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I
.

Local,-:national
activities ·Page A7 .

re(urn to
fishing the
Ohio River
on

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HI:· 50s
Low: 408

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Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant · April 23, 1995

A Mullimed1ct Inc .. Newspaper

Vol. 30, No. 11

A national day of mourning:
'

A presidential
proclamation
of ""ouming ...

I

President says children killed in blast_•may yet. lift up humanity•
' ·'·

WASHINGTON - President Clinton and his· wife many children around the country have been very fright·
sought Saturday to reassure children made fearful by the ened by what they have seen and heard."
deadly Oklahoma bombing, saying that the good in the
The work·
world outweighs •: those who are ... evil."
· ers and their
With nearly 40 federal workers and their children gath" ·
children rep·
ered in the Oval Office, the Clintons used the president's
resented each
·weekly radio address to reach out to youngsters who have
of the federal
been troubled by images of the children killed or injured
agencies th~t
in Wednesday's attack. i
·
. had employ. ees in the
On Friday, till= president !leclared Sunday to be aNational Day. of Mourning, saying the children who were
Ok I a hom a
killed "may yet lift up humanity," · .
City federal The president encouraged chihjren to confront their building:
fears.
Hill a ry
The Clinton a uaed the president's weekly
''We want children to know its OK to be frightened by
radio address to reech out to youngsters Rod ham
something like this ... so you can deal with your fears and
troubled by lmagee ol the children killed Cli nton enor
Injured In Wednetday'a alllc:k. •
go on with your lives." the president said. "I know that
couraged

Gas price petitions:

PAGE EIGHT- CAR CARE EDITION

THE DAILY SENTINEL

APRIL, 1995

·,How You Drive is as Important as What You Drive
-....,

By Bob Bolidura11t, Ford Motor
Company consum~r spousperson
and owner of Bob Bondurant
School ofHigh P~ifomuJnc~ Driving

Driver and passenger safety,
and extending the life of your vehicle are two important topics for
today's drivers. While safety fea tures like air bags and ABS brakes
are significant fmprovembnts
from Ford Motor Company and
oth~r automotive , manufacturers.
there are simp.le habits you can
v develop in the~ you drive that

will make you and your passengers safer, while at the same time
increasing the life of your vehicle
and its many parts.
The first area I'd like to address is safety. One area of sig·
nificant importance is how you sit
in the driver's seat. Sit upright so
you can be attentive to what' s
going on in front of and around ·
your vehicle. Slouching to the
left or right, or reclining the seat
too far back hinders your chan ces
of responding quickly in an acci-

and straight is to improv.e the position of your spine. Sitting up·
right will help keep pressure pff
the base of your spine, allowing
you to remain more attentive, less
drowsy and more rested after long
trips. A proper sitting position
gives you the best possible "feel"
for the vehicle.
.
The placement of your feet is
also important. Using the balls of
your feet on the appropriate ped·
als increases your senses for what

the vehicle is doing. Position your easier a simple l~ne chi~ge OC·
left foot on the wheel well or fool curs. It will take less effort to
rest on the left side. This simple change lanes in both normal drlvpraclice is another way to iricrease ing and emergency situations.
your sense for what the vehicle is
When following another vedoing and where it's going.
hicle at. a safe distance, look
When holding the steering through their windshield as well
wheel, utilize the palms of your as your own. A big mistake I i"'e
hands and position them at three drivers making is that they -are
o'clock and nine o'clock,'nottwo~y aware of vehicles and oband ten as many ·people teach. jects directly in front of them ,
Try it the next time you are in the rather than many hundredsoffeet,
vehicle and s~e just how much
even many miles down the road

dent-avoidance situation.

Another reason for sitting tall

AUTO FACTS

FACT:Willi'THE

AVEIWSE NEW CAR
COSTING .15.000

PEOPLE ARE ICEEP·
INGTHEIRVEHICLES
LONGER THAN EVE~
FIXING THEM IJP.

FACT:IJPHOLSTERY HEAOUNING ANO INfERIOR
RE~RATION IS ONE OF .

((

TH£ FASTEST GROWING
PARTS OF THE MOMaTIVE
SERVICE BUS.INES'~ .
•

With our low aulo loan rates, you
can update your current mode of
· &amp;raasportatlon AND get a ~Hat
deal on flaanctaa. Oar ·
auto loan rates are tbe
lowest we've offered In
yean...and they'D apply
to ANY aew car you'd
like to buy. Just shop
around and select the ·
new car you want.
(foreign or. domestic) and
then stop Ia and fill out
an appDcatloa. In most cases you'D have your
· anawer oa the same day.
,,

GC~
.

'

'

Add-on coo/er•••

,_&lt;c_o_n,_in_ue_d_fr_om_P•..:g;..e_7);.__ _

sion conlrul11 and sma lkr engines.

A device dosigneJ to pro!ect
against overheating i,-; the aux.iliary
lrunsmis.o;;inn ~•il cooler. Signiflc~mt

heat problems c.,n develop in any
climate when the following occurs:
I.

Carrying extra passengers unc.U
or extru Iu~age
2. '-Driving in slop~and-go traffic
3. Driving in ice or snow

, 4.

1

Driving in hot

temp~ralore!-&gt;

(especially above 85 degree&gt;)
5. Climbing steep grades
6. Trailer towing
Stress on the iran ~missio n nm
cau~ yourtransmi~sion

-

oil tempera·

ture to climb from a nonnall80 •F to
over 3(J()". enough lo breuk d_own the
transmission fluid. This causes varnishe'l to fonn in the tmn!tmis~iun ..

seals to harden and then bum out

plates to slip and bumcd·mll oil lo
fonn carbon inside I he transmission.
This shmtens the life of your
lrunsnliS!i!i&lt;m,not to mention the strain
•
un other cn£inc parts. Each 20 tlcgree drop in temperature. however.
double'! both oil und equipment lift:.
Keep tbat nuid cool and you'll
piolon@ the tran~miro;~1on 's life.
Tran\mh..,ion {'tM.11er., :m~ rel:1~
tivcly inexpensive in comparisJm to
the CO'\I\ of fransmission repair. rebuilding '" replacement. They're
liiMl easy to instull.
For a free _pamphlet on the cure
nf ytJUr vehicle'"' tnmsmi'l'iion send
a ~lamtll.'ll. o,clf-adtlrcl\.'\cJ envelope
to Car Care Counci I, Dept DT. One
Grande Lake Drive. Port Clinlon.
OH 4.1452. ·

SYRA(USE. OHIO 45779
PHONE 614·992 -6333

U(INE, OHIO 45771
PHONE (614) 992-2210

8,1 00 Gallia
signatures
enroute to
Af3•s office
By KEVIN P,INSON

Times-Sentinel Staff
' GALLIPOLIS - Next week, gas
price crusader Ellen Saunders will
• be toting more than 8,100 signatures
to the state attorney general's office
in Columbus. •
Saunders said she may have
t:eached her goal of 10,000 names if
earlier thi s month someone had not
stolen petitions displayed 'by area
merchants.
·
"If we had had the ones that were
stolen, we would have been pretty
dam close," she said Friday . .
Saunders declined to reveal when
she would make the trip .to Columbus, fearing opposition may attempt
to interfere with the delivery of t)le
petnions.
On Thursday, Saunders stationed
,herself at the county courthouse to
collect the last of the petition s and
encourage others to sign. Volunteers
conducting the petition dri ve delivered more than 1,950. signatures to
her and 50 people added their signa. tures, she said.
The petitions, which ask the AG's
office fora full investigationofGall ia
County gas prices, began circul ating
following a series of public meetings Saunders conducted in late February.
The petition also calls for full restitution to county ·reside nts "after
discovering the di screpancy and the
people involved."
When. the petition drive began.
Gallia County pump prices averaged IO cents per g'allon higher th an
surrounding counties.

children··to talk about iiie tragedy a..d to tell parents,'
grandparents and teachers " how you are fee ling inside.·'
" There are many more good people in the world than
those who are bad or evil," the first lady said.
· The president urged.parertts to li sten carefull y to _what
children say about the.bomhing. " Answer their questions
honestl y and forthrightly ," he said. "Tell them that the
evil people who committed this crime are going to be
found and punished."
..
In the Republican response. Oklahoma Gov. Fran k
Keating th anked everyone who reached out to Oklahoma
City after the bombin g,
Keat ing, a fonner FBI agent, lauded Clinton's response
to the tragedy . "Our president was swift to act. He sen t us
the resources to solve thi s terrible crime. and he offe red the
condolences and heartfelt assistance of a grieving nation,'· Keating said.

Excerpbl from President
Clinton's proclamation of a

-~

As we -"justice for fhe
ellll done In Olrlllhome City
onAprl/19,1995, goo/land
.
~I people everywtHHw
mourn th• lou of Innocents. ·But even 115 we grieve,
we resolve today In solemn promls• that thoee on
earttl shall never be boWed by murderou1 cowards.
Thl• fin against humanity shall not go unpunl•hed.
It has been said that, "In every child who Is bom,
the potentiality of fl!e whole human race Is born
agiJ/n." We lollt unimaginable potential thla pest
week. And M&gt; will miss our loved ones dearly. But
the children who died In this violence msy yet lift up
humanity. We do them no greater honor fhen by
taldng from their deaths the memory of their hopes. •

Hydro
project:

r

Officials offer:
status report ·

·;n ·the -·

By GEORGE ABATE .

Times-Sentinel Staff
BELLEV ILLE, W.Va.- Themo~t
visible portions of the Belley ille Hydroe lectric project will be built this
year and at the beginni ng of next year.
construction officials said recently.
. Op Thursday, thi s $153.45 million
project officially began with aground
breaking ceremony and should l5e
operational Nov. t. 1997.
Phil Meier. projec t manager for
American Municipal Power of Ohio ..
compared the construction of the hydroelectric pl ant to bu ildi ng a 10story bu ild ing underwater.
Peak construc1ion for th e hydroelectric plant will hap(knat the end of
-thi s year - when about 200 people
will_be employed. Meier said. The
plant wi ll provide ,orne of the power
needs of 42 Ohio comm unities.
. On Ju ne I . the: contractor wi ll begi n
construction of a colTer dam. This
phase wi II take several months. Meier
said.
The river will push two Austrian
turbines to create the electricity. Meier
said,
·
Eac h propeller weighs 45 tons. As
the waler nows ihrough the units wh ich are shaped like large lubesthe turbines will spin.
·
The $73.8 mi llion hydroelectric
plant consiruction will be completed
by Guy F. Atkinson Construction Co..
based in San Bruno. Calif.
The hydroe lectric lines for this
projecl will e.tend 25 miles from
Reeds vi lie to Rutland.
Last week, surveyors returned to
Continued on page A2

heartland:

Hunt continues for 2nd bombing
suspect; Rain stalls rescue effort
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Holding toys from what once was a day care
center, drenched and chilly rescuers searched, stppped, then searched again
Saturday through the bOmbed-out, shaky ruins of the federal building. The
second of two orig inal suspects remained at large.
The suspect, one of the
men whose sketches have
been circulated worldwide.
is described as square jawed. with thick hair and.
a tattoo on hi s left arm. and
he may not be the only one
the FBI is seeking,
" We have at least one
and there could be others,''
said Weldon Kennedy, special agent in charge of th e
inves tigati on. " There is
mu c h wo rk left to be
done."
CONDEMNS CAR-BOMBER .. Dan Williams of Much work remained at
Perry, Okla. , holds a sign condemning car-bomb the bomb Site as we~l.
suspect Timothy McVeigh Friday as McVeigh was
Resc ue efforts, stalled
taken from the courthouse in Perry to an awaiting S~turda7 mo_rnmg by Sit ff
helicopter for a Dight back to Oklahoma City.
wmds, lt ghtmngand steady
rai ns. resumed at midmorning as worken; began the heartbreaking job of diggi ng through the part
of the co llapsed building that had housed a day care center. ·
''The fi refighters are pickin g up toys and looking at them and handing them

SUSPECT ARRESTED - Thomas James McVeigh is lead out of t he Noble
County Courthouse by stale and federal law enforcement oflicials Friday in
Perry, Okla.;after being identified us a ~uspcd in t he bombing of the Oklahoma

City federal building.
to each other,'· said Jo'n Hansen. assistant fire chief. clutc hing a red plastic
fire truck in the downpour.
By early .afte rnoon, rescue rs were ordered to leave agai n for fea r the
building was shifting.
The death to ll remai ned at 78 Saturday. with another 150 people still
unaccounted for. More than 400 others were injured in the blast caused by
thousands of pounds of homemade explosive&gt; packed inlo a Ryder rental
·
truck.
Timothy McVeigh, who tu rns 27 today, was in the El Reno Federal
Correctional Center pending court hearings Thursday. He was charged
Friday night with " mali cious damaging and destroying by means of an
explosive a building or real property, whole or in part. possessed or used in
Continued on page A2

Village voters to decide News capsules
contested offices in fall Jobless rate mixed

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Time&amp;•Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - While Middleport will not have a primary election on May
2 due to lack of candidates. it ap pears that there will be a contest in the fall to
fi ll the two open seats on Middleport V illa~eCo un ci l . an d the mayor and clerktreasurer's posts. ,

As of Friday three residents had fi led as indepe nde nts for council seats and
one had fil ed For the mayor's post. The deadli ne for indepe ndents to fi le
petitions of candidacy is 4 p. m.. May I.
,
Any registered voter. regardless of politic;1l party. may fi le as an independen t before next week's dead line. Petitions may be picked up at the Meigs
County Board of Elections office, Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy,
The candidates who have fi led for a seat on council are incumbent Beth
StiverS, and political newcomers Barbara Hudson and George'Hoffman.
lncumbenJ.Jame$ Clat\yorthy did not seek re-ele9tion fo a seat on CounciL
Mayor Dewey Horton. whose petition to go on the Republican primary
ballot was declared invalid by the Meigs County Board of Elections, has fi led
as an independe nt for the mayor's post. . . ,
A number of petitions for all posts have been picked up. according to Rita
Smith. Board of Elections director.
Registered voters also have the option of taking- the route of running as a
write-in ca ndidate in the Novemher General Election. A declaration of intent
to he a write-in candidate must be filed wil h the Board of Elections by 4 p.m
on Sept. 28 to do that.
The onl y voting action in Meigs Cou'nty .on May 2 will be a Republican
Primlji'Y in Pomeroy.
.
John W. Blaettnar, incumhent. Kenny Klein, and Frank A. Vaughan are
seeking'the nomination for mayor; and Scott M. Dillon, -incumbent, Bryan S.
Shank, Geri Walton, and Bracy A. Konl are seeking nominations for the two
open seats on Pomeroy Villa_ge CounciL No Democrats filed for office.
If no independents file and there are no write-in campaigns o~ the November
ballot. then the Republican winners in the, May primary will go into office.
Smith reminded voters that Saturday is the last day to vote absentee. The
Board of Elections office will be open from '9 a.m. to noon that day to
accommodate residents who have difficulty getting into the office on a
weekday during regular hours.
_
There are several reasons which qualify voters to vote absentee. They
include being over 62 years of age, absent from the county on Election Day,
confined to a nursing home, penal or other institution. or in the military.

throughout region
GALLIPOLI S - March
unemploymen t rates i'n .
southeastern Ohio show a
mixture of both mi nor in·
creases and decreases, according
to information
released Friday
by the Ohio
Bureau of Employment SerVIces.

ln.
of

the Oklahoma City bombIng:

..----------------------------------------.,

rr

ot mQUmlng _todlly

l'llei1IOil of the VIctims

'

Fatally injured truck driver
identified as Belpre man

Ohio

"'•10n,~~;;;;i~'l~
·~~5t~l . ki lled
ROCK
SPRINGS•
A ofBelpre
mantruck
wa'
•••
Friday
when the-bed
the dump
.Scioto
1 lielgel

GOOD MORNING

•

~~~~~~~~~~

Lawr1nct

Unemp loyment
fell
i=:E3:::±~rt
sl ightly in Galha County
JackiOil
" ·rom February· to March from 9.6 percent io 9.5 per. cent In Meigs County. the
mte rose from 11.6 percent
'to 12.9 per~ent during the
Athono
period.
'
·Jobless rates also increased in _Athens County
,
(6. I percent to 6.3 percent) and Vinton County (I 1.5 perc en! 10
12.3 percent). Regionally rates fell in Jackson County (7 .5 percent
to 7 percent) and Scioto County ( LO percent to 8.7 percent).
according to the OBES.The jobless rate in Lawrence County held
steady at 5.3 percent during the period.

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections- 148 Pages

Busi ness

Dl
Calendars
he wa&lt; operating connected wilh a power hne.
82
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the· Stale Highway Classilieds
DJ-.7
Patrol reported.
Com.ics
Insert .
Rodney A. Mar&gt;hall . 38. was taken to Veter·
Editorials
ans Memorial Hospital ~y the Pomeroy squad
A4 &gt;
of the Meigs County EMS. where he was Local
A3
pronounced dead, TrMper Brad- Ale&lt;under
Obituaries
AS
said .
The accident occurred at' the cons1ruct1on Sports
CI-8
'ite for! he tlrst leg of the U.S. 3311-77 connec- Alo~ the River
Bi
tor proiecl near Meig' High SchooL
.u
Alexander said Maf'haiJ. dnymg a du,mp Weather
hed semi-tractor trailer full of sand. backeJ off
State Route 7 at 8:1 0 a.'m. at acloocd pori ion of
Columns
the road to dump the load .
The bed was raised and struck a 7.200-volt
Jack Anderson
M
power line. Alexander added . Marshall e~ited
the truck and wa&lt; apparently electrocuted, , Fre!!Crow
M
accordmg to the preliminary investigation.
Bob HoeOich
M
Ma" hall \ body was later released to the
JimSands
~
Spencer Funeml Ho•.ne m Belpre and the inciC IMS. Ott.A&amp; V•Hoi7 ........... CL
dent remained under invest1gatum Sat~rday,

Teen finds, returns wallet; rewarded,with insider's view of Washington
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sometimes honest~ is its own _reward. And banker told the local congressman. and the congressman upped the ante. ,
sometimes a grownup step,s in to sweeten the pot.
On Thursday. Rep. FmnkCremeans, R-Ohio, Oew Brian to Washington
After 14-year.old Brian Slonaker of New Matamoras in southeast Ohio.. gav~ h1m a gu•ded tour oft~e Capttol and arranged for Brian to be in th~
found a wallet so fat with 20- and 50-dollllf bills that it couldn't be folded, . audtence for the state greetmg of Fernando Henrique Cardoso, president of
he took a lot of ribbing for turning it in.
Braz!L
_
.
His friends said, •·J would have kept it and you're dumb;'' Brian recalled
Bnan calle~ ,that the h•ghhght of his trip: "That was pretty neat with the
Thursday. ''They'rejealous now."
,
nnhtal!' st~ff.
.
_,
. ,
· The man who lost the wallet- containing $2,500 - gave Bnan a S20
He dtdn I meet President Chn1on or forst lady Hillary Rooham Clinton b 1
reward. Brian said his father told a local banker what happened, and the got wllhm 25 feet of them and snapped a lot of pictures.
u
t

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.,.. •· .,.

•

,
Paga A2 Sunday 11m• Sentinel

.'

s~.AprtZ3

Accu-%"._. f'orecill

ing inltteSI 111e1 scm~ limes since
By JAMES B. RUBIN t/'
mfdwlnter
1994 to rein In growth
Assoclalecl Pftll Writer
WASHINGTON
Tbe and suppress inflation.
The economy surged abead at a
natlon'·s economy, reinforced by
what one ,analyst called sparkling 5.1 percent ann.uai rate in the final
underpinnings, appears to have three months of last year and grew
whhstood some major sbock waves 4.2 percent for all of 1994, the
and is expanding-at a sfower but strongest performance in a decade.
Most analysts expect a growth rate
still healthy nne.
.
The government will UIDOUnce ' o( around 3 percent for the first
Friday Its initial estimate of gross three monlhs of this year. ·
Practically all the recent evidomestic pllduct for the flfst quarColumbus
ter of 1995. Analysts predict that dence points to a slowdown. MaDuGOP, measuring ~:tput of facturmg production is dropping,
goods and services
In the particularly for c.s, and~
Unircd Stales, bas pulled back dra· spending that has been the engine
. matically from the booming expan- or rapid growth is leveling off.
The only major exception
sion that closed outlast year.
In recent months, the dollar has appears to be business spending on
taken a poun4ing and Mexico's capital improvements, particularly
economy bas been battered- slic- computers and state·of-tbe·art
ing Into trade with tbe Unhed communications equipment.
Last week, the Commerce
States. But. analysts said. the pace
of expansion for this U.S. economy Department reported that housing
starts plunged nearly 8 percent In
looks solid if unspectacular.
The stock market has responded March to a two-year low despite
· to the good news, pushing the Dow falling mortgage rates. Starts fell
Pt Cloudy Cloudy
Jones industrial average into record for three straight months for the
first lime in a year.
high territory.
· America's trade &lt;jeficit nar"The U.S. economy and its
underpinnings appear sparkling," rowed sharply in February even
said economist Allen Sinai of though the peso's problems pushed
Lebman Brothers investors. "That the trade gap with Mexico to a
m'akes the economy resilient to record level. The unexpected drop
Sunday ... Becoming cloudy. these shocks. They don't do us in." in lbe deficit of nearly 2S percent
By The Associated Press
The Federal Reserve appears to from January is likely to boost
, Clouds returned to ·Ohio late Rain likely in the afternoon soujh.
have
succeeded in engineering a GOP slightly for the first quarter
· Saturday, offering a cbance of rain . Highs again in the 50s,
soft
landing
for the economy, rais· over earlier estimates.
Sunday night. ..A chance of lain
. on Sunday in lbe south.
·
Temperatures will remain cool- north ... Rain likely south. Lows 35
Sunday witb highs in the 50s to to40.
Monday ... A chance of rain .
lower 60s statewide. Lows will be
Highs in the 50s.
_
in the 30s to around 40.
Extended forecast:
. Continued from page A1
A one-story building weakened by
The record high temperature ror
Saturday at the Columbus wealber . ' tuesday ... A chance of showers. the United States."
the blast 2 1/2 blocks away collapsed
station was 87 in 1985. The record Lows in the UJlP!:r 30s to lower 40s · Other charges were expected to fol- Salurday morning. Three people in·
and highs in the 50s.
low temperature was 27 in 1978.
low. The government has said it will side escaped without injury.
Wednesday ... Dry. Lows in the seek the dealh penalty.
Sunrise on Sunday is at 6:43
President Clinton, who plans to visit
30s and highs in the middle 50s to · Brothers Terry Lynn Nichols, 40, Oklahoma City on Sunday with his
a.m.
Weather forecast:
lower 60s.
and James D~uglas Nichols, of · wife, Hillary, for a statewide prayer
I
Decker, Mich., were being held as service, tried to calm cHildren 's fears
in his week,!y radio address.
malerial witnesses, Kennedy said.
"We want children to know it's
A search of Terry Nichols ~ home in
By The Associated Pre~
There we~ 212 Buckeye 5 tick·
Herington, Kan., was expected to be OK to be frightened by something
The following numbers were ets with four of the numbers, ~d conducted Saturday. U.S. marshals like this ... so you can deal with your
: chosen in Friday's Ohio and West each is w?rth $250. The 6,101 uck- took James Nichols from lhe Sanilac fears and go on wilh your lives,'' the
·
ets showmg three of lbe numbers County, Mich., jaiLSalurday, Sheriff president said.
- Virginia lotteries:
· OHIO
are each worth $10, and the 59,305
Mrs. Clinton urged children to share
Pick 3: 2-8-9
tickets showing two of lbe numbers . Virgil Slrickler said; he was expected
their feelings wilh parents and leachto
face
queslioning
in
Oklahoma.
Pick 4: 0-1-4-5
are each worth $1.
Aulhoriliessay McVeigh and Terry ers. Nearly 40 workers and their .chilBuckeye 5: 3-10-18-20-21
Sales in Pick 3 N~bers totaled
There was one ticket sold nam- $1,566,939, and wmners will Nichols are Army acquainlances. The dren gathered in 1he Oval Office 10
affidavit for James Nichols' arresl hear Ihe address.
: ing all five numbers drawn in Fri- receive $1,106,581.
In lhe, Republican response, Oklasaid
McVeigh listed James Nichols as
· day night's Buckeye 5 drawing and . Pick 4 Numbers players
homa
Gov. Frank Keating, a former
his
O):XI
of
kin
when
McVeigh
was
: it's worth $100,000, the Ohio Lot- wagered $350,505.50 and will
FBI
agent,
praised Clinton and
booked
in
Oklahoma.
tery said.
share $124,800.
thanked
those
who helped after the
In
Oklahoma
Cily,.
rescue
efforls
The winning ticket was purThe jackpot for Saturday's
disaster.'
'When
Americans are threatchased at Dairy Ma,t No. 5820 in Super Lotto drawing was $30 mil· were stalled by bad weather, includened,
when
we
hurl and need help,
ing 20-degree wind chills, amid fears
Painesville,
·
lion.
WEST VIRGINIA
lhe structure would collapse. Time- polilical differences and distance no
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
'
l)aily 3: 2-2·5
$491,381.
.
lapse cameras were being used · to longer matter," he said.
Daily 4: 5-9·3·8
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
determine if cracks in the nine•slory
•
Cash 25: 3-5-9-10-16-17
toured
the bomb sile .before dawn
building were widening.
Saturday,
arriving early arid wilhoul
The letters "DB" were spraypainted on many places in lhe rubble publioily to avoid disruplion.
~
(USPS 525-800)
Slern said both brolhers were coopto idenlify Ihe locations of bodies.
Published each Sunday. 825 Third 1\ve.,
Continued from page A1
era)ing
with federal investigators.
Fire
Chief
Gary
Marrs
said
four
Gallipolis. Ohio, by the Ohio ValLey Publishing
finish the last few weeks of surveying bodies had been lOC!ftod In ari'ifth'er~ Nelthei-mail has been charged.
&lt;;:ompany!M ulti medla, In c. Second clau postfor the power line route, said Chuck building acro,~sl11e street. Some had
file paid at G:.llipoll ~. Ohio.4563 1. Entered 115
McVeigh had been sitting in a
second dass mailing matter ot Pomeroy. Ohio,
Williams,lhe power line projec1engi- not yel been removed, he said.
county
jail 63 miles away from .Jhe
Post Offi~ .
neer.
He said resc ue squads - working bombing for two days when th e FBI
Membtr:'The Associated Press, and tfle Ohio
This November,construclioncom- two-hour shifts - wore proJective found him ..He had been stopped by a
Newspuper A~socio tl on .
panies will bid on lhe power line suits,
some areas were disi nfected trooper because his car didn'l have a
SUNOI\Y .O~LV
project. By July 2, lhe environmenlal because bodies were beginning lo license plale.
.
SUDSGRIPTION RATES·
information
must
be
compiled.
In court papers, the FBI said a former
decompose in~ ide the building. Cool
Uy Ca rrl~ r or Motor Route
In Spring 1996 construclion of lhe weather was keeping lhe problem co-worker of McVeigh called Friday
o.. \Vttk ....................................... ,....... $1.00
Oae Year ..............
.................. $52.00
power lines will begin, Williams said. under control, he'said . .
after seeing lhe sketch on television.
Line cqnslruction-will lake between
SING LE COPY PRI CE
Ray Blakeney, direclor of opera- He described McVeigh, who served
... .................................. 11 .00
Sunday
nine and 10 months once' it 's begun~ li ons for the State inedical cx:Jminer's in the Army al Fort Riley, Kan ., as
Williams' Seal tie-based company office, said 29 of ·lhe-dead haa been having "1:XIreme right-wing vie.ws "
No suNcnruons by mail permiucd in areas
where motor carrier sef"\'icc is avai l ab~ .
- · R.W.
-· W
has h"
crossed 1·dent.f.
· 1ud.mg f.1ve of lh e 13 and anger over lhe 1993 clash be·
· pBeck Inc.
1 1e d, me
1van.a,
nver&amp;
'"'
ennsy
as
mglon
h'ld
h
. bod.1es have been re- !ween authorilies and lhe Branch
- --Jlbc Sunday limes -Senti nei .,;ill not 'be ~'po~­
"vv"'II
'
dded.
,v c 1 rend w ose
k
AI
d
an
as
a,
1
1ams
a
•ihlc for advance payments mndc 10 carriers.
Davidian cull in Waco, Texas.
The wires will hang 80 feet abo)'e covere ·
Uaily and Sunday
lhe Ohio River. To allow for.(lllls :.pomm!X«im&lt;O«&lt;m!)O'XIm&lt;O«\mi~~IOOOmm!mlm&lt;O«&lt;OOOOX«miOOO~
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
heigh!, lhc corps of engineers de~
fl~_•lde Gallla County
'13 Wceki ..... ........................................... ,S23_92
mandcd the lines be extended 1,600
._..,., \
feel
across
I
he
river,
~ ~=::::::::::::::::::::::.:::·:::::;:::::::::::::::::~i:~ .

•I

Chance of rain will persist
in south through Tuesday

s.earch continues ...

Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks

Hydro plant

""d

· Ralrl Outside Gallla County
13 Wcek's .. ..............., ............................... $25.6 1
26 Week.s ....................... ., ........................ $49.66

!l.Weeko ............................................... 1%.20

I

Williams said. "We needed lo have
lhe leas! impaclun people ... We' ll be
on Ihe back of properlies as much as
possible. Unfortunatelyyou can'IIOO
percenl avoid people."

know your mower
.inside and out. ·
EasvMulch'"
Gold SerieS"
21.'~ push mower
4.51 !P 2·&lt;)'.clt• etlmmcKial·
grade Cfl){lnt',
•
Nt ~ru!&gt;l

'

St,\ ~J;m:d wlwd

r'itt"ot'r tnmmmp. .md
c,,..wr h,, n.ihn ~
Mudt•l Hl21 11

~~==~

alum inum dt'l:k,

4 -yCilr Wilrr.''lllly'.

St~w·n.'t ~ht'CI dl'Ck f111'

d t.,.,cr tnmmin~ and
L'il'ol c r h,1ndlin~

Mt..Jd 111411

'

A&lt;::o

author1Zl'Cl L1\,•n-Boy- de&lt;~ len., we knHw the ittS ilm.l

out~ of selcctmg the Lawn-Buf mower th,11'o; righl for you.

Our factory trained techniciafiS. and warrilnly ~rvice will
k~o.&gt;Cp your mower i1t JX'i1k performance: So 5~op in and visit us_
soon. Because nobody know~ more about your mower.

R&amp;G. FEED &amp;.SUPPLY CO.
399 W. Main
992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
The Store With "All Kinds of Stufl" for Pet•. Stables,
Lerge &amp; Small Animals, Lllwne &amp; Gardena

EDUCATIONAL TALK- U.S. Education Secretary Richard
Riley spoke with nrst grade students Denesba Smitb, 7, left, and
Alesia RIICbel, 6, while they worked on a computer at St. Joseph
School In Cincinnati Fridloy. (AP)

•

.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
'approved a contract Friday with the
State Public Defenders Office representing indigent criminal defen- .
dants.

Athens auomey Mike Westfall,
representing the group. said the
new contract includes 3 2.8 percent
cost increase, $39,073 compared to
$38,020, over lbe existing contract
.whicb expires June 30.
· The board also agreed to pay the
·Office $15,000 for each death
.penalty case it handles.
_.

By SONJA BARISIC
lions, calling the department an
Associated Press Writer
"enormous disappointment." .
CINCINNATI - Abolishing
Supporters of lbe idea say eduthe U.S. Depanmenl of Education cation is best administered at tbe
would be detrimental to the state and local levels.
nation's future, tbe bead of the
Riley said the public sector can
agency told a convention of Roman learn much from the Catholic
Catholic educators.
school e'Xperience.
· "If this co uri try is to, have a
"Your commitment to a core
future in Ibis new 'educauon era,' . ·curriculum and high acadc;mic stanit ivill depend almost entirely on dards ai1d your active in¥olvement
how we prepare Ibis generation of wilb parents set an example of tbe
young people for the coming many ways that Americ~. ed~ca- .
. times," Education Secretary tion can move forward, R1ley
Richard Riley said Friday.
said.
"And it is my belief tbat we
About 10,000 educators and·
cannot move ahead as a nation exhibitors attended the NCEA conunless we make education a nation- vention. The 'organization repreal priority."
sents more lban 200,000 educators
Riley. who was in Cincinnati to nationwide seJVing 7.6 miUion stu·
address the National Catholic Edu- dents from preschool through grad·
calional Association's convention, uate school.
said his deparunent plays an important role ·in setting educational
goals and making education a top
,
U.
'vt

on D2

•

Sunday nme-Sentlnei-Page-A3

decline in the nationwide high
school dropout rate, there still is
much work for the department to
do.
For example, overall achievement is slilllow, be said.
"So I am bewildered when I
bear critics telling us that there
should be no national voice of education in Washington- no one sitting across from our president at ·
Cabinet meetings representing the
concerns of educators, parents and
public and private schools and colleges," Riley said.
Several Republican presidential
candidates - including U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole of
Kansas, former Education Secretary Lamar Alexander of Tennessee
and Sen.' Phil Gramm of Texas have suggested doing away with
the department.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
R-Ga., bas made similar sugges-

•Announcements
•Banners
•Center Pieces
•Plates
•Napkins
•""able
Covers
1'
•Balloons
•Crepe Paper, etc.

GOLII:\1 .\HI\ - ~
~E ,\

\VEIIDii':( ; ~001\
506 Grand Ce ntral Ave.
Parkers bu rg. WV
•
Acro ss fro m
Grand Central Mall No rth
304-295-7 878

yo
br~
some
new ground.
e

•

.HHU5

593-776t

IILPU

LOWBLL

423-75t6 896-2369

NIDDUPOlT

IULSONVILLI

N!Y.Ul

992-6661

753-1955

788-8820

TIII .PUJNS

• (EDITOR'S NOTE - A taw· panionship, according to llle suit.
and attorney fees. They are also
:suit outlines the grievances of one .
The couple is suing for asking for interest on liquidated
&gt;: party against another. It does not $300,000 plu s pre-judgement and ,amounts and special damages.
:·estabUsb guUt or innocence.)
post-judgement interest, court costs
A jury trial has been demanded.
.: POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ::A Bidwell couple has filed a
:·$300,000 lawsuit against a Gallipo&lt;lis Ferry man for a 1993 automo:·bife accident, according to Mason
::county Cin:uit Clerk records.
-: Rebecca M. and Anthony Bur:·deue are suing Timmy R. Shuler
'for injuries they received following
;an accident involving Rebecca Bur.'delle and Simler, according to the
·suit.
In April 1993, Rebecca Burdette
was trav~ling west on Jerry's Run
Road and had stopped to make a
:left ,tum, the suit said. Shuler, who
; wa~ also traveling ,west, allegedly
failed to maintain control of his
veh icle and .struck Burdette's vehi·cle in the rear, lbe suit continued.
The suit said Rebecca Burdette
:allegedly received injuries to her
neck, back, head, shoulders, · hips,
anns and chest. The suit claims she
'incurred substantial expenses for
medical caJe, mental anguish and
7 Month
Minimum
1B Month
11 Month
·the IIJSS of capacity to enjoy life in
APY
APY
APY
Opening Depos1t
the future.
Burdette's husband, Anthony,
6.43
has suffered serious and peflllanem
$ 250,000
6.80
6 .69
injuries in the form of loss of con6.32
$ 100,000
6.69
6.58
sortium, service, society and com-

•

$ 10,000
$ 5,000
$. 1,000

CommiSSiOner
plans campaign
for third term

Ask your dealer about
Peoples Bank financing for a
new lawn or garden tra&lt;;tor
of your choice! .
M_AlU.TTo\

year) .to use at Rio Grande's new
Food Court through a student ID
card.
"
Students may increase their purchasing power by adding money to
increase the spending ceiling. This
will enable the card also to be used
for purchases in the campus book·
store. ·
Dorsey also poinled out estab·
lishment of the Middle America
Payment Plan, intended for students who want to spread their payments, do not qualify for student
financial aid, or choose to not to
request it. ·
"The MAP plan guarantees
tuition rates for lbe next five years
for incoming freshmen and students entering their junior year,"
Dorsey said.
More information can be
obtained from Martha Six, Nice
president of finance, at 245-5353 or
t-S00-282-7201.

jGallia couple file§ suit in Mason County

,

•

373-3155

• accepted a $9,437.50 in state
funds.

- Tbe commission also approved
• Appointed John Weeks to the
a resolution ·proclaiming the week ·Meigs County Metropolitan Housof April 23-29 as Meigs County ing Authority for two-year term
Crime Victims Rights Week.
effective May 1.
·
At the request of the Meigs
• Met in executive session with
County Emergency Medical Ser- Prosecuting Attorney John R.
vices Boa~d of Trustees, tbe com- Lentes and Sheriff James M. Souls·
mission approved purchasing a new by for approximately 1-1/2 boors to
ambulance for the Pomeroy squad discuss a legal matter. No action
from Penn Care Medical for followed .
$83,770.
·Present were Commission PresiIn other business, tbe board:
dent Fred Hoffman, Vice President
• Tabled discussion of a tourism Janet Howard Tackell, Commiscontract with the Meigs County ·sioner Robert Hartenbach and
Chamber of Commerce.
Clerk of Commission Gloria Kloes.

. RiO GRANDE - Room, board other Ohio students will pay SI 83
·
and tuition rates for University or per credit hour. . , ·
Other
tuition
rates
include,
$122
· Rio Grande and Rio Grande Com'
per
credit
hour
for
Wes
t
Virginia
. munity College students · will
increase less than 5 percent in students in the first two years ,
1995;96, Rio Grande olficials while the out-of-state student rate
is $194 per credit hour.
· announced.
/
The average national rate of
"This is the smallest overall
tuition
increases alone is 6.5 perincrease in a number of years and
emphasizes Rio Grande's commit- . cent this year. Officials said it is
ment to provide quality ·education expected to stay at or exceed that
• at tb,e lowest possible cost to stu· percentage in the future .
"Of pallicular significance is
l dents "and families." said Rio
: Grande President Barry M. Dorsey. that room rates will remain the
Tuition rates for full-time, in· same as this year," he added. "The
: district (Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and price for a meal' plan will increase
• Vinton counties) RGCC students slightly, but students will have
: will be $48 per credit hour (2.1 per- greater flexibility in choosing food
: cent bigher than last year); otHer options."
: Ohio residents will pay $56 per · As a part of 1b e meal plan,
. credit hour (3. 7 percent over last which provides students with a
choice of either 15 or 19 meats
: year).
. In-district junior and senior stu- weekly in the ,campus dining hall,
. dents will pay $136 to $182 per each residential ·student will have
: credit hour (12 to 16 hours), while $40 credil per quarter ($120 per

,SOP PLIERS

fl \BTYIIOI

years old and consists or five cens.
with two bunks per cell and a coinmoo day room.
Gerard said be would like to see
a demonstration project grant
sought_ by not spendin~ money
on consultants
State Rep. j 0 Jm A. Carey Jr•• RWellston, said be was interested in
these ideas.
•
"The problem Is not only bere
but across 1he state," Carey said '
The 39-yeaE-old infirmary has
:w rooms available, with 14 restdents currently residing in the
rooms, according to matron Sharon
Bailey.
In olber action during its quarterly meeting, the board:
. • appoinrcd Paul ~ as project director for the corrections
board Janice Elkins as its community ~lease coordinator, and Nancy
Clark as its secretary.

,Rio Grande to increase rates

r-----------,
Gfi4DU4TION

priWe'~d'despite strides such a5 a

35 prisoners with relatively low
risk to tbe nearby hospital and
senior citizens' center, Gerard said.
Laundry, food and medical services are conveniently located
nearby with it&amp; access to Vetel'lllls
Memorial HOspital, be added.
The senior citizens living there
n'!w e.ould be ·placed else.wh.ere,
wuh m-home county serv1e.es
offered to them, Meigs Comm1ssioner Janet Howard·Tacc~eu ~·
Currently, the fac1hty ts ~Ql
adapted we!lto ~e needs or seruors
· because of Its stairs, Howard-Tack·
el! added .. And a .consultant has
Sllld upgrad.mg the mf~ would
not be ~1bl~, she exp~ned.
Comm1~s1on Preudent Fred
Hoffman sa.d tbe county bas, made
no plans .about the mrlfi!WY 5 us~.
He questioned .lhe costs mvolved 10
making lhe swuch.
.
. 1~ the ~t year, offic1als cbose a
.~1te m Gallia Count~ .ror a regiOnal
~atl to handle area Jrul overcrowdmg.
..
. .
The Me1gs Jal11s more 1ban 100

·Meigs commissioners approve
contract with public defender

Education secretary
pleads cas~ before·
parochial officials

TDD ONLY

797-4547 376-7123

I·

~. Puzzle
•

By GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY.- Transforming
the Meigs County InfllliUU)' into a
jail was discussed at a meeting of
the Community Corrections Board
Friday afternoon.
Noting cootinued ovcraowding
ill the existing county jail and the
recent need to ~ply with housing
handicapped and infum prisoners,
!he commission examined tbe idea
m some depth.
If lbe infumary would be psed,
an electronic mo~itor could be
placed on the pnsoners, board
member Paul Gerard said.
But lbe difficulty lies In paying
for a monitor system, be added.
Currently, the electronic monitor~
ing devices n~ed to be booked up
to telephones for use.
The infumary could bouse up to

--)

find a route for the transmission line,"

You'll be (/doting on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
c/assifieds.

Building access
•t d
CI e as reason
.#
• 11
•
.or conslueratlon

The Iines are strung so high to avoid

rivcrJraffic, Williams said. The plan!
and power lines will not affect barges
and othe r vessels, said George
Connoll y, lockmaster all he Belleville
Locks and Dam.
The terrain of Meigs Counly .will
not be 100 difficull to lraversc allhough there willbenumerouscrcek
cro~sings, Williams said.
~)"The biggcsl challenge has been to

OH-Point Pleasant, WV

Chamber recogriitio

·Corrections _b oard ·e yes
infirmary· as ·new.jail site

157" I

=

Pomero~iddleport-GalllpoHs,

j

Analysts find· nation's
economy staying solid

OHIO Weather

~~~~

April 23, 1995

Apr1123, 1815

Pomeroy-MidCJieport ~alllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, ¥.'V

. ATiffiNS (AP) ·- Mary Boyle,
who was defeated in a U.S . Senate
race, said she will run for a third
term as a Cuyahoga County commiSSioner next year.
Sbe lost in the 1994 Democratic
primary to attorney Joel Hyatt, who
was defeated by then-Lt. Gov.
Mike DeWine, a Republican, in lbe
11eneral election.
Boyle, wbo spoke in Athens
;Ibursday night, also said sbe was
sony that state Democratic Execu- .
tive Director Greg Haas withdrew
jiS a candidate for the party's chair·
manship . She said his decision
would not burt the party.
: Hany Mesbel, wbo bas been lbe
chainnan since Aprill993, has said
be expects to Icave the job in June .

•

'g'
"'lllli'

6.64
6.58
6.32

6.53
6.48
6,21

6.27
6.21
5.95

Recognition of those making outstanding contributions
to the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce hlgbllgbted, the
sixth annual dlnnerldance
held at Royal Oak Resort Frl·
day. HQrace Kart was the
recipient of the Outstanding
Chamber Leader award In
recognition of his contributions to the organization ove•
the past year. In the photo at
right, Karr Is presented a
plaque by Chamber President
Charles Kitchen. 'In lbe top
photo, recognition went to
past executive board members, from left, Joan MaY., Jeff
Thornton, Kitchen, •nd past
presidents . Paul Reed (1994)
and Denny Facemyer (1983).
Plans were announced for a
later presentation of' a living
memorial to the late Dave
Baker in recognition of his
contributions to the c:bamber.

Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service recorded four calls for
assistanCe Friday.
Units responding included:
SYRACUSE
4:16 a.m. Rock Springs Road,
Susan ·Baxter, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
MIDDLEPORT
5:51 p.m., North Second at
Cole, Middleport, Wl\Dda Stoban,
VMH.

RUTLAND.
5:53 p.m. New Lill)a Road/State
Route 143, motOi' vehicle accident,
Travis Thompson transported 10
Holzer Medical Center; Luella
King, treated but not trlmsporu;d .
POMEROY
9:50 a.m., State Route 7, Rodney Marshall, taken to VMH for
·
treabnent.

Several gold chains have been sold in this
area which are marked 14K but are actually
partially or totally gold plated. These have been
chemically tested by our staff. This practice of
wrongfully stamping gold jewelry·is deceptive
and illegal . .
We recommend the purchase of 10 Karat and
14 Karat gold at authorized jewelry retailers or
. outlets with a return policy.
THIS NOTICE IS A SERVICE FROM

JLcquisitions :Fine Jeweby
GALLIPOLIS - MIDDLEPORT

LIFESTYLE FUR.NITURE SHOWCASE

PRE-SEASON
SALE! I
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·

Closeout of Last Year's Co·ver·s.

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:

CONSUMER ALERT

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HELP!

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· aooount

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CHINA CABINETS AND LIVING ROOM TABLES -

Minimum deposits to open an account js $1,000.00.-Rates Indicate
annual percenlage y~kland are available for aeeounll open April 20
through April 26, 1995. A penalty for ee~y whhdrawal moy be
imposed. lnlerest compounded monthly, paid at maiUrlty of
certificate only. NG cheeks will be issued during lhe term of lhe
certifi~te. Above rates availabt6 at all Peoples 8ank locations.

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9-8 FRIDAY
•

�'

-

I
·-· April23,1895

Commentary

A . 23,199S .

•.

Sunday Tunes-Sen~ /A4

--Area Deaths-- -Tri-County Briefs:--. Meigs County Court ·

Justice agency moves·against health 'fraud :
A DIYIIICIIl of

lll c-t SL, l'umeroJ, Olllo
(6l4) fn.ll56

ltOBERT L WINGBTI'
l'lablloioor
.

HOBART WILSON JR.
Enwtt.. l!dllor

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

A MEMBER or The AuociaWI ~~. Ialand Daily Presa
Auociatioo aod·tbo American NewiJ'II*' Publilhen Alsociatioo.
LETI'I!RS OP OPINION are welcome. Tiley lbould be le11 !ban
Allletten are aubjoc:t ID oditia&amp; aod mUll be oi&amp;ned wilb .
name. addte11 qd ~lepbone nuinber. No unalaaed let~ra will be
pliblilbed. Letters &amp;bould be ill &amp;ood lUte, lddre&amp;liD&amp; iiiUOI, not
pei'IOllllitieo. ,

300 wonk lona.

Washington Today:

Congress' secQnd 100
days may set agenda
for campaigns in 199_
6.
.

WASHINGTON - In one of
the mosl sweeping health care
ftaud investigations in bistory, the
Justice Department is considering
civil prosecution of up to 80 percent of the nation's hospitals for
allegedly submitting. false Medl·
care claims.
Attorneys from several hospitals
have already met with Jus lice
Department officials and are lreal·
ing the situation like a political
code blue. Officials from the
American Hospital Association
(AHA), which represents the
majority of tbe nation's hospitals,
plan to meel soon with Gerald
·Slern, Justice's point-man on
health care fraud.
AHA General Counsel Fred
Entin says that in the Jli!SI hospitals
have been allowed to simply repay
uniritentional overcharges. He fears
.the probe may "represent a real
shift" in government altitudes
toward the health care industry. .
"They're taking a sledge bam·
mer approach to a problem that l:an
be h~.ndled with a mu~b smaller
tool, . says Charles Rmstacher, a
Washmgton attorney who rep~esents health care defendaniS.

.: Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, April23, the II 3th day of 19951 There arc 252 days
left in the .year.
.
Tixlay's Highligbt in llistory:
April 23. 1564, is the generally accepted birthdate Of the English poet
and dratnatist William Shakespeare. He died on the same date 52 years
later.
'
On this date:
In 13.48, .King Edward III of England established the Order of the
Garter.
·
;r •
Jn 1616, the Spanish poet Cervantes died in Madrid (the same 'day
·
Williatn Shakespeare died in Stratford·on-Avon, England).
·'
In 1789, President-elect Washington and his wife moved into thcJtrst
executive mansion. tbc Franklin'House, iQ New York.
In 1791, the 15th president of the United States, ~ames Buchanan, was
. born in Franklin County, Pa.
,
In 1896. tbc Vitascope system for projecting movies onto a screen was
demonstrated at a music hall in New York City.
In 1940, about200 people died in a dance hall fire in Natchez. Miss. .
In J 954, Hank Aaron of the Milwaukee Braves hit the first of his
record 755 major-league home runs, in a game against the St. Louis Cardinals. (The Braves won the game, 7-5.)
In !968, the Methodist Church and the Evangelical Uniled Breiluen
Church merged to form the United Methodist Church.
In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to death for the assassination of
u.s. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. (The sentence was later reduced to life
imprisonment)
In 1992, McDonald'$ opened its ftrst fast-food restaurant in !be Chi·
nese capital of Beijing.
Ten years ago: The Coca-CoJa Company announced it was changing
,o~-lhe secret flavor formula for Coke, the world's best-selling soft-drink';
negative public reaction forced the company to resume selling the original
version.
Five years ago: Freed American hostage Robert Polhill, released in
Lebanon the day before, enjoyed his first full day of freedom at the U.S.
Air Force hospital in Wiesbaden, West Germany.

By

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, By WALTER R.. MEARS
AP Spedal Correspondent
WASHINGTON-- Somehow, the second hundred days sounds routine- none of lhe flair and excirement of the firSt But that pbase of the
congressional calendar will shape a record both the Republicans and President Clinton will carry into next year's catnpaign for the White House.
::
The Republicans' fi!St installment was striking, showy. and delivered
•• at top speed in lhe House, where they beat by a week their promise to vote
:: on their major proposals within one hundred days. It's slower in the Sen:• ate, of course, and that will be the crucial arena for those GOP bills when
•• Congress reconvenes.
;:
"Ours is going to be lhe second hundred days," said Sen. Bob Dole,
;; . the ml\jority leader and the leading GOP candidate to challenge Clinton
~&gt; : &lt; nextyear.
.
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This also wiD be the season for debate, and perhaps action, on the most
.; :volatile of social issues, matters such as abortion funding, reslnlints on
:· · :affll'lllative action, school prayer !!lid more. Activist House Republicans
:, were persuaded to hold off on those divisive measures while their leaders
,. pushed action on their "Contract with America." But they've been
,••• promised action in the months just ahead.
::
Add to that the budget slmggle lhl!t will be unfolding now. Republi': • callS have promised to put the·government on track to a balanced budget
•• in seven years, and cut taxes at the same time. Campaigning for presiden~
•~ , Dole bas signed on to that echo of Ronald Reagan economics.
:: ·. Now they've gor to say bow tbcy'll get to the $1.2 trillion in savings
:• against projected spending needed to get to balance. They avoided delaits·
·: . at the star~ pushing instead for the broad commitment of the balanced
~~ 'budget amendment, passed by the House but blocked by •a single vote in
· •• the Senate.
The House has approved a $188 bUlion, five-year tax cut. Clinton said
;
:0 that's too mucb, and wants $64 billion in middle class tax breaks. The
; : · Senate probably will produce a tax bill between tbose two proposals.
•:
Clinton also bas decided to push welfare ;reform, once a prime issue for
:• him, but shelved after he took office, in whach turned out to·be a political
=· misstep. He calls it an issue on which there ought to be political agree:: men~ to ge! it done.
.
But again, the dilemma is the details. The president said the Republi•• .
•! can bill the House passed "is too weak on work and too tough on chit: dren." He also warned against letting welfare be lumped into the broader
:: bun.;et debate and buried in a pile of other issues. .
. .
;•
•'Welfare reform is too important for tbatldnd of Washington gatne, ·'
• he said, cballenging Congress to get him a reform bill by tbc Fourth of
: July, a deadline that won't be met:
:
Tbe.Senate returns from its .Easter recess on Tuesday, the House a
week from Monday.
•
Clinton said they've got to join in making divided goverrullent work.
. :
"Before the Easter break, the House ... produced a flurry of ideas and
• proposals," the preside~t sai~.• "Some of them were good, some need
: · work, some should be rejected.
·
In his hundred day review, on prime TV time, presidential style, House .
Speaker Newt Gingrich said that was only the preliminary skinnish for
big b~tUes to come ..•..... All of us together, Republicans' and Democrats
·alike, must totally remake the federal government," he said.
Clinton's rejoinder:
"In the ftrst hundred days, it (ell to the House of Representatives to
propose. In the next hundred days and beyond, the president bas to lead
the quiet, reasoned forces of both parties to sift through the rhetoric and
decide what is really best for America."
Defining what's best, of course, is where the political argument begins.
It.will intensify in the next three months. Clinton bas said presidential
politics should wait, governing should come firSt But they will increasingly be bound together, especially in the third hundred days, in the fall
buildup toward the crucial operting months of the 1996 GOP race.
The president says be wasn't elected to produce vetoes, nor Congress
to generate issues for the next election catnpaign.
·
Dut they will.
(Walter R. Mears, vice presld•nt and columnist for The Associated
Press, has reported on Washington and national politics £or more
than 30 years.)

At issue is whether hospitals
David Barascb, the U.S. auor. essentially double-billed Medicare ney in Harrisburg, Pa., has been
for various diagnostic tesiS, which spcarbeading the probe, which was
were performed on an outpatient · receolly expanded to include more
than 4,600 health care facilities
Jack An..,ers-O'" nationwide . Since December,
Ul
~•
Barasch's !)IT'JCC has 'mailed letterS
and
to nearly 200 hospitals in Pennsylvania aa:usinB them of overcbarJ·
Michael Binstein ing for oulpatient diagnostic testing
and threatening civil lawsuits
basis in conjunction with inpatient unless IIley settle.
care.
.
·
.The ret;nalning 4,400 letters are
Hospital adminiirators. who are expected to be issued soon, with
pleading for understanding, have the rust batch beaded for Indiana,
been wanted repeatedly about these . Jllinois and Florida. Although
abuses. Four successive audits by declining to cite specific instituthe Department of Health and lions. prosecutors say several PennHuman Services found that most sylvania hospitals have already
hospitals examined overcharged entered into negotiations with lhe
· Medicare by submilling false government
claims for certain OUipatient tests.
"We have a situation today
Prosecutors note that hospitals where there's Ialli: of cutting (Mediwere warned of the false claims at care) benefits and services/ •
' least three times since 1983. Barasch told our associate Dean
Although the institutions paid back Boyd. •'But before we start doing
many of the claims before 1990, that, 'it's the view of the Justice
theY. continu.ed to· double bill for Department that we need to get.
the testing. After a fourth audit more aggressive in cracking down
uncovered more false claims in on false claims and fraud in Medi·
1991, HHS investigators referred care."
the case to Justice.
Barasch also noted that if li!J· ·

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Federal prosecutors have urged
lhe Pennsylvania hospitals to settle
for the amount of the overbilling
plus a penalty. The government
hopes to recoup some $30 million
in overbillings to.Medicarc in addllion to another $20 millim in fmes.
Under any proposed selllement
agreement, sources say, hospitals,
would have to institute an interoal
compliance and training progratn.
They would also have to reimburse
MediQ!re benefiCiaries for any copayments and deductible&amp; paid as a

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Among the most common
grievances from ,donors is lhe lack
· of presidential cufflinks, pens and
wind-breakers bearing the Camp
David emblem. Part of the problem
seems to be perle:-envy: Some of the
complainers are Democratic donors
whose law firms also include
prominent Republicans, who. can
point to their mementos from the
Bush and R91gan administrations.

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W.

C_
o nfusion in the natio~'s t~p _ bureal.Jcracy
NEW YORK- For millions of
Americans tax D-Day was just the
beginning, because if the past is a
guide, .many people are destined to
have an adversarial confrontation
with theiRS this year.
It could be a maddening expelience because, according to a Gencral Accounting Office study, the
Internal Revenue Service is apt to
be wrong in its own calculations.
In one study, in. 1988, Lhe GAO
found 48 percent of all IRS coriespondence and actions regarding
account adjustments were either
''incorrect, unresponsive, unclear
or incomplete.''
Though unforgiveable, the confusion is understandable.' The tax
code is now more than 17,000
pages of laws and regulations, and
hundreds of thousands of pages of
court decisions, rulings, opinion
letters, memoranda...
Nobody , including those in
Congress woo wrote the law, those
in the IRS whose job it is to ioter·
pret the law, and those who try to
fulfill the law can ever be cert;lin
~y. are right or wron~. Confused,

Daniel J. Piila, a· St. Paul, Minn.,
tax litigation consultant, documentS'
the appalling story of .i!,~ out-ofcontrol bureaucracy with unique
·

J 0 h n Cunniff
··

and incredible powers.
Pilla published his thoroughly
documented paper under the aus·
piccs of the Cato Institute, a Washington think tank, and delivered it
at a lbrum there on April 15. Here
are some excerpts:
• The IRS telephone tgxpaycr
assistance program provides about
8.5 nlillion Americans the wrong
an£wcrs to even the most basic
inquiries about the tax laws.
• About 10 million Americans
this year will receive correction
notices from the IRS assessing
about $4 billion. About half of
these notices will be ini:oi'J'ect.
• About 40 pcrcent _of the rev·
enucs the IRS collects through
penalty assessments are abated
when citizens· challenge the penallies. In 1993 taxpayers were over~
charged $5 billion.
In one of the most chilling docu·
• A General Accounting Office
ments a taxpayer is likely to see, i audit of .the IRS in 1993 found

wadespread evadcnce of financial
malfeasance and gross negligence.
The IRS could not account for 64
pe!C~nt of its congressional appropnauon.
.Unforgiveable, but maybe
understandable when you consider
the workload.
In the 1980s, the tax laws were
altered more than 100 times, and
the Tax Reform Act of 1986,
designed to simplify matters,
resulted in amendments to more
than 2,000 sections of the code and
creation of more than 100 new
forms .
.
.In just 1993 alone, said Pilla, the
IRS bad to revise and then test
more IIJ,an 6,100 computer software
programs; design or revise 250
forms and 110 publications; train
or retrain 29,000 service center
employees.
Despite goals and promises of
simplification, the runaway bureau- ·
cracy grows like a fantastic fungus,
compelling half of filers, or 57.5
millioncitizens,toseckprJfession·
a1 help in 1992.1n 1981, lbe percentage wasjust41 million . ._
Even then, fliers have no. assurance their retWlls are accurate. Nor
do IRS.advisers. In 1989,'the GAO

found !be IRS answe•ed correctly
and completely 62.8 percent of taxpayer inquiries to its assistance
program.
.
· .
IRS accuracy improved after
thai, said Lhe GAO, providing 89
percent accuracy to ·77 million
inquiries by 1993. But even with
that improvement, 8.3 million
inquiries were answered incorrectly
or incompletely.
·
Meanwhile, the GAO reported
that service to taxpayers was
declining in another way. People'
who called during the 1993 filing
~cason, for exatnple, bad just a one
m four _chance _of getting through,
vs. one m Lhree m 1992.
The picture drawn by Pilla in his
30-page report is that of a bureaucracy growing in spite of efforts to
thwart growth and becoming more
complex with every attempt to sim·
plify. J\!ld more wasteful and dom·
ineerin~ as welL
•
Copces at $4 each are available
from Cato, 1000 Messacbusetts
Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C.
.20001.
(John Cunniff Is a business
analyst for Th Associated
Pnss.)

111111 Dqlbcws.

Curtis W. Christian ·Sr.

IRON'OON- Curtis W. Christian Sr., 71, Ironton, died Friday, April .
21, 199S athis'resicleoce.
·
.
Born June 29, 1923 in Lawreooe County. son of lhe late Harrison E.
, • 111111 Martha E. Wilson Cbristian, be was formerly employed as a service
repairman for the Murpbcy·De•Cbea:olo Co.
.
He was a member of the Improved Order.of Redmen, a 44-year member of Shawnee Tribe 118, Past Great Sachem of Ohio. and a past member
'&lt;c
of the Perry Towosbip Volunteer Fare Depanmenr. where he served as a
dlspatc:ber. A notary public for 3S years, he was a Cherokee fiddler and
played in the Ironton MeJIIO(ial Day Pamde for 35 yems. A member of the
Baptist failh, be graduated from Kills Hill High School in 1943.
Surviving are bis wife, Anna E. Besco Christian, whom be married ·
SepL 30, 1945; two sons, CurtisW. Christian Jr. ofDaytoo, and Daniel A.
(Pamela K.) Christian of Ashland, Ky.; a daughter, Mis: Steven (Yvonne
· . A.) Brown of Gallipolis; three grandchildren, Scott A. Brown and Sean A. ·
Brown, both of Gallipolis, and Michelle Clay or Dayton; and a greatgrandchild.
.
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He was also l)teCeded in death by several brothers and sisters.

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Services wilt be held at the convenience of the family. Anangements
are by the Pbillips Funeral Home, Ironton.
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Lora
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Binstein are columnists for United F.oature Syndicate.)

Carry on,
Fred W. Crow ·
. EDITOR'S NOTE- Longtame attorney Fred W. Crow is
h
I e contributor of a weekly column ror The Sunday Times-Senllnel. Readers wishing to
applaud, criticize or comment on
any subject (except religion or
poUtics) are e~!'ouraged to write
to Mr . Crow In cure of this
newspaper.

Us. IIICI llllleS Champer of Pleasantpn, Calif.; eiJht grandcbildreli. I~
grcat·gnmdcbildrea ahd 20 great·great·granddaildren; aud several nie=

•·

(Jacli Anderson and Michael

life. This man bas spent a considerable amount of time and money on
his book. At the present time it is
selling for the retail price of $15. ·
The writer believes Ibis will be a
Meigs County classic and would
recommend its ·purchase. This goes ,.
without baviJJg read the book, but
knowing Opie is enough .. To order
the book write to Opie Cobb at691
Sycamore St., Middleport, Ohio
45760. The following is from
Opie's book:
.
"A Measure of Your Importance": "Sgm~: day when you're
. feeling important, some day when
your ego's in bloom, .some day
when you're feeling you're the
'most important man in the room,
take a bucket and fill it with water,
stick your band in it up to the wris~
pull it out, and the hole that ·
remains is a measure of bow much
you'll be missed. You may spiash
all
·h b
you was w en you enter, stir
the water around galore, but you'll
find when you finally leave it, it's
exactly the same as before. So as
f ll
d ·1
you 0 ow your ~· Y agenda,
always do. the best you can, be
proud of yourself, but remember,
there is no indispensable man."
.
In Gnd We Trust,·

per ot Cnhnnbus. Wayne Cbamper ot;MarionOoavid Cbampet ot Galljpo-

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Dickey

GALLIPOLIS -Lora S. Dickey, 78, 74 E. Court St., Gallipolis, died
Friday, April21, 1995 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Feb. 24, 1917 in Huntington, W.Va. daughter of the late Satnuel
and Clara Mehl Smith, she served as a Gallia County deputy auditor during the tef!ll' of be' husband, Monon E. Dickey, who preceded her in
death on Sept. 5, 1994.
She was also a mel)lber of the Farst Presbyterian Omrch of Gallipolis.
Surviving are a ·niece, Louise D. Sager of Columbus; two great·
nephews, John 'and Craig Sager, !Kith of Gallipolis; and tbrce great-nieces,
. Beth Geartieart and Nancy Sager, both of Columbus, and Lorrie Slone of
Wes~ Manchester:
· She was also preceded in death by two brothers. ·
·
Services will.be 11 a.m. Monday in the First Presbyterian Church, with
lhe Rev. AI Earley officiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the church one hour prior to lhe service.
Arrangements are by the McCoy·Moore Funeral Home Wetberholt
Chapel, Gallipolis.

Harry ~- Greathouse

The big game of 1935 and Opie . Cobb's book .
On Sept. 30, 1995, Notre Dame the_football game of ihe century by reported as alive is Floyd Stahl.
pla,ys football against OSU in nataonal sportscasters. The writer is Francis
Schmidt, Ernie Godfrey,
Columbus. Six~y years prior to that attempting to beat the drums for the Pete Stinchcomb, Pete Gailus, Ted
date, Ohio State lost a football gatne on Sept. 30, 1995.
Heironymous 11nd Tucker Smith,
game to Notre Datne in Columbus
the trainer, are all deceased.
by a score of 19-13. The writer,
/=red
Crow
It is tp be noted that three southhaving played in the 1935 game, is
eastetn
Ohio football players were
II would be nice if the Notre
aucmpting to scbedule a reunion of
on Ibis team - Cliarles Hamerick,
sorts that Will catch the nation's Dame team of 1935 could be pre- tackle; Tip Dye, quarterback; and
eye. At the present time we have sent at the banquet honoring Ibis Fred Crow, left end. In 1935 playwritten the OSU Athletic Depart- event .. In this connection however, ers played bolb offense and
tbcrc arc not too many players and defense. If you were removed from
men~ the Varsity 0 , and Buckeye
coaches
left who arc still living.
Boosters to get into lhe act
the game in any portion of a quarThe Varsity O-furnisbed us with . ter you were ineligible to return to
' This should not be bard to do
when you review the history of the the following current names of tbe game for that quarter. There
1935 game. OSU was a~cad of some of the living and its records was only one team on the field
Notre Dame by two touchdowns · show that there were four ends, . playing
that day . The specialists
with a few minutes left to play. namely Merle Wend~ Saui Busicb,
were
none
the player bad
Notre Dame then scored a second Fred Crow and Trevor Rees; one to appear beCI!use
on both offense and
touchdown making the score 13- tackle, -Red Haare; guard, Jim defense. In 1935 the field was grass
12.
Karchner ani:l Charles Ream; tack .. turf: Also, the maximum attenThe extra point Was kicked by le, Warren Chrissner, Gustv Zarnx; dance was about 60,000 people.
Wally Frombart. Yours truly was Tippy Dye, quarterback; Nick They have reduced the size of the
.sent in to block Ibis kick, and be Wasylik, quarterback; Jim MeDon·
so that 30,000 more people
was successful. The ball struck. him aid, Jumping Joe Williams, half . seats
can now occupy the same stadium.
in tbc left forearm, thus causing the back; Frank Antenucci, fullback; The sjze of the band is about the
extra point to be missed. With less Dick Beltz, hallback.
than one minute to go; Notre Dame
You can sec that, for the most same as in 1935. They played bet·
1935.
threw .a long desperation pass into part, the firs! OSU players have ter Iinhope
\O be present at this game
the endzone which was caught by gone to their rewards. In short, if living. I have written the alhletic
Milner, later an all pro end in the there ain't many left. There are a deparunent for permission to land a
.National Football League.
lot of us now living who are physi· helicopter near the field of play if
There was but a few seconds left catty handicapped. Some help may this is necessary for me to auend
when the winning touchdown was . have to be given for these players this game.
scored. This cost the Buckeyes a to be on the field on t11is historic
I have been waiting quite a few
Nationa.l Football Collegiate day.
years for this event to occur and I
I ·ll
Championship for the year 1935.
Some of the more prominent h
WI be part of the activities.
This touchdown also .cost the OS U players that are now deceased . Inope
the event I am deceased then,
undersigned a chance of being the are as follows: Victor Dorris, other arrangements have been
star of Lhc game. What happened· Charles Hamock. John Bcttridge, made for this gatne in September
after that may be portrayed in later Richard Heekin, John Kabaelo,
1995 Don' be
· d
·
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surpnse ·
writings on this story. The City of Ernie Roush, Gomer Jones. Capw bAboutd'Opje Cobb
Columbus and the State of Ohio tain, Frank Fisch, Stan Pincura,
e ave · ascovered that Opie
were stunned by this defeat. The Red Cumiskey, and Red Kleinbans.
game itself bad been referred to as The only coach on that team who is Cobb bas written a book about the
events ~t happened during Opie's

. ~IS-: Waller V. Cblmpcr, 89, 906 SeC0Dc1 Ave., Gallipolis, died Friday, Apil21. 1995 in Pl-•ent Vlllcy Hospilm.
~ PeL 9, 190S in Patriot. son of the late William Ch!l"'per and
Reaeie ,!&gt;'mnnood: he was employed .a t Columbus State Hospital and
GaDIIJn!u. Stille ~lito!C. He wi.s a U.S. Navy vetaan.
SumVIDll are bis wife, f1omlce Edith au..nper four sons Ray Cham-

....
.
He wasllbo preceded in death by bis first wife. Virginia Folden Cbaa)·
per, Oil May 28, 1941; two sons, Ebner Champea and Roaa1d E. Champer;
•. 111111 three brothers and four sisters.
-: ~ will be 2 p.m. Ttiesday in the w.uis Funeral Home. with the
j
Rev. Jun Lusher officialin£. Burial will be in lhe Bethesda Cemetelly
Stale Rourc 77S. Friends may call a1 the ftmeral bomc 011 Momlliy from ~
9p.m.
Graveside services will be cooducted by VFW Post 14464, Gallipolis.

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resul~ofthefalsepaims.

It may be an offer tbatilospitals
can't refuse: If a hospital declines
to settle; it risks civil prosecution
under the False Claims Act and
.could be bit with fines of at least
$5,1J90 per claim plus biple dam·
ages.
PERK-ENVY - Since -taking
charge of the Democratic National
Committee, Sen. Christopher
Dodd, D·Conn .• lias fell at times
more like a concierge than general
chairman. · ·
•
Dodd bas' made 10 ltips around
the oountry this year to raise money
for tlie DNC and lay the groundwork for the 1996 election. While
Dodd tries to make the case tb~t
Democrats are delivering, seine,big
donors have complained as much
about the lack of binkets and tender-loving-care as they have about
the political performance of President Clinton.

..

Walter V•.Cham per

lice allows hospitals to simply
reimburse for overbillin&amp;s when·
they get caught, there will be no
"incentive for th~ to stop the
practice."

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-AS

Pome..Oy-Middleport-Galiipolis, OH Point Pleasant, WV

,

RACINE - Harry Byrne Greathouse, 69, Vine Street, Racine, died
.Friday, Apri121, 1995 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born April27, 1925 in Sutton, W.Va., son of the late Ivan and Belle
Coeger Greathouse; he was a deckhand for Reserved Towing of Apple
Grove. A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, be was a member of the
Parkersburg (W.Va) VFW and the Syracuse Nazarene Church.
Surviving are his wife, Dor1Jti!Y Justice Greathouse; a daughter and
son-in-law, Catnelia and.Jame.s McGregor of Colorado Springs, Colo.; a
son and daugbter-in-law, Malcolm and Sylvia Greathouse of Washington,
W.Va; a stepson and wife, Dennis and·Cindy Wolfe of Racine; a stepdaughter and husband, Sandra and Qary Milch of Pomeroy; 12 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; two sisters, Lenna Russell of Marietta,
and Ethel Eagleton of Flint. Mich.; and three brothers, CarroU Greathouse
of Stamford, Conn., and Okey Greathouse and Henry Greathouse, both of
Aorida.

Graveside services wiD oo I p.m. Tuesday in the Letart Falls Chapel,
with the Rev. Lloyd Grimm officiating. Burial will be in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. There wiU be no calling hours. Arrangements are by the Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
.Military graveside rites will be performed by the Drew.Webster Post of
the American Legion.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Unverferd House, 190
King Ave., Columbus, Obio.

Christina Marie Polcyn
•,

•,

GALLIPOLIS - ChriStina Marie Polcyn, infant daughter of Anthony
and Carol.Polcyn of Columbus, died f:riday, April 21, 1995 in the Denbatn Springs (La.) Medical.Center. ·
.
.
.
Services will be held at tbc convenience of the fanuly and bunal Will
be in the StLouis Cemetery, with Monsignor William R. Myers official·
ing.
.
Arrangements arc by the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
,.

Isis Ferne Scott
GALLIPOLIS -Isis Ferne Scott, 81, Mount Sterling, died Friday,
April 21, 1995 iri Grant Medical Center, Columbus.
Born Oct. 10, 1913 in Cheshire Township, Gallia County,.daugbter of
the late Clarence E. and Goldie Swisher Peters, she was retired from the
Kroger Bakery in Columbus, and was a member of the Old Kyger
Church.
.
·
Surviving are two sons, Jerry (Phyllis) Scott of New Haven, W.Va.,
and Donald Scott of Moun~ Sterling; two daughters, Janice (Roben) L.ucas
and Anita Fife; both of Cheshire; 12 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren; two brothers, Vaughn Peters of Columbus, and Earl Peters of
Las Vegas, Nev.; and four sisters, Bernice Will of California, Christine
Dudding of.-Nitro, W.Va.. ·Lorene Lucas.of Cheshire, and Georgia Garri·
son of Aleron.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Hoine. with the Rev. Eldon Shingleton officiating. Burial will be in the
Gravel Hill Cemetery; Cheshire. Friends may call at the fun~ral home on
Monday from 6-9 p.m.

Gray Panthers
founder is dead
PHD,.ADELPHIA (AP) -Maggie Kuhn, who decided retirement
age was no reason to give up and
helped found the Grny Panthers as
a tool against discrimination and
the Vielnam War, died Saturday at .
age 89 .
Kuhn died at home in her
nurse's arms, said her Personal secretary, Sue Leary. She bad suffered
from arthritis and osteoporosis for
years.
"She bad always said sbe want·
ed to die before she reached the age
of 90 and sbe was going to turn 90
in August. She kind of died her
way," said Laura Quinn, who
helped Kuhn write her autobiography, No Srone Untumed: Till Life
and Times of Maggie Kuhn.
''The country is losing one of its
most indefatigable activists,"
Quinn said. "She epitomized the
power s:Jf the grass roots."

POMEROY - The following · Only; underage conswnptioa. CIOitS.
cases were ~ last week in I 0. days jail suspended 10 three
the Meigs Countj Court of Judge days concurrent, ,two years proba·
Patrick H1O'Brien.
lion;
Fined were: Cynthia Swisher,
· Terry D. Hayes ; Pomeroy,
Syracuse, speed, $30 plus costs; domestic violence, $100 plus COSII,
Timothy. Pattersoo, Racine, failure one year· probation , 30 days jail
to me and pay annual registration suspended to live days; Russell L.
fee, $20 plus costs; Dl!le Fellers. Nutter, Tuppers Plains, no OL.
Greensboro, N.C .. speed. $30 plus $100 plus costs. one year proba:
costs; Tonia Rice, Coolville, speed, lion, three days jail suspended if
$30 plus costs; Michael R. Ander· valid OL presented within 90 days;
son, Gladys, Va.• $30 plus costs; Donald P. Bunce, Pomeroy, speed,
Melissa Downing, Pomeroy, reck· $20 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus
· less operation, $100 plus-coSls; costs; Arlene Scarberry, Middle·
failure to drive within marked por~ speed, S22 plus costs; Hank
lanes, costs only;
. · G. Rood, Reedsville, furnishing
Harry R. Butcher, Pomeroy; alcohol to person under 21, srso
dd\&lt;lng under the inlb!en~. s~ro plus costs, 10 days jail suspended,
plus costs, 60 days jail suspended one year probation;
to 20 days, one year operator's
Brandy Barber, Reedsville,
license suspension, one year proba· underage consumption, costs. three
lion; drug abuse, costs, 30 days jail days jail suspended, two years prosuspended to 20 days concurrent bation; Bo!&gt;bie J. Scarbrough ,
with DUI, 'o ne year probation; Reedsville, seat belt ; S I 5 plus
Terry L. Downgard, Pomeroy, costs; James Vining, Syracuse,
DUI, $750 plus oosts, 30 days jail speed, $22 plus costs; seatl:lelt. $25
suspended to 10 days, one year OL plus costs; Greg Ryan, Pomeroy,
suspens)on, one year prqbation, 90-· assault. $150 plus costs, 30 days
day vehicle immobilization; left of jail suspended, one year probation,
center, costs only;
restraining order; Debra L. Hurlow,
· Donald R. Spencer. Long BOI· Point Pleasant, W.Va., failure to
tom, DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days yield from a stop sign, $30 plus
jail· suspended to three days, 180- costs; John M. Demoss, l;'omeroy,
day OL suspension, one year pro- seat belt, $25 plus costs;
bation, jail and $250 of fine susSherry Herdman , Rutland, fail·
pended ~pon completion of resi·
ure
to send child to school, $1 ()()
dential treatment program; &lt;::bristobond
to be posted and held until
pber A. Brown, Pomeroy. DUI,
end
of
school year; T·im.oth y
$500 plus costs, 180-day OL susDavidson,
Pomer oy, receivin g
pension, 10 days jail suspended to
siolen
property,
costs, five year;
three days, one year probation, jail
probation,
six
monlhs
jail suspend·
and $250 of fine suspended upon
ed;
completion of residential treaonent
program; failure to control. costs .

GDC slates warning siren test
GALLIPOLIS - The tornado warning ~ystem at Gallipolis
Developmental Ccater will be tested on Monday from 4: 15 to 4:25
p.m. 111111 on Wednesday between 10 and 10:10 a.m., GDC officials

sail

.

The tornado siren is a one-minute intennillcnt sound and the "all
clear'' siren is a ooe-minurc solid sound, officials said.
'

Mystery farm winner named
-GAlliPOLIS - Betty Walker, 73 Locust St., Gallipolis, was
named winner ol the Gallia Soil &amp;: Water Couservation Disbict and
Sunday Times:&amp;nliurs April 16 mystery farm contest.
. The farm pboto tbat,appeared in last Sunday's paper belongs to
Mr. and Mrs. Merrill L.' I':vans, 2362 E. Bethel Church Road in
Springfield T9wnship.

SBC slates open house Wednesday
GALLIPOLIS - An open house in honor of National Secre·
!aries' Day has heel) set for Wednesday from 4-6 p.m. at Southeast·
em Business College, Suite 312, 1176 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
The featured speaker will be Sandy Perkins of the Business and
Professional Women's Associlition.
.
Members or the SBC staff will be on hand to discuss secretarial
programs and continuing education opponunities. Refreshments
will be provided: For more information, call446-4367. . .

Juvenile court seniences female
GALLIPOLIS - A 17-year-old female was senrenced recently
in Gallia County Juvenile Court to the Ohio Deparunent of Youth
·Sj:rvices ftr a minimum of six months, the court annqunced. ,
Judge Thomas S. Moulton said the youth was convicted .of
receiving stolen propeny, a third-degree felony; unauthorized use of
a motor vehicle, a fourth-degree felony; an~ lheft. also.a fourth·
degree felony.
·
.
The convictions stemmed from .three separate incidents over a
six-month period, Moulton said.

Rutland man injured in crash-

.

HARRISONVILLE- A car-motorcycle crash at tbe .inrersection of state routes 143 and 684 Friday SCIJI ati area man to Holzer
Medical Center with minor visible injury, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol said.
Travis M. Thompson, 18, 32078 Side HiU Road, Rutland, was
transported by the Meigs EMS, where be was treated and released
for abrasions.
Troopers said Thompson was .northbound on 143 at 5:15 p.m.
when a westbound car driven. by Louella E. King, 68, Rt. 4,
· Pomeroy, pulled from 684 into Thompson's path. Thompson's
mororcycle collided with the car, troopers said.
· Datnage was moderate to the motorcycle and slight to King's
car. King was cited for failure to yield:
·

City police issue citations to three
GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police early Saturday
were Richard D. Saunders, 32, 20 Chambers Road, Crown City,
driving under the influence and red light violation; and Bcnjatnin J.
Wallace, 19, 920 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, loud exhaust and window
tint violation.
·
Cited Friday was Dennis R. Pauley, 19, Bidwell, for failure to
yield.

Area man booked into jail
G~LIPOLIS-

Booked into the Gal~a County Jail atl:30 a.m.
Saturday was Gerald 1Yon BIQOmfaeld, 30, 525 Polecat Road, Gallipolis, on Gallia Coubty Sheriffs Deparunent charges of disorderly
after warning and falsification.
Bloomfield is also facing an unspecified warrant, sherifr s officials Said.
·

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Sales - Rental - Seroice

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY

Editor's note: Names and addresses are printed as they
appear on ofradal~reportS. All newsworthy actions will he pub. lished without exception.

Four accidents
are investigated
POMEROY - Four one·vehi·
cle accidenls Friday and Saturday
morning were reported to the
Meigs County Sheriff' s•Department.
Reported Saturday morning was
an accident in which a 1994 Ponti· .
ac owned by Monica Hill, S yra·
cuse, was parked on 'third Street,
jumped out of .gear and drifted '
againsl utility pole. Datnage was
moderate, it was reported.
Three accident reports were
taken Friday. AI 7 a.m. on Forest
Run Road, Scott A. Hunter, Canal
Winchester, operating .a 1989
Chevrolet truck owned by Kokosing Conslmction Co., shUck a deer
on the roadway. Damage to the
pickup was light
At 8. a.m. on Pine Grove Road,
Robyn Hawk, Pomeroy, was traveling south on Pine Grove Road in
her 1970 Ford when she met another vehicle, got too close to the right
edge of !be road, dropped off the
pavement and lost control.
Damage was moderate to the
front and left side. She was taken
by private vehicle to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
At 7:30 p.m., deputies took a
report of an accident on Eagle
Ridge Road. Tom Wilson Jr., Middleport, traveling east in his 1982
Chevrolet, said that his brakes
failed and he, went off the left side
of the roadway in the curve and
struck the embankment. Danage
was moderate.

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3 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS , OHIO
•
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In Loving Memory Of

STANLEY BURDELL LAMBERT

Rock ol Ages offers you a choice ol 6 different colored granites.
Whllever your requirements may be, . complete satislacllon is
assured with Rock of Ages.
Hours: g:oo-4:00 M·T·Th·F. Others by appointment
593-6586 or 446-2327

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
352 Thircllve.

Ph. 446·2327

Gallipolis, OH.

Whon1 will he greatly missed.
We have suffered the loss of a very loving,
compassionate and patient man. Your love and
support has not gone unnoticed and will never be
forgotten by your family. Your love still shines through
all your sorrow. You will hurt no longer. Someone does
love you as much .as you loved them.
God Bles~ \lo1.1, We Love You. ·
EspeciaUy Christene Tackett
'
Tom•a Fuller
NatashaI &lt;Marie) Thckett
B.art Boggs
Christooher fackett

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Ohio/W.Va.

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Apri123, 1995

Ohio News ·in Brief:
Five boaters rescued from lake
LOGAN - Five Fairfield County family members clung to a
capsized boat fq- nearly two hours before being rescued, officials
said.
They were treated for bYJ)Oibennla at Hoelting Valley Community Hospital and released. 1be five were identified as James Retzer,
37; and stepsons Joe Proulex, IS; and Jeremy Proulex. 12; ·au of .
Lancaster; Retzer's brother-in-law. Steve Jones, 37; and Jones' son,
Bill, 16; both of Sugar Grove.
. The group was fisbing when the boat capsized about 8:15 p.m.
Thursday. A passer-by heard their cries for belp and called police
about IO:IQ p.m. Officers then contacted tile Logan County Fire
Department. said Dan Ubby, a diver on tile deparunent's dive res-

cue team.

The water .tempel'ature was 56 degrees, said Dave Robinette,
manager of Lake Logan State Park. The boaters were rescued about
200 yards from the shore of the 400-acre lake;. The accident remains
under investigation.
.
The 12-foot outboard boat. rated to carry about545 pounds. was
earrying more than 800 pounds when it capsized, Robinette said.
. r,

Realtors warn of time-share ideas
COLUMBUS - People trying to sell lime-share or vacation
property should beware of companies guaranteeing a sale, Ohio real
estate officials saiiJ.
The Ohio Dep&lt;ttUDent or Commerce, which regulates the state's
real estate industry. joined with regulators in other states this week
in warning consumers about unscrupulous "liquidation" companies.
·
"If someone approaches you with a gu:uantee to seD your property in excbange for an advance fee, I would urge property owners
. · to contact tbe Obio Division of Real Estate before sending any
money or providing credit card information," said Donna Owens,
director of the department.
·
Typically, companies solicit consumers by telephone or mail and
usc inflated claims about their ability to sell property. They ask for
upfront fees of $250 to $1,000.
·
Once the payment is made, consumers receive a contract with
clauses tbat negate tile promise of a guaranteed sale, officials said.
Refunds rarely are given.
-The Associated Press

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nile crime bill and the "UUth In wbich of the depanment's 1,100 or
sentencing"• bill, arc awaiting so lawyers and otber employees
action.
wiUn:Illlli1JfromtbeFishcryears.
· Montgomery said she was
Sl;le promised !bat COI!lpeteocy,
pleased witb tile progress of her not politics. will be tile deciding
legislative agenda but conceded factor.
tllat lawmakers now may be more
Montgomery f&amp;red four midlevel
focused on the state's two-year managers to give more decisionbll!lget, which must be ln plaoe by making power to section chiefs.
June 30.
.
The moves· saved l)early $250,000
Having been· through tllat pro- In salaries and beoents, she said.
cess a couple of times bersetr,
Nonpersonnel issues also are
Montgomery tucked a few pet pro- getting a closer look.
jects into the proposed budget.
"Every program and policy. is
They included money for 24-hour being thoroughly reviewed (or
crime scene investigation support effectiveness and efficiency." sbe
BETTY MONTGOMERY
for police, additional crime scene said.
and Bureau· of Criminal ldentifica- f t
•
tion and Investigation agents, more
high-tech crime rtghting tools. the
• "/
1'1
anongoingrevi~wprocess.
DNA labandastatewideautomalAnd, dependmg on bow you cat• ed fmgerprinting system.
•
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A top Democratic offiCial said
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va commumty servtce to COOiplete his
egorize tbem, two or four public
relations staffers bave been sbown Montgomery may be premature ln · Mayor Russell Holland will be sentence'.
.
.
.
tile door, Montgomery said.
boasting of her accomplisbmmts.
released from tbe Mason County
Holland. who ts se~kmg bts
But things still aren't moving
· "In some respects. they're mak· Jail at 12:0S a.m. Tuesday after four-year t~ as mayor.m the M~y
quite fast enough for tile attorney ing it through some of the easy serving 22 days for the misde- 20 city elecuon, w~ mdicted m
general.
. .
parts of tilerjob," said Greg Haas, meanor charge of embezzlement by January on three mtsdemeanor
"Most of tile time I like it," sbe · execuli ve 'director of the Obio a public official.
charges of embezzlement by a pubsaid. "I'm frustrated that it takes so Democratic Party.
. Holland. 64, entered tile jail on lie official.
long to get changes done."
"Restructuring your office lllld Aprii3 to serve a 60-day seoten~.
· Holl!lnd P!eaded guilty to o!'e
Tops on her refonn agenda was those l:iods of things are what peo- Ctrcult Judge James Holliday charge mvolymg a $28 cbecl: wntgetting a package of crime bills pie expect you to do when you take reduced the sentence Apri111to 30 ten to the ctty. In the plea agreethrough the Legislature. Bills sliff- over." Haas said. "The long-term days.
ment, the other two charges were
ening penalties f~ crimes commit- implications and the consequences
During bis time in jail, Holland dismissed.
ted with guns and creating a central of those actions are the lbings that bas .served as a trusty, wbich led to
Since Holland's sentence was
DNA laboratory passed tile House. · elected ofncials have more difflcul- a seven-day reduction in sentence.
announced, Point Pleasant residents
A bill to streamline death penalty ty with."
,
The'mayor will serve two years' have been wearing green ribbons to
appeals passed the Senate. .
Four montlls i)lto office. Mont- probatloJ! and perform 200 hours of sbow their support of the mayor.
Other items, including a juve- gomery has not nnished deciding_

TRILLIUM CLAU RINGI

'"
•.

WEST UNION (AP) - A for·
h
r,
mer mayor .of Manchester as
· pleaded guilty to a charge of theft
m ofncc for st~ing $21,000 from
the southwest. Ohio village.
Vernon Stricklett entered the
•· plea Thursday and was released oo
his own recognizance, a prosecutor
said Friday. Adams County Prose• : cutor Greg Carroll said a sentenc: • ing date was not set.
&lt; Tbefl in office is a third-degree
•f:: felony . The maximum penalty is ffAIUIED
'4; .· two years in prison and a SS,OOO OniONI lioy's
~ :: fine. Carroll said he expects the
On All Styles! . Spectra
\• · court will order Strtcklett to pay
back at least some of tbe money.
Scioto County Common Pleas
422 SECOND AVE.
:• · Judge Walter Lytten handled the
GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
:l · case because the current Adams .
614-446-1244'
• ·County ·
formerly was ManchSale Ends June 1. 1
ester
solicitor and worked

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Small Buslneao Unked· Deposit Prognun -This state
financing program requires that qu3lifvjng businesses
must create one full~ime equivalent job or nollay off a job
for every $15,000 to $25,000 requested.
I·
For infonnation about our small business loan programs.
please visit )'our local
Bank One office or call
.-

Tawney Jewelers

@

J-8()().677-4994.

. . 101994 BANC ONE CORPORATION

'

sbadow of the Capitol on Saturday,
proleltln1 wbat they fear will be a
broad rollback of environmental
prolectlon laws:
"Today r can tell you what the
largest ducat 10 our environment Is,
and it' a rlf!lt behind me - the U.S.
CongresS, • Roben Kennedy Jr., an
lllt&lt;lrney for the Natural Resoun:es
Defeosc Council, told a ra)Jy on the
National Mall. "They're literally
dismantling 2S years of environmental progress.' .
Congress has passed 28 major
environmental laws, including tile
Clean Air and Clean Water acts,
since tile first Eartb Day in 1970.
But environmentalists say the
new Republican-led Congress Is
quicl:ly - and stealthily - revoking tllat protection, and spent tile
2Sth Eartb Day urging Americans
to fight back. Organizers hoped to
collect millions of signatures on an
"Environmental Bill of Rights"
petition to present to Congress on
July4.
"Let them know up there that
we still care," actor LeVar Burton
of Star Trek: The NeXl Generation
told the cheering crowd. "Don't
tum back tile clock on tile environ·
ment''

a.PB:Jl"

BANKEONE

Whatever it takes.
lh1k II!11·, AIJ1111"- NA

t.f,,.Jb..,.nur

GALLIANS OBSERVE EARTH DAYand 600 blocks of Second Avenue In downtown
Several volunteers from the Gallipolis fire and ·
Gallipolis Saturday In observance-of the 25th .
pollee departments, the city maintenance crew,
anniversary of Earth Day. The trees were furGallia Academy High School Key Club, Galllponlsbed by Davison's Landscaping. Gallipolis
lis Area Jaycees and Galllpcllls Parks and RecreParks and Recreation Director Shannon Seyer
atlon Department planted 35 trees along the SOO 1 was)'! charge of the community project.
In Tumwater, Wash., more than of plants and aninials.
The 'Bet Is "broken and needs to
100 timber workers spent Eartb
"It is a cruel, vicious and unre- be fixed," agreed U.S. Rep. leoDay asking lawmakers to cut the lenting law," said Barbara Moss- nifer Dunn, R-Wash., who held the
Endangered Species Act, which man of Forlcs, Wash., who said tile "timber family" bearing with felresbicts logging on lands tllat are dec)ine in timber production kllled low Republicans Sen. Slade Gorton
home to certain protected species ber family's log trucking business. and Rep. Linda Smith.

;
TORGAU Gemiany (AP} the street and shook bands witll
:; Veterans of the U.S.-SoVietlinkup Alexander Sllvasbko, w~o was a
.. on the Elbe River arrived in a cav· 19-year-old Red Army lieut.enant
alcade of vintage jeeps Friday to w~en he ventured o.ut on a, ncl:ety
' re-enact their historic ·mecling that bndge to shake Robertson s hand
r cut Nazi Germany in two.
.
50 years ago.
.
.
t "It was a real risk " retired
About 500 people, mcludmg
.t1 Soviet Maj. Gen. Ale~ander V.
U.S. and Soviet ·army veterans,
~ Olsbansky said to William Robert- al!l!lauded.
.
: son, who was a 21-year-old U.S.
. T~c linkup of the U.S. 69th
; Army lieuteoaill when be led a ~vtston troops and~ ft:nny ~I·
• patrol far into no mao •s land on diers set off celebrauoos m Allted
: April 25 1945 and met the Rus- nations in April 1945. Cannons ,
• sians. '
'
frred salutes in Moscow. "Yanlcs
:
That is, after he convinced them Meet Reds" was the giant headline
·: to stop shooting at him.
in tbe military newspaper, Stars
•
"You were a very courageous and Stripes.
~ man," Olsbansky said.
.
Nazi Germany was cut in two. It
•
RobertsOn now a retired neuro- would be impossible for Gennan
~ surgeon living in Culver City, troops to reach Berlin. from .the
.. Calif. recalled the saying: south and defend the captlal agamst
·~ "Cotirage in y(,mng men is some- th~ Red_ Arm~. Nazi dictator Adolf
•· times confused with foolishness."
Httler killed hunself live days later,
:· They and other veterans remi- and the ~ar in E~pe ended with
,, nisced before an audience of histo- Germany s uncondtUonal surrender
;: rians and journalists before re- on May 7.
" ~ enacting Robertson's patrol with a
Two other U.S .. patrols made
'· cavalcade of a half-dozen old jeeps. contact with Soviet troops near
~ The journey was from Leipztg, 40 Torgau tbat day. Robertson's
miles to the southwest, back to patrol, though it was not tile Urst,
~ Torgau on the Elbe River in eastern
became tile most famous. He was
• Germany.
·
pulled out of action and sent on
I.
On Friday evening, Robertson War Bond tours in the United
t went up into tile same castle tower States.
~ where he bad gone in 1945 to wave
Silvashko, now a retired school
'" an American flag be had made teacher and citizen ()f independer;t
' from a bed sheet painted with red Belarus, was the first Soviet officer
stripes. He had been trying to s~w to meet Rollflrtson. But before that
'II Russians on the opposite bank of · he bad commanded his men to
! the Elbe River tllat their Allies bad shoot at the Americnn', thinkin&amp;lhe
: arrived.
improvised American flag that
w
'He waved the flag for the re· Robertson waved from across the
: enactment, bui this lime no one Elbe was a ruse.
,. shot at bim.
· ''I thought it had bee11 a waste
~
Robertson tllen came down to of time to make that flag," Robertson said, recalling his exasperation.

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,

Reich also urged business not to
conduct bidding wars for state and
lo&lt;;al tax breaks. which he said
means less money for public
schools and community colleges.
"Don't hit up the federal ~ov­
emment for unwarranted subsidies
and tall brealcs,"·be said. "If we're
committed to ending welfare as"'we
know it - and we should he let's .get rid of corporate welfare as

Reich said Fri(lay that most
Americans shared equally in
income growth from 1950 to 1978.
Since then, however, "almost all
the increase in average family
income ... bas .gone to the top weU.H
fiftb'' of tbe U.S. population. be
asserted.
At tile same time, "the bottom
20 percent has lost 15 percent of
real family income," Reich told a
meeling of. tile Financial Women •s
Association of New York.
The resulling disparity, he said.
poses "an enormous problem for
this country ... . If unaddressed, tills
S951B.
can rip our society apart.·'
Contributing to the disparity is
the fundamental change in the U.S.
economy - a shift from factory
production lines and concentration
on domestic targets to higb-tecb
occupations and global competition, Reich maintained.
In order for Americans to get
10 Karat Gold
tbe education and training nete11·
sary to compete in;the world econ112 Carat of Diamonds
omy and raise tlleir standards of
living, the government already bas
was S400
. NOW ·c_
begun school-to-work apprenticeship programs and offers low-cost
Receive a FREE
student loans, be said.
I
The Clinton administration also
Ladies Elgin 17
proposes streamlining federal jobtraining programs, vouchers to be
Jewel Watch with
used at community colleges to gain
purchase of this ring.
skiDs and tall deductions to pay for
education and training . .
Reich said, "tile government
cannot do it alone. The private seetor bas got to take the lead.··
He suggested tllat businesses
422 Second Ave. Gallipolis.
train tbeir workers, sbare prbfits
. witll employees, rely on attrition

PRICE

"Veterans re-enact link
tof U.S.-Soviet forces

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w}len doWnsizing and work with
community schools to develop

UNBELIEVABLE

By LINDA DEUTSCH
together under these tenns is very
AP Spe~lal Correspondent
high .... You can't sequester people
LOS ANGELES - Discontent for tills long with no end in sigbL"
among the O.J. Simpson jurors
Ito planned to inlerview more
surged into open revolt. with 13 jurors Mooday. He also planned to
members of the panel auempling to talk to the contingent of sheriffs
boycott the trial over the abropt deputies assigned to tbe jurors, his
dismissal of three deputy guards.
spokeswoman said. Tbe trial is
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito scheduled to resume Tuesday.
called off testimony Friday While · Simpson is on trial for the June
be interviewed seven jurors and 12, 1994, slaying of his ex-wife
wrestled with tile legal ramifica· Nicole Brown Simpson, and her
lions of the discontent among some friend Ronald Goldman.
members of tile panel.
·
Some legal experts said the
"I have grave doubts that this jury's actions could constitute concase is ever going to lumber to a tempt of court and form a basis for
verdict," said noted defense attor· mistrial, tbough they said that was
ney Leslie Abramson, in the court- unlikely.
bouse on another~. "I think the
"No one should panic ¥et,"
odds against keeping tllese people said Loyola U!!iversity law Profes-

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WASHINGTON - Labor Secretary Robert Reicb is urging private business io help correct the
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·O.J. jury revolt sends .trial into disarray

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Transition frustrate~ new attorney general
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated PHss Writer
COLUMBUS- During last
year's election, few clements o{
tben-Attomey General Lee Fisber' s
&gt;Operation took more hits from
Betty Montgomery than his public
relations staff.
.
So it's no surprise the staff been
a target of Moptgomery' s bouse
cleaning during her nrst 100 days
in offwe.
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sbe said at a news conference Friday. "We promiSed to cut down on
the press side oftbe offiCI)."
She waved around a severalfoot-long computer printout lisling
the department's publications and
promised many would not survive

Nation/World

April23,199S

Sunday Times-Scntinel/A6

sor ·Laurie Levenson. "Judge Ito
has to step in and bear these jurors
out. I think it is possible·for·him to
resolve the matter."
·
Levenson said she has never
seen a case where jurors bave boycotted a trial. "It's a serio~s situalion tllat Judge Ito bas to approach
carefully," she said.
Friday's developments capped a
week ln which much of Ito's atten·
lion' was focused on tll'e jury. The
judge halted testimony for part of.
Tuesday and all of Wednesday so
be could interview jurors one-on- .
one about a dismissed panelist's.
accounts of racial strife and personality conflicts amo~g jurors. After
those Interviews, Ito said he bad
found no misconduct.

Testimony resumed Thursday,
but the trial was quickly knocked
off track again.
Sources said many jurors were
in tears when they left tile courthouse Thursday night after being
told that three of the sheriff's
deputies assigned to guard them
bad been removed because of complaints by a srnhll conlingent of the
panel.
·
The deputies handle the 24-hour
job of keeping jur.ors insulated
from outside inOue.nces and news
accounts of the tnal. Dt.smtssed
juror Jeanette Harris had told the
judge that jurors.were separated by
race when they exercised, went
shopping, or watched movies.
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AB

Sunday nmes-Sentinel

April 23, 1995

· P9meroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plpsant, WV

1rimes- Jtntintl

Chemical p ant explosion
· leaves· four dead, 38 hurt ·
LODI •. NJ. (AP) - Tbe wroag critical condi,tion. Eight other plant
combination of cbemicals sparked workers were among the injured,
a powerful explosion and fire that and three of them were hospital·
~i.lled four plant workers and
ized. The other 34 injured people
mjured at least 38 other people.
were treated and released.
The blast and nJI!ring fire at the
The plant, which makes pharmaNAPP Tecbnologtes Inc. plant ceutlcal products al)d chemicals
a~out 10 ~iles. from New Y~rk
used in cos~tics, contained about
C1ty sent billowmg clouds of thick 1,100 cbem1cals,. including hydrob!Jicl' smoke and flames l.oq&lt;J feet gen compounds and acid gases,
high that oould be seen for nu~. . · said Gary' Alle11, an official with
. Emergency workers couldn t get the state Department of Environm~o the plant. for ho~s after the . mental Protec~on .
.
The. cbem•cals are not toxic,
Fnday morning explo~1on because
of the smoke and chemicals.
accordmg to NAPP Technologies
Plant·worker Buster McKenzie President- Hans Peter-Kirscbgaesssuffered burns over 95 percent of ncr.
his body and was hospitalized in
~bout 400 people from several
·

blocks around the plant were evac·
uated. All were allowed to return
home Friday nighi.
A plant worker who spoke on
condition of anonymity said that
about 35 employees were evacuated after fumes began waftlng ·rrom
a large tank where chemicals were
being mixed.
The wor)c:er said the four
employ es who remained inside
were trying to conti'ol the fumes
when the chemicals exploded
The plant employs about 150
people, ·but office workers and
many other employees hadn't yet
arrived for work at the time of the
explosion. The flte was controlled
by afternOon.

Slaying suspect puzzles officials
By PAUL NOWELL
pulling his ttaetor-trailer to the side
Associated Press Writer
of a highway, and then strangled
ASHEBORO, N.C. -Sean the women - twice with his bands
Palrick Goble considered blmself a and once with his legs.
real lady's man and bragged about
"He iust holds them real tight
his romantic exploits and 300- tili they give up," the investigator
pouod physique to police. A neigh· told the paper. "Then be drives
bor called blm a "scary kind of fel- I 00 miles and dumps their bodlow."'
ies."
.
.
Others call him a sensitive, gen·
The investigator said Goble
emus giant. He once complained to does not seem to comprehend the
police that his girlfriend beat bim • nature of the charges.
· "He said, 'I'm going to do my
up . .
Now homicide investigators time in Tennessee and get this
from North Cl!l"olina and about I 0 behind me so I can get on with my ·
other states are trying to drawn an .life," • the investigator said. "I
accuraiC ponralt of this confessed . don· t think be thinks much of these
serial killer, an enigmatic trucker gals he's choking . He was thinking
whose black 18-wbeeler bad "The be was going to get out and drive a
Wild One" embbjzoned across the truck again.''
cab.
A sharply different picture came
Arter his arrest on April 14, from friends .
Goble told police be ldlled 45-yearTwo sisters from Asheboro said
old Brenda Kay Hagy of Bloom- be gave them rings and clothing,
ington, Ind., in January at a service which authorities have.confiscatcd.
station .in eastern Tennessee and
"Whenever he was off the road,
c;tumped her body along Interstate he would come to my bouse,'' Lisa
81 in Virginia.
Hill, a 30-year-old mother of three,
He also confessed to killing 36- told the Asheboro Courier-Tribune.
year-old Alice Rebecca Hanes. a ' "Park that truck right up in front.
prostitute from Ohio whose body He was gentle. He was like a big I
was found in March off 1-81 in bear. If I was crying, he was right
Kingsport. Tenn .• police said.
there holding me. He didn't mis·
Authorities in Guilford County, treat anybody."
N.C.. said Goble told them be was
Hill's sister, Wanlla Moore, said
involved in the death of a woman Goble gave her several gifts during
whose body was found along 1-40 the 10 months she bas known him,
in February.
and used to call her almost' every •
He will stand trial first In day he was on the road.
Greensboro on the third murder
"He's called me many times out
on
the road and stuff crying,··
' charge.
Goble was arrested when be Moore told the newspaper. " Some' drove his Peterbilt truck into the times be •d say it was his grandma
Rocky Road Express terminal in that was ·sick. Other times be
Winston-Salem. He lived in an wouldn't say why he was upset.
aqua-blue trailer in nearby Ashe- Other times be' d say something
wasn't right and..hejust wanted to
boro.
· "When the feds laid their cards talk.''
.
on· the table, it' gave me goose
Stonestreet said Goble once
bumps," said Kurt Stonestreet, asked him for an advance on his
who owns the trucking firm with paycheck so be could pay a utility
his father. "Look here," be said, . .bill for ·a girlfri end who had a
pointing lO his forearm, ''I've got young daughter.
'em again.u
.
"He had a lot of compassion,"
Stonestreet rated Goble - who Stonestreet said.
pronounces his ,ftrSt name as Seen
Stonestreet said Goble told him
-· in the top 15 percent of drivers about his father, Kenneth, who
served time in prison in Illinois and
be's hired.
"He was a take-charge kind of New Mexico for raping young chilguy," be said. "He's the kind of dren.
guy who doesn't bother me in the
" He fell his father had been
mid!Ue of the night with a problem railroaded and was not gu illy,"
he can solve by himself.' ~
Stonestreet said.
·
One police investigator said
Goble's two marriages failed .
lri D&lt;:nton, he lived witll a girlGoble views himself as a lady
kiUer - in both senses.
friend, Juanita Campbell.
"He is very fond of his power
After an argument about teleover women, he loves his women," phone bills, she kicked and slapped
the investigator told The News &amp; Goble and shoved him out her front
Observer of Raleigh. " He's very door in September 1993, Campbell
proud of his physique. I'm serious. said. threarening to stab him with a
He tllinks women go for him."
butcher knife if be ever returned.
In each killing Goble has conGoble pressed charges, saying
fessed to, the investigator said, be he suffered cuts during the scuffle.
bad sex with the victim after But misdemeanor charges of

Senator's retirement
opens opportunity
for Republican gain
sonal propeny of one individual."
Pryor said be was reluctant to·
Associated Press Writer
leave,
particularly with Republi LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - U.S.
cans
holding
a 54-46 edge in ·we
Sen. David Pryor. an icon in .
Senate
going
into the 1996 elecArkansas politics for more !ban
tion.
·
three decades, anncru nced his
"I hope my colleagl!,es and I
retirement Friday, the fifth Senate
hope
our president and my friends
· Democrat not to seck re-election.
will
not
think I'm , deserting the
His retirement opens the door
party
at
the
time of, perhaps, its
for Arkansas Republicans to send a
greateSt
need,"
be ~aid. '"Ilut I
senator tO Washington for the r'arst
think
that
1
can
still
help this pany
time iii more than a century.
and
I
want
to
help
this
pan y."
The 60-year-old Pryor still is
Four
other
Senate
Democrats
immensely popular in his borne
have
announced
they
will
not seek
state, having been a state legislator.
re-election:
Paul
Simon
of
Illinois,
congressman and governor before
James
Exon
of
Nebraska,
Howell
going to Washington.
Heflin
of
Alabama
and
Bennett
He won his .third term in 1990,
facing only a write-in Opponent and Johnston of Louisiana.
Sen. Claib~Jrnc Pcll, D·R.I.,
taking 99.8 percent of tbe vote..
He ·suffered a heart ~ttack in annout\ted recently he had been
April 1991 and underwent heart diagnosed witll Parkinson 's disease, but he ,has not said•yct if be
bypass surgery in November ·1992.
However, Pryor said neither his will retire. Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga .•
health tiOr the Republican takeover also is wcigbinl! whether to leave.
of Congress prompted his decision, · Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, R·N. Y.,
which be said be made long before said Friday that Pryor's seat would
receive the Republican Party's
the 1994 elections.
•"There comes a time, I think, highest priority.
"We are going to do everything
when one should step aside, and for
me that time has come,'' Pryor told possible to beat Bill Clinton on his
more thllll 250 well-wishers at his home turf," said D' Amato who
announcement "A seat In the U.S . chairs a committee that ;aises
Senate should not become the per- money for Republican senatorial
candidates.
By JAMES JEFFERSON

Thought for Today: "Be not afraid of grearness: some arc born great,
. some achieve greamess, and some have greatness thrust upon them " _
· From "Twelfth Night," by William Shakespeare (1564-1616).
·

assault and communicating threats
were dropped on the condition that
Campbell stay away from Goble,
according to court records.
"He got laughed out of court is
basically what happened," Campbell, 28, told the Winston-Salem
Jourilal. ''I wasn't scared of him. I
think be was scared of me."

Apri123, 1195
•

·Hooked on fishing

foUowiilg an explo1lon at NAPP Tethnologies
BLAST AFTERMATH- Three unidentified
Inc. In Lodl, N.J. At least four people were killed
women consoled each other Friday "" the await·
ed 'word on the fate of four mlsal02 co-workers , and 381njund In the blast. (AP)

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BANK F1SIDNG-WbUe many anglers use boats, good fishing can usually be round from the banksoftbe Ohio River. Hober~ Cummins,
Middleport, left, and Ron Bachtel, Pomeroy, enjoy fiShing up against the Racine Dam. Their trick? Tossing their lines over a horizontal beam
and then verdcal jigging in the current. (T ·S photo by Jim Freeman)

GALLIPOLIS

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SPORT FISHING - Anglen redlscoverln1 the Ohio River are
fmdinl exciting fishing action for species Including S8uger, waUeye and
hybrid striped b1155. Here Mark Brown, author or ''Fishinl the Ohio
River", displays a typical Ohio River S8uger caught on tbt Gallipolis
pool below the Racine Dam. (T .S photo by Jim Freeman)

"I didn't think it'd be much fun,
but boy do I enjoy it now."

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By J1M FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel staff
RACINE- Long shunned by local anglers, more and more are getting
hooked on fishing the Ohid'River as water quality improves. ,
"The fiShing is only going to get better- if the water quality eolltinues
DISH FOR F1SH - Larry Holsinger, owner of Larry's Bait and
to improve," outdoor wriiCI Made Hicks of MillfJCid co10rnented during a
Tackle Shop, Letart Falls, and Ohio River Charters, displays someolthe
recent sauger fis)llng expedition below the Racine Dam.
lures be uses to lake large Ohio River hybrid striped bll55. (T·S photo by
HiCks, author of "Fishing the Ohio River", cited an Ohio River Recrea·
Jim Freeman)
·
tiona! Use Survey completed in 1993 that revealed,better fiShing in the river.
For ~xample, Hicks noted anglers fishing in the tailwaters below the Bellev·
ille Dam in 1992 toOk twice as many fiSh in only half the time it toOk anglers
In 1981.
'"We didn '!always catch sauger like this," he explained as he put another
fiSh into his boat's liveweU. "They started biting as the water quality
improVed...
Hicks would occasionally chat with other anglers about the water, what
I'
time'of day the fish were biting and what color lures they were using.Thal day.
the sauger seemed 10 bile well on white; curly-tailed grubs. coated with
KodiakFishAuractantPaste, workedslowlyjustovertheboaomoftheriver.
. "The river is a great resource," Hicks commented.
Larry Holsinger. owner of Larry •s Bait and Tackle Shop, Letart Falls,
agrees that fiShing is growing in popularity along the Ohio River.
"It is, it really is," he said. "Fishing for hybrid (striped bass), walleye and
sauger is really picking up."
·
Holsinger said he knows people wbo have nearly lost tbeir jobs because
they now spend so much time fiShing in the river.
When he isn't running the bait shop or out fJShihg himself, Holsinger
takeseareofhisotber bUsiness- Ohio River Cbar!Crs. which offers day-long
fiShing trips for walleye, sanger, hybrid striped bass and large catfish for up
to four anglers.
People from all the state and West Virginia have booked fishing trips, he
said.
Everything is getting better- including the water. he noted: "'It's not
oily.lt's clear and blue... like a lake."
According tO Holsinger, the peak season for hybrid striped bass starts in
early April and lasts through to fall. During the early and late season, they are
best taken with top-water baits, he noted. During the summer, heavy lead
spoon lures are used to catch the fish.
Also attesting_to the growing popularity of Ohio River fishing, the
League of Ohio Sportsmen is holding its flfSt'ever Ohio River Catfish
Tournament at Marieu.a in June with up to 1,000 anglers splitting a $20,000
purse.
.
ln researching the tOurnament we reviewed the Ohio River Recreational
UseSurvey... and found that fishing boats ll{e more abundant on the Ohio River
than in 1981 when·pleasure boats were reported to oumumber them 4-to-1,
according to league chainnan Larry Strauss.
"'What better way to make the Ohio Fishermen aware of the wonderful
advantages the Ohio River and its boundaries offer," be added.
LARGE CATF1SH - Danny Brown of Minersville herts a30Retired Chester resident Henry Babr has fished (or years in ponds and pound (and then some) catfiSh be caught below the Racine locks while
lakes, but starllld fishing in the Ohio River about s~ years ago.
jigging for S8uger.with a Silver Buddy. His grandfather Vic Brown, a
"'I didn' t think it'd be much fun," he commented. "But boy do I enjoy it veteliln river fiSherman, looks on. (T-S photo by Jim Freeman)
now."
•
Twenty years ago, people didll•t fish in the rive~ for anything other than
Bahr said be sees a lot more people fishing in the river.
trash fi~h, he said. The fiShing and the waiCI quality bas il)lproved tremen"You can catch all kinds of stuff," he noted.
dously m the last 1S years. he added.
·
"'It's btlen wonderful fishing this spring ... the best ever," he remarked.
"'It's clearer and clean now," he said. "It doesn't smell like it used to."

-Hen()' Bahr, Chester, on fishing In the Ohio
River
·

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RELEASING LARGEMOUTH -The Ohio River llso produces plenty orlargemoutb and smallmouth
biiSII. Here, Mark Hicks returns a largemouth bass to the Oblo Rlver.-(PboiQ courtesy Mark Hicks)

Hicks, a former Ohio Bass
Gre~tnup pools outlined in the
By J]M FREEMAN
Tournliinent
Circuit and Ohio
.sei:llpd section of the book.
Times-Sentinel starr
Red Man state champion, bas
In addition the book fwures
Basically a bow-to manual
'
fiShed the Ohio River for nearly a .·
for Ohio River anglers, "Fishing
quilrter of a century. In addition,
the Ohio River," a book by Millhe qualified IMle tilnes for the
field resident and outdoor wrirer
BASS Top 100 tournament
Mark Hlcks, deserves a place on
circuit
and once for the Red Man
every local angler's bookshelf.
Ali..American.
·
Hicks spent nearly two years
He
is
also
an
award
winning
researching the book which con·
wrirer and photographer with
. sisls primarily of two sections. ·
hundreds of articles published In
Tbe rlfSI section of the book has
Bassmaster
Magazine, Field &amp;
chapterS on largemouth bess,
Stream. Spons Af"teld. Fishing
sanger, hybrid stripers. catfiSh
Facts and other outdoor publica·
and other species while the
lions.
second section outlines the initial
"FIShing the Ohio River" is
531 miles of the river from Pitts·
available
locaUy at Old and New
burgh to tbe Markland Dani at
Spurts in Ravenswood, W.Va.,
Markland. Ind.
Hocking Valley 1)'ading and
The book pinpoints hunExchange
in Athens, Schwarzel
dreds of specific hot spots for
Marine in Hockingpi&gt;n and the
· different fish, such as creek
Outdoor
Shop in Belpre. In addimouths. sbQals.and other natural
tion,
"Fishing
the Ohio 'River"
and manmade struCtures that are
may be purchased through the
proven producas.
m;UI for $12.95 plus $3 shipping
more
than
100
iUustrations,
jlhotoGallia, Mason and Meigs
from Big River Preas, PO Boll
gxaphs,
how-to
drawings
and
maps,
county anglen will recognize
130, MilllieldOH 45761 (Ohio
along
with
quotes
and
comments
many of the fish.ing spots in the
~idealS add 81 CSIU salea laX).
Belleville, Racine, Gallipolis anJ from knowledgeable local fishermen. •

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Page 82-Sunday 11m11 Sentinel

Pomeroy.-Middleport-Galllpoll•, 0H Point Pleaunt, wv

April 23, 1985

Aprll23, 1995

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

Meigs community calendar

.,
JENNIFER DAMRON AND COREY HATFIELD

·Damron-Hatfield

EMILY BUMGARDNER AND ADAM FRANKS

Bumgardner-Franks
MASON, W. VA. -Larry Ear.
lene Bumsardner, Mason, W.Va.
announce 1hc enaqement of tbelr
daughter, Emily Kay, to Adam
Michael. Franks. son of I..aay and
Katbleeo Franks, Huotlnaton,
W.Va.
The bride-dect is a 1990 gradu·
ate of WaluuDa Hlp School and .a
1994 gradllllle of MarsbaJl University. Sbe is worldog towards ber

master's degree in speecb patbology at Marshall University.
Her fiance is a 1991 graduate of
Huntingtoo Higb Scbool and will
complete bis unde~raduate education at Marshall next month. He
will begin medical school at tbe
Marshall Universily School of
Medicine in tbe fall. ·
A December wedding is being
planned.

Her fiance, a 1993 graduate of
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Southern
High School, is a 1995
Damron, Racine, announce tbe
graduate
of
the Obio peace offiengagement and approaching. marcer's
training
prQgram at Buckeye
,
riage of their daughter, Jennifer
Lynn, to Cory Allen Hatfield, son Hills Career Center. He is a state
of Mrs. Kay Pickens, Racine, and certified commissioned police officer tbrougb the Racine Police
Charles Hatfield, Grove City.
The bride-elect-is a 1991 gradu- Department
ate of Southern High School and
An open church weddin¥ will be
altended tbe University o( Rio .held May 6 at the Racine FU'St BapGrande. Sbe .is enrolled in the,nurs- tist Cbun:b. Music wiD begin ai S
ing program at Buckeye Hllb p.m. An reception will follow at the
Racine American Legion ball.
·
Career Center. ·

lnghram-Saunders
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Oliio State University. She is an
Jobn Robert Inghram of 105 assistant field director for mail
Franklin Street, South Point studies ·at the Indiana University
announce the engagement and Center for Survey Researcb in
approaching marriage of their Bloomington.
daughter, Jennifer Lynn of Bloom- . Saunders graduated from ·Gallia
ington, Indiana, to Robert Allen Academy Higb Scbool and MarSaunders, also of BloomingiOn, son shall University with a bachelor of
of Mr. and Mrs. Roben William fine arts degree in voice. He is
Saunders of 96 Texas Road, Gal- working on a master of music
lipolis,
.degree at Indiana University in
.
Inghram graduated from Soutb Bloomington.
The open wedding will be 4:30 ·
Point Hip School and Miami University in Oxford witb a baabelor p.m. Nov . 18 at the Johnson
of arts degree in political science. Memorial United Methodist
S be received a master of 'arts Cburch in Huntington; W.Va.
degree in political science from

.•:r JAMES SANDs

•

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SYRACUSE -

Sarah Jean

Philson and Alexander James Piazza announce tbelr eogageinent and

upcoming marriage.
'Ole bride-elect is tbe daughter
of Jobn and Patricia Philson of
Syracuse. Sbe is a 1989 graduaie of
Southern Higb School and will
graduate from Obio University in
June with a bachelor of science in
bearing and Speech science. ·
Her fiance is the son of Eleoa
Piazza of Lake Parle. Fla. and tbe

late James Piazza. He is a 1985
graduate of Cardinal Newman Hip
Scbool in West Palm Beach, Fla.,
and bas a bachelor of science in
surveying and mapping from the
University of Florida. He is
employed witb Mack Roos and
Associates lis a survey/CADD technician.
·
The open cburcb wedding is
planned for July 15 at the Middleport Heath Un ited Methodist
Cburch.

tbeJWeviouaywltllelegiallta'lbld
drallil:llly te~llllpCd Obio ocbnoll
with the exprea intentioa 10 beBin
County. Glilia MIIIOijdatjon.
Acedemy HiJh
Some felted
one-room
Scliool had a · xhools would Ill be gone witbin the
reunion about dec e"c The driving fon:e behind this
1900. The rtt~t fintof~e-.J~~~e~~~p~~ofthestaleto

m.

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renner

NEW STORE HOURS
a. in. til 8 p.m.
a.m. til 6 p.m.
a.m. til6 p.m.
a.m. til6 p.m.
a.m . .til 8 p.m.

..........

A

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DR. CHARLES STONE

Dr. Stone
to address
ostomy

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ilssociation
.

GALLIPOLIS · Family Night
Bell Chapel Church 7 p.m. with
Friends of Jesus and Rev. Truman
Johnson to speak.

• G ALLIPOLIS - Dr . Charles
Slone, a member of tbe Holzer
. Cfinic General Surgery staff, speciillizing in vascular surgery, will
sjleak during the April 30 meeting
o{ the Obio Valley Ostomy AssociaQon. Beginning at 2:30 p.m. the
gi'Dup will meet in the French 500
Room at Holzer Medical Center.
: His Wlpic will be. "Variou s
Types of OStomies and Their Creations."
·
:Dr. Stone completed his dnder- ·
giaduate work at Cleveland State
University, after which he attended
Nonbeastem Ohio University Med·ical School and did his general
surgery at Akron City Hospital.
· For more information contact
tbe MaxWell 50 offi ce at 4465392.
••

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GALLIPOLIS - Heart Beat Cardiac Suppon Group 2 p.m. at Holzer Medical Center in French 500
Room.

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy
High School Class of 1970 reunion
3 p.m. Bossard Library.
'
KANAUGA - AMVETS Square
dance lessons from 1:30 to 4:30
p.m.

IlilA

Rll

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

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lJRG orientation
sessions to be
conducted
.

•••

THURMAN - :Thurman Grange
meeting 7:30p.m:
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Tuesday, Apri12S .
•••

' RIO GRANDE- Orientation bas
bt!en scheduled for. new st ude nts
, who will be admitted to tbe Univer. sity of Rio Grande fo r the Fall
Q11arter of 1995. Three different
se~sio n s will be conducted this

GALLIPOLIS - Alco holics
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peters Epis.
copal Cburcb.

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One of the biggest reasons why more State of Ohio employees choose United HealthCare

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•••

Revivals
GALLIPOLIS - Revival April
23 through 30 First Church of
Nazarene with· Don Wellman and
the Steve Adams Singers. Sunday
atl0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. and weekdays at 7 p.m.
•

New Rio OraiNk Sllldents with
~:~~~~~ regarding the orientation
~
or registration may call the
University of Rio Cifande Admissions Office- at 245-7208 or toll ·
. fre~ in Ohio 1-800-282 7201.
extension 7208.
·

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CROWN CITY - A revival is
being held at King's Chapel
Church tbrougb Sunday, April 23. ·
Services are 7:30 ·p.m. Rev.
Matthew Henry special evangelist

.•

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than any other HMO is the large number of physicians withm our provider network. Chances
are, your doctor is one of them. After all~ there are more than 7000 physicians rep~esenting

.

The New Student Orientation
Cemmittee at Rio Grande bas
planned orientation meetings for
Tl!ursday; June 8 and Friday, June
9; •Thursday, July 6 and Friday,
July 7; and Thursday, Sept. 7 and
Friday, Sept. 8. On those dates.
new students will be able to regislet. for Fall Quarter 199 5 clas~es.
. Tbey will be given the opponunity
to meet witb advisors to prepare
tbeir Fall schedules . Placement
testing for math will also be conducted during each orientation ses-

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Post 161 regular meeting
7:30p.m.

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sU~Dmer.

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

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irxxJ.

sei{

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Monday, Aprll 24

Woodward Iligb "School.
Tbe prospective bridegroom's
mother is Marylyn Kowalski and
his stepfather is Bill Kawalslti of
Toledo. Abalos also graduated in
1994 from Woodward Higb
Scbool.
The wedding will be July 15 in
Toledo.
·

M

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ADDISON - Special singing
with God Affibassadors 7:30 p.m.
Addison Freewill Baptist Cburcb.

RUTI.AND - Bill and Gayie
Morris of .Rutland announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of tbcit granddaupter, Carey
Ann Hartford, Toledo, to Juan
Abalos of TOledQ.
Tbe bride-elect's parents are
Rufena and Joseph Hartford of
ToledO. Sbe is a 1994 graduate of

value .of Gallia County's xhool
p!opetty, excluding Gallipolis, was
$83,395 or about $600 per building.
The 1914 reform in Oallia
County organizing all the schools in
tbe county outside Gallipi&gt;Us inw
one school board. There were sti1122
school boards under one county
school board. The reform provided
foraconntysuperintendentandtbrcc
tegional superintendents and tbe,
establishment of a grade school.
Previous to 1914 sllldents advanced
by completing what were called
· "fe!lders." The reform of 1914 crcJated the present grade system.
James Sands Is a special correipondentoftheSundayTimes-Senlind. His address is: 65 Willow
Drive, SpriDgbo.-o, Ohio 45066.

,

•••

Hartford-Abalos

also note that despite tbe fact that
there were more girls than boys in
thepopulationoflhccountyin 1914,
the enrollment shows that there wete
400 more boys than girls enrolled in
schools. ln many tUI1Il families the
idea still existed that girls were not ro
be educated outsido the home. Addison and Springfield Townships,
however,hadmoregirlscnrolledthan
boys.
.
One or tbe other ideas brought
into being by the reform of 1914 was
the initiation of state aid. For every
· pupilinGalliaCountythestatekiclted
in the total of$2. While this docs not
seem overly generous by today's
standards, in 1914 the average grade
school teacher made about $400 per
· year. A higb school teacher made
almost double that amount. The IDlal

•

•••

CARY HARTFORD AND JUAN ABALOS

AFRICA SCHOOL • Afr1c:a Sc:bool Is pictured In this 1930s
Blon Bndbury photo, loaned by the authors of "Gallla County
One-Room Schools: The Cradle Years." Africa Scbootln Cheshire
Twp. wu one of the lint one-room scbools to establish a reunion
of former pupils.

SPRINGFIELD. Mass. (AP) Many of Dianne Brook's collt~~~ues knew nothing of ber afternoon love affair. Who would bave
expected it of a University of Massachusetts professor, a Harvard law
graduate, a feminist?
But BrookS was oh-so-sbameless. Now, sbe bas written a book
that bares ber private pleasure to
the proper society or academia.
U it sounds like a ,soap opera. it
should. Her book, "Tbe Law of
Daytime: Soap Operas, Issue Plots
and Law Narratives." grew out of
her lifelong love of the aftemoon
televlsioo dramas.
·
The book examines bow millions of women sbape their ideas
about 1hc legal system from tbelr.
daily soap fixes. Sbe found tbat
tbese sbows focus on the aspects of
law close to many }"Omen .I back the [ami}
domestic violence, custody batUes
insurance I
and rape - wbile reflecting a sense
of aliemition from tbe male-domiwith
nt!ighbor
nated legal world.
serviCe. Call me."Soap operas ... convey to
female viewers a sense of our
CAROl1 SNOWDBI
exclusion from the legal system.
342 S.C... An..
They're honest about that . And
that's very real." said Brooks, who
cPl446-429G
·~··1, ow.
teaches legal studies at the Amherst
campus, about 20 miles north of
Ho•446-4518
Springfield.
Brooks spenl two years writing
Uke a good netghl::)or,
tbe 250-page book, and is considerState FamHS 1here "'I
ing two publishing offers. She
Sta lf' F1rm
already bas given two academic
l n!klr.ance~oe-s
IIIIIIUI.NCI
MomeoOII&lt;rs
papers based on ber findings.
Bloofrl,ngton tllofi()IS
Sbe says the soaps, while widely
viewed as melodramatic and cultur- 1 ,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
ally 1rivial, are no less accurate in

~011.

GALi.IPOLIS · GAHS Band
Boosters Craft and Home Decorating Show at fairgrounds from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
·

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ToMIIbip.PabplheftiiiCIIIteUII•
icln wu arpalied Ia 1915 Wll dill

county ICbool ron:e COIIIOiidalion was tbe lai:t of
reponed to hold high school gno&amp;J!IIII being tumed
reunion Wll the Africa School Ia out in nnlscboob. For insiii'CC in
Cbeahirc Township. Africa School · 1915, not COUIIIiJi&amp; Gallipolis, tbae
was open from lbout 186710 1934. W616only45higbsclioolpadullesin
That first reunion wu held June 12, OaDia County. By 1922 that nwnber
1915.
.
had rilen 10 nearly 200.
The day began at 9 a.m. wiib a
Another jWOblcm that tbe IChool
buebeil game between the
Jd'(llllofl9141ddteasedwastbelow
lllldentsand thefonperteachers. The attcndlncepen:auagein the schools.
"'ecbcn lino-up included lhrec doc- On any given day in the 1910's ohly
ton, Parter, Rowley llld Ely and two halfofall elementary studenu wete in
successful businessmen H.M. Har- xhool. By 1922 the atJendance rate
dina and J.T. Robinson. Among the for grade school studenll in Gallia
DOtables on the pupils' 111m wu €ouotywasonly66percent.In 1915
fleetfootedlsaiahThomu.Inorderto there was a dramatic difference in
level OUI the youth adv8J1188e that tbe IIIICDdance between boys and girls.
pupils had, tbe teachers were allowed . for boys tbe average was lower than
toa~bstitutel'romtimemtimcagroup
.50 percent, but for girls it was almost
or "ringers.•
60 percent
At noon a dinner was held. Then
The training of Gallia County
theaftemoonprogramwasgivenover one-room IChool teachers was fairly
tospeechesandmusic.At3p.m;therc low as no teacher had a lifetime state
was a spelling bee pitting former sm- certif'JCatc. Only 24 out or 174 teachdenIS against forJD« teachers. The ershadaprofessionalcertificate. This
previous month Gallia County had fact meant tbat the vast majority of
crowned its first county cbampion Oallia'stcache~hadnocollegetrain­
speller. The eighth grader advanced ing.Some71 of the 174in 1915 had
10 the Slate competition, where in a only a one year c:enif'lcaac, meaning
wriuenprelimiJwytcsthchadmspell they were beginning teachers. We
5,000 words c&lt;i"reclly 10 make the
spell down. Gallia finished out of the
money when a Higbland County 20year-dd won the~- The first ever
Africa School reunion ended witb a
meeting to fonn a permanent reunion

baDdling legal i&amp;JUel than police
and court shows. Sbe conteudl dial
daytime dramas often capture the
slow, iiiCfCIIICIItal progreas of Icpl
cases better than weekly primetime series.
·
"They're on every day, tbey get
to develop plots·in a more proCouod
way," sbe said.
A growing number of analysts
and scholars are studying soap
'operas for their cultural-meaning,
Brooks. Wd. Sl!.e,_llas tbe added
advantage, tbougb, of being an avid
soap ran.
• ·
Brooks, 36, began watching tbe
soaps as.a youngster at ber babysitter; s bouse. Sbe kept up the habit
as an adult, and still takes her luncb
breaks in front of tbe television oo
days wben she works at home.

ByJEFFOONN
Aaoclated Pre. Writer

·when
r--==---. certain
they origina!W
in
Oallia

Sunday, AprU 23

Philson·Piazza ·

fn1915AfrlcaScbooiWIIooeof

nine OIIHOOIII ICbools lJ1 Clwhite

Ire now fairly ""''!mon, but it illllll

are

SARAH PHILSON AND ALEXANDER PIAZZA

·.
••t
OAUJI'OUs-Schoolreunima

~111 Ill Con up

Sundav Times-Sentinel Page 83 .

Soap-loving professor
reveals her secret love

LAST CHANCE TO SAVEl SAlE ENDS MONDAY IT 8:301

Gallia
community
calendar
The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
1
events. The calendar is not
.designed to promote sale&amp; or
fund-raisers of any type. Items
printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

-Class ·reunions illustrate
:educational changes ,-

land Church of Christ. Opco 10
Th Co..,..;unlty Caleadar II
public.
Hal Knecn, Meigs Extenpublished •• a free service to
sion
Agent,
will Jive pcrenni~
aon·proflt groups wlsblng to
pointers
usinJ
a slide ..-nlllloo
aano.nee meetlaa and special
and
demonstratinJ
bow 10 divide
events. 'l'be calendar Is aot · ·
and
care
for
perennials.
1bere will
designed to p~omote sa1t1 or
be
free
plants,
refreshments,
door
fund nisei's of aay type. Items
prizes.
Janet
Bolin
will
assist
with
are printed u space permlta and
program.
.
eaanot be'1uaraateed to run a
specllk namber of days.
RACINE - Racine Loci~ 461,
. .
SUNDAY
' F&amp;AM, will bold an annual UllpeCREEDSVILLE - Revival ser- lion Thesday 7:30 p.m. atlbc baD.
vice&amp; at the Reedsville Church of Members to take a pie. Master
the Nazarene to be held through masons invited:
Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening .
•
•
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday,
Evangelist Paul Lucas. Special
6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park. New
singing.
members welcome.
RU1LAND - Believers FelWEDNESDAY
lowsllip Ministry witb Rev. Lester
Miller, guest speaker; music by the
MIDDLEPORT - Middlepori
New Vision Gospel Singers, 2:30 Literary Club, 2 J?.IO. Wednesday;
borne of Mrs. Etleen Buck; Mrs ..
p.m. Sunday:
George Hacke II to review "An·
MONDAY
American Tragedy."
. POMEROY - The Mei~s Roll call comment on tbc book. ~
.
County Veterans Service Comnusslon, Monday, 7;30 p.m. in tbe VetRACINE - Wildwood Garden;
erans Service Offacc, Pomeroy.
Club, Wednesday at noon, Counlry'
Kitcben, Racine. Greenhouse Iolii'·
·
REEDSVILLE- A special planned.
meeting of the Olive Township
.Trustees will be held Monday, 7:30
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE
Tbe"
p.m. at the township building.
Riverview Garden Club will tour~
POMEROY - Pomeroy Vil- Flowers by Craig Thursdayv
lage Council to meet in general evening. Members are to meet at.
special session Mooday, 7 p.m. in the Whitehead borne at 6:15 ·p.m·...
municipal building. Meeting open Mter the tour, they wijl return to
to pub\if.
tbe bome of Janet Connolly for .a
business meeting.
TUESDAY
RUTLAND - Tbe Rutland
POMEROY - Meigs County
Friendly Gardeners, open meeting, Library Board of Trustees, I p.m.
Tuesday, at 7:30p.m. at tbe Rut· Thursday, at the library.

Mo11day .••.. ..•.. ••....•.• ••• ~ 9
Tuesday •...... •.•. ...•.•.•...• 9
Wednesday ....... ~ ........... 9
Thursday ;..................... 9
Friday ••••... ,. .. ~ •..•....•..... 9

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpoll•, OH-Polnt Pleas· , WV

every medical specialty, not to mention nearly 90 hospitals providing all levels of care, currently
on the United HealthCare roster. We've even. implemented
Nurseline, a 24-hour health infonnation line staffed by registered nurses. Not everything at

'

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United HealthCare is on the rise, however. The co-pay has been reduced to $5 and the employee's
portion of hospital coverage has qeen lowered to ·10%. So now that it's time for you to
choose a health plan, we thought these numbers would make
'

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United Health Care
· of

.,,·,...-·~

C. U S T 0 M E R S E R V I C E : 6 l 4 - 4 4 2 - 0 5 .0 3.

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:P~~~~B~4~;Su~nd~·;•=y~n;m~es~~Se;;nt;in~e~l=.=::::::::=:=:::P=o~me;;r;oy~:·~~=d=d=le=po=rt::=c=•="=po=I=I•;•OH;==~P=o=ln;t~PI;e~...
;;n~t,~WV~~======~==~===========:==A=p=rll=2~1195
--The House of the Week--------~~-----1--­

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

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Beat of the Bend ...

Stone Details Add to Stucco Exterior

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International cultures~ to . converge at Ethnifest

••j

by Bob Hoeflich
to a nUJDbec of requesiS, lbe Uniled Melhodi8t Cburch.
A recepdon will be beld from 2:
choir of lbe Middleport Fust B~
list Church will be doina a repeat 10 4 p.m. at the cburcb 10 honor lbe :
· · r.;_r!ormance of liS Easter canlata, 99th birthday of Gamet C. Grlflin.
'Alone on the :Altar" at 8 this His actual birthday Is Tuesday, ,
evening at the church.
·
April 25, but the reception UDder· :
Direction of the presentation is . sJand.ably will be en S,UlldaY so tbat :
by Sam Cowan end-the presema· mm people can attend.
tion will start at 8 in order that
Mr. Griffin, as I undersland it, is
there be "darkness" whicll con· Meigs County's last surviving vet· .
ttibut.es to lhe effectiveness ·of lbe eran of World War I. I also under- •
can1a1a. Performing solos are Sara stand that be is an lncredillle per· •
Anderson, Sam Cowan and bts son.
brolliet, Ryan Cowan. By t¥ way,.
l[-you can't get IO· the celebta· '
Rysn is now a music major at Ohio lion, cards will reach bim al459SO
University having switched his SR 681, Coolville, Obio 45723.
major from another flcld. Talented
Sharon Hawley, whom many of
Interesting.
you know, is also featured in the
Received a newspaper clipping
presenlation. Sound will be han· with photos from the Hilliard area
died by Roger Gibnore who always relating to the 21st annual produc·
· does such a good job.
lion of the Hilliard Nite of Enter·
tainmen~ an amateur variety show
A SJ'ONE CHIMNEY, keyatnneo, arched windows end a illileeo exterior aM llalr In thlelulwrloue home. vat e bath w•;th a d u......
·' ·ink varu'ty,
Now about next Sunday, April staged recently in Hilliard.
By BRUCE NA111AN
right, a 15-1/2-ft. vaulted ceiling itself to casual family dining. and the other two share a split 30.
Ameng those pictured was Mary
AP Newafeac:ures
crowns the formal living room. Nearby, French doors open to a bath. An optional bonus room is an
That's the day lhat local gradu· Andrews, formerly of Long Bot·
A soaring stone chimney adds a Columns tJ:ame.the dining room on covered porch. . . .
.added plus.
ates of lhe Pomeroy High School Jom, having her makeup applied
rustic touch to the exterior of this the.other Side of the foyer.
A 10.1/2-foot tray ceiling tops the D · F-45 has t
living Class of 1965, will meel al 1:30 prior to maki11g an appearance in
stucco home. Other details include More columns straight ahead ~aster suite. A three-sided fire·
es~gn . .
a oyer, ~
p.m. in the offices of the Meigs the show. Mrs. Andrews has really
a ·covered porch and plenty of win- introduce the two-story great place makes the suite a pleasant rokio!'l&gt;t ha diningdroobm.kfa areta rookm, Local School District at the former become
active in a number of
·
Th
·
1 · 1d
A · ·
f
a c en an rea as noo , a
dows ~pped by ~eystone~. Ins1de, broomk. t .e room a dso tnfic u es a adult re ~~at. ultedsltting r.?;gmandeaa· master bedroom with an attached Pomeroy Hlgb School, now activities since leaving Meigs and · .•
ce
thre
d
bed- Pomeroy Village Hall.
attentJon to detail and w1de-open ac s a1rcase an a 1rep1ace tures a .,.,oot va
moving to the Hilliard area near ·:
81·":nn
The group of local grads will Columbus.
spaces prevail.
flanked by windows.
French door to the backyard. -"' rili'm. full~ s~on arywd
··
Plan F-45 by HomeStyles The kitchen includes a work French doors also introduce the rooms, lareedry a s,; pobo er continue its planning of special
8
Designers N~twork. features a dra- island, an angled serving bar and luxurious master bath, which is room.
~ room an a nus activilies which are 10 take place
The Eastern Higb School Alum· ·,
matic two-story foyer and 3,691 an oversized pantry. It me111es with highljghted by a garden tub, a sep- ~~m, totaling 3.691 square feet of w]len the 30th reunion of tlie' class ni Association will be awarding a -'
square feet of living space. To the a sunny breakfast nook that lends arate shower and his-and-her va'ni- livmg space. An attached two-car is held on Saturday, May 27 . $250 scholarship this spring to a
There was an excellent turnout of
j?7'"0:----~G§JJIS::Z::i~~:~·
~
=---l
ties. Overhead plant shelves add a garage ~s ro~m for a. workshop. class members at lhe initi81 meet· current graduate of Eastern High.
·;•·.. , ::. ;:0 · . : ··
rucetouch.
"J'!te pla01s avai_lable With 2x4 e_xteSeniors wiSbing to apply can get
..:: · ·
Upstairs. a bridge that overlooks r1or wall framlDg and a dayhght ing and, hopefully, attendance will more information and pick up their
· ··
the great room and foyer below ~asemen~. The basement founds- be a bit belter at next Sunday's ses· applications at the school's guid- ·,
leads to three good-sized bed- tion proYldes another 2,467 square sion.
ance counselor's office. Please note
Tbere were 108 members of the that completed applications must
rooms. One of the rooms has a pri- feet of space.
class at the time of graduation 30 be returned for consideration no
years ago. Since then six have died. later than May 17.
·.
Donna Carr, wbo is taking an
active role in getting the reunion
Since the Oklahoma City
activilies rolling, bas secured tragedy, apparently the popular
addresses for tile remaining 102 tiling to do is phone a bomb threat
class members all of wbom have to the nearest federal building .
been sent letters.
How warped do .people get? And I
,
~ 1 It"
And- next Sunday you might · expect you to keep smiling?
want to ~akc a visit 10 the Alfred

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MR. AND MRS. RAYMOND FURBEE

Furbees to mark 50th
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Ray,
mond L. Furbee, Slate Route 124,
Racine, will celebrate their 501h
wedding anniversary with an open
reception from 2 to 5 p.m. Satur·
·day, May 6 atlhe Racine United
Methodist Olurch.
· The celebration is being bosled
by their daugbter, Karen Bidwell,
Columbus, and tbelr sons, Eric
Furbee, Hammondsville, and
Richard Furbee, Wesl Chester,
Penn. Mr. and Mrs. Furbee have

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BACK
overlook&amp; the great ..OOm, where a wulted
ceiling With skylights creates an open, a""cious feel.

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;i:fo Order Study Plan

F-45

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Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 .baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your 1-fome-How
to Build, Buy or Selllt. Ranch Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
feature: Practical Home Repairs. which tells how to handle 35 common
. problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Home$, 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.O. Box 1562,
· ·
New York , N.Y. 10116-1562.

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GALLIPOLIS • "At least eleven
shots by two. How sure are· your',
is the theme for Ibis year's National
Infant Immunization Week. April
21 through 29. Tbis week-long
observance .began in 1993 as an
outreach effort of the Depanment
of Human Services and the Center
for Disease Control' s Childhood
Immunization Initiative.
Tbe Cbildbood lmmunization
Initiative program is striving .to
reduce the cases of vaccine pre·
ventable diseases to zero, to
increase vaccination levels ensuring thal 90 percent of lhe nation's 2
year-olds have the proper vaccina·
tions and to build a vaccine deliv·
ery system to maintain these
achievements.
According 10 the Gallia County
Health Deparunent, for every .$1
spent on childhood vaccines, $10 10
$14 are saved in future medical
IMMUNIZATION WEEK - Ga!Ua and. Meigs county bealtb · coSts. More than 1/3 of the children
departments are observing the beginning of National ln~ant
19 to 35 mopths old in tile United
Immunization Week following the theme: "At least 11' sbots by
Slates today are not up-to-date by
two. How sure are you?" April 21 through 2!1. Tbe week-long
age two. In GalUa County the one
. observance began In 1!1!13. Botb bealth departments offer free
time rate is 57 percent and in
Immunizations to loall residents. Lora Lynn Snow looks on as
Meigs County 74 percent.
daughter Julia receives her Immunization 'at the Gallla County
Witb funds provided by the
Health Depu-tment from Kim Greene, RN.
Immunizations Action Plan Granl,
the Galli a and Meigs . County

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State (ZIP)·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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River reveries

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The evolution of basketball .mania
By DOROTHY SAYRE
POMEROY · Someoneastedre·
cenlly if! knew my husband was such
a n111 about high school basketball
before I married him nine years ago.
The answer
is, ·'no."
0
f
course,
I
don' l really
mind. A lot of
women don't
know whele
their bus·
bands are on
Friday and Tuesday. nights. I know
whetemineis. Heisalwayswhelethe
Soulhern Tornadoes are. He was really Qciled recently when lhc Tornadoes had three g31Jle,i in one week.
We wa-e inviled to a-party and I went
alQne; he came aft« the game was
fmished. I don 't IJ'III'lmber who wen
thai night but he could tell you not
only the winner, but how many poinl:l
each of the Racine players made.
His fascinatiOn witll high school
sporu, ix sny SJlOI1S for that malttr,
baffles me. Now, !like a good baseball game; bot. witlllhc major leagues
suite, thete haven't been many base·
ball games 10 watch. I've liked the
World Series sillc:e my high school
days. Until his death, my dad and I
used to ber agaimt each otha oil the
• series outcome. At one lime, I could
even talk fairly inltlligently about the

different playas' siBiislics.
Rewming 10 my husbsnd's love
of basketbalJ ••j t all started in a Small ,
southern Qllio town called Racine in
aboUt 1946, when he entered high
school. By his sophomm year, he
was 1111 acc:omplished enough player
to start for the varsity squad. ~
years playing baskelball with
members, who are still good fri
,
'are his fondest memories. He left this
area shortly aftec high school and
didn't return here to live for over40
years, but he came back freqUMtly
and limed his nips during basketball
season. After retiremeilt, he wsnted
to come back and live·here 10 watch
basketball. Now, that, I think: is a
little CI"IZy. He ·could watch high
school basketball in sny town in the
UrutcdStaloCS. Hedidn'tknow a soul
on the Racine ttam.• Howev~be
knew lhcil grandfathers.
.
,
When my husbsnd was pia g
bllll for Racine, he lived with his
grandmother. They didn'tbavecaror
much money, but •Granny" was
proud of her boy. She didn't attend
the games but she failhfuUy clipped
out all the paper's stories of ihe "then
Purple Tornadoes" for him and piS ted
them in a IIClllpbook. Before the
games, she usually fixed his favorite
meal: a hamburger On a bun fued
with mustard ll'!ld a slice ofonion. He
played other sports, too, but basket·
ball was his best sport and his favor·

iJ.e. She saved those clippings, too.
Years later, while be was iii the serv·

ice, he came home and found Granny
bad kept his bsseball glove oiled. She
wasn't much for words of love, but
her actions bespoke it very loudly.
No, I don't mind that my hus·
band loves high school basketball.
He is already lrying to tempt oor
grandson. age 6ve,IO move to Racine.

Yoil

see, the grandson's·parents are

both six feet and taller. I think my
husband sees a budding basketball
star.
·
(Dorothy Sayre and btr h~
·band, Geroae, formerly or Meigs
County, moved here about three
·years qo an4 now reside In a new
bouse faciDg the Oblo River just
below Syracuse.)

CARDINAL DRY GLEANERS

APRIL SPECIAL
BEDSPREADS AND
COMFORTERS
1

"The workshop is designed lei
be proactive by educating the
e~ployee~ or voluntc;er.s who deal
duec~y With. the ~ubhc m custo'_llllr
relauons, effiCiently handling
potential probl~s before they~
pen. and keepmg patrons and VISI·
tors bappr and coming back,"
Schuette said.
There is no charge for the workshOp. To register or for more infor-

mation, call the Ohio Valley Visi·
tors Center at 446~82 .

'

An "otologist" or "otolaryngolist" (ENT) is a doclor of
medicine or os teopathy (MD or DO). Such a physician is
license d to practice me di c ine a.n d -. surgery,· and may
s pecialize in all aspects of _ear and .. hearing care. This
specialis t's edu cation typically includes four years of
college, four years of medical school, one or more yea rs of
gene ral hospital experience in lreating disease and three or
more years in a hospital-based or residency program . In
di agnos is and tre atment , the E NT uses and prescribes
medicines, performs surgery and may prescribe, fit and sell
hearing aids, directly or throu gh a staff audiologist.

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fest, ignoring warnings about traf.
By JANIS L. MAGIN
Associated Press Writer
. fie gridlock and violence. More
. ATLANTA (AP) - The calm than 200,000 people, mostly colbeginning to the Freilknik rolling lege students, were expected
·
street pany was marred by a late· through the weekend.
The
first
day
remained
calm
Frl·
night melee in which two people
day
until
about
11
p.m
.,
wbeo
were shot, police were bit with bottles and several businesses were police ttied to disperse several bun.dred people galhered near a down·
burglarized.
Police said those sbot Friday town shopping center, Lt. Calvin
· night did not have life-threatening Moss said. Officers moved in after
injuries. They declined to elabo· the crowd got rowdy.
Police were hit with bottles and
rate.
.
other
objects and CNN reponed the .
Thousands of yciullg blacks CQII·
crowd
attacked a news crew. Moss
verged on Atlanta for this year' s
.
said
it
was unclear bow many peoedition of the huge spring street

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INHEARI G
Lisa Koch, M.S., C.C.C.A.
Licensed Aud,iologist .

OFFER GOOD THRU APRIL 29, 1995

(6 14) 446-7619 or 1·800-967-3277
435 2nd Ave.
G»Jiipolis, Ohio

'
Veterans
Mem. Hospital
Pomeroy

77 E. Main St.1
Jackson, Ohio

1
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" I think this is 'policeoik,' not
Freaknik," said Officer Joshua
Dunlap.
About 200,000 young people ·
showed up last year, angering
many locals with huge traffic jams,
lewdness and noise.
This year, tile city imposed sttict
traffic restrictions .
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Help h er rem ember th e smiles, the
tears and the event.&lt;; th at fill her llfe.
Ch oose from our wid e sclet.'tion of
Classic Mother 's Rings•
set with lustr&lt;ms ston es
to mark the
'JU=.._
b itihmonth of
each child .
Ant hod zt.:d lkalc r of

st Jlnniversary
''. SJII/E

-feelings of discontent
- a lack qf accomplishment
-chronic disappointment in love, work or life in
general
-or a general sense of meaninglessness of malaise
consider the following ...
Psychotherapy is not simply a trea.tment for
psychiatric problems. Psychothera(&gt;Y is also about
personal growth, self-awareness, and an individual's development and fulfillment.

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614/9112-4015
Judy Wall, Owner

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

Vi sit "COUNTRY

NATURALS • Gilts

&amp; Accessories"
in historic
Middleport. Ohio.

You'll find baskets,
bears, dolls, pottery,
wreaths, wood, florals
and so much more!

INGELS CARPET
Spring Carpet and Vinyl Sale

Hours: 10:00 to 5 pm
Tuesday thru Saturday
Closed Sunday &amp; Monday

f1 CHfiRftllnG

R11nch like the

IN·STOCK
VINYL

GREEnFIELD

or o BEflonFUL
Cope Cod like the

Department of Psychology

446-5379
Holzer Clinic; 90 Jackson Pike,

Gallipolis, Ohio

•

HOrtnnGTOn

4 bedrooms. 2112 baths.
PORCH . Gf\llAGE and. .
FULL UPSTAIRS.•

__

$11 138

_
_ ,.01-o..,
,.,.304·773·5001
Q U ALITY 1-iO M ES
M ASO N , WV.

IIOOELHOW&lt;S
l OCATED JJST tooTH Cf n+E
POWEffJY.MASONIACGE
Model Homes Open Oeil'/
MO&lt;I.-...10. 12-e
12-8

OUTDOOR
TURF

KITCHEN
. PRINTS ·
~tUBBER

7

~

50%

'5q.Yd.

-·

-'"

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4 Colors
In Stock

BACK

$ 99
or o SPfiCIOCIS Two
Story Homelike the...

$59!,.

Sq. Yd.

••

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HARIFORD

Commercial
Carpet

$3''

Save Up to

3 Bedrooms. 2 baths •
finished wilt1 tun
foundation.

To Jearn more about this proi:ess of change and growth contact
Dr. Richard Boone or the Holzer €1inic Psychology S~;rvice .
Dr. Boone would be glad 10 answer your questions m to arrange
a consultation.

HOLZER CLINIC

'1 02.00

Order Nowl
Save 25% And Insure
Mother's Qay Delivery

fi!"Om

The process of psychotherapy, an hones't and
thorough exploration of your life, could hold the
key to solving matters in life which bother you .
most.

Starting At

CnacrUn Brotl a:r ~ l\ lothc r's Rings«~~

Middleport, Oh. 45760

~

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·

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317 N. Second Avenue

said.

said

.

·Country Naturals
Gifts &amp;·Accessories

pie were arrested.
Some stores were looted, police
Despite the trouble, tllis year' s
Freaknik has been calmer and
smaller than last year' s. officials

· The ·M ou~.ers
·..J-1- · ' Ring•
. .® ..

IF YOU EXPERIENCE:

&lt;

An NBC-HIS "Hearing I nstrument Specialist" is
licensed or regulated in most states to fit and sell hearing
instruments. Hearing instrument specialists with the "NBCHIS" designation have passed a national, standardized
examination and agree to abide by a code of ethics .

Health Departmenls have been
working since 1993 to make timely
immunizations easier for parents.
Both health departJnents provide
immunizations free of charge to all
Gallia and Meigs County residents.
In Galli a County, immunization
. clinics are held each tuesday and
Friday 8 to 11:30 a.m. and 1 to
3:30 p.m. Evening hours are held
twice monthly in tile courthouse
lobby from 4 to 6 p.m. lmmuniza·
lion clinics are held on the second
and fourth Tuesday of the month in
Meigs County. No appointment is
necessary for both clinics.
To obtain immunization information, parents may call Gallia
County Health Department at 4464612, exten sion 292 or Meigs
Count~ Health Department at 992·
6626. '-....

Melee mars otherwise calm start to Freaknik

•

A n "audiologist" is a h earing care speci alist who is
trained to provide evaluati on a nd hea ring conserv ati on
servi ces, as w ell as treatments .to compensate for !he
communication probl em s crealed by a hearing loss .
Following comp le ti on of a g raduate or professional degree
in Aud iology, and pri or licensure, eligibility, audiologists
must complete a 9 month, to supervided clinical internship
a nd pass a s tandard ized , compre he n sive, · nati o na l
examinati9li in Aud iology administered by the Edu cational
Testing Serv ice. Aud iologists evalu ale hearing disord ers in
both c h ildren and adults, usi ng sop hi sticated''procedures
and techology, prescribe, fit and sell hearing aids and
Assistive Listening Devices, &amp;nd develop and implement
complete hearing care intervention programs.

20 /a OFF!

OHIO RIVER PLAZA, GALUPOLIS, OH.
PHONE 446-9495

..

The facililator for the class will ·'
be Suzy Robbins, direciOr of Sales
and Events at the Athens County
Convention Bureau.
.

Who's Who In ·
Hearing Health Care

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Enclosed Is $4.95 each lor the booklat(s), -----~--

.

TilE FtOOR PIAN features countless details, including a private
sitting area In lhe master suite and a aunny breakfast area. The
formal living and dining rooms are removed &amp;om lhe resl of lhe
home.

Clip thts order and return label

Enclosed.Is $4for plan No. - - - - -- - - --

GALLIPOLIS • The Obio Val·
ley Visitors Center will be sponsoring the Gallia County H.O.S.T.
(Hospitality Orientation and Ser·
vice Trllining) Workshop from 6:30
to 9 p.m. May 23 at the Bossard
Memorial Library, 7 Spruce Street.
The workshop focuses on front- ·
line personnel such as sales clerks,
wailresses auendants volunteers ·
cashiers ~d office personnel.
will familiarize tllem with Gallia
County- its local and regional
attractions and services, and show
what hospitalily and flood customer relations mean to repeat
business and the bottom line, said
to Kim Sheets Schuette ,OVV1C
,duector
·,

five grandchildren, Michelle and
Michael Bidwell and Douglas,
Aaron, and Brenl Furbee.
Mr. and Mrs. Furbee were mar·
ried on May ~. 1945 at tbe
Langsville home of ber parents,
Clareuce Leroy and Desla Halliday
Anderson. The Rev. Charles Cecn
performed the wedding ceremony.
Mr. Furbee retired from Kaiser
Aluminum and Cbemlcal Corporation, and his wife is a former t.eacb·
er in the Meigs County schools.

of Rio Grande. '
,
Elhnifest 9S is the product of
three years of wo(k says, Sara
Jobnson Sow, Director of tbe
Ortlce of Mulli-Eihnic Affair&amp;.
Sov.: says the JlUIPOIC of the fcad·
vall&amp; 10 bilblilbt the etbnlc diverslty on tbc 1Uo Unade ~The opening day activ1Ues on
SUJiday are scbeduled 10 last from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. All weet night
eveoiS begin al 7 p.m. and will last
approxim•Jely 90 mlnutes.
The festival will begin with a
Native Amedcan Drive-In Pow
Wow Social April 30.
Sow says. "Students witb Native
AmeriC811 beriJa&amp;e wUI be panicipaling. We'll be fealllring demonstrations and customs of Nati\oe ·
Americans all day."
Meigs County resident Cher
Shaffer will demonstrate bow prim·
ltive woodland .pottery Is made.
Shaffer is of Cherokee and
Cboctaw desceDJ. A Traditional
Seneca tribe member will sbow a
primitive form of communication
called "snub snakes." Fred
Kennedy, wbo lives on a reserva·
lion in upstate New York near tiie
Canadian border, will demonstrate
bow bows are made.
Also included in tbe opening
day activities will be lwo grand·
entrances by Native American
dancers and drummers.
· Sow says, "We've received sucb
a tremendous response from groups
wishing to participates that we bad
to plan two grand entrances. The
fust will take place at I p.m. with
the second at 4 p.m. Dancers and
drums from around Ohio, West
· Virginia and Kenlucky are all tak·
ing part. We even have dancers
from as far away as Colorado

National :lnfant Immunization Week announced

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Sow's husbands Abou, is lhe ·
will present a program entitled .
"lbe Welsb: Their History, Lan- designer of all fashions lha£ will be
auage and Culture." Samples of on display. He Is a native of SeueKatawga Dancers from Parkers- Welsh delicacies will be available. gal, Africa. Tbe· celebratioo of
burg, W.Va."
The activities will be in the Wood African and African-American cui·
tbre will culmioat( witll a dance Ill
Other first day exhibits will Hall lecture rilopls.
include pottery carvina by Art
African and African-American 9 p.m. in the Rhodes SIUdent Cen·
TcquescM from Bedford and story· culJUre will be presented May 3. A tee.
Studeots involved in planning
telling by Debbie Stewari, a fasbio_n sbow featuring African
Mohawk descendant, as well as styles IS set for 7 p.m. in the Fine Etboifest include Ami McFarland,
weaving and fried bread-making. and ~arming Arts Centez. Mod- Erin Harpers St~phanie Crowl,
The arena director for all activities · eis will consist of faculty slaff and Debbie Stewart, Carmelo Oliveras,
is Gallia County resident Odell stodenu as well as children from a Yusef Hermana and Jason Bing- ,
man.
Pinkerman. All events will be held foor-county area.
on the main green at Rio Grande.
~·!!!!!!!!
The culture of the West Indies
wlll be showcased May I by Rio
Grande sbldents from Jamaica and
Trinidad. Authentic West Indian
food sucb as macaroni. pie, curry
beef, jed: cbicU,. and peleu will be
Profe&amp;BionBI Weddi!J8 Pholo8f'Elpher8
served. The sllldents will present a
program bigblighting life in tile
Whot dreoaa ore aode ot .. .
West Indies. Students wbo are
Reme mber yoor childh~ c~rea,... of being o bride~ ~II dr~ up in
members of the Rio Grande soccer
08lin and lace _W8lking down the isle to Uie man of your dreamo. Y011
1ea111 will bost a West Indian soccer.
dfeamecl your wecldin[s wOuld be perfect - the oplendor of your dreoo. the
expo, showcasing their skills and
· f"'ii"'nce of the flower.. the py of your reception. and the limebo
the style of soccer played in the
beauty of your fihol"!!J''pho.
Caribbean. Monday"s activities will
Your wedding Can be perfecUAnd we will be the"' to turn your little /9rl
take place in the Wood Hall lecture
flllt tlloy into the.grown-up reality of 11ft unforgettable doy _captured
room and on !.be green outside.
forever In pllcele&amp;o photogre ph6 thot . .. droam• are mod-' of!
May 2 and May 3 will be devolWe offer Care. Coocero . ond Coiopetonce
ed to the culture of two Asian
Call no r too void ~ your do~ !
countries. On Tuesday, Japanese
614-446-6700
students will present a martial arts
expo and program on Japanese cuiture. Traditional Japanese food will
he available. All Tuesday activities
are set for the lower gymnasium in
Lyne Center. The culture of the
Korean peninsula will be featw:ed
on Wednesday. A video showing
clips from Korean televisien shows
and movies will be presented in
Wood Hall lecture room. Korean
cuisine will be served.
Wales wiD be !.be focus of atten·
tion May 4. Students from Assis·
tanl Professor of English Dr.
Megan Lloyd's Wei~ Stodies class

RIO GRANDE· The first aDDU· scheduled io appear. They are the
a1 Etbnlfeat Is scheduled for April Crowned Princes of Montezuma
30 lhrougb ,May;§ at the Uolvcnlty. County. We've also Invited tile

I

Visitors Center,offer
hospitality training

Sunday nmes-Sentlnel Page 85

.

.All On Salell

Expert Installation- 90 Days Same As Ca.sh
·
with approved credit.

3 ROOM
$
CARPET SPECIAL

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Llwl11 Roo~n, Dl•llt Roo-, Hal
(lnol. . . peel and IIOIIIIlll lnatalldon)

175 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

PHONE 992-7028
TOLL FREE 8()().407·2634

Sh,op Mon., Tues., Wed., Fri. 9-5; Thurs. 9-12; Sat. 9-2

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April23, 1995 · -·

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

limes-Sentinel

633 violations won't take driver off the streets :
Dear ·Ann Landers: Will you
please tell me what it takes· to get ·a
·driver off the streets in New York
City?
,
.
According 10 a New York Times
story, which I am enclosing, a man
who calls himself Harvey Linen (one
of his many names) has had his
license suspended 633 times since
1990.Morclbanayearafta-thcNew
York poli&lt;:c department put lOge!her
. tof"most,wanted"drivers,Linen
ailS
·
was.hauled in. .
Actually, it waso't one of Unen;s
m111\y traffic violations that did him
in. His undoing was lhephony litcnse
Plate that happcn,ed to catch a
policeman~s eye. The plate was a
crudelycraftedcardboarda11'airstuck
in tbe rear window of his 1980 Olds
Tornado.
When Linen was stopped, he was
highly indignant. He said the car
wasn't his and that he had borrowed
it from a friend to drive over to see
his mother: He tripped himself up by
giving ·his real name or at Ieast the
name under which authorities had
kept all his records. When he was
.
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taken 10 the station house and 1\is communicate that he was reall}'
name was put in the corilputer, out choking. Valuable time was wasred
tumbleil hundreds of violations. It while his wife called 91110 teU them
took an hour and 45 minutes to print she thought her husband was having
them all. ·
a stroke·. By lhe time she managed 10
.Linen attempted to put the police describe the symptoms, it was too
on the tlefensive from the moment he late. Her husband was dead.
was anested. He claimed that he had
In trying to find a solution to tllis
never had an acci!lent (which was problem I came· up with what I call
true) and chastised the police for . "Tbe A~n Landers Choke." Herefi'ds
"bolhC!ring him" when dtcrc are so how it works: Thb instant you m
many drug dealers out there who youarechoking,placetxithhandson
h
h
r rail
oug ~ .1Q be rounded up arul. put . your throat as thoug you 1te Y
behind bars.
·
intend 10 choke yourself to dealh. In
In New York .City, more than 340 Ibis way, the person with whom }'OU
drivers have had their licenses are communicating will understand.
·
·
· your
suspen ded more than I00 times.
This
I'm sure if you .l.putth'IS m
· a mauer of record. I repeat, Miss column, many peop1e will! augh, but
IS
Landers, what on earth does it take in their private. moments, they will
to get these law-breakers off tbe stand in front of a mirror and try it.
streets in Ibis town? -- NEWSDAY They will then realize that it is the ·
READER ON LONG ISLAND
best way to get the message across
· h
DEAR
READER
I
h
·
:
ave no m
a urry.
answers 10 your question. If William
You have been in the public eye so
J. Brauon·, lhe chief of police in New long that your name has become plirt
York, would like 10 respond, I will of the language . .People will
remember I'The Ann Landers
Printhis.lette_r..
Dear Ann Landers: Some time Choke." Please tell them about it as
ago, I read about a man who choked soon as possible. And since I have
to death because he could not suggesredusingyourname,youhave

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ETIIEI::
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DEAR ETHEL: Here's your letter,
k ,
·• "
along with my than s .or wnun~
somelhing tbat could be.a godsend
for a great many readers. You wU!.
never know how many people you.
1euet My
saved by mailing yourfthem
thanks on behalf of all?oH
· •.:·
Anlllcoholproblem ow can yo~~

~~~1';;:X,~;UINOIS

help yourself or so~one you !ove?.
"Alcoholism: How to Recog.nlzt It,·
How to Delli With It, How ID C,''!'Iller:
It".will gilll! you
the answers
.••end•ta.·
d
b ·
1
self-addrtsse • ong, IISIMSS·st 1•
envelope and.a ~heck or mollrj on:ltr ·
for $3. ?5 (this !nciUks postage and_
handling) to . Alcohol, clo. A1111 -.
P.O B JJ562 Ch ago
lAnders, · · ox
• IC •
Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada, seiJd
$4.55.)
:.

119 units donated at tri-state bloodmobile visit
MR. AND MRS. STEPHEN TRACY

Lear-Tracy
POMEROY- The uiurel Cliff

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Free Methodist Church was the setling for tbe March 24 wedding of
Angela Lear, daughter of Russell
and Connie Lear, and Stephen
Michael Tracy, son of' Merlin
Tracy and Susan Tracy.
'!be Rev. Peter J. Trembley performed tbe 7:30p.m. ceremony following a program of mu sic by
Laura Guthrie, pianist and soloist.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, lhe bride wore a white satin
gown wilh shon puffed sleeves, a
sweetheart neckline, and filled
bodice of lace ac.ce nted with
•
sequins and faux pearls. The gown
. flowed into a chapel length train.
The bride carried a heart Shaped
cascade arrangement of white roses
with baby's breath tied with lace
and rose colored ribbon . Her veil
fell from a bandeau of white satin
norets and leaves.
Megan Swain was the matron of
honor arid Lois Riggs was the
'de
d Th
th
11
bn smai · ey bo wore oor
length rose-colored · satin gow ns
and carried single white roses with
baby's breath.

Dakotah, son of the bride 'and
groom, was ringbearer 3Qd wore a
black tuxedo. He carried a heart
shaped pillow with rose and black
ribbons. Flower girl was Erica,
daughter !lf the bride and groom.
She wore a white dress with pearls
and carried a white basket with
white and rose ribbon trim.
Jeff Tracy, brother of the groom,
and l)rilfn Teaford were the
groom's honor attendants, and ushers were brothers of the bride,
Rusty and Danny Lear, and a
cousin of the groom, -C:J. Stone.
An wore black tuxedos with white
rose boutonnieres'.
lmmediatell following the wedding, a reception was held in the
church social room. A three-tiered
CaSe decorated in lhe wedding colf
ors was served. with other rc resh·ments. Servers were an aunt of the
,bride, Marie Edwards, and a cousin
and aunt of the groan\, Trncy and
· Sue Stone.
The couple honeymooned at
Canaan Valley . The groom is
employed at Ravenswood Al~­
minum and the bride attends Valley
Beauty School in Marieua.

----~- - Wedding

policy_~.
.

Tbe Sunday Times-Sentine.l
Those not,making Lbe 60-day
regw:ds tbe weddings of Galli a, deadline will be published during
Meigs and Mason counties as news the daily paper as space allows.
and is b!IJIPY to publish wedding
Photographs of either tbe bride
stories and photographs without
or the bride and groom may be
cbarge.
published with wedding stories if
· However, wedding ne'ws must des.ired. Photographs may be either
meet general standards of timeli- black and white or good quality
ness. :t'be newspaper prefers to color, billfold size or larger.
publisll accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
Poor quaiity photographs will
•
not be accepted. Generally, snapTo be published in the Sunday shots or instant-developing photos
edition, the wedding must have arc not of acceptable quality.
iaken place within 60 days prior to
All material submitted for publithe publication, and may be up to
cation
is subjcctLO editing.
600 words in length. Matc~al for
Along the River must be received·
may be directed to
by ·tbe editorill.l dcpartmcrrt by the,Questions
editorial
department
from Ito 5
Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to lhe date
p.m. Monday through Friday at
of publication . .
446-234~.

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GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-State L. Hennesy, Robi:rt T. Hennesy,
Red Cross Bload Services' blood· Joseph A. Queen, Barbara C.
mobile collected 119 units during Fulks, Kelly Atkinson, Becky P.
its Thursday stop at Grace United Atkinson, Casby Meadows Ill,
Methodist Church, local Red Cross Jonathan E. Blackford, Heather R.
Jones, Amber N. Howell, Barbara .
officials said.
. The event drew I 3~ potential A. Mills, Jeremy L. Clay, MoUy L.
McWilliams, Gabriel' T. Bevan,
donors, with 13 deferred.
, Tbe nutsi,ng staff included Mrs. Gary L. Kilgore Jr., Lacie M. Neal, .
Eula Adkins. Mrs. Jack Harrison, .Amber D. Baughman, Timothy E.
Mrs. Tom Hysell, Mrs. Raymond Wilkins, Wesley S. Gibson, BranJennings, Mrs. Michael Pasquale, . don Hill, Brian Bevan, Jesse Stacy,
Mrs. Fred Stephenson, Mrs. Lewis Charles U. Miller;
Charles D. Plymale, Dan R.
Schmidt and Mrs. Evelena
Patel, Jeremiah Waugh, Brian
Wll~arns.
Workiag on registration and the Hel1in, Jaimie Fraley, Victoria M.
canteen staff were Janet Hughes, Mollohan, Kara Barnes,· John H.
Cindy Dmmmond, Mary Lou Har- Barcus, Stephen Hoffman, Trisba
·rison, Sadie Notter, Virginia Peters, Bill Medley, Roger J. WalkWright, Mary (lendenin, Gail Rus- er, Lou Ellen Zerkle, Tanya N.
sell, Wilma Webster and Ellabelle Taylor, Ronald R. Plantz, Peggy A.
Roberts, . Vernon W. Bumheimer,
McDonald.
Matt Milstead, Andrew Lemley,
. Giving blood were:
I Raymond C. Weiher Jr., &amp;tan Robert H. Craft, Heath Hutchinson,
K. Stanley, Kingsley !'f. Meyer, Jeremy Belville, Luke Patrick, Tia
Ricky Biggs, Kathy E. Biggs, Mary Osborne, Jason Halley, Suzanne
Henson, Jill Roderus, Rebecca

Thomas;
Ashley Walton, Chris Mullins,
Ruth Keeton, Stephanie Kuhn,
Lance L Hughes, Bonnie Broyles,
Carolyn Plymale, TeiT)i D. Chapman, Diana L. Clark, Frank E. ·
Naskey, Harold E. Whitt, AJnimda
F. Darst, Lee F. Burch.am, Rachel
D. Pullins, Sara E. Abels, Leland P.
Hamilton, Mia L. Pauerson, Gloria
J. McQuaid, Oran C. Barry Jr.,
Tara D . Chevalier, Doris D. Copley, Edward A. Midkiff, Stephen
Roush, Janet S. Williams, Denise
Rice, Herbert F. Schuette, EUis R.
English Jr., Doyle J. ·saunders,
Kimberly Cade;
David A: Duplantier, Bessie 'J.
Curtis, Clarence B. Stout, Linda L.
Toland, Lori A. Roberts, Shannon
M. Pratt, Stefanic Jo Danford, Gary
Bane, Gwendolyn S. Knox, Roben
G. Rothgeb, Geneie Plantz, Venetia
Slwalley, Shirley Lyman, David H.
McQuaid, James C. Saunders, Jerry
L. Burcham, Belinda U!e Broyles,

WASHINGTON (AP)- Golden Chocolate hie. is recalling its
"Gulliver" chocolate bars because
the candy's label doesn't note that
it contains nuts, which can cause
anergic reactions in' certain people.
The candy consists of a chocolate-covered wafer. The wafer contains ground ·hazelnuts, but those
nu~ aren't listed on the ingredient
label.
.
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Golden ·c hocolate issued the
recall after learning that a Connecticut child had suffered a mild
allergic reaction to lhe nuts. The
Brooklyn firm is printing a-new
~andy _
labellhat includes nuts as an
mgred1ent. .
Anyone possibly allergic to
hazelnuts who purchased a Gulliver
bar before. Apnl II, when the company discovered th~ problem, is

FOLLOW T~ES£ DIR£C710NS•••

GALLIPOLIS -The GalliaMeigs Community Action Agency
will be distributing butter, rice
peanut butter and Cocoa
Cruncbie' s to people holding valid
Food Commodity Cards Tuesday,
April 25 in Meigs and GalUa County.
Locations in Meigs County are
Meigs County Fairgrounds, Tuppers Plains Fire Station, Pageville
Town Hall and the Racine F'II'C Sta· ·
tlon. Distribution will be from 9:30
a.m. 10 I 2 p.m. or until lhe supply
is exhausteil, whichever comes

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first.

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Locations in Gallia County are
Gallia County FiUrgrounds, Gallco
in Cheshire, Mt. Carmel Baptist
Church in Bidwell and the Crown

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City Fire Station. Distribution will
be-from 12 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. or
until the supply is exhausted,
whichever comes first.
Recipients should bring a bag or
container for lheir commodities.
Those picking up items for others must bring a signed note from
the person in addition to 'their Food
Commodity Card.

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TWO LOCATIONS:
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151 SECOND. AVE., GALLIPOLIS 446-2842.
91 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT
992-6250

M~mber Jewelers'

Board of Trade

...,.__ Society scrapbook

446·3401
"We cater to a woman~
fitness needs "

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To Order One of
These Exclusive

Gifts Call...

9Jadel
OPEN
9-5 DAILY
9-6MONDAY
9-8 FRIDAY
Financing Available
Free Parking
Free Gift Wrapping

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1725 Eastem Ave.

31elefiQll(

.,

Can -~ ··---. ............ Lose_

Weight . . -.thyoUr ...................,....,

II'' getting warmer outside,.and it's ~me
to start wearing summer clothes again!
So make this your best summer ever
· wirh Weight Watchers! Right nt:YoN, you
con join Weight Watchers and register
absolutely free! Now that's worth getting ~cited about! CaUus today!

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Confidential Services
,
for females &amp; t:nales. ·
~Birth Control Exams
iPap Tests
•lests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
;Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
OJ;Iregnancy tests. &amp; counseling
a)\.1ethods include:
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Ave. Gallipolis

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· You ·-~--·~ . ~...-

~; PLANNED PARENIJ'HOOD
~~
OF SDUIJ'HEAS,.:OHIO

441·0110
Fr~e ll11/ DIIIVIIf

·

.• BICYCLE HELMET CAMis bein~ beld to celebrate Pauline
·:
PAIGN
. Shaver s 80th birthday April 29.
:; GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Cards may be sent to 4268 Addison
PQiice Department in ·cooperation Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 I.
w')lh Children's Hospilal, the Cen.triil Ol)io Pediatric Society and tbe
'Mjd-Obio Dairy Queen Stores will
sj)onsor a summer Bicycle Helmet ·
Qanapaign.
• The campaign will promote
' ~aring a bicycle helmet. Starting
~emorial weekend through tbe
La,bor Day weekend, the police
djlpartment will be watching for
·c!iildren wearin~ bicycle helmets
1111d practicing b1cycle safety. The
o)'ficers will be dimibuting
coupons for a free Dairy Queen
~e for each child practicing safe
cj.cling. Adults will also be awardetJ coupons if an officer feels their
REMEMBER
b~havior serves as a model for
il 's never too late to have a happy
y~ung people.
childhood!
,.
Mon-Fri 9-4
. Satl0.5
.CARD SHOWER
Layaway available S j
•
::GALLIPOLIS • A card shower

:Jvla{e someone jee[appreciatecf witli
afreslispririg bouquet of
6eautiju(~ arrangedgift bas~t.

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:Fine Jew~[ru
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APRlL 24-28

"Compare Acquisitwns Price.Before You Buy Any&amp;Mere~·

f2LCQ11ISI.'Ii09{S

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PROFESSIONAL
.SECRETARIES
WEEK

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LAYAWAY - ONLY 10% DOWN!

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LADIES PREFERENCE
Health Club

Secretar ...

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50%.To 7'0%* , .·

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Choices For Your

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GOLD CHAINS. AND lRACELETS- 10K and 14K
.SAVE
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ATitNTIONI -Sgt. Jack Nuckels of the 9lst O.V.I., Co. B
reenactment group takes a soldi•r to task at last year's Gallla
.County Civil War Soldiers Homecoming. This year's encampment
.~ponsored by the Our House State Memorial will be April 29
lhrougb 30 in GaUlpolis City Park. A Gen. Grant impers~tnator
.will make an appearance from 3 to 5 p.m. April 29 at the Our
House. For more Information on the living history event, caD the
phio Valley Visitors Center at 446-6882.

Give At The Office

. •SOLITAIRES
.
.
•DIAMOND TENNIS BRACELETS
•
•ANNIVERSARY BANDS
laud Diamonds • Marqui~e Diamonds • Pear Shaped Di•monds
Ovai'IJiamonds • Princess Cut lliamonds • Emerald Shaped Dramonds

.,.

-to boost your energy level
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-to lose unwanted p!lunds
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and inches
•'
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-to create Cl new body
-to make new ·friends
-to increase self esteem
-to decrease stress '
••
-to have fun
.
Call

t11 i\?c "r

Community Action Agency to
distribute commodities ·

OND·

SALE!

cines· may be useful in fighting a
By RA.NDI HUTI'ER EPSTEIN
form of skin cancer and possibly
Associated Press Writer
LONDON (AP) - American lymphoma, cancer of the lymph
scientists say an anti-cancer vac- glands.
However, in the latest report,
cine fpiled the spread of a rare
form of blood cancer In one researchers added a new twist.
They e~cited an immune response
woman.
"If the results of this single by injecting a piece of the cancer
patient are confirmed in a larger . cell into a healthy volunteer.
Investigators injected a protein
number (of patients) I think we can
.begin to talk in terms of cure," said . unique to the woman's cancer cells
Dr. Larry Kwak, one of the .investi- into her brother. His defense sysgators at the National C~cer Insti- tem made cancer-fighting substances, which were injected back
tute in Bethesda, Md.
But other cancer experts warned into the patient .
Kwak said the brother could not
that'one woman's success story is
have
gotten cancer from the profar from proving tbe treatment is
tein,
which
is only one smaU poreffective.
tion
of
the
cell.
The prot~in was
The 43-year-old woman with
sufficient
to
elicit
an immune
multiple myeloma- an aggressive
response
against
tbe
entire
cancer
form of cancer that often kills withcell.
but
not
enoqgh
to
cause
canin a few years - has been in
remission for more than two years, cer, he said.
Kwak said in a telephone interview. '
The report will be published in
Now Open For The Season
Saturday's The Lancet, a medical
journal
· Bedding Plants
Dr. B.J. Kennedy, an authority
Vegetable Plants, Hanging
on cancer and professor at tbe UniBaskets, 4 in Geraniums,
versity of Minnesota, said "one
case report doesn't prove anything.
Shurbs &amp; Trees, Rose
This could be an anomaly of this
Bushes, Strawberry Plants
one patient," not tbe result of the
treatment.
Hubbards Gr.eenhouse
· The notio.n of using so-called
Syracuse
992-5776
cancer vaccines - treatments that
Open Daily 19 am-5 pm
rev up the patient's defense system
to destroy tumors - is not new.
Sunday 12 noon-5 pm
Preliminary evidence from a few
prior studies ~uggested _that vac-

asked to return it to the store of
purchase for a refund.

MIDDLEPORT • GALLIPOLIS

.

Chris Craft, Robert Baylor, Jessica
L. Wood, Robin L. Pasquale. Paul
S. Koch, Donna L. Evans, Richard'
L. Neal, Jennifer L. Slone, Paul D. ·
Niday, Wanda J. ConneUey, Twyllia Y. Connelley, Marvin L. Baird;·'·
· · John H. Roush, John I. Jones'1·
Peggy A. Phillips, Lawrence W.·
Phillips, Kennison Saunders, Peggy
L. Rucker, Joan E. Schmidt, Misty
S. Stanley, Jacqueline J.McCarty,
Jodie L. Unroe, Amy B. Hutchins,
Thomas R. Hutchins, David E. ;
Clay, Henry E. Dillon, Farrell l'f,.
Houck, James C. Fife, Sandra M.
Saxon, Teresa A. Davis, Lesa l . :·
Caldwell, Patricia A. Dyer.
•

Chocolate bar recalled as allergy precaution

5kq_uisitioits J'ine Jewe{'!J
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• DepoProvera·injeC'Iion • Diaphraghm
• Birth control pill
• I.U.D.
.
• Condom/Spermicide
SlidlnlfF'ee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private insurance.

414 SECOND STfiEET
. GALLIPOLIS .
446·0166

509.S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992'-5912

c•• • (800) 487-4777
WEIGHT WATCHERS
GALLIPOLIS

JACKSON

541 Second Avenue_
Tue:
7 p.m.
Wed : 9:30a.m.

966 E. Main St.
Mon: 6:30p.m.'

ST. PETER'S
EPISCOPAL CHURCH

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HERE WE ARE, CLOWNING AROUND AT THE
CHOCOLATE FANTASY FAIR AT THE CONVENTION
CENTER IN COLUMBUS. OHIO, DURING OUR.
VALENTINE WEEKEND GETAWAY. WE HAD A GREAT
TIME SHOPPING AT TH ~ CITY CENTER FOLLOWING
OUR CHECK-IN AT TflE HYATI REGEN CY. THAT
EVENING WE HAD OINNER AT FIRE ENGINE N0 .5 A
QUAINT RESTAURANT IN GERMAN VILLAGE. AND
THE LETTERMEN CONCERT,"' WHAT AN EVENING OF
ENTERTAINMENT. THE FOUR LETTERMEN SANG ALL
THEIR HITS OF THE 50'S AND 60'S WITH THE 80 PIECE
. COLUMBUS SYMPHONY
PROVIDING
THE
BACKGROUND · MUSIC
WHAT
GREAT
ENTERTAINMENT. FOLLOWING THE CONCERT, THE
EVENING WAS TOPPED OFF WITH A SURPRISE VISIT
TO THE GRAYSTONE WINERY IN THE HISTORIC
BREWERY DISTRICT. A LATE DESSERT AND WINE AND
CHEESE PARTY WAS OFFERED AS WELL AS A TOUR OF
THE WINERY BY OWNER JANE BUTLER, A FRIEND OF
MINE WHO ·1 ME"' AT ONE OF OUR TOUR OP.ERATOR
MEETINGS A FEW YEARS BACK . IT WAS A GREAT
WEEKEND, EVER)'()NE DRESSED WITH A TOU CH OF
RED FOR THE VALENTINE FESTIVlTIES, WHAT FUN
WHEN EVERYONE JOINS IN THE "GOOD TIMES" .. •
WE RECENTLY HELD A HEALTH SEMINAR IN THE
BANK LOBBY USING THE THEME,"FEELING GOOD FOR
THE GOOD TIMES" REPRESENTATIVES FROM
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL AND THE WELLNESS
CENTER WERE PRESENT. MARJE GRAVELY. DIETICIAN
FOR THE iiOSPITAL.DISCUSSED PROPER DIET AND
· THE IMPORTANCE OF READING LABELS ON OUR
FOOD SHOPPING AND HANDED OUT BROCHUR ES TO
AID IN THIS . PAM SNYDER SPOKE ON THE
IMPORTANCE OF EXERCISE AND OFFERED OPTIONS
AVAILABLE AT THE WELLN ESS CENTER, WHILE
DIANNA ELLISON, AEROBIC INSTRUCTO R AT THE
CENTER , DEMONSTRATED VARIOUS EXE RCIS ES AS
WELL AS LINE DANCING, A FUN GROUP ACJWITY
. THAT-IS SOMETIM ES OFFERED ON VARIOUS TOURS
AVAILABLE TO THE GROUP.
NEXT WEEK WE WILL DEPART WITH TWO BUSES. 80
ABOARD. FOR A FUN TIME WI TH MEMBERS OF THE
POINT PLEASANT HIGH SCHOOL "SWINGIN SQU IR ES"
JAZZ ENSEMBLE AND DANCERS, DIRECTED BY GARY
STEWART AND JEFF HILBERT THE GROUP WILL
PERFORM AT OPRYLAND PARK IN NASHV ILLE AND
ON THE RIVERFRONT PARK IN NEW ORLEANS WE
WILL VISIT MEMPHIS FOR OV,ERNIGHT AND A VISIT
TO GRACELAND, HOM E OF ELVIS PRESLEY WHO
GREATLY INFLUENCED OUR MUSIC, TRAVEL ON THE
~ NEW ORLEANS FOR THREE DAYS WHICH WILL
JNC,LUDE A WALKING TOUR AND SHOPPING IN THE
FRENCtl QUARTER, A RIVERBOAT DINNER CRUISE,
LUNCH AT THE HARD ROCK CAFE. A SEAFOOD
DINNER AT FJTZGER.ALDS, A TOUR OF THE
SUPERDOME, A VISI T TO MARDI-GRAS WO RLD, ETC:
ON TO NASHVILLE FOR OVERNIGH T WJTJ,J A TOUR OF
THE OPRYLAND HOTEL AND A FU N DAY AT
OPRYLAND PARK . FOLLOWING THEIR PERFORMANCE,
THE GROUP WILL ENJOY THE RIDES AND
ENTERTAINMENT AT TI1E PARK. A GREAT TRIP AND ·
AN EDUCATION FOR THE STUDENTS AS THEY TASTE
THE MEMPHIS BLUES, NEW ORLEA-NS JAZZ AND THE
COUNTRY . MUSIC OF NASHVILLE --AN D WE BIG
PEOPLE LIKE IT TOO!
WHIL E SOME OF US ARE "TOU RING" OTHER
MEMBERS WILL GATHER.AT HARMON·PARl&lt;. FOR OUR
PEOPLES CHOICE TEAM PARTICIPATION IN. TliE
WALKAMERICA FOR MARCH OF DIMES; APRIL 30.
MEET AT 1 PM., WEAR YOUR PEOPLES CHOICE T·
SHIRTS AND EITHER PLAN TO WALK OR HELP OUT
WITH REGISTRATION, POPCORN, ETC. CALL ME IF
YOU CAN HELP. -AND LETS GET OUT AND
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LEWIS FAMILY
RESTAURANT

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LFTTHE GOOD TIM ES ROLL! !'
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~BAnk
oiP&lt;&gt;ntP-.-·FDIC

Peop!M ChOICe It. dMIIon 01' N

M
':1!Jt-::t;EOPLES
HOICE
C
CO-ORDINATOR

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April 23,

199~

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Entertainment

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Names in the news ....------M.HS musical
nalllly, some people

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~~~pet·im·

"Who is sbc?•abowildcled '¥CIIdorat
the GUM deplnmeat 1101e ubd wben pbaqrlphers ~y nppcd ClmpbeU
buying -lllilic.y walcliea in IIDUYmir·

huntinl

ucst.

&lt;t:pben was in the Russian capilli

Club, wli= sbc was acJw!nled 10 ptrfam
1011p from her 1994 debut album
~Babywoman.•
SboalsoiiiOIIedinRedSqUMe,pzed
atlhe onion cloiilea of St. Basil Cathedralaad
cruised around the city in a limousine.

some

Naomi Campbell

NEW YORK (AP)·- Darryl Slnlw·
berry may be trying to avoid a llrikcoul.
The f01111« Ali·Sc.r OUtfiClder WaDIS 10 CUI a deal where he would
testify againsr two fonnr.r reammarea in a tax-evasion probe 10 bypass a
tllree-monlh jail tenn, The Daily News reported Friday.
Snwberry, who bad pi~ guilty 10 tax evasion and is scheduled to
be semenced Monday, would teSiify against former New Yodt Mets
teammates Dwight Gooden 8iid Howard Johnson, lhe News said
A spoJccsman for U.S. District Auomey Mary Jo White would 1101
canment on lhe report. Jack Tip,. Slnlwbcny's lawyer, said he expected

-

PIZZA LOVERS NIGHT
EVERY ·
TUESDAY NIGHT
You Can Enjoy.Any Style
Personal. Size ...

~--~.

I

1 .29'

For Only 5

or With 16 oz. Son Drink

For Only
SENIOR PRESENTATIONS ·A musical,
"Seven Brides for Dracula," and a one-act play,
"The Vampire's Bride" will be presented by
senior drama students at Meigs High School Friday. Curtain time Is 8 p.m. Admission is $2 for
students, and $3 for adults.
Taking the role of Dracula in the 'musical is
Adam Sheets, pictured In the coffin, surrounded
by other participants In the production, ten to
right, front, Stepbannle Thomas, Jamie Ord,
Crystal Vaughan, Kelley Grueser, Susan Page,

Loretta Switt

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - Justlilce lhe cllaracler in her new movie,
Sandra BuUoclc gelS lonely, 100.
1
•• Sometimes I just wan1 to deal with things myself, stay at home; says
lhe starof"While You Were Sleeping." "And my friends know when I'm
d()ing it because r won't pick up lhe phones, r just shut off. But I need it;
·
it's,lilce, my rejuvenation."
BuUock plays Lucy Modenaz, a lonely train ticket clerk infawarM
wilh a handsome commuter. She gets drilwn iniO his family when he is
knocked into a coma and she pretends to be his fUIIICeC.

piano accompanist, and Becky Meier; and back,
Brent Smith, Phil Edmonds, Sarah Anderson;
Jason Taylor, Reggie Pratt, Shannon Staats,
Joey Ruchti, percussionist, Adam Krawsczyn,
Shllo More, Jerod Cook, Sam Cowan, and
Benny Ewing.
In the one-act play, the parts are taken by len
to right, Adam Wyatt, Mandy Jones, Walt
Williams, Richie Hagan, Heidi Huffman, Vanessa Compston, Lisa Yeauger, Robbie Baker,
David ·Fetty,_Todd McDade, Erika Meadows.
Jared HUI and Tyler Wolfe are also Iii tbe play.

'1.99

Cheeseburger
Lovers Night
Every Thursday Night

39¢ each u~,.

10

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Henderson, WV
Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande, OH

URG jazz ensemble to ·strike a tune at spring concert
fonns mainly improvisational jazz, arranging classes. As a musician,
ranging in style from I}uJce Elling- Kenney played trumpet in jazz
ton to Frank Zappa. ·
bands at DePaul and Ohio Stale.
"It's really like small combo- He toured with the Ohio State jazz
type jazz," Kenney says. "Every· band in 1990. Part of the lOur took
.body bas a sol~ part: We're uniq~e him to Mexico City's Jazz Festival.
m !bat we aren ! domg a lot of b.~&amp; ... " .. lbcre are seven members in the
bands type jazz....
Rio Grande Jazz Ensemble, J.P.
K~nney is in hh se.~ond ye~ Lyons (trumpet), Amy Taylor (sa:xteachmg at the Umversuy o( Rto opbone), Andy Sigman and Wendi
Grande. He earned a bachelor's Rollins (trombone), Christian Scott
degree in .Performance ~d &lt;;ompo- (piano), John Jackson (drums) and
Slllon from DePaul Umverslly and visiting member Keith Koby
did his graduate work in Composi- (bass).
tion at Ohio St.ate University in
Other upcoming Music Depart·
Columbus. At Rio 9rn"de, Kenney ment events at !be University of
. teaches all mus1c theory and Rio Grande include the Symphonic

Music makers: The new Woodstock sound
By DAVID BAUDER
Associated Press Writer
WOODSTOCK, N.Y. (APlMost musical impressions of
Woodstock begin and end with the
muddy festivals that bore the
town's name in 1969 and 1994.
Tbis upstate New York region
actually has a thriving music scene
tbat bas been boosted wilb the
release of a nationally distributed
album, called "New Music From
Woodstock, N.Y." It features five
of the area's most promising artists.
Charles L yonbar~ Will lloppey
and !be bands Lunch Meat, Peacebomb. Perfect Thyroid and Go Van
Go hope some of that Woodstock
mystique rub off on them.
''What I hope !be record docs is
let 'peo'ple out tbcrc knOw that
Woodstock is a very happening
place for music." said Lyonbart, a
folk singer wi!b a sound reminiscent of Leonard Cob en. "People .
talk about Seattle and Greenwtcb
Village, but there arc a lot of good
things happening here."
Woodstock's legacy as an atl5
colony attracted musicians such as
Bob Dylan and the . Band, who
recorded their lege ndary Basement
Tapes at a home in this Catskill
Mountains community about 90
_ miles from New York City.
Today, it is borne to a number of
prominent recording studios. Musicians like Donald Fagen, Marshall
Crenshaw. Rick Danko, Frcedy
Johnston and Graham Parker are
altraeled 10 the area's mountain air
and bohemian attitude and make
their homes bere.
Tbe natural advantages of the
region never were much help· to
strufgling musicians. In fact. !be
area s tiny population and concen·
tration of transplanted New York
City residents often made for smaU,
cynical crowds at sucb local clubs
as tbe Tinker Street Clfe.

" You'd beuer be good or peo·
ple won't clap. It's lilce !be 'Gong
Show,"' said Joe Stole, guitarist
and songwri ter for Peacebomb.
Local musicians credit Peacebomb and Lunch Meat wi!b paving
the way in nurturing audiences
hungry for original music.
"They see that someone is able
to stick it out and it starts to build
the. confidence of this area." said
Chris Hanson, singer and trumpet
player for Perfect Thyroid.' "This
(CD) is a tribute !o that.''
Peaeebomb, Lunch Meat and
Perfect Thyroid have tried to gel
ahead through steady perfonnances

•

By BARRY WILNER
NEW YORK (AP) - Ki·Jana
· Carter was, indeed, the first pick in
Saturday's NFL drafi. Except it was
Cincinnati, not Carolina. that made
the choice.
·
For the second straight year, the
· Bengals opened the draft. They
dealt the fifth pick in the first round
·and a second-rounder (36th i3verall)

and building an audience, ·instead
of simply shopping tapes lo reconl
companies.
Last ·summer's Woodsiock festival offered several local bands a
chance at their biggest audience.

Band Concert Wednesday, May 3;
a perfmmance by !be Maslcrworks
Chorale Monday, May 8 and a
recital by members of the Rio
Grande Music Deparunent Tues·day, May 9 There is no charge for
any of these events. For more
information call 614-245-7364 or
loll free in Ohio 1-800-2827201,
extension 7364
·

Start AI
·51,850

BAQUACil

HOLJDAY POOLS, INC.
2973

Piedmont Rd., Hunthigt.:&gt;n (304) 429-4788 •
Mon.·Fri . 9:30-5 Sat. 9:30-2

Jacksonville, the other expan-:
sion team, owned the second pick•
and selected offensive tackle Tony:
Boselli of Southern California, a~
expected. Bosclli has been com ~
pared to Anthony Munoz, another:
Trojan offensive tackle who was a;
perennial All. Pro and is considered(See DRAFT on'C·8)

Indians looking up
.after ~ 994 showing
By CHUCK MELVIN
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP)- They no longer have to wear shades in
the airport, mumble lhe name of their employer at the hotel's froni desk,
pray that no one recognizes them as they pass through town.
They can say it straight out now: They're the Cleveland Indians.
"When I first got lo Cleveland in ' 90, guys dido 'I even want to go there
to play against us, let alone go there and play for the whole y,ear," says
right-hander Charles Nagy, once an All-Star, now merely the fourth starter.
"In years past, it was like, 'How many games are they going to lose this
year?' and talk like that," Nagy said. "Now they're searching for tickets
for October and the playoffs. it's really exciting."
The excitement, il appears, is well-founded.
.
'When baseball abruptly pulled the plug in August, the Indians were in
second place in the AL Central, one game behind the Chicago White Sox,
and poised for their first pennant race since the Eisenhower administration.
They had taken full advantage of plush new Jacobs Field, pulling together the best borne record in baseball (35-16) including a franchise-record 18game home winning streak in May and June. Their last 28 games at the
downtown park were sold o.ut.
.
Had the strike ended in time for playoffs, Cleveland's 66-47 record·
would have qualified for a wild card berth.
·
Thai, suggests manager Mike Hargrove, w'as just a preview.
"I made out my regular lin.eup about a week before the players came
back, while the replacement thing was still going on, and I showed the lineup 10 (general manager) John Hart. And I said, 'How many lineups can
have a Sandy Alomar billing ninth and a Paul Sorrento hilling eighth?' I
mean., thai's a fairly strong offensive ballclub," Hargrove said.
· · The nucleus of the club remains intact thanks to Hart's timely signing of
his best 'young stars to multiyear deals. They are now approaching their
.
pnme.
Kenny Lofton, 27, led the league in hits and steals last year while \winning a Gold Glove for spectacular play in center field. Second baseman
.
(See OUTLOOKon C-8) '
.

"""'"~

By JOE KAY
PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP)- It
seems the Cincinnati Reds did
everything this spring except shake
the legacy of Pedro Borbon.
While other small-market clubs
were dumping salaries and reducing
their playoff chances, the Reds were
hoatding pitching and tinkering
wilb one of the deepest lineups in
lhe NL: Deion, Larkin, Rijo,
Smiley, Gant, Santiago, Brantley.
'' It's probably one. of ihe best
groups if not !he best all-around
group I've ever had," said manager
Davey Johnson, who guided the
New York Mels to a World Series
Iitle in 1986. " I thought we had a
great ballclub here last year, and
we'veimprovedonthat."
Last year, the strike derailed a
postseason appearance. The Reds
led the NL Central vi r!uall y the
wholeseasonandshowednosignof
cracking.
They ought to be even belle• in
some areas this year. The bullpen,
which led the NL ERA in ERA, got
deeper with the addition of Xavier
Hernandez, Pete Smith and Mike
Jackson. The catching got beller
when Benito Santiago arrived.
If the starting pitch in$ holds out;.
the Reds ought to make the playoffs.
' "This is a great team, ma n,"
said Deion Sanders, who spent his
off-season winning a Super Bowl.
"l KNOW right now we are a team
that's going to win."
There are two spots where the
Reds are vulnerable:
.
-· The startihg pitching. Beyond
lose Rijo and John Smiley, there 's
no proven starter. John Roper is still
young and developed a sore shoulder in spring training . Pete
not a one-season
fluke.~
Schourek
is still trying
to prove he's
- The cleanup hiller. Ron Gaol
missed all last season after breaking
both bones in his lower right leg.
Gaol, who replaces Kevin Mitchell,
ran well in spring training. Bul he's
still gol a metal plate in the leg and
will be playing more than half his
games on artificial turf. which lakes
a toll on even healthy legs.
I

.

'

Wiii'Borbon•s Revenge• hinder Reds in

.

Prices

Fun for the
whole fami:y!

.!

to the expansion Panthers for that last season. He is considered by
bt. Then Cincinnati took Carter, many pro personnel directors as the ·
. all-America running back from ·best running back prospect since
Pe n Stale.
Eric Dickerson.
·
Last year, ·the Bengals made
" I'm very excited, because I ·can
defensive tackle Dan ·wilkinson of have all my family and friends
Ohio State the first pick.
watch me every week , '' said
Carter, who bypassed his final Carter, who grew up in Westerville,
year of college eligibility, rushed Ohio, a fan of both the Ben gals and .
for 1,539 yards and 23 touchdowns Cleveland Browns:

I

BENGALS GET CARTER...,. Fonner Penn State tallback KUana
Carter (right), shown ~ompletlng a 62-yard touchdown pass play during the Nittany Lions' game against Minnesota in September, 1994,
was the first pick In Saturday's NFL draft. The Cincinnati Bengals,
wbo have suffered through 3-13 finishes in the 'last two campaigns,
selected the Westerville native. (AP)

"Maybe a man's king when he's fallen in love and raised a family,"
Petty says in the May 4 issue of Rolling Stone!! "Maybe that's lhe grenteSI
reward · lhere is in life. And, slnlOgely
enough, available to anyone."
Petty is married, with no children.

RIO GRANDE • Tbe Spring
Concert Series at the University of
Rio Grande continues Friday, April
28 with a performance by the University's Jazz Ehsemble. The show
begins at 8 p.m. in the Fine and
Pcrfonning Ans Ccnlcr. on !be Rio
Grande campus. •
The Rio Grande Jazz Ensemble
was assembled in 1994 by Adjunct
Professor of Music Christopher
Kenney. The group perfonned ini·
tially in the Spring of 1994 at !be
French Art Colony in Gallipolis,
for a clinic demonstration on jazz.
Kenney says, th e Ensemble per-

Carter first choice in NFL draft l

''NewsRadio.''

limits your run, really."
The 44-year-old superstar says adoring fllliS, platinum albwns and
sold-out concerts don't make someooe royalty- even the rock 'n' roll

DECATUR, Ala. (AP) - Loretta
Swit, best' lcnown as nurse "Hot Ups"
Houlihan in the TV series "MASH," can
handle a real-life crisis, 100.
She was nearing lhe end of her onewoman show, "Shirley Valentine" on
Thwsday when a tanado warning forced
people 10 evacuate the theatet. ·
Swit and some audience members ·
ended up atlhe police sration, where she
perfonned lhe end of the play to a round of
applause.
"It was a i:aptive audience, you might
say," she said. "Or a captive performer."

•

••

'You're not goio~ 10 put THAT on
lhe air, are you?'
Hartman; who got a lot of
laughs for bis President Clinton
imitation, left lbe NBC show last
season. The final year was rough. ·
"It was becoming sophomoric
and silly," the 46-year-old Hartman says. "The job served me
weD. It just left me with a bad taste
in my mouth ."
Harunan now is bappy playing a
newsman on the new NBC silcom

NEW YORK (AP)- Torn Petty admits he's no heartbreaker.
"l didn'tget into lhis to be a pinup; says Petty. whose currentalbwn
"Wildflowers" is in iiS sixlh 111011lh onlhe BiUboard chans. "l wanted to be
taken seriously as far as writing songs, llllildng music. The other thilll!

. •.

· . April23 ' .1995·• . i'4

"'"'-·
-~Je would say lblngs like,

the senrencing 10 be poSipOiled.
Lawyers for Gooden and Johnson said they don 'I believe Strawberry
can burt lheir clieniS.

••

~-s-Jmtinei Section · c ~ .

•'

NEW YORK (AP) - Comedy
can get ugly. Phil Hat1111a11 found
that out during el&amp;bt seasons ·on ·
. "Saturday Night Uve."
"l was emotionally stre5¥ld the
wbole time," Hartman says in tbe
. May I Issue of People. magazine.
"Tbe backstabbing could be
painful, but tbe hardest thing was
competing against your friends for

for a Wbion show 8l the Arlccdliao N"igbt

kind.

orts

Hartman
takes it ·
easy with '
new role

MOSCOW (AP)- When IUpeliutdel Naomi Campbell plid I vilitli=

.,

•

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B8

J

~995?

No matter what happens, it most said, laughing. " He got even."
Or perhaps just the beginning of
likely will be Johnson's final year
Yes, bui was it a one-line joke? another. entry to the lore of Borbon?
.
managing the team. Assistant Ray
I
Knight' is being groomed to take
over next year, leaving John so n
only one more chanc~ to win it all
before moving on.
"I didn ' I get to finish the job
here last year," Johnson said. " And
I'm thankful for having the opportunily to finish it this year."
If Johnson leave s Cincinnati
without another World Series ring,
Borbon ' s name is sure to ri se up
again.
The reliever supposedly put a
curse on the Reds 'when they traded
him in 1979. They didn't win the
World Series again until 1990.
when Borbon s howed up at
Riverfront' Stadium for an oldtimers ' game al mid-season and sa id
the curse was all a joke.
lake or not, "Th~ Curse"
became part of team lore. And
Borbon became pari of the. team
again this spring as its most prominenl replacement player. The overweight, 48-year-old pitcher faced
two bailers in exhibitions before the
/
Reds sent him back to his bird-rais~' ,
ing business in Texas.
'
Before he left, Borbon sold a pair
of parrots to Johnson. He wasn't
' ' ;;:.,
•'
'.
even gone a we.ek when one bird got
i
•'
a respiratory infection and died.
Then, Johnson's wife got sick with
... a respiratory infection .
"Borbon 's revenge," Johnson
•
SWEET STROKE, BARRY!
- Kansas City secqnd sacker
Jose Lind pats Cincinnati's Barry
Larkin on the head after Larkin's
rourth·inning
double
in
Saturday's exhibition game in
Baseball City Fla. which the
Reds won l0-2.'(AP) '

'

'

·rriiiiiji===~~:;~ijiji:;~~ii~;;~:===~~~~~~~~~~~~~l

.

Winter i_s leaving and hopefully
the·colds _anJ flu will go too!

·However...

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money
•

A!Y~J&amp;

•
MUNN SIGNS - GaUia Academy High
School pOint guard Brandl Munn (rlghl) •ign•d
with Shawnee State University last week. Seated
next to her is Shawnee State head coach Robin

OHIO VALLEY
SYMPHONY
Saturday,
April 22, 1995 ,.,
Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins
Ariel Theatre 426 2nd. Ava. GaiUpolle, Oh

Call 446·ARJS .

ents Debbie and Andy Kolcun. Behind them are
Redwomen head couch Dave Smalley, Gallia
Academy head coach Renee Barnes and Blue
Angel assistant coach Todd Miller. (TimesSentinel photo)

Kolcun to attend Rio Grande
,....,.

_.

I M · Il l
1:10,1:10 OA7LY

NATIREEI &amp;AT/SUM
1 : I D l: 1 D

•

Spring has its own ~edical problems
such as insect bites, allergies, etc.
Call the HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE
'
There for ALL.seasons.

1-800-462-5255
• Talk to your doctor ahout medication concerns •

•

Munn ·headed
for Shawnee State
.
'

-

NEWEST RED WOMAN - Gallia Academy
senior Meghan Kolcun (\eated al cente.r) signs
the national letter of intent to attend the
University of Rio Grande and play for its
women's bosketballteam. •lanking her are par-

8:00p.m. ·

.BUT
...URI
.... ..,_
...

Hagen·Smith. Stan!ling are GAHS head coach
Renee Barnes, GAHS principa l Bruce Wilson
and Munn' s mother, Georgina. (Times-Sentinel ·
photo)

'

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy se nior
The Blue Angels' 57'12 record during her three
Meghan Kolcun, tbe daughter of Andy and Debbie years · on the GAHS varsity included two
Kolcun of Gallipolis, signed a national letter of · Southeastern Ohio Athletic League championships,
intent to play basketball for the University of Rio three sectio nal titles, two district crowns and a
Grande's Redwomen Friday.
regional finalist berth. In the Division lJ ·regional
The 5-fool -9 small forward was a fi&lt;ture on title ' game against West Holmes, Kolcun finished
Renee Barnes' Oallia Academy vars11yCfub forner- ·nerschootgirl Career with a career· high 23-point
fina l three years after splilling ti.me between the performance in the Angels' 43-40 loss.
reserve and varsity clubs as a freshman . Barnes has
Personally: When Kolcllll begins classes on the
coached her in each of her four years at GAHS.
Rio Grande campus in the fall, she will be the secKolcun, who was third on the team in scoring, ond in her .family at!ending coll.egc. Her sister Amy
averaged It points per contest in her senior year. is at!ending Louisi•na Stale University.
She was second in assists and steals and was third in
Meghan hasn't been the only one in her family to
rebounding. As the Angels' consecutive free ~ lh row bring home the winner's trophy . Her brother Micah,
streak record holder (her 26-shol string straddled a seve nth-grader at GAHS, played for the Kyr,er
the 1993-94 and the 19911-95 seasons), she averaged Creek Little League Tournament champion
10.1 poinlspergameinacareerspanning 75games. Gallipolis Yankees in !994 and for Tony
Her sophomore and junior seasons saw her finish Thompson:s seventh·grade Blue Devils - they
second to junior Minj)y Pope in·scoring.
only lost once- thai claimed Ihe SEOAL Iitle .

••

r
,I

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy senior Brandi
Munn plans to majo r in spor ts studies at
Munn has chosen Shawnee Stale Universi ty as the · Shawnee with a concentration in athletic training.
"She was our p o n11 guard and ran the team ,~·
base for her college basketball career.
The 5-foot-5 Munn. who cut· an impressive Barnes said. "She' II really be missed because you
record in two years as a point guard w11h Renee have 10 hav~ a .poinl guard lo run the team. She's
Barnes ' Blue· Ange.ls and helped lead Gallipolis sound academica lly and Shawnee is gelling a good
.
· (22-2) to the regionals thi s year, said she chose person ..
Shawnee because of the overa ll quality of Robin
Munn. the daughter of Rob and Georgina Munn
Hagen-Smith 's program .
.
of Jack,on . JOined the Blue Angels as a junior. She
Munn participated in a sig ning ceremony at has· been all-Soulhca ,tcrn Ohio Athletic League and
GAHS Thursday with Hagen-Sm ith and Barnes.·
all -Southeast District each season at Gallipolis, ~nd
"S he's a total player~ she can pass it. shoot it received honorable -mentio n all·Ohio status this
and be depended on to score ," said Hagen-Smith, year. While at GAllS. she also competed on Jackie
whose Lady Bea rs posted a 3 !-5 record last season, Knighl 's v,olleyballtcam .
won th e NAlA Great Lakes Division I cha mpi Hagen-S mith, a 19g3 graduate of ihe Unive!Si!y
onship and lost to Western Oregon in the l&gt;lle game uf Rl(l Grande, assumed co aching duties at
at the nationals.
Shawnce m 1984 when the junior college team was
. "Brandi has excellent shooung ability in the . known as the Rangerenes . She remained with the
three-point range and is a player who remains cool team in J9R8 when the school became a university
under pressure," Hage~ · Smilh continued. "She has and the team was rcdubbed the Lady Bears.
all of the qualities I look for in a player, and is very
Dunng that time , Shawnee' s women's team has
sound academically."
captured several NAJA d1strict titles and the Mid-·
For 1994-95 , Munn averaged l2.2 points per Ohio Conference championship once. Current MOC
g~me and 4.3 rebounds per outing. She was last seamembers include Rio Grande, Cedarville, Findlay,
son's assists leader w11h 151 for an average of Malonc,·Mounl Vernon Nazarene, Ohto Dominican,
seven _per game. She also led the learn in stea ls with Tiffin. Urbana and Walsh.
140.

•

•

�.

•

.

•

' Paga

C2-sunday Tlmas

In the NBA'slast regular-season weekend,

·

-..
't

•

·

1ar ICIIS90·will mean something.

By bcatlns Seattle 105-97,
Sacramento atayed alive in its
down-to-the-wire playoff race and
set up a llbowdoMI today at Denver
that will decide the league's last
playoff berth.
· . "We'!~ fortunate to be .in this
Slh•llon, said Kings coach Gmy
St. Jean, wbose_club bas not made
the playoffs smce 198S-86. the
leam' s tint season in Sacramento,
"Now,~ it~-" .
. .
The K.inss viCtory Fnday mght
also clinched the Pacific Division
title for Pltoenix, wbicb beat Dallas

ll0-99.

lu the East, Cleveland's 103-82
win over Milwaukee set the conference's playoff seedings. The Cavalien clincbe_d the sixth spot and
save Boston m the fmal benb. even
while the Ccltics were losing to
New York.
.
"I don't like the way we got
in," said Boston point guard Sber·
man Douglas after his team's 99-92
defeat in tbe last regular-season
~ame at Boston Garden. "We

Sbouldhavc won.''
No matter wbat the Nuggets do
today at Golden State, the Kings
can ma1cc the playoffs by wlonlog
today at Denver.
Wall Williams b:ad 27 points for
Sacramento. bitting 14 of I7 free
throws. Mitdl Rlcbmood added 25
pointJ for the Kings, wbo 1!&gt;1 15
poiniS and 14 rebooods from Olden
Polynice.
· .
.
The Sonics, wbo g01 26 points
and a season-high 10 assists from
Detlef Scbrempf, cannot catcb ·
Phoenix for the Pacillc Drvision
crown even if they beat the Suns
today. Phoenix bas clinched the
seaSon series over the Sonics.
. In other games, it was New Jersey 107, Milwaukee 82; Pbiladelpbia 113, Miami 106; Atlanta 128
Dclroit Ill· Orlando 110
86; San A~tonio 107 'tbe Los
Angeles Clippers 96; and Utab 99,
Minnesota 96.
Suns 110, Ma•erkks 9!1
Phoenix won its second Pacifter
Division titie in three seasons
The victory, the Suns' ·58th
guaranteed lbc sec!llld-best
iri fran'cbise bistory. The 1992-93
team won 62 games, and the 1980-.

llldlarui

record

81 squad was 57-25.
Cbarres Bartley bad 22 points
and 11 rebooods. and Kcvm Joboson led three other J'bM!ix playas
in double figures with IS.
Jason Kidd and Doug Smilb
scored 14 apiece for tbe visiting
Mavericks.
Knkks 99, Celtla 9l
Playi~g without two starters,
New York beat Boston in the last
regular-season basketball game at
Boston Garden,
Hubert Davis bad .20 points for
the Kniclcs. Leading scorer Patrick
Ewing, out with a hamstring injury,
and starting point guard Derek
Harper, who has a sore ankle,
watched lbc game in slreet clothes.
Dee Brown and Sberman Dou·
glas bad 22 poiniS apiece for the
Celtlcs.
A halftime ceremony honored
the 67-year-old Garden's Ulusttious
past and the Celtics greats who
played tbj:re. The building will be
replaced in September by the $160
million FleetCenter. .
Cavaliers 103, Bucks 82
Cleveland eliminated Milwaukee from playoff C!llltention behind

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Aea-tk INdio.

lr L lsi.

y-Orlando ..............:S7
J·New Yort. ......... .s•
a.BOitoa ................ JS
MJw .................... Jt
.29
Ph.illdelphla ........... 24
WMhlnlloD_........... lO

New'""' .... .. .

24

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V
-t6
lO
S'l
Y1
61

.661·

Ill
3
• 22
26
21
33 .
!1

A32

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.m

.l96
.241

pomts and 11 rebounds.
Tyrone Hill hild l6 poinlll and
13 rebounds, and (Mark Price
return~ 1!&gt; tbe Cleveland lineup
after mtasma three aames witb a
left heel IDjury.
. .
.
visiting Bucks were led by
Enc Murdock's 24 points and
Glenn Robinson's 19.
Nets 107, BullcfJ 106
New . Jersey snapped a fite game losing streak with a viet ry
over WashingtOn.
The win was ooly the lhinl in 18
games for the NetS. The Bullets
lost their llth straight on the road
and finished the season 8-33 away
fromboole.
Armon Gilliam bad 28 }loints
and 17 rebounds and Kenny Ander5011 added 20 points and 12 assists
for New Jersey despite sitting out
the fmal quarter with back spasms.
Chris Morris bad 16 points and 13
rebounds.
Don MacLean match~ his season hlgb with 23 points to lead
Washington.

!be

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&gt;

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.,,
I.

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x·Ch•toue ...............9 31

.613

I•Cllea,o .............. 46 ]4
I ·Cl.BVELAND ...43 31
I·AUartta ........... T.4l 39

.57.5
..531
.,19

Nilwautee ............. 33

Detroit ....... ;........... 21

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a-UI.ah .... ,. .............. !J9
l·liouaroa .............. 41
Dcanr ................... 39

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O.Jiu...........,......... ~t'i 4S
Mlatetota ....... :...... 21 60

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:r.-PboeoJJ ............... !JI ll .716,
I ·Sea!Ue.. ,.............. !l7 2.4 .704
s· L.A. l..akm ........ (1 33 .593
Ji·Portland ..............42 31 •.525
Sacruneoto ............ 39 42 .481
Ooldta State ..........26 ~~ · .32.5
L.A. Clippcn ........ .l6 65 .191
I·Ciinched pJ•)'Qff berth
y.cJinched c:OG(«ence litle
z-cllnched dlviltoa t.IUe

'

..

Amerk..wlA-re

(See NBA on C-3)

ERRANT PICKOFF ATTEMPT- River Valley's Greg James
gels back to first base before Seth Barritt's pickoff throw gels past
nrst baseman Ryan Seevers (35) during Friday's SEOAL baseball
game at Kyger CrNk Middle Schoo~ where the Warriors won 13-4.
James, a junior outfielder who reached on a single to boost his batting
average to a team-best .4841, made it to second on the play. (fiinesSentlnel photo ~y G. Spencer Osborne)

UNBEATEN- The Washington Devils won the fifth-grade girts'
division title In the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department'• bas- ·
ketballleague wllb a 9.0 record. Kneeling are (L-R) Holly Haner,
Brlanna Johnson and ~rl CaldwelL Standing are coac" Brent John·
son, C.ra Dunkle, Meredith Addington and Brlttani Minnis.

1
10
1.5 .!li
l!il
3U
42

coniJacl.

CHICAGO W\IITE SOX: Optioned
Due Johnaon, Matt Karchntr and Sten
· Schrenk, pitcher•, and Brudon Wilao a,
' infielder, to Nashville o( the American
Auoclatlon . Allitaed Dave Riahetti ,
pll c~c r , and Oann How itt and Jerry
Wolak, ~ttleldetl, to Nut•v\lle.
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Aareerlt o
terRil wilh Juon Orirnlley, phch.et, on 1
two--year ·conuaet, ud Herbert Perry, IRnelder; Muny Ramirer., outfielder: and
PaW Shuey, Albie lopet ud Jim lewll,
pltchm , on on~yar contnc:ll.
DETROIT nGERS : Optioned Tony
Clark. Infielder, and Brian Maxcy, pitch·
er·, to Toledo or the Iatero.. iooal Leq:ue;
Alvi n Brown, l ou Lima and Ju1tln
Thompson, pitcher~, to Lakeland or lhe
Florida State U.ue. Aaia.ned Kent Bot·
tcnrield , Dway.oo He.nry and Kev in
Wlcbndn, pitchm, aod Kevin Br.ez and
Alan Zinter, lnncldm, to Tuledu. Sent
David My.el,jitcher, outrlr,ht to Lakeland. ReiHn~ Brian Darnel aod Terry
Leat-h., pltbera, Crom tmir minor· leaaue
cootnll:tJ. Pltced Orca Ooht, pitcher, oa
lhe dilabled lilt, retroactive to April 19.
TEXAS RANOtiRS: Aareed to terms'
with lcrt Frye, ncond buetnan, an d

••

f Warren Local records
.r 13-4 win over River Valley

&lt;- for you during your pregnancy

i

and delivery
·
·-:- for your newborn immediately
after del!very
· .
•&gt; for you and your growing family

I.OS ANGELES OOOOERS ' W~""'
AI OluDa, pitcher, (Or lbe. pwpoM of Jiv·
ina him hit llncolldlti911ll rele~~e..
NEW YORK METS: Apeed ~ termt
with Xevia Loman, Bobby JoaN , Mike
Rr:m11naer, Joa lu MaiWinillo, aDd Je"y
DiPoto, pitchm; Csrl Everett and Ryan
Thompson, oulfleldb1; Jeff Knt, &amp;eooond
bueman; and Rico Brogna, fll'lt baaeman,
QD ODe• yeM CODtnCU:. f&gt;lac:ed ThOlq)IIOD
and Xevin Northnlp, oullielder, on lhe 1s.
day di1abled U11.

on a on&amp;yar c:olll:ract.
BOSroN RED SOX: Al(l'eed to terRil
with Tim NaehrinJ, infielder, oa a one·

'
'
,
:·
1

1

W1ten you dwose your medh·a/ care, come
When: we carl mre clbVtlt you

• 1

as well as care for Y''l"

PHILADELPHIA PJIJLLIES : Op·
tioned ~ck Hollftcld, outfielder, to Saanton-WIIkea Barre of the h:teraaUo~•l
Leaaue. Sent Larry Mitchell, pikher, to
Reading of the Eutem Leque. .

Ohio University
Osteopathic Medical Center
Parks Hall614-593-2516
Coolville Medical Center 614-667-3134

PITTSBURGH PIRA'rES ' Traded

Stanton Cameron. outfielder, to the Teua
RanBel" to comp\BI.e an earlil!l" trade (or
Erik Johnson, infielder.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : Agreed to
Ierma with Joey Hamilton , pitcher, and
Edd[e Willlama, firat baaeman, on oneyear CODttQL'lll.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : Reu ·
l i&amp;ned Santos Hernande:r., pitcher, rrom
San Jon. or the Ca liror~ua league 10
Butllll(ltOn ol the Mldwe1t Leaaue and
Ivan Alvaret , pitcher, fn-.m eu~nded
•prlna tnlinina to Butlln.lfon.

&lt;- Ca rol Gaines, D.O.

•) Lenard G. Presutti, D.O.
'
·· -0&gt; Gerald Rubin , D.O. -0&gt; Donald G. Spaeth, D.O.
+ David Stroh, D.O.
;

Univenitr

1

i.

'

BaskelbaU

..•
!
:_

8uketbaJ1 Aflod•lion

j

Frld•Ctcscores

NeW YOII&lt; 99,

o 92

'

Utah 99,MiqDC*lll96

~PI1110,\ [)I,Jiu99

Sac:raroento tO!'i , Seante CJ7

Tbty pta~od Saturday

Olwtotte a Oucaao. "3 ~ 30 p.m.
Dea¥er Ill Ooldea Stile, 6 p.m.
Portland 11 LA. Laker~. 10:30 p.m.

Tod•y'•
regular-season nnales

CHESIDRE- Warren Local's (l-2."double), Bobby Fink (1-2),
baseball team tapped out most of /M.T. Blaine, Jamie Gruber Greg
its. run~ in the fml three innings of James and David Kelley (all l-3).
~nday s Southeastern Ohio AthletThe Raiders' agenda for this
tc League contest agamst the host week has them hosting Marietta
Rive~ Valley Raiders, which· the
(12-5 &amp; 7-2) at 5 p.m. on the UniWamors won 13-4 at Kyger Creek vcrsity of Rio Grande campus
lv!iddle School.
Wahama al KCMS Tuesday and
Starter Tyler Stonc, the winning Jackson Wednesday . Make-up
pitcher, combined with reliever games may be slated for later in the
Seth Barritt to strike out six and week.
walk three. ~be Warriors (7-8-1
League notes: Logan (9-3 &amp; 6overaU &amp; ~ 10 the SEOAL) need· I after Friday's 6·5 wiri over Gallia
ed(andg?', mpllf1.becauseofthree Academy ) is at the top of the
early Ratder errors) a three-run league, wllilc Marietta is in second
raDy i_n th~ fmt inning and a sevenAthens.(ll -7 &amp; 7-3), Jackso~
run not m_ tbe second to cha~e (13-6 &amp; 54) and Warren comprise
starter Kevm .Edwards_ off
btll the middle of the pack, while the
to overcome an 11-slrikeout. ove· Raiders and the Blue Devils (1-14
walk effort by Edwards and succe · &amp; 1-1 0) trail them.
soc Jason Jenkins.
Records for Athens and Jackson
Warren·s hitters were Johnson don't include Friday's action.
(1-1, double), Chip Robinson (1-2), . Inning totals
·
Jesse Lucas (1-3, double), Barriu, Warren
372-000-1 = 13-9-3
John Burnworth, Ryan Seevers, RVHS
101 -000-2 = 4-6-6
Gary Wheeler (aD 1-3) and Nathan
WP - Stone
Evans (1-4). River Valley (2-10 &amp;
LP - Edwards
1-8) ~ot its hits from Mall Jenkins

'

. New JetMJ 107, WMiliDil01106

106
Auapta l21_.~1tlll .
a.BVELAND 103, Milwau.toe a:z
OriCidO !tO, Indiana 86
SaD A!IODio 107, LA. ctippen 96

"'·

.•

CJNCINNA'IJ REDS: Placed Eric An·
lhony, oulflcld!!r, on the 1.5-dsy dlaabled
lill, mtoactive to Aprill7.

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Aareed to
tu1111 with Audy Yl!l Slyll:c, outfielder.

.

This is all you need to get anew
Mustang orF ·150.

I

•
•

•••

·

I

'95 Ford Mustang
• Air conditioning
• Automatic transmission
with .overdrive
~ AM/FM/Cassette
• Rear window defrost

Orlando • New York, 1 p,m.
Philadelphia lit WuhiiiJIDII. I p.m.

OlicaJO llt Milwallkee, 1:30 p.m.
CLEVELAND II Chartone. 3:30p.m.
Atlaatallllildiana, 3:JO p.m.
Saa Au4onlo It MlanetOta, 3:30p.m
Seatlle lill ~Dil, 3:30p.m.
B01toDat N." " Jeney. 6 p.m.
Detroit at Miami. 6 p.m.
o.tl• al L.A. Cippen. 6 p.m.
lJI.I"' MlhMIUll, 7 p.m.
SIICI'aJMnto Ill Duvcr, 9 p.m.
Ooldea Slalelill Portland. 10 p.m.

be covered until the year 2005. Also at no charge, we will
install a High Efficiency Media Air Filter. Act now before
the heat of the summer raises your temperature and the
price.
·
·

•

It~ Hard

...•

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47 11 9
43 110
41 117
37 l09
37 95
S 31 107

A
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106
104
IU
.Ill
101
138

Df&lt;rllioll
x-Qucbec .......... 21 II 4 60 17l 123
x·PittibwaJt ...... 27 12 2 S6 162 13-4
3
.5
6

47 U6 106
.. 1 117 125 .
40 107 l!lo'
5 ]9 113 133
S 13 !9 1S3

No money down.

,WESfllKN CONFE:RENCE
Ce ntralotTW.
IsG
l! L l: llao Ill
l ·DIIi.roit .... ,; ..... 30 I 4 611- 16&lt;1
' x.St . l.oula-........ 25 12 4 S4 IS4
TIJf'OIIIo ............. 19 11 7 4S 111
Chic.ao ............ 1919 4 42133
Pa.UM .•.............. IS IQ a :11 111
Winnlpta .......... 14 21 7 lS 140

!i.&amp;

99

I lot
llS
106
109

EdrmntQb ......... IS 23 4

Los An~le~ ...... , 13 21 I
Anlheim ........... t•l• 4

3~ 101 14)
}.4 Ill 1 ~

l4 130 I 60
)l 109 141

l&lt;linclu:d playott belVt.

' East Stale Street, Athens, Ohio

Frld•r'• sc:or•
WlllhiiiJloD 6, fbrtford)
W.lllDipel 2, tblcaa,o I
s~. Louil J. Toroato 1
tal Aap.l• ), EdmoOIOD 3 (tie)

'
Tbey played Salurdoy
OltiWI• N.Y. lllaodtn. 1 p.m.

@

Pbiltiddphla II. New J.ney, 1:O:S p.m.

uo p.m.

Taq.a Bay It l4cmtnal, 7:30p.m.
Q.tebec-. Fkrkll. 7:l0 p.m.
Toroalo • 011a.. 1:30 p.m.
Bdmoatol M VIIICDII'III', 10:30 p.m.

TodOY'••I'hllodolpbilol Butralo,l p.m.

.

BUICK"

•

!•
I

••
•••
••

' plus 1.X and 1~. hrst payment and.securscy dePOSrl ~at lease Inception. CIO&amp;ed-end lUst. Mileage based Dr! 12,000 miles pet' year Subjeclto PfiOr sale Ford
4x2. based on MSAP $18,820, optM&gt;n l&lt;l purChase al ..llSt ..-.ct $13.068,00. Muslang, based on MSAP of $16,6-tS, option to purchase a.t lease end of

:~~~~LJ

5

...

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••'

''
!
•
I
I

•
I

••

I

.......,.

"'·-"

'

A rather bold prog'nostication , but one that Warner Heating &amp;
.
Cooling would not make if we weren't so sure about the qu~lity and
reliabi_
lity of t~e Trane XL 1200 Weathertron" heat pump. Built to
the highest standards, and it provides cooling effiqiency up to 13.0
SEER . .For the best in year-round comfort, getthe Trane XL 1200.
Designed, tested and -manufactured to last. Best of all it heats,
cools; and 'saves.

It's Hard To Stop A Trane. ™·

1

per month, only 24 months"

••

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ALL NEW
.FOR f995

GMC

YUKON .
~·

1995
PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

4.9 APR
FINANCING

1994 CHEVROLET
CORSICAS
AS LOW AS

TOVRCHOJCE

1994 OLDS CIERA

OR
1994 BUICK CENTURY
AS LOW AS

10,999

5

11111 ..

Air, cassette, power steering.

1995 lf2 TON
CHEVROLET 4X4

$)7,695
'Auto., AM/FM cassette, bed liner
and more .

N3161

~ 1995
GEO METRO

s9,199
#3180

~

199S.CHEV. ·
LUMINA

SJ7,488
Power windows, locks,

. cassette, auto., keyless entry.
2 TO CHOOSE FROM/

ltsHa•d 7b StopA 1Jnne:·

CAO I LLAC::.
...........
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.:

'I"RA//E'.

•'

593-6641

l)dtait 6, ADibelm 5

WMitiOlfOO O.Pilbb'"lh,

.

• Cruise control ·Tilt wheel
• Air conditioning
• AM/FM/Cassette
• Power windows and doors
• forged aluminum wheels
• Chro!lle rear step bumper

Now through April29¢1
at Don Wood Automotive Complex. ·

Ul

P•inr DiYUIM
1-Cilawy .......... 22 1~ 6 jO 141 120
Vaawu¥er ........ IS 1611 4l 130 130

Saa. ]OR •..•.•...... 16 22 3

.

'••

CHOICE

58,995

S14,SS9

I

'95 Ford F-150 XLT 4X2

N~lhtul

801toa .............. 2216
llarti"Ofd ............ 18 20
Buffalo .............. 17 II
MontreaL ..... ,.. . 17 20
Ottawa .............. 4 32

l

PHONE 304-424-)EEP

YOUR

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All.ntk Dtnalan
x-l'hl\.adelpb.£1 .. 2.$ 13
New Jenef ....... 20 16
Wutd~~ogtoa ...... 1117
N.Y. Ibnam .... 19 20
TIJTIPI8ay ....... l7 22
Aorida .............. 16 20
N.Y. blander&amp; ... 13 24

c......,o,.,,J~,,.,,,,

DON _TATE MOTORS, INC.

TRAIIE I1D.

SEVENTH &amp; PLUM STREETS

5

EASTERN CONFERENCE

•'

WHARTON JEEP /EAGLE

CHEVROLET
TAHOE

Cooling will give them a 10 year Parts and
Labor Warranty free. That way your new system will

,

34:

II

Between April 24th and May 20th, 1995 the first 12
customers that buy a system, Warner Heating &amp;

'\i•

year before tearing a ligament 011
May 3.
The three-time c Youn winner was sidelined fo~ a wee~ after
catching the illness from his infant
daughter. He set down an 13 ol the
young minor leaguers h ' tcb d
against Friday
e P• e
·

so."
extended spring training in
Van Slyke was feel!ng a little Du~in, Fla.
. .
better after he signed wtth the BalVtola, 17S-146lifetune, was 1-1
limOte Orioles. The center f~eld job with a 4.65 ERA for Boston last
came with a price -be agreed to
take a pay cut ol mOte than $3 mil·
lion foUowing a season in which be
balled .246 f&lt;r Pittsbll'gh.
"I didn't bave to sign if !.wasn't
happy about it. It wasn't an unfair
C!llltract under the circumstanq:s of
wbat' s going on this year and the
season I bad last year," said Van
Slylcc,
·Viola, 35, agreed to a minor-

7Ciers 113, Heat 106
five straight titles.
Dana Barros scored 21 points,
Sean Elliott led lhe Spurs with
leading six Pbiladelpbia players 10 · 21 points, and Vinny Del Negro
double figures, as Philadelphia scored 16. Lamond Munay bad 21
defeated Miami.
points, and Terry Dehere bad 20
Sbawn Bradley added 20 points for the visiting Clippers, who losl
and 15 rebounds for the 76ers. Jeff their sixth straight.
· Grayer had 20 points for Pbiladel-·
Jazz 99, Timberwolves 96
pbia, which ended the season 14-27
Minnesota set an NBA record of
at home.
the wrong kind, becoming the first
Glen Ri.J;e had 36 points and team to lose 60 or more games four
rookie Khalid Reeves scored a sea- straight seasons.
son-high 32 for the Heat, which
The Timberwolves led at halfwound up 10-31 on the road.
time and· stayed close to Utah until ·
Hawks 128, Pistons 111
the fourth quaner.
Atlanta set a se~son high in
John Stockton, the league's
scoring and handed Detroit its I Oth ·career assists leader. had nine
consecutive road loss.
· assists for 1,003 this season as the
Steve Smith led the Hawks, who Jazz won their sixth straight. It was
·won their fifth in six games, with the seventh straight season he's
23 points, and Mookie Blaylock posted 1,000 assists.
added 18. Ken Norman and Greg
Karl Malone bad 24 points for
Utah.
Isaiah Rider led the Wolves
Anderson bad_\6 apiece.
Rookie Grant Hill matched his wilh 25, and Christian Laeuner
season higb of 33 points for the added 20.
visiting Pistons, Allan Houston
added 24 and Terry Mills bad 19.
Detroit lost for the seventh time in·
eight games.
Magic 11 O, Pacers 86
With a win over Indiana, Orlando posted the NBA's best regularseason home record in eight seasons at 39-2 .
The 1986-87 Boston Celtics bad
the siune mark.
Sbaquille O'Neal and Horace
Grant each scored 20 points as the.
Magic gained a split of the fourgame series between the two East·
em Conference' division winners.
Reggie Miller led the Pacers
with 14 points, but didn't score in
lhe second half.
Spurs 107, Clippers 96·
Dennis Rodman secured his
fourth consecutive NBA rebounding title · as San Antonio won its
sixlh straight.
With 17 .r ebounds against the
Clippers, Rodman became the first
player to lead the league four ·
straight years since teammate
Moses Malo,ne, who won a record

Super Cooling Deal With AHigh ffficiency Heat Pump!

I

mlstic we're going to make league conuact with ,.oronto. He
progress," mana'ement negotiatior missed DIDSt of last year because of
Roben Kbeel saJd. "But I remain an elbow injury, and the Blue Jays
oplimistlc that we'D be able to do said he would start the season at

action ..?"--=-un_ued_rro_m_c_-2&gt;_ _ _ _.

I

NUL standings

••

~

&lt;.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

•

~

.53

1.5

PtU~a113 , M.iarni

I

I

..a

NBA

N•lon.. u.,.e

BuebaU

y~

t:Antr .. Df&lt;rla&amp;oa
z·JDdlaaa ................ .51 30 .630

By BEN WALKER
AP BIIMball Writer .
Andy Van Slyke and .F rank
Viola found new places to play,
and Greg Maddux found out he's
ready to start on opening da~.
Roger Clemens, tbougb, won t
pitdl anytime soon, and Rick Sot·
·
cliffe wm't pitch at aD.
While four former Cy Young
winners were going in difrerent
dire~tlons Friday, tbe loclced-out
umpues and owners were going
nowhere. it seemed. The season is
set to start with replacement umps
Tuesday night if the regulars do not
return.
. "It's fair to say our differences
are substantial, and I'm not opt!·

F•Jardo u.d Jerry Mwtin, pitchers. AI·
•iBncd Stanton Cameroa, outfielder, to
OUahoma City of the Amcrlcll.ll Aaocla·
lion.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Aareed to
tl!l"lm wilh Fr111k Viols, pitcher, on a ml·
nor-leap cont111Ct.

NBA standings .

-

Ex-\,;y Young winners taking different paths

Jo~n Wiiliams' season-bigb 24

Roser P1vllt:. pitcher, on oue-year coo·
lnctJ. Re~~cwed lbe toDtttc:lli of H~ctor

lull\

On the !f_ring training scene,

·~

Kings still chasing · playoff berth; Cavswin
By The~ Pre.
Tbe· Sacramento Kings made
s..-e the final day of the NBA regu-

~ ~A;~;:I;2~3,~1:H:S:::=:=:=:=~~~~~~======~P~o~mw~o~y~M;I~~~Iep;· o~ft~·~a~al~l~;o;l~ls~,OH~~:P~oi~n~t:PI~e:au~n~t,~W~V~~~~~~==~S~u~n~d:ay~TI~•:m~e:s~Se:n~ti~ne~I~P~~~g=•~C~3

April 23, 1985~·

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt-Gallipolis, OH Point PleaAJ'It, wv

Sentinel

I•

"

.·\&gt;-·

I

••
•

N.Y. ,llalllld .. IICJitoa,lp.m.

•
t\

WARNER
HEATING &amp; COOLING
.
•

.

Serving Meigs, Mason &amp; Gallia

HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES .

PT. PLEASANT, WV 25550
304-675-t254
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All wheel drive, auto., air, casselle ,tilt &amp;
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CUISe•

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1992 Cadillac Braugham •..S19,995

1991 ~eep Wrangler ..........-.s8,99S One owner, only 43,000 miles
'199415 Passenger Van ... s18,995 1994 Caprice·Classic;........s14,995
1993 Pontiac Bonneville ... s17, 999 1994 Buick Regal~ ............ s14,995
SSE, only 25,000 miles.

COMFORT ASSURED~

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CHESTER, OH 45720
614-985-4222

1994 GMC Safari Van••.•..S16,995

5
1994
S·Series
Pickup
..........
9,499
1990 Olds Calais ................ ss,69S
58,299
1992
Ford
Ranger
Pickup
....
1990 Buick Century ............ s6,999
'
'

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

~-...,._,._

DON TATE MOTORS, hiC. ·Tax~~t:•not
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

�Paga

C4

Sunday nmes-Sentinel

April 23, 1995

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

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••

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•

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tlnel columnist Fred W. Crow was a member of the team, along
two other l'rominent southeastern Ohio athletes, Charles Hamer·
lck and Tippy Dye. Crow Is now organizing a reunion of surviving

players for tbe Buckeyes·Figbting lrish game scheduled Sept. 30 in
Columbus. For more detaUs, refer to the Crow column on A4 of
today's edition. (Photo courtesy of Fred W. Crow)

In continuation of.NFL draft

..

•

I

F

all f
·
.
. - or o
those skeptics w~med abo~t the
future of ·the pass1'!g gam~ m the
NFL, fear not. Thts yellf s draft
crop should _ease such concerns. .
· T_be qualtt~ at quarterback, wide
~tver an~ ught end ~akes often·
stve c~rdmators smile from San
FranCISCO, where tb~y have few
doubts about the passmg altaCk, to
Houston, where they had no clue
bow to attack without Warren
Moon.
Other than the Super Bowl
champion 49ers, the Cowboys,
Dolphins, Patriots and Raiders,
how many pro 'Jeatns are comfort·
able with their air games?
Certainly not the Oilers, who
have a shot at Steve McNair or
Kerry Collins, the prime prospects .
at quarterback. Houston went third
Saturday, after expansion teams
Carolina and Jacksonville.
Houston general manager Floyd
Reese· says there are eight or nine
"franchise" players in this year's
draft. The speedy, elusive, strong·
artncd McNair, at 6-foot-1 and 223
pounds, is one of them.
"If you get a franchise player ·
and fill a need, you can kill two
birds with one stone,'· Reese said.
Reese insists he's not concerned
with McNair's lack of big-time
opposition after playing in Division
I-AA.
- ''In my mind, a kid coming

from that s)tuation has a better
chance of being better in a better
environment/' be says. "They won
eight games. Without him, they
win zero.''
Either of the new teams might
go for McNair or CoUins, too. One
scenario has the Panthers trading
. the top pick to Washington for the
fourth overall choice, a second·
rounder and a player off the Red·
skins' roster. Then the Panthers
would take Collins after the Redskins grab running back Ki-Jana
Carter, Collins' teammate at Penn
State.
Other quarterbacks who could
· go high - - if not in the opening
round - include Rob Johnson of

Schultz
in ·une
to take
usee p·o st

Southern Cal, John Walsh of
Brigham Young, Chad ~ay of
Kansas State, Todd Colhns oJ
Michigan and Eric Zeier of Gear·
gia '
.
"McNair is head and sboulders
above everybody in the quanerback
ratings. •• said Dwight Adam~.
director of player personnel for
Buffalo, which could use a young
passer to groom behind Jim Kelly.
"But there are some good ones."
There are plenty of exciting,
game-breaking receivers, with .
three \llbo might go in the first

•,"
.,,

.,

·"
,,,,"

dozen picks: Michael Westbrook of
Colorado, J.J. Stokes of UCLA and
Joey Galloway of Ohio State.
"I really believe all three of
them would fit in here," said new
Seattle Seahawks coach Dennis
Erickson, whOse team picks eighth.
''Michael Westbrook has the
size and the speed, but he's probably not as refmed as the other two
at thi~ point. Joey Galloway is not
a&amp; big, but be's probably got as
much speed as anybody who has

· 461 SOUTH THIRD

",,
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,,
·",,
"
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PHONE 992·2196

MIDDLE QR1', 0~

"
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.,
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..,,
,.

..
..

(See DRAFT on C-5)

"·

1994 LINCOLN TOWN CAR
1994 CHEVROLET Sr 10

•

PICKUP

Just traded to us.
AM/FM Cassette ·
and Tonneau
Cover

.,"

SIGNATURE SERIES, 4 DR. 4.6 V·8
eng.', i'S, PB, auto. trans., air cond.,
AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise,
lleather interior, P. windows &amp; P. locks,
dual P. seats, rear defroster, cast
aluminum wheels.
WAS $25,995

".,
.,
.,"
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.•·.

.·"·,,''•
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1990 MERCURY GRAN MARQUIS LS 4 DR.

3/4 ton Heavy

\. NOW

Duty Chassis.

An excellent
towing truck

1992 CHEVROLET SILVERADO

'"
,,I'

By LARRY SIDDONS
NEW YORK (AP) - Dick
Schultz, who left the NCAA· s top
job amid charges he lied about an
improper loan program while alb·
lctic director at Virginia. is the
leading candidate to become execu·
CHEVROLET CELEBRITY
tivc director of the U.S. Olympic
Committee. ,
Schultz heads tbe list of seven
4 dr. nice
people to be intervlewed in the' next
few weeks by a blue-ribbon· panel
local car
of tbe USOC looking to fill the
coinnllnee's· No.· I job, according .
to sources famiUar with tbe search.
prJ'ced to sell
The executive director's post
has 'been vacant since last fall,
when Harvey Schiller left to
become president of Turner Spans.
It has been filled on an interim
CUTLASS SUPREME
basis by John Krimsky , the
USOC's deputy director and top
4 d r., Loe::ally
. , fund-raiser.
Others on the list of finalists, the
owned car in
urces said. were Krimsky; Merri· .
Dean Baker, former ath letic
excellent condition,
director at Michigan State; TF&lt;dc·
rna ''T" Ussery, rormer commisLow Miles.
sioner of tl]e Continental Basket·
ball Association; Mike Jacki, chief
fund-raiser for U.S. Skiing; Bill
Tutt. a Colorado Springs, Colo.,
business leader, and Dr. Kenneth
CHEVROLET • GEO • OLDSMOBILE
Burnley, Colorado Springs_school
superinu:ndent The USOC ts bead· .
quartered in Colorado Springs.
Baker is the only woman on the
short Jist; both Ussery and Burnley
are blaclc.
Gallipolis' Hometown .Dealer
. USOC president LeRoy Walla:r
•
satd recently that be hoped to have
a nominee to present to the com·
mittee's ex~utive'board at its next
meeting July 29, at Denver. He
also saict'at lite time that the field of
applicants had been whittled from
150 to about I~·
. . . . ._ _....;_ _. .~. .~---. ..;... ._ _ _ _..

1988

1980

•

Ga [[ipo lis

(614 446 _36 72

GALLIPOLIS - J.R. Mullins of Gallipolis, a first dan (rtrst·
degree)· instructor in Tae ~(woo Do karate, opened tbe Mullins
It!stitute of Martial Science, which is located at 462 Second Ave.
Mullins, a former .instructor at White's School of Tae Kwon Do,
will also be teaching jujitsu.

Bicycle race today

.

Wll.KESVILLE- The fourth annuli!.Unity Savings Bank Tour
of Southeast Ohio will began today at I p.m. on Wilkesville's main
street
.
.
.
Longo's. a Canadian' cycling team with plans to compete in the
Ontario and Canada Cup races and other international eveniS, will
be among tbe clubs participating in the 52-mile race, which will also
over pans of Gallia, Jackson and Meigs Counties.
Proceeds from the event will go to the completion of the
Wilkesville Community Building. ,
There will be comer,marshals at all intersections along the route
(the riders will take S.R. 124 from Wilkesville to Salem Center
before taking S .R. 325 to Vinton; then they will take Cemetery Hill
. and Bull Run road before returning to Wilkesville on S.R. 160; they
will ta1ce S.R. 124 to S.R. 32 before taking Vinton County Roads 10
and 9; then they l,ake S.R. 124 back to Wilkesvilh!; IQen they will go
soui.b on S.R. 160 to Vinton Cowlly Road 8 before 'feturning to the
rtnisb ·line in Wilkesville) and broom trucks to follow each category
of riders to assist them if nccessary,
· All riders are to register
. at II a.m.. at the village square.

Prevention seminar today
GALLIPOLIS - Holier Clinic will sponsor a seminar on
prevention and management of athletic injuries occuring during
youth baseball or softball today at 1:30 p.m. in the Gallia County
Cowthouse's second-floor meeting room.

Clinics postponed
· GALLIPOLIS - The National Youth Sports Coaches'
Association clinics 'for today and Moriday have been postpon&lt;!d. A
make-up date wiU be announced later.

Elliott racer to be displayed

.

;;.,·:

,...., L-----------------------.l
'

BE SORE TO CHECK OOT OO.ROSED
CARS AriD TRUCKS HOW I" lriVEfiTORY

18
.THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
•ow 8

1992 FORD F-150
XLT PICKUP 4X4
302 eng .. PS, PB, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM
stereo cass., 8 foot bed,
bedliner, chrome rear step
bumper, all terrain tires.
WAS $15,995

.

NOW

MASSILLON Gaiiia
Academy senior Dylan Evans
was one of three former high
school football
players
committed to playing for the
South team In the 50th ·annual
Dial Soap/Ohio ·An-Star
Football Gue, slated for July
1S at Paul Brown Tiger Sfadlum.
The 6-foot-2, 285-pouod
tackle, who bas signed to play at
Marshall University, will join
Qes~Jre center James Adkins
(6-2, 0) and Coal Orove's •Jay
Lucas (6-7, 23S).
These three wiU be led by Hamilton's Ed Migoery .(South's head
coach). Chesapeake's Phil Davis, Coshocton's Wade Lucas and
Delphos St. John's Vic Whitting will be the assistants.

POINT PLEASANT- Obio Valley Supennllfkets and Reese's
Candy will sponsor the appearance of NASCAR driver Bill Elliott's
Winston Cup stock car at Twin Rivers Foodland Saturday from· 11
,1',,
.'",
a.m. to 7 p.m.
,
'
,,t·, ,, . . Elliott's Hardy Racing Ford team is 20th in the Winston Cup
,.:~~· . . points race heading into today's race in Martinsville, Va.

AM/FM Cassette
player

T-Tops, Pwr
windows &amp; Locks.
This was the last
year this car was
made.

.Ev(lns chosen

,,."
,,.

9,

14,995

1993 FORD
EXPLORER

-

2 Dr., 4 wheel drive, 4.0 eng., 5
spd. trans., air cond., AM/FM
stereo cass .. lilt &amp; cruise. cloth
bucket seats w/console, Argent
styled wheels w/Uniroyal Laredo
tires.

WAS $16,995

NOW

1993 FORD
TAURUS GL 4 DR.
3.8 V-6 eng., .ps·, PB, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
cass., tilt &amp; cruise, dual air
bags, P. windows &amp; P. locks,
rear defroster, 21,000 miles,
one owner.
. WAS $12,991&gt;

819,999 Now 811,999

:::. N.r!'l_
d ra ft...(Continued
from C-4)
r1
------...: ·•. come out for a long time.
' .'

.;: ·
"J.J. Stokes is 6-foot-5 and 212
: ; · ·pounds. He supposedly ran 4. 7, but
"·• he ran better than that. I would say
he's 4.6 and just a natural athlete
who'stpt the size."
.,
Rick Mirer has spent two sea·
.·' .. · sons in Seattle with only one stand·
:: · · out target, Brian Blades. He must
::·::· be smiling at the prospect of team·
.. ;. ing with Westbrook, Galloway or
. ·, Stokes.
'· ::·
Other receivers who will go
'· •· early, if not in the first round, are
Jack Jackson of Florida, Frank
·: ::· Sanders · of . Auburn and Kez
McCorvey of florida State.
·· . Tight end, a trouble spot for
years, .is loaded. Another Penn
., State product, Kyle Brady, is the
best prospect and might sneak into
'j •I the top dozen.
.
.
··
Christian Fauria of Colorado,
Mark Bruener of Washington,
Lovell Pinckney of Texas, Pete
., Mitchell of Boston College anq

·
3.8 V·6 eng., PS, PB, .;Jual air
bags, &lt;'!Uto. trans. , AM/FM
stereo cass., P. windows, P.
locks, rear defroster, cast
tniles , extra clean. Two now in aluminum wheels.
inventory
WAS $15,995
WAS 1$15,995
3.6 V6 eng.,' PS, PB, auto.
trans .. AM/FM stereo cass .. till &amp;
cru ise . anti-lock brakes. air
cond .. dual air bags. P. windows
&amp; locks . cast alum. wheels, low

Nowt3,99S •Nowl3,995

1991 FORD
TAURUS GL ·

.STATION WAGON. V6 eng., PS,
· PB , auto . 1rans., ar1 con d .,
AM/FM stereo cass., tilt &amp; cruise,
P. windows &amp; P. locks, roof
luggage rack, 43,000 miles,
extra clean, new tires.
WAS $9,995

•ow 88,

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING

" .,"

.,' ,,,,·

meet or

OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.-FRI. N; SAT. 8-12
MUFFLER SHOP MON.·FRI. N; SAT. 8-12
NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.·FRI. 8-8; SAT. 8-3 P.M.

.
HONORARY BALL BOY· Billy Jac "B.J." Marnhout, son of
Randy and Cheryl Marnhout of Racine, Ohio, was thehonorary ball
boy at a recent Kentucky basketball game. He is pictured above under
the net, along with players Andrew DeCierq, left of Florida, and Jared
Prickett, a West Virginia native, for Kenrucky. Being a ball boy was BJ.'s
lOth birthday present from his uncle, Mike Marnhout. B.J.'s dad and
brother Butch wue also in attendance at the game.

- - Sports briefs, Hockey
INGLEWOOD. Calif. (AP) The Los Angeles Kings, losers or
six straight games and on the verge
of missing the playoffs for the second straight season, fired coacb
Barry Melrose amd assistant Cap
Raeder .
Team president Rogie Vachon.
49, will coach the final seven
games. Former Kings star Dave
Taylor. 39, assistant to G.M. Sam
McMaster, will be Vachon's assis·
tan I.
Melrose, 38, was hired before
the 1992-93 season following a
successful coaching career in the
Detroit Red Wings' fartn system.
He guided the Kings to their first
Stanley Cup finals appearance.
However, Ute Kings were 27-45·
12 last season and won only 40
limes iii their last 126 games.
Golf
LA QUINT A, Calif. (AP) .Charles Coody and Dale Douglass
combined for a 9-under-par 63 and
the opening-round lead in the
$1,105,000 Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf.
Lee Trevino aM J:)ave Hill tied
Chi Chi Rodriguez and Jim Dent at
64 over tile 6,843-yard Stadium
Course at PGA West.

.

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~··
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"''·•·

...
"

..... '

...

~GRAVEL'l Prof. 20G with '
Fo/llnL-Wift!AGroWIIy

::~

TRACTORS ARE OUR BUSINESS, NOT ASIDELINE

.. "
:: ~

,,lt'

.

•Stocks
•Corpor-ate Bonds
•U.S. Treasury Securities
•Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
•Insured Money Market
Accounts
•IRA's
Contact: ·
· Jay' Caldwell

Account Executive
441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

Sto~king

HydJ50" Mower
List $8778 Sill 16995

MANNING K. ROUSH, DIB/A

T·RACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
..•:·~•, GRAVELY
204 Condor St• Ph. 992·2975 • Pomeroy, OH.
•

~~ ..............................................

$7995
~i~ v~~:~e~umin~ ~~V .$8995
~4~~~!~~ia~~~Uise, cassette .. $8995
~~4 ~a:ia~~m~i~~:~~e ..............$9995
89 Ford Bronco II . $ 0
·
·
1 ,495
~~. ~~~:!n.~~~~i~~~;~~.. $10,495
91 Ford Aerostar XLT S.1 995
1
~~i~~fi~~ ~!~~~ ~~~~~~... $12,995
~~a~!~:'r~~~ ~~~~~~~ . $12,995
~t~n~~v~n"Yp!!!~6.
$12,995
94 Ford Aerostar
s.51 995·
95 Ford Windstar
$161 995
87 Chrysler LeBaron

•

Conve-t1b 1e. turbo, aulomat1c .local 'r.Jde

til t,

XLT, V-6, automatic. ..

._

auto, air ....

1988 DODGE CARAVAN
50,000 mi. V-6, Auto. PS, PB , 1
Owner, White-Red Int.

Extended XLT, almost new .......... ~..
Hottest mini van on the market .

$7,900

Prof. 14G with
HydJSO" Mower
List $6578 SALE 1499 5

,. ,.
•
,I'"'
,.
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•;,I'

OFFERING:

$20,700

1v

Prof. 14G with
HydJSO" Mower
List $7078 Slll 15395
Prof. 16G with
HydJ50" Mower
List $7178 Sill 15595
Prof. 16G with
HydJ50:' Mower
List $7678 Sill 16095
Prof. 18G with "
HydJ50" Mower
List $8378 SIU 16595

E~ char~~;~e

Member SII'&gt;C

4x~4~~==

deliver four seasons worth of professional results.

•Over 20 custom attachments
•Strategically located controls
•Dependable all-gear direct drive.
•Kohler commercial grade engine.
•50" heavy gauge steel deck.

Membe r New Yorio: Slotk.

1993 FORD BRONCO
Low Mi. PS; PB, Air Cond., Til t
Wheel. Cr~ise P.L. , PW, Red &amp;
Sliver.

,,

riding traciOr is job-engineered

Compnny

Extended length. V6 . ioca l.owner ~ .•

. ""

Professionai~G

OhJo

Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, April 26
Gallipolis· River Cily Farm Supply
4:00 ·5:00P.M., Phone (614 ) 446·2985
Minimum order of 25 fi sh
WE FURNISH YOUR HAULING CONTAINERS
To Place An Order Call The S&lt;Drc Above or Call : 1-H00-247-261 'i
(orders do no have to be placed in advance)
FARLEY'S FISH FARM
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421

NICE

The Gravely

The

Fish For Pond

..
"' .

'j,'"

· Brlnl in your best deal on a New Car or Truck
-,
. . wrlf tey to
lieat the Deal.
FOR A GOOD DEAL••
~ .Jack RoUSh, VIctor Arm• or Bob Ross

Jamie Asher of Louisville will get
strong consideration. All could be
quick starters in a league with few
outstanding tight ends.
"Most people think this is a
draft with an edge on offense."
Giants general manager George
Young said. "There's some quality
and depth in every offensive area.'·
Particularly in two areas; quar·
terback and tight end, where the
pickings ·have been limited in
recent years.
"I don't .think the colleges have
been producing players at the same
rate," Jets GM Dick Steinberg
said .. "Players from the '70s and
'80s who wen: playing football are
now playing basketb:\11.''
Not all of them. Many of those
standouts who chose foo1ball offensive football - will be on the
draft board this weekend. But not
for very long.

,,
.•..•

·~

1994 FORD .
1994 MERCURY
TAURUS GL 4 DR. SABLE .GS 4 DR.

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page

Area sports briefs

~·"

PS. PB, auto. trans., air cond., AM/FM
stereo cassette, power windows &amp;
power locks, tilt &amp; cruise, quad captain
chairs with rear sofa. Exira clean, low
miles .
WAS $21,995

1988 MONTE CARLO SUPER SPORT

:.1
,.'
,Y;
....

1993 FORD ·E-150 CONVERSION VAN · .

V8 Engine,
Alum. Wheels,

1616 E astern A_ve:

.
.

$

302 V·B eng. , PS. PB, auto. trans .,
AM/FM stereo cass ., tilt &amp;·cruise, P.
windows &amp; P. locks, cloth int., dual P.
seats with P. lumbar, rear defroster, cast
alum. wheels. Like. new, extra clean, low
miles.
WAS $10,995 $

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

Studio open

' ·

Passers and receivers rule
upper tier of collegiate' crop
B BARRY WILNER
YNEW YORK (AP)

'·

• '· April 23, 1995

...

REMEMBERING WHEN - This was the 1935 Ohio State
footbap team that lost 111·13 to Notre Dame that seas&lt;in in one of
the most talked·ahout collegepmes of the era. Sunday Times-Sen·

.·

'

1994 FORD T-BIRD
White • Red Int. VB , auto., PS ,
PB, PW, ,PS, AIR &amp; More Low
Mi.

1990 CHEVY SUBURBAN
4x4, Good 'Clean Vehicle, New
Tires, Auto, PS, PB, PW, PL. Atr,
Cruise. Tilt.

$13,900

The

•bbee
BI
MOTOR COMPANY

See

Bibbee
Marvin KecbatJgh
Jerry

Drive~Straight

oocHayman
1,.....---;-20
M
nutes
---i
Up
Rt. 7 North Thru Tuppers Plains

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

4 667-3350

p"Where Better ReallY. Mailers. 1
east State stteet
.. A\heiJS, OhiO

593·664

C5

�· Page-C6-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

Logan diamondmen get by Gallipolis 6-5

I
J

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t

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r

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.

SENIOR LINKFEST SLATED.;_ The Senior
: • Golf Tournament wiD be held on May 11 at 1:Z: 15
: • (&gt;•m• at Cliffside Golf Course. From left to right.

are Cindy Staley, Sue Burnette and Garren Snyder, the tournament's OJ.1111nlzers.

.

..

I

JA •'

I:

•

I
t:

J:

In the Open

some mate-up games Monday or LoRan
102..001-2 a 6-10-2
Tueaday, te slated to play a1 WarWP - Dennis (in relief of
reo Locll Wednesday.
Broc:b)
lnnlna lotals
LP- Cremeens
GAHS' ·
000-200-3 = S-8-1 ·

GALLIPOLIS - Chad Zlm·
merman hit a two-run, IJuU.Joed.
ed single with two out In the bol·
tom of the seventh Inning of Fri·
day's Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League baseball game apinst the
host Gallia Acadelliy Blue Devils
to lead the Logan Chieftains to a 65wln.
The game was originally slated
to be played at Mingo Parli In
Logan, but !bat f.eld was deemed
too· wet for play. Ron Janey's
Chieftains, accompanied by their
classmates on !be softball team,
came to Memorial Field as !be host

.

11 Boston Garden.

The old Ganleu sbook as 22 of

Logan bad held Lany Carter's
Blue Devils scolcless in !be fsrst
three frames while taking a 3-0
lead Into the fourth. Both teams
scored one run each in the next
three innings, whicb put the Acade·
my in a 4-2 hole going into !be seventh.
Gallipolis dented the plate three
times in that frame, with designated
hitter Dylan Evans: two-run double
putting the Blue Devils ahead S-4.
Then Logan came to bat for !be last
time.
· ·
Kris Begley walked and moved ·
up 90 feet on Brian Tucker's single. After Scott Young and Jay
Conrad were retired, Jack
Buchanan walked to load the bases
to set the stage (or Zimmerman, the
Chieftains' N0. 9 hitter.
Logan shortstop Dustin Dennis,
who came on in relief of starter
Chuck Brooks, got !be -win. Senior
Brett Cremeens went the distance
and lost for the Blue Devils.
The Blue Devils, who may have

·ay Jim Freeman

Sports b r i e f s - - - - - -

B_.ketb•ll .
BOSTON (AP) -Larry Bird,
Bob Cousy; Bill Sharman, Bill
Russell, John Havlicek and a host
of other Celtics greals came for the
last regutar-seasoa basketball game

team.

,

,:

April 23, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt Pleasant, WV

Times-Sentinel Staff
•

the team's best 'p layers and the

architect of thetr success, Red
Auerbach, uotted onto the floor
during halftime of the Celtics' 9992 loss to !be Knicks.
The 67-year-old building will be
In
by the $160

~

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D•.

•

'

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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

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

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE .
POINT PLEASANT
1675

I _Lyne Center slate

J'· ,
i•

:.
,
·:
I

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t

RIO GB,ANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of April 23. 30 at the University of Rio
· Grant'l,c' s lyne Center.
Ji'itness center,
gymnasium
and racquetball courts
Today- 1-3 p .m . and 6-11
p.m.
Monday -7 a.m.-11 p.m.
. Tuesday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
: Wednesday -7 a.m.- II p.m.
.
Thursday - . 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m. ·
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
.
Sunday, -April 30 - 1-3 p.m.
?"d6-11 p.m.

--

OPENING DAY SET- The Cliffside Ladies Golf Association wiD
hold a scramble as its season. opener on Saturday at 10 a.m. Those
interes.ted In joining may call Cliffside Golf Course or one. of the tbe
officers in lite pboto. From left to right are secretary Robin Lane,
bourd representative Debby Barcus, vice-president 'Sue Burnette,
president Garren Snyder and ~reasurer Wanda Boxdorfer.

·MOW DOWIIlHE COMPETITION

complimentary accessories.
Expert fitting and 1st choice

·

clean

\1'

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PRICES START Al

,
.
$ 95
2

I

• . Wild turkey hunters heading
Positionina - Select a calling
} mto the wood~ M;onday need to . position that places your back
$ C8l1iY alopg 11. lillie common safety against a large tree and leaves the
• , sense along with their favorite area in front of you open. Do not
: shotguns and turkey calls. ·
bide so well that you cannot see
•
Once sort of a nov~lty, turkey turkeys and otbcr bunters. The tree
~ hunting is beooming more popular you sit against will camouflage
~ and. unfortunately, the number of your outline and belp protect your
i, hunting accidents bas increased back.
.
~ . with. !be ri5!lln popularity. Turkey
Identify your target - Never
' hunung acetdents have occurred in ., shoot at a sound or movement.
; both Gallla and Meigs counties in Remember you ·can legally shoot
: recent years, including one fatal only bearded turkeys.
• shooting in Meigs County in 1992.
Hun1er orange -Wear hunter
'
Although turkey bunting, like orange when walking in lhe woods.
other types of hunting, is a safe If you kill a turlcey, tag it immedi•: activity, it carries with it special ately and !ben conceal it or wrnp an
~ safety hunting concerns not found orange covering on the bird before
• in o~r types of bunting. Hunters walking out of the woods.
:· accustomed to bunting deer. and
Know your range -Do not
~ other game should learn some of shoot at a turkey out of your shot~ the basics in rurkey bunting safety.
gun's effective range . Always
The Ohio Divtsion of Wildlife · shoot at !be bead and neck of the
; offers !be following safety tips: . bird and remember.that 30 yards or
•
Don't stalk- Do not stalk a closer is ideal for a safe,
kill.
t~key or turkey sounds. or try to Pattern your gun before the ·bunt
drtve turkeys to another bunter. and do not use large shot. Number
Always call the turkey to yotL
4, 5. 6 or 7 1/2 shot is ideal for
Dress for success - Eliminate turkey bunting in ~io.
See the beard - Never let
: colors black, red, white and blue
. from your bunting clothing. These excitement, nerves, panic or peer
colors are predominate in the male pressure guide your behavior.
t~rkey' s plu_mage and can co~- ~ake sure !be object you are shoot·
tribUte to a DUStakenfor game IICCI· tng is a bearded turkey. The most
dents. W~ar ~mplete camouflage.
critical moment of any turkey bunt
Remam sttll - Never move , is when you decide to pull the trigwave or make turkey sounds to ger. See a beard before you shoot.
The majority of mishaps occur
, alert another huriter of your Jl!eS·
: ence. !~stead , yell ?t s~eak m a when a hunter is mistaken for game
: loud votce and remam sun. Nev~r ·and is shot _ usually because the
assume you are the only bunter m shooter did not take the time 10
an·area
.
identify his or her target as a legal
Calling - Be careful when bird.
using lhe gobble call. The sound
A re s'j&gt;onsillle hunter always
and motion may auract other sees the turkey's beard, and identibunters and lead to a dangerous sit- fies -what is behind .his target,
uation.
·
before pulling lhe trigger.

With a tuxedo selected from
Haskins-Tanner's large selection
of the latest styles and

J:
•'

T.u.-L-ey
hun•e
·
d
1\1
. II ($ urge
to keep safety in mind .

; I I

Lovely Is The Night .••
"

Prom 1995
"Moroents

•'

•.
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••"

Remember

I

BE SURE TO STOP BY AND SEE OUR DISPLAY WINDOW

I

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Lawn Tractors

From $ 1.999

,
.
.
7

CW,mt Tua Btt:ks

coupon mar bl US«! lot
ucn lUJ:edO fenled 1

rRGJ¢

mus1 be p.esenled illlhl

11rnt ordtt IS placed.

...

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

W II I I A If f

- V...Ior ...... . . ,

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PRO DIVISION WINNER- Ruy Livingston, driving this Cutlass
owned by Don ·and Gloria Ours Racing, won the Pro Divsion on AprU
15 at the Kanawha Valley Dragway Park's season opener.
·
··vw.-

,: Livingston and Casto win in KVDP opener

O'DELL LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER

Mon. &amp;Fri. tiiB p.m.
Tues., Wed., Thurs.
&amp;Sat. til5:00 p.m.

150 UPPER RIVER RD. (across from K-Mart
GALLI
.
446·7826

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92 HONDA

92 PRELUDE Sl

Accbrtt EX, .f dool, red, rear spoiler,
powtt moon roof, extraClean. low
rrlles. Reducecllo...

4 wheel steeJing. 5 speed,
one owner, clean,

Tempo,
red, air,'
automa tic.

Corsica LT, white,

Tempo,

ana owner, air.

white, air;

s.tereo cassette.

automatic.

Fireblrd , wtllle, automatic, T·
Tops, power window&amp; I
hic ks. air, !ike new.

loaeledl

94 HONDA PASSPORT
194300, air. automatic, power windows &amp;
locks, cruise and more.

'

90GMC

88VOLKSWAGEN

85SAAB

Safari 7 passenger 'lan,

Convertibfe. red. 5 speed,

9005, automatic, air, stereo

8UIOm$1ie, V6, air, power
windoWs &amp; locks.

AM!FM.
real cleen.

cassette, power wlnckJwa;
&amp; lodts

Civic OX, 4 speed,
stereo, great gas
mileage.

Jena, white,
automatic, ai r,
stereo.

Delivery Will Be: Tuesday, April 25
Pomeroy - R &amp; G Feed &amp; Supply 'Company
12:15-1:15 P.M., Phone (614) 992·2164
Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, April 26
·
Vinton · Isaac's Feed

I·:' ,

New TROY-8/LJ'®

VO~LL~= ~~g ~::~

. _ lntr_oducing_ODYSSEY
The Honda of Minivans ·In Stock
Ready For Immediate
Delivery
.
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Fish For Pond Stocking

)

•

Powerrul 13- 16 HP engines; exceptional maneuverability, easy
controls, much more!
r•

edges of submersed plants C8l) produce nice catches of bluegiUs. This
provided by tbe Division of is a good early season lake for
largemouth bass anglers. Boaters
wildlifeoftheomoDeparllllelltof are limited to the use of elecuic
Nawnl~O:...t
motors only.
central
ALUM CREEK RESERVOIR
of year can be very productive. A ~ Fish with small wonns or larval
number of discarded Christmas baits in the shaded backwarer coves
· trees wen: placed in the lake during for bluegills. These same areas can
!be winter and offer 'ood locations produce good catqles of crappies
for crappies, bluegtlls and bass. when using minnows fished near
Fishing for walleyes. saugeyes and flooded timber or submerged brusb
channel catfish is rated good in piles. Slowly troll large crank baits
at moderate depths ttear the dam
199S.
wben seeking muskies; some of
TURKEY CREEK LAKE Annual releases provide excellent whicb measure up to 40 inches.
DELAWARE LAKE - Crapopportunities to take golden trout
pie
fishing opponunities are rated
in late April through May.
excellent
this year. A 10-incb mini·
Bluegills and redear sunfish are
mum
len~ limit n:malns in effect
abundant and can easily be caught
on larval baits or meal worms for these panfish. Spawning white
fished near the sbon:line. An angler bass move upstream in the Olen·
survey is ongoing here through tangy and Whetstone J!Qtlions of
lhe lake. Bass and catfish populaSeptcmbj:r.
tions are good .
Southwest ·
Northwest
COWAN L AKE - March
BRESLER
RESERVOIR through May is !lie best period to
Slowly
trpll
small
crank baits or
fish for bullheads. A large popula(See
REPORT
on
C·8)
lion of these fish is present.· Use
night crawlers or cut baits fished ,Area turkey checking
along the bottom during the
evening for best results. Crappie stations posted
and muskie fishing opportunities
are rided as good. Bass fishing is '
Ohio wild turkey bunters
rat~ ~s excellent with some fish including landowners and tenants:
wetghmg up to five pounds.
who successfully bag a gobbler
RUSH RUN LAKE - Worms during the wild turkey season Slarl·
and larval baits fished along the ing 'Monday are required to bring
the carcass, with feathers, bead and
Life jacket mandate feet attached, IO an Official Cbeck
effective on May .1
station for tagging by 2 p.m. on the
day the bird is shot.
·
T-urkey check stations in Gallia
Under new rules issued by the and Meigs counties are:
.
.
· United States Coast Guard, boats
Galiia County - Brown • s
under 16 feet must carry one wear- Exxon, Gallipolis; County Line .
able life jacket for each person Convenience Stan:, Waterloo; Meraboard effective May I .
cerville Convenience Store, Mer- .
Under tbe new regulation, a cervilie ; Rio Mini Mart Rio
tbrowable personal flotation Grande; Vinton General 'Store,
device, sucb as a buoyancy cusb- Vinton.
ion, will no longer qualify for lhe · Me'igs County - Baum lumber
carriage requirement.
Company, Chester; By The Way
Requirements for boats longer Grocery, Langsville; Eber' s Citgo,
than 16 feet remain unchanged. Racine.
The change takes place shortly
Unless otherwise noted, check
befon: lhe Coast Guard's National stations will be open for checking
Safe Boating Week, set for May 20 between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. from
to May 26.
.
April 24 through May 13.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-

Here is !be weekly fishing JepOrt as

Buying ANew Or Used Car
SHOULD· BE FUN!!
1! Will Be 1·1 You Shop
ATHENS HONDA CARS!

Ciji Casto of Mason, driving a
SOUTHSIDE - Ray Liv Jegster
2000, was the Junior Dragingston and Ciji Casto were among
stet
Division
champion . Derek
those recording victories· in
Baum
of
Chesler
took second In his
Kanawha Valley Dragway Park' s .
1993
Spitzer.
first race of the season, held on
April 15.
Russell White of Catlettsburg,
In !be Pro Division, Livingston, Ky . won ' the Modified Division
from Point Pleasan~ took ftrSt in a with his 1967 Mustang. Tim Casto,
1989 Cutlass owned by Don and Ciji's father, came in second in his
Gloria Ours Racing of Crown City. · 1974 Mustang.
In the Street Division, Chris
Livingston beat 'L,G. Daniel of
Stevel!s
of Ashland, Ky. beat Eddie
Whitesville, W.Va. in his 1987
·
Workman
of Milton, W.Va.
Camaro. ·

2:00 ·3:00P.M .•• Phone {614) 388-8880
Minimum order of 25 fis h
W E FURNISH YOUR HAUJ.-!NG CONTAINERS
To Place An Order Call The Store Abo ve or Call : 1-800-247-2615
(orders do no have lobe placed in advance)

Ranger XLT pickup,

·

V6, 5 speed,
.

stereo, air.

94 HONDA ACCORD
IP4215, air. automal ic, power windows &amp;

locks. cruise,

FARLEY'S FISH FARM
CASH, ARKAN~AS 72421

.. NO

NO INTEREST
'TIL OCTOBER'95.

'90 CHEVROLET

87 FORD

92 FORD

Corsica. gray. aulomalic,

Aerostar XLT, air,

air, 'AM/FM,

aUiomatlc, power windows

Ta urus.
air, automatic.
AM/f M

&amp; lOcks

·

.-

'''":t

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
Spring Service Specials good thm Apri128, 1995

••I
'

••

'· Sports deadlines
The ·'Oatlipvli:r Daily Tribune,
· ' The Daily Sentinel and the Sunday
•

Times-Sentinel value the contribu·
tions their readers make to th e
• Easy-starting Honda OHV
, sports sections of these papers, and
' they will continue to be published. '.
commercial engine
I · However, certain deadlines for • 4.5HP
Durable X~noy"' deck
l submissions will be obsetVed.
1 · The deadline fo.r pboLOs and • Exclusive twin-blade system
• related anicles for basketbaU (slll!}for superior' mulching
mer basketball and similar camps
• Self-propelled &lt;\fld
fall UDder the sommer sports dead·
line) and other winter spans is the
push models available
I last day of the NBA finals.
• Optional grass bag and side
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball -related
discharge chute available
photos and related anicles, from Tball to the majors, as well as other
HRM215SXA
spring and summer sports, is the
day of the last game of the World
Series.
•
The deadline for photos and
• • related articles for football and
HONDA
: other fall sports is the SaLUrday
•
; before the Super Bowl.
•
Tbese deadlines are in place to
allow contribu tors the time they
need 10 acq uire their photos from
the "photography studio/developer
of chOice and to give !be staffs the
chaOce to publish lbcseitems in !be
. . , _ , . _ ,.. __ _ .... " " " " " · · · - - - - · -..;.., .~ro~teseasonf~tbosespwts . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~e~~
~~:··:·~;·;~
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ALL
NEW

$1995
112013HSA

• ,Powerful13hp Honda OHV engine
• Hydros!&lt;ltic transmission (no shifting, infinitely variable
sj&gt;eed control) ·
• 38", twin blade, side discharge or mulching deck
• Anti-scalp roller standard
,..
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• 7 height adjustment

Riverfront Honda ·

UPPER IT. 7
·GALLIPOliS, OHIO
..................~~......~~...........:::::~::~~~::..J
' ...

Oil Change
Filter
Classic Lube

Air Conditioning
Service

$16.95

up to 36 oz of Freon, Parts Extra

$42.99
Rotate &amp;
Balance Tires
527.95

4-Wheel s46.95
10%
Senior Citizen
Discount on All
Service
Excluding AddUional Specials

DON TATE
RS, Inc.
It's Worth Your Drivel

92SUBARU

84 HONDA

91 DODGE

Legacy l , one owner.
automatic, air,
st ereo c;assene

Accord . 5 speed,
stereo cassene , gray,

Monaco 4 .:;oor, a•r. automatrc. power windows &amp; tocks.
crurse. one ownef.

harchback.

95.14 ::.
94 HONDA CIVIC

$65.50

Radiator Flush
Alignment
&amp; New Coolant 2-Wheel s27.95

'

19tt225, air, 5 speed ,

stereo.

4!6· X"'' "'" «.nJ11 C-tuden

nw 1111 W1f l1 4..'l

11tf111'UI,II

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BUY NOW AND SAVE SOME GREEN
ON AfORO· WHEEL HORSE.'
• No money dowri , no payments and no finance charges
for qualified buyers on Thro"s Re~olvi~g Charge Plan.
• Features a.big 16 hp Toro Power Plus"' engine to
take on the toughest jobs around your home..
• Hurry in whi le selection is at its best.

BAUM"LUMBER

· 88 PlYMOUTH
leMans,
blue,
5 speed

Voya ger Van , while With

'red interior, atJ tamatie,
AMJFM oassanet

91 GMC
CoMr$IQf\ II~. Hladelt Oi.W Ill. AM f M

cass C8, ~ ~ cf'll6, lulllt p¢111·
8 bed. VCA,'TV,' new lrenm c1a1

$12,995
'Payments figured with ~1 ,000 down - 93's for 60 mo. at 9. t5APR, 92 &amp; 91 tor
54 mos at 9.20 APR , 90 &amp; 8910148 mo. a\9 .24 APR and 88 &amp; 87 lm36 mo at

9.31 APR.

CHESTER

STATE ROUTE 248
985·3301

TORO WhtJellane.
l!.llt. ..... ~~.~ \ l '"o\1...

..

When you want It done right *

·"rnie :Jfapp!f. :Jiontfa Peop[e

11

81 0 E. STATE ST. • AT8ENS, OHIO
Phone 594·8555

�,,

I

~P~age-C~~~:;~s~u~nd~a~y~Tl~m~es-:;~Se~n~tin~e~l=iiaiilli~?ii~P~o-~m;e~ro~y~·~~~Ai~d~d~leipoi~rt-Galllpolla, OH-Point Pl.eaaant, WV

Indians
outlook.•.

,.

NFL draft under way...
a

Ohio fishing .report. ~c~n~tin::ued::.:,:rro::::::m..:::c-:. :. . &gt;
7

drift 'weight- forward spinners
tipped with minnows or night
crawlers to take walleyes. Shoreline areas produce goOd catches of
bluegills and white bass. Balloon
fishing techniques are best used at
night whep fishing for channel catfish .
LOST CREEK RESERVOIR The crappie and bluegill fishing
outlook is rated good. Fair opponunities exist for walleyes, saugeyes,
yellow perch,. catfish, bullheads,
llirgcmouth bass and smallmouth .
bass. Catfish, blucgills and crappies

comprise much of the catch here
' thistimeoryear.
Nortbeast
ATWOOD RESERVOIR
Use minnows suspended beneath a
bobber and fish deep in areas w1th
submerged structures to take crappies. Most range in size from eight
to J.O inches. Saugeye fishing is
rated as excellent Fish jigs tipped
with minnows on overcast days or
at night for ,best results~
MILTON RESERVOIR- The
outlook is good for those anglers
seeking black and white crappies,
walleyes, largemouth bass, muskies

- _- - - - - - - - - -

and channel catfish. Walleyes averaged about 18 inches last year;
while largemouth bass averaged
nearly 1(\ inches. Fishing success is
improving as water temperatures
slowly rise.
·
Ohio River
NEW CUMBERLAND POOL
- This 13-mile stretch or the Ohio
River in Jefferson and Columbiana
counties offers anglers 2,000 surface acres of water. Fish near the
wann water discharges and stream
conlluences when seeking saugers.
Jigs and minnows suspended
beneath a bobber along with wax

worms or red worms can be used to
take crappies. The stream connuences in the upper portion of the
pool offer· good fishing action for
hybrid striped bass.
Lake Erie
Some of ~he year's largest
walleyes are taken this month in
the western basin near Marblehead,
the islands and other nearshore
areas. Walleyes up to 12 pounds
arc not uncommon. Anglers should
use ice jigs or slowly troll small
crank baits near the bottom on
overcast days for best results. The
daily bag limit is now six walleyes.

·Beat Rising Interest Rates
By Buying Now
•No Money Down -With
Approved.Credit
•No Payments Until July 1995 With Approved Credit
•Prices &amp; Payments Clearly Marked
on Windshields
•More Car For Your Money - More
·Money For Your Car
(Does lllot Apply To Prior Sales)

gr-.

· A
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1llllt FORD TEMPO; 15015, automat~.
AM/FM, cloth Interior, dual mirrors, ....... .. .................................. S3ft5

...
:A•.;-'

1912 DODGE DYNASTY, 150tS,Iight po~er, air, automallc,
lilt, cruise. AMJFM cassette, cloth Interior ........ ......................... $1415

1991 NISSAN SENTRA, 14870, red, au1omaHc,
AMIFM , rear defloster, clotl11ntarior .................. ...................... SSM
1W1 FORD PROBE GL.15011, red, AM/FM cassette, '
sport wheels, cloth interlorr rear defroster, dual mirrors ...... ....•. 11718
1992 GEO STORM, 14897, white, air, au1omatic,
AM/FM , rear defroster, dual mirrors .......................................... S15l7
1992 CHEVY LUMINA, 148M, dart&lt; po~ei. air,
automaUc, AM/FM Cassetle, Ult, cruise, rear defroster ...... ....... $7811

1992 DODGE DYNASTY, 14959, V6, air, automatic,
power locks·, cruise. AMJFM cassene. tilt, air bag .................... $7815

'

1991 FORD PROBE, 14945, blue, air, AMJFM

.

1990 MAZDA PROTEGE SE, 14982, whka, air, automai~,
AM/FM.casseHe, alloy wheels. sunrOof~ cruise, power windows S7110
161 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, 141144, blue. automatic,
alloy wheels, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cassette, power windows $7995
1990 NISSAN STANZA, 14904, red, air,
automatic, tilt, cruise. rear defroster, cloth Interior .................... $6995

1993 MERCURY TOPAZ, 14990, gr&lt;Jen, air,
automatic, AM/FM cassette, til!, cruise, cloth inlfi!rlor ............. . $8995
1993 CHEVY CAVALIER AS WAGON, 14919. red, air,
autOmatic, AM!FM , tilt, cruise, luggage rack ........
........... $8915

1912 BUICK SKYLARK, 14988, VB, air,
automatic, cruise , tilt , power locks , AM/FM cassette ...............'$8700
t994 FORD ESCORT, ~4984, green, alloy wheels,
AM!FM cassette, air, 20,000 miles, dual mil'fors ..
.. ...... ' l " .. $9270

1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME, 14984, green, air, automatic,
AMfFM csSseHe, 1111 , cruise, power windows &amp; seats, air bag $13,400

TRUC~S AND VAN ,
1W2 FORD RANGER LONG BED XLT, 15025, Spor1 wheels,
rear slider, AM!FM cass, dual ml!'fors, cloth Interior ................. sme

$11 ,799

SALE

$13,499

POMEROY - Tomato and ,
potato growers need to be aware of
a devasta{ing disease, Late Blight
- Pbytopbtora infestans that bas
been spreading in the Midwest and
northeastern states. Late blight was
the cause of the Irish potato famine
of the 1840s.
This disease causes tbe complete defoliation of the tomato· or
potato plant. It develops best in
cool weather (50 degree nights/70
degree days) with rainy or dewy
conditions.
Large, dark, irregular lesions
develop on leaves and .stems and a
pure, wliitc mold growth is often
visible oo stems and the underside
of leaves, Dark brown, leathery'
lesions develop on green tomato
fruit. Infected plants may be killed
in one-to-two weeks if favorable
conditions persist.
The disease cannot survive in
soil or plant debris, For an epidemic to begin in any one area, the rungus must survive the winter in '
potato tubers (culls, volunteers), be
reintroduced on seed potatoes or
tomato transplants, or live spores

&gt;

1W8 DODGE DAKOTA, 15028, Blue, l'"'g bed, a&lt;,
rear defroster, AMIFM, dual mirrors ........, ........ ... .. ................... $8415

or

F.I1H3 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 15002, bu1gundy, V6,
passenger, air, automatic, tilt, cruise, air beg ............. .. ...... $12,400

SALE

&lt;· By HAL KNEEN

By MARK SMITr
''···· Ad ves,
t I nc.
.
: : Some people choose to build their
• own houses. However, mpst of us
would rather hire contractors who
know their trade
and can do a
much beaerjob.
You can Jooltat
building an in,~
vestment port·
~:
folio in the same
;;
way. Should
'•
you hire an
~;
an:hitect or do.
; ; the job yoursell7
:~
If you 8IC willing to spend a
'' considciablearnountoftimeleaming
: ~ about investments, continuously re,• mhing the mallceiS and 1118l188ing
' your holdiligs, yw might fare well on
your own. After all, no broker ~
fUI8JICial adviser has as much underSlanding abqilt yoi1r fmancial needs
than you do
'
· Notwithstanding, many people
~':; either lack the experience or uaining
: • 10 make theif own investment deci~~: sions or they don't have the time
:.; needed to do the job righL If you are
• one of these people, you should use
· • the services of a professional in the
, important task ofbuildilig and grow·~ ing your investment portfolio.
Full service brokerage ftrms
transact much more equity business
tban "di.sqrunt" brokerage fmns do.
, A recent study noted that the full~
· : service share the securities mallcet
: · is about8S%.
;·
Anotherinterestingfactsaysthal
:: the majority of mutual funds are pur' • chased by investors worlring with full
, service professional broken and fi.
: ; nancial planners.
'
The chief reason people work
with a full service broker is tha1 these
· ~ professionals take the time to know
:- and understand each individual's
: needs and tailor recommendations
based on these particular needs. Full
service brokers become an integral

au1&lt;,matlc AM/FM, Y6, rear defroster ................. .. .................. 17215

V6, automatic, air, cassette, tilt, cruise.,.

:

:~:

cas~ene. alloy wheels , rear defroster, cloth interior .............. :... $7415

1992 CHEVY S·10 1 15031, red, Tahoe Pkg.,
cass , air, sport wheels, rear slider, cloth Interior .......... $8315

Air, cassette, tilt, roof rack.

1092 CHEVY LUMINA APV, 15007, blue, air,
automatic, till, cruise, power windows. cloth Interior .......... ..... $10,520
1992 DODGE CARAVAN, 15018, dart&lt; po~er, all,
automatic, AM/FM cassette, air bag, 7-passenger, V6 .......... $10,850

1992 DODGE CARAVAN SE, 15011, blue. air, automatic,
AM/FM cassette, till. crui~. ail' bag, 1 passenger, V6 .......... $10,000
1093 DODGE CARAVAN,. 15020, blue, air, a.ulomaiiC,
lilt, cruise, VB, ?passenger ......:······.............~ ..........................$10,885

must be blown in with ralnstomts.
Tbc new suains of this disease
are resistant to current systemic
fungicides rocmnmended as conb'OI
measures for lhe 'commercial grower. In order to better study the dis·
ease, Ohio State University is seeking your assistance in tracking and
tracing down the various
races/strains of·Late Blight Dis·

ease.
If you have· either potato or

tomatoes showing symptoms of the

disease OSU will Identify, at no
cost to you, the pathogen and carry
out several specific tests to determine wbicb suains are represented.
Mailing packages will be available
at the local extension office.

age houses do noL
When looking for an investment
professional, you should look for
!IOIIIC9fiC you can trust, slimeone in
which you have confidence, someone
who can take~ lime than you can
tomoniuyour investments and keep
you apprised of new investment op-

portunities.
Finding that perfectly suilable
penon can be very n:warding. Tbc
search should not be based on transacting business but rather on the estal?lishment of a !oog term ~lationshipofunders!Mdingand~g. Here
are ~ few thmgs to conSider when
looking:
.
.
. • rust, .de~me your tnvesnng
needs and ob,JeCuves.
.
~ Seek referrals ~m ~ends,
n:lanvesand trusted adviSers like your
accountant: or anor:ney.
• Avmd openmg accounts over
the phone from a cold caller on flfSl
contacL
.
• Ask w~8l type of mv~tment
products an mvestment advtser offen, how he or sbe construe~ a pon. folio and find out what servtees are
charged and the cosL
.
• Lean toward f~ll-semce b~okerage rums that d?n .t have p~pne- .
tary J!IOC!uc~;5. Theu brokers -:v•ll be
mo~ ObJCCUve w,hen .suggesting sectmnes to meet your needs.
.
• ~ for finns ~~!at have been
m busmess for a long nme.
• Check to see if the rmn has
SIPC and additional securities proteeti?n and how muc~. ~~s that
pro~de at least $I 0 million m proteeuon are preferred.
.
• Make sure the ~kerage f~
t~amember~~eNIIllOnalAssoctauon of Securines Dealers (NASD).
New Ylrt Stock Exchange mernben are also favored.
Mark Smith Is all Investment
bro~er ror Advest Inc. in its Galllpohs office.

---

$15 799

$16,999

SALE
After Rebate
5 YEARS OF AWARD-WINNING SERVICE IN ATHENS
THE ALL·NEW 1996 DODGE CARAVAN NOW IN STOCK!

1092 CHEVY S·10, 14998, black, automatic,
AMJFM cassette, sport v.tleels, dual mirrors ........................... $6978
1991 CHEVY S· 10, 14770, A(v'IFM cassette.
sport wheels, rear bumper, bed liner, custom stripes ............ ... 16900
dual mirrors, rear step .bumper, sport wheels ........................... 176CM
1891 DODGE DAKOTA, 14980, automatic, a.ir,
AMJFM cassette, lilt, cruise, tool box, bed liner, sport wheels .. $9410
Ps'{ments figured Wllh down payment 01 St ,000 cash or tredt plus tax &amp; lllle. See salesman for &lt;letaifsl

•·

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\

INITIAL CLASS GRADUATE. Katrlnka V. Hart, vice·
president, branch administration, Ohio Valley Bank Co., was
among 22 bankers. from across
the state wbo participated and
graduated In tbe inaugural
class of The Bank Leadership
Institute, a new year-long leadership development program
developed by the Ohio Bankers
Association, Columbus.

April 23, 1985

TO RECEIVE STATE DEGREE • River Valley High salool
Future Farmers of America Eric 'Shriver, left, son or Mr. and Mrs.
Jobn Sbrlver and Todd Bryant, son or Mr. and Mrs. Steve Bryant,
wiD receive State FFA Degrees at Obit;&gt; Stale University on May 13.
Shriver and Bryant will be among 388 FFA members receiving
state degrees. Both seniors are agri-business students at RVHS ,

•

American drug companies n:poned n:ncies· are repatriated, .they trans- er, the U.~. con:'placency over. tbe
solid quanerly earnings increases lale in!-0 more dollars th1s year than dollar IS ""!allng and alarm mg.
as well, attributing at least some of they did a year ago. · . .
.
Just asAmencan exponers benefit
the strength to the rising value of
The_ rupsulc of that re~11onsh1p from H, Japanese and German
foreign currencies vs. the dollar.
is foreign _goods and services can exponers suffer. .
.
IBM, the enduring symbol of cost more m thts country. But there
· Japanese officials see the rismg
American technological might is lit~e sign !hat the dollm;'s wc:a~&lt;- value of the yen vs. the do~ar as a
branded as a flailing dinosaur just a . ness IS boosung domesuc mnauon, key threat to the country s slow
few years ago, said earnings nearly a common fear expressed m U.S. recoycry from Its worst recesston
quadrupled, helped in part by )be financial markets ~henever the since the end, ofWor)d War ll.
extra measure of competitiveness dollar takes another d1ve.
Germany s Chancellor Hel~ut
offered by a lower dollar,
"A lot of the rhetoric surround· 1 !Cobl. all~cked the Chnton ~dmi~"We're seeing a lot of currency ing the dollar's devaluatiOn has . IS tau on s monetary pol!CY lh
translation improvements," said been alarmist," said Gordon unusua!IY
thiS P.asl
Ben Zacks, executive vice presi- Richards, an economist at the week, exhonmg Was~I.ngton not

h~rsb ter~s

t~~~-~~~~~~~=n~r::~~~
;:~~~ ¢::~:~~!~:!~~:~~ toli\,~~~~~gr~~~erberatedfar
tracks corporate earnings projec- group.
beyond Japan and Ge~many the

tions. "It's definitely significantly
boosting revenues and earnings."
The dollar's decline belps
·exporters fatten profits by making
their products and services cheaper
in foreign markets without requiring them to ·lower costs. In addilion, when profits in foreign cur-

He predicted the dollar's depre- two_ biggest ~conom1c po~ers
ciation would add nearly half a per- bebmd the Un!led States . Michel
centage point to the U.S. economic Camdessus .. man,agmg director of
growth rate this year, partly the lnternauonal Monetary Fund,
because the dollar is now so low . also rebuke&lt;! ~e t;~ted States oyer
that American exporters have a . the doUar,,saymg a country whteb
comparative price advantage.
IS responsible for the key currency
FQC Japan and Germany, bowcv- Continued on 0-8

Virtuous man deserves credit
straight - and I congratulate you
By BRUCE Wll.LIAMS
On occasion, I have noticed thai . for your honesty - drop a note to
something I charged was not billed the merchant. Chances arc, tbe
in a timely fashion . I assume that ·merchant will tell you to forget
!he retailer has been a bit tardy in about it and thank you for your
submitting bis statements. Recent- honesty.
DEAR BRUCE: A few years
ly, I found a miscalculation in my
ago,
as a passenger in my husfavor on my credit card. I notified
the credit card folks with .the date band's car, I was involved in an
of purchase, the vendor's number, automobile accident. It was a very
and the amount that the seller dark nigbt, a freezing rain was
falling and we suddenly became
should bave charged me.
aware of a truck parked across the
road. My husband went into a spin
I received ,a very nice letter from and we wound up in a com field.
the card issuer, thanking IJie for my At first I felt OK, but the next
honesty but informing me that they morning I really burt, so I went to
bad no way to reimburse the ven- the doctor and was told I was sufdor for the omitted portion of the fering from severe whiplash. I've
purchase. I found this puzzling. bad a lot of therapy, but nothing
Would you care to comment? really has helped. Do you think 1
J.B., Sacramento, Calif.
have a case? Is it too long since the
DEAR J.B .: Diogenes bas found accident to start one?- C.L.,
his honest Dian! Not many people Tacoma, Wash.
would bring this maller to tb~
DEAR .C.L.: In most jurisdicattention of the credit card folks. tions, an action must begin within
However, in order to get this two years of the incident. So if the
cleared up, I'm afraid you would accident was over two years ago,
have to contact the merchant you might have a problem. If you
directly, because the credit card notified your own. insurance com·
company can use only .those figures pany of the claim within the two-.
which arc submitted by the mer- year period, this may be considered
. chant.
sufficient notification.
If you really want to put this
A legal matter like this tendS to
vary from state to state. You were

certainly eligible to collect under
the medical portion of the ins urance on your husband 's car - to
cover the cost of your physical
therapy, doctor's bills aild so forth.
As to what is temted a "friendly
suit" against your husband all,eging that be drove carelesslyth1s 1s another matter, wbicb may
or may not be limited by statute.
· If I were you, I would immediately determine precisely bow long
a period can elapse without putting
you out of the ball game. Remember: If you contacted your insurance company, perhaps th;lt's sufficient notification , Jn any case,
you'll probably need some on-thespotlegal advice and I urge you to
ge t it.
(Send your questions to:
Smart Money, P.O. B·ox 503,
Elfers, FL 34680. Questions or
general ihterest will be answered
in future columns. Owing lo the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot he provided.)
Bruce Williams is a syl)dicaled
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For .information on how to
communicate electronically with
Ibis columnist .and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1800·827·6364, dL 831.7.)
1

Information
update ·
By LISA MEADOWS
.
GALLIPOLIS " Late filed applications for CAT COVERAGE
ONLY ·will be accepted until April
28, 1995 with the following guide- .
lines:
- Producer must certify the
request for a late-filed application
is only for the purpose or meeting
the linkage requirements of the
ACT.
-Producer must certify that
the crop has ~ot been planted or the
crop bas been planted and IS m
good condition. Sign-up for the
1995 Feed Grain and W beat Program will run through April 28,
1995.
· The program offers tbe same
flexibility as last year but docs
require 7.5% set aside for corn. No
set aside for the other program
crops. The other change for this
year is the requirement to carry
insurance on all insurable crops in
·
order to participate.
NEW ACTU"'L PRODUCTION HISTORY REPbRTING
DEADLINES: Insurance providers
may accept catastrophic coverage
yield his tories until the earlier of
the following dates, as appropnate:
a. the filing or any claim for indemnity under a CA'f. poticy; or b. July
15, 1995. for spring-planted crops
(com &amp; soybeans).
NEW CROP REPORTING
AND CERTIFICATION DEAD-

!Margin'

1992 CHEVY S-10, 14872, red. 35,000 miles,

•

Section D

Money Ideas

*April 28, 1995, wheat and barley.
. • May IS, 1995 -oats.
•July 15, 1995 - -corn, soy·
beans. and burley tobacco.
Lisa Meadows is the County
Executive Director of the Gallia
Consolidated }' arm Service
Agency

1.Ht GEO HIACKER 4X4, 145Mii, custom stripes,

Automatic, air, stereo, long bed.

Commercial vegetable growers,
· yop should have received a
newsletter entitled Vegetable Ven· lure Line this past week from my
office, highlighting staked tomato
costs, greenhouse insect control,
pumpkin cultivar evaluations and
. other grower infol11llllion.
If not, call my office and w~
Continued on D-8
·

LINES:

30,000 miles, sport wheels, convertible .................................. $8115

Automatic, air, power windows &amp; locks, cassette.

p.m. and a cooking witb herbs
demonsuation from 1:30 to 2:30
p.m. Flyers with directions and
. specifi~s are available from the
extension.oflice.

pan of the investing process while
their counte-.,•
.,__ at discount bmlcer·

11189CHEVY 5·10. 14WS, black, air,AMJFM cassane,
sport wtleBis, bed liner, tlual mirrors .........; ......... ,.........,,. ....... $4995

NEW 1995 DODGE INTREPID

tum. In addition, the Akron Mobile
Zoo will be there from noon to 3

Interested in rare and unusual
plants? Don't miss Plant Discovery
Day at the Secrest Arboretum, an
85-acre preserve in Wooster. This
aruma! event will be beld on Satur·
day, May 6 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
at Fisher Auditorium.
One of the highlights is tbe
Plant Sale (10 to 3 p.m.) and Rare
Plant Auction (11 a.m. to noon),
which benefits the Secrest Arbore-

1987 DODGE RAM 50 TRUCK, 15027, blue, AM/FM
cassette, sport wheels, running boards, fool bOK ............ .. ....... S3995

NEW 1995 DODGE RAM 1500

expansion. .
.
.
Exponers and ~g U.S. multinationals prospered 10 the JanuaryMarch quarter. Eastman Kodak
Co., for example! reponed an 81
percent profit gam, partly due to
favorable exchange rates ~bat
boosted sales ~veneas. Caterpillar
Inc., another big exporter, reported
a 56 percent profit gain.
.
A half dozen of the btggest

~: Do you need an
~~[ investment adviser?

1992 MERCURY TOPAZ, 15004, white, air, automatic,
tHI, cruise. power windows &amp; locks, rear·defroaJer ................... $7100

~AMI"M

NEW 1995
DODGE
.
. DAKOTA

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1i92 FORD ESCORT WAGON LX, t•983, red,
AM/FM cassette, air, de~al mirrors, rear defroster .................... 11120

the dollar's 17 percent drop in
value against tbe yen and 11 JlC!'·
cent drop vs. tbe mark so far th1s
year still hasn't caused any acute
palil in this country.
On the contiary, U.S. corporate
earnings released this. past week
offered persuasive evtdence that
the dollar's slow demolition is like
an economic health tonic and could
beJp prolong the 4-year-old U.S.
·

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t 992 FORD TEMPO GL, 15008, VB,
afr, automatic, cruise, rear defroster, cloth Interior ................... $6815

By RICK GLADSTONE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Japanese
exp&lt;JJten saeam. Germany s leader rails. Finane~ llllllkets sbudd«.
Mooetary offiCials warn of financial apocalypse because the nu&gt;st
wi&amp;;ly used currency in the world
is anemic and wobbly.
But the Clinton administtatlon's
unwillingness or inability to bait
'

Area fa' rme rs a·re· urged to.be 0 n
:~
~~~ lookout for devastating disease

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tm DOOGE DAKOTll, 16030, 39.000 mUes. AM/FM
CDoiever. ~ort wheels, tonneau cover ... .........., ............ ......... Sl215

PLYMOUTH NEON

,

· ·~

;··!

bag ....................................... $4585

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1990 DODGE DYNASTY, 14929, VB ,'air,
automatic, AM!FM. tilt, Cruise, air

'

NO GIMMICKS OR GIVEAWAYS- .JUST THE BEST .
DEALS ON THE BEST CARS AND TRUCKS AROUND.

;,

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1993 CHEVY CORSICA LT, 14985, white, air, automallc,
\.
AMIFM cassette, tilt, cruise, rear-defroster, dual mirrors .......•.. $9870

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1912 EAGLE SUMMIT DL, 15027, green, air,
automatic, AM!FM cass, rear defroster, sport 'Nheels ............... $9420

1993 OLOS 88 ROYALE, 15001, green, air, a.ulomalic,
AMIFM casse.tta, power seats &amp; windows, till, crUjse ,........,.. S12.350

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1992 DODGE-DYNASTY LE, 14991, white, V6,
air, automatic, AM/FM cassette, tilt, cruise, power windows ..... S8850

. . . . .. 1): .

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1992 FORD T-BIRO, 15006, red, 2 door,
auto.matic, air, AM!fM, cruise, rear cletrosrer ........................... $87115

TH

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1912 CHEVV BERmA, 15024,
2 door, air,
autOmatic, air bag, AM/FM cass, IHI, Cfl.!ise, ciDI:h Interior ........ 18584

1times-Jentintt

1~ U. S. corpo.r ations show prosperous first quarter earnings

t~ Annivenary ~Alf-

Carlos Baerga, 26, has become a
consistent .300 hitter who can add
20 home runs and 100 RB!s. Albert
Belle, 28, remained a triple crown
. threat and a dangerous late-inning
hiller even after his corked bat was
, confiscated. Alomar, 28, hit .288 in
his healthiest season since 1990,
although he 'II open the season amid
concernS about a t~nder len knee.
Add to that mix Eddie Murray
, and Dave Winfield, taking .. detours
through Cleveland on careers that
will likely lead to Cooperstown.
Between t))em, they have more than
6,000 nits and 900 home runs,
enough experience to make them
invaluable if another pennant race
arises.
~
"We didn't bring them in to
figureheads, for their charisma,
because lhey're winners," Hargrove
said. "That 's part of the package,
RVTJ.AND SIXTH-GRADERS - 'Members of coach Mike Gilmore, Matt ·Stewart, Justin
but they were brought in because we
Rutland's
sbrtb·gr•de boys' basketball team are Gilmore and Cari·Rkkard.
1
feel they can still be physically pro·
(L·R)
B.J.
Kennedy,
Skip
Dodson,
Timmy
Hess,
ductive on the field . That other stuff
· is a bonus."
1
Murray; who drove in 76 runs in
(ContinuedfromC-1)
· 108 games wit!&gt; Cleveland last year,
needs 70 .hils to reach 3,000.
Frank Reich and Jack Trudeau ,
concern the Oilers.
Winfield adds a powerful right- a future Hall of Farner.
" I have lot of confidence in affording them the time to develop
handed bat to a team that"struggled
Houston, which made the playagainstleft-handeis last season.
offs seven straight seasons before what I can do, " McNair said. '' I Collins.
Thefe was some concern among
The starting rotation was solid a collapsing last year, gambled on think the Oilers must have it, too ."
Washington, seeking _a big-play scouts about· a hitch in Collins '
year ago, buill around Dennis · quarterback Steve McNair of
receiver after the Posse (Art Monk, delivery, something he eliminated
Martinez (11·6, .3.52 ERA), Mark Alcorn State.
Clark (11-3, 3.82) and Nagy (10-8,
Opinions about McNair were Gary Clark and Ricky Sanders) was by working with Bill Walsh.
It was the third time a quarter,3A5). To round it out, the Indians divided, ranging from "franchise dismanlled, went for Michael
back
and running back from the
have signed Orel Hershiser and Bud player" to "unproven." But Westbrook of Colorado. Best
same
school
went in the lop 10, and
Black, while a couple of y\)ungsters, McNair's improvisational skills, known for catching the desperation
Julian Tavarez and Albie wpez, are strong arm, great running ability pass that beat Michigan last season, the ·second time involving the
bidding to force their way in soon. . and leadership convinced the Oilers Westbrook has size, speed and can Ninany Lions. In 1983, quarterback
outmuscle defenders. He's also an Todd Blackledge and running back
The only piece obviously missing to take him with the third choice.
Curt Warner were chosen. Two
is a proven closer. Rumors have
The knocks on.McNair centered excellent blocker.
Carolina finally made its choice, years ago, it was quarterback Rick
.swirled all spring that the Indians around his playing in Division !eventually may trade for a high· AA, where he didn ' t face many lakin~ another Penn State offensive Mirer and running back Jerome
priced reliever if no one in camp is· tough defenses, and his being a raw player, quarterback Kerry Collins. Bellis of Notre Dame.
up to the job.
prospect. Obviously that dido 'I · The Panthers already have veterans

•

us1ness

~ -iiiiiiiiiiiii
'.

FREE - Gas Grill wit• Purchase of Yt.icle

(Continued from C-1)

NEW 1

;... Fa

•

·

Tbc term "margin" refers to the
practice of purchasing securiti~ in
part with borrowed money, usmg
the purchased securities as coltate,r·
ai in anticipation of an advance 10
the marke t price. If the advance
occurs, the purchaser may be able
to repay the loan and make a profit.
If the price declines, the stock rr.ay
have to be sold to settle the loan.
The maJitlin is tbc difference
between the amount of the loan and
the value of the securities used as
collateral .

TO CELEBRATE STEWARQSHIP DAY·
The Gallia County SoU and Water Conservation
District and Christ United Methodist Church
will celebrate Soil and Water Stewardship Day
on Sunday, April 30. For more than 40 years,
tens or thousands or local congregations and
thousands or local soil and Water conservation
districts have joined together to celebrate Stewardship Week. On April 30, at 10 a.m. a "lrac•
torcade'' will process one mile . from Clearview
Farm at 10615 SR 7 to Christ United Methodist

Church at 9688 SR 7 ror the 10:30 a.m. worship
service. All town and country soil and· waler
stewards, including businesses, are encouraged
to participate in the services. Theme will be
"The Living Waters." Following services, a
potluck dinner will be hid at the church. For
additional information, call Rev , Thomas E.
Rite, 446-4062 or 446-0733). Bu~ Mills, above, Is
a member of the UMC along with his family and
Is a technician for the Gallia S&amp;WCD.
,

Fisher Funeral Home takes part in program
MIDDLEPORT Fisher
Funeral Home is panicipating in
the Living Memorial Program
whicb provides for the plantm&amp; of a
tree in a natioual forGst as a tnbute
10 the deceased.

across the United States.
Fisher Funeral Home estimates

their firm's contribution has been
more than 500 trees.

,

The Living Memorial was
developed in 1976 by tbe
Batesville Casket Company in
cooperation with the U.S. Depanmem,of J\griculturQ Forest Service. The species and location or li ving memorial trees are determined
by the U.S . Forest Service based
upon the grcatesl reforestation
need. Trees have been planted in
most of the 156 national forests

Joe Foster to
appear·on TV .
on April29
EARN DISTRI CT AWARDS· Renee Carmic-hael , Jason
COLUMBUS · Joe Foster, Gal- .
Howard, Leanna Sande~ and Troy Duncan bave been named Dis·
lipolis, will be featured on the
trict 10 Future t'a rmers of America Proficiency Awards winn&lt;rs.
April 29 edition of Agri Counrry
They are now eligible ror state competition. Tbe awards are the
on WBNS-TV Channel tO, Columculmination of three years or work in agrkullul'lll education and
bus, starting at 7:30a.m.
Foster recently received the · supervised agricultur~l education. Sanders Is the daughter of
Brenda and Steve Sanders. She placed first_in specialty cr ops1995 Young Cattleman of the Year
tobacco. Carmichael, daughter of Loralee and John Carmichael
Award. He is a liiCmbcr d the Ohio
placed rll'st.in dairy production and second i~ accounting., IJuncan:
Beef Council' s Operating Commit•
tee.
son or April and C. A. Duncan, was second m fruit and vegetable
production while Howard, son of Cindy and Bob Howard, was secThe sbow, hosted by Ed Jolin·
ond
In placement in production agriculture. From left are Renee
ston, will be carried by nine other
Carmlcbael,
Jason Howard and Leanna Sanders.
Ohio TV stations on April 29.

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April 23, 1895

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaunt, WV

"lSI• D2-6undlly 11m• .Sentinel

AprU 23, 1895

Pomeroy-Middlepor1

Galllpoli~, OH

Point Pleaunt, WV

Sunday Times-Sentinel P1g1

aoJ

#-

~nvironmental
activists focus on ecology of urban areas
...
It's a term that i&amp; cropping up In
citiea around tbe country, and one
Clllbnced by a growing number of
youlig lawyers looking for soc~
cauaes to serve.
·
In Cbicago, these lawyers bave
belped residents of tbe Altgeld
Gardens housing project, mostly
biaclc, wbo say their neighborhood
Is a "toxic doughnut" surrounded
by landfills, factories and even
lagoons contaminated by medical

conccms relleaed that
"I tbinlc you want to allocate
society's resources on lbe environ·
ment rationally, 10d you should
make that decision based on risk.
The people of South Chicago face
problems every day that ani a lot'
more serious than those faced by
many people in other areas of tbe
counlly."
Neighborhood groups in ~nner
cities bave argued for years that
wasce.
tbey were being targeted for a variIn KetUeman City, Calif., tbey ety of industrial projects, and outhelped residents light one compa- right mistreabllent of tbe enviroii· ·
ny's plan to build a hazardous ment, because they're poor and
wasce incinerator on tbe edge of don't bave tbe political clout to
town. Tbe residents claim they light it.
·
were targeted because their coml
Tbe term environmental racism
munity Is predominanUy Hispanic:
was popularized by tbe Rev. BenAlthough tbe ecology move· jamih Chavis Jr., the former bead
ment is in its fourth decade, envi- of the National Association for the
ronmental activists, especially Advancement of Colored People .
environmental lawyers, are begin· Some activists say tbe practice
~a
oing to focus on a long-overlooked_· daleS back to ancient Rome, wben
ecologr of tbe urban poor.
,arbage was dumped in neighbor~
· "Its a sexy, new field," says boodsoutsidetbecity.
Luke Cole, a 32-year-old Sao FranIn 1987, while Chavis was affd.
NEW YORK (AP)- The lacest cisco lawyer who helped the Ket- · iated with United Cburcb of
Christ's Commission for Racial
round of cocpotate earnings repons tleman City residents.
"If
you're
a
young,
idealistic
Justice, he directed a study tba1
has been, to quoiC stock traders, a
lawyer,
and
you.
want
to
work
on
a
found
that tbe number of hazardous
real blowout.
social
movement,
there
aren't
waste
facilities in a community
• The earnings of many bigh-promany
vibrant
areas
in
wbicb
to
rose
along
with tbe proportion of
file companies, and some lesser
members
of
minority groups.
work.
Tbe
environmental
justice
lights, exceeded already bigb
that
is."
Communities
that bad two or
movement
is
one
expedlllioos. As of midday oo FriKeith
Harley,
3
~.
director
of
an
more
sueb
facilities
bad three times· ~ay, 164 companies bad issued
environmental
justice
program
at
the
proportion
of
residents in
'atronger-tban-e:ipected earnings
tbe
Chicago
Legal
Clinic,
says
tbe
minority
groups,
or
38
percent
l'eports, compared with 70 below
influx
of
young
lawyers
bas
Another
report
issued
last year
expectations and S2 neutral,
changed
tbe
focus
of
!'Je
ecology
.
said
that
a
member
of
a racial
.accordins to IDES International
mov!lment. No longer are Yellow- · minority had a 47 percent better
'Inc.
.
IDES. wbicb tracks earnings stone National Park or tbe spoiled chance than a white person of living ncar a commercial baz!lfdous
11ends, said profits are better than owl its only conclltns.
"I think it has renected the con- waste site.
expecced for tbe ninth consecutive
cerns of tbe orgailizations that took
William Sbutkin, 30, one of the
~uarter.
:. "Every quarter iacely bas been tbe lead in framing tbe environ · lawyers helping tbe South Bay resiexceedingly sttong," agreed Ben mental agenda,'' Harley says . dents, says tbe idea of tbc environ..ZSC:ks, executive vice president at " The Sierra Club, and I'm not menial justice movement isfO! so .
Zacks lnvesbllent Servlcie in Chlca· being critical, was concerned with · much to help tbe resident as to
go. • 'I would say Ibis quarter is preserving the pristine areas of tbe empower them.
' 'Environmental protection · is
,even stronger tban tbe previous · country, and their membership and
'Jew."
.• Analysts said tbe unexpectedly
:Strong earnings may sisnal tbe
peak strength of an Impressively
long bnll market, or they may bave
given lbe aged bull a new lease on

·"By GLBN JOHNSON ·
_._...,...,.. 1'.- Wrlllr
BOSTON - In tbe South Bay,
a BostoD neighborhood w::Jed
between a aou-fDMl sa=
•
interstate bigbway, ~·sa county
jaiL seven! mea'JM"*ina plants and
an abaDdonM tn11b IDdneralor.
Plane• roar overhead and
Amll'ak trains rumble by as !bey'
begin their journey to New York
City and points beyood.
Now a developer wants to build
.an aspbalt plant in tbe South Bay.
. Enough, say neigbbofbood residents. Tbey aren't going to take il
an}'lllORI, aod tbey bave a name for
their mistreabllent "environmental
racism."

Quarterly
earnings
real blowout'

TUCTOR AND TRUCK PULL

life.

.

SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1995
/ 4:00P.M.

.

. Ignoring some cautions tbat tbe
p1arket could be getting ahead of
ttself, investors merrily bid stock
" prices bisher. Tbe Dow Jones
1ndustri31 average set another clos·
Jng blgb Thursday and then
, prompUy exceeded it Friday, rising.
l 39.43 to 4,270.09, a record bigb
• imd up 61.91 for the week.
: Friday's double expiration of
: options and futures was Pli!'tially
, responsible for tbe market s run
Ibis. past weelc;. But share prices
·also got a boost from corporate
earnings reports.
·
Corporate giants like IBM,
Sears and Kodak is$ued dazzlingl!iofit reports for tbe three months ·
ended March 31. Tbey were joined
by ,Apple Computer, Merck, PPG
:J,.dustries and Kellogg.
Basic materials companies, such
as chemicals, paper and steel, did
beuer becallse tbey were able to
·raise prices. Compu1er companies
'of all stripes did better because of
:growing worldwide demand for
-technology.
.
Even investment and brokelJige
:firms, which brousht up tbe rear
Jast year, turned rallying stock and
!bond markets and cost-cutting
moves into impressive earnings
'gains.
· Large multinational companies
reaped substanlial benefits from the
weak dollar. wbicb boosled export
)'rices and f1!3de imports relatively
more expenstve. .
' Joseph McAiinden, chie
siategist at Dillon, Rea &amp; Co .•
said a large portion of profit gains
\vere tied to tbe weak dollar rather
than fundamental strength.
"Tbe weak dollar was a large .
factor in IBM's unexpectedly
strong numbers," be said . IBM
~tock rose 4 112 points on Thursday
and Friday, closing the week at 91
S/8. McAiinden said those gains
i\'ere not justified. • 'Investors
aren't differentiating true operaiiooal growth from currepcy,fluctu ations," be said.
.,
• Some other analysts also view
the markel's recent gains skeptical1y suggesting that in tbe long run,
stOcks will nO! come out of tbe dollar's a:isis WJscalhed If the greenback doesn' t recover, it will even·
Urally prove inflationary, If it does
recover. international sales, and
then earnings, will suffer. · On Friday, earnings growth in
Ole first quarter was running 23 .
percent over tbe first quarter of
1994, according to IB ES. :bat
C'ompares to 19 per~nl earnm ~s
growth for the Standard &amp; Poor $
sao toi all of 1994. .
• Some marlcet players ·are skeptic~ that grow th at that pace can
· continue.

Mason County Fairgrounds
ADMISSION $5.00 ·

5500 AND 6500 CLASSIC PULL
6000 AND
7500 FARMER PUll
.
I
Any SPlaces - 100% Entry Fee Payback
5800 AND 6200 STOCK 4X4 TRUCKS ·
Pay 5 Places -125 ·100 -75 ·50· 30
TUNE AND TEST TIME
2:30 pm·3:4S pm - ss.OO Per Hook
Entry Fees - 15.00
1

Sponsored By

Mason County Fair and M&amp;W Sled Co.Rt. 62 North
Point Pleasant, WV

directly relaced to political power," ty residents.
Ue in tbe ncigbbotboOds.''
Sbutkin, a visiting professor at
be says. "It's no secret that envl"Wben tbe people of Kettleman
ronmental banns follow tbe path of City looked around and saw that, Boston College Law School in
least resisj.lllce, and in communi- .you don't have to be a rocket scien· addition to being co-director of
ties tbat are disenftancbised for one tist to see that Ibis is not coinci· Alternatives For Community .t
reason or another, you end up with dence," Cole says. They filed a Environment, says his group bas
more of tbe problems."
lawsuit to stop tbe plant and won. been trying to train community
In recent yean the federal gov- Chemical Waste appealed, but it leaders about their rights and tbe
ernment bas begun to.respond.
dropped tbe challenge in 1993.
process they must use to set tbeir
Last February, Plesident Ointon _ Harley and two otbel' lawye~s COOlpJaints aired.
.
signed an executive order giving work full time on problems m
They've already forced Todesca
federal agencies one year to devel· South Chicago and northwest Indi- to file a more exlensive environ~ plans tbat sbil:ld minorities from
ana. Tbe area around Gary, Ind., is menial impact report with tbe state
dtsproportionalely large exposure borne to paint factories, old steel tban tbe company o'riginally
to ,pollution. He is awaiting their mills and a bost of landfills.
planned.
reports.
"The people in Ibis area don't
."That site is.a symbol for tbe
And in 1992, the. U.S. Environ· just need bankruptcy ·and divorce whole rest of the community,"
mental Procectlon Agency created serviCes," Harley says. "They Sbutkin says. "Tbe fact !.bat it's
tbe Office of Environmenlal Justice want to know about what to do been left there to decay, while there
to address proposals affecting ilbout lead paint in tbeir apartment, bas been opportunity to develop it
minority and low-income commu· tbe dump across the street from some other way, is a comment on
their homes."
tbe res~ given to that COOlJ!IUDi·
ru·u·es .
Carol Browner, tbe EPA's
South Bay has a lot in c;ommon ty. We ve tried to get them some
administrator, said in January: "All with South Chicago. The incinera- respect."
Amerieans deserve clean air, pure tor located there used to dispose of
Wben be's in tbe classroom,
water, land that is safe to live on, tbe city's garbage. Residents Shutkin reaches environmenlal jusfood that is safe to eat. All Ameri· cheered wben the plant was closed tice. Each year be bas no ll'ouble
cans deserve to be proleeted from 20 years ago, but the applause filling the 20 seats in bis class.
pollution - not just those who can faded as the plant decayed instead
''We're ll'ying to sbow people
afford to live in the cleanest, safest of being desll'Oyed.
'
that lbere's an alternative to corpocommunities."
Tbe plant's smokestacks and rate law," he says. "It's a very
Cole says Kettleman City, a graffiti-covered walls remain self-selective class. The class tends
community in California's Cenll'al today.
to mirror tbe diversity and progresValley, was a modern-day Rome
Todesca Equipment Co. of siveness of the movement.'
wben be got involved in the case.
Readville is proposmg to build a $3
Cole bas built a nationWide net·
Chemical Waste Management million asphalt plant on a lot just work of lawyers who bave joined
Inc. of Oak Brook, Ill., operated a · behind tbe· incinerator. Residents tbe cause. He says he gets more
hazardous waste dump on the edge fear it will create dust in an area eacb spring, as law schools bold
of town. Then it proposed building that already bas the highest asthma their commencements and aspiring
an incinerator. Kettleman City resi- - rates in tbe city.
lawyers look for new adventures.
dents, 95 percent of wbom were .
"The mess created by this plant
· "The civil rights cases have.
Hispanic, did some research and won't just settle on this 2.7-acre already been done," be says. "The
found that Chemical Wasle operat- area." says 'Lloyd Fillion, a South women's rights cases, the abortion
ed three incinerators around tbe End resident and chainnan of tbe cases they've aU been done.
eounll'y.
Coalition Against the As·pbalt
"If you look for' a field where
Each one was in a community Plant. "No matter what you do, 'here's an opportunity for progresthat bad 80 percent or more minori· dust will move off tbe site and set· ive change, Ibis is it."
I

Whitewater ·
counsel
interviews
first couple

SUNDAY PUZZLER
'

.

)

ACROSS

94 Manner of walking
96 Soft mass

· t Take hold of
6 Linle pies
11 Football's Tarkenton
and others
16 Applauds
21 Rascal
22 Concerning
23 Of hearing
24 Defame in print
25 Of sheep
26 Effective at an

97 Deity
99 Pack
t 00 Salty snack
103 Scot's cap
105 Kind of.tape
107 Water vapor
110 Rowing item
111Times

113 Clear
1t 5 Extreme degree
1.17 - Stanley Gardner
118 Dishonest one
120 Drink
122 Actor Von Sydow
123 Get brown in the
sun
125 - to be tied
126 Shrewd
128 Sailor
130 - diem
132 Sit for a painter
133.Stringed

earlier lime

28 Love
29 Writing implement
30 Table part
32 Grow together
33 Brisk
35 Pass away
36 Therefore: Latin
36 Darn
41 Give oft
43 Lener alter zeta·
44 Money or conveyor·

instrument, for

45 Ecstatic joy
48 Flies high
50 "Raven" poet
52 Illusion in the desert
55 Tints
57 Opp. of SSW
58 Dramas

short
134 Pee Wetor Della
135 - Angel s
137 Fiddling despot
139 Yell
141 Bar bill
143 Aquatic mammals
145 Mix together
147 Mule's cry
150 Cereal grass
152 Twofold
154 Poor grades
155 Peace symbol
159 Aclress Taylor,

62 -

in a million

63 English composer
65 Carry with effort
67 Open space
69 Tiny ball
70 Switch position
71 Fish eggs
72 B ecome more solid

74 Lunch or dinner,
e.g.

J 0 H N D EER E

I

76 Patron's saint

77 Esne
79 Slangy talk
81 Landed estate
83 Length times width
85 Energy
·
86 .AA.erican Indians .
88 Marathon
participant
90 Card game
92 Shipping containers

I

familiarly .

160 Adores
162 Degree holder, for
·Short
164 Trium~hant cry
166 Boston Red 167 Rudimentary seed
169 Unproved
asserti ons

173 "War and -"
175 Starr and Simpson
176 Thrall
177 Bonte tor oil
178 English composer

179 Toboggans
180 Domesticated
tet ·Animal groups
182 Silvery fish
DOWN
Feel about in the
·dark.
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
tO

Name for a hound

Gening older
Aller Sat.
Rind
Something shot at
Honest Decompose
Ottoman

"The Quick and the
Dead" star

11 Sect ·
12 Furrow .
13 Neighbor of Nev.
14 •Military forces at
sea
15 Snoozed
16 Poner's material
17 Cover
18 Dwelling
19 Danger
20 Icy rain
27 Points a weapon

31 Pow,ertul ruler
Soft food
37 " ... man - 34

mouse? ..

39
40
42
44
46
47
49
51
52
53

Unclothed
And
Sharp flavor
-of the .ball
Chinese gelatin
Snaky fish
Quantity of paper
Unclose, P.Oetically
Elk .
Deduce

54 · ·Put in a cooler
56 Something sweet

59 Omnipotent:
(hyph. wd.)
60 Arab country
61 Ceases
64 At hand
66 Mil. rank
68 Alegume
69 Entreaties
73 Ship's record

75
78
80
81
82
84
87
89
91
93
95

Curved line
Stunt
Forefoot
Military decoration
Firm
Fine and liberal
Magnitude
Feline
Give silent asserit

Kind ol bag
Not wordy
Of an arctic region
Pay increase
Ordinance
Silent
Female fox

106 Bismarck or
Klemperer

108
109
t 12
114
116
119
121
124
127
129
131
132
136
138
140
142

Similar
Kind of maid
Perch
Beret
Drug from hemp
Out of practice
Wind
Sign gas
Oolong is one
Highway
Chronicle: abbr.
Fleshy fruit
Hit hard .
Actor Steiger
Conducted
Scary yell

143 Name meaning

"star"
144 Poet Teasdale
1'46 Animals
147 Shapeless masses
148 Competitor
149 Sky blue
151 Stop!, at sea
153 Door faslemng
156 Western Indian
157 Outspoken
158 Put fo~h effort
160 Minus
161' Shut with force
163 Te rrible
165 Chimpanzees
168 Bus. abbr.
170 New Yea(s 171 "- 'T:own·
172 Actor Beany
174 Shade tree

Tide slowly turning against Toledo's gang graffiti
TOLEDO - Chris Reynolds is
winning the war against gang graffiti, even though he bas lost a few
battles along tbe way.
Reynolds is a pharmacist leehnician at Walters Pharmacy. But
these days, be feels more like a ·
paincer.
For two years, gangs bave used
tbe storefront as a canvas, spray
painting cryptic messages and symbols on tbe building. Tbe graffiti
never lasts too long . Reynolds
paints over it- right away.
He said gangs bave gotten tbe
message tbat be won't tolerate
graffiti. And Walters Pharmacy bas
been graffiti-free for tbe last four
months.
•
A new ordinance tbe city's Law
Deparllnent is drafting may belp
him out The measure, which bans
tbe sale of'spray paint to minors, is
being patlemed after a Chicago law
that bans all spray paint sales.
. Backers say tbe Toledo law will
help curb a growing gang problem.
Latest ligures, from 1993, identified 739 gang members. Tbere
were 407 in 1992 . Arrests and
complaints bave grown along with
gang membership, police say.
"It's a matter of pride,"
Reynolds said, standing outside tbe

pbannacy in a gritty, working-class changed in tbe mid-1980s when You're going to see cities experi·
neighborhood on tbe city's east street gangs began using it to ment with all kinds of stuff to see
side. "It's a never-ending battle. enhance their drug business, said what works," Mahoney said.
Gary Perlstein, a Portland Srale
But we're not going to give up Robert Teir, ,spokesman for the
University
professor of administra- ·
American
Alliance
for
Rights
and
either. We'D go out there and paint
tion
and
jqstice,
said outlawing
Responsibilities, a Washingtonright back over it." ·
spray
paint'
won't
'erase tbe prob. Councilwoman Edna Brown based non-profit group that examlem.
strongly supports tbe proposed Ines urban issues.
ordinance.
"Wben gangs began to get · Gang members will lind other
"Gang graffiti is a big problem . involved in drug marketing ... ways to "get' tbeir message out,"
in Toledo and I've .bad enough,"
largely with tbe advent of crack possibly using other kinds of pain~
she said.
cocaine, these kinds of symbols he said.
"Ba.nning it doesn' t really do
Brown wants the law to require became more and more imponant.
anything,
~specially when we' re
that spray paint be sold from After all, tbey can't put an ad in the
talking
about
long-tenn . It sounds
behind a locked counter, and that paper. Tbey have to depend on
good
for
the
general
public, 'Yeah,
proprietors post notices about tbe these signals," be said.
,
gee,
take
the
paint
away
and they
law in each store. That might keep
Graffiti marks a gang's lerritory,
can't
do
i~'"
Perlstein
said.
juveniles from stealing tbe cans tells customers that drugs are avail" Tbe real solution is we need to
and clerks from using tbe excuse able, contributes to neighborhood
do
something ilbout the gang probthey did not know about the law, blight and keeps residents Uving in
lem,
not .the symptoms of the gang
she said.
.
fear, Teir said.
problem.
Banning spray paint is
I "Once tbe graffiti is cleaned up
• " Some people bave said, 'It's
like
stopping
sneezing but doing
... neighborhoods have gone a long
going to be an inconvenience.'
nothing
about
tbe
cold."
They say, 'What jf a kid lias a way to eliminating the open air
Ricky Torres, 17, wbo said he is
school project and needs paint?' drug markets. No neighborhood
Well, tben tbe parents can go in bas been successful in eliminating a member of tbe Folks gang, said a
·
and buy it. I don't see it being a these markets without first elimi- ban won't stop graffiti.
"
We'
ll
lind
a
way
to
get
it,"
9
nating
the
graffiti,"
be
said.
problem," Brown said..
No city in Qbio bas taken sucb a said Torres, who lives near Walter
When graffiti started appearing
step, said John Mahoney. Pharmacy.
dramatic
on New York City subway trains in
Police Detective John Tharp, the
the early 1?70s, the artists were, for spokesman for the Ohio Municipal
city's
gang graffiti expert, agrees
League.
·
the most part, teen-agers da~bling
tbat
something
needs to be done
''Tbere is a growing trend to try
in mischief.
But the nature of graffiti to figure outwbatto do about it. ...

.,.

Deputies guarding ·O.J. jurors
following orders from Judge Ito

o.r.

•

We're new. We're green.
And we're here to help you.

There's a new john Deere dealerJn town. You can e~pect the
best-built, best-backed farm equipment and all the parts you need
to keep you running, You'll also find the friendly customer service
and advice you·expect from a john Deere dealer.
We hope ya,u'll stop in and say hello.

''"'

Theft reported

CARMICHAEL'S
FARM&amp; LAWN
LoCated inidway between Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grnnde
on .Old Route 35
·•

(614) 446-2412

Locally owned &amp; operated by John &amp; Lora lee ~arbtlchaet

GOOD DEALS ••• AND AGOOD DEAL MORE

~

t§llD

Puzzle .answer on A2
'(

ban.

•'This is a way of addressing
one part of the gang problem. Gang '
graffiti is a real menace to society.
It reduces rea~ estate values . It
makes people afraid to be in their
own neighborhoods," said Tharp . .
Three major gangs - the CriJ5s,
Bloods and Folks - operate i,n
Toledo.
Each bave their own symbols.
For example, lbe Folks main symbols are tbe six-pointed star an·d
pitchfork. To make the Folt.s
angry, a rival gang might spray
paint an upside down pitchfork dr
spray paint an "X" over their star.
"Disrespecting" a gang's ll'ademark has led .to gang violenc~ .
including driveby shootings. Tb81Jl
said. And graffiti also attracts new
gang members, wlio are impressed
by the symbols.
Seven yea rs ago, teen -age rs
were gang members. Now, poliCe
are seeing gang members in eltimentary school.
'
"These fi rst·, second· and thirdgraders understand the hand signs.
They understand the graffiti. They
understand the bylaws," Tharp
said.

Death camp liberation··
shocked-American Gls :

oo

. ' ,i.

about gangs but be also favors tlfe

WASHINGTON (AP) Wbilewaler independent counsel
Kenneth Starr inlerviewed Presi·
dent and Mrs . Clinton under
oath at lbe White House on Sat·
urday, the Wbite House said. '
"As the president bas previ·
ously announced, be and Mrs.
Clinton· are cooperating fully
with tbe independent counsel,"
said Abner J. Mikva, tbe While
House counsel.
In a statement, Mikva
declined to disclose tbe nature
of tbe interviews saying Starr
, bad asked that no disclosure be
·
made at Ibis time.
The president and first lady
were ,questioned. separately and
for about two bours each in the
residential quarters of the White
House.
Tbe private questioning
oci:urr'ed on a day in which the
Clintons concentraled prinlarily '
on tbe bombing of a federal
office building in Oklahoma
City, seeking to reassure and
comfort ·children disturbed by
television images of tbe bodies
of youngsters being carried from
the rubble. ·
The scheduled mid-afternoon
About 30 ,000 inmates were'
departUre pf a presidential golf·
By TERRENCE PEITY
freed at the Bergen-Belsen camp
ing outing was delayed for •
For a woman
tbe Appalachi- assaults. Portions of tbe trail in Associated Press Writer
near Hanover by British soldiers on
(EDITOR IS NOTE· The
about an hour, but it was not
DACHAU, Germany _ Notb- April15.
subject Is safety In this latest an Trail, that's how il is. 11 l'm not Tennessee, where family squabclear whether tbe unexplained
report from a team of newspaper afraid on tbe frail," she said. " But bles, reseniJDcnt of hikers and age- ing th e American infantrymen
Josef Kramer, tbe camp compostponement was relaled to the . reporters and photographers I am at road crossings, or at sbel- old resistance to " tbe government encountered battling across Europe mandant. gave the British a · ~tour
Wbi1ewa1er questioning.
hiking the Appalac:blan Trail. . ters tbat you could bear a road ll'ail" still exist, have bistotically and into tbe German heartland of inspection ." He acted as if there
Starr took over tbe investiga·
VIolent crimes, even murders, nearby ."
been rougher than others.
steeled tbem for what they found at was nothing wrong with wba1 they
tion of tbe Wbi1ewa1er land deal
When
she's
not on the AT,
have occar.r ed on tbe trail, but
But King says sucb incidents Dacbau.
saw - 35,000 bodies piled anj:l
in Arkansas last August from
they are rare. Nonetheless, blken Harper's Fairy is Tracy Brum- bave not occurred in recent years,
After storming through tbe gates strewn around tbe camp.
. tbe previous independent counare warned to be no less sensible baugh. a 29 -year-old registered and he points out that atleast2 mil· · of tbe COllcenll'ation camp near the
The last camp liberated by tbe
sel, Robert Fiske.
on tbe trail tban tbey would be nurse from Hollidaysburg, Pa . lion hikers use tbe trail eacb year. sparkling snow-capped Bavarian Americans was al· Mautbausell,
Starr's investigators bave
She's biking for adventure - but Multiply tbat by S8 years of trail Alps, some of the Gls wept.
walking the streets at home.)
· Austria Wben Gls overran it May
examined a wide variety of
she carries pepper spray in her use, and you get seven murders
Parked at a railway siding were 5, 1945, tbey found nearly 10,000
issues, including tbe possibility
pouch.
By SCOTI RULER
among more than 100 mitnon peo- 40 freight cars with 2.00Q corpses bodies in a mass grave and .110.000
tbat money was funnelled to
"I haven ' t taken it out," sbe pie.
News &amp; Observer of Raleigh ·
crammed inside. Thousands more survivors.
Clinton's Arkansas gubernatori·
Still, every biker at least thinks bodies were stacked like cordwood
The Dachau camp's bartled-wirc
ERWIN, Tenn. - Harper's says, "but I've had it right under
al campaigns from banks linked
Fairy snapped bcr bead up from ber tbe zipper. I don' t ignore that feel· · about safety . At No Business near tbe crematorium, because the fences, watchtowers and main gale
to the Whitewater invesiJDent,
camp stove, suddenly alert. "Did ing.''
Knob, Cruz Control (Jeff Cbar- SS guards bad run out of coal to arc still standing. It is a memorial
the gunshot death of White
By not camping near road cross- land), a 23-year-old social worker burn tbem.
that sound like a car door?" she
to more than 36,000 prisoners wlru
House deputy counsel Vincent
asked. Photographer Rob Cross and ings, trusting ber gut feelings about from Maine biking tbe ll'ail with bis
Starving survivors straggled out died there from 1933 to 1945. and a
Foster and allegations of a
I beard only tbe spring peepers by people and simply being sensible, dog, Hopalong, described a night of filthy barracks to bug the Ameri- tribute to tbe American .soldiers
White House cover-up.
Harper's Fairy is following the .when be and a partner beard people cans . Some s ickly prisoners wbo saved 33.000.
the pond ncar our campsite.
.
In tbe past month Starr has
Sure enough, visible through tbc advice of every frail agency: Be no in tbe bollow below shooting guns. · dropped dead befor e th ey could
The rescue at Dachau came aftu
subpoenaed 10 witnesses to leS·
trees was a silver Mercedes, its less sensible on tbe trail than you
" Our imaginations were . touch tbe bands of their saviors.
tbe 42nd and 45th infantry di vi·
tify before a federal grand jury
driver looking down at tbe pond. would walking tbe streets at home.
going," he said. "We tbougbt they
"We'd seen just about every- sioll$ had bauled from Alsace. in
in tbe continuing probe of tbe
No, tbe trail is not perfectly were drunk and shooting all over. thing in combat. But not this. I saw France, across southern Germany
Harper' s Fairy kept stirring ber
While House' s handling of Fostomato-lentil stew. But she didn't safe. In its history. there have been You bea&lt;, e~pecially from up tJ&gt;ings at Dachau that I have been toward Munich. They raced to
ter's papers.
relax until we beard another slam, only sev en murders on the North , ' Do~'t go down South! trying to repress for tbe pas t 50 Dacbau, 6 miles north of Munich,
Foster was found sbot to
and tbe engin~ stru:t up and fade Appalachian Trail, according to Have you seen 'Deliverance'?"
years," said Scott Corbett or Provi- afler an escapee from the camp told
death in Fort Marcy Park near
from earshot as lbe Mercedes dis- Brian King of the App alachian
But his attitude cban~ed " after dence,' R.I., one of the Gls who lib· them about the appallin g condi·
tbe Potomac River in nearby
lions.
.
appeared down lbe Forest Service Trail Conference. There bave also live minutes on the trail, ' be said, crated Dachau on April 29, 1945.
Virginia on July 20, 1993. State
s,
harassment
and
been
rape
road.
smiling.
-.,
Soldiers' tears were shed not
The Americans first discovery
authorities ruled tbe death a suijust at Dachau that spring, but also was tbe 40 railcars that bad arrived
cide and Fiske bad said his
at Buchenw al d. Bergen-Be lscn, a few days earlier from Bncben·
investigation also showed Foster
Sac bsenbausen, Ravensbru eck, wald. Some of the 2,000 dead on
had taken his own life.
Mauthausen and other camps liber· the train had died from hunger anq
Whitewater prosecutors are
aled in the month before the Nazis disease. Others were shot in tbe
known to be searching for a
surrendered May 8.
bead. The victims bad been hauled
mysterious box of papers that a
Auschwitz, in Poland, was over- from Buchenwald to keep them
White House aide was seen .cardismissed juror Jean ette Harris, j urors is nothing new to deputies
run by the Soviet army Jan. 26·, from being rescued by Patton's
By DEBORAH HASTINGS
rying in tbe West Wing of tbe
who's
black,
accused
some
of
tbem
assi ~n ed as bruhffs to the down1945. But most camps were in tbe troops.
Associated Press Writer
White House tbe morning after
of
giving
preferential
treallnent
to
town
Criminal
Courts
building.
heart
of Germany, so inany surCorbett, at the time a 31-ycar·
LOS ANGELES- It's not easy while panelists.
Foster' s suicide.
· Watching over them for the dura-- vivors bad to walt for weeks as old sergeant, arrived at the Jr;Un in
being den mother to 18 adults wbo
Prosecutors cannot locate the
To avoid being innuenced by lion of a trial, bowever, is unusual; Allied troops fo ught the ir way · a jeep wit h some buddies . Arl
can'
t even watch television by saturating
box, don ' t know what was in i~
publicity. tbe jurors live if jurors are sequestered, it usually toward tbem.
American tank roared up and it ~
themselves, let alone go outside.
where it came from or whether
under
constant
surve ill an~e at an is only during deliberations.
.
Eightee
n
mi
ll
ion
people
commander
got out.
'
All day, every day, armed baby unidentified downtown ho tel.
it even relates to Foster's death,
John
Perno,
director
of
court
Jews,
homosex
uals,
Gypsies,
tbe
'.'The
tank
commander
beard
a
'
sitcers ride berd over 12 jurors and Deputi~ monitor their pbone calls, sccuri t)' se rvic_es fo_r N~w York
sources-said last-week.
ha.ru!icapp.ed•. POW:;. J~b &lt;J.vah 's faint cry in one of the ll'ain cars . He
six al leniateS sequeslered for
But Foster handled some
censor
their
reading
ma1erial
and
state,
said
be
feels
for
the
sheriff's
Wi
tnesses, leftists, artists - bad climbed inside and eame out carry:
.Simpsen's murder trial.
Wbitewaler matters for the Clin·
search
their
rooms
for
conll'aband.
deputies
and
their
charges.
been
locked up in some 520 con- ing a Utile wisp of a man.. That "'.as
It's a tou gh job. Just look at
tons and investigators are seekBasically,
the
only
unsupervised
"
When
jurors
are
sequestered
centration
camps and subcamps tbc only survivor," Corbett said in
three sheriff s deputies reassigned
ing any docum ents th at would
activities
are
s le~ing, weekly confor
a
long
time,
they're
told
when
across
occupied
Europe, according a telephone interview from hi s'
Thursday, no questions asked, by jugal visits, batbmg and using the to get up, when to ea~ when to go
sbed~~~ on that activi ty.
to
generall
y.
accepted
estimates home in Providence,
:
Judge Lance Ito.
Whi,tewater prosec utors bad
restroom.
· . to bed, and it's the court offiCers' used .. to teach Gcnnan school ebil·
Gls
then
sbot
tbeir
way
into
the
.
Los An geles Co unty Sheriff
· hoped to conclude their investiDeputy
dissatisfacti
on
surf{lced
responsibilit
y
to
give
th
em
that
dren
about
Nazi
crimes.
camp.
Tbe
42nd,
nicknamed
the
Shenn an Block was outraged by
gation las t summe r into the
Thursday, wben a sobbing information." Perno said.
Eleven million, about balf of Rainbow Division, entered tbrougb,
tbe j udge ' s act. So were 13 pan- again
ac ti ons of White House aides
black
fe
male
juror
begged
Ito
to
"I envision the j urors looking at them Jews ,gassed in extennination tbe main gate . Men of the 45th
elists, who refused to go to work.
after the apparent suicide of
release her, saying "I can't take it these officers like drill sergeants at camps, never saw tbe outside world Division stonned in through tbc SS
Court was cance led Friday so anymore."
Fos ter, a close friend of the
After her meeting, Ito boot camp. After a few days, it gets again.
g uards' compound on the other
the judge could llegin meeting with replaced tbe three deputies.
president's.
pretty
old.'·
During
April
and
early
May
cer·
side.
'
each prOieSter individually.
But ques tio ns arose about
"The
judge
said
be
w(IS
removAs
Harris
said
to
Ito
in
a
sp;!cial
emonies
marking
the
50th
anniverA-ccording
to
the
Holocau
s"t,
Don''! blame tbe deputies, said ing them because be was attempt- bearing April 12: " .Some of tbe
whether the White Ho use may
of
the
shutting
down
of
Museum-in
Washington,
U.S.
do&lt;:-~
sary
Block and others familiar with ing to build harmony among the deputies would say thi ngs to us
bave tried to ·bide documents· in
· Dachau and other camps, elderly' " ments reveal the Gis were so out ~
supervising
sequestered jurors. The
Foster's possession from authorjury
itself.
Obviously
be
miscalcuwhere
you
j~st felt like screaming:
liberators will be reunited with raged by wbat they fo und that some;
12 deputies pennaoently assigned
it ies.
lated
that,"
Assistant
Sheriff
'Look;
I'm
not
a
prisoner
...
I
prisoners
they saved.
gunned down SS guards
thrur
to tbe Simpson panelists were fol· Michael Graham said.
understand
you
deal
with
ptisoners,
a
Buchenwald
s
ubtake
them
of.
lowing orders. Ito's orders, 'to be
.
The
three
were
among
several
but
need
to
undersll!nd
I'm
not
exact.
·
·"
"You have to understand that deputies named by Harris, Graham a
POMEROY -Theft of a boat
&amp;aid. It was unclear whetlter llilc)o
owoed by Victor Paynter, Middle· these deputies wbo ate assigned IIJ
·
. arteall)' llleRiiatlll by •
port, from tbe Richards .t Sons pit tbat seqeestration have been ~iven woman
for fewer
who complained Thursday,
at Letart is under investigation by very specific dircctiqns from tbe though Block suggested their reaswbo ·really are
clanked into
on a bill centration camp, opened March 22,·
the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart- judge as to what the jurors would, signment was related to her com- jailed,': Sheriff
said. "Pris- overlooking Weimar, a week later. 1933, and the next-to-last shur,
or would not, be allowed lo do,"
ment.
oners in our jail are allowed outside The Americans found 32,000 sur· down. It bas been called the Nazis'
plaints.
The 10-foot, green "john" boat Block explained.
contact, are able to make unsuper- vi vors and piles of bodies.
Ito will meet witb (be three
"school for murder" ~cause it
Allegations of deputy misconwas taken from tbc pit sometime
vised telephone calls, they have a
deputies
Monday,
Graham
said.
Th~y
also
found
lampsbades
was
the prototype for aU camps that
within tbe past two weeks, Paynter duct began earlier Ibis monlb, wben
lot more Uberties ."
followed.
Watc hing over seq uestered
made from human skin.
told Sberiff James M. Soulsby.
,

Appalachian Trail mostly safe
for hikers, but caution urged

98 Private room

100
101
102
104
105

make it more difficult, but not impossible, to place U.S. troops under u.N.
command.
Tbe message of Allard's book iS that in Somalia, tbe problems encountered by tbe Army Rangers bad nothing to do with foreign coounand. The
Rangers were Ill all times under a U.S . chain of command, Garrison, ~
commander, later testified to .Congress that a de\ay in bringing in U.N.
armor to help rescue tbe soldiers trapped m the ~ogadisbu fJrefight bad
no impact on tbe loss of nre.
· ·

..

Q

�/

•
I

AprU23,1885

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpoll•, OH Point Pleannt, WV
8

?ubllc Sllle
a. Auction

BULLETIN BOARD
of Rio Grande
Sunday.Only
Daily Special Veal $1 .55
Hilurs 11 am-Spin

Full Flats $8.99
Soil 6/40 lbs.
Bags/$10,
Mu!£bt45 Bags/$1 0

t=asfman's

LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS

(614) 441 -03981

1-800-441 :0399

Cars - Hand Washed

$250 °$425

For all your Video Needs
Transfers, Video Taping etc.

HOME HEALTH
CARE
Medicaid/Medicare
approved, disability
approved &amp; passport
approved.
In most cases the care we
provide to you or your loved
ones can be provided at no
cost lo you.
Also Hiring CNA's, HHA's &amp;
PCA's
.
EOE 614-446-3808
Potential Clients May Call
1-800-759-5383

Holzer Medical
Center
"Heart to Beat"
Cardiac Support
Group

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

SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected .
I• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111

Gallipolis

will meel Sunday,
April 23, 2:00 pm
in the Hospital's French
· 500 Room .
Refreshments served.
· Public invited to attend . .
For more .information call

. 1-800-462·5255.
Were Back!
Treasure House
Ceramics &amp; Gifts
Located Next door to the Drive
Inn Thealre, Rt. 7 North
Memorial Flowers Now Ready!
At the Am Vets
Square Dance Lessons
"Hoedown"
Sun. April 23rd 1:30 to 4:30
Firsl two Sunday's Free
Also workshop on square &amp; Line
Dance lessons with
Howard &amp; the turntable.
Kanauga, Ohio
Everyone Welcome. No Alcohol.

-E£:-

4

11

.

:="i

-

1w - .

Lang Hoft!j KMI- AI

No_.__....,"'a'
~-, 'r,•"-::"•.KI 1on,

T o - - · - - II

2214.

~--10-0idPM

Gallipolis Ferry, WV

FREEl

The Ohio Valley Ostomy
Association will meet

Lolalllg

~

- .

., __

Lillo Qbolo

=.:·=.:;n=~.~7
oot, 1Jr Old
C.,""'"
..,..!! wory rn_IIJ, lo gO;j
-

halrod

-471-4150
lo~&amp;

Found

FoUhci: ' Rod 1oM Fomalo
.._nd At. 321 North, ·H Nol
Clolrned Will Go To _ , 114:
245.1417, 114~--

Sunday, April 30 at 2:30

Employment Serv1ces

----:-:---:-..;.1_1-::::H:-:::a:::lp::-:-:W-:a::::nt::ed~-

y-- -L

POSTAL JOI8 -

t:IJ,'IW Por
Clnloro,
- -•pp"rdkMI
· Clorloo. FarAnd
An
'""'*'~~de
Elom in-loft, &lt;:all , _
llwtll, Ell. 11, I A.ll. To I
P.M. 7DOye.
- POSTAL .J088 -

1111" $12.01 .tit. Pl.. - L
Far Elom And Aoalioltlon lnbo.
C.M :11..._10-bt. Olt200, I

..

Yard Sale

Room at Holzer Medical

14

'""

Center. Speaker: Dr.
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Charles Stone
Topic: Various Types of

ALL Yard Soloo lluol lo Pokl In
Advonco. DEADUNE: 1:00 p.m.
the dar boforw the iod lo lo run.

Ostomies and Their

Sunda~
F~doy.

edition • 2:00 p.m.
llonday odhlon • . 2:00
p.m. S1turdly.

Creations"
For more information call
at 1-800-462-5255

.Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

SAVE AD

All Vud Saloo lluol 1o Paid in
Ad••-· Doodll .. : 1:00pm '""

the Holzer Health Hotline

cleaned $34.95; Two rooms &amp; Hall
$49.95; Five Rooms $99 95
Call Captain Steamer Carpet
Cleaner (304) 675-t304

PoW: AI Old U-1.

~ Rlft_

A.ll. To 11 P.M. 7 Dorw.

p.m. in the French 500

Get an average s1ze room and hall,

'!ap -

01
lnoldo A Convallod Wlnlod: Clolllo c:-ty Ohio,
=To Goo " - · - Peop1o in Hlllwy To 1180, IMID247M, 1*17114141.

-bo

doy boiON 1111 Ill lo 10 run.

Sunday odlllor&gt;- 1:00pm Friday,
llondoy odhlon 10:001.111.

Satur.:.r.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Yllnl Salo. At 31 - . :114mllo
II&lt;Donold'o. Walch . .

algno.
gone:.

Satunloy • _ ,

8

Pul?llc Sale
&amp; Auction

.

lUI

ln'''sl ..........
110

-----

""'- in
"
• . . tho
...... 1H4. a.. ..
........ Cei1-IJN4I.lllll0,

~·-- · -­

.. .

--,~110
wv ;.
-.
....1M'
.:
801(

IEmplopr

. .=::..-

..

21

Buslnau

·

J

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction ·

~

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL BARBER SERVICES
The SQJ!theasl Psychiatric Hospital, isliCcl&lt;ing
services of a Professional Barber for
approximately 16 hours per month. Must
possess valid license per Section 4709. 11 of
Ohib Re,;scd Code. Services arerequited for
the ,ieriod from July I, 19951hru June30,
1996 (2 year contract also available) Services
will be provided on grounds 1hru a Personal
Services Contract with flexible hours
available. Interested panics must submit bid
proposals (Fcc schedule per service is
p!Jiblc) by April 29, 1995.
&amp;Yid bids to:

?"11'"'----

Southoast Psychiatric Hospital
.
'
I 00 Hospital Drive
'
Athens, Ohio
45701
Attn: Human Resources
Telephone (614) 594·5000
TDD : (614) 594-2911
· EEO/AAP Employer

·we f!ire only U.S. Citizens and
legally authorized alien wotfce13. •

Umllation or diSCrimination
based on ra&lt;e, colo~ rallgloo.
sex familial statu&amp; or national
origin, (J( any lnlenllon to
make any ouch preference,
limitation Ot !lacrkrination:
Tlis new,papor.wiU nol

l!nOw!IIVY ICCOil1 .

Informed lhll alldwelllngl·
adllerllsod In 11118 nOWIIPIII&gt;tr".

are avdable on an
opportunl1y basis.

;"

Merchandise
Two
Sl 00:."
unlurnl8hld
an 1
_~ _
ry .
. . . . . _.._
1250 depoelt, 114 ••• 1134

Apartmant
for Rent

Rutland Fire House, Rutland, .Ohio.
·•
From Pomeroy, Ohio: Take SR 124 West ::
approx. 3 mi. to Rutland. Auction is located on . .1
corner of Larkin &amp; Main St.
•;;
As Mrs..Lucas has moved into a nursing home, '"•
who will bt!l)ffilrlng the following from her Pt. • ···
Pleasant farm home. Due to lack of Parking the '
auction has been moved lo Rutland.
Antlquea &amp; Collectables
Round oak claw foot dining -table w/4 chairs, •
wash stand, sellars cabinet base, flatwall w/jelly :
cupboard (rough), medicine cabinet, several '
dressers, cane bottom &amp; ladderback chairs, early ..
spoon carved recliner (upholstry bad). 1943 &amp; 45 :
WV license Plates, free standing gas healers, ~
wood wardrobe, several old &amp; unusual padlocks,
costume jewelry, apple butter stirrer, 2 cast iron
boilers, cedar chest, favorite #8 waffle iron w/
stand, burnside #2 ·pot belly stove, quilting
material. school de~k. mantle, round casl imp.
seat cam seeding co. Springfield, OH.
Modern
•
Nearly new G.E. H. D. Large cap. washer, older .~
May1ag elect. dryer, like new Hotpoint 30" Elect. ,,
Range,.admiral chest freezer, Bassett 4 pc. bdrm
suite, maple coffee &amp; end tables, recliners, occ
chairs, pecan chest of drawers, '2 living room •.
suites, ceiling light w/lan, book cas~si, beds, lots ,.
of linnens, pots, pans, d1shes, lawn furn1ture, _.
hand tools, lots of misc. out of out building "
including ass'! of nuts &amp; bolts .
.•
In Home Health Care Equip.
~
Nearly New Body Uft, manual hospital bed, balh ::·
hand rail &amp; seat, 2 cases adult diapers.
·•·
...
NOTE: The starting time for this auction is 11 :00
a.m. as there is a parade in Rutland earlier in the '
morning. Come enjoy lhe parade lhen spend the
....
day with us. The Anliques listed have been •
"Used" in the home lor many years. Some are
painted, all are restoreable, none are in
showroom condition.
.
Owner: Mildred Lucas
P.O.A. Frankie Shinn &amp; Grace Folden

1
Tn TUWIII'IDI• ADirlmlnl&amp;

y.., S~dow.. 2 iedroorne. 2
FloOra, CA. 1 111 Ioiii, FuUy
Clfblllod. AcluR Pool I loby

-· ..... -

Pool, Polio, -

abdrm.

r: -

Cora,
-Will
-Pick
· Up,blond
Wlllod__,__S21,
IM-

41 Houses lor Rent
:lnbng
Split lovol: living - . M - . 411ro, lomllj&gt;
,_, Mhchonatto, 2 1i211111a
:104-17HN1 aftor lpm.

JMU Cluolill u - o , Tolol

Lowncaro I Land,.:oplng. Call
Today And 1o Aoourod 01 A
Standing S""""ortlme Sorvlco,
Froo Eatlmol•l t14-211-t0N.

JillT Roo ling, Sldlni, I All
Corpontry Froo Ettlmotoo. 114:
258-tON.
Ucor.od Proctbcol Nu,.. will do

prlvala duly (aiiUng or aldlled
ar•), varlab.. nd• and houre

•••liriblo. 304-f7.1144.

Oak, walnut, cherry lumber, lots of small pieces
of wood.
Owner .· Vermont Markins

Dan Smith, Auctioneer

, ~------------~~--------------~~------~~----~~------~

Do-"

----

lw ront on llulbMy
Holghto, PornorO¥
1330/lno.
pluo dopcoh ond rol.-- no

3 lodruoni ...... in Counlry
For Salo By 000.., Solti!'Q On S
Ac.... Rur.l W.tw, LOcMed

32 Mobile Homes

- - Pllrlot I N001hup,
Prime Hununo. Prloed To WI
114-319-2240.

12lll0 1111 Oovonw Wllh Addition, Lltllng Room, Adclod Bodroom .181 Aert Wllh 2 ll"'ller

1

3 Bedroom HoUM, 112 AcN LDt

lor Sale

SmiM .....,. Largo Lol, 1 Largo

B.clroom, Plus Vert Small BtCf.
raom, FuM luemenl, Good
Locatlon_ Euttrn Avtnw. Ntlr

Bhcoolng
Conlof1
Rant:
$2.8Mio; ¥ory Nl,. " - · Wllh
2 LMgo B o d - 1-.,!!,

Hook-Upe.. 117.100, 1M 448 1085
1G Mlnuloo From GoiiiOOIIo,
l.oc:allcn
14a70
Fl. Clayton llcbllo - . ~ Ld, Good llcod, Aaldng 524,000,
1 112 Bothe, JL.t CondUion. For Thbi'd Avonuo, Rent: 129i/i10.
11-4-446-4168.
eau Evon"- 1~17N, Or
11cn1 inbormoUcn, 114-38J.l'131.
114-111-43441:-

r""

1

,

Fee/in Fine!

Guess Who sNo

I

''

C8rd of Thanks

Love,
Shasta, Shawn,
Charity, Linda,
Mom&amp; Dad

Longer 39?

\

uAuto"

~~Lumber"

I R-And Btth Plw Doublo
Garaoe, Extra Nice, No Pel'
Rolaronco •
Raquhod,
No Smolloro P...... 114-14f1S11:
.

-

40!!

Happy 40th!
love, Linda, Family &amp;
11

Help wanted

JOB s..
Are you 55 or
•
''
'
·' '

1Yall6blo
Ill or

·o- AI!IL

Older?
Interested in
getting back into
the work forc.e?
We will work with
eligible persons to
find jobs in Galli a
and Meigs Co's.
.For employment
and training information
Call .

1-800-338·7032

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
DIRECfOR OF q -U LD DEVELOPMENT
CENTER AND COORDINATOR OF .
PRE-KJNDERGARTEN CERTIFICATION
Posling Date; April 12, 1995
The Universily of Rio Grande announ ce~ an
opening for the Direc10r of lhe Child Development
Cenler and Coordinator of Pre-Ktndergar!On
.
Certificalion.
Masler 's Degree in Early Childhood Development,
Educalion orrelaled field required. Responsibililies
include administration of Early Childhood
Developmenl Center including work with budget,
staff training, staff supervision, curricttlum
coordinalion and coordination with 1hc College of
Professional Education for evaluation oftranscripls
for Early Childhood Development studenls. Will
teach 1wo Associale level student leaching classes.
Three years of !~aching experience wilh young
children and adminis1ra1ive experience preferred.
lnierested candidates should send leiter of inlerest
and resume before 1he deadline of May 5, 1995 10:
Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR
·Direclor of Human Resources
University of Rio Grande
Campus P.O. Box F27
Rio Grande. OH 45674
.
Univcrsi1y or Ri~ Grande/Rio Grande Com_munity Cullcge
ts An Equal Opporlunity Afftrma11vc Acuon Employer

My how
eyes do shine
And surprisingly,
they still look
mighty fine,
After putting up
with one another
for great big 49!
Happy
Anniversary
Mom&amp; Dad .
Guess Who!

In Memory

2

Rentals

Thanks to th.e Put on
Shop for spcnsoring the
League Championship
team for Friday night
shorttimers beag~e :
Roy Frazier, Andy
Lawrence, Chris
Somerville, Dave
Somerville, Ted Adams.

•I'

ap-

Fatten VOll Hallet
with awant Rd

•

..

oloc~

calll14.ft2-3711. EOH.

446-tmiEIQIOrloncod.

Lordy, Lordy
Look Who's

1986 Ford Taurus Station wagon loaded
"Shop Equipment"
Atlas Laythe, 12" M.W. Planner, Craftsman radial
arm saw. Boice 60" Laythe, Craftsman bench
grinder, B &amp; D D.ewalt Home shop, Craftsman
Dand saw, arill press. table saw. rockwell jointer,
air compresser, grinder, and large shop vac
craft'sman .
"Tools"
Lots ot 'good sharp hand saws, cross CUI saws,
one woman saws, lots of wood block planes,
lanterns, skill saw, belt grinder, off set grinder, XL
Homelite chainsaws. C Clamps, Cresent
wrenches, grease guns, stools, extension cords,
alum . ladder, step ladder, buck saw, draw knifes,
broad ax. &amp; eel.
G.arden &amp; Lawn Eq.
Turf lrac garden tractor &amp; deck, lawnchief push
mower, 21" lawn boy self perpelled · mower,
eclipse 8 H.P. riding mower no deck. push
mowers B &amp; S, Iron Wheel wheelbarrow, 8 HP
Tr&lt;&gt;ybuilt tiller, and 18' trailer.

~

- · to loundry
-p l loollkloolc!/'..:~
ochoOI

Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith Molden

Public Auction
Saturday, April 29, 1995
10:00 a.m.
Located on St. Rt. 124 Between Racine &amp;
Syracuse, Ohio. Watch for auction signs. This is
the personal property of the late Kenneth
Mark ins. from his workshop &amp; etc.
·

aplo., Iaiii

In 1...,._ o\JIIIIIcoil

•.

Ohio Lie #4318
614-742-2048 Cash
Pos. ID Lunch By Rutland Fire Dept.

I33QIIIo. No

Dopool1 R.quhd, 114-317·7110.

8

Racine, Ohio
Ohio #1344 W.Va. #515
•
Cash, Positive ID - Refreshments
"Not Rl)spcnsible f01 accidents or loss of Property"

Acl

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Call446·2342
or992·2156
FOR MORE

tt.FodoroiFair-.g

.of1968 whir:ll makos II lllegol
10 a!Minlle &lt;any preterence,

aclvertiaemerulor realwhir:ll 16 In violation oblhe law.
Our IHders are lleiaby

F111311Ciill

...
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this AIWipaper IIIUbtld b

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1 w - - ,,_....;..;,.._-=====:::::::::~---~
~~~ifci~iiiiii:ijii;
•~
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PUBLIC AUCTION
;;;wa::::..::;:;oc~~..:::.:...,.::-::..,._::;;:;:~"""::;;
SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1995
- .. - - .....
.. too-.Wiii~~ur-~
11:00 a.m. At
,Oobr...,._

1- __ .__ipallo.
'==

~---­
Scrop Lumber,
loonlo I

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-=~-~- -

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Ail'out

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411utd"H('Ij. I ""' toil ,_. ,

.

Nulrllbonol Wolghl . Lo. WI- To luJ: -

NIIulll. RUmhod Tlmo Ollw, 30$-251:

M'f

-

~IX To 7 •For ........ lerloue C1o111oo
COl M . a,- 11t 34111117.

Estate Planning
for families with relatives
who are disabled.
· Tuesday, April 25, 6:308:30 Bossard Library
Sponsored by Gallia
County Local Schools
Parent to Parenl Project.
No admission fee.

..

WIIDo......._,,. .. .....

... •

&amp;: ...\.:•::

a.

wa-

675•1371

-..~

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1

C l l -~- Wllh lin, 114-112:1114L
Cllllchn,
To 11ur: Junk Auloa
Conn1na .loiW. A I - , - Wllh Or WllhoUI lllolcn. Cel
tall, I~ ·
.....,!JWobr.I111U nn

FLAIR FURNITURE

MONTH
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
ALL PROGRAMS ARE FREE AND
. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC .
TUESDAY, APRIL 25
HEALTHY COOKING
CLASS, 6-8 P.M.
EVENTS WILL BE HELD AT PAINT
"CREEK REGULAR BAPTIST
CHURCH, 833 THIRD AVENUE,
GALLIPOLIS.

-

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7

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WMhlt~_ ~
C.l• T.¥'a, YCR'a,
Pall ct-. Pall /Ill - - C:Rip I a,
114-44M'7il. ·
came. "uiW• .... ......._

I.

-~

SERTA MATIRESS $59.00
BED FRAMES
$19.95
RECLINERS
$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
4/pc. Bedroom Sutte $499.00

\

Help Wlnlacl

-do ..,....,, "'.,..... :

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-.w.....,_
.
Don,...,..,
...
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Woollinl
..............
7

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old, 'lill be
_..._:111!111717 or •• •
, 1111

~--~kina -

SPRING SAVINGS

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
AND PAINT CREEK
REGULAR BAPTIST •
CHURCH ANNOUNCE THE
MINORITY HEALTH

11

CHECK mE

i

Skidmore Road

Classified Line Ads

446-2342 .
992-2156
675-1333

2

Evergreen Friends on

.. -

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..

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7 '?I . . . . .

Drrrrllnf u

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=..=-.::::,:.., ,.If

, ,,., Old !)cig IJondo, Pall
...,_. T• GoOd ...._ Wlh
kkii.I14111DD21

Bite This, Patti Davis
You're 40! Love From

...........
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1 ...,
7 ,

':-li -~

....

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Cloall ........... Or
~- ....... Or , ..

6

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

=·
•

Glvantay

FREE DELIVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5; Ph. 446-0322
3 Miles Out Bulavibbe Pike

&amp;Waxed 446-8778
'
Will Pick ~p

446-6939 or 441·054 7

.

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lllok

Drapes By Design
Free in Home Consultation
and Quote ·
Bedspreads, Pillows , Drapes

Call VIDEO TRANSFERS

~

GAHS Band Boosters
April 23 10·4 .
Gallia County Fairgrounds

For Sale
1-2200 BTU Air Con1ioner
1·1500 BTU Air CondHioner
1-Dehumldifier
2·1 0 Speed Girls Bicycles
All Like New 446-1630

.
.
:=,;,.::.n, ,f:£=
............ ..... ,, •• ...,!
=-........ =.,__
.
.... --

11

WLff k

-"Wiiiliil~~f

Bedding Plants,
'
Flowers

Sunday Timn-Sentinel Page.--05

Card of Thanks

The family of Roy
E. Armes would like
to thank the ~yracuse
Emergency Squad,
Pomeroy Emergency
Squad, "Life Light",
and Fishers Funeral
Home for all their
help and assislance
during the loss of our
lovec!__Qpe.
Also a special
thanks to Rev. Jim
Satterfield and Rev.
Bill Hinds for .:heir
words of comfort, and
everyone who sent
flowers and brought in
food.
Your love and
appreciation wiit not
be forgo:ten . God
Bless You All.
The Family

In Loving Memory
Of Robert N . Clark
Apr. 24, 1980
It has been 15 yrs.
since . you went
away
We cannel say, we
must not say thai
you are dead. You
are just away.
With a theery
smile and a wave of
your hand.
You
have
wandered into an
unknown land.
You
left
us
dreaming how very
fair it must be since
you linger there;
So we think of you
faring on in the love
of there as the love
you had here .
We think of you
still as the same and
say you ar not dead.
You are just away. ·
Sadly missed by
wife Lola, son &amp;
daugh.ter-in-Jaw
Larry &amp; Joy and
granddaughters
Tamra, Penny &amp;
Wendy,
Real. Estate General

Card ot Thanks

We would like to
thdnk the friends
who helped us in
the loss of our
husband and father,
Edward Preston in
anyway.
Thank our Pastor
for the consoling
words. For the
flowers, cards, ·
calls, visits, and
food. The ladies of
Church who
prepared dinner for
us. Your thoughtfulness can never
be forgotten. The
nurses and Aids at
Over-brook Nursing
Home. Thanks
again and God
Bless you all .

Real Estate General
Own Your Own Home
Land Contract Purchase
Minimum Down Payment
4 Single Family Homes on

Stale St $24,900 ea.
Double on State St
$39.900 ea. Owner

2

Finances up to 30 years

wrth $1000 Down Payment.
· Could be as·iow as
$186/month on Single
Family Homes and $326 on
Gouble (Interest and
Principal) Outstanding
opportunity io own you're
own home in excellent

location. 1.U14-388-ll008
tor appointment or to make

arrangements to take

.

Wife. Helen Preston
and Famil

advantage of this w~erful

opportunity.

Real Estate General

MOVE-IN CONDITION

• Anraclive home in Rio Grande includes: 3 BR,
Liv. Room. Duling Room. Study, Bat". eat -in
-kitchen, full walk-oul Basement.
• Walking Dist~nce to University
•10 minutcs.from Holzer
• New equipped kilchen with custom oak
cabinets, lile counlertops &amp; hardwood floors
• Well maiqtained throughout
• City Schools
• Generous yard wilh patio .

$59,000

Call 614-245-5399

11

X-RAY :TECHNOLOGIST
Ohio University Personnel Services is currently
accepting applications for a part-time permanent
X-RAY TECHNOLOGIST lor the College of
Osteopathic Medicine. JOB OUTIES: Provide~­
ray services to patients of the Osteopathic
.
.
Medical Center.
QUALIFICATIONS: Must be registered X-ray
technolbgist, AART certified. One year related
experience required. Ability to read and follow
written and oral instructions. Must have
satisfactory altendance and· evaluation in
previous job assignments as weU as meet
Occupational Health Medical Standards fQr
posted position/classification . Hours of work are
on a call-in as need basis Monqay through
Friday. Salary is $10 .99 hourly. APPLICATION
DEADLINE: April 28, 1995.
All'individuals interested in this position
ar11 required to complete an application
(resumes may accompany appli?atlon)
available at University Personnel Servtces, 44
University Terrace,
Athens, Ohio.
Applications may be o~ained be1ween the
hours ol 8:00 am and 5:00 .pm Monday
through Friday.
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athens, Ohio
An Affirmative Action/Equal
Opportunity Employer
Minorities and Women are
Encouraged to Apply

65 Fairfield Lane- 3 BAs,
balh, eat- in kitchen, 2 car
garage. latgo covered
deck. t2 x 16 outbuilding.

8329 St. Rt. 218- 3 BAs,
2 baths. LR. FA Ylith
fireplace with blower uA,
eal-in kitchen . $6~ 000.

..

--

WISEMAN REAL E~TATE, !i,C. G)
_,.,...,
. 446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER .. ,M-6·9555

_..::.:.::.:..:.:;__:-:-::-::::-'----::::--:--:::-. Lorena McDade· 446-7729

---

Carolyn Wasch- 441-1007

Sonny Garnes • 446,2707

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

Sundew Tlmes-Sendnei-Page-01

MEIGS COUNTY

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

m

'

(614) 742·3171 orl-800-SSS-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

1

..

Cheryl Lemley .............. 742-3171

2

CIP(II1II!Y

••

'

Fatm Supplres

&amp; L1vestock

,, -.-

v •.'
'·

NEW LISTING! WELL KEPT HOME on Lincoln
Street in Middleport. 2' or 3 Bed(ooms, 2 baths and
basement. Convenient to !ll'hools and shopping . Call
lor you appointment.
1758

, •.• •.&lt;

NOTHING MISSING
t. In City Located 2. MOderatelY Pr1c&lt;ICI

Dear Homebuyers:
LOG HOMES
Comfort, convenience,
energy
effiCiency,
and
durability
Oexibility in design are
a few of the reasons
why 20,00 families wUI
buDd a log home
year! .

''

tt -~ ·

','

'

.
.

•'' ' '

•"

Appalachian
Structures has been a
leader in the log home
industry· for over 15
years. Choose
over 70
standard
1
models or we'll custom
design one for you.

Rolrtgofal- 91- We-.
-ory.n, All Reconditioned
And Ooura- tlOO And Up,

And

WIH Dell..r. 114-NH+II.
Riding Lawn ll"'"!j M. HP, 1\oln
Cylinder B~DIII """ 91raton
Motor, iQO, 114441 0824.

i ·, . '

Bem SO....,IIIe'o Anny Surplua, ·

.. mouHogo turlloy clothing, by

.

'

Olllca, noon~(CIIf1....... oheakl).

Bendy¥1111 -

,..

\ •

·.~~·

..

BANSUI Rlc:llni With 4 Flohlr
llpMkn, lhlrp CO PloDr. JVC
C:UO.. Dedi, .bel 'A - JVC
TW~Uble. MOO. lt4 441 1211

~ ·-··''

-~-

Call or write for more
I
infomation.

Appalachian Log
Structures, Inc.

-.

;;j • .

REDUCED! ONLY $66,000
Commercial - or- Residential

,.•

'•,

3 Announcemems

-·

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11

Real Estate General

HelpWamed
II NEEDED NOW !!

OHIO LICENSED
Highly Motivated AN's All
Specialties
Experienced
In acute care settin g 1or

Short-term Assignments $$
Great Pay$$
• catt't -800-726-8773
Labor-dispute may exist.
EOE

.

OFFICE

446-to66

992-2259

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-097t
Mose Canterbury. Realtor-446·3408
JeaneHe Moore, Rea ltor- 256-1745
n m Watson. Realtor-446-2027
-

.

MIDDLEPORT · PRI CE REDUCED - Nice I

.
" -

. .... "'l"

'.

Scheduli_n g

·...

~ .

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'

·'

.

.

k·.
l' .
·~

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•'

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'·"

Cont inu ed g rowth
and expan sio n at
Commun ity Rehabilitation Centers, Inc.
has created excellent
career opport unities
at our Gallipolis, OH.
facility. Join one of
the lead ing providers
of qual ity rehabIlitation services and
take your career to
the next level.
Ou r bu ay, dynamic·
and supportive environment offers con tinuous new -cha llenges, and excellent salary .and
benefits package ,
a nd growth opportunity. For immediate
consideration,
contact: Christina D.
Palik, RRA, Regiona l
Recruiter,
Com ·
m unity Rehabilltaion
Centers ln'c ., .918
Youngstown-Warren
Rd., Suite C, Niles ,
OH 44446 . (800)

·-

i
3 bedrooms. 1 112 bath s. gas F.A. heat, ut)lity
roo m. fecreat1on ro9m. dishwasher &amp; island .

range II) kitchen. central a1r and 1 car garage
in .basement . There is a central vacuum
FARM FPR SJ~LE. -Brick home. barn , 2 sheds and pond
on 49 a.;rc::; more nr less. C1ty Schools. Call io_ see

system and -plenty atlic space. "A LOT OF
HOUSE FOR A SMALL PRICE" ASKING
~hll~~,Q~~MI;O I.~TE POSSESSION!

floor frame home wl ~ ·bedrOoms, I bath,
uti lity r_oom, 2 fireplaces. new~r FA N'.G.
furnace , permapayne w1ndows. Nice front
~ 1tt 1n g porcn· and sma ll Shed tor storage.

Home also has a fenced yard. IMPERFECT
STARTER HOME OR WOULD MAKE NICE
RETIREMENT HOM E" QNLY $29,000.00

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME· CHAROLAIS LAKE Df!IVE ·

.•

RUTLAND - Jivid~n Rd. · approx. 2 1/4 acres
on a dead-end ro ad. Three to four bedrooms ,
dining room , on e bath compl etely remod eled
inside the newer siding. Has a cellar, 24 x 24
workshop w ith attached shed, and a fenced·
area for an animal.
$50,000

CALL TO SEEt'

property or a fixer upper? Here it is a 3 bedroom
2 story home with a fence d lot , and a storage
building.
$14,000

..

hving ro om, dining ro~\~ garage locat€c;
on appro•imat!lllt: ~\Jj::.Jc!i'~more or less. City Schor.rr,_

NEW LISTING - LOVt;;U'o.Wn~G B rbo•" '·· ~
bedrooms , 2~~\!)il. ~11Y room .CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT,..
(
.

HOME r-o'l SALE - Ve•v ol Ri;er. 3 bedrooms. he.lh,
liv;. -t:· ~oom , k•. cJ 3'1, ltq).ound, pool, 2 'ca1~ yara {je, c!r;
sclrocls. (.,R i_ ~ f' Q fj ,NftlRMATION
HOME FOR SALE 3 be~room , bath, living room , fao.ilr
roam , k1tchen. fenced in back ;·c.r~ REALfO:~ JWN !.;II.

PRICED AT $45,000 00
NEW LISTING · 2 homes located on approximately 11 ,'2
acreS. On~ home has a rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths,
livmg room. d1n1ng room, family, kitch en. One home hus
a rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 batt13, living room .. kitchen ,
tamlly room . Sotlt have rural Wi:l er, LP gas Furnace , ana
more Call tor apjlolntment to sun.

LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SAL.E- 158 X 100. city water
&amp; sewer, electnc to pole. Pr iced at $14,000. Will sell on
Lan:t1 Contr act· $5,000 dow., payment, payments of
$191 23 per motlth for a penod of 5 yrs. Call tor more·
mformalion
'
FO.R LOTS - Each lot c~·n!~IPS appro)( , 20 a!:rcs. Two
lots haVe frontag9 Ol' St Pt ?.1t:! and htve frOntage 011

d

Cox MercerVille Ad CHECK Oi'J TH:B ONE.

.L:..f

FOFI YOUR CONvENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL. FREE NUMBER

lt"N~

'

~

1•800•894•1066

•

•
FOR INFORMATION
ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOMf OF THC: L0t:AL BAtiKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMAAKHS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

'

MIDDLEPORT · RUTLAND STREET - 2
1.26+ ac~es of ground goes with
riice
split foye r home. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
some aPp1icances w/ kitchen , newer siding .

Nica largo back patlol "THIS' HOME IS·
WAITING FOR A NICE BIG FAMILY TO FILL
IT UP!' REDUCED TO $51 .500.00
LIITLE FIXING UP - THIS IS ITI YOU CAN
MOVE RIGHT IN AND ENJOYI' ASKING
~37

story fram8 home with newer vinyl siding
and .newer roof. 3 bedr_ooms, lo baths, gas
f!e5or furnace, new unit air, rear screened
porch, some applicanc;:e w/kitchen, fireplace.
block storage building &amp; wood storage
building , 3 room apartment with sto~age &amp;

cellar below. Quiet Street! "IF YOUR
LOOKING . F'OR A HOME wmt VERY

RACINE · TACKERVILLE RD • This 1989
modular has just tleen compl etel y remodeled
and looks fanta slicl 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths.

2 8 baths, family room has lireplace and
built·in bookshelves, nice large open kitchen
w/ island and lots of cabinet space All new
carpet, paint; wall paper and many oth er
great 1eatores. ,Much more all sitt1ng on

approximately 18 acres. "ARE YOU
LOOKING FOR A HOME ALL SET UP AND
READY TO GO? THEN THIS IS IT! COME
LOOK AT ALL THE GREAT FEATURES
THAT THIS HOME HAS, TO OFFER"
ASKING $64,900.00

bedrooms, t + acres. "NiCE PEACEFUL
LOCATION AND LOTS OF ROOM Tl! RUN"
ASKING $19,900.00

WE HAVE A UTILE BIT
OF EVERYTHING, BUT WE
NEED MORE! THE
MARKET IS GOOD AND
-NOW IS THE TIME TO

SELL! GIVE US A CALL, -·
WE'LL WORK FOR YOl)!

tnn•ml- 304-1"'

Budge! T-leow, Uood l
RobUIIiiiAIIl'YDM•.lc cntlbtl To
0.. ,000 TnnOmlulan,Porto, fM-37$-2831.

l

IRST
HOICE

1Vtl:l Eogte

Rod, lllnl Condftlon, 33,000

W/1111 Leadingham, Broker ................ .446--11539

Real Estate Geaeral
VlRCilNIA SMITH, BRot&lt;ER .~··'"''-·"'- ··-- Hf.aat.
WILMA WILLL5.MSON•..._ ..........,_, ............21&amp;-003e

___.........._

EUNICE NIEHM ........................................... M&amp;-1897
LYNDA FRAlEY -- ..- ............:............... ~.•... ....._...

PATRICIA ROSS ...............................,......... 245-111575
PATRICIA HAY$ ......................,•. ,................ -446-3814

19ft GREAT RETIREMENT or starter home.
2 BA, kitchen &amp; OR. 1 acre m{l. Super buy

$34,900.

1101 5GREEN TWP NEWL~ COI~Sl.RUCT1o0
BRICK RANCH 3 bedrms .
kitchen w/oak cab inets, all
porcn. Gas heal c•tra lg.
garage &amp; h ~ge wOO&lt;shop

l'J!I4 NEW COMMERCIAL LISTING - Largo
apt. bldg. wf2 units al so store room for a
business of ~..,~, own. Bldg 46x96. Overhead
sloraae &amp; I c.c~e rrul. Great Income - 2 apts.
for rental, 1
1 MObile Home ·Pad.

11008 NEW LISTING BRICK RANCH.
IOcatet:l In Add1son • 3 bedrm, LR, w/lovely
carpet, equipped kitc hen , ful l · basement,
covered patio, anached garage. 2 car barn

1VCI Pontloc l.lmlno 13,000
1111.., Aut....~
M.O® 080, I
1618, 114256-1252. ,

ea-..

181M
·Z-21, fully 1111(. ,_, 30W7&amp;.11DI.

·

1VIM Chivy ca-r,_~1

oLCa,

~!:at'· CNIN. "
-

buUding. 3/. ac. n&gt;n.
~

EASILY COMMERCIAL
INVESTMENT PROPERTY!

CITY LOCATED ! 1737 1/2
CHATHAM AVENUE! 3

Frontage SA 7 &amp; Pike St. 2
House &amp; 2 lots. garage
w/apartment , and ad dition al

bedroom raised ranch home,
living room. rec. room, dining
room , kilehen, anached garage.
FA gas furnace. Nice home .
Call today for an a ppomtment.

buildings.

N739

AFFORDABLE $36 ,000.00

.

2.3 .uter, 11 t 4 4t 8042.

72·' Trucks tor Sale

CUTIE PIEI Tidy 2 bedroom PRETTY VIEW FROM THIS 3
DECK WHICH
home in good repair. Idea! for TE(R
OVERLOOKS THE OHIO
Investmen t property or an

11~

Font f'.2 pickup, lilt hood
end
chromo ' ojloke ....... wry
ohorptruclt, - · 1 1 4 - onwapm,

1995 REDUCED, REDUCED. this large
commercial lot Is cleared and reedy to build
on, call Wilma for mOfe details.
11001 NEW usnNG 1o ac. mJI on SA 160
on Kelton Ad . close to town. Hilhop view
w/lots at tmes, Very sectuOOd.

treew&lt;iy. Ca..1 og a beautllulllu1c n .
changtj to mm"1ercial.

-Fot 1118&amp; Fanl 4 CyHndor,

'

11011 NEW LISTING . 103 acres with nice
larmhouse, large barn, stocked pond and
prk;ed to sell at only $63,900.00, call Wilma tor
more oetal!s.

110os Nt:~· LISTING · (jQ etc. m'l clo:;e to
town arftJ nc... t \.:&lt; Holzer HO!.f,lltal &lt;:041 \he 00\1

!729

·"""· -

v.. , onglnl, 1111 -

RIVER. Immediate Pqssesslon.
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, family-

excellent staner home. $20's.
1730

SUPER BRICK RANCH, living

t

ACRES MOAE OR LESS

OVERLOOKING THE OHIO

AlYE A included is a 3 bedroom
one story home.
M718

LANDI LANDI &amp; MORE LAND.

Approx. H6 acres of ideal

opportunities. C•ll for mare

!683

beautiful-trees.
1131 GREAT PASTURE LAND. 50 acres ,
level to shght ly rolling with a 4 beelroom

ltlrm!IOUSO rhat needs some TLC, $6C,OOO.Ool.

NEW LISTING I
LOVELY! ..... -~--~

of Ohio River.
&amp; alum. aiding.

kitche, 2 baths ,

a7SHELTONROADINewer ~-4

living room. 2· Car

bedrOom rt'lnch hon1e, 2 b&amp;ths,
living room , kitchen. 3 Acroo
more or less, appro" . t mii•:

garage, 8 acres mor• or len.

from Rio Grande,

11~

OWNERS WILL NEGOTIATE!

n?:;o

Slar!lng

·by- reducing . price

$2 ,500.00 Anractive ranch

235 ACRES
OF VACANT

wit~

over 2 1/2 acres . Two and one

117il CHESHIRE • 3 bedroom ranch,_ 2
tiraptaces . lull basement, comfonable Uvmg
rm, 2 e31r garage. Rental home also

half baths . 4 bedrooms , extra
mobile home ~ook ·UP provides
added income . Call fo r

hunting! Situated in

wvco

compl~te

listing.

411748

BRICK 1Yo STORY AT THE
EDGE OF TOWNI
•

Bedrooms, sunroom , 1
room , family room, n lcoofn~:!~
&amp;etting. Owner w ill cc i

selling on land contract to
qual~ed buyer.
1749

SIDE BY SIOEI 2 Tracto of
land buy togelher or t aparataly. FOUR ACRE LOT left

9 &amp; , 0 Acre tra ct s. County
water available, city schootsl

11002 CLOSE TO TOWN 31• lledrm, bilevel hOme. range. dishwasher, refrig. washer
&amp; dryer. Famity rm., 2 full b&lt;..tns, 2 car garage.

attached carport , vinyl siding.
$30's
1743

LARGE COIIIIERCIAL SUPER RANCH &amp; 21
SPACE FOR SALEI Plenty ol Acres and a 3 room
oinfonnollon.

cr

·

lP gas heat/central air:- 14' x•40'

hunti ng land, frontage along
Raccoon Creek.
N719

parkmg &amp; warehouse spa~;: e .
Great many potential business

!. ~l ot

room, living room , dining area.

room. dinihg room, kitchen ,
family- room &amp; rae. foom , 2
baths. electric heat pu mp, 2 car
attached garage, neat &amp; clean
plus 2 acres .
M752

$10,000.00.

.

.. M

_

... o

o

-~

)....

'.. :·~).. u
- ..·.·.:.-..

' _::;,- .,,,500, 080, , _ , .

·~

Phone Office 446-7699
Kenneth Amabary.................... ............245 5855
Claude Danlt11 ..........................: ..... .... 388-9612

Tammie De Witt ........ ... ,...,............. Z45-0022
Martha Smith ................................ 379-265 t
f?roi'(;OIWSki. ,, ,.,.......... ,, ... ,245-9697
.. ............. '.. ........... .. ' 742-}171

.•

NEW LISTING! ACREAGE tO
PLUS ACRES. County water
available . Coli IOdi OY-' I

POMEROY • Ccmdor St; - P.re \'OU wanting
rental property or a fix er uppt:r. Then you may
want to see this one - A 2 ~tory with 3 bedroom,
1 bath.
-'
:~sking $14,000
DOTTIE TURNER, Brokor.......................... 992·5692
- BRENDA JEFFERS.......: ...... ...................... 992-3056
JERRY SPRADLING ..........................(304) 882·3498
CHAFlMElE SPRAI&gt;LING ...... ........... (304) 882-3498
OFFICE ............................. ........................... 992·2886,

ONLY ONE LEFT! Lot for sale situated at Union
Terrace, Pomeroy. Better hurry!
1751

"CLAYTON" 24 )(56 double·wlde In Greene Twp On t .6 acres
and only three miles from town. Cit;" Schools and countv water are
distinct features tor this total eledrtc, and centtai eir conditioned
home. The detached 1 car garage and warll-shcp makes this a real
buy, CALL TODAY.
-~73e

1-800-585-7101 or446-7101 ~

Ruth Barr.......... ,,,.... .. .... ... ,....... ......4•~1&gt;'1~7l2

• Approx . 3 acres with
house, 4 to 5 bedrooms, large family
room,
ng room, one bath u:Wty room,
porches, 3 sided pole barn and is partlv fenced.
$40,000

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

M727

home.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER.446-4618

MIDDLEPORT - Grant Street - A 1 1/2 storv
home with 3 be droo ms and 2 baths . Has f; - •
-newE\r roof. Close to schools and stores.
$26,0:JO ..

Ettl Spenca .................-. ....................... ~448-6426

3. 3 Boclmom Homo • . 1 Floor Plan Homo
5. Easy to Maintain - Cal today for an appointment to see this
home, or you will be the one MISSING out on owning this lovely

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

Judy DeWitt ......... ,....... ... .... ..,....... 441-0262
J, Merrill CarteL- ..... ........ .............379-265 1

_
•

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Real Estate General

Ii

..-·

I

LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE: _
'11
4.507 acre• ni/1
'9,000
112
4.815 a::res m/1
· 10,000
13
4.702 aCI'81 m/1
9,000
14
3.881 acr1&gt;1 mil
8,000
15
4.190 acre• m/1
!i,OOO
16
5.442 acre• m/1
10,000
17
6.148 acre• m/1
6,000
18 10.320 acrea mil
11,000
19
7.253 acres m/1
7,000
47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD! Aluminum sldecJ t 1!2
story home, living room , kitchen, over sized-detached
2 car garage. FA electric furnance . ,Add~ional mobile
home hook-up. Must call today for an appointment!
.
11558
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! For this t 1/2 story
home, 3 bedrooms, living room , dining room, kitchen
complete w/refrigerator &amp; range. 30' x 32 ' garage
situated at College Avenue. $20's. _
1746

Joseph L: Pratt
(614) 354-4141
1-soo-346-2sso

,ooo.oo

SA 124 - LONG BOTTOM • 1+ Acres of
ROSS RD · LEBANON TOWNSHIP , 120+
,
vacant
grqiJnd w/ river frontage. Near Forked
acces of wooded ground . Owner may split
Run
State
Park. 'GREAT BUILDING OR
Into 60 acre parcels. $400.00 per acre split
CAMPING
SITE'
ASKING $15,900.00
or $350.00 pet acre for all! • GET YOUR
LIITLE PIECE OF HUNTING GROUND
RACINE · 1982 14' X 70 ' mobile hom£. Total
TODAY AND NOT WORRY ABOUT
electric ·wilh heatpump/ CIA. :\shley
GEITING PERMISSION TO HUNT EVER
woodburner. bu!lt-in hutch, book l:ii 1eiYes.
AGAIN!"
Enclosed front porch &amp; rear por~h . 3

21188.

RACINE - Pine Grove Road - If you have ·
always.wanted a nice home and mini farm . Here
it is! The house has 2-3 bedrooms, Central Air,
Heat Pum p , · a nd equ ipp ed kit chen .
Approxi mately 5 1/2 'acres with most of it fenced
and a nice barn and other buildings.
Asking $55,000.

MIDDL~PORT - Li ncoln Street · needing rental

and sky li ghts. MUST SEE.

molar l

POMEROY - Willow Creek Rd. • Just off At. 7'
&amp; 33 close to Pam ida. It has 3 bedrooms , ranch,
with 2 bath, equipped kitchen , heat pump, and -·
detached 2 car garage on approx. 2 acres.
Was $59,900
Now $50,000

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK· .tlwilrooms. 2 ·bath!.,

t\lb,

11173 Font 421 011 In, oompllto

.

CHA RMING CAP~ ~t;ln~K HOME Y. rrtl
RIVERVIEW- IJ).Cll ie&lt;P&gt;P~~ - 3.87 with ~ 36 &lt; 48
pole barn. CAI.b~ 'I:!6RE INFORMATION!!

t~ot

AUto Parts &amp;
Accessories

MIDDLEPORT A 2-3 bedroom, t 1/2 storyhome with large bath, al so a 2 -car
sitting on a nice lot.

P.omeroy - East Main • relax on the front porch·
and enjoy the view of the Riv er in th is 1 1/2
story 3 pedroom home. with equipped kitchen
vinyl siding and And erson windows.
Only $27,500

located on.approx. 2. i &amp; acres wi l h sun roon1,

76

..

LANGSVILLE - You'll love to come home to- "
relax in the country. In this 2 bedroom ranch·
with equippr.1d kitchen si!lirig on 13 acres .
enjoy hunting th_
is is th~ place for you. $3~i,OOO • I'

11 · Help wanted

OCCUPATIONAL
THERAPISTS
$5000 Sign-on- Bonus
$55K+Nr. DOE
Flexible

ANTIQUITY - approx. 13 acres with one of
!
most beautiful undescribable views of the
Racine lot the river. bottoms. and hills. You
see for miles. A. 9 room hOme with 3·4
bedrooms, 2 baths , family room with fireplace,:J.~
•
glassed in 85 ft. porch and a 97 ft. long
see the view. A 4 car garage and 2 heat pumps. •
Very private at the end of the road.
$120,000

Henry E. Cleland Ill 992-6191

'

i,;·

.
.'

I

Or, if you already . own
property, and would like a
new doublewide or modular
home on it, you can have
your dream for down!
First Choice Mortgage
Corporation speci~lizes in
the financing of these
packages, and our interest
rates are the best in the
business!
Call today and we 'II be
happy to tailor make a
beautiful new home package
for you.

so

•

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

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

WILLS HILL ROAD · A small home that has
cathedral ceiling, large living room, dining area,
kitchen, one bedroom, utility area, heat pump.
Sitting on approx. 1 acre ground.
$33,900

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

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

IJood Realty)· Inc.

•
' l

Henry E. Cleland Jr .. 992-6191

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

- 5. 88Area.

5% down!

MIDDLEPORT - S. Second - An older 2 story 'home with lots of possibilities . Has 3 bedrooms, ".
1 1/2 baths , dining room. and full basement.
.Large corner lot and an older 2 car garage.
$45,000 '.

Real Estate Gener_
al

5.66 ACRES - Wooded - 35 Area..

'

A nice 3
LANGSVILLE - Crouser Road
bedroom ranch style home with heat pump,
attached one car garage, and a one car • -~
detached garage , above ground pool and. ·
storage building on nice laying lot. Only $45 ,000

n-.f
... ,.. ·
.........
ZONED COMMERCIAL- DUPLEX- Each u~it 2
bedrooms. Unit 1 has 1 bath. Unit 2 has 1 y, bath.
Kitchen complete w/appliances. Each 1 car
garage. Excellent are a. Good Investment
Property.

.

Dept. GOT,
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-458-9990

Excellent cendition. Close to hospital. 2 car
garage, lg. deck on side ..

.,

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

You can now own your
own land and a beautiful
doublewide or modular
home with foundation -for
only

•

to Rio Grande. Nice build•no lot.
Cab before this one Is gone.

N714

I

bedrooms, 2 baths, living room,
kitchen , large front porch.
Convement.

M712

OWNER WANTS TO SELl.
NOW I MAKE . HER AN
OFFER! 4 -BR, L5 story homo
whieh has baen remodeled . 2
BA, t car detached g1r1ge,
concrete dnveway. 20• acres.
N622

-

NEW LISTING . 20 ACRES • FARM

HOIII located N1 ""' counlry W/4 BRs, 2
bolhS , . - carpel &amp; , _ roo! PriCe reduced

10$65,000

'

:-

1959 COIIII:!RCIAL BUILDING in the
30'&gt;&lt;80' blocl&lt; bldg. w{approK 3,900 sq. ft .
&amp; 220 elec., 16' door. $45,000. VL Smith 3888826 or 446-6806.

H64 OUTS7Al~DING 5 acres tRACT build
your master.:;:ece on one flf the LAST lots ln

LAKEVIE'.-'-1 ;:::--T. 5 acre:s ~'! , ':'00. 2.348
acres $2~ ,9;~ 4 lots pn 'Nh!~e ~O&lt;ll.l. Subject
to msti'ICINe covenants.
11 01e GREEN TWP. 11·· acres more or less
large barn, pond, fence and " good road
lrantage , Level to rolling, mostly pasture,
some woods. $35,000.00

1033 BUY THIS DOUBLE HOME lpr an
investment, or live in 1/2 &amp;

~I

the ·rent help

withe plilyments. Located in nice little town

close to GaiHpolis.
11011 NEW usnNG . tresh on the
this 9 acres more or lflss and pncecl to sen
on ly $11,500.00.

.

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)

Pomerpy-Middleport-Gallipolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Pag-'&gt;8-Sunday Times-Sentinel .

S &amp; ·s Organics promotes purely natural fertilizer
GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallia
County-based pan-time business·
men have hit upon a different way.
of producing organically-grown
fenilizer and are finding a market
for their product locally.
S &amp; . S Organics, 852
McCormtck Road, owned and
· operated by Davtd Scouten and
Mike Simmons. is using the ·
byprodu~t from approximately
30,000 mgbtcrawlers bred each
m~nth to develop Wiggle Worm
Sot I B~tlder. a product they are
promotmg as purely natllflll.

AprU 23, 1995:

The business is open every' day
and potential buyers can inquire at
lhe address or eall 446-6692.
The fenilizet is good for house
plants, vegetables, flowers. lawns,
shrubbery and more, Scouten,
explained. In addition to the business'.·home base, Wiggle Worm
can also be obtained at Call's
Greenhouse in Centerville, the
Wholesale Warehouse on Jackson
Pike, and Ivydale Country on Stille
Route 7 Nortb.
Scouten .said ~e and Simmons
are developmg Wtggle Worm from ~

Fire ants under fire
by USDA researchers ~

a spedlll breed of nigbtaawler that fill
immediately
Scouten
thrives coly in warm ~r. The explained.
'
worms are grown In peat. wbicb is
Scouten said the idea to stan lhe
WASHINGTON (AP) - . Fire
absorbed by the worms, with the business on a part-time basis not ants, a seourge·of agriculture and
waste )!enerating the base of tile only to generate some extra revpeople througbour the South, are
fertilizer.
enue, but to fill a need for home
being targeted by government sci·
"This compares pretty ravorablr, lawn and garden care. Scouten's
enlists at a Florida laboratory
to other organic fertilizers,' full-time job is at the Kyger Creek . working on ways to uap and
Scouten said. "Their product may .Plant, while Simmons is a teacher destroy theln.
bave additives, but this is pure."
at Cross Lanes (W.Va.) Christian
. And the researchers found that
S &amp; S Organics·bas made con· School.
. the aggressive red insects. have a
. tact with Unco Industries of
Wiggle Worm is being sold healthy appetite that can be satbRacine, Wis., which also special- wholesale locally and Scouten said fied by just D!K&gt;ut anything edible.
izes in natural fertilizer, and is ban- he hopes the business can go even·
They can and do· inflict painfully
dling excess orders Unco cannot tually go full-time.
.
stinging
bites on h11mans who
1
stumble across their colonies.
Entomologists Thomas Macom
and
Sanford Porter, working at an
cent
because
of
demand
and
the
cuts of pork and turkey should be
Agricultural Research Service lab
·strong
U,S.
advantage,
it
said.
But
modest."
Exports of bulk commodities expons of sorghum and dry beans' in Gainesville, c.ame up with an
such as com and wheat should be could fall by more !ban 20 percent
steady or fall by less than 10 per- because of Mexican production.

USDA: Mexico holds export promise despite Pesco's fall
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
long-term market for farm expons
to Mexico holds prom~e despite
the peso's current troubles, Agriculture Department economists say.
Because of the peso's fall, the
department expects a 12 percent
decline this fiscal year in the value
or U.S. fann exports to Mexico a drop rrom $4.1 billion to $3.6 bil·uon in the 12 months ending Sept.
30.
But the long-term trade will
benefit from Mexico's growing
population, closeness to the United
States and trading relationships that
have been built up as a result of the
North American Free Trade Agree·
ment, analysts at the Foreign Agricultural Service say.
1n calendar 1994, the first year
of N AFT A, agricultural exports

from the United States to Mexico
reached an all-time bigb of $4.5
billion, a 27 percent increase over
1993, USDA reponed.
The expons dropped sharply in
January, the first full month afrer
devaluation. Expons 'were valued at
$275 million in January this ·year, a
21 percent decline from the $346
million recorded in January 1994,
and below the pre-NAFfA level or
$293 million in January 1993.
High-value products such as
fresh fruit and red meats took the
· biggest bit, and are likely to suffer
most.
''Although sales of higher-cost
consumer goods are likely to fall ,
products with less value added may
see smaller declines in exports," a
USDA report said. "For example,
decreases in exports of lower-cost

March (\fllk Production Up 4 Percent
W ASHINGTO~ ~AP)- The 22 .major milk-produ~ing states
churned out II.~ btllion pounds. of oulk products in March, 4 percent above the1r 1994 producuon, according to the Agriculture
Depanment.
Cows on farms in the 22 states numbered 8.1 million, 34,000
more \ban March 1994, and each cow produced an average l,454
pounds for March, 53 pounds more than lhe previous year.
The dcpanment's National Agricultural Statistics Service esti·
mated. that if the. 28 states not surveyed monthly were included in
~e .milk producuon figures, U.S: production would have lieen 13.1
b!U!on pounds In January, 12.2 billioo pounds in February and 13.8
btllton pounds in March.

everyday occunence!

Plans are linallzcd for the May
First Pond Clinic being held at
Rodney Keller's Farm on State
Route 248, just east of Chester.
Activities will begin at 6 p.m.
Bring your pond questions and
Earth Day '95 was celebrated
discuss
them with Dr. Eric Northroughout the United States Saturland,
Ohio
Stare University Extenday. What did you do to help our
sion
specialist
in natural resources.
Earth be a beuer place to live and
Topics
to
be
covered
will include
work In? Each of us needs to
stocking
your
pond,
caring
for your
become more responsible for our
pond,
identification
of
fish
and
actions and its effects on the en vi- .
plant
life
and
safety
tips
around
the
ronment. ·Farmers alone cannot be
pond.
·
the sole preserver of our eanh and
from o-1 its renewable resources.
Christmas tree growers, plan to
Consumers must become active
attend
a Pest Clinic at·the Morrison
in making the earth a better place
of the world bas the responsibility economists call a dollar g\ut that
Farm
located in Washington
Tr.
c
c
?f .m.~nta.ming reasonable stability keeps the currencr depressed. But to live through !heir purchasing and
County
at
7
p.m. May 10. For furdaily habits. Try to recyCle, plant a
m 11.
.
.
~he pamful spcndmg cuts· and tax
ther
inrormation,
call the extension '
tree, compost yard waste, clean up
The dollar ts sure to be a mam mcreases required to reverse that
your yard or plan to participate in office at 992-6696.
toptc thts Tuesday when fmance process are politically unrealistic.
(Hal Kneen Is the agriculturaJ
the
upcoming Ohio River Sweep
ministers. of the. United States and
"We' re not going to see any
extension
agent for M elgs Coun·
on
June
17.·
Make
Earth
Day
an
stx other mdustnalizcd nat10ns con- n;trrowing or the deficits • • said
ty.)
I fer in Washington. But there is lit- Elena Shpcrling bead of foreign ·
tl~ anticipation that the Amcri~ans exchange uading' at the New York
wtl.l offer to ~ndcrtakr. any dec1s1ve branch of Banco di Sicilia, an Italian bank. .
actton to stabthze the dollar.
Jl,. ris~ in U.S . .interest rates i.s
Olhers say the dollar's erosion,
one po~stple solullon liccause that left unchecked, could eventually
HUNTINGTON - Champion a pooling or interests.
would •m\Jrove. ~e return on dol- haunt the United States by precipiThe transaction is expected to
!ar-denommatcd mvesunents, mak- tating recessions in Japan, Ger- Industries, Inc . announced l'ast
mg the doJ.Iar a more attmcuve cur- many and elsewhere, hurling their week that it has signed an agree- close wilhin 30 days.
U. S. Tag and Ticket is a nationrency to bold. But the Federal ability to purchase U.S. products ment by wbicb U. S. 'l'ag and TickRes&lt;.'fVC Bo;u:d. whtch has doubled and layi~g the basis for shrinking et Co., Inc of Baltimore, Md., will ally recognized producer of tags
become a pan or Champion Indus- used in many applications, includshort-term mterest rates smce profits and layoffsat home.
ing shipping, postal, airline and
F~bruary 1994, isn't expe.cted to
"This is some thing that just tries .
,
cruise
line ini.lustries.
Champion
.will
pay
apjJroxim•st: them further because 11 could cannot go on forever," said David
The
company, which has been
mately
$1.1
million
in
shares
of
prcc1p1tate a recessu;m.
.
A. Levy, editor of industry fore in
business
since 190~. will continChampion
common
stock
·
and
Another answer IS .to shnnk the casts at the Levy In stitute, a
ue
to
operate
under the familiar U.
merge
U.
S.
Tag
with
a
wholly
U.S . trade and budget deficits, research finn in Mount Kisco N.Y.
S.
Tag
and
Ticket
name as a diviowned
subsidiary
of Champion, in
which have sent trillions of dollars "It's not in our interest to ha~e lbe
sion
of
Champion.
a transaction to be accounted for as
abroad and created what some global economy tank."

U. ·S.

Spring Melons and Vegetables Down
WASHINGTON (AP) -.Harvesting of spring melons and veg·
etables appears to be down this. year, according to the Agriculture
.
Department. .
Tbe.prospectiv~ area for harvest of 13 S!llecte(j vegetables during
the spnng quarter ts estimated at 217,600 acres, 3 percent less than
last year.
And a look at three melons showed 128,000 acres for spring harves~ down 4 percent from last year. Honeydew acreage increased
but that was offset by declines in cantaloups and ~atermelons. .
'
The department's National Agricultuml Statistics Service looked
at acreage of snap beans, broccoli, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower,
celery, sweet com, c~cumbers, eggplant, endive, head lettuce, bell
peppers and tomatoes.
. Meanwhile, lheni are 35,300 acres of spring onions ror harvest
thts year, down slightly from last year but 15 perceni above 1993
acreage.

Corporations.C.~ntinued

Champion Industries
·acquires U. S. Tag &amp; Ticket.

dead at 77

Super Lotto:
2-4-16-20-32-37
Kicker:
. 2!f7510

Sporll, Pap 4 .

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esti-:

..--Farm briefs-____,

Area farmers•.~ontlnuedfromo-1 .
will add you to the mailing list.
This Ohio Stare University Extension newsletrer is a combined effon
of the Washington County Extension agen~ Jim Barret~ and myself.
II is published six times a year.

estimare that 7.3 million fire 011111··
will scour a typical acre of land ID .
search .o ffood.
·~
In one summer week, Clilonles'
with a single queen will consume;
the equivalent of 3.1 pounds of:
insects and 5.6 quarts of suaar,
solution; multiple-queen colonies:
wiU gobble up twioe as much.
•
Aild the envir&lt;JI!mental danlagethat the ants can inflict is~·
widespread, because the pests can·
make a meal of crops, native.
insects and small animals. It's
mated that some 200 million acres
in 11 ~outhem states and Puerto:
Rico are infested by the ants.'

\r-~--~===---~------======~--~--~~----~
·
Ohio Lottery
~ Cosell,
Pick3:
031
sportscaster
Pick4:
6610

Potato Stocks Up 6 percent
·
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. Potato stocks totaled 123 million•.
per hundredweight on April I, up 6 percent over the same period in
1994 and 1993, the Agriculture Department repons.
The stocks covered a 31 percent fall in production in what the
depanment terms stomg~ states. But disappearance hit a record high
for lhe season at 277 million hundredweight, 7 percent above 1994
·
·
and 10 percent above 1993.
The dcpanment reponed loss and shrlnkage totaled 28 7 million
·
bundredweighi. 7 percent more than last year.
~arch processing of potatoes totaled 18.1 million hundredweight, up 4 percent from a year earlier.

•
,.

..

Vol 45, NO. 251
Copyright 19115,

1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April 24, 1995

Tough talk on terror
Clinton seeks broader powers as search continues

flower festival activity--]~· '

.'

·,

. ..

fighters went into the area of the

By DAN SEWELL
Prea Writer
1AIIoclated
OKLAHOMA CITY - The .
search for bomb victims entered a
grim new pbase today as searchers

at a federal office building dug into
. sections of a ,day care center and
Social Security office that are
expected to yield a heavy death
toll.
I
As the investigation into the
bombing widened, President Clinton sought broad new powers to
combat terrorism. His chief of
staff, Leon Panetta, defended those
proposals today against charges
that they could violate civil liberties.
"There's obviously a balance
that .we always have to strike," be
said on the CBS This Morning
show. "The president's proposals I
thlnlc are right on the marie."
·
An Army deserter from Fort
Riley, Kan., was questioned after
being apprehended in California.
.The lone suspect charged· so far,
Timothy McVeigh, once served at
FonRiley.
There was word that on the day
of the bombing, a Texas congress.man's offioe received a fax in cryptic language that may have
.described \be Oklahoma federal
offtee building that was devastated.
.
In connection with the fax,
authorities reponedly were seeking
.to question a University of Michigan custodian, Mark Koemke, 37,
who broadcasts warnings against a
"New World Order" over shortwave radio and bas distributed
militia bow-to tapes.
Two brothers who were friends
of McVeigh were being held as
··marerial witnesses, and there wcro
searches and questioning over the
weekend in Las Vegas, upstate
New York, Micbigan and Kansas.
. As the nation observed a day of

A MuHimedlatnc. Newlfi8Pe!'

ruins thai ooce held a day care center and a Social Security offtee the area where many bodies are
believed to be . The searchers
entered the area only after a dangling 20-foot-square concrete slab .
was bolted to the eighth floor of lhe
· building so it wouldn't fall on
them.
The search was again halted
temporarily this morning for more
shoring-up.
Despite continued cool weather,
a strong odor is beginning to envelop the building and the surrounding

area.

. IN MOURNING- Curtis
Carver of Moore, Okla., bowed
his head Sunday while listening
to a broad.;ast of the memorial
service for victims of the Alfred
p·, Murrah Federal Building
bombing. Carver was among a
group gathered near the down·
town Oklahoma City building to
bear the service. (AP)

No survivor bas been found in
the rubble since the frrst night or
the effort, and Assistant Frre Chief
I oo Hansen agreed that fmding one
now would be miraculous.
"There's always hope," said
Dawn Mahan, leaving a special service Sunday featuring Clinton and
the Rev. ]lilly Graham at an overflowing Oklahoma State Fairgrounds 4o return to a vigil for her
missing mother, a 48-year-old federal housing employee.
'
She described the waiting as
"Hell," then added softly: "Oh
yeah, there's still hope."
"Today, our nation joins with
you in grief," Clinton told 20,000 ·
people ·in~ide the fair arena and on
surrounding fairgrounds in a service that was also nationally televised.

mourning on Sunday, there was
more bad news.
Besides the 78 confmned dead
from the federal office building
bombing April 19, another person,
nurse Rebecca Anderson, 37, died
Sunday from bead injuries suffered
trying to help after the blast. More
than 400 were injured in the worst
He pfO!Dised ''to bring to justice
terrorist attack In the United States.
those who did this evil.' : In a SunThere were I 00 unaccounted for day evening CBS 60 Minutes interas rescue efrorts lost time over the view, Clinton repeated that those
weekeod because of fierce thunder- res~nsi~le. should be. executed.
storms, wind gusts and threatening
Ir thiS IS not a cnme for which
capital punishment is called, I don't ·
debris.
Late Sunday night, 120 fire- ·know what is," Clinton said.

The Racine Area Community Organization announced
Its queen for the second annual flower festival Saturday. In
the above photo, Courtney
Roush third from left, was
crowned queen by last year's
queen Amy Manuel, second
from left Roush Is a senior at
Souther.n High School ano:l
plans on majoring in pre·
medicine at Marietta College
"in the fall. The 1994 cour t
included, from left, Amy
Weaver, Manuel; Rou s h ,
·Brandy Roush, Shannon
Morarity, Erica Dugan, J essica Codner, Jennifer Cummins, Kerry Caldwell and
Jayrne · Miller. At right,

Racine's Breeanna Manuel
stays bundled up at her fami·
ly 's concession stand during
Increasingly chilly temperatures that hit the area on the
day of the festival. (Sentinel
photos by George Abate)
.

-

.

~

Meigs readies for observation
honoring crime victims' rights Secqnd Racine Flower Festival
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"All too often, the victims are
overlooked in the criminal justice
system," according to Meigs County victim's advocate Greta Riffle.
Riffle made her conwtents as the
observance of Crime Victims
Rights Week In Meigs County
begins by proclamation of the
board of county commissioners.
The observation coincides with
national and state crime victims

NOTICf! .

weeks.

· ll'llTJ~NI,()JlY f~I_.I~Ulill"'J(3~!
TOM
PEDEN IIDSMOB'
HAS All INVENTORY
OVER 800
IIEW
CIEVI0.£1S,
FS, PCII11ACS,OFBUDIS,
GEOS BRAND
Alii CIJS11IM
VAliS. Alfwlll be sold at ad t•llial discDilllls!
.
Plus $500 $2000 Cash back or &amp;% APR flnanci avallab
3
10
to 36 months)
on selected models~ approved cred'JY Tenns ~'/r.
able up to 84 months!
•

WEST
VIIGIIIIA'S
1M C011VERS1011 VAN DEAi£R HAS AN l"'tronnnv
OF
OVBI300
BRAIIDIIEW
nnnount
.·
CHEVID.ET COIIVEliSIOII VAliS.
St!lecti!JII tncludes.Astro All Wheal Drivlls and G·21l's, bolll avail·
raised~ or low tops. Prices range from $17,388 to

=::
'

•

·Cert'fled
,__,
·
·
I
. """" car buyers will be on hand to give highest trade-in
ralue for your automob!le. Pl.ease bring your title, registration
card, and payment boolt tf applicable.
.
Ill SAlfS PERMITTED 10 IIEAlSIS. This ciBarance is for retail customeJS only. Prices apply to available units ooly. llo ordering per·
mitted at these prices. ·

.

Crime VictimS Week will be
recbgni&gt;)ed locally Tuesday at 2
p.m. in the Pomeroy Parking Lot
with the release of balloons bearing
the names , pictures and imponant
information regarding missing cbil\hen across the country.
"Criminals get a lot of attention,
they get attention during the trial
and the system is careful to protect
their interests," said Prosecuting
Attorney John R. Lentes.
Anybody who surfers physical

·

or emotional harm as the result of a
crime, any crime, is a crime victim, ·
according to Lentes.
.
· "We always bear criminals complaining after their trials, but we
seldom bear the victim's voice," be
added.
Lentes said one of the first
things be did after taking office
was to hire Riffle as victim's advocate.
The office needed someone to
handle matters pertaining to victims, Lentes explained. "Some- .
times the victim's needs come into
conflict with the needs of lhe prosecutor's office," be added.
A new amendment to the Ohio
Constitution; passed by voters last
November , guarantees certain
rights to crime victims. ·
. ·
Victims have the right to
address the court during sentencing, appeal~. parole bearings and
on other occasions, Lenres said.
In ad,dition, victims arc to be

notified or the arrest or release of
tile offender, bail, the case number,
the officer assigned to the case and
coundates.
In some cases, victims can
receive frnancial compensation to
pay medical expenses stemming
from the crime, .funeral costs, loss
of income, counseling costs and
other costs as specifted under law.
"It is imponant to have the victim's input. Usually the public
it just from the defendant's point of

sees

view,'' Lemes added.

The state now ~eq uires each
county to have a victim's advocare,
unfortunately it doesn't supply
funding for the position, be said.
"We fund the victim's advocate
position through forfeitures," be
said. "Some state money should go
for victim's rights."
This is an appropriate time to
have victims ri~hts week considering recent events in Qklaboma
City, said Lentes.

attend~nce

Chilly weather
&amp;al.•lS tO di.SSUade
I•
ViSitOrS tO Village

encouraging: RACO

Pottmyer, the Athens Dixieland ·
Jazz Band and country/jazz band
The Billy Lci: Show.
Also, the flower festival hosted
a tractor pull for youths.
· . ~dded.
Res~ctively, the first,' second
Severa·! vendors e~en listed
By G.EORGE ABATE
large orders for their flowers and and third place finishers included
Sentinel News Stalf
.
other products, such as rugs, bas- · for the 54 pounds and under category.: Josh Smith, Megban
Tbe second armual Racine Area kcts and wood crafts, she added.
Wtlhams and Jacob Hunter. The
Community Organization's flower
This year's queen for the fcstitop three pullers in the 55 pounds
fes'tival was a success, despite brisk val is Southern High School senior
and over category included first
winds and cool temperatures, said Courtney Rou sh. Roush is the
Buddy Young; second, Tim Wolfe:
Kathryn Hart, RACO president.
daughter of Marshall and Debbie
and third, Jessica Wolfe.
'
More than 1,000 people were Roush of Letan Falls. ·
. RACO also recognized three
estimated to have attended the
Rains held off during the day for
IDdlVldUals ror their efforts in
spring event, Han said. Last year, all events, with substantial crowds
pullin~ together the event. Those
crowd estimates totaled about watching th e Meigs County
recelvt.ng plaques included: Dr.
1,400.
Shotokan Karate Club and the MidConcession sales reacbed nearly night Cloggers;she added.
Melante Weese of the Racine
the same levels as last year, II art
Other evenL~ included a parade,
Optometric Clinic; Dr. Douglas
Hunter; and Tom Wolfe of Home
cotmury and western singer Steve
said.
National· Bank.
"We hope next year will be big-ger and better ye~" Han said
"People came and bought food
and items and then lcrt," Hart said.
Individuals rrom as far away as
Columbus visited the event, she

'Other Ohio' conference explores
dispariti~s with dollar shareout

$17,388

$11,688

NO Doc Fees

No Ou: Fll!'ll&amp;. DeiMJe:f

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP
..
• Dnver &amp;de A.rbag
• Rear Anii-Loct BraKes
• Pow01 Steenng

- • PoWef-erakes

~~Ye"f!d '

BRAIID NEW '95 BUICK PARK AVENUE

• 16 Valve Power
• Custom Clolh lnlenor
' Onve&lt; S&lt;le ~•!bag
, Steel Belte&lt;i Tiles
• 4 Wheel Anlelod&lt; Blakes
· Power Steenng
"Sale Pnce lrr.k.des GMAC flr1t •··•• - f"-1- .__: Pow
_et_~akes
ln::en~e 11 Qualified

• Extended ChassiS

• Pow&lt;n Door locks
• At.t/FM Stereo

• Om01 S~e A• Bag

• Styled Wheels1

• Anh-lock Brakes

• Steel BeHed Tl res
• W~l Eq&lt;~!lll'dl

·PIS, P/B
• Sola/Bed
• Power Wn'ldoWS • lnd1rect L1ghtrng
• Prem1um Wood Pkg
• Power locts

• A11 Cond•~on

• T11t, Cru•se
• Full Convers•on
• Automallc Overdrrwe • AMIFM Cassette • Alummum Runn•ng Bds
• V1sta
Wmdows
• Loaded!

• Air Condii:IOil •
• Dual Anbag

• Anl&gt;locl&lt; Blakes
• AutomatK:
• AMIFM Cassene

• Oual AK Cunlortemp • Alumlflum Wheels

Climate Cool1ol
• Power Antenna
• Power Onve• &amp;
Passenger Seat

• Keyless Ael001e
· Entry S1stem
• Loailedl

.="~L"':t.:!""";::' : Ulifl,

·--~4
TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844 --.c===--------Monday • Saturd~y: 9 am • 9 pm

344·5947. 422·0756

•

'

•

Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

The effon dldn 't work because tee recommended increaSed public
By THOMAS J, SHEERAN
. it lacked unified political punch, afrairs activities and lobbying
Associated Press Writer
YOUNGSTOWN -A. veteran Meshel. said. He encouraged Other including _a speak\lf'S bureau, pub:
of battles within state government Ohio leaders to avoid the same lication of a newsletter and an elec·
- - offered advice on bow the "Other ~esult by working together on Ironic bulletin board.
A conference highlight was the
·
Obip" of less infl~elllial cities can tssues of comrno!l interest.
One participant said the nearby presentation of a study showing
obtain .the state help that Columbus, Cleveland and Cincinnati Youngstown State University cam- Cleveland and Columbus may be
pus building named for Meshel getting more than their share of
already .alU'IICt.
Former state Sen. Harry Mesbel proved that.decentralization can be state aid, but some smaller cities
are not doing poorly by compariof Youngstown, the state Demo- accomplished.
"That took a lot or work," son.
cratic chairman, told participants in .
~n . and Toledo, for example,
lhe third Other Ohio conference oo Mesbel said.
Other
Ohio
is
a
coalition
or
COnSIStently
ranked among the top
Saturday to find cost-effective
newspaper
executives,
elected
officities
in
per-capita
state aid for proways to altracl state jobs.
cials
and
civic
leaders
rrom
areas
jects
such
as
highways
and eco"It's not always economically
nomic
development
said
Gil
Pe't er. ' •
outside
Ohio's
three
largest
cities.
feasible to do so,' be said. Mcsbel
The
group
has
said
Columbus,
son,
analysis
director
of
the
suggested computer-type jobs that
Cleveland
and
Cincinnati
use
their
Youngstown
State
University
Ccn·
can be moved by installing phone
MAKING HIS POINT -State Sen. Tim Greenwood, R-Sylvalines to state agency headquarters clout to obtain a disproportionate ter for Urban Studies.
nia, IN\de a point Saturday during a workshop on state decentralnumber of state offioes and jobs.
~eterson_' s two-month study.
in Columbus.
ization at the "Other Oblo" conference in Youngstown. The con·
About 300 people illtended Sat- whtcb be wd was preliminary and
Mesbel recalled that, v.;_bile be
ference addre.&lt;sed the concern that the major population cenJers in
urday's meeting, the group's third. abbreviated by lime constraints
was a mayoral aide in Youngstown,
Ohio garner 1 disproportionate share of Ohio dollars and political
be bad worked with iben-Cieveland Previous meetings were in Toledo rocused on eight metropolita~
clout. At left ore Rkhard Vuebrtr and Maureen Conr.oy rrom the
areas.
Maya- Carl Stokes in the 1960s to and Marietta.
University or Toledo. (AP)
Other Ohio's steering commitincrease state aid.
•

•

Oil price hike
spurs 'wallop'
at gas pumps
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gasoline pump prices jumped more than
three •~nts per gallon Iii two wedcs
because of rising crude costs and
btgbcr demand, an industry analyst
says.
"This is significan~ a wallop of
an increase. Prices have gone up
nearly ll cents per gallon over a
year .ago." said Trilby Lundberg,
Pl\bhsher of the twice-monthly
~undberg Survey of 10,000 gas stattons.
Tbe avemge price of gasoline
including all grades and taxes stood
at 122.;21 ccnL~ per gallon on Fri·
day, up 3.2 cents per gallon from
April 7.
"Prices started going up a
month ago because crude oil prices
.are up an average $2 a barrel. It bas
a lot to do with nervousness in the
Middle ~t . over S!Jilply, plus we
are commg mto Abtgber demand
season," Lundberg said Sunday,

•

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