<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="8445" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/8445?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-07T11:38:18+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18863">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/b9217ca883d9734e40283c9012bf1aef.pdf</src>
      <authentication>db85ca44938fd325f1afeb7cb5ed7931</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="27289">
                  <text>Page 16 • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Asian crisis pulls
U.S. economy in
two directions
WASHINGTON (AP) - Asia's
economic crisis is pulling the American economy in two directions:
dampening manufacturing through
increased export competition and
boosting housing construction
through lower interest rates.
Construction of new single-family homes and apanments rose to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of
1.64 million units last month, up 6
percent from January and the highest
level since November 1987. the
Commerce Department said.
Meanwhile. acconding to the Federal Reserve, the nation's industrial
production was 'line hanged in February for the first time since October
1996. Economists said the report
showed the impact of reduced export
sales to economically ailing countries
in Asia and increased competition
from Asian imports.
"The industrial sector is slowing
in reaction to Asian developments,"
said economist Gerald Cohen of
Merri II Lynch.
Wall Street thrived on the mi~ of
news. The Dow Jones average of
industrial stocks rose 31 points to
8. 750. its second consecutive record
dose.
The unchanged February performance for indu.&lt;trial production.
which followed a small. 0.1 percent
increase in January, was attributed in
part to the third strdight monthly
decline in the assembly of cars and
light trucks.
Jerry Jasinowski, president of the
National Association of Manufacturers, said factories making aircraft and
industrial machinery have been particularly hun by slumping e~port
sales to Asia.
However. demand for technology
cominued strong. with computer output up 1.8 percent and semiconductor production increa.&lt;ing 2.4 percent.
By sector. production was
unchanged in manufacturing. down
0.3 percent at mines and oil fields and
up 0.9 percent at utilities.
The slack month eased some of
the inllationary strain on industry,
with the capacity usc rate sinking
from 83 percem to 82.7 percent and.
at factories alone, from 82.2 percem
10 81 .8 percent.
Manufact~ring is e~pected to bear
the brunt of the Asian currency crisis. But so far the troubles have
proved more of a boost than ·a drag
to the rest of the economy. Thirtyyear mortgage rates hovered around
7 percent in both January and February. That's only happened once previously - in late 1993 -during the
past 25 years.
·
Rising income and the lowest
unemployment rate in 24 years are
giving consumers the confidence to
purcha.~ homes. Plus. so far this year.
the housing has been helped across
much of the country by unsca.•onably
mild weather. the product of the El
Nino current in the Pacific Ocean.
However. heavy rains and flooding associated with El Nino have hun .
construction in California. Construe- .
tion fell 7.8 percent in the West to a .
rate of 348.000 units. It was the
largest drop since December 1~.
Construction rose 14.3 percent in
the Northeast to a rate of 192.000
units. the highest level since February 1990.11 increased 10.9 percent to
a rate of 724.000 in the South. the
highest level since June 1986. and 8.1
percent in the Midwest to a 372.000unit rate.
Nationally, construction of single-

Forbes
launches ads
backing plan to
scrap income
tax
WASHINGTON (AP) - Steve
Forbes began new radio advertisements Tuesday supponing a bill to
scrap the tax code by 200 I.
The ads. airing in Washington.
D.C.. Arizona. Iowa. and New Hampshire. represent the latest volley in an
increasingly heated political debate ,
over a plan to repeal the Internal Rev- i
enue Code by 200 I. The GOP views '
the bill as u way to build pressure for
• passage of tax refonn. and also to cast
Democrats as defenders of a complex ,
and bewildering tax code.
"President Clinton is defending
the indefensible - a federal income
tax code that's the biggest source of
pq_litical pollution and corruption in
America today." Forbes said in the
:ads. Forbes. the magazine publishing
magnate. unsuccessfully sought the
1996 GOP presidential nomination.
'The ads are sponsored by his issues
advocacy group, Americans for Hope
Growth and Opportunity.
The Clinton administration has
stepped up lobbying against the plan
to scrap the tax, which the White .
House describes as irresponsible.
A Forbes spokesman declined to
say how much the group was spending on the ads, but said they represent
just the first wave of ad• this spring.

family homes rose 4.3 percent to an
annual rate of 1.27 million units, the
highest since March 1994. Construction of multifamily units increased
12.6 percent to an annual rate &lt;if
366,000 units.
Building permits for future construction increa.•ed 6.5 percent in
February. the biggest gain since a 7.7
(JCrcent rise in December 1993.

Wedn.e.-ay, March 18,1998 .
'

Researchers find fossil .of primitive bird from din0$8Ur era
WASHINGTON (AP)- The fos- Forster said Tuesday. She said the Ocean island of Madagascar off the
sil of a raven-sized ' bird with fossil may be "the strongest last nails east coast of Africa.
•
dinosaur-like features has been in the coffin" for those wha doubt
Among the fossils, said Forster. ·
unearthed in Madagascar from a that binds evolved from dinosaurs.
were the bones of more advanced
rock formation deposited more than
A report on the study by Forster binds that lived during the same time
65 million years ago, researchers and her colleagues will be published and at the same place a.~ Rahona.
repon.
on Friday in the journal Science.
·
She said that Rahona wa.~ much
The fossils, of a type never before
Forster said the new bird species more primitive, closely resembling
seen, include wing bones of a bird, has been named Rahona ostromi. Archaeopteryx, an animal that lived
but also a long tail an!l"a huge, sick- which translates from the native ISO million years ago and ;s the earle-shaped killing claw" that resemble Madagascar language to mean liest known true bind.
such features in meat-eating theropod "Ostrom's menace from the clouds."
"Rahona was at the base of the
dinosaurs, said Catherine A. Forster A scientist named John Ostrom was bird family tree, · right next to
of the State University of New York an earlier proponent of the.idea that A!'chaeopteryx,'~said Forster. "It
at Stony Brook School of Medicine. binds evolved from dinosaurs.
hail a feathered wing plus many bind
"This animal gives powerful new
The bind fossil was found in a rock features in his hiRt~ and legs, includevidence to suppci'rt the theory that quarry among a number of other ing a perched foe¥•~·
binds descended from dinosaurs ... dinosaur-era fossils on the Indian
But Rahona also had that big

lcilling claw on the second digit of its
feel Such a claw is also found on fossils for dinosaurs like the velociraptor, a meat eater that walked on his .
hind legs and attacked with his claw
and a mouth full of teeth. Such animals were depicted in a panicularly
menacing way in the "Juras.~ic Park"
duo of films.
The bird had a wing span of at
least 2 feet, she said. and there was
bumps along the side of one wing
bone that are seen in the bones of
modern binds. Forster said these
bumps are where feathers grow, suggesting that the Rahona had a wide,
feathered wingspan.

Ohio Lottery

Lions,
Gophers
advance

Pl~k

3:
870
Pick 4:
4213
Super Lotto:
3-8-12·32-33-39
Kicker:
367443

Sports on Page 4

•

J

Cloudy tonight, chance
of rain. Lows In upper 408.
Friday, rain, high In mid··
60s.

•

ent1ne
Vol. 48, NO. 235

2 Sections, 12 Pagea, 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Th~rsday, March 19,1998

G:l1998, Ohio Volley Publlehlng Company

AGannett Co. Newapapar

Eastern board
rejects proposed
funding changes
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Eastern Local Boand of Education went on record as opposing a
proposed state sales tax for school
funding when it met in regular ses-·
sion on Wednesday evening.
The board unanimously passed a
resolution rejecting House Bill 650
and House Bill697, which propose a
one-cent per dollar sales ta~ increase
and change the method for school
funding through "property Ia~ relief."
Superintendent Deryl Well
referred to the proposals as "llawed
versions." in an attempt to fi~ the
school funding dilemma in the state
education system.
According to Well, the Eastern
Local School District will receive less
funding from the state, percentagewise. than it did from 1990 to 1996.
because the proposal eliminates equity funding to poorer school districts.•
.In other action. the board met with
Eastern High School Prin~ipal Clayton Butler to further discuss possible .
enhancement of the high school curriculum.
Butler reponed that·he h~d it\Vestigated the possibility of adding
mathematics and science courses to
the school's offerings. including
space ~cience, calculus, anatomy and
physiolo~v or e.nvironmental chemistry, which would be offered to students who are not enrolled in college
preparatory course work.
Butler said that adding these
courses would require the employment of another teacher. but noted
that' the high school now employs one
less teacher than it did a year ago.
Butler also discussed the possibility
of adding journalism. an appreciation
and choir to the school's curriculum

take

proposal to replace existing breaker
year.
Butler discussed the possibility of boxes in the hi&amp;h school building was
the district seeking accreditation tabled.
The board approved the hiring of
through the North Central Association for Accreditation of Elementary Becky Edwards. a fifth-grade teacher
Schools. High Schools and Colleges. at Tuppers Plains Elementary, a.• the
and noted that the addition of elective district's elementary art teacher for
course work would aid the district in the new elementary school. and
accepted the resignation of Pamela
its application.
Butler announced that senior Kel- DOuthitt as after-school detention
li Bailey had been selected to partic- monitor. The boand also approved
ipate in a PBS talk show about youth Scott Wolfe as assistant varsity basevoting in Ohio. The program will be ball coach, pending certification.
broadcast from Columbus an4 will
--Approved the renewal of propfollow a call-in format.
erty insurance with Wausau/NationElementary Principal Tom wide at a cost of $6,762:
Topolewski announced that the dis-- Approved the· transfer of funds
trict's three Parent Teacher Organi- from various accounts in the district's
zations would be meeting a.~ one general fund;
group later in the school year to dis-- Set the board's next regular.
cuss the consolidated organization for meeting for April 15 at 6:30 p.m. at
next year.
Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
Sheryl Roush, junior class advisor. with a work session at5: 15 p.m., and
and Sari Putinan, class member, niet set a spe9ial meeting on April 13 at
with the board to request theor per- 5:30 p.m., to awand contracts for
mission.to plan the annual senior trip Schoolnet wiring;
ne~t year..
--Approved a field trip for RightThi: 'class has planned 10 travel to to-Read Week activities for Tuppers
Aoridli next year, and requested the Plains Elementary students to Ramboard's permission so that they can -r,~,. MiiUion and Wood County,
begin fund raising for the trip. In W.Va. airport;
recent years. senior trips have been to
-- Approved a job description for
Virginia. Roush said that the students Ron Hill. t~ district's Drug-Free
are planning to visit Walt -Disney . Schools Program Coondinator;
World and EPCOT Center. St. Augus--Approved tbe 1998-1999 school
ti'Oe·. the-NASA Kennedy Space Cen- calendar, with the provision that. if
ter and Cocoa Beach.
need arise, the year will delay one .
A 'loose furniture bid specifica- week at the beginning of the year and
tions package as approved by Vargo. extend a week at the conclusion:
Cassidy, Ingham and Gibbs. the dis-- Met in.executive session to district's architect, was approved for cuss personnel.
advertisemeni. The board also .
Present were Superintendent
approved a change order from Gen- Deryl Well. Clerk Lisa Ritchie. Board
erdl Temperature Control for two President John Rii:e and members
valves for Lochinvar hot water boil- Roger Willford, Greg Bailey, Mike
ers and labor. at a cost of $2.925. A Martin and Rick Sanders.
ne~t

Republicans are critical
of Fisher's fund~raising

IF YOU
WANT JT

IT'S ON

Judge says
Hall to remain
in psychiat_riC
hOSpital

COLUMBUS lAP)- Lee Fish- tributors. But Dougla.•. a Toledo miler. the. Democrdts' endorsed candi- lionaire. has given his campaign
date for governor. has raised more $575,000 of his own money. plus
than $1.1 million since Bruce Dou-. $233.000 in in-kind contributions.
IRONTON (AP) - A man
glas began a self-financed campaign
Republicans
and
Douglas
charged with causing a southin January. acconding to a finance spokesman Dale Butland were critiem Ohio fireworks store fire
report tiled with the secretary of cal of Fisher's fund-rJising.
that kHied nine people must
state's office.
"Mr. Fisher's report shows him to · remain in a psychiatric: hospital
Douglas' decision to spend more 'be a classic career politician whose
for at least another two years, a
than $1 00:000 of his own money campaign is being propped up by
judge has ruled.
freed Fisher from the $2.500 limit on political insiders, .. But land said.
Todd Hall,26, of Proctorville
individual contributions. The report
The Ohio Republican Party said in
was found incompetent to stand
covers donations received from Jan . a news release that Fisher is "a lot
trial after the July 3, 1~, fire
1 through la.'t Friday.
closer to the deep-pocketed influence
at Scottown. Hall suffers from
Fisher's largest contribution - · peddlers th~n he is to the working
a 1987 head injury and has
$100.000 - came from Michael men and women...
been committed to the
Boieh. a coal marketer from the
But Fisher spokeswoman Judy
Appalachian
Psychiatric
Columbus suburb of Dublin. accord- Barbao said Fisher is simply playing . Healthcare System In Caming to the report tiled Tuesday.
by the rules that Douglas set into
bridge.
During a hearing 1\ae!day,
Richard Jacobs . a Cleveland motion by spending his own money.
developer who also owns ba.,eball's
"Lee Fisher ha' the support of
Lawrence County Common
Ckveland Indians. gave the cam- thousands upon thousands of indiPleasJudgeW. Richard Walton
paign $50.000. The Ohio Academy of viduals and organizations in Ohio.
accepted the hospital's Feb. 23
Trial · Lawyers also controbuted We have received support from more
evaluation calling for continued
$50 000
than 4.700 contributors ... Ms. Barbao
· treatment.
Min Cha Lee of Dublin. who list- said. "Our opponent intends to buy
·Ohio law requires a sixed an occupation of homemaker. the election...
month re-evaluation after a
gave $40.000. Four people each gave
defendant in a crimlnalt~l is
contributions.of $25,000.
Secretary of State Bob Taft. who
fOllnlt incompetent. · Another
Douglas released a report on also wants to succeed Gov. George
evaluation is not required for
Wednesday that shows he has raised Voinov!ch. fac~s no opposition in the
two years.
a total of just $15.000 from 16 con- Republican promary.

DISCUSS TRIP· Sheryl Roush and Sari Put·
man, standing, dlacueHd the Eastern High
Scttoo.I.Clt" of 1""'',plana to travel to Flo~l·

da for their ienlor trip. The cia.. raquetted the
boll'd'l authorization eo that fundralalng and
planning can proc:etCI.

Bill would put child's welfare first
"We can't know. We here in this
COLUMBUS (AP)- The Legi~­
lature has no business telling the body do not sit in the courtrooms
couns to give parents special stand- around Ohio," said Mason. R-Bexley.
ing· in custody decisions involving "We shouldn't be eroding this bill ...
Rep. Kirk Schuring, the bill's
abused or neglected children, the
sponsor.
said returning a child to his
House's judiciary chairman 'Said.
or
her
parents
is not always the best
The House on Wednesday
idea.
Grandparents
and other relatives
approved a bill that would require
often
make
more
lit guardians, he
judges to act in the best interests of
said.
the child in determining such cases.
"These relatives provide a safe
The 87-3 vote came after the House
harbor
for the child and the love and
turned down an amendment that
would have given natural J!arents attention they were- missing," said
SChuring. R-Canton.
more weight in the proc_ess.
The bill now goes to the Senate.
The bill would deal with children
The House also passed bills that
that a social service agency has
would:
·
removed from a hQme because of
-Make
public indecency, now a
abuse or ~glect. The coun would
have to put the child's welfare ahead fourth-degree misdemeanor, a thirdof other concerns when deciding degree misdemeanor on the lirst
whether to award custody to a parent. offense and a first-degree misdeanother relative or any other person meanor on subsequent offenses. The
bi II would also reduce the offense of
or placement agency.
Rep. Peter Lawson Jones' amend- urinating in public from a publicment was defeated 57-32 after Rep. indecency charge to disonderly conJim Mason. chairman of the House duct.
'-- Increase retirement benefits for
Judiciary Committee, told members
that lawmakers do not know enough nonteaching school employees with
about each ~ that goes before the 30 years' e~perience and increase
Medicaid reimbursement for the
courts.

same employees.
Those bills now go to the Senate.
The House also agreed to Senate
changes in bills that would help
prosecutors press munder charges
against someone who causes the
death of others while committing.a
felony. and require nursing homes to
follow the wishes of a patient who
does not want to be resuscitated.
Those bills go to Gov. George
Voinovich for his signature.
The Senate. meanwhile. passed a
bill that would allow candidates who
lose a primary to run a.&lt; independents
in the general election for the same
nonpartisan office.
It applies to candidates for state
school board, local school boards and
• township trustee.
The bill would eliminate the •·sore
loser"law. pa.«~ed in 1977. That law
barred u candidate who unsuccessfully seeking a party nomination
from running for office in the following general election.
The bill. which the Senate
approved 30-0, now goes. to the
House.

'------------4

VMH laboratory awarded two-year accreditation
The laboratory at Veterans Memorial Hospital has been awanded a twoyear accreditation ~y the Commission
on Laboratory Accrediwtion of the
College of American Pathologists.
(CAP). ba.sed on the results of a
recent on-site inspection.
The laboratory's director, Dr.
. David Althaus, pathologist, Gallipolis, was advised of this national
recognition and congratulated (or
the excellence of the services being
. provided. . .
Mrs. Cecelia Lisle, Syracuse, is
the depanment head for the opera-

tions of ihe local hospital's laboratory. The laboratory at Vetemns Memorial Hospital is one of more than
5,000 CAP-I)!:credited laboratories
nationwide.
The CAP Laboratory Accreditation Program. begun in the early
1960s. is recognized by the federal
government as being equal to or more
stringent than the government's own
inspection program.
Inspectors e~mine the records
and quality control of tht laboratory
for the preceding two years, as well
as the education and qualifications.of

the total staff, the adequacy of the
facilities, the equipment, laboratory
safety, and laboratory management 10
determine how well the laboratory is
serving the patient.
The College of American Pathologists is a medical society serving
more than 14,500 physician members
and the laboratory community
throughout the world. It is the
world's largest association composed
exclusively of pathologists and is
widely considered t~e leader in laboratory quality assurance. The CAP
is an advocate for high quality -and
cosi effective medical care. ·

LABORATORY ACCREDITED • The laboratory at Veteran• Memorial Hospital has been
awarded a tw~yaar accreclltetlon by the Commlaslon on LaboratOIY Accreclltatlon.of the Collage of American Pathologlata. Pictured with

the certificate of ac:creclhatlon from the left are
Dr. David Althaus, lab director; Cecelia Lisle,
local department head of the lab, and Robert
Bowers, VMH admlnlatrator.

•
·~

... '

..

.

~

�·com.mentary
The Daily Sentinel

..

Jhursday, March 19, 1998

Page2

Foreign policy can help, not

sav~;

Clinton

Errlest R. 'Monk' Carr

1HoM1-

-··p·-·lay
Congress' Cll"nton r'"e
dispute over spending

----

L___:~~~-~~~~_.:.__5~~~---::~~~~~~~J

Lieberman .should run for president:
an

Letters to the editor
Promises, promises, promises .

in

· . Ernest R. "Monk" Carr. 9! , 35382 Stale Route 143, Harrisonville, died
.Wednesday, March 18. 1~98. at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
He was born Jan. 20. 1907, at Mud fork, son of the late Harley and Grace
Saxon Carr. He was a former school bus owner and operator in Harrisonville
and was a member of the First Southern Baptist Chun:h, Pomeroy.
He is survtved by his wife of 50 years. Sadie Morris Carr. a son and daughter-in-law. David E. and Paula Carr of Gallipolis: two stepdaughters. Racheal
and Lee Lefebre of Harrisonville, and Donna Wilson of Hemlock Grove;
nine grandchildren; 13 great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held Saturday, II ;30 a.m. at Birchfield Funeral Home
with Pastor Lamar O'Bryanl officiating. Burial will be in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday. 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home. Memorial contributions may be made to the Meigs County Council on Aging's Meals
on Wheels Program.

Tommy Fisher
William Thomas "Tommy" Fisher. 51. Middleport. died on Wednesday.
March 18. 1998 at the Joel Pomerene Memonal Hospotal tn Millersburg. He
was born on May 18. !94fi in Mason. W.Va .. son of the late C.O. Fisher and
Virginia Rose Dillard Fisher.
He is survived by three sisters and two brothers-in-law: Rose mary and
Harold Moore. Wonhington. Nancy and John Terrell. Oak Ridge. Tenn .. and
Sarah Jane Fisher. Middleport; a brother. Bob Fisher or Mtddleport: a sister-in-law. Rita Beegle Fisher of Hehron; two nieces. six nephews and several great nieces and nephews.
Beside~ his parents, he was preceded tn death by a brother. John Fisher,
a sister-in-law, Jean Fisher, and a niece. Julie Fisher.
. Services will be held on Saturday. March 21. 1998 at I p.m. allhe Mtddleporl Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev. Bob Robinson officiating. Burial will follow in Riverv1ew Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Laura Hoffman
Laura Riggs Hoffman. 92, of Columbus. formerly of Meigs County. died
on Wednesday, March !8, 1998 at Columbus Quality Care Nursing Home
She was born in Hanford. W.Va .. on May 4, 1905. daughter of the late
)ohn Robert and Malinda Kearns Riggs. She was a housewife. She was a
member of the Grand Central Rebecca Lodge No. 699. Crestview Temple,
Pythian Sisters No. 550, and Pride of Columbus Daughters of America No.
207. She held many offices in the lodges.
Surviving are two daughters ~nd a lirother-in-law: Ruth and Charles Hughes. Columbus and Janel Potenza; two daughters-in-law: Irene and Evelyn
Hoffman; ·a sister, Lucille Jacobs. Middlepon: IS grandchildren. 24 great
grandchildren; and 10 great-great grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband. William
Cecil Hoffman; two sons, Cecil Ralph and William A. Hoffman; a grandson. Mark Alan Anderson; four sisters and four brothers.
Arrangements are under the direction of at Jerry Spears Funeral Home
in Columbus and will be announctd.

Couples I"SSUed marriage liCenSeS
The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:

D~ily

The

Nathan Russell Parsons, 25, and
Jane Elizabeth Miller, 44, both of
Evans. W.Va.; James David While,
20. Middleport. and Angela Marie
Hale, 20, Athens.

Sentinel

Stocks

!USPS Z13·960)
Published every afternoon, MondAy through

Fmt\y, Ill Collrt St., Pomeroy, Ohm, by the

Oh1o Valley Publishm&amp; Company/Gannett Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio -45769, Ph . 992-21Sfl Second
clu5 polilage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Auoc iated Pre·ss, nd the Ohio
Newspaper Association .

POSTMASTER: Send ackhess corrtctions to
The Daily Sentinel, I ll Court St , Pomr:roy,
Ohio 45169.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Cnrkr or Motor Roule

............... .. $2 Ot~
. .............. $H.70
............... S104 00

One Week ......
One Monlh ..
One Year

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Da1ly ................ .1 .... ................... 35 Cents
SubKriben not destnnt! lo pay the carrier may

rem11 m adv~nce dtrect 10 The D•uly Scntind
nna1hree. m or 12 monlh bas1s Crcdil w1ll be ,
g1vcn carrier each week.
No subscription by mMII permtued 111
where home earner ~rvice is Available

area~

Putlllshcr resc:rvcs the righl tO adjusl rate~ dur·

ing lhe subscript ion penod. Subswp110n rate
changes may be implemcated by changing the
dural ion of the suhscripcion.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside l'dtll• Counly

13 Weeks .......................................... $27.30
26 Weeks . , ........................... ,..
...S53.K2

~2 Weeks. ....

..SIII5.5lt
Rain OuiJJkk Mtlp Counly

13 Weeks ........................... .
2ftWeeh
52 Weeks .

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

Am Ele Power ...............49 t Sit 6
Akzo ................................ 102 518
AmrTeeh ................................. 47
Ashland 011 .....................56 7/16
AT&amp;T .................................65 3/8
Bank One ........................62 9/16
Bob Evans ........................ 21 518
Borg-Warner ....... :...........62 5/16
Broughton ......................... 14 3/8
Champion ...............................15
Charm Shps ...... ~ ............ 411/16
City Holding .................... :....... 48
Federal Mogul.. .................50 1/4
Gannett ........................... 68 5116
Goodyear .......................... 71 1/8
Krnart ................................. 161/2
Kroger ...............................44 7/8
Lands End ......................... 38 5/8
Limited ............................ 29 7116
Oak Hill Fln1 ...................... 28 112
OVB ...................... .,...........,. .....41
One Valley ....................... 37 5/16
Peoples ...................................42
Prem Flnl ................................. 22
Rockwell ........................... 60 1/2
AD/Shell ........................54 11/16
Sears :..............................58 1/16
Shoney's ........................... 4 7116
Star Bank ......................60 13114
Wendy's ............................ 21 1/4
Worthlngton ..................1711116

.....--...--

-----~~- - - - - - - -·~ -~~-....:...----

Elaine Fulton George, 93. 2764 Bulaville Pike. Gallipolis, died Wednesday, March 18, 1998 at her residence.
•
Born Nov. 30, 1904, in Addison Township. daughter of the late Edgar ·E.
and Minnit B. Loucks Fulton, she was a retired teacher from the Gallia County Local Schools.
She wa5 a graduate ofGalliaAcademy High School and Rio Grande College. She was a member of the Bulaville Christian Church. and allended the
Good News Baptist Church. She wa.~ also a member fo the Bulaville Grange.
Galha County Rettred Teachers Association. Area Council on Aging. Gallia County Senior Citizens, a Charter Member of Gallia Academy High
School Alumni Association and the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs. She
was a member of several area garden clubs.
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by her husband,
Harley K. George on Sept. 30, 1990; and by a brother, Shelton Glenn FullQn.

She is survived by the following niece&lt;. nephews and cousins: Margaret
Allemaog, Mary Akers. Georgia Saunders, Jean Yount. Patti Snyder. Dot
Thomas, Louise 0' Briant. Mary Lou Fenny, Carol Huff. Kay Ervin. Shelia
Zinn. Jim George. Mark George. George Miller. Ed Vollbom. Fred Vollborn.
Ray Vollbom. Stephen George. Kenneth Amsbary. Harry Amsbary and Gordon Amsbary.
.
Services will be I p.m. Friday, March 20. !998, in the Cremeens Funeral Chapel. with Rev. Clifford Curry will .officiate. Burial will follow in the
family plot at Gravel Holl Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call at the
Chapel from 6-9. tonight.
.

Paul Searles
Paul Searles. 78, Cheshire. died on Thursday. March 19, 1998 at his residence.
He was born on May 5, 1919 in Gallia County, son of the late Asel and
Rosa Denny Searles. He was a veleran of the U.S. Army during World War
II, was a member of Feeney-Bennell Post 128 of the American Legion. and
was employed as a farmer and coal miner. He was a member of Silver Run
Baptist Church.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Joan and William Fife, Cheshire;
a daughter-in-law. Karen Searles of Columbus; two brothers and sisters-inlaw: John and Doris Searles of Dayton and Alvin and Carol Searles of Chicago; three sisters: Agnes Elkins of Bellnower. Calif., Louise Wray of Baltimore. Ohio. and Bernice Speck. Long Beach. Calif.: four grandchildren and
five great grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife. Gertrude Searles. in 1989. two sons, Paul Allen and K~nneth Searles, and four brothers:
Asel, Jr., Herben. Leonard and Alben Searles.
Services will be held on Saturday. March 21. 1998 at II a.m. at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Pastor Bill Lillie will officiate, and
burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.

Paul Searles
Paul Searles, 78. Cheshire, died on Thursday. March ' 19. 1998 at hi s res·
idence.
He was born on May 5, 1919 in Gallia County, son of the late Asel and
Rosa Denny Searles. He wa.&gt;a veteran of the U.S, Army during World War
II, was a member of Feeney-Bennell Post 128 of the American Legion, and
was employed as a farmer and coal miner. He was a member of Silver Run
Baptist Church. His CB handle was "Mr. Haney."
Surviving are a daughter and son-m-law, Joan and William Fife. Che&lt;hore;
a daughter-in-law. Karen Searles of Columbus; two brothers and sisters-in·
1aw: John and Doris Searles of Dayton and Alvin and Carol Searles of Chicago; three sisters: Agnes Elkins of Bellflower, Calif .. Louise Wray of Baltimore. Ohio, and Bernice Speck, Long Beach, Calif.; four grandchildren: Tim
Fife. Minersvolle . .and hiS !lance. Stephanie Banks. Melissa and Jim Morrow, Gallipolis, Vicki and Rob Warburton. Columbus. and Krisly Searles,
Columbus; and five great grandchildren.
Besides his parents. he was preceded in death by his wife. Gertrude Searles, in 1989, two sons. Paul Allen and Kenneth Searles. and four brothers:
Asel. Jr.. Herbert. Leonard and Albert Searles.
Services will be held on Saturday. March 21, !998 al II a.m. at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Pastor Bill Lillie will officiate, and
burial will follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 lo 4 and 7 lo 9
p.m.

Anniversary

GOLDIN

Band5

STOCK'
OUR PRICES

Gold Chom' &amp;

CAN'T llE
BEAT'

Bracelets

__.__

~~

Und wOtcMes in stock. Wr: offer expert jewelry repair and the most
helpful .service available. Stop in and look 8t our fine selection of

JUST
ARRIVEDI

AVAilABLE IN OUR STORE ONLY

~

TWO LOCATIONS
151 2nd Ave., Galllpolla ·
81 Mill St, Middleport
MBIIIber Jewf/erl &amp;&gt;ard of Tmde

Free Parking
!laiiiJ
Free Gift Wrapping
•
• •Diamonde •Gold.Chalns
!i!1ft11
•Selko Watches
illliti . •Cr!)ll Pane •Rate Colna

RECliNER SALE

POMEROY
COURTHOUSE

Recliners for tall people, short people,
small people and big people.
We have a recliner to fit you!

OUR ENTmE STOCK
IS ON SAJ,E.
All Sofas, Loveseats and Sectlonals
included in this Upholstery Sale.

NO OBLIGATION QUOTES!

SA I.E

APPLIANCE
SALE

GLIDER ROCKERS

All Maytag On Sale .
All Whirlpool On Sale!
All Roper On Sale!

Twin
ea. pc.

Twin
ea pc

Reg. Sale
Reg. Sala
Full ea. pc ............. $259 $129 Full ea. pc ............. $369 $199
Queen set... .......... $499 $339 Queen set.. ...... ..... $699 $449
King set ................. $799 $479 King set._............... $999 $649

Serta Perfect Sleeper®
Chaparral Elite

Serta Perfect Sleeper 11
Ch:amtrr:Jd Plus

Twin
ea. pc.

Reg. Sale
Reg. Sal a
Full ea. pc ............. $649 $469 Full ea pc ............ $669 $499
Queen set.. ........... $799 $529 Queen set... .......... $899 $639
Kin!l set ............... $1 099 $799 King set... ............ $1199 $899

Free Dttllvery, Free S4!t-up, Free Removal of BedcUng

Mon.·Sat.
9:30 to 5:00

Many Styles and Fabrics
SALE PRICES START AT ONLY

· SAI.E!

QUALITY jewelry!

54.cquisitions fine Jewett:;

!:41,7*

ta,nl

Trackless Carpets
Berber Carpets
Sculptured Carpets
Commercial Carpets
Plush Carpets

Twtn
ea. pc.
wllllt your husiness! SA Vf: on all purchases of fine g~ld ; diamond:i

.,..
~nl

-II'&lt;&gt;·~
lJ1IIIIIBfS Till I '&lt;&gt; I ~

CARPE,. SALE

The eat's Meow VIllage"'

I 0 Year Non Prorated Warranty

AcquiSitions Fine Jcwdry has the lowest prices in th e area. We

lllliOIIIIT IllS ~~'&lt;&gt;'~

~--~----.---------------~--------------~
FLEXSTEEL &amp; .ERKLINE

$
tO&amp; 14KT

m

ii'GI

NICHOLSON, HELEN

Duraposture

Diamond
Solhaircs

118CIIY1fll
IIJUIE llfiT

tli,ni
1:41

GOOD AS IT GETS
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

-·-·-

SAVE UPTO
70%0FF ALL

m

LA. t:ariiiNIW. iR1

miere.
Birth
Mr. and · Mrs. Rodney Perry,

Veterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS -- None.
DISCHARGED
WEDNESDAY-- James Spaun.
Holzer Medical Cernter
Wednesday, March 18
Discharges
Frances Tucker. Bessie McCol!urn, Margaret Sowers. Kristie
. Sheets. Roben Davis. Rhoda Rcit-

.

TIIIIIIOWIBI ii'GJ

- - - Hospital news---

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

Brock says he has doubts.about what he di.d

Re: Ambivalent deception

The Daily Sentil'!el • Page 3

Elaine George

Thuraday, Milch
. 19, 111911.

taries of Defense; 60 lop retired gen- he's likely to observe, is a dream
all presidential
By Morton Kondracke
erals
and admirals, and a bevy of firit enunciated in 1975 by Ronald
With
a
Senate
victory
on
NATO
approval
rating
'Esta/J{islid in 1948
CEOs.
Reagan.
expansion and a trip to Africa, Pres- from 62 to 66 perIn mid-May, Clinton goes to Engident
Clinton
launches
a
monthsClinton
commined
himself
10
the
cent
in
the
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
land
for a Summit of the Eight-- forexpansion
early
and
unequivocally,
long
run
of
foreign
policy
activities
NBC/Wall Street
614-992-2156 • FaK 992·2157
merly
known as the G-7 economic
convinced
Russian
Prc;sidenl
Boris
this week that should sustain his Journal pill!. His
summit-where the top issue is likeYeltsin to seal a strategic pact with
public suppon amid ethica: bauer- foreign
policy
ly
to
be
Asia,
especially Japan's fail NATO, and opened the way for furmg.
approval rating
ure
10
reform
and stimulate its econForeign initiatives won't save went from 54 perther expansions ·in Eastern Europe
withoullymg himself to a panicular omy.
Clinton from impeachr.o~at any cent in January to
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
White House advisers say that
timetable -- all of which deflated
more than they did Richrud Nixon if 61 pen:enl in late Kondracke
summit
host -- and Clinton soul
ROBERT L. WINGETT
potential opposition.
smoking-gun evidence of lawbreak- February.
Publisher
As Clinton advosers note, his mate -- British Prime Minister Tony
This week or early next, Clinton
ing emerges, but .they could tilt the
political scales in his favor on a close w1ll make a genumely historic mark Africa trip staning next Sunday will Blair is likely to do whatever he can
in foreign policy when the Senate serve to "solidify the Democratic to stage events during the visit 10
call.
Even
though
advisers
acknowlratifies the expansion of NATO to base" among African-Americans. II bolster Clinton's political standing
MARGARET
LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Poland, the Czech Republic, and will also help win Senate passage of al home just prior to the opening of
edge
he
is
spending
"a
lot
of
time"
Controller
General Manager
the first-ever U.S.-Africa trade the Paula Jones trial in Lillie Rock. ·
with his lawyers. Clinton repeatedly Hungary.
The pro-ratification vote is agreement that passed the House last Ark .. on May 27.
· assens that he is "too busy doing the
At a U.S.-.European Union sumTl&gt;t Stnlintl IWI&lt;Omfllettwo to tho odnor from , . - . .., •
or topic&amp;
work the American people elected expected to be considerably larger week. .
Short lottOI'fl (300 words or 1..,) 11&gt;t ,.., ciUI- Of bo/tlf/ ,..,.,..,. 1'ypH ,.,_
d •
h M · than the necessary 67, representing a
Clinton's hardest foreign policy mil that's part of the same trip, Clin,.
,,.
prettrrod
nd
ell
may,.
od/IH.
Eoch
lhould
lncluH
•
IIIQtYIVro,
•dd-.
me
lo
o'
to
comment
on
t
e
ont1
10
'"" dllytlme p/10110 number. Specify • dlltolf lhwo'o .,.-...to •,.Wouutllclo
ca Lewinsky scandal and related spectacular triumph in selling a fight of the year -- which will come ton is expected io initoale talks leador larilr. Mall ro: t.ertfl'l to Ill• E&lt;llror, Tl&gt;l sentiM~ 1ft Court St. Pomorr&gt;y, Ohio
; mailers. As a result, he looks like
potentially controversial initiative ·to a head after Clinton returns from ing to free trade agreements wit~
4S1fi; or, FAX to i14-H2~15'1. _______
. ~~...,~""""'....,r-..,..-: he's working full lime on public
L...:::::::.::::,:;:::.::;:.::.::::=:;:.;;;,;.
Africa -- remains replenishment of Europe on services and intellectu~l
oppo~ bJ an assonment of foes.
the
International Monetary Fund, property.
incluao~t
Buchanan.
various
libbusinesseveniflhat's notthecasc.
Clinton goes to China in late Jun~
Foreign policy definttely allows eral peace groups. the New York which is being threatened by conser-.
•
Clinton to be presidential, especially Times, ~nd former Sen. Sam Nunn , vative Republicans who wanllo add -- a trip rescheduled last ~eek in a
a ban on U.S. suppon for groups step which aroused suspicions that
when it produCeS impreSSIVC VISUals D-Ga.
In a campaign run from the State advocating abonion as a family- Clinton might be staging a diversion
such as those expected late this
from impeachment hearings thai
By WALTER R. MEARS
month when Clinton visits war-rav- Department by Jeremy Rosner, a planning option abroad.
Administration officials think could be under way then.
AP Special Correspondent
.
.
.
.
aged Rwanda and spends three days former National Security Council
Administration officials insist
aide, the administration assembled Clinton will win his game of
WASHINGTON - Twice, congressoonal Republtcans have lned lo wm in Nelson Mandela's South Africa.
"chicken"
with
the
nght
hecausc
that
the dates were changed because
suppon
from
all
living
former
Sectheir way by attaching policy amendments to spendmg bills that must be
Last month, Clinton's confronlaChina
insisted it did not want Clinbusiness
leaders
will
lean
on
Repubretaries
of
State
and
most
Secreenactcd- and twice they 've lost to President Clinton. They're back for a uon with Iraq helped boost his overton's
visit
to be an add-on to another
.
licans,
fearing
that
failthird try.
r-------------~---------------, ure to support the IMF
trip
to
Asia-the Asian-Pacific sumThere are new. issues. wh1ch could work 'to GOP advantage in the replay.
mit
scheduled
for Malaysia in
will
lead
to
an
economThere also are familiar ones that undercut them before - appropriations for
WHAT~ ON TilE MINDS ofT~'() IS·YEAI?-OI.DS?
November
-but
an exclusive jouric
panic
in
Asia
and
a
disaster relie f to aid victims of the El Nino storms and flood9 and to pay for
ney
like
Chinese
President Jiang
downturn
in
the
U.S.
U.S. military operations in the Persian Gulf and Bosnia.
Zell]in's
to
the
United
Stales last
economy.
But
some
And there is enough in common with earlier rounds for Clinton's openoutside
experts
think
·
year.
ing salvo on the subject. broadcast this weekend, 10 echo what he said last
What difference will this periClinton could lose,
time, 14 months ago.
patelicism
make? Not much if spethough
blame
for
the
"These emergency measures are vital to the national interest," he said in
cial
prosecutor
Kenneth ~larr has
consequences
likely
his radio address, " ... but unfortunately, some in Congress are preparing to
hard
evidence
that
Clinton obstructwould
fall
on
the
GOP.
slip unrelated controversial provisions into the bill, proposals guaranteed to
ed
justice.
Clinton
returns
produce gridlock and delay."
But if what Starr produces is evifrom Africa on April 2,
Plus, he suggested, another veto, as when he vetoed a disaster relief
and in the middle of the dence of sexual infidelity ·and perappropriation in June 1997 to block two unrelated Republican provisions
month heads for Santi- jury about that, images of Chnton
and won a settlement that stripped them from the bill, after polls showed tbe
ago.
Chile, for the with Yeltsin and Mandela just might
GOP was being blamed for the delay.
Western
Hemisphere make ihe public think Clinton is too
"Congress would be unwise to head down that same road again," he said.
summit,
where
he will valuable to be ousted from office. '
Clinton said he wants straoghtforward emergency money measures. "No
(Mor1on Kondracke is execulaunch
negotiations
for
unacceptable provisions. No political gimmicks."
tive
editor of Roll Call, the newsa
Free
Trade
Area
of
But hiS side of the argument ISn't as simple as it was in 1997, when the
paper
of Capitol Hill.)
bill was largely for disaster relief after Midwestern flooding . Tbe wrangling
the Americas -- which .
·'
over Republican add-ons lied it up for three months.
The tacuc is nothing n•:w. ll is to use bills that will be difficult for the
president to veto as the vehicles for legislation that would be blocked, by
majorities or filibusters, were it handled separately. Democrats usi:d to do
the same thmg when the:· controlled Congress and Republicans were in the
fidelity to causes in which he than just beg credulity; they Christians.
Whole House.
By Ben Wattenberg
Now storm disaster aid is part of the package, "perhaps most important
betrayed lhe·public trust. "
Some still think that a Jew, or
I chaned recently with former believes."
of all." Clinton said, but not all. The broader dispute involves the payment Vice President Dan Quayle. More
IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR
He favors the death penalty and African-Arilerican, or a Latino, or ·a
of back dues to the United Nation&gt; and money to replenish the Internation- mature, aniculate aQd forceful than DEMOCRATS. The Democratic pri- vigorously supponed George Bush woman, can ' I win the presiden4.
al Monetary Fund after Asian economic crises.
in his earlier incarnation, Quayle maries of 2000 wtll likely be, again, on the Gulf War. He is an environ- Until 1960 similar views were held
Clinton's case may be more diff1cull on the international spending items plans to run for president in 2000. a " Iefler than thou" bidding contest mentalist with a strong background about Catholics. Then John Kenn~
than it was when hiS vetoes of Republican spending cuts led to panial gov- He thinks he can win the GOP nom- among candidates seeking suppon in civil rights, consumerism and was elected. Catholicism is now 'a
ernment shutdowns in 1995 and early 1996, and they got the political blame. inauon. He believes he could beat AI from liberal special interests: labor. civil libenies. He supponed Clin- nonissue. The sooner we get the variThey dod. agam. in the disaster relief dispute of 1997, when Clinton's veto Gore. He thinks Gore, in his current feminisls, blacks, environmentalists. ton's 1996 welfare reform and ous nonelectabillty issues behind ui,
was over GOP amendments to bar the use of statistical sampling as pan of incarnation, is too liberal to win. It is Consider a sorry example. At a opposed Clinton's 1994 health care the stronger this pluralist nation will
the 2000 census. and to automatically reduce and extend appropriations not an unrealistic scenario.
recent pro-racial-preference speech reform.
be.
when Congress and the White House can 'I come to terms on Spj:nding.
I asked Quayle: Suppose Gore at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Vice
Democrats need a Tony Blatr.
IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR
In eac h case. the settlement was on Clinton 's terms, with compromises on didn't gel nominated? He respond- President Gore attacked as hyp- The British prime minister ran as JOE LIEBERMAN. He'll be 58 in
the Side to deal wtlh the disputes.
ed: The other possible Democrats ocrites thGse who support a "color- " New Labor," critical of Labor's 2000. If he docsn 't run and Gore ~
Now Republicans arc pushing anti-abortion amendments lo the interna- are even more liberal. I said: What blind" society: "We see through "loony left," and stuck to his guns elected fo~ two terms, Lieberman
ti onal spcndmg measures, seeking a ban on use of U.S. funds in suppon of about Joe Lieberman? Quayle your colorblind. Amazing grace when elected. Clinton and Gore ran · would be 66 in 2008, perhaps too
foreign organo7.attons that work against abortion restrictions. even when that paused. He said: Loeberman? Is saved a wretch like me. Was color- as "New Democrats." They did old. He will not likely be chosen tl&gt;
Lieberman running? Lieberman 's blind but now I see."
some good things. But they caved in run as vice president in 2000. A
is done without American money.
That same dispute blocked the same appropnations late in 1997, before not running. He'd be the toughest
Sec what? That 80 percent of so often they are tarnished. A Democratic nominee prepared 1~
economtc 1urmool in Asia, which the White House said niakes the $18 bil- Deinocral to beat. Tell Lieberman Amencans, including about half of Lieberman campaign could force risk the religious issue can tum tb
li on IMF appropriation "essential to our own economoc health."
nol to run.
blacks, oppose preference and suppon Democrats to move toward the Sen. Dianne Feinstein, female, anO
The admtnostrauon and Congress are working on lJrovisions involving
Later, Quayle sent a note: "Dear a colorblind America:
aclovisl center.
from vote-rich California. Liebe't
IMF operations - legiumate concerns, according to the White House. But Ben. I enjoyed our visit. Please have
Lieberman favors colorblindness.
IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR man could raise stan up money from
the abortion issue is the collision point.
our mutual friend Joe L. stay in the and has engaged in rhetorical com- REPUBLICANS. The GOP needs a a base of DLC and Jewish contribu~
bat about it with the Rev. Jesse Jack- positive agenda. As long as Democrats tors (as Michael Dukakis got see4
Senate."
But Joe L., Democrat of Con- son. Lieberman, president of the arc dragged leftward, Republicans money from the Greek-American
necticut, may well run for president. Democratic Leadership Council thonk they can win by not being them. community). The Connecticut pri;
He should. Here 's why:
{DLC). is no liberal by the current But Democrats un-dragged leftward mary is held in September; Lieber:
IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR definition . He supports school· would force Republicans to again man could run for re-election if he
AMERICA. Lieberman is articulate, voucher pilot programs. He works become "the party of idea.•." The lost his presidential bid.
We sure know that it is election ume. Promises are flying about what the some say inspiring. He is respected closely with Republican Bill Ben· sight of the gallows sharpens the
I watched Lieberman give rous;
candtdatcs wt ll Jo.and have done in the past.
in both par•ies. unusual in this lome nett and Democrat C. Delores Tuck- mind: In 1994. a· Republican year, ing political speeches in publi~
Reall y. what has hecn done is very little and of course what will be done of political acrimony. In the er to put pressure on the cultural- Ltcberman was rc:elccted in bell- parks when he was a teen-ager
•· Almanac of American Politics," industrial complex, trying to get wether Connecticut by a 67-to-31 per- Stamford, Conn. He w,as a Wu~
IS ve ry ltttle tf they the candidates run true to form .
In the last governor's election. if you would have listened to the rhetoric, Michael Barone writes: "In a decade some obscenity out of television cent vote.·
derkind. The adults would murmu(
Southern Ohto wou ld have had everything, paved new highways and the in the Senate (Lieberman) has exert- programming. As a member of the
IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR "Somectay, Joe Lieberman is going
ed influence out of proportion to his Thompson· Commillee, he filed an PLURALISM. Lieberman is a Mod- to be president." Someday is now.
whole lllne yards.
What did Mctgs County gct--ahout three miles of new highway, a four seniority, comrniuee position or independent report condemning em Onhodox Jew. He does not work Or never.
:
lane that runs mto two lanes to nowhere. Now the talk is staning at the political clout, an influence that both panics for campaign finance on the Sabbath (except in rare emerBen Wattenberg Is a writer for
Ravenswood Bndge with an improved two lane highway which will go out came from respect for his indepen- abuse: "The truth IS that the mad gencies). He is respected for his Newspaper Enterprise Assoclatloll
m the country and dead end there and probably lay there for another 10 dence of mind, civility of spirit and hauers from both panics did more strong religious beliefs by Jews and
years .
As lon g as we have governors from Cleveland then that's where the roads
and lactones will go. The trouble with Southern Oh10, il is·still living in the
past horse and buggy days
that case led to the Monica Lewin- in another Esquire piece, in which he which he made many preposterous
By Joseph Spear
The veterans tn Southern Ohio arc ·gelling shon changed.
sky
revelations, which attracted the discussed a biography he wrote of charges, among them the claim that
The man who lit the fire that healWe have many older veterans who would like and deserve to go to~ vet- ed the ,pol in which Bill Oinlon is attention of the righteQUS Kenneth Hillary Clinton. After the Republi - Clinton stole olll of the While House
erans home. Guc" where the only veterans home is? Sandusky.
now boiling apologized to the presi- Starr and his Couon Mather can takeover of Congress, he wrote, to meet paramours al a hotel. Brock
L:tsl )Car a bunch of polt llcians came to Meigs County and other areas. dent the other day. lri so doing, he Brigade, which in turn led to the "I sold a proposal for a book on the said he· was the sole source for that
Mrs l'll'kcns offered property for a home which would have been a very said a mouthful about the idiocy of frenzy that currently consumes the most tempting target I could thinK tale. and it was pure gossip. He
good localton GueS&gt; agatn the tssue must be dead.
nation .
of, Hillary Clinton ... M)'&gt; frank added: "I was outraged when conideology.
It's noth111g but dirty politiCS. Tell me one thing that doesn't have politics
Now, Brock says in an anicle for· intention was to butcher my prey."
Da.,.id Brock, the young conservs.ervalive outlets like the Washington
m tt. You have to scratch somebody's back to get something done.
The biography turned out to be Times (and) the Wall Street Journal
ative who made his name with a Esquire Magazine, he has doubts
Enough is enough. lets sec that these politicians do whallhey say.
muckraking book about Anita Hill. about what he did. He was steered to relatively flattering, and Brock's editorial page ... let Aldrich brazen it
Denver Curtis, was the first to give national expo- the troopers by die-hard Clinton- right-wing associates went berserk. out and perpetrated a hoax on thci
BidweU -sure· lo the Arkansas -slate troopers haters, he says . The bodyguards He had sold out, they said. Brock public by celebrating 'Unlimited
who claimed they h.ad abened Clin- " were greedy and had slimy was on an ego trip and his book was Access' as legitimate and well researched .''
ton's womanizing when he was gov- motives," in that they were looking a whitewash.
Wrote
Brock:
"Most
conservafor
a
book
contract
'lind
displayed
a
Lesson No. 3: Truth os irrelevant·
ernor of Arkansas.
"palpable contempt for Hillary." He tives have come lo so revile Hillary to ideologues. The paramount thing ,:
Brock's
1993
expose
appeared
in
On the very Simplest of terms unc is either for something or against someis still not sure of the accuracy of Clinton and everything she reprelhtn g. Any other exprcssw n of voew IS at least ambivalent or at worst an the American Spectator, a right-wing what they told him. He laments hos sents that they have lost their moor- the only thing that mailers, is the :
cause.
periodical that specializes in Clintntentt onal and calc ulated effort to deceive .
ings,
forgetting
that
they
had
.
lack
of
skepticism
and
now
realizes
Concluded Brock in his July :
. For mstancc. those poltllcos who say: "I am personally opposed to abor- ton-bashing. ')'he story was, in the that he was blinded by ideology.
opposed Hillary in the first place on · 1997 article: "I've seen aspects of:
author's
words,
"perhaps
'the
most
toon but wol l support a woman's right to pnvacy" clearly meet the criterion
In his. mea culp~ to Clinton, political grounds, not out of-person- the conservative · movement that :
of what I choose 1o call "ambivalent deception." Regardless of rhetorical humiliating portrait of a sitting pres- Brock says he was caught up in a al loathing."
makes ine regret having ever been·
mantpulallon or 'erbal obfuscation one can't be both for something and 'idenl and his wife ever published."
Lesson No. 2: Ideologues don't associated with it. And I participated :
paroxysm of destruction and "conThe
story
mentioned
a
woman
agatnst somcthtng at the same ttme . One is either pro-life or con-life.... pronamed "Paula" who had allegedly spired to damage you and your pres-. know when to quit. They stan with in a scandal-fueled war against the :
lifc or pro-abortton• ·
•
:been ' escorted to Clinton's hotel idency." His rationale for writing the reasonable objection and argument, Clintons that produced Gary :
Anythmg else is intnguel
story was a "charade." His real pur- then are devoured by their obses- Aldrich; if that is what our conserv- •
Frankly th~ politocos' use of 'ambivalent deception" to obscure, confuse, room and afterward volunteered to pose: "To pop you right between the sions and quickly run things into the
alive cause boils down to. we're:
cover-up, or othcrwtsc lie is offcnstve to my intellect and to that of my fel - be the governor 's girlfriend. A few
ground.
doomed. "
•
eyes."
weeks
later,
Paula
Corbin
Jones
low ctllzens.
In
yet
another
run-in
with
his
Lesson No. I: ldeolog~es are
One can only pray.
,
Bob Murphy declated that she was the Paula in charlatans. They concoct noble ·erstwhile friends, Brock objected in
Joseph
Spear
is
a
syndicated
•·
Vinton question and announced that she.
1996
when"FBI
agent
cum
scandalwriter
for
Newspaper
Enterprise
:
motives
when
in
fact
they
are
often
would undertake to restore her
monger G~ Aldrich penned a book Association.
•
·name, as well as seek a modicum of driven by vile purposes.
called "l!nlimiled Access," in .
Brock
said
similar
things
last
July
remuneration. Clinton's testimony in

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.9L9{'1Jt£

DINING TABLE'
&amp; CHAIR SETS
Reg. $2S9 Drop-leaf Table,
$
2 Chairs ••••••••••••••••• Sale
Reg. $369 Oval Table,
4 chairs•••••••••••.•..•• Sale
5669
Reg.
.......Sale S
Reg. $929 Oak Farm Table
$
4 chairs ••••••••••••••••• Sale .

209

::~:::~~.~~~.~.~:

S39
39
7

MANY MORE SETS
TO CHOOSE FROM

09{:s

FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE
POMEROY

992·3671

SAVE . SAVE. SAVE SAVE . SAVE.SAVE .S AVE . SAVE . SAVE

.

.

~

.

'•

..

'

..

'

'•

I

•,

'•

•,.

•

_.

._

~

�Thursday, March 19,1998

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
,

COLUMBUS, Clhto (AP)- Gtrls
who Jed thelf teams to the state's final
four - Mmster's Lauren Shenk and
Bascom Hopewell Loudon's DtDt
Reynolds- are the featured sl!lfS on
the 1997-98 Assocmted Press Dtvtston IV aii-Clhto htgh school basketball team
The team was announced on
Wednesday
Shenk, a 5-foot -10 semor, and
Reynolds, a 6-l JUmor, shared play er of the year honors based on lhe
recommendations of a statewtde panel of sports wrtters and broadcasters
They dtdn'l meet dunng the regular season, but could tf each wms m
Fnday's state semtlinals
Founh-ranked Mmster (25-1 )
takes on No 3 Marton Pleasant (251) at 2 p m and mth-ranked
Hopewell-Loudon · (24-1) meets
Zanesvtlle Rosecrans (19-7) at 4
p m The wmners Will dectde the
champtonshtp at 5 p m Saturday
The coaches of the year are Bedford Chanel's lim Gamber and Mtke
Ward of Pleasant
Oluo State-bound Shenk averaged 16 '8 pomts, 3 6 rebounds, 4 5
asststs and three steals after earnmg

has been trymg to take a far less-talented team to the
NIT semtfinals
The Gophe~ (18-15) accomplished that Wednesday
after needmg an upset wm over Mtchtgan State mthe
mauguml Btg Ten loumament JUSt to squeeze mto the
NIT
And they can !hank Jacobson the talented small forward Haskms started woomg long belore Jacobson
became a star at Park Htgh School m Couage Grove.
JUS! southeast of the Twm Ctttes
A semor Jacobson tintshed m style m hts last home
game He had 16 of hts 21 pomts tn the second hall
and added II rebounds and five asSJSts After Mmnesota
wasted a nme poml second half lead Jacobson used a
mfly spm move to set up a tymg scoop layup wuh 57
seconds left He rebounded a mtss at the other end on
Marquette s next possessiOn, then drove 10 the wmnma
basket wuh 25 seconds left
e
"We knew Jacobson would want the ball ' Marqueue sentor Aaron Hutchms satd
The Eagles JUS! dtdn 1 know how badly Jacobson
wanted to make the plays that mauered m)lts last game
at Wdhams Arena
"Gomg through me That's the way I wanted to do
11, ' he satd "I dtdn"t want to be a guy who htdes m
the ~:omer ·
Because Jacobson came through m hts last college
game at home. sen tor pomt guard Enc Hams Will get
to play hts first college game at home Hams grew up
mthe Bronx. and plans to show hts teammates all the
stghts before they play Fresno State or Hawan next
Tuesday at New York City's MadJSon Square Garden
" I lee! like the wetghtts oft my shoulders now" satd
Hams. who shot JUS! 1-for-8 Wednesday I wanted to
get there so bad '

The other semttinal wtll p:ur Penn State, a 75-70
wmner over Georgta Tech, agamst the wmner of
tontght s game between Vanderbtlt and Georgta
Hams and Jacobson have won 89 games dunng thetr
careers. more than any other patrol players m Mmnesota hiStory Butttlooked hke the1r mark would stand
at 88 as Marqueue pulled ahead m the final mmutes
First the Eagles (20-11) took advantage of foul
problems along Mmnesota 's frontline to wtpe out the
nme-potnt deltctl Then, they used the three-pam!
shootmg of John Cliff and Aaron Hutchms to take a 6559 lead wtth 7 13 lelt
The lead was 71 -67 when Hutchtns hit two free
throws wtth I 30 remammg, the last ot hts team-htgh
20 pom!s But Marqueue, whtch rail ted I rom live down
m the tina! 24 seconds to force overttme 111 Monday's
wm over Auburn couldn't make 11 stand up
Mtke Bargen mtssed the front end ol two one-andone sttuatJOns m the final 2 23 and Clift mtssed two
open three-potnters 111 the final 45 seconds
"I was very proud of our guys.' coach Mtke Deane
satd after Marqueue 's SIXth stratght 20-wm season end
ed - They could have melted at the half and packed 11
up but they dtdn t We came out and dtd the exact
oppostteSatd Hutchms "Its dtsappomtmg to end (my
career) wilh a loss but 11 was a great loss Penn State 75, Georgta Tech 70 - Greg Grays
scored 14 ol hts 18 pomts m the second hall mdudmg the ltebreakmg three-pomter, as the Nutany Ltons
won at G!!orgm Tech
Grays, a freshman reserve hll a three pmnter With
6 36 remamtng to gtve the Ntttany Ltons a 57-54 lead
they would not relinqutsh

By RUSTY MILLER

Spivey In the first half of Wednesday night's NIT
quarterfinal game In Atlanta, Ga., where the Nittany Lions won 75-70. (AP)

SPLITS THE DEFENSE - Penn State's Titus
Ivory (33) splits the defense offered by Georgia
Tech defenders Mtchael Maddox (left) and Travis

The season started wtth a seven
page arttcle 111 Spans Illustrated and
the anentton hasn't substded for
Dayton Chammade-Jultenne's Tamtka Wtlhams
Now she wtll be performmg at the
23rd annual state htgh school g~rls
tournament wuh a lot more eyes
watchmg her after wmmng the 1998
Ohto Assoctated Press Ms Basketball Award on Wednesday
All year Wtlliams has borne the
burden of expect.tttons and h.ts
shrugged 11 all astde
"It was good pressure," smd
Wtlhams, who has Signed wtth the
Umverstty of Connecttcut
The 6 foot-1 semor a\eraged 18 8
pomts, II 6 rebounds. five asststs and
3 2 steals a game wh1le shootmg 614
percent from the field and 77 4 percent from the free-throw Ime
What does she do hest 0 Her
answer reveals a lot .tboutthe kmd of
player she IS
"Probably reboundmg .md bemg
a lillie qUicker than a lot of gtrls I go
up agamst · she s.ud "And playmg
anywhere The last three games I've

Scoreboard
P"nn S1 a1c 7 ~ Ge ur~1a T.c ~ h 70
Mlmk '&gt;ll11 71 MlrlJUdl• 7 1

Basketball

1 om~ht's quarterfinals
\ ttllkrb1lt P O 12111 Cml t&amp; l ~t(]K 141 Hp m

NBA standings

Frt

EASTERN CONFERENCE

,, ru.0&lt; 7

ll: L

Nlw Yurt.

'"'"
"" ,,""
,,
,,
"'
"'
,.'"
"

(JI{&gt;

')

(-.I I')

H)

N~:" Jcr,cy
w.~ hln j.: hl l

II

Orl1n1l•

a. ~ t on

Pint ll.klplu 1

II&lt;
II
' II

W!
)

II
II

,.
'"'" "

Atlwt•

Cl EVII 1\ ND
Dc1wu

' II

h

M • lv. n ul.. &lt;~
I tQ t nlu

l

\lulv.t '! ''"' ' un

~
~

Ut 1h
S m Arll

,,"

11•

I

II

Mmn..: M•t•
llL OU \t f

"""'
I

'i(XJ

IO

,,

I';

[) If I\
Dunn

ru.

I

"7
II '

Panfif Or' • ~ wn
1

,,I

'~~li lt 'ill

, I A I hr '
1 l'hocru•

I

\ ClrJ f'tl'
G,,IJ,:n S 11
1 Lhlli.hl I J l11 II I'&lt;.'fill

I 'I

\\ u lnu.d a\ .,
I\J1IIIII )-I
IJr.: pi

Ph il

\

I

II

l IIIU

~•~~ n ..

I

!04 [ldl

t\l..rnn ll(lh,u -1 7 \\ l r ~ 1u~ 1 l /'1
( 111 k&lt;}!cl B IL nn 7t.. ( t&gt;l Rn-~. h~. roll bl
Lll Bt oc d iLhllt (J'i ( ) tti W I Gl 01nJor1 'i 7
C I ~ l tltln t 61 lkllt,;vuc W

lA H r 1(1 f'h h ~ ~
It uml •• 11 lJ 1J11 h'i l m M ~. N1 ~ h '''' 'i 2
N v. l l \ 11 I 111 'ill \.1 tnu I rau J 1

J1 \J IIIli' It I
Clllrl&lt;llclll L11! 1\'i
s~ 111 1. 1 t , u r1 '"''' ~~~

I

1 ~11, IJ i' h ll iH

~ ~amt&gt; ~
1 ~ 1 11
11

I un1ghl

lu.b 111 t '' \1. 1\h l
IA'n\ t l II I ll nlu 1 1 m
Pnr1 l 1n;l 1 N ~ l'. ~ur~ ~ IOltl
Orl1n..lo 11 N~w l~ll~) 7 1(} p n
Mdv. )u klr 1 \rl 11 11 7 101 111

Goldeu\lut 1 Dlllt&gt; ~ HJpm
Bnuon 11 H( U\1 11 :-; lO 1 m
( LEVI I A/'I. IJ JISidlt~nl II! 'l t m

Fnd&lt;t} s g:mJH
N.:~~o Jtt\l) 11ln l1 1n ~ 1 n
All tOI I MN,,., \ 1!..-. ( 1 n
Ur lh 11 PluiJtldplut
01111
l'••rtlmd 11 t tzl n I
•0 !'en
( okk n 'iltlt' II \ !J II~ I 10 j) '11

T oronll 11 L\ tr1 11 '\ p 1
V&lt;~n~OU\UJ I (h,f. 11tn

()(:I vrr

'

"

~t

\I \krun ~«' mlfin::al~
U r n ll tJd ud ( J 2 I J "'~ Sh 1k('r Hts (22 I)
nlur , J ry 7 tm
I&lt; •}! 1n 1 lhunp11trl\ h1p Ckvr.: St Jgn 111us
( J7 7) \ I A ~ n II n ILh lt 1/Silllr.:r Hts W tnn~ r s II
urd v 7 1tlp m

AI Ua}lun final
\\ hill ~~ 0 l )fi:') C HJ Vtuhrow

ll 1) l1lc nLI
I ll 61 I 11'\11\ } 1
h

II

"

t
Ill 1 1

"1mne1uiJ t1 p 111

Ch 1rl o11 ~ II S 11 An10010 K lQ p m
St." \lilt nl l A t... ~ ~ . n 10 10 p m

NIT slate
Wednesday 's quarttorfinal scores

Thursday 6 I 'i I'm

Br.: rhn Hllan.J 120--ll vs Lowdlv11lc (14 101
TIIU~day H [l m
Fmal Saturday 1 p m

By The Associated Press
II was a rough mght for Karl Mo~l
one and the Utah Jazz
The Jazz had thelf 11 -game wmmng streak snapped by the Ch.trlone
Hornets II I -85 Wednesday mght,
and Mnlone fi111shed the game lookmg like a beaten boxer
Malone got scratched across the
eyes when Charlotte's Davtd Wesley
tned to block a shot late m the second qunrter Malone played the second half wtth swollen e) es ,md l.tter
accused Wesley of trymg to hurt htm
"I've played the game long
enough to know when a guy ts really gomg at the basketb.tll And he
went at my head," s:ud M.tlone, who
scored 17 pomtson 6-or-15 shootmg
"There's no way you htl ,, guy m
both hts eyes tf you were trymg to get
the basketball So I' II JUst throw that
one m my memory banks "
Wesley, who at 6-foot-1 202

l&lt;wD

At Daytoo fina l

t-l mulll!l B 1t.11n (20 ~ ) ~s C.n Ro~er D&lt;~..:u n
121 ! S 11urd 1 ~ 7 10 p nl
\t Hnwhng C. rtrn.nnal
( I ~Mil111 (2 1 l) vs Clt&gt;ve BciiCdlcllllt (11
X) S rturJ1) 710r m
AI \lhtn.~ final
Nl \1. Ll:.X IJ\GTON t l6 9) H Do\ er {22 2l
\ lurJ I) 7 lOp Ill

01\ tswn Ill finals
AI D•yton

l11 lndiJn lh li (I Rb)vs Ouy Ch ns l~:ln (2 \
I ! I n Ji ) 6 p m

At Alhtl\5
'\p u1 1 H1i!hbnd t24 I) \ S CHESA PEAKE
1 1 1 11 lndl) 7 \OJi lll
AI Tultdo
H 1\i ll!nd Yw aynt Trace t22 21 vs Rocky Rnh
lul hr.: r m \1.
21 Fu da~ 7 :m p m
A.l Canton
llt&gt; Jford Chand (22 2) "'' M:lu lll on Tusl:aw
(2 1 ' l Fnday 7 ]() p m

m

Dtvtslon IV S&lt;mllinals
AI Col umbus
~or wJ t l S! P01 ul (22 2) vs Rtchmo nd Dale
St ulhl-:tslem (20 1) Thursday 6 IS P m

Ba-;•ball
Amrntan lra~:ur
tEXAS RANG! RS Numr.:J 8ru H C r,hh ~
m llll,.t:r ol Pula.~k 1u l 1be Appalil!.:hMn Lc lt:U~ i\s
~1g n~d INF Warren Morns 10 thttr nnnor 1~ • ~,:uc
t:arnfi Opllolll.'d OF Marl!. Lillie to Okl .t1mn.:1 Cu y
or the ARk'ru: m AsWt:lauon an~ INF Rob S •~SI.!r
to Tul~ a of the l uas Lca,.ue

~t\11 \.i.: S

:I!'LI&amp;GE!LA

New JcrS4!y
Phtladelrtna ................. .
W015hmg1on
NY R&lt;~ngm

"' 11 9
l'i 20 10

9r t91 nt
80 llf\ 1411

N Y Islanders

22 14 10

Flondil

1Hl612
l 'i4l IJ

bl 169 I R~
'i4 171 IHH
4H l 'i7 201

Tampa B1y

11 21 11
22.21) 17

l:Ci- 19 14
12 26 9

292-1 Jl
27241'i
27 29 II
'·························:2b ll 7

-·-

1~

121.1 21 ..

IW JIJ2
71 194

l 'iH
16';1

71 174 16ll
69 16b

6'i l bO 16H
'\9 160 17!1

Ct'nlral Divi5ion _

:I!'LI&amp;GE!LA

x O:dl&gt;~s
Dclrod

St Louts
Phoenix
Chttato

41 16 tO
17 19 11
1624 8

92 204 1l6
87 207 16\
80 202 ' "

2610 II

64 I !II

189

61

161

24H 8

:'i61'i7 191

26

1 oromo

2~

12

167

P11c1fic: Dlwlslon

Colorildo ..................
Los Angelrs
Ellmonlon
S;m IOK"
Vancouver
C11lgary
Anahe1m
Iii

c hncMd playoffben h

14 19 16
11 2S II
26 11 10

27 11
21 17
20 14
21 17

84 201 172

1\ 194 177

62 176 196

7 61 164 179
II 11 191 240
I ' 11 176 205
9 I I IlK 208

Wednesday's scores
Pnuburgh 4 Edmon1on 2
Washmg1on I Carohna 0
N Y lslilnders 4 Ounwa 4 Otel
N Y Rangtrs 1 Montreal I (OT)
New Jer$Cy l Annhe1m 0
Tampa Bay 4 Vantouvt&gt;r 2
Detroa S Toronto 2

DaltllJ 1 San Jose I

Tomfl)lt's games
Flonda. D.l Buffalo 7 p m
Toronto nt Boston 7 10 p m
Anahctm at Ph•ludc:lplna 7 10 p m
Montre 11 11 Ch•cilgu 8 10 p m

B•skrtb•ll
Na110nal H11\ ktlhslll Assutlahun

NEW JER Sl¥ NilS

S 1 t: n ~d

I D1v1d

Vmt:hniOl:ICIUIIJ 10 Jty~o:•ulrlt.l
PHILADELPHIA 7tll RS Kd~ 1:\CU l W1lh.nn

Cunmngh,1mfmmn 10-tl•ywnlnd A~o:lt v u cJ( I
W1lft IIIIS fHIRI tht&gt; IIIJUft'J ~~~~
UTAH JA7J.: Ad iW1t~J C Crt&gt;~ Ostr.:rl ll! fn 111

BOULDER Colo (AP) - The December 1996 .md rehahtht,J!cd 11
agent for skter Ptcabo Street, who f.tster than anyone expected. mttme
suffered senous leg lllJUflcs l.ts! week for the Wmter Olymptcs m N.1gano
Ill Swttzerl.md, sal() she nught mtss
all of next season
I·
II " too soon to m.tke any !lectstons about the future, smd agent
The Public Utllnres Commrsston of
Brad Hunt, who Is based m Boulder
OhiO has set for public heanng Case
But Hunt on Wednesd.ty conceded 1t
No 97-1 02--EL-EFC. to revtew lhe
fuel procurement praelice$ an~ polt" concetvable Street mtght ne\er
ctes of Columbus Southern Power
race agam
Company, the operation of its Elec·
Hunt satd he h,ts recommended
tnc Fuel Component and relate~
she av01d mter\lews unt•i she h.ts
matters This heanng ts schedule~
made some dcc1stons
to
begtn at lhe Commtsston offices
The Olymptc super-G gold med tl
at
10
00 am on March 24, 1998
JSI suffered a broken left lemur ,md
ruptured nght amenor cruct.lle knee
All mterested parttes wtll De gtven
hgamentlasl Fnd.ty at the WUI ld C'up
an opportunity to be heard Further
Fmals
informatton may be obtatne~ by
She has heen ,11 the V.ul Valley
contactmg lhe Commtsston at 180
MedJC.tl Center m the care ol Dr
East Broa~ Slreet, Columbus Ohio
Rtchard Ste.tdm.m. smcc Sund.ty
43215-3793
.
Street mJurcd her left knee m

LEGAL NOTICE

lh.: IIIJ!lfn.i

Nlllk&gt;oal Fuulhaii!AaKU.:
CAROLINA PANTHERS I ulcd 1o m111,:h the
New Ork 1ns S:t!llt ~ ol fer ~h~o:'l.'l 111 S t11ad Cul t
CHI CAGO fl F:ARS Sl,_lll!d (, Mll.:c 7..uwJut
~ky 10 ,\IWO f('ai ullllf l~ t
OETRO il I IONS S1p.nt:J G I O\ llt: vt:rly 11KI
TE Erk Sttl\ l
INOIANAPOUS COLTS Matdtt.:tlthr.: Clu~ 1
gn Rr: 1r1 o lf~ r ~ ht.&gt;e tlu011nn y M1ml•nr.:h Tcr
nunatt:d the ~on1r:11: 1 1 f LB Stt.'flht:n Gr 1111 W nvt.'tl
WR U:~t Kculaluh1 DB lkt.ln ~ Ma tl• ~ 1nd OL
Cl ay Wllhllll1S
NEW ENGLAND PA TRI O r~ N zmcd J.td•
W. ~ •ll y qu ar ll! rba~ k s ~o 1~o: h 111tl L&gt;cW 1ynr.: W 1lkr:r
lkfr.:nsi\IC ISSISI:IIll

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS S11tncd 01
Wnrren Sapp ton~"' year ~un t rad tltk!lt5ton

Hockey
Naltonal HDC.ttry Lta&amp;Uf
NHL Suspended Dallas Stan 0 Cnut Ludwzg
for twn gnmeJ and finetl h1m Sl 000 for dbow1ng
Anahe1m M1ght y Duck1 RW Tt.'t:mu Sclannc 1n "
March I 1 ga~ Suspended Dmou Rc~ Wwgs

RW Marlin l..apomle ptnthng 1 hcarmg tor t.:ross
chtckmg Edmonton Otlen I W Rrm Murr 1y .n a
March 17 gnme

DETROIT RED WINGS R.: ~. •il.:d G Ry~n
Ba..:h from Houston of the IH L
LOS ANGELES KINGS A ss 1gn~d RW V1t0111
Yachmenev to Long Beoch of the IHL
NEW JERSEY DEVILS As.~tJ!I)(d C Brendan
Momson 10 Albany of the AHL

NEW YORK RANGERS A111gn&lt;d C P J
S1ock 10 Hartford of the AHl
PHOENIX COYOTES Rcr.: nllcd C Onn1cl
Onere from Spnnxf~eld of the AHL

$7999

+tax

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS
RUTLAND, OHIO
742·2511
1·800·837·8217

pounds ts etght mches shorter and 54
pounds hghter than Malone, called
the accusal ton "mltculous "
"He d already put an elhOw m my
face," said Wesley, "ho had n
pomts and 13 asststs " It was JUS! a
foul I' m down there by myself He's
already got a foot m the lane What
am I gomg 10 do?"
Glen R~~:e scored 26 pomts on II·
of-14 shootmg for the Hornets, who
shot a se,tson-best 61 percent from
the field and won for the 12th lime 111
13 games
"That was probably our best allaround game of the year," Rtce smd
Rtce, who was still recovermg
from the flu, also had four rebounds
and four asSISts m 36 mmutes
"I was feeling preny lousy thts
momtng," he smd " I was weak .md
had a lot of chest congestton. I JIISI
wanted to come out ,md gtve the te.tm
whatever I could '

After a scoreless two penods, the
game opened up, wtth nil the goals
Leave tllo the Great One
The New York Rangers peppered - scored 10 the third penod and overMontreal goahe Jocelyn Thtbault ltme
Mtke !;lastwood gave the Rangers
wtth shots throughout overllme
Wednesday mght Thtbauh was up to a 1-0 lead 28 seconds mto the thtrd
each c~allenge- unttl Wayne Gret- penod wtth hts fifth goal Jonas
Jloglund tted it wtth 6-21 left m regzky made the play of the mght
_
Gretzky's bnlitanl pass between ulatton on a power play
The Rangers then blitzed the
two defenders was lipped home by
Kevm Stevens wuh 18 seconds to go Canadiens m overttme, gelling all
m the extra sessmn. That hfted the seven shots
"It's a good wm for us," Gretzky
Rangers past the Cnnadtens 2-1
" II was a lucky dectslon," the smd "I thought we played sohd .md
NHL's career scormg leader s:ud wtth dtd a lot of good thmgs We were
undue modesty "Nme out of 10 pnuem when we had to be, but we
ttmes, I would have gtven 11 back to fore~:hecked well atttmes
"I thought !hat Eastwood Ke1 111
Bnan Leet~:h He was hollenng for 11
Kevm went to the net and I was lucky and (lim) Sweeney dtd ,, mce JOb of
openmg up the tee for the rest of the
to get 11 to htm "
But the Rangers dtdn"t gam as guys It was JUSt a good team effort "
Also Wednesday, II was PtUsburgh
much ground as they hoped when the
4,
Edmonton
2. New Jersey 3, AnnOnawa Senators stormed from
hetm
0,
'Washmgton
I, Carolma 0,
behmd to tte the New Yot k Islanders
Tampa
Bay
4,
Vancouver
2. DctrOil
4-4 Thatleftlhe Rangers four pomts
behtnd Ottawa for etghth pl.tce m the 5. Toronto 2: and D.tllas 3. San Jose
I
East

By The Associated Press

E Camon ~ 10 Sr :!: I~ franczneAIItn Kalidil ~

10 Sr 19 0 Ltah Oooald\00 S

O.ul~on

Sooth

tMiem 5 10 Sr 17 1 Mund) H11lbrnol C1n H1lls
Chn~uan ~ !li Sr 17 0 Mtbue KllfU~ Ccnttrt'luiJ
~
Sr ~7 &amp; VALERIE KUR, Rr.f.PSVII.LE

10

EASTERN. 6 I, Jr., 171: Hull) KotPJl lontm
Calli 6 I Jr 25 fi Tillun) !iilud;,cr Hnv.rr;ton
Cononoo Vnllc)

~

6 Sr

~7 lj

h~tr Col Trtt ofl1rt- '9 Sr IK l Sh:moon S1m'

Shadystdt 6-0 Sr 17 :'i

SYMM~S

VALlEY AHHY WOKKMAN
PORTSMOUTH CLAY AMANDA MAYNARD
OAK
Hll L
JESSICA
BIIANNON,
RIF.DS\111 U: F.ASTEII.N, AMANOA MllN ION
PORTSMOUTH EAST
Jo) \\'1lkmocnn Van W~lt Lmroln\ k'U Htalhtr
Hao&lt;lm LR Kuhd:t l.cnonl Shunmle Crt'\l lule Amy
Sctunthl
1
S0l111 May. """-

du&amp; 1ina On\ ts Lzhrn) Ctnter.
Mary Wmrntr K1dron Crnt Chn ~tcon Tara
0 11I\ E C':mtnn Km1 V~mtr Md)nntiJ .M•~htllc
Tom~m.. Mrt}1:0kit)t( Ml, l) Cnlnn Southln{!lnn
Chl1 l~er 8n mnr 1Ju1nmd Ktd n lfl Cern Chn,llan
lnurrn Norman Lcrtnm::a
Am 1ndu A\f'.Jm Ku1l 1nd l ind"&lt;) Sl'lmnltr N
R1d~t\ •lit Luke: R1J ~ ~ A\ lllcm) Ja,nnnr Rnw u11
Rtchmmd H1 " Heuhn&amp;hu'\lrr l.nnun C.1th Annr
Rnchr G 1tt' M1U, Gtlmour

.-..•

Players or lhr yur. l :m"n Sl\tnl. Mm 't~
D1D1 Reynolch Ra'ICom Hoptwcllloodoo
Co.hn of 1M ,un Tim Oa1nber Btdfocd
Chanrl Mtke Ward Marton Pfe:~q, nt

Speciol mention
Heather VukriK' Tnmnto Jtll Yoder Bcrlm
Hzlnnd Tri~ Ly~ten Shndy~tde Sttphantt Campbell S Ch~~tlt!o!Ofl Soothcuslern Slt(lhuntt Miller
S1dnry Lthman Brooh BoY&gt;tr MotTo~! lhJFd••lt
Gwl Klttnnct\rlt HMord Ea10! Knm; KENJ)H.A
RINEHART 8EAV~R l!A!ITER'N Tnl\h:l MeytB
Mo"f'Y"IOY.n Whnta:AL: Chr•,Aitenhtuser Dtlphol.
St Johr~ ' Be' Fannmp: L11ktMdr Danhul) l.c•Mh
Ann Imhoff Hn-.toh lilt Un-.tol Counnty Hamilton
Multrul RWgt K::allt Stamtl;wl!h Lettoota Jcn Lull
~iflll:adott Ahhc-u Bulltlf'd R«&lt;fntd C'tuutel Amt'tr
Gooden Bedford Ch.1ntl Mrlt&lt;osa I wii.MI Thorn~
Lnlgrmr.~t Strphan.c Alltn~ Nc"buf)' C'hnsht
Sh idrac h lndependtnce

Honorable mention
Sar.dl Sr:ul;. Bnll.rtslnn Cnnnnon Va lle-y
Bethany St~B S:!ratm Ilk Shen.uttlnoth A!the Rts
tr z..nes, tile Ro-.ccran\ Ka) ';- t\1aJ:,!1'41'0. Btl~1rt St
John Ttlfan) MO!II;atn fklla m~ Sl Jtltln Sttf'humc
Coc:hmn Nc!v. M:uaiTVItll' J:mnl~tr:
Tara Clllhtn Umon Ctl} Ml,~h,mul-.a Vullty
Bn:k) ~lly Spnnyr~tkl C'ulh Jamtr Bllr'hk'r
uun.ms F.mll) ~lllkrlr COIIOJ!IOfl Candace Smtih
C11) Summ11 Cnunlry DJy Jl!'nn) Sm11h S
Churteston Southta~c:m
Br111Mh Bowrr M!nr zl Rllll!tdalc MeJ;!IIn

~'I

r~

:4 rU·w·.
JESSICA BRANNON

The Jazz shot &lt;mly 37 percent
from the field. more than II percent
below theu league-leadmg average
"They bent us every w.ty \\e
could be beaten We had no answer
for them,' smd Utah coach Jerry
Sloan, who was eJeCted for argumg
wtth oftic1als after Malone's lflJnry
"We played scared, m my opmton I
never really dtd see us come back and
compete.''
Elsewhere in the NBA. 11 was
Mtamt 94. Vancouver 91. Phtladdphta I04, Detroit 96, Smt Antonto 92.
Mmnesota 76, Seanle 99. the Los
Angeles Clippers 80, ,mel the Los
Angeles Lakers 99, Phoentx 93.
Heat 94, Grizzlies 91
Alonzo Mournmg scored 26
potnts and Dan M.IJerle scored four
pomts m the lina170 seconds .IS Mt.lmt beat Vancouver
lim Hardaway h.1d 23 pomts .md
II asstsls for the Heat. who moved

wuhm percentage pomts of tdle lndt
ana for the second-hest record mthe
Eastern Conference Mt.tmt has won
19 of 24 games
Shareef Abdur-R.llltm liCorcd ~I
pomts and Brynnt Reeves had 20 fm
the v t~ttmg Gnzzltes. who ha\ e lost
five stratght and 11 of 14
76ers I 04, Pi~1ons 96
Allen h erson "ored .1 se.tsonhtgh 38 pomts us Pluladclpht.l \\on oll
Detrmt
The Stxers.dsogot.tltlt ftom 1m mer Ptstons Theo Ratltff and Aaron
McKte, who were acqutred m
December for Jerry Stackhouse and
Enc Montross Ratltff had 18 pomts
and 10 rebounds, whtle McKte finIShed wuh 12 pomts, etght rebounds
and etght asststs
Grant Htll Jed DetrOit wtth 31
pomts and nme rebounds
Spurs 92, Ttmhen\ olves 76
Ttm Duncan had 20 pomts and II

rebounds, and San Antomo held
Mmnesota to a season-low poml
total
Avery Johnson scored ~2 potnts
for the 1 tstlmg Spurs, " ho h.1ve won
mne of 12 games Davtd Robmson
lim shed wtth 15 pomts after entcnng
the rounh quarter 0-of-9 from the
field
Kevm G.1meu had 16 pomts and
10 rebounds for Mmnesota but had
only two pomts m the second h:ilf
SuperSonits 99, Clippers 80
D.tle Eilts matched hts season
htgh wtth 2"1 potnts as Seattle became
the NBA's first 50-game wmner thts
season
Elhs scored ti&gt;e pomts 111 a 1~ -0
mn that gave the Somes (50-IS) a 91 75 lead wtth m mmutes remanung at
Key Arena
Seaule swept the four-game se.lson senes from the Chppe,-.; and
moved two games .thead ol Ut.th tn

the race for the best record m ihe
Western Conference
Jerome Kersey of the Somes and
Lamond Murr.t) oftheChppers "ere
eJected "llh I 59 left 111 the tlurd
qu.trter It s1,1rted as a shm mg match,
.md Murray threw two punches
before the players were restr.uncd
Lakers 99, Suns 93
Shaqmlle O'Ne,tl S&lt;Ored ]] pomts
.md gr.1bhed u se.JSon-htgh 22
rehOunds as the Los Angeles L1kers
held off Phoentx fot tis seventh wm
m etght games
The Lakers rem.unetl four g.1mes
bchmd the Pac11i1: DIIJSton-le.tdmg
SuperSomcs with 17 g.1mes left mthe
regular season The I'ISIIing Suns,
who had thctr five-game "mnmg
streak snapped Uatl the L.tkers hy 2
112 games
Robert !lorry il.1d 18 pmnts .mel 10
rebounds for los Angeles

....

-~

Islanders 4, Senators 4
In the best comeback for Onawa
smce 11 reJotned the NHL as an
expansmn team stx years ago. the
Senators gotthtrd-penod goals from
Magnus Arvedson. Wade Redden
and Shawn McEachern m a 4 05
span Serget Zholtok sent the game
mlo overttme "tlh I 28 remmnmg,
em,mg a 4-0 New York lead
" It's an tmponantpomt. an) "•'Y
you get 11,' coach Jacques Martm
satd
The Senators set a club record hy
gomg seven games at home wuhout
a Joss (5-0-2).
Tom Chorske scored 11~0 unasSISted goals for the Isl,mdcrs
Penguins 4, Oilers 2
AI Ptllsburgh Jnromtr Jagr scored
his 31st goal and Ron Francts h.td
two assJsts to m1se h1s carerr total to
999. Francts has 55 asstsls thts sea
son, and IS trymg lo become the seventh NHL pla~er to get I 000
''I'd hove liked to see the odometer tum over tomght. hut \\ h11l c,m

you do?" Francts s,11d
Rob Brol\n scored the ttc hrc.tkmg goal m the second penod when
Edmonton mtsh.mdl~tlth~ puck an,)
leit 11 m the crease lor Brown to
swtpe past Curtts Joseph
The Pengums have 84 pomts to
match last season's total wtth 14
games left
Devils 3, Mi~hty Ducks 0
Martm Brodeur broke hts team
record for wms m a season by stop-pmg 25 shots for New Jersey
Brodeur dtdn"t have much hard
work m recordmg hiS J8th wm, but
he twtce stopped 43-goul scorer
Teemu Selanne on second-penod
breakaways, and saved hts etghth
shutout of the season by stoppmg htm
aga10 10 Jhe final seconds The
shutout was the 30th of hts career
Rookte Krzysztof Ohwa, Scott
Ntedermayer and Bnan Rolston
scored for the host Dcvtls
Capitals I, Hurricanes 0
Olaf Kolllg stopped 16 shots for
hts th1rd shutout ol the se.tson, .md

Washmgton conunued a rem.uk.tble
penal!) -k1lhng run
The top penalty-ktllmg team 10 the
NHL shut down all etght power
plays agamst a Carolma team that has
been woeful recently wtth a man
advantage The Cnpttals have sue
cessfully ktlled 42 of theu last 45
penal!tes. whtle the Humcanes have
scored only once 111 thetr l.tst "17 power plays
Ste\ e Konow.tkhuk', lirst-penod
po" er-pl.ty goal was enough to gtve
the Capttals thelf fifth wm m SIX
games The loss snapped a four-game
road wmmng streak for the Humcanes. now two pomts hehtnd the
Rangers
lightning 4, Canucks 2
Stephane Rtcher on a hot stre,Jk
smce stgmng a new three-)ear. $6
tmlhon &lt;Ontract. h.td I\\O goals and
two '"'"Is .md M.uk Fttzpaln&lt;k
m.llle 13 s.ll es as Totmp.l Bn) won tis
second str:ught hom~ game
RIL'her com ened two feetls hy
Jutly Hull mlo goals .md .uldcd

.-.

asstsls on goals by Darcy Tucker and
Hull to cap a four pomt ntght
Rtcher has 16 pomts m hts I.JSt 15
games m a Ltghtnmg umform
Tampa B.ty's Jacques Demers
coached the game desptte Wednesday's announcement Ius wtfe Dehhte
was dt.lgnosed wllh cancer and "til
undergo surgery and treatments at St
Joseph's Hospn.tl m Tampa
Red Wings S, Maple Leafs 2
Kns Draper scored 1\\ tee and
rookte goalie Nom1 Mar.JCie m.11l~ 20
~r;.ave~ to \\ '"

h•" ~econd game 1n ·'"

---

many ntghts
Mtke Knuble Brendan Shan.th.m
and Vy.JchesJa, Kolio1 also scored
for Detroll \\ht•h ended a three
g,tme road los m ~ stre.tk AI) n
McCauley .tnd Derek Kmg replted
for Toronto
Stars 3, Sharks I
J.mue Wnght and D.m Keomer.
fill-ms for lllJUr) -pl.1gucd D.tii.JS.
e.1ch scored,, ~o.tl D.tli.JS .tlso got ,,
po" er pl.ty gtMI 11\ I ~th tn the p."t
I~ g.unes

Baseball spring training continues

I

c

Sti~b

attempts comeback with Blue Jays; Braves beat Tribe

By The Associated Press

NEED PROPANE FOR
Cooking • Heating Water
• Unvented Heater Construction
100 lb. Cylinder $2830 + tax
2·1 00 lb. Cylinders of Propane Gas
Installed, induding regulator and
10 feet of tubing

rinl ltam Laurtn Shenk Mtn ~ltr ~fOOl 10
Srnuw· 161( pnml~ prr Jlll~ DIDt Rrynokb Bus
com Hopewell L..oodoo ft. I Jr 2~ 2 Stacy WnJkt

BECKY PHILLIPS OAK HILl Ml Sr IH 7
Thlnllt~~m Tooyal..owm McDoftald ~ S S1
iJ 6 SABRINA ~lOONEY, CROll N CITY S
GALUA.U. ~ 16.1: Amy Martm !IIi C'h:trledon
Soulhta~ ltrrt ~ 10 Sr lb 0 Hcuthtr Noel MeAl

Jerome Manon Plfn'tllnl Hrutuny Little Cui
Welhng1nn Mum M..:Andrtv. ~ L1oca,.1tr ft,htr
Cuth Mc~F ~kCnm~ Daft\ 1llc
AMANDA ADAMS WILl 0\V WOOD

I

h~l

Football

-·-

Here 's the 1997-98 Assoct.tled
Press DtvtsJOn IV gtrls aii-Ohto htgh
school basketh.lllteam. h."ed on the
recommend.u10ns of .1 st.ue m~Jit,l
panel (wtth school, hetght, grade and
sconng average)

Sftoad ltam: Amanda turontuult Ntv. Rltgrl
6-0 Sr I Mit Cuthy Zmhru~&amp; StNmJ M~ Kinlcy 3
II Sr 18 0, Mand) Wtnncr fl LPrMliC' h 2. Sr
16 3 KnMin RMtherry Marm Plfa'ltmt 6-0 Sr ,
l&amp;ll:Erinlt&lt;mllor BtrllnHolund.6.0 Soph ~o o

Rangers top Canadiens 2-1 in OT; Devils, Red Wings win

S.:oll

l'iti

WESTERN CONFERENCE
l&lt;wD

S1\N fRAN((SCO ClAN I'S Opunnr.:tl LHI1
Rid y P1dcc!ll tu I n:snu ul the I'{ L 1\:..~ll! l lcd 01
1 lltl I r.: 1\:h If Jdl n til ( H~.:nr y Mr.:rm.lc~ md
RHP j, II() IIWH\Itl ll ~~: l r. 11\11\IH ~ ~ lj!lll l iiiiJI

71 17&lt;J 172

Norttleatl D1wl.liton

A I ( u!urnhu"' linul
l ntun M\. Km t..:y
S 1trrl •) 7 lO r n

u

Transactions

Vlu prc~ •dcnl 1nJ gcncu l mm1~c r Sus 111
Ill ~lllO..:UII Y+.: l\S \~1,1111 ll lht: ~~IIU 11 111111 1~
u
Ow~ Bud, Vlll.: ll t\~Uknt ul ld h'I11SIIlt: s tk s
lkbhlc NtlUIU m,ml ~r.: r 11! l li L nl ~..:1\'ll~o:s md
Rury M l N~IIthr..:tlllf nl hu111l ll ~llu l! nul Vltlc••

Allanllc Otvlnon

I Bn 1l., h JHII ( l} lJ IS

J

Nt&gt;w Jersey al Wa! hm~lOn 7 p m
Vanwuver at Ouawa 7 :\0 p m
Carohn 1 11 Dallas 8 lOp n)
N Y lslall&lt;lcn at C 1lgary 9 p m

PH ILADELPHI A PHILLIES N1md I J

EASTERN CONFERENCE

I ll

A I C mlon ~m1fina l
M ~Hlc \1 1 1 1 1 1 \ ~ }\kmn St V mu~n l St
~~ llur ldl y 7 p m
I Hi ll H rn n Hoban (2 1 4) vs Y(l U
f.. I rrn~y/ Mr n n S1 V St M w1nnu Saturday 7 10
1 n
I)

Fnday's games

Wa\k

NHL standings

worker who w.ts .1 good looth.tll
player and" as offered 'schol.tt'Ohtp
to Gmmblmg
Her two older "bhngs hOth pla)ed
college basketball Tamtka can sttll
remember w.uchmg her brother,
Mtchaei_ pt.ty for Mtamt of Ohto
agamst mtghty North C.trohna m the
NCAA tournament "hen she was m
the fifth or stxth gr.1de Her stster
Tangy. w.ts .1 st,mdout .11 Bo" hng
Green
Tamtka's 11 -ye.tr-old siSter m.t)
be the best of the hunch She pl.1ys on
three dtfferent teams .md IS , , 5-I0
stxth gr.1der "She's huge " Tamtk.t
smd "A btg g~rl "
Ac.ulemtcs ha&gt;e al11ays been a
pnonly lor T&lt;~mtk.t 11 lm h.ts a l ~
grade-pomt average and ts a member
of the Nalional Honor Soctety She
plans to maJOr m commumcattons
and broadcastmg at UConn
Wtlhams beat out another Dtvtston I first-team aii-Ohtoan, PJCkermgton's LaToya Turner, to become
the lith AP Ms Basketball wtoner
Also constdered by a state medta
panel were Katelyn VujaS of
W•dsworlh, Ko~lie Gnggs of
Wauseon, Columbus ' ManonFrankhn 's Tomeka Brown and Barnesville's JesSica Hmes
Wtllmms wtll recetve a pl.tque m
the shape of Ohto

Leg injuries may force
Street to miss 1999 season

J 11m

Jn t;~f)

Dnmon 11
\I

Colorado .lll'l.tlt'l'

Naltona11Aa~ue

Hockey

\I Toltdo fin::a l
l d \ I hu' \ !IJ 'i) H ~~~ ~ wr•nd St b.l
1
\Ool f t! ( 111 S JilUd J) 7 lO p t11

't

I

S Ill \111 I I

LA [

I'"
I

I

S IL l IO it'lt U

~~

l 1 h~ y 'i~

On •smn I slah~

~u'&lt;

" ,,'' "'"
I II "

Pcll11mJ

St I dl'. uJ 76 1\ mJ u ~ ky

W!

I'J
I'

(2 1M) 12 10

l&gt;r\ 1~1011 II

I"

I

"II

He u' wn

V

L

l1

1 l n'" Utt~.l

I ,1 '\1 Jolin ~ h'i r(ll

WES I ERN CONF F.RE:'&lt;l F.
Iwn

11

01 \IIS \00 I
Cm o n ~kKult y h K ~uh:r111III'N 41
( n W11 1n v. 6 ~ ( n r\d;~ n 60 101 1
(k~&lt; S ~ ~ ~~~~~~ HO E (kvdmJSh •wt; l
01 ~ (ohllld Wh lil 7-1 Cm Prmu:tonbM

'"" '7
'
,,
'III)'
II
"0
'"
I "' I'
"
" '" 'I '' '
"
-·-

•rlnul

H1w

Wednesd-.y's semannals

'i()X

11
'0

Inth 111 1

n

11

Ohio H.S. boys'
regional tournaments

(r nlrod lhHS+un
(111 1. \~ I

Silt: 00 I I )

Ill\

A llan11r IJiH!iiUII

:wm
M•um

1111

Glouster Tnmhlc (10 ll t n Gr01rlllvn.:w Hh
p 01
Fin zl Saturday l p m
AtOaylon
Dal Jdtcnpn ( IH 'i) vs Cm Seven H•lts (2 1
2) l'hursd1y b l'i ll n\
J;u:kson Center {11 I ) vs Mtn !iler ! 17 6'
ThurSlby R p m
F1nal S 11urJay 1 p m
AI Toltdo
.fmdlay L1bert y Bentnn H 9 4) vs Pt.111WIII~
tiM~) Thursday 6 lOpm
ConuR(n!al (IR ~)liS Delphos St John s (1 7
6) 1l1U1~1y ~ I Ci I' 111
Fmal Saturday • p rn
AI Canlun
lndepem.len~.:c ( IS 'il vs BloomlldJ (II ll)
(I :'i 9) Thurnlay 8

played power fom ard, I guarded
somebody on the penmeter and I
played some pomt guard Oh and I
hke to play defense. too "
Her pomts come from any angle.
any dtstance under any ctrcumstance
"Wherever I c.m get them.' she
satd "Behmd the three-p&lt;Hnl hne.
my JUmp shot a lot ot steals and a lot
of oflen"ve rehOunds It all depends
on where the co,tch pms me "
Where,er coach Frank Goldsberry has put her, she hns produced And
her team has won The E.1gles c.~rry
a 23-2 record mto Fnd.ty's 9 p m
semtfinal agamst Toledo Centr.tl
Catholic (25-1) .md leilo" first-team
AII-Ohtoan E11ck,1 H.mey
H.mey and Wtlh.Jms have mel
bel ore. agam on opposmg sttles dur
mg AAU tournament s mthe summer
Wtlhams h.ts pl,tyed on ch.tmpt
onshtp AAU te,Jms for the p.lStiiiO
years
No mailer \lihere her teams h.l\ e
played- around Ohm. W.IShmgton
DC , or Chan.mooga, Tenn Wtlhams' parents h.n cn't mtssed ,,
game
She gets her hetght I 10m ller 6-2
mother a reltred te.1cher" ho worked
m the D,1yton public school syst em
She gets her athl~llc tsm ft om her
f.uher, a retJred Gener,tl Motors

Zurbrugg of Sebrmg McKmley (5I1, Sr, 18 0), Mandy Wtnner of Fon
Loramte (6-2, Sr. 16 2), Enn
Hostetler of Berhn Htland (6-0,
Soph, 20 0), and Oak Htll's Becky
Phtlhps (6-0, Sr, 18 7)
Gamber's Chanelteam went from
4-18 a year ago to 16 8 thiS !lme
around- a school record for" ms m
a s.;a&lt;;On whtle wmnmg the program's
first dtstnct utle
Ward used a steady hand to gut de
Pleasant pnst an early loss to rn al
Morrnl Rtdgedale eventu.1lly avengmg that loss to capture the league Iitie
on the way to the 25-1 record

Hornets pound Jazz 111-85, snuff Utah's winning streak

AP gives Ohio's Ms. Basketball
to Chaminade-Julienne's Williams
AP Sports Writer

(irst-tenm aii-Oh1o menlton a year
ago.
Reynolds, sttll surveymg dozens
of scholarship Qffers, htt for 24 2
pomts, mne rebound,, 3 5 asststs and
3 2 steals a game She, too, was firstteam all-Ohm a year ago, then Jed an
AAU team to second place m a
natiOnal tournamenl
Jmmng them on the first ali-Ohto
team are East Canton's Stac) Wnght
(5 -10, Sr, 215), Fran~:me Allen of
poll champton Kaltda (5-10, Sr,
19 0), Leah Donaldson of South
Charleston Southeastern (5-10, Sr,
17 7), Cmcmnatt Htlls Chmllan's
Mandy Holbrook (5-5, Sr, 17 0),
Melame Karas of Centerburg (5-I 0,
Sr, 27 8); Reedsvtlle Eastern' s
Valene Karr(6-I,Jr, 171), Loram
Catholic's Holly Koepp (6-1 , Jr _
25 6), and Tiffany Stocker of Bowerston Cononon Valley (5-6, Sr,
27 9)
The second team IS Jed by Pleasant's Knstm Roseberry a 6-0 semor
who averaged 18 0 pomts and 9 ]
rebounds a game\\ htle htumg half of
her 3-pomters Others on the squad
mcluded New Rtegel's Amanda
Lafontame (6-0. Sr, 18 8). Cathy

-•

Eastern'·s Karr, Brannon join cast of eight area honorees

,Page4
Thursday, March 19, 1998

Minnesota beats, Marquette; Penn State tops Georgia Tech
noor and mobbed coach Clem Hask10s as he tned to
do a postgame mtervtew
' I would challenge anyone who says that the NIT
tsn 1exc lllng Haskms satd, complam10g that the roar
mtght have damaged hts nght eardrum "If you find an
NCAA game more excttmg than thts, you are nut~ You
must be laktng the wrong medtCIOe, or you should get
your prescnptton changed '
Forgtve Haskms, tf he mtssed all of the buzzer-beatmg drama m the fJrSttwo rounds of the NCAA tournament last week A year atter leadmg the Gophers to
thelf ltrst Fmal Four appearance 10 that tournament, he,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

AP $.ub'mlts Division IV all-Ohio girls' basketball/1st

NIT quarterfinals continue

By RON LESKO
MINNEAPOLIS (API- The eaHp lntmg roar at
the final buzze r sau.J 1t all Mmnesot:ll '&gt; gomg back to
a Final r ou r even 11 11 ''" 1 the one most people wtll
be "atchtng next week
Wnh hometown favonte Sam Jacobson ptrouelltng
to the deudmg layup' 111 the final nunutc ol h" last
g.1me at Wtlltams.,.,.rena the Golden Gophers beat Marqueue 73-7 1 tn the NatiOnal ln vilallon lourn.tment
qu.Jrterflnals Wednesday ntght
The VICtory touched ott "raucous ce lcbt,llton tram
the crowd ol II 842 many ol v.h om spilled onto the

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I'

I '

I

Dave Stteb ts ready for the next
step.
Stteb. trymg to make a comeback
at40 after a live-year absence looked
sharp Wednesday m a stmulated
game for the Toronto Blue Jays
Stteb, the Blue Jays' career wm
leader, p1tched three mmngs agamst
mmor leaguers at Dunedm, Fla He
allowed one htl and rellred stx of 10
batters on grounders
"I threw everythmg today, had
decent locatton but got behmd too
many httte~ early throwmg curve
balls on the first puc h." Sueb satd
" When I g9( behind _a hiller. I was
able to come back and throw stnkes
Changmg speeds really saved me out
there today."
Sueb, who last pttched m the
maJOrs m 1993 for the Chtcago
Whtte So~. might pttch m a mmor
league game Saturday tf he feels all
nght
"My arm, my back are tine. phys~~:ally I'm fine," he satd ' I've
thrown a lot of balling practice and
stdes where I've thrown a lot. of
pUches.''
Among !hOse watch10g Stteb was
hts former Toronto catcher Erme
Whttt, now a Blue Jays mmor league
coach
"Hts slider looked OK and he had 1
a couple of gQOd ct~rves," Whitt satd.
Braves 10, Indians 0
At Kis.,unmee, Aa, Andres Galarraga drove in five runs, and Denny
Neagle pttchcd five scoreless 10mngs
a,, Atlania beat Cleveland
Galarrag,a ~il ~ lhree-run d!)uble,

a solo homer and an RBI smgle NeaBernard Gtlkey also homered for
gle (3-0) allowed only two htls and the Mets. Btll Pulstpher puched four
extended hts spnng shutout streak to scoreless mnmgs for a save
14 mnmgs
Rangers 7, Pirates 3
Cleveland nght fielder Manny
At Bradenton Fla _ Tom GoodRamtrez dtd not make the tnp whtle wm's two-run smgle off struggling
the Indtans sorted out an altercatton Jason Schmidt sent Texas over Pillsbetween htm and a clubhouse auen- burgh
R~~:k Helling pttched three-hu ball
dant
Ramtrez reponedly slapped club- for stx mnmgs as Texa.~ tmproved us
house asststant Tom Foster alter major league-leadmg spnng record to
bemg told that he could not remove 15-6
Red SoK 3, EKpos I
two bats from the equtpment room
At
Fort
Myers, Fla , Derek Lowe
The altercatiOn look place Tuesday
lndtans general manager John pttched five mmngs of one-hll ball a~
Hart satd the snuatton has been dealt Boston beat Montreal
Lowe, who walked one and struc\
wuh, but dtd not say whether
Rrumrez would be fined or suspend- QUI three, made the start because
Butch Henry mJured hts hamstnng
ed
while runnmg the bases l;w week
Phillies 3, Blue Jays 2
Athletics 6, Giants 0
At Dunedm, Aa • Toronto closer
At Sconsdale, Anz .. Rtckey HenRandy Myers gave up unearned three
runs m the nmth mmng and Phtladel· derson led otT the game wllh a homer
and stole hts first ba.'f of the spnng
phta rallied to win.
Blue Jays starter Pat Hcntgen as Oakland beat San Franctsco
Henderson, who holds the maJor
pttched seven shutout mnmgs, allowleague
record wtlh 721eadolf home~.
mg only two hits
Phillies ptt~:hers Calvm Maduro, btl ,a shot over the left-field fence
Billy Brewer, Darrin Wmston, Wayne agatnsi Ktrk Rueter. Ben Gnevc
Gomes and Yorkis Perez combined added a solo homer.
Kenny Rogers pttched seven
on-a one-httter Ed Sprugue homered
mnmgs. allowmg four sm·
scoreless
m the second mnmg for Toronto's
gles.
only htt
Phtladelphta's Gary Bennett htt a
two-out, two-run smgle that tted 11. -----.:;Sports
and Btlly McMillon followed wtth an
RBI smgle
Coll~e
Mets 7,Astros 1
NORMAN, Okla. (AP)- Steve
• At Port St. Lu~te, Aa.. Butchl Owens resigned as Oklahoma's athHuskey homered twice, doubled and, let1c dJrector, its~~lhan two yean after
drove tn five runs to lead New York • the 1969 Hetsman wmner took the
over Houston.
job.

g.une called alter live mnmgs pttched live scoreless mnmgs lor
Angels 9, Diamondback• 0
Chtcago agamst Colorado
At Tucson, Anz • D~nn Erstad hu because nl ram
Chad Kreuter had a two-run douTony Saunders (2-1) was touched
hts "first two spnng lrdtntng horne,-.;
and drove m five runs. leadmg Ana- lur live runs on live hns m li ve ble lor the While Sox who failed to
score at least seven runs for the first
mmng~
helm over Anzona
ttme 111 seven games Chtcago" sttll
White SoK 3, Rockies I
Erstad hu a three-run homer thai
At Tucson, Anz , Mtke Strotka hill!~- 325 as a team
capped a live-run second mnmg olt
loser Bnan Anderson who had gtven up only one earned run 10 hts fiN
12 10mngs Erstad hu a two-run
homer m the fourth
Brewers 12
SPRING ATHLETIC SHOES
Mariners (ss) 7
At Peona. Anz _Jeromy Burmtz
and Bobby Hughes htt home runs.
Including Baseball, Softball and Track
and Mtlwaukee had 15 htts olt four
Seattle ptlchers
Burnuz got hts thtrd homer of the
Stop in and see our Spring '98 styles of baseball
spnng and Hughes was 1-for-3 wtth
four RBis The Manners got hon1e
softball and running shoes!
runs from Alex Rodnguez and Edgar
Martmez among thelf 18 hus
One group of melal
Nice selection of
Plus ...
Cubs S, Mariners (ss) 3
Baseball
Cleab
closeout
running shoes
At Mesa Anz . Manny Alexander
by Brooks Asics &amp; Nike
drove m four runs a.~ Chtcago beat a
Greol[or
Seaule spht squad
practice or sa~
Glenallen Htll htl a two-run horner
m the fourth off Terry Mulholland to
gtve Seaule a 2-0 lead
• Baseball and Softball ph. rers, we now have
Tigers S, Devil Rays I
At St Petersburg, Fla • Bnan
GlovoUum by RawUngs to soften and preserve your
1Hunter drove m three runs, and
1Detro•! defeated Tampa Bay 10 a
ball gloves.

ARRIVING DAILY...

NIKE • REEBOK • ASICS

19

$29.00

briefs------ • Easton Bat Bags in team colors
Owens' frumly was rocked last fall
by the sutctde of hts oldesl son,
Blake Owens wound up takmg an
extended leave of absence, and only
returned to the job at the stan of thts
year.

'

219 N. Second

Middleport

0

�'By The Bend

,,

The

n·.ailY Sentinel
·

Thursday, March 19, 1998

Po""'roy • Middleport, Ohio

.
Page&amp;
· Th~r•day, March·19, 1_998

MIDDLEPORT- -POMEROY
ROTARY ~LUll
INVITES YOU THE THE

Parents co.ricerned aboitt son's homose-xual orientation
pany of his male "pals. " They all
appeared to be decent and
Ann
respectable, and we never thought a
thing about it. Calvin took a room·
Landers
mate two years ago, and they recent1991, Loa AnJdcl TilllC;;I
Syndinu:: and Cru•m
ly decided to buy a condo. They
Syndkau::.
. both act perfectly normal, not effemjnate or anything like that.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
Can you tell us what made our
and I are beside ourselves. Our 24- son take this unexpected turn in the
year-old son. a fine young man who road? There are no homosexuals in
always did well in school and is now my family or my husband's that we
successful in the business world, has know of.
dropped a bombshell on us. Last
We are devastated at the thought
week, "Calvin" told us that he is a that he Will never marry and have a
homosexual.
family like his two brothers. Please
Calvin has dated a few lovely tell us what you can about this shat·
young women from time to time but tering blow. We need .your help in
never had any long-term relation- getting through this. --Accepting
ships. He seemed to prefer the com- But Sad in a Southern·State

==------....1

Area student receives scholarship
from Capital
Wendy N. Shrimplin, a senior at
Meigs High School, has been awarded a University Challenge Grant
from Capital University.
This grant is awarded to incoming freshmen and transfer students
on the basis of standardized test
scores and/or scholast ic achievement.
Shrimplin is the daughter of Gale
and Francie ShrimJ!Iin, of Pomeroy.
Located in Columbus, Ohio,
Capital University prepares students
for lifelong learning in the global
environment of the 21st century
through five colleges: College of
Arts and Sciences, School of Nursing, Conservatory of Music, Law
School and a Graduate School of
Administration. In addition, there
are Adult Degree Program centers in
Cleveland, Dayton and Columbus .
Fund benefits from- "Have a
Heart" campaicn
A total of $709 was collected in
the February "Have a Heart" campaign of the Meigs County Division
of the American Heart Association.
Paper hearts handled through
local businesses were given to customers who then put their names on
hearts and displayed them in the
business.
it served as not only a fund raiser
but also as a way of making residents aware that February was
Amerlcan Heart Month and that
heart disease is the number one
cause of death in Meigs County, said
Susan Gerken, chairman.
Vaughan 's IGA in Middleport
collected $404, the most of any business.
Other businesses participating were
Kroger. Fruth Pharmacy, Meigs
Senior Center. Pomeroy Exxon

Community
Calendar
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Pcrrys at
the Ash Street Free Will Baptist
Church in Middleport. 7 p.m. Thursday. Pastor Les Hayman invites public.
EAST MEIGS - Parents with
children who will attend the new
Eastern Elementary School (K-8)
invited to meeting Thursday, 7 p.m.
at Eastern High School to discuss
the progress of work at the new
playground and organization of the
new PrO.
POMEROY - AA and AI-Anon
Thursday, 7 p.m. Sacred Heart
Catholic Church, Mulberry Avenue.

Dear Attfptlng: It's good to
know that you're accepting, but your
son did not take a sudden "turn in
the road." His sexual orientation has
been present from the beginning. In
other words, he didn't GET that
way. He was BORN that way.
You need to learn more about
your son's sexual orientation in
order to deal with it intelligently.
Please write to PFLAG (Parents,
Families and Friends of Lesbians
and Gays). The address is: 1101 14th
St. N.W. , Suite 1030, Washington,
D.C. 20005 (www.pflag.org).
Dear Ann Lande~: I would like
to comment on the letter from "A
Desperate Woman," whose husband's ex-wife was demanding that
their daughter, "Mandy," age II ,

T~~ mys;~r;e~ ~~ ~ary.

Tiger Mart, Pomeroy Food .Shop, ••
Higg1ns
Taz's Marathon, and Twin Oaks Clark were featured in reviews at a
Arthur Treachers. The funds will be recent meeting of the Middleport
used to suppon research and educa- Literary Club held at the home of
tional projects of the American Gay Perrin.
Heart Association.
Sara Owen's review of "A
Information about the American Stranger is Watching" was followed
Heart Association or card iovasc ular by JoAnn Wildman's review of
disease and prevention may be "Moonlight Becomes You."
obtained by ca ll ing 1·800-AAOwen related that Mary Higgins
USAI.
Clark was born in 1931 and began
writing professionally to support
herself and her five children after the
Grant writing seminar offered
death of her husband. It was not
A grant writing semmar will be until after her third book "A
held to assist citizens seeking money Stranger is Watching" was released
for projects and activities in South- in 1977 that she became widely
east Ohio.
read. Called "The Queen of SusThe program will take place at pense" by her publisher, she has
the Malta United Methodist Church emerged as one of the most popular
on Saturday, April 18th, from 8:30 authors in the United States. Owen
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Reservations are added that Clark says she writes for
required.
·
the mainstream, about niCe people
The seminar is recommended for not looking for trouble, but who find
environmen.tal education specialists, evil in their every'day lives.
teachers, staffs of churches and nonAs she outlined the story of a
profit organizations, elected offi- deranged murderer now planning a
cials, and any citizens or volunteers kidnapping in order to set himself up
who need to raise money for local in a new life, the reviewer touched
projects.'
upon the debate in the story about
Four topics will be presented: capital punishment. One character
How to be a Successful Grant argued that it is brutalizing, while
Writer, The World of Giving, Pro- another maintained that it is used as
posal Development, and The Ohio a just and necessary punishment.
Environmental Education Fund,
Owen pointed out that the murRegistration will begin at 8:30a.m. derer is known from the beginning
and' the seminar is expected to of this story, but it contains plenty of
adjourn at 4:30 p.m. Lunch will be suspense, including the fate of the
served, and is included in registra- man awaiting execution who has
tion. Class size is limited to 30 par- been unfairly sentenced for the murticipants.
der.
Reservations must be made prior
Mrs. Wildman's review of
to April 10, for $5 by check to the "Moonlight Becomes You" did leave
.Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D, Rt. 2 Box ID, the identity of the murderer a mysMarietta OH 45750-9614. For more tery. In this story. Wildman said, the
information, contact Beth Robinson author used the custom of Victorian
at (740)373-7926.
death bells included in some coffins
to add a note of terror. Terror was the
Mysteries reviewed at Literary opening theme as the reviewer read
Club
from the first page of the book . .

~--------~------~~--~
Get the latest in sports news from the

Daily Sentinel

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo Center

2nd Set ·Free
EVERYDAY!

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Board of MRIDD, 7 p.m. Thursday
at Carleton School.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood Garden Club, Thursday, I p.m. at the
'lome of Sarah Roush, Syracuse.
RU1LAND - Rutland Village
Council, special meeting. 7 p.m. on
Thursday to discuss the mitigation
project.
POMEROY- Meigs Ministerial
Lenten service. First Southern Baptist Church, Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
Rev. Roy Lawinsky to speak.

Any

Any

Exp.

Exp.

From originaiUO or US C-41 proeeu rolla.
See One Of Our Clerks For Detail• Of The Fuji
Tru Color Film Club Card
Have 6 Rolls Develop And Get The
Seventh Roll Developed FREE

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Arthritis Suppon Group, Friday. I0
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m. in the conference
room of the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. Anyone who has
arthritis or has a friend or family
members with arthritis is mvited to
attend.

Try Us Out For All
Your Photofinishing Needs

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Area Parkinson's Support .Group. 2
p.m. at Grace United Methodist
Church Building, 600 Second Ave ..
Gallipolis. Dr. David C. Hogg,
senior pastor of the Methodist
Church, to speak on keeping a posi. rive attitude.

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph. Charlet Rllftt, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
. Sundty I 0:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 1112·2856
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.

)WI~HfR

LOH5E
Pharmacy

WHk

report everything that goes on in the
house. Your response -- "It is obvious that his daughter is trying to
divide and conquer" -- was off the
mark.
It is clear that this poor child is
being used by her biological mother
to spy on !ler father 's household, and
the girl probably can't say no without feeling that she is betraying ·her
mother.
"Desperate" should insist that
her husband tell his ex-wife to stop
using Mandy as a spy because she is
suffering irreparable harm by being
made to choose sides. She has probably been told that her father and
stepmother are "no good."
The natural mother is the problem , Ann, not Mandy. As the child of

divorced parents, I know what I'm
talking about. If my stepmother had
turned on me the way you suggested
Desperate should, I think my already
fragile world would have collapsed.
Please reconsider your advice. -A.W. in Durham, N.C.
Dear A.W.: A zillion readers
have asked me to "reconsider" my
advice. Consider it reconsidered .
I'm taking 40 lashes with a wet noodle. Mandy's father should tell his
ex-wife to knock it off.
Dear Ann Landers: /&gt;. ·close
friend of mine introduced my widO~&gt; c d sister to a man she thought
would be a perfect fit. I have learned
through another source that this gentleman, who is. a widower, had an
affair while his wife was ill with

Wildman mentioned that the
story had recently been dramatized
on TV. but that she believed this tale
of intrigue, terror and romance was
much better as a book that she found
difficult to put down.

Auxiliary Unit 263, American
Legion, met recently at Dale's
Restaurant.
Ada Franklin was hostess for the
meeting conducted by Lorenc. Gog·
gins. She read the news bulletin
from Eighth District President Betty
Harris urging members to pay their
dues early.
March being community service
month, Helen Culmer presented
material on some of the .many volun·
tary services that can be performed
such as visiting shutins, donating to
charity, tutoring in schools, and

Donation Made
Donations have been made to the
U.S.O. Covenant House, American
Indian Relief Council, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, food for the poor,
CARE, and missionaries in Africa
were reponed when Lewis Manley

breast cancer four years ago. The
person who told me this insists that
the affair does not reflect on his
character.
Was my friend obligated to
inform me of this, or does one affair
not a villain make? -- Puzzled In
K&lt;iokamonga
Dear Kook: In my opinion, it
was· an act of friendship to put the
two unmarrieds together. That person who carried the tale makes me
wonder what motivated him or her
to pass on that information.

ROT

Send questions to Ann LandeM, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd : Suite 700, Los Angeli'&lt;, Calif.
90045

SATURDAY, MAR~D 21, 1998

_

AT :rimJGS COIJNTY SEMOR CITIZENS CENTER

working at bloodmobile centers.
Lula Hampton reported from the
American Legion Firing Line that
under health care- claims by U. S.
veterans there arc proposals before
Congress to prohibit veterans from
filing tohacco related claims during
their time in uniform . This brings
complaints from the American
Legion which contend it is taking
away benefits equally deserving
from one group to give to another
equally deserving.
The president had the closing ceremonies.

.

.

SERVING FROM 7:00 A.M. TO 11:00 A.M.
Adults· 13 and up s4
Children· 6 to 12 s2°0
Pancakes • Sausage
Coffee * Milk * Orange Juice
Under age 6 ·eat free

DOiti'E 07011, INC.

POMEROY, OHIO

~

DIEVRDLET.

(614) 992~6614 • (800) 837·1094
Mon.·Frl. 9 am·8'pm; Sat. 9 ani•S pm
1

w
~AC.

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

@

Sponsored By
Middlepo.r t-Pomeroy Rotary For Benefit
of
.
Meigs County Service Projects
·

110::19'nc:ae BUICK•

~-~

'

·~

.' '
0:.:

·"

......

...

ROTARY MEMBERS

1998 GMC
SUBU.8AN
Auto., 4X4, SLT, leath!')r,
va all power.
MSRP•••:...........$39,504.25
Dlscount. .............5,014.12
lnvolce...............34,490.13
Dealer Markup ....... $10.00

rour

Prl~t..

1998 CHEVY
CAVALIER

1998 BUICK

2 Dr., air, 5 speed,
· cassette, more.
MSRP:..............$14,260.00
Dlscount..............1,085.65
lnvolce...............13,174.35
Rabata ................. 1,000.00
Dealer Markup ....... $10.00

Loaded, cassette,
aluminum wheels.
MSRP ...............$20,393.00
Dlscount. ............. 1,411.89
lnvolce ............... 18,981.11
Dealer Markup ....... $10.00

*34I 50013 Prke..
35
'"' *12I 184
.

1996 CHEVY

Auto., air, stereo, buckets
'7990or

$169 permo.
NO MONEY DOWN
Tax &amp; title eXIra. P~ ligufed on 9.75'11.
APR, 60 montlll. Offer baaed upon bank ·
credit approv~ .

1997 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO
2_Dr., V6, auto., air,

_ WALTER HEINZ
JOHN ANDERSON
ROBERT BEEGLE
HAlKNEEN
LLOYD BLACKWOOD
SUSAN CLARK
CHARLES BLAKESLEE
AL DETTWILLER
KATHY HOOD
KRISTIEBUN
DAVID SNYDER
HOWARD FRANK
VERNAGAYESULUVAN
BERNARD FULTZ
GENE TRIPLElT
JOE YOUNG
RICHARD VAUGHAN
DAVID AVERION
MAXINE GASKILL
JOHNLENTES
JON PERRIN

CENTURY

*18I 991 11.

rour••
Price

Jeff Warner Insurance
992·5479

1998 CADILUC
SEDAN DEVILLE

POMEROY, OHIO

TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM
MEMBERS &amp; AT THE DOOR

JOHN RICE
GENER,IGGS
DENNIS SAELENS
JENNIFER SHEETS
KARL KEEBLER
JAMES.MOURNING
HAROLD NEWELL·
SUSANOUVER
JEFF WARNER
RANDY HAYS

Support Middleport-Pomeroy Rota.ry
Proceeds to Support
Meigs County Services projects

Triplett Engineering Service
9.92·2194

POMEROY, OHIO

Clark's Jewelry Store
992·2054

POMEROY, OHIO

Loaded, leather, V8, low miles.

ToChoouFrom'29,980

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply

OR

1996 CADILUC
SEDAN DEVILLE

loaded.

$13I 990
.

992·6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

Loaded, va. Hurry!

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry
992·2635

FLEETWOOD va; loaded, 1owner,leather................................118,400

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The Shoe Place I locker 219
992·5627

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·3785

POMEROY, OHIO

·Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
I

POMER~Y,

992·2955

OHIO

Karl Kebler Ill, CPA

you can never again finance a
new vehicle. can me tor details
on how you cen drive a nice car

.Investment &amp; ·Tax Consu~tant
992·7270
POMEROY, OHIO
. ·. '

Mr. Barcus

'

..

Crow's Family Restaurant

•

.\,

,}

992·2121

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

MIDDLEPORT

·Fruth Pharmacy

K&amp;C Jewelers

Bankruptcy does not mun that

now. Aak

Ewing Funeral Home .

985·3301

·'

•19 990

95 CADILLAC
95 OLDS DELTA 88 1owner, 43,000 actual miles, like new ..................._............ 112,850
92 CHEV. CORSICA V6 auto., air, stereo ................................................................13,995
94 CHEVY Sa10 PICKUP 4cyt, 5speed, 57,ooo miles ...................................... 16,400
98 CHEVY Sa10 PICKUP Ext. Cab, LS, V6, auto., air, CD pl~yer, 37,000 mi ... 117,600
93 CHEVY lUIIU Za34 Extra Clean. Black..................................................110,490
95 CHEVY K2500 PICKUP 3/4 ton, 4X4, 350 V8, auto., air, titt, cruise .......... 117,400
97 FORD EXPLORER ILT 15,000 miles, loaded, like new......-..........................124,800
97 PONTIAC TUNSPORT VAN ve. air, cruise, titt, s.ooo miles ....................119,860
~96 DODGE RIM DUO PU va, auto., air, cruise, tilt, cass., 18,000 miles ...... 117,450
97 CHEVY K1500.PICKUP 4X4, va. 5speed, air, titt, cruise, 3,455 miles.....122,500
96 CHEVY 5-10 BLAZER V6, auto., air, titt, cruise, 4Dr..................:......:........ 111,600

CHESTER, OHIO

Downing·Childs·Mullen·Musser
Insurance

Baum Lumber

992·6491

V~ughan's
992·3471

~.OH45718

POMEROY, OHIO

Fisher Funeral Home
992·5144

.MIDDLEPORT

Home National Bank
.

'

RACINE
949·2210

Cardinal

Brogan Warner Insurance

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·6687

Gllllpolla, OH 45631
740 448 2185

Tuppers Plains, OH 45783
74HIS7.;!1111

.

992·2432

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

farmers
Bank
a Soving$ Company
74MI2-2t3S

992·2342

SYRACUSE
992·6533
POMEROY, OHIO

The Daily tentinel
992·2155

POMEROY, OHIO

�;

I

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Marc;h 19, 1998.
,,

Sentinel
®Eastern High School.com
classic before school March
'

I want to. be able to speak
my mind without getting into trouble
tell people what I believe in, and
tell one person off
I want to be loved
I want to feel what others feel
I want to love.
- Kay Hunt
I'm not always strong
And sometimes I'm even wrong
I win when I choose
And I can't stand to lose.
But I can't always be
The rock that you see
When the nights get too long
And I just can't go on.

Football Football is so fun
Football Football! hate to run
Football Football is so cool
Football Football the Packers Rule!
-Matt Putman

.

.

.

By JANE BURCHARD
The junior class of Eastern. High
School will present William Shake·
speare's "A Midsummer Night's
Dream" on March 20. The play will
be performed as an assembly before
the entire high school.
The play will not only have witty
dialogue from its quirky characters,
but several live band performances to
help set the moods of many amusing
scenes. The art depanment has also
contributed to the junior class project
by creating props, which will be used
as costumes for cast and scenery. (To
add to the ridiculously funny mood of
the play, juniors without speaking
parts in the play will be the scenery.)
The six main characters of "A
Midsummer Night's Dream" arc
Helena, played by Stephanie Evans,
Demitrius. played by Scott Stephens,
Hennia, played by Jessica Marcum,

Students in Mrs. Angie Rigsby's ninth grade English ctllss have been
developing their poetry-writing skill s through the "Poetry Tree."
Here are some samples of the freshmen's work.

Here I am take me
Somehow you saved me
From a lifetime of nor being
All love can make me.
- April Milhoan

40

Matt King as Lysander, Titania, portrayed by Mary. Styer, and Heath
Proffit as Oberorl.
During the first act, Hermia, a
rebellious young woman forbidden to
· see her true love, Lysander. decides
to go to a forest outside of town to a
forest outside.of town to marry him.
In confidence. she tells her best
friend, Helena. of her plans to elope.
Helena, in tum. out of jealousy. tells
Hermia's unwanted suitor. Demitrius
· - whome she loves dearly .and used
to date - about the marriag plans.
Soon, the four lovers are lost in the
woods late at night, unknowingly surrounded by fairies.
All the while, the King of the
Fairies, Oberon, and the Queen of the
Fairies, Titania, are fighting over an
errand· boy whcr Oberon believes
Tttania should give to him. Oberon
and his army of fairires are willing to

do almest anything to get the boy,
including harming the queen.
Now that the characters' ulterior
motives have been established, the
humor really begins .as a play within
the play unfolds and more characters
are introduced: Puck, played by Jere·
my Coleman, a mischivcious fairy
who ·entenains Oberon by playing
tricks on monals, and Bottom, played
by Aaron Will, an overly-confident
weaver whom Puck uses as entertainment for himself and the king. As
each scene passes, the audience will
find itself more surprised and amused
while each plot twist brings the main
and minor characters closer to complete hysteria.
However. it is the ending that is
most shocking.
Even those who chose not to have
a speaking part in the play will take
center stage at one time or another.

call 74().742-1080.

Scottish Benjl hous e dog, wall
trai ned , neutered, has had all
shots: to goOd home ohty. 304·

LONG'S
'
I

"Final Happiness"
Now that he has come along,
I feel nothing can go wrong.
I carry a smile upon my face all day
and I am happy in every way.
my eyes are full of light,
and face is always bright.
The only way someone can change
the way I feel inside. is if he died.
I feel sure that he could ne'er 6C:;
For he would to leave me.
- Renee Barringer
"Forever"

I was good and he was bad
. Hi s childhood life was very sad
We tried so hard to stay together
But they wanted him gone forever
my only hope was to get away
But! loved him dearly and wanted to stay
When they found him I cried all night
I couldn't bear to see tbe ·sight
He knew I loved him and knew I cared
For it was too late he went to the chair
Most people laughed but fewer cried cause of his
death they made me die. They didn't take two lives away for
there were three but never to stay. But up in Heaven we were
together and planned to stay that way forever.
- Robin Barringer
You! !
The wind is as sofl as your skin.
Your smile is as bright as the sun.
You are as calm as the trees and
you are as lovely as the urban jungle.
- Tim Grimm
An old house deserted, on a cold winter day.
Where did they go? They didn't say.
The boy was bad. the girl sort of whiny,
the parents were supportive and the baby was tiny.
Where the family went, he just cracks and 'creeks
as the cold wi nd blows. Whey did they leave him? All alone
All he could do is cry and moan. Something new
Appeared to him. A little red car. Couldn't be them?
No. it's not. It's some.one new. Who could they be?
Wh at should he do? It was a family of four they seemed
REAL nice. All he could hear was something about
price. He had a new family that opened his door
and hasn't left since, so he's not sad anymore!
- Amber Church

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Most state!
have alarmingly low math and sci·
ence standards, says the Fordham
Foundation.·
A new repon looks at math standards in 46 states and science standards in 36. More than one-third
flunked math standards, and onefounh flunked science standards.
States not evaluated either .tacked
standards, or did not make them
available for review.
"Too many of these standards are
vague, flimsy, illogical or just plain
sloppy," said the foundation 's
Chester Finn.
The report comes two weeks after
release of the ' Third International
. Math and Science Study - TIMSS
- which ranked U.S. high schoolers
at the bottom of the world in math
and science.
U.S. students perform poorly in
math and science because states and
school districts fail to adopt tough
standards, Bruce Albens, president of
the National Academy of Sciences,
said after the TIMSS ·study was
released.
·
Too many districts try to design
their own rnath and science standards,
said Alberts. Th~ National Academy
of Sciences took four years to design
K-12 science standards. drawing on

20 :~

110

"They're going to be more effective using them," he said. "They
have a top-down system."
In the report by the Fordham
Foundation. only three ·states earned
"A's" for math standards: California,
Nonh Carolina and Ohio. States
earning " A's" for science standards
include California, Hawaii, Arizona,
New Jersey and Rhode Island.
The evaluation of state ~tandard.~
reflects the conservative membership
of the Fordham Foundation,

COMPUtER SYStEM
tECBNICIIN

expertly mimicking palace columns.
trees and shrubs. To enhance their
costumes, the scenery people willllli
wearing camouflage, construction
paper .leaves and newspaper branch-:
es, all made or donated by someone
at Eastern High Schoo. Also, to give
the background a more three-dimen-:
sional appearance, trees and shrubs'
will tum a~ characters walk past or
.around them.
·
1
The cast members are grateful to'
Mrs. Kathy Garrison, Mrs. Lolita
Morrow and Ms. Kim Prosperi for
their help and suppon during the
prodcution.
·
Although this year, the play wilt .
be perfonned as a school assemblY,
it will be considered for next year''
senior class play. This year, it wil[ ·
·give the juniors much-need practice-.
and test the- play for audience rene; .
lion.
'
•" .

Tiukey Hunting Seminar
Healthcare of Leon Buffalo
(Rt. 62, Trible Road. Leon, WV)
Saturday, March 21 , 1998
9 a .m.-1 p.m.

Art Honor Society inducts
.new members at ceremony
By STEPH EVANS
Four new members and two honorary members were inducted recently
into Eastern High School's National An Honor Society.
Members were inducted on Feb. 26 in the third annual induction ceremony.
In the last two years, the inductioq service was held as a part of the annual
Spring An Show.
The advisor to the organization is Lolita Morrow, the art teacher.
New members were Mendy Guess. Stephanie Evans, Jamie Dlflke and Kim
Godwin. Honorary members are Seva Cline and Nancy Pickens. Members
who were already a pan of NAHS were Jenny Conklin, president; April Fore·
man, secretary and public relations; Bethany Cooke and Melody Lawrence,
treasurer and public relations.
•
.
The N,4.HS ·has had a great year this year, and we've had a lot of fund.
We are looking forward to our Spring An Show and whatever else comes
. our way.

MAll American Rod&lt; Show"

COOLSPOT

Bleach a: S~en Day

CONVENIENCE STORE

JesusI

Fuai.Qmetrlaa.Dall

April3rd
Tickets $6.00 each

Family Alltllurant
Coolville Exit off Rt. 7
667·61 00 Store
667-6101 Restaurant
0wn81': Bryan White

992-2844
on sale at

Francis Florist

Feed Supply
"Stuff"-for Ftts • Farm
Animals Stable
Joe Evana . 992•21.84
Owner

Advertise your
business here.
Call
992·2155
Ask for Dave

Juniors' web page
puts EHS·on Internet
By JUDY WEST
Eastern High School is on the internet.
This past fall, Radley Faulk and other juniors at Eastern decided to put
an EHS web page on the internet While the page began as a page for the
junior class, the juniors decided last fall to add sites for construction, senior
pictures and information about the district's elementary schools in order to
increase interest for web surfers.
The web page is an interesting idea, and as infor'mation is added, the page
will become even more interesting. For example, pictures of the Eastern High
School marching band appear on the homecoming link, and the band will
record approximately 15 seconds of tbe school's fight song for that section
of the page.
There is also a Schoolnet site, which shows the elementary students using
the Schoolnet program:There are also pictuies of the junior class and school
calendars.
All in all, the web page is helping to update the Eastern Locat School District so that we can be ready for the new millennium. By the year 2000, every·
one can know what Eastern High School is all about. If yoli wish to visit the .
website, you can log on at www.frognet.net/-.ehs . .

Wheel Horse ·
TRACTORS
and RIDING
MOWERS

333 Page Street
Middleport, Olio
45760
(614·992·6472

BAUMLUMBER
State Route 248
Chester
985-3301
/

, • .L!
Your Prom

Headquaners
llOW Main

·llil llwd . . . A. . .

Ohio River
Bear
Company
992-4055
Tri-County
Ford

UD

ftiOUBLESBOOtD

'

.Fruth Pharmacy Is recruiting a member
for Its MIS Dept.
Individual must posses• basic eoftwara and
hardware
knowledge,
UNIX
operating
systems, computer and system troubleshooting skills, and networking experience.
Send reeume and wage requirements to:
Computer Technician
Fruth Pharmacy
Rt. 1, Box 332
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTI&lt;;E
Spring cleanup of Rutland
Townahtp Cemeterlee witt
begin April 15. Anyone who
wenll to aeve decoretlone
ere eeked to remove them
before then.
(3) t7, 1e, 22 3tc
Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
•NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturdey, March 21,
{998, et 11:00 a.m.; a public
Hie .,r11 be held 112t1 Well
Sacond Str11t, Pomeroy,
Ohto, The F.armere Bank
and Savtnga Company
parking let, to Nil lor Cllh
thelollowtng collatri:
18811 CHEVROLET
' C-10 PICKUP TRUCK
· 2GCCC14H4GI1330158
;The Farmera B1nk and
Saving•
Compeny,
Pomeroy, Ohio ,...,.,.. the
right to bid II IIIII ute, lnd
to Withdrew the above cott•teral prior to 111e.
Further, The Fermere Bank
and Saving• Company
,...rv11 the right to reJect
eny Clr ell bide eubmlttld.
Further, the ebove collll·
eral wilt be aotd In the con.
d.ltton tt Ia In, with no
expr111 or Implied war·
re nU •• II Iven.
l'or further Information,
contact Tim et 985-4289.
(3) 18, 19, 20 3TC

t·

Property.,............. 28,500.00
General
Government ........38,920.00
State Highway ........ 5000.00
StrHI Conlllructton,
Mllntenanct~

&amp;

Repelr.......................21,000
EMA Money
1166 OHDSR ........ 68,784.00
Water Fund .......... 81,500.00
Sewer Fund .............. 62,000
Sewer Debt
Fund ..................... 48,000.0D
Blatc Utility
Servtcea................. 4,000.00
Replacement
Fund .....................10,000.00
Totaloletl
Approp. ............. 385,704.00
Eellmlted population ... 600
Federel Cenaua
• Popiltitlon ..................... 487
Thlt Ia an uneudlted
Financial Statement.
I certify thta report to be
correct and true to the blat
of my knowledlltl.
RoHmery Snowden-Eakew
- Clerk·TrHaurer
337 Main St, P.O: Box 420
~ Rutlltld, Ohio
(3)19, ~

742-2211

.

WICKS
HAULING

·Ul)"'estone,
·Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

..

-·

;
I

so

.. .

:

'

ers rarm on Red mud Aki ga. An·

Found: male beagle, Forest Run

vicinity, call740·949·3403.
l os t : 1 Mare Pony. Red With

•
-'lllls StraH01: Master SIf¥1Cll •-.Lnl
'""' Clan
tloor Power lqulpnrenf Association: Certlfltd 2 C•dt
State Route 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio

r

1476.

170

949·2804

..

' Custom Homes
j

M&amp;J

a

-

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Saleollual
Be Paid In A.dvance.
DEAQUNE;2;00 p.m.
tne day belore me "'
Ia to run.Sunday

Remodeling

House Trailer .Sitn !
Land Clnl'lng &amp;
I
Grading ·
I
Septic Syltem &amp;
"Build Your
!
Uti IlUll
I
Estlmatn
1998 Martin Street
I
(614) 992-3838 '' Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
12/1t/lfn ·'

adiHon • 2:00 p.m.

Friday. Mooday adltlon
· 10:00 ..... Satunlly.
Thursday, Friday And Saturday.
9:00A.M.635 Thlld Avenue.

Dream"

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

Joe Wilson
(61 992-4277

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In

,.........._.....,-:--""""""';...--..__..;______,,1

Advonce. Deadline; 1;OOpm the

CELLULAR PHONES

dey before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday A Monday edltlon1.:00pm F!lday.
Spring yard sale· Thursday, Friday, Satu rel ay. 1635 Lin coln
Hetgtns, rain or shine. LOts of cot~ctlbtes. many one and two dollar
Items, ma.ny other items.

360° Communications

'
JEFF. WARNER INSURANCE
.

113 W. 2ND ST.

Thursday, Fr iday, &amp; Saturday,
36670 Ba shan Ad, Long Bonom,
misc. items, atso antiQues.

80

POMEROY, OH.

Auction
and Flea Market

------

I

614-992-5479

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full li me auction eer, complete
auction
se rvice. licensed
t66 ,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304·
773-57a5Or 304- n :r5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit~
ver And Gold Co in s, Proofseta,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings. Pre·1930 U.S: Curren cy,
Sterling. Etc. Acouisitlons Jewelry
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

.Awnue, Gall!&gt;otis. 740-«6-2842.

Antiq ues, lop prices paid, RiverIne Antiq ues. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owne r. 740·992-

2526.

20 Yrs. E&lt;p. • Ins. Owner: Ron nie Jones

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture ,
wi ll buy one piece or comp lete

IIAN:o.-..,.M:..N:o.N:o.~IIAN.-.IIAN:o.M..
M!~J !.il!!J ~~f il!!J ~ : ~ ! w~ ~tj ~ I tilt~ iJi._uj ~

~.

JD COISTRUCTIOI

-~

1/A
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
;..,
ill!• Garages , Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding J'i!:
~

Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Ins ured

~

Phone 740-992-3987

"""•

Free Estimates

!il!!;

Owne r: John Dea n

Je~.·Ftb.·Mar.

Fr11 Eat.• Fully Insured

White Blaze Face, Rio Grande
Area, 740·245·5492.
LOST: 2 Siberian Huskies tn one
Gamp Con~y a1ea. Call 304-6753613 after5:00pm wHh any lnb.
Missing Since 1124190: Tan Male
Cocker Spaniel. Lest Seen On
·Williams Hollow Road wearing
•Choker With PA Rabies Tag. Any
llnto Apprecialed. Call 740-446·

l.t- '

I

Quality won- Gu.rantHd

Lost and Found

For relurn~~:=~~n German
Shephard taken hom Edith Rog·

•Mowers •Chain Saws •Weedeaters •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlgga &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollough
·Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!

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

1 ~1oW92-11057

t;

f@

household. Dsby Martin. 740992-6576.
Buy ing Hardwood Timber On

Shares. 40180 Or 50150 % De·
pending On Quality, 740·256·
61 72.

Cle an La te Model Ca rs Or
Trucks, 1990 Model&amp; Or Newer,
Smith Buick Ponllec, 1900 East-

ern Avenue, Galipolis.
&amp; 0 Aut o Parts. Buyin g
wrecke d or salvaged vehicles .

J

304· m-5033.

Wa nted To Buy: Used Mobile

Homea. 740·446·0175. 304-675·
5965.

. Middleport, Oh.

Wanted- standing trees. tree lops

or fence rows for firewood. 740-

LIMESTONE

COUNTRY CANDLE
SHOP

Special Thru
March
8 ton Delivered

New Hours:
Tues-Fri 10·6 Sat. 10·4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essential Oils
• Easter Baskets
• Handmade Sruff Rabbits
• Assorted Wooden Angels
Bring your odds &amp; ends
and we wilt fill them.
Rt. 124 Minersv ille, OH

$120
Mileage Umlt
Call Randy

992·5050

740-992-4559

....

SAYRE

Custom Cakes

1:TRUCKING

ALL OCCASIONS
Blrthdaya, Holldaya,
Weddlnge, Showere,
Annlveraarlea,
GrlduaUOIII, Etc.
Home Bakery Ucenoed
and lnapected
Plea and Cooklee

Hauling, Excavating
a Trenching
Umeit~ne &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer a House Sites
Rutonable RafeJ

Joe N. Sayre
614-742-2138

843-5544

Ohio

1 mo. pel.

YOUNG'S.
CARPENTER SEVICE · ·

II Call Mall
.. Buy Accumulations•
"Coltecttblel, Antlquea,
Mlacettaneoua,
Houaeholde, etc."
Jean WhHe
740-245-9448

BAUM LUMBER
NOW IN STOCK A
NEW ECONOMICAL
29 GAUGE ROOFING
OR SIDING

!192·290&lt;4.
1

IU(H GROVE ROAD
GUN SHOOT
. SUN.. 1:00PM

Fectory Choke Only

FrHEt tlmateo
No Job Too Small

Btlan Morrlaon

(740) 985-3948

Wanted : Fly Wheel. For Wlsconsi n 10 HP Motor, On A Bolens
Lawnmower Model ITA·100, 740-

446-t756.

We Buy Auto's In Any Condition,

Call 740·300·9062. Or 740-446·
PART.

Metal 9" OC Rib/White

3'XI0'·$12.50
3' X12'·S15.00
3' XI4'·S11.50

tf11lD .

lumber • lllllldlng Uotorlalo
Cuotom IIlli~ Rool Truoaeo
Pole Bam Pockageo
Toro Whltl Horae Troctoro
Hot Springa Sp11

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas ! Shirley

Spea,., 304-675-1429.

Open: 7:30-5:00 Weekday•
i:~ : OO Saturday

Avon $8 -$20 /Hr, No Door -To •
Ooor, Easy Cash. Fun. 1·80073&amp;0168 indlsls/rep

46384 SR248 • Cht11t!r.9,h!\l•.

Babysitter needed in Racine area,

74&lt;&gt;-949-4004.

Bates Bros. Amusement CO.
Must be 18 years or older. Free
10 travel. Call 740-266·2950, M-F,

8.00·4:30.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
30 Announcements
$50 reward or information leading
to the "recovery of a stolen red
Kawasaki 300 Bayou 4 wheeler.
stolen 3/ 12/98. 740·742-1365 or

740-742·9530.
Giveaway
40

•Room Additions
•New Garagea
1o Montl1 oto mate Oatmanan,
•Electrical a Plumbing I
o.ood with kids. to good' home
only. :»t-458- 1515.
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
11 Month old Tr ic olor Beagle,
Painting
runs good, good with children, to
gOOd hOme only. 304-675·7911.
Alio Concrete Work ·,I;. P/B Conlractors Inc.
•Bobcat Service
· 6 Mil8d Puppies: Two Solid Cobr,
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Three With Blue Eyes, 740-446·
•Concrete
V.C~ YOUNG Ill
9351.Aftor6 P.M.
Construction
992-6215
8mq.' old lemale, Black Lab &amp;
Pomeroy, Ohio
•Maaonry Construction
.Blue Tick mixed. beautllul, play·
•General etc.
lui. great lamlly ~og. house
Commorct.l ond Reoldentiel
broke, needs country home to
. run. 304-6 75-2 362.
24 Hr. Bobcol Sorvlct
RUTlAND, OH.
AVIIIIDll
AMERICAN LEGIQN

!·

The Classlfleds

992·2498.

Parts and Service!!

--·-·

YouW Come Up Aces ·With

very good with kids, spayed, 740·

r---::~---'::":~---~-----,1

ca-u........).

Public Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
·
NOTICE. Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, March 21 •
1H8, II tO:OO a.m.,·, public
ute .,r11 be held 11211 Wilt
Second Strllt, Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Farmara Bank
and Savtnga Company
-'-----....;.---1 perking let, to Nil for c111i
Public Notice
the rono.,rng collateral:
1993 YAMAHA SCCA II
PUBUC NOTICE
. MOTORCYCLE
Ordtnenee No. 1998-1
JVA4DUE03PA011845
Annuet Appropriation
The Farmer• Bonk and
Ordl,.nce
Savtng•
Company,
Vlllllltl of Rutland
Pomeroy, Ohio r..1rv11 tht
FIIICII Yur Ending
right to bld at thte ute, and
Dec. 31, 1H8
to w~hdrew the above col·
Unencumbered Balance lateral · prior to aate.
Jan. 111, 1998
Further, The Farmere Ban~
Generel Fund .......$11,388.14 and Savtnga Compeny
Special Revenue
reHrvaa the right to reJect
Funda ................... 81,717.92 any or all blda aubmttted.
Entarprlu
Further, lhll ebove collet·
Fund ................... t06,775.50 era! will 1M eotd In the conTotal ................... 198,681.62 dliton It Ia In, with no
Taxea .................... t1 ,503.00 expr111 or Implied · war·
Other sourcea
rant111 gtvell.
GtMnlt Fund .......45,385.00
For further lnformetlon,
Special Rwenue
contact Tim at 985-428t.
Fund ...................15,600.00 (3) 18, 19, 20 3TC•
EnttrpriH Fundi ... 178,000
Totii .............. A... 2311,1185.00
Public Notice
GrendTotal
Generet Fiind .......88,2110.14
LEGAL NOTICE
,
Special
Seated blda wtu be
"What happenedl Old I touch a nerve?"
Revenue ...:.......... t7,317.92 received In accordance with !----......:-...:.;_____________
EmtrpriH
.
the lew until 10:00 noon,
Funda ................. 284, 775.58 Daylight Savlnga nme, on
Total ............... $448,349.02 April 13, 1998 II the
Trnaurer'l Olltoe, Eaalern
Eatllllltld RHOUroH
Current Expen- end
Loc:at School Dtatrtct, 38900
Other Expet1dltuSR 7, Rlldevute, Ohio, for
Security o1 Peraone and
the furnlahlng of matertata,

Three year old Cocker Spaniel .

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

(LimeStoneLow Rates)

JUft Clld••

·aottle Gas

992·2196

...

Long Hair, Male, Ho4J1ebroken,
~~~~~t~ft~~~~d~n. ~hone 740·

swers to nam e 'Chance." No
(N
·;"''------~:;:0~::,:~~;:::~~--===~1
questions ask. Call John Rogers
HlQ0-207·0576.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO•.,
Ume•tone Hauling !

I

Rutland
Supporting all the
lf'MIChoo.. &amp; youth
Stop In and 11Y "HI"
to Dave or Herb.

.

.

····· ·- --

Public Notice
Public Notice
labor, equipment end ~ compeny to do eurety
complete lnltalllllon .. bUIInlll In the Stile of
necnury for end Ohio, end I current
.. . '
..
tncldenllt to the SchooiNet :· nnenctet etetement of the
"
Wiring ProJICII tor Eaatem aurety company. The bQndl
~---,
High School and E11tern K· ehall be on the · form
8 Etementllry In the Eattern approved by the Board of
Local School Dlatrtct, ; Education of the Eaetern
Reedevtlle, Ohio. The bide Local School .Dietrlct, with
'witt be publicly opened end aufflctent auretlea, In a aum
rMd by the tre11urer at the equet to the _, tum of the
Treaaurer'a Ofltce, Eeatem bid, end ftlld with IUCh bid.
WILLUDLLocal School Dletrtct
The Eallem locltllolrd
R..devtlle, Ohio. Seated of Educetton reeervee the
btda mull be plainly marked right to rtlect eny end all
992·2646
"Btda for SohooiNet Wiring bide or any and all perta of
Project. • The blda ahaU be a bid. A p,..bkl conferwnce
Gravel, Umeetone,
tebuleted and reported
will be held on llerch 23,
Tops-oil, Fill Dirt,
the tr..aurer to the board
1998 at the 3:30 E11t1m
Sand.
No Minimum.
Ita next mHIIng.
Standard Time. Atllndlnce
No bid ahatt be · by bldderela mendatory, In
conaldered unt111 mlde on order to clarify or enewer
the forme evelttble at the . queationa concerning the
ofllee ofthe tr111urer of the 1 p t c IIt c 1 II on a
and
Eaatern Locet School dra.,rnge.
.I ROBERT BISSELL
Dtatrlct, Reedevtlle, Ohio
Bid apeclflcatlona can be ,
'COIISTRUCfiON
and In eccorclance with the picked up at E11tem local
contract documenta, which High School. Coplll .,ru be .•New Homes
c o n at a t
oI
a 11 · evelleble and 1 depoett for
•Garages
advefllaemente and nctleft, the bid epeclflcatlone wilt
the lnetructtone to blddere, be required. The amount of ! •Complete
epectftcettona
end the depoalt Ia filly dollare.
Remodeling
drawlnge, bid forma, form
The attention of blddera
Stop
&amp; Compare
of contract egrHmant, form Ia called to the atetutory
of bid and performance requlramenta of the s- of
FREE
bonde. The premium for the Ohio relettng to the
ESTIMATEES
bond ehall be Included In ltcenelng of corporation•
the proposal baae bid organized under thelawa of
985-4473
amount.
any other etate, end to the
7/22/lln
Each . bid ehatt be contrut documenta
accompented by a contract available at the afortaald
bond In an amount.equal to olllce ol 11M """'rer.
McFEE ROOFING &amp;
By order of the board of
the total aum or the bid
PAINTING
eupported by 1 Power of Educetlon ol the E11t1m
Specializing
In:
Attorney, lor the bonding Local School Dtatrlct.
agent, a eertlflcata form the
Uu M. Ritchie New Roofl, Roof Repetre,
Depertment ol lnaurence
Truaurer
Guttere, Interior &amp;
authorizing the auraty (3) 101 tc
Exterior Painting;
Drywall Rlflllr.
L.o- filii during the
HERMAN® by Jitn Unger
· winter monilia of

Advertise your
business here.
Call
992-2155
Ask for Dave

The "Good Buy"
Guys&amp; Gals

I,.
I

KIT ' N' CARLYLE®. by Larry Wright

"

..
i

Small House Dog, Blonde, Wlttl

e

614-.992-7643

·Chester, Ohio

I

Plays Your Favorite
Rock-Dance &amp; Country Tunes
FRIDAY, 9 PM· 1 AM
THE MilWAY TAVERN

Band .s et
for contest/
March :21 .
By JUDY WEST
The Eastern High School con·
cen band will perform at District
17 contest on March 21 at II a.m.
The contest will be 'held at Ironton
High School.
Concen band competitions an;
much different than Marching
Band competitions. The band will
perform three long pieces of music
while sight reading. When sight
reading, band members have three
minutes to study the piece, three
minutes to discuss the piece with
the director, and then play the piece
of music - which is usually music
that the band has never played.
Also, bands are required to earn
a superior rating in order to
·advance to state competition. while
marching bands sometimes have
six chances to qualify for state-level competition.
Band members are both nervous
and hopeful . Many are in junior
high, and aren't as experienced as
senior high members. Our director
Kimberly Prosperi is also nervous,
but Principal Clayton Butl,er feels
that with the leadership of the
upperclassmen, the junior high
students will perfonn well.

Help Wanted

BISSELL BUILDERSI INC.

/ 985-4422

i

.
I

the nation's top expens.
"To say that every district should
design its own science standards this is crazy," said Albens. "They
don 't have the resources. We won' t
be internationally competitive."
Impeding adoption of tough standards is the splinlered organization of
U.S. schools - thousands of districts
each charting their ·Own academic
course.
The Academy's science standards
have been posted on the Internet, said
Albens , and China has adopted them.

Free E1timate1
448-4759
191

Call 614·843·5426

I

.

Agricultural Ume,
Umestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

20Vrs. Exp.
· tns. OWner: RICk Johnson

675-1193.

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

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances

Over 20 years 11xperi1Jnce.
Free Estimates

·

.:-TRUCKING

Galllpolle, Ohio 45831

· • Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

will enable students to get and hold life with a positive outlook," Ray ficult, but Mrs. Barnett, job special."
a job after graduation.
Basim. a JOG member at Eastern ist for the program. takes hertime and .
While · is school, 'students will said~ "I think it is a wonderful pro- covers the material step-by-step, until
e~plore the job market, identify their gram it. taught me what an we understand.
career interests, research technical employer would e~pect of me."
The program emphasizes doing'
training and other educational opporAfter graduation, the student's job your personal best and maintaining 8'
tunities, learn skills and techniques to specialist wit[ continue to assist him positive attitude while reaching for·
get and hold a job, parti,~:ipate in the 1ior her for a period of one year as the personal goals.
:
student-run Ohio Career Associa- student enters the work force, attends
Students interested in panicipating
tion, and participate in activities, field ;college, enters the military or engages in JOG should contact their coun1in other post-secondary training.
trips and other social activities.
' selor, their school job specialist, or
"JOG taught me how to look at
JOG helps students face difficult . principal.
obstacles. The class work is often dif·

Report decries
low math, science standards
.

R•.L. HOLLON

COHSTROCTIOn

Future jobs program takes· root at EHS :~
By ROBIN BARRINGER
and APRIL MILHOAN
A program at Eastern High School
is designed to help students find work
after graduation.
JOG - Jobs for Ohio Graduates
- is a school-to-work transition
program which beings in school and
continues to provide support services
Iafter you graduate.
Why should students join JOG?
The program is designed to help
develop employability skills which

Giveaway

Misc. Item s tO be hauled away,

,Class to stage Shakesperian

Students develop
skills in verse via
'Poetry Tree'

When the world wants too much
And it feels cold and out of touch
it's a beautiful place
When you kiss my face.

.·

.I

COWING SOON
.
New Sports Restaurant
Needing general manager, kltctlen man agement. kitchen help,
kitche n prep. bartenders , hostess , servers . Please send re sume to: Twisters _Sports Gril l
107 Acaoemy Drive Rip ley, wv

2527t .

DATAENTRY
Data bate entry. Good Keyboard ing allllla. Sel f·l11rtlng .
Prevto ua experience preferable.
Send rea ume end u lary requir ements to : Box SF- 2 c/o
Point Pleuent Reglater 200

Metn St. Point Pleooant, WV
25550.

.

Dependable And Flexible Cerllfied Nurse Aid Needed For tn
Home care. Call Adrianne Or An-

gie 1·800-41il-6334.
FRUSTRATED? NO REAl. ADVANCEMENT POTENTIAL?
GL..ASS CEIUNG?

· II you are employed and lee/ you
are in a no gain situation, you owe
II to yourself to consider joi ning
Beagle &amp; Terrier mtxa d, &amp;mos. : the Loewen Group. This Is a tllgh
old white &amp; yellow cat. 30.-875· . tncome profess ion. rapid ad·
·5590.
vancement pot ential. and selfsatisfaction helping families. For
Male dog,· Roftweller/ Chow mix, yo1.1r last Job Interview, call Steve

gOOd witll ChHdl8n, 74().992·2904.

Smt!&gt; at614-992·7440.

�Page 1o • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

":J~:."u_rsct_~aty";,M~a_.~":h_-1_9~,-:1998~---:-:-:-==-:--.-:--_-.;,.-:_"""":"=--~-~ P":o-:m;...e::_~~:~:·:_M:;I:dd:l:epo:=rt:,O=hl=o==--=========Th=eDally Sentinel• Page 11
NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER

ACROSS

38 CIA'I

~··-

1 ...._ lrOUnd 37 Joyful

qulc:kJy

exclllll.ltlon

e Acting IW•d

H Snoope
40 TV"I Marla -

10 Not IWike
12 Fuhlon

Board Cerlllled

X Ray Tech

needed to work part lime m mo·
bile X Ray rn Gal lrpolisfPt
Pleasant area Please send re
su me to Honzon Mobr le Health
Inc 1302 7th Ave Hun tmgton
wv 25701 "
Have An Avo n Party In Your
Home And Get A Free Grftl Call

Atrsha Roj aS At 740 245·9635 ,
An Avon

Independent

Sates

Representallve
lmmedr ate opemngs for CNA PT/
FT

Aequ~re s

WV certrfrcatron

Mu st be abl e to work all shrfts

Excellent bene l rt package lor FT

employees Contact Sandra Aert
m ~r e

AN DON 304 675 ·0860
l a ~un

Ext 124

rs an EEO Em

ptoyer

MuJdlepon Pa rk Re creat ron rs
now takmg aophca ll ons fo r lrle·
guard s

Appli ca ti ons can

FINANCIAL
210

Sty lrst Needed New Sal on W1th

Business
Opportunity

1NOT1CE1
OHIO VALLEY PUBL1SH1NG CO
recommends th at you do busi
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to se nd money through the
ma1t unttl you have Investigated
the offering
If you have an established busl

3 Bedroom $995 Down, $1981
Mo . Only Oakwood Homes, Bar·
WV, 304-736-3409

bours~n11e,

Glenwood Palestine Ad Mason

co 1969 3 Bedroom moolle

8575

Large selection ol used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starting at $2995

Professional
Services

Livi ngston s basement water
proolmg all basement repa1rs
done free esttmates l1fe 11me
guarantee 1Oyrs on JOb expe u
ence 304·675 2145

1-888-928·

3426

Quick deliver, Call 740 385·
962 1

L1M1TED OFF!iR
1998 Doubtew1de 3br 2 baths

$1 699/dow n $259/mo Only a1
Oakwoocl Homes N1tro WV 304·

755-5885

Located Johnson s Mobile Home
Pa rk Eastern Avenue With Ex·

The Career Opportunity 0! A life·
t1me One Of The Nat1ons Prem1er
Mortgage Co Will Soon Be
Openmg In The Oh1 0 Valley In
f1nlly Fman c1a l Solut1 on Inc
Takes Pr1de In The H1ghest Qual
11y Customer Serv1ce And hten
s1ve va n ety 0 1 Program s At
Some 01 The l owes t Interest
Rate s Ava1lable In Tod ays Mar ke l We Are Now Acc epttng
Resume s From Sea so nal Loan
Offtcer And Expenence Mortgage
Processor Candidate Should
Have All east t 2 Years Expen·
ence And lOr College Degree In
A Related Fteld Our Success
Has Led To Un1magmabte Growth
And Unltmlted Opportunity For
Our Employees We Currently
Ofter Top Pay In The Indu stry
Pa1d Vacallons &amp; Hol1days And
Comprehens1ve Medical Plan If
You Co ns1der Yourself H1ghly
Ambllt OUS And Sell MOtivated
Don 1 let Th1 s Opportunity Pass
You By IndiVIduals W1th Bank Or
F1na nce Company Exper1en ce
Are En courageCI To App ly fa(

New Doubtew1de Repo 4 Bed rooms 2 Baths Easy Terms I·

pando 740 446-2003

800-383-{)862
AU real estat e adventslng 1n

this newspa pgr 1S subJect to
me Federal Falf Hous1ng Act
ol 1968 wt1 1ch makes 1!1llegat
to advcrl1se any preference
11m1tat10n or OISCflmmatJOn
based on race color rehg1on
sep{ fam11ial status or natiOnal
ongm or any 1nlent1on to
make any such preterence
hm1tahon or dJscnmna!IOn ~
Thts newspaper w1U not
knowingly accept
adver11sements tor real estate
WhiCh IS In VIOiatiOO Ol the
law Our readers are hereby
mlormed that all dwellings
adve rt1sed 1n th1s newspaper
are avatlable on an eQual
opportumty bas1s

Resume To 717 -346-526 1 Or

Vosper Cable Marketing A Aucl1t
mg 15 lookmg for Sales Reps to
Market cable TV services m Vtr
g1ma &amp; Kentucky as well as
Po1nt Plea sant , WV Must have
rel iable transportaiiOn Weekly
travel requ1rec Heallh Insure
Will pay Per Otem towards week·
ly eMpenses Excellent mcome
potential VMC ts also looking for
potenllal Sates Managers and 1
Qual thed mstaller Call Scan
Vosper at 1 800 686 4826

WILDL1FE JOBS TO $21 60 /HR
INC BENEFITS Game War
dens Security MatnJenace Park

Rangers NO EXP NEEDED
FOR APP AND EUM 1NFO
CALL 1-800-813-3585, EH
6475 8 A M · 9 P M, 1 DAYS
ldt,lnc

YOUTH DEVELOPMENT PROFESSIONALS Do You Believe
Tha t Every Ch dd Deserves A
Healthy Happy Nurturmg En~ 1
ro nmenl In Whi Ch To Grow? Re·
crutters From Moose heafl Ch1ld
Ctty And Scho ol Are Seek1ng
Canng, Energellc Patient lndtvtcl·
uals Or Couples To Res1de In
Our Campus Homes (l ocated 40
M1tes W 01 Chicago) To Provtde
Gu toance An d Support For Our
Ch1lclren Newborn Through Htgh
Schoo l Age Mu st Be Ove r 21
Ha"e HS 01p loma Expe oen ce
Workmg W1th Youth College De
gree Prelerred Co mprehens1ve
Tram1n g Provtded Salary
S1 250/ Month .. Free Room And
Board (Over $750 Value) Bene·
ltts tnctudtng Free Me&lt;J1cat In
surance Pen s10n Plan And
4038 Aecrwtmg (" NEW PHONE

NUMBER

")

8881755 2680

www moosetntl org

180

Wanted To Do

Dependable hones t lad u~s will
CIO your housectean1ng 304 576

2147 or 674-0598
Expene nced Carpen lry Fram1ng
To Fm1 sh Remodelmg Add- Ons
Decks 74()-441-0296
EMper1enced Child Care Available
Near Holzer Hosp1ta l Acceptmg
Age s 4 .. Any Days /S h1fts 740

441 9806
Furflllure repalf rehn1sh and res
torauon also custom orders Oh1o
Valle y Rel mlshtn g Shop Lau y
Ph1lllps, 740-992-6576
Georges Portable Sawm1l1 don I
ttaul your togs to the mtll JUSt call

304-675 1957
Parntlng Plumb1 ng Remodeling
Any And All Odd Jobs 1 Free Es
!lmates. 740·245-515 1
Professional Tree Servtce Stump
Removal Free Est1mates1 In
surance Brdwell Oh10 614 388
9648 614 367 7010
Will Care For Your L11!1e One In
My Home N1ce Clean Friendly
Chnst1an At mosphere 740-379

9887
W111 cto tre e lrlmm tng, laMscap·
Jng fertlhiinQ hauling and o! her
odd jobs 740-992 2904

7191
New Doutllew1de 3BR, 2 bath
$1 325 Down &amp; $179 permo 1-

888 929 3426
PRE-OWNED HOMES
EMcellen t Condition, Owner Fl·
nancrng Available Call 304· 722·

7148

Call Toll Free 1-888 77 9 4437
Ask For Mr Hatley
The Fam1ly Resou rce Network of
Mason County Per sonnel Com
mttlee IS now accephng res umes
lor the postllon ot Fam1ly Ae
source Oue ctor A Masters De
gree IS preferred and a Bact1elors
Degree IS requ1red m Public Ad
m1mstra110n Human Serv1ces, or
a related held Expenence m pro
gram management organization
at planning and grant wrtltng preferred as well as demonstrated
ab1ht1es m communtly orgamza·
!!on commumcauon and leader·
ship The position w\11 tocus on
the overall management ol the
FAN, m accordance w1th the po
IJCJ9S and regulatiOnS set forth by
the Mason County FAN BoarCI Of
01rect ors Salary ra nge fr om
S17 000 to $22 000 The deadline
lor resumes w1t1 be Apnl 3 t99e
Please sene! resumes to Mason
Co FAN Personnel Commtttee
P 0 Box 39 3 Pt Pleasant WV
25550 ThiS POSJtton IS a grant
lundeCI posltton through the Gov
Cab1net on Children and Fa·
mllles

St1ll under warranty owner fl ·
304· 755·
nanclflg ava ilable

REAL ESTATE
31 0 Homes for Sale
Ranch 3 Bedrqoms 1 Bath Large
L1vingroom Large Kitchen 1
Acre Galttpo ll s Ctty Schools

$62 000 537 Plymale Road 740446 4323
3 Bedroom &amp; Bath Large Out
building , Cl!y AnCI weu Water

Walerloo Ohoo 304-736 2193
3 Qedroom L shaped bnck ranch,
2 car garage 2 lull baths on
100x300 level lot 5 m1tes South
ol Pomt Pleasant , 20 mmutes
from Toyota Plant Very nr ce

304 675-1226

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths Oak
Cabmets, Carport Barn 1 Acre

$79 500 740-446 0035

AEPO SPECIAL Most Homes
Never L• ved In These Homes
Are Orasltcally Reduce d With
Spec1al E-Z F1nan c1ng CALL

NOW FOR PRE-APPROVAL, 18611-736-3332
Single Parent Program. Special
hnancmg on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Payment• u low 11
$180 CaD now 304-755-5885

Special 16x8o JBR, 2 Da1n
$1,325 Down $179 Mo Free air
&amp; lree sk1rtmg 1-800-691-67n

SPRING SPECIALS
$499 Down
9 9 Fixed Ratel

$1911/Mo. Payrnen1s
$17,995 on 3BR.
Free Delivery I Set-up
Only A1 Oakwood Horne•
N11ro, WV, 304-755-5865
New 3br $999/down $189/mo
Free Set·up &amp; Delivery Only 3

car garage Asking $50 ooo 304576-2972

Le111 Only a1 Oakwood Homes N1
1ro WV 304-755-5885

BUY HOMES FROM $4,000 1 -5

Very Ntce 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths,
16x60 Mob1le Home W1th Lots Of
Extras! Already Sel Up On Lot,
Take Over Payments Call 740-

Bdrm , Local Gov't &amp; Bank Aepo's

Call 1 800-522-2130, X1709
Middleport, beaut1lut two story, 3
br 2 ba th large I r &amp; lr . oak
doors &amp; tnm, Smith's custom oak
cabtnets Jenn· alf range d1sh·
washer detached garage, by ap-

poon1men1 740-992-5243

Ranch 2 bedroom, 1 bath ltntng
room , d1mngroom k1tchen 1 24
acres w1th uier lrontage , enough
nyer frontage to make summer
camp s1te located on SR 124
Aacme Oh, 740-949-2006
Very mce two story home w1th two
car garage tocateCI in Gravel Hill
Commun1ty m M1ddleport Corner
tot w11t1 newer Sldtng root, wmd·
ows and much more call 740·
992·6737 or 740.992 30410

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12M50 mobile home lurntshed
cent ral air 60x90 tot call 740
992·2309 anyt1me
12x65 Trailer 3br 1 bath $5 500

Call 304 675-4678
14 1!70 38A $999 Down &amp; ONLY
St 59 per mo Free atr &amp; free sk1rt
mg 1·88B 928 3426
1968 OetrOIIer mo011e hOflle new
wtung &amp; ptumbm g co mpletely
remodeled $6 000 304 675·
6149

por1 $300 monlh plus deposn
and utilities 740-992-3194

446-0571

Why Rent When You Could Own?
81g Savmgs On Singles And
Ooubte·Wtdes 6 75% To Quail·
hed 8lJyers $499 00 Down Plus
Tax And T1tle W1th Approved

CredO!) WESTWOOD HOME
SHOW, INC 1·800·251·5070 Or
304-736-3888
NEW BANK REPO'S, ONLY!
LEFT, 1-8011-383-4862
330 Farms for Sals
Mint Farm 20 85 Acres Plus Ex •
Large Pol e Barn Wil.h Concrete
Floor, 1994 St Rt 325 N , 1 1/4

Mile N 01 S1 R1 35, Applllosed A1
$56 000 Does Not Include Trailer,
Phone 937-568-4500

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
\ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
SMALL BUSINESS,
COUNTRY ESTATE)

We are opan 8 30am-e OOpm

Apartments
for Rent

1 anCI 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nlshed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pels, 740

992 2218

1991 Gores! Glen 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths 21 E( pan do 14x 80 AH

$252/Mo Pay Oil I 17 200 740
388-8741 740-388 8389
14M80 Glamour Bath $179/Mo

441Hl008

304-736-7295
Anenhon Mob•~ Home Owners
Area s largest Inventory 01 Inter·
tnerm &amp; Coleman Heal Pumps
Air Candrt 1oner s Furna ces &amp;
Parts Huge Buy1ng Power Means
The Lowest Installed Pnce Easy
Over The Phone Bank Flnancmg
Call Bennett's Mobile Home HTG
&amp; CLG 1:800-872-5967

BUY 1N MARCH
No Payments UntU July 1998

E Z FK1anclng
Call Frnance l ine

1-800-948-5678
Free Set·up &amp; Delrvery
Discoun t Moblte Home Part s &amp;
Accessones Wa ter Hea te rs VI
nyl Slw tm g K1ts $29 9 95, An
chors Wood &amp; Fibergla ss Steps
Root Coatrngs Doors, Wlnctows
Plumbtng &amp; Electrical Supplies
Block1ng Wood &amp; Wedges And
More t Call Bennetts Mob1le

Home Supply A11 740 446 94 16

~ 1 0 Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom House At 36 Chilli·

colhe Road Gallipolis Deposl1
References $325/Mo , No Inside

Pel&amp;, 740-446-2419
2br house, stove &amp; relng&amp;Jator at
129 George St New Haven, Wv

Cenlenary 4 112 Miles From Gal-

One bedroom apartment In Mid-

d1ep&lt;lf1, an u11h1M&gt;s paid, $270 pe1
month , $100 deposit, call 740-

NtwHiven,WV
1 Bedroom apts for elderly or

Presant System

1-800-649-2323
74Q-245-ooot
Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
poano Dr 740-444 4525

JET

AERAT10N MOTORS
Aepatred New &amp; Rebt.ufl In Stoct
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528
Johnson s Used Furnnure
Washer, Or~ers. Hutches. 0 !·
nella's Aelngerators Stoves Tel.
evrs1ons, Llvlngroom /Be droom

Sulles. 740-448-4039, 740-446·

Movmg Sale Cub Cadet Lawn

Traclor 44" CU1, 18 HP Hydros1a1-

snell $10, Rockar $15, 740-446Prlmestar. $99 wilh rebate Free
HBO with first month fret. Offer

Queen Size Walerbed Complele,
Works Good 740-379-2720 AF·
TEA I PM
R a S Fum11ura

UpstBirs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur·

Buy, Sen, '!lade
Usad &amp; Anllques

C~an

No Pels, Refe&lt;ence

1519

Furmture

304-773-5341,

Daybed No Mattress $170, Swivel Rocker Patio Chair White

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In

Town, Newly Remodelad , HBO
Wsek1y Rales, Or Monlhly Ra1es.
740-441·5698. 740-441-5187

51ee1 WIPed llncludo&amp; Fool Slool
$751 7~0-446-2629. Leave Message
Smllh Corona PWP 4200 WordProcessor W1th Monitor It Has A

Hard Orlve And A Disc Drive II

Sleeping rooms with cooking
Also trailer spa ce on river All
hook·upa Ca ll after 2 00 p m ,
304-n:J-5651, Mason Wll

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home slle available bet~
ween Athens and Pomeroy eall

740-385-4367

Mllon, WV

Seahawk Paddle Boat, 5 Person,
Green /Wh l1e $250, Brass

Furnished
Rooms

Jl'

AKC LhasaApso 1ema1e, Jmos
old, ve1 checked, a11 shols $250
Parakeet 1n cage. $30 304·675-

7223
AKC Regtstered Golden Aetnever

puppies seven weeks old $200
each, cal740..742·3166

1111

Mlxod Hay Celano Jacuon Farm
Ph 740-446-1104, 740-441-0460,

Comes With Spell-Right, Corona
Cote Ill For Spreadsheets Lotus
And Word Perfect II Has Been
Used L.ess Than 10 Times

Bough1 New $350, Sell For $250,
OBO, Also Fo&lt; Sale Smllh Coronoa Eleectrlc Typewrller $140,
Call 740-245·9635 11 No Answer
Please Leaw AMessage

(rwtaurant

46 Tiger Woode'
org.

3 Monlhs Old, 740-446-1575
Tempered, 740-448-8603, 740-

Now Thru March 2151. Square
Bales Was $2 00, Now $1 25
And $1 50 Each 1 MUs Norlh On
RoU1e 2, 304-67&amp;:3960

740:245-9081

1985 Jeep Cherokee New Tires,
Good Work Car, Needs Starter,·
$600, 740-2$-1863

71 0

Autos for Sale

'95 Bulclt Cenlury, V-e. loaded,
48k, $9400, 740-84$-5218.
1962 Chevro1e1 Super Sport, 300
Cu 1nch, 300 HP 4 Speed, Excel·
len1 Con&lt;lillon. $8.500, 740-366-

auto. air new transmis ·

Tirss, New Banery, Engine 10,000
Miles, Excel1en1 Condl11on $6,200
740-44&amp;-3485

992-6583

In Color, Very Friendly, Loves

Kids, $200 740-446-1375 , 740
448-7171

-~~------------~~=~

NOncE

Frot1Ch City Pet Grooming
NOM0pen1

tilt, am fm cassette

740

Professional Groomrng by Ap ·
pointments 650 Second Ave

GallipoliS, OH 304-675-4858

1988 Ponllac Bonnev1ne 4dr. v-

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

6, auto, air. good clabn car. h~h

m11oago $2,500. 304-882-3852

large and small, blade k1ng cutter.
sileege blowor, 740-742-2123

a

450 Case Dozer 'Power Angle
Tilt Blade, 614 Actual Hours,

$17 000, 740-245-5439
Seal The Spring Rush, gel your
mowers &amp; trimmers tuned up
now Sider's Equ1pment Hender

son wv 304-675-7421

JO 494A Corn P1an1sr, Vanely 01
Piales, Ready To Plan1. Good
Shape, 740-446-1010
John Deere 2J 0 Garden Tractor
S1,500 John Deere 110 Garden
Tractor. treeCI !Ires $1,200
Wheel Horse A-90 Spee1al Garden Tractor $1,050 Wheel H~e
Garden Tractof B·tOO H)ldrot

NICe $1,500 MTD 6 Horse, Rear
Engine. Real~ Clean S350 High

John Deere 7ft hay blne , New
Holland grinder mixer. AC two
row no tiff corn planter 1Ott
transport disc all 1n good cond1
1iOO 304-273-4215
Kottenng SkiCIIOader 45 HP Commercia l Nrce Machine Asking

$7,500, 740-446--8044

MARCH SPEC1ALS
Ford New Holland 301 OS 42np
diesel tractor. Bx2 transmission
lnclependent PTO, 1 double spool
velve 2 wheel dn\le $12,500

4wd $17,000 8 75%1onanclng
Piqua rounCI bale Ieeder wagons.
38 feed openmga, load fmm rear
$2,300 Plqua round bale haulmg
wagons, hauls 8 round bale&amp;

$1,900, Keolere Servlco Confer
St. Rt 87 Pl. Plaaoon1 &amp; Ripley
Rd. 304 105 !874.

Massie Ferguson 230 Diesel 740
Hours, Wllh 5 Ft Bush Hog,

$8,000, 740-682-3530

620 Wanted to Buy
Wanted Ford And Masae., Fer·
guson Tractors, Older Models

8N, 9N Jubolee. 600 -600 Sones.
This Type Tractors &amp; lmpfa·

menls, 1 937 866-2822
630

Livestock

4-H Fair Pigs 40-50 Pds 740256:-6016
4-H Feodor Pigs, 30 -40 Pounds,
740-251H11 02
6yr old Chaslnul Mare $800
30¥75-2359

ttl86 Food Eecon GT
Red n Co1or, Tires Now, Loaded,
Power SUn Roof 64 000 Milos
$1,000
1304)4511-1111

,.&amp;&gt;T I cmT TW..
'(CO f"DI-4~ l

WON\ COO~IDEe.
1\:\1~ "tl~~lt{b UP~ ..

~~~YOO"-':l

t:-130~!

Asking

!1-_,..,-+,

-y

Motorcycles

1998 Yahama Warrior 350 4

Honda Z 50 Special 1011 ol
chrome $650 740-446-8237 Af:
,., 7pm can 740-367-Cl311

BJG NATE

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
12 F1 A1u(1ilnum Boa1, W11h 5 112
HP Moler, 6 Trailer. $550 740·
367-o137
----------

1989 Bass Tracker 1811 flberglass f1sh/skl boa1 wlf50hp
Jonnson trolling motor, axe

cond $5,800 304-675-1176

1992 Excel Bow Rider 1811 Slc
Volvo In/outboard motor, tur·

quolse/whlle, am-fm caasene,

of new parts, good condition,

Bow-Well cover. convertible top,

$1900, can 740-949-2203 or 740-

Side curtains, Mooring covor, Ea-

3I ··~~~~
Hlpbonn
4 Soulhlut
Aalln holiday

IIEp
7 Bllllllll'l
Yogl8 ThOMght
t Yutlllll

5 Sun. lfl"Ch

West

Pus

North
29

Pus

Pus

4•
4NT
7•

Pase

11 Gourll
12 Clothing
13 -deg18 lhllacrap
20!:.."Y.t..
21 Hebrew

23 Gambling

Eut

24Colcel

Pase
Pase
Pus
Allpase

dlvltlon
25 Eye pert
21 cans

2t0kl~

38 Move qulcltly
40 Rhode lellnd,

ror-

41 Electrical unR
42 DMclly lllllce
43 Film hokllr
.WAgalnat
46 sm.tlllquld

-

47 1WII of plum
41 T1ie atllllteop

SOKennedyor
Koppel

52 a-d of

53Cnl
city

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campo•
Celebrtly CIJlfllr aypograma .,. CfNttcl from quocllionl by famous people, put anct preeet'll
EICtt letlli In the cipher ttandl tor ftlbr TodlyJ Cl1ut I eqwll: 'r'

•G K

G

• D V U Z,
II G V J

vw

DVUZV
G 'T T

TWDC

XWZLUT

VJC

u

ECFWLC

FWXVUFV

PH I D

G

NTUI

E CD V .•
PCXC JUFSLUX,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION, 'We all know that Art Is not truth, Art Is a lie that
makes us reahze lrulh • - Pablo Picasso

S@\\ctllA-~t.~s·
::::
CLAY I. IOUAN _;,__ _ __

flAY DAllY
PUULII
- - - - - - 1411o4

~y

Reorrange letters of
0 lou1
ecromblecl words

low to form lour ~mple wordo

SRUGEH

0 EL RV

II

1~

~
It-__,.;;.1-,1

I

.,V_A~~-iS;;,.,.;0;--!1
~
6

You can tell a person's character by what they turn up
when offered a JOb, their nose
r-::-:-::-:"'"':-::---, or the1r -- - - -- s
-

I 1 I 1 ..~~
EPRAIT

IQ

CompleJo 1he chuckle quo1ed

•

by f,ll1ng '" the m1SS1ng words

.;..li"--ilr-'-ilr::-7-l

.

•

•

•

•

•

,__,_ _.__..__,_ _.___. you develop from step No 3 below

gfe galvanized trailer I wheels,

1989 Chevro1e1 Celebrlly, V-6 automatic, new tires Call Ron Harrls
a1 740·992·2161 for lur1tler lnfor-

ma~

1989 Geo Metro

v-QIU::F1 [ ~OPE 100

__,

$16,500 080. 304-675-5332

1969 Buick LaSebre, loaded, lo1S
949~2045

TH.t: BORN LOSE,R_

199-4 Jeep 2 Doors, Auto, Air,'

1996 Chevy 4wd 1121on, crultt,

1988 Dodge 318 Engine AUIO,
Air. Tl11, Cruise, Red, U1 Kl1 Ou11aw ll Wheels Sharp $7,500 Form,
740:367-0433

cleYice (2 wda.)

3Z Rlpllur

22=...ck

By Phillip Alder
I spend much t1me med1ating -- as
Mrs. Malaprop might have said -- .
over the bidding sequences I give in ·
th1s column. Should I st1ck to meth·
ods from the 1950s because most
readers probably still use them? Or
should I bring everyone into the
1990s? As regular readers w111 know,
I lean toward the latter. I hope you
agree with Dr. Samuel Johnson, who
pomted out, .. Curios1ty is one of the
most pennanent and certain charac·
•teristics of a vigorous intellect"' And
there's always something to be
gleaned from the play.
This deal features three modem
b1ds that enjoy ubiquitous use m tournament bridge. F1rst. North uses a
transfer bid. his two-heart response
showing at least five spades. Then he
makes a splinter bid: an unusual jump
to show slam interest in spades with
at most one club, After South cuebids, North uses Roman Key Card
Blackwood, the modem ace-askmg
convention that includes the trump
king as a fifth ..ace:" Finally, North
b1ds an ophmist1c grand slam
Now South exh1bits his declarer·
play expert1se. Havmg to find the diamond queen, he sets out on a voyage
of discovery. After wmnmg With the
club ace. South ruffs a club in the
dummy, plays a trump to hand, ruffs
1
, a club, crosses to hand with a trump.
'draws the last trump. and ca.~hes his
he1111 tricks. What has South learned?
He knows that West began with
three spade&amp;. at least three helll1s and
silt clubs. So, he has at most one diamond. Declarer ca~hes dummy's diamond kmg. then runs the d1amond
jack, Nicely played!

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1993 GMC Safari van fully looded ONLY 69 000 m11os, ex¢ •
shape $8,700 304-675-7039

wheeler exc cond $3,200 304·
895-3237 or 304-895-3080

1 lleput8tJon
2 Futu,. U.lll."

Thursday. March 19. 1998

clean1 $7,000 OBO, 740-044- "'
2311 daya, 749-949,-2844 eveo-·(

1986 Cheve11e $500, 740·3170137.

eylllble
27 111110 - •tung
30 Auto llflty

The modern
quandary

'•

Now Open Sundays 1-4. Mon·Sat
11-6 Fish Tank &amp; Pel Shop,
2413 Jackson Ave Point Plaas-

51 Wntern rope
54 CINued
17 Bunt
55 Qualm
It lmpulelw
541 Fibbed
20 IIIUMum object 57 Short 1e111r1
23 Tlkelejet
2t81nglng
DOWN
mother

18 Sc:hed. abllr,

31 Knotty
33 Anchor

1993 Ford Aerostar van, blur 4
with bh~• irnerlor, 70,000 mitea~:.
limited edition. new tires verye.•

1995 Honda 300EX, Good Shllll8
$2600 740-367-QSSO

49 Pert of
Congroo

2S Sldnny-ll'ehn

:

39,000 Mileage, $11,500, HO·,
379-2726

good, $1295 neg ' 740-992-6824

2.
4t
S•

tHEY CAUGHT YOU
CHEATIN' IN TH'
CARD 6AME ??

slon $2.900 304-895-3237 or
304-895-3080

1972 Chevy Monle CarlO, $1,800,
740-36Hl550

1986 Ford Tempo, auto, air good

!NT

BARNEY

1986 Ford F·1!i0 4x4 302 luellft-

body good shape, runs excellent,
dependable, gas saver. 36 mpg,
$395 080 call 740-389,9693 12·
6pm

Female Shellie sao1e And While

Soatll

1987 S-10 Blazer 4'WD AC, Pi," :
PB, T1h, CRZ Looks /Runs Grt«tl '
Tobacoo Plants For Sale, Re· ,54.295. 740-446-1451
•
serve For May P1an11ng Denny
Dewhurst 304-895·8733 Leave 1988 S-10 Exlended Cab 4J4
Message
$3,000, 1976 ChiiVf 314 Ton 4x4
$1,000 740-441-Q132.
650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
1989 GMC Safari Fu11 Cua1om.
Oekalb Seed Corn Kay Farms ivan. $3,950 74Q-.446-.1222
Can 304-675-1606 ll No Answer
;1991 Plymoulh Voyager 1,1~ •
Leave Mouago
Wheel Drive 94,000 M11oe On!Yj'L
SPURLOCK UIIE
1,ooo Milos On New llansmft-i:t
I FEII'TlliZER
s10n From Dodge Dealer A1 Cosl -&gt;
Comp1a1o Blending &amp; Spreading, Of $1,700 $6,500 Call After 8 PM ~
localect. Neer Gallla Counly Lme, /Before10 00 P.M 740-245-9467
t
1 112 Mile Soulh 01 51a1e Route
279, on Jlmes Emory Road, Oak 1992 ChiiVf s-to Blazer, 4 3L, v6, 1WO door, air oond111on1ng, new
HIU, 741M82:.9040
11res, $7000, 740-698-7019, 740- '

TRANSPORTATION

•

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

bullt Transmission , New Palnl,

Jected.

empiOyM)

15 Father or

lllrrymorn

• A 10 4
• A 8 53

1984 Chovy 4x4 305 Aulo, Rt-

Females 1s1 Shots. Wormed
Roady 3130198, $200, 740-3792383 Calhy

an1, 304-675-2063

9 A83

1980 CJ 5 Jeep 4spd, runs good,
s1.000 304-e75-e214

zodiac

34Drlldgrape
35 One of the

• A 10 9

1986 Full Size Bronco 4 New

0406

AKC Reg1stered labs, 1st Shots,

Shp. $350 304-675·3824

Ronlln RIO Gtande, No Po1S, 740
3711-2540 Or 740-379-9887
nlshed.

Don

Llfl Chair 1n Good Working Condillon, $125, 740-379-2720 AFTER I P,M,

en&lt;l•r&gt;J sooollll00-263-2640

&amp; D•pos11 Requlrod, 740-448-

Bath

Wheel Push Mower, Like New

Two bedroom apartment, $260
per monlh plus deposit and utih·
lias, Third St~. Racine, 740·
247~

Hydro

Sheels 373 Georges Creak Ad
74Q-446-Q231

1004

9627

Construction Workers Welcome

Welcomel740-446-2515

ECONOMY
Hea!ng And COOling
Up-Grade 'four

disabled HUD ssslsled EOH
304-882-3121

3 Bedroom house new carpet ,
$425/mo + deposit, references.

Ntce Furnished J Bedrooms.
Ava1lable For Approx imately 6
Months, Cons1ruct1on Workers

Drop-l.oafTabte, 80'
Wlth 12' L.oof,
Wa1nu1 Flnllhod,
6 Chalro, $200,
740-446-0195,

IC Transmlsskm EMcellent Condition $2,375 Console Stereo $50,
Chau And Footstool $20 Book·

RIVER BEND PLACE

A Groom Shop -Pel Groommg

4 track 4·w heeler harry drag
sprayer NH co rn chopper NH
round baler, Massey tractor, Allis
Ch tractor , manure spreader,
Cia as drum mower. 4 plow &amp; 2
plow 2 hay wagons, 2 sileage
wagons, hay tecldar, NH square
bater, hay elevator bush hogs,

740-446-0423 Even ings Or Sa1urday &amp; Sunday

New single eff.el8ncy apartment 1n
Mlttdleport, utilities pa1d , $375
plus depos•t 740.992·5304

Apar1men1s $295/Mo, 740·446-

Pets for Sale

Curreny &amp; RettreCI Beanie Babies

In New Haven 1br fumtshed apt,
includes washer &amp; dryer depos1t
&amp; references 304·882·2566

~M

560

610 Farm Equipment

tunities

304-675-5162

STEEL BUILD1NG5 • BRAND
NEW • ENGINEERED· CERTI·
FlED DRAW1NGS 40x80x12
$15 400 Value Now $8,800 ,
50x100x16 $34,000 Valua Now
$17 752, 60x200x16 $62,400
Value Now $39.761 Call Toll
Roe 1-888-568-9349

1-800-537-9528

por1 From $249-$373 Call 740·
992-5064 EQual Housmg Oppor-

Ntce cfaan elllency apartment
references &amp; deposit, no pets

886-5405

$700, 740-448-7375 Or 740·446·
7171

300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

Gracious llvmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
R1verslde Apartments in Middle·

New House Or Barn Trusaets

Ch•mnev Liner And Cap Included

Concrele &amp; P1as11c Sepllc Tanks

6056

740·448·2412, Or 1-800·594·

HAY SALE·

ows. llnlels. elc Claude Wlnlers
Rio Grande OH Call 740-2455121

Call 740·992-e836 aller 6 pm

882-2566

Cinemu . Shbwlime &amp; Disney

Large three beclroom farm house,
carpeted garage, $400 plus se·
CIJIIy deposit 740-992·5331

storage uM Bla ck and cherry
NB\'er out ol box S125 Holds up
to 940 discs, also holds tapes

Braso In Color Slaln,Jess S1ael

$275/Mo, No Pels, 740-256-

Hay Round And Squaro Be1os AJ.

cond1lion, k&gt;w miles, runs &amp; looks

Brand Newl Grea1 Glh1 CO/video

Brunco Wood Or Coai ' Burrtlng
Fireplace Insert .BUtH In Blower
And Thermostat Btack And

$265/mo 304-773-9171 leave
Message

no pels 304-675 2749

Breek

ESTATES , 52 Westwood Ouve

Two Bedroom Apartmen t For

RENTALS

Metabolism

COs &amp; tapes not 1nduded

lipolis. Nice 2 Bedroom, Stove
Refrigerator, Water Furnished,

640 - Hay &amp; Grain

198'* Mercury lynx, two door,

BEAUT1FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PR1CES AT JACKSON

furnished aparlmarll, utilities
paid, deposit &amp; references 304·

Mareo, 2 Years, $1 ,000 Each
Flrm, 740-24!HXI70.

AKC Siberian Husky Pups Mate,

Milk Pump, Phone 740-886-9161
After 6 00 ~M

2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
pltances furniShed. laundry room
facilities, close to sehool In town
Apphcaltons ava1lable at Vtllage
Green
149 or call 7.o40 992·

Beech 51 Mlddlsport, OH 2br

Two Reg Quarter Horse Bay

4-16-4822

4548

Equal Housing Oppor!IJ'llly

Hamp&amp;hlre Fair Plgs, 40 -60 P&lt;IS ,

740:379-2805

Randall Milkers Electric Wesher
For Pipeline &amp; Milkers, 75 Almo

Bab)l bed swmg, car seal, stroller, 2 1n 1 h1gh chair 304~675 ·

&amp; movies Call 740·446·2568

1971 Toyola Land Cruiser 8 Cy·
llnder, Bod1 Good, $1 ,ooo, 740·
379-2730

1962 Cunass Supreme, 2 o, 260
VB Good Condlllon, $2.100 Or
Bes10ffer, 740-jl92-4568

740-367-0433

1rom $279 10 $358 Wa1&lt; 1o shop

Goa1o And Chickens For Sole,
740:2M-1098

SPRING BREAK

Stock, brick, sewer pipes, wln!l·

&amp; 4-WDe

730 Vans

03 le-t&amp;

•KQJ876
• KQ4
t KJ 2
• 2
Weal
East
• 5 32
• 4
• 9 8 5
• J tO 7 2
• 6
•Q98753
•KQ9874
• J to
South

&amp;MEEK

1996 Mazda 4x4 Exler&lt;lod Cab, 5
Speed, Alr, Excellen1 Condl1lon,
86,000 Milas, Relall $15 400,
Asklnrj $13,500, 740-379-2666

9~M

500 Gal Solar Milk Tank, 4 Surge

For tree consultallon antS Free
Somp1o&amp; 17401"1-1982

Mo . Clean New Car,et Remodeled Above Rick Carls Tavern

FOR SALE ·REGISTERED SIM·
MENTALS 10 Monlh Old Red
And Wh11e0ull ·Slro CAUF1T1ME
1o Monlh Old Red Heller -Slre
MACKFRID 740-245-5030 Before

AKC Registered Aottweller Pup·
pies Had 1st Shots Parents Well

Through Lose 10 10 200 1bs Call

992-7806

Cash Pa1d For Land t11 G~lia
County, Blackburn Aeally, 740·

4" x 100" Corrugalod P1&gt;0 $24 99
Pit1sburgh Palnfs Besl CeiNng
Paln1$12 99 Gal We also Have
Bulk Seeds, Qnlon Sels, Cypress Mulch, Top Soli, Potting
Soil. Ek: PA1NT PLUS HARDWARE

1 Bedroom Apartment , Upstairs,

Bu1ldmg tots m Letart WV 112
acre each along US 33 304·895-

Real Estate
Wanted

30' Hulch Glass Doors, $125,
740-379-2720 AFTER I ~M.

Second Avenue Galhpolls $250/

1990 Fleetwood 14x70 3 Bed·
rooms 2 Baths $235/Mo Alf
$1 ,200 Pay 011 740 446 8741

360

0409

Amazmg

0006

8389

I

Fair Pigs For Sale, $50 Each,
740-742-2457

Building
Supplhts

Featuring

15 Honey Pme Kitchen Cabinets

:JIIC.S76-41184.

Pond $55 ooo 1Ewmg1on) 740388-9352

1991 Fat rmont 14M 70 $174/Mo
Pay 011 $9 200 3 Bedroo ms 2
Bath s 74 0 388 874 t 740 388

682-2623

&amp; Coun1er1op •l1 ,500, 740·367·

$6500 740 742-1323

Large WoOded Bwldmg Lots W1th
Some RestrictiOnS Near S R 850,
Le ss Than 1 M1le From 4 Lane
74Q-441-o541

12 Use.d Oak kitchen cabinets,
coun1er 1op &amp; sink $700 304-

DeposH. No Pels, 740-256--1568

550

Sen $4,800. 740-894-9400, 740-

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Bedrooms State Route 7 South
Bladen, S2751Mo Relerences &amp;

440

Antiques

Mooraowner

Deposol, No Pels, 740-256--1568

4336

North

gelding , excellent trail ttors,

304-871&gt;-4137

lalla /Orchard Grasa Mixed Call

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison , 1210 Second Avenue Gallipolis, Ohio, 740-446-

2x10 Constructron Coast $8 600

am 10 600 pm, Sunday 1,00 10
6 DO p m 740-992-2526, Russ

Bladen, S27SJMo References &amp;

6~M

Wa1er11ne Specoal 3/4 200 PS1
$21 95 Per 100. 1" 200 PS1
$37 00 Per 100, All Brass Compression Att1ngs 1n Sloek
RON EVANS ENTERPR1SES
JaCkson, OhiO, 1-800-537-9528

42xeo Ft W11h 1o -12 Roo1 PilCh,

81Jy or sell Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Ma1n Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

2 Be&lt;lrOO'liS S1a1e Roule 7 Sou1!1

60 Acres W1th 30x55 Barn Aha

740-368-8389

530

2 Bedroorn trailer, rele fences &amp;
deposit 304·675· 1076 leave
message

Nice One BA Unfurmshed Apart·
ment Range &amp; Refng Prov1ded
Water &amp; Garbage Paid Oepos1t
Requ ired 740·446 4345 After 6

3880

7093 or 1 a00-346 8176

Included, 740-992-2167

Now Taking AppUcallons- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse

1972 mobile home, t2xS5 asking

everyday Call us at 740·992·

740-367 0433

www ~Uidepath corrvlocaVfTlOYI

OBO, 740-992 2290

llems. kid's clothes, U S made
Smith &amp; Wesson knives and lots
mora Coma 11nd check us out

9342

N1ce 14x70 S1tuated On A 5 Acre
Lot Located Johnson R1dge
Road, $350/Mo + Deposit !References 740-367·0433 Alter

Upright, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
JaCkson, Ohio, 1·800-531-9528

Wor1d 740-446-9066

1o 4X backpacking and camping

It Relerences Required, 740-446-

Nice one bedroom &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments In Pomeroy, ut1htles
paid, no peJs, 740-992-5856

120 It long 80ft long by 75 11
wide level lot m Middleport reduced hom $23,000 TO $17 000

Sporting
Goods

Bast prices anywhere· full line of
Advantage Camo in · lime tor
turkey season Great selection or
new an'd used boots, lots of new
anct used camo sizes 2 months

Hook-Up, $250/Mo , $200 Depos-

3Bedroom, 1 1/2 balh US 35
Lock 11 $300/mo $200 deposll
Opllon 10 buy Sell $26,000 10.,..
Down Owner Flnancong 304-34&amp;
1739 or 304-543-1809

Year In The Haaltng &amp; Cooling

Dryers $75 Each, Guaranteed To

Wl11011'1 Amfy SUrpiUI

Moblls Homes
for Rent

63 95 Acres ApproM 8 Acre
Lake Gallta County County Water
And Electflc $2 600 Per Acre

740-388-8678

520

1 Bedroom Trailer Close To Galli·
pol1s, Nice Clean With Uli!lty

~ash

Heal Pumps Only Sl1ghly Hlghar
Cen Us Todey 1998 1s Our 281h

While Washer $100, 2 While

Two bedroom house. clean, re·
lrigerator, no slova, no instde
pets, deposit required, 740·992·
3090

TAX SPEC1AL

8 Acres-3br doubtew1de moclular
home in Glenwood, detached 2

Slroe\ Gi0hpo11s 740-446-7398

Three badroom house In Middle·

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260·$.300 sewer, water and

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 le111

Washer $205 1 Year Warranty,
Skaggs Appliances , 76 VIne

lies, 740·949·2587 8\lenlngs No
Inside pets

$8 900 740 367 0415

800-837-3238

Relrlgera10r $75, Dryer $75, Elec·
Ulc Range $75, Wasner $95,

near Racine, $300/mo plus u1111·

10 Minutes From Gallipolis 2
Bedroom Trailer, On 5 Acres
Land Nice Butld tng Front And
Back Porch $350/Mo , + Deposit,

New 1998 14x70 three bedroom,
1nctudes 6 monltls FR EE tot rent
Includes sk1rllng deluxe steps
and setup Only St87 08 per
month w1th $1075 down Call 1·

V1ne Street, '\Call 740·4.t6-7398,
1 1100-499-3499

Small, two bedroom, full basement.

Must Move I 1980 Windsor Mo·
b1le Home Remodeled, lennox
Heat Pump 2 Bedrooms, 0 1sh·
washer, Bu11t In Microwave 3
Year Old Refngerator · Kttchen Is·
land Deck Included Askin g

rai And lP Gas Furnaces. llfeUmt Warranty On Heat Exchang er •If You Don t Calf Us We Both
Lose!" Free Estimates! Add·On

Bus1ness1 740-~ 46·8306 , 1-800·
GOOD USED APPL1ANCES 291-ool8
wasners dryers relrlgerators ,
ranges Skaggs Appllances, 78 STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gs11on

U1110ies1nclude&lt;l, 513-574-2539

420

Or Without Clientele Busy Corner
Contact Brenoa s Kut &amp; Kurl 740·
441 ·0583

WARM UP: High Efficiency Nalu-

French Clly Mayleg 740-44e7795

2 Apartments In Rio Grande
Area Across From College, 1
Bedroom Apartment, $31 0/Mo.

op ti ons available

230

no pets. can 740-892-6886 aller
530pm

cells after 8 OOpm 304-562·5840

Household
Goods

Appl iances
Reconditioned
'Washers , Dryers, Ranges, Relrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

Pomeroy, 4 bedroom, HUO, wrth
stove &amp; relrlgerator, references,

$29 700 sell 101 $27,000 No

Slarllng a1 ONLY $39,999 Many

510

after 6 OOpm, deposit and refer ance required

Room , 1 Balh, U111111es Included,
$200/Mo Deposl1 Requlred, 1

Huge 28x80 38A t 112 bath

8yr old Rogls1tfod Quarter HOI'se

In Pomeroy, NC, equipped kllch·
en, nice yard, call 740-992-7833

home &amp; 314 acre land Appraised

ness and unused parktng space
you may Qualtly to be a U·Haut
Dealer II mterested call 800·282

prcked up at Vrllage Ha ll between

Need so meone to work tn home
to care lor wrfe 304 675·6132

2 or 3 Bedroom Around $200 per
month Call cred1t ltne 1·800·

948-5678

be

sam 4j:m Monday through Fnday

Nice' two bedroom housa located

1s1 Tlme Buyer&gt;. E-Z Flnanong

421-1-45 Sign of the

lllclllid 14 - d"

MERCHANDISE
Housecleaning And In Home
Gare, References, 74C&gt;-446-4009

llholollrapher

.o4

Doors, Good

There's no
way around it,
Classified Ads

very low hOurs, garage kept, very
good condiiiOn $7,000 304·2736259 sa _. 30p

m

m

614-9-t9 2414

•

-~-M-~~~--------

Kawasakl STS Jet ski, &amp;tlll under
warranty, three seater, 83 hor&amp;t--

Worli Car, $1,200, 740-446-0744.

power. bough1 naw July of '97 .

199t Chevy lumina, 3 1 Euro

three matcbing .Kawasaki ski

model, v-6, 60,000 mllea. blue
1h b1 1
d
wt
ua ntarlor, 2 oor, all OP·
11ons, $5,000 080, 740-949-2311
days, 74D-949-2644 ewnlngs

vesls and 1rallar all go wllh 11,
$5000, 740-949·2203 or 740·949·

1991 Nlssan p u cau 740·357·
7243 Or Leave Message

760

1992 Plymoulh Lazor Turbo
Charged, AU Wheal Drive, 5
Speed, A1111FM Casse11e, 1 OWner. Exce11en1 Condillon, $8,000.
740:~
'

2·305 Truck Engines 304·576- '
2635
---------350 01ds engine runs good,
$150 740-742-2539
-

n~e

1993 Mazda 929 1oadod, very
304-675-1226

BUDGET PRICE TRANSM1S·
SIONS, Used 1Rel&gt;ul11, All Typal,

1993 Oldsmobile 98 Regency

Access Over 10,000 Tranamls·
slons, &amp; Clutches 740-245-56n •

Elite fully loaded. new tires,
77,000 miles $10,900 Consider
1mdo 304-675-1570

1994 Plymoulh Co11, Runa Grea1,
87,000 Miles, $5,900, 740·2459088. Leave Message
1995 Lincoln Town Car, Slgna1ure
Se&lt;las, Loaded, 32,000 Moles, S1o11
Warranty, Asking

740:388·8047

2045, will consider trade for a

good pontoon boa1

Ripley, WV 304·372·3933 or 1·
800-273-9329
_ _ _ _ __
790
Campers &amp;
Motor Homes
;;:.:~:.::::::.

In good

1998 Dulchman 1811 exc cond -

Miles Excellent Condition. Call

loaded, no down payment, II•

1997 Neon 2 Doors Auto , Air,

SERVICE S

1980 ·1990Cars For $100111
Seized And Sold
Locany Thls Monlh
Ttucks, 4x4's, Elc
1·600-522-2730. X3901
redit Problems? We Can Help
JEasy Bank Flnanc1ng For U&amp;ed
JVeh lclea, No Turn Downs, Call

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

UnconditiOnal hfetime guarantH
Local references rurnlshad Ea·

1abi1Shed 1975 Call 1740)446- ~
0870 Or 1-8()().287-0578 Rogeri • ~
Welerprooflng

V1Ck1o, 740-446-2897

Appliance Pa ris And Service An
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perlence All Work Guaranteed,

Uplon Used Cars R1 82-3 Miles

French Clly Maylag, 740-448•
n95

South of Leon, WV Financing

Avallabte 304-458-1009
720 Trucks for

Sale

19114 ChiiVf 4 wo nn, N:., Runs
Good, 305 Engine, Good Work
Truck, Asking $3,800, 740·446074:4 '

C&amp;C General Home Malnlenanco- Palnllng, vinyl siding,
carponlry, doors, windows, balha,
mob11t home repair and mort For
free es11ma1e call Che1, 74Q-992·

i

!

6323

840

1fNICI Cillvy Truck

Cuslom 30, Black In Color, Loaded, Bocfy In Real Good Shape,
$:;,500, FaC1ory Bll BloCk 454,
90,000 Ml1es
Phone (304)458-llt9

-=~~i.~~~~~~~~~~w~ith

sume loan 30-i:e75-5522

19,000 Mileage, $7,900, 740-3792726
Bad Cred1t, No Credit, Bankrupt·
cy? We Can Help! Bank Finane·
ing On Used Vehicles, 740~44t0607

ITHURSDAY

New gas tanks, 1 ton trucJc
wheela &amp; radlalors 0 &amp; A Aulo,

1996 Cnrysler LHS Loaded, Low
740-440-9633 Aftar 8 PM

I

Electrical and
Refrigeration

, •

Residential or commercial wiring.

new servlca or rape1re Masllr L~'
censed electrician Rld•nour.
Eleclrlca1, WV000306, 304-6751766

SCRAM-L!TS ANSWERS
Uptown - Grant- Posse - Attest- STOP to REST
If people have nothmg to do how can they STOP to
REST?

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

•••'·"'"'•.LCOnd
1991 Camper 15 tl2fl
304-615-6289

6 GET
UNSCRAMBlE lElTEIS TO I
ANSWEI

1
,

'

PISCES (Feb. 2().March 20) Your
financial aspects are e~tremely •
encouraging, for the next few days. If
ycllrdon 'tadd to your holdings or cut
loses, you 'II have onl~ yourself to
bl~. Get ~jump on hfe by, understandmg the1nflue~ces that will gov·
em. you in the year ahe~- ~end for '
your Astro-Graph pred1c11ons ~y
mailing $2 to A11trO-Graph, c/o.th•s
newspaper, P.O. Box 1158, Murray
Hill Station. New York.
.10156.
Be sun: to Slllte'yourzod•w; s1gn. •
ARIES · \Marc~ 21-Apnl, 19) If
rou·hope 10 lm~S$ othep With your
Jde&amp;S today, you must ex~ss ~em

!'IY

you.
conv1c11on. Enthusiasm will
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qct, 23) Pan·
g1ve a boost to what you have to
nerships look promising for you
offer,
today. There could be two adJustTAURUS . (April 20-May 20)
menl~ in th1s area that w1ll be wonh
Thmgs w1ll go smoother for you
pul'!luing
and executing• . today 1f you mch back in a situation
SCORPIO
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
where you share a mutual interest,
Remuneration
you
deserve is not
enabling assoc:iates to assert thembe
denied
you.
&lt;!onditions
going
to
selves.
are
movmg
in
ways
where
you 'II be
GEMINI (May 21-lune 20) Today
in
pos111on
for
your
proper
ent1tle·
bas rewarding potential, "provided
ments.
you ahgn yourself with people who
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec,
take what they do seriously, Do not
Jet the malingers hold you back.
21)
the casual observer, your .
CANCER (June 21-luly 22) Sigaccomplishmem might appear to be
mficant steps can be taken today
lucky, but it will be your bright mind
toward an objective you're anxious to
and hard work that makes it happen.
achieve, It will require- all your dedCAPRICORN· (Dec. 22-Jan, 19)
.ication and focus to pull it off,
You will have an amazing amount of
LEO (July 23:Aug, 22) A domireserve upon which you can draw
neering individual may by to dis- . today if required. Do not let the size
suade today you from using your · or scope of the challenge SCllfe you
plans, If yoo think what you have to , off,
offerisbetter,don'tyieldanyground,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb, 19) In
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)'Il!ere • order to get your tenns today. you
are some important adjustments stirmay have to be a bit firmer than usuring,ai this Umc. They Should be pos- ,al so your associates will talcc you
itive and havefllf-reaching effects for , \seriously when you malce an offer.

lo

-

-

MARCH19I

�~·

Page 12 • ,.., Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

. Thursday, March 19, 1998

Tarheels beat
Mich. State in
tournament

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

rwt.~~~~.~~"
t" .
IIIII"'
...

Pick 3:
3-3-8
Pick 4:
3-7-3-3
Buckeye 5:
7·11·13-16-24

Sports c:»" Page .4

t:::::::

.:'f'C. ': .

• . ',
. I! '
•

•

"I

•

.

..
- ..: .

..

Ram
Showers ton
In the
30s.
Saturday,
with light
rain and drlule. Highs In
the lower 40s .

•

en tine
IIDI. 48, NO. 236

2 Sections, 12 Pagee, 35 cente
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 20, 1998

C1998, Ohio Valley Publishing Company

, Poll says retirement cheers working Americans
president of,Princeton Survey Research Associates. which conducted the polls
for Pew.
One linding is that working people " have different expectations than you
might think, given the experience of today·s retirees ... said Cola.&lt;anto.
Nearly half - 48 ~rcent - of Americans who are ~till working said they
see retirement as "a chance for a new beginning." People aged 35 to 49 were
most likely to take this view.
Only a third of current retirees reported their nonworking years have been
a fresh start, however. More, 39 percent, said retirement has been just "a continuation of life before." and 20 percent said it was "a step down" for them .
It "suggests people have gotten too optimistic." said John Rother. a
spokesman for the American Association of Retired Persons. "Really only
a small minority have put away the savings that allow people to pursue their

WASHINGTON (AP) - Working people·think retirement will give them
a chance to make a fresh ~tart, but most retirees say their lives are about the
same as before~ or worse, an upcoming poll fmds.
The "Image~ of Aging" survey. which will be relea.,ed in its entirety early next month, is part of a $12.5 million campaign funded by the Philadelphia-based Pew Ch&lt;l(jtable Trusts to get Americans talking about the future
of the nation's Social: Security pension system.
The kickoff is Saturday, when the re~idents of 10 cities are invited to join
an "Americans Disc\lss Social Security" video conference with President
Clinton and membeP.I of Congress. More forums and periodic releases of
polling results culled from interviews with 15.000 Americans will follow.
"Our whole purpose ... is to understand the context of opinion and impressions that will surround the Social Security debate.'' said Diane Colasanto,

dreams. "
The Pew project overlaps with Clinton's plan to promote 1998 as a year
of public dialogue on Social Security. h w.ill be the topic of his weekly radio
·address Saturday. and Clinton has asked the AARP and the economic watch·
dog group Concord Coalition to sponsor four regional town hall me&lt;tings.
starting April 7 in Kansas City. Mo.
The president's promise to follow up next year by a.~king Congress to make
changes to prepare Social Security for baby boomers ' retirements has mused
activists from Wall Street brokerage houses to senior citizens centei'O. as well
as lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
Key congressional budgeteers Sen. William Roth. R-Del .. and Rep. John
Ka.,ich. R-Ohio, are pushing legislation that would test a new system of pri·
vale investment accounts.

'A real
rough
time'

ODOT plans $5M
worth of highway
project$ in Meigs

USED CAR &amp;
.

DCK

By JIM FR~MAN
Sentinel tf!Ws Staff
Ohio Department of Transportation District 10 expects one of its
busiest and most expen~ive construction seasons .this year.
Deputy Director J ' Dowler estimates that District
projects for
1998 will amount to approximately
$100 million, including two big projects already underway on U.S. 50 in
Athens County, and a third U.S. 50.
project in Athens County scheduled
to sell this June.
Total construction in Meigs County for 1998 is in the neighborhood of
$5 million. aCcording to ODOT Di~­
trict I0 ~pokeswoman Nancy Pedigo.
District 10 includes Athens. Gal·
lia, Hocking. Meigs. Monroe, Morgan. Noble. Vinton and Washington
counties.
·
Meigs County project~ include a
bridge replacement on State Route 7
near Eastern High School, resurfacing SR 124 from McKelvey's Comer
at the junction of SR 338 to
Reedsville at a cost of $897.962.20.
and from Pomeroy to Racine for
S486.656.85, and resurfacing all of
SR 325.
Paving work is expected to stan
around May I and be comp leted by
Sept. 30.
Work ha.' already started on the

S490.000 SR 7 bridge deck replacement project near EHS by Maiden &amp;
Jenkins Construction Co. of Nel,onville. Completion is slated for July
31. Pedigo said. ·
The Shelly Co. of Thornville will
reinforce large plastic pipes running
beneath SR 7 on the new four-lane
and also on Salisbury Township Road
673. The $147.183.50projectentail~
reinforcing the pipes with beneath
each of these roads with steel liners
by June 30, 1998.
In addition, a four-lane bridge
deck repair project over Naylor's Run
Road will be sold in May or June at
an estimated cost of $835.000.
Some jobs left over from la.&gt;t year
will also be completed. including a
bridge replacement project on SR 143
n·~ar Hanisonville and resurt·acing of
the U.S. 33 four-lane near Pomeroy.
- &amp;'!lergency projects include riverbank stallilization along U.S. 33 in
front of the Pomeroy Kroger-store
($1.733 million) and repair of a 'lip
along SR 248 on the Chester side of
Bashan Road ($1.100 million).
Other emergency projects include
a slip repair on SR 338 north of the
Raven~wood Bridge for $2 15.000.
slip repair on SR 124 at Pewitts Run
near Long Botto~n for $7(~}.000 and
a slip repair on SRni~tthe Shade
River Bridge. three . m{es south of

Ohioan pleads
with Congress
to reject higher
rate on loans
for disaster aid

Long Bottom for $803,ooci.
Gallia County projects ~lated for
completion include the construction
of a tum-off lane from SR 7 to Little
Kyger Road near Cheshire. installa·
tion of a' tmffic light at the junction
of SR 7 and Olive Street in Gallipolis. resurfacing SR 588 from Gal·
lipolis to Old U.S. 35. resurfacing SR
325 from Rio Gmnde to Vinton.
resurfacing SR 141 from the
Lawrence/Gallia line to SR 233. and
resurfacing SR 554 from SR 160 io
SR 7 in Cheshire.

Gallia County emergency pro·
j~cls include the repair of a slip on
Old 35 just west of the new ODOT
gamge. and several slips on county
roads throughout the county. including one .on Gravel Hill Road near
River Valley High School.
The emergency projects were
schedukd as a ri:suh of Maich 1997
floods. These projects are being funded by the Federal Highway Admin·
istration.
In Athens County, ODOT will
resurface SR 681 from SR 356to the

Albany corporation line. along with
other paving project~ . In addition. a
slip will be repaired - using emergency funding - on County Road 44
east of Shade.
ODOT will also be resurfacin~
roads within Ohio Department oi·
Natural Resources' facilities in
Athens and Vinton countie.s; painting
bridges in Gallia. Hocking. Morgan.
Noble and Wa.;hing!On counties: and
installing raised pavement markerS
and replacing guardrail throughout all
counties of the district during the
1998 construction season.

Judge wants 'maximum risk' inmates out of private prison
BRIGHT RED.

W~P.
!J!i2J ~"
5.4 VB. New body Style

1994 CHEVROLET

vs,~.'N.~l.Juise, ti",

Both have A/C, P. equip.

door

TRADE IN
1997 FORO ESCORTS

o, A/C, 4 doors.

RED, GREEN &amp; WHITE

o~ ~!.JcP,lW, lt.,B~~Pse~.

1~~~POS
f) Auto

M cass.

ONE GREEN + ONE MOCHA

SPORTY

LL UNDER 14,000 MILE

AKRON (AP)- A federdl judge
ha.&gt; said the District of Columbia
maximum risk inmate~ at a private.
medium -security
prison
in
Youngstown must be ·removed to an
appropriate prison.
Two inmates have. been stabbed to
death in the pm month at the Nonheast Ohio Cerrection Center. which is
· opemted in Youngstown by the Corrections Corp. of America of
Nashville, Tenn.

·farmland

Pr:~~-ervation

B('AARON MARSHALL

4x4, auto, A/C

ONLY

5

10,995

SIGNA\3~/-sHI~.q!!, Js~l~StAJIcass,
PW, PL. cruise, tilt, leather interior, power seats.

proposals

avail?.ble. I want those people out of
here. ·
. . .
Bell said that the transkr .0.1 pnsoners who have. b&lt;:en llknllloed as .
maxtmum-secunty ~osks wa.&lt;a mostake . and that the lacoloty was supposed to house only medouno-securo - .
ty inmates.
.
.
"They shouldn t be there on the
lirst ~!ace - . you know It and I
know, Bell sao d.
.
"You have to get them out ot there

all. " Bell said.
Bell's order was a follow-up to
one he gave last month halting further
tmnsfers of priSIJ':lers from D.C. to the
Ohio private facolity.
Already. II inmates identified a.'
maximum-security risks have been
returned 10 prison in .Lonon. h is
uncertam how many more moght
have to be returned. because the
proson os undergoong an extensove
inmate reclassification that may take

because they shouldn 'tbe there at

several more months.

slowly makff way intorlegislature

nJ~~YJ!Y, ~W.~.Aa~

equipment RED IN COLOR.
e other is V6 atr power equip
GREEN IN COLOR.

The prison has been the subject of Lonon. Va. Thirteen inmates have
an inmate lawsuit seeking to move been stabbed at the· Youngstown
the toughest inmates to a maximum- prison since it opened Ia.;! May.
security prison. On Tuesday. Gov. .
U.S. District Judge Sam Bell in
George Voinovich signed a bill into Akron on Thursday ontered the
law allowing local authorities to return of all Washington. D.C..
investigate problems at privately inmate~ identilied a.s maximum 'secuoperated prisons that accept inmates rity risks .
.
from outside Ohio.
When D.C. Assostal1t Attorney
. The prison. designed for 1.500 Paul Klein objected that there is no
on mates. has 1.700 I rom crowded place else to put them. Bell shot back:
prisons in Washington. D.C .. and " I don' t much care what options are

5

4,995

aoo-1 ,,t~~~c,fP.Isfe9ri~~. AM/FM
VERY NICE USED TRUCK. LOCAL TRADE IN.

~~~~~~~~1t~,~~~

Gannett News Service

COLUMBUS -in August 1996.
in front of a roomfu I of farmers at the
Ohio State Fair; Ohio Gov. George
Voinovich appointed an Ohio Farm·
land Preservation Ta.'k Force to study
preserving farmland in the state.
Twenty months later. as a pair of
legislative proposals underwent their
initial hearings at the Statehouse thi~
week; it appears ooly a small piece of
the 21-member taskforce's recom·
mendations is on track to pa.~sage.
Likely to whisk through the General Assembly this year is Senate BiII
223, which allows state or local government to pureha.se development
rights, known as conservlllion easement~. to preserve tf)e agricultuml use
of land.
"It's pemlissive, not mandatory,"
said the bill's sponsor, Sen. Grace
Drake. R-Solon. "It just gives coun·
ties the tools to do it if they want."
Similar programs underway iti
Pennsylvania and Maryland pay
farmers the diffenmce between the
agricuhural value of their land and
the dovelopment value of their
acreage.
Under the bill, counties are per·
mined to levy or increase the sales taJt
to acquire development rights or

.

retire bonds issued for that purpo~e .
It also rreates the agricultuml Conservation Easement ' Purchase Fund
within the Ohio ()epartment of Agricultural.
·
· It ha.' the backing of the state agricultural department and was put
together after six month~ and four
drafts with the input of builders.
developers . environmental groups
and farming groups.
"We really have to focus our
e!Torts on getting some legislation
through that can take advantage of a
federal farmland protection program.' ' said Patrice Gillespie,
spokesperson for the newly·oreated
Office of Farmland Preservation in
the Ohio Agriculruml Department.
She explained that the bill would
leverJge a federal program that offers
matching fannland preservation dol·
Iars to states that have development
right purcha.o;c programs in place.
Meanwhile. the bulk of the task·
force's report is including in a sweeping farmland preservation bill. sponsored by Rep. Gene Krebs. R.Camden. that underwent sponsor testi·
mo.hy in the House's Local Govern·
ment and Townships Committee.
The legislation. kno!"n as House
Bill 645, includes provisions that
would cre,ate vo.l'!ntary countywide

comprehensive land-use plans
designed by local ollicials. create
areas that would be designated !lor
agricultuml use while changing th&lt;l"'
region's estate lax laws and give pre I~
erential treatment to areas where a
city expects to grow in the next 25
years.
It also encourages inner-city
development by exempting building
materials in community reinvestment areas and creates a.lilllte-wide
management information system in
order to improve development planning and coordination.
But this wide-ranging bill is
already genemting criticism from
relators and developers who fear the
comprehensive changes made in the
legislation. The state's agriculturJI
depanment has also not backed the
bill.
"We want percolation on this
issue," said Krebs, who said he
hopes that House committee mem·
bers can hash out the details keeping
in mind the proposal's l,arger goals.

If the bill doe~ not pass the legis·
lature, Krebs vows to introduce it
again.
"This bill will be signed by a governor," he said. "I just don't know
which one."

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - An Ohio
woman who wa.s flooded out of her
home la.'t year made a trip to Capitol Hill in the hope that her story
111ight make things easier far [amilies
hun by the next natumrdisaster.
Minta Herrin of New Richmond.
Ohio. implored lawmaken; to reject a
Clinton administrdlion proposal to
charge a higher interest rate on disaster loans.
" Rai~ing the cost of a disa.,ter loan
would be a real problem for a fami ly like mine." she told a House com·
mittee on Thursday.
When the Ohio River overflowed
i'ts .b.anks la't year. the Herrin home
was swamped under 5 feet of water.
ltaving the family with few salvageable possessions when times already
were tough.
Mrs. Henin. 25. had given binh to
her second child just weeks earlier
and her husband was still recovering
from a heart anack.
" It was a real tough time- just
overwhelming financially," she said.
The family got a 12-year loan to
help them set up housekeeping anew
and after some di!Ticulty got some
donated furniture from a relief
agency.
She said the thought of others in
her predicament having to ligure out ·
how to come up with an extra $20 a
month on top of an already unexpected payment led her to agree to
testify before a committee evaluating
the Small Busines~ Administration 's
budget proposal.
The' SBA. which administers the
disaster loon program. ha.~ proposed
liliing its interest-mte cap to 6 percent
from the current maximum of 4 percent - for an averJge· incre:&gt;se of S20
a month to borrowers.
The head of the SBA. Aida
Alvarez. called the proposal both lis.cally responsible and sensitive to disa.•Her victims.

The number-crunching side of the
Clinton aJministJ'ation also defended
the idea. JiJCk Lew. deputy dinx:tor of
the Oflice of Management and Budget. told the commiitee "the alterna.
tive would be to reduce loan volume
.... We think that would not be lidvis·
able."

...... ·i

,'

.,

-· ··, J
,~_.

.

... .
f

: f';:"
;-. •"• '

. ...

CALLED TO SCENE- Pomeroy firefighters were called-to the
leak at the oouar General Store on East Main Street
Thursday attemoon. A cargo truck making a delivery to the store
austelriad a ruptured fuel tank. Fire ChJef Danny Zlrlde aald the
truck lost an estimated 80 gallons of dleul fuel, which waa disposed of by the village In accordance with EPA regulations. Diesel
fuel, accOrding to llrkle, evaporate• easily, eliminating the .need
for extenslva cleanup.
·
r....tne of a ~I

•

But Alvarez and Lew found them·
sel ves up against Small Business
Committee members who were ske'pticalthat there wa.' no other way for
the SBA to lind a $125 million sav.
ings in its budget.
After live stmight ye:us of similar
proposals - each shot down by Congress - the committee's chainnan,
Rep. Jim Talent, R-Mo., said he
hoped that SBAofficials would ab;m.
don " the illusion that this is the best
budget the SBA ha.~ ever submitted."
"From the point of view of the
disa.ster victim, I think this 'take it or
leave it' attitude is giving them the
back of your band. and government
~hould be better than that," Talent
said.

••

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="411">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9811">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27291">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27290">
              <text>March 19, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1587">
      <name>carr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="22">
      <name>fisher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1598">
      <name>fulton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1095">
      <name>george</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1073">
      <name>riggs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3362">
      <name>searles</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
