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.... De·~"

Pomeroy • Mldcileport •

l ••. _........

Galllpol'-, OH • Point P!Nsant, WV

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Quick end to GM strike ·appears unlikely
"The impacl of lhe slrike is
Members ofl!Jni~ Auto Workers
spreading rapidly," said Shaiken. "II Local 696 wenl on· slrike Tuesday
is considerably enhanced as a result over safety and job securi1y issues,
including lhe production of parts by
of jusl-in-time invenlories."
Like other aulomakers, GM min· outside plants or companies.
imizes invenlories to cui costs, a
By Thursday, fourdM car assempractice lhal makes it vulnerable til bly plants and two parts plants had
disruptions in supplies.
bee.n fm:ed lo cease production. A
GM spokesmaJI Tom Kilpsline three-day slrike al lhe plants rwo
declined to comment on lhe slrikc's years ago idled five · OM assembly
impact.
pla111S in Michigan •.Indiana and Wis·
David Garrily, a financial analysl coMin.
wilh the New York-based 'smith BarJim Hagedon, GM spokesman in·
ney Inc., said lhe strike would pml&gt;- I&gt;ayton, said no full-blown talks
ably not have a major imJl'lct on were scheduled Friday, bur small
in·veslors.
·
" .gmups nf ncgotimor.; from both sides
"A strike of similar duration lwu "'"' in suhcnmmiuccs 10 discuss
years ago cosllhc company a nkkd issu,·s.
a share. Big deal," said Garrily.
ll:~~l'linn would nnl say whclher

DAYTON, · Ohio (AP) - I&lt;
speedy end to a fiver-day-old slrike
'by deneraJ Motors Corp. brake work·
en 1hal idled six olher GM plants
.appeared nowhere in sight Sallltd&amp;y.
A GM official said formal talks
between the two sides were not
scheduled, and a union leader said he
expected llie slrike to last at leas! until
next week ..
Nearly 20,000 GM workers have
been idled by lhe walkoul of aboul
3,000 workers at ahe two Delphi
Chassis planls, which supply brake
sysaems and parts ro nearly all of lhe
auromaker 's 29 assembly planrs.
Harley'Shaiken, a labor professor
al lhe University of California al
Berkeley, said GM is probably under
considerable pressure to setlle lhe
slrikc.
.

••Am [ going to get cx.citctJ ahhut

returned. But Joe Hasenjager, Local
696 preaidenl, told WHIQ.TV lhe
major issues were still on lhe table.
"We stand ready to meel and
resolve all of lhe issues," he said .
Hasenjager said tiitks likely would
be held during lhe weekend. He esti·
mated lhe slrike would lasl at leasl
unti 1 nexl week.
"Alibis point in time, I don'! see
anylhing changingJhal," he' said.
GM said in a stalemenllhal 6,500
workers at the Oshawa, Ontal'io
assembly plant were !old Thursday
not to report 10 wor\( until funher
notice. The plant makes lhe Buick
Regal, and lhe Chevtolel Lumina and
MoniC Carlo.
.: r
Assembly ·plaints in l:aniing and
Orion Township, Mich., shul down
after running Our of p~ during lhe
second shift lbursd!iv. ·
·

any pl'u!!rcss was made.

lhaa7 No."

l'alls In Ihe union were not

•

.Altered plant genes curb pests' appetite
The few aphids !hal survived were
plan Is pump out large :~niouo11s of the
smaller and ofren failild 10 ma1ure.
hormone, eylokinin.
S/nigocki is trying lo purify nal·
"Overproducing the honnonc uml insccl-killing compounds thallhe
at levels up .to 70 limes nonnal jump-slarts !he plan!"s own bio- plan1s make as pan of lheir ~sponse
chemical defenses," said Ann to cytokinin.
Smigocki, a molecular gcncticisl
"Cytokinin influences hundreds
wilh lhe research service in of plant genes 10 coordinate lhe
Beltsville, Md.
planl's complex tasks of making and
"Leaves of tomato and tobacco storing food, maturing and fighting
plants !hal carry the modified gene pest~ and diseases,': she said.
serve as less-satisfying meals 'for "Cytokinin's influence on fighting
tomato hornworrns, green peach insects is normally loo litlle, too laiC
aphids and possibly other pesls," she to g!Wd a~ainsl yield loss." '·
Smigocki said her engineered
said. Hom worms that ale the tin·kered
gene
may simulale plants' natural
p(ants were no' killed bul ate much
defenses
more closely !han aoday :S
less lhan normal.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Tinkering
wilh the genes of planls has produced
a hormone that curbs the appelile of
the voracious hornworrn and other
pests !hat prey on tomatoes, lobacco
and peaches.
The Agricultural Research Service
is seeking an industry p~er for an
effort lo refine the lechnology so !hal
it can become a usef'!l tool for grow-"
ers.
/
The key modified gene, developed
by lhe agency, an arm of the Agri- .
cullure Departmenl, has been paten!·
ed as a biotechnology lactic.
When pl8f!IS engineered with rbe
gene are chewed by insects, the

most common biotechnology
approach. In !hat approach, a planl's
introduced gene makes it manufacaure carerpillar-killing prolei/ts nearly all the time.
"The plan! unnecessarily .makes
lots of the proteins even when no
pesls are feeding," she said. By contrasl, her transgenic plants crank out
extra cytokinin only when being eat·
en or otherwise wounded.
'Using a standard gene-engineering
approach, Smigocki attached a new
swiach to a cytokinin gene. The ,
switch, a gene fragmenl known as a
wound-induCible promoter, originates
in potaro plants.

Looking toward the investment world's future ·
based on lhe data gathered from you.
By JAY CALDWELL
GALLIPOLIS -Rapid changes Your investmenl professional will:
• Heijl you establish your financial
laking place in the inveslment world
roday will undoubtedly affect your objeclives. This may include quanti·
financial plans. More !han ever, your fying individual financial goals in
needs require the special attenlion dollar terms, identifying definile
!hat an investment professional pro- investmenl time frames, prioritizing
yourol&gt;jectives, and examihing those
vides.
Financial planning ctin benefil objectives wilhin the contexl of your
you whelher you 're just saaning out available resources.
in your career and wan! to creale a.n · • Gather the appropriale informsinvestmenl plan for lhe future , or tf lion . Take inlo consideration your
you 'te-nearing tetiremenl and need 10 individual and family financial status,
delermine what your income and risk lolerance, lifestyle, and health.
• Process and analyze ahe inforesrate planning needs· will _be after
you R:tire. The real advantage of !he malion gathered. This may include a
financial planning process is lhat we review of your existing policies,
prepare a plan !hal is uniquely yours,

• Monitor and modify lhe plan.
This is especially imponan1 if !here
are any changes in your financial
goals, tax laws, economic conditions,
and/or available inveSimenl prOducts
or techniques lhal could affect you.
You can have your financial plan
created a1 a cost 1ha1 will be afford·
able for individuals and families
alike, whelher for a plan to fund a
child's education or for a more comprehensive plan lhal incorporates
income tax, rerirement, and estate
. planning.
Jay CaldweU Is an investment
brpker for the Ohio Company in ia
Giiillpolls oftke.

wills, trusl agreements, or olher legal
documents. It may also include documenting your financial situalion,
including
income,
expenses,
strenglhs, and weaknesses.
• Recommend a comprehensive
financial plan tailored lo your specific
needs. At this poinl, your financial
planner will identify lhe mosl appropriale products and sttalegies 10 help
you work toward your objectives.
• lmplemenllhe plan that you and
your financial planner deem appropriale. Your financial planner can be
a valuable resource in helping you
obtain lhe produc" needed 1o carry
out your plan.

'

Beer byproducts lower cholesterQI
•

LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) - A
microscopic mile can him irilo a giant
problem for honey producers.
The mile, Varroa jacobsoni, "is
probably lhe No. I threat facing lhe ·
beekeeping industry in Wyoming
and the nation," said Richard Nuna·
maker, a federal entomologist
Nunamaker works with lhe
USDA's Agricullural Resean:h S!:r·.
vice al the University of Wyoming.
He said the rick-like mile was firs!
detecled in Wyoming several years
ago.
"Beekeepers should be . careful
where lhey obtain !heir packages of
bees," said Nunamaker. "They
should purchase bees !hat come from
colonies !hat are nol infesaed wilh
Varroa.''

, WASHINGTON (AP)- Doclors . damaging cholesrerol in their bloodaren 'llouling beer-drinking as a way streams.
to lower choleslerol, but scienlisls are
Scientisls Y.. Vic-tor Wu and
looking al byproducts for jusl that George E. Ingle!l oflhe departrnena's
purpose.
·
Cereal Crops Research Unit in PeaBarley, like oats, contains a com- ria, Ill., have discovered an ineJ&lt;pen·
pound lhat inhibits production of cho· sive way of using air lo separate barlesterol. The heallhful componenls ley flour while enriching portions
are removed in lhe beer-making with dielary fiber.
process, which takes aboul 40 percenl
"If this p~ess were 10 he ad?pl·
of rhe barley grown in !he United ed commerctally, heallh-consctous
States. Most of the rest is used for consumers could see more baked
animal feed.
goods made wilh barley and oals,"
Agriculture
Department , reporled USDA's Agricultural
-researchers are looking for ways lo Research magazme.
make barley more auractive as a
II was Inglett who developed
human food because it is loaded wilh Oaarim, an oar-based fal replacemenl
beta glucans,the soluble dietary fiber containing soluble beta glucans,
!hal has made oals a favorile of peo- which is used in several consumer
pie looking 1o reduce .the levels of products.

'· .

i

United States tobacco exports on rise
respectively, from !he previous year.
Burley exports dropped 5 percent, lo
47,130 tons, and the value was down
4 percenl, at $3(15 million. •
U.S. manufacturers eJ&lt;ported
231.1 billion cigareltes worth $4.77
billion last year. Volume was up 5
percenl bullhe value was down 4 percenl from 1994.
Americans imported 190,2911ons

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United Slates exported 209,482 metric tons of unmanufaclured lobacco
las! year, bringing in $1.4 billion.
The Agricuhure Departrnenl says
rhe volume was up 6 percent and the
value rose 7 percent over 1994.
Exports of flue-cured lobacco
totaled 123,042tons, worth $866 million, up 15 percent and 16 percent,

of unmanufacrured tobacco last year,
valued at $550 million. That was a 22
percent drop in volume and a 10 per·
cenl decrease in value.
U.S. farmers sold-232,588 tons of
burley lobacco during lhe first 40
days of 1he 1995-1996 auction season, 14 percenlless than for lhe same
period a year earlier. l'riees are down
only sl!ghlly.

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·, WASHINGTON - Two yean•
after·Presi~nt Clint.on's bCalih em
plan Hopped, House Republicans· .
decilled IIIey call ~s a more li!nil- .
to oKtend healt!J i01urance.1o
ed
WGDii ~ bllinJ denied it.
. ...,., PemOcnls aiticiDitt lhe
R"' 1'1~• ·on flrlday for vleriJ18

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SQUIRM •IHI SQUEAL
'-"

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• 141

SOUTHEAST
RTS ·

PROMOTED • Jeffrey W.
Mullins tJas been promoted
from Hlety coordinator to
Hlety supervtaor In the Per·
eonnel Department at the Ohio
Valley Electric CortJOt'ltlon's
·Kyger Creek Plant. The pro-motion was ellectlve .March 1.
Mullins joined OVEC In 11190 as
a personnela11l1tant and was
promoted to Hlety. coordlnltor
In 1991. He 'II a llf1lduete or
Bowling Green University With

a blc:helor or:eclence degiw 111
flualneas

,

admlnletratl~ •.

Mulllne l'ltlclel In Charlltton,

w. va.

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Plck3:
635
Plck4:
3613
Super Lotto:
9-19-21-22-37-38

Sports, Page 4

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Marlcrld on Wlnd•h»lfla
Vol. 46, NO. 219
1 Sac:tlon, 10 Pages

r---Out with the old-

tilt, C111111, PW, PL. ................................................$10,144
1114 OLDS CUn.ASS SUPREME S15855, A/T, A/C,
AII/FM cua., tilt, cru111, 1'111' clef.; cloth lnt ......$10,
1114 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE.15182, Whltl, V-6q.,
A/C, A/f, AM,IFII Clll., tilt, cruiH, PW, PL......~:.$11,780
1114 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 15153, v-e tng., A/C,
A/T, tilt, crul11, PW, PL, air blg,l'tlr def.............$11,248
1112 CHEVY LUMINA 11710, Bilek, v.e tng.,l/c,a/1,
AII/FII, cus., tilt, crulu, ,..r clef., cloth lnl ........ 18133
1114 OLDS CUn.ASS CIERA 15701, A/C, A/T, AII/FM
cua., tilt, crulH, PW, PL, l'tlr defraltw ............... ur.ct
18115 CHEVY CORSICA 15831, Whitt, A/C, A/f, AII/FII,
tilt, sport whttla, cruiH, 30,000 mlltt,
bal. of tact. War....................... "............................. $11
111tiUICK REGAL CUSTOII15817, V-6 eng., AJC, M,
AIIIFII ca.... P. wlnclowllaeata, tilt, crut11 ....... $1ms
1814 CHEVY BLAZER 4X41S577, Lt. Tahot,4 Dr.,
whltl, llllhtr
AIC, AlT. 'H IIIII·• AIIIFII
PW, PL, tilt, orulu, sport whHIS, roof , ....,........ • ••·18115 CHEVY 8-10 EXTRA CAB 15555, Black, AJC, A/T,
AMIFM ci11., tilt, crulst, topper, sport whetlt, dual
mi-M I'Hr
IIIII, 23,000 mRH, balance
tad;y..
. or

'•";·r~··~ .

f.our olcl sheriff's depllrtment·crulsera and another old vehl·
cle were sold at auction Saturday morning to make way lor ntw·
er cars recently purchased by the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment. The $5,200 raised In the auction wlll be used to purchaae
an additional car. Sheriff James M. Soulsby, left, and othera examIne the cars prior to the auction.

1889 CHEVY 8-10 EXTRA CAB
A/C, I'Hr
btd liner, l'tlr St~:·-;;.;;:·~:-115
1181 CHEVY 8-10 LONG BED 15725, Dk. pewter, Y.e
II'IQ., A/C, AIIJFII c111., spt whls., I'Hr slldtr ...~.$59115

ftlp IIIII,

IIIPOIIft

to

PL launroof, lilt, crui,H..........................................$
1814 GEO TRACKER 4X4 15589, BliCk, AM/FM CIA,
A;c,. . lport wh11la, dual mlrrora ................ ".......... $11
1814 NISSAN TRUCK 15883, Rtd, AJC, AIIJFII cua.,
rur llldlr, sport wheels, 22,000 mi., bllanct 01 factory
warranty, automatic lrlnsmlaslon ...................... $11,120
19115 GEO METRO 15878, Blue, AII/FII, 20,000 mlltl,
blltnct of~ warranty, air cond.........;...........~
1112 NISSAN TRUCK 15713, Red, 28,000 mi., air cond.,
AII/FM caaa., aport w11M11 ..................................... $I8CJO
11188 NISSAN TRUCK 15714, Blue, air cond., AII/FM
CIIMttl, aport wlllelt.............................................$58
1113 NISSAN ~ENTRA 11715, Rtd, 4 Dr., A/f, A/C,
AIIIFII call., tilt, cruiM, I'll~ dtlrolttr.................$9V75
1113 TOYOTA TRUCK 15717, A/C, AII/FII, ca....
21,000 mllta ............. ~ ................................................$88110

Counay residents may have noliced a new look 10 some of the Meigs
, County Sheriffs Depanment's patrol cars. ·
Th~ deparlment recenlly purchased three newer cars formerly used
by !he Slale Highway Patrol. The cars are painled black wilh !he word
'sheriff in bold yellow letters brackeaed by horizontal yellow stripes.
. • ·Th~prkings ~reJeCelltlY approved b~ the B.uckeye Stale Sher·
~lff'T'ft.ssociation· for use· on cruisers in all of Ohio's. 88 counaies; Mei'gs
Luunty Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
The idea is lo make all sheriffs' cars more uniform, he explained. "II
.makes lhem more visible to lhe public."
Soulsby said his depanmenl has purchased only one new car during
his seven years in office.
,
We have got good, used cars purchased from lhe highway palrol or
i other police dcpanments for $3,500 10 $6,500, compared to $15,000 to
$18,000 for a single new car.
They las! two 10 three years, and in some instances up to four years.
"They have had good maintenance," he said. "We use !he Meigs High
School au1o class for work on them."
"We have saved a considerable amounl of money," he said.
Some of !he cars were purchased with money confiscated in drug cases. Soulsby said. In !he pas!, the board of county commissioners had
appropriated S15,000 a year for purchase of cars, he added.
Saturday, lhe depanmenl sold four old cruisers and a Ford Bronco !hat
had been confiscared by !he depanmcnl.
·
The high-mileage cars will be replaced with newer cars and !he $5,200
raised by their sale will be used to purchase ano1her car.
"The newesl car we have is a 1992 model," Soulsby said. "It looks

1114 DODGE SHADOW 15621, Rtd, AJC, A/r, AIIJfll,
mr defroster, doth lllllrlor .......................-.•-. 11870
1114 DODGE CARAVAN SE 15571, Blut, AJC, Atr, tilt,
cruiH, AII/FII Clll., P. wlndoWI, P. lOCks, llr big,
7 P'!IU, V-8 eng.....................................................$14,530
1994 DODGE CARAVAN SE 15718, Blue V-1 eng., lit
bag, 7 pe.... A/C, A/T, AIIJFII ca..., tilt, crulte,
P. wll'ldowll1ockl ............................................... $11,875
EAGLE TALON 15723, Rid, 2 Dr., A/T, AJC, AIIIFII
cua.,l'tlr defrOitlr, power wt~ &amp;loclki ...... Si114115·
1 . DODGE DAKOTA SPORT TRUC~ 15891, Red, V-1
eng., AJC, AfT, AWFM ca11., bed llnlr,lfiOit wmeela,

new."

1e,ooo mllll, bliance of tectory W11'11111y........$12,47S
1~ DODGE CARAVAN SE 15711, Blut, A,/C, A/T, V-6
IIIII·• 7 pau., AIIJFII Clll., P. windows &amp;loeb,
tilt, crulte, root rack, cloth Interior,
EAGLE SUMMIT 11709, 2 Dr., l'tlr.apolltr, lfiOit .

1.

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1114 FORD EXPLORER 4X415885, V-6q., 4 Dr., A/C,

AlT. AIIIFII ~. PW, PL, tilt, cruiM,
---~ ................................................................$1~

.1814 FORD ESCORT ISm, AJC, A/r, AWFII, air big,
rw dlfiOitlr, clotl\ Interior....................................s.33

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A Racine man and a Mason ,
W.Va., JUvenile are facing charges
slernming from !he reponed thefl of
a car in Mason Friday.
Arresled were Ernie Roach, 18,
and a 17-ycar-old juvenile male.
They are both facing felony charges
of receiving stolen property, accord·
ing lo Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby.
Mason Counly officials reponed a
1987 Pontiac Fiero belonging lo
Dale Ray Smith, Leaan, W.Va., was
slolen from the parking lot of the
Mason Bowling Lanes.
On Saturday, !he Meigs County
Sheriffs Department received call
concerning a car. localed near the
backwater on Tanners Run Road, in
Letart Township, Soulsby said.

a

Deputy Robert Beegle delerrnined !he
car was the some one reponed srolen
earlier by West Virginia authorities.
Friday nighl, Racine Marshal Matt
Richards stopped a car driven by
Roach when he allegedly failed to use
a 1urn signal. The juvenile subjecl
then allegedly showed !he officer an
operalor's license not belonging 10
him, Soulsby said.
The two were brought 10 !he sheriffs office for questioning by depulies
Beegle, Scotl Trussell and Carl
Hysell, Soulsby said. They admiued
having the car, he added.
Roach is being held in !he Meigs
Counly Jail pending an appearance in
Meigs CouRty Court. The youth was
cited to lhe Meigs County Juvenile
Court.

~Fellow

inmates might riot,'
Sanders says after. sentence
.

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Vote for

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Mary Powell 00

1,,.1. . ..lay

Mel.. County Commluloner
~March

"PrUer:vatlon, O.,elopment, and Proepe;
·
for TomotrOW''
t
" { wUl not luzv~ tmY t?thtrjob'~ · .
~·Wndmr,
CouiiiJ COJnlllilrion~r
' · wJil h llfl' only1$"

w

. R 1 t'&gt;•: fdolo ...olfilrlly !be'

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s

-lWell:I!Oil&gt;w~Dr..~•

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"This election is nor just aboul
As Dole sought anolher big pri mary day, Buchanan and Sieve picking a candidate 10 run in a single
Forbes battled on. They ralked elecaion," Forbes said Sunday. "This
increasingly of influencing the GOP eleclion is aboul the direction ahat
agenda and less of the likelihood of America takes." One of his top supblocking Dole from lbe nomination . porters, former Housing Secrerary
" We're going foward because I Jack Kemp, even talked of opening a
.represenl a cause and the people who dialogue wilh !he Dole campaign,
are behind me wan! me to represenl although Forbes quickly disaanced
lhal cause in the Repubican conven- himself from Kemp's remarks.
lion ...." Buchanan said this morning.
Buchanan vowed lo slay in !he
"We're going lo San Diego to do bat· race lhrough !he Augusa nominaling
de for the lhings we believe in," he convenlion . His talk of trying 10
said.
" amass as many delegales and votes

·.

as we can " was a cl ear s 1gn

Buchanan, barring what call s "a bi g
joll," is aiming now for leverage in
·platform and olher convention business.
"We are going 10 go 10 that convention, as we have every right tO do,
and quile frankly, I' ve got an obliliation 10 represenllhe people who are
behind me in those battles at !he corrvenlion, especially the ri ghl-lo-li fe
votes."
·
Simple malh e•plains the dilemma·
Continued on page 3

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Still
Ohio House of Representatives
candidate Jeff Fowler cited false
promises on highways, equal educalion, and job growth in soulheast
. Ohio as the reasons for new represenlation for Meigs County in the
statehouse, in a
al a Salurday
reception fQ! lhe
·
liict'·candidale iii '
Senior Citizens Center.
Several local and state candidates
joined Fowler and nearly 60 people at
!he Saturday fund raiser for !he Gallia County nalive's House campaign.
Referring 10 Rep. John Carey's
proposed House Bill 440, which will
created rural induslrial parks in Ohio,
Fowler slated that rural induslrial
parks are useless withoul highways 10
and from Ihem.
"Without a four-lane highway system in Southeast Ohio to move goods
into and oul of these rural induslrial
parks. all we will have is big emply

Fowler also quoted an Akron Beacon-Journal saory on Carey and
House Bill 440, which revealed provisions in lhe bill for lhe use of slate
monies in construction of a parking
garage near The Limited's Columbus
corporate headquaners.

JEFF FOWLER
parking lois in !he middle of corn·
fields. We have to have highways
built, like we were promised over
awenly years ago, in southeast Ohio,"
said Fowler.

"According to state commiuee
teslimony1-milliontof dollars in slate
money were going 10 be used loward
building !his garage for The Lirnired.
Yel, when John Carey was asked
about the provision in his own bill by
a commiuee chair in hearings, he
couldn't give anyone an answer as to
why lhe provision was in House Bill
440. This is an example of our representalion in Columbus," said Fowler.
Fowler, a school leacher in !he
Trimble Local disaricl, also slressed
!he need for equal educaaion to "give
lhe children of southeasl Ohio a
fighting chance in the ever changing
workplace."

"George Voinovich, the educati on
governor, boasted in his slate of the
slate speech on the increases in !he
slate private school voucher program. It's lime thai Columbus start
dealing wilh public education. instead
of centering their efforts of educating
Ohio's children on a few private sub·
urban academies," said Fowler.
2l.s!_House District represen\lltive
Mike Shoemaker (D-Bournevi li e)
echoed Fowler's message. stating !hal
education in Ohio mu st be on a level playing field .
"We have kids in Ross Counly .
schools !bat have lo keep their feel on
pallets when it rains, so they ca·n usc
!heir compulers with out being electrocuted. There is an elementary
school in Noble County without
restrooms. Students must cross a
highway to go to rest;ooms in an
adjacenl building. Educalion mu sl be
equal, and it must be public. This isn't
happening in Ohio and it must
change," said Shoemaker.

'·Because of Chinese war games

U.S. to move warships closer to Taiwan
•

Two are facing charges in
connection with auto theft

.............................................................tlu,n~ .

AII&lt;'FII. fold.down power lilt, cloth lulwlor ........ $54il5

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
DANIA, Aa. - With one eye
already 1umed loward a fall show·
down with President Clinton, . Bob
Dole is appealing for a seven-slale
"Super Tuesday" primary sweep that
would put him well pasllhe halfway
mark in the race for !he Republican
presidential nomination.
Anticipaling a sarong Dole showing, rival Pal Buchanan acknowledged today !hat; "We may have a
rough day Tuesday:"

Fowler tells fund-raising group 'industrial parks
Old cruisers sold
.useless without roads leading to and from them'
make way for
ithe near-new ones

1911 NISSAN 240 SX LE f570t, 1 owner, 37.000 mlltt,
A/C, AII/FM CUI., ltllther aeata, cllltom whtltls.

~~~=·:1:"11., power wtl1dowa llockl .. $111,544
u
ACCLAIIII5727, Red, AIC, Atr, · .

Dole appeals for another
Tuesday primary sweep
Seven-state victory would put candidate past
halfway mark for GOP presidential nomination

IIIII,

21,000 ml•............................. ~..............~ .•$1733
SHADOW 15et2, Whitt, AJC, Air. AII/FII,
cltfrOitlr, clott11nttrlor.................................... $11125
DODGE INTREPID 15654, V-6 eng., AJC, A/T, tilt, '

35 centa
A Gannett Co •.Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Monday, March 11,.1996
'
.

'

1114 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE 15707,
Green,
l
•

*h~

•

'

"WHEEL &amp; DEAL?' .
NO MONEY .DOWN!
.
Wrth Approved Credit
Prlt:fl• and Payni.,ta

AlT. A/C, 'AII/FII cassettt,

Clear tonight, lows in
teens. Tuesday, sunny,
high In upper 40s.

Kicker:
603689

i •. ;

br,aport .

I
·.......

M•Other ...lt,rs

1113 FORD RANGER XLT 15123, Red; Allofll, l!td

lim~ li,;.~~iion '

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No.1
Kentucky
upset

.

1911 HONDA CIVIC LX 15724, AlT. AIIJFII Cll., power
'
window• llockl,
power ~lrrora......._ ..................~

Business breifs .
NEW YORK (AP) - · In ahe '
often-pc..Verse ways of the financial
markets, slacks and bondS plummel·
ed afler ihe government ,announced
!he brightesl jobs · t:ebound in 13
years.
.
The Dow Jon~ industrial average ·
losl more than 171 points, lhe ahird·
_worsl one-day "p&lt;:iint drop in history.
The price of die he!l.wether 30year Treasury bond saw its sharpest
retreal since 1J17.
The news of unexpei:tedly brisk
Pebruary job growth of705,90(&gt; was
more than dpuble what · analysts·
expected, making il unlikely lhe Fed·
. 'eral Reserve will cur interesl ra1es
• again, as lhe markets ·wanted.
.
'The govemmenl'-repon said lhal
. the nation's unen;~ployment rate felt
. 1o .5 percent. dow11 0.3 ,percentage
point frOm Jan!'ary.

Ohio Lottery

Sunday, March 10,

LUCASVILLE (AP) - Carlos
Sanders, sentenced to death las! week
Cor his role in the 1993 Lucasville
prison riol, thinks fellow inmales are
so u·~wilh
lhe senaence 1ha1 !hey
migh · ·
"II is 1 po
tlity and a probabil·
..ity. People are upset. They know I've
been dealt with unfairly," Sanders
said last week a! the Hamillon Coun·
ly jail in Cincinnati. during ,an inler·
view wilh The Columbus Dispaach.
Sanders, 33. was convicted last
month of brdering lhe death of Robert
Vallandingham, a guard al the Soulhem OhiQ Correctional Facility in
Lucasville. Sanders was senlenced on
Wednesday.
Investigalors said the Muslim
inmaae leader led lhe I l·day uprising

in retalialion for nol geuing his way
over religious issues.
Prosecutor Rick Gibson thinks
Sanders has become a manyr in the
eyes ofolher inmares beCause he has
!alien on lhe system.
Sanders estimales he still gets 20
to 40 leuers a week. Inmares wanfhis
advice. They seek his counsel.
Even though he is in sollrary confinemenl and has had no faee-lo-face
contact with Lucasvilk! inmates .for
neatly three years, Sanders now has
more power with !hem than he did
before 1he riot, former Lucasville
Warden Arthur Tate Jr. said.
Cleveland atl~y Niki Schwartz
believes Sanders lillY be vlewec! as a
manyr "if in fact he \¥as singled our
for conviction and execution becauie
of his leadership·role."
,f

WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Slate Warren - Christopher
accused China of "reckless" provocations against Taiwan on Sunday and
said U.S . warships would move closer 10 Taiwan in ahe coming days.
Chrislopher said lhe Uniled S!ales
wan led lhe battle group lee! by !he aircrafl carrier Independence "in a position 10 be helpful if they need 10 be.
They'll be moved somewhal closer 10
Taiwan in fulure days. •1
China has soughllo influence Taiwan's presidential eleclion scheduled for later thi~ monlh and dis·
courage !he pro-democracy movement on the island by staging missile
tests offTaiwan's coast and announc·
ing plans for live ammunition 1es1s in
lhe straits !hat divide Taiwan from lhe
mainland.

China's actions have escalaled
military lens ions between lhe lwo
governments lo a level nol seen in
more !han a decade. Both Beijing and
Taipei claim to be lhe sole legilimate
government of lhe Chinese, but their
enmily has heen lempered in recenl
years by increased trade and lourism
across the Taiwan Strait.
Chrislopher, speaking on NBC's
"Meet the Press," said lhe aclions
taken by China, "have been reckless,
I lhink they've heen risky, and ...
smack of intimidalion and coercion .
So !hat is a situalion of greal concern
10 us."
He repealed the U.S . warning 1ha1
Chinese military aggression against
Taiwan would be a "grave maller lo
us. We've made lhat as clear as we
possibly can to them because we .

Home sales up in January
WASHINGTON (AP)- Sales of
new homes unexpecaedly jumped 4.2
percenl in January despile !he bliz·
zard and bitter cold in parts of ahe
country and consumer concerns over
the economy. II was the second
straight advance.
The picture was mixed, wilh sales
rising in lhe Midwest, South and Wesl
wl\ile suffering lhe sleepest plunge in
nine yearS in lhe Norlheast where lhe
blizzard was concentrated.
The Commerce Department said
1oday rhat sales of single-family
homes totaled 693,000 at a seasonal·
ly adjusted annual ralc, after rising O.S
percent in December 10 665.000.
Many analysts had. expecled sales to
drop lo aboul 627,000 in January.
The report l)ombined Lhll da1a for
December and January. The data had
been delayed by lhe blizzard and par·
tial governmen1 shurdown earlier in
lhe year.
Unlil December, sales had fallen
for four Straighl monlhs as prospec·

don't want any miscalculalion on
!heir pan."
The administralion has refused to
say e•aclly how the United Sraaes
mighl respond to a mililary altack, or
whelher U.S. troops might be sent to
help Taiwan defend itself. Chrislopherdeclined lo outline possible U.S.
actions .
It was nol clear from the slatements by Chrislopher and laler comments by U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Madeleine Albright if
the U.S. warships would enter !he
area designated by China for the
ammunition e.ercises.
Aibright, speaking on CNN's
"Lale Edition Wilh Frank Sesno,"
said Chinese officials had been
"warned very specifically" that they
should avoid confrontation with the

· Uniled Slales.
Last December the aircraft -carri er
: Nimitz, accompanied by other war. ships, passed through the Taiwan
: Suait, making an implicil statement to
·!he Chinese that !he Uniled States was
concerned about the i~crcascd belli·cosily aoward Taiwan.
It was reportedly the first U.S. carrier group to pass through the slraits
since 1979, when I he United States
cut off diplomalic lies with 'Taiwan
and recognized the Beijing governmen! as ahe sole represcnlati ve of
China.
In !he Taiwan Relations Act !hat
accompanied the change in diplo·malic recognition, !he Uniacd Slales
said it would work toward !he peaceful reunifiCation of China and Taiwan
and pledged it would help Taiwan

r-------------~----~---

Poll reveals Dole gaining
support in Buckeye state

tive home buyers worried about slow
job and income growth and high levels of debt. offselting lhe auractiveCINCINNATI (AP) - Bob Dole has gained support among
ness of falling interest rates.
Republicans surveyed in Ohio during the pastweek, according to
Thirty-year, fixed-rate mortgages
an Ohio Poll Rleased Sunday.
averaged 7.03 percent in January
Dole was supported by 58 percent of respondents, up 10 per1996, down from more !han 9 perc!mt
centage points from a week earlier. The other candidates showed
a year earlier.
virtually no change, with Pat Buchanan supported by 14 percent
The monthly payment on a
and Steve Forbes by 10 percent.
$I 00,000 mortgage with a 7 percenl
Dole has gained support with Lamar Alexander and Richard
inleresl rate is $665, while lhe payLupr
dropping out. Rouihly 16 percent of those polled were undemen! on lhe same loan wilh a 9 percided.
cent rate is $805.
· Ohio's presidential primary Is March 19.
For all of 1995, sales were down
The findings were baed on a poll or 819 Ukely Republican Pri·
0.9 percen11o 664,000, from 670,000
mary
voters iatenlewed March 5-8. The margin for error is three
in 1994. 11 was lhe lowes! level since
perc:mt&amp;Je points.
610,00 new home were sold in 1992
The Clncianad Enquirer, WLWT·TV and the University ot
as lhe economy was emerging (rom
. &lt;;tndnuati lpOIISOr the poll, which Is conducted. by the Institute
.
rhe recession.
for Policy Research at the university.
·
The latesl report means lhe SC!I·
Dole wiD be In Colunabus on Thursday at the &amp;&lt;!Vernor's annusonally adjusted estimate of new
al Winter Appreciation.Reception, lteld to tluuik Republican par- ,
houses for sale at lhe end of January
ty leaders and supporters.
- ·
was 3111,000, representing a supply of ,
Steel Door
~.{, .
Bucltanaa said be will C8111pa!an at lite
6.7 monlhs at-lhe current sales rare:
Steel MiD and at a ~ In Boardmaa oa 'l'aelday. 0n Wed-- · • (~
largesl since a 390.000 backlog in
day, be plans to campelp Ita ~ Almlttt Md ToWo, ,1
li:i
January 1980.
I
.
•,
~~ ' " polO! .-

y..,...,..._

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�Monday, March 11, 1 •

. .Commentary
Th~

Page2

••

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Monday, Marc~ 11,J998
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•,

.:a.~--nom.•
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1!!'..1.
~· ·
l"cVaJ

~

The hard-bi(4n Gramm •• who to a contest between Buchanan· and iha1 vo1c wo o
lind Mlch8el B-In .
always had .a personal affection for President ainton. he wbuld not vote inee. But ~ larger dynamic driving
Grarruil's endorsement decision was
WASHINGTON ••• Patrick J. Dole despite · their rivalry - was fo'r Buchanan.
111 COurt Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
For the Gramm family, the nega- the specter oF Buchanan somehow
Buchanan may be 1/le best thing that · moved by the sincerity of Dole's ser·
814-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
tive feelings aroused by Buchanan 's winning -- or prolonging -- the nomcould have happened for Republican
.
Party unity. He's already brought
campaign hit home. Supporters of ination battle. He told senior staffers
By
Jack
Anderson
' Buchanan in the Louisiana caucuses he would feel guilt-ridden the rest of
together two of the.Senate's most bitter political rivals ·with his strident
distributed campaign Uterature point- his life if he didn'tjpmp in aD!l do his
and
·
rhetoric.
ing out that Gramm's wife, Wendy, is part to defeat Buchanan, whom he
A Gannett Co. ~ewspaper
calls "dangerous."
Consider the tale of how Sen. Phil
Michael Blnsteln Korean-American. It read; "Many privately'
Dole
agreed
with Gramm that he
conservatives
will
not
vote
for
him
in
Gramm, R-Texas, and Senate' Major·
ROBERT L. WING-ETT
needed
the
eooorsement
sooner rather
ity Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., mon. When an aide later dsked him ' the Wimary due to his interracial mar· Publisher
later.
"Look,
Bob,
the fact that
'than
went from implacable foes to near about the call and whether there had riage. He divorced a white wife to
fraternity brothers i.n a matter of days been an · endorsement, Gramm . marry. an Asiatic." Buchanan has !lost this race doesn't mean I stopped
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
quipped, "Hell, by tbe time he got off denied any links between the litera- loving my country," sources say
last month.
Controller
General Manager .
Gramm told Dole. "I thought I
Shortly after Grlllllm dropped out into all that, he never got around to ture and his campaign.
Contrary to published repons, should have been the nominee, but
of the rm:e following a poor showing asking."
in the Iowa caucuses, Dole called
It didn't matter, for Gramm had Gramm personally learned of the lit- the voters spoke and they didn't say
'
L.-.. fo
p:olo-. T/wy al&gt;ould be Ieee tMn lOD - · A I seeking his endorsement -· but he decided to endorse Dole even before erature several days before the elec- my name."
•lfMd-ltteluda-.-,.,._
never quite got around to asking. the call. Gramm sees former Ten- tion. But w.)len Gramm requested
Gramm traveled to New Hamp. ber. No un1C;:w ,.,..,. ""' be publlah«&lt;. L - . allould I» In flOOd Instead. Dole began reminiscing nessee Gov. Lamar Alexander as a copies, his top staffers stalled in get- shire the weekend before the prima'•
about his ill-fated primary campaigns phony, and Malcolm S. "Steve" ting them to him out of concern for ry to give Dole a gracious and unconin 1980 and 1988. His voice cracked Forbes as a faith healer whose flat tax how the vile literature might impact ditional endorsement, which proved
with emotion as he described the idea is no magical elixir for healing the candidate:
insufficient to prevent Buchanan
.By the time Dole called back a fr!lm eking out a victory. Since then
ordeal and the pain of, losing. Dole · all of society's ills. But most of his
.
.assured Gramm that he was still a wrath· is reserved for Buchanan, second time to request hi,s former Dole has acquiretl a COijlf08nding
young man who would get another whom he regards as an economic · adversary's backing, Gramm's only lead over his remaining rivals,
Loss of hospital would
devastating
shot
to run for national office, per- demagogue, an anti-Semite and a concern was timing. He thought'Dole Buchanan and Forbes. The new dra·
new doctors, who in tum will utilize
Dear Editor,
haps
realizing the same could not be racist. Gramm has privately told would pro~ly lose the New Hamp- -rna in the race W..s injected after
As a resident of Meigs County and the services now being offered at
said
for
himself.
aides that if the election came down shire primary. though he still believed Buchanan suggested that he might
an employee of Veterahs Memorial your hospital. The new facility wili
'
become the suicide bomber at the
Hospital, I am concerned about the bring new jobs and additional serRepublican
convention unless a list
future of health care'in Meigs Coun- vices for the convenience of all
of
his
demands
-- from a voice in
,....
Tal&lt;iNG
Meigs Countians.
ty.
writing
the
platform
to'a veio-power
A petition signed by 124 employ'Last year your local hospital lost
MuCH
INFoRMaTioN.
e·Mall. oR
Dole's
running
mat~-- is met. ·
over
.five doctors that have not been ees and volunteers of VMH was
Fa~
FoR
SiX
Weai(&lt;S,
aND
!'M
Gramm
has
been
loatl)e to offer ·
•.: ~):placed. VMH is .currently is cur- recently sent to Meigs County Comany
advice
to
the
Dole
campaign,
C.V'I'riJoiG VOl/ Bacl( 1"c oNe ~-LiNe
' ~ntly staffed by three physicians tha~ missioners stating conce~n for your
telling friends that "there's nothing
: tiave admitting privileges. Obvious- hospital. Our three current cqmll)is~\'10!! 4iND BasiC ca8i.'! ONLy.
worse than somebody who Is a loser
: ly we need more do&lt;;tors for this sioners, Fred Hoffman, Janet Howard
·
telling
a winner what they . ~ught to
.facility to survive its current status of and Robert Hartenbach, quickly
·'_
do~
"
~··
~
~
".a community hospilal.
responded with a signed letter of
The
one
substantive
e•ception
• The loss of doctors brought overwhelming supporJ for your hoshas been Gramm's warning to the
employee layoffs, wage 'reductions pital and a commitment to the conDole campaign not to cut a deal with
and loss of sick leave benefits. There str,uction of the new medical arts
Buchanan in the name of party uniare ,approximately 130 employees building.
ty. Dole must not let Buchanan do to
iemaining at VMH. Despite the cut. As I see it, the survival of your
him what Jesse Jackson did to former
.backs VMH remains one of the local hospital should be the number
Democratic
nominee Michael
largest employers in Meigs County. one issue on the minds of all Meigs .
Dukakis
in
1988
--take controLoftbC.
· Each year your hospital con- Countians. You never know when
nominating
convention.
Gramm is
uibutes a substantial amount of mon- you may need your hospital. Let's
touting as required reading for the
ey to the city .of Pomeroy 'from a one- save what is here first, make it strong
Dole campai11n a book •entitled
percent payroll tal(. Your hospital and and then we can talk about econom"Minority Power," which devotes a
its employees spend a substantial ic growth and development in Meigs
passage
to that sorry episode.
.
amnunt of money to support local County.
Dole,
who
is
intensifying
calls
for
.
businesses. Your hospital and its
I urge you to support your local
party
unity,
had
beuer
be
careful
whai
employees are also involved. in hospital and to .let elected officials
he hopes for ill the · case of Pal
numerous community organizations know you want your hospital to
Buchanan.
.
\hat help all &lt;'f Meigs County. Clos· remain open to everyone. I now know
Jack Anderson and Mieha~
ing your hospital would be a devas- how the current commissioners stand,
Bimtein are writen ror Uoitecl
tating loss to Meigs County.
I would like to know how th.e other
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
" A medical arts building has been candidates for COfl\missioner stand on
proposed for the campus of VMH. this issue before I place my vote.
This new building will provide
Mike Sharp
,&lt;:: , .,.
offices for an influx of seven to 10
Reedsville

'£st46Bs(id in 1948

By JIICk ~

OHIO Weather
'IUeaday, March lZ
AccuWeatbet"' foreCast for daytime conditions and

Ella Virginia Ann Fisher

••

.

IToledo I 48" I

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lhe-_,_, -- ""',.., ___

m•ulli«fro_,._-,.

.

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Buch~.
I

Too

· n ar:-d the right to bear arms ,,
)

,

By Nat Hentofl
__)
Holding over his h d a formidable shotgun, Pat Bllchanan -· beam'
Dear Editor,
·· we are incompetent.
ing in a black cowboy hat -Of course, if one levy passes, and addressed the troops at the .CrossTrimble did it, Federal Hocking
did it, Miller did it, Gallia.County did . · the other doesn't then the winner benit, and even Symmes Valley· did it. efits greatly and the state loses out on roads of the West gun show in
·.Vhat did they do? Took advantage of its consolidation efforts. When I first Phoenix:
"Every .. man who heads a family
the state building fund. Vote 'yes' on wrote for the newspaper in Southern's has got a right to own and keep and
March 19 for the passage of the state tournament glory days, there
school levy's at Eastern and Southern. were over 650 high schools in Ohio. bear arms to protect liis family."
For- a long time, I . resisted the
A 'no' vote at Sou.thern would take · When I first got on the board in the
Buchanan interpretation of the Sec.the county back to the "dark ages: and mid-1980s there were 628 high and Amendment. D11ring lectures
a 'no' ~Ole at Eastern would prove that schools. Now, there are under 610. and on radio talk shows; I would be
area of the county even more lame Slowly, consolidation is eating away
confronted with the inevitable hostile
than at Southern; a sure trip back to at Ohio schools. In rural areas, like question: "You claim to be for all of
the Ice Age.
ou..S, the state is pushing for consol- · the Bill of.Rights. But why don't yOu
The Eastern Local School District idation at the county level ' like in
ever mention the right to keep and
has a gold mine atits finger tips. A West Virginia.
'
bear arms?"
There has been a big uproar from
'yes' vote and new school, the build:
My invariable anti-gun answer
ing of the sewage system, the build- folks -about the Racine Elementary ·was that I recognized the right oflaw
iug ban being lifted, and a new four- Building. But I would wager that less
enforcement officers to bear arms -lane Route 50 should really entice than I 0 percent of the population
if they were psychologically screened .
business to boom in that part of ihe lives in a home as old as that build- very carefully. And, I said, l would
county. With open enrollment becom- ing built in 19li.Jf everyone lived in
only approve of hunters being armed
ing more popular Eastern would old homes or castles with moats surif animals were also provided with
thrive. If Eastern's levy passes and rounding them, them I would have no lethal self-defense weapons.
SOuthern's does not, Southern should complaint.
Otherwise, I added, the Second
. board its windows, for it will become
It's not just a building either. At
Amendment simply means that "the
a:ghost town as the more intelligent . both Southern and Eastern, the righl of the people to keep and bear
will willingly go to Eastern, then the school's will be equipped with equiparms" exists because "a well-reguodiers will be bused there in time · ment and materials that will las~ for
lated militia" is "necessary to the
oni:e.'t~ school actually closes.
years. At Southern, there will be a
security of a free state·. " Therefore,
, .Southern baske!ball over the years new building with 22 regular class- there is no constitutionally protected
has had a relatively devoted follow- rooms, two kindergarten rooms, two individual right lo bear aims apart
in~ of nearly' 800 fa~s. Those fans new science labs, seven special edu- from service in a state militia.
Not being entirely confident of
rriourted up and·rode .'"t? the valley Clition rooms, three reading rooms,
of death to save the d1stnct m a des_- and one art room music room compi~tion bid for the l&amp;;~t ~mer~ency puler lab, Jibraryimedia center: g'ym,
levy. Th~t ~av_ed the d1stnct, hteral- cafeteria and locker rooms. The high
I~· Now.n IS ume to mmmt up agam
school will have a new library/media
or perhaps put the horse to pasture center, a new computer lab, a new
fo~ver.
.
.
science lab, a new business room and
• Just like other state agenc1es that an additional classroom
By Joeeph Sp1111r
hay.e ·bee1_1 moved o_ut_ of th'e county,
·At Eastern, the old ·high school
During the month of March, I will
tlle ~talc ,100 has a d1v1nc plan for '"· will be renovated to nearly a new be spending many hours watching the
a~d , o'lr, S}&amp;te .?~· .\l(lucati~ .. ,J~ .the building, .something diat has been madness that is thC National Collesflltc,l~ ~t, wtuU.~g fo( us ftul. AI · heC!cled for a long iime. but no local giate Athletic Association basketball
our opemng m~ttng of the. Easte)'ll ·funds could handle a renovation. tournament.
(4x:a1Teacrhers~iatioli,?Urstat~ Now's the chance. At Eastern, the
DuringthemonthofMarch,Jwill
rep.ntative tbld'us of Ob1o's plan new K-8 building· would house 24 also be spending many hours watchtq ,consoljdate· Meigs C9unty with . classrooms, two science rooms and ing politicians compete for the, pres- Gallia .COunty with pla~s for a new labs, one home economics room, six idency.
s~hool near Ky~er Creek. Now, special education rooms. an art/techStay with me. I'll be making a
wouldn't that be li1ce. Some pans .of nical edUclition room, a computer lab, point soon. .
ourcountywduld'haveto .travcl ·.o':er a library/media.center, a ~w · gym
All of the candidates talk about
:MII}liles to_get tl)ere.
,.' ,
•and cafetorillm,
their pfans to fire up the .economy,
• Will it'Jiappen? It has bappel!ed to
Voters. please don't let the sand boost wages, create jobs. One w•y
sevtrJI.qdler swe agencies that use4 . slip throuih • your fingen. Even · they can study up on how to do this
' to ~~ J:!oused in ~ ~· ~le ~. ~gh .l ~ it will be a hlrdSbip is to 1wa1eh the -NCAA basketball
tljcluiht ~e fouf 0-'h• ¢olll'tY; ·· .?n me. ;I know I{J •"!Y ~that~- tournament~
' - ~· wouiCS always bj, ·~· Now, ' IS Jbe time to VOtll, Y,CI ' U.ve .faith
i told YOu I had Point,
. . : tbjly~1.,JGIIC'! Du!)'t I~ ,wlllt yoJ-1 ·• luNhve ~ill flnila !'1}'• . ' ,
, ·
J .jltobahly .s~oul~' clarify iL. ·
• : a~ ·hl~d~ co~, we ~ye fO ; I -'« '~' ·;! ·, , •
. .. S . Wolfe · , The NCAA,which is the confed; fill fii'jlt, We '!!"'e jo JI!'O"C to the~ -~
. r ,,.. •
' Aidee, erJ!io" of colleges and pnlversities

Take advantage of state building fund

that analysis, 1·have been looking at
the heretical work of such constitutiona! law professors as William Van
Alstyne ·(Dulce University), Daniel

Nat Hentoff
Polsby (Northwestern University)
' d Le vmson
·
(U nlvCrslty
·
· 0f
and San.o~
Texas).
Also, 1 c•plored the four-volume
Encyclopedia of the American Constitution (Mac.millan). There 1 discovered that "the only analysis available to Congress" when it voted on
what came to be the Second Amendment was an article saying that the
amendment assured to Americans
"their private artns." James Madison,
architect Of the Bill of Rights, had
approved that analysis.
In the same article, Don B. Kates
Jr. quoted Samuel Adams, who insisted that "the Constitution never be
construed ... to prevent the people of
the United States from keeping their
own arms."
Furthermore, as the records of our
pre-Revolutionary times show, every
household, by colonial law, had to
have arms; and when there was a military emergency. every inale adult
had to bring his own arms to the battie
.It was inconceivable,! finally realized, that after the Revolution free

American citizens would agree .. as
part of the Bill of Rights -- to give up
their right to keep their own arms,
whether or not they were members of
a militia.
Then there, was Thomas Jefferson's view of the Second Amend- ,
A Pr ,
p b
ment.
s
'
o.essor
ols Y wrote
notes to
in
Reason magazine, Jefferson
George Washington __ whose gun collection numbered . more than 50
pieces •• "One loves . to possess
arms."
·
Seeing tho Second Amendment as
the framers did -- and as Pat
Buchanan does .. does not mean thai
the private right to bear arms is without limits. Just as the First or Fourth
Amendments do not provide absolute
individual rights.
For instance, Don Kates writes in
the Encyclopedia of the American
Constitution that Second Amendment rights iire not infringed when
minors, ·felons and the mentally
impaired are prevented from owning
firearms.
"Moreover," he adds, "the government may limit the types of arm's
that may be kept. There is no right,
for uample. to own artillery or automalic weapons or the weapons of the
footpad or .the gangster, such as
sawed-off shotguns and ll,lackJ'acks."
Nor need registration and licens-

ing requiremenl~ violate tlic S.ccond
Amendment. Reading the Second
Amendment as it was actually writ·
ien and intended does 'not ,make the
National Rifle Association the arbiter
of standards for permissible, constitutional regulation.
Having changed my own reading
of the Second Amendment, I cont1'nue to abhor guns and still keep trying
to convince my wife not to get one.
l remind her of those husbands, pets
and even children who have been
wounded or worse when mistaken in
the home for a predator. I am, however, losing this b~ttle, having abandoned my previous constitutional
argument.
Recently, on a network .call-in
radio show, thai inevitable question
came: "You say you 're a civilliber. tarian. What about the Second
Amendment?"
., cited gun-loving Thomas Jefferson and wen1 on with other.evjdence
of the original intent of the framers
to protect the private right to bear
arms. The caller, his ·indignant;
rehearsed response shot down in
midair, fell silenll.feli righteous, yet
worried about the Second Amendmenl coming into my own home. .
N
'
.
at Htntoff Is a nationally
renowned thority 00 th .,._
·
au ·
e rU1$$'
Amendment and die restor the 811
or Rights.

:llj

a

'&gt;, .(1:1;,'-;,}
i .~a
' '"'8 vJ.',,,._. • •• •ft'nn
_&lt; :..._• £iii.
..· _,··. ,..;.:a~v
.·! ·..I ·,. '/ ,1· ~
, 1

.

,

,..~,_n. f .U

.I

11** Y•·

'

'

n~.,_.,_,

re~lates the ,~mes the 'instituti.S,.. play, w-.. IIIPI'imHn 1905

.ibll

wh.eii .~~~~ .Roosevelt,
aked ~Jvenaty o!'f,ic1i111 to fnd the
~!tyalid ciJFitilia iiW charaetcr-

.

8jlllor, · ,..
,
1
~ ' yO... )'411 ' f~ s~
. . Ill i' li"J. .• • .,,

W.VA.

-

lr.ed'cOIIep football, and to regulate
the mess that was collese spons in

Betty J. Fultz, 63, Middleport, died Sunday, March 10, 1996 in Riverside
Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
Arrange~ents will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.

Today's ·weather forcast ·

Bessie H. Phillips Price

I

Southeastern Oblo
Today...Sunny. High in the mid
. 40s. Near calm wind.
Tonighi...Ciear. Low in -the mid

teens. Calm wind.
Tuesday .. .Sunny. High m the
upper 40s.

Bessie Hall Phillips Price, 86, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Saturday, March
9, 1996, at the Ravenswood Care Center.
Born Auc. 28, 1909, at Grtat Bend, daughter of the late Merlin and Mary
·
Goeglein,
she Wl\5 a teacher and a member of the R. Douglas Chapter 15
~ontin•ed from page 1
Order of the Eastern Star and member of the First Baptist Church in
facing B~ehanan and Forbes: Dole to clinch nomination. Forbes is a dis- Rlvenswood.
Survivors include a stepdaughter, Vicki Martina of Maryland; stepsons
has 392 of the 996 delegates needed tant second with 73 delegates
'
· Greg and. Ste~e Price of Atizona; a cousin, Charles Goeglein of Pomeroy;
three grandchildren and thrte great-grandchildren and a niece.
.
.----•
----..
She was preceded in death by husbands Herman Phillips and J.R. Prite,
and by a brother, John Hall.
Services will be held Tuesday, II a.m. at the Straight, Tucker and Roush
Meigs C11unty Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports the depanment is
Funeral Home, Ravenswood, with the Rev. Kenneth Miller officiating. Bur·
investigating a report of vandalism at a Coolville area residence Friial will follow in the Ravenswood Cemetery.
day night.
·
·
Friends may call Monday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funetal home.
Debbie Watson of Woods Road reported that someone damaged a
DanThx sign in front of her residence at the comer of Woods and Alfred
roads. She reported the damage:! occurred between 3 p.m.. and 10:30
p.m.. .
,
Marie M. Roy, 91, Racine, died Saturday, March 9, 1996, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital E~tended Care UAit in Pomeroy. .
Born Oct. 2, 1904, in Pliny, W.Va., daughter of the late Noah and Sarah
A one-car crash on U . ~ . 33 near Rock Springs early Saturday sent
Martin
Myers, she was a member of the Racine Baptist Church, Meigs Counthree people to Veterans Mep10rial Hospital for treatment of injuries, ·
.
ty
Senior
Citizens and a charter member of the Racine Fire Deparunent Au•the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
iliary.
Transported from the scene by the Meigs EMS were driver Angela
She is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Clarence and Inez Roy
R. Wells, 17, Columbus, and passengers Emily M. McKinney, 17,
and Bol!llie and Hazel Roy, all of Racine; a daughter and son-in-law, BetColumbus, and Travis S. Arnold, 19, 122 Union Ave., Pomeroy.
ty and Robert Pooler of. Middleport; seven grandchildren; II great-grandAll were treated and released from the VMH emergency room, a
children;
five stepgreat-grandchildren; and a sister, Lula Shaffer of
hospital spokesperson said.
Pomeroy.
.
Troopers said Wells was eastbound at 3 a.m. when her car went off
She
was
preceded
in
death
by
her
husband
of
50 years, Claude "Hopthe left side of the road and struck a guardrail. The car then crossed
per"
Roy;
two
sons,
Claude
and
Jimmy
Roy;
five
brothers,
Pilly, John, Jim,
the road, struck a concrete bridge abutment, continued on, rotated and
Beverly and Ed Myers; five sisters, Jane Harbert, Mary Edger. Liza Grimes,
slid into a field, according to the report.
Mier and Rilla Myers.
Laura
The ~ar was severely damaged and Wells was cited for driving under
Services will be held Wednesday, I p.m. at the Racine Baptist Church
the influence, failure to control and no safety belt.
•
with the Rev. Larry Haley officiating. Burial will follow in Greenwood
Cemetery in Racine.
·
·
Friends may call Tuesday at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport, 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. and one h~ur prior to the services at the church.
·
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Kevin Dugan, Veterans Memorial
gency Medical Service recorded 24 Hospital.
calls for assistance Saturday anti
8:24 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Sunday including five transfer calls. Center, Leola Gilmore, Veterans
The Rev. \Y,illiam C. Ward, 68, Middleport, formerly of Gallipolis, died
Units responding included:
Memorial aospital.
Thursday, March 7, 1996 in the Veterans Administration Medical Center,
Chillicothe.
.
SYRACUSE
POMEROY
Born J un,e 5, 1927 in Lynchburg, Va., son of the late Clarence Earl and
p.m. Saturday, Smith Ridge
2&lt;49 a.m. Saturday, U.S. Route 33, R 8:27
d S
th p· ke
"
flora Belle Hayes Ward, he was a U.S. Army veteran, a retired employee of
motor vehicle accident, Travis ArnOld
ua • aman a IC ns, veterans
the Philip Sporn power plant, the former pastor of Bethel Churcli and assow,
Memorial Hospital.
,
· and Angela ells, V,eterans Memorp.m.
Sunday,
Rockspn'ngs
ciate
pastor of the Paint Creek Baptist Church, Gallipolis.
3 55
ial Hospital. Syracuse squad transHe was· a member of the Providence Association, the ministers and dea. ported Emily McKenney to Veierans Rehabilitation Center, Sadie Carr,
cons institute of the Providence Association, and a member of the StewartMemorial Hospital. Pomeroy Fire Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Johnson VFW Post 9926, Mason, W.Va.
. Department and Squad respond~ to RUTLAND
Surviving are a daughter, Sharon Pierre Louis of Brooklyn, N.Y.; two
scene.
3:18 a.m. Saturday, South Third grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; three sisters, Sheilia Smith of
5: 14 p.m. Saturday, Rocksprings Aven~e . Ray Foster, Pleasant Valley Keystone, W.Va .. Gearldine Sales of Buffalo, N.Y., and Evangelist Flora J.
·Rehabilitation Center, Betty Morris- Hosp1tal.
Ferguson of Columbus; and a brother, Ernest C. Ward of New Haven. .
·sey, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
7:34a.m. Saturday, Union Avenue,
He was also preceded in death by a son, two grandchildren and two sis· 12:53 p.m. Sunday, Powell's Mar- }n-tati!Iermilt, Veterans Memorial ters.
·
· ket, Laura Vaughn, Veterans Memoospital.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Paint Creek Baptist Church, with
rial Hospital.
4:38 p.m, Saturday, Ov~rbrook the Rev. Dennis Hurt, the Rev. Gilbert Craig Jr.. the Rev. Calvin Minnis, the
Center, Mary Davis, Holzer Medical Rev. LV. Gause and Evangelist Flora J. Ferguson officiating. Burial will be
Center.
MIDDLEPORT
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant, W.Va. Friends may call
I :40 a.m. Sunday, Wells Road, at the church from 6-9 p.m. Thesday.
3:58 p.m. Saturday. Overbrook
Center, Anna Welch, Holzer Medical Patty Shane, Pleasant Valley HospiThe body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to the services, Miltal.
I
Center.
itary graveside rites will be conducted by the Stewart-Johnson VFW Post
9:40a.m. Sunday, Overbrook Cen- 9926, Mason.
2:08 p.m. Sunday, Lincoln
ter,
Clara;Grueser, Veterans Memor·Heights, Cecil See, Veterans MemoArrangemen!s are by the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
tial Hospital. Pomeroy Squad ill ial Hospital . .
assisted on the call.
5: 14 p.m. Sunday, Walnut Street,
William Bralton, Veterans Memorial
between Chester and Thppers Plains. .
Hospital.
Syraruse water olllce open
The Syracuse water board offices Preceptor Beta Beta
RACINE
•
Preceptor Beta Beta will meet
7:2S p.m. Saturday, Bashan Road, . will be open Thesday and Wednesday
from 12 to 4 p.m. to- allow village Thursday, 6 p.m. at the Episcopal
1 water customers to pay their month- Parish House in Pomeroy.
Th~
ly bills.

.Dole seeks..

•efS
Local
brl
:no b

Sh eriJJ prO eS Vandfdism report

·Marie M. Roy

Crash on 33 sends three to hospital

---EMS logs 4 calls---

Rev. William C. Ward

Meigs announcements _____

·l

1·

Publllbed •""&gt;' .,......._ M~y """""'
Fridoy. Ill Court St., ........,._ Ohio, by ....
Ollio \Wiley
Co.,
.........y. Obio 4,69, Ph. t92;lU6. Second

Publi'*• eon...-

ct...- JIOid II P~. Ohio.

M-.lll:r. The AuociMed Prtu, and the Ohio

"New- "-illioa.
POSTMAS'nR: Send addteu correction&amp; lo
The Doily Senu·nel, t II CouJt St., l'o-.y,
Ohlo4.5769.

8VISCIUPIION IIATU
a,c.rtor
.. _ . _

One Wect......................... ,.......................$100
One ..... ...............................:...... ....11.70
One v........................ :...... ..................St04.00
SINGL&amp;COPYntCII ·
Dolly ..... ....................... ............ .......... .. 35 Call

Subeull&gt;a• ""'oloolrina "'P11 :lie c:onier lllOlJ
ronil in di...... Tilt Doily SellliMt
... - . d• ... 12 ....... """• Cmlll willl:o

Stocks

.... ca:riet

each-

t-

--

No ""'&amp;&lt;ripoioo by mall petllllned In -

----~~
.....
MAtLStllscatmONtl' . ·
illotll c..,

.

13 'll'eetl ..................... "."'···...... _....,.••...m.JO

• -................................................. 15:uz
5:1-...........................................$105.56
- - l\lotiiC...,
t S -......................
......................... $19.25
311-................................................SSUI
! I -.............., .................. ,, .........$1Gt.12

Meeting eaaceled
Racine Board of Public Affairs
meeting for 7 tonight has been canceled.

Am Ele Power .......................4H,
Akzo ....................................,.53~
A1hland 011 ...........................35~

CoanrWtown meet1111 set ·
The Rutland Village will meet in
regular session Thesday, 7 p.m.. at the
Civic Center. A special town meeting
discussion will'be held during the
meeting on flood conuul in the village, with a federal government representative to field any questidns and
concerns. All concerned village residents are urged to attend.

Bank One ................................35
Bob EV11ne ............................ 15~
Borg-W•rner .........................31 \
Champion Ind....................... 11'.4
Charming ShoA ......................4'1.
City Holdlng ......................... 201\
Federal Mogul ....................... 19~
GanMtt ...................................~
GoodyMrTlR ......................50
K-mart .....................................?'\
L8nda End ............................... 17
Umlted IM..................- ........1·1 -.

Middleport FIIAM to meet
The . Middleport F&amp;AM . Lodge
11369 will bold a special meeting
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the Middleport
temple. Work in thi: EA degree will
. . take place. All .memberS are invited to
attend.

.,

TPC Water lSoud to meet

· ~ Thppers Plains-Chester Water
Board will meet in regular session
MoD!lay night, 7:30 p.m., at the
water district offices on Bar 30 road

Carroll M. Swanson, 82, Middleport, died Sunday, March 10, 1996, at
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis
.
.
Born May II, 1913, in GalliaCounty, son of the late Charles H. and Byf\1
Blagg Swanson, he was a field engineer with the Eckol Company. He w•
a member of the Feeney Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion, a Navy
veteran of World War ll, and attended the Heath United Methodist Churcb
in Middleport.
He is survived by his wife, Katherine Hawkins Swanson of Middleport';
two sons and daughters-in-law, Chades and Sally Swanson of Australi11,
Robert and nna Swanson of Phoenix, Ariz.; a daughter and son-in-law, Mary
and Gary Simmons of Las Vegas: a daughter, Sylvia Fox of Newark, Del.1
six grandchildren and several great-grandchildren.
'
He was preceded in cieath by a brother, Charles Swanson.
.
Private services will be held at the convenience of the family. No. visi•
tation will be observed. Memorial contributions may be made to the Heath
United Methodist Church, 349 South Third Ave., Middleport OH 45760.
Fisher Funeral Home of Middleport is handling arrangements.

L. Glendon Webb
L. Glendon Webb, 75, Coolville, died early Saturday morning, March 9;
1996, at his residence.
·
Born April6, 1920, in Jackson, son of the late Earl and Lottie Colegrov~
Webb. He retired as a furnace operator from Union Carbide after 32 yean
semce, and was a member of the Union Carbide retirees club. He was ari
Anny veteran of World War II and was a member of the Coolville Veteri
ans of Foreign Wars Post.
He is survived by his wife of S3 years, Gladys Deeter Webb; two daugbters and son~-in-law, Linda and Larry Simmons and Donna and Larry Fore,
all of Coolville; a daughter, Pam Russell of Coolville; six grandchildren a.KI
a great-grandson.
·
.
He ·was preceded in death by four brothers, Paul, Arthur, Everett and
Orville, and by an infant brother, Earl; a sister, brace Lucas, and an infant
sister, Alma.
Services will be held Tuesday, I p.m. at White-Blower Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. David Cogar and Helen Kline officiating. Burial will
be in the Weatherby Cemetery in Coolville, where military graveside services will be conducted by the Tuppers Plains VFW Post 905il. Friends may
•all today from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
·

·

CUll'S 2tl-'NI)

'
in authority to step up and demllll&lt;i
that college athletes be. paid foc their:
efforts. They are•even more valuable'
to their institutions t~an lab assistants!
1 who wash test tubes and worlt•stud-•
ies who research professors' books.:
Why should they not be·paid at Jeastl
as much is these people? ·
That's where the politicians come1
in. ·They want to increase wages fori
people, fine. They want to create ~
jobs, fine. They should go to school I.
on Teddy Ro9sevelt. Appoint a~
·national. commission to reform ~ol­
Jlege athletics, and inslriJCt itco begin
,formulating rules governing pay- ~
ment to athleies.
·
Many .ideas have been suggested
.in recent yean; Some .say i:ollege
·football an11 baSketb.all teams art'!it.
tie nlore than min&lt;ir-lca1ue clubs and
should be treated .as such, even
housed and.trailllid off-campus.~
say the student·athJe~s shll!'ld be'
awarded ; 'degrees" 1if the . s~
they play. And so on.
i
'
JO,.pll SP.r Is a *7""1:i' ~ '
write,. far N__,.,.r Eaterprbe

general. It was common pnictice at evolved intb a capricious, imperious,
the time for institutions of higher obtuse bureaucracy tha\ promulgates
learning to offer at~letes illeaal and enforces an encyclopedic collecinducements, pay ringers ("tramp tion of arcane and complicated rules.
If college ' athletes are somethnes
tempted to tiCcept gifts and favors arid
Joseph Spear
sell their free tickets on the side, it
athletes") to play, and collude with could be because they are poorer than
faculty to help their stars through most .of their friends on camplis. Yes.
they get room, board and tuition, but
their courses.
~ound familiar? Hardly a year they are forbidden by NCAA rules
goes by that some college ol; univer, from' working pah-time jobs during
sity isn't nailed-for the saine tres- ·the season, U!d even their summer
ptwes thai the NCAA was created to employment has to meet the NCAA's
prevent.lpdeed, the sitUation is much rigid·purity standards.
worse today ~au5e educational · ·Considet the irony of this situation
institutiOI!S reap the rewarcls of tele- in the context of the current tournament. All ;parties will m8ke out like
vision.
•
CBS is curlently in tl)e second bandits •• except for the people playyear of n eight•year, $1.725 billion ing the aaihes. Television will make
contract extension {or bUketball millions sel.ling pictures of their
tournament rights !!lone. liach of the exploits. Their home schools will
make,millions by allowing their pic·
I teams that'goes to the l:'.,.al Foor m
tures
to lie ti'IU)smiued to our living
l earlyApri!Wili~Mewellover$1I,Jiil·
rooms.
Evon their COIIChea will be
lionbacktocamp~~~withthem. Most
of that money will underwrite llhlet- , exploiting Qleir successes with lucraic activities, atW will !101 be used to tive shoe ' company contracts and '
1
sUIIIIIICi- cllllpS.
further pnera1 educationlllims..
'J'hC time has come for somebody AaodadOe.
The NCAA, meanwhile, bas

Betty J. Fultz

Daily Sentinel

How basketball can boost the economy

r!IW"I~"'r

• IColurnbusl50' I

num-

:Letters to the editor

fflllfll

Ella Virginia Ann Fisher, 75, of Dutchtown Road, Minersville, died Friday, March 8, 1996, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis following an
extended illness.
.
A homemaker, she was born in Syracuse on June S, 1920, daughter of
the late Orris E. and Anna florence Roush Harris. She attended the Minersville United Methodist Church and was a 1938 graduate of Pomeroy High
School, a member of the Meigs-Gallia Community Action Program, Drew
Webster Unit 39 of the American Legion Au~iliary of Pomeroy, and the
Wildwood Garden Club.
She is survived by her husband of 57 years, James Mason Fisher, Minersville; three sons and daughters-in-law, William Mason and Dorothy Fisher of Torch, Roland Ray and Vema Fisher of Columbus and Orris Gordon
and Linda Fisher of Syracuse; a daughter and son-in-law, Carla Jean and
David Danks of Marion; a df.llghter, Barbara Kay Fisher of Columbus· a
sister, Sara Elizabeth Roush of Syracuse ; two brothers, Ernest Edison H;...ris of Racine and Paul Eugene Harris of Minersville ; four grandchildren ;
two great-grandchildren; an uncle and many nieces and nephews.
Services were held Monday, I :30 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Revs. Charles Neville and Chris Robinson officiating. Burial was in Gilmore Cemetery.

lMantlfteld l47" I•
IND.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Carroll M. Swanson

MICH.

Daily Sentinel Buchanan has -brought. the GOP together
*""'"'" ,..
.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Virginia Ann Fisher '
.Ella.
Ella V'rginia Ann Fisher, 75, of Dutchtown Road. Minersville, died Friday, March 8, 1996, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis following an
extended illness.
·
A homemaker, she was born in Syracuse on June 5, 1920, daughter of
the late Orns E. and Anna Aorence Roush Harris. She attended the Minersville United Methodist Church and was a 1938 graduate ofPpmeroy High
School, a member of the Meigs-Gallia Community Action Program , Drew
Webster Unit 39 of the American Legion Au•iliary of Pomeroy, and the
Wildwood Garden Club.
She is survived by her husband of 57 years, James Mason Fisher, Minersville; three sons and daughters-in-law, William Mason and Dorothy Fisher of Torch, Roland Ray and Vema Fisher of Columbus and Orris Gordon
and Linda Fisher of Syracuse; a daughter and son-in-law, Carla Jean and
David Danks of Marion; a daughter, Barbara Kay Fisher of Columbus; ·a
sister, Sara Elizabeth Roush of Syracuse; two brothers, Ernest Edison Harris of Racine and Paul Eugene Harris of Minersville; four grandchildren;
William Mason Fisher II of Torch, Mason Gordon Fisher of Syracuse, Jeremy Lee Fisher of Syracuse and Elizabeth Ann Fisher of Torch; two greatgrandchildren, James Mason Fisher II of Torch and Michael Scott Fisher
ofTorch; an uncle, Burrell Dawson of New Haven, W.Va .. and many nieces
and nephews.
·
Services Were held Monday, I :30 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home i~
Pomeroy with the Revs. Charles Neville and Chris Robinson officiating. Bur·
. ial was in Gilmore Cemetery.

----Hospital news---Veterans Memorial
Friday admissions- Samuel Zeigler, Shade.
Friday discharges - Marie Roy,
Racine.
Saturday admissions ·- none .
Saturdjly discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - Clara
Grueser, Racine.
Sunday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Disc:haties March 8 - Patricia
Neace, Colin McDermott, Betty
Wyatt.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. William
Jeffers, daughter, Gallipolis Ferry,

ONE
LESS

THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JuGGLE

.

You've got e lot on your mind. You're building
your world end your Insurance needs are
resl. But you don't need to add this worry
to your list.

ATAT .....................................82\

Talk to your Independent agent. lnelst.on long·
term experience, community preMnee, ahd
someone who Ia with you both before and. .
after things happen. Jutt do this one ~
and lane the juggll 4 ... to UL

Peopl18 BaMorp. ·········· ~·······23

Ohio Valley BllniJ ..................m
OM ·V•IIIy ........~.................... 32~

A~ •-••oooooooouooo~ooooonoooo57~

Robbln1 I Mverl.............·.....31 ~
Royal Dutcllllltilll .............. 131~

.......
.......
.
.
®

IJhorteY'• tnc. ..........................l\

Star Bank .......~..........:-............11'
WendY lnt'1 ............................17'4

'

WOrthington Incl...................20\

-•-l•-

The Ohio Calualty Oroup

.,..

Stoelc reportl ere IM 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Adftet
ca.lllpolla.
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WHEIIE EXTIIA EFFOIIT II .OUII POliCY

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W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Matthews, son, Gallipolis ; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Penningtqn, daughter,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Chris Stanley, son, Bidwell .
Discharges March 9 - Mrs.
Thomas Matthews and son, Ruby
Briggs.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Matthew
McCaulla. son, Rio Grande.
Discharges March 10 - Mrs.
Matthew McCaulla and son; Mrs.
Wayne Pennington and da~ghter,
Mrs. William Jeffers and daughter.
Mrs. Chris Stanley and son.
(Published with permission)

\

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�.Sports

The ;Daily Sent~!J

In NCAA conference tournament action,

.

ronday, March 11, 1996

fc '

State and Iowa State record upset wins

By Tile Awoclatecl Press

since their second game, a 92-82
· As far as Kenlll&lt;:ky is'concerned, defeat to Massachusetts (31 -1), the .
it was the perfect lime for a loss.
team that moved up to No. L
"The loss will help us. It shows ·
, "As great as people make us out
to be, we couldn 'I have made a great us we're not invincible," Picino said. ·
Kentucky. the top seed in the
run . in the (NCAA) tournament
unless we lost tonight because things Midwest Regional, opens the NCAA 1
have come too easy," coach Rick toumament Thursday against San ·
Pilino said after Mississippi State Jose State (13-16). No. 19 Missisbeat the Wildcats 84-73 Sunday to sippi State (22-7) opens the same day
win the Southeas~m Conference· against Vrrginia Commonwealth (248).
tournament championship,
" You could see they. were surKentucky (28-2) was trying for its
fourth consecutive conference tour- prised to he that far down. They were
nament title. The Wildcats, who playing in a hurry, rushing and doing
dropped from first to second in the things they don't usually do," said
final poll of the season, hadn 't lost Mississippi State's Dontae Jones,

who scored 28 points and grabbed- II
rebounds. "We had nothing to lose.
We relaxed and played hard."
In other games that determined
automatic NCAA tournament berths,
No. i 7 Iowa State beat No. 4 Kansas
56-55 to win the Big Eight; No. 9
Wake Forest beat No. 13 Georgia
Tech 75-74 to win the Atlantic Coast
Conference tournament for the second straight year; and San Jose State
beat Utah State 76-75 in overtime to
win the Big West tournament
At New Orleans, Mississippi
State became the first SEC team to
beat Kentucky since winning 76-71
at Lexington, Ky .• on Feb. 14, 1995.

At Greensboro. N.C., Tim DunThe Bulldogs, who stopped Ken- . points, was fouled by Jacque Vaughn ·
tucky 's 27-game winning streak, after Raef LaFrentz had given the can scored 27 points and grabbed 22.
opened the second half with a 20-6 Jayhawks a one-point lead with 7.1 rebounds, and Jerry Braswell made·
four clutch free throws in the final ·
IUD, building their biggest lead when
seconds remaining.
Vaughn then took the inbounds minute as the Demon Deacons·
Darryl Wilson's second straight
three-pointer made it 63-44 with pass and dribbled the length of the became the ACC's first repeat tour-·
13:41 left.
floor before missing a short bank nament champion in 14 years.
Georgia Tech, which trailed by as'
"If I had a choice to come back shot. Time ran out as players fought
and win by one, I'd much rather have for the rebound.
many as 16 points in the ~econd half. :
Iowa State (23-8) opens the closed to 71-70 on Michael Mad- ·
taken a loss," Pitino said. "I think it
will benefit us more."
NCAA tournament Thursday against dux's three-oointer with 50 seconds '
California (17-10), while Kansas left.
No. 17 Iowa St. 56
(26-4 ), which lost a No. I seeding
Braswell' made his first two free '
No. 4 Kansu 55
At Kansas City, Mo., Dedric 'with the loss, starts Friday against throws with 42 seconds to go. fol- ·
Willoughby made two free throws South Carolina State (22-7). •
lowing a driving basket by Stephon'
with S.S seconds left.
Marbury, Braswell made two more·
No. 9 Wake Forest 75
Willoughby, who finished with 20
No. 13 Georala Tech 74
with 32 seconds remaining.

By DOUG TUCKER
"The young men were so happy.
· ~SAS CITY, Mo. (AP) That's what weighs most heavily on
Even in a year almost free of contro- all the 'committee," Frederick said.
versy, the, NCAA tournam.ent selcc- "We realize that for every (George
tion committee couldn't really enjoy Washington), there's another team out
its job. ·
· there that's really disappointed. That's
The 64-te&amp;r~~ field was announced the most mentally taxing part of it,
Sunday, and not long after chairman ; and the most emotionally diffioult.
Bob Frederick expressed the feelings
"It's hard for me to even talk
experienced by him and the other about it"
eight men who·decided who would be
At a time when there are usually
in and where they would be seeded. national outcries over the exclusion of
"The seeding was really hard. But one team or another, the complaints
the hardest part .for us personally is seemed at an all-time iow.
the selection (of at-large teams)," said
UCLA coach Jim Harrick was
Frederick, the athletic director at· mad about getting shipped out of the
Kansas.
West Regional. But even Fresno State
An aggrieved look came over his coach Jerry Tarkanian accepted the
face when he told of watching on live fate of his 20-10 team.
television the jubilation of George
"I think our kids deserved it, but
Washington's team at n.ews of being I could make a great case for some
selected.
other teams that dido 't make i~ " said

Puoduc ..... ... .ll
hnn St........ 12

lndilllll ........ ll
lowa ......... .. ll
Michiau ..•.. IO
Minne101a ~ .. IO

Michipn 51...9

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlln~e

:r..
O.loodo ... ...

L l&lt;l.

~

I

Wiscon1in .....8

Dlvlslon

.... .;. 41

GD

ll

.1l8

26

.S74

II ~

32

1l

484
.452
417

17
19
21

Boston ...... :/ ...... ..... 23 39

J71

24

Pflilodelphi'0 ..1........ 12 48

.200

14

New Yorlr. ....... .. .;...35
MiQITii ........ J........ JO
Wublna•on .J.. .., ..... 28
Newkney , .. F.... 2l
I

J4

lllioois ...... .. 7
OHIO ST. .....3
Northwestem.2

' Centnl Dtvision
.............. 54 7 885
lndiumd .... ..... ...... J9 23 .629
Arlo.nla L ............. J4 27 SS1
CLEVELAND .. . .34 21 ll1
Detruir,................... n 21 .sfiO
Charll\lc .... .......... .. 29 ~I 483
Milwf!w ............. 21 :l9 .350
Tor091o·(·· ··· ·······: .... l6 44 .267

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Micah Olto, Erlci HI!~ Mlcheei Bernett end Eric Dll- :
·
lard.

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Indiana 57. Michigan St.

Eastern boys' basketball players ho·nored ·at banquet
won 67 percent of his games in an Olad Nelson, Joey Taylor lind Jason
Coach Chris Stout made presenBy SCOTT WOLFE
tations to members of his junior var: Athletes, coaches, family and 11-year varsity coaching career at Warner.
friends of the Eastern junior high. Southern, told the Eastern athletes to
Eighth-grade team members hon- sity squad, with cel'tificates awarded
junior varsity and varsity boys' bas- "appreciate .everything they have ored were Matt · Caldwell, Travis to Travis Lodwick, Lamar Lyons,
. ketbal I and cheerleading programs each and every day and to reach high ·Friend, Matt Bissell, Jonathan Hag- Corey Yonker, Ricki Hollon, Robert
were honored at their annual aw,ards for their goals and stay dedicated and gerty, Eric Smith, Steve Weeks, Josh Harris, Jeremy Kehl, Nick Spurlock,
Joey'Weeks and Steve Dutil.
banquet Sunday afternoon at Royal focused in their efforts to obtain Will.
.
Stout thanked the athletic departthem."
dak Resort near Five Points.
Varsity Cheerleading advisor
: Master of ceremonies Tom .. . Caldwell concluded by challeng- Monica Chadwell honored her squad ment, the athletic boosters, players
i'lunter of The Daily Sentinel gave ing the Eastern underclassmen to for their tremendous effort and for and parents for all the support and ·
the opening welcome. Eastern • :nior continue building on the groundwork their commitment to the team hard work throughout the season. "If
cheerleader Melissa Dempsey~eliv ­ that the graduating seniors have laid throughout the season.
it wou)dn't have been for any of you, ·
before
them.
eted the invocation. which wa. folCertificates and special awards we would not be here," said Stout.
Hunter then introduced junior presented were: Vicki Adams (Most
lowed by a potluck style dinnt ·.
Hunter then mad• presentations
Following the meal, Hunter intro- high cheerleading advisor Lisa Improved); Chris~i Mills (Most Spir- honoring the senior players and their
duced guest speaker and veteran Sheets, who commended her squad ited); Kelli Bailey (Most Creative); parents. Each alhlete and their parSouthern varsity coach Howie Cald- for a line effort throughout the sea- and captain Melissa Dempsey (Out- ents were given a floral planter on
well. In J.i• ;~o·e~uctjon, Hunter son. Squad membershonored were standing Cheerleader).
behalf of the Eastern Athletic Boostreferred ·to Caldwell',s 21 years of Carrie Sheets, Melissa Barringer,
Adams, Bailey, Dempsey and ers and Francis Florist.
Honored were Mary Dempsey,
cOaching in the Tornadoes program Amanda Upton and Nickeya Bartoe. Mills were honored for making the
Seventh-grade mentor Tim Bis- all-Tri-Valley Conference all-acade- · mother of cheerleader Melissa
and his personal hardwood experiences as an Eastern player against sell and eighth-grade mentor Brian mic team, with grade point averages Dempsey; Ron and Joyce Hill, parents of Micah Otto and Eric Hill;
Caldwell's Souihern teams. "Our · Weaver took the podium next to above 3.5.
teams' ~oughest and most aggravat- award each of their squads for their
Freshman boys' coach Joe Bailey Steve and Sandy Bowen. parents of
ing matchups were against Coach fine season efforts. Both coaches honored his squad, with presenta- Brian Bowen; arid Roger Barnett and
Caldwell, but there was no other thanked the players and parents for tions of gifts made by Mrs. Pam Janet Hoffman, parents of Michael
coach we respected more after the their hard work and - dedication ·Hager and certificates to Jeremy Barnett.
Hunter also spoke about the athbattles. both on and off the floor, as throughout the season and urge~ Casto, Jeremy Coleman, Joe Dillon,
much as Coach Caldwell."
their players to. continue working Jason Mora, Josh Hager, Willy letic booster group and their work in
Caldwell, a 1971 Eastern gradu- throughout the summer in open Burke, Beau Bailey and Shane making the athletic programs at
Eastern possible. "Without the boostate, spoke of the values and lessons gyms and at camps for next season. Church.
he learned while growing up at · Seventh-grade team members
Bailey praised his players for ers and their work, there would be no
Eastern and how much of an impact honor;~ were Dustin Kebler, Ben their hard work and for their com- ·uniforms, no basketballs, no equipthose ~igh school days made on his Wolfe, Matt Grubb, Joe Brown, mitment to the program thr'oughout ment, no games. I urge every parent
to get involved in the success of the
life and career. Caldwell, who has Brad Willford, Wes Crow, Josh Kehl , this past season and beyond.
'

Earnhardt wins Purolator 500

·Eimhardt still had to drive 37
more laps in the Purolator 500, but
ti\at.was a moot point. No one was
aoin. to catch the seven-time Winaton Cup cliampion after his final trip
down pit .road.
: :.owe had' a great pit stop there at
the erid," Earnhardt said, savoring
hiS.;rec:ord-setting victory Sunday
o~er ·Terry Labonte. "I knew when
[ c~ down the front straightaway
uld 1\:ny was just rolling off pit road
~~~~ we had a great stop. All I had to
.:lo
run the car hard."·
'
., ~was· leading by ·aboutone .
~ when Earnhardt made his ·:
:ftilalpn-Oag stop at the end oflap ·
.~ ..l9J 1 It tool( only 19.72 secondsfor :
l•, _.~r~s crew tQ, flwiBO fou~ ·
.f ·drei·.~ .poUr two ClliS of gas into
.,. d.ti qi8vrolot M~ ~o.
. ;
. ·,, ~. ~ driving a ,Chevy,.I
, ' ciiiiW in die nOlll ~JIIC UQUnd and ,
'.~ ·tciOk~l .II i6cotldl for his. stop, ·a ·
. ' , 1111 b'i!hle time but not nearly u

seconds.
l,abonte's runner-up finish was
his best at the Atlanta track.
"We had. some lugnuts Jam up on
that last ptt stop and lost ~orne
ground. It was a tough deal," said
Labonte, ~h.o got to start from the
No. I posttton after top qualifier
Johnny Benson wrecked his car in
practice Saturday.
,
:'Earnhardt's car and our car
were pretty equal." Labonte added.

·RYL sign-up
setlsions Tuesday
and Thursday

"After that last pit stop, Dale was
really hooked up and I don't think
our car was qui1e as good as it had
been· on the previous set of tires."
Earnhardt set a race record of
161.298 mph in the same car he used
last November in Atlanta

Cage standings
1995-96: All games
Team
W L TP OP
X'Wheelersburg ... 22 1t600.1248
Chesapeake ........ 20 21513 1214
Marietta ... :........... 15 612451192
x-Fairland ............ 16 7 1532 1369
Logan .................. 15 71301 1171
Jackson ............... 14 714131319
Greenfield ...... :..... 14 7t387 1313
Meiga ................... 12 91373 1345
South Point. ....... :.13 10 t492 1375
Warren Local.. ..... 12 1013151197
Point PleasanL .. 1o 13 1344 1448
$ou!hem ....... :........9 ·131402 1482
Rlver.Yalley ...........9 131258 1'321
Alheila ............... :...&amp; 141240 1272
~~ ..:.:...........5 161~ 1248
PonamotJth ............ 4 1511114 1381
Vinton' ~111!1)' ........ 2 19 1397 15119
dtllllil ·tOiirney
· Division 2 Dletrlct Flnela
At OU, Athena
·
~night's resUlt•
ltonton 114 South Point 48
Fiairland 87 HlllabOro 64
Two wlnMra advance 10 the OU
regiorlll! in Alhtiha. ·

I

:n ~

Arizona 71, California 68
Ore1on 62, Ore.on St 46
St1111f&lt;Jfd 67, Arizoaa St 53
UCLA 82. Wuhiiaton St. 71
Wubin&amp;ton 71, Southern CQJ 68

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.717

Gil

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J4ol

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17~
22~
24~
31~

.100
.6ll
.311
.186

I

finales Sunday by Kansas and Kentucky, which got ambushed by Mississippi State, threw the commitiee
into an unexpected quandary.
"We had a smooth process going.
We were thinking we were in pretty
.good shape," Frederick said. "Then
suddenly, we were re-thinking a lot of
things in tenns of the bracket."
Kansas had already heen penciled
in as a No. I seed. But Frederick,
since he's athletic director at Kansas,
had to leave the room while the oth·
er committee members pondered
changes in the bracket.
Frederick waited more than 45
minutes before being summoned back
to the conference area. The last No.
I seed came down to Purdue, Kansas
and Cincinnati, and the Boilennakers
got the nod because their record
agai nst.the other tournament teams

'

: was better than the others'.
J Mississippi State still ended up ~
the fifih seed in the Southeast -even
though Kentucky had a 27-game
winning streak and was ranked No. I
in The Associated Press poll.
" We tried to adjust Mississippi
State," Frederick said. " But to be
quite frank, the lateness of the hour .:..
made it very difficult on us. We
couldn't make an adjustment with01lt
:unraveling the bracket and starting
1
over.
" We've asked people to play
sooner (in the selection process). It
would have helped in this case."
Kansas wound up the No. 2 seed
J in the West.
" I said before th'\!J didn 't have a
i great deal of conceri'ii'a!Jout tlie No. I
1or No. 2 seed," Jay hawks coach Roy
' Williams said .
·
·

'

14
21
31
14
)4

JJ

)9

.770
644
492
.452
.4l2
.441
.361

8
17

... - ,....,plonohlp

Conntc:ticul 75, Gecqetown 74

19~

19h
20

llliHI&amp;Id-b

Iowa St 37, "inouri 53
K&amp;UUu61, KINaS St. 5~

H

BI&amp;Skyehl-lp

Montana St. 81, Weller St. 70
Bl&amp; Wal temlnn.tl
San Jo~e ~t. 71, UC lr\'iM 67
Ulllh So. 116, Lon&amp; Beooo:h So. 73

Cor6nnct USA dla•piroluhip
Cincinnali 8!1, Morquene 84 con
lvyl..equ cham~
Princeton til Penn S6 (OT} · ·

VJUH:ouver 89

Utah 104, Minnesota 96

Toliight'sgames

NA lA DIY, II fiUirte'rn..a. .
Albertso•l7, WitcOIIsin Utrberan 79
Walab B:Z, lloaac 76
Whitwmh 88, Nw t-'IWftne 70
Willi.:tm Jewell~. Tabor 71

Tuesday's CIUIIes

NCAA Di•. llluo R.....
Cl!ol-lp
California. Po_18, Indiana, Po. 68

Phoeni:11111 New Jersey. 7:10p.m.
TOfonto AI Phill\dclpbio, 7:30p.m.
Utah at Adonia, 7::\0.p.m.
Miami ot.,D:IIIa.. 8:30p.m.
OrlaOOo Ill Denver. 8 p.m.
Poll land 41 L.A. Uken, I0;)1) p.m
SQII Anronio Ill Oolck:n Stale, 10:30

StROH~~

ward46

WaJah Jetuit5S , Akron BIICI'IIel !2
2mles¥ille 62, Olillicothe 3~

Dblolon II
c....brids" 61, Jolon GleM 52
Clc. VA-SJ 69, Ole. Benedictine 62

· TQUtllaDitnts
Mld..C r' _. c..wftrettCf

Younpt::':S:~~;~Io4)

IO'D

.·

Fairi.WI67, Hllllboro 64

t-on64.S.r.,;n•48

AU games
at SL John Arena, Columbus

Divblon IV
CLU"d.ington 65, Heath ~2
~
Fnirfaeld 88, Beaver E:ulern 64
Norwalk Sr. Paul :'i8. Crestline :'i I
.

Ohio U.S. girls' scores
Regiooal noals
Diwidon I
Beavercreek 42, Day. Chominade·
Julienne 37

Divblon Ill
Akron Hoban 37, Brookfield 3~
On. WyominJ 43, Utica 34

·

Division I
Tbnday: Col. Brookhovcn (26-0)
vs. Bta¥t:rcrerk {2~-1). 2 tJ.m.; R01.·'l
River Magnificat (22-4 ) vs. Wooster (2

1),4p.m.

Champioosttip: Saturday. II a .m.
Division II
Fricbly: G:;arfield Hts. Trinity (23 &lt;~)
VI . Bellefontaine {24-2). 7 p.m.; Lima
Bath (26-0) vs. Zanesville Maysville (19.
6), 9 p.m.

.
Ch:nnpion11hip: Sa1urdny, 9 p.m.

.' Dh-lsion Ill
FridaJ: Upprr Sandusky (26-0) vs.
Suaarctedc Gara~ay ,.,!1- 1). 2 p.m.

Breast cancer has killed millions
of American women. Probably
someone you know. Regular mammography at our fully accredited
mammography facility is one of
the best things you can do to protect your health.
A mammogram, though,
depends great Iy on the professionals who perfonn it and those who
interpret it. That's why we offer
you only certified technologists and
board certified radiologists on our
mammography staff at O'Bieness

Hospital. Talk to your doctor about
a referral to O'Bieness.
Even if you show no signs of
breast cancer, The American Cancer
Society recommends a screening
mammogram every one or two
years after age 40 and every year
after age 50. ·
Now is the time to take charge
of your health. Do something wonderful for yourself and your family.
Schedule a mammogram at the
mammography facility at O'Bleness
Hospital.* ·

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N. Kentucky 99, S. lndwnb 87

NCAA Dl•. II North Cmtnt R.....

.......

APToplS
college poll

NCAA Dl•. II Northcutllqlon
SKOndreund

....

W:I.:I Ell.~

I.M:wachuseus{.S~) .. 31·1

St. Anselm 78, Fnnklin Pier« 10
St. R01e 83, New Hampshire Coli. 82

NCM Dl•. II Soul. Cmtnl R'llon
Ooaonplonohip
Not1h Alabama.92, Missouri-Rolla. 80
NCM Di•. IISeol. Repon
.

Champlondlip
Alabama AAM 98, Cohunbus 82

1,!\87
2. Kentucky (2} ............ 28-2 I.SIJ
.l . Con~tic:ul (I) ........ J0-2 1,499
4. GaorJCIOWfl. ............ 26-1 1.2.19

2
I
3
6

NCAA II w.. R,.lon
Cllo-lp
cs Baltenlleld '1. Seonle Paciroc 6l

4. Kansas .................. 26-4 1,2.tj9
4. f\lrdue .............. ... ..... l.'i·!l 1,2.W

~

4

NCAA IN•• Jh Alloonlle R'llon
Cltantpla_.., .
Rowan 98, Slockron Sr. 70

7. CINC INN ATI .......... 2l_. 1.248
I . Tma T«h (1) ......... 21·&gt; 1,2.11
9. ww FoteoL ........... l.l-3 I.IIB
, 10. Vill:aaova .......... .. .. ·.l.'i-6 99!1
II . AritonA ..................24-6 857
12. Umh .........!.. ..... .... 2l-6 191
' 11. ~ioTceL .... 22-ll 69J
14 UCLA ....................2.1-7 61111
1~ . Syracu~ ....·..... ........ 24-l
67~
16. Memphia -. ............. .22-7 l27
17. low:~ S1 ......... .. ........ 2~'-8 ''6
IB. I'I:M S\.. .................21-6 4'17
19. Miuiuippi S1 . ... 22-7 496
20. Marquel1e ............... 22-7 492
21. lowa ....................... 22-8 44~
22. Virjinia Tech ......... ll-5 324
23. New Muico .......... 274 211
24. Louisville ............. 20-ll
U7
l.'i. NwthCavolina. ..... 20-IO l!'il

driver Steve Bigley, the Pure Stock
1 Champion at Ohio Valley Speedway
in 1995. He was voted "Driver of the
Y•" and "Most Popular Driver" in
his division at the first annual DTRR
Banquet last January.
Bigley, a 28-year old with a great
· future in racing, is employed at the
·AMES Company in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
This driver anticipates being a top
finisher at some of the area tracks
·such as West Virginia Motbr Speedway, Hilltop, Skyline, KC Rilceway
.I and Midway.

NCA~ Dl•loio, II

Cin. LaSalle 97, Fairbota 62
Cin. Onk Hills 61',,Day. Dunbar !12
Cle. Glenville 63, Cle. CollinWood 4~
Cle. Heighls 74, Shaker Hta. S9
LakewOod St . Edward 74,
Stron1sville 54
Sprin1. South 68, Cin. Withrow 61
Tol. St.John's S4, Tol. Roaer• S:l
Trotwood-Madison 64. Cin. ·Wood -

Girls' state pairings

S. DaluMa St 94. N. Dokola So. 83

ou• r.mking:

I;
.

SI!C ......~Ip
Miuiuippi Sf. 1". ktll1ucky 73

60

NCAA Dlv. II Gmt Llkn RfaMn

Fort Hl)'l St. '11, Regis 69

The t~ 25 1eoms in The Associaled

l

.

p.m.

Press' mens coUeF basketbnll .poll. wilb
fint ·pluct! votes in parentheses, records
throu1b Marcil 10. tolal points based on
H poinn for o fint ·place vole throuah
one poinl for a 2!11h-plnec vote. and prtvi·

•
•'
;

66

Divi.... IIJ
At.ron Mnncbesler 63, Norw:~yne 60
Archbold 72, Patrick Henry 59
Chn~Jrl 64. O.Uari• Fnlb 47
Ge~ 52, Woodmere 44
l..clli"'IOO 70, Bellevue 68
Marion Pleasanr64, Marion Elgin~-~
Moun1 Gilead 69, Madl50n Plains :'i:'i

MACc.... ploaohlp

L.A. Oippen ar Detroil, 7:JO p.m.
Vancouver at Sacramrnto, I 0:30p.m.

:r-

O.,.u.,

DivW.IV
Danville 61, Sockeye Crmrnl ~
OuoviUe 49, Minsaer J2
S. Charkston SE 66. Fayetteville 61
Zanesville Ros.ter&lt;~ns 63. E. Canton

E. Micloiaan 17. Toledo 61

San A.n1onio 106, Seanle 10~
New Jeney 99, Oenm 88
Socramento 96. Golden SIQie 95

I

ECAcc•••.......lp
So. Mlehael'o 96.
81

Do Something
· Wonderful
For Yourself And
Your Family.
Schedule A
Mammogram.

ACC temlftnala
Georgia Tee~ 84, M1UJionol19
WW f01ea1 68, Clemlon 60

New 'Vort. 1041 ctliroao 72
Toronto 128. OaJias 112

I

Dlwlsion I
Bowlins Green 60, Elidn 58 (OT)
Canton GlenOak 65, Stow 52
Canton Me: Kinley 78. Canton Timken

Garaway 78, Paint Valley 57
Upper Sandusky 4!1 , Clklw:ucr 40

Tournunents

Orlando 122, Ploeni11 lOti
Mit~mi 18, CLEVELAND 81
.L.A. Clippers 104. _PhiladciDhio 102
Boston 110, Milwaukee 10~
Poll land II 1, lndiona 108(2 OT)
WuhinJion 99, Alllllfl 91 ·

I
I

Tournaments

llltWttldl~lp
San looe St 76. Uloti St 75 (01)

l..exinaron 70. Belbue 68
Olnu:1ed Falls J6, Rocky River H
Omille 79, CantonS . 43
Onawa·Glandorf76. Lima Bath ~7
Poland 46, Cortland-Lakeview 36
Wam:nsvi lle H1s. 71 . Copley 60

Allanllc ID elll...........lp
Manacbuscns 15. Temple 61

Sunday••...,.,•

Hout.~OD 9S,

Ohio U.S. boys' scores

HI&amp; l!iallt•'to.dhiP
towo St 36, ~.- ~3

Ohio wonteD's
college scOres

Saturday's

Satur'day's smns

1

~J

recular-season action

Detroit 92, Dallu 91
Denver 102. Oolden Stole 88

Throw Percentage (71 .4% ); Bowen,
Most Assists; and Micah Otto, Most
Rebounds.
Junior Chris Bailey was presented the "Bryce Buckley Award" for
his dedication and hard work in battling back from a serious knee Injury.
Bailey, who injured the knee midway
through the Eagles' football season,
worked aggressively in rehabilitation
throughout this basketball season to
maintain a roster spot on the varsity
·squad.
Junior guard Eric Dillard was recognized for.ftis selection to the aiiTVC academic team. Dillard has
maintained a3.5 grade point ave.rage
throughout the year.
Team awards went to Hill,
Bowen, Barnett, Bailey, Micah Otto,
Daniel Otto, Josh Casto, Steve Durst,
Jeremy Kehl, Ricki Hollon lind
Corey Yonker. Statisticians honored
were seniors Renee Gray, Debra Dillon and Jessica Karr and junior Patsy Aei ker. Managers honored were
Steve Weeks ana Chris Lyons.
Hill was honored for being named
to the coaches' aii-District ·13 team,
all-Southeast District Associated
Press second team and first team allTVC. Otto was honored for earning
honorable mention ali-'IVC, Coaches all-District 13 team and Special
Mention Associated Press all-Southleast District.

WSAZ-TV gets involved in auto racing
.

WSAZ Television (Channel 3) man Staats said, "We would iike to
and the newspaper Dirt Track Rac- take this opportunity to thank WSAZ
ing Roandap has joined forces for TV 3 for their involvement and all of
increased coverage of the 1996 rac- · the hard work they will be doing in
ing season. This is one more big step bringing coverage to all the fans of
for local dirt track racing and Dirr dirt track racing."
Truck Racing Roundup.
Free lahce writer Scott Wolfe will
The Dirt Track Racing Roundup be writing for the publication, doing
will be av.ailable at WSAZ Televi- · feature articles. writing columns and
sion 3 offices upon publication, serving as KC Raceway public rela. which is slated for March I 5. Many tions director.
WSAZ plaris to carry a local racother.area locations in Meigs County will also have the newspaper, ing segment .on its Sunday newscast
which is free to the public and paid · dedicated solely to auto racing.
WSAZ is sponsoring Coolville
for by local advertisers.
·
Newspaper general manager Her-

Others receivlnt

8
7
12
9
II
10
18
11
13
14

23
16
~

21
19
IS
22

20

"*': Wii .+Oiftft

R1ty 2~.:\, Stanford 19-ll. E. Micbiaan 24GeorJe Washington 21·7. Oeor&amp;ia 19·
9. IJdi;)na 19· 11. Michiaa:n 20·11.
Bradley 22-i. Temple 19-12. Duke 18-12, •
Coli. of Charlelton 24·3, Te-.as 20-9,
Dre.el 26·3, 8o11on Colh~ae 18- 10,
Clemaoa 18-10, Fre1no Sr. 20-10, Min·neJOioll 18·12, Monllni' St. 21-8. Tulane
18·9. Tulsa 22-7 .
~.

Big Ten final standings

'

NCAA DIY, Ill Gmt Loobo Rec1on

cto...........,.P

Ma.._,·

Hope 69, Willeober&amp; 60

NCAA Dl•.lll

.

••
•

A I - Rqlon

M

Ftontlin &amp; M.,halll~. Wilkes 10

NCAA DI•. IIIS.Uih Repon
Ooanoplonolllp
Illinois Wellcyan 7.J . WushinJIOn,
Mo. 61
I'ICCA lui Dillrkt

a........,....p

Malone &amp;8, Nyack 86

SEC tcmlflnals
kentucky 9~. Artaaw 75
MinissiPri Sl. 86. Gcoraia 68
htiUAnd Coafertnn clll.........lp
NE l.ouisiDAa 71, Norf_,b Te•as 60

SWC , ....plonahlp
Te:lllll Tech 7~ . Te~~:u 7J

'

.

.

'

Soutlnnllem Alllldlt Conferenre

Chalftplonahlp '
Mila. Valle)' St Ill, Jac:Uon St. 94

WAC cM-.pionshlp

New Mc!Oi&lt;o 64, lhah 60

.'

•1 AJI COMirTIII TO PIOrfDffiG Till

The Racine YouiJI Association
has begun plans for many improvements at its flicilities at Star Mill
Park; including the possibility of
adding lights f9r night games. 1
1'he organization· is looking for
additional pai'en!S and \iolunteers to .
act liS coaches, maintain the facilities
and run the co~~ossions stands. .
~ip-up sessions for .the Racine
YoUth lMgue for aU rUms will continu~ Thesday ·t'ro!il ,6-8 P·",'· and
Thu~·y ~ 6-8 p.m. The Sl~n-!IP
ses~tons w1!l ~ held at the Kmd_er- ·
garten · aulld~ng, ~~~ted bes1~e'
, J, • . . . . . a," ·~.
1
\(' ' (·~!~Jenduntor H1gh S~hool in
· OIVI-'on!! ~·
·f ·i. ,':.· '-' . . . ..a both ¢an were back Raeme. . , ' . '.
.
.
., . ' AI 'OU, Alllltll
: · . · 0. IIi&amp;~~ ~ to 111eing spel'd, • .. A $U rea•stranon fee 1s reqli~
. Wedn•~ll'lt ·
lll•p wei liheld.'He.Wotind ~~~~cet;l!licate is needed· far Fllirlliltd "'· B1lilre,
IIOI'iktn w. Cernbrldge, ' p.m• .
hw,•P'•·~IIf:U ~ .~ ····~9 ~..._

wu

boosters, because with more bodies
the job will he easier and the results
will be better for everyone," said
Hunter.
Hunter then introduced varsity
head coach 1'6tl'y Deem, who centered his talk around the past season,
his seniors and the future. Deem
looked back upon the performance
.of the program this season, particularly the play of four seniors that he
said "he's really going to miss having in the program."
Deem praised his team members
for their work and accomplishments
over the past three years. He noted
that the work must continue throughout the summer, for the team to continue their improvements they've
seen each season. The teams have
_increased their winning totals and
Deem stated that he is happy that
more and more Eastern boys are getting interested in the program.
Deem challenged hi• underclassmen to continue their commitment to
the program, by practicing whenever they can attending a summer
camp.
Deem then made ·award presentations to his four seniors: Eric Hill,
Micah Otto, Brian Bowen and
Michael Barnett. Special award presentations went to: Barnett, Best
Defensive Player; Hill, B~st Free

Mouht Unio11166, Drfiance 61

North C&lt;fllnl II.......

NCAA men's scores

24~
:u ~

NCAA DMMn Ill
AtiMitk Sft'tionll ch•Jhplonship

ACe-~
Wake Fon:sr 75. ~lfeeh 74

F~ Hays Sl. 99.SouthOakottSt. 90

20
20
20'.1:.

PlldRc Obislon

)Seuttle .................... -47
L.A . l..nken ........... .38
Phoeni1. .................. 30
Golden State .......... 21
' PonlaooL. .............. 28
. SOIClDin&lt;roo ............ 26
LA Clippen .... ..... 22
'll·clinchcd playoff apot

.

S~way.

~~

l)allos .... ..... : ......... ZI 40
MinllCIOia ............. 19 42
Vnncou"er ............. ll 48

\

senior players -re honored during Sunday's
•nnuel Eastern boys' basketball banquet by

By PAUL NEWBERRY
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) - Dale '
Ear,nhardt was taking a sip of water \
w!Kin he felt the right side of his car ·
plop io the ground. A few seconds
liiler, the Intimidator had clinched
an11ther victory . at Atlanta Motor

~

~nver ......., ...... ...26

AWARD WINNERS - Receiving special
ewerda at Sunday's. Eastern boya' basketball
banquet were (L-R) Chris Bailey, Brian BQWen,

.

Sunc!ay•s toul'llooments

FarWa&amp;

L
Ulab L ........... c...... 43 11
Saft J\nlonio ........... 42 18
Hoo•on .......... .. .....41 22

I

2l l .HJJ
21 6 .ns
6 .667 19 II .631
7 611 22 I .7J3
8 .ll6 20 II .64l
R .ll6 II 12 .600
9 .lOO ll IS .lOO
10 .444 16 14 .m
II .3&amp;9 18 q .600
ll .167 10 17 .m
16 Ill 7 20 .2:19

Sunday's seon

Mkl~al Dfvlslan

·• .

.s.n

6 .667

MinncJOta 67, lllinois66
Michiaaa 6~. Wi100nsin 51
Penn Stale 86, OHIO STATE 1Q
Iowa .56, Purdue ~2

\¥,ESTERN COfo!FERENCE
IU

1

Saturday's..,....,.

'

~~:-Chicago

coach Tony Deem. Receiving rllcognlllon. -re
(L-R) Brien Bowen, Micah Otto, Eric Hill, and
Michael Barnett

them back to reality, unless a truly
monumental upset should be
onlained, are the teams obviously rated the best of the four No. I seeds.
Massachusetts (31- I), the Atlantic
I 0 champion, will take on Central
Florida in the first roundflof the East
Regional in Providence. R.I., on
Thursday. Southeastern Conference
champion Kentucky (28-2), theN!). I
seed in the Midwest, awaits S'lll Jose
State in the first round in Dallas on
Thursday.
The other two No. I seeds are Big
East champion Connecticut (30-2)
and Big Ten champion Purdue (25-5),
which lost its regular-season finale
but got a top-seed reprieve when
Kansas was beaten by Iowa State on
Sunday in the final of the Big Eight
tournament.
Losses in conference tournament

Scoreboard
NBA standings

.: SENIORS HONORED -These four departing

the fanner lJNLV ~h. whose suit
against the NCM is set 10 begin in
state court in J.,aS Vetas in May.
"Anytime a COJnniittee has to
choose between so many teams,
they're going to lea~ some out that
feel they ought to be in," Tarkanian
said.
There seems no glaring omissions, although the power confer·
ences hogged 56 pe!Xlent of the bids,
led by the Atlantic Coast Conference's six. And dtere seems no unde·
serving bid-winners, even though the
committee was required to take two
sub-.500 teams for the first time in 41
years.
Central Florida {IJ.J8) and San
Jose State (13-16) slipped in through
the back door via conference tourna·
ment upsets and were seeded 1\lo. 64
and 63, respectively, .\11 set to whack

I

Basketball

t

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Jnthe NCAA men's toumsment selection,
.
:PCLA bumped from West ·Regional; ACC gets six in tourney

Monday, March 11,.1998

~i. ssissippi

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

MOST IIIICIIIIT, COUITIOUS ANII
TIMILY SIIJICI ,OSSIILI."

I~

'

'

'•
'
'I

'
•'

I

PLEASE VOTE TO· HELP RE-ELECT

''

~

I

.I

Elect
'EDWARDW.

DURST
Meigs County Treas~er

'

e; 6p.m. ..

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
55 Hrn;pital Drive, Athens, OH 4S701
614-S93-5551
ofllllY ~ by tile AmericM Colle&amp;e of Rodiok&gt;IY and
tfiO Food lind Dnll Adminlstnlion.

A hospital we can all
be proud of.

Pild for Ill' cendldale Edwwd W. Dint 31340 Noble Surtlmt Rd. Mlddlpott

'

L--------------------------~--------------_j
,.

;;.

•...

..

,.

_,.

�•
Pac:~e 6

. __Monday, M•rch 11, 1891

Pon)eroy • Middleport, Ohio

• The Dally Sentinel

r. Monday~·
iJ.!'i

.!he Deily Sentinel• P~~ge 7

March 11, 1996

l

·\

Warm up
America
RSVP along· with the Yarn
Council of America is sponsoring
the Warm Up America Program in
Meigs County. The program invites
you to cllntribute knilled or
crocheted squares to create warm
afghans to be distributed to needy
families and homeless people. We
are asking you to knit or crochet
nine inch squares to be put together
into afghans. We have ftee knitiing
an~ - crochet patterns for those who
would like to participate. There are
several volunteers at the Center
who have staned to make squares.
If you have questions about this
project please call us at 992-2161
and as k for Alice Wolfe or Diana
·Coates. 1f you are unable to
participate but have some left over
yarn from projects we would
appreciate having it. Drop it off al
the Center or call us and we will
arrange to have it picked up. We
hope to have several afghans to
send to the CounciL Thanks for any
.help you can give us.

MARCH MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

WEDNESDAY

'l'UESDA't

MONDAY
12

11

BBQ Ch~cken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli
Bread
Pineapple Chunks

Oven Baked Fish
Ovea Roast Potatoes
Carrots
Bread
Tropical Fruit Mix

Weiner
Sauerkraut
Mashed Potatoes
Bread
.·Fruit Cocktail
Tur~ey

.

Sloppy Joe on Bun
Skin on Potato
Wedges
Baked Beans
Honey Bee Ambrosia

Beef Stew
Liver and Onions
Cole Slaw
Mashed Potatoes
Biscuit
~eas &amp; Carrots
Peaches
Bread
Creamy Fruit Salad

15

14

Pinto Beans and Ham
Cole Slaw
Cornbread
Apple Slices/Raisin
Cookie

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy
Buttered Peas
Bread
Peach Slices
Spaghetti with
Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Garlic Bread
M_a ridarin Oranges
in Gelatin

Vegetable Beef Soup
Pime·n to Cheese
Sandwi,ch
Crackers
Pea.cht Creamy
Pudping

Scores POint
•;_ • Spreads and much
more.
1 11. .
1·900-776-o1oo
1
Ext. 7830 $2.99 per
min. Must be 18 yrs
~ nj Touch-Tone Phone.
Req;

I'
i

r..____
II

I

Salisbury Steak
' Potatoes
Scalloped
Lima Beans
Bread
Pears in 'Lime
Gelatin

Donna Grate, an RSVP ~olunteer, helps at the Bloodmobile.
Free cholesterol kits for home use were given to the donors
during the last ~lslt made at the Senior Center.

Support .group meets
The AD/RD Support Group will Illness". "The Magic of Humor"
meet the 3rd Wednesday from I:00 will be the other topic of
p.m. until 3:00 p.m. at the Meig~ discussion.
Why not take a break and take
Multipurpose Senior Center. The
support group welcomes caregivers the opportunity to share and learn.
and persons who wish · to learn Join us at the Support Group.
mor&amp; about Alzheimer 's Diseaso or ·Meetings are very informal so
come for all of the discussion or
caregiving.
Ul)cuming meeting dates are come and go as your schedule
Mar~h 20 and April17. Dr. Richard
allows. Refreshments will be
Boore is scheduled to speak at one served. If you have questions or
of fhe meetings; Dr. Boone's would like more ·information,
spel1king date had no! been please contact Lenora Leifheit,
, confirmed as of this printing. His · R.N., at 992-2161.
topi!; will be "Stress and Chronic

Will seminar to be held
HAVE YOU BEEN THINKING . The seminar will be informal
with an open question a~d · answer
ABOUT MAKING A WILL AND
session.
Sue will have will packets
HAVEN'T GOTTEN AROUND
prepared
by Legal Services and
TO IT? Here is _your l)pportunity
will
assist
you in making your will
and it's free of charge.
S1 1e Feldmeyer, Auorney, wiII at that time. You will leave with
.
conduct a will seminar at the Meigs your will prepared.
If you have questions, call Darla
Multipurpos~ Senior Center on
Thursday, March 21 from 10:00 Hawley at 992-2161.
a.m. until12 noon.

.Tax assistance available
make an appointment, c~ll Daria
. Ha~ley at 992-2161.

...

HOME"Serving
MEDICAL
EQUIPMENT
Southern Ohio for over 17 years"

.

'JeHIC!t

WE HONOR

i. - J
.

212 EAST MAIN ST.

·118rl-3785

.·

GOLDEN BIJCUYJ CARIWI

Wheelchairs
Hospital Beds
Shower Stools
Grab Bars
Commode Chairs
Walking Aids •
Diapers &amp; Chux

· ·~ '·Everything

· for the
Patient
at
Home

Ostomy Supplies

Diabe~icSupplies
Feedmg P!Jmps

Cervicat Pillows ;

Traction EquipmenC
Tens Units &amp;; Suppli
Back Supports •
Knee, Ankle Bracesl:,. '
Nursing Supplie~ ~
Support Hosiery i .
First Aid Supplies 1
Dressings
:

T.HE MEDICAL SHOPPE
'

-'-46-22()6

1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
·
~Just-Minutes From

Holzer"

·Wedell~

otndhrlduel

.S.nlor Plcturwl
Call 1182-7747
Wllk!Mye ·Iller 5 pm

...,~

Limestone, Sand; Gravel, Coal &amp; Water

Owner: Ronnie Jones
Cheshire, Oh
(614) 367..0266

WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

992·3954 or 985-3418 .. .1.,

&lt;"
·J '..., , ................---...,;;....

I

H&amp;H

Armou~JCE

FREE ESTIMATES

892·5535

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

a..e• wflh .., for

LillY'S
LIWICUI
•ll'ee Trimming

•Mowing (Aesldentlal
and commercial)
•Shrubbery
Maintenance
•Odd Job• p_er request
No uwn Too Ut'IJI
or Too Str1111/
Plan Ahead, C.ll Today I

P.UJDsi•JJ.G NISSAN INC.

1827 Murdoch Ave.

742·2803 .J/111 mo.

WV21t01

•

' I

=' r-1'-~---

HYDUULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HI.

New Five St•
L Vagas Pick
Sports Elfert. .eiit

HouM Repetr •
Remodeling
Kitchen I Bllh
Remodlllng
Room Addltlone

ffSidli~!!::~~~~Petloa

-900-rn;:o100

1

' tn1u...,. - &amp;xpert111ced
Cell Wevne Neff

ext. 7823

503 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio
(Special Price on Aluminum Cans
from March 1 thru 29)
Bring In minimum of 50 lb1. of aluminum cans 10
·reglslsr for Bunn Coffeemaker to be given away.
Drawing will be held on March 29th.

$2.1111 per mtn.
MUll be 18 Y,..
S.-4J.e11845 81134

11112-4405
For F - Eatlmetea

1111111110.

ATTENTION SPORTS
FANS
Let your fingers do the
walking to the spQrls
line. Finance Stocks,
NHL, NBA, NFL, Point
Spreads, Daily
Horoscope . .

Give Yourself The
Spo,rts Edge Sports
Et\li)jifainment linen
1-000-ns-01 oo

Ext. 6057
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch Tone Phone
'
Required

992-3894

Water
'L-- . ~.;,r; 1.Jf- Treatment
~1Z~ -~ Equipment

1·900-776-Q700

:Ji Serv-U (619) 645-8434

Dutributed by

Ext. 3685
$2.99 per min. Must be
18 yrs. Serv-U

The_ water treatment company cordially Invites you to

619 645-8434

part1c1~ate In a free, no obligation. comprehensive water

..

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTE.S, INC.

CWI'.S CAl CO.
Ow-.:

TOS, Mlntrel H81'dne1a, Iron, PH.
Plelll cell ft,.inSoft et 11112-4472 or 1-80().606-3313

to 181 up your I- ·weter'anolyela.

... ..... lltl' ,
S...&amp;llntlt

f '''"'

Herry a DOnna ct.n

a. ,s.m

Starting Sun. thru Feb.
29 Sr. Cltlzena Special
File for' day runa.
$1.00 per person to
Pomeroy a Middleport
Daye: 541·1124 (local)
Nlghls: 992-2741

,...,_Wtttr
I

hfAr111161t
1V&amp;VW..
la:ptdiH AI I Ut

,._ (JHJ 615-1651

wtmo,

Card of Thllnlca

~···~
Middleport~
RUIIIInd

The1amily of
Elsie Ali98 Welch
wishes t6 thank all
our friends, family,
and neighbors for
sending flowers
and food.
Special thanks to

12

Room a board for
. aenlors a dllabled.
Stlls llcen..CS.
L.ols of TLC. Family
home atnioapliere.
Rliaonllble Ratee

992-5042 or 742·1120
Polly or Ch.,_-

Bi~ny-Jordan

Home.

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

: . . s..tiMI c..sslfletl•

•

Something from the
honey's
Live girls 1-to-1
conversations
1-900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+ ·
$3.99/min.
Procall Co.
(602) 954-7420

SUMMER IMAGES
TAIIIIIIIG
12 SesaiOna For

$20.00

18 SMalons Fo~
$25.00
Of!en 9:00 to 3:00
~:30 to 10:00 P.M.
OWnere: Pete A Diane
Hendricks
Phone: 614-992-2487
311/1

m.tiH

Help Wanted

ACJml!iStons Coordinator
Join a dynamic organi~ion! Point Pleasant
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, is seeking
the right individual to assist with the
management of their facility. Qualifications for
this p&lt;)sition require a BSW degree from an
accredited program of social work, MSW
preferred. Must have current license to practice
soci~ work in West Virginia. A minimum of
two years experience in medical social work,
gerontolo_gy or health care facility is required.
you have 'tlie right credentials and are up

this.challenge, please contact:
,. Point Pleasant.Nanln&amp;and
RehabWtadoa Center ·

$I

Rq, l.l9x 3Ui .
, • Point Plealant, WV l5550
A Gll,...,t FGdllq

,.,
I

TruckingLimestone
Bulldozing and
Backhoa
Sarvlc..
Housa Sites and
UUIItlaB

CARPENT£R SERVIa
•Room Addlttone
•N.wGaregea
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Aleo Concrete Work
(FREE ESnMATES)
V,!:. YOUNG Ill
.

All Kinds of Eorlh Work

-

992-3838

Howard L. Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Guttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

949-2168
511MM TFN

mo. po,

YOUNG'S

~

101&amp;11n

Howard Excovotin

.

1112-8215

P.Omeroy, Ohio
1/Wn

OH 45831.

30 Announcements
Home Alarms, Pef'sonal Alarms
Pepper Spfay, Stun Guns Rea~
son_ably Priced For More'lnformaoon, 614-256-6850.

Giveaway

R. L. HOLLON

TRUCKING

Beagle Mixed Pups, 4 Females, 2

~1/1

Authonzed AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine' Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumiture, Fireplace
items, Planter hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuff!!

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861

wv

100

Males To A Happy Home , 614 .

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IIII'IIIOR·IDIIIOI
FREE ESnMATES

1'1111• ..... ,...... ..

. . . ,...

.....1........... ..
DIY IIASOWLI
IIYIIIfiiiiCIS

614-915-4110

:l/2811 mo. pd.

PRO~ESSIONA L

SERV ICE

LICEnSED /i. BO ND ED
FREE ES rtr.1AT ES

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; REMODELING CO.
SHIN GLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
POLE BARNS AND GARAGES
RESIDENTIA L &amp; COMP,lERCIAL

FREE
Pick-up discarded
washers, dryors,
hot water tanks,
furnaces, batteries
and any metal
materials.
Call 992-4025
between 8 a.m.-8 p.m.
Mon. - Sat.

Asbab~He's
Sliver Bridge Plaza
614-446-4462

4 month s old. 614 -985 -

60

Lost and Found

Found- Hus~y puppy with ice blue
eyes,
3090. Co. Rd. '19 vicini"'
.,. 814-992Found- pure white long haired female ca t, 11ery friendly, 61 4- 985-

3384 .
F~und : mixed breed female pup.
lr~endl.y, good with kids , Noble

Summ11 vicinity , 614 -992- 7557,
Knsti.
Lost- !lack, male, COCker Spaniel,
Fh. 7 between Vele rans Hospi!al
&amp; Me1gs High School , su .g92.

28 Yc.1 rs Experience

PHONE

1-B00-377 -44 77

614-245-0437

Mon.-Sat. 10-6

IRI CO. RECYCLING

STAR

Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March

GUITAR

Do your part for our environment. Bring us your
alum. eana and othll' rec:yeables and reglater 10
win a handcrafted solid walnut and cedar lined
blanket cheat valued at $800 to be given awt1y
March 30th. Trl. Co. Recycling open l daya a - k
to 1111rve you.
9-6 Mon.·Frf; 9-3 Sat. &amp; aun. Located cor-rMtr of
St. Rt. 143 a 7, Pomeroy, 614-992-5114.

Rewardl Lost: Male Siberian Hu sky Dark Gray And White, Brown
Eyes. Bright Green Collar Missing Since Tues (20thl Ariswers
To ttAisha, Call614-446 -3t72.

Yard Sale

10

Prom

Dresses
Levi's

lessons for
Plano, Drums
&amp; Guitar
Guitars 179 &amp; Up

Also Accessories
614·367-G302

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
All Vard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2: 00 p.m.
the da~ before the ad is to run .
Sunday edition - 2 :00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sat-

urday_

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Al l Yard Sa les Must Be Paid In
Advan ce . Deadl ine: 1:OOpm the
day be~~re the ad is to run. Sunday e~1! 1on- 1:OOpm Friday, Mon day ed1t10n 10:00a.m. Saturday.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Boggs Auction Service, 61-C$-4 46 -

7750.
Rick ~arson ~uction Company,
fu ll 11me auctroneer, cOmp lete
auct1on
serv ice.
Licensed
t66 ,0hio &amp; West Vi rginia, 304 -

773-5785 Or 304-77:!-5447.

New At lngJ.s IJ.etronies

lladle lhaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
_on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

992·2825
1131l'rln

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box 587

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle .

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949-2512
ll.I.UONAIII Jl.U'U
tnllfn

PAlmi&amp;

SPORT'S CAR

Free Eatlmates
35Yers Exp.
RHIIOIIable Rates
985-4198

Flndara of hard to

..........

DELUXE

!lnd auto parta.
614-992-4060

uvet;:~ics

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1-900-255-0300
ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone
required;

"'ew Homes • Vl'nyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Serv-U

614-992·7643

(619) M5·8434

home, 3 black female

mo.

4186.

analysis. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

TRI·STATE SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

' Till

2122/TFN

6'

~-

SWF 21-43 Wllh Same interesiS

Write: P.O. Box 533 , Gallipo lis: .

4 beautiful 4mo old kittens and
t tr old very preuy Tabby c8.t 10
good homes only. 30H\5-&lt;S50:

Racine, Ohio ~5771

•~-~~, IIINlEY'S
-:~~~N
•~'• RECYCliNG CENTER ,,,,,

No Wilting dlr:_ect

SWM 33 Like&amp; Dancing , Movies
Quiet Evening• Ar HOme. Seek ~

Chester, Ohio

'(814) 949-3013 Phone
(814) 949-2018 FAX
814 594-2008 NIGHT

IOftCI • • 11.:1 • lftiCI

Updlted Every 15 Min~

P.M .

985-4422

285&amp;3 BASHAN RD.

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

REMODELING
SERVICE

Princess Vtdeo New Shipment Of
Adult Video' s 814-448-2501,
1380 Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis,
Open Sunday's Now Noon -10

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

WELDING &amp; FIIRICATION
. UO.OO/HR.

7

Guys &amp; Gals Yaur Area , 1·900 -

890-3737 E". 4206, l2 .99 JMin.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

CHEAPER RATES

985-4473

__,.,.:::,:11.::-::.~

949-2512

RACirtE HYDRAULIC REPAIR .
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC. ·

FREE ESTIMATES

Call 992-3967
~
Details.
,.. _.__ for
__
_

Personals

40

Serving S.E. Ohio a WHt VIrginia
Toll Free1-80CJ.872·5987
448 11418
., J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER

005

r.1rtJT S

18 .. Sarv-U, 61a-645-a..34.

Nissan Headquartel'!l
Lowest Prices

BENNETTS

I

•Addlllolla

•New Garegee
•Remodeling
•Siding
•Roofing
•Painting .

Jfgreh l,.eials!

IWV010212

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•,

11 o

•NewHomea

. , , . , . , . " ltii'Vke to INtck If up

,: , -NatiotHrl ProgtDII

.-...

Cullom 11.-.g • -&gt;doling

PARKERSBURG

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

At Blg Bend
Health &amp; Fitness
87 Mill St,
Middleport

Fur:~eral

~,

F,_EitlmaiH

614-742-2193

' PROGRAM

:·:

"" o

for

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Br1ckles

'
lr---~-.__ WEIGifl LOSS

.

oI I

Air ~llonare, Heat Pumpe,
In 1tock
FumiiCII. All

BllndSIIW M

--..

. -fllllf.
- ·-

I •

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

FTH Estimates

and Manufactured Housing

Portable

Serv·U
(619) 64~1434

'. •'

.... l

SAWMILL

profile thttnHlves.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience *Insured

-~~-

(AmNTIOII SINGUS)II
No More IW Dattil
Slntply Cll . 1-900-656-2600 Ext.
3836, 2.99 per ... +
II yrs., -.lllstu to
sll9eslacatlll .il OW.

JONES' TREE SERVICE

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING

W•lllnde • enytlme

EOE
~.

POMEROY, OHIO
Tr11h Ramoval· Commii'CIII or RelldenUal
Septic Tanka Cleaned &amp; Portable Tolleta Ranted.
Dally, weeitly &amp; monthly rental ratea.

oAnnlvwtlrlle
·oCouplea (111111111-)
''Groupe oFemlly

Serv-U (619) 645- 8434

Meigs Senior Center activitieS
plan to have .a pool tournament more persons to participate. Center, 992-2161, to register for the
The Meigs County Council on
during April and are looking for Anyone wishing to play can call the pool tournament.
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sewing, cards, games,
pool. Weekly activities are Chorus
Practice on Tuesday at 12:45,
Knitting Circle on Wednesday from
I 0 to 12, and Ceramics Clus on
Thursday from 9:30 to noon. Cost
for the Ceramics Class is $1.25
plus the cost ofJreenware. Physical
Fitness is hel on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 11:15 to keep
participants "fit and limber".
A representative from the Athens.
Social Security Office will be at the
Center on Wednesdays, March 13
and 27, from 10 to 11 a.m.
Darla Hawley · and Leafy
The Senior Ceater has a monthly birthday party where seniors who 1ttend the meal prognm
Chasteen will be assisting seniors
are honored In the m()nth of their birthday. Honored atlbe February birthday p1rty were (back
with filing tax returns on
row) Donna Gilmore, Pomeroy; Lawrence Gluesencamp, Portlaad; Lee Youna; New Hann (front
Wednesday, Thur$day, and Friday
row) Loretta Beegle, Pomeroy; Marcella Chapman, Pomeroy; Rosanna Manley, Middleport; Betty
through April 12. Please caU Darla,
Maurer,
Pomeroy.
992-2161, to make an appointment
or for funher.information.
The ''Over 50" Exercise Class
will continue on Mondays and
Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. through
April 3. New members are
welcome to this class for bending
and stretching exercises and low •
impact aerobics for cardiovascu.lar
strengthening. .
Wedaesday, March 13- · The
Stroke Survivors Support Group
meets from 1 to 2:30, with Lia
Tipton, Holzer Rehabilitation.
Coordinator.
Friday, Mareh IS- The Arthritis
Suppon Group .meets from I 0:30 to
noon.
Wedneiiday, March 20- The
monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
be held from 9:30 to 11 :30.
Wedneiiday, March 20- The
Alzheimer's Support Group will
meet from I to 3 p.m. The speaker
will be announced later.
Thunday, March 21- Sue
F~ldmeyer, Aitorney, will conduct a
free will seminar from 10:00 to
noon.
Thunday, M1reh 21· the first
evening dinner of 1996 will be held
with serving from S:OO to 6:1S.
Cost for the baked steak, muhed
potatoes and gravy, green beans,
cole slaw, dessert, roll, and
beverage will be $4.00 per person.
T~e public is invited to atte~d. The
classics will entenain with musical
. numbers from the 50's, 60's, and
70's.
Thunday, March ,28- The
Snenl speakers recently
on Elder Abuse and Consumer
at
monthly birthday party will be
.
Center.
.Joha
Lenles,
Prosecullag
Attorney,
Conaie
Dodsoa
from
the
Victim's
Adv01:ate Group, ;
held. Seniors having birthdays in
Sheriff
Soulsby
and
Debbie
Ellis
rrom
,
t
he
Adult
Protectln
Services
all
spoke
on
these subjects. •
the month will be recognized.
They encouraged seniors to c'ontact their offices If they ha~e any questions concerning theae
' Nutrition bingo will be played and
matters.
a skit presented in celebration of
National Nutrition Month
beginning ·at 10:45. .
Thanday, March 28- The
Anwar Cataract Center will
conduct a vision screening fi;Cim
10:00 tci I :00, nci appointment is
necessary for the free screening.
Mastectomy Suppli~
UftChairs
The Senior Center pool players·

Yftr
OCCtllf'H!II

I

!

29

Scalloped Chicken
Broccoli/Cheese
Sweet Potat'oes
Apricots
Cake at Site

...................
s&amp;:c'i:.1 . .
. I ... A.

I

1

28

27

26

FRIDAY

21

20

19
18
Meatloaf
Oven Baked Chicken
Parslied Boiled
Mashed Potatoes
Potatoes
with Gravy
Corn
-Harvard Beets
Bread
Bread
.' Applesauce
Pears
25

13
Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Creamed •Tomatoefl
Gree.n Beans
Muffin
Pear Halves

.THURSDAY

7.~- r-----­
SJjorts Funll

~ - ..

,

(N

~------~ :'~~~~o-·s_u_nd_a~y~C~al~~)~~

All Ohio
F&lt;~sv

P, 1y Autll

ln~~ur;ulCt'

90

Wanted to Buy

A!ltiq~es, collectables. estates .
Rntenne Antiques, Russ Moore.

owner. 614-1192-25211.

Anv C1r
1\11y Dr rvr 1
DUI &amp; SR ;•;&gt;

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East:
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

- Dt~.,(-(l;

J &amp; D's Auto Parts . Buy1"ng sal -

mts:·

Compt.tt:·r Ottotcs
(b 1·+!

q9~

i'(L~n

f-'&lt;Jili 'll'y

Need Direction?

Love ·
Bualnei!S
Family Matters
Allow Your
Peraonal Paychlc to
AsslatYou
1-90().988 8800
Ext. 1277
$3.99 Per Mlnuta
Mull be 18 yrt1.

Touch-ToneR=~~
Serv-u (619) 6

...,

Kick Boxing .

vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304 -

773-5033.
Non-Working_ Washers, Dryers, ·
Ranges, Aelngerators, Freezers
Ai r Conditioners, Color T. V. ·s:
VCR's, Also Junk Cars, 61~ · 256 -

'236.
Top Prices Paid: Old U S Coins
Silver, _Gold, DiamondS, ·All Old
Collecttble.s. Paperweights, Etc.
M.T.S. Com Shop, 151 Second
AYenue, Gallipolia, 614·448-2842.
U_sed furniture- antiques , one
prec:e or _complete estates, alae
do apprvnala, Oaby Mardn 614-

1192-7441.

•

Wanted to Buy Used Mobile

HomeL Can : 61Ho!S-0175
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
~r Without Motors. Call larry
Lively. 614-3118-9303.
Wanted To Buy: Uu\a Tikes Toys

Sand Bo•, Picnic Table. Play

House, 614-24~7

Tral~ing

Wanled To Bur : Sand Slone
~oundatlon Stone For llndacap:
mg, 814-441-1013.

At Big Bend

Womod To Buy: Standi(IQ Timber

Health &amp; Fltnesa

AnJ Mloun~ 614-388-..

E:t•1f'LOYI.1F N 1

Children I AduR

Cluses
Cal1992·3967
tot Detalla

lttdlerita .

Beef and Hog

Bua(~)882·2758

Rea. (304) 882-3328
Weat Columbia WV.

'

3~R\11Cf'o

110

HelpWanted
' $-WANTED-$

10 people who need to 1011
weight &amp; make
to try new ~ ·
patented
prOduc t

30"'773-9J83

.

�./

Monda~,

Monday, March 11, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

March 11,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:ALLEY OOP

The Dally SenUnel • Page 9

.
--------~---------------~------------~··
NEA Crossword Puzzle
:··.

BIUIKII:

.,• t .

~

PHILLIP

,,:::,.......

3 Baclroorn HOuea For Rent In Rio
Grandi, 2 car Gorogo, Petio, 0.
poilt Requirad, No Pets, 814·
379':!720,
.. AFTER 8 P.M.

flta . Far exam, application ·~P

..a.~·

••-"-

.. .., 701-214-11138

e...

4 bedroom, newly remodlted,
fenca yard, wJd furnished, $4501

mo. plua utilities. 814-882-8888
altlrepm.
Four bedroom houae in Pomeroy,

Able A•on Repreaent•tiYel
rieeded. Earn mon.r lor Chrlat· ,
m&amp;l biKI II homo/It -1&lt; 1·800-

references reafter

Smell Houoe On Raccoon Crook •
Bear Run ROad, Sheltef Houll,
Boat DQck. Large Oect&lt;a, Over-

AVON · $8 -$15 IHr. No Door To '
Door. No Minimum Order. Bonus·
.. ) -800-827-&lt;4840 ~...

loo~ng

Crook; $325/Mo. Plua 0.
posillto Poll. 814-256·8112.

BAns BROTliERS AMUSE-

MENT COIIMNY.

Must bt 18 yeara or'Otder and

420 Mobile Holl1tl
for Rent

free to 1ra~eL Call e1-4-288-2150,

Bam-4 :30pm, Monday thru Fr. .y
betore Mal&lt;lt 22 10 lfiPIY.

1•x10 1111 otac•lc, 1250/mO. +Utilitie&amp;, Gallipolis Ferry. 30•·&amp;75·
4088.

CAI.LNOWI •
15 Poaplo Nllded To Hold N"'ll
Positions At ~ Expondl"'l Olatrl· ~;:=;:;:=:;;;::;:==t
budon Oudot. No Expirlence Re- I'
quired, 1300 Per Week To Start 180 Wanted To Do
Hunters

Brother• Conuruction 1 Home
lmprovementl, 814·388-8887
~llll:t s..... Or Bll
Do HouHCieanlng&gt; Rllnnc11 1
Exporience, 814 3811 8920.

has an opening lor a full-time

CoderiAnalyat. certlfica.Uon 81 an

Eleclrical, Plui'nblng, Concrete
foundatlonl, a.tag11, Room Ad·

A R T codl
tall
·
' ' 'oxporlonca
ng .pee
It OrI lqUI\I·,
· 8~il~ng;,~0~l~lli~d,~6c1~4·
alent
wiCPT
ICD·8 r~~~Re~mad~
,.,~
.....a 78.
1
coding requlrttd. Apply to Per19n.
"-v-r 61
nel· Oir&amp;ctor, Jackeon General Genttal Malntenanc·.~lntlng,
Hoopi1BI, PO Box 720, Riploy, WV Yard Work Wlndowa Waohed
25271 .
Guuora Cleaned Light Hauling,
Dental Hyglenllt For lmmldlara Commorlcal, Retldtntlal, St!IYO:
Poalllon '" P(ogre11ive Office 8 14--388-0429.
Orlenll&lt;l T...,d PreriondY8 Care Georgeo Partabl• Sewmlll, don't
And STM. PieHl Send Reaume: hi 1
1
m1
CLA 378 c/o Gallipois Deily Trib· ~~g~l 10 the I jult call
une, 825 Third A'ttrl&lt;Ja, Gal~polis,
OH 45631 .
Mother 01 4, Will Bebyalt Small
Children And Will Watch Children
Do you have room in your heart Before And After School, 814·
and your homa Ia&lt; a .-y c:lllld? 250 81189.
Become o Proloulonol Treelmtnt
Parent and join our teerri. Free
training in your are ... 2• hour

Profeaalonal Tree Service, Com·
plate Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Service ·50 Ft Reach, Stump Re-

support. competitive rolmlluraemant.and the -tunlty., make
a diffetence in the life of a child.

moval, Free Eatlmaltll

Ahor 7 P.M.

-t•
,._r

All n111
a~ In
lhll
Is oubftelto
the Federal Fa~ Housing /14
ol1988 Which mokes Mlltgtll
to advertise 'any preteronoo,
limitation or dlacrtmlnotton
'baHd on race, color, r811gion,
... lemlllal11atui or national
ortgln, or any ln1antlon10
. make ~sud! proloronoo,
llmllatlon or dlacrlmlnetlon.•

This -per wll.nol

Four badroam house on Mulberry
basement, heat pump, nice lor

Into.. no Ottllgetion. Send S.A.S.E. . 002-2049.
close to school and hospital. one
lo Prestige Unit tl, P.O. Box SANDIE'S has opening for your.· car garage With breezeWay, 614·
1015808, Winter Springs, Fl child .' Playroom, maalt, snacka. 992·3119 leave message with an·
3271g,
AH haura, my horne, Chaste(, 614· - i n g -.

in the Wa10n County area. Thia
potilion will be reaponaible for

2-K, Young School Agt During
summer. 3 Days per Week Mini·

provldi"'l on-tho-job iilpport lor inlm 61H48·3657.
people with diaobllltloa. Expeil·
enco with dloabUIIItt preferred.
wallpaper hangers, $11oe. per

Nice home in Racine, large build·

ing will house small busineu,

alao a one car garage, fenced
yard, aut of flood area, asking
$41,000
'
..... .-814-949-2804.
. .

1------------

FOR SALE : Rental Property,
Ho.use With 2 Apartments Local·

hour. Relerences available. 30~·

ed At 517 Fourth Avenue, Galli ·

Contacr FOES, 304-522-3337 no

later 3-22·118. EOE.

675-2249.

.

Oreenhou• worked wanted· 1530 hours per week inc,ludlng

Will do home and office cleanlng,
reasonable rate&amp;. Call 814·7&lt;42·

ooma weekenda, muat how reler·

3504, uk Ia&lt; Alicia.

Immediate op8nings: excellent
opportunity to iOin the long term
health care tield. Seeking partrime Registered Nurtes and licenaad Practical Nurs• far vari·
able ahltra ror 88-bed intermediate

Will paine your home/ buslnell
Inside or out. Experience, license,
senior discount. free estimates.
Ohio Valley Painting, 304·882·
3803 (Ron). .

care nuroing leclllty. Plllnt Pleat·
ant Nursing &amp; Rehabilitatior) Cenr
tar, State Routa 82N, Plllnt " ' ant. Well V.lrglnla 25550. Apply
In poroon . 304·875·3005 (A
Olenmork AIIOCIIIOI Facility)
EOE
'

FINAN C IAL

210

· Business

Opportunity

"Lumber Prices Up?' Steel build·
Jobl. Job/ Joba $8.7! -sg.2! illr. inga dealor profiis are UPII Coat
E'aay Work, Floxlble Houra/Local 11 low· aa $3.00 sq . h. National
Area, No Experience Necessary, manufacturer awarding local
1-900-211-9218.
DEALERSHIP. 303-759-3200 OM!.
2200.
.
Licensed oj)era10r Claas I for water and waater water. Send reINOTICEI
aume CIO Mayor, Rut1Bnd Village, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Box 420, Rutlend. OH 45775.
recommends that you do busl·
nasa with people you know, and

UachlnHt Wonted: Mull Be De· Not to
pondalllt Ablt To )'lork Flaxablo mall
Hours A!1d Be Experienced In the
Job Shop. Send Rosume To: 92
Tarry LonO...--, OH 45840.

money through tho
have irweatlgated

1 and 2 bedroom ·apartments, fur·
niahed and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pe·ts, 614·
1 Bedroom Near Holzer's Su.per
Nice , $266/Mo. Plus Utilities,
lease /Deposit Required, 6U·

448-21157.
2bdrm. apta., tOtal electric, ap·

pliances furnished, laundry room
facililiee. close to school in town.

Applications available at: VIllage
Green AP\1. 149 or con 614·892·
371t . EOH.
2~r..

unlurnished, newly-painted,
utilitiaa .lu rnlohad, 1375/ma, 11 00
deposit, 2217 N Main St. 304·
87!HI198.

polio, 814-448-31183.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

Tt"~ree

bedroom home in counrry, . BUDGET PRICES· AT JACKSON
Whiles I-fill Rd.. Rutland. one bath, ESTATES. 52 Weatwood Drive

in-ground pool, 814·892-5087.

lrom 1244'10 $315.

Wal~

., ohop

&amp; mavin Call 614·448·2588.

encea and knowledge of plan11.

Apply In par10n at Hubbard'l Will paint your Home/Bualnoos,
Inside or out. Experienced. liGteemouH, Syraa.tae, Otio.
censed. Senior tllacoum. Free
Home Typtsta, PC users needed. 81dmatea. Contact Ron, Ohio Val·
$45,000 Income potential. Call 1· ley Painting. Homo • 304-882800-513-4343 EJCL 8-11388.
3813.

Apanments
for Rent

3' Mobile Homes
· for Sale
t978' t4x70 Schultz 1978 t2x28
Vamco Add Room Many Extras!
Excellent Condition , Price Re·
ducod I 614·448·11034.

1888 Grandville 14x70 2 Bedrooms,

Fire~lace,

Total Gas. Un·

derpinning, 16x12 Deck, CA.

Muat Be Moved.
367-0429.

$10.500, 614·

19Q1 14x76 Breezewood II, 3
Bedroom, 2 Bathe, All Electric,
Central Air, Deck, A Very Well

E"'al Houaing()pporturity.

in Pt Pliuant.COropa.,._,. oalary .
and bOnifttJ poc:klge o - . Far
· conlidanllalln....., ctll304·

AntiqUeS

Buy or aell . Riverine Anti4uea,
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt 124,
Pomerow-. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00

a.m. ., 8:00p.m., Sunday 1:00.,
8:00p.m. 814-11112-25211.

FurnlahOct t Badroom Aportmont,

With Solar Cover. Ladder 1
Pump, 2 Years Old, Asking:

Bunk Beds Never Used Solid
Wood With lnnor Spring Matuosa, Livlng Roomo Suites, $275,
Phone: '8t4-888·8373 Routo 7
Beside Glovannla'a Pizza, ProcU&gt;rvlllo, OH.

Evana l;nterpri&amp;es, Jacklori, OH

1-800-537-9528

Electric Hospital Beda, For Sale

Dr Rantl 614-3711-2720,
P.M.

AFT~R

e

!

Electric Wheelcholra /Scootora,
NewiUaod, Scooter !Wheelchair
lilts, Stairway Elevators, Lift
Chairs, Bowman' a Homecare,

614·448·7283.

'

Fuller Brush &amp; Stanley Home
Cleaning Productil. Dele &amp; Wilma
Wood, Ind. Dlst304-675-IIIIO.
JET

'

AER~ION MOTORS '
Repaired, Now I Rebuit In SIDelL

Cal Ron Evans, 1-800-537-ll52il.
La~

aasorlmtnt of,_,

Ptl~

I

presant longabergar bisketa,
BCCIIIOriet &amp; paUaty. AIIO t;On·
~Qi8

doublewide,

$1799 down , $275/
delivery &amp; setup.

Homes, Nitro
New 14x80, 2 01 3bedroom. Only
make 2. paymen11 to move ln. No
payments alter 4~ears. 30~ · 7555588.

One beetroom apartment In Pt.
Pleasant, no p818, 614-002·5856.

Spring Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohioone bedroom apartment, no pell,
deposi~

New Bank Repos. Only 4 leh. S1111
n warranty. 304-755-7191 .

$180/mo., $125
3083.

Price Buster! New 14x7D, 2 or
31H. Oni)' $995
Free dBiivery

Three Room Apartment, Next To

OakwOod Hames,
755-5685.

naodl. 30W75-1077.
With

Small Apartment Ground Floor,
Private Furnished, Urilities·Paid,

No Peta, $1 oo Deposl~ $205/mo.
814-448·0544, 510 Third Avenue, ·
Galljpoljl.

814-887·

Library; $350 Per Month, Dopoalt
Required, No Pats; Contact Judy

At Bouard Library At .,4,441·
1323.
'

soum

1994 Dodge Sport Caravan
21.000 Mllu, Call Alters ~M-'
814-448-4134.

1ID Thu-rd Sc, two door, 3.8
litre, V-8, alllt model turbo, PS,
PI, AC, 5 apotd, power 10811

1004 Ford Explorer XLT Plus Ex·
traal Excellent Condition , Good
t.llloogo,814--18.

neg ..locka,
eu-992·7478
or 614-94g.
and
"Groat Car,·
U200
2811.
·

94 Ford F-150 -ix4 XLT. lqoded,
16,200 milia, excellent contltian,

'114 .Mua1Bng GT, V-8, '! opood, IJ
c, PW, POL, dual olr IJaga , anti
lock braltoo. auper ota&lt;oa, am/1m
cuaotto I cd, 38,000 mllos,

t.lotol Roofing And Siding Gal·
vanlzed, GIIYBiurne And Feinted,
814-24!5-5103.

814-742-2824.

560 .Petl fOr Sale

$15,500 lirm, aerious calls only,

1968 MUitang Convertable All

Driglnal289 Auto. 814-384-7392.

Groom Sflop ·Pet Grooming. Fea· · 1975 Volkswagen Beetle. good
turing Hydro Bath . Julie Webb. cond .. $1,200 · OBO. 304-875·
1550.
Cal814-448-0231 .
AKC 'lab pupploa, bred from
dud&lt; and goau doga. ref·
tronc11 on proviaua liner, ahota

1nd wOrmed, vet checked,

9Q2·31S78 after 5:30pm.

1978 Mercury Grand Marquil,
excellent condillon, $700 , cell

814-002-2843

,..__

19114 Olds Cutlau Colais, V8, ac.

exc. cond. 304·812 ·3149 leave

AKC Aeftlstered Boxer PJpa,

1200 To o Oocktd, 814·258·
6128.

CFA Regiaterad Himalayan Kit·
lena, 1 Weeks Old, eu-•o40·

Spaniel, AKC Regiatertd 1 Good

570

UUM Otdsmobil&amp; 98, " door,

S18oo. call 814· 742·2413 after
1pm.
1986 Chevy Z· 24 Caviler Good
Condition, 11.500. OBO Or Trade
Far Older Mixltl, 814-245-!748.
1917 Chrysler LeBaron Vory
$1,800, Muat Selll614-3'/l-2920.

Good Condi\ion, l'nside &amp; Out,

·
5 S•"""
t 981 Ha rrzon
,......., With AI r,
Excollont Shape, 109,000 Miles,
$1 ,200,614-3711-2723.
1988 Ford Taurus starionWagon,
runs goad, needs some work,

11188 Cutlass Calais, 4 Door,

89,000 UIIH, Quod Four, HIGh
Performance

. MUIIcal

Engine,

looks

Groo~

Runa Groat. Great Gat
Ulleagel PS, PB, Roar Window
lnltruments
Delroater, Tilt - · Alr, Crulea,
'Fender Tellacaater Guitar, Ameri- AMIFU Cuaottt Storoo, Inter·
metant Wlpera, New Tires, e 14-can Made, ssoo. 81+388-8135.
441-G4411, 814 448 111100, can Bo
G I L Legacy Bau, 1mo old, axe. Seen Acrou From Stoto Hwy.
cond., paid $725, will take $550 PetnJI Olfico, Jackeon P1M Anr·
DBO. 304-Yn-5226.
- · $4,!100 OIIQ
Upright piano and bench $200. 1001 Chl1111 raoo car, 11
304-875-1852.
- I n '11, WillfOOd. bettorrything, .td,
tirH,
Neal padalo, lutl coil, on bolrd
FAf11.1 SUPPLilS
fi,. sy. . . rollng · - $1!800
nog. Coil Scan Wolle, 814·84g.
&amp; I IVFSTOCK
2879, 014-849-2045 or 814·DD2·
8193,

throe-··

BARNEY

tJ 8 5
6A K Q 9 8

Sumac
24 Floatl upwenl
21 Alrtlno Info
21UKtlrno
21 Go bed
Ill Up to now
311Won
33 High In pitch

DOWN

18ouugl

2 Sillglr-

5 Echo

3~111

8 Runo
9 Buaineu-

chamber
I What person?
7 MICIIw genua

4 Aitlhor

Umberto-

woman Loudlor

10 Change tile '

'

12=:.. :
13 Viry l

-..pllahad'
cllllcl

I

J

i''.

,, .;
1991 Handa 300, 4wd, $3,400 . •.
304-875-1178.
:
~.
,.
.

NeW, Purple, Black, Yellow With ':

Matching Helmet, 15,350, 814· ;,

J - 11

.·•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

18118 Honda 300 4-whaalor, 2wd, ;
~

Honda Ttail 90, very good cond., :
$&lt;100. 304·812-3238.
.

BANIC

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

6850.

THE BORN LOSER

~~~~. WI-\Y Det-IT YOU
5f...Y ~ Bffm.I&gt;.E .sfNi!.T

-4 American Racing aluminum ~
rims &amp; tires· 2 rear, 235-SR-14, 1 ·

A

Twt,.,TY·

.

+

? -II

New Holland 1111. hoybind, oxc.
·:

,

buil1, All Types, Acceasible To

Over

10,000

.1 ,

••

~------~----~--~·
Car
stereo equipment for sale.· •:·
814-1148-20154alkiaf.Tyeon.
New gas tanka, one ton truck
wheel&amp;. radiators, ftqor mats. a~ .

I•,.

Home

810

wilh-Coii814-8114-711C!.
LlvHtoc:k
• ..,.
.....,
a2 WHIIm Pleuure'Gtldlng. 114
lncendvo Fund AOHA 'FIIIyL Big
85 AppondiK Filly, AQHA Cnatil·
pion Sldton. 814 2811 8522.

Ranger XLT Air, AM/

I --------u~ 5010 ditch witch trencher

Fumlahed
Rooms

General Home Main l'nence- Painling: vinyl siding ,
ur~try, doorl, WtndoWs, bllths.
~e home rapeir and more. For
frle .. timale call Cher. e1~.Qg2.

C&amp;C

0323.
304·578·4883; Afllr
DR'IWALL
114
0401
1-tfna,llnith. - "·
1904 JttP Grand Cherokee 'Lim- Cailfnus textUred, piastef repair
Con Toin 304·875-4188. 20 yeer~
llld, Loedod, 814-448-7490.

*

VIlli &amp; .t-WDi

JIOPMVVWAZK . '

(MTZWBYM

NWDFH)
OCWRJFZZK
M'BKWZ .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : 'A terrible thing happened again last night nothing ."- Phytls Oiler.
.

S@\\4llA-&lt;Z£~s·

:::

TUTIAILl
PUIZIII
- - - - - - - - 141to4 ~r ClAY R. P O l l A N - - - - - Rearrange a.tters of
0 four
ocramblod -.Ia

low to '""" four -do .

I
I

OLCOTE

, f---r.-1-T-1=-r=l--T-:12,.=.,.1--r
1

CIMNE

I

..

"'-r.-L...,Er.-K...,.-L
-,Nr--11 ...~_,'
5 1
6 I I
.11- 1
• . • _

•

•

•

_

•

the chuckle quoted
by f1llmg "" the missing words

•

m~:Rr~B:~~~RES I'

2

4

5

Harper - Frank - Drift- Crawly - AFTERWARD

Tile Trt~~sure You
tht
Sovlnp You'll Find In tilt
ClouJ(Ied Sectloll.

.' . .

One cutie to another: "I set up a budget so 1can worry
about my spending ahead of lime instead of AFTERWARD."

;.

I MONDAY

MARCH11

I

I

.., .

..

.; '
•:
~•
~~ •

'

.

FIELDS AND SONS
Spac:lallzlng In all holfll 1 -montll PalnUng, wollpopor, and
a-,-1. Cullt1mlzlng tN remadollng kjtchen and· both. Even tht

amalleat

lmprovemen&amp;s are tm-

por- ..... 304-882-2213.

Para Home

lmprovemen~- remo ~

'IIi Ford Branco II 414, Ed~le titling, rooling, aldillg, call 814·
, IU!DmldC, Ill powtr, tilt M2·45830t814-0Q2. 7315.
call814·002·8485 al·

.

'

1:t:

oxporitnoo,

73o

buliness needs i
who meollthl
COmputa&lt;
well u all
Thlo poll·
a lull·-

ATWOKO :

Appliancfl Part&amp; And Service: All • ,
Name Branda Over 25 Year, E.·
pirience All Work Guaranteed, : ;

. 5 Speed, Price :

111g5 Ford Ronoor Ext. Cob. 4
Cyl., 5 Sptod, Fee. Air, FMIAM
Coooeb, Cayman Gm .. Bodllnar.
13,:100 Orlg. Ulloa, Ono O.nor,
$12.400, Or Boat Offor 814·448·
45114 Con Ba s- At Rt 7 &amp; Adti-Pikl.

PTWFBO

l;

71!15.

count In March. Slder'a Equjp·
marl. 304-875-7421.

AJZZKP

PCMOK

~--~--- ·

:•A~~~~1-eg81, 814-388- French City Maytag, 614-448·

1100. 304-875-1550.

EFPCMJP

ML

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

\ .
'

:
---:----~~--~-----

11191 F'ord pickup. t$0 XlT "'"''
bodt · omoraldone
·owner,
axeollen
dnditlan,
110,000. 81-21145.

MBK

IWVWBKOK

•

..

tOGO Ford Rangar XL'l'. 304-il7!51178.

Tractor tune-up IIIIa, 104Jft dit·

ZFGK

1 r 1 1 I' I' I' I
e &amp;1itisE I I I I IrH~N I I I I 1·

11
11

0488 Roger• waterproofing. Es- '
llblllhod 1875.
.

ald $75. Craft1m1n garden Iiiier

'F'N

,__..__..__..__....___.,__, you dewelop from step ,No. 3 below.

l:

SERVICES

know

•

0 I R Auto, Riplay, WV. 304-372· "
3fl33 or 1-800-273-93211.
.:

campers&amp;

ldvtrtlalng
campaign
40 Premature
45Eccantrtc
46 - Mloorablas .
48 Aa far -- --

0
...,..,~r r.,8-X'jV-'ET-j.,;,.T,,-i, Q-~ompiete

Transmission, ; •

814-245-5877

tlon)

39 Item In an

Some people become leading authorities because they
r--::-::--:--:-----, have guessed right - - - - than

-------------------Budget Transmissions, Used IRe- i":

Engine, Trade·ln's Welcomel
COok ......... 81oH4&amp;0103.

1U1 Chevy 5 Spood, 86,000

produce the killing defense on deal_8
Uke this one. It becomes so ingrained
in them that conceding a nlff-and-dlscard is a total no-no that they misa the
times when it is right.
Given that whopping hirit, how
should.East plan the defense apinst
four spades after West leads the club
10?
When the dummy cornea down, the
defenders should always check the
bigh-i:ard count. Here, the dummy bas
It points, South has shown 16-18 and
East has 13. How much does that
leave for West? Somewhere between
nothing and zero! So, there is no logic
in, for eltample, a diamond switch.
Next, what has East leamed from
the opening lead? As East has the
club nine, West must have led from a
singleton or doubleton. So, East bas
three club tricks available. But where
is number fouf?
Whenever )'Oil have taken aD possible side-suit tricks, your only other
chance of a winner is in the trump
suit With this backdrop, giving a Nff.
and-discard isn't a no-no; it is usually
the only way to go.
East won the lint trick with the club
queen, cashed the club ace, and con·
tlnued wlth the club king, We8t diecarding the diamond three. Now East
Luckily West held the spade seven.
When he ruffed with that card, forcing
dummy to overnalf with the 10, East
was guaranteed a trump trick, the
fourth for the defense.

Improvements
~:
Mower Candllloners, Forage
Equipment Still And Servlco. 1988 Nlnan PU. 4 Cylinder. 5 ------~~~~----•'
· BASEMENT
Altizer Farm Supply, 814·24!· Splld, .V11y. Dopondable Truck,
WATERI'ROOFING
814-2511-81187.
51113.
Unconditional lilet.ime guarantee.
HI·CO 511. llrUih hog 1295. 304· 1988 5-10 Pick·Up. Raly Wheala, local references furnished. Call •
Excatllnt Conditio('. New Albulli (814) 446·0870 Or (614) 237- 1:
882-3238.
•
UF tils Dleaotlroictor Reatored,
$4,005; 35 UF. Sherp $3,'795: 85
t.IF New Motor And Tlr01, $3,005,
1080t.IF $4,1115; 814-288-e522.

•

0

J '

1g88'Chevy 8-10 ahort bod, ,_
.. $2,800. 304-875-

AU (l888

Dil-l~~

lront. 205-R-14, $300. 814-949- '

720 1l'uc:ks for Slle

51542.

.

~

turned down elaowhara. Upton 790
''
Equ)_.t Ulld Cora. :ICM-4511Mot«;~r Homes
1•
tan.
~~~~~-.-:-~-:--~~ ,.
Credit Problomo? Wo Con Htlp1 1990 Travel Master Clan C 27 ·, ·
Fl. Lono~ Air, Generator, 8 New J :
Eo~ Bonk Financing For Uted
Tires, Excellent Condition, Inside : 1
Vohlolaa, No Turn Downo Call &amp; Out, 814-448-1211 . II No An- 4 •
Rulli. 814-448-28117.
-LNWIUao-.

rebuilt engine, o4spd, neyt liras,

4•

applied
the lethal lance, leading the
l=-....;==========::;:=:...:::!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~=~~~=-=~.:.·-~'""'~~~VE:!!~:.....J . .club
eight.

~

·.;

Auto Parts &amp;
• Accessories

2741 .

/

Life~

BIL~.

J&gt;~51tiN

19g5 Pro 17 bass boat, 40hp, ,
$7,250. 304-8115-3013.
'

760

1

IN YOU/t

radio. trailer. $1 ,400. 304-675 -

rlts r.duded. 304-6~2570.

MAICf MINt

'-tlt'-tc6 P,I,.,Tfl&gt;

1976 Thunder craft 160, 70hp
older Mercury motor, good cond.,

1195 Stratal 18ft., 150 Evinrude,
1111 than 10 hours, all accesso-

Pass

lpparertl
221riftne. ~
25 Blurrlell
27 Studio
31 Coatly fur
32 Meulnlo l - ·
illther
34PIIId
3&amp; Cillnlng
Implement
3&amp; Myaterlou1
38- Major
(conalella-

Dbl

The either:.Or
syndrome

i

1985 Honda V·30 Magna Needs
Paint, &amp; Back Brakes SBoO. 814- , •

inquiries only. :ll4-895-301 a.

Eaal

I

PEANUTS

~·

green, exc. cond., $9,900. Serious

North

•

wheeler, ehalt drive, reverie;.. •
"'electric stan, used about Shrs, ..1 :
same aa new, S1,o400. 30o4·6 75- • ,

441-0405.

26

In my experience, many players below the expert rants find it dilficult to

1883 RM Suzuki 125 Dirtblka
Water COoled, C-letely Gone
Threw, $850, 814~48-8605.
·,.
--~--~-----------··
1 98• Honda 200 Big Red 3• ~ •

2511-83111.

aunlx

21 Becomo

Pasa

By Phillip Alder

1965 Mauoy Forguoon Tractor,
Vory Good Condition, Runs Ex·
oollent, 814-742-2457.
1_00
__
5.,;W_haoi
___Ho_.;,roe--tra--cto_r_w_l_th_8_l
lpaod 12 horae 38' .,_, ueH
leu than 50 houro, $1400, 814·
992-13511.

chroma -

I

:~i:Sr:?r-:= 7"0268 or
740 MotorcyciH

2074.

Weal

1iiCompareuve

Opening lead: • IO

CLOTHeSLINe??

~~.:::V.~o~h::T..~

Gohl Round Baltt'a, M- COn·
ditionera, Dl 0c t.lowero, Olec

2•

PAW II DID YOU GIT
YORe HAT OFF TH'

610 Farm Equipment

Doztr 31 o coat W/4-wey blldt,
gu or cyllndar 1!,!100. 304·1]527o40.

South
I NT

1994 CBR 600 3,600 Milts, Lrke , •

~31_88_.~
· ----:-~-:-~~~~- $2000 DBO, 614-892-5347.

~u~ S~ ;;."P':::"'.;.;_a:, ~ cond.,304-87!5-4301.

PAINT SALE. Pith~~!!:..~'~:!
Paint lto.ewaai..
S11 .Dglgol., Somi-GIOII
$12.98/gol., lntroduotory
Now Slkktna Interior
s"""" and Flnloh 2011. off ragutar
price, Deruoto Whitt or Block
Enamel, (Spray Con) Buy Ont
Got One Fr•. PAINT PLUS 304875-4084.

IAntllh

23 Entlotllilllr -

•A 15 4 2
•A 53
- tA K 4

710 Autos fOr Sale

Black, brick, oewor pipoo, wind·
owa, llntolo, etc. Cl'"de Wlntaro,
Rio Grandt, OH Call 814·245·
5121 .

Sire, 614-3'11-2728.

tuniDea.

OHerl

-._
Bu.........
Suppllel

Tany LamB. Guaranteed Lowtlt
Pricaa At Sfloe Call, Gallipolis.

Downstairs, Utllltiea Furnished,

Trailer Perk. Peyoll $22,265.00. port. From $232·$355 . Call 814·
304·773-8138 5-9pm.
8112-5084. Equal Housing Oppor-

s·rzo

Good Home Only: 3 Year Old
Male Black &amp; White Cocker

Disney . aroJ. 5 doya, 4 hotel
nightl, usa onytlmo. Peld $310,
sol $100. 304-353,9131.
'

Riverside Apanments in Middle-

0

"-'II Sll
reaa, ·~
p,
7
D. l200.1t4-3S -o258.
~ng

$1,000, Call Alter 5:30 P.U. 614448·0440.
·
Boots By Redwing, Chippewa,

11Bira, Utii~H Peid, Ito Pets, Ref....,.... 61....-523.
Furnishad 2 Rogma &amp; Bath,

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and

W-"~

Old Charry Gate Lag drop 1111 AKC Rtglatored Ran Woller Pup·
tabla, alx matching ladder -back piH, Champion Bloodline. Gorchalro and three laevoa, 814-002- men Background, Slrt OFA Corti·
7320.
lied, Parenti Excellent With
Children, 111 Sholl I Wormed,
540 Miscellaneous
$350, 61'~-2•s--o433.
Merc~dlse :
AKC Rogiatored, Shaw Quality
S
· 1 p
1 C k
U
100amp breaker box wlbr,okor
• e oc or ;pan••
uppy,
lor polo, ......, uled, $80. Hl'(lrou· Good BIOOdtlno. Excellont Mark·
!Whlta I Tan
In Calof,
inga, Black
lie clutch ma•llr cylinder tor Fan! Data
• Hauaobro01 -aBirth:
8131195
tnrcl&lt; $85. 304-882·21188.
ken, 614
.
.
78 2728
27 Ft. Round Above Ground Alot,

300 Thru -2,000 Galiano . Ron

1992 14x70 OakwoOd 2 Bedroom
2 Fulll!aths, $18,500, OBO, 814· Furnished Elllclanc:y-AII Utilltloa
258-8980 Altar 5 P.M.
Paid, Shore Bath, 1145/llo., g19
1994 Fleetwood 14x70, 2bad- Second Avanue, Gallipolis, 8 14·
raom. 2bat1\ 3 ceiling fans, 3 lky· 448-3945.

343-~12.

Pen U1111!1!\e Hblnl 11ortlto. NliW
Roicrultlnt ' Conaultantl · Md .
Booklrlg Shows In 'I'Jt!is · Area.
Grtllt Opp.rtunitr For Extla
Coah, Tmol I Free Llnooriel For
· lnlormltion Pt.... can Johnna
At614-245fl33. .

530

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tilnks,

MANAGER FOR POPULAR
REBrAURANT CHAIN

experior..ed floiotautant ua._r ·

Reloading &amp; F ahlng Suppllll.
Live Belt &amp; Llconao. Crawlorcl'o,
-.on, WV.

Efficiency. Referenc8a. Oepoeit.

pofls. 81,..448-4418 After 7 P.M.

erator. dryer, aU electric. Cia, underpinning, garden t11b, Zuapan

.Sponlng
Good.

Ito pets.ll04-875-5182.

Clean, No Pats, Reference, De·
Built And Detailed Home, Must pooltRaqulrod, 61H48-1519.
See To Appraciatal $17,000 Furnished Efficiency 2 Rooms,
(Serio~• Inquiries Only) Call 814· Share Bath, $195/Mo. \ltllltlo.s
256·6391 LaaveMessago.
Paid, 607 Second Avenue, Galli·

ligtits, dishwasher, 18cu.lt. refrig·

520

Counuy Sldt Apermanta, Nice 2 1 -------------~--­
Bedrooms, AC, WA&gt;, Wa•r. Saw- Coffee table with two matching
or Garobge lncludad, 1350/t.lo. and tables, very good condition,
Depoalt Raqutrid: 513-822-o2114.
614·002-2215. .

Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Up-

610 5

Vln, 41,000 mllto, 4.3 V-8, auto,
loaded, 4 ceptaln 11111 I bench; •
,_ drH, garage kept, muot 111.

j~~;~Gtw~~Deol~o~On~J 550

Turkey, Archerr,, Guns, Ammo,

992-2218.
Heights, equipped kitchen, lull

-

22

41 Flammable
..-tal
so 18111001
51 Obeys
12 Millllc

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

llen:hlndlll

VIRAFURNITIJRE
814-4411-3158
HoultholdFIWnlllrtAnd
1

03-11-ttl

6KI8

2

47 "'Wo- . ; -

•J? 2

540 Mllcelll~

sewer, water and trash Included,

440

t109763

1-800-400-:Moo.
ler5pn.110,900,
·
V~i~ne~S~tr·~·~~~C~ta~ll~8~11~4-~448~·~7398=~·~
~~~~~~~~~;;;r::::::::::::==~~ aoking
814-949-2481 ai-

Ram. mod. 781 ~ 22·250. Marlin
mad. 338 eli 30·30. CoM Lawman
rage, 614-992-89211 .
mk.111 357mag. Mauaar bolt act
308. Bryca 59 9mm cal. High
Two and three bedtoom mobile standard Sentlnol doluxo cal 22.
homaa, otartlng at $240 ·$300, 304·87!5-15411.

11 stall horse bam + 20acres for
laaaa, R1 2, Crab Creek Rd. 30o4-

1ge7 Chevy S-10 Blazer 4X4 ,'
tooks tharP. runs good, many ex·
traa. $4,000. 304-675-3581 after

1S182 Chevy Aatro Converalon

PICKENS FURNITIJRE
New lUNd
304-875-1450'

42~

178tMr
11T-20 uua.,.c

EAST

67 3

•a a 8

1&amp;87 S-1 0' Blazer 4114, loaded,

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Watlhera, dryort, rtlrlgorotora,
rangea. Skogga Appliances, 78

Three bedroom trailer in Rulland,
·14X70 wilh 16M30 addh:lon, ga-

614.002-2167.

WEST

Counuy Furniture. 304-675-6820.
Rt 2 N, 8miloa, Pi Ptoaaant, WV.
TUN-Setll-8, SUn 11·5.

304·758-RENT.

OllPOrturity ba~s .

Earn $10001 weekly atuffing on-

Flltiort Divorallled Employment _9_115__:.3&lt;108
1 __,-·------'------Services hal a part-time (as sun Valley Nursery School.
neadod) vacancY lor a job coach Childcara t.I-F earn-5:30pm Age&amp;

room. $300/mo. + $500 deposit.

758-AENT.

310 Homes for Sale

8·,,..

Ren't 111 month tree. 1971 2bed·

Our readers are hereby
Informed lhet all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

FAMILY RESPURCE CENTER at Big Or Too ,Small I Bidwell, Ohio.
et'l-3118-11848, 614·387-7010.
1-800-«ls-5277.
In their h'ome, please ull

· Ulddlopor~ 6 t 4-892-5856

430 Farms lor Rant

In-

Qualiliod. experienced, CNAI
HHA, able lO care for lila eklerly

Nice twa bedroom mobile home in

-rJyoccopt
tldJter1lsornaniS "" """ _,.
w111chla In violation ollhe law.

ice -Call And Savel No Tree Too

velopea at home. Be rour bQ.u.
Start now. No exp., free auppllas,

81~ · •46·4416

•&amp; 4 3

goad. body very good condlllon ,
$1,800 , 814-992-4548 or 814 - '
9112-2508. .

$3,985 negotiable. 304-773-5109
aher 5:30pm.

French City Maytag, 8 14:448·
7795.

2 Bedrooms. Small, Furniahed
Avenue, Gallipolis,

EEK&amp;MEEK

&amp;pm.

Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Rlngea, Refri·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

....-- :£
_,
...,.
...

•Q J 10 8
•K Q J 10
•Q 2

1D88 Plymouth Voyager, runs

er Now . Modo! 1 Yair W!lfrlnty,
1205; Skeooa. Appliance, 78 Vine
StrHt, Golllpalla, 814·448-7398,
1-800-400-3499.

$235/Mo. Woter Paid, 820 Fourth

surance, 24 Hr. EmBfgency Serv-

Want to know mare? Call AVC

1aae 314 Ton DOdge Panel Van

1 Vear Warranty; Maytag Wuh-

1995 Skyline, 1•x10. thrH bodroom, one bath, $18,500,. 614·
892·3891 .
.

Only,

Please. Coli Monday 614-441 ·
1975.
CODER/ANALYST
Jackson Generol Hospital
Ripley, WV

NORTH

318, AuiO, St ,&lt;IOO, 614-256-8854,
814-2511-6329.

fuM besement, largo yard, $2501

992·8356 or 304·812·28-45, Ind.
Rop.

SeriouA Job

S1 ,000 OBO. Call304-578-321l t;
altlr4pm.

Admiral Drytr Ukl Now $85; G.E.
Woaher Hoevy Duty, IDS; Whirl·
pool Waohor Heavy Duty, 1115:
Hi&gt;tpolnt Rolrlgtratar, FroatfrH,
1150: Gao Rongo 30 lnch 'AI·
mond, Nice 1.185: Rolrlgo.rotor
Admiral Almond, Llkl N.tri, 13150;

41~'a.

14 eracl.cl
1lllakal

good &amp; runs, needs head gasket •

Free room. board. Will train. 7
..,._ &lt;107-875-2022 '" 0505C1o.
'ATTN:I'olrliPiouo...,_,., Plltltiont. Permenent tulltiljlo lor clorfllaorl«s. Full Bono-

..•

Pt;.t- ~

lor lloblrt
......w.rtn)

• Flablr. . ..

,,=...,of
, _.....

1984 Ford Bronco II, 414, look•'

pefsl tioni. Hiring men, women.

~ ..

37 Poet - (llonor

1 Pool COt....

ALDER

U00·$1100 weekly. Year round .

·-

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

;_,j;..:I.A.;::O.oii!Wi;..;:..l 0 ken romance? . The
__________.;,_ _ _ _ _ _ Matchmaker can help vou underaland

In either ina1anoe.
VIIQO (Aug. 23 Stpl 22) H will no1 be
wile to try to reeolve problema bemeen
wh81to do·to ~ the Nlationlhip watt&lt;.
ASTRO•ORAPH
Mall $2 .75to Matchnlek8r, c/o INI , _. you and vour mate In tho preaonce ot
: : - -- - - ; . . . . - - paper, P .O. Box 175B, Murrav Hill outsiderB todav. You bolh mev aay or do
lhlngs you'Nregret.
StaliOn, New Yortc. NY 10156.
UBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23)' Othera may
ARIES (llaldl 21-Aprtl111 Play ft Mill
think ~ are aN tlllk and no action today.
today and don't agree too hastily to
BERNICE
something v11u haven't analyzed trom Finish your initial tasks llret and yak
BEDEOSOL overy angle. A lew pitfalls rMV Iuiie In the about them only H time permll!l.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ncw. 22) You mav
Shadows.
pangs of gull later today wyou pur· .•
TAURUS (April 20-llay 20) H you are formulating 8 good idea, you lhould no1 cha.. something thai coats more than
diacusa ft with OUIIiderl. An aaaodalw'l . you· know vou should apand . K11p an
tK..Ir ·
negativity might cause vou to make an eye on your budglll. ·
.._,._
unwise altentllon.
IAGITTAIUUS (Nov. U·Dec. 21)
OEMtNI(*y 21..,_ 20) Cunently. an Demands 1niiJC)I8Ci by 0111e11 may I'Mtrtcl
· •
asaociate may be taking hii' role In a cot- your Independence todav . However,
r~ldrly' , ~ 12. 1088
lec1ive antllavor men .-loully than you lnltaad ol maldng • big dMI about ft, do
.
• .
.
, are tllklng youos. You should both try 10 thlbeat you """ with lhltoola at llaftd.
You may lind thl kind of relattona~tp . get on the aame peg~~.
CAPRICORN (Dao. 12-Jan. 1.) Think
you've Vllmeil for In tho vear aiMiad. CANCER (June 21-.luty 22) Only your raall8tlcaily today llld try to - thlngl•
Gonorally ~- you oould be quill beat ellorta will be actcnowladgrtd and they are, not u you wlah IIWn to be. You
lortunitte _.. dialing with olflera on • rewanled today. H you conaclotllly per· can overcome o~v•r•• conct«lona by
bUia.
.
•
form belOw your atandllrdl, don~ allpeCI addrr Wng them dnctly.
Pll
llulll• 201 You lllrll ill' accoladM or~AQUARIUa (JH. ..,._ 11) RogarO' know wiMn
Mt;l you . . ltftStW LEO (July :n-Aug. 22) Avoid PMHlng INI 01 wnat you bUy·toa.y, c:hectl 81011
~ow to achieve thla ""'"'IYI !odU· your lucie In a loolllh laahlon tollay. Do item cm1lluly 8Dd . . . you're gM·
Hqwovor. you might not make. -lite no1 take ~ rllke or llflCOUIIIIIe oth- ling what you pay for. Sotti+ilt• nwy try
Trying 10 _ . up a bfo. .,. to do ao. You ~ notllave good luck IOaMdtlyou.

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t700,114-311-~ .

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Plae 10 • The Dally Sentinel

B~ader-~ ·:- sets_the

-·, ;!·

Ann
Landers

..

I

t995, 1..01 Allfdu
TncsS~MdC~

11011 Syndialc.

By ANN, LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: You recen!IY
printed a: l~tter about hepatitis 13 and
C tl}at needs some clarificatipn_ .
Hepiuitis B is readily transmitted
sexually ·and is I00· times more
infectious than AIDS. On the other
hand, h~patitis C is sexually transmitted in less than 10 percent of the
c ~s . There are f!lany married cou-

J

Eastern
student
.
rece1ves
scholarship

because donors have been screened note ~t this disease is rarely transA~ntly, lhe look on my· face
carefully sillce 1990. Researeh is mitled by sexual coniiCt. It canL amused Fred because he lhen prostill being done to find lhe best treat- however, be pas~altlag through cec&amp;d-to. "sample" my salad, too. I
ment to combat this disease.
blood contact. Please take .-e of picked ~my ~ and .put it directyourselves.
., .
~...__
ly in from of him. He tried to return
Anyone who would like more
Dear Ann Landers0 l'd like to- it, saying he didn't want to eat all of
information should send a selfaddressed, stamped envelope to respond to lhe letter- li'om ''Marietta. " it,. he just wanled a taste. I then
Hepatitis Foundation International, · in Mass.," whose frilll)d liked to eat i_!itormcd Fred in a no-nonsense tone
Box 222, Cedar Grove, N.J. 07009.- off the dinner plates of olhers. - of voice lhat he would either "eat it
- Thelma IGng Thiel, chairman and Here's how 1 handled a similar situ- - or wear it." I summoned the waiter
CEO, Hepatitis Foundation Interna- ation years ago.
and ordered another salad.
tional
·
My best friend's cousin, "Fred,"
That happened in 1955. Five
Dear Thelma Thiel: Thank you -was visiting from out of town, and 1 years ago, I attended a wedding, and
for setting the record straight. I also was invited to have dinner with them Fred was there. Would you believe
heard from the American Liver at a very nice restauiint. After our he remembered that restaurant inciFoundation, telling me the same salads were served, Fred i:cached dent? Not only that, he told me he
thing.
over and put his fork into his has never forgotten the lesson he
For all my readers who may be cousin's lettuce. I was appalled at learned that evening and has never
suffering from hepatitis C, please his bad manners.
since eaten from any plate but his

An Eastern High· School senior
has been awarded a full tUition scholarship by the University of Rio
Grande.
Jennifer Mora was recently presen ted with the Atwood Award for
Excellence which is given to eligible
JENNIFER MORA
students in honor of the University of 1 am happy that Jennifer has elected
Rio Grande's founders, Nehemiah to study at the University of Rio
and Permelia Atwood. The At wood s Grande."
established the university in 1876.
Jennifer plans to major in ele. "The university is very pleased to mentary education at Rio Grande.
offer this special award to Jennifer" Her future goals include teaching
.said Mark Abell, exel'utive director of kindergarten and owning her 'own
admissions at Rio Grande. "She dis- daycare center. Jennifer is the daugh-plays the many qualities we want to ter of Richard and Denise Mora of
,sce in an Atwood Award recipient and ~Pomeroy.

A county-wide beautification project involving sunflowers was
planned when the Meigs County .
Garden Clubs Association met
recently at the Meigs County Public
Library.
Emphasis of the project will be on
involving the public jn planting sunflowers which will he judged and .
awarded prizes. Betty Dean and Janet
Bolin were appointed co-chairmen of
the project and will develop the enteria for awards. More information
will be announced later to encourage
residents to panicipate in county
beautification.
·
Suzy Carpenter, county contact
chairman, presided at the .meeting.
Karen Werry announced plans for a
- Meig&gt; County Town and Country
Exposition to he held Sert. 28 ~d 29.
She and Hal Kneen. extension agent,
will have charge of the event. They
invited the garden clubs to have dis-

plays and demons1r11tions at the event
which will feature educational and
entertaining events.
Plans were made for hosting the
spring meeiing of Region ' II of the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs.
The buffet luncheon was planned
with clubs to furnish muffins and coffee cakes'. Bernice Carp[enter displayed white wicker baskets and
flower seed packets which will be
used along with live plants on the
tables. Favors and door pries were
also discussed. Regional treasurer
Betty Wells will have charge of registration, Eva Robson, Werry and
Aiice Thompson will be in charge of
the sales tables, and Werry will provide signs to direct travelers to the
Carleton School in Syracuse where
the meeting will be held. Setup for
the April 27 meeting will be held on
the night before at 7 p.m.
Schedules for the Meigs County

Fair flower show were distributed.
Elich club drew four classes for each
of the two shows, Aug_ 12 arid I5.
Gladys Cummings and Marjorie Fetty ag: co-chairmen for ,the shows.
Theme will be "Meigs CountyGoing Places" and the schedule will
feature important sites in the county
to be interpreted in artistic floral
designs. Special classes will include
. varieties of hosta with ,educational
poster and haridouts, and there will he
special sunflower classes and educational displays.
Speaker at the meeting was Kneen
who previewed the first of three session for the homeowners' yard and
garden series to be held this spring.
The first session will be Tuesday at
7 p.m at the Senior Citizens Center.

By ED PETERSON
_Social Security manager, Athena
Are you self-employed? Does
. your business employ a few people or
: do you work alone? No matter how
small your business--or whether it is
a full or part-time occupation--you
must report your earnings and ·pay
Social Security tax with your income
tax return due by April IS.
If you operate a trade, business or
profession, by yourself or as a part·. ner, you are self-employed. Net earnings of $400 or more in a year must
be reported on your schedule SE. If

you cam under $400, your earnings tinued to pay the Medicare portion of
can still count for Social Security if the Social Security tax, which is 2.9
you decide to compute your earnings percent, on the rest of your earnings.
using one of the optional methods of
The employer's share of the Social
reporting. However, the option avail- Security tax is not considered taxable
able to you depends on whether you income to the employee and lhat is
have income from an agricultural true for the self employed as well.
trade or business or a nonagricultur- Thus, in figuring your net earnings
al trade or business. Call the Internal - from self employment for income tax
Revenue Service for information on purposes, your net profit from the
the optional method of reponing.
business is reduced by a percentage
The Social Security tax for 1995 equal to half of the self employment
was 15.3 percent on self employment tax rate. And, also for income tax purincome up to $61,200. If your net poses, you can deduct half of your
earnings exceed $61,200, you con- Social Security self-employment tax

as a business expense.
If you have wages as well as selfemployment earnings, compute the
taxes on your wages first. Then, your
self-employment income is the difference between your wages and the
maximum earnings taxable by Social
Security in 1995 ($61,200).
Remember, even if you don't owe
any income tax, you must fill out the
tax return Form I040 and Schedule
SE to pay self-employment Social
Security tax. For more information,
call the Internal Revenue Service.

Area educators receive MegaSkills certificates
Ttie. Best Gift Ycu Can Give Your
Child, are the basic habits, attitudes
and behaviors that determine children's achievement. They include
confidence, motivation, effort,
responsibility, initiative, persever-

through using the easy. enjoyable
home activities.
Nominated by Venture Capital
and Title I programs to take
MegaSkills training, Mrs. Northup
and Mrs. Circle took the training at
. ancc, caring, teamwork, common Zanesviile, in the fall of 1994.
The U.S. Depanment of Educasense and proble,!Jl solving.
Workshops and Home Learning tion presented the "A+ for Breaking
Activities, based on MegaSkills, have the Mold" Award to the "MegaSkills" been designed to help families help program which is dedicated to changchildren achieve in school and ing and to improving education in
beyond. These workshops enable communities with special focus on
families to stimulate childrep's in-1 promoting greater family involveschool and out-of-school learning
'

..

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events• . The
-calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are_p.rinted as space permits
and ca11not be guaranteed to run a _
. specific number ol days.

MIDDLEPORT -.- Brooks-Grant
Camp 7 Sons of Union Veterans
meeting Monday, 7:15 p.m. at Hope
Baptist Church. Speaker will be Rick
Whisman of Huntington, W.Va. on
Civil War medicine.

MONDAY
POMEROY -- Big Bend Farm

RACINE-- Racine Board of Public Affairs meeting Monday, 7 p.m. at

NOTICE

Tl)

BIDDERS

STATE OF OHIO

DEPARTMENT OF

Tlli'NSPORT~TION

Columbut, Ohio
onlce of Con~ Legal C_opy Number 116-203
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Date 2129/96
Snlad proponlt will bt
accepted from all pre·
qualllltd blddert at the
OHiet of Contracte, Room
118 of the Ohio Department

I

own. I admit, it made me feel awfully gOO(!. -- Joan in Indianapolis • ~
Dear Joan: It is said that "f&lt;&gt;&lt;Xtfs
love." When you feel kindly towaip
a person, you don't mind sharinj 31
sample of whatever is on ydur pili!!..
I confess that I'm an invetef11o
taster myself, and I can't ~all e~
baving been told, "Order yo.{r

Antique 'Club, 7:30p.m. Monday, at
Meigs High School Library.

Public Notice
T raneportatl.on,
·o I
· Cotumbue, Ohio, until 10:00
a.m.
.
Tueeday, March 26, tete
tor Improvement• In: Atheile, Oalllo, Hocking,
Melgo, Monroe, Morgan,
Noblt,· VInton , and
Waehtngton Countlet, Ohio
for the Improving of
. eectlont ATH-7.0.000 and
varloue, Stole Route 7 ond
varloue, In varloue vllogae,
by opplylnt! polyatter

ment.
The nonprofit Horne and School
Institute developed these workshops,
which are presently conducted in 45
states and have assisted more than
65,000 families.
The first in a series of three workshops is planned for Monday, March
II at 7 at Southern High School.
These free workshops will last for
approximately ~n hour with a prize
drawing at each one.
For additional information residents may call cati Vicki Northup or
Patty Circle at 949-261 I.

Public NotiCe
pavement mll'klnga.
"Tha date ttt tor
comptttlon of thlt work
ehell be •• eat forth In tht
bidding propottl." Plant
and Specification• art on
!Itt tn tht Dtpartmtnt of
Tranaportatlon.
JtrryWrly
btrector of-Tranaportatlon
(3) It, ta; 2TC
Public Notice

' Public Notice
than ·tO% of tha bid amount
In favor of tht afor..old
Melgt
County
Commletlonere. Bid bondt
thtll be aecomptnltd by
Proof of Authority of the
o!Hcltl or ogent algnlng the
bond.

Bldt thell be "tied and·
marked oa Bld for
Middleport Porldng Paving
ond malted or delivered to:
Meta•
County ,
Commtlllonara,

Courthouat, PomtJOy, Ohio:
457ft.

-

Attantlon of bkldiro
called to al ,,
raqutramenta co-lntd
thle bid pocktt, particularly
to the Federol Lobor
Standardt Provtalont and:
Davia Ba·con .Wagea,
vartout
l!'auranca
-'oue~uat

and
for • .
and

for tOO%

Ill 11, , .. 21;

Pick 4:

8-7-S-7
Buckeye 5:

9-19-27-30-31

•

want peace and quiet, I recommend
:
a phoneless cord.

•••

Send questions to Ann LatJ·
ders, Creators Syndicate, 5777
Century Blvd., Suite 700, Lilli
Angeles, Calif. 90045
'

'Y•

·Vol. 48, NO. 220
1 Section,

SIS.

:\ER\'()t ·s

on the insurance.

Horton announced that the county has advertised the bids for the boater
parking paving job on the new village marina project, and the village is hoping the project will he completed by the middle of April.
Honan added that the bid for the new floating dock at the marina will be
advertised around the end of March.
In other matters, council:
• was updated by Arnold Johnson of the Middleport Recreation Depanment on the Middleport P&lt;!OI Project.
Johnson said that. volunteer labor and materials are desperately needed
for the project for the work to he completed by Memorial Day. Volunteers
interested in working on the project can contact Johnson at 992-6589.
• heard from Horton on the failure of rental owners in paying their vii{Continued on Page 3)

floor of the Meigs County Courthouse.
Last week, commiSsiOners
pledged t)leir support for the planned
hospital addition to include assisting
in the selection of a building site and
making available county-owned
property.
Emergency Services Director
Robert Byer said Monday that emergency services supports the hospital
and added that the demise of the
facility would "kill the EMS system
as we lin ow it."
Howard addressed rumors that the
location of the EMS building, behind
the hospital, was one of the five proposed locations for the medical arts
building.
Howard said she has not been formally notified of the proposed location, but assured Byer it would not

COLUMBUS (AP) - For the
fifth year in a row, the number of deer
killed in Ohio during the 1995 hunting season set a record. But a farm
group said the tally should have been

ENJOYI~G THE DAY - Urilted Auto Workers member Carl
Sawell relaxed Monday while picketing outside of the General
Motors Coip. Delphi Chassis plant in Dayton. The eight-day-old
strike at ~ brake plants have Idled at least 50,000 GM employees nationwide. {AP)
.

even greater.

The Ohio Division of Wildlife said
Monday preliminary figures showed
179,543 deer were killed during the
statewide gun, bow and primitive
weapons hunting seasons.
That was a 5 percent increase from
170,527 '" 1994.
"While the record total is below
our earlier estimate, hunters still
enjoyed their best deer-hunting season ever in Ohio." said Patrick
Ruble, executive administrator of
wildlife management and research.
'The gun season was doubled to 12
days last year in an attempt to reduce
a deer population estimated at
500,000 last fall _Officials had hoped
for a harvest of between 190,000 and
200,000 deer.

of GMC Yukons only 26 days.
on March 5, OM has been forced to
On Monday, there were indica- shut down 15 North American assemtions that talks with the United Auto bly plants and six pans, plants.
Workers had stalled. No progress was
Another 12 of roughly 200 GM
reported over the weekend and no pans plants in North America have
new talks were scheduled , GM been affected, with some workers
spokeSinan Jim Hagedon said.
being sent home but production conLocal 696 President Joe Hasen- tinuing.
jager said the strike "could be a long
The workers at the two Dayton
one.··
plants struck over safety and job
Since the 3,000 members of Unit- security. The plants supply brake sysed Auto Workers Local 696 walked tems and parts to nearly all of OM's
off the job at Delphi Chassis Systems assembly plants.

"We feel there just was very, very
little hunting pressure the second
week of that gun season." said Bob
Stoll, the division 's forest wildlife
project leader.
" I think hunters took their vacation the first week and didn 't have
more time to hunt. We had a little
hunting from local folks ," Stoll said.
"Certainly in some portions of the
state we did .not achieve the harvest
we wanted _to get.' '
The farm bureau, the state 's
largest general farm organization.
was pleased with the record but disappointed that the informal target was
not reached. It said a significant
·reduction in the deer population
would reduce damage to crops .
_ "The_wildlife division is working
m the nght d~rect1on but we don't
have the problem under control," said
C. W1lham Swank, execut1vc v1ce
pres1dent.

~...../

Guannteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
Available

TAIPEI. Taiwan (AP) - Tai- miles from the Taiwanese islands of
wan's military went on high alert Quemoy and Wuchiu.
today as China staned war games in
"We have heightened alert, espethe Taiwan S!raits. and police across cially on the front-line islands which
the island cleared out bomb shelters lie face to face with the exercise
for the public.
area," a military official, requesting
. China opened the war games anonymity, said today.
about noon, sending 10 air force jets
Taiwan's 400,000-strong militacy
up for drills, Taiwan's Defense Min- says it expects the exercise to include
istry said. The jets stayed on China's anti-submarine me,asures, anti-ship
side of lhe straits separating the and anti-aircraft missiles. artillery and
island and mainland, a Taiwanese bombing runs.
military officer said, requesting
It also says China may·follow up
anonymity.
with a separate amphibious landing
The war games were the latest step drill.
in China's campaign to quell indeAlthough the military would not
pendence sentiment on Taiwan ahead elabo111te on what a high alert entails.
of the island's March 23 elections.
Jllllice said public bomb shelters,
· · ·However, there was no confirma- many of them untepdcd for yean;
tion that China's military was using have been cleared all over the island.
live ammunition, as it had previous- · taipei police inspected basements
ly 'said it would.
· and 'underground parking lots that can
Following up its test-.ftring of ·serve as shelters, and posted yellow
th{lle miss~les near Taiwan on Friday, stickers to point them out to the pubChina began eight days of air and sea lie.
maneuvers in a 6,600-square-mile .
Offieials also asked Taipei's 2.6
rectanSie that Stretches to the mid- million people to clear their basepoint of the Taiwan Straits -· a line ments, many of which have become
both sides refrain from crossing.
storage rooms.
·- The war-games zone lies off lhe
In Quemoy, a Taiwanese island a
sbjdheast Chinese coast, 30 to 70 - mile from lhe Chinese mainland, sol-

"4-MB

squm

r-----------,.
ANET
1"
nowr
W .. RD

interfere with emergency medical services operation.
In other action. commissioners

opened bids for a new ambulance to
be used by the Racine Emergency
Squad_
Horton Emergency Vehicles of
Grove City submitted two bids of
$83,199.50 and $89,969.50, while
Burgess Hearse and Ambulance of
Londonvillc and Penn Care Medical
Products of Niles submitted bids of
$90.371 and $93,766, respectively.
At Byer's recommendation, the
board tabled acceptance of any bid,
pending furth er review_
Commissioners also held a public
hearing on the proposed closing of
Frye Road in Rutland Township,
after which they agreed to close the
road . Attendmg the hearing w.as
(Continued .on Page 3)

Farm Bureau disputes deer kill total

Chinese s_aber--rattling places -Girl Scout Week-Taiwan's military on high alert

I 1111

t:&lt;l\ll\1\l{h.. l f .'

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
An architect_for Veterans Memorial Hospital will address the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
next Monday to discuss proposed
sites for a $ L5 million medical arts
complex.
Commission Vice President Janet
Howard announced the meeting during the board's regular meeting Monday afternoon. Howard presided over
the meeting in the absence of Commission President Fred Hoffman.
The architect will discuss proposed sites and plans for the medical
arts building, which will house additional doctors and allow thetn to use
the hospital's facilities.
The meeting, which will be open
to the public, will be held at I p.m.
in the county courtroom on the third

,

GM had an 82-day supply of cars
at the end of Eebruary and a 79-day
~upply of trucks. Generally, a 60-day
supply is considered ideal.
"Inventory;wise, we're in a pretty good po~ition,'' said GM
spokesman Tom Klipsline. "It's higher than normal."
' Still, GM could lose $2SO million
• week if all 29 North American
assembly plants are idled, said D~yid
Healy, a financial analyst with the
New York,basecJ Burnham Securities.
GM earned $6.9 billion in 1995.
And Ward's Automotive Reports
said that some GM models, such as
large sport-utility vehicles and the
fast-selling Saturns, already had tight
SIIPplies. The supply of Saturns at the
end of February was 49 days and that

bill," Hood said .• '
-"
Currently; the village charges half of a six-month average of customers'
bills when there is a break. Council discussed the proposal, but took no action

Commissioners set public
meeting on VMH addition

DAYTON (AP) General
Motors Corp. says it has plenty of
cars to sell despite a strike that has
forced the shutdown .of more than
balf of tbe automaker 's North American assembly plants.
. But analysts cautioned lhat the
world's largest autornaker could lose
millions of dollars if the strike continues. In all, about 60,000 workers
~ave been idled.
The eight-day strike at two Delphi
Chassis brake plants could close as
many as 27 of OM's 29 North Amer-ican ~plants- by late todar,company sources told The Detroit
News, citing internal planning documents.
The only North American assem'&gt;ly plants that will probably keep
running are Doraville, Ga., which is ·
gearing up to build lhe redesigned
OM minivans later this year, and the
Chevrolet Corvette plant in Bowling
Green, Ky. The Corvette brake system is not _supplied by Delphi Chas-

''

~--~-'-------------'------- ~

"I don't feel it is justified at this time," he said. "We just gave the village
residents a br~ak on their trash rates, and I hate to turn around three months
later and increase the water rates."
Council also discussed the possibility of an annual increase. which Councilman John Neville would like to see incorporilled into any action that council is going to take in the short-term.
"If we're going to have an annual increase. then let's tie that into the initial increase," he'said. "I think that would he better, whether the initial increase
is 20 percent or lower."
Neville asked Hood and the Board of Publi~ Affairs to gather figures on
a stepped increase, figuring in an annual increase over a multi-year period .
Gilmore then asked for a motion to approve the increase, which died without a second . The issue was then tabled by Mayor Dewey Horton.
Hood also discussed the possibility of offering leak insurance for $25 a
year, to cover costs associated with a water line break.
"We felt that the old system needed to be revised. If there is a tiieak, we
would go back and charge customers half of the three month average of the

_GMweighs
·car supply
·as strike
.continues

we

Old friends are the best friends
• No LAlldl or Fees
The Tri-County Community - after all, they tell me, so lhe reunion
• Accumulate or MOIKhly
· Action Agency which dis!fibutes of two Meigs Countians in a local
Income
food in nine Southern Ohio Counties store recently was quite special.
• Hllh Slfety!
including Meigs .and Gallia has been
Mrs. Richard (Margie) NOITis and
• Wide &lt;llok:e of Amuities of
awarded a $20,000 grant fr~m the R. Mrs. Pat (Mary) Roush were such
All Kinde
Alvin Stevenson Fund of the Colum- close ·friends during tbeir days at
eau for Information:
bus Foundation. Racine High School but then carne
SC
·
The g~ant will go toward con- graduation,rnarria~eandalotoftrav·
OIT_JNSURANCE
struction of the Agency's Regional cling and they los! touch.
40U (CIIIIect)
Food Center which is being built at
Pat went to the air force and Dick
3222 SwUt Rei.
the L.ogan Industrial Park. The to the merchant marines. ConseAlbuy, Oldo 45'710
, 19,000
foot facility will house quently, tbC Weavers moved to Jack- • Amwllies a iaued bJ hiwaw
,
· two major programs operated by . sonville, Fla., to be near his pon of ;1!~~!:~-;~lme~~;·~t:i:l~ell
Community Action, The Soulheast- shippina @!Jd lhe Roush family
for Cldy witlldnftls.
ern Ohio Foodbank and Central , moved about to various air force
Kitchen.
· The Southeastern Ohio Foodbank
distributes wholesome food through
· Re.ne~t
a network of Member Agencies in
nin~ Southern Ohio Counties: Hock· J'
ing, Aihens, Peny,W-.hlna!on. Mor- ·
san. Jackson, Viiitoll, Moil~ and
Oaliia. Community ACtion's Central
Kilchen serves !;hikiRn in Helld Sill!
. '
·
n_
and ~Y care centers, ~ ~derly at
congregate meahitea, and those who
_,
Yo.ui'
are homebound in Hol:kin&amp;; Aihens,
and Perry Counties.
County Commiuioner·
Completion of tbe IUJional FoOd
Pd lor .... 111 ddalt
Center is scheduled for this summer. '------·--~--cal--,_...,

A Gannett Co.-........

l

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Discussion on approval of a 20 percent increase in Middleport's village
water/sewer rates requested by,the village Board of Public Affairs was tabled
. Monday after a motion by Council President Bob Gilmore to approve the
increase died wilhout a second.
·
·
· "If we thouaht we could go on without asking for an increase. we would.
But, with increasing equipment, materials, and EPA testing costs, we are going
to have to do something," said John Hood of the Board of Public Affairs.
According to Hood, !he 20 percent increase would raise the minimum bill
!ly $2.89 a :nonth, With the proposed increase, senior citizens will still receive
. !heir current 10 percent discounted rate.
Hood ssaid lhat even with the increase, Middleport is still offering cheaper rates than the other villages in the county. The village has not had a
water/sewer rate hike since a 12 percent increase in 1992.
During. the discussion, Councilman Mick Childs held firm on his opposition to the timing of the rate hike.

Oh where,. oh where, have my bases.
videos gone, ·
Retirement came along as it hll$ a,
Oh where, oh where &lt;lid theY. go; way of doing and the two families
I hope that someone will let me decided to return to Meigs County
where the two friends had been
know.
'Cause my school and I need reared.
Recently, while shopping in t~
them so.
This co1,1ld be the appeal of same local store, Margie and Mary,
Pomeroy's Maureen Hennessy who is were suddenly face to face after -all
a speech-language pathologist with the passing years--like 52. They rec~
the Washington County Board of ognized each other immediately an&amp;
it was quite a reunion .. Both are resi£ ·
MRJDD in Marietta.
The three_yideos that are missing ing in the Racine area now so they
should be getting together quite oftep
deal with sign language.
The videos have been missing to fill in the details of those 52 years.
I love happy endings don't you?
since last summer. -when Maureen
was playing bridge at the home of
· Jane Walton. She was speaking of her
Anothet famous entertainer m~
work and sign language when a sub- Death on Saturday--George Burns, -of
stitute player expreSS~:() interest as she course. Although you are probabtr
had a relative interested in learning to aware of the deaths that occur among
sign. So Maureen graciously loaned the entertainment stars, I always like
the videos but they were never to discuss them with you. I think
returned. In the passing oftirne, it has feel better in acknowledging th~Jil
. slipped Maureen's mind just who bor- since their deaths many times rot
rowed them.
some of us mark the end of an eraNow Maureen is badly in need of a bit sad, eh? Burns was I00 and
:the videos since she has two new probably never missed a performance
clients who life deaf and blind. The in his long years of entertaining
tapes are needed to help the staff in except the one he had planned to do
learning how to communicate with on his tOOth birthday. There, finally
them.
came one he couldn't make. s&amp;.
The boiforn line is that it is now remember his famous line, · "Sa~
. time to return the tapes and-will the Goodnight, Gracie", and do kee~
borrower please get in touch with smiling.
.\
Maureen at 992-5402?

Tri-County CAA
awarded grant
for food center

35-

Ponferoy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday,' March 12, 1996

.

by Bob 1-tQeflich

\t:~H

to ,._

'M iddleport tables water/sewer rate hike

Kneen gave tips and handouts on
seeding, fertilizing, controling weeds,
_common pests and disease, and
talked about soil testing. The other
sessions to be presented by Kneen are
creating and ~aring for perennial
borders. April 9, and selection and
care of annuals on April 16,
Refreshments 'Were served by the
Wildwood Garden club. Another
meeting' of club representatives will
be held before the regional meeting
to finalize plans for it.
The program will be presented by
OAGC judges, Bolin, Carpentef,
Dean and Sheila Curtis, demonstrating some of the mooern anistit
designs on the fair flower show
scheduled. Tentative date is April 21
at the Pomeroy Library.
·
_;

Many !hanks for your response to
Faye Watson who had lost her-cake
starter during some house remodeling. Fay gbt a lot of calls from so
many of you who were able to help her out and she really appreciates that
as do I. Fay is now headed towards
SYRACUSE -- Meigs County the Easter season with a new batch of
Chamber of Commerce luncheon cakes.
Tuesday, noon, at Carleton · School. ·
Speaker will be Jim Orobe, head
Former resident Don Pooler has
successfully undergone a lung transOhio University football coach.
plant operation in Florida and is _
doing well. He'd love to hear from
relatives and friends in Meigs County: Cards and notes will reach him at
3611 S.W. 34th St., Apt. 52,
. Gai.nesville, Florida 32608.

Clear tonight, Iowa In
the 208. Wedneadlly,
aunny, high In the H..

•

a1

•
Gem of lhe Day: For people whp

SYRACUSE -- Southern Local
RACINE -- First of three .Building Committee meeting TuesMegaSkills workshops, Monday 7 day, 7 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary
p.m., at Southern High School. School. All district residents urged to
Free, last about an hour.
attend.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND -- Rutland Council
meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Public
inviled since discussion will be on
exploring possible solutions for flood

3-5-4

,

control.

the fire department annex.

Pick 3:

Sports, Page S

Beat of · th~end ...

,_ Self-employed use tax return to -report SS taxes ·

Public Notice

I

own ..,

Ohio Lottery
Karr, Evans
nominated
for All-State

Beautification project to incorporate sunflowers

.

Vicki Northup .and Patty Circle
have been · awarded MegaSkills
Leader Certification from the
Me gaS kills Education Center of The
Home and School Institute in Washington, DC The two join a select number of
educators and community leaders
nationally who have successfully
conducted a required number of
Me gaS kills Workshops for parents in
'their communities.
"MegaSkills." formulated by Dr.
Dorothy Rich in her bestselling book,
MegaSkills: In School and in Life--

••..
.

record s~raight on two types of hepatitis

pies in which one panner is infecled
wilh hepatitis C and lhe other is not,
even though !hey have been intimate
for -yean. II is, however, recommended lhat a condom be used in a
new relationship. Many infected
people have no visible symptoms
and are unaware of lhe risk of transmitting the virus to others.
There are safe and effective vaccines to prevent hepatitis A and B.
. both of which can be sexually transmitted. Hepatitis C is transmitted
primarily through blood contact -shared needles. nail files. razor
blades and toothbrushes as well as
infected needles used in tattooing
and body piercing. Transfusion is
rarely a source of hepatiti~ C

'.

Monday, March 11, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

dicrs trimmed hundreds of trees to
give their artillery units a clearer
view, Taiwan's China Times newspaper reported. The trees were planted after China stopped shelling the
island in 1979.
Beaches that opened to swimmers
in recent years have been closed
again, the newspaper said.
A Chinese bombardment of Que'
may in 1958 killed 600 people and
forced islanders int~ bomb shelters
for weeks.
·China claims Taiwan is a renegade
province, and has never renounced
force to reunify it with the mainland.
Taiwan also espouses reunification, .
but China is convinced its president, ·
4e Teng-hui, covertly wants to make
the island indeoendent
In-Beijing, Communist Pany Secretary General Jiang Zemin repeated
that that although China wants peaceful reunification with TJ!iwan, it will
use force if need be.
Jiang, head of the commission that
controls the People's Liberation
Army, told top officers Monday that
China must modernize its weaponry
and improve training and supply.
state-run media reported today.

Girl Scout Week !s being celebr8ted In Meigs ~nty thlt
week, March 1G-16. Pomeroy Mayor Frank Vaughan signed a
proclamation Monday In recognition of the.l3rd anntvenery of
the founding of Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., the largtst voluntMr
organization for glrla In the -lei. With 'ilugNn It Bethany
COoke, a _Hnlor girl scout of Troop 1204. {Sentinel photo)
,

Swank said the state should consider lowering the cost of pennits in
rural areas to encourage hunters to
take more deer.
Ohio residents who hunt in rural
areas need a $15 hunting license and
a $20 penn it for each of the two deer
they may take. In urban areas, the
price for the second deer penn it drops
to $1 Q_
"Hunters in urban wnes get a
break on license tags ," said Jeannette
Fish, fann bureau spokeswoman.
Ruble said a lower permit fee
_probably would not have the desired
effect. Instead , the farm bureau
· encouraged land owners to let deer
hunters usc their property as a way to
increase the deer harvest.
- "In and around public hunting
- areas where there's relatively high
- hunting pressure or areas where peo_pie don't restrict hunting, we don't
: realty see deer problems adjacent to
those kinds of areas," Ruble said.

Proposed jail
site located
near schools
irks parents
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. CAP) Residents are upset that a site close
to three Cabell County schools is
under consideration for a regional
jail.
"Surely there's a better place in
the county to build the jail than this ," sa.•d Margaret Manin, a teacher at
H1te-Saunders Elementary.
Clarence Lewis, of Huntington
said his 12-year-old daughter beca~
fnghtened when she teamed about
the proposed jail site in this dhio River community.
· . About_ 200 peoP,Ie met Monday
: Right to discuss the issue and vowed
; to lobb~ the state Regional Jail and
! Cot:ectlonal Facility Authority
1 agamst usmg the site.
,
. Jack RooP,. the agency's executive
dtrector, las~ week said the si1e was
one of two under consideration for
lhe Western Regional · Jail, which
would serve five counties.
The site is half a mile from Htllit- ington High School a mile from Rite-Saunders and ~II-It,2'111i
.
from Meadows Elernentlly. ~ •
-l-

''
'~"

."

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