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Frklly, February 2,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Pnm OJ a.rdli of Clllrllt
212 W. Main St '
PUtor: Andrew Milos
Swtday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a..m., .7 pm.
Wcdlleoday Setviceo • 7 p.m.

W-•

Pemwoy
Clcolrdt otCiorlll
33226 OlildtOII'oHome Rd.
Sunday Sehool • II a.m.
Wonhip • IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdlleaday Setvicea • 7 p.m.

Hal mess
Donvllt Hollnea Church
31057 Scace Route 32S,l..anaovU.
Pallor: Rev. Ridt Maloyed
Sunday oc:hool · 9:30a.m.
Sunday wonhip . 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Otildrcn'o church -10:35 a.m. Youth 6 p.m.
WedneJday prayer ~cc · 7 p.m.

Middleport Cbwdl of Clorlot
5lh and Mom
Plnor: Al Harucn
Yoolh Minister: Bill F!Uier
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15,10:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.,

Calvory Pllarl., Chapel
Harrisonville R01d
Pastor. Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9 :30 a.m.

Keno Churdl of Chrllt
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdiool-10:30 Lm.
Paswr-Jeffrey Wallac:e
ht and 3nl Sunday
F""' Wll . . .Clowdl
Aob SUOOI, Mid&lt;tlepnn
P1111&lt;1r. lei HOJIIIIII
Sundoy,s.lvie&gt;e. 7:30p.m.
SIIDIIOy School · 10 a.m.
Wednet&lt;kySeJVic:e-7:30p.m.
. _.F1nl Bopu.t Churdl
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip , 10:43 a.m.

......... JilniBapdll
Pu&amp;&lt;r. Paul sa.....

llaaMoinSL
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip-10:30a.m.

~'r~:.:-IOfa;r:

· Pastor:. E. Lamar O'Bryant
• Sunday School-9 :30a.m.
Wonhip-10:43 a.m., 7:110p.m.
Wcdneldly Servic:co • 7:00p.m.
Fll'llllopdll c.......
Pastor: Mark Moorow
6ob an~ Palmer SL, Middleport
Suuay Sdlool • 9:15 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:13 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednes&lt;lay Service· 7:00p.m. '
F1nl
Bapllll
Putor:
Rov.
Lany
Haley
Youlh Pa110r: Aaron Youna
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m.,'7:00 p.m.
Wedn&lt;~~ay Setvic:es ·7:00p.m.
SilvtrRIID~...

PUior: BiU Uttle
Swtday School • IDLm.
Wonhip • lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday ServiCOI-7:30 p.m.

MI. u.... Bapllot

..

l'ao10r : Joe N. Sa)'n:
S101day Sc:hool-9:45 a.m.
Bv..... • 6:30 p.m.
Wcdnelday SetviCOI • 6:30p.m.

-

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

·• R..:ine, Oil
Pallor : Danid Berdine
Wonhip · 9:30a.m. Sunday
Bible Study · 7:00p.m. Wednesday

Old JleiHI F"" WUIBa ..... Churcb
28601 SL lb. 7, Middlepon
Sutoday School- 10 Lm.
E....... • 7:30p.m.
Thunday Semc:ea • 7:30
Hll- Baplbt Chon:b
SL RL 143 ju11 olf Rc. 7

t&gt;asiOr. Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.·
Sunday Sd!ooJ · 10 o.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
VIctory Boplllllodepeo..lll
525 N. 2nd St Middleport
Pas10r: limes E. Koesee
Wonhip • IO.:m., 7 p.nt
W~ncsday Services • 7 p.m.

Wonhip - 11 a.m., 7:30 p,.m.

Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Rote of s•aron Holiness Church
l..eadin&amp; CrW&lt; Rd., Rutland
Pa1tor: Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;

Beorwallow Rid&amp;• Chord! of Cbrllt
Putor: 1act Colctrove
Sunday Sc:hool -9:30 a.m.
. Wonhip -!0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdn~day Setviceo • 6:30p.m.

S1.111day school- 9:30a.m.
SWJday wonhip -7 p.m.
W~neaday prayer meeting· 7 p.m.

Zion Churdt of Chrlllt
Pornc:rOy, Harri...,ville Rd. (RLI43)
Pa1tor: !toter Wallm
Sunday Sc!ltoOI - 9:30a.m. .
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m .

Pine Grove Bible Holiness Chur&lt;h
lfl mile off Rt. 325
PallOr: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m. .
WDflhip - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plain Churcll of c.....
Pascor: Scanley Mint:lto
Sunday School • 9 o.m.
Wonhip · 9:45 a.m.
Wedn~y - 7 p.m.

Weoleyan Dible Holiness Chun:h
75 Purl St, Middlepon.
Palil.Or: Re\'. John Neville
Sunday school • 9:30 a.nt.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:10p.m.
· Wednesday. Secvice · 7:30p.m.

Bradbilry Chun:h of Chrtll
Plswr: Ridt Snyder
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Hyoell Run Hollnea Chllr&lt;h
Pucor: Robert Malley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · IQ:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Secvice ·7:30p.m.

.

RuUand Chordl of Chrtot
Pastor: Euaene E. Underwood
Sunday Scbool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Llor&lt;l ClllfF'm M&lt;lhodiSI Ch•r&lt;h
Pastor: Peter Tremblay
Sunday. School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 7 pm.
·
Wednejday Senlicc ·7:00p.m.

Bradford Churdl or Chrlsl
Comer of St Rt. 124 A Bradbury Rd.
Evancelin: Keith Cooper
. Youth Miniocer: Michael Teagarden
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Setvices · 7:00p.m.

Rutland Communlly Church
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Hvcnina • 1 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:tviceo • 7 p.m.

Hkkory Hilla Church ol Chrlol
Pucor: Jooeph B. HOIItins
SWlday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip -'10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Sa•nt s

Liberty Chrtltlan Church
Dexter
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday Evenin&amp; ·6:30p.m.

Hanlock Grove Churdl
PUIOr: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Christian Union
HO&lt;Iford Churdl of c•rbt In

OUr Saviour Lutberan Cburdi
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenowood, W.Va.
Intrim pa110n: Gc.orJc C. Weinck
Sunday School • I0:00a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m.
'

Pastor: Rev. David McM.-.is
Sunday School· II a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedneoday Setvicea -7:30p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Chur••
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second 51., Pomeroy
Pas&amp;or: Davm Spalding
Sunday School · ~:45 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Cbrtltl., Uolon
Hanford; W.Va.

Faith Bap... C•lll'&lt;h

RaUJ'Oid SL, Mason

S~nday

United Methodist

School • 10 a.m.'
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Mt.MeniiiBIIIIIIol
Foonh .t Main _SL, M~epon

Rutland Church of Gud
Pastor: G"'llory L. Sean
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 1t a.m., 6 p.m .
Wednesday Services • 7 p.in.

Wonltip-lla.m.

• PUlor: Rev. Gclbell C1111, Jr.
Sunday SchoQi •9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-10:45 a.m.
AllllqtliiJ . . _

s...day Scbool • •Elo a.m.
Wanhip • 10:45 a.m.
Thunday S&lt;rric:ea • 7:30p.m.

.

R.llallll Fret Wll, Bapliot

Gnhan. Uo.llod M , Wocship · 9:30a.m. (ht A 2nd Sun),
7 :~p.m. (3rd A 4oh Sun)
Wcdoeoday Service· 7:30p.m.
Mt. Oll•e Unltod Motbndlst
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Putor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sundoy School · 9 :36a.m.
. Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

"

Mclp Cooperali•e Pari..
NOflheul Cluller

Syra&lt;UIC Flnt c•urdll of God
Apple and Seoond SIJ.
Pastor: Rev. Da\'id RuaiCll
Sunday School and Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp; Services~ 7:30p.m. ·
Wedntlday Setvic:eo · 7:30p.m.

Alfred

Paa10r: Sharon Ha1.11man·
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

SolcmSl. '
P1110r: Rov. PaUl Taylor
Siri&gt;day Sc:hool · 10 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
·
w........y Setviceo • 7 p.m.

Clool"&lt;&lt;l or GGcl'lf .......,..,.
O.J. White·Rd. dfSl.lb. 160
Paotor: PJ . Cllopnan
Sunday Sd!ooJ • 10 a.m.
Wonhip. 11 a.m.
Wednesday Setvica • 7 p.m.

Ca tho liC

c - . Church of God
s. R. 248 A Riebel Roaa, Cheater
Pascor: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday ~ · 9:30. a.m.
Wonhip · 6e.m..
·,
Weckteoday, 7 p.m. Family Training Hour

c-.

Sacrtd liMit
Cllotrdt
161 Mul~ A.._, Pawoy, 992-51198
Pastor: Rev. Waller B. Jleim
Sot. Oln. 4:45-5: 1~.; ~·· ~:30 p.m.
Sun. Cccn. -( :45-9.15 a.m.,
.
5101. Mall . 9:30 .....
Dailey Mw · 1:30 a.m.

. AACJNE ~lfi!G .MIU.. . ·
Mill Wo1k.
t:abintl lbk•_,

lrracust

Lm1Bottem
Pastor: Rev. Charles Muh .
Sunday School ~ 9: 30a .m .
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Putor: Rev. Thomas M.cCluna
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
W!'.flhip • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wcdntlday SeJVic:es · 7 p.m.

CIMotor Chordl or the Naa,_
PallOr: Rev. Herbert Gnte
Sunday School-9 :30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se:Mces • 7 p.m ...

Flatwoods
PUior: Keith Rader
Sunday Sebool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip . II a.m.

R•llaod Churcll of the N-.ne
Putor: Samud Buye
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Secvices • 7 p.m.

Fc.-eotRua

Pao:tJattd First Cltlii'Cb orae Naureoe

l'allor: Cbarleo Novilk

Pastor: Mart Malson
Worship · 10:30 p.m.
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Thunclay)SeJViCOS • 6:]() p.m.

Healll (Middlepest)

New Haven C..n:ll or the N-...e
Pastor: Glendcin Scroud
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Servicea • 7 p.m.

Pa•ton Vemaaaye. Sollivan
s...~ School· 9:30a.m.
Wclhhip • 10:30 a.m.

Mta ...vllle
. Pu10r: Ocades Ncville
Sunday School -'9 a.m.
Wanhip . 10 a.m.

'
Oth er Churches

Paari Chapel
SUI)day School • 9 LnL
Wonbip • 10 a.m.

,_

l'omtnly
Putor: Raben E. Rd&gt;intOn
Sunday School • 9: IS a.m.
Worship • I0:30 Lm.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 a.m.

Rock!lr.l...

Pascor: Keith Rader
Sllllday School · 9:15a.m.
Worthit&gt; · 10 Lm.
Youch FeUowahip, S...day • 6 p.m.
RuUand
SWiday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 Lm.
Thunday Servica • 7 p.m.

llarrjtlon•Mle COWtmunlty Churdl
Puu&gt;r: Theron Durham
Sunday • 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
,
Wednesday · 7 p.m. ,

=-.,.!;

PlliiOC:
BakCT
Sundsy Sc:hool • 10 a.m.

p.,..,.,Cantel
Kenneth Baker

Falllt.Full Gotpel Church
l..ongBouom
Plocor: Steve Reed
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhit&gt; • 9:30 a.nt and 7 p.m.
Wedneoday • 7 p.m.
Friday · fellowship secvice 7 p.m.
The Belleven' FlltOWiblp MlnWrJ
New Ume Rd., Rutland
Plstor: Rev. Ma11mt J. Robin.,..
Setvic:es: Wedneoday, 7:30p.m.
·
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

SalanC•ter
Plstor: Ron Fierte
SIDiday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • IO:IS a.m .•

Worship - 9 a.m.

Clorhll• Fellow.lp Cen ....
Salem Sl., Rulland
Putor: Robert E. Muaaer ~
Sunday·School • 10 a.m.
Wonhlp · li:IS a.m., 7 p.m.
. Wedneaday Setvice • 7 p.m.

Holloon Chrlltlan FelloWIIIIp Chun:ll
Rev. Clyde Hendenon
S111day secvice, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship ~day, 7:00p.m.
W~y IOMCC, 7:30p.m.

.

Enddme Ho ... or Prayer ,
(at Burlingham church orr Route 33)
Pastor. Robert Vance
s...day wonhip. 10 a.m.
Wednesday service • 6:30 P.l'l·

S101day School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (lnd .t 4lh SIDI)

The Salvation Army
IJS Buu.emut Ave., Pomeroy.
SaiJlnlay • 10 Lm. /
Thunday • 7 p.m.
Sunday · 7 p.m.

MQI'III"' Star

Put..-: Kenneth Baker
SIDlday Sc:hool· 9:45 a.m.
· Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Thundax Services · ·7 :30p.m.
SuUon
PasLOr: Kenneth Baker
• Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (1st .t 3nl Son)

Middleport Community Churcll
515 Purl SL, Middleport
Pallor: Sam Andersen
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Everting · 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Secvice • 7:30p.m.

.Faith Tabernacle Churdl

East Letart
Pastor: Btim Hartneaa
s ...day School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
J •

Bailey Run Road
Putor: Re\o. Emmett RIWIOCI
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m. .
Evening 1 p.m.
Thunday Setvice • 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harlmes1 ·

Cool•ltle Unllod MelhodW Part..
Pas10r: Hdon Kline
Coolville Churcll
Main &amp; Fiflh St.
Sllllday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Semcea • 7 p.m.

1411 Bri~cman SL, Synaue
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evmina · 6p.m.
Wednesday Setvic:e • 7 p.m.
Hazel CotniiiUillty Church
OffRt. 124
Putor: Edsel Han
Sunday Scltool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30a.m:.,7:30p.m.

ll&lt;lhel Cbun:b
Townohip Rd., 46&amp;C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.

C0111munlty Church
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship · 10:30 ~m . , 7 p.m.

Wonhlp • 10 a.m.

Morse Chapel Church
Sunday ochool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 1J a.m.
Wedhesday Service • 7 p.m.
F~lh

Goopet Churdl
Lon&amp; Bouom
Sunti&gt;!Y School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday 7:30p.m.
MI. Olve Commulllty ~
· PUior. Lawn:na: Buah
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
.
~vmina - 7p. m. ·
W~ay Secvi&lt;e • 7 p.m.

RAW~IN~S-COATS

FISHER

Mlcldl..,..-t Cllurch of tho N.......,e
Pastor:·G,..ory A. Cundiff
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 un., 6:30p.m.
Weckteaday Secvices • 7 p.m.

PallOr. Rev. Raben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday Scbool · 9:30a.m. ·
Wonhip • I 0:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servio&lt; • 7 ~.m.

Roedavllle F~p
Churdo ., ... N1111nile

33045 Hiland Rold. PorJteroy
PallOr. Roy Hilnter

FUNERAl- HOME

212 E. Main Street
982-3785 POI!leroy

112-5141

You Don't Have To Look Fat.
To Spy the Best Buys 1!1 the .
Classifieds.

264 South 2nd

912·3911

.. . . . . . . . CUIIC

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

. ' .. ·~ &amp; .......~.
a
dlf llca'fe+zW•

·' Mt·21M

'' 1*!·51~ Pomero~

9112-2104

.

P.

AGENT

NatiOnWide Ins. Co.
of Calumbul, Ott.

.EWING FliJNERAL HOME
"Dipily Md Sel'llict Ahwry1"
&amp;ll~lished

. .,..:W, ~8in

21 .

8112·2318 Pomeroy

. .{: .

1913

A Gannett Co . News paper

Gallipolis • Middl eport • Pomeroy

-PageA7

pageA2

a

•

Pt. Pleasant • February 4 , 1996

Vol. 30 , No . 52

.

.

.

Ups and do.w ns: Area jobless rates
December

7.5% '"' '' '""'""' " '''''""'

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

~:~ ::::::::::::::::::::::~

t·~ .. ~5.5

.

FMAMJJA SONO J

1111

...

CHANGE IN PAYROll JOBS

StlvenviUe Word of Faith
Pallor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evonina • 7 p.nt
Reloldtla Lire c•urcb
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon

up in Gallia, down in Meigs

GALLIPOLIS - Jobless rates in December decreased in more than half the ~ounties
in southeastern Ohio, according to infofllla·
tion released Friday by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
The unemployment rate in Gallia 'County
increased by .3 perce01 - from 8 percent to
8.3 percent - between November and
December. The rale decreased in Meigs
County by .3 percent- From 9., percent to
9.2 percent - during the period. ·
According to the ODES, 1,100 of Gallia's
counties 13,800 member work force was jobless in · - which serves
December. In Meigs, 800 of the county's processed 518 new and additional claims for
8,600 member labor force were unemployed unemployment compensation during December.
during the month.
Office manager Tom White said 345 job. Other regional December jobless rates
(November percentages in parenthesis) were: seekers, including 88 first-time registrants
Athens, 6.3 (6.1) percent; Jackson, 6.9 (6.8) visited the job service section of the Gallipopeicent; Lawrence, 7.2 (6.5) percent; and, lis office during the month.
According to White, new registrants.listed
Vinton, 10.3 (10.7) percent.
job
skills from food service, general and spe·
Locally, the Gallipolis office of the ODES

mixe~

Regional jobless rates
Ueccm/Jct 95

cialized clerical to electrical maintenance,
material handling and health care.
Registrants possessed skills in over 80 occu·
pafions, he said.
·
Loca,l employers placed eighteen jobs
order:s during the month, White said. Skills
sought included clerical, route 'sales, grill
cook, meat wrapper, blocklaying attd material
handling.
"Employers needing workers can tap the
largest single source of jobseekers in the area
by calling 446-1683 and placing a job order,"
White said. "There is no charge for the
employer or the jobseeker to use this service."
The December unemployment rate of 14
percent in Morgan County was the highest in
the' state, the OBES said. ·
· Franklin County had the lowest jobless
rate for die month ai3.2 percent.
The county rates are unadjusted, meaning
they do not take into account season!~~ adjustments in employment.

Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m .
Churcll or Jesus c•rhl.
Apollolk Fala .
1/4 mile pall Fort Meta• on New 1..ima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednelday -7:00 p.m.
Fnday-7:00p.m.
Clifton Tabernacle Chorch
Qiflon, W.Va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 7 p.m.
1lwnday S!;rvice • 7 p.m.

: Planning
:begins for
new medical
arts -buildi.ng
~~~a;the-d~:~~~=~

PentC&lt;OIIIIA...,bly
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pallor: William Hol&gt;ac:l&lt;
Sunday Scltool · IO·a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m. ·
Middleport Pentecostal ·
Third Ave.
PastOr: ltev. Qarlc Baker
Scbool - 10 a.m.

Syra&lt;U• Flrol United Pracbytil'tao
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
Harr-vllle Pracbytert• Clowdl
Worship • 9 Lm.
•
Sunday School· 9:45a.m..
Middleport Prtotiy.......,
Sunday School - 9 Lm .
Wonhip • 10 a.m:

Seventh-Day Advent1 st
Se-lii·DaJ Adveotliot
Mulbeny 1111. Rd., Pomeroy
P.-: Roy Lawiruty
Satunlay Setvic:ea:
Sallboth School • 2 p.m.
Wonbip • 3 p.m.

United Brethren
ML H-011 UollodIa Cloriot Chon:•
Texat Community orr CR 82
Paitor: Raben Sandon
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.
F.den Uolled Br-...ln Cltrlsl
2 lfl miles nonh of Reedsville
on State Row 1'24
P1110r: Rev. Roben Markley
SWlday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip ·7:30p.m. ·
Wednesday Setvic:eo ·7:30p.m. ·

Arctic cold grips region

C
,.,
b
rews .wor" to com E!f
ice-covered ·road_ways

GALLIPOUS - Just in c~ everyQne forgot
wllll winter was like, nalllre tossed a t~~minder at
southern Ohio's river counlies, including Gallia

o'r • medicalms building
space for seven to 10
residents of
10
counties,

Pentecosta l

-~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j~~ ~an~~d~M~:o~igs~,residentS
ii~n~lho~; fotm
ofmo_: s_no: .a:d _n~~"' awo)&lt;e Satiarday lo partly
~

. The ~ :.i.~·.'j:e,t~oe

c)oudy skies and lows in the single digits after
intermittently heavy snowfall Friday left addi·
s(ooljdr'd 'Health S)iteiiis, of which
tiona! accumulation.
tw.r Medic:al Ccnier is a pan, ~ No more snow was predicted for the remainder
mlde an expanlion :of the medi~ll
of the weekend. The National Weather Service
lllaff and ellbanc:cd ICI'Vii:OS possible.
said Saturday night's lows were to range between
: "Availabili!Y j)f a modem office
·Sand zero, with ·highs reaching from 15 to 20
builclint to ' allfatt physiCians proSunday.
1
Sides die vital key 10 successful
Sunshine was predicted for Sunday lind light
ttentitment," Lucas said.
winds were expected to keep the wind ctJjll factor
: Three potential sites are being
from gelling more uncomfonable.
~onsidered on the campus of VeterGallia County Engineer Joseph Leach said
us Mel!lorial Hospital, according 10
snowfall estimates received by the highway
the administrator.
depanmeni ranged from two inches in the nonh
". · The finn,.Marshall Erdman and
ind west sections of the county, and seven to eight
Associates, hll$ been engaged 10
in the southern panion near the Lawrence County
fine.
handle the project development and
design, which includes selection of
Gallia officials decided Saturday to declare the
he
·
· ~ he
county at a Level r emeraency, the lowest.setting
t most appropnale SJie or,t pro·
in a severe weather situation, Sheriff James D.
posed 10,000 to 12,000 square foot .
buildins, followed by construction.
Tayl6r said the decluation would remain in effect
"Seven 10 1o 11ew physicians
until state atid county roads were cleared..·
.would have a' P9sitive impact on
Highway crews on the state and local level
medical care l!nd employment in the
wete in foree Saturday, with Ohio Department of
community with the possibility of an
Transponation plows double-teaming on state
-~•
f 30 10 0
routes.
.....ition
4 new jobs,"
Leach said Friday that the county highway
Lucas said.
He said both VMH and Holzer
deparunent would continue plowing·and cinderClinic, Inc., are actively ~ruiting
,ing the county system, but persistently low tern.·
.
peratures were expected to render salt and other
phys•c•ans.
As soon as a stte .se1ecice-breaking combinations useless.
don becomes definite, lhe design
State and.county officials advised residents not
process ~an begin and a construction
to travel, but if they had Io go out, they were
ConUnued on pege A2

VM1f with llo!~· tUnic '8nd .C~· ·

°

urged to use caution on slick and snow·
covered roads.
"Our roads are passable, and most of
them will he treated by the eml..oLS.at·
, UJ4ay.~:, Leach .. said. "We will hav&lt;:
C5CWS out Oil Sunday."
· • ... ..
1lJe Oallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Pattol rePoned ii had investi·
gated seven accidents since Friday
morning. ..,
.
Taylor said the sheriff's department
and Emergency Management Agency
were prepared for the weather. All four·
wheel drive vehicles available Io ihe
sheriff were in readiness, but the smaller amount of snowfall received
decreased the need by Saturday, he said.
'They were all ready to go, but no
deeper than the ·snow is, the black-and·
whites have had no problem pulling
through," he said. .
"Everything has gone real smooth,"
1
the sheriff added. "I just hope with the
low temperatures we don'tlose our util·
ities."
In Gallipolis, city and volunteer fire
LOSING BATTLE -John Finney and Unda Wamiley,
department officials were probin,l! the employna of Bowman'• Home Health Care In Gallipolis,
reponed leak of about 200 gallons of fought a loalng battle agalnal filling •nowflll Friday ••
kerosene from a tank at Smith's Ashland they bruahed off 1 Vlhlcle atlhe buslne11' parking lot.
&amp; Carryout, 118 Vine SI.
Varying amount&amp; of snow fell in Gallla County before II
A city police spokesman said the leak ended ear1!f ~lll[da!f.
was detected Saturday morning when employees around the business."
came to work and the GVFD notified the stale
An Ashland Oil crew from Marietta was also
Environmental Protection Agency, which was expected to recover the spilled kerosene, ihe
expected Io be in Gallipolis Io examine the cause spokesman added.
of the leak.
The approach of a winter storm late last week
The cause remained undetermined, but the aroused memories of the Jan. 6-7 blizzard that left
spoke~man said the leak had been contained and , more than a fool of snow in Gallia County, but
"there was no hazard to the
or people
ConHnued on page A2

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

.

.

f\lleig~

anglers hope to News capsules
·land new
. boat launch Land mine explosion kills U.S. peacekeeper
.

Good Morning

an.

Today'•
~ 11lbw.l
·sARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - A laM mine explosion killed an American. soldier in northern
18 Sections • 164 Pages
Bosnia on Saturday, the first member of U.S. forces to die in action since the NATO-Ie&lt;l peace mission began.
RACINE - A{ea anglers lire hoping to lure a new boat launch to Ibis
11te American was killed north of Thzla, headquaners for U.S. forces, when he stepped·on a land mine. He
· fa!endan
BUrJ
small, Ohio River community... with some assistance from the state of Ohio. was q.e first 1.J .S soldier 10 die in Bosnia and the ninth alliance soldier to die since NATO began deploying to
Clepiftcds
. Racine sits at the head of the Gallipolis pOOl of 1he river, just below the
1he B,llkans in December. Another.Americah soldier died in January at a logistics base in Hungary, apparently
. tailwaters of the Racine Locks and Dam, a spot highly valued by area
of natl!ral cau5es.
·
Comics
anglers.
.
The soldier, whose name was being withheld pending notifi·
Edlk&gt;rl!!c
Although the village has a boat launch, the agina facility is plagued by a
calion of next of kin, was wounded at 3:45p.m. (10:45 EST) at
Obltv•rjn
A6
l~~&amp;:k of parking spaces, a limited approach to the river and•some deterioraa checkpoint near the town of Gradacac, 25 miles north of
Sports
Cl-8
tion of the ramp which often leads to stuck boat trailers.
Tuzla, said an Anny spokesman, Lt. Bill Donovan. He was pro·
. When the fishing Js good, some boaters are .forced 10 park their trailers
nounced dead at the 212th mobile Anny surgical hospital.
Weatbcr
AJ
i!lesally. The village did expand the pailtins area last year, but local anglers
Pr~sideni Clinton was briefed about the death during a camsay still more room is neede&lt;l·
, .
paign stop i~ New Hampshire. Asked by a reponer whether the
, The Ohio Division of Wildlife agre:es and is womns on the problem, ·
.accident gave him second thoughts about the Bosnian mission,
Col umns .:cording to Dave Bright of the Ohio Division of Wildlife's District 4 Office
he said: "No. not at all."
in Athens.
.
·
In a statement, Cl.inton extended sympathy to the soldier's
Jwk Apdmgg M
. "We are doing a site review," said ,Brjghl. "We recognize there is a. need
family."They should know that he died in .the noblest of causes
Bob.Ugc'kh
ll
fOr improved access to thai pool."
•
·
- the pursuit of peace .... We will continue 10 take every pre·
• Currently the stale's.real estate and land man~~gCment office is negotiat·
caution to protect American troops as they continue to perfonn
ig with property ownen to secjfthey are interested in sellin1 property near_
this critical mission of securing and enduring .peace in Bclsnia. "
'JimS•n' .
Bl
die vili'F's Sill' Mill Park, he said.
,
As pan of the peace agreemeni, CroaiS and Muslims on SaturDonthY Suit
Bl
It is too early to say what son of ramp the state would build, although one
day signed documents giving them control of Serb suburbs in
Jillllibility ia'lhat'it could resemble the facili!y constructed near Forked .Run
Obi9 Valley~ Co.
Sarajevo. But Serb police [J:mained in place, despite the protests
Siate PIR below the. Belleville LoCks and Dan about five years ago. ·
AP of the Bosnian government.
~. ---------.....;....__,
;, Thutile'S intefesl iQ the project stepls from the Ohio River angler surOhio poll: Support·for Voinovlch, Glenn evenly divided..-mong voters questioned
v,y conducted in 1992 and 1993 from the New Cumherlansl Pool near the
~ylvania boJ'der to the Indiana stale line. ,
' CINCINNATI (AP) - S,uppon was about even for ,Republican Gov. 45 percent. Two percent favored some oth~ cal$dale, and 4 pereenl were
~ 11111 illfWY iftdicated growin&amp;. in~ in the river and provided good
Oeorae Voinovich and Democratic Se!J. John Glenn 'among ¥oters ques- undecided.
·
'
1
~oil on the riVer's economiC impect to il.tly cominunilies. In addi·
tioned about 1 possible matchup in the 1998 Sellllte election, the Ohio Poll , The margin of etror wu 4.1 pei'CIInt&amp;Je points.
,
~Wiler cptity hu improved. he said.
·
. •
reponed Friday.
The pollsters conducted telephone interviews Jan. 11-24 of 574 r,p..
.• %1
m~h interest in tbt;. Ohio River'U~til the last eight re~ ...
YQin.!!vich wes
by 49
to Glenn's tered voters who were selected at random.
·• ·
.cr.i&lt;.n~
.:; . "' ·
ContlnUN;on fiiii-AJ· ~·
ty JIM FREEIIIAN ·
1'liMe llnlltlll11111ff

'•"

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY ' .
·We FiftiJoctoq' . .
Preecriptione.

982·2955
A SAFETY

s••uaiiiMcE

. . . .7871 '
112 Nartll a-Id Aw.
~Oil

\

~Ilion

tmes.-.

'
Cat•ary
Billie Churdl
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: ltev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wedntlday Setvicc · 7:30p.m.

992-5432

. 115 E. Melilorill Qr. Pomllll!Y

214E. ,....,

Low: -r-

•

l

FaiU. Fellowalolp Crusode ror Chrllt
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Di.chns
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

"FNlrilg K«&lt;tucky Fritld Oh/ciken"l
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

Veter1na

HI: Teen,

'

.Telecom overhaul: Q&amp;A

.,.

Fairview Bible Church
Letan, W.Va. RL I
Paotor: Ran1tin Roach
Sunday Sehool· 10:]() a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

.
Crow'a Family Ae..,.ur~~nt

~emorlll Hoepital,

'

White's Chapel W....yu
·
CoolviDo Road
Putor: Rov. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wanhip - 10:30a.m. ·
Wecktetday Service · 7 p.m.

FotltGoopet......._

Pomeroy Flower Shop

.."

Frtoci•G.... ~
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Rater Willford
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip-7 p.m.

'.

Elqln-Wamer
INSURANCE
.SERVICES
I

Carleton ln-lnaiiMII Clt•rdl
Kinaobury Road
PUtor: Jeff Smith
SWlday Sc:hool · 9:30a.m.
w~ SeJVic:e 10:30 o.m.
Worship Seniioc-llt and 3nl SIOidaf. 7 p.m.
No Wcdneaday Bvmina SeMCO

Uttlted Fallll C..rdl
Ri. 7 On Pane~ By·Pa11

Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Soutlc Bo11tt1 NewTeotaSilverRldae
·
PUtor: Robert Bober
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonbip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne~y Service · 7 p.m .

Dyesvl~e

Wednesday Services · 10 a.m.
Hoddncport Chon:b
GrandSIIoet
Sunday SchOol • 10 a.m.
Wonhit&gt; - II a.m.
Wct:klcsday Services - 8 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.sn.
. B•.....a 7:30 P.J!I·
Tueaday A Thanclay - 7:30p.m.

SyrocuseMI...,.

Sunday School · 10 a.n\.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Chooter
P1110r: Sharon Hausman
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School • 10 a:m.
Thundly Services • 7 p.m.
Joppa
PutOI': Bob Randolph
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· JO,]() a.m.

~1 CloordlCII llle N.-.ite

~riPulor: Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wanhip • 9 a.rn ..

Wcdneaday SOrric:ea • 10 a.m.

St. John Lulllenn CloPine Grove
Putor: Dawn Spalding
Wonhip ·9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

Reedsville Church oiChrlsl
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip Setvic:e: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 am.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.ni., 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeJVic:es • 7 p.m.

CeatraiCIUIIer
AllltsrJ (Syraaao)
PUtor: Cllarlet Neville
Sunday Scbool • 9:45 a.m.
Wonbip • II a.m. ,
Wednesday Secvice~ • 7:30p.m.

. The Church 0( JOIUI
ChrlllofLa-·DaySalota ,
St. RL 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20-ll Lm.
Relief Socicty/Priellhood II :05·12:00 noon .
·
Saaunilnt Setvicc 9· 10: IS a.m.
Home,nakina moetina, 111 Thun: • 7 p.m.

Luth eran

. s,..•._ c•urdl .,... N........e
Paotor: Bin StiJu

'I'Iopptra PlalU St. Put
PUtor. Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sehool • 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Tueaclay Setvices · 7:30p.m.

SnowvUie
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 •.m.

•

LanpvUie Cltrllltlan Church
SWJday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvice 7:30p.m.

PutOI': Rov. James S•terfi•ld
Sunday School· 9:45a.m
E\lalinll ~ 1 p:m.
Wednesday Setvic:es • 7 p.m.

Interim hllor: Teresa
Sunday School • 9::!0 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 L'l'·• 7 p.m.
\ Weclnetday Serv~ • 1 p.m.

Reoraulzed c•urc11 of J...• Chrlll
onau.r Day Salllll
Ponland·Racilto Rd.
Putor: Janice Danner
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worohip-10:30a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m. ~

Thursday service -'6:30p.m.

Fort11R11t1Baptlll
Pastor : Arius Run
Sunday Scbool • 10 am.

•I'MhMwtl ·ott~Bt

Epi scopal
Grace Eplocopal C..rdl
326 ll. Main Si., Pomeroy
,Rector: Rev. D. A. duPlmtier
Holy l,luc:hatill and
Sunday School I0:30 a.m.
Coff~ hour followin&amp;

.

Bank building restored

Putoc Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday school and woniUp 10:25

Chlllch of Cf111st

-C ollege basketball . Page c1

Dodging
flemolltlon

Churc

.

.

'

W
&amp;

1

...
'...
...
'·

.•

;w.·t

'

.·.~

'

. •.

"'

Jt. .

�-.

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gal~pollt, OH • Point Plea~nt, WV· ·

. . . . , ... t ...

-

OHIO WeJth er
Sunday, feb. 4

S~nday,

February 4,

: Ftbruary·~-4.-1------~------~~~~~~,~,-.e-g-,~.o-n-a~l--------.-u.-,m~.t!J-.-.-~-, -,.~A,

1~

Medical building

Tri•County Briefs:

Continued tram ~ A1
schedule detennined.
.
With wly site selection, it is
anticipated that the medical office
building could be compleJed in
1996, Lucas said.

,A.ccuWellhe,.e fcncut
MICH.

IMansfield I 8~ I•

GalUpolis wonuzn granted probation

.congress
takes break
for ~renewal'

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis woman was sentenced to six months
probation recently in the Gallia County Common Pleas Coun. ·
According to records, Mary E. Wolford, SSS Addison Pike, pleaded guilty to theft, stemming from an August 199S incident.
Additionally, she was sentenced to counseling at Woodland Centers and 10 days community service at the Outreach Center, according to coun records.

By ALAN FRAM
·AaiOCiated Pl'ftl Writer

Flood assistance number available
POMEROY -A toll-free telephone number is available to those
who want 10 ~~pply for flood assistance, according to a release from
the Ohio Emergency Management Agency.
.
People with flood losses can han~le their entire application for federal assistance by calling 1-800-462-9029.
An inspector will make an appointment to look at the property a
few days after the telephone registrati1,1n, and a check for damages as
calculated by the inspection will be mailed shortly afterward, said Phil
ZafeiJlOius, federal coordinating officer for the Ohio flood disaster.

·WASHINGTON - 'Promising
action on the debt limit and other
major bills when they return, Repub.
\
licans sent the House home for three
,
~' '
fl
weeks so ~~~emben; can "rest, renew · ·VIEWING siTe -Three aaaOc:llllea at Vetarena .,_l\lorllll Hoapllal examine one of thiN ponlble on;;~
ourselves" and avoid "the distortions pua aJtaa Which couidb4f' used for the eon1truellon of 1 new medical art I building. From the left are Don he
of the national media."
· gle, director of plant operations; Scon LUCII, hoapltal admlnlatrator; and Je_ff Warner, chairman of the or·
W. VA.
The Senate, too, is embarking on 'pltal'a board of truateee.
a period of short worlc weeks ~
which happen to coincide with the
Iowa and New Hampshire GOP presidential contests. Both are of interest
to Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole,
R-Kan., who hopes to become the
Continued from page A1
·;
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton has and hunting supplies.
party's nominee. ·
Sunny Pl. Clolldy Clo!llfy
Ice
said Bright. "Now it's second only to advocated construction of a · new
How~ver,. he said he feels a ne~
Democrats, s~nsing a chance to Lake Erie."
boat launch for several years, first ramp jl{quld ben~fi t customers ~
; Vis Assocfafttd Pms~ Graphk:INet
paint Republicans as deaf to the
"We thi'nk it will do nothing but going on record in support of o'ne in already has and said the vtlla~
nati_on 's problems, say now is not tile
an article the spring, 1994, issue of needs to s upport the construction. t .
time f9r Congress to take a break. contin~ to get better," he added.
Southeast
Ohio magazine.
''I'm real excited for it to happep
Promoting the river as a source of
They note that a measure to prevent
"It
would
be
a
big
plus
for
the
for
the village and lt.ope to get 11
a tumultuous f~ral default in March recreation is a multi-state task, he
whole
county,
not
just
'the
Racine
done,"
said Meigs .'County Gam~
explained. An Ohio · River Fisheries
remains undone. ·
area,"
said
Thornton.
''I'm
really
Protector Keith 0 . Wood.
:.
They also say there is no bal- Management Team. has been formed
By The Aaaoclllled Preaa
· · Sunrise Sunday at 7:38 a.m., sunglad
to
see
it
happening.''
Gomprised
of
administrators
and
"We
have
a
great
resource
that
·~
anced-budget deal with President
· It will continue to be cold across set at 5:54 p.m.
Thornton has met with various there for the fisherman ," he added ..:
Clinton,
no tax cut and no overhaul biologists from Pennsylvania, Ohio,
·
Weather
forecast:
' Ohio .
·
West
Virginia,
Kentucky,
Indiana
state
offic.ials including wildlife
. "We're looking forward to it,~
· ' Panly cloudy skies and scattered · Sunday... Partly to mostly sunny of Medicare, Medicaid, welfare, and Illinois.
Chief
Michael
Budzik,
state
real
farm
programs.
said
Henry Bahr of Che~ter, a dire~
immigration
or
Hurries will continue Sunday with west and south. Flurries likely northestate
officials
and
a
local
pr6pert)i
"We
are
working
and
communi"Congress
needs
to
stay
here
and
tor
and
former . pre~idenl of thf
temperatures just slightly higher than easr: Highs 5 to 15.
owner.
He
has
been
working
on
the
cating
on
access
to
the
river
and
work,"
Senate
Minority
Leader
Tom
Meigs
County
Ken /&lt;!msbary Chap.
Sunday night...Partly cloudy. ScatSaturday readings.
project
with
State
Representative
other
issues,"
he
said.
West
Virginia
Daschle,
.
D-S.D.,
said
Friday.
He
ter
of
lzaak
Walton
League as we~
Temperatures Saturday night were tered flurries northeast mainly late.
John
Carey
(RWellston).
officials
are
also
supporting
the
as
an
avid
fisherman.
added, "I have no idea why the
Jo drop to I 0 below to 15 below zero Lows zero to 5 below.
House is taking a break. To my Racine project, he said.
A modern boat launch located
Monday
...
Partly
sunny.
A
chance
A few people continue to use th~
•~ in the northwest to zero to S below i,n
knowledge,
no·
one's
running
for
'
"If
we
could
launch
a
boat
(in
.
near
the
village's
.
S
tar
Mill
,
Park
of
snow
showers
northeast.
Not
as
old
ramp , commented Bahr. addi~f
' ihc south. Skies were to .be partly
would
complement
.recreational
presid~nt
over
there."
Racine)
in
three
years
I'd
be
tickled
the
club
has donated $200 tO"the vtl,
.·'cloudy · and scattered flurries · were cold with highs in the 20s, ellcept
facilities
already
Much
of
the
GOP
legislative
agento
death,"
Bright
said,
estimating
in
place.
according
· Iage to maintain the existi'l8. ramp. : ·
•.}Klssible. Nl'8f record lows were pos- lower 30s southeast: ·
da seems to have become rnired in that construction could take between to Thornton.
Extended forecast:
"It would be a good thing for thC
. : sible in some areas.
'
Racine ' businessman Eher Pick- county," said Bahr, whose blue pick•
• In spite of the sunshine across the _ Tuosday...Chance of snow. Lows partisan stalemate, despite Congress' two and five years if everything
·
.' ambitiou~ start a year ago. Nonethe- goes smoothly.
ens, owner of Eber's Citgo, says he up truck and boat trailer are a famil:•
. ·~~ate on Saturd.ay, te?'peratures 10 to IS with highs 30 to 3S.
less,
Republicans
argue
that
they
"I've
got
my
fingers
crossed,"
he
Wednesday
..
:A
chance
of
rain
or
doubts a new ramp will generate · iar site at the Racine boat rami\
.'remained in the stngle dtgtts. 'lllere
have
fundamentaLly
changed
the
said.
''There's
an
obvious.
need·
for
ii;
additional business for his service "People come Trom as far away aJ
: 'were some lake effect flurries main- snow. Lows in the 20s with highs 3~
debate in Washington from whether we expect plenty of support ... espe- •station.- In addition to selling gaso- Columbus and Ch!veland to fish oR
ly over the northeast part of the stat~. ·. to 45.
•
line and snacks, Pickens sell fishing the river here."
Thursday ... Fair. Lows in the 20s to balance the budget, cut taxes and cially from local anglers.",
~ ' Record liigh temperature 63 m ·
revainp .major benefit programs into
.'1890; record low 10 below zero in with highs 35 to 45.'
how to do those things.
' ·l985.
Republicans say th!lt when ConI
gress returns to full speed on Feb. 26,
they will send Clinton legislation
.
.
extending the federal debt ceiling and
continued from.page .1'1 .
affected, .
COLUMBUS (AP) _ Senate
"I had to balance that against two
•
Hemby submitted · a preliminary avoi.dlng a.default. They say they also
· ·fcsidcnts heeded _advice to stock up damage estimate of about "$560,000 will ·finish a bill revamping fann pro- President Stanley Aronoff said he and one-half years of agonizing and
t'ln ~upplies, remam hof!~e or restnct ' to tlMl $late EMA Friday.
grams, plus work on immigration, looks forward 10 teaching college stu- never-ending inquiries and decided
'~tavcl, emergency offictals satd.
.Weather . permitting, a FEMA, anti-crime, spending and other mea- dents and schoolchildren. about the that it was better to get it behind me."
·.., .:rl)e blizzard's a{te~ was felt teain will~ in Galli• County Mqn- . sui'es. _
·
.: - · •' .
proper ethiGal concjlJ~ 9f ~!ect~ pffiAronoff,
who
previously
Butnow.they·.say, ·~_lime for a , ~ cials.
" . '·
· . · announcedhewouldnotscckrc-elecY..ith flooding iliroughout'~he regt.on dli{"to detel'!lliJ1~ ihve qualify fo~ a
.
· Aronoff pleaded guilty in Franklin tion this year, said hediles not intend
·- · few weeks .ljlter. Whtle Metgs federal declaration or not," she satd. break.
' "After , the budget stru~gles, _!&gt;f Cotinty Common Pleas .Court on . to step down as scn.ate presi~ent or
(lounty was decl_ared a disas~r area
· The county is ·already under a
November, Oecember ~nd January, Friday 10 .reduced charges in an retire early.
·&amp;y President Chnto~ •. allowm~ f?r state declaration.
"Part of the reason for today was
receipt of federal atd, Galha IS ., • "As far as darnajle coverage,lis We need to .rest, renew ourselve~. investigation of lobbyist payments.
He was fined $500 on two counts just to ·end it and tum my full and
'11waiting a determination by the Fed- concerned, a state declaration quali- . s~nd some ,ume ':'tth our famtlles, .
~ral
Emergency Management fies us ,for SO percent reimburse- . gam new pen;pecttves and develoP. of failing to file a financial disclosure undivided attention to what I do best,
stlltement for
in speaking fees which is public service and my job as
Agency.
ment,"'Hemby explain~d. 'The fed· new tdeas and new approaches,
House
GOP
leaders
satd
m
a
packet
he
received
in president of the
" Arlm~[!_
: Local EMA Director Terl}' ~ral declaration qualiftes us fpr ' 7S handed to lawmak!lrs Thursday as
and
1993.
said.
"I
hope
to
1991
Wemby stressed that while private percent. We're really hoping for a
they. left town.
. Aronoff also was ordered to
term."
~ropcny :damage due to flooding federal declaration so we can get . The d~uments show,that Repub- form 50·hours of community
~;;;.....-~;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _iltttti!!~~
jllas r_ninimal, county and townshtp inore money back to the political . beans beheve they can help promo~e at schools and universities.
roads, bridges and culverts were subdi~isions."
themselves by returnmg to thetr
~·1 look at that as kind of a joy,"
home dtstncts. ,
Aronoff said: "I want to talk to kids. "We need to ed~cate our news And, 1 hope I'll have something to
medta and our constttuenis on what .say that is. meaningf\11. I'm going to
~e havde behen dom.g, whdat wed~!tetheve :say, .'Perception in politics is more
tn,
an w ~!Thewe mteedn toh 0 • ,
:important than anything else.' "
I
Call Life
Services
papers
say.
Y
ne
to
ear
.rom
' . Sen. Gene Watts, R-Colurpbus,
·
By ROGER PETTERSON
way to 60 below zero on Friday.
us w1thout the dtstorttons of the
d two lobbyist companies also
for a professional and caring place to .
Assoelated Pres• Writer
Hundreds of thousands of people
. I med' "
an
nauona
·~·
indicted
in
the
investigation
all
plead· Chij:ago's record low tempel)lture without power Saturday because of
find responsive mental health services at
The papen; say that wh~n Con- ed no coiuest on Friday and were sen- \
pf 1.9 below zero Saturday didn'.t faze the cold and because of ice breaking gress
returns, Repubhc~ns wtll try_ to teitced.
'
a reasonable cost. Our caring staff can
Patrick O'Connell, standtng out of power lines.
reach a budget-balancm.g deal wtth
Watts was fined $250 and ordered
help you deal with all life's problems,
the wind while he waited for a train.
At least 33 deaths ·had been
m~erate
and
co~servauve
Democ:spend
40 hours teaching students
10
" After all, this is why we live in blamed on the cold, snow, ice and
big and small.
rats and to,p!ace some orall of thts about ethics. He had been charged
Chicago. It's kind of exhilarattng m rat~. over t~e last week. ..
,ag~een:-ent
mto
the
debt-hmtt
legtswith
failure
file
a
statement,
a
10
It tsn· t af lot of
a way, " sat'd O'Connell • 52 ' who was \.·
· fun, Wayne
h he latton tn late. February.
Gallipolis
.
fourth-degree
misdemeanor, for
out w iting for a train. "It's some- Sharp sa~d o putttng up_ wtt t
thing~ pit yourself against."
severe cold m a house wuh only a . GOP leaden; have been trytng to accepting a check in 1993 for an
2881 S.tate Rt. 160
get su~port . from Democrats for event he did not attend.
, Records for overnight low tern- wood-bummg1stove for heat.
Aronoff said he'pleaded guilty so
(614) 446·1861
'
•
were rewritten Saturday
"We shut off about four rooms we~ks, m. long-shot hopes of prespera1urcs
·
f 1· · the I' ·
sunng
Chnton
to
accept
a
budget
he
could'
get
on
with
his
political
.~
Ulah where Salt Lake City fell and ktnd o .tvc tn
tvmg room
duties .
,rom12 below
· zero, to Indiana and . and thc k'nchen.." sat·d Sharp, who compromtse on Republican .terms.
0
"House ·Republicans ~~·til work
"Did 1 have to enter a plea? No.
south ijltO Alabama. where Huntsville runs a small datry fann about 20
every day through each available step Did my counsel tell me, 'Gut it out
Areas of counseling include: Stress, Anxiety, Panic Attacks
' sted'a low of 7.
.
~ast of Valenttne, Ncb. And
to
move
toward
reform,
a
balanc.ed
and
you'll
win?'
Yes.
Would
1
have
Marital, Parenting wofk, Relationships, Substan~ Abuse,
po In il]e Black Hills of western
lc hts fa~t.ly was c~ld, he sa1d hts
budg~t
an~
mtddle-class
tax.
rehef
pleaded
tO
any
knowing
falSification?
Depression, and Divorce.
. ~otitli . Dakota, the tcmpcr~tu':l'
were trrttable, wnh frost -bntcn
\:. dropped 10 45 belo* at the little town
.avoid
and a
'?. the JObswrote.
and No,"
·
•
bfRoc~ford. Sl!l!,lrday's coldest read:lng in f-1 innesota was 47 below
itt Emt&gt;arrass, something of a
&lt;llrter the town of Tower fell

-.-

NeW 'IVIeigs boat launch!

::Monday may see slightly
·.w armer weather in Ohio

.·.,

WELLSTON- $tate Rep. John A. Carey Jr. was named chairman
of an Ohio House sufK:ommittee that will explain the current state budget's impact on Ohio's businesses.
.
Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Columbus, chairman of the House Economic
Development &amp; Small Business Committee, said Carey, R-Wellston,
was chosen for the position due to his dedication to economic devel. opment.
The subcommittee, which consists of four other members of lhe
House, will begin hearings soon, Tiberi 'said.
"Since Rep. Carey took office last January, he has ~ponsored more
bills than any other freshman," Tiberi sai(l, "and the vast majority of
his legislation deals with ways in which poor or rural areas of Ohio
can jump start their economy."
•

,,

Eastern Board slates Q &amp; A session
EAST MEIGS - The Eqstern Local Board of Education's regular
meeting will be Monday at 6:30p.m. at Chester Elementary School.
The meeting will include a 30-minute question-and-answer period
about the proposed $8.75 million district building project and March
· 19 bond issue.
·
All parents and district.residents are invited to attend.

Deputies probing residential break-in
CROWN CITY- A brealc-in at a Crown City area residence was
reported Friday to the Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
Alta E. Dailey, 10634 State Route 218, said she was awakeAed at
3 a.m. and detected someone was in her home with a flashlight. Dailey said she remaine{l quiet for about IS minutes until she was sure
the intruder had left. '
Dailey discovered the intruder had damaged the telephone box outside her residence and took $42 in cash from her purse, according to
the report. Dailey said she later dressed and stopped a motorist to call
· · the sheriff's department.
The incident is under investigation.

·Aronoff pleads guilty, fined
for failure to disclose fees

~Arctic - cold grips regi·on
~

Carey mimed-to cliair subco,mittee

.

: Bidwell man cited following accident
·
GALLIPOLIS - A Bidwell man was cited for failure to yield by
: Gallipolis City Police following a two-car accident Friday at the inter: section of Pine Street and Second Avenue.
· Officers said Jimmy R. Massie, 19, 15 Autumn Hill Road, was turn: ing left from Pine onto Second at 4:41 p.m. and collide~ with a north: ·~~"c;u- -~~n br Josgmp~ Bomce, 20, 1098 Skyline Road, Oak
,

: City police'jailnuzn on two-charges
; GALLIPOLIS -A Crown City_man was booked into the Gallia
; ·County Jail early Saturday by Gallipolis City Police, according to jail
'. ~ord ~
•
.
. .
· Otis E. Bush·, 27, 367 Bladen Road, was charged by officers With
: failure to appear and drug abuse. He entered the jail at I :46 a.m.,
: !ICCOrdbg to ~ords.
.
.
· Cited by police early Saturday were Stc:ven D. Mulhns, 37, 7228
State Route 7'South, Gallipolis, driving under the influence, failure to
comply, failure to control and s~:~spended operator's license; and Donovan L. Blake, 23, West Columbta, W.Va., fumtshing alcohol to mmors.
Ticketed by police Friday was Natasha Hannock, 18, 213 Kriner
Road, Gallipolis, underage consu.mption.

Before A Small Problem••.
Becomes A Great Burden

Midwest cold snap blamed
as cause behind 33 deaths

.

.

.~.100. d' /·nsu•ance co·~e·age
:r

Counseling

W' 1 I I

I A . .

.:,.;reminder issued for NFIP
.l

POMEROY- In the aftennath of
flanuary's flooding, disaster officials
reminding homeowners through3&gt;ut Ohio that they may purchase
~ood insurance coverage through
ithe National Rood Insurance Pro!£ram administered by the Federal ,
Insurance Administration, a part of
~e Federal Emergency Management
~gency.
: "Year in and year out, flooding is
:!he leading cause of property loss
·~om natural disasters in this counry," Federal Coordinating Officer
il Zaferopulos said . . "But all to
~ften, homeowners learn after .the fact
)!iat protection against flood loss is
::116t part of their n?nnal tnsurance
:Protection package.
!
., According to Dale Shipley of the I
hio Emergency ~anageme~t I
gency, residents · can tnsure thetr :
omeforand
contents
against
flood-a
::lng
lessitsthan
it costs
to insure

said, is a government"based progra~, but cqverage IS ~vallable from
any IJISUrance agent · lt~ensed to sell
property and casualt~ tnsurance. .
Flood msurance IS avatlable for
businesses as well as homes, and for_
renters as well as homeowners: and
it doe~n't matter where the bustness
or ~stdence IS located, accordmg to
Shtpley. .
There IS a toll~free number, 1· 8()()..
427-4661. whtch homeowners,
renters and busmess owners can call
for the ~arne of loc~l agents who handl~ . nauonal Hood tnsurance.
While the program was created to
provide affordable msurance to rest- .
dents of htgh-nsk areas, 11 can benefit people everywhere, satd Shtpley.
He noted th~t a fo~rth of all flood
insurance clatms pa1d are for property outstde flood ptams.

&gt;re

Life Counseling .Services

tncenuv~s c~eate

Damage to both can was moderate.

~~~~;::;:;;:;;:;;~;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;

~

.

.,:~~;:p;~::ce, he

.

IIJND,\YOfll;)l

.'

POMEROY_ The Meigs Coun-·
genealogical research. United Fund na.tional organization, and all ~one~
t United Fund and its continuing
4
doiiB:'s have. ~nabled the museu"': to ratse.d for· Me1gs ,County proJects ts
fund-rilising efforts have
I
pr?vJde addmonal resources on stte, admmtstered by . the local
b
1
10
h ·
th $13 000
k
~
sa~d Parker.
volunteers. Contnbuttons to the Untt. rough
an 7•5 per
' mcae n·t
~
"Guests are·
ed Fund
mg
t e chmor,e
an y over
·
· always ~ery pleased
·
· are encouraged
·
1 d through 11a
. tow d ·its $18 000 oal for 1996,
(P"~
and actually amazed at the m.ultttude one-tt~e donatton. , p e ge or payro
Pre l,ll'd 1 s ' Oli~er announced
~
·of resources that we have available m deductton .
th e museum," she sru d·
For add'tlton
· a1 m.ormatton
·r
·
th ' st enk usan
about
$!3,360 has been
All of the money raised by the. the United Fund for Meigs &lt;;ounty, or
received and/or !edged to.the UnitUmted Fund for Meigs County ts gtv- to obtain a donation or pledgefo~.
en
who
ed Fun d, wt·1h thp
e campat'gn su'll well
h to groups dtn Metgs ·County
d
r · restdents may contact
· Susan Ohver· at
under ro ss. Contributions from
II
ave requeste support an are e •gl- 992-2161. DonaiJons may be matl'1d
busmesses
· p gre
· d'tvt'd uals are bel'ng
blefor .fun&lt;lmg
for Meigs
11 .
an d tn
·
. by federal 5013C sta- 10 United Fund
.
. County·
req uested to help benefit groups in
tZ
tus, Ohver sat d.
.
.
Box 424, M1ddleport, OhiO 45760.
· ' county
'
· sup port
9
The fund IS not affiliated w1th any
· Metg..
who recetve
and funding from the United Fund.
'
1
In 1995, 12 groups, including the
American Canc~r Society of Meigs
County, Meigs County Cooperative '
Parish, 'Meigs Industries and ~iverbend Arts Council received ·support .
GOAl.- SII,OOO
or funding from ~ non-profit organization, Oliver stated.
.
"The reason for purchasing the
The Meigs County Historical
Society and Museum was also one of records from surrounding coun1ies is
the 12 agencies funded by the Unit- because so many of the people !raved Fund for Meigs County in 1995. eled back and forth between the
Meigs County Historical Society counties. When a person is doing
President Margaret Parker reported to . research, it is helpful to have this
the United Fund Board of.Dircctors information in one place," she added.
that money granted by the organizaAdditional funding will be used to
tion has been used to purchase mar- . purchase· microfilm of county
riage records dating to the 1800s for .records, newspapers and other !"'rMeigs County and surrounding com- rounding publications, Parker satd.
munities.
This year, visitors from as far
These records are helpful to fam- away as Puerto Rico and 30 states,
ilies conducting genealogical including Hawaii, have visited the
research, Parker said.
Meigs County Museum to conduct

Syracuse gives OK
to operating funds
SYRACUSE- Syracuse'Village ry."
.
Council appropriated $257,723 for
Othen; attending the meeting were
general operating expenses ill. 1996 Larry Lavender, Mony Wood, Don ~
wl)en members met Thun;day mghl at na Peterson and Eber Pickens.
the municipal building.
In other business, plans were
made for Mayor George Connolly
and Cou11cilman Bill Roush to attend
traini~g in conducting court to be
Easy PJy Au to
held in Akron on Feb. 22 and 23.
lnsurJncc
It was noted that the mayor has
·-. '\ '.
been appointed to the Local Emer1
;".._ ':y' Dl O\ t"l
gency Planning Commission.
,-,,,.
' f' ·n
i ·''. /
;'. .:) 1 '·- .:
The need for sprucing up the vii- .
lage was discussed, as was tearing 1
-cDISCO Uil! S&gt;

·~~~c~~~e~~~~~~~~~~ properties .

Council issued several ·livestock
permits to village residents, autho-.
rized purchase of a radio for the village truck, and heard a report from
the.police officer, Tim Gillilan, show\
ing that he has issued 18 citations
during the past month.
The mayor's report showed
~eipts of $2,441, and balance in
various funds as reported by !Janice
Zwilling, clerk, were general fund, ·
$31,901 .80; street fund, $20,821.46;
highway, $8,171; fire $2,743; water,
$1,349; pool, $76.04; guaranty meter,
$3,079. 14. and cemetery, $89.23.
Meeting with council was David
Spencer, chairman of the Southern
Local Building Committee, who discussed the 6.1-mill bond issue to be
on the March primary ballot to fund
construction of a new elementary
school. He showed the promotional
video, ·:Moving into the 21st Centu-

~ad lately, so.this couldn't ct1me at

I

TABLE &amp;
' ....4 CHAIRS
.

Clllrry • Bilek Flnlah

NOT Still••
_ ONLY 5

39f'S

better lime, n

~~

Mn. McDousll.i
·
• The McDouPJs lllliY also plan ~
acation, their first in more thin si~

J3. Sbe did not elaborate.

t

II'S.

•

McDoupl, 56, bouabt the win-lina ticket 11 IIi Exxon llllion near
h city's dOWniOWII.
....
~-

'

I

TO

Our Prices Are The. Lowest In The Area.
.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home LocatecJ at
Intersection or Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OR 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours I:00.5:00 p.m.
The.- Sal. or by appointment.

l'l;nill" Ult·.Jil':,

1:)] ;, ~~C:'_) l(J ,~IJ

Porncm y

It's Time Again to Start
Tlain•ine A•out Your
Prom, And- And Wla~
Not 1M Has•ins·Tanner
Be rhe One You Choose
'For Your Tusedo!
.

===i:·======iJ •No appointment needed

FAMILY PUCnCE

i

~ ~'SOme etttellJency medical biDs
. illave mllde it impossible for us to get

C&lt;

A Few Of Our Home Slandard Features

• Andersen Tilt Windows
• Stanley Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 161n. On Center
• Armstrong solarian Floor Tile
~ Marellate Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2x t0 Floor Joint, 16 ln. On Center
• S2 Gallon Water Heater
0 Shaw CarpelS
0 Delta FIUc:ets
• Master T-lock Vinyl Siding Wilh Lifetime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphali Shingles
• tO Year Structural Warranty On 'The Home

. . . c·,,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)winners of $1 00,000 in the
f!)Werball game plan to pay bills and.
y a car with their money.
.
Peter and Deborah McDouaal of
h~eston_ claimed the prize on Fri-

.

.

All Ohio

:rtte

. con I'IUC&amp;

D

.

:

:.;:1~~""J!·
0. v;r:. . . . . . . . . . . . .;. '"'"""""~ .:

111!

~of

·~:eed~te,

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
· WEIGHT CONTROL

·

996

s~ccessful

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

1

land Willis for the drive, and at right, Randy Friedland maket a
donatlon1o Chris Myers Cozza, a volunteer board.member.

Meigs United Fund exceeds 75% of 1996 goal

r::==============~·

::J;ar.
.
. .
• Shipley satd that an msurance
igent can issue a Hood insurance pol·
,;· or refer residents to a represen-

lay plans tor bo~

REACHES GOAL- The United Way of Gallla CountY fund-ralalng drive reached Ita goal S1 0.5,000 lor 11M16. JlkiKoebel, In photo at left. a volunteer board membir, accepta 1 clieck from Clee-

THOSE WOlliN. ·PIOPU,
WI All OPEN 'ftL 7 P.&amp; ON11ESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH I JEFFEISOII AVIIIUE
POIIT PLEISAIII .
(304) 675·1675

•Over 100 styles to
choose from
•Extended Hours:
(Mon. &amp; Fri. til 8:00)
·F~ee phone call
1-800.560-5384
•Qualified sales staff
•

�:~:commentary
J.~av .~ime· itntine!
. .'I.st48Gsli4 in 1.966

• Third ~venue, O.IIIPolla, Ohio
· •14 4412342 • Fax: 441 3008
111 c-t Sbwet, Pomeroy, Ohio
114-112·2151• Fax: 992·2157

•

I-

•

I

",.,_

-~

· A' 9•n~ett Co.
Newspaper
..
\

'

!

-'!'"T'"""~

.

'

~

'

Mllfllllr-.1 Lehew
Conlroll•r

Lellft 10 1M editor 1/W nlcome. TMy lhoU/d be,_, th8n 300 IWII$.
A,/1 /etten.,.·~ to editing- muel be alflll«&lt;end ~udillddtwe
end 11/epiiOM _
n umw. No Ufll/f~Md ,._ will be pui!Uahed. 4-..,..
ehoUid be In gO&lt;NI ._,., llddiHIIIIfl lau11, 1101 periOIII/11111.

.sackers of pilot school
~voucher project opt~mistic
.that program will work
;sy USA CORNWELL

;AeiiOCiated Pme Writer
•: CLEVELAND - Backers of a pilot school voucher program remain
~ptimistic th~t t)le pt;o~ will work, despite increasing legal challenges
ian.d other problems to ~ oven;ome.
;: However, opponents say they are just as determined to stop the program.
•: The program will provide ·vouchers, or scholarships, for enrollment of
:~hildren in private school~ beginning in September. The vouchers will be
;worth up to $2,250 e&amp;ch fiJI' 1,500 schoolchildren.
·
;: The Legislature approvecl the pilOt li!St year, but two lawsuits challenging
{he progmril hlive been flied in Columbus. The suit~&gt; chum the program vio)ates state ani! federal guarantees of separation of church and state and
~atens' adequate financing of public e&lt;jucation. .
•; The program :a)so . still must find enough private school openings to
4ccomrnodate the students and must ens1,1re that children get into the schools
;tjtey_want and tbat m'eet 'their needs. About 50 schools have been approved
:for the program.
.
~ "l really thillk we Will have enough openings for those with vouchers,"
!laid Bett Holt; program.~istrator for the Cleveland Scholarship and
TuiO~ng 1'.-ograni. ·' ·
· ..
. ·
·
:~ "We have.asked the schoolJ to submit lists to us by the end of next month

.4n how many Openinp they Dll.peci'IO have, and that Will give US a good idea
qf where we stancl.': ,J\e said.' . '•:r .
· ~ : The tUtOring ptograril is o~er!eeing the voucher system for .the state.
;, •llie vouchers are for s.ll!dents entering kindergarten through third grade,
!ttd ~9lt said some. pew schools I!J'e opening to· provide more classroom

''·~~ ~~gge~ted·

alternaii ve that daes not look promising now was the LegJt
'Jature's proposal that suburban public schools might open spoil&gt; for city
s dents.
,
.
·
sei~, .suburban public .s9~ool contiguous to Cleveland has offered, ·Holt

.t:

...: ''We are ldtt boping that may occur, but most of them are concerned that
money_-'tlte ~te pat,s for tuition probably would not cover their per-pupil
ts .wtiic!J,m ~~~~r thlm ours," she said.
·
As far 1!5 soine private schools are cc!'ncemed, however, th~ program
~~ 10 pea~ ~me' true.
·
·
.
·
· ·
: '.'For \he fii'SI time, parents who noRilBIIy wouldn't have the money can
ch~ iheir 6hitd's sc;hOol," Said Lydia Harris, prirtcipal of St. Adalbert's
Elementary School. ."Arid, even though this is only for students starting
kin!lel'girten'l tiiroush"ihird grade, we hope to receive continued funding to
gephc\se children through eighth grade on the voucher program and plant
the'sfieds of hope." · ·
·
·
.
, ,Cp~vincing the Legislature to .provide .future financing w'ill be another
clia.lleng:e, Holt swd. .
.
· ·
;. "ll t the-students' progress will be monitored, and the program will be
ey::ltiated, so hopefully we can m8Ice ,a goOd'base for future funding ."

Februwy 4, 1188
'

Lott may seek Do·le's Senate leadership;
camp eall~ the ~eeent turn of events
a "very troublesome thing."
WA~HINOTON -·' ;~ S~ , · :'From my ' peri~ctive, Trent
Republican cloaja'oom IS abt!zz with ·· 'bebeves·that hi$ iiK:Cess. depe.nds on
rumors of palace inlllisue:·
•
· h(s loyally 10 Bob Dole. Yet he
~re is Bf?w,ing ~ulllion ,that ,. kn~s ~Bob DOle is not willing .
arnbt~ous MaJOIJty Whip ~nt Lott, . 19.p\lt f\111 Cjll!fidepce iJi' him. ... I
~-Mtss:. ; · the. Senate's se,cood-io· · thilill (Lou)' is somiwhit ·fNstnted
comlTlll)d; has. his .eyes ~;~n ~~~~ l liecAuse · I den't think he ·sees that
' Dilljor\IY IQ()er'sjob held .lf7. spb-~ JoOcl will beinsrecipi:oe•ted lly 'the
Dole_: ~ f. tesult, behiiiil~lllii"MJ!IIS lel!ler."
· .
· · ~
-telatJons · be~ween ~le ~- Lott ~ Soun:es say Do~ .Yfas livid with ·
-~ve .grown• lgcreumgtx··djsttus~ . ~.during the debate.over w~ether
m ~1\,l,wedcf.
. ·.';bot,' · , :.to se11d';Americaii · troops into
· The •siiQtgun nwn!fe ~ · Bosnia, Dole tupported'the deploy~ie ~ Loti began i!l ~~•.,after ·. · m.ent, whjil!
chose the politicalUitt edged out Sen. Alan ·SimPson, ly easy 'route of opposing the mis·
R·Wyo.• a Dole Joyalist,\jy ope vote sion·. Dole quickly became furious at
f9r the No: 2. job. Defying early what 'he (~It ·was Lott's grandstand·
expectations, there's been calm fC~r a ing .. going ori television to criticize
year.
the rnis.si,on. without the courtesy of .
., Dole diellards are JIOW complain• .:c~sulbng liim first.
··· .
· ing tb&amp;t Loti has distanced himself · A gro4p of Republican senators
from the majority leader ot1 several had just liJ1ished a meeting in Dole's
key issues ·and blindsided him on office last December · when a
others. Lou's S!lpponers counter that reporter asked Dole if he knew that
Dole has often kept his deputy out of
the leadership loop; while ~nal­
izing honest policy differences.
"I iW.rik it's' clear that Lott is salivatiqg,!' one Republican ·senator .
close · to both men told us. "1be
·problem is that Lott is displaying his
ambition to be majority leader, and
his impatience.to wait. Dole's Senate ienn is up .in ,1998, and I don't
think he would rim again. But if he
doesn't gel the (presidential} nomination I think-he would like to stay
majority leader until he leaves."
Adding whilt could be the pivOtal
factor, this source added: "I don't
think,Lott want~~ to wait that long."
· Dole told us in a recent interview
that he won't "address anonymous ·
sources." adding that "as far as I
know we get along fine." But Dole
conceded there could be some
"presidential politics involved in
this. I assume Loll helps (Republican candidate Phil) Gramm, I don 'J
know. That's his right. ... I expect
people !o do their job, and he's done
a good job."
Many senators aie not so sanguine. One .GOP senator in Lou's

·No discipUruuy' aetion planned

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Loll had just denounced the mission
Lott, who did not rellim &amp;or
on television.
repellal phone calla, lamely soutJtt
"Dole, of course, was very todistancehimselffromSantonup's
cool," said one Republican who remarts and claimed the thou'ht
attended the meeting. "But Dole hadn't crossed his mind: But colwas really steamed because Lottjust leagues recall the way he sBI!"blind-sided him. ... 1 think that exac- bagged Simpson for the assistant
erbated things very dramatically."
leader's job, and see a parte
_epa.
Says Dole: "I don't think he real- Weeks after reaSsuring Sim11son ~
ly ever took an a oath that he ~8$ he had no plans to challenge hipl,
going to support ihe leader on every· Lott entered the race.
·'
thing." In a sense, Lott did take an
Lott's supporters theorize .._,
oath. ~eeking to illlay concerns 11\at Do[e, not Lott, may· be engaged i+ a
he would push a more confronta· power-play to anoint his successor:
tionally conservative agenda on Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okla., chair- .
Dole, Lott vowed back in 1994 that man of the Republican Policy Coln"there won't be a separate agenda. mirtee.
l
I'm going to ride shotgun for the
"I think some of it is that Wle
leader."
would prefer to see Nickles ahd
The latest fracas was sparlced by doesn't really lfilst Trent," said !&amp;is
freshman Sen. Rick Santorum, ·R- . Lou ally. "I think Dole per!:Cive~ a
Pa., a Lou loyalist, who' drew the ire philosophicpl gap and doesn't want
of his colleagues by suggesting that to give
any traction."
:
Dole would face a challenge. for the
Jack . Anderaon and Mlc~l
Senate's top spot if his presidential Blnellln are wrtftlra for Unhtd
bid failed.
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
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FLUENT

POTHOU:SE.

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UDIANT 40 ·
PORTABLE HEATER
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THE

Meet the savvy irivestoi"s who led 'the field
in the 1995 Peoples Bank
Stock Picking Contest ·

RIPLEY, W.Va. - A Letart
woman was killed and another
injured in a two-vehicle accident in
:Jackson County late Friday, according to Jackson County Sheriff's

'De~~~~~~~~~~~~uedandJudy

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Nibert of Letart was injured in the
accident, which occurred around
II 30
u s· 33
: p.m. on · · · near Ripley.
Nibert is in the Critical Care Unit
at Jackson General Hospital, Ripley,
. ~ hospital spokesperson said SaturdayAsh and Nibert were both regis·
tered nurses-at Jackson General, the
spokesperson added.
W'l
'd N'be
dri ' 1 son sao
' rt was
vmg
· an~ Ash was a passenger when Noberts 1993Subaruwentmtoasktdon
cy roadway. The vehi~h; slid into the
path o_f another vehtcle_ and was
struc k m the pa~senger st de. .
Further ~etatls on the ac~tdent
were unavatlable before pressttme.

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AprtiSauqwlll,l'ropi&lt;S Bank 1 · Cyadtla lkarf of MO~,
Discount Brokemge represen- was the second place winner
tative. has th~ pleasure of pre- with a gain of 43 poiniS. She
senung the al'lltrds.
won mo.

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lllrf ~of M&gt;~

Dt. lodstey 'l'llllaatl of
Williamslown was the forst
plare winner with a gain ot 50
points. He won $500.His port·
folio included Boeing Co.,
Bristol Myeos, 1\lerck &amp; Co.,

...

oprured lhitd place with a
gain of l8 point&lt;. She woo
$100 .

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Ou&lt;hack Steakhouse and

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Royal Dutch.

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As fot Bette? Bene's ponfol~_picks garnered her \he dubious dinsiinction ~ :ing in '

334th 'place with a loss of 5 points. She could not be reached for commen~ but her fmancial advisor
commented that one should not invest in the stook market with a get-rich-quick mentaliiy!
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., ·-~~~QIEIIl TAXES•.
. DIP'·WILL ·- -~CH ~. ~996.
DUII.IIE
IS JANUARY~~31, 1996.·
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Dlsro~~rtt ~ DejMrl::wM of~ ,_. 1AIIIftw a COMpiiMe_,
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Peoples lllnkDisooailtllrokmge SenicG areOint'ldlro ,. . . . ~~- -·
Sli'C, NYSE, NAsi&gt;. Discount bro~ fwilll are,J?Ot ~-~~'Del pe-ltGt~ ~or .
insuml by 111y bulls. PDIC, or ail}'~- IIP1It 4 ~· MBinvol,t !Ilk IIDd iiiUkellllue ctmge's,
lncludlo8po5SibleloJa,ofpi~. ,....:~ '~t
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593-7761

Mtlrieaa

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tickinjj Co.

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THE Til BOOKS IRE.NOW OPEN FOR
FIRST HALF 1995 COLLECTION OF
EAL..EST-TE TOES AND ALSO

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withfOUil. ofdieriu~bets,aitdeachis
The folI.owing numbers were , worth ~250. The 4.85&lt;\.ticbls sbowselected' ill Fri'day's:OIIio .;hd West ~- inJ 'lllree ·elf the ,.uumliers are each
Virginia lotteries:
'
worth $1 and the S3,044 tickets
, ' QIDO
showing.tw~ of the numbers are each
1 wortli $1.
Pick 3: 7~0.6 - •
Pick 4: 5-2-3-2
· Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
Buckeye !I: 10.11-29-3,1-32
$1.~5.03~. and wjnners will receive
No tickets were sold naming all $434,226.N'
five numbers drawn in Friday night's ,
Pick 4 umbers players wagered
BuckeyeS drawing, the Ohio Lottery i $397,714 and will share $147,200.
Said today.
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Thejackpot for Saturday's Super
.k
ld
Lottod
·
sg· ·u·
r;E:rw:.RG~n .
A winning ttc et wou have been !
worth $100,000.
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3 250
' Sales in· Buckeye S totaled i ' 1'Daily
., 4:
0.1·9-8
$4'?k:~ere 133. Buckcy
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Mason County
woman dead in
one-car wreck

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!Jhl~, ~ Va. IQtfery pi~kf

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· COLUMBUS (AP) - Officials at revise its English program or lose ·
colleges and universities in Ohio will state money.
The panel recommended keeping ·
be given a chance to respond to the
Eng-lish
programs at Ohio Universi- .
latest recommende&lt;! cuts in doctoral
CHimt .
programs, said a member of the sityty and Bowling
Green
State
Univer915-1111
with some
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __... .
state's board of regents.
Since last year, the Ohio Board of
.Regents has examined doctoral pro' grams in an effort to reduce state
' funding. In the latest round, the
board ordered reviews of doctoral
PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL
programs in English. business, engineering, physics, law, chemistry and
education administration.
'·
Six sphools were recommended to
make ~hanges in their programs or
·they could lose funding . .
Doctoral programs in , English
could be shut down at the Universi· ·
ty of Toledo, Kent State University ·
, and the University of Cincinnati·
. based on reviews by tpe regents.
The English review panel recom·
mended eliminating money fer Tole. do 's doctorate in English and said
Kent State should stop enrolling
English doctoral students. k was
suggested that the University of
Cincinnati be given 18 months to

·CAMBRIDGE -1be former pi&gt;lic:t chief of Byesville will be sentenced March II OJI theft an4 otllet cbaiies. , .
Tim Chesar .IIIIlS found guilty 'Jbursd!ty in Guernsey County Com'
mon Pleas Court ·after p!Cading no contest.
·
He fa&lt;;es up to 36 months in prisOn and $5,000 in fines for the charges
of ~eeord la!J\pering and theft. He also faces 9()·days in jail and up to
$750 in fines for dereliction of duty.
-The Associated Press

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Ex-police' cJiieffoees,ieqtencing

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Leach resigned the post in Juuary
199.5, swing that hi~ office hid 110
legal strinp required to handle Dooaplain oversighL
:
1be resolution calls for the"*
lishment of a variance bollld wu
established for piing variances
from the flocidjllain managemellt
requirements.
The board is to consist of thRe
appointed members, each to serve:a
four-year tcll}l. and will ·hold op(n
meetings as nacessary.
•
Copies of the resolution can lie
·picked up at the commissioner$'
office.
' 'The degree of flood protectiOn
required by the resolution is consiCI·
ered reasonible .for regulatory pur·
poses and is bitsed on scientific and
engineering· considerations, aeeo"rding to a section under provision&amp;.
Failure to comply with the requi~
menta .of the resolution will result in
a misdemeanor.
A second public hearing will lie
held 1bursday, Feb. 8 at I0 a.m. in
the commissioners' office to further
discuss proposal's outlines.

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College officials to respond to
proposed program cutback
I

CIRCLEVILLE '- City residents ~ advised to boil their water
because of a broken water-main. '·· 1
A 100-yell!'-old, 16-inch water 'line ~ke .oout 7:30a.m. Friday in
the nonhwestem part of the city, sai~' Gayle FCISnaugh, public utilities
spokesman.
A second line running parallel to the •rupture!! main was providing
service, he said. But about 50 custilmers .temlililed without water.

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plans really fair? He (Glenn) hasn't
seen any proposal~· this year tbat he
supports."
,
Charles Boesel. a spokesman for
Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, said the
senator hasn 't signed on to B!IY proposal. "But he is for tax simplifica·
tion and fairness in the system," Boesel said.

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~I'PI*idlat.~~.Y~~·~-fate"'f- .;:·~"

.stituents."
. : '';·_ \ "11ie congressman is interested in
WASHINGTON - Chillico~' ·lh~ idea of simplifying the tax sysarea Republican lawmakers- Frank • tern," s.aid Scott Milburn, Hobson's
Cremeans and Dave Hobson suPIX!J1 pres~ seq-elary. " What he wants is
the concept of a flat tax, an idea thai~s · lower taxes .for working families, but
in the spotlight on Capitol Hill and on - with the elimination of deductions we
the lips of GOP presidential hopefuls. ,would have to see what would hapRepublican Steve Forbes, seizing ,pen."
on voter dissatisfactiOn with the cur, ~ GOP proponents also argue that a
rent tax system, has made the flat tax iflat tax will spur the economy by
a hot political issue on the presiden- 'infusing more.money ibto the private
tial campaign trail. .
~(ictor, and thereby lower interest
On it's face, single -rate tax rates.
appeals to many Americans, who
But critics say a Oat tax doesn 't
believe they would pay less taxes and ensure tax fairness for all Americans,
have a simpler way to compute them. :hei:ause it raises taxes for the middle. "I want to see a tax cu~" said Crl:· clus, an\! will balloon the federal
. means, who is the only member of ,deficit at a time when Congress is try. ~cin~ss to endorse Fo~s. a bil· Jing to balance the budget.
ltonwre pupltsher, for pres1dent. "The
"Most of the ideas are not good
American people are attracted to this ones," said Jack Sparks, a spokesman
:idea because of its simplicity. They :for Sen. John Gi~nn. "They are
·' support tax-relief and tax simplifica- . about cutting taxes for the rich and
'lion. A number of these proposals .raising taxes for the rest of us. They
would.be a definite plus for my con-. _talk about simplification but are the

Broken n.ilin pro-.pts water boil order ·

By

Hobson tend support to flat tax

By PAMELA BROGAN

COLUMBUS- The Columb!l§ Foundatio" last year received gift~~
totaling $30 million or more for the fourth consecutive year.
Few community foundations- permanent endowments that awanl
money to~~~ community's needs- reach the $30 million mark in
back-to-back years, President James Luck said. ·
Last year, $30.1 million was i'aised, iJICreaslng the usets of the foun·
dation and its affiliates to $300 million, l-uck said.
The foundation, which ranked eig.,th or;better nationally alnong community foundatioos from 1992 to 1994, is expected to he in the top
dozen for 1995, he said. Its success can be credited to new gifts and a
strong stock market, Luck said.
The foundation distributed more than $24 million last year, award. ing about 2,500 grants to 700 nOnprofit organizations .
Donors created 61 new funds and added to thousands of uisting ones.
Gifts included bequests and contributions from corpor..ions, families
and government.

been

Commissioners had the rmot of ard areas anne11.ed by the county.
two public hearings on the revise4
1be proposal notes that no struc·
,!resolution Thursday.
,.
ture or land shall hereafter be locat
The resolution allows Gallia . ed, erected, constructed, repaired,
County to participate in the National .extenoed, converted, enlarged or
Flood Insu·rance .Program; promote altered without full compliance with
the public health, safety and general the terms of this resolution.
.
welfare; and minimize public and priThe new plan designates Terry
vate losses due to flood conditions in Hemby, director of the Emergency
_speci(ic areas outlined in the pro- · Management Agency, as the flood- ·
posed resolution.
plain itdministrator. She will oversee
The resolution applies to all areas the plan by granting or denying
of special flood hazard within the the development pennit applications in
·county as identified by the Federal accordance with its provisions.
.
Emergency Management Agen·cy,
The position was formerly hel4 by
,including many additional flood haz- · County Engineer Joseph Leach.

. Gannett Newa Service

CINCINNATI - A man was charged with felonious assault forallegedly injuring the 6-month·old son.of his girlfriend, police said.
1be infant, Joshua Parks, remained'iil critical condition early today
at Children's Hospital Medical Center, said a nursing supervisor who
declined to. give ber name.
•·
A rescue squad took the child io the hospital on Thursday. Police said
Joshua ~ad suffered head injuries and w.as in cardi!IC arrest wjlen res·
cue squad members arrived.
.
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Ronnell Jordan, 18, ofCiJICinnati, was charged Friday with the assault
and was ~irlg held in'
Hamilton County jail.
.
Jordan' bait
c\l,ring for the child, who is the son of his girlfriend,
Tasha Pa,ks, 22, said Lt. Greg Sni.iler.
"We've been told-the long-tenn prognosis for (Joshua's) ~eeovery is
very poor," Snider said.
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Cremeans~

Man faces charges in injuring baby

Four weeks ago, we visited the scene of the Jan. 6, 1887, p:1urder of
Charles Phelps, an "inoffensive and harinless old man about .50 years of age"
who lived in the Flatwoods Settl!lp1en1 of Meigs County.
,
The teader may a1so recall the .subsequent capture afidconviction in the.
case of Josiah "Si" Terrell, 27, fonnerly of Pomeroy, a notqrious ne'er-dowell.
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Sentenced to death m the Me1gs County Common Pleas Courtroom, Terrell v:as executed at the Ohio Peniten~ary in Columbus at 34 minutes after
mtdmght on Sept. 2, 1887. less than etght triOtjths after the IJ!Urder.
Newspapers of the time carefuUy chronicled Terrell's final evening:
After eating·dinner, Terrell asked for and rec~ived a su!t of black in which
he was to be executed and carefully dressed himself as tf he were about to
take a journey.
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He was still- cool anil coll~ted and greeted visitors pleasantly, 'and
seemCd~n no way in dread of !he fatal drop, reporters noted.
{'·'h·
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At 9 ·p.in .. he retired; _asking to be wakened at II p.m. He shook hands
~ith a te11ow prisoner; Ebeneze.r Stanyanl, who was convicted of the murder;of a.woman in Mahoni1111 County, Miss Alice Hancock, for refusing his
attetlttons.
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"Jpe, look,out for nie, I'~ coming toll," Stanyard said.: .
f'.t l-1 :30,.P.m., !erreiiw~ rous~ from sleep and surpnstngly as~ed for a
. ITo' all of you wl!o signed the petition on the gasoline prices and those of lunch, The lunch consts!ing of fri.ed chteken, shced tomatoes, fried pota·
, y6u.who.wished you had. 'This letter is designed to bring you up--to·date. · toes, dried ~ef, hiiJT! sandwiches, butter, pie and coffee was brought in, and
tllte last time 1 spoke to the Attorney General office 1 was assured the he_ate heart~ly, rem!ll'~ng that he had "a splendid appetite." He asked for a
watch and investigation of our gas prices will be ongoing. I was also told dnnk of whtskey, whtcb was refused.
that at \his point in time, gouging is the only thing they have found. Not to
By midnight, about 35 men had jammed into the execution room, awaitsax that :other things like setting prices alid monopolies may be happening ing Terrell's arrival. At 12:31 a.m., he stepped onto the death trap, once again
bU,t to ·prove this inay take time so we must wait an~ watch. I ,also discov· proclaimed his innocence when questioned and even assi,ted with the fas·
erid that 'the ln800 ~iimber is·still availtiblc for you but·for·sQJ!IC reaso.n the tening of the straps. At 12:33, the noose was adjusted around his neck.
eldension'number 64328 is not available. I wonder why?
'
!errel~'s last words were, ~~ordi~g to at least three accounts:
God m Heaven knows I. wn I ~utlty. There are some people and lawyers
'· .Let'nee w!tat.the American ijerilage Dictionary of the English language
·hal io·say for googe.
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··
who thi~~ they hav~ got s~ttsfactt?n on me now, That's all I got to say."
~· rf.· ~ys info~ltl - A large ainount e11.acted or extorted: gouge, gouging,
A mm1ster then told htm, "Jos1ah, ~ut your confidence and trust m the
ge) . if'' , ·
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Lord." To which be replied, "I have."
·
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. 1. -to cut or scoop out
·
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''At precisely 12:33 112. before one 1could realiZe what had happened,
1
2: to force .-.out / .
Wanlen Coffin (no first name listed}, who had b'een standing with his hand
. 3. to exact exorbitantly or e11.tort from
on the lever, sllot it from north to south," according to the Meigs County
.. '4 ,. slang - to swin.:lle
Telegraph which published a chilling, detailed account of the execution as a
• ,,
'1ben I looted up 'swindle".
warning to other woulil-be murderers.
By Tha ABIIOCIIlted Pre•
.
;•I. To cheat or defraud (someone) of money or property. To practice fraud
"The trap doors rattled agil.inst.the side of the scaffold, and with a heavy
Today is Sunday, Feb. 4, the 3Stll' day of 1996&gt; 1bere. are 331 days left in
as a habitual means of'qbtaining p:1oney. _.
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sound the murderer dropped 6 112 feet, rebounded, swung • time or two, and the year.
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. Can you belie:o-e that the State of Ohio says gou~itig is not against the then became quiet.
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Today's Highlight in History:
.,
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"There was not a twitch of a muscle or a movement of the body; as it hung
In 1789, electors unanimously chose George Wtlshington to be the first
Olqty, What:s the answer?
·
within a few feet of. and nearly on a level with the spectators."
. president of the United States.
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I don't feel I can tell you what to do·but I do feel it is
Instantly, two penitentiary physicians tore open TeJ!ell's vest and began
On this date:
_
'ill
of your rig~· since l·opeiied up Pandora's box. the morbid task of recording his pulse. The hellrt beall&gt; were announced as
In 1783, Britain c[eclared a formal cessation of hostilities with its fonner.
upper hatid w\th'IIU'oi her ptirchasing power. You follows: fi~t minute, 17S; second, ISO; third, 150; fourth, 140; fifth, 120; colony, the United States. of America.
;
you are·awBII! of it or not. If you buy at their sixth, 98; seventh, 90; ·eighth, S2; ninth, 40; tenth. 25; eleventh, 14; twelfth,
In 1801, John Mmhall was sworn in as chief justice of the United States,
'Y,OUr penniui!»&gt;IO gouge all .ttiey want. .
I 0; and three minutes later he Wlis pronounced dead.
In 1861, delegates ftom sill. southern states mel in Montgomery, Ala.,'to
~:~:~.~:G~~~~tot.',~milke.a Jivin,, but when it beC.omes a hardship on
An e11.amination of the body showed that the neck was broken between form the Confederate States of America.
,
advantag~ of the people, t~~.tn you can and must the first and wcond vertebrae.
In ·1932, Ne~ ,York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt opened the Winte~ '
_For, eiuunple, in 199S we obtained tow new
Incidentally, the rope used to hang TentH was formerly used in Jackson Olympic Games at Lake Placid.
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Some 54Y
we needed for il sma11town County, the warden having deci.~ to use it as it was though~ to be* better
In 1938, Thornton Wilder's play "Our Town" opened on Broadway. ~· •
in 1~. the Auto Works at rope 'thail the _one already provuled at the pnson. It was a half-inch rope,
In 1941, the United Service Organizations, or USO, C8J1!e into existence L
has
maliy stores have we lost twenty feet long, made of sea srass and very Slf?ng.
.
·
In 1945, President Roosevelt. British Prime Minister. Winston Cl}un:hil
1 dotl't claim that gasoline ~ are the only reason
The rope had been used to hang four people 1ft Jackson County 1ft 1885: and Soviet leader .Josef Stalin began a wartime conference at Yalta.
'
~a, bu! it must take its (air shire of the blame. High John Jackson, Laban Stevens. and Williim and Luke Jones, the latter twQ . In . 1948.. \he island nation 11f Ceylon - now Sri Lanka -'- became a]
m•oy reiiSOils we ·are w~ 11/e in tod~y:
bemg brothers and were hanged at the same tJme, both·ends of the rope tndependent dominion within the British Commonwealth.
· .
have ciOIIid of late? ~oite ..They &amp;1)1 remodeling, being formed into nooses.
.·
'
.In 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst wu kidnapped in Berkeley ...
• one is j~~ selling gu. :ploy sell bread, milk,.hoApparent.ly; ~ong its. other .attnbut;~· the ~lesraph had few qualms · Calif., by the Symbionese Liberation Anny. .
. • ~ ::
.-e dOwil from ·'"' y~ llld of coune we are all ~bout speaking til of the dead With a porno~ of the ~~ account rehash- _ .In 197.5, lriore lhlin 22,000 people died when a severe earthquake sbtlc1~'
the prices .-e lliiJJowl;r,
,
·
111g ,Terrell's known or alleged trUsgresstons .- .!nc:luding at least pne· · Gua!emala and Honduras.
.
·
,;
that s~y 0111' ps baul !I'JCks through unsolved m~. an attempted ~ and ~veraltnciilenll ?'anon,
· II! 1977, 11 people were lcilled when JWo carl of a Chii:IJill 1ransi ,.·
if this ma1ra sense Ito anyone, let me" • In the meanbme, at least one person ~bunbd 'lllmlla statement con- Authority train fell off elevited lrllcks after il collision with arlolhCr iniil
·
•
,..,
~g his acquisition ~f~lps' coat. While Terrell claimed to ha~e bQught
In 1983, si_ng~r Karen Carpept«died in Downey, ~f" at qe 32. · ·
• •
will lave 19111 with Ibis ~~ht. '1ltere are many
tl from 11 !Dan at Br~ey s Mdl for SI :SO,.!I"othel: man \Janie forwald, to say
.In 1987, ptantstUiimlce died'" Palm Spr!np••Callf.. atqe 67. · ·~
"
cliJtributors and stations ·would lower
in our ~ he saw Terrell _weanng the coat the_ evemng of the murder_long before' he
Ten yean ago: 'P!'esident Reagan, in·his fifth State of llle..Union
'Of
8Jid Oallia oou1c1 have ever r;eached Bfl!ley's Mill.
.
,
.
protleimed. "~
American Comeback" from years of~ w«*; :·
~ - . ~ JQ ~~·~I clicl•nOtconfe.s,~ ¢me, the Te!eSJ;Iph speculated that .and told a JOint seuton of Congress that America'wu "8i0Willl . .
·'
added · ~ U*intained hope ihe soveriiOr Wll!lld commubl his ~ ~entente to ' -ever)' day." ,
.
:
, · - ',
· •li(e ~
1D01D01iL ' 1 .
.
.
· ,
f1ive· yean ago: bllian Preaidellt pes~Jla(a~ . PI'! · 1 191 lrtbld ,
'-lil,lt may~ rilcall~ tbat vt~iting Judae ~ ·' talks wiih lnq ~ the Unibld States in an~:.0 ~.; a#1n4'tel lhe ·'
·
• ~--~~~ ~
.~(no
) ,diM Cll!bPDCd him DOt to Indulge ill any . Oulf Wat. PresideD! Bush sent Consms a -$1.4.5' trillion· budpt 'for !ileal .

A'lett~r long overdue

By JILL WILLIAMS
Tlmn-Senllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - An amended
Hood damage prevention resolution is
under study by Gallia County Com·
missioners in the wake of a state find·
ing that the county 's current resolution doesn '1 comply with state and
federal standards.
Rec'erit findings issued by the
Ohio Department · of Natural
Resources' Water Planning and Man·
Jgement Section to the commis-·
sioners revealed that an update to the
1989 flood plain resolution is
required.

COLUMBUS - Ohio State University is spendins up to $44 million
for an automated accowiting system that is e11.pected to save $10 million to $15 million a year. ·
William Shkurti, OSU vice president of finance, said the system will
pay for itSelf in three or four years.
.
The savings represent between I percent and 1.5 percent of all depart·
mental budgets 'and are gained primarily in suppon staff time. That·
means some jobs could be cut, he said.
1be university will try to eliminate jobs thmugh attrition and by mov-·
ing affected people to other positions within the university.
By June 30, the university will have spent $20 million on the pro·
ject. Shkurti said. An additionil $20 million to $24 million will be spent
on equipment and ti'aining for tbe university-wide system.
·

However, according to accounts of the time, it seeins likely ihat Terre 1
did.just that
, . · ' ' ,.
"One could see that he had hope until the black cap went o~et his -head ' .
the Telegraph reporter' noted. "Terrell tqak the whole thing to be IIS81DC
bluff for the purpose of getting him .to confess, and 1'1\: did ·not find out bel
ter until it was too late."
Attending the hanging from Meigs ~unty were Sheriff George ntu
H. H. Davts of the Republican; W.E. Russell of the Herald; Walter E. Jon
of Pomeroy; W.S. McDaniel, Meigs County's guard at the penitentiary; ait
the Telegraph's reporter, who was unnamed.
~
None of Terrell's family was present for.the event. ·
··
•
Also pres~nt at the htinging w~ cou~ty surveyor (no first name us~
Watkins. In hts account for the Racme Tnbline, he wrote:
,
''1lle way in which Ten-ell acted was ma&amp;elous, in the face of deat&amp;
itself, and the nerve which he displayed would have done credit to a benet
man."
·
,
He faced death like. "a martyr of old," Watkins noted.
!
Like nine-tenths of the men who died upon the gallows, Terrell refused t~
confess to his crime -· an act some influential Meigs Countians took to sig•
nify his innocence.
·.
·
·
· ;
Others criticized the dVerwhelming evidcince used agaitl~t Ten;ell -- th4
overcoat_. looking ~lass, money, blood spoil&gt; on the shirt he wore, e~c . .. a4
purely Circumstantial. But there IS no doubt that Terrell died a poor, illite~~ '
ate man, without money and without inOuential friends to come to · hi•
defense; a situation. similar to that encountered by Charles Phelps several
months prior.
.
.
!
Later that_day, Terrell's bodY. was sent home to his mOther for eventuaf
burial in the Rock Springs Cemetery.
.
•
The Telegraph ended its account:
The law of God and man demanded th&amp;t he should die: It's done and ~
drop the curtain on the last scene in tbf cateer of the first man ever execut'
ed from Meigs County and would pamt on that curtain the heaven-given
command:
-1
'ThQu shall not kill."
Jim FI'HRII!n Ia 1 staff writer for the ~ndly Tlme..senUnel,

l!ettets to th~e editor

• •

·

OSU installing accounting system

·'''

Terrell proclaims innocence to the end
By' JIM FREEMAN

.

COLUMBUS - Six police officets wi~ not face departmental charges
in ihe death of a man who suffocated when he was bogtied and placed
on his stomach.
A report issu~ by police Chief Jaynes Jackson on Friday said the officers broke rules, but they are not to blame in the death of Christopher
Kinneer, 21: of Nelsonville.
Kinneer died in December 1994 after being hogtied after he was anested. ·
.. •
. ~
The'1'Cport said Kinneer's delith was "a sudden, unavoidable, acci·
dental death whi~h officers at~mp!ecJ to prevent, although there. was
a breakdown in our·system." · , ·
. .
.
.:
Although th~ report concluded that d~partmental pqlicy wu vio1at: ed when Kinneer ·was hogtie4, the officers will ,-not l)e' di~iplined
hei:ause the inve~tigation found.that (lilly one' ~ive4 a directive issued in January -1994,- that told officers to plaCe bogtied prisQ!ters
Qh ~ir sides.
·
·
.
· . .~ ·
The offi&amp;rs were cleared of criminal wrongdoing in May whe.n a
Fran'iclin County grandJury refused to indict them. In. oecember, lhe
· FBI cleared the &lt;lfficers of civil ri'glill&gt; vjOJatioi\s.
·
. ·.
A wrongful-death lawsuit'filed by Kinilcer's fuQily against the offi·
cers, Jackson and the Division of Police.is scheilllled to go to trial in
September.. ,
• . ··
. ,

· ). Community fourldation nets $30 million
••

Convicted murpt~rer hanged

t

~~ Ohi~ ~e~s _in ·Brief:·...,;,;.,. Commission eyes new fl·oodplain resolution~

I -

By JIICk ~ . . ,
ltld MlchMI BI-n,

~

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

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~WH•onJr.
Executive Edhor

Sunclay,

Ohio/W. Va.

~~··- ,'" ·

PegeA4

~-09.09

JtiebomiUe

75H955 · s.

LoweiJ .

. il!l6-Z369

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.

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

:Sw'

Grace H. Terry
VINJON- Grace H. Terry, 84, Vinton, died Satwday, Feb. 3, 1996 '
in the Holzer Senior Care Center.
'
, ·
•
Born ApriiJO, 1911 in Apple Grove, W.Va., daughter of the !ate
George Hannon aild Alelia Ann Plowers Spears, she was a homemaker
and attended the Fairview Christian Center, Cen•int
She was alSo preceded in death by her husband. Cecil Leland Tef.
; LANGSVILLE -Joseph "Big JO('" Bryant, S6, Langsville, formerly of
ry, whom she married Oct. 3, 1932, in 1979; a daughicr, Linda Lou
•Logan, W.Va., died Thursday, Feb. I, 1996 at his residence. .
• Terry; and 18 brothers and sisters.
: A miner f~ Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mine,2, he was born April
Surviving are five sons, Cecil Ronnie Terry of Bidwell, Samuel
}20, 1939m Ltilcoln County, W.Va., son of the late Mason and Carrie Adkins
Eugene Terry' and Jtmes Wayne Thiry, both of Palriot, Larry Dale Ter!Bryant.
,
ry of Vinton, and William Joseph Terry of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; sev• A U.S. Army .veteran, he was a member of the Langsville AMVETS, the
en daughtcn, Ro~lie Catherine Shoemaker of Grove City, Ruby Vio:Wilkesville American Legion Post 476 and the McArthur Eagles Aerie 2279.
la Gibson of Monticello, Ky., Alelia Annabelle Seagraves and Mary
' Surviving are his daughter, Sharon (Thomas) Elkins of Peets Mill, W.Va.;
Eloise Cox, both of Oak Hill; Grace Ellen Broyle&amp; and Diana Lynn
;four stepchil~n. Paul~' R. Larnben of ~inc, Audrey M. Goble of EwingWoodward, both of GallipOlis, and Pamela Sue LaJie ofSeottllurg, Ind.;
non, Debra Priddy of Mtddlepon, and Ulhe E. Lambert of Cheshire; seven
37 grandchildren, SllfCBt-grandchildren and seven great-great-grand' grandchildren; and a. sister, Lucille (Grady) Kellison of Dillsburg, Pa.
children; Md three sisterS, Roseman Jewell Davia of Cleveland, Melin· Services will be 2 p.m. 'l'uesday in the Evans Funeral Home, Ghapda Alwida Waugh of Lesage, W.Va., and Leola Vtrginia Wilcox of
manvi)le, W.Va., with the Rev. Lee Salmans officiating. Burial will be in the
Altoona, Pia. .
·
Highland Memory Garden, Godby Height, W.Va. Friends may call from 7Serviees will be I p.m. Thesday in the Faith Baptist ChuR:h, Rod9 p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, and from 6-9 p.m. Monney, with the Rev. Lloyd Fry officiating. Burial will be in the Fairview
day al the Evans Funeral Home.
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
Gallipolis, from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Monday.
·
· The body will lie in state in the church one hour prior lO the service.
RACINE - Gilben C. Han, 71 , Racine, died Friday, Feb. 2, 1996 at his
residence.
,
.
Born Au~. 24, 1924 in Antiquity, son. of the late Earl and Fannie Sayre
Han, he rettred from the Central Operaung Co. after 3S years' service. He
was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II and a member of !he Racine First
Baptist Church.
•
•
Surviving are his wife, Audrey Haym1111 Han; four sons, Dennis Hart and
Monty (Paula) Han, both of Racine, Barry Han of Los Angeles, Calif., and
:Srett (Sherrod) Han of Lafayette, Ga.; five grandchildren and a great-grand.
;child; eight stepgrandchildren; four brothers, Ronald (Hilda) Han, Linley
(Mildred) Han, and Raben (Lillie) Hart, all of Racine, and Eldred Hart of
Eliot, Maine; three sisters, Lorene Pyles, and Joyce Manuel, both of Racine,
1lnd Patsy Willis· of CoiiJI'!bus; and several nieces and inepbews.
·
He was also preceded 10 dl'alh by a son, Gary Han; and by two sistersin-law, Pauline and Ellie Hart.
Services will be I p.m.W~esday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Larry Haley officiating. Burial will be in the Greenwood Ceme- ·
,tery, Racine. Friends may call lit the funeral home from i-4 and 7-9.p.m. Tuesd~
I
.
. · .
.
...

Gilbert C. Hart

Tom F. Metcalf

MIDDLEPOKf- Tom F. Metc~f. 80, Middleport, formerly of Bridgewater, N.Y., died Friday, Feb. 2, 1996 in the Holzer Senior Care Center, Gallipolis.
.
Born Feb. 12, 1915 in Gallipolis, son·of the laic George W. and Viola Folden Metc~lf Roush, he ~as reared the home of the I~ Orren Roush. He
)Vas ~ retrred commeretal .truck dnvCI'. ·
Surviving are six daughter$, Palricia [).ennis of Texas, Betty BasiOn,
bharon Tessmer and Susie Carpenter, all of Hanville, Frances Cugini of
.kavenna, and Linda .Wilkinson ·of Youngstown; IS grandchildren and 14
kreat-grandchildren; two sistets;, M~ E. Miller of Gallipolis, and Sarah
fowler of Middlepon; and'several rifeces and nephews.
• He was al$o preceded in death by a son; Tommy, Metcalf.
.
I· Graveside services will be II a.m.. Tuesday in tile Gravel Hill Cemetery,
J:heshire, with the Rev. James Keesee officiating. •
.
; · No calling hours will be observed and arrangements are by the Fisher
l?uneral Home, Middlepon. '
.
·

!n

t

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·- t

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~hat!,f~· 'J2Jne""Newell ·

..

"'I
I

FAREWELL TO GENE - Gene Kelly, left, 1nd Judy Glrllnd
ell need In the 1842 Him "For Me and My 011." Kelly, the choreo-1
grapher 1nd !lancer who .brought hl1 lthlellc SII'ICe 1ncl lrleh •
ch1rm to numerou1 movie mu.1 lcall of the 1MOl 1nd 'SO., died
Friday. He Wll 83. (AP)
.
·

~

·Harvey Brown

GALLIPOLIS - Harvey E. Brown. 7l. 20 I Fourth Avenue, Gallipol,,
died Wednesday, January 31, 1996 in Holzer Medi.cal Center.
,
·
Born t.{arch IS, 1923 in Mason ~ounty, West
Virginia, he was the son of the late Harvey L. and
Lillie Cox Brown. ·
,,
·He riltired from nearly 30 years' service from
Columbia Gas of Ohio. He served in the U.S.
Army dlll'ing World War II anti was stationed in
!tal~. He was also an avid fisherman. He was, a
member, of VFW Post 4AM and the 'AmeriCl!n
Legion,
.
.
Surviving are his wife, l;!ulah M. Miller
Brown, whom he married February 17; 1943 in
Miami, Florida; a daughter and son-in-law, Peggy
and Charles E. Huber II of Gallipolis; two granddaughters, Amy Huber of Kent, and Abbey Hubct
of Gallipolis; and a grandson, Thby Brown .Qf
Gallipolis.
,...
He was also preceded iii death by a son, Gary
Lee Brown; and an infant brother, Charles Edward
Brown.
,
Services were held at l p.m. Saturoay, February 3. 1996 in the CremeeDS
Funeral Chapel, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial was in the
German Ridge Cemetery, Walnut Township.
'"
Pallbearers were Riger Brown, Dick Brown, Gene Moore, Luther Moore,
,..
John Paul Kerns and Richiud Miller.
;.

Elladene Mae Watson

rl .' .

MINERSVn.LE- ElladeneMae Watson, 75, ofMinenville, devoted foJC
lower of Christ, went to be with our Lord who she followed for 47 years, o~'
January 31, 1996.
Born June 2, 1920 in Spencer, West Virginia, she was the daughter of the
late William Harley and Ella Elsie Miller Ferrell. She retired from the book:
·mobile, was a cook for Carleton School, and a homemaker. She was a menk
ber of the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene.
·, ,
. She is survived by her husband, Leroy Watson, Minersville; two daughters and sons-m-law, Deanna and Frank Summerfield of Nonh Lewisburg:·
·and Darlene and Mark Kocher of Columbus; a son, Jim Watson of Columbus; four sisters and three brothers-in-law, Marie Hauck of Pomeroy, Eloise
and Eugene Smith of Marion, Mildred and Bill Miller of Ashland, and Jean·
and Eddie Keele of Sebring; seven brothen and five sisters-in-law, Kessell
.and Biroie Ferrell of Lel(ington, Ky., Bill and Donna Ferrell of Wadswonlt,
·Glen and Janice Ferrell of Hilliard, Charlie Ferrell of Ashland, Roben Fer•:
.rellofLodi, and Jack and Betty Ferrell and Dick and Karen Ferrell ofWoost.-•
·er; two grandchildren, Renee and Brllnden; and several nieces and nepheWi. :
·
: She was preceded in death by her parents.
Services will be held at II a.m. Monday, February 5, 1996 at the Syra, .
cuse ChuR:h of the Nazarene, with the Rev. William Stires officiating. Burial will folll)w in the Beech Grove Cemetery in Pomeroy. Friends may c~l!.
at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport from 2-4 and 6-l! p.m. Sunday, Fe!f
ruary 4, 1996, and one hour prior to the service at the church.
N:!~~~al contribution: may be made to the Syr~u~ . Ch~reh of th}

Multi-talented Gene Kelly · .Deaths of .note elsewhere .~
. . passes from scene at 83
Mm~: :~~~~&gt;_Ray :t;~:~~~!:~:· ~n~~::::':i ~:;

, CHE~ijiR&amp;,..,...Shm:on M. "Jane" Newell, 53, Cheshire, died Friday, Feb)'
LOS ANGELES (AP) __: Actor.
. ~ ~6;ia)HOI,.n Mc:clical Center. ·
·
Dancer. Singer. Director. Gene Kel!t·JDOm JuQ-.8..•\942 m C91umbus, daughter of ~~~c. tate Clarence 0 . and Alva ' ly was all that - and a teacher, tbo.
~. Stewan Newell, she was a cook for the AEP River Division in Lakin,
A consummate showman who
\V.Va., and· a member of the YFW ~-te~art-Johnson Post 9926 AuKiliary, ttansfonned both American dance
~ason, W.Va.
.
.
..
,
.
and the Hollywood musical, Kelly
: She~~ also preceded m death by a brother, Clare.nce '· B~k". Newell.
died Friday at age 83 from compli' · SurviVIng are a daughter, Lee Ann (Elmer) Spauldmg of Btdwell; a son, cations of several strokes.
Jeffrey M: Newell of Middlepon; as grandson; two sisters, Nina (Lewis) DaiThe fanner ' ditch digger and law
le.y. of Ocala, Fla., and Wilma Scarberry of Vinton; three brothers, Dean :school dropout was one of the coun(Manha) Newell of Mason, ,Donald and Margie· Newell of Clifton, W.Va., 'try's top entertainers in the 1940s and
'nd Roben M. (Becky).Newell of Pomeroy; one grandson; and several nieces · 19SOs. His joyful dancing, boyish
and nep.hews..
.
· ·good looks and regular-guy
'• S~rvtce~ wtll be I .P·~· The~ay ''! thJ; Fogleso~g Funeral Home, Mason, demeanor made hini the perfect perwith .John ~u~ officaaung. Bunal wtll be an the Rivervaew Cemetery, Mid- ·former for postwar America.
Kelly was as influential as he was
dlepon. Fnends may call ,at the funeral hQme from 7-9 p.m. Monday.
~
popular! His athletic, occasionally

~~~~~~ph~t~~sthi~n~:~

JQhnn;ie M. Tiller

1

jeans.
'r
•
~~Intire,, w~~-~identally invented isobutylene did not. When the·pre&amp;Oil
"He once told me dancmg was a u"' matena ,_...or everything from sure was released, the isobutylene·l
man's game, as mueh of a spOrt as disposable foam cups lO insulation, . evaporated and made a foam poly.'H
baseball itself," said Liza Minnelli. died Friday. He wits 77. ·
styrene with bubbles in it.
whose mother, Judy Garland, coMcintire said he was trying to . Dow Chemical named the produo( '
starred with Kelly in his 1942 film make.a. new rubberli.ke .polymer by ."Styrofoam" and sold it as buildinf
debut "For Me and My Gal." ·
combmmg styrene wtth asobutylene, insulation,
· "And he made us believe that. He: . .--..--!11!!'!!!1!!!!!!!!11!!~!!!!!!~~~~~~!11----1 ·
cbanged our minds and suddenly, all
of America wanted to dance just like
Gene Kelly," Minnelli said.
Kelly dabbled with serious roles
but was more at home in lightheirted, idyllic stories. His most enduring
cinematic image was a rain-drenched
spin around a streetlight in lll~2's
~ 'Singin' in the Rain"- a moment

~:;cr:.::~=~~t~~

modem
·
"Gene was one of a kind. He rev- ican musical ever made.
GALLIPOLIS -Johnnie Mack Tiller, SO, G~tllipolis, formerly of Hunt· olutionized dancing in film," Frank
Reynolds, Kejlly's "Singin 'In the ·
i~~on: W.Va., died Thursday, Feb. I, 1996.
· . '
·
Sinatra said in a statement. Kelly Rai9" co-star, said he made her a~tar.
' : Bpm April ·~~1 1945, son of dte late Clarence and Mat;on Marie Tiller, "was a disciplinarian and a perfec- "He taught me how 10 dance 8nd how
he.was arself-e,m
, nlayed stone mason for 3S years.
·
··
u·ont' st - I should know. I practt'ccd 10 work hard, to be dedt'cated and yet
floall al Agla ollwl you 1 allalol al 1 ....,.,,. Oolond •••lin
1
~ wife, Kay Tiller; his stepmother, Kathleen Tiller· two for hours and hours and couldn't still loving as he was to his family
WI. · I uw · r1qtlr11m•n._
; Survtving are·his
•''
.. ...U
··-• .....
- , com,llll
,,_,, •• "'ll•i•cllnann
- ·• "- .. II
'ons, Ed (Crystal) Tiller of Gallipolis, and Terry Tiller of Proctorville;
believe it when I saw myself dancing and friends," she said.
Ill Utili wllh floallal Agla.
sasters, I'J(Ilii:Y Danforo ofNe~l;lOh Be&amp;~;h; Calif., Judy ~of,Ona,W.Va., with Gene on the big screen."
Kelly's influence spanned generHaura: 1:00-4:00·11-T•Th-F. Olhen by IPPHtlll4nd H~lclltompson ofHunungron; !104 fi~e brothers, Danny Tiller ofMariKelly danced with Sinatra. Kelly ations,lasting right up.to today's pop
113 81118 or .._..2327
~.ua, Jac~'TIIler, David1iller 11114 Clmnee· "Bug" 'ri11er, all of taviletie danced with Debbie Reynolds. Kel- stars Madonna, Michael Jackson and
W.Va., and EmiiTtller,of·Huntington.
.
•
' )y {twice) danced with 'FredAstaire. iPaula Abdul, as well as modem
..V
; Services will be 2 'p.m. 'l\4onday in !he Reger Funeral Hollie, 1242-46 Kelly danced with canoon characters. ;dance avatar Twyla Tharp._
...!H!!2W'III!~I=f4~·="-::.-.!!;~!!:!!!~~!:!!I:=!::.:!!;J[::
MamsA~.. Huntirjgtlm&lt;'t.1th i'iitorFrcdRamey officiatina: Burial will be More than anyone, though, Kelly
,I
the Whne Chapei·Men'iQpai'Oardcnis, Ona. Friends may call at the t'uner- .. danced with moviegoers.
~I home'from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
·
Kelly's movie musicals - from
1
"Anchors Aweigh" in 1945 and "On

ihree

RIIUY 1. SAUIDEIS MAIU•••n
...

,. r

.v'··v···enne M'•.

addell '

theTown"in1949to"AnAmerican
in Paris" iqJ 95 I - brought the
! ·
'·
'
·:
•
'
stately stepS"i!f Astaire to the mass~ MIDDLEJ.:'OKf- Virienne M. Waddell, 100, Mi~ died Fnctay,. es. Where A:staire was polish, Kelly
~eb. 2, 1996 II\ the Overbrook Nursing 'Center, Middleport:
was muscle. Astaire danced in top hat
' Born Sept. 6, 1895 in Middlepon, daughter of the late Thomas and Jen- and tails,
in T-shirts and blue
rlie Da~is Middleton, she worke;d for 23 years for the former Meigs Water .-;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~;;-.:.:=::,.;·:;;;;~~~
Co., and was a member of the Mtddlepon Presbyterian Gatureh and the Mid-·
~P91'1Li.terary Club.
;· ' ·. ·
~.
·
,• • Slli'VIvmg are three nephews, two meces, and several great- and great-·
' ~-nieces and· nephews.
,
I ; S~ Was preceded in death four brothi:rs, Thomai, Cllrence, Earl and Davis
,Mi'cJcYftQ!l
., ; an~ !1Y t~~ siste~, Elsie !;h~bm and Genevieve Sherman.
'If, ~\{~te ;f&amp;,rirly serVICCS were held ~y. Pol!, j, 1996- in the Fisher
POMEROY
jr• ~ne~ Ji~e; Middleport, with the ~v.., ~~ }tQbinson officiating. A
~,
Jft Bl'lllp
• , Qlel'ndtial se,t:V•ce ..vall be held at • Iller.d4t,e .. lli'Jfl!meilt will be at Sacred
1182-2188
.
lieart ·Cetne~Cry. l'ome~y. · · . · ' . . ·. ·
VINTON
. •.f11 lie~ of flowers, donati~s may lie.'PI_Ide 10 the Middleport PresbyterCllllla
~l'y Yerd
Chun:h,
P.O. Box 226, Mtddle'""' Ohio 45760.
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·;Joseph 'Big Joe' ~. ryant

1

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' A: . I! depends on how quickly
Aesoclaled Press Writer
compames gear up to provide the new
WAS}:IINGTON- It's all aboui . serv;ces, and, in some cases, how fast
·c1loice. New worfds ·opened through they · satisfy certain regulatory
':your telephone, computer and televi- reqalirements. Long-distance compasion set.
mes and cable companies say it
' · . At the outer limits, the changes could take anywhere from six months
.. faase tbe possibility of bringing the to four years to begin providing
·. world's leading medical specialis~ local phone service - depending
' into your h,ome through you~ ~om- ~ upori the market. Some Bell compa·
"puler. Closer to re.ahty: the abt,lny to mes.exjlect to provide, long-distance
order your favonte pazza by merely servtcl outside their local phone ter:-t~uc hing your TV.
ritories as soon as Clinton signs the
.' • Here are some questions and bill. But consumers will have to wait
'l!llswers about the possible impact of longer to get long-distance service
the telecommunications overhaul bill from . their own Bell company
'approved this week by Congress and because local BeU companies first
· 16xpected. to be Signed by President must clear a number of regulatory
Clinton:
.
.
and competitive hurdles. Bell com., , Q: What are some new services Jll!nies say they ' ll accelerate their
'that might evolve?
plans to provide cable and other
'd
A: Companies •re looking at such va eo services, but couldn't be more
'mings as oroering television shows, specific.
.
"'·~ws and movies from you TV set or
Q: How does cable deregulation
computer; interactive TV, which work?
Would let you buy a pizza by touchA : If you are served by a "small "
ing your TV screen or using a remote cable system - defined as having
control; and high-speed modems that 50,000 or fewer customer and is pan
cable customers can use to connect to · of a company that controls less than
the Internet. A futuristic service is I percent, or roughly 600,000, of all
h~•ing your bean chtcked at home cable customers nationwide- your
tl)rough an electronic link to a doc- rates will be deregulated immediatetor far away.
ly. About20 percent of all cable sub·, Q: How does the bill change scribers would be affected. Existing
where I might buy my _cable, tele- rate rcgulations"'would stay in place
phone and other · communications for the rest of the nation 's cable cusservices?
tilmers though 1999 - unless a teleA: The bill would let cable. local phone company begins selling cable
and long-distance companies into service in your town.
each others' businesses. That could
Q: Will my cable rates will go up?
allow you to buy:.local and long-dasA: It depends on whom you ask.
t~nce phone servocc from your cable The Consumer Federation of Amercompany; long-distance service, ica says yes. They estimate customers
HBO, CNN and other cable channels will sec a•erage increases of $5 to $7
from you~ local Bell company; and 1 a month after deregulation . The
go to AT&amp;T, MCI and Sprint for National Cable Television-Associacable and local phone service.
tion says cable rates will eventually
Q : When can I ex~ct these godownascablccompaniescompete
changes?
against telephone, satellite and others

for cu9toniers.
~: How !ll&gt;out my telephone rates?
A,: Agalp, it depends on whom
you JISk. The Consumer Federation
and the Consumen Union say rates
will' go up beiiuse the level of competilion envisioned by the bill's sup-·
poners won't emerge. The consumer
gropp~ also'uy the bill makes it more
difficult for state regulators to keep
local phone rates reasonable . But
local telephOne and long-distance
companies say ra~ for both services
will go down as competition evolves.
Q: Can one company own my
local newspaper; cahle system , TV
station and radio station?
A: No. However, the bill lets one
. company own multiple radio stations
inthesametown. halsomakcsitcas· ier for a company to own both the
1ocat TV station and the cable system.
And it also will be easier for one
company lo own a TV station and
multiple radio stations in the same
community.
Q: When can I buy a TV set with
the V-chip that'll let me block programs electronically labeled for violent and other objectionable content
from appearing on my TV screen?
A: The Electronic Industries Association says in about two years. The
chips are suPPOsed to be installed in
all new sets 13 inches or larger sold
in the United States.
•Q: What happens if someone electrotl,ically sends my 17-year-old
c~in a nude picture over the compU!f:r?
·
A: If soineone is caught sending
indecent materials to a minor he
could go to jail or be fined up to
$100,000. The definition of indecent
is close to the one that applies to
broadcasters. Some of the things the
FCC has dee.med indecent for broadcaste,rs are explicit references to
nlll)ity, seKual intercourse, urination
and breast size.

•
·
ff•
,
.
Ch 1ne.·se 0 · ICials gauge,· t·mpact

.
Of
h
k
. severe eart qua e in province

By RENEE SCHOOF
· .. . .
.
Aeeoclllted Prell Writer
liamal repons saad that 30 .people
BEIJING _ An earthquake with had be.en killed, 29 of them on afarm
a·preliminary magnitude of at least · an . L•J•ang County, Xanhua saad. It
6,4 struckosouthwestel'l) China's Yun- saad a number of old houses had.c~lrian .. prov.in~e..Saturday, killing at lapsed and that water and electncaty
IQasl 30 people and damaging build- ~uppl~es h~d been dasrupted..
.
ings, water and electricity lines. LIJiang IS near the northwest corThe quake cut communicatioiil1&amp; ~r
Yunnan,. an IS~ated area of
the town of Zhongdian the state-run • . gg mountaons a. precapttous
Xinhua l\lews Agency ~porteil.
· !•~er vall~ys . The regaon produces a
The quake hit at 7:14 p.m: (6: 14 wadcrangc of flora and fauna and the
a,m. Esn near Lijlang, a count;· scat provan~e has been c.alled a natural
Slid scenic area in Yunnan, Pbout ' zoologacal and botanacal garden.
~300 miles southwest of Beijing, the
.The area IS not heavdy populated,
C:ntral Seismology Bureau rcpt·rted. saad Ma Tianmmg of the eanhquake
~' The bureau said the quake had a center.
.
J)reliminary magnitude on.o., highLocal offictals reached by tele- .
ei than the 6.4 reported by. the u .S. phone late Saturoay s.aad they dad not
&lt;Icological .~crvi~r
ha.ve any anformataon about the

'!.

'
quake's impact.
·
Th.e seisll)ology center was dispatchmg.a team to investigate, Ma ·
satd.
.
A. 6.5-magmtude. earthql!ake hit
Wildmg, another Yunnan town, on
Oct. 24, killing 51 people, injuring
80,8 and ~esiroying or seriously darn·
aging almost 200.000 buildings.
,A magnitilde-6 quake can cause ·
severe damage and magnituae 7 is
co~sider a inajor quake, capable of
causing widespread, heavy damage.

s

HOOTING'S WAKE- Emergency workers
W11h., on Frlclly. One teacher 1nd two llturu1hed • lhootlng victim from the scene at
dents were killed, and another etudent Will
F ller J 1 HI h Sch001 1 M
ron
un or II
n OilS Lake, · Injured In the shooting. (AP)

,

T.een
hefi'd ,·n scho.·oI s h. 00
. t.rng uea
Ill
th s
I.
.

By MARK JEWELL
Associated p
Writer
MOSES LA~Wash. _A 14 .
year-old boy with a high-powered
rifle killed a teacher and two students
and seriously injured another student
inside their junior high school classroom Friday, police said .
The student was arrested shortly
after he entered Frontier Junior High
School at about 2 p.m.. weni 10 a
classroom and began firing', police
said,
·
.
"Numerous shots were fired and
one teacher and three students were
shot," Sgt. Dennis Duke said in a
news release.
·
A 13-year-old girl who was shot in
the abd!imen was flown in Serious
condition to Harborview Medical
Center in Seattle, about ISO miles to
the west, said Tim Cooper, a
spokesman at Sarn!.ritan Hospital in
Moses Lak~
Killed were Leona' D. Caires, 49,
and students Arnold F. Fritz and
Manuel, vela, both l4, Gfantcounty
Coroner Penny Sibley said.
·
Parents of se•eF)II students in the

,
the gun out of the boys hands and
wrestled ham to the ground, Black
saad.
.
Lane declined to discuss what
happened Friday night, telling an
Associated Press reponer, "I'd really rather you talk to the Moses Lake
Scbool District." District officials
referred questions to police, who
refused to discuss details.
The school was evacuated and students were sent home early as parents
streamed in to search for their chitdren . Officials later canceled the
weekend's athletic contests and
offered psychiatric counseling to students.
One classmate of the alleged
shooter said he wasn't th~ kind to
make trouble .

~!:~s~:~::~i~;ea~~e:~~rc:a~l~e:.

"He was an honor student. He was
not involved in gangs. He was not in
drugs," the stude~t told KHQ-TV i~
Spokane on condnion of anonymity.
"He was a nonnal stUdent among the
rest of us."
,..--------....,

Recliners

concealed his rifle, according to Dan
Black, editor of the Columbian Basin
Herald.
The boy pulled out the rifle and
shot three students in the front row,
then shot the teacher as she moved
toward him. He allowed the wound·
ed girl and another girl to leave the
classroom, Black said.
Physical education teacher Jon M.
Lane then ran down the hall and confronted the boy, who turned the
weapon on Lane.and told bini to put
the barrel in his mouth. Lane knocked

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f,Aoderate 'Blue ·Dogs' eye
t)wn balanced budget plan
IL PENNY BENDER
Some Republican leaders still
.dannelt News,servtce
think they can win over enough con" WASHINGTON - A group of servative Democrats without strip- 1
stratcd House Democrats and ping the proposed $245 billion tax
;
· publicans arc ,bucking their lead- cuts from the bill top~ a veto-proof
C,IJ'hips and are trying to devise a hal- budget, he said.
atccd budget plan of their own that
It will be difficult to pull GOP
..C.uld not include lax cuts.
' leader~ away from a campaign
; They hope to attract eno~g!J sup- promi~ like tax cuts •. but (lingrich
from moderates an thear partaes may "sec some passable strategies
nd the budget stalemate and pass out of this," Castle added.
·
a ~lan that reduces the deficit, they '
Gin@rich spokesman Tony Blank·
said.
Icy could not be reached for comment
Twcnty-si~ lawmakers sent a lei·
Friday.
·'
to President &lt;;linton, House
As lawmakers head home for a
cakcr Newt · Gingrich . 'Senate month-long break from Congress,
~ority Leader Bob Dole and other eliminating ta~ cuts was gaining
c~gressionalleadcrs Thursday night,
support on both political fJVnts.
u~· ing them to strip the tax cuts from
"The patamount issue is to bal·
1 ·: budget Nil and vote on them scpance the budget over seven years,"
a tcly.
· said Rep. Bob Clement, 0-Nashville,
i "We believe that the best who !Jas wOrked on another of Cas' OIJlroach is to scp)lmte the issues of tic's bipanisan budget groups . " I
balancing the budget and culling think we have the vo_tes right now. It's
fa.cs." the lcncr said.
just getting them together. The
j The hipanisan cffon is spear- (Republican) leadership has strange
hooded by The Coalition, a group.of ways of keeping us apart," such as
2f Democrats who call themselves keepiilg bills off the floor.
"~!uc Dogs.'' and the Thcsday Lunch
Rep. Van Hilleary, R-Grandview,
Bench. a coHection of 20 moderate one of the House freshmen who·sup~.U,ublican~: Both, sides have pro• poned shutting down the government
~d separate plans to balance the last month, calls it "a good strategy.''
b!gct - without taK cuts.
"I think the lax cuts are easily
"The mimbcrs and the underlying demagogued." Hilleary said.
·
p icics are so close .that we believe
Voting separat~ly on 'tax cuts is
coil sensus is possible.~· , tht letter one; Wll)' to P"'S a balanced budget
sa~.
and getlt out of the way, he said.
.t l don't ~ant ~o get ?JY .hopes too
"We are going to try to build
, ha&amp;h, liut thas maght sagnafy a relll momentum for these (budget) plans,"
breakthrough'.'' said Rep. Jobn Tan- said Jamie Ri,!Pge, spokesman for the .
. nei, D-Union City, one of the leaders Concoro Coalition, which suppons
pf' the Blue Dogs. \ ''We haven't reducinJ jhe &lt;leftc:it. ·
•
wqtkcd it aH oui ... but just the inch: '· "The, hottom linp is that a lot of
fad that they have, .decid~d" ~ot t,!l,_,_.!he Republicans realize that now is
m st on a ta~ cut rs a sal!ntr.'~ant ' not a ,JioOd time for tax cuts, but
mqve toward our philosophy." '
they've locked themselveS into it," he
a f the Republicans are willing to said.
'
.
.
st~ up toJeadenandvote fora plan·
Thi$ i1roposal wou.ld give ~m a
wi,hout tax cuts,the. measure would way out, he saad.
.
PllfS easily. Tanner said.
• Tanner and Castle satd they hope
\"1 don't think it's quite ihat sim· lO wort 9111 compromise budget biH
plq;" said Rep. MicNacl Caitle, R· for Conlreu 10. consider when it
~.: one ohhe 'Lunch Bunch lead- retums·tromreeess .t·~ehdoffeb..

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SunH8y, Februery 4, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plei11nt, WV

"!!!.

Along the River

Witnesses believe pilot's actions .prevented furthef
·l oss of life
. ..
,

.

.

.

.

'

.ay PHIL WEST

MIO~IIUI:I PreM WIIIW
. NASHVILLE. Tenn. - Wai~ss Chena Hill reached one quick conclu-sion after watching an F-1 .. Tomcat's dreadf)ll descent into a cluster of
-Nashville homes.
'
.
The pilot was a hero.
Navy invcstiaators lnay take months to determine why Lr. Cmdr. John
.·Stacy Bates' tighter crashed after takeoff Monday.
. They spent the week at t)le crash site, collecting pieces of the $35 miiJion jet in boxes to he reassembled in their· search for the cause.
•. Hill, 24, serving breakfast at the Waffle House on Monday morning,
watched as the fighter jet circled over·a tightly packed area that encompassed
:busy lnten.tate 24, a dozen lfllrtmcnt complexes, several motels, more thari.
)0 office buildings iUI!I an elementary school. It seemed barely a couple of
'hundred yards away, she said.·
· Although the wing tips were see-sawing back and forth, Hill thought the
pilot had enough conlfQl to eject.
·
: But Bates, 33, didn'tleave his plane, which crashed into a front yard and
plowed through the home of Elmer Newson, 66, and his wife Ada, 63. The
Newsoms died, along with a visitor, Ewing T. Wair, ~3'; Bates; and his radai-

.officer, Lt. Graham Alden Higgins, _28.
•
·
" You could tell these people were trying to keep-from hitting a populated area. They could have ejected," Hill said. "I think this man·should be,recognized nut foj·wrec!cing this plane but for saving l\undrc4&amp; and hunfeds
of lives."
.
The first solid reports from on-scene investigaton may bear Hill but,
"To 1!4; honest with yi&gt;u, we don't see any attempts a,t ejection. And that's
very initial," Rear Adm. Spp Di~. commander of the Naval Safety ~n­
ter. said Thurs!lay. .
"When you look at an ejection seat, you can sec whctlier things have been
pulled to commence ejection. And on initilll investigation, we don't see that/'
he said.
.
.
Bates, based .at Miramar Naval Air Station in San Diego, had spent the
weekend 'with his parents in Nashville, where they had gone backstage after
a 9rand Ole Opry show that featured Emmylou Harris, Bill Monroe and Mar-,
ty Stuart.
·
When Bates said goodbye Monday morning, he told them 'to check his
takeoff on their way home to Chattanooga. ,
·
. His steele F-14 roared down the runway and rocketed away ln a high-speed,
steeply angled launc~, for whic'\ he had special clearance: Navy investiga-

Attorneys
·debating
new site
for trial
' By PAUL QUEARY
· Aaao~lated Preu Writer
, . OKLAHOMA CITY -A prosecutor asked a federal judge to con. sider the "children who lost a parent"
in the federal building bombing w)len
·deciding whether the trial should be
' held in Oklahoma or out of state.
"They don't need to be separated"
from a mother or father forced · to
·travel to attend the trial, U.S. Attorney Patrick Ryan, his voice breaking,
told U.S. District Judge Richard
·Marsch.
•
Prosecutors want defelidants Ttm·.othy McVeigh and Terry Nichols
iried in Tulsa. about 90 miles from
the bombing site, so the families of
'the 169 victims killed in the April 19
blast can attend.
· "Tulsa would honor the victims'
'rights in a way no other venue
·eQUid," assistant U.S. Attorney Sean'
·Connelly said.
· · Defense attorneys have asked
Matsch to move the tiial' t&lt;;&gt; Denver,
where Matsch is chief jydge, or
another out-of-state city because they
say intense pretrial publicity would
'make a fair trial impossible in Oklahoma.
"The people of Oklahoma were
'told ove~ 1111d oyer·_again that they had
a special relatioil$p to tl)es~ events.
and they came to 6elieve it," Michael
Tigar, the· ~ 'i)f Nichols' defenSe
team, said Prilliy in closing arguments at the' change-of-venue liear-

mg.

.

"They embraced that concept as a
medium for their recovery," he said.
McVeigh lawyer Stephen Jones
said that "in the spirit of reasonable
compromise," h~ had suggested alternative cities, including Charleston,
W.Va., San Francisco, Seallle and
POrtland, Ore.
Prosecutors said coverage of the
.bombing was intense everywhere in
the country, but that voir dire,the tra:
ditional questioning of potential
jurors. would be effective in seating

B

~

tors will not say whether they 1believe the high-performance takeoff was .1.
.
·
·
factor in the crash.
ll's on~ of many factoo being weigb4;d as the-Navy ,tries to explain w!:'&amp;t ·
went wrong....,. for the famili~ of the victims as Well ~ fo,r the pilots o[ other F-14 fighters.
•
•
Shortly after Bates took off, Hill and several customers saw the low-flying jet making an irregular rocking motion as it banked into a left tum back ·
toward Nashville Imemalional Airport. ·
"He was turning around and trying to get back to the airport. When he
realized he couldn't malce the airpon, he tried to get to that open field," she ·
said.
"It scared me half to death! Everybody in here started cryiils."
Teachers and pupi.ls at nellf\ly Paragon Mills Elementary School practice
plane crash drills along with fire and toc1ado drills, physical education teacher
Terry Sensing said. ·
Bates' jet rattled windows and doors at the·school, with ~40 - studcnts in
third through sixth grades, when it passed over Mon!lay, Sensing said.
He nished o~tside in lime to see a fireball billow up from the crash. - :
"I'm .sure the pilot could h•ve ejected. But I think he fought it as long as •
he could," Sensing said.
:

;: Restoration wins
-~: over demolitfoh

a fair jury from Oklahoma.
. McVeigh and Nichols arc accused
of t'elleral m11raer and conspiracy
charges,. If convicted, they CQuld
.. f~ce the death penally.
Matsch took bver the case after an
appeals coun ajlreed that damage to
the chambers of the original trial
judge, Wayne Alley, raised doubts _
about his impaniality.
The government abandoned its
earlier attempt to keep t~e trial in
Lawton, a military town 90 miles
southwest of Oklahoma City with a
· population of about 80,000. Ea~lier
this week. Matsch raised senous
.. doubts about whether. the tiny federal courthouse in Lawtpn could han-

die the trial. •·
, Qklahorria CiiY had been.'virtilally niled ooi~for the tri~l · from the
beginning in part because the federal counhouse was damaged in the
blast.
.
Ttgar -said he would file another
change-of-venue motion if the trial is
moved to 1\tlsa, a city of 367,000
with a much larger courthouse. Jones
said he had not decided whether he
would challenge a Tulsa trial.
Matsch said he would decide on
the change-of-venue motion bef9re a
Feb. 27 hearing on -other issues.
Matsch, who scrapped a May 17 lri·
al date set by Alley, has not set a new
date.
·

FEC investigation concl.udes, a tad late,
Bush ·campai·gn ,accepted illegal donations

•;

..

Clinton enters campaign mode ~
with visit to.key prim.ary state

· ·•'

'
By RON FOURNIER
sign the telecommunications over- turned and paused. then waved anyAIIoelated Prell Wrller
. haul legislation passed by Congress way - to a huge hangar wall.
on Thursday and called on cohgresMANCHESTER,
N.H.
• A sign on a restaurant window as
Accused by Republicans of breaking fional Republicans to keep working Clinton's motorcade blew through
a string_of 1992 campaign promises, with him to develop a balanced-bud- Concord. read: "Liberal portions.
_President Clinton Saturday sur- get plan.
.. · '
Conservative prices."
~
rounded himself with police officers,
After a day of low-key events
' Touring a.grade school journal- ·
saying he kept his pledge to put more steeped in policy and the presidency ism class, Clinton complained that he
in Concord and Nashua, Clinton gets weary. "Sometimes I'm tired all
cops on the streets.
Wrapping
up
a
two-day
trip
Ill this slipped into canlpaign mode at a New ·the time," he said. "NOI enough
1
key primary state, Clinton said, .., am England-style nighttime rally in hours in the day."
gratified.the crime rate is down here. Salem, south of Manchester.
• Then again. there are those
I am gratified the crime rate is down
He outlined the pillars of his cam- cheap thrills. That's what he told the
all over America:"
.
paign: educational opponunilier, safe crowd at a Nashua company in a disStanding in front of two rows of streets, ·accessible health care, envi- cussion about the importance of even .:
unnonned police officers, Clintpn ronmentnl protection, economic the most mundane police work. "No ~
underscored his efforts to put I00,000 growth and :in aggressive foreign pol- job can be one constant cheap thrill :
cops on America's streets, saying the icy.
from morning to night." C::linton ;
job isn't yet complete- but will be
And he borrowed a page from said, wlth a pause. ':Even ~ine."
..:
under hi~ leadership.
Republican Ronald Reagan's " Stay
"You can~t eliminate the darkness the Course" re-election message of
that lurks in human nature" he told 1984. "We should not take a change
several hundred people in a cramped of course and follow a direction that
church hall. "But we can go back to we know has no chance of working.
the time that crime is the exceptipn What we need to do is hear down and
and not the rule."
go forward," he-declared.
Clinton made his remarks shonly
But the purpose of his two-day trip
after New Hampshire Gov. Steve was to rekindle the magic of oldMerrill attacked him for failing to fol- style, intimate politicking that is a Ira· .
low through on promises he made dition in this first-in-the-nation prifour years ago to cut middle-class mary state. Clinton has never forgottaxes, reform welfare and govern ten that New Hampshire gave his sagconservatively.
ging 1992 campaign a boost.
OFFERING:
"Today, the bisgest challenges
"No one ever runs for pre$ident
•Stocks
facing President Clinton running for knowing enough about America to be
re-election in 19% arc the promises · president," the president told the
•Corporate Bonds
made by Bill Clinton.thetandldate iii Salem crowd, his voice .piped into
~U.S.~ Secarldis
1992," Merrill said in tile GOP iwo additional rooms that held over•Mutillll FUnds
·
responH, .to Clinton'§ ~kiYJ~b flow audic;nces of several hUndred,
•lnaated 'DIX-Fr.e----- ·
ad4ress. "Sadly. fo(fllie peop,l~ _qf _.,. "'lli\l f&gt;eople here always ...are unf•ik. i : Mr~~~
Ne~~ li~mpshirc ...- Bijl . ~illt~? ~~ . inglf 9ouneous to the candidates a~;,
· B~M;.:,.......
-. give them a chance to learn QbOut
_ _.
talked nght and governed leli.
' Earlier in the day, Clinton s!Opplljl America."
Accounts
· at a coffee shop, where he basked ~n
"You taught me a lot about Amer-.
•IRA's
the warm glow of supporters who ica, and I thank you for it," hq said.
remembered him from 1992 when his
Clinton c.learly enjoyed thj: day,
· Contaet:
strong showing in New Hampshire for all its humorous, poignant and
· · , Jay Caldwell
vaulted him tow&lt;lrd the White House. odd moments:
Joha Miler
Pictures 9f him during his visit four · • The trip bpgan inside a hanger II
. A«ollllt Ex«llliilfll
years ago hung on the walls.
·Andrews Air Force Base, Md .• )Nhcrc
"Here's where it all started," he Air Force Qne was stored unlilthe
. 441 SecendAvenue
said as-he moved among some 50 last minute because of a snow storm.
Gilllipo•a.. OR. 45631
customers packed into the Chez The indoor _setting preventeil the
....,
Vachon coffee shop. "It's good to be usual crowd from gathering amj wav(614) 446 lW
back in lhis place. I had a wonderf~ ing at the president as he ~d his .
·
•
,
time here." '
plane. Noticing the change as he
1-800-48'7·2·19
1,
In his radio address, recorded in ~re~ac~hed~t~he~to~p~
·o~f~the~s~ta~iB~,:.:J~~..:==========::,;
1
New Hampshire for broadcast Satur- r-

·'

At issue is whether Bush's campaign accepted illegal contributions
from the Republican National Committee and 18 state Republican partics to pay for 16 trips in the summer
of 1988.
Bush crisscrossed the country
from June to August - as the primaries ended and before the general
election started- speaking to GOP
groups in such key election states as
California~ Ohio, Michigan and Flori-

da.
The cost was picked ~p by the par·
ties and not 'his campaign· fund,
which by law was limited in the total
amount it could spend.
The FEC noted that Bush's primary campaign was nearly put of
funds at the time, and he was not yet
allowed to begin spending his $55.2
million in general election money
until after the nominating convention
·in August.

day.
Qlinton
his wage
~II for~
increase
in therepeated
minimum
and a .
law that would allow people to take
their health insurance coverage from

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Iter'. Ho'•••.
•wGnfage

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rest youraelf tO save money.

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CENTER.

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We offer ouiSIIJidlng ~

to malce ,OOr new
homeaft'ordable, NO MONEY DOWN, NO POINTS OR
QUl)SING COSTS, ANQ FIXED·RATE MORTGAGE
I"INANCING 10 qualified propeny ownen. Quick aedlt lfiiWOVII
ol'ten In 48 hours. No ~ payments durtns COCIIWCIIon. No pftvale
lllOfi8I8C
illslll'IIICe (PM!).: No motlpjjt! application or PIO e
lli!es.
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Tuesday, February 13 .·
10 a~m. !O 4 p.m. .
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Ask abou't our tpecial ·incent~Vp:S on aU 90" complete homes. But hurry,
you must talae advan1J8C of tlle.e special sa~ by the end of the month. ·

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French Five Hundred Room

nee and op~- to publ~ ..

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c••• ;:.. h:-w1*ii.4ii:iaa;c;. e.;
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for I'm: brochu~e ~ YIQI our model home center.

sOUTH POINT, OH

CROSS LAND, WY

-County Road 120 ~

f'h: 8141884-3881

:

414 ""Goff Min. Aoltl

Ph: 304(171-1700

1913 BANK CALENDAR- Above Tom Wolfe, a former employee of Racine Home Bank, displays a 1913 bank calendar. The calendar wea found in the attic of the building and has now been
. fra~ and hung In the former bank lobby.

heshire High School paved the way for integration in Gallia education

We have more than 30 home designs. We build with traditional fr.une
!X'f~Stl'IICiiOn on your property up to 90!11 complete. ~u can llnish-th!:.

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RESTORED - h was just a year ago after getting a condemnation order rescinded lhal Joe, Kay and Jay Prof·
fltt began work on restoring ~he old 1911 Racine Home Bank building.

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HOLZER
MEDICAL.
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OISPLAYS PLACARD -Thla 'metal insurance placerd,
above, from the Oce.n Accident and Guarantee Corp•
offered a $100 reward lo anyone who mig hi burglarize the
bank. In the early yeara of the Racine Home Bank, It hung
on a teller's window. h's been pul back there by Kay Proffitt. The ornata tin ceiling, below, was sandblasted to
remove the many coals of paint, and after necatiBry
repairs it was painted 1 bayberry color. The overhead
~~i unit was removed In the restor:al~io!!!n~::,:;::!;

Slnc:e 1946, we've.buUt over 300,000 homes for famdles like yaws. 'M!!'re .
homes.
the nation's

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S6 years was the vault. It was intact
although the brass framework had coats and
coats of paint which had to be removed to
reveal the beauty of the entrance way.
The counter and the teller windows put
there
when the building was constructed
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
had
all
been removed to make way for a
Timet-Sentinel newt atllff
variety
of
businesses which operated in the \
RACINE -- Just a year ago at this time
building
following
the bank's closing.
the old Racine Home Bank building on
.
First
there
was
a Dairy Queen, then a
Main Street had been condemned and was
about to be tom down because it created, as pool hall and finally a craft shop. Since the
Mayor Jeff Thornton said, a "pazard to peo- mid-1980's the buildin~ has ~n vacant.
Gathering up the onginal bank furnishple walking along the sidewalk."
ings
was not an easy taSk for the Proffius.
Pieces of stone were falling from the top
Bllt
they
were successful, rigl!t,down to the
of the two story concrete block and brick
teller
and
cashier signs, and a ,metal insurstructure.
ance
placard
with a message to robbers.
While many viewed the old building as a
It
reads,
"SIOO
Reward. The Ocean Accidetriment to the village's main street, Joe
and Kay Proffitt saw something different -- dent and Guarantee Corpora1ion having
a deteriorating structure to be sure, but one insured this bank against loss by burglary
and daylight holdup will during the continworthy of restoration.
•
With so few historical buildings left in uance of this insurance pay the sum of $100
Racine, they decided they couldn't just for the apprehension and conviction of any
stand by and let the 1911 structure be pen.on or persons attempting to burglarize ,
· •
demolished if there were any way of saving this bank."
The
Proffitts
were
able
to
recover the
it.
"We felt we had to do everything possi- original counter, teller and cashier winble to save that building," said Kay, whose dows, and all the ornate ironwork from an
interest has always been in preserving antique shop and after being refurbished
they were put back in place.
things of the past for future generations.
On hand to guide the them iri the restoraSo .last February, the Proffitts, joined in
tion
was Tom Wolfe, president of the Home
the venture by their son, Jay, approached
National
Bank in Racine.
Mayor Tllomton and asked for a "grace"
Right down to minute details, Wolfe
pc;riod on the demolition order to give them
remembered
just how it looked when he
time to check into the purchase and the feabegan
working
there in 1949.
sibility of restoring the building.
He
was
employed
at the Racine Home
Today the restoration has been completBank
from
that
time
until 1967 when it
ed and that 8~-year-old building, conmerged
with
the
Racine
National Bank and
dcmned just a year ago, is a jewel along
the business moved into the National Bank
Racine's-Main Street.
Not. oiily is ·it attJ:active inside and out, building across the street.
Using a picture which Wolfe had, the
but it hiis attractec! a new business to the vii·
'
Proffitts
began the process of restoring the
lage.
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building
to
its original design.
Scheduled-to open tomorrow on the first
A window put -in when the Dairy Queen
floo~ is Racine's Flowers and Gifts operated
operated
there was .removed and the old tin
l&gt;y Larry and Wendy Tucker. The rooms on
ceiling,
which
still had some 1937 flood
the second floor are being finished for
mud
on
its
upper
side, was, taken loose,
office space.
repaired
where
necessary,
and sandblasted
When the Proffitts began the restoration
to
remove
the
many
coats
of
paint put there
work the only thing that gave any indication
that a bank had operated in the building for over the years. Continued on page B-5

A.L- · ·

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job~~~~~~ reiterated his intention to

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1911 Racine bank
"
-- condemned a year
"· ago restored today

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HEADED FOR HEARING ~Special U.S. attorney Joeeph Hart·
zler ilrrl~ Friday at U.S. court In downtown Oklahoma City.
Harztler and other government .Uomeya were arguing agalnat a
ch.ange of venue motlpn filed by defense attorneys for Oklahoma
City bombing dafendMta Timothy McVeigh an.d Terry ,l!lorrla. (API

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-Section
B
Sunday, Februlry 4,1916

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those villages but from outsiders. .
This . harassment was panicularly .
strong following the depressions of
the middle 1870s and the middle
1890s. Blacks and European immi- ·
grants became scapegoats for the
economic problems of the country.
In 1876 the Gallipolis Bulletin .
reponed an assembly by the ·
Cheshire Colored School. The newspaper wrote, "The colored people
conducted themselves with commendable p~ri~t~, but I am sorry
to say the wh1tes did r.ot. I have wit- ,
neilsed an immense amount of bad •
behavior at church and school, but :
the conduct of a very large propor- :
lion of the whites on this occasion •
· surpassed anything I have yet seen. :
Yelling and stamping was
panied by shrill piercing whistles :
that would stanle one eqiJII. to an •
unexpected gun shot. There was :
excessive and immodena laljgh~r :
at the ·i:lose of each m:itation •
Singing and laughing be~n · ·:
were some of the milder foims of :
indulgence."
•
....._._.li.a pu'-10. :
l'llpondant of the ......~ :

accom- :

netu ................ . l'l li: •

tfWIIIoW Dr., lptlnllta~ OltiO ~
41011.
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, OH • Point Pleeunt, WY

Sunday, Febr\18!1.4,

18".

:;Sunday, Februllry 4,1196

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Materialism sta~s young these days

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Ann
landers

Beat' of the Bend
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by Bob Hoeflich

1995, LDI ADJCICS

11mes Sflldica~e •

aaon S)'ftdicllc.

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due to high water and.' that inconv~
niences us all if we are heided t9
Athens and beyond.
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Under the leader'ship i&gt;f Lyle Sin;
clair, a lifelong resident, tiflion if
being taken to request, tlje ll·lii·
Corps of Engineers ·at Runti,.nltol\
W.Va.;to clean outtwo creek's w~ic~
Sinclair says are the root of the prol!t
lem. Sand from strip mining opera&gt;
lions on Route 681 has filled up ~
creeks and land around the commur
nity not counting all of
other
stuff which has washed into th~
creeks.
1
Sinclair has contacted the Cor-pS
of Engineers about the matter. He
was advised to contact ~I political
leaders from the townshtp level Qjl
up the Iaddt( to help put some kic!t ·
, into the re9llest. that the creeks be
dredged. Sinclwr has been busy the
past few days making all of these
contacts.
And where do you fit in? Well,
besides the political contacts petitions have been prepared for presel)tation to the Corps. You are asked tp
stop in at one of several locatio~
where the petitions have been placed
and sign. These petitions are at Peopies Bank and the Post Office in
Middleport; at Bank 1•. Farmer,s
Bank the Post Office SwisherLohs~ Drug Store, and ihe Beacon
Service Station, all in Pomeroy;
Whaley's Store on Route . 681; ~~~~ l·
and L. Tire Shop and lho ,Sinclair
residence, both in But'lillgi\Un. ' I

Hope and-Russell Moore, longtime Pomeroy residents whom many
of you know, must be bursting with
pride over the career accomplishments of their son, R. William (Bill)
Moore.

JOHN AND JANEL HARRISON

Gillispi·e~Harrison
POMEROY -- John Martin Har- Gillispie, sister of .the bride; Renee
rison and Janel Leigh Gillispie were Gillispie, cousin of the bride; and
united in marriage Dec. -2 at the Amy Harrison, sister of the groom.
Faith Baptist Church in Mason, Flower girl was Marissa McAngus.
W.Va.
,daughter of Buddy and Bonnie
Rev: Jerry Scott perfonned the McAngus, and cousin ofthe groom.
double ring ceremony. · 'Ringbearer was J~se Hanson, son
The bride is the daughter of Mr. of Harold and Linda Hanson of Rutand Mrs. Danny L. Gillispie of New land.
Haven, W.Va., and the groom is the
Michael Fink served as best man
son of Johnnie K. Harrison and for the groom. Other attendants were
Diana and Roger Coates, all of Dana Gillispie, brother of the bride,
Pomeroy.
•
Eli Fink and Johnny Sargent.
Missy Smith of New Haven was
A reception was held at the Hart· the vocalist, and Dan Hayman of
ford
Community Center. Evelyn
Syracuse was the pianist. Guests
Roush
decorated the center for her
were registered by Heather R. Roush
granddaughter's
reception. Serving
of New Haven.
were
Tammy
Roush,
Shirley HesThe bride was escorted to the
son,'
Kathleen
Hamrick,
Joyce
altar by her father and given in marGillispie
and
Evelyn
Roush.
riag_e by her parents. Shannon
McComas' served as maid of honor,
The couple resides 10 Mason,
and · bride's maids were Rochelle W.Va.

DARRIN AND SARA CADE.

Wiseman-C.ade
PATRIOT - Sara Wiseman and
Darrin Cade were united in marriage
Dec. 9 at Sugar Creek Missionary
Baptist Church with Rev. Billy
Markins officiating.
Sarah is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Wiseman of Patriot.
O~n is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Cade of Waterloo.
Music was provided by Ruth
Swartzwelde~ on · the piano and
Charles Wiseman singing.
The maid of honor was Michele
, Casteel. Bride's mai!l were Shelly
Wilson and Ashley Swartzwelder.

Elizabeth Swartzwelder was flower
girl.
Best man was Doug Cade.
Groom's men were Chad Crank and
Jeremy Catalogna. Ushers were
Scott Wiseman and Matt Wiseman.
Junior Ushers were John Wiseman
and Justin Wiseman. Cody Myers
was ringbearer.
Taper lighters were Clint Wiseman and Dustin Holschun. Lindsay
Swanzwelder registered guests.
The church was decorated ·in red
and white poinsettias and ho}ly
vines.

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ARTHUR AND MARGARET HUNNEL

Rustemier-Hunnel
POMEROY -- Margaret Ellen
Rustemier and Anhur Anthony Hunnel exchanged wedding vows in an
outdoor ceremony Dec. 22 in the ·
garden counyard of the Marriott Inn,
Melbourne, Fla. Ei)een Milici perfanned the ceremony.
The b{ide is the daughter of
William and Catherine Rustemier of
Satellite Beach, Aa .. and .the groom
is the son of Donald. and Frances
Hunnel of Pomeroy.
The double ring service took
place in a gazebo decorated with an·
archway of white tulle, red flowers
and white and trailing ivy. Music
· was provided by a keyboard organist.
The bride was esconed _by her
father and given in marriage by her
parents. She wore a white lace tealength gown featuring a handkerchief panel skirt and a portrait neckline which ended in a fall of white
chiffon. She carried a bouquet of red
and white roses. Her veil was of
bridal illusion with a headband of
flowers.
The groom was dressed in a black
suit with a coordinating tie and a red

PETER AND TARA WOODS

Barber-Woods
POMEROY -- The First United ington. Bride's maids were Tara
Methodist Church of Nelsonville Wilson of The Plains, Carolyn Keith
.was the setting for the wedding of of Kettering, Janet Wuertzer of
· "fam Jo Barber, daughter of ~ichard Akron and Amy Woods of
:C.nd Judy Barber of Murray City, and Byesville. They wore floor length
l&gt;eter James Woods of Pomeroy, son gowns or hunter green velvet fash,
l&gt;f Regis and Marsha Woods of Cam- ioned with sweetheart necklines and
·bridge .
........
carried ann bouquets of white roses,
· The wedding took place on Dec. baby's breath and greenery, tied with
2 at 2:30p.m. with Rev. David How- burgundy ribbon.
~; II performing the double-ring cereScott Woods of Byesville was
many. Providing music for the wed- best man. Groom's men were Phil
ding were Tessie Stanley, Philip Ratliff of Huntington, W.Va., Mik~
:Vcnrick and Lynn Sullivan, organist. Chancey of Pomeroy, Trevor
The bride was given in marriage , Thomas of Hurricane and Mark Spiby her parents and escorted to the garelli of Bellaire.
iltar by, her father She wore an
Jennifer Gust and Erica Fee were
[vary stain gown fashioned with Oower girls, and Mtchael Gust and
Sweetheart neckline. short puffed Jack Beebe were ring bearers. All
sleeves. a basque waistline. and a are cousins of the bride. Julie Ven,. f.ouffant skirt with
beaded rick registered guests.
appliques .. The semi-cathedral !rain
A reception ~as held at Bak~r
was trimmed with ros~ttes and Center ballroom tn Athens, followedged in beaded schiffli lace.
ing the wedding. .
'
: She carried a cascading bouquet
The couples restdes tn Pomeroy,
of red and white roses with baby's Both Mr. and Mrs. Woods are teachbreath ll!fd greenery.
ers of Meigs High School. She is a
: Maid of honor was Tiffany Bar- graduate of Ohio University, and he
bllr, sister of the bride, of New Lex- is a graduate of Marshall University.
---Wedding
The Sunday . Times•Scntinel
·regards the weddings of Gallia,
, M~igs and Mason counties ~s news
4nd is happy to publish weddtng stories and photographs without
1
·Gharge.
:
" (fowevcr. wedding news must
mcec pnerll standards of timeli·
'neP. The 'JlCwspaper prefers to pub•· •lisb Kc:ounu•of Weildings as soon as ,
· ~iblt a.-.r ihe event.
·
:1
,y0 ·, ~ publiShed in die ·sunday
' edit_iqn die wedding mu_. · have
llkCn ~ W.idlin 60 days lii!OI' to
u. ~ion, 8lid .may ·be up .IQ
·aee words i' ~- Material for
~ 1111 Rher mUll be reuiveil'by
thl! ldttarial depilti~Jeill by 1'llan;~Jar, 4 p.m. prior 10 die dale of p~~.,:.

iil:llioll.

~~ l!!:~~~~~~ C~~~~~~~[IO

2342;

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published aa a free ser,vice to nOn·
profit grou(ll wishlna to announce
' "'·e etinp llild special events. The
Calendar Is not-desiped to promote sales ®lund-raisen of uy
·type. Items
prillted as space
~Its and cannot be gua~teed
to run a specific number of daya.
.,
•••
Sunday, Feb. 4
•••
;' GALLIPOLIS r Gallia County
Soccer Association meeting 2 p.m.
BQSsard Libracy.
•••
. MOD4ay, Feb. 5
•••
.
CHEsHIRE. TOPS meetini 10
to I I a.m. at &lt;;:heshire United
Methodist Church.

lire·

p.m.r,f~ythrough~~yat446. .

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,CiA{,.LIPOLIS FERRY. W. VL

/ Community Advi~Qry F.el of Abo

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policy----'
Those not nlaking the 60-day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photogt'llphs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white . or good. quality
·color, billfold ~ize or larger.
.
Poor quality pliOtogr~hs will not
~ ,il¢ceptcd. G~nerally, SJ18111ho!s or
tn...nt-developmg photos are nor of
~Je quality. .
~I ptaterja~subll!i~ .for publi·
Clll!on tSSub.JCCIIO edtttJ!g. · .
QuestionJ .may be ditllcled to the
ediiOrial ~nt frOm I .to 5

rose boutonniere.
Mark and Regina Rustemier,
brother and sister-in-law of the
bride; served as best man and
matron of honor. He wore a black
suit with a red rose boutonniere, and
she wore a red stl-eet-length dress
with a corsage of red and white
roses.
Following the wedding a dinner
was held in the inn. The dining table
was centered with red and white
roses and the unity canille used in
the ceremony. A two-tiered wedding
cake was trimmed with pearls and
topped with a Precio~ Moments
'
bride attd groom.
Those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. William Rustemier of Satellite
Beach, Fla.; Dr.. and Mrs. Mark
Rustemier: Eric and Bridget, of
Gainesville, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Geraghty; Dillon, Shannon and
Devin of Atlanta, Ga.; and Mr. and
Mrs. Don Hunnel of Pomeroy.
The couple resides at 721 Azure
Ave. NE, Ptllm Bay, Fla. The groom
is serving in the U.S. Air Foree and
is stationed at nearby Patrick Air

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p.m. in the administration building.
•••
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. POl~ PLEASANT, W.Va. Ltfe. Ltbeny and Freedom lllileting
7 p.m. Vocational school.
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Communiiy
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m.,, New
Li(e Lutheran Church.
•••
1\aetday, Feb. 6
·
••• •
GALLIPOLIS- Grieving Parents
Support Oro\111 7:30 p.m. New Life·
. Lutheran Churth. ·
.•••
,
GALLIPOLIS
AlcOholics
Anonymous meeting 8 . p:m. St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.
·
· •••
POINT PLEASANT, . W.Va.
NEpariiCop!l_cotics ChurchAnony_
,m~s_j:~O _p.m.

1

me

. As president of the Hospital Divistan of MedCath, BtU has had the
res.ponstbtbty_f~ buymg the land,
butldtng, equtp~tng and staffing the
Mc_AIIen factbty. It . opened for
pattents on J_an. 17, thts year.. Other
hospt~ls betng m cons~ctton or
plannmg stages are Ltnle Rock
Hean Hospttal located '" Ltttle
Rock, Arkansas, and Tucson Heart
Hospital in Tucson, Arizona.
A 1967 graduate of Pomeroy
High School, Bill holds a BS degree
from Ohio Nonhero, Ada; MT from

~

St. Rita's in Lima; an MS from Ohio
State University and an MBA from
Western Carolina University.
Bill WIIS administrator at. Mission·
Memorial Hospital in Asheville,
N.C., for several years before
• ~cepting a position as administrator
and vice president of Charlotte
Memorial Hospital, Charlotte, N.C.
He was ltiter hired at the University
of North 'Carolina Charlotte's Universi'ty Hospital as vice president
and administrator. During his tenure
ai University Hospital, he oversaw
seve(al depanment expansions and
rapid growth of the adjacent University Medical Park. He was also
active in community projects and
lead the University City Branch
YMCA and the University Area
Council. Bill joined MedCath in
March, 1994. and moved to
McAllen in December, 1994.
Residents of the Burlingham
, Community are tired of being flooded at every whipstitch and you, too,
might be \"cary of the nooding
which takes place on Route 33
through the community.
Too frequently over the years the
highway through the area is closed

'

,.

•

,.
KELLY SMITH AND RONNIE ROBINSON

Smith-Robinson
-· CHE!iHIRE. -- June Smith of
Cheshire announces the engagement
·of her daughter, Kelly Lyitn Smith,
to Ronnie Franklin Robinson, son of
'Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Robinson of
·Reedsville.
Smi~ is the granddaughter of
Elizabeth Johnson of Columbus and
.!he late Charles Johnson. She graduated frpm Meigs High School and is

employed by Vaughan's Cardinal of
Middleport.
Robinson is the grandson of
Frank and Iva Upton of Reedsville,
and the late Raben and Nina Robinson. He graduated from Eastern
High School and is employed by
Weber Construction of Reedsville.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

I

Please stap by one of the loca,&gt;tions and sign a reque'l for help a)
soon as possible so thiit' the Prcij«l
can move forward •. Keep, \n mip4
the squeaky wheel does get· the oil'
and some "oil" is certainly ·n~ed, i6
Burlingham.
·l

;~~:~y's

I

I know. I hate the weather too.
But I'm gonna count on you to keep
smiling.

.'

more washing to try and remove the'

mildew odor and stain. However, it
lowered'the level in the irOning box..
Winter time sees less jroning
done 'by . me than summer. Around
oven is "not their home, mos.t of our winter clothes are
favorite." I'll clean sweat shirts/sweaters and sweat
an oven any day pants which I don't iron. Summe~
(even one that is 'have the tee shirts, shorts ~ all th~
not self-cleaning) other cotton blended fabri'cs that
over a pile of iron- need a little touch up, \)1' m~t of u$
ing. I must inherit older generation feel it is necessary.
that dislike from I've noticed more and moni of th~
my mother. I younger people aren't ironing any:
i
remember a large thing. How I envy. their oblivion tQ
cardboard bo• which held mother's wrinkles.
'
)
ironing. It was always full and never
My son has inherited "everything
emptied cOmpletely. We outgrew
needs to be ironed," though. He arisl
some of the clothes in that box
es a few minutes early each day and
before they were ever ironed. Oh, irons a shirt to wear to wortc. He said
mother ironed a lot, but only items he would rather do that than speOfj
tftat were needed immediately. In
-an hour ironing shirt.~ and pressing
her defense, she didn't have much pants on his days off.
1
ti'mc to iron with a family of si• plus
I have a shon clothes bar in our
all the ·other farm-life duties, but I
laundry
room where I hang clotheS
know for a fact she didn't like to
coming out of the dryer. ·w!len the
iron.
rack become full, I know it is time td
When I was a young wife, my
iron. That is whe11.l go i'nto my, too
husband would always know when
busy routine: I clean out lhc refri'ger•
I'd been ironing all afternoon. He
I ·go to the dentist for a
would come home from work and alar;
canal; I clean the bathroi&gt;ms; I wat
utter some innocuous comment such
all the plants inside and ou~; I invit
as what a lovely day it was, and I'd
people over for dinner 'sb I don'
.snap, . "Anll, just what is so lovely have time to iron that day; I make aP:
about it?" Yes, he could recognize
the business teleph&lt;'ne calls I'v'r.
my post-ironing syndrome, .
been delaying; I write some letters; 1:
Before perma-presscd came upon ta[le a trip; I go shopping: I plant thi!:
the scene in men's . trousers, I had . garden; and th.en finally, ~int :
many pairs of pant creasers. That . unable to delay it any longer, l'havt:
helped cut down on the .ironing time to •ron. ·
~ ) . ,
J
a bit, but niy vote goes to permaI wish I could snatch clp~s t:ighf;
pressed fabric as the best invention out of the dryer and smooth them"
in my life time! I still iron/ nearly onto hangers and say, "Don't !heY'
everything, but it doesn't take the look great?" I know no one . wilf
time I felt it previously .wasted.
know, or care, I00 years 'from tOdai
'
.
.
I remember my mother and whether or not sornethin&amp; w~
grandmother heating flat irons on ironed; but I know t~y 1\114 1 have'
the wood stove to do their ironing. to iron it. And, gee', to iliin~ ·J could.
Mother always SpriJIIded the clothes have· been having fun cl~ina thG,
vtith water the night before she oven.
·
"
planned to iron, and rolled them up
·Dululor . . , . • ._ hi11hi~---.
lisfldy •to hold dte ·molsture inside. . 1...-.ty
"' _...........
_ . . ,_ .........
.......
_
.....
.......
i .
~uionally, she wouldll't' iron
_...,...,..,. . . ONo ......... liotait
wt\en she planned and the clothes
would mildew. That necessitated
'

rooi

.,.,...

.

some off.
job (it could tum into full-time), ani!
Dear Ann Landers: I think you keep an eye open for something betmight want to do a little more ter. Follow up each and every lead,
research on the middle class. My and keep your fingers cro~sed. I'll
wife and I are both professionals cross mine for you, too.
!
with college degrees and post- gradDear Ann Landers: I enjoy th!:
uate degrees. We held well -paying, sayings you have printed in yo~
full-time jobs until two years ago. column from the old Bunna Shave
Since 'then , we have been ·able to signs. They bring back some worifind only pan-time and minimum- derful memories of the trips we u5e_ll
wage work. Our rejection letters say to make in our old Tin Lizzie. Here'ti
o,fe ljfC "overqualified."
one I recall after almost 60 yeari.
Ann. we are in the middle of a Please print it. -- Ruth in Fresn!3.
serious recession, and the so-called Calif.
middle-class professionals have
Dear Ruth: Same here. We used
been hit hard . Many of us are strug- to see those signs between Siou~
gling to survive. The trend ·O f City and Omaha. Here's yours : :
employers is to hire several panGrandpa's whiskers, old ani!
·
•
time workers to replace full -time gray,
workers. That means they don't
Often get in Grandma's way.
have to pay benefits, including medOnce she chewed them in her
ical insurance. Thts is devastating to sleep.
i
people in our position.
Thinking they were shredde4
I manage to stay fairly upbeat, wheat.
•
but I'm constantly fighting depres'•
sion. It's getting awfully hard to
Send questions to Ann Lande~
keep my chin up. Any ideas? --Sur- Creators Syndical~, 5777 W. CeJt
viving in Sonora. Calif.
.
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeld,
,
Dear Sonora: You and mil !tons of
Calif. 90045
•
others. Hang on to your part-time
•
·•

Online rather than in line for Girl Scout cookies ·
By DOUG DURFEE
The Detroit News
The days of parents whining,
wheedling and begging co-workers
to buy Girl Scout cookies could be
numbered.
Like spiders seeking food, Girl
Scouts are going to the web in the
1\unt for the h~ngry. But at least for
now, only the Patriot Trails 1Girl
Scout Council in Boston can sell
you cookies on a computer.
The Boston scouts have developed a web site to sell cookies on the
Internet using Merchant Solution, a
software program designed by Open
Market of'Cambridge, Mass. A web
site is an address that displays information.

The $20,000 program is kind of a
one-stop shopping store that ·allows
customers to order cookies and have
them shipped. It also figures sales
tax and shipping'costs. Shipping will
cost $3.50 for the first three box.es
and 50 cents a box thereafter.
"We donated the program to support a good cause and to show folks
that things are being bought and sold
on the Internet," says Kim King,
spokeswoman for Open Market, the
finn that designed the software.
The' firm is not giving the program to other troops because of the
the e•pense, she says.
•
Elaine Ballenger of the Michigan
Metro Girl Scout Council in Detroit
says the state group is developing its

own web site for the Internet, but
doesn 't know if cookie sales will be
pan of it.
"We're hoping to have it up and
running in two to three weeks," she
said.
·
·
Ki'ng says the Boston Girl Scouts
don't want to put a crimp in sales for
sister scouts·elsewhere. She s~y s the
Cookie Store tells browsers "to
please support your local Girl
Scouts first."
But she says the scouts have a
market penetration of 8- I 0 percent
in the average community and the
web site could increase sales.
Consumers worrjed about putting
their credit card numbers on the Net
shouldn't be, King says. She says.

buying through the Net is no different from making credit card purchases to home shopping shows op
televisi on.

"The page is on a secure file
server so there is sec uriiy on both
ends." she says.
Selling Girl Scout cookies on the
Net is just the first step for Ope'n
Market, a privately held company
started 18 months ago. King says "a

bunch of consumer companies ~' ·

have purchased the software so they
can begin selling on the Net. " We
e&lt;pect to make announcements in
the next two to three weeks."
'
The address to buy Girl Seoul
cookies through the Internet is ~
http:(slash)(slash)www.plgirlscouts.or
g

-

Founder's Week Bible Conference to be broadcast locally
GALLIPOLIS - With past conferences as a barometer, Moody Bible
Institute officials anticipate an
aggregate attendance of 40,000 at
their annual Founder's Week Bible
Conference.
The conference runs Feb. 5
through 10 at Chicago 's Moody
Memorial Church. All of the conference sessions will be carried live on
91.7 FM, the local broadcast outlet
for the M.ood J3roadcasting Network
in Gallipolis.
MBI holds its Founder's Week
Conference each year during the
week of Feb. 5, binhday of the

Houdas~;l wh~

Bob
has been battling a variety of illoess+
es for the past four years is cumntlt
residing at the Rock Springs Rehat
bilitation Center.
l
Bob has shown a lot of positiv~
attitude and courage in facing his
problems. He does waillto thank all
of you for the phone calls, cards and
prayers. You've helped him a great
deal.
•
-Incidentally, the Pomeroy High
School Class of 1952 apparently haf
a progrii!D of support going. He't
been heating from so many of hii
classmates from that graduating
class. That, too, bas been encoura~
ing.

Ironing vs. oven cleaning;
By DOROTHY SAYRE
Probably the least favorite household chore I've ever e•perienced is
ironing. Most women, I think, would
say cleaning the

By ANN LANDERS
bear Ann Landers: I agree with
you that children today are showered with too many things. My husband and I raised six. children, who
are now grown and have children of
their own. The difference between
what our kids had when they were
growing up and what their childrep
have is depressing.
I returned {rom baby-sitting my
daughter's family a few days ago
and decided. I should stan a new
organization. I will name it "GAG."
J'his stands for Grandparents
·
Against Glop.
My grandchildren's playroom
looks like a New York toy store,
jammed with playthings and books.
Toys and 'gadgets spill out of their
closets. The drawers in their rooms

.

Mr. and Mrs. Moore recently
returned from a trip to McAllen,
Texas, where they visited with Bill
and his wife, Sandra, having gone
.especially for the ribbon cutting ceremony at the'McAIIen Hean Hospital.
The McAllen Hospital was bui It
through a coalition of Rio Grande
Valley doctors and the North Carolina-based MedCath Inc, The new 60bed hospital will specialize in cardiolo~y and prevention of bean disease. It is the only "free Slanding"
bean hospital in the United States
and the second in the world, the
other being located in Gennany.

c~ ­

can't be closed because !he kids
have m&lt;ire clothes than they can
hold. So far as I know, the children
,aren't centipedes, yet they each have
at least SO paus· of socks.
The parents keep complaining
that money is tight, but they don 't
seem to realize that they would have
more money, less stress and confusion, more time and better balanced
kids if they eliminated SO petcent of
the glop.
I love to be with my grandchildren. but I find it very hard to deal
with the 'e•cess. There are so many
· underprivileged children who don 't
have the bare necessities, and seeing
these children, so over-indulged,
makes me sad. Any comment? -- ·
Gagging in Green Bay
Dear Gagging Grandma: Since
paren\s have the las! word, you can
do little about this over-indulgence
ex.cept vow not to add to it.
You might, however, suggest that
the parents encourage the children to
give several dozen toys to the underprivileged youngsters in town . Tl)ey
can call the Salvation Anny, which
collects toys for children, and drop

school's founder, evangelist D.L.
Moody. The event serves as a type of
homecoming for MBI alumni and
friends. Since MBI trains pastors,
missionaries and ' oiher Christian
workers for positions world-wide,
guests come from around the world
and give the event an international
flavor.
Several long-time favorite speakers arc scheduled to address this
year 's confererce: Tony Evans, Stuart Briscoe, E.V. Hill, and Joni
Eareckson Tada. Also included on
this year's schedule are Ron Hutchcraft, Haddon Robinson. Alistair

Begg and David Ring.
Moody's broadcast facility at
Gallipolis has been broadcasting
Christian radio programmin~. originating from its Chicago studios
since the spring of 1994. Transmitting with a power of 50 watts, 24hours a day on 91.7 FM, Moody's
facility ill Gallipolis is actually a
satellite-fed translator of WGNR.
Monee-Chicago, Ill. Gallipolis is
one of 3 I so-called "Satellators"
serving communities across Nonh
America.
These stations broadcast hundreds of Bible messages. children's

...,

Meigs community calendar
Tbe Community Calendar is
SYRACUSE -- Sutton Township
published as a free service to non- trustees will meet M.. nday, 7:30
HILLARY BOSTIC AND JEFFREY KNOTTS
profit groups wishing to announce p.m. Syracuse municipal building .
meeting and spedal events. The
CHESTER-- Chester PTO.memcalendar is not designed to pro·
mote sal~ or fund raisers or any bers are invited to attend an· open
GALLIPOLIS - Hillary Bostic of Gallia Academy High School.
type. I..,ms are printed as space forum of the Eastern Local School
and Jeffrey Knotts announce their
pennits 8!Jd cunot be guaranteed Board at the Chester Elementary
engagement.
Knotts is the son of Ronald to run a specific number of days. , School Monday, 6:30 p.m. A short
Bostic is the daughter of Rodger Knotts Jr. and Karen Brown both of
PTO meeting will follow.
Bostic of Gallipolis and Francis Phi- Gallipolis. He is a graduate of Galli a MONDAY
labaun of Ironton. She is a graduate Academy High Sc~Jool .
LETART FALLS -- The Letart TUESDAY
POMEROY -- Pomeroy ElemenFalls Elementary School PTO will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. Parents and tary PTO will meet Tuesday, 1 p.m.,
at the scbool gym. All interested parteachers are asked to attend.
ents are urged to attend.
CARPENTER
Columbia
GALLIPOLIS - Southeastern were Christina Adkins, Toyia Ban- Township Trustees will meet Mon- WEDNESDAY
RACINE -- Southern Local
Business College has released the gura, Kim Blackburn, Bethany day, 1 p.m at. the fire station.
Building Committee meeting
names 6f students. on the achieve- Blake, Crystal Bowens, Angela
Wednesday. 5 p.m. at the high
PAGEVILLE
-Scipio
Township
inent list and graduates for fall quar- Bunch. Loraine Cochran, Christie
school.
All district residents welTrustees,
6:30
Monday
at
the
!cr.
Coffee, Janice Durst, Kelly Hamcome.
Pageville
township
hall.
Those students on the achieve- mond, Lisa Hawley, Lee Henderson,
mcntlist with a 4.0 grade point aver- , Brigit_ Hoga~, Yeronica Holcomb,
age were Lisa Beck, Sara Bratton, Chasuty Jamtsoh. Debra McAihster,
Brenda B.urris, Genia ·Campbell, Toni McCoy, Susan Page, Mtchelle
bianc Carper, Janet Coen, Vonzell Stov.er and Hershel
Coley, Kiltlty Cottrell, Kathy Davis, White.
Those students receiving degrees
feresa Davis, Mona Durst. Ernie
3, is the nation's largest and oldest
Flora, Brandy Gilliam, Lisa Hud- following fall quaner Dec. 22 were By GENE SLOAN
(since 1829). New digs this year: the
USA
TODAY
nail , Bndgett Mayes, Tonda .Mead- Laura Batchelor with an associate's
Forget the blizzard. Bring on the 10-acre. Convention Center, giving
ows, Megan· McGraw, Chrissy degree in bll!;iness administration;
organizers nearly twice the space
McGuire, Dianna McQIIeen, Rae- Tammy Bobb of Po,meroy, with an blossoms.
The City of Brotherly Love is that they had at the Civic Center.
lenc Northup, Jaae Polk, Jerry associate's degree in accounting;
Roberts, Robin RQ11Ch, Lori Sax.on, Mona Dur~t of Bidwell, with an !!Citing ·ready for a welcome. respite
from one of the East's most brutal
Sherry Sayre,:. KriFti Shane, April associate'~ degree_·llt_elleculive,secStinson, Tany~ -,Sturgeon, Patty retanal wtth a maJor 10 medtcal sec- winters on record with a bigger and
Philadelphia
Thomas, · Michelle Ward and Jen- retary; Sara Eades of Mtddleport, better-than-ever
nifer Weiscnd. ,
with an associate's degree in busi- Rower Show.
"There are some years where
All Natu111l T·LiteTM
: Students achieving a 3Sor better ness ildministrati~; Pamela Gbce.n
people !'Cally need a flower show.
Willi
Chromium PlcoiiNite
grade point average were Rachel of Pom_eroy, _wtth an ~s~oct~te s
IJ'his is one of them, " says Mike
Jlales. Tammy Bobb, Heather Con- degree- tn busmess admmtstratton;
(de, Rosemary Hayman, Ingrid Teresa Oliver of Point Pleasant, McGrath, editor of Organic GardenLawren~. Shelley Lyons, Angela W.Va., with an assoc:iate's degree in ing magazine.
The Philly show, Feb. 25-March
fowers, Rita Rogers, Angela Shel- accounting: Jan~ Polk . of P~int
1on, Angela Vance and Tammy Pleasant, wtth a dtploma m medtcal
White.
office secretary; and Lon Sax.on of
; Those students who acquired a Gallipolis, with a diploma in data'
3'.0 or better grade point average entry speciatist.

Bostic-Knotts

Bears for AU Occasions

~~j)'AJ~pS
drugs,,~~~u~Sf)ll~nrer:
ysA fOPAY
.
', WASHINGTON .- Compelling
evidence that a new class of drugs
~ally can extend the .lives of AIDS
patients Thurs,day capped a meeting
tJ!at bi'Oiclght the most hopeful news
in years.
·
; The breakthrough adds to excite~nl about the drugs called protease
inhibitors.
"There's no question this is an
ijnJ11l11811~ llep," said Dr. Anthony
fauci, head of the National Institute
elf AllerJY
Diseases.
. and Infectious
.
.

ence on Retroviruses and OP.JIOI'tunistlc Infections.
·
Abbott Laboratories' sevenmonth Sludy of ritonavir found that
it cut the death mte in half among
patients with advanced AIDS, said
Dr. John .Leonard of Abbott.
' The benefit, even if it turns out to
be temporary, "clearly goes well
beyond whit's currently available,"
he said.
Protease inhibitors block an
enzyme that the AIDS virus needs to
reproduce.

AND

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(FIIULY PUmCI)

10.5 Mon. thru Sat.
Open Sun. 1-5 p.m.

on Rt. 7

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--

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Also Open by A~ntmtont.l
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'
-

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* New

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2 mites North of~.,

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Philadelphia prepares for
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FRIDAY -SIMPSON, M.D.

Better Living, Naturally

Valentine
Bears

'Business college graduates
'honor students announced

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IN 3 DAYS

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Coming in
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�I

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

~c

Sunday, February 4,1

Mitchells to mark 43rd
•

. .

1

.

MARTIN AND JUDY HASH

· -~Hashes

to observe 40th

PORTER - Mr. and Mrs. Manin
Has h will celebrate their 40th wedding: anniversary with a recepti2n in
their honor from 2 to 4 p.m., Feb. II
at Trinity United Methodist Church
in Porter, hosted by their children.
They were married Feb. 3, 1956
in .Ri chmond, Ind. Judy is the
daughicr of the Late Mildred · and
Lowell Fish of Bidwell, and a 1956
graduate of Bidwell High School .

Manin is the son of the late Glenn
and Luvina Hash of Bidwell and a
1957 graduate of Bidwell High
School.
They are the parents of Gwen
"Robbie" Phillips of Bidwell, Many
"Pam" Hash of South Point, Becky
"Greg" Gardner of Spencerville and
Amy of Bidwell. They are the
grandparents of nine grandchildren.
The couple requests no gifts.

LANGSVILLE •• Delben and
Katherine Mitchell observed their
43rd wedding anniversary Thursday.
The couple was married Feb. I,
19S3 ·at Middlepon.
They are the . parents of three

sons, Kenneth of Valdosta, Ga., Paul
Davis of Pomeroy, and Edward of
Ch~leston, S.C.; and. a daughter,
Teresa Chandler of Ashford, W.Va.
They also have seven grandchildren.

By
GILLES
Mltrln 'lrid~Pendent Journal
-- In " Ferndale," an eccentric Marin, Calif., psychotherapist is experimenting with a new treatment called Net-therapy, which uses the Internet to
i!Apfove his patients' communicati&lt;?n skills.
· Along the way, Dr. Randolph Mix must deal with such crises as mysterious comas, evil twins-•JKI forbidden romances.
If " Ferndale" sounds like a soap opera, that's because it is. But the only
way 10 gel to the fictional treatment center is through a computer modem : It
exists only in cyberspace.
Find it on the Wol-ld Wide Web at http:(slash)(slash)www.ferndale.com
Creator Tom Arriola says it's the first truly interactive soap opera. EarliCif'lllltempts io create on-line dramas, such as "The Spot," fall shon ,on plot
and audienoe participation, he says.
"What differentiates Ferndale from any other entenainment web site is
th!' fact that it has a.personality and is plot-driven, Arriola says.
, Howard Cushnir, a Sebastepol, Calif., screenwriter with movie and tele1Ctfi.on experience, has written a loose script, while impromptu performances
~~~~ he provided by the cast of 13 actors.
·
· " We have real characters in real soap opera sitoations who go live every
day," Arriola says. "Macho bikers, addicted housewive~, zoned-out rock

D&amp;.ooTT -

DEAR DR. GOTT: 'IWo years
ago, my 50-year-old daughter had a
hysterectomy. Since t!Jen. she has
PETE!R... · ·.. ·
had a bladder problem. She will be
fine for a while 'and therl, without
''I
'"
"'
warning, she will lose urine. This is
very embarrassing for a working
woman. Her dactor has · prescribed .
various · medications and exercises
. without improvement. Can this
ti .
problem be the ,result of the surgery
and, if so, what can be done 10 cor- the lesions can be trellt~d wit~
rect it? · ' .
;: ,, cautery or hot ~all wa"tef gargles. ' ·
QBAR REAbER: A woman's .
To give you more infonnation~ I.
urinary· continence depends on the .am sending you a free i:'opy ol mY
I' angle of the .urethra (the tube
ltealth Report "Viruses and Cd'
through which urine passes) as it . oer."
leaves the' bladdoir. ; This angle is ·
. •
' ·' '·
1often affected by·' gynecological
abno!lllalities, such liS a cystocele )
(dropped uterus]. It can also be
affected by ~urgeri, especially hys.
'
terectomy.
&lt;•
ln'your daughter's c.asi:,.ihe most
likely exp!arnition for her problem is
(
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that she is periodically incontinent
\
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BY
THE
obtain a second opinion from a urol- '
In Stock · .:~
ogist, because she,may require fur- !
. ther surgery. This would be a small '
WAVERLY
price tO pay to reeain COntrol of her I
bladder function.
.
., . LAURA ASHLEY :.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I'm a female
"
in my 50s. In the past two. yeiiJ:S, I "
••
Retail
$30.99
Yd.
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have been getting ulcers in my
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throat off and on. The doctor gives
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appear again. My doctor says it's
just a virus. What could be the real
cause?
LARGE SBJPMENT
DEAR READER: Repeated
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have many causes, including llerpes
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The next time you dtlerience
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Stripes, Moirel ' '
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For some pe·aple, the brain
tells time while sleeping

By ROGER MUNNS
teers, aged 19 through 62, who
Aaaoclalacl Press Writer
claimed they had an internal alarm.
DECORAH, Iowa (AP)
Each was asked to set atime to wake
You're in a strange place, there's no up without any -ellternal alarms.
alarm clock and it's imponant to Each was given three tries, thus .prowake up early.
viding 45 tests, and some varied the
Do you stay ·up all night? Luther wake-up time at least once.
College Professor Bill Moorcroft
In a dcpanure from other tests,
said many people have discovered a each panicipant wore a Wrist sensor
better way ~ the brain's own no- called an actigraph, which records
cl.ock alarm.
movement every minure .. The data
"Not everybody CliJI ,do it. There 'produced by the sensor showed
are some who need three alarin exactly when the subject woke up.
clocks and a bucket of ice to get up. "{here were 44 usable sets of data;
But many people re~lly can do it on , the actigraph malfunctioned on the
!heir own," Moorcroft said. ·
. •' remaining test.
That's one view.
Of those 44 nights, 18 of the subCritics say it's poppycock.
jects awoke IS minutes or less
"This is an old wives' taiF. Peo- before the stated time. Another 10
pie have studied this since the were late by no more than 15 min1920s.
,
•
utes.
"They say they can wake up any
"Fifteen minutes is pretty strintime they want,' but what it comes gent criteria, given that you're sleepdown to is, all the evidence comes ing six, seven, maybe eight hours. I
from their own repons. You don't think that's pretty good. If you give
have any objeciive statistics," said them a 30-minute window, you get
Harold Zepelin, a professor of psy- another seven. That makes 80 perchology at Oakland University in cent within a half-hour of the tarRochester, Mich,
get," said. Moorcroft. .
Some people, he said, might be
."The interestil)g thing, and we
.,.;]l,.:"l&gt;\,i\'1!-'-trJ·. •~aul AND EVELYN SPENCER
able to wake up if they have a regu- . didn't expect this, is that the ones
hir sleep pattern and if their intended who had one or more different times
wake-up time corresponds to the were more· successful than those
.
t. ftJPPER's ' PLAINS ., Guy and Larry cif Tuppers Plains. They have cycles of rapid eye movemeRI sleep. who had the same time. I have no
Evelyn Spencer · &lt;if Tuppers Plains, seven gran~children, Angie Taylor REM occurs every 80 to 100 min- idea why. It's counterintuitive," he
said.
e~lcbrf tc~ . 1h9ir 50th wedding and Chris Spencer of Columbus, utes.
"I
had
one
guy
who
Said
he
could
·
The results wo11ld be ev.en more
aq'iuversary Fnday woth ·a famoly Larry Bryan o{ Little Hocking,
wake
up
within
five
minutes
of
his
impressfve,
he said, if it hadn't been
dihn,cr at the home of Larry and Pat Karen Spencer of Pensacola, Aa.,
designated
time.'
So
I
asked
him
to
for
one
volunteer
who missed all of
, S ~nccr in Tuppers Plains.
Debbie Clements of Amber, Olcla.
change
the
time,
and
he
was
an
hour
his
times.
"There
was one guy who
. ··Married on Feb. 2. 1956 in Cat- and Michael and James Co. of
was not very good. He woke up, but
Uolsbtorg, K)'., they are the parents of Edmond, Okla.; and two greai- and a half long," Zepelin said.
Such
has
been
the
debate
for
he
was never close to the target," he
.children, Roger of Marietta; granddaughters, Allie SJ!Cncer and
years.
said.
Coc of Ed mood, Okla. ; and Kiara Taylor.
Greg Mader, an official for the
Moorcroft said the results show
American Sleep. Disqrder Associa-• that the ·brain can sometimes do
lion in Rocheste.r, Minn., said the things better during sleep than when
topic has been batted back and fonh the person is awake. It wouldn't surin the group's periodical Sleep. ·
prise him, he said, that humans
Moorcroft . said he has new evolved with an internal alarm.
ammunition.
"Think about it. Alarm clocks are
"The problem with other surveys . a fairly recent invention. Going back
is, you ask people the results but to cave man times, if you're sleeping
you're never sure they tell the in a vulnerable place, you want to
truth," he said.
get out of there before dawn. Tho:&gt;je
So he devised an exper·iment to humans would have survived and
take the self-reponing away.
passed on the genes of'this trait," he
Moorcroft recruited 15 voluo- said.

rs· to celebrate 50th

---News

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Playing with and chasing

your pet all-around the yard.

' .
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1,, ,

elebtating
eagan's
5th birthday

-~y JEFF WILSON

.
asoclated Preas Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - On
nald R,eagan's JISth birthday
sday; fio~se Speaker Newt Ginich, retired Gen. Colin Powell and
others will celebrate the milei&gt;ne at the restaurant where Reagan
~opos'!d to his wife.
·
But Reagan; whci would call the ·
~casion "the 46th anniversary of
~Y 39t~ binhday," won't be there.
, 11t's the latest agonizing sign that
... zheimer's c;lisease may be taking a
tl1'1 qo .R..9~ald .Wilson Reagan, the
o#tion 's 40ih chief executive.
,; Known as Dutch, The Gipper and
'tiJe Great CQihmunicator, Reagan is
~ly seen these days by a few
fhends"staff 1\fld family. . ·
;: The public hasn 't seen him since
~disclOsed IS months ago in a lett'r th1tt he has Alzheimer's disease
"!Jd tiC:' was beginning "the journey
1~1 will lead me into the sunset of
19~ life ."
'IThe Reagan family wants the
Gal1111 County Girl Scouts recently held 11 Cookie Crunch It Big Be11r, to ldck-off their cookie aale.
Jorld to remember the avuncular,
Contestllnta -re asked to eat as many cookies aa they coultl In three minutes. The winners and
~!tty Reagan rather than a man with
those participating were front left, Richard Mudd, Tom Grube, Bob Merry, aacond place end Bill
ajjn""'ory-sapping disease.
Medley; 11nd back left, D11rrell Detty, first place, Dwayne Beaver, Lynn Alban and Jim Skidmore, third
•i "President Reagan is not complace.
ffytable attending large public
clients . :any longer," said spokesoman Joanne Drake, who faithfulrelays1y~~t inf~~llt\on about
agan: llc 'comes td hos ·Century
terrazzo nooring was. cleaned and
Qi:y office every day, plays golf and 1 C~tlnued from page B~1
The exterior of the building was
polished. wood trim and moldings power washed and remonared, a
i~t' doinj 'Well.''
· · ·
:rhe ceiling was then painted in a were refinished, and carpeting was
new roof was put on, and the ornaW'l plan to play golf with Ronald · bayberry color. one of three colors added in one area.
mental stone work on the top of the
~agan on his 85th binhday.'' said
used for both the interior and exteriHanging on the lobby wall is a
'&gt;~iness,nan and Reagan friend or finish . Teal and cream are the oth- framed'l913 Racine Home Bank cal- building was reconstructed. Trim
paint in the accent colors of bayber~wrick M. Cook.
.
.. er featured colors.
endar which was found in the attic. It
ry,
teal and cream gave the exterior
,,paughter Maureen Reagan saod a
The oak counters were refinished, lists the original board of directors,
an
attractive
finishing touch.
fc""tnonths ago her father and the
as was the ornamental -irpnwork W. A. Ellis, .president; LA. Weaver,
And
today
a building destined for
h .nily are "very well aware" of hos
around the counter and cages. Sever- vice president; C. B. Crow, cashier;
A~~eim~r ' s di~casc, an irreversible
al pieces of the original frosted glass and H. A Parr, H. K. ·Coe, Richard demolition just a year ago has been
,,r!Jrologocal dosorder that destroys
used in sections of the cage were Allen, J: M.
, John Philson, restored and the Proffitts can look
with pride to their accomplishment.
th~ brain's .memory cells.
recovered. and ·although there arc a and
couple of cracks, were put back in
!Reagan and former first lady
Nancy Reagan dechnc mtervoew
place. The original teller and cashier
re~uests. ,
windows were installed.
tOn Tuesday, Mrs. Reagan will
For energy efficiency new winh~d. a Sl •.QOO-a-plate. bonhday celedows of- the original design were
brf.UOn at Chasen s restaurant. ' inst~lled. In a concealed room under
wllerc Reagan proposed to her m
the stairwell a new furnace was
installed to replace an old and ugly
I~2. Closed last April, the legenpary folm mdustry eatery ts
overhead heater.

ij

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continue iller involvement
1C ~~1~:~~~:/S~n!. oihers Foundation
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Skip's Out of Town At

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fx-(f'
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GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Junior Fair Board has announced
a change in the Miss Gallia County
Junior Fair Queen pageant
Beginning this year the pageant
will add one independent fair queen
candidate slot for girls who are a resident of Gallia County but attend a
high school outside of Gallia County. The independent candidate slot
will be open to girls who are juniors
or seniors between the ages of 16
and 19.

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All Landry
judged on interviews, a 1
and an evening-gown competition.
wasMiss Kansas USA, Danielle Boatwright.
Tertne!;see USA. WIIS named second runner-up.
.·winners fFCCive more than $207,000 in cash and prizes,
includlin~: ;a ~;ooo· employment contract and cash prizes from several com-

: PLANNEDP~NTHQOD

Miss Gallia County
queen pageant adds
new slot for contestants .

original

L~~~~~a: ~USAdcfeated 50 other eon-

tesl;lnts t\

submitted within 30 days of
occurrence. All binhdays must ·be
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

II e!• Page 115

medical repons and fake photographs.
" We 've got on-line actors who are trained in on-line acting - these are
the ftrst professional on-line actors in history."
·
Arriola first used such phony documents in his ftrst on-line drama" oa dill
Web, " The Criine Scene Evidence File," which still atlrllets up to 100,000
Websurfers per day.
In the case of "Crime Scene," Arriola created a phony coroner's RpOrt
about a murder.
" It almost got me put in jail it was so true," Arriola says. Local law
enforcement agencies had to be convinced the Web site was ftction.
"It's sometlling I call 'faction ,"' Arriola says. "There's got to be evidence for it to be belie vable."
" Crime
Scene"
can
be
visited
at
hllp: (slash)(slash)www.quest.net(slash)crime.
Just like its televised cousins, "Ferndale" will be supponed by advenising. There 's no cost to participate as an audience member.
Arriola says there's ample reason to believe soap opera will thrive in
cyberspace, since the idiom successfully made the transition from radio to
television.
" If it's as interactive as it's supposed to be, it will go far beyond what
soap operas have done so far," Arriola says.

Restoration .. · - - - - - - - - - -

!sOU"fH PADRE ISLAND. Texas (AP) All Landry; a junior at the University ofSouthw,.locr·n 'j..ouisiana, has been crowned Miss

b~

musicians - they' ve all found their way to Ferndale."
For soap opertf fans who' ve longed to tell the ever-malevolent Erica of
"All My Children " what a witch she is, " Ferndale" will be a dream come
true. Each day, the actors enter on-line chat rooms in character to interact
with the audience.
Brendie Bassman, a manufacturer's representative in Scottsdale, Ariz .,
says she can't wait to log on to "Ferndale."
"I used to watch soaps on TV, but now that I usc the computer, I don't,"
Bassman says. "I'm excited.
"It's tlerfect for my generation because we're all on Prozac and suffering
from empty-nest syndrome," she laughs.
However, some experienced "Net surfers " wonder whether the idea of an
Internet soap opera isn't redundant.
Arriola says the characters will improvisationally surf the Internet to
respond to queries in their personal e-mail 'addresses or meet people who
might help the progress of their cyhcnhcrapy.
"They all want suggestions from the Web audience on how to get on with
their lives," Arriola says. "You can't help but lind a favorite character to
chat with daily from this concoction of personalities."
In addition to the audience interaction. a little more realism will be added
to the Web site with authentic-looking documents such as police repons,

.-:-----------Cookie crunch-----.

crowned Miss USA

policy-~-

In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel ·.will not accept weddings after .
60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and'other news
anicles iri the society section must

\

SALE··

I

~ ' a.._,~

Interactive
soap
opera
takes
·
s
tab
at
Net-therapy
on
the
Web
JoHN

acrrr.·M.D.

DI;LBERT AND KATHERINE MITCHELL

Pomeroy~ Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaeant, WV

'-"nday, February 4, 1196

Hystere.ctomy may/ -l
affect .bladder contror .·t~
By PETER H: GOTT, M.'D.

.

-See pu~le on page 06
I

lo.l

'·'

•

�•
•

Entertain~nent
People in the news

LQS ANGELES (AP)
Chris Farley's · thing ~ Quayle and other Republicans only dream about: butt heads with
parochial school teachers didn' t appreciate his earli- Murphy Brown on 1V.
est attempt at humor, but that only encouraged him.
Gingrich plays himseJf on the Candice Bergen siu:om in a scene where he
"I'll never forget that first laugh," said Farley, confronts the brassy 1V joumllist backstage after she mocks lijnr'at a Wish·
who displays his hyperactive brand of physical com- ington roast.
edy in his'new film, "Black Sheep."
No sttanger to wc;.rking in front of 1V cameras, Gingrich is scheduled to
"The nun came over to my desk to yell at me for tape his pan Tuesday during a Los Angeles visit for Ronald Reagan's 8Sth
something ansi I said, 'G~. your hair smells terrific,' birthday pany, CBS said Friday. No broadcast date was announCed.
like in that commercial," said Farley1 31. " Well, all
"Murphy Brown" has had less friendly brushes with jloliticians. ln 1992,
the kids laughed hysterically, and it was like a reve- the series shot back at then Vice President Quayle after he condemned Murlation."
phy's unwed motiJerhood.
·
The perfopner, who rose to popularity during his
five-year stint on "Saturday Night Live," teams up
· NEW YORK (AP) - Gillian Anderso~ is staning to get her share of
· Newt Glngrlnch with former " SNL" co-star David Spade in " Black recognition for the show that launohed co-star David Duchovny to quick
1
Sheep." The duo appeared in last year's "Tommy fame.
.
•
The acttess who plays skeptical FBI scientist Dana Scully opposite
Boy."
·
.
•
Farley, who as a teen-ager idolized comedians like John Belushi, said he Duchovny's conspiracy-mad Fox Mulder in "The. X- Files" admits the lopwants to maintain perspective on the comedic persona that has brought him sided press initially bothered her.
"At first I felt like: This is our show. It wasn 't just l)is show," Arukrson
success and remembers some advice from "SNL" creator Lome Michaels.
"Although I love this kind of · com~y. sometimes I feel trapped by tells Entertainment Weekly. "But !learned to not care so much."
always having to be the most outtageous guy in the room ," he said. "In parNow after a few years of tracking aliens , mutants and other assorted paraticular, I'm working on ttying not to be that guy in my private life. Lome nonnal mysteries, Anderson is developing her own mtlowing:
It was evident at an "X-Files" convention recently in Los Angeles, where
told me that that's what 1\illed Belushi more than anything else."
she received a thunderous ovation, and later fielded a familiar question:
. LOS ANGELES ~AP)- House Speaker Newt Gingrich gets to do some- How come her C().Star gets all the magazine covers?

'Gulliver' to 'Thorn ·Birds.': It mu·st ·be
sweeps weeks for TV networks

By LYNN ELBEA
·
AP Televllion Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Something appealing, something ·
appalling. Something for everyone - it's the- February ·
sweeps bonanza.
From a lavish adaptation of "Gulliver's Travels" to the
return of "The Thorn Birds" to irresistibly schlocky 1V
movies like "Co-Ed Call Girl," the broadcast networks are
intent on chasing away our winter blahs.
Oh, and they also have some interest in snaring the biggest
possible audi~nces to belp local stations set the highest possible advertising rates.
· To that end, NBC, ABC, CBS and Fox are heaping magic,
. mayhem and miniseries on us. 'They· re even spiffing up regu· lar series with sly come-ons, like "Law &amp; Order" and
"Homicide" crossover episodes and big-name guest stars.
Here are highlights (all times Eastern): MINISERIES
"Gulliver's Travels," NBC, 9-11 p.m. Sunday and Monday, Feb. 4-5. Ted Danson stars in this adaptation of Jonathan
Swift's satirical tale of a wanderer who finds extraordinary
lands. Mary Steenburgen and an international cast co-star.
"'The Thorn Birds: 'The Missing Years," CBS, 9- I I p.m.
:;unday, Feb. II, and TUesday, Feb. 13. Richard Chamberlain
returns as Father Ralph de Bricassan and Amanda Donohoe
phays Meggie O'Neal in a "critical period" omitted from the
1983 miniseries based on the Colleen McCullough novel.
"Seduced by Madness: The Diane Borchardt Story," NBC,
9 p,m. Sunday and Monday, Feb. 25-26. Ann-Margret stars in
a .fact-based drama about an abusive woman who manipulates
thnee students into committing murder.
"Gone in the Night," CBS, 9 p.m.' Sunday, Feb. 25 and
'1\lesdii'Y, Fi:b. '1.7. Shannen Doherty, Edw ~rd Asner,· Dixie
Car:ter and Kevin Dillon star in this drama based on ·the ordeal
of a Chicago family whose father. is accused of his young
daughtei-'S·muidcr.
·

,

..

,
"The Boys Next Door," CBS, 9 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4. A
"Hallmark, Hall of Fame" adaptatio11 .o f Tom Griffin's play
about four developme.ntally disabled men trying to make it in
the world. With Nathan Lane, Tony Goldwyn, Raben Sean
Leol!atd, Michael Jeter. Courtney B. Vance and Marc Winningham.
"Co;Ed Call Girl," CBS, 9 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 6. Tori
Spelling stars as Joanna. a college student seduced into the
upscale call girl life . Suggested by actual events, so
voyeurism is permitted.
"If Looks Could Kill," Fox. 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 6. Antonio Sabato Jr. plays a hustler wlw orchestrates a million-dollar murder: "America's Most Wanted" host John Walsh co- .
stars, relating the manhunt for the killer.
· "ln. the Line of Duty: Smoke Jumpers," NBC, 9 p.m. Sunday, Feb. II , Adam Baldwin and Lindsay Frost star in the
story of a mountain man who risks his life and marriage fighting fires.
SWEEPS WEEK ' Richard Chamberlain· reprlaea hla tole as Father Relph
''Robin Cook's Tenninal,'' NBC, 9 p.m. Monday, Feb. 12. de Brlcassart end Amende Donohoe stars •• Maggie O'Neal In the CBS:'TV
Doug Savant, Nia Peeples and Michael ironside are featured miniseries "The Thorn Blrde: Teh Mlaalng Veers." The original "Thorn B'"'a"
in this thriller about drug · company corruption based on appeared In 1983 to the second-beat retlnga for a mlnlaerlea ever, behind
Cook's novel.
only "Roots." (AP Photo)
"A Brother's Promise," CBS, 9 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 14. .
they track a killer storm.
Matt Keeslar stars as Oly!llplc speed skater Dan Jansen ~nd h1s quest to
MThe World's Funniest Hypnotist," ABC.-9 p.m. Monday, Feb. 12. Paul
overcome person~lt':?gedy. the death of his sister.
.
. .
McKenna is helped by Gena Lee No)in ("Baywau:h"), Chuck Woolery
"A Case forL1fe. ABC, 9 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 18. Valene Bertmelh and and Richard Roundtree as McKenna hypnotizes aud1ence members.
·
Mel Harris portray sisters whose close relationship is tested by the divisive
"The Late Show with David Letterman Primetime Video Special II,"
1
issue of abortion.
,
CBS. 10 p.m. Monday, Feb. 19. Letterman for those who can't stay up late ·
"Generation X," Fox, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 20. Matt Frewer and Fino- anymore. .
Ia Hughes star in a science fiction adventure based on the Marvel comic
"Wynonna: revelations," CBS, 10 p.m. Friday, Feb. 23. The singer's
recent wedding ceremony. songs from ~r new "revelations" album and
hook X-MEN.
chats with her mom Naomi and sister Ashley arc featured.
·
.
"Neil
Diamond;
Under
a
Tennessee
Moon,",
ABC,
10
p.m.
Saturday.
SPECIALS
,
"Lance Bunon: Master Magician," NBC, 8 p.m. Mon4ay, Feb. 5. Ele- Feb. 24. The singer showcases his new album of origin!ll songs in a per·
phants disappear, fake horses turn real and women levitate with help from fonnance taped at Nasbville's Ryman Aoditorium. '
•·
"Skate International Champions Series," Fox,'8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 24.
Bur:ton, a World Championship of Magic winner.
·''The'Greatest Shows You Never Saw." CBS, 10 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. Top contenders in the competition in Paris include America's Michelle
7. Faith Ford hosts a look at moments from television pilots that never l&lt;wan and Todd Eldredge and Canada's Josee Chouinard and Elvis Stojko.
made it to the air, including :·Madame Sin" with Bette Davis.
"'The Mysterious Origins of Man," NBC, 7 p.m; Sunday, Feb. 25.
"National Geographic Special: Cyclone!" NBC. 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. Charlton Heston hosts this examination of new infonn&amp;tion about prehis10. Daring scientists capture some of the earth's fastest winds on film as toric man.

.

Ending Monday's . show with the
"You
wise-beyond-her-years
Learn;" she cireled the stage pen meter with !oti&amp;-tegged leaps, joy~us as
she' .oughta be.
.

,.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Jeff Chuck Kornegay each had I0.
Villanova forward Eric Eberz left
Sheppard came off the bench to
. • 'score seven points during a 16-2 see- the game with 4: 16 remaining in, the
~ ond-half run Saturday that carried first half with a bruised back and did
not return. He had his legs knocked
~ .No. 2 Kentucky past Florida 77-63
from under him while going up for
r for its 17th consecutive victory.
·i : Senior center Dametti Hill fin- a rebound.
No. 9 Georgetown 10
:. )shed with a career-high 29 points
Notre Dame 53
; and 10reboondsforFlorida(9-10, 4At Landover, Md .. Allen Iverson
, S Southeastern Conference). Antoine
~ :Walker CQ!Iected 14 points and 10· had 27 points and seven rebounds
Saturday as the ninth-ranked Hoyas
' ~ .rebounds for Kentucky (18-1 , 8-0).
:
Kentucky wen\ up 43-30 on rolled to a 70-53 victory over cold: .Wayne Turner's 10-foot bank shot shooting Notre Dame .
: :with 16:23 to go. Florida's Brian
Iverson was 10-for-18 from the
; .Thompson then hit a short baseline field, including a running 40-foot
• 'jumper and Greg Williams connect- shot ~~ the buzzer that gave the
~ ed on a three-pointer from the corHoyas a 15-point halftime lead just
. ::. ner to slice ttie margin to eight points as the Fighting Irish were starting to ·
·· one minute later.
,
find some offensive rhythm.
:·, Toqy Delk started Kentucky's
Freshman reserve guard Day. .; decisive run wiih a driving layup and mond Jackson added II points and
~ Mark Pape made two of three free
eight rebounds as Georgetown ( 19,; throws for a 48-3S lead before Hill 3, 9-2 Big East) handed the Irish (7. II , 2-9) another one-sided defeat in
. •,scored on a layup at 13:56.
: -: Turner came back with a baseline Notre Dame's first year in the con:'jumper, Walter McCarty hit a layup ference .
'The Hoyas essentially builttlleir
before Sheppard finished the run
: 'with a layup, three-pointer and two winning cushion with a 16-S game' free throws for a 59-371ead at 10:39. opening run that included six points
.
Delk finished with IS points for from Iverson and a technical foul
THIS ONE'S MINE! - Kentucky'a Mark Pope (41) gets 1 grip on
• Kentucky, which shot :.j6 percent against Notre Dame coach John
the
b111ketblll while Florida'• Greg Wllllems reechell In during Satfor
protesting
a
foul
call.
MacLeod
(26-of-56) from the field. Brian
Drctay'a
SEC game In Lexington, Ky., where the Wildcats won 77~3.
'The
Hoyas
defense
repeatedly
disWilliams contributed . II point for
(AP)
' Florida, which made 43 percent (21 - rupted Notre · Dame's set offense,
forcing bad shots and containing
, of-63) of its shots.
leading scorer Pat Garrity.
including his last basket that gave
· ~ · Kentucky jumped out to a 22-11
I :24 to go that held off a Michigan
; ' lead on Ron Mercer's three-pointer ·
Garrity led the Irish with 13 Penn State a 90-87 lead with 46.2 State charge.
seconds remaining.
:· from the right wing. and the margin , points, while Derrek Manner had II
Jamie Feick, who topped MichiNo. 17 Purdue 56
·increased to 29-15 on Derek Ander- points and seven rebounds.
gan State with II points and II
' son's dunk off a turnover with 5:53
No. 10 Penn State 95
MKhigan SL 51
rebounds, had ended the Spartans'
No. 16 Iowa 87 (OT)
At West Lafayette, Ind., Justin cold spell with a three-pointer that
togo.
At iowa City, Iowa, Pete Lis icky Jennings came off the bench to
Florida battled back with a 9-2
made the score 44-39 with 4:59 to
' run, closing to 31-24 on Hill's inside and Glenn Sekunda each scored 20 score eight points in a decisive 12- play.
; power move at 2:0S. Kentucky with- points and Matt Gaudio added 19, point spurt by Purdue as the 17th'The Spartans · managed to cut
:.' stood the challenge to lead 35-24 at including eight in overtime, Ill lead ranked Boilermakers held Michigan
their deficit to 46-43 but Purdue
· halftime.
No. 10 Penn State to a 95-87 win State without a field goal for more
responded with a three-pointer b.y
"·
No. 6 VUlanova 88
over No. 16 Iowa on Saturday.
than eight minutes in a 56-51 victo- Todd Foster. Jon Garavaglia's threeDan Earl finished with II points . ry Saturday.
pointer and a free throw by Daimon ·
PittsburJh 55
' ' At Villanova, Pa., Kerry Kitties and Phil Williams I0 for the Nittany
Purdue (17-4, 7-2) ttailed 35-31
Bethea left the Spartans trailing 49' . scored 31 points and No. 6 Villano- Lions (16-2, 7-2 Big Ten), who con- after Chad Austin made one of two 47 with I :54 to go.
. va used a quick second-half spurt to tinued to claim a share of the con- free throws with 13:26 to ignit~ the
Porter Rober:ts hit two free throws
, :put away Pittsb\Ugh 88-SS Saturday. ference lead while handing Iowa its run which put the Boilermakers · one second later for Purdue, fol ahead to stay.
' ·.
'
lowed ~ustin's'three-pointer. Pur, .. The Wildcats won their 14th in a first home loss this season in II
games.
row in their first Jame at the duPont
Michigan Sr,ate (12:9-; .6'-3r i\1~.~ · d~ ·!ijilsM ail 'opportunity to
·~ Pavilion since John du Pont- who • Jess Settles scored 23, Andre I had SIX turnovers and nine consecu•
put the gathe away at the free throw
line as it missed four of six attempts
, financed the building - surren- Wooh;idge 19, Chris Kingsbury 17 tive·missed shots.
Jennings. who scored all I0 of his
in the final 61 seconds but the Spar;. dered after allegedly shootiug an and Russ Millard IS for the •
·- Hawkeyes ( 15-6, 4-S), who were lry- points in the second half, had a pair tans were unable to capitalize.
. Olympic wrestler to death.
Michigan State shot only 25 per,, Villanova (18-3, 9-2 Big East) ing tO' give coach Tom Davis his , of;~teals and layups in the streak and
.
' hl~Sket with 8:48 to play put the Boil- cent in the second half, making only
.• made nine of its first 14 shots and hir 200th win at Iowa.
The Hawkeyes rallied from a 72- : etU1akers ahead 42-3S. After Quinton six of 24 attempts from the field.
its fil'St 14 fnee throws of the second
Michigan State, which led by as
63
deficit with 8:20 to play, and ; Brooks made one of two free throws
" half to give Pittsburgh (9·9, 4-6) its
Woolridge's layup with 2.8 seconds fo&lt;(the Spartans, Jennings came up many as 10 points in the first half,
sixth loss in seven games.
··~
Kittles, who jumped into third left tied the score 82-all and sent the wi\h another steal and hit two free held a 29-25 advantage at halftime.
thrOws when he was fouled to give The Spartans built the lead by over"·place.on the Wildcs:ls' career scoring game into overtime.
powering the Boilermakers on the
Gaudio, who scored 12 of his PUrdue a 44-36 advantage.
: 'ist (2,050), also had six rebounds.
Austin led Purdue with 17 points. boards. recording a 21-1 &lt;)advantage ·
, . Alvin Williams added 18 for Vii- team's final 15 points. scored eight ·
: lanova and John Celestand and straight points in tlie extra period, incllKiing a key three-pointer with in the opening period with a 9-3 margin on the offensi ve boards. ·
,

!

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:Juf{~aLJm.a.rk' \11Jrlnt:&lt;·:
r7 Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis, OH 45631

.

All Your

FIUDfile~~
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CO LONY TH EATRE
FRIDAY THRU 11IUR8
WALt DI8NEY'8
I'Q-13
7;acl

: . (Editor's note: He was the
: Jreatesljockey olhiura; somuay
• of ell time. Eddie Aruro, at 80,
: reftec.l l on hiaiJ!lahll of 11 remark,
• able career. The writer, also
: reiired, has !mown the jockey
:; s!Me hll days ·as an AP reporter.)
~ By CHARLES MOREY
; NEW YORK (AP)
. They
·: pinned three nicknames on him:
.' Banana Nose, Heady Eddie and The
'J:Master. The third was what the oth·
l~r ~keys-called him. They held him
.n n awe. · .
•
':;i:. Ed&lt;iieArcaro. the king of race rid' i.ers for aln,ost 30 years, the big-mon:·.ey bootet..ll!e guy with the winning
":-tQuch wllen.the stakes ran high, will
·'•..cele!Jrate his 80th birthday on Feb.
·:19.
· '~ : As ever, he is laking the weight of
·S,~llJJtoie years in stride. He expects
w o observe 'the day as he observes

...
~,5/n today's Pro Bowl,
· o..~._ ·

·;:: HONOLULU (AP) - Mike
'':Holmgren won't admit it, but he's
· ~got a significant advantage as coach .
the NFC team in today's Pro
.,fBowl.
:' ". Although,he's had only live days
· :lo put toaether a game plan, the
~reen Bay Packers • coach has a
-bunch of players familiar with the
~~ffense - ri~ht down to the termi·
.IJiology.
.
.
::. For starterS, ihet'e are his own
::ptayers, quarterback Brett Favre and
· tilhl end Mark Chmura. Or, he
,'fould go to a bunch of San Francis' eo 49ers in quarterback Steve'Voung
r.amt receivers leri-y Rice and Brent
;7011es. Philadelphia n~nni•a back
'RickY W~~tmcan be included in t1u1t ·
'Jt:®p, too.
": All JR products of .the "West
t~ ofkiiiC.'' which Holmgren.
J !'clPed deSliJI while an usistanl

··m

;;

!

.

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I

Toledo never seriously challenged .after the break.
The Rockets were paced by Craig Thames with 25 points and Casey Shaw
with 18. Toledo shot 51 percent from the floor for the game.
·
Ball St. ended the night with a 56 percent field goal mark.
Both Thompson and Wells shot above 50 percent, with Thompson nailing 13 of 21 tries and Well s on the mark with II of 18. Thompson also hit
seven of 12 tries from three-point range.
Ball St. enjoyed the advantage on the boards, pulling down 30 rebounds
to Toledo's i L
Kent 59, Bowling Green 58- At Kent. Ed Norvell made a pair of free
throws with 14 seconds left Saturday to give Kent a 59-S8 victory over Bowling Green.
,
Nate Reinking scored 16 points and JShawn McKenzie and Norvell added
12 apiel:e for the Golden Flashes (11 -7 overall, 5-5 Mid-American Conference).
.. ·
Jay Larranaga had 24 and Anthony S{acey 18 for the Falcons (I 0-R, 5-5).
Norvell's free throws were the final points of a half in which there wen:
seven ties ana 13 lead changes. Bowling Green had taken its last lead at 58S7 on a jumper by Larranaga with 21 seconds to go, then Norvell put the
Flashes on top to stay.
Norvell had given Kent its first lead of the game on a layup with 52 seconds left in the first half that made the scoQ: 28-27, but Larranaga gave tlie
Falcons a 29-28 halftime lead by scoring with 17 seconds remaining.
Bowling Green led by as many as nine points on three occasions during
the first half, but was outscored 18-10 in the final 7:42 of that period. No
team led by more than si~ points in the second half.
Neither team had a good shooting day. Kent was 19-for-47 for 40.4 percent, while Bowling' Green was 17-for-55 for 30.9 percent.
Wls.-Green Bay 60, Wright SL 53 - At Dayton. Jeff Nordgaard scored
24 points and sparked a decisive first half run on Saturday to lead Wisconsin-Green Bay over Wright State 60-53.
Nordgaara scored eight points during an 11-0 run that put the Phoetiix
( 18-2 overall, 10-0 Mid-Continent Conference) ahead 16-S with II :32 left
in the opening half.
·
Green Bay never trailed after that.
Wright State (10-10, 4-6) was able to cut into the deficit in the second
hall' and pulled to within 52 -SO with ~ : 20 left. But Ben Berlowski's threepointer made it S5-SO and the Phoenix then hit five of six free throws to seal ·
the victory.
,
Berlowski finished with 12 points for Green Bay.
Vitaly Potapenko's 21 points and nine rebounds led Wright State. Mike
Conner added 13.
C.pltel84, John Carroll 74 - At Columbus, Chad Coconis scored 22
points, including.the go-ahead basket as Capital beat John Carroll 84-74 Saturday.
Capital ( 14-6 overall, 9-5 Ohio Conference) trailed most of the game until
Coconis hit a three-pointer with 4:25 left to make it 66-65.
John Carroll remains on top of the conference standings with a 10-4 record.
The Blue Streaks' overall record is 14-6.
J.J . Richardson and JeJTrey Scsplankis each scored 22 for John Caroll,
while Joey Bigler had 19.

'

'

every day, with a round of golf- if
it doesn't rain. Eddie has mixed feelings about rain ..
His brilliant career, and his life,
very nearly ended on a muddy track.
As it was. he rode for two more years
before he called it quits, in 1961. He
had turned 45 and had a page of the
record hook all to himself. Some of
his records have been eclipsed over
time but no. other jockey has come
within a furlong of Arcaro's record
in Triple Crown races. He won 17.
The ride ,that nearly cost him his
life was a Triple Crown event. It was
at the Belmont Stakes in 1959 on a
muddy track. As an Associated Press
reporter, I saw it happen.
The Belmont is a relentless nin of
a mile and one-half, once around the
spacious oval. Eddie rode Black
Hills, a long-striding colt and the second choice to Sword Dancer, the

"Arcaro was sprawled grotesquely all three Triple Crown races twice.
eventual winner.
.
Arcaro had Black Hills in third or on the track, a rag doll in a mud pud- He won with Whirlaway in 1941 and
.
Citation in 1948. Both horses raced
'four:th place behind Sword Dancer dle. " '
for the . first mile, the. position he
Arcaro suffered a concussion and for Calumet Fann and were trained
wanted. In the middle of the sttetch was out of action for a month. His by Ben Jones.
' tu~ he sent Black Hills up @long the
Arcaro recalls the two ho,;es and
only other serious spill was in 1933
rail with a flashing move that seemed at age 17, at the beginning of his I their trainer with fondness and
-certain to carry the colt into the lead. career. He was riding a horse named , remarkable clarity.
Jones, Arcaro recalls, had conThen the left front leg of Black Gun Fire at a Chieago track. He sufHills snapped. sickeningly. The horse fered a fractured skull and a punc- trived a special set of blinkers· for
went down and the jockey went fly - tured l4ng and was sidelined for four Whirlaway for the Kentucky Derhy.
They gave the colt a view of only the
ing. Eddie landed face down' on the ' months.
sloppy track. Two horses charged up
Both times, lie climbed back in inside rail . He also gave Arcaro spefrom behind and one of them struck the saddle and picked up where he 'd cific instructions:
" Don 't mind if you break last.
Arcaro a glancing blow in the head. left off, riding winners.
"I was unconscious," he recalled
From 1931 to 1961 he won the This colt is slow to get going but he
recently. " I was drowning with my
Kentucky Derby five times, a record can run the fastest last half mile of
face in a puddle. Only one man was
he shares with Bill Hartack; the any horse I have ever seen. Make
nearby, a photographer. He ran out Preakness six times, a record; and the your move at the half-mile pole." .
Arcaro did just so. Running
on the track and lifted me up. He
Belmont Stakes six times, a record
saved my life."
·
eighth
at the half-mile pole, 10
he shares with a 19th century jockThe view from the stands was ey named Jimmy McLaughlin.
lengths behind the·teader, Whirlaway
chilling. In my AP report, I wrote:
And he's. the only jockey to win · began his move. He streaked into the
lead at the head of the stretch and
won in a gallop. •
Citation 's Derby was in 1948.
Eddie always listed Citation first
when as ked to name the greatest
horses he rode. (Second: Kelso.)
Actually
Eddie wanted to ride Citacitnlnt player.
.
•
.ma~e it clear he wouldn't skip Smith.
It goes back to Smith's first Pro
"I made that mistake once and tion 's stablemate, Coaltown, in the
Bowl appearance.
I' m not about to make it a secpnd Derby but Ben Jones said no.
"Citation will bury Coaltown any
With the game on the line, Holm- time," Holmgren said. "He hasn't let
time
you ask him to," Jones said .
gren, at that time a 49ers assistant, me forget it and every time he's
found himself six lengths
Arcaro
pulled l;he rookie in favor of a more played af!ainst a team I've heen
back
of
Coaltown
at the half-mile
experienced running back.
involved with, he's pounded the liv,
pole
on
a
sloppy
track
at Churchill
When told that Holmgren ing daylights out of us."
promised equal distribution this time
Injuries have kept him out of the ·Downs. But he waited. AI the head
uoun&lt;t· featuring a certain Dallas Pro Bowl the past two years, but of the sttetch he asked Citation for
Cowboy, Smith .laughed and said, Smith promised to make up for lost ' his best. In a half-dozen strides the
big horse was in front and pulled
"No, no.- no. ! haven't had a good time. '
'
away
in a romp.
talk with Mike yet, but I think he
"I've ~issed coming out here the
The
Jones-Arcaro team had won ·
knows my intentions.
past couple of years," he said. "I
the
Derby
with Lawrin in 1938 and
"They can use all the running · really wanted to come ou1 here this
backs they want, but this one right year and relax a little bit, get out on won it again with Hill Gail in 1952.
here has carried it over 500 times this the golf course and enjoy nlysc lf. ' Eddie is not much for looking back
year and that's enough for me."
"I'm ·feeling pretty good. I'm . at losses but he sl:ill regrets having
After letting that sink in- and as iglad the season is almost over. What ,picked the wrong horse in 1942.
·He had his choice of two GneenHolmgren recovered from the gag ,we accomplislted this year with all
ttee
Stable star:ters,.Devil Diver and
Smith said he'd give it his best shot the trials and tribulations that went
And Holmgren was quick to on away froll) the field make it that ~hut Out. Trainer John Gaver told
·
·
•much better."
· ·

,4Many NFC players know Holmgren's plans

. TOY'BTORY

er room .

:-Arcaro reflects on career f.ull of comebacks &amp; triumphs
,.

.

OXFORD, Ohio (AP)- Landon Hackim scored 19 points and Miami
took advantage of Ohio's poor shooti ng to pull away for a 76-61 victory Saturday evening.
Miami (14-4, 6-4 Mid-American Conference) shot 52 percent in 'the second half to break open a game that was tied 31-all at the intennission. Hac kim
led four Miami players in double figures.
·
Ohio (I 0-11 ,' 5-5) couldn 't overcome poor perimeter shooting. Guard Geno
Ford, who scored 16 points to lead a 65-56 victory over the Redskins on Jan.
6, managed just nine points on 3-of-15 shooting. Ford missed his seven threepoint attempts.
Overall, Ohio was 1-of- 15 from behind the three-point arc. Miami hit 6
of 12.
Ball St. 88, Toltdp 68 - AI Muncie, Ind., LaSalle Thompson scored 29
points and Bonzi Wells.added 28 as Ball St. beat Toledo 88-68 in Mid-American Conference action Saturday.
The Cardinals (10-8, 6-4 MAC) shot 64 percent from the floor in the firSt
half to race to a 51-32 halftime lead.
:
The Rockets (12-9. 5-5) trailed just 24-23 with 9:59 to go in the first half.
Ball St. then went on a 27-9 run to take an insurmountable lead into the lock-

:;- As he gets closer to BOth birthday,

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NEW YORK (AP)- China's leading acttess Gong Li is known for her
feminist roles, so .it's no surprise she says sexist Hollywood can wait.
"Up to now, I haven't seen any interesting parts,'! she says in the March
issue of Premiere magazine. "If you want me to be a 'hua ping' (literally
'flower vase,' or 'bimbo') in a movie dominated by men - why would I
bother? Thero are plenty of films I could do in
China."
'The 30-year-old actress: credits include "Raise the
Red Lantern," "The Story of Qiu Ju," "Ju Dou" and
most recently the possible Academy Award contender
·:shanghai Triad."
After years together, Gona ended her romance
with director Zhang Yimou, who made most of her
films. She was angt'y he wouldn't marry her, but has
a new boyfriend now and has said she and Zhang may
work together again.
Their .-elationship was scandalous· in communist
China because ~e was married at the time, but it also
helped cement her image as the spirit of modem Chi· Gllllen Anderson
nese women fighting sexism and outdated traditions·.

Section C
Sunday, Febnlary4, 1890

; In Top 25 college action,

Ralher than defer_politely, she spoke up for herself.
. :
"Maybe it's my time now," she says in the magazine's Feb. 9 issue,
which features her on the cover.

contemporary acoustic guiJar music aQd songs of
emerging performer, Connie Sue Robinson, and the
bluegrass and gospel music
of the Gloryland Grass
group will be on stage at
Gallipolis' Morris and
DOrothy Haskins Ariel 'Theatre 8 p.m., Feb. 10.
Robinson writes all · of
her own songs from life
experiences and "the way
the world is," she.says.
She taught herself
play the guitar lllld spent
much of her youth ttavelling with her father and his
gospel singing group.
"The emotions that came
p.ouring out from their
songs stuck with ine down
through the years," she
said.
She has written more
than 30 songs. but still
includes Amazing Grace in her
repertoire.
The Gloryland Grass started
seven years ago with a shotgun for a
banjo. Ronnie Lemley was the
leadc,. He !'las then j9ined by Jerry
Taylor on bass, Seaford Jorden on
guitar, leRoy McCoy on tiCJdle,
Nancy Lemley. lead singer and Alvin
.
Johnson; tenor.
All of the group's members grew
up around bluegrass gospel music,
and it wasn't long before they started
playing in churches and other events
catering to bluegrass gospel.
Tickets can be ' purchased at the
Ariel Theatre box office. For information call 446-A.IITS.

1timts- Jentinel

.·

1

-

r AlaA s Morissette, s ng1ng strong

.'

Ao.oustic, gospel
music co ing to Ariel

~OVIES

.

potts

·:

"

.':' "·'i'f • I

with ·ihc 49ers.
"You don 't have to spend a few
hours getting everyone used to the'
terminology,'' Holmgren said. "We
even have guys in the offensive line
who are f811)iliar with this system.
"If they're comfortable running.
it. then you have a better chance of
producing some IIOQCJ plays and still
&amp;tay within the offensive rules of the
Pro Bowl."
Holmgreri'sAFCcounterpan. Ted
Marchibroda of Indianapolis, doesn't disagree. .
",Any advan. .e helps in a game
like this." he said. "The key is not
to Jl'l too compli,cated. We want to
have some fun out there and show·
case the guys ·the best we can." .
But Emmitt Smith had some fun
this week making Holmaren ~quirm
a little by playin_g 11\e role ofa recal-

him: "Shut Out is in better condition
right now."
Arcaro mulishly stuck with Devil Diver and finished out of the money. Sl\ut Out won. Had he listened to
Gaver he 'd have had a record six
Derby winners. He did ride Shut Out
later that year, winning the Belmont,
Travers and Arlington Classic.
•Shut Out hated me," Eddie said.
"Once when we came out on the
track, he tried to rear over backwards
and crush me. I turned the whip
around and hit him on the nose with
the handle. His manners improve4
immediately."
When he retired in 1961, Arcaro
left a record, since surpassed, of 554
stakes viclories.
.
Eddie now lives in Miami. He and :
his late wife, Ruth, had two children ·
who· have given Eddie five grand;:
children, all girls. "'There are no .
male Arcaros to carry on the line, •! :
Eddie commented ruefully.
He has had two heart bypass oper: :
ations and is holding prostate cancer :
at bay with monthly hormone shots; ;
But none of the ailments seem to din( ·
his love for golf. Once a I0-handi: :
cap player. he still, at age 80, shootll :
in the 90s.
:
He says he's as much addicted tq :
vitamins as he is to golf. "I take I0 :
or 12 vitamins a day," he said. "14
consider them one of the reasons I ·
can play 18 holes of golf a day with-: :
out collapsing."
:
What made Arcaro great? His :
textbook seat on a horse, clearly. He; ·
also had sttong and sensitive hands(
cold nerve of a skydiver, the jodg• :
ment of a fighter pilot to make split.:·
second decisions.
·
:·
And now, from the high hill o( :
age, he has all uncluttered. persPe&lt;:-· :
tive of his ·accomplishmentS and hiS: :
place on the planet. What was ·the: ·
greatest day of his life?
·
Eddie grinned. "The day my: :
.father bQarded a banana boat in Italy: ·
to come to the Uniied States."
·

.'!1

�...

0

•

•

: ., • • C2 • ,....
, IIIII -~.,jlooolllhlulml

.BY 'beating Afarletta 67·53,

In seeking to find an advantage to
Prior to Friday's action, Graceland
·' Christian High School in New keep up their winning ways, Leach
; 'Albany, Ind. has a varsity boys' team has cut back practice time half an
: that sported a 13-1 record while hour a day to ac~ommodate mental
1 'being led by one of the youngest
preparation, which is accomplished in
1:oaches in that pan of the Hoosier the form of scrutinizing game film
and holding meetings.
State.
"Our kids need that extra half hour
'
The )Varriors are guided by 23·
year-old Chad Leach (Kyger Creek of mental preparation," he said. "You
'89. Kentucky C)Jristian '94), the son can see it in our practices and games.
of Chuck and Cathy Leach of I can tell they are a much more
Cheshire. In the 1994-95 season, his focused team right ·now."
first at the Warriors' helm. his club
lost its first nine games- before strugFriday's River Valley-Gallia Acadgling to a 4-15 finish.
.
emy boys' reserve-varsity doubleAccording to a January anicle in header, postponed because of the
The (New Albany) Ledgtr· Tribune, recent snowstorm, will be played
Leach said, "It was strange to be in a Monday on the Un1versity of Rio
sym like New Albany's or any of the Grande campus. The reserves are slatlarge s-chools. But our kids believe ed to stan play at 6 p.m. The varsity
lbey can compete if they just play game is expected to start at 7:30p.m.
hard and stay together. There's not
Friday 's Alexander-Eastern boys'
that much difference in talent reserve-varsity doubleheader was
between us and the bigger s-chools." · postponed and rescheduled for Tues~
Graceland's players showed their day, Feb. 13. Saturday's Easternbelief in Leach's words in December, Beallsville boys' reserve-varsity douwhen the Warriors had to play Indi- bleheader was also postponed and
anapolis South Central and Bloom- res-cheduled for Saturday, Feb. 17.
ington North on the road on consecSaturday's Gallia Academy-Fairutivc n.ights.
land girls' reserve-varsity doubleAfter beating South Central64-58, · header was also postponed. With the
Leach came up wilh a way to inspire /tournament set to stan barely next
his players before playing Bloom- week, this non-league contest has not
ington North. ·He had them watch the been rescheduled al press,time. Their
movie "Hoosiers" on the bus during home gam~ with Warren Local, origthe trip to Bloomington. "As far as I rinally slated for last Thursday and
know, it's the biggest school we've postponed because ofthe snowstorm,
· ever beaten," he said. '
has been rescheduled for Feb. 15.
This season has seen his crew, This game is first on the Blue Angels'
which would be.class-ed as a Division make-up list.
IV club in Ohio, playing teams from
It is a standard practice to play
. schools ~ith student populations I 0 rescheduled league games whenever
.times larger than Graceland's. The possible. However, the fact that the
Warriors have made it in pan because Logan Chi'eftams secured the Southpf the shooting of senior point' guard eastern Ohio Athletic League title by
.~colt Luttrell, who averaged an areabeating Jackson last Thursday may
high 27.7 points per contest as of last rell)ove the necessity· of the Blue
·week. He has scored 40 or more Angels' playing this league contest
·points twice so far this season.
once tournament play has begun.

uc'beats

Ulinoi-s State 91-57

'

" I told you my guys were nocturnal.
· syJOE KAY
· CINCINNATI (AP) - A lot of · This is the hardest we've played in
'people wondered· why Cincinnati a long t1me."
"I felt pretty good," Flint said. "I
.coach Bob Huggins would volunteer
got
a lot of sleep earlier in the day."
to play a game that lipped off after
Illinois
State (14-7) wasn't hoth·
midnight.
,ered'by
the
time or the crowd'. II simHis filth-ranked Bearcats provid.
·
pty
didn't
have
any way to stop the
ed the answer: They like to keep late
first nationally ranked team it has
1 hou~s .
played
this season. .
·
Cincinnati gave one of its most
The
Redbirds
haven't
beaten a
complete performances of the season
team
since
their
89-88
victoranked
:curly today, dommating Illinois·State
ry
over
then-No.
14lown
on
Dec.
29,
91 -57 in a game that began at 12:06
1987.
They
knew
early
that
there
a.m. ES'F and ended at I '49. No
• umcs mvolvmg ranked teams were was no way that streak was going to
end against Cmcinnati.
played Friday night.
" It had nothing to ilo with the
Huggins offered to play so late to
crowd,"
coach Kevin Stallings said.
get on ESPN. He also thought it
"It
has
something
to do with Fortson
)Vould he fun for Cincinnati fans.
and
Flint
and
Long
and those criuers.
some of whom showed up in robes
and paja"!as. They seemed to thrive Oh, and Htjggins. It had something
to dci w1th Huggins, too."
on the odd hours.
·
Huggins tied for most baskeiball
"I thought our students were fanvictories in the school's 95
coaching
tastic." Huggins said. "That was the
years.
Huggins
·~ 154-59 in his sevmost enthusiastic, the most upbeat
season.
George
Smith's teams
enth
our students have been all year." ·
154-56
in
eight
seasons in the
went
The Bcarcats ( 16-1) gave them a
1950s.
lot of reasons to get loud. Art Long
Huggins has groused about the
dominated the boards. coming up
Bearcal''
inability to put overw1th a season-high 16 rebounds in
matched
teams
away. They had no
ju'st 21 minutes, while Dnnn~ Fort·
such
problem
against
Illinois State.
son scored 24 points an~ Damon
The Bearcats went on a 23-6 run
Flint added a season-high 23.
0
Every one of the 12 Cincinnati to go ahead 31-9 midway through
players got into the game. and every the first half. The lead grew to 47-21
imc scored at least two p&lt;~ints.
• at the intermission, and Cincinnati
· "I want to soy this to all you peo- led by as many as 38 in the second
ple who questioned why we were half.
jlluying at midnight," Huggins said.

- - - C a.ge standing,----.
Gallipolis ............ 2 6 394 454
1995-96: Allgtll!m..
Team
W L TP OP River Valley ........ 1 6 376 409
TOTALS
29 29 ;M07 3407
Chesapeake ..... 13 o 950
Friday'• reeu~
Wheelersburg ... 14 11114 '813
Marietta ............ 11 4 923 805 . Logan 67 Marietta 53
Falnand ..... , ........ 9 4 897 798 River Valley 111 Gallipolis, ppnd,
.
Jackson ............ 10 51013 938 reset Feb. 5
Warren
Local
at
Jackson,
ppnd,
Warren ·Local ...... 9 5 841 726
Greenfield .......... 9 5 801 738 reset Feb. 7
Logan ............... 10 6 932 924
(SEOAL reaerv•)
'Malgs .................9 6 952 933
Tum
.
W L ·TP OP
bouth Polnl ........ 9 6 997 899
Warren
Local...
...
8 o 459 332
Athetis ................6 9 878 867
Marietta
........
:
.....
7 . 2 611 427
' Point Pleasant....4 8 724 807
Gallipolis
............
5
3 364 390
Ri'ier Valley ........5 9 802 821
Southem ............4 10 845 932 Logan .................4 5 465 465
, Gallipolis ............4 10 711 803 Athens ................3 5 353 421
Portsmouth .........3 12 8961128 Jackson ..............2 7 · 370 454
Vjnton County ....1 13 9131091 River Valley ........0 · 7 280 393
TOTALS
, 21 21211522112
Frlday'eruulle:
Frlday'•lllull .
Greenfield 61 Miami Trace 55
Wellston 78 Vinton County 69
Marietta~~ 58 ·
'Wheelersburg 65 Valley 61 ·
A~~~CI........... :
Fairland at Buffalo, reset Feb. 7
Wa1'1'811 ~at a;lp.. ,
.
South Point at Rock Hill, ppnd
· Pol'tlrilOulh at ~ ' .
.Wbma at Pt. Plaaaant, ppnd
G,.:enlietd _. P.88t:IH•.(IIlii)
Trimble at Southam, ·ppn&lt;1
VInton COUriiY -' SQuti'Jfm (mu)
'Nell· York at t.1alg8, ppnd
Pt. ~at Logan (mu)
-• SEOAL Vlti'Sity

m

-'

W L TP OP ·
Marietta ......: .......8 · 1 589 '514 A~V~Illll
.
7 ' 2 546 532
Logan.................
-~-'IOn

Team

warren Local ......4 •
Jacklon ..............s
All)8ns .. :............. 2

4 433 ~

&amp;Scila&amp;lih
...
lllllllll•~r

GALLIPOLIS - Due to the
rapidly moving snow-storm that
raced through Southern Ohio Friday
aftenloon only one scheduled Southeastern Ohio Athletic League basketball game was played. and the
Lo(lan Chieftains spoiled the perfect
league, record of the; Marietta Tigers
with a 67-53 triumph.
The quick-hitting snow forced
postponement of the scheduled Gat-·
lipolis-River · Valley and Warren
Local-Jackson games. Bath have
been re-set for next week with the
Gallipolis-River Valley contest set
for Lyne Center on the University of
Rio Grande Monday campus niglit.
The Warren Local contest at Jackson
will be played Wednes-day.night.
Athens had an open date Friday;
but was scheduled to visit Gallipolis in a Saturday night game.
Logan's victory over Marietta
keeps the Chieftains alive in the title
chase, as Marietta is now 8-1 and
Logan 7-2. Both .teams have three
. league gal"es remaining.
'
•The Tigers alsQ remained alive in
the league reserve championship
with a 60-58 win ·over the Logan
jayvees F,riday, but still trail the
undefeated Warren Local reserves in
the standings. Warren is 8-0,•.and
Marietta shows a 7-2 record. •
Logan 67, Marietta 53
At. Logan, senior Jeff Maibach
scored I 0 ,points in the first quarter
and accounted for 14 by halftime
leading the Chiefs to a 31-17 advantage b~ lhe halftime mtermission.
Sophomore post-man Joe Yukovic
s-cored half of his game high 20
points in the first half, as the Logan
defense held the- other Tigers to just
seven points by haiftime. •
The 14 point halftime bulge .carried for the remainder of the contest
as the teams each .scored 36 second
half pqints.
Twd key statistics that enabled tile
Chieftains to gain the victory include
12-2 in assists and hitting 51% of
thelf shots compared to 35% by the
Tigers. In three point shot attempts
Logan swished four of 13 and the
Tigers connected on four of 18.
Three Chieftains cntere,d doubledigit scoring too by Coy Lindsey's 19
pomts, including all four of their
three-point goals. Maibach finished
with 18 and l:.ucas Kline added I 0.
Joe·Vukovic led Marietjla with 20
points and II rebounds, with Ttm
Heslop adding 19 points.

0=4; ·scot Thrapp 2-0-0=4; Coy
Lmdsey 2-4-3:19 ; Chad Slack 0-04=4; Chad Moore 2-d-4=8; Jeff
Maibach 9-0-0=18; Lucas Kline 2-06=10. Totals: 19-4-17=67
Reserve score: Marietta 60,
Logan 58 ,

~~~

1992CHEV
Z-34

~
'

V-6, 5 spd, Red w/gray cloth
lnterlcir, AC, stereo cass, Pwr
windows-locks, cruise, till.
$harp Car

''""' ,,.., auto, Red wlblack cloth
lln1:erlc1r. AC, stereo eass, ,;rulse,
Lots of Extras. 1 owner.

1995 BUICK
LESABRE
4 Dr, V"6, auto, Wliite wlblue
interior, AC, stereo cass, Pwr
sea1s-wlndows-locks-mirrors, 1ilt,
29K.

cloth lnterlor............................................. ~ .....................$4850
1991 DODGE DYNASTY 15643, Red, V-8 eng:, AJC, AfT,
Aun:M,Ifllt, cruise, air bag .......:.................................... $4595

Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM LE 15642, White, AfT, A/C,
AMIFM callltlt, sport wheels, rear delroster ............ $69115
1993 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 15635, AfT, AJC, AM/FM calllllt,
rear defroster, power locka...........................................$7534
1991 CHEVY CORSICA 15640, Blue, A/f, A/C, AM/FM,
cruiH, tilt, r.ear dtfrolter, clbth Interior ...................... $6850
11194 HYUNDAI EXCEL 15625, A/T, A/C, rnr defroster,
fol~ ,..lllt....................................
1993 CHEVY CAVAUEJI S/W 15517, Blue, AfT, A/C, AM.fM
Clll., crulle, dual mirrors, cloth lnt.lor................" ..$7783
1 . FORD AsPI,RE 15126,4 Dr.; AIT,A/C, rear deffoate:',
IOOOOOIOOOOOIOOOOI0$7970

el(blg, cloth lntll'lor... "...:.........: ................................. $822G
1993 DODGE SHADOW 15628, White, A/C, AfT, AMJfM,
rtar defroster, cloth lntertor...,............;........................ $8125
DODGE SHADOW ES 15832, Gre,en, AfT, AJC •.AIIIFM.
tilt, cruiH, air bag, eun ":~i::~:d:·;~.:·Aii.'iiiiFiii.~;:l:!
19t4 boDGE SHADOW·~1, Red, A/C, A!f, .

··22,983'

996 CIIEVY
S·IO PICKUP
Power st~~ering, ABS, 5 spd, day
lime N!'fling lamps

$9,989
19951UICK
CENTURY
OR
1995 OLDS CIEU

8eYWIIIIo a - from.
An v.e, Alllol:dld.
YOUR CHOICE ·

SJJ ·OCIIi

A/C, A/f, AMIFM can., tilt, llr bag, aport whetle .......$99115
1993 PLYMOUTH LASER 15808, 2 Dr, ~· AM/RI,

l'llr clef., clolt: Interior· .............................:.:...............:...,..!$
1993 FORD TAURUS 15564, 4 Dr., A/C, A/f, AMJFU ceu.,
CNIM,elr big, P. Ults, w'nldowl&amp; lociii ............... IU0.:244
1~ FORD T-BIRD 15811, Ri$1, A/C, A/f, AMJFM cau., P.
Win., loeb &amp; ...., tilt, cruiH, air bag ................~.......$9700
11192 ~HEVY CAMARO 15809, V-8q.,' A/C, A/T, AMJFM
cau., tilt, crulle, eurvoof, PW, eport wlillfe, 25tt:
.
ArvllverurJ, cl'!lfllnterlor ......., ....................................$81115
1114 CHEW CAVALIER aa7, ~ 2 Dr., AMJFM cap,, .
~==~:IIIII. Of tictory wamnty, A/T, AIC.......:...$1G,475
,
GRAND PRIX 15638, O,.n, A/T, AJC, V-8 ·
eng., P. wlnclowl&amp;loclcl, tilt, cruiH, AM1FM cau..$111,399
1995 CHEW CORSICA 158311, Wl:llt,
AM.flr apt.
Willa., tilt, crullt, ...... dlf., air big, 30;000 n:l..........$11,350

.)64

l!i.S

.186

2J

11 .!-i

54_5

17

54~

11

~24

18 •
19 . ~

.488

24
29

)81

273

41

19

. . I~

1'\
14
16
26
27
)I
l~

Gl

690
.682
M2

64

12

3 ~7

2&amp;2
.222

10

I

.409

14

It!
20 ~

hcillc Di•idoft
Se!lltie ...... .......... :\2 12 727
S..cral11(ntO ........... 2.1 17 .~75
LA taken
.2., 19 ~68
Pu&lt;ilond .... ·......... 21 24 467
Phocnia . .... . 19 24 442
Ooklto State ........ .19 2.'\ .4~2
l A Clippers. . , ltj 28 ::\64

~l.

Cm. Manemont

Cm Fumey10wn 61 , Cin Wyoming
.
Ci n Harmon 66. Cm Walnul Hdls

Cm. HugOO R6. Cm Mt Healthy 7~
Cm M:Mklr:t 6:t C1n Re:lthn(! 49
On St:vtn H11ls 71. New Mt11RI1 62
On Summu ,!li. B:uavtu :'14
C!n Tnylor RJ . Cln lnd1an Hill60
Cm Winron Woods R2 , Can Nonh-

wcst4K

Ctn WomJwanl "i2. C1n Taft :'10
Ordev•lle 62. fbmfton Twr. :"ill
ClayrMnl ~5. Dover 52
Cle Cmholic 64, Garfield HIA Tnn1ty

7
7
II . ~.
12 . ~

.19(0T)

I~

Cle He1ghts 57, Lakewood ."i I
Ck:, Southca.~T 60, Waterloo 4tl
Cle S1 Edward A9 Cle Bl'OCdlcltne

.. .

It;

Friday's scores

Climon-~asste 7J, G11%neview :'12

Wo.U.inston II), Pooland97

Col A\:mk:my67 . Tree or Lrle 58
Col. Brookha...cn 64, Col B«t:hcmfl

Orlando IOH, Atlanta Y5
lrxh!Wl 116. Ba11nn I~
Cleveload -107, Phoemx R.~

62
Col Cc:ntenmul 55 .- Col LtndenMcKrnlcy 47
Col. Dc:Salc:o; 5'i. Cnl Ready 45
Col E:L'lt :"iK. Col NOI'Ih land!'il
Col. F..'\.~tmoor 62, Col Bn,gg~ !li2
Col Miffltn 66. Col Whetstone 54
Cnl Soutll 71 Col Mannn-Franklin
69
Col. St Clmrle!i 62. Newark Cn th :'17
Cot Wcs1 122. Walnut Ridge 74
Coldwnter ~I Mannn local ~I
Coltlntl Crnwrord 44 Cn:lltlinc 41
Culumbm S5 , Brnoklyn 4 .~
Con ... uy cre~IVU!W 6:\ Adn '\)!
Cur~ty 11 . T:tllnllu.lge62
Conl1trn.l L:1kcv1ew 62 Ncwron Fulls
40
Crcstwooll J'l. G;~mttmlle .n
Crooksvtllt 68, Morgan !li9
Cuyalmg.1 Foils R4 . Rt'IVC"nna 1K
Cuyallop:OJ Ht1. :"iY. Be:~chwnOO 4:\
Dalton~- l&gt;n)'lestuwn 66
pay Chnsn:m 17. Middletown Chr.

Su Antonio 101. Minnesota 90
U!ah 122. L.A Cltppen II.\

New lcrsc:y 9:\, Vancouver 1W

O.icaao 99. LA t.nken 84

Golden Slate 114. Toronto Ill

They played Saturday
Ponland a1 Philadtlpfua, 7 '0 p m
Bostoa .:11 Miami, 7:)0 p m.
Socmmen1o at Detroit. 7 JO p.m.
Clevelnnd m Milwaukee, 8 : ~ p m.
Minneso111 ar Dallas, 8: ~0 p m.
Sennle or Houston, ti:JO f1 m.

Toronro at LA. Chprcn. 10 ~0 r .m.

Today's J!:amrs
New York nl Indum.a.. I p m
Sun .a.numio ar Orlando. :l:JO p.m
Phocnt~ a1 WuhtfiJIOR. 6 p m.
Chm•oue II AlltiiHtt, 1 p.m.
Chicaco at Dcnm. 9 p.m.
Uuh ar l A Liken, 9 30 p.m.
New Jeney 111 Gulden Suu.:. 10 : ~0

4)

pm

• '

Ctn. Dter Park

Cln. Elder 69, Cm Ut Sullc 6J

D'.ty Paucrson 4\1, Day. Mt:ulowd:ilt
4J

· Monday's la'-

Ponland na Toron10. 7 r.m.
lA:trottlll New York. 1:JO r.m.
SIIL:mmenltJoiMmnll, 7·:\0p.m.
Danas at MtMCsota. Rp.m
U111h lll Van•.:oovn, 10 p m.
Galdeft State ul L.A Cllflpen. IO.JO

l6

Dix1e M, Nonhnd~ .n
Dublin Cnffman ~4 . Newnrk 'il
E C~mtun 7M. S:111dy Vt~l . 4:"i
E. Clinton ~9 . Wa yne~vd le 47
E LiWfJlool W, 0.1k Glen. W Vn 40
E. Puk..""1nc: 68, Ctllumt:Man,l 50
F..-tJun 66, Valley View 'i1
Edgenon 5K, Hu:k5Vtlk 44
Edgewood 74. Lcmon-Monme 70
Elyria Ftul Bapt 65, Grand R1vc1
Ao.:1ul 6J
. Elyritl Open Door 74, Cle Lutheran
E 7l
~y na W 64. Avun 411
Emnnuel Bart ~6. Oltawa Htlls ;ii4
Frurl~kl 7:"i. Milford 60
F:urfiekl Union 10. Bloom-Carmii6 J
1
Fourleu oaR. Akron Coven1ry 17
F111uport Harb or 7\1 , Th'omp son
l..t..'tl,:emonr ~
F:urvtew .'il. Avon l..:lke 4;\
F.:tlcrnl Htw.:ktng 67, Hemlock M1ller

pm

NCAA Division I
men's seores

-

Friday's action
C1tniSiu1 62. Manh... m• ~7
,DtV1mmath 64. Bmwn 60
· tlreJ.el H7 New Hampslure 7:"i
HIVVlWIS62. Yale 47
luna 7K. Niat:ara ~9
Mat..: 7!1. Hobtr-.1 :"i7
J\.·ma 77. Cnmell67
Pri"'-l.'fon 66, ColumtMa ..~
TowsnQ St 71, Nonhen.~tt."m fl7
VL&gt;t'mlmt9K. Hart10nl9!1i (.l

-

1\ _

Day Stebbin~&gt; 71 . Milton-Untnn 66
Ot:Gmrr R1vmtlle 54. Benjamin 1t_o.
p.an 'i I
,
lklflho~ Sl. John 's ffl . Foo R!!t.\lVI!t)'

on

~ {OT)

Fchcuy 61. Clc:rmunr Nonhcastern n
fmdl.1y 61 , Sylv~uun Nonhv1ew S'i
F1n:lnnd5 6J. Clcarview ~6
Fon l.ornmie "9 Jnchon Centl!r .W
Fo$1Mit\ Sl. Wcndclin 60 , Ttff1n
Cnlvcrl :'18
Fr:mkhn 64, Ox lord ralnwand.l (IJ.
rmnkhn· M(lnrue 77. Nmion:1l Trml

Howani. KI . Luyul:1. Md 6Q

Mldw"'

Cmcmnau 91. lllmm ~ S1. !li7

Far Wrsa
L.nynla Marymount tO. Gtm1~.1 bY
M1m1anu \14, ld:Wl 6K
Muntano1 St K~. r:. WoL~hllll!lun M
P(1nlant.l 7K. f\&gt;rp.-Ninc: 72
,
S Utnh ~. UC'Santa Cruz :17
Wdlt" Sr ij&lt;j, N. AnttlM 6~

••

Fremont St Jnseph 7:'i. Mohnwk 72

HlTJ

Fronuer 76 Bcalln tile 70
G:tlloway we~tlrmtl 71. Gab&lt;lnna M
Genna ~K Nnnhw11ut.l ~
C'Mo.'UfJL'town 1~. Rlanc~slcr 74
, GlcnOak' 'iM. New Ptnbtkljlhia 42
Gr:1ntl Val M. Jlym.11unmg Vnl 5h
Grntl\hicw 77. Washm~lnn C H 'r,o
Gnmvtll~· ~ . Berne Untnn !li9
Gn.-cnvillc K:l. S1dt~)' KO
H:mnltun 60. MlddiCIIIWII n
Ho.nul!tlft D~klin 714 Cm McN1(holas

Ohio men's
eollege seores
Friday's attlon
- · COOII Al.... k Ceftr.
Ocntsun61. Kenyon .~9
Wittenbt.'rf!. 10 I. Cmil: W~slcm 76
'Wdostcr M. Cltx.-rlin 62

1

Ohio women's
eollege-scores
Friday's ac:tlon
111a reo'

No 6 h1walll.. Ohio Sa.

HaNm NunhC'rn 74. V,mluc 50
tfcmh n \ Fisher C:11h 46
Hil.lll'd 47, ll1mnus Wurtlunj!tl)n .W

Hi,lh.bom Kol. Wlllmnuburj! .~9
Htllslkl~ !li9. Nhrwuylk.· 4.~
Hillhlfl.W. Slr)'ln l7
Htlly N:.nl:! 6!1i. Padu;1 :'IS
HowlAnd 7~. Sak.'ftl M
HI.Kiron ~I, Nort(ln bH
Joh• Olcnn62. Phi In ~ I
Kalidol711 . 0UtWIII~ 4\1
Kenton R•lll!c t.9 S11rmg Sh11wnt..'ll

1_,

-C..AIIIIttkCool.

K&lt;Aroo ~A. O.nisun u

Ketknnp. Ftum'lflnl ~7. F.urhllfll 7l
Key&amp;~one 60. W~lltnJton :"i 7
Krdron Chr ~7 . Conullon Val !lil
Khlf!.S 161 Gus hen ~I

Willenb&lt;rJ 79. C... Rctern: 76
WOUf'Cr 94, Oberlin J!li

9bio H.S. boys' 5e9res

Krnhuod •a. I'&lt;IT)' 4710TI
LaB~ 7b. Yota. LibL'I'Iy b,\
L.1kc R1d~e A.;;lll :"i~ . Willo-H1II Chr
l)

A/C;M,

~·

1114 FORD TAURUS GL 15513, AJC, AfT, AMJFM Clll., tilt,

crulu, P•.,tl:dc:we, fW clef., air bag, clott: IIIL .......:,lu,mJ
11112 OLDS DELTA. ROYAL 15812, Blue, A/T, A/C, tilt,
c:Nel, PW &amp; locka, Ali/Fil, P•.._ clott: liit.:...... $11,550
111411ERC. CC).UGA(t lCR7 15591, Rid, 2 Dr., A/T, A/C,

l.alkcluntl79, Radg..:wood !19
Uikevtcw 62. Newlon fall~ .UJ
Lcbanoo R:"j:, Oa.y Cnm1ll M
lx irsic 61. Arcadi:t ~
Ln•ngton !'i'J. Mansfi\!ld M1tt.li.son H
l..itrny Ce!Wer 6K. Conlil'lt!mal62
Uhmy Umon KO. Lickins, Hts .~ .
Ubeny· Bt:nton 71 . Cory-R:Iwson 114
U~king Co. Chr !W. Vt ~tory- Rntllay

l.it:king Vnl :"i8, UtiCit 46
Lima Ba.th RO. Kenton ~6
Lima C:tth .~H . Mdler City 46
LAma Shawner:: !liR ~lina. 'i6.

Lima Sr. n . Cm. Sycamore 72
U111111. Temple Chr. M. Rillgemont ~
Uncalnview R2, AUen E ~I
Usloon Rl Soo1""" Loca161
Uale MranU 60, Wtlmrnt.ton 50
Lopa 67. M.n..o l)'
London 6.'\, W. Jetfmon 41
Lonin Adm. KJns 44, Midvit:w :1:\
Loudonville 69, Bhw;:t. R1vcr SO
Louiaville 17. Mirava 66
Loaitville AquiruM 80, Canton Clllh.

61 . -·

) 1 - 84. 1\slllabola S1 John 58
Mllllitoo-Piaina 5~. C&lt;dilrvilk )7

s...,....,

-.

·'

4 579 583 •....._. .. ~lntonOounty(mu)
8 480 472 .........•Pt. Pleuant

v.a

..

Minnesoca .......... II
VuncouYtY
. 10

CUI

or.,

. Ext. Cab, -4x4, V-8, auto, PW.,
PL. lUI, cruise, More.

Dilll.u

wheels.............................................................................~

1989 BUICK REGAL CUST.I5617, V-8 eng., AIT, A/C, Allfil
~ •• I'IW del., PW &amp; locks, P. Hltl,' tilt, CruiH ....,..$7775
11194 PLYMOUTH Durnil • · 2
wtilte, eng., ·

PICKUP

Den¥Cr ................ 18

mirrors, rear ftlp seats, 23,000 mtlea. Bal. of Warr.• $13,995
1993 FORD,RANGER XLT SUPER CA815539, V-6 t11!1J.,
AfT, A/C, rillr lllcler, •P. Willa., 2 tone, R. ftlp Hllt.$12,805
1995 CHEVY $-10 SUPER CA815560, Blue, AIIIFII, 111'
bag, sport wt:eets, dual mtr., ...-r ftlp Hlta, 11,000 mi.,
'
balance
of factory warranty •••••••••..·............................$11,775
11194 MAZDA TRUCK 15552, 15,000 ml111, bal. of factory
war., blue, cuet.llrlpee, AMJFM ca11., aport wheels.$9250
1989 CHEVY $-1015522,36,000 mites, AMJFM Clll.,
running bolbrds, rear slider, duel mlbTCIR .................... $5495
1993 FORD RANGER XLT ~. Long bed, AM/FM can.,
dual mirrors, bed llner.......................................,........... $8420
1993 FORD RANGER XLT 15623, AM/FM, bed llner,lpCIIt

l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

'

San AniDnio . . .. 29
Ulab .................... JO
Housaon .......:vl

tOpper, lpCIIt Wheels, dual

$4995

IB

9

""""'"'
1\:Ill......
J. fd.

l:.a

aport wtteels, cuat. atrl.,.s ...........................................$7833
1995 CHEVY $-10 SUPER CA815555, Black, A/T, A/C,

l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .

12

WF.STERN CONFERENq

11192 FORD·RANGER 15592, Red, AM/FM can., bed Hner,

cloth lnterlor........................ ~ ............ :.......
11192 GEO METRO 15633, AII/FM cellltlt, A/C,

.444
409

.2o4 20

Cleveland . .............24 20
Detroil. .. ...... . 2'l 20
Clwlone .............. 21 22
Milwouka: .... ....... 16 26
TOronto .... ......... .12 l2

ftUCKI

bag, power \l¥ft'1Ciowl'.................................
11194 DODGE lNJREPID 15636, Green, V.e eng., A/T, A/C,
AM/FM ca11., P. wlndowl&amp; locka, air bag ..................$9144

GMC SIERU

Allanta .. . .... ..

AJC, A/T, AM/FM, cloth Interior .................,................ 110,757
.
.

IIIIOOOOOOIOOOIOOI00000000000000$5115

J

CCIIIroiDiwlolon
Oicaso. . .... 41
::\ 932
Indiana ............... JO 15 667

cruiH, air big, 711111., V-6 eng................................ $13,1115
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 15622, V-&amp;q., 7 pall.,

11192 GEO STOR~ 15495, White, AfT, A/C, AM/FM, dual
mirroi'e, cuetom llrlpla, cloth lilterlor ........................ $6485
1990 GEO STORM 15575, AfT, A/C, AM/FM callette,.
lpOit wlleeii...................................
1990 OLDS CALAIS 15533, Blue; AM/FM, dull mlmn,

Gl

.6,.

~12

New Jmcy ...........18 26
Bolton. . . .... .16 28
Philadclpllra ...... , ..... 8 J5

1989 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 15803, Grey, 7 Plll.rAIT,
A/C, v-8 eng., AMJFM calf., tilt, cruiae,tug. rack ....... $61100
11194 DO~E CARAVAN SE 15571, Slue, A/C,
tilt,
cruiH, AMJFM caa1., P. wlnaows &amp; locka, etr bag,
7 pe11., V-6 eng....................................................,......$14,53(1
11193 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 15499, Blue, V-6 811!1J.,

AII/I'II Clll., tilt, crut11,

....... ~ .~ Wi

NewYork ........ ....211 I~
Wuhlnlfon...........22 21
Mioml ..................20 1.~

A/C, A/T, AIIJFM, tilt crulst, air blg.............................st415
11194 CHEVY LUIIINAAPV 15547, Green, A/C, A!T, AM/FM,

4X4

AllonlkDiwlolon

~"r!t.

....

191M MERCURY TRACER S1W 15637, AfT, Ale, 'AM/FM, air

1••~~:

EASTERN CONFERENCE

I locka....................................................;...S18,515
1114 GEO TRACKER 4X4155119, Black, AMJFM cau., A/C,
apOrt wheelt, dtlll mlrrora••.••••.•••..•••.••••.•.•••.•••.••••••.•• $11 ,341

1993 MERCURY SABLE 15634, AfT, A/C, P. seete, wtnclc:We
&amp; locka, tilt,.crulli, AMJFM cap., v.e eng..........;........ -

14,?95

Southview S~
Brookfield 46, Hubburd 42
Brookvtlte n. Dar Oakwood 66
Bryan 64. Dtlra6
Buckeye VaJ 89, N Un1on :'il
Bucyrus 68. willnrd 59
Caldwell 6:\, Buckeye Trail 46
Canal Fulton NW 61. CMton S SJ
Canal Winche lter 61 , .a.manda·
Clenrcrec:k ~5
Canftt:ld 83, Gmlf'd47
Canton GlenOak !Iii, New P.htlodel·
phia42
Canton MtKinlc!y 68, Massillon 58
Cmlinal61 . Btrlshire 45
Carchngton 73, Mount G1lead 67
Can:y 73. Seneca E. ~:"i
Cnnollton 41, Akf9n Spring. 40
Ctntcrburg 64. Danville 54
Cbaoel 81 , Elyna Catlt :"i4
Cllardon 60, Solon 4:\
'
O.illicOihe 60, Gmve City ~6
Cm At ken 79, Cm Western Hills 66
Cin Ander~&gt;on 76. Cln Glen Eue 67
,Cm Country Day !li2. Cin Locklnnd

__...,p..,. standings

Atr,

S-10 PU

soon as I say he can't, that's enough
fuel to gel him going," Jordan said
with a grin. "So I believe in him."
.As Johnson ~Jordan sat together 1n a packed Interview room after
the game, Johnson said " The
world's greatest player, he~ to my
left, puts you in so many bad
predicaments."

=-=

rear defroller, cloth lntiJior ......................................... $8870

\996
G.O
...TUCKER
'
4x4, alr, st8f80, 15' wh8els, Wild
Fire Red
$
.

· "I'm sure in due time he can
show these guys he can play the
game," Jordan said after the Bulls
dominated the Lakers 99-84 Friday
night to dim the luster of the fiMt
Michael-Magic meeting since Chicago won tlie fifth and final game of
the 1991 NBA Finals.

--~

1114 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4155n, Whitt, U Tahoe, ltattler
Ults, A/C, A/f, v.eq., 4 Dr~ AM/FM can., power locks
&amp; wtndowe, tilt, crulle,lpCIIt wheels, roof rack ...... $11,1110
1114 FORD EXPLORER XLT 4X415585, 4 Dr., aport
Whlela, ~.AfT, AMJFM caaa., tilt, cruiH, rear del., P.

Marietta.....................9-8-15-21=53
Logan .................... l5-16-15,-21=67
MARIETI'A .,_ Ttm HesJop 4-32=19;Adam Trautner~l=l; Drew
Piersall 1-0-0=;2; Jared Perrine 1-0·
I =3; Mike Wells 0-0-3=3; Joe
Vukovic 8-0-4=20; Mark Vukovic 20-1 =5. Totals: 15-4·11=53
LOGAN - Craig Frasure 2-0-

KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) Hale Irwin, lasi year's Senior PGA
Tour Rookie of the Year, shot a 65 to
iake the first-round lead in the·Roy- ,
al Caribbean Classic.
'
Irwin held a two-shot lead over
Dick Rhyan, who came in at 67. Bob
Charles and Rick Acton each shot
68.· Ray Aoyd headed a group four
strokes back at 2-under 69.

~

tfw! •

Pqe C3

Mot..,.~.
62 .
M...roeldSo. 77,CI&lt;. V!\-SJ7)
• MlllatieiJ St P.:rcr'' n . Mansfie ld
Chr. S4.
(

Marion- 81 . Nl&gt;nhmor62
.. Martoa River Val. 62. Spwla Hllh1Md4'l
•

.

•

meeting since t991

NO TRUCKS, NO GIMMICKS,
NO GAMES
Just GOOD Used Cars at
Super LOW-PRICES!

414'1

Ouarter l!llllll

-Sports briefs--

Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpolla, OH • Point Ple•llnt, WV

I

first league setback

from the hardwood •••

·.Fiflh~ranked

.

-· Logan hands Tigers

TALES

., Sunct.y, February 4, 1996

OH • Point Pleasant, .wv

Pomeroy • Middleport •

MarlinJIOn 6.1. W Brunc:h S.
ManinJ feoTY ... B•clu:ye Lo&lt;:aJ 48
Muyaville 6l Franklin Hts ~9
Millon 60. Norwood 47
t.tauillon Jac:kson 52. Alliance 4'\
Malhews 69, ColhnJ Western Re"""' 68

Maumee $6, Pelrysbu1J4:"i
Mi»JJTTCC Val. 11. Tol. Ovis11an 62
Mayfoeld ~. Eruoloke N 4~
MIII)'IVtlle :"iO, New Luin&amp;ton 40
(OTI
McClain 61 , Mu~omi Tnk'1: ~~
McDonald 4A Mmenl Rklge 41
Medtna 79, Berea ~0
Medina First Bart 61. H~ritage Chr.
46
M ~mor 82 E Clevel1mt.l Shaw 7!1i
Mentor L..* Cath 67 . Cllnrdon NO-

CUR

Miamisbura

~.

M1ddl..:1own Fen'VIck

46
Middlefield Cnrdinul 61 . Burton
Btrksturc 4.'i
Middl e1own Muduon ;ii6, Preble
Shawnee .'i2
M1dpark 94, Cloverleaf :"i9
Mmster 71 , Pnrkway 6.'i COT)
Mnsusinuwn Val 80, Tipr Cuy
Bethcl47
Mooroe Centml 68. Fon Fryt !'i:'i
Mount Vernon 70, Delaware :"iS
N Canton 61 . M;tntllon Perry ~I
N. Ctnlrnl/4, &amp;loa 66
N. 01m~led 42 . W~1lake 34
N Rtdgev lllt.! ~ . Southview 67
N R{lyallon 72. Brunswick ~5
New Alb:lny !li4, MiUer~porl ~ ;\
New Knoll ville: 76. New BR:men 4~
New Rctgcl n. N Bnllimore 'i~
New Rtthm.md 47, Lovehmd 46
Newbury 6J, Bmlol ~)
Nurdomn 69, Brush 60
Nonhridgc 77, Lucll~; H
Norwt~lk Sf&gt;, Galton 3R
Oberlin 62, Rroobule 46
OlentMgy 68. Lakewood ~
Olmslcd Fulls 74, Rocky River 52
Ontano 71 , Fredencldown 66
OranJe 66. Kenston !li5
·
Orange au 72. You. ChnSIIOII 66
Orcaon Clay ~. Fn:mont Ros~&gt; n
Oreaon Stnlch 69, Danbury Ukestde
61
Olsego 69, Elmwood 64 (0T)
Onawa-Gii1ndorf 77. Elid.l49
Pninesv1lle H~y 80. Conlk!aut 66
Patne~v•lle R1ventdc: 84, Jcflcuon
Areal9
Pondorn-Grlboa 60, Arlington !liJ
Pnrma 70. Shaker H11 67
Parritlt Henry 76, Montpelier ~~
Patalding 61. Delphos JdfL'1'10n 4H
Petmville 71 , Fnyent: 62
Plymouth !iO. Mapleton 41
Polartd 62. Struttlen 37
Renrc 79. H1ghhtnd 76 (0Tl
Rr:ynoltlsbur&amp; 47 Pickering1on 40
R1chmond Dnlc SE 73. Hunllnj!t~l ll ~2
RIJ,;hmomJ Hu 12. lndcf'll!ndem:c 69
(OTI
1tivcr V1ew R4 W Mu,ki~um .liM
Rootstown 89, Moa;tldnn: flO
Rossfun157 Holland Sprin,: 47
Russ1a 72, Houston 49
S Cen!rol ~ - A~lnnd~stvicw !Iii
S Charlest on Southeastern 71. YellowSpnng.\66
S Range 6b, hckson M1llon 46
Sebring !li6 Columbtnn Crtstvtew ~~
Sherwood F;~trv~ew ''· Hol&amp;me 30
Southmgltm Chalker 72. Lordstown
ll
SflCRCCn&lt;tllc 52. Columbus GroVt: :'iO
Spnng C:11hobc 7K. Gmham ~~
Spnng Local 46, Lowellvtlle 4~
SprinJ Nurlh 67. Wa)'ne 61
•
Spnn~ Ntll'!hea~tern M. Urbana 54
Sprin~ Snu lh f'l7 Denven:reek. ~(}
SpWlf!hnm ~J. Hamilton Ro ,,~ 44

Jordan smiled and rolled his eyes.
Neither Johnson nor Jordan were
big factors in the game. Jordan
scored 17 points, 14 below his
league-leading average . Johnson,
who had 19 points, 10 assists and
eight rebounds 10 his return three
nights earlier, a 128-118 win over
Golden .State, had I 5 points. three

ass ists and three rebounds in the loss
to the Bulls.
At least one player didn 't think
much oftheiluildup for the game or
of Johnson's peiforrnanee.
"Michael and Magic was a bu~ch
of hype. They need more than a rusty
Magic to beat this team," said Den·
nis Rodman , who played tight

Northnlt Didston
Pittsburgh . . . :'\1 16 :l 6:"i 2;\8 168
Mon~Tcal.
. 1.1 2n 6 l6 162 m
Boston ... . . 21 20 7 49 171 17:"i
Hanf'ord ... . . 20 2l 6 46 144 16)
Buffalo. .. . ... 20 26 ;\ 43 146 160
Ollawa ......... 9~92 20114199

KANSAS Crrv ROYALS Aa""d oo
terms with Kev1n App1l'r. pircher. on a
one -year contract
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Agreed
lo terms w1th Cal Eldred, pit cher, on u
one-year contr.K.:I
SEATILE MARINERS: Agreet.l to
term s wnh Norm Charlton, pitcher, on
one-year contracts 0cfllntlted Willi s
Otanez. inlielder. for wrgnment
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Released
Cmy Page, J'lllch«, and re·S tJnetl him 10
a tln nliK·Ie a~ue con1 roc1

WESTERN C::ONFERENCE

Iom

Crntnl Di"Won

Derroit .... '' .
CIUCiiJO .......
Toronto ..
.
St LoUIS ..
Wmrnpee:
Dallas ........

1\: J. I I'll. GE !lA
:\:'1 9 4
261~11

22 19 9
21 20 9
21 2!1i 4
14 2511

74 181
6~ 176
SJ I:'II
')I IJS

46 176 1 8~

Nalionul LuttH
ATLANTA BRAVES. S1gned Murk
Lemke sa=~.:ond baseman . to 11 one-year

~9

COn lr~l

1.\7 112

Pacifit' Division
CoiQr.odo .
27 I~ 9 6) I97
Va.neoover .... Ul 20 U 49 lll:'i
1a
10 46 148
LosAngeles ... 172:\12 46171
Edmonton ... ltl26 6 42 IH
Anllhe1m . . ltl 28 'i 41 144
Son Jose: . . .. 111:'i 'i 21 IS9

c,,,.., . . .

106

141
147
1:\6

n

JjS

CHICAGO CUBS Agreetlln renns
wnh Scoll Se:rvm~. c:ll~:her. on a one-year
o.:on1r011:1
FlORIDA MARLINS Agreetl to
terms With Aklt An&lt;~~ . inliddcr, on a two·

1115

)'Car lOIII rOCI

14)

11:\

190

LOS ANGELES DODGERS. Ag,..;d

111

1n1 ~nu~

229

one-ycoll' l;Ontmcl

. Friday's scores
Vancouver 5, Dallas 4
Hanford 4, Anaheifn ~

They played Saturday

Pinsburgh a1 Detroit, 1 p m
Pbiladefph1a at St Lou.is. ~ f .m.
NY Rangm al Colorado.. Jl.m
Clucaao at San Jose, :l p.m.
Ronda ar TnmpaBIIy. J J1 m.
Burtalo at Boston. J p.m.
New J&amp;:BC:y nl Ounwa, 7·10 p m
NY Islanders 11 Washmgton . 7·:\0
p.m

Montreal at Toron1o, 7:)0 p.m.
los Angeles ar Ci~lgary, 10 'lO run

Today'sgames

Tampa Bay al ButTalo. :'1 p m
Vancouver a! Wmmpcg. J (l.m
Dallas at N Y bla~ . 7 J'1 m
Cllicago 111 An:lhetm, Hfl m

wuh Brandon W:ms. pi1cher, O n~

MONTREAl EXPOS . A1!-reed tn
l..:rms wnh Mm:ies Alou, outliehkr, on a
one-ye&lt;ll' ~untmcl
NEW YORK METS Numcd K~:v111

Blankenship scoullnt s urervi ~ ur for rhe
Sourhcrn Cahfonun :u'CII .
SAN DIEGO PADRES NilffiL-d Tom
HouS(' tmema1ional baseball co n~ uU a m

Basketball
NationAl Baskrtball A!i!K!Cialion

NBA Suspcndctl IXn ver Nu!!~cu
Jnlcn Ruse :Inti Mllwauk1..'t' Bua.:b
gu:1rtl Sh~rmnn l&gt;oughl 5 for one i!iltnC
Wll hnul Jl.OI)' and. hnctllllcm $7.~00 anti
$4.4XXJ. respc..·ttvely. lor the1r n\ttons m u
j!.tntt: on Feb I
WASHINGTON BUI..Lb'TS Sl~nl!d
Greg Grant, gmll'tl. In a IO-t1.1y ctmlr,IJ,;I
Placed Chns Webh...'l', lorward and M nr~
Pnce. guard. nn tht: mJured lui
~tu,1nJ

Coolinmta18a."'-etrnlll A~lalion
¥1\KIMI\ SUN KINGS . Stgnct.l
Kcndnck Warren, lorw01ni

Transactions
Baseball

COLORADO SILVER BULlETS ·
Named John Ntekro Jltlthmg l;Uauh

Ameriean LfaJ:uc
B,AlTIMOR£ ORIOLES · Agreetl 10
te rm s wnh Calvm Mtu.lurn and Bnun
Sat::kmsky. fHichus. Brad Tykr inlidtk..'f,
and 8 J. W:I~ZJI~ . .::ncher. en one-ytllr
conlrncls Srgned Rocky Coppm~er . M1ke
Horde)', Jm•my Myers, Ketth Sherard,
nnd Don Aorence. ptl~:hcrs. Junmy Fo~er
and Kns Gresham. e;udll:rs , Rod Robcn5on, 1nf1elder. Gr.:g Bl osser, JiirYI S
Brown. n.fttl JOt! Hall. ouUielders, 10 mt·
nor-k:nguc contracls
BOSTON RED SOX Named Stne
August director or baseball operations:
Erw1n Bryant an1stam scouring d~n~~: tor .
Jack McCor mack tra"Yelhng secretary;
Tom Muorr: ba~Cball opera1inns aumant;
and Kent Qualls coordinator ol tmscbnll
opemtioo1. . 1

•

!

defense on Johnson during most ~f
the 32 minutes Johnson was on Qle
court
.
1
" Ma2ic doesn'l have the legs tel
for this game. He 's out there reaiJI·
ing and grabbing. That doesn't get it
in this league."

While Jordan was relatively qui(See NBA on C,.4)

Football

Natkmal r.ocwa.....

I'&gt;

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NEW ENGLAND PATRJOTS . E,;
tended lheir ll'tllllln&amp; ~amp apeel'l'lel'l wtU(
Bryant College un11l 1998 . Re-1i1ned
Troy Brown, w1de m:dver-kiek returner
NEW YORK JETS Named D8 vidl
Price trnmer
•
Canadian Foott.U Lape
SASKATCHEWAN ROUGHRtO.,
ERS· Announced Par Perles, orfen1in
li ~"C" coach. w1U ooc rerum Announced the
rcnre~nl of Frank Smith, n111nma backsWide rtt.ctvers coach

Hockey

,

Nal'-nal Hodc:ey ~­

BUFFALO S!\BRES. R&lt;colled Sam ·
Pc-:.rson. left wmg. from Roches1er or the '
AHL on an eme1gency basis.
COLORADO AVALANCHE . Sent'
Anron M•ller, defenseman, to Cornwall of,
the AHL
.
EDMONTON OILERS Sen! Gre&amp;
DeVnes, defenseman, to C~ Breron of1
rhc ·AHL
FlORIDA. PANTHERS . Recn lled
Bob Bou8hnn, derenscm:m. from Cutoh-;
na ofthc AHL
HARTFORD WHALERS. Sent Ja.'K!n
Mt"B;un :md Murek Mnl1k, deft:mmen. 10 ·
Spnnj.lield of rhc AHL
MONTREAL CANA.DIENS. Senr '
Patnck U.brecqt~e goallcndrr, 10 F~-,
1c1on of rhe AHL
NEW YORK ISLANDERS Ac .
qu1red Bob Hnlkldis, defenJCm3n, from '
the Cli1cngo Blackhnwlu ror Dil111ton Cote ·
rtght wing
·i
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS Recalled .1
Aru Bnmam~ defenseman. from tfer"shey
uf the AHL. ·
•
SAN JOSE SHARKS· Recalled lArry •
Dyck. JOaltcndcr. from Kanw C1ty of the •

IHL

I

College

BAYLOR Announ~tl 1he nmgnarion
of D1ck Elhs, atMcuc director. cffecllve 1

Ma,.

~I .

•

YAlE Announ~..~d the rettrement or'
STeve Griggs. mcn 'li soccer c t~h
·

"""!""-----Sports briefs----Baseball
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Kevin
McClatchy lost one of Ius largest
investors and $5 million '" equity.
but the Pittsburgh Pirates' buyer
insisted the last-mmute pullout won'l
sin I&lt; the nearly done deal.
Apparently unhappy with his limIted role in the Pirates' day-to-day
operations, metals dealer William
Snyder bolted only three days before
McClatchy's final paperwork was
due to be filed with major league
baseball.

McClatchy, a California businessman whose buyout w~s
approved by baseball's ownership
co mm1ttee on Wednesday, said he
would begin to raise eKtra capital
immediately.
Tennis
ZAGREB, Croatia (AP) - Topseeded Goran lvamsevic, Cr6atia's
top tennis player, advanced to the
semifinals of the Croatia Indoors
tournament by heating Adrian
Voinea of Romania 3-6,6-4, 7-6
4).
.

q-

&lt;On

Streeuhofo 6~ Ftclll61
Stmnj!svl!le 72. Br'-'\:kmllc 65
~
Swanton 7!\, Evcrj!n.'Cn 6:\
Tc,I)'S V;1l 6tl. Loga n Elm :'IH
T'--cumst•h 11:!, Grt-oenon ~2
Tlfftn Cnlumbi,mu tO. Upptr S:m·
tlusky :"iol
Ttrfl C11)' 74, Stdn.:y Lchm.1n hi
Tol Ukht-)1 6K, Tol S1 frnnch 62
Tol Rog.m H7, Tol W.u le ~2
Tol S\:1111 ~ . T~ Crt~hoh c 46
Tol S1 John·s 87, Tnl. Wootlwllfll !Iii
Tol S1a11 66 Tnl S..lwdk.'l' H
Tol Wlulmcr67. Na(l01eonll"i(0T)
Tnwnln 'i I. C.~thz '\2
Tn VIII;Jg..: 117. J\nsonm !liM
Tn· V,,llc)' 51 Shendm1 :'17
Trt.td 64. lntlmn l.:.1ke 61
Tnw;ty 70 Clco1r Fnrk 61
TrotW!IIll.l M:.Llbtm 9~. Jl1qua 1M
Tn1y 7H. Nonhrnont tH
Tu~ .: aruw:l!l: Cath. 6!'i , New conwr stown 4M
Tu~k1w HI lndmn~nl 6tl
Twm Vulk'y S. 79. Tn·Ctll.lnty N 6~
Twinstv~ 6l4. W. Gr.tu~n 51
Un1oto 7M. Adena 70
Unned ''H. Le~mnm 29
Ut'flCr Arhngron ~7 , Dublin Scrotu '49
Upr-=r .Soolo Val . 57,1..tma Pmy 49
Volley Forge 72, Nnrm,11ll1)' 4:"j:
V:m Bun."'l 69, MLComb 'i9
Van Wert 71. Oefiom:e 60
Vnmir10n 71. Elynn 71
V.:rllmllcll67, Mmmt F. "iM
W Carmlllon t.7 . Vanililia.1 Buller 50
w ~tcr l.aklltll n Cln Prmceton

&lt;7

~

41

"I'm telli n' you, man.
I was there. I saw the whole thing.
It was enormous."

W Hulmcs 64 , Mcdma Buckeye 47
W Ltbcny Snlem 77. Me~ham u bur~
W.ulsw!lr1 h fit&lt;. Gh.'CII 50
W:tl!lh Jcsuu62. 1\kron Sl V-St M SM
W.lfluktln\'lol Ci1, S1 M .~ty'~ ~2
W,1rren Champit1n .'iO. Blldj;t.'f oiH
W.mcn Kennedy ~I You Moon.:y

WarTCn~ vdlc Hrs. 'i7. Gnrliclll Hts. lK
Wayne Tr.11.'t" 69. 1'mnrn !'iii
W,lync~fielli-Gosllcn 74} Fa1rbanb
62
'
Wcllscnn 7K, Vmltlft Counly btJ
Wdlsv1llc 61 . Be.1vt.'f U.~t:.ll ol~
Wt.'~t..:rv1lk N .'i~ . Grov..:ron 4.\
WeJoll.dl/1. P:un1 V:1l 52
Wb~leubor,!! 61, Luc:uv111e V11l bl
Wlutch.tll8:'1 Watkins Mcmuri,1l :"i7
Wu.:khffc 60, Ol.:l~Jln F:llls 4:\
WilkMI!!hby S h'l. Mapk Hb t.M
Wiodllnm b6. Wnodridgc !'i2
W1'KX1nanre ~9. F..:I!Oiwnotl49
Wooster 60, Unnmtuwn l.:1ke ~M
World H~trvest 7H. Ikl.!wruc Chr .~I
WmthiDltiUn Krlbournt: 4K, Wc~te ~
ville S. 47
Wynfoftl 7;ii, Rivetdult.' 64
Xcni" 6tl, Cedarville 60
Yoy Boardm.1n !'9, You. Unuhne 5~
You . Ens! !'i6. Cle. Kennedy :"iJ
You Rnyne 60, Campbell4:'1
You . Wtbon 8~. You. Chaney 73
7...1rte Tr.11:e 57. Piketon 44
Zant..osv1llc !liR, l.ancaster 41
Z.1.nesv111c Rt~'\:ro~ns 4:"i. Col Wall~·
son4:l

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NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AttontlcDivi-

Ioaa

1\: L

:t fiJ. GE GA

NY R~~n~~m . )01118
Florido .............. Jl 14 6
!'lfil""lphio ... lj 14 II
w................2. 21 ~
New Joney ........22 22 6
.2t20 7
NY. l t - . .... tJ 21 8

r..,.....,. . .,. .

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1)9
IJI
129
~ t:IO t24
49 14!
34 Ill 18)

70118
68 177
61· Ill
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�Iunday, Ftbru8ry 4,. 1_.

NBA

..
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gam~s ~._on-ti~-fi-rom_~_-3_&gt;_

-

The Bulls were coming off a 20.
points Uld Rodman had a sepson- point win a1 Sacramento the previous
higl1 23 rebounds 10 help the Bulls night, but they· showed no sign of
win their !8tl) straight, improving fatigue.
their record to 41-3. ·
" I knew the whole game would
· Chicago shot SS percent·and ran be built up around Michael and ~ag­
up a 20.pointlead.early in the. third . ic," Pippen said. "We didn 't want to
quaner on its way to a franchise. get caught up in that from a teamrecord ninth consecutive road victo- standpoint. That's what the fans in
ry.
the Forum wanted to see, but we didJohnson was impressed.
n'I want to get caught up in that."
. ''They're all they'_re built up to be
In other NBA games, it was Utah
and more," he said. "They really are 122, the Lbs Angeles Clippers 113;
· clicking on all cylinders and playing de vel and 107, Phoenix 85; San
very well. I didn't have as much fun Antonio 101, Minnesota 90; Orlan(as Tuesday night), but give them a .do 108, Atlanta 95; Indiana 116,
lot of credit"
Boston 108; Washington 113, PortJordan, who himself returned land 97; N~w Jersey 93, Vancouver
from a 17-month retirement last 84· and Golden State 114 Toronto
March and really didn't hit high gear 11
until this season; said he understands
Jazz 122, Clippers 113
what Johns'on faces in his comeback.
Karl Malone had the first triple''That's something that takes double of his .11-year career, getting
time," said Jordan, at32 four years 27 points, 15 rebounds and 10
younger than Johnson. "It took me assists.
a little while to get back in the game,
Malone's best-known teammate,
and it's going to take him the saine John Stockton, also is closing in on
amount of time."
a career milestone·. He had two
Cedric Ceballos led the Lakers steals in the victory, leaving him 18
with 23 points, an.d ·Elden Campbell shy of Maurice Cheeks' NBAcareer
added IS , ·
record of 2,310.
l
.' '
. The victory kept the Jazz in a virtual tie with San Antonio atop the
Midwest Division standings.
·
Stockton scored a se_ason-high 31
points and Jeff Hornacek added 27
(Results.as of Jan. I?)
for
Utah, which led by as many as 21
Leflgue · - Early .We~nesday
in
the
third period bc;fore allowing
Mixed
the
Clippers
to pull within six.
· ·ream standings - Captain D's
Terry
Dehere
led the Clippers
(30-10), Tony's Carryout (30· 10),
with
3.1
points,
a
career-high.
Brent
F.O.E..2171 (24-16),.Thunder Alley
Barry
added
23,
also
a
career-high,
Cats (22'- I 8), )),V. Weber Construction (10-30), . 1\ojeigs· Golf Course l)ut the Clippers lost for the sixth
(2Q..2tl), !Shainsaws &amp; Roses (14-26) time in .seven game! and dropped to ·
6-'16 on the road.
IJ!IP R&amp;B Bi:'ads (8-.32).
Cavaliers 107, Suns 85
· Tealn'higlueries-F.OcE. 2171
Cleveland
tied an NBA record
'(1922) :
.
' .. '
with
I
0
three-pointers
in·the first half
• Team high game -. Tony's Carand
routed
road-weary
Phoenix
.• ryout (659)
behind
23
points
from
Chris
Mills.
' ' ·
· Mt:n
Phoenix , playing ,the seventh
Individual high series - John
game
of an eight-game road trip, was
Tyree (543) and Bub Stivers (50 IJ
. ,Individual high game·- Tyree
(219) and Roger &lt;;hrpenter ( 197).
BSBA meeting
"
., Women
· lndivillual high series ..,- · Pat set fo.r Wednesday
Carson · (520) , and Maxine Dugan
BIDWELL - The Bidwell Sum(~02)
'.'· . ,
mer Ball Association will hold a
lndivlduafblgh'game - Carson
meeting Wednesday at7 p.in. at Bid( ]~4):~n~.!J~IrY Smith &amp; Margaret well-Porter Elementary.
Eynqn (129) ·
' ·.
·

i.

·

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:Maso·n. Bowling
:Leagu, results

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-•-*-

i' . ;~ ·'(Resulfli as of Jan. 18)

'
Lyne ·Center slate
.
RIO GRANDE -. _Here is the
schedule lor the week of Feb. 4-11 at
thc.Univi:rsity of Rio{]rande's Lyne
' .'' .
.
Center,
· Fitness tenter, gymnasium
' · ·: 'and 'racquetball courts ··
Today- 1-3 and -6-11 p.m.
Monday- 7 a.m.- II p.m.
7 a.m.- 11 p.m.
WCilnesday- 7 a.m.- 11 p.m.
Thursday- 7 a.m.- II p.m.
F,riday -· . 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday--' 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 11- 1-3 and 6-11
p.m.

WaY_;

Michael vs.
Magic

&lt;

· :. Free-weight room

· ' 1"!H!aY ,..,.. CIOjied
,.

'

.

M~y- 3:31).,8:30 p.m. .
,T hnday- 3:30-8:30 p.m. ·
• , ~~n~y - 3 :~9-8:30 'p.m.
tiui;Sday - c!osea ,
Frld!iy....,. 3:30-8:;,10 p.m1
. Saturday ~ closed ·
. Sunday, Feb. II - closed

-

tha .,lonaorahip o1 Rio Gnmcle BP m8n8ger Milrk '
McCartney. Complimentary ticket&amp; are available.;_•
at the atatlon.
"

ANAH~IM.

the •Los Angeles Kings and the
Ducks in the past three nights.
sWt shy of setting a Hartford team
Whalers coach Paul Maurice was
record for consecutive starts by· a non-commital as to whether he
goalie.wou].d send out Burke after a few
Thal. near-miles~ne was buried dufs ofT when Hartford plays at Vanbeneath all the· questions · ~e was couver next Wednesday.
asked abOut . m~ing
key sav~
. " Our schedule will dictate as we
against AU-Star Paul Kariya on Fri- get further in the season, " Maurice
!Jay night. . .
said of Burke's future starts. "He's
·Burke used his glove aqd lli~ wits playcsf'very well of late."
to save a crucialwin.in ~is 21 ~~con­
Burke stopped, Kariya's shot just
sccqtivc stan, a 4-3 triumph foNiiC a minute before Nelson Emerson
Whalers
against the• . 1.Anahc\111
broki: the 3-3 tic with his I8th goal
1
1
.. ..
.Mighty Duoks. . ·
·
.:, of the season. with 2:08 left in the .
·~1 wa• unaware of that tecorlt,'•
second session.
Burke . iaid of Oreg . Millen~s · 2~ .
When Kariya rltsscd his shot, he
straight starts in goal for HanfQrd_in collided with l.inesman Baron Park1984-85. "I'm just glad we are get- er.
ting some days ofT after playing three
Parker had to be taken oil on a
games in four nights with all thC stretcher, delaying the match six
travel."
minutes. He suffered a mild concusBurke, who made 24 saves, is sion and was taken lo St. Joseph's .
now 9-9-3 during his streak, includ- Hospital for further examination .
ing wins on the West Coast against Kariya was not hun.
.

PHONE 992·2196

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Output, elect.
dash, power
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auto trans and
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Pa~k nixes weekend races

FLOIU!NCE, Ky. (AP) :.._ Turfway Park canceled live horse racing
Friday night and Saturday dOc to the
extremely cold weather.
,
Park officials decided to cancel
live racing following the first race
FriR.~Y ~vc;ning.
. ., , ..

1112 FORD

4.3 V6High

Calif. (AP) - Sean

Burk01did~~t know that lie's just one.

.

JOHNSON

transt\:r the franchise to a city outside
the state of Washington."
But the judge cautioned, "This is
by no means the fina l word on this
lawsuit, much less what happens to
the Seahawks."
Faced with the prospect of a Seahawks move to fill the void left in
Los Angeles by the depanures oftbe
Raiders and Rams, the NFL said:
"Until these (legal) matters are
resolved, tbe team will remain in
Seattle as far as the league is concerned."
p
·I
Behring, who has owned the Seahawks for eight seasons, has a.lease
with the county to play in the Kingdome through 2005.
·
But if the Browns can leave
Cleveland for Baltimore, as they
hope, what's to stop the·Seahawks?
Behring has no intention of selling the NFL franchise nor of playing
another game in the Kingdome, the
team 's only home since it began play
in 1\176, said Ronald L. Olson,
Behring's lawyer.

"There is no way that this counRamennan scheduled a Feb. 16
ty can ~land before this court and · hearing on King County's req~est for
claim that this is a safe structure for a permanent injunction.
playing football games, " Olson said.
His temporary order allows the
"Under no circumstances will he team to shut down and move its local
(Behring) put a team into that struc- offices and training camp, so long as
lure and take the liability that goes the Seahawks play their home games
with that."
in the Kingdome next season.
In a statement, Behring said nothOlson said the move would take
ing about his ul ti mate destination but place this wec.kend.
declared, "It is with great regret that
In Inglewood, Calif., Hollywood
I am announcing today that the NFL Park board chainnan R.D. Hubbard
franc hise we purchased is leaving said he wants to talk with Behring
Seattle." ·
and the NFL about building a stateThe NFL hasn 't been able to slop ol~the-art stadi um .
teams from moving. So if anyth ing
"We arc ready to give the football
stops the Sea)lawks, it will probably fans of LA a fantastic new stadium,"
be the courts.
Hubbard said.
"This office is not in a posi tion to
In Seattle, King County Execudetermine whether there is a seismic tivc Gary Locke was ready, to pu,t up
risk ," the league said.
a light to keep the franchise that
The NFL said it wou ld discuss the joined the NFL as an expansion tCllm
Seahawks at a ' Feb. 8-9 owners al0 ng with Tampa Bay in 1976.
meeting in Chicago. The problem of
"This madness in football of
shifting franch ises, iitcluding those abandoning loyal fans simpl y must
in Cleveland and Houston , already stop," Locke said: "This is a football
was on th e age nda.
town, but th is comm unit y will not he
coe rced in any fonn , in any fashion,

whalt:trs ·and Canucks nolch

9Vitd .

411DDlEPO

t , ..

~ Uul•

PageC5 ·

The Race Book at Turfway Park
~as to be open for simulcasting
today, with cards scheduled from
Aqueduct, Gulfstream Park, Santa
Anita, Bay Meadows, Garden State·
and Penn National.

· "I'm hanging on the edge likeeverybody else," he said.
The team's subUrbah ·Kirkland .
headquarters WI!S locked up and ·
guards were posted in the parking lot
and lobby late Friday. _
With the 'NFL's recenl record of.
clubs moving almost at will, Seattle ··
pro football fans were ba.ing a lot of
their hope on keeping their team on
Portland Trail Blazers owner· Paul
Allen.
Allen, who lives on Mercer
Island, co-founded Redmond-based
Microsoft .Corp. with Bill Gates:
" ... To date, no one has alerted us. •
that the team lifO(or sale," Allen
spo~es woman SUsan Pierson ·said ·
Friday, adding that "as a fan, he '
hopes they stay in town."
Behring bought the Seahawks in .
1988 for $8Q million and $19 million
in existing debt. He installed his SQn, ·.
David, as president.
The Seahawks arc now estimated
to he wortn between $160 mi Ilion · ·
and $200 million, including $40 mil- • .
lion of debt.
·

of the first period.
Valeri KarJlOv gave the Ducks a
.3-2 advantage on a breakaway 4:33
into the second period.
Coach Ron Wilson was not hap·
py ahout the play of tbe Mighty
Ducks aftertheir impressive 2-1 win
over division leader Colorado on
Wednesday night.
" We have too many highs," he
said . " We had a great effort the oth-

er night and then w_c slack off. We
didn't show the Hl)rlford Whalers the ·
respect they deserve."
· Veteran defenseman Bobby Dollas was al so unhappy about his
team's inconsistent play at home,
where the Ducks are justll -12-2.
" When we go to' another team's
building, they take •control of the
game." he said.

wi~s in limited NHL action

Andrew Cassels had a goal and
two assists for Hanford, including
the goal that mad e it 3-3 at the I 5:23
mark of the second period .
" We knew we wercn ' t goin g to
play for awhile." Cassels said of the
win, "so we didn't wanl to leave

anything out on the icc. Everyone
was pretty pumped up for this
game."

It took the Whale rs onl y 32 sec-

Iowa

to keep football here."
Before filing its suit, the county
rejected a $20 million buyout offer
from Behring and said he could not
legally brea~ the lease.
Locke accused Belving.of "moving the goalposts" repeatedly by
upping his demands for King~ome
improvements.
· "One bus to seriously question
whetber Mr. Behring was ever serious about staying in Seattle," he
said.
. "Money damages aren't adequate
in this type ol' situation," county
prosecutor Nonn Maleng said. "We
have tbe right to specifically enforce
this agreement, and that's exactly
what we're going to do."
Locke said· that Behring "does
not have any deals with any other
party or city," but added that the
team owner wanted to take the Seahawks to California.
Seahawks players still have not
heard anything from Behring or
team oJ'Iicial s,·l3-year veteran Trey
Jupkin said.

ond s to score after the opening faceoff as Cassels ass isted on Glen Wcs- ~
ley's 40-fo ot backhander past Anahei m goalie Ouy Hebert.
The Ducks came right back to ttc
it28 seconds later on
Sacco's 35·
foot slap shot.
Then Geoff Sanderson scored for
Hart ford before Steve Rucchin 's
power play with seven seconds
remaining tic it again bel'ore the end

Joc

women get 82-75 victory:over.OhiQ State

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Iowa needed a shot in the ann in the
second half of its game against Ohio
State. So the Hawkeye~ turned to
Nadine Domond to administer the
medicine.
Domond scored 13 of Iowa's
lirst 17 points in the half, and the No.
6 Hawkeyes went on to defeat Ohio
State 82-75 Friday night.
She hit all eight of her free-t hrow
attempts and was three of fiv e from
three-poi nt range, linishing with a
game· high 27 points- all but three
coming in the second half.
" !thought the de fense on ou:· pan
could have been better, but Ohio
State did a great job of attack ing us
and taking it right at us," Iowa coach
J\ngie Lee said.

The game was tied at 31-31 with
I :59 left in the lirst half when
Tiffany Gooden hit a 23-foot trey
from the left wing to give Iowa ( 181. 9-0 Big Ten) the lead for good at
34-31. The Hawkeyes held a 39-35
advantage at halftime.
Domond's driving layup at the
9:47 mark capped her seco nd-half
scoring binge and gave Iowa a 56-.51

lead. Ohio State (15-7, 6-4) got no ·
closer the rest ol'the way and trailed
by as many as 13 points late in the
game. . ·
.
" I think the two halves were dif- ·
ferent stories," Ohio State coach
Nancy· Darsch said. " In the tirst half
I thought tflatlowa's aggressiveness
on the offensive boards really hurt
us."

The Hawkeycs pulled down 13
offensive rebounds in the half, compared with Ohio State's four.
Gooden had 20 points for Iowa,
while Amy Herig added 17 points
and a game-high nine 1ebounds.
Karen Clayton had live assists.
Katie Smith and Adrienne John son each had 22 points to pace the
Buckeyes. Smith added live assists.

., '

302 ·V·8 engine, PS, PB, auto. trans.,

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1994 JEEP

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CD player, auto
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302 V-8 eng ., PS, PB, auto. trans.,

AM/FM stereo cass., tilt &amp; cruise, air
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locks, b.ed liner, chrome rear step
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3.8 V-8 engine, power steering,

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"Power tools. And electroni cs.
And drill t&gt;its. Toilet s.
Even an indoor lumber yard.
I mean it wa s overwhelming."

doorknob~.

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er brakes, 4 speed transmission, a1r
conditioning, AM/FM stereo radio,
swing lock mirrors, rear step bumper, good tires, full wheel oovers.
WAS$2,995

'l'oday--' 1'-3 and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- ti-9 p.m.
Tuesday - 6-9 p.m.
· \Vtdnesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thunday - 6-9 p.m.
· Friday - 6-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Fejl. tl - 1-3 and 6-9
p.m:· . ,'

.,

I

4&amp;t SOUTH THIRD

.
Pool

•

:'

By JIM COUR
'
· SEA'ITLE (AP) ·- Seattle Seahawks owner Ken-Behring wants to
head for Los Angeles: with Chris
\Yarren, Cortez Kennedy and the rest
of his NFL team. He's 'also headed
to court.
J&lt;iing County filed suit Friday,
seeki ng to stop the team from
becoming the fifth NFL franchise to
move or announce plans to move in
the past year.
The county won a small victory in
its battle to keep the team in the
Kingdome, a 20.year·old domed
s.tajlium Behring 's lawy.er said
wouldn' t protect anyone during an
earthquake. ,
; Behring filed his own suit in
neighboring Kittitas County, alleging
King County violated theKingdome
lease by failing to cerrect seismic
deficiencies in the stadium.
• In Seattle, Superiof Court Judge
Dale Ramennan issued a two-week
temporary restraining order barring
Behring "from taking any steps to
'

~1:\.. COU.Qt)'

'I;

Leagile --:- 'f!lursday Nite'Mixed
Leagull ·
·: '
'
·
~m standings Team 3,
Tqj.lboatcrs, Lethal Enforcprs, Midnill! ·Strikers, .Manley's Recycling
·1 anll M;u:JQ's Cards.
;;
''re.'m high series - Team · 3
(2072)
·f Team
'hiah 'game• - 'Team 3
'
(716)
· '
Men
·Individual high · seties - R.
Spencer (564) and D. Gilly (549)
Individual high game_:. Chuck
Burton (232) and .R. Spencer ( 186)
..~
Women
Individual high series- Roxann
Russell (552) and Carla Tulloh
(48~ 195)
.·
.
ln,dividual high game - Russell
(204) and Tulloh (182)

..

Uninspired by the return of Danny
Manning from a lcnee~njury that had
sidelined him for nearly a year.
Manning had 10 points and three
rebounds in 26 minutes...
The Cavs finished with 12 threepointers, including four by Danhy
Ferry and three by Mills. Ferry
scored 22 points.
·
Charles Barkley and Kevin Johnson scored IS apiece for the Suns.
Spurs 101, Tlmberwol,;;es 90
David Robinson had seven
blocked shots in the fourth quarter
and San Antonio scored 14 of the
game 's final 16 points.
Robinson finished with 21 points
and eight blocked shots, and Chuck
Person ha~ a pair of three-pointers in ·
a late 12-0 run and finished with 14
points. Sean Elliott scored 20 points,
Avery Johnson 15 and Vinny Del
Negro 12 as all five Spurs starters
reached double figures .
Minnesota, which rallied from a
SPiONIK&gt;!;IS GAME - Rio G111nde BP will ·
15-point third-period deficit, hasn't
aponaor the Rio Grimde Redmen'a home game
won at San Antonio since April 3,
agalnat Ohio Dolninlcan Thursday at 7 p.m. Red1990.
men head coach John Lawhorn (right) accepts ·

•

King County files suit against Seahawks to prevent move

___._ _ ____._ _ _ __

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• Sundly, February 4, 19e&amp;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, OH • Point P1e1unt, WV

· Hwl

;

·aubka ·and Torrence among winners at Mill rose Games .
By BARRY WILNER

.

.. · .NEW YORK (AP). - The_Mall· rose &lt;?ames had ~e~r been ktnd to
Serge• Bub~. It dJdn t ~ook like.they
would treat ham well thts year, eather.
Bubka, .the ~orld's greatest pol_e
vaul~r watb mne world c~p•onshaps and the 1988"'0l_ympte gold
' medal, had won m Madason Squ~
Garde.n .before. He . samply had~ t
. done, 11 m the tradtt1on-laden Mallrose.
. .
So when 1~ Ukramaan star began
warmmg up Friday mght,
runway
felt strange. And he dtdn t have the
.proper poles after the one he prefe~d to use broke. .
It was not an.... y JUmp for these
,:reasons," Bubka said after overeommg those woes t.o leap a meet·record 19 feet, 2 114 mches. "Whe~
.you do not have the nght poles, 11

!he

des~s your normal feelings.

1

The pole vault track has been
ch.an~. also. .The ~r vaulters
w~ at, too, that 11 had a dtfferent feel
to 11: You 1 ~ the rhythm. Every step
IS dtfferent.
So was the result, !'&lt;&gt;wever.
)Ju~ka beg~ Jumptng a! 18-8 112.
He t;n•ssed has ~rst attempt _before
soanng over easily.
Then he passed at 18-8 II~ -~nd
19:0 114· Atl 9-2 114• Bubka massed
tw1ce before geltlng over to snap the
meet mark of 19-.1.
. Bubka then Skipped 19-4 114 and
tnedfor 19-81/4,whtchwouldhave
been a record m the Umted States.
He went ~nder the bar o_n has first
~tempt,. hn the bar wnh has ~best on
has second try, ~n barely m1s~ on
has thtrd, brushmg the bar wath h1s
chest on the way down.

Torrence took the women's 60-meler
dash. Canadians Donovan Bailey
and Bruny Surin, the' l-2 finishers in
the World championships ·100
meters, finished the same way in the
60.
Torrence, the 1992 Olympic 2()(),.
meter gold medalist, led all the way
10 win in 7 _02 seconds. She believes
she can break 7.00.
"I think I've put 0 lot of pressure
on myself indoors because I want to
break the seven-second barrier,,
said Torrence, who has won six Millrose sprints. "My husband said I'm
trying to grab the whole track with
my first step. ·
"In order for me to have 8 chance
at 7.00, 1 need to improve my starts.
Last week 1 had a te .
.
Tennessee~ won in .;r:~'~:!vm
much better.,
·
as
·
•

"I was reldy to jump very high

~oday.'.' he &amp;llid. "People said to me,

Sergei, you 've never won the Mill-

"?SC Games.• It served as a motivataon to me to have a good meet and
a good performance."
It was Bubka's third Millrose
appearance. In 1986, he was unhappy with the runway setup and failed
to clear a height; Last year, he
cl.eared the bar only once, finishing
second at 18-8 114.
"The Mill rose is not.always lucky
for aqe and 1 ~on't know why. It's a
good meet wnh a good atmosphere
and .I have a Jot 0~ friends here.
Maybe I would get Jet lag or other
problems that destroyed my perforll)!lnces here."
Bubka's was the most impressive
pqtormance on a night dominated
by spnnters. World champion Gwen

White. denies deal with NFL on Browns issue
CLEVELAND (AP) ...:... Mayor
Michael R. White denied that an
agreement has been reached with the .
NFI- on the Cleveland Browns,
despite a report that a deal has been
worked out between the city, the
league and the team.
' ''Tilere is no deal between the city
ofCL1eveland and the .NFL," the mayor said iri a news conference Friday.
" WJW-TV in Cleveland reported
friday that a deal has been worked
pill that would allow the city to keep
thc1 Browns name and the team colors .. The station did not identify its
.
sources.
• The deal would. [equire :arowns
own.er An Modell to pay the city's
legal bills in its lawsuit to keep the
team in Cleveland, the station said._

Modell also would have to pay the
remainder of the lease with the city
for the use of Cleveland Stadium, the
report said.
The report also said that the NFL
would approve the Browns' move to
Baltimore if all of those conditions
were met. In return, the NFL would
guarantee Cleveland a team, but
only if a new stadium is built.'
The television report said the
NFL would then give the city a $30
million loan to help with construe- '
tion of a new stadium. It also said
that it could be as long as three years
before Cleveland received a new
team.
."We have not reached a deal, and
I don't anticipate reaching one over
_the w~kend," NFL spokesman Joe

Browne said in an interview published Saturday in The Plain Dealer.
NFL officials could not be
reached today. for 'additional comment. A recording a1 the National
Football L~ague's New York head•
quaners said the offices were closed
for the weekend.
Browns spokesman Kevin Byrne
said Friday that he knows of no such
agreemen1. .
White called the news conference
Friday to address continuing rumors
about deals between the city and the
NFL. He said he would not "negotiate this in the media."
White did say that negotiations
were continuing.
"I would have to say they are not
only substantive, but they have been ·

Bailey: the world's top-ranked
IOO..meter runner, beat Surin with a
eloclcingof6.S6. He overcame a start
he called "pa~tic. '.'
"I'm very confident in my acceleration," Bailey said. "I think if I'm
.within a meter out of the blocks, I'm
in the race. The best pan of my race
often is after 30 meters."
It certainly was Friday night.
Surin, the . 1993 and 1995 world
indoor champion, was timed in 6.59.
" I'm not pleased with the time...
he said. "I just got back from Europe
and I'm a little tired."
Gail Devers, the favorite and
1 ranked in the world in the 100
h':.':dtes withdrew from the 60 hurdies af;er sustaining a leg cramp
while warmin u . Michelle Freeman of Jama~a. ~he meet recordholder at 7.90, won easily in 7_93 _

Jobs &amp; other sports blamed for dropping interest in wrestling.

i

. Amoog the surjlrises were victo-

n~s fo~ Naall Bruton over Marcu~
0 Sullivan m the male and Courtn~l
Hawk!~ ahead of a strong field an
the men s 60 hurdles.
.
.
Bruton, the 1994 me_n's m~le w!Aner, shrugged ~ff mmor mJunes
from an auto accadent on Wednesdqy
to easily beat O'Sulftvan, a fellow
Irishman who hn~ won the Wana!'Iaker Mtle five um.cs. Bruton wQn
10 4:00.58, whtle 0 Sullivan: bo~ered by a by a shght tear behand ~ts
raght calf, never was m senous contenuon. .
.
.,

Hawkms,takmgtheleadover~~e

fourth hurdle, wo~ m 7.64, beat1~
two-ttme Olymp1c gold medahst
Roger Kingdoll); Mark Crear, who-is
ranked No. I m the world; world
mdoor and outd~r ch~mpton ~~~~JI
Johnson; ad 10-ume Mallrose wnmer
Greg Foster.
J

in~~h~~!~~~:e~o~~;~n,~t:

Wooster men
hand Oberlin.
65-62 defeat

good-faith negotiations on both
sides," he said.
Cleveland is scheduled to go to
court Feb. 12 to try to f=e the
OBERLIN, Ohio (AP) - Ryan
· Browns to ~ain in the city thtOUgh · Gilnnan and Lamont Paris scored 13
1998 to sausfy the stadium lease. points each to lead Woosterto a 65The city is also seeking $300 million 62 victory over Oberlin in the North
in damages from the Browns and the Coast Athletic Conferertee on Friday.
stadium authority.
Oberlin (2-17 overall, 0-11
. White said there arc no plans at NCAC) hCid the lead only once at 5this poant to abandon the lawsuit in 4 with 16:41 remaining. Wooster
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas (16-4, 9-3) led 37-23 at the half, and
Court.
led by as many as 15 points, 40-25,
early in the second half;
"Nothing has been said, nothing
Oberlin managed to cut Wooster's
has occurred in these discussions that lead to five points on a 10-0 run end.has delayed our intent to be ready on ing with 15:22 remaining, but
the ·morning of Feb. 12 to put. our Wooster led by as many as 11· points
case before Judge (Kenneth) Calla- with 6: I 0 left in the game. .
han," he said.
Tony Calloway scored two po.inL•
.at the buzzer to cut. Wooster's final
lead to 65-62.
Calloway led scoring for Oberlin
teams would pay•service expenses, with
22 points.
·
including game-day employee park- 1
ing, grounds maintenance, external Sure Fold captures
• an
. d property taKes. I
sccunty
"Our concern is to he sure, far Lebanon Raceway
as the patron is concerned, that feature race win
nothing changes, that exactly the
same level of service continues as
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Sure
existed in the past," Watson saiil,
Fold never folded in the feature race
The Indians and the Cavaliers can Friday night at Lebanon.RaCeway.
recoup the. money in rent discounts
Sure Fold, driven by Jack Dailey,
at Gateway, officials said Friday. · grabbed the lead on the backstretch
The amount of the rent discounts and withstood several challenges
had not been determined.
down the stretch. The winner paid
Indians officials could not he $9.20, $3.80 and $2.40. Maggie
reached lei comment. A message was Cochran returned $3 and $2.1 0,
left at team offices for Dennis while Wilma And Betty paid $2.60.
Lehman, eKecutivc vice president for
· The daily double combination of
business.
4-1 paid $348.80. 'A crowd of I ,555
wagered $151 ,369.

Clark, competing in her 19th Millrose Games, taking her sixth 800 tidf
in 2:03.20: Knthy Franey in . ttle
women 's mile in 4:36.46; Brand~
Rock in the men's 800 hi I :50.
Mark Carroll in the 3,000 in 7:44.7 ;
Charles Austin at 7-7 t'/4 in tile
men's high jump; Tisha Waller in tHe
women's high jump at6-2 J/4.

lridians and Cavaliers take over costs of Ga~eway
CLEVELA.ND (AP) -· The esti. mated $1.2 million in annual -expenses for running the dateway sports
tomplex will becQme the responsibflity of the city's professional base. ball and . basketball. teams neKt
month . .
The Cleveland Indians and the
Cleveland Cavaliers will begin paying such costs as security, maint~0ance, Pl'9peny taxes and parking for
eljl):lloyees ~.at 'tl\e . I: 112-year-old
s(!oris: ·c~nlpl,cx: that was built for
them, Olitcway o'fficials said Friday.
''The . complex includes Jacobs
'

Field, where the Indians play, and
Gund Arena, home of the Cavaliers.
"It's a situation where you either
provide the services or you don' I,"
said Craig S. Miller, chairman of the
Gateway Economic Development
Corp. "And if you provide the services, they have to be provided by
the team."
Miller said the agreement was the
last in a series of moves 10 resolve
Gateway'.s troubled finances.
"Gateway simply cannot, will not
have sufficient revenues from the
leases to be able to provide these scr-

.M agazine says Storm have
pro hockey's worst logo
'

vices at that level," Miller said.
Without some relief. Gateway
could have run out of money and
have been forced into dclault, said
Miller.
Late last year, Gateway
announced various moves, including
a county loan, to pay ofT a $21.5 million conslruclion debt.
Gateway had been unable to pay
soriae contractvrs for wor~ completed, but it has been paying ofT obligations 'from a $10 million loan from
the county and a SI0 million grant
from the state. Also, Cavaliers owner Gordon Gund 1~'1 year made a $9
million orte-time payment toward the
debt.
Richard Watson, attorney for the
NBA's Cavaliers, conlirmcd that the

.

, ..'TOI.£00, Ohio (AP)- Looking

·for the worst logo in professional
\
hockey.?
. ·' f.ust check out the Toledo Storm
of the E~'t Coast Hockey League.
The Hockey News bestowed that
honor to the Storm in ils annual
;:Best and Worst Logo Poll ."
. The Storm's logo was 51st oul of

1

st. .

"You mean we didn't make the
top 50," Storm spokesman Mark
Kelly said. .
.
Thc ·logo Ita.' the team's name in
thick'~lack letters being dissected by
a hockey stick and a holt of light-

ning. Above the team's name in thin
letters is "Toledo." Below the Storm
is "Hockey" in thin letters.
- · When Kelly inquired about how
mimy logos were rated, he. was told
hy the Hockey News that it would not
have made a difference. There could
have been a hundred logos analyzed
and the Storm would have been
IOOth.
"This is n[)l a r~,hion show,"
Storm general manager Pat Pylypuik
said.
The Cincinnati Cyclones of the
ECHL had the worst uniform last
year, according to the magazine.

Steelers may ·break lease
if 'r enovations a.r en't made
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The is."
Stccter.. have no intention of leaving
Rooney also said. "One thing I
Piusburgh, but may~ their Three cannot do, thistcam cannot do. is be
in a position wbere we're staying in
Riv~rs Stadium lease next year if no
stadium renpvatiori plans nrc made. a stadium that's deteriorating and
· ·.Sl~!elers presjde.nt Dan Rooney that nothing is going to happen."
Rooney.'s October request came
sai,d the city and Allegheny County
have taken no action .sincc his Octo- as the city was negotiating with
ber request for $75 million in ·rcno- prospective Pirates owner Kevin
McClatchy over a new, b~-.cball-only
vations or a .new stadium.
Rooney now says the $75 million · stadium . Rooney said he doesn 't
ligure may be too low, and he wants want to interfere with the Pirates' sitfeasibility study mlJ!Ie to determine u~tion, but must guard the Stcclers'
how much the renovations · would interests.
Cj)st. 111c Stcclcrs wantluxwy suites,
upgraded stadium access, two new
pro~Cticc liclds and highway tmprovemcills.
: ''We do have an escape clause,'!
Rii6tiP~ said; ?We h~vc to start l~k' .
ing :1! ~ ' v~~ clos~ly, no quest1on .. ·
And we·don 'I want t9 do that. But, ·
hey, if they 're JUSt going .to sit and
talk, tliat's ·going to come."
~ohnson
The Steelcrs must alert the StadiWil Authority ·in January if they !'Inn
to buy out thc1r stadaum lease wnh- .
o1,1t giving a rea.,on. They must give
twp y~ars' notice, n)eaning the car- .
liest they could leave the stadtum
wquld be after the 1998 season.
'
The team 's only options sh6uld it
ab~ndon Three Rivers wo'uld be to
linan.cc its own stadium, perhaps in
County O:i' Cranberry in
• ~
nty, or toplay, ie .an,eKist-'
t~. insllllliflllm.
· ,.
. .
·
Tile only sllldiilms of ildequate
s~ iii tile Pittsbtqh1'CJIO!I an: Pin
Slildium, where the ~lers played
1
sdllte pines in ~ 19601; Moun'
'
tafneer Field·in Morpntown, W.Va.,
.ail(! Beaver Stadium in State Col-

a

as'

•

"

:~y RON SlfiAK .

tO

And Mark Gerbard, who runs the
Miami Valley Kids Wrestling Association in Dayton, said 1,200 children from lcindergllrtell through lilUh
grade are members.
"Our numbers are actually staying the same," said Gerhard.
Coaches
say
high-school
wrestling has much to offer, even for
those with limited athletic ability.
Wise said hard workers can be liiiC cessful wrestlers even if they lllcli; the
natural skills.
"Some guys arc not lllhlcticlllly
talented, but arc very strong mentally and put a lot of hard work in," he
said. " It's basically a sport of will."
Students who choose not to go 0111
for wrestling arc missing an opportunity to develop a strong work eth- '
ic, self-esteem and confidence,
.
coaches say.
"It gives kids a strength that carries on in their lives," said Bqcr.

·

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP); Jhe AT&lt;t,T P~!lble Beach National
• fro-Am 'used:' to be '~nown as the
:'Crosby Clamlia~e •. and the, way the
"'leadcrboard was jammed going into
t )&gt;day's thil'(l.'rou'nll, it was like 't6e
. ~d days when Bing. called a party
~~nd everybody came. ·
·· ··
"'•' Jeff Maggert had lbe lea4 at 8~r,pal' J36;after 36..hole~. btii he
·- ~as only one stroke ahe.ad of Loren
. oberts, Steve .Jones and Davis Love
I.
.
.
Eight more golfers were at 138,
eluding Tom Watson,' Nick Faldo ·
d the llottest player in the world
ht now;· Phil Mickc:lson.
.~ A staggering 13 'more players
re thrC~: str!lkes behind at 5dcr-par 139.

And if the wind that usually
whips off the Pacific stays calm over
{he last two roundt, Pebble· Beach,
Spy~;lass Hill and Poppy Hills, soft~ned by rain earlier in \he we~k.
. s~uld 'continue to give up birdies.
' .~ 'This is playing veey, veey easy.''
Maggcrt said after shooting a 68 .at
Pebble Beach. "The cou!Se is perfect
for shooting good scores. If the
grecn's ·were a little better, we'd see
some real low scores."
lfhere was no telling how low the
sc~ ·would have been if the greens
. soaked by two days of rain earlier in
the week bad not been so marked up
bY, the)~ pro~ and amateurs trudging o~er them.
Maggert, playing the back nine
·first , 'missed a two-foot par puu on
No. 13.
"That gave me a· little wake-up

.

call," he said.
lnde!ld it did. He hit a wedge to
less than a foot for a birdie on the
next hole arid then made birdie pu!ts
of 18, I0 and seven feet to get four
consecutive birdies.
"I felt' coming into this week
everythin!1 was going pretty good for
me.'' Maggert said.
He'll need IO continue playing
~ell: Among those t within striking
dastance was Mackelson. who won at
Tucson, skipped the Bob Hope. then
won at Phoenix last week.
He's trying to become the first
player to win three straight starts on
the PGA ,Tour since Nick Price in
1993.
"This is ·my third consecutive
tournament where a low round on
Saturday will put ine near the top of
the · leaderboard," Mickelson said

.

partner Doug Martin were at 15
.after shooting a 66 at Spyglass in a three par-$s.
under par after two rounds, five
My
shoes
were
full
or
mud
and
"
round in which Ihe clnscsl he came
to a bogey w~' a threc-f&lt;K&gt;I par pull. water," Love said. " I must have had behind the leaders. Krueger, a six"I don'tthink I've ever guucn off five or six drives in the fairway that time San Francisco woman's amathis well three straight times," he just buficd. It was casual water teur champion, plays 10 a 10 handi•
cap... Bill Murray, waiting by the
said.
everywhere."
Mickelson played the back nine
The heartbreak of the day had to practice green at 7:30 a.m. to do a
first and played nearly perfect golf. ·belong to Jim McGovern. He was TV interview, pored over the sports
"l had good chartees at 13, 14 and
I0-under- par through the 13th hole, section ... Former baseball commis15," he said. "They all went right but bogeyed Nos. 14, 16, 17 and 18 sioner Peter Ueberroth, playing in
this tournament for the eighth time,
over the edge; all from inside 15 to finish at 6-under.
feet. "
Leading1he pro-am at 20-under- is a member of Cyprus Point. a MonThen they started falling as he par was the team of Howard Clark- terey Peninsula course that used to be
rolled in birdie pulls of 20, six, 20 Michael Enthoven. Shane Bertsch- . used in the tournament. "I live in
and 15 feet on the next four holes.
Luke Helms were at 19-under, and Laguna Beach, but it's .only a S4"It was an advantage to play in the duo .of Davis Love-Orel Her- minute plane ride," Ueberroth said ...
Oub designer Roger Cleveland, who
the first group and have nirte holes of shiser was 18-under-par.
perfect greens," Mickelson said.
. Divots: The all-family foursomes founded Cleveland Golf and works
Love moved into contention with 'had Brad Faxon and his father. Brad for and plays Callaway now, carried
a 66 at Poppy Hills. He was even par Sr., playing with Tom i.ehman and the not-yet-on-the market Great Big
after seven holes, then birdied sev- his father, Jim ... Sally Krueger, the· Bertha titanium woods. "They'll be
en of the last II holes, including all only woman in the field, and her out in April," he said.

.

VILLANOVA, Pa. (AI?) ~ Vil~nova University receiiled no more
jt.an one-fifth of the $5 million that
~hn E. dti Pont promised the S(:hool
when it named its basketball arena
liter him, sources say.
:. Du Pont, accused of killing
ympicj wr-eStler Dave Sc~ultz on
n. ~~- only aaY.e . th~ l unrversitf,
00,000 to $1 million, according to
:rormer universily officials who
~poke on the condition of anonymity.
: The balance he promised in 1985
.never came after the university

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

WIAftOI
7th I PlumSt
Parh:enbiurg, WV

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officials wanted to remove du Pont's according to tbe editors of lhc stu- students) don't really care. I think the
name fr~m the John Eleutherc dent newspaper, the Yillanovan.
majority who have an opinion would
"There hasn't been a huge prefer to sec it changed."
duPont Pavilion.
"If they take his name o[f the · uproar," said editor Jonathan Klick.
The 6,500-seat duPont Pavilion
"A lot of them are questioning opened in February 1986. Along
building, they're neve( going to gel
the money," the source said. "On the what's going to happen. but there 's with the basketball coun, the buildother· hand, they're probabl~ never no strong opinion either way among ing contains a 200-mcter indoor
the students."
going to get the money now, any· track, tennis courts and balling
Added Klick's colleague, Joe Pat- cages.
way."
The source added .. "It was a deal terson, "I think the vast majority (of
The $15 million arena was
that wa.• controversial when they
made it. Now it's coming back to
haunt them."
The issue of whether du Pont's
name should remain on the ~uilding
has not been a hot topic on .campus,

dropped its wrestling program,
which du Pont established and
coached.
"Du Pont got upset, walked out
and never paid off the rest of the
money," one source. said.
·
University spokeswoman BarbaraCiement refused to comment on
du Pont's gifts to the school.
The shooting prompted a two-day
standoff at du Pont's estate, which
includes a world-class training center for his wrestling team, Foxcatcher.
· One source said the university
would be in a difficult
if

l

COLD WEATHER
"PAC BOOTS"
LEATHER TOP

already set for construction when du
Pont made the $5 millio~ pledge,
which came as the university was
naming its new S 1.5 million swimming ceQicr allcr him.
The relationship between lhc university and the millionaire became
strained after problems arose with
the wrestling program.

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Coaches also say wrestling suffers from a lack of television and ·.
newspaper coverage that could generate interest in the sport.
And they lament the decline of
college wrestling programs. That
discourages participation at the highschool level among students hoping
for college scholarships.
According to the National
Wrestling Coaches Association,
more than four-year colleges and
universities in Ohio have dropped
their wrestling programs since 1972.
But interest in wrestling appears
In remain strong in some quarters.
Membership increased from
117.371tn 118,110this year in USA
Wrestling, a Colorado Springs-based
group that promotes wrestling
amung all ages , sponsors tournaments and camps, and helps train
wrestlers fnr the Olympics.

JVIaggert takes on·e-stroke lead at secon~ round's conclusion

y JOHN F. BONFAnl .

"And low prices.
Guaranteed everyday low prices.
They were pract1 cally
giving the ·stuff away."

Jim Walker

···::=-~~~

sajd .

illanova-pu Pont relationsh'ip_strained by unfulfilled pledge

Co·ngratul~tions,

w;:it:n

11r the Pebble Beach National Prt&gt;tAm,

~

BAseball
NEW YORK (AP) - The Seattle Mariners completed a big week ·
by agreeing to a contract with pitcher Noim ,fharlton that could he
worth up to $8,225,000 over three
seasons.
Earlier in the week, Seattle agreed
to~ $34 million, four-year extension
with Ken Griffey Jr. and to deals
with outfielder Luis Polonia and
pitcher Mike Jackson.

Gene
Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy..Oids·GEO
has announced that
Jim Walker has
...rned Top Sales
. Honors for the .
month of
·January
.. •.

commitment, but you're not getting suburbalf Columbus lias only 2S
wrestling this year for Cuyahoga
the· same numbers anymore," said wn~stlers on its team, down from .F-'ls Walsh Jesuit, which has won
Wayne coach Mark Silver§.
consecuti v~ state Division I chammore than 40 a few years ago.
Wayne wrestler Keith O'Connor • "There are far more things for pionships the last two years, wrestled
said the hard work scares some stu- kids to do tOday than there used to at meets around the country and
de~ts away.
be," said coach Lee Spitzer. "And twice appeared on ESPN.
"A lot of guys would .rather go those thingsllt'C more attractive than
"This is the lowest amount I' vc
par)y than come to practice and being in a -wrestli11g· room for two had," said coach Bill Barger. "I can't
work1" said the 18-year-old senior hours a night and working your taii gennybody to come out. To come
from Huber Heights. "You've got to off.''
~
• out for our team, you have to really
have 'the hean to ·do it. Some people
Some 'students have jobs. Others want to wrestle."
ain '1 got i~ "
Barger said students will riot
arc attracted by one or more of the
Silvers said the Wayne wresiling school's 27 other varsity sports.
come out for wrestling if think they
team has stayed steady at just under
"''ve got six or seven kids play- can't win a spot on the first team.
40 members for the last few years. ing ice hockey that are wrestlers,"
"The kids ofthe 90s - if they 're
And Gazy Wise, coach of the near- said Spitzer, past president of the not VII[Sity, they don' 1want to put 1n
·
by Beavercreek wrestling team, said Ohio High School Wrestling Coach- the time," he said .
his squad has actually expanded to es Association.
Silvers said some freshmen and
abo,ut 50 members.
·
Some students also choose to sophomores choose to hypass
But both acknowledged that par- fQCus on one . sport year-round to wrestling until they have a beucr
chance of making tbe first team . Othticipation in wrestling is down. ·
maximize performance, he said ..
"II seems like youth today is not
The decline in wrestlers has ers choose to get jobs in stew!. 10 save
interested in putting in a lot of hard affected even the most successful money for a car.
ult !\CCffiS lO , ffiC that kids OUC MJ
work," Wi~ said.
programs.
Upper Arlington High School in
There are only 17 students into gelling a car imlncdii!lcly." he

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-Sports briefs.-Tennis
LONDON (AP) - The lntcma-•
tional Tennis Federation has two
weeks to prove it has e~idence that
tennis starS Mats Wilander and Karel
Novacek tested positive for cocaine ·
at last year's French Open.
Five days after the allegations
were disclosed in a British newspaper. the two players took the ITF to
court in London in an allempt to
have the federation's current drug
testing procedures declared unfair
and to prove their innocence.
Despite the allegations, the ITF
has taken no action against either
player. Wilander, who was ranked
No. I in the world in 1988, has won
seven Grand Slam titles. Novacek. a
Czech who was ra~ked No. 8 m
.1991, is now down to No . .122.

8y JAMES HANNAH
' DAYTON, Ohio (AP) _;_ It's not
· war, but it's close.
The air is filled with groans, curses and the sound of bodies being
'Slammed to the mat as wrestlers at
Wayne High School go through their
:paces.
·
" Before practice is over, one
wrestler limps off with a lturt toe.
' ·Another lies motionless, with a twist~d leg. A third sports an.ice pack on
' lln injured' shoulder.
•' High school wrestling has always
been a demanding sport, but its
"'iemands may be taking their toll off
"''ll!: mal. The number of.high school
wrestlers in Ohio has fallen dramat"ically in the past 20 years.
.,: In 1.973-74, nearly 22,000 stu1dents' wrestled. Last season there
·-were only 13,743, according to the
Ohio High Schooi,Athletic Associa1ion.
•• ! "There's still the same level of

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.12~;00

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par~

By CATHERINE O'BRIEN

GlEN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) From his coitage, 7~year-old Allan
Galloway sees the· many moods of
·lake Michigan. He has seen it
s.t imd by stonns into dark blue
choppy waves only to quiet the next
day and gently lap the shore, sunsprayed under an azure slcy.
Galloway's home is what locals
call spining distance from the lake in
the peaceful Sleeping Bear Dunes
National lakeshore, off a dirt road
lined by forest . .
He remarried on the back porch
of that conage. And he remembCrs
one long night when a fierce stonn
pushed waves against his back
doorstep.
·
"While we were trying to sleep .in
the bedroom, you could hear the
waves lap the house foundation. It
scared us because we didn't know
what the next night would bring."
Galloway recalled.
Since he built the one-story cottage in 1961, nature. has pennanently moved the water's edge 90 feet
closer, submerging 15 pines. But
Galloway has always hung on.
· Now he is looking at a deadline
he may not weather. long ago he
signed a contract giving the fedepl
government the right to kick him out
of his house in 6 112 years.
·
"llle older people get, the less
they enjoy the idea of being taken
. ~ out of an area," Galloway said as he
looked over t~e lake 'Wrapped in early morning fog. ·
.
. ; Shortly after the Sleeping B~ar

system faced with evicting homesteaders

Dunes park was created in 1970, fed- Dunes is second only to the Indiana Seven! opposed the plan, and Stueral agents started buying up the pri- Dunes National lakeshore in having pak said he has met with resistance
vate land inside the designated park the largest number of agreements at
from the Park ~rvice.
area.
a single park. Indiana has 243.
More than 1,500 land' owners
Galloway was told he must sell
11le parks include Cuyahoga Val- have already left Sleeping Bear, ·
his holdings to the government. For ley National Recreation Area in
according to Park Service records.
25 percent of the purchase price he Ohio, which has 94 non-lifetime. 11le houses are usually auctioned off
got a lease to continue living there leases and 29 lifetime leases.
and caned away so the land could be
for 25 years.
· In his effort to stay on the propn:tumed to its natural state.
" It was a generation that didn 't eny longer, Galloway has collected
Pearson said it would be unfair.
fight Un~ le Sam," Galloway said of money from 75 other park " inholdKif the government chose to extend
the decision he regrets.
~rs ".and hired a Washington lawyer
occupancies for the small remaining
Now he is fighting to extend his to lobby Congress to extend their
group." He said others who volun,
lease at least to the end of his life. leaSes .
tarily left could return to demand a
Even then, he worries about his wife.
They are pushing a bill intro- ,lease extension or their land back.
She' would have to leave the proper- duced in May by U.S. Rep. Bart StuResidents in the surrounding
ty if he died, since they married after pak, whose 1st District includes the
community resent the tax-free status
the deal. His wish is to pass the place park. Stupak's bill would extend the
of those leasing, noting some of the
on for his children to enjoy.
Sleepiag Bear leases for 99 years cottages are ~nted out by owners
But the National Park Service beyond the usual maximum of a life- who are away more often than no\.
counts on having the land back for time lease the Park Service has
"The lease holders requesting
the park. It believes it has given granted in the past
extensions have had a very good free
many owners a generous price. for
"I've always heard the difficult ride - with no propeny taxes, free
their land and waited patiently while stories - people felt they weren't fire, police protection, along with ...
they have fini shed out their leases treated fairly by the then-Park Serrepair and care of our roads," Bessie
vice, and it has been a sore point,"
tax, free.
J. Musil, who has been the treasurer
"There is a contract between the Stupak said.
· of Cleveland Township for several
The leases usually run between decades. wrote Stupak.
Park Service and these landowners,"
10
years and lifetime, said David
said Duane Pearson, assistant superAt the April meeting, Musil said
intendent at Sl~eping Bear Dunes. Barna, a Park Service spokesman·in she had ·owned 48 acres inside the
"The time is running nigh for a Washington.
park ·and had been a willing 8eller
In Sleeping Bear Dunes, there ljJ'e along with many others, relocating
number of the111."
There are 143 non-lifetime leas- nine remaining lifetime leases. There outside the. park and paying 'proper- ·
es in Sleeping Bear. Nearly half the are also leases in one other Michigan
ty taxes.
leases expire in the next 3 112 years, patk - Isle Royale National Park,
If the legislation passed1 Galwhere all 14 remaining leases are' loway said, it would only be fair that
with the rest running our by 2014.
11le ~ational Park Service has lifetime.
he and the others pre~ent receipts of
Stupak held a meeting at Sleeping payment to the local government for
similar leiiSe agreements in 79 other
parks, spanning coas~ to c~t from Bear in April to discuss his legisla- such services, in lieu of taxes - a
Yosemite National Par* in California tion, and about 80,community resi- provision wri!ten into Stupak's bill.
to the Cape Cod National Seashore dents showed up to express interest.
"Nobody wanted to voluntarily,
in Massachusetts. Sleeping Bear

, ·:For those who take many vacations,

Camping in a recreational vehicle
is one of the county's g~t outdoor
bargains.
A family can~~ 30 to 80 percent
more vacation for its money when
traveling and camping in an RV,
according to a study by the National Association of RV •Parks and
l:ampgrounds and the National
Recreational Vehicle lndwstry Association.
,
. · RV camping, according to the
.study by PKF Consulting, costs half
,,. os much as·driving a car and staying

in hotels, 40 percent less than trav- each of 30 selected pairs of cities in
eling by bus or train and staying in · the United States.
It also analyzed a variety ofRVs,
a hotel and 30 percent less than flying to a vacation destination and ranging from a pop-top camper
• towed behind the family car to travstaying in a hotel.
The study also foun~ that even the eling in a personal motorhome and
most expensive RV camping vaca- preparing the majority of meals in
tion costs about 60 percent less than the motorhome at campsites.
It did not include the cost of buyflying and renting a house or condo
ing the motorhome or trailer, but did
at a destination.
The study-analyzed the costs of a include the operati9g costs.
hypothe(ical family of four, with one
"The findings of this study show
child under age 12 and the other a that RV vacation savings are so sigteen-ager. It studied a dozen differ- nificant that it wouldn't take many
ent types of vacations . including trips to recover the initial cost of the
round-trip transportation between RV," says Gary 'LaBella of the Go

~ · · Public hearings set for February

.·

; NElSONVIllE - A series of. .
public hearings will be held at five
locations throughout the state concerning proposed 1996-97 hunting
regulations offered by the Ohio
Division of Wildlife.
A hearing forthe 19 southeastern
counties comprising Wildlife District
4 be held Feb. II at I p.m. in room
177 of Hocking College.
A statewide hearing will be held
March 8 at 9 .a.m. at the wildlife
agency's District I office in Colujhbus.
·'
The proposals have been given to
the Ohio Wildlife Council Which will
meet April 4 to vote on their acccptanco.
Copi!ls ·of the proposed ~egulations arc available by contactmg the
WildJife District 4 office at 360 East
State Street, Athens OH 45701. or )ly
callil)g 1-614-S94-2211.
.
Among the proposed n:gulattons
arc a one-week fall turkey huntmg
scaSQn, a.longcr and earlier muzzleloadirg deer season and increased
smal game hunting opportunities.
Rec:ord number
1
of
top
bucks
registered
1
•AI Cambridge, a record 614 trophy-~izcd white-tailed de~ were ·
offiCially accepted it~to the Buckeye
Big f!uck Club during 1995, the
Ohio Division-of Wildlife reported,
· Tl)e club was fonned in 1957 to
increase public appreciation and
awarl)ncss regarding Ohio's ~r
herd.' 11le firsl awards program was
held jln Feb. 14, 1959 in Columbus.
Most of the 614 bucks recognized
this year, which includes 530typical
and 114 ~on-typical bucks. were taken d~ring the 1994-95 deer hunting.
scasQn. l';lany of the deer and the
; · hunh!rs who shot them will be pre: · sent Feb. 24 at the Pritchard-Laughlin Cpntcr in Cambridge during the
38th 11nnual Buckeye Big Buck Cl4b

Seminar and Awards Banquet Day.
This year's banquet is being held
in honor of the Zanesville Times
Recorder for its many years of commitmcnt in covering hunting, fishing
and the outdoors in Ohio.
Tickets for the awards banquet
arc limited and currently on sale
through Feb·. 15 at $17 each. Ticket
orders must be mailed with full paymcnt and a self-addn:ssed stamped
envelope to Buckeye Big Buck Club,
PO Box 2009, Heath OH 43056.
Admission for seminars and displays which arc open to the public
from 10 a.m. through 5 p.m. arc
included in the price of the banquet
tickets. Those who do not purchase
banquet t'ickcts are charged an
admission fee of $5 fort he day; chiidrcn 12 and under arc free .
In addition, successful deer
hunters in southeastern Ohio will'be
given the opportunity to have their
trophy deer antlers scored at an·open
scoring day slated fQr Feb. II at the
Rocky Boot Outlet Store in Nel- .
'

spread his ashes in the lake."
,
In 1-979, the government con-.
demned her property and Menton
said she was for'ced into court and •
into selling. According' to park
records, two dozen other pi'openies
were condemned to force the sale.
Under legislation passed in 1982,
Menton was granted an extension on
her lease_:_ until January 1998. "We
have hopes there might be another
extension," said her daughter, Dawn
Schlum.
·
Galloway could have bought a
lifetime lease on his property. But
that meant giving 40 percent of the
money froni the sale to the f~ral
government. He felt that was a fool ish gamble because if he died six
months later, the government woilld
get his property iinmediatqly.
He argues that residentillike him
keep an eye on things at the beach ill.
a time of tight park budgets:
"The remaining 'inholders'
respect the land. We don't want to
change it. What would it ·hun for us
to stay"? ·: he said. "We're like the
neighborhood watch."

Camping America Committee,
which sponsored the study.
"RV travel and clllilping is a natural choice for the growing number
of cost-conscious young families
and retirees looking for vacations of
maximum value," he says. "And,
since RVs provide transportation,
lodging and meals in one package
that's ready to go when you are, RV
camping vacations provide more
travel freedom, prevent cost overruns
and help avoid vacation foul-ups."
According to the PKF study, the
most expensive one-week RV camping trip cost $S90. ·

nma

s·

lassy Active 27%_40 .. R.. SUt
'SALE 1749
lassy Select 21'1t-40 •·•• $8.49
w'7"
Provfco(liNt
HI Pro
27%.;..50 ..... $14.49.........
SALE. ..'13"
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sonville.
Officials scorers will btl" on hand
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. to score antle(S eli'
giblc for membership in the Buckeye
Big Buck Club, Pope and Young or
Boone and Crockett clubs.
There is no charge for the scoring,
but a membership fee may be
charged for entry into one of the
clubs. Antlers from any Ohio deer
harvested between 1958 and 1995
are eligible for scoring.
~ Antlers must have been air-dried .
for 60 days or more and successful
hunters must provide the pennanent
metal deer tag, as well a5 information
on the county, date and method of
harvest.
·
Those sportsmen interested in
having the racks scored, as well as
attending the Wildlife District 4
public hearing on proposed hunting
and trapping regulations, may leave
their antlers with an otJjcial scorer at
Rocky ·Boots between I0 a.m. and I
p.m. and pick them up after the hearing and before 5 p.m.

.) · B)' PATRICIA LAMIELL
·'" AP Bwhleu Writer
oW NEW, YORK - Stocks tumbled
'"" from rec.ord heights Friday and long,,.., tenn bond prices retre31ed as a runup in gold prices to levers last seen
" I in 1990 stirred fears of inflation.
wl
The Dow Jones industrial average
J:h fell 31.07 to 5,373.99, reversing
'•u direction after five consecutive days
-10' of all-time highs. On Thursday, the
"" Dow index rose 9.76 to a record
~!~ 5,405.06.
On Friday, decliners led advancers
o,.i• by about 6 to 5 on the New York
'·'·'· • Stock Exchange. Big Board volume
was moderately heavy at 418.18 mil.&gt;~ lion ·shares but below Thursday's
''~ pace:
'·''
St'ocks kept the losses to a mini -~ , mum for most of the day, but lost
ground in a big downdraft in bonds
·,;,. in the final ·hour.
'"The bond market pulled back
~
very quickly in the last hour," said

r

.

leon Brand, a global market specialist at NatWest Securities, "some
on worries about inflation, some on
supply, and the fact that there was no
progress in Washington on the budget talks ..As soon as that ~ame in,
people started taking profits in the
stock market."
Broad market indexes were mostly lower. The NYSE 's composite.
index fell 1.14 to 340.09. The Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock index fell
2.62 to 635.84. The American Stock
Exchange's market value index fell
0.14 to 55S.54.
But the Nasdaq comoosite indeK
rose 2.65 to I ,072. 11 , breaking
through its previous all-time 'closing
high of 1,069.79last Dec. 4.
The 30-year Treasury bond, a
benchmark for long-tenn lending
rates , fell I 11-32 point, pushing its '
yield up to 6.16 percent, as gold
prices continued to tear higher.
Spot gold closed up $4.10 at

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S.ntev Kaldot', 1111, Galllpolla jiOetmlllllr,
·men,center Tom 'S .ndln • 2!1-JMr ...,.;.
' ' clrlvir'JI """' during niCtl'lt cnmonl8ut tM Gelllpalll Po.t
OffiCe.~ I! 21· v-' ,........ oltM Galllpolll poet~;
del'""- mall to city pebone elong Uppir Rt. 7. Kaldot' ulcl_.
ll'llemplclylllhlve . . . . . . ~-- IWirde, but when ctn.
' vwa reach 20"'" wllhout en
IWit, ther -'"-expert
clt'lwr'l
from ... Columbua dlltrlct.
piWIMt. 1Ge.lllpal18

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COUIITY:
"AVE-IE

1300&amp;UID

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Now's ·t he time to .
·plan for 1996 crops

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Come to 18yl0r Moto,. In Athens,
and teet.di,IW llda awMOrM machine.
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Davis new member of
URG Board of Trustees

Officers attend training seminar

. Ef\RN$ AWARD •

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results.
Service, United States Department of
Beef Producers, plan on attending Agriculture. For further infonnation
a "Managing The Beef Herd" semi- contact Hal Kneen at (614) 992-6696 .
nar on Monday, February 12, 1996
Gallia County Preview: Open
from 6:30 - 9:30 p.m. at the Pan- Steer and Heifer Sh~ ill be held
derosa Restaurant at 745 E. State on February t8, 1996 starti n'g at
Street, Athens, Ohio. Topics covered II :00 a.m. with the heifers, immediwill include Bull Selection, Herd Bull ately followed by the steer show. This
Management, Calf Management and annual event . is held at the Gallia
an Ohio Cattlemen's Association County Fairgrounds (Jackson Pike
Update. A dinner will be provided Road ) and is sponsored by the Galcourtesy of the following sponsors: lia County Cattlemen's Association.
Athens Landmark, COBA/Select Immediately following the Preview,
NEW MEMBER OF URG BOARD - Dr. Barry M. Dorsey (right)
Sires and Ohio State University a pn;view class for eligible 1996 Galprealdent of the Unlveralty of Rio G111nde, welcomes Lew OliVia
Extqnsiori. Ple!)SC place reservations lia County JUAior Fair steers will be.
to tM unlveralty'a board of truataea.
at the Athens County Extension held. For infonnation to show, please
Office, (614) 593-8555 , by February call the Gallia County Extension
9th.
Office at (614) 446-7007 . Gate
"Ingredients For Successful Mar- admission is one dollar per person
keting of Horticultural Crops Semi- over the age or twelve.
nar·· is being held on Monday, FebInterested in starting a vegetable
njary 12, 1996 from 5:30 7:30p.m. or fruit farm? Plan to attend the 1996
RIO GRANDE - Lew E. Davis, 'will be very valuable as the universiat' the Pickaway-Ross Joint Voca- . Ohio Fruit &amp; Vegetable Congress, 'president and chief operating officer ty moves into the next century."
tiona! School, Chillicothe Ohio. february 13-15, at the Toledo Sea- ' of Jackson County Broadcasting Inc.
A founder of the Ohio Farm Radio
Thr~e speakers will give tht:ir opin- gate Center. The theme is "Quality since 1974, is a newt member of the Network-, Davis produced daily radio
ions and succe~s stories in assisting Produce Makes the Market". For fur- University of Rio Grande Board of agriculture reports for farmers over
fanners to realize higher values for ther information call the Ohio Fruit Trustees.
21 Ohio radio stations prior to foundtheir produce through cooperative and Vegetable Association at 614A native of Jackson, Davis man- ing Jackson Broadcasting. He has
marketing. Join economists. Dr. 249-2424.
ages WKOV-FM, WYPC-FM and also served as director of public relaBruce Anderson from Cornell UniHarold Kneen is the Meigs WCJO-FM commercial radio sta- tions for two organizations, the Farm
versity, Dr. David Hahn from Ohio County Agricultural and Naiural tions. He also serves as a trustee of Credit Banks of louisville, Ky., and
State University and Dr. Bill Taylor Resources Agent, Ohio State Uni- WITD, a non-commercial religious the agricultural division of Monsanfrom the Cooperative Development versity Exte~ion.
broadcast station.
to Company in St. Louis, Mo.
"Mr. Davis will add a special
In 1966, he was employed with
dimension of energy and experience WRFD Radio in Columbus as farm
to the university's board," said Pres- director and director of agricultural
ident Barry M. Dorsey during a services.
recent meeting when Davis was offi- · Davis, who received his BS degree
cially installed as a board member.
from Ohio State University, got his
Dorsey continued, "As a Jackson start in radio as an announcer for
resident and businessman, Davis WJEH-AM radio in Gallipolis as a
By JAY CALDWELL
mined.
brings an important perspective that teenager in the early 1960s.
GAlliPOliS - 403 (b) plans are
This wide range of investment
unique retirement programs avail- choices is a significant benefit for
able for employees of cenain tax 403 (b) plan participants. You can
exempt organi- now design a program to meet your
zations, such as long tenn investment objectives.
hospitals,
These objectives typically are differPOMEROY - Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rought and Assistant
schools,
and ent depending on the stage of a parChief fame s Stacy attended a training seminar Jan . 25 at Marietta Coluniversities. As ticipant's life. For example, a person
lege.
a 403 (b) Plan in his 20's or 30's would be more
participant,
The seminar, sponsored by Attorney General Betty Montgomery and
growth oriented. A mutual fund that
you ' II enjoy spe- . invests in stocks that have a strong
the Ohio Peace Academy Training Council, focused on the FBI's new
cial tax benefits potential for above average growth
program "Drugfirc" which will deal with fircann evidence linked to
provided by the U.S. government.
drug
cases throughout the counttf, It also included information on
would be appropriate for this age
AFIS,
Ohio's new automated fingerprinting identification system .llle
First~ because the money you 'II group.
third topic di scussed at the seminar was physical force and a shon lecinvest is pretax, you' II benefit from
As a participant gets older and
tax-cjefemd compounding of any
ture of the changes that arc being made by the Ohio Peace Academy
Training·Council.
earnings until you make a withdraw- approaches retirement, ·his investPresenting. the clru;s was Don Phillips, grants representative from the
al. This means you could be earning ment allocation should be shifted
governor's office; John O'Nan, deputy superintendent of the Bureau
interest on money you · would nor- toward capital preservation and
income, while maintaining a smaller
of Criminal Investi gation; and a presentation on physical force .
mally be paying in taxes .
element of growth.
Second, if you wait until retireIf you are eligible to participate
ment to start withdrawing your
RACINE -- Racine Flowers and Gifts will open for business Monin
a
403 (b) plan I would encourage
· m~~ altho~gh you will be taxed,
day
in the newly renovated bani\ building on Main Street in Racine.
you
to
do
so.
It
is
a
simple
and
ecoyou may" he ·m a lower taK bracket,
Owners
arc Wendy and l arry Tucker who also operate the Pomeroy
givinf: you added tax savings. With- nomical way to meet your retireFlower
Shop.
ment goals. If you are currently pardrawil~ prior to age 59 112 may be
Managing the Racine shop for the Tuckers will be Donna Nease.
ticipating
in a plan, I encourage you
subject to a 10 percent tu'penalty in
Nease described the shop as a full service flower shop where a varito
review
it.
Make
sure
you
underaddition to ordinary income taxes.
ety of gift items will be sold.
·
stand
the
investments
in
the
plan
and
403 (b) plans have traditionally
Hours
of
the
new
shop
will
be
from
10
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
six
days
a
week.
that
those
investments
are
appropri·
used ''tax sheltered annuities'" as the
An open house is being planned for later this month.
investment vehicles, and are some- ate for your unique situation. You
times referred to by that name. A have a wide range of investment
few years ago, legislation was enact- objectives. If you need help or need
POMEROY - Small business owners or individuals employed by a
ed that allows participants a much a second opinion, contact an investsmall
businesses who would like to learn how to set up accounts, make
wider range of investment opportu- ment advisor.
entries in a check register, track income and expenses and-write and
nities. Investments in variable annuJay CaldweU Is an lnvesemtnt
print checks, have been invited to participate in a Quicken workshop
ities and mutual funds are now per- broker for The Ohio Company In
1
series.
Ita Gallipolis ollke.
It will be held on Wednesday, March 27, April 3 and Apri.l 10 fonn
9 a.m. to noon at the Athens County Extension Office, 280 West Union
Street, Athens.
instructors will be David Etzkorn, OSU Extension Computer Specialist, Columbus; Dave Mangione, District Specialist, AgricultUre and
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Daiwa Bank ltd. closed an ill-fated
Natural Resources; Janet Hollingsworth and Chris Penrose, Athens
Pentagon canceled a $4.:l billion pro- · chapter in its overseas business, forCounty
Agents.
ject to build hundreds of unmanned mally shutting its U.S. operations in ·
fee
will
be charged per management team of up to three members.
A
reconnaissance planes and said it compliance with a governmentRegistration and fee deadline is March 20, however, space is limited.
would put more effort into a newer, ordered eviction from tbe United
Enrollment is based on a first-paid, first-serve basis.
.. more capable aircraft that soon will States .
The bank completed the sale of
fly over Bosnia.
branches
in 15 U.S. cities and most
. ~tely, the Pentagon said Ffi,
HUNTINGTON - Champion Industries, Inc. has announced that it
day it will commit to a seven-yeat of its loans and related aSSets to Sumhas completed the acquisition of the operations of the E. S. Upton Printcontract with .McDonnell Douglas to itomo Bank ltd. for $3.37 billion.
ing Compeny, Inc. of New Orleans.
'
buy l!JI add.itio.nal ~0 C-17 cargo ·Federal and state banking regulators 1 , RChampio_nd's whhoandlly-ownmededscertamubsi~iaryf.,UBptour;queiabi~l: ~tin_g of Bhanaton
planes for $16.6 billio~ . It said com: had ordered Daiwa to shut down its
ouge, pat cas
assu
11
on s
tUes tn exc ge
mining to' multiyear contract rather U.S. operations by friday as punfor substantially all of Upton's assets.
than negouitina separate deals each 'ishrnent for conspiring to hide S1.1
The Transaction was completed in accordance with Upton's confi1 :ned
1billioll i tt bon!J-trading losses from
year will save ~896 million. ·
Chapter II bankruptcy case in the U. S. BankruptCy Coun for the East-U.S. regulators.
em-District-of Louisiana. '
NEW YORK (AP) - Japan's
Coatinued on D-6

r-Business, .farm briefs---,

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and debt. Baxter shares fe11 2 112 to
42 112.
Apple rose 718 to 29 114, ai;
investors awaited further develoPments in Sun Microsystems' reported bid for the company. Sun's shares
rose I 112 to 47 318.
·
Meanwhile, Michael Spindler,
Apple's embattled chief executive
officer, was ousted by the company~
directors and replaced by Gilbert
Amelio, an Apple board member an4.
until Friday, chief executive of
National Semiconductor Corj.
National confinned Spindler's resignation during trading and its shares
fell 118 to 17 5/8. Apple waited until
3 112 hours after the close of all trading to 111ake its announcement.

4.03.(b) plans

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Uni~ersi ty Ce nter for International to 14.
Busmess Research said its inflation
Oil stoc ks sank. Oil prices wobindex eased to 103.4 in January fr,om bled all week on fears that Iraq might
a revised 103.7 in December. \ · be permitted by the United Nations to
And the University of Michiga~'s res ume oil exports. But oil closed
January consumer se ntiment ind~x higher on Friday, with theMarch condecreased to 89.3 from an originall~ tract on light, sweet crude up 9 cents
reported 89.9.
in NewcYork to 17.80 a barrel, as
Analysts said the data paved the traders expected a drop in temperaway for further further interest rate tures would boost demand for heatcuts by the Federal Reserve, but \ ng oil. Still, 'texaco shares dropped
tradc:rs said that was part of the' buy- 1 1/8 to 80 3/4.
ing incentive for gold traders, who
Mergers and acquisition news
fear that further cuts might prove boosted some individual stocks.
innationary.
W.R. Grace shot up 7 318 to 69
The central bank ~ut short-tenn 114. Baxter International confinned a
. rates by 0.25 percent earlier this report that it had made a fonnal offer
week. for the third time since last to purchase Grace's National Medical
July.
.
Care Inc. division in a transaction
Meanwhile, gold stocks rose ~ valued at $3 .8 billion in cash, stock
gold prices moved higher. On the Big
Board. ASA limited rose I to 49 5/8,
and Newmont Mining added i to 59
1/8. On the American Stock
Exchange, Echo Bay mines rose 5/8

Investment viewpoint

'· i
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$4 1S.20 an ounce, a si~ - year high, in
heavy New York trading. Bond
investois were also skittish about new
supply expected with next week's
Treasury re funding.
Meanwhile, banking and financial
services st~ks fell as interest rates
moved higher. Merrill lynch fell I
318 to 55 718. The Federal National
Mortgage Assocjation. or Fannie
Mae, fell I 114 to 32· 112.
Basic materials stocks, which are
closely tied to the economy, also fell,
including ,paper and chemi cals.
Oeorgia Pacific slid 718 to 71 718.
DuPont dropped 1 718 to 76 3/4.
Bonds fell even after the release of
new economic data confirming that
the economy is slowing. The labor
Department said the jobless rate rose
to 5.8 percent in January, .the first'
increase in three months and ·the
highest level since last spring. The
number of jobs declined by 210,000.
In a separate repon, the Columbia

Extens/(Jn Corner

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t

r $- -~- - iN STORE- 1

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By HAL KNEEN
cultural wing.
POMEROY. - Ground Hog Day .
General n:certification .classes will
has come and gone. PunKsutawney be held on Thurs4ay, February 8,
Phil in western Pennsylvania saw hi s from 1-4 p.m.', and .again at 6:30 to
shadow, so·they will have at least six 9:30p.m. at the Meigs County Extenmore weeks of winter. Bradbury sion Office. Please call992-6696, to
Bob, WMP6's Ground Hog Day reserve your space in the classes.
reporter announce,d. that he did not
·She'cp and lamb producers
see his shadow. So; locally our fore- remember to cast your vote o'n the
'· ca is that spring will ~oon be upon 1996 USDA Sheep Referendum 'us. Personally, I'm going·to believe Tuesday, February 6, 1996. This ref~ our Ohio forecast! I believe in posi- erendum will decide whether protivc thinking and if I can get all of ducers approve assessments on their
t .You. believing with me, spring will products to fund promotion, research
soon be here! Un.til· then, plan on and educational efforts. All product attending a loc'lll or regional educa- ers, feeders and importers who certitionlll meeting· to update your fann- fy they were engaged in the produc·
ing skills and knowledge.
tion, feeding or importation of sheep
t · , Fanners, it is time to renew your or sheep products (except importers
private pesticide applicator license by of raw wool) between January I and
attending local recertificatiph classes. December 31, 1994, are eligible to
Topics that will be covered include : vote. Producers must vote in the
changes )n the Ohio Department of county where they live, and corporal!'&gt; Agriculture Pesticide law. Worker tions must vote in the county where
J, ..Proieetion Standard~, new safer &amp; their business headquarters is local:..~-!"ore cffccuve pesttctd~s, how to ed. Ill Ohto~ voto_nll woll tak~ place at
-~ · •mprove&lt;local watcr-'qualtty:iind•eur· •· the local Exlenston Office on Februrent research &amp; production bulletins. ary 6, 1996 during nonnal working
A special greenhouse/vegetable hours. Meigs County sheep produc' .. grpwcrs class will be held on Tues- ers must vote beiwecn 8:30 a.m. -day, February 6 from 6:30 to 9:30 4:30 p.m.. The local Farm Service ,
~. rrt at the_Southern Hi~h Schoo_l . A~e.n~y. will count ballots, determine
acme, Ohto tn the Vocational Agrt- ·· eltglbtltty of voters and tabulate

Ho•• 271ft_50 .. R.. $11.69 ~SALE '1 0''

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,w:.f•-.ms-RUABY TRIJOQOAD SAI.E

t/ WI SEU SIUW
&amp; IIIISEID .

Stocks fall from record highs

~

lOUISa .1.•111. t 1.&amp;-6 P.&amp;
UT.tUL•2P&amp; .

AI Pet FIHNis Special r.ktel

Sunday, February 4, 1898

~ Farmers urged to attend regional sessions

I

OPENING'MONDAY,.FEB.

Section D

ERise in gold prices incites inflation fears

~

IIISOI, WV

Happy

:·r

I

Featurb1g lultbard lr-.nd,
Dog food ,&amp; Specialty F..ds

':RVs found to give substantial savings
' BILL SCHULZ
· ..By
Aatoclatecl Pren Writer

'
pay taxes when they were colng to
lose their places anyway," he said.
The park spans about 57,000
acres including 30 miles of breathtaking beach in northwest Michi1111,11 's rural leelanau and Benzie
counties, and the north and south
Manitou islands. Interspersed with
the secluded beaches are giant sand
dunes and forested hills. ,About
20,500 acres were donated state
land, but tlic rest was once privately owned.
.
Those who built in Sleeping Bear
aft~ 1965, when it was clear that
park legislation was in the works,
could lease for only five years.
Gloria Menton, 73, fell into that
category. But she fought thC Park
Service for five years to kel:p her
seasonal cottage in the fam!ly for
herself, her three children and their
grandchildren to return to each sum'
mer.
"I kept telling them, 'I'm sorry,
but I'm not selling,"' Menton said.
"I care a lot about this pl~e . My ·
husband wouldn 'tgo anywhere else
(for vacati01i). When 'he died, we

1!imtsJt•mnel .
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'

By USA MEADOWS
lion fiom NRCS if there is any doubt.
GAllii'Ol,IS -It's not too early
Once a crop is planted in violation
to plan for 1996 crops. If fanners . of the highly erodible land or wetland
w111t to retain eligibility for 1996 requirements, it is too late. The proUSDA benefits, they must know ducer will be ineligible for 1996 benbefore planting next ye&amp;I''S crops, efits. By completing the AD-1026
· whedter the .land has hilt! a hishly certification for highly erodible land
ero&lt;)ible land or wetland detennina. and wetland in the Farm Service
lion made by .the Natural Resources Agency office prior to plantinc. and
Conservation Service.
reviewing maps, farmers will have
, Farmers also need" to know information to decide whether NRC,S
'whether crops to he planted on-hiJh- dctenninations are necessary, or they
ly erodjblil land tire permitted by a may contact NRCS ·concerning
silhed conservation plan and they details of.their conservation plan.
need to cheek whether they have land
11le Farm Service Agency WJRis
l ·lhat was a wet area that wu manip- to
with producers to help them
' . ulated after Dec. 23, 198S, and there- m.intain their 1996 eliJibility for
fprt e&amp;Mot be planted to il&amp;ricultUJ-., . • USDA benefits. However, it is up to
1 : a1 commodities. Planting areas that · the producer to be informed before
; : were drained after this date by 110t11e- plantin&amp; 'so violatiOIII can be avoid' one elae does not excuse a producer ed.
t : fro!n inelisibility if lhey1 plant lhe
...._ Mellllowa 11o tile coaty
{ ' oilvertiid ~RL-Farmera-- adviaecl alit allte tlbedor ol dM ' Gtlllle.
· . to set an official wetllnd dCtermina- Faria Sea +leo AaeacJ.

,..ork

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',l;o

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New shop to open for business

Workshops scheduled

-Business highlights'

Acquisition completed

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�Sunct.y, ~ry 4, 1998
Pomeroy • Middleport e Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

PegeD2e~

·110

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Protect your·eyesight'
while doing repair work' .

House of the week

A place of dreams

Br READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
For AP 8peclat FMtu,_

By BRUCE A. NA111AN

. AP Newafcsztarea

Superb Indoor and outdoor
features make this sprawling oneSIOIY home special.
A creative design that has plenty ·
of wide-open spaces .and gathering
spots, Plan F-87, by HomeStyles
Designers Network, features
2,962 square feet of living space.
The grand facade will get the
attention of visitors lllld passersby.
Two 'stately columns. a graceful
arch and a half-round window
frame the front entrance, while
the stucco exterior gives the
home a bright look.
~nside, the foyer features a 16-ft.·
Jilgh ceiling and showcases a fan.
tail transom. The dining room and
the, living room on either side
have ceilings that vault to nearly
11 feeL A boxedout window in the
living room provides guests a
sbnpy sitting spot, while built'in
sflelves In the dining room can put
your formal dinnerware on dis· ·

play.
The family room, with a 15·ft.
vaulted ceiling, is at the center of
the lloor plan and extends to the
ol!tdoor living spaces. A fireplace
is llanked by buUt-ln shelves.
The adjoining kitchen shares the
• family room's vaulted ceiling and
offers a cooktop island, a large
JllllllrY arid ·a breakfast nook that
ope!ll to the patio. On ~reezy
·sammer afternoons, friends and
rinliJy villi eQjoy pthering here.
Tbe master auite offers the ulti·
ntate In comfort: 'double-door
elltry. a lO.ft. tray ceiling, patio
access and a bath that shares a

DIE GRAND FACADE wUI draw compllmentll. Two stately toluDVIa, 811 arch 8lld a half-round window
&amp;ame the entrance. The aterior ie atucco.
see-through fireplace with the
·
bedroom.
.
Three secondary bedrooms
esign F-87 has a foyer,
share two full baths at the other
living room, dining
end of the home.
room, family room,
kitchen, breakfast nook, four
bedrooms, three full baths and a
utility room, totaling 2,962

D

(For.a more detailed; scaled p/a11
of tllis lloiiSe, it~cllldi~~g guides to
estimati111 costs at1d /itlatlcitlg,
serul $4 to HOIISe of tile Wed, P.O.
Box 1562, New Yort, N.Y. 101161562. Be SMrt to it~cllllh tire ~Ia,
number.)

..
square feet of living space. The
plan is aoiailable with 2x4 and 8in. concrete block exterior wall
framing and a slab foundation. A
three-car garage provides 567
square feet of space.

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Your eyesight can be extreme'Jy
vulnerable wben you 're working on
home repair, workshop or other do-it·
yourself projects. .
Chips of metal may ny from a
badly hit nailhead or from a screw'head when a power bit slips. And
saws, routers and other power tools
can throw sawdust and wood chips
with great force a.nd speed. But the
vast mlljority of all eye injuries can be
avoided with proper safety practices
and protective eyewear.
•
There are basically three kinds of
vision-protecting devices: goggles,
glasses and face shields. All must provide a physical banier without imped·
ing your vision. And the barrier
material mfist not be a potential haz·
ard in itself.
Protective lenses may be .made of
safety glass, polycarbonate re~in or
other plastics. By far the most impact·
resistant lens material is polycarbon·
ate. It's not unbreakable, but it's considered to be many times stronger
than either glass or other plastics.
Most off-the-shelf safety glasses and
goggles sold these days are polycarbonate.
Acceptable protective lenses will
be stamped by the manufacturer to
indicate lhatthey have passed .safety
tests. The frames will bear a "Z 87.1"
stamp to indicate they also have
passed quality tests.
All three types of protective
devices are available clear or shaded.
Tinted or shaded eye wear is good for
working outdoors. If you do welding,
always wear eye protection that is
specially shaded to guard against the
elttreme brightness and infrared rays
produced by the torch.
Whichever type of protective eyewear you choose, buy a product
that's right for the job and coinfortable. If it's uncomfortable, chances
are you won't wear it.
Here js information about protec·
tive measures: Goggles
If you're going to buy only one
kind of protective eye wear, get gog·
gles; they'll protect you in most sit·
uations. Goggles are close-fitting
devices that provide protection not
only in tbe front but at the sides, top

F-17

IIJGU CBIUNGS, open ap8cca IIIJd plent¥ of amenldea tum thla
one-story home Into an hi\&gt;itlng llftthertnglpot. The living and din·
11111 rooms on either side or IJ!e foyer provide a l'onnal aetdng lor
enteJ1alnl1111, while the family room IICive8 • home baee lor c:uwd
get-IO«cthcra. Sl~lllli ldaas
open to a pado with a ~~UDUDer
kllchen. There Is an l111ancl c:ooktop In lhe combined kitchen IIIJd
breakfast nook. For privacy, the alraordinary maaW' 1111te Ia eeparated l'rom the thRe aecunclary bedrooma IIC:IWII the . _ ,

doon

petermining what type of caulk to buy
·. By POPULAR MECHANICS
'or AP Special Feature•
· Choosing the right caulk for the
. job from a selection of tubes spread
across a 10-foot wall display in your
home center can be downright intimidating. A single tube of caulk ·can
cost anywhere from $1 .50 to $14.
: Regardless of what the caulk is
lilhclcd. what tbc caulk is made from
is the most important consideration
in dctcnnining what it's best suited
for. What you want the caulk to
adhere to and where you'll want to
usc it should determine the characteristics of the caulk you buy.
For eKamplc, to caulk joints
. around doors and windows requires
sealant that's both fleltible and long
lasting. hils good adherence to siding
(wood. aluminum, and vihyl), will
resist extreme weather conditions
and, if it's not painted over, will
wi.thstand UV radiation from direct
sunlight. To seal nashing around a
~himncy. tbc caulk must adhere to
masonry, roofing shingles and metal· fiashing. and stand up to the clcn\ents unpainted. The wann, wet
conditions of a bathroom require that
a caulk resists mildew and withstands moisture.
The label shwld provide you with
the information ·YOI! need to deter·
tiline 'its suitabilily for your project.
ll It's to be unpainted, check to sec
i£ the caulk comes in a selection of
colors so you can match adjacent
cplors of siding and trim paint. If you
can't lind a match, some caulks arc
available in clear formula.
·
The label should also state
whether the caulk is paintable or
•tainablc. what kinds of paints and
••lltins it's · compatible with . and
Whether it requires priming before
'"'inting. The dryin&amp; or curing time
befCIR painting ~hould also be specified.
'
, If you're. wotliing· in cooler
weather, t!leck the recommended
.pp!ication ~range. Some
ICIIIants can be applied 11 any ternperature d,ile o..,.. require a min·
imum ol 40 dcpws F!litlenheit or
- hipcr. In some caSes. IUding the
label will not give you ~ clear idea

a

and bottom as well. Costing SS to $1 S•
and available in most hardware stpces,
they ·are usually secured with a head~ .
band. Those with direct vents allow
good air circulation, minimize inter·
nal fogging, and are adequate for sawing and hammering. Those with indi·
reel vents offer added protection
from fine particles and splashes, .
Many are large enough to be worn
over prescription glasses. Glasses
Ordinary eyeglasses don 't offer
adequate protection for most work:
They're open at the top, bottom and
sides, and their lenses are not made of
safety glass or plastic. They can
cause a serious injury jf a lens break~
and shards ny into the eye.
Costing as little as $3 and available at most hardware stores, safety
glasses are the most compact fonn oi
protective eyewear. Get ones with
side shields to block particles front
entering. Some also have shields
across the top. A basic pair of. safety .
glasses offers adequate protectim\ ·
wbcn hammering or.using hand tools
and slow-moving electric tools. If you
wear glasses all the time, consider .
prescription safety glasses, available
from most eyewear stores. Face(
Shields
Face shields offer full-face pro·
tection and are ideal for blocking
thrown chips and shavings.. ·They
have a brow band and one or two
bands that pass over ille top or around
tbc back of the head. Full-face shields.
with a headband stan at about s10.
and are carried at most hardware
stores.
Face shields don't offer good protection against heavy impact or
objects that ny up or around their
edges. For that reason, always. wear
safety glasses or goggles as·well. Pre··
·ventive Measures
J
Always protect your eyes when
using power tools or when hammer-:
ing, prying or splitting with handtools. Protect your eyes when paint..
ing, especially ceilings, .or when.
using solvents, thinners or cle,ansers. ·
For lawn 01' garde~ wor~. wear gog-:
gles to protect aga1nst thrown stones
or sticks, or branches that snap back [
during trimming, Always wear a face '
shield and glasses or goggles when
using a ch~: saw.

of exactly how well the caulk wi II becomes more durable.
perform. To help you choose the best
Included in this general category
caulk for the job, we've grouped are adhesive caulks such as Polythem in eight categories by formula scam-seal by Dar)llorth and
type, alon g with some of their basic Phenoscal Vinyl Adhesive Caulk. In
characteristics.
addition to sealing cracks, these
If cost isn't a consideration, then caulks act as light-duty construction
the new tripolymer or co-polymer adhesives. Replacing a loose ceram·
caulks arc the best choices for ver- ic tile, setting ceramic soap dishes
satility (about $4 to .$6). Proflex by and installing vinyl baseboard mold·
Gcoccl and Lcxcl by Sasho arc mul· ing are just a few of the jobs adhetitask s.fi~Ants designed to adhere to sive caulks can handle.
dissimilar surfaces such as metals, · These inupensivc caulks (about
glass and untreated and treated $1 to $2j have been around for years
wood. With excellent adhesions and are suitable for indoor usc only.
properties and more elasticity than Although oil-base c~ulks are inex·
other caulks, these new technology pensive, they 're not always the best
sealants can replace some ·specialty buys because they have a limited 'life
caulks such as butyl-rubber and and require mineral spirits for
asphalt .caulk. However, these new cleanup. Plain latex caulks, on the
fonnulas are flammable and should other hand. are easy to apply and
he applied with caution and proper clean up with water. They're suitable
for interior uses such as .caulking
ventilation.
Th.c high-end latex caulks such as woodwork when painting, but
230 by DAP are also multipurpose they're not a good choice for areas
caulks. The most popular fonnulas exposed to the weather.
are latex-base variations. or combi·
This type of caulk is medium
nations with silicones and acrylics. priced (about $2to $4) and is tradiThey're easy to usc. clean up with tionally used to caulk masonry-towater and arc almost as durable as wood or metal joints. It's also good
the polymer fonnulas.
for caulking glass-to-metal joints and
Just as cxjicnsivc (about $4 to $6) sealing aluminum and galvanized
are the 100 percent silicone caulks, gutters. This type requires mineral
the best choice when scaling damp, spirits fot cleanup and is more diffihigh moisture areas. They shrink' cult to work with than the newer forvery little, remain neKible, are water mulas. J'ripolymer and co·polymer
resistant and have bonding power for caulks can be used for similar appli·
joining dissimilar surfaces. They're cations.
also the best for caulking around
Both of these fonnulas are ex penbathtubs. shov:ers, sinks, and other • sive. high-perform~ caulks (about
high•moisture areas. Some silicones ·$4..50 to $14) used primarily in
don 't hold paint well, however, and marine applicatjpns~ey have
they don't bond to rot-resistant excellent adhesion properties and are
· wOods such as cedar, redwood· and · waterproof. However, they are toxic
pressure-treated wood. As such, until cured and precautions must be
they're not. as vc;rsatile as the com· taken to provide proper ventilation
' pound-latex and polymer fornuilas. · ~nd skin protection during appiica,
Silicones can be applied in eold.con· · lion. Strong · solvents are also
ditions.
.
required f()t cleanup. ·
In, the midprice range are' the
While the expensive polysulfide
acrylic .latex-formula caulks (ab.out formulas are genersliy reserved 'for
$2 to ·$6). These represent the best ' marine liSe, Franklin · In!Cil)8lional
· all·~ro~~nd bUys for n)&amp;iiy UICS ipsidc ma)ces a ppPUiaropric:ed polyUrethane
and outs~ the bOuse. and
fea- formula that is auilAble for use
ttn simj!l~. warer .up. As ~iii- around the ·~home,JlldJl~nd
cones and other additiveure intro- Wood· Window Caulk is a Jood
c(uced into the formula, .the caulk' ·choice for redwood and cedar siding.

Polyurethane caulks have excellent
properties.
The best way to fill large cracks
.in difficult to reach areas is with
foam caulk. However, it's sensitive
to UV radiation so it must be paint·
ed if it will be exposed to sunlight.
The foam sticks to just about anything and is messy to work with.

I .

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

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING &amp; REPAIR
"Ptanoa Ate My Businaa"'uallly
Tuning &amp; Service Since 1977
BOB GRUBB (814) 446-4525
13 Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis, OH.

UNIQUE.
EXPRESSIONS
652 Jackson Pike, GalHpolis

814-448-4848

Valentine's Day
Wed. Feb. 14
Order now for best
selection .

Wedemerer'a Auction Setwloe,

I
watoled To_a.,: Ulde
.Tikeol.,., •1
IW2-7.
·"
.
'
Wonled To au,; S!ancllng Timber, ,:. .

I

114-3711-27511.

wan11d To Buy: ll•ed Mobile I
Home. 014-~175..
.

I
"
!

l 1.11 'I CY I.H rI'
"I

lo'.'

IV'..

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!
Sena Mattress
$59.00
Bed Frames
$19.95
Recliners
$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
La·Z·Boy Recliners $299.00
GUder Rocker w/Giider
Ottoman
$199.00

FLAIR FURNITURE
. 675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, ~

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance ·

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
'

Phone (614)446·6111

Gallipolis
Heated Garage Sale

for

Galtipois. Cillo 614-378-2720.

Now Taking Appt ic.iti ona At The

Master C8td • 111111 - CUll &amp; carry

GOOSE CLOTHES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Monday February 5th from
9am-3pm

556 Centenary Rd.

Wanted to Buy

Valentine's Day
st: Patrick's Day
Spring

Cab for model 574 or 2500 Int.

2 mjles North ol S. Bridge on SR 7
~0-5 MonthrU Set.
CloMd

614-446-2712

offers .

"Purr·FIICdf

Farm Tractor

Spe~ial

Extended

Hours

be8utiful gifts
For your SPECIAL V~NTI,..E
· Tues.Thur.Sal. 11 am · 8 pm
Sun. Moo
387•7999

Mon, Thur. 10 am • 8 pm
_Fri. 10 am· 6 pm
Sat. 10 am· 4 pm

VIllage T1111nlng

Victoria's Prom &amp; Bridal
Boutique

Rio Granda, Ohio
New Bulbs • 3 Bedl
can 245-6528
. NIPO!utntenta

.. Atlwdmlon I Dwllapm~~••

homo

In Alcino. largo bui d-

i ng will houae small bu sineas .
al so a one car garage, fenced
yard; out olllood area, asking

keeper -Tax Preperation No Job

Too Small! Call Sondra For AI·

IDrdaiN Prien 51~70.

Profeslionat tree Service. Com~
plete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Service -50 Ft Reach, Slump Removal, Free Eatimateal In·
aurance, 24 Hr. Emergency Service -Call And Savel No Tree Too

-1•

All raol
adllerllslng in
!11111 no-r Ia Slbjocl10
the Federal Folr Housing Acl
ol19118 wNch makes h Illegal
to adVerllaa ' any preference.
lml1otlon or dl!ICIImina:lon

BOOTS ,
-All Leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00 '
Sale Price $59.00

Large Stock
Engineer ........................ $49.00
Wellington ..:................... $49.00
Loggers ........ ...... ........... $50-55
Harness ................. ...... .$59.00
Carolina-Georgia·H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex

SWAIN FURNITURE
62 Olive St. Gallipolis

Limited Offer! 1996 doublewide,
3br, 2balh , 11709 down, $ 2751
mo nth . Free delivery &amp; se tup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Ni tr o
wv. 304· 755-5885.

will not
..-1ng1y accept

2· K. Young School Age Ounng

Bra available on an equal
opportunlly basis.

SUmmer. 3 Days pet Weef( Mini-

Bank Repos. Easy Financing. Call
Run Murdock 1·al0·251 -5070.

-r-lion

Thle

Card of Thanks

adv.......,

""m814o4W&amp;-3857.

Conalructlon work, all phases.
Addiliona, lidinQ, ..,.lltnng, IIUCCO, JYnlhetJca. lirush drywall, roof
repairs, Installing windows. 30&lt;4·
875-81102.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Willing Ia babyait in my home,

12x50 &amp; 12x8S, Underp inning,
Porch, Sccve, Refrlgeralor $3.000.
$3,500 No Calls Aher 1 PM . 614-

FINA N CIAL

14170 \l indale Mobile Home wt
E.11pando , 314 Acre, Chesh ire

1'.- ........... 614-002-3308.

210

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

recommend• that you do busi ·
nes1 with people you know, and
NOT 10 und money lhrou~h 1ne
maU until yo.u have inves11gated

the oliorlng.

388-96116.

Twnahp. 2 Out Buildings , Rural
Water, Central Ai r, Cable 614-

367·0303

In Memory

Yl••••ory

,........

Ia
.of qr father,

...........

Dnalloo,who

Gallia County'l LargeSt Hair &amp;

Tanning Salon, S.ekin~ Businesa
Partner, Great locat•on. Good
Bu1ineu Great Investment. Only
Serious lnqulriea Please, Sef'ld
Name, Adchsa &amp; Phone Number

•54131.

_~ .

........., 4, 1995.
HaPPJ. ....rlos
oro all wo havo
farHw.
lowe,

front rovr

Far Rent: 271 Eaatern Avenue.
G•lllpo11s, Suitable For Small

clllldr•

Buolnen Or Olllceo. 614·446'

310 Homes for Sale
2 badtoom 1 bllh home on 21o1s
in Syrac:use, 2•x30 1.5 story
shop building, S22.SOO. call BolCh
61"-1192-3004.
3 Bedroom Ranch , Gas Heal,

~~~

=i

:,:':," 1 ~k,.,d.

Condo, ground level.

2 bedroom.
2 batha, .comptetely lurn1shed, in

Pori Charlolle. Fla .. 1114-B85-

:Jgi!7.

Country living 2 Acres, 3 Bed·

Co\
rooms,
61"-HI
1 Balh,
8832Eal-ln

In Memory

Silver Bridge Plaza
Hours 10·6
Closed Sundays
FOR SALE
'89 Chevy S·1 0 4x4
. V-6; air, PS, PB,
Short Wheel Base
446·2234
u.~'•• uo.

Class of 1984
"Get-Together"

A1 the Stowaway
Feb. 17th at 6 pm
RSVP by Feb. 12. 96
Call Mary 441·9891
or Tammy 256-1036

Will babysit in my home.

FTJPT &amp; after school care.
For more details Please Call
985·9833 Anytime
"Oil Painting Classes
Offered"
Contact Parks &amp; R~tCreation
Dept. for details
441-6022

675-2786

. 7amtoa·pm
. ~-ins Welcome
9-5
to10J1day thru Saturday
cal SharOn &amp; Amanda
Owners of Village Florist
245-,5878

Call446-2342 or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

lHfanilyoiVirgWa
1'1lotlas wotrld •• ..
slllll aur siKere llatl!s ·
it lhe reclllt loss ol aur
IIIOiher, •• (Gillie &amp;

Mtllforl,
MitltlepDrf sqaad &amp;
v..,eers,
Vet.,_
Me•a~

&amp;

~
(OI'GI!Ir,

Dr.
Douglas Hunter, OW.
State Highway Patral,
Gallipolis Dtvalap1111ntal
staff,

Centers,

Elder Ray
. fowler &amp; Kilgdoln
of Jellovth's W'dMss,
Carl Hysel &amp; deputies
ol Meigs C.Jy Slieriffs
Office, ~ Co. Sllerlff
Taylor, Fisher's f..-al
H- tnl to all aur

H•

famles anti frilllds for
faod, 1110111Y &amp; their
sylllpGihy. Wonls CCII
never express how you

• were appreciated
cllring Jllis tragic loss ol
ours.

LATRISHA ANN
HURT
· Feb. 4, 86-Feb. 5, 86
It seems like yesterday
when we held you. You
brought so much Love &amp;
Joy into our hearts.
You were "'special"

&amp;

"Pr-..cious" to us.
Mommy, Daddy, Sabrina,

Kilchen,I:~~De~n~n~is~J~r·~·iB:ri!tta:n:y~

MONEY MAKER &amp; FREE RENT
When you buy this DUPLEX and TWO MOBILE HOMES.
Uve In one and let the other 3 Rentals make your
payment Convenien1 location close to Gallipolis. Phone
lor info.
1754

415 ACRES M or L
OF THE BEST FARMS IN GREEN TWP., GALUA
COUNTY, OR SOUTHEAST OHIO. 415 Acrea M or L\
Great lor Da1ry Farm. raising beef cattle. or just farming. il
nos 3 nouses rented now. Barns. Tile Milk House. Lean to
Shed. Plus other bldgs. &amp; tool·sneds. 2 Tractors, 2 Plows,
2 Disc .. 1 Haybine, 1 Hay Baler. 1 Rake, 1 Cornpicker. 1
ON'E

110

Help WantBd

••1 C.A
HHA &amp; PCA
Ful~limt &amp; part-line
positions available, GG!ia
&amp;Meigs (oue'3h Excelent

salary. paidH &amp;tie
insurance · . Company
wiH
with
high school
r GED
or 2years~ in
caring for the elderly.
Contact Haolth

!rain=

Management Nursing,

762 Second Avenue,
Gollipolis
Drlllll'l • 2~-3~ mi.

to atartl
Top benefits including
heaHh, life dental &amp;
vision ins. and 401 K.
Drive la1e model, top of
the line conventional
equip. $1000 algn-on
bonua. Your choice of
national or regional
fleets. 1 Yr. OTR exp.
OfO Leasefpurchass
avail. Call 1Oa·2p Sun.
· or 7:30a·5p M-F. 1·800·
876-8754 ext. JE·12
·conditions Apply

P..-IE.K-

Oli lhis, his 90Iii'bTriiidoy

Feb. 4th, 1996

He wenl to live with Jesus

rmd "' bofl' 1D see him
apr 5111118 illly.
We ":J.ou and lore yoo
rtry
.
Wile: Macy
Otildren: Grip, Sis &amp;.Ray

Corn

Grinder, 1 Manure Spreader, 4 Milkers, 2 Bush

Hogs. 3 Hay wagons. and a cattle loader. Many more

farm equipment and tools too numerous to mention here,

all goes. A complete Farm
appointment now.

w~h

all Equipment Phone for

1753

PHONE 446•7699

KENNETH AMSBARY, PH. 245-5855
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 44&amp;-9539

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

;11 o Help Wanted

PROGRAM
MANAGER

Real Estate General

Gelllpolia, Ohio
RehabCare Group is
seeking an experienced
heakhcare manager to join
our interdisciplinary team
of rehab professionals at
our hospita~based adutt
inpatient unit at Holzer
Medical Center.
BS In Healthcare or
Business Administration
and
demonstrated
management
and
mali&lt;eting skills required;
MBA,
MHA,
and/or
managers with a clinical
background preferred.
Competnive salary aQd
benetn package. For more
info!mation
contact
Barbara· Snell. RehabCare
Group, 7733 Forsyth
Blvd., Suite 1700, St.
louis, MO 63105 or call1 800-6n-1238 ext. 216
FAX (314) 863-0769.
Rehabcara Group
Jobllne HIOO-&amp;n-1238
Equal Opportunity Employer

POSrriON OPENINGS

MEIGS COUNTY
'

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

m.

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley.. ............742-3171

RIAl!OQ

A

LEND•II

WELLS
Raised ranch slyle home.
6 acres.
Fireplace, 3 BRs. 2 baths. FR, Kit &amp; more . Free gas provided
to dwelling presently. Call lor rTIQI'&amp; inlonnation.
· 1806 '·
MULBERRY HEIGHTS Nice 90x145 lot wi1h neat ranch home
with attached one car garage, dining .room, kitchen, laundry '··
large living room.
17&amp;7'
SR 124 RACINEI Lovely 3 bedroom home with harod&lt;;•·a"•ld I"
hardwood flooring . Detached 2 car garege with over
apartment. cat! to see this one.
1776
33739 BUCK WILCOX 47159 EAG~E RIDGE
ROAD· SSS,OOO-Over 3t ROADI Aluminum sided 1
acras &amp; a 112 story story home,
frama/brlck 3 badrooms, 2. kitchen, over sl~~~:1e~:~~~·i
baths, Jiving room, family 2 car gara~~·
room &amp; so much more. Let furnace . Addldonat mobile
Charyl show this one to you, home hook-up. Must call
call today!
·
t797 today lor an appolntmenll

of .Community Support Programs
ACCESS to HUIIllll Resource Dovelopmenl
Mlldl!- QllllllkiU..: Maal£r's Desrce in Counseling or
Social Work. LI'C·or MSW.
Dotlho: Coordination of all5en'ices fO{ children includin&amp; Host
Home and CSP. Participalion in treatment planning, referral, staff
supervision, ind qency planning. Rep«senlallon oo communily
boards. Reaponsible for developiiiJ ond moni1ori~g wrap-around
treaanen1 far children.
(2J Job 11do: Oallia-Meigs Head Slall Mental Health
Professional ACCESS to Human Resource Developrnenl ·
MI-. QullllcalloM: Bachelor's Des- in Social Work or
"'lll&lt;dfield
Jill...,.., lmplemeniS mental health co,.,.,.,.ent for children and
fomilies enrolled in Heod Start.
Deadtine for bolh positions: Fet¥uary 12, 1996
Send resume and teaer of in'""'" 1o:
(I) Job ntlt: Oirec:10r

-

~511

,_....

ACCESS to H - a - m Deullp•u•l

FOR. ALL YOUR

ESTATE NEEDS, WHETHER
BUYING OR SF.LLING GIVE CHERYL LEMLEY I,
CA!.L &lt;•1~n42-3111.
· ·

1456J..._ Pile G Np ;llo, 0111o &lt;156.11 ·
ACCIZSTh H._-..O...Iopmctoo ia
......,..,•• lllftdod in part by 11to Gallil-J..,.__Melp 8owd of AJ..dtot. Or"'f

-"-··-·- -·

•equal-"""'

'

Bessie L. Bays
The family of Bessie
L. Bays would like to
extend our thanks to
all who showed the
kindness at the loss of
our Mother, Grand·
mother, Great Grand·
mother, and G real·
Great Grandmother,
friend, · relalive,
neighbor, and church
rhernber.
McCoy
Moore Funeral Home,
Rev. Alfred Holly,
Ramsey
family
singers, and lhe piano
player,
H o Iz e r
Emergency Room, the·
Emergency Squad,
the doctor, nursing
stall, the grave digger,
all who sent food,
flowers, cards, phone
calls, and the prayers.
May God bless· each
ahd every one.
The Raymond Bays
lamily and children

Thankl

IN MEMORY OF

Ashabelle's
is now having
75% off
all winter stock
and clearance items.

1111 72 Norris Mobile Home, fit

'!' 8pm 30"-875-17113.

make any SUCh praiorance,
Wmltelion or dl8crimlnatlon.•

Sun Valley Nura81y School.

Childcara M-F 6om-5:30pm "9ft

8"-'"'-'

1994 Redmond 14x70, 3bedroom,
1beth, S14,000firm, exc. oond. Af·

blaed on """'· ector. rol9!on.
oexlamilldt otatus or national
ollgln. or any Intention to

advertisements tor real estate
w111chla In
ol the law.
Our rwdono 1111 heroby
lnionned thai aH dwellings
in this newspaper

Big Or Too Small! Bidwell, Ohio.
814-3118-11843, 81•-387-71110.

to

Judge &amp; prosecuting
anny. for their
4-411-0527.
humanitarian
efforts to
m• KitkWood 12x60, 2 lltd.room.
Range, Refrigeta10r, Cenrral Heat·
unite a local family who
ing &amp; Air Cond it10 n1ng, Includes (
had just lost their mother.
Storage Shed &amp; Deck , Ask1ng
$6500 OBO 61•-258· 1&lt;•3 Bet·
It's good to know you
ween 9am-t0pm.
care! Hats off to yw
1978 1070 Schultz Mannchasler
With 12x28 Fa cto ry Add-On
from an appreciative
RJom 6 , 4-446-6034.
citizen of Meigs County.

Georgea Portable Sawmill. don't

Prolenio,nal EJtperience Book -

Thanks the Meigs
-County
. Dept.
Sheriff's

Three bedroom homa in country,
w~,.. HiD Rei.. Rulland. one botl.
~rd pool. 81"-912·_506 7.

haul your IOQI to the mill just cal l

ConlaCIJoM aU14-992-7llllll.

1981 Smoker, Very Good
tion, Hardwood Floora , 2

7...8 .

8,. ·~29.

school I college students in ba·
ale math, algebra I trigonometry.

Card of Thenkl

do s. Aaklng $4000

General Maintenance , Painting,
Yard Work Windows Washed
Gutter• CleaAed light Hauling,
Commerical, Reaidenti al, Steve :

-1175-1957. .
MATH TUTOR- will lu tor high

320 MObile Homes
for sale

~1.000 e 1 "-II4~28G&lt; .

407 Main St. Pt. Pleasant

they

'(

Nloo

RE AL ESTAT E

pr8M1118

30 Announcemants
For1un11 wilt be ..de now MLM
IIOp omol&lt;ing, all bolllnic:al, recommended, 100% gu)nniHd,
1-1100·870-5887.
.

2• Hour Care For 1 Elderl1 Or

4423, 814-44&amp;-8565.

COUNTRY

------------~-To Buy: Junk Au10o Willi •o.
Or Wi1nou1 Molora. Call Lorry ·I
l.ivlir.81. 381130!.
.
l

oo or TnrH
February 15
POSTAL JOBS
PHR, Dlroclor
S10rt 112.08 IHr .. For Exam And
aourcoa. Unlvoralty
Rio Appl icallon ·tnlo. Call 211·788·
Grande, Campuo Box F27, Rio ::~~XI. OH581 9 A.M..g P.M.
Gnulde, DH •587&lt;&amp;. MIEEO Employer. '
Thllloiga Coun1'/ lloanl &lt;liMon-

BULLETIN BOARD

IVYDALE

Walftd

310 HomH for Sale

To P.O. Box 833, Gallipolis, Ohio

245-5678
Special: Valentine Cards·
Buy one, get second of lesser
value free

StaW~Pl~----------~-----------------

......

-·Ply

Village Floral &amp; C&amp;rd ~hop

I

180 WenttdTO, Do

Live-In caralakM io&lt; elderly wom- Hanclcapped Paraon In UcenHCI
on. •-5 day lhlh. Relore~ll rt- PrMilo Home, .,._..,-oooo.
quirtd.:IO"-e15-4851.
Certified c:hild daycare provider
wll blbylil in my homo on HyHII
Pollal I Gov't Jobo 121 /Hr • Run Rei., Pomo!oy,11"-ll92·3537.
Bonoftll. No Exp. Will Train, For
Electrician Any Kind Of Eleclrlc
AP,r&gt;l And .,.. 1.SOO.-~.
WOrl&lt; Dono. 81""'*"1 137.

-------·1

44688n

l·'l

HelpW.nttcl

r.

ASK US ABOUT ELECTRONIC
FILING. 736 Second Ave.

c~---------------------

AtJNOU rJCH.IUH S

110

. ,ftHded. Earn money tor Christ· lmmedl•te Openings Avaiiable Gallipotia Dairy OuHn For SUm- lli~ (Coltawl School'
Mei;o lnclui1riHJ- I Mil&gt;
mao bill II - a t WOI(L 1-IOO- Fol CtrUfted Nuroe Aldel. Clm- mor Holp &amp;Day Shih Grll.
oli1ull--., e-dnatg2-8358 or 304·182·28•5, Ind.
dllvo
W.;oo, Dtn.rontal Wllh Our prelet'lt Director of Nu r1ing lOr (RN or LPN) to WOfk widutudRep.
xperitnce. Sign On Bonua 1111 accepted an enviable "'"' -and td.Uill wllh doNjoprnero.
Available
Equal Opportunity Em- opporwnlly cloaor to her flmlly. 1111 doaliitioo. Mull be a tOgioAGENT: AVON SELLS ITSELF
Contacl Thl Anil1ar11 Dl- We are now aMklng an RN with teted nurM or 'liceniBCI PfQCticat
.Nood CASH For Wiftllr Billa? plorer.
rac:tor 01 Hurling. Plnacrall care menagemon1 and program do'lel- nuroe currwndyliconood in !he
Earn $8 ·$151Hr. AI Work -Home
Conllr,
170 Plnocro11 Drive, Gat- opmom OXberltnct 10 1111 mla po- 11118 ol Ol'io. Proiotrecl quollflca·
1 -1100- 7~2..738
llpolla, Ohio •5831 81•·•08· lilian.
Ilona: E•onceln publiC heallh
Boby.inlng In My Home For Two 7112.,
Wo are a 100 bed locilily cloing nursing. uper;..,. working,.,
Praachooi Children tn Tho Spring
both lnpetlent and outpatient rt· chidr., and a,ha with dawlophabllitatlon. Development of sub· rn~ntatd•tilltln. Send rttume
~
·
Send
~~oau
..
&amp;
Rtf....... To: CLA 370, CIO Galli·
acute rehab and dementia unita by February D. 199810:
polio DaJI! Tribuna. 825 Third
are In proare11. We employ ten
Avenue; GIJrpcll, OH 41131.
lull time ,....II lor prooloiqn of
s- - ·E&gt;IOCUiive Dlrac:l&gt;r
OCcupational. Phyalcol. •Rnplra- Moip CCOin1'/ Board of MoniBI
COI.JISEI.OR IOERAPIST
lOry and Spaocn Tl11t8~J¥. Candi·
Ra!arda1on and Dovoiopmenlll
dales ahould exhlbil abillly 10
Diublllioa
An Ou""'oon1 ChlmiCII Dopondcommunicate, organize and work
1310C&amp;rielon Slree1
ltncy Agency Locoled lnJackoon
Mlh lheoo multiple programo. We
P.O. Box 307
Ohio Ia SHidng A Ouali!td. Fw':f:nize your carHt' goal• with
Syracuse, Ohio 45778
aon To Prwl&lt;lo Alcohol And Oili. HI ..._ • __
hla y competitive nlary and Ub'l·~ ~-- 1 _
er Drug CounM1ing. Knawtedge
blnoll padcage
o., ~· no.~r ,_ r.,.- 1.
01 Chamlcal Dependency Ro·
To~ndtOihiaeiCCitingor,
al Line Crews &amp; Underaroung
INSURANCE SALES OPPOR.
.
Crew• for Telephone and Cable
...., qulrod. Bachelors Degree Prt·
TUNITY
portu
•••
,,
arftumeiO:
m
TV. Send ·Rreaume to P.O. Box
lomld. Send Rnume By February
l.indernln,
AcinlnlslriiOr,
Roclt·
858
Goahan. Oh •S122 or Leave
9, 1998, To: FACTS, 1770 Jack· Locallnourarn:e Company INk·
aDrinol ~b Center, 38759
il Mesaage wiht Answering ServAodiipringo Rood, l'tJme&lt;oy,
10ft Plko, -1. OH 45814 EOE, Ina highly mohaled indivi&lt;luai lo
ice@ !513J762-ll501
0110 ~5789. ·
.UJFIH.
Jorn our ••am ot praftaalonala.
Earn $1000a weekly atuffinu en· Qualified carldldates muat mHt Peraon Experienced In Plumbing
WILDLIFE ~ONSERVATION
velapu at hame. Be your boll. the following crlterl1 : have good
And
Oroln
Cleaning,
Mull
{!e
Now
Hiring G:,:swardens. Seaan now. No exp., r.ee ouppllea, peopta akilla. be willing 1o work Naat 1n Appearance And Have
· M ·
info., no ·obligalion. s.nd S.A.S.E. ovhodnlnga a~d ao me ,sahlur d~y s, Good Drivlnn Record 30•·875· c:umy alntenance, Park Rang·
•
ers Etc. No Eaperiance Necea·
10 Prtlliga Unfl tL, P.O. Box o1 • · curronl 11 1o ea 1 '" 1 •· 7857
1858og, Wln1tr Spring&amp;, Fl conae, and havo ,.... yeara of __·POsmONAV'i;a:A£ilE~-~Iary, For Applic:ation And lnfor·
327 11
auc:ct11Ful sales ••perien~• ·
matlon, 1· 407-750·3122 E11.
DH112C ( 7 A.M. -8 P.M.J 7 Days.
==·
Somo coli ago ldUCIIion pra- Loading
Eam up 10 $1,000 weeldy IIUillng Contractor
WILDLIFE ~ONSERVATION .
envaiopal al homo. Stir! - · No Our package jncludeo high pay· Sheetmetat snop
/
JOBS
1Jp8ritnee. Frae auppUea.
Game Wardens, Security, Main·
outa, advanced markellna and plicant Muat Have
madOI'l . No obllgallon.' Sond
Layoul Aftd Fabrication EJ:pltl· 1enance, Ell:. No Exp. Noceaaary.
ac:tdreaaad atamped envelope to computllt IY'*"*· solid manage. ence, Job Coordination Skill,
Now Hiring. For Info Call (218)
Exprou Dept ~e . 100 Eall mtnl 1ncl adminlalrativt aupporl, Worl&lt; Well Wllh Of1n, EIC.
Ext 8710, 9 A.M. To 11
Whil•tone Blvd.. Sllile 1•8·345, peid training, \l'acatlona, and ex·
penaea.
error1
and
omiuiona
ln.
·
CtiCiar !'wk. Tll711113.
Good Bonolil
IUftlnco, &lt;101.Kard penllon plan.
401K
Experienc!ld Scrap Burner1. lm· medlc:.ll &amp; dental plan as well aa
PtuoExtu
medlele Openiftfll. Call 30"-232- • - working condlllons. ·
Our Growing Taam Today
1333 Mon ·Fn, 8:00 To 5:00.
AL-.
Please forward all reaumea to :
Send Reaume To:
FULL OR PART· TIME Car I Human ~1ource1 Oeparcment
Book. now hirina . Local
SHEETI.IETAI. POSITION
'Truck Mecnanlc~ Mull Bo H.on- ISO. P.O. Box 738, Mariana, 011
aaleaperaon needed. Matgaret
Box 11117
ell, Rttlabte, Havo Own Tool&amp;, •5750. EQUAL OPPORTUN rtv
Plotce. 30«75-3ns altet !ipm.
61,.....S1~ Ill-F. a.S). o
EMPlOYER
Jacklon. OH · -

and 11us1nesa r.. Preparation.

Enc)C11d Ia $4.15 Hell for the ba'*-'(a)_ _ _ _' - - - - - -

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

110

Time Courier lllalnlonance
- r y. 7 ttova. 407-175-2022 Poaillon ~vallobla lmmedia!aly.
Rep, To: CLA Box 372, c/o GaHioxt05015HCJ.4.
paUt Dally Trlllllnt, 825 Third
$35,000 IVA. INCOME Po!onlial. - . . . , Gallpotil, OH -1.
Readl~ Bool&lt;l. ToH ffte (11 ~
-.em En R-2814ForDotliiL
· POSTAL JOBS NOW
S•o.ooo IYR. INCOME Polonlial. GOV'T
HIRING
te SUort 123,100 Homo Typflll IPC Utero. Toll 134,100 FOR
IYr.
Cd
For Appilcalion
Fro• (1 1 100-891-9771 En T· &amp; EmPloyment Info.
~-111- 508281• For Ullingl.
15354 en t452.
.AVON I All Arua I Shirley -rye::;..PC uura nMded.
~:IO"-e75-1&lt;429.
~5,000
po-l. Call11101).513-013
Ell
S.83M.
Able Avon R•prenntatlvta

·for Complete. PIOI!:Uionlillndlvldutil

No.-------------

Mime___________________________________

Help W1111ed

ANGELL ACCOUNTING

Full study plan infonnatlon on this house is available !n a $4 baby · '
blueprint. Fourbookletsarealsoavailableat$4.95each: YoiJrHome-HOw ;
to Build. Buy or Sell ft. Ranch Homes, 24 ol the most popular lrom this ,
feature; Practical Home Repairs, wl!ich tens how to handle 35 common
problems; and, A·Frames and Other Vacation Home6, a collection of24
atylaa. Send check or money order payabl.e to the Associated Pres$ and this
label to: House of the Week, the SUnday· Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10118·1562.
.

Enclcnd Ia 14for pllln

110

f:uKy guaraniMd. No expet"ience

I~I====Th=O~m~~=rS=tu~d~y=PI~an==~t
1

MASIER
a IIPiash of luxury to the momlniC rou·
The duaJ.IIink 'VIIIIIIJ accommodates two pooplc, while 11 built·
In: -Ire-up &amp;able provides an Ideal place to preen. A see-throuJih
laoeplace ahar41tl with the maater bedroom lends romance and
w8rmth to a ~ In the tub.

$200-UOO -kly. Aaumble
productL No lllling. Paid dlroct

\

'

�P11ge 04•
51 0

HeM:

510

Goocll

540

HouMhold
Goode

.

Boato By A•dwl"'l , Chlpp-.
To., La,., O.erantMCI Lowoot
Priolo At Bhoe Colo, GliiiOolll.

El..lrlc WhMI....Ira IScoollri,
Now lUNd, s-tor - h l l r
Lllto, Slllrway Elmtora, L,!Jt
ChNpl 2S' Slleto T.V. 2 """ 01c1 · Chllra; Bowrn.n•a Homecar-'l
. '
o r - - . Whfll EJecrrrc Caak 814-441-7211L
SliM, 81"-3111-eoe1 .

A,...na Skit Br Side Roltiaero·
tor, Color T.V., Waahor, Drrer,
814·256-t23&amp;

Concr... &amp; Plutlc Set&gt;tlc Trio,
300 Thru 2,000 Galrone Ron
Ewane Enterprlaaa, Jackson, OH
1-800-537-8528.

Apple llo Colnputor, Eattndod
llemorr. Two Dlak Drl..a, Monl·
tor, Image Wnttr II Printer, SOh·
ware, Excellent Condltlan, 814· tc.ch, love-~ abloe &amp; lampe;

&amp;-., bed. etrollor, Wllkar, owing, tains; knickknack• : Tupperware :
canni~

. . -L ~7S4541.

auppllea; night atand ;

violin; Vat)! good condition, 814·

·BoiiJ Clolhea, For Uttfo Girt, Silo 1192-3244.

HI·E118cr.ncy L P. Or Hall,., GU
a:!% Furnocu 100,000 BTU l &gt;
800· 2t1·0098, 814·448·8301 ;

O.ct Srll.,.. And Air ~lion,'

9 pc. dining room aulle; bunk
'beds I drtaatra: pictures; cur-

258-e565.

Freezer For Sale t5 c... Ft ~
Montlll Old.l350. eu ue 111111: •

ero.FrMEIIiml...

..

' .

rn...-therm l Miller MOD!ie HonW
Furnocu. Gu, Oil I Electric lof,
Stock. Laroe Oiatrrbuter Bur 011~
of N- Mobile Homo·Furnacil:

SERVICES

Bank Financing Availabl•, Ca1~
3 -12 Montho, Slmilac 814-441Due To Remodel ing. Kilchen Bonnotll Mobile Homo HTG ·&amp;'
01115, 814.SU.IIIe2.
Cabinets &amp; Sink For Solo 814· . CLG At 814·448-9418 or 1-BOO;;
872-51187.
.
,,
448-9239.

Home
Improvements

810

Appliance Partw And Service: All
tlamo Branda Over 2S Years El·

'Baaltv,
Inc.
BiH

LOO!&lt;JNO TO SELL OR
A HOME?
LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL lJS TODAY!

COCkalfofo 814-31111-8714.

perlence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Mayng , 81•~446 ·

Golden Retriever Puppies AKC,
$200, Sholl I Wormed 814·379·
2Q8 1 Ahlf Spm.

7795.

Pampered Pawa Fomi~ Pet SlOtt
now opon Monday llnpugh
Thursdoy, 9am· 7pm, FrKiay ond
.5aUirdilr, 9am-8!&gt;m, Sundar br

446-1066
e14-446-0390t

RENTALS

appointment. Grooming, pel supplie, AKC puppies, ki..ns,' bird'
fotcf and much more. Located
nect door to Tho Added Touch.
Call814-9!12-8244 lor grooming
eppointmont.

J2 LOCUST STREET, GAWPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Modern 1 Bedroom Aparlment.
\

•

N. 3rd, Middleport. 211edrocm, fur·
niahed. Deposit &amp;... reference&amp;.
304-882-2568.

REALTORS:

C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Real!or/Broker-446-0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446-2027
Patricia Roes, Reetnor

Allen

I
1 Bedroom In Kanauga,
Carpeted, Appliances Included,

No Peca, Oapoait &amp; Refarencea,
$250/Mo. 814-898-7102.

C&amp;C Glneral Home Mainrenenee- Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doora, windows, baths,
mobile honw ntpair and rT1Jre. For
free ealimara call Cher, 814·992·
8323.

'

three bedroom apartment,

•ORI'WALL
Hang, linllh, repair.

Ceiling• teltured, P'uter repair:
Call Tom 304·875-4188. 2C reara

._;once.

Ron's TV Service, opocallzing In
Zenith also Mrvicing moat other
brands. House calla, 1-800-797·
0015,
30&lt;-576-2398.

'

one bedroom apartment in
, B14·9G2·5958.

610 Farm Equipment

i two bedroom apartment in
Racine, no pats, $275/mo. plus .
doposi\ 814-992-7843.

sALE PENOINGI · •

Great
stan.r home • 2 bedrm, 1
bath with .teltn!llnllble IItie. 2
lots, approx. 85' x 166'.
Bidwell area.
1111

Now Ta.king leases For 1 Or 2
3 Room Bedroom Apartments, 814· 388·

Woods, In The 1100.
, On SR 2.33. -:-::=--:--~--:--­

Complete SOme One bedroom furnished apart~

mant In Middleport, 814·446·
3091, 614-992·5304 or 814·992·
2178.

INVEn-.ENT.

1085 Maue~ Fer~uson Tractor.
Vety Good Condiuon, Runs Ex ·

New On Tha Market· A
beautiful 24' x 58' double
wide with a 1/2 aae lot more
or less. II hall 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, &amp; a 3 .car garage.
YOU MUST SEE THIS
ONEI 1111

.r8n&gt;Odilled
~:j,.._,..

.

ceMent,

Smckers, S300 Depo811, $350/Mo.

Appllcarlons At 1743 Cemenarw

814-742~2457 .

63o

~

LivestOCk

12 week old pig&amp; lor sale, $35.
814-849·2111 7 or 614-~·290!1.

Hay Bougllt And SOld, Horae And
Darry CluaNty, Br Tho Semi Load~
Gornw1-., OH 513-8116-2822.

OPPOR'IUNITY • 2 homea
located rn downtOwn VInton.
Uve in one and rant the
Olher. $75,000 CALL TO
SEE!
1114

Small ·one Bedroom, .Excellent
Condition; CQYntry setting, w&amp;ener, Dryer, Stove Refriqeralor, Non

640

11045 NEW LISTING v...nt lot
In IOWn $10,000. VI.S 318-8821

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay, Square Bales, $1 .50 6H·

Stonewood Apartment• 'now IC·
cepting applioallona for apart·
menta, aff -trlc, lor -~, and

store front

disability. FMHA aubsldlzed, be·
sic r11nt. $280 per month, EOH,
814-1182-3055.

BRAND NEW HOMI! : Tu
abatement R~or Owned. 3
bedroom, 2 baths. Ldcaied
in the city. $52,000. .1101

1\vln RIVera Tower, now accepting

applicarlont lor 1br. HUO IUblld·

ized apt. for ofderlr and haridl·

450

Fumllhecl
Rooms

Circle Motif, GaUipolla, OH 814448·2501 or 114·387·01112. Err.
Aoomo, Coble, Ar, Phont,
M~ &amp; Aotrlgerator.
·

SPACIOUS RANCH • oilers
7 rooms, tonmal dining, large
family room, 2 car garage,
city school disiTicl. $65,000.
1118

c1...,
2t&gt;lidroom\ total electric, no pets,
1 CrHd. $275/mo. includes trash
pickup. $200 deposit. New 1995
2btroom, no pets, 1 child, $3501

mo $300 deposit. 304·675-43277
aft r Spm.
'

Mon1h, Conven-

3 Bedroom, Near NGHS OJ! 180,
S~ove,' Refrlgera'lor, Watet, Trash

Pai)f, ,$250/Mo., Plus
61 4,~1161111. .

Oep~ait,

.

Mobile Home For Rent, 614·448·
078·~. .

with a
thlo ona. II could be !uat
you're .. looking . •
11t7
•
·.
.

0

Trajlef-' .for Rent .·on Georges
Creek 814-446·1279,&lt;

Loretta McDIIIIe • ~ 7729

Carolyn

Apartments

1 •'!" '2 bedroOm j!p/lrtmenl8, fur-

nished and unfurllfish~d. security
depp s i~

required, nQ pets, 614- .

992·22tB:,,

-·•
•

.

NEW USTINGI
THE WOODS YOU WILL
FIHD THIS IMMACULATE ~~~=:~~Qe,
RANCH. Uving room , dining
room. kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths. Large octagon deck
that overlOoks ;18 plus acree,
pond &amp; 24 'x28' detached
garage. Picture perfect! Call
today
18M

~

.

'

•

Kathleen ,M. Cleland 992-6191

. ...

'"".,.

• &gt;

LII&lt;-

.

,I

~iiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~;..i
••
BLACKBURN REALTY
.
•
.

·-

l!liiiY to pro~oa )'OUr-·

II 0118 Apo~ment on St. At. 160

~Wr'."

lmmocli... pooo .. Par unM 28ds.,
11053 STYUSH BRICK &amp;STONE eat-In kllctleft, farge IMng room,
QUALITY BUILT HOME Tlis is an waSher &amp; C1ry8r space, big CIOIIll,
lnvilltllon to - n own aclassy . has a 'back porch 112 aero m/1,
homa In the suburb. 3 or •
weH lnsUiatk)n . CALL ETTA.
bodrma .. 2 1/2 blllha, Ioyer entry,

11025 CLOSE
. 3 BA ••
3 batha, cathodr8l Cofil"'l, oaHn
kllcl1en, formal din. rm. ' - living
room, utility, blek &amp;1ront POJCII.

car detached gar. A WOMAN 'S

Bldg. 4 AC m/1 Secluded

DREAM. VI.S 398-81126

Office .......................... 99:t-US9

Paradise.

205 Nor1h Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

11 039 3BR

Swan Cr. bridge . This can be

:

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Oh 45631 ·
Rnny Bl1ckbuna, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008

110110 E.collently located Carry
Out business wtl~ incluctes all
equipment and stock. If It has

Joe Moore, Assoc:llte 441·1111

been your dream 10 have your

own business, lhll ceuld be H.
delay call Claude lodlr.

only.

SALE OR LEASE Nlca lot
been claared for

•

I= .

I I use. AfiO a IWO
on edge . of
Lewis Stree1. Pt.
Caii .Cia&amp;ldo 446-7609.

'~

'i

.

Broker

aparlment a

garage with rental income.
Cell today!

OUT OF TOWN OWNER
SAYS "GOTTA SELL FAST"
R~ price $5,000 &amp; and
wants oflerl Over 148 acres
ril/l, barn, shed, garage, &amp;
more.. Plus 1 1/2 story home
that has been remodeled!

!

SPRING IS .t,IIOUND THE CORNI!RIII Here ' Is a
beatilui duplex ·tli8f Deeds a loving hind: One half
lhla hu been completely remade~.
o'!t*
haa 2 bedrooms, ·1 1/2 batha and a large .••t· ln I
kitchen. l.at lhla project be your aprl1111 fling.
to see this duplex.

Ce"lng fans , satetlite dish, back car garage &amp; deck. Nice private

porch I storage area. $46,000. area. Call before this one 11
GONE.
C&amp;ll Patty 445-3884

~

rn.

t

i,.

•

'
•••
••

' PORTlAND- Portland Rd. this is a perfect homa lor a
family. This 4 bedroom is practically maintenance free with
heat pump and equipped kitchen, vinyl aiding and
beautifully decorated you must look at this one If your
lOOking lor that special place.
ONLY 1311,500

••

1

LANGSVILLE· Co. Rd. 10· Approx. 2 acres of beautiful
bottom land. Water and eleciTic available. A -home or
mobile home site.
M,5C10

$14,000

7.744 Acres mil

DEXTER· Have you alway&amp; wanted to manage a little
country store? We have jual the one. Approx. 32JC30
building just waiting lor you.
ASKING SZI,OOO

IAI1Acres mil
$12,000
County water available. 1575

~jiTJii;ii9iJ$45,0GD

POMEROY· Mulbeny Ave. A 3 bedroom DoUble Trailer on
raige lot. Has a shingled roof, a large living room, air
'COnditioner, new carpet, end lois olllor8gll room. Also has
a building lor a nlca lhOp and lois of parking space.
WAS 127,500 NOW $25,000

:::r'tiwt"W~~ -front cOvered~
Honie

\.'

'

-

..
...
. l
l-

.{,

;.

,

'J-. 'I

..

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xe·

lnlilli.,l il!iiii"V lana and

NEW USTIIIQ. .SR 68-4· 2 otoioy brick &amp;
frame newly cdnstructed home . Orywlli,
carpet, vinyllntarior. EIIICirlc hallt, very nlca
woodburning fireplace, storage shed,
unfinished g1rage. Some appliances. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. Home needs to be
linllheil. Located on approximately 5 11C1811.
Thla Will make somaone 1 beeUilful home.

·AI!&lt;INO m,aoo
NEW USTING- MIDDLEPORT· SOtith 3rd ·
SlrMI· very nice oldoi~ iwo IIOry frame

MW c.lllng
~~:.
Cult...• home•. •mall lot.
ql" ·
8610NII REASQNABI..E , .. homa. Car~t·, \Rierlor :PIIilter/drywall,
OF . RS ~ . . ·!Iii; ~DI!RED!I AIKINO ·F.A.N.G. Hal. 7-11 rooms with 3 bedrooms, 1
117·
·
112 baths, toyer, deck, utility 'lrea, Illite
. ' ;
.
·
opac1. Woodburner Insert. IMMEDIATE
Ntnf LATtNG- ~lmately UO of POSSESSIONII AIIONQ 1311,_,
:~c. 'laying ground. Public W~. 2 itCNY F - Home with 4 bedtooma. 2

;;f,;::=to!:.:.a:J:"
"":iZ
condition~
.

,_

rn

doWn

thla

=~-~or mobile hOme site.
. . . . . .,1011

J

WE

blitha. New roof, cara lrH 11ding, added
lnaulldlon. Clble, ftr~. F.A.N.G. Heat.
IMMEDIATE POSBESSIONI
AIKINO

131,0110

USTINGSI·

11063 VERY nice living room
11'lc31i' w/FP, 4Bcll .• dining room,
eatin·kitchen, all on x·large lot

W/b8m. 45,900. Call ETTA
11072
DESIRABLE
RESIDENTIAL NEIGHBORHOOD
In town 3 bedrm. ranch W/nf1W
roof, hot water tank . tumace
w/~;:ernral air and vinyl siding. 110112 LOG CABIN .
Uving rm . w/ fireplace. dining rm PRIVACY! Enjo'f tho lOft that over
w/lrenctl dOorl to a patio. $57,000. looks the spacious living room
VLS 398-1111211.
- a baautllul stone fireplace. 3
BR's, 2 full baths. Master
11034 50 acru rM Of vacanlland. bedroom fil tor a King and his
GREAT LOCATIONfll Close to tho 0\rean, with hOI tub, skvtlghls &amp;

POMEROY• Mulberry AVe.· A 3 story rrame homa with
thrM apartmenta. Each hu 2 bedrooms, dining room,
khchen, and living room . POaaibly a smllli olllca apace in
besement. Fmhly painted otMicle.

,,1,111111.

c

lf'l an equlppad kitchen with
nool&lt;, Iorge utlily room
servea aa an office, partial

bra-

throughout.

Pdiii!ROY· F.,_ StrHt· Alrilollt Ill lot .wjlllota of
lronlllgl could helle 2-3 buildlnO ..... Haa ., older houle
that
loll of wai1t.
•
111,0110

lroQrM;,.___ ,.,,,_,_,,.tlllll2

111/1. see,ooo.oo vt.S 388 111128. ·

11023 Located wllhfn City SChooll 11995 2 BR Ranch homo on large
- A bit ol woodland. Huge 4 lol In Pl. Pleasam, Cleared lor
bodnX&gt;m , 2 story with 2 t/2 blllha, commortial use.
formal IMng room a dining room,
15'. 23' lamlly. ~of cablnala

POMI!ROY· ~ SL· ~ 25510011rontege
and lois or deplh. All city liiiiiiCel a'IIIIIIDie. Could mll&lt;e 2
tra111r
WAS ...0110 ~ 17,000

MKINO ...000

11004 RIO GRANOE comer lot
toned commercial 3 olftca nna.
stor-.e rm . UNDERGROUND
TANKS HAVE BEEN REMOVEO
$50,000

Cl'larolais Lake. 2+ ac. 2 car I foe&amp; COUNTRY AS YQU LIKE
, garage, partial basement The
fTI Cozy 3 · Ranch 1 bath,
quality of tllis home will oatound county
water, ,_ vinyl llldlng,
. rcu, AND YOU CAN MOVE IN new
windows,
fUmac.,
· TODAY! Call Patty Hars lor _., tank. Country decor. &amp;1 hat
ac

showing 448·3884.

.....,_,. hootedpool100m31 ' x
53' with iovety 18' • 38' pool,
·
00- 25' • 29'. Home
can bo bought with srnoll o c or ofl 115 ac m/1. Tho land It
btiOiil1ll.l lOlling • trMCI with lniJia

.8NOWYILLIE· GooM Ct'Mk Rd.· l\llPIO&gt;&lt;. BIIC. olland with
poalbltl bulcllng aile. Propllly ... on both lllde ol road.

kitchen, utllty room, elec.neat
pump oncltwo large IliA buitdlna In
the city SChOOl C181rlct, Call en"A.

~

DOTER· A 4 bedroom 1 1/2 II10ry home that hall been
freshly palnt•d lnolchl. Hu lual on lurn1ce and
_.,.,__ Also - · · a frOnt 8ittlng porCh and partly
leno:ed yard w1t1t ~area.
. ONLY &amp;11,000

1o1s: .

11061 Graham School Rd. 8
acres m/1. 3 lids., 211da., • ·largo
flvi"'l room wilh fireplace, oqulp.

hOspllol, ochooll ... All public bar. Efficient lane• duel eloc. &amp;
utilitlel IYallallla. Land Is to 1uet heal pomp. Cantral air. Solid
LAND - 26 11C. 111/1 blaciltop
rolling. $155,000. C&amp;ll Paftr 446· oak cabinets. Ceramic tile floors In 11070
rd. homosltes. """'*! mlntflf
3884.
kltcrten and Dalhrooma. Lovely &lt;9lll. VI.S 3811111128
jj6. carpet. Over looking beaurlful

city,

c.-

POMEROY·
Rd· A large 1.5 ac:re lot w/Barri!lgton
Doobl-lde, silting on lull basement. Home has 4 BR.
dining &amp; family room, &amp; In ground pool, back deck. 1481
$41,1110

IS THE ,ASKING
hnonAI PAICI!I LAND CONTRACT
W/SII,OOO OOWNI C&amp;l lor the
Ianna. 3 e&amp;droom ranch, lull
1 ear garage, large
living room, close to
.&lt;
1713

•r;-. . •..

11051 REDUCED TO $48 .000· 11065 Cczr little cot1ag0 2 Bell ..
Oat·ln·kHcher. ,_ atm.wln , small
out building on farge level 101.
29.900. Call ETTA

FlYE POINTS- A 3 bedroom ranch silting on approx. an
ac:re. Has ceniJai air, giWd.n area, 3 outbuildings and Is in
Salisbury grade school dlslrlct.
$311,1110

11.101 Acres rpA

' .-

11047 SEEING IS BUYING 3 BA
ranch In Rodney Village II. cozy
family room w.Mood boo1et' stOY8, 110114 GALLIPOLIS CITY 6.7$9
......~ living room. lOis at Sf'IC&amp; lor vour /!1:. MIL BoautHui home w/3 boy .
family. Separate utihty room . Lot windows. 3 badrms, 2 tuM baths,
with fenced yard. City schools. Huge L.R., Loads of stor-.e. 2

-

1822

r

nome on 9 acres MIL

on lower Rt 7, just below the
yours for only $32 ,000 Call
Ctauclo tocloy.

•• ' ·' '
IR 12,.; ·~~- R_,tly remodeled 1
~storY_: fRtiM hOme. Vinyl exterior, 2· 3
Ocimii ..,._..., ~lances, plaster wall,
woot1 ilo0!1rie,''aitki ~. buement with
&amp;,M· ~ living room with atr1m

t •

.

open dlnl"'l rm., living rm . w/IOg
ftraploco lnse~ . family rm .. great •
eat In kttchen. The rwar of the
home opens to a polio and an In
grirund pool. Ylrd Is trorod, also a
O.Zello. 2 car anachld gar. &amp; 2

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

••
•

$12,000
. NEW LISTING NOT JUST
VACAN't LAND- 25 'acres m/1
.plua thie .3-4 bedroom home.
·Land Is rOlling with so/ne
tillable &amp; . fenced acreage.
Mineral ~ghta inCluded. Call
today!
~

·a

,

iI

HEW LISTING! WILL NOT H
AVAILAILI! FOR TOO
LONG! $34,900 • 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, kitchen
wtlh
range, refrigerator,
ger_age. Nice level lawn.
BETTER ACT FASTI

• .,.. .....l't''l"·~

•

Henry E. ClelandJr.. 99l-US9

~

Witch· 441·1007

sewer, water and trash Included,
-614.:1192'2167.. :
.

,
.: .tor·Rent
' '

.

....,

OFFICE 992-2886

RHIEstate

hom.~s. st.a rtlng at. $24.0·$300,

440

448-&lt;lll53.

1992 Jeep Wrangler 33.•000 Ac tual Milos, Like New. 191111 Dodge
Colt $1000, Dar• 614·441·0177
Everinga 304-675-31181.

'

.'

.J.~
.

Never Wot, $2.25 Pvr Bale, 614·

~~~~~~~~========~====~~~G~•~m~n~-~~~;z7~00~~~~====~~~; i

Tammte OeWm ...... :.............. ~ ......... Z45.()()22
Manha Slllith ...... ............................. 379-2651
Cindy Dron&amp;owakl .................... ;...... 441-0736
Cheryii.Atlt[y ............................ :...... 742·3171

I

Twa, and ihr~~ bedrooni mOblte

3 story building.
_teduced to $149,50011

446..3644
JjAVJD WISEMAN, BROKEB,GRI.r. 446-9555 ,; •

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
lJ. . 1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 il
.

Second Culling Orchard Grass,

WIS~MAN R~AL ESTATE, INC.

~ ~ririd'oniiia,:;:OO,; ifci

1~108e

.

Over 10,000 sq. ft.

'

Aoornt lor lent · .or montli.
Star~'J ~2j)Jmo. co.n;. - .
8t4' .
.

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

space. I

this

FOR YOUR CONVENiENCI! TRY
· OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

446-4618
Judy OeWiu .............................. 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter ........................ J'i9-2t84
Ruth Barr............................ :....:.446-7101

Round Bails Or Hay, Never Wei &amp;
Slated In Barn. 614-245-51 17.

space: Neart1rl·

5,000 sq. ft. of retail

boclrm. IIDno laced home lamlty
bttlh, lovely LA W/fireplaco, full
baMman1 w/1/2 bttlh, tamlty rm.
alao w/llr..,..... 2 c a r bedroom•. 3 full baths, full - · 3 ... 111/1 $70,000
baMman1. EQUIPP«&lt; kK. anc12 car 111164 LOTS AVAILABLE In a
oarage located "min. from town. neigi\IIOri100d with CLASS bur 5
Dwn8r wants ACTION. Till$ litho ..... more or lasl .l or m 100 or
beat home choice near the city. 2 112 mn acrea to 11dioo or
C&amp;l VI.S 388-8826.
"""*lob lor $18,900.
E - haS only 2 choice lollS ac.
1874 FOR RENT 2 badrm . for
$33,000 and 2.348 acres
cottage S2SO per mo. &amp; dep.
526,900 Restrictive covenant•

equljiGCI kH .. bnlaldasl rm., atareo
speakers throughout . 2 car
- I I I I I · WI overl1oad atorage,
acreenod back porch. Call VLS
388-882fl«e-e808

44&amp;·4824 .

H..rt Ot The Cltyl Goctdl···

1874 CHESHIRE · Boautltul 3

1849 INSTANTLY APPEALING
homo with a view of the country.
_ , Ioyer cott.OOII collklQI 11052 OVERLOOKING 1l1E
a balcony, 3 bOdn!ls .. 2 112 blt\0, BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER .
L Rm. w/ -umlng fireplace, Smart all brick ranch . 3-•

Grau hay, &amp;quare bales, Bashan
R4. Racine, 614-949-2217.

Road, Gallipolis, 614.....e-2205.

capped. EOH ~~7Q,

We Need Lr st rngs" We Are f.lov111q
Property And Nee d r.lot r to SilO\'!'

wv

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

pine-·-

Owner

· 25,000
=-~
L

-

planttc~

Smltl1398-

11057 ONLy 'OiE BEST FDA
THIS ONE • Now under
brick &amp; VInyl Ranch.
Tho ·n iniiiiOiio dei1ICinttcJ
"" -.,.y end comlorl. fluge
Qroal rm. w/llrap!llce, Formal
111n1r10 rm, bodrm. 21' • 24',
12 -.no) 21' 1 18', 3 balf1 ,..., w/cuatom made ,
2C*~-&amp;40'x45' -~
..- ,
•
court. portlll blmt. 2 ..,.., Clloed iiJihtl. lllr*1a lg.
ac.
lolll.. Juat......_
-~n
_ fnMn
__- ·
... LA w/FP, 1 Ill. tUtt betfr • - -"44-M

. ,.,. .

-

..---

~~

--· ....... .....

., -.-porch
tar-.. .--·

- · In tho Make 'lbur Dream Come True!
arM. It tho lime to PICk Call Plllv
4tUitlt.
• ...,... Call lllr;lnJa--

.,. of

\,

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

Sunday, Fetwuary 4, 1t88

Ohio Lottery

Conservationist lists 10 rules of fish pqnd management
have had a chance to spawn. Under bulletins or agricultural and wildlife
By PATTY DYER, f
normal conditions, they will spawn agencies.
District Couervatlonist
GALLIPOLIS - Despite the cold the second summer after they have
8) Adequate vegetative cover
been
stocked.
should be maintained on the waterand rainy weather this is an excellent
3) Fish the bluegills hard. Take out shed to .prevent turbid, silty water.
time to check the condition of your
9) If muddy water persl!\s for long
pond. How· is it holding us to the at least a dozen bluegills for each
.
recent rains? Ase the spillways func- bass.
periods of following heavy rains, use
4) Don't throw any bluedis back, gypsum or hydrated lime to clear it
tioning properly? Is there brush and
trees growing on the dam that need even little ones.
up. Follow Ohio Pond Management
5)
Never
let
livestock
wade
in
the
removed? Are tbere appropriate safety devices near the pond and clearly pond, nor trample the edges.
6) Do not plant aquatic vegctatinn
visible?
of
any
kind in the pond; it may. lend
The 10 commandments of Fish
to an unbalanced fish population and
Pond Management are as follows:
I) Do not put fish, of any kind, a serious weed controt problem.
7) If a serious weed problem .
into the pond ucept those you get
,
develops,
consult Extension pond
from the hatchery.
2) Do not fish for bass until they

bulletin for recommendations,
I0) Proper fertilization may be a
good management tool if intensive
pond management and production is
desined. It is not a recomme!llled
practice for this area due to the li~t­
ural fertility of our soils and the
accompanying weed problems which
usually result from added fertility.

I

.. Farmers face challenges
, .pARRE, Vt. (A~) - .That even a on aquaculture and exporting goat
. single farm' remams m Vermont
speaks ,volumes about the perseverance of the state's farmers.
These are tough times for farmers,
especially dairy farmers. Yet there
was no hint of that walking through
ihe.Vermont Farm Show in Barre last
week.
.
People were upbeat and the signs
of the resilience of farmers were
everywhere.
There was the llama at the
entrance; the booths hawking meat
from emu, ostrich and rhea as "a red
can live with"; the seminars

genetics .
Dairy is still king, of course, and
Venriont's dairy farmers work long
and hard to carve out a living. But
more and more farmers are finding
ways to supplement dairy or even to
survive without cows1 continuing a
pr&amp;ess that began before there was
even ~ Vermont.
.
The story of farming in Vermont
-and in many other of the nation's
farm· ·States - is one of constant
change. The emu is merely the latest
in a list of products that began with
potash.

•

tllagistrate ·

31 Chrus fru"
32 Johnny34 !lravol, ·at bullfighli

35Snup
38 VIOlin nime '
40 cli)ning
41 Tourisfs need
42 Play boisterously
44 Sketched
45 New: prefl1c
47-AviY
49 Direction indicator
52 Ulce cOllege wa!fs

Ag department
to revise rules

EARNS EXCELLENT RA11NG ·The Gallia Soil and Water ConIII'VBtlon Dlstrlet received en Excellent Service Award rating at
the s3rd Ann1111l Meeting of the Ohio Federation of Solland Water
Coni8Mitlon Districts held Jan. 16-18,1n Columbua. The award
1a a part of the Distinctive Service Goodyear ConaervatiOI'I Award
Profilram. Lawrence Burdall (right) who Ia presently aervlng gas
Supervisor for the Gallla Soli an,:l Water Conservation District,
received the award from Federation President Gary Mast.

54 Peril
56 Help In wrongdoing
so Mnk por1ion
61 Cooks in oil
62 Not at al spicy

WASHINGTON (AP) - Meats
labeled Choice and Select may never be the same. ·
Starting July I , the Agriculture
Department will revise rules for

63 A cosmetic
65 Feel poorly
66 Baby honiea
67 Sandwich spreads
66 Ffexlble lube

,..·-F.arm, business briefs-.., · ~~~;~ofcarcassbeefandslaughter
Continued from D·l

No-till meeting set Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Soil land Water Conservation District
will sponsor a no-till meeting at the C. H. McKenzie Ag Center
Tuesday, Feb. 6, from 12 noon until 5 p.m.
· Ray Adamski, Knox County Crop Consultant and Bob Hen(\ershot,
area resource conservationist with the natural resources Conservation
service, will be guest speakers.
Those planning to attend have been asked to contact the Gallia
S&amp;WCD office at446-8687.

Tree sale underway
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia Soil and Water ConserVation District tree
sale is in full swing. All products are selling quickly. Colorad'o blue
spnili~ are already sold out.
.
Residents have unul March 22 to place theJ£ orders.
For more information on obtaining an order form residents may call
the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation DistriCt at 446-8687 or stop
by the office at Ill Jackson Pike, Suiic I 569:

: 'From AP, Stiff Reports

69~8C8p

The department's Agricultural
Marketing Service said carcasses 30
to42monthsofage-knownas"B"
maturity·- with small or slighl marbling degrees will be removed from
Choice and Select grades and i~clud­
. ed in the Standard gradiY.
Lon Hatamiya, administrator of
. the marketing service, said the change
is being made at the request of the
National Cattlemen's Association.
"The 'B' maturity carcasses often
vary in palatability, which contributes
significantly to inconsistency of eating quality of beef in the Choice and
Select grades,·· the service said in an
announcement. "Although cattle in
these grades makes up only a small
percentage of the U.S. fed beef sup- ·
ply, their variability can contribute
significantly to overall consumer dissatisfaction with beef."

.

70 One-- million
7101dll~
lniiDJIIIfll(

72 Perforation
. 73 Crude dwafllng

74 Got up
76 WOven fabric
76 .Sdlooner part
79Wise
80 Sharpened

81 Harvest goddess

· Temperatures at the Meigs County Emergency Services office in
,Pomeroy dipped to 7 below Sunday as the area r'emained.in the grip of an
• U'cdc air mass.
·
The l,ow temperature overnight was 2.2 below.
. No cold-related injuries were repoqed.
About 1,160 Ohio Power customers in Sutton Township, including the
4;0mmunitics of Racine, Syracuse and Minersville were left without electricity
]or little more than an hour Sunday morning,.according to Ron McDade, Ohio
1'owcr1Columbus Southern Power manager.
1'1111 outage was due to an overload, McDadnxplained. ,
• In tlddition, CSI' customers in the Forest Run/Nease Settlement area were
:without electticity for a short time early Saturday momi!'g after a ·truck
spreadina salt and cinders knocked down a transmission line.

PIJ!!SENTED CER11FICATE • A 'Certificate of Achievement"
was jmtaented recently to David Mills, president of the Gallla
County Junior Fair Board, for the completion of a succeull,ll1 DIS
flllr. Fred L•.Dalley,left, Ohio Department of Agriculture, made the
presentation to Milia, prealclent of the Gallia County Agrlcultur·
at Society during the 1996 Ohio Fair Managara Convention In
Columbus last month.

.

82 Part of the leg
83 Warsaw native

84 Kettle
85 Sal~ng vessel

88 -deforce
89 Place for a
horsashoa
90 Tweezers·fike

Instrument
94 Adhesive
95 Newt

96 Legal wrong •
97 Private rooms

98 Estuary
99 Cin:fe part
·100 Flighua,&amp; bild

105 Rapid-

. 107 F011118rty, formerly
108 Kind of probe
109 Charged partlclee
110 "Jane-·
111 London's river
113 Musty

114 House made of ice
and snow
1f5 Ve&amp;BIIl for dye
117 FlOp

118 The Beehive Slate
119 Simpleton
Patanl

124 Minus
126 Sheer
128 Prilon ollicer
132 Mil. addr.
.. ; 133Toaild, 134 African plant
. 135 Complete
139-Baba
140 At no time
142 Apportion
144 Nol hollow

145findl
147 Ms. Cara
148 Sc:oundref
149 Govemail .
150 Mountain ~
151 w.. coriceined
152 Tic ,
153 -and llrlfiea
154Wallca UvOugh
.'

water
DOWN
1 Breakfast meat
2Escape

3 FatheJS
4 Untted
5 Spread to dry
6 "Mask" star
7 "Zhivago" name
8 Eye part
9 Makes ready
11) Solar or Dewey
decimal: abbr.

11 Divide
12 Law breakers
13 Hoarfrost
• 14 Friend: Fr.
.,
15 Parill's subway
16 ·--Birdie"
17 Actor Steiger
18 Specialtermlnology
19 •t ·cannot --lie"
20 Snooze
30 Ptvcfous stone
310rdinance
33 Addlllonallhlngs
36 Helen of•
37 Mool
39 Glove size: abbr.
40 Pea soup
.43 Pltl&amp;bwgh player
44 P11811811 away
46C48 Fond du-, Wise.
49 Be in store lor
50 River In Gelmany
51 Take hasy
53 Despicable

54 Thin coin
55 Overact

57-Roulle
58 Rub out
59 Domesticated
61 - up (spoils)

82 Shqpplng center
84 Marina creature:
2wds.

88FioS
67 Connect
68 Mammoth
72 Very small meaaure

.73 Game period

.

Human Resource Investment Council, and serves as the governor's
&lt;;lirector of cabinet.
She oversees the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, the Ohio
DepartmenJ of Agricult~. as well as
the Governor's Office of Appalachia,
the Ohio Coal Development Office,
and the Office of Housing and Com:munity Partnership.
· In addition, she is the primary
iarchitect of Jobs Bill III, the state's
t newest economic stimulus package
ithat especially targets distressed
fl!. i-Gft
:viljftl)Vic&amp;
htrban anci'rural areas. It is the first of
1
ippOialllllllier directoi: or the Goverits kind in Oliio history. ·
'i!!C'sPJilce of Ajlpalachia, where she
Nancy and Jeff, her husband of 25
llWia&amp;M ''tctmomic development,
years, reside in Marietta. There are
fllililinl ·i!'4 pplicy issues for 29
six membel'$ in the immediate Hol~~counties, including ~
lister family: Jonathan and--his wife,
Meip.
Lanie, Jeremy, Justin, Emily and
~ncy Hollister
Working with state agencies to
·Kate.
link needed services to the
The dinner will be held from 5·
Appalachian region, she developed nities and supported local education 8:30p.m. in the high school cafetekeY CCOQOmic development packages and heallh programs.
ria. Tickets are available from RepubAs lieutenant governor, Hollister lican Central Committee·members.
thlll i~ job training opportu-

76 Slam
79 Chimney dirt
82 Furniture Hem

Meat varie1y

84 Juan - de Leon
85 Outpouring
86 Storch or Hagman
87' Entertainment
awaRI ·

88 MofaJS
89 Not give a 90 Engaged In
swordplay
91 Actor Flynn
92

Ube,_.,

instrument
93 Authority: hyph. wd.
96 Throw
97 Twofold
101 Man at bat
.;
I02 lncfl!lelf to believe. ' ' ·
103 Colorful filh
:;:
106 Neighbor of'Cal.
,
107 Righlleu bild
108 Begln:.2 wds.
'•
109 - Stravinsky
&gt;•

V

112,CiassWied Rems

.

&lt;'
.,: .

113 Holy woman: abbr.
114 Acl1861 Lupino
f 16 Mr. Httchcock
118,Westem.lndian
120 PradaiQ!Y blld
121 Crazed
122 Musical drama
123 Relocation
piOfesalonill
f25 Ries high
127 Tribal emblem
129 Ventured
130 Best pari
131 DI'MUCI to the134 Seaweed
136 Stew pot
137 RoW
138 Says further
141 Dir. letters
143 Cut off -'
144 Upperclassmen:
abbr.
1,45 Pen:eived
. 148 Period

Political leaders gauge impact
~~ Riffe, legislator indictments

r}

( :
:;. ;·

COLUMBUS (AP) -

financial Information
8Qught from ·farmers
. WASHINGTON (AP) - The
. ·; 'Agriculture qepa'rtment is aho~t to
' i take the financial temperature of
American fanilers.· ·
·Over the·· next three months,
' ' 20i000of!he nation's 2 million farm- ,
er. and rallchers wjll be ask~d·
dcitailed questions about their operaJ tions by the department's Agricultural Statistics Service.
J ":By,,&amp;J!Ilnding a~ut an ,llour with
, i ~ibnal&lt;intervtewer, producers
, 'flU 'llf! '-itl¥ing an important c:ontri:
Mil!.' IQ thO overall ~If~ of the
' '\1.~. e;rieuliural cOiilmul)ity," the
1 ~ slid ,In ~ ~tement.
j JftfOflltlllon jlii~ in the survey
. will be ·liMcf to develop and Q,djuat
' ·. : J~ proarams;. set ·pro4u\ruon'cost
) .,.,tlmat91. frOIII !Which Pf1W81D sup- .
· · p:iitS arid loans are c~ulqtod. ; asse!ls
. ? ,hOw·acm.: ~h!u)g~s are affecie,d .
~· :ttew progr:ams; and determine""""'" '
·. {~redit and GJ!I!servation I!!PI!'JI!JS ....
'
.
.

t

.

Political

leaden in the state are.already beginning to calculate how the indictments
of three lawmakers will affect this
f-'l's elections.
Democrats, who hope to recapture
die Ohio Senate, can point to two
Senate Republican leade11 who were
fOUnd guilty on Friday of misdemeanOr charges stemming from payments from lobbyists.
. Meanwhile, House Republicans
1n thrilled that none of their members faced eharges. They hope to link
the Democrats to their fonner leader,
reiired speaker Venl Riffe, who was
indicted.but plli!IS to fight the charges
in coun.
Riffe along with the two Republicans - Senile President Stanley
Aronoff &amp;1111 state Sen. Eugene Watts
....,.. were indicted for failing to repon
·1housands of dollars in speaking fees

•

from lobbyists.
~.
who
previously
Aronoff,
"Very clearly, the situation is announced he would not seek anothbipartisan," said Curt Steiner, a for- er term this year, will not be affectmer Republican political consultant ell by the political fallout in an elecand. now chief of staff for the House tion.
Republicans.
But Watts might be in f&lt;ir a fight
The lawmakers were accused of as he seeks another four ,years. He
breaking a law tha~. before 1994, faces a challenge in the Republican
allowed legislators to take the mon- .· primary, and the ethics issue will
ey but forced them to disclose pay- surely surface, said Watts' opponent,
ments over $500 from any single David Michael of Worthington.
source.
"Lawmakers h3ve a duty to live
Instead of reporting payments, by the spirit of the· laws that they
prosecutors said, lobbyists would helped make," Michael said. "When
"pancake" the money, giving law- la)Vmakers break the law, they also
makers several $500 checks that break something much more sacned .
were written by different people but - the public trust."
in reality came from the same place.
Steiner conceded that Watts is
Aronoff, of Cincinnati, pleaded most vulnerable to the ethics attack.
guilty to misdemeanor charges Fri- But he also said the issue will be offday. Watts, of Galloway, pleaded no set by Watts' record in his heavily
contest. Both said the mistakes were Republican district.
unintentional.

to leave
plan be

.r·

Several local businesses are
In a special funcf.rals·
lng project for the Meigs Branch of the American Heart Association. Gary Coleman, above, of Krogera looks over the
"hearts" to be given for a $1 donation, then personalized arid
displayed on the wall at the store.

Campaign pushes
need to embrace
healthier lifestyle
. The annual"Have a Heart:- Save a Heart" campaign is underway
several Me1gs County busmesses under sponsorship of the Meigs
County American Heart Association.
Patrons of participating businesses arc in~ited to purchase a paper
heart, put their name on it, and display it in the store where others can
see that they "have a heart."
February is American Heart Month and the American Heart Assocciation reminds individuals that heart disease is the number one cause
of death in Meigs County.
Proper medical attention, regular exercise, a diet low in fat and cholesterol, as well as no smoking all play key parts in good heart health,
Meigs Division officials advise.
·
Money from the campaign will go into the treasury of the Meigs
Branch.
Last year's funds from the Ohio Affiliate of the American Heart
Association were spent for research, 30 percent: public health education, 23 percent; professional education, I2 percent; community education, 12 percent; fund-raising, 15 percent; and management and general expenses, 8 percent.
10

.

Ohioan
first U.S. casualty of peace mission
.

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are frozen - I hate it," said gas station attendant Louis Carvalho in Newark,
N.J.
"It 's like sitting in the freezer without any clothes on for an hour," said
Steve Parkansky, 25, a bartender in Rhinelander, Wis., which saw temperalures plunge Sunday to 43 below zero.
The lethal Arctic cold that plunged temperatures to recond lows in 13 states
. racked up a fresh round.oftemperature records Sunday.
·
It got down to 5 in Newark, N.J., Sunday, leading the"chairwoman of a
Polar Bear Club in nearby Glen Rock, N.J., to call off an ocean swim.
"Even I'm not that crazy," said Maria Alazarro. "It's too cold to be outside."
It was too cold in Embarass, Minn. _ 56 below _ 10 show your face.
And the minus 11 reading.in a little town in Michigan said it all.
"Hell's frozen over"
· He II , a bou t
.' sa·1·d .,.om
,, Da"·s
,, , who owns a ranc h m
an hour west of DetrOit.

chairs the state and local government
commission, co-chairs the Governor's

_ Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister will be.
. the guest speaker at the Meigs Coun- ·
. ty Republican Party's Lincoln Day
Dinner Saturday, Feb. I0 at Meigs
· High School.
. • Hollister, a descendent ofcine of
·Ohio's fi11t pioneer families, is Ohio's
·first woman lieutenant governor. ·
· •After serving on the Marietta City
.Council, she was 'ele.c;.ted mayor,
where she served from 1984to 1991.
· . As mayor,' she aided ill the cre..ation of a j~nt OhiO/Weilt Vtrginia
Jabor-~apinent couii,Cil, which
·secured ;tuncl!'lJ' fur a new multimilr•CR.·~
· . ~~~·
nw;..'~liiid
. ~~ . ~~· '. .

75 Mil. g1p. on campus
n Whistle sound

83

I

Eastern Hig!l School students missed classes for the lOth lime this win'ter due to a water line break, while other Eastern schools, and Meigs and
Southern Local schools, opened today on a one-hour delay.
Another night of single digit-lows was predicted by the National Weath-.
er Service for tonight, but a warming trend toward the 30s was in sight for
Tuesday.
·
Across the country, it was so cold...
Firefighters in Atlanta set an ice-covened hydrant ablv..e so they could fight
a house fire. High school bands were dropped from a parade in St. Paul,
Minn., so lips wouldn't freeze to brass instruments.
And in Pittsburgh, condensation from factory smokestacks combined with
temperatures of 6 below zero to produce man-made flurries in some parts of
the city. Meteorologists said the snow even showed up in satellite pictures.
"It's so cold we can't even give out the right change because our hands

Hollister will .address Meigs -Have a heart... --. ---. Voinovich
:l incoln Day·di·nner Saturday
tellsfeds·

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A Genllllt Co. Newtlpaper

.

·
103 Untt of weight
104 Bolger or Walston

30 Seize

35 oenlll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 5, 1996

:Arctic air mass coritinues grip on region

102 Chef

.~Poem

.

. ~-

THIS SALE IS FOR THE BIRDSII

·, ,

....

ECONOMY WILD BIRDSEED
25&amp;8•••• .
50 ll~ •••

•4''·

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$

99 ,

In Sarajevo today, an official with
the NATO-led Implementation Force
LAKEVIEW - Donald A. Dugan corrected a previous official statepw up just 60 miles from Dayton, ment that D~gan was killed by a land
wile~ bosnian talks produced the mine. The official, sJ!ellking on con~ accord he died enforcing.
dition of anonymity, $aid Dugan died
Dugan, 38, a Sergeant 1st Oass after he picked up a piece of ammufiom Belle Center, was the first U.S. nition from the side of the road and
IOkliertodic in actio!) sitJ9e the peace it exploded in his hands.
mission began in Bosnia.
.
There was no immediate explana. ThrouJhout the area, friends and tion for the inaccurate first account.
family remembered him as a devot•
DUgan, who was assigned to a unit
lid soldier and a fun and caring per· based in Germany, was pronounced
1011. '
.
dead a~ the 212th mobile Army sur. "He was a super guy,'' said his elt· gical hospital. The Asmy said today
wife, Betty Dugan, 37, of Lakeview, an autopsy sbowec! he died of "extenIII;IOut 10 miles west of Belle Center. sive head injuries." .
"He wu out to serve his couptry and
The autopsy report was limited to
dill's' what he did." Hiah achool the cause of dCJI,th and provided no
..., ced:e.u,the JMirrenl.illed friends information on other injuries, said
~('« clivorciaa in 1983.
Sgt. Michael Ertel, a spokesman at
Dapa waa k,illed Saturday it) . the Armv-run hospiU.I at Landstuhl
IICJitlleni 1~1. He is the ainth · .south of Kaiserslautem.
.piMcC 19kfier to die since NA'ro
Ertel said one word - "explobeta ~Ofi~ 'lo the Balkans' in sion"- was
at the bottom of
Deceml*-.
the report, but . . \!AS no indication
" ..

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.$82'·

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ly JAMES HANNAH .
~-11..11 PiMa Wrltet

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BLACK OIL SUNFLOWER SEEDS
. .
..
$ 79
25ll.lil

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upper20t.

.

SUNDAY PU·Z

Disease outbreak ends
WASHINGTON (A~ - The
Agriculture Department has officially declared an end to the 1995 outbreak of
, a bothersome livestock disease.
No cases of the disease,. vesi~ular
stomatitis, had been identified for
more ~~~n 45 days, the department's
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service announced.
The outbreak was discovered'last
May near Las Cruces, N.M. The service conducted 1,162 investigations
for the disease and found 367 infected premises, mostly in the Rio Grand
Valley of New Mexico and in the San
Luis Valley and on the western slope
of Colorado.

Kicker:
525815

·VaL 41, NO. 181
•1 lnlliln, 10 ......

Sheep producers to vote
DENVER (AP)- U.S. sheep producers will vote Feb. 6 on whether to
assess themselves and importers in
order to pay for promotion and
research programs.

ACROSS
1 Stupefy with drink
·6 Cuts, as coupons
11 Getlostl
16 Englishmen, for
short
21 Skirt shape;
hyph. wd.
22 Houcinl or Belafonle
23 - minister
24 Si!lll a certain way
25 Made healthy again
26 Amerindians
27 Boundary
28 0111 ROI118n

5-14-17-41 44 47

c....

tonight, lobetween o lind 1o.
Tuncley sunny, highs In

'· .

Because the · outbreak has been
declared ended, Canada has dropped ·
requirements for special veterinary
inspections ofexported U.S. horses.
The European Union will drop test. ing requirements May 15.
·
The disease, affecting horses, cattle and other livestock, causes blisters
in the mouth and on the hooves and
teats. Animals cap become lame and
refuse food and water when the blisters break.

.

Super Lotto:

..

Congress tries to sa·ve
farm lending agency
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress is making what may be its.final
attempt to create a successful secondary market for farm loans.
A bill that has passed the House
and Senate would overhaul the
authority of the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corp., known as Farmer
Mac, wh.ich was created in 1988 to
encourage a stable and competitive
source of borrowing for rural America.
"This leg~on is a final congressional effort to make Fanner
Mac viable," said Sen. Dick Lugar,
R-Ind ., chairman 'of lhe Senate Agriculture Committee. " Legislative
restrictions may have hobbled the
institution until now. If the new
authorities do not prove sufficient, it
will be time to declare Farmer Mac a
failed experiment."
The organization is privately
owned and operated in much the
same fashion as Fannie Mae and Salli!l Mae, which were set up to increase
tlie supply of money available for
honie and education loans, respectively.
Farmer Mac has raised $21 million
in private capital to operate a secondary loan market for agriculture,
but no taxpayer money is irwolved.

286

Pick 4:
. 9552

SpOrts, Page 5

.

NEW SALON OPENS- A new beauty salon, Family Hair Care,
haa been opentd In Reedavllle, corner of Barton Road off S1ate .
Ri:lutli 681 , by Ella Jones. Jones graduated from the Valley Beau·
ty Schoolln Marietta In December, i992 and worked at the Fiesta Salon In Belpre from March 1993 to November, 19,95 at which
time aha quit to prepare for opening of her own salon. Hours are
Tuesday to Friday, 8 a.m.·to 5 p.m. and Saturday, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Ttl• '-!lephone number Ia 3711-9809. Here Jones worRs on her first
customer, Tess Frldanatlne.
~·

Pick 3:

t.telgs tops
Buckeyes In
'd oubleOT

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whattype of device exploded. """
Members of Dugan's family were\
to view the body later today al the
Landstuhl hospital, and then a decision would be made on when the
remains would be returned to the
United S~ates .
Dugan was one of six brorhers and
sisters. He also leaves behind a wife,
Miriam, who lives in Germany, and
a IS-year-old son, Donald, who lives
with Betty Dugan.
· Dugan had been with the 1st Battalion of the 1st Calvary until he was:
sent to Bosnia in December. He
joined the Asmy in 1978 and became
a career mili!JUY man, serving as a
recruiter and drill sergeant.
Dugan did not talk about joining
the military while growing up, his
brother John Dugan sliid.
"I don't think it was an ultimate
goal or plan, I just think it was hoW
things worlced out,'' he said.
. Usa Dugan, 19, haoftrouble coping
with the news.
- - - ·•

"I don't understand why my
father is dead, because he was supposed to be over there keeping
peace,'' she said. "I would· like Bill
Clinton to explain that to me."
Ms. Dugan, who is pregnant, last
·saw her father in December.
"I told him he was going I() be a
grandfather," she said. "I always ·
thought he would come back."
Friends said Dugan grew up on a
farm here in west-central Ohio. He
also lived in nearby Ridgeway before
joining the Army.
,
High school classmate Kathy
Cahill of Kenton, about I0 miles
northeast of Belle Center, was
shocked bv the news.
"It's a lot different when you
watch il on TV and you know who it
is in the bo~ they're carrying,'' she
said.
Another O,hioan, Joseph Kruzel,
was killed last year in Bosnia along
with two other U.S. diplomats when
their vehicle went off a road on Aug.

Sgt. Donald Dugan
19. Kruzel, a professor at Ohio State
University, was leading a peacekeeping mission.
More than 40 soldiers, including
three Americans, have been injuned
since the deployment began, mostly
in mine accidents.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Gov. George Voinovich has written a
strongly worded letter to President
Clinton in which he complains that·
.Washington bureaucrats are impeding
implementluion of the state's welfare
reform plan.
. Voinoyich, in Washington for tbe
wintermeetlng ofllie N'atioifll Governors' Association, released the contents Sunday and said he would personally deliver the letter to tbe White
House today. .
Questions the U.S. Departmept of
Health and Human Services raised
threaten implementation of the plan,
which was signed into law in August.
Ohio must obtain waivers of federal regulations on several key points.
The program is designed to encourage welfare recipients to work and
take more responsibility for their
.
lives.
The questions deal with seven
·major provisions. including a time
limit that restricts recipients to three
years of benefits in any live-year
period.
Voinovich wrote it is "incredible
to me that a group of Washington '
bureaucrats now sits in judgment
. over a welfare package that Ohio's
elected representatives and advocacy
organizations spent months developing m a spirit of cooperation and consensus."
He said the Clinton administration's promises to speed up the waiv.er process seem not to apply to his
. welfare plan.
"Over the last six months I have
become increasingly frustrated thai
reform rhetoric coming out of your .
administration has not matched concrete actionS," he wrote.
The governors. meeting through
Tuesday, are trying to reach a bipartisan consensus on welfare and Medicaid reform that could provide the
basis to get both issues moving again
in Congress.
A welfare reform bill that Congress passed in December was recent,·
ly vetoed by the president.
Voinovich told reporters that if ·
Clinton had signed the welfare bill, ·
nearly all of the roadblocks federal
bureaucrats are raising .to Ohio's
plan would have been eliminated.
Other key aspects of the plan that ·
federal officials are c&lt;)ncemed about
include sanctions fer participants
who do not show up for job assignments and a proposed program of
drug-abuse assessments and treatment for Medicaid recipients who are ·
pregnant. ·
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Gov. TQmrily Thompson, the GOP chairman of .
the governors ' group, said the Democratic and Republican governors were ·
close to agreement on a welfare
reform plan.
He said the compromise would ·
tum the federal welfare entidement
program in a block grant rua by the •
states w!th some continued federal
oversight.
'
Voinovich on Sunday also itltro. ··
d~ a ~se4 resolution dealina
w1th professional football friachisea ·~
.moving from city to city.
"'

"'

'

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