<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9471" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9471?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-14T22:21:18+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19905">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/d6cf1642406752c52148dc418bfb9735.pdf</src>
      <authentication>eaa17f3a2aac4d9b9644cd1751645113</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30385">
                  <text>(

.

•

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Frfday, February 17, 1995

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Get tested to rule out prostate cancer
PETER
GOTT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: I've been
having blood in my semen for
about six months. Sometim~ it's
like port wine, other times it's
bright red. This is not associated
with any pain . My urologist has
prescribed three rounds of antibiotics over a period of time, and I do
have kidney stones that don't present,problems. . .
DEAR READER: Blood in the
semen may reflect prostate infection, as your doctor suspects, but it
can also be caused by prostate cancer or benign tumors.
In my opinion, you should be

.examined by another urologist to
make sure that your symptom
doesn't have an eminous basis.
You probably need kidney X-rays
(again) , and you should certainly
have cystoscopy, during which !be
specialist examines your genital
tract with a lighted instrurnenL
In addition , I would order a
prostate ultrasound exam, to see if
you have a growth (or stone) deep
within the prostate gland.
Kidney stones will not cause
blood in the semen, althou~h they
may lead tO blood in the unne. I'd
focus my attention on your prostate
gland. See a urologisL
To give you more information, I
am sending you a free cpPy of my
Health Report "The Prostate
Gland." Other readers who would
like a copy should send $2 plus a
long, self-addressed. stamped envelope to P.O. Box 2433, New York,
NY 10163. Be sure to mention the
title.

DEAR DR. GOTT: My friend
has been diagnosed with lichen
planus. Is this contagious and is
there treatment for the condition?
DEAR READER : Lichen
planus is a recurring, inflammatory
eruption of the skin. 1be cause is
unknown, although some experts
believe that it may be due to an asyet-unidentified micro-organism.
In any case, it is not contagious.
The affliction is diagnosed by biopsy.
No treatment is necessary,
unless the lesions itch, in ~hich
case anti-histamines and steroid
lotions may relieve the symptom . .
Cortisone pills may be necessary if
th.e eruption is widespread or tends
to recur .frequently. Patients with
lichen planus should be under the
care of dermatologists.
DEAR DR. GOTT: Would yoil
guide your re:lders through the
menstrual cycle and give your
opinion as to the safest point where

.--Number crunchers-_,

intercourse would less likely cause
gestation? Is it the ftrst few days
after the end of the. flow? Is pregnancy possibiC during flow?
·
DEAR READER: Let's keep it
simple.
Most women ovulate about two
weeks after dal'_one of their m•.nstrual cycles. Therefore, the best
time to conceive is on or about day
14. Interi:ourse· is least likely to
result in pregnancy if it occurs just
before, during or jiiSt alier menstruation.
Remember that this is ·merely a
rule of thumb. There are reported
instanceS of women conceiving 8l
any point in their cycles, especially
if their menstrual panems arc irregular.
Copyright 1994 NEWSPA·
PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For inrormation on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by c:al6ng 1800-827-li364. ext. 8317.)

Daytona 5_00 preview- C1

SALLY FIELD

· This "Woman" costars Charles
Durning, Brenda Fricker, Tony
Goldwyn, Ron Silver, Jaclc Thomas
and Sheila McCarthy.
It's the hardest thing she's ever
done, Field says. A brealcneck 60day sl!O(Jting schedule, the .sweltering Texas loc~tions, her 170-odd
cosntme changes, those are some·of
thereasonsshecites.
Field fondly recalls the aging·
process she underwent during the
production. "I found that, playing the
unknown of old age, your imagination can allow you to experience
something that you can't really
return to in portrayin~ the youth
you've already known, ' Field, 48,
says. ''The older Bess got, the
more of a kiclc I got out of iL
"In the meantime, I son of lost

Academy will re-evaluate Documentary
Committee after ~Hoop Dreams' flap .
· BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- The Oscar nominating procedure for documentaries will be
reevaluated in the wake of the
snubbing of the acclaimed "Hoop
Dreams.''

"We'll be talcing a close, hard
look al .the procedures of the Documentary Committee to see if
changes need to be made," Arthur
HiDer, president of the Academy of
Motion Picture· Arts and Sciences,

said Wednesday.
"Hoop Dreams" follows two
Chicago high school stars as they
pursue dreams of playing professional basketball. Despite collecting some of the best reviews for
any film last year, the only nomination "Hoop Dreams" received
Tuesday was for best editing.
The committee that nominates
documentaries is composed not of
documentary fibnmalcers, but of 47

veteran Academy members .who
volunteer. The committee has '
bypassed such highly regarded
fibns as "The Thin Blue Line" and
"Ro$er and Me."
H1ller suggested some critics
had not seen this year's five nominated documentaries: "Ma~a Lin:
A Strong Clear Vision," 'Com ..
plaints of a Dutiful Daughter,"
D·Day Remembered," "Freedom on My Mind" and "A Great
·Day in Harlem."

tmts
A Multimedia Inc. , Newspaper
. MATH-A-THON WINNERS- Andy Mora; right, and Chelsea
Young were named nrst and setond place winners respectively,ln
· the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Math-a-lhon at Chester
Elementary School. Tbe program is used to raise money for the
research hospital. Thirty-one students participated, raising
$1,098.12.

•

11

'

own ag~. I didn't feel any par- look tlood," she says. "THAT'S
scary .~•
llcular affi!"tY or. connecbon to any
What doesn't scare her so much
age as bemg mme. My ..own age .
is
Staying
alive iA ShOW business.
be~~!" to be son~ffu;uy.
After
all,
how
scary could it be for
For '!'e, ~~~?llng IS never .~bout
someone
who,
so early on, surEgo ~ra~~cat1on For SallY:• she
vived
"Gidget"
and "The flyirig
e~plams. It has all'? d? w1th ereNun"'?
a~ng a characler ~ ts n~ht for the
"I guess because my struggle
piece, whether she s Gumevere or
sraned
so young, I expect it," says
theHunchbackofNotreDame.
Field.
"I don't know how to be the
"I feel accomplished, which I
lUding-lady type," Field admits,
didn't
use to feel," she allows,
"and pan of me bali felt luunpmed
"but
I
don't ever feel confident
by that. That part of me thinks, 'If I
about
anything.
r never have. Even
were more of a glamorous son of
the
times
that
seemed lite they
movie star, had a sexier quality
should
have
been
the easy times
about me, I would be better.'
were
still
a
struggle
for me.
"But I don't know how to be
"It's
always
a
struggle,
but I
that way." On the conllllry: "I'm
feel
there
are
many
more
hills
to
not afraid if I have to look like dogclimb.
It's
my
responsibility
to
doo.''
"I'm more afraid if I have to scramble."

~
~

HURRY TO DON TATE MOTORS

calendar
•

Tbe Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-pront groups wlsblag to
announce meeting and special
eveats. Tbe calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
.
fund raisers or any typ~. Items
BY PASTOR PETER TREMFor example, many dabble ,m are printed as spaee permits and
BLAY
.
astrology, the practice of guiding cannot be guaranteed to run a
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist your hfe by the movement of the . specific number of days.
•
stars. A practice that is directly forChurch
Many people today deny the bidden by the Word of God in
FRIDAY
existence of the devil and. his Duet. 4:29.
RACINE -Pentecostal Assemdemons. They believe themselves
The devil is a subtle creature. bl;&gt;:, S.R. 124, ncar Rac.ine, J~es
to be too enlightenc:d t.oQ sophisti- tie even tells us that it's okay to G•llette evangelist; spee1al slngmg,
cated for such a belief.
carry good luck charms. "What's Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Either you believe the Word of so wrong with good luck charms?" ·
God or you don't. We cannot pick he asks us. What's wrong with
SATURDAY
and choose which pan of God's them is that they are taken directly
CHESTER - Special meeting,
Word was wish to believe. Either .from satanic worship and the prac- Shade River Lodge, 453, F. and A.
we believe all of it or we can have lice of sorcery, again directly fer- M. Saturday, breakfast, 7 a.m.;
no reason to believe any of it.
. bidden by God's word.
lodge opening, 8 am. Work in the
The devil must love it when
Qther people practice spiritism entered apprentice degree for two
people deny his existence. They are by using devices lilce the "divining candidates.
easy prey for him. He will lie to rod" to supposedly find water.
them. He will deceive them. He Some women use superstitious
SALEM CENTER - Star·
will ensnare them, at his will. methods for rmding oot the sex of Grange #778 and Star Junior
Many people that deny the exis- their unborn child. Fanners resort Grange #878 regular fun night and
tence of the devil and demons are to spiritism in planting by the signs potluck supper Saturday, 6:30p.m.
easily led into occult practices. of the Zodiac or by the entrails of at the grange hall. All members and
Tbey seem so innacent. Things like animals. If you don't think so, just interested people urged to attend.
the Ouija board, which is sold as a pick up a copy of the Farmers
game in our stores. Children play Almanac:
MONDAY
with it by ~iving up their wills to
I .recall picking up a calendar
LETART FALLS -Letart
· the poSSCSS•on of an evil spirit who from a local business some years Township BOII(d.of Trustees meetthen directs their hand to move the a.go that contained all of these ing Monday, 6 p.m. at office buildpointed to letters on the board.
superstitious devices for planting, ing.
In Eph. 6: II the Greek work all of which ar~ based on the
translated "Devil" is "Diabolo." occult, spiritism, and primitive reliSata!l is diabolical. He is described gions. God tells us not to imitate
as the''Tempter" and "the Enemy." false religious.
Yes, someone may say, 1 know
In an effon to provide our readEph . 6:12 reminds· us that our
struggle is against Satan and his these are questionable practices, ership with current news, the Gal~
forces that are described as "princi- but they seem to work. I respond, lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
palides and pow~" The New Tes- "So What. Are you a child of God Sentinel will not accept weddings
tament describes him as subtle, or not? What business do you have ·after 60 days from the date of the
mischievous, and a.perverter of going to Satan to find answers? event
righteousness. He must love it You cannot serve God and the
All club meeting$ and other
when he is able to have full_control Devil. Ch~._this day_whom you _ news articles in the society section
over those that deny his extsmrree. - ,Yill serve."
must be submitted within 30 days
Satin ~HI do all he can to mvolve
(To be continued next week)
of occur:ence.. A!l birthdays must
people m the occult by convmcmg
Articles for the weekly Ser- be submuted w1thm 42 days of the
tliem that these practices are mno- monettes may be submitted to occurence.
cent and then he will snare them the' Rev. Peter Tremblay 991All material submitted for publi- .
and,control their lives.
5326
·
'
cation is subject to editting. · ·

N
ews poiJ'·cy

.
-------Aifrednews notes----.

By NELLIE PARKER
· The Alfred United Methodist
·church congregation enJoyed a
soup dinner Sun&lt;!&amp;Y followmg regullu' worship semces.
. • Pastor Sharon Hausm!ln ga•e
thi: blessing. 0t1Jm attendin~ were
. Wilma Henderson, Nina Robmson,
.. Sarah Caldwell, Charlotte Van
Meter Eloise and Russell Arcber,
Iohn Taylor, Rit;hard an.d Florence
. Spencer, Osie a'nd ,Ciau Follrod,
.

.

j

Kathy and Stacie Watson, Dan
Spencer, Doris and Lloyd
Dillinger, Tim Spencer, Susan
Pullins, Thelma Henderson, Joyce
Burke, Gertrude Robinson, Melvin
T111cy, Torn Taylor, Barb Hannum •
Debbie Barbee, Marlene Donovan,
Joe, Laurie, Janae, Ashley, Jessica
and Matthew Boyles, Sandra Massar, Philip Boyles, and Nellie Partter, all local; Eleanor Boyles, Bel-

pre, and Bernice Hawkey,
Grantsville, W.Va
Members signed a card for Rose
Carr who is in University Hospital,
Columbus. .
Thelma Henderson, Sarah Caldwell, and Nina Robinson attended
County Council ·lit the' Rock
Springs Church Monday night.
Joe and Will Poole were business visitors iii Xenia Tuesday.

•
- - - f --·

·.

Tlmii.Sentlnel Staff
: POMEROY- The Meigs County Board of Cornmissioners ma,y have moved ·a step closer to selling
guns confiscated by officers in 1993.
The board is trying to selll,416 guns forfeited to
the county by Roben D. Fife, Middleport, after officers confiscated the weapons from his home and
business in July, 1993.
·
Fife pleaded guilty to a charge of receiving stolen
property. In return for the plea agreement, he agreed
to forfeit the guns, with tf!e county and himself
splittil!g the prdceeds from the sale.
The board advertised the firearms in The Shotgun
News, a national firearm dealers' magazine.
''ln~he last two days we've got lO responses to the
ad," said Clerk of Commission Gloria Kloes.
Kloes said she has fielded calls from North and
South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Ok.lahoma, '
Nebraska, Wisconsin, Kentucky and West Virginia.
"I'm pleased with the initial respo~se, but I'm still
waiting for serious offers," said commission President Fred Hoff~J~an.
.
The advertisement. which cost $199.25, is scheduled to run in the Feb. 20 edition of the publication.
The bOard will let dealerS view the guns on March·(!.
The board also agreed to sponsor the Tuppers
Plains Sewer District in obtaining a $500,000 Community Development Block Grant.
Prosecut'ing Attorney John Lentes, who represents
the sewer district, satd the district needs a formal
resolution of suppon from the commission in order to
secure the water and sewer grant.
· In other business, the board:
• Transferred SI 04,Q69 from the county general
fund to the public assistance fund.
· • Made an appropriation of S12,273 to the general
fund at the request of the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation/Developmental Disability.
• Requested County Engineer Robert Eason to
make a recommendation on a request by Chester
Township trustees to add roads in the Hartinger
Addition to township mileage. The board also wants
a recommendation from Eason on a request from
Scipio trustees to close a part of township road 257.

'

1·992-6614 1-800&lt;837-1094

4 Door. auto.,
stereo, air,

power steering.
5

$8999

1994 CHEVY
BEREfiA,'

1994 OLDS ·
ACHIEVA

'
4 Door,air, auto., air bag, stereo
2 Door, auto., air, aw bag,
cass., P. windows &amp; locks, bucket
cassette, power windows &amp; locks, · seats, Intermittent wipers ,
V..S, PS, cruise, lilt.
cruise, tilt
.

$11,9-99

$10,995

1994 OLDS
CIERA

1994 CHEVY
CORSICA

V6, auto., cruise &amp; tik, air, stereo.
air bag, P. win. &amp; locks,
intermittent wipers, cassette.

4 Door, auto., air, cass .. V6, air
bag . till, cruise.

1994 CADILLAC
.
SEDAN DEVILLE
Leather, va, all power, cassette,
· air bag, cruise.

$11,995

$10.,949

$24,959

189 Down
189 Per Mo.

5

.,

CAPR~CE

door, cruise, tik, antl·lock brakes.

4 Door, V6, automatic, air,
stereo. cruise, lilt.

va. auto .. air, cassette, air bag, 4

$'14,995

11,995

5

1994 CHEVY .
CAVALIER
4 cyliQder, automatic, air con d.,
stereo, power steering·, power
brakes. Hurry!.

sa,995.

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

DON TATE MOTORSi Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

---

~.

•An prices include

rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; 1ees not
1ncluded.

R.,. Freak
CtemMIM, RGafllpolle,
••ld h• will
carefully
Wllfeh t»wlopmenta regarding the
o.,partment
of Energy and poulble effect• on eouflwm Ohio.

I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
.
Tlmes.S.ntlnel Stefl
MIDDLEPORT - On the a.o;surnption that "if there is something to do or
something to sec, they will come", the Middleport Community Association is
taking a new approach to making Dave Diles Park in downtown Middlepon a
·gathering place.
The new program which members of the Community Association hope will
"catch fire and take off' is called "Spectacular !'vents". It is geared to
organizations, businesses or anyone who might be interested in sponsoring or
presenting a one-day weekend or evening activity in the .park.
The emphasis, said Tom Dooley, who is heading up the MCA project, is to
"do thin!!'i. here, so we don't have' to go somewhere else - to make our
community the place to come for a good time".
_
But to make the program succeed, Dooley said that it must involve more than
just Middleport groups, that organizations and churches in the county must get
involved.
.
·
''This is not just a ' Middleport thing::,', said Dooley," Drul people need .to .
understand that." He described it as an invitation for people to come in and use
the park in a way which is enriching to the community.
Dooley said that the plan is to offer entertainment and activities on a regular
basis, to give people something they can look forward to and decide to attend.
As for the guidelines, all of the events will have to be approved and
scheduled by the Middleport Community Association. They will be free, and
held on the weekend or in the evening. Preference will be given to events which
are ·of interest to the entire family. Sponsors will be responsible for all
equipment, setup and cleanup, electricity will be available on the stage and in
the depot. and limited adverrising will be provided by the Association.
Fund raisers will be restricted to the sale of refreshments or souvenirs.
Already scheduled are the two annual celebrations of the Community
Association, July 4 and the River Festival on Sept. 16.
Monday night Middleport Village Council voted to be the sponsoring agent
for an Electric Light Pa111de of The Midnight Cloggers directed by Bruce
Wolfe who has been entertaining at Disneyland for the past four years:
The Bend Area Community Band directed by Toney Dingess, organized
with an Ohio Arts Council grant and some local funds from the Middleporr Ar)s
Council, will do a concert in the park in .June.
Otbe! agencies ani! organizations, like the Mei!!'i County Humane Society
on tbe care of animals, and the Extension Service on borne and farm activities,
have expreued. interest in spohSoririg events .

.·'

Ohio lawmakers
look for ways
to cut taxes in
budget proposal

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ReWASHINGTON (AP) - House
publican lawmakers say thcy.,pre trySj)eaker Newt Gingrich has singled
ing to get a better understaniling of
out the Environmental Protection
Gov. George Voinovieh's proposed.
Agency as government bureaucracy
budget as they look for ways to trim it
at its worst, but EPA officials conenough to reduce taxes.
tend his outr.age often focuses on
"We arc looking for ways to cut
problems that have been resolved.
some things that don't make sense,"
As Gingrich outlined his views on
said Rep. Patrick J. Tiberi, R-Columenvirompental protection last week,
bus. He wants to fipd out how much
he said the EPA "may well be the
spending can be reduced in
biggest job-killing agency in the in..Voinovich's $33.76 billion proposal '
ner city in America today.'' He called
.•before he is ready to endorse a tax cut .
its policies "incredibly destructive
House Speaker Pro Tempore Wilto the poor."
liam G. Batchelder, R-Medina, said a
While he did not elaborate, the
. "Significant number" of the 56-memreference seemed to be to failures
ber House Republican caucus would
under the Superfund toxi waste
like tocuttaxes in the 1996-97 budget
cleanup law, which have I ft thoubill now under study in the House
sands of contaminated a abanFinance Committee.
doned pieces of land - k own as
"There's a very, very strong feel -.
"brown fields" - idle n cities
ingalongthose lines," he said. But he
across the nation. Meanw ile, busisaid it·was too early for lawmakers to
nesses.Jiave moved to the suburbs.
be thinking about cutting taxes.
.' ''Our current brown fields policy
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,is irrational and economically dethe senior member ·of the Finance
structive," said Gingric", R-Ga. He
Committee, said he ·is serving as an
said the EPA shouldn't require sites
adviser .
destined for industrial uses to be BLASTS EPA. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, nan ked by Senate Majority leader Bob Dole,
''A lot of these young people feel
cleaned to standards for a kindergar- right, and House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, R-Ohio, meets wltb Republican
the same about taxes as I have for '25
ten playground.
. . Congressional leaders. Gingrich singled out the Environmental Protection Agency as governyears,'' Netzley said. ' 'A lot of them
. EPA officials said the agency has m~nt bureau~racy at Its worst.
feel they were elected to make govrecognized the problem with
ernment smaller and take it off the
Superfund and brown fields for some time. Last year, it tried to get that sit idle in cities across this country, to bring them back to life, to" backs of the taxpayers . They were
Congress, as part of a revamping of Su)l!'rfund, to give greater remove ·a blight on the neighbothood, to create jobs to create hope,"
amazed and appalled that the
nexibility to inner cities as they try to clean up sites and return them said EPA Administrator Carol Browner.
governor's budget is a ,10 to .l2 pcrPressing to get regulatory .reform legislation through the House,
to industrial uses. One proposal would have established different
c~nt increase.''
criteria for cleanup depending on future use of.the land.
Gingrich has sprinkled his remarks in recent weeks with examples of
Netzley said the conservative lawRepublicans blocked the reforms in the final days of the last alleged EPA horrors. He revisited several of them Thursday in a
makers believe the current tax strucCongress.
speech to an environmental conference.
.
ture is~generating too much revenue,
Last month, the EPA moved on its own and announced it was
Of the government's long campaign to deal with asbestos, Gingrich
and thai there could be as much as a
taking 25,000 of 38,000 urban sites off the Superfund invento•y, said he has heard complaints from school officials and declared: "I
S1.3 billion surplus by July .
leaving the remaining, minor cleanup to states, and'opening the way know of nobody who's a scientist or who 's in public health who thinks
Voinovich, a Republican, projects
. for their development.
that tearing out the walls to get at the asbestos - in terrns 'of human life
thai $838 million can be put in the
"We are working ... to clean up the contaminated pieces of land incidents - is a rational strategy .''
stale savings account.

Community.association takes
new approach to park activities

1992 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, 53,000 miles, leather, all power .....................:........... $14,995
1991 JEEP WRANGER 4X4, hardtop, 32,000 miles. Must seel ................ ;................... $10,995
1988 FORD RANGER PICKUP, 4 cyl, 5 speed, topper.: ......... ~ ........................................ $4,995
1992 PONTIAC BONNEVIUE SSE, loaded, white ...........,...:........................................ $15,495
1991.GMC SONOMA,4 cyl., 5 speed, 2-tone paint .........................................................$6,995
· 1988 CADILLAC SEVILLE, loaded, V-8, leathe• .............................................................. $7,995
'
1990 i=ORD F150 4X4, 5 speed, 6 cyl ...............................................................
~ ............... $9,999
1993 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, loaded, V6, red ..............................................................$12,995
1985 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN. Hurry! ..............................:......................................... $2,995
1991 BUICK PARK AVE. ULTRA, loaded, leather, all power .........................................$11 ,995
1990 GMC SIERA PICKUP, VB, auto., air, topper. Extra Sharp!.. .................................... $9,~

1994
- • CHEVY
LUMINA

Gingrich singles out EPA
as bureaucracy at its worst

'SPectacular Events' proaram

PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRIJCKS

1994 CHEVY

Meigs County
moves closer
to sale of guns
. By JIM FREEMAN

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

1994 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

•

1..----'--------....J

1'~~~~1)~N1'~ ])A~ ~Al.~!!

Community

Vol. 30, No.2

AP, T-5 Staff Reporta
serve on the task force.
Sixth District.
over to the De. WASHINGTON - Federal taxpayers could save
'"I~re is not doubt that in order for us to balance the
The Clinton administration already has a plan to reorga- rense Depart . ~illions of dollars by lowering cleanup standards at En- budget we must make government smaller," Cremeans nize the DOE and privatize some of its functions, Deputy mentor the En·
·ergy Department nuclear-waste sites, says thechai.rmanof said. "It is highly appropriate that we examine the func- . Energy Secretary Bill White said. The plans call for DOE vi ron menta 1
a House task force that wants to dismantle the agency.
lions of these departments todetermi11e if they continue to to cut spending by $14 billion over the next five years, he P rote c t i on
"There's just not enough money'to fund what they are be needed."
said.
Agency.
trying to do, to go back to pristine conditions," said Rep.
Tbeeffonbas the support of Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio,
Todd Man in, a researcher for the Spokane, Wash .He said DOE
Todd Tiahn, R-Kan.
chairman of the House Budget Committee.
based Hanford Education Action League, said his watch- has overex"Tbe'se are isolated areas. They are areas that were not
"Of course we've still got to do nuclear weapons dog group is oP.,n to proposals to cut cleanup costs.
tended' itself in
populated when we started. We should perhaps be looking management, but when you talk about cleanup and all the
'• But it is the moral and ethical responsibility of the negotiating cleanup agreements with individual states.
at a containment policy rather than•a pristine policy," he regulation, the overregulation, the~osts, the money - it 's federal government to clean up those sites they made dirty · "Whatever happens, we need to go back and look at the
said.
·
incredible," Kasich said at a Capitol news conference to -to at the very least make sure they are safe for people agreements we negotiated and not try lo fall into that trap
Tiahrt's panel is one of four established by House announce the task-force effon. who live and work thereandfortheenvironment, " he said. again and have to renegotiate some of them," Tiahrt said.
Republicans this week to develop proposals to eliminate,
Cremeans said he will carefully watch developments
Overall, Tiahrt said, long-term plans to clean up radio'·Part of it is going to be through contracting and
· consolidate or privaiize the departments of Energy, Edu- regarding the Department of Energy and possible effects active waste at the nation's former nuclear-weapons plants determining what are the requirements we should hilve ·as
cation, Commerce and Housing and Urban Development. on southern Ohio. The Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion is expected to cost between $300 billion to S1 trillion.
far as getting back to an acceptable level of waste conRep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, was named ;'o;;_.;P,;:Ia:,n::,:ta:;,t,;.P:ik::;et:::ll:;:n;.:is:,::on:,:e::.;o::,:f.:;th;:e;;;la:;,r~ges:::;te::,:m:.:;p~l~oy!:.:e::.rs:,:i,::n.:;;C::,:re::,m;:e;;;a;;:ns;.';;;;;.,·.!_H!:e;.:e:!n!.:v:!:is:_:;io:!!n:s.,:t,::ur!.!n:!:in:!l,;:D::;O::;E;_'s~ci::;ea::,:n:u~p.,:r~e!!spo~n~si_:;b!!,ih:_::ti::;es~..!t!!ro!!.l,._"_:h~e;,;s::a!!id::..,.

~y

FIRST IN SALES!
FIRST IN SERVICE!!! AND
FIRST IN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

•

·rask force.- chair says lowering standards at nuclear waste-sites will sav~ billions

'

•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant . February 19, 1995

House panel takes aim at DOE

DON TAR MOTORS, Inc. &lt;~
,..: 0::;

onPageA2

••

Known for ages, Sally Field portrays a woman's life in NBC m1n1senes
.
. By FRAZIER MOORE _
"Mrs. Doubtfire" and "Forrest
AP Televisioo Writer
Gurnp. ")
NEW YORK (AP) - Sally
In "A Woman of Indel'!:ndent
Field? At a~e 18, she became Gid- Means" the audience w11l rirst
get, that qwntessential 19(i()s Cali- encounter Bess Steed Gamer in ber
fomia girl.
teens. By the end of this six-hour
No one much watched this little NBC miniseries, Sally Field will
·surfside sitcom during its single carry the audience deep into Bess'
season. Yet"Gidget" still made old age. '" Woman" ai~ Sunday,
waves. It launched a star and plant- Monday and Wednesday. from 9 to
ed a'legend. You've been watching II p.m. EST each nighL
Sally Field ever sinee.
Tbe ftlm, which brings the twoThis is worth belaboring as the time Oscar winner back to televiactress who started out a beach sion after more than a decade, is
bunny, then played an airborne based on the 1978 novel by Elizanun, presents herself three decades beth ForSYthe Hailey. Related totallater in a complex role that lets ly through Bess' letters, the book
viewers accompany her, stage by tracks the life of a plucky, loving,
stage, through a colorfully unfold- irascible, needy and unsinkable
ing life. (l(er most recent theatrical woman, from the tum of the centufilms are the box office smashes. ry all the way into the '60s.

Details

Three days on the witness stand -PsgeA7

•

.

HI: 50s
Low: 30a

,.,

News capsules

GOOD MORNING

Auditor to speak at GOP ev~nt

Decision pending
on toll-free calling
betWeen Mason,
Meigs counties

'
T.oday's
Times-Sentinel

GALLIPOLIS - State Auditor Jim Peiro will be
16 S.C:tlons - 116 l'llces
the speaker for Gallia County 's annual Lincoln Day
Business
Dinner Tuesday at 6:30p.m . in the AMVJiTS BuildD1
ing.
Calendars
82&amp;4
The dinner is sponsored by the county's RepubliDJ-7
can Party organization.
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Classlfteds
Petro, 46, was elected auditor last November after ·
Public Utilities Commission of Comics
Insert
more than two decades of work.in government. He
Ohio has yet to make a decision Editorials
A4
became the assistant to the mayor of Cleveland in
concerning the establishment of
AJ
1971 and was a special assistant to then-U .S. Sen.
toll-free telephone service be- Local
William B. Saxbe the following year.
tween the'Middleport, Pomeroy Obituaries
A6
He served as assistant prosecuting attorney for
and Syracuse exch~nges and rhe Sport•
·c1•8
Franklin County, wqrking as a trial lawyer on adult
Mason, W.Va., exchange.• ·
~Al:-::-:--::h:-::R
::cl:-----..;B:.:J:..:..
.
d
ong t e' ver
felony prosecutions. He later returned to northern
Approximately I 00 Melg1ian
Ohio as assistant law director in Cleveland.
Mason County residents, offi- Weather
A2
Petro opened a private law pr~cti&lt;;e in 1974 and l"as prosecuting attorney in cials and merchants attended a-·
Rocky River. He was elected to Rocky River's city council in 1-977 and was ·laler - PUCO hearing on Nov. t6""in
named the city's law &lt;;lirector.
. Pomeroy lo support establishColumns
He served four terms in the Ohio House of Representatives between 1981 and ment of toll-free telephone ser1991, where he,served on the House Finance Committee. He was also the ranking vice between parts of the two Jack Andcrsop
member on the House Committee for Ethics and Standards and for the Committee counlies.
Fred Crow
on Commerce and Labor. He was elected a Cuyahoga County commissioner in . PUCO attorney examiner' Bob HoeOlcb
1991. and served as chairman of several committees.
Daniel E. Fullin, who presided
Petro is a native of Brooklyn, Ohio. He received a·bachelor's degree from over the meeting, indicated at JimSapds
Denison University and his law degree from Case Western Reserve University. the time the PUCO should reach
a decision on tbe matter during
$5 million condo, office project set for Jackson February ..
Scott Farkas, the attorney examiner worki.ng on the case, is curr~ntly
JACKSON- A $5 million housing and retail development project is planned
working on the case to present it to the commission, a PUCO spokesfor this southern Ohio community.
The planned project, under development by Coriell and McCarry Investments, woman said Thursday afternoon.
will reported contain 43 condominiums, nine office sites, eight locations for retail . Cunently, local officials want to establish toll-free cailing between
the Middleport, Pomeroy and Syracuse exchanges in Meigs Countyand
outlets, and more than 150 parking spaces.
All of the condominiums will be for purchase; none will be available for rental. the Mason and New Haven exchanges in Mason Counfy .
Approximately 35 people testified at the meeting where residents
The only reported obstacle to be \)vercorile is to have the property rezoned.
argued that Loll-free service before the communities, separated by the
Upon approval, work is scheduled to begin around the middle of April.
Coriell and McCarry is headed by Dick Coriell, a partner in Scioto Block, Ohio River, would improve the business climate in the area.
Fullin said the PUCO would consider the testimony prior to making
Portsmouth Bloclc, Portsmouth Building Materials and Martin Block Company,
its decision. .
and Rick McCany of McCa_ny Construction .

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

4

•

•
. '

.ct..

-.-

�Pomeroy-Middleport r-.alllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page A2-sunday nma. SenUnel

Sunday, Feb.19
for daytime coodili0113 aud

MICH.

•

. C_HESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs Community Aelioq Agency will

Pleasant conditions
to continu~
expected
.

Training deaths prompt probe

J

Republican's
Lincoln Day
Dinner

apparent as lliey tried to ensure
!here would be no bombs or listen' ing devices hidden in the supplies.
: Inmate negotiator George
likatzes even suggested that stale
negotiarors ,taste the food in front
Of inmates to make sure that il was
safc.
: On Thursday, jurors I istened
Intently to a tape recording of a
~csperate plea by Clark 10 res10re
,_..;..._..;.._..;..._ _ _ _..., ..

.

.

WHEELING , W.Va. (AP) The jury deliberated for 6-112
Two Ohioans were convicted Fri· hours,before convicting the men on
day of federal charges in the slay- . charges ofkillinll a federal willless,
irig of a Hancock County woman . interstate travel m aid of racketeerwho threatened to testify against ing, conspiracy . to commit thosa.
.one of them.
two crimes and conspiracy to. vioMark Watkins, 31, and Delmar late civil rights.
Walton, 35, both of East Uverpool,
Prosecutors alleged Pugh was
Ohio, were convicted in the death killed because she threatened to
of Debra Pugh of Chester. She dis- report Watkins' drug dealing 10
appeared on May 21, 1989; and · aulhorities. Watkins was Pugh's '
was found drowned II days laler.
former boyfriend, prosecu10rs said.

&lt;USPS 515·8001

'
• Publ ishrd ea.:h S un d:~y . 8 2~ Third Ave.,

' Gil llipelis. Otuo, by 1hc Ohiu Valley Pub li daing

:company!Mulli medu&amp;. Inc. ~cond clnu po~t ­

. age paid at G o lti po li ~ . Oh io 45631. Emerfd o ~
! leCOnd clan mnihn8 inauer at Pomeroy. Ohip,
'Post O(ficc.
:Membfr: The Auociatl!d Press. and the Ohio

oNewapaper Auociation

•

Pair convicted In murder

SUNDAY ONLV
SU&amp;t;CRIPTJON RA'n:S
By Carrier or Motor Route

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.FAMILY PUCTICE

.PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

•
SINGLE COPY PRICE
-Sunooy.......................... 1.. .................... - ... SJ .OO
' No subS(Iriptions by mail pcnniltcd in areas

:where motor clllrier servia Is av ailable.
-The Sundoy limes.Scntinel will not be respon·
:siblc fot adv11nce paymenu made to.carriers.

Dolly ond Sundily,
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

.

lndde G1llbl County

' IJ WeekJ.! ...................... ......................... $23.92

~~ :::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~
Jt.tn Oablde G•lll• CMnty

·'

'll w..u .............................................. $25.6 1
~6 Wcclts............................................ $49.66

.52 Weeks....,......

....... $96.20

r---------------------------------""'1
Here's A New Way To Wheel And Deal
For Your Next Home Mortgage ...

..

canrnodity eards on Tuesday, Feb. 28 81 die following Iocalions:

Meigs County - Meip County Fairgrounds, Tuppers Plains
F'rre Station, Pageville Town Hall and lhe Racine F'rre Station. Disllibution will begin around 9:30 LID. and last mlliJIIOOII, or until the
supply is exhausted.
Gallla Cotinty - Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds, Gallco in
Cheshite, Mount Carm~ Baptist Church in Bidwell, and the Crown
City Fire Station. Disttibution will begin around noon and last until
2:30p.m., or until the supply is exhausted.
Those picking up for others must bring a signed note from the
person in addition to their food commodity card.

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

problems

ATHENS - Nationally syndicated columnist and Ohio University alumnus Clarence Page will be
among the keynote SPeakers at the
second annual Black Man .Think
Tank at OU in March.
Page, columnist and editorial
board member of the Chicago Tribune and a 1989 Pulitzer Prize winner for commentary, will kick off
GALLIPOLIS -Free immunizations will be given by the Gallilt
the
think tank with an 8:30 a.m.
County Health Department in lhe courthouse lobby on Tuesday
from 4-6 p.m.
speech 81 Baker Center.
.
The
think
tank,
entilled
"Who
Childhood immunizations will be available for ages two months
We Are vs. Who Tiley Say We
and up. Children receiving immunizations must be accompanied by
Are: Redefining the African-Amera parent and have Ill! up-to-date shot record.
ican Male," wiD run from 8 a.m., to
3 p.m. Saturday, March 4 81 Balcer
Center. The conference, free and
PA'TRIOT- The second in a series of public panicipation
open 10 the public, will feature a
meetings scheduled by the Gallia CoUrtly Loeal Board of Education
series of topical sc:Ssions seeking 10
has been set for Thursday at 7 p.m. at Southwestern Elemenlary
replace stereotypes of AfricanSchool.
' American men with reality-based
The board is seeking public input on school dislrict issues and on
information , sad Rex Crawley, conthe direction the district should take in the future.
·
ference creator and coordinaiOr.
"This is an issues conference
that I hope will generaie discussion
· so folks will , leave here thinking
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Building will be closed
about the experience of black
Monday in observance of Presiden~' Day.
·
males, and think about redefining
their image and dispelling stereotypes," said Crawley, who is also a
· Foster Complex res1dent director.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Commission meets Tues·
· While last year's event was limday at 7 p.m. in the municipal courtroom.
ited
10 black men, attendance at the
Copies of the agenda are available at the City Building, 518 Secconference this year is open to
ond Ave. , and the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library, 1
everyone.
Spruce St.
"The theme and focus of the
conference is issues relevant 10 the
African-American male experience,
but-it's not limited to particiBIDWELL- The driver of a car pumped .$17 worth of gas iniO
pation
by only black men," Crawthe vehicle and drove oft' without paying from .The K.orner at. the
ley
said.
intersection of state routes 160 and 554, the Galli&amp; County Sherifrs
Last year' s think tank led 10 ~e
Department was infonned.
creation
of the Black Male TramA store employee rold deputies the incident occurred at 6:14 p.m.
ing
program
at OU this year,
Friday. The repon is under investigation.
through which black faculty and
·
staff share their experiences 'with
15 participating ou and Athens
GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police early Saturday
High School students. Training
were Floyd D. Myers, 60, 2018 German Hollow Road; Patriot, for
focuses on independent living, spirdriving under the influence and weaving courSe, and Clifford ~· illlality. interpersonal relationships, ·
conOict management and commu· Peters, 21, SL Louisville, for expired operator'slicense.
nity"service.
·
Black Male Training partici" 4
''
• u
• ...
pants will graduate froni ihe proOAK HILL- The·annual SL David's Banquet for southeastern
gram during a ceremony at the .
•· Ohio will be held Saturday, March 4 at6:30 p.m. at Oak View Eiethinlc tank. Because the conference
menlary School.
coincides with Dads' Weekend,
Dean Circle of G3llipolis will eater lhe llanquet, beginning with
fathers are invited to attend with
the traditional leek soup. Bob Powell of Bidwell is the master of
their children.
ceremonies, and a group singing of favorite and familiar Welsh
The thinlc Lllnk will also feature
hymns will be led by D. Merrill Davis of J~n.
motivational speakers Paul Hill,
The event pays homage to the patron samt of Wales.
,
executive direciOr of the NeighborTicket reservations may be made by calling 446-7667, 286-1906
hood House community center in
or 682-7057 by March 2.
Cleveland and author of Coming of

Immunizations slated for Tuesday

Board schedules public meeting

City building closed Monday

City Commission meets Tuesday

Drive-off reported to .deputies .

Shoes receives a certificate riom Dave Kucsma, .
effective scbools building coordinator, Don
Vaughan of Vaughan's Cardinal receives a certificate from Dennis Eichinger, MHS assistant
principal; and Carol Crow accepts for Crow's
Family Restaurant. Other businesses participating in tbe progra111 are Ingels Furniture, Johnson's Video, Subway, Diary Queen, Kroxer Grocery, Locker 119, Hutton Car Wash, Clark's
Jewelry, McDonald's, Dan's, Francis Florist,
Adolph's and Sweet Greetinp. (T -S photo)

BUSINESS RECOGNITION - Sixteen local
businesses bave recognized ud rewarded Meigs
High School students for their aCidemlc
achievement. As a part of tbe open bciuse program at MHS Thursday night, busiDess owners
were presented certificates for tailing part In tbe
program. Students aettlng all A's are given xold
cards, ud tbose makinl B's or above In all their
subjects receive maroon cards. Wben presented
to the partidpatlng stores, the students receive
discounts. Above, Annie Chapman of Cllapman

Rio students explor~ war history

RIO GRANDE -· Students in
David H. Corcoran•s 20th century
history class at the University of
Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College discovered a treasure trove of World War II mem·orabilia during a recent class trip to
the.Ohio University Archives.
The collection of war correspondent CorneliuS Rran's wartime letters, questionnarres, photographs
and artifacts has sparked a keen
interest in war history among the
11 Rio Grande students, Corcoran,
Ph .D., adjunct professor ·at Rio
,..~~ ·
.
'
uuuaue.
S8ld •
An Irish-born journalist and
author, Ryan distinguished himself
in wartime newspaper 5ervice and
later wrote epic histories of the
conflict, notably Th4 Longest Day
and A Bridgt Too FtJT, both popularized by their movie adaptabOIIs.
A special museum room at
ou· s Alden Library has been set
aside to display many of the writer~ s mementoes, whtcb deal with
numerous great people of the 19401960 period, according to Archivist
George Bain, who introduced the
studen~ archival collection.
Amo
rare photographs,
ug McCabe, an expen
explain
on Ryan and archive records manager. is one showing Japanese dictator Hideko Tojo slumped back in
a·chair after attempting·suicide.
"Ryan and three others looked
on in the picture," McCabe said.
"After
phoiO was taken, they
Age: African-A~rican Male Ritts rushed the
him
10 the hospital, where
of Passage; Howard Tillman, pashe was revived. Later, he was tried
POMEROY - ~ vacant Pomeroy house was ·broken into late
tor of the New Covenant Believers_ for .war crimes, c,onvicted and
Wednesday night or early Thursday, according 10 Meigs County
Church in Columbus; and Nashid hanged. That was the American
Sheriff's Deparunent reports.
·
·
Fahkrid-Deen, former coordinator way of handling things back then."
of minority student affairs for the
George Nesselroad, owner of the house, located off U.S. 33,
Ryan also repoited on the daily
reported someone broke into bis home and also fell through the
OU College of Health and Human activities of Gen . .George Patton's
steps, records show. Items were found on the porch and over an
Services, now community college Third Army during his tenure as a
embankment on 33 near the suucture. .
·
coordinator for minority affairs at correspondent for the London
Items stolen were not stipulated in the reports. The incident
the University of Kenlllcky.
Daily Tel~graph . Ryan became so
remains under investigation, reports slated.
Conference sessions include the interested in military tactics,
Black Man Health Crisis, Blacks in McCabe said, leading 10 an "infatuEngineering, The New Corporate ation" with D-Day and the later .
Mentality, Education Financing publication of The Lon$est Day.
HARRISONVILLE - A cow worth $1,200 was shot overnight
and Empowerment Through Orga"Exc!JI'Sions like th1s make hisThursday, according to Meigs Countr Sheriffs Department reports.
nizational Unity. Facilitators in
tory
more alive, more meaningful
Harold Graham Harrisonville, satd he heard three shots about 3
group sessions will include OU and more worth learning for stua.m. Friday and th~ next morning he found his bl~ cow by his .
administrators and faculty, Colum- dentS." Corcoran said,
bam, records show.
.
bus businessmen and New York
During the trip to Athens, the
The cow had been shot in the neck and although not dead, was
state government employees.
~wsalsostoppedattheWoodson
unable to move, reports staled. Graham had 10 destroy the animal,
Crawley is on educational leav.e
according 10 reports.
from the New York Stale Division
of Budget and is working on a doctoral degree in cross-cultural com ·
munication at OU. He holds a masMIDDLEPORT - Middleport Village officials have postponed
'
ter's degree in public adminislla·
a tneeting set for Monday, according 10 an off~ei!JI.
,.
ti.on and a bachelor' s degree in
The meeting would have discussed ~ potential fun~-11llsmg and
political science from OU.
f111311Cing efforts with the boat dock facihty, the official staled. No
Crawley said his experiences as
reschedule date has been set.
.
an African-American male, couEditor's note: Names, ages and addresses arc printed as tbey
pled with national statistics on
appear on orrJCial reports. All newsworthy actions will be pubblack men's economic, social and
lished without exception.
educational struggles and proposed
New York legislation 10 declare1he
black male an endangered species,
sparked Crawley's interest m fostering a concentrated effort to
: Units of the Meigs County Wilma McGraw, Holzer Medical encourage young black men 10
;Emergency Medical Service logged Center.
ov.crcome societal odds against
-six calls for assistance Friday.
RUfLAND
them.
:Units reSponding included:
2:37 p.m. , College Street,
For more information, conlacl
:
MIDDLEPORT
Kethel Hatfield, VMH.
Crawley
at 614-597· 7349.
8:48 a.m., Fourlh and Lincoln, --- ··
Beverly Napper, refused treatment
: 5:05 p.m., Village ~nor, Ti~
Justice, Veterans Memorial Hospl-

Cemetery in Wellston, where the
"Some significant local hisiOry
purported slave son of early 19th . would be forgotten if we didn '.t
century President Thomas Jeffer- occasionally get out and see it.''
son is buried.
Corcoran said.

We Proudly Display
this Emblem

City police issue citations

Ulelsh. ce'eb•nno'n set Ma•"'h 4

Pomeroy theft reported

'Because
it means we are knowledgeable . ethical jewelers
dedicated to consumer protection and customer
service. We had to pass rigorous examinations to
enier the Society and are re -examined ar:nually lo
make sure we're up on the laiesl developmenls.

sym~ol

.

Cow shot near Harrisonville

The@.
in.our stor.a is your assurance
of getllng fine quality rewelry and good value .. .
because we truiy know what we're selling.

ga«/~~
· Je•e"IS

404 2ND AVE, GALLIPOLIS '

@. MEMBE~

(614) 446-1647

AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY

You Are What You Thin·k•••

Middleport.postpones meeting .

.Meigs squads log 6 cans ·

:tal

•

•. ·U:03 p.m., OverbroOk Nursing
Center, Dorothy Hartenbach, Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
RACINE
: 10:03 a.m., Broadway Street,
Rossie Badgley, VMH.
: 10:53 a.m ., State Route 124,

Hospital news

·One Week ................................................. SI 00
·one Year ............................................... .. Sj2.00

black male

distribute pears,,green beans and butter to diose holding valid food

I

~:fo :~m':g~~~~e::r~

Sunday Times-Sentinel / A3

Tri-County Briefs:____, Think tank
CAA slates food distribution
to tackle

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) An Air Force fighter pilot whose
misidentification of two U.S. Army
helicopters killed 26 people
received a letter ofsai.\'rimand for
his actions, a rejlort ' Saturday.
A brief filed in court-martial
proceedings agaii\Sl Capt. Jim
Wang, the Air Force officer
charged
in the shootdowns,
• lcolumbusls2"
revealed administrative punishments also were given 10 seven others, The Daily 0/r./ahoman reported
· in a copyright story.
Wang, of Columbus, Ohio, was
aboard a nearby AWACS radar
plane when the April 14 shootinlls
occurred over northern Iraq m
April. .
He is accused of failing to tell
the fi~h ter pilots t~~ helicopters
were m the area, fa1lrng to ensure
that the helicopters were broadcasting the correct identification codes,
and failing to properly supervise
the con !rollers under his command.
Wang is the only one of six Air
Force officers charged in the down.
ing who faces a court-martial.
. He could not be reached immediately for comment. A message
was left at his home.
Saturday's repon is significant
.
because Lt. Col. Howard R.
. The record high temperature for
Altschwager, the military judge·
By The Associated Press
BREAKING GROUND - Pomeroy Nursing
heimer, nursing bome administrator JlniLinde- :
lhis
dale
at.the
Colull\bUS
weather
·
hearing
the case, ruled in favor of a aad RehabiUtatloa Center representadve&amp;, along
The National W'eatba Service is
man,
Meip County Commission President Fred :
forecasting pleasant conditions for station was 65 degrees in 1948. prosecution request to ban testimowltb local aad state ol'liclalll, broke eu'tb Friday
Hoffman
and State Rep. JOhn Carey. Llndemaa :
The record low was' 7 degrees
ny on the administrative discilhe rest of the weekend in Ohio.
afternoon on a $800,000 renovatiqn to the cen- •
said
tbe
project,
which will be completed this .
plinary actions.
Skies were moslly clear Sat!U- below zero in 1946.
ter. Performing the ceremony were, rrom left,
summer,
will
belp
tbe center meet tile lleCds of :
Sunrise Sunda~ will be at 7:20
The Oklahoman reported that
day night with lows in the 30s.
Betsy WiUy, nurslna home re111dent George Genchanging
bealtll
care
demands. (T·S photo)
:
the defense brief said Capt. Eric
Mild lempenllllres will continue a.m.
Weather forecast:
Wickson, the lead F-15 pilot during
in10 eilrly .nexl week, although sevSunday
... Variable cloudiness the attack, was given an official leteral weak wealher systems will
: produce an increase in cloudiness north,.. PariJy sunny south. Highs ter of reprimand for lhe accide~L
Wickson, who mistook the
: S ur!.!lay and Monday. The first 45 10 50 norlh except cooler near
·
on die edge of lrouble.••
Army helj~opters for Soviet-made
· WASHINGTON (AP) .- The Ga.
· chance of rain will be across north- Lake Erie...50 to 55 south.
"This·
is
a
dangerous
business,"
Monday
...
A
chance
of
showers
.
H'
d
rdered
'ssiJe
fi
·
Army
plans
four
separate
mvestiga"My heart goes out ro lhe ram;;.
Iraq
0
011
: em Ohio on Monday.
.
1
m
s,
JODgs
tions
into
the
exposure
deaths
of
said
Gen.
Gordon
Sullivan,
the
north
...
Fair
south.
Lows
in
the
30s.
lies
involved. Any loss of a soldier
after his wing man, LL Col. Randy
. Highs Sunday .will be between
Army
chief
of
staff.
"It's
a
dangerHighs
45
10
50
north
and
·so
to
55
is
a
May,
confinned
the
misidentif1C8four
soldiers
during
rigorous
loss for all of us ... said sum:
· 45 imd 50 in northern Ohio, with
·
Ranger
training
in
a
.
Florida
ous
profession.
These
slildiers
live
van.
south.
uon.
cooler temperatures possible near
Extended forecast:
Wickson, who was never swamp.
: Lake Erie, and between 50 and 55
Tuesday ...A chance of rain or charged, also received an "unfaPreparation for the toughest
· in lhe south.
: Thin, patchy clouds drifted snow showers. Lows in the 30s. vorable information file" entry on combat assignments "will never,
never be risk-fn:e" and there has
:across parts of the state, but skies Highs near 40 north and in the 40s his record, according 10 the brief.
May also was reprimanded and been no apparent increase in train. were mostly clear early Saturday south .
Wednesday...Achance of rain or . charged with 26 counts of negli- ing accidents generally, Defense
:morning. A liUie fog and haze was
snow
showers northeast. Dry else·
· ·
b
h h
Secretary William Perry said Fri· being reported. Predawn tempera-.
gent homiCide, ut t e c arges . day. "Nevertheless, we look at
where.
Lows
in
the
mid
20s
to
mid
:lures were moslly in the low 10 mid
were dropped after hearings last them very carefully." .
· : 20s, with some localions reporting 30s with highs 35 10 40 norlh and
fall.
d
.h
The Army has ordered fOIU' sepin the 40s soulll.
·
temperatures in the teens.
' A permanent a
ment, a ara1e investigations into the tragedy
more serious admin · live pun- _ the worst in lhe 44-year history
ishment, was initiall · en 10 Col.
Douglas Richards n, but later of the Ranger training program.
dro """ the bri f ·d
The four soldiers died of expoPr.-·
e S8l ·
sure Wednesday after struggling
Richardson, who was operations through chilly, chest-deep swamp
commander at the time of the waters in a remote area of Eglin
shootings. thought he did not have Air Force Base near Pensacola, Fla.
COLUMBUS (AP)- A jury is electricity and water to the cell- authority 10 coordinate Army heli- They were in the final days of a
l k th ·
copter operations, despite slanding
th
.
:expected 10 hear .r7 hours of tapes b oc epnsoners controlled.
orders 10 the contrary, the brief rigorous two-mon Ranger trammade during the Lucasville prison
"Please do this. Please," Oark
ing regimen.
·
:riot during the trial of an in male begged negotiator Dave Burchett. said.
Four others in the unit also saf. accused of killing another pnso'ncr "They want to get out of this
Other punishments listed in ' lhe fered from ~thennia and had 10
brief included:
. G J r·• S Pilkin
: aud a guard.
· peacefully.... All you got to do, if
'
be rescued rom the exercise site.
. A tape made O!J April 14,_1993 you wan110 cooperate, is just tum
• 8 ng. en. e .rey . · g- Hypothermia is caused by severe
·- one day before inmates killed the (exp,Ietive) on. This is my life, ton, oveiltll cominander for Opera- loss of body heat, leading to
guard Robert Vallandingham buddy. '
·
tion Provide Comfort, the relief extreme fatigue, drowsiness, disoriwas played Friday in Franklin
In response to Clark's pleas, mission to aid Kurds in northern entation, and sometimes death.
AM-VETS BUILDING
County Common Pleas Court.
Burchell said authorities needed Iraq, was reprimanded.
Investigations are being con•'I want you to know one two hOSIO!Ses released as a sign of
Pilldngton was relieved of com- dueled by the Army Inspector Gen108 Liberty Street Kanauga (Just oft Burnett Road)
thing," an unidenbfied inmate said good faith . Eleven guards were mand the following June but Pen- eral's Office; the Army Safety
on the tapes. "Any foul up and held hostage during the siege.
tagon officials said at the time that Office at Fort Rucker, Ala.; the
Tuesday, February 21,1995
hostages is terminated, all of them.
"Here's a show of faith - by the transfer "did not constiwte dis- · Army Crimin11I Investigations
"Any foul up, any kind of trick on nobody killing one of these ciplinary action."
Division; and Maj. Gen. John W.
Social Period: 6:30 p.m.
behalf of your peoples, either from guru'ds," snarled Skatzes, who is
• Brig. Gen. CUrtis Emery, comHendrix, commanding general of
the roof, or creating a diversion awaiting trial on charges related to · mander of the operation's ComFort Benning.
Dinner: 7:00 p.m.
with a lot ot noise with the heli- the slayings of Vallandingham and bined Forces Air Component, was
Army officials said the water
Guest Speaker:
reprimanded.
was chest-deep instead of kneecopters flying over, and hostages two inmates.
wiU be terminated."
·
Robb was involved in negotiat• I st. Lt. Joseph Hal eli was
deep as normal and they were in it
JIM PETRO, Auditor of State
Jason Robb, 26, was charged ing the end of the riot, which left given undisclosed administrative
longer than expected. The soldiers
with aggravated m~rder in the nine inmates and Vallandingham punishment, the brief said. Halcli
also had a false sense of security
Dinner Ticket $15.00
deaths of' Vallandmgham and dead at the maximum-security was the enroute controller aboard · about the danger of hypothermia
inmate David Sommers during lhe prison.
the radar plane, in charge of ensurbecause the air was a rcl.atively
Call: Connie Hemphill446-4968
11 -day uprising at the Southern,
If convicted on the murder ing that the aircraft changed 10 the
wann 65 degrees.
Ohio Correctional Facility. He was · charges, Robb could be sentenced proper identification codes when
The water, however, was 52
Verlin Swain 256·6900
·also charged with kidnapping guard to death.
, . !bey entered the no,.fly zone.
- ~degrees, only-2· degrees above the
: Darrold Clark. ·
·
· -·
· · ·
training limit, said Col. Galen JackMolly Plymale 446-1214
. : ·The ~Ix:s p~ed Friday includ- ·
•
.•
•
man, commander of the Ranger
0
Training Brigade at Fort Benning,

:Prison riot trial jurors will
:hear tapes of nego~iations

Regional

February 19, 1995

Pilot given
reprimand
in accident

OHIO Weather
Accu -W~ fom:ut

February 19, 1995

· VE'I'ERANS MEMORIAL
: Friday admissions - Flossie
·Badgley, Racine; Gilben Zwilling,
'Pomeroy; Cora Woodard,
Pomeroy.
· Friday discharges - Delbert
l:&gt;ridembre, Middleport.
. ·HOLZER MEDICAL CEN1'ER
: Dl&amp;charaes Feb. 14S - Mauh~
Crabtree, Violet Kraulter, Cee1l
· Roach , Hannel~re Donta, Roy
Burger, Ch81lottc Bateman, Mra.
Danny_ gardner and daughter,

Every Bill Item
For Valentina's D~y!

THIN sue

OFF

AT

Southeastern. Business (C)IIege
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA • GALLIPOLIS

446·4367

Paula Hilley.

(PIIb'' 'eel with permission) .

-

-

-~---

Sprlng,Quarter
Begins Aprll3

.

J~

,
-

..

Flnanclll Aid IYIIIIble
(lor lhOM who qualify)

Reg.

•
-

.

-.-

�•

.Commentary

February 19, 1995

Ohio/W.Va.
Clinic bomber decries restrictions :

February 19, 1995

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A5

Gephardt's troops are growing restive
ll5 Third A.., GaUipoU., Oblo

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo

(614) 446-1341

(614) 991·1156
ROBERT L. WINGETI
PubU.ber

HOBART WILSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW

EJ:ecutJ .. j!AIItor

Controller

A MEMBER of The AssO&lt;:iated Press, and the Amerioan
Newspaper Publishers AsSO&lt;:iation.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to ediling and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
publisbed. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
per&amp;Onalities.

:W'!shington Today:

:L1nes drawn in battle
. to deregulate America
By LAURIE ASSEO
Assotiated Press Writer
: WASHINGTON - Too many laws. Too many regulations. Too many
tights?
: As deregulation fever sweeps the country, people rail about senseless
government rules and laws that many Sly stntngle common-sense ideas.
: Consider public toilets.
.
,
: When New Yort City experime11ted with sidewalt toilets three years
ago, lobbyists for the disabled invoked the federal Americans with Dis·
abilities Act in insisting that the toilets be accessible to people in
wheelchairs.
• : That amounted to a "prohibition of sidewalt toilets," New York cor·
~ porate lawyer Philip K. Howard writes in -his .new book, The Death of

·wASHINGTON - House
Miloity I Neier RichiiCd 'Gephardt,
D·Mo., who bu publiely rebeUed
against President Clinton since the
midterm elections, ·is himself the
carget of a rebeUion by Democrats
on the tax-writing Ways and Means
Committee.
After a closed-door meeting
with committee Democrats last
week, one Jawmalrer compared the
scene to an "infantry platoon on
the front line telling the captain,
'We're not going into battle.'"
Gephardt's troop5 were threatening
mutiny against middle-class tax
cuts proposed bY' both him and
President Ointon.
"We were marched into the fire
two years ago to raise taxes and to
put the emphasis on deficit reduc·
lion," one attendee complained.
"What you've got now is every·
!Jody for himself."
No ultimatums were issued dur·
ing the 30-minute mej:ting, but
lhere was "real intense talk" by
approximately 10 dispirited
Democrats who lamented their
lea~er' s decision to put tax breaks
ahead of deficit reduction, sources
say.

tee's ran.ting minority me~ber,
hardly ltved up to hts "Stlent
Sam" caricalure. Gibbclns has been
livid over the way Gephardt has
galloped ahead of the caucus in
proposing a lll!-cut package with·
Jack Anderson out prior consultation. Gibbons
finally vented his feelings last
and
week.
The 74-year-old Gibbons told
Michael Binstein Gephardt
of the two votes he was
most
ashamed
of since coming 10
they were supposed to ready a
Congress
in
1962:
The ·Gulf of
package of tax cuts that could com·
Tonkin
resolution
escalating
the
prise an alternative to those con·
Vietnam
War.
and
the
Reagan
tained· in the GOP's "Contract
With America," and which w.ould administration's 1981 tax cuts,
pass through the powerful gate· which helped fuel a decade of debt
explosion. Armed with economic
keepers on the committee.
Some Democrats favored writ· statistics Iavin~ out good news on
ing Gephanll a letter - as opposed everythinf from unemployment to
to a personal meeting - citing procfuctivtty, Gibbons argued that
areas of widespread disagreement, the cwrent robust economic condi·
criticizin!! the lack of leadership lions make this an ideal moment
and servtng formal notice they ror sticking to defteit reduction.
Gephardt estimates his plan will
would oppose tax cuts. Explained
cost
$66 billion, while the Clinton
one Democrat: "We started with
plan
would cost $60 billion. The
the letter and cooler heads said,
GOP
waqts tax cuts worth $20S
'We don't want to write a letter
billion.
because it's too confrontational."'
As Ways and Means members
Last week's face-to-face meet·
ing was civil but strained. Rep. · toot turns speaking, Rep. Charles
Sam 'Gibbons, D·Fla., the· commit· Rangel, D·N. Y., invoked another
Democmts on the panel wran·
gled for weeks over how to con·
front Gephanlt. Committee members chafed at the expeclation that

By

Ml'llll

nvw

ho'ft~~ardsayslawshavegivenAmericanstoomanyrights~amount

to expensive mandates for the rest of society. One of his maj~W targets is
the disability act, signed in 1990 by President Bush. .
• New York City officials took the public 10ilet idea back 10 the drawing
board after the 1992 experiment.
"The ADA did make it much more difficult," said Fran Reiter, New
York's deputy mayorfor planning.
· ·
Howard argues for a balarice of interests- in this GBSe, people who
use wheelchairs versus everyone else in New Yorlc City who needs 10 use
a restroom.
B.ut. Jusu.·n Dan Jr.• commissioner of rehabilitation during the Reagan
admm1stra11on and. a longtime advocate for the disabled, says some· inter·
csts ran't be balanced so easily.
"You simply are not an equal citizen if you cannot go to the toilet,
Dart said. "You're not able to wiX'k in that area, you're not able to sh~
inthatarea"
. Similar debates can ' be heard on myriad issues, such as how to speed
Food and Drug Administration ~roval of new medicines without com·
saC
~~~i:;~~live~ty, or how tom e environmental rules less costly and
The
·
C aki
·
quesuon o Ill ng government regulations moo: efftx;tive is hard·
ly new.
University of Chicago law professor Cass Sunstein wrote in a 1990
book that government rules sometimes fail because they are badly written
inflexible or inconsistent. Often bureaucrats who craft the rules must rely
on la~s ~sed by Congress that miss the target, he said.
· Still, tt was laws and rules that gave Americans safer cars a cleaner
. environment and less discrimination based on race and sex, he~&gt; Some people question the most ardent deregulators' motives. Con· .
ad
RaJ h
·
·
sumer vocate
p Nader views ..much of the debate as a "scarcely
veiled attack on that pan of the Jaw that's supposed 10 h-elp ordinary peapie against powerful interests."
.
.
..
.: Howard insists he's not talldng about'eliminating regulations, but mak·
tng them worlc beuer.
·
. • "People want most of the things that government does,'' Howard Sll'd
in an interview. '~This argument over whether we need government -·
big government versus no ~ovemment- misses the poinL The question
tS how government works.'
·
.
(Laurie Asseo covers the Supreme Court and legal Issues for The
Associated Press.)

C'l'llm NAM
.
• Nf'!.
1 ~;
.,U1KI

-l--

1
'

, J# ·:.•. ,,.
"

spending.

.

tions.

.

Gephardt listened intently and
sympathetically, and in the end said
more meetings were needed. Not·
ing the obvious split in the caucus
between deficit hawks and tax-cut·
ters, he S{IOCulated that the former
were begmning to outnumber the
latter. "You could see he was
struggling over the fact that his
base was eroding," said one senior
Democmt who attended the meet·
ing.
Some questions hovering over
the ll)eeting went IIIUISked: What is '
Gephardt's end-game, and does it
include running against Ointon for
the Democratic nomination in
1996? Since last November,
Gephardt has closed the gap with
Republicans in some areas while
deliberate!~ distancing himself

, SAFETY TOUR - U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Relcb spoke
With Mila Sanldad, rlabt, an 11-year employee ol the Leece-Nnllle
Alternator plant In Cleveland Friday, Reitb called the plant a
model for management-labor tooperalioa on safety Issues. (AP)

OSHA readies hefty
fine for steel maker·

lWr: ~ Q~ Y0Uf2
'n;RM J\J'!,T SlTTiN~ AWUND ~ '!::e~~o~:~aephardt has
ON Vnnn snubbed Clin10n by proposing his
· lV\1"'"' own version of a middle-class tax

OJrt:

CINCINNATI (AP) -Govern·
ment regulators have accused a
Cincinnati_company of 23 serious
or willful violations of workplace
safety rules and proposed fining the
company $130,900.
.
The Occupational Safety and
·Health Administration proposed
the runishment for Queen City
Stee Treating Co. OSHA said Fri·
day its findings resulted from .
inspecting the company's plant Col·
lowing a complaint about a July II
explosion there.
·
OSHA alleged that the company
allowed slippery floors at the plant
and failed to train employees in
safety practices or review emergency plans with them. The agency
also said the company failed to
develop emergency rescue procedures, did not train workers in
operating chemical processes or
correcting deficiencies in those
operations, and ignored safety

cut, given a qualified embrace to'
the Republican plan for a flat tax,'
and annOIUICed that he would take·
his orders "from America's hous·
es, not the White House."
. Gephardt was IC$5 brash during
his meeting!! with Ways and Means
members, mentioning the importance .for Democrats to position
themselves in a smart manner rela·
live to Republicans. The comment
led one committee member 10 later
quip: "You don'·t know whether
he's talking ... on behalf of the
House or of .himself for tbe
future."
(Jack Anderson aad- Michael
Binsteiu are tolumuists for Unit·
- -.= ""'':'~-:--,--.;;;. . ed Feature Syndicate Int.)

- _.,:_-

onr:~~ Valhntine'f Day oc~urs
at ~e nov:J:t =.;":,~~this~
da . In the
in
..
l"~e m
- ess~apasg
-~est,, ·~·eaddirewueonre tomathnye

Da.teline on Thursday, Saturday "seeking soulmate," "tired of Dispatch which e~hibited this ani·
and Sunday. Your ad will run for ~aes" and others. Some of the cle stating that one Karen Smith,
tJm:e weeks.. You fill out a coupon, wo en sou~ht men over age SO. P~. Ore., was notified by her
whtch contams your message, and(
pe_ue, I dtd not see any of my credtt .union that she was overv
u•
listed.
dra
her
. cDIJlical valel!tirn:s sent I received
Fred
C
age
.
. - -wn tn - account by the sum of ;
or exchangCd leSs valentines this
•
rOW
In th~ mille category, you.. llave $346,000?
year than ever before. My age mail it to the 'dateline address set. ads ~~.~en who are; g~ .
To,yo men and a woman used. her ,
might have had something to do forth in the paper.. Afrer that you ~cers •.. ~~e~ country mustc ; credtt card 10 make 124 wtth·
with it.
too shy ; w1d.o~s only" and dra,~al
. s over S4 hours. The arrested ·
are given a five-digit number to
an othe d
u
di duals
ld lace h
However, when I opened the protect your identity. Up to this m y . r esc~p ve tenl!s one tn VI
wou p
er card in .
Columbus Dispatch, a separate sec- point there is no charge. To can. th1.nt of or mvent. Wuho'!t one _of the automated tell~r :
tion of this paper contained a respond to an ad, there is. a 900 rev1ewmg each ad thoroughly, 11 machmes and Withdraw the mwu"Valentine Dateline" fOr both men number at a cost of $1. 99 per would appear tha~ there are v~ry mu~ am~unt. It was a clever .
and )VOmen. I was amazed and minure. This sounds like a bargain, few wtdows ~ wtdoo,yers seetmg manipulatiOn o~ the computer sys·., .
asf:D,unded, as J. Edgll!' Hoover QIICC. doesn't it?
.
.
the use of th1s datehne column. tern by these llueves. All the wtth· ;
satd, to see this advertisement.
Ther~ were no ads of one _male drawals were l1lade .over the week· ,.
Rupette, if you are lonely, I would of~~':sre~~~~:d;~~=: seekmg the compamonshtp of ~nd when the cred1t offices were
suggest tliat you read these ads. ·
Th
·
another male..
closed.
. ,
You might fmd a pearl in one of mg men. e capuon on some of
. The question has come to my
Someone stole Karen Smith s
1
d 0 btained' th redi 1
·
these ads floored me: "Unique · mmd Rupe as to wh the
these oysters.
woman," ''Tall winsome" or "Seek·
'
'
·
e r 0! no
purse II':
ec
can!. ,.
To commence this story' I ing big teddy bear." At fust I felt I one ~\!ld use thiS m.eans of mn:o- Karen did not ~w that her credit
should state that the ads contain could respond to this last one, but ducuon to the opposite sex. &lt;lt;ltte card ~as ·mlssmg. The machines .:
frequent abbreviations. They are: after reading it, I discovered that frantl~' I ~annat see anyt.h~ng u:;ecJ m .the theft were supposed to ,
M-Male; F-Female: S-Single; D· . you had to be in the 19·27 age wrong 10 this practice,, ~~lding gtv.e no more than·$200 per day on •
Divorced; B·Black; 0-0riehtal· H· limit. I'm at least SO lears late . you are carefulm Y~ se bOll.
a sm~le card, but there was a mal·
Hispanic: A-Asian: W-White~ c. SWF is ooly 19 years o age and is
would Jl:e. talcing a chance, funcuon.o~the computers to pennit .:
Christia11: JcJewish; WW-Wid·
but m ~ommu~111es such. a~ ours, th~ cnmmals to get the money as
owed: ISO.in -search of; (n/s)-non· seeldng SWM, age 19·27. A seri· the av81lab~ !ric~ are limited. A mptdly as they did, Rupe, suppose
smoldng: and (n/d)-nondrinldng. 1 ous, intelligent SBF had an ad cap· w!)rd of c~uuon, 1( you do adver· your bank called you and told you ·
would suggest that the paper might tioned, "Shut up and ldss me." This use, ~eep 11 to yourse~. There are you were overdrawn by $346,0007 ,
add a few more of these ab'-v 18
. •
is a little forward, don't you think? gossips who would love to. chew You wouldn't feellilce sinft'ng The
u•oo
Other descriptive terms of the ad
thro
to the birds
star spangled Banner a ter you .
lions such as: o/w-overweight: m/s· placers were: ''pretty," "profession· y~u up or
w you
on
marble-shooter: SIS-snores in
ti!is one. However, you may not get heard this news. ·
:
sleep; y·at-h-young at bean: og-old al," "pure country," "really good anywhere ~s.you.try.
V,:hen are you or when is the
goat; and rb-rich bitch.
woman," "retired .and lonely,"
.I got 10.£!uniting, 1f I should use banJc liable for any loss that may·
By calling the 800 number you ... career woman," "home body," thrs adverusmg, how would 1frame occur by the unauthorized use of
can get a free live-line ad in the "seeking companion," "seeking my response? My code letters your credit card? At some future
•
professional," "seeking quality,", would be MWCWW ISO NS ND, time we will attempt to answer this.

Xou

· .
·
poor, the arts and !hi; world.
But the public's curren·t disdain
for the L-word doesn't dismay me.
A racial polarization is far more
'aiaJming. Galvanized by the Nov. 8
revolt of the GOBS (Good ol'
Boys), the Republican farty is
pied· piping this country s lurch
toward the resurrection of "sepa·
rate but equal.'' Hang around.
You'll be a witness to history.
But m'?mentary pessimism can
NEYER.disrupt ':"Y congenital love
affatrwtthAmenca.
· ·
. ~ ¥cCJeod Bethune kept a
su_mlar fmth. Just before she died,
thiS great black educator wrote her
l~gacy. I pass it on to you as a
hghthouse for future stormy times.
"I have a.legac~ to I.Cl!ve my
people... a philosophy ofhvmg and
sharing. 1pray now that (it) may be
h~~pful to those who share my
vtsum of a.world of peace.
"I leave you Jove. I leave you
hope. I leave you the challenge of
developing confidence in one
another.".
.
(Chutk Stone Is a columnist
for NeMpaper Enterprise Asso·
elation.)

almost~· b~;~t ~~~

Ohio,

question. One thing is certain, you

~:;::&gt;g~=~c~rhum;,.. I~ ~~~:t::~:=~h~;g~

thiS connecu,on I soug~ the advt':C
of Robert '\_V~gett. publisher of thiS
paper. He~okin§IY mumbled that I
~ould be '.fired. from his paper if I
m~ J!lis ad m the Dispali:h. He
then. ta~teated . that ~hto. Valley
~bhsbing .c~. IS cons1denng hav·
'':'g adven1smg for. the lov~lotn,
suniiiiC to that descnbed herein, as
a pan or one of its publishing. products. He need not worry smce I
~auld not have placed an ad in
either paper.
Rupe, did you see the last Satur·
day's front page of the Columbus

Wtth the card as to its Joss. Karen
was not liable for Ibis theft on her
credit card.
In God we trust
Carry on, Fred w . Crow .
EDITOR'S NOTE -\Long·
time attorney Fred w. Crow is ·
lbe c011trlbutor or a weekly col· ·:
umn for 'fbe Sunday flnies-Sen·
liul. Readers wishing 10 ..
applaud criticize or comment 011 ·
any subjetl (except religion or
politics) are encouraged to write '
1o Mr. Crow In care or Ibis news·
'JIIper.
'

"T.od
ay •. n h •. story
1

Mat

By Th' A!llociated Press
Today is Suoday Feb 19 the 50th da
left in the )'CIW.
'
'
'
Y of 1995. There are 315 days
Today's Highlight in Hiswry: ..
Fifty years ago on Feb 19 194S d · w ·
Marines tancied
· ' • lln!'g . orld War U, some 30,000
they encounlerM rem: the ":'estern Pactfte island of Iwo Jima, where
cans toot control of the':a~;:nce. from J~ forces. The Ameri·
battle.
Y tm~t island after a month-long

·u.s.

this date:

In I473, the astronomer Copeniicus was born. 11 -. Poland. .
. In .1803, Congress voted 10 accept Ohio's ~ ~tuti ·'
m a biZBrle oversight, did 1101 get around to tormall ~,...,.ft Obion, but
hood Wlliii9S3.
. Y·-1u•g
o state-

{
'
~--·- ·.

Priced from •

1991 FORD FEST1VA

F·&lt;Uw,, 5 ~pet:d. AMIFM cau , PS: 1)8, 4

$1999!
6 Months FREE*!

CHEV CELEBRIT¥'995
14 &lt;loo,, 4 cyl,

aalo,

ai,, PS. PB, AM/f'M
JRU=r

7~
.......

PLYMOUTH VOLARE

39500

1

Station wagor1 , (Wt o

1984 DODGE DIPLOMAT
4 doo,, auto, ai,, AMWM,
PB,

-

, __

-~..

__

_:__

,.

'3495 00

TW, CC , ~.&lt;&gt;,.; mile•

1990 FORD ESCORT PONY
13495

2 J,., 4 cyl, 4 'P"d, I'S,
PB

. air, 6 cyl, AM/FM ca.u , PS, PB

. '

1•. 7·u~ CHEV. BLAZER
cyl. deilel4x4, a tiro, air, AM!FM , PS,
PW,PDL

1980 PONTIAC LEMANS
t yl., 4 dr. , a"t~

• Powerful Briggs 6 Stratton
13·16HP Engines'
· • Welded Steel Frame!
•light 21-lnch Turning Radi~s!
• Optional Deck Suspension! ·
. • Superior Lire Of Sight!

$395"

MONT liLY PAYMENTS
BASED UPON $1,000.00

0

DOWN OR EQUAL VALUE IN
TRADE-IN AND BALANCE
INSTITUTIONS. TAXES &amp;
FEES NOT INCLUDED

• Four Gallon Fuel Tank'
• Easy To Get On And Offl
• Easy To Service And
Maintain'
• Save time year 'round with
handy attachments!
• 7 Year Warrantyl

modl:lls.
.
CNdll terms lot qt~~IIIIMI mOV·BILT«&lt; EAsy P•y Plan CUIIOinln: ·.&amp;.1181 1/lM the
M follOws AI&lt;. - 16% on flrs1 $1 ,000 o! be.larat, 7 9 2')1, on 8WIIS, AA 7 g:nr.,,
,
Rl , W.... and Wl - 18,, KS · 18 98,._ ont. ~ ll .OOO ot balanc:.!. l U ,._ on
18'\ onttkC81S, SC - 1692'11. ; TX - 17.64"'- , WI - 18"At on ~rllll750ol
Mlrllfrun flr.Mat d'large II S 50 b lad! btllng cycle 1'1 wfltctt
of CT. DC. HI . ID. KY. lA MD, NE. NM. NC, NO, 01=1, n1 R1)

F9·895

O'Dells Lawn &amp; Garden
·150 UPPER RIVER RD.
(Across from K·Mart)

GALLIPOLIS

446·7826

Gigantie Used Truell Sale
1992 GMC
FULL SIZE PICKUP
350 V-8, 8' bed, SLE trim , NC, PW/PD,
cassette, tilt/cruise , auto. , one owner.
loaded' Low miles, black solid .

OUR I.OW PRICE

5

13,999

1991 CHEVY PICKUP
SILVERADO
6'/2 bed, NC, PW/PD, tiiVcruis~. cassette,
350V.8, auto., 33,700 low miles, local one
owner trade, sandstone solid. Must see!
Looks like new.

$

OURI.OWPRICE

12,999
1993 CHEVY S•10
FLEETSIDE PICKUP
7'f, bed, Tahoe Pkg., V-6 eng .,. 5 speed
trans., Hunter green w/striping . bne local
owner, very nice vehicle.

OUR I.OW PRICE

PLUs-RIP RAP

•

ellpressed cmcem afttr his reteue.:
"We ' re not taking it lightly,"
said Lyn Marsu:Ucr, spokesWOIIIIlll
for the B¥ency.
Restrtctions on Brocthoeft alsO
effectively bar prominc~t anti•
abortion lawyer Michael Hirsh ot
Howandstown, Ky., from reprcsestt; ·
ing him.
:

rJlOY.BIU® lAWN TRAQORS
MOW DOWN THE COMPEJ'ITIONI .

FINANCED TflRU LENDING

w. Va. lottery
picks
4:

apamnent for either, said Patrick
Crowley, supervisor of the federal
probation office in Cincinnati.
Brockhoeft said he did not know
when or where he woUld loolc for a
job.
Planned Parenthood Association
of Cincinnati, Inc., a victim of one
of Brockhoeft's attacks, fought
against his return to Cincinnati and

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE

~

On

Test results
comparison
delays trial

admitted to burning a second
Cincinnati clinic.
No one was inj~ in the ftre·
bombings, and Broclchoeft said
from prison that he won't cause
more problems.
By Friday aflemoon, he had set·
tied into a one-bedroom Cincinnati
apartment, and was wearing an
electronic monitoring device.
He must find work or attend
school and is allowed 10 leave his

House fires leave 4 dead
throughout Buckeye State

W.

22S LBS,

traJning for working in confined
spaces.
E!!. S.l!:nger, ·president of Queen
City Steel, did not return a telephone call Friday seeking comment
The company' has 15 working
days in which to challenge the cita·
liOns and proposed penalties before
the ind~pendent Occupational Safe·
ty and Health Review Commission.
OSHA alleged, 21 serious violations and two willful ones. The
agency defines a serious violation
as one in whic;h there is a substan·
tial probability that death (W seriOus
physical harm could result from a
hazardous condition; and where the
employer knew or should have
known of the hazard.
A willful violation is defmed as
one committed with an intentioDat
disregai-d or, or indifference to, the
requirements of federal workplace
safety law.

John Brockhoeft, 43, was
released from the federal peniten·
tiary near Ashland, Ky., early Friday after serving four years of a
seven-year sentence for the I98S
ftrebombing.
Under terms of his release,
Brockhoeft is forbidden from
"writing, publication, membership
or speech concerning the subject of
ahortiol) ... to prevent your mind
·from dwelling on subjects that have
a hiJh lilcelihood of prompting you
to VIOlent behavior."
· Referring to abortion repeatedly
as "that= that I'm not allowed
to write,
, act or think about,"
Brockhoeft told The Cincinnati
Enquirer for a story published on
Saturday that the restrictions are
"totalitarian" and ••Orwellian."
. "When I'm in prison, I have the
nght to say anythmg I want, write
anything I want and have it pub·
lished, speak to any friend I have,"
he.said, "It's just when I get out of
pnson that I don't have those
.· rights."
Brockhoeft said he sent a 12·
page appeal to the U.S. ·f arole
Commission, which set .the threeyear conditions for .his parole. He
wrote the appeal before his release,
and expects a response in several
months.
He complained that he is pre·
vented from contacting his flllllCee
Joanne Phimester, 22, of Ne~
Zealand, because she has been
involved in the anti-abortion movement
The former mail handler plead·
ed guilty to setting fire to the
Cincinnati clinic and also was con·
victed of planning to bomb a Clipic
in Pensacola, Fla. He has since

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The results of FBI lab tests will
be available in about three weeks
for defense lawyers representing a
·man charged with spouse abuse
under a new federal domestic violence law, a federal prosecutor
said.
. Attorneys for Christopher Bai·
ley of St. Albans on :Friday were
granted a l'll'f&gt;·month delay in the
start of Baile'y's trial. The lawyers
said they needed additional time
~In Dayton, Toniqua Hawkins, .
By Th·e Associated Press
for defense experts to compare
· House fires around Ohio have 11, died after a fire raced through
their test results with the FBI's
claimed the lives of three children her family's two-stOry frame house
results.
on the city's west side.
and an elderly man.
U.S. District Judge Charles
Fire department spokeSman Ed
The fJres occurred within hours
Haden
II agreed to move the trial
of each other Friday morning in Cross said the girl's 17-year-old
from
March
7 to May 16.
Coshocton, Dayton and Cincinnati. brother had heated up some oil· to
Assistant
U.S. Attorney Phil
In Coshocton, a 4-year-old boy cook french fries and fell asleep on Combs said federal a'ents "still
·
and his great-grandfather died in a thecouch.
have some (evtdence) ·ltemS we're
The
ftre
woke
the
teen-ager
at
blaze reported at II: 18 a.m., fire
rounding up." He said FBI test
Capt. Steven Fox said. The boy's 3:37 a.m. He screamed to. wake up
results
should be available to the
grandmother and IQ.month-old sis· his sister and 9-year-old brother,
defense
within about three .weeks.
then ran across the street to get
ter were injured and hospitalized.
Bailey,
34, is accused of abduct·
Killed were Qifford Hubble, 79, help from a neighbor, Cross said.
ing
his
wife,
Sonya Bailey, on Nov.
The neighbor was able to rescue
and his great-grandson, Joshua
26
and
abusing
her during a six-day
the brother, but ftrefighters found
McFarland.
trek
through
southern
West VirJudy McFarland, 47, was listed the body of the girl on a stairway
ginia,
eastern
Kentucky
and Ohio.
in .guarded condition early today at landing, Cross said.
He
was
arrested
after
he
carried
his
The 9-rear-old was treated at
Coshocton County Memorial Hos·
unconscious
wife
into
a
Corbin,
pital, said a nursing supervisa who Children s Medical Center for
Ky., hospital emergency room on
asked not to be identified. Brittany burns and released.
Dec. I.
Cross said the victim's mother
McFarland was in fair condition.
Rebecca Betts, U.S . .attorney for
Fire officials were still investi· apparently was at work when the
the-southern
district of West Vir·
fire started. He said there were
gating the cause, Fox said.
.
ginia,
said
Bailey
is the fust person
Coshocton is 64 miles east of smoke detectors iii the home, but chaiged under ·the Federal Violence
that they had no batteries.
Columbus.
Against Women Act of 1994. The
law, pan of the omnibus crime bill
Congress approved in August,
makes it a felony to cross a slate
line to abuse a spouse or domestic
Daily 9..6-9-9
By Tbe Assotialed Press
.
partner.
Cash
2-3-S-6-17·22
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 6-1-6
Pick 4: 4-1-S-4
Buckeye_5: 10.19-30.34·3~
Two Oh1o Lottery ·game uctets
show the winning five-number
combination (rom Friday night's
Buckeye S drawing. Each entitles
the owner to claim a $100,000
. prize, the lottery announced Saiur·
day.
· . The winning tickets were sold in
North Olmsted and Fairborn.
Sales for the Buckeye S game
DEUVEBED AND SPREAD!
totaled $537,974.
·The 181 Buckeye S tickets with
. •Top Soil
•Mason
four of the numbers are each worth
•Fill Dirt
-concrete Sand
$250. The 5,609 with three of the
numbers are each worth $10. The
•Pit Run .
•Driveway
57 :Z67 with two of the numbers are
each worth $1.
•Drainage Gravel ·
·The Ohio Lottery will pay
.'
$429,293.50 to winners in Friday's
•Pea Gr~vel
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
for the game totaled S1,477,896.SO.
•Drainage Tile
· · In the other daily game, Pick 4
)llumb.ers players wagered
•Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5')
$335,164 .SO and will share
•Block and Mortar Mix
$259;700.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lcitto drawing was $12 mil·
lion.
·
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: S-6-4

Th
d d h b d
'\ I 1
e goo an ' t . e . a of va entine's Day·

Tts the season 10 be manipula• women freedom figh
.
live and 10 unload guilt-ridden obli· Tubman s . 1 ters- Haniet honorary d~s and three chaired
gatory deferences to black histoly. Wells 8 • OJOumer Truth, Ida B. prof~rsh1ps, the !all· laJI!ty, gen·
Years ago, this annual commemo- Beth ~~
McCleod tle·mtened Franthn continues to
ration was an instructional broad·
une
on postage churn &lt;?UI boots. Between
ening of America's. ethnic hori·
Chuck Stone
~anusc.rtpts he spends )lis few
zOJ!S. Today, it has turned into 8
recreati~n~l hour~ tending his
reprise of the order given in the stamps.
.
.
award-wmrung otthids. •
moviccJassiccCasablanca: "Rounil ·
But black history_ or Negro
If, however, , a~ Antonio
up the usual suspects."
history or African-American histo- observed to Sebastian m The Tern·
A Southern newspaper did In . ry, depending upon ideological pest that "What's past is pro·
an undeserVed page-one story' on predilection _ has been pasteur· Iogue," !hen Franthn's life has
black history, it shamelessly repon- ized into academic imllotence. paved a hi~hway fiX' young history·
· ed that studen~ would learn all the Newspapers. in cities With large makers l~te Dwayne Ballen.
"encyclopedic facts about black black populations and a paucity of Recently hired as the anchor for a
history", and then reduce that mag- black reporters pay homage to new g'?IC television channel, the
nificent compendium to a tiny triad black history not because they ~fessmnally .seasoned Ballen, 33;
- George Washington Carver · think it inents recognition but . will be reportutg about a sport in
Booker T. Washington and ~ because they don't want 10 be which b~ks are in. as short a supLuther King Jr.
accused of racial insensitivities.
ply as whttc mallll! m a slam.iJunk.
But if students are to gain
No single African-American mg contest.
.
comprehensive and accurate symbolizes black ,history's
VALEDICTORY- Heracluus
account of black history, they also qUintessential integrity more was rig.~L ''.N?thing endures. but
must learn about revolutionary authoritatively than the ,...,..lilic his· change. This rs my last syndicalslaves - Cato, Denmark vesey, tori an, John Hope F~in. Only ed column. A few _daya ago at Har·
Gabriel Prosser and Nat Turner one African-American _ w.E.B. vard, Barbra s.tre~ gave. tihat
black-skinned versions of Ethan Du Bois_ is a fitting comJIB!i,son ~ould be any liberal s valedictory ·
Allen, Nathan Hale, George Wash· to Fnmldin's intellectual grandeur.
!nan e~oquent defense f!C liberalington and the Minutemen.
This year, this audacious apos!le 1sm. L!berals, she remmded us,
And they also must learn about of schohirship is celebrating his humant~ed Amencan ~emocracy
the powerful contributions of black 80th birthday, Holder.of over 100 bfiv lctadlng 1\lC human l'!ahts fight
or women, blacks, chtfdren, the

a

£!nr-C.~tF'l"'"
»rt:
~,

,. "N'T
c.rrND"' '~· vou
'' """

sum~ ~ 'U'I'C.

A
pi
• t I• •t•
bl
k
h
•
t
'
. . . ea aga1ns 1m1 1ng ac
IS ory s scope
:.!:'&gt;'

TNrt: IIHAAD
An

{JM. YOU'[ll; GQNNA i I "FLII

Common Sense: How Law i1 Suffocating America.
: in truth, the wheelchair-access requirement didn't till the idea of side·
jYallc toilets, although it has helped delay it
· But the public-toilet dispute illusbares the battles that loom betwoen
lawmakers bent on deregulation and citizens who invoke the )X'Oteetions
prilvided by laws.
·
· Government rules and regulations are blamed for boosting costs to
industry and creating a host of inconveniences. But who's to say which
laws are bad, and how they can be fixed? ·
· Many Republicans want to impose a moratorium on new government
tegulations and let Congress till any rules deemed too costly.
·
. . Senate Republicans have a top-10 list of regulations they want to
change or eliminate, including rules based on the Clean Air Act and the
l)azardous-waste cleanup Superfund.
'
.
- Howard's book, written from the corporate standpoint, appears 10 have
caught the deregulatory mood.
: "Increasingly, law makes us feel like it,i victims," he writes, ar~g
that senseless rules impose huge burdens on busineSs while often miSSing
~ dangers 10 health and safety.
· He has particular derision for those who write the laws:
• He marvels at the concise 1956 law that authorized the interstate
liighway system. Twenty-eight pages- compared to a 1991 transpona~on law that was 10 times as long.
.
• He calls the 36,000 pages of tax laws ''practically nothing but loop-

l'l'tAJ.r,s

1.\AYU:

CINCINNhTI (AP)- A man .
released after serving priso!l time
for fuebomb!JII! a Cincmnati abor·
tion clinic satd he has filed an
appeal to change what he called his
''Orwellian" probation restric-

war ·as his reference point. He
rtCalled lUg combat experience dur·
ing the Korean WIIC in which sol·
diers could count on generals
desc~nding from headquarters to
explain what went wrong after a
defeat and explain why it won't
haPpCII again. Rangel, who argued
agamst retreating from the deficit
battle, note4 bitterly that there had
been too little leadership overall.
"It would be a hell of a lot easier if
we all read from the same page,"
Rangel told us.
. .
Rep. Harold E. Ford;· D· Tenn.,
fumed over the need to proleel poor
children, who he complained were·
in essence bankrolling the bulk of
the middle-class tax breaks lhrougl.
proposed deep cuts in welfani

$8,4 99

1991 CHEVY S·10
LONG BED PICKUP
4.3 V6, 5 speed trans., A/C, cassette , tool
box, 49,702 low rniles, one local owner.
Black w/red stripe.

OUR I. OW PRICE

$617 99

Smith's GMC Truck Center, Inc. ,
•

133 PINE STREET

1·614·446·2532

'-

GALLIPOLIS

"" ~

r

�Page-A6-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

february 19,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point PIMaant, WY

'

--Area Deaths-- Black veterans'
Norman C. Biggs

By LINDA DEUI'SCH
AP Specjal Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - A detective
who claimed O.J. Simpson asked
no questions when told of his exwife's death retreated after being
confronted with his own .police
report Friday, acknowledging
Simpson said, "What do you mean
she's been ltilled?''
Detective Ronald Phillips under cross-examination by
defense attorney Johnnie Cochran
Jr. - said he recalled Simpson
askinjl the question during the early
mmung relephone conversation on
KEY EVIDENCE - Prosecutor Marcia
Angeles police dete~tive Tom Lange testlfted
June 13.
Clark returned a .bloody glove, a key piece Ill
durlng
tbe OJ. Simpson double-murder trial.
The detective also said that the prosecution evidence found near Nicole Brown
Llilige
is
one of the lead investigators In the
conversation lasted no more than a Simpson's condo, to a piiiStic bag Friday as Los
murders.
(AP)
minute and thai Simpson, who was
in Chicago, larer tried to call him
seen anything olher than photos of·
back at the police station:
cutor Marcia Oark gave the jury its stand.
Cochran also suggested that first look 8l the physical evidence
Detective Tom Lange identified the items. They were unveiled just
Simpson, who had taken a late- in the case, displaying a blue knit the glove as the one he saw at as court was recessed for the threenight flight 10 Chicago, was sleep- cap and a dark glove that were Goldman's foot, and said the knit day holiday weclcend.
The evidence is considered critiing when· he got the call at 6:05 found near the bodies.
cap appeared to be the one he saw
cal for the prosecution, which said
a.m. Los Angeles time, the mom- · Clark used the judge's pock- near the glove.
ihg after NiCole Brown Simpson etknife to open a cardboard box
When the cap was revealed, fibers like those from Simpson's
and her friend Ro~qld Goldman containing the items, which also Simpson turned to attorney Robcn Bronco carpeting were found on
were found slashed to death outside were individually wrapped in Shapiro and appeared to say, "That the cap along with hairs like Simpsoli•s. The glove is alleged to be
her condominium.
brown paper bags. Wearing rubber loolcs too smalfror me."
· Ending the day's testimony in gloves, she lifted the items out of · The presentation of the evidence the male of one found at Simpson's
powerfully dramatic fashion, prose- the bags and placed them on the marked the fii'St time the public has eswe.

o

GALLIPOUS - Clara B. Viars, 64. Gallipolis, died Saturday, Feb.
18, 1995 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
Born Feb. 18, 1931 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late James Monroe
and Verba C~x Layne, she was a home!llalter and a former employee of
Robbins &amp; Myers Electric Co.
·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Irwin H. Viars, on .
April 26, 1994; four sisters, Celestine Mercer, Gladola Mitchell, Leona
Runyon and Lucille Slcele; and two brothers. q,ranville Layne and Har·
land Layne.
.
.
Surviving arc a daughter and son-in-law, Diana Lynn and David
Gedeog of Athens; two sons and dauj!hters-in-law, Jeffery A. and Barbara
Viars, and Jody L. and Stephanie VW'S, all of Gallipolis; two grandchildren; a sister, Mal ville Maxwell of Gallipolis; and a brothC{. Uoyd Layne
· of Columbus.
·
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in lhe Willis Funeral Home, with the
Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial will be in the Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday from 6-8 p.m.

Deaths elsewhere
· John J. Louis
CHICAGO (AP) - John J.
Louis. whO -served as U.S. ambas·
5349_r I!J.Qreat Britajn from 198! to
1983, died Wednesday, He was 69.
Louis was chairman of Arizona·
based Combined Communication
Corp., when President Reagan
named him the nation's envoy to
London.
Combined Communication.
which Louis co-founded in 1968,
· owned the Oakland Tribune, the
Cincinnati Enquirer, seven 1V stationS and 13 tadio stations. It later
merged with"Gannett Co. Inc.,
owner of the nation_'s largest newspaper group.
Louis was a great-grandson of
the founder of S.C. Johnson &amp; Son
Inc .• makers of Johnson's Wax.
He was pan of the ownership of
the Chicago White Sox and later a
vice president of the Milwaukee
Braves. At one time, he was an
owner and director of the Braves,
after the team move4 to Atlanta.
Eric A. Walker
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (AP)
- Eric A. Walker, former presi-

dent of Pcimsylvania State University. died Friday of heart disease.
He was 84.
·
During his tenure, w~i~&lt;_h
stretched from 1956 to 1970.
enrollment at the university
increased from 13,000 to 40,000,
the faculty more than doublllll in
number and more than 100 buildings were consliucted.
.
Walker helped to establish the
National Academy of E~gineering
.and served as president from 1966
to 1970.
·
He received the White House
Citation from President Nixon and
the Department of Defense Public
Service Award.
David Elmer Ward
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- David
Elmer Ward, whose election to a
county judgeship at the age of 22
put h1m in the Guinness Book of
Records; died of cancer Thursday.
He was 85.
The eldest so~ of a farmer, he
graduated from high school at 16
and from law school at 20, He was
admitted to the bar by special
approval from the couns.
•

It now applies to anyone who
has failed to quit despire a doctor's
warning, "which is pretty much
everybody." said John P. Coale.
one of the plaintiffs' lawyers.
No doctor's note is required.
The tobacco companies want
lawsuits against them tried sepa·
rately. But plaintiffs' lawyers argue
that very few people can afford to
sue on thelf own.
RJ. Reynolds Tobacco Co. said
it will appeal Jones' ruling.
''This is an unprecedented
application of the class-action
rules," the company ~din a stBlC·
m_e~~er de~endants - l·ncl·uding
tobacco giants The American
Tobacco Co.; Lorillard Tobacco
.Co.; Philip Morris Companies Inc.;
and Liggett Group Inc. - either
said they could not comment
because they had not read the rul~
ing or did not immediately return

.

•

,
;
1

,

~

•

Slocombe said "it was clearly:
understood during the negotia-;
dons.''
He said North Korea must:
accept the reactors because Soutl\,
Korea was paying for a large por,tion of the new technology,
Pyongyang would receive and for
other reasons that he did notexplain in a presentation to the pri-'
Vale Center for Strategic and International Studies.

A11ANTA (AP) - The U.S. murder rate;-alfeady ~i'ibed by some
as an epidemic, will increase sluuply and lead to a " blood bath" within
the next docade as the nuinber of teenagers grows, a researcher says.
Murders committed by children aged 14 to 17 have increased by 165
percent since 1985, said James Alan Fox. dean of the College of Criminal
-Justice 8l NOI'II)eastem University.
·
That will surge even more as some 40 million young children mature
into their teens, Fox said.
·
· ·
"Unless we act today, I lruly believe we'll have a blood bath in 10
years when all these kids groiV up," Fox said Friday at the national meet-:
mg of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "l'mnot optimistic."
·
. Alfred Bh,unstein of Carnegie Mellof! University called Fox's descripbon "exccss1ve," but agreed thai Amcnca should brace for a spurt in lhe
national murdcl' rate.
"I do expect that as there are more ~p,le'in the high crirpe ages, of 14
to 24,1hen the rates will go up," he S81d. 'It will be a shift upward onlhe
order of 10 percent"
.
Murder rates among tcen_s actually dipt?ed in the 1970s. but surged
suddenly in the mid-1980s when crack cocame - and lhe guns lhat came
with it - became common on the streetS.
.
"With the inuoduction of crack, there' were ~ar more drug transactionsand lhe number of sellers expanded." Blumstein said. "If you're in the.
drug business, you have to carry a gun. :
"The more guns there were, the greater the incentive for a kid to get
one," he said. "Teenage fights, which are inevitable, escalated into
shootinJ~s."
·

Prosecutor unveils .dramatic
'evidence
..
.

· LOS ANGELES (AP) - After ness stand in front of Detective
days of drab police testimony, OJ. Tom Lange.
"It appears to be the glove thai I
Simpson's prosecutor ended the
week with a cinematic moment observed at the foot of Mr. Gold.
befitting a true murder mystery, man," testified Lange. ilii\:rring !0
dramatically unveiling a ski cap slaying victim Ronald Goldman.
Clark lhen pulled the blue cap
and bloody glove found at the
from
its sack.
crime scene.
"That also appears to be ihe
With plastic gloves covci'ing her
hands, Deputy District Attorney llluc knit stockmg cap that I
Malcia Clallc gingttly cxuacted the observed ncar .the glove." Lange
"
twQ. key pieces of evidence, first said.
Simpson,
watching
closely,
from a cardboard box, then from
turned and appeared to tell his
crumpled brown paper bags.
lawyer,
Robert Shapiro, "That
S(le ,laid the glove on the wit-

Our customers
apprecrate
perhaps the rarest
quality of all:

looks too small for me."
It was the fust display of physical evidence since the trial began,
and legal analysts said its timing
Friday was intended to leave jurors
with something 10 think about over
the three-day holiday weekend.
''The glove and hat made jUfOCS
forget lhe last two days of testimony. It opened a whole new chapter," said Loyola University law
professor Laurie Levenson. ''Testimony from police witnesses tends
to he rather dry. A hat and a glove,
wilhout saying a word, are much

CAROLL SNOWDEN

more interesting.··
Simpson is charged with murdering "e x-wife Nicole Brown
Simpson and her friend Ronald
Goldman on June 12. .
Prosecutors 5ay fibers found on
the hat match cilrpets in Simpson's
Bronco, and hairs on the hat are
similar to his. The glove matches
another blood-stained glove found
at Simpson's estate two miles ·
away, police say.
The defense says a police detective may have planted the glove to
frame Simpson . .

342 Secpnd Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph. 446-4290
Home 446-4518
I NlU. o\N CI

•

Like a good neighbor,
srare 1=11rm I~; rhere~ •
•cate •••m •n•urance companle•

Home Office•: Bloomington, llllnol•

QUALITY

THAT ENDURES.

Your Full Line
Satellite T.V. Dealer
Featuring;
Toshiba • Prlmestar •
RCA
POMEROY
Meigs County Dlsplly Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager

WE CAN CLEAR UP THE PICTURE!
Our Proa Have Over 17 Yeara of Experience
. In Satellite Sales &amp; Service To Answer
Your Questlona And End The Confusion I!

~
~

992·2588
VINTON

NORTHSTAR SATELLITE _
. AND TELEVISION

·

.

,•
~

sa 688**

,
..

~

'I'

Gallla County Display Yard
155 MainS!.

~

'

i"

.

240 UPPER RIVER RD. (1141-12 OR 1-800-217-1212 GAWPOUS, OHIO

\........,;=::,.~~...J ~

.----------------------------------·-------------. ~
Attention Meigs County R~sidents

I

• Extended Chassis
• Ori'er Side i'Jr Bag
• Anti-lock Brakes
• Air Condition
• AutomatiC O..erdrive
• Vi ~a Bay WrndoWs
• Power Steering

Meigs Memory Gardens Has Designed And Is Co~structing
~
'\
A Beautiful Garden Building Mausoleum .. ·
~
,•
We Are Offering Pre Construction Discounts Now!!!!
,.
""
••
. I~MEDIATEACTION IS RECOMMENDED!!!!!
•

• Power Brakes
, Tih Steer~g
• Cru1se
• AMIFM Cassette
• Power Windows
•·Power Lodc.s
• 4 Gaplain Cha1rs

No Doc Fees Dl!lnoeted'

.'94 CHEVY SUBUf\dAN 4x4

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP

BRAND NEW '95 CIEVY AStRO EXTEfiiED
.
.CONVERSIJN VAN

t..

• Sola/Bed •.
• lndrreclughlrng
• Prem1um WoOO Pkg.
· Full ConverSIOn
• Alummum Aunnmg Boards
• loaded!

• Rear Anl1-lock Brakes
• Power Steer1ng
• Power Brakes

350 V·B POWER,ISILVERADO

• Custom Cloth lntenOf
• Sreer Belled T1re s

··Silverado
.. · 4X4

• 350 H Power
• Auromat1c
• Air ConditiOn
• Rear Ar/Heal

~

• Cru1se Conrrol
• Tra1ler1ng Package
• Alummum Wheels

• Power Sreer1n g
• Power Brakes
• Power Door Locks .
• Power Windows
• AMifM Cassette
• T1lt Steermg

$18,988

~

~

'

_l!Q.Dot Fees DetYeruJ

:,

~

BRAND NEW '95 BIIClllfSABIIE

~
Take Advantage Of This Opportunity Today
Do Not Leave This Responsibility For Your Loved Ones To ~
..
Be Forced To Deai With When You Are Not There To Help. •

II'CkJOeS P{)"llOC

-~

t.r1&lt;lel :lO lnc;tl'l11Ve
NQ.llllotecl

4

~

~-------------------, l

For More Information
Cut Out Coupon And Mail To:
Meigs Memory Gardens
0

P.O. Box 85

Sales - Rental - Service

OH 45720-0085

HOME OXYGEN THEUPY
Respiratory Therapist - 24 Hour Emergency Service
We Bill Medicare, Medicaid, etc., for the patient:

Toll Free
1·800-458·6844

Jackson
286-7484 .

•

•".,:(/

___•_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

•·PHONE:

I
I
I
t
I

I
I

•

•

•.

)

• Power Steering
• ~ower !lrakes
• Power Door Loci&lt;s
•PowerWIIldows

• AMIFM Stereo
• Ttl! Steenng

• Custom Cloth 1n1er10r
• Loaaed!'

S25,888
No[);(; fees. Oeh~u!d'

NEW '95 PIIITlAC ~ SE
• ~· Coollion
• Dual Albag
d&lt; Stakes

• C"""' Coow~
• Delay Wl&gt;ers

· Custom

·

CkJth fnlefiOI'

•loo:led!

PARK AVENUE
· Alumlt'llmWhees
• Keyless Remole

·Entry SySiern
·Loaded'

1·1500

BRAND NEW
EXTENDED CAB 4x4
• SpM PackaQe

· 350 V·B P"""'

·PIS. PIS
• AMJFM Cassane

• A1r Conclthon

• Oustom ClOth lnt

• •Allloma!IC

~L____-

• Tilt, Cnne .

.. . .

_,-!II~-

.,

350 V-8 POWER

· Deluxe Front Bvmpe~

• Chrcxne Rear Step Bltnper
• Cast A!umii'IUm Whee~
• Well E~wect t

BRAND NEW
'95CHEVY
4x4 BLAZER'S

FRESH SHIPMENT!
lSAND LT'S

WE'VE GOT THEM ALL!

'
~

_I DATE OF BIRTH:....,.__ _ _ _ _ _
Free Valuable Gift
.
I
~
For Mailing In
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ •:
L...........................................................

-

\

I

I
~

• Anll-loci&lt; Blakes

,,

.,
'.,y

d

I

I

Home Owned and Operated

Gallipolis
446-7283

iADDRE~S:·

1

1 NAME:

• A1rCona111on
• 3600 V-6 Power
• r)ual A1rbags

' '&amp;alef'nre

~

Nye the Science Guy.
'

J

~

Oil use disagreement
clouds .nuclear accord

By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASHINGTON- The U.S.
accoot with Ncx'th Komi 10 halt its
suspect nuclear prog!BIII, already in
jeopardy over the communist
reg1me's refusal to accept South
Korean reaators, is running into
another problem: How 500,000
m_etric tons of U.S. fuel oil will be
used.
The fii'St shipment. 50.000 metric tons, has arrived in North Korea
for use in a civilian ·thermal power
plant. The idea is to wean Nonh
Korea away from using an experimental reactor thai is believed to be
part of an ambitious nuclear
·weapons program. .
calls.
.
But over U.S. objections, North
It will be months before the 60
hiw fmns that joined to me the suit Korea intends to divert some of the
start ·signing up plaintiffs, said fuel to military purposes, and the.
RiChard Heimann of San Francisco, dispute is now in negotiations with
whose f11111 is among those pledg- li'yongyang along wilh the one over
South Korean reactors, Dc&amp;nse
ing $100,000 each toward the suiL
The lawyers must first give Undersecretary Walter Slocombe
Jones a proposal for notifying said Friday. "We have told them
potential plaintiffs. Then the tobac- expressly not to usc the fuel for
co companies get to respond. Then military purposes," the Pentagon
official said.
·
Jones decides whBl makes sense.
At the same time, he acknowlThe lawsuit was filed by Dianne
Castano, whose husband died of edged the agreement reached lasi
lung cancer, and smokers Ernest October did not explicitly require
Richard Perry Sr., T. George North Korea to replace the rcactot
Solomon and Gloria Scott, all of and two others near completion
with two light-water reactors. .
New Orleans.

~

Top programmers
resign from PBS
NEW YORK (AP) ~ T1110 of
lhe Public Broadcasting Servite's
top programmers, including its firSt
chief programming executive, have
resigned. ·
Ch'ief programmer Jennifer
Lawson and her senior vice prcsidenl; John Grant, said they will
leave lhe service on March 10. PBS
President Ervin S. Duggan
announced their resignations Friday in a news release from PBS
headquarters in Alexandria, Va.
.
· Bolh LawSO!l and Grant blamed
their dcpanurc on Duggan's decision earlier this monlh 10 split PBS
into three operating divisions.
.
"I've been here now for five
years and it's been five wonderful
years.'' Lawson said in a telephone
mtcrview . ."1 wouldn't even consider this, had not my role ... within
the compantcc~ged."
·
Lawson
e PBS • fust chief
programmer in 1989. During her
tenure, PBS aired its two mostwatched series. The Civil War and
Baseball by Ken Bums. She also is
credited with launching PBS' Chil. dren's lnitiatiye, which nearly doubled PBS' preschool viewership. ·
·Grant oversaw PBS' coverage
of the Gulf War in 1991l'and negotiated PBS' pannerships with NBC
for 1992 election coverage and
with Disney on the popular Bill

HAIR STYLING COMPEllJION- Senior eo~metology stu·
dent Billie Butcher demonstrated her sldlls, usia11 Pauline Wolfe of
Racine as her model, at Thursday night's VICA competition held
at Meigs High School. The winner of tbe contest, Trlsh MaHafrle,
advances to the reglonals which will be held March 4 at Nel·
sonviDe's Tri-County Vocational School.

Judge says smokers
may join in lawsuit

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Anyone who _has ever ignored a doctor's advice to quit smoking can
join a class-acbon lawsuit that
accuses tobacco companies of
manipulating nicotine levels to
hook smokers, a fcdcral judge says.
The ruling Friday by U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Olda Jones n means that
as many as 50 million people
would be eligible to join the lawsuit, according to the )udge and
lawyers.
·
The suit was filed by a smoker's
widow and three current smokers
who say they're unable to shake
their addicuon. They claim the
tobacco companies covered up
. knu·v~w
.: ledge thai nicotine was addic~

Researcher warning
of murder 'epidemic'

Detective recalls
O.J. asked about.
Nicole's murder

Oscar Collins

Clara B. Viars

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A7

Defense
scores
points

heroism hailed
50 year$ later·

POMEROY - Ncrman Qlester Biggs, 70, Dawnpm, Fla., a former
Pomeroy resident, died Thursday, Feb. 16, 1995 in a Davenpon hospital.
He is survived by two sons. David and Michael of Dayton; a daughla';
Kim Hugill of Columbus; a sister, ·frances Adkins of Pomeroy; a brolher,
Nathan Biggs of Pomeroy; and several niece8 and nephews.
He was preceded in dealh by a son, Kent; his parents, Anhur and Ollie·
Biggs; five brothers, Baxil, James, Ralph, Dorset and Alfred; an infant
By DARLENE SUPERVD..LE
told," Dalton said following the
sister; and another sister. Elizabeth Congrove.
Alsoclated
Preas
Wrller
ceremony.
The body is being cremated and there will be no services. His ashes .
WASHINGTON- It lOOk SO
Graham, retired since 1986from
will be returned to Miamisburg for burial.
years but the crew of the only television repair work, said he
World War II Navy warship didn't know whether foolishness or
manned by blacks has been offi- heroism led the crew across a mcncially recognized for risking their acing ocean made even more
GALLIPOLis -Services for Oscar Collins. 70, 10108 B.aypon.
on a stormy Nonh Atlantic treacherous by lhe German U·boats
Louisville KY.·• who died Friday, Feb. 17, 1995 in the Jewish Hospital, lives
voyage
in 1944.
lurlting below the surface.
Louisville: will be I p.m. Monday in the Henderson (J/.Va.) Church of
Every man on the USS Mason, a
But lheir actions and detenninaChrist.
destroyer-escort,
was
praised
for
tion
helped remove barriers and
Evangelist Sam Gwinn will officiate and burial will be in the Ohio
heroism
and
outstandmg
pcrforpush
the U.S. military to\fard full
Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the Willis Funeral Home on manec. But the official commcnda· mtegration,
according to the elocuSunday from 7-9 p.m.
'
tion
didn't
come
until
Thursdaymenlal)o,
which!
was shown during
Pallbearers will be John Haffclt, Sam Long, Steve Pearson, Man
hal( a century after the historic lhe ceremony at the Navy MernoriCollins. Tim Lasseter and Howell Lasseter.
al.
. Honorary pallbearers arc Clayton M. Coli~. Walter 0. "Red" Eads transatlantic adveniUre. ·
"I'm
very
grateful
aild
I
feel
so
were all v~ young and it
Jr., Randy Gillespie, Junior F. Baker, Monty Pearson and Gary Lee happy about the whole thing," was"We
a fact of just domg our duty,"
Collins.
James Graham, a radio operator said Graham of Roosevelt, N.Y.,
aboard the Mason. said at a cere- who has devoted the rest of his life
mony.
to telling the story. "In those days
Navy Secretary John Dalton black guys were always proving
MASON, W.Va. - Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday in the Foglesong
presented the honors to the 72- themselves."
•
Funeral Home for Rolland P. "Gibby" Gibbs, 75,l.etart, W.Va., who died year-old Graham and II crew
In the book published this
Thursday, Feb. 16, 1995 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
members, who bear-hugged and month by lhe Navallnstirute Press,
The Rev. George Hoschar and the Rev. Rankin ROach will officiate.
slapped each other's baclcs.
crew members recall the 31 stormy
Burial will be in the Zerldc Cemetery. Military graveside rites will be
In October 1944, the Mason days spent at sea. They also talk
conducted by Stewan-Johnson Post No. 9926 of the VFW.
guided pan of a convoy of Army about service in a segregated Navy
Born OCt 5, 1919 in the Salem communily, son of the late Dewey and tugs and barges to England lhrough · thai had assigned most blaclcs to be
Willia Edwards Gibbs, he was an electrician. A U.S. Navy veteran of .90 mph winds and 40-foot waves. cooks and waiters, and tbe ~:.­
World War 11, he was a member of Stewan-Jolmson Post No. 9926 of the .After malting land, brave crewmen diec and discrimination they
VFW and IBEW Local No. 183, Lexington, Ky.
.
climbed on deck to weld cracks
Charles Divers of Maywood,
Surviving are his wife, Mona Edwards Gibbs; two daughters and sonsthai threatened to tear the ship apart IlL, believes white Navy higlicr-ups
in-law, Ramona and Dean Knight of New Haven, W:Va., and Renita and before they went bact to sea to~- quashed the recommendation
Donnie Roush of Gibbstown, W.Va.; two sons and daughters-in-law, Rol- cue the rest of lhe rugs.
.because of tht. skin color of the
land "Sunny" and Connie Gibbs, and "Keith and Micbelle Gibbs, all of
A recommendation for letters of Mason's 160-member crew.
Gibbstown; 10 grandchildren and II great-grandchildren; six sisters. Eliz- commendation from the convoy's
"They didn't want us 10 do 100
abeth Johnson of Broad Run. W.Va.. Maysel Zerkle of Mason, Dorothy commander somehow got buried in good," said Divers. 73. a quarter·
Fields and Grace Goodnight, bolh of Hartford, W.Va., and Janice Goodthe Navy Archives and was only master aboard the Mason. "They
night and Sandra MacKnight, both of New Haven; and ·a brother, Jack discovered during research for a didn't expect us to succeed to the
Gibbs of Gibbstown.
recent book and documentary film degree we did.
He was also preceded in death by two brothers. William Clibbs and on the Mason.
"I'm just glad I was able to live,
Danny Gibbs; and a great-grandson,lsaac David Foreman.
. ''I think its an impor11int part of long enough to receive this lhing,"
Navy history that needs to be Divers. a retired electrician, said.

Rolland P. 'Gibby' Gibbs

Nation/World

February 19, 1995

...
r
4

TOLL FREE 1·B00~822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947 • 422.fJ756

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon - 6 pm

I

�'

•

Ongoing probes tarnish
Cli~t~n's image on ethics ·
,ar.s I6ind
ObseI...r"'
J
Ja/,S
D• C• ScanUu
n0f UnCOmmon

VERDICT AWAITED - CoHo J1er1uson, ltft, ud Ilia ltpl
advisor, Alton Rose, listened as the jury
DOlled Friday at tbe
·end of Ferauson's trial In the Nassau County Coartbouse In Mine·
ola, N.Y. Ferpson, who refused to plead IDsiDity IDd wqed his
own bizarre defense, was mnvicted .of marderlng six riders and
woundinK19 In a methodical sllootilla spree 011 a crowded Loo1
Island Railroad commuter train in December 1993. .(AP)
·

w•

Victims' survivors ·
satisfied with verdict
in commut~r killings

By PAT MILTON
Associated Press Writer
· ~OLA, !'I.Y. - .In a co~roolJl packed wtth SDrVIVOIS of his
auack and families of his victims,
the man accused of gunning .do~
SIX peDJ.lle on a.commurer ~ listened ImpaSSively . as the JUry
reiUrned the verdict even he
expec~:
.
·.
.
9u1hy .. Guii!Y. Gu1lty. Gu1lty.
Gwlty. Gwl~.
· ·
A smatteml! of app~use ~~e~ the first gu11ty verdiCt Fndl!y
. mght, and the courtroom erupted m
. cheers when .a handcuffed ·Colin
. :Ferguson was led out by coun offi·
.. cers. J~ foreman ~lton Dove .sat
: :If! the JUTY box, Cl)'lng and claspmg
. h1s arms.
. .
. Fergu.son, who faces hfe 1ft
·pnson, wtll be sentenced March 20.
"I'm sure he's suffering now
and that makes me feel gOod;" said
' :Roben Giugl~, a passenger .who
: ·was shot point-blank in the chest
. but recovered to restify against Fer·
: .guson.
:: "I never want 10 hear his name
: again," said Carolyn McCanhy,
· whose husband was killed and son
: Kevin crippled in the massacre.
"He's not worth my thoughts. He's
not worth my time."
; Ferguson, armed with a 9mm
. semiauiOmatic pistol, walked down: the aisle of a crowded Long Island
; Rail Road train on Dec. 7, 1993,
· firing randomly at commuten. He
~illed six and wounded 19; the
killing spree ended only when Ferguson, attempting to reload, was
: taclcled by passengers.
, His legal adviser, A110n Rose,
' said Ferguson was "unfazed" by
: the verdict and surprised only by
.
... the · 10 d 11.be
. how Iong 1' 100~
Jury
e r·
. ate- about 10 hours.
, · 'file conviction ended an often
• surreal three-week trial in which
: Ferguson refused his lawyers'
: advice to plead insanity and instead
: condqcred his own bizarre defense.

He claimed a white man stole
his au10matic weapon and opened
fue while he slS~t: lried 10 subpoena President ChniOn and ex -Gov.
Mario Cuomo· and announced
there was a m~rder conspiracy
against him that was linked 10 the
prison slaying ofJeffrey.Dahmer.
His defense consiSICd of a single
witness - a Nassau County homi·
ci!le detective !~~ready called by the
prosecution. In his closing argoment, Ferguson accused the surviv·
ing victims of conspiring with
police to implicate him
All but two .of the .i9 surviving
victims testified against Ferguson.
'The fust person shot on the train,
Maryanne Phillips, coolly told him
during the trial, "I saw you shoot
me" _ a scene that was repealed
..
over and over m the Long Island
counroom.
. . •
The parade of VICUms IIICluded
~evi~ M.cCartby, wbos~ ~at~er
d1ed m ~IS lap on the tram, L1sa
Combatti, who w~ seven months
pregnant when shoe; and war ve~­
an Thomas McDermott, who wd
th~ c~age W~· w~rse than ·anythmg he d seen m YICII!IM.
.
Ferguson was conviCted on SIX
munler cluuges, 19
murder char~es, two cou_nas o weapons
. possess1on and a smgle count of
reclcless endange~t.
.
~e.wa_s aequ!tled.of 25 cou~ts
of ciVIl nghts v1olau~s. al!el\mg
he targe~ed_ t~e shQoUng v1cllms
~use 0~ thelf mce. .
He d1d shoot white people,
black people, Japanese P,CDP~ he 8!W' ev~!YOJ!C· ~~ wasn 1 racially
mo~~aled, S81d J!'fOr ~ H~k­
er. He was a~atnst soc1ety, he
haled everyone
During the 'jury's closed-door
di
·
F
• · 1
SCUSSIORS, crguson s piSto was
placed at the cen~ of. the table.

B• SANDRA SOBIERAJ
'
Assocl!!ted Prall Writer
WASHINqroN- ~.IICX
and t1!e II'!'Pptngs. of I!"Vil~ge. At
!he midpomt of Bill Clinton s pres·
1dcncy, one or another has already
toppled.one &lt;;aJ!inct official, fll!='
the res1gna~ons ~f ~veri! at~es
and ~ .mvesuganons ~ggmg
other off1c1als and the Chntons
thcm'Thesel ves._ f • inal and thi
.
. 11 ~ o cnm
·e cs
mvesugauons has ~en ll!'me of
the .gloss ~ff an ~niSlratlon that
amv.e d m Washmlj:ton full. of
prom1ses to set the h1gbest ethical
stan~.
.
.
~pcc1al prosecutoiS l!fC m-:esugaung two.cases - one mvolvmg a

forme~ agn~ture ~tary ru;td the

oth~r mvolv1!'g t1!e Clmtons past

bus mess dealings m Arkansas.
There are preliminary criminal
· · · ·
di
.
mvcsbgan.ons pen °1! agamst ~wo
moo: Cabmet secretanes. And Cd·
eral Pf?SilCUIOTS have bee!' asked to
mv~Ugate another W~lte House
ad':'.ftriloes appear to be an unusually high number under investiga·
lion or fon:cd to resiRR because of
scandal," said government professor Larry J Sabato of the UniveiSi·
ty ofVirgi~ia
"But you ·probably would have

had at least as many under a ciOud
in the Johnson alkllinislration if the
press had scrutinized them as
closely," he said.
Indeed, every administration
seems touched by scandal.
But Sabato say~ the American
public is more cynical and the news
media more ag1ressive when it
comes to the transgressions of the
Clinton White House, in part
bec•t•se Clinton himself invited the
scrutiny
· ~ghoul the 1992 campaign,
Clinton pledged stricter ethics for
federal offiCials and iii his inauguraJ address he called for political
reform that would shun ~ and
"penonal advailtage."
. On his fllllt day in office, the
new president signed an executive
order barring senior appointees
from cenain lobbying posi~ions
after they leave govemmenL
Less than nine months later, a
federal prosecutor was asked to
investigate whether a failed
Arkansas savings aad loan illegally
• litical
·
81·ded Clin
•
ton s po
camJl81RRS
or Whitewater real estate venture.
Then there's Paula Jones, who
filed a sexual harassment suit
apinst the president last May.
."It is a sign of our times that
people can .kick up a ci?ud of dust
and allegauons can swtrl an~ ~
the~ get a great deal of atiCDbOI!White Ho~ ~secretary Mike
McCurry S81dFriday when asked
about officials who bave come
undrr an ethical cloud.

I!NIDI!ANA
JONIESo
Kyger Creek Juni~r
Archaeological Society
By USA PETERSON

"J" TOWING

Day Phone: 614-949-3117
Night Phone: 614-949-2355

.

AAA SOUTH CENTRAL OHIO
360 2nd St., Gallipolis

446-0699

.••
''

'

Cabin
·fe\'er
Sale
.

•
,.

~
'"
''

'

••

r

•
,.
'('

~

rr
f

f'

•

Brave the Cold Outside and·Warm Up to
Red Hot Savings Throughout the Store!

••

•
r

'•

••
•'

auemr=

'

••

••

•

,.

SPI!CU~l NOTEz We here at MASON FURNITURE have
"Cabin Fever" and ao do. . our dally aole• report! No11V we're
doing aomethlng about ltl ALL PRICES REDUCED!

'

.:.•,
•

.'··

I

elected officers recognized at
the state level and will have
their group listed in the spring
edition of the Ohio Archaeologist, the society 's official
publication.
As an official chapter the
group will also have an
opportunity to make·a presentation' to the March meeting of
the state society March 19.
They will present a minisession entitled "The March of ·
Masks," feature replicas of
Native American masks and
other artifacts which the
student members have·created .
A video of the student
member's last meeting including a problem-sol.ving activity '
and a replica workshop will
·also be shown . The students
performed all the researcb
behind the masks and the
activity. This will be the first
time that an ASO mini-session
has ever been presented by a
group of children.
The development of the
presentation stemmed from a
discussion with President
Sherry Peck and Ruth Warden
of the WRVD Chapter of the .
ASO on anifact preservation.
Warden sees the group as
being more than just the first
archaeology club.
· "The thing I like best
about this is that it recognizes
-students with a common ·
interest without having to be ·
labeled," she said.
"This is a group they can
. identify with."
And as other extracurricular activities suppon
certain qualities such as

'•

leadership or discipline so
does the archaeology club.
"I hope it's developing
their critical thinking skills.
Something they need to
survive," Warden said. "I
know it's building their self-

'•

I,

'·
'

·-'

Talbot S81d. I ~~ wiSh there was
1
a death penal Y·

..
.,
~

••

'

students. Warden says that
students that move up to the
high school are still welcome as
members .

con-fidence." ~

or rogue countries could obtain
nuclear weapons.
Der Spiegel said the intelligence
repon counted 124 cases of nuclear ·
smuggling worldwide in 1994,
more than double the 53 cases
known in 1992. It said five of the
1994 cases involved weaponsgrade maierial.
·one growing source of the
stair.
G'""any is a trarisit region for smuggled materials was office111 of
black-market radioactive materials the Russian navy submarine force,
.
from former Spviet bloc countries. Der Spiegel said.
The
United
States
and
Germany
Security at those countries' nuclear
have
spearheaded
effons
to help
facilipes declined with the collapse
Russian
authorities
stop
the
smugOf COI"mumsm. . .
.
gling
and
increase
security
at
~~ year, small amounts of plunuclear
weapons
facilities
and
toniupl and enriched uranium suitable for making nuclear weapons power plants where poorly paid
were. seized-for the fOist time, rais- workers are templed to steal the
ing the ·alarm that terrorist groups materials.

. BERLIN (AP) - Known cases
· of smuggling of radioactive mareri·
: a1s b&lt;Jve more than doubled in the ·
' past two years, the news magazine
Der Spiegel reponed Saturday.
D,r Spiegel said the f1gures
were contained in a repon by Ger·
many's Federal Intelligence Service for Chancellor Helmut Kohl's

•,

..
.,

~

.•'
I

''•
•
''•
•

MASK MAKING • Lindsey Nida, left, Derick .
Daniels and Jessica Hungerford of ~the Kyger Creek ·
· Junior Chapter of the Archaeological Society of Ohio
make masks for the groups prese!!taUQn of "The March
of~asks"at the state meeting March 19.

The society also seems to
be instilling a sense of
responsibility. The children
stay after school for special
projects imd attend meetings
during their summer vacation.
They raise their own funds
for field trips and for membership dues. In fact, they
. frequently have a higher
amount in their savings
· account than most adult
chapters.
Though the group now is
fifth through eighth grade, •

"Older kids that are really
interested can serve as mentors," Warden said.
There are several children
that she expeCts to continue in
the group b~yond the eighth
grade.

Parents and faculty have
given the group wide support.
Kyger Creek's Parent
Teacher Organization provided
the seed money for the organization and parents volunteer
time for meetings and activities.
There are five to six parents '
at every meeting, Warden said .
' "They jOst jump in when
th~ y are needed,". she said.
The group has received
some recognition at the stale
level. Cecilia Goett entered ari
artifact at the slate ASO exhibit
· and received a ribbon for the
best junior personal find . And
· the group will featured in the
spring issue of Ohio Ar~hacul­
. 08)1· .

The ASO has a total Qf 23
chapters and approximately
3,000 members.•- -- - - --

Evolving dinosaur museum offers more than dty bones of science

H.OWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX ·SERVICE
•

Computerized Tax Returns

Phone 992·7036

.

·..,:

After~~ .~crdlct, J~ Thomas

Eveiling and Weekend
: Appointments .

Times-Sentinel Stair
CHESHIRE • A group of
students at Kyger Creek
Middle School are making
history as they look back into
it. Under the supervision of
Ruth Warden, the school has
the state's first and only junior
chapter of the Archaeological
Society of Ohio (ASO).
The project began when
Warden made a presentation to
students on her membership in
the Lower Ohio River Valley
Basin Chapter (LORVD),
Patriot. The students were so
interested they approached her
with the idea of staning-up
their own chapter:
Sixty students, fifth
through eighth grade, re.sponded when Warden held an
organizillional meeting and the
Kyger Creek Junior Chapter of
the Arch·aeological Society of
Ohio was founded . The chapter
received its chaner May 22,
1994 and began holding
meetings the first Wednesday
of every month.
The gro~p 's activities
include searching for anifacts
in the spring and summer, and
archaeology studies. Their
ani fact hu!ltS are generally in a
field across from the middle
school, with the permission of
the landowner.1The group goes
on field trips. Last year they
visited S~~nt Mound ~tnd this
· year w.ill visit Mound City.
As a chapter of the slate
organization the group enjoys
all the benefits that comes with
membership. They have

NEW EMERGENCY ROAD
SERVICE CONTRACTOR
FOR MEIGS COUNTY

LUCKY

February 19, 1195

YOUING

\

, N(Jclear material smuggling.
: up significantly, rept;Jrt says .

•

.

'

She noted new disclosure
requirements and independent
counsel laws were in place before
Clinton came to office. "What I
don't unde111tand is"why the Clln·
ton administration seemed so
unprepared," she said.
RON BROWN
The list of Clinton apt&gt;Ointees
Cisneros lied about payments 10 his
under lnvesti~ is lfOWIRg.
, The Jusuce Department said 'former mistress during an FBI
ThUISday it's conductio' a prclimi· background check for his 1992
nary criminal investigation to . nomination 10 the CabincL
determine whether a special proseAnd federal prosecutors have
cuiOr is needed 10 investigate Com· been asked to investigate whether
mcrcc Secretary Ron Brown's per· White House adviser Ira Magazincr
sonal fiDBIICes.
lied under oatil about the activities
Justice is already looking into of the hc!alth reform task force
whether Housing Secretary Henry headed by Hillary Rodham Clinton.

'

Section. B ·

•

Suzanne Garment, a scholar at
the American Entaprilc Institute
who bas written extensive!)' on
political scaod•I•. said the Clinton
administration is "making the
same mistakes as their prcdeces~''

~hnts-itntintl

Along the River

February 19, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolis, OH Point PI-nt, WV

Timet Sentinel

MASON FURNITURE. COM'PA.N·Y
"90 Day s Same As Cash'

2nd St1eet

By J.L. HAZELTON
_tion," president Ellen V. Futter promised in a recent interview at the pink
, ·Associated Press Writer
nco-Gothic castle-looming over Central Park.
' NEW YORK (AP) -The 94-foot blue whale dives forever into noth·
Putter, who came 10 the museum late in 1993 from her post as head of
ingncss, its hairy, stuffed neighbo111 frozen midslride at what generations Barnard College, is mustering its resources 10 benefit the 3-million-plus
of schoolchildren have known as the dinosaur museum.
visitoiS who IQ8III annually through its 24 interconnected buildings sprawl·
Now in its 125thyear,oneoftheworld'slcadingsciencemuscumshas ing over 18 acres.
.
walled 10 find itself in the midst of the Information age. It's not just the dry
· Her goal: ''Enhancing the science lireracy of the entire nation."
bones of science on show these days at the American Museum ofNatwal
One Ooor up from her office, the two sunwashed new halls meant to
History.
·
C8fi'Y visitoiS along mammals' evolutionary tree of life are packed with the
Today tiny, filmed projections of la'Chacologists stroll abouta model bones of mammals and their ex,tinct relatives.
dig expllining their work. Nearby, students roll joysticks on video games
. The unuSual evolutionary app10ach means humans are grouped with
explaining how· hwnans came 10 be.
one of their closest relatives: the bat.
Don't fear for the dinosaUIS, though. They're still here•. As are the
The new halls fearure videotapes of scientists explaining their work and
Slrips of-soil mounted behind glass- "actual sections dug from the . intaactivecomputerstationsbulgingwithdataonmammalsandtheirenvi·
groundM -along with Teddy Roosevelt's hata, MlrpretMead's walking ronment and explanations on fmding, collecting. preparing and studying
sticklnand thehalldisplaytheon ~~~~ :~~::e· . to . W
.
fossils.
.
.
,
one
way,
.,.~ · - - ........es 10 115 y~g
It's all designed to help visiiOIS understand the planet's present and
den, while in a diRencd room nearby, the latest in a &lt;Wades long line of make decisions about its furure by explaining its pasL Four additional halls
toddlers Sl8llds tniiSfllled before the African Buffalo - "Wow,look how are due to open by next year. ·
big they are!"
·
About 250 creatures are on display. All told, the museum houses 30
"We're going topescrve those things that mate ita beloved institu-

•

.

million specimens and anlfoclS.
·
Off the exhibition floor, work goes on in the molecular biology lab,
seminars and conferences flourish, and expeditions span the globe. Recent
fmds include a new lemur in Madagascar and an embryonic dinosaur in the
Gotii descn.
Another example of what's new is the overhauled exhibit on human
biology and evolution. II ranges from the struclllfll of DNA 10 the blossom·
ing of an in the Ice Age. In one particularly cheelty display just past the
hologram that replaced the plasti£ Transparent Woman, a skeleton family
and their skeleton dog watch a nonskeletal basebu.ll player talk about
muscles and joints on a nonskeletal television.
·
· Farther along, Lucy strides through a diorama with another Aus·
tralopitbccus afarensis at her side. It's a grand R~plication of the sll"'ll that .
could have created the Tiutzanian footprints showing thai pre-humans .
reared up on their hind legs to walk.
. . ESl.ec~J90
1i icthroinnovahtions ifnclude Ex~ tions, an audio guide with a
IWJSL 11"0 ng
ug any o the museum s permanent exhibition halls
triggers a narrative overview' complete with sound effects and music.
An aciOrreprescnting Admiral Roben Peary, for example, talks about
fmdingthe 34-ton Cape Y.or1c meteorite and delivering it to the museum in
1897.
"
.

1

40

I

(304) n:J-5592
I

Jeannie Howell, E.A.

·--

~

..

.--'

-

'

r

.-

.'

�•
I

Times

Sentinel

MELISSA LLEWELLYN AND TODD WORKMAN

Llew~llyn-Workman

VICTORIA -PEAVLEY AND BRUCE WILSON

Peavley~ Wi Ison

resides in Washington Court
House.
Her fiance is a the son of James
and Donna Wilson of Clarksville.
He is a graduate of. Clinton-Massie
High School, received an associate
degree at Southern St~te and
allCnded Wright State Umvets~ty.
He is employed by Kurz-Kasch m
Wilmington.
The wedding will beJWle 17.

ALBANY - David and Jane
Llewellyn of Albany announce lhe
engagement and approaching ~ar­
riage of _their daughter, Mehssa,
and Todd Matthew Workman, son
of T.K. and Mildred Workman of
Rutland.
The
ate of
Vocational

Hocking College. She is also
employed by Signature and Works
of Athens. The prospective bride- .
groom is a 1993 graduate of Meigs
High School ana is employed at
Jim Frecker's Delta Metals of Middlepon.
The wedding is planned for July
29 at the Mount Union Baptist

GALLIPOLIS - Dorthy B.
Williams will be the keynote
speaker at the' Gallia/Hocting
Fourlh Annual Black History program 10 a.m. Feb. 2S at Paint
Creek Baptist Church.
The program will incl~~ special awards and recogn1t1on to
those in the community, a quiz,
dinner and Black history displays
and memorabilia.
She has a bachelor of arts
degree from Allen University. a
master's of arts degree from the
University of Alabama. She has
studied further at Wayne State,
U.S. Space AC&lt;Idemy and the U.S.
Department of Energy.
She is a member of the Legisla·
live Contact Team Professional
Education of Tuscaloosa, Ala.,
Superintendent's Advisory Council
Professional J;ducators of
Tuscaloosa City School System,
Leadership Development Fellow
1968-69, Ford Foundation, Vice
President American Associlltion of
University Women (A:'AUW), ~­
torian Emeritos Alabama AssociBtion of Woman and Youth Clubs
-lnd the Bailey Tabernacle CME
Church.

She has also been listed in tile
Who's Who of IntelJec:tll•l•. ~s
Who of American Women artd
Who's Who in the South anJI
Southwest
Williams was born Dec. 15,
1939 in Florence. S.C. and is ~­
ried to lames Arlhur Williams college professor of vocal music @I
Wilberforce University. She h!5
three children Angela, Melody · ~
Jirnniy ID.
~
In 1990 the Williams family
was named ''Family of lhe Year" iJ)
Tuscaloosa
a "James Arthur
Williams
Day" . was pro:
:
claimed in

...

Entries can be mailed to:
..· .
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce_
· 16 State Street, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563L ·::;
Prizes ·will be awarded to the top four entries.
M:.."

-

. ·-&gt;

. Jlitime~_____:___________~ --

Fat &amp; Fiber Plan
Florine Mark
Area Dtredor
lmt 50 pounm artd. hos

kept

it-lor 27

yeo'$

Address_ _ _ , . - - - - - - - - - - - -

can work lor yw,
roo. lr• ea•y·to

follow, and

~~'
Phon~'--~----------------~--~

PLAN

CALL (800) 487-4777

Maynard-Barrett
POMEROY - Jim and Betty
May113rd, Pomeroy, anno!lnce the
englljlement and &amp;pptoaching f!18r·
riage of their daughter, Melissa
May113rd •. to Jamie Barrett, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barrell,
Lan~sville.
·
Tile bride-elect is a 1993 gradu·
ate Qf Meigs High School and is
attending Hocking College ·majoring ill business manag~t

Her fi3Rce is a 1992 graduate of
Meigs High School and is studying
telecommiUiications and broadcasting at Hocking College.
The open church weddi11g will
be held I :30 p.m. May 27, at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene.
A reception will follow at the
American Legion Hall in New
Haven, W.Va

ST. PETER'S
EPISCOPAL (HURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue:
7 p.m.
Wed: 9:30 a.ttl

LEWIS FAMILY
RESTAURANT

966 E. Main Sl.
Man: 6:30 p.m.·
,:

Elq)IIU Meeting

•Contest deadline: Tuesday, February 28, 1995•

·Contest promotions have been made possible
....
through the sponsorship of the
··
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Magic 101 Radio.

emment of the province of lower
Austria, in cooperalion with Feder·
al Agencies of Austria, plan ·to
organize an official act in Erlauf,
Lower Austria where American
and Soviet soldiers met in 194S.
Veterans of lhe 261st Infantry
are being invited to visit for the
celebrations as official guests of
the govemp1ert1 of .Lower Austria.
That govtrnment is ready to deliay
all expenses of the journey and
accommodations. Now is that a
deal"er" what?
Guido Girolami and Joe Young
of Meigs· County were both wilh
the 261 sL If you, too, served with
lhat combat group just get in touch
with Guido, in Pomeroy, and let
him know if you're interested in
making the trip.

Harrison-Haas

1_

~

J_.·

Recognized African-American poet began in Gallipolis

l

.·

I

I
l
l

i

1-..

u..

Mason-An.gel.

l

a.

Am
Milt

:Z
wa

•:z

.u

;z

=--

a

ever MasterCard is accepted; you can use
.Jeanie Plus as a debit card with your checking · ·
account.

JENNIFER HAWK AND JEFFREY BOYD

H~wk-Boyd

pany in Apple Grove, W.Va. .
Bo d is a graduate of Belmont
Tech~cal Cofiege, St. Clairsville
wilh an associate's degree in electrical engineering. He is employed
with American Electric Power and
work~ at the Gavin Plant - in
Cheshu-e.
The OP!lfi church wedding will
be 2 p.m. March 11 at the First
Church of Nazarene in Gallipolis.

~~-

i

I

all the benefits of your ATM card, plus wher-

QALLIPOLIS - Mr. an~ Mr~.
Raymond Hawk C!f Gall~oh_s
announce the .engagement 0 thell'
daughter 1enmfer _D. Hawk to Jef·
frey L. lloyd. He IS the SOil of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Boyd of Bndgepon.Ha ... · 1993 g·-•~ f the
. w": IS a .
....- o.
Umversnl of R1o rande Wllh. a
bac~elor s of.s~ienc~ degree ~n
bus mess admmlstrallo~. She IS
employed at Shell Chemical Com-

•

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. - suit with, a red rosebud boutonNatalie Alane Warner and Ali Reza niere.
Afshari were united in marriage
The mother of the bride wore a
Dec. 29 at the Trinity United silk teal street-lenglh dress with
Ruth Gilkey is confined to the
Melhodist Church, Point Pleasant, matching shoes.
Holzer Medical Center as the result
W,Va
Kimberly Blevins a.nd Sarah
of a broken hip-she received in a
The
bride
is
the
daughter
of
Tucker
attended
lhe
guest
book.
faU at her home. Cards will reached
MARTIN AND KELLEY HAAS
David M. and Cheryl K. Warner of
Immediately following the cere·
her at Room 214-A.
Midland, Mich., formerly of ~ch­ mony. a small reception was held .
mond, Va. She is the granddaugh- at the home of lhe bride's grand·
Last Seplenlber a 81'0U\l of re&amp;POL S
11
honor. Bride's maids were Palricia ter of Jean Warner and the late mother on Sandy Heights.
dents n1 Maples, the hoUSing corn~L~ ~~ ~;:wD= Haas, Krista Haas and Rachel Ralph E. Warner of Sandy Heights,
plcx on Mufberry Heights, decided
The newlyweds are students ·at
united in marriage Dec. 10 at Sokolowski. They wore tea-lenglh Point Pleasant, and the late Mr. and Marshall University in Huntington, I
to do somelhing helpful.
·
Newman Center Chapel at _the hunter green dresses and carried Mrs. Ferren Niday.
W.Va. IU!d the groom is owner and
The project adopted was the
The bridegroom is the son or instruciOr of the Kung-Fu Academy
· · hio Stale University.
bouquets of red carnations and
malting of comforters to be given
Fatemeh· Afzalirad and Sohrab
BCCellted
•
· the daughter of pau1 roses
· ·
to the Meigs United Methodist
.. •"•· KelIey 1s
Stanzy
Rosswith
was hoUy
the flower
girl. Afshari who reside in Hamburg, in Huntington, W.Va.
but-of-town guests attending
Parish 10 disuibute to lhe under:~. and Jean Harrison of Gallipolis. · She wore a red velvet dress and Germany.
.
were David M. Warner, II of Midprivileged and needy as the perish
~n is the .son of Dr. Martin N. carried a b&amp;dret of red carnations.
Rev. Steven E. Dorsey officiat- land, Mich.; Carol Jean and Jim
saw fit. WeD, it's been a wiota" of
. and lhe late Janice Haas.
. Chris Dobelbower was best ed lhe double-ring ceremony. Mrs. Adams of Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
accomplishment
for lhose Maples
The double-ring ceremony was man Groom •s men were David - Tim Scarberry, organist, provided Bill · Young and Rayann of
1
residents.
They
are
wrapping up
performed by father Don Andric Harrison, Chris McGee _and Daniel lhe music.
Pomeroy;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marshall
work
on
25
quilts
with those
1 and music was provided by Pete
Escorted by her father, the bride Canaday of Rio Grande; Angie
1 McConnell.
.
V.aughan. The ringbearer was
already completed having been
'
Austin HarrisOn.
. was attired in a street-lenglh ivory Clark of Charleston;Kerrie Steer
turned over to the parish.
~ . . . Escortede bto herlhe !l'alhtareranlhdegbrii~~~
The reception was field at the dress with matching satin pumps and Sam Jamil of Richmond, Va.;
Residents extend a big thanks to
m mamag Y
•·
•
Big
Bear
Farms
in
Powell.
The.
and
carried
a
bouquet
.of
red
roseMike
Fitzgerald,
BOy!
Have
I
goua
deal
for
you.
everyone
who contributed material,
Joshua
Bedeck,
wore a traditional-white full-lenglh
·
buds,
ivy
and
baby's
brealh.
Steve
Robinson,
Yuni
and
Angie
It's
a
deal,
however,
only
if
you
money
and
other items to the suegown with a fitted bodice and three tiered weddinjl cake was
The
bride's
allendant
was
her
Foster, Amy and Larry, Chris served -with lhe 261st Infantry of cessful project; And guess what?
: · sweelheart neckline. The bodice topped wilh a porcelain bride 3!'d
' and sleeves were accented with groom. Kristie Dobelbower regiS- sister, Tiffany Warner. She wore a Knapp, Daniel Honaker, Leslie lhe 651h Infantry Division in Aus- 0n Sept 5, the I!""'P will crarik up
seafoarn silt ensemble wilh a rose- Gault and Jimmy Workman, all of tria during World War II.
· to repeat the proJccl
•
pearls and sequins. The full skirt ~h~~~e is a graduate of lhe bud corsage.
·
Huntington, W.Va.
·
This year will mark the 50th
and short train were trimmed with University of Rio Grande and is
The bridegroom wore a chan:oal
The couple resides in Hunting- anniversary .of the meeting of
What's lhat stnlllge thing in the
suit
with
a
red
rosebud
boutonton,
W.Va. and plan a belated bon- -~merican and Soviet troops on sky? Naw, it isn't Superman. It's
~ Iache bride wore a beaded and. . employed at Riv~rside Memorial,
niere. The best man was Daniel eymoon trip to German and olher'--"Austrian soil and in order to give the sun-and ain't it swell! Do
l
•
Hospital as a cardiac nurse. ,.
J pearl headpiece. She carried a casThe groom is a gradllli!C student Honaker. He also wore a chan:oal areas in Europe.
Ibis anniversary due prom!nence in . keep smiling.
} cading bouquet of white roses of the Ohio State Umversuy majOfi BCCellted wilh pearls, baby's brealh ing in mechanical engineenng. The
l and holly.
couple resides in Columbus.
Amy Lelone)t served as maid of
· .
B JIM SANDS
came lhrough James Madison Bell: the hermit passes on some philoso- spumed all Heaven's decrees, and
Speci~l Correspoodeot
In 1859 when Brown and 22 phy: "lf there were less of selfish- preying on their I!C!rdi~ selves;
. . menmovedliiafarmoutsideHarper's ness,iffriendswerelessuntrue;how wrought all earlh's m_ISenes. Good
!IJeBWlchSchoolnearHarrism · Ferry, Bell stayed in Canada tore- much of all earth's w.:e"~ess andonlygoo&lt;;Jyoungliiend,hasCiod,
Gallia ~Wlty -:vas one ~f sev~ cruit more people for the raid Bell would vanish from our v1ew.
thy maker, g~ven, but man, becNI¥
'
schools m G~lia ~ociated wtlh advisedBrowntodelaylheraidfora
"For !here'~ enough for every hecouldoffendandc~eto.~l,a
Mncan-Amencan hiStory· Sadly few monlhs until more people could one: enough, and some to spare. Heaven, has seared hiS~ galnSI
much oflhe pre-1960s history taught be recruited. Brown believed lhat his · Enough of comfons 'nealh the sum every wail, and wreathed his brow
i~ bla~~ ~hoo~ was.almost exclu- raid .at Harper's Ferry would be lhe for all thai breathe to share."
.
with scorn, till pity's !"3Yer hath.no
stvely whi~ history._
. catalyst fora general revolt that would
"But man! oh, selfiSh, sordid a~.and thousan_ds died forlorn.
. Many mterforce lhe end of slavery. Ironically man! How like a fiend at heart, deep
He bow~ h1shead, he spate~
esun~
MncanBrown
was
captured
by
Robert
E.
skiUedineverywilyplan,heplaysa
.
more,anderel
d~~unf~!Us
j
Amen_can people
Lee who was commanding a Wlit of demon's IJarl. See h1m exulung m his care, he darted nealh his an:hmg
were lgnpred m
lOOwelltrainedU.S.Marines.'Brown might of pageantry arid pnde, pass- door, and left me lone, and lonely
·:
most of the early
was later uied and executed. It was ing unmov~ aniid lhe bjig~t of hun- there. The_n cautiously,.! c~~red
anth._(llog1es_ of
Bell who gave the eulogy for Brown ger WISupplied: The,oi'Phan s cry for down, ass1sted by fm Lunas hght.
black Amencan
atlhe Princess St. Melhodist Church charity; lhe w1dow s lonely moan, and when I gamed my cot and town,
poetry· However.
in Chatham.
. awakes no chord of sympathy wiihin lo, 'twas lhe silent noon of night"
JKX:ms by Gal~
In 1860 Bell went to San Fran- his heart of stone." .
·
nanveJamesMadicisco where he wrote the fust of his
The hermit lhen goes on 10 deJames Sanda Ill a special correson Ben are found.
. poems. In 1865 he returned to Can· scribe alllhe rebellions of mankind spondentortbeSundayTimes-SeaI\
Jam~s _Madison BeD ~as ~m m ada and lhen went to Toledo so6n againsl his own nature. "Since then line!. His address Is: 65 Willow
9alhpohs m ~~~ an~ hved m the after that During the summers Ben till now, mankind like elves ha~e Drive, Springboro, Oblo 4~.
2
11
Old French C:: Y. un~ll84 whc:n followed his trade of plastering and l··~ - -t'!~-- f!!-"t . . f!!-"t-f!!-"t-- ~-·1
he ~oved to Cmcmnau to f~er hiS _then every winter he would travel a
KEITH AND CINDY ANGEL
studies and learn the_plastenng trade lecture circuit reading his poems. He .. It n
..,tt~ ~ 1'1\'C' It C' tt
f! ~
from his broiher-m-law George also rose to prominence in lhe Re- ~ \,V
J1 ., liJI.'-1 \,'-I.,
\,IJ
Knight. In 1844 Bellllecarne ~n~ of publican party.
...
lhe fust studen';S at Cmcmnau High
At least one of BeD's poems re- ._.
253 N. 2ND AVE.
_•..,
&lt;,
.
School
on
~son
Street.
lales
to
his
days
in
Gallipolis:
.._
MIDDLEPORT:
OH
45760
992
2289
~
! 1 GALLIPOLIS · Cynthia Sue James.
that
"Once upon a clear autumnal ._.
tfo
' '
•
...
.It waslhIbiS sc_hoo_I forf blacks
l Mason and Keith Allen Angel were altarThebybride
was escorted to lhe . ired
lh book
S .n.... .- •..,
her father and given in ~.nsp
e , wnun~ ?.
e
day,
....
1111 VHJ' AMJ'flll
;,.
, united in marriage Dec. 17 at CenUncle Tom s Cabm., Here Bell
With weary heart and spirit ~
Seleetfon of Ceramfes
tenary United Methodist Church marriage by her parents.
Maid
of
honor
was
Brooke
studied
Greek,_
Latin,
music
and
art
bowed,
~
J with Rev. Harold Benson officialMiller. Best man was Jack Angell, amongotherthmgs.Oneofthefound·
I sought a silent scene away
Sffln UP for . ..
- ing.
.
cousin
of
the
groom.
Ushers
were
ersof~eschoolwasaMr.
Woodson.
From
the
turmoil
of
the
crowd.
·
.._.
Cl
'
~4.j:.. Cynlhia is the daughter of H,
Danny
and
Bobby
Angel.
brolhers
After
hiS
dealh
Mrs.
Woodson
marAnd
where
a
rent
primeval
rock
.
~
GSSIIS.
.
..:._
..:Dean and Marilyn MaSon of G~­
b ipolis and Kcilh is lhe son Jumor of the groom and Craig Mas11n. ned John,Gee of Gallipolis. . .
Reared high its bead o'er spire - :
'Tuesday &amp; Friday
~
•
From 1854to 1860Bclllivedm and do
·
..,_
~nd Rosemary Angel of -Crown brolherofthebride.
. A reception was held in the Chalham;Canada.ltwasbereihathe
~\
ed
· ti and 10 •
10:00 AM·Noon
L',City.
.
.
k IC seem m&amp;JCS c
~
AND ·
-~
101 Piano and organ mus1c were church social room. The cake !'as became an associate of John Brown,
·
.
~performed Edilh Ross. Solos were served by the women of lhe church. who in t859 led lhe raid at Halper's moe
The struclf of my · plebeian
7:00 PM•9:00 PM .
The couple resides i~ Crown Fcrry. lnfactmostoflhecorre,-pon~rformed by Shannon Saunders,
dcncc for lhe planning of lhe raid home.
.,_
~
p: ousin of the groom and Kelly City.

i

JACKSON

With Jeanie Plus, you'll continue to enjoy

:

IOV-

I

The ATM Card that acts like .
a check while saving you
time and money!·
..

•

Warner-Afshari

has returned to
Florida after a visit here )Vilh his
molher, Mrs. Margie W61f~. and
other relatives and friends.
Bruce was on a few days vacatiQn from his work at Disney World
wher, he has been employed for
nearly the past four yean. He has
now panicipated in 748 parades 1101
to mention the numerous rehearsals
which are needed to give the professional touch to appearances.
Bruce has now been promoted to
lhe position of an area supervisor
which means that while he still
takes part in some or the parades;
he is also doing some technical
control work .needed as the floats
move through Disney World.
Bruce still appears in an afternoon
parade every day and also dances
m the Disney World Castle Show.
While visiting here, Bruce has
been working on plans for a Mid,
dlepon street parade which wiD be
staged Sawrday, Aug. 12. He calls
it an "Electric Light Parade". Some
of lhe floats involved will be pulled
by vehicles while others will be
self-propelled. He reports that .lhe
paiade will be elaborate and elec·
trified. He's now in the process of
designing costumes which will feature a lot of sequins, lame, twinkling lights and olher showy stuff.
You may not remember but
Bruce was into piano while living
in Meigs County and accompanied
some of lhe presenlations by vocal
students of Lee Lee at Southern
High School. Well, Bruce recently
purchased a 75-year-old grand
piano and is really enjoying the
instrument

•,

l

it give•

you more choices,

GALLIPOLIS

ALl AND NATALIE AF~IHARI

.:i §

1

The Strategic Plan Marketing and
Promotions Committee,
in cooperation with the
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, .
invite area residents to submit their ,
ideas for a G~llia County "slogan".
Suggestions should be short,
expressive and memorable. ·

Plan...and It's
worklngt The
•imple truth i5, The

Page B3

Beat of the Bend ...

•

"S loqan Con test "

Weight. Watchers
Fat &amp; Fiber Plan has helped
thousands of people lose weight.

Sentinel

by Bob-Hoeflich

Ga//ia (~ounty
L

Sunday Times

Wed din

'-

Thousands of ·
Americans haw
tried Weight
Watchers Fat
&amp; Filler
·

MEUSSA MAYNARD AND JAMIE BARREn

·-February 19, 1995

Williams to speak at
Black History

Engagements

'

February 19,1995

lpoUs, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Stop by any OVB office for comC~rrus

Ma sterCard

plete details and to see how easy it is
to get your free Jeanie Plus card.

Meigs Comm.u·n/"ty·calen_daf

E
*:

:r

t

l!Eastern boys sectional game on
at Alexander, go on ~e
·e. uesday in main office of lhe high
hool. All advanced tickeiS are $3.
.,
m plays Beaver Eastern. .
POMEROY- Auxiliary, Fra""~:!iemal
Order of the Eagles, 7:30

· r;t&gt;.m. Tuesday, at the hall.

-'~ ······­
~
LOSE ~~- 1 0 LBS. •
,·

All Nalural C.H. 2001

..;
• ,

·

With Chrvmlum P/coHn•l•
!lONEY !JACK GUARANfEE

•

·~

FRUTH&gt;PHARMACY •

······-

788 N. 2nd

{

Confidential Family Planr~ing Services
for females &amp; males.
•Medical Exams
•Pap Tests
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
·
· •Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmiHed diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling .
.
•Methods and supplies for bi_rth control and safer sex

~aiUrday

IN 3 DAYS!

· Middleport •

Ibentingazemy straining eye,
Andyieldingtoatnulsientfreak,
s1auon at 7:30p.m. meebng.
Resolved wilhin my soul to try
And scale lhe towering CloudWEDNESDAY
· capped peak."
POMEROY - Wildwood GarBell goes on to tell how he had
81
den
Wednesday
heine of · comeuponthehomeofahermitand
DorisClub,
Grueser.
I p.m.

PLANNED PIRENIHOOD
or SOU,.HEAS,. OHIO

~ EAST MEIGS - Tickets for

liZ 00 OFF COVPON · LIMIT 1)

••

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the Rutlan&lt;! F'lre
Siation to go to .Pizza Hut for sup-·
per. Members will return 10 the fue

· MONDAY
'-: LETART FALLS - Letart
Erownship Board of TrusteeS ~­
- ~ ng Monday, 6 p.m. at office build~ng.
.
TUESDAY
' POMEROY - The Mei~s
· ounty Board of ~lections w1ll
. ave its regular meetmg Tuesday, 4
i:r'·l11· At th@ttime the _val1dlly of
-candidates' petitions will be eslab!lished and regular business will be
'-"iscussed.

..

'

DepoProvera·injection
· Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale

'

.

We accept Medicaid and.prlvate Insurance.
414 'SECOND STREET
.
509 S. THIRD STREET
GALLIPOUS
MIDDLEPORT
. 446-0166
992·5912

'

.

'!!.

'!

f_

....~...

-·

;,...
'!
;..

'!!
.-,:

~

Regular Hours: 9:30-4:30 Tuesday-Saturday

i-

•--.;:&lt;&gt; · -if;~---~---~---~-·~·-

DR.DUTTAJOINSSTAFF
Dr. Nirmal K. Dutla, Jatkson, has been named an
associate member of the medical staff at Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
A surgeon, Dr. Dutta is a graduate of the
government co llege at Chiuagong ,'Ba~g l adesh, and the
Dhaka Medical College in Bangladesh. He served his
inlernship "at Nortan Memorial Hospital, Louisville ,
Ky., and residencies at the Bridgeport Hospital in
Connccticut;.the Beth Israel Hospital in Newark, N.J .,
and the Deborah Heart and Lung Center in Browns
Mill s. N.J
A 12 year resident of the Jackson, Ohio area, Dr.
· Dutta is af(iliatcd with the Oak Hill Surgical Practice
·
and the Oak. Hill Hospital.
Dr. Dutta is now making regular visits lo Pomeroy.
His office is located in the Veterans Memorial Hospital
Outpatient Clinic and may be reached by calling 992-

3632.

.,.

-

�Page 84 Sunday nmee SenUnel

:February 19, 1995

Gallia community calendar
'

!

·

*••

•••
TueldiJ, Feb.21

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·

~omeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla,

OH

Polnt,Pieaaant,

Flourishes Update Ranch Styling

United Methodist Church.

Sllllday, Feb. 19

Service':

...

MR. AND MRS. JERRY TAYLOR

Taylors observe 25th
•

.

50th
I

DENVER AND WII.MA !-IOU.CK

annivers~ry

CROWN CITY - Denver H. and
Wilma Houck of Crown City
recently observed their SOth
anniversary with a party held in
their honor.
The couple was married Jan. 10,
194S by the late J.H. Shato and
have been residents of Crown City
. for 47 years.
· They have live sons, Denver W.
Houck of Sebastian, Fla., Roger F.
Houck of Gallipolis, Vernon K.

celebrated

Houck of Crown City, Stanley 0.
Houck of Gallipolis and Charles R.
Houck of Vinton; three daughters,
Anna Marie Camp of Columbus,
Teresa Ireland of Gallipolis and
Lisa E. Houck of Crown City; 20
grandchildren; two steP-grandsons;
and seven great-grandchifdren.
Wilma is the daughter of Emma
Meadow Thivener and Miles Rice.
Denver is the son of the late
I arome and Rosa Elliott Houck.

JERRY AND BARBARA COLMER

35th anniversary marked

POMEROY - Fred B. and don; Alvin and Barbara Jean Tripp;
Bertha F. Smith celebrated their Debra. Adam and Abbie Chevalier;
62nd wedding anniversary Feb. 4 al . Becky, James and Justin Cotterill;
their home of S9 years located on Diana Windon, Gabe and Beth Farley; Rodney, Stacy, Amber, Megan
West Shade Creek Road
The observance was a surprise and Haley Tripp; and Todd, Kelly
planned by their children and their and Ryan T-ripp.
families, Virgil and Kathryn Win-

~~~~;!i~n~B:a:::.~:Sr

Shari B'--~well. The;• Meadows I I, Paulette L. Hogg,
POMEROY - I erry and Bar- daughter,
.
.....
u
Jonathan E-. Blackford, Angela D.
bara Colmer recently celebrated ;:on-m-~w, Ste~e Blackwell, sang · Bums, Phillip A. Mollohan, Joseph
their 3Sth wedding anniversary
There IS ~ve.
.
A. Queen, Heather R. Jones,
with a ceremony to renewal their
A recepuon ~as held foll~wmg Sharon D. Montgomery, Ronald
vows at the Pomeroy Church of t!le the cere":Jony w1th several frie!'ds . Plantz, Gary L. Kilgore. Mike
Nazarene. Rev. Glen McClung, . and family members present1~g
Soles, Molly L. McWilliams, JerepasiOr, perfonned the ceremony.
g1fts to the couple. Unable to atte ,. . y L. Clay , Barbara A. Mills,
Mrs. Colmer was escorted down
the observance was the co.upl . Stephanie R. Spence, Lori A.
the aisle by her son,. Bill Colmer, son, Tun Colmer, and h1s family .o f Roberts;
· who also served aS best man for his Springfield, Ga.
Hillary Ann Bostic, Fred A.
father. Serving.as matron of hon&lt;X
Mr. and Mrs: Colmer have live Smith, Brandon Hill, Mall Milfor her mother was the couple's grandsons and six granddaughters.
stead, Chuck ·Ptymale, Steven
Carter, Aaron Fridel , Terry D.

Wedding policy

The Sunday Times -Sentinel • Along the River must be received
regards the weddings of Gallia, by the editorial department by
Meigs and Mason counties as news Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date
and is happy to publish wedding of publication.
stories and photographs without
Those not making the 60-day
charge.
deadline
will be published during
However, wedding news musl
daily
paper
as space allows.
the
meet general standard~ of timeli.
Photographs
of either the bride
ness. The newspaper prefers to
or
the
bride
and
groom m11y be
publish accounts of weddings as
published
with
wedding
stories if
soon as possible after the event
Photographs
may
be either
desired.
To be published in the Sunday
and
white
or
good
quality
black
edition, the wedding must have
color,
billfold
size
or
larger.
taken place within 60 days prior to
Poor quality photographs will
the publication, and may be up to
be accepted.
not
600 words in length, Materilll for

G.

SURDYKA, M.D.

GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Support
Group 7:30p.m. new Life Lutheran
Church.

•••

By PAT WKAS
_; : . AP Newafeatures
.
: • Arched windows and graceful
! columns elevate this home to an
(
' elegance not typical of ranc h
. Ies.
,' aty
~ : Design F-35, by Homestyles
; ~ Source I" .Designers' Network,
•. also uses columns inside the
i 2,018-square-foot home to ·define
: the spacious entry gallery. The.
: J:entral section of the gall ery
• soars to a height of more than 20
: teet, and light spills in from a
: windowed donner above.
· Past the columns, the expansive
: great room features an II 1/2: foot stepped ceiling and a fire: place Oanked by built-in shelves.
• Two sets of sliding French. doors
: topped with arched transoms
; open to a sequestered backyard
: terrace.
· Decorative columns also intro: duce the formal dining room,
: which boasts a 9 1/2-foot stepped
: ceiling that rises to 10 1/2 feet at
, the front window.
:-.

Looking for short-lenn
gains? trv. the ... ·

.

~

ltl()ples Value (])

Chapman, Wendy R. Crago,
Harold E. Whiu, John W. Haffelt,
Leah I . Johnson, A. Suzanne Henson, Tia R. Osborne, Jason E. Halley, JiU S. Roderus, Lee M. Burcham, Kim Tackeu, Ricky Swain,
Bob Chriscnbery, Glen Chapman,
Amber Chapman; Shirley Eisnaugle, Gary L. Eisnaugle, David N.
McQuaid, Amanda L. Darst,
Donna L. Evims;
·
Dorothy L. Perlcins, Charles H.
Sibley, Leland P . Hamilton ,
Edward A.. Midlciff, Doyle J. Saunders, Louie M. Harvey, Geneie
Plantz, Beverly A. Rife, Clarence
B. Stout, Wanda L. MacCiinchy,
Charles M. Null, Robin L .
Pasquale, Maurice R. DeLille,
Rachel D. Pullins. Terry L. Farley,
Mike E. Perry, Jack Richards,
Bessie I. Curtis, Mary L. Hennesy,
Robert L. Hennesy, John H. Roush;
Keri H. Puckett, Glenn H. Ward, ·
Wanda J. Connelley, Twyllia Y.
Connelley, Vernon H. Bumheimer,
Jerry A. Myers;
Paul D. Niday. Daryl L. Martin,
Frederick E. Burdell, Richard L..
Neal, Albert L. Earley III, Lante L.
Hughes, Douglas G. Spurlo~k.
Gary A. Carney, Everett 0 . Montgomery, Robert T. Polcyn, Barbara
C. Epling, Robert .L. Lucas, Carlos .
E. Swisher, Donald R. Blake, Darren L. Hoffman, Jlinct S. Williams,
Farrell A. Houck, Richard P.
Speirs, Linda L. BrothelS, Henry E.
DiUon, James C. Fi(e, Teresa A,
Davis, Gary L. Lyons, Kennison
M; Saunders, Lcsa I. Caldwell,
Jennifer B. Graham, Hugh H. Graham Dl, Debra L. O'Dell, Joan E.
Schmidt

AsblgbM
Minimum
OpeninQ Dtpoail

•

$ 250,000

$ 100,000
$ ·10,000
$
$

5,000
1,000

18 Month

11 Month
APY

. 7Monlh

APY

7.17%
7.06%
7.01%
6.96%
6.69%

7.18%
7.07%'
7.02%
6.96%
6.70%

6.91%
6.80%
6.75%
6.70%
6.43%

APY

. . ·..- :··~· .._..... ~.P. :·..
.'

All wi th Easy Mulch cuttingsystem.
21" lightweight staggered
wh..t deck and
2-year warranty .
Choose from push

\1---.1

or self-propelled,
4.5 HP2-&lt;ycle
orok'yd e.

C.u B00-374-612S to open the
'

.

••

(30411~

KODt\K
f1IN SAVER 35 Camera

KOOAKCAMFD
Zoom Plus Camera
Onl)

·I

Now you can get aline on anythinQ that swings, slides. angles, bows

All an authorized Caradco window distributor,we offer the wic(est ra[lge
standard-sized primed and clad wOOd windows and patiO doors
•

white. I clearly was not going to be
white.''
The tale of how Williams, now
dean of Ohio State University's
law school, crossed the color line is
recounted in an autobiography published this week, "Life on the
Color Line: The True Story of a
White Boy Who Discovered He
Was Black."
Growing up near Alexandria,
Va., in the early 19SOs, Williams
lived in the white {18'1 of town and
went to an all-while school. Like
his father, he had a light complex- ·
ion and straight, darlc hair. His
father 's slightly darker skin tone
was auributed .to Italian ancestry.
Williams' troubles began as a
young ster. His alcoholic father
abused his mother, who later left
with a younger brother and siste~.
After the family's business collapsed, Williams, his pennil~ss
father and younger brother M1ke
were forced to move to Muncie to
live with his father's family.
. lt.was on thai trip that ~is father
leaned across the aisle of the Grey-

Or, choose oor Georgetown Collection for authentic true divided litBs
doul&gt;le·paned insulated glass .O&lt; tradHional single-pane glazing.
Caradco sets the standard for quality wood windows, with over 100
yellr)! of craftsmanship and expenence. No one but C81adco ollars as
much quaHty, vatiaty and anentiOn to detail. And nothing but real wood
has as much ·durability and tong·lasting natural beauty. ..,
So, if you're building or remodeling, take a look at our line ... and
open your home to beautiful new view$ . .. with-Caradco.
·

. An Alcoa Company

mmlla

STATE ROUTE 241

CHESTER
. 915·3301

A full range of models
with the feat ures
you need .

. $JOO
Film Dev~loping
Get $1.00 off your ifext coliJr print processing order from
our store. We u.se Kqdak paper and chemicals to develop your
film into prize prints. See store for detazls./

F-35

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 Sec44d ~t6t~allipolis .. [ ll:tZ~ ]

6

Woocf{antf Centers, Inc.
ONE Cf' Tl£ MOSTCOIFAEII'NSM: &amp; I'RlFESOONAI. MENTAL HEALTH AGB«:ES t1 SOJTI£ASTERNOHIO
w..-.~ Cenlerl .. fUnded tft plrl brlhlt GaUIA-.,Iec'cran IIJigT Bolrdof
.
Alcohol, Drill] Adoltc:tlon llllllllonlll HHfth -

.

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED
-:!Hir. ~ Rooldontllll

s.rvtooo

oCoio ..ohoolll" Adoll-.1

. CouiWIInu &amp; Thonpy

-:24 Hr. En-ocy Seov"*

oClllldlon'o R-lol

.Uaniage &amp; F....,.

anrl'orQa·PIIIIINTI'Mlmtl"f .
•VI&lt;llm'o - " " " ' " " '

Coulwolng . ,

RESIDENT .
. PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS It
SOCIAL WORKERS

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED. ·

dol-- - -·

· of'lll&gt;setvlcllot
of'wydoothorlpJ .
ofn1*1yooo Aoll.f'n9111!11
tOaiiiMelgiH.. ±'Irt

oCUollil-•

oev- &amp; T--.g
-.a CGmmuniJy T"**''J
4uptMttdttoua6ngk:lf

Emollorwlly~

MEDICAAEoMEDICAIDoTITLE XX•SLIDING FEE.SCALE.CEATIFIED
BY STATE OF OHIOoEVENING APPTS. AVAIL.AIILE
.

JACKSON

24 HOUR
'
CRISIS LINE

200 MAIN ST.

. 286·5075

LOCAL CRISIS LINE

446-5554
TDDAVAILABLE

24HOURS

3086 STATE RT.160

OUTSIDE OF
GALUPOUSCAUUNGAREA
TOLL FREE DIAL 1
AND THEN

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

_446·5500_

800-25.2-5554

992~2192

GALLIPOLIS

POMEROY

~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~

in

BAUM "
LUMBER

hound bus and explained to the boy
for the ftrst time his racial heritage.
Shonly after arriving in Muncie,
their father disappeared and the
boys were shuttled from one relative to another.
Dora terry, a black housekeeper, took them in, stretching her $2S
weekly salary. ·
_
Williams _put himself through
Ball State Uruversity, then the University of Maryland and George
Washington University, -where he
received a law degree.
·
Later, he held a variety of
administralive jobs at the Universi·
ty of Iowa, before arriving at Ohio
Slate in 1993 as dean.
In 1969, he married Sara Whit·
nc)', a white woman he met in
grade school. Her family disowned
lier far dating a black man.
: 'I do believe there wa~ some ·
reason I was called upon to live the
life that I was given," Williams
wrote. "Maybe to share it with others in the hope that no child will
have to expenence ~hat I did." -

KODAK
35mm .Cameras

Off

Law School Dean tells story of learning
he is black and that it mattered
By RODD AUBREY
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gregory Williams was 10 when he
found out he was black -and that
it would matter.
"In V~ia. you were a .white
boy, in Indiana you're going to be a
colored boy," the youngster was
fOld by his father, a light-complexIoned black man, on iJ bus ride to
MIDicie, Ind. "You're not any dif.
ferent today than you were yesterday, but you'll be treated differently in Indiana...
..
. Williams, whose mother was
white, had no clue of his father's
racial backgroiDid. He learned of
his mixed-race heritage only after
his parents' marriage ended ami his
father, Tony, was forced to return ·
to the housing projects on the black
side of his hometown of Muncie.
"I didn't believe him really, but
he was pretty earnest about it so I
began to believe him," Will.iams,
S1 said in a recent phone mtervi~w. "There wasn't any choice
about w~ether I was )!Ding to be

KODAK
FUN SAVER Cameras

Capture the moments
wilh the camera
that saves the day.

7.95

n 'IGII, STEPPED ceilings highlight this ranch home, an elegant
and pracdcal design. The master bedroom, brealdust room: and
great. room all lu!ve access to rear outdoor areas. Tbe kitchen
Include• a 808Ck bar as well •• the breuldast room. Two walk-In
cloJJets oll'er ample. swraae ht the muster bath•

·~ect.

KODAK Film .
We carry a film for
every moment.

l5 """· " " "

'179.95

•
•

Toll Fr.. l-800-333-1784

OrM, PoW P....,_ WY 25650

Onll
5

64'-10' OVERALL

(304) 675·5971

2520

KODti.K GOLD Ultra 400 Film

u·-r

.-. . .

ror appolntmco\ta call'

IJJJ PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
I irJ The family of professiooo/s
v...,

COY. PORCH

24'-e·. to·-e·

Only 5

natural wood lnterk:H's.

Ofl1ce Nou,., g a. in. • 5 p.m.. Monda, through l'rklor

14'-B*•

· Get quali"'
Kodak film and cameras,
~'lus
.
great processm.g. p one-stop converuence.

eo•-t•• ea·..o·

Caradco windows are energy elticient and practically maintenance
free, wHh dOilble-paned insulated Qlass, dual weatherstripping. tin-in
sash and .removable divided lite gnlles for easy cleaning. Gef them
factory promed, or white or bronze aluminum clad. Both with warm.

" Visit your auth orized Lawn-Boy dealer for
incredible fall clearanc" prices on our Gold and Silver
Series mowers. Push mowers start at $239.95, and ·
self-propelled-mowers start at $289.95.·

TAWNEY . STUDIO

TfO CiR
GWCI

- ot

2907 Jackson Avenue
. Point Pleasant. .West Virginia

State (ZIP)

. .,

self-propelled, 4.5 HP
2-&lt;ycle or 5 HP 4-cycle;
even eleCtric start!

Lawn-Boy's FallillgPrices Sale.

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

t;'

from push or 3-speed

~placeme.nta.

Street __-:----- - - ----- - - -- - ' - - - --

:.

available.

knee and hlp

Nam•-----~-----------------

'

cutting system,
no-rust aluminum dock
and Mulching Zo!W! throttle
for reserve power. Choose

fractures and adult reconatNctlwe !lurgery

Encloaed Ia S-4.95 each lor the bpoklet(a) _ _-:-- - -- -

11'-0'x
13' · 0'

Easy

Treating . · variety of joint and muacl• dlaonlen.

.......

'

or a..~rves .

'

Encloa"' Ia $4 for plan No. - - - - -- - -- - - - -

. The One-Ston
Picture pfa&amp;

··----·--·
-RII II

=.

. .·.

D

esign F-35 has a great
room , kitc he n, dining
room, breakfast room,
three bedrooms, two baths and a
gallery, totaling 2,018 square feet
of habitable space. There is a
two-car garage and storage and
utility areas.'The breakfast room
and maste r bedroom have
access to a covered porch, anll
the great room has access to a
terrace. The overall dimensions
of 57"8" by 64'10" include the
garag e. Foundation options
include a standard baseme nt,
daylight basement. slab or craw~
space foundation.

(For a mort detailed, scaled p/aN
of this house, iNcludi11g guides to
estimatiNg costs aNd /i11a11cillg,
sr11d $4 to House of the Wed ,
P.0. Bolt 1562, New Yor~. N.Y.
10116-1562. Be sure to i11clude
the IIMmber of the pla11.)
·

.: ' ·,

II

Full _study plan inlorma:lon on this house Is available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available a($4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Self lt.' Ranch Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
feature; Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handla 35 common
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes. a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.0 . Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.
.
Clip this order and return label

JJI:DRII 13

·~~:.:1:best. with the

Sports Injuries • rraC:ture.s • Work Injuries

master suite and the kitchen.
Two additional bedrooms are at
the opposite side of the home .
The rear-facing bedroom fea·
lures a 12 1!2·foot vaulted area
brightened by a showy arched
window arrangement. A second
full bath is close to both bedrooms as well as to the two-car,
side-enlly garage, disguised with
another front-facing arched
window.
The garage doors may also be
located at the front. replacing the
arched window, if desired . A
garage storage area with access
from the side yard is a nice extra.
The utility closet is replaced by
stain! in·the ·basement versio1J.

.... .
'

account or flqllflllt mofl Information.

The gourmet 'kitchen offers a
large work area, a double-doored
pantry, wall ovens and a cooktop.
An angled sink and a breakfastserving bar provide plenty of
space for casual meals on the
run.
The adjoining breakfast room is
.gnusualiy large and is further
expanded by a 9 I /2-foot Oat ceiling and an arch-topped sliding
French door that opens to a covered backyard porch.
The secluded master suite is
embellished by an 11 1/2-foot
stepped ceiling and a cozy sitting
area with built-in shelves and private access to the covered back
porch.
The master bath includes a
dressing area with a sit-down
vanity, a large linen closet and
his-and-hers walk-in closets. The
bathing area has a whir'lpool tub,
a' separate steam shower, a dualsink vanity. and a private toilet
compartment. The hallway laun-dry closet is convenient to the

Hands, and Health. 4-H eiiCOIJI"I8e3
well IUIDided development in these
areas. In 4-H. they choose a project
area in which they are intereSted.
There are o~er 17S projeciS f10111
which to choose. The 4-H_project is
an in depth learning expenence.
The members attend regular 4-H
meetings a nd are involved in
demo nstra tions and community
service projects. They may serve IS
an officer of the club. They may
participate in COIDity events such IS
4-H Camp or the fa ir. There arc
also many opponun,ities available
at the state and national levels
including college scholarships and
educational trips.
·
For more information on 4-H
call the Gallia County Extension
Office at446-7007.

To Order Study Plan

4.95

Easy Mulch'"

Announces the OpenlnQ of His Medical rractlce l.n

ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

II

•••

'
GALLIPOLIS • Faith Vall&lt;y
Church, Feb. 19-26 , ~unday, :6
p.m.; Monday-Saturday, 7 p.m .
Special singers and Pastor Rocky
.
Jeffers speaking.

li
Silver seri.SSntowers

DAVID

'

Bloodmobile collects 82 units
dU[ing visit to Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - The 'Iii-Stale
Red Cross Blood Services bloodmobile·collected 98 units durin~ its
Thursday stop at Grace Unued
Methodist Church. .
Local Red Cross officials
reported that 110 people paented
themselves to give blood, 12 of
them frrst-time donon.
The voiiDiteer staff working the
bloodmobile visit included Mrs.
· Richard James, Mn. John Plymale,
Mrs. Charles Webstts, Mrs. Bruce
McDonald, Mn. Mary Lou Harrison, Mrs. Joe Drummond, Mrs.
Dan Notter, Mrs. Edwanl Wright,
Mary Clendenin, Mrs. Tom Hysell,
Mrs. Lewis Schmidt, Mrs. Edison
Guinther, Mrs. Fred Stephenson,
Mrs. Larry Dailey, Evelena
Williams, Mrs. Euta Adkins, Mrs:
Mike Pasquale, Mrs. Raymond Jennings IIIKI: ~ Sandrn. ·
Presenting themselves were:
RaY.ffiond C. Weiher Jr.• Henry
K. Milam, Darlene Milam, Robert
Murp~y. Kimberly Gillespie,
Melanie Althaus, James Young,

4-H week celebrated

Revival

RODNEY - Mr. and Mn. Jerry
They have tWO chil~n Lance
Taylor celebrated their 2Sth Taylor of Gallipolis and Tanya
GALLIPOLIS - Eating Disoranniversary. The couple were mar- Taylor of Rodney. They reside in . ders support group 7 p.m. Addison .
ried March 14, 1970.by Rev. John Rodney.
Jeffers.

Smiths observe-62nd

•

...

•••
Mondar,Feb. 20
•••

Sunday nmes Sentinel Page 85

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County 4-H Clubs will celebrate
"Ohio 4-H Wed" Feb. 19 throoJh
. March 6. Clubs will be reorgaruzmg and recruiting new members,
deco rating windows, setting up
sc~ displays. writing newspaper
3111cles and other means of educat·
ing the public about the 4-H programs in Gallia County.
·
Last year 1,200 youth in the
community were members of a 4-H
club.
4-H is a ~olunteer youth development program concerned with
help ing boys and girls grow in
lcnowledge, skills, citizenship and
leadership.
The four H's on the emblem
(clo ver) rep resent Head, Heart,

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

•••
~_!!!'~Anonp.m.~~~nty
GALLIPOLIS • Operatiqn
u•.....,
•••
Liftoff 7:30 p.m. Fint ~
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia CoiDity Ch~h.
•• •
•.
Historical Society mecti_ng 2:30
GALL! POLIS • Community
p.m.. 430 ~dAve. wnh Edna Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. Nc\v
Whiteley spcalrinR 0 .0 . Mcintyre. . Life Lutheran on Rt. 160 across
•••
from "--cncy Medical
CROWN CITY • Dan Beaver
~'"""
•••
.
II a.m.·Good Hope United Baptist
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.:Churcb.
•••
. Narcotics Anonymous ·Clean 811&lt;1
WILGUS • The Inheritors to Free Group 7:30. p.m. Episcop~l
sing 7 p.m. New Trinity Freewill. Church. ·
•••
'
Baptist Churdl.
GALLIPOLIS • Alcoholi~s
_,Anonymous
8 p.m. St. Peter 's
POR11lR • Ron Lemley 7 p.m.
Episcopal
Church.
:
at Clark Chapel Church.
'

•

7

wv
- -The House ,of the Week----------~-----­

Pomeroy Mlddleport-4alllpolls, Ott

•

I

I

•

!

.

•I•
•i
••I

®fl/W ~®IJV fl,®IJPJ~
IJWfl fJJIJ!IlU fll(l} .
IJ. [fJU(I} ~fP(JJJ~IJ1.

Member

.

.

0HIO ·V ALLEY BANK·
•

-~~-

I

-/.:·

'(614) 446·2631
1-800-468-6682

'

.

�'

Page--86-Sunday llmes 5enUnel

February 19, 1995

·February 1~, 1995·

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaaant, WV

Veteran returns to Vietnam to honor faiJen men,.investigate
·
MIAs
al,_ the~
~~c one,"

Exhibit spotlights AIDS and perils of sex through the century :. :
By CALVIN WOODWARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Abstinence message, circa 1920:
" Believe no one who says it is neeessary 10 indulge sex desire.' '
Abstinence message today: "If
possible, it is best to avoid sexual
intercourse until you have a relationsbip with a partner who is not
infected and who will only have
sexual intercourse with you."
Those voices from now and then
are represented in an exhibil on
AIDS opening today at the National Museum of Health and
Medicine, a Defense Department

inslitution ihat is the nation's prime
Jepository of medical history.
As the displa~ of condoms,
warnings and advJCC makes clear,
the fight against sexually transmitted diSeases is an old one. But the
m&lt;nl and medical certiwdes of the
past have giv~n way to something
more complex in the age of AIDS.
The exhibit traclcs progress in
lengthening lives of AIDS patients
but it's mainly a story of a battle
yet to be won. ·
Even the title, "Living in a
World With AIDS," belies a
recognition that a cure is not just
around the corner. In contrast, the

military put out a World War I film
on avoidin• venereal disease with
thecan-doli1le, "P'JttoFighL"
An AIDS video presentation in
the exhibit addresses bolh protec·
tion and abslinence.
When viewers ask for "safer
~x" instruction for teen-agers and
adults, they are shown through
graphic animation how a condom
should be put on and removed.
When they ask about abstinence, they are told "it's your
body and fO~ alone" and they
should avoad SCJt with people who
are having sex with others, if they
can.

Museum spokesman Dick
4vinson said while some people
might think AIDS is inappropriate
for the museum, the institution
would be sJUrting its responsibility
if it ianored the epidemic.
"For a public museum runded
by taxpByers, which is supposed to
focus on health and medical issues
- how could we not address this ...
and atrempt to do everything we
possibly can to briiJg people, particularly younger ·people, in to see
it?" he said .
The exhibit focuses on one New
York City AIDS patient, Ron
Wogatnan, showing ~e dozens of

medicines he had to rate daily, the
cap and long underwear h~ _wore
when his body became_SCDSIIIVe to
cold, the artifacts of a life defi8Ddy
crammed with ac tivity near ·the
end.
The exhibit shows how even
recent medical knowledge has
changed on AIDS. Earlier it was
• thoUght a 10 percent bleach sololion would till the virus on nee-

By CINDY LEISE

is considered idequate.
·
Advocares of "safe sex" now
talk of "safer sex," unwilling any,"
more to encourage people to
believe condoms are 100 percent
effective.
;
Bact in the 1920s, the Americaa
Social Hygiene Association
marched foursquare into the debate
on sexually tn111S111ined disease, in
. a way that would offend 'today's
sensibilities.
•

Tbe (FJyria) Chrolllcle-:Telelnm
· BAY ~GB, Ohio (AP) -:'Ibc North Vielnlmese .,.,.w m
ckoves after dust on ~arch _8,
1969, and Amherst native hm
Kapucinsti. fired h!s grenade
~agam anclagam.
·• His beuiA:JUI!It colone.l w~ one
of the firs~ to die. ~ w'!O
was working as a~ m Lorain
when he was drafted, had cut the
man's hair the day before tbe
·]t"¥k
.
·
: •: Cpl Kapucinski, then 20, ~as
:~of about ISO American soldiers
·'!Wbo came under fire at U Grant, a

~ii=ashion

Your EngageJDent Ring
Headquarters!

$~49

$299
$399
$999

'P-iiWII styles.
::. Tickets priced at $4 will go on
sale in mid-March. As in previous
, year, numerous doot prizes will be
' awarded and packets containihg
: merchant discount tic:tets will go to

Galli poll•

Four rehabilitation nurses
receive certification
GALLIPOLIS • Four regislered MA, ~. vice president of nursing
nurses. on the staff in tlje Rehabili- services at the hospital.
tation Unit at the Holzer Medical
Rehabilitation nursing is a spe: Center, recently earned their statuS cialty practice area within the
: as Cenified Rehabilitation Regis- ~cope of profe_ssiona! nursing ..It
. tered Nurses (CRRNs).
mCludes the dtagnosts and treatThey are Kay Rutherford, RNC, ment of human responses to actual
CRRN, nurse manager of the reha- or potential health problems on
bilitation unit; Joey Miller, RNC, either an individual or woup basis.
ONC, CRRN; Pam Short, RNC, · The goal of rehabilitation nursCRRN, and Sharon Stout, RNC, ing i§ to assist the individual with a
CRRN.
chronic illness or disability to
"CRRNs are uniquely qualified restore and maintain optimum
registered nurses in the area of health.
rehabilitation ·nursing. Their
)~unner emphasized, "the
expanded lmowledge base provides CRltN is particu Iarly skilled in
an enhancement for the care of per- treating alremtions of life8tyle that
sons who have specific rehabilita- . can result from eithe{ physical distion needs. They must renew their ability or chronic illness. We are
certification every five years by proud of our staff who are commitretaking ·the credentia rest or by the ted to their career goals and put
accumulation of points of credit · fonh the time and effort to achieve
earned from their participation in certification for the benefit of our
:continuing education or other activ- - p~ents."
. ities," said Nancy A. Brunner, MS.

Crist to bring laughs to safety ·
awards appreciation b,anquet
GALLIPOLIS - Lyle Crist,
· CSP, will be the guest speaker at
the Gallia County Safety Council
and the Ohio Division of Safety
and Hygiene Safety Awards and
· Appreciation Banquet at the Gallipolis Holiday Inn 6:30 p.m. ·
March 6, 1995 at 6:30p.m.
A c;u:eer Professor of English at
Mount Union College in Alliance,
. Crist has been on lhe speaker's cir-·
: cuit for more than 20 years, with
-endorsements nationwide. He
· shares motivation through merriment, and learning through lau~h­
ter. His focus is on cornmunicatmn
and his laughs come not from joke
books, but from real-life marerial
found on radio, television, newspapers, professional correspondence,
advertisements and the classroom.
LY.LECRIST
He is the author of seven books,
including texts on writing, collections of his own poetry and his being performed by ljpJI'O{~~ional
memoirs of teaching. Another of troupe throughout the midwest.
his books is the bit&gt;paphy of deaf
For more information call the
and-blind Richard Kinney, tbe liiird Chamber of Commerce office at
person in the world to earn a col- 446-0596.
lege degree deprived of the two key
se nsory perceptions. The book,
For more information on 4- H .
"Through the Rain and Rainbow," call the Gallia County Extension ·
iS now the basis of a play which is - Office at 446-7007.
•

•
•
•
•

. .(I

'.

'

Excellent choice for purchase or rental.
Tremendous value and durability
Sleek styling, clean lines.
Full range of models and accessories.
• Choose from a variety
oJ'/'rame colors and
two back heights.

_...i

•

I

The Medical Shoppe
1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
' (614) 446-2206

FASIDON SHOW PLANNING- Tbe lOth
IDDual fasbloll tlbow wiD be b,eld oa AprU 7 Ia
tbe gymllllllum or Pomeroy ElemetallrJ Sdloal.

: everyone buying a gift.

At 1M lint pl•nnlna aealcia were froni the left,
Annie Cb1p_aaa, Holly W!U, Sll58n Clark and
VIcki Ferreu, c:o-cllllnaaD, and Naaey Thoene.

•

:Divorce risk rises when single people abound
: ·
Wamin
:Th NEW y~~~ may be hJ
: e area you
•

: ~~"=~separation

:gites up tor young couples if they

'live in an area with plenty of
:unmarried and available men or

•
"'
:women.
a DCW study find&amp;
. Th~t suggesta many husbands

:and waves keep_ an eye out for a

:~rnner·saidracarellerScou

: · The more possibilities they see,
:the bctler the chance of finding
·someone worth leaving a marriage
:for, Sou!h said Friday.
: : He said he assumes unhappy
:marriages are especially vulnera' ble, but that he could not rule out
:some eff'll:t on People quite satis.tied wid, !heir lltllffl88es wbo hap-;pen to m~et the partner of their
•dreamS.
. Soutll noted that a national sur.yey found that about 15 percent of
:u.: wives and ex-husbands said
:they had been romantically

•

'

v

v WOoferl v 1W88181'1
v Cint~r channel
v Subwooters
.
v over 180 different ...

Speakilrs lor home
and home tlleater
v Auto stereo
v Amplified v PA
v CB and scanner

.

models on sale now:·

'

~:

HURRY IN

FOR BEST
SELECTIONI

Our bame .........
lnclud8 a 6-y...
llmltad .WII'I'MIIY

Prim good through .

Sund1y 2/2&amp;/95 •

'.

'

:'

;:;tn
-~
'

SAVE NOW!

........._.
..·~~

81299

. Portable ll&amp;dlilld

(614) 446-6700

I:=~~=~o~f~t~h:e~A~m~er~tc~a~n~!l!~~;--:::::~,
I
The Shoe ( afe "CHRIS"

Now
when you purchase selected Sealy a'!d Serta mattresses al
original price. you get the matching boxspring I foundatwn for $/.001 plus .~leef,
FREE w1th no moneJdown, no in.terest charges and no payments for SIX months.*

Available In Tan
a. Sand

1\ol ...

0 l

Pur~has&lt; any mattress at
the original price and get

lr.Wil

for just $1.00!

he~lth care questions .

. All Cellular Phones are Now on Sale!

4918*

~

PHOTOGRAPHY
Profsislona/ Wedding Photography

has all the right ingredients
for answering your

t~

Save on this AST 488 Com...ter Package

Sociological Review.
Andrc:w C~lin, ~Job~ Hopkins U01versuy soctologtst who
studie~ marria~e, divorce a!!d
remarr!age, cal ed tbe~~~~w:
good pt~ of research
•
even married pc:ople may CODSl~
the alternatives 1f they'Je not,satiS·
tied with their ~-''
"I don't think this tells us that
the presence of unmarried adults is
a threat to a happy marriaae," he

Holzer Health Hotline

Quality is not a lost a:n at
Radro Shack. Our Optimu s
home speakers include a
5-year limited warranty at no
eKtra cost. see store ten details .

.- -

involved witb somebody outside
the marriage before getting
divorced.
Since eitller spouse can cause a
divorce, the result su~ests that at
least 30 percent of divorces occur
after one spouse has started an
affair South said.
.
S~th is a sociology professor at
the State University of New Yort
at Albany. He and colleague Kim
Lloyd
their study in.this

the matching bo• spring

* Illness or Injury

..·

Less than 1112 " thin and 11 .1 ounces with '
banery- fi1s easily in purse, briefcase .
reg 99 99 ,.17 ·10608V

* Physician Re/erral

' 989*

* Health Care Ev~nts

'blllllllblle
Plug into car lighter and
it's ready to go. Moves
easily from car to car.
reg 9999•17 -10218¥

*Support Groups

ReQIJHH new achv at10n ano m1mmum 5P t~ lc e comm•t
ment Wllh flad,o Shack authOfl l td C &lt;: liu l~ l ca me• Pnces
\\'1tnou1 ac t• ~ at 1 on ~11 - lll&lt;'t S3.09 99 • tl -1060

SJ49 99 Offer vmd Ill CA Oeta• ls tn store

More Great Electronics Savings 1

See Puzzler on Page D-2

,.._ Wrllt Wltl:b

488SX PC with Creauve Labs
cs ..:_ ·nuumedla kit, speakers, monitor .

$998.
$598.
$698.

~Tells " you the lime at a push of a butlon or
hourly. With alarm . r 119. t7.99163-5042Bv

AST 6033s Advantage! 11 PC, a special-edition Creative Labs"·_; inc. multimedia ~lr_
' _

..
..

(complete with double-speed CD-ROM drive, 16-bit sound card, soltware and

installatiOn hardware), Super-VGA color monitor and mini speakers. L~al bus

video , pre-installed MS-DOS 6.21 , Windows 3.tt , AST Works! , plus PFSWorks
800 number lor 24-hoqr, 7-day technical support .
reg . separa1e 11em s 1388.95 IF2S-403120314Cl9 1140 ·1359BV 'ln111allel10n &amp;Mira

Call . l-800-462~5255

44%0FF 918

••

20% IFF

11

81 .

.

$897.

-

rom 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., se.ven days a week,
t:l specially train~d R.N. is on d.uty to ,
answer your questions on .health ca~e and.
to infornt you about available semces.

C081Paclllllrm cloclll'lllla

Intel M d !lie lntellns1de I~ are reg1ster&amp;d trad em~ rk s ~ ll n tft l C!jYP

Our smallest! Convenient on-top

' controls. reg

14.99 1F t2-15908V

'

Holzer Medical Center

I

•

11

Your communUy partner in change ...
As we continue the Holzer Tradition 11

·'
We can wrap a gift, add a card and ship it

anyv.:here in the US via Fed Ex• delivery
service. For a store near you or to orc:ter, call

t-800-THE-SHACK~

___,

Features At An
Mtordable Price.

'~ill be on the p!Ogram along with
i1~ns in clodiin$, s!IOCS and jew;~, handcJ'afled 1tems, and sew-

TAWNEY JEWELERS INC.
422 Second ln.

Ughtwe_~ht

:, ·Again this year enrertainment

'

'

ROLLS 2000 WHEELCHAIR

·P~'s.

Many Other Sizes and Shapes To Choose From!
RECEIVE CHECKS • I'Uincy Brunner, (left), VIce President or
Nursing at Holzer-Medical Center congratulates i'our registered
nurses from tbe Rehab Unit sllifT, that earned tbeir status as Certi· ·
fied Rebabilitatioa Registered Nurses (CRRNs). They are, (left),
Joey Millers Sharon Stout, Pam Short and Kay Rutberrord.

been back to Vietnam since the Kapucinski said. His own daugh. In August, the map helped the
don '!
Kapucinwar.
1m are now 12, IS and 19.
VIetnamese recovec 95 bodies. The sin sa1d. " Thts 1s the only grave
"It's going to be tough going
Kapucinski, who cuts llair at remains of about 100 more men (from the war) Jhat _the y have.
back to my base camp llld mceOnl Bay .Barbc:r Shop, drew a map of were found nearby. The bodies or . There ~ people coou~g f~om all
the palalts of the people that I put the burial sire with the help of fel- men who attacked his base o~er V~ and bghung tncense
in their graves" Kapuclnski said low veteran Robert Coot of Avon members of 9S C Regiment of the slicks~- •
the day before his departure.
l..ake.
First Nonh Vietnamese Army,
Vietnamese ? ffic_ials alre~dy
Now the father of three,
They based the map on an aerial were exhumed and reburied with thanked Kap!lcmsk1 by tu~nmg
Kapucinski has painful memories photograph Kapucinslti too1t when military honors.
over the rem11ns of IS Gls m the
of the attack onLZ ~L
he wa5 being evacualed for a shmpDuring his visil, Kapucinsti will past fe~ weeks. ,
,
After il was over, Amaicans put nel injury several days after the place a plaque, provided by CJaapDurmg _th e trtp, . 18 ~mencan
the bodies of the Vietnamese fuefighL.
·
rer 249 of the V1etnam vetiriiis of vetemns will meetwtth Vtetnamese
around the 1Jue as a warning to the
Cook, a senior designer for Mid- America, at the cemerery holding to e~change mort mfoflll!IIIOD.
enemy. Later they were bulldozed dough Associates Inc. in Clev~ - the remains pf the Vietnamese
Dog tags and other ne ms may
into mass gra~es.
. .land, use&lt;l computer graphics to killed in the fare6ghL
·
. help solv~ the my~~ of som~ of
A number or the soldiers looted pinpoint the location of the old · "This is their Vietnam Memori- the A'!fen~an_s mJSsmg m acuon,
very young - maybe IS or 16, landing zone.
Kapucmski satd.

POMEROY - "Fashion Alive
:Jn '95"is the tbeme of the lOth
;)nnual Pomer-oy Merchants Associ;iuion fashion show to be beld Apil
·~ at the Pomeroy Elementary
!)cbool.
:• Vicki Ferrell of Buuons and
l~ows and Susan Clark of Clark's
!Jewelry will again this year serve
:48 co-dJairman for the evenL Oth•l:rs on the commitree are Nancy
:,-ooene, Annie Chapman of Chap:'lllan's Shoes, Ann l.ambtrt of 1fJe
;1'abJic Shop, and Holly Williams or

BOUND • SHAPED
1120 CT.
$79
1/10 CT.
$119
1/7 CT.
$149
1/5 CT.
$199
1/4 CT.
$279
1/3 CT.
$349
1/2 CT.
$599

$79
. $129
•
$199

temporary landing base north of
Saigon.
The ftrefight with 1,600 North
Vietnamese lasted all night with
horrors aplenty. By daylight, 17
Americans and hundreds of the
enemy were dead. ,
Twenty-six years later,
Kapucinski, 46, has relllmed 10 the
Communist country with a delegalion to honor tbe fallen men and
seek information on the 2,213
Americans still missing in action.
Kapucinslri left his Bay Village·
home Feb. 4 for the th=-weet trip
spon~ by t'!e Vietnam Yetmi!S
of Amenca. Itts the ftnt U!flC he s

[~how in
~4~he works

•

1/20 CT.
1/10 CT.
1/7 CT.
1/5 CT.
1/4 CT.
1/3 CT.
1/2 CT.

Sunday llmes SenUnei--Page--87

Pomeroy Middleport Geillpolll, OH Point Plaaaant, WV

·-

.

.

You 've got questions. We've got answers.••
.

Out ol whack? Out ot warranty? We fix
most major brands of out-of ·warranty
electronics. For a ~tore near you, call

1·800·THE-SHACK'"

,
•
•'

..

'

·I .
- __J .

•

'

~

..

•

I

•

., .

-

�Entertainment

.February 19, 1995

ports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B8

People in the news
Last year, Marshall signed over bis $550
NEW YORK (AP) - Donald Tzump spent 18 months in prison for laX evasion.
million estate hl his 11011. The fonune has been
says he wants two things cut of the Empire State
put in trust and Smith largely has been cut off
Building: nw and bis an:h-nemsis Leona
SEOUL, South Korea(AP) - MicbaeiJacDolt'sheen·anbanned.
Hebnsley.
The government reversed its position Friday and decided ID allow lhe from lhe money.
Smith has complained of her financial
Trump filed a lawsuit Wednesday 10 get · singer 10 perform in lhe nation's capital.
woes
and insisted she is· in love with her
rid of the building's openilors, Hclmsley-Spear
In 1993 the government banned a Jacbori concert on lhe grounds he
husband
and has performed her ''wife duties."
Inc., which is owned by Mrs. Hebnsley's hus- would offend Kon:an cUSIOms.
band. Harry.
South Korea frowned on foreign pop performen after a teen-ager was
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Soap open
Trump, who owns half lhe 102-SIOI)' crushed hl death at a 1992 New Kids on the Block concert, but recently has
shrink
Hall has settled a real"life dis·
skysc111pcr and has a longstanding enmity with allowed shows jly Boyz ll Men and Richard Marx.
pute
involving
the ramily of her late therapisL
Mrs. Hclmsley, claims the management compeny
Jaekson is expectd!IO perform in June. ·
·
The
aetress
sued 10 regain $800,000 in
has let lhe landmark dereriorale iniO "a second·
loans
hl
George
Barkouras,
who died in 1992.
rate, rodent-infested" office lOwer.
HOUSTON (AP) - Anna Nicole Smith is fighting her stepson over
:Jbe jury was waiting 10 hear final arguJohn Scanlon, spokesman for Hebnsley- guardianship of her 90-year-old billionaire husband.
meniSin·the
trial ThUillday when the settlement
Spear, called the lawsuit frivolous. He said the
The 26-year-old former model and Playboy centerfold was in eoun
was
reached.
Terms or the agreement weren't
'
Clllllp811Y has spent $60 million since 1990 on impovements. A hearing was ThUrsday for a hearing in which she won visilation rights 10 ace her husband,
'
disclosed.
.
· 1. Howanl Marshall.
·
··
IICbeduled for Man:h I.
"I'm
pleased
in
every
area," said Hall, 47, who plays the demonically
Mrs. Hebnsley, who earned the nickname lhe "queen of mean" for her
Marshall's son, Piell:e, has tempol81) guardianship of bis father, who
possessed psychiatrist Dr. Marlena Evans on NBC's "Days of Our Lives." :
tough ~~~~~~~gement approach in her husband's hclel and real eslate holdings, doctors say is mentally incapaciwcd.

Di•

Top video
· sales
By Tbe Associated Press
Weekly charts for the nation's
most popular videos as they appear
in next week's issue of Billboard
magazine. Reprinted with permission:
VIDEO SALES
Copyright 1995, Billboard Publications Inc.
I. "The Mask," (T~)
2."Speed," (FoxVideo)
3.''Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs," (Disney)
4. "The Land Before Time II,"
(MCA-Universal)
. 5. "Penthouse: Swi!Dsuil 2,"
(AVision)
. ' ·
6. "A Troll in C:cntral Park,"
(Warner) ·
7."Eagles: Hell Fn:ezes Over,"
(Geffen) (Platinum)
8. "Playboy: 1995 Video Playmate Calendar," (Playboy)
9. "Nirvana: Live! Tonight!
Sold Out!" (Geffen) (Platinum)
lO. "Jurassic Park," (MCA-UIIi·
versa!)
.
VIDEO RENTALS
Copyright 1995, Billboard Publicalions Inc.
!."True Lies," (Fox Video)
2. "The Mask," (Turner)
3."TheCiient," (Warner)
4."Wolf," (Columbia TriStar)
5."Biown Away," (MGM-UA)
6. "Oear lind Present Danger,"
(Paramount)
7."The Shadow," (MCA-Universal)
8. "Renaissance Man," (Touch.shlne)
.
9. "Maverick," (Warner)
10. "When a Man Loves a
Woman," (TouchsiOne)
MUSIC VIDEO SALES
Copyright 1995, Billboard Pub·
licalions Inc.
I. "Live at the Acropolis,"
Yanni (BMG) (Platinum)
2." Hell Fn:ezes Over," Eagles
(Geffen) (Platinum)
· 3. "Bartra: The Concen," Bar- ·
15ra Streisand (Columbia) (Platinum)
4. "Live! Tonight! Sold Out!!"
Nirvana (Geffen) (Platinum)
5. "Our First Video," MaryKate &amp;. Ashley Olsen (Dualslat)
(Platinum)

Walt Whitman's missing
notebooks rediscovered

'Days of Our Lives' is favorite
soap, Deidre Hall the top actress

B,-CATH~CROCKER

Alloclated Press Writer

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
(AP) - "Days of Our Lives"
won six awards, including
favorite sho~W, and Deidre Hall,
who plays the passionate psychiatrist Marlena Evans, won
best lead actress at the II th
annual Soap Opera Digest
awards.
Nominees in l7 categories
were cbnsen by ediiOrs of Soap
Opera Digest, except for the
"hottest mille and female stars~ '
and "hottest soap couple,"
which were based on v1ewer
mail.
Other awards handed out Friday night went hl "Days" cast
members Jason Brooks for out·
standing villain, Drake
Hogestyn as hottest male slat, .
Roben Kelker-Kelly and Lisa
Rinna as hottest couple and
Louise Sorel as female scene
stealer.
Tom Eplin of "Another
World" was named outstanding
lead actor.
'"General Hospital" earned
four acting troph1es and a spe·
cial award for head writer Oaire
Labine. Jonathan Jackson was
.named .outstanding child ac10r,
Brad Maule won supporting
actor, 'Kristina Wagner won
houest female star and Rena
Safer was named younger lead·
ing actress.
The "Editor's Award ... was
presented 10 Labine in recogni •
lion of conuibutions 10 the freld
of continuing drama.
Other winners were: Brooke
Alexander, "As the World
Turns.,. female newcomer;
Keith HamiiiOn Cobb, "All My

Children," male newcomer;
Roger Howatt~. "One Life to
Live," younger leading actor;
~ Kimberlin Brown, "The Bold
and the Beautiful, ... villainess;
Signy Coleman, "The Young
and the Restless," supporting
actress; and Michael E. Knight,
"All My Children;" male scene

NEW YORK (AP) - Noteboob conlaining Walt Whitman's
scratched-out poems and philosopbical musings have been Jedis,
covered more than SO ye8111 after
they were slolen from the Library
of Congress.
The f&lt;iur notebooks were found
by an unidentified man in his
father's esune and turned over to
Sothebfs auction house for evaluation. The boob had been a kift to
the man's father, said Selby Kiffer,
a vice president in Sotheby's boots
and manuscripts deJ)artmenL
.
Kiffer contacted the Library of
Con11ress after finding evidence
linkmg it .with one of the notebooks. The auction house also
determined that a paper butterfly
included with the manuscripts,
which Whitman used as a prop in a
-phOIOgraph, was from l/le library.
The ootebnokS and butteifly will
be returned 10 the library.
"We are grateful 10 Solheby's
for its lllertness and its public spirit,
and 10 the person who found the
four Walt Whitman notebooks,"
James Billington, the librarian of
Congress, said Friday. "They are a
priceless part of our national herllllge. ..
The Library of Congress said
Whitman's literary executor
deposited 24 Whitman manuscripts

at the library in 1918. They were
moved in 1942 10 a secret repository in Ohio for safekeeping during
World War II.
When the container with the
poems was return in 1944, it wa,
missing 10 notebooks and the but·
terfly, the library said. The whereabouts of the other six ·are still a
mystery.
Kiffer said the earliest of the
four notebooks he examined was
from 1847, and included about 47
small pages densely written in pencil.

FAMILY NIGHT

EVERY

Personal Size ...

or Wllh 16 oz. Sol1 Drink

.For Only '1.99
4 PM-9 PM ONLY

Ht;NDERSON, WV
GAWPOUS,OH

which included all the current
daytime serials.
Actor John Larroquette eo·
hosted the event at the Beverly
HiiiOn hotel. .

become as much a tradem&amp;~ ..-.
Jean-Luc Picard's bald pate or
James Kirk'ssideburns).
She's no powder puff. When
Janeway wants a command executed, she snaps "Do it!" instead of
using Picard's counly "Make it

so. "

·

Mulgrew says her character is
tough but also compassionate,
warm and, well, feminine. She also
has a fien:e curiosity.
"We are lost in space. We may
never see home again," she says.
"But l"lhink in myself and my
deepeSt being, there's a quickening
of the pulse and I'm thinking, 'Oh
boy, the planets I'm going to
explore ... the stones I will overturn."
Mulgrew says she isn't worried
about what fans will think of a
female caplain. More important, at
the moment, is dealing with the flu
and 16-hour days that keep her
away from her two young children.
"I miss my children, I'll be
frank about that," she says, but
adds, "I'm old enough and smart
. enough to know that I made a
choice."
· .
Cast and crew alike say Mul~~ never complains and is lis dis:
c1phned as ,her character. She
attributes thatiO being trained as
"second in ·commancno my mother" in a family of eight children.
"In a big family, when you're

issuing orders and you don't feel so
goodoryou'refeelingsadyounelf,
these things have 10 be masked for
lhejobhasiOgetdone."
'
Though she wasn't· a Trek fan
she believes in the Trek universe. '
"They're not 1·ust writing set'·
ence fiction here; they're writing
dreams •• she says •'Einstein
would h~ve 8PIWOVed ;,
"'Reconfigure' i~ every other
.Jine "he says "It's the most pop •
- Jar ~erb ins~ Trek."
u.

French City Prom
Style·Review
· Sunday ·
February 19, 2 p.11.
Ad11lssloa 13
Morrie l Dorothy Hlleklne
Ariel T_,. 4212ncl. Avo. Galllpollo, Ou

C•ll 446·ARIS

10 , ...... . 10 MIIDOI• .,..,.

'"'

· 7 :00,9: ) 0 DAILW
MATINEIS SAT J SUN

1:00 l:JO

scored II of his 32 points during a
crucial second-half run that helped
carry Oklahoma 10 a 94-89 victory
over No. 9 Missouri on Satwday.
The Sooners (19-6, 6-4 Big
Eight) ran their record 10 J3.{1at
home this season. Missouri (haml8-4,
7·3) only led once and we~e
•
pered by fool uouble -four players fooled oul Overall, the~e were
55 fouls called and 81 free throws.
The Tigers trailed by seven at
halftime but outscored Oklahoma
9-2 in the first 2:30 of lhe second
half 10 tie the score at 48. They
eventuall)' lOOk a S7-56 lead on a
baseline Jumper by Paw O'Liney,
who fmished with 24.
Then Minor got the Sooners
going again.
. The Big Eight's leacling scorer
had II during a 15-3 run that
stretched the lead to 71-60 with
8:22 ID go. Minor was 17-of-20
from the line.
John Onljes added 18 points and
Dian Barnes 14 for the Sooners.
Missouri got 14 from Jason Sutherland, who fouled out along with
fellow starters Sammie Haley,
• Julian Winfield and reserve Simeon
Haley.
No. 10 Arkansas 115
Mississippi 70
At Fayetteville, Ark., Corliss
Williamson made seven . free
throws lll!d Scouy ~urman hll two
lhree-pomters durmg a 13-0 run
that helped t.Oth-ranked Arkansas
beat Mississippi 8S' 70 Saturday.
The run began after the Rebels
(8-14, 3-9 Soulheaste~ Conference) had sc;ored II straight for a
20-18 lead. The spun by Arkansas
(21·5, 9-4) started when
"-:illiamson made two free throws
w11h 9:24 to play in the half. He
made four more and .then Corey
Beck daned.under the b&amp;sket for a
reverse layup and passed 10 Thur~

·Repla~ement players

SINGLE-HANDED OFFENSE - Connecticut's Ray Allen (34)
takes the one-banded shot over teammate Travis Knlaht u weD 11
ViUanova's Ron WDson and Chuc:k Kornegay durlna Saturday's Bla
East battle In Starn, CQnn., wl!ere tile Wllckall upset lite top-ranked
Huskies 96-73. (AP)
man who made a 3.
Setoo HaD 82
· No. 11 Syrac:use 74
At East Rutherford, N.J., SeiOn
Hall put itself back in the NCAA
Tournament picture and spoiled a
record-setting day by Syracuse's
Lawrence Moten by handing the
No. II Orangemen
their
third
. ,. '
'
-·

.

~

straight loss, 82-74 Saturday. ·
The win was the fltSl agninst a
ranked team for Seton Hall (16-8,
7-7 Big East) and only lheir founh
in 31 conference games against
Syracuse (17-6, IQ-4)..1t snapped a
two-game losing streak that had put
the Pirates' NCAA Tournament
~~ces in peril.

not new to baseball .

By HAL BOCK
Again, the league wasn't amused aild noliAP Sporlll Writer
fied Detroit management that every game
Just in case the proprieiOrs of baseball think missed would cost the franchise $5,000, no
this busiltess of replacement players is some smllll bit of change in those days. That caught
brilliant new scheme, they should be advised owner Frank Navin's attention in a hurry and
that, like mosllhinp; it.is not origioal.
be decided that the reclllcillllnl players notwithThe fUDC has seen this act before ani! sur- slandlng, the Tigers would field a team, one
vived.
· way II another. Manager Hughie Jennings was
Barely.
.
dispatched hl assemble a squad, even though
In 1912, Ty Cobb was the best player in recruiting players was not part of his job
ba&lt;eball, smack in the middle of a ~emarkable description.
·
string of nine Sllllight American League batting
By then, the team h~ traveled from New
championships. He also had a hair-bigger tern· York 10 Philadelphia and Jennings headed for a
per and was not the friendliest of fellows.
sandlot and then a local seminary 10 collect
On May !'5, Detroit. and Cobb played in some prospects or, perhaps, suspects. He signed
New York, where some fans began heckling nine of them - the requisiie number- and
the Tigers' star. Eventually, he had heard returned hl the team.' Coaches Joe Sugden, 41,
enough and h&gt;Ok off iniO lhe slands hl go after and Deacon McGuire, 48, 1115o suited up and
the guy with the big mouth.
·.
the Ti~rs h&gt;Ok the field for a game against the
Sounds familiar, doesn't it? ·
Athleucs. ·
·
·
Cobb pummeled the heckler, a poor soul
One of the replacements was Billy Maharg,
named Lucker. It was an act of revenge hearlily who thought he'd go undercover by spelting his
endorsed by his teammates if not by the ~elll name - Graham - backwards. He was
American League, which frowned on players · hitless in his only at-bat and was the only
jJunching paying cus10mers, League president Tisen replacementiO play again, a1ao hitless in
!ian Johnson moved swiftly, suspending Cobb one at-bat for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1916.
indefmitely.
Maharg was not done with llaseball,lhough. He
His Tigers teammates, not lllways so fast hl surfaced again in 1919, identified as one of the
rush 10 Cobb's defense,. did so this time. If conspirators in the Black Sox scandal.
Cobb was out, they said, whY. ·then they Yiere
Another replacemeril was Ed Irvin, who had
out. lOa. They would go on strike.
two b'iples in three swings, a performance that

allowed him to complete his major league
career with a rather stunning slugging average
of 2.000;
· On the ~d for Detroit for the replacemenl game was Aloysius Tlllvers, a willing reilow who would later become a reverend and
professor of Spanish. Fonunately, pitching was
not a prerequisite for either of those profeSsions
because, truth be known, Travers was not much
of a pitcher. He was, however, the only pi:cber
these Tigers had.
.
So, Travers trudged out inning after inning
and took his lumps. When it was over, he had
allowed 25 hits and 24 runs. Four of the hits
·were by Eddie Collins, who lllso took adYllii·
lllge of lhe elderly McGuire, stationed behind
the plate, by stellling five bases. Travers did,
how.ever, have li complete game in his only
major league appearance and his name remains
in the record book for the most runs ever
allowed by a pitcher in one game.
The semipro Tigers lost 24-2 and were paid
$25 apiece !II their time. This. Navin reasoned,
was a lot' beuer than paying $5,000 to the
league. The next day, peace broke OUL Cobb
was reinstated and advised his teammates 10
return.
When lhey came back, each striking Tiger
was fined $100, a stiff charge for their loyalty
10 Cobb, especially since he was fined halt that
amount for punching ow the fan.

·'

I F&lt; L\1ll~
I:\ 1.1

With 'winning car,' Marlin:says 1995 DAYTONA 500
he can take Daytona 500 _again Rac8fact8

IPC- 131
7:00, 9; 10 DAILY
IVr.TiftiiiSS SAT &amp; 5 1.111

I : OO ,l: JO

Sunday, February 19, Daytona, Florida.

--~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!'!~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~=~~~;;;.;;;;;.;;;;;,

II

BAG

A BIG

RETURN WITH OUR

DouBLE CouPoN CD!

l
Annual
Percentage Yield

Kansas, making full use of a big
Florida, which lost 83-67 to
height advantage, turned back a Kentucky on Jan. 10, trailed 79-77
Kansas State rally and beat the on Greg Williarns' two free throws
Wildcats 78-67 on Saturday, the with 58.6 seconds left, but missed
Jayhawks' 12111 straight victory in its last thn:e shots and turned the
Manhauan.
· ballovertwicedown lhestreleh.
The Jayhawks haven'tlost at the
Florida hit S3 percerit (25-forhome of their an:hrivals since 1983 47) of its shots, but committed 22
and are 20-3 for the founh season llimovcrs that Kentucky turned into
in a row. They never trailed while 33 points. Kentucky shot 41 perimproving the1r league-leading Big cent (29-for-71) and had just nine
Eight mark lO 9·2.
turnovers.
Kansas State (11 -12, 2-9) lost its
Andrew DeClercq contributed
fifth straight and ninth in 10 games; 22 points and seven rebounds and
but not before giving the 1ayhawb Dametri Hill had 12 points and
a scan:. With Kansas State trailing seven rebounds for Florida. Harriby as many as 13, Belvis Noland son, a seniQr, finished with a
scored fou~ points and Elliot career-high II points f!I Kentucky.
Hare her got two in an 8-2 run that
No. 24 Mlllaaota 66
brought the capacity crowd to its
No.8 Mk:hlpa State~
feet and shaved the lead 10 59-58.
At Minneapolis, VoshOn Lenard
Hatcher 'had 18 points for K- broke out of a shooting slump 10
State. Tyrone navis had 15 and score 17 points Saturday and No,
Noland had 14.
24 Minnesota's defense shut down
No. II Kentuck,- 87, Florida 77
eighth-ranked Michig~Siate and
At Lexington, Ky., Rodrick beat the Spartans 66-57. \ .
Rhodes scored 23 p9ints;Tony ·
The Gophers (17-7, 8-4 in lhe
Delle had 19 and seldom-used Big Ten) avenged a 54-53 loss last
guard Chris Harrison came off the month to Michigan State despite
bench to hit thn:e thn:e-pointers ID being hobbled by injuries. They
s~ No. 4 Kentucky 10 an 87-77 . crept within I 1(2 games of the
vtctory over Florida on Saturday.
league-leading Spanans, winners of
Florida (13-8, 7-5 Sootheastem) nine of their l&amp;olt 10 games.
got a career-high 30 points from
Michigan State (18-4, 10-3)
Dan Cross, who hit all 16 of his entered the game with a leaguefree-throw atlcmpts.
best 50.7 pei'Cenl shooting average
Kentucky (IS-4, 10-2) lOOk the but shot just 38 percent from the
lead for good at 72-71 on Jared floor following a 36-peicenl showPrickett's 10-foot jumper with 3:59 ing in their earlier meeting with lhe
to go. After a Florida turnover, Gophers.
Delk hit a three-pointer from the
Shawn Respell scored 17, eight
left wing 10 increase the margin 10 below his average, and backcoun
four points.
·
mlite Eric Snow went scotele••
·
· ·
before fouling out with 2:16 left.
The Spartans' Quinton Brooks
scored 14 of his 16 points in the
.
second half;
Oklah011a94
No.9 Millllourl89
At Norman, Olda, Ryan Minor

RIO GRANDE ·- Tiffin's
-•-•-•Ashley Allen had her way with the
TIFFIN (21-40=611) - Allen
)lets 10 lhe.tune of 33•points eomin~ 0/4-10119-314=33, Shardo 6(14.{1,0.
mostly from behind lhe arc, buill 4(4=16, Wilson 519-010-0(0.. 10,
:was Rio Grande's Redwomen who Laker 1(4-0/0-1(2=3, Ohman liS·
:had their way with Saturday Oft).{l/()=2, Redmen 1(5-0/0.{110=2.
'afternoon's Mid-Ohio Conference TOCala-1!145-10119-11110=68
basketball game at the University of
Total FG - 25-64 (39.1 %)
Rio O~'s Lyne ·Center, where
Rebou~-'33(Wilson 11)
the Redwomen won SS-68.
Blockea shu - 3 (by Allen,
"The whole team pla)'ed really Laker &amp; Shardo)
well IOday," said Rio head coac:h
AsliBis -7 (WilsonS)
David Smalley. (Megan) Winters
Steals - 7 (Laker &amp;. Shardo 2
was lOUgh in the paint offensively. each)
Tricia (Collins) was lOugh inside
Turnoven- 18
defensively. Kim Sowers had eigh~ . Fouls- 18
assists and some really key basketS.
Fouled out- Wilson
Michelle Tabor hit some threes.
RIO GRANDE (4(1-39=85)- .
"And Stacy Riley- like always
-. was everywhere," he added in Riley 4(9-4/4-5/5=25, Winters
regard 10 his club's scoring leader 1/IS-0/0-1(2=1S, Tabor 0/1-3/8in the game. She had 25 points 10 4/4=13, Sowers 4/S-010-414•12,
lead a quartet of double-figure Collins 419-010·0~8. Smith 4(7010-0/0..8, Floyd 1/3-0/0-0/0=2,
scorers.
Tiffm led 19-17 at the I0-minute Rawlins 0}0-0/0~214=2. Totals:
mark in the first half before the 24151-7112-16120=85
Total FG- 31-63 (49.2%)
Redwomen (13-14 overall &amp; 9-8 in
Rebounds- 39 (Smith 10)
the MOC) went on a 14-0 run that
allowed them to stay ahead by no
Blocked sllolll - 2.(by Collins
·
fewer than 10 points the rest of the &amp;Rile)
way.
~ -14 (Sowen 8)
Angie Shardo and Liz Wilson
Steals - 13 (Riley S) ·
had 16 and 12 points, respectively, ·
Tumoven-18
Fouls-IS
for the Dragons.

'Star Trek' generation only threat . to ' oyager
B,- ROBERT JABLON
"Voyager" sets are built on the
Associated Press Writer
.
same ParamQunt sound stages as
LOS ANG.ELES (AP)- Forget those for the defunct "Next GenerCardassians, network execs and ation," among the most popular
other bad ~uys. The fans of Slat syndicated sliows ever.
Trek's earher incarnations are the
:Ibe main bridge is aU steel and
real threat t9 "Star Trek: Voy- ribbed paneling. It's a Machine
Age, no-nonsense look -as diflierager."
.
The fourth live-action series ent from the. plusli pastels of "Next
debuted Jan .. 17 as flag-waver for Generation's" Enterprise-D as a
the new Unue~ Pa~am~unt Net- Borg from a bunny rabbit
·
work. Bets are 1t Will hve longer
A dedication plaque lists lhe late
than a Trilt .
. . .
"Slat Trek" erea10r Gene Rodden. . those
But only if It avo•d$ ncking off !lgry !Ill chief of slllff.
who, m the course ?f 30
Majel Roddenbeny, his widow,
years, sav~ the Slat ~ ~verse r•uises the new series for its glossy
from obhv10n, made •t a. v•.rtual special effects - easily affordable
m~ myth, and gel rab1d 1f the on a budget of more than $1.5 mil· cosm1c laws are broken.
lion per episode - and its female
. One f3!1 even turned o~ ~~~~ P";· main character, Capt. Kathryn
m1ere _epiSOde beca~se It d1dn l Jancwav.
·
· sian w1th the phrase .10 boldly go
In the oril!inal "Star Trek' '
... '·. ~o much for bold mnovanon.
series pilot, Ms. Roddenbeny was
. The fans are always ID our second in command of the Enterm1n~; ... Th~y keep us on our prise. NBC rejected the character
toes, . says R1ck Be~!l"· who !~ because it fell audiences would
execuuv~ producer of. Voyager . balk at a femllle in charge.
lllong w•th Michael Piller and len
Now,lhere's Janewar.
Ta~!II· .
"Oh, am I happy,.' Ms. RodWe hav.e .a whole Star Trek denbeny sa~s. "lbe only thing that
technology," Berman says .. ','It's bothers me IS it took 30 years 10 do
lllc1 made up, but 10 ~e f~ II s as it. Which means that Gene, once
tea!.as lhe ~ _of SCIC~.
again, was ... before his time."
. Voyager ~ lhe third TV ?IfActually, "Stlir Trek: Voyspnng of !he ongmal1966·senes, ager,:.' lik.e jts anc'estors, reflects
not counung a long-ago cartoon clfrrent'Siiciety more than future
sho~.
. ..
. ..
pmspects.
Piller calls ll back hl has•~·
The "Star Trek" of the 1960s
Where the recently ~~ Star Jllll women officers in \Diniskirts us
- - - - Trek: The Next Genef11!10n had a_ the freedom-loving Federation
cushy behemoth of a sh1p that seat- fought a Cold War against the Evil
ed 1,000 an.~ the current "D~p Empire of Klin~.
S~ace Nme has a sp~ce s1auo.~
"Voyager's • warld is,morally
wttll a holo-brolhel, V?yager
complex. The crew includes the
returns 10 the small-boat-tn-a·blg· Maquis, a rebel group founded
ocean lheme. .
.
after a Federation tn:aty ceded their
The Intrepid-class s~ l_las a colony worlds 10 the Cardassians.
paltry crew of 200. that li
ttself (Read Israel's West Bank and you
snatched dee!? into uncharted get the piclllre).
space. The !D•ss•o_n: ID boldly go.The captain, played by Kate
home. Wh1ch Will take 7S years MUlgrew ·1s a raspy-voiced Superun)ess "Voyag~" can ftnd a mys- mom of the '90s !fiUISPlanted 10 the
terious alien to help.
. •
sws.
·
. The idea ~as If! keep the_show · Here she is, dealing with reneliesh by creaang a new antverse, gades, a nasty alien, a ~arp core
away from Starlleet and away from breach and a bad hair day all at
the Federation," Berman says.
once (her flowing red locks m·av

· STORRS, Corm. (AP)- Keny
leitt!es scored a career-high 37
points and No. IS Villanova sent
Connecticut 10 a resounding 96-73
defeat Saturday in the Huskies'
first home game as· me nation's
top-ranked team.
. The Wildcats (19-5, 12·:0:~
·East) extended their winning
·10 II games and threw themselves
:iniO the race for the Big East title.
·They traillhe Huskies by one game
:and each has four remaining.
: They alsO ended Connecticut's
·18-game regular-season winning
:Streak, a conference record, and
1tanded the Huskies (20-2, 13-1)
{heir ftrst home loss in 27 games,
:dating 10 the a J9931oss 10 Jackson
·State in the ftrst round of the NIT.
:The Huskies were uying 10 become
:the first team in conference hisiOry
-togo undefeated.
: . It was all Kittles in the fltSt half.
:The junior forward scored 2S
il(lints as lhe Wildcats h&gt;Ok a 48-44
:halftime lead.
· Kittles, the second-leading scor:Cr in the Big East at21.9 points per
:game, was 5-for-8 from thn:e-poinl
nnge ·in the first half and Eric
~beri was 5-for-6 from there in lhe
;second half. He finished with 23
;POints.
, Doran Sheffer led Connecticut
;with 14 points, while Ray Allen,
-the Big East's leading scorer at
22.5 per game, finished with 11 on
·4-for-17 shooting.
:
No. 3 KW11585 78
Kansas State 67
At Manhattan, Kan., Jerod
Haase SC9t'ed 21 points and No. 3
· ··
:·
·

F.o r Only '1.29

·stealer.
The magazine's readers were
asked to choose from a list of
three nominees per category in
1111 but favorite show category,

:V illanova downs UConn 96-73

·Redwomen record
·.:as-68 WI. n ove·r Tl.ffl. n

TUESDAY NIGHT

' Style
YOIJ Can Enjoy Any

DAYTIME SOAPS - Actress Deldre Hall of ..Pays of Our
Lives" bold&amp; ller ouiBWidlng lead actress aWard Friday at 1te 11111
annual Soap Opera Digest awards sllow In Bever!,- Hills, Calif.
"Days or Onr Lives" won six awards, (AP Photo(Micllael
-·
·
Caullleld)
_

Top 25 college basketball

Month
Maturity

1be inrerest rare on the account may change at the customer's discretion when the New York Pri~ Rate changes . The customer
inc~ their ':'te twi~ during lhe 16 month tenn wi1h the fust coupon by the same percentage as the t'ota.l increase in the New vn:J
~me R~e sancc the acwun~ was open~.1 The second coupon may be used to increase the rate by the same perc~ntnge as the total
t~rease 1n the _New York Prime Rare sanee lhe ~t coupon was red~med . This CD is not_automalically ~newable and requires a
mammum deposn of $2 •.500.00. Penalty
Withdrawal. A.P.Y. is available as of the date of this issue, but is subject to

.-

By PAUL NEWBERRY
.
the lOp three, I think we'll be the ones 10 beat."
~ Dletancl: 200 laps and 500 miles
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Sterling
First, he must get by the lntimidaiOI'; Eamhanll,
....
Car apHcl: up to 200 mph in draft,
Marlin has some bad news for his competitQrs, who who has won three races at Daytona in less lhari a
185-195 mph in turns
already consider him the favorite to repeal as week (last Sunday's Busch Oash,. Thursday's sec....
De9ree
of banking in comera: 31"
Daytoila SOO champion.
ond 125-mlle race and Friday's International Race
.... Seeling capacity: 108,000 (plus infiel!l)
"We probably had a third- or fourth-place car of Champions), is ·feeling supremely confident.at a
last year when we won the race," Marlin said. "I track that has provided his greatest success - 26
Daytona recorda
think I've got a wiruting car this year. I'll put our Vjctories overall -and his greatest disappointment
.... Faataat..ce: 1n.602 mph
car up against anybody's."
·- 0-for-16 in the DayiOna 500.
(Buddy Baker. Oldsmobile. ·1980)
Marlin showed the strength of his new OJevrolet
"This should be Dale's year to win the Dayl(llla
.... Sloweet race: 124.740 mph
~onte Carlo in one Qf the 125-milc qualifying
500," said Richard &lt;llildress, owner of Eamhanlt's
(Junior Johnson. Chevrolet. 1960)
races last Thursday. He passed at will, led all but black No. 3 Monte Carlo. "I've thought that every
.... Moet vtctoriH: Richard Petty, 7
six laps and drove off 10 a fOID'·length viciOry over year and il hasn't happened yel, butthis~shouJd ,be~-- llo Mottllpl-led: 184(of 200). Ricliara·Petty
Dan'ell Waltrip.
the year."
·
•
.... Moat Top 5 flnlahH: RicharH Petty, 11
Don't overlook the other Dale. Dille Jarrett fm- ·
"The scary thing about it was that he said his car
.... Moet money won: $258,275
.
wasn't handling good in the 12S," said Waltrip, ished a distanl -lhird to Marlin in the fltSt 125·rniler,
(Sterling Marlin, 1994)
who also drives one of lhe new Monte Carlos thai bul people seem 10 have forgotten that he won the
have been so impreuive in practice and qualifying "'1lOie with a speed of 193.494 mph last weekend.
this week. "He said it was pushing, and be was • ''we know who we're chasing now- and who
having to let off aliUie bit in !he turns. I'd just like . we have to beat," said .Jarrett, who lOok over fOI'
to.have anything like he's got down here."
the injured Ernie Irvan in Robert Yates • Ford
Drafting is usually a critical faeiOr on tbe high Thunderbird. "Thursday's races showed us where
banks of DayiOD8, especilllly since restriciOr plates . we have 10 work on our.cars and at what pan or the
were mandated to cut down speeds, but Marlin track the cars are superior right now. That's·soruemadli it a moot point in Ute qualifying race.
.
thing we ·can work on."
.
Jarrett isn't concerned that he'll be the lone Ford
"He had that rirst race totally pulled apan,"
Waltrip said. "He was that strong. In the second wolf against&amp; pack or Chervolets. .
race with Dale Earnhardt, you had cars piled up on
"When you get to lhe end or the race, people are ·
top of Jtim;,
.
going 10 Uy to win," he said. "I think we have
"I don't know what we can do with Sterling," enough car, enough engine !hal in the right posihe continued. "Hopefully we'll be'lble 10 hang tion,.wecangobyourselves."
with him this year. We probably won't be able 10 · With his vic10ry Thursday, Marlin rollowed ill
show him the way around here, but we can certain- the footste~ of his father, Coo Coo Marlin, who
Lake Uoyd ·
ly follow him."
· won a qualifying .race a1 Daytona in 1973 in one ·of
A 44-acre man-made
Marlin, who will stan from the inside of the sec: the old Monte Carlos.
lake formed to provide
ond row in today's race, certainly. realizes that the
"I changed tires for him back then," lhe. ~oungcr
the dirt used to build
strongestcar doesn't guarantee victory at Daytona. · Marliri said. "I wasn't but 15 , 11"~ I shouldn't have
. lhe famous 31-degree
"A lot can happen in 500 miles, and it's hard to even been in the garage."
.
high banks.
repeal in the Daytona 500," he said. "If it comes
There's probably a few racers who wish he
Source: OaytDna lnterna1tonal Speedway
down to SO laps to go and we're one of the ones in wasn 'l around this year.

Year
1994

11193
1992
1991 '
1990

- - Thetrack
Daytona 500 is a 2.5-mile
high-banked trl-oval . The
backs1retch is 3,400 feet long.

..

.'APIEdDoCIMoro
.

T

..._

-

;- ..

----

~

.

'

~-~

-

~·

•

�.'
'

February 19,1995

Page C2-5unday nmes Sentinel

.·Logan
earns
slice
of
SEOAL
title
with
53-34
triumph
over.
GalliPQiis
LOGAN.
ifl't:r- xn;•
Coach Gary Swine· Gallipolis 53·34 Friday night in the
hart's 1..og1m Chieftains roUed over new Hocking Middle School gym
·
·

•

'

S~

..'

,...'
'·

'
'
.

'.

'

'i
'·
'
'·

•
-LEAGUE CHAMPS • Lopn'a Krla Bealey .
cultlng down tile JJets at Lopa Friday nlgbl
tile CbleftaiDI
DOiisbed olhlaltlng Gallpolla 53-34 to pill a shire ot the 1!)94.45
. . Southeastent Ohio r --~ bulelball cbaDiplnnsltlp.
.
u
......,._
.

Qualls, 6-4-8-16; Dylan Evans,~0-0-2; Non-scoren .• Enc
.Humpbrers. Wes Sanndtzs, BrW
Baker, Rtchard Kuhn, Brett Gre·
meens. TOTALS ll-(1)-7·13-34.
LOGAN (53)- Cay Lindsey, 2·
(4)-2·3-18;ChadZimmerman,2-7·
8-11: Dustin Dennis. 3.().0.6; Chris
Stamer, 1-0-0-2; Chad Moore, 2-06-4; Kris Be~tlqY. 4-4-4-12; Non-

to gain a share of the 1994-95
Qualls picked off IS orGallipoSoutheastern Ohio League basket. lis' 32 rebounds. The Blue Devils
ballchampionshio.
had eight assists, three by Dave
It W!IS Logllllfs.ISth victory in Rueter, ae..en steal&amp;, three by Seth
20 starts this season. The Chief. Davis, and five blocked shots. tlwe
tains finished confe=ce play with by 1osh Coot. The Gallians were
a 10-2recanttoshare .thetillewith seven of 13atthelille,had 18per·
Marietta Gallipolis dtopped to 7- sonals, and committed O!IIY 14
12 overall and 4-8 in the league.
turnovers.
The Blue Dcvils concluded.reg·
Logan was 13 or 22 at the line,
utar scaso.:Jtay at Wbeelersbuig had t3 personals, and committed
was'-..ever headed in win· IS
will battle Rock Hill
oing tiS i4th conference croWn in Friday afs:tS p.m. in the Division
the school's historY
II sectional tournament at Rio
"We played scared," said Blue Grande. Logan will take on Miami
Devil Coach Jim Osborne. "We Trace on Feb. 25 in the Division 1
didn't rebound, and we missed at sectiooal tournahlent a1 Athens.
least 20 lay ups," be added. 'Thcl
in Friday's preliminary game,
.did a good JOb on the boards,
the Blue Imps avenged an earlier
Osborne concluded. Logan, led by season loss to the· Papooses by
big' Kris Begley's IS rebounds, posting a 39-23 victory.
controlled the boards, 39-32. It was · Gallipolis led 13-6, 22-13 and
the first time this winter an oppo- 30-19 at the quartennarks.
nent out-rebounded the Gallians.
Greg Lloyd paced the winners
Neither team shot weU .from dJe with 1S points; Isaac Saunders
field. Gallipolis was 13 of SO for 25 added I 0 and Heath McKinniss
percent (one of 14 from the three added nine. Nathan Klinebrielled
point range). Logan wasn't much Logan;s attac1c with eight points.
beltet, making 18 of 48 ror 37 perGallipolis improved to 6-12
c~L
. .
.
overall and clinched a fuur1h place
The Chteftatns led 15·7, 28-13 finish in the SEOAL with a 4-8
and41-26atthequartermarks.
record. Logan dropped to 6-14 and
Logan placed three players in 3-9
double figures, led by Coy LindVarsity box.score:
sey's 18 markers. Begley tossed in
GALLIPOLIS (3~) - Mark
12 and Chad Zunmennan 11.
Clark, 0-(1)..().0-3: Davtd Rucker:
T~ Qualls w~ the onl~ Blue 1·2-2-4; Ryan Barnes, 0-1· 2-1,
D~v1I tn double ftgures wtth 16 Seth Davis, 2-0-1-4: Iosh Cook, 1pomts. ·
().().2; Chuck Miller, 1~2; Terry

.·.c ag· 8 Sf&amp;nd l"ngS·.
.

1814-15-tlll gai!IM

l! L II! .Ill

·Team

.Wheelersburg ...... IS 3 1474 116S
l-ogan ................;.IS S 13Sl 1176
Marietta ............... IS 5 1366 1089
:warrenLocaJ ...... I4 611661083
l'airland ............... l4 61398 1282
&lt;Jreenfteld ........... l3 61240 1094
:c!tesapeatce ......... l3 71244 1049
' l'ortsmouth ..........ll 6 1200 1100
·Southem .............. l2 81359 1287
:PointPieasanL ..... IO 91141 1101
:South Point............8 111226 1184
Meigs ....................9 10 1160 1218
Athens ...................8 12 1139 1176
~iver Valley ..........8 121232 1332
Gallipolis...............? 121017 1111
)ackson ..................6 131135 1209
:Vinton County,......S IS 1190.1478
(SEOAL varsily)
.
1994-!15 Filial
Iam,
»:: L II! Ol
Logan .................. 10 2 792 (1:)7
Marietta......:........ tO . 2 829 635
:Warren Local ........9 3 686 630
Gallipolis...............4 8 S73 671
River Valley ..........3 9 7Q4 817
:Athens ...................3 · 9 660 742
Jackson ................. .3 9 724 n6
:J"OTALS
· 42 42 4!J611 4!J611
.
{SEOAL reserves)

lwl

l! L II! Ol

Marietta ............... !! I 684 452
Warren Local ..... .ll 1 fliT 406
Jackson ..................? S 511 491
Dallipolis ...............4 8 4SO 481
JUver Valley ......... .3 9 435 577
Athens ...................3 9 358 517
Logan ....................3 9 425 546
TOTALS
42 42 3470 3470
: Feb. 17 games:
Logan 53 Gallipolis 34
Gallipolis 39 Logan 23 {r)

Tbe surp'rising Warren Local
Warriors, with only one senior on
the squad, locked up third place
with a 56-48 biumpb over River
Valley to finish at 9-3 in league
competition. The Jackson Iroilmen
· concluded their league play last
weekend but traveled to Point
Pleasant Friday, and absorbed a 00:
so loss in 8 non-league make up
contesL
In Saturday night ·games, Gallia
Academy traveled to' Wheelers·
Burg, whi.Ie Jackson entertained
Nelsonville-York to close out reguJar season piay. ·.
Marietta 65 Atllens 64
At Marietta, the Tigers blew a
16 point third quaner lead berore
they got the wake up call that their
second sttaight championship was
in jeopardy. After posting qliarter
leads or 15-14, 29-23 and 47-40,
theTigersfrozeatthecharitystripe .
in the rourth quarter. .
Mter a six-poiiu surge early in
the final period that made it 53-40
in favor or the host team, the Bulldogs chipped away until the lead
h~d melted to 1)4-59 at the two
mtnute mark. ·
Marietta's Greg Theiss was
fouled and made just one or two
. rree throws, lrif~ering a strin' of
three straight trips to the line m a
one-and-one situation by the
~igers, who came away empty each

=ve:r~

bme.

·

Meanwhile, Athens was
attempting threes, and used two
time outs, plus one by the Tigers in
the final minute. With just seven
ticks remaining, Athen~· Tom

Keirns .goaled 'to make it 6S:61 .
Followu~g anot~er Bulldog ume
out, Mari.eua mtssed another rree
throw a SIX seconds berore Shamel
Maxwell buried a three-pointer at
the buzzer ror the final_score,.
.
N~ known ror !hell' ~-~tnt
shooung, the I;lulldogs hu e1ght
treys , including lhree by ~Jyce
Lonas, two each by Kah1eem
Maxwell and Jerf Mc~llis\-Cr ~d
one by .Shamel. Martell~ s r1ve
three-pomters ~from Tun Hesl~p. JC?sh Harr:s, Brad Kroft and
Tun Bmegar.
·
Marietta controlled the boards
35·28, led by rreshman Joe
Vukovic's t'O rebounds wh~le
Shamel Maxwell led Athens w•th
six.
. Tim Heslop took game scoring
honors with 16 for the winners with
Vukovic adding 13. Bryce Lonas
andJeffMcAllislereachnetted 15
ror A~
_...:_._._
ATHENS
(14-!J-17-24=64)
Bryce Lonas 2-3-2-lS; Shamel
Maxwell 2-1-0=7; Kahieem
MaxweU 3-2-2=14; Mike Boyd 4·
0-0=8; Mike Grippa 1-0-1=3; Tom
Keirns 1-04=2; 1eff McAllister 42-1=15. Tollls: 17 II 6:64
MARIETTA

(15•14-18·1~5)

Josh Harris 1-1-0=S; Tim Hes· ·
lop S-2-0=16; Ryan Robinsm 3..0.:
2=8; Jason Albrecht 2.(}.()=4; Brad
Krort 1-1-2=7; Joe' Vukovic S-03=13; Greg Theiss 3-0-3=9; Tim
Binegar 0-I -0=3. Totals: 20·5·

JEAN'S TAX SERVICE·
CGmputarizad Tax Returns.
Day and Evening Hours
Reasonable ·Rates
JEAN VAN METER
PBO.NE 192-11974

·.
8·iJ~·

Galli

7 6 13
IS 13 13
lteserve score
Logan 23.

Loan

v

2 39 1

'

.··~

s

$13f 995
·
·

89 Chevrolet Corsica 4 dr., compactSedaA ................ '4995
88 Cadillac DeVille Full size luxury......_. ...... .. ...............15400
90 Chevrolet Cavalier 4 dr., auto., air, red .................. 15995
91 Chevrolet S.-10 Local trade, 4 cyl. , 5 speed ... ..~ ........ '6995
89 Buick Regal GS V6, auto.•. air cond............ ,........ .... '6995 ·
91 Buick Skylark 4 door, auto., air, sharp car ..........:.... ..16995
92 Mercury Topaz 4 dr., auto., air, cruise, tilt ................. 17995
.
. .
s 9
91 N1ssan
Stanza Local
trader ....................................... 7 95
93 Mere. Capri Convt., local trade, buy 'now &amp; save .... 110,995

s

92 BUICK LESABRE
Lr•dd&lt;•d w1th a I the options

.

.

.

;Lyne Center slate

1319 95

Pool
Today- 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.
' · Satarday - closed
· Sunday, Feb. U - closed

.,.
~·

•
:·
••
•
'
:
:
•
•

"Where Better Really Matters"
East State Street.

.593·6641

Athens, Ohio

OIL CHANGE &amp; FILT.ER ...$15.95

~;:J';Iand

vs. Oak

Hiii~Cbesapeake

fiinner. a1 Ironton, 8: IS p.m.

•,

.•-

.

per month, only 24 mqnths

No Down Payment•
~

--

. .

.

·

at ·non Wood Automotive Complex. -

593-6641

',':,.___

-~·

GALLIPOLIS

· 618 EAST MAIN ST.

SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

992-6674

446-Q303

'l!t- OPEN MONOAY·FRIDAY 9-6; SATURDAY

. -·--

9·5

MasterCard/VIaa/Oiscover

..

2 Door, auto., air, air bag,
cassette, power windows &amp; locks,
V·6, PS, cruise, tilt.

1994 OLDS
, CIERA

1994 CHEVY
CORSICA

V6, auto .. cruise &amp; till, air, stereo,
. air bag, P. 'win. &amp; locka,
Intermittent wipers, caasene,.

4 Door, auto., air, cass., V6, air
bag, tilt, cruise.

$. 1 -1,9~5

$10,949

1994 CHEVY
lUMINA

va, auto .. air, cassette, air bag, 4
. door,.cruise.Ji~. anti-lock.brakes:

4 D or, .V6, automatic, air,
stereo, cruise, tilt:--

$14,995

111$2 CHEVROLET S·10
Blazer, 2 wheel drive,

$11,99-5

Sport Equipment, NC,

SJ 0,995
1994 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
Leather, V8, all power, cassette,
air bag, cruise.

$24,959

CAVALIER

2 dr. Coupe, Red, Auto ,
Air, AM-FM, Great
. Condition, Great Gas
Mileage, Priced Right.

I

--

~--r-

- ~-

.

'

.. J994 CHEVY
CAVALIER
· 4 cylinder, automatic, air cond.,

s tereo, power steering, power
brakes. Hurryl.

$8,995

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks' Must Go.
1991 CHEVY

'

l

~ Door,air, ;~uto . , &lt;.ir bag, stereo
cass., P. windows &amp; locks, bucket
seats, intermittent wipers,
cruise, tilt

$11,999

Down
Per Mo.

1994 CHEVY
CAPRICE

Supercab, 4.0 V6 engine
· 5 speed trans .
w/overdrive , XLT Decor
Package, NC , much
- b:l more, only 37,000 miles,
local trade, one owner.

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723
(614) 667-3~50 I

•

4 Door. auto.,
. stereo, air,

1992 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL,53,000 miles, leather, all power ................................. $14,995
1991 JEEP WRANGER 4X4, hardtop,32,0DD miles. Must see! ................................... $10,995
1988 FORD RANGER PICKUP, 4 cyl,5 speed, topper .................................................... $4,995
1992 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE SSE, loaded, white ................... :...... ,............................. $15,495
1991 GMC SONOMA, 4cyl., 5 speed, 2-tone paint ......................................................... $6,995
1988 CADILLAC SEVILLE, loaded, V-8, leather .............................................................. $7,995
1990 FORD F150 4X4, 5 speed, 6 cyl ........................................................:...................... $9,999
1993 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, loaded, V6, red ..................................,...........................$12,995
•
•
1985 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN. Hurry! ,;,;..................,.................................................$2,995
1991. BUICK PARK AV~. ULTRA, loa.ded, leather, all power ....................... :....,............ $11,995
1990 GMC SIERA PICKUP, VB, auto., air, topper. Extra Sharp! .........,............................ $9,999

Power
Windows,
Locks,
Tilt &amp; Cruise,
4.3 Vortec
V6 engine, Auto, only
49,000 miles, Xtra

Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman

'•

•

I

POMEROY

-=============J ·

See

1994 OLDS
ACHIEVA

'

•

L

EastState Street, Athens, Ohio

Call614-992-24~7~8~~~

PRE-OWNED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

MOTOR .COM"ANV
f"'"'

DON WOOD

~i:a~Th~··~·S~at. Or

1994 CHEVY
·aEREnA

5

Bibbee

No Down payment•

p.ni.

1994 PONTIAC
·suNBIRD

$8999
189
.
. · $)89

The

per month, only 24 li!Onths

Model Home Located at
Interseclion of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Vl••wi••o Hours I :00-5:00

power steering .

1992 FORD RANGER

Jl _._..

_., .

Free-weigh! room
Today- closed
Monday- closed
Taesday - closed
Wednesday- 3-7 p.m.
Tllursday- 3, 7 p.m.
Friday -3-7 p.m.
Saturdlly - closed .
Sunday, F;eb. 16 - closed

· AM/FM/Gassette

·

'

,;
Home alhletic events
: Monday - men's basketball
.Ys. Urbana at 7:30p.m.
:· Tuesday - D1vision II boys'
;ectional action: River Valley vs.
Meigs at6:30 p.m.; South Point vs.
)ackson at 8:1S p.m.
:: Friday- D1vision II ...........-,,;;,._
tional action: Ironton vs.
at
~:30 p.m.; Rock Hill vs. Gallia
;*.cademy at8:1S p.m.
·: Sa!iJrday- Division.II boys'
lsci:'tioilal action: Warren Local vs.
River Valley-Meigs winner at 6:30
p .m.; Portsmouth vs. South Point~ackson winner at 8:1S p.m.
·
'
: Notes: A Lyne Center member.)hip is required to use the facilities.
Faculty, starr, students and adtnin·
isuators are admitted with their ID

both with NO MONW' DOWN will let you breathe easy .$2'9 9
..

.,

can now be made one day in.
)idvance by calling 245-7495 local- ·
ly or JOll-free at 1·800-282-7201,
~xtension 7495 .
.
• All guests are to be accompaniC:d by a Lyne Center membership
holder and a $2 fee.

'

FAMILY HOMES INC.

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1·992-6614 1-800·837-1094

.

· power windows/
power door locks .
· tilt wheel/ ·
cruise Control
· · privacy glass

.$29'. 9

u;;..,....,..;·AR.OUIND - iii his quest to Jl8!l to a teammate, River
Valley's
Graltam (rlghl) moves around Warren Local's Dan
Greenwalt In lhe fourth qtiarter of Friday night's SEOAL game on
the Raiders' COtJrt, where the bDIIB lost 56-48. Graham flnlsbed wllh
19 poinls to share Korlng ha.on wllb tile Warriors' Scott Hendricks.
(Times·Seallael pholo by G.
.

~~cquetball coun reservations

· 7 pils~enger seating
· 4-speed automatic
transmission

· power windows/
power door locks
· tilt whee II
cruise control
· privacy glass

, Feb. 25 pmes:
Lopn vs. Miami Trace, at Athens,
8: IS p.m.
·
·
Orc:enfield vs. Vinton County , at
Citillicothe. 3 p.m.

•

•

'95 Mercury Villager
.

}

-

Rebate expiration dates vary
between styles, so ;,. visit our
model home today Cor full details.

FIRST IN SALES!
FIRST IN SERVICE!!! AND
n:ti FIRST IN CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
~
HURRY TO DON TATE MOTORS
l'~~~~~~r-11'~ PA~ 6Al.~f!

,.

DON WOOD

'95 Ford Windstar

· AM/EM/Cassette

and racquetball CtMirts

you can do the celebrating wi th a
$1.000 manufacturer's rebatt' .
ChOose the home that metts your
needs, lifestyle and b~dg&lt;t from a
wide variety of affordablt&gt; noor plans
and styles.

Gee

.

,.

531 1 900

Breathing Room
· 7 passenger seating
· 4-speed automatic
transmission

:·

•

Maroon. s2995

Fltae!IS ceater,
IIJIIIIIUiUID

Today- closed
Monii•Y- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 am.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
, .. Friday - 9 am.-9 p.m.
., Saturdlly - ci08Cd.
·r·,· Sunday, Feb. U - closed

Warren
56 River
48 (r) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-===========-~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
Warren Local
Local 60
River Valley
Valley 29
-,

Marietta 65 Athens 64
Marietta 74 Athens 31 {r)
Fairland 91 Coal Grove 65
Meigs 61 Vinton Cowuy 48
Southem-68 Federal Hocking 66
:"rVJleelersburg 82 South Webster 61
Chesapeake 64 South Point 60 (ot)
Pt. Pleasant 60 Jackson {mu)
: Feb. l81ames: · ·
Gallipolis at Wheelersbur'g
Nelsonville-York at Jackson
Paint Valley at Greenfli:ld
HiUsboro at Pmsmouth (mu)
Feb. 20 game:
Southern vs. Nels-York, at Al)lens,
?p.m.
· Feb. 21games:
Pt. Pleasant at Roane County
River Valle1 vs . Meigs, at Rio
'Grande, 6:30p.m.
Jackson vs. South Point' at Rio
·Grande, 8:15p.m.
·
Chesapeake vs. Oak Hill, at Ironton,
~:ts p.m.
. ·
.
Feb. 23 game:
Wahama at Meigs {mu) .
· Feb. 24 games: ·
.
' Ravenswood at Pt. Pleasant
Ironton vs. Athens at Rio Grande.
6:30p.m.
I I
.
Rock Hill vs.Gallipll/.lS at Rio
Grande, 8: IS p.m.
·
Wheelersburg vs. South Webster~oal Grove winner, at Ironton, 6:30

.

:
·
.·
.
.

'

V8 leather, loaded'

:.
•,

Purchase an All American Home

dur ing our Silver Anniwr~ry and

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

:: Here is the schedule for the

.week of Feb. 19-26 at the Universizy of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.

91 Pontiac Grand Prix vs: P. win. &amp; locks..... .. .......SS,999
89 Ford Bronco 114 WD Red &amp; white, auto., air, vs ... 110,495
90 Jeep Wrangler 4x4 Auto., hardtop, low miles ..... 112,495
92 Buick LeSabre White, oneowner ......................... 113,495
'
94 Chev. S-10 Extended Gab, auto., 11 ,ooo miles ....... 113,495
9(! Toyota 4x4 5 spd., local trade .. ............................. 113,995
94 Ford Ranger vs;e~t. cab, auto ........................ ;.. .'.. 113,995
94 Ford Ranger Super Cab v-s. LXTpkg ........... 1 13,995
94 Ford Taurus GL 2 to choose from, ~ir, loaded ......114,998
84 GMC SUBURBAN 414

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

a

·

low miles,
very clean..................

mg the Tornadoes a 68-66 win over career at SoUthern.
nado lead diminish to a one pomt .Kevm lhle Iwd m the thought or
the Federal Hoclcing Lancers.
With the score tied at 12·l2 deficit going into the fourth quar- game-.tying basket to .send th.e
The error written scoreboard going into the second period South- ter.
teams m!D the thou'ht of nex.t pen·
was n.ot the only ~xcltement or the em exploded for 24 points to the
AI one point in the rounh quar- od overtime. q.tering ~or both
ev.e~tng, as sen10r guard Ryan • Lancers 17 making~ IlCOn: 36-29 ter the Tornadoes were down by stdes pvc the!!' respecuve tean\f .
Williams SCOI'Qd 20 first·halr points at the ltalf. A flal third quarter ror five, but the totally roeused SHS standtnc o~all~ns after a har~

B~NCER OSBOitNE
RiVer Valley forward Jeff Stiu sank
Warren made lU of 12 foul its season at 19-1 overall and 11-1
T CHESHIREtiDel Smlf
~~ secwon.thd 7u,&gt;_26culet'!'tarren's l,ead to shots in the final quarter. River - . the latter mark tied the Warriors
- Fueled by tl!cir
"
Valley made two out or four at tl!e with Marietta for the league reserve
success at the roul line, Warren
Then with 5: 13 Iert. Junior cen- line in that period.
title _ irl the Southeastern Ohio
Local's Warriors claimed a S6-48 ter Bruce Ward's Iefi,wmg jumper
The shooters: The rest or Hen- Athletic League.
.win ~ver River V~ey Friday night hacked Wanen's lead to 42-41.
dricks' 19 points carne fiom 3-rorShawn Taylor led the Warriors
at River Valley Hillh School in tl!e
Nearly two minutes passed 91ield·jloal shoOting, while the re 3t wi~ 14 points., Aar~n Adams Jed
regular-season finale for both without a point being scored before , of Bamu's 13 points carne rrom 2- Chris ~llcessor s ~81ders &lt;?·13 &amp;
,clubs.
Graham buried a trey f'rom the right ror-8 field-goal shooting.
3-9) wtth a game-h1gh 15 pomts.
• " We can't stand prosperity," comer to give the Raiders a 44-42 . Graham, who tied Hendricks for
-•-•-•:Bajd Warren boss Dan Leffingwell, lead, their only one of the night
scoring honors, got his offense
WARREN LOCAL
:Whose troops captured the firstWith 2:56lefi, the Warriors tied mostly from 5-ror-13 field-goal
(10-19-13-14=56)
oliver win for their club on the the game at 44 on junior forward shootin~. while James' 18 points
Hendricks 3-0-13/15=19, Barriu
· :Raiders' court. "But seriously, we Steve Elder's layup.
came ptimarily rrom 6-for-IS field- 2-0-9/9=13, Robinson 4-0..()/0=8,
•tried to roree the issue when· we
The Warriors then sandwiched goal shootillg.
Elder 2-0,3/4=7, Canfield 2-0·
:~ouldhavebeenpatient"
Hendricks' layup (1 :00) between
0/0=4, Reusser J-0-1/2=3, D.
:· He rererred to the Warriors ' rourSethBarriufreethrowstolead ·
This week's agenda has the Greenwalt 1·0·0/0=2. Totals:
•gaining an 11-point lead with 2:31 50-44 berore Giaham made free Raiders (8·12 &amp; 3·9) facing Meigs '15/39.0/0-26/31=56
:fert in the second quarter. But the throw with 23 seconds Iertto trim · in the Division n sectional Tuesday
Total FG pet.- 38.5%
;Raiders outscored their guests 9·3 that lead by one point
at 6:30 p.m. at the University or
Rebounds- 33 (Robinson 8)
·In the ~riod's remainder to cut
After Hendricks canned two Rio Gtande'·s Lyne. c enter. The · Assists- 11 (D. Greenwalt &amp;
:Warren s lead to a 29·24 margin at one-and-ones made necessary by winner or that contest will tate on Hendricks 3 each)
·halrtime.
fSenior foN1ard Doug Uoyd's foulthe third-seeded Warriors {14-6 &amp;
Steals - 8 (D. Greenwalt &amp;
: Throughout the night, the ing out {: 19) to give Warren a S2- 9-3) _ they received a fmt-round Reusser 2 each)
;Raiders had trouble with Warren's 45 lead, classmate Jason Stout sank bye _ in the upper-~racket title
Turnovers - II
o&lt;Jefense, which was geared to keep- a three-pointer with 12 seconds left game Saturday at 6:30p.m. ·
Fouls -15
:mg them out of the paint Despite to cut·Warren's lead to S2-48. But
-;the Warriors' effectiveness in Barritt racked up four more rree
Reserve notes :
Local
RIVER VALLEY
•achieving their objective, the
to complete the
beat River
{9-15-14-10=48)
:Raiders canned four three-pointers
Graham 1-4-5/6=19, James 3-3in seven tries in the third qliarter.
313=18, Ward 3-0-010=6, Stout().
:: That, combined with junior
1-010=3, Boothe 0-0-lf]pl, Stitt ll;point guard Jamie Graham's two
0-1/2= 1. To,als: 7/25·.8122·
~hnical free throws in the last two .
10/13=48
.minutes, contribllted greatly to the
Tolll FG- 15-47 {31.9%)
:Warriors' owning a 42-38 leadRebounds- 24 {Ward 6)
1heythe period's end.
Assists- 10 James 4)
. : Raiders 1aln and lose lead
Steals - 8 {Cochrane, Graham
;. In the first 4:30 of the fourth
. &amp; Jaunes 2 each)
. quarter, only six points were
Tur110vers - 11
scored. River Valley had all or
Fouls-22
1hein.
.
Fouled out- Uoyd
:. After missing the first free
~w on a trip made necessary by
~con Hendncks' second roul,

women wdl play at MI. Vernon
Nazarene.at 7 p.m.
Redm ' .
Free uck~u for the
• ea s
game F available at all Ohio Val~
ley FOOdland stores.

You're found The
Right.Car At The
Right

fourth qlllriCI' bolh teams Di'epared
for overtime to decide the 'OUtcome
of this area high school baskCiball
game. However, arter reviewing·
the official score books It was
determined that the Tornadoes

W8r'"ienl0Cai'beats RiYef'V8118y""56:4s- ~o;;:'£.r::::. ~:~:c.:::~

8-34 ·
12 ·aiS3. .
• 0 1tpo1IS 39
.

FROM DON WOOD:

10='S
.
.
Reserve score - Marietta 74,
~thens 31
1827 Murdock ~ve.
485-8451
9563A '93 NISSAN, 214 lit.
Silver. Only $5$95
8195A 'tl PEUGEOT 405 DL
5 Speed. On!y $5995
90S4A CHEVROLET SID
214. Only $5995
8178A '91 BUICK REGAL
Loaded. Only $5995
9070A '90 PONTIAC LEMANS
·Air. Only $4495 ·
91 BSA '90 NISSAN SENTRA
2 dr., red. Only $57BS
9186A '90 NISSAN SENTRA
2 dr., blue. Only $5395
8190A '90 SUBARU
4 dr., auto., blue. Only $5995
404A 'tO PEUGEOT 505
Slallon Wagon. Only $5995
61950 '89 PEUGEOT M116
Sports Sedan. Only $5995
9505A HONDA CIVIC
4 dr., 5 1peed. Only $4595
9545B '89 DODGE DAKOTA
214, IIIIo. Only $4995
' " 9045B '88 HYUNDAI
lolechlnlc'a Special. Only $995
9513 '88 PONTIAC SUN BIRD
•
· 4 dr., allver. Only $3795
8518A '88 NISSAN REG. CAB
21•. Black. Only $3995
9542B '88 NISSAN LWB TRK.
Black, auto. Only $4595
8067C '87 SUBARU WAGON 4x4,
blue, 5 apeed. Only $2995
~A NISSAN STANZAGXE
Auto. Only $4995
60278 '86 STANZA WAGON
Auto., blue. Only $2995
91488 '86 BUICK CENTURY
4 dr., IOIIded. Only $2595
9167A '86 PLYMOuTH REUANT
Yellow. Only $1495
8187A '85 DODGE 600
4 dr., blue, IIIlO. $2295
81078 '85 NISSAN SENTRA
2 dr., maroon. $1795
9021A '85 PLYMOUTH VOYAGF;R
Maroon. $3995
9174A '85 BUICK SKYLARK
4 dr., Maroon. $2795 .
91888 '85 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
4 dr., gray. $2595
91058 '84 NISSAN PULSAR NX

]:U

· B1 d
~~bTOr:ul
ran t.
·
14-{4)-13-22-53. .

stty of ~·o Grande s basketball
teams wtll .have make-up games
Monday.
.
The R~en will hoss Urbana at
7:30 .m. m a contest
by

94Ford
RangerXLT

PARKERSBURG NISSAN INC.

nally labeled as a "game-tying"
'blskel'by Kevin Jble withill the 18st
seconds of the fourth ~uarter was
il!ter.redermed as the, game-winnmg butet for Howie Caldwdl's
Soulhem Tornadoes.

Tom ~rc:·

Rio Grande teams to play Monday
. RIO G~E .-, The Univer· Ohio Vall~y Foodland. The Red-

: Marietta tops Athens 65-64 · to _
w in half of SEOAL title
: · The final curtain rang down &lt;?II
. the 1~94-95 Southeastern Ohto
: .A~euc. League baskethall ~
· Pnday mght
: · \Ylten t!te scores came in _the
: ~e!U! Ttgers and Logan C::hie~: tams ~is_heil ~ league co-champt. ons wtth tdentical 15·5 overall and
: 10-2I~IUI! ~- .
Martetta clinched 11s second
~ title with a 6S~ shading of
i'ISlttng _Athens w~tle Logan
'Crabbe~ •ts share WJ!h a. 53-34
'lob_bering or the Galltpolts Blue
Devils a~ Logan.

~

C3

~ft.!rE~2~~C:!!.4!£~!.~g.~!~E.)~e!.f!.f!!r!ll~~~l"P.L!~:.~~...~

February 19,1195

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

Sunday nmes sentinel Paga

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

-·~-

,.

Taxes and title fee not included .
All payments subject to credit -approval

•All prices mclude
rebates 10 dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not

DON ·TATE MOTORS, Inc.

1ncluded .

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

,I

-

-

·--,~

--

..

•

�r

OH

1995 ESCORT SPORT 1994 ASPIRE S·DR. 1995 WINDSTAR GL

.

.

AIR COND.
REAR DE:FROST
POWER STEERING
AM/FM CASS. '
LT. &amp; CONV. GRP.
PWR. MIRRORS
LT. GRP.
SPORT APP. GRP.
AUTO. TRANS.
TACH.
TILT/CRUISE
R5ES6-!

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
'14,27500

'

BUCKET SEATS
- 1.3 L ENGINE
5-SPEED
AIR CONDITfON
AM/FM
.
4 DR. HATCHBACK
R4AS1

•
•

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
5
10,27500

•

1995 ASPIRE :2·DR.

*7-PASS .. BKT. SEATS
*SPEED/TILT
*LIGHT GROUP
*REAR DEFROST
*AIR CONDITION
"AM/FM CASS.
*POWER WINDOWS
*POWER LOCKS.
*POWER MIRRORS
*FLOOR MATS
.*LUGGAGE RACK ·
*LOADED!!!!

·1994.RANGER 4X4

1994 AEROSTAR

1995 BRONCO XLT

*XLTTRIM
"AM/FM CASS.
*SLIDE REAR WIN.
*XLT STRIPE
*4.0 L ENGINE
*5-SPEED MIT
*ALL-TERR. TIRES
*CAST ALUM. WHEELS
*AIR COND.
*CLEARCOAT PAINT
*MAN HUBS
*SUPER ENG. COOL
*60/40 SEAT

*XL TRIM
·
*7-PASS/DUAL CPT. CHAIRS
*AIR CONDITION
*CONVENIENCE GROUP
*PRIVACY GLASS
*SPEED CONTROl/TILT
*PAINT STRIPES
*FORGE ALUM. WHEELS
*AM/FM CASS.
*CLEARCOAT PAINT
*AUTO. TRANS.
"V.-6 ENGINE

CAPT. CHAIRS
XLT TRIM
CLIMATE CONTROL
AI~ COND.
REAR DEFROST
WHEELGRP.
OUTSIDE SPARE
LUXGRP.
PRIVACY GLASS
ENH/LT GRP.
. POWER MIRRORS
POWER LOCKS/WIND.
AM/FM CASS .
.5.0 L ENGINE
AUTO. TRANS.
ALUM WHEELS
LOADED I Ill

BUCKET SEATS
1.3 L ENGINE
5-SPEED
ECONOMY!!!!
R5AS3-4

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
'22,34000

Point Pleeunt, WV

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
5
8,73500

;TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
518,42500

.TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
'20,21700

.

1994 .ESCORT WAGON

'

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
00
5
· 28,375

1995 F150 4X4 .

PRE·OWNED ·SPECIALS
'

.

•

'

PRE~OWNED

.

1995 F250 4X4, AUTO., XLT, TURBO DIESEL, O~LY lOO MILES ................ $27,495.00
. ·1993 DAKOTA SPORT, V6, AUTO., AIR, ONLY 17,000 MILES .................... .'$10,995.00
1989 CHEV. G20, CONVERSION, LOW MILES, LOADED, RAISED ROOF ... $8,995.00
1991 RANGER XLT, AUTO., AIR, ONE OWNER .............................................. $7,995.00
XLTTRIM
CRUISE/TILT
1990 F150 4X4, AUTO., XLT, NEW TIRES ...........•.......•.............•............•..•••....$9,495.00
AIR COND.
1990·CHEV. G20, MARK Ill, CONVERSION, LOADED .................................... $9,995.00
AM/FM CASS.
1986 .DODGE D150, AUTO., VB •...... ;.. :.............•...........•.......................:.......•.. ,$3,495.00
PWR. WINDOWS
1988 DAKOTA, AIR, MAT., NICE TRUCK .......................:•...........•..........••...•.... $3,495.00
PWR. LOCKS
ALUM. WHEELS
1984 CHEV. G20, §NVERSION VAN, SOUTHERN COACH .................•....... $2,50.0.00
. .235 OWL ALL TERR.
1992 F150 CUSTO , . T., 6 CYL., LONG ~ED .•.•........•...•.....•....•............... ;.... $8,995.00 .
. CHROME ijKG.
1992 FORD F470 SU ER DUTY, AIR, 161 WB ............................................ $14,995.00
LOADED
1991 F150, XLT, 6 CYL., MT. LOADED, LOW MILES ................. ,.................... $8,9~5.00
· 1993 F150, 6 CYL. MT., WORK TRUCK ........................................................... $9,995.00
1993 F150 XLT, VB, LOADED, ONLY 18,000 MILES ..................................,••.. , 11,995.00
. l
1990 RANGER, 4 CYL., MT., 57,000 MILES ..................................................... $3,995.00
TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS"
1994 AEROSTAR WAGONS, AUTO., AIR, SPEED, TILT,
5
21 '14900 .
POWER WINDOWS, POWER
LOCKS, POWER MIRRORS, LOADED!!!!!
7 UNITS AVAILABL~, ALL COLORS
YOUR CHOICE ............................ :.............. $14,295.00
1994 AEROSTAR WAGON ALL WHEEL DRIVE, XLT PKG.,
TWO TONE PAINT, AIR, ALL
. POWER, ONLY 12,412 MILES . . ·
SAVE THOUSANDS ..••.. &lt;&gt; ........................ $17,995.00

1995 PROBE SE .

AIR COND.
PREM. AM/FM CASS.
PWR. MIRRORS
REAR DEFROST
TILT/CRUISE
PWR. WINDOWS
PWR. LOCKS
SE PKG:
ALUM. WHEELS
FLOOR MATS
. PWR. SUNROOF
R5PR1

1995 CONTOUR GL

1994 T-BIRD LX, AUTO., MOONROOF, ALL POWER ....................... ;.. ~ ........ $13,995.00
1993 MUSTANG GT; SUNROOF, CD, LOW MILES ............. ~ ... ,...................... $12,995.00
1993 TAURUS GL, V6, POWER, 4 DR ..................................................:.........$11 ,995.00
1992 LEBARON CONVERTIBLE, V6, AUTO., LOADED ...:............................. $9,995.00
1992 MUSTANG GT SUNROOF, LOADED ........................... ~ .......................... $9,995.00
'
·
· . ssm~
1992 TEMPO GL, AUTO.,
AIR, 4 DR ................................................
,...............
,
.
1992 SUNBIRD SPORT, 2 DR., AIR ................................................;................. $6,800.00
1991 T-BIRD, AUTO.,. AIR, ALL POWER, LOW MILES ................................... $7,995.00
1991 LINCOLN MARK VII, LSC, LOW MILES ..................... ;.......................... $14,995.00 ·
1991 LUMINA EURO, 4 DR., AUTO., AC, CLEAN CAR ..........................._. ....... $7,995.00
·1993 CORSICA LT, 4 DR., V6, AUTO., AIR.; .................................................... $7,800.00
1991 TAURUS GL, V6, AUTO., AIR, 4 DR ........................................................ $6,295.00
1989 TAURUS GL, AIR, V6, AUTO., CLEAN CAR ................., ......................... $5,995.0Q
1994 ESCORT SW, AUTO., AIR, VERY LOW MILES ......................... .'............. $8,995.00
· 1993 T-BIRD LX; AUTO., AIR, LOW MILES, ALL POWER ..... :...................... $11,995.00
1994 TAURUS G'L, AUTO., AIR, 4 DR., V6, SPEED, TILT, POWER LOCKS
PWR. WINDOWS, PWR. SEAT, AM/FM CASS.
LOADED, 5 UNITS AVAILABLE
YOUR CHOICE ......................;................... $13,995.00
1994 MERCURY SABLE, AIR, V6, AUTO., 4 DR;; ~PEED, TILT,
AM/FM CASS., PWR. WINDOWS, PWR. LOCKS,
PWR. SEAT, LOADED, 3 UNITS AVAILABLE .
YOUR CHOICE .......................................... $13,995.00

.1995 MUSTANG

'

AIR COND.
FLCONSOLE .
REAR .DEFROST
PWR. HEATED MIRRORS
LIGHT GROUP
·PWR. LOCKS .
CRUISE CONTROL
AUTO . TRANS.
PREM. AM/FM CASS. ~
CAST ALUM. WHEELS
LOADED!!! ·

"

$400-~: ·.·

1995 YOUNG BUYER
PROGRAM PROVIDES
$400 CASH BACK ON
. PURCHASE OF AN'( ·
. ASPIRE, ESCORT
RANGER (2.3L) OR
TRACER. .MUST BE 25
YEARS OLD,OR
YOUNGER.. . SOME
RESTRICTIONS APPLY.
SEE SALESPERSON
FOR DETAILS.

flee

V8 ENGINE
CRUISE/TILT
AIR COND. '
PWR.LOCKS
PWR. WINDOWS
PWR. SEAT
AM/FM CASS.
ILLUM. ENTRY
FLOOR MATS
LIGHT .GRP.
DECOR GRP.
R5F05-06 .,

.'.

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
5
22,51000

1994 THUNDERBIRD

1995 EXPLORERS IN
STOCK NOW!
2 DR. &amp; 4 DR .
MODELS

.h
Cas -=~:
Bab.ktr
.

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
512,93500

·199SCROWN VIC.

SPECIALS

•

AIR CON D.
POWER STEERING
REAR DEFROST
LT. &amp; CONV. GRP.
PWR . MIRRORS
LT. GRP.
LUGGAGE RACK
REAR WIPER
CLEARCOAT PAINT
S43S710

.., .

.

Reggie Carmicba~·Guy Sayre,
Lanny Keesee .o (:l1get Sayre now! .
372~3673'
.

AIR COND.
3.8 L ENGINE
5-SPEED
ALUM . WHEELS
AM/FM CASS.
BUCKET SEATS
AIR BAGS

1995 RANGERS ARE
HERE! SUPERCABS,
REGULAR CAB 4X4
1995 F-SERIES 4X4
HUGE SELECTION OF
TRUCKS IN STOCK!!

.,

..

..

AIR COND.
PWR. WINDOWS
PWR. LOCKS
PWR. SEAT
· CRUISE/TILT
AUTO.
ALUM. WHEELS
REAR DEFROST
V8 ENGINE
LOADED

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

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
5
17,85000

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
5
16,01500

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
.· 516,87000

.[

244 So. Chu~~b St:; Ripley~ WV

•·

------------------~--1
'

•

TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
5
'
19' 420°' 0

•

73~
'

*DEALER RETAINS REBATES. TAX, TITLE EXTRA. ·

.I

.- 1

•
•

�•

C6 Sunday nmn Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePort Gallipolis, Ott Point Plaeunt, WV

February 19, 1995

Meigs defeats Vinton .County 61-4_
8

· B. DAVE HAIUUS
Tl'.::Seadlle
ROCK SP~n:'ar'oa:b!t a
difference a r- mMn!
This lime laat year die Meigs
Maraudt.n ~ I"" '"'
.
a v;rvoo con-

c

-

~~=the~
~f;

· . as many tries en route 10 an

· season

....
WORKING THE INSIDE- Meigs postillan Travis Abbott (left)
leans into Vinton County's John Murphy (23) wbile going for the I•·
the-paint basket during Friday night's Ohio Division game at Meigs
High School, where the Marauders won 61-48. Abbott rmished with
eight points. (Times-Sentinel pboto by Dave HarriS)
·
·

•
bl
t
ast
·
r
•
m
e
ge
_
s
p
T
.

Ea.stern 53-52 in OT
..

CHAUNCEY~
OtiO hit
.
. Micah
.
10

a t!J!ee·po10t.shot_
with
10
10

wa~

of
the leading
first quarter.
It
.J .
Azbell
!he TomcatS
ID Jthe
second period scoring seven points
with two tluee-pointers and a twopoint field goal. Dennis Osborne
hit a lhree pointer wilh only sec·
onds to end the quarter, allowing
THStotakea27-22halftimelead.
The lhird quarter showed both

seconds

:1a!;;: f!~~=~w

a

e en

p~ying ~t

.»:

MEIOS .....................6

_
T
I .Qrna
I r1

.Vinton County ..........4 10
..... .2 11
.Nelsonville-York
.

4 14
4 14

.
Hocking Division
Federal Hocking ..... IO 3
SOUTHERN .......... 11 4
· Miller........................9 5
· Alexander .................7 7
EASTERN................4 9
Trimble ...... :.............. 3 II

n

tempo of the game.

Ryan Wtliams, Southern ................ 19
· K8R Ganel1, Belpre ........................ 18
Brad Howe, JQson .....~ ................. 16
Brett Fink, Wellston.......... ............... 17
Mark Wh~ing. Fed. Hock................ 16
Bill McGrath, Miller.......................... 17
Scali Hendricks, Warren......... :....... 19
Ct.a1ie Sissel, Eastem .................. 1s
Ryan Robinson,- Marietta ................ 19
Teny Quais, Gallipolis.................... 17
Travis Rice, Alexander ................... 14
Kris Begley, Logan.......................... 18
Jeremy !olson, Fed. Hock .............. 16
.Greg James, RiverValley ............... 17
Jeremy W•d. Vinton Co ............ .... 18
Chad Jarvis, Alexander ......... ......... 17
0

wi~ ~tern

FEDERAL HOCKING

216
251
262
246

14.4
13.9
13.8
13.7
13.5
13.2
12.8
12.7
12.2
12.1
11.8
11.6
11 .4
11.4
11.4
11 .2
112
10.8
10.6
10,4'

m

238

244
241
171
206
189
198
194
193
137
213
134
19S
181
167

WE WILL BE OPEN.·NORMAL
BUSINESS HOURS ON
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20th

(ll-17-18-1'='6)
..
Mark Whiling 9-0-2/3s20, Jeremy Dotson 1-0-2/4=4, Scott Nippert 1-0-0/0=2, Chad Nelson 5-0- .
'1/9=17, Jeremy Tolson 3-0-2/3=8;
Nathan Gilders 4-1-2/2=13.
Totals: 24-1-15-21=66

s

19th thr.u 26th

Friday's scores
SOUTHERN 68, Federal
Hocking 66
.
M'!IGS.61, ViniOn 48
Trimble 53, EASTERN 52
NtiUer50, AJexander48
Belpre 65, Wellston 62

Member FDIC

Your Bank~~···
Fs

BEAT
RISING
INTEREST
RATES
BUYING
NOW!

**
**
**
**
**
**
**
**
*
*-

. .... .... .... .
'

w

•

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company
·

WNU

211 West Se&lt;OIII Street
P.O. box 626
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
614·992·2136

Route 7
P.O. Box 339
Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783
614·667·3161 .

**

18i0 TOYOTA TRUCK, f4127, blue, AM/FM
cassene, air, tool box, rear bump&amp;f ... ..................................... '5485 .
1881 PONTIAC SUNBIAD, 14843, air,
automatic, AM/fM, el~h Inter~. rear defrost~r ......................... '5:415
11189 FORD TAURUS GL, f48Se, blue, air, automatic,
AM!FM cassene, ti~ . power seats &amp; windows, alloy wheels ...... ! 4115

11189 CHEVY BEAmA, f4880, red, automatic, air,
AM/FM, power windows &amp; locks, lift, cruise, sport wheels ........ 'C915 .

11111 CHEVY 9·10, 14809, sport wheels,
fiberglan topper, dual mirrors. AMIFM ...................................... '5815
1881 DODGE DYNASTY, 14818, blacll, air,
automatiC, AMJFM. air bag, rear defrostrer .......... ..... .................. 'M75
18i0 NISSAN TRUCK, 14823~ AM/FM caosene,
bed liner, spof1 whels, dual mirrors ....... :... ............................... '1315
1881 ClEO TRACKER LSI, 148ee, 4&gt;4, aulomatlc,
air. AM/FM cassette, removable top ............ ............. ................ . '8720
1113 NISSAN PICKUP, 14187, low miles.

95 Toyota 4x4 '

•Chrome appearance package

· •4 Door

•Deluxe AM /FM/cassette
•CFC·free air conditianing

per moud ~only 24 lnouU IS'

•Power windows and doors
•Tilt and Cruise

•AM/FM stereo
.
.
·Tinted glass ·..
•Sliding re¥ window

--

$-)99
.

permonlh.myl4mouUIS"

·-

both at a price you .~ get into .
· at Don Wqod Automotive Complex.
East State Street, Athens, Ohio

NEW 1995 NISSAN SENIRA IE

~61 SOUTH TH1RD

·

1994FORD

•

4.6 V-8 eng., power steer., power brakes,
auto. trans., AM/FM stereo cass., tilt &amp;
cruise, power windows &amp; power locks. power
seat, clolh int., rear defroster, cast aluminum
wheels, air cond., dual airbags, 14,000 miles .
•

Now

8

17,995

1991 FORD
3.8 V6 eng ., power steer., power brakes,
auto. trans., air con d., AM/FM stereo
cass., tilt &amp; cruise, power win(,IQ..ws &amp;
power Jocks, rear defroster, extra c)!Zan.
local one owner.
WAS $6,495
$

5'

.... "1i&amp;r ·

•••

~\. ...

Now

l' •

8,995

8

.

.

NEW 1995 NISSAN ALIIMA GIE
Air, power windows &amp; locks, cassette, cruise.

(,--M-SR-P-$1-7,-38---..8)

.

SALE

.

6 cylinder engine, power steering, power
brakes, 5 speed transmission, B foot
bed, AM/FM stereo · radio, chrome rear .
step bumper, local truck, 20,000 miles.

Now

515,499

'

.

lt-.' :.;.J

13,

8

·THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
·1994 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
LX 2DR.
4.6 V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto.
trans., AMWM s1er.eo cass ., air
CQnd .• lll!al power seats. lilt and
cruise, power windows &amp; locks.

NEW 1995 NISSAN MAXIMA ILE

1992 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
3.8 V-6 eng .. power- s1eering .,
power brakes, · au1o . 1rans.,
power windows &amp; locks. power
seat. AM/FM stereo cass .. air
cond ., rear delroste r. local
low miles.
----------,.-.-,-----~

8

13,999

8

SPECIAL

10,999

' 1987 JEEP
CHEROKEE
LIMITED
4 Or.· 4X4, V- ~ eng., PS, PB,
auto . trans ., air cond .. AM/FM
s1ereo cass., 1ilt.&amp; cruise, power
windows &amp; locks, rear defroster,
local owner. ·

___SPECIAL
8

6,995

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING

•u,eoo

Bring in your best deal on a New ·Gar or Truck and we .
·
will try to meet or Beat the DeaL
FOR A GOOD DEAL.~ •
See Jack Roup, Victor Arms or Bob J\oss
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENJ IS OPEN MON.-FRI. 8·5; SAT. 8·12,
MUFFL,ER SHOP MON.-FRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12
NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.-FRI. 8-6; SAT. 8·3 .

•

.

VICTORIA LX 4 DR.

1994 TOYOTA' PICKUP T·IOO DELUXE .

'8415

1112 OLDS CIERA, 14n3, AM/i=M cassette,
air, automatic, rear dlfrOSter, tilt, cruise, cloth Interior .. ........... ,. '7484
11112 MERCURY TOPAZ, 141is4, automatic,
air, AM!FM, cloth Interior, rear defroslet ........ ........................... . '74H
111113 DODQ~ADOW, 147!54, while, 2 door,
.AM/FM, sport Wheels, cloth interior .. ..... ..... ... ........................:.. .17071
11182 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE. 14818, red,
automelic, air, lilt, cruise , air bag, AM/FM , rear Clefroster .......... '085
18i0 MAZDA EXTRA CAB TRUCK, 14740, rear saats,
AM!FM caMetta, rally wheels, low miles ... ............... ... 1.. ....... '7415
11182 PONTIAC ClRAND All SE, f4858, blue: 2 door.
sport wheels, AMJFM cassette, till &amp; cruise. air, power locks .... '7ttS
1881 CHEVY CAPRICE, 14152, light pewter, V8, automat~ .
air, AMJFM cassette, power windowS &amp; locka, cruise, tilt... ........ '8285
11113 CHEVY CAVAUEA AS WAGON, f412S, aulomallc,
air, AM/FM cassene, tl~ . cruise, luggD""~ rack .. ....... .... ....... ....... '8M5
1812 DODGE CARAVAN, 14778, 7 pa~u .._,.... , "''·(.rube,
autamalic. $1r. AMJFM caasene. power equlpmenl .................. .. "SSI2Q
1813 CHEVY CAVALIER RS, 14715, 2 door, automatic, air,
" " "' alloy whoolo. power locks, ciOih lnterkif .. ................... .:.1n:l PONTIAC GRAND All SE, IN805; while, V6,
autofnauc. air, AMJFM cassette, tilt, cruise, power locks ... ..... ... '1170
11182 PLYMOUTH VOYG&lt;GER, 14811,\iir, aU1omst~.
AM/FM casseno, lil1. crui... air bag. power locka .. ....... ............ .. '1735
1881 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN, 14832, V6, air, auiOIJIItic, .
tilt, 7 passenger, power windows, cloth Klterior .. .... .......... ......... IIMOQ
111113 CHEVY LUIIINAAPV• NnS;!illomofiC, a ,
AM/FM cassette, tMt, cruise, power windows .......................... •to,no
111113 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, Nne, black, air,
automattc, AMJF~ casSette, V8, tilt,cruise, power wtndowl ... •10,470
TRUCK, 1147115, King Cob, red , aulomatlc,
AM{FM cassette, rear ftip aeats, bed liner .. ......... .... ,. .... ......... 111,•
11113 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, 1147111, 7 ~. V8,
air, automatic, AMIFM, tilt, cruise .: .........................................
11113 OLOS CUTLASS SUPREME, 114827, blue, IIU11lmollc,
air, AM/FM, power seats, tilt, cruise, ve ................................. •11,1110

' $1 ,000 down. ~us tax and till e. lirst payment and security deposit due at lease 1nception: 24 month dosed·end lease. Mlle~ge
based on 12.000 mtles per year Subjec1 to prior sa~. Tayota Camry LE. based on MSRP of $20,163, optiOn to purchase at lease
end $13.105 80 Toyota. 4~t4 , based on MSRP $16.212. option to purchase all4!1ese end $13,105.94.

-

PHONE 992-2196

SALE 512,999

•

•

.

Af1DDLEPOR1, o\'\

.

Automatic ,-air, cassette,dual air bags.

(-M-SR-P$"---.13-,93---..9)

f.1j;;d

4 cylinder engine, power steering, power
brakes. automatic transmisston, air
conditioning, AM/FM stereo cassette,
rear defroster, like new, 4,000 miles,
local car.

593-6641

0

TRIMBLE

............:... .......... '8320 .

blue, air, a~tomatic ., .. ,.... ......... ......; ········· ······ ................ ... : ...... :

1

'
(11-16-8-11-7=53)
Dennis Osborne 1-3-3/6= 14 ,
Zach Miller 2-0-3/4=7, Heath Ann bruster 1-0-5/8=7, J.J. Azbell 4-12!2= 13, Nathan Angle 3-0,219=8,
Adam Irwin 2-0-0/0=4. Totals: 134-15/29=53

1993 FORD ESCORT LX 4 DR.

11182 CHEVY BEAmA, 148e3, AM/FM, 2 door,

95 Toyota Camry LE

Bucldey 2-0-0/0=4, Jeff Stetheni 60-0/2=12, Jason Sheets 1-1-0/0=5,
Eric Hill 2-0-IW=4, Charlie Bissell
7-0- 1/4=15, Micah Otto 4-1 010= 11. Totals: 21-2-218=52

·.

ALL
NEW
STYLI

18i0 CHEVY LUMINA, 14829, red, air. '
automatic, AM!FM. tilt, cruise. ctoth iriteriOf ............. .~ ... ............. 'SM.
_tp88 HONDA CIVIC CAX, 141108, blua. air,
•
AM{FM ca~ene, rear defroster, 5p(Jf1 wheels ... .. .... .................. '5M5

1

Mandee Argabright, Wellslon .......... 20 293 14.7
Vanessa Compston, Meigs ............. 20 271 13.6
Amber Bla:kwell, Meigs ..'............... 20 2S8 12.9
Amber Staten, River Valley............. 19 . 237 ~2.S
Jamie Andrews, Alexander .............. 20 245 12.3
Misty Markins, Alexander .. ..,.:.... . 20 . 245 12.3
Rebecca Evans, Eastem ................ 20 241 12.1
.Ave. Jill Shaler, Nels.-Y0!11 ..................... 18 214 11 .9
23.6 . Gretchen Linscott, Fed. Hock. ...'1' 20 237 11.9
23.0 Tara Rutherford, Logan .................: 20 238 11.9
19.5 Lindsay Shumway, Nels.·Yorlc ....... 14 160 11.4
18.2 Jonna Manuel, S~hem ................ 20 228 11.4
17.0 .
16.4 Julie Wagner, Warren ..................... 20 225 11.3
Brandi Munn, Gallipolis... .. ....... . . 19 2t0 11.1
16.1
15.8 Shelly Cook, Logan ........................ 20 218 10.9
15.4 Mariah McAfee, Fed. Hock ............. 19 203 10.7
15.1 · Cindy Armstead, River ValleY ......... 19 203 10.7
14.9 Jodie Huck; Warren .............:..... :.... 20 205 10.3
-14.9 Wh~ney Hastwell, Gallipolis ........,... 19 192. 10.1
10.2
10.1
10.1
10.1

·tt'(\:.. county ·

NOW

AM/FM casseM, rear slider, cloth interior ............................... '8415

eletra nice .........................................

448
322
390
363
323
312
322
316
293
251
239
298

standing defensive effort for the
Eagles. Steven Snyder scored 14
and Terry A)fman had 11 for Trimble.
EASTERN
(ll·ll-10-14-4i::52)
Brian Bowen 0-0-1/2= I, Ryan

1891 CHEVY S~10, 14784, 2 tone palnl,

Get Into

·~·

Erica H~es, Vinton Co .................. 19
Shauna aughe!ty, Marielta ........ ..14
Kathy Coyner, Befe:.............. ...... 20
Jamie Colebank, elpre . ............. 20
Mindy Pope, Galfipolts .. ........... ....... 19
Ket~ KDStohi)'Z, Athens.. ................ 19
Jessica Karr, Eastem................... ... 20
Jera Bohlen, Logan......................... 20
Katie KDStohryz, Athens ................. 19
Rebecca Sexton, Jackson ............. ,.17
Renee Turley, Southern ........ ......... 16
Beth Koons, Trimble ... ... . . .. , ... 20

$

11188 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 114853, automat~ . air,
tilt, cruise, 7 passenger, cloth Interior, AWFM, woodgrain, ....... '5415 '

.

•

Player, Team ............................ Gamn Pts

!

. SOUTHERN

February

Wednesday's scores
MEIGS 71, Aleli8Dder 65
Belpre..71, Trimble 37
Wellston 87. Miller46

THROUGH GAMES OF FEB. 13

*

,.

12
12 8
II 8
8 II
5 12
3 15 .

Girls basketball

:

-• -•-•-

OHIO
4-H
WEEK

173
1St
181
182

~~~*********************••••••

Wt' Sa.l.ute

1994 GALLIA COUNTY
OVB 4-H SCHOLARS

Joe Grubb, Alexander..................... 17
Pau Pullins, Meigs.......................... 15
Dustin Dennis, Logan .......... .......... 18
Jeremy Thrapp, Nels.-Yak ...... . 18

__
35 rebounds, led by Bissell's 10, · assists, 19 iebowids wiih Angle's
had eight steals, wilh Hill and Bis- nine, eight steals, 13 turnovers, and
sell each getting two, turned !he committed 13 (outs.
ball over 19 times and committed
Reserve notes: Chris Stout's
23 turnovers.
Eagles won 44-38 behind Chris
Trimble hit 13-27 field goals, 4- Bailey's 20 points. Daniel Otto
9 in three point attempts, had 2 contributed five points and an out-

Uiey erased their point deficit to
send the game in10 overtime. lHS
held on the rest of the way.
. Eastern was 22-47 in field goals,
2-12 from three-point land. The
Eagles served nine assists with
Buckley giving out three, grabbed

He on y

Williams 8-4-:UJ=30, Ryan
0-0-1/2=1, Jamie Evans 2~,
Mason Fisher 4-0-3/4=11, John
Harmon S-0-1/l=l2. Kevin Ihle 10-010=2. Totals: 21-4i-8/11=68 ·

Tl'll'lis Abbott, Meigs ....................... 1S
Coy Lindsay, Logan ............ 0"' " ...... 18
13
PIS Ave. Jeremy Hill, Sruhem ............ :........ 19
356 20.9 Jason Gail, Nels.-Yak ..................,. 18
390 20.S Jim Simpsoo, Belpre ....................... 13 .
Mike BO'fd, Athens .......................... t7
366 20.3
318 19.9 Tim Heslop, Marietta....................... tC
327 19.2 Mason Fisher, Southem ................ 19
276 17.3 ·Micah Otto, Eastem ........................ 14
293 17.2 Kahieem Maxwell, Athens ............... 17
321 16.8 Chad Nelson, Fed. Hock ...............: 16
250 16.7 Stll'ie Fink, Wellston ....................... 11
309 16.3 Doug UCifd, River Valley ................ 17
274 16.1 Jamie Graha111, River Valley ........... 17
224 16.0 Mike Lewis, Nels-YOlk .................... 12
278 15.4 Seth Bamtt, Warren ........................ 19 ·
244 1S.3 Cass Cleland, Meigs ....................... 1.2
259 1S.2 Chaq Zimmerman, Logan ............... 18
272 15:1
Bruce Ward, River Valley ............... 17
247 14.5 Jared Wolto!d, Ja:kson .................. 16

Eagleslose... ~.·~~-o_nlin_~ ~_m_c~--------------------------------------------~--------------------

-

haS now ended for the Tornadoes
as they rrepare next for the fii'St
round o the sectionaliOumament
10 be held later this week.
Reserve notes: Federal Hocking
led by J. Chapman with 33 points
won 65-60 over Scott Wickline's
Tornadoes. Jesse Maynard had 16
points and Ryan Norris scored II.·

.

.

TlftOUGH GAllES OF FEB.
!_lllyer, TNIII ........_ .. , ____ Gillies
Rya! Meldda, Miller .....:................. 17

?f

.

school scoring leade

Boys basketball

Oe$.
••''n.
••.- ~(C~onun::':uell=from=~C:::-3i;...·--------:--------=::-::-:::-;;~-....,..
f,
was
Martin

8

9 10

ranae

The Vikids cut ii to 28-25

S

8

the half. But Meigs took a 30-~ very limited in lhe s~c'?nd half
lead al the half ll'h.en Hendnx be~ause of an ~nkle IDJury not llSSISIS 10 the cause.
scored off the offens.tve bolrds at believed 10 be senous.
'lh IS
Meigs will hit lhe tournament
the buzzer.
Cleland led all scorers WI
The Vikings battled bact ro lie pointJ. Meigs hit 22 of 48 from the trail Tuesday.evening against River
the game at 32 when Willi~s floor i~luding ()De of four from Valley in the first round of the,
sc~ at the 6:~5 nwt of the lhinl t1uee poiDt
fll!' a W8l1ll; 4~. Division sectional tournament at
penod. But Meigs too1t lhe lead for In lhe last tluee periods, Meip hit lhe University of Rio Grande. Tben
good when Mart Mills drained a 19 of32 from lhe floor (59%), after the Marauders will travel to
trifecta fro~ tl!e right wins wilh hi~ only t1uee of 16 ~ lhe lint Wahama Thursday to baule the
6;35 ~a1010g 10 lhe the period 10 period. f1!e Marauders hit 14 of 24 . White Falcons in a make-up congtve ~e~~ a 35-32lead. .
from~ line (58%). .
.
tesL,
.
Me1gs mcreased the lead 10 4~Cleland owned'¥ boards w11h
3~ on another ~ucket by .Hendrix 13 the Marauders 29 rebounds.
Reserve aota: Meigs defeated
w1fh 4 :45 left ·~ the penod._ But Me~gs had 14 tumov~, and seven Vinton County 53 -41 in the
Shane Barber h1t a three pomter steals, led by Cleland s tluee.
evening's fii'St game. Chris Lllmfrom deep in the ~ft.corner at ~
Vinton hit 19 of 54_ from ~he belt led Mei~s with 14 points and
4:25 mark to cut u 10 41-37 w1th floor (35%) and~ m on nme Bradley Whulatch added 10 for
4:25left in the period.
o~ 1_4 from the ~me (64%). The Meigs. Nick Sparks scored 13 for
John Mwphy hit a bucket inJhe V~kmgs pulled IJ! 28 .rebounds, Vinron.
paint 25 seconds later to cut it bact Wtth Mwphy grabbing etghL
· -• - • - • - '
. Mei lead (41 39)
. "It as a Rreat team effort"
VINTON COUNTY
_ ••)
to a· rw~ pomt
gs . . • ·
. w . 1\
•
But Me1gs reeled off su 10 a row Skinner 881~. It was a·great way
(15-10-16-7=.
and Stanley's ~et off a Clela!td for lh~ semors .&lt;Jerrod "!olma~,
Shane Barber 0 -1-4=7, Jeremy
ass1stgave ~CJgs a47:39lead Wt!h Hendrix ~_!!-~10g) 10 fmish thetr Ward 5-0-1=11, John Mwphy 6-01:27 left. Bnan Radcliff scored m ~at'""'"'·
0=12, Doug Williams 3-0-1=7 •.
the Ian~ for ViniOn wilh 1:12left 10
Wtth all the games the.Maraud- Shawn Davis t-0-2=4, Coty Walk,
make 11 a 47·41 Marauder lead ers have had to play thJS week, . er2-0-1=5 Brian'Raddiff 1-0-0=2:
heading iniO the ~od.
S~nei' ~ 10 go 10 his bench~ lot Totals: 18:1-9=48 ' ·
In lhe fourth
· lhe V~s 10 g~ve hiS starters a ~- We
could not get any closer !han s1x had treme!l,dous. contnb~uons. off
MEIGS
points. That came with 3:38 left in lhe. be.nch .' Skinner satd. MillS,
(14-16-17-14=61)
·
the period on a bucket by Jeremy ~endrix, MilJs, Holman. and HanGary Stanley 4-0-1=9. Marll:.
Ward 10 close 10 within 52-46. But mg allJ?layed .well. Tomght was a Mills 1-1-0=5, Jerrod Holman l-OMeigsoutscoredthevtings9-2the bench. victory.
.
.
.
2=o4, Cass Cleland 7-0-1=15, Paul
' rest of the way to win pulling
Skinner al~ cre~ts hiS semor Pullins 3-0-:z;,s, Benny Ewing 0-0away.
·
playmaker Ewm'- Wl!h a outstand- 2=2, Donald Yost 2-0-0=4, Adam

E~~;.me off of assists by Ben p~~g~e! ~~~ecc1~ :::.S~clin~.E.:~~r~:le ~~::ti-I~~~~boll1·

.1. lY. .1.
2 14
5 10

sccnd ldw_o po~n~, but h~ndigdt~
outstan tng JO ruom
~uder offense and added four

~See EAGLES OD C-7)

Ohio Division ·
Div. OveraU

I.cam.

··f

..

Sunday nmn Sentinel Page C7

.

~Th~e-~Ea~g~le~~~d~id!!no~t~gJ~·v=e~u:p,~as=-~ba=s~"'-~tba~U~
garne~."~~~:.!:;~~~~~~~~~~~~n
The. l994-1995 regular season
,J

.

:~age standing~
:Belpre ..................... 11
Wellston ...................8

Jeff Skinner's Marauders defeat
ed the VikiDII's 61 _48 Frida;
evening. The win was the seventh
in the last nine games• for the
·Marauders (9-10 overall &amp; S-8
mark in the Tri-Valley Conference's Ohio Division) .. The win
clinches a third lace.finish for the
Marauders in d:e Ohio Division
over the Vikings (S·l5 &amp; 4 •10)
Meigs, who was playing its
da
started
founh game in fve
1
·
c Y5' k
I
out sow. Vmton ounty 100 an
early 9-31ead when Doug WilliamJ
scored wilh 4·05left 111 the riod
. Meigs baaied back and ~tit io
11-10 when Travis Abboa connect·
ed on a pair of free throws wilh
2:18 left in the riod. The first
.,.. ·00 ded
th Vild
m;ls.f:
WI
e
ngs on
Meigs' took the lead for good
with 3: 10 left in the half when Cass
Cleland hit a follow-up shot in the
painL Meigs then went on a 6-2 run
to take a 26-21 lead with 1:20 left
in the half on buckets by Gary
Stanley, Donald Yost and Adam
Hendrix. All t1uee Marauder buck-

However, it
only the Southem crowd left standing after !he
officials determined the score was
really the Tornadoes 68 and the
Federal Hocki!lg Lancers 66. .
An elated Caldwell said, "the
kids came out and played hard
t.eall\S
.ball
tonight. They feel like they have
cuttmg 1ts def~clt !0 on Y t ree been put down all year and came
points 35-32 gomg 1010 lhe fowth out totally focused and ready 10
quaner
p!ay. It was a classic high school

left ,regulation lUIIe ~Tony
1010
l?eem ~Eastern. Eagles
overlime Wllh the Tnmble Tomcats.
The ~omcats held ~ff lhe Engles
by ,sco!m.g seven ~mts to.Eastern. s sa m the. overume period 10
lhe Eagles
$031' 10 3 9-2 lead over Trimble hut
THS hit a couple of three pointers
to · th
t 11 11 t th
d
ue e score a
:Tvc
boys'·

o.21

when Shawn Davis bit a pair of ilmn. Tile oaly player DOt to score
free throws wilh 34 seconds left In was Nkk Haning and his play was

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Pleeaant, wv

February 19, 1995

.

-

f.

�I
•

In the Open
By Jim Freeman
Times-sentinel Slltfl

h
•
1•
h
0 10 IS lng .lcenses
1
March
On
t 0Withbtheebulksof Old
hunting season bol, certain veterans who are Per·
a

,.

over, it's time for th~ outdoor
enthusiast to look away from the
huntinl! w~ and meadows and
Inward the nvers and lakes for the
Upcoming fishing season.
Ohio fishing license~ for 1995
go on sale effective March 1.
Resident licenses cost $15 for
persons 16 through 65 who have
resided in Ohio for the past six
months. Annual non-resident
licenses and three-day nonresident
tourist licenses cost $24 and $15,
respectively.
The following Ohio residents
. ' bl e for a free f'IS h'mg
are e I 1g1
license: persons 66 and older, peopie who are physically disabled
who require the assistance of
anolher to fish, residents of state
and county institutions, holders of
~·veteran" license plates displaying
international wheelch81f

manently disabled and former prisoners of war.
·
Local anglers should not e~t
carp and channel catfish caughtm
the Ohio River. The Ohio 1995-96
fishing rc~ons inclu~ an ad_visory wammg ~pie agatnSt _eatmg
those two spectes caughtm tile
river between the Pennsylvania
border and the Greenup Lock and
Dam near Portsmouth.
People younger than 16 years
old or fishing in a private wnd or
on land and water which they or
their .parents own are not required
10 purehasc a fish'
1 mg 1'tcense. However, persons fishing in .privatt:IY
owned ponds, l~es or reservotrs
open to public f1shin~ through_ a_n
agreement or lease w1th th~ D1vtsion of Wildlife are requued to
have a liCC!'~·
.
.
In add1t1on, Ohto has .agree-

·Fartnfllusiness

Outdoors

February 19, 1995

By ROB WELLS
: AP B"o!naa Writer
WASHINGTON - The JICIO\'Io
:. at Piper Jaffray Cos. were qutle
" happy this past week as they agreed
to JliiY $70 million to llellle a big
lawsuit involving 7,OCXJ !hareholders who bought one of their trou·7 bled mutual funds. .
Not only was the Minneapolisbased investment firm able to avoid
an expensive and protracted legal
fight. It also expects to m111 a $27
million break on iu federal ' and
stale taxes from the settlemenL
Accounting and tax experts,

1·

while deferring from the ~ifics
of the case, say such dcdUCllons are
quite routine - and legal.
"I don'tlite it, but it is," said
Paul R. Brown, an accounting professor at New York University's
Stern School of Business.
Internal Revenue Service rules
prohibit deductions for civil or
criminal fines. Sealements, however, can be deducted as a cost of
doing business. Essentially this
means that taxpayers are sharing in
the burden.
"It doesn't surprise me because
stuff like this happens all the

••

'.'
'
•

GALLIPOLIS -Ohio Valley
Bane Corp. reponed fourth quarter
1994 net income of $658,800 or
$.89 per share compared with
$531,800 or $.74 per share for the
same period last year. The 23.88
percent increase in net income and
the 20.27 percent increase in net
income per share for the current
period was due primarily to
Improved net interest income, a
decrease in provision for loan loss
expense and an increase in total
other income.
Ohio 'Valley Bane Corp. is a one
bank holding company with Ohio

.••

·.

plained that ihe ban infringed on
their rights as property owners.and
tax)lllyers.
The ordinance covers but is not

limited to deer, dogs, cats, rabbits,
squirrels, skunks, groundhogs,
opossums, raccoons, beaver,
foxes.and bears. ·

•,

•
•

.,••
~

.•
~
~

Valley Bank as its subsidiary:
which operates offices in Gallia,
Jackson and Pike Counties. The
company also opened a new loan
production office in Point Pleasant,
West Virginia during the fourth
quarter. The Loan Origination Center is lhc comJIIIRy's first expansion
iniD another Slate.
Net income for the y~ ending
December · 31, 1994 was
$2,425,500 or $3.31 per share compared with $2,025,400 or $2.86 per
share a year ago. This 19.75 percent increase in net income and
15.73 percent increase in net

income per share ·was also due pri- check for a cash dividend· of $.38
marily to increased net interesl per share as deelarcd by the board
income and a decrease in 'provision of directors on January 17,1995.
Shareholders enrolled in the divifor loan loss expense.
All earnings per share are dend reinvestment plan will receive
adjusted for the siOck split of Apri I a stalement reflecung lhc reinvest27.1994. In 1993, the Bane Corp. · ment of their cash dividends on the
adopled FASB 109, "Accounling shares lhcy hold under the plan.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. sharefor Income Taxes." The required
holders
will be receiving next
adoption was effective for fiscal
years beginning after December 15, month a copy of the 1994 OVB
1992. This accounting change annual repon and proxy material.
decreased net income. in 1993 by The annual shareholders meeting is
scheduled for Wednesday, April 5,
$74.6thousand.
Shareholders of the record date 1995 at the Morris and Dorothy .
of January 25, 1995 have been Haskins Ariel 'Theatre in Gallipolis.
mailed a deposit notificalion or
•

THOMAS THORNTON

New business O.f.Bns

BONNIE KEMPER

Mary Cec11 named trainer
for P. J. T. Horizon Stables

•'~ ,
t:

THORNTON, KEMPER PROMOTED· Thomas R. Tborutoa
has been promoted to asslstaot sltift operating eopeer aod Boa·
J... nie J. Kemper to unit supervisor at Oblo Vulley Eledrlc Corporalion's Kyger Creek Pilot in Clitllblre. The pn1111otions were efl'ec._ tive the first or January. :fbontoa joined OVEC lo 197' as a
~ laborer. ID 1"8, be trausferred to .-e operations department as a
~ utlUty operator. During that same year, be wu promoted to auxB·
iary equlpmeat operator lind in 1990, to llllit Apervl!ior, TbOI'Iltoa
resides in GaWpolls. Kt111per joined OVEC Ia 1988 as alaborer.ID
1
! 1981, sbt transferred to the operatloa~:&amp;!rtmeol as 1 utility
1 equlpmeut ~n·
, operator. ID 1!1~:2, she was promoted to 1
: tor and in 1991, to equlpmeut operator. Sbe resides Ia GaDipolls
: and is the parent or five sciu ud two daugbten.
•

R

BIDWELL 7 Mary Cecil, of
Louisville, Ky·., has lxlen named
ll'ainer for the P. J. T. Horizon Stables, Inc., a new business in Bidwell.
.
That announcement was made
last week by Patty Toler, owner.
Cecil has worked with wellknown uainers in Louisville. She is
a member of the Tri-State Horse
Show Association, American Saddle Bred Horse Association and
United Professional Horsemen's
Association.
Cecil has also been involved in
the breeding industry of saddle
horses. ·
The new business, nestled in the
rolling hills of southern Ohio along
· the West Virginia border, ~'if full of
caring and ambition," Toler said.
Toler said she has always had a
passion for horses. "It all started
several years ago when I' bought an
American Saddlebred. From then
on, there has been no other breed
for me."
Toler had to ttavel elsewhere for
!raining, but she always missed the
"hands 011 care" she"knew how. to
give.
lleing a caretaker of.horscs for
· many years herself, Toler asked for
help from the PJ. T. farm's manager, Kelly Ager. He developed a
feeding ration.
Ager has degrees in animal sciences from Ohio Stale and ATI. He
worked with the universities 10 produce a high gl!!llity fee!!. and alfalfa hay . He in turn manages the ·

f

IUY NOW IN

. •All standard equipment
•5 Speed
•V-6 engine
•Air Bag

•Cloth trim
•Long or short bed
•Order yours now!

'95 CHEVY 5·10 PICKUP
Sale price Includes GMAC First nme Buyer
l•centive of qualified and GM Rebate.
ORDER,YOURS HOWl

'95

•Air conditioning
·5 Speed
·In stock

c

T CAVALIERS

•Just Arrived
•41n Stock
•Options extra

41N STOCK!

•Air conditioning ·
•Bedliner
•Locking differential
•Engine oil cooler

·

•4-Speed aulo. lrans .
•Jrim rings
•AM/FM with cassene
•Solid color

YOUR PRICE

$14,388'95 CHEVROLET LUMINA
•Air
•Automatic
•Power sleering
•Power locks
•dual air bags

· '95 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
2DOOR
•Dual air bags
•Anti·lock brakes
•V-6 engine
•Auto overdrive trans.

•AM/FM stereo
•Delay wipers
•Custom interior
ORDER YOURS NOW!

YOUR PRICE

$16,486

$15,801

'95 CHEVROLET CAMARO
•Dual air bags
•5-Spee?

Hot a 1994 some dealers are advertising!
Ready for the snow season.

YOUR PRICE
DELIVERED

Stock #315

•Rear defroster
•16 in. aluminum wheels .
.'Group I

'95 CHEVY 414 WIT

BRAHDNEWI

$15,198
•V-6 engine

Stock #316

'10,545

sa,9~7
•All New
•Stock #366

BRANDNEWI.

STARTING AT

YOUR PRICE

'9 5 GEO METRO

~ I

sa,688

FULl PRICE
'95 CHEVY FULL SIZE PICKUP
2 WHEEL DRIVE

$18 888
.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'95 CHEVROLET LUMINA
4DOOR

•Custom cloth interior
•Air conditioning
•AM/FM stereo
ORDER YOURS TODAY!

•V-6 engine

·Dual air bags
•Air conditioning
•Auto .. trans.

•Keyless entry
•Rear defroster
•Anti-lock brakes ·
·Group I

=~--r-.....,.,

-;·

YOUR PRICE

'20, I 337.

$ .

14,996
Stock 11257

'95 OLDSMOBILE CIERA
4 DOOR

SUPREME

'95 OLDSMOBILE

Fully Equipped ,
Payment 68Sedon3 6 months closed end lease, $1 ,poo down orirade.
TB&gt;&lt; &amp; tiUe tee eXI!a.

BEST PRICES IN THE TRI·STATI RIGION
·. •

GEO

•

-'95 OLDSMOBILE 88 ROYALE
SPECIAl' EDITION.

Loaded With Equipment.
In Stock - Ready for Delivery.

BIUEVEIT!!

OLDSMOBILE

·,

; CFSA officials hope
~ to make consolidation
•
~move by first of July
•
:
,
•
•
:
:
•
:

,,

•

•

•

..

Holzer Clinic laboratory
receives accreditation

on

Farm loans req.uire ·
·
· Q · 1- ·
crop insurance coverage . ua ~lty. Farm and Fleet
.
rece1ves state award .

.
~

For greater returns
~ thinlt long, steady

t
1

Dalbar F'mancial Services of
: people try 10 re• fleet on how to· BostonfoundthataiO-yearbuy-aodi day's investment news wiU affect hold strategy in equity funds pro' tomorrow's markets.
duccd retums three to four times
: . 'f!'is approach, although appeal- greater than the in-and-out tactics of B EDWARD M VOLLBORN _
, mg,1s so wrong. Research has shown some investors. Said the study
Y""'ALLIPOLIS. p
h .
: lhalbuyingandholdingsinvestments "Invesiment return is far more de:
';:t . ....
- -:- ersons ."':d0
• · · th 1o g haul arks, better iii
.
. .
wa.. to ....ome pnvate pesbct e
.
: over .e n
w
. pendent on mvestor beltav1?.r than on app~cators should lake the oppor- · ~e ~ual tobacco production
, almost every case corn~ 10 re- [mvestment] performance.
ttinlly to attend a class Monday meebng will be Tuesday, Feb. 2811
--11-~-~-~a~
. l!.uY!!!B_and selling, tha.L!§_ - If your investment goals have a -- evening. The 7 p.m. class will be - 7:30p.m.atHannanTraceEiemeo• playmg the ~eL
long time horizon but the stoek mar- held atlhc C.H. McKenile Agricul- !8fY School. Keynote speaker will
: . Of course, With nearly all types of ket volatility coneems you, consider twa1 Center.
bC Dr. William Snell, economist .i t
• mvestments,therearenoguararu~s. the following:
An overview oflhc testing will the University of Kentucky. He
• But over the last century, hiSIOrical
•the !aleS! economic news, orpo- be, $iven and study malerials will will discuss many tobacco market'
: · evtdencehasshownthestoekmarket litical developments at home and be tssued. Staff from the Ohio ingandpolicyissues.
: has a rematkable ability to rebound abroad, can cause stockS t6 ''react I&gt;epart"'ent of Agricullllre will be
Brcilda Raines, from the Adams
• fromcri!lissitwulons. Even the Great . emotionally" 00,a daily basis·
at the McKenzie Ceater on Thurs- County ·consolidated Farms Ser: Depression of the 1930sproved1Dbe
, over ~lor/g term mu~ fund day, Marth 2 between 3 and 6p.m. vices Agency (formerly lhc ASCS)
: no more than a 1emporary selback to share prices will ~ly be delet- to administer the !Cit. B~se of will overview issue~ of the caw:: lhc upward momentum of stock .mined by the sales and earnings of ~v~ w~ during earlier rceer• trophe cove~e requtrement.
.
: pnc~.
.
· .
the underlying companies;
tific:ation ~ons, we h_ave sched., ~ G~ C&lt;&gt;~!nty program will
:
Lipper Analytical ServiCCS, Inc., . . , investments in solid, hil!h qual- uled !PI addiUonal sesston .for the be pnm!'nl&gt;: pohcy. ~f you want
• an ·invesanent research fmn,lrJII;ked tty stocks and stockfunds are genet'· . ove':ung of March 22 1 Call for production mformauon, plan to
atlend a 1 p.m. session at the J~: 180 mutual f~ over the ~ 25 ally worth holding onto through short- ddads,
: years,calculating,anaveragegamof tcrmmarketswings.
son County ASCS off1ce,

Tobacco production meeting set Feb. 28 ·
F arm Flash es -

.

,

.'

RECEIVES ACCREDITATION- J, A. deLamereu, M.D.,
laboratory director, SuS&amp;n Davis, laboratory .manager and Steve
Elberfeld, .11ocillary services director, display Holzer Clinic's twoyear CAP Labontory Accreditatioo •.

By LISA MEADOWS
voaers.
GALLIPOLIS - On December
Ballots must ~~roperly signed
6, . 1994, it ·was officially and returned to
A by 4:30 pm
announced that the Lawrence on March 2, 1995 OR ballots must
MARY CECIL
County Consolidated Farm Service . be J)l'q)Crly signed and postmarked
laboratories nationwide. The CAP
GALLIPOLIS
The
Holzer
.
Agency (formerly ASCS) will be by March 2, 1995 and received
Laboratory Accredilation Pro~.
nutrilion, and .breeding asJ)ect for
closed and combined with the Gal- before ballot counting. in order to Clin.ic laboratory was reissued a . which began in the early 1960s. is
two-year
accreditation
by
the
Com[he
farm .
lia CFSA Office.
be valid. The counting of ballots
recognized by the·Federal Governmission
on
Laboratory
Accredita•
Toler said, "Since experience is
The county committees from . for the burley tobacco referendum
ment as being equal ,to or mo~e
•• Lawrence
the besl teacher, I sttive to keep the
and Gallia Counties are will take place at 8 a. m. on i'ues- tion of the College of A~eriean s!riugent than the government .s
Pathologists (CAP). The accredita·training cost down to an affordable
: working together to try to make day, March 7, 1995 in the C.H. lion
·
was based on the-results of a own inspection program.
amount"
; this ch;tnge as easy as possible for McKenzie Agricultunil Center. The recent on-site inspection.
lnspeciDrs e~ine die records.
Her daughter, Tricia, came into
~ the producers from both counties.
counting of ballots is open to the
In a leiter to laboratory direcaor, and quality control of the laboratothe
business with her five gaited
, The dale of the actual move of the pubtic.
ry for the last two years, as well as
horse, "Love's First Admiral." In
: Lawrence office to Gallia County
The Gallia County CFSA Com- I.A. delamerens, M.D., CAP 1he education and qualifications of
him of the national recog1993, he was the tti-slale's reserve
' is unknown at this time.
mitlee will conduct their normal · adVised
nition and congJ:lltulated the labora- 1hc staff. They also look at the
champion ·in .five gaited pleasure.
.' .l
A proposed date of no earlier meeting foUowing the counting of IOry for "excellence of services ·facilities, the equipment, laboratory
In 1994, he w.as five gaited junior
1 than July I has been submitted to ballots March 7, 1995 instead of being provided."
safety and laboratory management.
.
exhibitor
reserve champion.
• the Ohio State CFSA Committee. March 14, 1995 as previously
Holzer Clinic's laboratory is one Their primary concern is how well
For
more
information concem• Until the two counties are co-locat- scheduled.
Holzer Clinic serveS the patient
j ed, functions will remain indepenProducers arc urged to contac.t of more than 4,200 CAP accredited
ing the n~&gt;w business, contact Cceil
al879 Homewood Drive, Bidwell,
~ dent of one another. In other words, the Gallia Consolidated Farm Ser' producers from Lawrence County ·· vice Agen'c y at 446-8686 with
:, will continue to use the office in questions concerning the Lawrence
! Ironton until further notice,
County CFSA Office closure or the
•
B11rley tobacco producers are Burley Tobacco Referendum.
! reminded that a referendum will be
Lisa Meadows is acting Gallia
: conducted February 27 - March 2, County executive director of tbe
POMEROY - Any producer tion of USI;lA, which combined the
• 1995. Ballots will be 'mailed on Gallia-Lawrence Consolidated
GALLIPOLIS - Quality Farm &amp; vocational rehabilitation services
who
anticijJates applying for a farm · programs of the former ASCS and
: February 24, 1995 to all eligible Farm Service Agency.
Fleet
of Gallipolis was recently such as vocational assessment,
loan from USDA must obtain at FCIC with the farm loan programs
.
recognized
and presented a plaque training,physical restoration,and
least Cala'strophic (CAT) crop of FmHA, under the newly created
inswance coverage on all crops of Consolidated Farm Services Agen- from the Rehabilitation Services job placement.
Commission (RSC) for their supThe manager of Quality Farm
economic significance.
cy (CFSA).
.
The earliest sales closing date in pon in hiring individuals with dis- and · Fleet, John Lammers, stated
The coverage must be obtained
that he is very satisfied with the
before the sales closing dale for the this area is March 15. This date is abilities.
In
lhc
past
year
they
have
quality
and 'quantity of their work.
crucial
because
once
it
passes
and
producer's particular crops. The
both
a
consumer
from
employed
The
Ohio Rehabilitalion Serthe
loan
applicant
has
croP.S
withrequirement applies to both direct
•
the
Bureau
of
Vocational
Rehabili'
vices
Commission
has offices for
oul
CAT
coverage,
they
Will
likely
and guaranleed farm ownership,
•• By MARK SMITH
10% annually. This means if your operating, or emergency loans have to wait until the following tation as well as one from the bolh The , Bureau of Vocational
, : Advest, Inc.
moneywasinatax-d~~......;_:eount, administered by the former Farm- crop year to be eligible for loan Bureau of Services for the Visually Rehabilitation and The Bureau of
:
There's no doubt about it-people you doubled it every seven years. Ifit ers Home Administtation (FmHA) assistance.
Unpaired.
Sci"Viccs for the Visually Impaired
• arclivinglonger. Itonlymakessense was in a taxable investment, you offices, now .using the working
Both
consumers
are
severe
I
y
in Athens.
further information about the
handicapped
and
have
had
difficul• for investors to set their siaes on the doubled it every I0 yeirs.
It is the goal of the .commission
name Rural Economic and Com- coverage can be obtained from any
ty
in
oblaining
meaningful
employto
assure
that pefSC!RS with disabili,
: long term.
Despite these facts, many inves- munity Development (RECD).
local crop insurance agent qr the
ment
.•
RSC
has
developed
many
lies
arc
able
to lead a productive,
:
However, by
tors tend to moye money from one
Thts change is required by the CFSA (formerly ASCS) office.
stratet~ies
over
the
years
10
assist
in
satisfying
lifeminimizing limitareading the ftnansecurity to another. Only 30% of Federal Crop Insurance Reform Questions regarding the loin
allo\vmg
.
i
ndividuals
with
disabililions
and
maximizing
their skills
1 cia! press, watch·
money in deftned conttibution pen- and Department of Agriculture requirement can be answered by .
ties
10
achieve
their
vo~arional
and giving people. freedom in mak' ing TV and listensionl'.lans (like40I(k)s)country-wide Reorganization Act of 1994. The the local RECD (formerly FmHA)
goals
and
to
allow
them
to
become
ing vocational choices
office.
·
Act
also
authorized
lhc
reorganizaing to friends, it
islnvestedinstoc;ksandstockmutWil
more
independent.
RSC
offers
seems
many
funds. Yet

.
I errors.

so routine and canmon that scveta1
experts contacted by a reponer
wondered why it was being l'liaed
as an issue at all
"I don't think it unfair. It hap:pens quite rputinely in settlements," said Richard A. Lockridge, a Minneapolis-based attor·
ney for shareholders who scitled
the case.
"It is a cost of doing business,"
said Michael H. Frankel, a tax spec!aJist and partner al the accountmg
fum KPMG Peat Marwick in
Washington.."lt is a shock,· I agree,
at ftrSt."
·

OVB's fqurth quarter earnings up

..·
"'"·

RESERVE CHAMPION EXmBITOR - Trk:la Toler, the 13·
year-old daughter ~ Maurice and Patty Toler of BldweU, wu the ·
reserve cbamploa fin-Baited exblbltor tor 1994 after showing ller
Amerk:au Saddlebred horse lu Tri-State Horse Show Association
competlllous lu Oblo, Keutncky and .West VIrginia. Her steed Is
trained by Mary Cecil of PJT Horlzoa Stables, Inc. of BidwelL
.

time," said an IRS tax attorney, its mutual fund prospectus about as a loss," said Piper spokeswomwho spoke on · condition of the volatile ~ of ~vatives in an Marie Uhrich.
anonymity. "ll's a matter of the a fund marketed 11 one dial would
While the IRS declined comcorporation offsetting business preserve investon' CI!Pilal.
ment on the specifics of the Piper
expenses and this could be a legitiThe lawsuit charged that case, the agency said such a dcducmate business expense.''
between July 1, 1991 and May 9, tion generally 1s considered a norInvestors sued Piper Jaffray last 1994, investors lost about $139 mal business expense under Secspring afler one of its popular bond million.
.tion 162 of the federal tax code.
· mutual funds, the Institutional
Piper denied it misled investors
" ... If it's a liability incurred in
Government Income Portfolio, s'uf- and said it was prepared for ttial, their trade or business and it's
fered major losses. The problems but said it decided to settle and something that we consider ordiwere due primarily due to the avoid a porentially long and costly nary and necessary, then they
fund's purchase of volatile.mort- dispute. The settlement must still would be entitled to the deducgage derivative securities.
win approval from a fcdcral judge lion," the IRS aaomcy said.
The lawsuit charged Piper made and the shareholders. .
The practice of deducting settlefalse and misleading stalements in
" We will record the scUlement ments as a cost of doing business is

. ·,l·

$11,994

Section D

~ Piper Jaffray settlement inclu-d es big tax write-off

Hunters chafe under ban
on public hanging of deer
TRENTON, Ohio (AP) Councilman Robert Ncanover,
Hunun are calling 1 City Council who proposed the ordiii8Dce, said
ban on hinging slaughtered tlccr · . be has the llacking rJ residents. He
and other animals in public view a said lhc ~ wa in teS(lOIISC
misfire, but officials are sticking by to about 20 residelta who said they
their guns.
were offended by hanging deer c:armentswithWestVirginiaandKcn- ~~;.:~decorated with
tucky allowing buckeye anglers to
Huntcl Chris Spndling said be
fish from either shore of the Ohio would circulate petitions to put the
River. For more information, con- issue before votci's. All residents
suit the Ohio 1995-96 fiShing rcgu- who spoke at the council meeting
lations.
fb .
opposed the ban.
The number 0 · usmesses se11• ·
The council on Thwsday adopting hunting and _fishing licen~ !n ed lhc ordinance allowing animals
Meigs County :wtll be dccrcasmg m to be hung s:;~fhtered or pro
'
the near future, according to Mei~s cesscd only in
yanls. The vole·
County game protector Keith · was 6-1 . Councilwoman Shari
Wood.
Lewis, who cast the lone vote
. The goal is to continue conve- againsttheonlinance,saidtheissue
nience while streamlining lhc num- was one that should be 110lved with
ber of agents and sub-agents selling common sense and not legislation.
licenses, he said.
Violations will be a minor misLicenses will 'be sold at the fol- demeanor carrying maximum fmes
lowing locations: O'Dell's Lumber, of $100, with further violations
Pomeroy; Jeff's Carry Out, bringing a maximuin $2SO ftne and
Pomeroy·, Gloeckner's, Pomeroy; 30daysm· jail.'
Larry's Grocery, Syracuse; SunThe adopted ordinance is a comFun Pennzoil, Racine; Eber's · promise that has failed to satisfy
Citgo, Racine; Forked Run State hunters.
•
Park, Reedsville; Hawk's 76, TupThe council's original proposal
pers Plains; Baum's Lumber, would have limited hunters to
Chester; Hilltop Grocery • Rutland, hanging and slaughlering animais
· and Reed's SIOI'e, Reedsville.
in a shed or garage. Hunters coril-

1rimes. jtntintl

..

·

Portsmouth Street, Jackson, or a
7:30 p.m. session !!I the Lawren•!l.
County Soil and Waler Conservation Disttict in Linn ville.
Dr. R.C. Pearce, professor in the
·agronomy de)lllrlment at the Uili~
versity of Kentucky, will be the
speaker. He plans to cover topics
relating· to .fertility. crop nuttition
role in curirig quality, eiC. Plan 10
take advantage of these opportunitie$!

sumption is expecteel to continue
inl!l 1996; planted aaeage of com
is expected to decline by 3 million
acres in 1995. This scenario points
to a decline in endin,11 stocks oL corn next year. Com pnces are generally expected to increase another
10 cents per bushel over the next
few weeks and could add another .
10 cents on lhc basis of early season weather jiUers.

. Reminder: Gallia County PreThe USDA's February Supply view Open Steer and Heifer Show,
and Demand report contained nb Feb. 19. The heifer show will start
changes in the projection of U.S. at II a.m., with the steer sliow to
com use during the current market- · follow immediately.
ing year. The near-term prospect
· (Edward M. Vollboru is tbe
for com prices remain generally agricultural extension agent tor
favorable.
·
Gallia County.)
The record price. ~f corn con-

,I

.

' .'

•

•

�•

Page

OH Point Pleuant, WY

Sentinel

Analysts warn

Response
to ·renovated.inn
.
...~~ay end town's lean tim~s

Dow may top 4,000 soon,
but may not stay there
be~eve

inflation begins ~tick in.
To be sure, the week's economic data was not unequivocal. Housing starts were found to have
dropped 9.8 percent in January, and
first-tim5r un employment clatms
shot up zO,OOO during !he week
ending Feb. II. Both or those
stalistics, along wilh a 0.3-percent
gain in the nation's unemployment
rate reported earlier this month,
countered assumptions that the
economy is growing too fast.
·
Market bulls like Alan Ackerman, executive vice president at
Fahnestock &amp; Co., say !he strong
buying momentum is 190 powerful
to dismiss. " Some pessimists are
turning l]lOre optimistic for safety's
sake, . because they have to," he
said. "We're seeing more risk
money put into equities right now.
where the tone is improying all the
time.''
StiU, if intereSt rates continue to
rise, corporate profits, and ultimately stoCks, are bound to suffer,
warned Jeffrey Applegate, martel
strategist at CS First Boston.
"Is this !he next leg of the bull
cycle, or a head fake?" Applegate
said. "I think it's a head fake. I
lhink lhe economy's stiU too strong
for !he Fed not to tighten furlher.
. Can it be possible that !he economy
can be slipping and profits won't? I
don'tlhink so."
·
On Friday,lhe NYSE composite
index fell 1.44 to 261.83, up 0.03
for the week. The Nasdaq composite index fell 6.34 to 786.97, post- .
ing a 3.46 loss for lhe week. The
American Stock Exchange's market value index slipped 0.08 to
447.60, down 0.25 for !he week.
The Wilshire Associates Equity
Index, which is the market value of
NYSE, American, and over-lhecounter issues, ended !he week ai
$4.75 trillion; off $2.2 biUion from
the previous week. ,
~

'

v

ndlq Friday,
Jlebruaryl7

•

All-time high:

3,978.36
1tJIUMJJ"' J/,/fJ!U 3.'1104

By M.R. KROPKO
AP Business Writer
CLEVELAND - The U.S.
Postal Service says Ohio-based
Suarez Corporation Indostries has
made millions of dollars by duping
people into thinking they've won a
big prize.
But SCI founder Benjamin D.
Suarez says· !he postal service is
seizing some of his incoming mail
in part because of his published
views about government regulalion.
The SCI sends out sales.promolions using Intentionally impressive
sounding names such as "Case,
Waterman &amp; Associates," the
"Office of the Treasurer," the
"Board of Currency Disbursemen!' ' and the " Department Of
Currency Disbursement.''
·
But the ZIP codes are all the
same: 44767-0001, a code·assip;ed
exclusively to SC.I because· o !he
volume of its return mail.
Inside are sweepstakes and
offers for inexpensive merchandise
- pen sets or a costume jewelry
set wilh cubic zirconia "diamond
simulants."
Postal Inspector Robert Denman
says ~ lhe lencrs are.tantamount to a
direct mail mugging.
At the request of !he Postal Service, U.S. District Judge Paul R.
Malia on Dec. 9 issued a temporary
order allowing in~ctors to seize
responses to five S I promotions.
A hearing on whether to make
the order permanent was scheduled
for Wednesday.
"AU five promotions lead consumers to believe that some important entity. such as lin accounting
office, law flllll or bank, is personally contacting them regarding a
significant cash ~rize that 1hey
·have won," Kent enhallurick, an
assistant U.S . attorney in Cleve·
land, said in a legal brief filed in

ing industry."
Suarez compares his promotions ·
with the well-known American
Family Publishers sw~P.stakes,
which sells magazines while offerin$~ a -$10 million sweepstakes
ppze.
.
Suarez said SCI employs about
1,000 people and had sales last
year of about $150 million. He
would not discuss net income,
except to say it was substantial.
The order to seize lhe incoming
mail of the five SCI promotions has
been little more than l!n irritant,
said Suarez.
Since its incejltion in 1968 as a
computer software company, SCI
has branched out into 12 diverse
divisions, including computer hardware ~ and online services, jewelry
retailing and pub~shing. .
Suarez publishes "Stark Magazine" in Ohio's Start County and
said he wants to soon publish a
weeldy newspaper;
Lindenwold's Fine Jewelers, the
largest SCI division, makes and
markets fme and costume jewelry,
especially its Lindenwold Cubic
Zirconia Diamond Simulant. The
Postal Service says !he fake diamond has little value.
Denman, in the affidavit dated
Dec. 2, says five recent SCI mailings generated more than 400 complaints or inquiries.
·
'
that
them to
won a signifwhen in fact lhey
duped into purhave
chasing cheap jewelry or o1her
items,' • Denman said.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., forwarded to the Postal Service a letter from Susan Ja!Ter of Waymont,
Pa., who said her 83-year·old
mother received·one of !he promolions.

1111104

1111104

3111115

1211104

486

By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Press Writer
SISTERSVIT.LE, W.Va. - The
fortunes or !he Hotel at the Wells
Inn rose wilh those of industry.
Built during lhe oil and gas boom
of 1895,' it lhrived until recently,
when hard times hit lhe chemical
plants along the Ohio River.
The lhree-story redbrick hotel
and restaurant closed late in 1993,
and demolition seemed imminent
Instead, the old landmark was
given a last-minute reprieve by a
~ltizen who stayed !here briefly
nearly 20 years ago.
. Now, after a 10-month,
$700,000 effon to restore some of
tlie inn's former luster, developer
Walker Boyd and oihers see the
refurbished hotel as .the town's best
~ope for its futw-e.
:. ~'If it will go, it will be the lifeline of Sistersville." ' said Tyler
County Commission President Bob
Wable. "It's really the heart of lhe
community. It's somelhing that

478
470

481.97
+0.5
•
lor the week

end~

462

454

Frid•y,

448

•

438

February 17

All-time high:
. 482.00
Flbruary 2, 1994 311194

UPIIIdCip

NASDAQ

430

Labor official cites improved factory safety :
CLEVELAND (AP) -It was a !ems," he said. OSHA is part of
government inspection and fine the U.S. DeJXlrllllent of Labor.
thai got a labor-management safety
Tbe plant, which makes altema·
committee working at a factory tors for trucks, cut its days lost to
.wi!h .unsafe conditions, Labor Sec- j"ork-related injuries from 72 in
retary Roben Reich sajd.
1993 to seven last year.
And that, Reich said Friday,
OSHA inspected the plant
proves that lhe nation's 2,000 job March 4 and fined it $3,630 for
safety inspectors play a key role jn eight safety violations. The plant is
maintaining a safe work place for part of Alternator ~Products DiviAmericans.
~
sion of Arcade, N.Y., and its ~nt
The inspection by !he Occupa- company is Prestolite Electric Inc.
tional Safety and Heallh Adminis- of Ann Albor, Mich.
tration mobvated lhe company to
The inspection and subsequent
help improve safety, Reich said job safety committee meetings led
after touring the Leece-Neville to regular classes on safety and
Alternator plant. He wore safety small-group safety tours of the
glasses as required.
plant The company made wrist and
''They had a committee but it back braces available "to employgot a little fired up when OSHA . ees.
came in and found some probTlie 119 memliersofLocall377
/

of the International Brocherhood of.
E!ectrical Worke~ alS? cam~ utr :
WJih safety suggesbons, mcluding a;
safer way .to han«i!C !he dumping o.f
metal chtps, shtelds to protect''
workers from moving pans and a'
better way to vent glue vap&lt;n.
Union cooperation with man- ··
agement over safety issues:
improved after the ' inspection ; ··
according to Dorolhy Canty, lh~. ·
union's chief shop steward.
•
''We're not quite as hostile;
we're willing to talk," she said.
"On management's side, lhey'rc;..
wining to listen."
~
In 1993 job-related injuries ai
the plant included an arm broken.
by a machine, frequent back Sb1linl:
from improper lifting and wristproblems from repeating !he same
production motion, she said.

See Answer . to Puzzler on .Page B-6
ACROSS
1 Popular fruit
6 Raymond Burr role
11 Greek assembly
16 -and raves
21 Ethical
22 Of sheep
23 Sits tor the camera
24 To pieces
25 Copper·;tnd-zinc
alloy
26 Pavaron1, e.g.
27 Failed Ford
28 Thighbone
29 Outside: prejix
30 Beget
31 Annoy
33 Skillful
3&amp; Airline into
36 Flightless bird
. 38 Fate
· 39 Costa del 40 Understand
· 41 Bashful
42 Profit
44 Sleep
48 Where Lima is
51 Harmony
54 Ba,seball's Durocher
and others

55 Bedouin
57 Oppose
61 Show of "Melrose
Place"
62 Crooked
63 Minaret
65 - Claus
66 Ethereal
67 Conflicts
70 Termagent
72 Scot's cap
73 Sty
i4 Possess
75 GOP member: abbr
77' Ice house
79 New Year's - .
80 Blue-pencil
82 Native of: suffix
83 Sportscaster Cosell
85 Wrecked
87 Manservant
89 Unopened plant

90 Caviar
91 Dress part
92 .Sea duck
94 Smelled strongly
96 Greek lener after pi
97 Highlander's skirt
100 Timetable abbr.
101 Crystal-tilled stone
104 Lair
105 Brother of Jeff
Bridges
t 06 Cry at bulffights
107 Scary yell
108 Sketches
110 Endeavor
112 Crisp cookie
113 Boorish fellows
116 - and butler
118 Cleveland's lake
119 - Dolphins
120 Naval flag
122 Therefore (Lat.)
123 Flit
124 Song
125 School in England
127 Concealment
129 Fling
130 High card
133 Child
135 C1gar residue
136 Cooking vessel
137 l ondon's Scotland

DOWN
1 Yellow color
2 Veranda
3 Talk long and idly
, 4 - Vegas
5 Overhead rails
6 Movement
7 Ward off
8 Trig function
9 Yoko 10 High-strung
11 Summi1
12 Deity
13 Greek peak
14 Marsh plants
15 Napping
16 Balsa
17 Mimic
18 Calls
19 Veracity·
20 Homeless anima l

30 Slipped ·
32 Shade tree
34 Equal
37 "The - and the
Ecstasy" .
39 Laziness
43 Skill
44 Meaning
45 Cudgel '
46 Love god
47 Untanned skin
49 Legal maner
50 Neighbo&lt;" of Can.
51 Wide open
52 Shouted
53 Meat-.eating
54 Go away

.

141 W ater ba.rrier

t 42 Seraglio
144 Caustic solution

145 Earthy sediment
146 Dove's cry
147 Sun-dried bnck
149 Pine Tree State
151 Repu lse
153 Mistreat
155 Rhythm
156 Neck scart
157 Express .
158 Office gadget
t 59 Horse
160 Shows the way
Hi1 Lab compound
162 Cloth1ng

56 Floating 'ice mass,

· tor short
58 Deliberate
59 Barrel part
60 Domesticated
62 ExplOSIOn
64 Kinsman: abbr.
67 Rooted
68 Wore away
69 Baste

..

83 Color
84 Steiger ot "The
Specialist"
86 Annoy
88 Table part
89 Milwaukee 91 Contour
92 Costly fur
93 Sing·softly
95 New Zealand parrot
96 Send payment
98 Andes animal
99 Lukewarm
102 Sphere
103 Venture
1OS Small fruit
109 Wise
111 Tutor
112 Inane
114 Gift tor dad
115 Mil. rank
117 ~hys .
119 Impair
121 Part of n.b.
123 Be entitled.to
124 Ram
126 Usual
128 Sunbeam
129 Yell
130 John Ouincy 131 Student at West
Point
132 Overact ·
134 Tantalize
136 Fragment
·136 Sharp
139 Fragrant flowers
140 Active ones
142 Animal group
143 Isinglass
144 Allows
145 Rod torroasting
148 Stinging insect
150 Give silent as~nt
152 Dawn goddess
153 Say further

..

...

.. ,

~ ,L

.,.

·'·
,.
'·...

..
,.

154 Tavern

...'

71 Exercise session

76 Mom or dad
78 Yes: Fr.
81 Tit tor -

•,

·j

'
•'

Attention Farn~ers
-. ~-Bank one-;s-~-­
participating in the
1
Agticultural
Linked

. ,.

c

..

"'

-

...-

....

_,'

For details on borrowing for agricultural purposes, call your nearest.
Bank One office in Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Meigs or Perry counties
or calll-800-677-4994. Applications must be received by the office
· of the Treasurer of State no later than March 17, 1995.

-Q

"'="

..
.. ,.

.
BANK:SONE
.

(l 1995 BAN C ONE CORPO~AT ION

........
• ~'· ·

'

d

. . :..

-.!··'
~

Whatever it takes.

\'

SistersviUe desperately needs.''
He purchased lhe building for
The hotel had fallen on hard $45,000 a day before its contents
times in the '80s as neamy chemi- were auctioned from the white-pilcal plants and other operations lared front porch. At the auction,
along the river closed or scaled Boyd ;1C111111bled to. buy lamps and
back. As business slowed, smaller olher goods representadve of !he
downtown storefronts closed, too. hotel's past. He reopened two
As a result, fewer people passed monlhs fater as a bed-and-breakthrough town, situated at the base fast Meanwhile, renovations conof the panhandle an hour soulh of tinued.
Wheeling and lhe nearest interstate
Mayor Douglas Sapp said resihighways. From 1980 to 1990, Sis- dents donated more than 3,000
tersville's population decreased hours to prepare the hotel for the
nearly a quarter, to 1,800.
· · annual higb school alumni gatherJust over a year ago, lhe Hotel at ing in May. "People brought !heir
the Wells Inn was in such disrepair own paint, anything to get the
many thought it would never host rooms ready," Sapp said. "Boyd
another elegant dinner party or just made a chart or whal needed.to
overnight guest
. be done and people carne in and
" Every time I walked by, I got a llid it
sickening fee~ng because it was in
"I lhink that reaUy let him know
such deplorable shape," ·said how the communitY. SUJ?pOrted
Wable, a Sistersville car dealer. "I him ," Sapp added. 'I lh1nk !hat
really lhought the place would be proved to him that, doggone it,
tom dOwn."
we're going to roll our sleeves up
After wa~ehing i-epeated failures and get in here and we're going to
to save !he building, Boyd last year make this work this time."
took matters into his own hands,
Wable S!lid Boyd surprised
determined to save lhe hotel where many who expected anolher failhe lived for lhree monlhs in 1976 w-e. He, too, "was kind ·Of skeptiafter becoming a cbemical plant cal" when Boyd discussed his
manager.
dream for a full-service hotel.
"It was just a place !hat I had . · " He lias moved considerably
developed an affection for and an faster than anybody could have
admiration for, almost like a per- imagined. We're all behinil it, and
son," !he plain-spoken Boyd said. we're just pmying that he's going
"I felt saddened !hat she was hav- to make it go."
.
i~g such a hard time.''
He and the ,others in town hope

--LOOKING FOR NEW LIFE - Developer
Walker Boyd stands in front of the Wells Ian in
Sistersville, W.Va. Towaspeople bope.tbe reaovatlon of the 100-year-old establisbment will
the hotel will draw visi!Ofs, business travelers and weekend crowds
from Ohio, Pennsylvania and
beyond.
First-floor renovations are nearing completion. Worlc continues on
lhe 35 rooms and suites on !he second and third floors. Formal and

lwo Jima: the day
war philosophies
bloodily ~lashed

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Postal services targets direct mail retailer
the case.
People contacted "have little
reason to suspect that the true purpose of the promoti~ns is to sell
them cheap merchandise at inflated
prices,'' Penhallurick said.
Suarez, 53, president of lhe privately held company based in
North Canton, alxlut 60 miles south
of Cleveland, said his company has
been unfairly singled out
·
The Postal Service's allegations ·
"II!C blatantly false," be said.
·:the whole lhing is a sham,"
· Suarez said. "We are seeking a
congressional investigation on the
matter. We are working on a
counter lawsuit against the Postal
Service for selective prosecution ~
and restricting First Amendment
rights."
.
Steve Baden, SCI's lawyer, said
"certain congressmen have been
contacted .... There's nolhing further I can say."
SCI is Republican U.S. Rep.
Ralph Re~ula's disuict. A member
of Regula s staff, who asked not to
be identified, said SCI contacted
Regula, who sent a letter to a subcommiuee overseeing !he Postal
Service .. only to bring it to !he
subcommittee chairman's attention." He said Regula did not
request a formal hearing on SCI's
complainL
Suarez said he believes he has
been targeted because of previous
battles with attorneys general in
some states - particularly Washington and West Virginia - who
have challenged SCI business practices.
·
He said he's also a target
because he has aulhored books on
how to market products by mail
through sweepstakes. The books
are highly critical of government
regulation. He says his sales tactics
"have been accepted ever since I
can remember in lhe direct martel-

::: (EDITOR'S NOTE- Like
•many small towns, Sistersville,
:W.Va., bas laad Its slwe ollaard
;tbaes.lt evm came close to lollng
:lt;s veatest asset: an elqant illn .
,f!tat had been a landmark for a
century, But tbe Hotel at tbe
Wells Inn is making a comebllclt,
and towasfolk are hopeful Sistersville 1rill, too.)

•
fortllewetk

.........
,, "

~

-.--

once again &amp;ecome a popular spot for visitors,
business travelers and the weekend 1etaway
crowd. (AP)

casual dining rooms, a pastry shop
and a cozy bar have reopened. A
new indoor swimminR oool and

exercise room occupy -part or ~iiie
courtyard just off tbe formal dining
room.

'

Allies' knockout punch ·
still spared community
(EDITOR'S NOTE - Fifty years ago on Feb. 22, Capt. James
McGarry, a B·17 bomber pilot and squadron leader, partlclpakd Ia
Operation Clarion, lhe biggest Allied air effort of World War D.
·Here is McGarry's remembnnce or that mlsslan and ltis decision to
spare a picturesque Alpine vUiage. The article ftrst appeared in the
Schenectady (N.Y.) Gazelle, where be served as a eolumnlst after
World War D.)

: (EDITOR'S NOTE - It was lively flat save for its volcano,
the blOodiest battle of the Pacific Mount Suribachi, at its ~ulhern
By JAMES McGARRY
during World War D. The lnva- end. It would be a fixed· aircraft
For The Associated Press
-ion or ~wo Jima ·In mid-Febru· carrier for emergency landings of
FOOGIA; Italy -The briefmg officer faced us and a hush fell over
~ry or 1945 cost 11,821 American B-29s bombing Japan from bases
the room as we caught a glimpse of !he wall map with the target and the
lives, 5,453 of them Marines, ·a n in the more distant Marianas. In
route markings pointing to various German cities beyond the Alps.
to secure landing strips for fact, 2,25i of lhe massive bQmbers
·The raid was labeled "Operation Clarion." It was to be lhe largestAmerican bombers. From the were eventually to use .lwo.
scale Allied air effort since the outset of tbe war.
·
battle also came a pidure lhat ·· Japanese strategists anticipated
Briefly, !he plan called for hundreds of Bir attacks upon remote mid
eadures as a symbol of the this. Lt. Gen. Tadamichi Kuribwidely separated points of the enerfly's communications' lines ... upon rail
MariDe Corps to this day.)
junctions, marshaling yards, bridges and repair sheds.
ayashi had his 22,000 men tum the
It was ~e cutting a lhousand-inch snake into l -inch.segments. 5trateisland's 11nderlying coral into a
By SID .MOODY
maze of tunnels and caves w.ith 800
gic planners hoped that lhe result would severely criJlllle the supply lines
AP Newsreatures Writer
of tbe Germans, leaving their forces on all fronts short of the ammunition,
concealed guns.
··
.
There was no subllety in the bat"Why dig so many caves?
food, fuel and equipment necessary to carry out effective resistance 1!1. our
tie for Iwo Jima. There was no We're all going to die anyway," a
ground armies.
··
.
roOm for it.
colonel asked Kuribayashi. The
Throughout !he entire European !heater of operations, lhousands upon
On an island one-lhird the size commander agreed Japan had
thousands of AUied aircraft were launched !hat day for a knockout punch
of Manhattan, two ideologies "reached the end of the road."
designed to slash the veins of Germany.
clashed head-on. One was lite war- But, true 10 !he samurai code, he
Across the map, whose borders ran from Foggia to Berlin and from the
rior code of lhe Japanese samurai: told his troops the Americans had
western coast of France east to Poland and ~Romania, lite unseen bomber
Death before dishonor, lhe wiD as •'no desire for the ~lory of their
highways were marted wilh yards of ribbon and black string.
transcendant armor against the ~ ancestors, of postenty or for the
Here and !here along the ribbon markers, a red arrow had been drawn
material accoutrements of. any glory of their family name ....
to signify rendezvous points of bombers and their fighter escorts. Fighter
enemy. Opposed to this was the They go into batde wilh no spiritu· planes were assigned the additional duty of shooting up truck convoys and
unflinching tradition of lhe United !II incentive and rely on material
rail equi~ment in their spare time, while the bombers hammered larg~r
Sta!CS Marine C';orps.
.__
superiority?'
· targets wtth a dozen quarter' ton bombs MCII. ~ - ·
·
· Bushido, the way of the warrior,
He was right abo~ut material
Every available Allied plane in France, Great Britain, Corsica and Ita!~
developed over 800 years of inces- superiority. For six weeks B-24
was ordered into lhe air that day and as our squadron rose in formation
from lhe plains of Fo$&amp;ia, lhe skies above !he Adriatic Sea sparkled wilh
sant fighting amon~:~lhe warlords of bombers had plastered Iwo Jima.
1Japan. Originally tt had left room On Feb. 15, 1945, six batdeships,
thousands of silver wmgs. Customarily, a squadron pot up !!~&lt;Yen bombers
for honorable surrender. But afll!r five cruisers and planes from 12
per mission. On lhis day,lhe average was II. · ,
U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry escort carriers added !heir mighL
Our bomb group was assigned a secondary railyard approximately 35
jolted Japan into lhe modem world
"I can't help thinking nobody
miles southwest of Munich. InteUigence had reported it to be undefended
LAST SURVI'VOR - Charles W. LlndberR, 74, posed at his
·in 1853 by sailing his fleet into can live through this," wrote comby anti-aircraft guns. Our bombing altitude, consequenily, was scaled
Riehrteld,.
Minn., home with Joe Rosenlbal's ramed pboto of the
Tokyo Bay, lhe anciel)t code was spondent Robert Shenod, a veteran
downward from lhe usual 20-odd thousand feet to 12,000 feet.
raising of the nag at lwo Jima. Lindberg is tbe last SI!Oivor of the
Our navigator, 1st Lt. Henry Laarkamp, of Roseville, Mich., loolclng at
altered.
of other Pacific landings. "But I
six Marines who raised the nag. He wUI be a guest of bonO.. Sun·
The emj&gt;eror, literal descendant know better."
wealher forecasts and the route maps, said; "This could be quite a busy
day at the 50th anniversary ceremony at Arlington Natloaal Ceme- · day!" Litde did he know just how busy.
·
of !he Sun goddess, became a rallyOn Feb. 19, lhe Marine Jrd, 4th
tery. (AP)
.
·
ing point for national patriotism. and 5th Divisions began going
AS our ~IT!.b group droned across the northern coast of the Adriatic
Dealh for him was the litmus test ashore. Their · supplies were
and zigzagged between the flak-defended town at the moulh of the Po
Valley, we ran afoul of the weather.
~ of Ioralty.
immense: enough food to feed
Hirohito, emperor during World Columb.us, Ohio, for a month, a achi. Two Japanese were killed Sank the "Jeep" carrier Bismarck
By the time we had half-crossed the Alps, we had tightened our formaWar II, told his troops " ... to be year's supply of toilet paper, ammo charging them as they raised a Sea.
lion until our planes were riding nose-to-tail oc wingtip-to-wingtip. Tbe ·
captured means not only lhat you by the shipload, 100 million small American flag on a nearby
On March 8, some I ,000 visibitity became so resuicted inside lhe clouds lhat at times planes less
disgrace yourself, but your parents ctgarettes for the 4th Division · pipe. Lt. Col. Chandler Johnson defenders made a banzai charge than 200 feet apart lost sight of each·other.
and family will never be able to alone. And fmgerprint ink to identi· called for a bigger flag so everyone the word literally means 10,000
At one point, we met a scampering flock of P-38 fighter planes'-!hold up !heir heads again."
fy bodies among the 20,000 casual- could see it.
years, the attackers surrendering on in lhe clouds. Their leader spotted us just in time to avoid the mass col In a land where honor and ues predicted by lhe land Coml1\81!·
Joe Rosenthal, a photographer their lives for the emperor in lision. Half of his formation zoomed suddenly in our path and passed
shame are inseparably intertwined, der, Gen. Holland M. •'Howlin' for The Associated ·Press who had exchange for 10 millennia of glory. overhead. The rest of the fighters dove away from us ..
this produced a disregard for dealh Mad' • Smilh.
made other landings, heard about it The Marines kiUed 784.
·
As we passed over the mountain range , we descended gradually
the Americans could only put down
As the Marines carne in ~e an and followed the party taking !he ·
"We have not eaten or drunk lhrough the cloud layers, hoping to break out into clear weather by the
as fanaticism .
iron wave, only American guns · larger U.S. Navy flag up !he vol- for five days," Kuribayashi · time we reached our objective.
The Marines, on lhe olher hand, were firing. Kuribayashi h.ad cano. He snapped off several radioed. "We are going to fight
The forination had gone down as low as 11,000 feet in the target area
had been shock troops since CapL
'tched J
tacti' 0 f fi ·
frames, making sure .to get names bra·vely to the last."
when the visibility hampered us completely. When the group leader
swt
apanese
cs
mng and hometowns, and sent the film
Samue l Nicholas led lhem ashore on
By the 18th day, the Marines . attempted to tum the entire group in a circle, we lost sight of the other
!he landing
force from the out·
to capture Fort Montague in the set. Instead, he waited until the off to Guam for developing in case reached the northern end of the squadrons in the clouds .
Our crew was leading !he squadron and the 10 bombers behind us
Bahamas on March 3, 1776. But in invaders reached zones pretargeted they might be worlh transmitting. island, isolating the surviving
Japanese in tWO pockets. Navy Lt. remained in visual contact wilh us. We circled foc several minutes trying
reaction to the carnage of World by his gunners. The first Marine One became immortal.
War I, pacifi sm in the United casualties were hea,ily loaded ·men
"That flag means a Marine Toshihiko Ohno counted only five to sight !he target. Once lhe clouds opened slightly benealh us and we
States had reduced the Corps down who slipped benealh lhe waves and Corps for the next 500 years,' ' men left of 54 in his anti-aircraft could see P-51s "riding lhe rails" in a strafmg sweep.
to only 15,000 men by the 1920s.
drowned.
· Navy Secretary James Forrestal battery.
I called lhe group leader. By ihc time we established contact. his forces
Marines, however, were the
. The first Marines wobbled up told Smith even before he saw
On March 14, lwo lima were climbing back above tbe Alps. They had not been able to locate !he
only U.S . troops to see action through soft volcanic ash that also Rosenthal's soon-to-be-famous "Hell wilh the fire out" - wail . target eilher. He ordered me to rejoin him, if possil)le, over norlhem Italy.
~between lhe two world wan.-Tbey -OOUM down their tanks and~ guns. photo.
dC:Cl.ared secure. That day !he .5lh
We started to chmb south over lhe mownams. Our bombs still hung in
became hardened veterans.injungle Tlien the Japanese opened fire,
By the end of the sixth day, D1v1ston suffered 134 casualties. readiness m lhe bomb lxiys. As we reached an albtude of 15,000. feet, the
fighting and landings in !he unruly blowing Marines into body frag- 1,605 Marines had been killed. Twelve days later 350 Japanese wealher thickened so badly !hat our wingmen, flying ~ximately 100
lands of Central America . This ments scattered all over tbe beach· Medics used· 400 pints of whole made ~ final sword charge and feet from our eyes, could not be seen. The danger of collision was so great
l)lood in a single day . The U.S. were w~ped out..
meant !he Navy and Army didn't head.
lhat we agreed to split up and rejOin formar.ion above the clouds.
have to do lhe dirty wort and gave
"C'rnon, you gu~." cried Sgt. Pacific commander, Adm. Chester
Kunbayasht had. gone to the
We broke out into the sunny skies at 21,000 feet and established radio
the Corps a mission instead or John Basilone, who had won the Nimitz , considered using poison mouth of hts ca~e. bowed tow~d contact with each olher. In a few minutes we were back in bombing formothballs. The result was a manual Medal of Honor in desperate fight- gas but decided the Americans Hl!Ohtto's lmpe~ Pal!lcei.and nt- . mation, l;u:ading south on a boiling white pmirie in the s~y.
for amphibious warfare that ing on Bloody Ridge on Guadal- would not be the ftrSt to break the ually stablied h.u~self m. hts ~s!Om- . . In southm-t Au3!ria lh~ J;!QIJJI~ gave way completely. We.opened our
t;ecame a texdiooiUmtlieMalines' ~ canal. Then a ~shelllciUed him imd - Geneva Convention aga·inst- it, ach. Ah aide f1mshed h1m with a liomb bay doors and leveled out, steadying our airspeed in.preparation for
island-by-island campaigl'l across his men.
allh?Ugh the J~panese had used gas sword to !he back.of hts bowed a target or opportunity. The bombardier called suddenly and said, "Let's
neck. Only 216 of l!•s men had ·s!J!_· _ makeJ!run-on..that..townup ahead, How about it? ~ ~-~
--the Pacific in World War D.
_ _warra~nLOfficer Ennis James~~nst the Ch.mese. __
~n~ered,
~marbbly
!he
last
two
I
looked
at
!he
town.
It
was
a
small
viUage,
snuggled
between
whiteJwo Jima promised to be no dif- Geraghty, 44, 'had fought in World . Th~ Martne.s CIJ?tured the
capped htUs. A railroad ran like a fine pencil line down the valley and
ferent. only harder.
War I. "Gunner, you don't have to tsl~ s two landing Strips, lxlyonet gtvtng up Sill years after the baule.
.
lwo
J.
i
ma,
the
bloddiest
baule
of
tl}rough the town . "Let's go," I said.
Gen . Douglas MacArthur, for . go," he was told. "No, I'd like to agamst
samu~a1
. sll(ord,
the
~ific,
had
cost
6,821
A~riWe alerted !he olher planes for !he run .
one, decried !he Marines' head· see what it's like." He was killed flamethrower agamst smper. On
I
down, straight-ahead inelhods as a finding out ·
.
M~rch 4, a B-29 named Dtna can. h~es; 5,453 of them Mannes.
~we pre~ for a bomb run on this little village's Toonerville troiprodigal waste of human lives. He
Of 1,000 Marines who landed Mtght and low. on fuel made an Smllh s gloomy_forecast hac! ~ leylike railroad. I began to have second lhoughts. I leaned forward and
used his Army trOOps instead with on the right wing that first day, e~rgen~y. landing o~ one of them surpassed, a thtr~ of his l~ndmg looked the town over once again. The more !looked at it the more it
strategy and maneuver.
only 150 were left by nightfall. The whtle vtctous ft.ghtmg went on force of 60,000 bemg casualues.
. seemed like a travel agenty poster. I decided 10 forget about it and save
When it was over Pvt. Johnny · our bomb load. ·
·
Tbe Marines argued !heir taCtics Japanese would roll guns out of nearby.
.
.
were ideally suited for island war- their caves - there were 5,000 of
A ~eek mto ·lhe bailie, Kunb- Lane was waiting on . ~e beach to
When we reached norlhem Italy, we found a huge, 33-arch rdilroad
fare. A relentless onrush would them ...:. frre, !hen roll !hem back ayasht ra'!ioed he had lost 50 ~- be evacuated and ran mto Mmor bridge over lhe Tragliamento River at Casarsa. It ·was one of lhe few
save lives in !he long run. BesideS, before naval batteries offshore · cent ~f h•s. men and . most ~f hts D~lton~ w~om he bumped mto at ~ remaining mil bridges feeding German reinforcements ll!ld supplies into
Italy to oppose our Fiflh Army.
!he Marines were not uained nor could retaliate. They rolled time machme g~ns. He. satd !he tsland the begmnmg.
"How'd you make out, litte
We made a run on !he bridge and blew outlheee sections of it and
equipped for long batdes of attri- bombs, even rocks down on the would fall 1f he d1d not get naval
lion.
invaders.
s,UPJ?.Drt. ln.st.~ad he got a f~w fe~?;' DaiiQn,:Wked. . .
~evercly dama~ed eight others: I was glad we had saved our bombs
I m alJYe, Lane replied.
T'my lwo Jima, a volcanic island
Nonetheless, by the fourlh day kamikaze sUICiile plane$ !hat cnpms~ of.droppm~ them qn. lhe httle I?•cture-postcard village in the Alps.
I~ the battle of codes, the
I unagme the villagers, tf we pul It up to !hem now, would be preny
760 miles soulh of Tokyo, was a lhe Marines had·clawed !heir ll(ay pled the fleet earner Saratoga and
Marines
had
won.
glad
lhemselves.
I
case in point. Tbe island was rela- ' 10 the 556-foot summit of Silrib·
•• ,
1

I

~

~

·-

-1-

'

..

•

\
~-

"~~--

·-

-~

~-

~~·

\

•

''
•

--~·

L~
r1

�Page D4

..

'
Pomeroy--Mlddleport-Galllpolle, OH Point PI-nt, wv

Sentinel

Record ~Jeopardy!' tee~ winner . m~intai~s composure

BROADVIEW HEIGIITS (AP)
-' The answer is: This you'!' took
hl!m~ a record $42,300 pnze by

WUIIIIDB the 1995 ltoparlfy/ Teen
Tournament
The question: Who is Matthew
Zie~?
·
"I'm doing my pan 10 keep it
low key, to stay calm and
focused," said Zie1c:nslti, 16, a
junior al Brecksville-Broadview
Heights Hi~h School in suburban
Cleveland. 'It's really no big deal
to me."

He intends 10 use some or lhc
winnings 10 buy a car - probably
an Escort - and perhaps a CD
playa- to rep.lace his heat·UJ? model.
He plans to mvc:st the rest m a ocrtilic:ate of deposit« a mulual fund.
The tournament was taped in
January and broadcast or! Friday.
All estimaled 17 million television
·viewers watched the two-week
tournament, accordin~ to KingWorld Productions which 1118ltc1S
the garliC sbow. '
Zielenski said he ueated his

v1s1t to Los Angeles as a busmess
trip. W:hile ~ oth« 14 con~!S
were Stghtseemg, he holed up m his
holel room 10 study. .
He confessed to bemg nervous

before the competition.

" But once it got staned, ~ou

di~'thave timeiO be nervous.' he

There ~ere limes when I
thought the cliWrs .were g~ing10
burst apart, ~e were pressmg so
hard,.,scrapp!JIB, !or every advl!ltage, he 581d. It requtres sphtseco~d reactio'ls. You're just
pumpmg and pumping and moving

ahead."

,

He focused on. lhe bast, Alex
Trebek; and a red light on the game
board that IOid contestants when
~y could ring in 10 state a quesuon 10 a game board's answl%.

ATIENTION LADIES!!!
Only 3 months to go
until swimsuit season
Call
Ladies Preference
Health Club and ask
about our
Valentine Special

D.J.'s Graft Shop
2390 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Oh 446-2134

·Call VIDEO TRANSFERS
446-6939 or 441-054 7

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg . $149.00
•
Sale Price $59 .00
Large Stock
Engineer ............... ......... $49.00
Wellington .. ,., .......... ....... $49.00
Loggers .. .......... ... ..... $50-55
Harness ......... .. ............ .$59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H ·
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
·
All U.S. Made

'•

..

,.

..'..

Southeast

Ohio

confidentia l family planning services to 600

Galtia County residents each year. Bir1h
Comrol Services include a phys ici?~ n
examination. cancer screening. education
and birth control supplies. Women and men
may receive te sts and treatment for sexually
transmitted cttsease and anonymous HIV
tests. Sliding Fee Scale; Private Insurance
and Medicaid are accopted. Planning
prevents unintended pregnancy For an
appt. call (6 14) 446-0166

-GRAPH

..
... .

·'•.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'·

Send for ypur Astro -Graph predictions
today. lilait $2 to Astro-Graph ; clo this
newspaper. P.O. Box 4465 , N.ew York ,
NY 10163. Be sure to state your zodiac
sign.
ARIES (March 21--Aprlt 19) Even though
you may not be mindful ol detailS today,

lA

4•

2 •

2A

3t
,
-

Enter
partner's mind

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Anything By Phillip Alder
newsworthy you accomplish today will
not go unnoticed by your associates, so . The final bridge player of the week
don't toot your own horn. lilod esty who operates under a pseudonym is
becomes you. bragging does not.
Don Yarmy. By what name do we·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Before know him?
Signaling is a dirficult but vital part
appoint ing your$ell as an instructor
today, make sure you know what you're of defense. You want to give partner
talking about. Mtsinformallon at this lime the right information . But will he $1·
could create severe problems.
ways be confident you know what he
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Your family needs to know? Sitting East on today's
should be your l~rst priority today , so deal was a young Australian player,
don't let others who feel they have a Avon Wilsmore . He averted disaster
clatm on your time and talents lead you with a thoughtful signal.
•
astray·
Defending against four spades, with
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Keep your ego which club should East signal at trick

urgent may arise today concerning your
work or career . It will turn out to be more

SR-22

manageable than you thought so keep a
cool head and don't panic.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Oo not let

under controi today when dealing with

compromise today if you and yOur mate
disagree about sensitive issues . It will be

up to you to find the middle ground.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do not let it be
S81d that you 'fe uriwilling IO help others if
there isn 't something in it for yo u. Put
friendshiP before profit today."

(614)446-6111

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Take time to
carefully study any proposals which look
like exceptional bargains today . If you
don't. you 'll end up wilh a lot of sizzle but
no steak _

,LIBRA (Sept 23·0c!. 23) Although you
are normally tolerant in a certain arrange ·
ment, today you could be a stern disciplinarian if ev~rything doesn't go your way .

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov . .22) Any impediment s o r restrict ions you e)(perience
today will probably be or your own mak-

. ing: Try n~t to let self-defeating thoughts
put you behiM the eight ball.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) You
have• a good chance of fulfilling your
plans today, but take care not to use tactics that others might find deceitful or

Fifth Annual Organ Recital
Sunday, Feb: 19, 7:00p.m.
First Presbyterian Church
51 State St, Gallipolis
Rev. John Neely, Recitalist
Free to the public

lend "-ne To: a.n II 1 II 1,
_ , BM:ah
1 Drfve. Onll,
,; .WYIIIU.EOE.

''-'---=--or
1 · card

3 papers

Gallia County
Democrat Chili Dinner
. Feb. 27th- 6 pm at
AmVets Building in
Kanauga.
Everyone Welcome
$1 oiperson, children
under 12 attend free.

3 days
6 days
10 days
Monthly

15 words
15 words
15 words
1S words

or
or
or
or

less
less
less
less

Register 675-1333
56.00
59.00
S13.00
51.30 / day

Over 15 words
$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 per wd .
$.05 / day

Announc emen l s

446-4159

Free Puppies
7 wks old
Part lab/shepard
Call 388-9956

(614) 245-0525

Free Tickets
Foodland Night
University of Rio
Grande VS . Urbana
rescheduled Mon.

Pomeroy,
Mkldlepon

I! VlclnHy

~--.,.~

•b•d,

........
_Love.....
_ ~.JJd•
or_ ..

124 iiUt~~ony, """-·
Pupp&amp;.. ........, II' 'l._,.e
lnd ... ~ b o l h r::1,~ - I l l 100 or

Pullllill: Poll WI

Ne.4 -

1041.

Sot1111

I If • Coi.. 2 . _ , ...._

y-

-hi-.

klain 7 -

GilL

-aood
topuppy,
good ....,__
~
4110.
.
.

•

··Jc•su

CloOn LMe llodol Coro Or
Trucloo, 1117 ar Noc:.s
....... Pontloo, , _
Eoolom~Oolllpolo.

1

Hlmotowan lllltorw born Doc 4,

Call 446-2342
or 992-2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

.

hold Or ...

Altr ""'" Of Elo. Aleo
'FF" rxs.~·e,
el Avanae.J ~

the pall
special
to all
donated
in

1E~~:nia~Rev.for Mary

•'

.

•Isomt

I :~~~rs.1and
·I
A

Feb. 20 7:30 p.m.
Win Prizes &amp;Ca,sh!

· ,.
'

-1=:z· F--

- · ....

Independent Beauty

,.

..,

•ppreciate all who
food,
ards,
:·tfllowers, · prayers and
I w·onls of symp•thy.
want to th•nk
MIC unit, the
and
atl:ell for her.
Fisher Funeral

wanted to Buy

Becky VanCleave
Consultant

•
-.--·-- -

1118 -

lor

rw... ,

ton cloyoJ In

Ajwll, ........ !'"Y.,._muol Mvo
I'M-'JIIa:al1.
·
lllddto . .. lilly to llw In a
- " " horil8,

1'104.

.J:~~~'r, Daughter and

parking. Phone

-••

lloturo-toCIIII&lt;Ir-

_ . , IPOionllol

C-

Drivwo,
~--Clrlfv,~14-112Ell·
poNF
777S, Or A•• I P.ll. 114-:MI-

city, gas, air, private

'

a re-order.

Hllp!UI. To: CLA
310, C/o Golllpollo
. Dolly Trlbul1o.
!!!"'"~
.
" - Oolllpatto, 011

~._1!111~~·=
,.,._...
'""

2 bedroom mobile home ,

For Rent

book a party, or to place

n...o ......, . Exp rtooooo

Full

.

Ohto/tl.Nol.'!'-'~~~!l',"to'r.:.
K; - -..,... 0211.

1

card

or Thanks

Thanks to churches,
businesses and
people who donated
and participated in
Russell Holsinger
Cancer Benefit.
Also thanks to the
community'and
people for their
prayers and support.
The 1-tolsinger Family

I

~---~~~~--------------~
. ANSWERS TO S&lt;!:\\.~lA-lU~.t/IS 2.-19 .. 9 .,..;
SCRAM-LETS
QUAINT .
STOLID
DEPLOY
HECTIC
INJURY
BESIDE

CO~!SPICUOUS

.

I was taught to be truthful and not
tell lies. While observing others, however, I've decided that honesty is the
best policy. But I also noted that honesty will ~also make you very CONSPICUOUS.

~~~~~Rupe.
Terry
ll
'

... .
~.

•

Rife,
and

appreciate all and
never forget your
and kindness.
Ernest and Dorothy
C. Greene (parents)
Micheal, Nikki, lllld
Eric, her children,
brothers, sisters and
·grandchildn:,n.

'

•

•'

•
Helen
family,
Ellen

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7

~

LAf'.&amp;"''

SALES EXECUTIVE

RANDLTIIANIIRR,onoolthe 11

Family of Carol
I Tn.nn&lt; would like to

many thanks
all who helped us in
loss
of
our
I Mt~tht~r, Daughter and
Sister.
We appreciate all who
sent
food,
cards,
flowers, prayers and
words of sympathy.
We want to thank
OSU MIC unit, the
doctors and
who cal:ed for her.
The · Fisher Funeral
Home and the pall
bearers. A special
thllllks to all those
who donated to the
benefit
in Carol's
honor. Rev. Mary
McDanial for her
words
encouragement.
Tom and Helen Young
and family, Charles
and
Ellen
Rife,
Marien Terry and
Sylvia Rupe.
We appreciate all and
will never forget your
love and kindness.
.Ernest and Dorothy
C. Greene (parents)
Micheal, Nikki, and
Eric, her children,
brothers, sisters and

..

' .

.

11,

w.-. .,..., ........,.,

Now ICC $'I • ppM !:.liOn. for
thl Lydie opiL (FmHA~ Lo08llll
on Andllf.w'i 91., lleecNt, WV. All
opto.
lumlollod- will.,..,
oolrigonolor, II1CI ..tpol. Trooh
,.,_.. potd toy · HUD

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

.. ~. - A,pll- 71
: : . : :..Cit! l~n..1·,

LAYNE'I fURNITURE
Comptote .........
otoi
........
Jntlo.
llo&lt;n: llonlol, ... I~

d. " lnlll,...ecl CarUd
IIIFIIIO',
.lulto

ontoo tt4-113-41t4. EHO.

DS22, I mltoo 0111 lullwMio Pl ...

Ill':.:

Fr.DIIuarr.
PICKENS fURNITURE
NeM111d

2r r,
""'•=o~ a
11111
-6151.
OM bodooom lumllhlll oport·
"*II In lllddlollol1. con 114-IN·
5304 Of 111 1tf.30tt.

lfll!ll-. .... fur.
nllhtng. 112 not. ollnlcho Rd: Pt

No

PI-J W'l, Cll 30441&amp;-1450,
&amp;1t •••

Twin
Alvwo T - ,- - 111r.
-HUD
-·
tna lpllllcadono
oubolilllld opl. too- . - , ond
hlndtcopplll. EOII '104-171-

.ua.

aw-

o\UCTIOII A fURNITURE. a
Ott.. ... Goltlpallo. • Ullll

wa.-..

._..,po.

-1

'i:,t

How 11o Get The - . - . - • ...,....
CEO's
IOW72-4•.
.
111
Paycheck
Protull
n.. s.mco.
Comtlllto ToM - · Buobt
Metlife is !!JOking for
·
sa 1es representatives,
dpeople Uke. you, wd idth ,
ctcmun&amp;tiDn an nvmg
ambition. We can offer'
you an opponunity to
earn more than our CEO
does.
It's a challenging job with
big pay opponunitics and
big benefits. After we
teach you abour our many

financial products and
services, what you earn is

=~--==-~=-~Yalll, NurMry lohool.
~~ ~~c'.:i':"'~

lun

ou .... - ·,

:'
I A.II
. .e
P.ll. '!:r."'hl':"--T
-To
.au 4tl 0121.
do ... 1 'lng, ~
..........- .
lldlng,

Will

='b.=-~·

110.

. . . _,., 2 ~. CA, t 112

'

1'" Solullz . - · 2 Bill·
--F-,OooAHot
11W!f 1121. ·

water.._.,.,,

21

a.th, Fu1J

Polio, . . .
~ -

t=:'·. Noa P-,
Poll,
tlocurtty Dllpooll

Roqulrod,-IIWIJ1.7180. ·

·

to -

2bdmt. opll., Iaiii - · II&gt;'
~
lumlollod, toundry

ta....
:.;;;;;a.;;-.
...,,_
fooltlllo8
.-

-In
It:

'1f1111Mo.Mii

A..o.

ClltiiM4a-m1. EOH.

-

or

-CA, 1112
Pllll,
14172,
1181h,
dock,
h10::'~
I
llltl. on . . . - lat. .._,, W'l,
JM,OOO 080. -17Ha41 lflor

"'"'.......,1'1,

~

.,..

1110 Ctovton 1411110 112 Aof8 Lat.
2 an, ; 111111. CA. ~

Colllng, 2 DocUo, Ylf!l, _1
Mila OUt Ill On Uft, $21,uuu,
114 ••• 113:1..

Bu..neu

1113 Sltytlne 14171 3 - - ·
2 DocUo u...,.nnlnt~, On
Nice . Aontal Lat, tii,OOO. 114-

OpportUI'!HY

441-0471.
tNOiiCEI
otiO VALLIY PUII.IIHIHG CO. 1113 lul18hlno 14lt71 3 hcl- All N• 1 ltd'OOm Efficiency,
N:

1o-

an••• thlll rou do

buM-

LIU::tZj]' ,,._""'·

,_1.2

a.lhl,
On IEAIITFUL APAII1IIEHTII AT
wtth....,.. rou k-r.""" 8120 ,_k, bt:l I
NOT
.-wy t.._h thl Alntlll Lal 118,100, I
IIUOQET PRICES AT JACKSON
mtll.
UTAD.A a Wwt ucd Drl"
-the-....
untM -lptlll
11M DOUI~ PEPO l- ........to C.l
t211. 11ttti21U.
PAY -ROUTE
. . . . lind In, - ..
EOH.
10 LDDII a ,,..."lltM II• tD . .lltflad bu!W: ... diMU•J
1om .,_Wktr. Opon :M In
--~o:=:•l cllpclll1,
c.II1.....141M
nopllo.

-

'""'""---..1·

:P:i"=•

31 Homes tor Sale

,_3

13 _ _ .....
118d-1112hlllo.LR'
.PIIvod Dri-. 114'4*atii.

AUCTION

1lltll
,.
_ - U~n· 2_.,,
TOIII
Ellctrlc,
nlng. Alllly ·To Into On
Corillr Lal p.... Llnl C o u l l . - · - - · 114441-7781

Col,,.. ....
-1~.

----r
-

0n1J
'

li'IOIIIIItto Off 141, 114-317.-,

.._ .... _
-lilly

: 2314Aof8

Bu"'"YIII 11.1100, AI&gt;-

- - 4 llloo S. On SA 211, 114-1111.

Ono- ol1181 _

_
.._.

.... -77S.e4S4.

r SIGN OFF ON THIS OEAL 1

For more inf~rmalion , please contact:
Tainmy Buver or Judy Northup '
ft (304) 675- 1121

ront

llo'1Doc. ovot1ooiii~~A.'-•
.
' .
IJtnd For !toto, a..8d 1.114
Ac,. On N•lghiMI J Road,

3 Announcements

Olhn quaJii'ICGiiam epp~,_ AIIIOIIIU IIYmbj«t to mtdit 11ppnJIIII1.

FREE 1a1

2mi. ~R!.3,

This newspaper will not
· knowlingly accepl
advertisements tor real estate
which Is n violation olthe law.
OUr readers are: hereby
Informed ttlat all dwellings
advertl5ed in lhis newspaper
are avallabte on an eqyal
opponunlty basis.

To (lllillj/'1, ~rdltlur c• nOIItGwOfllnltfl• hotrN in th' /at thm ,an.

r

.35 Lot• &amp; Acreage

Umitalion or (jlscrlmlnatlon .-

• Loans for new and existing single-family houses,
maaufactured homes &amp; mobile home1 eligible

s

ttvlllln. :ti04·7M-7'1t1.

origin, or any Intention lo
make any such pretorance 1

• Receive a tu credit equal to a percentage of the
annual interest paid on your mortgage

Ad

-=========.
app.y

NEW lANK AEPOSt OniJ 4 toft!

se• familial status m national

Mountaineer Mortgage
Credit Certificates

H

lncl............

Colli_,.,

based on race, color, religion,

W"l Vlr&amp;inia Housing Developmenl Fund

10:00 A.M.

111t1114170,
lng.
.. _
bloat.., 1 ollltt,...
hamltWI..,. tr-anoe, Md I

~ I real estate advertising in
this newspaper Is subject to
the FeOOral Fair Housing Acl
of 1968 which makes II Illegal
to advertise M
any preference,
limilallon or discrimination

A Specisl Program For Cuslil'iad Home Buyers

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1995 .

UIIITED OFFIPI' ,_ 14170 a3br., .... DOWN, No Po,-o ,.
•ft• - . , _ DIIIIV"" a .,
Setup.
31M-7111111.
...... 2
po-a-tn.
141170 2-lbr.

LordyLordy
Scotty~

"40"

5

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

AMBER DAVISON
The years fly by like a
wink of an eye
From a tiny neYiborn to
a teenager we sigh . .
We've taught her to
respect &amp; be caring &amp;
kind
Not to laugh at or mock
ones who are blind.
1 ontv a few more short

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

~ .... : ; ~ i

~ ----------------~
.
'

L?rdy, Lordy
Deb Shaver

Is Forty
. . Gang At
Middleton

own.
But lor now we still
treasure our daughter
at home.
Happy 13th!
Febrtiary 17tt&gt;. 1995

Estates .

make this year even bigger!
With weekly sales since 1985 we've sold most
anythinQ you can come up with!
Our liuge advertising budget draws more
buyers to get you more money for your
merch . ndise! If you have quality goods our
adve s g will draw the buyers to 9et you top
money!
No sale oo large · we can handle them alii
Yea·r 'round price on public auction at your
location we charge 10% commission &amp; help setup yo~r sale- you· pay advertising 5%
commission on anything motorized that you ride
,
or drive.
Schedule your outside sale early sp we can
have plenty of time to advenise .
If you live "anywhere" in Ohio, Indiana or West
Virginia we can handle your salel Licensed in
Ohio, Indiana, W. V. #1030
Auctioneer • Finis "Ike" luac •
Phone 614·388-9370 ·
Or check wHh VIrgil luac at l1aac's Feed
Store Phone 614-388-8880
Monday thru Sat. 10 am - 5 pm

-lo •'- ANTI·QUE

Rea l Estate

3 Announcemem
The ReJHibliatn
Lin.;oln Day Dinner
AM-VETS BUILDINC.
I 08 Li beny Street Kanauga
(Just off Burnett Road) ·
Thesday,
February 21, 1995
Social Period:. 6:30 p,.m.
Dinner: 7:00 p.m.
Guest Speaker:
JIM PETRO,
Auditor of State
Dinner Ticket: $15.00
Call:
Connie Hemphill
446-4968
Verlln Swain 256-6900
Molly Plymale 446·.1214

· • a..t.go Fur.....,11ttti02M.
Tat'll Townha ... Apartmenta,
. . . . . . . . . . .tor, v.v lpoctooa 1 Apollmon~, a

....,_, :ro.~.,. ...., ...,.
lonum IM 411 1117.

Fmanct al

We'll train you to select
target markets, so you can
choose your clients. And
during the months that
you 'rc sritlleaming, our
training allowance will
help you get staned.

-.~.With

for Sale

Truok . . , _ . . Fl. '-'t, 1181bl • - n.mowll, F- E.. '1044711-4125.
t - t -~---. 24 u~.• •

up to you.

;121- .

o\JIIII--

u.-,

like to express our

I hEtlpful in our lime

ootid

wlc-. -

c

't"'::

=·

JOIN MEt n' PAVS~ .

gratitude to all the
people that were so
thoughtlul
and

p
liO.
- - 4lnlwtor.....
2 ltOIJft ti.OO 1 - t m

-.v--am-.

118,_
_.oln 11-1101'1. F.-

llllntOIIio. 11+441-1181 or 1 - $21,000. *~
1171,
.
•
fumltura, .......'= W1U1rn l
==··
2br., 2 111111. 2 cor -~~~. out
Work boalla. IU •• J1M.
building
lldlhg,
- 0111. EOI
AUihl 001
I- ~ the
45
Fumlahld
Vt'RA FURNITURE
~-.-ltlc,pluntbIWIM*•
liWWUI .-¥
T....,ol_ HI..,. _ __,.. 11 - . . .....lp '*~Com- 1!11· 10UI110 tot, 2nd • 2 a.di'UOI'II Traillr Cloae To
Rooms
Ouotlr ~Fuma ...
ClOoro8 St .. HI-, $42,000
01 Rio - . 114tna-lonllor ·-...... - · 30441&amp;-JUI.
11811· !oWG-3SJI.
3111141.
......... ~- _, 118
........
lh
---··
Dooto Dn
.....,.na ....,_ w -na. Cooh - Cony! RENT.Z-GWN
plclood . . II &amp;lly llldg, 5th Ill, Clllld ..,. In mr llorM In llfd.
3 hclraonw, 2 l.thl+ HMI
Ateo tnil._ !lpiiCio on river. "' Ancl LaYR8Y -Aiao Avd t?
"""'1:00 tilt 4:30.
lloll•r lhnl ,..,, . Pump, 0111 Fumooo, 1 Aero,
Colt oltlr 2:00 p.m., FOM Dollvooy Within ~~~V E -: Won, 011 Rich
nHI:~, 114*2-ta4.
O.rege. Atldleou ·A fw, MJ,OOO,
304·7l'WIIt, ... _,,~W'I~
, _ ___!:_::=====::..=~=-Nlc8 2 11811,_, 14170 htiOIIIo.
Quick. W1ll Got • 8110dv.c~llll. Far a- Cool Ta Pr r ollan, --m7.
1 - . -To tlolt 1.fOOGO.-I-IIIH-I» "Cell hndno Wlltum 1 8
Public Sale
-•w-.-ns.a
L.Mlr1ndli IIVcl. ThrM ledNOI'I'I ·
P.M. 114 '41 2111.
43113.
011Q,
Nice Nelohboftt a ad PrieM To
&amp; Auction
WILDUFE
.ICOIISEAVATION
llllt118- ~ S.l Qulcldy. 114-4411-2324 After
JOII
Yn wortt W l 5 P.ll.
Qam1
Srlourltr. Qutt.,. CIIIUed i4ht HMIIIng,
Apanment
ISAAC'S AUCTION SERVICE
Llllgo • -· nice 2 bod,_. 44
- - Elo. No
Cotnn-::l! - I l l . 111-: r1nchlr
on ..r~ kit, 172.000.
lor Rent.
'Springtime Special*
JiNoWHI~.For
.,.._ ·
304·T.D-2173 or r..w m
ge.
CaHA.II To2tt'1 ~710"--. lnO, I OIOrgM Poltable SewmUI. don1
In appr~ciation for our most successful year yet
•
1 ~-. - • ··
-~~to
1111 mfn lUll Send HIU Aa.d. 3 b•iown, 2
-•t
M t h e , - 21l110 _ , I
we
will be charging only 10% commission for the
'
--.. IDIMIAIIa Rellitty, 3Q4..
entire
month ot March!! Now's the time to i:lean
~ ori7S-3431. K • C P - tnollllltlon, 2 P1d room a.r.11 Apertnwnt,
your garage, attic, outbuildings etc. We hope to
, _ 1111m11-. :Mhr. _ . _ 32 Mobile Homes
~

..,
Y~-.•--111Mnortutoll3-

P.O. Box 87
Parkersburg, WI/
26102
Ph: (304)428-7416
Fax (304)428-1834

The
W. Fooce Sr. would

- 1-

_.,.. , CoN 114-112-1111.

ltvfntl.

•p~rtmenta

---~lr­

31 tfoiiiM for sale

1- w.- .....,....,... _,

- .__
,., ,

- - ""'· Pl. 2
Notth,• PI, - -· ~
lAO.

room

Aollilont

HelpWanted

011 ..,

1 ond a bodet VIUeae
R-

Groat....

1GC pi

0 , . "' '*"· Inc.

Metlifa ·

II
•

......,
_._

....... and two chlldrwl,

So if you have the drive,
\ve have the opponunities
for you. Give us a call.

•

Mary Kay Cosmetics
· glamour make-over, to

LoC81 _ , .... S..Wng ....
l1oM !!liP IWIIh P Jllllllly 01

Po
lng - - 118fundo.
o.n
eor -715-aao
Elll1:tlllt. (:M -~

Family of Carol
~11roo:ps would like to
many ihanks
all .who helped us in
loss
of our

Call for a free facial ,

P
I - Dr.,
ColoOaNJs;
Cofttor,
Pln.awt
1... Oh.
4aS1. 1.......'7'112

No Experlllw tiiCI llrJI tiOO

The family of Margie
E.Bamett would like to
thank E.M.S., Holzer
Hospital
Emergency
Room Dr's &amp; Nurses,
Floor 4E. &amp; 4W. Rehab
6th floor, Dr. Under,
special
thanks
to
"Holzer Hospice".
Le
Grande
Blvd
neighbors, Willis Funenil
Home,
Rev.
Archie
Conn .&amp; Pastor Don
Plosser, piano player &amp;
singer,
pall
bearer
(grandsons), Adriah ot
Eva Beauty Shop, First
Baptist Church ladies for
ser•ino food (plus Trinity
Church ladies),
ootiee escot1. An extra
you to ALL lor
your support of love &amp;
kindness of flowers,
food &amp; prayers.
big thanks to a
I frh•nd. Audrey Johnson.
appnaciate &amp; will
you in our hearts.
Finally to the Lord Jesus
Christ for our Mother
Salvation, &amp; lor his great
promi~: 1 Thess. 4:13·
18.
H~sband- Henry A.
Bamen, Children;
Chester &amp; (Virginia)
Tacken, Robert Barnen.
. Mark &amp; (Beny) Gay,
(Harold) &amp; Sandra
Barnett, 14
grandchildren, 33 great
grandchildren.

ing.

t•-

To 8100

_____

,,....

Many players would drop a dtscouraging club two at trick one. Yet it .is
wrong. Clearly, partner has led a si))gleton ace or from A-x. If the former,
do you fore see the danger? At tri~k
I"!O. partner is likely to lead a low diamond, playing you for the king._As yqu
don'(.have the king, you must sigrtal
with the club 10.
:
If partner has a doubleton club, he
will treat this as a come-on signal aftd
lead another club. which is fine . If he
~a s a sing leton, though, he Will rehd
the 10 as a suit-preference signal lor
hearts. '
'
And that's what ha.ppened. Wil~ more's partner switched to a heart )It
trick two . Wilsmore won trick three
with the spade ace and gave his partner a club rufl. The diamond ace was
the fourth defensive trick.
Don Yarmy is better known as Don
Adams of "Get Smart " fame, which
has just been reincarnated on the Fox

..'=Ill....to--

mull-.....,_ ""'"
we,304-771-a7.

express our gratitude
&amp; appreciate for your
love shown to us in
our time of sorrow.
May God Bless
you for your
caring &amp; sharing.
' The Jim Enyart family

There is a chance it needs more polish- · network.

Sentinel992-2156

Thanks

To all of our friends
we would like to

Classified Line Ads
Tribune 446-2342

.

....... - . Th8 Jab WIA CGn. . 0 1 4 - Of Wool&lt;.--

~

...,....
- - o rEm.,•.~

o,ortun1ty

,.:t

companions. Instead of bickering oyer
You might not -like East's three-dla·
who is right, give others a chance to mond raise, particularly with no honor
prove their points.
in the ·suit But he had to consider t~e
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might possibility of a profitable sacrifice giv-

friend early in the day. Although you'll be
tempted to tell someone else, let th e
story stop with you .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Occasionally
you overanalyze a situation to an
exlreme. Today, however, you'd be wise
to review every aspect before rendering
an imponantftnan9ial decision.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Although
you might be quite competent to handle
large, compte• problems today, watch out
for the details. The linle things might tnp
you up.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Pride
might 'be your biggest impedi'!lent today.
· Do not feel ashamed to seek advise from
a friend who may have tne answers.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Try to
avotd putting yourself in the position
today of having to borrow from a friend
Who is not known for his/her generosity.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Resist the
temptation to use a new t!ictie in 6usiness matters if you 've· never tested it.

-. eo.., ••••

-DIIna
Rtr •
Poalllafl Cl
--lle.ln'lhoCW.

one?

Dopook Roqulrod,

42 Mobile Homes
~~t~~~~ ~~~~~~-­
f9r Re.l lt
-~~~..;;;;Yo
• ._ ~
!iot,__~~ 1800• M ~ • SBR, 2181he,
'
«
InVIr11noo
N
.._,,
FR,
·
Llrgo
Yonl
•
Equal~
'**'""--lor~~~~
ForCA,
-AH
·Etoolftc,
2 elriiL ..D fuJ •utlllll•
"
SI1,100,114-44•TU1.
-111170 TtOitor
2 1111111,
.....,.. to: loXIINl8ol.
A-'M, c1o- 'Pl.
114-141·1141.
..... 2yto. motlor froWd
2 oloty ...... - ,.._.,.. ~eall;.!!'i zao ....,. at .•
Hoven s....-11111, 11 want--' t Do
Pl. Ploo .nrL W'l HNO. EOE. ~~ieiii*:*iiO;:!iOr~!
!!n.n
Ctll~
Of
olug
f&lt;lr
poll
tlml
wtt~=olwlolw
I=Mtftt
..._
--:--::--..,:---::-0==~
11oor comp~~~e~y rwuu 11111 d, 2
111 . . .__. ,.... -:..,_.., . ., I , v.t.... RH'o. Doy ond Evonlilg lhl. t 0 1
w~~
...., .,__ an.. a.moe. Complll• 1r11 MYIJ: !ltonl 111y 40'lc2r, -r
... D' t' d aN encour~geciiO
~
~
..
....
_
·-~ ~
opplr.
- - "'''""-' ..,..., eo.-. ........, DIHT, 1aplln.
sa ...., .,.,
.•. - • •--·
•= · MJ 32'11231, · 100'140' lal,
Keolotot Cot

anyone take the control of a critical mat·
ter out of your hands today and delegate
it to someone else. Hold _.the reins ugh tty
on this one.
' hear some interesting goSsip about a en the prevailing vulnerability. .

. CA,.,CER (June 21.Juty 22) Prepare to

Ell..,.. aotl, . .~
W.. I Th ,..._ E.dp--.
Olllnloro
Ffnllttn .,. •nd
..... srra.
...

8010 Notthlit Al7
POioiZl2
-~
114-Ml-7142
Itt 112 1'2'

:f:..lio~:A"::t."t..~

to Astro·Graph, c/o thiS newspaper, P.O.
Box 4465, New Yori&lt; , NY t0163. Be sure

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Something

- n l o l o - AI-· Coli

OraHll Mllg~ Community
Aolloil........
Agonoy
.ITJIA
_

--ion

you can.

pace· and the rules yourse lf instead of
lea·ving it up to associates or companions
today. Rely on your injtjat1ve , not theirs.

S.A.I.E,.

Cotpllo••- ·CDuntry Fwnlturo. Ill

HouM AttacMd

Wii

- l o r rontln S,tp - · 114-

Tall ftM, ~. Ext.
!113.

Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: :.. A

I

--

now.

._, - 1 ._..,. Poyl - .

Pass

I

Corpll In 8Joolt. 0... II Pof.
teme V\nvl In ..oc:k. M 7 h111

II......,.,.,.......

=·~

~ llolll. 1~,;=..-or,t:~~
~~- ... ~ ClrW*, Fl. I"
...

Vulnerable: North-Soutl!
. Dealer : East
South
West North East

w
a l l p • P - 011.00
1-

Cot1fll • 'II!IYfln -

Cottogo lor ..... In Pl. - ·
1141DIKI

-

or a reli·

gious or political nature. They already
have core beliefs Major changes are
ah8ad for Pisct::ts in the Coming year .

A~... .,
2111.

Hou11hold
Goode

2 I J • • ~ pupllil.
Ylno 81-, Flnl A A rip Ill UlllMo. o.o.lt,

........ .._ -.r olutllng
11 homa. SlMt

5I

All• 7 P.ll.

41 Houlll for Rent

-~-~=
Willi, Pilei
-,
.-7Hl

r

~--.;;;;;;;;;;;---

F.atltol'#,
-

---

f.1 erch ,m d 1se

=:.. -"':!:ro.l:i
Piw. •

Rentals

t_":::::0:..':::"e";.&amp;f..'l....

dictions for the year ahead by mailing $2

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

(tl~ SW6'A'fli"£.S .

3

• • 11

day gilt. Send lor your Astro-Graph pre·

liOn.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) Establtsh the

LARGE SELECTION OF
LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp; CHAIR
RICED $450 TO $1095
NE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. thru Siit 9-S p.m. 446-0322
· 3 miles out Bulaville Pike

Just In
, UNIFORMS, SCRUBS &amp; LAB
all styles &amp; sizes.
COATS
Second Chance Consignmnt Shop
701 2nd Ave .
Inside
the' Movie Station
.

.. 10 9 8

•

Rooms
-

..

II&gt;J974

you 'll have the capability to achieve niost
of your objectives . Strive to do the best

ASK US ABOUT ELECTRONIC
FILING.
736 Second Ave:
446·8677

LAYNE FURNITURE

Sports Cards Now
At The Put-On Shop
334 Second Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio
Selling At 2~% off
BECKETI

2-18-95

EAST
WEST
.s3
' •A 5
Friends and acQuaintances could play •Q 7 3 2
•J 6 5 4
constructive roles in the year ahead . so t AJI0965
• 8 4 3 2
try to participate in as many social activi- •A
• t0 7 2
ties as possible. The more people you
SOUTH
know. the greater your opportunities will
•KQt 0 82 ,
be.
•A K
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Oo not
•K 7
impose yoUr views on your friends today ,
•Q 9 54

Fum '-heel

1 jZ.G~l.i.'l WISH Y04J
lfi/OV~DN'T ') t610f' oN

--lAlii

•Q

45

Apartment
lor Rent

Help Wanted

'101 ._...or

lilonday,Feb. 20, 1995

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) For a joint

44

l
101111 ... M - . _ . . . , Oullcanll. lno
.... lllp.1-JIIZ-4!11.

NORTH

Sunday

KIT 'N' CAilL YLE® by Larry Wright

A-16 tou, • .... llltflwn. 1no

• K J 8 6 3

especially i1 your comments are

wanted·

~-

defeats philOsophically.

to state your zodiac sign.

. Gallipolis

Rinky Dink Basketball Tournament
(4th, 5th, and 6th: grade bracket)
Bidwell -Porter Elementary School
State Route 160 Bidwell , Ohio
March 1oth, 11th, and 12th
$30.00 per team
Jim Coe (614) 446-0550
Phil Skidmore (614) 446-3993
Cheerleading competition contact:
Missy Tacket (614) 44 1-1909
All Proceeds will benefit Bidwell
Summer Baseball Association

or

11

r==w
-=r••IHr--

ALDER'

to achieve your goals today, you'll have
to be thick·skinned and ready to cope
Wittl setbacks . Treat liie's victories and

endeavor to go smoothly today , everyone
in,volved muSt meet the group's e•pec ta :.
lions. One slacker could ruin the opera·

Phone

PHILLIP

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) In order

and Business Tax Preparation .

•

11

disingenuous.

blocks today. If your first plan isn't feasible, replace it with another one immedl·
_ately. Aquarius. treat yoursel f to a birth-

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

1n Gallipolis" provides

.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) It might be
necessary to work around a few road -

• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

Did you know 'that ... Planned Parenthood of

that

setback or two

Cancelled/Rejected

'

Employment Serv tces

I!'

You have great potential tor improving
your financial conditions in .th9 year
ahead. Howe·var, before reaching your
desired bottom line , you might suffer a

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For Complete, Professional Individual

Transiers, Video Taping etc.

Next up is the Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions
October.
The teen winner lraditionally has
not done well ~ainst a:dult competitors but Ztelenskl vows to
change
"I know a lot obscure stuff,"
he said.

Sunday, Feb. 19, 1995

614-446-3401

For all your Video Needs

-

BRIDGE

said.

BULLETIN BOARD
• Cakes • Cakes - Cakes
Birthdi!ys, Anniversaries,
Showers, Weddings Bring
Sally your Logo or Emblem
and she will duplicate it in your
special order. Also wedding
mints and chocolates
Cakes by Sally at

OH Point Pleasant, wv

February 19, 1995

Located et "the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In
Mason, W.Va. will be selling Items !rom the estate
of Dr. Keith Glenn of Henderson W. Va. plul
additional Items will be sold.
FURNITURE
9 pc. carved walnut D.R. suite , 10 pc. 1930's fancy
walnut D. R. suite, .oak 3 door ice box, round oak table
claw teet, carved oak Hi -Boy, oak Hi-Boy w~m i rrow. 12
tin pie safe, two pc. step back cupboard, fancy lg. oak
side board w/claw feet, VIet walnut marble top table .
walnut Sheraton drop leal table , Viet drop well
dresser, lg. poster bed, lg. w.lcker stroller, mahogany
D. 'A. suite w/co rner china, child's roll top desk,
maho.gany china cabinet, oak washstand, spinet desk,
but~ her bloc!,_ h&lt;!.[f comode, oak lile .Cij binet , oak
chairs, early wagon &amp; more.
GLASSWARE &amp; STONEWARE
Over 40 pc. Am erican Fostoria lg. flat bottom ice lip
pitcher, cups, plates, bowls, candle sticks, loothpick
holder, &amp; others. Heisey, pres s gla ss. flo blue ,
Depression glass, Ornate slag glass lamp, 3 pc. scrim
shaw brown stoneware pitch er w/girl praying w/dog,
yellow &amp; blue crocks, early stenciled bowl (Redware),
spongeware crock. Breininger Pottery, several jars
w/blue &amp; crocks w/ blue stone jars, D.W. Rhodes
Cottageville W.V , Hamilton &amp; Jones, Donahho &amp;
others, 3 bal. open lop jar wng. flower books . 9 val. set
John Stoddards Lecture's, 29 Vol. 1955· 1983
Thoroughbred Sires &amp; Dams. ScoHish Chiefs Vall , II ,
dates 1827, Childrens Mag. (1847) Vol . 7, 19, 22. Life
&amp; character of David Caldwell dated 1842,
Shakespeares Play's Dated 1809, Little Red Riding
Hood, My Linle Darlings more quality.books .
COLLECTIBLES
·Red &amp; White coverlet w/anlmals, fruit, flow11rs· &amp;
people w/verse. Blue &amp; Whit e coverlet, N4 R Dep.
China Doll, small black baby, two old swo rds. 4'x2x8,
3' x5 ft. oriental ru9, some wea l'; Early Capital at
Virginia picture, painting by Sobrlna P. Lathrop Basket
of flowers, seve ral lg. good early ba skets, t 7th
Century hand forged cas t iron standing crane
(potholder), cast iron snake, 3 cast iron birds, Thomas
Hill Gallipolis 0 . pot &amp; lid, Balto 12" pot &amp; lid, lg. coftee
pot, brass fender claw feet, lg. sterling sliver vase sgn.
Yale University presented to Class Boy 1903, Eari
Wooden Cane sg n. D . . C: Applegate staghandle
sterling collars wooden bowls, adv. tins , 4 early
weath er vanes plus much more.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUOION CO.
AUCTIONEER : RICK PEARSON
.APPRENTICE AUCTIONEE R: KEVIN MEADOWS
#A· 116
EXECUTOR CHARLES STOVER
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773-5765
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I.D.
Not rooponolblo for occldonta or lo.. of prop8rty ,
Llcontod end bonded In"Ohio, Kentucky .&amp;
Wool VI'IJinlol66
0

'

�.-...

I

OH Point Pleasant, wv
51
I

Houlehold

Building

'

Supplies

Goocli

83

LlvlltOCk

HI)'&amp;Gt'llln

.

-

18d!_o.L.

71

Transporta11011

71

Autos for Slle .

Autoa tor Slle

1114---'IZ!I.

lcii!H It, CLAt-T. POLLAN - - - - - -

.

.Q Rearrange

the 6 scrambled
.. words below lo make 6
simple words.
Print letters of
eqch
its line of squares.

t-..... a-t,
ahouof, lui
-...,., 11100
OBO. 304-77S-UIN.

==~-rOt...........
.._ . ,,_,

----1012.

..

3

.' .

54 Miscellaneous
$1.50,

Merchandise
30" QE -

rongo, olmond wlblk
lnlnt, 3Ciii-I71-211H.

PREVIOUSLY OWNED
VCR'o I CAR STEREO'o
4 VCR With
- · tiOUI; a-ng VCR
PUll; SymDhonlc W:R 111.11;
JCPonnoy III::R llll.tl· oung VCR .080 4 M.ll;
1Joji11191-·W:R
Wllh
-·
194.11; Shorp W:R 1111.1115;
12
Cor 9 1 - F-. til To llll.ts;
JIB Technclcl:la. ~ , Stlte
1110, Qolll
•
"I
One Sot Goa ~For Flro NO;
One s.r. ConOiructlon
Ke; .... 35,000 81\J 1141: One
100,000 HI Efflcloncy Qu
Fu...- IIIII, 11&gt;1-4~ 1 • 1·
~17.-;
0no
Eloctrtc: Fwna.. With AIC CCIII-

380 Borono, 13 In cUp. 0.21
SIMI cta.ln .... 11• blr, wlcue.
304-T~S-~172.

SollwoN.

-lo

Blrdl,
lgu~nu,
TA,.ntullle,
mlco. Fleli Tonk I Pol Shop,
2413 Joockoon Avo. Polnl
Plouont ; ~2013.

-r

Atlentlon
l DouHomww••rw W. C.~ A Complolo Stock 01 lnt.rthorm
12SEER P - And Fur.-And -leHooneFur. _ ·Porto With Flnonclng
Av.lloble Coli lonno11'o _ . .
-lng • Cocllna All14441-4411 Or f.-.n-817: Aok
U. About Tho Emplro
Home Wall Furn1ce That U..

-lo

Stud HrYice tor AKC A-lor.
pnlor dog becllarvund,

--.w

57

-12110.

Nb Eloctrtc:My. WY 010212.
8oo1o By Rod Wing Ch-o
-40 To .SO o.g-., lf.H. a·rown
Quoronleod• ~ Prtc:oo, Tho
-Colo, 014-44&amp;-4222.
Clller ID box, brand new, tlve
momolf, $3S.III5, 114-1112~111.
CCncrila I PIUilc S.pllc
Ton!uo• 300 Thru 2,000 OollonO

Rocfng ao-kort, 5.5 HP onillno,

Musical .
Instruments

11121, liii-Mf1.2871 or 114-"1411- ln..nlory Roductlon S.lo Up To

2041.
Rofrfgontota, Stovoo, ~
And u.y.rw, All· Roconcltloned
And Oouronleodl tiOO And Up,
Will o.Jinr. 114-11111-&amp;441.
Ramlnaton A411omotlc 12 Go. Eli·
tro NICe• ·14110• 114--3,
Botwoon • A.ll ... P.M.
S.m Somel ville'• Army Surpl.,.,
by Bondyvlllo Olflco, noon6pm Frf.Sun. Hoovy wlniOr
clolhlng. (cool&gt;no chocfca). 304-

Ron t.nna Entii'J)I'teea. Jack- · OH 1.aoo-II:J7-t521..

10% 0111

Hummlnablnf lluolc
Jockoon, OH, 114-2-.
Poavey · lluolclon · :100 Wall
Oullor Ampllflor With 4 ·12"
Spookor· Coblnol, '--ko Uko

Now; 1800, 114-3711-2101. ·
.
Plonoor lruek ....... - " " "
&amp; amp. All brond now, olfll In
boK. $100. 304-171-4101.

.
Fl,...ood $31 Pickup Lood, Wo ~~Dollvor, I Stock, 114 311 1010.
Sonyo ·It" color TY • - • ·
FIN!Oood Harcfwoocfo $40 Pick- Ru.ll811c horne 81ereo wldull
Up Lood, Ootlv-, 114,21111• caeMtt!ll, AIIIFM ,.do, tumiUie
wlrwmote and entertainment
1141.
olond. 304~75-7161.
FOIW hoo1w tind olr condlllonlng
untta . for Nle; 1~ twin b.t STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Oollon
wfth box oprfnga ond . .n. . . Upright, Ron Ev.n1 Ente,.,._e.
In wrv aood: cciHihlon, call 114- JocUon, Ohio, ~7-A521.
1112-7441 aftorlpm.

...'

.

.

EAt Aatwoods
l'L\HI.\( · , nice sized tot
' ached garage.
1744

. ..

S \LE

.

16392 SR 7 $outhCommercial business +
1985 14 x 70 Redman 2
BR, 1 1/2 baths. $57,900 • •
11612

D. C. Metal Salts, Inc.

L_:..:..:.:....;:.:.:..::.;:...;:.:::..:._..J

LOG HOMES
G_omfort, convenience,
energy

efficiency,

durability
and
Ot:xibility in design are
a few of tbe reas.;.,s
why 20,00 families
build a

log

63

241-6121.

...•
..
'.

t last long. LA, bath, eat-m kitchen. 1 car·~;,; ,;-~;

hq.,.e this

carport Someof backyard fenced LA set-up lor w~&gt;dburn&lt;!dOtect~g j
heat pump. $46,100
·
·

Log

Pomeroy- 4 mi nor1h on SA 7. One of the f1nest homes 1n '"""""""
now availabte1 Th1s quality home offers a tg'. toyer, LA
eat-In kitchen w/appl., formal DR, l:.Q. ulilily rm. 2 t/2
(master BR w/dresslng rm &amp; bath), fu ll bsmt, 2 car gar, pnvate bllacklopj
driveway, pool , 3 stg. bldgs &amp; lots of privacy 2 acres mil Call &amp; let
qualify you for this home.

Appalachian

Structures has been a
leader in the log home
indusiry ' for over
years.

Choose

ove.r

70

IS

from

design one for you.
wxil~
·infomation.

BoHom- Riyer Watchers Dream! Great vacat1on or we&lt;:ken:d I

~~~;~~~~~ ,: ;

J.l

11

bath, LA wltp, ~(itt , partial bsml. Furnished.
front of house to enJOY watching the river flow. Prlc:edl

standard

models or we'll custom

for

!1!!!!"1'

·'• ·

.

..

~ . .. #

MIDDLEPORT-N. Sec. 4 BR, bath, LA. k1!, alum, s1d1ng Would make a
good home or rental property. Reduced to $9,500.
LANGSVILLE- Great Huntmg! Be8ut1tu11y remOdeled (almost done) 1
18 acres m11 3 BA, LA. FA, OR. N1ce home . Call us today!

Only $2!1,900 I
SA 325, Langsvllle-92 acres PtuS. a trailer w1th lots ;, r~om built
total of 2,044 sq It Large garage. storage shed, cellar house,
Plenty of p~vacy G?od hunting . Asl(ing Only $60,000! Call us today!

Appalachian Log
Structures, Inc.

DARWIN-. Need a great build1ng s1te on 15 ,1J2 acres along with a
well and free gas (and hunting) . Could be 3 or 4 good butldmg 1
You can make some money here. Call us tOday.

Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-458-9990

IS1fRA.CUSE- Beauttlut older 2 story house 'on a comer lOt wilh an
home features a large bay window, btg front porch
lpafio . Ap~lliar&gt;ces Included w/ k1t. , 3 BA. 1112 bath. LR, FA, basement.
'
"
LISl VV TH IA.CK AT HAYES RCAL l::; lA It
~9~

Tra£}' L. BJ,inager ...... 949-2439

~

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-23S7

fltr -

,__,_;

~Town C o r , -

-

Living with a view ol tho Ohio River cozy
to live in, 5 rooms and bath. l1ke new
roof. while vinyl siding (no upkeep). front p,orch.
• • ·· -· - ~ clean inside and oul. Could be purchased on Land
·lc:onlracl. SEE THIS ONE Now. fleallorowned .
t&amp;96
·

··--·
!'!."• :::a,
--'~~-•

l'onl F-100 liLT to,_OOO
- . Flboral- Camper lop,

"·*· . . . . .

Mf7.
112 Ton

1111 Ford
302.
A411-. M,OOO ...... lllloo,
114 . . 0011.
'1171 Ford F-100 Aul01111tlc, AC,
-TIIM, l Toolllox, .f1W'Ifl-

2211 .

EXCELLENT BUSINESS
CQMME!lCIAL PROPERTY
3·4 off1ces. 1 y, baths . recept10n1st
area, totally · relur\Jished, lg . back
deck, 2 car garage . Ample parking.
heat pump. Could also be used as
residential. Only 2 '/, miles from cily.
Priced $80,000

UNIT 1: ~ BAs, 1 large bath, LA.
kitchen w/appliances, . baseboard
heat, 2 air cond. units (window). 1
garage.
UNIT 2 : 2 BAs, ,Y, baths, LR, kitch ·
en w/appliances. ·heat pump. central
air - new. 1 car garage.

OFFICE 992-2886 ·

"'::..:

Corio 88, 114-lQ.

ol1r•. fPQ!
14-fia.

=.:;Am•=

==
~

"ilW; ~= . -,=--._::-:--:=-o-od:-:ec.=--=-lon-,
1111
10 0
1111

Real Estate General ·

Real Estate General

Sofoo, 11. Hwy, 110 N. 411L N. 01

-·o,ll14-4411111

-

Tlrw, Aofdng
1 $4,000, 010, 11t ttl 1117.
'
CMv. 4K4 PU 14.111; 1117

&amp;ww~~noe

14.000 ....._ 4
Door, Aut Oil Olio. Air. Uko
....... .,.,..... $111i'lll'l Dep;

1HZ

·-·--~-···
a...- Conlfor Rl. ~~~~='=-~
N
':1.;:; = •41,000 Auto12,11111; 1181 -

t111,100.104471-7MI.
·
Soli: 1111 ~· Cleoolc
Good-·~.
301, v.a
...,
--.-.
t1,300, ~

PU
12,211i.J 1": PU
12,111; lltl
PU 12,2111•
1181 CMv PU 12,211; 1114 F.iAj
PU ti.IH; 1111 Chew V_. Auto
4114 PU tl.lll· 1114 I I - PU
!f,lll"i 1111 i!oid Von .,,1!11;
..o ....o-.11. ~twy· ,... H.
4 Ill. N. 01
IIIII.
·

.....,.._or

1111
~~
llf'woo=lo
autOIMU::..
tooa
""'" ..... :t..·=o3NI•
~-.. - · ~ .. - • ........,

-.

'- . Oldo llllllon w.jon, ono
- · U,OOO - . ,_ 1-.

~~--

. . flnonca.
·
;.li~Ooo;;; llorm 011 Ex-

~·-·
'"

t?,IOO. .
-

d,

PU

4
1111,

.

DodGe " - - . .

' LR I l l - EofonWIIIInl!!, Air .._. Air, PB, . W.nlod to """' 'II « P • .ILIVMI,
~ 0 I · - muM be
Ll, ~... loodotl, 4
11611',-114-lU ' " '
. "" -

f'l.iii:' •......_

. ·. BLACKBURN REALTY

205 North Second
Ave .
.
Middleport, OH .

.JJI Ranny Blaokbum, Broker, Plwne: (614) 446-0008

SYRACUSE- Fourlh Sl. - A nice 2 bedroom ranch home
with carport, gas F.A. Furnace. equipped kitchen and on
· corner lol.
$26,1100.00

~ 514 Second Ave., Gallipolio, Oh. 45631

~~!"

Joe.Moore, A88ociate441 -llll .

-'a , . ._

k:.d:i

'"':Hi

•

..•'

jo ·. ,

NEW LISTING· 2 homes located on approximately 1 1/2
acres. One home has 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms. 1 112 balhs,
living room, dining room, lamily, kilchen. One home has
8 rooms. 4 bedrooms. 2 balhs. living room. kitchen.
family room. Bolh have rural water, LP gas Furnace, and
more. Gall for appointment 1o·see .

~BIG

A DREAM HOME - Located on Senet:a Dr.
Pomeroy, Brick/frame Spilt foyer home
with 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, appliances,
be!lulilul family room with fireplace, central
air. Anached garage. Very nice home. Nice
lot close to elementary/high school. A
"Dream" Home no more .. .This could be
realitv...For You! Asking $65,000 Come
See Todayl!
:
.

LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SALE- 1'56 X 100, cily water
&amp; sewer, eleclric to pole. Priced al $14,000. Will sell on
Land Conlracl· $5,000 down payment. payments of
$191.23 per month for a .period of 5 yrs. Call lor more
information. '

;::

~USSELL D. WOOD, BROKER ........ 446-4618
='udy DeWIIt................. ~ ........................ 441-0262
•J. Merrill Carter.............. ~ ..................:.J79-2651

..~u.th
. Barr ......................- ...................... 446-0722

.,

MIDDLEPORT - RUTLAND STREET - 2
story frame home with newer Vinyl siding
and newer roof. 3 bedrooms, 1 -1/2 baths.
·gas floor furnace, new unit air, rear ·
screened porch : appliances, blinds.
fireplace, block storage build1ng &amp; wood
storage building. 3 Room Apt. wi!h storage
&amp; cellar below. Lovely Flowers . Storm
doors &amp; windows . Very Well Taken Care
of. ASKING $37.000.00.

Real Estate General

''

.1

MINI FARM • 7 Acres of ground ~Of~'!'~
on Welchtown Hill Rd. 2 lledroom
with living room, kilchen, bath,
··
room . Gas . warm morning heat,
water, some fencing if you'd like to have a .
SA 338 - APPLEGROVE - 1988 Clavton
horse or some. cows. Also a barn ana ·
mobile home (14 'x56') with an added f 4 • x . chicken house . Greal Garden Area.
24' room currently used as. a masler
ASKING $13,500.00.
bedroom . Total electric, central air, 3
bedrooms,_L J/2 balbs, utilify room off
kitchen. New carpet. 2 lots wilh a nice
garden area, partially fenced yard to lei
!he children play, well water. outbuildigg,
covered Irani porch w/swing, back porch,
cement walkways. Just minufes from lhe
Ravenswood Bridge. COME TAKE A
LOOK! ALL for $30,500.00
NEW LISTING - Just Out of t"uc:e&gt;1rc:a
LANGSVILLE
OWN YOUR OWN
SUMNER RD .• Approx. 34 d~J~i~·-;," .
BUSINESS - Located on corner lol on SR
Mobile Home with. added a:
124 - 4 yrs. old. Good Steady Income!
bedrooms, balh. Out buildinjls. well
Convenience/Gas Store wilh updated
TPC waler available. Appt1cances,
codes &amp; regulations. Includes all stock,
Nice Viewll ASKING $29,900.00
. '
equip.menl, lot with trailer hook -up,
additional building w/post office. (Rental
WE NEED LISTlNGSII SPECIAL
income
from
P.O.) · IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!! .CALL FOR DETAILS Ill . REQUESTS FOR HOMES AND FARMS :
IN THE COUNTRYI! ALSO NEED
~~]~ ~EFC~~E THE' LOCK &amp; DAM IN
LOCATION IN TUPPERS PLAINS
· Acre of ground • Great .
AREAl! HOMESNACANT GROUND.
camper up herell
WANT TO SELL77 GIVE US

WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR ......... 288-0036
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ................... 446-18117
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 448-6806
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ....... .......... 245-9575
PATRICIA HAYS, REALTOR ..... :............ 446-3864'-~
n i l NEW LISTING " NEW HOME · Retirement or
Starter hOme. 2 bedrms, 1 bath, LR, kit w/din. area. 1 aha
m/1 more JaM avaltable. Would you pass this up for
$34,900.00?
.

11000 NEW LISTING • IMMACULATE • LOVELY •

AFFORDABLE • Close to town. loc:at&amp;d In Green Twp, 3
bednns, 1 bath, kll., din. rm, cozy LA w/WOOdbumlng

•.

~

•.
'·
•.

-.

-.-.

•.

.
'
•,

•·

'
2 1 ..

fireplace , full basement, 2 car garage • new windows,
potrshed hardwood floors, oak cabinets, Jenn Air range,
microwave, dishwasher &amp; 5 COiling fans. Beautl1ul treed
yard, 1 ac. mil Don't be the one to say ~, could have
DOught that •

.

He7 HEW USTING • Brick ranch J beaims. 2 bathi, LA,
eat·ln, kit. w/ knotty pine cabinets. full basement w/ family.
rm. and outside entry to the patiO. carport. Nice qUite
neighborhood close to Holzer. Call for lmm,ecfiate
appointment.

1184 NOTICE: ONLY ·2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NDW TO BUILD YOUR
MASTERPIECE
IN
THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES MIL ALSO 2.348 ACRES
MIL. CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER HOSPITAL.
ALL LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS.

I

MIDDLEPORT - BRADBURY RD. - Old••r -1 •·.
2 Story ,Home with · possibilities.
'
bedrooms. living room, dining room,
kilchen, balh. Enclosed rear porch, large
Irani sitling porch on app·rox. 5 acres of I
ground . Free Gasll Home needs some " : .
work and Is· currently being remodeled.
ASKING $35,000.00
:
.

0

Tammle DeWitt .. 245-0022
Martha Smith ........ J7,·2651
Cindy Drongowsld24S..969i·

DEBBIE 'DRIVE •
EVERYONE
SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE. This 2 story beauly ,
featu1es 3 or 4 br"s, 2 balhs, beamed.
ceilings in lhe LR &amp; family rm, cherry
. cabinets in kitchen, 6 in. · outer walls &amp;
much more. Fantastic view.

CherYl Lemley....... 742·3171

.TWO HOUSESI TWO.LOlS! . OWNER WANTS AN OFFER
S1tua1ed In Gallipolis. Uve 1n NOWIII MAKE AN OFFER
one &amp; rent the other. (I) 2 AND YOU JUST MIGHT BE
story home wlalum. extellor, 4 SURPRISED! Groat business
· : •v
·
BR, 2 BA, large rooms, over corner of Third Avenu8 and
J"""RT-"TIME- FARMING? 2 -2.000-sq. ft. (2) 1 BR home . Cedar Slreel . 2 sto.ry
")lqry modern house buill Call for Information.
1709 brick/frame building, upstairs
0.1978. 4 bedrooms. · 2 balhs, .
used as 2 rental ·unlls, each
· l'enlral heating , rural waler, 2 SECURITY IS OWNING consisting of 1 bedroom, liylng
· #:.a'r garage and other YOUR OWN HOME! Ideally room, bath &amp; kilchen.
' 'l!ppartmenl
buildings . located close to Gallipolis. Downstairs currently used on
)&gt;rpductlve lillable acres. 712 SA 588. Nice sized lot. o~e Side as beauly shop olher
il"obacco and corn bases. Large living room wlnewer . Side approximately 880 sq . ft.
)pprox .. 11 acres ol wood carpeting newer roof, alum . ~scant . Call for complete
land. Lots of road frontage. siding, eat In kilchen . WILL llsl!ngl NEW ASKING PRICE
'Close enough for off farm C 0 N SIDE R
LAN 0 $48,900.
1682
~mploymerit.
Priced CONTRACT TO QUALIFIED .
ACRES MORE Oil
'easonable.
1710 BUYER! CALL FOR MORE 3 112
•
DETAILS!
f713 LESSI
REDUCED TO
LOTS I Two 4 acre fracts or
$4,000.00. Call tOday for more
~wner .would sell one tracl BONUS BUYI Included with inlormation.
t716
teing approx. 8 acres. County lhe sale of this 3 be.droom FARMI Used as a dalryl Over
)valer available. Frontage ranch home cons1slmg of
elong SA 325 . Rio Grande dining room, kitchen, living 60 acres, excollonf home silo
ftrea!
1714 room &amp; bath , IS a mob1le ·completo with septic and
, ·
homo already set up counly waler. Large barn
'5 YEAR OLD BRICK/FRAME complete wllh an elocfric heat approximately 72" • 103', com
JIANCHI Porfect for jusl pump. Approx . .J acre lof, call crib. silo, food ,lot, tobacco
;tartlng out or settling down! for complete llsbng!
1725 base . Moslly pasture, fencedl
J'llcelevellawn. 2 baths, living
Fronlage along ·Raccoon
•oom7 kitchen. 1 car garage. LARGE POND &amp; - 17 ·• Creek/ . ~
. ' - 1724
,:=all Ieday for your own ACRESI Nol lo far from RIO NEW LISTING! TWO FOR
.personal showing!
1726 Grande . Clly schools! Counly . ONEI Located al 407 &amp; 405
• ·
waler available . Nice quiet
);ASY · ACCESS TO THE place to live!
172t Pike Streel· 1 Story Slone
dwelling w11h 2 bedrooms,
l()HIO RIVERI 2 lois along
J!ear Run Road, nice camping SPRING WILL BE HERE living room, kitchen &amp; balh-1
~ltes, acc~ss taboal ramp! _ SOON I We have 14.688 · story dwelling with alum./vlnyf
•
1706 choice acres which can be siding has 3 bedrooms, living
:
yours. Appr~x . 8 acres ol r~om, kitchen, &amp; bath. Lot
)lOUSE AND MOBILE level grassland the rest"ln a s1zes each are approximately
lHOMEI Situated in lhe Village young tree woodlot. A small 56'x153' with all p~bUc utllties.
~~ Rio Grande . Vinyl sided stream runs through lhe edge
1739
llome wllh living room, dining 01 part of the property. Rural 235 ACRES MORE OR LESS
,.oom, kitchen , 2 balhs, walor arid electric available.
~etached 2 car garage. AND a close by. There are no OF VACi:ANT LANDIII Ideal
., 973 Chemplon mobile home, reslrlpHons. A plat of ground for hurltlngl Silualed In ,Ohio
:!:onslstlng ol 3 bedrooms, to be proud of. !his IS c~e lo Twp. WVCO
~ivlng room, kllcnell. &amp; balh. the counly park, SA n5.
..
~SKING $53,900.0011 __._.-161M!
)JWNER WOULD CONSIDER I
""NY REASONABLE OFFERI .

~•...

·~

I
•

0

11409 - FOUR LOTS - 4 BR home,
reduced to $44,000; 2 baths, LA, DR,
full basement, gas heal/cent. air. Corner
lots.
·

...

RUT4\ND- Jividen Rd · approx. 2 1/4 acres on a dead ·end
road T~ to four bedrooms, din1ng room , one bath
completely remodeled insi de and n ewer Siding Has a cellar
24 K 24 workShop with attached shed , and a fenced area fo;
an1mals .
·
550,000.

1;}

~DI $$$- 10 Acres! Counly
Mer available, city schools.
e wooded selling. Make an
·
rl
·.
·
1634

VACANT LAND - Approximately 10 acres loca1ed on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call for more information.

.)

· 1-800-585-7101 or446-7101

~ ,...

FOR SALE- VACANT LAND- Approximately 218 acres
located in Gallia &amp; Jackson Counly. Priced at $200.00 an
acre. CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION.
'

1985 HEW LISTING, COMMERCIAL LOT In Point
Pleasant area that has been cleared and ready for uSa
that has a 2 bedroom home that Js presenfly b81ng
rented .. Call Wtlma for mofe details.
.f95:9. COMMERCIAL BUILDING- Olive St. 16' door &amp;
~11mg w/loft for storage 210 &amp; 220 elect. water &amp; sewer.
6 cement to load &amp; unload in front . 30x80 building
aP.PfO)(. 3~ sq ft. block &amp; frame. $45,000.
1874. RANCH HOME with full basement, app._1710 living
space, gas heat, cent air. 2 fireplaces, 3 bedrooms,. 2
baths . 2 car detached garage 30x16 shed 2 small
outbuildings smalt'trame""home With 2 BR and'1 bath 2
homes anct 'buildings situate don 5 acres more or le'as
~rlced In the $70'!1.
1973 · NEWER MOBILE .HOME:, 3 bedrooffi lov81y
decorated on 1/? acre lot close to tl'le city, owner needs
more ~ace, great for the single person or newly weds or
the tet~ree·s, has a 2 car garage that is heated tor the
workshop person, caH us now.
.
.
.
11145 TERIFFIC PRICE foiQ,OOO . rome reduced tor
immediate sale. J beann. ranch, LA. dining are~. tamlly
rm . wlfireplace~ level tot. Located close to freeway ellit on
SA. 5 min from~ &amp; Motzer Hospital.

11411 - LOOKING
YOUR OWN .
PEACE AND QUIET - This could be it.
49.86 acres, Andrews Rd .. 8 year-old
home with 3 BAs, 2 112 balhs, LA, DR,
FR, heal pump, 2 car garage plus 24 x
48 detached garage .

BEND. REALTY, I~C.

~-'

HOME ON R A C C O O -bedrooms, 2 baths",
living room. dining roo
car garage located
on approxim~l
es more or less . City
Schools: CALL~~EEI
.

Real Estste Gerercil ·

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

-

'

FQR .INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY·HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS, .
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

l-c .

. 1181

----Am

;

FOR YOUR CoNVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-800-894-1066

'

l~:~r~~~::;~:·~;s-

72 Trucks for Slle

• 13400. 1MI Col VIlli Nil

*'·

'Chew

HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom. bath, living room. family
room, kitchen, fenced in back yard. REALTOR OWNEO.
PRICED AT $45,000.00
.

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ................. 388-8826

'

V~

Autos for S&amp;le

: ;; Real Estate General

Phone

wants a quick sal8 $65,000.

l

'

1995 NEW YEAR SPECIAL! II
PRICE REDUCED WITH AN EXTRA 1+ Acre Included with
buy this PICTURE "BOOK BEAUTY. Thai is what awaits
WHEN YOU TOUR THIS Beautiful County that includes
BAs, 2 1/2 balhs , very well constructed wilh features 16o
to menlion. A convenient location -only minutes
~~:~~~:~~;ng and Holzer Medical Center. Call for your
see this BEAUTIFUL HOME. *718

f ·-

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

50 acres eve o s Q Y ro ng w.' ,
oom
tarmnouse that· needs some TLC , and rrlced at
$10.000.00. call Wilma lod;ty.
.
·
H!ll GREATLY REDUCED, Large 4 bedrm. hQme. 2
baths, new carpet, new rqof.. 20.Acres or land. OWner

- · 13,110, OliO, -

Complete the chuckle quoted
by fillinll In the ~isslng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

ind ""'"
tp&gt;d,uw:a.,~~ to N41Q,
114- t1:100. 304-171-24411. . . •
f111114111 or 114 Ml 2041
1111211....,. .X Loodod, E-.
, . . OldlmcbU1 4
En- lent Conclllon,I,.......'IOZ!
llllna. Hlah lllloollo. .._...Good, 11112 Oldo Aollolvo; 1111·
.... Clood, P.IOO, - - Covollw Z-24; 1111 Cluy, 1111 "" Col 12.11!11
4 - 1111 ilorii - · 12,111; 1 . LE.S.D- \I.e, a-d eir, iiiGil ~.J;;~·~
OlD.~
.$2,111; D!!ogo ·~
1Mr C l o y . , - - · lllnf : ; : :
ctndlllon, I •od, • lllloa To tllll·; 1117 - o;, $2.111·

•

Real Estate General

1148 ... .TOUC~ CW CLASS · The remarl&lt;able spacoous
home With v1e~ of the county Italian tile foyer, cathedral
ceiling with balcony, 3 BA. 2 1/2 baths, living room with
WOOCiburntng fireplace, equip. kitchen. breakfast room has
? lg . window, s~ereo speakers throughout, brass hgnt
rtxtures and much more 2 car attached garage, attic
storage, 2 acres m/1. This house is maintenance free of
best quality Make your appointment and see if yo u don't
agree. ·
hi
ft31 OWNER WANTS AN OFFE R. on I s 3-4 bedroom,
2 baths , full baseme...nt. 2 car garag_e m a nice
(tetghborhood and pnc~ at only $40,000.00, don't delay
because this one w111 go fasr and make someone a lovely
hOme. needs a little TLC..
.,
"'.
1938 GREAT FARMLAND FO.R· THE FARMER minoed
· 1 1 1 11 hi I
111
th a 4 bedr ·

~·

~g:~:r:.~
b. Nlae_- Car, U.OOO. ~

OFFICE 992-2259

2403 : 992-2780

Real Estate Gereral

.-~-·

71

1117 louzu Sport, Aut-a.:
Dear, liNo, 1

•

IIHAPI'V HOLLOW RD. MIDDLEPORT· Ranch home wllh 4 bedrooms.
Lo(rnt,Y LA, eat-m kitchen, utility room· located on 1.5 acres IT'JI in a
'"
sorting. Only $42,100

PLAINS- Th1s 3 bedroom home

Q

ey..,.,

...:..:::::.::.:.::::...=:::::.:::--:..· '•

Ave.·on 31oiS II
living room, eat-in ·kilchen, lull
1 floor plan. Asking $42,800

.

~~r

Real Estate General
-......,.....;..,...;..:.:::..:.:..-=.:.=.:._____,.__
_ _ Real Estate General

~~~,t,~:~t';:~~~~~·, a bath, a large

will

- -- -- --- - --

11

·
"
--.
= 1-

Office ............................ 9§12-2259

1

Engine,

I
.1.

S E B DI E

I

'Kathleen M. Cleland 99~~19i-lr

1

Real Estate General

y

711 Autos for S&amp;le

Henry E. Cleland 111992-6191

, new ce1 hngs and light fixtures, new deck; new
, ,. ,,inn &amp; a1r; new Sldmg, shutters, &amp; doors, 3 BR, DR, LA w/fp, neW
1n i area in rear. Warranted home Low 50's.

Home

Real Estate General

Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007

Sonny Garnes - 446-2707

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan. Realtor/Br~ker-446-0971
Mose CanterbUJy, ReaHo(·446-3408 .
Jeanene Moore, Aeaitor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Aeallor-446-2027

1~~;;~ ~No;~t~hi~ng
has been overlooked in thiS newly remodeled &amp;
horrie! New carpet, new kitchen cabinets w/appl, new

T.W.

PH. 446·7699 OR 446·9539

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. . ~
.
4.4 6-3644
:-:~.=
DAVIn WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555

446-1066

Real Estate General

81

Court St. - Choose from 1 1393 Ewlngton Rd. - 100 178 Greenbriar St. of 3! Beautiful location . ac ., mil, 4 BA home, BAs,
3 baths, fu
Charming!
46x388 building &amp; 30 x 60 basement. $85,000 1121!1..:
barn.
#602

·32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

PICI/mo. ~2773.

Enterprla•

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

Wood Realty, Inc.

Llv.OCk

_.,lzlna

-558

Real Estate General

Blocfl, brick, l&gt;lpo-. wtn- NN 11 awn horl•bam far-.. .
dowo, llntolo, ole:. Cloudo Wln- WIPIM:UN, loclled on Hcnellck
toro, Rio Grondo, OH Coli 114- Ad. ott Cnb CNell. Ad.,

.year!

' Call or

Building
Supplies

55

Lawrence

LAwNnce, l2'f. 0.. Fu,..e,
L-P I Not. Hool Pumpo I
Eloctrlc Furna-. F- b
tlmotoo. H You Donl CoM U. Wa
Both loMI t14-441.e301, 1 - .
217-e308, wv 002141.

KENNET.H AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH .. 245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, .BROKER

441-1328.
Canne lbu rg, In c. 45719
SpeCializing in Pole
Bu1ldmgs.
Des igned Ia meel your
needs . Any s1ze.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
. Posl Bu1ld 1ngs and
Package Deals. Save
Hundreds, even Tho usands
ol Dollars.
Local Sales Representative
WESLEY MULLET
141 Barlow Rd. ·
PalfiOI,Ohio 45658
PH. 614·256-6031

Electrical &amp;
Relrlge,_lon

"'....

..

Loretia McDade - 446-7729

Workohop Toclo For Solo, 114-

· Ef9.
Comrne~

"''

B

10

cfol. 114-211-ttn.

"'

cE T

u

-

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

.

-

7

l

G:r

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER .
Cheryl Lemley..............742-3171
OPPC4IIUII't

7274 SR 7, SouthReduced to $34,900 . 2-3
BAs, new kitchen. Owner
anxious!!
#609

..,_

6

.. Hooting And Cooflna,

Ron'• TY SoMco,
In Zenith llao - l n g .,.,jj
olho&lt; brondo. collo, 1- - - WY 304-571-2318.

~ I was taught to be truthful
~·'.•;..- - - - - - - - . and·not tell lies. While observ- .
r ::
R NI J
ing others, however, I've de1--,lr--TI-r-19~1- ~ cided that honesty. is the best
.._...~_.__..L.-'----1.-..L.--'- policy. But I also noted that
honestywillalsomakeyouvery

t·-S00-585-7101
NEW LIST!
Road, format
with "bove g
$45,000 .00

5

u v.e

Plumbing &amp;
Heating .'

nolollotlonAllldlntlat,
And c.utled.

Improvements

Jont. ~,.

Von•

Chew All"' Von lllnl eon.
K Cor b;;d,;. AC
Auto.,Good Cantlltkiii. -~~- 4
PJl111t ... 0114.

. . . 1114 4K4

1

CIC
Oonorol
Homo
llalnlona- ond Hoone
Ropolr. For " - Oollmato coli
Chol, 114-1112-tl23.

-

•

326 2nd Ave. - 3 retail
&amp; 3 residential
fiiDartrTlE
Excellent
#229

Cono-

F_

Home

dillon, -

~

LOOKING . FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
4.507 acres m/1
'9,000
It
4.615 acrea m/1
10,000
12
9,000
4. 702 acres m/1
13
3.881 acres mil
B,OOO
14
4.190 acres mil
15
5,000
10,000
#6
5.442 acres mil
6,000
6.148 acret m/1
17
11,000
IB 10.320 acres m/1
7,000
#9
7.253 acres m/1

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

'
'
.' •

-·

_, $-1D,- I

-==-~~ai+teletf
4K4 - · ohort
104-

.

.C H I

'

Chew.

81

Clmpers&amp;
· Motor Homes

!

'

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

nwmbolnlollatni.OFAUflod, 114-1112-a'lk .

-

-

..

MEIGS COUNTY

AcciUOrlel

1114 l'oni4K4.~

L E Dp y 0

Real Estate General

=

11,000. ......

82

Serv1ces

..'1:r'

. &amp;.tWD'I

sT -

L 0 DI

'•'

Parts &amp;
Accessories

. Auto

-.

-a... ........... -.

1.'

76

.~

~~·..-.v-

N I Q A.U T

Real Estste General

-

.ltonllro -.TAX-100 2 WD,

Eo X m Conllllon, 12,110, Soul- P~ Porto-.
0110, Wll Tou • Kondo s Or Cobo, - . . . . 11-.
.
4 Wt rrlr PM nade, 1'14-441- - . 4x4 OrfM Trofn
Porto. 3
1tll ........... IArlol. . . - .
lllloo Soulh 01 Oollpollo AI Juc&gt;
114 •• naa
·
lion Rt. 7 • Rti1l~:
PHONENUIIBER:
.
lltl l'onl " - · at'cloob XLT.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
Truck-·
Chev.,
Ford,
DodGe.
- ••• AJAIII - ; : ,

-·
-.

In

. Real Estate General

Truckl for S&amp;lf
-~a.- ......
Is Ant C.M a........_..

72

That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle

-r. . .

Color T.V., Cl
IWrtgli'ltor,

kl&amp;CWIN,

:· - S@R~lA-l&amp;~trs®

!=ebruary 11,1115

7:1 Autoa for S&amp;le

Wo-.. Dryor,

OH Point Pleasant, WV

SYRACUSE· A n1ce 3 bedroom ranch w&gt;th some hardwood
floors , w1th mostly finished full ba!)ement . 2 baths, a gas
furnace with central a~r, newer roof, newer porches , 2 car
garage, an(t 2 bedr6om apartment with large living room
and din1ng room , Can a ll be used as one. large home . Agent

owned .

$79,000

POMEROY· Commercial Property Formerly the ElCCf;I ISIOr
Salt Works. A Very large building with over 20 ,000 sq tt . of
war}&lt; s pac~ Lots of parkmg space with thi s propm"ty.
Included is a 2 bedi"oom home and appro)(. 3 acres of land.
$300,000

COURT STREET RESIDENCE • Older
home has 2 sap. units or could be
converted l!ack to 1 family dwelling.
Faces cily park.

NEW LISTING, 1 YR. OLD LOG
HOME - Sporls appl'ox. 2700 sq. It of
living area; solid wood· walls, floors &amp;
ceilings; extra large rooms; wrap-around
deck; part basement; anached garage &amp;
• 2 barns, located at gage on a sprawling
4.2 acre tract.

· MIDDLEPORT- Gran! Street· A I 1/2 story home with" 3
bedrooms and 2 baths. Has a ne.wer roof . Close to schools
and stores.
·
$26,000.00
MIDDLEPORT- Park S1reel- If your lookrng for ·a nrce 3
bedfOom house here 11 1s! Home has newer root and carpet ,
Satl1ng ori a nice level lol. Ageni .Owned
Aoklng $32,500
RUTLAND LASHER RD.· Appro&gt; . 3 acre s with a 2 story
house , 4 to 5 bedrooms, large fart:~ ily room. dining room
one bath utility room . porches, 3 Sided pole barn and iS
pa~ly rence d.
$40.000
I'!OMEROY- E Ma1~ Slreel E. ·Ma&gt;n Streol· A 2 story home
with 3 bedrooms and one bath. Front and Rear porches
$26,900

PLANTZ-SI:IBDIVISION · $56,900 - 3 ·or
4 BR brick &amp; frame tri-level, 1 1/2 balhs.
LA, Family rm, kitchen, new roof, new
siding. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT:
TO SEE .
- ·
•'
·
~
33 ACRES - MIL corner of SA 325 and
.WoOds Mill Road, recreational land only
$t6,500.
.
1418 • JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD ·
Addison Twp, 386 ac1e farm, 3 ponds,
tobacco base 44 x 100 barn with
concrete floors . May consider spill.
(578)
.

1445 ·VINTON AI ; A ... Very nice lliiCI&lt;
v. home, LA, FR, kitchen, DR, HP, cent
air, garage and unattached , garage.
Rental house on property.

-

.

1453 • OHIO RIVER PROP.ERTY •
located at end of White Avenue off
Garfield. Sever~llots $20,000 .
$31,500 84 acrea. Morgan Twp., vacant
land. ·Possible farming land or
recreational land.

.

$18,800 47 acree, m/1, ·Harrison Twp.,
EllioRRoad.

.WE NEED LISTINGS
WE'RE ABOUT SOLD OUT
-

r

R"OTLANtf. A rece ntlY r emodeled horfle w1th new vln ~l
sidtng , new roof. and textured walls Has 2 bedroom S and
one bath and att1c space that could be used for more room
Comes with equ1pped. ki~chen and washer &amp; dryer.
·
~

.

. WAS $30,000 NOW S28;obo

POMEROY· E aSi t Main relall on the lront porch and enjoy
the vie'~( of the R1ver in this ~ 1/2 story 3 bedroom home
with equipped kitchen vinyl s1d1ng and Ander son w1ndows. '
ONLY $27,500.00
APPLE GROVE· Dorcas Ad . · Appro)!; , 6 ac res of .nice
laying yard and a one story ranch with Brooms, 1 112 bath .
3 or rnore bedrooms, family room , dintr;tg room ; and a step
saver kilchen Also a detached 2·car garage , workshop , and
attached shed .
. $10,000.00

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker.. :....... ................ 892-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ...;............................ :... Ji92-305&amp;
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882-3498
CHARMELE SPRADLING ................. (304)-882-3498
OFFICE ................ ;........................ :............... 892-2B88

,

•• c -

�•
'

Page D8 Sunday llmee

.19,1895

*************·***

Ohio Lottery·
llmellicGM·
II/II

Pick 3:
987
Pick 4:
2194

PIIJJs

ON PRESIDENTS ' DAY

Super Lotto:
12-14-17-23-29-41

11/11

Kicker:
003320

Low tooJabt In mid 30s.
Cloudy. Tuesday, cloudy. H!pl

In the up,pu 30s.

•
MYSTEkY FAJlM- '11111 week's mystery
farm, featured by tile Gallla Soli aa!l Water
Conservation Dlltrkt, Is loalted -wllere Ia
GaUia County. llldlvlduals .....Iaing .to partlcl·
pete Ia tbe weekly c:onteat may do so by guudag
the farm'• owner. Jut maD, or drop oft your
pea .to tile Gallpolls DaUy Tribune, IllS Third
Ave~ GaWpolls, Obio, 45631, or Tile Daily Sen- .
11ne1, m Court s~ Pomeroy, Olllo, 45769, and

you mlly wla • $5 prize from lbe Olllo Valley
Publllhlnt! Co. Lave your DJUM. 8ddrea llllCI
'lelepbone DUIIIber wltll yotQ' c..-.1 or letter. No
.telepboae .calli will be accepted. All conlelt
entries sbould be turned In .to tlae newspaper
ollke by 4 p.m. eacb Wed.-day.IIIC8M ola tie,
the whmer will be cla-D by l!oUery. Ne:rt week,
a Melp County farm wiD be featlll'ed by tbe
Melp SoU llllCI Water c-rvadon Diolrkt.

Free trees availab.le for
reclaimed mined land

'

of Forestty iod reccndy 1f1Proved for the trees are required to sulimit
by the Ohio General Assembly, the a management plan to the Division
new ~rogram will complement ' of Forestry.
O)lio s TreeSource reforestation
The seedlings are available in a ·
initiative, aimed at planting and variety of hardwood and conifer ·
nurturing more trees across the species and will be deli vcred in
state,
early spring. They must be planted
"We can·now help landowners by April 30. 1995. Landowners are
tum abandoned mine lands onto required to pay for planting costs,
productive forests and make a sub- however, several cost-share prostantial contributi.on to our refor- . grams are available which can
estation effon," said Ronald Abra- reduce the cost as much as 7S perham, chief of the ODNR Division cent.
of Forestry "Thousands of Ohio .
Landowners interested in the
acres have been stripped and TreeSource mine land tree planting
reclaimed to grass since a 1972 program should contact their local
change reduced tree planting as an ODNR service forester.
alternative reclamation teclmiquc."
Interested allplicants with land
Both private and industrial located in Gallia, Jackson ,
landowners are elijfible to receive Lawrence or Vinton Counties may
the free tree seedling which must contact tbeir Service Forester at
By BRUCE WIL~S
We are seeking more conserva- he planted on a minimum of lh1ee Division of Forestry, 86
tive investments and ate consider- and a maximum of 40 acres, Portsmouth Street, Jackson, Ohio
ing government-backed Treasury · Landowners interested in applying 45640; telephone (614) 286-5900.
notes. Am I correct in thinking that
this is a safe investment. and the
only ·way one can lose principal is
when one withdraws before dte
time period is up? Is it best to
invest through a brotcr and pay a
commission, or is it just as safe to
invest through a Federal Reserve
Bank? Should we invest in individual securities or a fund? We
thoiJiht this was pretty simple, but
now we are wondering. - C.R.L.,
Lafayeac. La. .
DEAR C.R.L.: Treasury-backed
instruments are the safest that this
country offers - as safe as our
govemmenL I'm still one or those
old-fashioned people wbo feels that
the ~ovemment is on pretty solid- footmg.
.
One does not withdraw from a
. Treasury instrument. however:. It is
sold on the secondary market. If
the interest rate is highly competitive. you could actually make
money on this U8lisiiction; On the
other hand, if interest rates have
risen beyond the rate that you are
currently being paid, then your
principal in a sale would be
AOCEirrS DON4.TION- Bertie SaDDden,
reduced.
-'staat
maaaaer, aceepll •
sylllem
You can go directly to the Fedfrom Ralldy Mamllout or Prescription
of Point Pleasant.
eral Reserve and purchase tbese
ne nebulizer, wbidt dispenses medlcatioa or resplra.tory alnray
instruments, or through a booker or
diseases such u Mtllma and brODdlltis, wu donated to 1111! Holzer
CUale Pediatric department. ·
banker; personally. I prefer the latter. For the few dollars involved,
it's just plain easier.
WANTING TO BUY A HOME?
As for the liulds, there are many
mutual funds that invest primarily
OR HOW ABOUT
or solely in government securities.
REFINANCING THAT HIGH INTEREST LOAN?
Here you have professional manFmha, FHA, VA and CONVENTIONAL LOANS
agement and very possilily a higher
return over the long pull. However,
AVAILABLE
· one must understand that you are
not direcdy investing in the Trea- ·
• Low or No Downpayment
sury, but rather in a fund that buys
• Special Financing Programs Available
Tre.ury insuuments, which can be
a bit more volatile.
• Programs for Your Individual Needs
Bruee WiUiams is a syndicated
• Low Fixed·&amp; Adjustable Rates
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
• Evening Appointments Available
Association.
(Send your questions t•:
• Local Representative for 10 Years
Smart Money, P.O. Boll 503,
• Free Prequalification
Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of
~eneral Interest wiD be IIISWered
· 1D future columns. Owing In tbe
-FIVESfAR _CALL VICKiE HAULDREN
volume or mall, pei'IOIIal replies
caDDOl be provided.)
MORIIiA&amp;E
(614) 446·4042
Copyrigbtl995 NEWSPAPER
. CDRPoRAnOII
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For Information on bow to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist and others, ·coli-tact America OnUne by calliq 11100-817-6364, ext. 8317.)
COLUMBUS - LatldoWtiers can
receive fn:e tree seedlings to plant
on reclaimed mined lands this
spring through a new program
established by, the Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources
(ODNR).
.
ODNR will provide approximately 400,000 treeS to be planted
on any 'Ohio mined land property
whi'ch has been stripped and
rei:laimed after 1972 Applications
for the free trees will be accepted
until March 15. 1995.
Initialed by the ODNR Division

WE'RE CELEBUTING PRESIDENTS' DAY WITH
PATRIOTIC DIALS ON THESE QUALITY '

,

PRE·OWNED TRUC S!
.
1985 Chev. S-Biazer
Just traded. bought new here. Low ·
miles, one careful owner.
See it now!
.

' ,
'4'-,·

-- A '

~::£1994 Chevrolet
K-Series Pickup

-

., ,

.'

4 wheel drive, auto. trans., ·air,
locally owned. Save Here!

Crop Insurance For
Tobacco Producers

PATRIOT - Shannon Fallon,

Pltriot. is a new juni~ member of
the American Angus Association.
Jnnior members are eligible to
resister cattle in the American
Angus Association and lake pan in
wociation sponsored shows and
other national and regional e.vents.- . .

The "new" crop insurance program is-almos t
free if you enroll for it 1 The government
pays the premium. Your cost (or
administrative purposes can be as little as
$50 per crop. For details contact me today.

·Named aide
GALLIPOLIS ·- Public He8Jth
has hired Gallipolis resident Donna
Foster as a home care aide. Ms.
Foster will make aide visits to
homebound patients in Gallia
County.
Pioneer Health Resources, Bre•
men, p(ovides home care services
such as slciUed nursing visits, home
care aides, home ·infusion therapy
and home physiological laboratory
services.

..

..

..
1991 Chev. S-10

1992 Chevrolet S-1 0
Extended cab, V-6, 5'speed, locally
owned, low miles.
New Chevrolet trade.

1993 Chevrolet
Astro LT.
Fully equipped, dual air, power seat,
power door locks, power windows
and custom cloth seats.

1994 Chevroh:~t
S-10
Only 6;000 miles, 4.3 V6, air, auto.,
two-tone teal and silver. ·
Locally owned.

1989 Ford
Ranger
Just Traded! Camper topper, 5
speed, extra clean inside and out.
Priced to Go!

1994 Chevrolet
S-10

e

MPCI " ... a.~c to oil producm ~prdlcss of ra&lt;c.

Clinton
salu.tes
lwo Jima
survivors

. "Half of Ohio's poor families
work. They are largely invisible
,because they just manage to get by,
often wi~ut health insurance and
often without adequate food or
housing," thereponsaid. · · -By JOHN CHALFANT
It concluded that some progress
Associated Press Wriier
has been made in rea:nt years. But
COLUMBUS _ Knox and perfonnance varied sharply among
Warren ranked best among the counties not only in specific cate•
· ~ the' .....,;
gories such as. child suppon collecstate 5 88 counues or tr .,....or- u·
b t·
rail rankin
mance in 10 health, education and
ons, u m ove
gs.
welfare areas used to measure help .
Mark Real, director of the nonfor low-income families, .a private profit advocacy group, said qucsresearch group said.
. lions of accountability were raised '
Pike and Cuyahoga counties · when one county could collect
ranked worst on a rating syswm child support in 75 percent of
that included such subjects as child cases, while another collected 13
support collections, unmarried percent.
fathers establishing paternity, Head
"The lack of a statewide strateStan preschool enrollment and pro- gy lies at the heart of what has
ficiency test scores.
become a patchwork quilt of local
.
The Children's Defense Fund- efforts to help families achieve and
Ohio included tbe rankings in a maintain economic indepetidence,
216-P.age boot called He.fp!ng to help them obtain a quality eduFam 1tus Work. l'he pubhcaUQn cation for their children, and to
was to be released today.
help them provide for their own
Meigs County was ranked 72nd health and safety," Real said in a
in the defense fund's report and news release. .
Gallia County was 47th. Other area
Among the ~·s .rondusions:
counties included in the report - ' The state s chtl!l. support
were washington , 15th; Jackson, . enforcement system rem~~;~ns funda21st; Athens, 28th; Vinton, 34th; men.tally weak, despite some
improvement. Child suppon cases ·
and Lawrence, 55th ·
r

Progress made,
but.performance
varies In state

Fully equipped, power windows,
po~er door locks, tiit, cruise,
AM/FM stereo 'wtcassette, only
11,000 miles. We sold it new!

1993 Dodge
1 To·n
I

Cab/chassis with 12 .ft. metal bed ,
only 45,000 miles, one local owner,
new truck trade.
Save a bundle here!

JIST PRICES IN TJfl TRI.STATI RIGION • BIUIVIIT!
1616 EASTERN AVE
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446·3672
•

By GEORGE ABATE
. Two of the four district buildings 'are 70 years old. The .others includSeatinel News Staff
mg the current junior/senior high school, are 40 years old he added
The Eastern Local Board of Education is considerinf! building a new
All four district buildings need major roof repairs, J&lt;ari. said. '
school, Board President Ray Karr said today.
"We don't know whether it will be a new high school or a new elemenAt last week's monthly board meeting, the board discussed the differtary," Karrsaid.
ent schools and the steps needed to get:;tate money, Karr said.
·
. Superintendent Ron Miruirtl will travel Tuesday to .Colwnbus to meet
"There's been no decision made. We are studying the· options," Karr
w1th the state director of this building program, he added. By the next
said. "It's ilur duty to investigate it as much as possible.n
boa:'! meetmg, the ~ should have more specifics and may make a
The board is weighing the cost of the project and whether residents
deciSIOn to place the ISsue on the ballot this November.
will support a building levy, Karr added.
The board hopes to keep the building levy about 5 mills Karr said ·
A new school wiD cost the least if the state Building Assistance Loan
The district is seeking input from community membe~ ~~ parent- ~chFund covers at least 75 pen:ent of the cost. he added.·
er meetings, Minard said Monday.
But. the district will plummet from the top to the bottom of the list if ·
The tltrell options include:
the district does not pass a building levy before June 1996, he added.
·
. • building a new centralized elementary liuilding, which would consblIf that occurs, the state wiD likel~ give any money and the grant
tdate the three current elementaries. ·
process must stan again, Karr said.
district rust applied for the pro• constru
_ cling a new junior/se.ruo
_· r high sc. hoo
_ 1 and then consolida
, ting
gram in 1984.
·
.

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

cc&gt;or. natiOI!ai ons~n. "'-"'or disabiii~.

•

OR

' l·800·5 21·0084 -

have more than doubled in the last
decade, with 92 percent of the
growth from worlcin~ families who
are ll!ll on public assiStance.
• Thirty-three percent of babies
lfornin Ohio In 1993· were to
unmarried parents, an all-time high.
• In 1993, Ohio established 59
paternities for every 100 births to
unmarried parents. That was more
than in previous years, but lagged
behm
' d Mich1'gan and Wt' sconsl·n.
• Twenty-nine percent of chitdren in very lOW' income woitiiig
families rea:ived child care help in
1993. Slighdy more that) 5 pen;ent
of c:hildren less than age 12 living
in Aid to Dependent Children ramilies received child care that year.
· • In 1993, IS percent of Ohio
school children hve~ in extreme
poveny and relied on ADC, compared with 10.5 pen;ent ip 1980. .
The fund said more accountabiiity was needed in human service
and health programs to measure
results and determine whether the
public was getting iJs money's
worth.
,
~ne reason: the repon said the
qhto Department C?f Huma.n Serv1ces cou)d not readily explat!l how
many ch11dren were served tn the
sta,te's $ISO million child c.are
assistance program.-

-

•.

•

·

'

.

'

. abortion into the GOP fold. But he
said the issue needed to be debated
and declared, "I am pro-life. My
.
party is pro-life. The Republican
ticket is going to be pro-life. ••
Dole, Gramm and Alexander,
considered at this point the three
leading candidates, all call themselves abortion · opponents ,
although Alexander says the Cederal government should have no rol~
in the subject.
And over the course of the
weekend, all three said they would
not use the issue as a litmus test for
appointments and suggested
Republicans would be better served
discussing other issues.
· Dole, for his pan. used his cam•
PHIL GRAMM ·
paign debut wooltenl\ to cement l!is
status as the front-runner, scamperder would prefe,r to avoid.
ing to nine. town halls over three
"I am an economic fiscal con- days and craclting occasional joli:es
servative and a sociallibenarian," about several polls showing him
GOP Sen. Arlen Specter of Penn- well ahead of the pack. "Move it
sylvania said in introducing himself up to tomorrow and it would be all
to New Hampshire and calling for right for me," Dole said of the disthe GOP to drop the anti-abortion tam primary.
· language in its party platfonn.
· And he tried to quiet any con"I believe that if the abortion cems about his age - he is 71 _
issue stays in the forefront we will saying his experience left him
be giving President Clinton his best uniquely suited to put the countty
. and· Jll:rhaps his only chance to be back on the right course before the
re-elected," Specter said.
close of the century.
That position, however, was
"Maybe there is one more c8JJ
challenged by three longshot con- 'to serve for my generation," Dole
servatives in the field: commenta- said. "Maybe there is one more
. tor Patrick Buchanan , California mission for my generation."
Rep . Robert Dornan and Alan
In his remarks, Gramm made no '
Keyes, a mid-level Reagan admin- direct reference to Dole. But the
istration State Department official Texan said he was the true conserwho now has a syndicated radio vativc in the Reagan tradition,
· show.
.
eager to cut taxes but also balance
"It is a baby , not a choice,"
the budget through spending cuts.
Doman said.
"I believe families can do a bet. Buchanan, who got 37 pereent ter job than the government does
against President Bush in the 1992 spending your money." Gramm
New Hamoshire orimarv. said he said. ·
'·
welcomed peoPole of all views on ..

Lawyer poll

•,

HOMELESS DOG - Friendly, healtlly, black Labrador male
seeks home. Tom Mozlaao, manager or the Country Mobile Home
P.ark outside Burlingham, pets the laid •back ·doa bt bas twice
returned to the pq110d. Ng dogs are allowed in the trailer park and
Its size could eallly scare older people, Mozingo said Saturday
afternoon. The area dog wanle,a will not destroy this dog, and be is
trying to nad a Rood home for It, be a«,Jded. (Sentinel pbolo by
George Abate)
·

predicts Q.J.
may go free
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
number of lawyers who believe
O.J . Simpson will go free has
increased since last fall . Fully 70
percent now believe his trial will
end in a hung jury or an acquittal, a
?~a~_ona! leg~ ne~SJI!Ipc;r rcpo~ -·
........y.
.
A National Law Journal survey
found 39 percent of lawyei'S polled
predicted a hung jury and 31 per:
cent an acquittal. The other 30 per·
cent either felt he'd be convicted or
didn 't offer an opinion .
The poll of 301 attorneys was
conducted Feb. '8- 10 and had a S.6
percent margin of error.
The results were more favorable ·
for Simpson than a similar poll
conducted by the newspaper in
September, when 61 percent said
Simpson wouldn't be convicted of
murdering Nicole Brown Simpson
and Ronald Goldmarr.
Some attorneys attributed the
change til reports that the jury was
divided by racial tension. The panel
now includes nine blacks, one
white and two people of mixed
race. A white juror was dismissed
on Feb. 6 and replaced by a blaclo
'juror. 1
"When there were eight blacks 1
thought it would be very difficult
for a lot of blacks to send OJ. to
jail," New York lawyer William
Kunsiler told the newspaper.

'

I

I

some elementaries in the current high sc hool. This proposal was Completed in 1985.
.
"
• developing two smaller buildil!gs near each other for K-5 and middle
school for grades 6-8. 1). shared gymnasium could bC attached between the
two schools.
·
"We're still open to other suggestions, but we don't have a whole lot
of time," Minard said.
. .
·
The district does not have a crisis with its ctirrent facilities, Minard
said.
.
.
Building needs have changed during the last I0 years with new stale
mandates, Minard said. The district's special education students are being
sent to other schools now ,.
Whether voters build a new sc\Jool or t ontinue to. repair old schools,
costs will continue to rise, Minard said. . ·· · ·
.
But, continuin~ to repair and maintain the district's old buildings
would "plow away ' at its funds, he added.
·

GOP White ~ouse hopefuls
test ·waters -in primary state

New report·ranks Meigs 72nd
in aiding poor working families .

W. R. "Dick" Brown, CLU
· Nationwide Insurance,
386 State Route 160, Oallipoli_s, Ohio
.
614·446-19,60
Crop Insurance Serviced By
:
Rain and Hail Insurance Service, Inc.

Eastern Schools ponder new building

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
MANCHESTER, N.H. - On a
night of polite competition and a
few pointed disagreements, Sen.
Phil Gramm took a moment to cap. By RON FOURNIER
tore the unifying spirit of the room:
Associated Press Writer
''The next president is not going to
ARLINGTON, Va. - Joined by
be Bill Clinton."
·
aging heroes of lwo Jima, President
But if not. then who?
Clinton honored soldiers bloodied
More than 1,000 New Hampand-lcilled 50 years ago in the savshire Republicans crowded a balla~e World War II liattle. " The
room Sunday night to mull that
dimensions of their struggle still
question and hear from nine GOP
stagger us," he said Sund;iy. ·
White House hopefuls, including
The president, in keynote
the three early favorites and a few
remarks commemorating the 50th
longer-than-long
shots.
anniversary of the pivotal batde,
The
event
capped
a weekend
l.!,id II\bute to four Iwo Jima surlhat
served
as
tho
ceremonial
openY!vars by name and urged Ameri- ·
ing
o~
the
1996
campai~n.
at
least
cw' to honor the memories of all
here
10
New
Hampshtre,
which
soldiers who fought for the tiny
holds the nation's ftrst presidential
Pacif'te island.
primary
a year from today.
''To be worthy of that sacriftee,
Common
among the Republican
we must detennine in this time to
candidates
were
pledges to cut or at
remain the strongest nation in, the
least
hold
the
line
on lalles, to shift
world so that our freedom is never
OBSERVING PRESIDENT'S DAY- The third Monday Ia
power
from
Washington
to the
again threawned," Clinton told a
February, traditio1111lly George Wasblngton's Blrtllday, Is when
states and to overhaul welfare and
. crowd of about 3,000.
Americans remember all U.S. presideits.l\bove, the'Rev. William
pllt a 11remium on work and disWith the monuments of WashMlddleswarth and Jerr Warner placed flags ill front of Pomeroy
couragmg
teen pregnancy. And, in
ington visible through a misty haze
businesses to commemorate tbe bollday. (Sentinel phoiQ by Jim
a clear indication that affUlllative
over the Potomac River, the presi- · Freeman)
.action will be a leading 1996 issue,
dent said; ••And we must worlc to
the leading GOP contenders said
create a nation worthy of the generthat February mornin~. The sky.
they were committed to ending
ation that saved it for our free- mainland Japan.
dom "
In 36 d;iys, U.S. casualties num- The island. And somettmes I think racial preferences in federal hiring
and conll'liCting.
. He spoke beneath a 78-foot . bered 26,000, including 6,821 I can still hear the noise of battle.''
Clinton, who avoided wanime · · For Texan Gramm, Senate
bronze statue depicting the famyus dead. For the Japanese, the toll was
wartime pbotograph of u.s: sol- even more gruesome: Of the servipe in his youth; told another Majority Leader Bob Dole and' forme.r Tennessee G'ov. Lamar
diers hosting a flag atop Mount island's 20,000 defenders, only generation's war stories.
Alexander,the
goal of the weekend
Suribachi. "Hard men wept when 1,083 survived. Thousands of the
He said Robert Dunlap, for 48
was
to
focus
on
!heir perceived
they saw the flag fly," Clinton dead are still missing, their bones hours straight, directed attacks
'd
hidden
in·
the
volcanic
island's
strengths
and
add
new activists to
against enemy positions at lwo
sat .
.
. .
f
their
growing
organizations
in the
The Associated Press photo by mtncate web o tunnels.
Jima. The president marveled at
state.
·
Joe Rosenthal symbolized the
.Introducing the president, Medal Douglas Jacobson, who grabbed a
But
the
three
also
got
a
vivid
nation's resolve, Clinton said. of Honor winner Col. William E. bazooka · built for two and
"Our countty saw the true defini- Barber shared his memories of destroyed 16 enemy positions by demonstration of the powntial for
lion of courage."
· "that S-mile chunk of.rock and himself. Joseph McCarthr charged
the GOP debate to be sidetracked
into a divisive feud over abortion. a
The Batde of Jwo Jima, one of volcanic ash." In a halting voice, through an open field wtth a carthe nation's bloodiest, gave the he told dozens offellow veterans in bine and grenades, Clinton said,
subject Dole, Gramm and AlexanUnited States an air base for long- . the crowd: "1 am older now, as are and Jack Lucas threw hiplself on
range bombing missions against you, but I can still see the .colors of two grelilldes to save his buddies.

4 cylinder, extra clean. Black
·exterior.
Priced to Sell, Now!

CODIJT

~NEW~

Fallon new member
of Angus Association

1 Section, 10 Pogea 35 centa
A Mullimodio Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 20, 1995

'

T-bills still
the safest bet

••ne

Vol. 45, NO. 206

Copyrlgh11995

I

I ..

~

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="371">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9743">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30387">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="30386">
              <text>February 19, 1995</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2480">
      <name>biggs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="10">
      <name>collins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="163">
      <name>gibbs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="904">
      <name>layne</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2781">
      <name>viars</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
