt;}a Fm Ava I
Must Have A 1 Creel! 1 800

617 6430 Ext t 553A

FREE
CASH
GRANTS!

We Buy Autos In Any Condition

Cal 740 388 9062 Or 740 446
PART
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Help Wanted

D vers Wan te d
500 Mtle Aad us Home Every
Weekend Health In surance Pro
v dad W th Fam ly Coverage
Ava lab e 401 K Ret rement Plan
F rst In F rst Out D•spatcl"' Lat e
Model Conv Trac o s W l h
Flatbed Tale s Compe 1ve Pay
Pe centage 01 G oss Contact 1

800 854 41 57

Avon $8 $18 /Hr No Door To
Door Ou ck Cash Fun &amp; Relax
ng 1 800 736 0168

AVON

$8 $20 H No Door To
Ooo Ou ck Cash Bonu ses 1

Bus~ness

Opportunity

446-0008

110

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM
Special Finane ng Available 304

738 7295

HOME SHOW
Used &amp; Repo SaOI

W~STWOOO

As Little As $500/Down

And Si 50 Per Monlh
Free Del very

I BOO 251 5070
Westwood Home Show Used &amp;

Aepo Sale As l•ttle As $500 00
Down And $150/Mo

ery

Free Del v

t 8D0-25t 5070

New DoUble Wide Repo $999 oo
Down Free Oettvery And Set Up!

304 736 7295

College Schotarsh ps
Bu s ness Med cat BIts
Never Repay
Call Ton Free

I 81)0.2 8 9000 Ext G 2814
Internal onal Comparty Needs
Help W th Ma I Order Home
Based Bu s ness $500 $6 000
Mo PT FT Ca 1 For lnve view 1

800 242 ~2.
For Sa te Re sale Bus ness 01 4
Yrs Great Fam ly Second In
come Low Overhead Cheap
Ready To Go Please Se nous In
qu1r es Only Call 740 446 7696

230

Professional
Services

LIVIngston s basemen water
proof ng all basemen t repC! rs
done I ee est rna e s I let me
guarantee 1Oyr s on tob expen
ence 304 675 2145

800 296 0139

Pavne • Cualom Timbering
Ronald S Payne Jr
Select Harveste rs of large ma

Computer Useres Needed Work
Own H s $20K $50K !'lr 1 SOD
348 7186 X 1173

lure hardwood &amp; high qtJahty
veneer mber Free Evaluat ons
WVDOF Cer I ed 304 576 20 14

Dav d Wh te Se v ces Inc Is
Cu r ent y lnter v ew ng Fo A
Qua I ed Se v ce Techn c an
Th s Is A Fu I 1 me Pas ton W th
Good Star t ng Pay Vacat on
Ho day Pay And Health In
suran ce Mu s Have Alleas t 5
Years Background In Serv ce
Mus Be W II ng To Work So me
tnstallat on II Necessary Resume
And Rete ences Can Be D opped
Off At Our Oft ce At 11 02 Ja ck
son P ke Gall pol s Oh o 45631
Or Ma led To P 0 Box 250
Atnens Oh o 45701 At ent on
ServiCe Manager
lmmedate open ngs to CNA PT/
FT Requ es WV cer f ca t on
Must tle able to work all sh Its
EKcellent bene t package tor FT
employees Contact Sand ra ReI
m e AN DON 304 675 0860
Ext 124 Lak n san EEO em
player
Stall Accoul'ltant Respons bItes
1nctude Camp I ng F nanc at
Sta tements For Non Prof t Agen
cy Exper ence In Camp fat on 01
Statements Payroll An t Gene ral
Laager A Must Sa a y Commen
surate W th Exper ence Send
Resume By Feb uary 9 To J D
P:O BoK 98 AtJtland Oh o 45775

EOE
WANTED Cer led Med cal As
slstant appro)( 25hrs week Mon
day Friday at e noons &amp; early
even ngs Send resume to Box
cw 22 c/o Polnf Ple asan t Reg
ster 200 Man St PI Pleasant
wv 25550 o fa)( resume to 304

675-3713
In need of person to do drywall
and ipray texttJred ce ling epair
on Manufactured Homes (Mobllfit
Homes) Must be will ng to travel
and spend mghts away from home
as needed Must be able to work
wtthout Supervision No walk n s
Send Inqu iry 10 El te Mobile
Home Maintenance 38655 S ate

Road 7 Long Sonom Oh 45743

Th s newspaper w II not
knowmgly accept
advert sements for eal estate
wh ch s n v olat on olthe
law Our readers a e l"'ereby
nlormed that at dwell ngs
aOvert sed n lh s newspape
are ava table on an eQual
opportun ly bas s

740 446 3653
t996 Schult Jbedrooms 2baths
v nyl Sldmg sh 11gled roof barn
build ng pr ce reduced 304 675

1275
1998 3br 2 batha lois ol exlras
set on rot Cal for more Into 304
755 7191
1st T me Buyers E Z Financing
2 or 3 Bedroom around $200 per
month Free dehvery &amp; set up
Call cred II ne 1 800 948 567e

3 Bedroom 2 bath

998 model

home nciude s Free tet up &amp;
delivery Skirting air color TV
&amp; VCR Included All for $219/mo
Only while supple s las t Call to

day 304 755 5885
5 New 1997 4 w des Unbel e\1
able Pr ce Must Sell Before Jan
31st To Clo se au Phystcat

Yea r C•ll Credn Lone 1 800 948
5678
PBEAM HOME SERIES
ENTERTAINER..,
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Sta t ng At

$219/Mo

SUNRISE ..
Loaded w th GE Appt ances
Start ng AI $299/Mo
fAMll.'l...
4 Bedrooms 2 La ge Baths
Sta 1ng $359/Mo um teCI T me
Oiler Only At Oakwood Barbours

vi ~ WVA 304 736 3409
Cuatom made homes where
the cuatomer IEit&amp; the
price &amp; we own lha bank

Only At
Oakwood Homes

REAL ESTATE

D sco unt Mot&gt; le Hom e Part s &amp;
Accesso es lowest Installed
Pr ces On Inter herm &amp; Coleman
Furna ces Heat Pumps &amp; A r
Cond 1 one s Hugh tn ... en tory
W th Easy 0\ler The Ph one Bank
Fm anc ng Ava fable Repla ce
ment Pa ts And Se v ce Calls
Complefe Stock Water Heater s
Sk t ng K s $299 95 Anch ors
Wood &amp; F berglass Steps Aool
Coat ng s Tub s S nk s Plumb ng
Supp l ies B eake s Electr cal
Suppt es ~ange Hood &amp; Part s
Doors W ndows Etc Bennett s
Mob e Home HTG &amp; CLG 1391
Sa lord School Road Gall pol s
OH I 740 4469416 Or ToJ Free

I 600 872 5967 WVOI0212
Double w de 10°o down $196/
mo Free del ve y &amp; setup 1 800
691 6777

DREAM HOMESERIES
ENTERTAINER
3bedrooms
:2baths star f9 at $219 mo

SU NRISE

oo. Down With A Job &amp; Good
Cred I $35 00 0 In Gal 1p0 IS

Area 740 367 0403 Page •t
800 395 2337 Pager 1576
985 Ranch 3 Bedrooms 1 Sa h
La ge l 't'lngroom Large K tchen
scnoo s
Acre Gall PO! s C

tv

$67000 740 441&gt; 4323

2592 Sq Ft 3 Bed rooms 2
Baths F n shed Ba smen l 2 1/2
Car Garage 1 Acre MOL Gall

poUs $110 000 740.446-4441
3 Bedroom Home 28 Gavin
Steel Rodney $4 5 500 Even

Loaded wllh GE ap

pllances start ng at $299/mo
FAMI LY
4bedr ooms 2 large
ba hs start ng $359 mo l m Ted
t me olle on y at oa~wooo Bar
boursv lie WV 334 736 3409

FIRST TIME BUYERS
EZFnancng
2 or 3 Bedrooms
Around $200 Per Montn

310 Homes for Sale

'.aoo 251

so1o.-

F rst T me Buyers E Z F.nanc ng
2 Or 3 Bedroo ms A ounCI $200/

Handyman Special Cash Only
2&amp;3 Bedrooms $1 500 &amp; Up!

Ad 740 742 7405 days 740
742 2086

R•dgewood Subd1v smn Sandh II
Road Hilltop lot ready lor spring
bu ldmg Newly paved road Ask

TAX REFUND
"BUY LAND"

La ge selection of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting at $2995
OtJ ck deli ve ry Call 740 385

able 304 736 7295
New 1998 14x70 three bedroom
ncludes 6 months FREE lot rent
In cludes sklrtlng deluxe steps
and setup Only $187 08 per
month w lh $1075 down Ca I 1

600 837 3238
New 2Bx80 3 or 4 bedroom
$39 995 Free delve y 1 800

691 6777

ESTATES 52 Westwood 0 '"'e
from $260 to $334 Walk to shop

Ac os compu ter 5 1/2yrs old
Wmdows 3 1 131n monitor Ep
so n printer Microsoft Wo ks
se'&gt;'e al other games &amp; programs

$400 304-675 1504
Be,.uUful 8 piece sell ng Norl aka
Ch na e,.ce llent cond tlon askmg

$450060 call740 247 4024
Brand New Great G1ftl CDfvldeo
storage unit Black and cherry
Never out ol box $t25 Ho ds up
to 940 d scs also hold s tapes

AKC 3 Pups lell $395 740 286
8753 740 286-685t

Golden Ret ever Pups AKC
Reglsterect 6 Weeks 1st Shots
And Wormed $225 740 446

Recogn zed Sale &amp; Eflectl\le
Agamsl Hook Round &amp; Tape
wo ms in Dogs &amp; Cats Available

0 T C BROWNS TRUSTWOR
THY HARDWARE 740.446 6828
(&amp; J D NORTH PRODUCE 740
446 933) (VIs t www happyjack
ncCQm)

Call 740 992 6636 aller 6 pm

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

COs &amp; tapes not ncluded

Complete shOe and leatt1er shop
and nventory for se ll or lease

$6000 1989 Mazda 323 $3000
080 1986 Suba ru good for

992 5064 EQual Housing Oppor

parts $300 Tandy Al 000 com

tun ties

pu er '$400 almost new motorcy
cle Ira fer $600 740 992 2242

Love y one bedroom apartment
equipped k !chen uti Illes lnclud

ed n Mlddleporl call 740 992
7833 after 6pm References and
deposit reqwed
Modern 1br apt all utili! es pa1d
except electric $250fmo + de
post 304 675 t371 or 304 675
Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo 740 446

Complete twm bed sa elite d sh
&amp; box tra sh compactor a I m

good shape 304 675 1594
Concrete &amp; Pla st c Septic Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jackson OH

1 800 537 9528

OP Stepper Gl dar Walker W1th
Pulse Montor L•ke New $150
OBO 7 4Q-379 2352

LAND
CAMP HUNT RETIRE

On One Of Our 5 To 20 Acre
Country Building lots

GALLIA COUNTY NEW 5 Acre
Lots Open Meadows $t2 900
Up $1 290 Down We Also Have
Land In Gallla Jackson Sc1oto
P ke Ross Athens Mags Coun
hes
Land Contracts tO% Down

ECONOMY

0006

Healing And Coohng
Up G ade You
Present System

OLD ASH VI,LAGE
APARTMENTS
Now accepllng appt cat ons for
regular rent apts 2br sewer
trash &amp; water pa1d la4ndry &amp;
playground on s te very clean
close to school &amp; stores
6th &amp; George St New Ha'&gt;'en
WV Contact from 1Oam 2pm

Mon Fn 304 882 3716
One bed oom apartment n M d
dleport all uiiHIIes pa d $270 per
month $1 00 depos t 740 992

7806

From $38 00 /Call For Dela ~

Call TOday For FREE Maps
ANTHONY LAND CO LTD
t 6()t).213-8365

74 245 9009

Q-

F rewood $40 AT uck Load De
rvered Call 740 446 4362 No An
swer Leave Message

$100 Club Builder

245 5747

Upstairs and Downsta rs apart
ments Available 9t Cedar Trailer
and Cottage At Porter (740) 388

1100
Furnished
Rooms

740 44t 5698 74Q-44t 5167

Cash Pad For Land In GaIa
County Blackburn Realty 740

446-0008

Wa nted To Buy La nd In Galla
County A ea For Future Home

Aepa~red

Steep ng rooms wtth cook ing
A.lso tratier space on river All
,ook ups Call alter 2 00 p.m
304 773 5651 Mason WV

460 Space lor Rent
\o1ob1 e home site ava1table bet
Neen Athens and Pomeroy call

Repa red New &amp; Rebu 1 n S ock

Magic Chef Electnc Range Euro
pean Burner Almond EKcetlenl
Condhon $150 740 446 9708
Pomeroy Thr II Shop now buy rw
Lev1 jeans toys ch ildren s c oth
lng must be 1n excellent cond1
tton Tue sday th ough Fnday

740 992 3725

o

R &amp; S Furniture
Buy Sell Trade
Used &amp; Antiques
Fu nture

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house w/ut lily room
$350/mo Deposit &amp; references

No pets 304 675 2749
3 bedroom house stove refrlg
erator washer/dryer clean no m
s1de pets deposit reqwred 740

992 3090
65 Acre Farm Fenced Newer 3
Bedroom Home 2 Baths Central
&amp; F eptace Detacl"'ed 30x40
v nyt Side Garage Large Barn
W th 6 Stalls &amp; Tack Room Frost
Free Water In Barn 10 Miles
From Galhpohs $650/Mo Plus

Securoly 740 256 6367

Appl ances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges Aefri
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 446

7795
Box Spnng &amp; Malress New Nev

or Used $199 Call 740 886
6373

Bunk Bed Se1 Sot d Wood with
Inner Spnng Mattress New Nev
er tJSed $285 740 886 6373
Ch na Otnner Ware Harvest
wneat Pattern 1o Place S1ttmgs

$75 Oak Coffee and End Tables

With Storage tin IS In Each $125

N ce two bedroom house in Po
mercy newly remodeled new
w ndows $350 month plus depos
1 no pets ava able 1mmed ately
w II sell on coni ac1 w th good ref
erences 614 Ei98 7244

Bolh Call (740)245 9055
Cozy Pet el Stove Holds 3 Bags
Of Pellets Used For 1 W nter

$900 740 441 1590

Dyer $95 Washer $95 Elec t 1c
Range $95 Aelr gera1or Frost

A o Grand e Area 3 Bedroom

Free $150 Small Up Aghl Freez

qu ed WID Hook Up 1 888 840

er Frost Free $150 Maytag
Washer and Dryer Set $300 Kel
vlnator Relr gerator Fr os Free

Balh &amp; t/2 $490/Mo Depos t Re
0521

Noce $250 Hot Point Washer

304 773 5341

Pad $440 WII Sel $275 Head

I ght Covers W II F 1 1991 Chev
ralel Beretta Paid $40 Will Sell

2205
WARM UP H gh Elf c ency Natu
rat And LP Gas Furn aces L le
1 me War anty On Heat Exchang
er 11 You Don 1 Ca ll Us We Both
Loset Free Est mate s• Add On
Heal Pump s Only St ghty H ghar
Call Us Today 1997 Is The
Twenty Seventh Year In Th e
Heat ng &amp; Cool ng Bus ness! 740
446 6306 1 800 291 0098

STORAGE TANK S 3 000 Gallon
Upr gnt Ron Evans Enterp r ses
Jackson Oh o 1 800 537 9528
Water! ne Spectal

3/4 200 PSI

$2 1 95 Per 100 I 200 PSI
$37 00 Pe 100 A I Brass Com
pre ss•on F nmgs In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jacl&lt;son Ohio t 800 537 9528
We ghl Loss LOSE UP TO 30
LBS 30 Days Dr Recommended

2 Bedro om tra1ler referen ces &amp;
d~pos 1 requ ed le ave ma s
sage 304 67 5- 1076
3 Bedroom t a ter n Henderson

PC $275 Call 740.886 6373
Polty • New &amp; Used Furnllure
we now have Army Surplus 1
2101 Jeferson Ave
Open 9 30 5 00 Mon Sat

304 675 SOFA (7632)

WV $300/mo +depos t &amp; rele r
ences 304 675 1'972 alter 6pm

Wood For Sale $35 A Load W 11
De ver 740 388 8010

Apartments
lor Rent

520

Sporting
Goods

~ Browning

9mm (380 ACP ) p stoi
excellent cond tlon asking $450

080 call740.247 4024

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Ant ques

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and tJnlurn shed secur ty
depos 1 reqUired no pets 740

992 2218

1t24 E Main Slreet on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W t 0 00
am to600pm Sunday 10010

6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ

1 Bedroo m Unus Newest t
Cleanest In The Area Near Ho z
er $269/Mo Plus UUiit es &amp; Se
cu ty Oeposlt Required No Pets

740 446-2957

1100 First Avenue 740 446
3573 Furnished Apartment W th

Carpo 1 And All Utllllles Paid
Close To Church
2 bedroom apartment n Pomeroy
utili! es pa id no pets 740 992

5858

'

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewe ptpes wind
ows I ntels etc Claude W nl ers
A o Gra nde OH Ca ll 740 245
5121

560

3bed room In New Haven WV

440

tOO% GUARANTEED RESULTS
I 888 294 8079

550

Pets lor Sale

'A

Groom Shop Pel Groom ng
featur ng Hyd o Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd
740-446 0231
AKC Reg ster ad Back lab 2
Males 2 Fema es 740 446 4551

24 Bulb Wo I Bed $1 000 740
446 696&lt;!

lent Cond tlon No Rust 614 446

t619

T!'41NIC ~ .1U5T

(.UT IT OlJT,

SPOTTtP A ,
l&gt; ~L.MAT IAN!

EllNitl

t989 Chevy New Body Style 3/4
Ton 8 600 G VW 350 Engon~

1992 Ford Ranger XLT extended

cab 1995 Ford F 150 XL low
ml es tots ol eKtras 304 675

2264

TrtP..V/E5 1-2.8

614 949 2126

$350 740.446 1635
Bea ut ful AKC Reg German
Shephard pupp1 es good blooCI

lrne ready lo go 2/t/98 304 895

THE BORN LOSER
,.f'O\.I W"-~
~7

JJ.'iT N-101"1-\~

1&gt;-.CTU"-LL'(

T'(PIGL 01\Y

IT W"-') IN)!(:.£

"-T T\11:.

1993"f=ord Ranger XLT 5 Speed

379-283S

1995 Che&gt;y S 10 V6 5 Speed

/

Goats &amp; turkeys many kinds

AM/FM Cassette
AC Tilt
Crutse Bedl ner 24 000 M les

Quarter Ho se Fold Inc Fun 740

304 675 1926
WELL MADE Good Condll on

All Purpose Ranch /Ropmg Sad

Hay &amp; Gram

640

TWICI\L
T\-\"-1-1 M~TI

1:.1-\7

740 441 0995

WESTERN SADDLE longhorn
Bull~ de Wrapped Tree VERY

730 Vans &amp; 4 WDs
1987 Forti Bronco II XLT 4x4---......_
New Jasper Motor Rebu11t Auto
Transmlss on Exce lent Condi
ton! Stn 04s lnqulr es Only

$5 300 7'Q-446-4207
1987 Ford Ranger 4x4 89 En

ON"Y

g ne Standard Tran s Camper

BECAUSE
TEDDY

Top $3 500 OBO 740 256 It 76
Even ngs 740 256 t687
Hay tor sate 304 675 2991
Mixed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

Ph 740 446 1104 740-441 0450

Round Bal es Ol Hay Stored In
Barn $18 00 Per Bale M xed

SQuare Bales 01 Hav St 75 A
BaOI 740 245 5506
Square Bales $2 00 Each I MIa
N On AI 2 30A 675 3960 Leave
Message

949 3403
740 446 8044

o esel

1989 GMC Sa tart Fu I Custom

Van $3 950 740 446 4222

3960

You slaJt w1th seve n top tncks
lhree spades one heart and three
cluhs The club lead has annoymgly
removed dummy s s1dc entry Also 11
doesn 1 leave you ume to play on dta
monds So thmkmg the contracl

Jcpcnds on

OBO 740 25&amp;-6731
996 Dodge 600 n ce depend
able ca PS PB automat c am/lm

5 Spd

W/0 D Trans

AC Welder $175 (740)245--15 13

1990 Dodg e Col 4 cyt nder au
lorna! c 1 5 eng ne good cond 1

Exce llenl $3 900 Ask For Amos
740.44• 8172 740 256 6251

HE

I THINK ITS SOMETHING
EVER't'ONE 51-lOlJLD DO
Ot-ICE IN A WHILE

I HID UNDER
M'f 13ED
ALL DA'(

DIDHrT

GO

New gas tanks 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radtato s 0 &amp; A Auto

A ploy WV 304 372 3933 or 1
800 273 9329

446 40 15
1996 Plymoutt\ Neon Green 4
Doors Auto A r 31 000 M1les

3348

$7 200 OBO 740 256-'6340 740
256-6467

CFA Aeg1stered H malayan K•t
tens 7 Weeks Old 6 14 446

Call Ernie At Gail1a Auto Sales

3186

Bank F nanclng

Jackso n Ptke 740 446 0724

FZLXFYHA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Compulers can figure out all krnds of problems
except lhe !hongs rn the world thai jus1 don I add up • -James Magary

'~~:~;~' S@lt4{\1A-~r,trs~~
Ed11•d
Rearrange )etten of
0 four
scrombled words

~y

WORD

GAM I

CLAY I POlLAN-------

the

be
lew to form four s•mple words

CEET [ N

I PI I
L UA S U

~ I I 1I

. ::::
...:N~A,.:..T-";U;-D:;...-ll
6

There are many d ets to
choose from but I m sure that Ihe
.
.
.
•
.
~
garlic d1et makes you look thmner
r---------------~ ata
5

IO

VEECID

1---,l;....-=..l..:....r,l7::--!-r.:,8......
, -I

Complere lhe chuc&lt;le quoted

.

by I II ng n 1he m ss ng wo ds

.

.

•

.

•

~ LETTERS IN SQUA~ES

J.IE 5 J.IIOIN6
UNDER THE SED

way around it,

@)

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IWEDNESDAY

ASTRO-GRAPH

1

gn.: ltt.:t unprcsston on others th 111

h~,;m~ a s~ctttvc or thrnwme yoU!
uound Usc the tender I outh

v.t.: ghl

ARIES (March 21 Ap11l

BERN£CE
BEDEOSOL

I ~a~b~~sl~e d 1975

Home Mal;,
1995 Saturn SC2 Automat c Air P,~;~~t~; Painting v nyl Sldtng
Cru se AMIFM Cassella Trunk I&lt;
doors w ndows baths
Release $12000 Call After 5 PM
repatr and more For
(Se r ous lnqu re s Ontyl) 740
ca ll Chet 740 992

F

Cl1max M1rth Tnad Betray ALREADY ,

Uncondll onal lie lime guarantee
references furn•shed Es

Dr ve n 43000 Mles 614446

YHXIGBH
G

S K

FZUHYC

S K

I truly believe that we need less mvent1ons and more
people to serv1ce the ones we ALREADY have

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Call (740) 446
800 287 0576 Rogers

J H NH Y

FGJV

JHDWFUSY

Classified Ads

SERVICES
Home

F GJ V

.&amp;'!&gt; P~INT NUMBERED

TO WORK TODA'(

8 600

1993 Dodg e Daytona 740 446

7527

FHIXDJW

C F H

JANUARY28I

Acces s Over 10 000 Transm1s-'
sK&gt;ns &amp; Clutches 740 245 5677

810

1992 Pont ac G and AM Black
AC Cruse Tilt Looks &amp; Runs

mtssmg

B G J

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS,
SIONS Used /Rebudt All Types

lion $1400 OBO 304 773 5364

1992 LeBaron convenable cov
er V6 Aulo A r $5 300 740
256 1252 740 250 1738

lhc

WSNHYJLHJC

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

614 441 1601

1969 Omm 67 000 M res New
Ttre s S1 200 Lincoln 225 Amp

HYMSJGI

1984 Honda Accord LX Four
Door Auto W ndows And Ooo(
lOCk S AM/FM Cassella Needs
TLC Best Ofler Call Alter 4 PM

760

1988 Dodge Omn Good Condl
lion 740 256 1526

by Luis Campos
r eryp16grarm a e created from q!ol()tahons by famous people pas arod p esent
Eac tte n hec~atanclslo•aroothef Todays ciiJ6 M equals$

Motorcycles

740 245 5586

$1 400

CELEBRITY CIPHER

367 0111

986 Ford Escort Ex p A r
Cru1se T It 5 Speed Low M le

age

poel

L....l_.J..._.l........JL.....J...-.J yolJ de ... elop f om step No 3 below

G V W Custom Wheels New
T res A I Options Very Sharp
Reel Patnt Deluxe Interior Heavy
Duty Rubber Floor Mats This Is
A Very N1ce Truck In Very Gf)Od
Cond1t on W1th 70 000 One Own
er Miles $18 000 740 992 2476

7 40

21 Earliest born
22 Midday
rest
23 Real - agent
24 Freshwater
fish
25 Gilt of the 26 Angered
27 "Jype of
drawing
29 Young
salmon
30 Dog'"
Garfield
31 -and write
37 Type of bean
38 Fabric
colorJng
method
40 Rolls41 Leave
42 Hookllke
'- parts
43 Ftagrance
451wo46 Verve
47 Camp
housing
49 Ac1ress
Merkel
50 Jar lop
52 Above to a
53 Heart

I

1995 GMC 4X4 Truc k 3/4 Ton
Exteneded Cab 6 5 Turbo Ou~sm

casseue St299 740 949 2045

Leave Message

llndtng

spades d1vtded evenly you cash
dummy s 1h1ce top honors When the
su11 h1caks 4 2 !hough you have to
admu del cal
Then vou notJcc that the hear!
frncssc was w1nmng Perhaps you tell
yo ur partner 1ha1 you should have
ducked a spade al tnck two wh1ch
works here However he w1ll proha
bly pomt outthat1llhe spades are 3
1 md the hear! fme sse IS wrong thi s
llnc wouldn 1 wm any plaud11s
Th" le ods to a thud thought How
ahnuttakm~ the hear! fines se 1mme
dilldy &gt; II 11 wms you can duck a
spade and go afler lour spades two
he Jrls and th ree clubs Or 1f the heart
Jmessc loses you can hope for a 3 3
spade spi ll
Study all the posslbihllcs before
pull! no quill 10 parchme nl
The quo1a11on IS from chapter I 04
ol
Moby D1ck
by HermaJJ
Mdvdlc
(

1996 Jeep Grand Cherokee lar
edo 4x4 Tow Package 4 a 6 Cyhn
der Nicety Loaded Black Exterior
Grey lntenor 13 200 Mile s
$21 000 Under Warran ty 740
985 Plymouth Tr ma s Charger
A t Co r\dl on NewT re s New
Battery New W ndsh1eld $1 000

z•

3NT

High M leage $3 700 Excellent
Cond•hOn 740-379 2409

6656

11 Hipbones
12 Small coin
19 Raced

East
Pass
Pass
All pass

I •

1990 Bronco 2 4 WD V6 XLT

1990 Fo d Ranger XLT 4x4 Au
tomatlc 6 Cyhnder 49 000 MJies
Excellent Co nd lt1on 740 446-

TRANSPORTATION

STOLE
MY CHAII'I.'

1988 Ford Ranger 4x4 PS PB 5
speed runs g eat $3950 740
1989 Ford F 250 4x4 7 4

Pass
Pass

North

ate'

400 Tran 2 Wheel Orl'&gt;'e Hlgb
Miles Runs And Onves 0 K But
Has Nasty Dents In Bed $t 800
Or Best Oller 740 992 2478

1994 Mercury Cougar XA7 8Cyl
PS PB Leathe r lnte 1or E ectrlc le&lt;~rl ence
Red Excellent Condit on Adult

AKC Rotwe tar 9 Weeks Old Fe
male Shots 8. Wormed Own Both
Parent Only To Approved Home

l!J99 Magnavox Console TV

Fair Condition

~

West

By Ph1lhp Alder
In wh1ch book does the followmg
appear? G1ve me a condor s qurll 1
G1ve me VesuviUs crater for an mk
stand' To produce a m•ghty book you
must choose a mrghty theme
There arc many theme s on bndge
The more you have slored on your
cerebral hard dnve the eas1er the
game w1ll often be However some
deals have a well known theme h1d
den bchrnd a facade of one or two red
hernngs For example how would
you plan to make three no-trump after
West has led a low club to dummy s "-''""ffii..!

t965 Dodge t/2 Ton Slant Six

1988 Ford Ranger XLT Exlended
Cab 6 Cyl nder PS PB PW Air
AM/FM Cas sene $3 300 Excel

'

Variations on
a theme

AUIO Long Bed With Lilt Gate
Th s Truck Is Eas)l On Gas

AKC reg stared Ch nese Shar Pel
pups lots of wrinkles $250 &amp; up

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Needs Some Repair $50 OBO
740 245--9til7

FOUR!!

Bedllner Sunv sor t45 000 Miles
New T•res $3 000 74Q-36ll 8056

70 000 M les

Aoawar to Previous Puzzle

Openmg lead • 4

t985 Chev ole! S 10 4x4 2 8 V

0361

Moore owner

lO PM

ONE, TWO,
THREE

6 5 Speed F berglass Topper

74(1.446 9044

AKC Regtslered M n1 Dachshund
pupp es call 614 992 9989

3 6 Cu Ft Hotpolnt Refrigerator
Freezer $65 740 446 0547 Alter

1 SHORE GOT
TH' CREEPS
HT II

OFFIC.E-

1969 Mustang 6 Cyl nder Auto
Ex ce llent tnt $5 000 304 675

GOOD USED APP,IANCES

llvmg Room SUite Never used 2

2 NT

A r $5 750 740 256 1252 740
256 1738

Dogs $50 Each Reg lslered

Sma I wa m morning healing
stove Square bales of hay Well
pump w/Co na r tank 304 937

Tra lers 12x60 two bedroom
$300 rent $100 depos•t t4x;80
lour be&lt;lroom $300 rent $100 Cle

I 800 499-3499

Fu I Blooded Heeler Dogs One 9
Wee k Old Pup Two 1 Year Old

710 Autos for Sale

s1ree1 (7401446-7398

2 &amp; 3 bedroom moD• e homes
$260 $300 se we water and
trash ncluCied 740-992 2167

6 Year Old Aqha Station Red
Sorrel With Wl"' te Blaze Dan
Hershberger t1 563 State Route
141 In Cadmus

s t 5 740 388-8996

S205 One Year Warranty Very
N ce Skaggs Appliances 76 Vme

posll ask lo Tom 740 992 4049

2.

720 Trucks for Sale

PM (740) 446 3570

Set 01 Four 14 In ch American
Aacmg Wheels 5 Star Design
W th Black Tr m Almost New

420 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Washers dryers relr gerator s
range s Skaggs Appt ance s 76
VIne Street Call 740 446 7398

BARNEY

304 45!l I069

Pos T ac $4950 Ca I Alter 4

740 949 3078 anyt me

PRtMESTAR winter blowout
spectal All nventory must go 1
t70 free channels free monthly
guide tree bonus g It Guaranteed
lowest price 8S8 265 2123

MERCHANDISE

South

Ton 6 Cyl nder 5 Speed AC

a

Muon WV

Household
Goods

Locust fence posts for sale John
Deere M T parts 740 247 296t
Se t 01 three 14 John Deere
plows
740 247 4793

die $800 740.379-270t

Power Wheels four wheeler w th
charger $50 Sha rp typewr ter
$40 Emerson TV/am lm rad io
combo $50 Lloyds amllm track
works $1 electric 15 weedeat
er $20 gray female k lien to give-

away

9000 Exl A 2814 For Cur enl

45 Plana
48 Excessively
1 Excessive
5t Submlnlva
anectlon
54 Of ucred
7 Of medicine
Images
13 Type of engine 55 Naval petty
14 Like a he-man
officer
15 In dreamland 56 Heated
16 Beginning
discourse
17 Cry of
57 Given 1o
alflnnatlon
wandering
18 Timetable abbr
; 20 Used e bench
DOWN
&lt;' 21 Triad
19441nvaslon
25 - Man March
date
28 Flavor
2 River In France
32 Take lor - 3 Layer of tissue
33 Barter
4 Enzyme
34 Hereditary
5 Goshl
factors
35 Skyllt Interiors 6 Texas city
(2 wds.)
36 I e In lull
7 "Jype of tower
37 Declared
8 Tune
39 Lingerer
9 Prefix lor pod
41 S1atus10 Fixes
44 -to Joy

Vulnerable East West
Dealer North

1991 Chevy P1 ck Up Truck t/2

JET
AERATION MOTORS

s le Any Acreage 740 379

510

6t72 Or 740 384 6042

$1 250 740.992 2478

Grubb s P1ano tunmg &amp; repairs
P ob ems? Need Tuned? Cat the
p ana Or 740 446 4525

74Q-385 4387

9384

Need A Car No Credit? Bad
Cred t? Bankruptcy? We Can
Help Reestabli sh Cred t Must
Make $150 Week Take Home 10
To 20% Down 12 Months &amp;
t2 000 Miles Warranty Availabl9
This Is Bank Financing 740 446

Aval~bO!

740 •

Loveseat Like New 2 Cha rs &amp;
Anlque Dresser 740 388- 9331

Construction Workers Welcome

Buymg Stand ng Timber And
Land With Timber 740 682 731 B

Vlck e 740 446-2897

2 Farmal Cubs W th Cullvators
Ford Jubtlee 2 64t Fords 800
Fo d 861 Ford 3 3 000 Ford
D esels M F 35 D esel M F 135
PS Graderblades Plow s o sc
N H Hayrakes Bush Hogs Hay
tedders 2 Sets Cultivators For
Farman Cubs New &amp; Used Parts
For Fords And Massey Fergu
son s Kessel s Tractor &amp; Equ p
402 Jackson P•ke Galhpoits

Equipment 304'675 7421

South
.. 6 2
• A Q2
tl09632
"'K Q 5

Credit Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank Financing For Used
Veh•cles No Turn Downs Call

Upton Used Cars Rt 62 3 Mtles
South ol Leon WV Financing

300 Wood /Medal Drivers Under ', "6_,.3_,.0-~L.,.Iv_e_,.s.,.t_o,c_k-=:-"::"

1519

Weekly Rates Or Monthly Rales

Real Estate
Wanted

I 6CJO. 522 2730 X390 I

8044

Golf Clubs 100 Sets Under $100

Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 9528

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town Newly Remodeled HBO
Clnemax Shawl me &amp; 0 sney

www countrytyme com

Locally This Month
T ucks 4x4 s Etc

Llsllngs

S~els

East
.. J 10
• KJ 9 4
+A4
• 10 8 7 3 2

t880 1990 Cars For $100111
5elzad And Sold

1991 Jotln Deere Backhoe Wlll"'
Cab &amp; Ext 1976 Koehr ng Ski
dtoader Mode 1350 740 446

7787

•A

Ext s 9388

610 Farm Equipment

Hydraul c oil lowest pnce n
town Vent free gas heaters pro
pane &amp; natural gas on sate now

Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur
n shed Clean No Pets Raference
&amp; Oepos 1 Aequ red 740 446

450

bV FBI IRS DEA Available your
area now Ca ll 1 BOO 5t3 4343

es Cad lilacs Chevys BMW s
Co valles Also J ee ps 4 WD &amp;
Your A ea Toil Free 1 BOO 218

Ohio 740 446 8906 740 446

4AKQ43
• 8 65 3
• J 7 5

4 wheelers motor homes furni
lure electronics computers etc

6651 740-446-2899
HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE

01 28 98

CARS FOR SI001 Trucks boats

Seized Cars From $175 Porsch

d-.po t 740 992 217B

All Over Southern Oh o

360

8K32 Oft ce Trailer $5 000 740

One bedroom apartment In Mid

Invest Your Refund In
Someth ng That Lasts Foreve

3 Le« 304 755 5561

MUST SEL L 14,.60 3bedrooms
2baths own e l nanc ng ava J

4 bedroom 2 bath carport 2 acr
es 30K40 pole barn on New Lima

35 acres of good hunting land on
Sm th Ad 740 742 7405 days
740 742 2006 even ngs

Beautiful River V1ew In Kanauga
Foster Mobile Home Park 740
441 018t

3br home ~ acre lot ocated n
Gal! po lls Ferry across from 84
Lu mbe Pr ce educed n ce

740 245--9ti20

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Free a r free sk rt 16K80 3 or 4
bedroom $1 350 down $299 mo
Ca111 800..691 6777

9621

4 Bedroom Ranch FuJI Basement
Fenced Yard Near Rio Gran de

3000 sq It home $115 000 740
8ol3-5&lt;153

:m 68~3970

mgs 740 245 925!!

304 675 5010 after 5pm

Hobby farm 34 acres hree bed
room 1 1/2 bath lull basemen!

Mo I 800 251 5070

On~

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

$18 000 304 675 8648

ol Nitro WV
304 755-5685

A ea estate adverl s ng n
this newspape s subtect to
he Federa Far Hous ng Act
ol 968 wh ch makes t I ega
o advert se any preference
mtat on or dscr m nat on
based on race color e g on
sex tam I a sta1us or naT anal
or gn oraly rtento to
make any such preference
m tllonordscrmna on

330 Farms for Sale

1994 Sultan Electr c Heat Pump
$1 7 900
2 Bedrooms 2 Baths

Compu ter u se rs Needed work
own hours $20~ to $50k yr
800 348 7186 Kl508

Apartment In Pomeroy 6 rooms 3
bedrooms bath &amp; half washer/
dryer hook up no pets $300 a
month $150 deposit 614 667
after 5pm

3230

lot W/Budd•ng Slle $13 000 740
441-D881

304 675 3000 8 5

446 4782

Grac ous IMng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V•Hage Manor and
Rl't'erslde Apartments n Mtddle
port From $236 $304 Call 740

1982 Oakwood t 4x60 all electr c
2b r 2 bath exc co nd n K&amp;K
can stay w/approved appllcat on
or will deliver locally $10 500

good cond w/heat pump w I de
live loca lly $ 12 500 Call K&amp;K

3711 EOH

man Shepherds Pure wnue

446-2602

10 Acres On Ne ghborhood
Roed 2 Miles From t41 Wooded

1988 Clayton Ux70 3br t batn

Ge

Furnished Elhc ency Apartment
Cent at Heat &amp; Air Conditioned
Carpet Throughout Pr va e Par K
mg AU Ulil lies Furmshed Except
Electric Pnvate &amp; Ou•et 740

able 304 736 7295

Call K&amp;K 304 675 3000 8 5

WMow AC 740.256-6632

Special ftnancmg available 304

Catlledral LA 3 BR 2 Baths low
small Al so estates apprat sa ls
ref n sh ng cus om orders 740

386 8922

Equa Hous ng Oppo tun ty

Aver F ontage Gallipolis Bnck
Ranch
Wrap Around Deck
er Level 2 Rae Rooms Wet Bar
F P 1 Bath 2 Car Garage Ap
po ntment 740 797 4468

8 Base Board Heater s Potable
D shwasher Exercise Macl"'lne

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

Beau

t fut Two Story Co omal 414 Third
Avenue GaiUpol s 3 Bedrooms 2

2bdrm apts total electric ap
.phances lu rn shed laundry room
fac 1t es close to school n town
Appllcat1ons available at VIllage
Green Apts U9 or call 740 992

&amp; movies Call 7 40 446 2568

736 7295

Oa mat1on Full Blooded Puppies
Wormed &amp; Shots $50 Each 740

ACROSS

Thursday Jan 29 1998

191

Ttt.:Oi. b tu: &lt;.lt.:Hiopme th tH.:ould !!IVC
y lU ~omt.:t hm g htg ahout whti.:h t &gt;be
hopclul E ul y mdlcal1ons nughl he
h" •lucu hy , 11 1end
TAURUS (Aprtl 20 May 20) II
} IU •d L JU~hl up 111 a challcn,1ng
dl\dopmcnt today don 1 let wiMI
tt m~ptrcs 10ttm1datc you Your
~ uon...!c t

mncr stu lfwtll i..:Onlc

to

the

lordn nl

AQUARfUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Thmgs sliould go as )OU hope today
pcrlmnong 10 an enlerpnse that
requ1res your personallouch Instead
of dclegaung handle cnucal devel
opments yourself Know where to
look for romance and you II find 1t
The Aslro Graph Matchmaker
mstantly reveals wh1ch srgns are
romanucally perfect for you Matl
$2 75 10 Matchmaker c/o thrs news
paper PO ijox 1758 Murray Htll
Stallon New York NY 10156
PISCES (Feb 20 March 20) Sm
cenly and thoughtfulness Will make

GEMINI (M oy 2 1 June 20)
S &gt;ln&lt;llmes your ms1ghts as to the
outcome of evenls are rather slarthng
Today 1s anolher one ol those days
when yoU1 assessments could be
nghl on targel
CANCER (June 21 July 22) Your
most subslanllal advantages are hke
ly 10 be gamefl loday fmm JOIIll
endeavors or through maners you
manage for others Operale from your
s1reng1hs
LEO (July 23 Aug 22) A wtse
selec11on of a par!ner could enhance
your luck today rn an onvolvemenl

where a un11!ed efforl tS requ1red Be
ex tremely p1eky
VIRGO (Aug 21 Sepl 22) People
who are m a pos1110n to g1ve your

career a boost arc '1cwmg you m a
favorable hght Keep pcrformmg
welt to mamtmn 1h1 s good- 1mpres
SIOn
LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) You are
hkely 1 oe luckierloday deahng wuh
b1g shnts mstead ol b11 p layers Star!
a1 the lop and work your wa) doll n
II nee&lt; ary
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) A
fam 1ly maHer that has been concern
mg you sho uld work ou1 saus facton
ly for all par!lclpants Keep focusmg

on a pos1t1vc resu lt
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
2 1) Your chances for success will be
enhanced today rf yo u vrsua hzc your
goal 1n a postllve manner If you sec
yo ursel f do mg the n ght thmgs yo u
will
CAPRICORN ( Dec 22 Jan 19)
Somethmg lhal ts workmg oul rather
well for you can be 11nproved upon
even more Use yo ur 1ngcn uH y to bet
ter what you ve already begun

(CC)

II

I

Murder (CC)

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

.

'

Wednesday, January 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
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~. 411, NO. 200
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By AARON MARSHALL
Sentinel Columbus Bureau

· COLUMBUS - After weeks of negotiations. Ohio's legislative leaders
unveiled a bipartisan school funding package Wednesday that relies heavily on voter approval of half-cent sales tax hike.
: The plan, rolled out at npress conference attended by m~re than~ dozen
high-ranking lawmakers from both parties and chambers of the legtslature.
tncreases overall education spending, funds lower cia's stzes on urban and
some poor schools and provides funds for Ohio's decayi'ng school buildings.
The deal also increases the ·amount of money the stale spends on transportation, special. gifted and vocational education.
..
It is aimed at resolving la•l March's Ohio Supreme Court dec1s1on that
tossed out the state's current school funding system giving lawmakers a year
to change Ohio's ·system of paying for public education.
.
Despite leadership's collective show of unity. critics of the plan -· oncluding one local lawmaker .. said the plan falls shon of the court's mandate
and serious doubts remain about the plan's fate in the Ohio House.. Last summer. the House blocked a penny-on-the-dollar sales tax increase backed by
Gov. George Voinovich.
D
•
"Everything is fragile," said House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson: RReynoldsburg. House Minority leader Ross Boggs, D-Andover. descnbed
che House support for the plan as "walking on eggshells." Leaders must cor·

a

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ral 60 votes in the House to pass the plan omo vmers.
In Gallia County. both school di&gt;tricts received increa,es in the 2-3 percent
However. lawmakers intend 10 introduce the new proposals today in a range under the plan when compared lo 1998 levels.
rush to meet a February 4 deadline to place the proposed sales tax hike on
State Sen. Michael Shoemaker. D·Boumeville, said he does nollhink the
the ballot. Floor votes on the deal are tentatively planned for the weekend.
plan begins to address the court's mandate .
If voters approved the sales tax hike, then it would generate about $564
"( would bel you my pickup truck that Lewis will laugh us oul of the
million-a-yearextru. However. a property tax break of 10 percent -· capped · counroom with this," he said. reti!rring lo Perry Coumy Common Pleas Coun
at $100 per hou&gt;ehold ··would take $236 million-a-year out of the addiJudge Linton lewis. who ha.' initial juri~diction over the school funding ca'iC.
tional lax money generated.
.
~eanwhile . a budget calculation done by the Legislative Budg&lt;t Oflke
The additional-money generated by the lax would go towards operating
shows that underthe plan a $46 million budget shonfall in 2002 is predicted.
funds, technology. increased school building con~truction and property tax
Senate Democrats, however, said late Wednesday thai majority-Republicans
relief. according 10 Senate President Richard Finan. R-Cincinnati. He added
have agreed to a 10 percent busine&gt;S lax rollback thai would bring in $200that voter rejection of the plan would bring dire cuts to state government
million -a-year.
starting with higher education.
•
Education groups wasted no time criticizing the plan. "Our initial ~naly­
The plan gradually raises the basic amount of per-pupil spending guarsis is the proposal falls short of addressing the revenue needs of Ohio's
anteed by the slate. Curremly. schools are guaranteed per pupil spending of schools and does not address the structurJI tlaws in the current tax system."
$3,663 in a combination of state and local taxes. Under the plan thal'ligure
said John Brandl, e~ecutive director of the Ohio Schools Board Association.
would shoot 10 $3.851 neKt year, with intlationary increases boosting the
The leader of the coalition of ~c hool districts that successfully challenged
sum 10 $4,414 in four years.
Ohio's school funding system agreed. '"When the court talked about a major
While no school district by district breakdowns of the plan were made . systematic overhaul! don't think they were just talking about steamcleanavailable, the The Daily Sentinel obtained an earlier printout of a similar
ing the engine," said Bill Phillis, executive director of the Coalition for Equi·
version of the plan. In thai version, all Mei,gs County schools received sizty and Adequacy of School Funding. He said the plan has " major !laws"
able increases ranging from 5. 7 percent to I0 percent over 1998 aid levels.
in opemtiom and facilities.

Schools telecast to
be on PBS Sunday
Ohio University Public Television will join other public broadcasting stations Sunday In broadcasting "Funding Ohio's Future, •
a one-hour live special exploring future school funding.
The program will be broadcast before a live audience of 500
peOple and will feature a panel of key leaders who will discuss tbe
rulln1ln the 199llawsuit from Perry County ~nd describe features of the school fundblg system.
Questions to be addressed include, 'What constitutes an adequate education in Ollio?' and 'How much does It cost to pro-

US. NO.1

8 LB.· BAG
RUSSETT
POTATOES

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17. 3 TO 18 OUNCE

. V,m and

diStribute qu!'tlonnaires addressing the issue. The
. teSultt or the questlonnan-e will be tabulated and distributed to
the media, school superintendents and others concerned with the
Issue or school funding.
The questionnaires will also be nailabl, at public libraries and
through the worldwide web at www.wosu.org/sc;hools/.
"Funding Ohio's Future• Is a joint projed 'Of WOSU-TV in
Columbus and the League of Women Voters of Ohio, along with
28 supporting organizations and Ohio's public tefeyision and radio
rtading services.

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Senate
ha' passed a bi II that would create a
task force to study how families can
betler handle child visitation rights
· .when parents divorce.
The 33-0 vote came Wednesday
after the .Senate Judiciary Committee
removed provisions that would have
allowed divorcing parents to set their '
own guidelines und eliminate counordered schedules.
~ Judges had concerns over the
costs a'5ociated with some of the
'bill's provisions.
· Under the bill, which goes to the
House, the Ohio Supreme Court and
lwo state judgeS a'sociations would
each appoint members of the 23-per·
son task force. The task force would
study Ohio law and make recom·
mendations on how to deal more fairly with divorce. dissolution. legal

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separation and annulment. II is to .
repon back to the legislature by Dec. :
31. 1999.
The House. meanwhile. approved
a bill that s~ould help authorities
investigate unsolv~d deaths.
The bill. passed '95-0. would
require county coroners to give DNA
specimens. tingerprinls and pho-.
togmphs of unidentified bodies to the
state's Bureau of Criminal ldentilication and Investigation. The information would be put into the bureau's
missing persons database.
Rep. James Mason. R-Columbus.
said Ohio would betome the first
stale 10 establish such a system.
Lawmakers also approved 92-1 a
bill thai would allow dentisl~ lo volunteer to help school athletic teams
and limit their medical liability.
Both bi lis now go to the Senate.

U.S. continues to prepare
for possible atta~k on Iraq

6 OZ. - OIL OR WATER
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· WASHINQTON (AP) ·-Senior
Clinton udministmlion officials and
lawmakers are continuing to lay the
foundations supporting possible U.s.:
led ai~trikes on lrnq.
· On Capitol Hill. lawmakers were
considering a resolution today to
'"take ali necessary and appropriate
accions 10 respond to the threat posed
by Iraq's refusal to end it• weapons·
·cif mass destruction programs."
Secrecary of State Madeleine
Albright, embarking today for
Europe and the ~ideas!, declared: '"I
am not going anywhere to seek sup. pon. 1am going to explain our positjon,"
. Iraq's foreign minister, Mohamed
Saeed ai-Sahhaf, aci:u.sed the United
Stales on Wednesday of fabricating
tile c;risis as an excuse to ~ttack Iraq.
.. Meanwhile, Marine Corps Gen.
Anthony Zinni. the U.S. military
cilmmander in the Persian Gulf
~gion. was heading to Washington
for meetings with senior policy-mak·
later chis week on the U.S.
options.

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and will be one ot over 700 Iocatloas wh1ch wtll broadcast the pro-

New bill would create
family law-task force

JIF
PEANUT
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LIGHT TUNA

2 Sections, 12 Pages. 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspapar

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday,·January 29, 1998

Education. groups criticize funding p_
lan

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Partly cloudy ~onight,
lows In the mid 30s.
Friday, cloudy, chance of
snow flurrll!l. Highs near

And in a hearing of the Senate
lntelligenco;. Comrnillee, senior intel·
Jigence officials predicted Iraqi President Saddam Hussein would continue to tweak the United States as long
as possible. hoping to create a rift in
the coalition arrayed against him.
"Saddam Hussein ha' the capabilily to generate a crisis and there's
not "'Kch we can do about that now
excepl to respond to the crisis." sa id
Army Lt. Gen.-Patrick Hughes, head
·of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
In the Senate. the thinking along
those lines is coalescing around a
much harder line toward Iraq, one
thai might aim nOI simply at containing Saddam Hussein, but toppling
him from power.
Defense Secretary William Cohen
met privately witll Lott and later met
with House Speaker New! Gingrich,
R·Ga., and other House leaders in
whal was billed as an "emergency
ineeting" on the situation in Iraq.
The faintest hint thai hostilities
might be avoided emerged from the
Stote Departmenl on Wednesday

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PLEASANT WEATHER was the rule Wednesday. Meigs Coun·
tlans took full advantage of the sunshine and atypical temps to
wash cars, work outside and just generally enjoy a break from

· winter. Steve Hutton, manager of Hutton's Car Wash in Pomeroy,
Is shown here preparing a vehicle for the automated car wash.
Hutton said warm weather yields plenty of work for the business.

Senior Citizens to begin tutoring, ·mentoring
program at Pomeroy Elementary next month
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

Senior citizens can be "stars'_'
when they become STARS-- a·tutoring and memoring program to begin
at the Pomeroy Elementary School
next month .
·
Recruitment of Meigs Countians
over 55 years of age for STARS -Seniors Teaching and Reaching Stu.
dents -- is underway now by the
Meigs County Council on Aging
through its Refired Senior Volunteer
Program (RSVP).
The purpose of the program as
outlined by the Ohio Department of
Aging is to bring the experience and
guidance of older Ohioans into the
classroom 10 enrich the Jives of
young people while giving the
seniors a sense of pride and accomplishment.
· The ultimate goal is to further the
progresS' of education in.--thc state

through improved test scores. allen·
dance mtes. and overall quality of
life.
Pomeroy_Eiementary School was
· one of 15 schools in Ohio to be
awarded a slate grant to implement
_the inter-generational progrJ.m.
The only other rural school selected
was Trimble Elementary School in
Athens County. All others were"inner·
city schools in Dayton, Columbus.
Cincinnati, Toledo, Springfield, and
Youngstown.
Schools awarded grants were
selected on the basis of their need for
special services. The Ohio Depart·
menl of Aging worked in conjunction
with the Ohio Family and Ctl!JQ!:en
Trust initiative to idemify the schools.
The two-year pilot project is
funded with $2.8 million. It is geared
to address the critical needs of chi I·
dren in kindergarten through third
' grade while allowing senior citizens

the opportu nity to serve in a productive capacity.
Diane Coates, RSVP director. and
Jamie Gillispie. coordinator. Meigs
County Council on Aging . are work ·
ing on implementing the progmm at
the Pomeroy school.
The emphasis of the STARS par:
ticipants will be on assisting students
with reading and communication
ski lls, working on a one-on-one ba&lt;is.
said Coates.
She and Gillespie explained thai
the seniors will receive an hourly tax free stipend of $2.50 per hour or can
take the pay in college tuition cred·
its for a grandchild or another rela tive. Tiley will also be provided
meals on volumeer days. and reim ·
bursed for an y travel expenses.
In addition to meeting th e age
requirements. seniors must commit to
serving 15 hours a week and to auend
training and serv ice meetings. Being

a resident of Meigs County. having
relatively good heallh, a love of chi I·
dren and a commitment 10 improve
the quality of education are other
requiremevts for participants.
II was pointed out by Susan Oliv·
er. executive director of the Meigs
Coun ty Council on Aging, that
im:ome is nol &lt;.1 cu n ~ ilkration in
se lecling voluntl!crs.
As h&gt;r each volunteer's lime, Oliver said thai three hours a day five
day:-i a week is whut the agcnt:y i ~
hoping for from the participants, but
that "can probably be negotiated ."
She Siiid thai local personnel will he
working with lhe Corporation for
Ohio Appalachian Development
iCOAD) staff.
The training 10 he provided
through COAD has tenlalively been
schedukd fur Feb. 12 and 13 with the
seniors to actually begin workin g in
the school in late February.

Starr seeks information from Secret Service·agents
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sum- then was urged by the president and New York . The offer was rescinded ers familiar with her account
A White House political aide.
'moning the 'former White House longtime Clinton confidant Vernon when allegations of an affair with him
Paul
Begala. today discounted these
surfaced.
chief of staff and gathering evidence Jordan to lie about it.
reports
as "probably another one of
The
New
York
Times
reported
The Associated Press reponed
from a safety deposit box in Oregon,
these
false
leaks." He told NBC.
today
that.
according
to
Ms.
Lewinprosecutors are selling their sights on last week that prosecu,tors .are inter·
''lhe
president
has been very clear
sky.
Clinton
told
her
in
a
private
Secret Service agents as possible wit- ested in a contact Clinton had with
meeting
al
the
While
House
in
late
that
he
ha.'
never
asked anybody to do
nesses into whether President Clinton Ms. Lewinsky in December - after
anything
but
tell
the truth ."
December
thai
she
could
testify
thai
she had-been ordered to describe her
had sex with Monica Lewinsky.
M&gt;.
Lewinsky's
lawyer. William
the
purpose
of
her
various
visits
to
the
Ofticials say Whitewater prose- relationship with the president under
Ginsburg,
without
addressing the
White
Hou
se
since
leaving
her
job
as
cutor Kenneth Starr's office and oath and before Jordan helped
substance
of
the
reports
. about the
Treasury officials were discussing arrange a New York job and Wash· an intern there was to see his secreDecember meeting, denied leaki ng
tary, Seny Currie .
how to gain testimony from the ington lawyer for her.
the
accoumto the press.
In
Ms.
Lewinsky's
version
of
the
The
Washington
·
Post
said
today
agents.
" I have no concept of where I hal
Starr is trying to determine chat the meeting occurred t;&gt;ec. 28 •meeting. Clinton also told her' she
leak
came from. and I deny we hav e
might
find
il
easier
to
avoid
lestifynear
the
Oval
Office,
according
to
whether there is any conoboration for
·
made
that statement. " Ginsburg said.
i'ng
if
she
moved
to
New
York.
said
sources
it
did
not
identify.
With
help
the ·accusaiion that Ms. Lewinsky, a
the
Times,
quoting
an
unidentilied
from
Jordan.
·
Ms.
Lewinsky
later
fonner White' House intern, had a
sexual relationship with Clinton and . received a job offer with Revlon in . associate of Ms. Lewinsky and oth'

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