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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r--.

Community

Business after hours'-Pageo1

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

ByLES HAYMAN, pistor
Middleport Freewlll B•ptlst
Church
"I wailed patiently f.:&gt;r tbe Lord
and. be inclined IUIIO me, and heard
my cry. He brought me up also out
of a horrible pit, out of the miry
clay, and set my feet upon a rock,
and established my goings." Genesis 2:7 says "And tbe Lord God
formed man out of tbe dust of tbe
ground." The man"reft:rred to here
is Adam. from wbom all mankind
sprang.
Tbe subject I would like to
focus on today is the thought of
being formed out of the ground, or
from clay. As Jeremiah puts it in
chapter 18, verse 3 ·~n I went to
lbe potter's bous~. and. behold be
wrought a work on the wheels, and
lbe vessel that be made of clay was
marred in the hand of the potter; So
be made it again another vessel, as
seemed good to tbe poUer to maice
it
Tbe firSt vessel is an illustration
of the natural man. I Corinthians
1.5:47 ''The firSt man is of the earth,
earthy; the second man is the Lon!
from heaven." Verse 49 "And as
we bave borne the image of the
earthy, we sball also bear lbe image
of the heavenly."
.
• Genesis 1:26 states tbat man
*as made in the image of God.
However, due to lbe faU of man as
a result of bis sin in the Garden of
Eden, man lost the divine attributes
that reOect the image of God.
Man no more reOects the image
of God today than a piece of bacon
resembles a pig. The bacon may
bave came from tbe little pig. but it
sure doesn' t resemble bim. And so
the reason for verse 49 "And as we
have borne the image of the eartby
we must aloo.bear the image of the
·heavenly." To bear the image of
the heavenly one must be florn
So have fun and live it up wben
again
as Jesus S!llled in John 3:7.
How great it is. With all of the .
you are young,
Now
if you pleaSe, let's go back
And listen to lbe good advice • . problems in our country, the presi- to tbe potter's bouse of Jeremiah.
dent' bas time to get involved in lbe The firSt image was marred so the
you're told,
baseball
strike. Perhaps, we ought
Cause as you will see, time
made another vessel as
to let America's favorite pastime potter
passes fas~
.
seemed good . Wben a person
And mucb too soon, you, too, just pass into the past. Surely we repents of bis sins, the Holy Spirit
can find a substitute spon of inter- enters bis life to start restoring lbe
wiU be old
est. Do keep smiling.
Image of God, and thus we bear the
Image or the heavenly.
1

•

'

The Apostle Pbi1ip
I esus
on one occasion to sbow bim lbe
father and it would satisfy bim.
Jesus told Philip. "If you've
seen me, you've seen lbc father."
Jobn 14:8-9.
·
· Colossians 1: 15 says that Jesus
is the image of the invisible God.
And so our lives as Christians
should reOect the image of God in
our everyday actions, as we mirror
bis love, joy, peace and judgment.
Psalm 103:13-14 says, "Uke as
a father pitielb bis children so the
Lord pitietb tbem lbat fear bim. For
RUTLAND LEGION HONORS... Joe and Janet Bolin ror th~ir
he knoweth our frame: he rememdedication
to the convnunlty, particularly with ~!necking down lbe .
bereth that we are dust." If you
old
Rutland
High Sebool last year. Standing Is Mark TIIUs or the
combine dust and water you'll get
post.
The
EU
Dennison Rutland American Legion Post has existed
clay, something that can be formed.
si~e 1943. (Sentinel photo by George Abau)
God is still desiring to form our
lives into somelbing for his honour
and alorv. "Where does the water
come from?" you may ask. EpbFRIDAY
Modem Woodmen, potluck at 6:3(!
esiaus .5:26 says we are cleansed by
MIDDLEPORT
Bosworth
Saturday night at Woodmen's baU,
tbe washing of the water of the
Council
46,
work
in
the
S.E.M.
Everyone
welcome. Door prizes td
word. Wbat word? The word of
Degree
Friday,
7:30,
Middleport
be
awarded.
God. Wben the dust of man's life is
MIDDLEPORT Retuni
exposed to the water of God's word · Masonic Temple.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughter
we become formable. 2 Timothy
LONG BOTTOM - Valentine of the American Revolution, I :30
2: 19-20 says, if we as Christians
will purge oorselves from iniquity, dinner at 5:30 p.m. followed by p.m Saturday at Heath United
we can he vessels untQ bonour. bymn sing wilb the Clark family at Methodist church, Middleport:
sanctified and meet for. the master's . 7 p.m. at the Faith Fuii ,Gospel Frank Vaughan, speaker.
.
use, and prepared unto every good Church, Long Booom. Pastpr Steve
CHESTER - Shade River
Reed invites public. ·
work.
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM, Chester, special
meeting Saturday, 7:30 p.m. for
Romans 9:21 says, the potter
SATURDAY
bas power over the clay. God is the
annual inspection and work in the
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham FeUowcraft Degiee.
potter. The text goes on to say there
are some vessels unto honour and
some IUIIO dishonour. Wby the difference? The amount of water we
allow in our lives. We don't like to
be expo~ to an over ablUidaoce of
water YQ!! see, because we may
loose .control and ·ood may take
over. That may lead to disaster!

,

·Community calendar

We all need our hearts ftxed, so
they will bold the water of God's
word. Tben be will tum it into wine
wbicb symbolizes tbe blood of
Jesus, that cleanses us from all
imrigbtousness.
May His richest be yours.
.
Les Hayman is pastor or the Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Cburcb in
Middleport "a cburcb at the foot of ,
the Cross, with Christ in our hearts
and you on our mind."

lou

Hilhide Baptut Church
Homeschool Academy ·

Have
chosen to embark' upon the tedious
task o Homeschooling?
·
Are you in need of some support?
Check into the Academic Program now being
·offered at Hillside Baptist Church by calling
992-6768
.
Become part of a program that works!

TO CHOOSE

'

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On al)p'Oved credit No! responsible fOr typographical «ron;

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'

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Low: 5
Details

College basketball results - Page c1

No ooe smiles '24 boors a day,
Gilbert Zwilling of Pomeroy
seven days a week. do lbey?
sent along a brochure dealing with
Although I traditionally end the Delta King. Now that's one we
eacb column urging you to keep don't bear mucb about here on the
smiling, I don't mean lbal it sbould Ohio.
be a fuU-Iime task. I just lbinlc lbat
Tbe Delta King and the Delta
it's sometimes easier to sbrug your Queen were prefabricaled in Scotshoulders wben lbe world gets a bit land and shipped to Stockton,
beavy-ffild il does for all of us- · Calif., and both boats were built
and try to smile. May as well, there. The two -boats operated
you're never goona get out of this between Sao F1'311ciseo and Sacraworld alive anyway.
mento from 1927 to 1940. Both
A reader, M. Susan Harris of were especially popular dwing prt&gt;Racine, wrileS lbat sbe does II}' to ·bibition when both drinlciog and
~keep smiling." She adds that at
gambling were permitted on boanl.
one time sbe felt that it took nerve
to make in this world, but as she
In 1941 both boats were being
grows older sbe' s beginning to feel readied for towing to New York
that a keen sense of humor surely wben World War II broke out.
cunes in handy.
Both boats served as troop transMrs . .Harris penned the follow- ports on the San Francisco Bay.
ing lines about aging. She says the After the war. the Delta Queen was
words fits well to tbe tune of
towed to New Orleans taking the
"Mistr." It didn't work for me, and Delta
King's engines for spare
that's probably because I couldn't parts. The
Delta King bas not operremember the tune to lbat song.
aled
on
its
own power since 1946.
Look at Us
From
1946
to 1984 the King was
Look at us, we done got old,
.
towed
from
port to port by a sucWe don't laugh as much as we
cession
of
owners
who were lookused to,
iog
for
a
viable
use
location for
And we can't remember things the vessel. In 1982,and
the King sank
weare told.
Richmond, Calif.• and remained
All the aches and pains we used at
submerged
up to its third deck for
to bear about we now bave.
15 months.
•
And the slim. trim figure is
In 1984, the King was. raised
replaced,
.
and
towed to Sacramento where it
By a spare tire 'muM the midunderwent a complete renovation.
dle,
The original 88 staterooms were
That was once our waist
converted to 44 luxury staterooms
Get that silly look off your face,
Tbose lines. no expensi vc cream each with a private bath. It is permanently moored and is lbe "unofcan erase.
ficial" symbol of, Sacramento. II
Our bearing is going, eyesight's offers restaurants, theater, conference facilities, wedding and bangetting dim,
'ijle war on old age, you just can quet facilities and is anchored within walking distance of many of
win,
Sacramento's finest attractions.
But if you want to feel safe,
Interesting, eh?
They bave that new convenient
·stuff called Depends.

• E,tended Chassis

HI: 20

•
tmts A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant- February 12, 1995

Vol. 30, No. 1

Buckeye Rural billing flap:
:c o-op attempts to soothe customers; Legislator answers questions
GALLIPOLIS - As Buckeye Rural Electric Olopera.live management attempts to soothe members' sore feel'ings about the cooperative's billing procedure, an area
legislator is trying to answer their questions.
..
. State Rep. John A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, attended two
.heated meetings between management and members last
week in Lawrence County and said he is researching the
possibility of state regulatjbn over private cooperatives.
AI a Thursday meeting with members at Symmes Val.ley Mjddle School, BREC officials announced thai members can read their own meters every other month.
, BREC is allowing the move to calm members' outrage
over a new billing procedure that has temporarily in. ,creased bills for some oflhecooperative's 16,000 users in
southeastern Ohio. Memberii ' every other month reading
will begin now, BREC Executive Vice President and
.General Manager Walter V. Truill Jr. said.

"We made mistakes and we are correcting them," Truitt
said. "We want to keep doing everything we can Jo make
Buckeye Rural Electric an outstanding organization for
service to our membership." ·
The cooperative is also establishing a member focus
committee to keep communication open between ·it and
customers.
·
"This will help us discuss needs up front, rather than
having to react to unforeseen problems," Truill said.
Truill said that members will be provided with informalion on optional meterreading dates, eliminating.BREC's·
need to do bimonthly estimation of bills for members who
choose to read their own meter$; 'BREC's meter readers
will check meters every oiher month.
Additionally, 'the billing procedure will be changed,
Truill said. Instead of using the three previous months '
electric use to estimate the 'bill, future estimates will

reOecl the consumer's use from a year before.
·
This method has been successfully used
by other cooperatives or investor-owned
PQWer companies, he added.
"This will reduce the 'seasonal ' differences experienced by some customers in the
past, including the recent changeover to
cooperative meter reading," Truill said.
BREC has assured Carey il is working
with customers to resolve problems, Carey
said.
In response to questions posed to him at
the meetings, Carey said territories served
by electric companies are governed by the
Ohio Revised Code and cannot be arbitrarily
Con!ln~~n page A2

Rep. Carey responds to BREC customers
QuntlonapuedtoStateRep. John A. Carey - •
Jr., R·Wei)Q)n, by m11111ben1 ot Suek.,e Rural
Eltetrlc Coopwatlvt liSt Mil!, llld C.rwy'a

. ,

m~:

... ,

Q. Ctn BAEC membenlftltch to a prime

poMr COII'Ipeny?

A. lllt terrltorlta served by electric compa·
nlw arw gavemad by the Ohio Rev!Md Code
and cannot be ll'bltnlrlly Changed;
·
0. DoH the Public Utllltln Commlaalon of
Olllo rttulate rural electric cooperatlvea auch
Caray
•BREC? ·
A. No, PUCO Ia not authartztcl to regulate
rurwl tlectrlc 'COOpel'lltlvM. "I am contlctlng the chairman of
PUCO to·aall him If leglllatlvt changaa could bt made to aiiPUCO to rwgulataruralei11Cl!1c cooparl!llvea If a majority oftht coop mernbtn raqunt PUCO reguletlon, and whit t.he conquenc• .,..,• Carey iald.
. Q. Who doel regulate BREC?
A. The co-op me'mberw are reapoMibleto regulata BAECthrough
·l htlr board ot
Tha bolrd ottruete• araelected brtha coop mem• at their annual malting.

truet-.

EPAd7!ops

Probable cause: Hearing
·demand -for· -focuses on trustee•s arrest
dioxin study

By KEVIN PINSON
Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - After hearing
CHARLESTON, w :va. (AP)- The Environmennearly three hours·of testimony Frital ProteclioQ Agency has dropped its demand for a
d_ay, visiting judge Domild Capper
dioxin study of the Ohio River at the site of a $1
will decide if a local pelice officer
~illion pulp mill planned for Mason County, a state
had probable eause for charging a
official said.
Guyan Township trustee with HeeIn return, the stale Division of Environmental Proing and eluding.
leclion agreed to a study of the entire Ohio River basin
DefenSe: attorney David T. Evans
. for dioxin, D.lrector David Callaghan said.
of Gallipolis filed a motion in late
The agreemeot was reached Friday, he said.
November for suppression of evi. Cellag\lan said the EPA and the Ojlio River Valley
ilence, alleging Officer Greg J:'razier
Water Sanitation Commission, an interstate agency
did not have probable cause for chargbased io .Cindnnali, will begin wqrk with the· stat• . · ing Roger Watson .of Crown· City
this "Summer on a study of dioxin and other toxic
·
Nov.8.
subsianam'. ·
The motion also asks for dismissal
The EPA will cover most of the costs, he said.
of the charges, alleging the officer
Dioxin is a toxic byproduct of paper bleaching. The
used excessive force in the arrest.
El'A wanted to halt a.water polluti9n permit the state
Capper decided Friday to hold sepaissued to Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc..of Rye Brook,
rate hearings for tbe two allegations.
N.Y., until the aniount of dio~in already in the river
A seeond hearing date has not been
near Apple Grove could he determined.
set.
CONFERRING- Special Proaacutor John R. Lentea talkl with Gallipolis
Greg
"The permit stands as we've issued it, with our
'tn his opening statement, Special Frazier Friday In the Galllpolla Municipal Court while defendant Roger Wataon, far right, walla
commitment to make any changes on down the road
Prosecutor John R. Lentes of Meigs for hla llttomey, David T. Evana, to retum to the eourtr&lt;!Om. (Tlmn·Stntlnel photo)
that might he diCtated by anything we find during this
County said he believes the officer
study period," Callaghan said.
bad probable cause in making the fleeing and eluding arrest.
"Officer Frazier was required to.have probable cause to believe this
Opponents contend tbe mill will dump dangerous
The officer had cause if the ''circumstances perceived by the defendant was fleeing and eluding," he said.
levels of dioxin into ~he Ohio. Supporters contend the
officer's own senses gave him reason to make an arrest," he said.
." If not, everything that happened thereafter is suppressible," Evans ·
mill will discharge dtoxin in amounts so small that it
"The court should look argued.
will not even be (!electable.
• About the onlythlngaa Galllpolla at the totality of the cirFrazier testified that he first used Hashing lights to signal Watson to
Parsons &amp; Whittemore says the mill will create up
pollee ollleer and a Guyan Town- cumstances at the time of pull over on Vine Street between Second and Third avenues. Watson
to 800 jobs.
ahlp trustee could agree on In eol!rt the arrest and the court did not stop, the officior said, so he began usi ng the· sircn .near the
Gov. Gaston Caperton; a key booster, has called
friday was that the trustee•• vahlcle should not be second intersection of Chillicothe 'Road.
mill opponents extremists and radicals. In December,
waa pulled over and hawaa •rrested. guessing with 20/20hind·
Watson said he did not realize·the policeman was trying to pull him
he asked EPA Administrator Carol Browner to interOfficer Greg Frazier's teatlmony sight iri the cold sterility over until hew as southbound on GarfieldAvenue. Having no safe place
vene after the EPA Region IV office in Philadelphia
painted an Image of trustee Roger of the courtroom, "Lentes to pull off the road, the trustee said he continued to the Church of God
·
insisted on the dioxin study.
Wall on u an arrogant man who felt said. ·
parking lot near'the city limits before stopping·. .
But the chairman of the Ohio Valley Environmenha waa above the law. Watson's
Evans argued that the
Using an audio tape of radio transmissions between Frazier and the .
tal Coalition called the agreement "disgusting."
point of view ahowed Frazier as a officer only had the right police dispatcher, Evans pointed out !hal the siren could nol he heard
"It ~ays you can go ahead and have your permit and
liar who waa out to gel him - Full to stop Watson fora speed- until Frazier radioed that Watson was "going down Garfield."
hearing tlattinony on pege A3.
we will study the dioxin level in the next two years,"
ing violation. For anything
The officer said the radio transmission was "I believe he's going to
Lewis Baker said.
·
else, he would need probable 'cause - an action on the part of the go down Garfield" and was made near the intersection of Chillicothe
"EPA has shown that it has no moral courage," said
defendant thai warranted the additional response.
Continued on page A2
Janet Foul, project coordinator for the coalition.

Ststs open In Mlcldle.port. pomerov

Filing deadline for May primary
election petitions approaching

ews capsules
Students will break .
ground for connector

'

Boaters upset
by action on
dock funding
By GEORGE ABATE
nmea-Santlnel StaH
MIDDLEPORT - Area boaters
are seasick by Middleport's decision
to return more than S 120,000 in state
and local money for a flOating dock.
The Middleport levee remains the
best location in the Big Bend area to
launch a boat, said Pat O'Brien, an
avid boater.
·
"1. think it's a tremendous loss,"
. O'Brien sai&lt;L "I think we need il very,
very bad."
.
A few years ago, O'Brien and other
boaters initiated the effort to improve
the Middleport levee.
"As far as pulling out our wallets I
don't know,'' he said, adding area
boaters would sponsor and support
fund raisers. " It's a very expensive
hobby and mosl have a mortgage· on
their boats."
·
The village can not afford the
$21 ,000 in local match, Mayor Dewey
Hortonsaidearlier.lfthis grant money
is returned, the slate will probably.not
give other grants to this community,
he added.
.
The riverfront project is expected
to cost $142,800, but with village.
labor it may Iota! just $120,000, said
Jean Trussell, village grants coordi·
nator.Thecountycommissioners have
pledged $26,000 for paving the park·
iqloL
·
If enough people are interested in
saving the boat la.unch, the village
will hold a public meeting and stall
returning this Ohio Department of
Natural Resou rces grant, said Bob
Gilmore, cou·nci l president
Jim Pape, an avid boater and Syracuse mayor, said the area must maximize its riverfront properly.
"I've got mixed fcelings .on it I
understand the village doesn ' t have a
Continued on page A2

·'

•

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
nmea-Sentlnel StaH
POMEROY -Thursday at 4 p.m. is the deadline for filing May Primary
POMEROY - Six Salisbury El·
petitions of candidacy with the Meigs County Board of Elections for terms of
ementary students will move the
first dirt on the U.S. 33-lnlerslate
office expiring this year in the subdivisions of Middleport and Pomeroy.
' As of late Friday afternoon, only two petitions had been filed -John W.
77 connector next month, accordBlaeunar for mayor of Pomeroy, and Kathy Hysell for Pomeroy Village clerk.
ing loan Ohio DepartmentofTransBoth Blaettnar and Hysell are filling unexpired terms created by resignaportation official.
Stale highway officials will visit
tions.
In both Pomeroy and Middleport, the terms of office are up this year for
the school at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday to show a snow 'plow, said
mayor, clerk and two counciln:'en,
.
·. '
Scene of the crime
The February deadline apphes only to those two v11lages whtch have the
Nanoy Yoacham, regional ODOT
spokeswoman.
·
population to qualify for partisan nominations in the May primary.
•Story on page A 7•
The students will then create post- ·
· Syracuse, Rutland and Racine, because they have ~pula lions of less than .
ers based on the visit, Yoacham
2,000, are considered non-parttsan and reSidenL~ Ihere have until Aug. 24to f1le
said.
The student with the most creative poster from each grade will move
petitions of candidacy.
+--~"""'-~ ::those villages also the terms of office for the·mayor, clefk, two councU
the first dirt on this project.
·
The ground breaking date for the first phase of the U.S. Route 33members, expire, as do seals on the Syracuse and Rac~ne Board of Pubhc
lnterstate 77 connector will be around March 7. Although the ground
Affairs. Voting on candidates (iling for those posts Will take place .tn the
.;breaking date has not been set yet, the project continues to move forward,
November general election.
· ·
·
In Middleport the unexpired terms of former mayor Fred Hoffman, filled by
' she added.
.This first 2.25-mile phase of the connector- between Rock Springs and
Dewey Horton when Hoffman resig~ed after being appointed comm!ssione~,
Five Points- is set for use by next spring. The 18.6-mile Meigs County
andelerk, Brian Conde, to which Ten Hoclcman was appotnled, will exptre th1s
poll ion of the connector is divided into four sections from .Rock Springs to
year.
·
.
the Ravenswood, W.Va., Yoacham added . .
Also expiring on Dec. 31 are the terms of lames Clatworthy andth~ late
Kokosing Construction, based in Fredericktown; won the conttacf with a
William Walters. Noel Beth Stivers was appointed to fill the unexpired term
bid
of $12,320,373.45.
·
of Walters. ·
•
Officials from Kokosing, ODOT and other subcontractors will hold a
In Pomeroy, the term of Bruce Reed, resigned, will be completed this year
meeting Feb. 27 and 28 at the Lafayette Motel in Marietta, Yoacham said.
by Blaettnar who by virtue of being president of Council, was named mayor
This session will help streamline the building process since the groups can
when Reed moved out of state. The unex{lired term of Brenda Morris filled by
share ideas and concerns before the project starts
• Hysell also expires this year, as do the terms of Scott Dillon and Bill
The company. employs about 1,000 workers each year, with at least 50
Haptonstall, councilmen.
.
.
Petitions can still be picked up at the Meigs County Board of .Elections,
employees devoted to the interstate connector site.
.
The next section of the connector - from the Ravenswood bridge to
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, but must be filed by the Thursday deadline. To
Rolandus ~could. be sold by tbe beginning of .19'17, Yoacham said.
qualify as candidates ol! the_ May primacy balloqJC:titiQQs. mui!U!lD'~in 50
valid signatures, meaning that they must be of the candidate's political party
Soil borings and aerial pho)os will be completed this spring for the next
or tie non-declared voters. The filing fee is $10.
·
·
.
phase, Yoacham said. About $1.3 milliof! in federal highway dollars have
All of the current Middleport and Pomeroy office llolders now in the final
been raised for this seqion of the road.
Continued o~ p~ge A2 .
.

1 .

I

L~~!!.,_J on Page A2

GOOD MORNING

Business had
no knowledge
of phone foul-up

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections· 116 Pagu

Business
01
Calendars
83&amp;5
GALLIPOLIS- A local business- Classifieds
D3-7
man said he had no idea the county Comics
was being billed for his long distance
,A4
calls until someone told him about Editorials
the article in Friday 's Gallipolis Daily Local
A3
. Tribune.
Obituaries
A6
"I didn 't know anything aboullhis," .
Cl-8
said lim Mink. " It wasn 'tany faul.t or Sports .
Along the River
of lim Mink Auto Sales."
Bt
The · Galli a County Commission Weather
A2
learned about two weeks ago that it
has being paying long distance
charges for call~ made from the ~uto·
Columns
dealership, located on Eastern : Avenue.
·
.Jack Andenoo
The billing error has been traced .,......, r-back to 1992.
Uli&gt;UdJUt
·Mink said he has been paying his Bob HocOicb
bills every month ~nd has not noticed J(m Sapds
any change mlong distance inc!Jarges.
c '"'·.,~ ,,.., ,...,.... co.
"I think (t.he phone company) was '-"------~---.J
billing me and the county both," he
said. "If it's anybody's problem it would be the phone company's ."
The commission did not know what expenses it incurred because of the
·mistake, but a bill for Dec. 1994 was $51.93 . At 24 months, that would total
more than S I ,200.
·
.
' in
Commission President Harold Montgomery said the error was hidden
a multiple-paged phone bill for 62 phone lines. making it difficult to spot.
The commission is investigating the problem and will hold the phone
company responsible for straightening il out, he added.
· Mink, who has been in Florida and learned of the error by phone, said he
. will contact the county commission to COIT\(:lare billing statements from the
phone company ,
.
.

'n"rt

''

�•·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaunt, wv

Page A2-Sunday llmes-Sentinel

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Feb. 12
Accu-Weathe,.e forecas1 for daytime conditions 8lld high tempetalures

•lco1umbusl1a•

I

S&lt;.rmy Pt CJoudy CJoudy

Ice

C1995Ac:cu·WN!hO&lt;, Inc.

Temps to dip Sunday night
&amp;1 ne Aaoc:laled Prea

l::~es~~~.~~~~~~a: ~:~~~ ror tbe poor:

He said tbe stale iDSiead would
provide private insurance policies
10 about 1.2 million cwrenl Medicaid recipients and to an equal
number of working poor wbo are
wilbout bealtb coverage.
" Privatizing lbe wasteful and
bureaucratic Med icaid program
would save tbe taxpayers of Ohio •
approximately $3.50 million per
year," Netzley said in a news
release.
He said tbe proposal would
require federal approval but no new
taxes.
Medicaid recipients, except
!bose in long-term nursing boDies,
would rec:eive lbeir insurance poll·
cies for free.
So would persons with incomes

Assistant House Speaker William

College
picks new president
.

Pro babIe CaUSe

WILMINGTON (AP)- WilmingiOn College cbose Daniel A.
DiBlasio as Its 17tb president Friday, replacing tbe retiring Neil

a private driveway. which would leave
the cruiser in the &lt;treet.
The hearing may have a local historical value because it was probably
the first time ihree elected officials
took the stand in a case.
Besides Watson, Chief Deputy
Dennis Salisbury and Gallipolis Municipal Court Judge William ·s. Medley were called to testify.
Salisbury testified .that he drove
Watson back to his vehicle in the
municipal paiking lot after watching
election results at Congressman Frank
Cremeans • headquaners on upper
State Route 7.
Medley arranged Watson's release
from police custody and was one of
three wbo·testified they never heard
Frazier inform Watson why he was
. arrested. The olher ~o were officers
Sieve Wilson and Thomas Banks.
Frazier said he told ·Watson; tbe
trustee said he was not informed until
. he was handed two citations as lie left
the police station with Medley.
· Watson was charged with speeding, fleeing and eluding, assault and
resisting arrest Testimony Jo Jhe assault and resisting arrest charges was
not given at Friday's hearing.

Dock funding

Thorburn.
DiBiasio, 4.5, is tbe interim vice
president for ~IUdent affairs at llle
University of New Hampshire. He
will take over at Wilmington on
'
Jul 1.
biBiasio was chosen by a
sesrcb committee tbat included college truslees, faculty, a studentll!ld
QuaJcers.

Membef New Vorl!. Slodl. E ~change
Membe• SIPC

•Stocks
.
•Corporate Bonds
•U.S. Treasury Securities ·
•Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
•Insured Money Market
•
Accounts
•IRA's

Con wet:

Jay Caldwell
Account Executive

POMEROY- The Meigs County Board of Commissioners Friday approved several money ttansactions. including a $30.000 cash
advance for tbe Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
In add ition, a $5,000 appropriation for a juvenile coqections
grant and a transfer of $5,53.5.63 witbin tbe Qerk of Courts office
were approved.
Tbe board also met witb Rodney Doty and D. Brent VanHoose
of Landis &amp; Gyr, Columbus, on completion of a House Bill 300
proposal for energy savings.
·
·
Commissioners then approved paying. weekly bills of
$1.58,863..58, consisting of 210 entries. and approved the JQinutes of
the Feb. 3 meeting before adjourning.

·New McDon·ald's opens Feb. 16
RIO GRANDE- The 14.339tb McDonald's Restaurant will
open for business at8 a.m. on TbllfSda¥, Feb. 16.
·
Localed at109 State Route 325 North, between SR 588 and U.S.
35, tbe restaurant win operate Monday through Thursday. 6 a.m. to
11 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 6 a.m. 10 midnight; and Sunday, 7
a.m. to 11 p.m.
·
Tbe restaurant is owned and operated by the Sauber family,
whlcb also operates McDonald's restaurants in Atbens, Gallipolis
and Nelsonville, aJid Henderson, W.Va.
,
The menu will feature a full selection of McDonald's food irems,'
including burgers and fries, specialty spndwiches, pizza and breakfast entrees.
·

Chester trustees elect president · .
CHESTER- Elmer Newell was elected president of lbe Chester
· Township Board of Trusrees at a recent reorganizational meeliog .
. Blair Windon was elecied vice president. Meeliogs were set for
the second Tuesday ofeach month at 7 p.m. in the Chester town
ball.

Police investigate fire at GABS
GALLIPOLIS - A fue tbat was apparently set delibemtely on
the stage at Gallia Academy Hip Scbool Friday is under investigation by Gallipolis City Police.
•
A school employee found that some clothes being bung on tbe
stage wete ablaze at 1:38 p.m. and extinguisbed tbe fire, police said.
A 16-year-old student was observed leaving tbe stage prior 10 discovery of tbe fue, according 10 the report.
·
Some of lbe clothes burned in the fire were later discarded.
police were told.

NOW OPEN FQR BUSINESS

Theft of car reported to sheriff

Gallipolis man cited by polite
•
•

GALLIPOLIS - · Gallipolis City Police cited Gerald L. Hall, 38,
1419 State Route 588, Gallipolis, for driving under the influence
and parking on the roadway at .5:29 p.IJI. Friday. according to
records.

.••
•

. Editor's note: Names, ages and addreSses are printed as tbey
appear on ..mcial re}lorts. All newsworthy acllons will be pQbllsbed without exception.
1' · '-~----;...:.______;....________,

~'County board re-employs
~Riebel on 5-year contract
·~

'""

..

~:

POMEROY- Jobn D. Riebel
: ' Sr. was re-employed on a five-year
( contract as superintendent of the
ro: Meigs County Board of Education
~·.during tbe board's Thursday nigbt
l ; meeting.
,• : Riebel bas served as county
: · superinrendent since 1983.
:.:· In other personnel mailers,
·• Melanie Van Meter was hired as a
,: substitute teacher 10 be used ori an
.. as-needed basis for lbe remainder
.: of tbe scbpol year. Discussed at tbe
: meeting, but without action taken,
• were the renewal of other contracts
: tbat expire this year. ·
·
•
Bus driver certificates were
: apP.roved for Roger Cotterill and
: William Justis. Also approved was
• the certificate for Joseph Hall Jr..
:. :J~~gg. sati~faclory completion of

'95 CHEVY SUBURBAN
"ALL NEW INSIDE &amp; OUT"

;
The boar!~ also . approved
• employment of personnel 10 assist
! school psychologists with re-evalu• allons, :ind employment of person"

lodoy fonaon lnfo.,;;at~a .

"-•'tHf_~
l•..,;w.n
\jl-~turc•.

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Mfl!' clwk&lt;_IWMbfor /J«UrN ......

(614) 446·2US
1-800-487-2129

P.O. BOX 114
RII'LEY, \yy. 25271
1-101).458,1!880

\..)

Inc.

•

POMEROY - Units of tbe
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service logged six calls for assistance Friday. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
7:20 a.m.. Nortb Second
Avenue, Charles Pugh, dead upon
arrival;
'
10:03 a.m .• Laurel Street, Mark
Oiler. Vererans Memorial Hospital;
3:26 p.m.• Holzer Clinic, Dallas
Wetherboll, Holzer Medical Cen·
ter.
POMEROY
1:45 a.m .. West Main Street,
Gilbert Zwilling, VMH. ·
RUTLAND
2:02 p.m.• Hampton Hollow
R()ad, Myrtle Wilson, Pleasant.Valley Hospital;
2:36p.m .• Meigs Mine 2, David
Hagar, HMC.
·

SEE IT NOW!!

Riebel and Carol
treasurer.
Friday discharges - none.· ~·~
:o~e=l~t~o~a:s:sa~·s~t~a:n~e:a~rl:y~c:b:il:d:b:ood~~M~c~C~o!y~a~n~d~~~~T~h~o~m~as:;~M:Jid~ill~e~po~n~.~~~~~~

:

•
i

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Rick Boone, Ph.D.
Psychologist

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Hospital news

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90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
.446-SJ79i

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I

Meigs EMS runs

JOHN D, RIEBEL SR.
The early childhood budget was
re-evaluated and revisions and
amendments were approved. Riebel
VETERANS MEMORIAL
noted lbat there will be a special
Thursday admissions - Paul
education review by the State Houdashelt, Pomeroy; Frances
Dcpanment of Education Marcb 1- Scholl, Pomeroy; Teresa Alderson,
Middleport. · .
·
2_
Attending the meeting were
.Thursday discharges - none.
Robert Barton, v ice president; ·
Friday admi.ssions -Gilbert
members Howard Caldwell, 1.0. ZwiUing, Pomeroy; Diana Boyd,

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(Formerly Dr. George Davis' Office)
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~Large Selec:llon of Eyeglasses •Evaluallon of Cataracts
•Most Insurances Accepted
Saturday and Evening Hours Available - 446-2236

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriffs deputies are investigating the theft of a BidweU area man's car.
.
,
Joseph.L Shepherd, 381 Buck Ridge Road. told deputies his
1983 Toyota was removed from his residence around noon Friday.

Just Traded One Owner, 14Ft. Flat Metal Bed,
speed V-8 Engine, .

Some homes tl)' to separate
·you from the environment
Our homes make you a
part of it

DR. R. TODD RAGAN, Optometrist

\

FREE PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTATION IS
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OFFERING:

commissioners OK transactions

DiBiasio bas been in his current
role at New Hampsbire since July
1991. He was executive of the
Council of Presidents of the New
England Land-Grant Universities
from 1984-87.
DiBiasio also bas been assistant
dean of tbe graduare sc:bool at Obio
State and director of student services at Rocky Mounlain College.
He got bis undergraduate degree
from Ohio Wesleyan and bis master's and doctorate from Ohio
Stale.

.

'

-Tri-County Briefs:-

less lhan 1.50 "percent ot tbe federal
povaty level.
Netzley said the bill would
require uninsured Obioaos with
iD&lt;:omes ISO percent to 22.5 percent
of tbe poverty leveliO pay wbat be
desaibed as a small escalating premium contribution.
Otber proposals in the legislalion:
• Refund varying amounts,of tbe
premilllll, up 10 $300. 10 !bose wbo
do not use thei r insurance and
avoid nnneces••ry use of emergency rooms.
• Limit punitive awards in medical malpracdce cases.
• Limit awards in product liabiiUy cases for services sucb as dipbIberia and tewms inoculations.

Filing deadline

.

•
•

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A3

February 12, 1995

By JOHN CIIALFANT
' Batchelder, R-Medina.
Asooclahd Pna Wrlkr
Gov. Gecrge Voinovicb and tbe
COLUMBUS - Poor Obioaos Obio Department of Human Serwbo now m:eive bealtb care from vices back ao ~lemate plan of tbeir
Medicaid would instead have sta10- own c:alled ObioCare in wbidl die
paid privaae bealtb insuranc:e poll- state wou fd bire private health
cies under a proposal from tbe maintenanc:e orgEizadons 10 cover
chairman of the House Insurance Medicaid rec:ipientS.
Commitlee.
· The department said it bad not
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura, seen Netzley's bill, but tbat Direc:~d Friday be was confident tbat
tm; Arnold Tomptins and tbe agen10surers would eagerly compere for cy s staff wou.ld review it.
a chance to wrlre policies for about
"We will work witb tbe spon1.2 miUion Medicaid recipients.
sors of the bill. I believe we share a
" We' ve talked 10 tbem. There common goal of improving access.
will be furious bidding," Netzley to quality care for low-Income
said in an interview. "You'll save Ohioans," Tom!lkins said through
hundreds of millions of dollan.''
a spokesman.
Netzley outlined bis proposed
Netzley' s proposal would abollegislation Friday. Co-sponsors isb Medicaid, tbe state-federal

Snow showers rell across pa,rts
Lake effect snow across tbe of extreme nortbeast Obio 8lld tbe ·
snow bell will begin 10 taper off as · western counties during the day on
p!Ktly to IIIOSily smmy skies return Saturday. Only a light dusting
10 tbe state on Sunday. De spire tbe aa:IDIIulaled.
Slln&lt;binc, lelllpel'aWfCS .will remain
Afternoon remperatures ranged
weD below n()I'IIIJII. Temperatures from around 15 in northwest Obio
will climb only into tbe mid to · to around 30 across extreme soulbupper leeDs.
ern Obio. West winds gusting as
· A wind c:bill advisory was In hip as 3.5 mph across the nortbern
((ffec:l for nortbem Obio Saturday counties made temperatures feel
nipl. West winds of 20 10 30 mpb even colder with wmd cbill readwere to produc:e wind c:biUs as low ings of 510 25 below zero.
Weatber rorecast:
as 30 below zerq.
.
A winrer weather ,advisory also
Sunday ...Scallered snow show• was in effect for extreme nortbeast ers northeast. Mostly' sunny else~Obio Saturday nigbt. Local ac:c:u· · where. Highs 15 10 20.
: mulalions of up 10 .5 inc:bes of snow ·
Sunday nigbt .. .lncreasing
· were possible ac;ross tbe snowbelt cloudiness. Lows 0 to 5 above.
: of nordleast Ohio.
Monday... Mostly cloudy. Highs
Wind chills in southern Obio 20 to 2.5.
: were 10 be as low as 20 below zero.
Extended rorecast:
: Actual temperatures were 10 drop
Tuesday ... A chance of snow.
•·10 around zero or below by Sunday.
Lows in tbe mid leeDs. Hips 2.5 10
; Scattered snow showers Saturday 2.5.
·. ni~t were 10 give way 10 clearing
Wednesday... A cbaDce of snow
· skies.
north and raiD or snow south. Lows
in tbe 20s. Higbs 3.5 10 40.
Continued tram page A1
Tbursday ... A chance of rain.
year
oftheir
term of office are RepubLows 30 to 3.5. Higbs 4.5IO .5.5.
licans, except Stivers who is nonContinued from Pllll• A 1
declared.
changed, which indicates thai BREC
In Rutland ,lo Ann Eads has filled
the
last year of the mayoral term of I he
customers cannot switch loa private
Conlin~~ from~·~~.~ A1 l.
late
Eddie Martin. The four-year terms
. power company.
lolofmoney, Pape sa~d . . ' h~te t~oad,"besaid. "Mypickoftheplaces
on
council
of Stephen Jenkins and
. While the Public Utilties Commis- se~ that money lo~t ... I d hke to see if 1 had my choice would have ~en
Richard Fetty expire this year as does
: sionofOhioi~notimthoriz~dtoreg~- Middleport get at.
the church."
·
' late cool'\'raltves, Carey saad he as an
Beyond public projects the area
u·
"d 1
d f lh the term of Oerk Sandy Smith.
: contact with PUCO Chairman Craig needs a marina and busin~sses that
smg a VI eo ape ma e o
e
Jeff Thornton's term as Racine
' Glazer ""lo ask him if legislative can provide boats to people from the stretch of State Route 7 from. Grape mayor expires this year along with
~nges could bema~ to allow PUCO . Columbus area, he added.
·
Streetto the church, Lenles pomled lo tbat of aerk Karen Lyons, and coun, to regulate cooperatives af a maJoraty
One local businessman who repairs several spot~ and asked Schaub af cil members Henry Bentz and Julian
. ofthe co-op members request regula-. boats said his operation has thrived they were suatab!e. for a.traffic stop. Scott Hill. Also expiring are the terms
: lion."
during its IS months of operation.
.. Sch~?b ade~.tafaed eag~t sates as of Doug Rees and Bobbie Roy on lhe
"MeigsCountyneedsalltiae money
okay ~ nne as adeq~ate and one as Racine Board of Public Affairs.
it can gel," said Tom Barnhart, owner ~ot SUitable;. He. admalted Jhat he had. TbetermofJarnesPapeasmayorof
of Marine Services, Syracuse.
no quarrel wath the argument that Syracuse also expires this year. Other
(USPS 525-aOO)
The project must be completed by Watson could have pulled over else- officials serving out the last year of
July 1995,' Trussell added. No land where. butthe church lot was "ideal." their respective terms are Janice
Publiahqt cBCh Sunday, 82.5 Third Ave.,
has beeh purchased but easement
Upder re-d1rect by Evans, Schaub Lawson Zwilling, .clerk, Bill Roush
O.IIipolis. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publi~hing
Comj)any/Multimedill. Inc. Second cla.u post·
work
has
been
completed.
said
many of. th~ spots on Garfield and Dennis Wolfe, council members,
age paid a1 Gallipolis, Ohio 4~6 3 1 . Emered as
The
venture
consists
of
a
floating
would
have requared ~ulhng up ~ver and Laurence Ebersbach, Board of
second class mailing ma11er lit Pomeroy, Ohio,
Post Office.
·dock, a wider ramp and a new boater the curb and onto the sadewalk or mto Public affairs.
parking lot, Trussell said. Between
Mtiabtr: The·Associated Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper Association.
eight and Ill parking spaces for boaters would bC added belween Walnut
SUNDA\'ONLV
Have you ever found yourself....
SU&amp;SCRJPTJON RATilS
and Rutland streets on Fronl Street.
Available for use year-rou)\d, the
.-wondering why you have problems in a
aluminum dock would measure 30
'
. . relationship?
feet long and 10 feet wide, Trussell
SINGLE COPY PRJCI!
added.
Sunday ........................................... ~ ....... $1 .00
Boating remains a long-term op-feeling misunderstood or unappreciated?
No subscription! by mail pennilled in arens
portunity
for
attracting
visitors
Jo
the
•
whm: 111()\or cunier 5en'ice is available.
area, Barnhart said.
-having trouble malting or sustaining
lbe Sunday limes·Senline1 will not be respon·
People who travel lhe river from
friendships?
·sible for advance pa~menu made to carrien.
Marietta to Hu11tington, W.Va .•.need
.
I .
a place to dock and refuel. Currently, ,
Dally ond Sunday
MAIL SU&amp;SCRJPTIONS
- not caring for the person you've become?
Jhe closes) fueling stations are in
lndde Galli'! G:Mmty ·
Gallipolis, he adde.d. ·
11 Weeks .. ,, .... ,...•... ,,.,., ... ,.L.,,,, ...,, .. ,,. Sl3.92
26 Wetb ........................ :........................ $47.06
Many area residents own boals and
YOU ARE NOT ALONE!
52 Weeks ................................................. $92.S6
need
a facility like the proposed
Rata O.llkte Galli, Counly
13 Weeks ................................................ $25.61
Middleport dock, he added.
The help you need in addressing these very real
26 w..u ................................................. $49.66
"Hey, let's do something," Barnhart
S2 Wocb ................................................. $96.20
problems may be found in a special, relationship-based
said. " II seems like everyone is lacka:
tberapy group now being started by Holzer Clinic
daisical about lhis."
psychologist Richard Boone, Ph.D. He is available for
ooitsultation about his group. Membership will be
limited, so don't delay calling to schedule a free,
personal consultation. .Ml inquiries are treated with
the·ubnosl dignity and confidentiality of the individual:

·,- BREC ra
· te

February 12,1995

Plan suggests buying policies for poor

Continued from plge A1
Road.
Evans argued that from Garfield,
the church was the only safe spot.
"Unless he stops in lhe middle of
the road or pulls up over the curb,
there are no places for him lo puUover
where two vehicles could park, isn't
that true?" he said.
''Tbatisabsolulelynollrue,"Frazier
said. "He had several, several opportunities to pull over or just to stop in
the road." ·
Evans asked if Watson took any
evasive action, such as turning off
Slate Route 7.
"He did nol stop," Frazier said.
"That was evasive to me."
Lentes asked the officer, "Do you
think he was willfully ignoring those
sirens and lights r
"Yes," Frazier said.
Testifying for the defense was
James R. Schaub of Ashland, a retired
slate trooper who provides investigative services to attorneys.
Using the audio tape, Schaub said
he timed the length belween transmissions when Frazier reported he
was al Stale Route 141 and then atthe
Church of God.
Schaub said he drove.the length of
Garfield Avenue three times and calculated that the pursuit's average
speed in the half-mile length must
have averaged 33 mph.
The formertrooperwasasked if he
saw any good spots where Watson
~mid have pulled ~er before reachmg lhe church parkmg lol.
"There were places 10 get off the

•

'

I

~·

�..
•

Commentary

February 12, 1995

'

Ohio/W.Va.
·Just g~tting a little air...----. Federal public defender exp·ects
February 12, 1995

· Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4

Kassebaum looking to lay off Job-Corps
A Division of

825.Thlrd Ave~ GaUipoU., Oblo
(614) 446·1341

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(614) !l!ll-1156

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

HOBART WILSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW

COntroller

Executive Editor

A MEMBER of Tbe Associated Press, and tbe ·American
News'paper Publishers Association.

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published . Letters should be ln good taste , addressing issues , not
personalities.

Washington Today:

Entitlements they
just keep growing

WASHINGTON - Just five
months after conservatives clam·
ored for her excommlJnication,
Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, RKan., bas emerged as one of the
high piests of the Republican rev•
olutioo.
The pro-choice Kassebaum has
·challenged party ortbodo~y on
many issues. But when she voted
for President Clinton's crime bill
last August, some of ber conservalive colleagues bied to punish ber.
According to knowledgeable GOP.
senators, there was a backstage
campaign to strip the seniority of
Kassebaum and other modernles.
"It was a bitter time," recalls
Kassebaum. "In the 16 years that
I've been here I've never received
sucb bitter, hateful emotional
phone calls (from constituents).
But you're not here to just do a
cakewalk."
With her seniority intact, Kasse·
baum has soared from the peripb·
ery to prime-lime. Tbougb she was
the only female senator for many
· years, she refused to take a tolcenistic route to prominence. Kasse-

• ' 'f.
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- While President Clinton's budget team tells
Congress that he's got deficits on a downward glide path, nearly twothirds of government spending is taking off, on automatic pilot
· Those climbing costs are for entillement programs and for interest on
the federal debt
Entillements - direct payments to individual Americans who meet
benefit formulas - oould be changed by law, but at political peril, since
: the people wbo get them also vote. Interest has to be paid and the debt is ·
going up. too, even if annual deficits really are curbed.
That s the impasse. Clinton's presidential commission on entitlements
and tax reform told him that by the year 2012, projected spending for enti·
. . !lcments and inierest would take all the revenues the government coUects.
By 2030, the panel projected, federal retirement and medical programs
. alone would cost as all the taxes the government raises, unless the system
is overhauled fltSt. ·
There's a consensus on the problem; none on the answers. Even the
special commission that spent a year on the eotillements issue couldn't
agree on the way to avoid it while there's still lime. Its 269-page report to
. Clinton said there must be swift action to head off real trouble over the
: nc~t 30 years, and offered options on what to do about it.
. . . That panel, headed by Democratic Sen. Bob Kerrey of Nebraska,
·•. : issued its findings on Dec. 15 and .went out of business. It was more than
: a month before Kerrcy could arrange a session with Clinton to deliver and
' discuss it.
·
Reforming entitlements, which would involve eventual changes in
:. Social Security, the biggest and most sensitive of all those programs, is
, · · not a task most politicians want to talk about .
.
''It was a political suicide .mission. We !111lrnew tha~" Sen. Kent Con• · rad, D·N.D., said of the entitlements commission. ''But we believed it
was necessary for somebody lo· step up and give cover to the politicians
and the administration as to what's going to happen to the future citizens
of this country."
:
.
And the topic was unavoidable as Reptiblican-run congressional bear·
ings on the new Clinton budget. "Maybe the president is saying ... you go
Dear Rupe: Do .you know the
firs~" said Sen. Pete Domenici of New Meuco, chairman of the Senate
defmition of the word friend? The
Budget Committee. "I'm not against that."
·
Sen. Bob Packwood, chairman of the Finance Committee, said he was word "~riend" is defined by Webdisappointed in Clinton and Congress. "I don't think we have the heart to ster as a person wbom one knows
weU and is fond of."
face up to the problem we all lrnow is the problem," Packwood said.
c' Throughout his torr, '!'e story
"The president has said Social Security is off the table. Republicans
and Democrats hl!ve said Social Security is off the table. Medicare is about Damon and Pythtas IS lrnown
as tbe "hallmark of friendship."
apparently off the table. Interest has to be off the table."
· With major items off limits, Packwood said, "we all know thafwe've. Old Pytbias. was condemned to
against Dionysus.
fooling ourselves" with any suggestion that routine trims will deal with di:ath for• a. plot
Pyth'
obtai bail
In orde r .or.
taS to
n
,
the deficit.
. Republican leaders pushing the balanced budget amendment have be had to post Damon as security
. made 2002 their target for what would be the first brealc•even year since for his return.
On the day scheduled for
1969.
Pythias'
execution, Dainon was a
" There must be a secret plan somewhere in Washington,". scoffed
Sen. John Breaux, D-La. He said Americans should be IC)Id whether it hits little upset that Pytbias hadn't
on time. (You would be
Social Security, cuts Medicare or eliminates highway aid in order to bal· returned
·f
· h.ts s1·tuaf ton. )
1
oo 1 you were m
: ance the budget. "It must be a heU of a plan if we are going to do that
Damon would bave been hung had
withoul iouching any of these programs," he said.
Pythias not returned. When Pytbias
Republicans see the entillement crunch coming; their complaint is that
did
return, Dionysus was so moved
Clinton's budget doesn't direclly address it. "Basically, two-thirds of the
by
the
display of friendship that be
. budget is on automatic pilot and the admirlistration ignores two-thirds of
released
both of them. Damon was
the budget,' · complained Rep. Christopher Sbays, R-Conn. ·
ready
t~
die
for Py~ias .. The n:tum
Challenged on cntillemc.nts, Clinton's people reply that the ftrst step
of
Pyth1as
I?rov.
ed b1s fnendshtp to
:has to be the one the president already !las tried, and lost. "If we are
Damon.
It
ts
understood
that both
:going to control the entitlements we must, as the president has said fre.
Damo~ and Pytbias died in a Chari·
· :qucntly. focus on health care reform," said Budget Director Alice Rivlin.
(Waller R: Mears, vice president and columnist for 'fhe As.....,lated ot acctdent near Syracuse.
How many friends does the
Press, has reported on Washington and national politic~ for more
average person have? The answers
than JO years.)
will vary depending on the dcfmi. lion of "friend.'' Most realists feel
that if you have more that one true
friend you are lucky . There are
many ~quaintances which we may
call fnends. 'fhese people., for the
Dear Editor,
A few years back I used to bear most part, will do about anything
What will happen farther down a radio news commentator called they can for you. There are situa·
H. V. Kaltenbom, wbo would start lions where a supposed friend will
the road?
What is wrong with our people bis program by saying "Ah, yes, refuse to help when he could.
When this happens, !he friendsh.ip
and those around the world?
there is gOOd news tonight."
How long has it been since y.ou
Maybe we will hear these same may be over, dependmg on the ru,
.
cumstances.
.
have read or heard any "good" words again, sometime.
However,
there
are
certam
llminews? If it weren't for crimes.
Keep on listening.
world conflicts and catastrophes,
Virgil Wallcer tations as to v;hat some or all of
there wouldn't be any news.
Racine these ·people would do for you.

baum declined an .invitation to
appear on the podium with other
women at the 1984 GOP convention because she didn't want to be

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
·
treated like a "bauble on the tree."
As the new chairwoman of the
Labor and Human Resources Committee, Kassebaum is a powerful
branch on the tree. She has staked
out a surpri$ingly activist agenda,
ranging from welfare reform to
paring the 154 federal job-training
programs, which cost $25 billion a
year. Kassebaum has gotten so dar·
ing in her reform efforts that some
of the same GOP colleagues who
didn't think she had the ftre for a
revolution are now trying to slow
her down.
·
Even Kassebaum seems amused
by the irony . "Well, who would
have thought that Nixon could go

U.S,..

.., :

'

CINCINNAU (AP)- Taxpayers will be paying more to defend
indigent people facing criminal
charges in southern Ohio's federal
Courts.

Starting this year, poor clients
inaeasingly may be represented by
a new fede'r al public defender,
Steven R. Keller, or one of his
seven assistants.
KeUer, based in Columbus, was
sworn in Feb. L He is the fltSt fed·
eral defender in the 48-county fed·
eral district of southern Ohio,
which includes Columbus, Dayton,
Cincinnati,
Athens
and
Steubenville.
Every accused criminal has a
right to. be represented by a lawyer.
For years, federal judges in the dis·
trict have paid private lawyers to
fulfiU this obligation to indigents.
"We can probably handle easily

WUIIa~town

(W.Va.) firefighters toOk a break to load up new air tanks while fighting a bouse
fire Friday In Williamstown, across the Ohio River rrom Martella, Ohio. The house was engulfed
in flames when firefighters arrived and there were no Injuries In the blaze. (AP)

hio News in Brief:

"

Junior high student collapses, dies
COLUMBUS - A 7th-grader collapsed and died while playing
basketball at a Columbus middle school Thursday.
The boy was playing basketball in the gym at Uuckeye Middle
Schoo) ·when he passed out ·He slipped.into cardiac arrest while
paramedics were working on bim and died at Cbldren' s Hospital.
WBNS-TV reported on Friday the boy had a medical condition
that could have contributed to his death. The boy's family has
requested that the hospital release no information on him. •

~·

Where 's the good news?

..

Fred W. Crow
stree~ to associate with you social·

ly, or to go to the same church does
not necessarily make you a true
friend.
T
,
f
h h
he wntct ee 1s t at t e two
greatest obstacles to friendship are
"money" and a "loose tongue.'
Rope and Rupetle, now we are
going to ask questions in order for
you to determine the
ha number of
true friends you may ve.
1). Would you lend yotir friend
money?
2). Would you repeat any
derogatory remarks that you have
heard
·
pertaining to your friend's activities?
·
3). Would you go to hal for your
friend and defend him from vicious
gossip when the remarks may be
true?

. 4). Would you rush into your
friend's burning house and rescue
his dog?
5). Would you refuse to go into
his house when your friend is about
to suffocate from smoke inhalation
caused by the fire'!
'
6). Would you purchase gro·
eeries from your friend's competi·
lor?
7). Would you seek professional
betp from your friend s competi·
tor?
8). Would you be a friend to a
person who makes a pass at your
. wife or girl friend?
.
9}. If your friend asks you to

vole for bim, would you do it even
though you have promised to vote
for bis opponent? . .
10). If you are a man, would
you watcb your friend's children
on tlle day that the Super Bowl is
being played?
·
11). Would you give your share
oJ your mother's assets 10 your
brother when the .brother has pro·
all th
vided
e help to your mother?
12). Would you vote for ·a friend
who is on the other political ticket
wben both of you are strong in
your support of your party?
H). Would you classify as a
friend a person wbo would take
·
advantage of you on some busmess
matter?
•
. l4). Would you conceal the
truth to prolec.t your friend from
. serving a sentence for a crime?
There are many times when a
person may bave two friends doing
the same type of business and it is
difficult to choose which friend
you want to do your business. You
bave the feeling that one or the
other wiU be angry after you make
.your decision.
A true friend will not end his
friendship with you on this one fact
alone. you have to'be careful, however, bow you handle this one.
There are many reasons for doing
business with your friend's com·
petitor. For e~ample, you may have
done business with your friend's
competitor long before you knew
your friend.
,
In short, there may be extenuat·
ing circumstances and you should
tell your· friend the reason for this.
Give him an honest answer.
However, if you choose noi 10·
say anything about it. then you run
the risk of losing the friend. A

'·

Candidates to fill vacancy line up ··
COLUMBUS - At least seven candidates have emerged to fiU
the upcoming vacancy on the U.S. District Court bench in Colwnbus.
Tbe appointment, made by President Clinton, is expected to
change the political makeup of the four-judge federal caurt in
Columbos. Judge S. Arthur Spiegel in Cincinnati is set to retire J itne
5, and Judge Sandra Beckwith of Columbus wiU move to fiU that
vacancy.
The applicants will be screened by Anthony Celebreeze, 11 for~J~er Ohio attorney general. He said be hopes to whitlle the list to
two by mjd-March.
·· Amoog the Democrats being mentioned' for the federal judgeship
are Appeals Judge Gary Tyack, Common Pleas Judge Beverly
.Pfeiffer, Municipal Judge Janet Jackson. All three are from F~n
County. Other candidates from Columbus are lawyers Denis Mur·
pby and H. Ritchey Hollenbaugh.
·
Also on the list of potential nominees are Judge Ann Marie
Tracey of the Hamilton County Common Pleas Court and Susan
Dlott, a Oncinnati lawyer.

f~end may. tell you that he can get
bts grocenes cheaper or get his
deed prepared at a tower pice from
your competitor. Do not tell your
friend that "business is business" or
their product and/or services are
1
Res0 11
• end of friendship.
ou¥c.
·
o close this column, we should
like to quote from ·a book written
by Marion Stroud and furnished to
us by Marlene Wilson, as foUows:
"God gave us two ears but only one

Grand jury clears Pike deputies

•

just as .. some unk'nown killers
murdered Nicole (Brown Simpson)
and Ronald Goldman, now tbe
press was Olurdering me.''

Chuck Stone
On the same page was that ol'
foul-mouthed bigot himself, House
Majority Leader Armey, blaming
the media for reporting his descent
into execrable verbosity. Sloshing
through a pool of his crocodile
tears, the chubby-faced ~
to cop a plea after be had caii1!I.bis
Democratic colleague, Rep. Barney
Frank, wbo is openly gay, "Barney
Fag."
"I take strong exception ·to the
iliring of the tape (sob) and even
the transcribing of a stumbled word
(tear drop), as if it were aL intentional personal attack (sniffle). And
I take tliis exception especially in
light of the fact that I went to the
press who bad the tape (ob, save

•

me, . First Amendment) and multiplicity of accusations of sexuexplained to them, ·in the best al misconduct from responsible
l!!!!f!Qf I could (grDan), that I had
women, Sen. Packwood came up .
simply (snivel) mispronounced with an astonishing rebuttal, "the
. (sob) a name,'' (Parenthetical news media will even lie to get (the
e~pressions are mine.) ·
accusers') stories.''
Can any decent-thinking person
· Three months ago, fonner Prcsi·
defend this aposlle of bigotry- dent Busb's counsel; Gray, peered
wbo comes off like a subliminal down into the sewer of his mind
ally of people who believe that and declared to an audience that the
women are broads, blacks arenig- media's object "is not to destroy
gers, Hispanics are spies and Jews the presidency, but to take it over."
are kikes? But like Martin Luther's
Inman, once exalted for his abil·
lament that "it all depends op ity to walk on .water, had declined
whose ox is gored," democracy's to be Clinton's secretary of
most precious instrument of free- Defense because the press, led by
dom - the ·p ress - is being ·ideological cannibal Bill Safire,
scorched these days as the culprit bad "savaged" bim.
for everybody's sins.
Limbaugh excoriates the "libet·
As did Spiro Agnew, BiU Clio- al media" for every sin since Eve
ton assails the "elite media" of gave Adam the awte.
being guilty of "a convergence of
From my 37 years of ex peri.the way the press has handiCd•(the ence, I can ass~~re you .that' massive'
Vincent Foster case) and the way empirical evidence easily proves ·
tbe Republicans bave tried to that the American press is as racist
manipulate it.'' Shrugging off the . - !IS any institution in America. But it

tS also an equal opportunity glo\eUS
maximus kicker.
Reporting the blatant misdeeds
of a black organization does not,
ipso facto, make the media racist.
Rep. Waters accused "some members of the press, mostly members
of the white press," of trying to·
create· divisions among blacks.
Waters bas fought the good fight
·for decades. But tryin~ to defend
tbe NAACI' leadership s series of
unconscionable acts is tantaD)ount

mouth ... [perhaps) a divine indicalion that we should listen twice as
much as we talk," and "Good
frien.dships are fragile things and
rcqutre
as mu~h
care
any. other
fragil,c and
...,.r 1·ous
tht·as
ng."

r·-·

It is obvious that in order to

have a friend, ·you must be willing
to be a friend, This requires you to
do as much for him as he would do
for you. If either of you are lukewarm then you oo not bave a true
friendship.
Friendship is the most difficult
subject to define. Tbe writer bas
attempted to stimulate your think·
ing on this subject.and if you have
any ideas, please advise.
So, Rope and Rupette, look over
these questions and see if you can
identify your friends.
In God we trust.
Carry on,
fred W. Crow
ED~TOR'S NOTE - Long·
time. attorney Fred W. Crow Is
the contributor of a weekly column for The Sunday Times-SenII riel. Readers wishing lo
applaud, criticize or conunent on
any subject (except religion or
politics) are encouraged to write
to Mr •.Crow In care of this newspaper. .

No injuries in derailment
FAIRBORN- A freight train derailed Friday, resulting in dam·
age to several rail cars. No one was injured.
·
Jobn Thomas, battalion chief of the Fairborn Fire Deparuncm,
said 23 cars jumped the ttack about 4 p.m. Ten of the cars sma~hed
· into each other and piled up, he said.
·
Thomas said the train was carrying paper !llld road salt, !Jut no
'. hazardous
materials.
The cause of the accident was stiU under investigation.

.

..'

Patrol nets $1 million in cocaine

j.

,,

SPRINGfiElD -· · Troopers stoped a rental car on Interstate 70
Friday and ·seized 20 kilograms of cocaine with a street value of
nearly $1 miUion; according to the State Highway Patrol.
The patrol said it received information from Dayton police that
the car, which was being driven from a Dayton airport to Columbus,
contained drugs.
The patrol said troopers obtained a search warrant and found 20
one-pound packages of cocaine and one-half pound of marijuana in
the car's trunk.
·
Velma Broomfield, 33, of Columbus, was charged with aggravated trafficking, the patrol said.
-The Associated Pres•

,,

to rearrl!Dging the deck chairs on
the Tilllllic.
For the media today, "These are ·· .
tbe times that try men's souls."
.But just as democracy prevailed
when Tom Paine wrote those
words. the media, war[s and all;
will continue to ennoble this won;
derful experiment
.
(Cbluck Stone is ·a columnist
for Ne~paper Enterprise Assoi
elation)
:

Today in history
By The Associated Press
,
· ~oday is Sunday, Feb. 12, the 43rd day of 1995. There are 322 days
· left to the year.
.
•
Today's Highlight in History:
,
On Feb. 12,)809, Alrabam Lincoln, the 16th president of the u01·ted
. States, was born in present-day Larue County, Ky.
•
On this dale:
In 1554, Lady Jane_ Grey, who'd been queen of England for nintday~
was beheaded after .bemg charged with treason.
.
. I

.

WAVERLY - A Pike·County grand jury has declined to indict
two
in th~ recent death of a man in their custody, Sheriff
" · Larrydeputies
D: Travis said Thursday.
.
··
Evidence in the case was presented to the grand jury by the
Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation. Special Agent
John Perry said the bureau's iRvestigalion of the death at Travis'
request c!eared the deputies of any wrongdoing.
Byron Junior Schreck, 59, of Beaver, Ohio, was being taken in a
police cruiser to Portsmouth Receiving Hospital Jan. 20 when offi·
cers noticed be bad stopped breathing.
He was taken by ambulance to Pike Community Hospital, where
~·
Coroner Jose Benutto pronounced Schreck dead. Benutto said
" · Schreck probably died of a heart attack .
An autopsy report is expected by March 3, Beniltto said .
. · The deputies, whom Travis would ~ot identify, had handcuffed
Schreck's hands in front of him after subduing him at a neighbor's
house, the sheriff said. Schreck had reportedly been voicing threats.

That old devil, the m.edia, made me do i t - - - - - - - - -

OJ. Simpson does keep distin·
guisbed company.
When it comes· to journalistic
allies, you can't beat this list: Prcsi·
~dent Clinton, Rush Limbaugh,
House Majority Leader Dick .
Armey, Sen. Bob Packwood, Rep.
Maxine Walers, former CIA direc·
tor Bobby Ray Inman and former
President Bush counsel C. Boyden
Gray. All dispute Cassius' lament
that "The fault, dear Brutus, is not
in our starS, but in ourselves."
· Instead, they believe that a
major source of their personal
problems - and most social problems - is that unsavory, ubiqui·
tous psurper of uprightness, tbe
media. With OJ. they share a com- .
moo hatred for a common enemy.
The devil didn' t make them do it;
the media did.
Recently, on the front page of
. the eminently respectable New
York Times was woman-brutaliz·
· log Orcnthal James protesting that

75 percent of the illdigent de fen·
dant cases," Keller said. Court·
paid private attorneys wiU contioue
to handle the rest.
When federal judges paid pri·
vate attorneys !O defend more than
200 defendants a year, the courts
decided to create Keller's offiCe. In
the past two years, annual pay ments to appointed lawyers have
averaged $750,000.
Keller's first-year budget,
including salaries, rents, furniture
and computers , will be $1.2 million.
The change will assure that
defendants have a lawyer when
they f~rst face a judge, rather than
hours or days later when a private
.
attorney can be fpund.
Keller is looking for a Cincin-·
nati office where three assistants
wnl be working by Labor Day.

Four other assistants will work in
Columbus. Keller also is seeking
applications from criminal defense
lawyers with bial c~perience .
The 6th U.S. Circuit Court ol
Appeals, based in Cinciimati ,
appointed Keller for a renewable
· four -ye.ar term . He will be paid
$109,915, wbich is 95 percent of
hi s foremost legal opponent, the
U.S . attorney.
That is less than Keller earned
in Columbus as a criminal defense
attorney, taking private and court·
appointed cases for the past II
years.
Money and service motivated
the hiring, said U.S . District Judge
John Holschuh Sr. of Columbus. A
public defender's staff will assure
12-month coverage: said Holschuh,
chief judgeJor the southern federal
district

MQther of teen slayings suspect
gets life in . prison for. complicity

Some thoughts on the nature of friendship
When· there are only one or two
who would make the sacrifice, then
these people would be known as
true friends. To speak to you on the

Sunday Times-Seminel /AS

indigent case.costs to increase

to China?'; she said.
months.
Kassebaum kicked off ber
Sbe followed up in January with
tenure as chairwoman by one- two more days 'of hearings, wbich
upping the more "revolutionary" exposed a pattern of uncontrolled
chairmen:· She slashed ber staff by violence and other misconduct at
25 percent, the largest cut of the Job Corps centers across the oounSenate's 20 committees . Tllen try - including murders, gang •
Kassebaum set ber sights on the activity and drug abuse. Just a few
largest job-training program - the days before the bearings, three stu·
fabled, 31-year-old Job Corps.
dents at a Job Corps center in Ten1bC program provides basic job nessee were charged with firsttraining to troubled, low-income degree murder for ldllinJI a classstudents agoo 16-24. Labor Secre· mate. The girl was tortured with a
tary Robert Reich has called it the
meat clever and then bludgeoned in
"jewel in the crown" of job-train· the bead with a piece of asphalt.
ing programs, but last fall. Kasse·
''I've been in· correctional instibaum seized on a government tutions that were better than Job
report that showed the SLI blllion Corps," Kassebaum told our. assoprogram was wasting at least $100 ~iate Ed Henry. "We heard people
million a year.
· testify that they left the streets in
Kassebaum convinced Sen. Ted order to try to get into another
~ennedy, D-Mass., then-Labor
environmen~ but (the JOb Corps)
Committee chairman, to bold the was .much like what they had left.'~
first Senate oversight hearing on Sitting next to Kennedy at the hear·
the Job Corps since 1984. The ings, Kassebaum noticed that the
October hearing revealed that the liberal icon "had·his eyes opened"
program only places 12 percent of by the riveting testimony of various
its students in the jobs they're students and administrators.
After the hearings, Kassebaum
trained for, and that 50 percent of
tbe students drop out within si~ demanded.that the Clinton administration "suspend iliunediately" its
plan to expand the number of Job
Corps centers from Ill to 161. But
Kassebaum's Kansas colleague Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole
- previously endorsed the expansion plan and has called Job. Corps ·
"a symbol of what can be done
when we are committed.''
Though Job Corps is a renlnant
of the Great Society, Kassebaum's
crusade is geiting resistance from
otherwise reform-minded Republi·
cans. She has received a stack of
letters from GOP senators defend·
ing the program because it brings
jobs to their states. It's a role rever·
sal: Consefvatives wbo chided
Kassebaum for supporting a crime
f:}
bill
full of pork are now protecting
);•. ;/;···;, .~/ { :'
Job Corps for parochial reasons.
..., .
:'You know, a program builds
up turf," Kassebaum told us. "I've
gotten some letters from Republi •.
can senators saying, 'Ob, it's a
wonderful program.' So many sen·ouR
ators who have centers in their
•Kl~
s~ates Republicans · and
Democrals - have been very supportive (of the status quo)." .
· (Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are columnists fur United Feature Syndicate Inc.)
'

BAt.Ki~ · nu; OEFiClT

Letter to the Editor

........- -

....---------------------~

FDIC

.-1

.,
'

ONU frat fire
accidental,
officials ·say
ADA (AP) - Officials have
determined that a fire at an Ohio
Northern University fraternity
house was an accident that began
during a fraternity initiation ceremony.
·
The Stale Fire Marshal's office,
the·Ada Fire Department and ONU
security investigated the fiq~., and .
declared it accidental, said Ada ftre
Chief Jay Epley.
. "Duritig an initiation ceremony,
a candle was accidentally knocked
over onto tbe floor in the room
. where the fire began. Flammable
materials located on tbe floor .
began burning rapidly and ignited
other combustible materials,"
Epley said in a staiement released
by the university Friday.
"Investigators have determined
that there is no sign or indication of
any hazing, alcohol or drugs
involved in the ftre," he said.
Fourteen students and a security
guard-were injured when the fire
broke out Monday on the second
floor .of the Sigma Pi fraternity
house. The three-story brick build·
ing housed 25 sllldents.
Two students remain in serious
condition at St. Vincent's Medical
Center in Toledo, the university
said. .
'

LANCASTER (AP) - A
woman convicted of helping her
son and his friends cover up the
killings of two 16-year-old girls
shouted that she "didn't do it"
when she was confronted by the
stepmother of one of the victims at
her sentencing bearing.
Fairfield County Common Pleas
Judge Joseph Clruk allowed Conrlie
Sweeney, stepmother of Jamie Kelley,. to address the court .before
Elsie Sheets was sentenced Friday.
Sheets, 54, of Baltimore. Obi&lt;&gt;,
was sentenced to life in prison for
complicity to commit aggravated
murder and 15 y.ears to life for
complicity to commit murder. She
wiU be 91 before she is eligible for
parole,

Authorities say Sheets helped of Whilehall, face trial as adults on
her son, Roben Jr., 16, and two . charges that include aggravated
friends get rid of evidence connect· murder.
ing them to the slayings, then made
Another friend, Sonya Hawkins,
the!D all pizza.
19, pleaded guilty to complicity
Robert Sheets and Robert charges and was sentenced to 28·
Dantel, 16, of the Columbus suburb • 1/2 years to life in prison.

Ashland Oil suit
dropped in court
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A judge dismissed the remaining 26 plaintiffs in a poUution lawsuit against Ashland Inc. because
they missed court-ordered deadlines. ·
Cabell County Circuit Judge
Dan 0' Hanlon said Thursday the
clairns cannot be refded.
The plaintiffs D)issed deadlines
. to fjle motions, said Ashland attorney AI Parnell of Atlanta. "I feel
Ashland has successfully closed
this chapter of its history,'' he said.
• Plaintiff Sue Holland said an
appeal was being considered.
"We were getting too close to
proving what (Ashland) had
done," sbc said.

Lottery
numbers
' .

By The Associated Press
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 8-4-2
Pick 4: 2-0.0-9
BuckeyeS: 3-14-16-17-22
There was one ticket sold with
all five numbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye 5· drawing, tbe
Obio Lottery said:
. The winning ticket. which has a
$100,000 prize, was purchased at
the Petrol Point Amoco Food store .
in Perrysburg. ·
There were 165 Buckeye 5 tick·
ets with four of the numbers and
eacb is worth $250. The 6,247 tick·
ets showing three of the numbers
are each worth $10 and the 62,948
tic~ets showing two of the numbers
arc each worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay
$266,004.50 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
for the game totaled $1,544,872.
In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers
players wagered
$374,887.50 and will share
$184,200.
Sales for the Buckeye 5 game
totaled $553,151.
The jack·pot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing was $4 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 7-0.7
Daily 4: 4-8·5-1 .
Ca&amp;h 25 : 1-7-16-18-20-24

.

OFF AU

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Hours: Monday· Saturday 10 am · 6 pm
Su.nday Closed

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�'

Times-Sentinel

'

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

Area Deaths-- Rio Grande's RN-BSN program
Ruby Burchett
receives state regents' approval

RIO GRANDE - Ruby Burcbett, 74, Garners Ford Road, Gallipolis
(Rio Grande community), died Friday, Feb. 10, 199S at ber residence after
an extended illness.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in tbe McCoy-Moore FUileflll Home,
Vinton, with t.lle Rev. Uoyd Fry officialing. Burial will be in tbe Old Pine
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral bome Sunday from 6-9 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Bill "Holcomb, Danny Palmer, Jeff Pope, Jeffery
Pope, RandaU Spencer and Bill Young.

RIO GRANDE - Approval pf
tbe bachelor of science in nursing

program at the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande Communi·
ty College bas been granled by tbe
Ohio Board of Regents.
Rio Grande nursing program
officials, wbo were on hand for tbe
regents' approval at a recent meeting in Cincinnati, felt the state's
: CROWN CITY - Oral Otis Green; 81, Crown City, died Thursday, . nod was the completion of a long
·Feb. 9, 1995 in Holzer Medical Center.
and often diffiCult process.
: Born Feb. 10, 1913 in Crown City, son of tile late Jobn H. and Cora
"Offering a BSN degree was
:Sheets Green, he was a retired farmer and attended tbe Centenary U~ted
Ouistian Church.
: Surviving are his Conner wife, Leona Waugh Green of Crown City;
:three son's and daughters-in-law, Frances and Harold Dillon, and Hazel
POMEROY - The following
:Dolores and Forrest Fisher, all of Crown City, and Brenda and Pa)Jl Nickcases were resolved this week in
ell of Garden City, Mich.; two sons and daughters-in-law, Oral Otis and
the Meigs County Court of Judge
:Shirley Green Jr. of Crown City, and Woodford Leon and Mary Green of Patrick H. O'Brien.
:Gallipolis; 11 grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren, and several stepFined were: Ralph G.·Coleman,
-grandchildren and step-great-grandchildren; 110d two sisters, Frances Rose
Reedsville, speed, $30 plus costs;
:Of CircleviUe, and Daotby Clagg of Northup.
Les K. Downer, Castleton, On!ario,
· He was also preceded in death by two sons, Roy Lynn Green and Neal
speed, $30 plus costs; Sharon S.
Rodger Green; two brothers, Lowell Green and Woodford Green; and a Pierce, Racine, speed, $30 plus
·
·
· costs; Arnpld N. Spencer Jr.,
sister, Virginia Green.
Services wiU be 2 p.m.·Sunday in the WiUis Funeral Home, with' tbe
Coolville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Rev. Jack Holley officiating. Burial will be in tbe Swan Creek Cemetery. . seat belt, $25 plus costs; Charles
Pallbearers wiD be Kendall Fisher, Woody Green, Jolm Thomas Green,
Bayer, Parkersburg, W.Va., speed,
David Sbort Bruce Taylor, William Maddox, James Maddox and Tommy
$30 plus costs; Steve W. Haning,
Dale Caldwell.
Albany, disorderly conduct, $SO
Honorary pallbearers are Keith Allen Randolph, Michael Kenneth
plus costs, live days jail suspended,
Randolph, Bill Fisher, Kenny Sl!ort Randall Short, Charles Short, Sammy
16 moothj probation;
Jobn Walters and.Tim Nelson.
'
. Danny J. Meadows, Spanish. burg, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
George T. Powell, Barnesville,
speed, $30 plus costs; Roger
POMEROY - Mark Anlhony Oiler, 39, Pomeroy, died Friday, Feb. Edwards Jr., Leon, W.Va., seat
10, 1995 at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
_
belt, $25 plus costs; Travis L.
Born Aug. 4, 1955 in Pomeroy, son of ibe late lack Lewis and Mar- Gibbs, .Letart, W.Va., disobeyed
garet Singer Oiler, be was employed with the Meigs County Highway traffic signal, $20 plus costs;"seat
Department. In addition, he was a graduate of Meigs Local High Scbool
and a member of the National Rifle Assoeiadon.
Survivors include three brotbers, Mike Oiler of Middleport, Jack Oiler
of Aorida, and Charles Sorden of Connecticut
He was preceded in death bY. a brother, Mickey Oiler; and wo sisters,
Karea Sue Singer and Aorence Singer.
·
Mr. Oiler donated his body to science at the .Oblo University College
GALLIPOLiS - A Gallia
.of Osteopalhic Medicine in Atbens.
· .
· .
County youih was transported by
i\rrang~nts arcl by the Ewing Funerai.Home.
LifeAigbt to Grant Medical Center,
Columbus, following a one-vebicle
accident Saturday on Graham
School Road. .
MIDDLEPORT- Charles W. Pugh Sr., 62, )'.fiddleport, died Friday, · Norval Howard Foster, 17,
address unavailable, was in fair
· Feb. 10, 1995 at his residence.
Born Sept. 22, 1932 in Evans, W.Va., ~n oftbe late William and Pearl . condition Saturday night with
Donohue Pugh, be was a 1:1.S. Air Force veteran of the Korean Conflict facial lacerations and other injuries
and was a member of Painters Local 999 of Ironton, the Feeney-Benneu in Grant's trawna unit. a hospital
· Post 128 of tbe American Legion, Middleport, and the Order of tbe Eagles spokesperson said.
2J.71, Pomeroy.
·
·
Tbe accident occwred around 9 ·
a.m.
Further details on the accident
Surviving are his wife, .Betty Edwards Pugh; a son and daughter-infrom
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
law, Charles and Linda Pugh or Gallipolis; a daughter, Judy Pugh of GalState
Highway Patrol were not
lipolis; a daughter and special frieod, Patsy Ward and George Bunch of
available
before presstime.
Pomeroy; daughters and sons-in-law, Carolyn and Donald Call, Peggy
In
another
accident investigated
and Dennis Musser, and Martha and lames Smith, all of PomCI"\)y, and
by
the
patrol,
a Jacksoe man sufBrenda and John Smith of Reedsville; 13 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren and one great-great-granddaughter; a sister, Gmce Durst of Mid- fered minor injury wben his car
struck a deer Friday on U.S. 35.
dleport; and several nieces and nephews.
.
·
Ronald G. Dalton, SO, was not
He was preceded in death by a daughter, Mary Lou Pugh; a son,
treated at tbe scene, tbe patrol said.
William Pugh; and two brothers and two sisters. ·
·
Dalton was eastbo.und in SpringServices will be I p.m. Monday in the Fisher Funeral Home, .wilh the
Rev. R. Keith Rader officiating. Bllri!ll will be in the Longview Cemetery, field Township at 6:25 p.m. wben
Evans. Friends may call at"the funeral home Sunday from 5-9 p.m,
. his car struck a deer that entered
the highway, causing moderate
damage to the car, according to the
report. The deer left the scene.
•. RACINE - Cora Balser Webb, 89, Racine, died Thursday, Feb. 9,
"t99S a{ Overbrook Center, Middleport.
· A retired teacher with 35 years In the Meigs County Scliool system,
she was bont Jan. 19, 1906, in Ravenswood, W.Va., tbe d,augbter of the
· late E. W. and Henreua Barnhart Balser.
·
• She was a member of the Racine Uniled MethOdist Church, was a 50CHESTER - No injuries were
• year member of Racine Chapter No. '164 of the Order of the Eastern Star, reported following a one-vehicle ·
·and held two grand OES offices.
accident on Pine Grove Road fri: Surviving are a '!&amp;ughter and son-in-law, .JoAnn and~?~~~ Foster of day.
~
·Sterling Heights. M1cb.; a son and daughter-m-law, l .W. Jun ani! Bet_ty
Brenda L Venoy, Long Bonom.
. Webb of Blacklick; and seven grandchildren and three great-grandchll- was westbound whtn sbe lost con• dren.
.
.
trol of ber 1984 Chevrolet pickup
· Sbe was preceded in death by ber husband, Ralpb Webb; and three on the snow-covered roadway,
· brolllers and two sisters:
according to Meigs County Sheriff
· Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, with lhe lames M. Soulsby. The truck slid
·Rev. Ken Baker officiating. Burial will be in Letart Falls Cemetery. off the left side of lhe road and into
. Friends may at the funeral borne Sunday from 24 and 6-8 p.m.
an embankment, sustaining damage
OES services will be conducted in the funeral borne at 7 pm. Sunday. · to tbe front grille.
No citations were listed on the
: Stage, screen star
report.
In addition, Meigs sheriff's
·Wayne dead at 81
deputies investigated two collisions
. LOS ANGELES (AP) - David
Friday involving vehicles and
Wayne. a versatile actor wbo won
whitelail deer.
·Tony awards playing a leprechaun
David L. f!arris; Pomeroy, was
'In Fin ian's Rainbow and a
on Flatwoods Road .around 6:30
•Jap1111ese man in Teahouse ofthe
p.m. wben a deer ran into the side
.AugusJ./110.1111. bas died, H~ Wl!S 8! .
or
. bis 1992 f!ontiaG Sunbird causWayne died Thursday after a
mg moderate damage to tbe car.
·long bout with lilng cancer, his
William T. Norton, Pomeroy,
. dauabter Melinda said Friday.
was eastbound on Texas Road
He enjoyed a long career that
around 6:40 p.m. when he struck
.' spanned Broadway, television and
and killed a deer that ran into the
·film, portraying characters ranging
path or bis 1980 Ford truck, caus·fn&gt;n1 the precocious ensign in Mr.
mg beavy damage to tbe left-front
·Ro~ns to tbe Mad Hatter in Batfender and side of the truck.
'man
. .
No injuries "'!ere reported In
· lie was born Wayne David
either
incident.
.
· DAVID WAYNE
.Mcl(ecikan in Traverse City, Mich.
. (In 1!155)
.In 1~36, he joined a Shakespearean
repertory company in Cleveland, Kennedy also bad theattical beginw&amp;e~e Sam Wanamaker and Arthur

~Oral

Otis Green

discussed wben I arrived here in
1980," Janet M. Byers, Pb.D.,
·R.N., dean of tbe Holzer CoUege of
Nursing, e~tplained. '"!ben In the
'80s we did a feasibility study on
granting the degree. Once it was
decided to offer the degree, we
accepled tbe cballenge of planning
the program and prepari.ng tbe
detailed proposal.
"We finally turned in our proposal to tbe regents last April, and
it .took until January to receive

County court ends cases

Mark Anthony Oiler

Gallia youth 'fair'
following wreck

.Charles W..Pugh Sr.

:cora Balser Webb

belt, $25 plus costs; Joe L. Riley,
Milfield, seat belt, $15 plus cqsts;
William M. Gaddis, Reedsville,
speed, $30 plus costs; Jeffrey M.
Rose, Racine, speed, .costs only;
Scott McKinley, Middlepon,
seat belt, SIS plus costs; Larry D.
Brown, Wellston, seat belt, $25
plus costs; Gerald M. Wells,
Tovey, Ill., speed, $30 plus costs;
seat belt, $2S plus costs; James L.
Carroll, Charleston, W.Va .. speed.
$30 plus costs; Guy T. Gabriel,
Athens. seat belt, $25 plus costs;
lobo E. Neville~ Pomeroy, speed,
$27 plus· costs; Randall E. B.all,
Athens, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Timothy ·D. Lawrence, Long
Bottom, criminal trespassing, $25
plus costs; Jerry Lee McDaniel,
Pomeroy, criminal mischief, 30
days jail suspended to five days,
costs, restitution, 24 boors community service; petty theft, 30 days
jail suspended to five days concurrent, costs. 24 hours community
service concurrent;
Dennis E. White, Rutland, driving under financial responsibility
action suspension, $ISO suspended
to $75, three days jail suspended if
valid operator's license presented
within 90 days, one year probation;
Todd ·Perry, Po~eror. speed, ~30
plus costs; Traca. D. Casto, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs; Daniel R.
Ortman, Glouster, seat belt, $25
plus costs.
Forfeiting bonds were: Thomas
Adkins, Portland, seat belt, $55;
Sherry Herdffian, Middleport, seat
belt, $45; Tracey Hysell, Lancaster,
seat belt, $45.

approval," she added.
Byers was assisted on the project by two associate professors of
nursing, Nancy Gooldin, M.S.N..
R.N., and Margl Wheeler, t:f.S.,
M.Ed.,R.N.
The RN-BSN program is
designed fa registered nurses wbo
have completed an assoei•te degree
in nursing or bave a diploma in .
nursing. The two-year course of
study Is intended to JX"Cpare nurses
for workplace opportunities in sucb
areas as health assessment, community bealth and nursing management
. ·
"Because the nearest school
with an RN-BSN program was
over 60 miles away, we felt there
was a real need for tbe program in
this area," said Donna Dixon,
Ph.D., R.N., acting coordinator of
the RN-BSN program and an associate professa of nlning.
· ·"'ur results Indicated we were
right," she added. "We wanted
about 25 students for the fltSI class
in sping quarter, and that's exacdy
the nwnber we have. In fact, we'll
have another group beginnin~ in
tbe fall, and we already have Clght
onlhe list."
Byers said she was pleased wilh
the response from the university
and community to the program.
"We accepted the cballenge and
the result will be an oppoprtunity to
providC tbe area wilh more highly
skilled professional nurses, and to
offer career and educational mobility for RNs wbo do not have baccalaureate degree," Byers said.
"We are indeed exciled to implement the program."

a

nre plant strikers may
not get their jobs back

••

..
';

'

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A7

)- Simpson to return-home,
1but in company of jurors
Simpson
trial update
IJo Judge Lanca "o led lawyers
through a rehearsal of
Sunday's visit by the jury to the
scene of tha crime.

"

Area trooper;:
wins honor :
from district :,.
'

GALLIPOLIS- Patrick w::
McDonald of the Gallia-Melgs Pos~
bas been named the 1994 Dlstrlcf
Troopet of the Year for the Sl.llld,
Highway Patrol and was one of I()
in contention for tbe state Troope~
of the Year award.
.
::
The state award was .g1ven to
Ellezer "Tom" Fontanez of thc!i
Elyria Pos~ marking the fltSI ~
the award bas gone to a mioorit~
trooper.
·
·,'
McDonald, 35, was name!! the
Gallia-Meigs Post's top~ in
November 1994 in recognition of
outstanding service during the year.
He was selected for the distric't
boilor based on his leadership abilities, professional ethics, courteous
treatment of others, enthusiastic
work attitude, and cooperation wil\1
supervisors, peers and the public. .
McDonald joined the patrol in
1981 and bas served at the Jackson
and Gallipolis posts. Originally
from Jackson and a graduate of
Jackson Higb School. McDonalf;l
also ·attended the University of Rio

1Jo Judge !to said he would
convene court at 8:30a.m.
Simpson will be taken from his
cell under heavy security to
lake part in the tour. As a
defendant, he has the right to
be presant -ior all court
proceedings.
Only a small pool of reporters,
a still photographer and one
camera crew will be allOwed to
cover the event. "o has
ordered air space over
. Simpson's propany off limns to
media helicopters.

Everyone knows lhal a !'O!le symbolize6 love. ~ul were
you aware of all lhe !ll.lblle difference! in meaniDB
belween dilferenl color I'O!ICS~
1\elorc you say il willi !lowers for Valentine~ Day. lk
sure lhal you know cxaclly whal you're saying.
·
Qed QQ!lCS · for Love
.
Yellow RO!ICS · for t'riend!lhip

AKRON (AP) - About 3,000
striking employees at four Bridgestone/Firestone plants may not be
able to get their jobs back immedi- Grande.
'
He bas previously been honored
ately if tbey decide to return.
Tbe company said Friday it bas as Jackson's trooper of the year i,n
enough replacement workers to run 1987 and 1991; the-Gallla-Meigs
the plants that have been hit by tbe trooper of the year in 1993; bas
sttike since July. If striking work- · received the Safe Driving Award;
ers w110t to retuql, tbey will be put and has been awarded the Healt}J
on a priority hiring li51, it said.
and Physical Fitness Award.
He and his wife, Trudi, reside
Jackson County.

Pink QQ!lCS · for tlappine&amp;

Also Carnations &amp; Mums in all colors .
We accept Visa, Mastercard, &amp; Discovery
Place your order now to be sure
Delivery orders taken till noon 2-14

MEIGS MEMORY GARDENS
RT. 7 &amp; EAGLE RIDGE RD.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
614-992-7440

UNIQUE
EXPRESSIONS
652 Jackson pike

PRE-NEED PLANNING FOR
• MAUSOLEUMS
• WESTMINSTER
CRYPTS
' .
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• MEMORIALS • LOTS • VAULTS .

ONLY ROCK OF
AGES

DEALERS HAVE

.RocK OF AGES

No injuries listed
in area accidents

.

Nation/World

February 12, 1995

MEMORIALS.
When ill'UIIll"l'i :o nll'nlnf'i.tb. c·oc
namcsl;mrl.. tmly ;•l''u1 : ltf:x•k c1f
~'t.'S. Only l~tJC:k c~ 'J\ocsnUC!-:r; the
!U.rDI~'l~ ,._.,lll'lt•al w;ur.mt.v
;u~V\vhen:. ;\miiHt~yan

Authori,.....-1

ltu~:kuf~'l~ I A.·tdcrmnntli:r,\tuu
tltt'h'l;mill', thc n;Jii stl\iln~~l '· ;utcl
tiK' b'l.l."lfilllll'C,!IJ.:tlll\i\kc l~urk ~~·

~t11 wl~~:tl itl.o:.: tl~urt~li!ILJ'"IIt'tll ..~.
GNllC~'C us ,lf'lli "'\:' 11 show you.
Gu.'\r.Ullt."1.,1.

Sales - Rental - Service

. HOME OXYGEN THERAPY
Respiratory Therapist - 24 Hour Emergency Servke
We Bil Medicare, Medicaid, etc., for the patient.

POMEROY
Melga County Display Yard Naar
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager

Home Owned and Operated

Gallipolis

Toll Free

Jackson

446-7283

·1-800·458·6844

992-2588 •

VINTON .

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Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St.
Jay a. Joe Modre, Managers

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11 &lt;¥, A I, 1: R

HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY
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. OH.

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. Lay-a-way now for Easter delivery.
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Corner 3rd &amp; Olive Gallipolis

(614) 446-3045

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Times-Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Chechen refugees
huddle in ·rail cars

Shuttle mission
helps pave way
for future links

By JULIA RUBIN
Asoclaled Press Writer
NAZRAN, Russia- In this refugee-flooded town near Cbechnya,',
then:' s no longer a right or wrong side or tbe tracks. The lrUiy unfortunate;
live right on tbe rails.
.
.
"There's nothing to do, just sit in this car and clean it," jamcnted·
Zaira Zbambulayeva, a lively IS-year-old frool Grozny wbo was curledup on a seat in a cold, uncarpeted railway car she shares with 66 other
people.
. ·
·
•
About 140,()00 Checben refugees have fled their war-torn homeland:
for neighboring Ingushetia. where they have ethnic and religious ties.:
Many live with relatives or friends, but for about 1,000 wilb nowhere else:
to go, tbe end of tbe line is a 15-car train parked on tbe edge of Nazran,,
the lngusb capital.
•
.
It's been almost two months now. And wilb no end in sight to Russia's .
war against Cbecben separatists, many of the train's despairing inbabi-:
tants accuse the government of doing little to help lbem.
:
They long for husbands and fathers left in the shattered capital of;
Grozny, for cbildren sent to relatives, for pets lost or abandoned ·in the ·

By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. .Discovery's astronauts returned
home in triumpb Sarurday aftes and
eight-day flight dlat featured a historic rendezvous with the Russian
space ~talioo .
Commander James Wetherbee
guided the sbullle down onto the
,runway at Kennedy Space Center
at6:SO a.m., just befoo: sunrise.
About 2SO people gathered in
tbe early momlng chill to welcome
Discover! home, including the
families o tbe six astronauts.
"Welcome home and cpngratulations on an outstanding mission,''
Mission Control wid tbe erew.
The last of Discovery 3-112 million-mile journey took the shuttle·
diaBonally aaoss the United States
in darkness: over Tacoma. Wash.,
Idaho and Wyoming, down lhfough
the Midwest and South and into
Aorlda. Discovery glided through a
clear sky on rm&amp; approach.
"Here we come," Wetherbee
said.
The flight's dramatic bigb point
came when Wetherbee steered Dis·
covery within 37 feet of the 100,
ton Mit space station Monday. He
described tbe 245-mile-bigb lryst .
as "a lrUiy spectacular and beautirul evenl"
It was the first U.S .-Russian
meeting in space since tbe 1975
ApoUo-Soyuz docking. It also was
a dress rehearsal for the June docking of Mir and tbe sbuule Atlantis.
Seven Atlanti_s-M_U: dockings are

exodus.

RETURN to EARTH- STS-63 pilot EUeen
Collins of Elmira, N.Y., and Commander Jim
Wetherbee of Flushing, N.Y., chatted as they
walked under .the winx of tbe space shutUe Dis-

planned through t 'J'J '/, when the
United States, Russia and other
nations plan to start building an
international space station.
'''Ill is may be the end of your
mission, but you have set lbe stage
for limitless future possibilities as
we move in.to an era of world cooperation in space," Mission Control
told Wetherbee late Friday night.
A day after lbe rendezvous, cosmonaut Vladimir Titov, the second
Russian to ride an American Shuttle, used Discovery's robot arm to

covery lifter landing early Saturday at Kennedy
Space Center's Runway 15. CoU1111 Is NASA's
first woman space shuttle pilot. (AP)

release an astronomy satellite.
Tbe satellite. wbicb contains an
ultraviolet telescope, spent two
days of free flight focusing on
interstellar gas and dust before
astronauts hauled it back aboard for
the ride bome.
Then as1ronauts .Bernard Harris
Jr. and Michael Foale ventured out
on a spacewalk Thursday to practice moving tbe 2,800-pound satellite with a handle tbatlooked like a
steering wheel. NASA wanted to
know bow easily future spacewallc-

ers wiU be able to move massive
objects during space station construction.
They didn't have much trouble
moving the satellite, but tbey did
slrUggle against space temperatures
of about 12S degrees below zero.
Rookie astronaut Eileen Collins
became NASA· s first female
spaceship pilot when Discovery
blasted off Feb. 3. Harris made history as the first black person to
walk m space.

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: A long the River

February 12,1995

History
in space

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.·:MLearning
life
skills
eigS
.lndust·..,·es .·
,
$8ryJ ng the
·
,
.
community
By JIM FREEMAN ·
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1,

Times-Sentinel staff
SYRACUSE _ Enhancing the
Jotallife experience for people with
.functional limitations_ that's the
goal of Meigs Industries.
. Meigs Industries, located in
Syracuse, is anon-profit organiza'tlon which operates business
contracts 10 provide training anfl
. . • tbe
.employment opportuntues •Dr

;

Tbey dream of books, toys, a 'change of clothes. Old women sweep lbe:
soggy mud beneath the train steps as if it were a front slOop.
:
Children play with sticks and the cbunks of coal that lie in piles outside•
the train. Few attend Nazran's overcrowded scboofs, saying IIley don't:
have supplies and clolbes.
:
"It was either take the children or take our lbings," said Zarema'
Dzbigudkbanova. wbo fled Grozoy in late December with her six children:
while her husband stayed Ill guard their apartment. She hasn't he; -1 from :
him since.
.
:
She ·lifted the pant leg or ber smaUest son, Adam, to reveal bare feef:
sticking into the tiny rubber boots dlat came in humanitarian aid pack-·.
ages.
•
"For two months be's been walking around without socks," sbe said,:
accusing Russian 1r00ps at the airport and local officials of pilfering the;
best of lbe aid packages.
. .

~ult servBoaricedprofgramM talofRthetardae
Meigs
• ·lion
quntyd De 1o0 ental Disab'li - .
1 an
ve pmen
ties. . Jnd · • ' · ·
Me
ustnes and
IDJSSIOn
IS Ill
provide•gs
employment
training
·for the adult who has developmental
•disabilities, said adult services
.
.
'Our oal
director DaVId
Milliken. '
g
• is 10 provide meaningful, paid work
:'for all of our employees and assist
~ tllem in becoming productive,

.

{; responsible, and contributing
,I members of their community." ·
\
Currently, this is being accom; . plished through placement in our

This Silver Key can
get you $1,000 closer
to your new home.

wood fabrication department and on areas in thmgio:.
tbemobjanJ_lei~
~wn maintenance reputationofbeingvery,n:liablcand
'"Meigs worken have a
.........~"Specific services offeied
· provide high quality services. Since
include janiiOrial and cleaning, lawn 1988, our job placement service bas
maiiltenance and mowing, wood
placed many individuals with
fabrieation, light assembly work,
mental retardation in colnmunity
specialty packaging, bench wak,
jobs and has solved many employbox malcing, contract mobile work
ers' personnel problems without the
crews, job placement services,
high.cost of recruitment, selection
government iilitiatives and specialty and training.~ be noted.
weighing and cduoting.
"A survey of companies doing
"Meigs Industries bas belen
business with Meigs Industries
providing needed services for
indicates a high level of satisfaction
Meigs County area businesses for
with our services,'' he Ullded. .·
over 13 years." Milliken said.
But meaningful work is only
Lately, Meigs Industries
part.ofthe.service Meigs IndusUies
workers have been constructing
offers its participants; they are also
rose treUises for a Columbus
entitled to the services of speech
company. .
and physical therapists. In addition,
The operau'dD t'nvolves assemtbe staff a1 so me
· Iudes a regJS
· tered
bling parts for the treUises, packagnurse. Other features of the program
t'ng and prepann
' g the ···-bled
· Iude proVJ'ding home adapuve
·
_..
•nc
product ~or shipping... all under the
·
d
equtpment an case management.
watchful eye of supervisors,who
"The program·is more focused
oversee the production process.
· toward the total life experience
Other projects include the
including h.ome life, vocational
assembly of tomato bask~ts, aJ'ob
·
d
tha .
_,___
~f
expenence an money management
111
t gelS the wuu,.-rs.out o e
to enhance overall life," habilitation
familiar Meigs Industries work
department staffers explained.
·environment and into a different
They are learning life skiDs.
. climate.
Th - · • ·
h
k' d f
e gu.u •s Ill teac any m o
In addition, workers are
skill that will help a person function
contracted to clean highway rest
in society, they added.

Section B
February 12, 1995

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Money woes, battles distract NAACP mission
.
.

That balloting will. determine
the fate of longtime board Chairman William Gibson, who critics
say has cloaked NAACP finances
in such secrecy that lrUSlees can't
determine where miUions of dollars
h~.ve gone.
For lbe past four monlbs, a collection of NAACP officials called the "Save Our Sbip Committee" -has waged war .against
Gibson . They've publicly
denounced him. urged him to
appear.
In the view of many, some of resign and filed a federal lawsuit
!bose things already are bippeiling. accusing him of improperly spendBut the National Association for ing $1 .4 million in pension and taxlbe Advancement of Colored Peo- exempt grant funds.
"It became apparent to many of
ple, wealcened by debt and distractus
that something seriously was
ed by a power slrDggle, bas moved
offstage on tile civil rights issues wrong," said C. Delores Tucker,
· an NAACP lrnstee and head of the
cenlrallll its existence.
·
Interim administrator Earl Sbin- commiuee. "We've Uied to resolve
hostes said lbe NAACP does what this internally, again and again and
it can to stay visible, but must again, but were stymied by Dr.
·
-focus on resolving its internal prob- Gibson."
Gibson, ·a dentist in GreenviUe,
lems "s·o we can live to fight
S.C.. wbo has chaired tbe board for
another day."
Next week, the group's 64 board I 0 years, did not return messages
members gather in New York to seeking comment. He bas said he
review finances - the group is wiU not resign and .intends 10 seek
nearly $3 million in debt - and another term.
His challenger is Myrlie Evers·elect new officers.
By SONY A ROSS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- When it's
raising money, the NAACP 'asks
supporters to envision wbal America would be like if the counlry's
oldest civil rights group ceased to
exist.
Affirmative action might die,
and many jobs for blacks with it.
Votiitg rights could erode. College
scholarships for blacks might dis-

Williams, 61, widow of Medgar
Evers, the NAACP field directnr
who was slain in Mississippi in
1963. Evers-Williams said she is
seeking .the job because "there is
no way r can disassociate myself
with Ibis organization. and no way
I can stand by and wa.tch it go
under."
The crisis at the top has isolated

Not only were board members
unaware that Chavis had quietly
settled a sexual discriminaiion
complaint by a female employee
for $334,400, they didn't know the
NAACP was nearly $3 million in
debt at tbe time. ·
Chavis, who lOok over in April
1993, says be inherited a debt. His
predecessor, foriner Executive·
.Director Benjamin Hooks, insists
he left a surplus of $600,000.
After he was fu-ed last August,
Chavis sued and reached a $12,000
setilemeni with the organization in
late Oelllber. .

the 2,200 local NAACP chapters
and its Washington office, whicb
continue to raise money and to
lobby Congress. But some say they
feel increasing pressure to explain
to members wbat bas gone wrong
at the NAACP's Baltimore l)eadquartess.
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' "If they don't solve some of
these real serious organizational •
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problems we have, it won't matter •
Wlrh c"romium Picollnar.
who runs the organization," said
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•
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Heory Luvert, president of the 200- •
member chapter in Eugene, Ore. • FRUTH PHARMACY •
"If an organization like the
Middleport •
NAACP fails, we might as well get •786 N. 2nd
our gunny sacks and get ready to
pick some more cotton.''
The most public problems erupted last year and eventually led to
the ouster of Executive Director
Benjamin Chavis .
•·

MOBILITY EXERCISE - Physical therapist Jo Tayhl, len, and habilitation COI/rdlnator Julie
Dillon assist Lori Anderson in getting from ber wheelchair to a walker.

-······-

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you can do the celebratin_g with a
$1.000 manufacturerS rebate.
Choose the home that meets your
needs. lifestyle and budget from a .
wide variety of affordable fl oor plans
and styles.

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Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33 ·
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00-S:OO p.m.
The.-Sat. Or By Appointment Call 614-992-2478

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. ASSEMBLING TRELUSES-Meigs Industries offers vocational training for thosewitb functional
limitations, here workshop specialist Jim Kramer assists Jimmy Casto. and Don Buffington in stapling
together rose treUis pieces with an air-powered stapler.

February is Heart Month
Be Heart Smart ...
SWING TIIERAPY- Here physical therapist Jo Taybi assists Lori Anderson in a platfo~ swing
used for balance and postural adjustments. The swing also comes with an infant adaptation kits complete
·with padded sides. According to Taybi, the swing provides a variety of movements for people 'who do not
tolerate movement welL .
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We Even Do·

PACKAGING- Debbie Morrison, left, aad J011n Hart seal packages oftrelllses being prepared for
sbipping, Meigs Industries workers have been ciiiiSiructinR rose trellises (or 1 Colnmbus company. The
operation involves IISllemblinR, packaginR and pr.eparing the completed product for shipping.

·Windo\Ns.
Lots of folks ar~ taking advantage of our
special low-rate financing to clean up their
credit card bills - !:Jut the same great rate
_!~ also available for home im~rovements ~
· . .-.a vacation. :.or even a new car. So
hurry in to Peoples Bank to polish off the
'
financing for your next big project'
r

9.99°/o::=:~.
L()al( &amp;fc-

Pt. Plcaynt
Mason
Mick Howell
Helen Fields
Mark Gro\'es
773-5514
M&lt;lissa Scarberry
675-ll2l

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New HaYen
lim La1n&lt;

tulia Willoughby
882-2135

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An~uaf percentage -rate shown as of 1/S/95 and sut;ect to chanl'e.
·· ·

Loans·subj~ct tO

credit approval.

WORK SKILLS -OneofMelgs IDdustrles goals is to leach skills
tJmt will belp 1 penon function in !IDdety. Above, Lori Anderson,
workshop specialist Linda WUI, Bill Wean, Sarah McCarty, Uavid
• Karr ud Manila Mace bag trellil.pleces while Mark Weber, right,
·. praetlces one oftbe most important work tasks- workshop cleanup.

~i=Dii

SPEECH TIIERAPY - Roger Lance polats out thinp In a book with the assistance of speech
therapist Valerie Jacoby. Speech therapy is one or the services Meigs Industries offers to its program
p~rtldpaats.
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~P=ag~~e=B=2=-=Su:::::n:::d=a~y=Ti=•m=es-~=Se~n=ti=ne=l=======;:~~~~~~::~~~t~ O~oint Pleasant, WV~====~======~==~::::=~~~'!=l=~~

Cat food
sold as tuna
China,

.•

AMY JO CARNEY

CrouseCarney
GAU.JPOLIS • Beverly Elkins
of Gallipolis and Sieve Crouse of
Gallipolis announce tbe marriage
of tbeir daugbler, Amy Jo Crouse
to Cliff Carney, sqn of James and
Joan Carney nf Salt Lake City,
Utah.
The couple' were married Feb. 7
in Las Vegas, Nev. They will
reside in Salt Lake City.

ERIC AND SARA HARRIS

Oxley-Harris
JASON AND RHONDA JONES

Johnson-Jones
GALLIPOLIS • Rhonda Lynn
Jobnson and Jason Jones Were Wlited in matriage Feb. 4 11 Silver
Memorial Freewill Baptist Church.
The double ring ceremony was
officiated by Rev.Jackie Parsons.
Rboocla is the daugbler of Ronnie and Norma Jobnson of Gallipolis.
is tbe son of Kari Jones
Trapaeric of Akron.
was

altar by her father and given in
marriage by ber parents.
Matron of honor was Cberrie
Gibbs, sister of the bride. Hower
girl was Brittney Gibbs, niece of
tbe bride. Bestman was Paul

Nance.
Tbe reception was held at tbe
church ball wilb close mends and
family in attendance~.

RACINE - · Sara Oxley and velvet skirt and a bow waistband.
Eric Harris exchanged wedding She wore a matching bow in her
vows 1:30 p.m. Dec. 17 witb Rev. hair. The ring bearer was Joshua
James Satterfield ~rforming tbe Harris, nephew of the groom. He
double ring ceremony at the Mount carried a heart-shaped pillow edged
Moriah ChUrch of God.
with lace and decorated with roses
The bride is the daughter of and baby's breath.
Mary and Aoyd Oxley of Albens,
Tbe groom wore a black tuxedo
and tbe groom is the son of Minnie witb a white bow and cummerand Paul Harris of Minersville.
bund. The father of the bride,
A Victorian Christmas theme groomsmen, ushers, acolyte and
was carried out in tbe church deco- ring bearer wore black tuxedos
rations with garlands, white Christ- · witb black bow ties and cummermas lights and bows of hunter bunds.
green and burgundy. Two heartGene Harris served as best man
shaJ&gt;ed candelabra were placed for his brother, and- Rick Findley,
behmd the decorated altar and lit his brother-in-law, was a groomsbefore the ceremony was per- · .man. Shawn and Andrew Van
formed.
Vranken, nephews of the bride and
Given in marriage by her par- groom, were ushers. Erik Van
ents and escoi:ted to lbe altar by.ber Vranken, nephew of tbe bride was
father, the bride was auired in a ilcolyte.
.
gown of white satin with a fined
Music was presented by soloist ·
dropped waist bodice and puffy Kristin Torres accompanied by
*eves tapered to tbe wrists. The pianist Laura McFarlin. Tabnee
bodice was adorned with lace, Jobnsoa was guest registrar.
· sequins and beading. The chapel
A reception was beld a1 Carleton
train fell from a full bow and was Scbool. Garland, poinsettias.
accented with beading. She wore Cbrisanas lights, and burgundy and
roses, baby's breath and bows in hun&amp;er green bows decorated the
her hair. Sbe carried a cascadhig reception room. Centerpieces were
bouquet of a dozen burgundy roses, made of garlands, poinsellias, and
cream ·carnations, ivy and baby's gold bows. The heart-shaped wedbrealb.
ding cakes were decorated wilb .
Sandie Van Vranken was her fresb burgundy roses.
sister's matron of honor. Amy Van
The bride is a graduate of Obio
Vranken, niece of the bride, was UniversitY and teaches at Meigs
maid of honor. Both wore bur- Junior Higb School. The groom
·
gundy velvet tea length dresses owns HatrisConsttuction Co.
with lace capelets. They carried
The couple resides in Racine.
bouquets of burgundy and cream
roses witb eucalyptus and baby's
breath accented with bows bur¥~
~
gundy, cream and and gold.
Ashley Zielinski was.fiower girl
and wore a white ruffled blouse • . All Natural C.H. 2001
•
With Chromium Picollnere
with an ankle-lengtb bunter green
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News policy

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The bride is a 1982 graduate of
MIDDLEPORT - Denise L.
Meigs
High School and a 1992
• · Cobb and Robbie S. Holland were
: united in marriage Dec. 13 at graduate of Ohio University where
Cochran, Ga. with Rev. Leonard sbe earned a bachelor of fine arts
degree. She is associated with
Arnold offiCiating.
The bride ·is the daughter of Soulbern Station Signs and GraphDonna and Benny Spears. Middle- ics in Eastman, Ga .. as a graphic
port. and Wayne and Patty Cobb, de_signer.
The groom is a graduate of
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Maternal
.
Hilliard
High School and a staff
lUaJIIIparents are Evelyn Wainer or .
sergeant
with
the U.S, Air Force at
Zepbymills, Fla., and the late John
Warner-Robins,
Ga.
Warnerof Pomerby. Palemal grandFoUowinu
W€:ek
in Helen, Ga .•
parents are Pat Cobb and tbe late
tbe
oouple
resides
in
Cochran,
Ga.
Orion Cobb-of Newbury Park,
They
were
honored
by
family
' Calif.
The groom is tbe son of Billy and friends with a reception in
and Deloris Holland and Lillian November at Royal Oak Resort.
Mae Holland of Hilliard, Ga.
The bride was escorted by ber
,

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Gallipolis

446-662D_•

AHoney
of aGift.

Giw Telejlora's "Be My Honey"
Bouquet fur Valentine's Day,
Ttiesday, February 14.

PHOTOGRAPHY
Professional Weddif19 Photography

(614) U~6700 '

MADISON. Wis: (AP) - Two
bald eagles have died in Wis- .
consin, bringing to nine tbe number
of eagles thai have died there Ibis
year.
.
ODe eagle died Thursday a few
bouts after being found near
Poyne* in soulb-central Wisconsin. The remains of anotber were
found about 25 miles away.
Velerinarian Joe Kelly said rwo
_Qtber side eagles were brought to
his Prairie- du Sac office this week
suffering from seizures. He .said
they seemed better after be treated
them wilb Valium.
Killing an eagle, a protected
species, is punishable by up to a .
year in prilm and a $1?'1,000 fme . . \.

Treating a variety or Joint and muocle dloord .....
knee and hlp replacements,
tlacturea and adult reconel:n.lcUve SUllleJ"Y

OKrC

2907 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant. West Virginia
Oflltt ifou,., 9 a.m.. S p.m.. 1'1oroiay through l'rl&lt;lay

ror appolntmerlu call'

(304) 675·5971
Toll Free 1-110().33J 1784

IJll PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
lirJ The lomily of profeuionols .

2520 Valty Dmt. Point Ptt.n. WV 25550 (304)175.4340

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FRUTH PHARMACY •

Sports 11\)urles • l'ra~ures • Work 11\)urles

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ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

: eagles die in
I• Wisconsin
.~

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'
Announces the Opening of His Medical Praa.lce
In

~ Two more bald ..

•:•

~~-ire-

IN 3 DAYS!

f\

Laura Cobb served as maid of
boDor fa' ber sister. Best man was
Stacy Evans, mend of lbe groom.
A reception followed tbe wedding.

' .

In an effort to provide our readership with current news, tbe .Gallipolis Daily Tribune and 1M Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from tbe date of tbe
event
All club meetings and other
news articles· iD tbe society section
must be ~ubmitled wilbin 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted wilbin 42 days of lbe
occurence.
All mateJi!U submitted for publi·
cation is sul!ject to ediuing.

•

lklighr your Valentine with a
cuddlyrhllh !:.ear who anwes with
a ~Jutiful OOuquet rJ. flowers.

Afterwards. he detaches ~ily to
g1ve bear hugs fur years to come.
To serd th~ irresistible Tclefl0!1l
gift, call or v~1t our shop.

31etenour
VILLAGE FLORAL

' NEW YORK {AP) - A
;town food suppuet tumcd cat fOOd
into human cbow by slappinz new
labels on tbe cans and peddling
33,000.cases of it. federal prmecuIOIS claim. ·
Michael Cbu allegedly lumed
quile a profit He pwcbascd lbe eat
food for as little as $4 a case and
sold lbe "chunk light tuna" roc up
to $24 a case, the indictment says.
The cal food was distributed in
1991 and 1992 in Micblgan, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, RhOde Island
and Wisconsin under the labels
"Ocean King," "Blue Bay,"
"National," and "!GA." An unde·
termined amount was eventually
recalled and authorities believe
none of it is in stores anymore.
At least one person became ill
after eating the recbrislened ''Se~­
entb Heaven Tuna Treat Cat
Food," Assistant U.S. Attorney
Tanya Hill said Fridalj;\The tUIIjl in
lbe cat food bad decomposed and
wasn't fit for human or. beast. she
said.
,Cbu, whO was charged Thursday, faces up to 29 years in prisOn .
if convicted on nine counts of
fraud. He did not return a phone
call to his office. His arraignment
was scheduled for Wednesday.

Fun for the
whdle .fami/y!

JEANETIE MEADE AND DANA BROWN

Brown-Meade
VINTON - Jeanette N. Meade
and Dana A. Brown announce tbeir
engagement and upcoming marriage. Jeanette is the daughter of
Roy and Teresa Meade, and Dl!fiD

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$1,850

\,

Mon.-Fri. 9:30..5 Sal. 9:30-2

Hello, Travelin ' Friends!!!
ALOHA!!!
What a great time we had in Hawaii last month as we sailed through the .
islands on our cruise ship. docking at various ports to· enjoy what that
panicular island is best no~ed for. We sure miss that 80 degree weather w~
had to leave behind. We noW have to rely on memories to warm our spirits
as we slip and slide through the snow.
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We boarded our motor~oach ·and headed to Coiumbus to ov~rnight near
the 3irport in order to catch our early morning flight' to Dalla_s. Then onto
S~n Franci~co where we checked in to our accomodatiqns fo,r two nights on
F1sherm~n s Wharf. We were lucky to arrjve in between two strong storms
and the day we toure:d the cily we even had a ray of sunshine or two. We
":'ere· able to cross I he Golde~ Gate ..Bridge on our double-deCker tour bus,
nqe ~o rhe lop ofTele~raph H~lllo vrew !he enlire bay area, a beauliful cily
to v1s1t With all the mterestmg shops, restaurants, and different ethnic
groups represented. We saw Chinatown, visited the Deloies Mission, some
rode the cable cars, We visited the beautiful Japanese Gardens, and of
course shopped for interesting items on fasinating Fi~herman's Wharf. A
cily we- plan to 'Yisil again and •our surrounding areas up and down the
coast.
We new IO Honolulu and checked inlo lhe Hawaiian Regent Hole I on
Waikec Beach. On lhe nexl day we visilcd lhe Polynesian Cultural Cenler,
took a ~anue . ride to observe the various island custom~ represented and
laltr that evening had dinner-and saw a fantaslic show with each set of
dancers and performers depicting their village. The costumes were
beaulilul.
The. followi.ng day we .boardcd our cruise ~hip, settled into our ~abins, got
acquamled w.11h lhe Slalf, and prepared for a Bon Voyage Parry complclc
with lhe traditional streamers and of course , Hawaiian Music. This is a great
way to see all the islands as y~)Ur ship becomes your float.ing hmel and as
you sleep, you are-sailing to a new dCstmation. Next morning you can have
break laS! on !he deck and look ou1 10 a dif[erenl island, known lor differenl
things. On !he big island of Hawaii, a slop al Kona and again al Hilo which
. provided the opportunity to explore the Volcano craters and a walk,across
!he hardened lava fields. AI nigh! our ship 'passed by lhe only aclive volcano
on the island and we were able to see lhe hot, red lava roll down the
.mountain and explode in a cloud of sle'am as it hit the ocean. What a sight!
A smell of sulphur gave an errie feeling to lhe darkness of !he nigh!.
We had rwo days on'!he Garden Island on Maui wilh i!S beaulilul nowers
lrecs and Pineapple Pfanlalions. We look a !ram ride !hrough !he fields of
coconut gro"Yes, pmcapples, bananas, anll other beautiful fruits and flowers.
It was on this island that we boarded a deluxe motorcoach and went to the
bcachfr~nt for ap authentic Luau complete with torcheS, the roasted pig, and '
a be~~~rful show. Of course, we had 10 shop a1 Hilo Halties and pick up our
Hawanan outfits wh1ch was a _great tJe~l o'f fon in ~Itself. We were given
orchid leis to complete our ''LOOK" It was fun!
A _'Yisit to Kuaui,. the island that was damaged two years ago by the
humcane, has rebualt and the beautiful Waiinea Canyon, second to the
Grand Canyon as a touriSt attraction, is a great sight to see. Helicopter tours
give a fantastic view. '
·
Back in Honolulu before We caught our night home, we visited Pearl
Harbor viewing the Memorial and learning o.f that terrible time in 1941
when S:O many lost their li"Yes during the bombing. It was a sobering time to
stand over that great battleship and read the names of the 900 young men
who are e.ntombcd there. It makes us stop and 'reflect on the sacrifices lhat
were made for us to remain free. .
We !hen made an overnighl nigh! lo Dallas and 1h~n on 10 Columbus
where our Motorcoach was waiting and tirought us home from our "two
weeks in the sun".
We are now ready for departure to Columbus this weekend for our
Valenline Gel -Away. We will check in !he Hyau Regency, spend lhe
afternoon shoppm~ at !he Cuy Center or lounging in !he iridoor pool, and
t~at evenmg we will ~cet 10 the:_lobby a_nd go to German Village where w~
will have ~ great dmner al fHe Engme No. 5, a renovated firehouse
complete with lhc brass pole. Wonder who will be first to slide down? I
know a fe~ possi~ilities : Thc.n carrying on the (~stive mood, we will go to
the beautifully restored Ohao -Theater for a li'Ye cOncert- by the ·Four
L..euermen, complete with an 80 piece orchestra. Remember, Pur Your Head
On My ShoJIIder, Going Our Of My Head, Theme From A Summer Place,
Etc., All Lellermen HilS. Should be a grea1 concert
Next morning after a breakrast at lhe hotel -at our leisure, we'll allend a
Chocolate Fantasy Fair at the adjoining Conv~ntion Center where we will
see Chocolate Displays, tastings, gifts, and etc., All for Val~n1ine
Celebralions. A great weekend.
NeWslelters.have been mailed to Peoples Choice Members this week with
. our plans for 1995 announced. In March we wil£ have a Health Seminar at
the. Bank wilh lalks and informaribn on nulrilion, exercise and good healthy
att1tudes addressed . Doorpnzes and refreshments will also be available.
Plan to join us for these important issues and we will learn how to sray
heallhy as we... ·

.

LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL,

L11t_

ro.. early.
P.opln Cholet ii a OMIIOn
, oU~Oint ,.,..._,.,_

FO~EOPLES

MARY
CHOICE CO-ORDINATOR

,

. CANTON

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GALLIPOLIS
Rebecca
Moorc-Fianncry of Gallipolis
might aow be called a widely published poet Her poem "A Sister' s
Memory" will be published in tbe
anthology Quest of a Dream.
This is tbe tbird year Aannery
bas been published . In I 993, her
poem "Grandmother was published
in the anthology Tears of Fire. In
I 994 her poem "God Needed an
·Angel in Heaven" was published in
Echoes of Yesterday .
Flannery's work was selected
through a competition sponsored
by Pacific Rim Publications. "A
Sisler's Memory" was chosen as a
semi-final.ist. Advancing to this
level, Aannery is eligible to win a
grand prize of $1,000, rlfSt prize of
$500 or SO olber cash or gift prizes .
Aannery is a I 99 I graduate of
Jact,son High School. She is a
junior at the University of Rio
Grande. where she is majoring in
elementary education and minoring
in health education and elementary
Spanish education.
Sbe is tbe daughter of Lew and

REBECCA FLANNERY
Peggy Moore of Jackson. She iS' llie
granddaughter of tbe late Trimble
and Stella McCoy of Pikeville, Ky.
and lbe late Carl and Dessie Moore
of Oak Hill.

Meigs community calendar
The Community C11l,ndar Is
published liS a freer-service l.o
non-profit· groupsiWisblng to
announce meeting ·and spedal
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
.fund raisers of any type. Items ·
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
SUNDAY

POMEROY - Singing Sigrist
Family to perfonn at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene. 6 p.m.
Sunday , Public invited.
MONDAY

POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club. Monday. 7:30 p.m.
at lbe Meigs High School library . .
POMEROY - Women Alive,
Monday. Kyger Creek club house;
7 p.m., devotional ·speaker. Salad
bar.
CHESHIRE - Cheshire TOPS
· to host ope11 bouse, Monday, 10:30
a.m. at Cheshire United Melbodist
Church. KOPS to be recognized .'
More information call Janet
Thomas, 367-0274.

RACINE - Racine Board ' of
Public Affairs will meet Monday 7
p.m. 31 Star Mill Park.
MIDDLEPORT - The Disabled American Veterans and the
Auxiliary, 7 p.m. Monday at Middleport American Legion ball.. ·
SYRACUSE- Syracuse PTO
Monday, 7 p.m. at lbe school.
TUESDAY

'GHESTER - Chester Township trustees will meet Tuesday, 7
p_m.
HARRISONVILLE
Har·
rison ville Chapter 255, Order of tbe
Eastern. Star, Tuesday. 7:30p.m.
Benefit auction to be held.
POMEROY - Ohio Hunter
Educalion Course star!ing Tuesday, •
6-9 p.m. at Meigs County Public
Library. For more infdnnation or to
register for the class, contact Chief
Instructor Dana Aldt;idge at 9926311.
WEDNESDAY

MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepori Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at tbe Sacred
RACINE - Rep. John Carey Heart Rectory. Mrs. Chester Erwin
open door meeting at Racinc, Mon- will review "Rachel Carson" and
day, 3 .to 4 p.m., Racine Village Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will review
Hall. Constituents invited to . "King's Oak". Members are to
express concerns wilb state govem- respond to roll call by naming a
me!ll.
biography IIley have enjoyed.

HOIFFPoiAN AND DANIEL SHORT

Hoffman-Short
LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Hoffman, Long Bottom,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Lisa Lynn, to Daniel
Frank Short. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Short. Reedsville.
The bride-elect is a I 993 gradu·
ate of Eastern High School. She
attended Kent State University for
one year and is attending tbc University of Rio Grande to continue
her nursing program. She is
employed at Pinecrest Care Center
of Gallipolis as a social service
assistant.
The prospective groom is a

DONITA MANUEL AND KURT SAYRE

Manuel-Sayre
RACINE - Kurt Sayre of New
}Iaven, W.Va. and Donita Joy
Manuel of Racine announce tbelf
·engagement and approaching marriage.
The bride-elect is tbe daughter
or Don and Joyce Manuel of
Racine. Sbe graduated from Soutbern High School co~pleting the

· cosmetology program at Meigs
High School.
Sayre is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Sayre of New Haven. He
attended Wabama High ScbQOI and
is employed at American Alloy. ,
The couple plan an early .spnng
wedding.

Remains of
WW/1 pilqt
recovered
.DEN OEVER. Netbei'lands
(AP)- The remains of an Ame?-

can World War II av1ator from
Ohio were recovered from the sea
Friday, still in the cockpit of a
fighter plane shot down by German
forces.
Relatives of Flight Officer
Frank Gallion will be asked
wbetber they want lbe pilot buried .
in the Netherlands or returned to
tbe United Stales, the Dutch navy
said.
Dutch officials were trying to
locate the pilot's relatives and
obtain information about his home-

1992 graduate of Eastern High
School. He ,has attended· tbe Uni-·
versity of' Rio Grande and is
emplqyed by TCKS, Inc. as a flfSt
assistant.
An open church wedding will be
held 1:30 p.m. May 27 at lhe Middleport Church of Christ

Wedding
policy ,
The Sunday Times-Senrinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs without
charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli·
ness. The newspaper prefers 10
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition. lhe weddin~ must have
talcen place within 60 &lt;lays prior to
the publication, and may·· be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received .
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to· the date
of publicatio~.
Those not making the 60-day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.

RACINE- Racine. Town meeting Monday, 6 p.m. at the fire
department annex to discuss village
business. Rep. John Carey to
attel)d . .

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Kerr of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and
approachlng marriage of their
daughter Luri Ann to Paul Anthony
(Tony) Waugh son of Mr. and Mrs.

Francis A. Waugh of Crown City.
Both are employed wiUJ Gallia
County Emergency Medical Services.
The wedding be March II at
King Chapel Church, CroWJI City, .

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN. CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
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"~", OFf.ICI HOUI.f ;

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•.,.r.••••,, ·-~ p7i00 ,.~;t·;
,.·.-..ar '~'·:• ";·1130 ...£12 .• •·

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WflCO!{ . · •

SatUr4ay lfPOfatiO'i.ts .,.n.~~r,

~ • ·, NIW PAflllm ~ WAlKofll

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

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

DR.DUTTAJOINSSTAFF

Gallion. 24 was escorting B-17
bombers on their way to attl!Ck a
German navy base in Wilbelmsbaven when be was mot down by German Messerschmitt
109 lighter.; pn Nov. 3, 1943. The
Dutch navy said it didn't know his
hometown.
The wreckage of his singleengine P-47 Della Thunderbolt
wasn't discovered until an Oc!Dbcr
1993 survey of the Ijsselmeer
inlimd sea, ;tbout 50 miles north of
the Dulcb capital of Amsterdam.
· The plane, which bad broken in
two, was still equipped with three
of its six.machine guns when it was
raised Friday. It was the most oonie airplane wreck recovered in
Netherlands si~ tbe war, 5aid
y spokesmah Eryk de

Dr. Nirmal K. Dutta, Jackson, has been named an

A

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oekborsl

A .navy salvage crew even

_ . _ recovered Gallion's

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Soap Box De.ri&gt;Y meeting, Wednesday; 5:30 p.m. Pomeroy Flower
Shop. All interested participants
encouraged to allend.

Kerr-Waugh

town.

rust-encrustea ~

Zippo cigareuc; lighter from tbc
cockpit. de Boekborst said. .

"

is the son of Chester and Fran
Brown.
.
The wedding will be 4:30 p.m.
Feb. 14 at Fellowship Chapel jn
Vinton. A reception will .follow at
tbe American Legion .

·
·.
,
- Mrs. Phyllis Divinity.
Blevins, a graduate of Ohio Val:. Rhodes of Canton announces the
,., engagement of her daughter. ley Christian School in Gallipolis,
··~. Aimee Rhodes to Scott 0 . Blevins, holds a Bachelor's of Philosophy in
.-.son of Mr. and Mrs. James V. Interdisciplinary Studies from
· .Blevins of Rodney.
Miami University, 'O~ford and will
, Rhodes is a graduate of Jaekson graduate May 1996 from Candler
High School and Massillon and . School of.Theology with a Mas: Otterbein College, Westerville· with ter's or Divinity and the Emory
: a Bachelor's of Arts degree in University School of Law with a
: · pnglish. She .will graduate in May Juris Doctorate.
~ 996 from Candler School of The- ·
The wedding will be July 22 at
ology at emory University in the Cburcb of the Lakes United .
~llanta, Ga. with a Master's of ·Metbodist Church in Canton.

2!173 Piedmont Rd., Huntington (304, 429-4788

Rio Grande, Ohio
(614)245-6678

We deliver!

Local woman's poetry to
be published in an

........

&amp;CARD SHOP
0~ ~our

Sunday Times-Sentlnei-Page-83 .

associate member of the medical staff at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
A surgeon, or: Dulla is a gradual~ of the
government college at Chi uagong, Bangladesh, and the
Dhaka Medical College in· Bangladesh. He served his
internship at Nortan Memorial Hospital, Louisville,
Ky., and residen~ies at the Bridgeport Hospital in
Connecticut; the Beth Israel Hospilal in Newark, N.J.,
and the Deborah Heart and Lung Center'in Browns
Mill s, N.J.
A 12 year resident of the Jack son, Ohio area, Dr.
Duua is affiliated with the Oak Hill Surgical!Jactice
and the Oak Hill Hospital .
Dr. Duua is now making regular visits to Pomeroy..
His office is located in the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Outparient Clinic and may be reached by calling 992-.

3632.

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Page--84-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middl.e port-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant, WV

Max Tawn.ey walks the roa to Mandalay
chased in tbe open 11URet in Rangoon. The people smoke opium
lilce people used to smoke
cigareues in !be United Stales.
When we landed at !be ouldated
airport in Rangoon; we were over
two hours going tbrougb .C"SIOOJs.
Our 1111vel ageoc was very upset the
way we were being lrealed; be felt
it was because we were Americans.
They made us open all or our Juggage and left il in bad shape for us
co puiiOgetber again.
We fmally got 10 our lnya LaJce
Hotel in Rangoon. It was oot fUSI
class by any means. All of the meo
countries.
·
and boys wore long skins. They
Burma Road was built by tbe were not allowed to wear II'OUsen
9Uoese as a military supply route lilce we do. But they were nice 10
JD 1937-38. It is aboul 700 miles
us. They bad Slria rules to go by.
long and extends from the railhead The food and service at lbe hOtel
of I.asbio, Bwma, 10 Kurunin~, the were te m'ble . .
capital o.f Yunnan Province, bina.
The aulomobiles were all at
It was used by the Allies during the leas! 12 to IS years ·old. I found
early.part of ~orld War II.Tbe that Burma was ruled by a mililary
supplies for Chm!l were Ian~ In , dictator and his cronies, wbo were
Rangoon and sbtpped by ratl to cruel 'Illey reponed! Jcilled ·
Lasbio. lil A~ 1942, f!1e 1apanese cent j,eop1e and p.aJc. many;: ·
caplured Lasbio and.gained conlrol
pie in prisons. They dido'! eta
of the roa.d, wbtcb was not trial. In 1991, the Nobel P~ace
reopened until Janlllll¥ 20, 1945.
Prize was awarded to us
s •
Burma bas a tropical monsoon da 8h
un, an s
cli.mate simil~ to Mexico . Bud- wb~
~~~ ~:~:r s:u~~;i
dbiSm •s practiced by 80 percent of years after her pany }VOn more than
the people. There.·~ only a siii!IIJ 80 percent of tbe votes in free elecperceotage of Chrisuans. Buddbtsl lions. Writers ·and polilicians are
tempi~ schools provi~ basic skills .sentenced tO long prison terms for
for pnmary school cb~ldren. Many any expression of dissent
people spealc Enghsb largely
Tourism bas long been a pillar
be~ause B ~rma ~as annexed to of tbe economy in Bwma; it is one
Bn11sb lndta dunng lhC: t&lt;ngl!l· of Asia's poorest nations. The ·
~~ese Wars. Many Bnusb sun couolry has no major industry
hve m Burma.
Most of their income comes fro~
In ~eptember 1958, Ge~eral !J tealcwood, rice and gemscones. 1
Ne Wm Coole over; be reured 10 wen1 into a cealcwood forest and
I ~81. Then San U came 10 power walcbed the elephants staclc tealcHts successor was General Saw wood like they do·1 Thailand
Mau.ng (1988). At. this time lhC:Y
One experience ~ will never forabolished all elecuoos, Burm~-·~ gel was .seeing a man lying in tbe
now ru.led by tbe lOp generals, ~ ( street, covered witb blood H bad
~any m~?CeDI people ~e being been sbOI by the police ~uc:e be
ltilled or J~ed wttboul a trial. .
criticized lbe police for arresting
, Bu~a ts known for narcoucs his son. His son bad sold some
. and optum. I saw ~y fields of leakwood for $8 to feed bis cbilpopptes grow~g and bet~g harvest- dren. He bad nol reponed it The
ed. I have an optum ptpe I pur- _police bad thought il was slolen
B;rMAXTAWNEY
I bad always wanted to walk on
the.rood to Mandalay, known as the
Burma Road, where many Amcrican soldiers were Jcilled while
fipting the Japanese. In the 1980s,
I bad this oppo.tunity.
Burma is the largest countty in
!i01Jlheasl Asia. It borders Thailand,
Laos, China, India ind Bangladesh.
It is surrounded on tbe north, cas!
and wesl by mountain ranges that
have elevations up to 15,000 fee~
on the soutb by tbe Andaman Sea
and the Bay of Bengal. These rae1ors i~olace it from neighboring

.:d

MR. AND MRS. THOMAS JONES

Joneses to mark 50th
CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.

The couple mainlain bomes in Buffalo, W.Va. and Cheshire. They
have four children, Denver of Webster Springs, W.Va., Jay of
Cheshire, Loretta Blalce of Middlepon and Yvonne Lee King of Gallipolis; 12 grandchildren; and 10
great-grandchildren. The reception
is given by tbeir children.

Thomas Jones will be honored witb

a reception at tbe Cheshire Baptist
Church 3 p.m. Feb. 18 in honor of
tbeir 50th anniversary.
The couple were married Jan .
27, 1945 by Rev. J.E. Johnson of
Leon, W.Va. Mr. Jones retired as a
river boat captain after 36 years.

Beat of the Bend.: ~
by Bob Hoeflich
The Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center,.witb tbe help
of several sponsors as well as a
number of volunteers, is conducting a balloon valentine bouquet
sale for tbe benefit of Alzheimer's
Disease.
Sponsoring tbe sale along witb
tbe cen.ter are Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Johnson Construction
Co., Kee and Dee Ceramics and
Radio WMPO where tbe bouquets
will be assembled for delivery on
Tuesday.
.
·
Orders may be placed at the
center, 992-6606, or with the
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial, 992-2104, or in the
lobby . The bouquets are $5 each
delivered or they can be picked up
at WMPO if you prefer.
The time capsule containing
various items relating to tbe 175tb
birtbday of Meigs County is still
. not buried. ce·remonies for the
~urial were set for two Saturdays
and, of course, you know what the
weatber did. However, Margaret
Parker or tbe Meigs County Pio.
neer and Historical Society, vows
that tbe capsule will be buried .
Another date and time will be set
later.
.

Gerald and Mildred Shuster will
be marking their wedding anniversary at their Pomeroy borne on
Valentine's Day. It's tbeir 63rd so
big congratulations to them on the
romantic day, Tuesday. The
address is 1643 Lincoln Heights.
If you live down by tbe river,
you.' ve got the right to. sing the
blues. Well, tbe song went something like that and the blues will
really be crying \li!Lill ..Mati.etta on
March 17, 18, and 19 when the

fourth annual River City Blues Festival will be held
The event is sponsored .by the
Blues, Jazz and Folk Music Society
of Marietta and the society bas
engaged several big city blues
musical groups for appearances al
the HOle! LaFayeue.
On March 17, The Nighthawks,
a ·four piece band from Washington, D. C., will be feacured; the
Lonnie Brooks Blues Band, six
pieces. ~ul'of Chicago, will be the ·
March 18 fealll)'C. Both bandS \viii
start playing at 9 p.m ..On Sunday,
March 19, at I p.m., Mississippi
_Heat, a six piece blues ,band, also
oul of Chicago will provide the
entenainmem. The events are, of
course, open to the public.
Susie Fischer, 99, had to be
moved from her home on Morning
Scar Road to tbe home of a daughter, Gloria Michael, in Syracuse,
bu1 no one seemed 10 be able to figure out how to do that Eber Pickens took the bull by the horns and
moved Mrs. Fischer· by way of a
fire !ruck. Again il' proves that
where there is a will there is a way.
And Betty Kern with a binbday
on Feb. 29 will be seventeen and
three quarlers of a year old this
month since Feb. 29 doesn't come
around too often. Belly is actually
71 in spit~ of the lack of a birthday
date every year. I assume she
otiserves il on Feb. 28 during the
"off' years. Her mailing -address is
41210 U.S. Route 33 , Shade, Ohio
45776.

The Bl~ Red Boat

By JIM SANDS
Spedal Correspoadenl

They just killed him and walked
away.
Wbt:n we left the hotel, I saw a
dead maD lying besi&amp; a car. We
did 1101 blow wbal happened. I was
only ~y to be leaving.
One of the boys a1 tbe bote! bad
told me thai tbe police came at 2
a.m ..ooe morning to tbeit home and
took his dad away. The police tJ!d
not give them a reason. His m&lt;&gt;lber
was crying and asked why !bey
were doing Ibis. They would not
tell ~r. All of tbe people live in .
fear, II is unbelievable wbal was
going on in Burma when I was
there. I bope it is DOl like.thai today
beause il is a beautiful countty.
The ruler is inviting IOUrisiS to
come 10 Burma now and enjoy at
bargain prices such items as gold
and gemstones. Bul cbe tourist
trade largely contributes 10 lbe big
sbOis wbo are stealing much of tbe
profits.
F~ a lime there were joint-ventures witb Singapore, Japan and
Western investors who tried to get
more IOUrists to come back to boost
their economy. However. on Feb.
2, 1995, The Wall Slrtel Journal
said inveslors were pulling out.
·"Cicing public opposition .to its
lrade with Burma's military
regime, Eddie Bauer joined a growing lis! of Western sportswear and
.apparel importers pulling their
business out of that Soucbeasl
Asian countty." WSJ quoted Eddie
Bauer: "After several mombs of
researching the situation, we
deemed tbat the political climale
and growing opposition to trade in
Burma posed a p&lt;&gt;lential threat to

"On Saturday night, the Ameri-

citizens of African descent in
Gallipolis, felt themselves justified
by the fall ofRicbmond; in getting up
an illumination in their quanerof our
town. They did it well, and also got
up several fine ttansparencies that
were ji)Slthelrlnd
.to agitate. tbe
'bile' of that
CIII

class among us
known as cop-

BURMA Is ltnown for Dllr:
eotles an opium. The people
smoke opium like people ued
to smok~ cigarettes In the
United States. Plcutred 11 a
woman smoking opium.
our future manufacturing opponunities." Bauer continued by saying
it would not renew itS ·CODtraccs
wilb Burmese factories when they
expire later Ibis year. Liz Claiborne, Levi S1rauss and Reebolt
International afready bave lefc
Burma. I muse say Ibis was one trip
I wUI never forget
Max. Tawney, longtime busJ.
nessman oec:asloJ!*Uy writeS articles for the Sunday Times-Sen·
tlnel about experiences he has
had during his world-wide travel
lhro!lllb tbe years.

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perheads. Of
course they
showed their
venom, by tbrowing scones inlo
them, and at persons carrying them,
one or IWO of whom we learn were
.. severely hun. This kind of fun might
. do for tbe barbarous age when slavery was the dominant power in the
land, and DemoclliCy its chief advocate. Under the present order of things,
all such petty meanness, only indicates how deeply rooted pany feelings remains."
So wrote the G~lipolis Journal in
April of 1865. The Civil War brought
bolh joy and heanache to African-

. RIO GRANDE • I.ake Baps.l, English Composition an (,I other
· director of !he los~;n~cu~ Mecl;ia courses, and we. see it as a very
Center at tbe Umversti.Y &lt;?f R10 workable format for both tbe
Grande, and Pat Stout. pnnc!P!I' of insbllciOrs and tbe studeniS."
River Valley Higb ~cb~l JOmtly
The system involves televisions
announce an e.xpansto~ ~n tbe use and monilors at botb URG and
· of tbe interaeuve q:JeviSlon (lTV) River Valleys The inSII'Uclors and
system the two ~ools share.
students can see each other, and a
The sys!CDI which bas been used vertically moWJted camera at Rio
10 teadl River Valley st~Xk:nls C?l- Grande allows the. vie win~ of
lej!e co~rses from !)le umv.ers.lly notes, etc. A similar setup holes
· w~U be m use fuii-Ume begmnmg Buckeye Hills Career Center inlo
~Cull;
.
the sys'!Jm.
.
We ve worlced with lbts system
"Tb1s was the very first fiber
· for three years now, and we feel optic system in tbe state to be used '
. confi!leDt !bat ~e can expand to this way," said, Stout "We of[er
· full-~me use ~~~~oul any prob- our students a Secondary Options
Jems\ .Bapst $lid. 'The mteracUve Program that allows them to go to
~le_vts~oa system .~oes have a few . !be Rio Grande campus to auend.
IimilaUons. but we ve learned bow ·classes. This system gives tbeQI
to deal w11b nearly all of them. still another option. Instead of bav·
We've used ITV for malb, speech,
.

•
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Sunday, Feb.ll
.

360 Second Avenue

'

, PO_INT PLEASANT. W.VA. •
. •Narcolics Anonymous Tri Counly
:aroup 7:30p.m. 61 I Viand St.

•••

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ing 10 travel to Rio for classes, they
can take .~ollege level classes here
at Riv.er Valley. For some studeniS
because of the travel or the
·exlracurricular activities tbey're
involved in here, thai's' a big plus."
For the sludents at Buckeye
HiUs. the university offers tuJorials.
panicularly in malb. Sludents at
Buckeye Hills must pass proficiency lesiS, and the classes offer them
a chance to Jearn tbe .math sltiUs
they need. The lTV system will
conlinue to be used at Buckeye
Hills, in addition to River Valley
"The lTV system bas been a real
plus for us," said Buckeye Hills
9irector Kay Michael. We gol online witb the system at tbe start and
it's been very helpful. It's iut exoellen!
entiO our other efforts
,.

in our inte'rvention program wilb
tbe niolb-grnde proficiency lesiS in
math. The studeniS seem to like it,
and I think tbe luloring they've
received bas helped tbem a lot."
"We tbinlc Ibis is an important
part of tbe future of educalion,"
Bapsl added, "and it's irnponant to
stay on the leading edge. Expand·
ing our usage of the rrv system to
full-time slatus is a significant step
in thai process."

OFF
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. GALLIPOLIS • Galli'a Counly
Homemakers 10:30 a.m. C.H.
McKenzie Agricullure Center.

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

Clearancet
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French 500 Room Holzer Medical
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:and ·root washing 10 a.m. Bell _ Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peler' s
Episcopal Church.
~Chapel Church. New Vision
•
~Singers 7 p.m.
•
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Chamber of Commerce meeting 12 .Dislria Library Board of Trustees
•
·Monday, Feb. 13
1
p.m. Stowaway.
5 p.m. at Dr. Samuel j... Bossard
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AID SOCIETY • This house at Fourth Avenue
Spruce Street In Gallipolis served as a home for the Mutual Aid
Society, starting In 1870, the year the 15th Amendment to tbe U.S.
Constitution was ratlned. This organization dales formally to
about 1863, but existed lnformaUy before the Civil War.

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"darlc colored man" ana tllal his wife sented as the Dispatch fought
was a "light colored woman." The sttoogly agmnst tbe granting of any
protection society helped blacks more righcs to African Americans.
But in May. of 1870, Gal!ipolis
procure the proper papers.
blaclcs
were able 10 celebrate the
The Civil War did away with the
need for papers, but as 10 the question ratification of the 15th amendment
of the rig~IS 10 be granted African- 10 the Constitution which declared
Americans, -that was a debatable that the rigbt of suffrage shall n01 be
question. The Gallipolis Dispatch denied to citizens, "on account of
newspaper raised a number of issues race, color, or previous condition of
related 10 civil righcs for blacks in a servitude." The ,day .began with a
number of ediiOrials in 1865. Some Tally-at the Baptist Church then loRepublicans wanled to give black caloo in the 700 bloclc of Third
persons tbe vote, but ban them from Avenue. A procession of several
hundred marched 10 the city landing
holding office. The Dispatch aslced
where !hey boarded the steamboat ,
if that was constitutional. i\ second
question raised pertained to whether Oriole for the lrip to Cheshire. A big
day of celebrntion was held at Wator not African-Americans would be
allowed coattendall whitechmcbes, son's Grove near Cheshire.
After 1870 the Mutual Aid Socischools, and places of amusement
ety gave up mosl of iiS involvement
"Now if they do not intend breaking in civil and political righiS. Olher
down all·distinction on account of
organizations were brought inlli
color, bow far do !hey propose 10 being 10 deal witb those issues. The
go? Funherifall tbese things 1!fe not Mutual Aid Society came to deal
granted, will they (Negroes) n&lt;&gt;l fall with basic human needs: ciOibing,
sbonofbaving all lherigbiSofwhite
food, shelter and providing proper
men? Still fanher. if any of lbese
burial for loved ones.
privileges should be granted as a
James Sands is a spec:ial correright, why not all?" wrote tbe Dispatch. As a mat1er of fact all lbese spondent ol'tbe Sunday Times-Sen·
questionsposedbytbeDispatchwere llnel. His address is: liS WIDow
irrelevanl 10 the cause they repre- Drive, Springboro, Obio 45066.

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Americans living in Gallipolis. Durmg the war years many blaclcs migrated to Ohio from Virginia, and
blacks living in Gallipolis felt obli. gated to care fllr lbese persons. To do
this a Mutual Aid Society was formed
Its purpose was 10 help feed, cklthe
and house blaclcs escaping front the
soulb as well as 10 provide a proper
burial for people of African-American descent. The Mutual Aid Society
continued in Gallipolis into the 201h
century and the building that belonged.
to this society at Fourth Avenue and
Spruce Stteet is still standing.
Before the war a similar type
mutual protection society existed to
protect the rights of free blacks. Even
blacks living in Ohio had to have on
them at all times documentation that
they were in fact free blacks.and nol
runawa;,o slaves. For instance Elijah
Anderson carried a certificate signed
by Justice·of the Peace, Carel : "I do
hereby cenify that Elijah Anderson,
a Mula no man aged 24, is a free man
as I verily believe having known him
about 19 years that he has been living
in Gallia County wilb his pareniS
Abraham Anderson and Martha
Anderson, both free people of colour.:·
William , Woodley's papers malce
reference 10 the fact that he was a

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�February 12,1995
Page-86-Sunday nmes-Senti nel

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

February 12,1995

Lovers have bee_
n saying it with a Valentine's card for many years
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY . "All tbe world
loves a lover" and Tuesday, Valentine's Day will find many pro·
claiming ~ir love with a colorful
card of hearts and nowers and a
verse pledging undying love.
Greeting c,a rd companies prediet that more than 850 million
valentines will be exchanged Ibis
year.
'
But not all will be sentimental
and sweet, some will be funny .and
naucring, and a few will carry a
slinging )Ilessage of some sort like the "vinegar valentines" of
years past..
lne history of valentines dales

back to Rome in 270 A.Q. wbere, old valentines away as keepsakes.
according to legend, a yllWlg priest sometime~ found by family mem·.
narned_Yalentinus was senten~ to bers or fn~nds many y~ars later.
ex~utio~ by Emperor Claud!u~ n That practice of preservmg senti·
for refusmg to renounce Christian mental messages bas lead to valenteachings. The s torr _go~s t~at tine col_lector-s. Today the most
Valenunus healed b1s Jailer .s blind coll~cuble ones, date from the
daughter and feU m love w1tb ber. 1800 5 to the 1930 s.
Bef~re he w~s be beaded by tbe
Another _l_ess know~ l~gend
Romans, be sent a farewell mes· about the ongm of Valentines Day
sage to ber. which was signed dates back to the ancient Roman
"From Your Valentine."
festival, known as tbe Feat of
The symbolic sending of a note Lupercalia. Celebrated on Feb. 14,
with a message of affection bas · a feast was held to honor the ~an
c.ome to represent tbe loving e~o- ~od, Lupe~.cus. The c~,l~br;mon
uoo expressed through valentines mcluded a love louery ~ whic.h
today. And because valentines young m31dens would wnte ~e1r
convey feelings of one person f~?r names on cards and ptaa: them mto
another, people tend to tuck thetr a large urn m the pubh.&lt;: square.

Vocational
week
observed

tum select a woman's card from
the. urn and would tben court tbat
maJden through messages of love
fora year.
.While ~e "love loctery". ~ustom
qu1c~ly d1ed out, the traditiO~ of
sendmg ~otes of love and affectiOn,
or valenli~, ~aJned.
.
Tbe Victonan era was a ume
when "vin·egar valentines" or
"rudes or crudes," some sarcastic
and insulting were introduced. It
was the lime of the "penny dread·
fuls"- and for a tim~ they Dour·
1sbed ..In the late 1800_s, however,
valentines changed agaJn, they kept
the humor hut got rid of the sting.
Verses of flattery also became pop·

ular abo6l !bat time.
Because of the legends on the
origin of Valentine's Day, there bas
remaine4 tbe qupstion as to
whether the obser\lllllce is a reli·
gious or romantic one.
Over the years Valentine's Day
messages have undergone a
beart." Since some peo-

®

H Aw A ( (

THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL

·

.

Miss Texas selected as new Miss USA
1995 before a home state crowd
Friday nigbt.
.
The 21-year-old sophomore at
San Jacinto Junior College, wbo
gives motivational speeches to

Final Hours!

inner city youth, won the swimsuit
and interview rounds based on
judges seores.
Miss USA 1994 Lu Parker of
South Carolina crowned ber suc·
cessor.

.,

pie are not comfortable sending
cards pledging undying love, the
industry bas accommodated them
by introducing funny and friend·
sbipcards
Today;s racks display all sorts
of valentine cards - one sure to
say in verse just tbe right message
for your valentine.

.

1\vo Great One-Week Tours To See
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Your tour includes: roundtrip air, seven nights stay at the
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and see the white sand of Waikiki Beach.

RIO GRANDE • In celebration
of the 20th Anniversary of the District and National Vocational Edu·
cation Week. Feb. 12 througb 18, ·
the Gallia-Jackson· Vinton JVSU
(Buckeye Hills Career Center) will
sponsor several special events
tbroughoul the three-county area.
The annual "Back to School for
Mom and Dad Day" will be Tuesday, Feb. 14 with parents/guardians
.
inVited to spend the day wi$ their
VOCATIONAL WEEK • Recognizing National Vocational _
student and join tbem for lunch in ·
Education Week the Gallla County Commissioners signed a
the "Corral," the school restal1{311t.
proclamation designating the week Feb. 1Z tbrougb 18. Those on
Tbe district will sponsor a
for tbe signing were, left, Angie Utile (River Valley) from the
band
"Business After Hours" with the
Marketing
Education program ; Commissioner Harold Saunders;
Jackson Chamber of Commerce
Christine
McGuire
(River Valley) from the Computerized Word
Thursday, Feb. 16. Other activities
Processing
program;
Ben McGuire (River Valley) from tbe Agrl·
will include job shadowing w.itb
·
cultural,
Recreational,
and Diesel Mecbanks program); Faith DiJ.
area businesses, selected marquees,
Ion
(River
Valley)
trom
tbe Community Senilces progr11111; Jason
and vocational awareness activities
Snyder
(Gallla
Academy)
from the Building Trades progr11111; and
within tbe local schools.
Commissioner
Ken
Farmer.
Signing the proclamation Is Commis·
In celebration of tbe 20tb
sioner
Harold
Montgomery.
Anniversary of the Buckeye Hills
Career Center, the Gallia County cation Week, Feb. 12 through 1M.
in tbe celebration of their 20th
Commissioners passed a resolution
The district students and staff . Anniversary and National Voca·
declaring National Vocational ~u- invites the. community to join them tiona! Edutation Week.

By JOSH LEMIEUX
Associated Press Writer
SOUTH PADRE· ISLAND,
Texas (AP) - Miss Texas, Chelsi
Smith, an education major from
Houston. was crowned Miss USA

The unmarried men would each in

--The House of the Week---------------_:_---:--

.

April 20-28, 1995 - Hosted by .
Donnetta Dyer, CTC
October 5-13, 1995 -·Hosted by
Judy Dodds, CTC

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Full study plan informatiOn on !his .house is available in a $4 baby
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rambling home, but the comforts
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ByPATWKAS

AP NeMfeatllml
The enchantment of a cottage

•••
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~-- Design

Enclosed Is $41or plan N o . - - - - -- - - - - - --

offers a timeless rambling floor
plan in its 1,751 square feet of tiving space.
Stone masonry is used in the
· facade, in conjunction with a cov·
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'shutters around the front-facing
windows. The wbole rustic effect
extends an open inVitation lo any
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The four-bedroom design offers TilE OPEN, RUSTIC charm of this one-story cottage Is simple but endul"'!!l beautifully. Stone DI81101UY
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Is used In the facade In conjunction with lap aiding and shutters.
.
construction. The front pore~
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welcomes guests into the spa·
The plan is available with either
cious interior. The home's Lcrawlspace or slab foundation
shaped entry hall flows from the
options and a generic conversion
formal dining room at left, past
diagram is also available.
the living room at the center of
the home, to the secluded bed·
(For a more detailed, scaled Plan
r~m hallway on the right.
of this house, iJicluding guides to
A 13-foot vaulted, beamed ceil·
estimati,g costs and financing,
ing soars a~ove the expansive Uv·
send $4 to House of the Week.
:·ing room, whicb offers ample
P.O. Box 1562, N~w York, N.Y.
, ; space for both family life and for10116·1562. Be sure to include
' · mal entertaining. This huge centhe Jlumber of the plan.)
:· ·. tral area features a massive fireplace with a stone hearth and ,
built-in bookshelves on either
• side. Two windows flank a
' French door that opens to the
'- backyard patio.
The efficient galley-style
esign F-24 has a living
kitchen adjoins a bayed eating
room. dining room, eat·
· area. The kitchen offers conve-.
ing area, kitchen, four
' nient serVice to the casual eating ·
bedrooms, two baths and an
~ .
·.area and the formal dining.room.
~/
.
entry, totaling 1,751 square feet
· Nearby, a utility room offers a
of liVing space. There is a stor-washer and dryer, a counter for
age area and a utility area that
a strong
. folding clothes and a door to the
houses the washer and dryer
room.
garage.
.
and
additional storage. There is
the
utility
room
are
accessible
the hall, the three remaining bed·
. At the opposite end of the
also
a two-car garage. A door
lw&lt;H:ar
.garage,
which
from
the
rooms are larger than average,
. home, the deluxe master suite
leads
from the living room to a
·
comprises
484
square
feet.
offer ample closet space and
; includes a dressing room, a priThe
overall dimensions of
patio.
This one-story home has 2x4
share another full bath,
vate bath and a large walk-in clos71'
by
32'
include
the garage.
exterior-wall framing and a total
A nice-sized storage area and
et with built-in shelves. Across

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424 SECOND AVE.
. GALUPOLIS

D

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,

GLIDER
TEEN PERFORMANCE
- Milly WUfong, Sara Craig,
Carrie Hartson, Beverly Stew·
art, and Jason Harris, left to
rlgbl, view exhibits at an art
museum, a scene In "The
Great Artrageous Adventure,"
to be presented by ~ Middle·
port Cburcb of Christ Teen
Cbolr 7 p.m. Sunday at tbe
church.

Sale Ends Monday!

·,· MIDDLEPORT _ Seven per·
&lt;ormances. of "Tbe Great Artra·
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Ieven CUrtis Chapman bave been ·
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"Maximum Jmpac~'; for Ibis montb
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'11 15 ..., ......
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ll'avellng to several churches !n
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Other performances are Feb.. 26
tb Ath
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Christ, March 12 at the Gallipolis
Christi Cburcb. The fmal perforan ·
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·• VINTON - Amanda M. Davis,
daughter of Mitzie Davis of Yin·
Jqn. was recently chosen as a finalist in the 1995 National Teen-Ag~r .
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· •, Tbe pageant is to be held June
16 and 17 at Dominican College In
Columbus. Participation in the
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rcir their superior commitment to
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-

'

Chris tolunez, 23, says in a lawsuit that the New York Knicb forward
showed up without a ticket for an event at Tavern on the Gft1en in June, and
enJaed the mtaurant despite the objections of security guards
Nunez's lawsuit, filed Wednesday, says he asked Oakley to ·step out of the
room and the player "responded i1bJib.u ·
hit N~ez in the neck.
w S!re and derogatory language" and

deaf, said in a written response 10 a report~~r's
queslion. "I understand if she wants to use her
ability to speak to make an impression to the
hearing public. But she tallced to an audience
who can't evaluate her ability to speak he·
cause we can't hear her."

'-

~e

NEW YORK (AP)-Arestawantsecurity guard says he was slam-dunked by
Charles Oakley, and wants lhe basketball AII:Star to pay him $2.5 million.

•

-FJ

Screenwrit~rs

explicit promise to abolish it, but
the WGA says even a small strilce
against tbe credit is significant. A
ratification vote is. set for next
month.
The directors' union is opposed
to the limits. It also resents a new
clause giving writers a cbance to
see tbe director's cut of a movie
before it is seen by the producer.
''The director bas tbe contractu·
al right to negotiate for the possessive credit as part of our (contract)," said Gene Reynolds, the
'DGA's president "Every director
. bas that right."
·
And almost every director,
including a fust·limer, lakes it even though fllmmaking is a buge·
ly collaborative process.
. "A lot or-fairly bigb-powered·
writers bave been incensed about
Ibis for as long as I can remember," Said Simon.
"The possessive credit misleads
tbe public,"' be said. "It reinfon::es

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lead.

take a43-36Iead.

Kansas led 64-41 after Jacque Vaughn bit a free
John Amaecbi ·hit a free throw to bring the Nittany
as lhe Jayhawks defeated tJie Sooners 93-76 Saturday throw and Raef LaFrentz completed a three-point play Lions within nine, after Michigan State reeled off 13
with a dominating inside attack.
to c:ap a 17·2 run. _
straight points to take a 65-43 lead with five minutes
Seven-footer Greg Ostertag scored 17 points to lead
Ryan MinOr, the Big Eight's leading scorer. had 26 left.
points for the Soonel!, before fouling out with 4:28 to
Jon Garavaglia added 12 points for the Spartans.
A technical on Oklahoma center James Mayden play. .
No. 8 Maryland 80, Florid• SL liS- At College
with Seven minutes in the balf led to a IG-0 Jayhawks
No. 7 Mlcblcan St 68, Penn State 53 -At State Par, M~. eightb·ranlced Maryland, in datlger of losing
run that produced a 37-24lead. .
College, Pa., Shawn Respen scored 21 points as No. 7 tbe momentum gained by its victory this week over
The Sooners were then called for two technicals- Michigan State beld onto flfst place in _the Big Ten No. 1 Nortb Carolina, &amp;book off Florida State 80-65
one on the bench and one on coach Kelvin Sampson- with a 68-53 victory over Penn State Saturday._
Saturday with a Jate·H.() run.
witb· about IS minutes left, after an Oklahoma player
Penn Stare (13·7, 5-6 Big Ten) controlled the early
Joe Smitb and Johnny Rhodes each scored IS points
w&amp;\ knocked down by Scot Pollard under the Kansas )liiQl or the game, r~ng tbe Sparllins into a slow balf- for tbe Terrapins (19-4, 9-2), wbo led by only two
basket. No foul was called.
court contest .that tbe Nittany L-ions led 32-28 at balf. points with 5:20~maining.
·
The ~bnicals were called as Kansas brought tbe time.
Maryland's defense forced tbe Seminoles into com-·
ball down tbe court past Oklahoma's bench. Greg
But tbe Spartans (17-~. 9-2) got the running game milling a season-high 24 turnovers.
Gurley made all four free throws, for a.58-39 Kansas going in tbe second half, opening with a 15-4 run to
Scott Shepherd scored a career-bigb 17 points for

the Jaybawks (18-3, 7-2).

·

··

·

·· . ·

Florida Slate (11-9, 4-7), all in the first half on 7-for-8
shooting.
The Seminoles' leading scorer Bob Sura. bothered
by ou.Jike symptoms, did not start either half and fmished with 12 points. Swa' s only flrst·balf basket made
bim tbe fmt player in school history to reacb 2.000
career points.
Dllnob 104, Iowa '17 (OT) - At Champaign, Ill.,
Kiwane Garris scored 27 points, including a key basket
in ovenime, and Shelly Clark added 25 in leading
UUnois to a 104-97 victory Sa1urday over Iowa.
Illinois (16-7, 7-4 Big Ten) frittered away a 13·
point first-balf lead as tbe Haw keyes (1 4·9·, 4· 7)
caugbt up and took a 52-51 edge with 13 minutes left
The lllini bad to slage a comeback themselves in tbe
final seconds to tie the score at '88-88 and force tlie
extra period.

·

Xavier, Wittenberg, ONU and Ear[ham among victors
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff. ·
Massey bad 16 points and four
other Musketeers were in double
figures as Xavier defeated
Wisconsin-Green Bay· '76-SS
Saturday in the . Midwestern
· Conference.
Massey bas been in double dig·
its 21 of 22 games this season.
Cbris :Westlake led the Fighting
Phoenix with 20.
Xavier never trailed and was up
34-28 at halftime._Tbe Fighting
Phoenix scored right away to cut
the lead to four, but Xavier came
back with an 18-6 run !bat ended
with 12:22Ieft in the game.
. Tbe Musketeers (19-3 , 11-0
MCt) turned tbe ball over only
five times to Green Bay's 12
turnovers, wbicb included five
steals by Michael Hawkins.
Hawkins also bad 16 points for .
Xavier: ·
The victory is the 17th straight

for Xavier against MCC opponents attempts ftom beyond the arc.
in tbe Cincinnati Gardens. Tbe
Jobn Burns bad 16 points for
team bas a 69-4 record there for Wittenberg, while Steve Setty
MCC games. ·
.
. scored 11 and Travis Robertson
Jeff Nordgaard added 14 points bad 10 points and 10 assists.
for Wisc.-Green Bay (15-6, 7-3)
For Denison, Brian Malinowski
and Ben Berlowski bad 11 .
scored 16 points and Casey Cbroust
Pete Sears added 12 and Larry and Jeff Hem eacb had 14.
Sykes bad 11 for tbe Musketeers.
Wittenberg Ied48-21 at the half.
TJ. ·Johnson added 10 and was g.
Oblo Northern 70, M1rletta 52
for-8 at lhe free-throw line.
At Marietta, D_' Artis Jones
Wittenberg 93, Denison 59
scored 19 or his 24 points in tbe
At Springfield, Jamel King bad second half, but it was an early run
18 points and led a balanced tbat propelled Obio Northern to a
Wittenberg scoring attack as tbe 70-52 victory over Marietta on
Tigers defeated Denison 93-59' on Saturday.
Saturday.
.
Obio Nortbem (18-4, 15-1 Obio
Wittenberg (17-6, 11 ~4 North . Conference) cli 0 che!l at least a
Coast Conference) jumped out to a share of the conference title with
23-6 lead eight minutes into tbe Balwin-Wallace . However, tbe
game. Antbony Robinson scored Polar Bears will get bomecourt
nine of his 16 points during the run. advantage throughout tbe league
The Big Red (9-14, 6-9) bit only tournament becaus·e they beat
1-of-12 from three-point range, Baldwin-Wallace twice.
while tbe Tigers made 10-of-21
Nick Bertke and Jon Lepinski

Earlham 94, OberOn 71
bad six points apiece during a 20-4 Andy Huffman added 10 points.
At Richmond, Ind. , Dante
run to open the game. Marietla (7 •
Eric Jobnson led Capilal with 25
15, 3-13) never got within 10 points. MUte Potts scored 23 and Brown scored 20 poin!S to lead five
points after that.
·
Chad Coconis chipped in 18.
Earlham players in double figures
Jason Hayes bad 17 points and Musklngum 91, John CarrollliO as the Quakers defeated Oherlin
16 rebounds to lead the Pioneers.
At New Concord, Bryian 94-71 on Saturday.
Earlham (6-16, 4- 11 North
Man Bergman added 15 points. _ Burson scored 22 points and Kevin
Lepinski fmished with 13 points Troyer bad 17 as Muskingum beat Coast Conference) outscored
Oberlin 2,2·5 over tbe final 6 112
and Bertke scored 12 for Obio John Canon 91·60 on Saturday.
Nonhem.
Lance Ream scored 13 points minutes of the flfst half to take a
Mount Union 77, Capltal73
• for tbe Muskies (11-11, 7-9 Ohio 48-30 lead.
At alliance, Todd Simon scored Conference) and Man Rapol added
The Quakers continued in tbe
second half, outscoring Oberlin (4·
25 points as Mount Union used a 10.
second-half run to defeat Capital
Shannon Viclcers scored 11 and 17, 2-12) 25-6 in tbe f~rst nine min·
77-73 on Satilrday.
Joey Bigler bad 10 tor John utes of the second half to take a 7338 lead.
Mount Union (9·13, 5-11 Obio Carroll.
_
Conference) went on a 13-3 run 10
Muskingum jlimped out to a 21Jason Jolmson added 18 points
make 57-44 with 12:431eft.
0 lead and John Carroll (12-10, 9-7 for Earlham, while _Nathan Boyce
Capital (12-10, 7-9) used a 10-~~ ). Muskingum led 46-14 at scored 15, Ed Stewart bad 12 and
· e.
.
Eric England added I I.
spun to cut the lead to 6&amp;-65 with Josh Ellison led the Yeomen
two minules to go.
Tb Blue Streaks' London
But Mount Union bit6-of-S .free • Fletcb llit a layup with 18:18 left _with 16 points. Darryl Seldon
throws in last 1:30 to seal it. Neal in tbe
e to make it 48-23, but added II and Aid Freuman and
Richards bad 14 points .and 10 John C oil would get no closer Crnig Jones each scored I0.
rebounds for the Crusaders while than 25 the resl of the game.

TOLEDO, Obio (AP) - The Muscaro said tbe allegations were
Ohio Higb School Athletic "just sickening to read."
Association is studying allegalions
·~At tbis point, I want to give it
that private bigh scbools have bro- some more thought. My immediate
ken its bylaws by reauiling players . reaction is that I am extremely dis·
away from public schools.
turbed and disappointed with what
OHSAA commissioner Clair I read," be said.

The allegalions were included in
"They (Catholic schools) buy
a series in The Blade Ibis week . their players, don't you know it."
The newspaper reported some area - said Howard Mabel, assistant prin·
bigb school coacbes routinely cipal at Stan High.
break OHSAA rules by recruiting
He and others, such as Dan
· students for athlelics.
McLemore, Scott High School
"It puts a dark cloud over all of girls' basketball coacb, told the
us involved in interscholastic alb- newspaper tbat Catholic schools
Ieties," Muscaro said.
recruit the best athletes by offering
The OHSAA, wbicb represents scbolarsbips, financial aid and
all public bigb schools and most other incentives.
private ones, regulates interTbis includes calling other
scholastic sports in the state. Its schools' star athletes, visiting !heir
rules forbid coaches from initiating parents and promising cbampi·
contact with prospective athletes .onships and college scholarships.
about transfer.;. ·
Many of tbe allegations centered
Coacbe~ at the city's parochial on the city's two nationally ranked
schools denied recruiting aiiega' programs - Scott Higb boys' bas·
. lions.
ketball and Stan Higb baseball.
The Toledo City League
&lt;;:ity League commissioner Ed
includes public and private schools. Scrutcbins said there always bas
Pla}'en who live in a school district been a lot of jealousy and bitter·
. sometimes play for a parochial ness between private. and public
school in the same league.
. schools in the league.
Tbe newspaper said a former
"It really sticks in a coach's
assistant basketball coacb at cr11w when you have to compete
Central Catholic Higb Scbool against a kid wbo lives in your own
acknowledged that he frequently distri~t,'' ScrutCbins said.
visited one young star who was
Parochial school coaches said
attending a public school. The for· !bey did nothing wrong.
.
mer conch bought him lunches and
"The feeling is tbat if you are a
offered to pay balf tbe player's Catholic school, you automatically
tuilion so be could come to Central recruit athletes," said Ed
Catholic.
Heintscbel, athletic director and
Tbe former coacb, Grover basketb3n coach at StJohn's High.
Cummings, alleged tbat other
"But I can tell you Ibis: I have
Central Catholic coaches also never, ever recruited a basketball
requiled.
player at St.John's."
Smile coaches, such ·as Rogers
"When we did it we knew
exactly what we were doing," he Higb ba~ketball coach
art
said.
"I
did
it
!Jecause
it
was
better·
Schroeder,
asked
for
state
and
local
HANDS TO HEAVEN- Eutem's Mlab Otto (44) stretches bb
, · investigations. ·
binds to the beaveM while genlng his sbot up in front of teangnate . ing our chance at winning.''
Rumors
of
recruiting
regularly
"From what I read, several
Jason Sheets (:W) alid two Federal HockinJI players during Friday
swirl through the city.
players should be ineligible for this
night's Hocking Division 11ame at Eastern Hlgb Sc:bool, where the
Lllnc:en won 60-46. (Scott Wolfe photo)

a

Call 446·1115

year and so01e ·coaches sane· Crystal Ellis said the allegations
are "rumors ·and innuendos'-' not
tioned," be said.
"Tbe question is, do we Iiave worthy of an inquiry.
"I'm not going to start chasing
the intestinal fortitude to do soDiebutterflies," be said.
·
thing about it?'' City scbool superintendent

Findlay posts 86-66 win
over Rio Grande women
RIO GRANDE - FiVe Findlay players tallied double-digit offense
to push the Oilers to an 88-68 win over Rio Grande's Red women
Saturday.
The Oiler.; canned 18 of 30 field-goal atlempjS in tbe fmt balf on
their way to taking an 11-poinllead at halflime. Rio Grande fell behind
. • in large part because or 10-for-27 field-goal shooling before balflime.
Rio's Stacy Riley lied Findlay's JeMi McGraw for scoring honon;
with 21 points. .
•
The Redwonien wiU bead north Tuesday lo face Walsh in a 5 p.m.
Stan.

-·-·-·-

FINDLAY (42-46=811)·- McGraw 6/11 -2/3 -3/4=21, Homer 7112·
1/I.0/1=17, Clever 214-112-4n=ll. Rafferty 517-010-I/2=11. Wbitt
3/4.()10-416=10, Trenkamp 3/8.()/0-212=8, Kemp 212-0/0-010=4, Miller
214-01,0-0/0=4, Ritter 1/3.()/0.011=2. Totals: 31/56-416-1~
Total FG-'- 35-61 (57.4%)
Rebounds - 43 (Trenkamp 11)
Blocked shots - 2 (by Homer &amp; Rafferty)
Assists -12 (by Pees &amp; Trenkamp)
Steals _; 7 (Trenkamp 2)
·
Turnovers ~ 19
Fouls -21
RIO GRANDE (31-37:611)- Riley 5/14-1/4-8/11=21, Tabor 2164n-212=18, WJnters 5/9-0/G-111=11, Smith 4/9-010' 212=10, Sowers
216-0/1-112=5, Collins 115-010-112=3. Totab: 19/51-511l·IS/l0=68
Total FG- 24-63 (38.1%)
.
Rebounds- 30 (Smith 9)
Blocked shots -1 (by Bostic)
Alsjsta - 16 (Sowers 7)
Steals - II (Sowers 3)
1 • Turnoven-17 ,
Fouls-16

'

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heart - send bouquets
of fragrant OC!Wers to all
your \/;den tines! ,

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•

The final year of competi·
lion for.Gallla Academy's Blue
Angel seniors - Meghan
Kolcun, Brandi Munn and
~lsty Coleman (L·R in the
right-hand photo), who stand
to the len of head coach Ren«
Barnes after receiving angel·
Imprinted basketballs prior to ~
· Thursday night's 41-point win - over Logan - hu seen them
lead their dub to their second
. straight Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League crown. In the
other photo, Coleman, who
said she hopes her team will let
her get back Into action after
her recovery from . surgery, is
taking a few snips from the net
in the first of what she and her
teammates .hope will be five
trips up the ladders. That
quest will begin Wednesday
night on the University of Rip
Grande campus against
Jackson. (Times-Sentinel photos by G. Spencer Osborne)

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LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP)- Technical fouls against
Oklahoma fueled rallies in each balf for No. 2 Kansas

OHSAA studying charges ot recruiting by priv~te !Jigh schools

"lntrodueinfl A: Unf4ue and Ne~ Coneept irt rannllifl"

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Top 25 college hoops

With tourney time almost here, they want ,f#ght more-dates on their farewell tour

HmHm llA~NING

f!llh ... ~~'-'~~~~' ~w~o; ~~ ...n.. l 11"' •••.

THE ODD
COUPLE

blues band from Chicago featuring
Dietra Farr on vocals, will con·
elude the event 1 p.m. Sunday.
For more information contact
John at 373-6640 during the day,
Don McBride' k73·5093 during tbe
evening or in West Virginia, Jessica at (304)295-5585.
The event is sponsored by tbe
_Blues, Jazz and Folic Music Society
·of ~arietla, a non-profit all volun·
tecr organization and is funded in1
pan by Arts Bridge.

SH T~ I S M CV I~ J ~ IH l.
Cl"E 1 0 IO!R HO! SE

n,. r~..,~. r.,. •r.

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River City Blues festival
sch~duled for Marietta

T~mtw.

. ..
·
uon.
. would never buy The songs are
Pippert also offers varialio.n on upbeat They remiDd me of wben I
the theory that peo(!le are most was outside and playing baseball,
attached !O tbe .~us1c tbe~ bear at the swimming pool, and all of
when they re 18.
that stuff, fmt Jove and all or those
"I'm thinking it starts at 12," little emotions when 1 was a prePippert said. "It's music tbat I teen or a little teen.'·

say directors hogging the spotlight

By JOHN HORN
ry (the French word for author),
AP Entertainment Writer
which holds that a movie's director
LOS ANGELFS (AP) - "Quiz is also its creatoc.
Show" is "a Robert Redford
According to the Writers Guild
film.'' "Boys on the Side" is "a of America, 80 percent-of movies
film by Herbert Ross." And it's released from 1991 to 1993 includ'_'Jobn Carpenter's 'In tbe Mouth ed a possessiv.e credit. Only 16 perof Madness."'
cent of those films were written
'~:here's one problem - no and directed by tbe same person.
director wrote any of these movies.
One notable exception to tile
Angry over two decades of what trend is Woody Allen. Although be
it· perceives as preferential treat· is probably tbe writer-director most
ment, the screenwriters' union entitled to a possessive credit, be
announced new contract language does not lake one.
Thursday aimed at blocking tbe
The gtilld surrendered any claim
movi~'lttedit power grab. Directors to th e credit in the early 1970s,
pro101se to fight
- . when producers promised it only
, , "I just_think it's inaccurate and ~ould be used for sucb superstar
ll s offensive to all tbe people who duectors as Billy Wilder and
worked on a movie - not just the Alfred Hitchcock.
writer," said ~avid Koepp. He co"We, like fools, believed
wrote "Jurass1c Parle" and "The them," sa,id Roger Simon ("EnePaper," whic~ were "Steven mies: A Love Story") whO chaired
Spielberg" and "Ron Howard"' a WGA subCommi~ that worked
fiJn;l~· ~pectively.
,
with producers and tbe Directors
I Just have one quesuon: What Guild or America to start abolishdoes 'dire_cted by' not say?"' said ing the credit. .
Koepp. ~~o is b_otb ~~iting and
As pan or tbe WGA's new coldu-ecung The Tngger. He won't lee live bargaining agreement
make it "a Da"!d Koelll! film."
movie producers pledge to "exer:
The possessive credit grew out cise control" over granting possesof the controversial "auteur'' theo· ·sive crediiS to directors. There is no

MARIEITA • Has wintertime
given you 1hose low-down dirty
blues? Well the River City Blues
' Fe~lival gives a voice to just that
attttude. The three-day event will
feature national as well as local
blues artists.
The Nighthawks a four-piece
bouse r.ockin' blues band from
Washing10n D.C. will get the fcslival off on a blue note frjday
March 17.
'
Featuring Mart Wenner on bar·
. monica the band will perform -9
p.m. at the Hotel Lafayeue in Marietta
~atunlay, March 18 an amateur
blues contest will be bcld 12:30
p.m. with six regional blues bands
perfonning .
The Lonnie Brooks Blues Band
will follow 9 p.m. Saturday. Tbe
s•x·p•ece band from Chicago, features :"lhgator Recording Artist,
Lonme Brooks on guilar and
vocals.
Mississippi Heat, a six-piece

••
.
. Your strongest song and life
u~fluences come when you are in
b•gb scbool and colle~e.'' said
:chert Unmacbt, ~ edllor of M
_treet,!oumal, an m~ustry magazme: But peopl~ didn't want· to
;.dm•~tbat they hk~d songs like
h.{ ·~btl!P My L1fe." '
arvm Pippert teaches a .~urse
on popular culture and_rock n. roll
~ Roa~o~~ College ·~ Roanoke,
a., an IS students hsten to the
same songs he does.
''They know relatively old
Rolling Stones songs," said Pip·
pen, an associate sociology profes·
sor wbo grew up in tbe '70s .
'~So11_1ebow these 18 to _22 )'earolds like the stilff that tbeD' parents
like; as opposed to my genera-

February 12, 1995

Ohio college basketball

Turn the be~tarqf.!f7d: Radio stations embrace the '70s

By AMY WESTFELDT
wbo li~tened to the mus1c ~ tbe~ bers 'wbo worked for the station in
Associated Preu Writer
formative years and bave JUSt b1t the 1970s
PHILADELPffiA (AP) - The tbe age wben they're old enough to
·'This 'format is ·Oin 10 be in
decade ~veryone couldn't wait to ~.it
· every market in tb~ cluntr b
be over •s badt. .
.
,
People tend . to be most _ midyear next year, .. said ~re~
Fueled by tblrtysometbmg nos· attached to the muSic of their teen Strassell vice resident or rotalgia for tbe simpler limes of tbe and early 20 years," said Julian grammi~ forp WCGY
in
' 70s, radio is bringing back music Breen, tbe program director at Boston :bicb switched formats
from the era associated with bell WMGK-FM in Pbiladelpbia, wbicb last September "Everyone has to
bottoms, big bair and _the Bradys.
~ent all-'70s. 'last summer. have one.''
·
AJJ.'70s radio stations are crop- ' lbe.re's something about tJiat age
Tiie . '
de
ping up everywhere, combining the that tends to fix a musical taste from t~7 ::a~~i~
ballads of Jim Croce, tbe hard rock among.a lot of people. ~ •
.
formats and markets said Tom
of Led Zeppelin and tbe disco
Just over a year ago, stations in Moon The Pbiladelph~ 1 uirer's
''Saturday Night Fever" sound· Tampa, Fla., and Los Angeles were music.critic
nq
track on lhe same peculiar playlist
the first to go all-'70s. Since then,
"It creak:s a nostalgia for a lime .
Playing back tbe oldies is not stations have switched in nine of when tbe world was less fragmentnew to radio, but waxing nostalgic tbe country's 10 largest radio mar· ed musically wben there was not
for tbe_'7.0s is a ·fresb appro~ch. · kets. New York ~s tbe only holdout sucb 8 huge gulf between the blaclc
Execuuves wbo made tbe sw1tch
A Seattle sta110n went a step furof the da and th wbi
say they're targeting tbe people tber and rehired some staff mem- . ~fday," M~ said.e
te pop of

emmei- ~tntintl -Section C

•

~ blow, Nunez says, left him in pain and wiable to work.
NEW YORK (AP)- OJ. Simpson pal
~eili&gt;ral!dy, whowcltsforOakley'sagent, WilliamPoUack,saidOakley
AI
Cowlings
says he also was a friend of
was m Phoenix for the ~.Star game and could not be reached.
Nicole Brown Simpson and isn't about to
portray
her as a drug-abusing floozy.
•
~OCHESTER, N:Y. (AP) - Heather Whitestone, the first deaf Miss
Contrary
to
some
reports,
hel!llid,
his
book
Amenca, spoke to students at the Nalional Technical lnslitute for the Deaf
That bothered some, who said sign language would have been more appropn': currently being shopped to publisherS doesn't
ale.
·
claim Ms. Simpson ledawildlifeof drug abuse
. Whitestone, wbo was crowned in September, spate to 1 mostly deaf
had a great relationship." Cowlings
AI Cowlings
audi~ of about SOO on Thursday. The speech was sent by closcd-&lt;:in:uit and
televJ8K!D to 40 other deaf and milinstream schools.
told TV Guide in an interview in the Feb. 18edilion. "Look,l'velostafriend
- two people.... The media has gotten away from that."
A s~gn-language interpreter translated as Whitestone apoke.
Whitestone,21, who has been profoundly deaf since she infancy usually
C?wlings blasted reportm as "trash" for their r;eaclion tc the killing of
chooses to~ and telies on lip reading. She dido'tleam Ame~ Sign
~SIJ!lpson and Ronald Goldman, and to_Simpson's trial. He said he's
Itm~uage Wltil she was in high school and says she has lrOUble .......~nng and
gomg directly to the public to tell his side, selling up a 900 number that "will
s•grung at lhe same lime.
_- ...-·
allow me to speak - . not for (tlie media) to wri,te it."
·:1Wbia~ your respect for allowing me to communiCate with my best
way,
testone said.
Callers to 1:900-260-ACAC (260-2222) will pay $2.99 a minute to
Brenda TreS$·Mowl of 01i1i said she was shocked that Whitestone spoke hearrecordedmessagesaboutCowlings' - notSimpson's-experiences
aiou~
·
·
Cowlings said it's fair for him to malce money off the case: "Why shouldn •j
"~he apparently forgot who the main audience was," Tre&amp;S-Mow I, who is I? Everybody else has been making money off of me, ... off of OJ."

M

I .

ports

People in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Benny Caner
says a little divine intuvealion kept lhe rain away
as he received a sur on lhe HoD)'WOOd Walk of
Fame.
Clouds threatened, but didn 't deliver
Thursday as the jazz composer, instrwnenlalist,
orchestra Iealec and arranger was honored the day
bef~ his 84th birthday'
.
·. "I called lhe man upstairs and asked if he
could do something about it, he said. "And the
man upsllirs said, 'Give me a little lime I'll ask
her about it.'"
'
· The 200 or so guests included Quincy
Jones, who said Caner has had a profound effect
on his life.
"Everything he's done, I've wanted to do. He's a guy who will give you
the bow, the anow and help you aim it at what you want, M Jones said.
Carter received a Grammy Lifelime Achievement Award in 1987 and is
nominated for four Grammys this year. The awards will be presellled March
I.
· He began working asa.mlisician at age 15,and paved the wayfortheswing
era when he arranged mUSJc for early bands including Cab CaUoway's.
Carter wroce music for grests including Benny Goodman Count Basic
Duke Ellington and GleM Miller.
'
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Sunday 11mes-Sentlnei-Page-C3
- ~~~========~~~~~~~~~====~~~~~
February 12, 1995.

t GAHS

'

Boys basketball

Travis ~. Mags ....,..................' 13 190 14.6 Chad Zimmerman. Logan............... 16
Jeremy Ward, Vinton Co................ 15 217 14.5 P• PlAins, Meigs .......................... 13
ntROUGH GAllES OF FEB. 7
Heslop, Marie11a....................... 16 221 13.8 Scott Decore, Miller......................... 13
Pllyw, TM .......................:.... GlmH Ptl Ave. Tm
Brait Firt, Wellston ......................... 15 312 20.8 Jeremy HiI, Solfhem ................ . .. 16 218 13.6
Ryan M~le, Miller ....................... 13 271 20.8 Jm Simpson, Belpre ....................... 13 175 13.5.
Mike Boyd, Alhens .......................... 14 189 1135
THROUGH GAMES OF FEB.
Ryan W~liams, Southern ................ 16 331 20.7
'
174
13.4
Kabieem
Maxwell,
AI
hens
..............
13
Pllyer,
Team
............".............. Games
Kart Garrett, Belpre ......:................. 15 299 19.9
213
13.3
Coy
Undsay,
Logari
........................
16
Shauna Daugherty, Marielta ...........14
Brad Howe, Jackson ....................... 13 252 19.4
Mason
Fisher,
S&lt;Uhem
...............
16
213
13.3
Erica
Hayes, Vinton Co ..........:....... 18
..... Whiling, Fed..Hock................ 13 243 18.7
Micah
Otto,
Eastern
........................
12
149
12.4
Kathy Coyner, Belpre....... ,.............. 18
Teny Qualls, Gallipolis.................... 14 245 17.5
Chad
Nelson,
Fed.
Hock
................
13
158
12.2
'
Jamie Colebank, Be¥• ................. 18
BUI McGrath, Miller .......................... 13 225 17.3
157
12.1
Bruce
Watd,
River
Valley
...............
13
Mindy Pope, GallipoliS .................... 16
Clalie Bissell, Eastern .................. 13 220 16.9 •
Kris Beglrtf, Logan .......................... 16 · 257 16.1 Jamie Grahan, River Valey ........... 13 151 11.6 Jara Bohlen, Logan......................... 19
Travis Rice. Alexander ................... 14 224 16.0 Mike Lewis, Nels-York .. .................. 12 137 11.4 Kelly Kosi~ Alhens.................. 17
Scoll Hendricks, Warren ................. 15 239 15.9 Doug Uoyd, fWar VaJflj............... 13 148 11.4 Katie Kostolvyz. Athans ................. 17
Gieg James, Rr.'St' ,Valley ............... 13 198 15.2 Joe Grubb, Alexander.. ................... 14 152 10.9 Renee Turley, .S&lt;Mharn ............ :.... 14
Chad Jarvis, Alexander """"""""" 14 213 15.2 Seth Barritt, Warren ........................ 15 162 10.8 Jessica Karr, Eastern...............;...... 17
Jeremy T~. Fed.. Hock ...............13 196 15:1" Cass Cleland, Meigs ...................... 11 118 10.7 Beth Koons, Trimble .............,......... 19
Steve Fink, Wellston ....................... 15 159 10.6 Malldee Argabri!111, Wells1on .......... 18
Ryan Robinson, Marietta ................ 16 241 15.1
Jason Gail, Nels.-York .................... 15 223 14.9 Jared WOlford, Jackson .................. 1.3 137 10.5 Vanessa Compston, Meigs ............. 18

Girls basketball

: SEQAL !oundup

166 10.4 Rebecca Sexton, Jackson............... 16
134 10.3 Amber Blackwell. Meigs ................. 18
130 10.0 . Amber Staten, River VaJlrtf............. 18 .
Jamie Andrews, AleX&lt;Ilder............. J 9
Misty Markins, Alexander ............... 19
7
Jill Shaler, Nels.-York ..................... 18
Pta Ave. Gretchen Unscolt, Fed. Hock ......... 19
322 23.0 Rebecca Evans, Eastern ................ 17
360 22.5 Tara Rutherlord, Logan .................. 19 ·
350 19.4
32'J 17.9 Undsay Shumway, Nels.-York ........14
282 17.6 Brandi Munn, GaUipolis................... 16
308 16.2 Shelly Cook, Logan ......................... 19
274 16.1 Mancil McAfee, Fed. Hock ............. 18
271 15.9 Cinct( Armstead, River Vajlf11,........ 18
213 15.2 Janna Manuel, Swhern ................ 18
253 14.9
274 14.2 . Julie Wagner, Warren ..................... 17
Susan Tackett, Gallipolis ................ 16
254 14.1
245 13.6 Jodie Huck, Warren ........................ 17

213
233
222
233
231
214
224
199
221
160
179
213
199
197
193

do it," said Blue Devil boss Jim Cocluane sank a three-pointer from rU'St in River Valley history.
Osborne to bis charges, wbo the left wing to give tbe Raiders a
Junior guanl Greg James_ be
achieved a split in their season S-4lead with S:341eft ·
was at the line at the 2:S~ mark
series with tbe Raiders and boosted
Tbougb the Blue Devils took tile because of Qualls • first foul _
their lifetime series record to 3-2. lead back when 6-foot·S senior sank one of two free throws to put
"1 knew it was in you. You played center Terry Qualls got bis layup River Valley ahead 12-7 . Thea
with intensity tbe whole giUDe."
and tbe bonus foul sbot to fall, the Gallipolis scored six of the next
The focus of tbe early minutes Raiders began a 7..0 run tbat fea· . eigbt points, lilcluding a four-COO(,
of the game was tbe paint, but · tured a foul circle steal by center in-the-lane jumper from sopbomon:
River Valley began to cbange tbat Bruce Ward tbalthe 6-foot-3 junior guard Dave Rucker tbal bounced 1n
_Y_o_u..,..d_ld_I_L..;.I...:Irn;.;.:e:._w..:y:..:o.:.u..;.co:.:u:.:ld:._~w~be;n;;j~un~i;or:::f;:or:;w:a:rd;;J~am~es;::used:;;'Q;g;et::a:s:lam=d=unlc=(=3::37::),:·the~ black-clad
witb one second left, to cut the
Raiders' lead to 14-13.
· Mid-game rlroughr .
burls Raiders
Blue Devil forward Josh Cook
committed a goaltending 1(iolation
tbat reSulted in Ward's getting the
SCENES · FROM

13.3
12.9
12.3
12.3
12.2
11 .9
11.8
11.7
11.6
11.4
11 .2
11.2

r

11.1

10.9
10.7
m 10.4
163 10.2
173 10.2

•

; Mar1etta tops Jackson to share lead with Lo_
g an; Warren wins .
Valley 72-54. ·
Both teamS were bol from three Greg Theiss 4-0-3=11; Josh Harris
A strong possibility exists tbal point range as Marietta bit oo six of 3..().7=13; Jason Albrecbl 240:4;
Logan and Marietta could be co- 13 wbile the lronmeo driUed 11 ol Tim Binegar 1-0-0=2. Totals: _11champions if the Cbieftains win 24. The Tigers f'misbed witb a 53% 6-23=83
over visiting Gallipolis next Friday average (27 of S1) wblle limiting
wbile Marietta plays bost to Athens Jackson to 40% on 20 of SO from
JACKSON
in the league wrap up. Tbe other the fJeld. Marietui dominated the
.
(11-24-10-~1=66)
· contest will see Warren traveling to
boards 32-18, led by Brad Kroft
Jared Wolford 2-4-2=18; Andy
River Valley.
and Greg Theiss witb eigbt eacb. Yeager 2-2-0=10; Brad Howe 4-SMarietta 83, Jackson 66
wbile Howe claimed nine for JHS.
S=28; Sbane Sbanton 0-0-4=4; ·
At Jackson, Ryan Robinson
In the reser:ve game, the Tigers Silane Wolford 1-0-4=6. Totals: 9.
poured in 31 poiniS for tbe winners. toot over fJrst place at I3-1 with a 11·15=66
and Brad Howe bad 28 for the S2-36 victory. Jaclcson fell to 6-S.
lronmen, as the two combined for
-~---•Warren Loca145, Athen~38
.
11 of tbe 17 field goals from tbree·
MARIETI'A
At Tbe Plains, the Warriors'
-· ·
·
point range recorded in tbe game.
(22-20-14-27::83)
Scou Hendricts saw bis free throw
..
111114 15...11 pmn
Robinson swished all six or
Tim Heslop 3-0-4=10; Ryan streak of 21 straigbt broken as be ·
' Illm
· ~ L II! DE Marietta's wbile Howe got live of Robinson 4-6-5=31; Brad Kroft 3- missed tbe fJrsttwo, but came back
: Wbeelersburg ...... 14 3 1392 1104 JJa::,:ckson~~'!s!11~._...,_:__...~0~-4!=~1~0~;~Jo:e~V~u:!k:!:o:,vi~c~I~-O~-~o=;2~;_:to~s:tart~a~ne:w:;,:~~b~v,::=412
: Logan ................. .14 4 1243 I~ •
• Marieua.: ............. l4 s1301 102.5
·: Fairland ............... 12 S 117S 1091
: Greenfield ... J....... 12 61160 1026
• Warren Local ...... 12 61039 984
: Cbesapeake. ... :.... 12 71180 989
• Soutbern .............. 11 81291 1221
.... Portsmouth ......... .10 61127 1040
;: . Point Pleasant........9 7 96S 909
· · South Point.. ..........8 8 1038 978
; · · Meigs ....................6 9 915 990 ·
1995 NISSAN
·. · Atbens ...................7 10 972 1009
1994~5 NISSAN
REG. CAB4X4
:. .Gallipolis...............6 10 8S7 930
SENTRA LE, 4 DR.
: . RiverValley ..........6 10 987 1072
Air, cassette, chrom pkg.
NC, cruise, sport'seats,
·~ Jaclcson ......... :........4 12 9S7 1040
much more.
; . : Vinton Cciunty ......4 13 1024 1307
:
(SEOJ\L varsity)
,~. I11m
lY L II! .Ql
', ; Logan ....................9 2 739 663
; . Marieua .................9 2 ' 764 S71
;;. WarrenLocal ........7 3 SS9 S31
.-:. Gallipolis ...............4 6 488 547 .
: . River VaYey .......... 3 7 S94 683
1995 NISSAN ALTIMA
1994.5 NISSAN
:: · Albens ............. ...... 3 8 S96 677
SENTRA LE 2 DR. ·
• Jaclcson ..................2 9 646 714
GXE4SPD.
: TOTALS
37 37 4386 4386
NC, cassette, power windows &amp;
AJC, eruise, sport seats, plush
.. :
(SEOAL r-rvet)
locks, plus much more.
much more.
;· Ium
lY L II! .Ql
; . Marieua .............. .lO I 610 421
•.' Warren Local ........9 1 497 33~
:.. Jackson ..................6 5 452 447
: · River Valley .: ........3 7 362 4S8
:., GallipOlis .............. .3 7 369 408
. : j\lbens .................. .3 8 327 443
• Logan .. :................ .3 8 402 507
;· TOTALS
37 Y1 3019 3019
1995 NISSAN
1995 NISSAN QUEST
! . Feb. 8 result:
PATHFINDER 4X4, 4 DR.
. MINIVAN
_;:. Logan 73 Athens 66 (mu)
•.. Logan 42 Athens 30 (r)
Air, full power, cassette,
Any Quest in stock.
:: Feb. 9 resuh:
ctuise,
much more.
5 to choose from .
: South Point S6 Buf-Wayne 3S (mu)
. : · Feb. 10 resulls:
~ Gallipolis 72 River Valley S4
· River Valley 40 Gallipolis 37 (r)
:. Warren Local45 Athens 38
: · Warren Local 50 Athens 24 (r)
: Marieua 83 Jackson 66
·
._ Marieua S2 Jackson 36. (r)
1995 NISSAN KING CAB
1995 NISSAN MAXIMA SE
· Vinton (:ounty 72 Nels-York S7
4X4TRUCKS
Miami Trace 64 Greenflel;d 48
AUTOMATIC
9
spd
.. 4 cyl.. air, cassette,
'· . MiUer 63 Southern 60 (01)
V-6, 190, full power, sunroof, leather,
chrome
pkg., plus more.
; .. Pt. Pleasant S6 Wahama 45
Bose Audio, plush much more.
: . Wbeelersburg.87 Noltbwest 47
i ' South Point 69 Coal Grove ~3
; COOsapealce 61 Buf-Wayne 59
: Belpre 55 Meigs 41
·
·~ Portsmouth 72 Day-Jefferson 68
;: (mu)
:i Feb. 11 games:
: Gallipolis a1 Warren Local (mu)
: Waverly at Athens
.: Alexander at Ponsmouth
4 Door,
V6, auto., super black, gray tJim,
·.:: Logan a1 Cbillicolbe
·
Cherry red. V6, a..o., PW, POL.
Blue, VB, auto., air, cass.,
. rear a1r,
' one owner
. ..
AM/FM cass., air, cust. wheet
.custom,
crUise,
. local. One owner.
' · Ironton at South Point
Woo $21,!195
Woo
$18,995
Loaded
Wao $14,995
; .Fairland at River Valley (mu)
1
NOW'20,995
.: Meigs at Wabama (mu)
NOW'6,995
NOW 17,995
· NOW 11
• Feb. 13games:
,.
92 MITSUBISHI
.: Wellston at Meigs (mu)
93 FORD ESCORT LX
&gt; Jack.son at River Valley (mu)
4 Dr., auto., black,air, AM/FM
Gray, 5 speed, POL, AM/FM,
4 Or., maroon; auto. with air,
Blue frost, auto .. air, PW,
Feb. 14 games:
cass.;local
car,
great
buy.
cassette
AMJFM
cassette.
POL, &amp;ssette,
, Albens at Cbillicolbe (mu)
w•• $8,995
w•• S6,995
Woo $8,995
local one owner.
: .' S011tb Point at Fairland .
NOW 17,995
NOW 18,495
NOW 114,995
• Jack.son at Vinton County
~ · East Clinton at Greenfreld
90 NI SSAN MAXIMA GXE
90 CHEV. S-10TRUCK
·. River Valley 111 Point Pleasant
2x4, 5 spd., maroon, AM/FM
2 Dr . red, 5 spd. wfa.ir, cass.,
Gray, V-6, 5 speed with air, V-6, auto., maroon, vefour trim,
:: · Wabama at Meigs
caoo. Priced to Sell.
all power options, t-owner.'
low m1leage, locaJ one owner.
stereo, low mileage.
~Feb.t5aames:
w•• S5.495
Woo$5,995 .
Woo $11 ,995
Woo$6,995
·• Point Pleasant at Gallipolis (mu)
1
NOW 14,995
NOW '1'0,995
NOW 5,795
. NOW 15,995
: ·Alellander at Meigs (mu)
• Feb.l7p-•
,
89 HONDA CIVIC
89 DODGE DAKOTA
89 FORD F1 50 2X4
90 PONTIAC LEMANS
•. GallipOlis II Logan .
·
2X4 TRUCK
4 Or., 5 opd., AA\IFM cass.,
Truck, 6 cyf., XLT, 5 opd .. AMJFM
: . Warren Local at River Valley .
2 Door,
maroon, one DWI"lir, runs great.
cass.,
air,
local
ooe
owner.
V-6,
auto.,
air.
5
Speed,
air
..
: Atbells at MarieUa
,
'
Wll$8,915
woo $5,495
Was $4,995
Coal Grove 81 Fairland
NOW 14,595
NOW'8,595
: Vinton County at Meigs
NOW 14,995
NOW'1 '
: Day-Jdfc:noo at Portsmouth
-'===
Soutbem st Fedctal Hocking
. Soutb Webster at Wbeelersburg
: · South Point at Olesapeake .
: Feb.18pmes:
1627 Murdoch Ave., Parkersburg
-.(Jalllpolia 11 Wbeelersburl!
::Nel.soiiViUe-York at Jackson
304 485-8451
::Palnt.Valley 81 OnjCnfJeld
:

:c

slraigbl His successful free tbrow
shooting began last week with one
against Marietta, 1S-1S against
Belpre, and five of five against

JacksOn.
Athens opened up a 10-6 rust
period lead and built an 18-131ead,
(See SEOAL on C-3) .

~:

S-T-R-E-T-C-H

~;
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Your Dollar!

•
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•
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age StandingS

~

_.,...

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Prices And
Payments
Clearly
Marked
On
Windshields

NISSAN

:
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;.o' .
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PRICE

1989 FORD TAURUS GL,.#4856, blue, AMIFM cass.,
cruise, tilt, power steering &amp; wlndows ..............$4995
1990 TOYOTA TRUCK, #4727, blue, AM/FM,
cassette, air, toolbox, rear bumper....................$5995
1991 CHEVY S-10, #4784, 2tone paint, AM/FM
cassette, rear slider, cloth lnterlor.....................$6495
1989 CHEVY S-1 0, #4807, brown, AM/FM cassette,
rear step bumper, dual mirrors ............ :............. $4995
1989 HONDA CIVIC CRX, #4808, blue, air, AM/FM
cass., rear defroster, sport wheels .................... $5665
1989 CHEVY S-1 0, #4809, sport wheals, fiberglass
topper, dual mirrors, AM/FM ...............................$5665
1990 DODGE DAYTONA, #4810, air, AM!FM cassette,
1111, air bag, r!'ar defroster ...................................$5495
1991 DODGE DYNASTY, #481 8, black, air, automatic,
. AM/FM, air bag, rear defroster ........................... $6675
1990 CHEVY LUMINA, #41129, red, air, automatic,
AM/FM, cloth Interior, tilt, i:rulse ........................$5995
1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM, #4834, air, automatic,
tilt, cruise, AMIFM cassette, cloth lntarlor ........ $5995
1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, #4843, air, automatic,
AM/FM, cloth Interior, 4 door ........,..................... $5495
1988 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, #4855, blue, automatic,
air, AM/FM,tllt, cloth lnterlor ............................... $3995
1992 PLYMOU1ti SUNDANCE, #4816, red, auto., air,
tilt, cruise, air bag, AM/FM, rear defroster ........ $6995
1991 CHEVY S-10, #4828, red, V6 eng.,
AM/FM cass., sport wheals, rear slider,

~.

L
'

'

J

action...

(Continued from C-2)
but hit a nine minute drougbt in the
last part of the second period and
early third quarter as Warren took a
2S-18 lead. With 2:18 remaining,
Warren was clinging to a 3S-33
lead, but Hendricks sparked the
winners by bitting a perfect eight
for eigbt a1 the line in the final 1: 17
ofplay.
·
Neither team sbot well. especial·
ly from tbree point range, as Warten rmished with a 32.5% shooting,
including 0 of 3 on tbree. pointers.
Atbens sbot just 29.4% and went
tbree of 14 on three point goals.
Hendricks. ied Warren with 16
points and Dan Greenwalt added
10, wbile ShiUDel Maxwell, Mike
Boyd and Bryce Lonas all netted
10 for tbe Bulldogs.
·

-•-•-•-

WARREN LOCAL
(6-10-11-111=45)
Scott Hendricks 2-0-12= 16;
Natlian Evans 3-0-2=2; Chad Can·
field 2..()..1=5; Dan Greenwalt 3-04=10; Erik Reusser 3-0-0=6; Setb
Barritt 3-0-0=6. Totals: 13-0·
19=45
ATHENS.
(10-11-6-14 =38)
'
Shamel Maxwell S-0-0=10;
Kabieem Maxwe111-0-l=3; Everett
Gatbron 0..0-1=1; Mike Boyd 3-11=10; Jeff McAllister 1·0·2=4 ;
Bryce Lonas 2-2-0=10. Totals: 12·
3-5=38
Reserve score - ·Warren SO,
Athens 24.

POMEROY
618 EAST MAIN ST.

GALLIPOLIS
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE :

992-6674
446·0303
OPEN MOND.AY-FRIDAY 9-6; SATURDAY 9·5
MasterC'ard!VIsa/Discover

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
. ~..

WE HAVE THEM ALLU! .

Gea
·''t

Chevy • GMC • Pontiac Olds - Buick • Cadillac - GEO

JIMMY

·.•' .

\ '

••

s1 1000 BELOW INVOICE ON MOST NEW NISSAN

TRUCKS INCLUDING KING CAB V6 4X4!

1995 OLDS.
CUTLASS
SUPREME SL

4 Door, 4X4, apple red, locking
drff., aluminum wheels, auto., air, ve, 2 Dr., cruise; auto., air, power
power windows &amp; locks. cruise, ·windo.ws &amp; locks, dual air bags,
lill, SL decor, cassette.
·
antl·lock brakes.

1995
CADILLAC
DEVILLE
V8, auto ., air, tilt, cruise, leather,
cassette &amp; CD player,
Calypso green.

$23 949 .• $11i 693· $34,695
PRE-OWNED £ARS &amp; TRUCKS

I

1991 CHEVY CORSICA, #4831, auto., air, tilt, rear
defroster, power loc:ks, AM/FM, cloth Interior .. $6945
1989 FORD RANGER XLT, #4837,long bed,
automatic, air, AM/FM cass., topper,
aport wheels,.bed mat ........................................ $5995

..·,..

. 1993 DODGE SHADOW, 114754, white, 2 door,
AM/FM, sport wheels, cloth Interior .................. $7671

.

4

1992
OLDS.CIERA,
#4773, cloth
AM/F~M~~c~~as~s~·~·:~a;lr,~~J ,~
rear defroster,
tilt, cruise,
1990 NISSAN TRUCK, 114823,w
.,, ,h; t;~tei, ~~~:~~~.~~~·rJ
bed liner, sport wheels, dual m
1990 MAZDA EXTRA CAB TRUCK, 114740.-(&amp;ar
seats, AM/FM cass., rally wheels, low mlle• ...:.$7495
1993 FORD TEMPO GL, 114774, V6, auto., air, AM/FM ·
. cassette, tilt, power locks, white ....................... $8145
· 1991 CHEVY CAPRICE, #4852, V-8, light pewter, air,
auto., AM/FM, power windows &amp; locks .........:... $8295
1993 CHEVY CAVALIER RS, 114825, auto., air, AM/FM
cass., tilt, crulsa, lu~gage rack .......................... $8565
1992 FORD TAURUS GL, #4700, AM/FM cass., air,
auto., P. windows &amp; rear defroster, blue ........... $8995
. 1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, #4734, air, auto.,
AM/FM, cloth Interior, crulae .............................. $8995
1993 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, #4776, black,
air, automatic, AM/FM CBBS., V6, till, cruise,
power windows . ............................................... $1 0,470
1992 DODGE CARAVAN,II4n8, 7 pass., Ult, cruise,
air, auto., AM/FM cass., P. equip........................ $9520
1993 NISSAN TRUCK, #4785, King Cab, red, auio.,
AM/FM cass., rear flip seats, bed liner ........... $11 ,995
1993 CHEVY CAVALIER RS, 114795, auto., air, green,
alloy wheels, P. locks, cloth Interior..................$8982
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, 114799,7 pass., V6, air,
automauc, AM/FM, tilt, crulse.......................... $12 600
1993 PdNTIAC GRA~D AM SE, 14805, while, vs:
auto., air, AM/FM casa., lilt, cruise, P. locks......$9870
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, #4819, air, auto.,
AM/FM case., tilt, cruise,, air bag, P. locks ........ $9735

s1 ,000 REBATE ON DODGE CARAVAN LE AND
CHRYSLER TOWN &amp;COUNTRY MINIVANS! ·

•..'

1992 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE SSE, loaded ...... ;............................................................ $15,495
1992 DODGE RAN, auto, air, stereo ............................................................................... $11 ,995
1991 CHEVY CORSICA, auto., air, sterreo, runs good ....................................:.............. $6,995
1988 CADILLAC SEVILLE, leather, VB, loaded ................................................................ $7,395
1990 GMC C1500 P/U, auto., air, stereo, cruise ............................................................ $10,995
'1991 BUICK PARK AVENUE, loadf!d, leather ................................................................ $10,995
1994.liNCOLN CONTINENTAL, loaded, 20,000 miles, leather ..................................... $23,995
1988 FORD MUSTANG GT, 46,000 miles. Must See!.:..................................................... $7,495
1994 GMC C1500 PICKUP, loaded, 7,000 miles........................... ~ .................................$15,995
1993 GMC K1500 PICKUP 4X4, 40,000 miles .............................. ................................... $16,995
1990 FORD F150 XLT LARIAT PICKUP 4X4.....................................................................$9,995
1991. GMC SONOMA PICKUP .........................................: ..................................................$6,995

1995 BUICK

s'1,000 OFF ALL NEW 95 DODGE
.RAM PICKUPS AND 4X4.'s!.
(Excluding Club Cabs and Work Special)

ROADMASTER
4 Door, VB, P. seat, P. windows &amp;

locks, keyless remole, dual .air
bags, cassette, aula ., air, leather,
dark cherry.

US EARN CHRYSLER AN.DNISSAN AWARDS FOR EXCELLENT
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
19911

Dual air bags, auto.', air, P.
windows &amp;locks, pass key
syslem, V6, cruise,tih, cassette,
Teal exterior.

995 PONTIAC
ILLE SE
Dual arr bags, ant i- lock brakes,
3.8 V6 , cass .. all power, rear '
defog., 6 speaker sound syslem ,
auto . air, rear ;;po1ler,
medium red .

$24
1995
METRO

1,000'5 OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS IN SOUTHEAST OHIO HAVE HELPED

995 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE

4 Door, air, power steering,
Tropical green, automatic,
. fear defogger.

$10,399

1995
GEO TRACKER

.1995 CHEVY

2 Door, convertible, black ,
licorice , stereo/cassette, PS, 5 .
speed, air, ) 5" wheels, 4X4.

MONTE CARLO LS
Bucket seats, V6,.aulo., keyless
remote, cruise, power lrunk,
Purp!e Pearl.

$14,499 _$17,6,95.'

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go:
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTOR.S,.lnc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!
I

,.

Di\.RE TO COMPARE

995 GMC

'','• .

=-

'

SEOAL

gliiJ!C. slartal wbat became a I~
spnnt by the Academy fueled
mamly by five more pomts frqm
~ook. Three of those C8J!Ie from
h1s beyond-the-arc _left wmg sllol
with 3:22 lert. wb1cb caused tbe
GAHS crowd to explode witb
cbeers. Als~ contributing to !be run .
were . semor forward R1chard
(See BLUE DEVILS on C-4)

1-992-66411-800-8237-1094

PARKERSBURG NISSAN INC.

'

THE REMATCH Gallia Academy .guard
Dave.Rucker (20) gets a
front-row seat to the
dunk River Valley
postman Bruc~ Ward
(No. 50 in the upper
photo)
delivered
moments after this
photo was taken in the
first quarter of Friday
night's SEOAL game at
Lyne Center. The rimshaker, which was the
centerpiece of the
Raiders' 7-0 run that
put them ahead in the
first quarter's middle
stages, .
caused
considerable elation
and
chest-butting
among the Raiders, but
their joy was brief. The
Blue Devils took charge
in the second quarter
and stayed ahead in
part because of offense
like that delivered by
junior guard Mark ·
Clark (No; 14 in the
lower photo) en route .
to a 72-54 win that
earned for them a split
in the season series.
(Times-Sentinel photos
by
G.
Spencer
Osborne)

basket 33 seconds
.tbe second
period. However,
made up
for tbat
or his next
four free
including
a pair of
made necessary by
second foul, in
the minute that followed to lie the
game at16.
. .
·
Cook. a 6-foot~ JUDIOI' who also
saw time at center later in tbe

308 E. Main St., Pome,roy, Ohio

custom atripes .....................................................$6995

11 1

downs Ri_
ver Valley .72-54 to split season series · ·~

• B~ SPENCER OSBORNE
: T
-Senlinel Stair
.
:
RIO ,GRANDE . - &lt;:Jalha
_ • Acade~y s Blue Devils, bebmd by
one pomt1at ~ rU'St quaner's end.
surged alfad m the second quarter
and ~yed ahead en.route to a 7254_VICtorr ove~ R1ver Vall~y· s
Raiders ~nday mgl)t a1 tbe UniYer·
sit&gt;;. of Rio .G'!I'lde's Lyne Center.

.

· Following Friday's slate of
: Soutbeaslem Ohio Atbletic Leaaue
~ ~ontests the Marietta Tigers and
·. Logan Chieftains are In a flal-fOOI·
: eel tie for fust place, Wam:n Local
::!las a lock on a third place fmisb,
: · ~nd Gallla ~c~~emy bas moved
. ·mto the fii'St diVISIOO.
, ; : : _In Fri~y·s 1\am~s !;be Tigers
:: llllv~ mto a ue With id;Je Logan
-: bY vutue of an 8?-66 v1ctory at
; . Jac:kson, Warren slipped by A~
. ·4S-38, and GAHS defeated River

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, .O H-Polnt Pleasant,

J

•All pr1ces .ndude

rebates to dealer.
Ta"e' &amp; fees not
includ ed.

.

.

�•

Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

_. February 12,1995

~u~Jp.re hal!_'!~-. '!!~JQ.SM~"~.:~!.~~t~~~~,.,~,
~rom
~~ ~::O~ci:~=

.Miller stages ·co.meback to ~ip . Southern 63-60 in OT

°

MiiG"s-

44.

11 5

TVC boys'
.
cage standings

Blue Devils win...

0TROY.I!IILT

-·-·-·-

.NO (PAYMENTS,
NO INTEREST* .')
·siX MONTHS!

Check Out The Selection ...

SONCJmA
Extended Cab

"95"

· We have the Best Prices in Town!

OIRW-B1

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK
CENTER INC.

O'DELL
LUMBER

O'DELL$ LAWN
AND GARDEN

.

446-2532

•

DAMAGED PORSCHE TURBO 1988 944TS, Clean Tille,

Pass Lower
Damage (Minor), Black w/Light Gray Leather Interior, 57,000 miles.

!
. I

·sEO' AL gi""IS' cage

As Is

$14,000.00

Repair~d

•!

.,..:~
~

,.~

l'

ti

H
~~
~

~
..~.

••
••

DAMAGED PORSCHE 1989 928 54, Clean Title, Rear Hatch Damage,

Today -closed
Monday- closed
Tuesday- 3-7 p.m.
Wednesday- closed
Tbursday- 3-7 p.m.
Friday - 3-7 p.m . .
Saturday- closed
. Sunday, Feb. 19- closed

'WINTER IS
STILL H~RE!

$24,000.00

Repaired

I~ 513,000_
.0_0

Repaired

$17116 Per

"'~.

:.:••
I'

••
••
•:

::·: 1995 HONDA PASSPORT
...
•,..
....
414
,~.

BY APPOINTMENT ONLY!!!!

Racine, Ohio
J.

State Farm •s there .,
S1are fat m
In su r anc f! Com p ,u )•C' S

HomE&lt; Ollu::o&gt;$ ,

PHONE ,992·2196

7 PASSENGER VAN. V-6 eng., P. steer.,
P. brakes, auto. trans., AM!FM stereo
cass. , dual captain chairs, air cond.!. tilt &amp; ·
cruise, rear wiper and washer.
~

Now

Bronze, saddle leather Interior;
· power moon roof, cruise.

$20721 Per
.

8

8,996

. 4 door, tan,air, automatic,
stereo.

$135 36 ~~.
Brown, 5 speed, air, stereo. P. win .,
custom wheels, power sunroof.

$135

30:;! V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., P.
windows &amp; P. locks, air cond ., tilt &amp;
cruise. AM/FM stereo cass., c hrome rear
·step bumper, cast alum. wheels, sliding
rear window, tutone paint. low miles.

$120

·.· 19Q:10RD
TEMPO
2 DR.
·

RX
Blue, air, automatic, T-tops,
stereo,. rally wheels. ·

$171°4 ~~

PREMIER
4 DR.

.
4 cy I: eng1ne, powers1eenng,
power brakes, 5 speed ·
transmission, air conditioning..
WAS

V·B eng ., PS, PB, auto. trans ..
air cond ., AM/FM radio, tilt ·&amp;
cruise. rear defroster. low miles
Extra clean.
WAS

$~995

$5495 .

2,495

~~-

SJI ,995

THIS WEEK'S SP.ECJAI.S

Now·8
91 CAMARO

54 ~~

BED

wAs $12,99;ow

91 TOYOTA .
COROLLA

36

)

1991 FORD F-150 XLT

Mo.

--

. Notes: A Lyne Center ~!Jer·
.ship is required to use tbe faabu~s.
Faculty, staff, students ~ ~o­
istrators are admitted wtth lbeu ID
·cards.
· .
Racquetball court reservauo~s
can now be .made one day 1o
advance by calling 245· 7495 local·
ly or toll-free at 1-800-282-720 I,
.
.
extension 7495.
All guests are to be accomp~nied by a
membership
bolder
a $2

A

Like a good nerghbor ,

1990 FORD AERO STAR XLT EXT. LENGTH .

$9855 ~:

4 door, white, air,
automatic, stereo.
,,

lfAfl UIM

.

Burgundy, automatic, .
air, stereo:

91 QLDJM011LE
CALAIS ·
:

342 Second Ave.
GalRpolis, Ohio
Ph. 446·4290
Home 446,4518

MiDDLEPOJR1, 0~

91 DODGE
MONACO LE

Black

(614) 949·2644

CAROLL SNOWDEN

.

. 89 HONDA ACCORD SE

89 HONDA ·.
PRELUDE 51

•

serviCe. Call me."

WAS $9,995

4 IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE ·DELIVERY

$28,_000.00

$18,000.00

·
1

.. I back the rami1
insurance I sel
with 8001. neighbor

~ WAS$19,:~W $18,995

..~

w/Gray ·Leather Interior, 60,000 miles.

, As

461 SO\.!TH THIRD

NOW

4,495

8

1992 MERCURY
1993 MUSTANG
TOPAZ GS
LX 3 DR.
4 Dr~. 4- t:yl. -eng:; PS, PR-'·1
.,..--HATCHBACK

1992 BUICK
REGAL
4 DR.
V·6 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans ..
AM/FM ·stereo cass .. tilt &amp; cruise,
air cond .. P. win . &amp; locks. · rear
defroster, .local car.

WAS .
$10,995

NOW

1991 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

auto. trans ., air cond. , P.
windows &amp; locks, tilt &amp; cruise,
luggage rack, ext~a clean one
owner, low miles. ·
WAS

$9995

8495
'

NOW 8

.

.

.I

,,

•

~

CARS.

ATHENS

.

.

Bring In your best.deal on a New Car or Truck and we
• .. ill try to meet or Beat the DeaL . .
.
.
, FOR A GOOD DEAL••• ·
SEE ·J ACK ROUSH or BOB ROSS
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.-FRI. 8·5; SAT..8-12
. . MUFFLER .SHOP MON.·FRI. e-5; SAT. 8-12
NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.-FRCB-6; SAT. 8-3 P.M.

..

'•

I

. Ryan Merct.le 7-0-2=16, Bill
·McGrath 11 -0-2=24, Scott Decorc
1- 1-1 =6, Tim Fulk 1-0·0=2.
Jeremiah Keller 3-0· 1=7, J:lffod
Browning 2-0-2;:6, Chris Thompson 1-0-0=2. Totals: 26-1-8/13=63

OXFORD, Ohio (AP)- Miami
University trustees agreed unanimously Friday to invest an additional $2.5 million in atbletics, pw·
ducing tbe biggesi athletics budget
in tbe Mid-American Conference.

995

White, automatic, air,
stereo.

Gray

DAMAGED MERCEDES 1989 300E, Clean Title, Left Rear Door Damage,

MiLLER

(11•12•15·1~9::63)

4.6 V-8 eng., P steer, P brakes, auto. trans·.
AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, leather
interior, P. windows &amp; P.. locks, dual power
seals, rear defrosler. one owner, 25,000
miles. Like new.

90 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER

•

Home athletic events
. Today - women's basl\etball
vs. Tiffm at·2 p.m.
~·
Tuesday- Divi&gt;ion II girls'
:; :sectional action: Meigs vs. WaverJy, 7 p.m.
D' . . .II
·• · · Wednesday I VISIOn
girls' sectional action: .River V~ey
vs. Meigs-Waverly wmner. at 6.30
·p.m.; Gallia Academy vs. Jackson
, at.8: 15 p.m. ,

$1

.,;,.,

Metallic w/Special Leatherette Silk Gray Interior, 30,400 miles.

As Is

7

Miami University
to invest $2.5M
in athletic budget

H
•;

.

SOUTHERN
..s. _ 4-6::60)
J r m 3Hill19 1_ _ = . Ryan
4 18
Wil~!s ~..()..l=l4 2Ryan
Martin 2M
fhe r S-4= 14
1· 1= 8 •
as_o~l= ts Totals: u,. 3 :
f:,~~:,'e 10 3,.
·
(1

1992 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

4 door, leather interior,air, power moon
roof, cruise,tilt. stereo, extra ~harp.

red, stereo.

. I

follow-up rebound~ McGralb {JUt .
Mtller up 60-58. Williams ued tbe
score 60-60 and a Merckle bucket
gav~ Mtller a 62-60 edg.e, when .
Jaoue Evans was fouled w1tb seven
seconds left and a chance to tie .
Both shots were off target and
Keller rebounded and was fouled,
where be btl one for a 63-30 tally.
Mason Fisher got off a desperation
s~ot at tbe buzzer, but it two
mtssed and Sootbcm ·rumbled bard
63-60.
Southern was 20-49 for two
pointers: 3-15 on threes, was 11-19
at the hne and bad 2 I rebounds
(leader Harmon 5), bad II s.tcals
(Ryan Williams four), 16tumovers
and 20 fouls.
Miller bit 26-47 for 55%.• 1-8 on
tbrees .and was 8-13 at tbe line wttb
12 steals (Merckle and Browmng
three), 23 turnovers and 19 fouls.
Reserve not~s: Miller won tbe
reserve. game 54-48 led by Ntck .
Stamer s II. Danny Sayre hatl 12
for Southern

..~~~

2 door, automatic, ·

$18;000.00

.

1

89 FORD .
TEMPO

Qu~rter

poorly and aaain did not rebound

well . We allowed Miller to get
back in iL"
Miller cut the·score to 39-38 and
Southern slipped into the fourth
round up40-38.
anyonecanwmonanygivenm~bt.
Tbe fourth quarter was a noSouthern tCJ?k a 13-11 lead 1DIO holds barred, battle Royal, tied at
tbe second penod, !ben by the 6:15
least nine times overall. Miller took
mark of the second· round Miller a 46-44lead, Its ftrst since early in
bad tied the score·attS-15 on goals
the third quarter,- and !ben 48-44.
by Merckle and McGrath. Southern
Southern called time and then 1
did not score again until the 3: IS
responded, but a missed rebound .
mark, but did score six going down
negated a chance ror a 48-48 tie. ·
tbe stretch to Qn!y trail 23-21 at the,
Miller held ~ slight advantage
half.
and Ryan Maron drew a two shot ·
The !bird qu~r was ~ see-~w
foul witb five secoqds left in reguaffau ·throughout tiS dQ111Uon. W1tb
lation. Trailing 54-53, · Martin ·
four minutes left· m tbe frame •. tbe
missed the chance to give Soutbern
score stood ~7-27, as Decore put a win, missing tbe firSt shot. But
M11ler . up 30:27 on a long bomb, under pressure, the junior guard
lben H1ll retaltated for a30-30 ue.
nailed tbe second to force an overt.
rl ·
Southern held leads of 34-30 · time· at 54-54.
and 37-32, buteacb time a turnover
A Williams lay-up gave South.
;,
·
•
or oussed rebounds took away tbe ern a 56-54 advantage early. Tied
chance for Southern to blow open at 58-~8 with just 1:15 left, SouthU' I I
tbe game.
ern missed a rebound that most
·
Caldwell
added,
"W.ben
we
would have given Caldwell
· The red-bot Sootbem gil:Is' bas- Brianne Proffitt each baviqg seven. · were up 37-32 we bad several gold· likely
the prospect of working for a last
ketball team scored another giant Linscot bad eight for FH.
·
en opportunities to open up a lead, shot.
win to claim !bird place in tbe TriSouthern bit 18-56 for 32 per- but during Ibis time we played very
Miller kept possession, and on a
Valley Conference Hoelting Divi-.
7-12
threes, 8-18
at the
st·~ndl"ng·e.
bit 33
sion and knock the Lancers out of a cent,
line, bad
rebounds,
nine assists
J't
1
u
o07
co-championship with Alexander;
(Turley and Manuel three), three
Leal!lle Overall vs. No.I Logan at 8:15p.m.
·
_ . · An Alexander win over Miller blocks, 13 steals, 19 turnovers, and
l£ L l£ L
Division II sectional at Rio
••· clinched the league. title for the JS.fouls. Federal bit 19-54 for 35.2 ll:am
percent, bad no threes, and was 9- *-GALLIPOLIS ...• :11 I 17 I Grande: No.2 RIVER VALLEY vs.
r, Lady Spartans.
•1
Jenni Roush's Tornadoes (11-9 · 20 at tbe line. Federal bad 16 Logan ........ ......... :.. .10 2 15 5 Monday's Meigs-Waverly winner at
~ overall and 8-7 in the Hocking assists (Bentley 7), 13 steals, and Athens ......................6 6 11 8 7 p.m.; No. I GALLIPOLJS .vs.
19 turnovers. ·
Marietta ....................5 6 7 10 Jackson at 8:15p.m.
·
,.o Division) opened up an 11-Jl(iint
Federal won the reserve game . RIVER VALLEY ..... 5 7 10 9
:l balftime lead, !ben bad to resist a
,
·
Warren Local.. ......... 4 8 9 U
•' Lancer comeback to claim the 51· ' 34-19.
••,• 47 win in the regular-season finale
-•-•-•Jackson ..................... 0 11 0 16
Federal Hocking · ·
•-won 'teague title
;: Thursday night, according to a
(U-14-14-7=47)
•: report released Saturday.
Friday's score
'•
Sammi Sisson and Jonoa
Kristen Lydy 1-0-0=2. Mariah
Waterford
49, Warren Loca147
:: Manuel were tough, getting some McMee 2-0-0=4, Alison Pierson 2.•: cl utcb buckets going down the 0-2=6, Tracy Bentley 5-0-0= 10,
They played Saturday
:• stretch. Three free throws by Lindsey Hart 1-0-0=2, Lisa MaborGALLIPOLIS
at Minford
:: Jouna .Manuel sealed tbe victory, ney 2-0-2=6, Debbie Buck 1-0~ .
Marietta at Fort Frye
, : after Gretchen Linscott bad tied tbe 2=4, Gretchen LinsCQit 5-0-3=13. ·
'• game at 45-45, and Sisson reestab- . Totals: 19·0..9120=47
This week's ~l!lte
:; lisbed Soutbem's lead to a 48-45
Monday
Southern
: • margin on a three poillter.
··
. Division Il sectional at Logan:
(19-16-7-9::51)
•:
Manuel led the Tornadoes with
; ; 20 points, wbile Renee Turley bad
Jonna Manue14-3·3=20, Sammi Warren Local vs. Athens at 7 p.m.
Wednesday
:• 14: Linscott led the Lancers (12-8 Sisson 0-2-3=9, Renee Turley 6-0Division I sectional at Athens
2;:14, Becky Moore 1-1-0=5, Bea
~: &amp; 9-6) with 13 points .. Teammate
, 1 Tracy Bentley added 10. .
Lisle 0-1 ·0=3. Totals: 11-7- High School: Marietta vs. No. 2
.
Chillicothe at 6:30 p.m.; Lancaster
•:
Southern held a narrow 33-30 8/18::51
•• rebounding edge ,with Sisson and
•t

.'

Free~weight roo~

,

T' -

e.xpect a Southern team to uadtuonally .get tougher; an~ unbeatable on 1ts o~ floor. Nettber was
tbe case m tbt~ very untrcdi~table
season. ,The To-Valley Conference
is b~anced from top to bottom. and

• ·g e t pas t ..
Sou· hern .91fiS
t=eJe,.al
Hocking 51-47
rl
.

i

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--C(;

Pomeroy-Middlepot:t-Galllpolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

, . RACINE- In a g!J!DC thai ~ent rebounding team I've ever been
· ngbt. ~~wn ~e wuc m overtiDie, around. There was one ke.y to tbe
. the vtSIUng ~tlle.r Falcons~ a game and thai was we just did not
63-60 upset VIctory ove~ !~-Valley ~bou~d., We came out flat and we
, Conference Hocking Divwon con- JUSt dido t come-to play."
S~utbe~ was outrebounded 41. tender ~outhern at Southern Higb
. Scbool.s Charles W. Hayman 21, mcludmg several key 11oards
GymnasiUm.
!bat could have salvaged a South. Southem (11-8 overall and 10-4 · ern win going down the suetcb.
· in the Hocking Division.) is now Soutbern additiooally bad only five
. second in ~;he leal!ue, two games offensive rebounds, cutting down
out of first tn the loss coliiDIIl after on second shot opportunities, while
Federal ijocking's win at Eastern.
Miller (9-7 &amp; 8-4} bad 10 offensive
· Southern's leagu)l hopes now lie boards.
·
in the bands of other league foes . Ryan Merckle Jed tbe reboundand a Lancer-Tornado rematch next mg parade witb 13 caroms and 16
. Friday at Ste~
points, while Bill McGrath notched
. A very dejected Howie Caldwell a game-bigb 24 points. Southern
. stated, "In all the years I've been was led by Jeremy Hill with 18
_· around basketball and all the years points, while Ryan Williams bad
I've been a part of Southern basket· 17 and Mason Fisber bad 14.
baiL Ibis is undoubtedly tbe worst
Late in the season, one would

:e

Pool
· Tpday- closed
· Monday- 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p,m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
Saturday -closed
· Sunday, Feb. 19- closed

•

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

Tb:s-Senlinel Correspondent
a bucket by JorWaiSOII wi.rr:40 icc cold
tbe floor . In the regrabbbou!!ds·
BELPRE - Belpre outscored left in tbe ball Meigs went into the founb penod, the Marauders were
mg et
:
d
tha:\~~1 ot'ir s1x !;:;;:sn were
Meigs 24-11 in the final 9:30 to locker room ~itb a 22: 19 advan- able to bit only four of 21 from
win abard-fougbt 55-41 ~isio~ rage. ·
·
floor 19%. BeiJifC was able to e .c Mei~· wiff~1 as busy week
ov~ tbe Meigs Marauders tn boys
Belpre took only their second adv~rage of Ibis and pull away for
ndag evening .w hen they bost
Tn: Vall~y Conf~ence basketball lead of the night when Gaul bit a the WID.
.
'tb MoJlsto~ in tbe ftrst of four games
action Friday evenmg.
follow-up sbot in the paint with
Gartett, wlio Jed all scorers WI
yte
'f!le win gives the conference 4:46 left to give tbe Eagles a 25-24 13 points, was jo~ed in dooble figID ~v:~~:· notes: Nakurna Tyree
ured in 17 points and Chris Lamleadmg Eagles a 9-3 mark In tbe lead but tbe Marauders quickly ures by Gaul .wttb 13 and J2s~
TVC's Ohio Division and a 12-5 regained tbe lead at the 3:56 ouut Watson with 10. Belpre bt~ 2
~ added 14 to help Meigs defeat
mark overall. The loss ended the wben Ewing· bit another three from 40 from the Door for 55% mcl~d- o; ~ 5145 Jason Wise led Bel
Marauders' four game winning tbe left wing.
ing one of two from tbree pomt
e Pl7tb 'gbt . ts
.
•
streak.
Garrett put the· Golden Eagles range. The Golden Eagles went to pre WI et .po~ ·•
The fmal score is not indica~ve on top for good with 3:10 left in tbC: . the line 16 times bitting 12 for
of bow close tbe game was. Metgs third period with a Iay- u,P from 75%.
.
•
(16+8·11.=41)
.
(6-9 &amp; 4-7) led for most of the con· along tbe baseline Garrett s sbon
Belpre pulled 111 27 rebounds,
Gary Stanley _ ~ • Cass Cletest after &amp;elpre took an&lt;early 3-0 J·umper from the lane 35 seconds with Jon Gerkin and Gaul grabbmg
.
I p ,. 5 0
lead. Belpre was not to take tl!e · left in the third period gave Belpre eight each. The G~lden. Eagles land 3-0-1=7, Pau ulms · ·
lead again until tbe 4:46 mark of a 35 _30 lead beadin into tbe final turned tbe ball over etgbt IJmeS and 1=11, Ben Ewing 0-2-0=6, Donald
tile third period on a bask~t by elgbtminutes.
g
bad nin~ steals. Tbe h~me team Yost 1-0-0=2, N~ck Haning 0-1Gaul. But.the Marauders qu1ckly
Belpre inaeased ·the lead to 39 _ was whistled for only mne fouls. 0=3. Travis Abbott 2-1-0=7 .
regained .the lead on a three pointer 30 less !ban two minutes into the . With two minutes left. tbe. Goldeq Totals: U-5·2=41
from Ewmg. ·
final riod on a bucket by Gaul. Eagles bad a total of only stx foo~s • . ·
Garren gave tbe Golden Eagles But fr!.vis Abbott drilled a three as the M~uders failed to get m
BELPRE
the early lead when be drilled a In· pointer from deep in the left comer the bonus stt~on all rugbL
(10-9-16-20=55)
Paul Pullins led. tbe ~Bfauders
Josh Watson 5-0-0710, Kent
. · .CLEARS T$: TOWER - Melp J!Wird Paul PuUins (left) gets his fecta from tbe left wing with 7:30 to cut it 39. 33 with 5.57 left That
to go in the opening period. Gary · was as close as the. Mara~ders with 11 points. Metgs bJt 16 of 61 Garrett 7·1-6oo23, Jon Gerkin t-Oshot above the outstretched arm of Jeremy Gaul, Belpre's 6-foot·S Stanley answered that with a three would get
·
from the floor for a cool 27% . 5=7; Andy Spencer 1-0-0=2, Jerecenter, during Friday night's Ohio Division contest In Belpre, where from tbe left wing at the 7:18 ouut
·
Meigs
to the line only three my Gaul6-0-l/2;:13. Toials: 21-1the Golden Eagles won 55-41. (Dave Harris photo)
oftbeperiod.
times.
two of them . The
16=55
i ~Meigs quickly increased tbe
(ContinuedfromC-3)
lead to 10-3 at the 5:08 ouut of the
Kuhn , who bad. four points, ano figure scorer, bad 12 poin.ts coming period w!Jen Ben Ewing drilled a
Ohio Division
three from tbe top of tbe key.
Rucker, who made one of two tech· mOsily from 4-for-8 f1eld-goal
Dlv, Overall
' Meigs increased tbe lead to its
·
nical free throws made necessary s!Jooting.
biggest of the night wben Travis lCilm
.
l£ L l£ L
by Cochrane's third ticket
This week's agenda will have Abbott bit a 10-footer to give the .Belpre .........., ............9 2 12 · 5
Anbe end of the run, Gallipolis
Gallipolis bosting Point Pleasant lf!aroon lind gold a 16-7 lead with Wellston ....................7 4 . 9 7
was ahead 26-16. ·
7 6 9
· River Valley cut that margin tO Wednesday, beading to Logan Fri- 1 :25 lef~ in the period. Garrett MfiGS ...................A
scored
the
last
three
points
of
the
·
Vmton
c;ounty.:
........
4
9
4 13
day
and
travelilig
to·
Wheelersburg
single digits three times before
period
on
a
free
!brow
and
a
bucket
Nelsonville-York
......
2
10
4
13
Saturday.
River
Valley
will
bost
intermission, but with 15 seconds
off
tbe
offensive
boards
to
cut
the
Hocking
Division
I
ackson
Monday,
cross
tbe
Obio
to
·
left, junior guard Mark Clark'
canned a trey from tbe right corner play Point Pleasant Tuesday and Meigs lead to 16-10 at lbe end of Federal Hocking .......9 2 II 4
.
SOUTHERN .......... I 0 4 . II 8
to give the B.lue Devils a 34-22 bost Warren Local Friday to fmisb the ftrst period.
Buckets
by
Garrett
and
Jeremy
MiUer
..... ;..................8 4 9 7
the
regular
season.
lead, which stood at halftime.
Gaul
to
stan
tbe
second
period
cut
Alexander
................. 7 5 8 8
River Val!ey's inefficient fieldRIVER
VALLEY
the
Meigs
lead
to
16-14.
But
the
EASTERN
............... .3 8 4 11
goal shooting burt its cause in the
(14-8-5-27=54)
Paul
Pullins
bit
two
su-aigbt
buckTrimble
................•....
2 10 2 13
second quarter, The goaltending
·
ets,
tbe
last
coming
with
5:
11
left
Friday's
scores··
James
4·1-112=12,
Lloyd
2-1·
call ·gave the Raiders their only
Belpre 55, MEIGS 41
. field goal of the frali'le in seven 2/2;:9, Boothe 4-0-0/0=8, Graham on a twisting lay-in to give Meigs a
20-14
advantage.
MiUer
63, SO~RN 60 (OT)
2-1-112=7,
Ward
3-0-0/0=6,
lries in tbe paint. In act two, GalMeigs
increased
the
lead
to
22Federal
Hocking 60, EASTERN
Browning
0-1-2/4=5,
Cochrane
0. lipolis made four out of six in tbe .
1-0/0=3,
Petiit
0-1-0/0=3,
Stitt
O-O17 with 3:46left in the half on a 12 . 46
rectangle. . . _ .
.
. .
V1nion County 72, NelsonvilleI/2=10Totals: 16/40-S/l4: 7/tl=S4 footer from bonald Yost. That
The third quarter was almost a
bucket was tbe last of tbe baif for York 57
_ ·.
Total FG -21-64 (32.8%)
replay of tbe second, as both teams
Meigs,
Belpre
was
only
able
to
Alexander
55, Trimble 44 .
Rebounds·
23
(James,
Lloyd
turned in field-goal shooting num&amp; Ward 5 each)
. bers similar to those of tbe second:
Assists .- 16 (Browning 4)
Gallipolis: 6-11 (2nd) &amp; 5-12 ·
Steak- 10 (James &amp; Ward 3
(3rd)
·.
·
each)
River Valley: 2-14 (2nd) &amp; 2-15
Turnovers- 16
(3rd)
·
Fouls-32
"There's no way you can win
Fouled out- Lloyd &amp; Stitt
will! that kind of percentage," said
Raider chief Mike Jenlcins, whose
GALLIA ACADEMY
troops have lost six of their last
(13-ll-16-22=72)
·.
seven games. ·
Cook
3-1-6110=15, Qualls 4-0The Blue Devils delivered the .
3/3=11,
Rucker
1-0-9/10=11, Kilbn
linal blow to lbeir arcljrivals at tbe
3-0-2n=8, Barnes 1-1-010=5, Clark
charity stripe by sinking 16 out of
1-1-0/0=5, Cremeens 2-0-113;'5.
21 free throws in the last act.
Miller 1-0-313=5, Davis 0-1-I!D.4,
Meanwhile, the Raiders, despite
Humphreys 0-0-212=2, Baker 0-0their 11-for-19 showing from the
1/2=1. Totals: 16/32-4/6-l8139=72
field in the final eight minutes,
Total FG- 20-38 (54.1 %)
could get no closer !ban 16 points. .
I...,..U.C Wornutkln Rer,rdint: Credil lt!nM: • After 61110111.h$ tt1t 'APR., ~Sed on yo~~t. st..:e ol rtsldeMe. ila talRebounds- 36 (Qualls 9)
Tbe shooters: Cook's game- .·
lows: M - .In 011l1r"' S ,000 of twi•M~. 1 92~ on t~~ms, ~ - 1 9~; AL. CT. fL lA Mot., ME. MN. NC. 'NO, M,. M. .
Blocked
shots
3
(Kubn
2,
WA.Mi
WI- Ift. KS · 18_96"4 on lint Sl .OOOof bllnf. 14 4'4011 eJtCfts. Nf. 18.96'11on Jnt 1500 vlbMa.
high 15 points rested mainly on 4- ·
IIN011ams, sc - 16.92'11: n: - 17&amp;.'111. WV - lfton lirll '150 cil bll.lnc:r. 111te~~~,meu. oc .and Ill otflw
I)
Rucker
for-8 field-goal shooting. Qualls
SUitS- 18.M Mmimum fNIKI! ch•lt! K S SO lor 1!«11 bilinC (J(It Ill wtw.h • i"Nrw:t.dWIC@ 15 prfat!Ae (~lor
lftidaCs Ill U., CT. OC, HI, ID. KV, LA. MD, HE . NM . NC, ND, OA. and • .)
Assists - I HR leer 5)
didn't miss in four lries in the paint
Steals
7
(RUck
3)
en route to an !!-point qigbt'.
1
ln""'
.
'I
Turnovers .:..(a_
Rucker's 9· for-10 perfm:mance at
Fouls-16 ,
the tine rested mostly on making all .
Charges
takoin (by Cook
of hi' fmal eight free thfows, w}lich
.
.
&amp;
Cremeens)
came in tbc fourth quaner.
·
James, his club s lone double150 UPPER RIVER RD.
Reserve contest - River Val(Across from K-Mart)
634 E. MAIN ST.
'
ley 40, Gallia Academy 37
GALLIPOLIS
446-7826
POMEROY
Scoring leaders - Brad KemTRADE-INS WELCOME
992-5500
135 Pine Street
Gallipolis
Here is the schedule for tbe per (River Valley). II; Isaac Saunders (Gallia Academy). 13
week of Feb. 12-19 at lbe University of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
·.
· Fitness center,
gymnasium ·
· and racquetball courts
TQday- closed
·
Monday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
. Tuesday- 9 a.m.·9 p.m.
,,
Wednesday- 9 a.m.'9 p.m.
Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
t' riday - 9 am.-9 p.m.
Saturday- closed
Sunday, Feb. 19- closed

Lyne Center slate

I

,
'

�Page-C6-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel ..

February 12, 1996

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

Federal Hocking records 60~46 victory over Eastern
•

By SCOTI WOLFE
Eas!em. Federal Hocldllgls uow 9- -· be on die borizon, however, ·Friday game. Wben tbe dUSI bad sealed on advl\lltage on a Whiting reverse
Times-Sentinel Coi'I"'Spondent
2 in the league and 11-4 overall, nigbt was not to be die case. East- tbe end of tbe fust quarter, Federal layup and a Natban Gilders steal
· EAST MEIGS- A 24-lllbird while Eastern drop$ to 3-8 and 4· em's report card read "A" for tbe (11-4 &amp; 9-2) bad emerged witb a and lay-in. Jeff Stetbem went back
fli'St balf, but tbe EHS quintet raled nanow 8-6 lead.
door for Eastern and drew a foul.
quarter outburst sparlced tbe Hock· 11.
ing Division-leading Federal Hock·
Eastern (4-11 overall &amp; 3-8 in a "C·" for tbe tbe tbird quarter.
In tbe second frame, Eastern's adding tbe free tbrow before (]Jar.
ing Lancers to a 60-46 triumph · the Hocldng Divisioo) bad already
Eastern played an aggressive defense really moved well, and lie Bissell drilled a IS-footer.·
over the underdog Eastern Eagles gunned down two league Goliatbs . diamond and one, comer ttap that likewise Federal did a good dl)fenNelson put FH up 14-11 on a
Friday night in bQys Tri-Valley earlier Ibis year, and Friday night's virtually toot Federal Hoelting's 6- sivejob keeping Eastern around tbe · baseline drive, but Eastern's Eric
Conference basketball action at bout looked like another upset may 8 big·man Mart Wbiting out of the · perimeter. Federal took a 12-6 Hill added a jumper and Bissell

Col. Mitflia 67, Cot UDden-M~Kialty
•
Col. Nonhlllld S9, Col. Cal~anlol 'I
Col. South S7, Col. BriiiP 37
CoL St. O..leo 7S, Col. w.....a 64
Col Well 71, Col. e.tmoll' 72
Col. w..~ooo~ 90. w.....
1s
Cal. Wheutoae 11, Col. BrookhiYea
73 (OJ)
.
Colwd&gt;lo ~9. CIL lodeoead-31
Coluld&gt;lollo IOI,I!.I'IIeolloo 72
Calumbu1 Orove 61, Coa,-oy
Cre~tvi.nr Sl
·
Coaa...,91, Albtoblllo&amp;lpood61
Colll1Dcotal51, Otto.tlle 41
Cotboclaa 73, St o.invllle 62
CoYID&amp;tOD .S9, MilliilliDIWI Val. :55
Croobville
W. Must.laaum 53
Cllyoboplllo. 7~.Aur&lt;n70
·
Ot.hoa 76, Hillldalo 73
Donbuty S9, Tot. Oui.llloD ~3
DuviUo :51, Joh01towa S7
·
D•r· CbamJaado-Juliene 40, Cia.
l'ur&lt;:d M.no. 36
!loy. Oui.llloD 96. Colvwy au-. 66
!loy. Duab• 90. BelmoDl Bl
Illy. Notth~t7S, W. Cltry)lltoa SS
!loy. l'llt«Joo IS, !loy. Colooel Whi~
76
.
O.y. Wayne 69, Spriaa. Sollh 66
DeOrart Rivenlde 72, Wayoe1field
Ooahen70 ·
Dela..-e 79, M.,...vme 73
Delta 72, W.-oa 68
•
Dublia -41, Tbom11 WorthiDI(toD 44"
E. CaliDa 69, ladian Vll. 61
E. Cle. Show 60, Volley Fori" Sl
E. U v - 68, Richmoad Bdilon 32
Eur:cn Brawa U, l.oelbutJ;-FairficJd
71
EolllW N. 12, Wlllouahby S. S2
Eoolwood S9, Olleao o9
Edaewood 74, Oxford Talawanda 53
EJktl48, Ceiiaa 45
EliiiWood 70, ICaalu .Latota OS
Elyrl.l80. Lonoin Adm. Kloa 61 ·
Elyrl.l F011 Bopt. 68, Cle. Ha. Lutboo-·
liD E. 52
Euclid 16, Brush 57
EY«-79, Moatpdier 66
Folrlleid Ullioa 63, Lopa Elm lS
Fairlell II, 1\a:law 47
Federal Hockia1 60, Reednille E.at-

60

Major men's
college scores

m. s.

Eut
Bruwa 66,lllrvwd 61
DlrumW171, YaleU
hDD 10l,Coroell11
Prl•ceo" 76, Columblo U
Teq~le ll. Rhode blud 63

Soutb

s•.

Jackloi!YIIIo 11, florida Allmic :59

FarWO.t
Bolle St. 61.1doho 60

OoazaD 86, .. 61
ldoho gl 93,1!. Wllhiaito• 71

anLoyolo Morymouat
. 97. Ponlond 94 (l
s .... Cion 12, s .. Froacioco 62
St. Mlry'o, c~.ai.Su D!eao 62

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
AboaCeDt.-Howcr Sl, Atroa E. SO
Aboa Col'tatry 74, AiroD Mucholta69

Alroa Ell" 7l, Aboo N. So

Airoa Flreatoae 59, Aktoa Kenmore

j

•• AlroaOwlleid

~o.

Alroa Buchtel70
AkroD SpriDJ,. 72 , ClnolltOD 69
Aleuudet SS, Trimble 44
Allea E. 63, Blufftoa :53
Alllaac:e 66, Caal.oa OlnOak :56

Anii.C11'1141, Avoa Lake 41
Aaloalt. 66, Bethel 40
Arc:aawn 69. Twill ValleyS. 61
Alhl.and CreaiYiew 89, Colliu Weal·
«n itden'e 64
Aaht.bula 67, PaiaeiVille Hlrvey 61
Alhtabu\1 Hubor 14, Aahtabu1a St
Joha72

A.._Uatowa·Fitch 40, Youaa. Unulloe
34
Aymville 48, Edaa-toa44
Bay Villaae 73, Fl.irview SS
Bavctcrcclr:; IJ, Fairtxlm 46
Bedront 69, Maple Hta."66
Bellbrook 75, Eatoa 61
BellefoaWne 64, Greeloa 56
Bellevue 15, Bucyrus 66
BeiPR SS, Meip 01 ·
BetliB Hilaad 01, 'fUicc'awM Cath.. 62
BcUIVIIIe 60, C.-ey SS
Bloom-C1troll 11, Ca01l Wiac:hatcr

n46

FeUc:ily 76, Blucfleater .53

Fia~y 55,1..ucutcr 40

fort l...onm1e 63, ADDa :53
foltoria75 , Nip:deoa 53
Frallklia 61, Lcmo... Ma~~W sa
FrantJJa Furnace Oreea 69, Beaver
e..tnSB
,
Fronklill Hll. 87, 'Miilcj'.'!I7S
Gahooao 60, Cln&gt;vepon S1
OaJioa S9, WiU.-d 'l
Olllipoli• 72, O.eahin Rlvcr Val. S.t
Oeuoa 71. OibiOaburJ 59
Oooraetowa 69, Cia. Whiteoak 33
Ginn! Sl, Polood 43
.
Grol1am 62,1loy. StcbbiDI S1
Orudview 51, W. Jeffenoa SS
Orallvllle 54, Alber Coth. 01
Oreettovlow 100. Yellow Spriop 48
Hamilton 14, Uma 69
Hamilton Twp . -46, Amaada-

60
Bottiu73, Jacboo Center 5I
Bawliq Green 70, Hollaad Spriq." SS
Bnwwic:t 6.S, Bma S3
Bryoo67, SWIIIton 64 (01)

Buc:byo Centrll 62, Frederictlowll 54
Buckeye Loc:al 58, Oat Olea, W.Va.
00

'

Buc:byeTrail73, Baroeaville62
c.Jdwell 44, FroDt.icr 40
Combrldp 83, ClaymoDl66

.

Canton Cath. 69, Walsh Jesuit 67

Ciearaoeto2
Hemlock Miller 63, Racine Soulbem

Canton S. S1, Canal Fultoo Nonhwea
S4 .

••

60(01)

CIDtoa Tbnken 92, Uatontowu Lake

Hwitap Qr, 80, Zue&amp;ville Chr. 66
HiiJiboro 17, WilhanubWJ 61
Holpte SO, Wa)'lle Trace 33
Hopeweii-Loudoa 71, T!tno Calvert

C.iiiiF 5.5, Dilie SO
Cedarville 63, 5. ChatleiitOII Southeadem 4.5
CCilterbliiJ 86, E. Kao:c 52
O..grin Flllll 43, W. Ocaua• J.S
'
Cha11cl 64, Garfield Hta. Triaily 62

67

'

Houatoa 62, Fairlawn 49
Howlllld 62, Struthen ~~
Huber HtJ. Wayne 69, Spriaa. South

can~OD ,6, KellltoD 54

66

Chr.29
Cio. Country O.y 11, Batavia7l ·
Cio. Deer Part 64, Cia. M•deira 61

...,

Hudloa Wea1crn Re&amp;erve 62, Linaly,
.
,
W.Va. S2
ladlu Vol. 69, E. CatttOD67
Jacboa MJiloD 56, s. R.abae .52
Kalida 61, Miller City SO
Keat Rooaevcll64, CUvattoaa Fall• 60
· Keaton II, Defianc:e63
. Keaton Rldae 62, Sprin&amp;. Northwat·

CbeJapeate 61, BuffaJo, W.Va. 59
Odllicothe 47, Worlhiogtou Xilbourue
4S
.
Cia. Alkea 51, Cin. Weatera Hilll48
Cin. Central Bapt. 66, Cia. Heritqe

canCia. Elder

XetleriDJ Alter 66, Cin. t.Jc:Nic:bolu

S8

~i~,.~~,~~~J~~~i~~

KectcriD&amp; fairmont70, CeDttrVille S4
XidroD Clir. 56, Te111Jie Chr. 42
. Klap S9. Wilmiaifon 57
·
Xiaki (Pa.) Prep 71, Univtr~ity School
58
LaBrac n, Badger sa .
Lakeland 70, J~·Sc:lo 54
Lobwood 76, Panna Sl
Lakewood Sl Edwwd 61 , Cle. St. Ja-

l:ia. ·~
Cio.O
/'jl~71

Cia. ~.~~~~L~

Cia.
lo

61 , Hamilton Bldin
•
Cia. St Xavier 74, Cin. LaSalle 64 ·
Cin. Summit 62, St. Bernard 47
Cia. Sycamore .59, W. Oleate.- Lalr:.ota

natiul ,U
Lcbuoo69, Middletown Fenwick 52
Leip~lc !iS, Cory-RawaoD .t&amp;

Uberty 86, Hubbanl 10 .

Ubcrly Ceatcr 82, Patrick Henry".57
Uberty Unioa 49, Berne Uni6a 46
Ubaty-Beaton I04, Arlinaton 48
Uc:kina Co. qr. Acad . 92, Northaide
chr.12
Ucking Val. l7, Big Waiow lS
Lima TcmpleChr. 89, Onawa Hill174
Liocolnview 81, Delph01 Jefferson 73
Lilboa 74, Sollheru Local S1
Lin.le Miami 60, Hamiltoa Rou 52
Londoa 10, Jooathaz~ Alder 59
Lorain 61, Vermilion 43
l....onjn Brooblde j:9, Keyatone 55
Lonia Cllh . 64, Elyria Cath. 4S
Lorain Midview 7$, Lorain Soutllview

's Cio. Taft 62, Cin. Woodward 61

Ciu. Turpia Sl, CiD. Aadmoa 48
Cin. Waluut Hill1 6..5, Cin. Wi.nton
Woodl61

Cia. Withrow 71, Mount Healthy 66
Circleville 58, Tfa)'l Val . .5 I
Oe. CalJ\olic 59, Parma Padua .5 I
Cle. Collinwood 60. C\e. South 57
Oe. Eut .5..5, Oe. Marshall 54
Oe. &lt;lleoville 60, Cle. Hay 59
Clc. Hei!lhta
Mentor 70
Cle. Kenaedy BS, Cle. Eaat Tech 74
Oe. Rhodea II, Cle. Adams67
Oe. 'VA-SJ 8..5. Louisville Aquinaa II
Cle. Wm Tech 66, Clc. Uacoln-Weat

n.

loy 66 '
MUiiiJoa Pary 47, New Philldelphia
o1 can

Stredlboro 6S, Crratwood SS
Sylvania Southview 61 Antho ny
Wayne6l
Tecwnadl71, Urbana69
Tiffia ColwnbiiD Sl, Shelby SO
Tol. Emauuel Bapt. 76. M1umee Val.

Moumoe4S, RIIIIIord&lt;O
MoyoYiUe 6~. Shrridlll 43
Mc:Comb 52, 1Wdia North«"D 37
Mc:Do111kl 56, Ba-lil Cenler Wea1e111
Rtaerve 40
Meadowbcook 62,1acilaa Creek Sl
Mocb1Dic:ob\1117l. ladlu Lot. 70
Medi:DI 72, Sttoapville 62
Medilla llialtload s•. Hudoou 49
Mea .. c;br.lS, Scuthridp ACid. ~2
Mcator Lab Cath. 53, Gatea Milia
Gilmour 51
Miami Trace 64, McClal11 41
MiamiaburJ 79, Day. c.toll 72
Middletown 80, Fairfield 68
MiddleloWD Madl1oa 61, DaJ .
NOI'ttlridJe Sj:
Mlllenport66,H-o9
Millen! Rldae S&amp;, MothOWI 47
Minrna7l,l..ouilvl\le61
.

67

4l

Tol. Whitmer 59, Sylvania Northview

S2

Toronto62,Bridgeport SO
Tri.CoWlly N. .50, tlfldrord 49
Tri-Valley 67,John Cilena S4
Tri·Village n, Fraak.lia-Monroe 60
Trotwood-Madiaon 84, Greenville 6S
Tuscanwaa: Val. 61. Sandy Val. 50
Twin&amp;buri !17, Sokm 55
Un ion Loc&amp;lSR, Bellaire St. Johu SO
UniOio 52, Wlllt!all49
Upper Atlinaton 65, Hilliard SS
Upper Scioto Val. 68, Pauldiua '9
Valley View 14, Oakwood 72 ,
Van Buren 62. Arcadia"S4
Van Wert 76, SL M1JY163
Vetsaillea 68, Tipp City SJ
VictorY Chr. -44; Meadvlll~ {Pa.) Cai""Y 2l
ViDc:ent Warren 45, Athena 38
Vinton Co. 72, Nellonville- York 57
W. Uberty Salem 61 , Triad 60
W. Union 69, N. Adami 59
WadsworUt IS, Copley'S4
Wapakoneta 94, Uma Shawnee .Sa
Wanen tll.ampioa tt2, LakeView S9
Wmeu Hifdiaa 96. Youua. East 72
Warren.sville 74, Nomt~ndy 43
Waruw River View 75, Morau 59
Washiaaton C.H. 61, Bealcy 52
Waterloo 41, RooutoWD 44
Waverly 7.5, Portsmouth W. .5&amp;
Weirton (W.VL) MldoaDI 73, Cooot·
ton Val. 71
Welllville 51, St.eubeaville Clth. 48
We.tnl...a1ham 79, Pcebl• S9
WettervilleN. 71, GroveCiiJ1l
Weltlab 68, Rocky River 52
Wheelenbura 17 •.McDermott Northwe.t 47
Whteli•a (W.Va.) P1rt 96,
SteubeDVille 58
Willo-HU162, Oraq.eCht. 36
Wiadham 88., OuretbYille 16

Minford T1, LuCIIvillo Vll. ,q
Mopckn field 10. M - 5 6
Morwoe Ce.lltnl.l2, Beallaville 6S
Mouat Oile.t 67, Northmor S I
Mouat Veraaa 81", Watt• Merwri.J
N. Caatoo 6&amp;, W001tcr 59
N. Royoltoo S4, Midp•t OS
NalioDIJ Tail TI, Newton 75
New Albl.ay 57, Licir:;iaa Hll. 49

New Bremen 10, Parkway 70
New Kaoxville 60, Ot1phc. St JohD's
S4

New LeliDILOD 77, Philo 6.5
New Miami BI, CiJL Lock..laDd S7
New Ric:hrmixl 62, we:atero Brown ,Sj:
New Rleael76, Frenx~DI St.Joteph 64
New•t Cailh. 57, Col. Reidy 41
Newton Falla 64, Broolr:fleld 61
Nordonia 101, Mayfield SO
Norton9S. Talln-.clac64
NonnlkSt. PIU169, Plymouth :54
Oberiin61, Avoa46
&lt;ll.io Deaf 73, Delaw•e OW. 62
Old Fort 57, Fo.toria St Wendtlin 38
Oientqy Sl, Utico 4l

Olnllled Faik l2, N. Ol1111ted 47

Ontario 80, Colond Cnwrord 54
Opea Door 72, Ub Ridoe 44
OraqeSI, Wic:tliffe46
Oreaon aay ItO, Bedront. Mic::h. 91
otcgt~a Strik:h 62, To!. Waite 4S
Ornille 72, Manalield Mldiaou S4
Ottawa-Oiaadod88, Um1 Bllh S1
Pliamville RivtnidD 71 , OcDev. 0
l'lado!I.&lt;Jilboo 70, Vlllliue 37
Parm• HtJ. Holy Name 61, Chltdon
ND-CLS6
l'&lt;rrylbuttll&lt;, Millbury Lot. 6S
Piketon 66, Adeu 4S
Piquo69, V11DdaliaBuller66
Ptlrtlmouth 13. Day. Jeffcnoa 68
Portamoulb Oay SO, Potbrmuth Notre

Dome"

Tol. Rogm 10, Tol. Start 71
Tol. St. Frt.ncillll . To!. Ubbey 13
To I. St. Johaa63, Tol. Catholic S4

Wood more 61, Northwood 52

Wocxiward II Tol. Bow1her 80
World Hwvi!IIIO, Liberty Cbr. 71
WorthinatoD Olr. 13, Lucu 69
Wynford 73, Oestline SB
,
Young. Boardman 59, Youna. MOOney
37
.
Yoona. 0\.aney &amp;8, ~1160
Youaa. Uberty 86, Hubt.rd 10 ·
Youaa. RayeD 87, Atroa St.V-St.M 69
Youna. Wilaoa 73, Youna. Calvary

Chr.S7

.

BerkahlR S7, Klrtlood 3l

. canRichmond Hta. 18, Beachwood S6

Briatol ,3, Oraad Val. 34
Oli!Ucothe 59, Wcrthiaaton Kilbourne

Ridgedale 60, C•d.inJlOD 59
Ridgewood 61, Strubura 39
River Val. 78, Elata 42
Riverside 12. Wayneafic:Jd 70
Roc:ky River l.utheraP W. 61, Brook.1)'1109

36

ae. Adami S2, Cle. Rhode.46
Oe. Hay 61, Cle. Glenville 26
Cle. Ha. L.uthen.a E. :54, Elyria Fint
Bop&lt;. 38
,
Oe. Keonedy SO, Cle. Eut Tech 41
Cle. Lincola·Weat SO, Cle. Weat. Tech
13
Oe. ManhaU &amp;4, Cle. &amp;1127
Clo. South-66, Cle. Colliawood 6:5

S. Wc:bller 84, Oat Hill 83

canCol. School for OtrtJ Sl, Ohio Deal 20

'

ALL·SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS
- - RIP RAP
.

DELIVERED AND SPREAD!
•Mason
. ·•Top Soil
•Concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
•Pit Run
•Driveway
•Drainage Gravel
Mat
•Pea Gravel
•Drainage Tile
•Culvert ~le (aU sizes up to 5')
•Block and Mortar Mix

Qu&lt;l&gt;oc .............. 9 I 0

II 38
ll 22

Butralo .............. 6 . J I

a...................

6 ~ o 12 30
Molllell ........... o ~ 2 10 zs ·
. Hallford ............ 2 6 2 6 2l
au-a .............. I 7 2 o 23

29
II

Tampa Bay 4. Hanford 3
Toron~ 2, Detroit I
Edmoatoa 5, Saa Jose 1

21

22

2o
2S
3ol '

Tbey ployed Saturday
Bulfaloa! N.Y.Jal•d.... lp.m.
Wub.iiiJlDD II BDitoD, 1:30 p.m.
Ottlw•ll Quebec, 7 p.m.
N.Y. Rutaen.ll T~o Boy, 7,30 p.m
Montrtalll PlinaburJh, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at. ~ew Jaaey, 7:30P.m.
I!Jrtlonlll Florida, 7:30p.m.
Loa An&amp;elea • ToroDlo, 7:30p.m.
Colg.-y II Doiloo, 8 p.m
WJallipe&amp;ll St. l..oui1, 1:30 p.m.
Su .loJe at Vaacouvcr, 10:30 p.m.

Cnlrll DIYII6oa

Ddrolt.............. 1 '
St. Louil ........... 6 3
Toroufo ............. :5 4
Dallll................ 3 4
Whmipca .......... 2 6

EE rA fs:l.
16 01

2~

0
l

1.. 4113 44

23
33

3

13 36

34

2
3

8 29
7 ll

23
41

P•Uk:DI*kJn
Sill].,. ............ S o I 11

2~

•'
t.

:
'.

Today's games
Anaheim ll Edrooatoo, 4 p.m.
New Jeney M Florida, 6 p.m.
Bolton at Burrllo, 1 p.m.
Loa Aaaela It Decroit, l p.IIL

~2

'•

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N»A .. baled onywllllleolltli:lenOI. ilastolcrWI: AK - 18'!i. on rm St,OOOol~ . 7.92' oo eMOeM;AR: 7.92%:
AL.. CT. Fl.. LA. MA. ME, MN, NC, NO, PA. AI , 'WA. ntWI - 18'Jio; KS · 18.96% oo ~r31$1 ,000ol balaru, 14.4" on
.....: NE - 11.8ft onlrltSSOOatbllanol. 18'!ioooUQIM; SC "- 18.0 , TX - 17.64%; WI/ - tn on..-et$750ol
bllla'a, 12'!to on~ OCn!alolherllates - 18 . ~. MinimJmlinlwadwg~~ ISS~ for ea:t1 billnQcvde in which
aWrwa cN"geil ~ llfter$.50(e0efllb ~ oiCT, DC. HI , 10, KY. LA. MD, N£, NM. NC, NO, 01=1, lnd AI .)
f9.B9&gt;

O'Dells lawn ·&amp;Garden
150 UPPER RIVER RD.

DO

·w

OD

446·7826

'

East State Street
Athens, Ohio

593·6641-.

PPHS conlinued on its way to a
9-0 spun with the beginning of lhe
fourth quarter. After Gilley's free
throw and Reymond's trey, Oliver
added a foul shot Gilley made another field goallo cap lhe run and give
Point a 50-38 advantage. Two free
lhrows by Jeremy Tucker . gave
Wahama its firs! points of the fourth
quarter, and Mau Fields made one of
lwo from the line 10 cut lhe lead to
nine. Reymond answered with two
free throws for the Big Blacks that
all but sealed the victory. Wahama's
fitrst fi1eld goa I of the Quarter came in
the final min me of play from See.
Then Jason King connected with five
seconds to play lo get the deficit lo
•
II , 56-45.
Point Pleasant also won lhe pre,
liminary coolest by a 57-35 score as
Tim Taylor scored 14, Jeremy
Buskirk nine. Jason Roush and B.J.
accompllshmenll of GaJUa Aca...:t_bukelball
BENEFIT PROGRAM CONTINUES -Brent
Buchanan eight. Wahama was led in
r, who Jed
Johnson (center), tbe owner of Johnson's Super· . players Brandl M1111n and o... R
scoring by Chad Ord's 14 poinls.
lbelr
respectiYO
leamoln
-!Ita
In
J......-y.
John·
markets of GaiUpolk, continued bls contributions
Healh Engels had nine and Lane
son's
stores
are
provldlna
food
and
odler
llemo
to
to the Gallla County Mlnlsterlal A11odatlon's
Young six.
the
GCMA'a
pantry.
(Tlma.S.ntlnel
photo)
"Pass to the Needy" proaram with the on-court
Wahama i$ slated to be back In
action this afternoon when lhe While
~----------------------------Falcons travel to Ravenswood for a
GAHS wrestlers
I p.m. junior varsity and varsily
encounter. WHS will visit Meigs on . fall to Warren
Tuesday, while Point hOsts River Valley the same e~ening.
GALUPOLJS - Gallia AcadeConfidential .Family.Planning Services
my's wrestling team fell to Warren .
PPHS (56)- Kris Gilley 5(1)-4/517; Mark Oliver 7-2/5-16; Tommy · Local· S9-18 Wednesday night in .
for femal~s &amp; males.
· ·
Dorsey .l(l)-6n-11 ; Jay Reymond
tbe Blue Devils' gym.
•Medical Exams
(1)-2/3-5; Jamie Stewart Z-111-5;
Posting wins for the Blue Devils
Mat! Wassel 1-0/1 -2; J.D. Holstein 0were 13~·pounder Cbris Vernon
•Pap Tests
(pin vs . Andy Fielder), 160,
0/0-0; Totals 15(3)-15n2-56.
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
WHS (45) ·James See 2(3)-4/4pounder Scott Lear (pin vs. Matt
•Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmmed diseases
17; J.C. Albright 5-2/2-12; Seth Moyer) and 215-pounder Sam Gar·
Jioward 4-0/1-8; Kevin Shields 1-114- ber (by forfeit).
..
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling .
3; Jason King 1-0/0-2; Jeremy TuckThe Blue Devils fell victim to
•Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
er 0-2/2-2; Matt Fields 0-112-1; . four pins, four forfeits, one deci·
Gabe Scou 0-011-0; Jamie Shiltz 0- sion and one technical fall.
DepoProvera·lnjectlon
GAHS will wind up lhe regular
0/0-0; Tolals 13(3)-10-16-45.
·
Total fouls-Po 1·nt 15,W.ahama21. season Tuesday at 6 p.m. against
Birth control pill
Point Pleasant.

PLANNED.PAREI7HOOD
or SOUTHEAST

.

..-

~Young Eagles get
•

0

:. HEMLOCK - Tbe Eastern
:i4unior higb girls' basketball team
~!aimed two dramatic victories to
~am a bertb in tbe Miller Jovita·
'tional championship Monday at 6
~.m. a1 MiUer.
! · Eastern claimed a 36· 34 firs!
::tound win over Zanesville' Rose;p1UIS before posting-a dramatic 38~S win over Logan in lbe semifi·
~als Thursday. Jessica Brannon's
:balf-court tbree-pointer banked in
)t tbe buzzer, allowhlg EHS to
:llVOid overtime.
• In 'tbe win over Rosecrans,
~rannon led witb 18 points, Valerie
~ bad six and Stephanie Evans
four, wbile Ann Wiggins and
•e Hayman got tbree eacb. C.
oore and J. McMillan eacb had
.eight for lhe losers:
: Eastern b'ailed 16-11 atlbe half
:1111ainst Logan. but came to take a
0!4-231ead after tbree rounds.
: Mter Eastern bad taken a 35-33
~ead on a Brannon layup, Mervis
tbe game a1 35·35 wilb a drive
ber own. Eastern bad tbe ball
lh six seconds and drove to balf
~ where Brannon took lbe sbot
)iitb two seconds left. As tbe
~ sounded lbe ball banked off
:the glass and tbrougb tbe net for
:tile win.
• Brannon bad 24, while Karr bad
·f.ine and Wiggins bad five. Mervis
\nd Carpenter each bad nine for
• Eastern (16-0) wrapped up a 14~ regular season under Paul· B~­
•on •s tutelage witb a 54-13 wm
~ver· Southwestern. Brannon bad ·
i(J, while Karr had 15, Hayman had
jix, Evans bad four, Wiggins b~
three and two each fro.m ~ng•e
Wolfe Heatber Mora and Lon Har·

lis. '

i, __~ngie

'

Degarmo bad 10 .for

;J~U~~tbwesrern .

· (6-.14-11-15=46)
Brian Bowen 3-0-0=6, Eddie
Friend 0.0-2=2, Jeff Stctbem 3-0,
1=7 • Jason Sheets 1-0·0=2. Eric
Hill 3-()..0=6, Charlie Bissell 6·0·
3=15, Micah Otto 3-0-1=7. Totals:
19·0-8110=46

Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale

We accept Medicaid and private insurance. ·
414 SECOND STREET ..
GALLIPOLIS
446·0166

•

509.S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992·5912

PEOPLES BANK'S "NNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST

Cathy Gessner and 269 Others
Cathy, an employee of
Phillips Pharmacy in St. Marys,
\
\
Wesl Virginia, pi£kcd all
Cathy Gessner
+22.875
phannaceutical companies to
American Home ProdUd!, Eli Lilly, Plloer,
capture firsl place in Peoples
Johnson &amp; Johnoon, Abbott Lob
Bank's Annual Stock Picking
+22.75
•. 8 Pat.Underwood
Contest. She won $500!
Di•noy,
Home
Depot,
IBM,
Inial;
Molorola
Pat Underwood of Livonia, ·
Michigan, won $250 lor second
Mlll'(ia Stanlland
' +20.125
place, and Marcia Slamland 9!
Eli Lilly, Merck, Pllzer, Abbott Lab, .Bri•IDI Myers .
Amesville, Ohio, captured the
$100 third place prize.
Brili1h Petroleum, Johnson &amp; Johnson, Matlin Mar~.
269 olher entrant~ won i
Proxoir, Inc., Rocky Shoe~ and llooh
solar calculator by beating
Pele, the child prodigy investor.
The contest is sponsor.ed by
Peoples Bank's Discount Brokerage Scmces. Ask "for a compltmenlary .tisco.,t
brokerage fee schedule at any Peoples Bank office.
·

.Final Results!
0

"

8

•

Great
lines.

;berth in tourney
3
. title game Monday

:Logan. . .

"Where Better Really Matters"

(Across from K·Mart)

Sports Correspondent
game high scoring honors- with 17
· • MASON, W.Va. - A 9-0 Point pomts. J.C. Albright nolched 12
::'Pleasant scoring spurt to begin lhe markers, and Selh Howard had eight
ufourth QUarter brought an end lo a for the White ·Falcons.
Wahama comeback rally Friday
"This was a critical win for us"
~evening as Coach Lennie Barneue's PPHS memor Lennie Barnette said.
:;: Big Blacks acquired the rubber "ll's getting down towards the end of ·
:r:: match viclory over !heir· county the regular season, and we need to
:: rivals, 56-45.
gain some momentum as tournament
,
The hotly conlesled cage affair time approaches. We look the ball
~ gave PPHS ils second win of lhe inside lonight, and Gilley and Oliv:• 1994-95 hardcourt season over er responded with the besl inside
•' c h Le · H II ' Wh' F 1
lhrcat "e've had in quite a few
~ oac
WIS a s
lie a cons. games. Our kids really played _well."
two county
hooked
up in
Wahama coach Lew•'s Hall was
,' The
lhe early
seasonrivals
D.A.R.E.
holiday
: toumamenl, which saw Point take a also pleased wilh lhe effort and inlen: 52-47 decision. Then three weeks sity turned in by lhe Falcon cagers.
: ago Wahama prevailed 46 , 43 at "We played awfully hard and the kids
• Poinl Pleasant. The win moves Point did everylhing we could ask of
~ · Pleasant to 9-7 on the year, while the
I hem," Hall said . "We simply made
~ White Falcons saw lhefr season slale .some bad mislakes at crucial limes,
'! dip to 6_8_
and in the end thai proved to be lhe
~
Kr
difference. This was a very intense
•
is Gilley, Mark Oliver and comest wi1h this being a big rivalry,
• Tommy Dorsey were the big guns and a lol of the mistakes we made
: offensively for the Big Blacks. could be altributed io the intensify of
~ Gilley scored 17 poinls. Oliver had lhe game itself. We also missed a few
~ 16 and Dorsey added II. However, easy shots we should have made in
} a three-pointer by Jay Reymond 1he early going. But, I'd like to lhink
&lt; proved 10 be the biggest bucket of the !hat 10 playing for two weeks mighl
~· .night for Poinl PleasaJ]t Wahama had have had a lol to do wilh thai," Hall
,.whittled a )2 point PPHS lead down added.
: ;to three at 41-38. Then Gilley added
Poinl Pleasant led by six after one
: :a field ~oal and free throw prior to quarter, behind the scoring of Oliv.. Reymond's 20 fooler. Reymond's
d
k
:::trey at the 5:04
. mark gave Poinl a .er an Dorsey. Then the Big Blac s
cnjoyed lheirbiggcstadvantageofthe
::: nine point 47 · 38 lead, and lhe Big evening al2442 midway through the
.., Blacks were never threatened second canto as Gilley found the
~ throughout the ·remainder of the range. Albrighl and See led Wahama
·••• contest.
·
back into contention in the final min"' Wahama was playing for the first utes of lhe half.. Yet, lhe Big Blacks
: time in two weeks and despite held a 31-23 lead atthe intennission.
:putting forth a courageous effort, fell
Seven points by See and four by
:;::prey to its Class AAA opponenls. In Howard helped pull WHS 10 wilhin
""the end, it was a slow first )J!!riod
::tbeginning and a five minute scoring lhree wilh 2:07 remaining in the lhird
•
. stanza. But, a buckel by Gilley gave
~·drought in the final quarter that Point Pleasanl a five point'lead, 43~pelleddoomlortheBendAreaFal·h · h ·
1
. ::cons. James See equaled Gilley's 38 'Wll el~ t mmutes lo pay.

.,...Lancers.

Iula

XLT

::~~~! neighboring Wahama

bunnies inside, while Federal
Eastern bad seven steals, 14
Hocking hit a 3 on 2 break under turnoverS, four assists and 17 fouls.
tbe bucket tbree times in succes- Federal had nine steals, five assists,
sion for a 34-24 tally. Federal hit 10 turnovers and 10 fouls.
11-18 in tbe lbird quaner for 62
Reserve notes: Federal won
With 38 seconds left, Gilders percent.
.
witb a grea1 come-from-behind S2..bad a break-away layup off the
Stelbem, Bissell and Bowen 50 win. Leading 50-47 on four
::Whiting rebound and fast break to mustered up five points for a 37-29 Kyle Ord free tbrows and a Steve
~ tbe score 20-20. Then Easttally, but that was as close as East· Durst safety, Eastern had the lead
'Ctll fired up its last shot prematureem came tbe rest of the game. East· and tbe .ball, but turned it over .wilb
~,y and missed. This set up a Tolson ern made a couple foolish 35 seconds left.
.
:'drive and Gilders blitz down tbe · turnovers and began a tailspin tbal
· Josh Chapman dribbled tbrougb
;tight sideline, resulting in anotber resu!led in a 46-3J score at tbe all five Eastern players and got a
;:,ilcore wilh 11 seconds left.
buzzer.
reverse layup to fall in addition to
.. Otto got o(f a final sbot for
Easte!ll fell down by 17 points, drawing lbe foul witb 18 seconds.
::Paslern, but too much muslard put S4·3S. but did not give up. Eastern left. Additionally, an EHS player
:.it over the backboard. The score made a mild run just under the four was whistled for a technical. Cbap..atood at a low 22-20 Federal at lbe minute mark, but Federal Hocking man hit tbe free tbrow to tie 50-50
: llalf. Eastern had held one of the . .put tbe icing on tbe cake with a before drilling bOth ends of tbe
:!teague's bigbest scoring teams to a Nelson book shot and a pair of cir- technical for tbe win.
~~ low aa tbe half.
cus shots from Tolson and Whiting.
Eastern bad previously won four
:: The flfSt pan of tbe tbird frame
Jeremy Tolson led all scorer.s of its last five. Chris Bailey bad 14
"'Was a relleainn of lbe flfSt half, but wilb 22 points, while Nelson and for Eastern. while Eric Dillard
::Pederal picked up die intensity on Gilder eacb had 12. Whiting had added 12 and Durst bad 11. Cbap::tts break in order to get some 10.
.
man bad 22 for Federal Hocking.
~ffense off the transition game ..
Eastern was led by Bissell's 15
-•-•-•:.;.dditionally, the game began to get points, while Ouo and Stetbem
. FEDERAL HOCKING
::lPbysical, an aspectoftbe gam~t eacb bad seven, Brian Bowen
(8-14-l4-14=ti0)
added six, Eric Hill six and Eddie
Mark Whiting.5..()..();= 10, Jeremy
"favored tbe bulkier Lancers.
:: Tbe.weekend's cold front hit the Friend two. .
Dotson 2.0~, Chad Nelson 4-1::J;:IIstem end of die gC.;;.e night
Eastern bit 19-44, 0·6 on lhrces. 1=12, ·Jeremy Tolson 8-1·1=22,
~of schedule as
put up 8-10 at tbe line and bad 29 Natban Gilders 5-0-2=12. Tntals
::_series of shots that consistently rebounds led by Bissel!'s II, Ouo's . 24·l·419=ti0
:;t'ell short of lbe mark. Easlern bit six and Hill's five. Whiling had 10
Eastern
~ust 9-27 tbe second half. At one of Federal's 29 rebounds,
, jlOint, Eastern missed three straight

Allan de Dhialoa

.IX L J: El! rA r.c&amp;.
Tampa Bay. ...... .5 S 1 11 34 34
N.Y. hiaadon... o S I 9 21 JS

int Pl_easant gets 56-45 win

~veral opportunities to break the
·•.game open before half, but a cou·
:;,;;1e over anxious plays and bunied
, ~ots played right into lbe bands of ·

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(614) 446-4042

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:·

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.:Eagles lose.. "__&lt;_co_nu_·nu_ed_fro_m_c_-6,.;..&gt;_ _ _~-:---"------..:..._--~-:7:::-;-::~--

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WESTERN CONFERENCE

»: L I
Chi""ttQ ............ I ~ 0

II
2I 10
0 I
3 -1
2 6

NHL standings

Loudoav\lle 66, Black River 61
Madiaon Pili r. 60, W1yoeavi\le 52
Malvern 63, Ncwcomcntowu S6
Muchctter 76, Ripley 7S
Mauafteld 9!1, Muioa H.ding S7
Morie11113. locboo 66
Manoa Local61, Fort Recovery SS
Marioo Pl•ut 64, N. Uutoa 53
MuliaJton 76, W. Braneh S4
Mlll1iDI Ferry 69, HaaDibal River 62
Muon S9, Oolhen 44
M111illoo Jacbcin 79, Canton McKia ~

Clear Fork-'J,'Triway 36
Cleatvicw S-". FJyria W. 52
, Clermonl Northeuletn 811, Bethel-Tate
ll
'
Oinloq·Maule IS, E. CI!Dtoa12 .
Clovaleaf 54, Breclaville 47
Cql. Academy 78, Marion Cath. 66
Col. DeSale~6.5 , Col. Hartley 53
Col. Eut 66, Col. Beechaoft 60
Coi . Iudepeudence 81. Col. Walnul
Rid&amp;t: 13

l4 s
4
Anaheim ........... ' 1
Van.c:ouvw ........ 1 4
Lot Anaei........ 2 s

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

l7

6S

(;:~~;;D
::: ::: ·
"
.........

Zaaes'l'il\e 76, Ncw•t 42

Ponamoulb E. 17, New 801toa 61
Preble Sh.woee 83, Brookville 80
Raveaaa Southeast 75, WCKM:kldae 69
Revere 67, Green S4
ReyaoldlbUfJ S2, Plc:kc:rin11a• SO

Salem 57, Niles 56
Sandusky 98, N. RidaeYI.IIe 56
Sebrina so, Uaitcd 4i
Shadyaide II, CllllCtOa, W.VL 'I
Sha.Ut HtJ. 94, Garfield Hra. 59
Sherwood Fairview 74, Tiaora 63
Ski Dey 91, Troy II
Sidney Ldunaa 77, Miam.i 1!. 73
SouthiDilt.Oil 66, Bloorillleld j!i
Spllllllisftlaod 68. Buckeye Val. Sl
Speocerville 88, Uma Pmy SS
Spriaa. C11hoUc: 71, Miltoa-UDioa !13
Sprtaa. Local84, Lowellville 64
SprinJ. North II, Xeail7o4
Sprina. Northea•lern 68, Spring .
Sh.awoee .54
Sprioaboro 80, Norwood .50
St. lle111J' 79. Miuter 6S
Stow 77, Bubert011. 69

i

' Ira ·

.·

pulled tbe trigger on a 12-footer for
a 15 -14 Eastern lead. Tbe .le'd ...
cbanaed bands four m~re limes
before Otto drilled a pau of frte
tbrows at tbe 3:13 mark.
'
Bolb teams bad tbeir ~ces in
lbe next two a!ld a half mmutes, bflt
neither capitalized. Eastern had
(See EAGLES on C-7) .•

Florida .... ::!....... 4 6 1
N.Y. Rq.,. .... o 6
New Jcne)' ....... 3 4 2
Pbilodolpbio...... ~ 7 I
· WIIIIIO&amp;Iob ...... 2 6 I

N..-the... D".WPitllburp ......... 9 0 I · 19 41

1995

I

SeHer luck next year, Pete.
I guess you won't be
heading to
Disney World.

Any other plans?

/

·

Actually Cathy, my
peopl~ hove been talking
to some folks in Orange
Counly. We'll see how
that pans out.

I

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�Outdoors

February 12, 1995

·Schott may lose out unless she talks with stadium task force
. CINCINNATI (AP)- A leader
of a task force·trying to dec~ on~
new stadium bas warned CIDCUinall
Reds oWner Marge Schon tbat sbe
might lose out unless she starts
talking.
Schott hasn't cooperated witb
·tbe task force, which is trying to
decide whether to recommend a
new stadium for the Reds or for the
·Cincinnati Bengals.
If Schott doesn't tell the taSk
:force what she would like, it will
Slart working with tbe Bengals on
· tbe stadium plans, Hamilton Counly Coounissioner Guy Guckenberger told The CinCinnati Enquirtr.
· Guckenberger issued the ultima·tum Friday, giving Scholl until
March I to cooperate, the newspaper reponed today.
• 'If we don't have her input,
we'll bave to proceed without
ber" Guckeoberger said·, "The
·end' of February is the deadline.
After tba~ I'm inclined to IXoceed
with the Bengals and do the best .

job we can with 1be Reds."
Guckenberger, , co-cbalnnao or
the Regwnal Stadium Task Fon:e,
,indicated Sc~ott is a main stumbhng block _m tbe stadium planning. She was miffed when City
Council negotiated a new stadium
agreement with the Bengals roughly a year ago, and bas been reluctant to work with regional officials
trying to satisfy both teams.
..
"We've given her oppor10Dilies
to teU us what she wants and what
her problems are," Guckenberger
said. "I ~ ~tand she would
be upset w1lb the aty after the Bengals' deal was made. And yes. sbe
bas a right to be upset. But a year
later, we have to move along."
Ken Lucas, judge-executive of
Boone County in northern Kenlucky and a task forllC co-chairman,
agreed It is time for action.
"I'm ;Wnost of the opinion of
let's do something, even if it's
wrong," be said. "Maybe some
action will cause somebody to get

:oow picks 18 counties as new
·home areas for wild turkeys .

By JOHN WISSE
:Division of·WlldUfe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The · Division of Wildlife bas
selected 18 counties for the release
·of wild turkeys Ibis winter in an
: attemjlt to ioc.rease their numbers
:and distribution.
'The oounlies arc Brown, Buder,
:champaign, Clermont, Clinton,
:Crawford, Delaware, Greene,
·Higblaod, Logan, Lorain, Morrow,
:Portage, Preble, Ross, Seneca,
:Shelby and Wyandot.
Wildlife biologists need to cap:ture 750 to 800 wild turkeys to
:complete the full scb~dule or
.releas.es that include 39 separate
:sites. Most of ihe release sites are
·in wooded areas near rivers and
.streams.
· In an average winter, about 300
·tmkeys arc capluied and relocated,
..but the number cam be much high·er if the weather conditions, such
:as extended snow cover, arc favor·able.
Biologists began baiting their
targeted capture sites in late
December to help attract flocks of
wild turkeys. Capturing began in
early January and wiU end in early
March.
Wild turkeys -~n nine southeast

offlbedime."
Task for~ member Made Guilfoyle, an' adviSCr to Kentucky Gov.
Bre~eton Jones, said, "~e have
receiVed absolutely notbmg from
tbe Reds. Obviously, the Rl;ds are
tbe team ·.that really need to come
forwardatth_ispointoftime."
Schott srud today that the Reds
have been working on tbe sladium
issue.
.
"We've been worltin~ on it all

along maybe Guckenburger
doesn:t know tbaL But you don't
offer tbe most important team in
tbe ciry lllllhing," sbe said
The Reds and Bengals share
Riverfront Stadium and have complaincd about the 25-year-old stadium, which is smaller than many
other NFL stadiums and doesn't
have as many income-producing
luxury boxes as other football and

.

baseball stadiums.
Bengals president Mike Brown
is lobbying for a new, foolball-ooly
stadium. Schott b~n'! given !he
task forllC any rlllilllcialmformation
or stated her preference for bandliog tbe stadium question.
The task force is trying to
decide whether to build one new
stadium and leave tbe other team at
Riverfront. Brown bas said the

By ,JOHN WJSSE ,
Division of WlldUfe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _
Tbe bald eagle cootiuues to thrive
in record .numbers in Ohio, the
Division of Wildlife said.
A midwinter bald eaJ:~ survey
conducted by state wil · e biologists and volunteers last month
counted 57 adult and 41 immature
bald eagles, mosdy near Late Eric.
That compared with 47 adult and

eagles Inhabited Obio, Through
this proJect. which focuses on aest
site 101provement, fostering, rebabilitalion, education and·protecliOO•
Ohio's breeding bald eagle populalion bas now expanded to cover 11
counties; '
Wildlife biologists said most of
Ohio's adult bald eagles do not
migrate out of Obio, except durioll

the most severe winters. ~any ~f
the immature eagles born m Obio
migrate sporadically from late
October through January, lhough a
few stay in Ohio tbrougboul winter.
During last month's survey,

is coordinated by the Nadooal Bio.
and northeastern Ohio counties arc logical Survey.
. Although the U.S . Department
the ones being captured and relocated. In 1994, the Division of of Interior may change the bald
Wildlife said an estimated 95,000 eagle from its current status of
wild turkeys were distributed endangered to tbrcalened. there arc
throughout a 14,000 square mile no plans to remove tbe bald eagle
area tbat included 689 toWIIsbips in from Ohio's list or endangered
wildlife. Bald eagles are also
60 counties.
among
a broader group of owls,
Tbe trap imd transfer project,
raptors
and
other birds of prey that
which dates to the late 19SOs, bas
are
protected
by federal and state
been fundamental in expanding tbe
laws.
wild turkey's range in Ohio. Good
"Ohioans generally have a high
habitat conditions and wise management of Ibis resource bas also repnl for our bald eagles. Though
supported higher turkey popula- eagles migrate seasonally through
Ohio, our midwinter survey results
lions, wildlife biologists said.
There were an estio\ated 7,700 indicate there's a good chance of
wild turkeys present in Obio in seeing an increase in the number~~
·1982. The estimate sCO!&gt;d at ZS.OOO nestipg eagle pairs in the ~tate, .
in '1988 . By 2000, the division said Gildo Tori, the supervisor of
hopes as many as 150,000 wild · the state's wetlands research unit at
the Crane Creek marsh in Oak Hartwlceys wiU be in Ohio.
· "We now have wild turkeys in bor.
There were 26 pairs of nestiug.
all of the ptime habitat found
eagles
in Ohio last year, including
throughout southeast and most of
one
pair
located near tbe Delaware
northeast Ohio. Several years ago
we decided to look at counties in Wildlife Area in central Ohio. The
otber parts of Ohio where tbe 26 pairs or bald eagles produced a
· potential exists to support small total of 30 eaglets, one shy of the
numbers of wild turkeys," said record balcbed in 1993 and 1992. ·
When the Division of Wildlife's
Bob Stoll, a. fon:st game. ~~age­
eagle
management project began in
ment superviSOr m the DIVISion of
19/9,
only four pairs of nesting
Wildlife.

VINTON - Vinton and Hannan Trace spUt a junior high boys'girls' basketball doubleheader
Thursday night at Vinton Elementary..
. . •
The boys' gnme sow the WildCatS win 50-44 behind S. Davis' 17
·points and J.R. Boothe's 13. The
host Tigen (2-9) were led by 12poiot efforts by Jasoo Joba&amp;OII and
Jared Oiler and Kyle Deel's 10.
The girls' game saw Vinton (36) win 22-9 behind Asbly Roberts'
10 ponts and Jamie Harless' eight.
Hannan Trace was led by Amanda
Dray's
points and Angei1Beck's
two.
These Vinton teams hosted
Kyger Creek Saturday.

10 .'

observers found a group of II
eagles . in a large tree a~ t~e
Mosquito Creek Reservou 1n
Trumbull County· Another group
?f 13 ~agles were seen near a bole
m the ICC on Sandusky Bay.

~~.and ~rs should not forget the lesson of the

answering the phone at w's home said be wasn't there
when a rcponer called for commem.
Federal authorities termed the AT&amp;T scheme one
r the b"
· 'der trad.
·
the l980s
o
1ggest ms1
mg cases smcc
lalccover boom, when big Wall Street fi urcs induding Dennis Levine and ·Ivan Boesk wefe caught and
sent to pn'son
Y
·
Earlier in the week tbe SEC charged John
Ka k f
rt' 1:
f the
a1
wes e, ormerpo •OI?manager or
mutu
~~i COI!lpany lnvesco. w11b a frau~ulcm scheme to
n;_e SEes to~~ ·
kin · il
·
.
' •w
IS see . g av penalues aga~nst
deKaalweske, chbarhgedb' that wbtledat lnvesco be c_oncealctl
s m w IC •s son waul secretly rece1ve commissions from his irading activity
·

vi~l~tions ch~es

B
.
· .
,
rumf1eld, wbohves m Palm Beach Gardens.
Aa., could not be reached for commeni.' A woman

Suggestions for Congress to cut taxes

S -C JNCJmA

_ · MAKING PLANS • Maklna plans for the nnt In a series of
''Business After Hours", IU'e GaiDa County Chamber of Commerce
President Marlaruie CampbeU and Uninrslty of Rio Grande PresIdent Dr. Barry Dorsey. The event is being boned by the university
on Thursday, Feb. 16 from 5:30 to 7 p.m. In the FAther Allen Greer
Museum. Dr. Dorsey serves as the Chamber's Business After
Hours Conunlttee Chairman.

"95"

Gallipolis Chamber's
'Business After Hours'
win begin Feb. 16

We have the Best Prices in Town!

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK
CENTER INC.
446-2532

Using the privileged information, Brumfield's
family and friends bought s.lock in the targets and
sold them once the stock soared when AT&amp;T publicly announced its 1·ntenti'ons prosecutors ••'d
•
- ·
Two-thinls of the profits, or about $2 miUion, was
·made around · December 1990, when AT&amp;T
announced its tender of.fer for NCR, lbe big computer
·
maker, the government
charged. ·
Brumfield and Thomas Alger a former subonliI
tAT&amp;T b •
'
'd 'd d h
~~~ pleaded ~u3J~:s~~::s ~~ul~~ 0~~
charge; Six others were criminally charged by the
us Attome ·s omce and all 17faced SEC civillaw

19~~:._fhn~to~ber P. La1a, b~cb chief in the
eofun=~nt di~is~ of tbe Securiu.es and Exchange
COIDIIliss100 said Friday
" ·
' · · ·'
los1der trading IS ll!egal and the .co~uences
can be seriOIIS. ~were operating mlhis c~te~l
and other contexes IS an atmorsbere of greed, said
r ·•·
·
tigati ng the AT&amp;T
.......,,
one 0 f the a ttoroeys mves
case.
FederalprosccutorsallegedCbarlesBrumfield,a
middle-level labor relations manager at AT&amp;T's
.Morristown, NJ. office, passed on secret information
over four years about poteolial AT&amp;T takeover targets - NCR Corp., Paradyne Digital Microwave
and Teradata.
'
·

·heck Out The Selection .. ~

135 Pine Street

February 12, 1995

I

Junior high cagefest
slated for Thursday
B.IDWELL - The 1995 Ga11ia
County Junior High Basketball
T~umamcnt will begin Thursday
Wllh rii'St-round action at BidwellPorta Elemenrary.
All other games, including the
.championship games on Monday,
Feb. 20, will be held at River Val•
ley High School.
For more information, call
David Moore at 446-7496 (home)
or at RVHS at 367-7377.

. ~ ~~ID E.W~~JSH

·
NEW~RK r 1 "Wall S
.. lh 1987
- n
trcet,
e
movie, a young hotshot played by Charlie Sheen
b' 1
b
· ga1'ns ndmittan to lb b t
.
ce
e ro . erage 18 eagues. Y
. tradmg on secret information about impendmg
lalcTbeeovers. .
.
.
,
.
real-life
update,
which
ought
be
btled "Main
Street." debuted Ibis
week Se
·
.
pas_1 . · veuteeD peop1e ,m
fivestateswerecbargedmanngtbatmadeS2.6million by trading on illicit tips about the lalceover plans
of AT&amp;T Corp.
For anyone who forgot lhal'tbe screen version
··. trader gets nabbed in the cod, federal authorities
'" unveiling tbecase i,ssuedadearreminder
.• "The fi
.
.
. . m.d
te
, :,
II'S! very IDiportanl pomt•s
corpora

·

Qh•

six

Section D

Feds charge 17 with illegal insider trading

Crow's ·on top of things.
HOeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

Vinton and Hannan
r:g~.:f~:=_dur- Trace split twinbill

$o~==:=~s=

·.

Bengals will leave Cincn~nali
unless tbcy get a new· stadl\~·
Scholl bas talked about pom Y
moving tbe Jlel!s to~ Kentucky, but tbatiS not COOSidered a
workable option.
The Reds are under leas~ ~~
Rl-.:erfrontlbrougb 2010 and Ills
unlikely tbe other baseball 0~
would let the team move out 0
Cincimati.
,
•

DOW says bald eagle_s k_eep increasing num
_bers an

~hnts- itntittet

·FarJJllllusiness

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C8

'

By KIM HARLESS
JACKSON- With the many
new faoes in Washington, Republicans, Democraes and the president
seem to be batlling it out to see
who. can win the hearts of voters by
cutting taxes. In this new spirit of
cooperation, Farm Bweau wants to
offer some suggestions of bow to
cnt taxes to ·
belp rural Ohioans.
The capital gains tax is a tax ort
the profit from land's value from
the time it w~ purchased until it is
sold. This tax hits farmers particularly bard because or the high land
reqmrements for farming . If a
farmer wanes to sell a parcel or land
to finance farm improvements or
retirement, or•en this t,ax eats up

any gains. Farm Bureau believes
tbal the accumulation and transfer
or capital assets is neoessary for a
beaithy agricultural economy. Farm
Bureau supports cutting the capital
gains tax rate to a maximum of 15
percent and indexing capilal gains
to inflation.
Another tax that hits farmers
hard is the estate tax. It iS difficult
enough for young people to enter
fanning and tbi ~ tax makes it more
difficult to pass a farm from one
generation to the next Currently
the federal estate tax law rrovides a
unified estate and gifi tax credit
that
exempts $600,000 from the nlue
of"an estate subject to tax. Farm
Bureau supports repeal or the fed-

eral estate tax and opposes any expenses, education and the firstreduction in the current exemption.
time purchase or homes.
Farmers, as with ail self- . Of course Ibis is but a sample of
employed, should be granted a per- Ideas Fatm Bureau has fpr cutting
manent. 100 percent tax deduction taxes, not 10 mention the everor equivalent tax credit for health standing policy or reducing tbe size
insurance premiums. Farming is a ~ spending babies of govenunent
dang,erous occupatibn and lbose m general. Passage of tax leg islahigh risks lranslate into high insur- lion is a priority for the 104th
ance premiums. Many farmers are Congress due largely to the Conreducing or dropping their cover- tract with America and commitage entirely because of the coses.
ment made to bring ies provisions
If those suggestions aren '1 up for a vote during lbe first 100
enough, here are some more : · days of the session. Let's not let
restore tax-deferTed IRAs or 'create our representatives forget lbe mesIRAs for whicb income earned is sage sent last November.
not taxable when withdrawn; accelCall or write and tell ihem how
erate depreciation
you feel.
and allow the fuU value of investKim ilarless is lhe area Farm
ments to be depreciated; and allow Bureau organization dir.Ctor
'
.
IRAs to be used to save
. for medical
'

'

Flipped car leaves owner stunned

.
.
to me that you are enlilbi to some any inside infonnation, but I have unreasonable request. When your
By BRUCE WILLIAMS
good reason to believe that a piece attorney writes up the deal, simply
You are not going to believe extra co111pensation because of the
or property currently on the markel include your right to trade or sell
Ibis. I tonk my car in for service. I diminished value or the autcimowas sitting there reading my news- . bile. Any automobile tbal bas been is going to multiply in. value over your option.
the next two or three years. I talked
paper and enjoying a soda when I se\lerely damaged, even though
That should in no way bother
repaired,
will
be
worth
considerto the owner, and sbe is in no great the seller because she wins either
beard the loudest crash imaginable.
Everyone rushed to look through ably less wben sold or traded, . hun:&gt;' to se.ll, but she is perfectly way - if the option is exercised
GALLIPOLIS - Tbe Gallia ness leaders to get together for an · tbe shop door and there was my -6- unless retained for a very long peri- w1Umg to g1ve me an option for the she g~ls her money, if it is no~ she
County Chamber's "Business After informal social hour, share ideas month-old. car on its side. It bad od oftio\e.
next three years to buy tbe property retains her property ownership with
Hours" will be held on a regular that will benefit the
I'd
discuss
Ibis
with
the
dealer.
1f I pay the property taxes during the taxes paid . Obviously, if the
fallen off the lift.
quanerly basis, startiug Thursday, community and bear li&gt; minute
that period of tiine.
It
may
well
be
and
this
is
going
It was in for its fusl 3.000-mile
·property goes up like crazy, she
Feb, 16, according to Dr. Barry program that will be of special servicing, I'm a grown man, but I to go down bard - that you should
I think this is a preuy good idea
DOl be real happy about your
Dorsey, cbairman of the Chamber's interest to the group. Dates and wanted to ay. I've never bad a new consider striking a deal in wbiCh and not a bad gamble. What I want opuon,
but !bat's why they dil l it a
Business After Hours Coounittee.
sponsors have alrcally been estab- car before and I really sacrificed to you trade the car in, pay for lbe to know iS if the property does go gamble.
.
.Dorsey, president of tbe Univer- lished for a fuU year iii advance.
get Ibis one. Now the dealer is mileage that you put on the car and up; can I sell the op1ion to someBruce.WUUan.. iS a·syndicated
' sity of Rio Grande; said the FebruBusiness After Hours wiU be on telling me thai they will gel Ibis slart from square one.
body else, or do I have to buy the writer for Newspaper Enterpriso · ·
~ ary event will be hosted by the
tbe third Thursday of February, twisted mess looking great, but
You might want to get the zone properry and then seu it? Clearly; it A•-latlon.
University and will be from 5:30 to May, August aud November. from they Bit not going to replace the car representative involved now. While would be a whole lot beller if I
(Send your que•llons lo:
7 p.m. in the Esther Allen Greer 5:30 to 7 p.m. The May 18 meedng and they don't have any responsi- the droppilig of the car is obvious! y c~uld earn the profit by just sbuf- Smart
Money, P.O. Box SOJ,
Museum first floor gallery. Own- will be sponsored by Amerilecb bility to do so. Can l)lis be possi- not the manufacturer's responsibili- flmg pape{, rather than owning the
her members and prospective mem- ana will be held at the Gallipolis ble? This car suffered at least ty, it is still in their bes1 inlerest to · property. Please don't mention my Ellers,- FL 34680. Questions of
general Interest will be answered
bers are invited to attend.
·
Holiday Inn.
SS,OOO·
in
damages,
and for me, it settle Ibis maner amicably. There is location for the obvious reasons. In
future columns. Owing lo the
"Business After Hours" proAnyone wanting to auend the
Anonymous Reader
no
question
in
my
mind
that
the
car
be
the
same.
T.P.,
volume
of mall, personal replies
will
never
vides a unique opportunity for February 16 event, can contact tbe Buffalo, N.Y.
DEAR
READER:
An
option
is
a
could
be
wholesaled
off
and
that
be
provided.) .
cannot
Chamber members and other busi; Chamber at446-0596. .
DEAR T.P.: You raise an inter- ibe dealer and his insurance compa- contract between two parties. Since
(For Information on how to
esting issue here. There's no ques- ~Y can recapture all or mo&amp;J.of their you arc anticipating lrl!ding or sell- c&lt;unml!llicate ele&lt;lronlc:•lly with
ing the option, that privilege should this columnist and others, contact
tion in my mind tbat the dealer ·bas mvestmem,
be written into the contract This is America OnUne by calllng 1-800the right to repair the car rather
By JAY CALDWELL
DEAR BRUCE: I don ' t have certainly not unusual. nor is il an 827-6364, ext. 8317.)
3. A stock invesunent you've lhan replace it However, it seems
'
In an earlier article. we discussed owned for a month loses 15% of its
how spreading your money among value in a market COITCCtion, Assum·different investment classes-other- ing that none of the fundamentals
have changed, you: a. Hold tight and ByEDWARDM. VOLLBORN
wise known as
west It bas allowed local youth to will begin at 7 p.m. at the South
By the latest crop estimate, 90
wail for· it to go back up. b. Sell itasset allocationGALLIPOLIS - The Galli a compete without (be time and District Extension Center, and a percent of the 1994 burley tobacco
there may be more declines. c. Buy Co!Jnty Preview Open Stee( and expe~se of traveling to majOr sll!te midday session on March II will
can help minimize
prod!K:tion had beeJI sold a1 auction
more-i I looks even better now.
investment risk.
Heifer Show will be Feb. 19. The or regional shows. A special thanks be held at the Edwards farm at the end of Sales Feb. 2.
4. Would you feel better if: a. You heifer portion of the show will start 10 the·many loc~l,.' businesses that between Thurinan and Oak Hill.
What professional
The season . average price was
doubled your mo~ey in W1 equity in- at II a.m .. with the steer show bave assisted the Galiia County
managers refer to
$184.14 per hundred: Even lbough
vesunent?b. Your money market fund immediately following.
Cattlemen' s Association in sponas "dynainic rebalA reminder or lbe Ohio Perfor- the "pool" lalce for the week ending
soring
this
event
and
making
it
one
saved you from losing half your
ancing." asset almance
Tested Boar Sale to be held Feb. 2 was 24 percent. the total for
The fifth annual evem will be
of
the
top
preview
shows
in
Ohio.
Feb.
18;
I p.m. atlbe Ohio Swine the "season". stands at only 8.9 permoney
in
a
market
slide?
location is really
be~d at the Gallia County Junior
Evaluation
Station, Case Road, cent Some economises bad earlier
5. YouarconaTV game show and ,Faugrounds. In addition to the .
nothing more than the occasional
More
grazing
scbOQI
opportuniColumbus. Some 35 boars will be indicated that a pool take of less
adjusunent of your pOrtfolio 10 keep eWJ choose one of the following; open show, a preview class for "eliits relative risk at a predetennined Which would you lalce? a. $1,000 in gible" 1995 Gallia County Junior ties! A lbree-session series similar offered . · Top indexing boar than 10 percent for the season
to those held in Gallia and Athens weighed 230 pounds al 119 days·
level.
cash b. A SO% chance at $4,000. c. A Fair steers will be held.
would positive for tbe future.
A "county" heifer show will fol- counties last s(ling and currently'in gained 2.68 pounds per day; had ~
To set up an asset aliocation 'sys- 20% chance al $10.000. d. A 5%
(Edward M. Vollborn Is lht
low the open heifer classes: The Meigs .County will be held during feed offering of 189.7; loin eye agricultural extemion agent for
tem, however, you have to first un- chance at $100,000.
area or 6.00: and .56BF.
show bas attracted some of the early March in Jackson County.
GoUla County.)
derstand the risks involved in the •
The
sessions
on
March
I
and
8
.
most
competitive
calves
in
the
midvarious investment categories you 'II
SCORING
be considering for your portfolio and
Now it's time 10 sec wha1 kind of
what risk level is appropriate for you. investor you arc. Total your score, .
The following worksheet can help using the point&lt; assigned here for
you determine your risktolerance each answer you gave:
By PATrY DYER
resources connected to the land. other programs have been translife." .
level. Answerthe,questions, and lben · (lnvesunent Viewpoint don't)
GALLIPOLIS - The. United More recently, the agency bas felTed to it: lbe Wetland Reserve
The Natural Resources Conse~­
State Department of Agriculture's worked with the nation's private Program, the Wau:rBank Program,
total your score to see if your riskva.ho~ Servic·e will continue t~
Soil Conservation service bas bad a landowners to increase acreage and lbe Forestry Incentives Program, wod' m partnership 'With lbe Gallia .
tolerance level tends 10 be conserva- I. A-2; B·l; C-4; D-1
name
change to the Natural improve management of grassland, the Colorado River Salinity Control S~1i and _Water Conservation Dis- ·
tive, moderate or aggressive,
2. A-I; B-3; C-4
Resources Conservation Service. wet lands, and forest lands through · Program, and the Farms for the !Ret.. Wh1l~ the agency is undergo. ·
I ~ Which situation would make · 3. A-3; B-1 ; C-4 .
. Future Program. .
The
new ;igency was authorized as USDA rrograms.
you feel happiest? a. .You hit the 4. A-2; B-1
.
mg a maJor reorganization and
"More
part
or
the
USDA's
reorganization
than
.
two-thirds
of
the
The Natural Resources conser- some f~eld omces arc being glDSOI·
lottery and win $100,000. b. You 5. A-I; 1n: C-5; D-9
.
land in this co)lntry is privately vation Service will increasingly 1dated, the Gallia County office
inherit $100,000 from a rich aunt. c.
Between S - 9 : You are probably last October. '
owned.
Those private landowners look at all resources on private Will be one, but they will also be
''Our
new
name
more
accurately
You earn $100,000 by risking $2,000 aconservatiVe investor willing to take
reflects
wbat
we
do,"
said
are
a
key
to our environmental well lands as ies n:source conservationIn the options market. d. Any of the some risks. It ~Y be best to stick
Lawrence
Clark,
Slate
Conservabeing,
"·
Clark
said. "We wiil con- ists help private landwoners on a providing service to the landowners
above. You're thrilled no matter how with a cl&gt;nservative portfoliQ until
tionist in Ohio for the Natural tjnue to build on our 60 years of voluntary basis. "We wiU continue in Lawr·ence· County. As the~e
your profile changes.
you getthe money
changes are being made every
Resources Conservation Service. experience with the unique rela2. A month after you buy it, the
Between 10 - 15 : You are a "Our responsibilities go further tionship between the Federal gov- to be the American people's link to efrort will be made to maintain the
value of your stock investment soars ·modelllte investor, willing to take than soU conservation, lbey have ernment and those. landowners, as private land, as helping caretakers highest quality service possible to
of the land.•But we think or land
by 37%. Wit~ no other detailS' what calculated risks to achieve grcatei for some time."
well as 'our partnership with local itself as a core constituent. I think .our customers.
All NRCS programs and scrdo you do? a. Sell it. b. Hold on for £&gt;Wards. You will usually have more
While the agency_bas focused. conservation districts," Clark we speak for the land with a capilal .
vi~~ ~ l!IIered on a.nondiscrimifurther possible gain. c. Buy more- in stock funds than the conservative OIL !!Oil conservation.for the past 60- added . ~
"b" - to go beyond the soli natory
basis without regard to race
- it migln go higher.
cclntlnued on 1).8
• years, it bas also been the key fedTbe new Natural Resources . resource, Clark said. "What's done
color,
na.
tional origin, religion, sex: .
eral agency to offer technical help ConserVation Service wjUcontinue
on our vast acreage of private lands age, man tal status, or handicap.
on private lands for the improvt!' to have responsibility for all pro- encompasses so much more--our
Patty Dyor Is tho district soU
ments to water, wildlife habitat, grams of the former Soil Conserva- . water, our forest .lands, our
conservationist
.
forestlands, grasslands, and other tion Service. In addition, several
wildlife, our air, our quality or
·'
'
MARIETI A • A seq~inar on aware of their responsibilities in ·
Who Owns Your Land will be bow these regulali!&gt;ns can affect ·
offered on February 13, 1995 .in them. The purpose or this seminar
· Marlena The seminar wiD be .held is .to·edilcate landowners about tbe
contiuued effeces of cold damage to for $5 each frolp lbe Ohio Fruit &amp; Adams , owner .or Adams Farms
,
at the Washington County career legal foundation of land ownership By HAL KNEEN
fruit bearing branches jn' l995 . Vegetable Growers Association.
POMEROY
I
just
returned
and
landowners
responsibilities.
Center located on State Route 676.
lo~ated outside Racine and Ty
Parts or the Michigan. vegetable
.
from
tbe
annual
Ohio
Fruit
&amp;
VegSeveral llJOwCr extension publi- Bnnager, owner of Ty Brinager &amp;
Participants
will
learn
about
tbe
Tbe seminar will slart at 7:30 p.m.
• In recent years, the number and law maltinjl process and ~ow to 'etable Grov,:ers Congress ·in Tole- region received more than 19 inch- cations were updated this· year and Sons Farm located near Reedsville
scope of 'federal, state and local p;uticipate m it. In addition, there do. Attendance was higher than last es or rain last July, thus dramatical- can be ordered from your local arc to tM: commended in their ass;s:
regulations have been incn:asing. will be a panel of rcsowce people year, due to good driving, weather ly reducing their 1994 profitability. extension office: 1995 Ohio Veg- tanc:e·lhis past summer in the colThe thirst for more grower etabll Production Guidt ($7), ~id­ lecuon of tomato research data.
and its centralized locality for the
These regulations bave an ~~act who can answer questions.
.
in[
ormation was quite evident, as we.iter~ Veget.able Variety Trial . This data was used in a paper ·.
For additional information on neighboring produciion states or
cih your land managCII)pll deciSIOII.
.
· the sessions I altended ill sweet Report for 1994 ($7) and the Com- pre!en.led at lbe Growers • Congress1.
Private property rightS have been this program contact Obil' State Indiana and Michigan.
·, Last year's 'Weather cOnditions oom, tomato and pepper production mercial Tree Fruit Spray Guide ., on D1sease Management in Freshdecreasing 'as public rights have University &amp;tension-Washington
County, 205 Pumam Street, Mariet- were sliD tbe·item of many coover, were packed. Proceedings. from the ($2). I do ·have a copy of each at Marke~. Tomatoes with TOM'
been inaeasing.
· Rural landowners, especially ta, Ohio, 4S7SO, 614-373-6623 . satioos. The fruit growers 'and uni- vegetable and fruit sessions were my office for your peruSal.
tAS T. Fresh market tomato .
Local vegetable growers, Jim
versity researchers expeet to see published. Copies can be purchased
forest and farm o.wnen, sbojakl lli: Ext. 275. ·
Continued on D-8
.

mar

Gallipolis

'

.Investment Viewpoint

Steer preview, heifer show slated Feb. 19

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Who owns your land?

Fruit, vegetable session

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ha~

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'.

I

I

�..
•

Page-02-Sunday nmn-Sentinel

12,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Plea..nt, WV

Incredible
.Universe

nvestors gua 1ng
against market drop

Ohio electronics
store goes high
tech In marketing

By PATRICIA LAMIELL
AP BuiO"• Writer
NEW YORK - Is the econotny beaded for~ _doWDtum? A look at
recent s!Odc maatcl activity suuests 10 some tbat 11 as,
.
Equity investors are stepping up their purchases of so-called "defen.
sive' • issues, srocts that tend to do bellel' than th4; rest of the martet during an ecmomic decline.
·
ill the
•
Signs of a slowdown may not yet he showmg up
. aov~ent s
del&amp;. said Steven Goldman, market ~gist al ~~ &amp; Co. m Greenwich Coon ''but stocks look farlher IDIO the borizon.
· The trend started late last year and picked up ~ Fe!'· 3, afte~ ~e
govenuoent reported a surprising 0.3 percentage potnt leap m the naoon .s
UIICIDploytoe!lt rate, 10 5.7 pen:ent.
.
..
·
Investors have increased their selling of ecooomically SCDSJiive stocks
and are buying more recessioo stalwarts. · . . . , , .
"The more cyclical groups have been declining, said Arnold Kauf.
man, edillll' or Tbe Outlook, a Standard &amp; Poor's Corp. oewsl~ter;
''Autos and steel and some of the others have been laggt~_Jg fir some .
time now, whereas the consum~ nondurable goods tompa111es, like the
drugs, foods, household products and that type or company have been
gaining," Kaufman said. .
The
.
r
"l'l:&lt;lple will st!U buy soap during recessions.
same ts true o drug
and food companies."
Standard &amp; Poor's index or diversified health care stocks, for example,
gained .7 percent in January after rising 12.1 percent in 1994. Drug stocks
added 5 percent ill January and 12.4 percent~ year.
.
But S&amp;P's automobile stock index lost 8.8 m January and 16.6 perte11t
for the year. Steel issues declined 9 percent last mooth and 3.6 percent last

By PAUL SOVIIRADA
.U.OC:Iated P..,.. Writer
HIWARD- The CD-ROMs
and laser dilcs area 't the only
things bigb-tecb at the newest
Incredible ·universe electronics
Slore.

A sophistij;ated maatctiag strategy and patented cbectout system
that JeCalls every customer's purchase down to the last floppy disk
is at the core of Tandy ·corp.'s
entry into the highly competitive
IIURelplace.

K::C

"We 1oo1t 11 it as a
where
we feel people would · to shop
in tbe year 20!)0," said John
Roach, chairman of Fon Worth,
TelUII-!Jfled Tandy.
. With its neon lights ·and MTVilllpited musk: p~ying on a wall of
STRATEGY FOR THE FllTURE -ln.:rodlvideo screens, the 185,000-squareand patented checkout system tllat monitors
ble Unlvene customer Child Moore showed olf · each cUitomer's actlvitlu and piU'Cbua.lt abo
foot store in suburban ColUmbus
his memhenlilp card ... be entered the mDiard
has JJIOI'elhe look of a New York
bas a McDonald's rutaarant, a Disney-trained
year
The trend is also evident ill the actim of broad maatct indexes. These
ltore
la.st Monday. Tbe store, one of the first
stair and more than 85,000 products In atoek.
nightclub than a retail operation. •
have been outperforming the Dow Jones industrial average, which is
co01umer electronics stores built by Tandy
(AP)
An in·Stole McDonald'S, hands-on
heavily weighll:d toWllld economically sensitive stocks.
Corp.,
bu
a
sopblstJcated
mark~tJ~g
strategy
video poie displays aod a karaoke
"Of course the marltet'makes lots of mistakes,:· adds Kaufman. ' 'It
booth round out the allraetioos.
responds to the latest economic news, and someumes that response ts
'~II' s quick," Harris said. "All
. The city was chosen as one of explained:. "it;s a sharp contrast to
cent· travel more than I 00 miles to
exaggerated or unjuslified.
.
the chain's first markets not . the used car sales culture of other
get there. It also repons thai half of you've got to do is walk up and
"There's an old story (that) the market has sui:cessfuDy predicted 10
because residents buy a lot of con- stores.
the visitors make a purchase with pay. You don't have a salesman of the last five recessions.-"
.
.
sumer electtnnics, but because they
each visit and thlit 20 percent are taking 20 minutes to write some"Pan of it is the Circus Circus
Friday, the Standard &amp; Poor's 500 ~mpos~te closet! at~1 .46, up 1.27
thing up."
.
doa't. said local Marla:tiag Direc· factor," said industry analyst
back the next month.
ror the day, a negligible distance from tiS allllll}C closmg bigb of 482.0Q.
Few customers worry about a The S&amp;P gained 2.82 for the week.
tor FJlen Daly.
. James Magid, of Needham &amp; Co.
· How is it so sure?
.
Big Brother· watching over 'llleir
· "Columbus spends 30 percent in New York. ije was referring to
Membership car.ds.
The Dow industrials added 6.39 for the day to close at 3,939.07, up
to 40 pen:eot less than other mar- the Las Vegas casino where the
A visilor to the Incredible Uni· purchases, Roach said.
10.43 for lhe week and ab&lt;&gt;ut I percent below its aUtitrie high of 3,978.36.
" "I'm sure there's a small perkets its size," she said. That leaves lion acts bring them in, but the · verse is immediately stopped by a
The Nasdaq composite rose 4.99 to 790.43, up 18.37 for the wt1ek. "
a lot of room to grow.
cheerful "cast member." New- centage of people - a very small
The American Stock Exchange's market value index rose 1.52 to
blackjack tables take their moriey.
The Hilliard store is one of the
447.85, up 5.42 for the week.
.
"What they want to do is to get comers are asked to step over to a percentage - who don't for wbalchain's two larllest. though the next people to feel that this is their banfc of computer operators who ever reason like the membership
The NYSE composite index rose 0.59to 261.80, closing the week with
wave will top the 200,000-square- srcre," Magid said. "The store cre- punch in names, addresses and tele- card," he said. "But we have not a 1.36 point gain.
fOOI matk, Ms. Daly said.
phone numbers. Shoppers then get seen in focus groups or interviews
ates excitement''
The Wilshire Associates Equity Index, which is the market value of
Fust-time visillll' Kevin Kearney
their
nwn bar-coded plastic card. ' with cast members any material NYSE,
American, and Nasdaq ISSues, ended the week at $4.76 trillion, up
With more than 85,000 products
summed it up in a word: ''Over· in stock, the chain says its nine
Anyone. wantiag to make a pur- resistance to membership.''
$41.58 biUion from ~e previous week.
whelming."
stores each pull in between $60 chase bands the card over to the
With store ma~ band and S- million ·and $80 million a year. nearest floor person, who punches
year-old nephew
hary Isaac in Tandy, which opened it first in the stock number and sends the
tow, lhe Columbus r-esident said Incredible Universe store near Pon- item to meet the person at the
,.
he'd Jrl)bably stay at least an hour land, Ore. in late 1992 and tbe checkout.
browsingandcomparingpriceson Hilliard store in October, plans to
"It's designed {o save and make
big-screen televisions.
good
use of the guests' time,"
open four more stores Ibis year If the SCC!JC is sligbtly reminis- in Denver. New Yorlc, Indianapolis Roach said. It's also used to keep
See Answer Puzder on Page B-4
cent of a theme park, weD, that's and Washington, D.C.
track of the stores' il)ventory and,
ACROSS
97 Homeless one
DOWN '
inrentional.
85 Shows lhe way
Roach says the chain tends to occasionally, ·to aien customers 10
99 Joke
"We asked, 'Who bas lbe best attract more aflluent, higher edu- · upcoming promotions.
88 Passed away
t Town101 Harvest goddess
1 Fellows
But despite its obvious marketcustomer service culture in the cated custOmers, particularly those
Milan money
/. 90
6 Fruit lor pies
104 Ump's cousin
2 Carouse
94 Coral ridge
business world?'" Roach said. who like to he on the cutting edge ing potential, Roach said be's not
11 Swiftly
106 River in England
3 Pointless
96 Rind
"We concluded that Disney does." of new tecbllologies.
aware of the system being used to
t
6
Disliked
a
lot
108
Love god
4 Print measures
98 Gunning
So the Disney-trained managetraclc
individual
purchases.
Nor
is
"We, quite frankly, didn't
Hair dye
110 Women of rank
5 Deserter
100 Struggle lor air
ment, called "producers" and expecttha~" be said. "We thought , the information sold to anyone else. 21
22 The devil
.114 Santa's Rudolph,
6 Concerning: 2 wds.
101 Command
"We don't even share it within · 23 Arthur- Doyle
"directors" oversee "cast mem· they'd sell a lot of low-end
. lor one
7
Processions
·
102
Norman Vincent the
company
among
divisions,"
be
ben" (sales stafl) at the individual goods."
24 Oil source
117 Profound
8
Sch.
grp.
103
Femme
fatale
said.
"scenes" (departments).
The company says that more
25 Stopl, at sea
1!9 Extreme
9
Dens
105Phobias
"We're putting on a show for tllan .J million people visit .each
Columbus resident Roben Har·
26 Characteristic
121 Challenge
10 Stage direc1ion
107 Red and Yellow
the individual guests,'' Roach store each month and that 10 per- ris likes the system.
27 Range of hills
.122 Fall short
11 Circus pe~qrmer
109 Frightens
28 Apportion
·• 124 "Zhivaga" name
12 Luau fare
11 ~ Distance measures
29 Sty
126 Sweet potato
13 Plus
112 Sidestep
30 Feather scarf
127 Blueprint
. 14 Imprison
113 Meaning
31 Lorenzo Lamas TV
128 General Robert
15 Foe
. 115 Requirements
role~
16 Harsh·sounding
·116 Free-lor·alls
33 Arab VI
129 Plant part
t 7 Totality
11 8 School dance
35 -QUI (get With
131 Berrylike lrurt
l8 Flooring pieces
120 Australian bird
dilliculty)
133 Regret
t 9 Call forth ·
123 ·- Doone•
COLDWATER (AP)- Work· produces seeders, planters, fertilil\Mark Standifer, an attorney for
36 Heavy hammer
135 Asner and Sullivan
20
Preventlrom
acting
125 Macaw genus
ers hoping to keep their century-old er spreaders and other farm equip- Allied, said state regulators are not 39 Undresses
136 Split
30 Place of rest
130 City in New Mexico
farm-equipment plant from closittg ment
currently requiring a cleanup. 43 Time periods: abbr. ·
137 Olthe stars
-32 The present
I 32 French cheese
are·puUing some passion into their
At issue is wbo will pay for a However, he said Allied proposed
44 Indian weight
139 - Antoinette
34 "- La Douce· ·
134 Lab burner
potential environmental cleanup of that AGCO consult- with state offi• · 45 Gave silent assent
penmanship.
14 t "We're oil - - the
31 Letters 1n genetics
137 Aid and~
47 Irrigate
Wizard"
Their relatives and other resi- fuel oils, solvents and heayy metals cials to assure that any environ38 Bell ·
138 Gym cabinets
49 Encountered·
1.43 Weep
dents have written bundreds of let- at the plant and bow much it will mental issues be resolved.
40 Not doing anything
140 Cleveland team
5t Daughter of Lear
· 145 Hair net
ters ·to ask Georllia•based AGCO cosl
"We still are hopeful that some41 School in England
142 Poetic preposition
54 Small island
147 Mad
AGCO, which leases the plant · thing can be worked ou~" be said.
Corp. not to move plant operations
42 Reddish'brown
144 Expressed a belief
57 Capital ·ot Kan.sas
149 Rudlments
from Allie!! Products Corp. of He said AGCO' s cleanup estimate
. color
and the 630 jobs outside the state.
I 46 Private room
59 Snakes
152 Split - soup
46 A meal
Li:tters also have gone to law- Chicago, bad planned to buy the was unrealistic: ·
· ·
148 Elec. unit
In the past
154 Went up
48 Resume
makers; said Larry- Stelzer, eco- facility for about $3 million. How149 Bedouins
Officials of AGCO, based in, 63
64
Card
game
157
Felt·tip
pen
50
Mystical caid
nomic development director for ever, AGCO balked after its con- Duluth, Ga., outside Atlanta, did
1SO 'Stupely with drink
66 Mild oath
161 Kinsman: abbr.
51 Forays
Mercer County. He· qtimated Fri- sultants said cleanup could cost up not return phone calls seeking com151
Region, poetically
68 Ship ol.1492
162 Hankering
52 Heron
153 Pains
day that 1,000 letters have been to $70 miUion.
ment Friday.
69 Uncommon
164 Leg joint
53 Web-looted bird
Wben announcing the plant
!55 Aeries
sent or arc heiilg wriuen.
Stelzer said be was not told . 70 Ametal
165
Devilkin
55 Breakfast item
156 Coup"AGCO and everybody else is closing on Wednesday, AGCO said where lhe plant's operations would · 72 Province in Can.
167 Cry at bullfights
56 Sailors
158
Australian "bear"
going to see a cotnmunity that is so its purchase agreement called for be moved. AGCO also bas plants
74 Grating
168 01 an eastern
58 Black or Valentine
159
Young
eel
committed to those jobs and that AUied to provide an environmen- in Independence. Mo., and Hesston
76 Gas: prefix
region
60 WOOden shoe
t
60
Marsh
plants
company, they are going to be tal!~ acceptable site.
and Topeka, Kan.
78 News item, lor short
170 Dwelling
6t Sell·esteem
163 Israeli dance
'It became apparent that Allied
absolutely astounded," said StelzAlthough the dispute involves
79 Fashion creators
173 Homeless animal
62
Attack:
2
Wds
.
.
·
166 Traditional story
had no intent to clean up the Cold' private companies, Ohio officials
er. "This will he resolved."
82 Antitoxins
175 Remove whiskers
65
Charged
part1cle
169 HonestThe White-New Idea Farm water faciliiy's problems at its are talking to both sides to try to
84 Prosperous
177 Mold of ice cream
67 Weight-loss
171 Samovar
Equipment Co. is the third largest expense,'' AGCO Chairman resolve the problem, said Don
86 Office worker, lor
178 Mistake
program
172
Turl
employer in the county behind Robert Ratliff said. He said Allied Clark, an agribu~ines~ specialist
short
179 Pollute
71 Baseball team
-'
174
Estuary
Huffy Corp. and the Reynolds and proposed a long-term lease at unac- · with the Ohio Department or
87 Crucifix
180 Governed
73 Horse's gajt
175
Upperclassmen:
Reynolds Co.
· .
ceptable rates.
89 Reveal
181 Horse
Development.
75 Sketched
abbr.
91 Born: Fr.
Stelzer said the plant aCcounts
Allied estimates the cleanup
182 Makes smooth by .
77 Mr. Cassini
"Obviously, we're going to be
176 Color
92
Playing card
rubbing
for 7 percent of the jobs in the . would cost between $481 ,O!JO and interested in 630 jobs," be said.
80 Hard-rind frutt
93 Acontinent: abbr.
183 Hide
$5.4 miUion and said the previous "That's imJI(IIant for our agribusicounty.
·
81 Type
95
Journey
184 Scorches
The plant was built in 1899 and. owner would be responsible for ness industry and rural develop83 Wings
most of the expense.
· ment.''

SUNDAY PUZZLER
to

Employees, famil~es mobilize
to .save farm .equipment factory

White House hopefuls put issues
on hold while hustling for funds
By RITA BEAMISH

Auoclated Prea Writer
.
WASHINGTON - Sen. Phil
• Gramm is seDing tickets to a $2.5
million dinner. Lamar Alexander is
lining up an impressive list of big·
name GOP fund-raisers. And Sen.
- Bob Dole Is laj)plq lleavy-bitten
for $1,000·eadl- "seed money,''
be calls iL
The $20 million-per-person
Republican primary ~ampaign is
under way, a full year before the
fmt pritiwy vOla are casL
At this early stage, financial
backers arc being courted and
recruited and pressured by the can·
didates. The candidates are already
bard 011 the hustle, hosting $!,()()().
a-plate dinners and working the
pltones for contributions.
The astonishing financial pressure has narrowed the fteld or weDknown candidates remarkably
earl ',
l?'ormLi Vice President Dan
Quaylfs surprise decision la~t
H'

•

'

week to sit out the contest was
driven in pan by inpney concerns.
·Jack Kemp cited a disdain for fund·
raising amon}! his reasons for not
running, and fonner Defense Secretary Dick Cheney was said to
have $nllar reservallons.
The earl'y umetalife is not
unusual; by the end or 1987,
George Bush bad stashed away $19
million for his successful 1988

.race.

. But the intensity .is heightened
Ibis year by a new schedule that
jams at least two. dozen primaries
and caucuses into a six-w~k peri·
od next year, lellving liUle time to
collect money once tbe voting
begins.
'
·
. ''There seems to be an early
commiunent and involvement by
people," said Philip Anschutz,
chairman "of Southern Pacific railroad and a Dole financial backer.
"I think they would like to see the
various candidates and their campaillns get organized and got
going."
' .

•

- ,I

The compressed schedule .is
fueling fund-raising fever because
it wiU force candidates to campaign
simultaneously -in expensive,
in)ponaot states such as California,
Aorida and Illinois.
"Tbere·~-soing to be -a gr-eater
need for TV and a greater need to
be able to pay for TV early," said
Alexander's communications director, Mark Merritt.
ihe schedule had Quayle plan·
ning fo~ as many as 200 fund-raising even15 over tlie next 10 tilonlhs
ill'what he concluded was "a brutal
process," said Jobn Vardaman, a
Washington attorney who had been
helping to organize Quayle's campaign.
·n.e Dole, Gramm and Aleltander camps talk abOut a goal of $20
million to $25 miDion for Ibis year,
mucb of which will be spent on
. raising the money and building
organization.
·
Tbe empbasi s on money bas
some less high-profile candidates
stewing.
·

~ebruary 12,~1~99~5~=r~:7==:~==7==~~~~;:~~~~=~~ OH-Point Pleasant, WV ·

·G
qu y c
off from reforming

Parks agency
taken to task
for messy files

-~~~! pr~~!:~ms
ASsociated Press Writer

.
, WASHII'!IGTON- In a conces·
sion to one of Wasbingtoll's most
powerfullobbies, Republicans have
quietly sbelved plans to disband
ilutrilion programs for lhe elderly
'and end the guar.intee to cash weifare for the poorest seniors.
According to House Republlcans senior citizens wiU not he targeted in the GOP's legislation to
reform the nation's welfare system
aS lawmakers ftrst proposed.
'
"' "Senior citizens can rest and
'relax and I)Ot get excited. We
haven't included them in our dis:Cussions or in any legislation at Ibis
point," said Rep. William F.
Goodling, chairman of the Economic and Educational OpportUnities Committee, wbicb is Writing a
'piece of lhe welfare reform bill.
· Democrats, meanwhile, stepped
up their attacks on the Republican
legislation, saying its worlc requirements for single mothers on weifare were far too weak and its bard'line positions would lead to starv, ing babies and homeless families.
House Minority Leader Dick
'Gephardt, D-Mo., said that, for the
,Republicans, "welfare refonn is
·just a way or passing the buck,
kicking people off the welfare roDs,
·and leaving innocent children out

But Democrats, in the minority
for the fnt time in 40 years, have ·
not united behind a counterproposa1 as the House Ways and Means
subcomotit~ ~n ~uman

resources

hegms wnling tts bill oext week.
Tbe GOP legislation would
deny cash benefits to Stn~le m~e_rs under the ase of 18, kick famt·
hes off welfare after five years, and
turn nearly 5~ social programs over
to .the states m three block grants,
including Ai~ to Families with
Dependent ChUdren.
. Rep. Geor~e Mille~, D-Cai.if.,
531d.the GOP plan, wbJCb requues
j~st 2 percent of the nearly 5 mil!ton adults oh AFDC to he e,~olled
10 a work program in 1996, of!.ers
only a token nod towar-ds work.
In the face or lobbying from
advocates for the elderly, bowev~.
the GOP. has reue~ted from us
plans to disband nutntion ~grams
that ]IIOVIde ~ot m~ to frail, ased
Am_encans 10 thetr homes and at
semor centers.
Un_der the GOP's original bill,
spending 011 those .prog~ would
have been combmed With food
stam.p~, 'sch~l luncb~s. and other
nutnllon asststance mto a l~mp
sum and returned to the states m a
block grant..
.
The details or runrung these pro-

White House again

NEW DIRECTOR - Senate Budget Com·
rnlttee Chairman Pete Domenld, left, and House
Budget Committee Chairman John Kaslcb,

grams would he left to the states growit to reflect increases in need.
Goodling, R-Pa, said Congress
and overall spending would he cut
· The GOP is also dropping its would address senior nutrition prooriginal call for ending the guaran- . grams when it takes up the Older
tee to cash benefits for low-income · Auu;ricans Act later Ibis year.
seniors and the disabled who
The elderly nutrition programs
receive Supplemental Security provided nearly 230 million bot
Income, which provides a maxi- meals to more than 3 million peomum monthly check of $458.
pie in 1993, according to the
As an entitlement, SSI is now Depanmem or Health and Human
available to anyone who meets the Services, and there are waiting lists
eligibility requirements and bas of frail seniors who want a meal

Thieves score big when stolen .
card spurs bank machine spree .
empty., it was no problem. The
thieves used empty envelopes. to
111ake five phony depostts totaling
$820,500.
.
.
"Many banks wtll heheve lbe
card user and tru~t •.~etr c~s·
tomers.:· Muzyn satd .. If _you re
putting ·~ som~.money, u .wtll post
tlt.mmediately.
.
.
. The spree began on a Fnday
mgbt, Nov. 18. Smtih left ~er van
locked in a parking lot wbtle she
atten~ed a. htgh school football
game m Gresham, a Ponland suburb.
.
Someone brok~, t?IO tbe van.
went through Smn.n s purse and
stole the ban~ card . Tb~y a!so
swiped the cards personaltdenufication number, wbtcb Smtih bas
wriuen on ber Soc iai Secun'tYcard .
d
t
Tb~ card was use momen s
after. tl .was stolen, at a bank
machine JUSt a few blocks from the
footbaU field.
.
Investigators used bank ~acbine
records to trace ~e lhte.ves route
more _than 100 mtles lhro~gb five
c~~Ues and ~8 bank machmes.
.
They drained a couple of them
dry.'' Secret Service agent James
Cline said.
·
Tbe card was lasJ used at 2:20
a.m. on Monday, Nov. 21. By then,
the group's luck' bad run out.
.

delivered to their door.
Many Corry, director of federal
affairs for the American Association of Retired Persons, said the
needs of senior citizens could have.
been overlooked in a large nutrition
block grant with limited spending.
''For m!Uly of these folks, this is
the only social contact they have,"
Corry said. "If you lake !!tis away,
they remain prisoners in their
homes, they don't come out."

def~nds nomin~e's recor~

By JOHN SOLOMON
and others for providing differing have begun to use hysterectomy in
Associated Press Writer
accounts of the number of abor· patients with severe mental retarda. WASHINGTON- President lions he performed.
tion."
·
"Clinton's embanled nominee for
On Friday, Foster reiterated bis
He said tlie procedure was j!!sti·
surgeon genernl disclosed in a1976 support for a woman's rigbt to tied because it could provide 'sigmedical journal that be had per- abonion and promised to make the nificant bygienic benefit to these
formed hysterectomies to sterilize . "figbt of my life" to save bis nom- severely handicapped individuals."
some severely mentally retarde.d ination.
·
·
Excerpts from the article also
even
as
the
administration
were
being .carried in the Feb. 20
.
But
.women.
F
h
· Dr. Henry Foster Jr. wrote that sought to prop up Oster, t. ere issue of U.S. News ~ World
he· performed the sterilizations were new signs or trouble as a Report, which comes out Monday.
because ·Jre' believed such proce- prominent Democratic senator
: Just bow many such operations
dures provided health benefits to sharply criticized the White Foster performed on handicapped
the women.
House's handling of the nomina- women was unclear. The adminisA senior Clinton administration tion.
tration official said be did not know
official said Friday that by the inid.Sen. Joseph Biden of Delaware the exact number.
1970s Foster bad stopped the pro- called the nomination "a political
But the article indicated that
cedure as medical opinion changed.
blunder in the extreme,'' and at Foster did a total of six sterilizaTbe article suggests· he did only a first vowed not 10 vote for Foster. lions on women between 1963 and
small nuinher of the sterilizations.
But he later recanted and said be 1973. It does not say bow many of
"Foster, along with the mainwould withhold final judgment those were mentally handicapped.
stream or lhe medical couununity, · until the confmnalion vote.
At lhe time, Foster was a gyneno longer accepted that sterilization
Foster wrote in tbe January · cologist at a Tuskegee, Ala., bospiof mentally retarded women by
1976 issue or the Sour hem Medical tal. He eventually be.came been
Journal that obstetricians and dean and acting president of the
hysterectomy was appropriate,"
said the official, speaking only on
gynecologists "must guard vigi- Meharry Medical College in
condition of anonymity.
c.
Iandy against the injudicious and Nashville, Tenn.
. Foster's nomination as the
indiscriminate removal of the norDr. Allan Rosenfield, dean of
nation's top public health officer
mal uterus."
the Columbia University School of
bas been rocked by revelations that
''Most gynecologists perform Public Health, said Friday that sterbe performeil 39 abortions as an
hysterectomy .for sterilization only llizations were.done by doctors like
obstetrician-gynecologist.
when there are other, more general- Foster through the·late 1970s not to
Foster has been under heavy
ized indications for removal of the prevent retarded women from havilltack fr.om anti-abortion groups
uterus," he wrote. "Recently, I · ing children but 10 alleviate lhe

B BOB BAUM
·
.
~oclated Press Writer
PORTLAND, Ore. - For the
thieves who stole· Karen Smith's
bank card, it was like bitting the
·ackpot on a slot machine_ over
~over and over.
They Cruised from one automated teller machine to another in a
·maroon, gqld-trimmed Cadillac,
spending boors at a time withdrawing money, police said. ·
In 54 hours, they made 724
withdrawals and stole $346,770.
Authorities call it one of the five
lar est autotnated teller fraud cases
. ~ S history
10
T·w~ men ~nd a woman have
been arrested, and a founb person
• be' sought
IS "They
10g did 1··1J'ust as ·fast as you
·.could punch in the card, punch in
the n~~~Dber and pull out the card,
time and time again, many, many
consecutive withdrawals," Delee- ,
tive Jim Muzyn said. "From time
to time, they were considerate
enough to let a real customer in."
To safeguard against this sort of
thing the machines are supposed to
give ~0 more than $200 per day on
any single card. But because of a
com uter software change at Oreon ~elCo Credit Union, the limit
~asn'tin effect that weekend.
When the account· became

right, Introduced Jane O'Neill, center, as the
next director or the nonpartisan Congressional
Budget·omce. (AP)

effects of mensttuation for those
· having difficulty..
..
.
"He's a very senstttve, carmg
d!lc!m ait!t his decisions like these
would bC that they should be done
only as a last resort." said Rosen-

_{__

'

I

•

,..
NEWARK, N.J. (AP)- While Law rence· ~• resignation heckled
condemning his words, Rutgers . speakers as others trieil to force
· University's Board of G~vemors their way into the room.
reaffirmed its suppon Fnday for
"Take your bigotry back to the
President Francis Lawrence, who bayou, Fran, we don't need il
came under fire for saying poor here," Flavio Komuves, a re&lt;;enl
stodents lack the "genetic heredi- graduate, said in the open meeting.
tary baekground" to perform well Lawrence was a professor an.d
administrator at Tulane University
on standardized tests.
· The"ooard issued its statement in'· New Orleans before be was
after a pivate session and a some· nam~ Rutg~s president in 1990.
''I'm not going to allow tbe
limes raucous 3-1/2 hour public
lynching
of Fran Lawrence," said
meeting during wbicb it lisren~ to
Mary
Davidson,
dean of the School
about 50 speakers for and agamst
of
Social
work,
who is black and
Lawrence, wbo again apologized
·
s
aid
tbal
her
great-uncle
was
for his remarks.
demanding
lynched
in
Oklahoma.
. Angry students
Campus maintenance mechanic

•

The agency was unable to provide auditable financial statemenis
to the Interior Depanmem's Office
of Inspector General for fiscal
years 1992, 1993 and 1994, said
Joyce ~leischman, depllly inspector
gene!'ai.
·
Park propeny values were over·
slated by more than $90 million
because of accounting errors, . she
said.
"Examples of inaccW1!te data in
the automated system were a vacuum cleaner worth $150 that was
listed at over $800,000, a dish·
washer wonb $350 that was listed
at over $700,000, a ftre truck worth
$133,000 that was listed at I cent
and a mobile radio worth $793 that
was listed at over $79 million,"
she said.

.

Public flll,tlce .
NO'IiCE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
Bureau ol Contract SalOl
Logot Copy Number I5-0tO
UNIT. PRICE CONTRACT
Moiling Data t/27/95
Soalod propooalo will bo

Public NotiCe

•

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL -

Sunday. Feb. 12, 1995

Public Notice ·

accepted· trom ttl proGallla County, Ohio lor
quotlllod btddoro at lhe Improving v1rloua routea
Bure1u of Contr1ct S1l11, and oocllono, tho Cltloo of
R~ 118 ol tho Ohio Belpre end Mortotta and tha
D parlmont
of. Vlllogto ot Clarlnglon and
1i . oporlollon, Columbuo, Bolte Valley, by herbicidal
Oh , until 10:00 a.m. apray.
Wecln11day, February 22,
"Thi date ut tor
11115lor lmprovomt~nlo tn;
complotton ol lhlo work
who has bested you in the past.

PubliC

.

NOtice

ohall bo ••· aot lorth In tho
bidding propo..t."
Plano and Spoclllcettono
oro on lllo tn tho Dopartrnonl
of Tranoporlaollon.
Jarry Wrty
Director of Trtnaportatlon
February 5, 12, 1915 .

methods tllat work .

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22·Jon. 19) Do no! GEMINI (M8y 21-June 20) Ge ne1al COn·
mak·e any halfhearted promises today. d1hons will favor you today. but don 't let
. You will be taken at your word and possi· your guard down lf YO!J do . your chances
bly.embarrassed when ·delivery is due.
for success m•ght dec rease .

· &lt;l1995byNEAinc.

CANCER (June 21 ·July 22) You won·!

nee d to embelhsh your achievements
Monday. Feb. 13. 1995
tod ay. You will be able to pull ofl several
Your talent s and l~ag inatiOn could take profitable dea ls , and th e events will
speak for themselves.
you straight to the top '" th e year ahead.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be generous Wllh
Try us1ng these gifts with greater commitlr1ends today , bu t don' t feel as though
ment than you have in the past
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 19) Have fun you must spend al l your money tu st to
w1n the1 r approval
and · enjoy yourse lf today , but don't do
VIRGO
(Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Maintam an
anything self-se rv~ng that puts others at a
optim1SI1c
outlook today , but don't cqnsld disadva'ntage . II you do . you might end
er
proJec
ts
ltmshed 11 there are Shll loose
up payi ng a severe pe na lt Y. Ma1or
ends to- lie_up.

changes are ahead for Aquanu s in the
coming year. Send for your Astra-G raph LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You may be
·predictions today. Ma11 S2 to Astro-Graph , tempted to pr omtse more tllan you can

· Four of the machines they'd ~~:i~~~e~~k~~;~db~~~ ~;~~~:~~r~~~;~ ~~
del1ver S!mply to appease others today .
used bad· btdde~ cameras that bad endeavors !hat don't directly affect your C/o !his newspaper. P 0 Bo• 44e5. New Honesty would be a better policy.
captured thetr ptcture. At a fifth, a inleresls. Your desi1e w1lllead you down York. NY 10163. Be sure 10 state your SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Even of
postal mspector mvesttgaung an a different palh and yau·re apl 1o find zodiac s1gn
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Major a sk ed , thmk twrce bef o re advtStflg a
unrelated check fraud case had much success.
fr iend on how to hand le a complicated
mstalled a camera that took p1c- AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t 9) Today you accomplishments are probable today , yet hnanc1al rriat1er today. Your suggest 1ons
. lures ·much more frequently than w111 pave an opportunity 1o help someone you m1ght st1ll !.all short or your mark . may do more harm !han good .
.
Se lf-doubt m1ght lead you to bel1eve that
the bank macbtne cameras '!~d. .
who really needs aSSISiance. However, you
SAGITTARIUS
(Nov
.
23-Dec
. 21)
can't succeed .
Davtd Gallagher and hiS Wife, tor some reason. you might tail 1o do so ARIES
Somelhtng
you
str
ongly
suppot1
m1ght
not .
21·Aprit 19) Be latr when
Terry, both 4~. became suspects and regret illaler. Aquarius. treat yourself dealing (March
fully
endorsed
by
your
companion
s
be
others today , but don't make
almost t.mmedtately. Gallagher has 1o a b11lhday gill. Send tor your Aslro· too manywith"
today
.
Res
1
s1
trymg
to
Ioree
lhem
lo
concess1ons . It IS perlecuy OK
been in prison f!ve. times and has Graph predic11ons lo'r !he yea1 ahead by to expect some thing 1n return tor wtiat agree with you.
21 (clony convtctwns. assts~nt ma1ling $21o Aslro·Graph. c/o !his news· you give.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22·J8n. 19) II you've
U.S. AllDmey L~ce Caldwell ~~d . pape1. P 0 Box 4465 . New York , NY TAURUS (April 20-May 20) This' can be been ·teellng sluggish tatefy , 1! ·could be
Muzyn and Cltne .staned t311ing 10163. Be sure to slale your zodiac Sign. a rewarding day tor you. bul you m'ghl do due to poor .eating or exercise habits. Try
the Gallagbers tn mtd-Deccmber. PISCES (F·eb. 20-Merch 20) You can ,somelh,ng a! lhe lasl minu te 10 lake !he to establish a he'alth•er , more constructive
No one was arrested nght away ; have a pleasant lime Wllh tnends today '' edge ott your VIc tory. Res'S! chang~ng rouhn e .
Muzyn _said, becausc .policc didn't . you refuse lo become 1nvolved in pelly ':~=~~~~~~:::"::::~~~~~~;;,;,;;;;:~::;:;:;:;;;:::.
.tmmedtately know who else was . social ontrigue Don'! play cloak and dag· NORTH
2· 11·S5
mvolved and wanted to bu)ld a ger games.
\
BRIDGE
,. K J
7 6 2
· t th e Ga 1-· ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) Instead of
s Ironger case agatns
•
10 4 3
1 Rb
concernmg yourself w1th what others
a,; ~rs .
have. f1nd contentment '" your own fife.
•5
1 he couple went to R.cno, and upon reflecl, on. you' ll real,ze !hat you
•ll ~ 7 3
Mrs. Gallagher told peool}lf her bus- have a 101 go~ng tor you.
WEST
EI\ST
band bad won a $50;
jackpot. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Phrase yow .
PHILLIP
'"9 4
,. 3
He bOught a new ptckup. .
. . comments carefully today or you m1ghl
ALDER
• A .J 2
• K9 8 6 5
On Tuesday mommg. ~~~esuga- umnlen11onally oHend a friend. Whal you
tl\ 1o ~ 6
• 8 4 3 2
tors arrested the qallaghers and the blur! oul on Impulse may be dllllcull lo
• K J 1'0 5
• .Q B 2
owner or the Cadillac, Danny Dal- explain taler.
SOUTH
low, 47.
GEMINI (May 21 -June. 20) E•pens1ve
,. A Q 1o K 5
. Police said lh~y found $30,000. lh~ngs wn 1 appeal to you today. so put
Q7
tn the ~uspects homes. Muz¥n
definite lim lis on your budge! 1o keep
·• K Q J 7
wouldn t say what be thmks hap- extravagance Irom ga~ntng the upper .
6 4
pe~ed to, the rest of the money . hand
Suuth tsn t liable for the lhelt. ·
CANCER (June 21-Juty ~2) You can
Vulnerable: Both .
usually handle several Sllual,ons s1mulla· By Phillip 1\lder
D~r : South
neousty. bul today u-mlgN.t be WISe IO
,· South West North . East
rocuson oneth•nga t a t•me .
EdgarKaplani scertainlyone oflhe
Obi. 4 •
All pass
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) You ca n wm tO best players never to have won a
Opening
lead:
•
4
respect and support from others loday it world tille. Last Saturday I gave a deal
you don '! play 'upon lhetr sympathy he defended beautifully. Here is one he
Approach them with maturily.
declared petieclly.
·
seven.
John McCutchen, "':'ho ts black , VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Occas,o nally, Playing in lour spades, Kaplan reWest won with the nine and didn 't
ked 10
hL
your dramatic II air can be ellac11ve al ceived a trump lead. He could see four perceive the danger. l;fe continued with
as
approac Gwrence. ·
enhancing your·1mage . b~l nol today .automatic losers: two hcans, one dia' 'As a child or od, 1 forgtvc Affectations not representing the real you mend and one club~ Obviously, if East a second trump. Kaplan wou in hand
you,'· McCut.c hen satd, and the will no! play well.
.
had the diamond ace, the contract was and led the diamond king, ruffing away
two men embraced.
.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) You have . safe. A diamond lead from the dummy West's ace. Back to hand with a trump,
10
Some wbo spoke
favor of everything illakes 10 be successlulloday would leave East with no winning op· . Kaplan cashed his two diamond win·
Lawrence w~re heckled loudly· if you refuse lo lei sell·doubt gellhe bet· tiort~Either Easl.could duck his a.ce ners, discardin g two heart: from the
Suddenly declarer , 'd only
Em~et Denms: a black professor 1er of you. All forms of nega11ve 1h1nk1ng and lose that tnck, or he could wm Wlth dummy.
three
losers,
one in each side suit.
of btologtcal scrences, was dended a1e counlerproducllve.
the diamond ace. selling up three dia·
If
declarer
plays a diamond honor at
!"a "bouse,slave" when bespoke SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be careful mond winne~s for South , on which trick two, West
is much more likely to
10 Lawreoc.e s suppon.
..
no! to talsely llaner someone. Your 1nsin· dummy's ctub losers would disappear. switch to hearts, defeating the contract,
·~ Untte~ Students Coalt~on, eerily could pump someone up and haunt Yet was it likely that· East had the di·
Tom Stoppard wrote, "Skill with·
whtcb orgamzed demonstrauo~s you later when this person thinks you amond ace' Giv~n West's takeout dou- outAsimagination
ts craftsmanship and
Wednesda~ and Fnday at the ~
owe h1miher somelhmg spec1at.
ble, surely West was much more hkely gives us many useful objects such as
campus tn New B~unswt~k. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Be to have that card. Kaplan backed his wickerwork picnic baskets. Imagination
demanded a meeung wttb extremely careful. today or you might no1 judgment with .• d~lightful deceptive wil110ut sjlill gives us mOdem art." And
Lawrence.
do well in a join! vent,ure. This is especial· play. After Wlnmng the fi!'l't tnck m t~e skill with imagination gives. us bridge
t ·, ly true if you 're involved wilh someone . dummy •. Kaplan led a d~amon~ to h1s plays like this one.
'

Qne deceptiOn,
One COntraCt

.
b
ttl
d
Rutgers
m
a
e
.
over Protests e
I
Pane
~es .I dent bac ked.by s tate
.
.
..
r
P
'

sions.''

(

\/

•

field, an obstetrician who knows
Foster.
By the 1980s, new medications
and technologies made sterilization~, ~less -necessary, Rosenfield
said..

WASHINGTON (AP)
Reconl-.keeping was in such a mess
at the National Park Service that
congressimal investigatds found a
vacuum cleaner valued on the
agency's books at $800,000 and a
fire engine at one penny.
The Parle ServiCe doesn't coUecl
enoligb information to tell where
its limited resources can he best
· spent to protect the federal property
it oversees, according a repon by
the Genen11 Accounting Office ,
Congress' investigating arm.
And when parks officials make
policy improvements, they often
can't tell bow effective they are, a
GAO repon said.
·
GAO.investigator James Duffus
III said in tbe report, released ·
Thursday, that four years after ·
Congress enacted a law designed to
ensure sound financial manage·
ment by federal agencies, "the
Park Service bas made little
progres.• in implementing its provi-

.,
,.

...

'

!

I

I

�Page-04-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7
· ANSWERS TO

11

S~R~~-ln.t;-sz.-12. .. 9

s

SCRAM LETS

PLAQUE

•,

In today's fast moving pace one
must always be on the move. There are

AVERSE
EDIBLE

those people who let the rest of the

LIKELY

world go by. but they usually are the
ones who drive the LEGAL SPEED.

VESPER
MAGNET
LeGAL SPEED ·

tor,
m - -forDrlw.
~~~laLOhloFill~
Pari
'Oma, - Compet.Uw
TNur.ing
•·•anla.
~- Difii!Nntlat Wllh Eo·

-ani

"':.":!~of oolo will be caoh ~~~~~~:~~~d~ymln ~~ng~~

H

•=:;:
For mor. In

Loot: Rod Hound ~ With 1 lion contRt HRDE.Inc:. 30t 313
Whitt Eye, 814 448 t
.
41180. EDE .
·

*'

· Gallipolis
&amp; Vlcl nlty.
:dLL Yard S.DE~•~IIuuotN 8o Paldln
....... E: 2:00 p.m.
tho day boiDro tho od 1o 11&gt; run.
Sundly odHion • 2:oo p.m.
Friday. llondoy odHion • 2.:00
;..p._m_
. s_._•u_rdo_;,Y·----8

AYONWSALE$
A-ogoS841SIHrPtuoFtic
D*ountol Soil
At - •~-- 1i ntt
ODIIoo
=d;'""=
. Rep.=·~;=-::;~~~·.me.;;::onol-::-:.:--::•
A~onnme,
-EomNo Door
-tM To
!Hr.:Door.
Ful Or
Part
1·
100-827-4840 lnci.IRop.
aa:or . - , ..-...~ 111
.----•
my
In Roclno, -.!oyo.
coll814-14.a?laftor 4pm. . ·
Babyolltor In ~~ :r"..1.. •ftor.
noon Shill 8
711&lt;.,~ Call
1
8
2
s-oon A.ll. • P.II.
Eam up to $iooo- otulflng

Public Sale ·
&amp; Auction

or chock with paolllva Manager's Offlco, Galllpolla
ldontfficotlan.
Municipal Building, s'18
Sold Boord ruti'YII t~a Soconcj Avenue, Galllpolla, Rick Pooroon Auction Company,
right to wolve lnformalltloo, Ohio, and alto at lho ":'~!..lotlmo ouctlon
oar, cornu plato
.
•--· n
1erv1ce.
cen8ed
lo accept at ro)ect any end Boaurd Memorial Ubrary, 7 ll88,0hlo 1 - • VIrginia, 304ell, or porto of any end ell Spruce Street, Gelllpolla, TIS-S185.
, .
bldo.
Ohio.
WodornOJor'a Auc:llon Sontlce,
, Molgo Local School Dlolrlct
Motthew w. Coppler' Clolllpalll, Ohio l14,371-2'720.
·
. Jane Fry, Treaauror .
City' Manager
320 E. Main SlrHt, February 12, 20, 1995,
Alidlon Slortlng Again, Sotur·
day, 7:00 P.ll. Fobnlory 11, Upp.0. Box 272
.
parL A.l - Rood Boaklo
. 8urtllo
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
otL
(814, 992·5650
(1) 22,Pu28,b(2) 5, 12; 4TC
~iJ~~:r ~o=:
11C Notice
_ _ _....;.....;.:;.:::.:....._. 3 Announcements
9
Wanted to Buy
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
Eooy· Romance, cal nowlll 1· Comllloto Houoohold Or Eo3111· tatool Any Typo or Fumfturo,
DEPARTMENT OF
I00-81&amp;-30011, . ut.
TRANSPORTATION
l2.ltlmlnutoJ_muot ba 18 yra. Applloncoo, Anllquo'a, Etc. Aloo
Columbuo; Ohio
Procoll Co., ....-eM.'JII20.
Appraloal Avollablol 614·31llClonltomon Sooklne t:om- 2120.
Buroo~ of Contract Selos
ponlonohlp From NIC&lt;o Fomolo
. Legal Copy Number 95-074 For Talka, Walu 1 Frlondahlp. Wllnl~_ rBoby part.a cr8t, 114!JNrr PRICE CONT,RACT
Sand Roplloo To: CLA 331, clo 812-21182&lt;
Mailing·Dolo 1127195 .
Clolllooh DallY Trtbune, 825 c
.
·
Th.lnl A~onua, Clolllpollo, OH . loon Uto IIDdol Corl' .O r
Sealed propooalo will be
~
Truclca, 11111 or NOii'lo,
accapled from ell pre· ~.
SmHh Buick Pontt!':l 11100
quallfltd blddero at tho
THE PAMPERED CHEF
EMiorn AVWiuo, Cloll
a.
"Tho KHchon Sloro Thai Cornao
Bureau of Contract" Sala1, To Your Door.'" t.oc.l CoMultant o.cor.ted
•II ,..., ·
Room · 118 of lha Ohio AYIIIobla At:
......,_, old Iampo old · D1 p 1 r I mo n t ·
of
8-..nl
morn.,_, old CiOCJ...ant'lq,.
Trenoportallon, Columbue,
Luvo 11-.
Mnllura. Rl-'no · - ·
Call FOr Information Ot1 Order~ Rua Moen, .owner. I~
Ohl 0 • · un Ill 10: 00 · a.m. lne
HamoopPartloo Or For Suo~ 2m.Wabuynttlal.
Wedneodoy, February 22, ._
~ n1 oo.
Froo J &amp; D'a Auto Parlll and SOiv,....,..,
19951or Improvamantoln:
Brochutw A~alloblo.
buying ·-=nk autoo-'"i
Atheno, Gollla, Hockl~g.
trucu. Alao,
ror ulo. 304Molgo, Monroe, Morgen, 4
Giveaway
773-5343"'
·
•
Noble, Vlnlon, Woohlngt9n ::
:--:1:-od--:-;.:..;..;.._~;;_;.;....:..:;.:..___ Timbor __ _, ··-·-- ._.
13
,
f
m
1
"
'
rooeten,
•ppll.
n•••-.
•
..,"'
C o u n II e t,
Oh oO
or 11 moo. aid, 814-JII2-21i30. .
Cloar Cutting A~allobla. Froo On
l'!'pro~lng aoctlon ATH 33·
Slto Eatlmaloo. 20 y..,. Eo· ·
0.00 on United Stotoa Route 2 Part Huoky Pupploo, 1 Malo, 1 ·portonco, 814-30-71188, Or 11433 In tho VIllages of Alb.iny Famala,
AdWiblol
Aj&gt;prox 5 _38;-;7-,.:.711;.:54.~-----~
Woolto Old,
814-446-01110.
·
;.;
an d BuchItI·, In tho Vlllogt
Old buttono, - - - r y•.
of Choahlro, In tho Vlllago·or 2yr. old - l o oat, lllock 6 old llthtoro1__1ran oklllolo, p10o .
M~irey City, In tho Vlllagoo - · apoyod, wwy tovlne. 304- tu-, Star w. .,
1711-1480.
lumH,.o tOOio or com
of J eruoo Iam, Low Itv Ill a . ;=.;;:::::;~~=:::-==--:;:-:- tatoo; OobY llortln,l
·11141.
•nd Stafford, 'In 1ht VIllage 8 Wook Old Block Calico Col,
of Stockport, In tho VIllage LHtor~rolnod and Wonnod 814- Wo,.od . To Buy: Jlllk Autoo
. of Summorfltld, In lhe 2541-!385.
With Or Without ......... Call
Vlllag• of Lowell, end other· Adorable pu- to vary good Larry Uvety. &amp;14-388-11303. '
verlout rautea end oecllono homo. 304-I?S-2547 ovonfngo.
Wa,.od To Buy: Standing 11mby furnlahlng ilnd lnatolllng Cuto whfto fuzzy pupploo, bar, 814-ln-2758.
relood pavement marker Huoky • Elkhound mix. 304,895- :;:Top::::-P;;:r;-lcoo---::Pold=:-A"'II'"'Oid='"'u.,..s=-.

•-••ra.

4

:!~ioo"'-"'"1::.8::'..:C:

FNt lntomtotlon. No Obligation.
Sond S.A.S.E to Slort....., ~K "
"'¥
, Y.o. Bo• 1411117, o.tohdo, L

==:·,.,..--=-~--=--=-::

321114

;.

lmmodlota Ot-nl::p, For Full
Tlmo Day And E_, nrt Shill, RN
Suparv-. CWnpotktv. Willi!,
Dl-111 Ex,.....nco, Equol ~unfty Em-.
Contact Tliio DlrociCif 01 Nurilng
Boforw Fobruory 8, 1111 AI
Ph•c- Coro Corilor, 1711
=~~~~~~";j12~111polla, OH

INDEPENDENT SERVICE CONl'AACTOA: llonufac:turw or
Pony Supplloo Seoloo lndloldual
To Sorvlco Partv canter In llaloll
I l l - .In Clall(pollo, Part·Timo
Wort&lt; 01--.mmaiiiY 2 Houno
IOor- Ai ts.211 Por lieu. Col
Mary Both
At 1 - • Ed.
llonday
~h 1'o Lllvo YoUr
Tolaphoo• • And
o Hovo Inquiry eau
Roturnod.
;:_
--~;,==o-,,.,=
~=--=~
Job c-. 1 - r y ,.ttlon,
port-limo, aporlonco wwtdllgl
--~~ wldloobiiHIM ·holpfUI,
OED or hlah IIChool dlplotM ,...
!#ENd, Nlilblt lnnopOIIatlon.
lcatlono wll bo labn lion:
13 1 Tuo. Feb., 14
llrn-tiNri, ClDodwiU lndu.trtn,
3041123rd.SI.,Pt.P-... ·
lloiutw Bai&gt;YIIIttor In . _
From 8:30 ...r:oo.~..Dovo V.rjtne:
For 1Wo Smol ...,lkliwn In C1oJ.
7144 Call .
n 1-2.
---:--:-::---:---'-::
2
Iii Memory

!'ousl;o'J

bot•••

t::,':..,"t"- -.

g=N.

~2.

materlala.

Coins, Gold Rlnga. Sllvw Colna,

"Tho date oet for Fomolo ·Boiaglo pup, 8 wjca. old, Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin $hop,
d:omplotlon ol lhla · work noodo o lo~lng homo, 614-992· 151 SocondA-uo,CiolllpoHa.
ahon bo at 111 forth In the ~1188:
··
·
-bidding propooal."
Smau black ,.mala dog, 304- Employment Services
Piona and Speclflcetlona 67S-2157.
oro on fllo In tho Doportmant Half Auatrallon Shooloerd pup.qf Tranoportatlon.
tiloo, 1 wtoa old ~~~~~ 11
Help wanted
Jerry Wrov tor a:OIJPII, all illy . . - a .
Dirtctor of Tronoportellon
·-POSTAL JOBS- ·
Pu......., luot In Uma for Yolo,.. u-HII E
•-~
Ft bruory 5• 12• 1995
tlne'i.iiioy Glfto, 304-875-3357.
~ r ng· ntry ...._ At f12.:11
IHr. + BonioiHo. CI..U, Contora,
And Sonora. To Apply For An
1. Card of Thanks
6 Lost &amp; Found
Application And Exam Info, Call

--==.:=i-:::;.;;.::....--

I would like to

Loet: Gil.._ I Cue On 18t
Avenue, C.ae Had S.mla Club

Wrltliln On ft. 814-.llt-S341. ,

'1•219-791-1181, Ext....

AVON I All Aruo I
Spoaro, 304-I'IS-14211.

Slol~oy

thank everyone

1

. who
remembered me
with cards

&amp;

-gifts on my
ninety fifth
birthday. ·
James Spencer
I .wish· to thank the
minisler &amp; members of
the Church of Christ in
Chrislian Union, also
many friends ·and
neighbors and family
thai sent cards, flowers,
gifts &amp; visited wilh n\e
after my accident. Also.
letters of support as far
away as Florida.
Thanks
for
the
ge stures of kindness.
their love and support is
htlping· me. in my
recovery.

A special thanks lo my
~onda and
grandaughters Rochelle
&amp; Cynthia.
Many Thanks
Mar Garlic
daugh~r

Card oHhanks

The fami ly of johnnie Jackson would like 10 extend
!hanks to all who helped in the loss of our Husband
and Father.
We appreciate all who sent food, cards, flowers, ·for
your prayers and w.ords of sympathy.
We want to thank all who helped at 1he Court
House, the E.M.S., Holzer Hospilal, Drs. and
Emergency Room Nurses. VFW Post #4464
American Legion Lafayette Post #27, and Patriot
Masonic Lodge #496 for their services, Willis Funeral
Home and Rev. Wayne E. Harrison.
Thanks lo the pall bearers and the Am Vets Ladies
Auxilary for serving food.
Special thanks to all who gave donarions lo ihe
Am Vets Building Fund in his memory.
·
Thanks 10 everyone. for your support, thoughts and
pr~yers. We appreciate all and will never forget your
love and kindness .
.
·
Edith Jackson- Wife
Ronnie &amp; A lissa Jackson - Son &amp; Dau htcr-in-Law

In Memory Ot
GARFIELD BLAZER
JR.
Aplil12, 1914Feb. 11, .1981
God shall
a!l tears
eyes; and there
be no ' more
neither sorrow,
crying,
there
be
1 ~""~'"n pain; for the
things
are
lpatSSE!d away.
Revelation 21 :4
We Love
Wife, Vir~Jini!ll
Children
Grandchildren

Happy Ads

Announcements

CHECK OUT THIS OFFER
Low-Cost Financing For Oualiljed Home Buyers
West Virginia Housing Development Fund

- · ~ongage Revenue Bond Program

II ill rtl. ,.., lion, 1110 -

BOOTS
All leather Western Bools
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, GorteK
Swain Furniture 62 Olive .St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

a1101,artotaplrouo30t 185731!1.
PC U... -.lad. Work wn
hra. :M. IFill. J'j4 :113-'2'13 011.

-

The Cardiopulmonary and
Cardiac Care units at Holzer
Medical Center will b.e
•
sponsoring a Heart Month
•.
"
Health Fair on Tuesday,
February 14 from 9:30a.m .
to 4 :30 p.m. in the French
500 Room . The event is free
and open to the public. Lowfat refreshments will be
served.

LAYNE FURNITURE
LAF\GE SELECTION OF
LIVING ROOM SUITES·
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $1095
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. lhru Sat 9-5 p.m. '446-0322
3 miles out 8ulaville Pike

P08TAL . -·OPENINQ

Entry ........ ..., 112.11
-IIUZ /Hr. For IErnfolol-~ ....
- i o n • Job ~tlon

1988
.

Transfers, Video Taping etc.

1990

Mercury

......... -ling,
polol -nllol, mooli, .
- ,
- tor CNA'a,
.._,..nlty,
ba4
PAib
VACATIONS and compotMJvo
Apply wfthln dolly.
rwqulrwd.

1 owner
388-8030

Loaded,

Loaded,

446-6 939 or 441-054 7

Did you know that.. Planned Parenthood of
SoutheaSt Ohio In Gallipolis pro11ides
confidential family planning services to 600
Gatua Coun ty residents each year. Birth
Control Se rvices include · a physician
examination, cancer screening, education
and binh cantrol supplies. Women and men
may receive tests and treatment for
· transmitted disease ·and
-~!~
tests. Sliding Fee Scale: P-riv~t8and Medicaid are
, ,;;;;"·~~
prevents un intended

appt call (61 4)

.

Friday, Saturday

and Roast Pork!
Wilh all the fixings

.

ASK US ABOUT ELECTRONIC
FILING.
736 Second Ave.
446-8677

Cool Due Now!

.

Prior

..'

try to

insure
I

everyone!

'

AUTOHIO Insurance
. Phone (614)446~6111
G 'aJ(ipolis
.

.

.

.

Basket Delights .
1725 EaslernAve. 441-0110
Roses Cash &amp; Carry
$29.95 &amp; $34.95
Register For Stowaway Dinner
For Two
Open Sunday 12 Iii 5 pm
'
.
ATIENTION

2

Only

3

•
ES!!!

months to go

•

until swimsuit season

pm B .o ssard

Call

anyone interested in

Ladies Preference

•

Health Club and ask

Soccer encouraged

about our
to attend. Spring

Valentine Special

Soccer starts soon.

614-446-3401

For more information, please contact:
Tammy Beaver or Judy Northup

1t (304) 675-1121

4277 St. Rt. 160

The Meigs Band Boosters

· Gallipolis, Oh. 446-1336
Nexws Products on sale
Feti. 13·1 8
20% off

will have a "Soup Supper",

3 REASONS ·ro COME TO
RIO GRANDE

Cafeteria. Menu consists of

All

6:30

.

.

'

-

A-,

_,-FridaY.
'

~t-ng

ke:::-,.,

lmum 114-441415'7.

.

pn\,

~rout*

corn

bread,

drink;

price

dessert

containers for carry-dut.

Thursday, February 16, 199S .
At 7:00P.M.

Auction &amp; Dance Benefit
for the Carol Toops family
at old · American Legion
Annex in Middleport . dn
Sunday, Feb. 12 starting at

'I

3 .,.,_... ,... holoj ~ tor IMN, ttiO,OOO, wid

Anyone whO wishes to
make
. do(lalions
.or
c~ntribute in any way •
please · contac;t
Helen
Young at 992-6723.

Gallia County

J.

6
'

.

under

Happy 60th
•

12

attend free

Call 446~2342
. or 992-2156
''••
•

FOR MORE INFORMATION

"(
•.

. I

.

•
'

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

CMslina

D. Palik. RRA.
Regional Recruiter, Community

·

Thin!
Avwtuo,
No
llnlumlohod
- CltiHpollo,
- · 322
- · 814-441-31111, 114-256-1103.

44

Apanment
tor Rent

1 Bod.-n, Kbchon, Aj&gt;pjloncOt
Fumlohod.~..•• JIIIr
-r
Hoooftol, ....,._ P11111 Dopoolt,
No Poto, 114-441-lltl57.

knowtingly accept
advertisements for real estate
which Is in viota:tion of ihe law.'

T11'11 Townlla.- ap.rt~N~n~a,
Vary Spoc-... I Apoll_, 2
Bodroonw, 2 , _ . CA. 1 112

·our re~ers are hereby

Bot~, Fully CoiPIIOoi, 2 P-.
PallO, Slort 13*1/Mo. No Poto,
lauo .PIUI Socuilty •Dopoolt .
RoquiNd, 1114-387-7150.
· opponunlly basis.
2bdrm.•....,., talal o1oc1rtc, opo
ploncoo lumlohod, loundry
room locllblao · - to tchoOI
In
town. .&amp;.~lone av•llablll
31 Homes for Sale
.,, Vllloae~oiiiii Alii•· ... or
_
And ..., .._ Down call 81J4.ft12-371 I . EOII.
PaYft*ll&gt; E::'tk Tomw, s Bod- 2br., 2nd tloor, kltc'hon fur·
""'_,dryor hook..,p,
=~...:!.~"II 1.';: nll!hod,
1yr. -ltiiM, no pMe. 304-871-GST.
4411-eiiOIIAa3 roqm opt oullkl~a llondor2· otory go- - .VWV.
mo. wlutllftiM
paid. pO. dopoolt·. No pota. - .
::=;n..:,:r;:.l;""',:;.d~ 875-41t0.
bayo: , _ ..-, 40'112r, ...,
·boY 12'1123'), laa'x40' lot,
121 000
• · 30W12-27I3.
3 bod.-,._ • ...,~ . !'!'..~..,. .... $2....... .,. ...........
s ·a,d ... 2 a-. Pump, Ciao ru,..oa, 1 kn.

For--·

tm.

Qorogo. Adclloon ...... $52,000,

~~317-7217.

And ...,

.._ Down
~ 'fo,_, 4 Bod-

="'..c. ....._ C.~~~·

HOI,- For llatt-. ·
s-rtllul . _ OVOrlooldna
Ohio Rl~or. u - Floor, 3 Bod'

3 112 Botht, FtmiiY
Room, Ell-In Kitchin, With

~-J;.:co;r:::

=

a...,..,~ Will Family
ln-Oraund

Pool

Wllh

~~~-~:;1
:10 Fruit

. -Tap
s-rtHul
La• t oping, 5 .._.,
814-441-78311.

117211.,

Efllcloncy, - - &amp; dopoolt,
no pota. 304-8'7Wtl2.
Nlcaly Fumlohod Apa,.,._,

1br, next to Ubrary, puking,
centr11l heat, air,.·reter.ncee ,...

qulrod. l-......al04.
Fumlthod
EHicloncy
Apt.
$210.00 month.UIIIKIII ocl. 120
Fourth Avo. Galllpollo. • 4411-aftor7:Grocl- liVIng. 1 ond 2 bodroom lpilltment. .. VIW.

Manor

32 Mobile Homes

EOII. ,

and

Largo 21w.. . ,.., ponlotiY lurnl~ dopoolt ._trocf. -

171-nn.

5711-

Nlco 2

ni""Z'JkCA, p&lt;lcod lo 0111. 304•

tt83lloblla . _ , 141172 3 Bodrooma, 2 Botho, ) ¥ - And
Dryor, Now Corpot, Tlllllly
'AodOIIII On 1 - . eM-317-lll&lt;tt.
1110 Clorton 14110 112 Aero Lot,
2 8R, f Both, CA, Col-11

-

homo,

;:;:1,

•

Rlt~.....a.

Aportmanle In llldd.._,_ FRim
3222-PM . Call 114-812-1.

1te1 . 12d0 mobl.. horne, tur-

L.T----------~::~ro~h~2=·~·~9~95~;------------~ .~~~· ~rt~
.I

Efflc..... y Aportmont, m A
Woolt UIIIKioo Pold.· 114-311-

ronchor on

W•lch for Truckloed of New C•rpel Coming In · . mao

OCCUPATIONAL
.THERAPY
NovaCare, the na1ion's leading
provider of adult rehabilitation
services has the 10119wing full·
and part-time opponunities in
Ohio and West VIrginia for
registered, licensed, or cenified
therapists: .
·
• Bec;kley, WV: OTR

This rlewspaper will not

=::;.:~ ~:::m1n

Help Wanted

br - · In Pornoroy &amp;

Mldclloporl, i14-lltl2-8858.

CWnplotly Fumlohod mobllo

home, .1 mi.. betow lown. avwlookln; rtvor. Dapooll. No Poto,

BICYCLE
ASSEMBLY
Huffy Service First
National
Retail
Service Company is
hiring
Service
Technici!ln to provice
in store assembly &amp;
repair of bikes and
other
consumer
product to retailers in
Gallipolis
and
surrounding ' area .
· Applicant should be at
least 1B years old .
Have reliable/ Ins.,
car and mechanic
ability/experience.
Also ne.ed phone,
basic hand tools and
ability to lilt 50 lbs.
frequently. Excellent
customer service
skills a must Wages
'&gt; based on piece work.
1·800·952·4('38

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

HousehOld
GoodI

5I

Furnished ·

45

• Pom"!"Y· OH: COlA,_ .
Make your life a little bener with
a · competitive
salary,
comprehensive
benefit
package, liberal paid time off,
anCI much morel

For more 'information, please
call. samara Kiefer at 1-SQ0293·6322 ext. t1 or wrlle to:
No11aCare
Inc.; - Contract
SeNices Division, 130 E. Wilson
Bridge Ad., Worthington, OH
43065.

EOE

NovaCare, Inc.

Slooplne. rooma wHh cooklnll.
Alao ~lor on ~.. r. llll

hook-upe. Call aflar 2:00 p.m.,
304·773-8UI,IIo-

46

wv.

Tr~~ller

epeca tar rwnt tn liMon.

t14-JII2410S.

to 8:00p.m. 114-812-25211.

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
Full time and part time . positions are
avail~ble for experienced Registered Nurses
in the . following areas: Critical Care;
Medical/Surgical;
Relief Nursing
Administrator. Excellent wage and benefit
package. Send resume to:
Rosie Ward
Director of Human Resources
' Holzer Medical Center
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Phone: (614)446-5105

.

54 Miscellaneous
5I

·

Household

Merchandise

Goods

16 cu ft Amana uhriaht ~.
good cond, ~1lHio.

Appro1lmotaly Stl Sq. Yd. llouri' 2 Watorboda For Silo: Ono
Corpo~ ~ Calllne Fan, Bolh
Super Slnglo With - Eoootlo,. 'CondKiori, f14-t411· . _ _ d 1125: Ono Slzo 111111: Both In Eocoi111114.
CondKion,l14-1112-31fil.
Carpal &amp; VInyl In Stock 15.00 Yd
6 Up 10 Pltloma Of Kftchon 32 .Bulti . TaMing Bod," ",1100,
C.rpet In StQii,k. OYer 35 P.t·
torno Vlnyt In Stock. llollolian

Corpoto, 114-441-JII44.
·COUNTRY FUANfTURE

814 4418012.

.All 81011 Bldde IDf ulol Ftclwy
O.la on sil14, 40170, 41i71,

Ced1r Bedroom Su.,l, $l'H.
Man-• Sot, $81 lip. 3pc. c:a.e

Tobloo. Set up. 2pc. Uvlne
A- SuHo, UBI up. Tabla, 4
ChaiN, l14f up. Curio. 4 &amp; 5
Dro-r Choat"· $4-4.115 up. lml.
AI. 2 Norlh, 1'1. -ont. 30417541120.

ond 'llldiJ, Olhor oil• . awol~
obla. LIMrTED SUPPLYII SALE
ENDS SOONI1- 5fiHIIIO.
Anlf1llon llobllo &amp; Doublowldo

ltom•"•n•,.
w. carrr AComplato Block 01 liltanhorm

12SEER HaOI Pumpo And Fur·
. _ Fur-

, _ And llollfto
nace Porta Will

Financing

'"erior,

Avoi!Mio Call· Bonnott'e lloblle
. _ Haotlne • Coollne .u aM-

$'10.00.. • 4 Interior, holow
caN :z Monn 15.00 ... ·

441-Mtl Or f.-.eT.I-1117. U. Abotll Tho Empl.., · llobiiO

Door, Vatioue alue 2

oolld

..-

Glaoa

USED

Pa,_

APPLIANCES
retrtgeraton,

,.ngoa. . go Appllanc., 711
Vlna St-. oil 114-441·7311, 1·

IIOIJ,oiii-MIIII. ,
Ment.al Health Therapist
Medical
Center
LAYNE'S RJRNITUAE
Hospital is currently · CWnploto homo luml~~~~·
Houtw: lion-Slot, 9-5. I
seeking a full-time
0322. 3 mlloo out . Bulo~lllo Ad.
F,.. Dallvory.
Menial Health Therapist
I
for our newly expanded
Mortoa Automatic Wo- 1
Yooir Warranty 't205; Whirlpool
outpatient program. The
Automatic Wllohor Almond Uka
qualified candidate will
Now 1 Yaor Worrontyj $2011: GE
be a ~ Master's level
Automatic L lui Now, 1
YMr Wllrronty t205; Willrtpool
prepared · e·ounselor
Auton\atlc Wllohor Eoool..,
licensed by the' State of Condftlon, $150; Willrtpool
Ohio .. Two (2) years . Automollc - · Advocodo
Excollo,.
CandKion
1110;
experience in adult and
WhlriiM!OI Automatic Wllohor
family therapy as·well as Whlie OoorfWorldng-condftlon,
$1111; Konmwo Drvar 1118; Sklo
knowl~dge of shorl lerm
By Slllo Ailvacoclo Woo 1285;
therapy approaches
Cut To 111111· KonmoN Eloclrlc
Rango Se5; Skaggo Appllonceo,
required. '
lll Vlna. St-. Golllpolla, . 814. Qualified candidates
441-73118, 1-800-401,3-lltl.
should submit a resume
lloyta~ahlr &amp; Drvtr Lorge
to the Human Resources ·' C.
, Exc.&amp;lent Condltlan,
Jl~
hi -ng llachlno,
·Department, Medica l
Orock
•~iii7-J1101 A~
Ce.ntcr Hospital, 272
tor 5P.II.
Hospilat
Road,
PICKENS RJANrTURE
Chillocothc, Ohio 45601 .
Nowl\laod
(614) 772-7562, FAX No opplloncoo, -hold lu,.
nlohlne. 112 mi. Jorrtcho Rd. Pt.
(614 )772-7902, or TDD PtooOont,
.WV, call 30~5-1450,
(614) 772-7933.
114 Ul 1448.

Holzer Senior Care ·Cenler, a 70 bed
extended care facility located on Colonial
Drive, is seeking a Certified Dietary
Manager. This is a· full-time posilion.
Candidates should have at least two (2)
years experience as a 'Food Service
Directoror relaled experiefl.ce.
If you are interested, contact: .
Holzer Seriior Care Center
Dick Huffer, Administrator
380 Colonial Drive
Bidwell, OH 45614
Phone: (614) 446-5001

Antiques
Buy or Ootl. Al-Ine .t.ntlq-.
1124 .E. M•ln 91rMI:, on At. 124,
Pomoroy. HoUN: II.T.W. 10:00

a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundlly 1:00

Merch and ise

w.io~ry.,..,

r-"""-----------------------,
CERTIFIED DIETARY MANAGER

52 Sporting Goodl ·
zt .._, hond gun, 12 ahol,
$110, 1Jl4.9112ollOIS.

53

Space for Rent

GOOD

L.I.S.W./L.P:C.C.

llobllo

~171113501Mo.

Nlco 2 Bodn&gt;oni

Rehabilltatlon Cerlters, • Inc.,
918 Youngstown-Warren Ad.,
Suite C, Niles, OH 44446. ~sop)
1146-2695. EOE

A.t•.-.n-

· •EioclriCIWotor,-nl-8

From Gallipolis, take 'Route 141, turn left onlo
ClUing, 2 O.CU, Fenced Yard,
· · Route ns, turn right onto Patriot Road, watch for .Clooo To Clolllpolla, 121,000,
tnt ue 1133.
·
signs.
'·
· tin Sunohlno 14x'nl 3 Bod: Out Of State Heirs Commissioned To Sell The . n:iOmo, 2 Batho; Laundry A-..;
81120 Dock, 8112 Bulldlnj,
: Following:
Rontod Lot 111,500, I 4
'
.110USEHOLD, TOOLS AND MISC.
87115.
· Sofa, dining room table, Lady La: Z·Boy recliner. liv·
1H5 , DOUBLEWIDE AEPO,
nnor llvod In, no -poymorrt
· lng room chair, end tables. marble lop ·. sq. labia,
wooden lop sq. table. wind-up clock, food grinder,
to
q,.lflod - · - dOihrery
&amp; 101 up. 304-7la-llllil.
microwave dishes, kitchen appliances, linens, lamps,
For .... Of renl.. 10x50 .,_
radios, hand lools. · misc. dishes, pictures, kitchen
- . . one bod,_,., gao ·fur·
. lable wilh 3 chairs, good aulo. garage door opener,
nace, electric hot w.fer lank
and "'~~""· locatod In P..tto
· gas cook slove. k~chen utensils, picture frames.
Fork. SIOO or 11~.• call 814: as~rte~ glassware, rocker,_§l~dQ Sing!!• sewing_ 1512.G"3,........
-. machine, sel. Club aluminum, wooden clothes dryer,
Now 11t5 Rodman 14114, 2 Bod·
· Tupperware, lots of box loads, afghans, baskets, and · room, TOIII Eloct~c, ·Undorplnnlne. Rlody To llovo Into On
. much, much more.
Cornw .Lot Park Line Moblla
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Coun. Phono 8-.aeoe. 614.
.Cider press. waterfall cedar chesl, hay hook !.arks, . 446-7787.
peanut jar, quilt, doll cart, seve ral pes. oak furntl~re,
UMITED OFFER! new 14170 2·
3br., 1518 DOWN, No Paymento
ssd iron, child's sad iron, some advertising, casl tron
aftor Syro. Fr• Dol~ory &amp;
skillets, several !Silver pc. thimbles, comic books,
~p.-755-81111.
large crock, buttons, casl iron pol. pop crates, lrunk,
Now 1111 141711, lncludao oldrt·
wQOI!en boxes, COI&gt;I&lt;ie cutters, rolling pins, stone 1lng, ...,., blocka, 1 r•r
jars, Coke lher!"omeler. Coke stra\Y Holde~. lunch ·
l monthl FREE lot rant. Only8
boxes, oil lamps, .scales, cook books, cookte jars, old
SII20 - n arid 11114 par mo.
Montgomery Ward , calal\)g. some Roseville, :ovash· I Call ·~- .
board, grey granite. Jiesla covered dtshlbowUp1tcher, . '. NEW BANK AEI!OSI Only 4 loft I
Nevor llvod 1!1. 304·755-71111.
jewelry, llns, pictures, misc. glasswaro;&gt;. needlepotnl
door slop, cast iron roaster, lots of boK loads, green
35 LOts &amp; Acreage
and pink depression, set of dishes. and much, much
8 Aero Loto For .Solo, 4 Mlln
more.
·
·
·
F.- Hal- Ho&amp;llllo~· 114-«8· MARLIN WEDEMEYER. AUCTIONEER Lie. 36.15
35JII, Or 814-441-3228. .
614-37~2720
5 ae,.. half milo. 1oom AI. 2 on
Jtrlchci'Aood, 304-4118-!1545.
Lie. and Bondod In Slale ol Ohio
Nqt Rtlponllblt lor Accident or Loss ol Property.
, _ , Lab- ono .c.. 1o1,

.,

9171.

HomiPirll,l14-441-1102.

---·and

children

otove.1 ..r, aloctrlc hoot pum]l,
210 3n1 81, Hovon; wv.
1210. mo. plua dopoolt. 304·773-

Avall•bl•, Dlpoalt And
R~ulrwd. Footor'a

FNt

SPEECH·LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGISTS

Our · busy, dynamic and
support111e environment offers
conUnuous new challenges, an
e~tcettent salary and benefits
package,
and
gmwtl'l
opportunity. For Immediate
consideratton,
contact:

'524-!Z7T.I.
2 Bodroom Furnlohod Coblo

Flnlohod

$55k+l\'r. DOE

llpollo, 114-m&lt;4341.
·
SmoU 2 bodroom, - ·

mobile home wJ2ac.,
S21o0/rno., POOI.._b. 304-

Pa~:l

$4,500 Sign-o~Bonua

LICENSED COTAo l PTAo

-1172

-

OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPI!rol

One 2 Bedroom Home; One 2
Bodroom llobllo. - . In Cia~

Rea l E state

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper is 'subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitation or dlscrlmlnaUon .~
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
Nmilallon o'r dlscril]linatlon."

rehab
professionals.
We
currently ha\19 the rollowlng
opportul"'ltles available at our
Gallipolis, OH facility:

2773.

flnonca,l-t-a211.
Po\Y PHONE AOtiTE
110 Loal '&amp; fllallllohod SM•
- !:_Clp_,•..,.n...,:M_,Hto....,.-l
0Ea~m~t\~S.IOO~~Wk~IY.l~
~
1..00 Ill tSII.
-ne: Won, Got Rich QWck.
WIII Clol A St~=-=-·
-toSaiL1
•

?e'

2 p.m.

VILLAGE WEAR
245·5050
Valentine's Day Sale on Winier
Clothing! Making room for new ·
spring arrivals! Lorialed across
· from B.P.Siation

.

Informed that all dWellings
ad\lenlsed in thiS newspaper
are available on an equal

fPuG£cc dfuction

$3.50. · Bring

·

large :S b 11koom tarrn houle,

on the IIVII, 23 Nnl:, IOc.ted on Horae Cr8M '

for sale

and

.

=~c:;:octlloyor Popo At

I

of

ana

luM - - largo building M1 Rd. on Cnob Croolt Rd. 304-524-

1995

at the Meigs High

quality
rehabilitation services. As we
conlil'l4Je to expand
grow,
so dOes our need f()l' QualifV

portly lumlohocl 1400 pluo
- ... Hy,l14-tt12·S783.
t..., ~.ooo. ...,_.Wail,
Now homo undor conoti\ICIIon
For or t - Ohio Rlftr eornplalo conatruclfon In lolu ol

Pubi.IC Sale
&amp; Aucllon

*Springtime Special*
In appreciation for our most successful year yet
we will be charging, ohly 10% commission for the
entire month of March!! Now's the time to clean
your garage; attic, outbuildings etc. We hope to
make this year even bigger!
Wilh weekly sales since 1985 we've sold most
anything you can come upwnht
·
Our huge advertising budget draws more
buyers to get you more ·rnoney for your
merchandise! If you have . quality goods our
advertising will draw the buyers to get you top
money!
.
No sale too large - we can handle them all!
Year 'rouna price on puolic auction . at your
location we charge 10% commission &amp; help set.up your sale- you pay advertising 5%
commission on anything motorized that you ride
or drive.
·
· Schedule your outside sale early so we ean
have plenty of lime to advertise.
: If you live "anywhere" in Ohio, Indiana or West
Virginia we can handle your sale! Licensed in
Ohio, Indiana, w .. v. #1030
·
Auctioneer- Finis "Ike'' Isaac
Phone 614-388-9370
Or check wl~h Virgil Isaac at Isaac's Feed
Store Phone 614-388-8880

provide~

1 8od-n Houoo
• SaaiHtJ DopOalt

P.M. 114·441 2111.

ISAAC'S AUCTION SERVICE

Oisoover
· community
Aet\abllitatlof! Centers, Inc&lt;. and
jOin one of the leading

~~~

n.~~2' ~~~
1301l'llo. .. IJIIIMIM a

lat.

=

Racine, Ohio 1344 W.Va. 515
· Cash • Positive ID • Refreshments

SIGN·ON·BONUS

houoo, - ·

Houoo .On BrlclgaiMn St-.

.

LMI_ge .,.. nice 2 bedroom
laiao tat, t72,000.
304-733--2173 or r.w mnnge.

1

'

lltl2-t040,

,.,.,..ace

Roqulrod. 114-441-1751.

traJier •h Mdl Flortda room,
tl -~lfll lno'&lt; dod, lnciUCI1ng ono1 ~ o1

vegetable and chili soups,

BOB EVANS RESTAURANT
New Winter Menu and 50% off
selected items in the General
Store

$1 0/person,

._·__~
lhl_P_•_o...:p=les.:.:::.__~_·_JI.__Fr_o_m_:
'l_'hGang!
_e_H--T...J
laaak
.....,..,,
.~

Slroot, " - · Hand and dry.. 85.00; - - and . ....
110.00. Wo pick,. ...., cofll14-

February 16th, 4:00 pm 'to

Everyone Welcome

Birthday
To Our Boss

8

Opponunny

Whispers Hair Salon

Building in Kanauga.

To ll"rflilj_, purdta.sn Clll'l iTo/ hu. owrwd 41 hom• in tJw lui thrw Jl4!0rs.
Oth,- quolif"~e11tiottl ~w. Afllotqu ,,... MIIJj«l to r:mlit ~~~. ·

. . Eallt ,ll!llfl

Dlck'a Cor -

All Ages, All Risks

pm atAmVets

• Defemd-payment.flnanclng of up to $1,500
available for closing oosts
·

yo

Dan .Smith- Auctioneer

'

,• .

Memorial Library

Dinner Feb. 27th-

• Low downpayment requirements

po~ ttme ..........

1:~ lo 3:00. :104-8711,1211.

Saturday, February. 18,

Democrat Spaghetti
• Long-term ftxed annual percentage rate of 7.97%
to finance new or existing single-family homes

--.-:nv
.

~2br.

----'-i::==--=--;._
·RoFumlohod
INOTICEI .
:I

miiMhm~

Cancelled/Rejected

We

Bullnea ·

21

tho oHorlng.
For ar -

&amp; CcMo.nby

8 ·

Bidwell, Ohio

Insurance

811 Vlond

:=:.o. .'a"';!.-=::=.::::

SR-22

•DUI • No

Happy 50th Sirthday

G.V.

Wanted to Do

Occupational
'·
&amp;
llEHAB
pay .
PROFESSIONALS

"--t "
.,.., no poto.
:ICM-4118-1721.
Conago tor ...., In Pt. Ptoount,

OliO VALLEY PUIUSHIHQ CO.
- t h a i 'YOU do_. wfth poop1o you k - ond

9:00am
Located on St. Rt 124 in Portland, Ohio will take
consignments Friday noon till 4 p.m. on Feb.
17th. Will sell oulside starting at 9 a.m.

Assoc. meeting

VILLAGE FLORIST
245·5678 or 245·5679
One Slop Valentine Shopping
· For Your Sweetheart ..
Cards, Bear, Gifts, and Flowers

~t'-.

Sacurlly,

388-9823

Galfla County Soccer

RESTAURANT
st. Rt. 160 Bidwell, Oh.
388-9823

.....

RESTAURANT

Auto Insurance
Lo wDown
Payment

WANTED
Couth and UncoUth
Characters
with known and unknown
Thealrical Talents
for "Ariel Frolics"
Centennial Production in July.
Auditions .
February 15 &amp; 16
6:30 • 9:00 p.m.
ARIEL THEATRE
Call Lora Snow, 256-1614 to
re.serve a time.
REWARD
An opportunity to be a part of
a Celebration of 100 years of
the ARIEL!

PIRATES COVE

18

Fmanc1al

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

and Business Tax Preparation .

Sun.

w.=.

llolnl-,· Etc. No Eu.
- - ,. -!Irina. For """
Coil 2111-?M-tiOIO Eof. mo, I
A.ll. To 11 P.ll. 7 Daya.

11

Rooms

=-3~-you

how. 32-4GIIouN ........... Col Sun Voi~Nu~.
lit iii• -.
8:CitJom-4:00pon. for lppolnlo 9ummor. !J Dayo .,... Wetk lllri'

PIRATES COVE

St. At 160

Clomo

'Or\111

oltono.
- Pay
' . .- . . II
ond
14.25
homo
por

Also, try our zesty lasagne

Craft Shop
2390 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Oh 446·2134

Sleak &amp; eggs, toast &amp; home fries
$4.95
Weslern·Omeletle w/toast
$3.95 .

&amp; Su~day

Delicious, Fresh RoastBeE!H ~

D.J.'s

Elreakfast
3 eggs, home fries &amp; toasl
. .
$1 .99
.

1 owner

Zbr., lladlaon ·Awe.,

/CONSERVATION

Help Wanted

Renta ls

lilt

Ex..COUplo
With
Aoloronce Seoloo Aportmont
Compla to ...._ -In
· - · Iockie !OmL rodlat• of Clolllpollo. 814AEOIBTERED NIIIISES, C11S1 2454185
Poyo Up To $52,000.. .lobo
Nallonhldo. 2 'leotw AN Eu. a
Rota. Col1-800-423-113tl.
SECURITY =DS· muot ba
to ohlll lnollldlng
lluot .....
Clooii polloo ricord, ~ hlotory, ...UOblt ....I'O'Iatlon,

trtkolt=
· :.::•
......

388-9991

Cakes - Cakes- Cal&lt;es
Birthdays, Anniversaries, .
Showers, Weddings ·Bring
Sally your Logo or Emblem
land she will duplicate it in your
""'Sflecial order. Also wedding
mints and chocolates
•
Cakes by Sally at

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For Complete. Professional Individual

AMI Etnle c.--. Prot

Town Car

Marquis

Call VI DEO TRANSFERS

=

Lincoln

11

41. Hou-. for Rent

Wit Captiva Point,
• Lakalond Fl113101. '

Aoiw
d Cono Contwtlu1~3
I'Aiohlngton ·
•
Rliv.ntl J Dd, WV 18 eutrwdty
lCCI~. . IIPPIICIItona fw Nur.
!!Ill • 11ldinlc CWIII train). CtttHiod !JUrOing
. . . , _ lncludo: hoolth ....

au

For all your Video Needs

to Do

SliGO lorna. ....

Rrtllng

c.N ....,_ 2/aW Daadll,_ 1·
1111011131 •• ~ 1011.

--·2--·

Cool Dude then,

_,_

~tfoooo•

~".:r='.::- ~

···3···
3

-In = -y

Wanted

on - - of pro • '"'' lilt
·~-~'!'.~loa,

t:ounty IFopl
WIO · 0..0, 304-f75.U1I or
W1C ~. Jlld.Clhlo. WILDLIFE

··· 1···

5

__ __t--. __

18

.

\_

Sunday Times-Sentinei--Page-05

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

Oolllo

Poll-..... 001 tor .J!.N.... ~
liED 11:.... w LUI ,......, fDr
- C o . WIC to
cord - • PI
I I of ,...

~

fqual

h~m~m~~Jwr.

7
Yard Sale
_ _ _..;___;__;__ _

BULLETIN BOARD

Applicatlono Ani .._ ....... , .
cpolod
At ,. _ _ Coro 'tort-

you .mooi
oiTP&gt;\ THio IH guldoll- u a dlolocatod -... or

PUBUC NOTICE
Tho · Galllpollo City
Comml .. lon will hold a
public hearing on tho ·t995
Budget
on
Tueaday,
February 21, 1995, •l 7:00
p.m. In .t he Municipal
Courtroom o.f the Gallipolis
Municipal Building, ·518
Second Avenue, Golllpolla,
Ohio .
T ·
he budget will be ·
available for lnapecllon by
tho public from 8:00 a.m.

CoN 114-44t-4'1111.

clependtn1 ,..,_ 104 IIZ·zMdi Of
1-800-lltl2.a541,

e;;;;;;;;.

.

12, 1995

;:,.;;;.n;=~lp~,-;;:;-.;;:;-td';·W.O;;;;ril;:odd., ~
,.,=~
•111o1aa
Co. So,....._,

AVON to buy w Ml, -!Wn. ....

Ani yooi l n t - In nunlng?
Boalimlne I I - 11, HADE llio.
wilT wpaneor a .... In Point
Pt. . .ntlo tl'llln you IO t I C: IIW
I Ctttlli..t NIINing_

Public Notice

February 12, 1995

Help Wanted

Tho lrolnlng lo -

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Matico Ia horeby glvon lhot
lhe Boord of Education of
lhe llelga Loc.ol School
Dlalrlcl, 320 Eoat Main
s treat, Pomoroy, Ohio
45769, will offor for tale by
atolod bid at 12:00 noon,
EDT, Mondoy, February 13,
1995, tho foiiO'f'lng vohlclo:
1980 GMC Pickup Truck
SerlollfTCD1A" '513827
All ·111 1a.,....d•nvo 1opoo
containing blda ore to bo
morkod clearly on tho ·

February

s-.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; RJRNITURE. 12
Olivo
St., Clolllpallo.
&amp; Uood
tumtlure,
heaterw, NWwt.,
I
Wotk boola. 114-441-31111.
' VI'RA FURNrTURE

114-441-3158
Ou•lhy Hou..ttotd Fumhure

And Appllanc.. Groat Doole On

Cooli And Corry! RENT·2.0WN
And Uy•way Al8o ·A.YIIIIIM.
Free o.tfwtry.~hln ~ Mllel.

44

. Apartment

Wall

Fumaco

That UaM

No EIOctrtcKy. WV 010212.

8o1ao couch &amp; choir 130. AUot
oouch a choir $711. Now kllchon
toblo·wrchalro 1110. Coffoo tabla .
w. Bod- ouMo 1!0. 2
Iampo 110. o304-e7tl-mt.
Boo4e By Rod Wing Qol-o
-40 ·To -10 Dag:.w e, lt.H. Brown

Guaranloodi I.DRoll Prlcoa; Tho
Shoo Cola, 14-441-4222.
caner 10 box, brand rww,
143.118,114-812-8118.
CB a- Slotlot&gt;- GolairJ Solum
rodlo, Night Eloglo D-f04 mlc,
PDC 100 wan molar, Total Hom
IV' ro4orlw:· ot • -•. Hygoln
alaCk t
bt1m, coa1 IN'M:I
!'Oior wlro, lloal ..,rythlne new
~'1..~~5, 114-Mt-2203~or,
Concroto

'

Ploatlc

Soptlc

Tanka · 300 'Thru :z,ooo Gallon•

Ron hono ,Ento-. Jack·
- · OH 1.8Q0-837.. 1121.
Fl,_ood lor 140/tood,
dellvorwd. 304-TI3.,.1:18.
•
Klndlowood -cool alooo,
top
You ~antlng,
pic- ,., SSOO.
,

-o;o:=·.m·

King

Slzo

Wll- . A-

~~nd s POda, 1200, .
Llkn To Trovol Non·
Non-OitnUr, Good
Rocord, 11o1 Job

Lady -

SrnoUr,

Drtvtne
Ralatod, 114-441-1204.
Large Buck Fltwploco IIIIOfl Eo·
cellont Condblon, 814,'1118-1023.

g.,.,.,boylnti

-

• 0111"8
- ·
Johrwon"•
Vkleo.·llldo

a~opor~,lt4-812·34tt.

One Sal Ciao Loge For Fltw 110;
One Boa,. ConOtructlon Hooter
Koroo- 35,000 BTU 1145; One
100,000 HI Efltcloncy Gao

Fumaco "115, '114-44f1-83!!1• 1'
100-287-4308;
0no
-.w
Eloctrlc Furnoco Wllh IJC Can·
vertor$250.
Racing ao-llort,_5.5 HP onglno,
1525, 8f4.Mt-..7't or 814-._.
2o.t5.

for Rent

Rofrtgorat-. IMI!IIM, ·And Dryoro, All R-tlonod
And .oa....,.oadt 1100 And Up,
Will Dollver. 114-IIM441.
SatoiiKo SliOltm: 10 Ft. Dloh &amp;

VALLEY VIEW
APARTMENTS
RIO GRANDE, OHIO
Now Ac1epling Appll1alionr:
·1 &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments, welllo wall
carpeting, new kitchen

appliances. on site
laundry facility, fenced in
playground, on site
manager&amp;: maintenance.
Water, sewer &amp; trash·

paid by owner. ·
' 614-245-9170

-

Receiver, "'lake Me~• AI·
Now $1,200, 8~31t.Qott8

Anytime. ·
·
SataiiKo Toinlolon Syoto..,. T8"
dlall, UnldM UST ::::. al1
. montha Did, ••cMierl
Su-rtptlon pOkl ' until

noll
C l -, S'-1~.

Ju!y. H!IO,
Tho IIOvlo Channel and l'lllny
more, 11100, 1-t-2203 or

814-149-2119.

44

Apanment
for Rent

WATERS EDGE APARTMENTS
Syracuse,

Ohio

Now availble FmttA One

BR apts.

S~nior, Disabled, Handicapped,
.

Basic monthly Rent

$269.00.

Residentpays electric only Range,

AIC on

CA.I"MtiB 111M.

TDD: (614) 446~5106

Refrigerator,

bodroorn aportmont , ;
nlohocl, utiiHioo poldl oolwooo•

EEO/ADAEmployer .

Community Room, Management,

Ono

Maintenance provided

dopoolt, 3 \12 m I• - h
ol illddloport,ltt-317-oet t.

-

Ono

t

d-

lumloiiOCI .,...,.

mont lp lllddlopOII. call814-812·
5304orl1~.

Unlurnlohod 3 Room, Balli, Yory
CINn Water a Tr~~•h P•kl, No
Pet., 1-Grter AI'M, IM 388 aaoo.
11--=-Help-w.a·nttd
_ .-c- ACCOIJNT CLERK
The Cily of GallipOlis
Auditor's
Office
is
accepting applications to
fill the position ol Account
Clerk.
Applicants must have a
working knowledge ol
gen.eral o«ice procedures
with
emphasis
in
acco~nting , payroll and
compuleroperalions.
40 ho~rs per week, 8:00
a.m. Ia 5 p.m.
Applicants must apply
in person al A!,!dilor's
OHice, Cily ol Gallipolis
518 Second
Gallipolis,
Ohio. Avenue,
.
Appli~ations must be
completed at lhe Auditor's
Office on or before
Februal)' 15, 1995. ·.
E:q_ual
Opportunity

LE;m;.;:;;PI.;;;OY:,;'!I;.;r·~-------...1

-site laundry,

SEE MANAGER FOR RENT
LICENSED PRACfiCAL NURSE
Ohio University Personnel Services is currently
accepting applications for ~ .. permanent intermine·nt
LICENSED PRACfiCAL NURSE for the College
of Osteopathic Medicine . JOB DUTIES : Assist
physici~ns in patient care by performing sk ill ed
nursing procedures; ~ssisting physicians with physical
examinations and minor surgeries; adminislering

UP SPECIAL

~:r-=-614-992-6419 TOO 1-800-750·075h .
EquarHousing Opportunity

'

W,.

Real Estate General

medic3tions; remove sutures, change .dressings, etc.;
observing. and charting patients ' conditions,
behav·ors
a d Jl!:l:l!lble ms_
, ; nc"'Parrng
· ·
t · ·
·
c
1__ .,__'l
."n d ~a'·'l."'"'"S_
necessary repprts aliO"recoras; communtcalmg IJy
phone with palienl s and others; and h'andl in.g
prescription orders arid rcqueSis .
QUALIFICATIONS: Current Ohi&lt;J licensure and .
certificate in pharmacology perm itting medi cation
administration required; good inlerpersonal skills
essential. Six to lwelve months clerical experience as
an LPN required ; a minimum one year clinical
·experience as an LPN high.ly desirabl e; recent
ambulatO!Y care experience preferred. Hours of work
are on a call-in as need basis Monday through Friday.
Salary is $10 .52 hourly. ~ APPLICAT!.ON
DEADLINE : February 17, 1995·
I
All individuals interested in this position are
requir;ed lo complete an application (resumes may
accompai).Y application) available al University
Persnnnei'Servlces, ,44 University Terrace, Athens,
0 h i o. A PP 11cat 1ons may b e o b ta 1ne dbetween I he
hours or 8:00 a.m. and S:OO p.m. Monday through
Friday.
·
·
'
OHI9 UNIV~RSITY
Alhens, Ohio
An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity ·Employer
~...___M_i_no_r_it-ie_s..a_n_d_w_o_m_c_·n_a_re__
E_nc_o,.u_ra.;g;.,e_d;.,to~A..;.pp:.l.;.y_.l

20 ACRES- 4 bedrooms , country home for
the family. Lovely carpet, ·living room,

lV

room;· 2 baths, screened porch •. country

•

kitchen with appliance. New Roof • Hard to

:

find all this for $65,~.

�•.

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

~F:e:br:u:a:ry:1;2:·:1:99:5==~====~=:=====§p.,=m~er~o=y=l=ll:dd:l:ep:o:rt:::G:al~lipo:ls, O=H;;;P;o;in~t=P=I~ea~sla~nt~,~W~V~;;.~~=f;~~S~u~n~d;ay~Ti~m=e~s~Se~n:;ti~n;ei;-P~a~g~e:=D;::7

February 12, 1995

Building

55

54 Miscellaneous .

Merchandise .

STORAOE TANkS 3,1100 BloCk, brlclc, ~ wfn.
Upolght, Ron Evono £ - doWI.._IInt.... otc.
I... , Klo - . 0H Coli 114Jiocllilon,Ohlo,~
24Win
·suNOUEBT WOLFF
SIMI IW!IIngo FIICiooy DITANNING BEDS
Cammorclol, l.lnMI, BioWOUI:al Sti64, 40x10, ~~
Tonnlng From $1".00. Llmpo, 701110, And Oddo """
Lottone. •ccr
P•~• Endo SALE ~ Fob 211111 or
Until
Gonel1~
!&amp;L'7'1110.
Low Aa 120.00. can Todoy FREE
NEW Color CotaiOg. 1-800 412· .
llr7.

u:•

56

Pets lor Sale

New 11 etall han bam tor IMM
wiDellurw. locltlld on HotNIIcllll
Ad, "" Cnb Crook Rd.,
· 304-a244773.
Roololorocl Po4lod Herwtonl Bul~

17llonlho Old ond10 llonlh Old
Heffw 114-211-1:115.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

1oC a 2nd Cui Oret.rd Gruo,
Squo,. Bolio, woe, 814441 '1053.

.

lllaod Hoy 9auoro Bolli $1.50,

ue osn0.

114 HI 1824, 1114

G""""
~-Pel ar-l"ll.
Flllu~ng
ro Both. Julia Eor _ , lor Nil, 12.25/l&gt;uol!el,
Wobb. COli
11-0231. · . . 114-112·2781 or 814-1112-2123.
2 Mlnlaturw Pomerenlana. AKC

RogloCt&lt;od, 114-117~10.

Cannelburg , Inc. 45719
Spwalizrng in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meet your
needs. Any size .
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildings and·
Package Deals . Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars.
Local Sales Representative
WESLEY MULLET
f 4t Barlow Rd .
Patriot,Ohio 45658
PH. 614·256·6031

7 Mon:h Old Male Cocluopoo,
Whllo, Wonnod, Arl Shoto,
Nout..wd. o- Wtlh Kkll Sl50

114-446-31134.

big dog1,

gre~t

Comrort, convenience,
energy
effici~ncy,
durability
and
Oexibility in design are
a few of the reasons
why 20,00 families will
build a log home this
year!

tor pollee or

.
Aegl.titred male . Boxer

•

Call or write for more
infomation.

Appalachian Log
Structures, Inc.
Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614
'Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-458-9990

,;,71..:_..:..;=.:..:.,..;;_;,..;:..::..;__

pupo, lown whh block mask, 111117 Chovelll lloiiiHo w/-o
born Chrittma1 ~· rudy to rallay whMia. auper ·~·
go, &amp;200, 614-985- 7.
$4800. 304-675-2451.
1

AKC

Reglltered

Cocker

!lponlllo For Solo Aduho
Puppllo, 1114-3111-2728.
Rate,

a.

Lonblrda,

Cocblllll, oCc. Floh Tonk &amp; Pol
Shop, 2413 Joe-. A- Point

P4uunt, 304-175-2083.

Gotmon

St.phofd

Pupo,

Fullbr.d, Btg BonM, Wonnecl,

11112 Canloll,_~,!I!Oml-i
COI)d.,
· .......,..734
Cpm. -

,l arge

IGuaM

WfctiU &amp; ICCH-

».

-

LN~

Rea.l Estate Genera(

Taw•ull

,.,."
Cobo.

74

73 Vlns &amp; 4 WD'I
..,. Chny •o~~:r-...1lna,
12200
111 , . 81'11.
:11
Troll . . . . 414,
lull - . V... IIUio. 1 - ,

p.,_..,

=. --

*•

12110, · -..

1m 114 Ton 4 WD DuoHy, IEJrcol.
... leohln'CII COndUon.
12.1110, 114 245 1024.
1112 Cllov. Com- Von.
IINFord41&lt;4. ~

Camp 'ft' For N
..._
... ...... _IOO,Nd,3200 Dodcie Dlllola. Yorio 110-.
- . eMOQ, 1141112 :1011 bot· · 1tl0" liA 100 A - . 1lml
lomlpm.
' ~~
"1!~
78 AutO Parts &amp;
Dllnlll Z10 H.P. 10 llpd.
Tr1n1mlulc 1. Sit lnllematlonll
AcC:81110rlel
Cui on. WIAJr .,..... ond Filii
Whool• . , . -~ ond Pump,
2 AIIC IDitlt, out. 3o4- et4 411 :14U:
17WMS ilfloi Spm. -12110111 ndlll ~~4 T..,.... PZII/75A11roclll llroo, wtlh 10" -. -.
-~h - .. 1221. ... ....... 1110
.••_
.. _

rJi: =.

79

Real Estate General

a .....
....._

•

Real Estate General

'

1

""'"· ~--~1_111._Aiml
_

l--rl"!:'

Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY

..

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

1184 Olde Cutlaee, $1300. 3D+

1-800-585-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley.............. 742-3171

In Wday's fasl

I

~ng

1i:r

1

1

A NT GEM

Complete the chuckle quoted
.
by filling in tha missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below •

10

..• .·'

.

184 Myrtle Ave. - 3 BAs, 1
1/2

baths,

heat

VIne St. • A "Fixer
pump. Upper" or building lot.
.
$29,500
$58,500

and ftiM
od to 12480, 114-

aood,

114~ "' 1-11-:1045.

OPP&lt;ImN1Y

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD1 Aluminum sided 1 1/2
story home, living room, kitchen, over sized detached
2 car garage. FA electric furnance. Additional mobile
home hook-up. Must call today for an appointment!
11558

18" Pontloc Grand Am, 4 - ·
LE. 3.0 lhlr V-1, GDOd "'!r, SISOO
OS0. 114-11112-6id'l.

LOOKING .FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
111
4.507 acres m/1
'9,000
#2
4.615 acres m/f
10,000
113
4.702 acres m/1
9,000
14
3.881 acres m/f
8,000
#5
4.190 acres m/1
5,000
116
5.442 acres 'm!f
10,000
117
8.148 acres m/f
8,000
•
118
10.320 acraa m/1
11,000
119
7.253 acres m/1
7,000

1118:2

Ford
421000rnl., whHo

Thundorlllrd,
W/groy

Int-.

11143. HOllE &amp; INVESTIIENT· can be bOught 1009ther.
New 3 bedroom ranch home w!large rooms. Whhe brick
front. Charming LA, dining room, large rm$. throughOU1,
lOads of oak cabinets In kit ., 2 car garage, 2 ac. MIL
'

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~ee

Answer to Scram-Lets

ramlly rm. and OUISide enlry IOlhe pallo. carport. Nice

qul1e neighborhood close 10 Holzer. Call for immediate

appointment

3 BAs, 1 1/2 baths, fulllbalh.A.ffnrdRbiiA
basement.

Real Estate General

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446~9555

DJ

\

Carolyn Wasch - 441-1007

l'racy l. llrinager ...... CJ49-l439 .

BIG BEND REALTY, INCJ
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 ' f==l
.... .i.

_

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

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER ........ 446·4618

Henry E. Cleland Ill 992-6191

J. Merrill Carter....................................379·2651

Judy DeWitt ...........................................441·0262

..

Ruth Barr...............................................44&amp;-o722
14 ACRES OF CLEARED ROLUNG LAND
Good fencing- 1993 16'x BO' mobile home, Wilh 3 bedrooms
and · 2 balhs. One bath wilh garden lub. Extra nice. A 2nd
nlobile home lor rental or . Mom and Pop . living quarters:
Barn, storage bldg . with work~hop , ~moke house wl~ qellar:
Calllo see lh1s mini farm.
· H723 ·

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

DEBBIE DRIVE-EVERYONE SHOULD
OWN A NEW HOME AT LEAST ONCE.
This 2 story beauly features 3 or 4 br's, 2
baths, beamed ceilings in lhe LA &amp; /amlly nn,
cherry cabinets in kitchen, 6 ln. outer walls &amp;
much more. Fanlastic view.

'

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Tammie DeWitt .. 245·0022
Martha Smith ........J79·26Sl
, Cindy Drongowski245·9697
Cheryl Lemley,1.....742-J171 .

Slreel· Need

OFFICE 992-2259

,
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1725

REALL'i MAKE YOUR HEART
BEATI Especially if you've eve.r wanled'lo
own your OWN BUSINESS wilh a good
s_teady income!! Located on corn er lot M

SR 124- 4 year old Convenience/Gas slore
wit~• updaled codes &amp; regulalions. Incl udes
all slock, equlpmenl, 101 wilh lrailer hook-up.
addilional building w/posl off.ice. (Renlal
income
lrom
P.O.),
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
CALL TODAY FOR
DETAILS!
.

THIS
HOME
'CHARM YOUI 3-4
bedrooms, Indian sandstone fireplace,
N.G.FA, full basement with one car .
garage, cable &amp; cenlral air. Now aaklng
$30,900. . .
•

.'

Serving Mason And Gallia Counties
pREAMED OF! Small communily
large
yard, rive r frontage
not
mentJon ... the lovely river view! Located in

Longbottom lhis homa lealures 2
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths. ulilily room. one car
garage in basemenl, part basemenl that
could be finished inlo addilional rooms.
ASKING $50,000- come see and make an
I

A SWEET DEAL IN MIDDLEPORT- THIS
PRICE
REDUCTION
MAKES
IT
SWEETEFU Close to local -shopping, lhis
one lloor frame home offe~ 2 bedrooms
balh, utillly area, fireplace, newer FANG
lurnace. front slitting porch, small level yard
lhal is complelely lanced, small shed. This
Is really a nice home and delinately worth
look ing all REDUCED TO $29,000

-

NEW, LISTING- RIVER FRONTAGE! 1+
acre vacant ground located· near rOrl&lt;ed
Run State Pari&lt;. Beautiful area &amp; viewl
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
A8klng
$15,900 .
VACANT GROUNO. SR 338 23.BB+ Acres
approx. 6 miles from the Ravenswood
bridge. Greal building sile . Once had some
dozer work &amp; driveway prepared. ASKING
$17,500 (OWner will conalder reoaonable
'olferl)

NEW LISTING· Diner&gt;weet Dril't'· . Ni&lt;e 1 fioor home
offering 3 bedrooms, I t/2 bathS. newer vinyl siding, heal
_pump and roof. I car garage, large yard . $56,000.

RACINE· Nice slarter home or possible ·
rental investment ~ one floor '1rame home

POINT PLEASANT· Previous Valle y Bell Shop &amp; Storage

POINT PLEASANT· Fonner · physician's office ' wi lh
plenly of parking. This buHding could be usep as office
sPace .or easily convePied mlo a duplex . For det.:nls, call
Mike at 675-3433 .

'Mike Warson, Broker 675-7109

Pa;, ,Mun~y,S..Ies Associate_675·2415

THIS HOME ON SR 7 IS SO LONELY IT
REALLY NEEDS A FAMILY TO LOVEI 2
story frame home with 3 bedrooms, newer
carpel, palnl &amp; B.G. furnace. Large fronl
porch, nics storage building . Approx. one
acre. ASKING $28,000 COME TAKE A
LOOK ... MAKE AN OFFERI
MIDDLEPORT· Located on Bradbury Rd .
1977 modular with newer repai~. 3
bedrooms. 2 balhs, alec. H.PJC .A. patio,
appliances, above ground pool, 2+ acres
wilh nice level yard. ASKING $39,900 .

wilh 3 bedrooms, bath, gas space heat, 1+
acre lol, shed. Just on lhe edge of 1own.
ASKING $19,900

CUPID AIN'T STUPIDI WHEN HE AlMS
HIS ARROW TO A HQME YOU'LL JUST
LOVE ...HE AlMS AT THE HOMES WJTI1
'CLELAND REALTY" OUT FRONTI
"CLELAND REALTY" H1TS THE TARGET
.. IN HOME BUYINGISELUNG NEEDS!
·
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAYI

•

LOOK AT TH1SI 3 Bedrooms, 24'x
sectional. Over 8 acres included in sale, ~
barns. Home consists of a newer roof~
basemenl, 2 balhs, kitchen, dining room,•
lroot porch. Much more included on lhe;
listing, call lodayl
1736•

STOP BY &amp; PICK Uf! A FREE QUALITY HOMES
BOOKLET, TODAY! SEE HOMES IN COLOR!!

· POMEROY· Easl Main relax on the fronl porch and enjoy_
the view ol the RIV&lt;&gt;r in lhis 1 1/2 story 3 bedroom home,
wllh equipped kitchen vinyl siding and. Anderson windows.
.
ONLY $27,500.00

11409 .. FOUR LOTS - 4 BR home , reduced
to $44,000, 2 balhs, LR. DA , full basement,
gas heat/cent. air. Corner lots ..

.

LANGSVILLE- Co . Ad. 10- Approx. 2 acres of baautiful
,bottom land. Waler and eleclric available. A home or mobile
home site.
· $6,500

·,

1133. HOME AND INCOME -Double Home with eamiilg .

power. VoU can 1tve In one Llllt and rent the other. Ctose
1o ochools, shopplnQ &amp; churches. canror lulllnlormallon
and an appointment VL Smith 388-8826.

1831. GREAT FARIIL.AND FOR THE FARMER . 50
acres level lo slightly rolling with .a 4 bedroom •
!arm house.

tHEW USTINil· K..G SIZE FAMILY HOME 0&lt; use this
super nice 5 bedroom lor PRIVATE HOME CARE . 3

1973. NEWER MOBILE HOME, on 1/2 acre lot with
a 2 car garage close to town , ·owner want's sold
loday.

ttllO LOVELY INDEED THIS 4 BEDROOM 2 1/2 blh
home on .. 12 acres Is sure .to please the professional
person and to11aly treed acreage with a pond that Is

tH2. NEW LISTING , spacious modular, 3
bedrooms , 2 baths, on an acre lot with a 3 car

.

baths, 3 ac: . m/1: Virginia l. Smilh 388-8826.

garage.

stoctced with' plenty of fish . A must to see. Call Wilma

today lor a view.

··

11000 NEW LISTING • IMMACULATE ·• LOVELY •
AFFORDABLE - ClOse to town. located In Green Twp, 3
bedrms, 1 bath, kit.. din. rm. cozy LR wtwoodbumlng
fireplace, full ba:sement, 2 car garage - new windows.
polished hardwoOd floors, oak cabinets, Jenn Air range,
microWave, dishwasher &amp; 5 ceiling lans. Beautiful treed
yard, 1 ac. m/1. Don't be the one to sav ·1 could have

'"'· NEW 'uSTING. commercial 101 1hat is ready
tor building or whatever you may have In tnlnd.

•

11001.NEW LISTING· fresh on lhe market, 2. •

bedroom, 2 bath, ilreplace, CA.
14.:70 mobile hom e .

ni~e

outbu1ldinQ.

HS8. COMMERCIAL BUILDING- Olive Sl. 16' dQO! &amp;
cellng w/IOft tor s1orage 210-&amp; 220 elect. water &amp; sewer.
6' cement to toad &amp; unload In front. 30:JC80 building
approx. 3900 sq. n. blOck": frame. $45,000.

Pick up your Quality
Homes Book at our office.
Real Estate General

:.$

'· "'! ... ,.._,;,.

A

;

( ) 514,,Second Ave., Gallipolls, Oh. 45631
Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 4.46-0008
Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111

rn,uw·rDv CAPE COD
offers 63 .75 acres, m/1 , moslly paslure,
lobacco base, 40x00 barn, 22x44 block milk
house. 750' road fronlage lor possible bldg ..
slles.

11461 - EXCELLENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAR BUSINESS - All equipment stays,
bldg .. approx . 624 sq. n.. 3 hall balhs , elecl.
heaVcenl. air. cily water.

f1477· LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS OF
OFF~~ SP~CE AND GARAGES FOR
TRUCKS· Frontage on Th1rd Ave . and Grape
Slreel. Call lor delails.

.'

LANGSVILLE· You'll love lo come home lo relax In lhe
country. In lhis 2 bedroom ranch wilh equipped kilchen
sitting on 13 acres. II you enjoy_hunling this is lhe place for

very ni~ e ranch home wilh living room, •

bedroom one story wHh ~inyl siding, newer :

t722

STOPII
PAYING THOSE RENT
PAYMENTS and get this 2 slory older home
at 1021 Second Ave . 3 bedrooms, living
room, dining room, kitchen, 2 car garage.
New carpeting &amp; more. Don't delay call
todayl 40's.
11717
323 HONEYSUCKLE LANI:I Older 1 112
-slory home wilh vinyl/alum. siding, newer
iool, new (1994) oak cabinels in kitchen,
newer windows &amp; gullers. 3 bedrooms .
living room , kilchen and balh. 1 car carport.
concrele pallo. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1734 .

1429-0FFICES, OFACES, OFFICES· Thai's
what lhls 3,000 sq/lt building offers. Located
160
Holzer. Ideal for many uses.
i

and s1ores.

$26,000.00

A GREAT LITTLE HOUSEl Neat 2 '•

roof 3 y~ . ago. Living room, kitchen, &amp;
balh. LP gas heat, counly water. Two lots &amp;
river view. Priced in lhe $20'sl
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
t730

BLAZER ROAD- Ranch home, 3 BAs, 1 112
·
balhs, LR , kilchen , 16 x 28 ,garage . River PLANTZ SUBDIVISION- $56,900- 3 or 4 BR
Valley school district
•
bnck .&amp; frame In-level, 1 112 balhs, LR. family
rm , kilchen, new roof, new siding. CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE .
\

bedrooms and 2 baths . Has a newer· rooL.•Ciose to schools

'

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:
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YOUR~O~W:N~::

1411 · LOOKING FOR
ANO QUIET- This could be il. 49.66 acres,
An~rews Rd ., 8 year old home with 3 BRs. 2
1.2 baths •. LA. DR, FR . heat pump. 2 car
garage plus 24x4B detached garage.

1431· Approx. 5 acres wilh frontage on ·
Raccoon, beau~ful shaded lot, house has 3
BR, bath, LR; kitchen, large unattached
garage. Offers a lot of privacy and peace &amp;
quiet.

...

9 ACRES! RIVER VIE WI One story 1rama ·•
home conslsllng ol 3 bedrooms, living ::
room, dining room, kllchen, bath: Storage •
building . Good hunting areal Call today for :
an appointment 40's. •
1718 •

v.

••

HP, cent . air ,

garage. Renlal

DON'T PASS UP THIS BRICK! Located at :
SR 588. 1.5 story home w/4 BA, 2 BA, LR, •
kilchen, large front porch. Clly schools! :
Convenient lo downtown Gallipolis. 1712 •
;
'
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;
•

DON'T MISS AN OPPORTUNITY TO
Exceplional 2,200 sq.
PURCHASE THIS LOVELY HOMEI Close
11. ranch , vinyl siding, beautiful view. Large
to town. wilh lots lo offer. 3·4 bedrooms,
living room and family room each with a
large family room, nice backyard wllh a 20'
fireplace. 3 bedrooms, 1 112 ball1s . Lots ol
· x 38' lnground pool with newer liner, lrull
· cablnels In kilchlln, large dining area. Super
lrees and much more in a family orienled
location close 10 hospllal and shopping.
neighborhood . Call today lor an
1715 . appointment
1737
r
SPRING WILL BE HERE SOONI We have
REDUCED TO $49,900.00 RANCH &amp;
14.668 choice acres, which can be yours .
ACREAGE· 4 bedrooms, 1 1/2 balhs, eat-In
Approx. 8 acres of level grass 'land, lhe resl
kllchen, living room .. basement. Newer
In a young tree w()9d lol. A small stream
carpeting &amp; root. 2.75 acre tawn .. Owners
runs lhrough lhe edge of pari of lhe
wanl sold, makelhem an oHerl
11699
property. Rural waler and eteclric available,
close by. There are no restrictiOns: A plat of
ground lo be proud of. This is close lo lh&amp;
counly park. SA 775.
11696

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227 LARIAT DRIVEl

$35,000

MIDDLEPORT- Gran1 Slreet- A 1 1/2 slory home wllh 3

1740 •

CITY LOCATED! 1737 1/2 CHATHAM
AVENUEI 3 bedroom raised ranch home
living room, rec. room, dining room, kitchen,
attached garage. FA gas furnace. Nice
home . .Call Ieday lor an appointment!
A,FFORDABLE $36,000.00
t729

235/iCRES MORE OR LESS OF VACANT
LANDIII Ideal for hunting! Situaled in Ohio
Twp. WVCO

I

'

two storage buildings and a complete :

2 STORY BRICK- 994 FOURTH AVENUENice back lawn approximately 46' 1~0 ·. 1
112 balhs, living room, dining room, kitchen,
FA gas fumace. Slorage buiilding. $43 ,500

G

ti432 .. MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR
SALE - Small restaurant ·wilh. two renlal
houses.
is located In Oak Hill. Call

RUTLAND M.~IN ST. • A vacant lol ·wilh cily sewage· and
wafer available. Nice lor a moblla home.
$5,000

dining room, kllchen, 3 bedrooms. There is :
an eleclric heal pump, black top drive, 24' x •
32' delached insulaled 3 car garage, plus '
salellite system.

.

you.

WHAT ABOUT THIS? 2 large lois and lhls :

you.Call446-7101 for your appointmenll
173B

LISTING, 1 YR. OLD LOG
PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY - 1.6
Sports approx. 2700 sq . ft of living area; solid . Acres +Or·, 3 BR, 1 112 balh, full basemen!, COURT STREET RESIDENCE · Older home
wood walls, floors &amp; ceilings; extra large 24x30 delached garage wll~ 10 fl: ' doors . has 2 s~p. unrts or could be converted back
rooms; wrap-around deck; part basemenl; Great for large trucks. Low mainlonance vinyl . IO 1 fumlly dwelling Faces cily park. .
attached garage &amp; 2 barns, localed at gage siding. Includes an above-ground pool . This
on a sprawling 4.2 acre tract .•
is a must-see. FHA approved.

Looking for o commercial lo11 Jusl off lhe main street
You really ·need to chec k this one oul. Localed on 3rd
Slreet, Middleport.
·
$10,000.

I

DON'T SIT AND WAIT OR THIS ONE
WILL BE GONEIII Nice neighborhood,
Green Township, close to hospilal. Call
today to see this lovely brick ranch home. 3
bedrooms, living room wllh fireplace and

x

M ichael Watson, Broker
Office' 675·3433 • 675·7 109 Home

·

UPDATED &amp; WELL MAINTAINED! Exira
nice 1.5 story home lhat's been extensively
remodeled. Solid oak cabinets, 4 BR. dining
area, family room, 2 BA, newer electric heal
pump &amp; Andersen windows. Large front
porch. 2 car attached garage.
1711 .

loads. more. This Is very neat and ready fOr

REALTY COMPANY

JrOrage or shop faciliries.

liM. LOTS OF SPACE, . In this 4 bedroom on a
large level lofln the Addison area, call today.

LANGSVILLE· Approx. 18 acres. Waler and Electric
$9,000.00
available .

Office .. :..........-............ ,992-2259

Ideal for retired couple or first time home buyer. Call r:lOW for

warehouse,

fireplace.

525,900

carport and palio on mobile home, rented lol in Gallipolis.

facilily: Ground floor approx . 9¥JO sq. f1. Seco nd floor 1543
sq. ft including offices and bmhs. Exce llcnl localion for

4

bedroom, 2 balh ranch With basement. 2 car garage.

property? Has 2

upstairs.

Owner will fi nance with moderate down payment. Lovely 2
baths. 2 bedroom mobile home with heat pump, covered

Real Estate General

1831 OWNER WANTS ON OFFER . on lhos

rental units. A 2 bedroom apartment downstairs that needs
some work and a one bedrqom apartment thats nice

OWNER MAKES IT EASY If

. PH. 446·7699 OR 446·9539

building. 2 units also store rom . tor a business of
your own. BlOCk bulkllng o&amp;6'x96'. Overhead storage
1 ac. m/1 great I{'ICome, located on a busy SR . You
may be overlooking a QOOO·deal $65,000.00

••'

Real Estate General

LENDER

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

1114 FOUR BEAunFUL AOLUNG LOTS on WMa Rd.
all utllnWn available. 2 112 Ac. rTV1 each make your cholce
nowl Build yOur dream home in the country and have
everlasting comfOrt.

ttM. NEW J:OMMERCIAL LISTING . Large Apl.

Sonny Garnes - 446-2707

Real Estate General

Real Estate G_eneral
Henry E. Cleland Jr .. 992-6191

BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH. 245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

tiN NOTICE: ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO IIUILD YOUR
MASTERPIECE
IN THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES Mil ALSO 2.3&lt;8 ACRES
Mil. CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND H01.2ER HOSPITAL.
All LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTA&lt;CTIVE COVENANTS.

e/J/a4

Branch Oflict - 446-6806
lJ Locust Sl.
G•llipolu, Ohio 456JJ

S1u,500, uc. cond. ~7'5-MIZ;

Real Estate General

appointment

CP

A

Real Estate General

&lt;&gt;

.

.

~~'"'.., J~
\::::7~

#L:ACI{BURN ·REALTY

family BAs, 1 1/2 baths, 7.32 ac.;
$44,900 m/1. .
$117,500.

Loretta McDade - 446-7729 '

M•in Oflic~-388 -881 6
958 Clnrk Ch•ptl Rd.
Bidll'e/1, Ohio 45614

.

4 BAs, 1

$69,900

.

oni~P~a~g~e:._!:D~-~4:_.::_~~~~~~~-=============~=========~~~

OFFICE 992-2886
3668 Neighborhood Rd ••

~·-

boughl thai.'

,_7 NEW USTING • Brick ranch 3 lledrms. 2 balhs,
LA, eat -In, kit. w/ knotty pine cabinets, full basement w/

NEW LISTING! FIVE POINTS AREAl Flatwoods
Road , format dining area, family room, nice sized lot
with above ground pool. 21' x 24' detached garage.
$45,000.00
1744 ·.

autom1.~1r, loolul

~

great
deal to orter. DeSigned tor great living. Firat ftoor has
fonnal entry with open atairway, formal living room with
nreplace, formal dining room. Cherry cabinets line the
wall of the extra large kitchen. Breakfast room and
powder room. 5econcl noor otters four bedrooms anc:l
bath . Bedrooms are king size, carpel ovar hardwood
ftoots. both has all ,_ fixlum and Love Tub. Basement
has huge family room w/flreplace, bedroom, exercise
area, laundry room and storage room. This home is of
superb quality as the plumbing h85 been replaced. All
new all covering, beautiful new carpet throughcM, new
wlndowllnstalled. Spacious kllchon wllh chan'y cablneiS,
Island tor Jenn ·Air range. Onlv prtvate showing will
decktllhe value Is here.
CALL VIRGINIA L SMITH A-46-6806 or 388·8U6

W~D.

11181 Bulcll Conlllry CUllom

Cnlllo, 1111, A15 ...-... Brakoo.
StnAe, Shocb, ~leellllnl Cond'llon, 11,000 111111, 12,110, 114148-3791 Eve,--·
11181 Morcury &lt;;oug&amp;r, v...

NEW USnNO, lhls spacious 3 bedroom 2 bolhs
mOdular on 1 acre lot In a nics area wtth lo~ of privacy
and only ~.500Jl0
·
Two story home, full basement and garage has

O

'=-="
oJJ
·";(_,

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NEW LllllNG 8AAGIN HUNTERS, Large 7 nn. 2

Q; "'Ll' ~ ::...":::

Phon•

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR .............,... 245-11575
PATRICIA HAYS, REALTOR .................. 448 3884

LOCATED IN THE CITY OF GALUPCUS

pace

'-"P'~

-~~rat=-~

Real Estate General

Qr

n ./

Electrical.&amp;

&amp;- AldlnoUr Eloctrlcol, WVOOOJOt,
_...,._1711

lc1h - - · - - · -

r

~

·s-r&amp;

VI I~

Froo
I I - Don, Col$

Real Estate General

story home, 3 bec:lrooms. LR, kit, din. room , extra living
room, good forced air furnace . Beautiful treed lot &amp;
OUibulklings. Price
Low.'

one must always be on the
--~
RE vp E S
move. There are those people
8 _,_~~.;.....;T:I9~---~ who l.et the rest of the world go
_ _ _ . _
by, but they usually are the
'--'---1'-....L..--L-"--..J ones" who drive the • - - - -

11411-3045.

su,....

L(

Eill1rlo

LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR ...;.............. 448 11808 .

-

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

0:0= ak

T.W.

u. w.
__ .,., _ _

-·-. -

EUNICE N1EHM, REALTOR ................... 448-1817

5

: ~~' I I

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

___...,=
~
?.
- ·- --..,..
·--.
"'
B -. .

WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR .........2aa 0038

84

l:".t"i-.._~...

~~a.at.~~~~~~~
-~~~·==~TV .__._
" ' - - - - . _......

EJec:trlclll &amp;

lawo.:":

!";Too;:"::'=:-=

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ................. 388 8828

B I L E DE

84

Heating .

PROFESSIONAL SERVI~E
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

3

.

Plumbing &amp;

. Real Estate General

I 1 I· _

.

Bluo- Vory Clood Candlo
Mll~l"· lui RUM
..... 11,000, 114 ttl 11M
1H1 S·10 Good Conclllon, L..ftAM111111
Who... &amp; lliWI Mldng IIIII Chovy 112 ton 414, 'H.
14,000, oao, e1t tte eill

1m Buick LISobrw CUllom,
60,000 ....... Good Condbion,
Vwy Dopondoblo, ~1370.
1110 Oldl CuiMa
2
Door, Fuluno Cloalc, 111111 c....
dhlon, Don' . . . Thle Onot
Phono Aftlr 5:00 P.ll, 114-444135111 Bob Soundlno.
1814 llonlo COrio 2dr., PS, PB,
AC; rift tii'M, MW pelnt, HC.

Cll 1 _ _ , . Or._,.

---.1

~. I I

lion, .High

111117 Chow,_ iliou&lt; oun • and oun roof, 2.8 V-4 111111ne,
IICIIItnl -.dhlon, 11000, 114-

M Ill ._...,..
-u.-1........ , . . , _

:;r-~-S-A-R_E_E_V

_..a..
;;ii7'f0ftj"j.-iiii;ir'iiiiii0iiiii
11117 Ford :v Wl!h

·--

wmU:.=NCI

.-.1· E Q A
I
2 Lup
-_ I 1 I I I _

Molor Homes

82

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81

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eorronge Ihe 6 scram bl e d
be Iow to make 6
: ':simple -words. Print letters of
·. each in its li.n e of squares. ·

11M Ford " - 41&lt;4, Good
cond,
304
1AI.

111M, a Tool Box, 114-!71-

a

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414 Drtve 1nlft '
--hOIGIIIIpolleAI'lion AI 7 a AI. 211. NEW
. -NuMBER: t14-44W717.

......_._

1111 OMC P
, _ Yin, PS,
PI, 11111D. 1.2L ._., '71,000rnl.,

-. 0 Rwords

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• Plolollp
DooiW.
,.,.,.

tq·Chuckle
se

Eel Itacl It' CLA'· • • ,OLLAN

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2218.
11183 El Comlno. 304-17&amp;-1Ja

Livestock

$4,000, 814-388-1352
Me...ge.

a...

·~
1111 Ford F-100 Automallo, - ·

1522.

5 Crou CoWii Whh Cllwta.

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~ ..That Intriguing Word Game with

Auto Parts&amp;
AcCIIIOI'IH

Johi180UI l'Niazl Lh M And
........ ~ And llollulll
Traad • .. Allo, Cloll -

....

Wontod lo bur· 'II or - r
Coprioo ~..
mUll bo
Broughlmlor Ul,
loodod, 4

11r7 Corolco 4 DR" PI, PS, ACI
&amp; Livestock
71,000 , Ml••· 'ttune Gr.t
12,185, 114-441-1151.
1i87 Toyolo T-1 A Good Work
C.l$1,550, 1 - 8 0415.
_61 Farm Equipment
lmemotlonol 240 Troc:lor Whh 1088 CMvrollil Cor8icl., 4 dr.,
2.8 - lr4octod 8 cyll-r, Sop,
CWIIVIIIor And Corn Ptanlor, $3,1100,
coli 114-ll12-a51.
12.-; . . _ Forguoon II
-or 81oortna, UV. PTO,
$31i7Ni. e5 IIF llloMI, $3,815;
13 M• 9horp 14,850, 114-211-

63

-r

5I Rod Dodge c:-t11 lllnuo
111111no ond T'"rono. llodw Good.
12,000 Nog.l14-256-e131
For !!ole Or Tnodl: 1lr7 ilonIMI'IIIIo LE L.oodocl, Auno Good,
Now '1ir11~.1 Full lniiiCIIon,
Aaldng u .....,ll14_.__,.._

IOrfee, S04-675-8713.
.
67!1-4881.
Wonlod To Brood: 10 !loflih Old 19:15 Cllabrtly Eura Bpart .MaRoglotorod Malo Rod Tabby llon
w~,
nice,
Peralln Wllh Black Or Calico amlfmiCieHitte, V.S, auto., air,
Femal~~e,..lan For Pick Of Ul· now Urn ond bottOfY, 111&gt;011 or
lor,I1...,46-31B4.
family, $2250, 114-140-aN or
614--2045.

Muslcel

78

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

1812 9 - 1 4 0 0 0 - 4
o-, .womo~1c, etoon
-,JI:"'- 114 211 1.4 0.,.;
814 ...e il32i e.on1ngo.
.

Both Pamrt1 On PrwmlMI. No
Paporo Sl'll, 114-38W545.
oond: 304..711-'1238.

Appalachian
Log
Instruments
Structures has been a
leader in the log home
indUstry for -over 15
years. Choose .from
JBL~ampllllor 100Wio, 4 brand
over
70
standard · now $125. 30H75-e713.
models 0( we'll custom
Farm Supplies
design one for :t"oil.

•

Autos lor SaJe

••5o, 114- 2·:1948.

fiT

.'

Transportation

guard d~ 1hoea and wormed,

AXe

3030.

72 TrUcks for Sale

AKC Gonnon Shophord pup·prM, large boned, will be very

78

45.000 - . , llrM.
A·1
flnanee.
• IJI..

A - boll Hnllgo, 1.100 to
2,000 lbo ...... 31M.f111.4301.

•

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

ow-.-~~:- wilt

2N8.

o .... 304-f111-S•

72 TruCks for Sale

• • Oldl Shllon ~. -

v...
door, ........24102.

llbood R....r Ill.. ~~

AKC 11-11 pu~ lo Squoro blloo $1.211o s:z.:..oa, por
~~· .A.
um, bolo. Allalla, Clover, urcnord

Pll"'bete,

LOG HOMES

Orvund Mr com, N3 1 lonl wtlh

IIOYbNn, _,_o, m norol
.
see, your -""· Long llotlom,
3 Malo Full Blooded Shlfl..tzu 814-118$.35111.
Pupploo 814-446-2153.
1:..:..:..:::.:..:=.:.......,...____

D. C. •tal Sales, Inc.

Autos for Sale

71

Livestock

63

Supplies

j \ "\.. ~

d. ("jiJ

'.

'.

MIDDLEPORT- Corner of S. Third and General Hartinger. A
really large living room, 2-3 bedrooms. one bath . Newer
windows, vinyl siding, several rooms freshly· drywalled.
.Large lol.
.
129,900
MIDDLEPORT· Hobart Strool· Two ~room . 1 balh, 1 slory
home wilh vinyl siding. WAS $10,500 .
NOW $7,000

.

McCumbor Rd • • Buy either 48 acres and lhe house .and
oulbuildings or buy 98 acres and the house and outbuildings
2 story home h'ls 8 rooms, 6 bedrooms, 1 1/2 balhs, 2 bay

•

windows, newer vinyl siding, 2 car garage, cellar with
·
· storage above and a 24 • 30 metal barn.
Houoe &amp; 48 ecroo S79,000

Houeo &amp; 98 ocroo $89,000
POMEROY· Mulberry His.• a nice 4 bedroom 1 1/2 slory
home with full basement, breez:way and ~ car
comes with equipped kllchen heal pump, C.A.

lot.

;
•
'

•
:

•

I

.

.'

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker.........................:992-5892
BRENDA JEFFERS ...... ....................... ........ 9V2-3058
JERRY SPRADLING ............ ........ ...... (304) 882-3498
. CHARMELE SPRADLING ................. (304)-8'82-3498
OFFICE ........................................................992-2888

·-.

.

11482- $25,000 Just mlnules from lown,
used lor rental property now. 3 BAs, balh ,
FR, kitchen, DR, gas heat
1447· OAK HILL- former clolhlng
store .. ,$27;900, corner lot. Call lor more

1405- NEED A NEW OFFICE + A RENTAL
APARTMENT1 250 Sec. Ave. Nice office 1422· OLD CHEYv-&lt;lLDS BUILDING· 420'
downstairs and apartmenl and slorage up. Fronl on Second Avenue and 62' lronlage on
Convenient 10 banks and shopping .
Grape.
11427· EXTRA NICE HOME ON. ST. AT. 7
SOUTH· 3 BAs , LA, FA, dining area, lull
basement, garage. Calllodayl
·
33 ACRES. M/L corner ol SA 325 and
woods Mill Road , re crealional . land only
St6.500.

Information.

1453- OHIO RIVER PROPERTY- locaied al
end ol While Avenue off Gadield. Several
lois $20,000 .

·$31

500 84 ocreo, Morgan Two., vacanl
Jan~. Possible fanning land or recreallonal
land.
64 ACRES· m/1, Comer ol Woods Mill and
SA 554, has a really nice homesite old bam,
lots of privacy yel close to school and other
actlv111es.
·

1419 • JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· Addison
. Twp, 386 acre fann, 3 ponds , lobacco base,
44x100 barn wilh concrete floors . May
consider spill: (578)

ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS
AND
1NVESTORS...EXTRA NICE PIECE Of
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR PORTER ..
Large lake wllh lake lronl silas. mobile home
on property al presenl time, county waler,
ONE AND HAVE THE INCOM E
entirelracl consisls ol77 acres, m/1 .
FROM THREE MORE· each unil has 2
apartmenls.Faclng cily park with all lh e
conveniences of In lown living. ·.

t1411·LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QU1ET·This could be il. 49 .66 ac res
Andrews Rd. 8 year-old horne w1lh 3 BAs
1/2 balhs. LA , DA , FR . hea l purt)p. 2 ~ ar
garage plus 24x48 delached garage.

2

f'RICE REDUCEO TO $67,9001 RIO
11482· $25,000 Just minutes from lown, GRANDE· ~· Drive Subdivision. 1 112 'story
. '
used for renlal property now. 3 BAs , bath, Brick • 4 BR 6, 1 1/2 baths lonlshed basemenl· $16,800 47 acres. mil. Harrison Twp, Elllotl
FA, kitchen, DR, gas heal.
·
Attached garage.
Road .

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Pege-08-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Febru11ry 12, 1995

Dr. Eissmann named book --Busine$s briefs-~ Sogan serves as AEP
By The Associated Pna
reviewer for publishing firm
COMING UP:
delegate in Switzerland
GALLIPOLIS • Holzer Clinic
The Couunerce Department reports on retail sales for January on

orthopedic Sllfl!eon, Edward Eiss·
mann, MD.. bas been selected as a
book reviewer for lbe Williams llll!l
Wilkins Publishing Co .. or Penn·
sylvania
Dr. Eissmann bas been asked to
provide suggestions for improvement on selected medical books
tbat deal wltb orthopedics . His
• input
will range from wbetber tbe
cbaplets follow a logical sequence
. to wbal medical information needs
to be updated.··
"it is an honor to be selected for
lhis duty, i:speciaUy since tbere are
only a few ortbopedists nationwide
performing this function for
Williams and Wilkins," said Dr.
Eissmann.
Dr. EiSSIIIlllln bas also cootrlbut·
ed wriuen malaials for publication
in medical texts. His most recent
EDWARDEJSSMANN, MD
work was in a landmark: onbopedic
text titleii''Knee Surgery," by Fred· Arthroplasty."
die H. Fu, M.D. and Kelly M.D.
Eissmann joined tbe Holzer
· Dr. Eissmann co-authored a chap- Clinic orthopedics department in
ter entitled "Complication of Knee Marcb of 1994.

Tuesday; the Labor Depanment reports oo consumer prices for January, lbe Federal Reserve reports industrial production for Janoary,
and the Commerce Depanmcnt reports on business inventories for
December on Wednesday; Labor reports on weekly jobless claims
Commerce reports on January housing starts on Thursday; Com:
merce repms on December trade oo Friday
TIC~ :
'
William J. ~see. was ftted &amp;!ler running Morrison Knudsen
Corp., the engmeenog-constructiOn fli'Ol, into financial trouble . ..
~'"'! Warner agreed to buy Cablevlslon Industries roc $2.7 billion m secood purcbase of a major cable system in three,weeks , ..
H~ agreed to buy Quaker Oall' North American pet-fond.operati~ for $725 million .... Toyota is considering building a fouttb
yebicie-~!Dbly plant m North America. a move lbat would bring
tiS capaCity 10 U.S. and Canada to over a million vebicles a year
A:pple Computer sued Intel and Mlcroeofl in widening copyrigbi
dispute over software for displaying video Images oo personal computers ... CS First Borton considered laying·off up to 1S percent of
·~ staff, or nearly 1,~ workers, in a renewed effort to boost saggmg profits ... Inflatioo at lbe wbolesale level rose OJ percent in
January, led by tbe biggest jump in energy prices in five montbs,
but lbe Increase was smaller !ban analysts predicted ... PalneWebber G r;ou,p repmedly is in talJcs witb the SecUrities and Exchange
Commtsstoo to settle expected civil administrative charges tbat
some.of the fmil's brokers misled investors in selling limited part·
nersbips.
·
' ,,

Forestry camp open to USDA announces 1995
high school students burley tobacco provisions

By LISA MEADOWS
• The no-net-cost assessment
By CINDY JENKINS
also plenty of recreatioo time made
GALLI,
P
OLIS
"
Tbe
U.S.
willbeannouncedlater.
GAlliPOLIS -Students, if you available. It wiU be beld June 11Department of Agriculture · Burley tobacco growers will
are interested in learning more 16 at Camp Musk:ingum just soutb announced on February I, 19951be vote F~bruary 27- March 2, 1995 in
about woodland management or are of CarroUton in CarroU County.
provisions of tbe 1995 a matl referendum to decide
The cost for tbe camp is $155 following
considering a career in foreslry,
burley tobacco program:
wbetber marketing quotas on a
you will want to attend tbe Ohio wbicb includes aU meals from Sun•
:The
national
mruteting
quota
poundage
basis will continue for.
Fores!JY Camp sponsored by tbe day to Friday as well as access to for tbe 1995 aop is 549.0 million burley tobacco
for tbe next tbree
Obio Forestry Associalion.
aU camp facilities. The camp fee is
pounds,
up
from
tbe
1994
quota
of years. Quotas will remain in effect
The camp is open-to bigb scbool tax deductjble. The Gallia SWCD
542.7 million pounds and is based if less !ban one-tbird of the voting
students wbo are at least 15 years will be sponsoring ooe full scholar- o~
purcbase intentions by domestic _producers vote "NO" . Burley
of age or bave completed tbe 8tb sbip for tbe camp, but you must get
c1garette
manufacturers, unmanu- tobacco is grown in Kentucky
grade. Students will have the your request in early.
factured expo~ (3-year avem8 e), Tennessee, Ohio and surrounding
opportunity to learn tree identifica·
Applications Can be obtained at reserve stock adJilsbnents, and dis- states ..
lion, agriculture, forest products, · tbe Gaiiia SWCD office at 446- cretionary
adjustments.
Burley tobacco producers will
and forest ecology. The classes are 8687 or stop by at Ill Jackson
-The
support
level
for
the
1995
.
be
a letter concerning lbe
beld in tbe outdoors unless tbere is ·Pike, Suite 1569, Gallipolis, Ohio crop is $1.725 per pound, up 1.1 newreceiving
crpp insurance requirements
a bard rain ~s(9nn. A field lrip and . 45631-1569.
.
·for 1995. Tbis letter sbould be
evening and recreational events are
Cindy Jenkins is ·· distrh:t cents per pound frmn 1994.
-For
each
farm,
tbe
1995
basic
carefully! Crop insurance
. also planned. We must emphasize forester for the Gallla Soli &amp; quota will increase 2 percent from reviewed
is required in most cases in order to
Ohio Forest Catnp is primarily an Water Conservation District
1994.
receive a price support marketing
Academic Camp, however, there is ·
· -The effective quota is expected card! Contact the Consolidated
to be about 576 million pounds, or Farm Service Agency at-446-8686
Continued from o-1
30 million pounds below 1994.
for additional infonnation. .
Lisa Meadows Is acting GaUia
·The marketing assessment wiU
growers' interest bas been stimulat- · . at the Meigs County Libraryed in tbe proper timing of fungi· Pomeroy Branch, given by the be 0.8625. cents per pound, on botb County Executive Director of the
cides to control .sucb serious dis- Ohm Department of Agriculture. growers and buyers, for a total of . Gallia Consolidated Farm Sereases of tomatoes as early blight, Please call my office to confirm 1.725 eents per pound fiX' tbe 1995 vice Agency.
anthracnose and septoria leaf your test taking intentions at 992- crop.
bligbt, while still minimizing tbe 6696.
·
amount of fungicides utilized.
Feb. 25, "Marketing - The Key
Further studies will be needed to To Income Opponunities·: will be
verify tbe past year's resulls; bow- · beld at the Holiday Inn in Parkers·
ever: tbe prospects to grow high burg, W.Va., from 8 a.m. to 4:30
quall!y tomatoes witb a minimum p.m. This annual seminar will focus
of·fungicide sprays to maintain oo tbe mallceting side of alternative
to your yard or 8creage, and also
good plant growtb look prom.ising.
agricultural income opportunities, By CINDY JENKINS,
Distrid
Forester,
adds
beauty. The species include
such as bait production, dried flowGalllaSWCD
two
each
of sourwood, which is
As part of Ohio State University . ers, greenbouse production, pond
highly
ornamental
due to tbe leaves
GALLIPOLIS
•
It's
time
to
start
Extension's efforts to reach the production wpodcrafts, quilting,
planning
for
spring
tree
planting
and
late
summer
blooms, wbite
c!DIIIIercial growers in tbe various- · POflable sawmill operation and fee
which
blooms
beautifuldogwood,
and
tbe
GaUia
Soil
and
WBIJ:t
COncounties witb reliable, research- ~bing. It is sponsored by Buckeye
ly
in
spring
and
attracts
birds
in tbe
servation
District
bas
some
new
based information, semi-annual Htlls ;md the Little Kanawha
faU,
eastern
redbud,
witb
bright
red
Ibis
year
to
malce
planofferings
mailings are sent to interested par- RC&amp;D, Obin State University and
ning
more
~xciting!
J&gt;~;~ds
in
spring
and'
the
magnolia
ties. .
West Virginia Extension and tbe
The conifer for Ibis year is white Jane, witb beautiful purple flowers
Our.office is updating our mail· Marietta College Smail Business
pine.
This species makes a wooder- and lush green foliage. .
ings lists, so if you are presently · Development Center.
Crown vetch and)\rildflower.
~b. 25-26, the 1995 Ohio Eco· ful ornamental, excellent wildlife
not ~eiving mailings in beef pro·
seeds
are also available for botb
break,
and
privacy
cover,
wind
du.chon, livestock management,
log~ ~ood &amp; Farm Association is
beauty and hardto-bold soils in
dairy production, vegetable crops,
boldmg Its 16tb annual conference screen.
Last
year
tbose
wbo
purchased
your
yard or acreag~. Crown vetcb.
commercial ~reenhouse opel'!ltions on the t?,eme of "1995 Cultivating
fruit
tree
packets
asked
for
more
planted
in early spring does not
and agronom1c crops please write,
~ge, at tbe Mclntosb Center at
apple
trees
be
made
available.
So
need
mucb
top soil in onler to take
stop by or call our office.
Ohio Nortbern University at Ada.
Ibis
year
our
fruit
tree
packet
offers
boid~steep
slopes. ·Aitbougb,
For !bose individuals looking at
tbe.
Granny
Smitb,
red
delicious
illulcbin
after
seeding is impof·
growing plants and animals using
Weekly in~. disease, and cui·
tant.
pound of crown vetch is
yellow delicious, and Stayma~
twa! inf01mation durin~ the ~w­ tbe organic farming philosophy, winesap apples.
meant to cover 1,000 square feet.
ing season is available from the · .this bas ·become a welcomed
The wildflower seeds are
The next two packets are all
Ohio Integrated Crop Management renewal of life before the busy new offerings. First, tbe shade tree
designed to aitrnct botb birds and
Newsletter from our state offices. spring season.
packet, includes some of the fastest
butterflies. The one ounce packet
The newsletter, Ohio Integrated
Feb. 27-28, a Regional Sweet growing hardwoods common to
contains nine annuals and eight
Crop ManagttrU!nt, costs $20 for Com and Pumpkin Scbool is being IbiS area They are tbe nortbern red perennials
and will cover around
tbe 24 issues. Subscription forms
held at tbe Evansville Marriott oak, sweet gum, sugar maple, and
250 square feet.
can be obtained from our office.
Hotel in Evansville, Indiana, spon- tbe Golden raintree. There are eight
For more Information call the
sored by Purdue University.
trees per packet, two of each variGallia SWCD at 446-86117 or stop
Upcoming events:
.
(Hal Kneen is the agricultural ety.
by the olrlce at Ill Jackson Pike,
Feb. 21, New Private Pesticide
extension agent for Meigs Coun- ·
Next, tbe flowering tree packet Suite 1569 In tbe new C. H.
Applicator testing starting at 3 p.oi. ty.)
is beneficial in attracting many
McKenzie Agricultunl Center.
'
species of birds and otber wildlife

LANCASTER • Lance Sogan,
vice president-administration and
human resources for American
Electric Power Fuel Supply Depart·
ment, recently served as tbe U.S.
Employer Delegate !O the Tbir·
teenth Session of tbe Coal Mines
Committee, spons&lt;X'ed by tbe Inter·
national Labor Office (ILO) of the
United Natioos (UN). The meeting
was held recently in Geneva,
'Switzerland.
The ILO, whicb consists of 170
·member countries, is ooe of 23 specialized agencies of tbe UN. Its
J!Ufpose is to improve the level of
working conditions tbrougbout tbe
world by c;stablisbing international
labor standards.
The Coal Mines Commit~ee met
for the first time since 1988 to consider a number of issues related to
the coal mining industry, including
productivity, employment, labor
relations, competition, training,. the
enviromnent, coal prices and world
markets, safety and bealtb, social
issues, and basic human and trade
· union rights.
Under ILO procedures, representatives of each of the 26 member states (including the U.S.) wbo
serve on tbe Coal Mines Committee were invited to appoint a tri·
partite ' delegation to represent
employers, workers and government
Sogan, who was elected chairman of the 24-member employers'
group, led tbe discussions, negotiated resolutions and spoke on tbe
group's bebalf. "Meetings such as

USDA reports poultry
disease outbreak in Mexico

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Agriculture Department is alerting
U.S . poultry producers to an out·
break in central Mexico of an
· infectious viral disease tbat is deadly to poultry.
American producers are being
advised to increase their biosecurity m'easures Ibis spring, when
migratory birds returning from
Mexico could carry ·the H5N2
avian influenza to pOultry flocks in
tbe United States.
'•we cannot overemphasize the
importance of on-farm biosecurity
wbile Mexico bas Ibis AI virus,"
said Donald Luchsinger, acting
deputy administralo~ for velerinary

Investment•..
C'.ontinued from D-1
investor. A one-to.three-year invest·
ment. horizon is compatible' with a
modemte invesunent approach. .
Between 16 · 23: You are an ad·
··venturous ·investor, willing to take
greater risk for more return. A significant portion of your patfo~o is
lilcely inves.ted in stocks and stock
funds, and may include aggressive
growth funds. An aggressive portfolio may make sense for you, depending on youi" time horiwn, especially
if that's three or more years away.
(Jay Caldwell is an Investment
Broker for Tbe Obio Company in
their Gallipolis omce.)

.

I

I'

services in USDA's Animal and
Plant Health lnspectioo Service.
Sucb measures include making
sure that the sboes and clothing visitors wear into chicken houses have
been disinfected and that feed
trucks don't bring in tbe virus.

You Can Enjoy Any Style ·
Personal Size .;..

ATTENDS SESSION •
Tammy Lyons, an Insurance
ag10nt for tbe Qulckel-Davls
Agency, Pomeroy, recently
a~tended a 6-hour multiple
peril crop Insurance reform
meeting In Columbus hosted by
the IGF Insurance Company ol
F O I
Des Moines, Iowa, for Its Ohio
· Or n Y '1.29
representatives. The Davisor With 16 oz. Soft Drink
Quickel Agency Is now certlneci
For Only 1 1.99
under tbe guidelines of the Fed·
4 PM-9 PM ONLy
era! Crop lruurance Corporalion to assist producers w[th
- HENDERSO,.., WY
crop insurance~nee::ds::_·_ _ _ _.=:::::GA::L:U:PO::U:S,::O:H::::~

'.liscussions and courses on cootact
lens, patient care, and treabnent cif
eye diseases.
.More !ban 400 optometrists and
optometric !15Sistants atteilded.

@!NEW~
Crop Insurance For
Tobacco Producers
Th~ "neW" crop rnsurance program IS alm'os t
free if you enroll for it 1 The government
pays the premium. Yl)ur cost for
administrative purposes can be as little as
$50 per crop. For details contact me today.

W. R. "Dick" Brown, CLU
.
Nationwide Insurance,
386 State Route 160, Gallipolis, Ohio

. 614-4_46-19.60

e

Crop Insurance Serviced By
·
Rain and Hail Insurance Service, Inc.
MPCI1~ avadablc

to all producers rcgardl~~ of race

color. niiiiOna\ ongm. sex. age or d 1sab1h~.

.

•

A COMPLETE LINE
FOR All OF YOUR
LAWN AND FARMING
NEEDS ••• AND A
COMPLE.TE ·SERVICE
PROGRAM.

Diesel - 25 HP- 2 &amp; 4 Wheel Drive, Live Lift, 3 Pt.
Hitch, Standard Cat. #1.

. TUCTOR SEATS STARTING AT s100.00
Complete line of . KING KUTTER. Equipment,
KYH!HS 4, 5, 6,. 7, 8 &amp; 10ft. Rear Blades 6, 7, &amp; 8ft.
Regular ~nd heavy duty.
Used Ford, Massey Ferguson, IH Tractors field
ready.
..

100's of Used Items To Choose From:

COME Sf~ THESE AT:

1467 .JACKS'1N PIKE (Old US 35 Westl
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
PHONE: 446-9777 OR 446·2484

1 SecUon, 10 Pages 35 cenla
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,' Monday, February 13, 1995

Clinton ·hails
his policies

Training in teamwork- Racine
studies
·water
upgrade

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
"Today there is no country in
AP Economics Writer
the world with an economy as
WASHINGTON - President strong as ours, as full of opportuniClinton sent his annual economic ty, as full of hope," the president
repon to Congress today. proclaim- said.
ing that hiS policies bave given the
The report provided a defense of
Clinton's
economic policies and
counlry rising prosperity and ask·
sought
to
generate
support for the
ing lawmakers to work with him to
provide universal health coverage budget he sent Congress last week,
for every American and to reform which proposes $144 billion in
additional spending cuts over·the
. welfare.
·
"America's economic prospects next five years to provide resources
have improved considerably in the for $63 billion in tax relief and $81
.:r .
last two years. And the economy billion in further deficit reduction
will continue to move forward in on top of the $50S billion five-year
1996," Clinton said in a message deficit-cutting package enacted
accompanying the 407-page report. during his ftrSt year in office.
The president noted that last
The Republicans who now con· year the economy grew at the trol Congress have denounced
fastest pace in a decade while inna- Clinton's budget ..for offering too
. tion remained m.o dest. He said little in deficit reduction and tax
niore than 5 million jobs had been relief compared to their own "ConTbe annual Klondilce races at Camp Kiashuta pushed area Boy Scouts to work together as a
· created since he took office and tract With America," which pro·
team
tbls weekend. Here, members of tbe Pomeroy Troop 249 start activities, witb aU but one
poses
$200
billion
in
tax
cuts
and
·
in
manufacturing
employment
scout blindfolded. The day-long event brought more than 125 Boy and Cub Scouts from as far
grew every month of 1994, some- . calls for enough spending reducaway as Louisa, Ky. (Sentinel pboto by George Abate)
thing that had. not occurred in 16 tions to balance the budget by
years.
(Continued on PaRe 3)
~;;:;:==:::::::;iiii;:;,:=.;;::;;;;;;---:---------------::--------:--'

:Funding for officers
·surprises l,ocal chiefs

•

·NEW SHENNIU FARM TRACTORS

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT ·cENTER

LANCESOGAN
ihis help us appreciate tbe extent or
glqbaJ change in our industry,"
Sogan said.
The session also focused on a
report titled "Productivity and Its
Impact on Employment and Labor
Relations in the Coal Mining
Industry," prepared by tbe ILO
staff. The report included a case
study of Soutbern Ohio Coal Company's (SOCCo) Meigs Divisionan AEP affiliate mining opemtioti.
SOCCo, tbe only U.S. company
prortled in tbe report, was selected.
because of its outstanding safety
record and tbe positive reiationsbip
that exists between labor and managemen~ Sogan said.

FAMILY NIGHT
.EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT

R~gan attends conference
GALLIPOLIS • Dr. R. Todd
Ragan , OD, Gallipolis, attended
tbe 1995 Anterior Segment Coofer-.
ence sponsored by tbe Ohio Optometric Association in Columbus
recently.
Tbe three-day conference featured bands-on workshops, clinical

Vol. 45, NO. 201
Copyrlgh11995

Carmichae.l's Farm .AND Lawn
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

614-446.·2412

GOOD DEALS ... AND A GOOD DEAL MORE

A

. By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Last week's announcement by
the Associated Press that Middleport and Pomeroy will receive
· grant funding for additional police
. proteCtion caught ~ome local officials by surprise.
·
The COPS FAST grant, part orlast year's crime bill, is designed
for communities with fewer than
50,000 residents. The Justice
Department estimated Ohio depart·
ments would get more man$26.7
million under the program.
Middleport will get $39,314 and
Pomeroy has been awarded
$34,071, the AP reported.
Middleport Police Chief Sid Little said he bas yet to receive anything in the way of official conftr·

Riverboat gambling
in W.Va. may not fly

CHARLESTON, W.Va- A bill to legalize riverboat gambling with a
local option would die in the House and Senate judiciary committees,ll!ld
in the Senate, according to a·survey by The Associated Press.
· Legislators were asked la1e last week: " If the vote were today, would
you vote yes or no on a bill to legalize riverboat gambling with a loclll
option?"
·
Legislators were asked to"reply on or off the record.
Of 25 members on the House Judiciary Committee: Fourteen said no,
six said yes, two were undecided, and three )Vere undecided but leaning
.
..
towanl no.
Of 16 members on the Senate Judiciary Committee: Nine said no, three
said yes, three were undecided,' and one was not asked.
Of the 34 members of the Senate: Eighteen said no, 10 said yes, four
were undecided, and two were not polled.
The House of Delegates was not polled because the p~oposal is
assumed ·to have more support there. House Speaker Chuck Chambers, DCabell, favors riverboat gamb)in]l and said he would introduce a gambling
bill this week.
\ Sen. ThaiS Biatnilc, D-Ohio, said she also would introduce a gambling
measure this week.
''Local option'' means 311 election in either the cities or counties where
the riverboat casinos or land-based casinos would be located'
·
·
A riverboat gambling bill died last year in the House after a Senate
Democmtic caucus snowed no support for it.
The proposal would allow the sale of eight licenses for riverboat casinos on the Ohio, Monongahela and Kanawha rivers and for two landbased casinos at hotels with more than 650 rooms, Chambers and Blatnik
havesaid. .
The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs is the only hotel in the state
with at least 650 rooms.
Developers are interested in building a 650-room hotel in Huntinmon
if the biU passes, Blatnik said.
Chambers was not concerned about lack of support.
•
"First, we've got to get a bill in and then start talldng to people," he
said.
.
The judiciary comiJlitt.ees have been busy with workers' compensation
refonn bills, he said.
Several legislators said th.eir votes could change depending on !he .content of the biB.
·
,
_
Sen. Joe Manchin, D-Marion, said the bill would have to require all
taxes be used for highways, bridges and sewers "so that we have something to show for it and do not become dependent"
Delegate .Ed Kime, R-Wood, said he would support the biU because it
· would establish a precedent for initiative and referendum, which he supports.
"I see tbe great drive to get this through as a chink. They wiU have .a
bard time fighting ir (initiative and referendum) off,'' Kime said.
Sen. Edwin Bowman, D-Hancock, said he would vote for a bill that
called for local referendums, but the bill also must !llQUire casinos to hire
West Virginia residents.
··
·Communities should have a say in how the· revenues are spent and
there should be some protection for liusinesses, Bowman said.
J

-

annex.

••

Stat e pat ro I b races
. w th bu d get
f or no•gro

mation.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Drug
"I tried to call Senator (John)
traffic teams of the State Highway
Glenn but dido 't get througli," he
Patrol are rolling up sizeable totals
said.
of confiscated cash and cars. Some
"I hope it's true- it would·pay
of that may come, in haridy as the
two officerS," he noted.
agency race., a no-growth budget.
Plans in the village are for hir,
Total funding. for the patrol
ing two additional officers with ·
would decrease 0.4 percent in the
·benefits to supplement the existing
first year of Gov. George
force of four offteers, he said.
Voinovich's proposed spending
Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
plan, and increase 2.9 percent Rought, wbo said he received notiless than the anticipated inflation
fication the night before the AP
mre - during the second year.
a nnouncement 6Y the U.S. MarThat amounts to $165 million in
shal's Office, said the federal. fundthe fiscal year starting July I, and
in~ will help hire a new officer
$170 million the following year.
GERALD ROUGHT
sblctly for foot patrol. ·
"We feel we can mainljlin our
"We don't have any paperworlc on the streets soon after, he added. levels at that rate," Col. Warren
done yet," Rought said.
The ·federal grant will require a 25 Davies, the patrol superintendent,
The funding should arrive with· per.~e~t local match. . .
.. • sai4 last week after an appearance
in a month' and the officer will ·be
It s gomg to def1mtely help,
before the House Finance Commit·
Rought said. The extra officer will tee.
(Continued on Pa11e 3)
He said ~he budget would sup-

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
Water system upgrades and a
housing grant are among the items
to be discussed at a Raci.ne town
meeting tonight.
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton
said the village will host freshman
State Rep. John A. Carey Jr., RWellston, at the town meeting
tonight at 6 at the fire department

Racine will drill its first water
well in 45 years after the viila~e
was awarded $80,000 10
Appalachian Regional Commissidn.
last week , according to Racine
Mayor Jeff Thornton.
"This money will go toward upgrading the Racine l!'ater system,"
said Thornton.
Bid s for the water well and ·
water line will go in the newspaper
later this month and the project is
~~~~~·~J.e finished by April,
Plans call for a new water line
out into the Yeliowbush area, and
for the village's economic develop.
ment site and new state-of-the-art
port 1,430 unifonncd troopers and water meter re ad i t:~g sys tem, he
a training academy class of recruits · noted.
in each year. "We can do the job
The new well should improve
· with that many people," Davies both th e quality and quantity of
·said.
water available to village residents,
The Office of Budget and Man- Thornton commented.
agement pegged total patrol
In addition, Thornton said he
· employment at about 2,450.
· expects to field questions about a
Davies said the patrol operates half-million dollar housing grant
17 two-officer traffic drug inrerdic· awarded to the village last year.
lion reams to confiSCate illegal drug ·
Phase II for grant applications
shipments through the state.
will start in the spring for housing
Among the tally since the pro- grant applications, Thornton Sllid,
gnini'S stan in June 1992 tl!Ioug h and will continue until the village
1994:
·gets 20 homes and four rental uni!s.
• Nearly 8,400 pounds of mariThe grant will provide up to
juana with an es timated street value $18,500 for renovations to eac h
of$19.3 million .
·
building, he said.
.
• At least 957 pounds of cocaine
For more information about the
worth $4 3.5 million.
grant, 'call Thomion at 949~2296 0,.
• 482 grams of heroin valued at grant coordinator Jean Trussell at
$241,000.
992-2733.
• 3.444 doses of LSD worth
(Continued on Page 3)
$17,220.
.

..

Fruit...

It's time -to plan for
spring.tree planting

·

·

,__.Cupid carnations---. Jurors catch glimpse

~ of Simpson's lifestyle

Janet Broadwater, a 6-year-employee at the Pomeroy Flower .
Sbop, clips tbe base or.eacb cama~ion stem in preparation for
the busiest business day of the yeaf. By trlmmlng tbe stem, the·
nower petals open up after sbipping, Broadwater said. The
store's carnations are gr,own in Colombia. Valentine's Day ill
only rivaled in sales by tbe week before Motber's Day, said
Larry Tucker, owner or the shop. (Sentinel photo by George
Abate)
·

I

By LlNDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - 0..1. ~imp·
son laid low as jurors saw where
his ex -W&lt;ife and a frie,nd were
slashed to death, then brightened
up as he stepped through the gates
of his palaual estate and back in
time to. life as a millionaire celebrity.
His brief return home - and the
jury's only firsthand look at the
mansion - was welcomed with
two ~!fireplaces, fresh flowers and
a Bible on the table.
"It's a beautiful house," said
defense ia'wyet Johnnie L. Cochran
Jr. "There were flowers throughout
... There were ftres in the firepl aces
... You had to come away with the .
feeling; 'Why would a guy give up
aU of that?"'
·
It was a stark contrast to the
murder sce·ne - Nicole Brown
Simpson's empty condominium.
The property · is u11 for sale, and all
furnishings and p1c1ures have been
removed.
Prosecutors argued that the
homey look at Simpson' s ho use
was staged to elicit the jurors' sympathy . l'hey objected to some of ·
the touches, and W3fi1Cd jurors kept
out of th e family room where .
Simpson keeps his trophies.
' It is a shrine to the defe ndant," complai11ed Deputy Districl
Attorney Cheri Lewis.
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
allowed j llfOrs to pass through the
trophy room, but he ordered a picture of Simpson's mother removed
from a bedside table, saying it had
not always been there.
Ito convened the unusual, sixhour tour ,to ic! jurors see for themselves the locations pertinent to
Simpson's lrial for the murders of
his ex-wife and Ronald Goldman.

Reporters weren't allowed
inside any of the stops, and security
was ti ght: More. than 250 police
officers were working in the area,
keeping gawkcrs away' and escOrt·
ing residents to their homes. Streets
were barricaded and airspace was
reslricted to keep news helicopters
ai a distance. One man giving out
omnge juice was told to remove his
' ·Free O.J.' ' sign.
·
The jurors' bu s and 13 ca rs
paused first at Goldman's apart ment and at Mezzal una, the rcstau·
rant where Goldman worked and
Ms. Simpson ate the night of the
murders. They dido 't leave their .
tinte d-window bus until they .
arrived at her empty Brentwood
condominium.
.
Simpson waited in an unmarked
police ca r around the corner as
jurors walked through the murder
scene in gro ups of four, taking
copious notes. Her fam ily didn't
want Simpson inside· the property,
and the defense said he didn.' t want
In he U1crc either.
··
Without an eye witness to the
June 12 murders, the prosecution's
case has stressed circumstantial
detail ~ - such as the narrow space
in which the bodies were found. ·
Goldman's. body lay in an
alcove near the gate that measures
no more !han 8 feet by 8 feet - too
small for more than a single
assailant. Deputy District Attorney
Chnstopher Darden said - so
small that Goldman must have feli
''caged" by the killer.
Cochran had a different take on
the small space.
"How do you have a life-anddeath fight in that area and not
have any bruises? Tbe'jurors had to
he amai.ed at that," he; said.
Cochran ·has shown jurors pic(Continued on Page 3)
:
1

•

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