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1'

•
Page-1G-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 6, ·1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,Spouse of alcoholic warns 'it's not 'just a few beers·' . . .
Dear ADD LaDders: I am married
to an alcoholic. May I tell your
mM1en something I paid no auention
when I was younger? I wish
someone had wised me up.
. My h~band. "Andy." has always
been a beer drinker. In fact, thai's all
·he ever drinks. As a young woman in
love, I did not notice that he drank
reven days week. He still does.
Over the 14 years we have been

a

married, we have had hundreds of
I want 10 tell all the Y.OUng people can help with this problem before my
fights about his drinlting. The last who think it's "j~t beer" thai if you husband 10t811y alienates our 19-)'CIIfseyen ycm have been hell on me and , can'tget tluough the day without that old daughter. "Gr~:1Chen" auends the
on _our 8-y~ar~old . daug~ter. _I've ' beer, you have a serious problem.-- local community college, ~orks
decided staymg m th1s mamage IS not OHIO
part-time and respects our w1shes.
DEAR OHIO: You told them, and She is a kind, well-adjusted youpg
fair 10 her.
I have begged Andy JQ gelll!:lp, but I thank you. Beer dnmksare lhe most woman and has a lovely circle of
he says he doesn't have a problem. diffiCult to reach because they don't friends.
After all, it's "justa few beers."
consider beer an intoxicating
The problem? Her room is a
My family is sick of him . He is · beverage.Those gieatTV ads portray disaster area. My husband feels that
always drunk by the time Sunday beerdrinkersashailfeUowswellmet he has the right to go in there
-!inner comes around. My sisters can't --good ol' boys who always seem to whenever he feels like it and inSpect
stand him, and-his own daughter has be celebrating something. They give the room. l.f it doesn 't meet his
no way of relating to him because he the impression that to lcnoclc beer is standards, he yells at her as if she
is a walking time bomb. She never somehow on-American.
were a J-rear-old.
·
knows when he'l~ e'\Piode.
One beer at a sitting is OK. TWo
1 feel everyone deserves some
Once, a long ume ago, Andy was beers, maybe. But anything beyond space. Greachen's room is her haven.
kind, polite and easygoing. Now he that number goes over the line of As long as the sloppiness doesn't
is rude, obnoxious, filthy, mean and recreations:! drinking.
involve other rooms in the house, I
antagonistic.
Dear Ann Landers: I hope you

don't make an issue of iL
My husband complains that 1don't
back him up. He insists that I should
keep after Gretchen about this. It is
causing quite a problem between us. .
He also gets very angry when he lries
to make a call and &lt;lretchen is on lhe,
phone a_nd . doesn't get off
immediately. Hethenscreamsather;
which is embarrassing because the
persononlheOiberendcanhearhim.
Please give me your views. I need
help. -- TORN MOTHER IN FORI'
LAUDERDALE, FLA.
. DEAR MOTHER: Your husband
sounds like a control freak ·wi!b a
short fuse.
· First, he has no business in
Gretchen's bedroom. Second, a 19-

:T'me capsule
• I tops
.;,:bUf/a
, , ,
'aCt'llllt'leS
f
IV

I

:: A year or celebration marking
the !75th anniversary of the found_ing of Meigs County will ~onclude
Saturday at noon when a ume capsule is buried on the Courthouse
lawn.

·~·

Plans for a reception from 1l

·a.m. to noon when the outdoor ceremony will begin were made by the
PStb Anniversary Committee
Wednesday at a meeting held at the

Meigs Museum.
Decisions were made on wbat
items will go into the three foot
stainless steel capsule donated~y
the Pomeroy Lions Club.
Pictures of the June reception
where recqgnition was given to
families residing' in homes or on
farms occupied by their ancestors
175 years ago, and·residents 95 and
over, and of the Meigs County
Genealogical Socieiy's recognition
of residents whose lineage goes
back to anytime before 1880, will
be incluiled.
Also to be placed in the capsule
will be pictures and programs from
various community activities wbich
carried out the !75th anniversary

theme, "Remembe~ng the Past 'Margaret Parke~. chairm~n of the
Shapmg the Future.
.
!75th anmv~rsary commmee, and
Others 1tems to be placed m the county officiills. Speeml mus1c will
c~psule are.a comme'!'orative J.'Ub- be pr~vided_ by the Meigs County
hcauon of The Dally Sentmel Histoncal Sm~ers un~er the drrecwhrch to!d a story of early Metgs twn of Maxme Whuebead .and
Count~, tts early settlers. governrefreshments will be s_erved.
111ent, mdustry, educatmnal factb The commemorative coverlets,
lies, churches, and growth patterns. mugs and publications of The Daily
a calender, a roster ~rom tbe Sentinel will be on sale . .
schools, a copy of the Lions Club
At noon the group will move to
ch~rtty new_spaper. the coyerlet
an area near the Civil War monudes1gn, a Metgs Co~nty cookie cut- ment on lbe courthouse lawn for
ter, a ·commemorative mug, _and a theburialofthetimecapsule.
lape prepared by WMPO Radio.
Plans call for a marker to be
Salurday' s progr~m will get placed at the site of the time capunderway at II a.m. m the court- sule which will be removed and
room of the M~t&amp;S Coun~y Court- opened in 2019 when the county
house. There wtll be greeungs from celebrates its bicentennial.

bb :

'

non-profit gr.o.ilps wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
des ill ned to promote 'sales
fund raiser~ of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
crinnot be guaranteed to run a
opecmc nurnber of days . .

or

FRIDAY
GROVE - Meigs
Gnmge, 7:30 FriOrange hall. Hem·
hosting.

MIDDLEPORT - Fr~ round
and square dance featuring C.J . and
the Country Gentlemen at old
Legion Building Friday, 8-11 p.m .
All welcome.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 regular meeting Saturday, :7:30 p.m. at the grange hall
on County Road I. Members ll!'lled
to attend. Potluck to follow meetin g.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411 meeting Sat-

urday, 7:30 p.m. at the Masonic
temple. Refresllmen.l$. All M.Mons
·welcome.

Sportsman Club will host gun
shoot at 1 p.m. Sttru!;!yL _
·

MONDAY
BASHAN -The county's atPOMEROY- FOE Aerie 2171
District 4 meting, Saturday, 5:30 home schooling group will meet at
• 7 p.m. Monday at 2!!471 Qasban
PJDRoad. For information call 949SUNDAY
31 !9.
PARKERSBURG - Native
. POMEROY - · The Meigs
Americans and others are invited to
a gathering at 3 p·.m. Sunday at County Board of Elections will
West Virginia University,Parlcers- · hold monthly meeting .at 4 p.m.
Monday at board office.
burg to organize a center.
FORKED RUN - Forked Run

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local

Business growth in Rio Grande -Pageot

P.S.. lfeel sorry or you w .n your
daughter movl!s ouL YOU willlhen
bealrne the focus.of your husband's
anger.
.
Lones~?Takuharg~ofyourlifo
and turn rt aro~U~d. Wrrte for A1111
lA~rs'rrewbooklet, "t'owtoM~

A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper

·By LARRY EWING

DECEMBER STUD
students of the week fo
cember at Pomeroy Elementary School
were front, Clare Sis
lranda Young, Bradley Soulsby and
Whitney Thoe~e, and back, al\non Soulsby, David Boling, Derrkk Johnson, and Ross StewarL

The Cremeans-sponsored "sunshine
nme..Sent!nel Staff
.
"l&amp;mtJroudtossythatwahavea/ready rule," along with reform measures that
GALLIPOLIS - "Revolutionary change" or a "paltry &amp;ccomp/lsh&amp;d . more this week In the cut the size of congressional staff, Set
pack~ge of reform"? Both phra~es have been usc:d to United States House of Representatives term limits on _committee chairmen and
descnbe the frantiC fust week acuvtty of the Republican- th
h be ·
l'' hed l th I t placed Congress under the laws that apled 104th Congress.
.
.
•n •• en sccomp ••
n • •• ply totherestofthecountry, were tackled
For ·all the talk of bipartisanship, Republicans and four dec•ctes."
on the first day of the 104th Congress.
Democrats.are already deep in battfe as the new Congress
Rep. Frank cremeana
Politically appealing, particularly for independentsettles in, competing for credit as guardians of the taxpayminded voters, these won overwhelming, bipartisan ape.rs and architects of political reform.
political symbolism', Cremeans was selected to. serve as proval. Republicans hailed them as 1he first ai:complishFirst-lerm Sixth District Rep. Frank Cremeans declared House floor manager for that section of the G~n- ments of their revolution; House Democrats, who had held
after his first week in the Hous~, "The facl:_of Congress tract with America" that promised to r.equirethateommit· ·- power for--40 uninterrupted yea-rs·,- prumptly-said they
changed forever ... in just 15 hours, on the first day of the tee meetings be open to the public. ·'
·
· dilln 't go far enough.
new session."
As floor manager, Cremeans was leadoff speaker on
"With this paltry package of reforms, the Repu~lican
"I was delighted to play a leadership role in what is now behalf ofthe pro)Xlsal, and kept track of the time allocated Party has shown that they just don't get the message,"
beingcalled'TheRevolution',"theGallipolisRepublican for Republicans during the debate, allowing as many complainedDemocratic Whip David Bonior.
said.
·
supporters as possible to speak on behalf of the rules
"I am proud to say that we have alr~ady accompt'ished
In an opening-day agenda that blended substance and change.
more
in the United States House of Representa.

salad bar.

.,

POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Depanment s!artS a free sixweek weight loss program at 6 p.m.
on Mondays or Thursdays at the
multi-ptli"JlOSe building.

11 .

-

.

.

·Clinton considers Increase
WASHINGTON

- Ointon administration

,~~ff~ic~ia~l~s;~~~~thetoday
the White House is
minimum wage, which,a
senior House Republican
vowed to oppose "with
every fiber of my being."
"It is under a~tive con-

sideration," Labor Secretary Robert ~eich said at a
White House briefing. He
added, "The president has
not made any final decisions. In fact, no recommendation has forman y
gone to the presidellt yet.' •

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Community Association will
meet at 5:15 p.m. Tuesday at Peopies Bank.

"KYGER - Women Alive,
Monday, 7 p.m. al the Kyger Creek
Club Hotise. Devotional speaker, a
craft, and refreshments to be a

w•SC· she said.
·. · ·
· The minimum wage has been $4.25 a hour since
1991." Some .economists believe that .any increase
would price jobs out of the" market.
"I consider the minimum wage the legislating
· away of job op)Xlrtunities" for lower-skilled work_ers, said House Majority Leader Dick Armey, RTexas. For these workers, he said, their lower skill
levels "do not result in productivity that justifies a
wage of that nagnitude."
White House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta said
Thursday that Clinton has not decided yet whether to
propose an increase. According .to a report in
Thursday's editions of The Washington Post, his
advisers are recommending that he endorse a $1
increase; to $5.25 an hour.
An administration official, who S)Xlke on condition
. .lhit his name not be used, predicted that the president's
- . final decision would be for an increase ofless than SI.
. Asked in an interview how strongly he would fight
any proposal to raise the minimum, Armey replied,
. "With every fiber of my being."
"We 've seen the minimum wage, repeatedly, cost
people their ability to get on the bottom-most rungs of
the occupational ladder .... If you take those rungs out
of the ladder it makes it doubly more difficult to get
to the. top rungs," he said.
'

·Cruise
• AM!Ft.t Cassene
• PoWer Windows

· Power Lod&lt;s

• Full Conversion
• F1berglass Running Boards
·Loaded!

• 4 Cap~in Chairs

.. Soot,.. """"'~

$21988
'
No Doc FM. 0.¥1!1111"

· • Titt Steering
• Cruise
• AMIFM Caosette
• Power Windows
• Power Locl&lt;s
• 4 Captain Chairs
• So[a/Bed
'

.

-

'94 CHEVY K·1500 EXTENDED CAB
4x4 PICKUP

·CONVERSION VAN

• Driver Side Air Bag
•Anti-Lock Brakes
• Ar COndrt~ .
• Automtt~ Overdri'lle
·Vista Say Windows
·Power Steeling
• Power B&lt;akes

• E.tended Cab
• Silvetado
• 4•4
• 350 V-8 Power
• Automat&lt;

• Air Cor)dition
• P&lt;iwer Steering
• Power Brakes
• Power Door Locks
• Power Windows

• AM!Ft.t Cassette
·Tin Steering
• Cruise
· • Aluminum Wheels
• Ful~ Loaded!

•Automahc
• Power Steering
• Rear Detro~er

• Power Brakes
• Cu~om Ckllh ·\
• AMIF~ Stereo
Bucket Seats
• Console
• Wei Equ!Jperjl
• Stee BeHed T1res

By GEORGE ABATE

OVER 30 SUBURBANS IN STOCK!

11W1D lEW '95BUICII' FS1BII
• Air COndition ,

• Power Steering
• Power Brakes
• Power Coo&lt; Locks
• Du~ Airt&gt;ags
' · AntHod&lt; li'akes • Power Windows
• 38)0 V1l

Power

• Af.\IFM Stereo
• Ti~ Steering
• Custom Cloth lnterio&lt;
•Loaded!

..
'94 CHEVY SUBURBAI4x4
• Air Condition
• Automatic
• Duat Aillags
•Powerlnkes

• Power Steenng
· PowerCoo&lt; LOCks
• AJJJFM Stereo ~
• Tin Steenng

• Delay Wj)ers

• Custom Cloth ~terior
• Loaded!

•Siv«ado
• ~X4

-~~~
• AIAomllic

-¥-8 PIIWI!IIIILVIUIIO

• ANIFII Cooselle

operates."

Cremeans heralded the "sunshine rule" as an example of
the Republican "Revolution."
'"On Wednesday we threw the doors wide open,"
Continued on page A2 ·

• Fo~

~

CHOOSE FROM 20 '94 AND '95
K·1500 EXTENDED CAB PICKUPS

From AP, Staff Reports
GALLIPOLIS - Snow and ice were
blamed for a local traffic death and at
least five other traffic fatalities in Ohio
as the state was hit w.ith the first st~
the season. .
..
The accidents occurred in sou bern
and northeast Ohio.
Icy road conditions are listed as a
contributing factor in a two·vehicle accident that .left a Gallipolis man dead
Friday.
.
Michael J. Myers, 39, 713 Vanco
Road, was
dead at Holzer
after be was taken there
by the Gal)ia County Emergency Medical Service.
·'
Gallipolis Ciiy l'ollce thief Roger
Brandeberry said a preliminary investigation indicates that Myers was traveling on State Route 141 in front of the
Magic 101 radio studios around 4:30
p.m, wben his car skidded out of control
and went left of center.
·
, ' '
The car then struck the front of a truck - • • ·
driven by Bert H. Irick, 50, Parkersburg, L,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;._ _...,...;::
W.Va.,andownedbyGoldsmit&amp; Black
AREA MAN KILLED-Gallipolis City Pollee ~re blaming Icy road condllloas Friday as
of Parkersburg. Irick was not injured. a conlrihutlng factor In this two-vehicle crash on State Route 141 that killed Michael J.
The fatality - Gallia County's first Myers, 39, Gallipolis, driver of the car.
of the year - is still under investigation; Brandeberry said.
of the vehicle on an icy stretch of Ohio 63 i~ Lemon Township.
Other Stllte Feta!ltlea
· Billy R. Sturgell Jr., 24, of Hamilton, was ejected from the
Near Blanchester in southwest Ohio, the State Highway Patrol ambulance after it slid into a ditch and overturned several times, the
said a Kenneth D. Baxter, 38, of Blanchester, died when his truck slid highway patrol said. Trooper Robert Patton said the co-driver in the
and hit a culvert and a tree.
ambulance was treated and released at a hospital.
Ice also was to blame for the death of a woman in Highland
In Columbiana County in northeast Ohio, Cecil Smith, 58, of
County.
·
.
Salineville, died when his car collided head-on with another Friday
Marilyn St. Claire, 53, of.Hillsboro, lost control of her car on ice afternoon. The Lisbon highway patrol post said both drivers lost
._ _
on Ohio 136 Friday, said a sheriff's dispatcher whO would not give control. on: ice.
her name. The car crosse(] the center lan·e ·and struck a concrete
Schoola Close; Bridge Damaged
culvert.
Fears of freezing rain and hazardous conditions pr9mptcd early
Delores Reece, 74, of Dayton, was killed when a car driven by her dismissals in the Gallia County Local and Gallipoli s City school
'
husband skidded on an icy road in Beavercreek, struck a guard rail districts.
and then hit a tow truck head-on.
Galli a County Ohio Department of Transportation garage began
A Butler County ambulance driver was killed when he lost control
Continued on page A2

Crisp remains hospitalized

No Doc Fe. DeMwd'

•r.r Cond11lci11

lives than has been accomplished in the last four decades,"
Cremeans argued in a prepared statement.
"The people of southern Ohio together with all Ameri· ·
cans sent a clear message to Washington lasi"November,"
hc·said.,".You (the voters) pla~ed In us your trust and we
'gave you our commitment to change the way government

Ice, rain create
havoc on highways

Mav not begin taU time until E8bruary

350 V-8 POWERJSILVERADO

• lndirectl.ightWig
• Premium Wood Pkg.
• Full Conversion• Aluminum
Running Boards
• Loadedt

8,988
L..._----ouifiiir.'iiSUIBIID I.E

Vol. 29, No. 48 ·

·

Man
dies
in
weather-related
crash
·Minimum . wage:
'

RACINE - Racine Vilfage
Council meets at 7 p.m . Monday at
the annex.

POMEROY - · Pomeroy residents should place old Christmas
trees on three days in the following
order: first ward, Jan• .9; second
ward, Jan. 10; and third ward, Jan.

$17,888
• Sola/Bed
• Indirect Lighting
• Prem•um Wood Pkg.

·

.

Board of Education will hold organizational meeting aL6:30 p.m.
Monday in the library, followed by.
regular meeting at 6:45 p:m.

BRAND NEW '95 G·20 314 TON

·

GOf lgder vqws tq oQQ-

I

• Power Brakes
• T1l Steering

'

.'Revolutionary change' or 'paltry packag_e of reform•?

I I

• E•tended Chassis
• llflver Side Air Bag
• ArlU -Lock Brakes
•)it Condition
• Automatic OYetdrive
• Vista Bay Windows
• Power Steering

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis·PI. Pleasant. January 8, 1995 •

:_104th U.S. Congress: Week one

agreed. "We have been dis¢;~~~;~~~:~:fi;
evtdence on the effects of the minimum

.F18ERGI AS$ ._.G BIIAIIJS

on Page A2

•
nn.es -

Frrends and Stop Berng Lo~ely.
S~nd a self-&lt;Uidtessed,llHig, brurMssme envelopt and a. c~ck·or money
order fo~ $4.1~ (rhrs rnclllfles post·
age and handlrng) to: Frrends, cl~
Ann Ltrndus, P.O. Bo:r 11562, Chrcago, Ill. 606Jl-C562. (In Canada,
send $5 .05.)

Laura
D'Andrea
TyS!Jn,
·
of
"dent
~~~~~~~~
ofllk(,rioJrniC
• WhO also

IWIIIIW CIEVY ASniJEX1Em CONVERSION

HI: 30s
Low: 20s

P8lJ)

------------Community calendar
The Community Calendar Is
· published as a f~ee service I()

·NFL playoff results -Pagec1

l9nger a chtld, shes •
~oman . Smce~reiC(: w~
tune, she~ get
pay or
own~ hne. ~
he

Top studen1s---

:Meigs 175th anniversary to conclude
,' I /

year-olc:l 1 ~ no

.

'.

..

ews capsules

Meigs rOKs
·-95~ budget
County general fund .
· set at $2.88 million
BY GEORGE ABATE

.

nmes-sentlnel Stall
POMEROY · The Meigs County
Board of Commissioners approved
1995 's general fund budget of
$2,882,I 06.70 ·about $6,0001ess than
last year's budget- during its rJ'gular
meeting Friday .
Last year's carryover balance was
about $242,000, said Fred Hoffman,
president of the .commiss'ion . Las.t
year'sexpenditures wereabout$1 ,000
.under receipts, he added.
"Jbis year we're ju'st, focusing on
the bare ~ssentials." Hoffman· said. .
Commissioner Janet Howard
Tacliett eongratulaled the county's
offices who held expenses in line last
year_.
~..
"Everyone needs to be pa ttedun the
back because we kept it within budget," Tackett said.
In the future, Hoffman said he would
like to see when people retire from
posts that they not be filled. .
"That's lhe reaSon we can't give
raises. It's because we don't have '.
~ays

of increasing our income,"

Hoffman added.
The county may eventually raise
funds by increasing the conveyance
tax from the current level of $1 per
1,000. Also, hotel and motel slays
could be taxed, he added.
The only major changes in this :
year's budget will be that the park :
district will only be funded for lhe :
_firs! six_mo.nths of th~ year, he said. ·
Although the county has no parks, ·
the park district does own properly :
that could become park.~ . Tackett said. ·
The park district may choose to place ·
a levy on the ballot 10 help pay for it.
The commissioners also will explore ;
Contlnu•d..on page A2
:

GOOD MORNING

GOP.leaders promise second
vote on unfun~ed mandates

Shell Chemical asks

Today's Times-Sentinel
nmea-Stntlnel Staff
for
tax
abatement
POMEROY -The founder of the Leading Creek Conservancy District may
IJ Stdlons - 94 Paaes
WASHINGTON (AP)- Republican leaders shifted
not begin his 18-month sentence before February, although the court ordered
to rebuild plant'
Business
gears Friday and promised to hold two votes on two
Dl
him to jail at lhe end of last year, Meigs County Prosecutor John.Lentes said
different approaches to curbing Washington's habit of
BELPRE, Ohio (AP) - Shell Calendars
83&amp;4
''
last week.
·
·
·
making
stales
foot
the
bill
for
new
federal
.policies.
Chemical
Co.
has
requested
a
tax
~
C
=
Ia
:
:.
s
=
s
lfi
=
ed
=
s----.
-=D=l:.::·::..:S
.Jn a court entry filed Dec. 29, visiting Morgan County Judge Dan Favreau
They already had pro!Qised to quickly enact a law
abatement for reconstruction of a
ordered Jack Crisp to begin his sentence after required surgery, adding Crisp
making
it
more
difficult
for
Congress
to
impose
remanufacturing unit destroyed in anC
=c:o'c'
m'--ie-:s-:-------=•::
nse
:.::.:
rt
must pay for these costs. Favreau has cle.arly stated Crisp is eilher to be in a
quirements
without
providing
money
to
pay
for
them
.
explosion
last
year.
·
Editorials,
A4
hospital or jail, Lentes added.
But after a meeting among 15 GOP governors,
. The explosion and fire OA May 27 ::Lo=ca-=:l == - - --_;_A3
:.:__
Crisp - who .fotmded the Leading Creek water system in the 1960s - was
House
leaders
and
Senate
leaders,
a
second
promise
killed
three
workers.
•
Sentenced to 18 months in jail for five misdemeanor counts of receiving
was added: to schedule floor votes on a constitutional
· II will cos I $65 million to $80 mil- Obituaries
AS
improper compe.nsalion for bonuses last February._
'
.
amendment outlawing the practice, _generically described as "unfunded . lion to replace the unit, Shell S]Xlkes- ~~~::====C~t-Is
Last year, Favreau waited for county officials to find another jail that would
house Crisp, but no facility wool&lt;! accept him, Lentes said.
mandates."
·
man Mike White.saliid~q!!~;~~1~~-thisl~~~~~~!!ij~==j!t~
_· Ohio.GoY. George Voino\'ich,_who has been the. lead negcitiator.on-the---ln-an.abateinent o
1--::-:;;~~~i~~~~.~~~ has~a hi~tory:!Jf-heart-j!oblems-and currently remains-in
issue for the National Governors Association, said th~ lltw two-pronged week wlllfWashington County com- · ...:w.:.ea=th
=er:___ _ _.....,__:Al.=__;
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I
Holzer
Center's intensive care unit, he added.
strategy
on
unfunded
mandates
was
hatched
in
response
to
threatenedmissioners,
Shell
asked
for
an
abateAlthough the court's las.t filing on Dec. 29stated Crisp must as~uine the costs
sabotage of another high -priority Republican initiative, a balanced budget . ment of either 20 percent or 30 perof his sentence, Crisp's attorney has maintained his client is indigent. But, in
Columns
cent over seven years, depending on
1994 no court filings were made to show Crisp's financial status and no · am~ndmerit.
He
didn't
name
the
potential
saboteurs,
describing
them
only
as
"some
·
'the
amount
needed
to
rebuild
the
decision was made by Judge Favreau. Lentes said.
.
Democratic governors" or "some people_.
White said.
Jack Andcrsml
· The county will have to pay for medical costs once Crisp is back in custody .
"Some
people
are
saying
that
'We
won't
support
this
unless
it's
amended
Even
with
the
abatement,
the
comFmJCmw
But, Crisp wil.l have to pay a $30a day cost of confinement if he is not indigent,
so that unfunded mandates are taken care of,' "Voinovich said. But if that pany still will pay the county $4 mil- Bob HMfllcb
headded.
.
kind of provision is added, "It may be hard to get it passed," he said.
lion in new ta•es during the sevenDuring !994, Crisp's attorney, William Eachus; rna~ no filings_ in the court
"This
is
an
outgrowth
oftbe
fact
that
as
we
try
to
devolve
)Xlwer
back
out
year period, White said.The.value for
Um Sands
to reduce Crisp's sentence. But, an appeal that was reJeCted by htgher courts
of Washington and to disburse power baclc to the American people we're tax purposes of the' new llnit will be
had asked for a shorter sentence, Lentes said. Since Lentes 9fcame associated
going to have to keep inventing, learning, growing," Speaker Newt Gingric~ _ higher than the old one because of
with this case, Eachus h~d made numerous requests fo~ -~. reduced sentence.
1
said
in announcing the new strategy,
~
.
depreciation, White said.
,
•
"There was constant discussions ... about ways td resolve this matter
An
amendment
.
w
ould
be
more
binding
on
future
Congresses
than
a
law,
During
the
first
year
of
the
abatement,
the
Belpre
school district would
including a number of informal requests· by Mr. Eachus ·to reduc~ the senwhich
can
be
changed
with
a
majority
vote.
receive
$1
.9
million
from
Shell,
White
said.
The
company
paid $1 .3 million
tence,'' Lentes said.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utab. is leading the drive in the Senate for a in school taxes in 1993. ·
·
"There have been discussions about house arrest, there have been discusconsiitutional
amendment.
That
approach
was
offered
in
th~
House
last
~year
Belpre
school
board
member
Bob
Wallace
said
he
opposed
the
abatement
sions about reductions in sentence, Ihere have been discussions about combiby
Rep.
Paul
Gillmor,
R-Ohio,
who
intends
to
reintroduce
his
amendment:
despite
the
increased
tax
amount
to
be
paid
by
Shell.
nation of jail and house arrest all raised by Mr. Eachj!J.
Until Friday, the mayors, governors and legislators fighting for limits on
"We need the money," Wallace said. "We've lost so much money over
"The one thing thai's very clear in this case is that the judge has always said
new unfunded mandates were talking only about a law, not a oonstitutional the years, financially we 're hurting.! would rather that we get the money._We
bis job is toenfo~ Judge lopes' order and put him into custody and make him
amendment,
and they seemed to be making great progress.
._
need it badly."
'
do "his time.''
.
.
Legislation
limiting
the
rise
of
new
unfunded
mandates
already
has
had
its
Washington
County
w!ll
receive
$450,000.in
taxes and Belpre Township
.
Crlap'a Stltua Since Chrlatmlla
first
hearing
of
the
new
~ongr..,ssional
session;
got
the
~ymbolic
S
I
bill
will
get
$250,000
if
the
abatement
is
approved,
White
said. The comparable
Crisp_lpj)CB!ed Dec. 26at the Meigs _Counti§h_eriff'sDepartm~~t. He was
number in the Senate; and was scheduled for floor debate next week.
· tax amounts Shell. paid in l993 were $290,000 and $1-56,000
·
Continued on Pill• A2

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Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm
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Pag._~-Sunday Tlmea:-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport...!.Gallipolla, OH-Puint Pleasant, WV

OHIO Weather

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January 8, 1995.·

Cli·nton ·
defen·ds
tax cut
proposal

Sunday, Jan. 8
Ai:cu-w~ forecast for

January 8, 1995

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MICH.

Regional ,

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·Tri-Cq~nty

county board meets Monday

·

GALUPOLIS - Gallia County
Ohio Department of Transponation
employee Roger Stout finished
fiflh in OOOT' s statewide Direc·
tor's Cup Truck Roadeo at the
Obio State Fairgrounds.
Stout, wbo earlier this year won
lhe District 10 Truck Roadeo in
Mariena, competed in the recent
state e~nt against winners from
ODOT' s 11 olher districts and a
drive representing the agency's
central office in Columbus.
Stout's goal in the state event
was to "do my best," which he did.
, The final four drivers wilh the best
scores from morning competition,
competed in lhe afternoon for lhe
four top positions.
Ohio's winning state roadeo-. ·
driver is from District 8, headquartered at Lebanon. The first run nerup is from District 2, based at
BEST DRIVER - GaiDa County bas the best snow plow driver
Bowling·Green.
In tbe nine coundes of ODOT District 10 In Roger Stout. Stout won
The District I 0 Road eo was
the Distritt 10 Roadeo, competing against more than 90 other
held at the Washington County
drivers, and finished fifth In the state roadeo against 12 other
ODOT garage. Stout and oiber
driven.
· drivers from Gallia competed iq a
field of more than 90 drivers. The
winning driver from each of lhe .Monroe, 'Morgan, Noble, Vinton ognizing the skillful usc ot snowplowing equipment in an organized
nine counties in District 10 com· and Washington countiesc
peted ln lhe final rowtd of competiThe Director's Cup Roadeo competition between operators. ·
tion for the district roadeo title.
IJ:egan in 1988 and is sponsored by employee morale would be boost-.
District I 0 Is comprised of ODOT's Safety Division. Origina- cd.
The roadeo was seen as a way to
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, tors of the event hoped m·at by rec-

. · G~LIPOLIS - Tbe Gallia Colinty Local Board of Education's
org~nzauo~al meeting for 1995 will be Monday at 7, p.m. in the
admm1strauve offiCeS, 230 Shawnee Lane.

WIC appointments available

W. VA.

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Snow remains a possibility
for Sunday ..and -on Monday

. ,.

in 1884.•
· Sunrise on Sunday is at 7:53
a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Sunday... Becoming cloudy wilh
a chance of afternoon snow. Highs
in the 30s.
Monday ... A chance .of snow.
Lows 20 to 25 .. Highs in lhe 30s. .
Tuesday ... A chance of snow
northeast...Oiherwise fair. Lows 10
to 15. Highs in the 20s to lhe lower -·
30s.
Wednesday ... Fair. Lows 10 to
15. Highs mid 20s to mid 30s.

By Tbe Assorlated Press
Skies became partly cloudy
from west to east Saturday night
Low u:mperatures ranged from lhe
lower teens across norlbwest Ohio
to lhe lower 20s' in far soulh.
Skies will be.c ome cloudy
statew1de on Sunday. Additional
snow is possible during ihe afternoon as a low pressure system
beads t?ward Ohio. High temperatures w1ll generally lie in lhe mid'
· ·
dle 30s.
The record high for· Saturday at
lhe Columbus wealber smtion was
69 in 1946. The record low was -16

Meigs •gs budget.
Continued from page A 1
olher ways of paying for a $43,179
computer sysiem for the county court
office and the $11,000 in training.
In tbe new year, the commissioners
said they had a few projects they'd
like to see completed; such as con. necting all telcph•;me lines so calls can
be transferred, winterizing the courthouse,' and resolving the dog pound
issue.
·
"I'd like to work more as a unit
rather than as separate offices,"
Tackett said.
Commissioner Bob Harienbach
said: "l'dlike as good a year as we hac;!
this last year.J think lhe· budg~t was
hanllled pretty good when it comes
out in the black." ...
"We didn't do a lot of things last
year," Hoffman said.
The following office budgets are
segments of the county general fund:
commissioners, $155,949; auditor,
$185,552; treasurer, $98,460; prosecutor, $168,338; planning commission, $3,200; common pleas court,
$106,338; juvenile court, $53,400;
probMe court, $27, 738;clerk of courts,
$92,510; coroner, $23,253; county
court, $94,688; board of elections,
$103, 110;, capital improvements,
$11,000; maintenance, $167.500;

~n (WIC) Program will be available for appoinunents and walk·

,

Associated Press Writer .
WASHINGTON- President
Clinton pushed his $60 billion taxcut plan Saturday as lhe best way
to help working Americans and
wamed against "quick fix" alternatives without directly atlaeking
rival GOP p-oposals.
Clinton used his weekly radio
address to remind Americans of lhe
details of lhe tax plan he proposed
before Chrisbnas: a $500 credit for
eligible families with children, a
tax deduction for college or vocational education expenses and an
·expanded IRA.
"I want our peor,le to have
more than a quick fllt, ' he said. "I
want ihem to have lhe reso11rCes
lhey need to fulfill lheir· hopes aild
dreams over the long term.''•.
--At the end of Congress' first
week of work under Republican
control, Clinton also spoke of the
need for bipartisan cooperation,
saying "we must prove lhat we can
work together to keep our country
moving forward."
Such conciliatory talk notwithstanding, the administration is
seeking to portray its tax plan as
the fairest and to suggest the GOP
alternatives are a giveaway to lhe
weal~1y.

"Anybody can say, 'I want to
give you a tax cut,' and nuike peopie Yery .happy_in the short rup,''
Clinton said. ''What I want to do is
cut taxes so that people can invest
in lhe education of their children
and in their own ed'ucation and
training and skills."
·In the Republican response,
Rep. James Longley of Maine said
tax relief is a GOP priority, but did
not discuss the specifiCs of various
proposals. He also a.dvocated a
constit.utional amendment to
require a balanced federal budget,
which Democmts say could lhreaten ·everything from Social Security
to veterans' benefits.

ms on Tuesday from 2:30-5 p.m. in tbe basement of. the Gallia
County Courthouse.
·
·
.
Applicant~ must bring current income verification a medical
card, identification and proof of pregnancy, if applicable:
WIC is the food nutrition program sponsored by'lhe U.S. Depart-ment of Agriculture, serving Gallia County residents wbo meet
income and nutrition guidelines set by the state. For example, a
family of three may have a gross monthly income of $1,900, a family of four $2,282, ete.
WIC supplements lhe diets of women who
pregnant, just had
a baby, or are ~reastfeeding children up to lhe age of 5 and infants.
For an appomunent, call~ 12, extension 302.

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TORNADO AFTERMATH - Derrkk
Brown stands In the middle or what was his
mobUe home, near LaGrange, N.C., on Saturday
after a tornado hit the Foss Trailer Park, dam·

Tax statements going into mail

aging or destroying at least a dozen mobile
homes. Two people died In eastern NIH'tb CaroU~
na due to a stor.m system. (AP)

· POMEROY - Real estate tax statemepts are going into lbe mail
Ibis week and next, Meigs County Treasurer Howard Frank said.
Frank is reminding property owners that statements will show
increases for lhe tax levies approved by voters in 19~.
.
These include the additional counytwide I mill for the Meigs
County Emer_gency Medical Service and !be extra 5 mills for the
Meigs Local School District.
·
Each mill increases taxes by $1 for each $1,000 of tax valuation.
The tax value is 35 percent of true market value, based on sal.es.
Tbe closing date for payment of real esll!U: taxes is Feb. 10.
· The deadline for paying mobile home taxes is Jan. 31 . The law
does not provide for an extension of that deadline. ·

Wintry weather systems touch
off devastation on both coasts
By TOM WELLS
Associated Press Writer
A tornado cut a five-mile-long
swath lhrough nnal norlbem .Flori·
da early Sarurday, injuring dozens
of people and damaging or destroy,
ing scores of mobile homes.
"There are piffes or trailers in
trees," said Marion County Sher·
iffs Lt. Joe Cobb. "Pieces of torn
and twisted aluminum are all over
the place. There are lawn chairs in
trees. There:s a little _bit of everylhing in trees." .
Farlher nortb along· the line of
stormy weather lhat bit Florida,
wind gusted as high as 145 mph in
North CarolitUI, IeiDing two people
and causing dozens of injuries and
extensive damage.
.
On the' West Coast, more than
200,000 customers lost power early
Saturday as a storm blasted Cali·
fomia with heavy rain, wind and
snow.
The stormy weather bit the
Soulheast as a strong cold front
pushed eastward off lhe East Coast.
The norlhem' Finrida tornado
touched down 'r11111 at lhe town of
Summertield, about 20 miles south
of Ocala. It damaged or destroyed
sever;il homes and stores in lhe
crossroads conununity of ahoui 500
pj:Ople, Cobb said. .
Jt sliced through pastureland
toward the northeast, cutting a
swalh a quarter of a mile wide and
about five miles lon~. then

smashed into the Bird· Island fering only minor injuries.
mobile home park where it .did
Saturday's rough weather was' a ;
most of its damage, Cobb said.
. relll,!W!I of a storm system that iced :·
"The tornado just smashed or roaC!s from the Plains to lhe East :
really damaged about !50 hoines," Coast on Friday and was blamed
Cobb said by telephone from Bird for six deaths in Obio, two in
Island. ·
Arkartsas, two in Oklahoma, two in
He said dozens of people were · Kentucky ancf one each in Tentreated for broken bones, cuts and nessee, Soulh Carolina and Alaba- •
bruises.
ma
'
,
One man who took shelter in his
In the West, the leading edge of ;
car was critically injured when the a powerful series of storms
twister picked '!P his mobile home slammed into northern California
r
and slammed it down on !be car, during lbe.night.
•·
Cobb said.
Besides knocking out power for
In the Orlando area, about 50 more than 200,000 people by
miles southeast of Ocala, wind ·downing power-lines on lhe coast •
ripped 9ff gar~ge goors, tore shin- and inland, lhe storm also knocked t
gles from roofs and toppled a few riot telephone service to several
chimneys . .·
lhousand customers.
·
l
In eastern Norlh Carolina, about
In the San Francisco Bay area, ••
20,000 Carolina Power &amp; Light 2. 72 inches of rain fell in 24 hours :
customers lost power, spokesman in norlhem Sonoma County, Else- :
Mike Hughes said.
where, the community of Honey- ·l
Waves churned by the storm dew got 3.30 inches.
•
drove a .550-foot lanker aground in
Up to a foot of snow fell in lhe ~ ~
, Beaufort Inlet near Morehead City, norlhem Sierra Nevada and up to 4 •
N.C., at the southern end of the feet was possible during lhe weekOuter Banks, the Coast Guard said. end.
'
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The lanker was carrying fuel oil but
About im inch of rain fell on j
wa~ not leaking.
already saturated southern Califor- ,
Seymour Johnson Air Force nia, flooding some freeways.
•l
Base near Goldsboro, N.C., reportOn Friday, California Gov. Pete 1
ed a wind gust .of about 145 mph, Wilson declared a state of emer- .t
lhe National Weather Service said.
gency for Lqs Angeles and Orange
Just outside Fayetteville, N.C., a counties, where flooding during lhe ~
water tower' toppled and smashed a middle of the week caused more •
mobile home, wi_th one person suf· .than $20 million in damage.
l

POMEROY ,..... The annual report of the Pomeroyofire Department reveals a total of 161 runs during 1994.
·
·The total's breakdown lists 13 runs for structure fires, 51 for auto
accidents, 21 for brush f~rcs, 18 for false alarms and cancelled calls,
11 for auto fires, 26 for mutual aid, eight for electrical and 13 for
olher situations.
·
.
On the .mutual aid calls, 18 were for structure fires, four for res- ·
cues, and four for olher.emergencies.. _ . _
The department spent a total of 1,880 man hours on runs, and
vehicles were driven 3, 770 miles.

Tru.stees and clerks to meet
· - GAii.JPOLIS - The Gallfa County Trustees and CleriCs Association's rescheduled December meeting will be held Thursday, Jan.
12 at6;30 p.m. in lhe Gallia County Senior Citizens Center.
The meal will be catered by Dean Circle. The speaker will be a
representative from Star Bank. An equipment demonstration is
planned by Jimmy Allen. ,
The meeting is also !be deadline for paying association dues.

Week one

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Voint;Jvich, G()P leaders pla~.e
ceremonial spin on inauguration

Police issue weekend citations

j

Great Bend theft reported

In intensive care, Crisp's three

ley conditions cau.;e accidents

r

New~papc:r Assqciation

auorneys, the prosecutor said.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Cani"., M01or Ro•m

.

o.e Week.. ..................... .. · . ........... S!.OO
One Year ................................. ..... ..... m .oo

SINGLE COfY PRICE
Doily ..................................... ····· ·· 1 '- 00
J&lt;o subscnplion. by mail permin&lt;d•in """
"'"'" mo&lt;orcom" « m oe 1' ""' 1 ""~
The Sunday times-Seminel will not he"'"""'
sible for ..Jmce ""Y"~"" mode 10,.me.,.
Dolly'"" s.....,
MAtLSIJBSCRIPTIONS
1"""' G•'"'

c.,.,,
;! ::!::::· :: : : : : : : ::m
~
92 16
1

52 Week~ci;;bi,kii~ii ~c;;;;·~;; S ·

..

I3 wm..................,................................ Sl.S.61

~6 Weeks .............................................. $49.66

52 Weeks., ... · · ·· ·· ···· .......

...... S%.20

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POMEROY - A series of accidents were reported due to Friday's icy wealher, according to the Meigs sheriffs reports.
At 3:05p.m., Terra Fields, 23, Rutland, lost control of her 1991
Chevrolet while heading west on State Rou1e 124, records show.
Fields' car stru;:k the side of a bridge and lhen spun around in the
road.
'
" Fields wa~ ·transportcd to Veterans Memorial Hospital by tl1e
Rutland squad, where she was later tre.ated and released, according
to a hospital spokeswoman.
·
·
.
At 10:40 p.m., John Henry Spencer, 18, Racine, slid off Addie
Decker Road into a nearby creek. His 1984 Dodge rested on its
right side. Damage was .listed as heavy to the yehiclc and Spence(
was transported, records show. .
At about 3:30 p.m., a Racine Fire Department truck lost control
on a gmde up Durst Ridge Road. The squad vehicle, which ·was fol·lowing behind, slid off !be road at !be scene and !be county highway
depanment was called to .assist both units, reports stated. No
injuries were reported.

. ff-I.C ·fatall"ty

&lt;USPS !ls-KOOI
Pu~li&lt;hod '"" sundo). , 25 Thi•d '" .
GollipoU.-9h,,.b)"1he!Jhoo-"aller Publi•hing· ~and..ult1mately-Mr....Cmp-from any --thecrashcausedse&gt;&lt;ere.structurai&lt;Ja•n,..~l•---.:::
Comp&gt;ny/Mulmn&lt;d•~ - l no, Second ""'' P'"'' r'fhing bad happening to him while in age to ·the 73-foot -span ·on· Cotmty
age prud at Galhpoll~. 0~10 4563 1 Entered as
tod' "
R d 9 (J h
u 'd )' . d .
~CORd cia~~ m,:ai tmg m:tner :n Pomeroy. Ohio.
cus
y. .
oa
. 0 nson ~· . ge 10 A dtson
ro..·Ofrl&lt;t.
.
The shenff and I.::entes are updated Townsh1p and offic1als closed it to
Mrmbo" The , _
., 00 .,.,d p,..,_and the Ohon · da1ly about Crisp's status by Crisp's traffic shortly afterthe 7:30p.m. acci-

Editor's note: Name.&lt;, ages and addres."'" are printed as ther
appear on official repm'l'. ~II newswor.thy action.' .will be published without exception.
,

Wooifancf Cen'ters, Inc ..
ttr ,-..I
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~-- - - - ; Alcol!o!.Jbtll!ll!lll:IIQn ond

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dent.

"At this point, I have no influence
"We looked at it again Saturday
on w,hat happens. J get a COUrt order morning and it appears that tempothat says-do certain things. I do it," rary repairs are not econ,!)rnically feaLentes sa1d.
·
sible," Leach said. ·
"If the co~rt order changes then 1
Leach estimated a replacement of
help the shenff enforce that part of it. the 30'year-old bridge would cost
The ~heriff at this point is simply approximately $250,000. He said he
reactmg to what the judge has ordered already pJans to seek state and federal
and Mr. Crisp'scon~ition. Thecondi· funding for the replacement.
lion ~ow IS very limited. You're eiThe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
ther m the hospital or in jail."
~ighway Patrol said the truck, drivc;n
The recent court order also allows by Russell W. Watterson, 35, Apple
for no recuperation time between sur- Grove, W.Va., was northbound when
gery lllld beginning his sentence, he Watterson lost control on the icy road
added.
and struck the bridge railing.
· • Watterson suffered minor injury in
The word "textile" comes lrom
the crash, which severely damaged
the truck. Watterson was apparently
!.~: w'=:!~~-!.8~'". te_xere, m~a.nlng
nottrea!e!lforthe injury and was cited
· by the patrol for no safety belt.

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED

-24-Hr•.Crtlll ~til

-. .

'24Hr.E-S.1Ylt:M

~~F......

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED
.

-camp .....-4 Adoleac:trt

ca..-.gr.~
·
~•R-1111
-OUI·P•torH.......nl

•VIdlm'•'=w• aP,...,n

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAl. WORKERS
....,. 8eMcu

.Pa&amp;h-s.Mcl for lhl llomJIIK

~~
oEmplo)-Aool . ......,....

EY-....u-.g

_,.CoomlunlyT'""*'tt

~MolgoH-

•

.S.~ ln1UdHouolngfor

men
~-Oiubled
MEOICAJ'IE»MEOlCAIOomLE XX•SLIOtNG FEE ScALE-cERTIFIED BY STATE OF OH!OoEVE~lNG APPTS. AVAILABle

JACKSON

.~~~~;~·

GALLIPOLIS
3086 STATE RT. 160

446-5500

.C...MaJhiQ

24 HOUR
CRISIS LINE

LOCAL CRISIS LINE

r::;!~~E

· OUTSIDE OF
GAWPOUS CAWNG AREA

TOLL FREE DIAL 1
AND THEN

,800-252-5554.

24

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POMEROY.
MU~ERRY HEIGHTS

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-~92-~1

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-GALLIPOLIS - A financial
meeting for Gallia Academy
.· igb School seniors planning to
•· attend college has been scheduled'
~ for Tuesday, Jan.' 17 a~ 7 p.m. in
-~lhe GAllS library.
·
·• l;'arents of juniors may also
· attend to see how the process
. l works and. to begin making plans,
·'although fina~d programs
~d ·applications change annually,
~school officials said.
-;· Financial aid officers and bank:;ing representatives will focus on
" grants, loans, scholarships, college
: work study and applications .
: Applications for federal student aid
:will be available for distribution.
• : If parents bave their 1994.tax
~ forms completed, those will assist
~ in figuring and completing finan~i:ial aid forms: A .University of Rio
: Qrande a!JmissiollS officer will also
1
•IJeon.hand.
·
: : I For more inforination, call 446:~250.

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GREAT BEND - A Racine man who left his Ullck near the
Ritchie Bridge returned to find someone broke in and stole a .357
Ruger Blackhawk revolvil[, a pair of channel locks and his wallet,
according to lhe Meigs County Sheriffs Departmeni.
·
· .
Michllel Holter, County Road 35, reported sm:neone broke into
his truck Wednesday after it had mechanical problems. The incident
remains ulldcr investigation.

.

since.

·

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police early Saturday
. were Tony L. Beck, 38, 2951 State Route 141 , Gallipolis, for driving under lhe influence, and Rodney E. Byus, 24, 35 Madison Ave:,
GaUipolis, for no operator's license and window tint violatiDn.
Cited by police Friday were Brad M. Houdashelt, 18, 281 Lariat
Drive, Gallipolis, red light violation, and Carolyn E. Gilker,son, 46,
Pomeroy, improper passing an.d no safety belt.
·

.
Crisp remains hospitalized

ContlnutHI from page A1
temporarily held in a local motel since
the Meigs County Jail was full, Lentes
said,
·
·
Then Crisp went to Riverside Hospital in Columbus where he stayed
through Dec. 30, when he was released following an initial examination.
.
Doctors had said Crisp must rest
three weeks before surgery could be
started, Lentes said. While returning
to Meigs County, Crisp had another
, ,attack and was taken to Holzer Medical Center where he has remained

Attempted break-in reported .
GALLIPOLIS - An attempted break-in at lhe offices of attorney William Dean Conley at 537 Second Ave. wa,o; reported to Gallipolis_City Police.
Conley ·informed police that the incident occurred.between noon
!llld 1 p.m. Wednesday when an wtknown subject attempted to pry
open the outside front door.
· No entry was gained, police said.

r

'.

•

make the public more aware of lhe
critical , and often dangerous, service s provided by ODOT. For
some employees, roadeo participation helped them sharpen skills as
lhey prepared for Ohio's commercial driver license testing.
'
. The roadeo course is comprised
of six segments, including a pretrip inspection, 'and driving courses
called lhe serpentine, alley dock,
the narrow lane, offset lanes and
the stop line.
In the pre-trip inspection test,
!be conteslant is graded on !be ability to check for safety and mechanical defects on a truck as would be
done during a normal pre -trip
inspection. Five defects are planted
on the truck to be inspected and
there is a 10-minute time limit to
locate !be problems. The contestant
is scored on the number of defects
located.
.
A truck outfitted with a snowplow is used for the five driving
courses lhat stimulate conditions in
which drivers may find themselves
as they perform their job duties.
The driving courses measure·
maneuverability, both backwards
and forwards .
1
As fifth runnerup, S~out .
received several prizes, including a
jacket and plaque .

Patrol _reports ~ive injuries caused by wrecks -

fomeroy FD reports year's activity

sheriff, $390,865; recorder, $74,272;
disaster services, $6,300; public defe~der, $40,000; agriculture (grant,
Meigs Fair Board, Albany Fair),
$110,333; vital statistics, $220; children services board, $87,000; soldier's
relief, $60,000; veteran's se!Vices,
$36,200; publicassistance, $ 1!14,069;
postage, $20,000; fringe benefits,
$222,000; highways (plat map),
Continued from page A1
$43,300; laJN libraries, $1 ,200; historical society, $8,000; insurance Cremeans said in a statement released
property, $!61,000; and miscella- Friday. "Never again will the American people be locked out of rooms
neous; $182,513.
Other funds not included in the where they are being represented."
"Those who have been elected to
. general · fund: human services,
$3,352,302; public funds, $2,236,580; serve are n'!w placed on notice,'' he
said. "The people are watching."
board of mental retardation
I
$1,207,975.50; doglkennei.'Sil ,BOO:
To emphasize their contention that
l
litter control, $77,000; real estate as: the GOP reform package was lacking,
•I
I
sessment, $99,415; youth services Democrats- first in the House, then a
•
subsidy, $49,991.23; children's ser- day later in the Senate- tried to iack
•I
vices, $174,000; marriage licenses, on another politically appealing proI
$3,621 ; and bond · retirement, vision, to ban lawmakers from receiv- . By JOHN CHALFANT
available, but Ms. Candisky rate events Monday: Secretary of i ·
$188,274.
. ing gifts from lobbyists.
believed it would amount to less State Bob .Taft. Auditor Ja!fles i
Associated Press Writer
In other news, the county highway
Republicans rejected them in·both
COLUMBUS - Mark down than lhe $650,000 spent in 1991 at Petro, Treasurer Kenneth Black- l
department's Dave Spencer informed houses, promising to take up addi- Monday as Celebration Day in lhe · Voinovich's first inaugural. Cam- well .and Attorpey General Betty 1
paign money was used to supple- Moptgomery. Those ceremonies •
the board the Keno bridge on County tional political reform measures later state capital. ·
ment
costs four years ago.
will take place in the Statehouse :
'
Road 28 should be completed by the in the year.
Gov. George Voinoyich and
Voinovich
sets
lhe
tone
for
his
Atrium.
j
second week of February.
"We're in the majority," said Sen- olher Republicans who captured all
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer j
The board will hold an organiza- ate GOP Whip Trent Lou. "We are statewide executive offices in the second term when he lakes the-oalh
tional meeting at 3 p.m. Monday.
going to dictate the agenda and the Nov. 8 election start their terms of office about noon on the stage of will administer the oath to
wilh "a daylong ·series of inaugural the Ohio Theater. across from lhe Voinovich about noon, moments l
schedule. "
·
eve'!..~
lhat include music, prayer Slatehouse, aild reads an Inaugural . after Lt. Gov. Nancy Putnam Hoi- ·l
.
.
The outcome of that agenda and
Address before about 3,000 people. . lister is sworn in .as lhe slate's first l
andof
course- speeches.
schedule will determine the fate of the
"I lbink you"ll find !be gover- wom110 lieutenant governor.
.
j
!be
oath-taking
cereMost
of
conservative "Contract With
nor
reflecting
on
the
first
four
.
Benjamin
Putnam,
father
of
lhe
monies
and
related
events
are
open
America'' that powered the GOP electo lhe public wilbout charge, except years, and looking ahead to the former Marietta mayor, will admin- I
weeks of rest will likely have to be tion sweep last fall.
for the governor's Inaugural Lun- next four years. He' II be speaking ister the ceremonial oalh. The offi· l
extended, he added.
'
cheon
($20 per person) and about lhings lhat have been accom- cial oath-tal\ing will occur earlier at :
Meanwhile, Lentes ·and Sheriff
plished and ... some of tbe legacies .a ,private ceremony .w ith. Rep.\ 1
evening ball ($50 per person).
Soulsby had contacted the Franklin -~ra
he'd
like to leave with the state as Thomas Johnson, R-New Concord. l
"The governor wanted to JDodCounty Jail -which has beds and is
II~
governor,"
Ms. Candisky said.
State law requires an officeholder
erately price each event so we
accessible to wheel chairs."This jail
Continued trom_page A1 .
His
speech
will
la~t
about
20
to administer the oath,
could open it up," said Caryn Canmay house Crisp during his sentence, treating state roads at noon Friday and disky, spokeswoman for lhe 1995 minutes.
•
About 2,800 people are expect· 1
but only if:
""
More specifics about his pro- ' ed at .the Governor' s Inaugural :
finished around 10 p.m. when tern- Governor's Inaugural Committee.
• potential liability is resolved;
peratures rose above freezing. Crews
Money from ticket sales is posed agenda are expected Jan, 26 Luncheon that is billed as a cele- •
• the Franklin County Jail has a bed resumed treatment Saturday mom- intended to ,offset costs of staging in the State .of lhe State speech to bration in music and dance
available; and
the events.
the House and Senate.
Obio's traditions and cultural herTaking oaths of office at sepa· ltage.
• after the extentofCrisp's medical inbte Gallia County Higqway DeNo estimate of the total cost was
treatment is determined.
•
partment also started road treatment
"People don't think I do anything at noon and finished around 6 p.m.
o~ this case. This case haunts me," Treatment resumed at 4 a.m. SaturLentes said.
•
~y and was to continue throughout
"It doesn 't haunt ine as a criminal the day if temperatures dipped again,
prosecutor because that part of it's officials said.
done. The logistics of it haunts me as · A bridge .struck by a water truck
to how to help the sheriff carry out his Friday has been closed by the Gallia
.
,.
, duties uriderthe courts order and also
County Highway Department.
!:WE fJ' Tl£ MOSTCOMPREI£NSIVE I f'IUESSIOHN..IENTAL HEALTHAGENCES N SWllEASTEANQiiO
protectth.~ sheriff and the county' .
CountyEngineerJqsephleachs.aid
Woodllnd c.ne.r. .. tundld 1n part
Qltltii..::J'•:D•~~·:cn:M::::•Ip~n~·~ar~dOIC~.:.==-~

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A3

Briefs:- Gallia ODOT driver among state's best

GALLIPOLIS - The G3llia County Wom~n, Infants and Chil-

By NANCY BENAC

•

road and struck a tree. Her car was for left of center.
Bus driver died
severely damaged.
The driver of a Gallia County
Transported to HMC following
anolber one-car crash were driver Local Schools bus was cited for
Cathy L. Pierce, 23, 62 Island failure to control by lhe patrol in an
Ave., Gallipolis, and her passenger, accident Friday on Cheshire TownGALLIPOLIS -Five people Charity S. Buttrick, 16, (jO Island ship Road 643 (Kyger Cemetery).
- Troopers said Barbara J. Ranwere injured in a series of accidents Ave. - ·
in Gallia County investigated by
Pierce was treated and released, dolph, 54, 510 SR 554'; Cheshire,
lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe State but !be hospital had no record of was norlhbound at I: 35 p.m., 260
feet south of Township_Road 641
Ilighway Patrol on Friday.
treauncnt for Buttrick.
According to .die report, Pierce (Jessie Creek) when the bus went
Patrol officials said it received
numerous.. ealls on non-injury, one- - -was -weHbound on U.S . 35 near . orr lhe right si.de of the road, suuclc
car accidents due to icy road condi- Gallipolis at 3:50 p.m. when she an embankment, then went off lhe
lions, but owners were coming to ·Jost control, slid off the right sido right side and struck a fence .
There were no injuries to the
the post to make out reports.
of lhe road into a guardrail, and
driver or lhe pass_engcrs and the bus
The Gallia County Sheriff's then down an embankment.
Pierce's car was moderately
Department investigated five noninjury, nan-citation accidents on damaged and she was cited for failFriday, while Gallipolis Cily Police ure to control .
investigated four without injuries
Driv~r Daw.n E'. Waugh , 47,
or citations aside from the fatal JaCkson Street, Vinton, and passenaccident on State Route 141 wilhin ger Marian 0 . Gardner, 42, 15337 .
the city limits.
State Route 160, Vinton , were
· Among the injury accidents ban- injured in a two-vehicle accident,
died by the patrol, Belly J. 'Rutt, 61, but were not treated at lhe scene,
47 Blazer Place, Gallipolis, was the patrol said.
• taken to Holzer Med1cal Center by
.Troopers said Waugh was northlbe Gallia County Emergency Med- bound on County Road 43 (Green
ical Service following a one-car Valley Prive), near Springfield
FRTllPRA
crash on County Road 2 (Neigh- Township Road 43 J.(pine Hill) at
Frigidaire i-!2 Cu. Ft.
borhood).
. 12:15 p.m. when a southbound
UltraS~yle ™
Run was later treated · and pickup uuck driven by William H.
released, a hospital spokesperson Saunders, 73, 25 Summ-erwood
Refrigerator
said.
Drive, Bidwell, went left of center
• Gently rounded co mers •
Troopers said Rutt was north- and sUllck Waugh's pickup.
Reach-thru, color t·oordinated ·
bound at 12:50 p.m. when she lost
Bolb vehicles w.ere moderately
handles
• Full-adj. glass shelves
control in a .right curve, slid off lhe damaged and Saunders was cited
• Freezer shelf • Adj. rollers

Friday's weather
.blamed for many
minor accidents

EMS units log 1·0 aid calls
POMEROY - · Units of tbe
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service logged 10 calls for assistance Friday. Units responding
included:
POMEROY
2:48 a.m., mullial aid for Mason
water problem.
.
REEDSVfLLE
4:56 a.m., State Route 124,
Nrira Buchanan, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT
6:04 am., Race Street, Depart·
ment of Human Services false
alarm.
I: 18 p.m.• 4 Cave St.; Eva Gessauer, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
2 p.m., 556 Laurel St., Darlene
Richie, VMH .
, 4:47p .m., State Route 141,
mutual aid with Gallia County can-.
celled.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions .- Anna
Turner, Pomeroy.
· Friday discharges - Russell.
Meadows,
Pomeroy; • Paul
Houdashelt, Pomeroy; Edward
King, Pomeroy; Ruth Francis,
Pomeroy.

or -sou,.HEAS,. OHIO

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•Methods and supplies for birth co!'ltrol and safer sex
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Birth control pill
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Sliding Fee Scale ·.
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance:
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5:21 p.m., South Second
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Valley Hospital.
RUTLAND
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was slightly damaged.
Citation issued
The patrol cited .Katrinka V.
Hart, 36, 608 Georges Creek Road,
Gallipolis, for assured clear dislaDce in a two-ve hicle crash Friday
on SR 7 ncar Gallipolis.
· Troopers said Hart was south ~
bou~d a! 7:45 a.m. when she failed
to stop in time and strqck the rear
of a pickup Ullck driven by Wayne' .
Hart Jr., 58, Letart, W.Va.· . ·
Wayne lll)ft had s topped in traffic at the time of lhe crash, the
patrol said. Damage was slight to
the pickup &lt;.Uld moderate to Katrinka Hart's car.

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

Commentary

January 8, 1995
•

iunb~ iitlus • ientbrel
A Dlvtaloa of

1

~N:.
l11 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

WASHING!ON - There ma_y
npt ~an officially declared cand•·
date . ~et ~or the 1?96. Rep~bll~
pres• enua nodmmahuon, alut de
topa cainpaign
cooteo erspledge.
ave rea Y
two
broken
During a private meeting last
M · · L d
s

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMB ER of The Asooc iated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPlNION are welcome. They should be less tbao
300 words All letters are subject to editing and must be signed With
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
pubhsbed. Letters should be m good taste, addressing issues, not

personahties.

·

'

Cleveland mayor
·seeks options.to
confrontational style
By M.R. KROPKO
Ass_oc:jate_f!.I'J-ess Writer _
_
CLEVELAND- The first year of Mayor Michael R. White's second
tenn was loaded with confrontation, the likes of which -one councibnan
says - had not been seen smce the turbulent tenn of Dennis Kucinicb in
lbe late 1970s.
White aclrnowledges there hasn't been much peace of late at Cleveland
City Hall. Key goals of hts administralion remain unresolved, meaning
turbulence lies ahead.
White expects battles on reforming and modernizing in lbe police
deparunent and putting more officers out on patrol by hiring civilians for
desk jobs; btring out some services !bat have been handled by unionized
· city workers; and bringing to local politics refonns that include stnctlim·
its on tenns and campaign spending
Fellow Democrat Kucinich narrowly survived a recall el~tion during
his term, which ended in 1979. And Cleveland went into tiscallllefault
alter he refused to sell a key asse~ the city-owned electric power ~t.
White said a political opinion newspaper column-published last year
summed up what 'he worries has become an unfair image. "It basically
said that if a corpse were standing on the comer and I didn't have anybody else to light, that! would light !be corpse," he said.
. White had several public run-ins during 1994 with City Council and
p6licc unions. Kucinich, recently elected to the Ohio Senate, took on lbe
city's corporate and banking interesL~. but White has been on generally
good terms with the private sector.
"Only a fool would not wan~ a better relationship wilb the council, and
I will commit to lbe people of the city that I will do everylhing I can to try
to improve on tt. But I will not do that by compromising on principles,"
While said.
He also said he welcomes a better working relationship with lbe Fraternal Order of Police and Cleveland Police Patrobnen's Association. But he
said if the unions tight his reforms, "then we'll bave to fight." The FOP
recemly sued the City to overturn White's appoinhnent of Safety Directot
William Denihan as acting police chief. .
,
Councilman James Rokakts, a Democrat and Finance Comminee
chairman, said White's relatioliShip with lbe 21-member council is now
"as strained as anyUung I have ever seen in my 17 years in the council,
including lbe two years when a guy. named Kucinich was in office It's
• because of hts style, developed in the lastl3 to 14 months.
•
"Somelbmg seems to have snapped," Rokakis added. "He doesn't
• consult. He puts propOsals forward and if lbere is opposition he ignores it
: and if there is criticism he takes it personally."
•
During White's tenure the city has seen the culmination of the down: town Gateway sports complex, the near completion of the Rock and Roll
: Hall of Fame and a surge of inner-city housmg and small business devel • opment
:
"I don't mean to take away from hts accomplishments," Rokakis said.
: ' ' He hru; had plenty of accomplishments he and all of us should he proud
• ol. we are separated not so much on tssues of substance as issues of
•• sty Ie. " ·
,
:
White said tnction arises because his administration is trying to find
• new, more-efficient approaches to governing.
:
"You don't know how badly I feel personally to have to come here
: and know that I'm soli, after live years, still not giving the people of this
• town the best shake on their money,'' White said.

k_~~ ~~t~-~o:r Se;aPbi~

Gramm, R-Texas, re;Khed an lnformal truce to prevent sniping
between their two camps. Botb
men knew they would be squaring
pfr as presidential rivals, and worried that. thei'r staffs and the media
would try to stoke hostilities. But
!bey agreed to keep the Senate a
demilitarized zone in their nomillll'lion battle.
· That peace held until last monlb
when Dole maneuvered behind the
scenes 10 deprive Gramm of a seat
on the powerful Senate Finance
Committee. In this case, it wasn't
so much the position on the
Finance Committee as the forum it
provtdes: Since committee members w11l take the lead on welfare
reform, Dole wanted to keep
Gramm grounded on this politically
potent topic. Dole denies actively
trying to thwart Gramm. "I dtdn't
call anybody," he told us. "1 -don't
lrnow who was fanning mat story,
whether it was Gramm's peopleI don't think so."
Gramm will crash lbe welfare
party, however, as be bas many
others in the past. Fonner House
Majority Leader Jim Wright DTexas, booted then-Demo~rat
Gramm off the Budget Committee

m 1983 for his turncoat fiscal conservati sm, only to see Gramm
restgn "from Congress and come
back to haunt the House as a
,

insiders."
Tbe "insider" indictment is one
that dogs Dole and was best cap- ~
tured during a breakfast strategy
· ~n
· Do1e.•s o ff'tce s boru.Y
meetmg
By Jack Anderson after Prestdent C!mton unvetled bts
health care plan m lbe fall of 1993.
and
GOP pollsters in auendani:e glumly
Micha 1 8' t ·
reported _tbat Rep~blic~ns had to
make lbetr peace With Chnton-style
Republican. A decade later. Sen. health care ref~.
Gramm. served as the conservative
One Republican senator who
standard-bearer in the health care ~,'tended the meell_ng recall~ ;
refonn debate without ever holding
They (pollsters) basically srud n
a seat on any relevant committee.
~ouldbe su~c·~ for. you to oppose
The Finance flap may under- ' II. Tbts tram IS ~omg down the
score Dole· s fear of getting track, every Amencan wants health
upstaged again by the more conser- care reform. The_ best way you can
vati ve and combative Gramm . handle thts tssue ts to go along vnth
Though it' s too early to handicap
the 1996 campaign, the battle of
B
, W ld
Gramm vs . Dole wtll give GOP
erry S or
voters a stark choice between a revolutionary and a repairman,
between a crusader and a consensus-seeker While Dole has a inore
compelling personal st9ry to tell of Midwest virtue and World War
II heroism - Gramm has a more
coherent message of smaller govemment and individual freedom.
"I think (Gramm) will be the
dominant conservative candidate in
•the Republican field, " says political analyst Charles Cook, who
believes the Republicans are best
served by nominating a moderate.
_ ,._ _
''People are too quick to complete·
...,._.-;:-,::r.;ly dismiss his chances .... He plays
the outside game and I don't think ...,w.'"m'''•oc•••' ..... ..,,.,~.,,.,..,,.
he has ever curried favor with the

e

InS eln

1994 Meigs and Gallia· County hono·r roll

The individuals named herein for~man, William..Emmitt Anderdeparted from Ibis world during the · son, William F. Fry, Mannie M.
. calendar year 1994. Special recog- McMillion, Richard Ed.win Lyons,
nition is hereby given to each indi- J. Mark Goodnite, Mary L.
vidual . May God Bless the out'
standing achi~vem~nts ot the indi·
Fred
Crow
viduals and bis or her contribution
to the htstory of our counties. For Rickard, Gerald E. Clark, Peggy
this reason we are placing each one Louise Reiunire•, Frances M. Johnon our 1994 Honor Roll.
son, Buddy Eugene Flowers,
Everett Waldron, Mary B. Lack- Howard Russell Roush, Harold E.
ey, James Earl Adams, Sophia Mac Roush , Besty M. Roach, Laura K.
Henry, Bernice Mae Gardner, Kersey, Virgmia V. Rus&amp;ell, Ora R.
Edward Hennan Lynch, Donald L. Cochran, Vera A. Dodson, Edward
Woody, Hannah Mae Henry, Gra- F. Rickard, Jr., Denver Ray Meadcie Neal, Lurelba B. Smilb , Beat- ows, Walter G. Hedrick, Charles
rice L. Riffle, Cleve Tbivener, M. Ztmmennan, Freda P. Davis,
Bessie Virginia Cummons, Ray Billy A. Stewart, Wilbur V. Van
Fisher, Ruth Geraldine Warren, Matre, Gladys M. Riley, Gladys
Hilda Maxine Bailes, Henry 0. Virginia Sayre, Vannie E. Roush,
Harvey, Wil:ma F. Foglesong, Eliz- Robert E. Mcintosh, Milton E.
abeth Daryle Sheets, Beyerly J . Roush, Roscoe Edwards, Delmas
Dillon, Duane E. Knapp,-4)ora Kearns, Josephine Harrah, Luther
Bunce Waddell, Charlotte E. Jol- Oldaker, Betty ~6ann Hendrickson,
ley, Lawrence Lester Speakman, Opal Faye ijoffman and Lily
Irwin H. Viars/. Sasha Marie Stevens.
Edwards, Edwara England, Wye
Olema.Yarbrough, Mary Janti
Wakefield Warren, Sanford Bills, Still, Jack Dawine Cleland, Lena
Charles E. Simms, Lena Nutter, Minerva Carpenter, Burton Thonias
Rosie F. Betz, James R. Musgrove, DeWees, Lena J. Hatfield, Jake
Charles Emerson CQrbin, Mary E. Peyton, Oris A. Roush, Lola B.
Lambert, Georgia Ella Dotson, Zwilling, Leona Elfa Rose WalCharles Milford Cannichael, Helen lace, Thomas Joemart Moore.
V. Masters, Shelby F. Clagg, Ola Leroy W. Bartrum, Merle S. Davis,
Mae Coen. Wilbur Raymond Han· Robert Houston Eads, Patty Lucille
ners, Raymond E. Cochran, Hil- Hudson, Edward R. Martin, Clifdred Mary Thorndyke, Shane C. , ford E. Whittington, Sr., Nina I.
Harris, Brian Keith Knott~. Wyatt and William L. Henderson.
Blanche Marie Parsons, Patricia
Alvin E. Lewts, Charles A.
Matthews, Thurman Boggs, Mary Nuckles, Sara L. Clay, William C.
B. Osborne, Leona A. Wolford, Dinguss, Nettie Jean Daniels ;
Evan F. Dillon , Luther C. Ralph J. Holley, Charles L. ShepThevenin, S. Lewts Hughes, Mary ard, Hazel F. Miller, Francis M.
!'ranees Rose, Norman S. Sprouse, Hammond, Noah Woods, Audrey
•
•T
Charles Mills Kemper, Dean R .• G. Porter, Mariam K. Carbargo,
.= I
Evans, Sr .. Willianr F. White, Phillip Snoddy, CliffOrd A. Rogers,
Rtchard John Sisson, James Earl Lee Johnsan, Betty Hammond,
Edward Marcum, Ernest L. Perdue, Virginia H. Cremeens, Frances
: By The Associated Press
:
Today ts Sunday, Jan . 8, the eighth day ol 199S. There are 357 days Claude A. Blazer, James F. Ben- Lambert, LtlZie Borders, Lula V.
son , Sr. , Mary Evelyn Gordon, Fisher, Doris E. Shaw, Jacob Mel: lefttn the year
•
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
Saul M. Saunders, Thorton C. van , Mary E'. Johnson, John S.
! Stxty ~cars ago- ilfi Jan 8, 1935 _ rock 'n' roll legend Elvis Presley Jphnsun, Hayward E. Rutt, Elva · Shaver, Bessie B. Laudermilt,
: was born m Tupelo, Mtss .
Maude Fisher, Johnny Marie Live- Ellen L. Morgan, AdaM. WriteSel,
• On this ,date:
ly, Dclori~ Frances Myers, Lowell Millard Dav1s, Charles W. Taylor,
In 1642, astronomer Galilco Galilei died in Arcetri, Italy
F. Halley, John Lee Waugh, Eddie Erman D. Cremeens , Agnes N.
:
ln 1815, U.S. forcfs led by C.en. Andrew Jackson defeated the Bntisb
A Ferguson, Charles Lee Wbttt, Lease, Gladys Myers, Olivia Fern
:
: in lbc Battle of New Orleans ~the closing e11gagement of me War of Wayne Anthony Baker, Jam,cs 0 . Mills, Edgar Cook Jr., Paul J. Jef• 1812.
Cremeans, Alexander Samour,
fers, Harold L. Sowards, Elizabeth
:
In 1894, ftre caused serious damage at the World's Columbian ExpostEula Glynna Richards, Betty 1.
Bess Williams and Robert Jackson .
• lion in Chicago
Walters, Alberta Holliday, Verna
Thelma Chase, Westina Crab:
In 1918, Prestdent Wilson outlined hts 14 pomts for peace after World
V. Hems, Pauline II Fulks, Goldie
tree, Ivan Halliday, Wilkie Hoyd,
; War 1.
.
WW. Ki,nNg, W. Paul VanMPel~ Myron
Marlba Jeffers, The)ma Morgan,
•
In 1959, Charles de Gaulle was maugurated as president of France's · · 0 et 11 • 1eremy ichael HalLeona Oberbolzer, Virginia Pol: Fifth Republic.
Icy, McKaylla L.caghann Vaughan, lard, John Rankin, William Scott,
:
In 1964, PreSident Lyndon B. Johnson declared a "War on Poverty."
Lee Rose, Emmitt Jesse Denney,
Lyman Stanley and Bettina Warn•
In 1965, the Star of India and other stolen gems were returned to th~
Elma Gladys Burns, Bonnie l.
er.
•
: AmcnC31t Museum ol N:uuml Htstory in New York
White, Robert Hensley, Russia
Clarence Haskett, William
In 1973, secret peace talks between the United States and North Vtet·
Copley, Gail SheeL~. Clyde Porter,
Lloyd Rollins, Walter Dyer, Pearl
'
Ruth Shaw and Dehner lbomton.
: nam resumed near Paris
Twyman, Ransom Coleman, Jr.,
:
In 1975. Judge John J Slflca ordered the relea'ie ol Watergate figures
Robert T. !Ombleton, Evelyn H.
Howard Pinnell, Maggie Mae
: John W Dean Ill , Herbert W. Kalmbach and Jeb Stuart Magruder from
Hartley, Jessie Jack Rtlcy, Kenneth
Rose, Jemima Sprouse, Helen
•Jlnson. ,
_
. .
•
K. Scites, Carl Edward Stephens,
Smtth, Ethel Mildred Smilb, Jessie
-~• . h11~70.Cfitnesc PffinicrTiiou EO:!ai (JicoTnBC)'mg at age 78:""..,--~-'IPaul-Thoinas Washtngton, Jr-.,
Myrtle -Jacttbs, · C!aranell
~
• -- T
'T
~
Eunice. L. Hallscott,- Kenncth D
'fownsentl,
Fiank·eontosta; W!Uam
•
en years ago. he Rev . L1wrcnce Marun Jenco was ktdnap.ped in Clark, Sumley Eugene Staats MarDorman
Swick,
Samuel George
: Lebanon (he was rclcao;cd 19 months later). Secretary of State George P. garet Ellen Hill, Edward Lee 'Perry
Sowards,
Mary
Lou
Meade, Ben
: Shultz and Sovtct Forctgn Minister Andrei A Gl'omyko wrapped up two' S
•
Lewis
Jones,
Jessie
Garber,
Hertella M. Russell, Hennan Ralph
• days of talks 10 Geneva Prcs1dcnt Reagan announced !bat his chief of
schel
Winters,
Elsie
Pleasant,
: staff. James A. Baker Ill . and the secretary of the Treasury Donald T
Ztrkle, Merrill J. Teatino, Sharon
• Regan, would trade jobs
'
· Loron Leffle, Oris Loren Zirkle
'Lucille Burris, Carey Cramer,
:
Five years ago: Mihtary tribunals 10 Romania began trying the ftrst Jr., Arthur H. Hart, William H. T: Mary Hebn, Homer Painter, Stan,
ley Swick, Lacy Wolford, Sr.,
: captured members of the cou~try's dreaded security -forces, who stood Wetgand, Frances Roush, Virginia
Hubert Wheeler, William Norris,
, a~cuscd of rest sUng the revoluuon that toppled Ntcolac Ceausescu .
B· Roush, Robert R. Hoffman,
:
O~c _ year ago. Tonya Hardmg won the. U.S Figure Skating Champi- Arthur Clifford Gibbs, Samuel Kenneth Ward, Mabel Brown ,
David Wickline, Lewis Swisher,
: onsh•r m Detrou, a day alter Nat_lcy Kerrigan dropped out because of the Pond Plants, Eleanor L. eck, The!Devin Levi Hays, Patrick Mundell,
• clubbmg ~!tack that had lelt her ngbt knee injured. (The U.S. Figure Skat· rna K. Roush, Harold S. Braden
Oscar Clark, Coy Ray Bart, Edgar
: mg Assoclallon dectded to•send K~rrigan along with Harding to the Win- Jr., Winnie I. Fiber Erma L'
Cullen Griftilb, Jr., John Nugent,
: ter Olymptc Gamr;;o~n Notway, w1th runner-up Michelle Kwan going as Folmer, Lloyd D. Smith: Donald
• ftrst alternate.)
'
Roush, Le1hia T. Lyons, Otmer
Sr., Edward Marion Mynster,
James A. Sinith, Melvin Cross,
:
Today's Birthdays: Actress Butterfly McQueen is 84. Actor-comedian Roy Cooke, Travts Joe Kirby
Mane New, Clyde Mount, Beulah
: Larry Storch_ ts 72 A
_ ctor Ron Moody is 71. Comedian Soupy Sales 69. Brtckles, Haskell E. Gillispie,
S
d
V
Catherine
V.
Sawyers,
Betty
B d
Wright, Carney A. Ball, Doris
; roa c~st JOUrna1tst an er anocur is 67. CBS newsman Charles Sleeth, Mabel Virginia Rose,
Harder, Ethel Lambert, Margaret .
• Osgood ts 62. Smger Sbtrley Bassey is 58. Actress Yvette Mimieux is 56 Homer S. Htll, Sr. Catherine A.
Mary White, Marie Wagner, Rev.
: AWophysictst S~ephen Hawking is 53 Rock smger David Bowie is 48.
Holman, Arnold Weldon wem , John
Lewis, Margery Rutan, Elbert
•
Harvey E. Berkley, Laura M. . Wtlfong, Barbara Stiffler, Carl
:
Th?ught for TO&lt;Jay: "Why is propaganda so much more successful McDaniel, Audie M. McFarland,
Momson, Golden Newsome; Turn; when II surs up hatred than _when it tries to stir up friendly feeling?" _
Garnet A. Gerlach, Carloyn June
er
Jackon, Walter Peck, Nellie
• Bertrand Russell, English plulosopher and mat!lematician (!872-I970).
{ M:uey, I~.M,_ Sl~t!!Lisaac.David . .!-IY.eC£. ~!Ia Miller, Sylvia-Miller,

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it .and change It on lbe margins."
Dole spent most of the next six
momlis liellgtng bls bets, wblle·
Gramm waged a boly war against
" soc•'al 1'zed• medicme,
· " talc'
. mg h'ts
message dtreedy to voters m roadshow fashton.
The same senator, wh~ considers himself a Gramm ally, observes
!?at q[am'!l. would have ~een
dead . pollucally for 1996 tf he
had mtscalculated the natiOnal
~ood on beallb care: "I have see_n
h_tm on se~eral occast~ take poStttons on Issues _wbtch buck tb_e
Republican _maJOnty because of ~ts
mcre~tble mte!l~~t and seen h1m
over ume prevail.
.
I~ contrast, Dole diehards _are
womed that be !bus far has fatled
to _commumcate a set, of .c ?re
beliefs. Is lhere a cause he s wllbng
to l~se ~ver?
He s reach~d th-e stage now
where some of hts ":~sses are
begmn~ng to sbow, a lon~!1me
Dole fnend and ally told us. One
of them is he doesn't re~lly stand
for very D!uch. H~ basn t thought
tbrou~h thmg~. He san operator, a
pollltcal leg1~lator, m~~e !ban a
thoughtful policy-maker.
..
Ruefully,· ~·s source added:_ I
happen to lbmk for lbe ftrst ume
that Phtl Gramm could be~ nommee. He has a bell of a beam and is
a bulldog . He know~, what he
lbtnks about everythmg.
qack Anderson and Michael
Blnstein are col~mnists for Unit·
ed Feature Synd1cate Inc.)

Uavid Wilson , Chester Lundy, Perla G. Averion, Alfred "Toby"
Shirley Park, Uly M. Stewart. Deb- Young, William A, "Cork" Robinorah 'K. Ellis, Martha L. Sowards, son, Henry L. "Hank" Moore.
Edna Jenkins, Charles McNeal,
Hazel M. McHaffie, Paul Sellers,
Beulah McComas, James C. Arlana Quick, ~arlba E. Ander,Wright Ill, Patricia J. Splete, Mai'- son, William "Ben" Rife, Nelda
tonT~ DicX:ev,-Paui W. North, · 'June" Wyant, Margaret A.. Rose
Joseph A. Blazer, Cecil P. Riffle, and Carl A. Manin . .
Verlon Back, Roy Gardner, Gus
Betty Jane Lambert, Freda
Thevenir, Joseph Grensbaw, John Miller, Paul Hensley, Lulber Bar-H. Cooper, Charles Leonard, toe, Roy Lee Fryar, Gladys Heiney,
Jeanne Bel ville, Edmund Kings- Michael Ray Harris, Kathryn Grace
land, .Jr., Gary Reynolds, Thelma Smith, Nellie Berruw!, Arthur ",
Reeves, Eva Faulkner, Betty Heiney , Had! PeaMene Lee,
Hairston, Lucy Martin, Henry Mamie Buckley, Charles Hall,
Leroy Campbell, Fred Pasco, Mary Floyd Vincent Hawk and Dorsel
Barrmger.
Wheaton, Thelma Ralph, Naomi
Opal Sbe~&amp;Janice Luman,
Skidmore Roush, Howard Brannon, Melvin S!Pver, Alben Durose, Stanley Fell
uehle Culver,
Jantce Robinson, Marta Dean Monie Fraley,
'eManley, Ken~IJI(;)&gt;well, James !j, Williams, Vir·
neth Reed, Norma Hemsworth,
ginia Kemper, Wayne Russell,
Alma Salisbury,'Walter Mooney,
Nancy Houck, Bessie Gilmore, Iris Brittanv Ruoe. Henrv McKinnev.
Tate, Gerard D' Amato, Hazel
Ralston Johnson, Joseph Brady,
McClellan, Carl Elliott, Kennelb
Anise Wood, Mary Robinette,
Boster, Earl Tawney, Orville
Martha MacKenzie, Gleen Soles,
Stone, Myrtle Goetting, Frances
Cecil Watson, Charles MacKenzie,
Welberholtand Emelia Harper.
Lola Sharp, Ruth Hershberger,
Mahlon Eblin, Margaret Holter,
Adeline ))_~~- Clarence Cline,
Virginia Thoren, Esther Wolfe,
David Walker, Russell Spaulding,
Vera Beegle, Richard Friley, Guy
Jessie Fulton Jr., James Vest.
Harper, Mary Williams, William
Rosella Secoy, Geneva Jeffers,
Esther Gorden, Doris Adams, Clif·
Larkins, Betty Proffitt, Charles
Findly, CIIU'cnce Price, William
ford Wood, Georgia Adkins, Edith
Smith, Sandra Baer, Ruth Bierbup,
Gilkey, Edith Harris, Kathryn
Helen Miller, Cordell Randolph,
Sheets, Ethel Spellman, Charles
William Morris, Marvin Teaford,
Simms, Raymond Shelton, Maggie
Walter Shell , Helena Daniels, Topping, Lemma Smith, David
Delma Hawley, William B;unhart, Hutchinson, Nell Higgins, Nova!
Inez 1\sh, Albert Martin, Olive Phillips, Garnet Nelson, Clarence
Lawson, Larry Jacobs, Beatrice Springer, Velvie Dewitt, Cynlbia
Lisle, Charles Blake. Sally Byers, Casey, Estol North, George
James Goodrich, Byron Haskins, Starcher, Deane Carter, James FillThomas Hayman, Gerald Reuter, mger, lUIImy Sigler, Clyde ThompWilliam Cooper, Chloe Rinehart, son , Freda Half!!.ill, Mary Neal,
Mary Kauff, Laura Ba].cr, Eliza- Mary Wallis, 11any Stewart, June
beth Roberts, Shirley Guinther, · Cantrell, Maggie Skaggs, Matjone
Corrine Hager, Marie Pursley , Moyer, Michael Rocchi, Arthur
Michael Hubbard, Leo Story, Vir- Martin, Floren Williams, Laura
girua Phalin, Sadie Trussell, Edwin Wise, Ross Fulks, Audra Haffelt,
Bumem, Lucille Norris, Dorsa.Par- Mary Evans, Jape Young, Archa
sons, Gladys Smilb, Elher Johnson, • McNeely, William Hardesty; Gina
Harold Russell, Frederick Nease, F. Barsotti, John Shaw, Edna Casey,
Patty Pickens, Herschel Badgley, Hubert Sheets, Sarah McGuire,
Delbert Ours, Karen Haggy, Don- Marjorie Rutherford, Jimmy
aid Van Cooney, Ethel Mullens, McGuire, Grover Johnson,
Susie Windon, James Weber, Carl Clarence Sheets, Charles Rice,
Bruley, Roger Theiss, Freda Fergu- William Campbell, Margaret
son, Elizabeth Well, Betty Triplett, Jarvis, Donna- Collins, Sarah Wall,
Kate Parker, Mary Elizabeth Chap- Russell Wooten. Paul Layne,
man, Arthur Barr and William Richard Spurlock, Asa Mossbarger,
Gibbs
Chanice Carter, James Hammon
Mildred B. Fowler, Mabel V. Jr., Peggy Price, Betty Janey,
Walburn, Gerald J. Overturf, Audrey Adlcins , Marla Lyall,
Kenard A. Prunty, Madeline M. Catherine Barnes, Edgar Maben
Swan, Albert F. Van Cooney, and Vemoka Waugh .
'
Qorothy A. Caldwell, Charles E.
The writer apologizes in
Lewis Jr., Keilb Robertson, Eva B. advance if a name bas been omitted
Struble, Richard E. Pickens, or lbere is an error in spelling. In
Richard L. Richmond, Marcia w. the event there arc any errors or
Karr, ' Richard H. Stewart, Chilton omissions in this list, do not hesiE. Qidle, Edna M. Wayland, James tate to contact me.
1::;, Meredltb-;-John-e-t&gt;ietzge ,
1--would-like-to-thank--the-follow--~
William E.· Backus, Edna Stobart, · ing funeral homes for their-help in
Frances E. Roush, Paul N. "Harris, accumulating the names on this
Linda L Watson, Ellen C. Conkel, Honor RoU. Ewine FuneraUillme,
Edith Schwab, Oc1a G. W:ifd~·- FrSiier Funeral Home, Birchfield
James W. Moois, Edward J. Wagn· Funeral Home, White-Blower
er, Phyllis M. Larkins, Nan W. Funeral Ho111e; Foglesong Funeral
Moore, Edna P. Canaday, Esther Home, Bigony-J ordan Funeral
Bonn "Scottie" Hayes, Irene M. Home, Willis Funeral Home,
A'rtis, Dale A. Hysell, Anna E. Waugb-Halley·Wood Funeral
Hilldore, Edilb C. Hoard, Eva·C. Directors, Cremeens Funeral'
Hysell, Kennelb Calc, Grace E. Chapel, Wilcoxen ·Funeral Home,
'
Call, Chester Wil~ William Atkins, McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
'
George A. Wyant, Delores A. Blower-Garrett Funeral Home and
Miller,' Freda M. Casto, Irene L. Straight·Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral
Hanson , Charles H. Romine, Home.
Charles L. Eskew, John W. "Bill"
In Gnd We Trust.
Thomas, Freddie Houdashelt, MerCaiTy on
rill Taylor, Henry F. Scarberry,
Editor's note • Long~tlme
Emogene "Jean" Fisher, Mildred I. Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the
HyseU, Kathryn F. Miller, Thomas contributor of a weekly column
"Dude" Hendrix, Janet M. Snyder, lor The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Betty Smith, Irene A. Davis, Hilda Readers wlshl1111 to applaud, crlt·
V, Smitlj, Rutb M. MoQ)c, Willie F. lclze.or co(JUDent on any subject
Blaine, Nona E. Nelson, Elizabetll (except religion or jlolltiCI!l) are
Mourning. Gal!!a L, Alnrado, , -'-OOIUQII!eclto..wrtte. to..Mr. Crow
In care ott•l~ newtpaper.
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Ohio/W.Va.
ice-__, Outgoing state watchdog
f~els job is_far from done
.

January 8, 1995

Dole-Gramm struggle is well underWay

,(

815 Tbtrd Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446·l3f1

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A4

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A5

Impressions
.f

COLUMBUS (AP) - Tbe
state' s fonn er itjspector general
says his workload didn't change
when .Gov. George Voinovich succeeded Richard Celeste - it stayed
heavy.
"I've been busy for six years
here," David Stunz, who has overseen investigations of government
offices, said on his last day Friday.
"I have not slowed down."
Sturtz, 57, was appointed in
1988 by Celeste, a Democrat.
Voinovich, a Republican, decided
to replace Sturtz because he said
one person should not hold !}le job
for too long.
Top Democrats, many Ohto
newspapers and others have urged
Voinovtch to retam Sturtz .
Voinovich spokesman Mike Dawson said the governor had no plans
to reconsider his decision.
Sturtz said there was always
something to investigate in bolb
administrations. And he satd much
work still needs to be done
'"llte next insiJectnr general that
comes in here has his work cut out
for him," he said
A strand of grass was bent under tbe weight of freezing rain near downtown Cincinnati Friday
Sturtz told the Dayton Daily
as the area braced for an anticipated three inches of snow to fall along with the rain. (AP)
News that both administrations had
scandals, but that th e cases m
Voinovich's
have to
become
more complex term
and harder
mvestigate.
Dawson satd Vomovich has
done a better job than the Celeste
·
.
.
administration on ethtcs matter.; .
)
"If you read the newspaper chp·
By JOHN NOLAN
· Wall ruled that the evidence was ed a $10,000 bond , but the judge pings for the last 12 years and look
Associated Press Writer
, sufficient to establish !bat a clime dtssolved the bond and ruled lb~t at those kmds of things, we comMIDDLETOWN - A high _ rna~ !)ave OCCt[rred, and he seni the Wilkinson c&lt;:mld remam ~ree on hts pare ~xtremcly favorably .to lbe forschool principal accused of solicit- case to a Butler Countygrand jury own recogmzance pendmg aclto~
ing the murder of his ex-wife tor consideration nex• month.
by the grand jury.
_ I.. . " I
denied the plan in a telephone call
Wilkinson, 44, of Middletown,
. He. remains on patd leave from
taped by police, according to evi· did not testtfy. He sat impassively hts JOb.
denceintroducedincourtFriday, - atlb£defensc;tableduring_U!ehearFrances testifi~d _f'nday that
"You proposed it and 1 rejected ing.
Brown came to her aplii'Unent last
·
it, • • Clarence Wilkinson, ·the
Defense lawyer Raben Cough- month and told her that Wilkinson
CLEVELAND (1\P) _ The city
·Franklin High School princtpal. lin argued that the prosecution pre- wanted Brown to kill her.
is joining the school district in ask·
said from his office in the Dec. 15 sen ted no direct evidence of any
"I was supposed to be shot in ing a federal court to end busing of
phone conversation with the pur- preparation by Wilkinson to have the head with a gun my ex-husband students for desegregation, Mayor
his eX-wife killed.
.
provided," Frances tcst.itied
Michael R. White said Friday.
ported hitman, Christopher Brown.
"No·, you proposed it and I
The case is built solely on aileUnder defense cross-exam ina"It is time now that we devote
rejected i~" Brown replied in the gat ions by Brown and Frances , tion, Frances said she received every dollar, every peony, every
call placed from the Middletown Coughlin said.
$1,700 a month in support UJtder opportunity to furthering and
poliee station.
"This case is ndiculous," terms ollbecouple's 1993 divorce. 1mproving the education of our
City Prosecutor Bruce Fassler Coughlin told the judge. "There is following an eight-year marriage.
children," White said .
presented the evidence at a prelimi- no independent evidence of a conFrances also wa~ the beneficiary
He srud the end of busing would
nary hearing, along wtth testimony spiracy."
of a $50,000 insurance policy on save the district about $10 million
f~om a police detective and WilkinBut the judge rejected the · Wilkinson's life, she testified.
. for transf&gt;Ortauon and enable the
son's ex-wife, Melissa Frances. .
defense plea . ·
(;gyg!!lin asked Frances if she 74,000-pupil district 10 f[nance
Police allege that Brown, 19, hated Wilkinson.
more educational programs
Municipal Court Judge Mark
agreed to kill Frances for $12,50Q
"Yes, I do hate him. He molestBusing was requirctl as part of
but then went to Frances and struck ed my son," she said.
the district's 21 -year-old desegrea deal to kill Wilkinson for
On T~day, a grand jury in galion case. to provide racial bal·
$15,500. Frances tQld police she neighboring Warren County indict- ance in the schools.'
· quickly backed out of the scheme.
ed Wilkinson on 17 charges of
White and school Superinten'--'l!lilkinson declined to comment gross sexual imposition, alleging dent Sammie Campbell Parrish say
folio ing the hearing . He had post- he molested. Frances' son, now 18:
the requirement no longer applies
because the situation in the district
has chrutged since the schools were
ordered to desegregate in 1978,
DAYTON (AP) - State offi.
five years after the case began.
~ cials have agreed to return the driv·
· The school system on Thursday
. er's license of a woman arrested for
drunken driving, the woman's
COLUMBUS (AP) _The Rev. Virgil J. Riedlinger raised his
attorney
said.
own vegetables and canned peaches. I',e al so saved more th an $!
The decision could allow other
dnvers charged with the same
million during his life.
. .
.
By The Associated l'ress
offense 10 get their hccnses back
Riedlinger, who died in June, left $1.25 mtlhon to Ponttfical ColThe following numbers were
before trial or a hearing.
lege Josepbinum.
_
. . .
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
· "It affects thousands of per.;uns
It is the Ia,gest gift ever recetved by the 10SUtuuon, the only ponVirginia lotteries:
tiftcal college outside Italy.
OHIO
who have been cited,'' attorney
John R.ion said Friday. "It's
During its 103-ycar history, the college-has traincd-mor~ .tll.w! _ __ Pick 3: 7-9· 1
· , extremely significant."
1,500 priests who have served in mo~ than 20 countries and all 50
- PiCk 4: 3-9-8-2- _
Rion rC'jltcsents Kristin K.
U.S. states.
· ·
·
- Buckeye 5: 5-13 -14-0-32
Sanders of Troy. Police stopped
The money will be held in an endowment, and about 10 students
The owner ot one Buckeye 5
Sanders last March and charged her
a year will benefit from scholars!! ips from the fund.
·.
ticket with the correct nve-number
with drunken driving. Police sus''Father Riedlinger's gift is a vivtd example of bow pnests play a
combination may claim an Ohio
ndcd
her
license
and
setzed
her
singularly
important
role
i~
fostering
vocations,"
~aid
the
Very
-Lottery
pnze of $100,000, dJe lotpe
Rev Blase ). Cupi~h. prestdent and rector of Ponulical College
tery announced Saturday.

Hl•g h school .prl• ncl• pal den 1.98
•In I•t•Iat•In g. m urder-f 0 r- hIre
• p I0 t

Oht o Ctvtl Rtght s Comnu ss lon
who was accused of failing to ftle
disclosure fonns while contracong
lor state business.
During Voinovich' s admmtSird·
tion, Stunz has inves tigated Terry
Wallace, form er director of the
Ohio Dcparlment of Human Servi ces. Voinovich fired Wallace
durin g the investtgallon of htnng
and spendmg practices
Sturtz leaves otflce in the milldi e of an investigation Into the
adminisliation' s dcci si&lt;,n tu cxJmnd

DA VlD STURTZ
mer admmistralton,'' Dawson satd.
He said the Voinovicb admims!ration has done a good JOb ot
responding.
"Whenever you have 5R ,OOO
en\ployces, you're going to have
people doing thmgs they shouldn ' t
be doing. We've dealt very swtftly
and very firmly with allegations of
impropriety
and any
impropriety
we've discovered,"
Dawson
said.
Celeste did not return phone
messages at his home and office
seeking comment Friday.
Sturtz's invcsllgations during
the Celeste administration mcluded
th-at of Wi'lliam Sykes, lormer
director of the Ohio Dcparuncnt of
Administrative Services and the

the state's minority set-a"de program to Asian-Americans, a group
that contributed 'to the Vmnovich
campaign.
He began lbe investigation 'in
October when a minority contractor
alleged that Voinovich Chief of
Staff Paul Mifsud suggested the
contractor would benefit if he
dropped a lawsuit challenging the
expansion. Mifsud has denied lbe
allegation.
Sturtz said Mifsud wa&lt; his ftrst
liaison ·with Vomovich and that
during one meeting , Mifsud satd
Sturtz's office posed a " problem"
because there was no control over
its operaoons.
Mifsud told the /Jar/y News be
never complained about tack of
controls. lie did not return phone
calls Friday seckmg further com ment, and Dawson dcchned to
comment.

~

• • campaign
•
"''eve l an d JOinS
b USing
•
to end mandstory
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DUI sus-pect

will get he

asked U.S. District Judge Robert
Krupansky to release it from the
requtrement. Other p•trties in the
case say they will oppose the
request.
About 35,000 pupils ride buses
each day, and about half tide !1uses
to maintain rac1al balance. The dtstrict and the city also have asked
that Cleveland not be ordered to
transfer 400 students by Jan. 21 to
maintain racial balances in moe
schools
White said relmiSing the dtstrict
from -the busing mandate also
would strengthen city netghborhoods by reassuring parents who
want some chuice tn dewhng
where their children go to school.
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

Great Savings on
-40° and -50°
Work Boots!

The Shoe Cafe

license back

Ohio News in Brief:

Fortune left to college

Lottery numbers

Cenif1 c:ue of deposit rates have climbed over 1he p.tst few momhs,
and aslute CD buyers are taking advantage by purcha s111g COs.
We can suggest one more way to mcreasc the ;Jdvanlolgcs or a CD
purchase Before you buy from your local bank ur any other source, C\11 a
Memll Lynch Fmanci:d Consultant. R1ght now, r:ttes on FDIC· Insured
CDs of banks and thrihs avatlable through Mcrnll Lynch are haghcr th:.m
the nauonal averag~s

Clh ;h,til.thk through M c rnlll ~ nch
.
· ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE
YIELD (A I'Y)

• car.

Sh~ has pleaded innocent , hut
Josephinum.
·
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.
The winning ticket was sold at
.
.
has not come 10 trtal.
During nearly 40 years as n priest, Riedlinger w.as .an nssoctate
'D' Abates Food Store in
INTEI\1'-I
T
RATE
TERM
• In September. Miami County
pastor in Delphos, Manslield', Tiffin, Sandusky, Norwalk, Clyde
Pamesvtlle.
. ·'
Municipal Judge Willirun Kessler
and Put-in-Bay. And he served as pa~tor at Shelby and Cloverdale
$ sa, Ie•s in Buckeye 5 totaled
5
.55°/c,
S.82%
3
MONT.ti
53 7 3 16
before retiring in 1976.
declared the state's drunk-driving
· · 1·
The 166 Buckl:ye 5 game tickets
6.53%
6.28%
6MONTH
penalties to be unconsuruuona m a
wim four of the numbers are each
'
ruling connected with Sanders'
•..,
''
'J
worth $250. The 5,534 with three'
6.93%
12MONTH
6.93%
case. He said seizing cars before a
TOLEDO (AP) - The Medical College of Ohio board ol
of lbe numbers arc each worth $10.
hearing violates the due-process
trustees rejected a three-year contract proposal that called for 3 perThe 58,800 wilb two or the numThe mtnt'l t r tJ tt'S " " d thr An n u11f r n r m taf,t' Y1rf,l (AJ'l') nn· tU of 1/ if/9 5 nnd tJrt
JUb/« f 1o chon~ A mminrum drpolll of SJ,cr.Jo u rt"qrm-.·rl In ll lf&gt;) l r tl).l '· ,.,u fy rt•ldJdraUta/
provisions of the Constitution.
cent annual pay raises for employs:.l's. _
bers are each worth $1 .
may nol b~ p~mu t tt'd, hou~ver, CDJ ca n l11· lul u ! rl# t~d m thf" u to miary m arkr l ' "'lftJCI 10
Under the state's drunken-driv-d
Board members· based Utefr deCision Friday on a fair share clause
The 0 hto Lottery wtll pay out
market conditiOns 111'Y nury rt'(l,'(t cuw,•nt mm1trt ducomu CDJ ml1'j !Jt' ll..uu•d ~ oua..o{ing law, police officers can suspen
in the proposal. It would require employees who are cligtblc to JOin
$537,883 10 winners in Friday's
JIDk' 1mtiluuoru
the driver's license of anyone
and pay dues to the Amencan Federauon of State, County and
Pick 3 Numbers daily game.,
Don 't miss 1h.is opp ortuni1 y for ;Uiril C11\'C yidd!&gt; an d the ad diuonal
charged with drunken dnving,
Municipal Workers union.
'
.
.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
~nsta~Uy seized lbh c dvehicl~ -~ o~!c
Of the 2,000 MCO employees, about 716 are dues-paymg unton
$!, 772,72S 50.
advantage s of having one of the world '!&gt; .leaJ1 ng (mancin l !&gt;C r\' Jl'C ~ firms
ts dnvmg an
tl un 1 a
members.
In the other qaily g;une, Pick 4
•behmd you
ing on the charge takes place.
Negotiations between MCO and lbe uni_on began tn July . The
Numbers pl ayers
wagered
Make a caJiwday 10 .1 Mernll Lynch F• nan n.tl Co nsuhant C':lll one: or
Kessler ordered the OhiQ
union had approved the proposll!Thursday mght.
·
·.
$370,654 and wtll share $99,700.
Bureau of Motor Vehideslb
· to reinUnion officials said 1hc contracl would allow the hospllal to
Tile jackpof for Saturday's
the numbers bl'i ow or mall 1hc coupon
state Sanders' license, but e agen·
lower costs by reducing lbe guaranteed hours of pay for employees
Super Lotto drawmg was $20 mil"
cy refused. Rion then asked Kessler
called back to work. Holidays, vacation pay, sick leave. on·call pa)',
lion .
•
The difference is Merrill Lynch .
_to.hold_tlte.agen~l' in contempt~.~-- - hcalth.carc.and.otheUlenl:liL'i would remain a1e ~ne.
I- - - - 'WEST..l!IRGINI,.__::......._ _1t--.. Rion-•adidh_the~at ~,:S a~~n~~
--.:rhc emplttyecs haycJJccn working under a q:mtractlbat cxpifCU- ~ Daily 3:::1· 6·2-.
general
to!
tm
ur,ay
.
'
in September.__________;...________.;...~
Daily 4:9-0-7-4
bureau has agreed to relllstate L---.....;.....;
C
ash 25 : 1-4-1 2-19-24-25
.
-~-..SanderS:. hcense.
M:ril-to-. Merrill bynch Bureau spokc·sma~ Leo Skinner
435 2nd Avenue
conlirmed that the license wtll be
Gallipolis, OH 456.31
reinstated.
,
. ·'It's our opinion that (Kessler s
Attn: FC# 9739
deciston) ... only affects h•s area of
- 1480 JACKSON PIKE
QALUPOUS, OHIO
_ PletR H'ntl me more mformllllon on C D~
jurisdiction," said Skinner. "It
(81•) ...._2208 or HIOO 445-2208 '
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
does not affect the rest of the

Cont•;,ct proposal re•iected

.

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&gt;

614-446-1176 or-l -800 ..93 7,.Q238
-------------- --- -·--- -------·------- ----- ·- --·--·-

--•---DILLON$ Medical Shoppe

~

~' .
Andy Sutter, an _assistant Ob~o

state."

attorney general, satd hts ofti~e ts
reviewing the legal repercussions
of the bureau's returning the
license. lie said he believes licenses will he rewmcd only in cases in
which judges order lbe bureau to·
do so.
During pregnancy, a woman'a
heart lncreMBa lte output of oxygen by half to th ...tourtha more
than normal to provide for the
-'-iliedl of llie unborn baby.

Physical~

S1rvk:1
.Sports llrdlclne
' •Adult Fltnla
•Work Rlcovwy
,
-c:ano.c Rlhlbllllallon

J

.,._,MIIucl n.tlnenta
"Theraplsll tllld Athlltlc Tl"'l
have
0¥11' 87 Y•~"~ or combined experience
"WiecCipl: Mldlc:m'l, Medicaid, Prlvllte
lnau,_, Workar'a Compensation

Addreu _ _ _ _ __:__ __

Cny - - - . . . . , - - - - - -

8u1ineu Phone" - - , . - - - - - - I Io n~ l'hnnc - - - ' - - - . . . . . : : - ' - -

'

MerrilllYf!ch cbC'niJ, pldit:" ij.lvt' tht:" ru mc and off1tt :'ld drt"n of )&lt;li n l"mrmo:tl Cnmultnnt.

~Merrill Lfnth

lfM'NIIIO UIICISI YOUR liGHT TO CHOOSE YOUR
PHYSICAL THIUPtm . .dicere Law1102

A tr.. dltJon of crust.

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Page-A&amp;-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV
..
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I

........-Area deaths-- GOP's early straw
~ohn C. Donohue ·
poU favors Gramm
' The Rev. Lou~ 1\, fussell and tbe Rev. Rick Maloyed wiU officiate.
burial _will be m lhe Forest Hills Cemetery, Flatrock, W.Va. Military
~ravesade ntes wall be conducted by American Legion Mason County
j"OSI No. 23.
·Mr. ~nobue was a retired 31-year employee oftbe Utility Departrrient
l Amencan AUoys, and a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean Conflict in
951-54.
·
.
Born Dec. 12, 1927 in Ambrosia, W.Va, be was a son of the late Jesse
I"· and Emma L. Wilson Donohue.
.
' He was also preceded in death by two sisters, Opal V. Escue and Gar*ette E. Donohue; and two infam brothers.
.
Surviving are two daughters, Theresa Moore of Mount Washington,
and Margaret Wau:rs of Valdosta, Ga.; two sons, Jobnie C. Donohue
Garry L. Donohue. both of Poilit Pleasant; two sisters and one brothn-law, Gretchen E. and Curt Connolly, and Adela E. Baker, all of Point
asant ; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Waller "Biil" and Kathryn
~onohue of Fon Meade, Fla., and Jesse J. and Anna Mae Donohue of
~runt Pleasant; and seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

f

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J=i2~~~D.
~~aofM~~~Morris,
70,1119 Vrrginia
tt..~
Ravensw~.
fo~erly
Sandyville, W.Va, died S:uurday Jan 7
(995 at h1s rcs1dence.
·
· '

' Born Juiy I~ .. 1924 in Parkersburg, W.Va., son of the late Lawrence
tlement and L1ll1an Ruth Morgan Morris, be retired as an auto meclianic
om Collecu~ Cbevrole~ North Miami Beach, Fla. He was a AAA cerli!ld lmDSMISSIOn mechanic for 40 years and was employed by the Jacl(son
ounty (W.Va.) Board of Education.
I He was a U.S. Anny veleran of World War II and was a member of tbe
fandyville Umted Methodist Cburcb.
r .Surviving are a daughler, Sharon Sparks of Ravenswood; two grand~bddren and two great-grandchildren; two sisters, Imogene Smith or
ileanor, W.Va .. and Grace Angle of St. Albans, w.Va; two brothers
(:barles C. Morris of Ravenswood, and Carroll R. Morris or Lakeland'
lfla.; and several nieces and nephews.
·
'
• He was also precede~ in death by his wife, Edythe E. Morris; a daugbtpr, Jud~ Mon;ts; and a SIS!Cr, Corrine "Queen" Neeley.
• . Serv1ces will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush Funerai. Home, Ravenswood, With the Rev. William Eaton officiating. Burial
'tall be m tile Independence Cemelery. Friends may call at the funeral
~me Sunday from 4-8 p.m.
..
, In heu of flowers , donations may be made to the American Cancer

~

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pOvel Myers

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Sen. Pbil Gramm waltzed to a lopsided viet~ Saturday as Louisiana
GOP activists rated a doze n 1996
Republican presidential prospects,
cementing the feisty Texan as tbe
race's early pacesetter.
Gramm won a whopping 72 percent of the vote as nearly 1,300 delegates to the Louisiana stale.
Republican convention staged the
fmt of wbal is likely to be a half"
dozen or more presidenlial straw
polls this year.
Coming_ in second with only 12
percem wlts Patrick J. Buchanan,
the conservative commentator who
cballenge.d President Bush in the
-1992 GOP primaries and ·may run
again. Tbird, with 5 percent, was
Lamar Alexander, tbe ronnet Ten-

host, who gave a rousing speech to
tile delegates. Former Vice Presi~
dent Dan Quayle was seventh with
17 votes - I percent. Five other
GOP prospects got less than I percent.
·
Saturday's event bas no impact
on who gets the su pport of
louisiana's delegates to the GOP
nominating convention; that will be
determined · by the state 's March .
1996 primary. But Gramm mounted a ·double-barrel ed effort
nonetlleless, hoping the victory and
his early fund-raising lead would
force other potential candidates to
rush thcu timetables for deciding
whether to run - and establish him
as a force in the important Southern
primaries.
He bad a handful of aides on
hand. sent mailings and Christmas
cards to delegates, cilled 100 or so
himself and rushed from reception
·· ner, Senate Majority Leader Bob to reception . Gramm also was
Dole, did not attend and tried 10 get endorsed by Louisiana's three
his name taken off the ballot at the Republican Hou:;e members.
last minute. He finished in sixth
Speaking to the convention ,
place, with just 28 votes, or 2 per- Gramm opened a bare-knuckled
CCDI.
assault on President Clinto11 and
In a lie for fourth, with 3 percent said the 1994 Republican rout left
each, were former Housing Secre- half the job undone. "We rejecied
tary Jack Kemp, who did not Clinton's Congress, we rejected
attend, and former Reagan admin- Clinton's programs but in 1996 we
istratlon State Department official are going to reject Bill Clinton."
Alan Keyes, now a radio tallc; show Gramm said.
1

~~g:r::::::~:::::::

POMEROY - The following
cases were. concluded in the Meigs
County Coin of Judge Patrick H.

~BRodger L. McCoy, Gallipolis

Pomeroy-:...Middleport--Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV

testimony."

·

..

The law ~ows. victims' f8J!Iilies to testify farst, then be present
for other teShDIOny.
Besides tainting .testimony, the defense may be concerned that
the ~resence of the families could influence jurors, said Loyola UnivefSity Law professor Laurie Levenson.
"They provide reminders of Ron and Nicole " she said. "The
jury is reminded ll!e!l: are two sides:lo a dispute.' :

. '

ley Jr., St. Albans, W.Va., speed, 10 days jail suspended to three
$30 plus costs; Richard Sycho, days; n;ckless operation, $30 plus
Albany, speed, $30 plus costs; seat cosls; leaving tile scene of an accibelt, $25 plus costs; James Wyant den.t, $100 plus costs, one year proJr., Glade Spring, Va., speed, $30 bation, 10 days jail suspended to
pl_us costs; Connie Hendricks, three days concurrent with driving
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; under suspensaon, restitution;
John A. Casto, Pomeroy, domestic Robert M. Johnson Jr., Racine no
violence, costs, restraining order OL, $100 plus costs, three days'jail
issued, 30 days jail suspended upon and $50 of the fine suspended ·if
entollmenl-in in. brJuse rebabilita~
Vlilid OL jjresenfea williin 30-days;
tidn;
William R. Adams, Long Bot- .
· Robert S. Marcinko, Tuppers
tom,
spotlighting deer, $250 plus
Plains, assault, costs, restraining
costs,
10 days jail suspended to
order issued, one year probation,
three
days,
two year bunting sussix months jail suspended; Joe
pension
with
hunter education
. Bolin, Rutland, seat belt, $25 plus
C?urse
to
be
taken
a1 end ~f suspencosts ; Kevin E. Heaton,' Chester,
swn,
two
years
probation;
two
stop sign, $35 .Plus costs; Larry R.
charges
of.
spotlighting.
additional
Fox, Middleport, speed, $22 plus
costs; fictitious registration , $10 two charges of aiding and assisting
plus costs; Lany Stewart, Rutland, in the taking or a deer witll a gun
fail!l_re to stop for stopped school . during closed season, one charge or
hunting a deer .with a &amp;lin during
bus, $40 plus costs;
·closed
season, fine&amp; and sentence 10
Shelby M. Pickens, Racine,
run
concurrent
with first charge;
speed, $24 plus costs; seat belt,,$25
Robert
L.
Thompson,
Long Botplus costs; Theodore K. Sauber, tom, spotlighting, $500 plus
costs,
Athens, no operator's license, cosrs
I 0 days jail suspended, two year
only; Elizabeth A. Gloeckner, suspension of banting privileges
Pomeroy, failure to restrain/confine w1th hunter education course to be
a dog, $25 fine suspended, costs; taken
the end or suspension, two
Brian J. Justis, Racine, driving years atprobation,
forfeiture of
under suspension, $150 plus costs. ·
fuearrn; two additional charges of

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. LOS ANGEl ES (AP) - Relatives of Nicole Brown Simpson
~ !tonald Goldman say they in rend t9...l!e. i!U!!uwrll:lll! _w.!!m
0 .J. Simpson's trial begins, despite defense lawyers' attempts 10
keep, them oul
·
'It would seem unbelievably outrageous to ... have any thought
about excluding any family member or either family from the court.
We have pemaps more right than anyone to be present," Goldman's father, Fred, IOld KCAL-TV.
Ms. Simpson's father, Louis Brown, said that his family, too,
plans to attend the trial. One or more family members also plan to
attend a bearing next week on whether prose(;utors can introduce
allegations !!!at Simpson beat his wife.
Simpson's lawyers want 10 bar the victims' relatives from the
. courtroom in case any of tbem ar¢ called to testify. Defense lawyer
Jobnnie L. Cochran Jr. said allowhJg relatives to lislen to otber testimony may aiJer tberr own !'CCOlleclions on the witness stand. .
Deputy District Attorney Christopher Darden said prosecutors
wjll "fight thattootb and nait"
·
Meanwbjle, prosecutors are trying to get records from a battered
women's sbelter where Ms. Simpson may have sought help.
Simpson. is charged With tbe June 12th slashing deaths of Ms.
Simpson and Goldman outside her Condominium.
Sujlerior Coun Judge Lance Ito hasn't considered the matter of
the families' presence yet, bur his decision will be guided by the
California Crime Victims Trial Attendance Act.
The 1986 -law allo~s the judge to exclude those who ''would
pose a substantial risk of influencing or affecting the content of any ·

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battle
defense :11JP.ve
.

Meigs County Court processes cases

.Ferry, W.Va., seat belt, ~25 plus
costs; .Carla Sue Notllogbam,
: G
.
·
· Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
l
.AL!-IPOLIS - . Dovel T. Myers Sr., 71, Gallipolis, diedFriday,Jan. 6, Brent E. Parish, Dublin, )'peed. $30
t995 m Pinec:rest Care C~rer.
.
plus costs; Randall L. Kimes, Long
r
Born Sept 10, 1923 m Lecta.be was the son of the (ate Amer_8!14C~ ~!P1tom, ~e.at bell, .ll5 plus .c.osts;
.osrer Myers. ·
Chris T. Hamm, Racine, failure to
He served 26 years in the U.S. obey traffic signs, $20 plus costs;
Anny, retiring as a master sergeant · Henry E. Clelland III, Racine,
He WI;' &amp;;~so a f~er Gallipc)iis city speed, $30 plus costs; Jeffrey W.
COOIIDISSioner and served as Gallia Rohrer, Waterford, seat belt . .$25
County Veterans Service offiCCI' for plus costs; speed, $30 plus costs:
man" yeats. He was also foonerly William R. Rader II, Parkersburg,
emptoyed at Gallipolis Developmen- W.Va., speed, $30 plus'COsts:
IBICenterandwiditbeRiverCurrents
Carole E. McLaughlin,
newspaper
.
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;
·
He V:as a member of all Ma· Johnny W. Grant, Galloway, seat
. 10Dic bodies in FOieSI ·Park, Ga A belt, $25 plus costs; . speed, $30
pastp-esidentoftbeGallipolisShrine. plus costs: Michael Rinehart,
Club, he was a member of Gallipolis Racine, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Elks Lodge No. 107 and American Gerald Howard; Albany, speed,
LegionLafayettePostNo.27.Hewas $30 plus costs; Don G. Smith ,
tbe past com~r of the Disabled Logan, operating with no authority,
AmericanVetmanscbaprer,pastcom- intrastate, $205 plus coSIS; Terry
mander of the Gallipolis AMVETS, Haggerty, Gallipolis, speed, $30,
past commander and quartermaster . plus costs;
'
·
of VFW Post No. 4464, past District
Christine Reed, Pomeroy, seat
12ccxnmanderofthe VFW, past all- · belt, $25 plus costs; Benjamin Gra'
statedistrictcommanderofthe VFW,
· ; DOVEL MYERS SR.
pastswcchiefofstaffbtbe VFW,
•
(
past AII·American Team district
qommarider 6f the VFW, paststare inspector of the VFW, Nalional Aide-DeCamp, past member of lhe VFW National Safety Committee past member or
tlae VFW National Le~ Committee, and Chef De GUe 1216 of Ohio. Common Pleas
Charges of no operator's license and
Jte auended Grace Uruted Methodist Olurcb.
failure to control dismissed in ex-'
, Surviving are his wife, Virginia Sayre Myers, whom he married Jan. 23, Jo&amp;eph L. CaiD, Jadae.
change
for guilty plea
1946; a daughter, Patsy Campbell of Gallipolis; two sons, Dovel Thomas
John
A. Richards, 75J0Cub!Jage
Crlmlul
t;lyers Jr. and John M. Mym, both of Gallipolis· and a grandson J D
Road,
WesterviDe,
$450 plus court
&lt;!ampbeD of Gallipolis.
'
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Jeremy M. Halley, 23, no ad1
dressavallable,$150pluscourtocSts, costs, .30 days in jail (27 days sus· Servia:s·wi!l be ~p.m. ~onday in the Waugh-HaUey-Wood Funeral
ome. Burial wtD be m the Pine Street Cemerery. Friends may call at the · 12 mooths in jail (all but 30 days pended), one year probation and a 90rnernl home Sunday from 24 and 7-9 p.m.
suspended), two years probation and day license slispension.
Keith A. Scott, 29, 20 Hubbard
~ , F.ull military hono~ wil~b,e ~led at the grayesire by all local military a one-yeai license suspension for
Street, Gallipolis, $750 plus coun
~gamzauons. A Masomc setVJce w1D be conducted mtllduneral homeat8:30 aggravated vehicular assault.
JJ;m. Sun!lay.
eosts,
six month in jail (allbutiOdays
-Divorces
Pallbearers will be Ron ·CalbQun, Bill Medley, Bill Davis, Claudia
suspended)
and two years probation.
Marjorie Watson, 32 Smithm
.
escamp, Sonny Chandler and Bob Wood.
Michael
A. Lake, 34, ProctorAve., Gallipolis, and William WatHonorary pallbearers areAbie Mathews, Jolm Jeffers, Max Tawney, Gary son, Wellstoo.
ville, $950plus coun coSts, 90days in
51lort, Ray Haskms and Johnny Jackson.
jail
(all but i 4 days suspended), two
Michael E..Spilbnan, 603 Alba
years
probation, a three-year license
Road, Patriot, and Monica Spillman,
3378 E. Pine S~RC;~,Mt.&lt;Aimy,-N.C. suspension and 1\ 90-day vehic~
immobilizaiion. · ·
Disaolutions
: l:EXINGTOl'j - Geo~ge Andrew Ray Jr., 70, 6660 ·Morrow County
Crlmiaal
Lori A. Ellis, 952 Kemper HolRoad 37, Lexmgton, d1ed lllw:sday, Jan. 5, 1995 at his residence.
·.
Bret
Pelfrey,
Gallia Met. Estates,
low Road, Gallipolis, and John V.
f Born 1\ug. 19. 1924 m.Jackson, he was the son of the late George A Ellis,
381
Buck
Ridge
Road,
.Bidwell, $50
10S37 State Route 160, Vinton.
&lt;;td Evelyn Sharp Ray Sr.
·
John c. Hende!son. 238 second plus court costs fof disorderly con1 He gradualed from Jackso~ High School. He was a U.S. Navy veteran ·
duct by intoxication.
~ World w.ar II who served m the Pacafic Theater. He ·moved 10 the Lex- . Ave., Gallipolis, and Gloria Hcnder·
Clifford 0 . Willett, 914 Fourth
son, 307 Upper River Rood, GallipoIMton area m 1948 from Jackson.
Ave.,Gallipolis,$100pluscourtcosts
.
• He re.tired in 1978 from the Mans.field Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
after- lis.
for
disorderly cqnduct by intoxicaJane
E.
Steger,
544S
State
Route
11/ard held pos1t10ns at the Tappan Co.. Bailey Distributing aniJ 20th Cenl~ry Pnntmg.
·J41,(lallipolis,andCbarlcsE.Stegi:r, tion.
Brenda K. Estep, 34, 1429 Lin• He was a member of the Stem Comers Uniled Methodist church a for- . 2906 State Route 775, Gallipolis..
n)er Sunday school teacher and superintendent. He was also a meoiber of
Kelley J. Turley, 94 Locust coln Pike, Gallipolis, $50 plus court
ll)e Rubber Workers Union local 17, Mansfield, and a life member of tbe
Street, Gallipolis, and Brady Turley costs for disorderly conduct by in~encan Leg1on Post m Jackson.
toxiCiition.
·
m, 300 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
. ; Surviving arc his wife, Louise V. Hambrick Ray; four sons and daugbMiscellaneous
.
· Leah Hale, 33 Garfaekl Ave.,
illrs- m-law, Gary N. and Jeanne Ray or Elm Grove, Dale A. and Susan
Yu Hsiang Luo, 31, 1718ChestGallipolis,andCbarlesA.Haley,842
Ray o( Bloommg Grove, Gayle L. and Barbara Ray of Mansfield and
. nut Street, Gallipolis, $50 plus court
First Ave., Gallipo6s.
nald N. and Ve11la Ray of Sacramento, Calif.; a daugbler and ~n-in­
costs for no operator's license.
. Sherry L and .R1ck Deppen of Willard; 12 grandchildren, three step• 1. M • •
Mary A.Kersey,46,Manchester,
g andch1ldren and a great-grandchild; a balf·sister Eli beth c
f G aII 1110
ISUPICmal
..SSOpluscouncDSts
for.driving under
P~m~ro~~ and acfostenlstcr: Elizabelb Rader of WclJ~ ·
llll!lan
5
.;. Fnends may-call-at the-Lexington Avenue Snyder Funeral Home on
WWiam S. Medley, jadge;~':!0::~ L. Hannu;J, Route I,
S~nday from 2-4 and 6-8 r,m. Services will be Monday at 2 p.m. The
DUI
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., $250 plus
_ RJ:v ..J\.n To~gle w11l offic1ate. Grav!lSid.&lt;;.sen:ices..will-be-Tuesda at 2
·Jerry L. Heiscluilan, 31, 1213 court coSts, 30 days in jail (sus~ · m thcf'amnount Cemetery, Jackson.
y
Lore118 Ave., Columbus, $1,800 plus pended),one yearprobationand three
'
court costs, six months in jail (five; d;lys of drivi!tg ~l!ool-for Wldcrage
~otewo-rthy ·deaths· elsewhere
months suspended), three years pro- consumption of aiCQhol while operbalionandafive-yearlicensesuspen- ating a motor vehicle.
,
J. Robert Ashcroh
.
Slanley GObert
·WiUil!!ll E. Hai&amp;:r. 24. Ull! Fifth
• KANSAS CITY, Mo. {AP) - J.
fU~SON; Ariz. (AP) - Stan- sion.Chargeofdrivingundersuspen~oben Ashcroft, a retired college Icy Gilbert, a retired judge who sion dismissed in exchange for guilty Ave., Huntington, W.Va., $50 plus
cun c~sts'f~ no operator's license.
president and faUter of freshman helped write the post-World Warn plea
Republican Sen. John Ashcroft, peace treaty between Ute United
Noah D. Larruil, 23,3651 Bulav. .Nma ~ace, 27, 68 County Lane,
died Thursday, a day after watch- States and Japan. died-Tuesday. He iDe Pike, Gallipolis, $750 plus court · Patriot, ~5~ plus curt costs for no ·,
ing his son take his oath of office in was 85.
,
Washington. He was 83.
Gilbert was an administrative
38Middlecreck
Ashcroft bad returned from law Judge for the National Labor and a one-year license suspension. Road, GallipoliS, $~00. plus court
Washington and was visiting Relations Board from the early Charge of driving under suspension costs ~or no operators Iicense.
another son when be became ill.
1960s unul rcunng in 1979.
..
dismissedinCllcbangeforguillyplea .
Rachard E. Johnson: 1~. 3972
Ashcroft was president emeritus
He was a Department of Justicti
Deln
K.
Ayers,
34,
Jefferson
GeorgesCreekRoad,Gallipolis,$100_
of Berean College of the Assem- lawyer when be helped write ·the
bli.es of God. He beaded Evangel peace treaty drawn up after Japan Ave., Huntington, W.Va. $450 plus ~Ius court costs for no open~tot'J..
College for 16 years and was bead surrendered 10 the United Stares on · councosu, 10 days in jail (seven days lieensc.
of Central Bible College for five . Sept. 2, 1945, ending World War suspended), one year probation and a
·Editor'snote: Namtt,ages,ldY,ears.
_ ____
II
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· ~ix-mogth license sii_~I'C'nsi!m •.
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·

January 8, 1995

Families of victims

•

; POjNT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Services will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday
In the Crow-Hu~sell Funeral Home. Point Pleasant, for John Claude
obue, 67, Pomt Pleasant. wbo died ThlKSday, Jan. 5, 1995 a1 bis resi-

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~potligbting, one charge of :urempt- ·!,

•

mg to lake a deer with a gun during •
closed season, one charge of aiding ;
and assisting in the taking of a deer · ;
with a gun duri!!g the closed g11n ,::
season, one charge of taking a deer •
witll a gun during the closed deer ;
gun season, all f!nes and sentences :
to run concurrent with first charge; '
. . Pamela M. Wise~ _Racin!l,. driv- •:.
mg under the influence, $500 plus ,•
costs, 10 days jail ~uspended to i
three days, 180-day OL suspension,· •.::
one year probation, jai~ and $250 of ·-:;
fine suspended upon c001pletion or ,.
residential treatment program: :
Travas S. Anlold, Pomeroy, fleeing, ~
30 days Jail suspended to seven .;
days, credit for time served, $500 ;.
fine suspended, costs, two years :'::
probation; no OL, 30 days jail sus- ·;.
pended to 7 concurrent with first' .-:
charge, 24 hours community ser-. J .
vice; fictitious plates,· costs only;,J
Re~ G:'Swartz, Pomeroy, speed, ~~ ,
$30 plus costs.
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Cases ended in Gallia courts

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$eQrge A. Ray.Jr.. '·

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dresses aad other laformatioa are
reported as avaDable on court records. All newsworthy actioas will
be published without exception.

'

104 Years Of Service
.Many of us saw you on TV and are proud that you are there to help
also proud to note that you are t.he · first graduate of this venerable
fulfill the "Contract. with America," restore the American· Dream; ·and
institution to walk the Halls of Congress as a member.
'downsize the Washington bu(eaucracy.
In its 1.92 years· ox existence Gallia County has ·had five members to
. All of your predecessors rose from humble beginnings to go on to make
Congress. The first, SAMUEL FINELY VINTON (1792-1862), served
great achievements. We are proud that you, too, have risen from modest
with distinction from 1823 to 1837 and again from 1843 until 1851. His
roots in Cheshire Township and like us, know what it is like to go barefoot
tenure coincided with the era of Henry Clay, Andrew Jaekson, and the War · in Summer, and know what the inside of a barn smells liRe. We know that
with Mexico. The~ second, JOHN LUTHER VANCE (1839-1921), was
you will nor ·forget the common folk who elected you and take into
account .the well-being of all Americans, and not promote policies that
there for a single·terin beginning in 1875. He was there when the Nation
celebrated its first' century of freedom and he became a major ,advocate of promote divisiveness by class, caste, race, or creed. We look forward to
the day when all Americ~ns can stand "on their own feet" and say that
the Lock and Dam System on the Ohio Riyer. The third, JOHN WAITS
,
they are making it on their own as you have.
MCCORMICK (1831-1917) served a single term during which time
When the scoffers said it criuldn' t be done, you and we knew better.
Congress enacted the Pendleton Civil Service Act in 1883. The fourth,
When certain elements in the press dragged you through the mud, we
ROBERT M. SWITZER (1863-1952) served four terms beginning in
1911, which coinci4ed with the progressive reform ~ovement and knew the truth was something ·quite different. With patience and
perseverance you kept plugging away until you achieved your goal. We
America's participation in World War L FRANK, you are number five, and
trust that you will serVe your country, state, and nation with honor . in
we feel confident.•. that
to our region as
. you. will tJring the same honor
.
Washington and remain a member of that August Body until the soon to be
these illustrious predecessors and such other southeastern Ohio legends as
enacted term limits law induces your retirement. Above all, we pray for
WILLIAM HARSHA,THOMAS}EN~NS, and CLARENCE MILJ:.ER.
c--Your distrief"is larg~r-than-theirs~so:::much-so-tbat-only-iifty....yeats..ago· ._y.ouuuccess-aud.hope that Gallia-Countians...e¥er_y_where-and indeed-,lnc:;-----"·'*1-~­
· .FIVE congressmen once lived in the territory thatls now yours your enttre popu·Jace- or the-'--Sixth- District wish you- GOOD LUCK and ~.,.h-­
GODSPEED!!!!!!!!
challenge is greater, As friends of the University of Rio Grande, we are

Most of our blllin• mmes
throullh l&gt;fOI&gt;Io wo'va

thouslltfulli ~m~od. The

'

mson - undentandlng,
oiftcere guldan.. Uld •
dopendabWty
In helping you
""lect 1 One ,

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I!QMEFIOY

Meigs County Dl~ptay Yard Near·
Pomeroy-Maeon Bridge
. - Kalla Miller, Mllnager

11112-2588

VINToN

•

Gall Ia County Dlapllly Yard·
155 Mllln Sl
Jay &amp; J1111 Moora, Man.pra

AND MOST ·o F ALL WE WANT YOU TO
KNOW·WE ARE PRO.UD OF You ....
F.
R
IENDS
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--~J~an~uary~8·~199~s-----:--------=N....:..::a:::..:t:.=i:..:O::.:D==/_W-=-:::-O=-:;:r:....:l:..d:=-_;;__---:---::---...::s:.::un=da;t.,y~Tim=e;.;.s·=se~nnne~·

eatimes -~~tnthttr Sectiori
.

~:_

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_J'":'A:-s_ _

,Russians gri.m ly press efforts · :~:
to crush rebellion in Chechnya · ·

SECUlliTY TIGHT- A MIISSachusetts state
trooper pau!led while the Norfolk County sh!f·
liT's van transpordng J!lbn C. Salvi m entered
the Norfolk County House of Correction and

.

Jail in. Dedham Friday. Salvi is being held In
connection with the abortion cUnlc shootings In
Brookline. (AP)

-

Suspect under suic.id~ we~tch

· B RICHARD LORANT
~erine Meyer, who works for a
.Jsodated Press Writer ·
- - personnel company. •'Whether
BOSTON ·- A man charged
with killing two abortion clinic
workers was fmally tamed over to
state authorities to face murder
charges, then whisked off to jail,
where be spent the ·night in isola·
tion under a suicide watch.
John C. Salvi Ill was being held
in the jail's medical facility,
uwhich is very, very secure," said
Norfolk County Sheriff Cliff ~at­
shall.
"You don't know what the
other inmates would do if they
could gel access to Ibis guy," Mar·
shall said Friday. "Would they say,
'I'm going to tear yoor l!elR! ofl'l' I ·
don't know."
Salvi was handed over to the
.Norfolk County Sheriffs Depart·
ment on Friday afler pleading inno·
cent to federal firearms charges in
Boston, bis third court,appearance
intwodays.
.
·
The 22-year.,old student flairdresser from Hampton, N.H., was
to be arraigned on state murder
charges Monday in suburban
Brookline, where be is accused of
killing the receptionists at twil l
ab&lt;&gt;rtion clinics and vtounding five 1
others in a Dec. 30 shooting spree.
Discussions were continuing
over whether Salvi would be tried
first in federal or state court.
u.s. Attorney Donald Su:rn said
the-Justice Department was consid·
ering bringing additional federal ·
charges, which could possibly lead
to a dealh sentence.
. Salvi also is charged with shoot·
ing up an abortion clinic in Nor·
folk, Va. Virginia aulhorilies have
agreed to delay their prosecuuon.
No one was burt in that attack.
On Friday. Salvi pleaded jnno- ·
cent to two feder di charges o( il11er·
state transportation of a firearm
· with intent to commit a felony . ·
Each count carries a maximum sen·
tence of 10 years in prison, ·a
$250,000 line arid lhree years pro·
PLASTIC
bation. A bial was set for Feb. 27 .
Yt. -.GALLON
. Salvi wQr.c. an ill·fhti!!g bll!e
blazer and Sal impas.~ively through
. most of the bearing with his hands
fokled in his lap, then was whisked
by a convoy of eight police motor·
cycles to jail in Dedham, soulhwest
of Boston.
Hundreds of bystanders watched
as Salvi was tat&lt;en from the court·
house in Boston's financial district.
None carried signs, but some booed
as Salvi passed.
"llhink a lot of the people- here
arc just curious, but I also think
that people want justice," said

they re pro-cbo..ce or pro-hfe,,,I
mean, this man lulled two people.

GROZNY, Russia (AP) - . Russian shells and rockets rained down
Saturday on Grozny, capital of
rebel Cbechnya, setting lbe presidential palace ablaze. The assault
came a day after Presillent Boris
Yeltsin' s Security Council pledged
to smash lbe Cbechen rebellion
A top Russian commander, Ml\i.
·Gen. Viktor Vorobyov, was killed
in Sawrday's fighting, the Interior
Ministry reported. Vorobyov, bead
of the Interior Ministry task force
in Cbechnya. was killed by a mortar shell as soldiers were a,ivancing
on. the besieged city, th ministry,
said, according to lbe Interfax news
agency. ··
Interior. Ministry troops are
fighting alongside regular .army
.
soldiers in Grozny.
Grozny was covered wilh smoke
from burning buildings and oil
reservoirs in lhe industrial disbict,
about 2-1/2 miles from the city
center. A spokesman for Cbecben
President Dzhokhar Dudayev's
forces said the reservoirs were
bombed Saturday morning, lntcrfax
reponed .
The militarY used "all kinds of
artillery and rocket la11nchers" to
target the center of Or~zny, wh_ilc.

January 8, 1995

•
ground forces attacked from the · were exploding at a rale of 15 to 20 ~
west, Interfax said.
a minute. Lezdinsh and Checben .
Small groups of fighters who fighters said the bairage was likely :
left nearby villages to· defend a preparation for an?ther ground .
Grol:ny ran lhrough empty streets offensive on the City, Interfax
towa~d Dudayev's palace, which
reported.
·
·
,
caught fire in lhe sl\clling, it said.
Russian IJ'oops entered Chech- •
Stlll held by Chechen defenders, nya on Dec. 11 in an effort to win :
the t:i.ll concrete building was back control of the mountainous •
bombed heavily Friday. Dudayev southern republic, which declared ;
bas- not been seen for days, its independence in 1991.
'
although Cbecben officials insist
Russia reportedly suffered bun- ;
that he is still in Gromy.
dreds of dead and lost dozens of ·
R~ssian legislator Ayva~s armored vehicles after attempting :
Lezdinsh, wbo is in Grozny, told to storm Grozny on New Year's .
Interfax that shells and rockets Eve.
•

·GALLIPOLIS- In an age where.
musical choices cater to virtually every
individual preference - from rap to
grunge, classic rock to alternative, new
age t() heavy metal ...... a group of local ·
men are finding life in.a more traditional form of expression, the barbershop quartet.

..,.

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~nder

the direction of Jim above the lead singet; the
McClellan of Huntington,
bass sin$S the lowest hannoW.Va., 21 men meet eYery . · nizing notes; and the baritone
Tuesday at the Morris and
provides in-between notes, to
Dorothy Haskins Ariel Thefonn consonanl, pleasing
chords.
atre to ~one their basses,
tenors and
·
Any 5ong can
baritones.
be adapted to
The group
barbershop
style. The
organized in
late November
music is gener·
after the Socially in the style
ety for Preserof "the old
songs" from the
vation and
Encoumgement
heyday of Tin
of Barbers Shop
Pan' Alley,
1890-1920,
Quartet Singing
in America Inc. (SPEBSQA)
with lyrical emphasis on
made a presentation at Grace simple, heaifelt emotions.
United Methodist Church.
Barbershop is a uniquely
"I was surprised that that
American an fonn, said
many people showed up and
Corbin.
·
keep coming back consis_ Working towards bl:c!&gt;m·
tently," said Mike Corbin,
ing licensed and chartered
membership vice president.
with SPEBSQA, the group's
Members travel from as far
ultimate goal is to perform
away as Jackson and Mason, · _ with its debut performance is. ....
W.Va., to hannonize with the . set for April I.
aspiring SPEBSQA group.
The national. society has
34,134 members in the
Though ~-~:sponse to the
group was strong, Corbin
United States and Canada, .
said, the group still needs
with 808 chapters ranging !n
around 20 more members to
size from 25 'to 200. The
make what he called a good,
society's mission is to share
small chorus.
.
\
and perpetuate barbershop ·
"We need any male
style music. They do this
singers," he said. But the
thioug)l competitions, fundgroup is particularly lig)lt.in
raisers and cori.tributing to
tenors and l:iaritones, Coi'tiin
charitable-organizations I
added.
•
within their conunilnities.
Some groups do singing
The single tenor -or baritone, as pan 'of the entire
valentines and educational
choru,s, is what makes the
outreach at schools. It is a
barbershop style so unique.
grassroo~s civic organization,
The type of.hannony in
Corbin said.
barbershop quartet singing is
The local chapter is novel
different than that in a church in that it doesn't have a
sponsoring chapter to direct
choir, Corbin said. "Every. bOdy has their own part."
it. Part of the Johnny Aplocally and abroad with easy
Barbershop is four-part
pleseed Division, the closest
start-up.
unaccompanied, close-harchapters arc in Huntington
· "Music is universal. As
mony singing, with melody in and Ashland, Ky.
long.as you have a voice you
the second voice, called the
. Corbin credits the popu· can participate," he said.
"lead." The tenor hannonizes lanty of the barbershop
Gallipolis has seen one

•

•

DR. R• .,ODD BAlAN, Optometrist
· lOW OPEl FOB BUIIIDS
at 458 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(Formerly Dr. GeQrge Davis' Office)
•Treatment of Eye lnfectlona
•Complete Eye Exams
-Foreign Body Removal '
•Adult, Infant and Children
•Contact lenses .- All Types
•T11111tment of Glaucoma
•large Si!leetlori of Eyeglaues •Evaluation of Catarac:ta
-Moat Insurances Accepted
Saturday and Evening Hours Available - 446-2236

....

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EASTMAN'S. ~.Your Community Minded
Low-Priced Supermarkets.

OOD

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· SUPERMARKETS
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2.} , ..... s,:~::roceries
3.) A 90 Second Slto .· CJ .

FRESH

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es

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SEALTEST
ORANGE JUICE

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•wings At Halftirne ..;

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early-shifl
police Chief Carl
Berry said.
_ .. t
All lhrce victims worked at the
plan~ wimesses said.
"I just beard shooting, just
shooting. Most women started bit·
ting the floor. The bosses said, 'Get
out of here!'" Maureen Wcb~ter
said. "This is lil\e ff!!Ilily I~ hgurs
a day, and we never thought it
would happen here.' '
The wounded woman was in
·scriclus condition, said Kristen
Finn, a spokeswoman at University
of Michigan Medical Center in
Ann Arbor.
On . Sept. I 0, a Ford worker
opened fire with a handgun as a
union meeting broke up at a factory
in Dearborn. On Dec. 9, an
autoworker appareqlly upset about
his work assignment allegedly
killed his supervisor and wounded
" 1 a CQ: "!.orker ~ii__Cl!Q•sler· Corp .
• plant.

other barbershop quartet in its
·
history, "The Foregone
Conclusions," with Dr. Tom
Morgan, A. Kimball "Red" -.
SUiter, John Markley and
Manning Wetherholt, 'who

serves as treasurer for the
new society.
· Corbin welcomes any. body that would like to join
the group or listen to their
rehearsals.
-~ .

Barbershop harmony traces roots to late 1800's

YUBI YOGURT...--~~......--.

Pl:YMOUTH TOWNSHIP,
Mich: (AP) - A man opened fire
in a Ford 'Motor Co. plant Saturday,
wbunding his estranged wife then
kil~·!'~ lmother man and' hinlSCII

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ASST. FLAVORS

Ford plant
shooting
kills two

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not n:quire instrumenlal
accompaniment.
indeed, it seemed to be
tnost al home at cbun:b
socials, in family parlors, in
salo(ms and even on street
earners. II was a style that
invited participttion, and
thousands of amateur warblers.
joined in. Whetever a few
singers who loved 10 blend
lbeir voices together gathered,
this musical style flourished.
The style was so popUIIir
tlml songs were writlen spe·
cificaUy for lbesc quanets.

••

BLIZZARD HOCKEY TICKETS

60. 75. 100
SUPREME EXTRA LIFE

By lbe end of lbe 19th
cealllry, a new style of per·
forming popular songs had
developed in America- it
ultimately captured the fancy
of !he nation. The new style, ·
feaiured four male

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decline, they wrote a humOrous
letter to friends, stating:
"In this age of dictators and

=~~~~n~~d;e~~~es~.: o;
Monday, Aprill t,'l938, at6:30
p.m."
•
Twenty-~ix men atlended

Ah
4 tC111f&gt;O

''Mia.tcr Jeff-or-son

;:~~.o $

BEENIE WEENEE
·VIETTI HOT
DOG SAUCE · ~:z.

-Though Die roots of fourpart hann~ny go jlat;k more than
a century, 11 was not unulthe

c

ltll rit.

LB.

41

:u~~~i:~~'::~. q~tennined to stern tlmt

Chord," appeared in 1910.
Thereafler, the singers were
labeled "barbershop quartets"

·Chicken Breast Tenderloins

Pre·Prlc
Stick

39

unique
Jy
.
~~~~~·~t':~:::~p
· ncan
;· ·
Ame
,art form
co
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•
rema1ns
the same
- - -

nSONIHOilY FARMS

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Lord - - - - PLAY THAT BAR-BERSHOP CHORD.,.----0

F F
F
molto rit.

~

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a templl

•

and the musical style was called
"barbershop harmony."

'

Hundreds of new "barber·
shop songs" were written for the
close, four-part harmony of
bllbeDbop quartets. The
musical structure of these
quartets became weD estahlished: the lead usually sang the
melody, with t,he tenor harmonizing above. The bass sang the
lowest harmonizing notes and .
the baritone provided the inbetween nou:s) either above or
·below the leiw, completing lhc

•
near accidental formation of the ·government control of everySociety that barbershop quartet
thing, about the only privilege
music was actively promoted.
guaranteed by the Bill of Rights
SPEBSQSA was founded in . not in some way superyised or
1938, when Tulsa tax auomey
directed is lbe art of barbershop
Owen C. Cash happened to meet quartet singing. Without a doubt,
a fellow Tulsan, invesunent
we still have the right of "
banker Rupert I. Hall, while both peaceable assembly which, we
. were in ~sas City, stranded
are advised by competent legal
when astorm closed the llirport authority, includes quartet
Meeting by chance~n a hotel
singing. 'The'writers have, for a
lobby, the men discovered their long time, thought that somemutual love for v~ harmony, thing should be done to ~urand together they bemoaned the age the enjoyment of this last
decline of that all-American
rl:maining vestige of human
institution, the barb_ershop
liberty. Therefore, we have

that ~IrSt rooftop meeting, and all
agreed they should do it again.
Attendance at subsequent
meetings multiplied rapidly; at
the third gathering, more than
lSO harmonizers raised such a
sound that traffic stopp!:d on Ill!:
street below.
A rcponer for the TulSa
Daily World c~ to pass by
the scene, sensed a good story,
and put the story on the national
news wires. The lengthy name
and initials, founder Cash's way
of poking fun at the New Deal's
"alphabet soup" of initialed gov-

emment agencies, captured·
the imagination of readers .
coast to coas~ and inquiries
came pouring in.
SPEBSQSA is now the
world's largest aU-male
singing organization, with
more than 34,000 singers in
more than 800 chaplets in,the '
, United Stales and Canada. ·
Another 4,000 barbershoptJCrs are members of affiliated
organizations in Australia.
Germany, Great Britain, The
Netherlands, New Zealand,
South Africa and Sweden.
The Society is headquar.
tered in Kenosha, Wis., in a
. historic 1930s:era .mansion
Qn the shores Qf kl!!l~
Michigan. Harmony Hall is
home to the Old Songs .
Library, lhe world's largest
privau:ly -held collection of
sheet music, containing
750.000 sheets and 125,000
titles from the heyday of Tin
Pan Alley. The Heritage Hall
Museum of Barbershop Har·
mony, also located in
Harmony. Hall, serves as
repository for barbershop
memorabilia, early recordings, costumes, reSearch
mau:rials and historical docu-·
ments tracing the roots of the
barbershop §tyle.

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Page-B2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Janua!Y 8, 19!§

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-foint Pleasant, WV

•January 8, 1995

X-ray detects commot1 bone disorder

Nun rescues covenant~
house ,for homeless
:...
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progress.

JARED AND MARJORITA u~on

Tromm-Dean.

RUTLAND - Marjorita E.
Tromm and Jared S. Dean were
uniled in marriage Dec. 10 at the
Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses in The Plains.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Tromm of Rutland, and the groom is lhe son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dean of
· Athens.
The ceremony included a discourse by Mr. William Tevis and
the marriage vows were performed
by Mr. Kenneth Dean.
Malron of honor was the bride's
sister, Alison Houtz. Bridesmaids
- were Natalie Tevis, sister of the
bride, and Leah Daniels, close
friend of the bride . Flower girls
were Mallory Dean, sister of the
groom, and Adrienne Tevis, niece

LANCE AND KIMBERLY BROWN

Holcomb-Brown

of the bri~e.
Best man was Steven Dean,
brother of the groom, and groomsVINTON • Kimberly Ann Hoim_en were Joel Ree~e and Shane conib; daughter of Donald and
Lmscott; _close fnends of the _ Henri¥[taJiolcomb_of Vinton, and
groom· Rmgbearer was -T yler Lance Conley Brown son of
Dean, brother of the groom.
Harold E. and Ruth An~e Brown
Mus1c for the ceremony was were united in marriage Nov. 5 31
played by p1amsts, R•ck Castrop Trinity United Methodisl Cbl!fch
3!'d Thomas Strodtbeck. ~e recep- by R~v. Marvin Sallee.
uon was he_ld at the Tn-.county
With music provided by vocalist
Jom! Vocational School m Nel- and organist Cindy McMillan lhe
son;~e~ 'de . 1992 d
f bride was given in marriage by her
gra uate ?
father.
.
·
.
n . IS a
Meags H1gh S~hool and IS
· Matron of honor was Christina
empl~yed by Quality Wmdow Sys- • Denny . The bride ' s maid were
tems m Pomeroy:-The groom grad- Fayetta Jones; Jennifer George and
uatcd from Athens Hagh S'bool m Melinda Davis
1991 and is employed by Goo~.
Best man - ~as Randy Jackson.
Inc. of Athens.
·

·

Ushers were Curt Brown, brother
of the groom, DJ. Saunders, Scott
Hash and.Doug Moses. -A reception "'as held at DAY
Post 23 following the ceremony.
Donnie Holcomb, bride's brother,
registered guests.
'
o
The couple will reside in Vinton.
Kimberly is a 1993 graduate of
River Valley High School. She is a
nursing student at Rio Grande College.
Lance is a 1988 graduate of
North Gallla Hlgli School. t-Ie Is
employed at Goodyear Tire and
Rubber Company, Jackson. ·
.
"

--Gartstein-Seamor:l

GALLIPOLIS - Maria Amy
Gartstein daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
Vladmir Gartstein or Cincinnati
and D. Erich Seamon son of Mr.
and Mrs. David Seamon of Gallipolis were united 'ln- marriage
Dec. 31 al the cbapel of lite DeUs,
. Lake Tahoe, Calif. Delores Post
officiated the private double: ring
ceremony.
The couple traveiC!)to San Francisco, Calif. for their honeymoon.
Amy is in her final year at the
University ofCincirinati pursuing a
PHD in clinical psvcholo~y.

Erich is a t9li7 graduate of Gailia Academy High School. He
received his undergrl\,duate degree
from W,itaenlierg University,
Springfield and a master's of science degree in geplogy from Bowling Green Slate University, Bowling Green . He is employed at
Northern KentuCky Planning· Commission as a GIS Applications
Analyst
The couple will reside at 2355
Ohio Ave., Apt I, Cincinnati, Obio
45'219.
.

Wedding policy

KENNETH AND KRISTEN OCKER

Maier-Ocker

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· CLIHON, W.VA. - T h e
·The best inan was Ken Ocker,
ballrooni of the Powell-Redmond father 07\the groom. David 0 .
house in Clifton provided a Victo- Monroe Ill, nephew of the groom,
rian Chris boas setting for the dou· was lhe ring hearer. The usher was
ble-ring f!!"rri:~gc c_cr~ mony &lt;!r James Logan Ill , ~ nephew of the
Kristen
Noel Maier of Rockford, groom.
.
Ill. and Senior Airman Kenneth
The bride's mother wore a one
(Lee) Ocker, Jr. of Mountain pie'c forest green dress with a
Home, Idaho.
round neckline and side ruffle
The cooplc were uniled in mar- accem. The groom's mother wore a
riage De, . 31 by Rev . Terry one-piece crepe dress in a fuschia
Alvarez.
'olor.
Tire bride is: the daughter or
Attending the 'eremony were
Danny and Pat Maier. of Rockford,_ . the grandparents of the bride, Mrs.
Ill. and the groom IS lhc son ol lana Litis flQd Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth and Beverly Ocker of Richard Ellen8, all of Rockford, Ill.
New Haven, W. Va,
Also in attendance were the grandll•e ballroom of the residence, . parenL~ of the groom, Bertha Ocker
now owned b'y Don and Marty of Shippensburg, Penn. and Mr.
Rader, uncle a11d aunt of the and Mrs. David 0 : Monroe Sr. of
groom. wa~ decorated in a Victori· New Haven.
an Christmas theme with gold,
Other guests included Mrs.
green and sh~s of burgundy and Te!fY Alvarez and daughter, Marlrose. Pomseuaas enhanced the beth, Mr. and Mrs . Michael
motif.
BaDour and their children, Amy
The date of the ceremony had and Shari, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
special meanin. g to the couple Hodgson and granddaughter,•Bri·
because it was the 75th wedding ana, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ocker, Mr.
anniversary of the groom's late , and Mrs. Alfred Ocker, Mr. and
great·g·r andparents, Owen and Mrs. Keith Ocker, Mr. and Mrs.
Odessa Porrcn . The bride descend- John Bouder and son, Jobn, Mrs.
ed the entrance hall slaircasc which Verna Cook, Major (USA Rea) and
·was adorned with lighted garl.and Mrs. David Monroe Jr, Pal Logan,
an·d- burg-undy-rlbtmn-:-Sh-c'"Wl!S ' Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bail Jr, Mr.-and
escorted to the altl!f by her father • Mrs. Greg Bail, Mr. an(! MI'S. Ray
and given in marriage by her par- Bail Ill, and Mrs. Alice Booth.
cots wear&lt;ng a floor-length white
A reception was held at the
satin gown embellished with Rader home immediately following
•s equins arid lace . Her veil was the ceremony. The three-tiered,
ador11ed with a band of wo.ven heart-shaped wedding was decor,U·
pearls and she canied a bouquet of cd with pink silk roses and topped
pink roses, white carnations..babies with a Precious Moments bride and
breath and miniature ivy.
groom.
The maid of ·hO!Ior W&lt;lll Karin
The lace cloth on the bride's
Maier, sisler of the bride. Brides- table was hand crocheted by the
maids-were Kim t.faier, siste_r of .groom's great grandmother, Ode~sa
the bride and Karen B.rigand1, Sister · Ann Forren. Following the recepof the groom. They wore tea-length tion, the bride and groom ileparted
gowns of velvet and taffeta an on a cross-country honeymoon
emerald green, witb rhinestone enroute to their residence in Mounaccents at the open back of the lain Home, Idaho.
.
gown. All three carried Vicaorian
The bride attended Rock Valley
bouquets of pink rosebuds, carna- College and wiU continu~ her edutions .ano_pe:y-1 loops. The bouquets cation once settled -in Idaho. The
were. designed by the mother of the groom is in the .US Air Force, stagroom. The flower girl wa1 Taylor tioned at Mountain Home Air
BaDour. She carried a basket of )t"orce Base, and attends Embrydeep burgundy rose ~tats. .
Riddle Aeronautical University.
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The Sunday Times-Sentinel of publication.
Those -no.t making the 60-day
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news deadline will be publi~ed during
and is happy to publish wedding the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
stories and photographs without
or tbe bride and groom may be
charge.
However, wedding news must published with wedding stories if
meet general standards of timeli- desired. Photographs may be either ·
ness. The newspaper prefers to black and while or gqod quality
publish .accounts of weddings as color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
soon as possible afler the event.
not
be accepted. Generally, snapTo be published in lhe Sunday
:
shots
or instant-developing photos
edition, the wedding must bave
are
not
of accepaable quality.
taken place within 60 days prior to
All
material
submitted' for publithe publication, and may he up to
cation
is
subject
to editing.
600 words in length. Material for
·
Questions
may
be directed to
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by the editorial department from 1-5
Thursd;iy, 4 p.m. prior to the date p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

Losflettei arrives 76 years- late
DORA VILLE, Ga. (AP) -

The
The letter originally was sent to
letter began, "I guess you think Turnbow in Hazel, Ky., by her sisl'm quite a little while in writing."
ter-in·law in Bowling Green, Ky.
That's putting it mildly. The let- But it. di~appeared along ~e way
ter arrived two generations late.
and d1dn Lreappear until recently
Postmarked Jan 27 1919 and in Louisville, Ky.
It was then forwarded to Hazel
intended for Mary Turnbow, the
letter was delivered 76 years later . Postmaster Donald Crawford, who
to the home of Turnbow's grand- · located Kilgore with the help of a
daughrer, Kathy Kilgore. It bore a local bank teller.
·
3-cent stamp.

.,

EDITOR'S NOTE - The
For McGeady, more venues
statbtlct are appalling, the reall· mean more parish speeches, donqr
Ilea lleart-rendlng. Bul for this receptions, fund-raisers, kids lb
ll7-year-old ROIIUin CatboUe n1111 care for and more prayers to It
It II one more c:aiUng In a c - r answered.
..
of service to mankind. JJere Is
In September 1990, McGea£.
bow she almost single-handedly replaced Covenant Hoose foundl!f,
rescued a scandal-tarred mission, the Rev. Bruce Riuer, afler repoqs
dedicated to rescuing children
surfaced of-.Im..suual im~
from tlae streets.
with the charity's male clientt.
By SIOBHAN McDONOUGH
Although be denied the allegatlo~.
Associated Press Writer
· a . report com miss iooed l!.Y
NEW YORK (AP)- These are
some of the nighbnares Sister Mary Covenant House later found fi:j:
who claimed they bad Rose McGeady lives with, not at residents
with
Ritter
and a sixth resident a&amp;!
night,. but in the broad daylight' of four employees
wbo said thQ&gt;
ber life:
rejected
his
sexual
overtures.
A 16-ycar-old Slaten Island boy
"Time bas changed things ~·
sleeps on the bare cenlent street McGeady says optimisticalij,
afaer leaving his Dunkin' Donuts recalling her first couple of years
job, where he used to shack up. He QD
the job. When she took over,' •
hasn't seen nor spoken to his mothshe
a $13 million payment on
er in a year and his dad died of one faced
or
the
agency's -New York
AIDS wben lie was only 12. With
buildings.
One-third
of _Covenant's .
no brothers or sisters to' tum to, be
·
donors
withdrew
overnight.
The
often contemplates suicide.
budget
went
from
$98
mil!ion
jn
Seventeen-year-old Quiana
1989
to
$76
miUion
in
1990.
•
returned to her Brooklyn home
"I
wasn't
a
kid
anymore.
I
was
after a brief trip and found that her
mother was evicted and admitted 62,' ~ she says . "But I rnade...a
into a drug rehabilitation center. covenant with the Lord. I said, ~U
Her 19-year-old brother is in jail you want this place to last, yo~r'U
for aransponing drugs. She doesn't have to do it. I'll give it my best.'
')We both kept our sides of tlle ·
waDI to sleep on the floor of bet
covenant.
.I never worked harder ,in
father's girlfriend's apartment..
my
life."
·
She's afraid if she stays with any of
Times
are
bettet
now.
her drug-user friends tb~:y'!! ~!c;,al
McGeady says that shortly after
from her.
,
lhe
scandal, the situation was often
As president and .chief executive
the
first topic mentioned in interofficer of Covenant House International, the 67-year-old McGeady views. and at donor receptions.
confronts a lot of real-life night- Now, it ranks 15th or so, if at all. ·
''Sister is a symbol becau.o;e she
mares . So occasionally· she feels
is
a
nun. But sbe fs'-.also a profe$entitled to a daydream.
sional
and very saraigbJ-forwaai:l
"·Wouldn't it be neat to close
like
any
corporate CEO," say,s
this place down, to say, we just
Bruce
Henry,
director of the Ne\v
don't need it anymore?" she says,
York
chapter
of
Covenant House.
gazing o~~ a window .of_the a_g_en"She
also
has
an
Irish
warmth." ·• ·
cy's cris1s center on 41st St. _and
Tllat
warmth,
charm
and com9th Ave. in Manhattan.
mitment
helped
Covenant
Hou·se
.But on the same day that she
regain
its
credibility.
In
less
than
would lead 2, I 00 ,youths at Times
five
years
$ince
the
scandal,
t!Je
Square for the fourth annual
agency
recovered
about-80
percent
nationwide candlelight vigil for
homeless kids, she afforded little of ils losses . Each year, abo'lit .
$100,000 comes pout'ing in from
time to fantasy.
Last year, the New York-based thousands whom McGeady hlls
Covenant House received 1.4 mil- written.
lion phone calls on its emergency
-·'
"nine line." About 1,200 kids
sought sheller in Covenanl House every night of the year. The refuge
PHOTOGRAPHY
provided 437,000 nights of shelter
Professional Wedding Photogrsphy -in all.
·
There are over I million home·
(614) 446-6700
less .and runaways under the age of
21 on the streets of the United
States each year, according to the
federal General Accounting Office.
The National Network of Runaway
and Youth Services estimates that
on any given night more than
I 00,000 young people are alone on
the sJ[eets.
.
·
No one understands these lig"
ures better than McGeady, the
feisty Daughter of Charity and
leader of the private, nonprofit
'
agency for troubled youth. Sbe ·
reels off such startling statistics as
compassionalely as she would say
the "Our Father."
Zodiac Boots
"In spite of bow bard we are
working the numbers keep going
Reg. '98.95 Now
up," sbe says.
With the increasing numbers of
Mens &amp; Womens Nike
street kids, her ag~ncy is expanding. · · .
. A Washington, D.C., chapter
will join the rosier of Covenant
Houses in New York, Texas, Florida, Loui~iana, Alaska, California,
New Jersey, Guatemala, Honduras,.
Mexico and Canada. And plans to .
expand facilities in Atlantic City,
N"".J ., ana tto11ywooo are an
,.,

~/'ire-

Anniversary
Fall and Winter
CLEARANCE SALn

20·30% OFF:

$58.95

30-50°/o off'
The Shoe Cafe:

'
n,ar:.
-

JANUARY

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GIGANTIC ·'
CLEARANCE
SALE!
·--------

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::, · Au ·WINTER

SPoR.TSWEAR

,

Liz Claiborne • Alfred Dunner • Marissa Christina • Susan Bristol.

1/

1/

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Winter Lingerie &amp; Robes... I 4 to I 2 OFFf
Dresses (Petite &amp; Reg.) ............... I 3 OFFi
1/

1/ .

J

AU Winter Jackets &amp; Coat~. I 3 to I 2 OFF]

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50TH ANNlVERSARY - Lorene Gibson and Clell Rime cele.:'' bra ted tbelr golden anniversary with a ramlly brunch. They Were
".'.married Dec.·31, 1944 In Point Pleasant, W.Va. and now reside In
~ ~ TaDmadgt. Clell is a retired worker from Goodyear.

S

Galli olis, Obi~

tine X-ray ex.aminations) and needs
no areatment. Howevet, in the presence of pain, Didronel (a prescrip· ·
tion drug tba( stabilizes.. bone
growU!) is helpful.
DiOAR DR . GOTT: I'm 25 and
suffer from panic/anxiety anacks.
I'm on Xanax, bul have numerous
.unanswered questions. I'm over~
come with uncontrollable mood
swings and rage s for no reason .
Why? At these times I feel like my
whole body is taken over with pain
that affects every area of my life especially eating. I can't read .
Studying is impos.~ible . ,My blood
tests are all normal and I feel like a
hypochondriac, but I believe my
problems are all the result of one
illness. Can you advi~e me'/
. DEAR READER : lligh levels
or anxiety and feelings of panic are
not merely manifestations of a
tense emotional state; such feelings
will actually cause marked physical ·
changes - such as rapid heart rate
and breathing, distraclibility,

uneasiness, sweating, liausea; diarrhea, and many other symptoms.
. These physical alterations
appear because the body releases
large q,uantilies of epinepherinc
(adrenaline) and other compounds
Uiat prepare the victim for fighl or ·
llight. You are not a hypochondri ·
ac; these reactions arc r~al , not
imagined.
Xanax, an an1i-anxie1y preS&lt;.Tiption drug, often helps people with
anxiety/panic attacks but should be
used in conjm\clion with other psychotherapy , such as counselin g-,
and only for shan periods because,
over time, the medicine may cause
memory problems and cogn itive
disorders in some patients. ·
Mood swings and rages arc n01.
however, ordinary con-sequences of
anxiety/panic atlacks. You should
a~dress these particular symptom s
w1th your therapist. If, for example,
you are s'uffe~ing from bipolar
mood disorder (manic-depression),
medicine (such· as lithium) would
be appropriate therapy.

DR.GOTT
PETER.
GOTT, M.D.

· To give you more i,nfonnation, I
:un sending you a free copy of my
Health Report "Mental and Emolional 'Illness." Otber readers who
would like a copy should send S2
plus a long , self-addre ssed,
stamped envelope to P.O . Ba.
2433, New York, NY 10163. Be
sure to mention the title.
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA·
P~:R ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(}' or information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, tonlac! America Online by calling 1H00-8Z7-63Ci4. ext. 8:\17.\

to computers for 'prayer and

:ily AMANDA KELL
,,1\asoclated Press Writer
LEESBURG, Va. (AP)- Since
Si. Benedict prescribed the rule of
:~' prayer and work" for rnonks in
the first century, most of their
_labors have been age-old ~ks like
copying Oiliiiiiscrip1s; fanning ·and
'rusinganimals.

" But the younger monks just
love it ,'' he sai d. 'They, see the
computer as an extension of the
m~astery and something holy,"
fhe _company got its start in
October 1991 when the Holy Cross
Abbey in Be,rry~illl!, Va ., hired
Leonara to bnng lis fruitcake bus•ness on hne. Leonard lhcn left his

Now 30 monks 'and nups at six writing. The monks and nuns are
monasteries are using computers in computerizing library card catatheir effons to lead productive- ·togs, creating documenr indexes
and pious -lives.
· and entering and checking data for
They ~e working f~r Electronic publicati?ns. · .
Scnptonum Ltd., an mformauon
Company president Edward M.
manageme~t business ~amed after Leon~rd saic!.._some_or th,e old~~
the rooms 11i IIIO!iastenes used for monks look askance at h1 s bus•copying manuscripts, studying and ness.

American.Heart Association recruits volunteers

job with a Washing! on compmcr
manufacturer to develop his own
business in 'Leesburg. :1bou1 30
miles away.
"At the end of 'six months of
working with the monks, I realized
here WJI:La =p..etcnt ·and under~
employed work force," Leonard
said.
A friend

.

su~~ested

lhc monks

work'

could catalog the medical records
of Johns Hopkins University . The
next contract was to compulcrizc
ran of the Yale University library.
The 111 onks and nuns cam $8 10
$12 per hour, and cadl mona&lt;~ery
owns its own-com puler eq uipment
Leonard estimated hi s company's
1994 revenue al $1 million; he
would notdiscloscprqlils

.
· ', POMEROY - Plans are being Grace Weber; Orange Township, the American Heart Association, tion is a vital pan of this corrunum' iinalized for the 1995 door-to-door Anna Blackwood; Rutland Town- which has, to date, contributed $1.2 ty and dese_rves our -voluntary and
,J:.md drive by the Meigs County ship, Joan May; Salem Township, billion to the funding 'of research · financial support to show our inter; (&gt;ivision of the American Heart Linda Montgomery and Dawn projects. The AHA plans to reach est in and concern for our chjl1\ssociation.
Kopec; Salisbury Township, Cathy the $2 billion funding mark by the dren's, our family's and our neigh·;,:· .The LocaLMeigs AHA Board Cooper- and-Judy Humphrey; Sci- turn o[.Jbe century.
bor's future," said Carr . .
· has already bt;gun recruited neigh- pia Township, Frances Alkire apd
, "Our committee truly appreci"Many Meigs County residents
· .bi&gt;rhood captains who, in turn are Virginia Gibson: Sutton Township, · ates all the volunteers who help may not realize that lhey, or a
'nic;ruiting walkers to assist in the Tonja Hunter; and Columbia with this campaign, but especially loved one, has directly benefited
;roject. "
· Township, Linda Dye,.
those who assist: year after year," ' r!om AHA programs such as Heart
.; ;, _Captains oLareas..include Mid·
Throughout February, these vol- commenLed Donna C~~r, ~ ~ag~e _ l·est, AcUYe Partn,crshlp, Heart A!
J,lleport, Maurisha Nelson; unteers and others will not only try ~ AHA Board member . Th•s •s a Work, CPR trammg or the ma_ny
. P.pmcroy. Dom •.a Carr; Minersville. to achieve the campaign goal of difficult project to get volunteers to pmgrams m all schools m Meags
:±\my Ohlinger; Syracuse, Mary $6,470, but also help educate their cover all parts of the coonty. Those County_." a~dcd Carr. _"Last year
:.Dyer; Racine, Jean Alkire and friends, family and neighbors about individuals who regu_huly serv~ the Me1gs County DIVI~JOn or the
Jeanette Lawrence; Bedford Town- the value of medical research. T!lis make the JOb of rccrumng volun- AHA reached 5,981 Me1gs County
~ip; Millie Midkiff and Jane
year's American Heart Month Mes- tecrs much easier. We -ihank them rcside_nts wi_th interactive prog~
ffrymyer; Chester Township, Tex- sage, "Life. It's What We're Fight- and all v~!unteers who help w1th contaan,ang_ mfonnat!on on card•o~anna Well; Lebanon Township, ing Fo.-," reinforces that' research is th1s
se.
• .
.
vascular d1scase. W1thout the supyce Quillen; Letart Township, a cornerstone of the work done by
'The American Heart Associ~· port of this ·commumty, th1s camrry Shain; Olive Township,
pa•gn and the resultmg programs
and reseJU'ch grants would ,not be

.. tudents spend .an afte oon at the Ariel
I"

GALLIPOLIS - Washington . written and choreograph by Tri- ~Elementary students were areated to cia ~ewslci, lhstructor of lmce at
!an afternoon at the Ariel presented the Ariel. Zalewski, ~ith th assis•by the Ariel Dancers and After tance of student s mo ers,
~School String Project students.
designed and cons'!ucted the cos~ Tbe peaformance wa' offered to tumes of bows, Chrisamas arees and
~kindergarten through third grade . angels.
·
.
~students as an introduction to
As part of the emphas•s on
,o:pportunitieS in theatre from on youth. in the arts the Ariel is offer~st,age performances to writing, set · ing scholar~hljls fo~ 1ts strmg pro·
•design, music, costuming, drama gram and 1s workmg towards a
!ahd choreography .
scholarship for dan~e classes.
: , The program "Christmas in the . Applications for the stn~g scholar.~.. featured dance students per- ship are being accepted for th_e w1n:rorming ballet, tap and jazz rou- ter sess1on. ~nyone w1shmg to
• tines 'from their classes at the Ariel. apply or contribute to the program
lThe After School String Project may call ,the Ariel at 446-ARTS .
~ tCUdents played a Christmas carol
Winter session dance classes at
,go their vmlins. .
.
- the Anel hegm Monday, Jan. 9 and
: "Christmas in the Stars" was

~

P?sr~~~~e interested in assisting

Sales - Rental -. Service

Tuesday Jan. 10. Monday classes
with the February res1dentaal carninclude pre-ballet at 4: 15 p.m., paign can reacb c.arr at 992-3222.
ballet I at 5 p.m., ballet Ill at 6
p.m., jazz II at 7 p.m. and· adult
ballet at 8 p.m. Tuesday classes_arc
ballet IIA at 4 p.m., tap I at 5 p.m.,
jazz I at 5:45 p.m., ballet liB at
All Natural C.H. 2001
•
6:30 p.m. and lap II a1 7:30p.m. •
Wffh Chromium Pkolln.t•
The spring dance concert will trace
/!lONEY BACK GUARAHfEE
•
(12 00 OF'F
LIMIT 11
the 100 year history of the Ariel •
thcaarc. The Ariel Dancers will also •
FRUTH PHARMACY •
join forces with Ohio University • Gallipolis
446-662~-seniors at a ~nccrt May 3. · ·
Saring classes are offered Tuesdays at the First_ Presbyteri_an '
Church in Gallipolis. A begmnmg
violin class is being offered at 5
p.m. for children wishing to start in
the winter session.

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY

·r.······~
LOSE ¥b 10 LBS. •
•

IN 3 DAYS!

Respiratqry Therapist - 24 Hour Emergency Service
.· We Bill Medicare, Medicaid, etc., for the patient. ....

•

Home Owned and Operated

Gallipolis

CO U~ON -

446-7283

••••••••

· Toll Free

Jackson

1·800~458·6844

286·7484

Holzer Medical Center

Meigs community calendar

~
The Community Calendar Is
\~p,ubllshed as a free s~rvlce to

non-profit groups washing to
announce meeting and special
.events. The calendar is not
~designed to promote sales or•lunil raisers or any type. Items
. are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed lo run a
specific number of days.

FORKED RUN - Forked Run
Sportsman
Club will host gun
1
shoot at I p.m. Sunday .
MONDAY
••
• BASHAN - The county's at~~me schooling group will meet at ·

Lion .loose in
Philadelphia

7 p.m. Monday at 2!!471 Bashan
Road . For information call 9493119. POMEROY . - The Meigs
County Board of Elections will
hold monthly meeting at 4- p.m.
Monday at board office.

craft , and refreshments to be a
salad har.

MaximuJ)l

'We/lness for those ~50 and over

An exciting new FREE inernl,crship program
designed to provide
·
·
individuals 50 years of alife ami over
·
opportunities to achieve anJ maintain gooJ he~lth .
• Speakers bureau for civic organizations
• LIFELINE inform.~tion
• Discounts in the Hospit~l Cafeteria, Gift Shop
and Hob:er Famaly Pharmacy
·
• .Quarterly newsle_ttcr contai~ing interes ting articles
and schedules of upc~mmg/ree health screenings and se minars ·

(LEANER_
.,._,.
----.
JANUARY SPECIAL
~

YEADON,
door of the school
was
frame I,! by first gra&lt;\ers' drawings
of lions, children wrote lion stories
and the principal played ''The Lion .
~leeps Tqnigbt" over the public
address system.
A day after residents reported
seeing a lion prowling the Philadelphia suburbs, tension and fear had
· Jurned to .excitement and humor
ThurSday at the Walnut Street Elementary School in Darby.
After all. police in Darby bad
-givel) up lheir search a11d Police
•Cbief Roben Smythe bad S31d the
'animal probably wasn't even a lion.
_. _. But aroond 3 p.m. in neighbor1ng Yeadon, officer Michael l'&gt;olly
spotted a tOO-pound mountain lion
•tD the woods near a parochial
. school - and lion fever swept the
jii'C3 again .

50

RACINE - Racine Village
Cuuncilmccts at 7 p.m. Monday at
the ann~x .

POMEROY - Meigs County
llealth
Department starts a free sixEAST 'MEIGS - Eastern Local week wcighrloss program al 6 p.m. ·
Board of Education will hold orga- on Mondays or Thursdays at the
nizational meeting al 6:30 p.m. . multi-purpose building.
Monday in the library, followed by
regular meeting at 6:45p.m.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddlePOMEROY - Pomeroy res i- port Community Association will
dents should place old Christmas meel at 5: 15 p.m. Tuesday at- Peotrees on three days in the following ples Bank.
order: first ward, Jan. 9; second
ward, Jan. 10; and third ward, Jan.
POMEROY - An organizaII.
tional meeting of the Board of
.Truslecs or the Meigs County PubKYGER
Women Alive, lic Library will be held Tuesday, 1
Monday, 7 p.m. at the Kyger Creek p.m.
Club House. Devotional speaker, a

lOIN N£l.WJI

~....

Detach, complete and return t\.c form helm,: to :
MaxWell 50, Holzer Medical Center
· 100 }ad~son Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-1563
' or call 446:5392

COA,.S &amp;
SWEATERS

~

•

Name___~--------·----~-,------------~--------------------~----

OFF

I

.. -- . -- - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - ----------·-- -PleaSe enroll me in Holzer Medical Center',\ MaxWe/(_5() ProJmm•

Address ___________~-------------------------------------------Phone______ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ l&gt;atc of hirth_~-----

OFFER GOOD THRU TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1995

I would like lo learn more about. _ _;-------;:-,.----___o..-------,--:_-

OHIO RIVER Pl4ZA, GALUPOUS, OH.
PHONE 44'6-.9495
•

'•

By PETER H. GOIT, M.D. ·
DEAR DR. GOTT: My husband
suffers from Paget's disease. Can
you provide information on Ibis
condition?
DEAR READER: This common
disease, of unknown cause, is
marked by patc~es of.abnormal
bone, usually in tlie skull but sometimes in other bones as well. The
patches are abnormal; they consist
of areas where the bone is being
rapidly depleted 'and replenished.
This leads to weak spots because
the new bone doesn't have time 10
calcify and strengthen.
Thus, although Paget's disease
of the skull will not affect beallh
(except by causing the head to
enlarge somewhat), Paget's disease
of tbe hip or le_g bones frequently
results in fractures and pain.
The diagnosis is made by Xrays of the involved bones and by a
bone scan. which will show the
areas or rapid bone turnover.
In most cases, Paget's disease is
discovered by accident (during rou.

~.Changing with the times ·monks turn

..

~TO -'f2 OFF!

Lifa ette Mall .Iii

.,.
..
..

SUNDAY
PARKERSBURG .....: Native
Americans and others are invited to
a gathering at 3 p.m . Sunday a!
West Virginia Univ~rsity- Parkers·
burg to organize a center:

"
'"

Sunday

ipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV

'

·-

�•

~P:;a:g=e-=B=4-=S=u=:n;=d=ay=Ti=m=e:=s=Se7n=tin=e=I=======~P~o,me,;;;ro;:,;y~·~~;AI;d;d;le;po;;;rt~;G;a;;lll;;;p;o;lls,;;;;O;;H~P~o;;;i;;nt;;P~I;ea;;;sa;;;;n;;;t,~WV;;,;===============J=a=nu=a=ry=8=,1=9::9::5:

January 8, 1995

Reader burned up·with big spending judicial system . ·
Ann
Landers
"t 99S, Loa AI'"o9f+n
TltMI Synd.c.te and
CrM!ota S~e·

~r Aan Landers: I don't know
how else to put this, so I will come
right out and say it: Our justice
systettt stinks. What follows
happened in Union, Ky.
A 17-year-old student shot and
killed his parentll and two sisters
(ages 14 and 12). He then took his
· gun to school. When apprehended,
the youth told authorities, "I've had a
bad day." He was sentenced 10 life in

prison but will be eligible for parole
in 25 years
Wha lh:
. that Jcid ho
~ ~s means 11s
be~~ 011
:::C street, : :~~ :;;:;,a~hen he is
old.
42
Y
•
. •
When I read stu II' like thts, 11 makes
me.so ~gry 1 JUst Jatuto ~~·
Meanwhile, we are spendmg. biliiOIIS
of doUars to butld more pnsons.so
we can feed and house people like
thts. or course, we, the taxpayers, are
the ones who are getung socked for
tl
.. .
.
(
How does thts su wuh you,
Ann? I am -- BURNED UP 1.N
CONNECTICUT AND DON T
WANT TO TAKE ?"ANYMORE,
DEARBURNED.Soaml,butlets

ears

a~swers

look 81 the.whole pic!Ure Where did
th. 17
. ·
IS
-year-ol~ ge~a weapon? After
years of fighung m Congress, we
finally g':" the Brady biU jlassed, but
by that bmc, the H011se and Scna.te
had shot a large number of holes m
iL Let's noe fotget that the sbOngest
and richest lobby in the United States
Is the National Rifle Association.
There is always the hope that
young criminals might be
rehabilitated. If they are taught a
trade, there is a chance that when
released, they can make an honest
!iving.Buthowmanyemployerswill
·hire an ex-con? Since so many
employers won't, parolees often
return to a life of crime. This is a
multifacetedprobleml!'ithnosimple

·
·
Sin&lt;:eeverybody knows bettet.than
anybody, I'd like some suggesttons,
please.
,
~ar Ann Landers: We !tea; a Joe·
about sexual harassment, but I m noc
swc I Jcnow exactly what it is. 111 bet
a Joe of others are also fairly vague
about this and would appreciate it if
youwouldspell.itout.Howaboutit,
Ann? -- UNDEREDUCATED IN
CHARLOTI'E, N.C.
DEAR UNDEREDUCATED:
Several months ago, the Chicago
Board of Education issued some
guidelines for lhose who asked the
same question. Herearesomeofthe
offenses the board'lfd constituted
~exual harassment, whether

. ren . aJ .
.
UOn or not:
Jokes or cornmentll about sex or
explicit invitations to have sex.
Displaying sexually suggestive
ob.JCCtll, photos or canoons.
Rernans about a person's bodv or
ICltual llb'aCtiveness.
Whistling, gawking or commenting on body parts, pro or con.
Touching, leering, whistling or
mating insulting, suggestive or
obscene commmtll or gestures.
Most companies will issue a
warning after a fust ofl'ense. If there
isuccondoccumnce,itcouldmean
dismissal.
Beawarethatsexualharassmentin
the workplace can be an equalopponunityofl'ense.Somemenhave
10

Middle_port Arts Council rece.ives grant for community. band

sued and won. They tiled female
department headS lllld boaes who
on to them lllld when the men
=~ed their
they were
democcd or fucd. P.S. 1;;. received
bulletin from Harvard Medical
1
.
·
ph · ·
SchooltiiSUUCilng young )'SICIIDs .
on w~ttodowhenaeuallyharassed
by,rs•~IIIS. '!Vhat a world!

advuc:ea

'A.Collec!"!nofMyFilliOrl'!Gt~

of the Day !S the perfrctlut~ ~ifi
for ''!"' specwl :wwwou who 11 •m:
pomble 10 buy for.. Sen~ a s~lf·
Oildrrsud, long, bu.swss-me enwlope Q/ld a ~h~ck or money older
for S5:25 (this •nclutks.posrag~ tllld
handling) to: Collectwn. ci~Ann
LAnders, P.O. Bo:c 11~62, Chicago,
~: 1.06/l-0562 (In Canada,

25

.Report finds that HIV is most contagious when r----Making it big--.,
those infected don't know they have it
. DElROIT (AP) - The AIDS
virus may be most contagious when
~leare leastlilcely to know they're
lnfocted, researchers·say.
. Researchers said Friday that lhe·
virus may be up to 1,000 times more
contagiousduringtheftrsttwomonths
-when routine AIDS testll are unable to leU whether people are infected.
''The danger is that a person who
. testll negative and is very active sexually may .be more dangerous than
someone who has tested positive,"
said Carl s.'Simon, a University of

Michigan tesean:her.
Arnon$ homosexual males, the
chances of infecting a ~er during
unprotected sex in lhe mitial60 days
may be as hi$h
three in 10, the
researchers satd.
"It means that if y~otrying to
evaluate a parmer for ho risky it is to
have sex, it is not just w many
parmers,butalsohOw
y,"said
James S. Koopman, a University of
Michigan epidemiologist.
Routine AIDS tests lookforpres-:
ence of antibodies the body has made
todefendagainsttheAIDS virus. The

as

putll some mathematic;al odds on infectiousness early on," said Dr. Scoet
Hohnberg of lhe Division of HIVAIDS at the .Adanta-based federal
Centers for Disease ConbOI and Prevention.
"The study, _published in the
November iSsue of lhe Journal of
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, is based on a computer simulation that used long-term studies of
AIDS antibodies in blood from more
than 8,000 homosexual males from
San Francisco and Chicago and studies offemale-to·male transmission in
I, 115 militaryconscriptll in Thljiland.

anu'bodies (lon't immediately appear.
~le infected wilh HIV, the
AIDS VllUS,·can be healthy lllld Jive
for years before the virus begins-reproducing and atlacb the body's
tmmunc ·systell!.
.
Otherstudie.shavesuggested that
HIV ismostcontagiousinearlysl.a$es.
The Michigan study, a mathemaucal
analysis based on existing research,
attempted to determine how much
more contagious.
"Within the context of actual
'studies, there are limited data to suppon this contention and this, model

......

Extension Homemaker&amp; 10:30 a.m.
C. H. McKenzie Building.

Monday, Jan. !I

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County•
Chamber of Commerce 12 p.m.
Stowaway.

•••

•••

...
...

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Board of MRDD 5 p.m. Guiding
Hands School work exooutive ses·
sian only.
·

•••

"

::. By WOODY BAIRD ·
. "I can imagine him at 60. I can
' • Associated Press Writer
tmagme htm ·havmg gotten through
_:; MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)
his period of dcspaif, just as so : : Somehow, the picture won't come 'inany people have, " said Peter
: . into foQJs: A pompadoured hut Guralnrck , ~~thor of~ new Elvts
: : graying Elvis, in sensible shoe~. lllog~~phy, Last TralJI to Mem• : sipping wann milk in Graceland's phis.
• , Jungle Room.
Thousands of fans were expected i~ Memphi.s this ~e~~end for .
: : Sixty years old? Not the K!ng.
• : But yes, Elvis Presley would be ~ommcmoratt ve acltvlttes I hat
: 60 on Sunday.
.
·
mclude a dance party, a cake-cutAnd though he died nearly 18 ung on the Graccland lawn and a
• years ago, that doesn't stop the symphony c'!ncert.
.
; l~ful. from celebrating. the day.
Prfi!ey died of h~ dtsease at
: ~r does it soften the rub of pass- ~2. locked 10 a sclf-IUlposcd tsola, ing time for !bose who sought as uon darkened by drug abuse and
: Jeen-agers to affect his youthful depr;.essiorr; Bur-had-he. tnade it
• swagger.
through that tune, Guralmclc thmks
• •

•••

•••

ROBERT
. M. HOLLEY, M.D.
'.

'

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

. TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M, ON TUESDAYS

JIM LUSHER

1

2

3

'4

5

:..

you think of the story, as the ~tory
of a fnend of yours, 11 s not &amp;Joke.
It's not sensational headlines
either .. It's ~hat happens to people
sometiUles.,
.
Presley s former restdence .
Grace land, draws more than
600 000 visitors a year and geL' tts
biggest crowds in August on tbc
anniversary of his death.
But .Graccland spokest;rum Todd
Morgan said the 60th btrthday ts
pulling in rans from around the
woFld . A tour group from Great

Britain is bringing in 300 fans ,
while smaller groups are expected
fromJopanandGcrmany.
'
An "Elvis Dance Party" Friday
night was expected to draw . a
capacity crow.d of 900, and up to
S,OO(hisitors were expected to tour
Graceland over.the weekend.
The Memphis Symph-ony
Orchestra scheduled tits annual
"Eivisifilrthday Concert'.' tonight,
and hundreds of fans were expected'Sunday for a cake-culling on tbe
Graceland lawn.

HOLIDAY LOAN
SPECIAL
Thru
Jan 27

Up.

~i=Dii

MickHoweU
Mark.Grov~
Annual pcn:&lt;i&gt;t&gt;J&lt; ntc shown u of l/5/95 aDd oubjca

10

clwrge.

MdiMa Scarberry
675·ll21

Loam subject to credit appr'OV'JI.

' Masnu ,
Helen Fields
773·5514

NcwHavm ·
Jim Layne
Tulia Willoughby
882-2135
- J

{]/mtc'tl OBjGYN CfJepatlmenl.~

'

a

accommodations for any patient .
and family in need of service,
Donations to lccep the place run·
ning, of course, arc more than weicome. If you'd like to contribute
something just send your donation
to Unverfenh House, 190 King
Ave., Columbus, Ohio 4320 I.
Meantime, back to Carolyn.
She is in room 911 in Doan Hall,
University Hospitals in Columbus
and I know she· d Jove hearing from
you.

Montrie Chaksupa, M.D.
Former rcsidcnl, Nancy Jeffers,
was in Florida recently at an
,I
antique sale. .
·
I
During the sale Nancy came
across a piece of furniture-a sidcboard, I believe- which wa.s ·
'
marked with made by Probst FurntI
lure Co. of Pomeroy. She would
'.
ha·ve purchased the piece just
because of the local touch alone but
it had already been sold . The
marking on the furnitute ruso staled.
that the Probst Co . made s•dcboards and "srues"- pie safes, that
Margaret S. Harnish, M.D.
is.
,
·
Personally, I have never heard
·or a Probst furniture Co. in
Pn;neroy. However, I told Nancy I
would check with you to sec if
f-;-·~--.dlolrrr)'lllJl~'~)'-ar•d-c:~nge~.t~~e beart~,-bad. Sbe' il-like for-·you to nolifv·--l'Sc---. failur~ He was a founding father Ferndora Story if you. have any.
of the )leart transplant .rrogr~ at background informatio11 on tbe ·
the Ohio State University Medtcai company.
Center. He was devoted to scrvmg
others until his unli!ftcly death in
The decorations are down-and
1988.
·
isn't tbe house drab-which cerUnverferth House was estab- tainly doesn't add to the January
lished by his former patients, blahs. I guess today you could
friends and family to honor the even call il "depression'\ And I
good he represented and to pe!]!Ct- wonder bow many more times I
Laurel A. Kirkhart, M.D. '
• ualc his legacy by servm.g the spe· will date papers and checks 1994 '
cial needs of heart pauenls and instead of 1995. Bet·you don't do
''
iJteir loved ones.
·
. . that. Do keep smiling.
: A sliding scale of rates has bee~n---:o---------::-':"'!'-------,

I

l.oc~tl

.

Pt. Pleasant

·: was going extremely well with
. ·: Carolyn . Korn, well-knowq
'• Pomeroy resident, who underwent
:.: a heart transplant at ·university
:'! Hospital in Cr.&gt;lumbus on Jan. I. ·
Talked to Bracy Korn who
· advis.ed me that doctors aTe
: extremely pleased with Carolyn's
~progress. She is now out of intensive care and into a room. If she
; continues to get along,this well she
. • will be permilled to move inlo what
. ! is known as Unverferth House in
; about jiJ days.
·. So Jet me·tell youabo_ut Unv:r- .
· ferlh Hou.se. It is tbe fusl of liS
IJcind in Central Ohio and is dedieat;ed to serving the needs .of heart
;trattsplant patients and their fami:ucs. This mission is accomplished
:by providing both a physical
·dwelling and emotional support
:during the transplant process. of
:evaluation, surgery, recupcrauon
·andlhe follow-up medical care.
: The house which contains some
:nine .apartments for transplant
·patients and their families ts named
for Don Unverferth who led the
.O.S.U. football Buckeyes as st.art·
ing quarterback, 1963-65 . He later
became' a world·renowncd cardtol·
researcher and expcrt .on car'

;t,

..... ()({1(

· Who says a lo~al Business c~'t compete with ilie "big guys" from oUt oftown1'
Come in to ~e Peoples Bank of Point Pleasant, Mason aiid~N'ew}Iaven·aunng
our after-Chnstmas loan sale and lock in a rate that stands up to anything the. big
corporate banks have to offer. . You can use the money for just about anything a car, a yacation, ho~e improv~ments or paying off your credit cards. And every
·Pe?ples Bank office ts fully eqwpped to handle your loan request from start to
fmtsh, so we can..save you time arui money!

fi!olje~

:: .L_A_s_o~f~e-ar~Jy~F=n~'da~y-ru~te-rn-oo--n.-ru~1~~~~~~to~~~~~~ng~

. Mason, WV
304· 773-5001
3 Beautiful Model
Hqpres Open·Dally

eally

by Bob Hoeflich

•,
•,

Quality Homes

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

MIDDLEPORT - Bill Cornell
is th~ new youtll dircctr&gt;r of Victory
Bapust Church. and wtll ht: empllastzr.ng_
·
·
row's
Y.!l.IJlh"
in ·his position .

The Comells welcome all teen &gt;
to the yo uth class wMclnneets
Wednesday evenings al 7 p.m. The
church is located at 525 North Sec·
ond St., Middleport and the Rev.
_Janics Keesee i ~ the pastor.

insecure young man on his way to
stardom- the Elvts who changed
pop music and gave .a legion of
American youngsters their first
sweet taste of rehelhousness.
But that!IUIC 1~ often overshadowed by Presley slater years of
drugs and excess, the Elvts who
keeps the tabloids and comedians
bus~.
.
.
. ' What people JUdge htm by
otten ts the last three years ·ol hrs
Ii~e and at ~!!at poin~ : he was g~numely lost, Guralmclc satd . If

t

::·. :Beat of the Bend ...
~:

Perceneage
Raee

Mr. and Mrs . Cornell am the
parents of three children. Kimbe_rl y..
a junior at Southern, Joseph, a filth
grader. and Jennifer, a freshman at
Bob Jmics University.
·
.

West Vlrglnlri, for use In denloplng a community band. Other Middleport Art Council members pictured are from the left, Nancy Cale and
Jeanette Thomas, with Tom Dooley, back. Pic- .
lured front is Tyler Andrews, grandson of Mrs.
Cale.

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

Country Pc:&gt;rch
3 Bedrooms
3 Baths
Open Staircase
Family Room

Annual

He and his wife , Patsy. recently
movcu- innn 1rea rca- rrorn Fort
Stewart, Ga . after his retirement
from lhc U. S. Arm y in which he
served 21 years. The y had prcvi pusly allcnded Victory Baptist
while living in the area in 1989 and ·
1990

he undoubtedly would ' still be
smgmg.
"The thing I like to imagine
him doing. is getting together with
(gospel smgers) Jake Hess and
James . BJ~ckwood and the Speer
Famtly. satd Guralntc~. who
.spent seven years researchmg hts
"?Die.."I'm .not tall&lt;ing about wh!tt
dtrectwn hss career would ha~e
taken comrncrctally. But ther~ s
nothrng that would have gtven him
greater satisfacti~? than that. That
was hts firs.Liayc. .
.
Gur~lntck s book, covenn.g
Presley s hfe up to 1958, chromdes th-e nslnWan-1ll!!bftious but

landfi . · · ·
of recycling," Richard Denison, a
illsormcmerators, 3· seniorscientist at the Washin~ton·~ APBusmessWrtter
•bas.edE ·
taJD'
d
!--! ~
NEWYORK(AP)-Moretrash, ·
. . nvuonmen
e.ense IDI •
·~~ ~
fiillin
S81dFnday.
ess
g.
.
More than one-fifth
"It shows clearly that with the
: . . Even though Arnencans are eref 'l
...
l h
momentwn of recycling, we are
aung more garbage than-ever, lhe
·o a., garuage n e achievinglevelsthatprobablyfiveto
:·5 amount dum~ or burtted has
United States Is 10 years ago most skeptics were ar:'l: ~:U~V:~Lttoc:e~~
transformed Into g~g coutd not be achieved; he
881
~ ·~tl!atAmerica'srecyclingdrive
new prOdi.ICtS.
The EPA study, recently com,~ .. is Wtilting
I tedb F..:.--", . As .
Prai
~~
More 'ihan one-fifth of aU gar~ e . y uuuum SOCUIIes,a
': ~· , bage m.
· the U~S
·
'IIi
1
th
·
ne
Yillage,Kan.-basedresearchfmn,
.n1
tates ts !J'IDS· mt on tons ess an m 1990•
analyzed data on consumer goods,
; . -formed mto n
uctll or, m the
Duriog the same period, U.S. garbage generation and other statis• :·. case of y~ ~asle, composted! lhe garbage increased to a new bigh of tics supplied by industry and govern: ..; studycommtSS.•oned by the Envuon- 206.9 minion tons, up from 198 mil- mentgroupsfrom 1990to 1993.Fran. : ; ; mental Protecuon ~g~ncy shows. · lion tons, lhe study shows.
klin has conducted garbage studies
, : . . In 1993,162million tons of trash
''Thisoffersproofofthe viability for the EPA since the early 1970s.

FAMILY PRACTICE

Cornell named youth director
at Victory Baptist-Church

· , CORNELL

.

wassentto

;f

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

BILL AND PATSY

FUNDING FOR COMMUNITY BAND Toney Dingess, Meigs High School Bahd direc·
lor, right, and Mary Wise or the Middleport
Arts Council, display a check from the the Ohio
River Border Jnlllallve, art agencies of Ohio and

.t

decisions of lhc mission .

and help oversee. the appointment
or new missionaries . .
Jk lr:ts served at Faith Baptist
for over nine years .

~; :
.
;* , ByDA~E.~ISH

Revival
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.The 22nd Cburch of God revival 7
p.m. Jan. I through 6.

•••

.

The Hartford Deluxe

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County

-,...

mRecycling keeps lid on -landtllled trash

Come Home to Q'-' ........

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA .Narcotics Anonymous Clean and
Free Group 7:30 p.m. Episcopal
Church.
.
.

CHESHIRE- River Valley High
School Bancl Boosters meeting 7
p.m. in bigh school band room.

GALLIPOLIS -Jim Lusher,
pastor of Faith Baptist Church,
. Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, has been
appoimed to the Advisory Council
of the Association of Baptists for
World Evangelism (ABWE).
With headquarters in Harris- .
burg. Penn., the council is under
the direction of Dr. Wendell Kempton, a noted Super Bowl and World
Series speaker. The Mission has
approxirriately 1,000 missionaries
serving on every contiQent of the
world . Faith Bap,tist ha~ actively
supported ABWE missionaries for
nearly 25 years.
1
In his new capacity on the council, Lusher will travel twice annually In Harrisburg to participate in

COUNTRY
- Robin Manuel or Radne poses "
bere with country singer John McDermott at the restaurant where
be performs In NuhvUJe, Tenn. She was in NullvUJe to ~gn a con- ·
tract with the Independent Label Assodatloq to cut a tape and.
make a video. She will also begin taping later this year with Arrow
Star Record Co.
·

•••

Tuesday, Jan. 10

None of lhe Ansbrldge f11nding nights from 7 to 8:30 p.m. In tbe
can be used for salaries - all par- Meigs High School band room.
ticipants must be volunteers,
An organizational meeting will
according to Mary Wise of the be held Thursday from 7 to 8:30
Middleport Arts Council. She said p.m. in the band room. Anyone
that the money will be used for who plays an instrument and
tlli~gs like purchasing music, cus- resides in communities along tbe
todtal fees when SChools are used, Ohio·River are invited to auend.
printed programs and publicity.
All levels of musicianship are
In awarding the grant to tbe welcome, said Dingess, memberMiddlcpon group for a community ship is free and anyone, bigh
band, Wise said that lhey described school age or over, is welcome.
it as "a perfect example of what
Dingess aitd the Middlepon Arts
they are trying to do .....something Council encourage representation
to draw the two states together".
from the adult community.
Sbe said the grants were comThe director said that large
petitive and the Middleport Arts instruments such as baritones,
Council was fortunate to have its tubas, and drums will be supplied
project selected for funding.
by tbe Meigs Local Band Boosters.
The project, according to Wise,
Any questions concerning tbe
provides· that the band perfomt in a program may be directed to
minimum of three community con- Dingess at 992-7141 from 10:30
certs befor~ the project is complet- a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday to Fried in June, 1995.
day.
The Council, however, is hopeThis is the second local ans proful that the volunteer community gram funded by the Ohio Arts
band, unce established, will be an Council. In December a creative
ongoing thing, she said.
writer spent two weeks at Meigs
Dingess has volunteered to Junior High School working witb
bring a band together and has set seventh and eighth grade English
regular rehearsals for Monday students on poetry writing.

~ : Can it be? Yes, Elvi~ Presley wo~ld celebrate his 60th birthday .

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peter's
Episcopal Church. ·

GALLIPOLIS - PERI meeting 3
p.m. Senior Citizen's Center.

Lusher appointed to
Baptist advisory council

bu ~ incss

and Priscilla Dodrill singing 7 p.m.
Clark Chapel Church.
·

' · By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
' ' Tlmes-Senllnel Staff
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Arts Council bas been award' · ed a $1,000 grant by the Obio
. River Border Initiative for the
·· development of a. community band.
The Obio River Border Initiative (ORB I) is a joint project of the
. Obio Arts Council and the West
: Virginia Commission on Ule Ans.
• administered by Artsbridge of
· Parkersburg and Marietta.
' The mission of Arlsbridge is to
. sbare opportunities and resources
among art organizations and indi' vidual artists in communities in
' ' Ohio and West Virginia situated on
the Obio River.
· The local project will be to fonn
a Big Bend Community Band, with
memllers from Meigs, GaUia and
Mason Counties, directed by Toney
Dingess,.Meigs Hig~ Scllool band
,. insttuetor.
·
' 1 The grant requires a 25 percent
~ local mat~b with that money .to
.,: come from the Middleport Arts
• Council's portion of proceeds from
' the 1994 Talent Show of the Big
Bend Minstrel Association.

.

----Gallia community calendar
The Community Calendar is
Sunday, Jan. 8
published as a free service to
non:profit groups wishing to
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. .announce meetings and special Narcotics AnonyiiJOU£ Tri County
events. The calendar is not Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.
v
....
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items ·
GALLIPOLIS - Inheritor's
a,are printed as space permil&lt; and Quartet will perfonn at Elizabeth
cannot be guaranteed lo run a Cha)l!:l Church, I p.m,
specific numlier of days.
***
'PORTER - Jake Frye preaching

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-BS

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, ott-Point Pleasant, WV

.

co I or
••

••

Crow's on top of things;
Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Pinson's oi( the wall. .
Freeman's out in the woods.

Times-Sentinel
,.

.

'

•

Donald E. O'Rourke, M.D .

R,ick 0. St. Onge, M.D.

J. Craig Strafford, M.D.

,gull/toundi!lg you o.nd ·yolAA ~otJed ones with .tke quo..Qity OOAe you need, wlten you need It
ttolt ~bgtefAicaf Md Qglle00fog1caf coae co,QQ tke 9#o@se- Ct1111c OBjGYN
COef&gt;O!tlntent o.t 446-5981.
•

�•

'

Page-86-Sunday Times-Sentinel

j

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

-,---The House. of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.-

•
••

~

•

...•

. January a, 1995

, January a, 1995

VM.H activities

-

.•

COCA COLA
PRODUCTS (

. Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2?1.00 with sauce 3?1.00 plain

Relaxing Porche~ Wrap Country-Style Home·

"•

· Sunday Times--Sentinei-Page-87

OH Point Pleasant, WV

12 PK 12 QZ. CAN

STORE HOURS

•
•

s

Mo1day thru Sunday

..•

8AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OH.

•

•

•

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD JAN. 8 THRU JAN. 14, 1995.

-.

-..•.

99

.SEVEN UP
PRODUCTS

WE NOW M:CEPT·WIC COUPONS

••

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12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS
.

WINNER - Kay Cullums, surgical technic:lllll, wu tile winner · .
or the q1111rterly SSO employee award given by Veterans Memorial .
Hospital as a part of the hospital's '!I done good at VMH'' pro- .
gram, recognizing employees for efforts beyond the routine call of
duty. Other employees named to the ''Done Good'' honor roU dur· .
lng the last three months of 1994 are Marty Meadows, Angle
Mayer, Sel!flll Call, Debbie Flnlaw, Kathy MIWer, Helen Corsi, .
Margaret Corsi, Trlsh Davidson, Marilyn Spencer, Deann VanMeter, Linda Holter, Jle~le Darst and Evelyn VanMeter. Above,
Mrs. Cullums receives her award from hospital administrator
Scott Lucas.
·

porches provide ~~!.~~'iOrtiii;-;;.;~~;j;j~;;;,~:!:~and~~arc~hed;
.
add totithe~nosno;:tw~lglc~~;;jfl..J..IjuaJ
also has a walk-in closet and
By PAT WKAS
built-in shelves. A second walk-in
AP ,Newsfeatures
•~• Quaint dormers, arched win- closet lies between ·the bedroom
Foundation options include a
is design has 1,~20
and the master bath. The bath
standard basement, slab or craw~
.: dows and expansive porches give
quare feet on the main
boasts a dual-sink vanity, a
space foundation. Generic foun·• this country-style home a nostalfloor and 525 square feet
whlrlpoonub;-asepiirateshower
dation conversion diagrams may
.• gie appeal. The-covered front
upstairs. Unless otherwise noted,
and
a
private
toilet
compartment.
be requested when ordering the
• porch comfortably wraps around
all main-floor rooms have 9-ft.
An
open,
angled
stairway
leads
blueprints.
- two sides of the home. Another
ceilings. The plan is available
up to a balcony that overlooks with 2x4 .exterior wall framing.
: covered porch at the back of the
the great room. Each of the two
! home provides a sheltered place
secondary bedrooms on the
:: for outdoor dining. This plan has
; been designed to achieve maxi- upper floor has a walk-in closet
- mum exteri&lt;;lr appeal without sac- along with easy access to a full
bath. The fronl'facing bedroom
·- · rificing style or livability on the
also
offers an 11-foot vaulted cei~
: inside.
•
ing brightened by an arched winThe open interior of F-29, by
·• Home'styles . "Source ......1 '' · dow arrangement. A storagearea
: · Designers' Network, encompass- that can be used for future~expan­
sion space is another nice extra
~ es a total of 2,245 square feet of
found in this plane
• living ·space . The floor plan is
. .~ _desig:ned t~J?r.oc!!l~e a_.!!owing,
- up-to-date environment.
• The entrance leads intc a dis., tinct foyer that affords ~ view of
~ : the great room. Just off the foyer,
COV
:): the banquet-sized dining room is.
PORCH
·' introduced by a columned archTWO CAR GARAGE I··-·I
~ way and boasts a 9-foot tray ceil21'-0'x 25'-10'
: ing. Beyond the dining room, the
:: great room features an 18-foot
I I
., vaulted ceiling, a wall of windows
PIA.L DN STAIR~-·
TO SHJI ATTIL
~
and built-in shelves that border
: the fireplace .
! The country kitchen offers
10'-0'x
.lUll.T-IN
~ plenty of counter space0 and a
10'-2'
v&amp;u:~ ti.G
:: central work island . A sunny
..; breakfast room adjoins the
GREAT RM
111'-11' CLG
kitchen and opens to the back '
16'-0'/20'-3'x
MSTR BEDRY
:- porch · through sliding glass
22'-0'
17'-8'
": doors. The breakfast room Visu~ .
- · 1y flows into the great room and
:: enjoys the same vaulted ceiling.
'· Just off the kitchen, the service
{ area opens to the porch and the
..J
1/ICL
..J
· ' garage . .The two-car garage is
&lt;1:
; well hidden from the street,
[&gt;:
w
- being set back behind the .wrap- .
&gt;
: around por~h on the left side of
I CJ
' CJ•-o• CLG
'\
r'
the home. The garage also has'a
•
I DINING RM .J.I
- handy storage closet and pullI
[16'-4'x 12'-0j
down stairs to even more storage
r-.
7 space above.
'
·
II'
',
----------------','
On the opposite side of the
·• home, the main-floor master
•
- ~ suite is highlighted by a bay win'cOVERED PORCH ·
F-29
~ dow, another tall window and a
- 10-foot ceiling. The sleeping area

i!-..lndOM

-::
~

Ti

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oz.
$}
. 14.75

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MOUNTA~N~ER

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Lb. rDII 10 Dl.links ·

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.Round Steak ••••••••••••• ·
•

------

~

•

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'

•

•

FAREWELL -A rareweU reception honoring Dr. Malwlm W. :.
Lentz, right, the surgeon who has been affiliated with Veterans•:
Memorial Hospital for the past 13 years, was held Thursday In the::hospltal conference room. Lentz Is relocating to Tlmn, Oblo. Seen ~:
pbove presenting Lentz with farewell gifts during the rt!C!eption 11re ::
Dr. James Witherell, lert, medical starr director, and hospital •~ :
administrator Scott Lucas, center. Lentz earlier on Thursday was ,···
honored with a luncheon by members of the operating room staR ·:
' who also presented him a girt. Lentz was also honored with a
by his omce staff.
.

partY :

USDA "CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

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EVAPORATED
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To Order Stu

Plan

Quadruplets make five
•

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Pruiu household just got four times
more hectic.
FuH study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby ·
Lisa Pruitt gave birth 10 quadrubluepnnt. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How. _plets on· Thurs¢ly at University or
to Build. Buy or Sell/f. Ranc/i Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
Cincinnati Hospilal. Quadruplets
feature; PractJClll Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common · occur abolu once in every 705,000
·problems: and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, collection of 24
births.
·
styles.Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
''Although nine weeks premalabel to: House of the Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562
ture,
·the babies ¥" all healthy and
New 1York, NY 10116-1562.
,
•
are breathing on their own," Dr.
Edward Donovan, Lisa•s obstell'iCl1p th1s order and return label
cian, said Friday.
The babies, three boys and a
Enclosed Is $41or plan No. - : - - - - - - - - - - - girl, all were in a breech position
and were delivered by Caesarean
Enclosed Is $4.95 each tor the booklet(s) _ __:__ _ _ _ __
section.
.

a

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------Street _ _:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------_;_,_

City_~--~------,-_:___

ThebabieswcrenamedKather-

Weddins Magic

20% Off

Wedd.'inglnvitations

•

Goldmark

·:

'I

:: GALLIPOLIS · Shayna Chap• man,' a junior at Marshall Univcrsi·
:: ty majoring in international husi - .
· ness, will be spending her spring
: semester' in spring. While in Japan
: she will be attending Temple Uni• vcrsity studying the language. cul'?turc, history and business of Japan.
Chapman is the first Marshall
: student to study in Japan .for over
: ten years. While attending Temple
:She will Iivc with a Japanese. fami: ~.
'
: She is the daughter of Steve ll"d
. ·t.inda Chapman of.{}allipolis. '
•
'
~

!;;~.~;t !
P;:::;.~;::o~!':~·
M~;~:';. ~;0~:··

506 Grand Centra! Aoe,'

"""'"~~"·

wv

aero., .from
Grand Central MaU

SHA YNA CHAPMAN

~

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D,.n.l) a . t lr
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Except Lizzy High &amp; Cats Meow

GINGERBREAD HOUSE OF GIF1S
=WRAPPING

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Sun. 1-6

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA, GAWPOUS • :

PHONE 441-(1111

Hours: M-Sat. 10-8
Sun 12 noonc5

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---'t:ISta::t•::~~~~~~=~~~J -PI-I-tlrd"'"d-rh.m-J.-:H-9a;-l~ll- : -

: Chapman to
.. attend school -: in Japan
•

Haskins-Tanner.

You 111ill have o~r 190 J1yle1 of
ine, Connor, Eric and Justin. The
tw:edo•
to choo•e fr-om. We have a
Pruius. also have a 9-year-old son.
large
1eledion
of the laleJt tlyle•
Kyle.
·
and
t:omplinu?iatary ncceuorie1 for
The !?.regnancy was not easy on
rhU •pel"ial _o Cl'allon.
the family, said Lisa and her busband, Wade. The cou'ple live in the
QualiJy Formplwear at
Cincinnati suburb of Blue Ash.
Affordable Prices
· Dpctors ordered Usa, 3 I, to
have complete bed rest for the last
I8 weeks of her pregnancy.
I .
Her due date was March 7. She
had been in bed since Sept. 24 and
was given a drug to prevent her
Call Ut Toll Fr"
from going into labor before the , _ _ _...;1~..80().=~560-=~LEV=I~~~~;;:;;;;_;;;;:;,;;~:;:;;::._J
babies were old enough to survive.
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Entertainment
Pee le in the news

January 8, 1995

PASADENA, Calif. (AP)- David lellernl~
sees lots of good things in Tom Snyder. Brevity
isn't one of them.
Leutnnan ap~ from New York via sarellitc at a teleVIsion writers' meeting Friday to
plug 'The Late Show with Tom Snyder; which
his company is producing.
When ~nyder gave a lengthy, serious answer to
a quesuon about the show, Lettcnnan inter- ·
jected: "Hey, Tom, we're paying for this satellite."
...
At other limes during Snyder's remarks, LCtterman grimaced and checb:d his wall:h,
Snyder's show debulll Monday after Letterman's "Late Show" on CBS.
NEWYORK(AP)-AsaddenedTrentReznorcanceledaconcertand
lOOk off for Miami after his golden retriever, Maise, plummeted to his death.
Some aewmembers were walking the dog on a third-floor balcony of
a Columbus, Ohio, arena where Rcznor's band, Nine Inch Nails, was per·
formirig. Maise jumped onto a railing, then plunged SO feeL
Rcznor got the news after the seL

Top selling music

ATLANTA (AP)- The son ofManin Luther King Jr~ wants people to
honor his father with a day of non-violence.
Dexter King urged wxring factions around the wtirld to to put down their
weapons on Jan. 16.
·
·
·
."We're asking people of good will everywhere to make an effon to
reconcile their difi'erence8," Dexter King said Friday at a news con{erence.
The conference was held to announce the start of King Week activities.
BUFFALO,N.Y.(AP)-MiUardF'tllm~n 'sbirtbdayistoday,andhisfan

club doesn 'I want you to forget iL · .
MiUard who?
The nalion's 13th president. ihat's who. An infonnal fan clubof25 people
gathered Friday to honor the obsctm: chief executive, who was born Jan. 7•.
ISOO.in ~yEast Aurora.
.
The group bowed their heads ID ''T4PS" and laid wreatliS-including one
from President Clinton - at Fillmore's grave.
·
"Wefeltthatundemchieversneededsomebodytolookupto,IJI'downon,
and that's Fillmo~," said Phil Arkow, head of the New Jeoey-based MiUard

sa Williams
,7. "Love Will Keep Us Alive,"
Eagles (Geffen)
8. "Turn tit!&lt; Peat Aroun&lt;!."
Gloria Estefan {Crescent Moon)
9. "You Gatta Be ," Des'Ree
(Music)
·
.10. "If You Go," Jon Secada
(SBK)

TOP SINGLES
Copyrigbt 1995, Billboard·Soundscan Inc. ' Broadcast Data
Systems.
I. "On Bended Knee." Boyz 11
· Men (Motown)
2. " Creep ," TLC · (LaFace)
(Gold)
·
3. ''Another Night," Real
McCoy (Arista) (Gold)
·
4. "Always," Bon Jovi (Mer:cury) (Gold)
5. "Here Comes the Hotstepper,'' . Ini Kamoze (Columbia)
(Platinum)
6."I WannaBe Down," Brandy
(Atlantic) (Gold)
.
7. " ·Before I Let :You Go,"
. Blacksb'eet (lnterscope)
8. "Take a Bow," Madonna
(Maverick-Sire)
___
9. "Tootsee Roll ," 69 Boys
. (Rip-H) (Platinum)
10. "I'll Make Love to You,"
· Boyz II Men (Motown) (Platinum) ·

R&amp;BSINGLES
Copyright 1995, Billboard
I. "Creep,"··TLC (LaFace)
2. "Before I Let You Go,"
Blackstreet (lnterscope)
.
3."On Bended Knee," Boyz II
Men (Motown)
4."Practice What You ~b."
Barry White (A&amp;M)
5."1f You Love Me," Brownstone (MJJ)
6."I Wanila Be Down,'.' Brandy
(Atlantic) (Gold) .
' ~ L"LBelong to You ='-How Many Ways ," Toni Braxton
(LaFace)
8. "Be Happy," Mary J. Blige
(Uptown) ·
9. "Foolin' Around," Changing
Faces (Atlantic)
10. "Here Comes· the Hotstepper,"
lni Kamoze (Columbia)
.
&lt;Gold&gt;.

MODERN ROCK TRACKS .
Copyright 1995, Billboard
TOP ALBUMS
(While the other charts are
C.opyright 1995 , Billboard- based on retail sales, tllis list is
Soundsclullnc. · ··
,: ·
compiled from mdio·station airplay
I . "The Hits." Garth Brooks reports.)
·
(Liberty)
.
·
I. "When I Come Around,"
2."Vitalogy," Pearl Jam (Epic) Green Day (Reprise)
.
. 3."II," Boyz II Men (Motown)
2. "Bang and Blame," R.E.M.
(Platinum)
. · (Wiimer Bros.)
4. "Dookie," Green Day
3. "Better Man," Pearl Jam
(Reprise) (Platintirn)
(Epic)
.
4.' :Buddy Holly," Weezer
5."Hell Freezes Over." The
, Eagles (Geffen)
·
(DGC-Geffen)
.
6. "Smash," Offspring (Epi·
· 5."Love Spreads," The Stom;
taph) (Platinum)
Roses (Geffen)
7. " MTV Unplugged in New
6. "Gatta Get Away," •Offspring
York," Nirvana (DGC)
(Epitaph)
S."llig Ones," Aerosmith (Gef7. "Zombie," The Cranberries
ten)
·
(Island)
9. " Wildflowers," Tom Petty
8. "About a Girl," ·Nirvana
(Warner)
(DGC-Geffen)
10. "No Need to Argue," The
9. "Sour Times," Portishead
Cranberries (Island)
(London-Island)
I 0. "Everything Zen." Bush
(Trauma-lnterscope)
COUNTRY SINGLES
· Copyright 1995. BillboardBroadcast Data Systems
. LATIN TRACKS
1. "Not a Moment Too Soon."
Copyright 1995, Billboard .
· Tini McGraw (Curb)
(While the other charts are
2."Goin' Through the Big D," based on retail sales. this list is
Mark Chesnutt (Decca)
compiled from radio station aiJplay·
3. " Pickup Man ," Joe Diffie reports.) ·
.
(Epic)
. I. "No Me Queda Mas,'' Sel~na
4. "Till You Love Me,' ' Reba '(EM I Latin)
.
McEntire (MCA)
2~·"La Medill Vueltlf:' ' lilts
5."Gone Country," Alan Jack- Miguel (WEA Latina) . ··
son (Afista)
3.':Me Ducic Estar Solo," La
6."Doctor Time," Rick Trevino Mafia (Sony)'
(Columbia)
. 4.' 'El Colesterol,'' Fito Olivares
7."This is M e." Randy Travis (Fonovisa)
(Warner)
. 5."Yu,elvc Mi Amor," Libera8. "Mi Vida Loca," Pam Tillis cion {Fonovisa)
(Arista) .
6. "Siempre Co.ntigo," Lucero
9.''1'11 Never Forgive My (Melody-Fonovisa)
·
·
Heart," Brooks &amp; Dunn (Arista)
· 7. "Mi Forma De Sentir," Pedro
10. "Take Me As I Am ," Faith · Fernandez (Polygram)
Hill (Warner)
8.' 'Te Arne,'' -Los Mier (Fonovisa)
ADULT CONTEMPORARY
9. "Con Tu Amor," Christian ·
SINGLES
(Melody-Fonovisa)
Copyright 1995, Billboard
10." Ni El Primero Ni El Ulli1. "I'll Make Love to You ," mo," Los Rebenes (Fonovisa)
Boyz .11 Men (Motown) .
.
2."l'm the Only One," Melissa
DANCE MAXI-SINGLES
Etheridge (Island)
Copyrigbt 1995,.BiUboonl
~· ~A:ll I-wanna Do," S hc r)'l --1~··ereep;''-'I'te (LaPace)erow (A&amp;M) - •
4uGet.Down," Craig Mack
. 4. " Always," Bon Jovi (Mer- (Bad Boy-Arista) .
cury) ·
.
. 3 .' ·Another Night ," Reat'

Area band nominated
for band of the year ~
ALBANY • The Southeastern
Ohio based quintet, Rarely Hen!,
has been nominated for "Entertaining Band of the Year" and bassist
Jeff Weaver is up for "Entertainer
of the Year" at the 1995 National
Bluegrass Music Awards to be
awarded Feb. 5 at the Roy Acuff
Theater.in Nashville, Tenn·.
These nominations come on the
heels of four awards won by The
Herd at the 1994 Midwest Bluegrass Awards. For the third year in
a ww the band won "Enrertaining
Band of the Year" and bassist Jeff
Weaver was named "Entertainer of
the Year." The group also received
the "Album of the Year" award for

By LYNN ELDER
''The problem is that networks
AP Television Writer
. .
typically schedule their ·programs
LOS ANGELES (AP)- There using insight and manual techmay be an art to television pro- niques," Aronson says. "There
gramming. but the science is sorely should be a way to automate a lot
.lacking.
of the difficult work."
That's according to researchers . Eacti season, programming
~,orking__ on ' computer models executives face il· jigsaw puzzle of
mtended to help plan 1V sched- · 21 weekly prime-time hours to
ules: Networks could be making assemble.
millions Qf dollars more in primeIn deciding where to place
time profits, the researchers claim.
shows, . ~ variety of factors are
And viewers may benefit from a taken into account, including the
more systematic approach that ulti· nature of the program (adult-orientmately could pinpoint the kind of cd series tend to air later) and the
programs they want, the ·
researchers !l;IY.· ·
·
At the University of Georgia, a
model with the inviting acronym of
SPOT - Scheduling Programs
Optimally for Television - is
being designed by professors Jay
Aronson, Srinivas Reddy and
Antonio Starn.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS
ARNOLDSCHWARZENEGOER,
DANNY DEVITO ~
tN
- JUNIOR PG·13 - ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

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1.- TliiiiiiMlllll-

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BEGIN JAN. 9 &amp; 10
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Caii.446•AifS
•

In Top 25 college hoops,

CELEBRATlON TIME- San Francisco running back William
Floyd spikes the ball shortly after scoring Ibis first-quarter touch·
down during Saturday's NFC playoff game against th~ visiting
Chicago Bears, w.ho ID&lt;il 44-15. Floyd made a return visit to the end
zone In the third quarter. (AP)
•

In Ohio college hoops,

'•

At PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - Damon Stoudamire scored20 points
play made it 68-67 with 1:26to go.
· ·
;md Ray Owes bad 18, leading No. 9 Arizona to an 82-67 victory over
Kenyon Murray missed the fmnt end of a one-and-one seconds later, .
Rhodeotsland S~turday. - ·
but Daimon B.eathea couldn't hit a go-ahead jumpcl'.l'l.ilb 3Q seconds left..
Arizona (10-3) led by II at halftime, but Rbod!l Island {4-6) moved
Snow knocked the ball loose in the Iowa end, but Ray Weathers travwithin 46-41 with 11:33 to go. Corey Williams then hit a three-pointer to
cUed while trying to scoop it up.
start a 14-4 run and Stoudamire made a three-pointer that ended it, puUing
The Hawke yes, though, wasted another opportunity when Andre
the Wildcats ahead 60-45. They never were threatened again.
.
Woolridge missed two free throws. On the ensuing possession, Respert
Poor shooting torpedoed the Rams, who lost for the fifth time in s'x
was double-te'amcd but got the ball to Snow for the game-wim\ing sbot.
games, They hit only 30 percent for the game and only 24 percent in the
·Res pen led the Spartans with 18 poin!s, while Jamie Feick added 14
first balf. They also were outrebounded 48-35, with Owes leading Ari- . poinls and 13 rebounds. Kingsbury led all scorers with 29 points, but ·
zona with 12.
·
· scored just onejlOint in.the final nine minules .
.
Iowa's high,prcssure defense dominated ·the·beginning..of..the· game. c ......... .
The Wildcats, coming off a one-point. loss to Arizona· State, opened ·...
sluggishly. Rbode Island got five ~traight points from Cordell llewellyn
and seven points from Jess Settles gave the Hawkeyes a 26-16 lead midand took a 12-81ead, its biggest of the game. Its last lead was 17-16.
way tbrpugh the first halL
,
No. 14 Michigan SL 69, No. :Z:Z Iowa 68- At East Lansing, Mich.,
At that point Respcrt had taken just two shots. but be worked his way
Eric Snow's jumper fr&lt;Jil} the free-throw line as time expired gave 14thback into the offense, and scored nine points in a 14-2 Spartan run that
ranked Michigan State a dramatic ·69-68 viatory'over 22nd-ranked Iowa
gave them a30-281ead.
·
on Saturday.
·
,·
Kingsbury, though, answered with back-to-back three-pointers, and
Micbigan State (9-1, 2-0 Big Ten) was helped when Iowa (11-3, 1-1)
Iowa was able tn h,old on for the one-point lead at halftime.
missed all four of free throws in the last two minutes, including the front
Purdu~ 68, Minnesota 60 - At West Lafayette, Ind., Cuonro Martin
.ends of two one-and-ones.
scored six of his J3 points in the final three minutes and Purdue used a
Iowa led 36-35 at the half, and with 10:40 to play, still h~ld a narrow
huge advantage at the free thrt\w line to beat Minnesota 68-60 Saturday .
lead, 55-53.
The Boilermakers (10-4, ·t-1 Dig Ten) hil 28-of-35 foul shots for the
But in the next 1:39, Chris Kingsbury hit two long three-pointers and
game. compared with just 3-for-8 for the Gophers (10-4, 1-1). Purdue's
an improbable turnaround jumper to put the Hawkeyes ahead 63-57 with
final se ven points came on free throws, including two apiece by Chad
nine minutes to go.
Austin and Matt Waddell and one by Martin. after Minnesota cut an It Meanwhile, the 'lowa defense bad taken Michigan State star Shawn
point deficit to 63-60 with 28 seconds remaining.
..
Respert out of the game; holding him scOreless for the first 15:46 of the
Minneosta's first successful tree throw was by Sam Jacobson with
" second half.
-6:25 to go, pulling the Gophers within 49-45 . But two free throws by
Respert wasn't the only Spartan who struggled. His two free throws to
Martin, a baskct .by Waddell, one free throw· by RoJ&lt; Hairston and two
pull Michigan State within 65-59 with 4:14, was Michigan State's first
foul shots apiece by Austin and Martin gave Purdue its biggest lead at 58points in over six .minutes.
47 with 2:39 to go. .
•
Res pert followed that with a three-pointer to narrow the gap to .three..
A thrce-p(&gt;int goal by Townsend Orr and two three-pointers by Vosbon
but the Srartans couldn't get any closer until Jon Garava~lia's three-ooint
Lenard sL1rted Minnesota's final rally, but the Gopl)ers' last basket was
by Eric Harris with 28 seconds to go hcforc the clinching Purdue free
throws.
'
Austin, who finished with 10 poinL,, was the only other Purdue player
in double figures. Waddell and Porter Rohcrts each added nine points.
Lenard led Minnesota with 16 JlOints, including 13 in the second half,
and Orr added II .
·
OAC).
'
·
with' his .seven rebounds and seven - The Gophers, who have. lost .13 straight games in M~y · Ar~na, led
Hei elberg turned th'e ball over aSsists
.mly once, 13-11 on a basket by Chad Kohmder with 10:45 left in the first
after 'n nding it and then had to
Th~ loss was the fourth -in. a row
half." Dut Purdue held Minnesota scoreless for more than five minutes
fou
kingum's Bryian Burson, for Cleveland State while Wright. after that and built a 19-13 lead on a basket by Austin.
·
who hit both free throws with five State won its third i~ 8 row.
{:'-A three:point basket by Lenard and a two-pointer b~ John Thomas
seconds left to give him 31 points
Wittenberg 80, Case Reserve 53 · brought Mmnesota wtthon one, b~t Roberts hll a three-pomter to start an
and give his team a three -point
At Springfield, Aaron Smith's
8-2 run that put the Bmlermakers t~ control.
.
.
Hairston scored five of Purdue s last seven pomts of the penod as the
lead . Burson topped the I ,000- 16 points ,led four players in double
. ·point mark In career scoring earlier figures liS Wittenberg won its fifth
Boilermakers took a 31-24· tead at the break.
in the gmne.
straight game and 26th in.a row at
After a timeout, Heidelberg borne Saturday witb an 80-53
turned the ball over again and this North Coast Conference victory
time Chad Oli vcr, who had 17 over Case Western Reserve.
points, hit a .pair of free throws to
Smith added JO rebounds to go
make it 76-71.
with his 16 points, while Scott
Adams then hit a three' pointer Schwartz had II points and nine
at the buzzer to cut the .final margin rebounds and Jamel ·King and John
to two points.
·
Bums each scored 10 points. Chris
Brian Miller added 16 points. Wolfe added 12 rebounds for the
Brian Swartzmiller had Hand Josh Tigers (10-2 overall, 5-l in the
Murphy I 0 for Heidelberg.
NCAC).
·
Muskingum was 9-for-23 from
The 26 sln!ight home victories
threc·poim range, while Heidelberg is the fourth longest streak in
was 8-of-15.
NCAA Division III.
·
Wright St. 82, Cleveland St. 74
A Jamison Aoat layup six secAt Cleveland, Delmc Herriman onds into the game g·ave' Case
scored 21 points as Wright State Reserve (4-6, 2-3 NCAC) a quick
won its second s'traight Midwestern lead, but
came back
Conference
with with the

M~rietta and W_
r ight State among

MARIETTA (AP) - Joey
Bigler had 13 points to help Jobn
Carroll beat Marietta 66-53 in the
Ohio Cooferenee on Saturday .
David Tucker had II and Jeff
Sesplankis 10 for the Blue Sb'eaks
(9-4 overall, 6-1 OAC).
. ForMarietta (6-6, 2-4), Ja~on
Hayes led with 12 points and 14
rebounds . Ben Dittmar had 12
· poinls. . · ·
'
. JC led throughout the game. At
the half, John Carroll led 29-25.
then by as"many as 16 twice the
second half - 54-3R at 8:03 and
61-45 at2:49.

Musklngum· 76; H~ld,lberg 74
At New Concord, ·.Kevin Troyer's three-point field goal with 14
seconds left gave Muskingum the
lead for .good as the Muskies came
back from a 12-point second-half
deficit to beat Heidelberg 76-74
Satl!l'daY in the Ohio Conference.
, Mall Adams. who finished with
24 pOints for Heidelberg (7-5 overall. 4-2 OAC), hit a·three~ pointer
with 31 seconds left to give the
Student Princes a 71 -69 lead. But
Troyer, who had 12 points, countered with a three at the 14-second
mark for Muskingum (7 -5, 3-3

•

WI nn.ers

State Saturday .
· -ahd neverallowoo
closer 1ho••- 1
Vitaly Potapenko and Rob 19 points in the second half.
Welch each scored 16 points for
Float led Case with II points.
Wright Stale (6-7 overall, 2-0 in
Ball St; 62, Toledo 51 .
the MCC).
At Muncie, Ind., Steve Payne
Jamal Jackson scored 27 points, scored 14 points to ICI\d Ball State
while Joey Rey added 13 and Juan
to a 62-51 victory over Toledo in
•
Hi1110 for Cleveland State (5-7, 0- the Mid-American Conference on
2 MCC). Jackson was the only
Saturday.
Viking starter in double figures,
The Cardinals (6-4, 1-1) over·
with the other four combining for carne a tO-point deficit in .tbc ftrst
19 poin!S. · ..
balf to beat the Rockets (6-4, 0-2).
,Wrigbt State built a 41-34 lead
Ball St;ue went on an eight-point ,
by halftime, shooting 45 percent run beginning at 15:47 to bring the
from the field (13-of-29) to Clevegame within two.
land State's 33 percent (9-of-2~).
The.Cardinals took over the lead
The Raiders finished 27-of-56
for good at 7:21 on a 'ayup by Mar·
,from 'the field for 48 wcent. while
cus Norris , who finished with II
CSU was 23-of-53 for 43-percent. . points.
Craig Thanes scored 16 points
:· KNOCKED 'AWAY -loWII's K~nyon Mtirray (....hi) knocks the · The Vikings made just one·Qf 10
STOLEN - Minnesota.'• Trevor Winter (center), 88ndwlched by
three-pointsbots. .
and bad eight rebounds for ·the
INtll away from Mkhlpn State's Eric: Snow on Snow's drl\oe to the
.Purdue's Brandon Brantley (right) and Herb Dove, has lh~ ball
Wright Sta~ also held a 38-29
Roclcets.
.
btidletln the ftnt half of Saturday's •lg Ten contQt In Eut LBIUI.....
stolen from him In the flnt h.,lr or Saturday's Big Ten matcbup In
upper band on the boards. with
Payne bad 13 rebounds for Ball
Mleb~ where the SJN1rfans won 69-68 because ol Snow's buzzer-beat·
West Lafayette, Ind., where the h111t Bollermaken won 68-60. (AP)
!ng sbot. (Al')
Rick Martinez leading the Raiders
State.
'
~

When vou. bring this coupon in. you'll get
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Arizona·&amp; Michigan State among victors-

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..

I·

I
~ -~i~I
I..

BEGIN JAN. 3

are

comedy or adventure: time .slot;
day gf week, length of show and
quality. .
' The model doesn't yet take into ·
account such elements as a seiies'
stars or the comp(:Utton it faces, bui
it's ':fairly robust without that,"
Aronson says.-"We get surprising- ·
ly accurate results with just these
parameters.''
The researchers are able to estimate ratings for every show in
every time slot, and to predict revenue and net profit from advertising revenues, Aronson says.

I

446-0923

through Pittsburgh.
Tbe Steelers returned to whM
they do best with a relentless run-

-

together. You're al.ways earning
enough money to have a car and a
house," Wolff said.
"It's a role and it's suffocating
after a while, and so it's a nice
thing to release myself from it in a
way and say, 'Look, this is the way
I really was and have my kids say,
'That's really interesting,' and they
can see how one could have done
what I did. ~ '
"One of the reasons I \vent into
the Army ... was the appetite for
e1tperience, fill the bank up. basically·, '' Wolff said. ''There was
this cult of experience among writers at the time."
A ·runner-up for the National
Book Award, "In Pha:rao·h's
Aimy" sbows Wolff succeeded In
filling the bank of experience,
albeit with an unexpected currency.
He was bumbled and disillusioned by his time in Vietnam, ·
unable at ftrsl to express himself in
words. He saw the deceit, the cruelty, the distance between the Americans and the ·people they suppoSedly were savilig.
·
"I. wanted to be a writer, I knew
that, but J. was so shocked by lbe
whole thing when I got there, the
alienness of it," said Wolff, who in
1967-68 served as an Arnly adviser
to a Vletnlllllese division in the
Mekong Delta.
The new book also includes stories about his life before and after
going overseas. Wolff describes an
unhappy love affair, the ·unwelcome emergence of his long-absent
father, confronting an anti-war
demonstrator on the campus of the
University of California at Berkeley.
In the chapter "Command I'J'esence ," Wolff remembers basic
training and how be convinced bis
peers that be was a born leader,
even as be looked upon hiniself as
a fraud. A year later, he was promoted to 1st J.i eutenant and
assigned to Fort Bragg in North·
Carolina. .

I.- ---------- I
I.
I

M~=ov=IAril=·s=ta=l======~~~~~~~~~~~~'

J\1!4
·
STRING CLASSES

s~ows that precede~ follow it ·
"Once you get those parameters
down, there are still on the order of
millions o( possible ways of doing
a lineup," Aronson says.
Market research , analysis and
gut instinct all play a part in the
shaping of a network's schedule.
What's lacking is scientific rigor,
researcbers say.
"We've developed a model that
can predict bow well a show will ·
do in a time slot based on several
factors,'' Aronson says. These
include show type. such as .drama.

win in AFC playoff·s

--

Computer models to improve television programming

1'• H kl \ J~ ·

•

their
latest
release
on
Pinecastlc/Webco Records. "Heanbreak.City", and lead vocalistJim
Stack was voted "Guitar Player of
.
the Year."
The Rarely Henl's latest single,
"Heartbreak City," is currently 14
on the National Bluegrass Survey,
the only nationwide chan tracking
bluegrass music and their entire
"Heartbreak City" CD Is 13 on the
National Top 15 Albums chan.
, The Rarely Herd will be appearing on the WVA Wheeling Jamboree at the Capitol Music Hall in
Wheeling, W.Va. 7 p.m. Jan. 28
Ticket information is available by
calling (304) 232-1170.

January 8, 1995

.

The many live·s of
Tobias Wolff

THE RARELY HERD

29~9

Section C

ning game, and Vinny Testaverde nine NFL teams to never reach the game opponents. They beat Miami 37-34 while resting several injured
reverted to Ills old fonn with costly Super Bowl; Cleveland is 0-8 in 16-13 in overtime on Nov . 20 in starters in their fmal regular-season
interceptions as Pittsburgh stormed . road playoff games since a 38-14 Pittsburgh and lost at San Diego game.
into the AFC title game by beating win at Dallas in 1969.
Foster, running better than be
the Browns 29-9 Saturday.
Tbe Steelers fed off Barry bas since his 1,690-yard season in
Foster's running, a towel-twirling 1992, rushed for 133 yards, allowcrowd an!) a defense that pressured ing a mistake-free Neil O'Donnell
· Testaverde - bun early by several to pick apan a frusb'ated, helmetdropped passes - into bad throws slamming Browns' defeftse that
and a safety for their first borne was the NFI..'s stingiest during the
·
playoff victory since 1979, the sea- season.
O'Donnell, tagged as the weak
son when they won the last of their
lin~ on a team loaded with Allfpur Super Bowls.
Pittsburgh, a one-game-and-out Pros, completed 16-of-23 passes
playoffs los.er under coacli Bill for 186 yards and touchdowns of
Cowher the laSt two seasi&gt;ns, will two yards .to Eric Green and nine to
play either the Dolphins or Browns-killer Yancey Thigpen,
Chargers in the AFC title game in bulb in a decisive 21-point second
Three Rivers Stadium on Jan. 15. quarter.
The Steelers last reached the conWhen the Steelers weren't keepfeh:nce finals I 0 years ago, losing ing the ball away from Cleveland
. with long, turnover-free drives,
to Dan Marino-led Miami.
Not only did the Steelers beat Testaverde - who bad eight interthe Browns three times in a season ceptions in the three games against
for the ftrst time in the Rust Belt Pittsburgh - was throwing it
rivalry's 45-year histOry. they did it away.
Testaverde, barely resembling
thoroughly and convincingly, bolting Ill a 17-0 first -half lead by scor- the quarterback who was so effiing on their first three possessions.
cient in beating the Patriots in the
L--,;_~-~----------------........1 . _ The two regular-season games wild-card playoffs, was 13-of-31
- were physical defensive duels for 144 yards. More importantly,
INTO THE CLEAR - After getting past Cleveland Uneback~rs decided mostly by the Browns' he lfad eighl interceptions in tbe
GOOD JOB!- Pittsburgh head coach Bill Cowher (left) congratPepper Johnson (51) and Mike Caldwell (56), Pl115hurgh running eight turnovers, but tbis was a three Steelers' losses - four of ulales offensive lineman Leon Searcy for his efforts In h~lping
back john L. Williams (ll) breaks Into the clear on his way to th~ Dawg pounding that contiriued them by Darren Perry.
Wllliams get his second-'!uarter touchdown run that helped the
~nd zone from U yards out during Saturday's AFC playoft' game In
Cleveland's growing playoff frusThe Steelcrs have played both of Steelers take a 17-0 l~ad at halftime. (AP)
Pittsburgh, where the Steelers won 19-9. (~P)
tration. ~ Browns
one of on Iy their potential AFC championship

By-ALAN R.OBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Tbe
road to the Super Bowl again runs

~AN FRANCISCO (AP) - Frank Sinatra's former lawyer couldn'
convmce an appeals court tD do it his JNay.
The court said Friday that Milton Rudin
couldn't prove he was harmed by being lisled as
a source fc:r Kitty Kelley's tell-aU biosraplly
about N~y Reagan.
.
Rudin, formerly Frank Sinaua's tonglime
lawyer, claimed his pmctice collapsed after
Kelley ciled him as one of 611 sources for the
)991 biography, whichallegeatl!atMrs.Reagan
had an affair With Sinatra while she was fU'St
lady.
. '
Sinatra has denied the affair, and PJ"esident
Reagan has said the book is riddled with inaccuracies.
· The decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit CoUrt
of ApPCals upheld a lower coun ruling that
Dexter King .
dismtssed Rlldin 's libel lawsuit.

By HILLEL ITALIE
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORIE' (AP) - When
Tobias Wolff decided he wailled to
become an author, he was a young
man ready for a fighl Society was
a great facade and words were
wrecking balls to smash itdown.
Since then, the 49-year-old
Wolff has written five books and
the demolition has been called off.
The world he once hated bas given
bim awards and 1:ommercial success. It also has given bim a wife
and three children, and a job teaching writing at Syracuse University.
•'When you start getting a stake
in the world Itself, things change,''
Wolff said during a reeent interview . "I'm not talking about having..money. I'm talking about seeing how the very structures you
automatically deplored all your
life, how ~Y also protect and nurture people."
What structures?
"The civilized understandin&amp;s
that go on betweeq people, the liberal tolerance I once despised· as
being insufficiently radical seems .
to me now the most hopeful thing
we have." · ·
If you only read such Wolff stories as •'Next Door" and "An
~isode in the Life of Professor
Brooke," you'd think be was never.
anything but the tolerant liberal. He
writes of marriage and campus life,
of genteel worlds" where "civilized
. understandings" are indeed considered Civilized.
But once he turns to the past,
whether in the story "The Liar" or
in the memoirs "This Boy's Life"
and · ~In Pharaoh's Army,'' his current book, he' s no longer so hannless . We see the teen-ager who
smashed windows and streetlights,
the Viemam vet who learned war
wasn'tlike a Hemingway novel.
1 "When you become a father,
you unconsciously don these robes
of rectitude and probity. You're the
authority and yoll always 'bad it

1itimeli- $entintt
•

Stealers halt Browns• season with

"'

'That was really tough for him," a spokeswoman said in the Jan. i3 issue FiUm11re Society. "He was the Gerald Ford of the 19th century."
of'Entertainment Weelcly. "He flew sttaightto Miami. He thought (the warmer
ThesocietygivesoutanawardformediocrityeachyeararoundFillmore'
weather) might cheer him up."
,!lirtbday. This year's winner was the canceled baseball season.

a

By Th~ Associated Press
Weekly charts for the nation's
best-selling recorded music a' they
appear in next week's issue of Bill·
board magazine. Reprinted with
permission. (Platinum signifie.s
more than I million copies sold;
Gold signifies more than 500,000
copies sold.):

iclc)5. "Secret," Madonna (Maver' •
6. ' 'The Sweetest Days,'c Vanes-

.

ports

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel /88

~446-1171

·Galllpoha.•

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c4-

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•

January

,In the NBA,

.Hawks beat Bullets 1-12-90
to give Wilkens 939th victory

AT LAST - \\'lib the Atl1111ta
Hawks' Ken Norman· holding up
a celebratory sign behind him,
Hawks head . e&gt;each . Lenny ·
Wilkens lights up a cl11ar In
honor of former Boslon Celtlcs
menlor Red Auerbach after the
Hawks beat the Washington Bullets 112-90 to help him break
Auerbach's victory record.
. WUkens Is now the aU-time NBA
win leader ainong coach~_(A.P) , ·

Ponteroy-'-Middleport-Gallipolis; OH-Point Pleasant, WV

In limited Ohio college cage action,

.

By Th~ Associated Press _
This season, il was Lenny
Wilkens' 1urn to pass Red Auerbach ..Wilb the way Dallas Mavericks are playing, maybe Dick Motta
migbtmoveupnextyear.
Wilkens became the winnihgest
coach in NBA history Frid;ly night
with his 9391b victory as the
Atlanta Hawks defeated Washing·
ton 112-90.
•'Tbe satisfaction is that only
one person can be No. 1· aJ the
·
· ·- ·

January a, 1995

a, 1995 :

lime," he said. :·u~Iy one guy can
be at lhe lOp. II s ruce to be lhere,
for however long. I got men;: and
noon~ can ~e that from me.
.
Wilkens •. m b1s 22nd seasonv !S
939-??3 w1th one N.BA cbampl·
onsbtp. Auerbach, 10 29 ye_ars,
w~m 938-479 and won mne lilies
w11h Boston.
.
.
. In the final nunutes .of lbe game
m Atlanta, Hawks ass1s1ant coach
D1ck Helm gave a big Cigar -Ule
kind Auerbach used 10 smoke after
v1ctor1es - to the non-smokmg
Wi!~~s.
.
I lit ·tbe c1gar up as a testament
to Red Aue~acb, who I tbi~ was •
one o.~ tb~ fmest coa~bes m the
NBA, Wilkens 5ald. As well as
J love Red, be never bad 10 coach
as mll!'y bad teams as 1 have." . ,
Wilkens, who also coached 10
Seattle, Cle.veland ~nd Portland,
got a standmg ovatton from the
crowd of 12,069 . Tbe ~m came
after the Hawks lost thra: in a.row
1ty10g for .lbe ~ecord·settmg VICtO·

·

.

.

~icnci""natistratc~y
us~~ . s~co~d-half
rally
to
defeat
OeP~ul
67-64
secon~

•

YRJs K GANO
for Cmcmnau coach Bob
. EMO_NT. lll .. (AP)- f!e Hu~l~s.
,
runs bts lOp e1gbt or nme players m
'It s what we ve done for a
and out. stressing defense and long time," heisaid Friday when
avoiding fatigue. That"s not a new the Bearcats rallied from 12 points
c ) ·
~
(Conunuedfrom . -2

behmd 10 lbe
half 10·beat don't play theDI, they &lt;lon' t get any
DePaul67·64, surv1vm~ a Blue beller. Wejusl Jry to play lbem,"
Demon mlly m lbe final nunuJes
H · · 'd
"The reason we have ~od
uggl0s.531 ·
.
depth is lbat we play them
you
Andlf you play ~or Huggms,
·
you play hard or you s1t. Or you get

·your ears blistered. That's whal
happenedFridaywbenlbeBearcals
· · ·
.
le 1•.~md by moe a1 the half.
I really goll!fter our guys at
half11me aboui our efforl · • Hug·
•

gins said. .
" We couldn't get guys in the
.
·
ngbt $potS. l .thought .lbcy JUSI man ..
handled us 10 lhe f1tst half, so I
(Se• HOOPS on C-4)

bum 29 for lbe Mavericks.
Magic 121, 'l'lmberwolves 99
The visiting Pacers were with- · Shaquille O'Neal scored 34
out coach Larry Brown. who points and Orlando remained the
would've been seeking his 500lb only onbeaten team at borne.
NBA win. Brown stayed in the
The Magic, 15-0 at Orlando
locker room wilb lbe flu and assis- Arena. lead thC league wilb a 25-6
tant Garfield Heard ran the ream.
. record. Anfemee Hllfdaway had 18

poinls for Orlando, wbicb began
Tbe Lakers won their fourth in a .
lbe fourth quarter ahead 87-80.
· row. At 19-9, they're off to lbeir
Minnesota w
as held below 100 best stan in five years.
points (or a team-record 13th
Eddie Jones scored 26 points for
straight lime. Isaiah Rider bad 32 the Lakers. Todd Day bad 29
points.
.
points for the Bucks and Glenn
Robinson had 22 points and I 0
TraU Blazers 95, Celtl9J 92
·
Clyde Drexler, wbo wants to rebounds.
leave Portland, made a three-point
Cedric Ceballos, the NBA 's
play with sixth-tenlhs of a second player of the monlb in December,
left to lift 'the Trail Blazers at missed lbe game because of back
Boston.
spasms.
·
Drexler finished with 35 points. ·
SuperSonics 108, Bulls 101
He's spoken this week about his
Detlef:. Scbrempf scored 23
desire the play somewhere other poinls, including a pair of three, .
· than Pottland.
pointers in the last 3:30, lifting
Dominique Wilkins and Eric Seattle over host Chicago.
Monltoss each scored 23 for the.
Shawn Kemp also had 23 poinrs
Cellics.
as the Sonics won for lbe 12th time
Lakers 106, Bucks 98
in 16 games.
• Nick Van Exel scored 11 of bil;
Toni Kukoc scored a career·
23 poims in the fourth quaner as · bigh 32 points for the Bulls, and
host Los Angeles beat Milwaukee.
Scottie Pippen had 18.

Hornets 119, Nets 88
Muggsy Bogues made a steal
and two free throws in the final
nlimile that helped Charlotte win at
New Jersey .
Knlcks 103, Cavaliers 93
John Starks scored all 23 of his
points in the second half as 'New
York won at Cleveland.

Slarks. held 10 2 poinJs in his
previous game, made four threepointers in the third quarter. He
scored 10 points in lbe fourth quat·
ter as the Knicks overcame a 74-12
dc:flcit.
Tyrone Hill bad 26 points and
Chris Millsa career-high 25 for the
Cavaliers . .

·NBA games..

While Wilkens was e~pected to
move past Auerbac" qmckly .this
season, .Motta an.d lhe M~vencb
have been a swpnse. Conung off a
league-worst 13·69 record, Pallas
is 14-14 after a 103-92 win over
Indiana.
.
The early success bas given ·
Motta a total of 870 victories,
third-highest-in NBA bislory. The
Mavericks have a betJCr record 50
far this season than Atlanta (13-:•
19).
.
.
:.:
In other games, 'Orlando beat·:
Minnesota 121·99, Portland toppeif :
Bos1on 95-92 Cbarloue edged ,
New Jersey 89:88, Seattle stopped::
Chicago 108,101, the Los Angeles,
Lakers .beat Milwaukee 1()6..98 and·
.New y otic defeated Cleveland 103-·
93.
·
·
Mavericks tOJ., Pacers 9Z
Jason Kidd had 15 points, 10
assists, eight rebounds and four
steals for Dallas. Jim Jackson
scored 30 points and Jamal Mash· .
(See NBA on C·ll

J

.

~·· L

Iwn

, Lowellville 56 , Berlin Center Weslera
Rtservc SO '
,
Madison 64, Ashtabula Harbor SO
Maple Hli. S1. Mayfield l4
Muaillon Jacks on 53, Canton
GlenOali 36
Maumee SO, RoSIIford :W
McCorrD 73, VaDiue 40
Medina First Bapt. 71, Willa-Hill pu-.
60
MeDlor 78, Warrensville 69
Mineral Ridse 55, s. Range 41
Mo&amp;adore Field 66, Mogadore 44
N, Ballimore 82, Bettnille 58
N. Oln.ted 68, Olmsted Falls·S3
N. Royaltoa 48,Mh*'arll42

I

NBA staridings

.

Great Mld.west Conference
Cincinnati 67, DeP.Jul64

All-de Dhklen

!ill

l! L &amp;1.

II.&amp;

Orlaodo .................. 2S
NewYorlr: .............. l7

6 .806
12 .S86

801tOD ........ : ........... J2

18

,400

New Jeney ............1'3 21
MhurU ....................10 19

.382
.345

Phllldclphia ........... IO 20
Wllhington ..............7 22

.333
.241

~~•traiiMvblon

North Coast Athletic Olaf.
Earlham· lOS, C•e Western 81

7
12.5
13.5
14
14.5
17

Wittenberg 63. AlleJheny S8

Tournaments
Cl•lon Cl•sk
Flr.t I"OUIId
, S. Cunn«:lit~ 81, Cenlnl1 St. 66

.

CLEVELAND ....... 20

10

.667

IDdlaoa ................... IB

II

.6,1 ... l.l

Ohio women's
college.scQre§

~~---··"''-'--\'=.:1LJ1 .§0()
2 .
Chlcqo ............ ...... l6 · 14 ·' .S~3 ~
Allanta .... ............... l3 19 .406

MilwauUe ............. tO

20

Detroit... ............ :...... 9 19
.

I

.333·

10

.321

10

· Witte'aberg 64, Allelheay 54

----

WESTERN CONFERENCE
II.&amp;

Mklwat Dt•lJion

l! L &amp;1.

.

Houslon ................. 20

9 .690

Ohio.U.S. boys' scores

1ill
-

Ulah .....,.......: ......... 20

10

.667

. .S

Son An!Ooio ........... l7
Deovet ............. ...... IS
Dallas ............... ..... .l4

10

.630

2

14

.517 ·

14

.500

5 .~

Minnesota ................ 6

23

.207

14

S

· P•lRc: Wvl•lon
7 .767

Ptlotnil ..... :............23
Seattle ............. .'...... 21
L.A:.Law. ., .......... l9
Sacramento ........ ... 16

9
9
13

.700
.679

Portlaod .... .... ... ...... U
Golden Stale .. ,....... IO

14
19

L.A. Cllppen .......... .5

2l

.517
.345
.161

.5~2

2

. ~
6.5
7.S
12.5
18

Friday's s~res
Portland 95, Boaton 92
Olarlolle 89, New Jersey 88 ·
Orlando 121 . Minnesota 99
Allanla 112, Washington 90
New York 103, CLEVELAND 93
Seattle 101, Olicago·JOJ
Dallas 103, Indiana 92
LA. Laker\ 106, Milwaukee 98

They played Saturday
Portland at Wuhingkln, 7:30p.m.
aoMon at Charlolte, 7:30p.m.
New krley at A,tlaDI:a, 7:30 r._,m.
Olicaao at CLEVELAND. 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Houston, 8:30p.m.
Photnil a.t Denver. 9 p.m.
PhBade.lphia at Utah. 9 p.m.
Sau Antonio al LA. Clippers. 1,0:30
p.m.
Miami at Sacramenlo, I 0:30 p.m.

Tonight's games

Minnesota at New Ytl"k, 6 p ~rn.
Orland~ a1. Detroit, 7 p.m.
Mi1waukee.at Denver, 9 r.m.
Millmi at L.A. l.nkers, 9:30 r.m.

Monday's games
Washmgeon al Bmtun, 7:}0 p.m
Dallas at Utah. 9 p.m.
•
Milwaukee at Phoen11, 9 p.m.
LA. Lak~!rs at PM\aml, 10 p.m.

Ma.ior men's
college scores
East
Oanrttouth 64, Princeton 56
New Hampshire 99, Hof&amp;ua 84
Penn 90, Harvard 63

.

South
Eait C_arolina tiO, E. Tefincuee St. 76

Midwest
CINONN AT! 67. DePaul 64
Drake 85, Housl nn M ,

Southwest
· Oral Rober1s 7S, N. ,.Vizona SS

Farw..t
. Weber St. 101 , BYU·Hawaii 66

Tournamenb
Aii...C.ollett Town1mmt
Flr.l rOWid

Ok.lahoma 97 , Alabama St. 68
Tulsa 107, Texu Ouisti3JI95

.-

Akron Buchtel 72, Ation E. .59
Akron Ellet 67, Akron Ce~~t.~Hower .59
, Akron F"lteatone S7. Mroo N. ·sl
Akron Garfield 84, Akron Kenmore 511
Arnhenl 66, Avon late 55
~bold 61, BryaD 52
ArUDi\!!o U, AI'&lt;JI!!io 48 .
Aihland 79, Lexington 76
Ashtabula 56. Geneva S3
Ashtabula EdeewOOd 56, Ashtabula St. ·
John 54
_
Aurpra 84, Cuvahoaa Htl . 69 .
Bay ViUaae 7S, Fairview 64
Beavercreek 8S, Fairborn 47
Bellaire '7, Martini Ferry Sl
Bloom Carroll 57, Canal Winchester;
47
'
Sowlinl Greeu 60, Holland Spring. 44
Brookfield IS, Youna:. Liberty 58
Bru1111wick: 59, Berea 53
Caldwell 50, Shenandoah 48
Canfield 69, Poland 4~
Carey 63, F01toria St: Wendclin 52
Oiagrin Falla S~. Chardon 37
.
Cin. N. College Hill 73. Cin. St.
Bernard 52
·
Circleville 69, Teays V81J. 58
ae. Benedictine 93, Lorain Cath. 50
Cle. Catholic 73, Ouudon ND-CL 63
Cle. Glenville 112, Indian Riyer 82
Cle. Heiahll 82, Parma Normandy 26
Cle.· Lutheran W. 71, Brooklyn 46
Clyde 58, Milan Edison 55
Col. BeecJlcroft 71, Col. Centennial 64
Col . Brookhaven 56, Col. Linden·
McKinley 311
·.·col. DeSalea 64. Col. Ready 44
Col. HartJey 56. Newark Calh. 47
Col. Independence 76, Col. MarionFranklin 51
Col. Mimin 70, Col. Northland 53
Col. South 15, COl. 'Easuooor 66
~ Col. Wes~ 68, Col. Brigi's 51
Col. Wes~land 69, .0\lblin 5J
Col. Whetstone 62. Col. East 58
Colurftlia 58. Independence 55
Columbiana 100, Leelonia73
Conneaut 47. Painesville Riven ide 44
Danbury' lakeside 68, Tol . Christian
39.
Qeiaware 82. Whitehall76
Delta 79, Evergreen 44
E. Pale&amp;tine 51, Sebring 47
Easllake N. 68, Bedford 63
Elmwood 69,1Ca.ruu Lakot.a S7
Elyrl116l, V.ermilion Sl (QT)' ·
Elyria Midview S4, Lorain Adm. King :o

4i

r=

FairlDnd 53, Che.aapuk:e 50
FairmQJll t:i4. Centerville 57
Fi irvi!!W 69, Hkbville 31
Franklin Hti. 87.. ReyllQidiJbura76
- Garfield Uta. Trinily 79, Elyria Clllh~

68

Grand River 70, Oe. l..uthera"n E. 62
He nriet~ Firelands 72, Wellington 61
Hilliard 80, Worthingt on Kilbourne 62
Jrontun 80, Rum:ll, Ky. 51
lackton -Milton 6l, .VIenna Mathews
S9
.
.
Kent ROosevelt 60, CUyahoaa Fall5 56
Lak:cvirw 80, Ba~ger . 38
; 'LaU~ood 611, Shaker Hts. 60
.
Lakewood St. Edw.-d 62, Qe. St. Jgnatiu&amp; 54
Liberty. Benton 81, Leipsic 6}
Liberty Center 62, Sw:mlon 60
' Lincoln't'jew 76, Convoy Creatyiew 56
London 95, W. .lt:fftnnn n
Lorain Clearvie"! 55, El)Tia W. 54
Lorain Keystone 63, Lorain Brookside
62 (0'1)
U:nin Souttwlew 60, N. Ridgeville S3
Looi&amp;towD 57, Bloomfield 47
Lovel:lhd. S.S, Cin. Readina 4S

1

Warrea auunpion 71, Hubbard 44
WarreD llardinJ 72, Auatlntbw~t-Fitct\
WaUieon 90, Montpeli«61

W..u.t.SI, Rocky River«

Newton Falla 59, LaBrae 56
Nilea 521 Struthm.SI
Nonlonla 68, .Euclid 63
Nonhwoodfi9. WOodmore 49
Oall Ha$tr 88, Marg.-etta 70
Oberlia 13, Avon 57
Qrcaon Clar 17, Bedford, Mich. 76
nt.eso 13. E..twood ,10 (OTI

ottaw.Olandod61,.Defiant:e -U -...,......-- -

•

Painenllle Harvey 84, JeCCt:non 57
Pandora-Gilb,oa 64, Van Bureri 49
Parma 88, E. Cleveland Shaw 76
Parma Holy Name 62, Mebtor Lake
Cilth. 55
'
Parma Padua 69, Bedrord Cha11el 64

(0'1)

.

B~au

Utrleul.eai•
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Claimed
Tim fort\IIDO• pitcher, orr walven rtom
the QnciDDali Redl.

.
.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS: Siloed
Paul Farits, Tim Iones aod Jim Bowie, Ia·
rieldera; Andy Tomberlin and ·scott
Bryant, outfielders; Mille MakludiaD,
catcheri aod-Rop- Smithbera. pitcher, to
· -minor-league cootncts.

.

Perrysbura: 68. Millbury Lake 54
Richmond Hts. 66, Beachwood 49
!tootstown !JT, Waterloo ~ _
Salem 56, Howland 54
SaiH).u;ky 6:2, Lorain 56
Sandwlly PCrkina78, Port Cl!nlon 12
Sandusky St. Mary 64, Hlb'on ·SI
"
Shadyside 69, Bridgeport 54
• Solon 61, Kensloo61
Southington Chalker 66, Maplewood
60 lOTi
.
Spriq. Local 5.5, McDoaald 50
St. Marys n, Urna.BaUi~
Sleubenvllle 48; Stalbenville Catb. 46
Sylvani• Northview 42, To!. Whitmer

u)s ANGELES DODGERS: Named
Mic~y Hatc:her Coach of Grut Fallt of
tbe Pioneer League. ·

.

·

FootbaU

National Footb.UI..niu
CAROLINA PANTHERS: Sianed
Mlll.t BIUott and Bmenoa Martin. ofCeu-·
sive Jloomea.
OREI!N BAY PACKERS: Pla&lt;:od Ray
. Wuaon, aafety, on injured raerve. Acti·
' vated Bernard Carter,1inebtcker, &amp;om the

Sylvania Southview SS, Anthony
Wayne 48 .
Thomu WortltillJ(oo
Orovepolt 49
Tol. Eriuuel Bapc. 80, Maumee Vall.
Sl
To!. Scott 64, Tol. Catholic 62

~•quod.

so.

.

.

!AoKsONVILLE !AOUARS: Si1ned

Rich Grlffitlt. tlaht ead: Ray Hall, derea·
slvo .tattle: and Willie Hanls, wide re-

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AMIFM, c~ttl Int...........................;,, •• ;••..•••.••••••.• ~ ..... $3995

1993 CHEVY LUMINAAPV, 14n5, white, air,
auto., AM/FM cass., tilt, cruise, p. windows ...... $10,890
1992 DODGE CARAVAN, 14n8, 7 pa188nger, tilt,
cruise, air, auto, AM/FM, p. equlpment...................$9520
1992 PLYMPUTH VOYAGER VAN, 114734, air,
automatic, AM/FM, eloth Interior, cruln ................ $9420 ·
1990 TOYOTA TRUCK, 114727, AM/FM cassene,
1lr, IQOI box, rear humper.................................,..... $699!j ·
1992 DODGE DAKOTA TRUCK, 114n2, white,
AM/FM casseHe, tonneau cover, aport wheela .....$71175
1991 CHEVY S-10, 114764, 2tone paint; AM/FM
caueHe, rear slider, cloth Interior ......................... $6995
1991 FORD RANGER, 114739, brown,
rear ~tep bumper, AM/FM ~aHatte, new tlrea ....... $5495
1992 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 114780, blue, .
au·to., air, AM/FM casseHe, tilt, cloth Interior ......... $5665
1990 MAZDA PROTEGE, 14755, 4 door, AM/FM .
call&amp;e,He,l:loth Interior, rear defroster ................... $5764
1989 PONTIAC SUNBIRD.LE, 14781,2 door,
r'!l, AM/FM, cloth interlor........................................$3995
1989 CHEVY CORSICA, 114m, air,
autom111lc, AM/FM, cloth Interior .... .'....................... $4995
1993 DODGE SHADOW,I4754, white, 2 door,
automatic, AM/FM, aport wheale, cloth Interior .••. $7924
1992 DODGE DYN~STY, 14693, white, air,
.
'lutomatle, air bag, tilt, curlsa, cloth Interior ......... $7995
1992 OLDS CIERA, 14n3, AM/FM CB188tle,
crul.., automaUc, air, rear defroater ............... $7874
19113 FORD TAURUS GL, 114837, air, autOmatic, .
AM/FM, lilt, air bag, power wlndowa .................. $10,595
1993 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, 114n&amp;, black, .
air, auto., AM/FM, V6,tllt, cru11e, p. wlndows .... $10,170
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air, AM/FM, tilt, r;rulH, p. wlndowa, air bag ........... $8495
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pawter, air, auto., AM/FM , p. Hits, tilt, cruise •.. $11,985
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.e.u,IFII. tilt, rear defroster ..... :................................. $8980
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air, AM/FM caalatte, tilt, V&amp;, power locks ........•.•••• $8630.·
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:U Of

Jaclcson .................. 3 I 168 134 .
. Marietta ................. J · I 246 i68
Albens c.. ................2 I 118 104
GALLIPOLIS ...... .I 2 105 145
RIVER VALLEY .0 3 103 164
Logan ....................0 4 133 185
TOTALS
. l2 1210091009

2 659 569
2 538 534
2 422 405
3 655 563
· 3' 547 434
2 466 .399
2 414 391
Friday's results
3 484 462 Albens at GAlliPOLIS, reset Jan.
4 609 497 31
I
4 612 582 Warren Local at JackSon, reset Jan.
4 553 517 17
4·. 526 538 RIVER VALLEY at Logan, reset
5 470 495 Jan. 28
5 375 . 432 Fairland 53, Chesapeake 50
1!.. 5!5 ~~ . NPrtl!westa! Wheelersburg, pp .
.
3 262 279 Belpre at Vinlnn County, reset Feb.
.
4 298 373 14
Portsmoulb .al Huntington High, pp
(SEOAL.v~rsity) •
Eastern at Southern, reset SaJurday
..~AW .. ~ .
_lY.__ L _Il . Qt &amp;urge._ Washington .aL- Point
~~~~~····............... .4 . 0 295 245 Pleasant, pp, reset Jan, 28
Local ........ ~ .I 163 162 Meigs at Wahama, pp
Marieua ................. 2 2 269 217 Soulb Point at Buffalo-Wayne, pp
GALLIPOLIS ....... 1 2 133 165
· RIVERVAILEY .l 2 190 225
They played Saturday
Albens ................... ( 2 ·193 226 Portsmouth at GALLIPOLIS
Jackson .................. I 3 264 267 Vinton County at JaciCsun-...
TOTALS
12 121507 1507 Parkersburg South at Manella..
. BLOCKS PASS- New York forward Charles Smith (54) finds
Waverly at Greenfield
•his pass blocked by Cleveland guard Bobby Phills in the third quar(SEOAL reserves)
Lancaster al Athens
ter or Friday night's NBA game In .Cleveland, where the Knlcks ·
w L I l Of Nelsonville· York at Logan, pp .
' Warren Local... .... .3 0 136 109 Huntington Vinson at Soulb Poinl
·e,rased a 10-polnt deracit lo beat the Cavaliers 103-93. (AP)

Victory Cu. 12. Sbon&gt;u (Pa.) Cit. 39
W. Geawp S6, Wickliffe 46
Walaut Ridae Sl, Lucuter Sl

(2 OT)

Big Ten

o.u.

OHIO STATE: Announced Korev

Logan .................... 7
Fairland .................6
· Warren Local ........
Greenfield .............7
· Cbesapealce ...........6
Wheelersburg ........4
Athens ...................4
Point Pleasant... .... 5
Marietta ................ .5
Ponsmoulh ...........5
Soulbem ................4
RIVER VALLEY .4
Meigs .................... 2
. GALLIPOLIS .......2
!_ackson ............... ~.z
South Point.. ......... 1
Vinton County ..... .1

Van Wat74, Elidl61

Napoleon 75, Fostoria 45

Indiana 61:1, Ohio Sl. 5!1

.North C011st Albletle Con(. ,
Earlham sa. c.e Wmem ss

Tol. St. Fnru:la 88. Tol. Bows....'11
Tol. St. iohu'o 12. Tot. Woodwanl42
Tol. SlJil 57. Canllul Slrilob S6
Twltub14:a 91, Oraoae .,
UPP!, Arlinl(oa 61. Omve.Q!~ .,..V\IIey Forae ... Oatneid 1111. 39

Ready For Winter?

----Cage standings---~
1994-95-all gimes

Ohio men's
college scores

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C3

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Cant()n

Former NCAA director embraces idea he once opposed
By DOUG TUCKER
KANSAS CITY, Mo ..( AP) For some of !he NCAA' s harshest
critics, an old enemy ha_' become a
powerful and Wlexpccted ally.
Walter Byers, th e principal
architect of !he NCAA s ystem of
a ljllateurism, says the time has
come to compensate college a!b letes _wilh more !ban mere scholarships.

" Amate uri sm is a nostalg ic
term apphed as an economic prin·
ciplc to control !be marketplace for
!be coll eges." Byers told The
Associated Press Q11 Wednesday.
" ! proposed changes before I left, I
argued lbe point unsuccessfully in
the NCAA." .
Byers retired in 1,987 after 36
years as the NCAA '·s executive
dire.clor. From !he early 19.50s until

!be mid-1'180s, wbCn college presidents 'began asserting control, no
other individual had greater influ ence in college sports. He admitled
that he spent almo st his entire
career fighting the id e a be now
espouses.
"I be lieve the a!bletes should
have !he same access to !be commercial marketplace !hat !he SUJlCk
visors and overseers a s we ll las
olber students have," he said. " In
light of the hypercommercializalion of today' s college a!bletics ,
dramatic changes are necessary to
permit' a!bleles to participate in !he
enormous proceeds." .
_Byers, who shocked hi s Conner

NCAA colleagues last summer by
criticizing !he system in remarks at
an awards banquet, is .writing a
book titled " Unsportsmanlike Condu el - Exploiting College A!bletes."
The book is being published by
!he University of Michigan press
and " tells how !be system is, how
it got !hal way and bow it can he
improved," Byers said.
S6udcnt-alhlete welfare is a simmering iss ue, for colleges, which
will wrestle wi!b other problems,
including academic standards, a!
!be annual NCAA convention !hal
starts Sunday .and ends Jan . II.
Outright compensation for alhleles

Rules for replacement
baseball players set
to be written this week
Dec. 14.
By RONALD BUJM
Harrington said !be commiuee
NEW YORK (AP) - Rules for
will
continue its telephone confer. replacement players probably will
ence
calls next week. Harrington is
he wriuen by !he end of Ibis week. ·
scheduled
to be in Washington next
Boston Red Sox chief execuu"ve
week
to
lobby
congressmen and
officer Jobn Harrington said Friday
senators
to
keep
baseball's antitrust
!bat his operations commiuee was
exemption
.
He
will
be joined by
discussing issues such as trading
acting
commissioner
Bud Selig,
replacements, assigning lbem _!o !be
Colorado
Rockies
chairman
Jerry
minors and whether they would
McMorris
and
perhaps
Chic.ago
count ,_loward a team's RaYrllll
White Sox chaitman Jerry Reinsunder lbe'. salary cap.
"All of !hose items are under dorf. New York Mets presidem
discussion," he said Friday from Fred Wilpon and lbe league presihis Boston office. "I'm leaving it dents .
"It's like starting up a new
lo the general managers and the
lawyers to pull togelher
scheme league . It's a complicated proconceptually. Hopefully ir will be cess," Harrington said of the
in a week from now fairly cryslal- replacemenl rules . "We have 28
lized.
clubs wailing 10 he given guidance
In Chicago, 86 players met with on issues such as compensation.
union head Donald Fchr on !be ftrsl Bul hopefully we will get il l&lt;f !be
stop of his seven-city tour to update executive council atlhe end of next
players. They said replacements week and il will. be approved and
players wouldn't succeed. .
.
disseminaled to !be clubs."
"No one wants to watch minor
Harri~ngton said hi didn't ·
"league baseball in a major league believe Ute plan would be presentstadium," American League MVP ed to all clubs for a vote, but
l'rank Thomas said. "That's no! instead ·would he sent to !be ruling
going !0_work . They kriow i!' s not . ~xcculive ~quncil . Baltimore Ori '
going to work,"
_
. ~ ales uwner Peter Angelos says his
- Fehr also said the boycou team won'tuse replacements: ·against signing contrac ts will
Harrington also said the group
remain in effect.atleas!lhrough !he didn't know how rosters. would be
· eqd of his tour on Jan. 16. Some . stocked.
wan! itlo continue indefinitely.
"S orne may be people in our
"We aren't going to play under own minor league organizations."
!he system !hal, was implcmepted . he said._"It !!laY be half from withand !hat's been clearly document- in a club, half from outside.
ed," said pitcher Jack McDowell, There's no way of projecting.·l!'s .
dealt to the New York Yankees aU so new.
'
from the Chicago White Sox. on

Ohio college hoops:.. (ContiimeplromC-3)

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Ohio State forward Otis Winston
dislocated· his right shoulder in
practice Friday, sports information
director Steve Snapp said. .
The 6-5 junior from Toronto.
Ohi o, suffered the injury as he
went up for a layup. He had been a
starter through !be ftrl t 10 games.
Snapp said Winston is out indefinitely.
· ' Where it hurls us !be most is
on defense," coach Randy Ayers
told The Columbus Dispatch .
' 'Otis was really starting to understand hi s role as a perimeter
defender for us.' '
Ohio State · will play George
Mason luday.
·

SENIOR FEMALE WINNERS- These girls led.lhe
old division in ·the annual Gallipolis Ellis Lodge No. 107 "Hoop
Shoal," held on Dec. 11, 1994 at Gallia Academy High School. From
tert to right are Jessica Donnelly of Green Elementary (first),
MacKenzie Greene of Washington Elementary (seoond) and Amber
Vining of Bradbun Elementary (third).

{614) 992-2148

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New Honda trade from Fa1 rmont Honda
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1987 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE

THE TOP THREE ..;:.. These girls wer~ the best of thoSe In the 10·
..... H ·year•old-dlvlsion ·in--the annual Gallipolis -Elks Lodge No.-- 107
"Hoop Shoal," held on ~c. 11, 1994 at GaUia Academy High School.
From kll
dght are Tiff!!llie..Hl!gu
Bi!IJ•ell-l'!!rter Eleme!!_ta~y
' (fttst) Caroline Althof of Washington Elementary (second) an Julia
Mollohan of Kyger ~reek Middle School (third).
•

m

ru

. 1 EADING TRIO- These boys were the best of those the 10-11
yea;·old division In lhe ann~al Gallipolis" Elks Lodge No. 107 •'lloop
Shoot,"· )&gt;eld o!! Dec.-11, 1994 at Gallia Academy High School. From
(eft lo r!ght are ,Andr~ender"?sc~of ~as~ln~loll_ Elementar:
(first), Brian Bickle ofR1o Grande Elementary (SeCond) and J.P. Har
mon of Syracu&lt;e Elementary .(third).

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TAYLOR MOTORS HAS
THE DOT ONES%

'

(Continued from C-4)
Gra f ... _..:.:::::::::::.:=:..:...::---,----::---:-::-:-:--

Graf said of !be time when she was found- a way 10 fix it, I feel very
hampered by !be pain. ''I'm back good."
.
on !be court now and ... obviqusly
"She's been practicing twice a
it's been very frustrating. I was · day very hard," !Jer agen~ Phil de
happy my back has been going Picciollo, said. "The reason she
very well . I got riil of my baclt · pulled- a-muscle was because lfcr
·
back w.as so good."
pam.
"Then Ibis . I! happened during
"! had to take off for nine days
practice while I was running for a· until the pain in !be leg well! away
shot.! do a Jot of stretching. Maybe totally," Graf said.
·
·
1tried to do a lin!e )QO much."
.
The _j(cyword is !Qil!lly.
Sincc she ·won 'Ibe dcfc'nding
Graf thinks she rusllcd back ·to.•
her rille at Melbourne, it meaps soon IlL~! year, returning before her
1995 wlll be' the first time since back was. complctely healed . In
1987 when she won't be a reigning 1993, a foot injury bmhcred her if
Gt"dlld Slam tournament champion. not her game .
She won her first major title in
Graf ha' played only two match19!l7, capturing !he French Open. . ...cs since .the U:S ..Open, .both at !be
Admil!ing she was " a lillie year-endong Vtrgmoa Sltrns Chan•sc.;..cd" by her severe :uui constant pionships in New Yorkjn Novcm. back pain. she said, "Now !hat I her.

SJS . .·

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WINTER
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YOUNGEST M~~E ..YINNERS- Thes~ ~ys cal!'e out on lop in
the 8-9 year-old diVL.,on m the annual Galhpoll'l Elk.i; Lodge No. 107
"Hoop Shoot,': . held on Dec. 11, 1994 at GaU.ia Academy H!gh .School.
From lert to r1ght are Donnie Johnson of B1dwell-Portrr Elementary
(first), ,James Eakins of Portland Elementary (second) and Kyle Burnett or Washington Elementary (third).

liunting~

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DON TATE MOTORS. Inc.
Gea ·1994-YEAR END
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~~ · Continues ·

(!)
J

94 CHEVY
.CORSICA

94 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

$8999 =$189 ~·~nih s9999 =$212 per
Oown

Good Sel1ctlo~ 0.1. . •·
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Chester

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93 FORD F150 4X4 P/U ...................... '15,490
90 GMC 1/2 TON PIU .....................:........ '9999
MAZDA MIATA Convertible .............. 112,995

90 FORD F150 4X4 P/U ...... :.............. '1 0,995
91 GMC SONOMA ............. ,.................... '5995
88 CADILLAC SEVILLE ......................... 17995
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88 MERCEDES 190E •. .......................

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JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
Any vehicle purchased ~traigtot Ol!t (without trade) a1the
already low sale price during the month of January,
Goodwin's will include the sales tax, all title fees, and
lemporary tag (if desired).

JUNIOR FEMALE WINNERS - . These girls were the best of
those in the 8-9 year-old division In the annual GaiUpolls Elks Lodge
No. 107 "Hoop Shoot," held on Dec. 11, 1994 at Gallla Academy .
·High School. From (ert lo right are Candace Sommer of Washington
Elementary (first), Kendra Rime of Beale Elementary,I'Ond) and
Jessica Curfman of Salem Center Elementary. ·
·
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"I haven'! been able to practice
hard for !he last four-five months."
(See GRAF on C-5)

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Located bewteen the Beacon Station ·
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1988 FORD TAURUS LX

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New Ford lrade from Pa.

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19871SUZU I-MARK

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE .

DEUVER.ED AND SPREAD!
•Mason '
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•Driveway
•Drainage Gravel
Mat
•Pea Gravel ·
•Orainage Tile
•Culvert Tile (all sizes up·to 5')
•Block and Mortar 'Mix

ELDEST MALE WIN NEilS- These boys led the 12-13 year-old
division in the annual Galllpoli.&lt; Elks Lodge No. 107 "Hoop Shoal,"
held m1 Dec. 11, 1994 al Gallia ,Academy High School. From left lo
right are Gallia Academy seventh-graders Jeremy Payton (first) ~nd
Cody Lane (second), who stand 'lo the left of Ohio Valley Cl)roshan
seventh-grader Donovan Ashworth.
·

'.

Only 63,000 actual miles
New Chevy trade from Pa.

a

State's
. injures
right shoulder

AUTO

J

CAUME. -

__, .

GOODVVIN'S

grows,

Latest injury forces Graf
to skip Australian Open

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - Steffi
. challenged !bern to come out in lh" · · final 20 minutes.
Graf won' 1 be defending her Aussecond half. This is !be most laid
"Fatigue is noi what cost us !be !raliail Open tide Ibis monlb.
back, unemotional group I've been glliJle. We didn't execute. That's
The world's top-ranked woman
around. II lakes more to get them wby we lost," Kleinschmidt said.
tennis player has pulled out of !he
going."
Trailing 45-33 early in '!be sec- year's first Grund Slam tournament
Cincinnati allowed DePaul to ond half, Cincinnati wen! ori a 23-4 , because of a strained calf muscle in
shoot 55% in the first half but only run - featuring separate bursts of ·. her right leg, !be latest in a series of
30% in the sccorid. And the 13 -0 and 8-0 - to overtake the injuries !bat have plagued her.
Bcarca!s, who made only 39% of Blue Demons.
In October 1993, she had foOl
!heir lirst-halr ancmpts, were good
Down seven with 2:40 left, surgery 10 remove bone chips. 'That
. on 56% in the second.
·
DePaul made a fmal run as Cole was immediately followed by
'' We were so much bener scored six straight points after !be severe back pain lba! forced her to
defensively in the second. We Blue Demons forced a steal and a pull out of several tournaments in
played the first half defensively shot-cluck violation. lba! made il !he last half of 1994.
like our lirstl3 games. Tonight we 61-60 with 1:181eft
' 'I'm very disappointed about
played · like we're capable of
The Blue Demons had a chance not going to !be Australian Open,"
defending . We rebounded a lillie to tie with 50.8 seconds left but Graf said in a telephone conference
b11 heller in !be second hruf," .HugKleinschrnid! missed !he second of call Friday. "It' s no! the way 1
gins said.
.
two free throws. leaving the wanled to slart 1995."
"··Pa_
u
l
coach
_
Joey
Meyer
saw
a
B
D espilc the
· almost constani
'-"'
earcats up by one.
ditlerence in his team, too. ·
El~wbere in Ohio col_lege bas- pain, Graf won !be Australi® O!len
_ "Tho diffcr~ ncc in the game kmball-Fr~1day- mghl;-Wincnbcrg last year, her only Grand Slam
wa s that we didn't execute our defealedAllegheny63 -58 and Earl- roumamentlr\umph in 1994. And,
halfcourt offense going in !he sec- ham wh1pped Case Western 105-81 while playing with a back brace,
o nd half and we couldn' I keep m Nor!b c;::oasl Conference acuon. · she reached !he final of !h&lt;:, U.S.
them offlhe boards," Meyer said.
Oberlin was scheduled at Denison Open, where she lost to Spain's
··we were tired . You have to . and Ohio Wesleyan was to host Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
execute down !he stretch and we Wooster in olher NCAC games, but
She los!'!O Mary -Pierce in !be
tired out a llttie bil'. They -did. a bet- both wen; postponed because of !be l'rench Open semifinals and was
tcr jotlflf guarding us.''
-,vea!ber '!fid rescheduled to Mon - upset in tlle opening round at WimDarncll Burton scored four of day.
bleuon by Lori McNeil.
. hi s 15 points in !he final 28 secCentral State lost 81-66 to
Graf. 25. said a trcaunent proomls '" the Bcarcats held off a late . Southern Connecticut in the first gram of massage, spinal manipulaDcPaul rally .
round of a tournament at Clarwn, tion and stretching has cur~d her
Art Long had 12 points and 17 Pa.
back pain .
rebounds for llfc' Bearcats· (9-5) in
the ·Greal Midwest Conference
opener for both teams. Cincinnati
has beaten DePaul seven straight
times.
· Brandon Cole led DePaul (6-3)
with 19 points and Tom Klein schmidt had 16 for the . Blue
Demons, who had live-game winning weak snapped. Kleinschmidt.
!be Blue Demons' leading scorer,
managed only four points in !be

______

have to happen soon.'' St:hcrvi sh

added .

.,....:..:.;;;;;.~;;;;;.,;,;;;,;;;~__;;,;,._

"As your family

7 _

-

the team could fold or move unless
it gets more support from fans and
corporate sponsor,; .
'' I wo ~Jd loxc to have a buyer
cvme to me." said Schcrvish, who
ow ns !be team wi th Steve Zoumhcraki,, wh o a lsli has sa id he
wa ul.~ be willing to sell.
'
" I wuu ld hate 10 fo l~ the team.
Du t some thin g dram atic i:-. ~oi n g to

1987 DODGE ARIES

It

SPLITS SEAM ,- Cincinnati's Darnell Burton shoots between
DePaul's Will Macon and Peter Patton In the first half of Friday
night's Great Midwest ga_me in Rosemont, Ill., where the Be11rcats
won ti7. 64. (AP)
·

·

CAN TON , O hio (AP)
Investors from !he Columbus area
are interested in buying pro socce r's Ca nton In vade rs, and !h ~
team' s owners say !bey arc willing
to se ll , The Repository report ed
Saturday.
The investors had not contaCted
Tom Scbervisb, a part-owner who
said on Friday he was ready to se ll
!be Invaders of !be Nati onal Professional Soccer League.
Team officials said Dec . 24 tb at

remains far from the official agen- 10 remain commilled 10 an outrnod·
da, ·al!bough Cedric Dempsey, !be ed code of amateurism for eoonomc
.
current NCAA executive director, ic contrOls."
B
yets
said
he
realized
!be
syssaid there is increased sympathy
among scbools to do more for a!h- tem needed overhauling before he
·retired . but his e(forts went
leles.
"There is a difference between nowhere even !bough he made his
what you can receive (in scholar- views public.
"In !he. l980s. I proposed to the
ship aid) and the cost of !b~ educa·
two
key policy boards of the
tio.nal experience, which varies
NCAA
on lwo different occasions
from school to school," Dempsey
!bat
we
should change !be way we
said . "All of us arc interested in
were
doing
tllings. The ideas were
trying to bridge !bat gap.
not
accepled.''
he said.
" I do not see any sympatlly to
"ilut
when
you
say the wnaleur
move away from !be basic principrinciples
of
1956
should control
ple of amateurtsm ... lbat panicipa!be
commercial
realities
of t995, it
tion should be motivaled primarily
is
an
illogical
and
defenseless
posiby education and tht: physical,
tion.' '
mental and social benefils fhat
NCAA officials argue !bat albderive from alhtetics.'' ·
letcs already are sharing. in the
Pay-for-play advocates include
n:wards. Besides a free education,
LSU basketball coach Dale Brown,
!hey point to such lhings as travel
who has been quoled as saying !he
and per diem for non-revenue athsystem is particularly unfair to
letes and grants to help albletes
youngsters from disadvantaged
meet emergency costs for every backgrounds.
thing from winter clplhing to funerDick DeVenzio, a fotmer Duke
al eXpenses.
basketball player, is trying lo orga"That's only elaborate moneynize coUege alblc!C$ from his home
laundering," Byers said.
in Charloue, N.C. B'yers did not
" As lon'g as !be colleges or the
sa~ he was endorsins DeVenzio's
NCAA
conlrol the money and
pl:m...,and said he would require
decide
hOw
it should go, it's clean
playecs~o be legitimale srudents.
"money
because
!be colleges and lbc
"The peopl¥ who are profiting
NCAA
have
laundered
i~" he said.
mosl from !be present system wiD
"Any
money
from
any or her
be the ones who mos t straggly
source is dirty money and makes
oppose any change," he said. ' 'It is
alhletes ineligible."
·
a disservice to these young people

tl)e

~·' '

Sunday nmes-Sentinel-Page-CS

I

"

"•

.:·
'

.
"

�•
Pag~6-Sunday

. II

January 8, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV

Times-sentinel

Outdoors

•

Gallia's Year in Sports·- Part Ill

GAH~

gridders and spikers win big

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
mage (414 rushing and 154 pass- .500 mark tban lbey did in lbe pre- Valley, Meigs, Logan, Fairland,
Times-Sentinel Stair
ing) in lbeir Oct. 7 homecoming
vious two gridiron campaigns, Jack Warren, Southern. Marietta, Oak
GALLIPOL.IS -Today we'll game against Albens, which lbey
James' River Valley Raiders, in Hill and. Jackson - went down
~ Gallia Academy's varsity foot- woo f!)-7. The previous record was
additipn to posting a club-best 4-6 before Athens knocked tbem off
ball and volleyball teams found a 524-yard clink against Marietta record, achieved the follow ing again, this time on their borne coon
,
otberfirsts:
winning to be a habit-forming in 1985.
surrounded by new bleachers.
Fullback Heath Hutchinson,
, They defeated Point Pleasant
activity in the final installment of
Thoogb the losses were responthis lbree-part series.
·
,who started his varsity football
28-22 10 collect their fmt win over sible for tbe Bulldogs' getting the
The streaks
-l:areer as a member of Hannan
lbe Big Blacks in three tries and SEOAL crown, the Angels dusted ·
. Streaking- in the win column, Trace's last team (lbe 1991 edi- pick up lbeir first season-opening themselves off and started winning
not in the buff, as was sometimes tion), ended his three-year career victory.
· again. They won their next four
done in the 1970s - became a with the l)lue Devils by accom• They edged Athens 17-14 in ·matches, including the Division II
popular pastime witb Gallia Acade- plisbing lbe following:
their initial meeting to record lbeir sectional tournament encounter
my's football and volleyball teams.
· • His 1.,2119-yard season helped first Southeastern Ohio Athletic with Jackson at Rio Grande, before
Brent Saunders' ¥arsiry Blue him surpasS'" Pete Neal's previous League win. They did it on junior falling to Thornville Sheridan in
De viis continued the winning season rushing record (1,108). Neal Don Wamsley's last-minute field tbree games in the district tournastr~ they started in tbe 1993 cam- played from 1969 to 1971.
goal, which was tbe ftrst in club me.nt's semifinal round at Chilli- ·
paign following tbeir 18-6 loss to
• He also broke Bill Joe John- history.
colbe.
Point Pleasant on Sept. 15, 1993. son's scoring marie by scoring 272
• Playing in the shadow of a
:rbe 1994 ponion of the streak took points. Johnson, who scored 271 lbreatened teacher's strike (which
• Among lbose receiving various
lbe Blue Devils to wins over points, played from 1945 until never happened), they defeated .outside-the-team honors (alleigs, Coal Grove, Point Pleasant, 1948.
Marietta 22-21 to chalk up their league. all-state, etc.) were:
arren Local, Marietta and Atbens
• He eclipsed Gamble Grant's first ~
·n over a Division 1 team.
Cross country
fore lbe Logan Cb1eftams, who !985 all-purpose yardage record
Gall ill Academy: Eddie Nebus
!NC~t on to ~in the Southeastern (1,264) witb a 1,755-yard effon.
Jacki Knight's varsity Blue
Football
Oh10 Atblet1c Leag~e title; beat These also came as a result of_ 185 Angels,
defending Division II
Gallia Academy: Troy Duncan,
~em 14,-13 at Memorial F1eld.
on punt returns, 172 on recepuons, · Southeast District volleyball cham- Dylan Evans. Heath Hutchinson.
• Though the wmmng streak carne 123 on kickoff returns and 26 on a • pions from 1993, won their first Terry Qualls and Jesse Stacy
loan end at 13 games, "eight and . fumble recovery in addition to lbe five matches, claiming New
Rivet Valley: Abe Haislop
Jwo is nothing to complain abou~" aforementiooed rushing yardage.
Boston, Oak Hill, Warren Local,
·
Golf
Saunders said at the end of a sea• H~ 21tou~bdowns in his final Marietta, Jackson and Southern
Gallla Academy: David Wright
lion that saw his troops win tbeir campaign broke the 19-touchdown · before falling to Athens at The
Volleyball
l'iist two games to tie Jackson for mark be set in 1993. He shared the Plains on Sept. 13.
Gallia Academy: Misty Colesecond in the league.
old mark with Neal (1971) and
Aft lb
h h A 1
er at mate ' 1 e nge s man, Meghan Kolcun. Brandi
The Blue. Devils collected a Johnson (1947).
club·--d 568 yards from scn·m.
picked themselves up and began a Munn and Mindy Pope
·~·
Though they came closer to the longer streak. Nine teams - River
River Valley: Nickie Meade
.·~·

~

.

IWF discovers more drugs amorig Chinese athletes ·.
t

.

tested ·pc&gt;sitive for dibydrotestos- nese competitors have enjoyed
WII:SON
1
LONDON (AP) - Two new terone, a banned steroid rommooly remarkable success in recent years
!loping cases have caused further known as DHT. It is the same sub- in swimming, track and field and
tlamage to the credibility of stance found in lbe urine samples weightliftiRg.
of the 11 Chinese athletes who
Ajan said be bad discussed the
China's J:IIIC!ging sports machine.
The International Weigbtlifting failed drug tests at the Asian two weigbtlifting positives wilb
· officials of the Cbmese Olympic
ederation said Friday that two Games In Japan in October.
Drug
testers
only
recently
. Committee and the Chinese nationemale Chinese lifters have been
al weigbtlifting federatiOn.
devised
a
method
for
detecting
anned foriife after testing positive
appears
to
have
"They completely support our
DHT,
wbicb
or anabolic steroids during
become
the
latest
drug
of
choice.
anti-doping
policy," Ajan said in a
ovember's World Championships
telephone
interview from IWf
Ajan
said
tb¢
urine
s_ample~
t-tlstanbul, Turkey.
·
offices
in
Budapest, Hungary.
were
analyzed
at
the
accredited
lab., The athletes. were both gold
''They
accepted
all our decisions.
)!medalists: b Dan, who se~ world oratory in Cologne. Germany,
including
the
life
suspensions."
Eords in the snatch in the 182.8- where German chemist Manfred
Ajan said the IWF is lbe only
Donike developed tbe DHT test
~nd class, and Wang Sben, wbo
red first place in the 118.8- . The latest cases bring to 13 tl!e federatiOn which imposes automatnd division.
·
· number of Chinese athletes recent- ic life banK· f6t" :i firsf s·teroid
IWF secretary general Tamas ly caught for drug lise. According offense. Other federations have ·
t Ajan of Hungary said both lifters to figures provided by Chinese offi- first suspensions of two or four
••have been stripped -of their· ·medals cials, 38 Chinese albletes in various yean, with a possible life ban for a
sports failed drug tests during second offense.
~and Li's world record will be
1994.
.
.
Ajan said China needs to
~thrown out. Under the federation's
increase.
its drug-testing program in
"strict anti-doping rules, any alblete
The spate of positives has cast ·
order
to
clear
its name.
· =testing positive for steroids further doubt and suspicion on the
"In
many
countries
where spon
legitimacy of China's recent emer~receives an automatic lifetime ban.
·
is
practiced
on
a
high
level, tbev
t Ajan said Li and Wang both gence as a sports SUJlCI1KlWer. Chi~y STEPHEN

B

••

.

~

.

~

~

have tbeir own doping control program," he said. "But I was surprised to bear in my discussions
wilb lbe Chinese lbat they don't
have Ibis type of program.
·
. "With everything that happened
m 1994 in all lbese sports, I am
sure China's sports leadership wiD
elaborate a very strict control program in tbe future."
· ·
"Ajan said be does not believe
there is any systematic, state-supported doping program in China,
"My opiniim is lbat this is not
the same situation as in former East
Gennany," be said.
.. Ajan suspects that Li and Wang
did not act alone, supporting t!le
theory that coaches, trainers and
doctors might be just as guilty as
the albletes.
"I am sure it's not only lbe atb·
lete," be said. ':This is why we are
asking tbe Chinese spon officials to
investigate what happened. We are
sure this is not an individual

action."

'-

~

t=~~~s leading ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ee o~~=~~:c;~: ~hampionship_s

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB

. • CARLSBAD, Cahf. (AP) - · time. The penalty gave him a 6
Mike Shea, the PGA.'s "senior
~obn Daly made a rocky return, bad instead of a 4 on tbe first hole and director of rules, ·later informed
emories of an incident earlier in be had a 71 on the round ~fore Stadler that be was being penalis career resurfaced for Craig coming back to shoot a 65 in the ized.
tadler, and John Husto~ took lbe afternoon, good for third place.
Huston, meanwhile, held a twotad at 11-under-par dunng a long
In 1987. a rules violation cost shot lead over Lee Janzen, who
• Yosbf_golf at the Mercedes Cham· SPGtadler a disqualification in the shot·a course record-tying 63 in the
p1on •ps. .
.
A's San Diego tournament.·Sec- . afternoon after having a 72 his ftrst
. Daly, playmg for the.lirst time ond heading into lbe final round, turn around the La Costa Resort
smce he was mvolved m a golf- Stadler was disqualified when a course.
.
course scuffle 1n August, went to 5- television viewer called the tournaHuston played ·steady; e.fficient
over-par with a 75 and "74 as_lbe ment and pointed outStadl~r·s via: golf the entire day, showing no.
gollers played 36 holes on Fnday lation during the third round.
sign of fatigue down the stretch,
to make up for a postponement the
Stadler bad placed a towel o~ with four birdies on the tina! nine
day before.
the ground wlien he had to kneel holes that included one on lbe final
Ram left pools of water on part down to make a shot from under a hole.
of lbe course Thursday, causing the tree, . breaking a tour rule by
Bob Estes was four shots off lbe
first round to be delayed for a da~. improving his stance.
pace ~ith cards. of 69 and 68, and
but the course was m good cond•·
He was assessed two shots Fri- ·Ben Crenshaw was at 6-under-par.
tion Friday.
day for teeing off at 8:03 instead of Qefending champion Pbil Mickel:_
Sudler finished the~ cotnbine_d " lbe selfedu:led 8:02, but &lt;!liliriied he son Jijjd a two-round totlil of 3tirst and second rounds at 8-ullder was not called to the tee and that over.
par. which includec.l a two-shot he waited at least two Diinutes to

WILL START WINTER
QUARTER

r:

BEGINNING CLASSES
ON JANUARY 10
AT 6:00 P.M.
AT CARLETON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE

for More Information
Call992·6839

River Valley Raiders'
mid-season report card
as.

!Z

Pllycr

3:1&amp; FI:d. ·~

31-88 20-33 14-20, 136
Amber Staton ..................... ,...... 10
49-98
0-0 21-3S 119
Cindy Armstea4 ........................ 10
31-82
1-1 IS·24
80
Sarah Ward ................. ............... tO
22-79
0-1
26-44
70
Niclde Meade ............................ 10
19-42
3-12
4-10
48
Erin Conley .......................... :.... 10
10-19 3-13
0-7
29
Vanl:Ssa Short ....................... ..... tO
12-35 0-0
3-10
27
Heidi Hash ...................................9
3-13
1-3
4-7
14
Stephanie Cash .......................... 10
4-6 0-0
1-2
9
Holly 'HaSh ..................................4
2-6 0-0
0-0
4
Racbael Polcyn ...........................:8
0-1
0-0
1-2
1
Michelle Ifartey ........................... 5
1113-469
28-63
89-161
.
539
Team ....
10
Totll1 field goals- 39.7%
Throe·polnl pd.- 44.4%
.
Free throw pd.- 55.3%
·
·
Reboundl - Meade 89, Armstead 77, Ward 35, Heidi Hash 24,
Staton 23, Conley 22, Cash 7, Farley 6, Polcyn 6, Holly Hash S.
Short 5. Totals: l99
.
.
Assists- Staton 34, Conley 19, Armstead 13, Meade 13, Ward
10, Heidi Hash 7, Shon 3, Cash 2,.Far-ley I, Holly Hash I. Totals:
103
s·t eals- Staton 30, Meade 23, Ward 23, Conley 21, Armstead 19,
Heidi' Hash 13, Short 6, Cash 4, Holly lla~h 3. Polcyn 2, Farley 1..
Touls: 175
·
.
· '
Turnovers:.... Farley 1, Holly Hash I, Polcyn 1, Shan 8, Cash 9 ••
Armstead 12, Heidi Hash 12, Meade 20, Conley 22, Ward 32, Staton
40. Totals: 158

.

AIIKan.e• ~ ·

RiverValley ............. .............. 141
Opponents .................... ........,. 107

148
114

136=
IH=

65
61·

44
93 ~

63 =
!16 =

320

53
90

55
7Q.

50=
50=

219 ~
271

llmnt eumes ~

Guests .......................................46
River Valley . ~ ..~...:.....................80
'

Bsllll eame• ~

.

River Valley .............................61
Hosts ........................................61
=

'

539
489 .

114
155

.

218

d

' .

The games
'·:

!&gt;ale-team ·
'
lW.
Nov. 28-at Meigs ............................................. _. ............. ,W
Dec. 1-Marietta...... .,...... :... ..... ......................................... W
Dec. 5-Jackson .................................................................. W
Dec. 8-at Atbens .:............................................................. L
Dec. !O-at Cbesapeake ........, ... .................. ............ ............ L
Dec. 12-Fairland .............................................................. w
Dcic. 15-LO~~ ....................... :........................... ::..:.. .......L.
Dec. 19-at
a Academy ........................... ....................L
Dec. 23-at Racine Southern .............................................. L
Jan. 5-Warren Local .............................................. ......... :W.

~

41-41
6S-55
76-&lt;1/J
51-64
33-48
"73-31
52-64
38-67
50-51
54-42

1992JEEP
CHEROKEE
LIMITED
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667-3350

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L.:::::::::::::::;:=:!J Jerry Bibbee

Dog licenses are required by law. Section 955.01 of the Ohio Revised Code states
that "Every person who owns, keeps or harbors a dog more than ;J r;nonths of age,
shall purchase a license for that dog before the 20th day of January of each year." ·
New licenses may be purchased at the auditor's Office, Meigs County Courthouse or
· by mail with this application.
·
.
The cost of each Dog License will be $4.00 and Ke.n nel Licenses will be $20.00
per kennel. The pe~alty, If late,
be an additional $4.00 per dog and $20.00 per
kennel. The application below may be completed and mailed along with a check or
money order to the office of the Meigs County Auditor, P&gt;O. Box 551, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

will

· ············~························
Clip

Application

Mail

Fees

Breed .
·if Known

·paid

OFFER.GOOD TH~U JANUARY 1QrH, 1995

ATHENS _I:~t•1~1•mCARS ·

P.O. Box 551
-" -~.~Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 ·

•..

rrJ{'£ !fl9lppYY{09{rJJ!A. ¥EOPL'E
810 E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHI01 594-8555.

NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
Meigs County AudHor

'

'
.0

.

January

8, 1995
.

: BfiCIIuse of laws tavorinv sport anglers,

•

•

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C7

·

\Has Ohio's. Lake Erie fishing industry seen in its .last days?
:By RANDALL EDWARDS

:The Collllllbu Diljllltcb

; PORT CLUITON, Ohio (AP)
· - Tbe- morning. was clear and
: calm, but 1J1 overnight storm bad
: left La~e Er.i e agitated . Heavy
: swells kept the Rora Jane bobbing
• and pitclllng, despite the weight of
' the fishing nets that stretched
: across the boal's stem.
: Jim Bod! and Bill Mitchell
• didn't seem to nolice the rolling as
; they used long-bandied nets to dip ·
: hundreds of Oapping fish out of the
'trap net

~~ . The fish - yellow perch, white
: perch, white bass, catfish, suckers
: - were sorted into bins in tbe boat.
; Mitche-ll set aside his dip net
• and hoisted a hefty walleye, a tro·
pby for many sport fi.Sbenrltn.
Willi a rueful smile, Mitchell
tossed the walleye back into lbe
water: "Worst fish in the lake."
Under Ohio law, the catch bad
to go back. Commercial fiShermen
are probiblted from keepins walleye; the fub an: reserved for sport
anglers.
As a result, Ohio's commercial
fisheries view walleye as a symbol
of state regulations that, since
1970, have severely limited the

industry.
·
teeotb-century flsherinen hauled in
Witb the 1994 commercial-fish· . lake and brook trout. muskeUunge,
ing season behind them, trap-net northern pike and blue pike.
fishermen wonder whether they'll
In time, a variety of ·ractors be back March I for the start or tbe including lbe industrialization of
next season.
the lake - conuibuted to a few"! guess I will - if they don't degree rise in the water temperaput us out or business," said Bodi, tore. Bv 1960. Lake Erie had seen
a 29-year-old Port Ointon resident. its last blue pike.
Commercial fishing in Ohio
· More significant, a long and
reached i!S peak in 196l , when 219 jolting downturn for commercial
licenses were issued t6 businesses flsbing on Lake Erie began April
that used trap nets, seine's and gill 13, 1970.
nets to harvest Lake Erie.
That's the day state regulators
Now only 311icenses allow bar· -worried about mercury .contamivesting by seine and trap net. The nation from industrial pollution and
28 fishermen who own tbt licenses perceived overfisbing - declared a
are all who remain of an Industry moratorium on the commercial bar.. that once played an important role . vest of most species of fish and
deemed many pc&gt;pular game fish
in the economy or northern Ohio.
Tbe fishermen might not survive unsafe to eat.
Ohio's laws and regul!ltions- .
The .ban on most species lasted
which on Lake Erie favor spc&gt;rt j!lst 10 days, but a new era of
anglers over the commercial side.
intense regulation had arrived .
Ohio's commercial fishery isn't When commercial fishing
going to grow: The state dQl!sn't reopened, the walleye was a proplan to issue any mo~icenses . bibited species: other restrictions
Fishermen must buy or injlerit one were imposed as well.
of the licenses that date from 1982,.
In the eyes or sp.:&gt;rt fishermen,
when Ohio began limiting them.
however, the regulations didu' t go
·
•
Commercial fishing has been far enough.
part of the Lake Erie economy · The spc&gt;rtsmen contended lbat
since Europeans settled along the the gill-net fishermen were inadwater in the early 1800s. Nine,

vertently killing too many walleye
in their nets, said ~ Emond. an
aquatic biologist for the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources'
Division of Wildlife.
Because of the growing concems, lbe state spent $2.4 million
in 1982 to purchase the 39 remaining gill-netlicenses.
.The buyout, which cut in half
what was left of the commercial
fleet, marked the end or an era in
northern Ohio.
do Ohio·
with ssb :~f~:~~~~:

with economics: Commercial fish·
ing payrolls cannot pump the lcind
or money into a community the
way marinas, hotels and condominiums - all patronized by spon
fishermen - do.
The Ohio Wildlife Council which considers tile fishing regula·
lions recommended by tbe Division
or Wil&lt;!life - continues to tighten
the rules on commercial fishing.
In 1992, when the stock of yellow perch showed a sharp decline
in Lake Erie, the council banned
commercial fishing for lbe fish dur- ·

ing tbe mbnths when they are easier to catch .
Ken Fritz, the wildlife division's
deputy chief, acknowledges that
Lake Erie probably is large enough
to sustain bolh the sport and commercial fishing.
• "The side of me lbat' s a biologist says, 'Yes, there is probably
room enough for bolb of them.'
But fisheries management is a
social science as well, and sport
fishermen are leery of tbe commercial industry. They'd rather see it
die out lban come back."

l.Maryland college students brave
1cold to band tiny Saw-whet owls
: By DEB RIECHMANN
: BITTINGER, Md. (AP)
: Kevin Dodge traded an evening 81
: his friend's wedding reception for a
late 01"gb1dale "th
1
~, His
wt . an ow ·
friends WldersiOOd. ·
~ They know Dodge's passion ror
· N rtb
s
b t
1
: tb e uny · 0 em aw-w e ow ·
' He bas spent many a cold night
: netting them and attachins alu·
: minumbands to their legs to learn
: about their migration.
'
"It's really neat to work on
1·somethlng that nobody knows
:about because whatever you learn,
:;.rs a contribution," said Dodge,
i,\lir!'CtQr ofth~ Nat~ Resources
~and Wildlife Technology Program
:Ut Garrett Community College.
: The owl. banding station, in an
:bid shed bear Bittinger, is one of
)lnly about a dozen ill the United
:!States. In the past three years,
~ge IIJld students from the col·
lege and nearby ~nlversltles· have
:1:aitsht and banded 263 Saw-whet
:J)wls.
.
" The white, tan, gray and black·
~eatbered owls stand up to eight
~nches tall and wei_sh about as
ucb as a large robm. They bree&lt;t
far norlb as Canada and,winter
rougbout all but the extreme
o6outbern sections of the United
::States.
" ·They are not nearly as large as
more commonly known Barred

~

$be

Owl or the large Great Homed Owl
often seen on Halloween posters.
Tbese larger owls eat unwary Sawwhets.
And these owls don't h09t like
t11e larg~er owl.s. The"
., toOt. ·· .
On a clear, cold night recently in
a grove of spruce and hemlock, a
tape-recorded Saw.whet breeding
call pierted lbe silence: "beep,
beep, beep."
·
"Basically, it just sounds like a
garbage truck backing up," Dodge
said.
The car battery-power!!d tape
recorder and speaker) are' placed
near 12-foot-bigh nets .lbat stretch.
250 feet across lhe ground. The·
owl flies in to investigate lbe·noise
and gets caught like a sbu\(lecock
in a badminton net.
Danny Quinn, a 27·year-old former Garrett Community College
student.now studying wildlife bioiogy ai West Virginia University,
was in charge of checking the nets
from dusk-to-midnight. He checked
tbe nets at 7 p.m., 8:30p.m. and
again atlO p.m.
.
More swdents IIVere to amve at
· 3. a.m. to check the nets until sunnse.
At midnight, Quinn, Dodg~,
Scott MemU and two b1rd enthust·
- asts from Frederick treklced a few
hundred yards to the nets.
·
''We got one!'' shouted Merrill,

a 22-yeai-old Froscburg State UniNEW'
versity student.
ANNOUNCED .- Don Ours
The tiny owl hanging upside Racing owners Dpn and· Gloria
down in the net was soon in the Ours announced lbal Ray Llv·
spotlight of several flasb!i.&amp;bts. Iogston of Point Pleasant will ·be ·
Quinn spent tbe next several min- the 1995 driver of their Oldsmoutes untangling the bird from the bUe Cullus· racer, wbiiSe engine
net. After ii was freed, tbe tellll! bas been l!.ulh and serviced by
dropped the owl into a white mesh Sherman Gerlach of Now Haven:
bag llllli~PilClliU!l!!t
_ .
Quinn weighed the owl, a
female, attached a leg band issued
br the u.s. Fish and Wildlife Servtce and measured her wings' and . Bowhunters
fealbers.
He looked in her wing pit to to return
cbeclc for fat, looked in ·her eyes to Flatwoods
and took note of fringe edging ber
feathers ihat helps muffle the
FLATWOODS, W.Va. (AP) sciunds of flight.
·After a 30-minute examination, · Bowhunters will return to Braxton
County to compete for world titles
lbe owl was released.
Dodge, an assistant professor Qf, / in 19?5, according to the president .
biology and wildlife, sa'l'tl of the International Bowbunters
•
researchers believe the birds winter Organization.
Event
organizers
were
pleased
in lbe Soulb in conifer forests,
· "We want to get more people wltllli!st year's competition in Flatbilnding, especially down South, so woods, Ken Watldns said.
"Everyone from the competitors
we know where our b!fds go." be
to
lbe
vendors and in~luding lbe
said.
•
lBO
officials
was impressed with
The Bittinger banding station
the
area,
the
courses
and the way
bas recaptured only three owls
U1e
Mid-State
Archers
organized
banded in olber parts of the counthe
event,"
he
said.
try. They were from Duluth. Minn.;
Green Bay. Wis .. and· Whitefish ' In 1994. more than 6,000 people
competed in the eighth annual
Poin~ Mich .. Dodge said.
competition.

~OW expects 1995 to show growth
jn wi.l dlife habitats and gam~ harvests

..

- Wildlife council approved
- Newlyllisco~ered bald eagle
nests g~ve Ohio 27 known nesting raising the daily bag limit from five
sites. •Thirty eaglets w'ere hatched to six for walleye at Lake Erie. The
and fledged in the spring, just short regulation takes effect March I.
- Ohio offered its first
of the record level of 31 ilj 1993
"Becoming
an Outdoors Woman"
and 1992. In 199 5, eagle ptoducworkshop
to
train I 00 partlclj'lahts
tion should be..close to the lbree· .
in
outdoor
skills.
A second ·work·
1
year avemge.
shop
is
planned
May
5-7 at Recte·
- As many as nine peregrine
ation
Unlimited
in
Delaware
Coun.
falcon chicks .were hatched. in
.
Columbus, "Cleveland, Clncjnnati, ty . .
- The Division of Wildlil"e
Toledo and Dayton . In 1995, the
hope Is for Increased reproductive ·enham:ed and restored more than
3,200 acres of wetlands wiJ.!l tb~
success.
,
- A· new interactive fishing help of Ducks l.!nlimited and 48
exhibit opened in Columbus at the olber partners. Work began on a
Center of Science and Industry and 908-acre c&lt;;~astal wetlands restoraa new wetlands exliibit opened at tion project on the Metzger Marsh
the Columbus Zoo. In 1995, in Lucas County. The $1 million
progress Is expected to continue on projeci is to be finished in I 996. In ·
a wildlife exhibit to open at Sea 1995, inore wetlands projects .are to
World in Aurora by spring of 1996. be undertaken: dedication of lbe
- National interest· was sparked Beaver Creek project in Greene
.
wiih the development in Ohio of an County Is May 20.
- Public archery ranges opened
interactive turkey-hunter simulator
modeled.. after a military firearms in the Indian Creek and Spring VaJ.
training system. In 1995, the sys· ley wildl.ife area_s. In 1995, contern will be shown at major sports stroction ts to begm on a rifle range
and travel shows and used ill hunt· on the Grand River and Woodbury
WUdlife areas.
ing clinics.

Thomas P. Price, M.D. DABOG,
FACOG, FACS, announces the
relocation of his office from the
Holz€r Clinic to the MediGal Plaza,
936 State Rt. 160, Gallipolis, Ohio
after January 1, 1995. · He will be
associated there with Drs. Abels,
Subbiah 'and Vallee. He will
continue his hospital practice at the
Holzer Hospital. Medical Plaza
. offers laboratory, x-ray, and A.C.R.
·Accredited and FDA approved
mammography.
Appointments can be · ma~e by
calling (614) 446-9620.

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HOLZER
CLINIC
.,.
I

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prz•enh!
UNIVERSITY
of
RIO GRANDE
BASKETBALL·

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TUESDAY; JANUARY,
..

7:30P.M.
vs.

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Pag~B-Sunday

Centerville
by Jim Saods
Special Correspoodent
:
Basketball at CCillerville Hi&amp;h
School probably originated in the
World War I era when Professor
Redmond was the coach of all SJICI1S
at the school.
The fii'SI decadeofWelshmeri
basketball was
not too distiilguisbed. In the
1927
Galli a
County League
toumamentCHS
failed 10 show up.
The officials generously awarded Centerville a fU"St

~igh

OSU's Stringer
to try NFL draft

January 8, 1995,

roundbye when i_lwas discovered 1be
motor car carrymg the team brol&lt;e
down.
BidweU then crushed CHS 21-S.
Players in the late 1920s included
Jones, Lindamood, Ruff, Davis and ·
Elias. The 1930 team fmished fourth
with Mossman, Slaybaugh, Davis and
two Lindamoods leading the way.
After mediocre teams in 1931 and
1932, the 1933 team of Terry, WilIiams, Taylor, Perry. Thomas, Shaffer,LindamoodandWilmoremldeit
to the GCL fmals where they lost to
Bidwcll44-23.
The 1934 team fmisbed third and
lhe 1935 team made itiO the finals ·
before losing to Cadmus 36-27.
The 1936 CHS team became the

·o~ly team in_Cen~ille history to
Win.a champiOnShip:

Nichols, Lloyd and~ IIPSCU
strong ~e 1e1111 in regular
9em10Dplly0Diytobedcmclishedin
the tourney by the Wildcal:l60-25.
TheteamsoflbeWorldW~Uera '
were coacbed by Ray Saunden and
. featured the scoring ofKeithFellureOther members in this era included
Wendell Jones, Bums HaD, Jimmy
Davis, David Wells, Tom Lewis, and
Paul Meadows.
From 194610 1950, Gomer Morris wu the coach. His 1949 1e1111
fmisbed 14-7 and his 1950 ~Cam W&amp;!l
16-S.In 1948theWelshmenfinisbed
OCL play at 3-8 but in the touma- .
menttheymadeittothefmalsbefore
bowing 10 Rio Grande_
Tbe 1949 team, after a gOod season, played poorly in the tournament
· 1)1e 1950 team lost the tide to 'Rio
Grande late in the season 37-35; Rio
Grande's GCL record wull-1 and
Centerville was at 10-ZEddie Cooper aver&amp;Bed over 20
points a game on this team that also
had Jesse Price, Garland Lanier, Jolm
McNeal, Junior Sims, Arnold HaD
and.Francis Shriver.
Tbe Welshmen were knocked out
of the tournament by Vinlllll. This
19SOteamdidhaveabigupsetatOak
Hill in overtime 54-52. Cooper had ·
25 points. He and Sims fouled out in
thefourthquarterbutlbeolherspulled
the game out
·.
11ie last two teams in CenterviUe
H.S. bistay, 1951 and 1952, were
couchedbyPopeyeWagner.The1951
team was 6- 14andthe 1952team was
11-9. The 1952teamhadhigbscoren.
Arnold Hall and Bill McNeal.
In one game the twosome combined for 54 of lhe team's 70 points.
Other members on lbe last Red and
White squad were McGary, Wilson,
Edmonds, Baisden, Arrowood,
Stumbo, Kennison, Thomas and two
Lanier (Gary and Richie).
The last last CHS game was a loss

The Welshmen bed Cadmus for
the regular season tille. The pair split
garnes.~ntervillewonatbome466 and lost at Cadmus 32-26. In the
tournament, Centerville beat the
Redski.ns in the championShip game
67 to 19.
Centerville was 17-6 in 1936and
had wins over Gallipolis, Coalton
and the defending state_champion,
Waterloo Wonders. This team of
Massie, Parry, Jones, Shaffer, Goff
and Johnson beat Waterloo in lhe
Di~trict Tourney before falling IIi
Wmcbester of Adams County.
· The Kermit MasSie coached_team
won 14 straight games during that
season.
The 1937 team produced a slo"'
start which led to a bfg controversy
between team members and lhe
schoolofficials. Afteronlysixgames
it was decided 10 cancel !he season.
In 1938 under Coach Sn'l!l~
the Red and White fmisbed at 3-7 in
GCL play. The 1939 team made it to
.500 .behind lbe play of Ed Thomas
and Vic Denuil.
Tbel940teamfeaturedhighscorer
Roscoe Crurn who, in a 46-25 win
over Mercerville, garnered 27 points
himself. Nolan Caner was lhe coach.
The 1941 team also had a "scorer."
In an era in which fiJial scores
were in the 30- to 40-point range,
VanBrownwentover20byhimself
· on a few occasions. Tbe 1942teamof
Lewis, Copley, Hall, Johnson, Terry,

son, Dan, while he was in college
in tile early 1970s.
"We've lived here 27 years, but
Danny hasn't lived here for 22
years," Mrs. Kincaid said. "Where
this magazine has been all those
years in between is anybody's
guess.''
Paul McGimiis, a carrier supervisor for the U.S. Postal Service in
Columbus, said _it wasn't in his
office.
"We clean this place out
daily." McGinnis said. "My best
guess is that it got lost in lhe bottom of a ;;ack somewhere alon~. the
way and just recel)tly surfaced.
George Baldassare, production
manager at Sports Illustrated,
guessed that the issue was shipped
from a re~onal printing plant in

Sports brief

Chica~o.

Golf
NEW YORK (AP) - ' PGA
Tour commissioner Tim Finchem
said the organization would fight
the Federal Trade Commission in
the courts and even to Congress
over the agency's .decision to seek
a restralnt-of-trnde complaint.

"It s notlhe first lime." Baldassare said. "A couple of years ago,
an old postal building was torn
down in Chicago, and they found
issues dating back to 1958. If it has
a viable mailing' address. on it, it' II
get there eventually ...

10 Rio Grande in ~tourney 5742.

MtNeal had~ pomts. From _193110
1952,Cenlelvillewas60-97mGCL
play_
. ""'·

tt1:\~Coun~~

4:/0itd

461 SOUTH THIRD

PHONE 992-2196 .

Sports deadlines
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sentinel and lhe Sunday
Times-Sentinel value the contributions their readers make to the
sections of lhese papers, and
will continue to be published.
submissions will be observed.
Tbe deadline for photos and
related articles for football and
other fall sports is the Saturday
before lhe. Super Bowl.
Tbe deadline :for photos an!! .
-related articles forbasketball (summer basketball and related camps
fall under the summer sports deadline) and other winter sports is· the
last day of the J"B A finals . The
deadline ~su1imi ssions of local
basebaiVand softball-relaled photos and related articles, from T-hall
to tbe majors, as well as other
s pring and summer sports, is the
day of thefasl game of the World
Series.
Tbese deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time they
need to acquire their photos from
the photography studio7developer
of choice and to give the staffs the
chance to publisb these irems in the
appropriate season for those sports,

J.- Salldllln spedal aJI'I'e-..:

CENTERVILLE HIGH
• Centerville High School
was dedicated In December, 1!129, and from that year untii19Sl,
the home bulietball court of the CHS Wellhmen. Centerville's • ·
only hardwOod championship team was In 1936 and they were • •
c011ched -by Kermit Massie.

KAREN GULLO
providing liquidity to Mexico," said Raphael Soifer,
Bus!,_. Writer
who follows banks at Brown Brothers Harriman &amp;
. ; NEW YORK- When a group Of U.S. banks
Co., a Wall Street investment firm .
. agreed this past week to loan Mexico billions to
To. be sure, there are some differences between
make it through a financial crisis, it generated an
1995 and the banks' previous foray into loans to
. uncomfortable sense of deadbeat deju vu.
developing Latin American nations.
·
Banks rushed 10 loan money to Latin American
For one thing, the banks m not the sole source of
: countries during lbe 1970s oil crisis, and some barely
credit to Mexico:'rhe $18 billion package consists of
- survived the losses that multiplied when Mexico,
loans from Canada. from the U.S. Treasury, the Fed: Brazil. Argentina and other sovereignties defaulted
eral Reserve System. and a group of European cen- ,
on the loatts.
,
.
,
tra1 banks.
Now a group of at least 10 U.S. commercial
U.S, banks' share of the credil line is relatively
banks, led by C1ticorp and J.P. Morgan &amp; Co. Inc ..
small.
are contributing $3 billion to an S18 billion emergen" The banks are not the only ones being asked to
: cy credit line to Mexico.
pull the oars,'' said Diane G lossman, a banking ana•
The loans are portrnyed by the lenders as a vote of .• lyst with Salomon Brothers Inc. "In the 1980s, they
- confidence that Mexioo will emerge from its finanhad.all the debt.' ' ·
• cial woes. But some banldng industry analysts are
What's more, bank lending accounts for a small
• giving the banks a thumbs down, saying the painful
share of capital innows to Latin America. Most of
· lesson of 20 years ago apparendy didn't sink in.
the invesunent CQ!!Ies from public and privale instilu"It was like dcj11 vu all over again, seeing banks

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BARBARA NOLAND

.

, ~Pinecrest
~~names new

-a
· d ml· ·n·. I"Sf'"S"'Of
'I ,,

GALLIPOLIS - Ms. Barbara
Noland was recently named administrator of Pinecrest Care Center
according to Mary Ann Lambert,
vice president of operations for
North American Healthcare, Incorporated.
Ms. Noland has lived most of
her life in the Central Ohio area,
and graduated from New Conoord
High School. Shi:-fu'rthered her
education by earning a BS degree
in health administration from Obi()
.l}niversity . Ms . Noland is a
f licensed nnrsing borne administra. tor in Ohio. Her most recent posi1 • lion was administrator at the Wesi
1 · Lafayette Care Center in West
· Lalayette, Ohio.
Ms. Noland comes to Pinecrest
: -with 18 years of long term care
experience. Ms. Noland belongs to
: the National Association of Female
, Executives ar.d has taken an active
: part in Rotary and her
:church activities .
, Ms. Noland will soon be rclo:eating to the Gallipolis area.

I'
I'

cass.,
cond.,
power
miles,

,:0W 818,999

'

Jaouary 8, 1995

loans.
tions which have been pouring money iniO developing country funds.
·
.
Citicorp's ex posure was S2.9 billion as of Sept.
But what makes analysts like Soifer uncomfort30, according to the bank's Securities and Exchange
Cmrunission lilings:
able is that banks, flush with capital and searching
for sources of income, .have been stepping up their
· Not everyone is alarmed about the Mexican credit
lending to La1 'n America and other development
mackagc. Bankers and other analysts say banks 'lfC •
economies around the world.
,. much more careful about extending credit and investSoifer said be worries that the lending comes at a
ing in Latin 'America than they 'once were. ·
time when banks total exposure to Latin America is
For example. one of the big areas of concern
approaching lo980s levels. That's not a big problem if
among Mexican investors are exposure to short-tam
the counuy's economy is growing and there's plenty
Mexican bonds ltnown as lesobonos, denominated in
of investor interest in developing-country securities.
pesos but indexed to the value of lhe dollar.
But -with interest in Mexican securities drying up,
U.S. banks don't own tesobonos, which became
at least for now, lhe lending looks riskier.
much more expensive for the Mexican govcnuncntto
Soifer said that the most recent figures a lending
repay because !he peso bas plunged in vaJ.ue.
'
. survey taken by the Federal Financial Institutions
"Most of the bonds are owned by foreigners, but
Examination Council, a group of U.S. linancial reguthey're not owned by banks," said an executive at
latory agencies, sbow cross-border exposure of U.S.
one bank that has loaned money to Mexico, who
bank 10 Mexico reached $17.24 billion at June 30 .
spoke on condition of anonymity . "1bey're held by
Some of the total represents deb! securities, nor jusc
institutional investors.''

USDA announces .
program deadlines -

Gene Johnson Says •..

'

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tilt &amp; cruise, P win . &amp; P. locks, .air
Climate Control, leather int., dual
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24,000 miles. Extra clean.
19
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BUY ANY NEW
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~imes-iennm1 ·Section

D
ack into the lending game with Mex co

AN.DYOU-WILL RECEIVE
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A

41IOOLEPOR1", O"'

Indiana women
beat OSU 68-59
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)Shirley Bryam scored 27 points
and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead
Indiana to a 68-59 upset victory
over No. 22 Ohio State.
The Hoosiers (11-1, 1- 1 Big
Ten), playing Friday night without
their leading scorer, .Lisa Furlin,
led at the half 27-20. Indiana
increased that advantage to 10
points at 18:06 before Ohio Staie's
- ' Katie Smith, held lo six pointS in
· the first half, scored 14 points to
knot the score at 39 al the nineminute mark.
Tatjana Vesel's three-pointer
then gave Indiana the lead for ·
good.
Smith hit two three-pointers and
Marcie Alberts added another ifi a
12-second span to pull Ohio State
(8-4. 2-1) within 61-58.

.

a

llpOIIdeato(IMSuodaJT~~ .
tlael. Hll acldms Is: 65 W.......: .
Drive, Sprilllboro, Olllo45066. ~:
·

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ~
Obio State coach John Cooper said
b0 hopes offensi-ve tnclde Korey.·
Stringer returns to school to get a
· degree. ·
.
. Stringer said at a news conference Friday that he will skip bis
senior year to make himself available for lhe NFL's April drafl
Cooper said be disagrees wilb
the two-lime all-American's deci- .
sion.
"Do I think he sbould ·come
oui? No, I think be should stay for
a lot of different reasons," Cooper
said, "He's as good an offensive
,lineman as you can find in college
football."
Cooper predicted that Stringer,
20, will be a firSt-round NFL draft
choice.
·"If I wasri't projectt;d to go that
high (in the draft), then I would be ri)lhl back here (at Ohio State),"
Stringer said.
The 6-foot-5. 320-pound junior
·from Warren Harding High School
was a first-team aii-Amer.icap
selection this past season for the
Buckeyes, who finished 9-4 overall
and 6-2 in the Big Ten Conference.

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School's basketball legacy recalled

Sl issue arrives 23 years late
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP)- It's
been a long lime since "Mean"
Joe Greene bas graced the cover or
Sports Illusmued. After all, lhe legendary. Pittsburgh Steelers defensive tackle left the game in 1981. .
But if Pete and Bonnie Kincaid
badn' t checked the date on the
copy of the magazine they recently
received in the mail, they might
bave thought the pro football Hall
of Farner had come out of retiremenL
Greene is featured on lbe cover
of the Oct. II. 1971, issue. The
Kincalds received the magazine
more than two decades late, in time
for Saturday's AFC playoff game
between lbe Cleveland Browns and
Pittsburgh.
Its whereabouts for the past 23
years remained a mystery.
The Kincaids bought a Sports
Illustrated subscription for their

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Times-sentinel

-

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - Long term conservation agreements- A sign-up
will be held from January 3 to January 27. 1995 for producers wishing to complete two or more conservation practices over a 3 to 5
year period. Funds for an approved
agreement are obligated over the
life of the agreement. Practices
such as seedings and waterways
available under the annual progllllll
are examples of eligible practices
under the long-term agreements .
WOOD AND MOHAIR PROGRAM - Producers who sold Shorn
wool, mohair, and/or unshorn
lambs in 1994 may file for in~­
tive payments designed to encoifr_age dome_stic production of these
products. Producers are ~rged to
file by January 31, 1995 10 order
for information to be tallied into
the national marketing average.
The final deadline is March 1,
1995.
•
NEW. FARM BURLEY QUOTAS - Wednesday, February 15,
1995 is the last day to apply for a
1995 new farm burley tobacco
quota. Following are some eligibility requirements:

(I) owner/operator must expect
to obtain more tlian 50% of his/her
income from farming (excluding
income from requested quota);
(2) must have experience in
producing. harvesting, and marketing burley tobacco by sharing in
the proceeds of the crop in two of
the last five years; ·
(3) cannot be an owner of a
farm (anywhere in the United
States) that has a current year quota
for any kind of tobacco; .
,
(4) and must own -or have readi- .
ly available, equipmen~ :md facilities for the production of burley
tobacco.
NOTE:
Income
sources
,
I
•
I
' ,
·such as spouse s mcome, pens10ns,
social security, un employment
compensation. salary , con\ missions, eic .. will be considered in
computing 'the "50% of income'
from farming"_requiremcnl: · .
CROP INSURANCE SIGNUI' . Signup for crop insurance will run
from January 17, 1995 to March
15, .1995 at the Consolidated Farm
Service Agency. Watch for upcoming details.
Lisa Meadows Is acting COIUity
executive director, Gallia ConsolIdated Farm Service Agency.

Dr. Boone receive&amp;---·-~
psych~"logy licensure
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
_psychologist Richard R. (Rick)
Boone, Ph.D.. recently eamed bis
licen ~ ure as a psyc~ologist , The
Ohio State Board of Psychology
awards certification to those psychologists wbo have successfully
passed both the written ·examina-.
lion for professional practice in
psychology and an oral examination designed and administered by
the state
_
Prior to his licensure, Dr. Boone
practiced as a psycholo~y fellow

--•

READY TO OPEN - A .Subway restaurant,
operated by Roger Hines of l.ogan, will open
Monday In a strip maD adjoining the Rio Mini·
Marl In Rio Grande. The store will he open

seven days a week from 10:30 a.m. unlit mid·
nlf ~ Is employing a staff of nine. (Photo by
1
Bl~r

.

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_

Subway will open doors
in Rio Grande~ o·n Monday
RIO GRANDE - Fast food uated (rom the University of Rio
Hines said he chose Rio Grande
options in Rio Grande will be Grande in 1970, majoring in biolo- . because of 1bc expanding amount
increased when Subwa~ ope11s its gy with a minor in chemiS!fy .. He of tralfic in tbe area due to the U.S .
doors in lhe village on Monday.
was employed at Holzer Med1cal 35 four-lane, as well as !he market
1be store Jocated·in a strip mall Center, managing its laboratories !he university offers. In time, he
.adjoining tbe Rio 'Mini-Mart, is -·--{or 22 yel!{sc~;VheJl ~e entered the .. said he hopes to. attract ho•II!O••
operated by Roger Hines of Logan ~sta~ranl busmess ~n 1989, o~n- fro!~ the sunoundmg communibes.
and will be managed by his daugb- mg hiS' fust Subway m Nelsonvtlle.
I knew the area long before I
ter, Amy Burger.
·
·:1 just .!o~e it," he said of the even .~ought of p~tting ..a ~ubw_ay
Hines, who operates Subways in busmess. It s very enJoyable lor there, . Hmcs explamed. It san.~
Nelsonville and Logan, said the. me . •People .coma to you becau_se place, 11 ~as a super schoo_l, ',l!'d 11 s
:store will offer· the standard Sub- they re hungry, and we uy _co sans- an ~ca I· d like to expand m.
way menu of submarine sandwich- fy that ~ed. "! ou have to like pc~;
. 1 he store 1s ~xpectcd to employ
es. Tbe store is set up for eat-in and pie to be m th1s ~usmess, and I do.
mne people. he sa1d.
take-out business. Hines said he is
'

~:!~~~cring es.tablishingdelivery

UPS plans rate increase

The store will be open seven
days a week from 10:30 a.m. until
midnight.
.
For Hines. opening t hc R10
.....
Grande store represen~ a rc_tw" to
the-area. 1bc Pomeroy native grad-

·
ATLANTA (AP) - United Pareel Service plans lo increa~mtes
for domestic service by an average
of 3.9 percent next month.
The increase was made ncces-

b h' h ·
k
sary Y 1g er costs, the pac age
shipper said Friday. The costs of
fuel, ·s upplies 1and
b
h ·labor,
· as· well
b
ave taxes, al ave nscn m t e
past year.

:-eusiness and farm briefs--.
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12,999

8

lla CHEVROLET
&amp;-10 PICKUP

1•1 FORD
'THUNDERBIRD

1•2BUICK
RIUL4DR.

6 cyl. engine, 5 speed
transmission, sliding rear
window, styled road wheels
with trim rings. rear step
bumper.

V6 engine, PS, PB, auto.
trans., AM/FM stereo cass.,
till &amp; cruise, power windows,
air cond., power driver's seat,
power mirrors.

SEDAN. V-6 eng ., PS, PB,
auto. trans., AM/FM stereo
cass., air cond., tilt &amp; cruise.
P. windows &amp; P. locks, local
one owner.

WAS$3,995

NOW

WAS $10,996

2,999

8

1993nRD
LX
HATCHBACK SPORT ~0·
DEL. 4 cyl. eng .. 5 sper3d
trans ., air cond., AM/FM
stereo cassette, rear Spoirer
cast aluroiny.m wheels, rear
defroster.
WAS $8,995

NOW

BIDWELL - Neenah Hill, -Bidwell: will exhibit Angus cattle-at
lbe 1995 RoU of Victory National Angus Show during lhe National
Western Stock Show in Denver, Colo,laJ)uary 11 -14.
Some 403 exbibilors who are members of the American Angus ·
Association with headquarters in St. Joseph, Mo., have entered a
total of 684 head to compete for top honors at the national ROV
e~e~l. .
'
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WAS $14,995

Now

To exhibit cattle at Angus show

.,

4.6 . va eng ., PS &amp; PB, auto. trans.,
AM/FM stereo cass., cloth trim, air con d.,
rear defrgster, extra clean, low mileage,
like new condition.

'7,899

NOW

8

9,999

NOW

1188 MERCURY

IRII IWIQUIS
4 Dr. ·sedan, VB eng.~
PB, air cond . leather int. ,
AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt 3,8 V6 eng., PS, PB, auto.
and cruise, all power trans. , P. mirrors, P. driver's
seat, rear defroster, tilt &amp;
e~uipment, extra'clean.
cruise. 3 to choose from.
WAS $6,495
WAS $15 995

. NOW

8

4,999

.

Rose joins associatio~
PATRIOT,- Jim Rose, Patrio.t, is a new member of the American
Angus Association. Tbe association, with more than 27,000 acuvc
adult and junior members, is the largest beef cattle reg1stry assocmtion in the world. Its computerized records includes detailed infor-.
mation on more than 12 million registered Angus.

DRIVE••••

Buckeye Home Heqlth expands

PUSH••••.
PULL••••

GALLIPOLIS - Buckeye Home Health recently opened a new
office in the French Square. 400 Second Avenue. Gallipolis.
Buckeye Home Health is accredited by the Joint Commission on
ACcreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) with commendation and is approved by lbe Ohio Department of Heal~ . .
The agency is certified by the Social Secunty Admmlstrabon for
participation in Medicare and Medicaid.
For more information or refenals, call tbe local BHH office,
1-~+-&lt;~.&lt;t·h 1155, or ~J•800,322""I'3-11 .

-yOUR

Committee to meet Jan. 26

We Want Your

.

GALLIPOLIS -The newly-fonned Gallia County Strategic Planning Natural Resources and EnyirOI!I!l~nt CQ.mll)ille~ will meet
Thursday, January 26, a1 7 p.m. in the C. H. McKenzie Agricultural
Center, Ill Jackson Pike.
The comminee was formed recently to promote the natural
resources in Gallia County and 10 act in an advisory capacity to the
Ciallia County Strategic Planning Committee in regards to the total
environment in the county.
For more infofTJI3tion, contact Cindy Jenkins at !he Gallia Soil
and Water Conservation District office, 446-8687.

Business!

lOW 813,998

CHEVROLET • GEO • · OLDSMOBILE

New state champion tree
•

·Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer
.
.

1616 EASTERIIIVE.
446·3671 Oil

•

GALUPOLIS

·0084
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PATRIOT- The Shagbark Hickory, located in Walnut Twp.,
(State Route 141 at the junction or County Road 7) has been certified as the new state champion tree. The tree is owped by Teddy J.
Bailey of Patriot and was nominated by Cynthia Jackson of Gallipo·Jis. The Shagbark Hickory is .140 inches in circumference. 110 feet
tall. and bas a crown spread of 75 feet.
The announcement
made by
. lbe Ohio B,ig Tree Program.
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under the preceP.orship of'l)r. J. E.
Althof.
As a licensed psychologist, Dr.
Boone· will be able to provide a
br&lt;x~d offering of clinical psyc~o­
logical services. Dr. Boone sa1d,
"The licensure is an important and
substantial part of my professional .
development. It pcnnits me to offer
additional services, such as group '
therapy, and 10 do so independently. I hope our community and the
region will benefit from my traming and interest in spiritual issues, a
relationShip-based psychotherapy
and in the therapy process as a way
to provide not only healing, but
also self-awareness, development
and growth. I'm looking forward
also to offering family-based services such as parenting and marital
communication sldlls training."
Dr. Boone, his wife Maria, and
their three children reside in Gal lijlolis.

you may win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley
MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery .
farm, featured by the Gallla Soli and Water
Publish Ill!! Co. Leave· your name, addrea and
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
telephone number with your card or letter. No
Gallla County. lndlvlduall wishing to partlcltelephone nils will be accepted. All conleal
pale in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
entries should be ·turned In to the new1paper
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your
· office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday: In case of a tie,
guess to the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next wuk,
Ave~ GaUlpolls, Oblo,-45631, or The Dally Sena Meigs County farm will he featured blJbl
llnei ;-U1-Court-st;;-~meroy, Ob111,45769, aoo•---...,1~ SOil and Water Con.•ervatlo!' District.

The best investm·e nf advice-: Keep it. simple
Investment Vle"'''oint
probably best 10 avoil! ~O!llplicated Evaluate your risk .tolerance before thi s is nothing c~plex or time-Con~
By BRYCE SMITH
and bard-to-understand products. investing,
·
suming. An easy-to-foUow monthly
With all the terms abOunding in Simple things still work.
·Keep good financial records. We household budget form can be purIOday'sfmancialworldinvestorsmay
Here's how:
live in a world that requires we keep chased at any stationery store. Itlcll
Jcel they've nm into a buzzsaw of
• Dcfmc your goals. What do you tack of transactions - how much we ~ou lmow when that insurance pre-·
buzz words. But '
wantyourmoneytodoforyou'7You pay for purchases what we receive in mium is due and when your tax estithe most important
might want to set up a college fwld linancial ventures. ~ceping proof of mate is approaching. But most irn·
word in the indusfor your children. Perhaps supple- ownership is another key to organi- portanl; it tells you at the end of the
try might Ire simmcnting your reliremerit fund or zation as your pursue your financial y~ where your money went.
plicity. Despite all
saving fora world cruise is your goal. goals.
That in itself could be your moilt
the leveraged buyWhile some may want more income · • Avoid complicated tax shelters important discovery. If you matdl
outs, · option
now,othcrsare-concerncdaboutthe and fancy life insurance. Many times, your· financial objectives to· where
tax effecl
.
spread5,andaceelmaking simple gifts to charity and to you have placed your money, you're
crated lease agree.
Be sure to state yow goals as chil\lren are preferable to a complex on -the way to reaching the goals
ments,thcreislittlethatisreallynew. simply and specifically as possible. trustarrangemcnt. These products can disc""""A I'
. .
_,.,., ear ~er.
You might see some new twists to
• Consider the risk:Noinvesunent · be exc~ IIcnt ~or specifi1c ·.SltUIUlons
And in many cases, the simpc
old products or some innovative comes without risk - whether it be and mdiVIduais but not necessary for route is best
· .
methods to take advantage of the inflation, changing interest rates; a many ,pcopte who could do just as
Bryce Smltll II aD IDvw r 1
latest tax I;aw. But for most of us_with ~~market or capital risk_.The higher the well with standard invesl!nepL~.
'-broker ror AdYest;IDc.,iirGIIIIpiinonnal invesbnent problems, it is · risk, the higher the potential reward.
• Keep a bouschold budgel Again, Iii.
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Pag.-D2-Sunday nmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant,

Congress in the land A _. tax step
ofnegaHveincen~ves
By JOHN CUNNIFF
.
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - Some day Americans migbt reflect in wdnder at a
government that penalized marriages, compelled payment of taxes ·on
" income" never earned or even seen, and limited tbe earning power of
tbe elderly. ·
But these and other inconsistencies are real, the consequences of
attempts at social engineering, politics, faulty legislation and inertia. It is
safe'to say, for instance, that few Americans are fOr a marriage tax, but it
elUSts.
.

Business Mirror

wv

i_n the tight direction

By Bruce Williams
Increase the amount to $1 ,000 a
Businesses have to deduct year. U you pay more tban that 10
$ocial SecUrity payments from any one individual, you are obliged
their employees' pay and mate ca- to get an employee number and
responding contributions of tbeir ·make the appropriate deductions
own. Can you tell me to what and contributions, ·b ut tbere are
extent, if any, individuals are· otber exceptions.
. required 1o do tbe same in CODIIeC·
One major exceplioo Sl8leS thai
lion witb household services, sucb if your employee is under 18 years
as baby-sitting, yard work, and of age and this is not their principal
cleaning?- L.B., LoweD, Mass.
occupation, tben tbey are exempt.
This provision t.akes place in 1995.
The government has colne 1o the .
DEAR )....B.: The law has recent· conclusion that many people have
· ly changed. It used to be tbat you · casual employees, and it's a foolish
were required to withhold if you burden to insist that they push the
paid household employees more paper involved to deduct Social
.than $50 in any one quarter. The Security and withholding. What do
law was changed in 1994 to you· know - we've made a step

Money Ideas

Just as certainly, it is a rare person who would suppon incentives for
.unwed mothers t.o bave more children, for consum
.,.!;!! to clog couns.JYith
phony producrliabihty cases or for regulators 1o harass small businesses.
But aU tbese things exis~ and tbey are but a trivial percentage of the
whole. More stanlingly, such incentives have ardent supponers, including
some who feel the country will go on tbe skids if tbey are removed.
And so, little is done to correct negative incentives; instead, tbey
become institutionalized, accumulating year by year and developing their
bureaucracy of enforcement, and bringing to mind James Madison·~
warning:
"I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of the freedom
of tbe people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than
by violenl and sudden usurpation."
By PATRICIA LAMIELL
If ~e laws lhat enforce such inconsistencies are examibed seriously, as
AP Business Writtr
promised by leaders of the current Congress, it will be more than has been
NEW YORK - Stocks rose
done for several years, ;JIId it could restore some lost faith iii government.
Friday,
led by economicaUy sensiWhile all these areas may be equally worthy of consideration from
tive and computer issues, foUowing
Congress, tbe chances of legislation differ. All have been skewed by years
the hood marlret higher as investors
of political and special interest thinking tbat confuses legitimate consider·
shrugged off the inflationary coose- •
auons.
quences
of th~ latest strong
Capit.aJ gains taxes .....: which include levies on -income never received
employment
data.
.
- have forever been associated with the wealthy, despite lniemal RevThe
Dow
Jones
industrial
aver.
enue Service data showing 55 percent of trpayers who repon them earn
age
rose
16.49
to
3,867.41,
its
$50,000 a year or less.
higbest
closing
level
since
Oct.
31.
lnaeases in tbese \3Xes have been defended as necessary to tbe Federal
The blue chip index added 32.97
treasury, but in reality tbe revenue so gained has faUen each year (tbrougb
for the week.
1993) since the last big increase in 1986.
Stocks and bonds started tbe day
They have also been defended as fair, although th·ey can be a tax upon
lower
after a stronger-than-expect·
a. tax. Perhaps worse, tbey also can be a tax on inflation; it is actually posed
employment
repon incited fears
sible under the law to lose money and pay a tax as if it were profit.
of
inflation
and
higher interets
It has happened. According to the Treasury Department, inflation
rates.
But
tbe
Dow
recovered early
accounted for three-quarters of "gains" from non-business real estate,
and
staued
in
positive
territory
and more than I 00 percent of the capita! gains from corporale stock,
·
throughout
the
session,
gaining
as
reponed in 1977.
·
much
as
37
points'before
trimming
Lost in the_political debate has been the matter of national interest. Bil·
its gains by more than half.
lions of dollars in capital gains are locked up in old invesonents, because
Advancing issues led decliners
tp iie.ll would be to be taxed on fictional ''gains.' ·
.
·
by
nearly 5 to 4 .on the New YoiX
While so locked up, the federal Treasury is denied the revenue that
Stock
Exchange. Big Board volume
would come from. sales, and new and innovative small businesses, tbe
was
moderately
bigb at 308 million
potential leaders of the future, are denied invesunents tbat almost cenainshares,
down
from
-309.15 million
ly would go 1o them. .
.
Thursday.
Think·.lank economists, suciLas..Gary and.Aidona.Robbins, attribute a
Broa!l marliet indexes were
variety of economic problems to such restrictions - slowed economic
mostly
higher, helped by strength
growth, for example, and put the lab in the billions of dollars.
in
computer
issues. The NYSE's
Capit.aJ gains is just one exiunple of negative incentives, and the dam· .
composite
index
rose 0.20 to
age done t() the e_con9my by them. Assessing the social damage - to
&amp; ·Poor's
251.59.
The
Standard
families, to children, to the elderly · ·is far trickier, and may involves
greater billions. ·
.
.
·
.
.
Simply to examine them, impartially rather than politically, in itself
could restore some faith in government.
BRIDGE

January 8, 191Mi

f01Ward with regan! to taxes.
DEAR BRUCE: Recently you
•advised a reader to consult a professional and the one you mentioned was an enrolled agent What
is that?- T.M., Bangor, Maine
. DEAR T.M.: An enrolled agent
1s one wbo has passed a test given
by !be I.R.S., which allows tbem 1o
pmclice bef~ the I.R.S. and speak
for the taxpayet. There are many
others who are allowed Ibis privi·
lege, such as attorneys, cettificd
public accountants and the like.
These reople are presumed,
because o either laking a test or
possessing certain credentials, to
bave the knowledge and ability to
represent clients appropriately. In

Assoct.Uon.

(Send your questions to:·
Smut Money, P.O. Box 513,
Elrers, FL 34680. QuesUono o'(
general Interest wiD be a111werecl
In ruture columns. Owi~J~~ to the
volume or nulil, penonal npUes'
cannot be provided.)
··
(For lnrormallon on bow tO'
communiCate electronkaUy with
this columnist and others, contact
America Online by c:aUing 1-~
IU7-6364, ext. 8317.)
"'

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BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

ALPER'

SAGITTARIUS- (f.jov. · f3-,Dee. 21 I
Pfotect your resources and possessions
today . Carelessness , such as leaving
things unsecured: CO\J/d result in a loss or

. theft.

NORTH

1·7·95

.•J

4
¥J1065

~'"Your

+K

.CSirthday
Monday. Jan. 9. ~995
Sunday, Jan 8, 1995
YC?u might have some interesting chal·
lenges in the y_ear ahead . You will be an
equal match for anything that confronts

Spend1ng less time on fnvolous pursu1ts
and more time on worthy endeavors w111
reward you handsomely in the year
ahead _ Y.ou_call...1.!1ake good thing s hap·
pen for yoursell during this cycle.

you , though Occasionally you may be CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 191 Take
slowed down a liltl~. but you 'll easily rtot~1ng lor grant~d loday in your com·
regain lost momentum .

merc1al dealings. Focus .instead on ·the

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 There's de1a11s. These moght be little hidden nests
a possibility today you might be kind to of trouble. MaJor change s are ahead tor
persons who don't want any attention and · Cap ncorn m the coming year . Send l or
latEn,-hostile toward someone who-net'!ds your Astra-Graph preffiC:tionSI6day Mall
assistance . Try to distinguish between S1.25 to Astro·Graph . clo lh1 s new spa ·
those Wlio need tie1p and those who per . P 0 Bo:~~: 4465 . New York . NY
don't Capricorn . treat yourself to .a b1rth- 10163. Be sure to state your zod1ac s1gn.

·day gift. Send for your Astro·Graph pre· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Strove to
dictions for the year ahead by mailing
$1.25 to Asrro -Graph , eta this newspa-

cooperate today 1nstead of lflSISIIng on ,
h~ vtn g your wa y 1 ~_yth i ng_ g_oes w&lt;'lili..

per , P".O. tlox ··4465. New York , NY 1t's hkely to be medon you
'f"
10163. Be sure to state your zodiac sign PISCES (F . 20-March 20) Today ot's

AQUARIUS ~Jan. 20-Feb. 19),The evatu-

aliens you make are usuatly based on ·

1mportant

4 3

•J 7 6 2

WEST

EAST

AKQ108

"97652

¥ K-

¥A 7

+852
AK9843

+976
AA'Q!O

SOUTH

•1\A

3

"'Q 9 8 4 '3 2
+A Q J io
65

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
South West North East
1•

. 4.

Pass
Pass

2•
P-ass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: "K ·

The trick
that disappeared
By Phillip Alder

tell1t l1ke 111s w1thout stretch-

acts ro accommodate your pre·

Th~

Senior Life Master, sitting be·

· entat1on. Even small embell•shme nl s.
w "t go unnot1ced. ·

side the roari~g rire, was feelihg
drowsy. However, when someone came

be unwise.
AR (March 21-Aprii19J You are usu·
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) ThiS IS·noi a ally ve y generous but today you m1ghl

to warm himself, the Senior Life
Master immediately perked up.

tog1c and practicality . Today, h0weyer,
you might tust play hunches. This wo~ld

be un ll1ng to part w11~ anyth•ng of value
un less ou're certam of get11ng more m
ret

down . The dupli~ate won't start for a
(ew minutes."

go awry,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20111 you perm ot
ARIES (March 21 · Appt 19) Guard pnde ro gel on yow way today. 11 coulo

After the man· had settled himself,
the SLM gave him a piece of paper with

against talking about prospects as 1f
they've already been accompliShed. Th1s

hamper you r cha nces of success and
cause -you to do someth•ng regrettable.

today's North and ,South hands written
on it.

could cause you ro cease your eHM and GEMINI (May 21-June' 201 Keep1ng an

Wh en this deal was played many

good day to become irlvolved fn financ1al
dealings with friends . ~spec1a l ly it you
have to play the banker. Someth1ng might

tgnore what needs robe done.

ope n mmd !oda y will p1o mp1 others to

''Pull up a chair, young man . 'Sit

..

30 Dow index Components included Alcoa. up 2 112 to-87 518; lntet,
national Paper, up 1 5/8 to 71;
Union Carbide, up I 118 to 30 112;
Caterpillar, up 1 to 56 5/8; and
mM, up I to 75 1/8.
'
.Mexican stocks moved low~ ill.
~~~~oedial ~OJllo that OOI!n!r)''J&gt;.
IUiillK'
CI'ISIS and 8 further drQp ~
the peso,. witb the bolsa's IP'C
index losing 0.84 percent.
v'
· Telefonos de Mexico's
can depositary receipts led the
.
ume on the New York Sl
·
Exchange, with 8.9 million sb
changing bands, and Ceil 1 118 to 31i

ACROSS

80 Grab
81 Mild oath
83 Co'penhagen
'

natives

10 Was painful
85 Understand
15 Not widespread
. 86 Tragic king
, 20 C!!J11UIY. Pianl _._,
88 Noted..vampire ~
21 About (a certain ~ Makes lace ·
dale): Lat. /
.
92 Drink ·
23 Seacoast
95 Incline
24 Divert
97 Jay of late night TV
25 Endeavors
98 Man lrom Brazil
26 Clapton and
101 Actor Baldwin
Sevareid
103 Steal
27 Artificial waterway
105 Flat-bottomed ·boat
28 Not wordy
107 Household cleaner
29 Billie Jean King's·
109 Water lily
game
111 Ascot
31 River in England'
113 Swords
32 Love god
115 Baffling question
33 Superlicial
116 Avoids
appearance
118 Direction indicator
34 Rough calc~lation :
120 Adds seasoning' lo
abbr.
122 Tenth: comb. form
35 Expire
123- Moines
37 Fishgig
124 Fitting
39 Object from
126 Jewish law
antiquity
128 Scarcer
41 Pigpen
130 Spread to dry
42 Arm bone
131 Young woman .
44 Hackneyed
133 Summary'. for short
46 K1nd ollily
135 Wheel hub
47 - Avi~
136 Fish paddle·
50 Rock star- John .
139 Energetic
52. lnslruct
141 Interlaced
54 Male cal
143 Nope's opposite
55 Chemist's
144Vip~r
workroom, lor short
·147 Comes to be
58 Foray
149 ltalia's capital
so Skull cavify =
151 School in' Engiarid •
62 Facets
153 Closer
·
64 Improve
1~~Jmposed a levy on
66 Aflower
156 More impolite ·
68 Fragrani'Wood
157 Of warships
70 At no lime
159 Dwelling
•
72 Send payment
160 Make expiation
73 Permeate
161 The Atlantic, e.g.
75 Perpetually
1S2 Snoozed
77 Appraiser
163 Domesticates
79 Bird habitat
164 Furnishes

7/8.

.

.

AT&amp;T was second in volume
and down I 318 1o 48 1/4, as CODo
cern mounted about a price war in
the long-distance telephone marker.
But Apple Computer surged 3
114 to 42 in Nasdaq uading, after a
computer trade magazine said the
company ntay be a takeover target.
~pple's. rise puUed ot!ler computer
ISsues htgber.

165 Gongs
166 Toboggan
167 Top pertotmers

..

DOWN
1 Dull surlace
. - 2 Monsters. · 3 Pollute
4 Baking chamber
5 Someth•ng left over
• · 6 Frost
7 Grime
8 American Indians
9 Take willingly
10 Determine
11 Burn
r-1_2 Treat wilh respect
-13 Rubs out
14 Punta- Este ·
15 Tardy one
16 Portent
17 Remedies
18 Something valuable
19·Suspictous
22 Declare
30 Opera star _Beverly

33 Slrenglh
36 Inveigle
38 Affeclfld manners
40 Permit
43. Excellent .
45 Sea duck'
47 Snare
.48 Facilitates
49 British measure
51 Unclothed
53 Western state
55 Jui~y1fuits •
56 Flavoring plant
57 Midler or Davis
59 Satan
61 Frugal one
· 63 Bristle
65 Bog
67 Levels lo the ground
69 Kingly
71 Housing expense
' 74 Drstributes cards
76 Contests of speed

Kingdom
Stupid one
Postal item
Pulls oars
Leave
Flies up and around
!t1 Tole rated- -92 Plate of mi&lt;ed
greens
93 "- - lucy•
94 "For- sake!•
96 Type measure
99 Map within a map
100 Female relative
102 Mongrel
104 Mistake
106 Erosion
107 Off the right path
108 Dry
110 Wild rushes ol

-,
••

respect· They w1t1 be only as recepttve as.

cesslul1n the pas! •

'Mannaduke had ever d

optimiSll C, but don't de

GEMINI.(May 21-June 201 Don't d1g too Lady Luck You need ro make a concen.

•' I

ed effort to..ach•evo your 'obteGitves today.

Marmaduke's single raise, she jumped

You moghl discover somethong you won·r LEO ·(July 23-Aug. 22) Dec1s1ons fouod-

directly to game. Then, after West had

be able to rests! gosstptng abou t.

ed upon tempora ry con ven•ence wil l ·not

led the spade king, Fenella spotted four

CANCER (June 21-July 22) B.-extreme· w•thstand a test today Base your 1udg·

losers: one spade, two hearts and one

deeply today tnto aJriend's personal ltfe.

iy selective today m seektn g ad"Vtce abotJt

ments on more endunng factors

I

•.;

a d.lff icull de cisoon. Some people you VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 221 Attemptong ·a

ducethistotalbyone.

"'-now have goo d mtenl·ton-s, ·but poor
JUdgment.

dO-lt -yourself project today could be dtS·
astro us· 11 1l -s ove r yo ur he ad. have

. As you have probably noticed, there
was but one chance. After winning ~th

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Plans conoooved someone wolh the expentse back you up
on skelchy information loday could cause LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Do nor make

the spade ace, Fenella played on dra monds . And when they broke 3·3, as

problems down the lin~ . Avo td drawing
conclustons before you have all the tacts

d~ mands of ott"!ers today that you would
not _!\/a nt ma de of you A dtctaronal att 1•

-.....
.•
•
•
•' •

••
..
. •',•
. ..•
'

..•
•

..

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'

.•'•
·:

..
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o'

•

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Today you tude woll provoke an angry re sponse if
might be prone tq tak1ng nsks that are out

you p1ck on the wrong guy .

,

•

_,,.•
•'•

of t haracter lor you. Your chances lor SCORPIO (Dol. 24-Nov. 221 Amosund•t

played a trump, the ace and king tum·

gratifying your expectations are rath er
slim.

Sland1ng betweell you and your mre
m1ght., occur today. If 11 does. . clear 11 up

bJtng With a metaP.hOriC Crash.
Mannaduke was so impres~ed that

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0et. 231 You and your roghr away .T•n:&gt;e woll make lhos s•tuatoon

after the session he proposed. Fenella

mate m•ght both have diffic ulty keePing

wo,se. not better

o.~r.cepted with alacrity, and

I

promises you make each olher. Neither ,SAGITTARIUS (Nov .' 23-0ec. 211 Even If

stand they are still happily playing

of you shoulrl make commitments you

bridge to'gether somewhere in F1orida.

the S1 1ua11on seems to warrant 11. don't

cannollulli: .
er oroclle anyone punr.c ry tOday The
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Avoid par- defen dan t mogh t overreact on sell ·
licipaling in office gossip loday. lword delense
· '"" Sf:WSPAI't:ll ENTERPRISt: ASSN

•

•

The SLM looked up, expecting some
comment from the young man, but he
had already moved into;the card
room.
-~

Crowr\GIIy, OhiO

PPIOI"'e: 25&amp;-tl740· •

-

•

•

Thursday, January 12, 1995 at 7:00p.m.
.OWNER: Hester Houck, Moving

T

"I

•

",.

..•
....
"

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,•.

.. ' I ,

•

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""'.·

"'

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ot

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I

Johnson-AUCIIONEER'

-

··-

HOUSEHOLD, TOOLS AND MISC.
Frost Free Gibson Refrigerator, Speed Queen
Auto, Watlter, P-ortable dryer, dlnlng. lable and
hutch, 3 pe. living room..set, melal kitchen cabinets, _ ~rlna
cook stove, Berllnglon Reclines, electric singer st1
rl)achine. 2 'rocking· chi! Irs, stralghl back chairs.
drawers. dressers, twin beds , 3 full size beets,

wardrobe. wall clocks, lamps,' utility labte, linens, RCA Color
TV, mise kilchen supplies, sklllqts, milk glass, i:ookbooks,
floor tamps, .throw rugs, what·nots, lawn chairs, eleclrlc
sweeper: mi&lt;rors. asliOrted glassware. misc .. dllttes .~ fenwn .
~and cut stemware, slools, step ladders, chimney cleaner.
pots and pans, electric appliance. hand saws, squares,
hacksaw, crow bar. shovels, scoop shovel, sled hammer. lool
box. hanglnllamps; and much, much, more.
NTIQUES and COLLECTIBLES
Wagner skillets, grlswald sklllel, sad Iron washboard.
blenko fenton, green and pink depression glass. cookie jar,
baskels, milk bottle. blue granHe ware, golden wheal dishes,
rolling pin, cookie cutters, cro'lll cut saw. sel dishes, 4 gal.
stone jar, sewing notions, wagner wear scotch -bowl, M60,

February f4, 1922 Daisy Churn, coff~e grinder, blue canning
jars, McCoy Pottery, set pyrex mixtng bowls. large barre[.
etched crystal vases. rosevllle-Zepher Lily bo'M, naol keg,
children books, small brown jug, hankies, cormng ware, oil
lamps, ftoor lamp.
·
Ello
C11h
Poalllvo I.D.
Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer, uc. 3815

614-379-27.20

.

Not Re1pon1lble for accident or loll of property
Uc. and bonded Jn ·atate~f Ohio
Au~lon Every Sllturday Night at 7:00 p.m.

1'wo lldoroblt klttono
homea, l14-62-221i.

to gOod

&amp;

&amp; ClloW,

,Lost &amp; Found ·

Roid,

8-.

Public Sale

8

&amp; Auction

Found:

S._pord puppy, -~ng
blue collart GNinbrier Eltatn,
SAndhill RCL 304-elS-1458.

Rlck Pal~n A.ucUon ~

full time a~Uoneer, com
a\lctlon
..mee.
UcllnMd
tee,Oitlo &amp; Woot Vlrglnlll, 301- .
773-5785.

i.ott: Yo"ng ~,::"' noutoNd
c:.t Sll 12~
n Syr~cUM
and Bowman'• Run Ad., 8~
94i-31:1e.

whKo· Beagle ;_7_ __;Y,:II:,rd:....:S:..:a::.le:,___

=~~ R~

.

.

A,uctlon-

Col. Oocor E. Click,
U....._e 75CotM &amp; ..._,.. ' -

-304-t--11&amp;-34311~-·- - . . , - - - -

1

Found: Dog, Wlllo Wlth
Lookll Llkll Pekin-. vtclnly:
H.dg.wood Drtw, B14 Ul 12114
Aftor8 P.M.

old,Pot Billy Pig. To

lklod Homo,

814-388 1010.

Protty rod &amp; whKo, molo, ~
wotchdoa, ._d all ahola. 301713-5201.'

PuppiM: lllxod Brood, Will S.
Modlum Slr.tl lklod Wlth
Chlldronl 814-2U..OO.

An nou nc eme nl s

Giveaway

2 port BNgiO pupploe, :IOW75o
4431.
111 Hquoo W I - Wlth Pone't
614-tiZ.-2.

8

BULLETIN 'BOARD

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

14, IIIII
10:00 A.M • .

SAt. IAN

Located on Rt. 33 at the auction center in Mason,
W.V. Mr. Quick is selling his home &amp; moving bac.k
lo California. Due.lo lack of parking his personal
belongings have been moved from Middleport,
Ohio to the auction center in Mason, W.V.
and will be selling the following.
Outstanding 8 pc. highly carved French DR
suite w/china cabinet has beveled and curved
glass door must see , beautiful highly carved 6 pc.
king size French BR Suite (Ivory &amp; Blue). lg . 5 pc.
feak lilhg size- BR STille wrmarbllf top nlglit
stands, 4 pc. Ivory &amp; Gold king size BR suite,
french desk, french desk w/glasstop, 5 pc. french
sofa, two Queen· Ann wing back chairs, French
chairs, viet marble tope table, M.T. coffee table,
brass &amp; glass tea cart, bookcase, french longere
chest, 6 pc. wicker set, french s tyle table, blanket
chest, cedar chest, benches, lg. bar, wrought iron
table &amp; chairs, Emerson 19" col'?r TV, G .E. Frost
Free gold Refrigerator, Kenmore 16 C.F. &lt;Freezer,
5,000 BTU air cond ., small kitchen appliances,
quality cookware, very decorative wall hangings,
lg. gold gulled Hall pc. lg. gold' gilled mirror, Ig .
painting, over 30 pc. of silver tea set, lg . platters;
tray &amp; Austria, Lefton . China. Norilaki, pink
depression, lg . pink compode, beautiful
stemware, several pc. I
glass baskets,
figurines , lead crystal lamp, hanging guilted
lam !IS w/pm:ms; gold. leaf candlell'lbra lights,
oriental style blue hanging lamps w/prisms, brass
light, ch.e rub lamp w/prisms. ig. decorated chalk
cherubs, brass .ducks &amp; deer, flowers. flal iron,
books, rugs, old haf pins~thimliles, fan, 6 hooked
rugs. costume jewelry, dresser sel, bird cage,
bottlet;;, lois of linens, Christmas Decorations •
craftsman hedge trimmers. several new items still
in baKes. Plus much more not listed.
Auctioneer Note; A very large all ·oay auction
Don't miss this onel!! . .
Auction Conducted By

Rick Pearson Auction Co.

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
· Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
'
Engineer. ....... .. .............. $49.00
Wellington ·' ...... .. .. ...: .. ...$49.00
Loggers ........ .. ...... ......... $50·55
Harness ...... .......... ........ $59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
·
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made ·

LAYNE FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION OF
LIVING ROOM SUITES·
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRI.CED $450 TO $1095
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1t95
Mon. lhru Sat . 9·5 p.m. 446-0a22
3 miles out Bulaville Pike

Your Choice Roast Pork,
Roast Beef or Prime Rib
Dinner with mashed
potatoes, vag. &amp; roll
Open Sunday 1 0 am • 6 pm

PIRATES COVE
RESTAURANT

Country Line Dance
And
Aerobic Classes
PVH •
Wellness &amp; Rehab
Center
For Time &amp; Information

.Call 675-7222
FOR LEASE
. COMMERCIAL
BUILDING
336 Second Avenue
Gallipolis
446-0577
HOL2ER 'S
"HEART TO BEAT'
CARDIAC SUPPORT GR()UP
WILL MEE:r ON THURSDAY,
JANUARY 10, 1995AT
6P.M. INTHE
FRENCH 500 ROOM
TOPIC: "MANAGEMENT OF
ANGINA" With
DR. GENE ABELS
REFRESHMENTS WILL 8E SERVED

Rt. 160

388-9823
Diabetes Support Group will
meeiTues. Jan . 10, 7:00pm
Pleasant Valley Hospital
downstairs conference room
for information 304-675-7222

Call 446-2342
or992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

L~ch Mason . W.'v. 773 -~785

Auctioneer: Rick Pearson

Owner: Harlan ~Pete" Quick
Terms: Cash or check 1(1ith I.D.
Not Responsible for accidents or
of property

..

•

)

Small mixed breed mal8 ~.
hod oil oholl, good wlchlldron.
304 ..75-'1134.

FOUND 2 blk

10:00 a.m.

••

'•
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"

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~ee

6

Giveaway

4

6 .-Loll\ &amp; Found

4

From Galllpolle, Take Route 141, Turn left onto
Route 775, turn right onto Patriot Road.
Watch for lfgne.

••

under~·

...

;pu6lic Auction

•

E;asl ruffed with the heart seven, but

·--~----

Giveaway

H11 Shot1, Love Kklll, 114-441·

"No more fly fishing practice tn the office . ok?"

Not Responsible For Accidents Or Loss of Property

•

when F.'enella regairied the le~d. she ·

__

&amp; Auction
__;,;;;,.;,;.;;..:..;.,,;,...;,

Saturday January 14, 1995

'

successor

she needed, Fenella led her last dia mond, d~cardin_g dummy '~ spade jack.

_

Located approx. '20 miles north of Ironton and
approx. 20 miles soutl'\ of Gallipolis at lecta the
auction is located 6 mile from State Route 775 on
Sanfork Road. ·
The following will be sold:
1969 Chev. Nova, . JD 1010 · tractor, 9N Ford
Tractor, 2 methanical tobacco transplanters, tub
ferti lizer spreader, 4' Rotary mower, 3 pt. one row
cultivator, 3 pt, disc, 2 bottom Ford plows, King
Kutter 6' Blade, Ford 2 way dirt scoop, sprayer,
flat bed wagon, farm 1reiler, 275. gallon metal
water tank, 2-Handy man j&lt;)cks, one· Jot tobacco
sticks, Homelite wa1er'pump, Lay-off plow. plastic
barrens. utility trailer, circular saw, .step ladder,
alum. ext. ladder,. rope, wrenches. hammers,
bench grinder,
hand
tools and other
miscellaneous items.
Terms: Cash
HOWARD O'NEILL, OWNER

-.:' ,

.·,.•'

club. She wondered how she might re·

0115.

PUBLIC AUCTION
il"

i

t enella opened one heart. Following

and other varloua route•

--.-~

.."•

handsome fell ow, not unlike yourselr.

South was Fenella Fortescu·Fynnes.
the first reasonable bridge player

eMonth 01&lt;1 Brnn Mile Puppy,

..

TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) The two fac- receove yo·u• voews an d op1mons wt,lh · was Mannaduke Smytheson. He was a
tors that m1ght hold you back today are

Improving. oecllon ATH-o.oo.
on Stale Route 7 In Athena

~

·' I

140 Sing a certain way
142 Work of licl1on
1&lt;14 Smell145 Passover feasl
146 Urge
148 Transm1t
150 Lunch or dinner,
e.g.
152 Neck part ,
' 154 As blind as !.... 156 Steal from
158 Bus. abbr.

NOnCE TO
wNTRACTORS .STATE OF
•· OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
_.. . Columbui, Ohio
-'," December 23, 1994
.•Contract Salao Legal Copy
~. . - No. 95.25 __ .
U!jlt Price Contract
S.oaltiLI!r_C!p_!!a&amp;ll wlllJ&gt;.~
recatved by all pre-qualified
)llddera at tho oHice of the
Ohio Department of
:Transportation, Coluinbua,
Ohio, until 10:'00 a.m.
: Wednesday, January 18,
•f995 for lmproveme~ta In:

4

------8
Public Sale

animals

112 Cautions
114 Ardor
117 Secret agents
1,19 Cily in Texas
121 Playing card
125 Recipe abbr.
127 Sale places
129 llerates
132 Evergreen tree
134' Parts olllowers
136 LethaL
137 Angry
138 President
Johnson's

Public Notice

end aoetlono by epRIYing
retro-reflectlve laot dry
pevemant marking material
for con1er llnu, edge linea,
lone line and auxnl ..y
markings.
~~"The
dote ut for
complollon of this work
ohall be eo ael forth In tho
bidding propoaal." ,
Plana and Speclflcatlono
oro on file In tho Department.
of Tranaporlallon and the
oHiea of the Dla1rlct Deputy
Athene, Gallla, Guernaey, Director. ·'
Hocking, Melg1, Monroe,
Jerry Wray
Morgan, Nabla, Ptrry,
Director ol Tranaportalion
VInton and Washington. January 1, 8, 1995
Counllea, Ohio lor

'

78
82
84
87
88
89

PubliC Notice
·~-

'

years ago Ccontinued the SLM l, North

self·defeatong thoughts and attempts ro you a•e
use methods thai have proven unsuc· CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Remaon

flow to the company' s individual publications.
However, the supply has tightened.
. " We can' t get as much newsprint as we wan~ " Whipple said. " We
have about a 20-day inventory now . We customarily carry more tban
that."
The Enquirer's presses require about 1,000 tons weekly for the Enquirer and two other dailies printed under a joint operating agreement. The
Cincinnati Posr and The Kentucky Pos1.
.
.
David Creech of The Evening Leadu in St. Marys-is among publishers
who said tbey might have .to switch grades of newsprint to get a better
price and availability.
.•
· For themost p~ publishers have known tbe price increases have been
corning and have tried to plan for them, including maintaining relations
with the newsprint suppliers, the executives said.
"We've t.aJked to the newsprint suppliers for many months now," said
Jim Hofmann, publisher of the Sandusky Register. " It was just something
we've been planning for a long-time."
.
·
Spokesmen for the newsprint industry say. the price increases arc long
overdue, with newspapers enjoying discounted rates in recent years while
the J!aper industry suffered.
"Lesr' you f!'cl sorry for the newspapers, you can go back to 1990
when the price of newsprint was $535 (per ton)," Lawrence Ross, an analyst for the WaD Street invesunent firm of PaineWebber Group Inc., said
recently. " In 1989, it was over $600. By this year, il was down to $42.0."
Tom Foster, president and chief executive officer of the Soutbwest
Ohio Newspaper Group of Thomson Newspapers, baseil al Middletown,
acknowledged tbat the mcrcases arc rollbacks of discounts tbe 001fspapers
enjoyed for seviral years while production or paper outstripped th~ mar·
kettlemand. ·
·
·
.
"We shouldn't forget thai these are discounts thai they (;mppliers) arc
removing," said Fostc·r. ''Our newsprint costs are coming back. in some
ca~s . to' where they .were four or live. years a!!o .. } 'hese are discounL~
we ve.been able to enJoy, and they ~c d1sappeanng.

Ami

See Answef to Pll.zzler on Page C-7
6 Notion

PHILLIP

ing meeting
later this month, aria!ysts,said.
.. .
·
."The economy is sizzling,"
sa1d Sung Won Sobn, chief
economist at Norwest Corp., "and
(Fed)· Chairman (Alan) Greenspan
is going to have to raise interest
rates 1o cool lhe economic temperalure down."
·
. Stock investors fear higher
mterest rates could cut into consumer purchases and corporate
earnings. But John Lonski, senior
economist at Standard &amp; Poor's
Corp., said healthy growth in
fourth-quarter earnings should off~et tbe negative effects of higher
mterest rates on tbe stock market,
at least near-term.
"The employment repon tells
us very litUe about any prospective
changes in corporate earnings,"
Lonski said.
.
Economically sen~itive stocks,
which loOk big bits in the final days
of lastyear, led blue chip issues
higber. Strong gainers among tbe

SUNDAY PUZZ.L ER
1 Engine

might get back ro the boss, makirig you
appear to be the one starting rumor::t.

haps that's a luxury we' re going to have to reassess,"' said Thomas J.
Mullen. publisher of The Lima News.
,
However, Mullen said the News will stress otber types of conservation,
such as redu&lt;;ing the numbers of unsold copies that are printed and accelerating measures for newsprint recycling.
Pub,lisber I. Bradford Tillson of the Dayton Daily News said a taSk
force bad been fonned at his newspaper 1o come up ;with ideas for reducins newsprint waste.
Price increases for advertisers was mentioned by some executives as
another means of coping, and some also indicated that subscription prices
for readers might go up.
Higher newsprint. production and disttibution ~osts prompted The
Cincinnati Enquirer to announce an increase in subscription prices effective Jan. 2.
.Talmage Campbell, ex~;eutive edito'r of The News-Herald of Willoughby, said price increases to readers are "not sornetbing we like 10 do . ... It' s
cenainly no benefit to us. It continues to raise the cost of newspaper read..
ership, and that hurts lhi: industry."
.
A number of tbe executives mentioned advenising rate increases m the
4 percent '!O 5 percent range, but many said that is in line with their norpees.
. _
mal annual increases 1o cover costs.
Most of the execuiives stressed tbey hope to avoid reducing tbe size of
Although at least one major newspaper, The Miami Herald in Aorida.
.tbeir "news boles," or ratio of 'the newspaper containing edilorial conhas announced plans to eliminate 30 to 40 jObs through attrition to help
tent.
offset rising newsprint costs, none of the Ohill newspapers indi~ated there
"We do not plan 1o change tbe news bole at all," sai!l Roben Smitb,
are plans for layoffs,
.
editor of The Columbus Dispat.ch , which uses about 1,000 ton s of
'_'We think we can internally cut our costs and hold the line," said
newsprint in a typical week. .
.
Thomas E. Thokey, general manager of the.Troy Daily News.
· H~ said the Dis~tch likely would red~ce the number of self-promo- .
None of the executives predicted tlifficulty in obtaining necessary
tiona! "bouse ads' in the paper, "but cutung tbe news content would lie
amuums of newsprint. despite increased demlilid nationwide for paper
VIe last reson."
·
.
products. • •
·
.~ However, several executives said tbe size of the news bole would have
Harry M. Whipple , presid.e nt and publisher of The Cincinnati
•lo be re-examined.
Enq!'irer, said th~ Gannett communications group, of which· his 'new spa"Hislorically, we've. run pretty roue~ of an open newspaper, and per- per 1s a member, buys newsprint tbrough a subsidiary and can control the

•

500-stock ' index added 0.34 to
460.~ . .
The Nas&lt;)aq Composite .indc~
climbed 4.03 for the day to 749.69.
The American Stock Exchange's
market value index fell 0.64 to
433.12.
The 3()-year hood ended tbe day
a\lllllt l/4 poilU Higher, pushing its
· )'leld, which falls when prices rise,
down to 7.85 percent from 7.88
percent Thursday.
· The Labor Department said the
nation's unemployment rate
declined to 5.4 percent in Pecem·
ber from 5.6 in Nove111,ber. The
economy ad~ed 256,000 jobs in
December. well within analyst
expectations, but the NovC&lt;D~ber
figure was revised upward to to
488',000 from the sizable 350 000
initiaUy reponed. ·
'
The jobs growth could indicate
~ th~ economy is growing at an
mflatwnary .pace and provide
incentive for the Fedi:ral Reserve to
raise interest rates at its policymal&lt;-

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-03

Point Pleasant, WV

fty The Associated Press
:
,
~ Ohio' s daily newspapers, facing_steep in~s in tbe co~t of tbe paper
$II which they print, hope to avoid drastic changes in thetr amounts of
lews content and the prices tbey charge advertisers and readers.
,
. However, some executives contacted durin~ an Associated Press
Slatewide survey of newspapers indicated price mcreases, especially 1o
~vertisers , will be.inevitable.
.
·
Virtually everyone stressed the irnponance of operating more efficient·
IJC, Including reduced waste of paper and belt-tightening in all areas.
.. "The new&amp;Jirint increases have driven up our cost of doing business,"
Sind Charles Siroh, operations manager of The Blade in Toledo. ' 'And
we've got to tighten up somewhere else. It's just as simple as that."
• Growth in the U.S. economy bas meant increased demand for all types
&lt;Jf paper, including the newsprint used in newspaper presses. Dunng ~
economic downiUrn newsprint prices sank to about $420 a ton. but Oh10
newspaper executives said they expect to pay increases of from 30 percent
~50 percent before prices level off during 1995.
·
·
. This comes on the beels of improved prosperity in 1994 for newspa·
{iers, many of which reponed sharply increased earnings. However,
newsprint is the second largest expense, behind people, at many newspa-

view' of tbis, they· are ellowed tO'
apeak direcdy for tbe elieut ratbe(·
tban having the client at tbeir side
during a proceeding.
·
Bruce WiiiiMM Is a syndlatea:
writer ror Newwpaper EDierprllll!·

'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH

phio papers brace for'· newsprint price hike

'...

Stocks increase with bond prices

ASTRO-GRAPH
•

anuary.8, 1995

~

I

•

I(

,,
/'

�•

-

OH

Page-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7 ·

11

ANSWERS TO

...!1"11' -

"Boy the traffic was a real mess
today. People drive so recklessly."
my business colleague complained
one morning. "That's true,' I offered.
"The way some people drive if the.
road turns at the same lime they do I
its only a COINCIDENCE!"

FROLIC
OFFEND
CRUNCH
ARCADE
SORDID
PENMAN
COINCIDENCE

~~~

Wanted to Buy

Ooon

11

Help wanted

or

Cora

TncM. 1 8 1 7 Smith . Sulek Panlloc,

eo.... A-.... Gottlpolo.
J lo D'o Ai«o .,.,.. ond - 11100

buylnt -M.J~nk outoo I
trucka.
ula. 3CM-

t•
To Tolanl lloport~=·
Box :lit, Cllorloolon, WY

Atllorf:.::'
713-5343or

•
-Tannlnol
Corclnol Fralglll eomo.. lno. lo

to bur- Uonol I
Amwkan Ftyw t,..lna &amp; .cc..

Wonted

hldnt

... . . . ..
tor
I

-r/oponlloro

oorloo, ole, call Frwd, 114-5112·
!1205W.

vonlllotbod dlvlolon, pnrlltoblo
.po, progrom, ooeunto

Old bullona, coelwnt lewelrv,
old 1~, Iron oldlloio, oiC-

-::Jl

oon-., -

tno. o
ablo, - no ~P
- fionl monoy
and llml
homo,
to
loooo on. Coli &amp;o,d, 1-22112421.

tu,.., Sl:ar Warw, gl. ., chlna.
tvmhure toot. or ~Ia . .
lot•. 00\.y llart!n, 6
-lUI.

Wonted To Buy: Junk Autoa
WHH Oi WHiiiiiil llotoi11. Coli

Liorry Unty. 114-386-11303. .

Nu..... lloclol Wort&lt;--..

llarl!otlng
_.,

c..~... ..rn.""'*
c..~n

tolophono

d - . M.IG/Iw'. In Poniolaf.
Bond ,.....,. to: Tho DIIIJ 8orillnol, P.O. Boo K-'121,

p_,,

OhiO 417811.
Prvgo ......
Home
HooKh
AaollcY Hoo .... 0t!on1ng
, _ Pooltloni·

.:r..:.,.~w:-;;-:-~
=.-r~oo~
t!
llaln II, Point p-.....i_ WY

..·

21650.
11
Help Wanted
Wlnlod: ExporioMod no.ntng .
!Mir 111-w..tdy, ._. Hour Joli,
- - lliill le Roll-, R&amp;taurant

l::.l";.':.
~ E'/:fd
•
oo: T
CI.A--._~Qat.
.......,.
Dolly
. ... Tlllnl

A-uo, Golllpollo, OH 41131.

Nurolng

anil

.

.alNSEIIVATlON ·

oiOBS
0omo
Wanlo!lo,
llolni-NoWEte.

loourtly,
No 'E:i:;
~~Fori
·
Coli
. mo, I

==:!.::======:!""~·~·1~0~11~~~-~~~- 7 0.,..
11 . Help Wanted

In-

-·~In

Help Wanted

""""""" . Apply to llr. Untho
domon 01
Nuroi"H~
Flohobllolallon
•

·"Poetal .....
$12.21 Per Hr. To St1rt, PIUI
BenefJia.
Canien,
Sort.,.,
ClorM. llalntononco. For An

=~-~~·

P-ro,, 114-

.

Aoollcatlon I Eum lnlonMtlon
. C.ilt. t.aoo-at-.e, Extonolon
a;z, IA.II.-8 P.ll., 7 Doyo.

0FFICE IIANAGEA

AVON t AI Arwa I Slllltoy
Spoo... 304-675-1428.

JoHN

SiLVERS.

~

LONG JOHN SILVER 'S
leads the wayt Our innovative alternatives to ordinary
quick-service menus have
made us a bold new industry
farce . .

REHAB PROFESSIONALS
SIGN-ON BONUS

ASSISTANT ·
MANAGERS

ichlav.do-~

raUO and the IUCCMeul caftoo
dldolo will lrl
In

LoNG

Arid

llrurM. For Top 40 Country
Arid . Old land. - - Only! --...o:zt,
.,.._._

FI.H.'o, LPN'o, ~ ........
Aldoo, Flold
~.,
- - lluot le
In 011, WY, KY. " - ' " ' - A WIUIUFE

PHYSICAL THERAPISTS
$70K+IYr. DOE
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS
$55K+IYr. DOE
SPEECH -LANGUAGE PATHOLOGISTS
$45K+IYr. DOE
COTAs&amp;PfAs
·$35K+IYr. DOE

AVON to buy or Mil, lladtvn, In-·
d1p1ncMnl rep. ~41 or
t.aQO.IIII2.a58.

18

Minimum 2 years manage- .
mont/supervisory experience, preferably in quick
service industry. S9me col·
lege preferred.

.'

1175 Frooclom MltlU 2 Bocl- 30WTW330.
raoma, 114-44~1812, IS'M-317- Th,.. hnd-oom ,,...., . . rwnlln
0554.
f
.
Syi'ICMI, 1'14-1Do3112.
1117!1 14170

882-a600.

w-.

T~lluM

l'llologropher Avolloblo
lar
Olhor Evelda
eon Kavln 114-4411-11118 Aft• ~
p.m.

Financ1al
21

: Laboretory Re...rch Allociate
Part-time Tenm (through June 30, 1995) .
Continuation Contingent Upon Grant
·
Funding
Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine
IA~1AIL.AiliLI: : Immediately following search . .
l ....,&gt;u- 16,00Q

I:

In
:~:;:;~~sa~mples
and

luoo•'e

l

experience

A Move In .the Right Dlrectfonf Step up to
homeownership in this spotless 2. - 3.
bedroom home in Middleport. You'll enjoy
the l!)rge 'comer lot and 2 car garage. Take a
look today.
11507

3 -.a1ono1 Roloro,_, Ano
Salory Ellpoetatlona To Kay R.

DlrectO!.!

Pl ...nod Porwnthood Of

1

s~

3111 Flk:hlond Av.,.uo,

--....

ELMWOOD TERUCE APARTMENTS

1171.

45

Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 4Sn1

Si- CD Ployoo, 2
AIDino Amplllw, Arnpltor.,
Alpine Cor
liarm, 8512 Klckor 8o!!, Colo&lt;
lV; Ford IIUMog at_; Lo•ro And
Fogtlght c:o.n o14-t4W22t
No Cotlo ARor tO 1&gt;.11. P -•

-

Roomi

Accepting
Applications for one
.
and two .bedroom apartments

-lor-·-or...,.l\.

~-. GalllaHolot.

Attontlon llobllo I DoU-

S l - - - h -.

- , . Wo Cony A Com-

AIIO tril•

ipiCI: on rtwr. Ql
-~JI'L. _CoM ollaf 2:00 p.m.,

Rents based on Income

piMo Stock Of lnlorthonn
;;zsttR Heot Pu..,. And Fur-

wv.

304·77HNI, ..._

Range from $0·506
Handicap Accessible Units

. ,.. .

Merchandise

VI'RA FURNrrURE

.........

4lllloo Out AI. 141

Management and Laundry on site.

614·949·2012 TDD 1·800··750··0J

~ Equai ·HotuSil1a ·()Ot&gt;Ortt

MCM And l&amp;obl.. Home Fur·

,_

Porto

With

Flnanclnfl

len-'• llobllo
Hooting I Cooling AI 114-

Avallololo Coli

441-1 Or 1-I00-412-aM7. Aok
Ue Aboul Tho Emplro llobllo
· Wall Fwnoco Thot Uaoo

HOI EtoctrlcMy. WY 010212.
a- Br Rod Wing Chippewa

-40 To -10 o.grMI, H.H. Brown

Guarontood1 LOwell Prtcoo, Tho

Shoe Colo, oM-446-4222.

Brunca woodburner wtlh acc.eoriee, $'150; 1881 ellver top-

'";+.,

per, Sontry, IKo 11188 pickup
$400; 114-&lt;11111l:tU

Cho•-·

614·992-6419 TOO

~

D. C. Metal Sale.; l1c.
bYNE'S FURNITURE

Comptoto ._, lumlehlngo.
Houra: Mons... _N , 1'14-441-11322, 3 mlloo. 9'1! l!ui&amp;VAio Ad.
F-Dollvery.

Sor.

With llolclllng Rocllnor I
Rocllnlng . . . . . -. Good CondKion, Cloanod, Fobrlc Prvtocted, $300, 114 118 0204.
SWAIN

AUCTION •

FURNrTUIIE. 12
• Uood

Qlhlo 81., Golllpollo. -

Equal Housing Opportunity .

tumhure, ....... Wnlem I
WCH'tl boqle. 1.,...._3151. 1

a..lllt bedroom eulte, 1111.1
new, 114-112-7804.

.

· Cannelburg, inc. 45719
Specralizing in Pole
Build ings .
Designed lo meet yout
needs . Any size .
CHOICE OF 10 .COLORS
FREE EST IMATE S .QN
Post Buildin.gs and
Package Dea ls. Save
Hundred s, even Thou sa nds
of Dolla1s.
Local Sales Representative
WESLEY MULLET ·
141 Barlow Rd.
Patr ioi,Ohio 45658

PH . 614·256-6031

Real Estate General

Real Estate Genefl!l

All real estate advertlsl~ In
il!is_nnwspapor is subjO&lt;:IIQ

· Phone

the Federal Fair Housing Act
which makes It mega!

Main 0/fict-388-8826

-;-~lfo'iiJ~i,ij;;;; "any pr,elerenCB,

Real Estate

---a

Merchandise

Alplno C..

Fumlshed

Real Estate General ,
202 Meldthl Road
Washington, WV 26181
Attn: R. Willis

_..,._

tbr. HOD
ou1roldloMI opt. lor and
hondlc:oppod. EOH ~

SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

.........

9 5&amp; Clark Chapel Rd.

liinltatlon or dlscrlmlnaUon
based on race, color, religion,
sex familia l status or national

Bidwell, Ohio 45614 .

origin. or any imentlon to
make any such preference,

Real Estate General

limitation or discrimination.•

One of the lovellnt fttrms In the arw cat1
now be your~ . Located on 21 gently rollinq
acres, m/1, this totally remodeled home
offers 3·4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room;
formal living room and dining room, lovely,
kHchen plus a bonus room to fit your family's
needs. Now add the outside buildings
consisting of a 2 story bam with 2 stalls, 3
smaller sheds and a detacl)ed 2 car garagtr.
All we need is a buyer and the farm ot your
dreams can be yours . Call Carolyn lot
further details.
11607

Brtck Ranch In Mint Condlltonl Very well
cared for. home offers the family everythingit could need . Features include parquet
floors in entry and dining room, 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, living · room,
attractive kitchen and 2 car garage. Large
back patio. Family oriented neighborhood.
$66,500
11222

home with view of the county. ,ltatla!1 tUe toyer, cathedral
ceiling with balcony, 3 BR, 2 1/2 bath$. living room ·Wilh
woodburnlng fireplace , equip. kitchen, breakfast room
nas alg . windOw, stereo epeakers throughout, brass light
fixtures and much mora. 2 car attache~ g_~rage , anlc
storage. 2 acres m/1. This house Is maintenance tree ~~
belli quality. Make your appointment and oee Wyou don. t
agree.

TEA&amp; P.ll.

For· oolt by - nice t 112
ttnl b d OOM, MW CU•
~1 .hil III111Mnt, loated h&gt;n

· .aory

ooklna

m,ooo

Houoo ond land lar -

4 bed-

only, 114-M.,:IOIJ.

·

· Miaaloporl,

oeo,catll14-111!2.eao.

lt73. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL, this 3 Dedroom
1993, 14 ~e 70 mobile home w1th a. 2 car heated
garage and on 112 acre. close to town.

""""• 2 both, ponlh ond deeM.
13 ICI'Mi, 4 081' aaracll1 2 hMt
pumpo1 . - lioauQtut orouna. Shown lw oppol-

Real Estate Geriaral
Locale$! on Bulevflle Pike, this 2 story
home offers aflordability. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath, living- room, eat-In kitchen and full
basement. Deck overlooking nice sized lot.
$39,900.
11205

Henry·E. Cleland ...... 992-2259

'

Kathy Cleland ........... 992-6191

'•

....

Office .......................... 992-2259

~·

...:
.-.

-

OFFICE 992-2259

~:
"·
•

Great

retreat 3 BR, bath, LR

wl1p, kill, partial bsmt. Fumishecl.
Froot pon;h oomplolely alo&lt;Jg lroot
"'"~"" ot hOuse ro enjoy wald'llng the
ri\ler flow. Priced at only $34,500

' ''1U,

I MIDDI,EPOA1 ·N. Sec. 4 BR , bath. LA, kit, alum. siding. Would make a
home or rental property. Reduced to 19.500.

·~i:
'·~

.

l.

.
. .

.

~j

.
Remodeled Where It Counta .... Every lady

''

'

of the house wants her kitchen and bath to
• ,!le glistening. We.ll, this home has bothl
\(Newly remodeled- kitchen and bath
guaranteed to delight. This vinyl sided ranch.
also offers 3 bedrooms&lt;:'1Jlath, largli·living ·
room ad a full unfinished )lasement with e
second bath that you can finish to suit you
needs. Add a t car carport and stQrage .area
on a large lot at a reduced price of $48,00Jl.
How can you not pick up the phone and call
Carolyn today?
11605

''

•

~

446-3644

IC.:J

\'j Tt,

i/l.~ r\ /l,1il,~rt '• &gt;&lt;

' &lt;' '
---~ ---

-

• .:

I !

----~

-

'

'

;,l •

·

•

Loretta McDade· 446·7729
Sonny Garnes • 446·2707

MIDDLEPORT • Bradbury Rd. · 1977
doublewide on app(OX. 2+ acres._ the home
has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, d1n1n~ room ,
large living room. The kitchen 1s eqUipped
and the llome has carpet and panel1ng. ·
The home has a newer heat pump and
11re
windows &amp; doprs. There IS
ground pooL ASKING

..

'

.

1

. . --

___

2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN 18M NEW CDIIIIIERCIAL LISTING: Large Apl ,
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUFI building, 2_unlts__r~lso store rm. f(Jf a business of your
MASTERPI ECE
IN
THIS
OUTSTANDING own. Bk:d I)Ui!c:Jing_-46' 11 .96.: O'le~ad s!ora.oo ... 1 ac
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACFIES MIL 1\l.SO 2.348.AGRfS . ~/r!iJreiflncome , located on a busv SR. You may be
O"!'rlookinO 8
$65.000 .00
MIL C~OSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER HOSPITAL
1\l.L LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS

LONG BOTIOM · 2 s'ory f)'ame home
with l acre including a smlill nver lot. Thos
home has had some remodeling done.
Equipped kttchen , living room, dining
room 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, utility room.
Gardim area and It also ·l)as a bysi!less
building being currently rented for a Post
Offica. This property has much more. Call
tor your appointmt!nt today!. Ask1ng
$45,000.00 MAKE OFFER.

I '

I

$45,00J.

11M NEW USTING - NEW HOME - Retirement or
Starter homa. 2 bedrms. 1 batn. LA. kit w/d1n. area I
acre mn more
available, Would vou pa~s th1s up

Carolyn Wasch • 441 ~ 1007

'

RESIDENTIAL, appro)Cimately 160 ~e 300 that has lots
of potential, great lor a mobile hOme parx. apanments
or new hOmes or· a business, a IJ'I USI to see . Call
Wilma for more details .

wmome. .

,.

(

ft . block &amp; ~arne .

Ul4 NGTICE: · ON~Y

,WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

titS NEW LISTING, COIIIIIERCIAL LAND OR

~:...-,__-.-'
"'"' ""·

3900

On!Y

Vou can make some money here. Call us tOday.

1947 NEW UST1NG- KING SIZE FAMILY HONE or use
this ~uper nice 5 bedrm,. tor PRIVATE HOME G_ARE . 3
batos. J.i!: ,.m~. Virg[nJ;r.b.-S_fl!ilh 38!882_1&gt; ~

· nOt water tank Is like new.
painted walls. Owner witt have
1n10 soon. Great Buy $37,900.

I

11o11~~~~~~::

1843. HOllE lo INVESTMENT • Can be bought
together. New 3 bedrm. ranch 'home w/large rms., White
brick front, charming LR, din, rm .. large rma. throughout .
loads or oak cabinets In kit., 2 car garage, 2 ac. M/L

325,, Lolnglrvll11•9&lt; acres plus a Hailer wtrh klts 01 room built on·
sq. Large garage, storage shed, cell.ar house. bam.
ol pnvacy. Good htJnllng As~ng
SSO.OOJI Call us loday1
DARWIN· Nee&lt;l a great butlding site on 15 112 acres along with a
well a M tree gas (and hunting) . Coutd be 3 or 4 good buitding ·

power.
can live In one unit and rent 1~
&amp; churches. Call lor
and an appointment. Vl Smtih 388 -8826.

10 school~ shoppirnJ

1112 NEW uSTING. and ready to move into this 3
· bedroom. 2 baths' with a 3 car garage that has sp ar.n
tor s !'lorses and an on 1 acfe that Is le11el and on
State Route 279 close to Rio Grande. Priced to sell.
call Wilma for more info'
·

1159. COMMERCIAL BUIUIING • Olivo St 18' doo! &amp;
ceiling wlloft 1of storage 210 &amp; 220 elect. water &amp; sewer.
e· cement ro load &amp; unload~n front . 30x80 building approx.

i

Price Reduction on ... This lovely ranch
located on large lot is ready for you to move
into. This home oilers 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
--.--!&lt;
cQi_~'y_IWng_r.DQnL aruLdining_area off of
la'lte. cheery, kitchen. The man of the
house will love the garag~ SRa~e. 1 car
" Keystotrt auncmro· to t~e Downtol!!l
atlllched galage, 20_K 30 detached garage
Business District! Here's an opportunity to
and large storage building. £nough space
own one of the largest buildings in the 'heart
to give him all the room he needs to tinker
of the downtown business district - The
in. Call today for your viewing of this lovely
Lupton Building. 3 retail units and 3
property priced at $56,000.
N601
residential apartments provide excellent
income, Access to all the rental units from
· the rear alley and municipal"parking lot. Call
Dave for more information.
11229

li.A.NGiSVU.LE· Great Hunting! Beautifully remodeled (almOst OOne)
18 acres mil 3 BR . LA . FA. DR. Nice home. Call us today I
Only $28,800

LOCATEP IN THE CITY OF GAWPOLIS
Two story hOme, full baSemem and garage has a great
deal to offer. Designed tor great living. First floor l'las
formal entry with open atahway,- tormai-Uving room with
fireplace . formal dining room, Cherry cabinets line the
wall of the extra large kitchen! Breakfast room and
powder room. Second floor offers four bedrooms and
bath. Bedrooms are king size, carpet over hardwood
ftoors. bath has all new ftxturesal'ld LOve Tub. Basement
has huge family roam w/flreplace , bedroom , exercise
area:· laundry-room and storage room ~ ..Thia ·home It ofsuperb Quality as the plumbing has been replaced . All
new all covering, beautiful new carpet throughoJ,Jt, new
wlndowlinstalled. Spacious kitchen wtttl cherry cabinets,
Island ror Jann-Air range. Only private showing will
decide the value • he.re.
CALL VIFIGINIA L SMITH 446-6806 or 388·882e

1845 TERIFFIC PRICE
reduced for Immediate sale. 3 bedrm. ranch, LR , &amp;
dining area. family rm . W/flreplace. level lot.' located
close lo freeway axil on S A. 5 min from town &amp;
Holzer Hospital.

,

weekend

.

Hank
Cleland 111 ...... 992-6191
.

••

''

Dream!

Sherri Hart ......... ~ ..... ,.-742-235'1

:.,1.

In Memory

aoanm,ond Long Bottom·

Tracy Brinager........... 949-2439

li

Happily Ever After is how you'll live in this
3 bedroom , 1 1/2 bath ranch with family
room and taroe Ul!Hn Rlte~en. For tliilp wftn
utility costs and ease of maintenance, this
home features replacement windows. Want
to live out, yet close to town? Call 19day for
an ~ppointment.
11592

H11 WELL KEPT CHARMER localed In a desirable
nolgnt&gt;omood ott SR 35, Slate toyer 011try, 3 bedrooms,
family bath, &amp; the ·master bedrm. has a bath, Inviting
tlvtng rm .. family rm. wlflreptace, kit. w/toadS oJ storage &amp;
panby, utility rm., abpve ground pool &amp; deck, Patio, 2 car
garage. This home 11 Immaculate. and. a pk!asur~ to

sliow. City schoOls. $67.000.

!

New Ustlngl Yes, Yes, Yesl That's what
you'll say when you see this .homef Yes, it's
a good location. Yes , it's been remodeled
where it counts .. And yes, it's affordable.
- Large living roo.,; 2-3 .bedrooms, 1 bath,
nice kitchen with breakfast nook located on
.25 acre, m~ .. oven 00 king the river. $37,900.
Better call Carolyn today before Ws too late.
11609

'In Memory of
JAMES EARL ADAMS
Who passed,away one
y!lar ago today.
January 7. t 994
A heart of gold stopped
beating; .
Two shining eyes at
rest;
God broke our hearts to
wove to us, He only
took the best.
God knows yo~ had to
leawe us;
But you did not go
alone,
Fo r part of me went with

Real Estate General

;

Blnd'a Eye Vlewfl Soar with the eagles with
this hilltop home. Very unique home and
setting, Outstanding view overlooking the
Ohio River, Gallipolis and West Virginia. ·
. Home in great condition. Perfectly private
.location close to town. $154,900
N227

1138 NICE FARMLAND OR PASTURE LAND. 50
acres level to sllghiiV rolling w1th 2 outbuildings and a
~ bedroom farmhouse that needs some TLC

1148 UNIQUE BEAUTY· • ,The remarkable· SP~!OU!I

' Qorage, For Solo In VIIOgo 01
. Rio Orondo, 114-3JI.m0 AF·

ea rd ol Thanks

.The day He took you
hOme.
It 's a lonesome world
without you ;
has
been the
Amd sad
0
.
way,
For life and home are
not the same,
Since you were called
away.
L.:&gt;ve Forever from
your wife. Helen, and
family

Homes for Sale

' ~3..:....Bo..;.dr;.;_,;,;.;;.;:.:Hou....;•_"'&amp;"""'z,....,;eo,...r

Pooltlon

The
family
of
WILLIAM
" Dude"
GIBBS would like to
thank everyone for their
man y 'kindnesses
during th e long illness
and at the death of our
beloved husband and
father.
With out your love ,
support, and- prayers it
would have been even
more difficult for us.
Your kindne ss will
always be remembered .
Sarah Gibbs, Bill and
Lorraine Gibbs, Sarah
and Greg. Jeff and
Joyce Gibbs, Lauren
and Man

•

tng.- - -

Syracuse, Ohio
Now availble FmHA One BR apts.
Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,
Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays electric ortly Range,
Refrigerator, A/Con-site laundry,
Community Room, Management,
Maintenance provided

Real Eslate

Until Rllod. EOE !ESP...

2

for Rent
Twin A._.. T -1 , _

54 Ml.:allaneous

WATERS. EDGE APARTMENTS

omf•1rrerl.

,

for Rent

Household
Goods

5I

Apanment

trvc:ll,

necessary: experience
western blotting teclhnkitili4

We offer competitive salaries.tonuspotentiaVbenefits/
!raining AND advance menU
Enter a new era of service
and excellence. Send confi·
denlial resume to:

44

Sunday

~

o...

45101.

=. . .

WV

This newspaper will not .
knowlingly accept·
advertisements for real es18te
wNeh is In violation of the taw.
• Our readen; are hereby
informed that an dwellings
advenlsed in this newspaper
are available on an equal

O.V.Iopnonl Co«dinolor For
Growtng· llulllcounty Fomlly
Planning Ago..,. RoquiiOO Ell. - - In lnc-lng llolor
Gift Donollono And Sklllo To
toa Arid lmplemont Pionnod lllvtna Arid &lt;:ap~~.ot eompoiQno. NSFRE Cortllic:atlon
boOiroblo. Salary In Kooptng
WHh bporlonco. Sand Ro1111M1

011

1888 Cloyton Trol•. 2 - .
1 112 Botho l4ll24 Room
Addhlon. Sltuatod on I 112

characterization of prc&gt;telt16:;NJ

· : 31

.Opon

poto,liWd-Znl.

ovonlngo.

~~.~~:~~IC!~~~~:
· Bachelor's in biology or chem.master's degree preferred. Minimum

- .. --.

Alhono

-and..,.....,_,

you do buot,.
noOo wtth _ . . you k.-1 and
NOT to aoild monoy llvougn tho
moll until you tra.. lnvootlgOtod
thoollwing.

Forry, crob C..... oroo, my

Ohio,

1DN 14x70 NaihUii wlh13 ....
pondo, 3Dr., 1 both WI~ tub
I ..Pirltl ahower, IVIIIablli 1 and 2 .............
lmmHlal:aly, $10,500. ~ _ ..... , dotlootl ....,....., no.
7124
ctayo,
30M75-MI7

rocommondo -

lelrwlll• ..-dod 3 doyo por
I l/2yr. old, Golllpollo

Executive

Apanmant
for Rant

INOTlCEI

wook lar

AtldM,

44

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Poii·TliM

,...,....,.

Oolrmont, 3Dr. 304-

Lota~k. 0::..~=
3183Evonlngo.

Business
opponunHy

Apanmtnt

an.

Roflu

............. ...,_ ...........

Flulblo Houra, 1 Clllld, Aftor
1:00 P.ll. IM.a56-1481.

,...,.

turn-

44

42 Mobile Ho11181
tor Rent

no,

'.

OJ.IO.

31 Homts for Sale

yoor old -',twolne:.loMd.$21,000, -~.
........... lrldolaGYI..- l o .....
olorJ,,3-4br., 2 11Mhl2 fully
lnf. )04475.1311; - 151, em. ,._
oqulood onchono ( - lor 2
CNolt Rd., Qollpolla Fwry.
lamiiiM), .attactwd ..,.., 2 ar
garogo, ~ Mall -ot ·
ol llano- Ahlor, 2ic.
lond. Sornor.IHo - - .. 3030 or Joon Cooto 17114431.
2 T . - On
Clloool - ·
114-251-6401, ·~32 Mobile Homes
2br. untwnt.lwd wln:pMdo,
1IZml. pool HIIC, on At. U.
lor Sale
~onl .

Hort&gt;ol

EmplOyer M!f'/0/V

Bob¥0111• .., -

Do

Wanted to

or
unturrwaMd, 5 I"DDmm mel beth
downatolro, oluml...,. aiding. 4

Egual Clpport\lnlty

Real Estate General

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Roclno1 1 112 otory

billion in annual sales can be the foundation
your future st,Jccess. We currently
opportunities for the following:
Store Manager
If you have an Associate's or Bachelor's degree
some experience in a consumer servRa
environment and an ability to identify, motivate
and develop your team, then come see
Payless ShoeSource can do for you.
· Assistant Store Manager
,
We are looking for an individual with. 2 years
college and 2 years of progressive SU11lervis1~nl
experien~.
·
Sales Aaaocltes • Full &amp; Pan Time
Come benefit from all that Payless
has to offer. Send resume to : · Pa
Shoesource , 215 Graceland Blvd., Colurrtbu1~1
OH 43214. An equal opportunity em1olove•
coriunined to the principles of workforce rlh;,.,,.. it;,l

,_,

OUIIor

Wanted

500 new stores per year and approximately

-·---.
.._
=·
-·
Wlnlod: Laod

8,1995

RETAIL OPPORTUNmES

IIONII7.

phono

1r1 to with. potlonto,
pllyolc:l- and llooplloll to orrongo 'o dmlnlono, I 1 anof
. . .OUr
...
. . tor
...........
•..._
.....- hoo

Employment Services
11

hoe

8, 19f.

Over 4,000 stores Nationwide, a growth ratt! :ol

.

-.

FOr -

.11

DC)

~

envtrOIIIMIII. Clndldll:• ahoukl

1St A_,uo, Galllpolla.
Wllnlod To Buy Uood llobllo
CoNI~.

Prolo-....

Wanted to

F'*

-

Rollabllolallon Coni• , _ hoo
o groot .._t~nlly onttablo lor
• fMn 01M1t• perwon wllhlnll
to work In o .......- roholi

Top . Pr- Polcl: All Old U.S.
~ Clold Fll
COini,
911op.
Home,

T1rM
- · IOn
" -Col
Flnrt

Therapy

Wonted To BUY: Uono1 And
Amortcon ftv.r Trolno Arid M.w. · Eio. FlOC!, 11112-5:105,

-

..............0-.. ,......
,. to dolO - .

and '

='"'AII.!:'!"'o...~
Wldo Vorioly 01 Wol .Polcl ,._
~-··
- - Os&gt;portunttr
To Earn
'E itlll
· - Lot·
Sand
A Plcturo
WHh Coftr

Or-.

Lolo -

.... .,..__ , __ _
18

=.~-·-

!Wr,OII-

..,... to with publlo
hondo g o - oHico

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

January

JIIUOI ...... - ...... C..... P r o - ... n.. ..,_, CoMplllo·~-~~ T~r • c-rlry ... ~moe•. -·11tl or 1 -

""" _..__- ...
11

11

WV

..__,~­
lng To le Tro-. ....,
- T o IICCI P.O. ..... U1,

o,

9

-. ·- ...

Help Wanted

Point Pleasant,

tm. OUI PLANTATION HONE • Bulh ·ln 1BOO's waning
to be restored. Large barn &amp; shed . 1 t7 AI:.. MIL. crop ~and
&amp; pasture &amp; wooded . Close to Holzer. All utll1t1es
available. ·
·

1811

NEW USTlNO HEAD FOR tHE COUNTRY,
L.a1Q9 2 sty. home wf4 beidrma, 2 ba1hs, new carpet , new
roof..20 Acres to roam on. Hurry! Hurry!

1194. LOTI OF ROOII FQA EV£fiYONE, In th;s •
bedroom · home that has new vinyl aiding. roof and
"'"'"""'!clOSe to Gallipolis and gric&lt;ld.at 0&lt;1iy $50.000 .00

1174. AAHC.H HOME with full basement, app. 1710
living apace, gal neat. cent. air, 2 fireplaces . 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. 2 car detached garage. 3(bl16 shed,
2 small outbuildings, small frame home wttn 2 BA and 1
bath, 2 homes and bulkllnga,sltuate dOn 5 acres mor'e Df
it11 priced In lho $70'S.

11M LOVELY SPUT ENTRY that ofters 4 bedrooms with
plenty ol ·spaca. Hu an alC1ra room tor a thop, summer
khchen or Just u~e your lmmaglnallon wtlh 1 car garage
and 2 112 acntS with a beautiful garden spot and has been
recently reduced , th!s Is a· beauty to SQ8 so call Ul today

..

lor a peek.

IM7
USTittO .. Brick ranch 3 lledrms, ~aths,
LR, eat ·ln. kit wf knony pino cabinets. fult bas9ment
w/ tam1tv rm. and autslde entry to the patio Carport
Nice quite neigh6orhood close to Holzer . Call tor
Immediate appointment. •

'
.

.

�•

Times-Sentinel
54 MIIC811aneous
Merchandise

58

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polht Pleasant, WV

Peta ror Sale

~&amp;Grein

64

Farrn Supplres
&amp; Lrvestock

1171

2 • ~~ · - pla)'W.

61 Fann Equipment

: .._., Olgon, ·- . Hal
Bock G&lt;ouild Ayt!Wno, Faol

-:n.

1

-=:.: :. =-:..:..::=--- -

...

Edited by CLAY I. POUAN - - - - - - - -

l-800·585-7101
RUSSELL.D. WOOD, BROKElt
Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171

riWiill

LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:

Roln-

And

O.k

2.33

• Compulor Slond, 114-4ol&amp;-10118.

ACRES - Green Twp .
Wooded, excellenl IO!;a~Qn for a
beautiful home. Make us an offell

burning
· King cool • ~ ltove. 304--175-17'80 iVii'ilfiii~ _
: King Slzo Wotorbod Slan1g0
• Uncf"'"!!'!', UIO; lloybod, m,
• 114-367·111011.

5.66

ACRES. - Buhl Morton'
Road. Some woodland . Green
Twp . Has been surveyed!

~ ,_.. Janllrol COlon Uo Your -~

· • lng I Cooling Prvblomo. HMO
• ·Pumpe, L.P. "1: Nat Gal Fur:;:pacH, EIKtrk: FUrnacee, &amp;14MI-6308, 1~8U301 Some
Good UHd Trwd~no Avolloi&gt;lo.

LOCATION - St. Rt. 160
(Old Rt. 35 W) area - 2 miles from clly.
Commercial
property In
excellent
.condllion. Also could be used as
residential. Call for a private shoWing.

_,:cau For ff'M ElttiNitM.

: ~ew aduh NFL APEX St1rter
· J•cket, m.dlum~$65, CC4I $"130;
- 1diM tMther ackee, medium,
: $50; 614-11112-7 •

FOUR CITY LOTS - Builders &amp;
Investors take advantage ol
Deferred Tax11 for 15 yrs. Can
see together or separate.

4,607 aoree m11
4.815 acree m/1
4.702 acrea m/1
3.881 acrea m~
4.180 acrea m/1
5.442 acre8 mil
8.141 acrn nvr
10.320 acre a mn
7.253 acrea mil

119

'8,000
10,000
8,000
8,000
, 5,000
10,000
• 8,000
11,000
7;ooo

47158 EAGLE .RIDGE ROADI

Aluminum sided 1 1/2
story home. living roo111. Mchen. over sized detached
2 car garage. FA electric furnance. Addillonal mobile
home hook-up. Must call today lor an appoinlmentl

11558

-

,~

Real Estate General

"" Oak laba. wt• t;haJr.. •• metal
-~ brake, 2 .81uddtd .anowtlree. 2
"""'-'torm

doara,

awning, CNik

a

11:1811

Real Estate General

alumn

poplar trim,

.

cedar lumb«, 275pl lull on
tank, ~ruck loci bOK, anUque
pu~p Drg~n, 304-175-4004 . . -

..

Real Estate General
.

A~

Swlvol Chflro, 814-3711-2720
terl P.M.

::
•
:
._

Plnblll M.cNne Full Slle C.ompulor,. Tandy 1-X Slo~1
AMIFM ea... na, CoffM MG
End Tablaa, Sony C.mcorder
Sansal Sl•eo R..:k llouni,Akal
RMI
To
R...
KMlWGDd
SpOoklfWLJ250, $1oopo1 Soli,
114 He ha2.

-

:

46-7101
IB

: : R&amp;S Furnhure. We buy, Mil and

,... hade

anttque,

MWIUMd

..., houoohold lumllhlngo. Will buy
""" any amount, largetamall. 105

Pt

:::_ S.cond St., M~1 WYo OWner· .
., Rock~ PNrMn. ;JM-77'3-5341.

Rl All O r,

-~ R•frloeratotli, 'Stov-.

WMhere
• • 4nd 'Dryers, AU Aacondltloned
,... And GauflniMdl $100 And Up,
~ Will O.llver. 614-818-Mtl.

::: Sam Sommllll'l Army su~.UI,
~ by Stndyvllla P.- Offlea, noon-

... &amp;:oopm Frf.Sun. Jr.

don AI. 7 • Ill. :til, 114-4410MO, 114-211 lOti.

"'" - . lila ar-o, ~r
--ro,I14-'IU-

205 North Second Ave;
OH

w.

RUTlAHD· Jividen Ad . • Approx. 2 1/4 acres on a deed-en&lt;i
road. Three to lour bedrooms. dining room. one bath.
Complet,ly remodeled Inside and newer siding. Has a
cellar, 24 x 24 workshop wilh anached shed, and a fenced

area for an animal. .

150,000

McCumber Ad; • Buy ellher 48 acres and lhe house and
outboilijings or buy 98 acres and file house and outbuildings
2 slory home has 8 rooms, 6 bedroom&amp;, 1 1/2 belhs, 2 bey
windows, newer ' vlnyl siding. 2 car garage, cellar wilh
storage above and a 24 x 30 molal barn.
Hou.. • 48 1crea $7ti,DIIQ,
Houoe &amp; 98 1creo $811,0110

I I I 1I
6

I

'
•'

.• A c R A D E

MIDDLEPORT· High Sl. to Page Sl. · nice double lot wHh a
2·3 bedroom home, dining area, cedar closets. cornice
boards over windows; some nice chandeliers, full bBSement.
and a nice 2 car garage wilh 2 finished rooms, anlc storage
and a basement In the garage.
·
$4.2,500

•
'

.•
..' •
.' R 0

LASHER RD· Ap-prox. 3 acres with a 2 story house, 4to 5
bedrooms, large family room, dining room. one beth
1
room, porches. 3 Sldad pelt llllln and is partly fenced.
$40,000

-·'
'

.. ~-.

.,'
•

•'

POMER9Y· Main ST. • A commercial building with 2.000 sq.
" cllnrl_311flarfments l!_boveth" was remodelad recanlly and
hill! newer furnaces. The upslairs rents for $800.00 a month
and lhe downs.talrs Is leased on a long term lease. $51,000

•

.•'

•,n .

Russell D. Wood,

'Y 111s I i 1£·•........................... 256·11:!6
J Merrill C
·
·
:
.
arter ...................... 379-2184
1 amnue OO\iltt
· .... ;.................. 245·0022
Judy llewltt .,...........
·
·
·
.. .............
441 ·0262
Ruth Barr ...:..................: ......... 446-0722

Broker.................................446 • 46 .18
Martha ·&lt;:n1'th
379 26"1
· · ~ ' .. ,..............
• ·&gt;
.Cindy Drongowskl
2 ·
........ 45·9697
Cheryl Lemle
~
.
Y............... 74?--171

-LiiNDIIt

''

·-

-

9

"Boy the traffic was a reai
. mess today. People drive so
recklessly.· my business colleague complained one morning. "That's true, • I offered.
"The way some people drive if
the roadtums at the same time
' 't . 1
they.do1sonya
---···
· • - • • -!"

7

N A. P M E N
l0

,. , ..

.

iI.

~

. !-- See

t.t·
NEW LISTING! 1
112 · CHATHAM
AVENUE· ~ slory home, 3 bedrooms, living
room, kllchen, rec. room, 2 car garage. Clly
uttlilies. Nicel Immediate possession. · 1729

:::: UNCI kHchen cablnete, an • .Jnk
"W baaln wf2 overhead Cllbln.ta,
.. countertop, good c:ond., $150.

. :1;: 304-!1711,2802.

I

PH. 446•7699 OR 446·9539

•

eat-in kitchen, liVirig room, laundry and bath,
fenced in lawn ." Large deck on back, 1 car
delach ed garage . PLUS a delached one room
cottage! Cable TV $40's.
H27

BONUS BUYI lncltJded
bedroom ranch home consisting of dini~g
room, kitchen, livirJQ room &amp; bath, Is a mobt~e
home already set up complete with an e!ectnc
heat pump . Approx . .7 acre lot, call lor ·
complete listing!
1725

·Allen·c . Wood, Realtor/Broker446·4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker446-0971
Mose Canterbury. Realtor-446·3408
. Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256·1745

OWNER WILL TAKE AN. OFFERI MUST
MOVE IMMEDIATELY! MAKE HER A DEALI
14'x70' mobile home wilh a 21' expando. 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 balhs &amp; more. Call. for more
details!
1723

AKC

J

blaci&amp;Jwh'h•,

COcklr

""-;.;;;;;; P'Ai;u:;G THOSE RENT
and gel lhis 2 story older home at 1021
Second Ave . 3 bedrooms, living room, dining
room , kitchen, 2 car garage. New carpeting &amp;
more. Don't delay calllodayl40's.
1717

'

~ack,

pupe,

champion

:!: btooclhwa, t150 fkm. 304-937~

... 27:13.

·

Don'l pass up lhls brick! Localed al SA 588.
1.5 slory home w/4 BR, 2 BA. LA, kitchen.
large fronl porch. Cily schools! Converilenl lo
downlown Gallipolis..
~t712

OWNER WILL FINANCE WITH SMALL•
DOWN PI\YMENTI \pprox . 60 acres more 'or
less wooded land. Lots ol road frontage . ·
NEW LISTINGI RIO GRANDEfY'?i'112 slory
home &amp; 4 lots . 4 bedrooms, living roo111,
kitchen. 2 car · derached garage . parllal
baseme.nt. Call for more information.
1731

SEJ' THIS FOR YOURSELF! 4 BA ranch, 1.5
BA, LA, eat In kllchen. basemen!, Culligan
water system, newer roof &amp; some carpeting
Nice lawn being approx. 2.75. acres more 0;
3 112 acrea more or 1'!!.!1 'REDVCEO. TO~
$4,000.00 . CaiUo®y loJ_mored nlonna~on .
1716

CARPET &amp; FRESH PAINTI IMMEDIATE
Remodeled 1 1/2 s)ory home ·
4 bedrooms, 2 baths. detached 1 car

;~~:~~i:2:0~acres.
barn &amp; olher buildings. Cily
I located al Slale Roule 588. PRICE

~
Yellow loll P,po, Womod,
. , Flrol Sho&lt;o S3DO. 8,..._
.1:131 ..... I A.ll. Cr Aftor 1:311
P.ll.
-Au•:rallan !MpMrd Pu...-.,
~J1011&lt;1ng PI-•. Sholl
Wor·
•n. 11• ue 3141.

.:.n.ct.

a

wv

304
-=-.="'xR=350,....,II'"ro.:.bll!:,..:....•·.:,•aoo:.....- -

Real EstatB General

~ .'

t

.

~~ -::;:;=;:::; CAPE COD
offers
acres. mil. mostly paslure,
tobacco base . 40x60 barn, 22x44 block milk
house. 750' road fronlage for possible bldg.
sites.

11461 - EXCEUENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAR BUSINESS - All equlpmenl slays,
bldg., ~pprpx . 624 sq. II., 3 hal!,balhs. elect
heaVcent air, cily waler.

1 YR. OLD LOG
appmx . 2700 sq. ft of living area; solid
wood walls. floors &amp; ceilings ; extra large
-rooms; wrap-around deck: part basement :
attached garage &amp; 2 barns, located a.t gage
on a sprawling 4.2 acrelract. ,$165,000. ·

PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY • t.e
Acres +Or·. 3 BR. 1 1/2 balh , lull basemen! ,
24x30 delached garage wilh 10 fl. doors.
Great tor la·rge trucks. Low maintenance vinyl
siding . Includes an ·above-ground pool. This
is a must-see . FHA approved.

t14n· URGE BUILDIN&lt;'l WITH LOTS OF
OFFICE SPACE AND 3ARAGES FOR
TRUCKS· Frontage on Third Ave . and Grape
Slr,eet. Call lor details.

TWO HOUSESI TWO LOTSI Situaled In
Gallipolis. Live in one &amp; renllhe olher. (1) 2
slory home w/alum eXIerior, 4 BR. 2,BA. large
rooms, over 2.000 sq. h. (2) 1 BR home. can
' lor lnfonmation.
1709
NEW LISTING I CUTIEI, Greal starter home or
super Investment property. 1 story vinyl sided,
ne.., roof, drywalle.d. L.P. gas heat. counly
waler. lmmediale possession I
1730
NEW LISTING! RIO GRANDE VILLAGE! Qlnyl
sided home and mobile home. House consisls
of 2 baths, living room, dining room, kilchen.
Hardwood flooring . 1973 Champion mobile
home. Village ulllities. Good rental income.
1732

I

1622
,:. '

~

FRENCH HISTORY MARKER I THIS IS ONE
OF THREE TO CHOOSE· FROM. Large
beaulllul homes t~al overtook lhe cily park wHh
a view of th8 Ohio River. Renovate to suit your
own taste! C~ll today of your own prtvate tour
and more details!
SECURITY IS OWNING YOUR OWN HOMEI
ld.eally localed close 10 Gallipolis. 712 SA 588.
N1ce ~i zed lot. Large living room w/newer
c~rpetmg nower. root. alum . siding, eat In
kllchen . WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT
TO QUALIFIED BUYER! CALL FOR MORE
QETAILS!
· 1713

F•rml Used as a dairyl Over eo acres,
e•cellenl home slle cornpi&amp;II&gt;WIIM1!eptlc-andcounly waler. Larqe barn approxlmalely 72' x
103', corn crib , Silo ,· feed lol. lobacco base.,
Mostly paslure, fenced! Frontage along
Raccoon Creek.
1724
5 YEAR OLD BRICKIFRAME-RANCHI Porfecl
lor jusl slarting oul or sellling downl Nice level
lawn, 2 balhs. living room, kitchen, 1 car
garage . Call loday for your own personal
showing!
1726

.

'

LARGE POND &amp; 17+ ACRESI Nollo far from
Rio Grande . Cily schools! Counly waler
available. Nice quiel placelo livet
1'721
EASY ACCESS TO ·THE OHIO RIVER I 2·1ots
along Bear Run Road, n(ce complng sires .
access to boat ramp!
•706

_ fronlage, good hunling
fiome.
HUNTE;RS PARADISE! LOTS OF LANDI 1761
acres' approximately. Moslly all wooded and lull
ol..wlldllli, close to Tycoon Lake and fronlage
along Raccoon-Creek! Prit"!llngfttl
1719
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER NOWIIMAKE
AN OFFER AND YOU JUST MIGHT BE
SURPRISED! Greal business corner of Third
Avenue ·end Cedar Street 2 story brlciVf raffle
building, upstairs used as 2 rental units, each
consisting of 1· bedroom, living room. balh &amp;
kitchen . Downstairs currenUy used or. one side
es beaury shop other side approxlmalely 880
. sq. ft. vacant. Call, for complele llstlngl NEW
ASKING PRICE $48,800
1682

227 LARIAT DRIVEl Exceplional 2,200 sq . h.
ranch, vinyl siding, beaulllul view. Lerge living
room and family room each wllh a flreplace. 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 balhs . Lois of cablnele In
k1lchen, large dining area. Super location close
.lo hospilal and sho~ping .
1715

N1432 - MOM &amp; POP
SALE - Small re slauranl with two rental
houses. Properly is r0caled In Oak Hill. Call

NEW USnNG· 2 homes localed on approximately 1·1/2
acres. One hcime has 8 rooms. 3 bedr0001s , 1 1/2 balhs.
living room, dining room. family, kllchen . On.e home has
a rooms. 4 bedrooms. 2 balhs , living room. kitchen.
famny room. Both have rural waler, LP ges Furnace , and
more. Cd tor appointment to see .·
·

b.idroor~os. 2 baths,

kitchen, newer roof, double front porch, waSher,

..

FOR SALE· VACANT LANI).. ,Approximalely 218 acres
located in Gallla &amp; Jackson Counly. Priced at $2_()0.00 an
!!J;!Jl. CAJ.J. FOfl MORE INFORMATION .

.
FIACINE· Rt. 124· Wait 1111 you see this 3 bedroom home
wilh beauliful ha.dwood fioors In living room a detached :i
car garage wilh 1 bedroom apa"J."'~
ver it. 1\pprox. 5

.
.

·-

-

'

··MIDDLEPORT· Hobart Streel· 2 bedroom. 1 balh. 1 sto,Y
home wtvinyt siding.
WAS $10,000 NOW 11,000
•

•

SIS,OOO

'

l

I

•

POMEROY· Mulberry His. · a nice 4 bedroom 1 1/2 story
h'Ome with full basement, breezway and 1 car garage,
comes with equipped kllchen. heal pump. C.A. and a large
lot.
.
$57,500.00
CHESHIRE- 3rd Slreet- A 2 slory frame wilh 8 roorlls. 3-4
bedrooms, finished basement, onB bath , front and side
porch, slorage building and a big lot.
DOTIIE TURNER, Broker..........................982·56112
BRENDA JEFFERS .....................................982·3056
JERRY SPRADUNG ......................... (304) 882-3488
SPRADLING ................. (304)-t82.34M

I

LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE· 156XIOO Cily waler
and sewer. electric to pole level. Priced St 4,000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
HOME FOR SALE ~3,--ms. balh , living room.
lamlly roo~l\'l'f.UMM!'Tn-back yard. PRICED AT
$45,000.00
VACANT LAND • Approxlmalely 10 acres located on
Bob Mc:Connlck Rd . Call lor more Information.
,
FQR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL ·FREE NUMBER

I -800-ll94-1 066
FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BIIOCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAl,. BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMA!IKETS. MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.
•

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'

•

1405- NEED A NEW OFFICE + A RENTAL
.
APARJ:M~'l.. 25P Sec , Ave Njce ~ QffiCll-14227'0tD-CHEV~-OLDS BUILDING· 420'
downslalrs and apartment and storage up . Fronl on Second Avenue and 62 ' 1ronlage on
Convenient 10 banks end shopping.
Grape .

.

.

aillllt,l

flo.ors . wllh mostly finished full 'basement . 2 balh8, a gas
furnace with central air, (lewer roof, newer porches, 2 car
garage . and 2 bedroom apartmenl with large living room
and dining room . Can all be used as one large home. l\genl
Owned .
-~~· -- ~711,001\.

'

This could b9 il. 49.66 acres.
Andrews Ad., 8 year old home wllh 3 BRs, 2
1.2' baths, LA, DR, FR . heal pump , 2 car
garage plus 24x48 delached garage.

HOME ON RACC~Qti...-a:K FOR SALE· 2
l&gt;ecfrOOins.
.-.JM.":Vroel. et~rc neat~1 112
acres, roore o~. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

SY!IAC\I.~E- A nl ~~ ~ b~!J12!!J'J!I1Cb Jlllb s~me .hardwood

.•

LOOKiNG FOR YOUR OWN PEACE

Approx . 5 acres with frontage on ·
Raccoon . beaullful s~aded lol, house has 3
BR, balh , LR. kllchen. large unattached
oaraoe. Offers a lol of privacy anti peace &amp;

car garage located
more or ~ass . City

MINERSVILLE· Approx. 3 acres wilh 8 2 story home wilh

acres.'

BLAZER ROAD- Ranch home , 3 BAs, 1 1/2
'
balhs, LA. kilchen. 16 x 28 garage. River PLANTZ SUBDIVISION· $56,900· 3 or 4 BR
Valley school dislrict.
brick &amp; frame trl·level , 1 1/2 balhs, LA, lamlly
•
ITTI, kitchen. new roof. new siding . CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE.

HOUSE, 8 ACIRES
Lawrence Co., 2 bedrooms. living room, dining mom,
kitchen, bath . CALL FOR APPOINTMENTIII

RACINE· Pine Grove Road· If you have always wanled a
nice home and mini farm . Here It is! The house has 2-3
bedrooms. Central Air, Heat pump, and. equipped, kitchen.
Approx. 5 1/2 acres wllh most of II fenced and a nice barn
and other buildings.
. ASKING $55,000

'·-

COURT STREET RESIDENCE- Older home
has 2 sep. units or could be converted tiack
IO 1 family dwelling. Faces clry park.
'

-.

ROY JONES ROAD- Syracuse- Af)prox. 1/2 acre of ground
. and a 12 x ~J!_ WIDdsor wit~ 2 bedrooms, a bedroom
addilion, large living room . equipped kltcllen, deck •
oulbullding.
JUST $12,qoo

i

11409 _ FOUR LOTS - 4 BR home . reduced
10 $ 44 .000 . 2 balhs . LA . DR , lull basement,
gas heaVcen1. air. Corner lots ..

. $135,000

.,.,.....

!ANGSVIUE· Crouser Road· A nice 3 bedroom ranch
slyle home with heat pump. attached one car garage, and a
one car detached garage, above ground pool and storage
building on nice laying lot.
ONLY $411,000

less.

~

DEI!Blt: DI!IVE·EVERYONE
OWN A NEW HOME AT LEAST ONCE.
This 2 slory beauty fealures 3 or 4 br's, 2
balhs, beamed ceilings In lhe LA &amp; family nn,
cherry cabinets In kltchan, 6 in . ouler walls &amp;
much more. Fantastlc view.

Tim

·
Fronlage- Need busin- building? Great
Has approx. ~65 fael of roed fronlage on W.
Big building lhat could be used for a business
POMEROY· Always wanled to won your own b~slness? A
bar business Includes all stock and fiXIures. Has an older .
back bar )hal Is beaullful. Has a D·3 license until 1 am.
Business only.
$27,500

~,

lnt•••

Llww•a
T.W.
Llwu ..'lCe, 12% GU Ft.tmiiCH,
l.P • Not. Heel Punq&gt;o •
Eloelrlc Furno-. F- Eo11-M. H You Don' c.ll U. Wo
Bolh ~~·~-. t.aoo.
287-6308,
002MI.

32 Locust Streel, Gallipolis

446-1066

or tear down and build your own.

,.\ '

Motorcyelal

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Wood Realty, Iny-.
CORA MILL ROADI $47.900 Cily
syslem. 4 bedroom ranch slyle home, large

June

.74or::.::.~~I""': Anor I P.ll.

64

Estate General

•

; : tom, twin top, exceU.m condl~
:"if_' tlon, $200, 1514-IV2-31J84 or 114-

Hydra 81th.

==~~~~J:~

1181 Dodgl Ram F~~oyor..
-·
• ll41rm .._"'Y os v..,
Autometlc Air COndhkHtlng,
PD, PW, PL, PS, Wholl

~-:."

An swer to Scram•Lets on Page D-4 - . . gopotoo
Cl I • mull bo Handa TRlt 'IV, 4 - ·
................
lf.l.-,4 ..._,.Condlllon,tl,ooo,ll4~
- · -'JIIWIO&amp;
441-1417.
----~--~~------~-----=~~~~--Real Est11te GQneral
Real Estate General

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

GEORGES CREEK ROADI
modualr home with newer Lennox
windows &amp; roof, well insulated ap1&gt;rox.lme11ely
.48 acre treed 'lol!

"".,.,. Whllo mllal bul\llbocf, lull bol·

• wlbb. COli 814-446-4231.

:J: a ::;::.r::"...f,::O
..it. :C
HMinwtlo •a1a11d
•-

POMEROY· Union Avenue - Make y9ur start in
or just make il your home. Wilh this 2
beciroc•m h,ome.
ASKING

tor f14.GO, Johnmn'• VIdea,

~ f•lurti'\Q

:'~J:MoV0:: .!':.0t
11

pumpj

I I I II I I I I L'I I I

F-man'o H.Oina And Cooling.
lnllollellon And "'Sorvlce. EPA
Corllllod.
Ao-·~
cloll144111-1111.
~.

Second Ave.~ .Gallipolis, Oh~~ 4S~3~
(B. Hanny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 4~6:..0008 ;
'
Joe Moor~, Associate 441-1111
·

a•m•, 2

Shop -Pol Clr_,lng.

1 '-"'8,.95

•

Com-·

loto modot llooll oar, aoonptllo
lA -

Plum!)lng &amp;
Heating

·-.a '511

Y Middleport, 814-812-3481.

:r. Groom

82

l7,2110,._:0.oAt•IP..._

Complete the chuckle quotea • - ·
by filling ln the mlulng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

CLAUDE DANIELS, Realtor· Ph. 388-9612
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH. 245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

" " Two Salamandere, 70,000 Mel
,.. 100,000; 15,000 BTU W.rm

Pets for sare

=

w.tn - ·

w STORAGE TANKS 3,000 O.llon

..:
.,.. 56

=sr:-r..::

--. --.
:::

U

1I

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· ~

12 160 THREE BEDROOM MOBILE HOME WITH 12 X 25
ADDITION BUILT ON. SITUATED ON A VERY NICE LEVEL
LOT , CLOSE TO RACCOON CREEK . . ALSO HAS
COVERED BACK PORCH AND CARPORT. PRICED TO
SELL AT $19,000.
.

.
.
r
·-.:t...:
~ .~:rid r r r r
r r r r r r I !i~et:=.-:

MIDDLEPORT· Uncoln Streel· needing renlal property or a
fixer upper? Here il Is a 3 bedroom, 2 story home with a
fenced lot, and a storage building.
· $14,000

-. Upright, Ron Evan. Entarprt_,,
: : Jackaon, Ohio, 1-800-537--0528.

T 112-3711.

s

' 446-,3636

POMEROY- Naylor's Run Road· Close .to town but out
lown. approx. 7 yrs. old, 1 1/2 story home with 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, one car atlached garage. and a 2 car detached
. garage sifting on approx. 1 acre of land.
S54,IQO

..

~

8

DDI

ao.ro

.AUDREY F. CANADAY, BROKER
MARY P. FLOYD 446-3383

~....-_M=l=S~

RHUNCC
•

25L~ws~~T·GA~~iLI~
0
Uttora

Member~ :

NEW LISTING! NICE. LEVEL TO GENTLY ROLLING LOT
IN 'THE COUNTRY, APPROX . 4 MILES FROM TOWN .
CLEARED AND BULLDOZED. ALL READY FOR BUILDING
OR MOBILE HOME. OllER ONE ACRE , SEPTIC TANK.
AURAL WATER. AND ELEC. HOOKUP. GREAT BUY AT
$12,5001
•

POMEROY- Fisher Street· Almost an acre lot wilh lola of
frontage could have 2·3 building sites. Has an older house
,that needs lots of work.
$11,000.

@

;:: blue blbbe ttt. combat bOota
... $60. 304.z73-M55.

~ UNCI regular Nlnt-.ndo

Realty

• '*'-l... . _ IANYHOUR

Servrces

POMEROY- E. Main Sireel- Need renlal property? Has 2
renlal units. A 2 bedroom apartment downstalrslhal needs
some work and a one bedroom apartment thats nice
upstairs.
$2~,800

.... men• lneu11tecl ooveralla 130,

..- Morning; call 814-882·JI4"1
:: ween ~-.,Opm.

lur. Con. """ Condldon

IM-44f.MRT or 1M 311 9M2

POMEROY· Willow Creek Road- A prerty sening.for lhis 2
bedroom ranch home with a full basement and approx . 1
acre of land wH~ cenlral air and e newer fllrnace. equipped
kitchen, and close to town.
$38,000

.l -800-585 .. 710

01"'
(' .
.
y tVe Us 5l Ca{f. ..

camtlll~ge,

-

Canaday

Loo~lng far ~ commercial lot? Jusl off lhe main street.
.. You really neecUo .check lhis one ,out Locai®Qn 3r~ s~lreet •
Mlddl~ft .
·.
'· ..~
,~
$10,000

OHICe

;

Rn . .

lon lruck
- -..

Alec&gt;, 4a4 Drive Train Part.. 3
1111• - h Of CIIHiaollo AI Juo.

POMEROY· Beech Street· A 2 story 15 yr. old colonial
home wilh a fantaslic view., Has 3-4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces •
3 1/2 balhs, family room, formal dining room, finished
basement. in ground swimming pool, solar heat. saielllte
dish, 2 car garage, and lots of privacy, sitting on 25 acres. ·
.
'
$133,000
'

.;.;_ OFFICE SUPPLIES FOR SALE:

_,_.-:Dfin;· · Ci61iliti; Mil

o-.
a.:0"'\:1-·!.':!"'wv.-

- Ploi!.Up ..... - .
C:UO.Doorlo-rolllcn.

RUTLAND· Main St. • A vacanl lol wilh cily sewage and
water available. Nice for Jl. mobile home.
$5,000

-: gam.,
Now buying
• lllllng · Jatirwon'a Vklio, Mid.
• dleporl, 114-112-3481._

Real Estate General

37NH3or1~.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

eornp..or,

Auto Parts&amp;
Acceasorlla

76

-

MEIGS COUNTY

11
112
113
114
115
H
11
118

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei..-Page-07

OFFICE 992·2886

E:r:perj,tince Makea The Difference! CaU
Cheryl Lemley, For a FuU Time Meiga
Couniy Agent For Over 17 yeara!

SPMUF.

Autos fOr Sale

NEW LISTINGS WANTED! ·

Dr-•

IBII ' PS1

Auloe tor Sale

71

1t Autos tor Sale

Real Estate General

• Complalo King - - 1111
Six
Pod. HoW:
• Som~w... Hoot• • Paddod
• Rollo Aloa - · • lion. Pod,
• 114-441-2044 Cr 114-24M1711 •
' A.ll. ·10 P.ll.

- Prlnt•r,

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-:-Poi.m Pleasant, wv

1m ...... COrio,- 414, 1171
'Gnlnd Pttx. 1M 111 '103 Abr 1
JIM.

Tn.., tMO, -

,. R. -

: c.ilonl
=~~h=::..~
Coo-l Slll0 I~

; w-.

Nowo, 414 onalno. -

:.~body~ U,IOO. -

61&gt;&lt; ........ -

- 2720 AFTER I P.ll.

Autoa for Sale
.

January 8, 1995

1995

11482· $25,000 /usr minutes from lown,
used .for rental property now~ 3 BAs . balh.
FR. k1lchen, DR, gas heat.
·
1447· OAK . HILL· · former clothing
store ... $27,900 , corner lot Call lor more
information.
1453' OHIO RIVER PROPERTY· located al
end of While Avenue off Gartlold. Several
lots $20,~00.
$31 ·soo 84 ocreo, Morgan Two .• vacant
·ranJ. Pos~lble farming land or recreational
lend.

•

64 ACRE8· m/1, Comer of .Woods Mill and
SA 554, has a really nice homeslle ol.d bem.
lots of privacy yel close lo school and olher
activities.

11427· EXTRA NICE HOME ON ST. RT, 7 ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS
AND
SOUTH· 3 BAs, LR, FR, dining area, full INVESTORS...El!TRA NICE PIECE OF
basement, garage. Calllodayl
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR PORTER ..
Large lake wllh lake fronl sires . mobile home
33 ACRE.S· Mil corner of SR 325 and on property al presenl lime, county water.
AND HAVE THE INCOME
TWIRFF MORE· each unll has 2
Woods Mill Road, recreaiiQnal land only entirelract constsrs of 77 acres, nv1 .
apartmenls .Faclng clly park wilh all the
$16,500.
Conveniences or In town living.
EXECUTIVE eUILDINO LOTS . 5 mlnulee
from Holzer, all 5 acres or more.
0
11411-LOOJ(ING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
ANO QUIET-This could be II' 49 .66 acres
Andrews Rd. 8 year-old.home wilh 3 BRe .
1/2 balhs, LR . DR, ~ FR , heat pump, 2 car
garage plus 24x48 delached garage.
RIO

2

$16,800 47· ecres . m/1, Harrison Twp, Elliott

Roed.

.

1

•

�•

Pag-08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midd!eport-Galllpolla, QH--fJoint Pleasant, WV

Scott, Hall receive
bank promotions

..

New concepts of pest control studied

GALLIPOLIS - Richard D.
Scott bas been promoted to vice
president and Judy ·K Hall to assistant cashier at Ohio Valley Bank
according to James L. Dailey, president and chief executive offiCer.
Scou. who will lead tbe bank's
$50 million ttust division, bas been
with OVB since 1976. He is a gmduate of Gallia Academy High
School and bas an
associaie degree in business admi_nistratiot\ from Southeastern Business College. Scott, who served
four years in tbe United States Air
SCOTT
HALL
Force, has attended numerous ttust
schools and seminars.
School in Gallia County and bas
Mrs. Hall is tbe bank's manager participated in American Institute
of tiaining and educational devel• of Banking seminars. Also, she is
opm-ent.
.
··
the financtal secretary for lhe ThurShe joined OVB in 1980 and haS a man United Methodist Church.
wide range of exp.erience in the
Ohio Valley Bank is a commu·banking
nity bank with offices. in Gallia,
profession. Prior to her current Jackson and Pike Counties in Ohio
position, she served as branch man- and a loan origination center in
ager of tl1e Rio Gmnde Office. She Mason County, West
graduated from Southwestern High Virginia.

ByEDWARDM. VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - I sr;nt most
of my week in ~school' learning
new concepts of pest control.
Dr. David). SbeUar, OSU pro- .
fessor of landscape entomology,
offered ·some interesting views on
use of biological control. Many
local residents were a!!noyed by
large populations of lhe multi.:colored Asian lady beetle last fall .
Releases of these insects were
made in Georgia in 1977 for the
control of pecan aphids.

Farm Flashes

A source of Asian lady beetles
was introduced accidentally on an
Asian freighter into New Orleans.

Recent North Carolina research · flies and ':Silod" wasps. It's-diffi.
shows up to 25 percjlnt of these cult to exl!lain tbe difference
lady beetles are ·oow·being parabetween a stinging wasp and a par.sitized by a tachinid fly. It is ironic
asitic walip. In many cases, naturalthat a biological control may actuly-occurring beneficials will do a
ally control this ''new" problem. ·
good job of controlling the pests if
According to Dr. Shetlar, most
we do not disturb lhe system too
people have a very 1131T0w view or much. A common method of dis"good' bugs . Tbey have been
rupting lhe system is by using pestaught that preying mantis and lady
ticides lhat are not really needed.
beetles are good and shouldn't be
Some pesticides actually kill the
killed. On the other hand, most
beneficials better than the pests.
people do not recognize tbat predators, such as spiders, &amp;round beeA reminder of the Monday, Jan.
tles, stink b!Jgs and fly maggots are
9 meeting, "Tips for Feeding Your
often more lmponant preda~ .
Calf."
The fu:st reaction is to kill them!
The meeting will start at 7 p.m.
Most people have a bard time
in lhe C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
accepting tbat there are "good"
Center. This is set up for youth and

adults involved in feeding beef cat- ,
tie. Jobn Grimes, extension agent'
from Brown County, will be the ; '
teacher. Plan to attend.
~

:--

Be sure to mark your calendar
for the Winter Agronomy School.
This will be held Jan. 18 at 6 p.m.
in the McKenzie Agricultural Center. Please note lhe earlier starting
lime. There will be a full evening
of programming. Reservations are
not necessary. This will be a good
opportunity for corn and soybean
producers to get caught up on the
latest production information.
{Edward M. Vollborn Is the
agrlcultur•l extension •gent for
Gallla County.)

Agent's corner
Change is occurring in the registration and uses of pesticides as
manufaqurers attempt to help the
farmer meet Worker Protection
landard guidelines, and attempt to
reduce potential health risk in
homeowner use.
Many of lhe newer pesticides
are safer to the environment, as
they 3!'C more speeific in, the pests
they control, sucb as breaking lhe
life cycle of the pest or using olher
naturally occurring plant material, .
insects, fungus or bacteria to con-

·- s

11'01 more dangerous pests.
·
Even the homeowner products
for pest control are seeing products
tbat will be environmentally more
friendly. However, the cost
involved for research, re-registration and promotion will be shouldered by you and me, tbe consumer.
The local rc:fenification classes
being bcld for licenSed private pestiCide applicators are necessary to
. the well-being of our agricultural
communities, environment and
world economy.
The Meigs County Extension
office will be holding recertification classes on Tuesday, Jan. 24.
Plan to attend either the 1-4 p.m. or
6:30-9:30 p.m. class at lhe Meigs
County Extension Office. For furlher information, give me a call !!I
992-6696.
Horse lovers, lhe

U.s·. Depart-

:
:

.,

TOP SAL~MAN • Mike Sergent. right, Is congratulated by
Gene Jgbrumn for being named "Top Salesperson for 1994" at.
Gene Johnson Chevrolet-Olds-GEO. Sergent exceeded his personal sales goal In 1994 and is looking forward to breaking his rec:ord
in 1995..
·

•

Stock drawdowns and an anticipated production shortfall of 1.2
million tons Ibis year sent world
sugar prices tQ tlleir highest levels
in more than 'four years in recent
monlhs, a new ERS report said.
· World sugar production is forecast at 112.6 million tons Ibis fiscal
year, wbile global sugar consumption is predicted to be 113.8 million
tons, lhe report said.

~

1

Vol. 45, NO. t73

·i

·j

.,

Cora usage to Increase
WASHINGTON (AP) - Indus-

1993-94, the report said.
Other major industrial uses of
corn include production or starch, .,
wbicb is used in paper products, l
and sorbitol, derived from corn.
starch and used in personal-care
products, food applications, surfactants, vitamin C, pharmaceuticals
and plastics. .
Starch production for industrial
uses is expected to use 213 million
bushels of corn this year, up 3 percent from the 207 million needed in
1993-94, the report said.

•

Suger production short
WASHINGTON . (o\P)
Worldwide su·gar production is
expected to fall short of consumption in 1994-95 for the third consecutive year, tbe Agriculture
Department's Economic Research
SCJ:Vice

Buy In January

PROMOTED- Marissa Marchi, R.T. (M), le"- bas been pro·
muted to assistant director of radiology services at Pleasant Valley
Hospltlll. Slfelillll ~f:iililile Davis, Jt.T.; ROMS, right, ilirictor Of
radiology services, discuss the results of a rec:ent survey.
·

PVH announces new assistant
director of radiology services
memlicr of the American Registry
of Radiologic Technologists and
lhe Gallia County Animal Welfare
League, and resides in Gallipolis
with ber husband, David Durbin.
"The team effort of Ibis department is outstanding," Marchi said.
"We are always working to
improve our services.' One of my
first priorities as assistant director
will be to work with Connie to
encourage customer feedback via
surveys.
·

GLENN K. LACKEY

laC key named
tO fifth term on
OfBF board

No green?
Congressionalle~dership

vexes environmentalists

,. •'

-- WASHINGTON (AP) - At the Wilderness Society and the Sierra
Club, at the Natural Resources.Defense Cou~Cil and the Audubon Soc1ety, they're expecting a battle.
.
. .
.
.
.
.
They're worried about Republicans amvmg on Captt?l ~11l . w1th th~u .
Contract With America, a pro-business tilt and a determmauon to rem m
government regulators.
By most accounts, lhe 104th Congress that. convened last wee~ will be
dramatically less inclined to think green than us r~nt Democratic predecessors. And environmentalists fear that decades of environmental proteclion may be blown away.
.
.
.
.
•'We're looking at a potential rollback of every maJor pollution law ~n
the books," said Gene Karpinski, executive director of the U.S. Pubhc
In~rest Research Group, which focuses on a broad range of env1ronmen- _
-- --ta11ssues. ·
- - -- ·-- ---~
-· GOP lawmakers say they're merely trying to bridle the federal government' s zeal to manage people's lives and 'bu~inesses. Tll4:y argue that too
often the cost of environmental .protecuon IS not adequately measured
against the risks.
_
If the Enviromnental Protection Agency is not closed, ''at least put a
snallle bit on them and ride that piJny down," Rep. Richard Armey said
~
. '
·.
.recently. "They're out.of controL"
· Such rhetoric isn't new for the Texas Republ~an. but now peo!Jie are
listening. After 40 years ofDe.mocrati~ rule, Republ~cans ~in charge,
and Armey, as majority leader, ts No.2 m the House h1erarctiy. .
Envirorunentalists labeled the last Congress the wo~st for env1ronmental protection since the original Earth Day in 1970. But now the 103rd
Congress doesn't seem SQ bad, .they say. Much of the leg1stauon •t. left
stranded -often by GOP filibusters - . is likely to re-emerge.• but With a
more
pro-business, anti-regulatory tone, 1awm akers and Iobb y1sts agree. ,
Some examples
.
·
· waste cleanup b1ll,
· wbtch
· almost passed
• A revised Superfund
toxtc
I'!St year, may now let businesses that polluted before 1980 off the book,
th . th Cl'
·
· hasstron gIYopposed
some mg
e mton adm'm1strauon
• .
·
.
• New drinking water legislation will probably be approved, but w1th
fewer regulatory controls than a bill considered only aiew, roQilths ago.
,'· -•;; The ·taw conttOiling pollution of ri~ers and lakes probably wjll .reemerge,butthistimecontainweakcrpr~tcctionsfor.wetlan~. . .
• A push is expected to open Alaska s Arctic National Wddl1fe Ref~ge
to oil .and gas exploration, and lawmakers may also try to ease dnllmg
restrictions in U.S. coastal waters. _

...,_,

l'tHJr.a

.

Inc. Newapaper

1!\i:· .: 4""'*•-f. ~~
·.~;. ~-- ·""' '
- -·•

~- ·.

_ . W · M 1 St t,Pomeroy buildinG which boll5ed the former Pleasers Re•!"urant I•
"'-The est a n ree
. Th 'dl
tU b
1 e company began several weeks ago
slowly but surely coming down, e sman ng Y a '\""g e an auto rts store. The windows,
ldn prepaidra tioJr ndror the co~:::u:!ioppon~ :t:::';tu'::~:~~l!ad~~one. (Sent:l photo)'
oors, s 1ng, a some

°

L-----------------..._. . _____.. . .,. . . . ,. ____.,;;,...,;,':":....;=~
d
GaIll. a mu rd-er sus pee·t-we s
•tness to shoot•l
ng .I nc·ldent
WI·
. ·
.. '
.

,

.

can not be ordered to testify against

• GALLIPOLIS - A local murder case developed a new bitcb Friday when the all eged murderer got
b1'tched ~ to the eyewitness.
Michael E. Wotre, 38, Huntington, W .Va .• and Terri Thomas,
·v1·n-e Street, Crown C'ity, were married in the Gallia County Probate
Court of Judge Thomas S. Moulton, a probate court spokeswornllli
confirmed this morning . .
Tbe marriage may have been an
auempt to disable lbe prosecution's
case against Wolfe, because a wife

her husband.
Thomas is the primary witness
in the Oct. 4 shooting at her residence, in which Eddie A. Ferguson,
41, Crown City, was killed.
Another witness, R_oger Harrison o"r Crown City. testified Oct. 14
at Wolfe's preliminary hearing that
he witnessed pa.t:t oftbe incident
from two houses down on the
opposite side of lhe slr'eet.
Harrison said he saw a man step
out of a truck and walk between

It costs about $14,000 a year to
keep ·one person in prison To help
Save liloney. the state
making
changes to keep par.olees out of
prison. The Columbus Di.1patch
reported Sunday . . ..
In addition t~ parole violators,
the state's prisons take in nearly
two parked vehicles. He then heard 20,000 new offenders every. year.
d
flash
Ohio's prisons are the seco!Jd-most
a gunshot an saw a muzz1c
· crowded in the nation, behind CaliTheThomas
witnesssay
testified
be · fomia .
beard
"Give that
me the
In 1'"'4 1 524 techn1'cal viola
gun, Mike,"
before
thethat
shooting
"" 768
• • felony offenders,occurred.
Han:ison
srud
he did tors and
b tba called • 'recommissions," were
not
see
the
suspcct.
'
s
face,
. 1 relumcd to custuuy,
.,., L
he had the same build andut hau
yons sal.tl .
stvle as Wolfe.•
The reasons: more drug use by
parolees and stricter supcrvison by
Woife, who remains in the Gal- parole officers who arc stopping
lia County Jail in lieu of a oflenscs before they get· ~orse, he
$250 000 cash bQtld, wa.~ escorted said: Others say domestic disputes
by j~ilers upstairs to the court for also get technical violators in trouthe ceremony Friday . · .
ble .. .

GaS Pump
· rices
· . ·. S hOW
P
dro,n
sll~nht
::1
I"
I '

LOS ANGELES (AP) -

Retail

g;;_~ prices shouW start rising ag~n

REP. TOM DELAY
.
. .
.
. . _
· mater.tmlencans have a ngln 10·
~now , g~nerally, where, ~ose cu\'
are commg fro~!!· but we can I
spell out everythmg, because much
depends ~n w~~t happens to tbe
economy ; be srud.
,
_
Most Republicans argue tbat
tliey can balance the budget with.out undue hardship by reducing the
rate of growth in government
spending, str'eamlining the bureaucracy and reforming welfare and
other programs .

COLUMBUS ( AP) - More
parolees are being sent back to
prison because t·hcy commmed
misdemeanor offenses, a corrections official said.
About twice as many ''technical
violators' • ended up back behind
bars in fiscal 1994 than parolees
who had committed felonies again,
said Terry Lyons, superintendcnt.of
parole supervision for the Oliio Department of Rehabilitation and
Correction.

after dipping slightly over the holtdays, an industry analyst said.
· Tbe average price for all grndes
of gas, including taxes, was 1.19:56
cent~ a gallon on F'riday, accordmg
to the Lundberg Survey of 10,000
stations across the country. That
was down four -tenths of l! cent
from Dec. 16.
"The overall national average
has dropped probably for tbc last
time " said Trilby Lundberg, publisbc~ of the Lundberg Survey . "If
" C[U(ic oil prices r_cmain sjcad_y,
reiail prices will likely edge up a
bit in the next few weeks."
•1
Pump prices already .ba~e risen
in some :ucas as suppltes of new
cleaner-burning gasoli·nc - which
is costlier to produce "7 move into
the markclplace, Lundberg sa1d
Sunday.
•
The average price at self-serve
pumps was 112.68 cents for regular
unleaded; 123.29 cents for , mt~­
grade unleaded; 131.75' for premium unleaded and 118.58 cents for
regular leaded.

Is

"So .much of our activity surrounds drug usage. or at least the
Cl\Cuse of.drug usage," Lyons said.
"If we take that away from them,
we hope to deal with other prohterns more successfnlly."
"Technical violators" arc
, parolees who arc rctumcd to prison
after committing misUc1neanors or

breaking the._rules of their relea.o;c.
Tbc offenses include drunken dliving, possession of a weapon, using'
~rugs and missing meelings with
parole officers.
Beginning this year, the state
will handle lochnical violators dif'
fcrcnlly, Lyons said, .
The ch:mges include mandatory
drug screening, which will begin in
February or March . All parolees
will he tested al least once every
three months, and those suspected
of having drug problems may be
checked weekly, Lyon~ said. .._ . .-"
Stale officials also plan to build
a prolotype community rehabilitation center for parolees.
Tbc 100-bed center would house
new parolees who need intensive
supervision and technical violators
w.ho are not considered dangerous
enough to warranl more priwn
time.
A site for the ccnlcr had not
been chosen, said Jill Goldhart.
chief of the Adult Parole Autl1nrity.
Sbe said $6.8 million was available
for the construction .

The past year,'most recently in connection with expansion of a program that· llcnefits minority busi nesses.
.
A Cincinnati conuacwr alleged
that Mifsud persuaded him to drop
· a lawsuit againsLthC-statc m. rcu•m~
for more slftte· work . 'lbe suit chalBrowni~g said no one has m~n­
quit.
lenged the administratiqn's de~i­
tioned
s.u.~:h
a_possil!lhty
to
btm
,
- -~ .! 'It is. categorically untrue and
.
sion
lo make Asiru1-Americans ch·
"That
is
speculative,"
he
said
from
bas no basis in fact," spokesman
gible
for the progrnm .
his
office
Sunday.
.
Mike Dawson said Sunday.
.
Mifsud
has denied the allegawill
Voinovich,
a
Republican,
- o---Tbe..=.newspaper said Mifsud · ~ill~
tion.
tie
inaugumted
to
his
second
term
be succeeded by Greg Brownmg,
Mifsud has been the chief of
.. .
now head of Ohio's Office of Bud- on Monday.
stal'f
since Voinovich became govfire
m
Mifsud
bas
come
under
get and Management .
emor
. . in 1991.

his fiflh filii t!Jnlo.year term 011 tbe
Obio Farm Bureau Federation

'
resents
""'
Atbens,
.'
Meigs
counties. ·
DAILEY PROMOTED He is involved in a 1,2.50-aac
Dwight A. Dalley, of Mr.
family
farm in Athells County, pro.
· and Mn. Leloy Dalley, Galducing
beef, corn, bay, sbeep 3lld
lipolis, reeeody promoted
timber. He bas been a member of
to a neld engloeer-prodndloo
Alhens
County Farm Bureau fer 21
aad eavlroameatal pcllillon by
years
and
served In a number of
Ohio VaDey l!kctrk Corporaleadership
posilions, including
tion Ia Piketon. OVEC aup·
president
for
three yems.
plies eleetrlc eaer11 for ~ II
He
is
also
a member or Atbeus
the U. S. Eark:b-nt Corpo·
County
Cattlemen's
Association,
ratloa'a analam faclllt;r Ia
Mid-State
Wool
Cl(owers
and baa
Piketon. He jolaed OVEC Ia
served
on
tbe
Adieus
Soil
and
1990 at Ita K:raer Creek ·Plaut
Water
Conservation
District.
In
Ia GaiiiDolla. He Is a andwtte
·
addition,
be
bas
served
on
tbc
of the tJnlverslty of Akron
administrative board or tbe
with a BS degree Ia electrical
Canaanville
United Methodist
enghieerlog.
Church.
He and his wife, Bonnie, are
~-----:------..1 parents of two children.

A Multimedia

The newspaper did nol cite a
·
source fur it• report.
Mifsud could n01 he reached to
comment Sunday. There is no
home phone listed for him in
Columbus . A message was left al

ey ~?~=u:.. = ne~~

Hotelwas
iD Clocinnali.
Lackey
lint elected to ••board in 1982. As a ~tee be ""'

2 Sectlono, 12 Pages 35 centa

New study finds
more parolees
•.
retL(riJ to [Jri~On

Governor's staffer denies report

iransition an easy one."
"We want to kno~~~:~~!:b~o~w;--l{t~o:~F~B:F;)~B~o;ar~1d~~T~r~u~st~ee~~~·~T~b~c~
·
~~·~~~~:::::~a:~~t.~:~
Good - we-arc-doing and the
I1------;~~::~.
Samaritan
of Radiologic back is truly our best measuring
u:nt1cr and Omal
Technology ,- has worked at PVH tool, " she added ·
for more than lhrcc. years. She is a •

\\

Ready to come down----. Behind ·
the wall
again

House vote as early as Jan. 19 on fish on a deck right now, not willBy JIM ABRAMS
an amendment to balance the bud- ing to be specific with regard to
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Democmts gel,.by 2002. The Clinton adioinis- bow they're going to do it, "
trying to slow lhe rush toward pas- tration, which opposes the amend- Daschlc said on NBC, referring to
sage of a balanced budget amend- ment, is urging Democrats to pres- the Republicans.
House Majority Lc:1der Dick
. ment arc demanding that Republi- sure the GOP to explain what programsparticularly
social,
cducaArme
y, R-Texas , was quick to.
cans fust provide real numbers on
tiona!
and
health
programs
they
respond.
"That's trolling with red
bow · they are going to cut federal
will
have
to
cut
to
achieve
that
herring
,
and I ain't tal&lt;ing the
spending .
l:lait
"
be
said. "Nobody
al
Passing a balanced budget F
,
. can now
Republicans, however, argue tell me what are the budget cuts
amendment without showing who
gets hurt is a "very irresponsible · that Democrats are merely trying to ·that arc most workahle five, six,
act," Sen . Christopher Dodd, D- ·scuttle' a constitutional change seven years from now. They can't
. Conn., said Sunday. "We arc once favored by 80 percent of Ameri- do it and we can't do it."
·
again doing what Washington loves cans. "It's an attempt by a party
Armey added that "once memto do and that is to duck the deci- that wants to preserve .big govern- bers of Congress know exa~tly.
~ions," be said on ABC.
ment to stop the. b~lanocd budget ~ 1\apter-nnd verse, .the Jll.l'" .that theVice President AI Gore, appear- · amendment,'' House Majority govemmcnt must hve w11h m order
in g. on CBS, ·said Republicans Whip Tom Delay, R-Teims. said on to get to a balanced ~?vernmenl,
pushing the constitutional amend- ABC.
their knees w1ll buckle.
.
ment arc ''the same group that .
Scnale Majority Le:~der ll~b
Senalc Minorily Leader Tom
quadrupled the national debt the Das~hle, D-S .D .• supports .the Dole. R-Kan .. satd on CNN th.tt
last time they•had the reins of gov- amendment but said Americans balancing the budget would require
ernment all the while talking the must be told hnw it ·will be additional spending cuts of as ·
same game."
·
achieved.
·
mucb as $600 billion, half the
Republicans have promised a
"Tbey ' re nipping around like amount of some govemment esti-

M
·Down!

.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 9, 1995 ~-

GOP down plays- Democr~tic
worries on balanced budget

Wilh
(to Qualified Applicants)

POINT PLEASANT, W .Va. Marissa Marchi, R.T. (M), has
been promoted to assislant director,
of radiology services at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, according to Connie Davis, R.T., ROMS , radiology
services director.
~
"I am looking forward to working with Maris!;a," Davis said. "Her
experience as a registered mammography technologist and tbe
excellent relationship she bas with
the radiology staff will make the

(

.

Copyright 1994

meot of the Interior has announced
Box 631, Milwaukee, Wis. 53201- .:
lhe availability for adoption of 125
0631, or call (414) 297 -4443 or .;
healthy and trainable wild horses
FAX (414) 297-4442. Applications '
from the Western rangelands at the
to adopt should be received by the ;'
Ohio State Fairgrounds, Cooper bureau before Jan. 27. 1995.
, ;,
Arena on Feb. 4-5. More than
.J
&gt;1
145,000 animals have been adopted
Are you raising beef cattle? ·
since the Adopt-A-Horse &amp; Buno
Youth and, adults are cordially.
Program began in 1973.
invited to bear a progriun entided,
To qualify to adopt up to four
''Tips_Ot) _Feeding )'Q11f Calf' by, .
animals, applicants must have, for
Johil Grimes on Jan. 9 at 7 p.m. at· :
each animal, a sturdy corral, at
the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural 1
least 6 feet high, shelter, transporta- , Center, 111 Jackson Pike, Gallipo-, ;•
lion and the ability to care for the
lis.
'
animals.
.
. Grimes
is
lbe
Brown
County''
•
&lt;
The adoption fee of $125 per
agncultural agent, as well as a .
horse is payable in cash or money ' well-known beef judge and past
order at the time of lhe adoption.
~sident of the Ohio Angus Asso-'
The fee helps defray the federal
ciation. This program begins a;
government's cost of rouodup. vetseries of Winter Beef Meetings ..
erinary care, transportation and
being arranged by Ed Vollborn, the
administrative expenses.
Gallia County agricultural
For applications and more· in for·
(Hal Kneen Is the agrlculltural
mation about Ibis event contact:
extension agent for Mt&gt;l!P-U&gt;U~I---'·--·-Bureau of Land Management; P.O.
ty.)

trial uses for corn - mostly for
producing elhanol -,-- are expected ·
to increase 12 percent this fiscal
year, reaching 748 million bushels,
lhe Agriculture Department's Eco·
nomic Research Service says.
In 1994-95, industrial demand
for com is expected to account .for
8 percent of total corn use, down
from 9 percent in 1993-94, an ERS
report said.
Ethanol production is expected
to use 535 million bushels of corn
this year, up from 458 million in

Low tonl&amp;bt In the 20s. Partly
cloudy. T~sday, chance of snow.
Hl&amp;h In the 30..
·
'

•

,.

Tobe~cco crop· small~r in '94; total supplies larger

. '
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
tobacco growers produced a smaller crop in 1994 lhan the previous
year, but total supplies were larger
because beginning stOcks were up,
the Agriculture Department says.
Total U.S. tobacco production in
1994 wa8 expt;eted to be 1.58 billion pounds, 2 'percent below 1993.
But larser be,inning stocks
increased domesuc supplies about
I percent in 1994, according to a
December USDA Economic
Research Service report.
The report said production may
increase slightly this year. Also,
U.S. tobacco use during 1994-95
may exceed marketings, which
·'Would reduce next summer's end·
ing stocks about I percent from the
2.47 billion poqnds of U .S.-grown
tobacco carried into this year, lhe
report said:
.
U.S. cigarette consumption in
1994 was expected to decline
sligbdy from 1993, the report said,
. bu I cigarette production was
expected to rise because of larger
exports, lhe report said.

Pick 3:
072
Pick 4: ·
8791
· Super Lotio:
, 4-8-11-38-40-41
Kicker: ·
985650

Page4

·Changes taking·place in use of pesticides
ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY - I just spent two
days in Columbus to be funber
updated on lhe changes in pesticide
registrationllabelingluses and listenin~ to predictions of future pesticide ~gulations. .

Ohio Lottery

Southern
slips past
Eastern

January 8, 1995'

•

'93 . . . . - PARK A-VENUES

BONNEVILI,E

Loaded

Loaded

,From '16,995

8 Pauenger .- u;aded
7 In Stock

'15,995

From '15,888

-

~-----=

."'itiJIJiflr/

'94~-

- 1-

- -'94 GMC
~

SAFARI XT

•
lo/11' tot'lll n,.~;/1(' .~ .~(·.~- For .I llt•tdt/,y llottwlmm!

BUICK.
PONTIAC

'Other Ohio' to reconvene in Marietta
I

Joe Matthews said.
By The Assocl•tejl Press •
The "Other Ohio'·' conference,
The mayor of Marietta said he
hopes the second "Other Ohio" which first ml:t ncar Toledo in
conference leads to a lobbying northwestern Ohio in October,
front to compete for state highway moves to Marietta, in southeast
· Ohio, for its second session on Satand community project money.
"There's no way a mom-and- urday.
pop store can compete W\th a Wal· . The two regions were dubbed
Mar!. and there's no way a town the "forgotten Ohio" by Gov .
wid a few thousand people can George Voinovicb during his 1990
·
compete with a city with hundreds campaign.
publishers
and
edi-.
Newspaper
or thousands of people," Jl.1ilyor

•

'

tors and public.-officials fofll)ed an
alliance out of frustratio.n . They say
their communities are afterthoughts
for a stale government that first
considers Columbus, Cleveland
ru1d Cincinnati.
•.
Robert Gabordi, managing editor of The Marietta Times, said
interest in southeas't Ohio is keeil.
. "This may be the first time that
many people from this area. have
gouen togetliCr to talk about 1ssues
as a region," he said.

INAUGURAL PREPARATION- Richard
Shack steadied tbt American Dag on tbe stage of
the Ohio Theatre In Columbus Sunday as prepa·

rations ,continued rur. today's Inauguration of
Gov. G•orge Volnovich. (AP)
I,

,
'
'

1

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