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••

COMM ENTARY
Ohio H.S. lfrls' scores
- Local

scoring~

Tbllnolay'J-

M&lt;lpe,W-41
Wf:lhloa .......................- ......1 ll 7 U •
Mnp .................................. l2 9 21 ),).

41

IS.!

W-('-fAW'I'VC~)

-

f:CroJmo
. ............~
llibby ..............4
~lie

~

II).R
H

0
0
0
0

leuie KiatJ ....................... J
Racbolltoanomon ............ J
Nikki Jultice ....... .............. l

7
2

1

~

a Eft

"*to

4-7
2·2
I· I

0

~roo~ Wllliams .............'..6

0
0
0
0

SbaonoJ! Price .................. I
llffanylWfhiiL ............... I
Ashley Thomu .................O
Maria~ Whaley ................0
llffany Qualh ...................1
. Totok
17

0.0

13
2
'l
2
2

IJ.I4

65

~

·o.o

.l -2

o

Q

Southern 71, Trl•ble 43

1

Soulhern ............................. l4 ' 16 2.5 16 •
'!'rimblc .................................6 18 10 9 •

........

Detro!t 11 Wu.hiqiOn, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlaota, 7:30p.m.
~at Hew Jeney. 7:30p.m. .
ID«W. II Orlando, 7:)0 p.m.
CbuiOIIo ot New Yoot. 8 p.m.
Ponllad AI 0111111, 8 p;rn.
L.A. Laked II Mi'*IOII. 8 p.m.
Toroato M Milw1Ube.l:30 p.m.
Hau•n~ at Cbic.,o, 81:30 p,m.
L.A. Cl~pptn 1C Utah, 9 p.m.
Sr.mmen10 a Oolclea Sll!eo 10:30 p.m.

z

·ll:!l

0

Saturd1!y'••·-

14

14

11

,.

4)

~ummins
..............~ ~
Stacy Lyons ......................S
0
Brigeue 81U'nes ....:............6
Kim lhle .. ."....................... .. l
Rache l '~um ............. ..2 ·
Heather Dadey.................. 2
$arah Brnuer ........ ............. 1
Tammy Fryar .................... 1
Amy Lee ...........................Q

0
2
0
0
0

Q

Totals

2

20
16
12
12
. 4

1).1
().1

4
l

0

l

0

~~~

Oen~ter

2·2
6-11
0 •.
. 4-4
0

IJ.ll

;!:al.~

$ha"wllll Judson ............... 6
J.essicaA sh.............. . ~ ... 8
Kim Guffey
, I
Krista Dugan ........... 1
Vanessa Du.nlt\'Y .............. 1
~~J. Griffin ·: ................ i~

NCAA Division I
men's scores ,

71

6-12
0
1-2

.3
l
. l

..1

43

0

g

0

Auttin Peay 91. E. Ken~ucky 6S
Compbell7l. Florida Allantir.: 61
Cen1. Aorid4 72. Georaia St 67
Elon 78, liberty 7.&amp;
Jaduonville St. 69, Merter 6.5 ·
Middle Tcnnfnee &amp;4. fle:lmont 7_
,
Morehead St 71. Tennessee St. 51
Murray St. 8], E. Illinois 69
N,cw Orleans 69. Dcn,·cr ·5.5
Sam -Houston St. BJ, Nicholls St. 78
Syracuse 77. Soutb C11r0Jina 74-0T
Tenn.· Martln 75. SE Mi uouri 66
· Tcua-Arlin111on 70, SE Louisiana 64
Troy S1. 11. S•mfocd 6.5

•

. Waterford 58, Eastem 35
9z

.3~

.... ....................... l7 17 12 12 •

S8

Eastem ............................... ..,.8
~aterford

,

7 II

Eastern

[[ElL

~le Spencer........ ..~~-~ ~-

.1-S

12
ll

J~I ie ~niley ......, ................6

0

1).0

Amber Boker ...................1
Stacie Wat5on ................... ]
i~~r VaBSickle ..............l
fOWl!
.
13

0

l-6
2-4 .

0

0
0

ll:!l
9·17

Mldwtst

l
4

~~
· ~
teny Ha 1......................... .5
o
. elanie Lang ......... .......... .4
0

bwo: s

-

~ arl'ma ................ l

•

3!

Heather fulmer ................. 2
Jantzen K.ins ..... ................ 2
Ashley Jones ................. .... 2
Hollie Arnold .. .. ...............2
~cllyY- ....................:1

tooals

0
0
0
.0
0
!

10

,[[ &amp;
1).0
17
0
0.0
2-4
1-2

6
l

ll:!l

.f

South....t

Oral Robotoll7. UMKC 76
SW 'tb11 74, Lamu 73-0T '
Texu· Pan American 59, St. Mary's, Texu 48
Texu-S10 Anronio 93, McNeete S1. 6S
W. kcnrucky 76, M.-Linlc Rock 71

!I

N.'BA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atllntk Dlvlllon
~. »: i. r.s; lil

Mtarru ................................... 22
NewYdrt ............................. 21
Philadelphia ........ ..................19
Drlando ................................ 16

12
14
16

.6417
.600
.~43

3'1.

20
New.Jtrsey .................·.......... IS 20
Washington
.. :.......... 1'2 24

.429
.429
.333

7'1..
7'b
11

&amp;5ton .. ................................ !$

Central Dlv..lon
lndiana ......... .........................23 II
Detroit .................................. 1! IS
Milwaukee .... _.__ ........ ..... ...... 20 16
Toronto ........ ...... -,.................. 19 16
Chlll'lotte ................. ........ ;.... 18 16
CLEVELAND ................ ...... I5 20
A.tlanm .... ........................ .. .... l2 21
Chioago .......... ... .. ............S 21

-·-

Far West

Arizou.IO,.Wuhinaton St. 7.5

Arizona St 90, Wuhinaton 80
E. WllhinJtoa 74, N. AriitOna M
Oonzaaa 96, San Franc:;;•co 73
lAoq Bach So. 76; !doho 69 .
Montana 71, ldlbo St. 56
MOOialla So. 77, Weber So..ro
Nevlda 67, UC Irvine 63
. New Mexico St. 91, Cal Poly-SLO 77
Oreaon 83, California 68
Pacific. 53, Boile St. 52
Portland St. 76, .CS Nonhridge 62.
Santa Clara 64, Portland 52
Stanfofd 73, Oregon St. 4S
TCU 69•.San Jo10 St 60·
Utah St. ~ 2. Cal St.·fullenon 70
Wyomins 88. New Mexico 83

I~

20 ·.4-441

1

.676
. ~59

4
4

.556
.543
.n9
.-429
· .364
.'156

4~

5

~~~

10·~

~

L - r.&amp;:

II
IJ
I~
17
24

24
2~

lil

.676
.6-49
S45
.500
Jl4
.314
.186

.

',.
4';
6
12':
12':
U ':

..... . ........ ] 1

Portland ................. ............. 21
Seatt le .......
.. .. 2.\
Sncrom= nlo .......................... 21

.5 .861
8 .771
n .6.W
11 .6.' 6

J':
8
8':

.

.

.

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

j

·: FULL SERVICE tAX PREPARATION
.
'
INDIVIDUALS • PARI'NERSHIPS • CORPORATIO"S • PAYROLL .
.

Meigs County Karate
Club winter quarter.
·beginning classes
starting January
18th at Carleton
Schooi,··Syracuse.
For more .Information

r===-=
I
FREE
.
I
.
.
,

.Ne~ LDCBtlonl .·
'33105 HIHand Road

I
I
I
I

Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769·
(740) 992·9355 ' .
Hours: ·
Mon.-Frl-9:00 am until 6:00 pm
Sat 9:00 . until 5:00

call 882-8838.

'

·ELECTf'QNIC FILING

WlTHlAX ·· '

PREPARAnON
Expi1'81 Allril 15, 20q0
Coupon Mull Be P~ntad .

....

.•

• !

·. Pu~lic Nt)tlce
NoUce OIS.te

•

If this is what your caddie looks·lfke.;.

•

..

•

I-~. .:.P.=ubi::.::IC.;::
·Notl:.:
_=ce=·:.:.·....;,.. ;
"IOOfllecl in 1!!-d 11oo11 21&amp; point In tilt otnttrllnt of
Atft- Dttit: Vol- ·

Public rqtlce

, Public Notice

ua,fMtlg-

By vlrtllt of an Order of at Pll(lt
County 'lbwnthlp Aoecl 1272;
Slit laautd out ot lht Raconltr'e tflae, .Melge .Tilt net · tlong l tald
Common Pl111 Court ol · County, 0111 ·, 1110 bofng otn1Mtl111 North _. 211' Ill"
Illig• County, Ohio, In 1111 ·lllfl ol30 ~ Lot No. 120, hilt • dlatance ol 171.02
.,.. of tilt Hom• National i'ownehlp..a-lorlh, Atllll'" fMt loa point;
.
ll1nk, Pl1lntlfl,. ve.·Chrllllt 11-Wnt, Otii'.e TOWMtllp,
The not ltevlnp aald·
D. llartlmua fb Cllrlall D. lhlaa
o1 Ohio· oenllltlrie lloillh 41 31' 32"
H1111tey, II al., llatMiclanll, encf ·"''"· ertleulerly Eall ,...11111 lhno lit" Iron
upon I Juctomanl thlrtln· ducrlllld •
:
· '. pint at • dlelanct ol ao.oo
renclarecl, being ca.. No.
llltlnnlng
fell .ll!d at a dlillanoe
..cv.ez ln"•kl Court, 1.. P.K. ·malt
242;2t lett IIICI going alolal
offer lor 1111 at 1111 front oaiiMrlllll
ltall Route dlllllltll ol 272.at fHI to
door ot 1111 Courthou.. in 1124 being till Norillwall · tilt prlnolpal point ol
POII*Oy, Mtlge Count,, oomar ol I I,DIIMfl 111011 lletllnnlng !IOfllalnlng · 1.00
Ohio, on the 11th day of or Ina lr8ot • r1oord1d In ·- o r Iiiii, Mtbjeollo •II
Flbnoary; 2100, at ·10:10 DMd'llooll 22('11 Pllie 1131; ....lentmenla ancl rlghlla.m., the following tend1,
l'lltnoa . elOng . ,tlld .._.
ltnemenll and molillt --.tllllloutll UO 21' tt• , lterlnge '" 111umed
h0/111, IOCIIId II 14745 W,tl I dllll"" Of 135.10 and art far . lilt
Curti a Hollow· · Road, fMtlo 1 polnt;l_ . · · · determination of angl..
A~tdavllla, OH 41772. A
Thtnoa lelivtnp. 11ld oniy.
.
·
eamplatt lagel diiCrtptlon -rtl111 Nor!ll..41 ·a t' 31"
Tht ebove dtaorlptlon
of the real Illite 11 11 Wilt PIMinl "VV! 511" Iron wa• prepared from en
followa:
·
pln1 II 1 dlallnol ol 30.10 1, actull aurvty made on thlt
114!lnli • part or • 110 acrt flit and at 1 dllllnee or ' 20111 day of Altguat,-1tn,
more or le11 tract of land 311.51.1ett IIICI•olng • -~ by C. Tho11111 Smith, Ohio
trantllrred to George and dllll~c• or 371... flit to • ·Prcifttllonaf Survtyor
Mergerat lluoklay ai
,.....,

eountW.....

at, Pll(lt 17, Mt1g1 Coul)ly

GALLIACO

Ofllcllll Atcordt. · . '· ·
Till! above ciMcrlbtd rul
111111 hM been aeelgnecl

Audllor'e PMotl Nundltr oe.

00221.0011.

Alto 1 1173 Torch mobile .
home; LD. Hl141310, Olilo:'
Ctrllfleatt ot Tille

183000111111.

o

¥111111.

• •·

•

.

•

•

By JIM FREEMAN
Tim•• Senllnel Stan
POMEROY -

·In economic
~;~r:·~~~ll;i:ke fishing. the hard·
e1
thai first "keeper."
Early
last
·year,
Meigs
County
Eco·
nomic Development director
Perry Varnadoe
predicted that by
· the end of 2002,
Meigs County
would
have
·J_,OO() new jobs.
V.mlldOe
Tuesday's
announcement
by Jolin Archer, vice presidenl/gen·eral manager of Bedin Inc.•. a manufacturer of customi~ athletic uniforms, to~~te In Tuppcli Plairis,
reduced thll number to 915..
"The fi,.t ones are the ·hardcit,"
Varnadoe Aid. "It takes 100 contacts
to gel a prospect, 50 prospects to get .

l'erma ol Stilt: 10% doWlt .

day of. nit, batancot on
delivery of dtecl. Sold
aublect to eeerued r~•l ·
..tile IIXII and mo~u• •
homlllxn.

. . _ M. Saulllly
1 (14),1121), t (21) 3T

·

. '

,-

&lt;t· nitF
· *
1.

\(

I

plate industry analysis, collect data,
pinpoint target markets and support
nmea-Sentlnel ·SIIifr
.
GALLIPOLIS -· Marketing their conclusions with financial and.
tourism in Gallia County is the goal statistical data.
The students are the direction of ·
of a group of Ohio University stuDr.
Jane Sojka, an assistant profes·
dents who came to Gallipolis Friday
sor
at
OU's main campus in Athens.
to see the area first-hand.
"The
students have good ideas,
The students are developing pro·
.posals to increase the county's . but they didn't really know whalto ·
expeCt beforehand," Sojka said.
attractiveness for visitors.
"They were really impressed with
Rhonda Cox, director of the Ohio
what
they had to work with and the
Valley Visitors Center, said the
usetsthat
we have to promote, such
OVVC, which promotes tourism in
Gallia, has worked for two years to as the Ariel Theatre and the French
· bring the senior ,marketing students Art Colony." she added . ..!'hey were
shocked at the beauty of the commuto Glllipolis to conduct research .
w~i~ \!C~ pleased witli the nity and are ready lei begin working."
~
response," she said. '
Jan
Thaler,
the
teeuurer
of the
The students will be responsible
OVVc
board
of
directors,
cave
the
for preparing a slrategic marketing
students
a
tour
of
the
downtown
plan for not only the Downtown dis- area, including local shops. Two stu-.
trict, but for the enti~e ~ounty. They
have been directed·to create a comP.l•..• - Tourlern, Pege A3

/I

..

q5,450*

•

• 3800 V-8 Power
• Power Wlndowa&amp; Locka
• Till&amp; Crulu

1999•Chevy

19110 Oldamobllt
Intrigue Sedan

Lumina Sedan

~4,850*

q4,350*

~

'

a

.• Powtt Wlndowt &amp;
• Tift Crulu

Windon Locka

a

LoCu
'

:, tWe

•l'ully LOidecll

•
II

.

-

'

*?

.-

~'

'

l·IJOO-UII ~ UH

w w·w. rtj go l'f~ CO'Iil
'

;·

•r' .

f

..

VISit OU~ WEB$!YE AT: wwW.tomPeclen;com
.

..

..

. CZ)

'.

Olalll hiQ tl .

.

' &lt;I,

£

·'·

,. ., '
.,

GOD;-COlJNTRYAND THE CONSTITuTION

cwo centuries old: "Congrc;sS .sliall
mab no lavi respecting an establish-

AP Religion Wrlt!tra •

.you· need to hit The Trail.

~·

:~·'

Good Morning

·RfCHARD
~y.:~uUAueaucH·
inil.. ·· .:•··~····~mbreuarevolved·
aioundr6' ~ofds. ·Q';
~=*l!re~
• ·~•·ent··,&gt;· ba·ttlefleld
1n· OhiO
H. owruHG
,
:Jj
''· .U
'
'

• Air Condltlonlilg
• nit e. Crulu -

WINTER. What a miserable tlme for golf. Unless you head for the -sunny
l!Juth and the red-hot Robert'rrent Iones GolfTrai!. Last year, ·over 5,000
golfers from Minnesota toQk advantage of the beautiful courses, the nice
weather and ·the low rates to experiertce'what th~ .
ALABAMA'S
New Yorl! Time.s call~d 'some of the best public
golf on.Eanh. • And while -we can't guarantee·
the weather, we can prqmise yQu gfeat golf.
• ' . ,Call for infotlllati&lt;!n abot~t our 3-d~y/2-night golf
an\f hotel pac.ka~ ill low·as $162.

. i,

:rhe d~~~~ ~ges ~~-~ §~R~c:\tion'of- ch~rch~ stat~ .

•

-

P I - -JoN, P1ge A3

By MILLISSIA RUSSELL

• •

•

a visit, and 2S visits to land a company."
Bellin, Vaniadoc said, is the
answer to the question: "If Meip ·
County is such a great place; why
aren't people locating the~e'l"
So far, Varnadoe said he hu
focused his efforts on areu witli low
unemployment ratci, like Cohambus. He seeks areas cloac by where
Meigs County's strengths ...,.. good
quality people to work - 1IR their
weaknesses.
Varnadoe said he hu diliCOve~ed •
. people in Col~mbus don't have an~ ·
particular feelings about Meip •
County; good or bad, they just don't
realize it .exists. Thai's ~TJO.thin&amp;.:
Varnadoe is trying to .chance by 1·
· developing an image for the .eounl)'~
an image reflected in the !lbamber
of Commerce's lnicmct website 11\at
touts Meigs . Cou'nty as ~ob'fo•s
South CouL •
"Low taxes; labor thai 1works
hard;· that's the message we're
. putting out," he 'said.
.
• Further, Varnadc&gt;e's focus hu
been-on smaller bullnc-..; .typicil'
Jy employing· 25-100 people, in a .:
variety of industries. He said such a
blend of smaller, diverse industry is

OU students target
Gallia Co~ tourism

;.
I

1999 Oldamobllt
Elghty-Eigh(Sedan

. •

departmeill screened ·residents' blood sugar and blood
pressure levels, as well as offering tree flu vaccinatiOns
and perfonning other health checks. Shown here are some
healthy views from the fair. (Millissia Russell phota;)

he Gallia County Health Deparu.nent spon:
sored a Health Fair Thursday at First O.urcbof
the Nazarene, Gallipolis. With the h,elp of local
businesses and heai!Jt care providers, the health

Propally Adclre11: 14741:
Curti• Hollow Rotd,
Alldavllll, OH 41772
Alii latalt Appral1"' AI:
112;100.GO.· Tllli real~~~
cenolbeiiCIIcllor lnalhllll
two-lhlrd1 lh• appralaecl.
,

Meigs director:
First ones are
the hardest

'

•

•

Betli·n·move·
may-spark
more in'tereSt

.

.

AIUtin 62. Dtdlas ]9Cent. Oklahoma 65. Came-ron 49
Delta St. '30, Cent Arkansas 68
W1 Central 73. Ouathita 70
Hardill-Simmons 73. SUI RD'-'l St. .''U
Harding 70, SE Okluhonl0167
· LSU 82. Arkansas 69
McNeese St. 70. Tex.ns-san Amonio 5.l
Oklahoma Baptil t 78. WDylgnd Bnptist69
Oklnhomn Christian 75. St. Gregory 's 4-1
Ok.lilhonln 9tY 7~. S. Nm:urene 71

·.

""·

mt

tmes

'\"'''•

. .

•

•

Southwest

East

AlbriaiK 7~. O\es1nut Hill 46
Alderson•Broaddus ~4. Bluefield St 68-0T
Amherw16~. Babson 59
811tc11J. Colby 71
Bowdoin 1-:\. Plymouth St. 69
Cem. ConnectiCUI St. 69. St. Fran ci~ . NY~~ ·
Concord 78. Da\li l &amp; Elkins 60
Cortland St. 81. Alfretl47
Curry 7l. Nlchols 19
Eliznbethtown 107. Bryn Mu\\•r 16
Fordham 79. Temple 78

Padfir Dlvillon
LA. Lal:m .

.

Miami,·Ohio 85, N. Illinois69
Michi1an St. 78, ladiana 56
Mid-Am fllawene 7.5 , CU!vet·Siotkton 66
Mount Marty 74, Sioux Fall• 67
N. IOwa 72. Illinois St. 53
Oakland, Micfl. 71, Valparaiso 64
Ohio St. S3,1?urdue 5I
Ohio Va11ey 80, Ohio Dominican 76
Ottawa, Kan.'69, Tabor 43
SIU·Edward1ville 66. Wii.·Parbidc 64
SW Miuouri St. 69, S. IllinOis 41
Sterling 62, Southwestem,'Kan. 52
Wayne, MiCh. 61, Saginnw Valley St. 45
William J~ell ,71, Missouri Valley 36
Wii .-Oiftn Bay 70, Detroit S6
Wis.-Milwaukce 70, Cleveland St. 69
Younsatown St. 88, W. llliooi1 Sl

NCAA Division I
women's scores ·

Mldwnt Dlvltion .
Utah .. ................................. 23
San·Antonio.__·....................... 24
Mi nDesola............................. l8
Denver ... ..... ... ..... .... ......... ,_17
D;lltas ..........., ..................... 11
Houston .................. ,......... .... l l
Va nco u v~r.
.. .....10

Mary 77, Minot So. '67

, 11

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ium

Beth111y, Kan, 85, M~non SS
,.
' Demel. Kaa. 49, Kaaw Wesleyan 29
8.-.d~y S9, IDdiiNO Sl S4
Butler 96, Loyola. Ul. 61
c.dinal Stritcb 92, Illinois Tech 47
Central St., Ohio 7S, Mount Vernon Nazarene S9
I;&gt;ickinson St. 70, Valley Ciry St 64
Dordt 66, Dakota Weslyn S7
Eure!ca 83 , UDCOln ~ri51ian 24
Evangei73,.Graceland .56
Feni1 St. 72. Gannon !19
Fonlbonne 30, Weatminuer, Mo. 66
Hillsdale 79, Michipn Tetb 71
III.·Oiicaao 63, Wnght St. 49
lnd.-Pur..IRdpl•. 78, Cbicaao St. s1 .
Iowa 80, Minncsol&amp; 51
Jamestown 68; Mayville: St. 64
Uwi172, S. lndiana SJ

Aa. lntemalional77, Arbnus St. 67
North Tau 74, UC Su11 Batbara 67
Nortbweslem St. 65, Stephen F.Auslin S6

4

J.IS

Midwest

Younastown St. 76, W. Illinois 59

8

4

Valdo"• S1. 8~ Albony, .Go. !8
.
V&amp;aderbill 60. Kentucky SS
.
W. Kentucky I04, Louisian&amp;-Lafayette 66
William Carey 59, Xavier, NO 57
Winln te 1~ . Gardner-Webb 62

WikMilwaukee 82, 111.-ChieagO64

10

1).0
1).0

UAQ 84. Houston SQ.;OT

Chicaso St. 63, lnd.-Pur.-lndpls. 60 ·
Ckvcland St. SJ, Butler 4S
Dctr;oil7~. Writhl S1. 6S
Ohio St. 5.\, W!scomin S I
Penn St. 82. Northwe11em 49
ValpanisO ~8. Oakland. Mich:o- 56
Wis.·Orttn Bay 64, Loyola, Ill. Sl

Waterford
~1ema
-

.

South . . ,,

13
16

0
0

.

. Cent. Connecticut St. 81. S1. Frllllci•. NY 79
MW:nmn 70. Loyola. Md. 6$
'Rider 89, lnna U

EIEIL

0
0
0
0

Elon 77, Ubeny 12
Aorida Atlantic 74. bcloonville 68
Fort Valley St. 86, Moois Brown 47
CeorJill 78. Florida 71
.
OeorJia Sr. 168, Jacksonville ~r. 61
~&amp;in Tech .5S , NOJth Carolillll ,44
Joh111on C. Smith 75. S!. Paul'~ J5
Kentucky Wesleyan 89, St Joscph·s. lnd. 65
Ll'lmbuth 59, ·Campbellsville 54
Lre 76: Manin Methodist 7S-20T
l.e:noir-Rhynr 64, Tu ~culwm .U
Limdtonc 67. Pfeiffer 62
Lipscomb 73. Lyon 67
lon&amp;wood 89, Mount Olive !16
Mempbi5 89, Soulh Florida 84 Methodist 64. Greensboro S6
Mi'-'Jiuippi College 74, Le:Tournrau +&amp;
Miuiuippi Sc. 82, Mississippi 58
MUITil)' St. 62. E. l11inoi1 50
N. Kentucky 74, Quincy 4S
N.C. Cenlrlll ~4 , Oi11. of Columbin 49
New Orleans 71 , South Alabama 67
Presbyterian 84. Mars Hi11 70
Ruse: 74. Stilltm~n 46
Sa m Houston St. 11, Ni c boll~ S1. 6.\
Stetson ~2, Cent. Florida 'I
Tenn.·MIInin 71, SE MissOIJri 65
Tennessee: St. 74, Mo~hcad St. 68
Tex[li-ArlinJI01166, SE Louisiana 46
Transylvnnia 59, Brescia 56

II J'b(lieAix, 8 p.m.'

Trimble

tlam

•
Barton 81, St. Andrew'a4-4
Belllf'lfli.ne 72. lnd.-Pur.-Ft Wayne 68 ,
Belmont ,\bbey 89, Queens. N.C. 65 ,
Berry 80, Blue Moumain Sl
Brewton Puter 9.5, LaGrange: ~S
Cllllpbcll 88, San\roo164
Clenuon 71, N.C. State S6
'
Cumberland, Ky. 82, North Greenville 57
Dillard 74, Loyola, NO 11
Duke 82, Wake Forest 48

CLEVELAND ll Sacnmenro, 9 p.m.

1

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St--.. .

E. Kentucky 8 1, ~ustin Peay 78

East

... M

Highs: 50s Lows: 30s
0.11•1 on Pip AI

·South

Miami 11 Vancouver. 3 p.m.

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Partly cloudy

Auburn 69, Alabama .51

Sunday'• 18111e5

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60, HuDler 42
Net.tm~~o~69 , &amp;eaver S4
l'eaoSt ,.,llliooi•66
R01CfWiiHanu48, .f,1nenoa 11 ..
Socml Hun 79, M""""'"dl, N.J. 6!
Sakm-Ttikyo 60, W. Va. Wes)eyan ji7
St. FrMCis, Pa. 74, UMBC 39

So. Jooopb'•7l.

roll

-weedy's view:
The denigration
of life

St. Joseph'•· Mainr 63, New &amp;Jiand 41
Trioity. COM. 7), Won:alef Tecb 49
Villanovt &amp;5, Pen• 16
Wuner 6S. Fairlcqh Oi~;:kiuon Sl
. Weflesky S7, Tuft• 41
.
West Uberty 9&lt;&amp;, W. Vir)lllil Tech 13
Whcaum, tdUI. 6f. Woroelln' SL '9
Whet:1ina Jesuit 84, w. Vuainia St. 78

MDclroi~ I p.m. I
A - • a.;..,., 11.10 p.m.
Mlanoi • Deow&lt;r. 9 p.m.
'
Sa AIMoeio It Suttle., 10 p.m.
CLEVELAND at VIQCOIIYCI', IQ p.m.
Ponlaacl •l'tloenix, lO:lO p.m. .

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Celebrating Ufe:
Amatter
of heart

NFL:
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&lt;r.RU,Miis; .:.. Longlfterlhe men~ofrclfgion,orprohibiting!he
h1gh school· foolllill game free excicisc thereof."
... .
ended, Lisa:tlerdahL 1!J11 Pat.
~uit16 )l.:ords in the United States
Mounce lit On wet blcache~a, talk• Constitution. Yet hardly a day goes
in&amp; intently under a shared umbreiiL by wjd\out a ·fiaht 11ver what they
.The "Yo 36·yeu•old mOibers . meal\ qr,how.lo live by them. Should
wCl'e disc..S.ina something&lt;lhl'y the ,_. Commandments be ·an dis"
cared deeply about:. the .prayers play. in courtrooms and classrooms
. brOadcast .wer the intercom ai their in'· Kentucky? Can _'a student-led
children's schools in the l'ohloiOc arlduatlon prayer be recited in a
Sohool District ·
.
, ~..-yland hi&amp;h ~I? Shauld a
-~ Henlahl oppqe¢ the prayei'l and ' New Yptk Clty teacher be fired for
WI$ lakin&amp; the coJI!jty school district · ~ prayers for ~ drowned stu·
10 ~rt. Mounce h~ oraani~ the dent? Can a·Californiacompany for·
·to,wn to fight b~~~:k. • .
·
bid a,Sikh from carrying a ccremo·· "Lisa, don't you be!ieve in nial claapr sianifyin&amp; his faith?
God?" M!limce asked. ,
The 16 long-ago words foment
\~.Yes I~ dO," ~enWII ~eplied. ·.
dis~ment, cllli cou"- and feed a
!'Then ho..y :ean 'you be qai111t conlinulna blttld{ over basic beliefs.
prayer In yqur"chilchn's sehools?" , At siake: IIOibin&amp;leu thin the P.~- .
.
· ' of iellaioft Iii llie' public lifc1of ,the'..
uked Mou(tcc. . , · ·
"Beclllllt1--~,nobody ' bel~ in United States.
.
, '
God the
way," He""-"1 ~d.
,
. · ,. , . . . ·
T~e · disagreement 'lndiJr _11he ' PleMe"- ,.,..,.._, Page A2

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·By :TfltA~JODIIIilci. Preu
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The American Civil Liberties· Union asked the
.. Some 'of t!'t ·!DaJor' disputes, ;IQ Ohio l~at. ·ha~e appeals,eourt to revenc a 1998 decision by a fcdel'l!l

·:: focused.on the separation of church and' state:
·
judge in Columbus that ·allowed Ohio to display -~
., . ·
·
motto u Ions • it docs not cite the biblical origin.
. . • 1Uederal judge in Oeveland. ruled in December
Within ·days of the rulin&amp;. workers installed a
that the state's school voiiCher proaram llnconstitution· bronze plaque bearing the state's seal and the m9tto in
ally~ lax money for ~eligious inslnii:tioil. ' •
a plaza sidewalk leading to one of the'maln entrances
'" The procram gives needy Qevdand -children in of the Slltehouse in Col.umbus.
~
kindei'JI(ten lhrouah sixth grade up to $2,500 in ' 'fhe.sllte arcued thai the motto docs not compel
· tuition vpuchers ,to attend priv~ lch&lt;i\lli. Moat of ~e pcop!e to believe anythina and that to some people it
3,543 children enrolled.'IJ'!IIn religious-schools. · · ·' would nO! have a religious connotation.
U.S. District Judr Solomon Olivet Jr. ordered lhe · o ' ,.
1.JIIl?p1111 shut down, but not. until a piom;.! 1JPP!11a1 .'· • A Clncinnati man says he will appeal the dis~lual ,
. C411' be l\clrd•. Tlioulands of stu~nts ·enroJied ill ilic of'hi• IIWiuitthat chaiiC!Igcil Christmas u a federal
: o~ we~e alloWed to,stay in.lhcir wuchcr schools holiday•
ntil then.
• '
· • •
'
·· Richard Qanulin, a nim·Christiin, iued the federal
, •
..
:
gOvernment hi August 1998, arguing it wu improper
• ~ 6Jh U.S. Clrcuil Court of Appeals in Qncin- ·for Con.- to make a Chrillilll Q!lCUion into a
ati It 99JIIidcrini whether .Ohio's f1!0114&gt;, "Witl! Qo!1. national holldly.
I thin• lie pdls~b!t;" viol- thc U.s. Conltltuti6ri• .,. ·. U.S. Olltrict Judge Susan J. Dlott in Cincinnati
aaovernmenl endonement of.~i&amp;lon.
·
·
rcjoctecl. the ChriibnM challenp in December. Con·
Ohio took th• m(\IIO'in t!ls9 from the bibllc:ef writ.inp of't.1itihew. ~ · ' · ' ·
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Page A2 • 6unbQ CJhnn -6ntlllel

Sundey, ~ 11,1000

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

"free exercise" of reliaJon. It l1 "It's mt:Jinly ignorance. Reu,ion is a lttodtJCiw for 11 lot
were &amp;iven th~ rlptto pray u loftg
understood to guarantee everyone the
• u It did not dasruptechool.
••
ofschool adminislnltors: in doubt, klep it.
Daubenmire aaid the clilpllle
freedom to worship without govern... had been emotionally hard on him
ment interference.
from PageA1
from PageA1 ..,....
UWyer ....................
and that he could no Joqcr !)like
. This Is the ground on which many
• ptomlnent EYWlgll: al
the n~csaary c:ommitmeat to the
church-state clispuieS' are debated. Is a
job.
He ~ill c:ontillue !P be a spe.
· The U.S. Supreme Court, the • Texas police officer who wears a
areas waa "merely actnowledalna
cial
education teacher at the
ultimate arbiter of the Constitution, half-inch-long cross pin on his oollll'
In Adams County, Ohio, says the as it didn't teach "religious doctrine
· the secular cultural upecta of
achool.
struggles with how to apply thoae 16 officially favoring Christianity over Rev. Susan Kelley Roads, "In 202 or sectarian interpretation of the
Christmas by declaring Christmas
words, making many of its key deci- other religions, which is constitution• years, we have agreed on only one Bible."
to be a legal public holiday," she
• The city of Stow in nonheast
sions on 5-4 votes.
ally forbidden? Or is he freely prac- thing." Namely, posting the Ten
Three years later, the citizens of
said in lier ruling.
· The court has tended to avoid con- tieing his faith, which is his constitu- Commandments on school property Pontotoc say the majority ruled any" The court believe&amp; that the Ohio agreed in Fe~ary to replace
Croversial religion cuea in recent tiona! right? What about a gospel in defiance of a Supreme Court rul- way and the climate for school prayer
majority of Americans, O.riltians a croas on the city seal with · the
years, but it will soon hear oral argu- choir in a public school? Or Muslim ing. Citizens· responded to a legal has never been better. Every morning
and non-Chriatians alike, WOIIId motto ~· In God We 'Trust," ending
ments on whet~ public schoolS can public school students seeking a challenge by posting them all over before school, students gather volunlikely continue to celebrate lhe sec- a 2 1/2-year dispute with the
.
give students the unfettered right to place to observe midday prayers? Or town.
.
·
larily for 10 minutes of prayer in the
ular ~nd tcligioua aspecta of ACLU.
The ACLU had filed a lawsuit
pray at footbal.l games. In o-rnber, an .Indiana bus driver who plays
Others are ignorant of the law.
. school gym.
O.ristmaa on o~. 25 each year
the coun heard aJgUmentaon whether Christian music as she drives?
In small, predominantly Protestant
"It's important to start the day
whether or not Christmas Day is a challenging the use of the religious
symbol on the city emblem. U.S.
taxpsyers' money can be used to buy
For years, religious activists were towns all over America, the school with a quiet time to give yourself to
legal public holiday," she said.
District Judge Dan ·Polster ruled
computers and other instructional on the defensive, says Jay Sekulow, a day .still begins as it always has ~ · God," says one student, Miranda
materials for religious schoolS.
conservaliv~ Protestant strategist and
with a prayer. "Sometimes tbey're Andrews.
• A head hi!Jh school foot \Jail against the city in December 1998.
In his Dec. 18 radio address, Pres- chief oounsel for Pat Robertson's not doing it maliciously or stubbornThe town made thai point again i.n
ooach who was sued by the ACLU
The l~wsuit in Stow, an upscale
i\lent CHnton said, "Finding the prop- American Genter for Law and Jus- ly,': says historian Edwin Gaustad, 1997·, when. Superintendent Jerry
in J'unc' for leading his players in · . Akron suburb, led to a referendum
er place forfaith in our schools is a lice. They were always trying ta author of "Church and State in Amer- Horton opened School Pride Day
· prayer resigned Jan. 6.
in 1997 in which 57 percent Of
· ·compiCl&lt; and emotional maHer for prove they were 'not violating the ica." .':The question has never come with a prayer. The ACLU saw that as .
Dave Daubenmire, who had Stow voters said they wanted to
many 'AmericaQs." .
COnstitution's ban on " establishment up."
a willful violation of the law.
ooached at London High School, a keep the scat; which tl\e city Had
.When the Constitution was vew, of religion."
At the other end of the spectrum
While Horton says the new
public school, since 1989, was used on its docllments and vehicles
the United States was a Dedgling
Now, he .5ays, they are beginning are school administrators who pro- ' arrangement has been a success, Hersued on behalf of parents wlio for 32 years.
complained about the prayer sesnation alinging to the Eastern to get better results by asserting their hibit thin~ the court has deemed dahl is not so sure. Three of her chil·
Raymond Vasvari, legal direcSeaboard of .a largely unexplored constitutional 'rights to free speech constitutional, such as after,hours dren have talcen "Biblical History in
sions.
tor of th'e ACLU in Ohio, called the
continent. The young nation was and free praCtice of religion.
school Bible clubs.
the Ancient Middle East," and she's
"'seHI~ment reached in October motto "In God We Trust," which
remarkably diverse for its time. ScvSekulow says his gro~p fielded
"It's mainly ignorance,'' says ' convinced. it's Sunday school under
prohibited Daubenmire from initi. appears on U.S. currency, " a bland
. eral competing Protestant denomina- about 102,000 citizen complaints in lawyer Steven McFarland, • promi· anoth.er name. The teacher, Mike
aling or leading students in prayer statement of general deism" but an
tions thrived in the original13 states, 1998, the latest number available. At nent Evangelical. "Religion is a Thompson, whose salary is psidby a
or other religious activities while improvement over the "denomina. along with a smanering of Jews and any one time, hundreds of them are in headache for a lot of school admini&amp;- · group of Protestant ministers, would
teaching, coaching or conducting tionally specific representation of
extracurricular events. Students the cross."
. Catholics. Religious differences the courts.
trators: 'If in doubt, keep it out."'.
not discuss his course.
·
··
between such groups as CongrcgaMounce ~!=.I!'embers her first reac. Another complicating 'faCtor: The
TWo of his students, Andrews and
tionalists and Quakers were·strongly lion to HerdiWI's lawsuit: "I just felt law of.the land can V31'Y depending I5Qe Ann Harlow; say tbey learned in ·
felt and hotly debated.
like someone was coming· in and try- on where you live and what year it is. class thai lhe entire Bible can be·
•
: The founders sought 'to ·create a ing to change a part of us."
Lower federal couns 1\ave iSsued proven 1:,1literally ttue. ''They found
society open to all - to keep the
Mounce grew up 'listening to conflicting rulings on numerous remains of So&lt;lom and &lt;Jomorrah in
nation forever free of the religious Christian prayers on the school inter- church-state issues that have not been the Dead Sea," '!IIY' Harlow, an asser. '
Svars and persecutions that had rav- com and wanted her children to do resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court. .lion that would su!'prise most biblical
aged Europe for centuries.
the same. The morning prayers Thai means a practice can be consti- scholars.
: Today, the founders' words help shielded them from temptation, she tulional in one state an~ unconslituHarlow says Thomjison tries to
gov~m a far different United States l!elieves,.and reminded them of their tiona! in another.
expose students to different religious
;- a nation of Mormons and MuS- accountability to God.
Mcfarland notes, students in sev- points of view. They visited a synaSubscribe today. (740) 446-2342
lims, Baptists and Buddhists, Scien-.
"We took it for · gnuited prayer era! southern states may initiate Jlfld· · gogue. for example, during a class
lologists and Christian Scientists.
would always be there,'' she says. .
uation prayers; in several nonher~ trip to Memphis to learn apout the
: And the words seem harder and ·
Sh~ agreed with Herdahl that the states, it's against the law.
Jewish perspective on biblical ·histo- -;;;;;:;;~;::===!::=====::;:=========;l
harder to apply.
·
government shouldn!·l •tell ..people
Furthei'JllOI'er-- becau6•·- ~lh&amp;- .. ry. Bul-il-w~ the city!s only Messian- . r;
: For Herdahl and·Mounce, and for what to believe. "But I don't believe Supreme Coun is given to close votes ic synagogue, whose doct~ne-:= that
many Americans . across thl: land, a second-grader saying a prayer is on church-state cases, the retirement' Jews must accept Jesus as their savior
)hesc matters are no mere exercises in establishment of religion,'' she said.
of a few judges means something - would offend most Jews.
legalism; they are woven into the fab.
Mounce, a school board member's prohibited one year might be legal
So we continue to argue, but to
ric of daily life.
wire, tried to understand ·Heqlahl's next year. "1\vo new appointments what end? Does the perpetual debate
FULL SERVICE TAX PREf»ARATION
"I'm more spiritual than reli- feelings. But she couldn't l)elp won- would make a tremendous differ- over religion 's place in public. life
gious," Herdahl, now 39, says, si):ling dering how a womari who baptized ence," says Marc Stem, lawyer for make us more or less tolerant of each
INDIVIDUALS • PARTNERSHIPS • CORPORAnONS • PAYROLL
in the trailer sbe and her husband her children in the Lutheran church the American Jewish Congress.
other? Does .it protect liberty or
share with their childn;n. "Church," · could object' to a simple Christian
Many conservatives look forward weaken .it? Is religion better off or
she says,'' is in your hean."
· prayer. Sure, a.prayer in. Jesu~· name with hope to a change in the makeup worse?
.. , .
· 1•
; Raised as a Christian Scientist in might offend a Buddhist or a Jew, but ofthe coun, which they say has tram. This muddiness- what to teach,
New Location!
San Diego, she remembers class- she had yet to meet a Buddhist or Jew pled'on the people's rights to exercise· h~w to. teach it, what to separate and
33105 Hllland Road . f ,,: ·
•mates teasing her for. refusing va&lt;;ci- · in Ecru.
,
.
their religions freely.
·
what to un,ite ~ keeps reaching into
.. Pomeroy, Ohio 457~1j;P! , I
·nations. Her six children, like her
Maybe so, but Mississippi · is . "The cultural trend of leaving many spheres of American life. And
husband, were baptized Lutheran.
becoming more diverse, says Neal .God out of public life helps account . the; fight continbes iti Ecru. .
.
' (740) 992-9~5
Aftq lier family moved to Ponto- Biggers Jr., the U.S. District Colin for godlessness 'in public education, · . Pat Mounce wishes Herdahl
·
Hours: ·
: ioc iii 1993 to :..., near her husband's judge who heard the Herdshl case. crime rates al)d ljlisrespect for par- · wquld ju~t let Poptotoc; be ~ontotoc.
Mon.-Fri-9:00 am Or\tll•6:00 pm
' parents, she disco,;"Cd that Christian Muslims are building a mosque in . ents,'' ~~ys Whitepead, Pontotoc
".! ·tell he~. 'Lisa, you're wrong,'"
Sat. 9:00 am until' 5:00
:'prayers were being bro~ ~cast daily by nearby Oxford.
School District's lawyer. "It creates Mounce says. "This is a Christian
, : students on the publiC·I(o~'ess sys- · The Rev. Steve Pawelk, a priest at the~ of ~vemment hostil- community. Our school does not
;,·, :. ',_' ,.. , 'i. '
)• !-···' .·,:;
· !em. She didn't think it was nl!r'l for. one of tWo Catholic churches.in the . ity to religion' insieaCI .of ~ f9l' . belong !o. t~e :ACLU.'"., . · . .
..
:)ny group to he preaching to her ch;!- area, says "some people here don't and protection offtee e~erci5e of reliHerdahl · appreciates Mounce's
dren in school.
•ven consider Catholics Christian.'' gion."
fonhriglttness. "I've bad a lot of
· : When she complained. she says, Sot.:e of his parishioners in this preThe religious right champions a respect 'for h~r through all this," Her: administrators suggested her 7-year- dominantly Protestant county feared constitutional amendment, reintro-" ilahl says. "She has a Chriltian aui~old ·son, Jason, wear earphones to making waves about the school duced in the U.S. Ho~ of Represen- tude. She . di~ with what you're
: block out the broadcasts. David, her prayers. But the Constitution .exists; tatives in September, tliat would doing1 but she won't treat you like
· l1-year-old, left the room during a he says, to protect the rights of . legalize prayer and the recognition of . you're the SQUm of the Earth.''
: Bible class she considered too sectar- mimirities.
. "religious belief, heritage or tradiAnd that is one of Ecru'slessohs.
: ian,,.When his classmates asked why,
In PontotoC, Herdahl was seen as tions on public propeny, including . Americans disagree, and perhaps
' she says, the teacber told them David the voice of liberalism. Rumors Dew schools." An identical bill failed to always.will, over' malte!S of church
: 'didn't believe in God.
that she was an outside agitator paid reach the needed two-thirds margin in and state. But the debate is never over
: · School officials say the earphones by the ACLU.
1998.
the fundamental. right to religious
: were .for listening to educational
"That's what was going around:
Separationists, including many freedom embodied in those 16 words
• )apes. They deny that the teacher 'She came from the North on purpose religious groups, oppose the amend- 'from two centuries ago. Wl)at Ameri.·
to do this,"' says Joe Manin, owner ment and say keeping government cans argue about is how ~t to prac- ·
· called David an unbeliever.
Herdahl spent a year trying to of Joe's Barbecue, which he calls the and religion apan is vital to maintain- li~ it.
-:s:hange the system. Finally, in late town's ''gossip shop."
ing the country'~ unparalleled reliU~like so many people throughout
: ;1994, she wrote to the Ariaerican
Herdahl laughs at the suggestion, · gious liberty.
. history and even tpday, Americans 'db
: .civil Ubenies Union and the .Wash- but she and her family have felt the
The Constitution's words concern- not settle their relijlious differences
· Jngton-based · People ·for the Ameri. repercussions. Herdahl says she lost · ing religion .an; "a formula to enable . with blood. They'debate them in leg: pan .Way, two groups that believe her job at a convenience store when people to have radically different · islative chambers a,itd mannered ·
: ·church·and stale should be kept strict- customers threatened a boycott. And beliefs about the most fundamental counrooms.
• ly separated. Both agreed to.represent , her children have faced flak·at school. questions of existence and live
Or eve~ whit~ sharing an umbrel·
"Kids said Mom had no respect together in relative peace,'' sa;Ys Dou- Ia. ·
·
: ,ller.
: Her lawyers maintained that both for anything," says Richard, now 14. glas Laycock of the University: of
: ~he PA-system prayers and the Bible
"I kept getting jumped in the bath~ Texas Law School.
• .classes violated the Constitutional room. But Mama did what was right.
In June 1996, Judge Biggers ruled
John .Ford won an Academy
: \:lause prohibiting "an establishment They were breaking the law.'' ·
that the Pontotoc School District's I\ward in 1940 for best director for ·
.student-led .intercom prayers were· "The Grapes ?f Wrat~." Jane ·Dar; ·Of religion.'' The clause, as interpret- ' In that, Ecru is not alone.
: :Cd by the.Supreme Court, means that
·Supreme Coun has issued seem- . uncon.stitutional. He said' ·. p"'yer~ . well won·best supportang actress for
. :government must not do anything to ingly definitive rulings on a number could he held only outside of.the reg- the same film.
.
&gt;"aid one religion, aid all religions or of church-state. issue&amp;, banning gov· ular school day, and only if voluntacy'.'
I
I
ll
I I I I I • :~ : :
ernment-sponsored prayer, doctri: and led by stu!lents.
' ·
; :Prefer·one religion over another."
1
• • Michael K. Whitehead, a Kansas naire Bible study and the study of
The judge also rut~ the sch~f DEADUNE FOR PURCHASE O~- DOG UCEN~ 18 JANUARV.31. FHi !l!'e Four Dollars :
h. d
.., ele Kenn•l .fHIIre TWenty DoUera .......00'. To · obtain .
:·.citylawyerwhorepresentedlhePon- creationism in public schools. But couldnolonge.rtreatBablestudyastt . ("',.()()) f ·
,' 4otoc Sc~ool District, countered that communities throughout America hnd. Instea.d, tt could offer a state- ' ...., . or IIC
og, ma1I or ,.m .•
•
~:forbidding the student-led prayer continue to insist on all of the above. approved course "Biblical History llcen" by mell, complete 1n~m eppllcetlon to: Nenc;y Peltier, Cempbell, Melg' County :
: :would violate the clause guaranteeing
Some simply ignore tlie law.
of the Ancient Mlddle East,'' as long
Auditor, 100 E. Second Street; Pomeroy, OH 4570. En~lo" I "lf·llddrellld, etllmped :
envelope with 1 check for thl price of1hl UceMt.
.
.

Debate

'If

BUckeye

out'"

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·_Court takes up abortion, gay Scouts
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court is adding two explosive cases
to an already high-profile term, ~ing to ~ide whether states can ban a pro.cedure opponents call "partial birth abortion" and whether the Boy Scouts can
exclude homosexuals.
·
The justices announced Friday they will hear arguments in the two cases this
spring; decisions are expected by July.
The abortion case could yield the court's most important ruling on the issue
. :Since it reaffirmed women's constitutional·right to abortion in 1992.
.
: : The juslices will revfcw a Nebraska law that made it a crime for doctors to
perform the controversial procedure. A federal appeals oourt struck down the
law as unconstitutional.
'
"A constitutional crisis is calling out for a remedy," said abortion-rights
advocate Janet Benshoof of the Center for Reproductive Law &amp; Policy.
"What's at issue is whether a woman's interest in her health can be trumped by
a state legislattire's moral and p&lt;ilitieal statement about a fetus.~·
But Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns said, "I feel strongly thai states should
have the right to legislate 'in the area of panial-birth abortion. It's a barbaric procedure that I hope is brought to an end."
Although the cum:nt' controversy involves a specific procedure, abortionrights activists contend far more may be at stake. They say the eoun's decision
could broadly safeguard - or dramatically erode - abortion rights, depending oil what state legislatures arc allowed to consider when passing laws to reg·
ulate abonions.

-Utah land returned to tribe

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from PageA1
more "r~ession-proof' than one or
two large employers in a single
field.
.
Tuesday's announcement by
Bellin was, Varnadoe said, "the culmination of everything we've done
for a year." ·
He said the Community Improvement Corp. and others staned work·
ing with Bellin in February and
gradually persuaded the oompany
Meigs County was where it wanted
to he.
.
"They could have gone anyplace
... but we competed and we won,"

,;

i

1

•

Varnadoe said.
Last year, Lee Jacobs, the director of the Ohio Department of
Development, toured the Tuppers
Plains Industrial Park site and the
Great Bend area with an eye toward
development.
. The industrial park at Tuppers
Plains is under construction and Varnadoe said he is contact with firms
that arc expressing interest in the
site.
"It's only a matter of. time until
that (site) develops," he said.
Likewise, the AEP-owned Great .
Bend site is destined for development, he said.
"SOmething good is going to be .
there.... There aren't that many
pia~ along the Ohio River with
access to an interstate," he said.

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OW"EROFDOG--------------~------~----~----~---------•
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A1LANTA(AP)-Thefull111oon ,
...
'
is expected to tum brick red fpr more
.AD.PR.a.s ·--,.----------..:,_..;_~------.:..;..--'"'--'----.--:.------•
••
than hour Thursday in a lunar eclipse
visible throughout the Ameri~its.
•
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TqVINSH'
The
celestial
event,
the
first
lunar
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econd
total
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eclipse
w.ill
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be visible July 16 over the U.S. West
, • ......,, (7ol0) 992-1155.
We will dleck your llitormatloo and make a
Coast. And a panial ·solar eclip~e wm
eonwdlon
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be visil)le over all of North America
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The
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bv
degree' of eclipse will deCtea.ie&lt;
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Nm
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1'1\ursday night, the moon wm be
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N,... · or Ext. UN
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dille, peMII.y will~ M.OOfOrllnglttlg 1nd taG.CIOfOr Ktilnllllatntt.,
.
·
L--------------------------....,...--~--"'---:-' E. Schaefer, a Yale astronomer. H~
' 100 ~: B.econd StrHt
·
.
,
NANCY PARKlA CAMPBE
. LL
presented a talk on the eclipse Satur~
day at a. meeting of t~e American L.;P_OI;;.;m,;;..
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•-

• • • • •·• • • • • • •w •,. • • •. •. • ' • • • • • • • •·• • • • • • • •

Alleged plotter returns to school

CLEVELAND (AP) - Stares greeted Amanda Hatley .when she returned to
South High School after the holiday break.
,
It was the 6rst time the sophomore had been beck in the school since Octqber when she was suspended for her suspected pan in a plot by students to oommit a Columbine-style shOOiing rampage.
,
Four students admitted they plotted to kill their peers and teachers and will
be sentenced Jan. 25. Hatley and eight other students were cleared of wrong"
doing.
School officials say they unoovcrcd the deadly plot in time.
,
But Hatley's ·attorney, Avery Friedman, claims in a lawsuit that Mayqr
Michael R. White and school district officials picked out Hatley and other stu.
dents for suspension because of their race. South High is predominantly blacK,
as is the mayor, and all the suspects are white.
..
The lawsuit; filed last month, accuses White of violating Hatley's civjl
rights, a claim he denies.
·
~
"We do not believe that the lawsuit by Amanda Hatley has merit," White ·
said in a statement earlier this month. City officials d~lined ~urther oommel!l
SUit
CO...
this week.
"Our focus has been and c:Ontinues to be the well-being of the children and
CINCINNATI (AP) - This year, a jury may finally hear the governthe
safety of our schools,'' the mayor said.
ment's allegations tbat aircraft malcer Boeing Co. is liable for millions of
dollars in damages because of alleged faulty gears blamed in two Army heli.
copter crashes.
Lawyers on both sides said they thinlc the pending lawsuit in Cincinnati
"
federal court could go to trial as soon as this summer.
NOKill OLMsrnp (AP) - ..Three young people were killed in a ·twiiBoeing denies any wrongdoing or liability for any damages and has asked vehicle accident on a residential street in this Cleveland suburb Friday niglll,
a. judge to reconsider his ruling that the case shOuld go to trial, lawyer police said Saturday.
.
Mi!chell Ettinger said Friday.
.
· The accident happened about 10 p.m. Friday when the car the three were in
Whistle-blower Brett Rolly, a onetime engineer for a Boeing subcontrac- struck the car in front of them. The car went off the road and hit a tree.
•
tor, filed the complaint in 1995. The government later took over prosecution
Eric Polocy, 20, and his passengers, Shanna Conn, 1.5, and Robert Schuscht!,
of .the lawsuit. '
16, were killed. Police said all three were from the aeveland area, but thoy
U.S. District Judge S. Arthur Spiegel ruled Dec. 30 that they are entitled were unsure of which community.
"
to a trial to try to prove their claims. He did not set a trial date.
· 1\vo men i'n the other car were not hurt,
Roby.alleged that a company he worked for as a quality control engineer,
Police do not know the cause of the ~~2!:.!~~;.._----~
Speco Corp. .of Springfield, Ohio, produced faulty transmission gean. He
said Speco, a Boeing subcontractor, provided the gears for helicopter rotors
to Boeing and they were installed in hundreds of Boeing-made O.inook
transport helioopters sold to the Army.
1\vo of the Chinook CH-470 copters crashed, one in· Saudi Arabia, in
. 1991 during Operation Desert Storm, the other at Fon Meade, Md., in 1993,

"'\

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COLUMBUS (AP) - ·The Ohio FJections Commi.Sion will hear a complaint against a Republican lawmaker who sent fund-raising l~ers to state
employees at work, despite the lawmalcer's contention that it was an accident.
"I know of no public official that intentimially wants to violate the law,"
State Rep. 4'nn Olman of Maumee said Friday. "But with so many fingers in
your campeign, it's almost impollible lo not comll!il some technical violation."
Olman's Democratic opponent in the Nov. 7 election for House District 51,
John Billis, filed a complaint against Olman with the commission last week.
The hearing is Feb. 10.r
·
The complaint says Olman broke alate law, whicb prohibits people from
solicitina contributions from public employees while the employee is at work.
Olman contends Billis dOes not have the standing to file a complaint because
he did not have direct knowledge of an alleged violation, but instead read about
it in newspaper stories last week.
"From the very get-go, the moment I found out that this had occurred, I
in.vcstigated it internally, within ou5 campaign office, found outthe facts, and
shared 100 percent of the facts with the election commission," Olman said.
.
·

Tourism

'

• · • .be,
ECIIpse
WI 11
seen across U.S.

according to Roby's lawsuit. Injuries were reported but no one was killed.

: ' SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Eighty-four years after the federal government
: oonfiscated thousands of acres of potentially oil-rich land from the Nonhem ·
: Ute Indian tribe, Energy· ~retary Bill Richardson says the government is
· JUdy to give it back.
.
: · If Congress approves the deal, the 84,000 acres will be the largest return of
· Indian land in the continental United States..
: "The land is not. needed for national security anymore," Richardson said
friday after announcing the agr'eement at the tribe's headquaners in Fort Ouch·
esne, aboutllO miles southeast of Salt Lake City. "The right thing to do ia tum
• it back. They're the rightful owners."
·
·
.
• · But there's a caveat. Under the agreement, the tribe can open the land to oil
i.and gas drilling.,bu' will have to pay royalties to the government.
. The money will. help the government cover the $300 million oost ofreloacademic quancr in March, where
cating 10.5 million tons of radioactive rock and soil along the Colorado River
students will make their presentaleft over from the mining of uranium during the Cold War.
tions to the class.' The best of the .
''It is actually a moral issue in that the government has finally returned to us
bunch will be presented to the
from PageA1
what was taken from us without our oonscnt, •: said 0. Ro,land McCook, chairovvc.
~ (11811 of the tribe's governing body.
·
"Ten weeks for this project is
:: The land, believed to contain oil-rich shale depoSits, was jliven to the Utes dents were even chosen to bC "-ret · really pushing it." Sojka said.
• in 1882. But in 1916, on the eve ofthi: nation's entry into World War I, the fed- shoppers."
"This will be a great thing for the
:: era!.government took it beck to create. a reserve supply of oil for the Navy Ocet.
"We wanted the stud~nts to get oommunity," Cox said "They will
the full understanding of what it is definitely bring fresh insight to the
like to he a tourist in the area,• Cox · revitalization proj~t."
said.
"They thought that if they were
An Ohio Department of Develop":. PASADENA, Calif.
.
(AP)- President Clinton said his drug adviser's effon with the rest of the group, they ment block Jlflnl totaling $378,600
, lo initiate revitalization ofthe down·
; :to insert anti-drug messages in prime-time television programs was not an would get treated differently."
The
marketing
plans
will
be
town was recently awarded ' to the
; ·attempt to rob networks of creative freedom.
' ~: · ''There was no attempt to regulate content or.tell people what they had to released at the end of OU's current . city.
f&lt; put into It," he said Friday. "Of course, I wouldn't support that."
~lXXJXXXXXIXXXX1i%%%%XXXXX111l%%~ll:XXxr.R
. - ~: Fallout' over the policy extended to California, where the~ ?f scv.eral
~· studios said they were unaware tiJat networks were offered financtalmcenllves
• : if certain programs preached against drugs.
.
~:
Five studio ex~utives, responsible for shows like "ER," "The Simpsons"
· ~· and "The Drew Carey Show," objected to the idea.
·
-~;
"I think it's appalling," said Gail Bennan, president of Regency Television,
: :which makes "Malcolm in the Middle" and "Roswell." "It's inappropriate for
· ~: government to panicipate in this way in the production of television."
~•. Peter Roth, president ofWl\lfler Brothers Television, which makes "ER" for
•
~: NBC, said neither he nor "ER" producer john Wells was aware of the govern~: ment's effons. Roth said he would never demand his producers or writers
.t:· refl~l a panicular point of view on a social iso11e, even if there were a finan. :: ~ial benefit.

Call 992-2104~ ext. 26i
,_v '

.

,when hundreds of thousands of people rallied in aome of Cuba's biggest gath. erings since the triumph of the revolution that brought President Caslro to
'J!OWe~ 41 years ago.
.
.
.
•
. .
· . Ehan, the boy at the center of the mtemataonal dtspute, was found chngmg
.to.an inner tube No.v. 25 off the coast of Florida after his mother, stepfather and
Qthers died in a failed anempt to reachp.S. shOres. He h.as been lltaying with
.relalives in Miami who do not want to send him beck to Cuba.
. : The U.S. lmmiJII'Ition and Natural~tion Service had ruled that Elian must
~be returned to his father.1uan Miguel Gonzalez, and set Friday as the deadline
.for his repatriation to Cuba.
·
But this week, Attorney General Janet Reno lifted the deadline 10 give
Elian's Miami kin a chance to fight in fedct;ll coun to.keep the boy with them.

Veterans :Memorial Jfospital ..
Skilled Jv'ursing_.'Facility .
JWme 1own staff caring for your loved one .
OFPFRIJI9: rp~sical rr'fierapy~
Occupational1fierapy~ Speecn 1fierapy~
J/ospiCe Seroicel Social &amp;roices and ,
JVutritional Counseling.·

I

·

. . The protest marked a return to the IBrJCr demonstrations of early ~mber,

THE VOICE OF THE OHIO VALLEY

Award'winners

Elections Commission to hear case

, HAVANA(AP) -The Jll'lndmother of Elian Gonzalez said she is willing
to: go to Miami to bring the six-year-old boy home to Cuba, while Fidel Castro's point man on U.S. relations expressed impetience at Washington's failure
!G enforce a repatriation order.
In a ·massive demonstration demanding Elian's return, tens of thousands of
. Olban women - hundreds visibly pregnant and others carrying small chil!lren
' ,.... n,uuched along Havana's seaside boulevard on Friday to the U.S. miJJSion,
~~~ Cuban Dags and chantins "Bring back our son!"
".:•Fll&amp;ll's young stepmother, Nelsy, Oanked by his two grandmothers, was at
the head of the "March?~ the ~mbatant Mothers," puahing his half-brotber in .'
utroller. Cuban authonlles esttmated that100,000 women panicipated in the

march. .

6unllap t:imes -&amp;rntintl • Pea- A3

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

~tan's grandma willing to get him

·J~av ~imts· ~entintl

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Pomeroy • Mldd
..port • Oelllpol'-, Ohio Point Pleeunt,
WV
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Sundey, Jenuery 18, 2000

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Hospital

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Page A2 • 6unbQ CJhnn -6ntlllel

Sundey, ~ 11,1000

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

"free exercise" of reliaJon. It l1 "It's mt:Jinly ignorance. Reu,ion is a lttodtJCiw for 11 lot
were &amp;iven th~ rlptto pray u loftg
understood to guarantee everyone the
• u It did not dasruptechool.
••
ofschool adminislnltors: in doubt, klep it.
Daubenmire aaid the clilpllle
freedom to worship without govern... had been emotionally hard on him
ment interference.
from PageA1
from PageA1 ..,....
UWyer ....................
and that he could no Joqcr !)like
. This Is the ground on which many
• ptomlnent EYWlgll: al
the n~csaary c:ommitmeat to the
church-state clispuieS' are debated. Is a
job.
He ~ill c:ontillue !P be a spe.
· The U.S. Supreme Court, the • Texas police officer who wears a
areas waa "merely actnowledalna
cial
education teacher at the
ultimate arbiter of the Constitution, half-inch-long cross pin on his oollll'
In Adams County, Ohio, says the as it didn't teach "religious doctrine
· the secular cultural upecta of
achool.
struggles with how to apply thoae 16 officially favoring Christianity over Rev. Susan Kelley Roads, "In 202 or sectarian interpretation of the
Christmas by declaring Christmas
words, making many of its key deci- other religions, which is constitution• years, we have agreed on only one Bible."
to be a legal public holiday," she
• The city of Stow in nonheast
sions on 5-4 votes.
ally forbidden? Or is he freely prac- thing." Namely, posting the Ten
Three years later, the citizens of
said in lier ruling.
· The court has tended to avoid con- tieing his faith, which is his constitu- Commandments on school property Pontotoc say the majority ruled any" The court believe&amp; that the Ohio agreed in Fe~ary to replace
Croversial religion cuea in recent tiona! right? What about a gospel in defiance of a Supreme Court rul- way and the climate for school prayer
majority of Americans, O.riltians a croas on the city seal with · the
years, but it will soon hear oral argu- choir in a public school? Or Muslim ing. Citizens· responded to a legal has never been better. Every morning
and non-Chriatians alike, WOIIId motto ~· In God We 'Trust," ending
ments on whet~ public schoolS can public school students seeking a challenge by posting them all over before school, students gather volunlikely continue to celebrate lhe sec- a 2 1/2-year dispute with the
.
give students the unfettered right to place to observe midday prayers? Or town.
.
·
larily for 10 minutes of prayer in the
ular ~nd tcligioua aspecta of ACLU.
The ACLU had filed a lawsuit
pray at footbal.l games. In o-rnber, an .Indiana bus driver who plays
Others are ignorant of the law.
. school gym.
O.ristmaa on o~. 25 each year
the coun heard aJgUmentaon whether Christian music as she drives?
In small, predominantly Protestant
"It's important to start the day
whether or not Christmas Day is a challenging the use of the religious
symbol on the city emblem. U.S.
taxpsyers' money can be used to buy
For years, religious activists were towns all over America, the school with a quiet time to give yourself to
legal public holiday," she said.
District Judge Dan ·Polster ruled
computers and other instructional on the defensive, says Jay Sekulow, a day .still begins as it always has ~ · God," says one student, Miranda
materials for religious schoolS.
conservaliv~ Protestant strategist and
with a prayer. "Sometimes tbey're Andrews.
• A head hi!Jh school foot \Jail against the city in December 1998.
In his Dec. 18 radio address, Pres- chief oounsel for Pat Robertson's not doing it maliciously or stubbornThe town made thai point again i.n
ooach who was sued by the ACLU
The l~wsuit in Stow, an upscale
i\lent CHnton said, "Finding the prop- American Genter for Law and Jus- ly,': says historian Edwin Gaustad, 1997·, when. Superintendent Jerry
in J'unc' for leading his players in · . Akron suburb, led to a referendum
er place forfaith in our schools is a lice. They were always trying ta author of "Church and State in Amer- Horton opened School Pride Day
· prayer resigned Jan. 6.
in 1997 in which 57 percent Of
· ·compiCl&lt; and emotional maHer for prove they were 'not violating the ica." .':The question has never come with a prayer. The ACLU saw that as .
Dave Daubenmire, who had Stow voters said they wanted to
many 'AmericaQs." .
COnstitution's ban on " establishment up."
a willful violation of the law.
ooached at London High School, a keep the scat; which tl\e city Had
.When the Constitution was vew, of religion."
At the other end of the spectrum
While Horton says the new
public school, since 1989, was used on its docllments and vehicles
the United States was a Dedgling
Now, he .5ays, they are beginning are school administrators who pro- ' arrangement has been a success, Hersued on behalf of parents wlio for 32 years.
complained about the prayer sesnation alinging to the Eastern to get better results by asserting their hibit thin~ the court has deemed dahl is not so sure. Three of her chil·
Raymond Vasvari, legal direcSeaboard of .a largely unexplored constitutional 'rights to free speech constitutional, such as after,hours dren have talcen "Biblical History in
sions.
tor of th'e ACLU in Ohio, called the
continent. The young nation was and free praCtice of religion.
school Bible clubs.
the Ancient Middle East," and she's
"'seHI~ment reached in October motto "In God We Trust," which
remarkably diverse for its time. ScvSekulow says his gro~p fielded
"It's mainly ignorance,'' says ' convinced. it's Sunday school under
prohibited Daubenmire from initi. appears on U.S. currency, " a bland
. eral competing Protestant denomina- about 102,000 citizen complaints in lawyer Steven McFarland, • promi· anoth.er name. The teacher, Mike
aling or leading students in prayer statement of general deism" but an
tions thrived in the original13 states, 1998, the latest number available. At nent Evangelical. "Religion is a Thompson, whose salary is psidby a
or other religious activities while improvement over the "denomina. along with a smanering of Jews and any one time, hundreds of them are in headache for a lot of school admini&amp;- · group of Protestant ministers, would
teaching, coaching or conducting tionally specific representation of
extracurricular events. Students the cross."
. Catholics. Religious differences the courts.
trators: 'If in doubt, keep it out."'.
not discuss his course.
·
··
between such groups as CongrcgaMounce ~!=.I!'embers her first reac. Another complicating 'faCtor: The
TWo of his students, Andrews and
tionalists and Quakers were·strongly lion to HerdiWI's lawsuit: "I just felt law of.the land can V31'Y depending I5Qe Ann Harlow; say tbey learned in ·
felt and hotly debated.
like someone was coming· in and try- on where you live and what year it is. class thai lhe entire Bible can be·
•
: The founders sought 'to ·create a ing to change a part of us."
Lower federal couns 1\ave iSsued proven 1:,1literally ttue. ''They found
society open to all - to keep the
Mounce grew up 'listening to conflicting rulings on numerous remains of So&lt;lom and &lt;Jomorrah in
nation forever free of the religious Christian prayers on the school inter- church-state issues that have not been the Dead Sea," '!IIY' Harlow, an asser. '
Svars and persecutions that had rav- com and wanted her children to do resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court. .lion that would su!'prise most biblical
aged Europe for centuries.
the same. The morning prayers Thai means a practice can be consti- scholars.
: Today, the founders' words help shielded them from temptation, she tulional in one state an~ unconslituHarlow says Thomjison tries to
gov~m a far different United States l!elieves,.and reminded them of their tiona! in another.
expose students to different religious
;- a nation of Mormons and MuS- accountability to God.
Mcfarland notes, students in sev- points of view. They visited a synaSubscribe today. (740) 446-2342
lims, Baptists and Buddhists, Scien-.
"We took it for · gnuited prayer era! southern states may initiate Jlfld· · gogue. for example, during a class
lologists and Christian Scientists.
would always be there,'' she says. .
uation prayers; in several nonher~ trip to Memphis to learn apout the
: And the words seem harder and ·
Sh~ agreed with Herdahl that the states, it's against the law.
Jewish perspective on biblical ·histo- -;;;;;:;;~;::===!::=====::;:=========;l
harder to apply.
·
government shouldn!·l •tell ..people
Furthei'JllOI'er-- becau6•·- ~lh&amp;- .. ry. Bul-il-w~ the city!s only Messian- . r;
: For Herdahl and·Mounce, and for what to believe. "But I don't believe Supreme Coun is given to close votes ic synagogue, whose doct~ne-:= that
many Americans . across thl: land, a second-grader saying a prayer is on church-state cases, the retirement' Jews must accept Jesus as their savior
)hesc matters are no mere exercises in establishment of religion,'' she said.
of a few judges means something - would offend most Jews.
legalism; they are woven into the fab.
Mounce, a school board member's prohibited one year might be legal
So we continue to argue, but to
ric of daily life.
wire, tried to understand ·Heqlahl's next year. "1\vo new appointments what end? Does the perpetual debate
FULL SERVICE TAX PREf»ARATION
"I'm more spiritual than reli- feelings. But she couldn't l)elp won- would make a tremendous differ- over religion 's place in public. life
gious," Herdahl, now 39, says, si):ling dering how a womari who baptized ence," says Marc Stem, lawyer for make us more or less tolerant of each
INDIVIDUALS • PARTNERSHIPS • CORPORAnONS • PAYROLL
in the trailer sbe and her husband her children in the Lutheran church the American Jewish Congress.
other? Does .it protect liberty or
share with their childn;n. "Church," · could object' to a simple Christian
Many conservatives look forward weaken .it? Is religion better off or
she says,'' is in your hean."
· prayer. Sure, a.prayer in. Jesu~· name with hope to a change in the makeup worse?
.. , .
· 1•
; Raised as a Christian Scientist in might offend a Buddhist or a Jew, but ofthe coun, which they say has tram. This muddiness- what to teach,
New Location!
San Diego, she remembers class- she had yet to meet a Buddhist or Jew pled'on the people's rights to exercise· h~w to. teach it, what to separate and
33105 Hllland Road . f ,,: ·
•mates teasing her for. refusing va&lt;;ci- · in Ecru.
,
.
their religions freely.
·
what to un,ite ~ keeps reaching into
.. Pomeroy, Ohio 457~1j;P! , I
·nations. Her six children, like her
Maybe so, but Mississippi · is . "The cultural trend of leaving many spheres of American life. And
husband, were baptized Lutheran.
becoming more diverse, says Neal .God out of public life helps account . the; fight continbes iti Ecru. .
.
' (740) 992-9~5
Aftq lier family moved to Ponto- Biggers Jr., the U.S. District Colin for godlessness 'in public education, · . Pat Mounce wishes Herdahl
·
Hours: ·
: ioc iii 1993 to :..., near her husband's judge who heard the Herdshl case. crime rates al)d ljlisrespect for par- · wquld ju~t let Poptotoc; be ~ontotoc.
Mon.-Fri-9:00 am Or\tll•6:00 pm
' parents, she disco,;"Cd that Christian Muslims are building a mosque in . ents,'' ~~ys Whitepead, Pontotoc
".! ·tell he~. 'Lisa, you're wrong,'"
Sat. 9:00 am until' 5:00
:'prayers were being bro~ ~cast daily by nearby Oxford.
School District's lawyer. "It creates Mounce says. "This is a Christian
, : students on the publiC·I(o~'ess sys- · The Rev. Steve Pawelk, a priest at the~ of ~vemment hostil- community. Our school does not
;,·, :. ',_' ,.. , 'i. '
)• !-···' .·,:;
· !em. She didn't think it was nl!r'l for. one of tWo Catholic churches.in the . ity to religion' insieaCI .of ~ f9l' . belong !o. t~e :ACLU.'"., . · . .
..
:)ny group to he preaching to her ch;!- area, says "some people here don't and protection offtee e~erci5e of reliHerdahl · appreciates Mounce's
dren in school.
•ven consider Catholics Christian.'' gion."
fonhriglttness. "I've bad a lot of
· : When she complained. she says, Sot.:e of his parishioners in this preThe religious right champions a respect 'for h~r through all this," Her: administrators suggested her 7-year- dominantly Protestant county feared constitutional amendment, reintro-" ilahl says. "She has a Chriltian aui~old ·son, Jason, wear earphones to making waves about the school duced in the U.S. Ho~ of Represen- tude. She . di~ with what you're
: block out the broadcasts. David, her prayers. But the Constitution .exists; tatives in September, tliat would doing1 but she won't treat you like
· l1-year-old, left the room during a he says, to protect the rights of . legalize prayer and the recognition of . you're the SQUm of the Earth.''
: Bible class she considered too sectar- mimirities.
. "religious belief, heritage or tradiAnd that is one of Ecru'slessohs.
: ian,,.When his classmates asked why,
In PontotoC, Herdahl was seen as tions on public propeny, including . Americans disagree, and perhaps
' she says, the teacber told them David the voice of liberalism. Rumors Dew schools." An identical bill failed to always.will, over' malte!S of church
: 'didn't believe in God.
that she was an outside agitator paid reach the needed two-thirds margin in and state. But the debate is never over
: · School officials say the earphones by the ACLU.
1998.
the fundamental. right to religious
: were .for listening to educational
"That's what was going around:
Separationists, including many freedom embodied in those 16 words
• )apes. They deny that the teacher 'She came from the North on purpose religious groups, oppose the amend- 'from two centuries ago. Wl)at Ameri.·
to do this,"' says Joe Manin, owner ment and say keeping government cans argue about is how ~t to prac- ·
· called David an unbeliever.
Herdahl spent a year trying to of Joe's Barbecue, which he calls the and religion apan is vital to maintain- li~ it.
-:s:hange the system. Finally, in late town's ''gossip shop."
ing the country'~ unparalleled reliU~like so many people throughout
: ;1994, she wrote to the Ariaerican
Herdahl laughs at the suggestion, · gious liberty.
. history and even tpday, Americans 'db
: .civil Ubenies Union and the .Wash- but she and her family have felt the
The Constitution's words concern- not settle their relijlious differences
· Jngton-based · People ·for the Ameri. repercussions. Herdahl says she lost · ing religion .an; "a formula to enable . with blood. They'debate them in leg: pan .Way, two groups that believe her job at a convenience store when people to have radically different · islative chambers a,itd mannered ·
: ·church·and stale should be kept strict- customers threatened a boycott. And beliefs about the most fundamental counrooms.
• ly separated. Both agreed to.represent , her children have faced flak·at school. questions of existence and live
Or eve~ whit~ sharing an umbrel·
"Kids said Mom had no respect together in relative peace,'' sa;Ys Dou- Ia. ·
·
: ,ller.
: Her lawyers maintained that both for anything," says Richard, now 14. glas Laycock of the University: of
: ~he PA-system prayers and the Bible
"I kept getting jumped in the bath~ Texas Law School.
• .classes violated the Constitutional room. But Mama did what was right.
In June 1996, Judge Biggers ruled
John .Ford won an Academy
: \:lause prohibiting "an establishment They were breaking the law.'' ·
that the Pontotoc School District's I\ward in 1940 for best director for ·
.student-led .intercom prayers were· "The Grapes ?f Wrat~." Jane ·Dar; ·Of religion.'' The clause, as interpret- ' In that, Ecru is not alone.
: :Cd by the.Supreme Court, means that
·Supreme Coun has issued seem- . uncon.stitutional. He said' ·. p"'yer~ . well won·best supportang actress for
. :government must not do anything to ingly definitive rulings on a number could he held only outside of.the reg- the same film.
.
&gt;"aid one religion, aid all religions or of church-state. issue&amp;, banning gov· ular school day, and only if voluntacy'.'
I
I
ll
I I I I I • :~ : :
ernment-sponsored prayer, doctri: and led by stu!lents.
' ·
; :Prefer·one religion over another."
1
• • Michael K. Whitehead, a Kansas naire Bible study and the study of
The judge also rut~ the sch~f DEADUNE FOR PURCHASE O~- DOG UCEN~ 18 JANUARV.31. FHi !l!'e Four Dollars :
h. d
.., ele Kenn•l .fHIIre TWenty DoUera .......00'. To · obtain .
:·.citylawyerwhorepresentedlhePon- creationism in public schools. But couldnolonge.rtreatBablestudyastt . ("',.()()) f ·
,' 4otoc Sc~ool District, countered that communities throughout America hnd. Instea.d, tt could offer a state- ' ...., . or IIC
og, ma1I or ,.m .•
•
~:forbidding the student-led prayer continue to insist on all of the above. approved course "Biblical History llcen" by mell, complete 1n~m eppllcetlon to: Nenc;y Peltier, Cempbell, Melg' County :
: :would violate the clause guaranteeing
Some simply ignore tlie law.
of the Ancient Mlddle East,'' as long
Auditor, 100 E. Second Street; Pomeroy, OH 4570. En~lo" I "lf·llddrellld, etllmped :
envelope with 1 check for thl price of1hl UceMt.
.
.

Debate

'If

BUckeye

out'"

.'

·_Court takes up abortion, gay Scouts
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court is adding two explosive cases
to an already high-profile term, ~ing to ~ide whether states can ban a pro.cedure opponents call "partial birth abortion" and whether the Boy Scouts can
exclude homosexuals.
·
The justices announced Friday they will hear arguments in the two cases this
spring; decisions are expected by July.
The abortion case could yield the court's most important ruling on the issue
. :Since it reaffirmed women's constitutional·right to abortion in 1992.
.
: : The juslices will revfcw a Nebraska law that made it a crime for doctors to
perform the controversial procedure. A federal appeals oourt struck down the
law as unconstitutional.
'
"A constitutional crisis is calling out for a remedy," said abortion-rights
advocate Janet Benshoof of the Center for Reproductive Law &amp; Policy.
"What's at issue is whether a woman's interest in her health can be trumped by
a state legislattire's moral and p&lt;ilitieal statement about a fetus.~·
But Nebraska Gov. Mike Johanns said, "I feel strongly thai states should
have the right to legislate 'in the area of panial-birth abortion. It's a barbaric procedure that I hope is brought to an end."
Although the cum:nt' controversy involves a specific procedure, abortionrights activists contend far more may be at stake. They say the eoun's decision
could broadly safeguard - or dramatically erode - abortion rights, depending oil what state legislatures arc allowed to consider when passing laws to reg·
ulate abonions.

-Utah land returned to tribe

••

..

.

~

....

.

... .

•

:
\

•

from PageA1
more "r~ession-proof' than one or
two large employers in a single
field.
.
Tuesday's announcement by
Bellin was, Varnadoe said, "the culmination of everything we've done
for a year." ·
He said the Community Improvement Corp. and others staned work·
ing with Bellin in February and
gradually persuaded the oompany
Meigs County was where it wanted
to he.
.
"They could have gone anyplace
... but we competed and we won,"

,;

i

1

•

Varnadoe said.
Last year, Lee Jacobs, the director of the Ohio Department of
Development, toured the Tuppers
Plains Industrial Park site and the
Great Bend area with an eye toward
development.
. The industrial park at Tuppers
Plains is under construction and Varnadoe said he is contact with firms
that arc expressing interest in the
site.
"It's only a matter of. time until
that (site) develops," he said.
Likewise, the AEP-owned Great .
Bend site is destined for development, he said.
"SOmething good is going to be .
there.... There aren't that many
pia~ along the Ohio River with
access to an interstate," he said.

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OW"EROFDOG--------------~------~----~----~---------•
i'
A1LANTA(AP)-Thefull111oon ,
...
'
is expected to tum brick red fpr more
.AD.PR.a.s ·--,.----------..:,_..;_~------.:..;..--'"'--'----.--:.------•
••
than hour Thursday in a lunar eclipse
visible throughout the Ameri~its.
•
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TqVINSH'
The
celestial
event,
the
first
lunar
..
•
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eclipse sil)ce September 1996 thitt
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Long Short
If
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eclipse year in the nation.
aca~rale.
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A
.
s
econd
total
lunar
eclipse
w.ill
•
ntwaraam at: Galllpolll; (740) 446-lMZ; or
be visible July 16 over the U.S. West
, • ......,, (7ol0) 992-1155.
We will dleck your llitormatloo and make a
Coast. And a panial ·solar eclip~e wm
eonwdlon
.
.lrw•mated. ·
.,.=.:"'.ka
be visil)le over all of North America
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the
moon's
s~adow
over
Canada.
The
nteuioiUI 1m
M........ EdKor
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bv
degree' of eclipse will deCtea.ie&lt;
, . SOUth-·
t'loJM Clfl'ilr ................
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Ext. Ill
,__.,, ••, '""'"""""'' : ward, and only aboutS percent of the
u.-,..
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Nm
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~.~ ·· ~·
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1'1\ursday night, the moon wm be
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,, 11 - . , . , ·
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N,... · or Ext. UN
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1100.12
• ing a bright brick red," said Bradley
dille, peMII.y will~ M.OOfOrllnglttlg 1nd taG.CIOfOr Ktilnllllatntt.,
.
·
L--------------------------....,...--~--"'---:-' E. Schaefer, a Yale astronomer. H~
' 100 ~: B.econd StrHt
·
.
,
NANCY PARKlA CAMPBE
. LL
presented a talk on the eclipse Satur~
day at a. meeting of t~e American L.;P_OI;;.;m,;;..
,;.ro..;.:~;,;.'~O-H_._41711
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•-

• • • • •·• • • • • • •w •,. • • •. •. • ' • • • • • • • •·• • • • • • • •

Alleged plotter returns to school

CLEVELAND (AP) - Stares greeted Amanda Hatley .when she returned to
South High School after the holiday break.
,
It was the 6rst time the sophomore had been beck in the school since Octqber when she was suspended for her suspected pan in a plot by students to oommit a Columbine-style shOOiing rampage.
,
Four students admitted they plotted to kill their peers and teachers and will
be sentenced Jan. 25. Hatley and eight other students were cleared of wrong"
doing.
School officials say they unoovcrcd the deadly plot in time.
,
But Hatley's ·attorney, Avery Friedman, claims in a lawsuit that Mayqr
Michael R. White and school district officials picked out Hatley and other stu.
dents for suspension because of their race. South High is predominantly blacK,
as is the mayor, and all the suspects are white.
..
The lawsuit; filed last month, accuses White of violating Hatley's civjl
rights, a claim he denies.
·
~
"We do not believe that the lawsuit by Amanda Hatley has merit," White ·
said in a statement earlier this month. City officials d~lined ~urther oommel!l
SUit
CO...
this week.
"Our focus has been and c:Ontinues to be the well-being of the children and
CINCINNATI (AP) - This year, a jury may finally hear the governthe
safety of our schools,'' the mayor said.
ment's allegations tbat aircraft malcer Boeing Co. is liable for millions of
dollars in damages because of alleged faulty gears blamed in two Army heli.
copter crashes.
Lawyers on both sides said they thinlc the pending lawsuit in Cincinnati
"
federal court could go to trial as soon as this summer.
NOKill OLMsrnp (AP) - ..Three young people were killed in a ·twiiBoeing denies any wrongdoing or liability for any damages and has asked vehicle accident on a residential street in this Cleveland suburb Friday niglll,
a. judge to reconsider his ruling that the case shOuld go to trial, lawyer police said Saturday.
.
Mi!chell Ettinger said Friday.
.
· The accident happened about 10 p.m. Friday when the car the three were in
Whistle-blower Brett Rolly, a onetime engineer for a Boeing subcontrac- struck the car in front of them. The car went off the road and hit a tree.
•
tor, filed the complaint in 1995. The government later took over prosecution
Eric Polocy, 20, and his passengers, Shanna Conn, 1.5, and Robert Schuscht!,
of .the lawsuit. '
16, were killed. Police said all three were from the aeveland area, but thoy
U.S. District Judge S. Arthur Spiegel ruled Dec. 30 that they are entitled were unsure of which community.
"
to a trial to try to prove their claims. He did not set a trial date.
· 1\vo men i'n the other car were not hurt,
Roby.alleged that a company he worked for as a quality control engineer,
Police do not know the cause of the ~~2!:.!~~;.._----~
Speco Corp. .of Springfield, Ohio, produced faulty transmission gean. He
said Speco, a Boeing subcontractor, provided the gears for helicopter rotors
to Boeing and they were installed in hundreds of Boeing-made O.inook
transport helioopters sold to the Army.
1\vo of the Chinook CH-470 copters crashed, one in· Saudi Arabia, in
. 1991 during Operation Desert Storm, the other at Fon Meade, Md., in 1993,

"'\

'

..

COLUMBUS (AP) - ·The Ohio FJections Commi.Sion will hear a complaint against a Republican lawmaker who sent fund-raising l~ers to state
employees at work, despite the lawmalcer's contention that it was an accident.
"I know of no public official that intentimially wants to violate the law,"
State Rep. 4'nn Olman of Maumee said Friday. "But with so many fingers in
your campeign, it's almost impollible lo not comll!il some technical violation."
Olman's Democratic opponent in the Nov. 7 election for House District 51,
John Billis, filed a complaint against Olman with the commission last week.
The hearing is Feb. 10.r
·
The complaint says Olman broke alate law, whicb prohibits people from
solicitina contributions from public employees while the employee is at work.
Olman contends Billis dOes not have the standing to file a complaint because
he did not have direct knowledge of an alleged violation, but instead read about
it in newspaper stories last week.
"From the very get-go, the moment I found out that this had occurred, I
in.vcstigated it internally, within ou5 campaign office, found outthe facts, and
shared 100 percent of the facts with the election commission," Olman said.
.
·

Tourism

'

• · • .be,
ECIIpse
WI 11
seen across U.S.

according to Roby's lawsuit. Injuries were reported but no one was killed.

: ' SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Eighty-four years after the federal government
: oonfiscated thousands of acres of potentially oil-rich land from the Nonhem ·
: Ute Indian tribe, Energy· ~retary Bill Richardson says the government is
· JUdy to give it back.
.
: · If Congress approves the deal, the 84,000 acres will be the largest return of
· Indian land in the continental United States..
: "The land is not. needed for national security anymore," Richardson said
friday after announcing the agr'eement at the tribe's headquaners in Fort Ouch·
esne, aboutllO miles southeast of Salt Lake City. "The right thing to do ia tum
• it back. They're the rightful owners."
·
·
.
• · But there's a caveat. Under the agreement, the tribe can open the land to oil
i.and gas drilling.,bu' will have to pay royalties to the government.
. The money will. help the government cover the $300 million oost ofreloacademic quancr in March, where
cating 10.5 million tons of radioactive rock and soil along the Colorado River
students will make their presentaleft over from the mining of uranium during the Cold War.
tions to the class.' The best of the .
''It is actually a moral issue in that the government has finally returned to us
bunch will be presented to the
from PageA1
what was taken from us without our oonscnt, •: said 0. Ro,land McCook, chairovvc.
~ (11811 of the tribe's governing body.
·
"Ten weeks for this project is
:: The land, believed to contain oil-rich shale depoSits, was jliven to the Utes dents were even chosen to bC "-ret · really pushing it." Sojka said.
• in 1882. But in 1916, on the eve ofthi: nation's entry into World War I, the fed- shoppers."
"This will be a great thing for the
:: era!.government took it beck to create. a reserve supply of oil for the Navy Ocet.
"We wanted the stud~nts to get oommunity," Cox said "They will
the full understanding of what it is definitely bring fresh insight to the
like to he a tourist in the area,• Cox · revitalization proj~t."
said.
"They thought that if they were
An Ohio Department of Develop":. PASADENA, Calif.
.
(AP)- President Clinton said his drug adviser's effon with the rest of the group, they ment block Jlflnl totaling $378,600
, lo initiate revitalization ofthe down·
; :to insert anti-drug messages in prime-time television programs was not an would get treated differently."
The
marketing
plans
will
be
town was recently awarded ' to the
; ·attempt to rob networks of creative freedom.
' ~: · ''There was no attempt to regulate content or.tell people what they had to released at the end of OU's current . city.
f&lt; put into It," he said Friday. "Of course, I wouldn't support that."
~lXXJXXXXXIXXXX1i%%%%XXXXX111l%%~ll:XXxr.R
. - ~: Fallout' over the policy extended to California, where the~ ?f scv.eral
~· studios said they were unaware tiJat networks were offered financtalmcenllves
• : if certain programs preached against drugs.
.
~:
Five studio ex~utives, responsible for shows like "ER," "The Simpsons"
· ~· and "The Drew Carey Show," objected to the idea.
·
-~;
"I think it's appalling," said Gail Bennan, president of Regency Television,
: :which makes "Malcolm in the Middle" and "Roswell." "It's inappropriate for
· ~: government to panicipate in this way in the production of television."
~•. Peter Roth, president ofWl\lfler Brothers Television, which makes "ER" for
•
~: NBC, said neither he nor "ER" producer john Wells was aware of the govern~: ment's effons. Roth said he would never demand his producers or writers
.t:· refl~l a panicular point of view on a social iso11e, even if there were a finan. :: ~ial benefit.

Call 992-2104~ ext. 26i
,_v '

.

,when hundreds of thousands of people rallied in aome of Cuba's biggest gath. erings since the triumph of the revolution that brought President Caslro to
'J!OWe~ 41 years ago.
.
.
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•
. .
· . Ehan, the boy at the center of the mtemataonal dtspute, was found chngmg
.to.an inner tube No.v. 25 off the coast of Florida after his mother, stepfather and
Qthers died in a failed anempt to reachp.S. shOres. He h.as been lltaying with
.relalives in Miami who do not want to send him beck to Cuba.
. : The U.S. lmmiJII'Ition and Natural~tion Service had ruled that Elian must
~be returned to his father.1uan Miguel Gonzalez, and set Friday as the deadline
.for his repatriation to Cuba.
·
But this week, Attorney General Janet Reno lifted the deadline 10 give
Elian's Miami kin a chance to fight in fedct;ll coun to.keep the boy with them.

Veterans :Memorial Jfospital ..
Skilled Jv'ursing_.'Facility .
JWme 1own staff caring for your loved one .
OFPFRIJI9: rp~sical rr'fierapy~
Occupational1fierapy~ Speecn 1fierapy~
J/ospiCe Seroicel Social &amp;roices and ,
JVutritional Counseling.·

I

·

. . The protest marked a return to the IBrJCr demonstrations of early ~mber,

THE VOICE OF THE OHIO VALLEY

Award'winners

Elections Commission to hear case

, HAVANA(AP) -The Jll'lndmother of Elian Gonzalez said she is willing
to: go to Miami to bring the six-year-old boy home to Cuba, while Fidel Castro's point man on U.S. relations expressed impetience at Washington's failure
!G enforce a repatriation order.
In a ·massive demonstration demanding Elian's return, tens of thousands of
. Olban women - hundreds visibly pregnant and others carrying small chil!lren
' ,.... n,uuched along Havana's seaside boulevard on Friday to the U.S. miJJSion,
~~~ Cuban Dags and chantins "Bring back our son!"
".:•Fll&amp;ll's young stepmother, Nelsy, Oanked by his two grandmothers, was at
the head of the "March?~ the ~mbatant Mothers," puahing his half-brotber in .'
utroller. Cuban authonlles esttmated that100,000 women panicipated in the

march. .

6unllap t:imes -&amp;rntintl • Pea- A3

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

~tan's grandma willing to get him

·J~av ~imts· ~entintl

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Pomeroy • Mldd
..port • Oelllpol'-, Ohio Point Pleeunt,
WV
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Sundey, Jenuery 18, 2000

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PageA4•

Buncley, •angeery 11,1000·

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~nclay,

...._, 11, 2000

• 6unb1p 1Elmn ·6tntlnel • P9 All

Pomeroy • Middleport • O.lllpolla, Ohio • Point PI•Hnt, WV

.
Free Immunizations offered

~imts- Jttttintl

GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizationa will be provided by the Gallia
County Health Deputmenl at the following locations this week:
• Wednesday, Jan. 19 - Gallia Metropolitan Eatates, 2-3 p.m.
POMEROY - Thelma Sue Bowen, 59, of Columbus, died Tuesday, Jan.
, • Thul'lday, Jan. 20 - Gallia County Courthouae lobby, 4-6 p.m.
.
II
,
2000.
.
~ Children in need of immunizations must be IICCOIIIpanied by a parent or
She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jones of Columbus. She
I~ auarclian, and bring a current immunization reoord with them.
is survived by three sisters.and a brother-in-law, Tom and Mary Ella Burnside;
and Patricia Lehew of Pomeroy, and Dorothy McKinniss of Lancaster. She was
~DAMHS
·Preceded
in death by a sister, Barbara McGraw.
.
Services were Saturday at Rutherford-5hoyer Funeral Home, ColufllbUS.
~· GAIJJPOLIS - . The Gallia-Jacbon-Meip Board of Aloo~ol , Drug
Alldiction and Mental Health Services will meet at 7 p.m. Jan. 31 at 53
Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
.
The board typically meets on the third Monday of the month at7 p.m. For
more information, call 446-3022.
.'
· . MIDDUPOIU' - Martha Ann Buckley, 82, Middlepo~ died Friday. )an. ·
14, 2000, at her residence.
A homemaker, she was born Jljov. 20, 1917, in Pomeroy, daughter of the late
contlnu~s
Harvey and Ruby Wines McCumber.
•
She is survived by five daughters. Frances Ann Manley of Middleport, CarRIO GRANDE - A continuing education course discussing the compar.'
olyn
Elizabeth Klein of Tuppers Plains, Martha L. Ord and Sandra S. Darst,
ison of religious faitha is underway at the University of Rio Grande/Rio
both
of Middleport. 311d Sharon. L. Ward of Pomeroy; a son, Sherman Gene
Grande Community College.
.
. ·
JJuckley
of Middleport; 32 grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; and a broth·
The oourse is held in the James A. Rhodes Student center Commuter
er,
Nathania!
McCumber of Gallipolis.
·
Lounge Mondays at 6 p.m.
.
She was preceded in death by her husband, William Sherman Buckley; three
:·. Guests for the remainder of this month are ·Pastor John Jackson of NeY{
sons,
Charles William Buckley, Carl Leroy Buckley and Paul Edward Buckley;
I.:ife Lutheran Church, Gallipolis. speaking on lhe Lutheran tradition on Jan.
and
a
daughter, Mary Lou Buckley. .
..
17, and Father Deacon Mark .fiagan·of the Holy Spirit Orthodox Church in
Graveside
services
will
be
al
12:30
p.m.
Thesday
at Middleport Hill O:mef!untington, W.Va., speaki~~ on Greek Orthodolt faith on. Jan. 24.
lery.
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Friends may call from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport.
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'Est/Wftsnd in 1966

Thelma Sue Bowen

825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
014 440 2342 • Fax: 440 3008

111 Court StrMt, Pomaroy, Ohio
014-m-2150 • Fax: m-2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publlsl!er
Diane Kay Hill
Controll•r

Faith comparison course

Our view: ·

Uni

·

(:losin·
gs annou·nced for King Day
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Participate in local·events
to bring the region together
· Unity is crucial to the Ohio Valley's future, and during the next
three days, local folks have 5ome wonderful 'events planned to
bring the region together.
·
. Kicking off things is the annual
community Unity Walk at 6 p.m.
today at Paint Creek Regular Baptist
Church. The effort was spawned by
Paint Creek Pastor Dennis Hurt and
includes his parishioners, as well as
those from St. Louis Catholic, Grace

: GAIJJPOLIS - Offices in lhe Gallipolis City Building will be closed
¥onday in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
·
· The Dr. Sam~cl L. Bossard Memorial Library will also be closed MoncDiy for the observance.

Weedy's view:

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Gathering against the denigration of life

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ne need

to celebratl!
our d(fferences,
rwt mock them.

as

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By The Aaaoclated Praaa
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Today is Sunday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of 2000. There· are 350 days left
intheyear.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Jan .. 16, 1920, Prohibition began in the United St~les under the 18th
Amendment to the Qmstilution. Prohibition waa later repealed by the 2)st
Amendment
·:
: On this date:
. • In 1547 Ivan the Terrible was crowned Czar of Russia.
. : In 1883: the U.S. Civil Service Commission was established.
: In 1942., actress Carole Lombard, her mother were among some 20 peo~e killed when their plane crashed near Las Vegas while returning from a
teur to pmmote war bonds.
~ In 1944, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower took command of the Allied Inva$Jon Force in London.
1
• In 1964, the musical "Hello, Dolly!" opened on Broadwayt beginning a
r¥n of 2,844 performances.
·
~ In 1967, Alan S. Boyd was sworn in as the fi~
, ·U.S. transpoi'lali!)n secJtlary.
.
.
, In 1989, rioting eruptc!d in Miami when u police officer fatally shot a
black motorcyclist, causing a crash that killed a passenger. .
; In 1991, the White House announced the slart of OPI'ration Desert Storm
te drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait.
·
.
· : In 1992, officials of the government of El Salvador and rebel leaders
sl'gned a pact ending 12 years of civil war.
·
•; Ten )ears ago: The Soviet Union sent more than 11,000 reinforcements
te the,Cau~asus to halt a civil war between Armenians and Azerbaijanis.
: Five years ago: In Union, S.C., a prosecutor announced he would seek the
IJtath penalty for Susan Smith, the woman accused of drowning her sons, 3·
)1ar-old M'1chae I and 14-month-oIdA! ex. Smith was later convicted of murrli:r ani~ sentenced to life in prison.
~ One year ago: Closing three days of opening arguments, House prosecut(!rs demanded President Ointon's removal from office, telling· a hushed
!!enate that otherwise the presidency itself may be "deeply and perhaps per~ntly damaged." Forty-five Albanians were found slain near the southcln Kosovo village of Racak.
. ~ Today's Birthdays: Ac)rcss Katy Jurado is 73. Author Wil)iam Kennedy
~72. Author-editor Norman P~horelz is 70. Opera singer Marilyn Hol'l)e is
cl&amp;. Auto racer A.J. Foyt is6S. Smger Barbara Lynn is 58. Country sinaer Jim
9Jalr~ is 56. Movie director John Carpenter is 52. Actress-dancer-choreo•apher Debbie Allen is 50. SingerSade ,is 41. Rock musician Paul Webb
{falkTalk) is 38. Rhylhm-an\1,-blues singer Maxine Jones(En \\Jgue) is 34.
Jlctor David Chokachi is 32. Model Kate Moss is 26. Singer Aaliyah is 21.
Actresa Yvonne Zima is 11.

·Agatha Beth Gibbs King

MASON, W.Va. - Agatha Beth Gibbs King, 27, Mason, died Friday, Jan.
14, 2000 in Holzer Medical O:nter.
BomApril16, 1972 in Point Ptea'sant, W.Va., daughter of Gerald L. and Sara
E. Brinker Gibbs of Mason, she attended Father's House Qurch, and the Syracuse and Point Pleasant Church of God.
.
GALliPOLIS - · Gallipolis City Police cited Marshall R. Wolfe, 48, 28
Surviving in addition to her parents are her husband, Timothy 1: King of
Birch Lane, Gallipolis, for failure .to yield half of the roadway following a New Haven, W.Va,; a daughter, Nalosha Marie King of Mason; a sister, Robyn
two-vehicle accident Friday on Birch Lane. .
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C. VanMatre of Letart, W.Va.; two brothers, Gerald. L {Belly L} Gibbs Jr. of
Officers said Wolfe was' eastbound, 60 feet west of Upper River Road, at. Mason, and Harold W. (feresa D.) .Gibbs of Hartford, W.Va.; her malel)lal
3:01 p.m. when he failed to yield part of the ro~dway to a car driven by Alii- grartdfather, Roy W. Brinker of Mason; and three nieces and two nephews.
' son R. McQuaid; 27, 565 Gwrges Creek Road; Gallipolis.
·
She was also preceded in death by her maternal grandmother, Margaret V.
Both ;vehicles collided head-on, according to tlie·rep&lt;irt. Damage to both Brinker; her paternal grandparents, Harold E. and Helen Gibha; and a niece,
vehicles was severe, officers said.
.
Tabitha Dawn VanMatre.
Officers licketed Morgan R. Davies, 17, 65 Crestview Drive, Gallipolis, · Services will be 2 p.m. today in FoSJesong Funeral Home, Mason, with the
for failure to control following an accident on the 600 block of Third Avenue . Rev. aovis Vanover and Brother Albert Yester officiating. Burial will be in
earlier Friday. ·
Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Visitation was Saturday in the funeral home.
Davies was northbound at 7:35a.m. when the car Davies drove drifted to
the right side of the road and struck a parked car owned by Don E. Carter,
657 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Damage to. both cars was severe, according to the report.
Cited by police early saturday was Eric S. Shriver, 22, 473 Shade River .
RUTlAND - .Joe N. Sayre, 69, Carpellter Hill Road, Rutland died Friday,
Road, Patriot, for driving under the influence .and failu.re to dim high-beam Jan. 14, 2000, at h1s res1dence . .
· headlights, accordjng to police records. ·
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. · .He was born Nov. 5, 1930 ~n ~arleston, W.Va., ~n oft~ late Carl an~
Cited by officers Thursday was Christopher G. Beaver, 19, 1016 Second ~haT. Harbert Sayre. He retired m 1990 as a consulllng engmee~ for AEP s
Ave. Gallipolis, for no seatbelt. .
D1vts1on of Fuel .Supply. He was a 40-year member and pastor smce Octo,
·
ber,1989 of MI. Union Baptist Church, owner of Sayre Trucking &amp; Excavating
and active in the Gideons and missionary work.
He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Rosalie Turner Sayre; a' son and
· GALLIPOLIS - A drive-off from a Gallipolis business was reported to daughtet·in-law, Timothy Joe and Klj.y Sayre of Albany; a daughter and son-inlaw, Helena and Roger Riggs of Rutland; four grandchildren; nine great-grandcity police ori' Friday.
children;
and a sister, Kitty Canterbury of Missouri.
·
Officers were informed that a subject pumped $12 worth of gas.into car
He.was preceded in death by a sister, Peggy Ann Sayre, and a brot~er, Tom
all~e Burlile Oil 76 station,~ Vine St., at 9:30p.m. and drove off wi~ul .
.
Sayre.
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pay1ng. ,
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Services
will
be
at
2
p.m;
Monday
al
MI.
Union
Baptist
Chureh,
Carpenter,
, The incident is under Investigation.
with the Rev. Otarles Swigger and Pastor John Elswick officiating. Burial will
follow in WeJls·Q:metery, Pageville.
Friends may call (rom 2-5 p.~. today at Bigbny-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, and one hour prior to services Monday at the church.
GALLIPOLIS -· Placed in the Gallia County Jail Thursday by Gallia
County sheriff's deputies were Joe Kevin Patrick, 32, Mason, W.Va., for
assault; Jacqueline Galloway; 30, 52 Westwood Drive, Gallipolis, for DUI,
driying under suspension and reckless operation; and Jonathan A. McWhorter, 37, 13961 State Route 7 South, Crown City, for p4role .violation.

Police issue citations In accidents

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By ROBERT WEEDY
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. abOrtion on demand through all riine months of broadly: jlhysical, emotional, psychological, farnil:.'
More than 30 years ago, Francis A Schaeffer pregnancy as a legal "right."
ial and the woman's age as bemg relevant
.
was writing about the thinking and struggling of
One argument ma)'" say the unborn 8(e not fully
Thus the court h~ for all practical purposes
men. He was a reading, listening, thinking man who human and they do not have a right to life if their legalized abortion up unlil birth. The u:s. Sena~ •
lived in the preser\~ learned from the pas~ and life hinders the liberty of a person who is fully Judiciary Commitlec in 1983 affirmed "no signifi· • .
cant legal barriers of any kind whatsoever exist
looked to the future. He saw lhal"ideas have leg_1," human.
Another
may
say
if
the
unborn
entity
is
fully
today in tile United Stales for a woman to obtain an ,
so thai how we think determines what we are.
human,
he/she
has
no
right
to
vse
the
body
of
anothabortion
for any reason during any stage o( her ,
Thus he became ooncemed about the "piea- er against that person's will. By this reasoning, the pregnancy." ·
United Methodist, First Church of
.
the Nazarene, St. Peier's Episcopal and First Presbyterian.
sure now" philosophy mother is morally justified in removing her ·offMedia hype made tile book "Final Exit" by
: Participation in the walk is by no means limited to members of
that was .advocating spring even if that results in death.
Derek Humphrey a best seller and was available in ~
Euthanasia
has
been
debated
much
in
the
last
libraries
almost everywhere. While in interviews .
these churches, however. If you want to promote unity, we
abortion as the "soluyear,
yet
many
have
no
idea
what
it
is.
When
·
Humphrey
generally called it "self-deliverance for
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h
fu
tioil·
"
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for
••unwanted"
encourage you to lace up your walking shoes and
· JOin tnt e n.
On Monday, the Southeastern Ohio 6ranch of the NAACP ·
children. He saw going couched in the language of choice and individual the terminally ill," he was more candid with .a
down that slippery rights, it sounds like a pei!IOii's right to be free of . British newspaper when he said, "It tells you hc:N,
will offer a traditional tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The
slopeoould only lead to painful ilnd unwanted intervention. is the issue. .
where and when to kill yourself or someone else. ll~
event starts at '1 p:m. Monday at Paint Creek Regular Baptist
also eliminating the
Slogans like "ald-in-dying" have led to the mis- breaks the last taboo. Follow my instructions for I'•
Church, and U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, a fdrmer Methodist min·
lives .(\f the elderly and takenbeliefeuthariasiaallowstheni.turalprocessof perfect death, with no mess, no autopsy, no post·
ister, is the keynote speaker.
sever~ly
. infirm dying to go unhindered: In reality, it is making peo- mortem," according to the Sun!lay Express. Did th~
·· '
\ The University of Rio Grande hosts its Martin Luther King Jr.
because they were not .pie die rather than letting them die. Kevorkian was media also .tell us how he II'Caled his wife?
making
people
die
by
lethal
injection.
.
.
Have
you
wondered
what
would
happen
if
the
Day festivities Tuesday, starting with a 7 p.m. concert at Berry 10 society.
~lributing positively
While il isn 'I talked about much, there is a bias media gave factual information about prenatal •
Fjne Arts Center, featuring the award-winning Central State UniThis is oommonly known aa.euthanasia, and the -~nst people.with disabilities. This can be the very ~velopJien~ abortion methods and fetal prun1 ;
versity Chorus. A candlelight vigil to· honor King's accomplish· p(&gt;Jitically correct terms of "death with dignity" and young or adVanced in age. Some people perceive Suppose they gave reports about how many
nients and remember his sacrifices follows.
the "right to die."
.
them iiS less than human and thus their life~ little depmsed folks ha~ ended their lives by following .
· i, ..
.,, lillfiiPhfl)y's, i~lnK!,ti.ons (rpm his ~II,. Su~ :
· • How appropriate it is these events surround the King holiday.
":h• fact these issues ·are highly charg~ and value. . . ,
What
irony
has
already
developed
from
this
they stopJlCilbanning fa&amp;.al pl'll·life information
While obtaining justice for black Americans was King's obvious • details poorly understood . by most Amencans
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
II brought about a yearly remembrance, on the movement The book, "Deadly .CompiL'ISion," by inflammatory and unlrlle?
goal, a burmng passton for equal nghts and umty among a
anniversary of Roe v. Wade of the sacredness of · Rita Marker, reveals liow Derek Humphrey, .co- : But they do air pro-death information like th6 •
Americans was at the heart of King's crusade.
life.
'
founder of the Hemlock Society with his wife Ann, · · typical housewife who says she supports abortion '
This 27th year, an entire week. is set aSide from 8banctoned·her when she was diagnosed with can- rights in order to keep the abortion decisioA '
. We believe the good reverend would be pleased to see the
. · between "the woman, her physician, and her fami, ·
strides America has p1ade since his tragic death in 1968. At the J!"'. 16-23to ref1CC! on the source and ~rpa!e of cer.
Ann, having no one to turn to, called Rita, who ly.".
·
same time, how eyer, we know King's dream is far from being hfe and to say that hfe should not be demgratcd.
f lfilled
·
When Dr. Schaeffer warned us, people then waa an opponent of the society, ~ut a· respecled . This is untrue beicause a woman can ' have ah·!
u
·
.
.
were incredulous - they didn~ believe it. Having adversary. 'lllcy became trusting friends.over the abortion performed on her by a physician she has·
If we had our druthers, Amenca would be close to fulfilling now heard the evidence of the elimination of more next' two yoars before Ann died. Even this story known for only 30 seconds. Also, her family has no
the dream. But it's not. There's still a lot of hate .in our great than 40 million babies and the besinning of physi- . show how much support is Def;ded from SOII)eone legal rishl to forbid, permit or be infonned abou.t
nation, and we must bridge the gap between races, genders, sex· dan-assisted death, many now can see and hear who cares.lCllling them is not die answer ... it never her abortion. And that includes sex-selection abor~ ..
.
~
.
ual orientations and generations.
~hat he ':"as saying. The' evidence gives credence to wiU~
That
this
debate
still
&lt;Xinlinu~
after
27
yeais
can
The
deCisions
of
men
are
flying
in
the
face o.r our .
We need to celebrate our differences, not mock them. A world . h1s wammg.
.
.
be
credited
io
the
effcctlveness.,of
pRSentin1
limit.
grea1
Creator,
and
at
what
a
cost.
·
Like
Beetle
Bai; •.
filled with people who look 11nd act the same would be a boring
!Jle grou~ that began thls.J?f~H~eath movement,
•
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while "sensitiVe" tq ll!e political needs of nearly ed facts and the acation of £al5e perceptions. Most ley's friend says, "We were given a box of Sooc!·
· place. Dtve~stty IS a good;tht?g.
•
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every interest group, tolerate natllism: the denial of Americans are uninformed about the oombined stuff called 'Life,' but we don~ look at the direc- ,
Let us stnye to reach Kmg s dream tn dur hfc;ttmes .- :both for the fundamental human right to life to a segment of effect of Roe v. Wide and Doe v. Bolton to provide lions." ·
our sake and that of our children. .
human ~inp simply because they have 1101 passed a mother uniimitcd access 10 abortion th'l"fib nine
(Robll't WM/Itf II I oolumnflt for thll Sundlly
through the birth canal. Thus the United Slates has months of pregnancy.. Doe defined "health" so Tim•• SIIIIIIMI.)

On this date in history

Board to meet Jan. 31

Martha Ann Buckley

\

Ulttrs to tl!• odilor an wlcomo. Tlt•1 sltovld bt ltss titan 300 words.
..UIIollrrs ,.,. •u"J•ct lo edilillr and nuul br rir11od and ilt&lt;lrul• ruld~
and ttltpilllll• '11umbtr. No uMitned lm•n will br publuhed. Lttttrs
sltoultJ b1 ill fopt/ lute, addtesSinJ i.uMcs, 11ot #Mnllllldilkr.

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LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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R. Sh8wn LAwta
Managing EdHor

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Your views:
pDn"e P"''OCeSS

II · READER POLL
f1
··
ofian.

"ltah! Rlhl Rallt Rahsl" from the sidelines. ·
.. As a l~i rcson, why noi ji!SI say, "Sta)i'away

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fromWai·Miltor~lseendupintheriverl"
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Bach time we ~ve our homes, the pOIBibili- 1 · The Tim•• SulliNI wanta
QPinkini. 1·
.Dea.r Editor: .
.
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. . lii:s that'we c:Oilld IKe tragedy lile endliu, but the . '1 P.Jeasa complete thll follow!~ and rell.im 1·
.
Does anyone understand whalrs goma on IR incenliva far outweigh the risks.
1 ~~R=~ ·'";".;:~attach~ .1'
.SbeSepherdsalltowhn, W.Va.? 'al
.
,__
Lei's be gracious about il: ,''The R~ are. , 1 lhlel8 of...;._ Ji You RIKIII . . apaoa.
1., ·
e
. I e ceremom . meelinp .,..tween· here."
,,
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f
dozens of high level and low level delegates?
' '
. Miry (lllller r' I . 1. Rank, ln.telrnll of~ 10 yoA/, llie I '
See the big room with lines of peace experts
Middi!IPOft ·1, following live III'IIIIS: echoolll, roads, drinking l ;
facing each other? None.dare to oome too close.
,
.
.
,1 water, racl'lllltlonal factlllln, and new jobs. . t '.
Progress means cornmg ~IOi!C enough to see IH '"' t' n
..I;.
1
each other in a passing stretch limousine.
n 0 uU
1ng uuWn ere ., I
,
f•
1
· Ointon's secret weapon, aa he!fdman in all ·. .!l:
The follow-111 1ettar this, isa few bags full of money.
lld•uud Su!ldlv Tlmll SIIII!INI ootum- I
.
·
, . . , · 1·'
11te.average 'Palestinian.of Syria has IIOihing.
Robart
.)
I ,. 2. Whilt'a the one 188Ue ·candldatea for · 1 ..
1
· lei alone freedom. 1iloody old Arafal and Assad ~· Deaf Mr.
y: , •
I otnce I11UII addrll.. to earn yolir vote?
see to lhal
.
·
.1; I real wi~·interesl your article in the Jan. 9, I
I .
. . All this is remindful of the Oreal White . Father: · ~. edilio~ of the Su*i 'limes·SenliflCI. In 1
~
who inVited the Indians to WaShington, D.C., to your openin paragraph, tpu said ~ucalioo I
·/'
' ' ·~
feast them and show them the splendors of civi- should be of great concern to all of us in this new. I
3. Should .;.... abandon the 101\81Y? Why . t.
lization. They rained IJ\el,ndians with gifts, pal'ad- year. ·
. ·'~ ·
. _, •
.1 I or 'jVhy oot?
. '
.
t~
ed them around town m plug hall and ·sent .them
• I SII'OII81Y agree w1th you. In addition, ypu •' 1··
carrying presenis back to the tribe with favorable wrote, "If we are goin&amp; to see im~anenl, a 1·
1
impressions.
· ·
positive OUIIook and a moa;urc.of what is yet to ·1
1.
This b.ig pow-wow is Shepherdstown·will get be III:COIIlplished 5J!ould be reviewed." However, • ,
.
1~
1e90ladcs frorQ the press, Ointon will save a little I did' not fil!d thit positive Dullook in your article. . '
4. Shou IIChool or teacher~n~
j':
face l!nd this world hot spot will cool off j~t in
I am a teacher ~n the 'Ga!lia Cqunty ~
~allowecj In the ~ Of
Y f;
time.
S!:hooltsystem. Beltcve me, ~r, we dO not Just
·· '
·
1·
Gayle
Prlcl
dumb
ildowll.•
O!uU!liniltntion,
~~118~
'
Portland ""pporl 'staff and _
ot ill our .....,..,
-~-'- 1 _~
111 -~
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worldna hard every day to achieve thole golls our
1·:
D
~
Jcaislllleln set.' Have w.e b? No sir, we h've
I. Should lhl u.s..~ COur:t revisit
~n
~~,7onalwe !2~de thto- aceomh~=:liMded.
Roe v. WD? W!rY or WhY not?
·
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---s::~ the -.;:;.::e..81in 11y.='ri:J~I·
--.
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Dear Editor:
·unclear to me. I ·tried Iii phone you, b'ut Willi
.'
This is in reference to the llrticle (:Jan. 6)on the unable 10 locale your Jjjting. Therefore, a le""'
I•
cOndition of the (Porneloy·MiiOtl) bridF, very w11 my best jeOOUrse. I lpplaud you for your
Name
I•
well wrillcn and quite subtle II any iced JII'OPI· obvious inlmll in eduCation and would Hb to
AdciiWI
L,
ganda piece should be.
'
, lrulouraae you to visit with· educaiOrlllld IIU·
t,
Plantuccdofdorrbtinthe mind of the public, · deilts. "
\
Aile-~ number
I, ,
· then, 10 II no.t to appear too negatlve,lldd • few
Marlyn Kuhn
I
little postii~ notes. tlhought I '-d a few flint
No!tliup Lo .. ___ ...... _;,;. .. _ .... ..,. _ .. _ -1. ,
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in·a·nutshell

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Wuk

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16, 2000

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(Edllor'ae:

J.!-!

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anti-Wal&lt;-Mart

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Joe N.- Sayre

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. b. US1neS$ rep0
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e

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Deputies place ·three In Gallla jail

UCtobreed
research ·mice

Galli&amp; EMS answers eight calls

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'
By The ANoclltad Pr111
~ The National Weather Service said
a cold front pushed southward Saturday night, and was expected to reach
r¥&gt;rthem Ohio by this morning,
. The front will move from the north
the south today. Skies will be.mostly cloudy and there will be a chancC
Q{ snow behind the front: Morning
highs in tlie nort~ will be around 40,
with temperatures falling into' ihe 30s
liy afternoon.
: lfiahs in the far south will be
around 50 abead of the 'front.
·
:' Sunrise today will be'at7:5~ im.
'
Wealher fOI'eallt:

brain and blood system cancers.
The teams are forming the Mouse
Models of Human Cancers Conser-

lo

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.

Jean Lama Moore

'

MIDDLEPORT- Jean Lama Moore, Middleport, died Friday, Jan. 14,
2000.
She was born in Nelsonville, daughter of the late Earl and Edith Sauvage
Lama,.
'
· · She and her husband, the late Harry Moore, owned the former Royal
Crown Bollling Plant in Middleport. Slie graduated from Middleport f1igh
School and attended Ohio University. She was a member of the Evangeline
'Chapter Order of lhe. Eastern Star, the Grace Episcopal and the Middleport
Presbyterian churches.
.
,.
She is survived ~y a niece, Carol Jean Jones Langen field of Columbus; a
nephew, Kenneth Jones of Orange, Conn.; a stepson, William Moore of Ash·
land, Ky.; two grandchildren, Carla Ann Mulvaney of Versailles, Ky., and
Catherine Jayne Elsea of Raleigh, N.C.; and three great-grandchildren.
'.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Harry Moore, and by a sister,
Alice Louise Jones.
.
••
Services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Fisher Funeral flome in Middleport, with burial following in Beech Grove O:metery, Pomeroy.
. Friends may call from noon until time of services Wednesday atlhe fun eral home.

Man charged with
killing wife's kitten

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~HOPPE:

HOME OXYGEN and

D I'

·
IABO JACkSON PiKE
:&amp;
GAlliPOliS

I,

pass the

I

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'j

1

savings

on to you .
. Cuntac t our agency

l

today li)r a customized

..pm(.XJSal on your homem\'ners
insumnce prorecrion:

''
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I

Auto-Owners fnsur,.,nc 7eJ '

I·

Life liome Car Business
if, P~¥~4. Pu;l- •

n.

INsURANCE Pws

A .
.
. n.GENCIES,

11.,;;;;;;;--:;.;-------·'"'---=--~·'. . .,~!

cill 111 tOday for a F~ initial naluation.
•

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992 66~

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A: Detecting a head injury is very difficUlt. SoJrietimes; the signs and/or symptoms ~•••••·
be minimal,' but you should look for any signs of abnormal behavior, ex•ce••si1•e l
tiredness; intense headache or headache lasting longer than 2. days, un.ste•adim:ss,
memory loss,, copfusion~ blurred vision, slurred speech, loos of appetite, sensitivity
light, dizziness or neck pain &amp; stiffness . Quite often signs of a head injury (c~mcu s••im&gt;)l
do not appear immedia.t ely after trauma , but hours or possibly days .a fte r the iniiti u•ll•
injury.
.
.
·
In order to prevent head or neck injury, you, need to be aware· of proper •norttol
technique, proper equipment maintenance and perfc;~rm neck-strengthe!'ing exercises.
Please also remember not to give your son any aspirin products be fore , during or
after athlet~c participation because that could increase ~erebral bleeding if he does
sustain a head injury. If you have any further questions, please feel free to call me ,
I-.AJ\\ 446-5534,
.
Fax your questions to .(740) 446-5565 or leave your questions on our voice mail
(740) 446-5534 or mail 't o: Ask a Professional-c/o l&gt;r. Kelly Roush, Chiroprac tic
Physician, Holzer Clinic, 90 Jackson Pike,
.

·

"lWtu:bttyo~~r riM of~ u~" ,

2500 Jefferson Avenue . . Point Pleasant, WV
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. 304-675-1675
. . . ..
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1·IOO~i·s:2206

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Dr. Robert Holley has received 8peeial
Training to identify and·treat the many tisk factors
· That lead to a heart attack or stroke

I

If you're 50 or
older, you're in

us ttl

ree . e IVery

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•r

allowing

F

ARE YOO 'At IISK?

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I

losses,

IIIII &amp; IINfAJ.S

OVER 25 FACTORS Cfl" .CfiUSE.A
"EARr fi'ITAC~ Ott.STRO.KE• .

I

the

RESPIRATORY EQUIP..MENT

•

I

TOLEDO (AP) - A Toledo man
assaulted his wife and killed her kitten
by plating it an oven turned up to 500
degrees, a city prosecutor said Friday.
. Dennis Davis, 56, was charged
IIUJ,.IJ.II;;
with felony domestic violence and
animal cruelty, said assistant city
prosecutor Sharon Gaich. He- was
you iruur.!
being held in the Lucas County jail on
$8,500 bOnd.
·
·
home with us,
. Gaich said that on Ja.n. 9, Roberta
thmurh Auto-Owners
Davis, 41, got home from work and
was told by her husband that dinner
Insurance Cnmpany, we'll save
was ready. She opened the stove and
found her kitten dead.
w u mnney! Statistics show that
.
'
She told police that her husband .., .,.
~onur.ah&gt;e gruup experiences
then assaulted her by tightening a
j~mp rope an;JUnd her neck.
tewer. b s-costly

UESTIONS and ANSWERS ...

~0. give blood

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Sunday...Cioudy. Highs in . the
I 114 Court
lower SOs. .
·
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. Sunday night ... Partly cloudy. lium.
As' a result pf , tlie informatio'n- · ...
L..--.,.·~;.·.-~.;."'.·---..,1 ·' •
Lows in the lower 30s.
· sharing, cancer · re~earch may be
Monday... Light snow likely, main· .accelerated. on multiple fronts, said
ly during tbe night. Highs in the lower Dr. Joanna Groden, a geneticist who
andmid40s.
will be leading UC's research.
, Exteaded rorecut:
If one group develops a way to
Tuesday...Mostiy cloudy with a detect early s(age breast canC:er, the
chance ofligh! snow. Lows from the bfeakthrough may help another team
upper 2ta lo the lower 30s, and· hi~ working on brain tumors. ·
ASK A PROFESSIONAL.....
•
in the mid and upper 30s.
Q: My son pl,a ys football and basketball and my worst fear i~ that h~ might ... ustain a
Researchef'!' hope 10 ·trace genetic
Wednesday:..Partly cloudy with ·a. links that influence how cancer
head or neck injury. I don~.t know if he- would tell me or his coach because he loves
chance of snow showers. lOws fro'm tumors gJqw alld spread, to develop
sports and 'would not. want to miss a game. What should I look for? Is there
the upper teens to the loliler 20s, .and more sophisticated imaging tools to
highs in the mid and upper 30s.
anything he can do now to prevent injury?
.
·
spot tumors and to find biomarkers.

Man ordered

. : MEDINA (AP) - . A judge ,
ordered a man charged wi!h fatally
s~ooting his wife in thei.r gal'!lge to
give blood and saliva llamplea to
prosecutors. ·
' Medina County Common Pleas
Judge Christopher Collier ordered.
Steven Bozsik on Friday to give
prosecutors the samples. Prosecutors need ·them tc;. compare with ·
bloOd found at the crime scene and
with a saliva swab submiued witli an
aj,plication for a new life insurance
policy for Bozsik's wife, Carol.
. BOzsik, 41, has pleaded innocent
to charges that he shot his wife
seven times Nov. 30 in the·garage of .
their home near this northeaal 0100
city.
· Sheriff's deputies said financ:i«l
· , proble~ 11111y haVe .been .a modye
for the slaying. ·
·

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• SUPPLIES &lt;md BRACES ! .

41

~.=. ~rosc:a.~e~v!;!us~ii~~ .!:~~:

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24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
MEDICAl EQUIPMENT i

s••"'"'
·rls• Art"y. s
OV•' 'ZJ c .

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BIDWEll. - Marilla M. Brown Gothard, 88, of Fairview Road, Bidwel ~
pasaed away on Thursday, January 13, 2000 in Holzer Medical O:nter.
:
She was born February 9, 1911 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Ri char~
M. Brown and Nancy DeWitt Brown.
;
Mrs. Gothard was a member of the Springfield Baptist Church near Bid~
well.
..
,
In addition to her 'parents, she was preceded in death'by her huSband, auj
Gothard, on October 5, 1971; three grandsons; and nine brothers and two siS"
ters. ·
·
;
SurviVing are two s ons and daughters-in-law: Luther M. and Mary Lo(i
Moore of Bidwell, and Loren E. "Gene" and Belly Moore of Rio Grande; twq
grandsons, Carl (Angela) Moore of Columbus, and Chris Moore and fia ncq
Margarette McDonald, of Gallipolis; and .two great-granddaughters, Tara and
Erin Moore of Columbus.
·
\
Graveside services will he 1 p.m. Monday in Mound Hill Cemetery, Gal•
lipolis. Interment will follow. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Fune;;;l
Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, on Sunday, Janu ary 16, 2000 from 3~ ,
p.m.
.
.
.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to the Springfield Baptist
Church, in care of,Elsie Higley, 127 Arnold Road, Bidwell, Ohio ·45614.

THE: ME:DICAL

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Uni ..
versily of Cincinnati College of Medicine
will breed a line of mice that can
· GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County EMS respOnded to eight calls for
mimi~
human development of cancer
assistance on Thursday, bringing the total number of runs for the mont~ to
of
the
colon
and pancreas.
.
106.
. . .
.
.
.'
Theuniversilyh(ISreceivedafive' Runs included a transport from Airline Road to Holzer Medical Center;
year,
$2~ million grant to breed the
transport from Vine Stre~t to HMC; transport from Shady Grove Road to .
mice
that
will be used to test the risks
HMC; transport from the Ponderosa Restaurant to HMC, two units sent;
and
effectiveness
of experimental
rc:Sponse to Frenchtown Apartments, treatment . refused; transport from
cancer
drugs.
.
. Fl'l'nchtown Apartments to HMC; response to Long Branch Road, treatment
UC's
grant_
is
part
of
an
effort
led
refused; and transport from,Bodimer's Grocery to HMC.
' I,'
by the National .Cancer Institute to
. '
accelerate basic cancer research;
Nineteen groups of scienli•1s will use
the mice to· study several leading ·

Cold front wi II filter
·through ·Ohio today

Mari II a M. Gothard

HOLZER CLINIC
90 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631

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PageA4•

Buncley, •angeery 11,1000·

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~nclay,

...._, 11, 2000

• 6unb1p 1Elmn ·6tntlnel • P9 All

Pomeroy • Middleport • O.lllpolla, Ohio • Point PI•Hnt, WV

.
Free Immunizations offered

~imts- Jttttintl

GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizationa will be provided by the Gallia
County Health Deputmenl at the following locations this week:
• Wednesday, Jan. 19 - Gallia Metropolitan Eatates, 2-3 p.m.
POMEROY - Thelma Sue Bowen, 59, of Columbus, died Tuesday, Jan.
, • Thul'lday, Jan. 20 - Gallia County Courthouae lobby, 4-6 p.m.
.
II
,
2000.
.
~ Children in need of immunizations must be IICCOIIIpanied by a parent or
She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jones of Columbus. She
I~ auarclian, and bring a current immunization reoord with them.
is survived by three sisters.and a brother-in-law, Tom and Mary Ella Burnside;
and Patricia Lehew of Pomeroy, and Dorothy McKinniss of Lancaster. She was
~DAMHS
·Preceded
in death by a sister, Barbara McGraw.
.
Services were Saturday at Rutherford-5hoyer Funeral Home, ColufllbUS.
~· GAIJJPOLIS - . The Gallia-Jacbon-Meip Board of Aloo~ol , Drug
Alldiction and Mental Health Services will meet at 7 p.m. Jan. 31 at 53
Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.
.
The board typically meets on the third Monday of the month at7 p.m. For
more information, call 446-3022.
.'
· . MIDDUPOIU' - Martha Ann Buckley, 82, Middlepo~ died Friday. )an. ·
14, 2000, at her residence.
A homemaker, she was born Jljov. 20, 1917, in Pomeroy, daughter of the late
contlnu~s
Harvey and Ruby Wines McCumber.
•
She is survived by five daughters. Frances Ann Manley of Middleport, CarRIO GRANDE - A continuing education course discussing the compar.'
olyn
Elizabeth Klein of Tuppers Plains, Martha L. Ord and Sandra S. Darst,
ison of religious faitha is underway at the University of Rio Grande/Rio
both
of Middleport. 311d Sharon. L. Ward of Pomeroy; a son, Sherman Gene
Grande Community College.
.
. ·
JJuckley
of Middleport; 32 grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; and a broth·
The oourse is held in the James A. Rhodes Student center Commuter
er,
Nathania!
McCumber of Gallipolis.
·
Lounge Mondays at 6 p.m.
.
She was preceded in death by her husband, William Sherman Buckley; three
:·. Guests for the remainder of this month are ·Pastor John Jackson of NeY{
sons,
Charles William Buckley, Carl Leroy Buckley and Paul Edward Buckley;
I.:ife Lutheran Church, Gallipolis. speaking on lhe Lutheran tradition on Jan.
and
a
daughter, Mary Lou Buckley. .
..
17, and Father Deacon Mark .fiagan·of the Holy Spirit Orthodox Church in
Graveside
services
will
be
al
12:30
p.m.
Thesday
at Middleport Hill O:mef!untington, W.Va., speaki~~ on Greek Orthodolt faith on. Jan. 24.
lery.
·
'.
Friends may call from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport.
. · ·
.
.
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'Est/Wftsnd in 1966

Thelma Sue Bowen

825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
014 440 2342 • Fax: 440 3008

111 Court StrMt, Pomaroy, Ohio
014-m-2150 • Fax: m-2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publlsl!er
Diane Kay Hill
Controll•r

Faith comparison course

Our view: ·

Uni

·

(:losin·
gs annou·nced for King Day
.
'

Participate in local·events
to bring the region together
· Unity is crucial to the Ohio Valley's future, and during the next
three days, local folks have 5ome wonderful 'events planned to
bring the region together.
·
. Kicking off things is the annual
community Unity Walk at 6 p.m.
today at Paint Creek Regular Baptist
Church. The effort was spawned by
Paint Creek Pastor Dennis Hurt and
includes his parishioners, as well as
those from St. Louis Catholic, Grace

: GAIJJPOLIS - Offices in lhe Gallipolis City Building will be closed
¥onday in observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
·
· The Dr. Sam~cl L. Bossard Memorial Library will also be closed MoncDiy for the observance.

Weedy's view:

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.,

Gathering against the denigration of life

•'

ne need

to celebratl!
our d(fferences,
rwt mock them.

as

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•••

By The Aaaoclated Praaa
.
.
Today is Sunday, Jan. 16, the 16th day of 2000. There· are 350 days left
intheyear.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Jan .. 16, 1920, Prohibition began in the United St~les under the 18th
Amendment to the Qmstilution. Prohibition waa later repealed by the 2)st
Amendment
·:
: On this date:
. • In 1547 Ivan the Terrible was crowned Czar of Russia.
. : In 1883: the U.S. Civil Service Commission was established.
: In 1942., actress Carole Lombard, her mother were among some 20 peo~e killed when their plane crashed near Las Vegas while returning from a
teur to pmmote war bonds.
~ In 1944, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower took command of the Allied Inva$Jon Force in London.
1
• In 1964, the musical "Hello, Dolly!" opened on Broadwayt beginning a
r¥n of 2,844 performances.
·
~ In 1967, Alan S. Boyd was sworn in as the fi~
, ·U.S. transpoi'lali!)n secJtlary.
.
.
, In 1989, rioting eruptc!d in Miami when u police officer fatally shot a
black motorcyclist, causing a crash that killed a passenger. .
; In 1991, the White House announced the slart of OPI'ration Desert Storm
te drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait.
·
.
· : In 1992, officials of the government of El Salvador and rebel leaders
sl'gned a pact ending 12 years of civil war.
·
•; Ten )ears ago: The Soviet Union sent more than 11,000 reinforcements
te the,Cau~asus to halt a civil war between Armenians and Azerbaijanis.
: Five years ago: In Union, S.C., a prosecutor announced he would seek the
IJtath penalty for Susan Smith, the woman accused of drowning her sons, 3·
)1ar-old M'1chae I and 14-month-oIdA! ex. Smith was later convicted of murrli:r ani~ sentenced to life in prison.
~ One year ago: Closing three days of opening arguments, House prosecut(!rs demanded President Ointon's removal from office, telling· a hushed
!!enate that otherwise the presidency itself may be "deeply and perhaps per~ntly damaged." Forty-five Albanians were found slain near the southcln Kosovo village of Racak.
. ~ Today's Birthdays: Ac)rcss Katy Jurado is 73. Author Wil)iam Kennedy
~72. Author-editor Norman P~horelz is 70. Opera singer Marilyn Hol'l)e is
cl&amp;. Auto racer A.J. Foyt is6S. Smger Barbara Lynn is 58. Country sinaer Jim
9Jalr~ is 56. Movie director John Carpenter is 52. Actress-dancer-choreo•apher Debbie Allen is 50. SingerSade ,is 41. Rock musician Paul Webb
{falkTalk) is 38. Rhylhm-an\1,-blues singer Maxine Jones(En \\Jgue) is 34.
Jlctor David Chokachi is 32. Model Kate Moss is 26. Singer Aaliyah is 21.
Actresa Yvonne Zima is 11.

·Agatha Beth Gibbs King

MASON, W.Va. - Agatha Beth Gibbs King, 27, Mason, died Friday, Jan.
14, 2000 in Holzer Medical O:nter.
BomApril16, 1972 in Point Ptea'sant, W.Va., daughter of Gerald L. and Sara
E. Brinker Gibbs of Mason, she attended Father's House Qurch, and the Syracuse and Point Pleasant Church of God.
.
GALliPOLIS - · Gallipolis City Police cited Marshall R. Wolfe, 48, 28
Surviving in addition to her parents are her husband, Timothy 1: King of
Birch Lane, Gallipolis, for failure .to yield half of the roadway following a New Haven, W.Va,; a daughter, Nalosha Marie King of Mason; a sister, Robyn
two-vehicle accident Friday on Birch Lane. .
.
·
..
C. VanMatre of Letart, W.Va.; two brothers, Gerald. L {Belly L} Gibbs Jr. of
Officers said Wolfe was' eastbound, 60 feet west of Upper River Road, at. Mason, and Harold W. (feresa D.) .Gibbs of Hartford, W.Va.; her malel)lal
3:01 p.m. when he failed to yield part of the ro~dway to a car driven by Alii- grartdfather, Roy W. Brinker of Mason; and three nieces and two nephews.
' son R. McQuaid; 27, 565 Gwrges Creek Road; Gallipolis.
·
She was also preceded in death by her maternal grandmother, Margaret V.
Both ;vehicles collided head-on, according to tlie·rep&lt;irt. Damage to both Brinker; her paternal grandparents, Harold E. and Helen Gibha; and a niece,
vehicles was severe, officers said.
.
Tabitha Dawn VanMatre.
Officers licketed Morgan R. Davies, 17, 65 Crestview Drive, Gallipolis, · Services will be 2 p.m. today in FoSJesong Funeral Home, Mason, with the
for failure to control following an accident on the 600 block of Third Avenue . Rev. aovis Vanover and Brother Albert Yester officiating. Burial will be in
earlier Friday. ·
Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Visitation was Saturday in the funeral home.
Davies was northbound at 7:35a.m. when the car Davies drove drifted to
the right side of the road and struck a parked car owned by Don E. Carter,
657 Third Ave., Gallipolis.
Damage to. both cars was severe, according to the report.
Cited by police early saturday was Eric S. Shriver, 22, 473 Shade River .
RUTlAND - .Joe N. Sayre, 69, Carpellter Hill Road, Rutland died Friday,
Road, Patriot, for driving under the influence .and failu.re to dim high-beam Jan. 14, 2000, at h1s res1dence . .
· headlights, accordjng to police records. ·
.
• .
. · .He was born Nov. 5, 1930 ~n ~arleston, W.Va., ~n oft~ late Carl an~
Cited by officers Thursday was Christopher G. Beaver, 19, 1016 Second ~haT. Harbert Sayre. He retired m 1990 as a consulllng engmee~ for AEP s
Ave. Gallipolis, for no seatbelt. .
D1vts1on of Fuel .Supply. He was a 40-year member and pastor smce Octo,
·
ber,1989 of MI. Union Baptist Church, owner of Sayre Trucking &amp; Excavating
and active in the Gideons and missionary work.
He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Rosalie Turner Sayre; a' son and
· GALLIPOLIS - A drive-off from a Gallipolis business was reported to daughtet·in-law, Timothy Joe and Klj.y Sayre of Albany; a daughter and son-inlaw, Helena and Roger Riggs of Rutland; four grandchildren; nine great-grandcity police ori' Friday.
children;
and a sister, Kitty Canterbury of Missouri.
·
Officers were informed that a subject pumped $12 worth of gas.into car
He.was preceded in death by a sister, Peggy Ann Sayre, and a brot~er, Tom
all~e Burlile Oil 76 station,~ Vine St., at 9:30p.m. and drove off wi~ul .
.
Sayre.
.
·
pay1ng. ,
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Services
will
be
at
2
p.m;
Monday
al
MI.
Union
Baptist
Chureh,
Carpenter,
, The incident is under Investigation.
with the Rev. Otarles Swigger and Pastor John Elswick officiating. Burial will
follow in WeJls·Q:metery, Pageville.
Friends may call (rom 2-5 p.~. today at Bigbny-Jordan Funeral Home,
Albany, and one hour prior to services Monday at the church.
GALLIPOLIS -· Placed in the Gallia County Jail Thursday by Gallia
County sheriff's deputies were Joe Kevin Patrick, 32, Mason, W.Va., for
assault; Jacqueline Galloway; 30, 52 Westwood Drive, Gallipolis, for DUI,
driying under suspension and reckless operation; and Jonathan A. McWhorter, 37, 13961 State Route 7 South, Crown City, for p4role .violation.

Police issue citations In accidents

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'
By ROBERT WEEDY
,.
. abOrtion on demand through all riine months of broadly: jlhysical, emotional, psychological, farnil:.'
More than 30 years ago, Francis A Schaeffer pregnancy as a legal "right."
ial and the woman's age as bemg relevant
.
was writing about the thinking and struggling of
One argument ma)'" say the unborn 8(e not fully
Thus the court h~ for all practical purposes
men. He was a reading, listening, thinking man who human and they do not have a right to life if their legalized abortion up unlil birth. The u:s. Sena~ •
lived in the preser\~ learned from the pas~ and life hinders the liberty of a person who is fully Judiciary Commitlec in 1983 affirmed "no signifi· • .
cant legal barriers of any kind whatsoever exist
looked to the future. He saw lhal"ideas have leg_1," human.
Another
may
say
if
the
unborn
entity
is
fully
today in tile United Stales for a woman to obtain an ,
so thai how we think determines what we are.
human,
he/she
has
no
right
to
vse
the
body
of
anothabortion
for any reason during any stage o( her ,
Thus he became ooncemed about the "piea- er against that person's will. By this reasoning, the pregnancy." ·
United Methodist, First Church of
.
the Nazarene, St. Peier's Episcopal and First Presbyterian.
sure now" philosophy mother is morally justified in removing her ·offMedia hype made tile book "Final Exit" by
: Participation in the walk is by no means limited to members of
that was .advocating spring even if that results in death.
Derek Humphrey a best seller and was available in ~
Euthanasia
has
been
debated
much
in
the
last
libraries
almost everywhere. While in interviews .
these churches, however. If you want to promote unity, we
abortion as the "soluyear,
yet
many
have
no
idea
what
it
is.
When
·
Humphrey
generally called it "self-deliverance for
·
·
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·
h
fu
tioil·
"
'
for
••unwanted"
encourage you to lace up your walking shoes and
· JOin tnt e n.
On Monday, the Southeastern Ohio 6ranch of the NAACP ·
children. He saw going couched in the language of choice and individual the terminally ill," he was more candid with .a
down that slippery rights, it sounds like a pei!IOii's right to be free of . British newspaper when he said, "It tells you hc:N,
will offer a traditional tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The
slopeoould only lead to painful ilnd unwanted intervention. is the issue. .
where and when to kill yourself or someone else. ll~
event starts at '1 p:m. Monday at Paint Creek Regular Baptist
also eliminating the
Slogans like "ald-in-dying" have led to the mis- breaks the last taboo. Follow my instructions for I'•
Church, and U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, a fdrmer Methodist min·
lives .(\f the elderly and takenbeliefeuthariasiaallowstheni.turalprocessof perfect death, with no mess, no autopsy, no post·
ister, is the keynote speaker.
sever~ly
. infirm dying to go unhindered: In reality, it is making peo- mortem," according to the Sun!lay Express. Did th~
·· '
\ The University of Rio Grande hosts its Martin Luther King Jr.
because they were not .pie die rather than letting them die. Kevorkian was media also .tell us how he II'Caled his wife?
making
people
die
by
lethal
injection.
.
.
Have
you
wondered
what
would
happen
if
the
Day festivities Tuesday, starting with a 7 p.m. concert at Berry 10 society.
~lributing positively
While il isn 'I talked about much, there is a bias media gave factual information about prenatal •
Fjne Arts Center, featuring the award-winning Central State UniThis is oommonly known aa.euthanasia, and the -~nst people.with disabilities. This can be the very ~velopJien~ abortion methods and fetal prun1 ;
versity Chorus. A candlelight vigil to· honor King's accomplish· p(&gt;Jitically correct terms of "death with dignity" and young or adVanced in age. Some people perceive Suppose they gave reports about how many
nients and remember his sacrifices follows.
the "right to die."
.
them iiS less than human and thus their life~ little depmsed folks ha~ ended their lives by following .
· i, ..
.,, lillfiiPhfl)y's, i~lnK!,ti.ons (rpm his ~II,. Su~ :
· • How appropriate it is these events surround the King holiday.
":h• fact these issues ·are highly charg~ and value. . . ,
What
irony
has
already
developed
from
this
they stopJlCilbanning fa&amp;.al pl'll·life information
While obtaining justice for black Americans was King's obvious • details poorly understood . by most Amencans
.
·
·
·
·
·
·
II brought about a yearly remembrance, on the movement The book, "Deadly .CompiL'ISion," by inflammatory and unlrlle?
goal, a burmng passton for equal nghts and umty among a
anniversary of Roe v. Wade of the sacredness of · Rita Marker, reveals liow Derek Humphrey, .co- : But they do air pro-death information like th6 •
Americans was at the heart of King's crusade.
life.
'
founder of the Hemlock Society with his wife Ann, · · typical housewife who says she supports abortion '
This 27th year, an entire week. is set aSide from 8banctoned·her when she was diagnosed with can- rights in order to keep the abortion decisioA '
. We believe the good reverend would be pleased to see the
. · between "the woman, her physician, and her fami, ·
strides America has p1ade since his tragic death in 1968. At the J!"'. 16-23to ref1CC! on the source and ~rpa!e of cer.
Ann, having no one to turn to, called Rita, who ly.".
·
same time, how eyer, we know King's dream is far from being hfe and to say that hfe should not be demgratcd.
f lfilled
·
When Dr. Schaeffer warned us, people then waa an opponent of the society, ~ut a· respecled . This is untrue beicause a woman can ' have ah·!
u
·
.
.
were incredulous - they didn~ believe it. Having adversary. 'lllcy became trusting friends.over the abortion performed on her by a physician she has·
If we had our druthers, Amenca would be close to fulfilling now heard the evidence of the elimination of more next' two yoars before Ann died. Even this story known for only 30 seconds. Also, her family has no
the dream. But it's not. There's still a lot of hate .in our great than 40 million babies and the besinning of physi- . show how much support is Def;ded from SOII)eone legal rishl to forbid, permit or be infonned abou.t
nation, and we must bridge the gap between races, genders, sex· dan-assisted death, many now can see and hear who cares.lCllling them is not die answer ... it never her abortion. And that includes sex-selection abor~ ..
.
~
.
ual orientations and generations.
~hat he ':"as saying. The' evidence gives credence to wiU~
That
this
debate
still
&lt;Xinlinu~
after
27
yeais
can
The
deCisions
of
men
are
flying
in
the
face o.r our .
We need to celebrate our differences, not mock them. A world . h1s wammg.
.
.
be
credited
io
the
effcctlveness.,of
pRSentin1
limit.
grea1
Creator,
and
at
what
a
cost.
·
Like
Beetle
Bai; •.
filled with people who look 11nd act the same would be a boring
!Jle grou~ that began thls.J?f~H~eath movement,
•
. .
.
while "sensitiVe" tq ll!e political needs of nearly ed facts and the acation of £al5e perceptions. Most ley's friend says, "We were given a box of Sooc!·
· place. Dtve~stty IS a good;tht?g.
•
. .
.
every interest group, tolerate natllism: the denial of Americans are uninformed about the oombined stuff called 'Life,' but we don~ look at the direc- ,
Let us stnye to reach Kmg s dream tn dur hfc;ttmes .- :both for the fundamental human right to life to a segment of effect of Roe v. Wide and Doe v. Bolton to provide lions." ·
our sake and that of our children. .
human ~inp simply because they have 1101 passed a mother uniimitcd access 10 abortion th'l"fib nine
(Robll't WM/Itf II I oolumnflt for thll Sundlly
through the birth canal. Thus the United Slates has months of pregnancy.. Doe defined "health" so Tim•• SIIIIIIMI.)

On this date in history

Board to meet Jan. 31

Martha Ann Buckley

\

Ulttrs to tl!• odilor an wlcomo. Tlt•1 sltovld bt ltss titan 300 words.
..UIIollrrs ,.,. •u"J•ct lo edilillr and nuul br rir11od and ilt&lt;lrul• ruld~
and ttltpilllll• '11umbtr. No uMitned lm•n will br publuhed. Lttttrs
sltoultJ b1 ill fopt/ lute, addtesSinJ i.uMcs, 11ot #Mnllllldilkr.

a.

.....

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

.

R. Sh8wn LAwta
Managing EdHor

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iunbav

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Your views:
pDn"e P"''OCeSS

II · READER POLL
f1
··
ofian.

"ltah! Rlhl Rallt Rahsl" from the sidelines. ·
.. As a l~i rcson, why noi ji!SI say, "Sta)i'away

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fromWai·Miltor~lseendupintheriverl"
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1
Bach time we ~ve our homes, the pOIBibili- 1 · The Tim•• SulliNI wanta
QPinkini. 1·
.Dea.r Editor: .
.
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. . lii:s that'we c:Oilld IKe tragedy lile endliu, but the . '1 P.Jeasa complete thll follow!~ and rell.im 1·
.
Does anyone understand whalrs goma on IR incenliva far outweigh the risks.
1 ~~R=~ ·'";".;:~attach~ .1'
.SbeSepherdsalltowhn, W.Va.? 'al
.
,__
Lei's be gracious about il: ,''The R~ are. , 1 lhlel8 of...;._ Ji You RIKIII . . apaoa.
1., ·
e
. I e ceremom . meelinp .,..tween· here."
,,
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......-;· ~ ·.
f
dozens of high level and low level delegates?
' '
. Miry (lllller r' I . 1. Rank, ln.telrnll of~ 10 yoA/, llie I '
See the big room with lines of peace experts
Middi!IPOft ·1, following live III'IIIIS: echoolll, roads, drinking l ;
facing each other? None.dare to oome too close.
,
.
.
,1 water, racl'lllltlonal factlllln, and new jobs. . t '.
Progress means cornmg ~IOi!C enough to see IH '"' t' n
..I;.
1
each other in a passing stretch limousine.
n 0 uU
1ng uuWn ere ., I
,
f•
1
· Ointon's secret weapon, aa he!fdman in all ·. .!l:
The follow-111 1ettar this, isa few bags full of money.
lld•uud Su!ldlv Tlmll SIIII!INI ootum- I
.
·
, . . , · 1·'
11te.average 'Palestinian.of Syria has IIOihing.
Robart
.)
I ,. 2. Whilt'a the one 188Ue ·candldatea for · 1 ..
1
· lei alone freedom. 1iloody old Arafal and Assad ~· Deaf Mr.
y: , •
I otnce I11UII addrll.. to earn yolir vote?
see to lhal
.
·
.1; I real wi~·interesl your article in the Jan. 9, I
I .
. . All this is remindful of the Oreal White . Father: · ~. edilio~ of the Su*i 'limes·SenliflCI. In 1
~
who inVited the Indians to WaShington, D.C., to your openin paragraph, tpu said ~ucalioo I
·/'
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feast them and show them the splendors of civi- should be of great concern to all of us in this new. I
3. Should .;.... abandon the 101\81Y? Why . t.
lization. They rained IJ\el,ndians with gifts, pal'ad- year. ·
. ·'~ ·
. _, •
.1 I or 'jVhy oot?
. '
.
t~
ed them around town m plug hall and ·sent .them
• I SII'OII81Y agree w1th you. In addition, ypu •' 1··
carrying presenis back to the tribe with favorable wrote, "If we are goin&amp; to see im~anenl, a 1·
1
impressions.
· ·
positive OUIIook and a moa;urc.of what is yet to ·1
1.
This b.ig pow-wow is Shepherdstown·will get be III:COIIlplished 5J!ould be reviewed." However, • ,
.
1~
1e90ladcs frorQ the press, Ointon will save a little I did' not fil!d thit positive Dullook in your article. . '
4. Shou IIChool or teacher~n~
j':
face l!nd this world hot spot will cool off j~t in
I am a teacher ~n the 'Ga!lia Cqunty ~
~allowecj In the ~ Of
Y f;
time.
S!:hooltsystem. Beltcve me, ~r, we dO not Just
·· '
·
1·
Gayle
Prlcl
dumb
ildowll.•
O!uU!liniltntion,
~~118~
'
Portland ""pporl 'staff and _
ot ill our .....,..,
-~-'- 1 _~
111 -~
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worldna hard every day to achieve thole golls our
1·:
D
~
Jcaislllleln set.' Have w.e b? No sir, we h've
I. Should lhl u.s..~ COur:t revisit
~n
~~,7onalwe !2~de thto- aceomh~=:liMded.
Roe v. WD? W!rY or WhY not?
·
I·'.,'
---s::~ the -.;:;.::e..81in 11y.='ri:J~I·
--.
r
l·
t,
Dear Editor:
·unclear to me. I ·tried Iii phone you, b'ut Willi
.'
This is in reference to the llrticle (:Jan. 6)on the unable 10 locale your Jjjting. Therefore, a le""'
I•
cOndition of the (Porneloy·MiiOtl) bridF, very w11 my best jeOOUrse. I lpplaud you for your
Name
I•
well wrillcn and quite subtle II any iced JII'OPI· obvious inlmll in eduCation and would Hb to
AdciiWI
L,
ganda piece should be.
'
, lrulouraae you to visit with· educaiOrlllld IIU·
t,
Plantuccdofdorrbtinthe mind of the public, · deilts. "
\
Aile-~ number
I, ,
· then, 10 II no.t to appear too negatlve,lldd • few
Marlyn Kuhn
I
little postii~ notes. tlhought I '-d a few flint
No!tliup Lo .. ___ ...... _;,;. .. _ .... ..,. _ .. _ -1. ,
· """"'
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in·a·nutshell

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Wuk

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16, 2000

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vcM

b•

'h

(Edllor'ae:

J.!-!

1

J

'd

ge s,ory
anti-Wal&lt;-Mart

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pra: .

1
p

:!.,

,,

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: ·;

Joe N.- Sayre

•
ff f rom
. b. US1neS$ rep0
.
rt d.
. 0' riVe•O
e

a

Deputies place ·three In Gallla jail

UCtobreed
research ·mice

Galli&amp; EMS answers eight calls

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By The ANoclltad Pr111
~ The National Weather Service said
a cold front pushed southward Saturday night, and was expected to reach
r¥&gt;rthem Ohio by this morning,
. The front will move from the north
the south today. Skies will be.mostly cloudy and there will be a chancC
Q{ snow behind the front: Morning
highs in tlie nort~ will be around 40,
with temperatures falling into' ihe 30s
liy afternoon.
: lfiahs in the far south will be
around 50 abead of the 'front.
·
:' Sunrise today will be'at7:5~ im.
'
Wealher fOI'eallt:

brain and blood system cancers.
The teams are forming the Mouse
Models of Human Cancers Conser-

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Jean Lama Moore

'

MIDDLEPORT- Jean Lama Moore, Middleport, died Friday, Jan. 14,
2000.
She was born in Nelsonville, daughter of the late Earl and Edith Sauvage
Lama,.
'
· · She and her husband, the late Harry Moore, owned the former Royal
Crown Bollling Plant in Middleport. Slie graduated from Middleport f1igh
School and attended Ohio University. She was a member of the Evangeline
'Chapter Order of lhe. Eastern Star, the Grace Episcopal and the Middleport
Presbyterian churches.
.
,.
She is survived ~y a niece, Carol Jean Jones Langen field of Columbus; a
nephew, Kenneth Jones of Orange, Conn.; a stepson, William Moore of Ash·
land, Ky.; two grandchildren, Carla Ann Mulvaney of Versailles, Ky., and
Catherine Jayne Elsea of Raleigh, N.C.; and three great-grandchildren.
'.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Harry Moore, and by a sister,
Alice Louise Jones.
.
••
Services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Fisher Funeral flome in Middleport, with burial following in Beech Grove O:metery, Pomeroy.
. Friends may call from noon until time of services Wednesday atlhe fun eral home.

Man charged with
killing wife's kitten

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~HOPPE:

HOME OXYGEN and

D I'

·
IABO JACkSON PiKE
:&amp;
GAlliPOliS

I,

pass the

I

I
'j

1

savings

on to you .
. Cuntac t our agency

l

today li)r a customized

..pm(.XJSal on your homem\'ners
insumnce prorecrion:

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Auto-Owners fnsur,.,nc 7eJ '

I·

Life liome Car Business
if, P~¥~4. Pu;l- •

n.

INsURANCE Pws

A .
.
. n.GENCIES,

11.,;;;;;;;--:;.;-------·'"'---=--~·'. . .,~!

cill 111 tOday for a F~ initial naluation.
•

JNCe

992 66~

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A: Detecting a head injury is very difficUlt. SoJrietimes; the signs and/or symptoms ~•••••·
be minimal,' but you should look for any signs of abnormal behavior, ex•ce••si1•e l
tiredness; intense headache or headache lasting longer than 2. days, un.ste•adim:ss,
memory loss,, copfusion~ blurred vision, slurred speech, loos of appetite, sensitivity
light, dizziness or neck pain &amp; stiffness . Quite often signs of a head injury (c~mcu s••im&gt;)l
do not appear immedia.t ely after trauma , but hours or possibly days .a fte r the iniiti u•ll•
injury.
.
.
·
In order to prevent head or neck injury, you, need to be aware· of proper •norttol
technique, proper equipment maintenance and perfc;~rm neck-strengthe!'ing exercises.
Please also remember not to give your son any aspirin products be fore , during or
after athlet~c participation because that could increase ~erebral bleeding if he does
sustain a head injury. If you have any further questions, please feel free to call me ,
I-.AJ\\ 446-5534,
.
Fax your questions to .(740) 446-5565 or leave your questions on our voice mail
(740) 446-5534 or mail 't o: Ask a Professional-c/o l&gt;r. Kelly Roush, Chiroprac tic
Physician, Holzer Clinic, 90 Jackson Pike,
.

·

"lWtu:bttyo~~r riM of~ u~" ,

2500 Jefferson Avenue . . Point Pleasant, WV
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. 304-675-1675
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1·IOO~i·s:2206

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Dr. Robert Holley has received 8peeial
Training to identify and·treat the many tisk factors
· That lead to a heart attack or stroke

I

If you're 50 or
older, you're in

us ttl

ree . e IVery

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•r

allowing

F

ARE YOO 'At IISK?

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losses,

IIIII &amp; IINfAJ.S

OVER 25 FACTORS Cfl" .CfiUSE.A
"EARr fi'ITAC~ Ott.STRO.KE• .

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the

RESPIRATORY EQUIP..MENT

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TOLEDO (AP) - A Toledo man
assaulted his wife and killed her kitten
by plating it an oven turned up to 500
degrees, a city prosecutor said Friday.
. Dennis Davis, 56, was charged
IIUJ,.IJ.II;;
with felony domestic violence and
animal cruelty, said assistant city
prosecutor Sharon Gaich. He- was
you iruur.!
being held in the Lucas County jail on
$8,500 bOnd.
·
·
home with us,
. Gaich said that on Ja.n. 9, Roberta
thmurh Auto-Owners
Davis, 41, got home from work and
was told by her husband that dinner
Insurance Cnmpany, we'll save
was ready. She opened the stove and
found her kitten dead.
w u mnney! Statistics show that
.
'
She told police that her husband .., .,.
~onur.ah&gt;e gruup experiences
then assaulted her by tightening a
j~mp rope an;JUnd her neck.
tewer. b s-costly

UESTIONS and ANSWERS ...

~0. give blood

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Sunday...Cioudy. Highs in . the
I 114 Court
lower SOs. .
·
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. Sunday night ... Partly cloudy. lium.
As' a result pf , tlie informatio'n- · ...
L..--.,.·~;.·.-~.;."'.·---..,1 ·' •
Lows in the lower 30s.
· sharing, cancer · re~earch may be
Monday... Light snow likely, main· .accelerated. on multiple fronts, said
ly during tbe night. Highs in the lower Dr. Joanna Groden, a geneticist who
andmid40s.
will be leading UC's research.
, Exteaded rorecut:
If one group develops a way to
Tuesday...Mostiy cloudy with a detect early s(age breast canC:er, the
chance ofligh! snow. Lows from the bfeakthrough may help another team
upper 2ta lo the lower 30s, and· hi~ working on brain tumors. ·
ASK A PROFESSIONAL.....
•
in the mid and upper 30s.
Q: My son pl,a ys football and basketball and my worst fear i~ that h~ might ... ustain a
Researchef'!' hope 10 ·trace genetic
Wednesday:..Partly cloudy with ·a. links that influence how cancer
head or neck injury. I don~.t know if he- would tell me or his coach because he loves
chance of snow showers. lOws fro'm tumors gJqw alld spread, to develop
sports and 'would not. want to miss a game. What should I look for? Is there
the upper teens to the loliler 20s, .and more sophisticated imaging tools to
highs in the mid and upper 30s.
anything he can do now to prevent injury?
.
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spot tumors and to find biomarkers.

Man ordered

. : MEDINA (AP) - . A judge ,
ordered a man charged wi!h fatally
s~ooting his wife in thei.r gal'!lge to
give blood and saliva llamplea to
prosecutors. ·
' Medina County Common Pleas
Judge Christopher Collier ordered.
Steven Bozsik on Friday to give
prosecutors the samples. Prosecutors need ·them tc;. compare with ·
bloOd found at the crime scene and
with a saliva swab submiued witli an
aj,plication for a new life insurance
policy for Bozsik's wife, Carol.
. BOzsik, 41, has pleaded innocent
to charges that he shot his wife
seven times Nov. 30 in the·garage of .
their home near this northeaal 0100
city.
· Sheriff's deputies said financ:i«l
· , proble~ 11111y haVe .been .a modye
for the slaying. ·
·

.

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41

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BIDWEll. - Marilla M. Brown Gothard, 88, of Fairview Road, Bidwel ~
pasaed away on Thursday, January 13, 2000 in Holzer Medical O:nter.
:
She was born February 9, 1911 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Ri char~
M. Brown and Nancy DeWitt Brown.
;
Mrs. Gothard was a member of the Springfield Baptist Church near Bid~
well.
..
,
In addition to her 'parents, she was preceded in death'by her huSband, auj
Gothard, on October 5, 1971; three grandsons; and nine brothers and two siS"
ters. ·
·
;
SurviVing are two s ons and daughters-in-law: Luther M. and Mary Lo(i
Moore of Bidwell, and Loren E. "Gene" and Belly Moore of Rio Grande; twq
grandsons, Carl (Angela) Moore of Columbus, and Chris Moore and fia ncq
Margarette McDonald, of Gallipolis; and .two great-granddaughters, Tara and
Erin Moore of Columbus.
·
\
Graveside services will he 1 p.m. Monday in Mound Hill Cemetery, Gal•
lipolis. Interment will follow. Friends may call at the McCoy-Moore Fune;;;l
Home Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, on Sunday, Janu ary 16, 2000 from 3~ ,
p.m.
.
.
.
In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to the Springfield Baptist
Church, in care of,Elsie Higley, 127 Arnold Road, Bidwell, Ohio ·45614.

THE: ME:DICAL

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Uni ..
versily of Cincinnati College of Medicine
will breed a line of mice that can
· GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County EMS respOnded to eight calls for
mimi~
human development of cancer
assistance on Thursday, bringing the total number of runs for the mont~ to
of
the
colon
and pancreas.
.
106.
. . .
.
.
.'
Theuniversilyh(ISreceivedafive' Runs included a transport from Airline Road to Holzer Medical Center;
year,
$2~ million grant to breed the
transport from Vine Stre~t to HMC; transport from Shady Grove Road to .
mice
that
will be used to test the risks
HMC; transport from the Ponderosa Restaurant to HMC, two units sent;
and
effectiveness
of experimental
rc:Sponse to Frenchtown Apartments, treatment . refused; transport from
cancer
drugs.
.
. Fl'l'nchtown Apartments to HMC; response to Long Branch Road, treatment
UC's
grant_
is
part
of
an
effort
led
refused; and transport from,Bodimer's Grocery to HMC.
' I,'
by the National .Cancer Institute to
. '
accelerate basic cancer research;
Nineteen groups of scienli•1s will use
the mice to· study several leading ·

Cold front wi II filter
·through ·Ohio today

Mari II a M. Gothard

HOLZER CLINIC
90 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH 45631

•

i

�•

..~

-,

-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohll) • Point Pleaaant, WV

p ..., A8 • 6anup .fli!IIH -htiael

•

Sundty, January 11, 2000;
'•

Page 81

•

~-·~----~--------------------------~----~--------------------------------------~------~~

Cases filed, decided in Gallia County courts MORELOCALNEWS.MORE.WCALFOLKSJ.

GALLIPOUS - The following · 80 hours of 1;001munity service.
~were resolved ~ently in Gal·
• Michael N. Rutter, 23,
·
' MCArthur, charged with domestic
lipolis Municipal Coun:
• Samuel K. Armstrong, 1011 tiolence, fined $180, sentenced to
Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, charged 180 days in jail, both suspended, and
with possession of drug parapherna- sentenced to complete an 18 week
l,ia, fined $150, sentenced to 90 days domestic violence intervention pro.in jail, suspended, two years of pro- gram.
bation and 80 hours of community
• Kelly M. Pope, 23, 89 Lakeservice.
view Drive, Bidwell, chaQ!ed with
• ' Marsella H. Harrison, 151 driving whije under the influence,
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, ft~~ed $550, sentenced to 180 days in
charged with driving while under the jail, 170 days suspended, three yearn
influence, fined $450, sentenced to of probatio.n, and sentenced to comhouse arrest due .to a medical condi- plete a 60 day rehabilitation prot ion, and a six month license suspen- gram, and a three year license sussion.
pension. Pope. will be given $25
.: • William L. Asburn, 26, 365 credit per day for rehab after the first
P.rice Strong Road, Vinton, charged 30 days. Also charged with posses•.
with specific alcqhol content, fined sion of marijuana, fined $100, dri,
$~50. sentenced to 30 days in jail, 29 ving while under suspension, fined
suspended, two years of probation $250, sentenced to 30 days in jail, 30
and 40 hours of community service. days suspended, three years of proAlso charged with failure to control, bation, and improper passing, fined
fined $25.
$25.
.
. • Greg Fooce, 13620 SR 160,
• Cory A. Leonard, 309 1/2 East ·
Vinton, charged with criminal tres- Main Street, Gallipolis, charged
· passing, fined S100, sentenced to 30 with criminal damaging, sentenced
. days in jail, 30 days suspended; and to 30 days in jail, 30 days suspend. two years of probation.
ed, six months of probation, and 60
• Denise A. Wemyss, 1635 Gage hours of community service.
Road, Patriot, charged with domes· . • Bobby R. Watson, 3663 Bullavtic violence, sentenced 'to attend ille Pike, Gallipolis, charged with
!lomestic violence intervention pro- possession of drug paraphernalia,
gram meetings.
.
· fined $100.
• Crystal Smith, 24, 381 Buck
• Dwayne E. George, 38, 1219
Ridge Road, Biawell, charged with McClaskey Road, Vinton, charged
. driving while under the influence, with driving while under the influ- fined $450, sentenced to three days ence, fined $450, sentenced to three
in jail or school and a six month days in jail, and six months of prolicense suspension.'
bation.
'
• Jimmy D. Horn~. 29, 5091'orter
• Milton D. Polly, 3821 Coal Val·. ley Road, Vintqn, charged with Road, Bidwell, charged,with driving
ilomestic violence, fined $100, sen- while under the influence, sentenced
tenced to 180 days in' jail, 178 days to thirty days in jail, 27 days sus' suspended, three years of probation pended, and six. months of proba. and attend domestic violence inter- lion.
·~ent, ion program meetings.
•'Amber D. Smith, 19, 381 Buck
• Jerry A. Wallis, 270 Sanders Ridge Road, Bidwell, charged with
: brive, Gallipolis,·charged with spe- underage consumption, fined $100, ·
· dfic alcohol content, left of center sentenced to thirty days in jail, 30
and no seat belt, fined $600, sen- days suspended, two years of proba.tenced to three days in jail or school lion,_ and 80 hours of community
serv1ce.
. and a one year license suspension.
: • Oley A. Angel, 28, 25 Smithers
• Bobby J .. Slone, Hueysville,
f't,ve., Gallipolis, charged with dri- Ky., charged with drug abuse, fined
ving while under the influence, fined $100, also charged with possession
. $600, sentenced to 180 days in jail, of drug paraphernalia, fined $100, ·
176 days suspended, three yearn of sentenced to 90 days in jail, sus·
probation.
ponded, and 80 hours of community
• Roger 'L. Bush Jr., 389 Buck service.
Ridge Road; Bidwell,.charged with · • Ronald G. Plants, 57 Jay Drive,
disorderly by intoxication, fined Gallipolis, charged with fleeing and
$100.
eluding, fined $100, Sentenced to 90
• Alan W. Camp, 30, Glenwood ' days in jail, both suspended, and two
W.Va., charged with driving while years of probation : Also charged
under the influence, fined $500, sen- with driving while under the influ·
tenced to 180 days in jail, 177 days ence, fined $450, sentenced to 180
suspended, granted occupation dri- days in jail, 177 days suspended,
ving privileges.
two years of probation, and a 180
• Shawn M. McClaskey,' 19, 224 day license suspension. Also
Head Road, Vinton, charged with charged with assured clear distance,
underage consumption, fined $100, · fined $25. •
sentenced to 90 days in jail, 90 days
• William B. Beegle, 19, 239
suspended, two years of probation, -·Fairfield Church Road, Gallipolis,
and 80 hours of community service. · charged with underage ·consump·
• Timothy D. Britt, PO Box 409 tion, . fined $100, sentenced to 90
Crown City, charged with domestic days in jail, suspended, one year of
v1olence fined $180, sentenced to probation and 80 bourn of communi·
180 days in jail; fine and jail sen- ty service.
tence suspended, two years of pro• Rusty W. Verrier, 1543 Eastern
. bation, _and sentenced to complete Ave., Gallipolis, charged with
counschng.
attempted theft, fined $150, sen• Charles F. D\)nahue, 20, 1195 tenced to 90·days in jail, suspended,
SR 7 North, Gallipolis, charged with three years of probation, 80 hours of .
underage consumption, fin~ $100, community service. Also sentenced
sentenced to 30 days in jail; sus- to complete his GED.
pendcd, two years of probation and
• APril L. Large, 458' Second

Ave., Gallipolis, charged ...,ith two
counts of ope!Bting a motor vehicle
while under the influence, and no
headlights, fined $250, sentenced to
100 hourn of community service.
• Melissa Reed, 66 Lower
Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, charged
with two counts of driving while
under the influence, operating an
unsafe vehicle, sentenced to three
days in jail, and a six month license
suspension.
• Allen D. Sowards, 758 First
Ave., Gallipolis, charged with
underage consumption, fined $100,
sentenced to 30 days in jail, sus·
ponded, two years of probation and,
80 hourn,of community service.
• Floyd L. Stewan, 40, Mason,
W.Va., charged with petty theft,
fined $150, sentenced to 90 days in
jail, suspended, two years of proba·
tion and 80 hours of community ser-

•

.

.___. ~-'""""'-......_.,"'""'-_ "'""-

.·-· .

Eastern thumps Waterford, takes TVC lead

SUNDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

·----

o.,.rtment

By SCOTT WOLFE

EAST MEIGS - 'The leagqe's two top
dogs battled it out for bnging rights in the
Hocking Oivisi1111 of the Tri-Vlllley Conference Friday night, but when ~ final b~er
sounded at Eastern' High School, coach
Howie Caldwell's Eastern Eagles had
embad&lt;ed on a giant 66-60 win over · the
Waterford Wildcats. Not only w_Fre the com·
batants tops in the league, but both were state·
~anked.
·.
Pitting the 16th-ranked E~glcs (9-1 •. 7-1)
and the No. II Wildcats (8-2, 6-2) against one
another brought a huge. cheering crowd to
Eilstern ~dwood_
•
. ."I've never seen a community as hyped up
as what this Eastern community is right now."
a jubilant Howie ·Caldwell quipped after the

Prep Basketball

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.
Frlday'a -ultlt ·
Galla Academy 62, .Logan 54
Jactcaon 55, Athens 47
'River Valley 53, Point Pleasant 52
Warren 44, Marietta 42
·

game. "The aunosphere is unbelievable. The
kids are enjoying the support and really
responding toil This was a big win fl&gt;r us, a
provlng win, cause they were number eleven
and we were number 16 (in the Ohio Associated Press Poll). We·lJrOved we could play
with and beat the best tonight,"
, The win brought great joy to Eastern,
because Wafllrford stifled ·Eastern last season
in its bid fQr the league championship. The
defending Tri- Valley Hocking ,champs were
up against more than they could handle on
Eastern's home stomping grounds Friday.
Caldwell said, "I was pleased with our
play. Every time we needed a big play we.
made it That is the mark of a good club.
Additionally, Joe Brown played as weli as
I've seen Joe Brown play in three years of
varsity basketball. Eric Smith has been com·

ing along and has renlly improved--he had a
great second half for us. But this is not an
individual game, the whole te;un contnbuted
Jonight."
.
The game was a dOgfight from the
onset. j)r.Jwing up its upper lip, the Eagles
snarled at the thought of falling to the scratching, competitive Wildcats. Eastern established its game-plan early, but Waterford was
quick to counter the upbeat transition game.
Eastern settled into n solid half-court
game, where junior forward Joe Brown was at
his best. The talented Southpaw wheeled and
1"dealed" razzle-dazzle up and under move
and torrid shooting display that allowed him'
to net 1'1 of I;astem's 29' first half points.
Caldwell said. "This was no doubt Joe's
best game. He took charge when we needed
him to. .take charge and carried
us the first
.

~rdty'l~ pntM
Gallla Academy at Portsmouth, late
, Trimble at Athena, late
Logan at Lancaster, late
· Warren II Parl&lt;erlburg SOUth, late
R.lver Valley at Falr!and, late

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Logan Ill River Valley
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Atlals at Warren
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Point Pleasant at Jackson

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· Nelsonville·York
Meigs

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•
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.: ·Souther.; at Eaatem ·
· - .Meigs at Vinton County
'
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. . · · Waterford at Federal Hocking
Miller at Trimb:·l
Belpre at Wellston .

MSRP 123,79QII
Sale.Price 121,499"
1
Rebate - 12,0D0(If Appllo.) Loyal~ Dioc. - 1500"

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Wellston at Meigs .
Eastern at Wahama

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Trimble at Athens, Iilia
.
; Williamstown at Fed. Hocking, late
' Southern at Wahama, late

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Rebate - 11,25QII
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Frlday'a -ultl!l
Eastern 66, Waterford 50
Southern '59, Trimble 56
Vinton Co. 74, Nelsonvlll~t-York 63
_&amp;lelpre n. Alexander 46 '
-l,'ederal Hocklng 92, Miller 50

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Raiders past Point
8 field-goal shooting in the first
quarter, the Raiders used their 11for-32 effort to keep ·the lead
throughout the first.hnlf.
.However, River Valley's 10-point
lead shrank to a one-point margin by
vinue of the Big Blacks' string of
eight unanswered points in a I :33
·spread that ended with the first of
senior guard Jason Pyles' two threepoint baskets (4:22). That cut River
Valley's lead to 15-13.
With 2.8 seconds lei\ in the first
half, Pyles' last trey shrank the
Raiders' lead to 25-24.
The thrill-a-minute second half
was mie in which neither
led
by more than five points.
In the third quarter, Pyles and
River Valley guard Anton Sullivan
had lead-changing baskets. Sinking
tying baskets were Point Pleasant
postman Ryan Litchfield - the 6foot-4 senior led nil scorers with 22
'points - and River Vnlley's .Eric
Nolan, Peck and Clark Wnlker. Hitting tie-breaking baskets were Litchfield and Peck.
· But when the ~uarter ended, it
was Sullivan's layup that padded the
Raiders' lead to the 39-36 m1111in
that stood at the period's end.
Litchfield's layup cut River Valley's lead to 39·38 with 7:16 left.
'Then the Raiders scored five unan·
Set RAIDERS • 82

Frldty'l -ultlt
Crou lanei 65, Ohio Valley 48 .· .
Portsmouth East 70,,S. Galli!! 57
Hanr11n v. RouhiU Christilll

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•

play before halftime, Logan (8·2; ·
By ANDREW CARTER
SEOAL 5-2).went on a 5-0 spurt,.
OVP Sport1 Editor
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acad- powered by Timmy Holloway and
emy gave head coach Jim Osborne David Montgomery, and took
· another shortlived lead at 21·26
two precious gifts Friday night.
First, the Blue Devils extended with 2:39 remaining.
The Gallipolitans closed the .
their curreni winning streak to
nine consecutive games and hnlf with a 6-0 run of their own
padded their ·lead in the SEOAL ani! led 32-27 at the intermissiorL ·
standings by defeating Logan 62- Lane had four points and Brian
Sims added a basket during the
54 in a vital SEOAL contest.
Secondly, that win allowed run.
Sims opened the third period
.Osborne to reach the 400-victory .
plateau in his distinguished career With the hot hand, nailing two .
three-point bombs one minute
· at Gallia Academy.
As time ebbed away at the apan to extend the Galli aAcade, ·
, · game's end, the capacity crowd of . my lead to 38-29 with 4127 to play.
Blue Devil faithful held up signs Logan, led by Matt Taulbee. Johnthat read, "400 OZ," signifying the ny Conrad and Ryan Swinehan,.
veteran coach's historic milestone. closed the gap to 38-36 at the 2:28
"It's more a tribute to the kids mart. Swinehan capped off the 7who have played · here than '!"Y·. 0 run with a IO·foot jump shot in
thing else," Osborne 'said, ''We've the ·middle of the lane.
True to form for the evening,
had a lol of good people come
through .this program who hav,e the Blue Devils · answered the .
Logan jabs with several body
helped make this possible."
Osbarne's milestone victory shots of their own in the form of an
came at the expense of colleague 8-0 outburst in the final two minand close friend Gary Swinehan, utes and led 46-36 as the third
· who offered sincere congratula' period ended. Lane and Jeremy
tions to his cbtinterpan in the Blue Payton connected on three-pointDevil locker room after the game. ers and Jeff Mullins tossed in an
What was expected to be a hard inside jumper to give the Blue
fought, rugged game ~idn't disap· Devils their largest lead of the .
point the. overflow crowd. :rhe two game to that point.
ball clubs slugged it out from the . Payton's .long range shot
opening tip-off until the final dropped in with just three seconds
showing on the game ~lock, markbuzzer. ·
Bo Shirey scored the five of the ing the second time this week he
Blue Devils • first eight points as converted a buzzer-beater. The
GalliaAcademy (9-1, SEOAL 7·0) senior threw in a half coun bomb
bolted to an 8-3 lead at the 6:07 against Point Pleasant Tuesday
mark of the first period. Logan ral- night.
Logan staged a furious rally iii
lied to take a brief 9-8 lead with
: 4:26 remaining ·after Jim Bennett what turned out to be a wild founh
converted a baseline jumper.
. quaner. The Chieftains outscored
· The Blue Devils surged back the Blue Devils 18-16 tn the final
into the lead with Cody Lane scor- eight minutes.
· However, GaiJin Academy coning six points down the stretch in
vened
12-of-14 foul shots in the
the opening period and led 17-16
fourth quaner, including 10
by the end of the quaner.
. LETTING IT FLY - Cllllll ACIIdemy''~ Tony Moore (44} letl!l hie jump _.hot go during Frldlly night's
Trailing 26-22 with 3:51 left to
See BLUE DEVILS • B2
SEOAL contlalln Galllpolll, where
Blue Devils won 62·54. (Roger Brumfield photo)

- SEOAL Girls-

•23,99900 Plus Tax &amp; Title

half."
.
After the first round of fire, Eastern had.
the biggest bite in a 16-12 tally. In the second
round, Eastern cooled. but was able to ride
out a 29-29 score into the intermission.
At halftime Waterford adjusted its defense
to contain Brown. but Eastern countered with
some offense from its supporting cast 6-foot·
6 inch guard Matt Simpson helped pick up the .
scoring slack with good penetration and his
ability to draw the 'Cat defense to the perimeter, while Eric "Animal" Smith used his
. brawn to anchor up the post. Both got the
bulle of their 16-point effons in the seco~d
half, producing a baffling inside-outside com"
bination.
Although Eastern's offense clicked in the
third round. the defensive stop of Waterford
Stt EAGLES • B5

Blue Devils
beat Logan

'fuMclly'a aci!Mule
Alhens.at Gallla Academy
Warren 11 JacksOn.

2000 MONTE CARLO
SUPER SPORT

. Auto Trans., Vortec VB E~J!ine,
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Report: Taft wants state
to help industrial siteS
.

Inside: Dr. Sam educates John RockerP•ge B4.
'
Inside: Youthful Colts and 1itans clash today - Page 85

"'

(740) 446-2342

Tax&amp; Title

get involved. Instead, developers
turn to often-pristine farmland and
forests in the suburbs.
One environmental leader said
Taft's proposal will not help much.
"That. doesn't seem like enough
to" do green spaces or brownfields "
sa1d Mart Conte, program coordina- .
tor for the Ohio Sierra Club.
,
He said the real problems are pro·
grams that subsidize· suburban
development ihat take away money
·that could be used to help cities.
As the plants have closed; median income in many cilies has ·
dropped an!! poveny rates for chil,
dren have skyrQCkcted.
From 1969 to 1989, Cleveland's
median income fell 27 percent,
according to the Ohio Depanment of
Development. In Youngstown, hun
by the downsizing of the steel indus·
try, median income dropped 29.5
percent and in Akron, where the rub·
her industry has been on the decline
the median income fell18.9 percent:
At the same time, poveny rates
for children in Cleveland rose 84
percent and more than 200 percent
m Ponsmouth and Steubenville.
Meanwhile, sources told The
Cmcinnati Enquirer for a story Sat·
urday that Taft will propose that the
state pic~ up 80 percept of the cost
of paving state routes in urban areas.
. . Cincinnati typically getS no &amp;!ate
help for paving state roada. But
Cleveland and Columbus usually
rCceive between 40 percent.'and 100 ,
percent of the cost for simiw work,
the newspaper reported.

~.

'

Gallla CountJ H•lth

STATE OF THE STATE

C~LUMBUS (AP) '-Gov. Bob
Taft 1s expected to promise new ini·
- tiatives in his State of the State
speech Wednesday that would help
Ohio's biggest cities, including a
plan to redevelop abandoned industrial sites, according to published
repons. ·
· Taft also is expected to·can on the
state to pay for more of the cost of
p;.ving state routes in urban areas.
Sources told The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer for a story Saturday
tbat Taft wants two bond issues of
$200 million apiece that would
aP.pear on the November ballot. One
w.ould help redevelop industrial
·sites, commonly called "brownfiel_sls," and the other -.yould build
more parks and bike trails.
.~ The latter proposal' would fulfill a
campaign pledge to help convert
abandoned railroad lines into bike
trails and clean up river corridors.
. Taft spokesman Scott Milburn
confirmed broad details of the
Sl,lCCCh Saturday, but would not provide further details.
·
". Mayors of Ohio's largest cities
have said redevelopment of brownfields is among tfleir bigaest conce)'ns. ·Cities have tried to lure developers to t~e often contaminated sites
as~· a way to bring back jobs lost
when the slate's smokestack industries scaled back, closed or moved.
But getting the sites cleaned up
can be difficult.
·
. . Property owners face far-reachmg and uncenain liability, making
developers and lenders reluctant to

Subscribe tOday.

vice.
: Danny R. White, 41, 3632 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis, charged
with two counts 'of driving while
under the influence, no insurance,
and driving left of center, fined
$1,000, sentenced to 180 days in
jail, 140 days suspended, five year
license suspension.

Sundty, J1nuery 18. 2000

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohll) • Point Pleaaant, WV

p ..., A8 • 6anup .fli!IIH -htiael

•

Sundty, January 11, 2000;
'•

Page 81

•

~-·~----~--------------------------~----~--------------------------------------~------~~

Cases filed, decided in Gallia County courts MORELOCALNEWS.MORE.WCALFOLKSJ.

GALLIPOUS - The following · 80 hours of 1;001munity service.
~were resolved ~ently in Gal·
• Michael N. Rutter, 23,
·
' MCArthur, charged with domestic
lipolis Municipal Coun:
• Samuel K. Armstrong, 1011 tiolence, fined $180, sentenced to
Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, charged 180 days in jail, both suspended, and
with possession of drug parapherna- sentenced to complete an 18 week
l,ia, fined $150, sentenced to 90 days domestic violence intervention pro.in jail, suspended, two years of pro- gram.
bation and 80 hours of community
• Kelly M. Pope, 23, 89 Lakeservice.
view Drive, Bidwell, chaQ!ed with
• ' Marsella H. Harrison, 151 driving whije under the influence,
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, ft~~ed $550, sentenced to 180 days in
charged with driving while under the jail, 170 days suspended, three yearn
influence, fined $450, sentenced to of probatio.n, and sentenced to comhouse arrest due .to a medical condi- plete a 60 day rehabilitation prot ion, and a six month license suspen- gram, and a three year license sussion.
pension. Pope. will be given $25
.: • William L. Asburn, 26, 365 credit per day for rehab after the first
P.rice Strong Road, Vinton, charged 30 days. Also charged with posses•.
with specific alcqhol content, fined sion of marijuana, fined $100, dri,
$~50. sentenced to 30 days in jail, 29 ving while under suspension, fined
suspended, two years of probation $250, sentenced to 30 days in jail, 30
and 40 hours of community service. days suspended, three years of proAlso charged with failure to control, bation, and improper passing, fined
fined $25.
$25.
.
. • Greg Fooce, 13620 SR 160,
• Cory A. Leonard, 309 1/2 East ·
Vinton, charged with criminal tres- Main Street, Gallipolis, charged
· passing, fined S100, sentenced to 30 with criminal damaging, sentenced
. days in jail, 30 days suspended; and to 30 days in jail, 30 days suspend. two years of probation.
ed, six months of probation, and 60
• Denise A. Wemyss, 1635 Gage hours of community service.
Road, Patriot, charged with domes· . • Bobby R. Watson, 3663 Bullavtic violence, sentenced 'to attend ille Pike, Gallipolis, charged with
!lomestic violence intervention pro- possession of drug paraphernalia,
gram meetings.
.
· fined $100.
• Crystal Smith, 24, 381 Buck
• Dwayne E. George, 38, 1219
Ridge Road, Biawell, charged with McClaskey Road, Vinton, charged
. driving while under the influence, with driving while under the influ- fined $450, sentenced to three days ence, fined $450, sentenced to three
in jail or school and a six month days in jail, and six months of prolicense suspension.'
bation.
'
• Jimmy D. Horn~. 29, 5091'orter
• Milton D. Polly, 3821 Coal Val·. ley Road, Vintqn, charged with Road, Bidwell, charged,with driving
ilomestic violence, fined $100, sen- while under the influence, sentenced
tenced to 180 days in' jail, 178 days to thirty days in jail, 27 days sus' suspended, three years of probation pended, and six. months of proba. and attend domestic violence inter- lion.
·~ent, ion program meetings.
•'Amber D. Smith, 19, 381 Buck
• Jerry A. Wallis, 270 Sanders Ridge Road, Bidwell, charged with
: brive, Gallipolis,·charged with spe- underage consumption, fined $100, ·
· dfic alcohol content, left of center sentenced to thirty days in jail, 30
and no seat belt, fined $600, sen- days suspended, two years of proba.tenced to three days in jail or school lion,_ and 80 hours of community
serv1ce.
. and a one year license suspension.
: • Oley A. Angel, 28, 25 Smithers
• Bobby J .. Slone, Hueysville,
f't,ve., Gallipolis, charged with dri- Ky., charged with drug abuse, fined
ving while under the influence, fined $100, also charged with possession
. $600, sentenced to 180 days in jail, of drug paraphernalia, fined $100, ·
176 days suspended, three yearn of sentenced to 90 days in jail, sus·
probation.
ponded, and 80 hours of community
• Roger 'L. Bush Jr., 389 Buck service.
Ridge Road; Bidwell,.charged with · • Ronald G. Plants, 57 Jay Drive,
disorderly by intoxication, fined Gallipolis, charged with fleeing and
$100.
eluding, fined $100, Sentenced to 90
• Alan W. Camp, 30, Glenwood ' days in jail, both suspended, and two
W.Va., charged with driving while years of probation : Also charged
under the influence, fined $500, sen- with driving while under the influ·
tenced to 180 days in jail, 177 days ence, fined $450, sentenced to 180
suspended, granted occupation dri- days in jail, 177 days suspended,
ving privileges.
two years of probation, and a 180
• Shawn M. McClaskey,' 19, 224 day license suspension. Also
Head Road, Vinton, charged with charged with assured clear distance,
underage consumption, fined $100, · fined $25. •
sentenced to 90 days in jail, 90 days
• William B. Beegle, 19, 239
suspended, two years of probation, -·Fairfield Church Road, Gallipolis,
and 80 hours of community service. · charged with underage ·consump·
• Timothy D. Britt, PO Box 409 tion, . fined $100, sentenced to 90
Crown City, charged with domestic days in jail, suspended, one year of
v1olence fined $180, sentenced to probation and 80 bourn of communi·
180 days in jail; fine and jail sen- ty service.
tence suspended, two years of pro• Rusty W. Verrier, 1543 Eastern
. bation, _and sentenced to complete Ave., Gallipolis, charged with
counschng.
attempted theft, fined $150, sen• Charles F. D\)nahue, 20, 1195 tenced to 90·days in jail, suspended,
SR 7 North, Gallipolis, charged with three years of probation, 80 hours of .
underage consumption, fin~ $100, community service. Also sentenced
sentenced to 30 days in jail; sus- to complete his GED.
pendcd, two years of probation and
• APril L. Large, 458' Second

Ave., Gallipolis, charged ...,ith two
counts of ope!Bting a motor vehicle
while under the influence, and no
headlights, fined $250, sentenced to
100 hourn of community service.
• Melissa Reed, 66 Lower
Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, charged
with two counts of driving while
under the influence, operating an
unsafe vehicle, sentenced to three
days in jail, and a six month license
suspension.
• Allen D. Sowards, 758 First
Ave., Gallipolis, charged with
underage consumption, fined $100,
sentenced to 30 days in jail, sus·
ponded, two years of probation and,
80 hourn,of community service.
• Floyd L. Stewan, 40, Mason,
W.Va., charged with petty theft,
fined $150, sentenced to 90 days in
jail, suspended, two years of proba·
tion and 80 hours of community ser-

•

.

.___. ~-'""""'-......_.,"'""'-_ "'""-

.·-· .

Eastern thumps Waterford, takes TVC lead

SUNDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

·----

o.,.rtment

By SCOTT WOLFE

EAST MEIGS - 'The leagqe's two top
dogs battled it out for bnging rights in the
Hocking Oivisi1111 of the Tri-Vlllley Conference Friday night, but when ~ final b~er
sounded at Eastern' High School, coach
Howie Caldwell's Eastern Eagles had
embad&lt;ed on a giant 66-60 win over · the
Waterford Wildcats. Not only w_Fre the com·
batants tops in the league, but both were state·
~anked.
·.
Pitting the 16th-ranked E~glcs (9-1 •. 7-1)
and the No. II Wildcats (8-2, 6-2) against one
another brought a huge. cheering crowd to
Eilstern ~dwood_
•
. ."I've never seen a community as hyped up
as what this Eastern community is right now."
a jubilant Howie ·Caldwell quipped after the

Prep Basketball

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•

Tlmaa 11 • • • Corr11pondant

.
Frlday'a -ultlt ·
Galla Academy 62, .Logan 54
Jactcaon 55, Athens 47
'River Valley 53, Point Pleasant 52
Warren 44, Marietta 42
·

game. "The aunosphere is unbelievable. The
kids are enjoying the support and really
responding toil This was a big win fl&gt;r us, a
provlng win, cause they were number eleven
and we were number 16 (in the Ohio Associated Press Poll). We·lJrOved we could play
with and beat the best tonight,"
, The win brought great joy to Eastern,
because Wafllrford stifled ·Eastern last season
in its bid fQr the league championship. The
defending Tri- Valley Hocking ,champs were
up against more than they could handle on
Eastern's home stomping grounds Friday.
Caldwell said, "I was pleased with our
play. Every time we needed a big play we.
made it That is the mark of a good club.
Additionally, Joe Brown played as weli as
I've seen Joe Brown play in three years of
varsity basketball. Eric Smith has been com·

ing along and has renlly improved--he had a
great second half for us. But this is not an
individual game, the whole te;un contnbuted
Jonight."
.
The game was a dOgfight from the
onset. j)r.Jwing up its upper lip, the Eagles
snarled at the thought of falling to the scratching, competitive Wildcats. Eastern established its game-plan early, but Waterford was
quick to counter the upbeat transition game.
Eastern settled into n solid half-court
game, where junior forward Joe Brown was at
his best. The talented Southpaw wheeled and
1"dealed" razzle-dazzle up and under move
and torrid shooting display that allowed him'
to net 1'1 of I;astem's 29' first half points.
Caldwell said. "This was no doubt Joe's
best game. He took charge when we needed
him to. .take charge and carried
us the first
.

~rdty'l~ pntM
Gallla Academy at Portsmouth, late
, Trimble at Athena, late
Logan at Lancaster, late
· Warren II Parl&lt;erlburg SOUth, late
R.lver Valley at Falr!and, late

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Sale Price 124,449 00
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Gallla Academy at Athena
Logan Ill River Valley
Marlena at Point Pleasant
· Jackson at Warren·
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River Valley at Gallla Academy
Atlals at Warren
.
· Marietta at Logan
Point Pleasant at Jackson

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· Nelsonville·York
Meigs

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.: ·Souther.; at Eaatem ·
· - .Meigs at Vinton County
'
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. . · · Waterford at Federal Hocking
Miller at Trimb:·l
Belpre at Wellston .

MSRP 123,79QII
Sale.Price 121,499"
1
Rebate - 12,0D0(If Appllo.) Loyal~ Dioc. - 1500"

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Eastern at Wahama

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.
; Williamstown at Fed. Hocking, late
' Southern at Wahama, late

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Frlday'a -ultl!l
Eastern 66, Waterford 50
Southern '59, Trimble 56
Vinton Co. 74, Nelsonvlll~t-York 63
_&amp;lelpre n. Alexander 46 '
-l,'ederal Hocklng 92, Miller 50

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Raiders past Point
8 field-goal shooting in the first
quarter, the Raiders used their 11for-32 effort to keep ·the lead
throughout the first.hnlf.
.However, River Valley's 10-point
lead shrank to a one-point margin by
vinue of the Big Blacks' string of
eight unanswered points in a I :33
·spread that ended with the first of
senior guard Jason Pyles' two threepoint baskets (4:22). That cut River
Valley's lead to 15-13.
With 2.8 seconds lei\ in the first
half, Pyles' last trey shrank the
Raiders' lead to 25-24.
The thrill-a-minute second half
was mie in which neither
led
by more than five points.
In the third quarter, Pyles and
River Valley guard Anton Sullivan
had lead-changing baskets. Sinking
tying baskets were Point Pleasant
postman Ryan Litchfield - the 6foot-4 senior led nil scorers with 22
'points - and River Vnlley's .Eric
Nolan, Peck and Clark Wnlker. Hitting tie-breaking baskets were Litchfield and Peck.
· But when the ~uarter ended, it
was Sullivan's layup that padded the
Raiders' lead to the 39-36 m1111in
that stood at the period's end.
Litchfield's layup cut River Valley's lead to 39·38 with 7:16 left.
'Then the Raiders scored five unan·
Set RAIDERS • 82

Frldty'l -ultlt
Crou lanei 65, Ohio Valley 48 .· .
Portsmouth East 70,,S. Galli!! 57
Hanr11n v. RouhiU Christilll

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•

play before halftime, Logan (8·2; ·
By ANDREW CARTER
SEOAL 5-2).went on a 5-0 spurt,.
OVP Sport1 Editor
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acad- powered by Timmy Holloway and
emy gave head coach Jim Osborne David Montgomery, and took
· another shortlived lead at 21·26
two precious gifts Friday night.
First, the Blue Devils extended with 2:39 remaining.
The Gallipolitans closed the .
their curreni winning streak to
nine consecutive games and hnlf with a 6-0 run of their own
padded their ·lead in the SEOAL ani! led 32-27 at the intermissiorL ·
standings by defeating Logan 62- Lane had four points and Brian
Sims added a basket during the
54 in a vital SEOAL contest.
Secondly, that win allowed run.
Sims opened the third period
.Osborne to reach the 400-victory .
plateau in his distinguished career With the hot hand, nailing two .
three-point bombs one minute
· at Gallia Academy.
As time ebbed away at the apan to extend the Galli aAcade, ·
, · game's end, the capacity crowd of . my lead to 38-29 with 4127 to play.
Blue Devil faithful held up signs Logan, led by Matt Taulbee. Johnthat read, "400 OZ," signifying the ny Conrad and Ryan Swinehan,.
veteran coach's historic milestone. closed the gap to 38-36 at the 2:28
"It's more a tribute to the kids mart. Swinehan capped off the 7who have played · here than '!"Y·. 0 run with a IO·foot jump shot in
thing else," Osborne 'said, ''We've the ·middle of the lane.
True to form for the evening,
had a lol of good people come
through .this program who hav,e the Blue Devils · answered the .
Logan jabs with several body
helped make this possible."
Osbarne's milestone victory shots of their own in the form of an
came at the expense of colleague 8-0 outburst in the final two minand close friend Gary Swinehan, utes and led 46-36 as the third
· who offered sincere congratula' period ended. Lane and Jeremy
tions to his cbtinterpan in the Blue Payton connected on three-pointDevil locker room after the game. ers and Jeff Mullins tossed in an
What was expected to be a hard inside jumper to give the Blue
fought, rugged game ~idn't disap· Devils their largest lead of the .
point the. overflow crowd. :rhe two game to that point.
ball clubs slugged it out from the . Payton's .long range shot
opening tip-off until the final dropped in with just three seconds
showing on the game ~lock, markbuzzer. ·
Bo Shirey scored the five of the ing the second time this week he
Blue Devils • first eight points as converted a buzzer-beater. The
GalliaAcademy (9-1, SEOAL 7·0) senior threw in a half coun bomb
bolted to an 8-3 lead at the 6:07 against Point Pleasant Tuesday
mark of the first period. Logan ral- night.
Logan staged a furious rally iii
lied to take a brief 9-8 lead with
: 4:26 remaining ·after Jim Bennett what turned out to be a wild founh
converted a baseline jumper.
. quaner. The Chieftains outscored
· The Blue Devils surged back the Blue Devils 18-16 tn the final
into the lead with Cody Lane scor- eight minutes.
· However, GaiJin Academy coning six points down the stretch in
vened
12-of-14 foul shots in the
the opening period and led 17-16
fourth quaner, including 10
by the end of the quaner.
. LETTING IT FLY - Cllllll ACIIdemy''~ Tony Moore (44} letl!l hie jump _.hot go during Frldlly night's
Trailing 26-22 with 3:51 left to
See BLUE DEVILS • B2
SEOAL contlalln Galllpolll, where
Blue Devils won 62·54. (Roger Brumfield photo)

- SEOAL Girls-

•23,99900 Plus Tax &amp; Title

half."
.
After the first round of fire, Eastern had.
the biggest bite in a 16-12 tally. In the second
round, Eastern cooled. but was able to ride
out a 29-29 score into the intermission.
At halftime Waterford adjusted its defense
to contain Brown. but Eastern countered with
some offense from its supporting cast 6-foot·
6 inch guard Matt Simpson helped pick up the .
scoring slack with good penetration and his
ability to draw the 'Cat defense to the perimeter, while Eric "Animal" Smith used his
. brawn to anchor up the post. Both got the
bulle of their 16-point effons in the seco~d
half, producing a baffling inside-outside com"
bination.
Although Eastern's offense clicked in the
third round. the defensive stop of Waterford
Stt EAGLES • B5

Blue Devils
beat Logan

'fuMclly'a aci!Mule
Alhens.at Gallla Academy
Warren 11 JacksOn.

2000 MONTE CARLO
SUPER SPORT

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Report: Taft wants state
to help industrial siteS
.

Inside: Dr. Sam educates John RockerP•ge B4.
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Inside: Youthful Colts and 1itans clash today - Page 85

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(740) 446-2342

Tax&amp; Title

get involved. Instead, developers
turn to often-pristine farmland and
forests in the suburbs.
One environmental leader said
Taft's proposal will not help much.
"That. doesn't seem like enough
to" do green spaces or brownfields "
sa1d Mart Conte, program coordina- .
tor for the Ohio Sierra Club.
,
He said the real problems are pro·
grams that subsidize· suburban
development ihat take away money
·that could be used to help cities.
As the plants have closed; median income in many cilies has ·
dropped an!! poveny rates for chil,
dren have skyrQCkcted.
From 1969 to 1989, Cleveland's
median income fell 27 percent,
according to the Ohio Depanment of
Development. In Youngstown, hun
by the downsizing of the steel indus·
try, median income dropped 29.5
percent and in Akron, where the rub·
her industry has been on the decline
the median income fell18.9 percent:
At the same time, poveny rates
for children in Cleveland rose 84
percent and more than 200 percent
m Ponsmouth and Steubenville.
Meanwhile, sources told The
Cmcinnati Enquirer for a story Sat·
urday that Taft will propose that the
state pic~ up 80 percept of the cost
of paving state routes in urban areas.
. . Cincinnati typically getS no &amp;!ate
help for paving state roada. But
Cleveland and Columbus usually
rCceive between 40 percent.'and 100 ,
percent of the cost for simiw work,
the newspaper reported.

~.

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Gallla CountJ H•lth

STATE OF THE STATE

C~LUMBUS (AP) '-Gov. Bob
Taft 1s expected to promise new ini·
- tiatives in his State of the State
speech Wednesday that would help
Ohio's biggest cities, including a
plan to redevelop abandoned industrial sites, according to published
repons. ·
· Taft also is expected to·can on the
state to pay for more of the cost of
p;.ving state routes in urban areas.
Sources told The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer for a story Saturday
tbat Taft wants two bond issues of
$200 million apiece that would
aP.pear on the November ballot. One
w.ould help redevelop industrial
·sites, commonly called "brownfiel_sls," and the other -.yould build
more parks and bike trails.
.~ The latter proposal' would fulfill a
campaign pledge to help convert
abandoned railroad lines into bike
trails and clean up river corridors.
. Taft spokesman Scott Milburn
confirmed broad details of the
Sl,lCCCh Saturday, but would not provide further details.
·
". Mayors of Ohio's largest cities
have said redevelopment of brownfields is among tfleir bigaest conce)'ns. ·Cities have tried to lure developers to t~e often contaminated sites
as~· a way to bring back jobs lost
when the slate's smokestack industries scaled back, closed or moved.
But getting the sites cleaned up
can be difficult.
·
. . Property owners face far-reachmg and uncenain liability, making
developers and lenders reluctant to

Subscribe tOday.

vice.
: Danny R. White, 41, 3632 Mill
Creek Road, Gallipolis, charged
with two counts 'of driving while
under the influence, no insurance,
and driving left of center, fined
$1,000, sentenced to 180 days in
jail, 140 days suspended, five year
license suspension.

Sundty, J1nuery 18. 2000

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�Page B2 • 6unl'lap 11:imes-6rntint.l

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

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Pomeroy •

Sunday, January 18, 2000.

despite a six-point second quaner from OVC's Dale Taylor. Taylor, who ended the game with 10 points, was one
of the two Defenders to finish in double figures.
OVC's offensi~e production, fueled by Jenkins' sixpoint third quaner. increased after halliime. But Cross
Lanes got six-point efforts from Reusller and Josh King.
Cross Lanes, which staned the fourth quarter with a
16-pointlead, 1\.ept the pressure on its host -.vith King's
10-point period. Jenkins, who joined Taylor as the only

OVC players with more than one basket in any quarter,
was the Defenders' leading point 'producer in the last
frame. He had si"l points, all of which came ·on thfee- .
poi~t shots.
King and Jenkins tied for top scoring honors with 18,- .:
point efforts. .
....
The future: The Defenders will host Teays Valley·:
Christian Tuesday and will play Grace Christian Friday
in Huntington, W.Va.

Tornado boy- cruise P.ast Trimble 69-56
that point the team came back togeth- 5-1 shooting night that netted 13
er an4 played on the offensive. We points, while Garret Kiser found his
did a nice job at the line and in break- shooting eye in a 4-6 night and II
· ing the Trimbl~ press when the game .points. Senior swing man Kyle Norwas on the line."
ris notched two huge three pointers
They call ' him "Rambo" on the eh route to a ten point night, while
hardwood in the Southern tip of Chris Randolph and Brandon ·Hill
Meigs County, but to plain 'folks· he's added seven and five points respecjust the feisty Russell Reiber. Reiber tively.
came off the .bench to spark another
Southern junior Nick Bolin, the
Southern win with a spirited . 15- team's top rebounder, sat out much of
point, eight rebound effon. Senior the game with a back injury.
post Reiber led a four-man double
Trimble was led by point . guard
digit scoring attack that exemplified Trent Pauon's 22 points, including 13
much balance across the Southern markers that came in the Trimble
score card.
·
com~ back. 6-5 post Rolland Chalfant
continued from 81 ·
Junior anchor Chad Hubbard
straight in the 'final 90 seconds to field and finished with 12 points. He no~ched eleven first half poin~ in a
See ;TORNADOES • B3
secure the victory and give !heir grabbed a team-high eight rebounds
mentor his 400th career win.
and had two assists and one steal.
Tony Moore coolly knocked ·
Sims also drew four charging
continued from B1
down all four foul shots he attempt· fouls against Logan. Osborne said
ed in the final minute. Mo6re 's foul that figure may be a record.
was a huge key. Eastern outsc~red its The victors had 23 rebounds '(Joe
shots stretched the Blue Devils' lead
Shirey scored 10 points. He was foe 16·10 in the round and set the Brown 6, Josh Will 6), and had 6
from just two' points, 54-52, to six 3-for-8 from the field. Shirey tone for the finale, l~ading 45-39.
steals (Brown 3), five turnovers, 12
points, 58-52, with 36 seconds left.
grabbed five rebounds and had one
The fight wasn't over, however, as assists (Simpson 3, Will 3, Brown 3),
Lane and Shirey each hit 3-of-4 steal.
·
Waterford.fought back to within five and 16 fouls.
at the foul line and Payton was 2Mullins and Dustin Deckard also after Eastern held its biggest lead at
Waterford hit 14-30 two-pointers,
for-2 ai the _stripe, his coming with had five ·rebounds, rounding a list of 59-46 with I; 15 left to play. Eastern
~-21 three~pointers (22-51 overall),
I I seconds left.
. five Blue Devils who cleared.at least took care of the basketball going
and
had a 7-13 night at the line.
"I think lhe effon was · unbeliev- five boards.
down the stretch and was able to Waterford had 28 rebounds (Waller
able, that the kids ·gave tonight,"
Gallia Academy outrebounded snare the 66-60 win.
12), IWO steals, 15 turnovers, 7 assists
said Osborne. "The defensive effort · Logan, 41-24.
Simpson, . Will, and Brown . not (Arnold three). and 19 fouls.
was probably the key again. We didTaulbee. led the Chieftains with only provided some key offense, but
JV notes: The Eastern reserves
n't give lhem any easy baskets and 16 points. He was 6-of-15 from the their unselfish play netted three
won 41-24, led by Chris Lyons'. 20
we didn't let them get the lead even field and 2-for-4 at the foul line. assists each among the trio.
points.
Justin. Carney had nine for
when they made the run late.
Taulbee grabbed eight rebounds.
Waterford . .
"We had so many guys -step up
Timmy Holloway had 12 points, . Stat sheet: Eastern hit 1-4 threeThis week's slate: Eastern plays
for us," he added. ''Tony hit some seven of which came at the foul line.
pointers, 22-43 two-pointers (23-47 Wahama Tuesday and goes to Southbig free throws. Cody and Brian had He was 2-of-5 from the field and hit
~verall), and was 19-24 at the line. em Friday.
a great game, and Bo was really 1-qf-9 free throws. Holloway had
good. Jeff and Dustin (Deckard) did · four rebounds and two steals. '
a good job on the boards. Dustin flit
a nice shot in the last quarter."
The Blue Devils played at
Lane led all scorers with 21 Portsmouth S,aturday evening. ·
points, connecting on 6-of-12 field
Gallia Academy returns to
goal attempts and 7-of-9 foul shots. SEOAL play Tuesday when Atl)ens
.
Lane had six rebounds, four assists visits the GAHS gym.
and one steal.
. Logan won the reserve (:'onte~t
.Sims hit 5-of-13 shots from the 52-35.

'

'

By SCOTT WOLFE .
,
Rees said of his club, "The pressure
GJ,.OUSTER - Exploding for 40 we handled at the end of the game
second-half points, the Southern Tor- will do a lot for us in future games.
nadoes tamed the Trimble Tomcats We were faced with some adversity
69-56 Friday night during boys' var- and we were able to overcome it at
sity Tri-Valley Conference basketball the end of the game. We beat a very
· · action at Trimble High School.
talented· Trimble team tonight."
Southern, 7-3, 5-3, played
Rees said of his team's ·fourthWahama Saturday and hosts Eastern period lull, "We played not to lose
Friday in a fight for the TVC Hock- there for a little while and I think our
ing Division's top spot.
players bad some doubt. We called a
"This was a huge win for us on the time out to get focused on winning
road," an ailing. but elated coach Jay the game rather than not losing. At
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;·~-----------

BLUE DEVILS

-·-

-·-

JERRY

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continued from 81
.~•. ;
.
With 16 seconds left, Holcomb
:S..ered points to take a 44-39 lead,
took
Sullivan's .pass in the lane and
~hich was the largest after halftime.
: : In the fourth quarter, the Raider's got the layup to fall. River Valley led
.
made their first six foul shots, 51-50 aS a result.
After both teams took time outs,
):Octuding two by senior forward
. &lt;JUstin Holcomb made necessary by Loomis, sent to the charity! stripe
:Jtitchfield's fouling out at the 2:27 because of Nolan's ·fourth foul · with
mark. But their missing five of their 6.4 ·seconds left, sank both. free last six he!~ put the Big Blacks in throws· to put .Point Pleasant ahead
52:5t:
~sition to lead.
·
·
· In the final seconds; Sullivan
· .: Payne, who finished with a team·
:high 15 points, missed the first shot · drove the lane and .put up tlic layup.
'liitd made the second on a two-shot The shot bounced away, but Peck
~nus made necessary . by Randall puited down the rebound and put up ·
:Shobe's foul at the 1:07 mark. Then his point blank-range shot in heavy ;
. )i:nior forward Cam Boardman's traffic with the buzzer only millisec·
•
'(ihly shot of the game hit paydirt onds from going off.
Peck's shot, which left his hand
:(tom behind the arc. That basket cre:ated a 49-49 tie with 54 seconds left. before the buzzer sounded, went in.
•: Sullivan missed two free throws The Raiders claimed the 53-52 win
•
,·.Sp
a two.shot bonus made necessary amid cries of disagreement from the
;by Boardman's first foul with 53.4 Point Pleasant faithful.
Brandon Mitchem's II poiqts
~Seconds left. Point Pleasant's Joey
•Loomis, the 6-foot-3 junior who helped push River Valley ·to a 41-38
:~placed !.itchfield at center, got the . win over Point Pleasant in the juniQL
.varsity game. Eric Frye led the Little Jebound.
.
·
.
' : About 31 seconds later, sopho- Blacks with 10 points.
Th.e Raiders will start league
:l)tore Casey Villars,, sent to the line
Logan Tues·
by Holcomb's ·fourth foul, missed rematches Tuesday
ihe first shot and made the second on day and be the hosts for Saturday
'a two-shot bonus. But that Point night's rematch with Gallia Acadec
my at Rio Grande. ·
Pleasant ahead S0-49.

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Club winter quarter
beginning cla1111
starting January
at Carleton
School, SyracuH.
For more information
call 982·8838.

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: : WAmNG TO SHOOT- River Valley postman Jeremy Peck (een·
'iilr) web for Point Pleaaant centar Ryan Lltchfll!ld (left) to come
~n before taking the In-the-lane jumper In the flret quarter of Fri·
:!ley nlghl'l SEOAL contest et River Valley High School. Peck's last·
·acond Jumper beat the buzzer to give the Ralden a 53-52 victory.
:(Jimes•Sentlnel photo by G. spencer Osborne)

Kyger Creek 6Z, Hannan Trace 51 '
Seventh-grade boys' game
at Kyger Creek M.S ., Cheshire ..
Scorers: Kyger Creek - Darren
Clark-22, Drew Henson, Chris Roush·
12 each, Jon Gaus &amp; Justin Halfhill-8
each

TORNAD O._,
BZ

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$1000 Rebate

Girls' game
at Kyger Creek M.S.. Cheshire
Scorers: Kyger Creek: Erica Taylor! 2. Jennifer Colburn 8, Stacey Rankin,
Nicki Tracewell-5 each, Ashley Caldwell, Fallon Mercer-4 each, Sasha Buttrick-2.
Hannan Trace: Angel Wright-?, CasVinton 44, Bidwell-Porter 41
'
sandra Mannon-5, Stacie Fellure-4,
Eighth-grade boys' game
Julie Gwin~. Danielle Hineman-2 each.
at Vinton Elementary, Vinton
Rccmds: Kyger Creek 5·2
Scorers: Vinton - Justin Davis,
KC's next game: at Eastern on Jan,
Nathan Nottingham-16 each, Jason
19
Casey-10, Riley Rice-2
Bidwell-Poner - Dakota Ston.c-16,
Hannan Tnce 68, Kyger Creek 34
Jarnxl Swain- 13, Brandon Coe-6, Josh .
·
Eighth-grade boys' game .
Denny-3, Chris Brown-2
at Kyger Creek M.S., Cheshire
Scorers: Hannan Trace - Dustin
Lewis-12, Dustin Halley, Jason MerBidwell-Porter 59, Vinton 40
rick·9 each, Josh Waugh-?,. Zack Lee,
· Seventh-grade boys' gam
Damien Ross-6 each, Brandon Caldat Vinton Elcnlentary, Vinton
well, Zeph Clary-4 ,each, Eddie LamScorers: Bidwell-Porter - Kyle ·
phier-3, Teddy Fortner, Danny Ousley, Tipton-19, Eric Dingess-8. Carl M.·
Derek Taylor &amp; Jeremy Yeauger-2 each. Wolfe· 7. -· Brandon Unroe-6, Kyle
Kyger Creek - Bryan Workman· -Casey, Charlie Nibe rt-5 each, Pete ·
t2, Zack Davis-8, Chris Nida-5, Tyler Saunders-4, Ryan Burger-3, Randall
Kelley-4, Levi Thompson, Josh Warns- 'sharren-2
•
ley-2 each, Derek Rhodes- I
Vinton - Josh Murphy-14. Terry
Other HT stats- Assists-20 (Lam· Miracle-S, Dustin Jeffers, John' Lee-6,
phier, Merrick &amp; Ross 3 each)': each, Andrew Cfark-4, Allen Pope-2
Rebounds-4S (Caldwell·&amp; Lee 6 each).
St~als-1 0 (Fonner &amp; Merrick 2 each).
Records: Hannan Trace 4-2

NOT ON THIS COURT! - An unidentified official aeparatas
Ohlo'l Duetln Ford and Clnclnn-l'a DerM1rr Johnson In the second
half of Saturday's "midnight madneall" game In Cincinnati, where
ttie t ranked Bearcata won 13·58. , AP
·
e Bearcats couldn t reiM until Bobcats had played a o. I team five
Mickeal's seven-point spurt pushed other times and lost by 24, .42, 47, 30
the lead to·double digits for the final and 21 points.
·
18th
time with eight minutes left and set
This time, there was no blowout.
up the Bearcats' 39th straight win at
"That's basketball," said Tate,
home.
who had 13 points. "You can't win
•
Esterkamp scored 13 and Sanjay by 30 every night. You don't know
continued from
Adell had 12 for Ohio, which broke what to expect of yourself. Everygrabbed 11 rebou"ds and notched 10 points for the 'C:a)S while Jessi Rich- with i\s history of getting over- body can't have a good day every
mond added nine and Bobby Trace hammered home six.
whelmed by top-ranked teams. The day."
: Southern took a 17-~ lead in the first period, coming out of the gate with
a barrage of three momentum setting three pointers. Nick Bolin hit the first
inside goal, then Kyle .Norris drifted a three for a 5-0 lead. Hubbard then
tJ'abbed a steal and drove it in for a score, then had another break-away
pttempt off the SHS press before nailing down his own three that pushed the
ocore to 14-5.
.
: Randolph hit.the third Southern three pointer to push the score to 17-8 at
,
the end of the fmme. ,
• The second period slowed to a standstill as both clubs got in foul trouble.
!Oouthem's Randolph, Jeremy Fisher, and Bolin each went to the bench, while
:nimble's Chalfant!¥ !ID·car!Jer exit in ~ sec!'n~ r~~d""~ .·
; .. '
iii --With a 12· 12 draw on the horizon, S'ouiliern took a 29-20 lead mto tht ""
&lt;&gt;
• •
. ltltenmsston.
.
,
; (;:hris Randolph played a great defensive game in drawing thiee charges,
1999 &amp;MC 171 Ell. CAB PU
}:NO of which came in the first half.
.
'"
;; · Southern unleashed its cannons in the third round with "Rambo''. a5 tjle ·
4X4, V-8, Auto, Towing, All Power,
f,etd general. Reiber led the '19-point assault with t,en marke~, while "SherAir, CD, Cassette, Locking Diff
iff" Garret Kiser led a posse to nine key reboun~s and four pomts. ICyle-Bob
#4851
:foorris notched an ever-important three, but Southern pressed itself into
k)eeper foul trouble, sending the 'Cats to an 8· I 1. stint at the line. Never-the·
MSRP
1ess, Southern led 48-32.
·
Invoice
~ AI one point in time Southern led by eighteen, but Trimble staged a gal· 1
}ant comeback. The Tornadoes became tentative in the foul-plagued finale as J
Rebate
Bobby Trace fired up the Tomcats with two consecutive three-pointers and
GM Owner Loyalty
'Jtauon tallied eight markers in igniting the offense.
· .
Dealer Markup
. : At the 2:15 mark Southern led 56-51, as Trimble went on a 19-8 run.
Southern called itS second time out of the frame to regroup where Coach
· 'kees hammered home the point that his charges needed "to play to win." The
j&gt;ep talk sparked more aggressive play and Southern garnered some breathtog room with a 15-21 siint from the line. ·
...
• Kiser hit 5-6 in the final moments and Jonathan· Evans went 2-2to seal the
ti9-56.win.
.
• Stat sheet: SHS hit 23-41 overall with 5-8 three-pointers and 18-31 twoPointers~ Overall they netted 18-29 at the charity stripe. Southern had 37
tebounds led by Kiser with nine, Reiher eight and five each fror:n Ftsher and
1
J3olin. Pauon had II of Trimble's 33, while Chalfant and Phil Fatres each had
)ix.
.
1
• Southern had 14tumovers. seven assists (No{Jis 2), ten steals (Hubbard 4,
lvarner 2), and 24 fouls.
·
· .
. .
.
: Trimble hit 14-35 two-pointers and 3-7 three-pom.ters With a 19-29 mght
tit the line. The 'Cats had 12 assists (Patton 4, J. Trace 3), 15turnovers, seven
· .
·
·
·
iteals (Patton 5), and 30 fouls .
! JV notes: Southern, 8-2, won .the ~serve game 62-35 led by Dally Hill
with 13 points and Nathan Martin wtth 12 pomts. Justtn Connolly added
~ight, Matt Neigler seven, and J .P Harmon seven. Trimble was led by Jesse
:Brunton with I 0 points.
'
:. This week's slate: Southern ~layed Wabama Saturday and hosts Eastern
,riday.

FOR GREAT SERVICE
BEFORE AND AFTER THE. SALE ..
.
.
;

Ky~tr Creek 40, Hannu 'f.- 20

By JOE KAY
,
.
l!"i~ter early in the second.~alf, Oh~o
CINCINNATI (AP) - . The w_.down by -only three pomts. That s
Cincinnati player who qas won mare when Mickeal took over.
college games than any other .extin·
Jermaine Tate hit a couple of bas·
guished Ohio's thoughts of an upset. kets, and Mickeal rebounded his
Pete Mickeal scored 18 points and missed free throw for a putback.
led· a pair of second-half spurts that Mickeal then hit a three-pointer that
rallied top-ranked Cincinnati to a 73- pushed the lead to double digits for
59 victory Friday night.
the first time.
It was closer than anyone expected
When Ohio got it down to 55-49
until the final minutes. Cincinnati . on Steve Esterkamp's three-pointer
(16-1) never led by double digits until with 10 minutes left, Mickeal hit a
Mickeal fashioned a nine-point run in couple of baskets and a free throw
tlie second half.
that restored the lead.
;.:Even though it was overmatched
Cincinnati has had to rally in the
ana in foul trouble, Ohio (9-8) stayed second half of its last two games. The.
unpomfortably close to Cincinnati all Bearcals fell behind by nine at Tulane
tl)e way through in the only Top 25 on Wednesday night before pulling
gpine Friday night.
out a 72-59 win.
·
: ; "Our guys weren't going to go
It was the same pattern and a near·
away," Ohio coach Larry Hunter ly an identical score this time.
'!lid. "We've played an awfully good
"Every team struggles at some
scf)edule, so we were not intimidat- point in the season," Mickeal said.
eo:"
"But while ·we're struggling, we're .
::The Bobcats finished with a 39-34 winning. That's the positive part."
. r~liounding advantage, hefd CincinCincinnati has gone into a shoot·
na!i to 5-of-18 shooting on l)lree- ing slump that allows teams to con·
pf:&gt;inters and limited center Ktnyon centrale its defenses on· the Bearcats '
~artin to nine points.
' front line. Martin, who had 27 points
::They couldn't handle Mickeal, against Tulane, went only 3-of-9
who has scored at least 16 points in from the field . against a defense
e!li:h of the last seven .games. The anchored in the middle by a freshman
sebior forward has gone 172-12 in .- Brandon Hunter, a Cincinnati
tWo years of junior college and now native.
,
seasons at Cincinnati.
"I just tried to play physical, " said
·:: "He's a winner," Hunter said. "I Hunter, who had 11 points and eight
didn't realize his background of win· rebounds. "I wanted to keep him
ffirlg until I digested his biography. away from the basket because he's
amazing. Then when you watch real explosive.
.
him on tape, you see the little things 1 "He and Mickeal were both frusho 'does, the competitiveness. He's a trated. But they still won, so they
special basketball player."
·
couldn't have been too frustrated."
.-·lie was the difference in a game
Cincinnati allowed:its fourth midttiitt started at midnight wil)l a bois- night game during coach Bob Hugteious crowd, then· settled into a lull. gins ' I I seasons to turn into another
Oliio's deliberate offense slowed the late-night scare. The Bearcats' last
p\'Ce and made Cincinnati and its fans midnight game turned into their last
home-court loss, 87·79 to Arizona
uneasy.
:; When Dustin Ford hit a three· State on Nov. 21, 1997 .

n:s

MOVING TO
HOOP - Eutern
Matt Simpaon (rtghl)
worka off the hlp of Waterford'a·Jolh Arnold (32) on hla way to thebasket during Friday night's TVC Hocking Division game at Ealtem.
High School, where the Eaglea won 66-60. Simpson flnlahed with 16
points.

Bidwell-Porter 37, VInton 31
Girls' game
at Vinton Elementary, Vinton
Scorers: Bidweii-Poner - Tarra
Minnis·!~. Hannony Phillips-9, Leslie
Ward-7, Rhonda Caudill, Lindsay Godwin &amp; Letea McAvena-2 each
'
Vinton Kristina Nay1or·l6.
Brandy Marcum-6, Sharon Johnson-5 ,
Tessa Russell &amp; Jessica Shriver-2 each

21

,y;:o

EAGLES

Hannan Trace - Jake Whiteman24, Chris Temple-16

Boys' game at Mason,
Scoring leaders: Trace

downs Ohio 73-59

Cross Lanes tallies 65-48 win over hurting OVC Defenders
Teammates Abe Abrams, ·Mike Jenks (sickness) and
Josh Sanders (back injury) also sat out for this game.
Teammates Adam Holcomb, Gabe Jenkins, Joe Meyn
and Eric Petrie played with the flu.
Not one Defender scored more than one baskot in the
first quarter, when the Warriors got six points from Aaron
Walker and four-point efforts from Phil Reustler and Dan
Valentine to take a 16-9 lead at the period's end.
Cross Lanes increased its lead to 30-21 at halftime

8oullblll' ll:imes -6rntind • Page B3

No. 1 Cincinnati

TRI-COUNTY PREP BASKETBALL
GALLIPoLIS -'The injury and sickness bug hit Ohi
Valley Christian's varsity boys' basketball team Friday
night, when the Defenders dropped a 65-48 decision to
Cross Lanes Christian.
The Defenders (5-5), who saw the decision end their
five-game win streak, went without the services of Chris
Burnett, who is on the disabled list aftor hitting a wall in
Thursday's practice. The 6-foot-4 senior center injured
the rotator cuff in his shoulder.

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�Page B2 • 6unl'lap 11:imes-6rntint.l

•

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

..

•

Pomeroy •

Sunday, January 18, 2000.

despite a six-point second quaner from OVC's Dale Taylor. Taylor, who ended the game with 10 points, was one
of the two Defenders to finish in double figures.
OVC's offensi~e production, fueled by Jenkins' sixpoint third quaner. increased after halliime. But Cross
Lanes got six-point efforts from Reusller and Josh King.
Cross Lanes, which staned the fourth quarter with a
16-pointlead, 1\.ept the pressure on its host -.vith King's
10-point period. Jenkins, who joined Taylor as the only

OVC players with more than one basket in any quarter,
was the Defenders' leading point 'producer in the last
frame. He had si"l points, all of which came ·on thfee- .
poi~t shots.
King and Jenkins tied for top scoring honors with 18,- .:
point efforts. .
....
The future: The Defenders will host Teays Valley·:
Christian Tuesday and will play Grace Christian Friday
in Huntington, W.Va.

Tornado boy- cruise P.ast Trimble 69-56
that point the team came back togeth- 5-1 shooting night that netted 13
er an4 played on the offensive. We points, while Garret Kiser found his
did a nice job at the line and in break- shooting eye in a 4-6 night and II
· ing the Trimbl~ press when the game .points. Senior swing man Kyle Norwas on the line."
ris notched two huge three pointers
They call ' him "Rambo" on the eh route to a ten point night, while
hardwood in the Southern tip of Chris Randolph and Brandon ·Hill
Meigs County, but to plain 'folks· he's added seven and five points respecjust the feisty Russell Reiber. Reiber tively.
came off the .bench to spark another
Southern junior Nick Bolin, the
Southern win with a spirited . 15- team's top rebounder, sat out much of
point, eight rebound effon. Senior the game with a back injury.
post Reiber led a four-man double
Trimble was led by point . guard
digit scoring attack that exemplified Trent Pauon's 22 points, including 13
much balance across the Southern markers that came in the Trimble
score card.
·
com~ back. 6-5 post Rolland Chalfant
continued from 81 ·
Junior anchor Chad Hubbard
straight in the 'final 90 seconds to field and finished with 12 points. He no~ched eleven first half poin~ in a
See ;TORNADOES • B3
secure the victory and give !heir grabbed a team-high eight rebounds
mentor his 400th career win.
and had two assists and one steal.
Tony Moore coolly knocked ·
Sims also drew four charging
continued from B1
down all four foul shots he attempt· fouls against Logan. Osborne said
ed in the final minute. Mo6re 's foul that figure may be a record.
was a huge key. Eastern outsc~red its The victors had 23 rebounds '(Joe
shots stretched the Blue Devils' lead
Shirey scored 10 points. He was foe 16·10 in the round and set the Brown 6, Josh Will 6), and had 6
from just two' points, 54-52, to six 3-for-8 from the field. Shirey tone for the finale, l~ading 45-39.
steals (Brown 3), five turnovers, 12
points, 58-52, with 36 seconds left.
grabbed five rebounds and had one
The fight wasn't over, however, as assists (Simpson 3, Will 3, Brown 3),
Lane and Shirey each hit 3-of-4 steal.
·
Waterford.fought back to within five and 16 fouls.
at the foul line and Payton was 2Mullins and Dustin Deckard also after Eastern held its biggest lead at
Waterford hit 14-30 two-pointers,
for-2 ai the _stripe, his coming with had five ·rebounds, rounding a list of 59-46 with I; 15 left to play. Eastern
~-21 three~pointers (22-51 overall),
I I seconds left.
. five Blue Devils who cleared.at least took care of the basketball going
and
had a 7-13 night at the line.
"I think lhe effon was · unbeliev- five boards.
down the stretch and was able to Waterford had 28 rebounds (Waller
able, that the kids ·gave tonight,"
Gallia Academy outrebounded snare the 66-60 win.
12), IWO steals, 15 turnovers, 7 assists
said Osborne. "The defensive effort · Logan, 41-24.
Simpson, . Will, and Brown . not (Arnold three). and 19 fouls.
was probably the key again. We didTaulbee. led the Chieftains with only provided some key offense, but
JV notes: The Eastern reserves
n't give lhem any easy baskets and 16 points. He was 6-of-15 from the their unselfish play netted three
won 41-24, led by Chris Lyons'. 20
we didn't let them get the lead even field and 2-for-4 at the foul line. assists each among the trio.
points.
Justin. Carney had nine for
when they made the run late.
Taulbee grabbed eight rebounds.
Waterford . .
"We had so many guys -step up
Timmy Holloway had 12 points, . Stat sheet: Eastern hit 1-4 threeThis week's slate: Eastern plays
for us," he added. ''Tony hit some seven of which came at the foul line.
pointers, 22-43 two-pointers (23-47 Wahama Tuesday and goes to Southbig free throws. Cody and Brian had He was 2-of-5 from the field and hit
~verall), and was 19-24 at the line. em Friday.
a great game, and Bo was really 1-qf-9 free throws. Holloway had
good. Jeff and Dustin (Deckard) did · four rebounds and two steals. '
a good job on the boards. Dustin flit
a nice shot in the last quarter."
The Blue Devils played at
Lane led all scorers with 21 Portsmouth S,aturday evening. ·
points, connecting on 6-of-12 field
Gallia Academy returns to
goal attempts and 7-of-9 foul shots. SEOAL play Tuesday when Atl)ens
.
Lane had six rebounds, four assists visits the GAHS gym.
and one steal.
. Logan won the reserve (:'onte~t
.Sims hit 5-of-13 shots from the 52-35.

'

'

By SCOTT WOLFE .
,
Rees said of his club, "The pressure
GJ,.OUSTER - Exploding for 40 we handled at the end of the game
second-half points, the Southern Tor- will do a lot for us in future games.
nadoes tamed the Trimble Tomcats We were faced with some adversity
69-56 Friday night during boys' var- and we were able to overcome it at
sity Tri-Valley Conference basketball the end of the game. We beat a very
· · action at Trimble High School.
talented· Trimble team tonight."
Southern, 7-3, 5-3, played
Rees said of his team's ·fourthWahama Saturday and hosts Eastern period lull, "We played not to lose
Friday in a fight for the TVC Hock- there for a little while and I think our
ing Division's top spot.
players bad some doubt. We called a
"This was a huge win for us on the time out to get focused on winning
road," an ailing. but elated coach Jay the game rather than not losing. At
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;·~-----------

BLUE DEVILS

-·-

-·-

JERRY

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CruiH, All

continued from 81
.~•. ;
.
With 16 seconds left, Holcomb
:S..ered points to take a 44-39 lead,
took
Sullivan's .pass in the lane and
~hich was the largest after halftime.
: : In the fourth quarter, the Raider's got the layup to fall. River Valley led
.
made their first six foul shots, 51-50 aS a result.
After both teams took time outs,
):Octuding two by senior forward
. &lt;JUstin Holcomb made necessary by Loomis, sent to the charity! stripe
:Jtitchfield's fouling out at the 2:27 because of Nolan's ·fourth foul · with
mark. But their missing five of their 6.4 ·seconds left, sank both. free last six he!~ put the Big Blacks in throws· to put .Point Pleasant ahead
52:5t:
~sition to lead.
·
·
· In the final seconds; Sullivan
· .: Payne, who finished with a team·
:high 15 points, missed the first shot · drove the lane and .put up tlic layup.
'liitd made the second on a two-shot The shot bounced away, but Peck
~nus made necessary . by Randall puited down the rebound and put up ·
:Shobe's foul at the 1:07 mark. Then his point blank-range shot in heavy ;
. )i:nior forward Cam Boardman's traffic with the buzzer only millisec·
•
'(ihly shot of the game hit paydirt onds from going off.
Peck's shot, which left his hand
:(tom behind the arc. That basket cre:ated a 49-49 tie with 54 seconds left. before the buzzer sounded, went in.
•: Sullivan missed two free throws The Raiders claimed the 53-52 win
•
,·.Sp
a two.shot bonus made necessary amid cries of disagreement from the
;by Boardman's first foul with 53.4 Point Pleasant faithful.
Brandon Mitchem's II poiqts
~Seconds left. Point Pleasant's Joey
•Loomis, the 6-foot-3 junior who helped push River Valley ·to a 41-38
:~placed !.itchfield at center, got the . win over Point Pleasant in the juniQL
.varsity game. Eric Frye led the Little Jebound.
.
·
.
' : About 31 seconds later, sopho- Blacks with 10 points.
Th.e Raiders will start league
:l)tore Casey Villars,, sent to the line
Logan Tues·
by Holcomb's ·fourth foul, missed rematches Tuesday
ihe first shot and made the second on day and be the hosts for Saturday
'a two-shot bonus. But that Point night's rematch with Gallia Acadec
my at Rio Grande. ·
Pleasant ahead S0-49.

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For more information
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: : WAmNG TO SHOOT- River Valley postman Jeremy Peck (een·
'iilr) web for Point Pleaaant centar Ryan Lltchfll!ld (left) to come
~n before taking the In-the-lane jumper In the flret quarter of Fri·
:!ley nlghl'l SEOAL contest et River Valley High School. Peck's last·
·acond Jumper beat the buzzer to give the Ralden a 53-52 victory.
:(Jimes•Sentlnel photo by G. spencer Osborne)

Kyger Creek 6Z, Hannan Trace 51 '
Seventh-grade boys' game
at Kyger Creek M.S ., Cheshire ..
Scorers: Kyger Creek - Darren
Clark-22, Drew Henson, Chris Roush·
12 each, Jon Gaus &amp; Justin Halfhill-8
each

TORNAD O._,
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i

$1000 Rebate

Girls' game
at Kyger Creek M.S.. Cheshire
Scorers: Kyger Creek: Erica Taylor! 2. Jennifer Colburn 8, Stacey Rankin,
Nicki Tracewell-5 each, Ashley Caldwell, Fallon Mercer-4 each, Sasha Buttrick-2.
Hannan Trace: Angel Wright-?, CasVinton 44, Bidwell-Porter 41
'
sandra Mannon-5, Stacie Fellure-4,
Eighth-grade boys' game
Julie Gwin~. Danielle Hineman-2 each.
at Vinton Elementary, Vinton
Rccmds: Kyger Creek 5·2
Scorers: Vinton - Justin Davis,
KC's next game: at Eastern on Jan,
Nathan Nottingham-16 each, Jason
19
Casey-10, Riley Rice-2
Bidwell-Poner - Dakota Ston.c-16,
Hannan Tnce 68, Kyger Creek 34
Jarnxl Swain- 13, Brandon Coe-6, Josh .
·
Eighth-grade boys' game .
Denny-3, Chris Brown-2
at Kyger Creek M.S., Cheshire
Scorers: Hannan Trace - Dustin
Lewis-12, Dustin Halley, Jason MerBidwell-Porter 59, Vinton 40
rick·9 each, Josh Waugh-?,. Zack Lee,
· Seventh-grade boys' gam
Damien Ross-6 each, Brandon Caldat Vinton Elcnlentary, Vinton
well, Zeph Clary-4 ,each, Eddie LamScorers: Bidwell-Porter - Kyle ·
phier-3, Teddy Fortner, Danny Ousley, Tipton-19, Eric Dingess-8. Carl M.·
Derek Taylor &amp; Jeremy Yeauger-2 each. Wolfe· 7. -· Brandon Unroe-6, Kyle
Kyger Creek - Bryan Workman· -Casey, Charlie Nibe rt-5 each, Pete ·
t2, Zack Davis-8, Chris Nida-5, Tyler Saunders-4, Ryan Burger-3, Randall
Kelley-4, Levi Thompson, Josh Warns- 'sharren-2
•
ley-2 each, Derek Rhodes- I
Vinton - Josh Murphy-14. Terry
Other HT stats- Assists-20 (Lam· Miracle-S, Dustin Jeffers, John' Lee-6,
phier, Merrick &amp; Ross 3 each)': each, Andrew Cfark-4, Allen Pope-2
Rebounds-4S (Caldwell·&amp; Lee 6 each).
St~als-1 0 (Fonner &amp; Merrick 2 each).
Records: Hannan Trace 4-2

NOT ON THIS COURT! - An unidentified official aeparatas
Ohlo'l Duetln Ford and Clnclnn-l'a DerM1rr Johnson In the second
half of Saturday's "midnight madneall" game In Cincinnati, where
ttie t ranked Bearcata won 13·58. , AP
·
e Bearcats couldn t reiM until Bobcats had played a o. I team five
Mickeal's seven-point spurt pushed other times and lost by 24, .42, 47, 30
the lead to·double digits for the final and 21 points.
·
18th
time with eight minutes left and set
This time, there was no blowout.
up the Bearcats' 39th straight win at
"That's basketball," said Tate,
home.
who had 13 points. "You can't win
•
Esterkamp scored 13 and Sanjay by 30 every night. You don't know
continued from
Adell had 12 for Ohio, which broke what to expect of yourself. Everygrabbed 11 rebou"ds and notched 10 points for the 'C:a)S while Jessi Rich- with i\s history of getting over- body can't have a good day every
mond added nine and Bobby Trace hammered home six.
whelmed by top-ranked teams. The day."
: Southern took a 17-~ lead in the first period, coming out of the gate with
a barrage of three momentum setting three pointers. Nick Bolin hit the first
inside goal, then Kyle .Norris drifted a three for a 5-0 lead. Hubbard then
tJ'abbed a steal and drove it in for a score, then had another break-away
pttempt off the SHS press before nailing down his own three that pushed the
ocore to 14-5.
.
: Randolph hit.the third Southern three pointer to push the score to 17-8 at
,
the end of the fmme. ,
• The second period slowed to a standstill as both clubs got in foul trouble.
!Oouthem's Randolph, Jeremy Fisher, and Bolin each went to the bench, while
:nimble's Chalfant!¥ !ID·car!Jer exit in ~ sec!'n~ r~~d""~ .·
; .. '
iii --With a 12· 12 draw on the horizon, S'ouiliern took a 29-20 lead mto tht ""
&lt;&gt;
• •
. ltltenmsston.
.
,
; (;:hris Randolph played a great defensive game in drawing thiee charges,
1999 &amp;MC 171 Ell. CAB PU
}:NO of which came in the first half.
.
'"
;; · Southern unleashed its cannons in the third round with "Rambo''. a5 tjle ·
4X4, V-8, Auto, Towing, All Power,
f,etd general. Reiber led the '19-point assault with t,en marke~, while "SherAir, CD, Cassette, Locking Diff
iff" Garret Kiser led a posse to nine key reboun~s and four pomts. ICyle-Bob
#4851
:foorris notched an ever-important three, but Southern pressed itself into
k)eeper foul trouble, sending the 'Cats to an 8· I 1. stint at the line. Never-the·
MSRP
1ess, Southern led 48-32.
·
Invoice
~ AI one point in time Southern led by eighteen, but Trimble staged a gal· 1
}ant comeback. The Tornadoes became tentative in the foul-plagued finale as J
Rebate
Bobby Trace fired up the Tomcats with two consecutive three-pointers and
GM Owner Loyalty
'Jtauon tallied eight markers in igniting the offense.
· .
Dealer Markup
. : At the 2:15 mark Southern led 56-51, as Trimble went on a 19-8 run.
Southern called itS second time out of the frame to regroup where Coach
· 'kees hammered home the point that his charges needed "to play to win." The
j&gt;ep talk sparked more aggressive play and Southern garnered some breathtog room with a 15-21 siint from the line. ·
...
• Kiser hit 5-6 in the final moments and Jonathan· Evans went 2-2to seal the
ti9-56.win.
.
• Stat sheet: SHS hit 23-41 overall with 5-8 three-pointers and 18-31 twoPointers~ Overall they netted 18-29 at the charity stripe. Southern had 37
tebounds led by Kiser with nine, Reiher eight and five each fror:n Ftsher and
1
J3olin. Pauon had II of Trimble's 33, while Chalfant and Phil Fatres each had
)ix.
.
1
• Southern had 14tumovers. seven assists (No{Jis 2), ten steals (Hubbard 4,
lvarner 2), and 24 fouls.
·
· .
. .
.
: Trimble hit 14-35 two-pointers and 3-7 three-pom.ters With a 19-29 mght
tit the line. The 'Cats had 12 assists (Patton 4, J. Trace 3), 15turnovers, seven
· .
·
·
·
iteals (Patton 5), and 30 fouls .
! JV notes: Southern, 8-2, won .the ~serve game 62-35 led by Dally Hill
with 13 points and Nathan Martin wtth 12 pomts. Justtn Connolly added
~ight, Matt Neigler seven, and J .P Harmon seven. Trimble was led by Jesse
:Brunton with I 0 points.
'
:. This week's slate: Southern ~layed Wabama Saturday and hosts Eastern
,riday.

FOR GREAT SERVICE
BEFORE AND AFTER THE. SALE ..
.
.
;

Ky~tr Creek 40, Hannu 'f.- 20

By JOE KAY
,
.
l!"i~ter early in the second.~alf, Oh~o
CINCINNATI (AP) - . The w_.down by -only three pomts. That s
Cincinnati player who qas won mare when Mickeal took over.
college games than any other .extin·
Jermaine Tate hit a couple of bas·
guished Ohio's thoughts of an upset. kets, and Mickeal rebounded his
Pete Mickeal scored 18 points and missed free throw for a putback.
led· a pair of second-half spurts that Mickeal then hit a three-pointer that
rallied top-ranked Cincinnati to a 73- pushed the lead to double digits for
59 victory Friday night.
the first time.
It was closer than anyone expected
When Ohio got it down to 55-49
until the final minutes. Cincinnati . on Steve Esterkamp's three-pointer
(16-1) never led by double digits until with 10 minutes left, Mickeal hit a
Mickeal fashioned a nine-point run in couple of baskets and a free throw
tlie second half.
that restored the lead.
;.:Even though it was overmatched
Cincinnati has had to rally in the
ana in foul trouble, Ohio (9-8) stayed second half of its last two games. The.
unpomfortably close to Cincinnati all Bearcals fell behind by nine at Tulane
tl)e way through in the only Top 25 on Wednesday night before pulling
gpine Friday night.
out a 72-59 win.
·
: ; "Our guys weren't going to go
It was the same pattern and a near·
away," Ohio coach Larry Hunter ly an identical score this time.
'!lid. "We've played an awfully good
"Every team struggles at some
scf)edule, so we were not intimidat- point in the season," Mickeal said.
eo:"
"But while ·we're struggling, we're .
::The Bobcats finished with a 39-34 winning. That's the positive part."
. r~liounding advantage, hefd CincinCincinnati has gone into a shoot·
na!i to 5-of-18 shooting on l)lree- ing slump that allows teams to con·
pf:&gt;inters and limited center Ktnyon centrale its defenses on· the Bearcats '
~artin to nine points.
' front line. Martin, who had 27 points
::They couldn't handle Mickeal, against Tulane, went only 3-of-9
who has scored at least 16 points in from the field . against a defense
e!li:h of the last seven .games. The anchored in the middle by a freshman
sebior forward has gone 172-12 in .- Brandon Hunter, a Cincinnati
tWo years of junior college and now native.
,
seasons at Cincinnati.
"I just tried to play physical, " said
·:: "He's a winner," Hunter said. "I Hunter, who had 11 points and eight
didn't realize his background of win· rebounds. "I wanted to keep him
ffirlg until I digested his biography. away from the basket because he's
amazing. Then when you watch real explosive.
.
him on tape, you see the little things 1 "He and Mickeal were both frusho 'does, the competitiveness. He's a trated. But they still won, so they
special basketball player."
·
couldn't have been too frustrated."
.-·lie was the difference in a game
Cincinnati allowed:its fourth midttiitt started at midnight wil)l a bois- night game during coach Bob Hugteious crowd, then· settled into a lull. gins ' I I seasons to turn into another
Oliio's deliberate offense slowed the late-night scare. The Bearcats' last
p\'Ce and made Cincinnati and its fans midnight game turned into their last
home-court loss, 87·79 to Arizona
uneasy.
:; When Dustin Ford hit a three· State on Nov. 21, 1997 .

n:s

MOVING TO
HOOP - Eutern
Matt Simpaon (rtghl)
worka off the hlp of Waterford'a·Jolh Arnold (32) on hla way to thebasket during Friday night's TVC Hocking Division game at Ealtem.
High School, where the Eaglea won 66-60. Simpson flnlahed with 16
points.

Bidwell-Porter 37, VInton 31
Girls' game
at Vinton Elementary, Vinton
Scorers: Bidweii-Poner - Tarra
Minnis·!~. Hannony Phillips-9, Leslie
Ward-7, Rhonda Caudill, Lindsay Godwin &amp; Letea McAvena-2 each
'
Vinton Kristina Nay1or·l6.
Brandy Marcum-6, Sharon Johnson-5 ,
Tessa Russell &amp; Jessica Shriver-2 each

21

,y;:o

EAGLES

Hannan Trace - Jake Whiteman24, Chris Temple-16

Boys' game at Mason,
Scoring leaders: Trace

downs Ohio 73-59

Cross Lanes tallies 65-48 win over hurting OVC Defenders
Teammates Abe Abrams, ·Mike Jenks (sickness) and
Josh Sanders (back injury) also sat out for this game.
Teammates Adam Holcomb, Gabe Jenkins, Joe Meyn
and Eric Petrie played with the flu.
Not one Defender scored more than one baskot in the
first quarter, when the Warriors got six points from Aaron
Walker and four-point efforts from Phil Reustler and Dan
Valentine to take a 16-9 lead at the period's end.
Cross Lanes increased its lead to 30-21 at halftime

8oullblll' ll:imes -6rntind • Page B3

No. 1 Cincinnati

TRI-COUNTY PREP BASKETBALL
GALLIPoLIS -'The injury and sickness bug hit Ohi
Valley Christian's varsity boys' basketball team Friday
night, when the Defenders dropped a 65-48 decision to
Cross Lanes Christian.
The Defenders (5-5), who saw the decision end their
five-game win streak, went without the services of Chris
Burnett, who is on the disabled list aftor hitting a wall in
Thursday's practice. The 6-foot-4 senior center injured
the rotator cuff in his shoulder.

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Sund8y, January 1e, 2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plellunt, WV

·-

SUNDAY COMMENTARY

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Could 'education' have prevented R·ocker's outburst?~By SAM WILSON
n--Sihllnel Corre•pondent
It seems that one way to make yourself a hot celebrity is to follow the John Rocker formula.
The Atlanta Braves relief pitcher is quite popular
these days. Just make some of the ugliest public state·
ments knocking all races, genders and peoples you can
think of, and you too can be.in demand and on the talk
Show circuit.
Yes, it's open season on Rocker. But if he thinks it's
bad now, just wait until the season starts. Dealing with
his teammates, opposing players, Braves management
and baseball's brass is just the tip of the iceberg.
Rocker is a .Titanic waiting to happen.
·In a recent baseball publication, it was revealed that
Ken Griffey, Jr.; probably the.most popular and visible
player in the game, received two death threats on his
Internet site last week. 1 don't know if Rocker has a
website, but that amount will probably be Rocker's
total on a bad day during the upcoming season.
· When an individual enters the entertainment indus·

try, their lives become an open the team. It seems Braves manaaemcnt believes that
book. A lilss of privacy is just one Rocker's appearance oould put te~~~~mates in harms
of the trsdcoffs for stardom and way. We don't want a stray bullet hittina Ores Maddux
wealth. Celebrity statua comes with or Tom Glavine.
a price taa. One slipup is just what
It hu aotten so bad that some fantasy baaeball
the tabloid presses love to exploit.
leagues have bamd Rocker. The Suspended Reality
Rocker was different. He per- J..eaaue of Las Vegas his banned him for either one seaformed the ultimate boner. He son or for life. He joins RobertoAlomar, Darryl Straw·
exposed his ignorance and stupidity berry and Albert Belle .as players who have been susto one of the most prestigious pended by outf81!Cd fantasy fans because of their oftensports publications in the world. It sive behavior.
would take a supreme effort to top that kind of .
So now it comes lime for the media to begin defend·
screwup!
· ing Rocker. His right to free speech. Giving him the ,
Rocker now faces a life on the run .. He will have to opportunity: to run•a correction to the story with his
be accompanied by 'bodyguards wherever he travels. "I'm nota raci,st" tour on 20/20 and ESPN's Up Close.
He'll hav~ to live under the umbrella of death threats
The truth is that baaeball and the Braves need to profrom all those crazy people thai seem to rise from the teet players like Rocker by educating them. I'm not
woodwork looking for notoriety.
defending his comments; however, there are ntariy peaThe Braves have even discussed the possibility of pie who say the aame thing$ as Rocker in private or
having Rocker stay at a different hotel when 'they trav- among friends. All of· us have heard and seen such
el. It is one of the ways to protect him and the rest of behavior in our own lives. We may have even said such

OUTDOORS IN OHIO

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Despite claims by the Humane Society of the
United States that coyote hunts are cruel, Ohio will not stand in the way
Supporters of the "coyote drives" say the
of the organized hunts.
The Humane Society sent a letter to Gov. Bol:5 Taft last week asking· hunts are useful in dealing with.an overabun- .
that he publicly oppose the common rural practice of rounding up
hunters to shoot coy,otes in what are referred to as "coyote drives." It also dance of the animals, which, in some cases, are
wants him to ask state wildlife managers to consider banning the prac- a nuisance to hunters.
tice. ·
Opponents ·claim the hunts are cruel and
·The group also is sending letters to volunteer fire departments in .Pick' away and F~irfield counties asking them to cancel coyote drives planned should be banned. ·
for this month as fund-raisers.
"These hunts have been popular in Ohio for a-number of years," said
Jim Lynch, an Ohio Department of Natural Resources spokesman. "We
Grain farmers generally like the bushy-tailed animals because they eat
see no reason to change that because, over time, these hunts have beeli a groundhogs. But livestock farmers say coyotes kiiJ·sheep and Jambs.
very successful approach to deal with the state's abundant coyote popu·
Coyotes typically weigh about 35 pounds a~d have great eyesight and
· lalion."
'
sense of smell. Because they can be hard to.spc)t, it's easier for organized
Sightings of coyotes in Ohio have increased 200 percent since 1990, groups than individuals to hunt the animals, L)'flch said.
.
Lynch said. Coyotes have been spotted in all 88 counties, in urban and
While there are no restri~tions on how many ciJyotes can be killed or
rural areas.
when they can be killed, the hunts typically are organized for January
They generally are active at night, preying on rabbits, mice, chip- when the .coyotes' fur is t~e thickest.
munks, squirrels and cats. :
Coyote drives draw about 100 hunters and'raise several hundred dol-

.

Iars through the sale of pelts, lunches and raffles. The hunters, carrying
shptguns, arrange· themselves in a large square and drive the coyotes
toward the middle.
~
Amanda Fire,Department in Fairfield County, .southeast of Columbu.;;·
plaps a hunt Jan. 22, and nearby Saltcreek·Tarlton Fire Department in.•
Pickaway County had ~ne scheduled for Saturday.
., Last year's hunt in Amanda killed five coyotes. The department usu :-,
ally raises several hundred dollars from the pelt's, plus a benefit so~p.,"
and,sandwich lunch.
J
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Saltcreek-Tailton Fire Chief Ray McJunkin said the Humane. Socie~'r
is an aggravation.
.
·
"These are farming communities," he said. "People in rural

commu~ '

nities out here probably know more about taking care of animals !han tbc..
Hymane Society.
·
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"It kind of hits a sore spot."
Taft' deferred the issue· to state wildlife experts, said his spokesman,..
Scott Milburn.
,' ~
"These coyote roundups are cruei. There is no redeeming value whatsoeyer. This is being done for fun," Humane So~iety spokeswomaP"•
Sandy Rowland told The Columbus Dispatch-for a story Thursday. . . ••

~oat

safety highlights
conservation. club meeting

·' Does that equalize things for Sunday's AFC quarterfinal at the RCA
·
: "This is a time when oitr veterans have 10 step up," Manning says.
~It will be a learning experience for us and the only way to learn is to
flo out there and play and experience it."
·
', The problem for the Colts is that those veterans are primarily on
*fense. Tight end Ken Dilger, who is 27.,is ·the oldest offensive
starter. And Cornelius Bennett, who's played in five Super Bowls with
~e Bills and Falcons, will miss this game with a knee if\iury.
) The Titans are a lit,le more experienced.
·
: They have eight players back from the Houston Oilers of 1993, the
last time t,he itinerant franc!Jise made the playoffs. And they have nine
tjlore who had postseason expe~:ience with other teams.
; And, of course, they all played Jast week in the Music City Miracje, the 22-16 win over Buffalo won on Frank Wycheck's lateral and
~evin Dyson's 75-yard return after the Bills had gone ahead with 16
seconds left.
··
• The most experienced Titan is one of the most experienced players
in NFL history- 38-year-old'guard Bruce Matthews, who this season
set an NFL record for games by an offensive lineman with 264 . He has
.
h
11 p1ayo ff starts. more th.an anyone on e1t. her·team but Bennett,
w o

~me?

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" ST. LOUIS (AP) - Life near the top has been
It looked as if Minnesota would make the same
a foregone conclusion for the Minnesoca Vilcings kind of turnaround, and Green faced a major chat•
with Dennis Green as coach.. Success didn't come lense .early this season . Coming off a 15-1 record
tbat quickly for Dick Vermeil's St: Louis Rains.
and the most prolific offensive year in league hisThe ';il&lt;ings have been playoff reguiars since tory, Minnesota started 2,4,
Gteen w¥ hired in ·1992. Although yet to make the
Maybe it was a cimyover 'from nnt winning the
Super Bowl under him, the Vilcings made the play- . NFC' championship 'despite such a gaudy record,
offs in seven of Green's eight seasons. He hu 'the . or the ineffectiveness of quarterback .Randall Cun1'\fC's longest tenure with the same team.
ningharn, whom Green finally benched for Jeff
In SJ. Louis, any suggestion of a~n when George, or the lack of production defensively, parthe season began would have been greeted with ticularl)' from such key players as John Randle
disdain. The· Rams lost their prized · free-agent and linebacker Ed McDaniel.
signing, quarterback Trent Green, with a wrecked
The defeats came in close games, mainly
knee in the third exhibition game. They were com- because the offense sputtered. ·
illg off 5-11 and 4-12 seasons marked by discord
Green didn't lose his cool, and the move to Jeff
bordering on dissension.
George paid off.
·' Questions of whether Vermeil, 63, could still
"I think our guys played· hard," Green said. "I
handle the rigors of coaching- he left the.NFL in never had any question about our guys' attitude. I
1982 with burnout- dominaied summer talk.
just don't think we were playing as clean a game
Vermeil adapted, making changes in staff, play~ as we should have been playing. When you're
ers and style. The Rams responded with a 13· 3 playing Tampa Bay and Detroit and Green Bay,
rt',I:Ord, the best in the NFC, and the inside track to those are teams that you play twice every year. If
!~Super B9~l.
·
you make a few ·mistakes, they can beat you.
.

Jfllf;_C!JDYilll!!•&lt;.aJijl&gt; fJ\.;othe
room all · week, would be a
~~~~ •of embarrassment - at least
5 week,
nl
.
Jaguars led 41-7 at halftim~.
the postseason record for most
in a half,.
~lacksi~nville held a 24-0 advan-

.

y

t91ded, staring btankty at the
seemingly emotionless despite
t~hutr1bli11g loss. .
.
uo1.pmns had six turnovers.
clo:sed the season losing seven
ol'!:the:ir last 10, fueling thoUghts
has to go - either the
quarterback or both,
is undecided about his
tllltlre. but there's been 'widespread

We've been around long enough to know not to
panic. You either know your team or, you don 't."
The Rams, whose NFC West crown earned
them a week off, had winning streaks of six and
seven sandwiched around two .losses before drop·
ping a meaningless' finale at Philadelphia. BuMhe
only playoff teams they faced this season, Tennessee ·and Detroit, .both ·on the road, beat the
Rams.
·
· That doesn 't appear to concern Vermeil, wtio
believe~ his team has overcome every challenge.
"I thin~ the only thing.that these guys have to
do is go to the next level," Vermeil said. "Person·
ally, I have seen them do that in the games that
were critical. I think back to Atlanta (in t!te second
game). I think of the first 49ers game" in which
they
to San Fran. snapped a 17-game losing streak
.
.
CISCO.

"All of a sudden, boom, they were a level that
I hadn 't seen."
Green has seen that level from his team. He can
only hope it will reach that .Caliber soon - · like
today.
·

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..

JAGUARS

.

.
retire I afd-tbe ,,. are ••(WO •1p)ayoff "Victories,. hardly• '
missed five games with a neck injury memoral&gt;le considering the way the
an~ fi.ni!!h!:ll with the wo..St quarter, , Dolphins have exited the lasl'.two
' hili-~~~~ ~6?)1) of his st(iried.1 7· , years: This loss comes on top of I.St
yeal' career.
;·,: . year's 38' 3 thumping at the hands of
Meanwhile, all Johnson ~ to Denve.r last se!150n that led Johnson
show for his four seasons in Miami · 10 quit for a day.
·

sotr:toaft;;,~~e,:::':;·~a;:;:eJ~~~

1818 Sullaru 11KtOU!I*.!'.
of !act.

.

Very different ro~ds lead to the same
~estination for. Vikings and Rams

.

warr.

_,......,;..,,....-------------, has played in 20 postseason games.
·
·'
But a lot of players on 'both teams don't think that matters much ,
given their big-game college experience.
.
•
The Titans stan two rookies on the defensive line - Jevon Kearse,:
who was defensive rookie of the year and an All-Pro and John Thorn· :
ton, their second-round draft choice.
"Jevon played for a natiimal championship every year," Thornton ;
said. "We have a whole lot of guys that come from winning programs :
in college."
~
.
;
The Colts, meanwhile, have a small group of veterans left from the ·
•
1995· and 1996 playoff teams, including Dilger, defensive linemen :
Bernard Whittington and Ellis Johnson and safety Jason Belser. The :
other starters in the secondsry also have playoff experience - Jeff :
Burris with Buffalo and Tyrone Poole and Chad Cota with Carolina. ·
That seems to make Sunday's game a wash in terms of experience,;
or lack of it. That doesn't make it very different from the rest of the;
this weekend's four games in the Super Bowl countdown.
.
"I read in the paper where there's not much fan interest because '
the Denvers and the Dallases and the 49ers and teams like that are not :
,,,
playing now, but I' m not sure that's right," Indianapolis coach Jim •
Mora said.
·
"We have fans. Tennesseehas fans . The Rams have fans. People.
1-....:=-.;
want these teams to win, too. So I think it's good. I think it 's great." •
DUELIN~ QUARTERBACKS - Peyton Manning of lndlanawli• (taft) and
Mora himself has some playoff experience, all of it bad. He was 0Tennessee s Steve ~cNelr will square off today as.the AFC Dlvlalonal Playoffs 4 in I 0 seasons in New Orleans.
.
continue. Menning t• making hlaflrst postseason start, while McNair suits up
"That
makes
no
differen~e,"
Mora
said.·
"I'd
feel
the
same·
way
tor Just his second NFL playoff game; The Colts are beck In the playoffs for the
flrat time since 1996. The Titans' last playoff appearance was 1993. (AP)
· about this game if I was 4-0. This is one you wantto win furthc team.··
·.

.

'
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wheell, roof f'ICk ••••••••••••••••••- ••••- ......................................11,100
1818 SUIMtru L8geoy Outbltok • WB568, 22,000 mites, bal. of tact.

\

not the key .ingred-ient for Colts, Titans

IJ&gt;II·

••

GALUPOLIS - Dean Palmer, three-day boating safety course at
an Ohio Division of Watercraft offi- the University of Rio Grande this
cedrom Portsmouth, spoke to mem- spring.
" · .
bers of the Gallia County ConservaNew officers for 2000 include
,lion Club at their recent meeting. Bob Donnet, president; Bob Nelson,
The club' also elected new officers vice president; Ed Clary, treasurer;
for the upcoming year.
and Melba Wyatt, secretary.
Palmer addressed the problem of
Steve Salisbury was the former
water safety enfofCement in the president. Donne! is stepping up to
local area, noting that his office has the president's slot after serving as
rei:eived complaints from Gallia, treasurer and Wyatt replaces former
Meigs, Lawrence and Vinton coun· secrell!ry l!.onald "Buddy" Betz.
ties regarding unsafe operation of
In other business, .the club voted ·
boats and jet skis, including reports to support a new ordinance proposed
of underage people operating water- by the Gallipolis City Commission ·
craft.
to clean up after the Canadian geese
"We have had reports of small that have settleq in the city, mainly
children operating jet skis and even · along the waterfront area and the
large boats, and we emphasize that city park. ·
no·perosn under the age of 12 is petIn other news from the ·Gallia
milled by law to operate any water- County Conservation Club m~eting,
craft, no matter who is with them," a turkey seminar has been scheduled
said Palmer. "Anyone between the for April 15, at the Bob Evans Shel- ·
ages
12 and 15 can operate a terhouse in Rio Grande.
.
craft, providing someone over 21 is
It was also announced that the
with them, if the younger person has National Rifle Association banquet
obtained a permii."
will be held April 19, at the Elks
He said that stricter measures will Lodge in Gallipolis.
be taken in 2000 to enforce current
Mike McConnell, Gallia Coun·
laws.
.
ty's wildlife officer, reported that
"Our primary job will !&gt;e to edu· 357 deer were bagged during the
cate rather than issue citations to recent muzzle-loader season.
those found violating Ohio's boating
The next meeting of the Gallia
laws," Palmer said. "But we will County Conservation Club is set for
write a citation when we catch Feb. 9, at the Gallia County Gun
someone in flagrant violation of Club. The meeting begins a 6:30
these laws."
·p.m.
Palmer said his office will offer a
(Submitted by Odie O'Donnell)

.

.
:: INDIANAPoLis (AP) - Peyton Manning, Edaerrin James and
. .y .of the. Indianapolis Colts have no playoff experience. Steve o;. ' ....., •.
llfcNillr, Edd1e George and many of lhe Tennessee Titans have just one
pme- albeit one of the most memorable games in NFL playoff his-

.

Buckeye State won't .stop organ.iz.ed ·coyote hunting for now .
'

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NFLtDIVISIONAL·PLAYOFFS

'

iY DAVE GOLDBERG

things ourselves.
'
Years ago, teams bepn to hire paychialrists to helJk
playen cope with the slress of being major lei£ue Sian... .
When you take naive young people who have been .:
blessed with incredible talent and expose them to the. •
scrutiny of today's savvy media, y011're aaking for
problems.
During his quest for Babe Ruth's home run record in
1961, Roger Maris was harassed by the media so much .
that he began to IQSC his hair. He partially blamed the.
Yankees for not protecting him.
.
Today's players are more sophisticated; however, I "
there are still plenty of Rockers out there. Th.e league,
needs to make sensitivity training part of their routine •. ·
It should be added as a mandatory clause.in any sports
contract.
The repercussions of Rocker's comments will still .
be making waves six months from now. Baseball needs
to address the problem by educating its players. This ·
may not change Rocker's views, but at least he'll keep.
them to himself.

,,

{
~. ~xperience
r

·.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
.

'
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Freshman Big Blacks
top Aalders
·n
·
•
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POINT PLEASANT, W.va. :.:._ Point Pleasant's freshman basketball
team beat River Valley 54-48 in overtime .Thursday night. ·
Scoring for the Raiders were Brandon Burns (19), Eric Pugh (nine),
Allan Brown (seven), Derrick Layton, Jessie Ward (six each) and Smith
(two).
.
'
•
No information wu reported lor·the Big Blacks.
The Raiders will play at Loga~ Monday at 5:30p.m.

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�•

Page Bot • 6unllap 1limtt1·6tntind

Sund8y, January 1e, 2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plellunt, WV

·-

SUNDAY COMMENTARY

•.

'

Could 'education' have prevented R·ocker's outburst?~By SAM WILSON
n--Sihllnel Corre•pondent
It seems that one way to make yourself a hot celebrity is to follow the John Rocker formula.
The Atlanta Braves relief pitcher is quite popular
these days. Just make some of the ugliest public state·
ments knocking all races, genders and peoples you can
think of, and you too can be.in demand and on the talk
Show circuit.
Yes, it's open season on Rocker. But if he thinks it's
bad now, just wait until the season starts. Dealing with
his teammates, opposing players, Braves management
and baseball's brass is just the tip of the iceberg.
Rocker is a .Titanic waiting to happen.
·In a recent baseball publication, it was revealed that
Ken Griffey, Jr.; probably the.most popular and visible
player in the game, received two death threats on his
Internet site last week. 1 don't know if Rocker has a
website, but that amount will probably be Rocker's
total on a bad day during the upcoming season.
· When an individual enters the entertainment indus·

try, their lives become an open the team. It seems Braves manaaemcnt believes that
book. A lilss of privacy is just one Rocker's appearance oould put te~~~~mates in harms
of the trsdcoffs for stardom and way. We don't want a stray bullet hittina Ores Maddux
wealth. Celebrity statua comes with or Tom Glavine.
a price taa. One slipup is just what
It hu aotten so bad that some fantasy baaeball
the tabloid presses love to exploit.
leagues have bamd Rocker. The Suspended Reality
Rocker was different. He per- J..eaaue of Las Vegas his banned him for either one seaformed the ultimate boner. He son or for life. He joins RobertoAlomar, Darryl Straw·
exposed his ignorance and stupidity berry and Albert Belle .as players who have been susto one of the most prestigious pended by outf81!Cd fantasy fans because of their oftensports publications in the world. It sive behavior.
would take a supreme effort to top that kind of .
So now it comes lime for the media to begin defend·
screwup!
· ing Rocker. His right to free speech. Giving him the ,
Rocker now faces a life on the run .. He will have to opportunity: to run•a correction to the story with his
be accompanied by 'bodyguards wherever he travels. "I'm nota raci,st" tour on 20/20 and ESPN's Up Close.
He'll hav~ to live under the umbrella of death threats
The truth is that baaeball and the Braves need to profrom all those crazy people thai seem to rise from the teet players like Rocker by educating them. I'm not
woodwork looking for notoriety.
defending his comments; however, there are ntariy peaThe Braves have even discussed the possibility of pie who say the aame thing$ as Rocker in private or
having Rocker stay at a different hotel when 'they trav- among friends. All of· us have heard and seen such
el. It is one of the ways to protect him and the rest of behavior in our own lives. We may have even said such

OUTDOORS IN OHIO

...

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•

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Despite claims by the Humane Society of the
United States that coyote hunts are cruel, Ohio will not stand in the way
Supporters of the "coyote drives" say the
of the organized hunts.
The Humane Society sent a letter to Gov. Bol:5 Taft last week asking· hunts are useful in dealing with.an overabun- .
that he publicly oppose the common rural practice of rounding up
hunters to shoot coy,otes in what are referred to as "coyote drives." It also dance of the animals, which, in some cases, are
wants him to ask state wildlife managers to consider banning the prac- a nuisance to hunters.
tice. ·
Opponents ·claim the hunts are cruel and
·The group also is sending letters to volunteer fire departments in .Pick' away and F~irfield counties asking them to cancel coyote drives planned should be banned. ·
for this month as fund-raisers.
"These hunts have been popular in Ohio for a-number of years," said
Jim Lynch, an Ohio Department of Natural Resources spokesman. "We
Grain farmers generally like the bushy-tailed animals because they eat
see no reason to change that because, over time, these hunts have beeli a groundhogs. But livestock farmers say coyotes kiiJ·sheep and Jambs.
very successful approach to deal with the state's abundant coyote popu·
Coyotes typically weigh about 35 pounds a~d have great eyesight and
· lalion."
'
sense of smell. Because they can be hard to.spc)t, it's easier for organized
Sightings of coyotes in Ohio have increased 200 percent since 1990, groups than individuals to hunt the animals, L)'flch said.
.
Lynch said. Coyotes have been spotted in all 88 counties, in urban and
While there are no restri~tions on how many ciJyotes can be killed or
rural areas.
when they can be killed, the hunts typically are organized for January
They generally are active at night, preying on rabbits, mice, chip- when the .coyotes' fur is t~e thickest.
munks, squirrels and cats. :
Coyote drives draw about 100 hunters and'raise several hundred dol-

.

Iars through the sale of pelts, lunches and raffles. The hunters, carrying
shptguns, arrange· themselves in a large square and drive the coyotes
toward the middle.
~
Amanda Fire,Department in Fairfield County, .southeast of Columbu.;;·
plaps a hunt Jan. 22, and nearby Saltcreek·Tarlton Fire Department in.•
Pickaway County had ~ne scheduled for Saturday.
., Last year's hunt in Amanda killed five coyotes. The department usu :-,
ally raises several hundred dollars from the pelt's, plus a benefit so~p.,"
and,sandwich lunch.
J
.
·
·: _
Saltcreek-Tailton Fire Chief Ray McJunkin said the Humane. Socie~'r
is an aggravation.
.
·
"These are farming communities," he said. "People in rural

commu~ '

nities out here probably know more about taking care of animals !han tbc..
Hymane Society.
·
·'"
· '·' ''
"It kind of hits a sore spot."
Taft' deferred the issue· to state wildlife experts, said his spokesman,..
Scott Milburn.
,' ~
"These coyote roundups are cruei. There is no redeeming value whatsoeyer. This is being done for fun," Humane So~iety spokeswomaP"•
Sandy Rowland told The Columbus Dispatch-for a story Thursday. . . ••

~oat

safety highlights
conservation. club meeting

·' Does that equalize things for Sunday's AFC quarterfinal at the RCA
·
: "This is a time when oitr veterans have 10 step up," Manning says.
~It will be a learning experience for us and the only way to learn is to
flo out there and play and experience it."
·
', The problem for the Colts is that those veterans are primarily on
*fense. Tight end Ken Dilger, who is 27.,is ·the oldest offensive
starter. And Cornelius Bennett, who's played in five Super Bowls with
~e Bills and Falcons, will miss this game with a knee if\iury.
) The Titans are a lit,le more experienced.
·
: They have eight players back from the Houston Oilers of 1993, the
last time t,he itinerant franc!Jise made the playoffs. And they have nine
tjlore who had postseason expe~:ience with other teams.
; And, of course, they all played Jast week in the Music City Miracje, the 22-16 win over Buffalo won on Frank Wycheck's lateral and
~evin Dyson's 75-yard return after the Bills had gone ahead with 16
seconds left.
··
• The most experienced Titan is one of the most experienced players
in NFL history- 38-year-old'guard Bruce Matthews, who this season
set an NFL record for games by an offensive lineman with 264 . He has
.
h
11 p1ayo ff starts. more th.an anyone on e1t. her·team but Bennett,
w o

~me?

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.

" ST. LOUIS (AP) - Life near the top has been
It looked as if Minnesota would make the same
a foregone conclusion for the Minnesoca Vilcings kind of turnaround, and Green faced a major chat•
with Dennis Green as coach.. Success didn't come lense .early this season . Coming off a 15-1 record
tbat quickly for Dick Vermeil's St: Louis Rains.
and the most prolific offensive year in league hisThe ';il&lt;ings have been playoff reguiars since tory, Minnesota started 2,4,
Gteen w¥ hired in ·1992. Although yet to make the
Maybe it was a cimyover 'from nnt winning the
Super Bowl under him, the Vilcings made the play- . NFC' championship 'despite such a gaudy record,
offs in seven of Green's eight seasons. He hu 'the . or the ineffectiveness of quarterback .Randall Cun1'\fC's longest tenure with the same team.
ningharn, whom Green finally benched for Jeff
In SJ. Louis, any suggestion of a~n when George, or the lack of production defensively, parthe season began would have been greeted with ticularl)' from such key players as John Randle
disdain. The· Rams lost their prized · free-agent and linebacker Ed McDaniel.
signing, quarterback Trent Green, with a wrecked
The defeats came in close games, mainly
knee in the third exhibition game. They were com- because the offense sputtered. ·
illg off 5-11 and 4-12 seasons marked by discord
Green didn't lose his cool, and the move to Jeff
bordering on dissension.
George paid off.
·' Questions of whether Vermeil, 63, could still
"I think our guys played· hard," Green said. "I
handle the rigors of coaching- he left the.NFL in never had any question about our guys' attitude. I
1982 with burnout- dominaied summer talk.
just don't think we were playing as clean a game
Vermeil adapted, making changes in staff, play~ as we should have been playing. When you're
ers and style. The Rams responded with a 13· 3 playing Tampa Bay and Detroit and Green Bay,
rt',I:Ord, the best in the NFC, and the inside track to those are teams that you play twice every year. If
!~Super B9~l.
·
you make a few ·mistakes, they can beat you.
.

Jfllf;_C!JDYilll!!•&lt;.aJijl&gt; fJ\.;othe
room all · week, would be a
~~~~ •of embarrassment - at least
5 week,
nl
.
Jaguars led 41-7 at halftim~.
the postseason record for most
in a half,.
~lacksi~nville held a 24-0 advan-

.

y

t91ded, staring btankty at the
seemingly emotionless despite
t~hutr1bli11g loss. .
.
uo1.pmns had six turnovers.
clo:sed the season losing seven
ol'!:the:ir last 10, fueling thoUghts
has to go - either the
quarterback or both,
is undecided about his
tllltlre. but there's been 'widespread

We've been around long enough to know not to
panic. You either know your team or, you don 't."
The Rams, whose NFC West crown earned
them a week off, had winning streaks of six and
seven sandwiched around two .losses before drop·
ping a meaningless' finale at Philadelphia. BuMhe
only playoff teams they faced this season, Tennessee ·and Detroit, .both ·on the road, beat the
Rams.
·
· That doesn 't appear to concern Vermeil, wtio
believe~ his team has overcome every challenge.
"I thin~ the only thing.that these guys have to
do is go to the next level," Vermeil said. "Person·
ally, I have seen them do that in the games that
were critical. I think back to Atlanta (in t!te second
game). I think of the first 49ers game" in which
they
to San Fran. snapped a 17-game losing streak
.
.
CISCO.

"All of a sudden, boom, they were a level that
I hadn 't seen."
Green has seen that level from his team. He can
only hope it will reach that .Caliber soon - · like
today.
·

.

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JAGUARS

.

.
retire I afd-tbe ,,. are ••(WO •1p)ayoff "Victories,. hardly• '
missed five games with a neck injury memoral&gt;le considering the way the
an~ fi.ni!!h!:ll with the wo..St quarter, , Dolphins have exited the lasl'.two
' hili-~~~~ ~6?)1) of his st(iried.1 7· , years: This loss comes on top of I.St
yeal' career.
;·,: . year's 38' 3 thumping at the hands of
Meanwhile, all Johnson ~ to Denve.r last se!150n that led Johnson
show for his four seasons in Miami · 10 quit for a day.
·

sotr:toaft;;,~~e,:::':;·~a;:;:eJ~~~

1818 Sullaru 11KtOU!I*.!'.
of !act.

.

Very different ro~ds lead to the same
~estination for. Vikings and Rams

.

warr.

_,......,;..,,....-------------, has played in 20 postseason games.
·
·'
But a lot of players on 'both teams don't think that matters much ,
given their big-game college experience.
.
•
The Titans stan two rookies on the defensive line - Jevon Kearse,:
who was defensive rookie of the year and an All-Pro and John Thorn· :
ton, their second-round draft choice.
"Jevon played for a natiimal championship every year," Thornton ;
said. "We have a whole lot of guys that come from winning programs :
in college."
~
.
;
The Colts, meanwhile, have a small group of veterans left from the ·
•
1995· and 1996 playoff teams, including Dilger, defensive linemen :
Bernard Whittington and Ellis Johnson and safety Jason Belser. The :
other starters in the secondsry also have playoff experience - Jeff :
Burris with Buffalo and Tyrone Poole and Chad Cota with Carolina. ·
That seems to make Sunday's game a wash in terms of experience,;
or lack of it. That doesn't make it very different from the rest of the;
this weekend's four games in the Super Bowl countdown.
.
"I read in the paper where there's not much fan interest because '
the Denvers and the Dallases and the 49ers and teams like that are not :
,,,
playing now, but I' m not sure that's right," Indianapolis coach Jim •
Mora said.
·
"We have fans. Tennesseehas fans . The Rams have fans. People.
1-....:=-.;
want these teams to win, too. So I think it's good. I think it 's great." •
DUELIN~ QUARTERBACKS - Peyton Manning of lndlanawli• (taft) and
Mora himself has some playoff experience, all of it bad. He was 0Tennessee s Steve ~cNelr will square off today as.the AFC Dlvlalonal Playoffs 4 in I 0 seasons in New Orleans.
.
continue. Menning t• making hlaflrst postseason start, while McNair suits up
"That
makes
no
differen~e,"
Mora
said.·
"I'd
feel
the
same·
way
tor Just his second NFL playoff game; The Colts are beck In the playoffs for the
flrat time since 1996. The Titans' last playoff appearance was 1993. (AP)
· about this game if I was 4-0. This is one you wantto win furthc team.··
·.

.

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not the key .ingred-ient for Colts, Titans

IJ&gt;II·

••

GALUPOLIS - Dean Palmer, three-day boating safety course at
an Ohio Division of Watercraft offi- the University of Rio Grande this
cedrom Portsmouth, spoke to mem- spring.
" · .
bers of the Gallia County ConservaNew officers for 2000 include
,lion Club at their recent meeting. Bob Donnet, president; Bob Nelson,
The club' also elected new officers vice president; Ed Clary, treasurer;
for the upcoming year.
and Melba Wyatt, secretary.
Palmer addressed the problem of
Steve Salisbury was the former
water safety enfofCement in the president. Donne! is stepping up to
local area, noting that his office has the president's slot after serving as
rei:eived complaints from Gallia, treasurer and Wyatt replaces former
Meigs, Lawrence and Vinton coun· secrell!ry l!.onald "Buddy" Betz.
ties regarding unsafe operation of
In other business, .the club voted ·
boats and jet skis, including reports to support a new ordinance proposed
of underage people operating water- by the Gallipolis City Commission ·
craft.
to clean up after the Canadian geese
"We have had reports of small that have settleq in the city, mainly
children operating jet skis and even · along the waterfront area and the
large boats, and we emphasize that city park. ·
no·perosn under the age of 12 is petIn other news from the ·Gallia
milled by law to operate any water- County Conservation Club m~eting,
craft, no matter who is with them," a turkey seminar has been scheduled
said Palmer. "Anyone between the for April 15, at the Bob Evans Shel- ·
ages
12 and 15 can operate a terhouse in Rio Grande.
.
craft, providing someone over 21 is
It was also announced that the
with them, if the younger person has National Rifle Association banquet
obtained a permii."
will be held April 19, at the Elks
He said that stricter measures will Lodge in Gallipolis.
be taken in 2000 to enforce current
Mike McConnell, Gallia Coun·
laws.
.
ty's wildlife officer, reported that
"Our primary job will !&gt;e to edu· 357 deer were bagged during the
cate rather than issue citations to recent muzzle-loader season.
those found violating Ohio's boating
The next meeting of the Gallia
laws," Palmer said. "But we will County Conservation Club is set for
write a citation when we catch Feb. 9, at the Gallia County Gun
someone in flagrant violation of Club. The meeting begins a 6:30
these laws."
·p.m.
Palmer said his office will offer a
(Submitted by Odie O'Donnell)

.

.
:: INDIANAPoLis (AP) - Peyton Manning, Edaerrin James and
. .y .of the. Indianapolis Colts have no playoff experience. Steve o;. ' ....., •.
llfcNillr, Edd1e George and many of lhe Tennessee Titans have just one
pme- albeit one of the most memorable games in NFL playoff his-

.

Buckeye State won't .stop organ.iz.ed ·coyote hunting for now .
'

'

•

•

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NFLtDIVISIONAL·PLAYOFFS

'

iY DAVE GOLDBERG

things ourselves.
'
Years ago, teams bepn to hire paychialrists to helJk
playen cope with the slress of being major lei£ue Sian... .
When you take naive young people who have been .:
blessed with incredible talent and expose them to the. •
scrutiny of today's savvy media, y011're aaking for
problems.
During his quest for Babe Ruth's home run record in
1961, Roger Maris was harassed by the media so much .
that he began to IQSC his hair. He partially blamed the.
Yankees for not protecting him.
.
Today's players are more sophisticated; however, I "
there are still plenty of Rockers out there. Th.e league,
needs to make sensitivity training part of their routine •. ·
It should be added as a mandatory clause.in any sports
contract.
The repercussions of Rocker's comments will still .
be making waves six months from now. Baseball needs
to address the problem by educating its players. This ·
may not change Rocker's views, but at least he'll keep.
them to himself.

,,

{
~. ~xperience
r

·.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
.

'
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•

~...

'

Freshman Big Blacks
top Aalders
·n
·
•
I

or·

POINT PLEASANT, W.va. :.:._ Point Pleasant's freshman basketball
team beat River Valley 54-48 in overtime .Thursday night. ·
Scoring for the Raiders were Brandon Burns (19), Eric Pugh (nine),
Allan Brown (seven), Derrick Layton, Jessie Ward (six each) and Smith
(two).
.
'
•
No information wu reported lor·the Big Blacks.
The Raiders will play at Loga~ Monday at 5:30p.m.

DVEI

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'
crulie ......................................................... :..............................~
a Ford Taurua 8(W ................... ;.. , ..................... ,....................1818 .

... c:t.v. Luml111111553 Wf, 14/C, tit,

3oa ·e.

(740)--6614 ~ 1-800-83:7,~1~
..
.
.

·w·

"

-

'

.'
'?

I

,,

1-.. '

.'

C"tt!n!IIM~

'

·ta\·

v

:'-'!/ .. .. . .

Well Vlrglllli'lf1 Chevy, Pcilltl••· Bulell, Olds, "!
And C111tom Vl!l Diller.

'

J

�•

.

•

'

• .1

wv

•

.,.,_ry11,

!A/On theRi

Page C1
Sund•y, J8nU8ry 10, 2000

•

Local scoring swnm1uies'

R~
Phil

R.iwrValtey .......... ,............. ll 1-4 14 1'•

H

Nnl -.I(Z.II, SIGAL W)

bioi&lt;
a...
lt.yan U!chfield ............ S-13
JUOll Pylc• .................. 4-15
Joey Loomi1 .................. 2-3
Cam Boardman .............0.0
Nidi. DallOn ................... l-2
Randall Shobe ............•..0.,3

CucyVillan ........ ...... ...0-1
J.P. Simpkins ................. !l:.l

-()..()
0.0
1·1
1).)
~

2-4

6

0.0
0.0

3
l

1·2

I

Rlwr Valley (1· 11. SEOAL J.7)

-~rai&amp; Payne ...............
- 4-11
"""

- 2-3

1·[I2

a.I!I .

Justin·Holcornb .... ,..... ... 4-7

().()

2-2

10

~ercmy

0-0

4-6

10

2-S
1-6

0-4
0-0

8
S

Steve Conley ................0.3
~lark Walk~ ................0.0
Denney .
.......0.1
~ylo 0..1 ......
........!&lt;l)

0.1

)-4

0.0

2-2
0.0

3
2
0
D

t....t

0.1

ll:Z

!&lt;l)

SJ
.62

Lopn (8·1, SEOAL 5·11

-Ryan Swinehan ............."""
[[ Ell..S
l-2 .....
1-1
().{)
.1'1mmy Holloway .......... 1 4 ~
1 ~2
7-10 112
-~au Pippin ................. .. .l-2
()..I
0.0
2
.{ohnny Colll'ad .............. 2-~
1-6
1-1
8
Jim Bennen ................... 1-6
0.0
. .l-4
.S
Joey Conrlld., ................. 0-1
().0
().{1
0
Mall Taulbee.~ ............... -4--7
2-8
2-4
16
David Montgomery ....... 2-3
0-0
2-2
6
"(ravis BeJiey ................ O:.J.
Q::0
!1:0
ll
Totals
ll-ZI
! -18 15-.U 54
• AsliltJ: 9 (Swinehan J). Blotkcd abots; 3.
:Fouls: 23. Rtbouncb: 24 (Taulbee 8). Steals: 7
(Holloway 2). Total FGs: 17-46 (.369). 1\lrno•tn::

.J).
•

Gallla Aead1my (9·1, SEOAL 7.0)

""" .bl.
[[ Ell.
Ohlinger ...
0..0
0-0
0-0
0
.Cody Lane ..................... 4-9
2-3
7-9
21
' 1 :.J$~my _Payton .............. .0-.~
2-.S
2-2
8
UnanSnru .................. J- 10
2-3
0.0
12
Shirey......... . ..... .2-5
1-3
3-4
10
)eff Mulhn5 ............. '. 1·2
OoO
0.0
2
.Ton)' Moore ... .. ........0- 1
0-0
4-4
4
-Oullin Deckard
...l;l
Q;J.
W. l
"toto~
tl·33' 1·15 t7·11 6l
· • ·Aalsts: 13 (Lane 4). lkM:ked shotl: 0. Fwll:
Rebounds: 41 (Sims 8). StNit: 6 (Mulliaa 2).
-~olal FGs: 19-48 (.396). Thmoun: 16.
)!law .

. J~C.

:Bo

:HI.

•
Eastern 66, Waterford 60
.l?.a.nem ............................... 16 13 16 21 a
-Waterford ........................... l2 17 10 21,.
.

Waterford (8·2, TVC Hockin1 6-2 )
.rtuu
""" JoB,2
D
,Heath Gillespie .................0
2·2
-Erin Purdew ...................... 2
J
0.3
Josh Arnold...
...4 '
J
0-0
. Mark Waller:
...... 6.,
0
3-4
Zilch Arnold .....
...... 2
0
2-J
Tocals ........................... 14
8 7-1)

Dla ValentiiiC! ................... 3
AMRuayan ................... l
.Bao f&lt;lwoldl .................... .l

().()

=

S.Uthem (7-3, TVC Hockin&amp; 5-3)
l1ust
a,.., J:olo
D
Russell Reiber................... S
0
S-1
Chad Hubbard................ ... s
1
~2
. GIU'I'ett KillCt ... ' ........... 3
0
4-6
Kyle Nonis .................... ...O
2
2-4
Chris Randolph ...... .. ......... !
I
2-4
BrandonHill... .................. l
I
0
Nick Bolin ..
.. ...... 2
.0
0
Jonnthan Evnns ............. . I
0
2-2
Matt WllTJif:r:
..........1
·o ".0:.2.
Totall
11
5 11-19

nam

0
"""
I
-2
0
0
0
3

13
18
IS

0
1-1
.1·5
2-4
.19·19

Ohio

H.S. boys' $Cores

Ad,;,.) Kiaa 52. Elyrio 45
Akl. Euc 63, 8..-J 62, OT

Ill.

II

0.1
0-2
3.4

·

n

ley40

Cin. Anderson 64, Cin. Thrpin 49
Cin. Colerain 66, Lakma E. 57
Cin. Finneytown 60, Cin. lndlan Hill 5~
Cin. Hills Ch~c&amp;d. 59. Cia. Landmark Chr. 46
Cin. Hughes SO, Cin. Withrow 48
Cin. Lockland 72, Cin. N. College Hill 52
Cin. Madeira 81, Cin. Wyoming 69
Cin. McNicholas 74, Cin. Roger Bacon 49
Cin. Moeller 63, Cin. LaSalle 53
Cin. Northwest 61, Muon 54
Cin. Princeton 60, Hamilton 46
Cin. Purull Marian 55, Day. Chaminade~Julienoe 41
,
Cin. Reading 52, Cin. Dreer Park 51 , OT
Cin. Seven Hills SO, Cin. St. Bernard 26 ,
Cin. ,Sf. Xat"ier 46, Cin. Elder 42
Ci n. SyciUOOi-e 48, Milford 42
c;in. WalmJl Hills 55, Cin. Mt. Heallhy 50
Cin. Wenern Hills 99, Citt Taft 68
Cin. Winton Woods 69, On. Harrison 61
Cin. Woodward 59. Aiken 53
·
Cle. Benedictine 82, Lollis~ lilt ' St. TI!omaa
Aquinu 54
Cle. East 88, Oe. Lincoln-West~ 1
Cle. Ea1t Tech 74. Cle. Collinwood ~6
C~. Glen~ille 103, Cle. Rhodes 59
Cle. Heritage .S6, MUsil1on Chrbtian 47
Cle. JFK 57, John Marshall-51, Ot
Cle. Soulh 85, Cle. John Hay 45
Cle. St. lgnatiu5 59, Sl. Edward 52
Cle. VASJ 9j, Mn~son 67
Clermont NE 56. New Richmond 55
Collin1 ~estern Reserve 60, Ashland Mapleton
37
Col. Brookhaven 84, Col. Mi fflin 66
Col, DeSnle! 68, Mllrysv!lle j8
Col. East 60, Col. Cenlenninl 59
Col. Marion-Franklin 75, Col. So uth 56
Col. Nonhland 86. Col. Beechcroft 59
Col. Rendy 68, CoL Hartle)' 5.\
Col. Walnut Ridge 76, Col. Briggs 75. OT
Col. Watterson 74. Col. St Ch11rles 6.'
Col. Wellington 82. Uberty Christian ~6
Col. West 76. Col.. Easmtoor 70
Col. WhetstOI}C 77. Col. Linden 62
Columbiana Cre~i\·iew 73. Leetonia 4~
Community Chr. ~7 , Orange Chr. Academy 51
Conneaut 67,. Ashtabula Harbor 51
Convoy Crestview 62. Pnuldinl! J6
Cortland Lal:.evieW 49, Hubbard 40
Coty-Rnwson 82. Arcadia 57
Covington 78. Bt-thl!l 74 .
Crestwood 81. StJfttsboro 35
Crosslanes Chr. (W.Va.) 65, Ohi o Vldlcy Chr. 48
Danbury Lakeside 57, Oregon Can.linnl S trit~h

.

'fbey ployed Saturday

Thday•S games
Miami at Vancouver, 3 p.m.
Pc:nver at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
CLEVELAND nt Sacramenro. 9 p.m.

~li

b.

15
13
10

Mouday's games
Boston ~~ ~uhington, I p.m. ·
Milwaukee at Ati4Dt&amp;, 2 p.m.
New Jersey at Philadelphia, 2 p.m.
•Seaule 111 L.A. Lakers, 3:30p.m.
Orlando at Golden Stalcl, 4 p.m.
Detroit at New York , 4 p.m.
Toronto at Cbarlot~e , 7:30p.m.
lndlaon at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Houston at D:lllltu. 8:30p.m.
San Antonio at L.A. Clippers. 10:30 p.m.

7

7
.S
4
2

l.

li9

NCAA Division I
meli;s scores
Friday's action
Eo~

.56

Brown 79. Danmoulh_63
Columbia 7S, Cornell S8
"OCiaware 62, Boston U. 59
Hart(ord 60, Drexel 58
Hofstra 86. Vermont 52
Niagara 77. Marist 72
Towson 60. NonhCtlSfern 56

. ~,.... Lon" Chr. 65, Ohio Valley Chr. 48
Cross l.anes.. .... ......... ...... l6 14 22 12 ,.
Ohio Valley
' ........... :.... 9 12· IS 1~ ,.

s..

Friday's octlon

Detroit al '?/uhinaton. 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:30 P-fllBoston at New Jer,ey, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Orlanda, ,7:30p.m.
Charlone • New York, 8 p.m.
Portland at Dallas, 8 p.m.
LA. Lakas at Millllelo&amp;a, 8 p.m.
Toronto 11 'Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Houston 11 Chieaao, 8:30 p.m.
LA. Cllppen at Umh, 9 p.m.
Sacramento a1 Golden Slate. 10:30 p.m.

69

22
6
5
9
10

u!ri d

1

.

6
60

11-17

4

New York al Charlo«e, ppd., death
Philadelphia 102, Orlando 100
J'oronto liS, Milwaukee 11 0
lndiua Ill , L.A. Lakers I 02
DcuoiiiOS, Washington 98
Atlanta 89, Olicqo 83
· Miami 92, Denver 87
· CLEVELAND 82, Vancouver 80
Seatlle 91, San Antonio 85
Ponland 10$, Phoenix 83

a.8

l!lo.
4

2· 2

~ 77. Sc. Mory'o, Col. 49
Dieao 82. l.oyo~ Miry""""' 38

n

nam

66
60

D
2·2

!•

-·-

Trimble
Phil Fnirc1 .........................
1
l1ust
"""
.. Trent Panon ......................4
Hobby Troce .
. ......0
JeffTrnce ... .............. ...... 2
Jessi IUchmond ................ J
Rolland Chalfant. ............. A
Tolals
14

.J..t

18
Alcr. GIIfidd61, Kenmo"4J
Dale liylor ....................S-8
0-0
10
Akr. Manchelkr 59, TuJCWawu Val. 44
, . _ H...- .............H
o.4
9
Ala. SVSM 65, UNiey (W.V&lt;) 46
JosbSimmons ............... l-2
I·}
&lt;to ~
Ameli.S9. Cia. CilenEsteS4
Joe MIC)'a .. ,.................... l-1
0-0
0-0
2
Anoa 77, Fairlawn .SO
Erk Petrie ......................0-0 • 0.0
2-•
2
Archbold 79, Moatpelier 49
Brad BowlinlO ...............0-2
~I
1·2
I
Arlington .SB, Dola H..tin'Northern 52
J.T. ~ ................ r....U
0:0
U
1
Ashlwi 59. ~mi.lion 49
.
1'Mak
16-34 3-11
7-15 u
1\sbland Cres1~icw 15, Norwalk Sl. Pau163
AlUla: 13 (Bowman &amp; Holcomb 5 each).
Aihtabula 62, Painesville HWYcy 47
FHII: ' '· Fotlltd out: Tllylor. Rebounds: 26 (Hoi·
Attica Senrca E. 67, Fremont St, Joseph 62
comb It Jertkias 6 each). S1eala: II . Thbl FGs: 19- .
Austonbera Grand River Academy 98, Sooth
{.422). 1\lrno•en: 26
Ridge Academy 46
Avon Lake 47. North Olrt~~ted 38
Barberton 78, Ravenna 44
Dan.esvillc ~9. Bridgeport S2
Ra!,com Hopeweii-Loodoa .54 r Fostoria St. Wen~STERN CONFERENCE
delin 4 1
At._.k Dn-IIIIQII
Bca~cr Easlem 86, Porumoolh O ay 78
L f.&lt;l. llll
Beavercreek 94, SprinJ. S.. ?o4
'
Miami
.... 23 12 .M7
Bedford Chane191 , Cle. C~ nt . Cath. 69
New York .......................... 21 14 .600
2
Bell llire 82. Union Loeal 56
Philadelphia ....................... ,20 16 .556
~':
Bellbrook 71 , Middletown Madison 66
Orh111do ............................... 16 21 .432
8
Bellefontaine Sl. Spring. NW 41
Boston ........ ,...
. .... ,15 20 .429
8
Bellevue 84, Buc:y(lJS 64
New Jersey .............:... 15 20 _429
8
Bell ville Cleor Fork 82. Medina BUtkeye J2 '
Washington ......................... 12 25 .324
12
Beloit W. Branch 66. Akr. Spring. 43
Belpre 77, Albany Ale!landcr 46
Central Dlt"lsion
Berlin Hiland 81, StrllSburg-Frnnklin 68. o'r
Indiana ..... ~...
.. .. :24 II .686
Bishop Donahue (W.Va.) 68 , He llnirt St. John 's
Dt:troir ............................. 2&lt;l I~ . ~71
4
61
Toron10 ........................ ..... 20 1 6 ~ .556
4':
Bloom-Cnrroll 51 . Circlevi lle 46
Milwaukee ............................ 20 17 .S41
S
Blufflon 65, U~ Scioto Valley 51
Chadotte ........................ .'...... l8 16 .529
~1 ;
Bowerston Conolton Va11ey 68, BeiiiiH·i lle 61
CLEVELAND ...................... I6 20 .444
81:
Howling Gr«:n 57. Anthony Wayne 44
Atlanca ..
.. ....... ., ....... ~.' 21 .382
IO'l
Bryan 57. Uberty C~mer 45
Ch!COJO ......... :........................ S 28 .152
18
Cadiz Hlll'rison Cent. 61 , Wellsville 48
Can. GlenOak SO, Alliaoo: 47
Can. Heri1age O.r. 65, You. Chr. SJ
WFSTERN CONFERENCE
Can. S, S I, Alliance Marlington 40
Midwest Dlwiiktn
Can. S(lu!h 51 , Marlington 40
L f.&lt;l. llll
Cnnal WinchesiCI' 89, Amanda-Ciclll'crtek 57
Utah ................
.. ..... 23 II .676
Canfield 65, Poland .S7
'San Ant ll(liO
........ 24 14 .632
I
Curdington-UncC?ln 54. Marion Elgin Sl
· MinnesoUI ......
.. ...... 18 Jj .545 , 4~~
Carey 46, Sycamore Mohawk. 38
Dtnver ........................ ,......... l7 18 .486
6':
Carrollton 61, Minerva 59
.Dallas .................................... ll 24 .314
12~
Camlia Margaretta 54, Clyde 51, OT
Houston .... ,...... :............ ,.... 11 24 .3J4
1 2'~
Cedarville 54, S. Charl~ s ton SE 41
Vancouver........ . ............. 10 26 .278
14
Celi na S2. Onowa-Ciandorf 45
Centerville 55. Xenia 47
.
, Padftc Di¥id0n
Centrai-Hower 89, Elle:l 43
L.A. LWn .......................... JI · 6 .838
O.ampion 69, Liberty ss·
Portland ................
........ 28 8 .778
2'1
Cheshire River Valley 5J. Poinl Pleasant (W.Va.)
Seatlle ............... ,: .................. 24 13 .649
7
52
Sacramento ..
.. ..... 21 12 .636
8
Chillicmhe 59, Thomrur W!&gt;flhington 32
Ph oenix
... .20 IS _j7f
10
Chillic01he Huntington Ross 54, Frankfort
L.A. Clippers .......
........ 10 25 .286
20
Adena 51
Golden Swe......... ...................6 29 .171 . 24
Olillicothe Unioto 65, Piketon S.S
Chillic~ Zane Trace 56, Bainbridge Paint ValFriday's'scores

EUttm (!M, TVC Hockin&amp; 'M j
rJua:
;:,s. JoB,
D Ell.
Joe Brow n........................ 8
0
7-8 . 23
Malt Simpson ......... ..........5
0
6-9 16
·~ Eri c Smilb ................ ........ S
0
6-6
16
Josh Will .............. ........ .. 3
0
0- t
6
Garren .Karr .............. ......0
I
0-0
3
Mau Bissell... ....................!
0
0:0. 1
Totals·
U ·
1 19·14 . 66

Southern 69, Trimble !6
Southem .......·..................... :\7 12 19 21 •
Trimble ..................... ,..... .. :...&amp; 12 12 24

· ···Jl

ParWttt

"$
NBA standings

Totall
IJ..31 5·11 . ll·ZO 53
• AultU: 2.. Fouls: 21. Rebounds : 26 (Peck 12).
.Steals: 4 (Payne 2). Tolal FCs: !8- ~~ (..l27).
'furnot"ers: .S.

Gallla Academy 62, Lngan .54
Log11n ..... .... : .................... l6 II 9 18 "'
OelliaAcade\ny .................. \7 I~ 1~ · 16 ,.

~

Ci.c:illnlli 13, OHIO 59

Olllo Veley Cb....... (5-5)

Tot..! FG1: 18-4S (.400). Tumcn"en: 12.

Petk ............. ..... 3-4

MW~ ... :...... .2

-C .... Jeokiu ...............6-13
a... al · l

0..0

Aaron Sulliv1n ............ ,. 1-9
£ric Nolao ..
....... .1·2

12
12
7
6

0.2

P....: 16. KebcNadl: 3•. Twnonn: 7

1-5
I
H
~
0
'RUII
15-31
).7 IJ.U 5J
, _ , 9 (Pyle• 5). P -: 16. Foulell 001:
Utchfitld. lb:bo...... : 27 (Utchfir:ld !). Strall: I .

•

.

~1:'1~· ·. ...

111.22
:l-5 11
II
6-6

H

....

.......

Rlnr VaUey 53, Polat PI • O ,
PointPJew.n~ .... .................s t9 12 16•
n

Day. Colooel Whl~ 90, s.m- 66
Day. Dunb• 80, Sllvcn S6
Day. Otkwood S), Carlisle .M
Day_ Paftm()p 54, Day. Meadowdak 47

Miclwtlt

65
48

Oe:fiaace A)"'!!''Vil\e 71 , FIUtvitW 51
O.Jaw ... 16, F~ Hcipml6
O.lpboo J....... 65. Ailoo Ellt 62
Dow&lt;
44
Dublin~ 67, HDfiord
50
E. Can. 35, MMJillon Tlulaw 50
E. Clinton 73, CtiMon-MIIIie 46
E&amp;slml BMwn 80, lasbwJ fairftckt -46

so.- ..._

MuR~~~ SO, Woodridp ~
N.

Elloa 63. Brwtvme '2
Edoa 78, Fa}'dle 56 '
Elmwood 90, Gibloobui'J 6.5
Elyria Catholic 69, Trinity .57
Eu~lid &amp;l. VaHey Forae 50 .
Evangel Christ1111 59. Urbaftl Grice 23
Fairf~eld Quillian 59, Grove City Ovistian 36
Fairfteld Union 66, Teays Valley S7
Fairmont $7, Fairborn 55 ·
•
Fairview 5~ . AnW:rst 47, OT
Felicity 71 , B~tavia Sl.
Findlay 85, Fostoria 4l
,
And lay Liberty· Beaton j8, Ptndoa-Gilboa 4j
Firestone 64, Akr. Noeth 45
. f"csher Calholi'c 47, Heath 4li
Franklin 67. MinmisbuiJ 57
Fredericklown 7l. Eut Knox 52
Fremont Ron 86, Sandusky 74
Ft. Recovery .5~ . Rockford Parkway 51
Gallipolis Gallla 62. LoJllD .54
Gc:oeva70, Andover Pnnlltuning Valley - ~
, Genoa 47 , Eastwood 42
Georgetown 60, Bethel-Tate 54
Girard 6fi.' Fnirlnnd 64

Gnadenhutten Indian Val. .54. Byesville Meadowbrook 51
Grand•iew 63. West Jefferson 56
Granville 55, Licking Hts. 47
Green 77, Rtverc 5~·
Greenwi ch $. Central 70. Monroeville li6
Hamler Patrick Henry 58, Everjrecn 44
Howiland W4yoe Trace .51, Holgate 37
Hebron lakewood 67. London M . OT
Hidsville 85, Edgerton 8"3, OT
Hilltop 65. N. Cenrra145
Holland Spring. SO. Maumee ~8
Houston 51, lac bon Cenler 49
Huber"'~- Wayne 61·, Spring. N. ol9
HudJon 69, Kent Roosevelt 55
Hudsoil Wes~.ern Reserw: 47. Manhews J4
lromon 65. Pol'l:smouth 60
Jackson ~5. i\thens 47
Jefferson Arta 68, Attuabula Edgewood 61
Johnstown Northridge 65, Centerburg 61
Kalida 80, Ft. Jennings 77. 30T
Kettering Alter .S I , Hamilton Badin 37
Kidron Cent Chr. 58. Mandield Temple Chr. 56
Lakotn W. 6~. Middletown 52
Laneastef Fisher Cath. 47, Heath 46
Lebano n 50, Kings Mill s 43
, Le mon-Monroe 61, W. Carrollton 60
Ubeny Union 66, Berne Union 52 .
Ucld ng Co. Chr, Acad. )6, Lima Chr. B
Li cDog County 36, Lima Chr. Academy 33
l.icltiog Val. .50, Madison Plains 44
Lima Bath 50, Defiance 49
Uma Temple q,.r. 71, Ouoville 61
Unle Miami ~8. Go.diC!n 47
Logan Elm .S4, Hamilton Township 48
Lomin Catholic f?6, Elyria FBCS 22
Lcrain Clearvicw 73, Avoo 61
Louisville 61, Canal Fulton NW S8
Lucasville Val. 66, Whcelerlbui) 62
Magnolia (W.Va.) 52, Sl. Clai11ville 43
Malvern j8, W. Lafayene Ridgewood 47
Mansfield Sr. 58, l.exiqton 38
Maranatha Chr. 86. 01'J(:C Haven 46
Maria Slein Marion Local40, New Knox~ille l6
Mariemont 49,·Cilt. Taylor 46
Marion Cath. 106, World Harvul75
Marion Local 40, New KDox\'lllc 36
Marion Pleasant 51, Delawm BuCkeYe Val. 44
Marion Ri~~ Valley 71, Galioa Nortlunor 49
Massillon Jackson 65, Can. 11mbn 4)
Massillon Pcny 51, Uniontown J,..ate 44
Mayfield 85,.NCM'donia 59
Maysville 65, New l.exlnaton $3
McCOmb 74, Leip~ic SO
McConnelsville Morpn 90, Croobville 53
Medina S4, BNnswick 33 ·
Meotor 55, l..akeWood 46
Mentor Christian 64, Fallh Oui1tlan ~S
Memor Lake Catholic 57, Panna Padua 38
· Miami E. 70, Lehman Cadi. 51
Middletown au-. 59, Xenia Cbr. 37
Miller Ci!y 46, Continental 38
M\llersbura 'West Holme:~ 54, l..ou4onville 38

c;ao;;;~~

Si4ooy 63. Thor 52
Soloo 81. 1kvdo 71. OT
Soodo Poil&lt;12. Caol 0.0..

N. ~

o..-

N.
N.

.,

N. Royokoa
Navane 'Faltltl• '-5, Maanolia Smdy Valley 44
Yoo\ 14. M&lt;;Anlu- Via""' Coua!y

-·ill•·

~

Now Alblfty 49, Mlllenpoot 47, OT
New C.li•le Tccumltb 71 , Orec.DM 33
\ New Matamolll Frontier 60. Suahsville
Slowndooh 53
$
New MiddletOWn Spriag. 13, Jacbon-Milton ~ 3
New Paris National Trail61 , Tri.Coopty N. 57
Newark 42, Lancuter 40
Nonoa S8, Cloverleaf 44
Noowolk 53, O.Woa 45
f,. Oak Harbor 6~. Port C~nton 37
Oak HJII17, McOennott Scioto NW 51
Ober1ia

•

~6.

I

·. Rou S6, . Norwood 3.S
•
Ruuio 66. Ft. J.oruo;o 64, OT
•
Shekiub Ouistlaa 58, Uncoln. Baprist 41 '"".,1

Broobide 55

•-

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o.........,... ~..

By Charl.ene Hoeflich
Times-Sentinel Staff

'&lt;,

Soudl-55,11io!ood51
Spona HiJ)obuool 65. Moonl RJdpdlle &lt;II
Spri ... Sh•- 62, Komoo Rid&amp;&lt; 54
Sprioopooo 64, Eqowood 42

·~

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. _ t •_

S1. Heury 74, Colctwaler 69 ~
St. Mary'1 62, Keanon 40
Statbaiville ~7. Oan.way 41
. 8 •.
Fedonl Hockio1 92. Homlock MUlot~
Stow 46, Cuylhop Falls 33
-:-.~~'
Stronpvilte 66, Brecbville ~
•fl · •
Strutben 66, Niles .S I
~,::.
' Sll')'ker 67, Petdsvllle 47
"'!too"
Summit Country Day ~6. Cin. Country Day •s.SylvaW..Nonhview 65, Sylvapia Soudwiew
nlaWan da 6.1; Oaf. Stebbins 48
•
\ .•,
TallmtldJe 77, Copley 56
'•
"Tecurruch71 . GreenonSl
"*
Thomas Worthinaton .S9, 0\illicott.e 31
•"-'~
Thom~ille Sheridan 61 , Jobn Glenn SO
~nffin Calvert 86, Bettsville ~5
~Tiffin Columbian 47, Upper SnndiiSky 39 :; ,
Tinora 54, Anlwetp 5 ~
1).
Tol . Chr. 64, Tol. Maumee Val. 44
..,~
To\. Libbey 81, To\. Scott 70
"•
Tol. St. Francis 48, Tol. Start .30
r
Tol. St. John's 6$, Tol. Waite 30 .
,~
Tol. Whitmer 49. Oregon Clay 47
..
Tri-Valley South 58, Miniuinawa Val..' 8 ~ "'.CI
Trotwood-Madison 9(1 , Grttn\·ille ~5
~:;.
Troy Cbr. 7~ , Day. Jeffer1on 65
, ...Twinsburg 78. Kenston S4
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· Tyler (W V:~.) Consolidated 12. Hannibal Riv~

s,..._,

PILLSEvery day
C•ro~n Korn
takee 5e pUla.

1

•

.

OhloOtpn
Procu.......nt.

She-

tlmnltCCOm:

pan... UnchJ L .
JonM, LOOP's
.chief executlv•
otncer, to

meetlnga •nd

talla her atory.

TAKI ADYAIIT-1 Of

Heart transplant
Jecipie~t thankful
for second cha·nce

REWARDS
. GREAT IIOWI

,•,;

Give Ul your.~II!IIISTAR

loll! anc1 -·u .;ta you a

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INSTAl 1m*

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~MM

'•

n

OMERQY- While there8t

II

of the world was heralding
the new millennium on Jan.
1, Carolyn and George Kom
observed the day with a
"celebration of life."

. Cl!aaM . ..I I
I I ........ , .........
"Muul ..... Sid ............. JIRIPCI !diJI.
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Store

Potillro.~. OH 45711

It wu the fifth .anniversary of Carolyn's l(fe·saving
heart transplant .at Univ,ersity Hospital in Columbus,
· . :Q!! IJlPI'II!?.!"'l.!ll:l?fJ.~· 1, J 995, w.ith her. name at th~ .
lop of the transplant hst, she wailed for a donor heart. .
.Before the day paued, it came from a 16-year-old Can·
1011 resident; The' Korns ' prayers for an orgari donor had
been answered.
.
·
,
· That day was the beginning not only of a new year for
the family, but more importantly, a new life for CarolyQ.
It is that "life" which wu celebrated on Jan. 1, 2000
wh~rr family and 'frleJI!Is gathered at the Korn home on
Jones Road ·near Burlingham. "Congratulations on five
years with a new heart" was the inscription on the Pl'rtY ·
cake.
·
·
The &lt;story began in 1989 when Carolyn, 39, a Meigs
•
County courthouse employee, starting having some
health problems. She was extremely tired and on occasion experienced shortness of breath, but had no pain.
After seeing several doctors, a diagnosis was made Carolyn had a "transposition of the great vessel." '
That, she explained, meant that the left side of her
heart was on the right side and the right side was on the ·
left. The transposition brought on cardiomyopathy, leading to heart failure. Carolyn was told that wiihin a period ·
of five to 10 years,' she would need a heart transplant.
She worked about a year after that before having to
give up her job. She was on medication all the time and .
several limes a year went back to the hospital for treat·
ment with steroids. By 1992, her condition had deteriorated dramatically. She waS unable to lie down to sleep,
the tiredness had ·increased, as had the shortness of
breath. She was put on the University Hospital's trans·
plant list. ·
When hospitalized there in September 1994; they
moved .her name to the front sheet of the list. ·
The crisis came on Dec. 21 when Caroly~ GOilapsed at

..

Month Of
January
'

CELEBRATION OF UFE- George
•nd C.rolyn Kom obHMKI · the
new millennium with a.cel8br8tlon

LuH Oil &amp;Filter

the couple's Wright Street hont,e in· Po!lleroy. In critic~!
under the care of three specialists at University Hospital.
condition, she was taken to the hospital and lhis lime her
. L;!st Monday and Tuesday, she was there for her
name was moved to the top of the ·transplant list.
. annual checkup, "the ·one where all sorts of tests and a
After only 11 days -'- while many wail weeks and .
biopsy of heart tissue is taken." She now awaits full
months for organs - the heart for her transplant became
reports on the tests . .
available.
·
Carolyn is bot~ optimistic and realistic in her overall
While Carpi yo does not know the identity of the
view of being a ·transplant recipient.
donor, she says she thinks often of that special family
"I know that rejection is atways a possibility any day,
whQ.csaid ''y,cs" to organ ®n~ion during a time of great
any time, but riglit now I feel fine and I enjoy every day."
:; sad!liiss "and gri~f in theit ljve.i.
·1. •.
She believes in living every day to its fullest, and she
. , ~· writca periodiCI!Iy ,to· thank them and let tliem
considers every day a.bfeuing.
·
.
• k~.lhoW 'she is '&amp;ftlliii"'!!ng. ·The&lt; letters go thlough··.....,-Fh•ni1illlilll'ernhat th~ "Who "receive 'have.an oblig~
LQQP (Ufelim; of Ohio Orpn Procurem~nt). who sends . ation to jlive," Carolyn .and George for the past three
· ·11 ott' to the Canton Life~nk, which then forwards it to
ye@lll haye volunteered at llnverferth House, founded by
lhe &gt;)it.;nily.
.
. the family of the late Don Unverferth, a world-renowned
0i'have never heard from them, but at least they know
cardiologist and researcher at the Ohio Stale University
who I am, thai I'm doing well, and how to contacl me if
Medi~al Center.
they should ever want to ·do that," commented Carolyn.
Carolyn also volunteers at the headquarters of LOOP,
The transp.lanl recovery period went well for Carolyn,
where she does office work. Sometimes she accompanies
althQIIgh she did experience periods of organ rejection
staff members to group meetings, where she enforces the
and ~o:omplications from medication and was in and out of
appeal for organ donation by sharing her story.
the !iQspital time and again. ·
.
In October, Carolyn, who had volunteered 247 hours,
Slie and George stayed at Unverferth House, a place
was honored by LOOP as the "Volunteer of the Year" in
which provides free housing for transplant patients.a ceremc;&gt;ny at the Ohio Historical Center.
locat¢ near t~e hospital. American Electric Power transUp until last month, she drove to Columbus a couple
ferre(I .Oeorge to a job in the Columbus area so that he
of times a week to continue her volunteer work, but she
could·worl&lt; and still be with his wife.
·
is riow hoping to find volunteer work closer to h.ome.
couple lived there until June, when they took an
She i:an'l be around germs because her immune sys·
apar
t in Grandview. As Carolyn's condition stabi·
tern is suppressed by the .medication she takes, which
lized • improved, they bought a house in Carroll and
keeps her body from rejecting her new heart. That elimi·
were there until last summer,
nates volunteering in hospitals and schools.
'
when ·they returned to
The .couple talked about changes in their lifestyle
· · Meigs County.
since the heart transplant.
. Because of the numerCarolyn said' for a long time she had to wash fruit and
. ous anti-rejection medvegetables in bleach waler lo kill
ications sh~ takes any bacleria, thai she couldn't
· 56 pills a day - and
even touch the peel on a
resulting complicabanana or orange withlions at times,
out gloves, thai if she
Carolyn
·remains
Ple•ae He•rt, P•ge C3

intervention is so critical, have

been lost.
A few years ago, your column
addressed early detection for children with developmental concerns.
The organization that published
this information was Pathways
AwarenessFoundation. Would you
please reprint it?- A GRATEFUL PARENT IN ILLINOIS
DEAR. PARENT: Thank you
for asking. Although not all body
movement disorders turn out to be

cerebral palsy, physical lherapy
can slill be helpful, and early
intervention can make a huge dif·
ference, whether the case is mild
or severe. ~
,.,
As your leiter proves, nol all
doctors are as w~ll-informed as
they should be . It is important for
·parents to ask questions if they are
concerned about their child's
developmenl, aild have no.idea
what is wrong.
Here are some of the early
symploms to look for:
• Poor head control after three
mon!hs
• Stiff or rigid arms or legs
• Pushing away or arching back
• Floppy or limp body poslure
• Cannot sil up without supporl
by eight months
.
' Uses only one side of lhe
body, or only . lh~ arms, to crawl
• Extreme irritability or crying
• Failure to smile by three
months
• Feeding difficulties
• Persistent gagging or clloking
when fed ·
• Tongue pushes soft food out
of the mouth after six months
Pat~ ways Awareness Foundation is still doing a terrific job.
Any reader who recognizes these
symptoms should write for guid·
ance to PathwayS' Awareness
'foundation, 123 N. Wacker Drive,
Suite 900 Chicago, Ill. 60606, or
~all 1·800-955-2445 (www.pathwaysawareness.org). You will
receive some valuable information
free of charge.

•

·of 1118. The dlly m•rkecl the fifth

annlvera•ry of Cl!rolyn'e he•rt ,
transplant

'

sis's

Dear An~ Lllnden: The Amer·
ican public is learning a lot about
multiple births and infant physical
developmenllhese days. I have
my own story, whi ch many other
families share.
. My son; who is 10 years old,
was diagnosed· al 5 1110nths with
eerebral palsy - specifically, lef&lt;
hemiplegia. From the beginning, I
was concerned about his physical
development.
Although I was always met
with compassion at the monthly:
pediatric visits, my concerns
regarding his lefl hand movement
were considered a "wait-and-see"
issue. I am not a "wait-and-see"
person, and so I did my own
·research.
When my son was finally diagnoSed, he was referred for immediate physical ifd occupational
therapy, so he could learn how lo
use his body more effectively.
Without this early inlei"Venlion, I
don'tI, believe
he would' now be
'
playmg basketball or baseball,
, ·walking wilh only .a slight limp, or
have total use of his left hand. In
fact, my son would probably have
little knowledge of how to use the
left side of his body, or be aware
that iI exisled.
Physicallherapy i~ a positive,
hopeful experience for belh par·
ents and children.
My heart breaks to see loddler·
age children, and even more
frightening, school-age children,
jusl being diagnosed. The early
years, the formative years where

DIAit PaiMIITAR CUIIOMIR,

.,

24 Hour Towing
Pager Number
1·740·576·5211

.

'

81111hehu ·
received. Ll!at .
f811,8hew..
rillmed Volun·
tMr of the YMr
by utellne of

auppr•alng
her Immune
ay•tem80
.
'th8t •h• won't
go Into 'o rg•n
rejection,
while otller8
.,.to control
herdl•bet•
arid kldn-v
. problem•
rel8ted to th•
h•rttran..
,.
pl•nt.

.,.J

childhood
development

giving bl!ckior

Som••refor

·"'

Addres~ing

VOWNTEER
OF THE YEAR
-Volunteering
I• C.rolyn
Keirn'• WfiY of

A BAG OF

Olmsted F11lls 102. Bay 62 ,
Ontario 73, Bucyrus Wynford 62
Orrville 64, Muulleld Madison 60
l Otsego 69, Milbury Lake 52
Ottawa Hills 70, Tol. Emmanuel Rapt 62
Paioe1ville Riverside 66. Eastlake Nonh 65. OT
Parma 64, Nonnandy 6J
Pnrma Hu. Holy Name 64. Chardon NDCL S6
.. Perry.\bura 76, Rossford 46
Philo 52, W~st Muskingum' 25
. Pickering1on 65, Westhmd 51
PinbufJ Frunklin·Monroe 61 . A ~ s.o niu J9
;\ Plymouth 67 , New Landon 60
·· Port~moutb E. 70. Sooth Galli a 57
.. Porumouth Notre Dame 74. New Bo ~ton .65
Preble Sbawnee 41 Day. Nonhridge 37
a
.
~
Vincent Warren 44, Marietta 42
• ..,.•
-t•, Racine Southern 59, G l oust~ Trimble ~6
Washington C. H. 62, Jonathan Alder SJ
fo"
Ra.vennn Southeast 67, Mogadore ~8
Rayland Buckeye Local SO. Martins FelT)' 48
Wnverly 75." Portsmouth W. 64
~
Westerville North 68. Gahanna $9
a·~vme Euiern 66, Waterford 60
Westerville Swtb 66, Grovepon 54
Reyooldaburc 54. Dublin Sci01o 4~
W~iteball - Yearling ~5. Pataskala Wutki
Richmond Edison 82, SteUbenville Cath. Cel'!l57
Men101iul 51.
'f:(;
1

Ann
Landers

•

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·
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(740) 446-2282
TOU FREE 1-877-448-2282
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The
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. TO. Wl/mslf"
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Is alcohol ruining your life or
the life of a loved one? "Aiw·
holism : How to Recognize It, How
to Deal With It, Hc;&gt;w to. Conquer
It" can turn things around. Send a
self-addressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $3.75 (this includes
postage and handling) to : •AI~ohol,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box ll562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 ·0562. (In
Canada, send $4.55 .)
To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndi·
.cate web page at www.creators. ·
.com .

�•

.

•

'

• .1

wv

•

.,.,_ry11,

!A/On theRi

Page C1
Sund•y, J8nU8ry 10, 2000

•

Local scoring swnm1uies'

R~
Phil

R.iwrValtey .......... ,............. ll 1-4 14 1'•

H

Nnl -.I(Z.II, SIGAL W)

bioi&lt;
a...
lt.yan U!chfield ............ S-13
JUOll Pylc• .................. 4-15
Joey Loomi1 .................. 2-3
Cam Boardman .............0.0
Nidi. DallOn ................... l-2
Randall Shobe ............•..0.,3

CucyVillan ........ ...... ...0-1
J.P. Simpkins ................. !l:.l

-()..()
0.0
1·1
1).)
~

2-4

6

0.0
0.0

3
l

1·2

I

Rlwr Valley (1· 11. SEOAL J.7)

-~rai&amp; Payne ...............
- 4-11
"""

- 2-3

1·[I2

a.I!I .

Justin·Holcornb .... ,..... ... 4-7

().()

2-2

10

~ercmy

0-0

4-6

10

2-S
1-6

0-4
0-0

8
S

Steve Conley ................0.3
~lark Walk~ ................0.0
Denney .
.......0.1
~ylo 0..1 ......
........!&lt;l)

0.1

)-4

0.0

2-2
0.0

3
2
0
D

t....t

0.1

ll:Z

!&lt;l)

SJ
.62

Lopn (8·1, SEOAL 5·11

-Ryan Swinehan ............."""
[[ Ell..S
l-2 .....
1-1
().{)
.1'1mmy Holloway .......... 1 4 ~
1 ~2
7-10 112
-~au Pippin ................. .. .l-2
()..I
0.0
2
.{ohnny Colll'ad .............. 2-~
1-6
1-1
8
Jim Bennen ................... 1-6
0.0
. .l-4
.S
Joey Conrlld., ................. 0-1
().0
().{1
0
Mall Taulbee.~ ............... -4--7
2-8
2-4
16
David Montgomery ....... 2-3
0-0
2-2
6
"(ravis BeJiey ................ O:.J.
Q::0
!1:0
ll
Totals
ll-ZI
! -18 15-.U 54
• AsliltJ: 9 (Swinehan J). Blotkcd abots; 3.
:Fouls: 23. Rtbouncb: 24 (Taulbee 8). Steals: 7
(Holloway 2). Total FGs: 17-46 (.369). 1\lrno•tn::

.J).
•

Gallla Aead1my (9·1, SEOAL 7.0)

""" .bl.
[[ Ell.
Ohlinger ...
0..0
0-0
0-0
0
.Cody Lane ..................... 4-9
2-3
7-9
21
' 1 :.J$~my _Payton .............. .0-.~
2-.S
2-2
8
UnanSnru .................. J- 10
2-3
0.0
12
Shirey......... . ..... .2-5
1-3
3-4
10
)eff Mulhn5 ............. '. 1·2
OoO
0.0
2
.Ton)' Moore ... .. ........0- 1
0-0
4-4
4
-Oullin Deckard
...l;l
Q;J.
W. l
"toto~
tl·33' 1·15 t7·11 6l
· • ·Aalsts: 13 (Lane 4). lkM:ked shotl: 0. Fwll:
Rebounds: 41 (Sims 8). StNit: 6 (Mulliaa 2).
-~olal FGs: 19-48 (.396). Thmoun: 16.
)!law .

. J~C.

:Bo

:HI.

•
Eastern 66, Waterford 60
.l?.a.nem ............................... 16 13 16 21 a
-Waterford ........................... l2 17 10 21,.
.

Waterford (8·2, TVC Hockin1 6-2 )
.rtuu
""" JoB,2
D
,Heath Gillespie .................0
2·2
-Erin Purdew ...................... 2
J
0.3
Josh Arnold...
...4 '
J
0-0
. Mark Waller:
...... 6.,
0
3-4
Zilch Arnold .....
...... 2
0
2-J
Tocals ........................... 14
8 7-1)

Dla ValentiiiC! ................... 3
AMRuayan ................... l
.Bao f&lt;lwoldl .................... .l

().()

=

S.Uthem (7-3, TVC Hockin&amp; 5-3)
l1ust
a,.., J:olo
D
Russell Reiber................... S
0
S-1
Chad Hubbard................ ... s
1
~2
. GIU'I'ett KillCt ... ' ........... 3
0
4-6
Kyle Nonis .................... ...O
2
2-4
Chris Randolph ...... .. ......... !
I
2-4
BrandonHill... .................. l
I
0
Nick Bolin ..
.. ...... 2
.0
0
Jonnthan Evnns ............. . I
0
2-2
Matt WllTJif:r:
..........1
·o ".0:.2.
Totall
11
5 11-19

nam

0
"""
I
-2
0
0
0
3

13
18
IS

0
1-1
.1·5
2-4
.19·19

Ohio

H.S. boys' $Cores

Ad,;,.) Kiaa 52. Elyrio 45
Akl. Euc 63, 8..-J 62, OT

Ill.

II

0.1
0-2
3.4

·

n

ley40

Cin. Anderson 64, Cin. Thrpin 49
Cin. Colerain 66, Lakma E. 57
Cin. Finneytown 60, Cin. lndlan Hill 5~
Cin. Hills Ch~c&amp;d. 59. Cia. Landmark Chr. 46
Cin. Hughes SO, Cin. Withrow 48
Cin. Lockland 72, Cin. N. College Hill 52
Cin. Madeira 81, Cin. Wyoming 69
Cin. McNicholas 74, Cin. Roger Bacon 49
Cin. Moeller 63, Cin. LaSalle 53
Cin. Northwest 61, Muon 54
Cin. Princeton 60, Hamilton 46
Cin. Purull Marian 55, Day. Chaminade~Julienoe 41
,
Cin. Reading 52, Cin. Dreer Park 51 , OT
Cin. Seven Hills SO, Cin. St. Bernard 26 ,
Cin. ,Sf. Xat"ier 46, Cin. Elder 42
Ci n. SyciUOOi-e 48, Milford 42
c;in. WalmJl Hills 55, Cin. Mt. Heallhy 50
Cin. Wenern Hills 99, Citt Taft 68
Cin. Winton Woods 69, On. Harrison 61
Cin. Woodward 59. Aiken 53
·
Cle. Benedictine 82, Lollis~ lilt ' St. TI!omaa
Aquinu 54
Cle. East 88, Oe. Lincoln-West~ 1
Cle. Ea1t Tech 74. Cle. Collinwood ~6
C~. Glen~ille 103, Cle. Rhodes 59
Cle. Heritage .S6, MUsil1on Chrbtian 47
Cle. JFK 57, John Marshall-51, Ot
Cle. Soulh 85, Cle. John Hay 45
Cle. St. lgnatiu5 59, Sl. Edward 52
Cle. VASJ 9j, Mn~son 67
Clermont NE 56. New Richmond 55
Collin1 ~estern Reserve 60, Ashland Mapleton
37
Col. Brookhaven 84, Col. Mi fflin 66
Col, DeSnle! 68, Mllrysv!lle j8
Col. East 60, Col. Cenlenninl 59
Col. Marion-Franklin 75, Col. So uth 56
Col. Nonhland 86. Col. Beechcroft 59
Col. Rendy 68, CoL Hartle)' 5.\
Col. Walnut Ridge 76, Col. Briggs 75. OT
Col. Watterson 74. Col. St Ch11rles 6.'
Col. Wellington 82. Uberty Christian ~6
Col. West 76. Col.. Easmtoor 70
Col. WhetstOI}C 77. Col. Linden 62
Columbiana Cre~i\·iew 73. Leetonia 4~
Community Chr. ~7 , Orange Chr. Academy 51
Conneaut 67,. Ashtabula Harbor 51
Convoy Crestview 62. Pnuldinl! J6
Cortland Lal:.evieW 49, Hubbard 40
Coty-Rnwson 82. Arcadia 57
Covington 78. Bt-thl!l 74 .
Crestwood 81. StJfttsboro 35
Crosslanes Chr. (W.Va.) 65, Ohi o Vldlcy Chr. 48
Danbury Lakeside 57, Oregon Can.linnl S trit~h

.

'fbey ployed Saturday

Thday•S games
Miami at Vancouver, 3 p.m.
Pc:nver at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
CLEVELAND nt Sacramenro. 9 p.m.

~li

b.

15
13
10

Mouday's games
Boston ~~ ~uhington, I p.m. ·
Milwaukee at Ati4Dt&amp;, 2 p.m.
New Jersey at Philadelphia, 2 p.m.
•Seaule 111 L.A. Lakers, 3:30p.m.
Orlando at Golden Stalcl, 4 p.m.
Detroit at New York , 4 p.m.
Toronto at Cbarlot~e , 7:30p.m.
lndlaon at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Houston at D:lllltu. 8:30p.m.
San Antonio at L.A. Clippers. 10:30 p.m.

7

7
.S
4
2

l.

li9

NCAA Division I
meli;s scores
Friday's action
Eo~

.56

Brown 79. Danmoulh_63
Columbia 7S, Cornell S8
"OCiaware 62, Boston U. 59
Hart(ord 60, Drexel 58
Hofstra 86. Vermont 52
Niagara 77. Marist 72
Towson 60. NonhCtlSfern 56

. ~,.... Lon" Chr. 65, Ohio Valley Chr. 48
Cross l.anes.. .... ......... ...... l6 14 22 12 ,.
Ohio Valley
' ........... :.... 9 12· IS 1~ ,.

s..

Friday's octlon

Detroit al '?/uhinaton. 7 p.m.
Philadelphia at Atlanta, 7:30 P-fllBoston at New Jer,ey, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Orlanda, ,7:30p.m.
Charlone • New York, 8 p.m.
Portland at Dallas, 8 p.m.
LA. Lakas at Millllelo&amp;a, 8 p.m.
Toronto 11 'Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Houston 11 Chieaao, 8:30 p.m.
LA. Cllppen at Umh, 9 p.m.
Sacramento a1 Golden Slate. 10:30 p.m.

69

22
6
5
9
10

u!ri d

1

.

6
60

11-17

4

New York al Charlo«e, ppd., death
Philadelphia 102, Orlando 100
J'oronto liS, Milwaukee 11 0
lndiua Ill , L.A. Lakers I 02
DcuoiiiOS, Washington 98
Atlanta 89, Olicqo 83
· Miami 92, Denver 87
· CLEVELAND 82, Vancouver 80
Seatlle 91, San Antonio 85
Ponland 10$, Phoenix 83

a.8

l!lo.
4

2· 2

~ 77. Sc. Mory'o, Col. 49
Dieao 82. l.oyo~ Miry""""' 38

n

nam

66
60

D
2·2

!•

-·-

Trimble
Phil Fnirc1 .........................
1
l1ust
"""
.. Trent Panon ......................4
Hobby Troce .
. ......0
JeffTrnce ... .............. ...... 2
Jessi IUchmond ................ J
Rolland Chalfant. ............. A
Tolals
14

.J..t

18
Alcr. GIIfidd61, Kenmo"4J
Dale liylor ....................S-8
0-0
10
Akr. Manchelkr 59, TuJCWawu Val. 44
, . _ H...- .............H
o.4
9
Ala. SVSM 65, UNiey (W.V&lt;) 46
JosbSimmons ............... l-2
I·}
&lt;to ~
Ameli.S9. Cia. CilenEsteS4
Joe MIC)'a .. ,.................... l-1
0-0
0-0
2
Anoa 77, Fairlawn .SO
Erk Petrie ......................0-0 • 0.0
2-•
2
Archbold 79, Moatpelier 49
Brad BowlinlO ...............0-2
~I
1·2
I
Arlington .SB, Dola H..tin'Northern 52
J.T. ~ ................ r....U
0:0
U
1
Ashlwi 59. ~mi.lion 49
.
1'Mak
16-34 3-11
7-15 u
1\sbland Cres1~icw 15, Norwalk Sl. Pau163
AlUla: 13 (Bowman &amp; Holcomb 5 each).
Aihtabula 62, Painesville HWYcy 47
FHII: ' '· Fotlltd out: Tllylor. Rebounds: 26 (Hoi·
Attica Senrca E. 67, Fremont St, Joseph 62
comb It Jertkias 6 each). S1eala: II . Thbl FGs: 19- .
Austonbera Grand River Academy 98, Sooth
{.422). 1\lrno•en: 26
Ridge Academy 46
Avon Lake 47. North Olrt~~ted 38
Barberton 78, Ravenna 44
Dan.esvillc ~9. Bridgeport S2
Ra!,com Hopeweii-Loodoa .54 r Fostoria St. Wen~STERN CONFERENCE
delin 4 1
At._.k Dn-IIIIQII
Bca~cr Easlem 86, Porumoolh O ay 78
L f.&lt;l. llll
Beavercreek 94, SprinJ. S.. ?o4
'
Miami
.... 23 12 .M7
Bedford Chane191 , Cle. C~ nt . Cath. 69
New York .......................... 21 14 .600
2
Bell llire 82. Union Loeal 56
Philadelphia ....................... ,20 16 .556
~':
Bellbrook 71 , Middletown Madison 66
Orh111do ............................... 16 21 .432
8
Bellefontaine Sl. Spring. NW 41
Boston ........ ,...
. .... ,15 20 .429
8
Bellevue 84, Buc:y(lJS 64
New Jersey .............:... 15 20 _429
8
Bell ville Cleor Fork 82. Medina BUtkeye J2 '
Washington ......................... 12 25 .324
12
Beloit W. Branch 66. Akr. Spring. 43
Belpre 77, Albany Ale!landcr 46
Central Dlt"lsion
Berlin Hiland 81, StrllSburg-Frnnklin 68. o'r
Indiana ..... ~...
.. .. :24 II .686
Bishop Donahue (W.Va.) 68 , He llnirt St. John 's
Dt:troir ............................. 2&lt;l I~ . ~71
4
61
Toron10 ........................ ..... 20 1 6 ~ .556
4':
Bloom-Cnrroll 51 . Circlevi lle 46
Milwaukee ............................ 20 17 .S41
S
Blufflon 65, U~ Scioto Valley 51
Chadotte ........................ .'...... l8 16 .529
~1 ;
Bowerston Conolton Va11ey 68, BeiiiiH·i lle 61
CLEVELAND ...................... I6 20 .444
81:
Howling Gr«:n 57. Anthony Wayne 44
Atlanca ..
.. ....... ., ....... ~.' 21 .382
IO'l
Bryan 57. Uberty C~mer 45
Ch!COJO ......... :........................ S 28 .152
18
Cadiz Hlll'rison Cent. 61 , Wellsville 48
Can. GlenOak SO, Alliaoo: 47
Can. Heri1age O.r. 65, You. Chr. SJ
WFSTERN CONFERENCE
Can. S, S I, Alliance Marlington 40
Midwest Dlwiiktn
Can. S(lu!h 51 , Marlington 40
L f.&lt;l. llll
Cnnal WinchesiCI' 89, Amanda-Ciclll'crtek 57
Utah ................
.. ..... 23 II .676
Canfield 65, Poland .S7
'San Ant ll(liO
........ 24 14 .632
I
Curdington-UncC?ln 54. Marion Elgin Sl
· MinnesoUI ......
.. ...... 18 Jj .545 , 4~~
Carey 46, Sycamore Mohawk. 38
Dtnver ........................ ,......... l7 18 .486
6':
Carrollton 61, Minerva 59
.Dallas .................................... ll 24 .314
12~
Camlia Margaretta 54, Clyde 51, OT
Houston .... ,...... :............ ,.... 11 24 .3J4
1 2'~
Cedarville 54, S. Charl~ s ton SE 41
Vancouver........ . ............. 10 26 .278
14
Celi na S2. Onowa-Ciandorf 45
Centerville 55. Xenia 47
.
, Padftc Di¥id0n
Centrai-Hower 89, Elle:l 43
L.A. LWn .......................... JI · 6 .838
O.ampion 69, Liberty ss·
Portland ................
........ 28 8 .778
2'1
Cheshire River Valley 5J. Poinl Pleasant (W.Va.)
Seatlle ............... ,: .................. 24 13 .649
7
52
Sacramento ..
.. ..... 21 12 .636
8
Chillicmhe 59, Thomrur W!&gt;flhington 32
Ph oenix
... .20 IS _j7f
10
Chillic01he Huntington Ross 54, Frankfort
L.A. Clippers .......
........ 10 25 .286
20
Adena 51
Golden Swe......... ...................6 29 .171 . 24
Olillicothe Unioto 65, Piketon S.S
Chillic~ Zane Trace 56, Bainbridge Paint ValFriday's'scores

EUttm (!M, TVC Hockin&amp; 'M j
rJua:
;:,s. JoB,
D Ell.
Joe Brow n........................ 8
0
7-8 . 23
Malt Simpson ......... ..........5
0
6-9 16
·~ Eri c Smilb ................ ........ S
0
6-6
16
Josh Will .............. ........ .. 3
0
0- t
6
Garren .Karr .............. ......0
I
0-0
3
Mau Bissell... ....................!
0
0:0. 1
Totals·
U ·
1 19·14 . 66

Southern 69, Trimble !6
Southem .......·..................... :\7 12 19 21 •
Trimble ..................... ,..... .. :...&amp; 12 12 24

· ···Jl

ParWttt

"$
NBA standings

Totall
IJ..31 5·11 . ll·ZO 53
• AultU: 2.. Fouls: 21. Rebounds : 26 (Peck 12).
.Steals: 4 (Payne 2). Tolal FCs: !8- ~~ (..l27).
'furnot"ers: .S.

Gallla Academy 62, Lngan .54
Log11n ..... .... : .................... l6 II 9 18 "'
OelliaAcade\ny .................. \7 I~ 1~ · 16 ,.

~

Ci.c:illnlli 13, OHIO 59

Olllo Veley Cb....... (5-5)

Tot..! FG1: 18-4S (.400). Tumcn"en: 12.

Petk ............. ..... 3-4

MW~ ... :...... .2

-C .... Jeokiu ...............6-13
a... al · l

0..0

Aaron Sulliv1n ............ ,. 1-9
£ric Nolao ..
....... .1·2

12
12
7
6

0.2

P....: 16. KebcNadl: 3•. Twnonn: 7

1-5
I
H
~
0
'RUII
15-31
).7 IJ.U 5J
, _ , 9 (Pyle• 5). P -: 16. Foulell 001:
Utchfitld. lb:bo...... : 27 (Utchfir:ld !). Strall: I .

•

.

~1:'1~· ·. ...

111.22
:l-5 11
II
6-6

H

....

.......

Rlnr VaUey 53, Polat PI • O ,
PointPJew.n~ .... .................s t9 12 16•
n

Day. Colooel Whl~ 90, s.m- 66
Day. Dunb• 80, Sllvcn S6
Day. Otkwood S), Carlisle .M
Day_ Paftm()p 54, Day. Meadowdak 47

Miclwtlt

65
48

Oe:fiaace A)"'!!''Vil\e 71 , FIUtvitW 51
O.Jaw ... 16, F~ Hcipml6
O.lpboo J....... 65. Ailoo Ellt 62
Dow&lt;
44
Dublin~ 67, HDfiord
50
E. Can. 35, MMJillon Tlulaw 50
E. Clinton 73, CtiMon-MIIIie 46
E&amp;slml BMwn 80, lasbwJ fairftckt -46

so.- ..._

MuR~~~ SO, Woodridp ~
N.

Elloa 63. Brwtvme '2
Edoa 78, Fa}'dle 56 '
Elmwood 90, Gibloobui'J 6.5
Elyria Catholic 69, Trinity .57
Eu~lid &amp;l. VaHey Forae 50 .
Evangel Christ1111 59. Urbaftl Grice 23
Fairf~eld Quillian 59, Grove City Ovistian 36
Fairfteld Union 66, Teays Valley S7
Fairmont $7, Fairborn 55 ·
•
Fairview 5~ . AnW:rst 47, OT
Felicity 71 , B~tavia Sl.
Findlay 85, Fostoria 4l
,
And lay Liberty· Beaton j8, Ptndoa-Gilboa 4j
Firestone 64, Akr. Noeth 45
. f"csher Calholi'c 47, Heath 4li
Franklin 67. MinmisbuiJ 57
Fredericklown 7l. Eut Knox 52
Fremont Ron 86, Sandusky 74
Ft. Recovery .5~ . Rockford Parkway 51
Gallipolis Gallla 62. LoJllD .54
Gc:oeva70, Andover Pnnlltuning Valley - ~
, Genoa 47 , Eastwood 42
Georgetown 60, Bethel-Tate 54
Girard 6fi.' Fnirlnnd 64

Gnadenhutten Indian Val. .54. Byesville Meadowbrook 51
Grand•iew 63. West Jefferson 56
Granville 55, Licking Hts. 47
Green 77, Rtverc 5~·
Greenwi ch $. Central 70. Monroeville li6
Hamler Patrick Henry 58, Everjrecn 44
Howiland W4yoe Trace .51, Holgate 37
Hebron lakewood 67. London M . OT
Hidsville 85, Edgerton 8"3, OT
Hilltop 65. N. Cenrra145
Holland Spring. SO. Maumee ~8
Houston 51, lac bon Cenler 49
Huber"'~- Wayne 61·, Spring. N. ol9
HudJon 69, Kent Roosevelt 55
Hudsoil Wes~.ern Reserw: 47. Manhews J4
lromon 65. Pol'l:smouth 60
Jackson ~5. i\thens 47
Jefferson Arta 68, Attuabula Edgewood 61
Johnstown Northridge 65, Centerburg 61
Kalida 80, Ft. Jennings 77. 30T
Kettering Alter .S I , Hamilton Badin 37
Kidron Cent Chr. 58. Mandield Temple Chr. 56
Lakotn W. 6~. Middletown 52
Laneastef Fisher Cath. 47, Heath 46
Lebano n 50, Kings Mill s 43
, Le mon-Monroe 61, W. Carrollton 60
Ubeny Union 66, Berne Union 52 .
Ucld ng Co. Chr, Acad. )6, Lima Chr. B
Li cDog County 36, Lima Chr. Academy 33
l.icltiog Val. .50, Madison Plains 44
Lima Bath 50, Defiance 49
Uma Temple q,.r. 71, Ouoville 61
Unle Miami ~8. Go.diC!n 47
Logan Elm .S4, Hamilton Township 48
Lomin Catholic f?6, Elyria FBCS 22
Lcrain Clearvicw 73, Avoo 61
Louisville 61, Canal Fulton NW S8
Lucasville Val. 66, Whcelerlbui) 62
Magnolia (W.Va.) 52, Sl. Clai11ville 43
Malvern j8, W. Lafayene Ridgewood 47
Mansfield Sr. 58, l.exiqton 38
Maranatha Chr. 86. 01'J(:C Haven 46
Maria Slein Marion Local40, New Knox~ille l6
Mariemont 49,·Cilt. Taylor 46
Marion Cath. 106, World Harvul75
Marion Local 40, New KDox\'lllc 36
Marion Pleasant 51, Delawm BuCkeYe Val. 44
Marion Ri~~ Valley 71, Galioa Nortlunor 49
Massillon Jackson 65, Can. 11mbn 4)
Massillon Pcny 51, Uniontown J,..ate 44
Mayfield 85,.NCM'donia 59
Maysville 65, New l.exlnaton $3
McCOmb 74, Leip~ic SO
McConnelsville Morpn 90, Croobville 53
Medina S4, BNnswick 33 ·
Meotor 55, l..akeWood 46
Mentor Christian 64, Fallh Oui1tlan ~S
Memor Lake Catholic 57, Panna Padua 38
· Miami E. 70, Lehman Cadi. 51
Middletown au-. 59, Xenia Cbr. 37
Miller Ci!y 46, Continental 38
M\llersbura 'West Holme:~ 54, l..ou4onville 38

c;ao;;;~~

Si4ooy 63. Thor 52
Soloo 81. 1kvdo 71. OT
Soodo Poil&lt;12. Caol 0.0..

N. ~

o..-

N.
N.

.,

N. Royokoa
Navane 'Faltltl• '-5, Maanolia Smdy Valley 44
Yoo\ 14. M&lt;;Anlu- Via""' Coua!y

-·ill•·

~

Now Alblfty 49, Mlllenpoot 47, OT
New C.li•le Tccumltb 71 , Orec.DM 33
\ New Matamolll Frontier 60. Suahsville
Slowndooh 53
$
New MiddletOWn Spriag. 13, Jacbon-Milton ~ 3
New Paris National Trail61 , Tri.Coopty N. 57
Newark 42, Lancuter 40
Nonoa S8, Cloverleaf 44
Noowolk 53, O.Woa 45
f,. Oak Harbor 6~. Port C~nton 37
Oak HJII17, McOennott Scioto NW 51
Ober1ia

•

~6.

I

·. Rou S6, . Norwood 3.S
•
Ruuio 66. Ft. J.oruo;o 64, OT
•
Shekiub Ouistlaa 58, Uncoln. Baprist 41 '"".,1

Broobide 55

•-

.J! .

o.........,... ~..

By Charl.ene Hoeflich
Times-Sentinel Staff

'&lt;,

Soudl-55,11io!ood51
Spona HiJ)obuool 65. Moonl RJdpdlle &lt;II
Spri ... Sh•- 62, Komoo Rid&amp;&lt; 54
Sprioopooo 64, Eqowood 42

·~

•
-.
w
. _ t •_

S1. Heury 74, Colctwaler 69 ~
St. Mary'1 62, Keanon 40
Statbaiville ~7. Oan.way 41
. 8 •.
Fedonl Hockio1 92. Homlock MUlot~
Stow 46, Cuylhop Falls 33
-:-.~~'
Stronpvilte 66, Brecbville ~
•fl · •
Strutben 66, Niles .S I
~,::.
' Sll')'ker 67, Petdsvllle 47
"'!too"
Summit Country Day ~6. Cin. Country Day •s.SylvaW..Nonhview 65, Sylvapia Soudwiew
nlaWan da 6.1; Oaf. Stebbins 48
•
\ .•,
TallmtldJe 77, Copley 56
'•
"Tecurruch71 . GreenonSl
"*
Thomas Worthinaton .S9, 0\illicott.e 31
•"-'~
Thom~ille Sheridan 61 , Jobn Glenn SO
~nffin Calvert 86, Bettsville ~5
~Tiffin Columbian 47, Upper SnndiiSky 39 :; ,
Tinora 54, Anlwetp 5 ~
1).
Tol . Chr. 64, Tol. Maumee Val. 44
..,~
To\. Libbey 81, To\. Scott 70
"•
Tol. St. Francis 48, Tol. Start .30
r
Tol. St. John's 6$, Tol. Waite 30 .
,~
Tol. Whitmer 49. Oregon Clay 47
..
Tri-Valley South 58, Miniuinawa Val..' 8 ~ "'.CI
Trotwood-Madison 9(1 , Grttn\·ille ~5
~:;.
Troy Cbr. 7~ , Day. Jeffer1on 65
, ...Twinsburg 78. Kenston S4
~"''
· Tyler (W V:~.) Consolidated 12. Hannibal Riv~

s,..._,

PILLSEvery day
C•ro~n Korn
takee 5e pUla.

1

•

.

OhloOtpn
Procu.......nt.

She-

tlmnltCCOm:

pan... UnchJ L .
JonM, LOOP's
.chief executlv•
otncer, to

meetlnga •nd

talla her atory.

TAKI ADYAIIT-1 Of

Heart transplant
Jecipie~t thankful
for second cha·nce

REWARDS
. GREAT IIOWI

,•,;

Give Ul your.~II!IIISTAR

loll! anc1 -·u .;ta you a

. . . DISH NETWORK
DICliTAL SA181111 TV SYSTEM..
INSTAl 1m*

••

6 . . . MONIHS

Of ~Du:A'I101' #II'
P1100U.MM1NG MCIMI .
VAWID AT $19.99 I'll MONIHI
~MM

'•

n

OMERQY- While there8t

II

of the world was heralding
the new millennium on Jan.
1, Carolyn and George Kom
observed the day with a
"celebration of life."

. Cl!aaM . ..I I
I I ........ , .........
"Muul ..... Sid ............. JIRIPCI !diJI.
I

'

5 s· 1 ·•

'ael.,...PI¥

o Ool-hloill

... ., ,....

...... ,

..........

zto &amp;lit Mllft

Store

Potillro.~. OH 45711

It wu the fifth .anniversary of Carolyn's l(fe·saving
heart transplant .at Univ,ersity Hospital in Columbus,
· . :Q!! IJlPI'II!?.!"'l.!ll:l?fJ.~· 1, J 995, w.ith her. name at th~ .
lop of the transplant hst, she wailed for a donor heart. .
.Before the day paued, it came from a 16-year-old Can·
1011 resident; The' Korns ' prayers for an orgari donor had
been answered.
.
·
,
· That day was the beginning not only of a new year for
the family, but more importantly, a new life for CarolyQ.
It is that "life" which wu celebrated on Jan. 1, 2000
wh~rr family and 'frleJI!Is gathered at the Korn home on
Jones Road ·near Burlingham. "Congratulations on five
years with a new heart" was the inscription on the Pl'rtY ·
cake.
·
·
The &lt;story began in 1989 when Carolyn, 39, a Meigs
•
County courthouse employee, starting having some
health problems. She was extremely tired and on occasion experienced shortness of breath, but had no pain.
After seeing several doctors, a diagnosis was made Carolyn had a "transposition of the great vessel." '
That, she explained, meant that the left side of her
heart was on the right side and the right side was on the ·
left. The transposition brought on cardiomyopathy, leading to heart failure. Carolyn was told that wiihin a period ·
of five to 10 years,' she would need a heart transplant.
She worked about a year after that before having to
give up her job. She was on medication all the time and .
several limes a year went back to the hospital for treat·
ment with steroids. By 1992, her condition had deteriorated dramatically. She waS unable to lie down to sleep,
the tiredness had ·increased, as had the shortness of
breath. She was put on the University Hospital's trans·
plant list. ·
When hospitalized there in September 1994; they
moved .her name to the front sheet of the list. ·
The crisis came on Dec. 21 when Caroly~ GOilapsed at

..

Month Of
January
'

CELEBRATION OF UFE- George
•nd C.rolyn Kom obHMKI · the
new millennium with a.cel8br8tlon

LuH Oil &amp;Filter

the couple's Wright Street hont,e in· Po!lleroy. In critic~!
under the care of three specialists at University Hospital.
condition, she was taken to the hospital and lhis lime her
. L;!st Monday and Tuesday, she was there for her
name was moved to the top of the ·transplant list.
. annual checkup, "the ·one where all sorts of tests and a
After only 11 days -'- while many wail weeks and .
biopsy of heart tissue is taken." She now awaits full
months for organs - the heart for her transplant became
reports on the tests . .
available.
·
Carolyn is bot~ optimistic and realistic in her overall
While Carpi yo does not know the identity of the
view of being a ·transplant recipient.
donor, she says she thinks often of that special family
"I know that rejection is atways a possibility any day,
whQ.csaid ''y,cs" to organ ®n~ion during a time of great
any time, but riglit now I feel fine and I enjoy every day."
:; sad!liiss "and gri~f in theit ljve.i.
·1. •.
She believes in living every day to its fullest, and she
. , ~· writca periodiCI!Iy ,to· thank them and let tliem
considers every day a.bfeuing.
·
.
• k~.lhoW 'she is '&amp;ftlliii"'!!ng. ·The&lt; letters go thlough··.....,-Fh•ni1illlilll'ernhat th~ "Who "receive 'have.an oblig~
LQQP (Ufelim; of Ohio Orpn Procurem~nt). who sends . ation to jlive," Carolyn .and George for the past three
· ·11 ott' to the Canton Life~nk, which then forwards it to
ye@lll haye volunteered at llnverferth House, founded by
lhe &gt;)it.;nily.
.
. the family of the late Don Unverferth, a world-renowned
0i'have never heard from them, but at least they know
cardiologist and researcher at the Ohio Stale University
who I am, thai I'm doing well, and how to contacl me if
Medi~al Center.
they should ever want to ·do that," commented Carolyn.
Carolyn also volunteers at the headquarters of LOOP,
The transp.lanl recovery period went well for Carolyn,
where she does office work. Sometimes she accompanies
althQIIgh she did experience periods of organ rejection
staff members to group meetings, where she enforces the
and ~o:omplications from medication and was in and out of
appeal for organ donation by sharing her story.
the !iQspital time and again. ·
.
In October, Carolyn, who had volunteered 247 hours,
Slie and George stayed at Unverferth House, a place
was honored by LOOP as the "Volunteer of the Year" in
which provides free housing for transplant patients.a ceremc;&gt;ny at the Ohio Historical Center.
locat¢ near t~e hospital. American Electric Power transUp until last month, she drove to Columbus a couple
ferre(I .Oeorge to a job in the Columbus area so that he
of times a week to continue her volunteer work, but she
could·worl&lt; and still be with his wife.
·
is riow hoping to find volunteer work closer to h.ome.
couple lived there until June, when they took an
She i:an'l be around germs because her immune sys·
apar
t in Grandview. As Carolyn's condition stabi·
tern is suppressed by the .medication she takes, which
lized • improved, they bought a house in Carroll and
keeps her body from rejecting her new heart. That elimi·
were there until last summer,
nates volunteering in hospitals and schools.
'
when ·they returned to
The .couple talked about changes in their lifestyle
· · Meigs County.
since the heart transplant.
. Because of the numerCarolyn said' for a long time she had to wash fruit and
. ous anti-rejection medvegetables in bleach waler lo kill
ications sh~ takes any bacleria, thai she couldn't
· 56 pills a day - and
even touch the peel on a
resulting complicabanana or orange withlions at times,
out gloves, thai if she
Carolyn
·remains
Ple•ae He•rt, P•ge C3

intervention is so critical, have

been lost.
A few years ago, your column
addressed early detection for children with developmental concerns.
The organization that published
this information was Pathways
AwarenessFoundation. Would you
please reprint it?- A GRATEFUL PARENT IN ILLINOIS
DEAR. PARENT: Thank you
for asking. Although not all body
movement disorders turn out to be

cerebral palsy, physical lherapy
can slill be helpful, and early
intervention can make a huge dif·
ference, whether the case is mild
or severe. ~
,.,
As your leiter proves, nol all
doctors are as w~ll-informed as
they should be . It is important for
·parents to ask questions if they are
concerned about their child's
developmenl, aild have no.idea
what is wrong.
Here are some of the early
symploms to look for:
• Poor head control after three
mon!hs
• Stiff or rigid arms or legs
• Pushing away or arching back
• Floppy or limp body poslure
• Cannot sil up without supporl
by eight months
.
' Uses only one side of lhe
body, or only . lh~ arms, to crawl
• Extreme irritability or crying
• Failure to smile by three
months
• Feeding difficulties
• Persistent gagging or clloking
when fed ·
• Tongue pushes soft food out
of the mouth after six months
Pat~ ways Awareness Foundation is still doing a terrific job.
Any reader who recognizes these
symptoms should write for guid·
ance to PathwayS' Awareness
'foundation, 123 N. Wacker Drive,
Suite 900 Chicago, Ill. 60606, or
~all 1·800-955-2445 (www.pathwaysawareness.org). You will
receive some valuable information
free of charge.

•

·of 1118. The dlly m•rkecl the fifth

annlvera•ry of Cl!rolyn'e he•rt ,
transplant

'

sis's

Dear An~ Lllnden: The Amer·
ican public is learning a lot about
multiple births and infant physical
developmenllhese days. I have
my own story, whi ch many other
families share.
. My son; who is 10 years old,
was diagnosed· al 5 1110nths with
eerebral palsy - specifically, lef&lt;
hemiplegia. From the beginning, I
was concerned about his physical
development.
Although I was always met
with compassion at the monthly:
pediatric visits, my concerns
regarding his lefl hand movement
were considered a "wait-and-see"
issue. I am not a "wait-and-see"
person, and so I did my own
·research.
When my son was finally diagnoSed, he was referred for immediate physical ifd occupational
therapy, so he could learn how lo
use his body more effectively.
Without this early inlei"Venlion, I
don'tI, believe
he would' now be
'
playmg basketball or baseball,
, ·walking wilh only .a slight limp, or
have total use of his left hand. In
fact, my son would probably have
little knowledge of how to use the
left side of his body, or be aware
that iI exisled.
Physicallherapy i~ a positive,
hopeful experience for belh par·
ents and children.
My heart breaks to see loddler·
age children, and even more
frightening, school-age children,
jusl being diagnosed. The early
years, the formative years where

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Pomiroy • Middleport • G•lllpoll•, Oh!o • Point Pl....nt, WV

C2 • 6unba!' 1Jimtl -6rntinrl

SUncley, January 11,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllp,olla, Ohio Point PIHunt, WV

•

-.
X-ray telescope capture~

COMMUNITY CORNER

new views of the universe:

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

If you are one of those people
who cannot auend Adult Basic Edu-

Tlmee-sentlnel Staff

cation classes in the community

split sunlight into rainbow colo!•·.
Each element has a disti~
"color" in the X-ray spe~trum.:
"This gives you a fi~erpri~
or a bar code, of the elemen~
said Canizares .
:· "
His data showed cleO{ sig~
for iron, neon, magnesiu!ft and~
icon, along with oxygen in ~
amounls. ,
\
·:~
"There are roughly \o
masses (mass equal to IO:suns~f
oxygen," said CanizareSI ·~n)'
would be enough oxygen tr ab~~(
10 solar systems,"
:. :
Astronomers believe th I che¢•
ical elements expelled into' the uili~
verse from supernovae join cloor1i
of gas and dust that evenl~ally or!•
ate new stars and plane1s, Sucfl:~
process is thought to haye git•~
the Earth and its sister planets tm:liq
chemical elements.
., ~:::.
X-rays also are emitted f
black holes and aslrimo
turned the Chandra to examine· ~
black hole at the centor1 of l
Milky Way, our home galaxy, ·I~
found a surprise·.
.~•-a
"The two million solar ~
black hole is. very quiet, " ·said
don Garmire, a Pennsylvania S:~

By PAUL RECER
AP SckKe Writer

ATI..ANTA (AP) A new
space telescope has captured the
most detailed images ever of one
of nature's chemical factories, an
ancient exploding star that is
churning out efeQ1ents essential to
life.
The SU billion Chandra X-ray
Telescope, launched last July,
detected X-rays flashing from a
I ,000-year-old supernova, or
exploding star, and found streams
of oxygen and other elements
moving outward at more than two
million miles an hour.
"These might be called the
fountains of life because it was the
explosion of such supernova that
provided · the oxygen on Earth;"
said Claude Canizaies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
astronomer and a member of the
Chandra science team.
Reports on studies by the Chandra were delivered Friday at the
national meeting pf the American
As!r0 nomical Society. · . '
Lelghanne Redovlan and James Blerstlne, Jr.
Canizares said the Chandra
shows thai ring-like structures
loaded with chemical elements
were hurled out of the supernova. University astronomers. "The:,-3ti
The image captures the star about rays are puny, really nothtiii
remarkable . That is a real puzz'ti
1,ooo·years after the explosion.
POMEROY - Mr. and ·Mrs. eral 's Office of Con•ressional and
Another surprise was founaiil
The
star
is
about
200,000
light
John Redovian of · Pomeroy Public Affairs at Balling Air Fence
the
30-million- solar-mass black
Earth,
Before
it
explodyears
from
· announce the engagement of their Base in Washington, D.C.
hole
at the cenlerof Andromeda, a
ed,
it
was
about
10
times
more
·
Her .fiance is a . Lieutenant ·
daughter, Leigh Anne , to James
Bierstine, Jr. , son of James and Colonel in the U.S . Air Force and is massive than the sun. A light year, sister spiral galaxy to the Mii~X
Way just two million light years
Christine Bierstine of Pine Island, currently assigned to the Pentagon. the distance light travels in a year
·6
trillion
in
a
vacuum,
is
about
away.
.
grad(lated from Warwick Valley
N .Y.
Stephen
·miles.
Murray
of
the
Har.The bride-elect is a graduate of High ~chool and the U. Air Force .
Such stars burn hydrogen and vard-Smithsonian Center 'fof ·
Eastern High School and received a Academy with a bachelor of science
helium during their lifetimes. In Astrophysics said the Androm~dA
bachelor of science degree in jour- degree in asiron81,1tical engineering.
The couple is planning a Novem- massive stars, the process creates black hole was "cool and unu_su~
nalism from Ohio University. She is
-· ·
·•t
heavier elements, such as iron and al."
employed by the U.S. Air Force and . ber wedding in Washington, D.C.
"It is a cool source of X-rays
oxygen.
When
the
fuel
is
exhaustworks at the Air Force Surgeon Gened, the stars collaps~ and explode, considering its size,,. said Murray
releasmg energy equal to the ener- "Black holes seem to come in' l.
gy produced by the sun over its wide variety of pauerns."
·::
X-ray data from an objec't
, entire lifetime.
Shock waves from the explo- known as the "exploding galaxy·:
sion heat gas to about I 0 ·million found a very lively place, sait1
4
'
••
degrees, creating X-rays which ca.n Gannire.
worldwide. The procedure is suc- after myomectomy, a · surgery to be vie)'led by Chandra. The X-rays
''2
cessful in ·easing symptoms in remove the · tumors while leaving i:an be separated by wave length,
about 90 percent of cases, Wor- the uterus, Worthington-Kirsch in a similar way that a prism will
said ..
thington- Kirsch said.
Twenty percent to 40 percent
Recipients are screened by
gynecologists prior to emboliza- of America.n wom,en over 35 have
tion to rule out uterine cancer, fibroids, which lead' to at least 33
detect infections that could lead percent of the 670,000 hysterectd complications and de~errnine . tomies performed every year in
whether other .11roblems SUf:h as this country. he said.
Fibroids grow from cells of the
endometrio~is are severe enOugh
'GALLIPOLIS - Basil and Irene
uterine muscle. They can go
to lead to hysterectomy anyway.
Holley
of Gallipolis announce the
Most women spend a night or undetected at the size of a pea for
engagement
and .approaching marless in a hospital and resume· their years or grow rapidly to the size
riage
of
their
daughter
Linda Adams,
lives within a few days, compared of a bowling ball, multiplying as
mother
of
Heather
Han,
to · Eric
to weeks ·of recovery after tifne passes.
Coon.
He
is
the
son
of
Belly
Coon
of
The growths appear to be .drisurgery. The downside is painful
ven by estrogen. Because a Athens.
cramps that hit some women for a
The bride elect is employed by
day or two after the embolization . woman's estrogen levels usually
Integrated
Service Systems and
And much more study is needed drop with menopause, doctors
works
at
Tri-County
Mental Health
to gauge long -term effects of the often advocate a wait-and-see
and
Counseling
Services
in Athens. .
procedure on fertility, among approach to fibroids absent seriprospective
·
bridegroom
is
The
ous symptoms. J_.ike Chatman , .
·other factors .
employed by Cornwell's Jewelers in
"I was on my feet in a day and many women who s.eek the proceI haven't had any problems since. dure are beyond their childbear- Aihens ..
. A spring Caribbean wedding ts
My fibroids almost disappeared," ing years .
Dr. Bruce McLucas. one of the planned.
said Chatman, the mother ·of two
506 Grand Central-Ave.grown sons . who was among the
UCLA gynecologists "involved in
. (304) 195-7878
first patients in the United Stales, the pio·n eering fibroid embolizaat the University of California tion program there ; said a little
skepticism about new techniques
Medical Center in Los Angeles .
Around the country, about 500 is healthy. But he · stressed that
radiologists
Perform
uterine embolization for other problems
artery embolization .. They're see- has been around for more than 20
FURNITURE
ing many women seeking treat- years.
GALLERIES
ment for fibroids that grew back

The
accomplishments
of
Charles
Slack
who
graduated
from
Ps&gt;meroy
High . School
.
and the~ went
on to. Marshall University where he.
set a NCAA record for rebounds
with an average of 25 .6 a game and
was named to the Mid-American ·
Conference all-league teams · in
1955, 56, and 57, will be honored on
Jan . 26.
'
That day his jersey number 17
will be retired in halftime ceremonies at the Marshall-Miami game
in Hender;;on Center.
Slack, a retired Goodyear executive, who lives in Massillon, will
speak earlier that day at the Tip-Off
Club at noon at the Radisson Hotel.
He and his family li've in Massil -

s&lt;4:t

lon but visit relatives here occasion-

ally. His mother was Margaret Slack
who lived on Mulberry Avenue .

6Pil

REDOVIAN-BIERSTINE

.

''

CHAFFINS-HUTCHINSON

:

NORTHUP • Ronnie and Patty

~Hutchinson of Northup, announce

:the engagement of their son , Heath
·Eugene, to Krystal Gayle Chaffins,
'daughter of Molly Ch.affins of'Martin, Ky. , and Paul Chaffins of
Saylersvi'ile, Ky.

A March wedding is being
·
planned.
The couple are both serving in
the United States Marine Corps as
bulk fuel specialists petroleum engineers . They are · stationed in Camp
Lejeune, N.C.
·

He

s,

s:

New
procedure offers women hope against hysterectomy
.
'

'

By LEANNE ITALII\
Associated Press Writer ·
·NEW. YORK (AP) - Arleen
Chatman's mother had a hysterectomy . Her. grandmother had a
hysterectomy. So did her sister.

'"

two aunts and a cousin , who was
only .32 when the family problem

-

uterine fibroids -.

struck her

as . they do mlllions of women

every year.
Chatman, 57, was detero1ined
to buck her history, fight through

it ' s done by interventional radiologists - not gynecqlogists ..
Under local anesthesia accom panied by pain medication ; a

quarter-inch incision is made in
the groin. A catheter the circum-.
ference of spaghetti is threaded
· into the two arteries that -supply
blood .to the uterus and feed
blood-dependent fibroids.
Guided by bursts of die projec ted by X -ray imaging , plastic
particles the size of sand granule s

her fibroid-related pain and find a · are injected into the vessels ,
way to avoid a hystercc10my, blocking blood to the tumors
despite five miscarriages and while allowing the uterus to
periods so heavy she used a box receive nol.l-ris~mcnt from other
of sanitary napkins combined sources.
Fibroids slowly dctcrioraic
with tampon s in a single day.
·' I g:ot very anemic and was over three month s to a year after
nlis sing work," said the elemen- emboliz.ltion , offering women an
tary sr.:hool librarian in Los Ange- average 40 percent to 60 percent
le s. " 1 grew up in the old school reducti o n that appears to be per of ·tt ' s jus t a woman 's curse and

manent , said Dr. Robert Wor-

you have · to put up with it.' Then
I started reading and everybody

thington - Kirsch . a Philadelphia

~ \vas

talking about hysterectomi£S

being done that weren't needed ,
saying there should be alternatives."

. The alternative Chatman chose
three years ago is a relatively new

•treatment that allow s women to
avoid the ri s ks and lengthy recov ery periods of surgery. It ' s called
uterine artery embolization. and

radiolog_is t who has performed a

little more than 600 uterine artery
embo lizatiun s, the most in the
United' States .
.
The procedure us ually takes
care ·of multiple fibroids , not just
the prominent ones unlike
surgery.

About 4 .500 women have
undergone the procedure in the
Unitql States. and 6,000 to 8,000

'

Adams - Coon .·
to wed in spring

GOLDMARK'S ·
WEDDING NOOK

WINTER

&lt;)

World's highest waterfall in remote ar:ea

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -Angel Falls, the highest waterfall in the
world, is located on a remOII' plateau in Southeastern Venezuela and wasdis.
covered by an American pilot. The waterfall has a total height of 3,212·feet.
1848. Cora Taylor Crane, wtfe of · It was sighted in 1935 by an American aviator, James Angel, while flying .
·
writer Stephen Crane. covered the , through a canyon on the plateau.
Greco-Turkish War of 1897 for The
•
New York Journal. And Mary Bo)ile
i!lll \1 (J(JI ( IJIII]II IIIII]"
O'Reilly reported the German inva. ,.
- - __. ........_- --- .. • • l
sion of Belgium in 1914 for The
Boston Pi lot.
The Bolshevik Revolution,
Italy 's invasion of Ethiopia, the ri.se
of Fascism and Nazism, the Spanish
·Civil War and general international
unrest were all magnets for newsCreating balance
·
....
women , including Helen Kirkdoesn'tjust
happelr-it
·
patrick, Josephine Herbst and 1 •
·'
takes practice, planning
·, Martha Gellhorn. A Russian aristo-

WI

. History of women war reporters fills a void
By NORMAN N. BROWN
Associated Press Writer
"The Women Who Wrote ·the
War" (Arcade, $27.95) is an excellent book, exhaustively researched
and bursting with information about
women war correspqndents. H fills a

large void in the history of 20th-centur}' journalism.
Author Nancy Caldwell Sorel
eloquently tells · the story of these
women who rebelled against being
cast in u'sua1 roles as society or fashion writers. It goes back to a time
when women had to beg, cajole and
demand assignments to cover fighting overseas. Evan so, fewer than
I 00 ·became war correspondents

during World War II.
. The fi'rst women reporters
allowed abroad were barred from
· the front and accessibility to hard
war news . So they wrote colorfully
detailed stories about the soldiers'
and sailors' colT!plaiQts. meals, med~
ical ·ane'nlion and similar subjcj.:ts. '

Gradually. opposition to women
reporters on the battlefield lessened,
but it·didn ' t disappear. No command
·i

wal)tcd to be the one where a woman

'.

Peoples Investments~
the !RA ·rollover. specia:lists.

,

crat,· Sonia Tomara, became a New

York Herald Trib~ne correspondent,
while a resolute .woman from New
Jersey, Margaret Bourke-While,
became famous for her wartime
photographs for Life magazine ,
More women. served in Europe
than in the Pacific, where fighting·
occurred on small islands and was

conducted from ships and airpllmes,
making it easier for the Navy to con trol the presence of women in those
areas . However, women eventually

managed to get beyond Hawaii to
Guam, Saipan , Iwo Jima and Oki-

' reporter was krlled . (In fact , none nawa.
was killed · during World War II. )
Among · them was Dickey
Women correspondents had to strug- -Chapcllc, a gutsy photographer who
gle with ordinances and restrictions became a favorite of the Marioe
that h~mpered their work, but they Corps. which she covered closely in
succeeded , often wilh resourceful- the . Pacific and years later in
ness and distinction.
Lebanon and the Dominican RepubSorel provides a brief earl y history of . women war rcp(Jrtcrs, begin -

li c. She is the only-American woman

war correspondent .killed In action;
ning with Margaret Fuller. appointed while covering the Vietnam War, she
by New York Tribune editor Horace" was killed by shrapnel fram an
Greeley to cover unrest in Italy in exploding land mine.

and sometimes a little
help. If you've been

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·

series.
II is a project funded by the Ohio
Department of ~ucation which is
designed to help adults who do not
have their high school diploma,
study for the OED test .
The program will air beginning
Saturday, Jan . 29 at 7:30 a.m. with
repeat broadcasts .on Monday at 3
p.m. and the following Saturday at 7
a.m. The programs can be taped . For
information on workbooks or to

enroll, just call the Ohio Literacy
Network at 1-800-228-READ. or
contact the local Athens-Meigs Edu cational Center in Pomeroy.
Wanna adopt a.horse ?
On Feb. 12 and 13 the Bureau of
Land Management will be. CQnducting ·a Wild Horse Adoption at lhF
Ohio State Fairgrounds, Cooper
. Arena.

The BLM is respon sible for managing the wild horlie and burro herds

REMODELING BEGINS AT CHURCH • The Llghthouae Assembly
of God Church, located on State Route 160, two miles north of
Holzer Medical Center, hal received the deed to the property where
the congregation has been worehlpplng for over 20 years, and will
now begin renovation of the fllcllltles. A·'building fund hae been
established which will permit Improvementa In the lntarlor and exterior of the building as well es the surrounding property. Worship
s~rvlc~ will continue uninterrupted while the construction pro,
ceeda. Servlcea being at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sundays and at 7
p.m. on Wednesday.
,
·
'

·,

will be brought in on Friday. Feb.
11 , with viewing from I to 5 p.m .
er happened to Vi9la Moon of Mid- The hours for adoption will be from
dleport, she is now a patient at the 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. and if any remain on
.Pleasant Valley ·Nursing and Reha- Sunday from 8 a.m. until noon .
For more infonnation or an applibilitation Center, Sand Hill Road in
Point Pleasant, W. Va. She would cation residents may call J-800-293178 I . Applications have lobe in and
like to hear from her friends :
Mrs. Moon was one of those peo-.. approved by Feb. 4. There's a minipie who was always se11ding cardsto mum bioding fee of $125 per animal
encourage others. Now it's our· tum to help with the cost of roundup, vet
fees , and transportation and adminto send one to her. ·

Mr. and Mre. Robert Ward

L

'

"-"--:
.· ----..REDOVIAN-WARD. . POMEROY - Amy Elizabeth
R.'\dovian and Robert Ohlen Ward
were 111arried in a Nov. 27 ceremo- .
ny . at the First Presbyterian Church
. in Middleport.
: . _The \&gt;ride is the daughter of John
a~d Rosella Redovian of Pomeroy.
:rite groom is the son of Helen
Ward of Oak Hill and the late Jack
Ward.
·. . ·T he service was conducted by
Rev. Krisima Robinson. A brief sermon was given 'by Robert Crow of
Syracuse, anq the bride's greaty,lli:I.e Sam Warbel recited .scripture
~ the"Russian Orthodox· liturgy.
~Jluptjal music was perfcirrned by
~tilnist8~ Sharon Hawley of Midilport \on.d Eleanor McKelvey of
actisfr and soloist, Leigh Anne
ovia~ .The bride's go.dfalher,
~yid Bo.weri, .was in!mpet soloist

.~

...u,;,l .....

~

lho '

Birt

. l!!":~'"l"":..... ~· ... ·~r- ~~-

.•

at.~}.h.r ·,-.J.·;.~.,,.·~ -:&gt;_-q.: ""'f ~' •. ~,~ ~

~tGi.ven in 111arriage by her father,
'-•: bride \~ore II• fuU! Iengt~ ' gown
· 4(.Whtte ..$atm embelhshed wnh lace
~\fill pear!s on the bodice and on .t}te
. ~- ·l'h&lt;l hea&lt;lpiece ofher yeil-was
~ adorned ~ilh pearls. ~he car'!(11 a bouquet of ,whole Stlk roses
·~ lil~cs, accented with ivy,
· ~hanotis, and pearls.
~:'rhe brfde's sister, Leigh Anne
iodovian, was the maid of honor.
~i:hlesni.iids were Nicole Nelson,
Kellie Collins, and Stacey Duncan.
I

.

The flower girl ·was Kayla Ward,
niece of the groom. The auendanls
wore floor-length sleeveless gowns
Remember Scott Pullins, son of
of burgundy satin and carried bouSuzie Mash, who graduated from
quets of long-stemmed silk bur- Meigs, went on to college, and then
gundy roses trimmed with .dried got involved in state government.
statice and ribbons.
He is executive director of the
. Jedd Rawlings of Oak Hill Ohio Taxpayers Association which
served lis best man. Groomsmen has a goal of limiting Ohio taxes,
were Philip Kuhn, Benji Levis, ~nd
spending and regulations.
Greg Libby. Ushers were Pete
The organization isn't new just
Deuy, Mauhew McFann, and had a name change, and neither is
Devan Hale.
SCott as its executive dir~tOr..
. A reception was held after the ·
ceremony at the Ohio University
Inn in Athens. Leigh Anne and her
cousin, John Lisle of Syracuse,
sang while the wedding couple had
their .first pance.
The tables at the reception were
decorated with glass· pillar vases
PHOENIX (AP) .
R.J .
with ..cascading arrangements of Reynolds has agreed to stop maiti ng
white· statice with silk hydrangeas , cigarette samples to non-smokers
and lilacs. The flowers for ,the wed- nationwide.
ding cer.emony an(! the reception
Arizona Attorney General Janet
were designed by the bride's moth- Napolitano had demanded since
er and her godmother, Jeanne November that the Winston°Salem,
Bowen.
N.C.,-based toba&lt;;co manufacturer
The bride, a gra&lt;;luate of the Uni- slop the practice.
versity of Rio Grande, is a teacher
R.J. Reynolds has maintained it
in the Middletown City School Dis- did nothing wrong because the samtrict. The bridegroom. who also . ples were sent only to. people who
attended the University ol Rio signed up for assorted promotions
Grande. is the assistant branch and had ccrti fied that they were over
manager Of the Oak Hill Bank in age '21.
,
Franklin where the newlyweds are
But in a letter Thurs&lt;jay to
making their home.
. Napqlitano from Reynolds vice

Diamond Earrings ·

istrative expenses.

1/4 carat s99

Beller safe than sorry.
Did you know that every year
55,000 sledding accidents occur and
about 7,000 of those involve heM

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The American Academy of
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helmets for protection.

4 Prong Set Reg. '569

··"'' "·' "' '
......
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Gornflt

Have a ~ice week.

gloves. ·
.
Before Carolyn was discharged
'
from the hospital,
ound his wife. He said there was a
special emphasis on hand-wash ing.
"You don't know how much
you don't wash your hands until
someone talks to you about these
~~~~:~·::~~ for treatment. When · things. Now if I'm out and come
Jl:
&amp;'Shower, she had .lo turn on in, the first thing I ·do is wash my
water -and leave the bathroom hands. People just aren't aware of
five minutes to get oul th" how many germs they carry
·
· which had been laying in the around on their hands."
Carolyn. has no complaints
and might be contaminated.
idifiers couldn't be used . about anything she has to do lo
she wanted to plant flowers, keep well. She's just e~tremely
had' to wear a mask and grateful for the new heart which

Continued from C1
,even.to.uch the peel on a banana
orange without gloves, that if
went to the grocery store and
in:• the produce department
the sprayers ac)ivated, she
to leave.
·
If a dog or cat scratched her,
had to go to the hospital

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Tkrowgkowt /an. 31,

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president and deputy gene,ral counsel Guy M. Blynn, the manufacture~
acknowledged that its mailing s~s­
tem for dealing with adult smokers
is "f)awed" because it allows unsolicited mail to be sent.

TwoLoaatJon••
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keeps her alive .
She believes that God intended··
for her to live long enough and to
be healthy enough to take care ·or .
her dad, Robert Jones.
.Carolyn's mother, Pat, died a
year or so ago and her father, who
has Alzheimers Disease, is now in
a care facility. The Korns came
back to Meigs County to assist in
his care. They have since buill a
house on property which has been
in her £amily for years.
Carolyn and George are people
who count their b.lessings.
They will tell you thai every
day is a day 10 celebrate life.

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or

4 Prong Set Reg. '159

R.J. Reynolds to stop sending cigarette
samples to non-smokers nationwide

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Pomiroy • Middleport • G•lllpoll•, Oh!o • Point Pl....nt, WV

C2 • 6unba!' 1Jimtl -6rntinrl

SUncley, January 11,2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllp,olla, Ohio Point PIHunt, WV

•

-.
X-ray telescope capture~

COMMUNITY CORNER

new views of the universe:

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

If you are one of those people
who cannot auend Adult Basic Edu-

Tlmee-sentlnel Staff

cation classes in the community

split sunlight into rainbow colo!•·.
Each element has a disti~
"color" in the X-ray spe~trum.:
"This gives you a fi~erpri~
or a bar code, of the elemen~
said Canizares .
:· "
His data showed cleO{ sig~
for iron, neon, magnesiu!ft and~
icon, along with oxygen in ~
amounls. ,
\
·:~
"There are roughly \o
masses (mass equal to IO:suns~f
oxygen," said CanizareSI ·~n)'
would be enough oxygen tr ab~~(
10 solar systems,"
:. :
Astronomers believe th I che¢•
ical elements expelled into' the uili~
verse from supernovae join cloor1i
of gas and dust that evenl~ally or!•
ate new stars and plane1s, Sucfl:~
process is thought to haye git•~
the Earth and its sister planets tm:liq
chemical elements.
., ~:::.
X-rays also are emitted f
black holes and aslrimo
turned the Chandra to examine· ~
black hole at the centor1 of l
Milky Way, our home galaxy, ·I~
found a surprise·.
.~•-a
"The two million solar ~
black hole is. very quiet, " ·said
don Garmire, a Pennsylvania S:~

By PAUL RECER
AP SckKe Writer

ATI..ANTA (AP) A new
space telescope has captured the
most detailed images ever of one
of nature's chemical factories, an
ancient exploding star that is
churning out efeQ1ents essential to
life.
The SU billion Chandra X-ray
Telescope, launched last July,
detected X-rays flashing from a
I ,000-year-old supernova, or
exploding star, and found streams
of oxygen and other elements
moving outward at more than two
million miles an hour.
"These might be called the
fountains of life because it was the
explosion of such supernova that
provided · the oxygen on Earth;"
said Claude Canizaies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
astronomer and a member of the
Chandra science team.
Reports on studies by the Chandra were delivered Friday at the
national meeting pf the American
As!r0 nomical Society. · . '
Lelghanne Redovlan and James Blerstlne, Jr.
Canizares said the Chandra
shows thai ring-like structures
loaded with chemical elements
were hurled out of the supernova. University astronomers. "The:,-3ti
The image captures the star about rays are puny, really nothtiii
remarkable . That is a real puzz'ti
1,ooo·years after the explosion.
POMEROY - Mr. and ·Mrs. eral 's Office of Con•ressional and
Another surprise was founaiil
The
star
is
about
200,000
light
John Redovian of · Pomeroy Public Affairs at Balling Air Fence
the
30-million- solar-mass black
Earth,
Before
it
explodyears
from
· announce the engagement of their Base in Washington, D.C.
hole
at the cenlerof Andromeda, a
ed,
it
was
about
10
times
more
·
Her .fiance is a . Lieutenant ·
daughter, Leigh Anne , to James
Bierstine, Jr. , son of James and Colonel in the U.S . Air Force and is massive than the sun. A light year, sister spiral galaxy to the Mii~X
Way just two million light years
Christine Bierstine of Pine Island, currently assigned to the Pentagon. the distance light travels in a year
·6
trillion
in
a
vacuum,
is
about
away.
.
grad(lated from Warwick Valley
N .Y.
Stephen
·miles.
Murray
of
the
Har.The bride-elect is a graduate of High ~chool and the U. Air Force .
Such stars burn hydrogen and vard-Smithsonian Center 'fof ·
Eastern High School and received a Academy with a bachelor of science
helium during their lifetimes. In Astrophysics said the Androm~dA
bachelor of science degree in jour- degree in asiron81,1tical engineering.
The couple is planning a Novem- massive stars, the process creates black hole was "cool and unu_su~
nalism from Ohio University. She is
-· ·
·•t
heavier elements, such as iron and al."
employed by the U.S. Air Force and . ber wedding in Washington, D.C.
"It is a cool source of X-rays
oxygen.
When
the
fuel
is
exhaustworks at the Air Force Surgeon Gened, the stars collaps~ and explode, considering its size,,. said Murray
releasmg energy equal to the ener- "Black holes seem to come in' l.
gy produced by the sun over its wide variety of pauerns."
·::
X-ray data from an objec't
, entire lifetime.
Shock waves from the explo- known as the "exploding galaxy·:
sion heat gas to about I 0 ·million found a very lively place, sait1
4
'
••
degrees, creating X-rays which ca.n Gannire.
worldwide. The procedure is suc- after myomectomy, a · surgery to be vie)'led by Chandra. The X-rays
''2
cessful in ·easing symptoms in remove the · tumors while leaving i:an be separated by wave length,
about 90 percent of cases, Wor- the uterus, Worthington-Kirsch in a similar way that a prism will
said ..
thington- Kirsch said.
Twenty percent to 40 percent
Recipients are screened by
gynecologists prior to emboliza- of America.n wom,en over 35 have
tion to rule out uterine cancer, fibroids, which lead' to at least 33
detect infections that could lead percent of the 670,000 hysterectd complications and de~errnine . tomies performed every year in
whether other .11roblems SUf:h as this country. he said.
Fibroids grow from cells of the
endometrio~is are severe enOugh
'GALLIPOLIS - Basil and Irene
uterine muscle. They can go
to lead to hysterectomy anyway.
Holley
of Gallipolis announce the
Most women spend a night or undetected at the size of a pea for
engagement
and .approaching marless in a hospital and resume· their years or grow rapidly to the size
riage
of
their
daughter
Linda Adams,
lives within a few days, compared of a bowling ball, multiplying as
mother
of
Heather
Han,
to · Eric
to weeks ·of recovery after tifne passes.
Coon.
He
is
the
son
of
Belly
Coon
of
The growths appear to be .drisurgery. The downside is painful
ven by estrogen. Because a Athens.
cramps that hit some women for a
The bride elect is employed by
day or two after the embolization . woman's estrogen levels usually
Integrated
Service Systems and
And much more study is needed drop with menopause, doctors
works
at
Tri-County
Mental Health
to gauge long -term effects of the often advocate a wait-and-see
and
Counseling
Services
in Athens. .
procedure on fertility, among approach to fibroids absent seriprospective
·
bridegroom
is
The
ous symptoms. J_.ike Chatman , .
·other factors .
employed by Cornwell's Jewelers in
"I was on my feet in a day and many women who s.eek the proceI haven't had any problems since. dure are beyond their childbear- Aihens ..
. A spring Caribbean wedding ts
My fibroids almost disappeared," ing years .
Dr. Bruce McLucas. one of the planned.
said Chatman, the mother ·of two
506 Grand Central-Ave.grown sons . who was among the
UCLA gynecologists "involved in
. (304) 195-7878
first patients in the United Stales, the pio·n eering fibroid embolizaat the University of California tion program there ; said a little
skepticism about new techniques
Medical Center in Los Angeles .
Around the country, about 500 is healthy. But he · stressed that
radiologists
Perform
uterine embolization for other problems
artery embolization .. They're see- has been around for more than 20
FURNITURE
ing many women seeking treat- years.
GALLERIES
ment for fibroids that grew back

The
accomplishments
of
Charles
Slack
who
graduated
from
Ps&gt;meroy
High . School
.
and the~ went
on to. Marshall University where he.
set a NCAA record for rebounds
with an average of 25 .6 a game and
was named to the Mid-American ·
Conference all-league teams · in
1955, 56, and 57, will be honored on
Jan . 26.
'
That day his jersey number 17
will be retired in halftime ceremonies at the Marshall-Miami game
in Hender;;on Center.
Slack, a retired Goodyear executive, who lives in Massillon, will
speak earlier that day at the Tip-Off
Club at noon at the Radisson Hotel.
He and his family li've in Massil -

s&lt;4:t

lon but visit relatives here occasion-

ally. His mother was Margaret Slack
who lived on Mulberry Avenue .

6Pil

REDOVIAN-BIERSTINE

.

''

CHAFFINS-HUTCHINSON

:

NORTHUP • Ronnie and Patty

~Hutchinson of Northup, announce

:the engagement of their son , Heath
·Eugene, to Krystal Gayle Chaffins,
'daughter of Molly Ch.affins of'Martin, Ky. , and Paul Chaffins of
Saylersvi'ile, Ky.

A March wedding is being
·
planned.
The couple are both serving in
the United States Marine Corps as
bulk fuel specialists petroleum engineers . They are · stationed in Camp
Lejeune, N.C.
·

He

s,

s:

New
procedure offers women hope against hysterectomy
.
'

'

By LEANNE ITALII\
Associated Press Writer ·
·NEW. YORK (AP) - Arleen
Chatman's mother had a hysterectomy . Her. grandmother had a
hysterectomy. So did her sister.

'"

two aunts and a cousin , who was
only .32 when the family problem

-

uterine fibroids -.

struck her

as . they do mlllions of women

every year.
Chatman, 57, was detero1ined
to buck her history, fight through

it ' s done by interventional radiologists - not gynecqlogists ..
Under local anesthesia accom panied by pain medication ; a

quarter-inch incision is made in
the groin. A catheter the circum-.
ference of spaghetti is threaded
· into the two arteries that -supply
blood .to the uterus and feed
blood-dependent fibroids.
Guided by bursts of die projec ted by X -ray imaging , plastic
particles the size of sand granule s

her fibroid-related pain and find a · are injected into the vessels ,
way to avoid a hystercc10my, blocking blood to the tumors
despite five miscarriages and while allowing the uterus to
periods so heavy she used a box receive nol.l-ris~mcnt from other
of sanitary napkins combined sources.
Fibroids slowly dctcrioraic
with tampon s in a single day.
·' I g:ot very anemic and was over three month s to a year after
nlis sing work," said the elemen- emboliz.ltion , offering women an
tary sr.:hool librarian in Los Ange- average 40 percent to 60 percent
le s. " 1 grew up in the old school reducti o n that appears to be per of ·tt ' s jus t a woman 's curse and

manent , said Dr. Robert Wor-

you have · to put up with it.' Then
I started reading and everybody

thington - Kirsch . a Philadelphia

~ \vas

talking about hysterectomi£S

being done that weren't needed ,
saying there should be alternatives."

. The alternative Chatman chose
three years ago is a relatively new

•treatment that allow s women to
avoid the ri s ks and lengthy recov ery periods of surgery. It ' s called
uterine artery embolization. and

radiolog_is t who has performed a

little more than 600 uterine artery
embo lizatiun s, the most in the
United' States .
.
The procedure us ually takes
care ·of multiple fibroids , not just
the prominent ones unlike
surgery.

About 4 .500 women have
undergone the procedure in the
Unitql States. and 6,000 to 8,000

'

Adams - Coon .·
to wed in spring

GOLDMARK'S ·
WEDDING NOOK

WINTER

&lt;)

World's highest waterfall in remote ar:ea

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -Angel Falls, the highest waterfall in the
world, is located on a remOII' plateau in Southeastern Venezuela and wasdis.
covered by an American pilot. The waterfall has a total height of 3,212·feet.
1848. Cora Taylor Crane, wtfe of · It was sighted in 1935 by an American aviator, James Angel, while flying .
·
writer Stephen Crane. covered the , through a canyon on the plateau.
Greco-Turkish War of 1897 for The
•
New York Journal. And Mary Bo)ile
i!lll \1 (J(JI ( IJIII]II IIIII]"
O'Reilly reported the German inva. ,.
- - __. ........_- --- .. • • l
sion of Belgium in 1914 for The
Boston Pi lot.
The Bolshevik Revolution,
Italy 's invasion of Ethiopia, the ri.se
of Fascism and Nazism, the Spanish
·Civil War and general international
unrest were all magnets for newsCreating balance
·
....
women , including Helen Kirkdoesn'tjust
happelr-it
·
patrick, Josephine Herbst and 1 •
·'
takes practice, planning
·, Martha Gellhorn. A Russian aristo-

WI

. History of women war reporters fills a void
By NORMAN N. BROWN
Associated Press Writer
"The Women Who Wrote ·the
War" (Arcade, $27.95) is an excellent book, exhaustively researched
and bursting with information about
women war correspqndents. H fills a

large void in the history of 20th-centur}' journalism.
Author Nancy Caldwell Sorel
eloquently tells · the story of these
women who rebelled against being
cast in u'sua1 roles as society or fashion writers. It goes back to a time
when women had to beg, cajole and
demand assignments to cover fighting overseas. Evan so, fewer than
I 00 ·became war correspondents

during World War II.
. The fi'rst women reporters
allowed abroad were barred from
· the front and accessibility to hard
war news . So they wrote colorfully
detailed stories about the soldiers'
and sailors' colT!plaiQts. meals, med~
ical ·ane'nlion and similar subjcj.:ts. '

Gradually. opposition to women
reporters on the battlefield lessened,
but it·didn ' t disappear. No command
·i

wal)tcd to be the one where a woman

'.

Peoples Investments~
the !RA ·rollover. specia:lists.

,

crat,· Sonia Tomara, became a New

York Herald Trib~ne correspondent,
while a resolute .woman from New
Jersey, Margaret Bourke-While,
became famous for her wartime
photographs for Life magazine ,
More women. served in Europe
than in the Pacific, where fighting·
occurred on small islands and was

conducted from ships and airpllmes,
making it easier for the Navy to con trol the presence of women in those
areas . However, women eventually

managed to get beyond Hawaii to
Guam, Saipan , Iwo Jima and Oki-

' reporter was krlled . (In fact , none nawa.
was killed · during World War II. )
Among · them was Dickey
Women correspondents had to strug- -Chapcllc, a gutsy photographer who
gle with ordinances and restrictions became a favorite of the Marioe
that h~mpered their work, but they Corps. which she covered closely in
succeeded , often wilh resourceful- the . Pacific and years later in
ness and distinction.
Lebanon and the Dominican RepubSorel provides a brief earl y history of . women war rcp(Jrtcrs, begin -

li c. She is the only-American woman

war correspondent .killed In action;
ning with Margaret Fuller. appointed while covering the Vietnam War, she
by New York Tribune editor Horace" was killed by shrapnel fram an
Greeley to cover unrest in Italy in exploding land mine.

and sometimes a little
help. If you've been

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'

'

'

·

series.
II is a project funded by the Ohio
Department of ~ucation which is
designed to help adults who do not
have their high school diploma,
study for the OED test .
The program will air beginning
Saturday, Jan . 29 at 7:30 a.m. with
repeat broadcasts .on Monday at 3
p.m. and the following Saturday at 7
a.m. The programs can be taped . For
information on workbooks or to

enroll, just call the Ohio Literacy
Network at 1-800-228-READ. or
contact the local Athens-Meigs Edu cational Center in Pomeroy.
Wanna adopt a.horse ?
On Feb. 12 and 13 the Bureau of
Land Management will be. CQnducting ·a Wild Horse Adoption at lhF
Ohio State Fairgrounds, Cooper
. Arena.

The BLM is respon sible for managing the wild horlie and burro herds

REMODELING BEGINS AT CHURCH • The Llghthouae Assembly
of God Church, located on State Route 160, two miles north of
Holzer Medical Center, hal received the deed to the property where
the congregation has been worehlpplng for over 20 years, and will
now begin renovation of the fllcllltles. A·'building fund hae been
established which will permit Improvementa In the lntarlor and exterior of the building as well es the surrounding property. Worship
s~rvlc~ will continue uninterrupted while the construction pro,
ceeda. Servlcea being at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. on Sundays and at 7
p.m. on Wednesday.
,
·
'

·,

will be brought in on Friday. Feb.
11 , with viewing from I to 5 p.m .
er happened to Vi9la Moon of Mid- The hours for adoption will be from
dleport, she is now a patient at the 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. and if any remain on
.Pleasant Valley ·Nursing and Reha- Sunday from 8 a.m. until noon .
For more infonnation or an applibilitation Center, Sand Hill Road in
Point Pleasant, W. Va. She would cation residents may call J-800-293178 I . Applications have lobe in and
like to hear from her friends :
Mrs. Moon was one of those peo-.. approved by Feb. 4. There's a minipie who was always se11ding cardsto mum bioding fee of $125 per animal
encourage others. Now it's our· tum to help with the cost of roundup, vet
fees , and transportation and adminto send one to her. ·

Mr. and Mre. Robert Ward

L

'

"-"--:
.· ----..REDOVIAN-WARD. . POMEROY - Amy Elizabeth
R.'\dovian and Robert Ohlen Ward
were 111arried in a Nov. 27 ceremo- .
ny . at the First Presbyterian Church
. in Middleport.
: . _The \&gt;ride is the daughter of John
a~d Rosella Redovian of Pomeroy.
:rite groom is the son of Helen
Ward of Oak Hill and the late Jack
Ward.
·. . ·T he service was conducted by
Rev. Krisima Robinson. A brief sermon was given 'by Robert Crow of
Syracuse, anq the bride's greaty,lli:I.e Sam Warbel recited .scripture
~ the"Russian Orthodox· liturgy.
~Jluptjal music was perfcirrned by
~tilnist8~ Sharon Hawley of Midilport \on.d Eleanor McKelvey of
actisfr and soloist, Leigh Anne
ovia~ .The bride's go.dfalher,
~yid Bo.weri, .was in!mpet soloist

.~

...u,;,l .....

~

lho '

Birt

. l!!":~'"l"":..... ~· ... ·~r- ~~-

.•

at.~}.h.r ·,-.J.·;.~.,,.·~ -:&gt;_-q.: ""'f ~' •. ~,~ ~

~tGi.ven in 111arriage by her father,
'-•: bride \~ore II• fuU! Iengt~ ' gown
· 4(.Whtte ..$atm embelhshed wnh lace
~\fill pear!s on the bodice and on .t}te
. ~- ·l'h&lt;l hea&lt;lpiece ofher yeil-was
~ adorned ~ilh pearls. ~he car'!(11 a bouquet of ,whole Stlk roses
·~ lil~cs, accented with ivy,
· ~hanotis, and pearls.
~:'rhe brfde's sister, Leigh Anne
iodovian, was the maid of honor.
~i:hlesni.iids were Nicole Nelson,
Kellie Collins, and Stacey Duncan.
I

.

The flower girl ·was Kayla Ward,
niece of the groom. The auendanls
wore floor-length sleeveless gowns
Remember Scott Pullins, son of
of burgundy satin and carried bouSuzie Mash, who graduated from
quets of long-stemmed silk bur- Meigs, went on to college, and then
gundy roses trimmed with .dried got involved in state government.
statice and ribbons.
He is executive director of the
. Jedd Rawlings of Oak Hill Ohio Taxpayers Association which
served lis best man. Groomsmen has a goal of limiting Ohio taxes,
were Philip Kuhn, Benji Levis, ~nd
spending and regulations.
Greg Libby. Ushers were Pete
The organization isn't new just
Deuy, Mauhew McFann, and had a name change, and neither is
Devan Hale.
SCott as its executive dir~tOr..
. A reception was held after the ·
ceremony at the Ohio University
Inn in Athens. Leigh Anne and her
cousin, John Lisle of Syracuse,
sang while the wedding couple had
their .first pance.
The tables at the reception were
decorated with glass· pillar vases
PHOENIX (AP) .
R.J .
with ..cascading arrangements of Reynolds has agreed to stop maiti ng
white· statice with silk hydrangeas , cigarette samples to non-smokers
and lilacs. The flowers for ,the wed- nationwide.
ding cer.emony an(! the reception
Arizona Attorney General Janet
were designed by the bride's moth- Napolitano had demanded since
er and her godmother, Jeanne November that the Winston°Salem,
Bowen.
N.C.,-based toba&lt;;co manufacturer
The bride, a gra&lt;;luate of the Uni- slop the practice.
versity of Rio Grande, is a teacher
R.J. Reynolds has maintained it
in the Middletown City School Dis- did nothing wrong because the samtrict. The bridegroom. who also . ples were sent only to. people who
attended the University ol Rio signed up for assorted promotions
Grande. is the assistant branch and had ccrti fied that they were over
manager Of the Oak Hill Bank in age '21.
,
Franklin where the newlyweds are
But in a letter Thurs&lt;jay to
making their home.
. Napqlitano from Reynolds vice

Diamond Earrings ·

istrative expenses.

1/4 carat s99

Beller safe than sorry.
Did you know that every year
55,000 sledding accidents occur and
about 7,000 of those involve heM

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it:~juries?

c..,.....l......

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The American Academy of
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helmets for protection.

4 Prong Set Reg. '569

··"'' "·' "' '
......
...,..

Gornflt

Have a ~ice week.

gloves. ·
.
Before Carolyn was discharged
'
from the hospital,
ound his wife. He said there was a
special emphasis on hand-wash ing.
"You don't know how much
you don't wash your hands until
someone talks to you about these
~~~~:~·::~~ for treatment. When · things. Now if I'm out and come
Jl:
&amp;'Shower, she had .lo turn on in, the first thing I ·do is wash my
water -and leave the bathroom hands. People just aren't aware of
five minutes to get oul th" how many germs they carry
·
· which had been laying in the around on their hands."
Carolyn. has no complaints
and might be contaminated.
idifiers couldn't be used . about anything she has to do lo
she wanted to plant flowers, keep well. She's just e~tremely
had' to wear a mask and grateful for the new heart which

Continued from C1
,even.to.uch the peel on a banana
orange without gloves, that if
went to the grocery store and
in:• the produce department
the sprayers ac)ivated, she
to leave.
·
If a dog or cat scratched her,
had to go to the hospital

}a"M"'!f Birlh.to"e
R;,,_, Ea,.,.;np or
Pendtmt

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ltiO.OO

Tkrowgkowt /an. 31,

. . laorMolt.,, llooon

president and deputy gene,ral counsel Guy M. Blynn, the manufacture~
acknowledged that its mailing s~s­
tem for dealing with adult smokers
is "f)awed" because it allows unsolicited mail to be sent.

TwoLoaatJon••
Comer 2nd &amp; Grapo Galllpi&gt;ll•

e8
MANUFACTURER DI-RECT
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.

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keeps her alive .
She believes that God intended··
for her to live long enough and to
be healthy enough to take care ·or .
her dad, Robert Jones.
.Carolyn's mother, Pat, died a
year or so ago and her father, who
has Alzheimers Disease, is now in
a care facility. The Korns came
back to Meigs County to assist in
his care. They have since buill a
house on property which has been
in her £amily for years.
Carolyn and George are people
who count their b.lessings.
They will tell you thai every
day is a day 10 celebrate life.

Winter .A thletic Clearance

.,

Lane·
$100
Rebate
Hampton Hi-Leg
Recliner

SALE

$289

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.Sherman Recliner

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connection.

40°/o OFF
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make your IRA

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t1 Mill Sireat Middleport

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KipHng_
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Am.tl.ll't
F.~"'"'ll Birlk.ton•
R;ng•, E11rring• or
PenJtmt

To '" loll&lt;lof ll•or

*On Selected Styles
See Participating Dealer For Details

.. .

•I

RAyMOND JAMES

1/2 carat s399

or

4 Prong Set Reg. '159

R.J. Reynolds to stop sending cigarette
samples to non-smokers nationwide

'

0

on .western rrange land. The animal s

In case you've wondered whatev-

ihe nexi step:
Get on the path to

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to check into the the OED on TV

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now is the time to take

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CHURCH BEGINS REMODELING

·.Storewltte.aale on truly fine furniture- ·

thinkln$ abo~;~t i-eiirement

financial security.

P~~ge

Sundlly, JMUIIry 11, 2000

.~.

Krystal Chaffins and Heath Hutchinson

6unbap 1Jimfl -6tntintl•

Mon - Sat 9.,.7

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our newest designs to pamper you
Plush cushioning awalt8 you with
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QuaCity !furm

P us

!furniture, Carpet, .9lel'jiances
F!nanclngAvallable 42123 State 1(!. 7 • Tupperstains, O:Jl
9(j Day Lay-Away
667-7388 e 1--800-200-4005

Mon.-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9·6 ' Sat. 9~4

• lmlttar D11lgn
·,•·flnl
'Fumllure
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Mask-making workshop
planned at Rio Grande

·Couple to mark anniversary
..

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CROWN CITY - Fred aitd Hattie
·Phillips of Crown City. will ce lebrate· their 65 weddin g anniversary
on January 25 , 2000.

Mr. and Mrt. Hayward Sheets

~;Golden

anniversary planned

A MOJ)leflt W1.th Max··

·

MAX

They have 10 children, 19 grandchildren, 29 great grandchildren and
siX· great great grandchildren.

I recently was informed that ·a
dear business friend of mine is now
in a nursing home and not doing
well. I will always remember him
like he was when we used to have
lunch together every Monday at Bob
Evans' Restaurant and we would· flip
a coin to see who was going to pay
the bill that day.
I am very fortunate at age 86 that
I am able to write about my life and
friends. My wife and I have shared a
full iife and been blesse.d with four
wonderful children. '
I will. have my 86th birthday on
the 27th of January. I will celebrate
by having a birthday party at the
Methodist Church with a few of my
friends. I spoke with my world trav:
eling companion, Jack Hanna, he
told me that he and his wife Suzie
would try their best to make it to my
party. i sure hope that the Hannas
and all of my dear f•iends are able to
attend my celebratiot\.
·
I gotta go now, I will write you
later.

URG to present Irish dance
workshop l perfo.rmance

Meigs Community ·
Calendar

_.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing lo .
ann·ounce meetings and special
. events. Tbe calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
'raisers of any. type. Items are
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

The Administration Staff, Activity
epartment, Employees and Residents o
Overbrook Nursing Center would. like to
extend our sincere thanks and gratitude to
·the many, many. School. Groups, the Civic
.
and Church Organi:zatio.ns, ·the · Girl
SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Dave Scouts and Brownie Troops and all the
Dailey to speak at the North
ndividuals who· gave their time,. love and
Bethel
. Church, 4 p.m. Sunday.
.
support to the residents of Overbrook
MONDAY
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday. Appro- during the Chnstmas. Season. Your visits,
priations meeting to be followed
rograms and gifts really helped brighten
by regular business meetina.
. the season for all of us. Knowing how
TU~~g;lEPORT • Brooks- busy this time of the year is for everyone,
Grant Camp, Sons of Union Vet- it meant SO Very. mUCh tO US th_
at each 0 .
erans of the Civil War, 7:15 p.m.
:ruesday, anne• Hope Baptist
OU took the time tO ~h. OW hOW much YOU
Church, Middleport. Women's
Civil War gropp to be formed. care. Once more, a most heartfelt "Thank
Ohio Depariment senior vice·
commander to speak and instan You!'~ to each and eve
.. ryone ofyou.
. new officers,
Died on same date
Mike Crites,Activity 11Jirector
John Adams, America's second
Overbrook Nursing Center '
president, and Thomas Jeffenon, the
.
third president, both. died on July 4,
Middleport,
.Ohio.
1826- the 50th anniversary of the .__ _ _ _ _ _ _.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.._.;..._ __,

I

Wliile it's still blooming,
'Tfie powerful nosta~ic winds, .
Witli tfie sweet scent OJ a river Lily,
'Endlessly surround me.
.
'Tfie 'Berlin Wallfalls to tfie ground,·
· 'Tiiere 1.stilnd naked, · .
Without my Jeatfiers _C»" pride, ·
andi surrender to a devoted lieart's
Indefatigablefeat. : ·. ,,
,
'
!Afrer tfie snake dance,
'·'
. . and the torrential rains'
· .. '' Crfie.bean seeds genninate
In tfie torrid soil;
.
'Tfie sacredjlame burns.consiant~
·In the sa'nctity of lovesome souls ..

.

I

"Sweet (Jeulah f.anct" ... "He Came To Jl1e"
"Oh What fl Moment" ... "The (jroken t&lt;ose"

more .. .in a free concert by
.

Saturday Evening, anuary 22nd at
Faith Baptist Church
3615 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
The Church is located on Old US Rt. 35
Halfway between Holzer Medical Center and
Bob Evans Farni
For Further Information Call: 470-446-2607
A Freewill
Will Be Taken

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RESOLUTION

N·
•

Get fat.

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Start the: Nc:-;v Year off-by indulging yoursdf
Join 'by Februel)' 1 .
and you 'II start
receiving our
handy Food Fincler"'
wheels

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FREE!

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a Firstar chedclng account, plus an interest

in I checking account . that

yield that can heavy ~p your

c:an feally add some -bulk to

.bottom

your piggy bank. With VIP

nearest Firstar branch 'and see

. Checking you get all the

how you can fatten up your

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Visit

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financea!

great benefits that come with

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GAwi'OUS

.I

Str.r.M Epldpll Church •'541 Soceod..._

Compliments Of

Jerntifer Carr:

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Corrie Hear All Your Favorites

'!•:

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When in doubt, have a laboratory
analyze the old mortar.
There are several 'buildings in
Gallipolis that demonstrate the
result of rejl9intin~ with hard
mortar or sand blasting. Typically, these buildings or chimneys
will show significant loss of
bricks or brick surfaces.
While thi s discussion leaves
much unstated, for 'the reader who
is planning future care of a
masonry building, · Preservation
Briefs are available from 'the U.
S. Government Printing Office.
· Please request Number 2:
Repoint.ing Mortar Joint s in Historic Brick Buildings or Number
6: Dangers of Abrasive Cleaning
of Histori c buildings.

weather stresses · to the bri cks.

....J

Stars scintillate,
In tfie meaningless dark screen
0{ sunburnt skies, · '
Whe11 cordelia strikes
'Tiie arena of my memories.
. 'Tiie memories incessantly
'Blow me into a million micron bits,
'ButJiirosfiima very soon reanimates;
'Tfie glory of eosin pi~k bloo~s
In all my organs oj mzcron srze.

.

be very sure that the mortar is not
harder than the old soft brick. Old
mortar had a high sand content.
Modern mortar contains portland cemen t, which is very hard .
With expansion and contraction
due to heat and cold , the soft
bricks gradually crumble while
the hard mortar in the joints
remains.
.
If portland ceme nt is used in
preparing-mortar to make it more
workable, it sho uld not be greater
than 20%.
·
·
A mixture of eight parts sand,
four parts lime and one part portland ce!Jlent. usually produce-s a
soft mortar that will · take 'the
struct ural stresses of the build.ing
without transferring the normal

'-

Cordelia

' 'I

ers on the market but these should before cleaning, especially if
be tested on a small area·. If used, there is significant joint failure.
all residue qeed&amp; to be rinsed
The major red flag here is to
away.
A lime wash, absorbent talc
or clay poultice with a solvent
By Jan Thaler
more common .
may be used to draw out salts or
Many significant historic
Paint or stucco was frequently stains from selected areas . It is
buildings in Gall,ipolis are con- applied to blend additions, hide almost impossible to remove
. structed of brick, which frequent- poor construction or solve a paint ' from masonry ~urfaces
. . Iy came to our City used as bal- moisture problem . Removing this without causing damage .
.
last in ships. This reuse was eco- protective coating would cause
The amount of pressure ·
. . nomic a! and 'provided a long-last- recurrence of the pre-existing applied with a water wash is quite
ing building material. Bricks problem.
variable and may depend on
were also manufactured locally
Thus it is important \O , cleter- . where the operator is standing.
. _:and some were ,made on site dur- mine the purpose of the cleaning
Pressure 'is meas1,1red in
• -'~g construction.
before you begin. Sometimes pounds per square inch (psi). Low
. Goop examples are the Presby- cleaning is considered in rehabil- pressure might be 20 to 100 psi;
. tcrian Church. 1828, the Episco- itation project.~ to give the build- high pressure is usually anything
·pal Church, I 859, the Our Hou se ing a new look .
over 5090 psi .
Many historic buildings.llave
Museum , I 819, Polly WetherHigh pres~ure might be used
· holt's home on First Avenue,. only a moderate amou nt of soil on · modern industrial materials,
1824, and there are many other adhering to the brick surface . but never on historic brick.
fine examp le s of brick construe- This tends to give character to the
The safest method is to hire a
"tion .
structure. Vigorous cleaning may co mpetent operator who under'.
Stone was less commonly change ·the character, but it will stands historic materials. He/she
. used , probably because much of also 'increase deterioration .
wi II need to test small areas to
the loc al limestone is rather so ft.
Historic brick might be com- determine the correct amount of
In· thi s area, acid rain accelerates pared to a loaf of bread, with a . pressure to prevent .damage.
· the deteriora1ion of limestone.
cru st on the outside and a soft
Following clealling, many con.' Howe ver, probably one of the center on the' inside. When bricks tractors recommend ''sealing" the
· most familiar stone buildings is are made. the outsi de of the brick resulting porous surface . If water
.. the Lupton Block, 1894 , with its is exposed to greater temperature has been used. there should be
distin c ti ~e facade appearing to in the ove ns than the inside.
several weeks of dry weather to
This firing provides the pro- prevent· sealing moisture ·inside.
serve as the ce nter piece of the
The above photo shows a
. block facing City Park.
tective outer hard crust. When . The other side of this issue is that · chimney on one of the older
:::: · · The original buildings, circa this crust is deStroyed by abrasive most sealers wear. off and usually homes In Gallipolis. It Is evident
.•• 1895, at the Gallipolis Develop- Cleaning, water penetrates the are ·good for about one year.
that the choaen mortar was too
~!'ntal Center (formerly Ohio bricks and air pollutants can more
A final caution concerns hard for the eoft brick and with
~-; epileptic Hospital) were lime- readily attack the bricks.
repainting historic brick. Gener- weather temperatura changes;
; stone as are the stone water towSandblasting also tends to ally, to keep moisture our of ·the the brick Is gradually dlalnte' ers. The stone for some of these blast out the mortar between the brick, repainting should be done . gratln~.
: CP,t)le from the hills bordering the joints providing another entry
: golf course.
point for water and neces•itating
; The old Gallipolis waterworks repainting. Therefore, the good
• on Eastern Avenue is another intentions to "restore" the build• epmple. All of these were built ing ultimately lead to its demise
• about the same .time just before by· increasing deterioration of the
~ the iurn of the century.
brick.
Probably one of the most comAbrasive cleaning may also
.. irJt=:riJ::.tsea VIces ..
mon errors, in care of masonry destroy architectural detail,
' buildings, is inappropriate clean- which is visually significant to
.. ing methods. This is especially the appearance of the b,uilding. ·
i. tlue of old brick. Many owners This can include terra-cotta or
c were "sold a bill of goods" by carved wood designs on trim
Feel Conf1d111~ with Eurelr.1N
ner 81ck Gu1r~n1•1
contractors, ·who were not know!- boards.
: _edgeable about preservation.
The · amount of damage' to
'•:
The owners were told that bricks and stone, with pressure
lj simd blasting or high pressure . cleaning, is variable and some~· w'ater would clean up their build- times unpredictable. Cleaning
;; -in·g and make it look like new. methods should be tested on a
'i~ Sllnd, because it readily avail- small, less visible area before
' ·able, is most · frequently used,. committing to a plan.
.: although oth~r products s~ch as
Variables incl~de the type and
~a!
Yau'v• fouf\d OJL
·I :~~lass beads, shells; volcamc ash condition of buildin·g materials,
www.eurekanet.com
;" or ground slag may be used. the pressure being . applied, the
't''liQmetimes·
~
.wa~er is used in com· skill of the operator, the size J~nd
"Ina'I I'&lt;in '.wttn. "'' gt.t~;
• • •',-. •' · .,... '- '-' 'sharpness of the grit ·and the type
While it removes dirt , stains or of mechanical equipment.
;:'P)Iirit, abrasive cleaning methods
The standard golden rule for
abrade the surface of the bnck, cleaning masonry is: " Select the
causing spalling, sometimes to gentlest means possible." A low
.•tJ!e extent that the entire .brick · pressure water wash, with addi- ~(adually disappears.
· .
tiomtl scrubbing with a natural
:::· Abrasive cleaning method s are · bristle brush , where stains· are the
.often chosen to remove coatmgs mo st persistent, is 'often the best
~such as paint or stucco, which method.
·liave failed. Many 19th century
Steam cleaning can also 'be
:)!uildings were painted immedi- used effectively to bring dirt to
, .• I
:jttely afte~ construction to help the. surface without damaging the
:protect po?r qualit~ bricks. A · surface. .
·
;&lt;-'t!lllmon misconceptt?n was that
T~ere are also ch¢mical clean-

i

News polk}y

6:14·992·6412

early brick buildings were not
painted initially.
After 1870, the quality of brick
improved making it less necessary to paint for protection and
unpainted brick buildings became

EtJrekaNet

offered ai no cost and is limited
to I 0 teachers and 20 students.
The dance performance by
"Common Ground," an Irish
dance troupe, will be held on
Sundax, Feb. 13 at the John Berry
Community College.
The two events, a step dancing Fine an·d Performing Arts Center
workshop and a performance of at 2:30p.m.
an Irish dance troupe, will both
The Ohio Arts Council helped
-be held in February. The work- , fund this program or organization
shop is open ·to ·teachers from with state dollars to encourage
grades 4-12 and each teacher may economic growth, educational
be accompanied by up to two .stu- excellence and cultural enrichdents.
ment for all Ohioans.
·
The step-dancing work~hop
Fo( more information on , the
will be held from 9 a.m. until workshop or the. performance.
' noon .on Saturday, Feb. 5.
call the Berry Fine and PerformThe class will feature interna- ing Arts Center at 245-7364 or 1tionally known dancer and chore- 800-282-720 I.
ographer Melissa Obenauf, who
is part of the Yugoslavian profes. sional dance troupe, "Zivili."
Advan.ce regi stration is required
for the workshop, which is being
RIO GRANDE - Area teachers and students intere sted in
dancing won't want to miss two
Upcoming events at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande

TAWJ'IEY
I hav~ been
very fortunate
that I have had
the .opportunity .
to write articles ·
!hal lire publisbed in the
Gallipolis Tribune. Many people ask me why I
write these articles.
I do it because I love to bring
back pleaslml memories of my 86
years of life. I enjoy being able to
share the experiences that my
friends, children, grandchildren and
"_,':~t,
great-grandchildren may enjoy my
In an effort to provide our reader·
experiences for years to come as I
ship with current news, the .Sunday.
have enjoyed them.
.
Times-Sentinel will not accept wedI love to write. Many nights, if I
dings after 60 days from the date of
can't sleep, I will get up and write
the event.
.
.
· until 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning.
Weddii)gs submitted after the 60I'm glad I never did require much
day deadline will appear during the
sleep, just 5 or 6 hours a niaht. lt.is
week in The Daily Sentinel . and the
now II :30 and I got up and began
Gallipolis Daily Tribun~ .
writing.
Max Tawney is a· Gallipolis
All club meetings and other news
I was just thinking that very few
businessman and longtime con- articles in ihe society section must
of my 70 classmates of the class of .
tributer to the Sunday Times Sen- be . submitted within 60 days of
1933 are still living. Only one of my
occurrence. All birthd'ays must be
tinel.
classmates from grade school, Harry
•
submitted within 60 days of the·
· Coulson, is living. He is 86 years
occurrence.
old, lives in Columbus and writes
me often. He is a dear friend and we · .----~-------------------.,
had many happy days together.

lllunbap 1!:imrf -lllrntintl • Page C5

PRESERVATION NEWS AND· VIEWS

'

Care of Bricks,
·.stone and Mortar

•

GALLlPOLIS - Hayward and Edwin and Bessie (Shelton) Gates.
..
They are both retired from the
: :Jean (Gates) Sheets of O~llipolis,
·.:will be celebrating their 50th wed- Gallipolis Developmental Center.
They are the parents of two
; .: ding anniversary on January 23,
daughters, Mrs . ·Kathy (Michael)
&gt; 2000
: ·• Hayward is the son of the late Nibert of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. and
·:.Dent and Nettie (Saunders) Sheets. Mrs. Susie (J. R.) Bays of Southside,
: Jean is the daughter of the late W.Va.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____._ ·

By

•

RIO GRANDE- Area students and teachers will have an opportu-'
nily io learn from internationally-known puppet maker Ralph Lee during an upcoming workshop at the University of Rio Grande/Rio
frande Community College.
•
The mask-makinc workshop will be held from 1-5 p.m. Saturday,
Jan . :h and Sunday, Jan. 23 at the Rio Grande Art Annex.
It is open to all area elementary school teachers and each teacher
may be accompanied by one student. Tbe class, whic.h is being offer,e d
at no cost. is limited to IS elementary schoolteachers and 15 •stude'nts
from the region.
...
Lee has acted on Broadway and in different theaters around the .
country. He has also created puppets and masks for theat.er productions in New '(ork City and around the world.
. '
An exhibit of his puppets, masks and other creations has also been
showcased at the Lincoln. Center For Performing Arts in New York.
City. The e•hibit, which was the feature of a New York_ Times artie!•·
will be on the Rio Grande campus throughout February at the Greer
Museum.
·
.
·
Students in Lee's weekend workshop at Rio Grande wi,ll learn libw
to make large · .masks similar .to the iype of masks that Lee makes.
Al!vance· registration for the f~n and informat.ive class is ,required: ·
Rio (irande students will then present some of their own masks a~d
costumes· during . the university's own adaptation of the Wel sh play
"Taliesin" March I, 2 and 3 in the John Berry Fine and Perfor~ing
Arts Center.
,
. · .
1
•
.
The Ohio Arts Council help ed lun~ thi s program or org~nization
with state dollars tq encourage economic growth , educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans .
·
For more information on the workshop, e•hibit or play, call the
Berry Fine and Performing· Arts Center 'at 245-7364, or 1-800-2827201.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Phillips

'
.
Pomeroy • Middleport • GaUipolle, Ohio • Point PIH..nt, WV

:- Sunday, January 18,2000

Sunday, January 18, ~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea..nt, WV

Tuoodlr 6:00,Pm •Wednacllr9:l0.am
'jACKSON '
Comfcrt Inn·•,60S East Main

'. .

'

Mondor 6:30 P"l

!Admirer

.

.

'

.

'AnnUli "'-0111illge ~ (APVJ volld asolt/1/00. Fees can reducoyoor oamtnos. Rates are IIAIIoctto chlnge. Fot porsonaiiiCCOllllll only. ReQu~r
IC&lt;:Ollnt opening llftx:llltiiiiiiiPIY.
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Declaration of Independence.

MEMBER FDIC

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Mask-making workshop
planned at Rio Grande

·Couple to mark anniversary
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CROWN CITY - Fred aitd Hattie
·Phillips of Crown City. will ce lebrate· their 65 weddin g anniversary
on January 25 , 2000.

Mr. and Mrt. Hayward Sheets

~;Golden

anniversary planned

A MOJ)leflt W1.th Max··

·

MAX

They have 10 children, 19 grandchildren, 29 great grandchildren and
siX· great great grandchildren.

I recently was informed that ·a
dear business friend of mine is now
in a nursing home and not doing
well. I will always remember him
like he was when we used to have
lunch together every Monday at Bob
Evans' Restaurant and we would· flip
a coin to see who was going to pay
the bill that day.
I am very fortunate at age 86 that
I am able to write about my life and
friends. My wife and I have shared a
full iife and been blesse.d with four
wonderful children. '
I will. have my 86th birthday on
the 27th of January. I will celebrate
by having a birthday party at the
Methodist Church with a few of my
friends. I spoke with my world trav:
eling companion, Jack Hanna, he
told me that he and his wife Suzie
would try their best to make it to my
party. i sure hope that the Hannas
and all of my dear f•iends are able to
attend my celebratiot\.
·
I gotta go now, I will write you
later.

URG to present Irish dance
workshop l perfo.rmance

Meigs Community ·
Calendar

_.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing lo .
ann·ounce meetings and special
. events. Tbe calendar is not
designed to promote sales or fund
'raisers of any. type. Items are
printed only as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a specific number of days.

The Administration Staff, Activity
epartment, Employees and Residents o
Overbrook Nursing Center would. like to
extend our sincere thanks and gratitude to
·the many, many. School. Groups, the Civic
.
and Church Organi:zatio.ns, ·the · Girl
SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Dave Scouts and Brownie Troops and all the
Dailey to speak at the North
ndividuals who· gave their time,. love and
Bethel
. Church, 4 p.m. Sunday.
.
support to the residents of Overbrook
MONDAY
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. Monday. Appro- during the Chnstmas. Season. Your visits,
priations meeting to be followed
rograms and gifts really helped brighten
by regular business meetina.
. the season for all of us. Knowing how
TU~~g;lEPORT • Brooks- busy this time of the year is for everyone,
Grant Camp, Sons of Union Vet- it meant SO Very. mUCh tO US th_
at each 0 .
erans of the Civil War, 7:15 p.m.
:ruesday, anne• Hope Baptist
OU took the time tO ~h. OW hOW much YOU
Church, Middleport. Women's
Civil War gropp to be formed. care. Once more, a most heartfelt "Thank
Ohio Depariment senior vice·
commander to speak and instan You!'~ to each and eve
.. ryone ofyou.
. new officers,
Died on same date
Mike Crites,Activity 11Jirector
John Adams, America's second
Overbrook Nursing Center '
president, and Thomas Jeffenon, the
.
third president, both. died on July 4,
Middleport,
.Ohio.
1826- the 50th anniversary of the .__ _ _ _ _ _ _.;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.._.;..._ __,

I

Wliile it's still blooming,
'Tfie powerful nosta~ic winds, .
Witli tfie sweet scent OJ a river Lily,
'Endlessly surround me.
.
'Tfie 'Berlin Wallfalls to tfie ground,·
· 'Tiiere 1.stilnd naked, · .
Without my Jeatfiers _C»" pride, ·
andi surrender to a devoted lieart's
Indefatigablefeat. : ·. ,,
,
'
!Afrer tfie snake dance,
'·'
. . and the torrential rains'
· .. '' Crfie.bean seeds genninate
In tfie torrid soil;
.
'Tfie sacredjlame burns.consiant~
·In the sa'nctity of lovesome souls ..

.

I

"Sweet (Jeulah f.anct" ... "He Came To Jl1e"
"Oh What fl Moment" ... "The (jroken t&lt;ose"

more .. .in a free concert by
.

Saturday Evening, anuary 22nd at
Faith Baptist Church
3615 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio
The Church is located on Old US Rt. 35
Halfway between Holzer Medical Center and
Bob Evans Farni
For Further Information Call: 470-446-2607
A Freewill
Will Be Taken

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RESOLUTION

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Get fat.

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Start the: Nc:-;v Year off-by indulging yoursdf
Join 'by Februel)' 1 .
and you 'II start
receiving our
handy Food Fincler"'
wheels

.'

FREE!

•
•

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a Firstar chedclng account, plus an interest

in I checking account . that

yield that can heavy ~p your

c:an feally add some -bulk to

.bottom

your piggy bank. With VIP

nearest Firstar branch 'and see

. Checking you get all the

how you can fatten up your

'

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lil).e.

Visit

your

financea!

great benefits that come with

,•.

.•

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t&amp;iJlalesfi tpatel

GAwi'OUS

.I

Str.r.M Epldpll Church •'541 Soceod..._

Compliments Of

Jerntifer Carr:

(

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Corrie Hear All Your Favorites

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When in doubt, have a laboratory
analyze the old mortar.
There are several 'buildings in
Gallipolis that demonstrate the
result of rejl9intin~ with hard
mortar or sand blasting. Typically, these buildings or chimneys
will show significant loss of
bricks or brick surfaces.
While thi s discussion leaves
much unstated, for 'the reader who
is planning future care of a
masonry building, · Preservation
Briefs are available from 'the U.
S. Government Printing Office.
· Please request Number 2:
Repoint.ing Mortar Joint s in Historic Brick Buildings or Number
6: Dangers of Abrasive Cleaning
of Histori c buildings.

weather stresses · to the bri cks.

....J

Stars scintillate,
In tfie meaningless dark screen
0{ sunburnt skies, · '
Whe11 cordelia strikes
'Tiie arena of my memories.
. 'Tiie memories incessantly
'Blow me into a million micron bits,
'ButJiirosfiima very soon reanimates;
'Tfie glory of eosin pi~k bloo~s
In all my organs oj mzcron srze.

.

be very sure that the mortar is not
harder than the old soft brick. Old
mortar had a high sand content.
Modern mortar contains portland cemen t, which is very hard .
With expansion and contraction
due to heat and cold , the soft
bricks gradually crumble while
the hard mortar in the joints
remains.
.
If portland ceme nt is used in
preparing-mortar to make it more
workable, it sho uld not be greater
than 20%.
·
·
A mixture of eight parts sand,
four parts lime and one part portland ce!Jlent. usually produce-s a
soft mortar that will · take 'the
struct ural stresses of the build.ing
without transferring the normal

'-

Cordelia

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ers on the market but these should before cleaning, especially if
be tested on a small area·. If used, there is significant joint failure.
all residue qeed&amp; to be rinsed
The major red flag here is to
away.
A lime wash, absorbent talc
or clay poultice with a solvent
By Jan Thaler
more common .
may be used to draw out salts or
Many significant historic
Paint or stucco was frequently stains from selected areas . It is
buildings in Gall,ipolis are con- applied to blend additions, hide almost impossible to remove
. structed of brick, which frequent- poor construction or solve a paint ' from masonry ~urfaces
. . Iy came to our City used as bal- moisture problem . Removing this without causing damage .
.
last in ships. This reuse was eco- protective coating would cause
The amount of pressure ·
. . nomic a! and 'provided a long-last- recurrence of the pre-existing applied with a water wash is quite
ing building material. Bricks problem.
variable and may depend on
were also manufactured locally
Thus it is important \O , cleter- . where the operator is standing.
. _:and some were ,made on site dur- mine the purpose of the cleaning
Pressure 'is meas1,1red in
• -'~g construction.
before you begin. Sometimes pounds per square inch (psi). Low
. Goop examples are the Presby- cleaning is considered in rehabil- pressure might be 20 to 100 psi;
. tcrian Church. 1828, the Episco- itation project.~ to give the build- high pressure is usually anything
·pal Church, I 859, the Our Hou se ing a new look .
over 5090 psi .
Many historic buildings.llave
Museum , I 819, Polly WetherHigh pres~ure might be used
· holt's home on First Avenue,. only a moderate amou nt of soil on · modern industrial materials,
1824, and there are many other adhering to the brick surface . but never on historic brick.
fine examp le s of brick construe- This tends to give character to the
The safest method is to hire a
"tion .
structure. Vigorous cleaning may co mpetent operator who under'.
Stone was less commonly change ·the character, but it will stands historic materials. He/she
. used , probably because much of also 'increase deterioration .
wi II need to test small areas to
the loc al limestone is rather so ft.
Historic brick might be com- determine the correct amount of
In· thi s area, acid rain accelerates pared to a loaf of bread, with a . pressure to prevent .damage.
· the deteriora1ion of limestone.
cru st on the outside and a soft
Following clealling, many con.' Howe ver, probably one of the center on the' inside. When bricks tractors recommend ''sealing" the
· most familiar stone buildings is are made. the outsi de of the brick resulting porous surface . If water
.. the Lupton Block, 1894 , with its is exposed to greater temperature has been used. there should be
distin c ti ~e facade appearing to in the ove ns than the inside.
several weeks of dry weather to
This firing provides the pro- prevent· sealing moisture ·inside.
serve as the ce nter piece of the
The above photo shows a
. block facing City Park.
tective outer hard crust. When . The other side of this issue is that · chimney on one of the older
:::: · · The original buildings, circa this crust is deStroyed by abrasive most sealers wear. off and usually homes In Gallipolis. It Is evident
.•• 1895, at the Gallipolis Develop- Cleaning, water penetrates the are ·good for about one year.
that the choaen mortar was too
~!'ntal Center (formerly Ohio bricks and air pollutants can more
A final caution concerns hard for the eoft brick and with
~-; epileptic Hospital) were lime- readily attack the bricks.
repainting historic brick. Gener- weather temperatura changes;
; stone as are the stone water towSandblasting also tends to ally, to keep moisture our of ·the the brick Is gradually dlalnte' ers. The stone for some of these blast out the mortar between the brick, repainting should be done . gratln~.
: CP,t)le from the hills bordering the joints providing another entry
: golf course.
point for water and neces•itating
; The old Gallipolis waterworks repainting. Therefore, the good
• on Eastern Avenue is another intentions to "restore" the build• epmple. All of these were built ing ultimately lead to its demise
• about the same .time just before by· increasing deterioration of the
~ the iurn of the century.
brick.
Probably one of the most comAbrasive cleaning may also
.. irJt=:riJ::.tsea VIces ..
mon errors, in care of masonry destroy architectural detail,
' buildings, is inappropriate clean- which is visually significant to
.. ing methods. This is especially the appearance of the b,uilding. ·
i. tlue of old brick. Many owners This can include terra-cotta or
c were "sold a bill of goods" by carved wood designs on trim
Feel Conf1d111~ with Eurelr.1N
ner 81ck Gu1r~n1•1
contractors, ·who were not know!- boards.
: _edgeable about preservation.
The · amount of damage' to
'•:
The owners were told that bricks and stone, with pressure
lj simd blasting or high pressure . cleaning, is variable and some~· w'ater would clean up their build- times unpredictable. Cleaning
;; -in·g and make it look like new. methods should be tested on a
'i~ Sllnd, because it readily avail- small, less visible area before
' ·able, is most · frequently used,. committing to a plan.
.: although oth~r products s~ch as
Variables incl~de the type and
~a!
Yau'v• fouf\d OJL
·I :~~lass beads, shells; volcamc ash condition of buildin·g materials,
www.eurekanet.com
;" or ground slag may be used. the pressure being . applied, the
't''liQmetimes·
~
.wa~er is used in com· skill of the operator, the size J~nd
"Ina'I I'&lt;in '.wttn. "'' gt.t~;
• • •',-. •' · .,... '- '-' 'sharpness of the grit ·and the type
While it removes dirt , stains or of mechanical equipment.
;:'P)Iirit, abrasive cleaning methods
The standard golden rule for
abrade the surface of the bnck, cleaning masonry is: " Select the
causing spalling, sometimes to gentlest means possible." A low
.•tJ!e extent that the entire .brick · pressure water wash, with addi- ~(adually disappears.
· .
tiomtl scrubbing with a natural
:::· Abrasive cleaning method s are · bristle brush , where stains· are the
.often chosen to remove coatmgs mo st persistent, is 'often the best
~such as paint or stucco, which method.
·liave failed. Many 19th century
Steam cleaning can also 'be
:)!uildings were painted immedi- used effectively to bring dirt to
, .• I
:jttely afte~ construction to help the. surface without damaging the
:protect po?r qualit~ bricks. A · surface. .
·
;&lt;-'t!lllmon misconceptt?n was that
T~ere are also ch¢mical clean-

i

News polk}y

6:14·992·6412

early brick buildings were not
painted initially.
After 1870, the quality of brick
improved making it less necessary to paint for protection and
unpainted brick buildings became

EtJrekaNet

offered ai no cost and is limited
to I 0 teachers and 20 students.
The dance performance by
"Common Ground," an Irish
dance troupe, will be held on
Sundax, Feb. 13 at the John Berry
Community College.
The two events, a step dancing Fine an·d Performing Arts Center
workshop and a performance of at 2:30p.m.
an Irish dance troupe, will both
The Ohio Arts Council helped
-be held in February. The work- , fund this program or organization
shop is open ·to ·teachers from with state dollars to encourage
grades 4-12 and each teacher may economic growth, educational
be accompanied by up to two .stu- excellence and cultural enrichdents.
ment for all Ohioans.
·
The step-dancing work~hop
Fo( more information on , the
will be held from 9 a.m. until workshop or the. performance.
' noon .on Saturday, Feb. 5.
call the Berry Fine and PerformThe class will feature interna- ing Arts Center at 245-7364 or 1tionally known dancer and chore- 800-282-720 I.
ographer Melissa Obenauf, who
is part of the Yugoslavian profes. sional dance troupe, "Zivili."
Advan.ce regi stration is required
for the workshop, which is being
RIO GRANDE - Area teachers and students intere sted in
dancing won't want to miss two
Upcoming events at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande

TAWJ'IEY
I hav~ been
very fortunate
that I have had
the .opportunity .
to write articles ·
!hal lire publisbed in the
Gallipolis Tribune. Many people ask me why I
write these articles.
I do it because I love to bring
back pleaslml memories of my 86
years of life. I enjoy being able to
share the experiences that my
friends, children, grandchildren and
"_,':~t,
great-grandchildren may enjoy my
In an effort to provide our reader·
experiences for years to come as I
ship with current news, the .Sunday.
have enjoyed them.
.
Times-Sentinel will not accept wedI love to write. Many nights, if I
dings after 60 days from the date of
can't sleep, I will get up and write
the event.
.
.
· until 2 or 3 o'clock in the morning.
Weddii)gs submitted after the 60I'm glad I never did require much
day deadline will appear during the
sleep, just 5 or 6 hours a niaht. lt.is
week in The Daily Sentinel . and the
now II :30 and I got up and began
Gallipolis Daily Tribun~ .
writing.
Max Tawney is a· Gallipolis
All club meetings and other news
I was just thinking that very few
businessman and longtime con- articles in ihe society section must
of my 70 classmates of the class of .
tributer to the Sunday Times Sen- be . submitted within 60 days of
1933 are still living. Only one of my
occurrence. All birthd'ays must be
tinel.
classmates from grade school, Harry
•
submitted within 60 days of the·
· Coulson, is living. He is 86 years
occurrence.
old, lives in Columbus and writes
me often. He is a dear friend and we · .----~-------------------.,
had many happy days together.

lllunbap 1!:imrf -lllrntintl • Page C5

PRESERVATION NEWS AND· VIEWS

'

Care of Bricks,
·.stone and Mortar

•

GALLlPOLIS - Hayward and Edwin and Bessie (Shelton) Gates.
..
They are both retired from the
: :Jean (Gates) Sheets of O~llipolis,
·.:will be celebrating their 50th wed- Gallipolis Developmental Center.
They are the parents of two
; .: ding anniversary on January 23,
daughters, Mrs . ·Kathy (Michael)
&gt; 2000
: ·• Hayward is the son of the late Nibert of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. and
·:.Dent and Nettie (Saunders) Sheets. Mrs. Susie (J. R.) Bays of Southside,
: Jean is the daughter of the late W.Va.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____._ ·

By

•

RIO GRANDE- Area students and teachers will have an opportu-'
nily io learn from internationally-known puppet maker Ralph Lee during an upcoming workshop at the University of Rio Grande/Rio
frande Community College.
•
The mask-makinc workshop will be held from 1-5 p.m. Saturday,
Jan . :h and Sunday, Jan. 23 at the Rio Grande Art Annex.
It is open to all area elementary school teachers and each teacher
may be accompanied by one student. Tbe class, whic.h is being offer,e d
at no cost. is limited to IS elementary schoolteachers and 15 •stude'nts
from the region.
...
Lee has acted on Broadway and in different theaters around the .
country. He has also created puppets and masks for theat.er productions in New '(ork City and around the world.
. '
An exhibit of his puppets, masks and other creations has also been
showcased at the Lincoln. Center For Performing Arts in New York.
City. The e•hibit, which was the feature of a New York_ Times artie!•·
will be on the Rio Grande campus throughout February at the Greer
Museum.
·
.
·
Students in Lee's weekend workshop at Rio Grande wi,ll learn libw
to make large · .masks similar .to the iype of masks that Lee makes.
Al!vance· registration for the f~n and informat.ive class is ,required: ·
Rio (irande students will then present some of their own masks a~d
costumes· during . the university's own adaptation of the Wel sh play
"Taliesin" March I, 2 and 3 in the John Berry Fine and Perfor~ing
Arts Center.
,
. · .
1
•
.
The Ohio Arts Council help ed lun~ thi s program or org~nization
with state dollars tq encourage economic growth , educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans .
·
For more information on the workshop, e•hibit or play, call the
Berry Fine and Performing· Arts Center 'at 245-7364, or 1-800-2827201.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Phillips

'
.
Pomeroy • Middleport • GaUipolle, Ohio • Point PIH..nt, WV

:- Sunday, January 18,2000

Sunday, January 18, ~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea..nt, WV

Tuoodlr 6:00,Pm •Wednacllr9:l0.am
'jACKSON '
Comfcrt Inn·•,60S East Main

'. .

'

Mondor 6:30 P"l

!Admirer

.

.

'

.

'AnnUli "'-0111illge ~ (APVJ volld asolt/1/00. Fees can reducoyoor oamtnos. Rates are IIAIIoctto chlnge. Fot porsonaiiiCCOllllll only. ReQu~r
IC&lt;:Ollnt opening llftx:llltiiiiiiiPIY.
'

Declaration of Independence.

MEMBER FDIC

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Sundly, JII"'*Y 18, 2000

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point P11111nt, WV

Page C6 • iounhp Q:imtf·iotntintl

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God and basketball the draw for winning athlete&amp;
•

IIY LISA SINGHANIA
arc eKpected to be religious role
models for all students at the school.
Associated Press Writer
For the basketball team, that
GRAND RAPIDS. Mich. (AP)
- When the final whistle blew and means sitting tfp front at mandatory
:cornerstone· College had its first chapel, and no drinking, drugs,
:.Oational basketball championship, swearing or any of the other bad-boy
fohn Lanser and his teammates got behavior tolerated at some schools.
· "When we go 'to hotels, I get a.lot
4own on their knees to pray.
• "We just fell like we needed to of compliments about their behavsive thanks Tight away," Lanser ior," coach Kim Elders says. " I
riocalls. " I think this is just a talent don ' t worry about my kids partying
-~e· ve been given by God."·
. or getting into that kind of trouble.
Afterward, the players celebrated Our kids care about each other. ...
their NAIA Division II title last · We' re brothers in Christ together." .
Elders' team also meets each
spring with a cookout and a jump in
the hotel pool - with their clothes week on its own for Bible study, and
went to the Philippines last year to
tin, or course.
; That's because at Cornerstone shoot hoops and share its C\lristian
faith. '
~udents are committed to a ChristMore thal1"1oo colleges and uni·
ian-centered education and code that
t'Drbids premarital sex, homosexual- vetsities have. Christian rootS , Cor·
nerstone is one of more than 90 pri ~
ity, gamblins and dancing.
· Although it's not unusual for vale schools nationwide that hire
·individual athletes at ·other schools on ly Christians for full-time. faculty
· to pray or for chaplains to be avail- or admi{listrat ive positions, accordable to teams, Cornerstone players ing to the Council of Christian Col-

some aren't as religious as others.
leges &amp; Universities.
Pulling a Bible out of a teamBut it's not all straight-and-oarThat was the case with Christo· mate's duffel bag, he flips through
row at Cornerstone. Cheerleaders pher Tolman.
the volume in search of a verse he
wear short skirts, unlike those ··at
·"I carne here for the basketball says justifies competitiveness and
some other Christian schools. And first. But now I'm here for the reli- good sportsmanship.
some of the male basketball players gion first," said Telman, an 18-year·
Indeed, Christian colleses have a
wear eanings, something that Elders old freshman from Grand Rapids.
long tradition of suong athletic pr()says is OK although be wouldn't
"We pray before ~very class. I grams. Calvin Collese. a few miles
didn't know it would be like this, but from Cornerstone, won the women's ·
wear one.
"We're not nearly as legalistic as I love it."
cross country championships last
we used to be,"· Elders says. "We
, 1be basketball players . say their year in NCAA Division Ill, and in
want our kids to be able to make high-profile status on lhis campus of 1992 won the men's basketball title
good choices outside and inside of about I ,600 undergraduates makes in the same league.
"Just ~cause you're a Christian
school."
them especially aware of their
The basketball program is Iuong behavior.
basketball player doesn't mean you
"If someone sees you· with a can shouldn't try to beat the competienough that Elders says it 's not hard
to recruit. Many of the players are of beer, it's not a good witness to 'tion," Robinson says. 11 But il does
from west Michigan and most know Christ," says Ben Ch~mberlain , a mean no fighting or cursing."
There are occasional lapses. Last
what th.ey're getting into. Comer- 21-year-old junior.
year
a player was kicked off the
Religion ·only enhances th.e
stone requires a ll prospective stu1
team
and out of Corners(one for
dents to · submit a recommendation team's performance, says Brian
' from a minister and a written state- Robinson, a 20-year-old junior from behavior Elders would only describe
. ment of their faith.
Kentwood who dreams of becoming as in violation of school rules, but
Elders says he doesn 't know of a doctor, because players tend to not illegal. This year, the student. is
any non-Christi ans who have been ·trust and rely on one another on and back in classes and on the team, and
.his faith is "stronger than ever,"
on the basketball team, although off the coun.

•

Recipes to make
you break those
f:lew Year promises
: By Marlalisa Calta
: Look, someone's goi ng to do 'it,
S&lt;! it might as well be me.
·
Someone 's goi ng to tempt you to ·
bfeak that New Year 's diet, that resolUtion to eat only foods h(g h in ·
fiber and low in fat ... or high in protein and low in carbohydrates ... or
wf!atever.
y m not being 'mean here; it's good
to· pay attention to what ·you cat,
· arid· to aim for a healthy, balanced
diet. But the word " balance" is the
key. It's important to incorporate
some yummy, not-strictly-healthy
foods in even the most stringent of
eating regimens. (I ·am. of co urse,
no.t addressing people with heart
conditions, diabetes, food allergies
or other health imperatives for eating on the straight and narrow.)
For most of us , if we are gOing to

fall off the wagon, it makes a lot
more se nse to take .the time to

indulge in a high-quality, truly delicious treat,' rather than, say, scarf'ing a bag Of pork rinds in the car.
In this spirit, I've collected a
short list of di shes for those occa~
sions when yo~ plan on splurging .
Since these are

rec ipe ~.

I

haven ' t include d treats you can
bu¥: for example, imported French
ch~eses (for high fat content, along
with sublime navor, try an Epoisses
or Langres). Italian prosciutto, Belgian chocolate, Devonshire cream

or Starbuck's Coffee Almond
Fudge icc cream.
I' ve included sweet things (bread
pudding, chocolate butter cookies)
.and savory (pasta With walnut~, oil
and anchovi~ s) to appeal both to
those who like sugar with their fat
and tho se who go for salt.
Look, you can't be perfect forev•

Pour into prepared di sh, spread- and place pn an ungfeased cookie
ing evenly with rubber spatula. sheel or a sheet lined with baking
Place dish in larger roasting pan set parchment. Mark the top of the
on middle oven rack and pour boil- cookies with the tines of a fork, or
ing water into the larger pan to a leave them plain. Bake for 15 mindepth of about I inch. Bake for I utes, or until set. Yield: abotlt 4
slores,
hour, or until knife inserted in cen- dozen.
The manufacturers tout Almond- ter comes out clean.
- Recipe from "Chocolate:. A
ina 's healthy profile (low in caloMeanwhile, prepare the sa~ce : Sweet Indulgence," by Karl Petzke
ries , fat and salt), but I can vouch Melt butter in top bowl of a double and Sara Slavin (Chronicle Boqks,
boiler set over hot. not boiling, 1997)
for the taste.
There are a bunch of navors, water. In a separate bowl, combine
SPAGHETTINI
WITH
including ginger-spice, chocolate sugar and egg. Add to melted butter.
Stir
2
to
3
minutes,
until
sugar
·
,
ANCHOVIES,
WALNUTS
AND
and sesame (my favorite), and they
can also be purchased through dissolves completely and egg is GARLIC
cooked and the mixture coats the
www.almondina.·cain.
1/2 cup walnut pieces or halves
back of a spoon. (DO.NOT .SOIL or.
Two 2-o~nce cans anchovy fi).
BREAD PUDDING WITH the egg will curdle). Remove pan lets packed in olive oil
from heat and let sauce cool to
1/2 cup virgin olive oil
WHISKEY SAUCE
room temperature. Stir in bourbon.
2 tablespoons minced fresh garFor the pudding :
Serve pudding dir.ectly from lie
·
2 tablespoo ns butter, softened
· I 12-ounce loaf of day -old qven, with )'lhiskey sauce on !ide.
I cup water
Yield.: 8 to 10 servings.
I pound imponed spagheuini
French or Italian bread
from
Karen
Ziner,
Bring 5 quarts of salted water
Recipe
1 quart half-and-half
to
a
boil
in a large pol.
Providence,
R.I.
3 eggs
· In- a food processor, grind the
.2 cups sugar
1/2 cup seedless raisins
walnuts to a fine powder, being
2 tablespoons vanilla eKtract
BUTTER careful to stop before turning them
CHOCOLATE
COOKIES
For the sauce:
into nut buller.
8 'tablespoons unsalted butter,
2 ounces unsweetened chocoDrain thi: anchovies. Rinse them
late, chopped
under cold running water to wash
cut into.l/2-inch pieces
I cup sugar
I cup butter, at room tempera- away any eKcess salt. Pat them dry
1 egg
with paper towels and chop them
ture
112 cup bourbon
1/2 cup confectioners.' sugar
up.
.
Place oven rack in middle of
Heat the oi I in a large skillet.
2 .cups ,all-purp.ose flour
. 1/4 teaspoon salt ·
oven. Preheat oven to 350 degree s.
Add the garlic lind anchovies and
gently saute, stirring often, until the
With. a pastry brush. spread the
113 cup cornstarch
Melt the chocolate in a. small, garlic ·turns a ri~h golden color. The
softened butter evenly,over the bot·
tom and sides of . a 13-by-9-inch heavy saucepan over low h e~l. Set anchovies will dissolve and become
baking dish. Set aside .
· aside to cool. Beat the butter. with almost a paste.
To prepare the pudding: Break sugar until mixture is light and
Immediately add I cup of water
bread into chunks. dropping them nuffy. Beat in melted chocolate. _In to the skillet, being careful not to
into " bowl. Add milk.
a separate bowl, .sift together the burn yourself, as the oil may splatWhen soft, crumble bread into flour, salt and corn starch. Beat into
small bits and continue so"ak ing the butter mixture.
Gather the dough into a ball.
until all miik is absorbed. In a sep"
arate bowl, beat eggs and sugar Divid~ in half and roll each into a
with a wire whisk or egg beater log about 2 inches in diameter.
until smooth and thick .
Wrap in plastic and chill for at least
Stir in raisins and vanilla. Pour 30 minutes.
. egg mixture over bread miKture and
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Cut
stir until well-c6mbined.
log into slices about 1/4-i nch thick

ter. R~i se the heat 'and l:ioil vigorously until the liquid has reduced
by· half. Keep the sauce over very
low heat while the • spaghettini
cooks.
Cook the pasta in the boiling
water for 4 to 5 minutes (the pasta
should still be quite firm ).
Drain, reserving a few tablespoons of ~he cooking water, and
add the pasta to the sauce in the
skillet. Toss for about 2 minutes
over low heat until the pasta is al
dente (still firm, but cjone). Sprinkle
th~ walnuts over the pasta, tossing

•

ly Jem11 18nde

Playen also say they try to he)Jj
each other he Christian.
"We try not to curse," says Mat:k
Zichterman, a 21 -year-old junion
from Hudsonville who was on the
championship team. "We all still
have our temptations, and I'm learn"
ing that you need people around you
to keep you Christlike."
..
1be team, which lost four gradu- •
ating seniors after its championship.
victory; -started the season 8-5, com.
pared with· last year's 37-3 record.~
But Elders will be proud of his team
no matter what they do, as long as
they show humility and good spons,.
manship.
14&lt;For me, it's rewarding to see·
where they came in spiritually to tilt·
program and where they leave," ~­
says. '" We always say it's about ;
more than. just basketball here. ...
We're tr)"i ng to prepare them for il ·
all."

.

May 28, 193 3, was a big day in
the history of sports in 'Gallia County, as on that day the 'first lighted
llhletic r..ld here wu dedicated.
' The field was located beside the
Silver Bridge. Some 14 lishts of
1500 watts ·elclt on six hish poles
supplied the illymination.
• The first· pifch was to he thrown
out by Dr. Charles Holzer Sr., but
ju~t moments before the game he
.,.las called to an emergency.
·
• Coming in from tlie "bullpen"
was Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., mayor,
B.W. . Krodel. Providing the music
were. the Masonic Drum and Bugle,
Oorps of Gallipolis and the Junior
Mechanics Band of Pt. Pleasant. In
tile first game Gallipolis beat BarbOursville 6-5 on,a wet .field.
.. That first game was on a Sunday
afternoon. The first night game was
played May 30, 1933, with Gallipolis beating Pomeroy' 4-3. Starring for
Gallipolis were: Bob Diggips,
Woody Brothers, Hobart Wilson' Sr.,
Paul O'Brien a.nd Ted Keller.
The manager of .t~e Gallipolis
team was "Rags" Clendenin. The
Gallipolis Daily Tribune remarked
that Diggins might have had a
shutout eKcept for some hits that

to distribute the nuts evenly.
..
If the pasta becomes dry, add ,L
to 2 tablespoons of the pasta cooking water. Yield: serves 8 as al\
appetizer, 4 as a maiil course.
- Recipe from "Cucina Sim:·
patica,': , by Johanne Killeen and
George Germon (HarperCollins,
1991) .
.
Copyrighi2000 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Paul 0. BolsYert for lhe New,
Engl11nd «;:ullnary Institute
.. ,

'
bus Redbirds and the Canadian
Clows played on the field, as did
semi-pro teams from Huntington,
Charleston, lind Parkersburg.
When the Pittsburgh Crawfords
played here in 1933, they had S
players who would later become
part of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Included on the roster were: Satchel
Paige. Josh Gibson, Cool Papa Bell,
Oscar Charleston and Judy Johnson.
and Tippy Dye.
The Crawfords beat Gallipolis
A recreation league was formed 14-0. Josh Gibson hit a · ball that
that summer with teams from Gal- . went over the river bank in right
lipolis, Pt. Pleasant, 'Pomeroy and center some 450 feet from home
Mason City. League galjleS were . plate. The Gallipolis outfielder Otto
played most evenings at 8:15 p.ni: Pattjck played Gillson about 400
On many Sunday~ exhibition games feet from home and was able to hold
were played at the Silver Bridge dia- Gibson to a .450 feet triple.
mond.
· ,...
..
Gibson was referred to as ''the
Some oftbe teams ·that played on. black Babe Ruth.'' He hit on average
the Silver Bridge diamond in the about 75 Homers a year playing a
1930s included two famou~ black 150 game schedule that included
teams- the Piusburgh Crawfords ana games in the Negro National League
the Homestead Grays. Also playing . and exhibition games.
Satchel Paige was believed to
here was the.House of David ansi ey.,.
f!ave
pitched in.over 2500 games in
Young's All-Stars.
,'.
The last named team featured a his career that stretched out over 20
68 year old pitcher named Cy years.
.
.
Just in one year Paige appeared
Yolmg. The House or David was
composed of celibate bearded ball on the mound in 134 different
·players who lived in a commune .~t games. Paige claimed to have
Benton Harbor, Mich. The Colum- pitched 47 no hit games in hi s

Pomeroy had
that hit clods
of dirt and
skipped
away from
the infielders. Playing
for Pomeroy
were Guy
Guinther,
Fred Crow~

career. In the 1930s the Crawfords
traveled the south playing the Dizzy
Dean All·Stars. In one of America's
most historic games Paige beat Dean
1-0 in a game that lasted 17 innings.
In 1934 when the Homestead
Grays led by Hall of Farner Buck
Leonard played at the Silver Bridse.
they had to come from behind to
edge Gallipolis 7-6. Cum Posey was
then th~ manager of the ,Grays, who
would from 1937 to 194~ win nine
straight pelmants ill the Negro
National League. Playing for Gallipolis was Coalton resident and' former Cincinnati Red Pat Duncan.
Gallipolis act\lally beat the
Columbus Redbirds in 1934, just
after Columbus had won the Little
World Series over Buffalo.
The Redbirds finished the Amer~. ican Association season ·With ItO
wins, the most of any Columbus
team. Nine of those Redbirds later
played in the Major Leagues. Gallipolis became the first team to beat .
Columbus on the 25 day October
tou~ of Ohio by the Redbirds. Bruce
Will oughby tripled home two runners in the 8th inning to put Gallipolisup9-7.
·
One ol' the most interest ing exhi·
bitions here pitted Gallipolis against

th~ Canadian Clowns. The Clowns
played baseball in clown outfits, arid
between innings they did all sorts of
Stunts. Gallipolis beat the Clowns 43 behind the play or Joe and Harry
Grimm, Red Stanley and the Patrick
brothers. Gallipolis had some good
pitchers in thi s' era in cl uding

Ntircotics Anonymous Tri - County
group meeting, 611 Viand Street, ·
7:30p.m.

•••

BIDWELL- Poplar Ridge Free
Will Baptist Church services, with
inlerim pastor John Elswick, 6:30
p.ln. Special singing by Earthen
vessel.

,Joint
hnplant
Surgeons, Inc.

•••

: ADDISON - Church service at
Alldison Freewill Baptist' Church, 6
p.(n., with Rick Batcus preaching.
'
.
tANAUGA- Worship service at
·sdver Memorial FWB Church, 6

...

...

P-ill·
~

~M,LJPOLIS - Candlelight
Ui;i.y Walk sponsored by Gallipolis
Ministerial Association, beginning
at J'aint Creek Baptist Church, 6
P·'l'· Stops Ill Grac~ l/o•lel/ ,.. , ,· ,
M•thodist, St. Peter's' Episcopal, '
'Fit;Bt Presbyterian and ending at St.
Louis Catholic with refreshments.
Si ~ging, prayer and welcome mes: ·
.sage at each church.

Specialized Care for Total Jornt Replacement
For initial evaluations or follow~up visits,
we offer monthly hffice hours . .·
.. ,
Our Next Clinic Will Be

2·1,2000·

Lutheran Church

Creek Regular Baptist Church, I ...
p.m. Congressll)an Ted Stricklan4
guest speaker. Refreshments served
'by Daughters of the King following
program.

•••

study, 7 p.m.

Thursday, January 20

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Narcotics Anonymous meeting Tri · County, 611 Viand Street (use side
entrance), 7:30p.m.

•••
Thesday, January 18

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Captive Free
concert at New Life Lutheran
Church, 7:30p.m. Fellowship meal
at6:30 p.m.

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

Bib!~

•••

GALLIPOLIS -. Choose To Lose
Diet' Group, 9 a.m: at Grace United
Methodist Church. For information
call ~6 · 1156.

•••

•••
GALLIPOLIS- Alcoholics

GALLIPOLIS - AI -Anon mee~ng
at St. Peter's Episcopal Church,' &amp;·
p.m.
'
.
OALLIPQUS.- ()jew Life
Lutheran ·churi:h 12'Step Spiritual
Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.

Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m., St.
Peters Episcopal Chu'rch.

•••.

'

•••

•••

••• •

Harley Crouse is recovering at
home after his recent hospitalization, and would like a card shower. .
Send cards to 2906 State Route 775,
Gallipolis, 45631.

Saturday, January 22

•••

CROWN CITY - Edna Chapel
Church services, 7 p,.m., with Ralph
Workman preaching.

•••

•••

Mildred Hardway Jenkins ,)Viii
celebrate her 85th binhday January
18. Birthday cards and wishes inay
be sent to 108 Kineon Drive, Gallipolis, 45631.

GALLIPOLIS - Upward basketbail games at First Church of the.
Nazarene, 10 a.m.'- 1 p.m.

•••

Friday, January 21

•••

S2nd·birthday on January 17. Cards
may be sent to him at4711 State
Route 160, Bidwell, 45614.

this month. Next scheduled meeting
will .be February 3. For information
call 446-0808 or 675-3533 .

•••

VINTON - Deercreek FWB
Church songfest, 7 p.m., with the
Grubb Family Singers, John Grubb
and i I year old Rachael Fraser.
. Mickey·Maynard pastor.

Hannah McBride will tum 90 on
January 23. Cards wishing hera
happy birthday may be sent to 129
Union Road; Bidwell, 45614.

·.(614) 221-6331 for Appointment Times
Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute

• Checking

• Money .Market
• Savings
• Consumef Imns
~ Real &amp;tale LoanS
• PLC/Ilquiline
• Trust A(:copnt
• Visa
APYs listed below inclucle ~ bon1111 of~ additi0nal.25%. TheSe ~n~ rates are Otily aYdilable
when you connect with three other qualifylng·serviceS fro111 Peoples Bank.

.,

• IRAs

•I

It's our way of encouraging you lo look at alllhat P~pl~ Bank hils to offer. So go ~ talk to a Peoples
financial services representative ... and get connected for higher rates! ·

.

.

I
I
1 $200 Coupon good
1 toward th• purchase

L !~•,!!~•,!!1!!_•.!!'~:.~2.,

.FLAIR

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
WV

6'15-U71

***

***

RIO GRANDE . Second annual

•••

,

•••
•••

'

•••

•••

...

Eighty-Eight Sedan

•••

VINTON - Vinton Baptist
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
teaching series on 'Discovering
God's Best,' Five Foundational
Skills for Supernatural Living eaeh

•3800V-6Power
• Power Windows a Locka
·• Tilt a Crulae

• Power Window• a Locke
• Tilt aCrulae
• Fully Loaded!

1999_Pontlac Grand Am

1999 Oldlmoblle

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1999 Chevy

ijf,ii· ~3j5o· ~f2io·
• Power Window• l Locka
• Tilt &amp; Crulae
• Al~mlnum Wheils

""'*"'t

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ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

.Through, the ages, folks have celebrated the
special holiday season (md the beginning of a
won,derful
I

lma(Iine the confudon of a child ,.ho
cannot hear our world. A child 'I mott
critical learning lime it birth to three
year.. Hearing io your child', Jirot
~onn.ection to th6ir aun-oundi"B• and U
el8enticd in developing mc~ny important
•kilU: opeech, language , learning and
1ocial okillo. early detection rif a
hearilllf problem rnean.. your child
haye the be•l chance lo grow 111ith the
rett of the world,
.

Intrigue Sedln

q5,450* . q4;150*. q4,350*

•••

OALLlPOLIS- Gallipolis chapter
TijlPS (Take Off Pqunds Sensibly)
meeting, First Church of the
Nazarene, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Call ,
SJiirley Boster 4.46 - 1260.

1999Chevy
Lumina Sedan

1999

olzer Heal~Jt Hotline

• AutOIIIIIIc
• Air Condtlonlng
• w.a Equlppedl

• Aulomatlc
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Crul11

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

'

Mlnil{!um dopooh tO open on
Ia $5;000. '1110 annual pe~Q~nu.- ·yleld ahoiim ia'accluate u of lanuary.
6th, 2000. Tho bariua will be C(ltl¥ 10 your CJ) monthly. lntereot may be crec!itlld to ony PO(&gt;!!~ Bank . '·
cteP.,.!t ocx:ount or Cl'Pitallzed nian61)'. Other .,CC!ola do'not apply. Apenalty'for oorly with&lt;Jnt\Nal may be '
imp!*d. A""'!ol'l~ avaUablo a.t all i'Cop!ea Bank !cicatlon&amp;, FDIC inJured.
·
.
·

·.••• make

----------

fli'

Jf)'ou're COIUieCfed to any three of die fullowlng rmplcs llllak lmil:a, )'011 qlllllify for our bon~ CD l'lllel

hear.ing should be
·testea at birth.

soothe

your

PORTER - Bible study at Clark
· Chapel Church, 7 p.m.

Dr. Maitiil Luther King, Jr., Celebration beginning with Central State
(;ALLIPOLJS - Bulaville
Chorus free performance at 7 p.m.
Cliuich services beginning with
· at John Berry Fine Arts Center.
Sullday Sch9ol at 9:30a.m., church
Candlelight service to follow.
at 10:30 p.m. and evening worship
Refreshments afterwards. Open to
at 6 p.m. Preaching by Rev. Jay
public.
-·
Jar,vis and special music by Jarvis
,
***
:!~!
F.pily. GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Are~'
•
...
· Christian Women's Club meeting ~
~GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Holiday Inn, noon. Program features
Hl:$terical/ Genealogical Society
"We Auto Know" with Tom Russ~~
pr~Jgram, "Researching Family His·
speaking on "It Auto Work,'; Susab~
t~ry" with Henny Evans as speaker,•.. Russell on "Tune Up · Tune In,"
2.i0 p.m,
and Belle Bowers from Huntingtoq;. ~
:
. W.Va., "In Gears." RSVP 338 •· ·~ l .
&amp;546or4.41 : 1199.
' :,
Monday, January 17
~ ,,
•
Wednesday, January 19
QALi.IPOLIS - !'larcotics Anony mous Miracles in Recovery Group,
HENDERSON, W.VA. · Western ,d
St; Peter's Episcopal Church, 7:30
square dancing, 7:30 · 10 pcm.,
p.in.
Henderson Recreation Building.
'
ci:HESHIRE- TOPS.(Take Off
POMERO'I:' - Narcotics AnonyPounds Sensibly) meeting; Cheshire
mous Living In The Solution
Urlited Methodist Church,lO- II
Group, Sacred Heart-Catholic '
a.m. Call Am) Mitchell at 388 ·
Church,
7 p.m.
8004 for infOrmation.

•••

'

•Massagers

••• •

....

Your chlld 1 s

Clarence Fisher ( pitched with ~the
Washington Senators), Howard
Hardway and Dick Dunkle or the
Mid-Atlantic Class C min ur league
and Gib Davis. The field at the Silver Bridge probably ex isted until t~
late 1930s.

'

Hospital claims world record in halted labor

Cll::~

This 1935 Max Tawney photo pictures the Sllvar Bridge baseball
field basicle the old Silver Bridge. On this field In the 19301 played
at least seven future membara of baseball's Hall of Fame. The first
night outdoor sporting event In Gallla history took place here on
May 30, 1933.

~
~..--. --·· ..,---~"""-:--.. ,Galli~( Co-mmunity Calendar-------____;,.
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Nursery providEVERGREEN -Springfield
•••
•••
ed.
Townhouse church service, 7 p.m.
Sunday,January, l6
GALLIPOLIS - Southeastern ,.
•••
.
*** . ~
Card Shower
Branch of NAACP's Dr. Martin
•••
•••
GALLIPOLIS - New Life
GALLIPOLIS - The Patkinson
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. ·
Luther King, Jr. Day Tribute, Pain\
•••
Area Suppdrt Group will not. meet
Lonnie Burger will celebrate his

•

ROCKVILLE, Md .' (AP)- In what doctors describe as a medical marvel and a world record, a baby boy was
bom ·five .months after his twin brother was stillborn.
Benjamin Rosenthal was delivered full -term and healthy by Caesarean section Jan. 3, 153 days after his twin was
stillborn to Mindy Rosenthal of Silver Sprin,&amp;. Doctors at Shady Groye Adventist Hospital say it set a world record
for the longest case of arrested labor.
.
.
.
·
.
Moments after the first twin was born dead Aug. 3, obstetrician Sheri Hamersley placed a stitch the·thickness of
a shoelace at the opening of the womb.·
Without it, the second baby would have followed immediately. Even with it, Hamersley said, the chances of .a
successful delayed binh .were less than I percent.
.
.
·
It's not uncommon for a woman to miscarry one fetu s, then carry the second twin to term. ·But cases such as Mrs.
Rosenthal:S. in which the cerviK opens and tbe mqther actually delivers the first baby, are very ·unusual.
.
''I cjidn't know we· were making history, " Mrs. Rosenthal said.
In November, a woman in Cincinnati gave birth to a second twin afler 152 days.
Hospital officials attribute the latest success to a skillful doctor, medication and the fortitude of Mrs. Rosen,thal
and her husband, Stephen. Mrs. Rosenthal was confined to bed after .the delivery of the first twin.

6anbap 1Jimtf ·iotntintl • Page C7

Silver Bridge baseball field first' to have lights for events in .1933

Elden~s.

·FOOD: RESOLUTION BUSTERS
cr. In fact ..perfect is boring. In life,
as in diet. variety is key.
Note: For everyday snacking, I
can heartily recommend "Al mondina," a cross between a cookie and
a biscotti ' now available in grqccry

Pomeroy • Mkldltport • Galllpolll, Ohio • Point PI•Mnt. wv

# Sunday, Jllnuary 18,2000

.,

-··

INHEA;RI
•ttrlfiiL~I

•

1

•••

CIIN lor 1M oltlce - - Jl'lll·

aani&amp; 1r .._. 14CINT&gt;M111
omaH .-

'

,__,

-·~·"""' ~;

,,

'

. )

'.

'

.

.

6amuntil
·'
·\· ··· 2 am ~.
.\'

'•

.7/Uyo~r .llnancilll n~;t//m one P~-

435 Slcond Avenue
••••••••••••••
Galllpolla, Ohio 1-800·887-3277
446-7619

I

,.

I

j.

7 days a
. week .··

1~800~,462-5255
.

II

· · · . Ask ypu.f physician about
medication concerns

.

•

'

Monday· Saturday 8 •m - 8 pm
Sunc:lay 1 pm • 7 pm

.

•
'

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.

TOLL FREE l-800·822 -0417 • 372 -2844 • www.lompeden.com
, _,

___,

_____

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

,,

�•

..

Sundly, JII"'*Y 18, 2000

Pomeroy • Mlddl1port • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point P11111nt, WV

Page C6 • iounhp Q:imtf·iotntintl

·'

God and basketball the draw for winning athlete&amp;
•

IIY LISA SINGHANIA
arc eKpected to be religious role
models for all students at the school.
Associated Press Writer
For the basketball team, that
GRAND RAPIDS. Mich. (AP)
- When the final whistle blew and means sitting tfp front at mandatory
:cornerstone· College had its first chapel, and no drinking, drugs,
:.Oational basketball championship, swearing or any of the other bad-boy
fohn Lanser and his teammates got behavior tolerated at some schools.
· "When we go 'to hotels, I get a.lot
4own on their knees to pray.
• "We just fell like we needed to of compliments about their behavsive thanks Tight away," Lanser ior," coach Kim Elders says. " I
riocalls. " I think this is just a talent don ' t worry about my kids partying
-~e· ve been given by God."·
. or getting into that kind of trouble.
Afterward, the players celebrated Our kids care about each other. ...
their NAIA Division II title last · We' re brothers in Christ together." .
Elders' team also meets each
spring with a cookout and a jump in
the hotel pool - with their clothes week on its own for Bible study, and
went to the Philippines last year to
tin, or course.
; That's because at Cornerstone shoot hoops and share its C\lristian
faith. '
~udents are committed to a ChristMore thal1"1oo colleges and uni·
ian-centered education and code that
t'Drbids premarital sex, homosexual- vetsities have. Christian rootS , Cor·
nerstone is one of more than 90 pri ~
ity, gamblins and dancing.
· Although it's not unusual for vale schools nationwide that hire
·individual athletes at ·other schools on ly Christians for full-time. faculty
· to pray or for chaplains to be avail- or admi{listrat ive positions, accordable to teams, Cornerstone players ing to the Council of Christian Col-

some aren't as religious as others.
leges &amp; Universities.
Pulling a Bible out of a teamBut it's not all straight-and-oarThat was the case with Christo· mate's duffel bag, he flips through
row at Cornerstone. Cheerleaders pher Tolman.
the volume in search of a verse he
wear short skirts, unlike those ··at
·"I carne here for the basketball says justifies competitiveness and
some other Christian schools. And first. But now I'm here for the reli- good sportsmanship.
some of the male basketball players gion first," said Telman, an 18-year·
Indeed, Christian colleses have a
wear eanings, something that Elders old freshman from Grand Rapids.
long tradition of suong athletic pr()says is OK although be wouldn't
"We pray before ~very class. I grams. Calvin Collese. a few miles
didn't know it would be like this, but from Cornerstone, won the women's ·
wear one.
"We're not nearly as legalistic as I love it."
cross country championships last
we used to be,"· Elders says. "We
, 1be basketball players . say their year in NCAA Division Ill, and in
want our kids to be able to make high-profile status on lhis campus of 1992 won the men's basketball title
good choices outside and inside of about I ,600 undergraduates makes in the same league.
"Just ~cause you're a Christian
school."
them especially aware of their
The basketball program is Iuong behavior.
basketball player doesn't mean you
"If someone sees you· with a can shouldn't try to beat the competienough that Elders says it 's not hard
to recruit. Many of the players are of beer, it's not a good witness to 'tion," Robinson says. 11 But il does
from west Michigan and most know Christ," says Ben Ch~mberlain , a mean no fighting or cursing."
There are occasional lapses. Last
what th.ey're getting into. Comer- 21-year-old junior.
year
a player was kicked off the
Religion ·only enhances th.e
stone requires a ll prospective stu1
team
and out of Corners(one for
dents to · submit a recommendation team's performance, says Brian
' from a minister and a written state- Robinson, a 20-year-old junior from behavior Elders would only describe
. ment of their faith.
Kentwood who dreams of becoming as in violation of school rules, but
Elders says he doesn 't know of a doctor, because players tend to not illegal. This year, the student. is
any non-Christi ans who have been ·trust and rely on one another on and back in classes and on the team, and
.his faith is "stronger than ever,"
on the basketball team, although off the coun.

•

Recipes to make
you break those
f:lew Year promises
: By Marlalisa Calta
: Look, someone's goi ng to do 'it,
S&lt;! it might as well be me.
·
Someone 's goi ng to tempt you to ·
bfeak that New Year 's diet, that resolUtion to eat only foods h(g h in ·
fiber and low in fat ... or high in protein and low in carbohydrates ... or
wf!atever.
y m not being 'mean here; it's good
to· pay attention to what ·you cat,
· arid· to aim for a healthy, balanced
diet. But the word " balance" is the
key. It's important to incorporate
some yummy, not-strictly-healthy
foods in even the most stringent of
eating regimens. (I ·am. of co urse,
no.t addressing people with heart
conditions, diabetes, food allergies
or other health imperatives for eating on the straight and narrow.)
For most of us , if we are gOing to

fall off the wagon, it makes a lot
more se nse to take .the time to

indulge in a high-quality, truly delicious treat,' rather than, say, scarf'ing a bag Of pork rinds in the car.
In this spirit, I've collected a
short list of di shes for those occa~
sions when yo~ plan on splurging .
Since these are

rec ipe ~.

I

haven ' t include d treats you can
bu¥: for example, imported French
ch~eses (for high fat content, along
with sublime navor, try an Epoisses
or Langres). Italian prosciutto, Belgian chocolate, Devonshire cream

or Starbuck's Coffee Almond
Fudge icc cream.
I' ve included sweet things (bread
pudding, chocolate butter cookies)
.and savory (pasta With walnut~, oil
and anchovi~ s) to appeal both to
those who like sugar with their fat
and tho se who go for salt.
Look, you can't be perfect forev•

Pour into prepared di sh, spread- and place pn an ungfeased cookie
ing evenly with rubber spatula. sheel or a sheet lined with baking
Place dish in larger roasting pan set parchment. Mark the top of the
on middle oven rack and pour boil- cookies with the tines of a fork, or
ing water into the larger pan to a leave them plain. Bake for 15 mindepth of about I inch. Bake for I utes, or until set. Yield: abotlt 4
slores,
hour, or until knife inserted in cen- dozen.
The manufacturers tout Almond- ter comes out clean.
- Recipe from "Chocolate:. A
ina 's healthy profile (low in caloMeanwhile, prepare the sa~ce : Sweet Indulgence," by Karl Petzke
ries , fat and salt), but I can vouch Melt butter in top bowl of a double and Sara Slavin (Chronicle Boqks,
boiler set over hot. not boiling, 1997)
for the taste.
There are a bunch of navors, water. In a separate bowl, combine
SPAGHETTINI
WITH
including ginger-spice, chocolate sugar and egg. Add to melted butter.
Stir
2
to
3
minutes,
until
sugar
·
,
ANCHOVIES,
WALNUTS
AND
and sesame (my favorite), and they
can also be purchased through dissolves completely and egg is GARLIC
cooked and the mixture coats the
www.almondina.·cain.
1/2 cup walnut pieces or halves
back of a spoon. (DO.NOT .SOIL or.
Two 2-o~nce cans anchovy fi).
BREAD PUDDING WITH the egg will curdle). Remove pan lets packed in olive oil
from heat and let sauce cool to
1/2 cup virgin olive oil
WHISKEY SAUCE
room temperature. Stir in bourbon.
2 tablespoons minced fresh garFor the pudding :
Serve pudding dir.ectly from lie
·
2 tablespoo ns butter, softened
· I 12-ounce loaf of day -old qven, with )'lhiskey sauce on !ide.
I cup water
Yield.: 8 to 10 servings.
I pound imponed spagheuini
French or Italian bread
from
Karen
Ziner,
Bring 5 quarts of salted water
Recipe
1 quart half-and-half
to
a
boil
in a large pol.
Providence,
R.I.
3 eggs
· In- a food processor, grind the
.2 cups sugar
1/2 cup seedless raisins
walnuts to a fine powder, being
2 tablespoons vanilla eKtract
BUTTER careful to stop before turning them
CHOCOLATE
COOKIES
For the sauce:
into nut buller.
8 'tablespoons unsalted butter,
2 ounces unsweetened chocoDrain thi: anchovies. Rinse them
late, chopped
under cold running water to wash
cut into.l/2-inch pieces
I cup sugar
I cup butter, at room tempera- away any eKcess salt. Pat them dry
1 egg
with paper towels and chop them
ture
112 cup bourbon
1/2 cup confectioners.' sugar
up.
.
Place oven rack in middle of
Heat the oi I in a large skillet.
2 .cups ,all-purp.ose flour
. 1/4 teaspoon salt ·
oven. Preheat oven to 350 degree s.
Add the garlic lind anchovies and
gently saute, stirring often, until the
With. a pastry brush. spread the
113 cup cornstarch
Melt the chocolate in a. small, garlic ·turns a ri~h golden color. The
softened butter evenly,over the bot·
tom and sides of . a 13-by-9-inch heavy saucepan over low h e~l. Set anchovies will dissolve and become
baking dish. Set aside .
· aside to cool. Beat the butter. with almost a paste.
To prepare the pudding: Break sugar until mixture is light and
Immediately add I cup of water
bread into chunks. dropping them nuffy. Beat in melted chocolate. _In to the skillet, being careful not to
into " bowl. Add milk.
a separate bowl, .sift together the burn yourself, as the oil may splatWhen soft, crumble bread into flour, salt and corn starch. Beat into
small bits and continue so"ak ing the butter mixture.
Gather the dough into a ball.
until all miik is absorbed. In a sep"
arate bowl, beat eggs and sugar Divid~ in half and roll each into a
with a wire whisk or egg beater log about 2 inches in diameter.
until smooth and thick .
Wrap in plastic and chill for at least
Stir in raisins and vanilla. Pour 30 minutes.
. egg mixture over bread miKture and
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Cut
stir until well-c6mbined.
log into slices about 1/4-i nch thick

ter. R~i se the heat 'and l:ioil vigorously until the liquid has reduced
by· half. Keep the sauce over very
low heat while the • spaghettini
cooks.
Cook the pasta in the boiling
water for 4 to 5 minutes (the pasta
should still be quite firm ).
Drain, reserving a few tablespoons of ~he cooking water, and
add the pasta to the sauce in the
skillet. Toss for about 2 minutes
over low heat until the pasta is al
dente (still firm, but cjone). Sprinkle
th~ walnuts over the pasta, tossing

•

ly Jem11 18nde

Playen also say they try to he)Jj
each other he Christian.
"We try not to curse," says Mat:k
Zichterman, a 21 -year-old junion
from Hudsonville who was on the
championship team. "We all still
have our temptations, and I'm learn"
ing that you need people around you
to keep you Christlike."
..
1be team, which lost four gradu- •
ating seniors after its championship.
victory; -started the season 8-5, com.
pared with· last year's 37-3 record.~
But Elders will be proud of his team
no matter what they do, as long as
they show humility and good spons,.
manship.
14&lt;For me, it's rewarding to see·
where they came in spiritually to tilt·
program and where they leave," ~­
says. '" We always say it's about ;
more than. just basketball here. ...
We're tr)"i ng to prepare them for il ·
all."

.

May 28, 193 3, was a big day in
the history of sports in 'Gallia County, as on that day the 'first lighted
llhletic r..ld here wu dedicated.
' The field was located beside the
Silver Bridge. Some 14 lishts of
1500 watts ·elclt on six hish poles
supplied the illymination.
• The first· pifch was to he thrown
out by Dr. Charles Holzer Sr., but
ju~t moments before the game he
.,.las called to an emergency.
·
• Coming in from tlie "bullpen"
was Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., mayor,
B.W. . Krodel. Providing the music
were. the Masonic Drum and Bugle,
Oorps of Gallipolis and the Junior
Mechanics Band of Pt. Pleasant. In
tile first game Gallipolis beat BarbOursville 6-5 on,a wet .field.
.. That first game was on a Sunday
afternoon. The first night game was
played May 30, 1933, with Gallipolis beating Pomeroy' 4-3. Starring for
Gallipolis were: Bob Diggips,
Woody Brothers, Hobart Wilson' Sr.,
Paul O'Brien a.nd Ted Keller.
The manager of .t~e Gallipolis
team was "Rags" Clendenin. The
Gallipolis Daily Tribune remarked
that Diggins might have had a
shutout eKcept for some hits that

to distribute the nuts evenly.
..
If the pasta becomes dry, add ,L
to 2 tablespoons of the pasta cooking water. Yield: serves 8 as al\
appetizer, 4 as a maiil course.
- Recipe from "Cucina Sim:·
patica,': , by Johanne Killeen and
George Germon (HarperCollins,
1991) .
.
Copyrighi2000 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Paul 0. BolsYert for lhe New,
Engl11nd «;:ullnary Institute
.. ,

'
bus Redbirds and the Canadian
Clows played on the field, as did
semi-pro teams from Huntington,
Charleston, lind Parkersburg.
When the Pittsburgh Crawfords
played here in 1933, they had S
players who would later become
part of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Included on the roster were: Satchel
Paige. Josh Gibson, Cool Papa Bell,
Oscar Charleston and Judy Johnson.
and Tippy Dye.
The Crawfords beat Gallipolis
A recreation league was formed 14-0. Josh Gibson hit a · ball that
that summer with teams from Gal- . went over the river bank in right
lipolis, Pt. Pleasant, 'Pomeroy and center some 450 feet from home
Mason City. League galjleS were . plate. The Gallipolis outfielder Otto
played most evenings at 8:15 p.ni: Pattjck played Gillson about 400
On many Sunday~ exhibition games feet from home and was able to hold
were played at the Silver Bridge dia- Gibson to a .450 feet triple.
mond.
· ,...
..
Gibson was referred to as ''the
Some oftbe teams ·that played on. black Babe Ruth.'' He hit on average
the Silver Bridge diamond in the about 75 Homers a year playing a
1930s included two famou~ black 150 game schedule that included
teams- the Piusburgh Crawfords ana games in the Negro National League
the Homestead Grays. Also playing . and exhibition games.
Satchel Paige was believed to
here was the.House of David ansi ey.,.
f!ave
pitched in.over 2500 games in
Young's All-Stars.
,'.
The last named team featured a his career that stretched out over 20
68 year old pitcher named Cy years.
.
.
Just in one year Paige appeared
Yolmg. The House or David was
composed of celibate bearded ball on the mound in 134 different
·players who lived in a commune .~t games. Paige claimed to have
Benton Harbor, Mich. The Colum- pitched 47 no hit games in hi s

Pomeroy had
that hit clods
of dirt and
skipped
away from
the infielders. Playing
for Pomeroy
were Guy
Guinther,
Fred Crow~

career. In the 1930s the Crawfords
traveled the south playing the Dizzy
Dean All·Stars. In one of America's
most historic games Paige beat Dean
1-0 in a game that lasted 17 innings.
In 1934 when the Homestead
Grays led by Hall of Farner Buck
Leonard played at the Silver Bridse.
they had to come from behind to
edge Gallipolis 7-6. Cum Posey was
then th~ manager of the ,Grays, who
would from 1937 to 194~ win nine
straight pelmants ill the Negro
National League. Playing for Gallipolis was Coalton resident and' former Cincinnati Red Pat Duncan.
Gallipolis act\lally beat the
Columbus Redbirds in 1934, just
after Columbus had won the Little
World Series over Buffalo.
The Redbirds finished the Amer~. ican Association season ·With ItO
wins, the most of any Columbus
team. Nine of those Redbirds later
played in the Major Leagues. Gallipolis became the first team to beat .
Columbus on the 25 day October
tou~ of Ohio by the Redbirds. Bruce
Will oughby tripled home two runners in the 8th inning to put Gallipolisup9-7.
·
One ol' the most interest ing exhi·
bitions here pitted Gallipolis against

th~ Canadian Clowns. The Clowns
played baseball in clown outfits, arid
between innings they did all sorts of
Stunts. Gallipolis beat the Clowns 43 behind the play or Joe and Harry
Grimm, Red Stanley and the Patrick
brothers. Gallipolis had some good
pitchers in thi s' era in cl uding

Ntircotics Anonymous Tri - County
group meeting, 611 Viand Street, ·
7:30p.m.

•••

BIDWELL- Poplar Ridge Free
Will Baptist Church services, with
inlerim pastor John Elswick, 6:30
p.ln. Special singing by Earthen
vessel.

,Joint
hnplant
Surgeons, Inc.

•••

: ADDISON - Church service at
Alldison Freewill Baptist' Church, 6
p.(n., with Rick Batcus preaching.
'
.
tANAUGA- Worship service at
·sdver Memorial FWB Church, 6

...

...

P-ill·
~

~M,LJPOLIS - Candlelight
Ui;i.y Walk sponsored by Gallipolis
Ministerial Association, beginning
at J'aint Creek Baptist Church, 6
P·'l'· Stops Ill Grac~ l/o•lel/ ,.. , ,· ,
M•thodist, St. Peter's' Episcopal, '
'Fit;Bt Presbyterian and ending at St.
Louis Catholic with refreshments.
Si ~ging, prayer and welcome mes: ·
.sage at each church.

Specialized Care for Total Jornt Replacement
For initial evaluations or follow~up visits,
we offer monthly hffice hours . .·
.. ,
Our Next Clinic Will Be

2·1,2000·

Lutheran Church

Creek Regular Baptist Church, I ...
p.m. Congressll)an Ted Stricklan4
guest speaker. Refreshments served
'by Daughters of the King following
program.

•••

study, 7 p.m.

Thursday, January 20

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. Narcotics Anonymous meeting Tri · County, 611 Viand Street (use side
entrance), 7:30p.m.

•••
Thesday, January 18

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Captive Free
concert at New Life Lutheran
Church, 7:30p.m. Fellowship meal
at6:30 p.m.

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

Bib!~

•••

GALLIPOLIS -. Choose To Lose
Diet' Group, 9 a.m: at Grace United
Methodist Church. For information
call ~6 · 1156.

•••

•••
GALLIPOLIS- Alcoholics

GALLIPOLIS - AI -Anon mee~ng
at St. Peter's Episcopal Church,' &amp;·
p.m.
'
.
OALLIPQUS.- ()jew Life
Lutheran ·churi:h 12'Step Spiritual
Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.

Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m., St.
Peters Episcopal Chu'rch.

•••.

'

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•••

••• •

Harley Crouse is recovering at
home after his recent hospitalization, and would like a card shower. .
Send cards to 2906 State Route 775,
Gallipolis, 45631.

Saturday, January 22

•••

CROWN CITY - Edna Chapel
Church services, 7 p,.m., with Ralph
Workman preaching.

•••

•••

Mildred Hardway Jenkins ,)Viii
celebrate her 85th binhday January
18. Birthday cards and wishes inay
be sent to 108 Kineon Drive, Gallipolis, 45631.

GALLIPOLIS - Upward basketbail games at First Church of the.
Nazarene, 10 a.m.'- 1 p.m.

•••

Friday, January 21

•••

S2nd·birthday on January 17. Cards
may be sent to him at4711 State
Route 160, Bidwell, 45614.

this month. Next scheduled meeting
will .be February 3. For information
call 446-0808 or 675-3533 .

•••

VINTON - Deercreek FWB
Church songfest, 7 p.m., with the
Grubb Family Singers, John Grubb
and i I year old Rachael Fraser.
. Mickey·Maynard pastor.

Hannah McBride will tum 90 on
January 23. Cards wishing hera
happy birthday may be sent to 129
Union Road; Bidwell, 45614.

·.(614) 221-6331 for Appointment Times
Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute

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It's our way of encouraging you lo look at alllhat P~pl~ Bank hils to offer. So go ~ talk to a Peoples
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•••

,

•••
•••

'

•••

•••

...

Eighty-Eight Sedan

•••

VINTON - Vinton Baptist
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
teaching series on 'Discovering
God's Best,' Five Foundational
Skills for Supernatural Living eaeh

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.Through, the ages, folks have celebrated the
special holiday season (md the beginning of a
won,derful
I

lma(Iine the confudon of a child ,.ho
cannot hear our world. A child 'I mott
critical learning lime it birth to three
year.. Hearing io your child', Jirot
~onn.ection to th6ir aun-oundi"B• and U
el8enticd in developing mc~ny important
•kilU: opeech, language , learning and
1ocial okillo. early detection rif a
hearilllf problem rnean.. your child
haye the be•l chance lo grow 111ith the
rett of the world,
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Intrigue Sedln

q5,450* . q4;150*. q4,350*

•••

OALLlPOLIS- Gallipolis chapter
TijlPS (Take Off Pqunds Sensibly)
meeting, First Church of the
Nazarene, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Call ,
SJiirley Boster 4.46 - 1260.

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'

Mlnil{!um dopooh tO open on
Ia $5;000. '1110 annual pe~Q~nu.- ·yleld ahoiim ia'accluate u of lanuary.
6th, 2000. Tho bariua will be C(ltl¥ 10 your CJ) monthly. lntereot may be crec!itlld to ony PO(&gt;!!~ Bank . '·
cteP.,.!t ocx:ount or Cl'Pitallzed nian61)'. Other .,CC!ola do'not apply. Apenalty'for oorly with&lt;Jnt\Nal may be '
imp!*d. A""'!ol'l~ avaUablo a.t all i'Cop!ea Bank !cicatlon&amp;, FDIC inJured.
·
.
·

·.••• make

----------

fli'

Jf)'ou're COIUieCfed to any three of die fullowlng rmplcs llllak lmil:a, )'011 qlllllify for our bon~ CD l'lllel

hear.ing should be
·testea at birth.

soothe

your

PORTER - Bible study at Clark
· Chapel Church, 7 p.m.

Dr. Maitiil Luther King, Jr., Celebration beginning with Central State
(;ALLIPOLJS - Bulaville
Chorus free performance at 7 p.m.
Cliuich services beginning with
· at John Berry Fine Arts Center.
Sullday Sch9ol at 9:30a.m., church
Candlelight service to follow.
at 10:30 p.m. and evening worship
Refreshments afterwards. Open to
at 6 p.m. Preaching by Rev. Jay
public.
-·
Jar,vis and special music by Jarvis
,
***
:!~!
F.pily. GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Are~'
•
...
· Christian Women's Club meeting ~
~GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Holiday Inn, noon. Program features
Hl:$terical/ Genealogical Society
"We Auto Know" with Tom Russ~~
pr~Jgram, "Researching Family His·
speaking on "It Auto Work,'; Susab~
t~ry" with Henny Evans as speaker,•.. Russell on "Tune Up · Tune In,"
2.i0 p.m,
and Belle Bowers from Huntingtoq;. ~
:
. W.Va., "In Gears." RSVP 338 •· ·~ l .
&amp;546or4.41 : 1199.
' :,
Monday, January 17
~ ,,
•
Wednesday, January 19
QALi.IPOLIS - !'larcotics Anony mous Miracles in Recovery Group,
HENDERSON, W.VA. · Western ,d
St; Peter's Episcopal Church, 7:30
square dancing, 7:30 · 10 pcm.,
p.in.
Henderson Recreation Building.
'
ci:HESHIRE- TOPS.(Take Off
POMERO'I:' - Narcotics AnonyPounds Sensibly) meeting; Cheshire
mous Living In The Solution
Urlited Methodist Church,lO- II
Group, Sacred Heart-Catholic '
a.m. Call Am) Mitchell at 388 ·
Church,
7 p.m.
8004 for infOrmation.

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'

•Massagers

••• •

....

Your chlld 1 s

Clarence Fisher ( pitched with ~the
Washington Senators), Howard
Hardway and Dick Dunkle or the
Mid-Atlantic Class C min ur league
and Gib Davis. The field at the Silver Bridge probably ex isted until t~
late 1930s.

'

Hospital claims world record in halted labor

Cll::~

This 1935 Max Tawney photo pictures the Sllvar Bridge baseball
field basicle the old Silver Bridge. On this field In the 19301 played
at least seven future membara of baseball's Hall of Fame. The first
night outdoor sporting event In Gallla history took place here on
May 30, 1933.

~
~..--. --·· ..,---~"""-:--.. ,Galli~( Co-mmunity Calendar-------____;,.
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Nursery providEVERGREEN -Springfield
•••
•••
ed.
Townhouse church service, 7 p.m.
Sunday,January, l6
GALLIPOLIS - Southeastern ,.
•••
.
*** . ~
Card Shower
Branch of NAACP's Dr. Martin
•••
•••
GALLIPOLIS - New Life
GALLIPOLIS - The Patkinson
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. ·
Luther King, Jr. Day Tribute, Pain\
•••
Area Suppdrt Group will not. meet
Lonnie Burger will celebrate his

•

ROCKVILLE, Md .' (AP)- In what doctors describe as a medical marvel and a world record, a baby boy was
bom ·five .months after his twin brother was stillborn.
Benjamin Rosenthal was delivered full -term and healthy by Caesarean section Jan. 3, 153 days after his twin was
stillborn to Mindy Rosenthal of Silver Sprin,&amp;. Doctors at Shady Groye Adventist Hospital say it set a world record
for the longest case of arrested labor.
.
.
.
·
.
Moments after the first twin was born dead Aug. 3, obstetrician Sheri Hamersley placed a stitch the·thickness of
a shoelace at the opening of the womb.·
Without it, the second baby would have followed immediately. Even with it, Hamersley said, the chances of .a
successful delayed binh .were less than I percent.
.
.
·
It's not uncommon for a woman to miscarry one fetu s, then carry the second twin to term. ·But cases such as Mrs.
Rosenthal:S. in which the cerviK opens and tbe mqther actually delivers the first baby, are very ·unusual.
.
''I cjidn't know we· were making history, " Mrs. Rosenthal said.
In November, a woman in Cincinnati gave birth to a second twin afler 152 days.
Hospital officials attribute the latest success to a skillful doctor, medication and the fortitude of Mrs. Rosen,thal
and her husband, Stephen. Mrs. Rosenthal was confined to bed after .the delivery of the first twin.

6anbap 1Jimtf ·iotntintl • Page C7

Silver Bridge baseball field first' to have lights for events in .1933

Elden~s.

·FOOD: RESOLUTION BUSTERS
cr. In fact ..perfect is boring. In life,
as in diet. variety is key.
Note: For everyday snacking, I
can heartily recommend "Al mondina," a cross between a cookie and
a biscotti ' now available in grqccry

Pomeroy • Mkldltport • Galllpolll, Ohio • Point PI•Mnt. wv

# Sunday, Jllnuary 18,2000

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Sunday, Jllnuary 18, 20QI:

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiRpolla, Ohio • Point PIUHnt, WV

Farm/Business

ENTERTAINMENT----~

S.ictlon

..

D

Glenn Miller Orchestra to play at Un.lversity of.R.io Gran~e:
Submitted article
RIO GRANDE-Over a half·
etnlUry ago, one of the world,s most
beloved musical personalilies disap~ared tragically over European
slOes, and the Glenn Miller Orches·
~ was thought to be gone forever.
' History has proven, however, m.t
its hard to keep a good band down.
.: : Glenn Miller's legend has been
kept alive through the Glenn Miller
Orchesll'a, which will, perform in a
~ial engagement at the Universi·
iy: of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Com·
lnunity college JanuarY 24, al 8
p.m., in the Alphus R. Christensen
Theall'e in the John Berry Fine and
l'!=rfonning Arts Center, as pan of
!he Valley Anists Series.
· The orchestra rose to fame during
· i~e pre· World War II era and soon
popularized the familiar big band
sound that became the mark of the
~O's and 40s.
.
In 1956, the orchestra reorga.

nized, and it has been delighting
audiences with old and new
favorites ever since.
Today it remains. one of the most
popular big bands in the world, reg·
ularly entertaining sold·oul audi·
ences at home and abroad .
The 19·mcmber band and vocal
group continues to play many of the
original Glenn Miller arran~ements
that have thrilled audiences for
years, as well as some new favorites
played in the familiar big·band style.
The band prides itself .on its abil·
ity to stay current while maintaining
iis familiar sound. Some of the

orchestra's
more modem selections i11clude
"Up Where We Belong", "Star
WarsfWar of the Stars", and the
theme from the television series
"Fame". The band carefully selects
its repertoire to reflect old and new
songs that will remain timeless and
true to the orchestra's musical lega·

cy.
One of the most recognizable
characteristics of the orchestra is its
distinct sound, created by the clar·
inet holding down the melodic line,
doubled or coupled with the tenor
sax playing·the same notes while the
other instruments fill in the beauflful
harmonies and accents .
The orchestra obviously has
found the right combinatiQn. The
group, perfonns nearly 300 concerts
a year and 1ravels 48 weeks out of
the year. They entertain more than
half a million people annually.
T)te Glenn Miller Orchestra con·
cert is sure to be a memorable event
which promises to be entertaining
and delightful for the whole family.
The university i~vites everyone
. to come out and enjoy this unique

concert experience. Tickets are
available at the door, and may be
purchased for $20 apiece.

The Glenn Mille Orcheatra

a

·

But he, Philbin and the entire
APTelevlslon Writer
"Millionaire" staff are also straP"
•' · NEW YORK (AP)- " Nobody ping themselves in for another ride
thought it could possibly work." on the game·show roller coaster, this
1
Regis Philbin began Sunday night as time sharing it with Fox's copycat,
hiS ABC game show, "Who Wants· "Greed," as well as Johnny·come·
tcr · Be a Millionaire," made its latelies "Winning Lines" (CBS) and
breathless return for "a brand·new "Twenty·One" (NBC).
century."
Until last Aug. 16, game shows
·· Having proved itself in August hadn't clicked in network prime·
~n November as more than a fly. time since the I 950s. Then came the
by-night success, "Millionaire" was premiere of "Millionaire, " a British·
niJw back for an elght·night bted quiz show that Davies, a 33· .
Ri'arathon (continuing tonight at 8 year· old former ABC exec who him·
p.m . EST and on through Sunday) self is British·bom, had talked the
before seuling into an open·ended network into leiting him import.
':'In of three airings per week.
"'Millionaire' now seems like
.. "The eagle has landed!" crowed such a big, obvious, 'duh!' sort of
1\ost Philbin, presumably ~parting television program," Davies notes.
frOm the script...
"But before it went on the air; .this
' One day last week, "Millionaire" was !lie most alternative, the most
e~ecutive producer Michael Davies pie·in·the·sky, the 11lOSI unlikely·IO·
Was plotting .that opening sequence. work idea."
·
H'e wanted to come back with a
He doesn't begrudge other pro·
bang. Maybe kick off with a visual ducers now riding the quii·show ·
pastiche of past big winners, spiced wave and makes no forecasts for
wlth a bit of we· told·you·so for the what effect, if any, their clones will
show's naysaye~s.
have on "Millionaire."
.
Plus, some purple pro.se to capBut Davies can claim two ad van·
lure the phenomenon when, "night !ages with final· answer certainty:
after night, 31 memorable nights, a His show was first, and it has some·
nation sat transfixed as real Amcri- thing that no.qne else's•hi!S .,-.talkcans rode a roller coaster of raw show veteran Regis Philbin.
·
emotions.''
"I can't say enough about how
Davies would soon sit down. to great he's been," Davies declares.
wiite those opening lines for his host
Indeed, for ralings·anemic ABC,
to bring to life.
"Millionaire" has proven to be Dr.

Regis' Audience Pitk'Me·Up (recommended dosage: schedule as
needed).
·
But simple Nielsen glory hardly
conveys the show's impact on the
national consciousness.
"It's been amazing to watch the
show just penetrate the pop cui·
ture," Davies says.
He caught his first glimpse in
September on a drive through Penn·
sylvania. Along the way, he hap·
pened to pick up a local. newspaper,
whereupon his eye fell on a sports
story that referred to a team's uncer·
tain prospects as "the $1 million
question.''
As Davies realized, "before
August, it would have read 'the
$64,000 question"' - a turn of
phrase born of a game shpw nearly
50 years ago, updated only now,
thanks to "Who Wants to Be a Mil·
lionaire."
On the other hand, Davies does·
n't really· consider :'Millionaire" a
game show.
"I think it works in spite of being
a game show," he says. "You don't
ever actually .worry about the game.

You just watch the drama unfold."
He means the drama of each con·
testant facing . 15 successive multi·
ple·choice questions that, when .
answered correctly, mean a million~
dollar payday. "I don't think you
follow .the game elements," he says.
"I think you follow the human
nature of it."
In Davies' large yet sparsely ·
appointed office, one conspicuous
element is a bulletin board posted
with different colored index cards
bearing titles like "Mastermind,"
"Smush" and "TFI Friday.'' These
are project ideas to ~hich Davies, a5
an independent producer, would like
to tum his allenlion.
But for the moment, "Million·
aire" is too big a hit and too much .
work.
"I don 't think any ofus had any
idea how tough it would be to do,"
he concedes. According to the unfor·
giving cycle, each episode is taped
just one day before air: Then time·
consuming post·production statts.
"We came aliU'ffiingly close to not ·
delivering the sl1ow·on several &lt;!Ua·
sions:"

He sighs, a lillie weary but cl~ar·
ly fired up. Then, before returning to
a staff meeting tO thrash out that
opening, he grapples with a milliondollar question: What have the past
few months meant to' him?.
"I' ve had what you. might think
would be the greatest feelirig anyone
could have as a television ·produc·
er," he replies .. "ButJ've never had
one time when I though~ ' This. is
great, we've changed television.'
Because we're all working like a
mother to gel the next show out!"

That's it? Final answer? Davies
reconsiders and smiles. "This is
about as good as it gets."
EDITOR'S NOTE - Frazier
Moore can be reached at fmoore
"at" ap.org

'

' GALLIPOLIS- A recent recog·
nitlon banquet was sponsored by the
Gallia County 4·H Advisors Associ· ·
ation to honor volunteer service of .
the· Gallia County 4·H advisors or
:volunteers.
, The banquet was held at the Eliz·
. abeth L. Evans Outdoor Education
Center/Canter's Cave 4-H Camp near
;Jack~on, in celebration .o f the 50th
:anniversary of 4·H camp at that
"
:location.
More than 100 people attended
;and heand the guest speakei', Cory
•Henry, a recent International 4-H
:Youth Exchange to Costa Rica. She
;explained the process on how 4·H
;members cail apply to become an
•l,ntemational 4·H Youth Exchange
:Student, and she narrated a slide pre·
''Si:niation on Costa Rica.
: ; - Thenextitemofbusinesswasthe
lni~oduction · of Hall of Fame
'nductees and presentation of the

B.YJAY CALDWELL
GALI:JPOLIS - In 2000, those
who are about 10 retire or change
jobs, or whose employer is terminal·
ing the company retirement plan,
may be eligible to receive a "lump
sum disll'ibution" as defined in the
J'ntemal Revenue Code.
· Such a distribution may be sub·
stantial and may r~~sent ihe cor-herstone of their retirement security.

·•

So it is important for them to consider
their options carefully before making
a decisi~n reganding distributions . .
Basically, they are faced with two .
main options. Should they take their
distribution and pay taxes now?
Should they roll their distribution
over into a rollover Individual Retire·
men! Account (IRA)?
If they decide not to roll the dis•
tribution over into a traditional IRA

This charl shows hew local stocks of interest performed last week.
·' Each day~ closing figures are Iirovided by Advesl ofGallipolis.

rate.
.Their seCond option is to roll the
distribution over into a traditional
IRA account. This alternative assures
that assets will continue to achieve
Ia&gt;&lt; deferral and work to provide for
their retirement. Under current IRS
regulations, an individual ·need not
begin receiving distributions from
his/her traditional IRA until reaching
.
age 7().112.
Here are some rollover facts to
keep in mind when faced with this
decision :
• Only 60 days are allowed from
the receipt of a lump sum disll'ibulion
lo roll over all but your after·taX con·
tributions.
'
• All pre·taX contributions and all
earnings from the employer's quali·
fied plan in the future may be rolled

u.s.

Whether you need to talk a little.or a lot;
Cellula,- has a calling plan that's just right for you.
.
Plus, get 500 free. night and we~keitd miuutes/

.'

The way ptOple talk around
~~m.·
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•·

u.s. c.tlutor

Zane PloD Sholtlina·Ctntlr·
1014 N. Bridge- St. .
·
ns-~141

9 M!tllll
usee Will-Mart t!iolk
2145 e.ttm Avtnuo
(7401441·1011

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'•'*••

Ctoooici PloD·

401 E. H,.on
215-iDOt

-u.s~!Ll.
•~

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Now lleltitn lhOtltliiiO CooR
IOtO Jib-. itti..

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.,

By HAL KNEEN .. ·
'POMEROY -:- Can you believe
it? Only 64 days until spring·arrives!
Some Letart Falls area flinners
have already ·started to plow their
lands for early spring plantings. Veg·
etable growers will be staning cabbage seedings in the next 10 days.
.Greenhouse operators are planting
seed, transplanting seedlings, potting
up vegetative cuttings and taking cut·
tings for new plants.
· .T he mild . weather has everyone
thinking of spring·related activities
from baseball to plimting the garden.
However, don't get too eager as we
still have two months of winter
weather to contend with.
So take some time to review the
multitude of seed, gardening and
equipment.cata_logs that are inundat·
ing your mailboxes. If you are not on
their mailing list, seek .out -lhe cata·
logs at the local public library or ask
a gardening friend, I'm sure they will
share.
Start a list as to what you would
. possibly purchase, referencing the
catalog, page and price of the items
you desire. If you arc like me, the list
would fill three times the garden area
a.vailable and make the public debt
loo~ like pocket change. Get togeth·
er with fellow gardening buddies to
prune the "want list" to a more rea,
sonable list.
The Meigs County branch of Ohio
Stale University Master Gardeners
will be hosting a program entitled
"Starting Plants,From Seed"·on Tues·
day, ·F eb. ~9 from 7·8:30 p.m. at the
"Meigs County Annex, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. Admission will be
free!

an hour· long Mastef Gardener Open
House on Wednesday, Jan. 27, start•
ing at I0 a.m., )l'lhich will explain the
program and volunteer activities.
The meeting will be held at the
Meigs County Extension Office
iocated on Mulberry Heights in the
basement of the County Annex (for·
merly the County Home) next to the
Holzer Medical Center Clinic. If you
are unable to make the meeting, but
would like to be considered for the
limited training openings, please call
the extension office at 992·6696
Home gardeners, are you interest· · from 8:3().4:30 p .m. Monday through
ed i~ assisting youth and adults in Friday for further information .
learning about how plants grow,
The 30th Annual Ohio Power
plant care and how plants interact
with the environment around us? Show is being held Jan. 28,30 at the
Consider becoming an Extension Ohio Expo Center (State Fair·
grounds), Columbus. Visit hundreds
Master Gandener volunteer.
This Ohio State University Exten· of agricultural, construction and out·
sion educational program promotes door power equipment dealers during
the dissemination of. reliable, the daily trade show hours, 9 a.m...4
research·based gar~ning infonna· p.m. Local Ohio and Michigan
lion through trained 'volunteers into Equipment 1 Dealers Asseciation
the local community.
members have free passes. Tickets
. In exchange for 50 hours of class· are $5 at the door.
roqm and field ll'aining, volunteers
There are still openings left for the
offer an equivalent number of hours "Pastures for Profit" regional school
to assist in planned educational being held on Jan. 20, 25, 27 and 29.
opportunities iii the community, like: This school will be held at St. Paul's
4·H club programs and judging, United Methodist Church in Tuppers
senior citfzen plant exchanges, gar· Plains.
den clubs, schools, yo.uth organiza.
Learn about intensive grazing
lions, festivals and the county fair.
practices you can implement in your
A Meigs· Athens county class will pasture fields. Pre·registration is
begin on Wednesdll)l, Feb. 16 from 9 required, so give us a call at the
a.m.·3:30 p.m. at the Athens County Meigs County Extension Offic.e at
E·xtension office. Weekly Wednesday 992·6696.
class~s will held. until March 29 and
(Hal Kneen Ia Meigs County's
one Saturday class on March 18 to Extension agent tor agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio Stele
visit area greenhouses.
·
Prospective volunteers may attend Unlveralty.)
Private pesticide applicator r~cer·
tification classes will be 'held Tues·
day, Jan. 18 from noon·3 p.m. and
repeated at (i:30.9:30 p,m. at the
Meigs County Extension Office,
located at Mulberry Heights hehind
Holzer Medical Clinic.
These classes are set up for farm·
ers who utilize pesticides on grain,
forage, live.stock and non·crop farm·
land. Please call the extension office
at992·6696, if you plan on attending
so sufficient handouts can be printed.

..

..
'

'share
Cash dividends were 14 c~nts per.
for the fourth quarJCr. compared
, to II Cash
cents in the fourth 9uarter of
dividends for 1999 were
199~ .

53 cents per share, compared to 44
cents for 1998, an increase of 20.5
percent.
At the close of business on Dec.
31, 199.9, the average of the bid and
ask price of OVBC stock, 1raded on
Nasdaq under the · symbol OVBC,
was $33.625, compared·to $33.20 on
Dec. 31, 1998. Forthe fourth quarter,
OVB's nelinc~e was$1.02 million,
compared to $1.16 million during the
same period last year.
Net income IX;' share was 29 cents

Tobacco firms b.oost

•

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I~M;R . . .iljW~· (
1403 11111 II.
..
17401315-1001

4151-8722 or II!JOII2H771
AIM. - ...... - .... . WilMa 1 1........ Now lloi1DI!. .llcbon:
For vow --~~~~ we ltM -10 IUIIIarilld aaont ta· ~ !llano. •
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. CMiidl ear~• h a .. 1\ "h upan ~
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Shong.

Start .Preparing for spring ·planting

Increase of 3 9
Percent noted

"-'·'

.'

nle
. Steve Beaver, Sheryl Slone, Carl
F-ler; · Millar, Marilyn Furst, Bill Phllllpa,
Laura . A.o barta, Monna Phillips and Todd

OVBC ne~ income tops $4 mi.llion

-

· ~US. Cellular..

ADVISOR RECOGNITION . their yaara of aervlce a1 advlaora to
County 4-H organlza.lon at the recant
banquet at Canter' a Cave W.re, from left, Con-

• Regardless of whether it · is
deductible, is still possible to make an
annual $2,000 IRA contribution to a
traditional IRA rollover account.
However, mixing regular traditional
,IRA contributions with the rollover
balance will prohibit rolling the distribution back into another employ·
er's qualified plan in the future.
. ., • With a ·contribu&lt;Ory traditional
I'RA, only cash can be pu_l in, but with
a rollover traditional IRA, if non·cash
.
•
assets are received as part of the dis·
tribution, they can· be put in directly
.
.
(e.g., employer stock).
GALLIPOLIS .- Oh10 Valley
·
• Distributions may ~made from Bane Corp:'.s .net mc~me for 1999
a traditional IRA rollover account at was $4.29 mtlhon: ~gam of $16,2,000
any · time after age 59. 112 free of - over the $4.13 mtlhon posted by the
penally,just like a contributory tra:
firm in 1998, Chairman and Chief
ditional IRA.
E~ec~bve Officer James L. Druley
The traditi,bnal · IRA rollover s~td. .
.
.
account provides an opportunity to . Oatley satd the amount ts an
continue building assets during work· mcreas~ m net mcome of 3.9 percent.
ing years. while continuing to defer
Nettncome per share was $1.22,
income lax until beginning to receive compared to $1, 18 in 1998. The rise
distributions.
of 4 cents per share represented an
This continued growth could
mcrease of 3.4 percent.
mean the difference betwee.n living
simply .and living well during "gold- ·
on ,~ .ears." Of course, before deciding
NEW YORK (AP) _
The
.which strategy best meets set objec·
tive's , · it is a good idea to consult nation's two biggest tobacco compa·
financial and tax advisors.
nics. are boosting cig~tte prices in
(Jay Caldwell-11 I cartlftld ftlllln- a move that analysts say could add as
clai. planner with Raymond Jam• much as 18 cents ·per pack at the
· Fl~anclal Servlcea, .441 Second ~tore.
Phi!ip Morris, owner of the best'
Ava., Galllpol11, 446-2125, ll\llllbtr
selling . Marlboro brand, .and R.J.
NASO and SIPC.)
.
Reynolds Tobacco Co., whtch m~kes

12:·months/

Double your minutes for 6 ·or
.........,.

..

rollover account, they will pay taxes
in. the year they receive the distribu.
lion and have the remainder to invest
.
as they please. 'The main benefit of paying ta'xe~ .
on the distribution now is that they
may be eligible for special tax treat·
ment of five or IO·year averaging or
capital gains treatment and ('lay a low·
er tax rate than usual on the distrib·
ution. Otherwise, the distribution
will be taxed at' their ordinary tax

over.

..

~I

.r;,

THE WEEK IN
STOCKS
'

David Letterman to
undergo heart tests
NEW YORK (AP) - Funriyman
David Leuerman suddenly tljl1led
·serious during a taping of his talk
show, telling audience members and
gitcst. Regis Philbin that he will be
uhdergoing a test for possible hean
disease.
. Lettennan, 52, was to undergo an
a~giogram today. at an un!iisclosed
hospital in New York. In an
·angiogram, a flexible catheter is
inS.ited into ·an artery and guided to
the area of the heart. then dye is
injected into the catheter and an X·
rdy film is made ofhean function. ·
• The test "could result in a clean
.blll of health, medication .or other
procedures," Letterman spokesman
Howafd Rubenstein said. Letterman
will have the angiogram performed
because "he thought it prudent to do
this now as a precaution," Ruben·
stein added.
·. Leiterman said the worst·case
st:enario would be to "oj,en daddy's
rib cage ... and I don't want that."
'

-·

Ta.ldng "your lumps ...-...,. .t;as 1n sums

University of Rio Grande Jazz
Ensemble to hold winter concert ~

as

i;

il•

,-:'·-,...-,--,...-"';:-----------"-----'------~-----.:.....---'-----'-----------.

least one solo.
"We cover a wide range of
periods and styles, " says Kenney.
"Everyone's featured in a number
· of styles."
The .Jazz Ensemble is made up
of nine Rio Grande Students who
are chosen by audition to be part
. of .t he elite group of musicians .
The ensemble emphasizes impro·
visation and features keyboards,
percussion, woodwind and brass
instruments, guitar and. bass.
The ensemble prides itself not
only on the composing and per·
forming talents of its members,
but also its abiliq to cover a wide
variety of jazz styles, from old to
new, with each given its own dis;
.· tinct flavor. .
·
Kenney says this is a wonder·
ful opportunity to come out and
·experience the outstanding tal·
ents ,of local students. .
. "We hivile everyone to come
~out," he says. He promises a night
. 'o f excitement and fun.

left,
Larry Shong, Jame1 Thomas, Angle Harden,
Don Harden, Bertha Carter, Ralph Mlller and
Sharon Shoemaker.

I

Clover Club Awand. The 1999 Hall of Gallipolis, . Bossard Memorial
Fame inductees included 'Lowell · Library,. Brown's Nationwide Instir·
"Buz'' Can; W.R. "Dick" Brown,. ance, Buckeye Rural Electric,
Dorothy Toler and Jackie Graham. Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Caner's
The 1999 Clover Club Award weni to Plumbing, Judy Clark • Avon, D &amp; L
Holzer Clinic. Accepting the award Family RV, Elite Look, Empire Fur·
was the clinic'.s Jim Blevins.
nilure· Co., Evans Moore Insurance,
The formal program concluded Farmer's Bank, Firstar Bank, Friend·
with the recognition of all the 4·H ly Mart of Rio Grande and 'G alli!»
advisors in attendance. Each volun· lis, Gallia County Farm Bureau, Gal·
leer advisor was presented a Certifi· lia County 4·H Advisors Association,
cale of Recognition for their years of Gene Johnson Chevrolet/Oidsmo·
service. Recognition pins were also bile, Irvin's Glass Service, Inc., Jack·
given to all advisors with 5 · 40 years ie Graham, Lady Bug Floral, Mane
of service. The evening ended with a Designers, McCoy Moore Funeral
door prize drawing conducted by Lar· Home, Amy Miller, Norris Northup
' ry Shong, the 4·H Advisors Associa· Dodge, Inc ,, O' Dell Lumber Co.,
tion·Commillee president. ·.
Ohio Valley. Bank, Paul Davies Jew·
Special •hanks to the followitlg · elers, ~ople's . Bank, University of
' businesses and individuals who prp· 'Rio Grande, Ronnie Slone, Smith
vided door prizes: Altizer Farm 51\p- Buick Pontiac, State Farm Insurance
ply, AreaAgeilcyonAging . Disti;t · Johh K. Schmitt, Larry and Joyce
7, Bob Evans Sausage Shop of Rlo Shong, Style Station, Turnpike of
Grande, Bob Evans Restaurant•'bf Gallip&lt;;&gt;lis and Village Florist.

'Jn~est'ment Viewpoint:

'·

·. Submitted article
·: RIO GRANDE - A ·talented
gioup of University of Rio
G)'ande/Rio Grande Community
college Students will be showcas·
ing their unique abilities
the
Jazz Ensemble takes the stage for
it); semiannual concert
·:The exclusive nine· member
group will perform a rousing pro·
gram of jazz favorites on Thurs·
d;ay. January 20, at 8 p.m. in the
Alphus R. Chrisfense!l' Theatre in
tbe John Berry Fine and Perform·
iQg Arts Center.
,. The group . will be performing
a: number of delightful selections
sjJch as Flamenco Sketches by
.- ~iles Davis, "Jelly Roll Blues"
~&gt;,' Charles Mingus, and "But·
terfl y" by Herbie. Hancock. ' All
s~ngs have been arranged by Jazz
Ensemble director Christopher
. Kenney, Ph.D.
The Jazz Ensemble's perfor;
mances are unique because eacl;
member of the group showcases
his or her p~rticular talents in at

.or. banquet It' Canter's Cave were, from

-:Galli Co~nty 4-H-advisors
;hailed for volunteer service ·

;~Millio~aire' produc·e r Michael Davies wins the game.show game
~y FRAZIER MOORE

•
RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE- Recognized
for their years of llll'lllce 11 advlaora to the Gal·
lie County 4·H organization at the recent aclvl·

ADVISORS HONORED- Gallla County 4-1;1 ·catharine GHlff!aul Shaffer, Sharon Sayre, Rick
advlaora honored for their yeara of earvlce lit
Sheddea!l, ~ BaeYel', Jim Clark, Mary Lou
the recent advlaora1 bttnqullt at canter'• Cave . !dulllna, Charyl Hubble and Angle Alderlgl.
ware, from left, Pam Watha, Leah Juatlce, .

forthe fourth quarter, compared to 33
cents per share m the fourth quarter
of 1998. Return on assets for 1999 .
was 0.88 percent, compared to 1.01
percent in 1998. All per share num·
bers are 'adjusted for the 25 percent
stock split that was effective April 19,
1999.
OVBC owns three subsidiaries Ohio Valley Bank, Loan Central.and
Jackson Savings Bank. OVB operates
16 offices in Ohio and West Virginia,
while Loan Central has four con·
sumer finance company offices in
southern Ohio. Jackson Savi~gs Bank
is located in Jackson County, Ohio. ·

whol~ale

price

the Wmston, Salem . a.nd .camel spokeswoman Jan ~mnn saiU .
brands, announced the prtce nse Fn·
·Other . tobacco companies are
day.
...
. . .
~ expected to match the increases.
The Phthp Moms mcrease of 13
Neither company comments on its
cents a Jl.8Ck w~olesale, goes mlo , .pricing strategy for competitive rea·
effect wnh s~tpments Mond~y, sons. But analysts said the moves
spokesm~n Mtchael Pfet! satd . .. appeared aimed at boosting prof·
~eynolds 13cc~ts·per·packmcrease ltability following last year'~ steep .
ts effecltve wtth Thesday shtpments, · decline in cigarette consumption .

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•

Peg. C8 • ~hnba!' 11imrl ··ioenllnrl

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Sunday, Jllnuary 18, 20QI:

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiRpolla, Ohio • Point PIUHnt, WV

Farm/Business

ENTERTAINMENT----~

S.ictlon

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D

Glenn Miller Orchestra to play at Un.lversity of.R.io Gran~e:
Submitted article
RIO GRANDE-Over a half·
etnlUry ago, one of the world,s most
beloved musical personalilies disap~ared tragically over European
slOes, and the Glenn Miller Orches·
~ was thought to be gone forever.
' History has proven, however, m.t
its hard to keep a good band down.
.: : Glenn Miller's legend has been
kept alive through the Glenn Miller
Orchesll'a, which will, perform in a
~ial engagement at the Universi·
iy: of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Com·
lnunity college JanuarY 24, al 8
p.m., in the Alphus R. Christensen
Theall'e in the John Berry Fine and
l'!=rfonning Arts Center, as pan of
!he Valley Anists Series.
· The orchestra rose to fame during
· i~e pre· World War II era and soon
popularized the familiar big band
sound that became the mark of the
~O's and 40s.
.
In 1956, the orchestra reorga.

nized, and it has been delighting
audiences with old and new
favorites ever since.
Today it remains. one of the most
popular big bands in the world, reg·
ularly entertaining sold·oul audi·
ences at home and abroad .
The 19·mcmber band and vocal
group continues to play many of the
original Glenn Miller arran~ements
that have thrilled audiences for
years, as well as some new favorites
played in the familiar big·band style.
The band prides itself .on its abil·
ity to stay current while maintaining
iis familiar sound. Some of the

orchestra's
more modem selections i11clude
"Up Where We Belong", "Star
WarsfWar of the Stars", and the
theme from the television series
"Fame". The band carefully selects
its repertoire to reflect old and new
songs that will remain timeless and
true to the orchestra's musical lega·

cy.
One of the most recognizable
characteristics of the orchestra is its
distinct sound, created by the clar·
inet holding down the melodic line,
doubled or coupled with the tenor
sax playing·the same notes while the
other instruments fill in the beauflful
harmonies and accents .
The orchestra obviously has
found the right combinatiQn. The
group, perfonns nearly 300 concerts
a year and 1ravels 48 weeks out of
the year. They entertain more than
half a million people annually.
T)te Glenn Miller Orchestra con·
cert is sure to be a memorable event
which promises to be entertaining
and delightful for the whole family.
The university i~vites everyone
. to come out and enjoy this unique

concert experience. Tickets are
available at the door, and may be
purchased for $20 apiece.

The Glenn Mille Orcheatra

a

·

But he, Philbin and the entire
APTelevlslon Writer
"Millionaire" staff are also straP"
•' · NEW YORK (AP)- " Nobody ping themselves in for another ride
thought it could possibly work." on the game·show roller coaster, this
1
Regis Philbin began Sunday night as time sharing it with Fox's copycat,
hiS ABC game show, "Who Wants· "Greed," as well as Johnny·come·
tcr · Be a Millionaire," made its latelies "Winning Lines" (CBS) and
breathless return for "a brand·new "Twenty·One" (NBC).
century."
Until last Aug. 16, game shows
·· Having proved itself in August hadn't clicked in network prime·
~n November as more than a fly. time since the I 950s. Then came the
by-night success, "Millionaire" was premiere of "Millionaire, " a British·
niJw back for an elght·night bted quiz show that Davies, a 33· .
Ri'arathon (continuing tonight at 8 year· old former ABC exec who him·
p.m . EST and on through Sunday) self is British·bom, had talked the
before seuling into an open·ended network into leiting him import.
':'In of three airings per week.
"'Millionaire' now seems like
.. "The eagle has landed!" crowed such a big, obvious, 'duh!' sort of
1\ost Philbin, presumably ~parting television program," Davies notes.
frOm the script...
"But before it went on the air; .this
' One day last week, "Millionaire" was !lie most alternative, the most
e~ecutive producer Michael Davies pie·in·the·sky, the 11lOSI unlikely·IO·
Was plotting .that opening sequence. work idea."
·
H'e wanted to come back with a
He doesn't begrudge other pro·
bang. Maybe kick off with a visual ducers now riding the quii·show ·
pastiche of past big winners, spiced wave and makes no forecasts for
wlth a bit of we· told·you·so for the what effect, if any, their clones will
show's naysaye~s.
have on "Millionaire."
.
Plus, some purple pro.se to capBut Davies can claim two ad van·
lure the phenomenon when, "night !ages with final· answer certainty:
after night, 31 memorable nights, a His show was first, and it has some·
nation sat transfixed as real Amcri- thing that no.qne else's•hi!S .,-.talkcans rode a roller coaster of raw show veteran Regis Philbin.
·
emotions.''
"I can't say enough about how
Davies would soon sit down. to great he's been," Davies declares.
wiite those opening lines for his host
Indeed, for ralings·anemic ABC,
to bring to life.
"Millionaire" has proven to be Dr.

Regis' Audience Pitk'Me·Up (recommended dosage: schedule as
needed).
·
But simple Nielsen glory hardly
conveys the show's impact on the
national consciousness.
"It's been amazing to watch the
show just penetrate the pop cui·
ture," Davies says.
He caught his first glimpse in
September on a drive through Penn·
sylvania. Along the way, he hap·
pened to pick up a local. newspaper,
whereupon his eye fell on a sports
story that referred to a team's uncer·
tain prospects as "the $1 million
question.''
As Davies realized, "before
August, it would have read 'the
$64,000 question"' - a turn of
phrase born of a game shpw nearly
50 years ago, updated only now,
thanks to "Who Wants to Be a Mil·
lionaire."
On the other hand, Davies does·
n't really· consider :'Millionaire" a
game show.
"I think it works in spite of being
a game show," he says. "You don't
ever actually .worry about the game.

You just watch the drama unfold."
He means the drama of each con·
testant facing . 15 successive multi·
ple·choice questions that, when .
answered correctly, mean a million~
dollar payday. "I don't think you
follow .the game elements," he says.
"I think you follow the human
nature of it."
In Davies' large yet sparsely ·
appointed office, one conspicuous
element is a bulletin board posted
with different colored index cards
bearing titles like "Mastermind,"
"Smush" and "TFI Friday.'' These
are project ideas to ~hich Davies, a5
an independent producer, would like
to tum his allenlion.
But for the moment, "Million·
aire" is too big a hit and too much .
work.
"I don 't think any ofus had any
idea how tough it would be to do,"
he concedes. According to the unfor·
giving cycle, each episode is taped
just one day before air: Then time·
consuming post·production statts.
"We came aliU'ffiingly close to not ·
delivering the sl1ow·on several &lt;!Ua·
sions:"

He sighs, a lillie weary but cl~ar·
ly fired up. Then, before returning to
a staff meeting tO thrash out that
opening, he grapples with a milliondollar question: What have the past
few months meant to' him?.
"I' ve had what you. might think
would be the greatest feelirig anyone
could have as a television ·produc·
er," he replies .. "ButJ've never had
one time when I though~ ' This. is
great, we've changed television.'
Because we're all working like a
mother to gel the next show out!"

That's it? Final answer? Davies
reconsiders and smiles. "This is
about as good as it gets."
EDITOR'S NOTE - Frazier
Moore can be reached at fmoore
"at" ap.org

'

' GALLIPOLIS- A recent recog·
nitlon banquet was sponsored by the
Gallia County 4·H Advisors Associ· ·
ation to honor volunteer service of .
the· Gallia County 4·H advisors or
:volunteers.
, The banquet was held at the Eliz·
. abeth L. Evans Outdoor Education
Center/Canter's Cave 4-H Camp near
;Jack~on, in celebration .o f the 50th
:anniversary of 4·H camp at that
"
:location.
More than 100 people attended
;and heand the guest speakei', Cory
•Henry, a recent International 4-H
:Youth Exchange to Costa Rica. She
;explained the process on how 4·H
;members cail apply to become an
•l,ntemational 4·H Youth Exchange
:Student, and she narrated a slide pre·
''Si:niation on Costa Rica.
: ; - Thenextitemofbusinesswasthe
lni~oduction · of Hall of Fame
'nductees and presentation of the

B.YJAY CALDWELL
GALI:JPOLIS - In 2000, those
who are about 10 retire or change
jobs, or whose employer is terminal·
ing the company retirement plan,
may be eligible to receive a "lump
sum disll'ibution" as defined in the
J'ntemal Revenue Code.
· Such a distribution may be sub·
stantial and may r~~sent ihe cor-herstone of their retirement security.

·•

So it is important for them to consider
their options carefully before making
a decisi~n reganding distributions . .
Basically, they are faced with two .
main options. Should they take their
distribution and pay taxes now?
Should they roll their distribution
over into a rollover Individual Retire·
men! Account (IRA)?
If they decide not to roll the dis•
tribution over into a traditional IRA

This charl shows hew local stocks of interest performed last week.
·' Each day~ closing figures are Iirovided by Advesl ofGallipolis.

rate.
.Their seCond option is to roll the
distribution over into a traditional
IRA account. This alternative assures
that assets will continue to achieve
Ia&gt;&lt; deferral and work to provide for
their retirement. Under current IRS
regulations, an individual ·need not
begin receiving distributions from
his/her traditional IRA until reaching
.
age 7().112.
Here are some rollover facts to
keep in mind when faced with this
decision :
• Only 60 days are allowed from
the receipt of a lump sum disll'ibulion
lo roll over all but your after·taX con·
tributions.
'
• All pre·taX contributions and all
earnings from the employer's quali·
fied plan in the future may be rolled

u.s.

Whether you need to talk a little.or a lot;
Cellula,- has a calling plan that's just right for you.
.
Plus, get 500 free. night and we~keitd miuutes/

.'

The way ptOple talk around
~~m.·
. .. .
•·

u.s. c.tlutor

Zane PloD Sholtlina·Ctntlr·
1014 N. Bridge- St. .
·
ns-~141

9 M!tllll
usee Will-Mart t!iolk
2145 e.ttm Avtnuo
(7401441·1011

'

'•'*••

Ctoooici PloD·

401 E. H,.on
215-iDOt

-u.s~!Ll.
•~

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.

Now lleltitn lhOtltliiiO CooR
IOtO Jib-. itti..

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.,

By HAL KNEEN .. ·
'POMEROY -:- Can you believe
it? Only 64 days until spring·arrives!
Some Letart Falls area flinners
have already ·started to plow their
lands for early spring plantings. Veg·
etable growers will be staning cabbage seedings in the next 10 days.
.Greenhouse operators are planting
seed, transplanting seedlings, potting
up vegetative cuttings and taking cut·
tings for new plants.
· .T he mild . weather has everyone
thinking of spring·related activities
from baseball to plimting the garden.
However, don't get too eager as we
still have two months of winter
weather to contend with.
So take some time to review the
multitude of seed, gardening and
equipment.cata_logs that are inundat·
ing your mailboxes. If you are not on
their mailing list, seek .out -lhe cata·
logs at the local public library or ask
a gardening friend, I'm sure they will
share.
Start a list as to what you would
. possibly purchase, referencing the
catalog, page and price of the items
you desire. If you arc like me, the list
would fill three times the garden area
a.vailable and make the public debt
loo~ like pocket change. Get togeth·
er with fellow gardening buddies to
prune the "want list" to a more rea,
sonable list.
The Meigs County branch of Ohio
Stale University Master Gardeners
will be hosting a program entitled
"Starting Plants,From Seed"·on Tues·
day, ·F eb. ~9 from 7·8:30 p.m. at the
"Meigs County Annex, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy. Admission will be
free!

an hour· long Mastef Gardener Open
House on Wednesday, Jan. 27, start•
ing at I0 a.m., )l'lhich will explain the
program and volunteer activities.
The meeting will be held at the
Meigs County Extension Office
iocated on Mulberry Heights in the
basement of the County Annex (for·
merly the County Home) next to the
Holzer Medical Center Clinic. If you
are unable to make the meeting, but
would like to be considered for the
limited training openings, please call
the extension office at 992·6696
Home gardeners, are you interest· · from 8:3().4:30 p .m. Monday through
ed i~ assisting youth and adults in Friday for further information .
learning about how plants grow,
The 30th Annual Ohio Power
plant care and how plants interact
with the environment around us? Show is being held Jan. 28,30 at the
Consider becoming an Extension Ohio Expo Center (State Fair·
grounds), Columbus. Visit hundreds
Master Gandener volunteer.
This Ohio State University Exten· of agricultural, construction and out·
sion educational program promotes door power equipment dealers during
the dissemination of. reliable, the daily trade show hours, 9 a.m...4
research·based gar~ning infonna· p.m. Local Ohio and Michigan
lion through trained 'volunteers into Equipment 1 Dealers Asseciation
the local community.
members have free passes. Tickets
. In exchange for 50 hours of class· are $5 at the door.
roqm and field ll'aining, volunteers
There are still openings left for the
offer an equivalent number of hours "Pastures for Profit" regional school
to assist in planned educational being held on Jan. 20, 25, 27 and 29.
opportunities iii the community, like: This school will be held at St. Paul's
4·H club programs and judging, United Methodist Church in Tuppers
senior citfzen plant exchanges, gar· Plains.
den clubs, schools, yo.uth organiza.
Learn about intensive grazing
lions, festivals and the county fair.
practices you can implement in your
A Meigs· Athens county class will pasture fields. Pre·registration is
begin on Wednesdll)l, Feb. 16 from 9 required, so give us a call at the
a.m.·3:30 p.m. at the Athens County Meigs County Extension Offic.e at
E·xtension office. Weekly Wednesday 992·6696.
class~s will held. until March 29 and
(Hal Kneen Ia Meigs County's
one Saturday class on March 18 to Extension agent tor agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio Stele
visit area greenhouses.
·
Prospective volunteers may attend Unlveralty.)
Private pesticide applicator r~cer·
tification classes will be 'held Tues·
day, Jan. 18 from noon·3 p.m. and
repeated at (i:30.9:30 p,m. at the
Meigs County Extension Office,
located at Mulberry Heights hehind
Holzer Medical Clinic.
These classes are set up for farm·
ers who utilize pesticides on grain,
forage, live.stock and non·crop farm·
land. Please call the extension office
at992·6696, if you plan on attending
so sufficient handouts can be printed.

..

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'share
Cash dividends were 14 c~nts per.
for the fourth quarJCr. compared
, to II Cash
cents in the fourth 9uarter of
dividends for 1999 were
199~ .

53 cents per share, compared to 44
cents for 1998, an increase of 20.5
percent.
At the close of business on Dec.
31, 199.9, the average of the bid and
ask price of OVBC stock, 1raded on
Nasdaq under the · symbol OVBC,
was $33.625, compared·to $33.20 on
Dec. 31, 1998. Forthe fourth quarter,
OVB's nelinc~e was$1.02 million,
compared to $1.16 million during the
same period last year.
Net income IX;' share was 29 cents

Tobacco firms b.oost

•

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1403 11111 II.
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17401315-1001

4151-8722 or II!JOII2H771
AIM. - ...... - .... . WilMa 1 1........ Now lloi1DI!. .llcbon:
For vow --~~~~ we ltM -10 IUIIIarilld aaont ta· ~ !llano. •
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Start .Preparing for spring ·planting

Increase of 3 9
Percent noted

"-'·'

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. Steve Beaver, Sheryl Slone, Carl
F-ler; · Millar, Marilyn Furst, Bill Phllllpa,
Laura . A.o barta, Monna Phillips and Todd

OVBC ne~ income tops $4 mi.llion

-

· ~US. Cellular..

ADVISOR RECOGNITION . their yaara of aervlce a1 advlaora to
County 4-H organlza.lon at the recant
banquet at Canter' a Cave W.re, from left, Con-

• Regardless of whether it · is
deductible, is still possible to make an
annual $2,000 IRA contribution to a
traditional IRA rollover account.
However, mixing regular traditional
,IRA contributions with the rollover
balance will prohibit rolling the distribution back into another employ·
er's qualified plan in the future.
. ., • With a ·contribu&lt;Ory traditional
I'RA, only cash can be pu_l in, but with
a rollover traditional IRA, if non·cash
.
•
assets are received as part of the dis·
tribution, they can· be put in directly
.
.
(e.g., employer stock).
GALLIPOLIS .- Oh10 Valley
·
• Distributions may ~made from Bane Corp:'.s .net mc~me for 1999
a traditional IRA rollover account at was $4.29 mtlhon: ~gam of $16,2,000
any · time after age 59. 112 free of - over the $4.13 mtlhon posted by the
penally,just like a contributory tra:
firm in 1998, Chairman and Chief
ditional IRA.
E~ec~bve Officer James L. Druley
The traditi,bnal · IRA rollover s~td. .
.
.
account provides an opportunity to . Oatley satd the amount ts an
continue building assets during work· mcreas~ m net mcome of 3.9 percent.
ing years. while continuing to defer
Nettncome per share was $1.22,
income lax until beginning to receive compared to $1, 18 in 1998. The rise
distributions.
of 4 cents per share represented an
This continued growth could
mcrease of 3.4 percent.
mean the difference betwee.n living
simply .and living well during "gold- ·
on ,~ .ears." Of course, before deciding
NEW YORK (AP) _
The
.which strategy best meets set objec·
tive's , · it is a good idea to consult nation's two biggest tobacco compa·
financial and tax advisors.
nics. are boosting cig~tte prices in
(Jay Caldwell-11 I cartlftld ftlllln- a move that analysts say could add as
clai. planner with Raymond Jam• much as 18 cents ·per pack at the
· Fl~anclal Servlcea, .441 Second ~tore.
Phi!ip Morris, owner of the best'
Ava., Galllpol11, 446-2125, ll\llllbtr
selling . Marlboro brand, .and R.J.
NASO and SIPC.)
.
Reynolds Tobacco Co., whtch m~kes

12:·months/

Double your minutes for 6 ·or
.........,.

..

rollover account, they will pay taxes
in. the year they receive the distribu.
lion and have the remainder to invest
.
as they please. 'The main benefit of paying ta'xe~ .
on the distribution now is that they
may be eligible for special tax treat·
ment of five or IO·year averaging or
capital gains treatment and ('lay a low·
er tax rate than usual on the distrib·
ution. Otherwise, the distribution
will be taxed at' their ordinary tax

over.

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THE WEEK IN
STOCKS
'

David Letterman to
undergo heart tests
NEW YORK (AP) - Funriyman
David Leuerman suddenly tljl1led
·serious during a taping of his talk
show, telling audience members and
gitcst. Regis Philbin that he will be
uhdergoing a test for possible hean
disease.
. Lettennan, 52, was to undergo an
a~giogram today. at an un!iisclosed
hospital in New York. In an
·angiogram, a flexible catheter is
inS.ited into ·an artery and guided to
the area of the heart. then dye is
injected into the catheter and an X·
rdy film is made ofhean function. ·
• The test "could result in a clean
.blll of health, medication .or other
procedures," Letterman spokesman
Howafd Rubenstein said. Letterman
will have the angiogram performed
because "he thought it prudent to do
this now as a precaution," Ruben·
stein added.
·. Leiterman said the worst·case
st:enario would be to "oj,en daddy's
rib cage ... and I don't want that."
'

-·

Ta.ldng "your lumps ...-...,. .t;as 1n sums

University of Rio Grande Jazz
Ensemble to hold winter concert ~

as

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least one solo.
"We cover a wide range of
periods and styles, " says Kenney.
"Everyone's featured in a number
· of styles."
The .Jazz Ensemble is made up
of nine Rio Grande Students who
are chosen by audition to be part
. of .t he elite group of musicians .
The ensemble emphasizes impro·
visation and features keyboards,
percussion, woodwind and brass
instruments, guitar and. bass.
The ensemble prides itself not
only on the composing and per·
forming talents of its members,
but also its abiliq to cover a wide
variety of jazz styles, from old to
new, with each given its own dis;
.· tinct flavor. .
·
Kenney says this is a wonder·
ful opportunity to come out and
·experience the outstanding tal·
ents ,of local students. .
. "We hivile everyone to come
~out," he says. He promises a night
. 'o f excitement and fun.

left,
Larry Shong, Jame1 Thomas, Angle Harden,
Don Harden, Bertha Carter, Ralph Mlller and
Sharon Shoemaker.

I

Clover Club Awand. The 1999 Hall of Gallipolis, . Bossard Memorial
Fame inductees included 'Lowell · Library,. Brown's Nationwide Instir·
"Buz'' Can; W.R. "Dick" Brown,. ance, Buckeye Rural Electric,
Dorothy Toler and Jackie Graham. Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Caner's
The 1999 Clover Club Award weni to Plumbing, Judy Clark • Avon, D &amp; L
Holzer Clinic. Accepting the award Family RV, Elite Look, Empire Fur·
was the clinic'.s Jim Blevins.
nilure· Co., Evans Moore Insurance,
The formal program concluded Farmer's Bank, Firstar Bank, Friend·
with the recognition of all the 4·H ly Mart of Rio Grande and 'G alli!»
advisors in attendance. Each volun· lis, Gallia County Farm Bureau, Gal·
leer advisor was presented a Certifi· lia County 4·H Advisors Association,
cale of Recognition for their years of Gene Johnson Chevrolet/Oidsmo·
service. Recognition pins were also bile, Irvin's Glass Service, Inc., Jack·
given to all advisors with 5 · 40 years ie Graham, Lady Bug Floral, Mane
of service. The evening ended with a Designers, McCoy Moore Funeral
door prize drawing conducted by Lar· Home, Amy Miller, Norris Northup
' ry Shong, the 4·H Advisors Associa· Dodge, Inc ,, O' Dell Lumber Co.,
tion·Commillee president. ·.
Ohio Valley. Bank, Paul Davies Jew·
Special •hanks to the followitlg · elers, ~ople's . Bank, University of
' businesses and individuals who prp· 'Rio Grande, Ronnie Slone, Smith
vided door prizes: Altizer Farm 51\p- Buick Pontiac, State Farm Insurance
ply, AreaAgeilcyonAging . Disti;t · Johh K. Schmitt, Larry and Joyce
7, Bob Evans Sausage Shop of Rlo Shong, Style Station, Turnpike of
Grande, Bob Evans Restaurant•'bf Gallip&lt;;&gt;lis and Village Florist.

'Jn~est'ment Viewpoint:

'·

·. Submitted article
·: RIO GRANDE - A ·talented
gioup of University of Rio
G)'ande/Rio Grande Community
college Students will be showcas·
ing their unique abilities
the
Jazz Ensemble takes the stage for
it); semiannual concert
·:The exclusive nine· member
group will perform a rousing pro·
gram of jazz favorites on Thurs·
d;ay. January 20, at 8 p.m. in the
Alphus R. Chrisfense!l' Theatre in
tbe John Berry Fine and Perform·
iQg Arts Center.
,. The group . will be performing
a: number of delightful selections
sjJch as Flamenco Sketches by
.- ~iles Davis, "Jelly Roll Blues"
~&gt;,' Charles Mingus, and "But·
terfl y" by Herbie. Hancock. ' All
s~ngs have been arranged by Jazz
Ensemble director Christopher
. Kenney, Ph.D.
The Jazz Ensemble's perfor;
mances are unique because eacl;
member of the group showcases
his or her p~rticular talents in at

.or. banquet It' Canter's Cave were, from

-:Galli Co~nty 4-H-advisors
;hailed for volunteer service ·

;~Millio~aire' produc·e r Michael Davies wins the game.show game
~y FRAZIER MOORE

•
RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE- Recognized
for their years of llll'lllce 11 advlaora to the Gal·
lie County 4·H organization at the recent aclvl·

ADVISORS HONORED- Gallla County 4-1;1 ·catharine GHlff!aul Shaffer, Sharon Sayre, Rick
advlaora honored for their yeara of earvlce lit
Sheddea!l, ~ BaeYel', Jim Clark, Mary Lou
the recent advlaora1 bttnqullt at canter'• Cave . !dulllna, Charyl Hubble and Angle Alderlgl.
ware, from left, Pam Watha, Leah Juatlce, .

forthe fourth quarter, compared to 33
cents per share m the fourth quarter
of 1998. Return on assets for 1999 .
was 0.88 percent, compared to 1.01
percent in 1998. All per share num·
bers are 'adjusted for the 25 percent
stock split that was effective April 19,
1999.
OVBC owns three subsidiaries Ohio Valley Bank, Loan Central.and
Jackson Savings Bank. OVB operates
16 offices in Ohio and West Virginia,
while Loan Central has four con·
sumer finance company offices in
southern Ohio. Jackson Savi~gs Bank
is located in Jackson County, Ohio. ·

whol~ale

price

the Wmston, Salem . a.nd .camel spokeswoman Jan ~mnn saiU .
brands, announced the prtce nse Fn·
·Other . tobacco companies are
day.
...
. . .
~ expected to match the increases.
The Phthp Moms mcrease of 13
Neither company comments on its
cents a Jl.8Ck w~olesale, goes mlo , .pricing strategy for competitive rea·
effect wnh s~tpments Mond~y, sons. But analysts said the moves
spokesm~n Mtchael Pfet! satd . .. appeared aimed at boosting prof·
~eynolds 13cc~ts·per·packmcrease ltability following last year'~ steep .
ts effecltve wtth Thesday shtpments, · decline in cigarette consumption .

;,
· ~....:;....;...--~~. .

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

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Page 02 o &amp;unbap

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Pomeroy

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.

oMiddleport oGalllpqlis, Ohio oPoint PleaHnt, WV

Sunday, January 11, 20QO

Water may help ,you fill up faster ;~

ANIWUNCU,1E.NTS

By BECKY COLLINS
This could only be why a bowl of cooked oatmeal, which has absorbeif
· GALLIPOLIS - it 's not a bad habit, but researchers are finding that "eat· a lot of water, is more filling than a breakfast bar made with the same amoull\ , .
ing" water is an even belter way to help you cut calories. Let me explain ... of oats.
,
·
·
~. ·
Most foods have some water in them- some foods more than others. tn · Soup, of, course, is a good example of a water-rieh food, but most fruit$
a study in a recent issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, and vegetables are high in water content, too. Unfortunately, water content :
researchers reported that foods with higher water content helped study par· isn't listed on Nutrition Facts labels, but you can find it in the U.S. Depart· •
t1c1pants feel fuller while consuming fewer calories. ·
·
ment of Agriculture's Nutrient Database (hltp://www. nal.usda.gov/fnic/cgi ~
Their conclusion: Filling up on foods with a higher water content can help binlnut_search.pi). There, you can look up specific foods for their nutrient ·
you reduce calories without feeling hungry.
content - water is listed first.
':
The researchers served meals one day a week for four 'weeks to 24 study
For example, raw zucchini is 95 pei;Cent water by weight; raw tomatoe"s ·
parttcipants. At .lun ch, each participant ~te a .first course that consisted of are 94 percent water. Raw oranges are 87 percent water; raw apples are 8~ '
chicken rice casserole, the same casserole with a glass of w~ter, or a bowl p~t water. On the other hand, white bread is 36 percent water; toasted, ..
of chicken rice soup.
.
.
-11's 30 percent water.
•
.
The soup was made of exactly the ingredients in the casserole plus the
Gener~lly.• this is mo~e eviden~e tha~ addi~g ,more fruits and vegetablei·
g.lass of water. How~ver, the participants who got the soup ate fewer caio- to your dtet ts a good thmg, espectally tf you re trymg to cut calones.
r;es than the rest of t~e meal. The soup helped cutb their appetite more than
(Becky Collins is Gellle Co~nly's Extension agent for family end con::
the casserole alan~ or the casserole with ,a giass .of water.
eumer aclencea, Ohio State Unlvertilty.)

Strong earnings may set market's course
'

: 15-YEAR EMPLOYEE- Russell Potts was recognized lor 15
•years of service as an employee of the Bob Evans Farm during
:the farm's al'!nual Christmas dinner at Simpson United Methodist
• Church in Rio Grande. Potts Is seen accepting the· award from
:Mary Cus'ck, Bob Farms Inc.'s vice presidenlfor corporate com-

!munications.
'

By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Business Writer ·
NEW YORK - In the first two
weeks of 2000, th~ U.S. stock market has alternately· stumbled and
soared as investors anguished over
rising interest rates and inflation, yet
couidn' t resist putting their money.'
into the market that rewarded them so
. richly in 1999.
In the next few weeks, analysts
say, the market may find a true direction as AmeriCa's corporations report

their earnings for the fourth quarter
of 1999. And if analysts are right in
expecting that companies had another quarter of robust profit growth, the
market's direction is likely to .be
straight up,
As reports flow in during the coming two weeks, "the .market's attention will shift from interest rates ·and
earnings preannouncements to the

powerful earnings gro~th .story of
2000," said Edward Keon, director of
quantitative research at Prudential
S,ecurities in New York.
First CallfThomson Financial said
this past week that companies in the
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 should see
profits rise an average of 17.6 percent
from the fourth quarter of 1998.
But in a twist that mirrors the latest developments in the stock market,

hut-shot technology companies are
ltkeiy to ~outdone by old-fashioned
industrial businesses. Keon expects
technology compani ~s to post average earnings growth of l I .2 percent.
Meanwhtle, the basic industry sector
1s expected . to report 39.0 percent
growth, utthty companies are likely
to post 2 I.5 percent growth, and ener·
gy ~ompanics may see earnings dou-'
ble Irom the final quarter of 1'998.
That reversal of fortunes could be
t~mporary. Many technology compantcs ctted Y2K computer worries for
slumping sales in the second halfof
1999. Meanwhile, the basic industry
sector IS facmg easy comparisons to
the fourth quarter of 1998 when
many companies were harnm~red by
the Astan financial crisis.
"Many of the tech companies will
come righ[ back in the first quarter as
the businesses that deferred spending
last year go ahead and buy," said
Joseph Abbott, senior equity strategist at 1/B/E/S International Inc.,
another firm that tracks earnings.
Nonetheless, analysts say technology companies will face espectally tough scrutiny from investors.
With many technology stocks at or
near all-tim~ highs, investors may
prove unwtlhng to tolerate even mild
disappointment.

This past week, shares of Yaboot
tumbled after the company said its
foun~-quari_er earnings handily beat
both published estimates and the
unoffici!ll "whisper number" that circulated among Wall Street traders.
Even as analysts applauded the company's pe.rformance, · investors
focused on Yahoo 1's warning that its
growth rate will be difficult to sus·
tain.
The selloff was evidence of
investors' nervousness about the skyhigh valuations of the technology
sector, said l{ugh Johnson , chief
·investment officer at First Albany
Corp., who warned that other technology stocks may be in for the same
treatment on Wall Street.
" If you are a growth investor who
has opted ~o buy s.tocks at these valuations, you've already heard the
positives," Johnson said. "Your
scanner should now be tuned to the
negatives."
'
In the meantime, some analysts
expect and encourage a shift in focus
to the so-calletl value ·stocks, which
. languished last year as investors
poured money into technology
shares.
"This q~aner will serve as a·
reminder that there are great nontech
companies likely to make much mon-

. THREE YE~RS OF SERVICE - Judy Eggleton, left, was rec·
ognized for three years of service as an employee of the Bob
Evans Farm during the farm's annual Christmas dinner at Simp·
son United Methodist Church in Rio Grande. Mary Cusick, right,
Bob Evans Farms Inc.'s vice president for corporate communi·
cations, maile the presentation.

By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Business Writer .
· NEW YORK - Stocks rose ·
sharply Friday, boosted by a strong
earnings report tram high-tech bellwether Intel and comments from
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan that indicate interest rates
will be rising only slightly.
The Dow Jones i,ndustrial average
rose 140.55 to a 'new closing record
of II ,722.98 1 easily topping Thursday's record. The new closing high
was the Dow's third·this week and its.
fourth since the start of 2000. Forthe
week, the Dow rose 200.42.
Broader market measures also
finished with solid gains. The Nasdaq
composite index rose I 07 .06 to
4,064.27, and the Standard &amp; Poor 's
500 rose 15.47 tu 1,465.15.
The Nasdaq, which dipped as
much as I 0 percent below its peak
last week. has rebnunded smartly in
the past two sessions and is

IJOW

just

1.6 percent below the record high
reached Jan . 3. The S&amp;P 500, meanwhile, is just tour points below its
dosing record, iea~hed Dec . 31.
Technology stocks led the Dow
and the Nasdaq Friday, with industry
leaders Intel and Microsoft accounting for a major portion of those

indexes' gainS.
" We continue to have money
coming into the market, and money
m;1nagers are deciding that techno!, ·
~gy offers the opportunity for the
tggest gams,'' said Ricky Harrington , techilic.al analyst' at Wachovia
Securities in Charlotte, N.C.
Intel, the world 's leading computcr chtp maker, rose 12 to I03 1/16
a~cr announcing better than expecte earnings late Thursday. The company cited a surge in sales of personal
computers during the back-to-school
· and holiday shopping period.
The company's strong report and
optimistic outlook lifted rival chip
maker Applied Materials, which
gained II 118 to 135 5/8. Computer
makers like IBM, up 1 3/8to 119 5/8,
advanced as investors anticipated
strong profit reports.
Microsoft rose 4 7116 to 112 1/4
a day alter Bill Gates' decision to
relinquish his chief executive job to
company president Steve Ballmer.
Analysts said the move will assure .
continuity in the company's leadership.
Stocks also benefited from growing confidence that inflation is not
rising sharply. A speech ~y
Greenspan Thursday mght convinced

i

· FIRST YEAR EMPLOYEE - Peggy Callihan; left, was recognlzed for herflrst year of service as an employea of the Bqb Evans'
Fann during the farm·~ an_nual Christmas dinner at Simpson United Meth~lst ~hurch tn Rto Grande. Making the presentation was
Mary Custck, nghl, Bob t;vans Farms Inc.'s vice presldenUor cor·
p1orate communications.

Personal•
DI~BETIC TESTING SUPPLIES.
Tnllng Suppt111 Moy 8t FREE
TO Qualified Patlenta. Medicare
And Private Insurance 11 Wtl·

come. No HMO's. Cal , ·800·8197578.
Herpa • EverCL~ Stopt Herpes

Outbreaks! 96% Succeu Rate.
Toll Fraa ~ 1·877-EVERCLR Info :

www.eYtrdr.com

,.

point and then had them discontinue'
the service. What ·do you think? _
L.H., Broussard, La.
DEAR LH.: If you 101•re unable to
recejve the signal, you should have
c
notified the satellite company. If
· they prov1ded the stgnai, whether or
not you were there or had the ability
to listen .to it is not an issue. Unless
you nottfied them that you were
unable_to use I t - and I doubt tha~
dd b
you 1 , ecause you were testing
other receivers - it is my view that
you paid the bill pmpcrly.
DEAR BRUCE: I mn 27 and my

Or No COat. We Bill Medicare Or
Your Insurance Direct. Get 2 New
B,as , Prosthe ctlcs , Every Six

Monlht, FREE Shipping. 1-liOO·
7~·7880.

1

START DATING TONIGHT!

:.a

~~~~~~gew~f· t.::!fc :e~er r~tes 'an~

then switch off when ilie time has
1

'

'

9:1l0-5:30.

•

Adul,t Male Seagle - gentle. won-

3021.
(304)675·7559.

!: !::~os!r!~~d~~.

DivOrce-

pupp~s.

lie,tst shots a wormed, 740.992·
2121.

Miniature Collie TriColored . Fe·
mala . ,t.pprox 1 year old . (740)·
44HI118
" -arr lab, 81ac~·
(304)675·6908. .

Puppies.

.,.sm-al-1 a-m-o-.-.1-d-,.-m-.-,.-Lh-.-,.
Apso;

female '

Lost and Foun.d

ll

80

Auction
and Flea Markel

Bill Moodlspaugh AucUonetrlng·
c::ompltte auction service. Buy
and sell e&amp;tates . Ohio License
17693, wv 1338, 74D-992·9707.
Wedemeyer' s Auction Service,

1847.

90

•Ill'.

Gallipolis, 740-446·2842 .

Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homes, 740·4•6 -0175, 304-675·
5985.

EM PLOYMENT
SERVICES

Apartments
for Rent ~ •

Son &amp; Brother

John .Paul

Accepting Applications.
1 Bedroom Apartments,
Total Electric; Central Air
Elderly (62 or older)
. Disabled Handicapped
'·Eligibility Based on Income
Handicapped Accessibility
~ase Gall (740) 992.. 3055·.
·TDD# (800) 855-2880
Office Hours
Monday - Friday
'
8:00 am to 12 Noon ·

•= ·Equal Housing Opportunity

(J.P.) Jones, Jr.
5/1!49 -1114(90

Sadly Missed ·
John Paul, Sr;,
Joanie, Jimmy,
Jackie, Joyce, Jeff
&amp;Juanita ·

110
$2,000

Help Wanted
WEEKLY! MailinO

400 .

3701 H 438. Start Immediate~.

$45,000 !Year IPotentlall Doctors
Need People! Process Medical
Claims From Home, We Train .

MUST Own Computer. 886·332-

5015 Ext 1700 .Ually.

Announcement

Inc.

..

E(jie Your Still
.Looking Good At

.

Announcement

50 .
Happy Birthday

. Love Ya
&amp; Girls

.

'

EOE

At cepUng AppHcaUons For
Home Healing Driver 's, Weekends 011, Paid Time Oil, tn·
aura nee And 4011&lt; . Must Have
Atlean Class B COL With Tank
Endorsements. Send Replies To:
CLA 490 clo Gallipolis Dally Tr lb·
une, 825 Third Avenue , Gallipolis,
OH45631 . A

ATTN: Qwn A Computer? Put It

player

U&amp; • 75

Mid-Ohio Valley Truck Driver Training
W..kday .dtti!OS 8 to 5M·f. Aha evtni"1J' , .woei&lt;onds.
• Classes for bolh doss Aand BLk1111t
• finoncinl tlld funding tMII1ablt •ased on tiJtlbl!ty
·
'91" pluctmtitl 011 Class Attttilli"'J'
li&lt;tnsod tho Ohio "il.Pmtmtlll of H~hway Salety Marlttta, Ohio 45750
Cantad Ed Adoms 1-800-648-3695 or (7401373-6213 Ext. 338

.y

Holidays. Apply In Person At Ea11
Auto Sel'\lice, Sidwell , OH 4~14 ,

Shirley Spears, 304-675·1429.

Earn $112 ·$3521n 1 Day, Plus
Free Pictures. tnvlte Your
Friends To Your Home For A

Party. 600-426-6383.
110

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter-

TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 2000

ii"'~r...u'"".a COLLECTIBLES AUCTION

"'"''"'

8580 ST. RT. 588 (OLD RT. H
.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
tml.ltiT. QJIII Calf Set (Tht, ElL Cood.), De lml
..... Maldt tilrr (Good Cml.), l'rittltilt 'flnltdir (Ori&amp;
'Paint; Sq. Nlil), 5lrt*U I'Mr Cupboanl (plinetl), Smil
StqW Cupboanlln Ori&amp; Ptit~ TwO lluckrt llcndtei, Early
hintld Dak, Early !lmnl11idt Cltamlcd Dtm (I ()tQ on
'Rip, Dnwet ia Midtlk, I ()tQon'i!4XUJn)ll bt bvle in-otdiH I
Gtmt .... Sq. N*l Chutdt.ftw, 1IWt Stlnd ~Bar,
. EadJ • l'mh Bendt, Flatdi ~ .,.,. so, 'Rip,
l'inlld lfalllll, Nllilllll'lad a. lf.1&amp;lc on lniltt lJid
- Scl!nl Cl]:lioanla.s illl 'Ripl, Old llcRr 11m,
Old ·~ ll'llnul De!i,'SIIIII'IIItle I sands, Otblr
llllc. !11r0bt, Gl•••t (~ IMlwltlt), ~
ClilmJa Piper Holder, Old rdnil oolladt, Old
bp, /odr. Tn, litdlen Ulaillll, Bllitlts, Blroit. ,
llln, 1-' .tlbldr Dolb, Old Glatmtr; Nutr.

work out fine. If there comef a lime
when you are unable to do tli~t. then
the home equity loan bec!&gt;mes·,Jl
·
· chotce,
· · wtl· h'''
muc h more
altracttve
m!!l'
mterest
· t~
dlower
d 'b'l'
. . rate : and
. 1 tls
, , ~·
e uctt Illy.
'
· ·--··
1
· Interested in buying or ~llin'' ~
house? Let.Bruce Williams'. "Ho~
Smart" be your guide. Pri~~i: $!4.~
plus shipping and handling: ~
(800) 994-6733.
·
·;if,
(S d .
,.
d ' S ·.Jli
· en \'our qlleStlOIIS ,..,; ma,,

. .wv.
.

Help Wanted

Environment

The Family of Charles
William "Buck" Dean
would li/ce to thanlc
everyone for their
prayers, food, flowers
and supf'!'rl during om:
time of loss. A special
. thank you to McCoy
Moore Funeral Home,
Gdllia County.EMS,
·Holzer Medical Center,
St. Mary. ~ Hospital,
Simpson Chapel and
Rev. Jack Berry.

Computer Proficient
with Microsoft
Excel. Bachelor
Degree with Major
in Accounting.
Minimum ofTwo ·
Years Experience
Familiarity with
Inter-Company
Entries a plus
Send Resume to
Box 492.

Auto Insurance Monthiy ·
Payments "Problems with
your driving record; OUt's
speeding tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's issued.
.Call for a quote.
t;lrown lnsuran~e Agency
446-1.960

5:30 Po Mo
'

.

.

(740) 245-9880
(740) 446·0526

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

336 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-'8235
Start your business
today..
Prime Shopping
Center Space ..

Needed Will Tra in. Call t -888·

251 ·7475.

11 o Help Wanted
·
Job ·Postinsg
SEPTA Correctional Facility
Nelsonville, Ohio
Application s may be obtai ned from and returned
at

th e OBES office . The deadline for

application for this po sting is Friday January 28,
1999. BE SURE TO INDICATE FOR WHICH POS!TlON
YOU ARE APPLYING ON THE APPUCA TION FORM.

Learning Lab Instrucor-futl

Position 1:
time

Work Schedule : 2:00p.m . ~ 10:00 p.m.
· Monday through Friday
Hourly Rate:
$10.86 @ hour
Minimum Quatlrtcattons: Valid Ohio teaching
in Adult Basic Literacy
Education ot teaching e ~&lt;perience . Knowledge of
comp·uter h a rdware , software and operating
Certificate. Experi e n c e

Skill s

and

Abilities : Abilit'y to administer and score

the Tests of Adult Basic Educ.ation.

Knowlcdg~

..... lillltl .... tl. .

Clt/tlill••,..Gil Ollr

brucebrucewil•~·

'Iiams.
com. Questions of general
illttrtst will be answertd in future

)I

of

GED. Knowledge and ability to work with various
software including Windows 95 and Windows NT.
Ability to maintain a local area network. Ability to
Organize. prepare and te"!ch from daily . lesson plans

for individuals, small groups and large groups.
Ability to work independently . Skill in oral and
writ~en ~ommunications.

'

.

·~·················
2:
Transportation Monitor -part

Position

t'ime

Work Schedule:
Hourly Rate:

2:00 p.m. to 6:00p.m.
Monday through Friday
$7 . 37 @ bou,r

Minimum Quaiiflcallons: Valid Ohio drivers
license and good driving record. High School

diploma or GilD required.
Summary of dull~s: Oper.ates a 15 passenger
yan, transporting . re~idents to j'ob · sites, · for
Interviews, appointments

and for other

faCility

business . Must be able to make minor repairs to
assist with vehic:;le mai . ntenan~e. Must be able to

Serenity House
serves Victims of domestic
viqlence
call 446-6752 or
1-800·942-9577

Mollohao Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
ll3f3B-&lt;)173 or 446-

?===~====~

Classes
Ballet, Tap, Jazz,
Teen Jazz, Teen Flag
Pi=ltty' Fellure

~

Fo1 Computer, Professional Individual
and Business Tax Preparation
ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
735 Second Ave. · 446-8677

(740) 245-9880
(

)
40 4 4 6 05

1 -c).i.):;?:ljr.;;:h';~-r.;:~2:::;6:-;:-'il

II

,
Night
University Of Rio Grande
VS .
Cedarville College
January 18, 2000 7:30P.M.
Pick up your complimentary
tickets at O'Dell Lumber
· Company
61 Vine St. Gallipolis
634 E. Main St. Pomeroy .
French City Mall
Antiques Crafts &amp; Collectiblas
350 2nd. Ave. Gallipolis
Store Wide Sale.:.
. Jim. 12th. · 16th
10% · 20% off
on seleCted items,
Discounted Items &amp; more

Saturoay

22
10:00 am-2:00pm

Unbelievably Low Prices
On All Furniture, Linens,
TVs, Etc.
Cash &amp; Carry Only
990 State Route 160

Two Grave Lots At Qhlo Valley
Memory Gardena . .Good Location
In Veterans Section $385.00
Valued at $t ,600.00.
Call446·0711i Aller 5:00P.M.

For More
~S~p~~i~g~ll~~=~~~~6~1~~~f~:za~~~44~6~·2342 Or 992·~156
• available at
affordable r~te.

• I.Ill,.~-=WIIIII~
!MI . .
.

'

polis.

PCA &amp; LPN Pooillona Fo1 A Local Home Health Agencv. Train- DATA ENTRY • National Billing
Ing Available, Good Pay. Reliable Seeks A Full IPan Time Medical
Transportation Is A Mu&amp;t. App ly Biller. .Salary At $46K Per Year.
At: 2M Upper Rive r Road , Gam- PC Required. No Experience ·

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services currently
has openings in Meigs County: ·.
+++++++++++++++++++
1) 33 hrs/wk: 8 am Sat. thru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
Position 3:
Cook-on call
required;
·
·
Work Schedule:
Works as nee(jed .
2) 25 hrs/Wk: 8 pm · 8 am SaVSun;
Hourly Rate:
$7.59@ hour
3) Emergency Relief (Substitutes): hours scheduled
Minimum Qualtllcatlons: High School diploma
as needed;
or GED required. At least one year's experience in
We are searching for compassionate professionals
institutional food service .
with a team vision and a desire to teach per~onal
1
and community skills to Individuals with mental
Summary of dulles: Responsible f~H preparation
retardation. The work environment is informal and
and serving of meals to residents . Must assist in the
rewarding. The re,quirements are: high school
supervision of residents working in the dining roa·m
dlploma/GED, valid driver's license, three years good
~nd kitchen. · Also assists in the .daily accountability
driving experience and adequate automobile
of inventory, invoices, meals served, and various
insurance coverage. B.C.S, offers comprehensive
documentation. Ability to fiJJ.in for absent
training in the field of MR/DD. Starting salary:
personnel and ability to perform duties without
$5.50/hour. Interested applicants need to specify
su'pervision is required ,
·
position of interest and send resume Io: P.O. Box
SEPTA Correctional Facility is o Dr.ug-Free
604, Jackson, OH 45640-0604. All applications must
,
Workptac.e and an Equal Opportunlly
be post-marked by 1/26/00. Equal Opponunity
Employer.
~~------------~E~m~~I~o~er~-~------------..1

Lynch Agency

1lo ~ 'RI Adlatilellft

.,

1-800·

complete reports, job site verifications, trip logs,
and other reports . Must be able to direct activities
of residents and to enforce facility rules .

Help Wanted

Call for a quote
Ronnie Lynch

Nutr. Melt ratty lt1tittJtirC lim

Mont.\', PO::. Box 5Q3,' Elfirs, FtQJ."'

Annually. Coli

291·4ti83Dtpl. fl09.

systems .

ACCOUNTANT
IBMAS400

Baton Classes
Instructor
World Class Twirler
Jill Georges
22 Locust St., Gallipolis

AUCTION

Public Salt and Auction

· LEMLEY's"AUCTION

150,000

Immediate Openings For CNA ,

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

· LARGE PUBLIC

FRIDAY, JAN. 21, 6:30

•o.r Third Avenue ,

available

OH 45631

110

OH.

Auto Technician 5 Years Experl·
ence Auto Mechanic 2 Years Ex·
perlenee Rate Of Pay Is Nagotl·
able Hours 9 A.M. To 6 P.M. Paid

825 Third Avenue
Ga~lpolis,

Gallpol~ .

EMERG ING COMPANY NEEDS

Medical Insurance Billing Mall·
tance Immediately. If Vou Hlvt A
PC Vou Can Earn $25 ,000 To

to the Athen s Office:: of the O hio Bureau of
E11Jployment Ser vices. Co~ple"t e j o b de sc riptions are

740-992-64.19 TDD #1-600· 750-0750 .
Equal Housin'ji
Opportunity

IH1. PT 1FT

Professional Glamour Picture

• Send Resume to:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
RE: Advertising Sales Rep

Comlort Air,

Help Wanted

aa8--491·1224, www.work&lt;oOut•Of·
your-home .com

·.t.VONI All Areesl To Buy or Sell.
'Must have good CommunicatiOn
,
skills
• Must have good driving f8COfd
&amp; Provide own Transportation
'Must have ability to be a TEAM

Htlpar NHdtd, Mechanically In ~
cllnecl. WIU Train. Appty In Person
Botwttn 9 A.M. &amp; 10 A.M. At

ASSEMBLY AT HOllEtt Crall&amp;,
Toys. Jewelry. Wood , Sewing ,
Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1·BOO•
795-0380 El!l. t201 (24 HNl).
To Workt

110

Help Wll'lttd

.e -u LLETIN .BOARD

..Water's Edge Of Syracuse
. Taking Applications For
.'.
1 Bedroom Apartment
Seniors. disabled, handicapped
Range, refrigerator, NC, on-site
laundry, community room, 24 hour
maintenance providee
Clill or Come By Our Office Located At
· 2070 St. Rt. 124
Office Hours
,'
Mon. 10-3 Thurs. 10-3 ·

Offers Top Salary Commensurate,
with experienCe. Benefits inchJde
401K, Health &amp; Lite Insurance,
e Mileage. S&amp;nd Resume &amp; 5alary
History to : HMNS/UHC, PO Box
t042 Proclo&lt;vllte, Ohio •sees

110

NO Vou Connecled?
Internet Users Wanted!
$350 ·1800 mee•
1·663-681-6750
www D'lOOfrtthatstyn rom

Card of Thanks

Complete Site
· Pn:puation
Land Clearing,
Buanena, Footcn, ·
Diu:hing, Ponds,
Topooll, dtivcway stone,,
peral truckina. onow
n:moval
Call w (740) 446-7903

Apartments
for Rent

201 Stewart Avenue , Worth!·

ngton, KY 41183, Or Fax To 808836-9617.

actlon·now.com

BrocHures! Satisfaction Guar·
anteedl Postage &amp; SupplieS Provided! Rush Self·Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Bolt 1438, ANTIOCH, TN .

~

Submit RHumt At Gatllpollt

Arby 'a Of-Mall To Cartee Land
Oevelopmant, Inc . dba Arby'a ,

net Users Wanted! $350 ·$800 I
Week 1·888-718·4944 www.take-

Betty E. Jones
9/9!29 -1!16!61

P~o.

Phontt 740·388·9516 , If You
Have No Variable Experience
Please Don't Apply.

Complate Household Or Estates!
Any T~pe Of Furniture , Appllanc·
es, Antique's, Ele. Also Applalsal

A\'Onue,

In f.-oving
Memory
Wife &amp; Mother

Recorded Message) 1·800-8548469 El&lt;l. 5046.

Ohio 740-379·2720.
Wanted. to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets,
DiamondS, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterllf'lg, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 15'1 Second

'*

ABlY' S RESTAURANT M&amp;N.

AQEMENT OPfORTUN!TIII
(All Ltvtl') AVAILABLE. Rapid
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Slllt Artl . Good Pay And Bent·
fltl . Reataurant ExperltnC:a A

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Availablei 740·379·2720,

&lt;WouU!Li% 'I'o '17itJn.(,

CROSS POINTE
· APARTMENTS

l

Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
dty b'efort the •d 11 to run,

SSO reward· lost Jan. 11th, Brltta·
ny spaniel, "Rusty' , Hockingport
area, Medlana dog tag. 330·334·

I

~tr(jraiM/na

i

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Ylrd Stlto lluot Bo Plltd In

Australian

3366.

,7olin. '"'· !J{oud(_

440

Pomeroy,

Help Wanted

$800

"Ot.Jalilicatlons must inclUde;
Energetic. Ro6fJOOsiblo, Caring
and PrOYide Quality Care.

Lab &amp; 8oard01 Coe

llpoll$. (740)·4411-!1292

440

·10:00 o.m. Stturdty,

(700~-44 1 2

shepherd : two pups: 740-992·

!-.11f.l.
'lie 1flllil1,,.'W. ~

'

Frlday.~­

·Free Mixed Pups to good home.

110

'Home Helltn RN
·s...,.,.,1... 'lmmodO!Ia Opening tor FT.
RN SI.I&gt;8Ni601 in Gallia County.

Ia to "'"· Sunclly
tdlllon · 2:00p.m.

Good Homo, 740-256-8284.

Sunda-. a Monday edition·
Rlchlrd w. Clay-you need to gaf Puppies. Aonweller 'mlx . 740-742-· 1:OIIpm F~day.
hold of the famlty Law Master In . 2036.

'* ..,_.

.,

.... day btl&lt;&gt;&lt;wlllt td

/tl.

D

Sunday, January 16,2000

Help Wlnted

WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY! (24 H1.

AlJ. Ylrd '"'" llutl
Btl&gt;old tn . -.
DE &amp;PitH£: 2:00 p.m.

Five Amer ic an Spit z Puppies.

Fret

110

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Free to ,good home. ( 30o4 )615-

Free Lop - Eared Aabbil To

'(!times -~entintl

Yard Sate

derful wJchildren, lOves to hunt.

IIIIJ""""

•'
following the report. Americatt
Express gained 3 112to 159 1/2 ana
J.P; Morgan.rose 5 3/16 to 128.
:
Optimism aboyt earnings extend{
ed beyond the technology $CCtoq
Lands' End rose 2 7116 to 17 5/lfi
after ')Vall Street anal~sts nQted thai
in' spite of s1uhiptifg' sal~' in II\~ ~ghtj "
week holiday shopping season, prof•
its improved.
.
~
. J..ucent Te~hnologies dec,lined ~
1116 to 53 3/16 in heavy trading ami~
rumors that the ·Securities ano
Exchange Commission was investii
gating the company's · accouritin~
practices. Lucent officials -said the~
were unaware of any investigati!J~
and the SEC. would not confirm o;
deny an inquiry.
·,
Th~ market's gains wer.e broad
based. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by an 8-tO· 7 margin
on the New·York Stock Exchange and,
by a 4-to-3 margin on the Nasdaq. !
NY~E composite volume totalee
I :~3 btlhon shares, compared witf 1
I .25 billion in the previous.session. 1
· The Russell 2000 indeK of small.. ;
er companies rose 6.37 to 507.56. :
Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stoc~'
average rose 0.7 percent. Germany''
. Xetra DAX tndex rose 3.1 . percent 1

34680. · E-111ail to:

Items. $1 .00 ba.g Jill every

~""frtlllil,lllfim 1111hJIItt .. w,u 1111/j
. . . 1111""'""" 1luiai. f-1111 gr.Jfdw.
. Spa:ltii!Maqt.
6rnjdfool, ..,_, tl
. , 9bdltm. 11M ,_MItlic f-tl. $1p'd''!
t{ptU Ill tlic 4rfl jfw&amp;nfor iMirj,fllll~ lilfwN.
'1MitQ,. 1M .,.,.~WHI

7·1

i

740-592·1842
Quality clothlnQ and household

70

Found Ohio License Plate In Gal·

.. ~

I

lind th 1
1 . '
for es~ 8-~w r~es, It sehoems to w~k
loanmeh.. h •so ave 1• 1me-equuy
'cent w
, bottc ints currentthyon
. y .59
· per·
11
· ' I havea aI)IOD
goesdebt
up of
to
pnme.
credit card
$4 000 d · fi
·
· .
' '~n tn tVe ~b~lhs the mterest on thts amoun~wtll mcrease 10 14
~;rcent. A.~ I better, otT with the
orne . equny loan,_ which is
deducttble, or the credtt card loans?
-C.M., Topeka Kan
,
.
'
'
as ~:;:! 1~-~~l:lse ~in~ equ~
d' ·
eep P aymg t .
ere,/ card roulette and · ~et new
car . sat the teaser rates, thtngs will

9 West Stinson, Athens

Card of Thankl

Intermediate crude for February ister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said he
"Thirty-dollar oil is going to have
deltvery oti seltled up $1.33 at $28.02 anticipates a six-month extension, .to be inventory-d_riven," the analyst l
a barrel on the New York Mercantile while Kuwait ahd Saudi Arabia indi- · said. ";Ilte news ts out on OPEC-~
Exchange .,..... jumping 16 percent for cated Thursday it cduld go through that's a )mown quantity. The
the week and su'J)assing the previous 2000. ·
·
.unknown is what happens in the near
nin~-y~ar high reached in No.vember.
OPEC \"ill vote on the length ·of term. with supply."
.
. :; 1
. Its a btg move,,and w_c ve.seen · anextensionatitsMarch27meeting.
Key mvenlory reports will ti~
close to fo.~r dollars ~atn m the last
AlsO underpinning the rally were released a day later than usual next
lew ~ays, . satd Chrts Sta~ros, an the season's first subnormal temper- ~eek - Wednesday and Thursday.
analys~. tor Pmne Webber m New aturcs . in ·. the northeastern United mstead of Tuesday and Wedn~sday
York. Most of It seems to be dnv~n States, the major heating oil-cori- - d~e to the Monday obse1="ance of
by what OPEC has come out and satd suming region. Parts of New En land Martm Luther King Jr. Day&gt;
clearly - that they would extend the saw wind-chill factor temperatu!s f
February heating oil rose '4.53
cuts beyond March."
minus 20 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit~ cents to 73.81 ceQts ·a gallon; Feb~FU·
Meettng tn Vtenna, the market conditions certain to send demand ary unleaded gasoline rose 3.25 cents
momtonng commme,e ot the Orga- soaring.
·
· to 7.4.52 cents a gallon; February npt·
mzatmn ot the Petroleum Exporttng
After hurdling the $27 d 528 ural gas rose 7 cents to $2.322 per
Countnesagrced to strongly recom- barriers in a single day, oil~~ $JO a 1 ~000 cubic f~et.
mend that the 10-month-oid .produc- liarrel may'be just around the
Coffee pnces fell 5 percent ,on
uon cutbacks be contmucd beyond • Stavros says it. de n~orner. technically inspired trading; despite .a
thetr scheduled March 3I exptratton. whether world and U.S.' ~ sus ~~~ · Iack of fresh news. M;arch coffee sc1;
The e~tenston could be longer continue 10 fall, 'since OPEC'spaeci- tied down 5.80 cents to $1~ 127S, a
than expected, whtch helped a~cel~r- sion an extending cuts takes the spec- pound on the Co~ee, Sugar.~ Coed~
ate the pnce runup. lraman Oti.Mtn· ulative factor out of the rally. .
Exchange in New York.. ·:, ~

in our life?_ K K ·via e-mail
DEAR ·K K . think that you are
doing well If r'h' ad 10 guess I would
. · majority of the money
•
bet that the
is
be'mg eame
. d bYyou· an d 1·•th'mk that
bears some consideration. If our
husband chooses to go the "star~ing
artist" route 1 thin.k that's fine 85 long·
as you agre~ 10 it. Over a long periad of time it mi ht he ""'tter 10 tum
the art t'nto an avgocatt'on~.
DEAR BRUCE· I am constant}
. I'
'th
d't ards I aky

-To 'tb\1 Thrih Shoppe

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

Have Fun Meeting Eligible Singles In Your Area. Cau For Mor•

:i;.

a year combined. I comtributc 6 percent to a 401 (k} program which
matches 50 cents on the &lt;)ollar. My
hus band ts· a self-employed artist and
puts $50 a month in an SEP. I also put
$H)() a month into a regular savings
account whtch we do touch when
things gel tight. We also take $50 a
t•1onth from our chec~ing accouin to .
buy mutual funds. We would eventually hke. t.o use thts invested mon·
b
ey ~o uy a home. We .owe $10,500
on a low-interest school loan $1 500 ·
on our car and our rent is' $5JO a
month . .My question is, are we sav-

t Glen Paulk WiU Not Be Rtspon·
llbll For Any BIUI Madt By An·
yone Other Than MyHI.
Glen Paulk

MASTECTOMY Supptlos AI Lilllt

~;~~.!:..dis~~~.i~~~~~?.~,.. ~~!~.,~..e'"~J~::,.P.!~..~~~! ~~~Y.".!~~~~~perly paiq ~·
DEAR BRU~E: . My children
gave. me a s~tellue dtsh, a receiver
and mstallauon for tny birthday. I
called. the pho ne company to have the
pr,ovtderh tum on the service. I could·
n 1l!e1I e vo1ume up to a decent lev·
e). ' After three dtfferent recetvers
were Installed, which took over a
month, thts . problem still P,ersisted.
The techmctan advtsed me· to return
the re~etver to the store'and g.et one
,
t
,
by
. adlfoeren manu.acturer. I d1d, and
It solved lhe problem. In the meantime_,I have been hilled for satellite
scrv1ce stncc day one. After com-

•Are vou contulld, In 1 crltll, dO
you need haaUng? Ltt'l Prayl
Clod grot lhlngo w11en people come together In prayer. Do
you want answer&amp;? FrM Prayerll
Sand me your requ111a and 1
SASE lo: Believing In God for
Victor;, Mo. R. Moyhugh, EI03 Co·
lonlal Rd. Bldwll, Olt •5111 • '

~unba!'

Giveaway

40

60

[

Oil prices hit 9-year high at $28 per barrel
By DAVE CARI;'ENTER
AP ~us~ness W{iter •
. ·
Otl prtces roared 5 percent htgher to a n.ew nine-year high Friday,
t'oppmg $28 a barrel for the first time
si~ce 1991 and the Gulf War. The
gam came afterOPECremoved vtrtually ail doubt tl wtll extend tis
agreement on lowered productton for
several more months.
Fng1d weather.m the northeastern
Untted States also contrtbuted to a
sharp rise in crude ·as well as gasoline, heating oil and natural gas
futures .
.
. In other markets, coffee pnces
sank to a stx-wcek tow and soybeans
m?ved significantly higher for a
thtrd consecuuve day.
.
Crude climbed as high as $28.10
a barrel, the highest since Ja~: 16,
199 I, ·before the Alhed rtuittary
strtkes on Iraq that brought about an
end to the Gulf War. ·

005

elnglea .lontght. Call .toll fret 1·
1100-766-~. Oidonoion 6176 . .

The Wilshire Associates Equ~y!
Index - which represents the com•'
bined market
value of all NYSE,:
·
American and Nasdaq issue,s - rosC:
$298 29 btl !ton durtng the week to;
. $13.795 tnlhon. A year ago }pe tndex•
was $11.451 tnlhon.

·
. . is likely to
many mvestors
the· Fed
raise rates no more than a quarter-percentage point at the next Federal
Open Market Com.mittee meeting an
Feb. 1-:!:.
Although rate increases are usually. troublesome, market .watchers
said th~y were impressed that
Greenspan indicated he won't let
inflation get in the way of a surging
U.S. economy.
'.'Greenspan has demonstrated that'
he understands the world has changed
and that he doesn't intend to do anything scary to the market," said
Charles Pradilia, chief investment
strategist at SO Cowen Securities.
"We are
comfortable with
Greenspan's comments because it
shows he is not behind the curve, and
won't· let inflation raise its mighty
head."
The .latest economic data released
Friday once again showed inflation
remains under control.
The government said consumer
prices rose by 0.2 percent in December, slightly below forecasts. Exciuding energy prices, the gain was just
0.1 percent. The report was the latest
confirmation that fears about accel·
crating inflation remain unfounded.
The Dow's financial stocks rose

30 Announcements

lnlo•mallpn. 1-SOO·ROMANCE ,
Ext.8735.
Why wolt? Start mooting Ohio

ey for many years," Keon said.
This past week, the technologydominated Nasdaq composite
remained the most volatile of U.S.
market indexes, but rounded out the
week with substantial gains. The.
Nasdaq, which dipped 10 perce~
below its record high last week, ·il
now just 1.6 percent below its peak\(
•••
For the week, th~ Nasiijlq rose!(
181.65 points. A gain of 107.!16 Fli.;
day left tlie index ai 4,06ll.27. ·· :;
The Dow Jones industrials ros~
200.42 during the week. The blue;;
chip index rose 140.55 on Friday t~
finish the week at 11,722.98, a new:
record high.
.
::
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 rose ~
23.68 over the course of the week;•
adding 15.47 on Friday to -finish at;
....
I ,465 .15.
.
·~
.
~The Russell 2000 index of small:
er companies rose )9.25 during the
week. A gain of 6.37 on Friday left
the index at 507.56.

Stocks· soar on positive economi·c ' news

ClaSSifieds
-

Section

'

•

�.
Page 02 o &amp;unbap

~i met ·&amp;rnlinrl

Pomeroy

~·

~

,

...........·-

- ·.--- ....

.

oMiddleport oGalllpqlis, Ohio oPoint PleaHnt, WV

Sunday, January 11, 20QO

Water may help ,you fill up faster ;~

ANIWUNCU,1E.NTS

By BECKY COLLINS
This could only be why a bowl of cooked oatmeal, which has absorbeif
· GALLIPOLIS - it 's not a bad habit, but researchers are finding that "eat· a lot of water, is more filling than a breakfast bar made with the same amoull\ , .
ing" water is an even belter way to help you cut calories. Let me explain ... of oats.
,
·
·
~. ·
Most foods have some water in them- some foods more than others. tn · Soup, of, course, is a good example of a water-rieh food, but most fruit$
a study in a recent issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, and vegetables are high in water content, too. Unfortunately, water content :
researchers reported that foods with higher water content helped study par· isn't listed on Nutrition Facts labels, but you can find it in the U.S. Depart· •
t1c1pants feel fuller while consuming fewer calories. ·
·
ment of Agriculture's Nutrient Database (hltp://www. nal.usda.gov/fnic/cgi ~
Their conclusion: Filling up on foods with a higher water content can help binlnut_search.pi). There, you can look up specific foods for their nutrient ·
you reduce calories without feeling hungry.
content - water is listed first.
':
The researchers served meals one day a week for four 'weeks to 24 study
For example, raw zucchini is 95 pei;Cent water by weight; raw tomatoe"s ·
parttcipants. At .lun ch, each participant ~te a .first course that consisted of are 94 percent water. Raw oranges are 87 percent water; raw apples are 8~ '
chicken rice casserole, the same casserole with a glass of w~ter, or a bowl p~t water. On the other hand, white bread is 36 percent water; toasted, ..
of chicken rice soup.
.
.
-11's 30 percent water.
•
.
The soup was made of exactly the ingredients in the casserole plus the
Gener~lly.• this is mo~e eviden~e tha~ addi~g ,more fruits and vegetablei·
g.lass of water. How~ver, the participants who got the soup ate fewer caio- to your dtet ts a good thmg, espectally tf you re trymg to cut calones.
r;es than the rest of t~e meal. The soup helped cutb their appetite more than
(Becky Collins is Gellle Co~nly's Extension agent for family end con::
the casserole alan~ or the casserole with ,a giass .of water.
eumer aclencea, Ohio State Unlvertilty.)

Strong earnings may set market's course
'

: 15-YEAR EMPLOYEE- Russell Potts was recognized lor 15
•years of service as an employee of the Bob Evans Farm during
:the farm's al'!nual Christmas dinner at Simpson United Methodist
• Church in Rio Grande. Potts Is seen accepting the· award from
:Mary Cus'ck, Bob Farms Inc.'s vice presidenlfor corporate com-

!munications.
'

By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Business Writer ·
NEW YORK - In the first two
weeks of 2000, th~ U.S. stock market has alternately· stumbled and
soared as investors anguished over
rising interest rates and inflation, yet
couidn' t resist putting their money.'
into the market that rewarded them so
. richly in 1999.
In the next few weeks, analysts
say, the market may find a true direction as AmeriCa's corporations report

their earnings for the fourth quarter
of 1999. And if analysts are right in
expecting that companies had another quarter of robust profit growth, the
market's direction is likely to .be
straight up,
As reports flow in during the coming two weeks, "the .market's attention will shift from interest rates ·and
earnings preannouncements to the

powerful earnings gro~th .story of
2000," said Edward Keon, director of
quantitative research at Prudential
S,ecurities in New York.
First CallfThomson Financial said
this past week that companies in the
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 should see
profits rise an average of 17.6 percent
from the fourth quarter of 1998.
But in a twist that mirrors the latest developments in the stock market,

hut-shot technology companies are
ltkeiy to ~outdone by old-fashioned
industrial businesses. Keon expects
technology compani ~s to post average earnings growth of l I .2 percent.
Meanwhtle, the basic industry sector
1s expected . to report 39.0 percent
growth, utthty companies are likely
to post 2 I.5 percent growth, and ener·
gy ~ompanics may see earnings dou-'
ble Irom the final quarter of 1'998.
That reversal of fortunes could be
t~mporary. Many technology compantcs ctted Y2K computer worries for
slumping sales in the second halfof
1999. Meanwhile, the basic industry
sector IS facmg easy comparisons to
the fourth quarter of 1998 when
many companies were harnm~red by
the Astan financial crisis.
"Many of the tech companies will
come righ[ back in the first quarter as
the businesses that deferred spending
last year go ahead and buy," said
Joseph Abbott, senior equity strategist at 1/B/E/S International Inc.,
another firm that tracks earnings.
Nonetheless, analysts say technology companies will face espectally tough scrutiny from investors.
With many technology stocks at or
near all-tim~ highs, investors may
prove unwtlhng to tolerate even mild
disappointment.

This past week, shares of Yaboot
tumbled after the company said its
foun~-quari_er earnings handily beat
both published estimates and the
unoffici!ll "whisper number" that circulated among Wall Street traders.
Even as analysts applauded the company's pe.rformance, · investors
focused on Yahoo 1's warning that its
growth rate will be difficult to sus·
tain.
The selloff was evidence of
investors' nervousness about the skyhigh valuations of the technology
sector, said l{ugh Johnson , chief
·investment officer at First Albany
Corp., who warned that other technology stocks may be in for the same
treatment on Wall Street.
" If you are a growth investor who
has opted ~o buy s.tocks at these valuations, you've already heard the
positives," Johnson said. "Your
scanner should now be tuned to the
negatives."
'
In the meantime, some analysts
expect and encourage a shift in focus
to the so-calletl value ·stocks, which
. languished last year as investors
poured money into technology
shares.
"This q~aner will serve as a·
reminder that there are great nontech
companies likely to make much mon-

. THREE YE~RS OF SERVICE - Judy Eggleton, left, was rec·
ognized for three years of service as an employee of the Bob
Evans Farm during the farm's annual Christmas dinner at Simp·
son United Methodist Church in Rio Grande. Mary Cusick, right,
Bob Evans Farms Inc.'s vice president for corporate communi·
cations, maile the presentation.

By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Business Writer .
· NEW YORK - Stocks rose ·
sharply Friday, boosted by a strong
earnings report tram high-tech bellwether Intel and comments from
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan that indicate interest rates
will be rising only slightly.
The Dow Jones i,ndustrial average
rose 140.55 to a 'new closing record
of II ,722.98 1 easily topping Thursday's record. The new closing high
was the Dow's third·this week and its.
fourth since the start of 2000. Forthe
week, the Dow rose 200.42.
Broader market measures also
finished with solid gains. The Nasdaq
composite index rose I 07 .06 to
4,064.27, and the Standard &amp; Poor 's
500 rose 15.47 tu 1,465.15.
The Nasdaq, which dipped as
much as I 0 percent below its peak
last week. has rebnunded smartly in
the past two sessions and is

IJOW

just

1.6 percent below the record high
reached Jan . 3. The S&amp;P 500, meanwhile, is just tour points below its
dosing record, iea~hed Dec . 31.
Technology stocks led the Dow
and the Nasdaq Friday, with industry
leaders Intel and Microsoft accounting for a major portion of those

indexes' gainS.
" We continue to have money
coming into the market, and money
m;1nagers are deciding that techno!, ·
~gy offers the opportunity for the
tggest gams,'' said Ricky Harrington , techilic.al analyst' at Wachovia
Securities in Charlotte, N.C.
Intel, the world 's leading computcr chtp maker, rose 12 to I03 1/16
a~cr announcing better than expecte earnings late Thursday. The company cited a surge in sales of personal
computers during the back-to-school
· and holiday shopping period.
The company's strong report and
optimistic outlook lifted rival chip
maker Applied Materials, which
gained II 118 to 135 5/8. Computer
makers like IBM, up 1 3/8to 119 5/8,
advanced as investors anticipated
strong profit reports.
Microsoft rose 4 7116 to 112 1/4
a day alter Bill Gates' decision to
relinquish his chief executive job to
company president Steve Ballmer.
Analysts said the move will assure .
continuity in the company's leadership.
Stocks also benefited from growing confidence that inflation is not
rising sharply. A speech ~y
Greenspan Thursday mght convinced

i

· FIRST YEAR EMPLOYEE - Peggy Callihan; left, was recognlzed for herflrst year of service as an employea of the Bqb Evans'
Fann during the farm·~ an_nual Christmas dinner at Simpson United Meth~lst ~hurch tn Rto Grande. Making the presentation was
Mary Custck, nghl, Bob t;vans Farms Inc.'s vice presldenUor cor·
p1orate communications.

Personal•
DI~BETIC TESTING SUPPLIES.
Tnllng Suppt111 Moy 8t FREE
TO Qualified Patlenta. Medicare
And Private Insurance 11 Wtl·

come. No HMO's. Cal , ·800·8197578.
Herpa • EverCL~ Stopt Herpes

Outbreaks! 96% Succeu Rate.
Toll Fraa ~ 1·877-EVERCLR Info :

www.eYtrdr.com

,.

point and then had them discontinue'
the service. What ·do you think? _
L.H., Broussard, La.
DEAR LH.: If you 101•re unable to
recejve the signal, you should have
c
notified the satellite company. If
· they prov1ded the stgnai, whether or
not you were there or had the ability
to listen .to it is not an issue. Unless
you nottfied them that you were
unable_to use I t - and I doubt tha~
dd b
you 1 , ecause you were testing
other receivers - it is my view that
you paid the bill pmpcrly.
DEAR BRUCE: I mn 27 and my

Or No COat. We Bill Medicare Or
Your Insurance Direct. Get 2 New
B,as , Prosthe ctlcs , Every Six

Monlht, FREE Shipping. 1-liOO·
7~·7880.

1

START DATING TONIGHT!

:.a

~~~~~~gew~f· t.::!fc :e~er r~tes 'an~

then switch off when ilie time has
1

'

'

9:1l0-5:30.

•

Adul,t Male Seagle - gentle. won-

3021.
(304)675·7559.

!: !::~os!r!~~d~~.

DivOrce-

pupp~s.

lie,tst shots a wormed, 740.992·
2121.

Miniature Collie TriColored . Fe·
mala . ,t.pprox 1 year old . (740)·
44HI118
" -arr lab, 81ac~·
(304)675·6908. .

Puppies.

.,.sm-al-1 a-m-o-.-.1-d-,.-m-.-,.-Lh-.-,.
Apso;

female '

Lost and Foun.d

ll

80

Auction
and Flea Markel

Bill Moodlspaugh AucUonetrlng·
c::ompltte auction service. Buy
and sell e&amp;tates . Ohio License
17693, wv 1338, 74D-992·9707.
Wedemeyer' s Auction Service,

1847.

90

•Ill'.

Gallipolis, 740-446·2842 .

Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homes, 740·4•6 -0175, 304-675·
5985.

EM PLOYMENT
SERVICES

Apartments
for Rent ~ •

Son &amp; Brother

John .Paul

Accepting Applications.
1 Bedroom Apartments,
Total Electric; Central Air
Elderly (62 or older)
. Disabled Handicapped
'·Eligibility Based on Income
Handicapped Accessibility
~ase Gall (740) 992.. 3055·.
·TDD# (800) 855-2880
Office Hours
Monday - Friday
'
8:00 am to 12 Noon ·

•= ·Equal Housing Opportunity

(J.P.) Jones, Jr.
5/1!49 -1114(90

Sadly Missed ·
John Paul, Sr;,
Joanie, Jimmy,
Jackie, Joyce, Jeff
&amp;Juanita ·

110
$2,000

Help Wanted
WEEKLY! MailinO

400 .

3701 H 438. Start Immediate~.

$45,000 !Year IPotentlall Doctors
Need People! Process Medical
Claims From Home, We Train .

MUST Own Computer. 886·332-

5015 Ext 1700 .Ually.

Announcement

Inc.

..

E(jie Your Still
.Looking Good At

.

Announcement

50 .
Happy Birthday

. Love Ya
&amp; Girls

.

'

EOE

At cepUng AppHcaUons For
Home Healing Driver 's, Weekends 011, Paid Time Oil, tn·
aura nee And 4011&lt; . Must Have
Atlean Class B COL With Tank
Endorsements. Send Replies To:
CLA 490 clo Gallipolis Dally Tr lb·
une, 825 Third Avenue , Gallipolis,
OH45631 . A

ATTN: Qwn A Computer? Put It

player

U&amp; • 75

Mid-Ohio Valley Truck Driver Training
W..kday .dtti!OS 8 to 5M·f. Aha evtni"1J' , .woei&lt;onds.
• Classes for bolh doss Aand BLk1111t
• finoncinl tlld funding tMII1ablt •ased on tiJtlbl!ty
·
'91" pluctmtitl 011 Class Attttilli"'J'
li&lt;tnsod tho Ohio "il.Pmtmtlll of H~hway Salety Marlttta, Ohio 45750
Cantad Ed Adoms 1-800-648-3695 or (7401373-6213 Ext. 338

.y

Holidays. Apply In Person At Ea11
Auto Sel'\lice, Sidwell , OH 4~14 ,

Shirley Spears, 304-675·1429.

Earn $112 ·$3521n 1 Day, Plus
Free Pictures. tnvlte Your
Friends To Your Home For A

Party. 600-426-6383.
110

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter-

TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 2000

ii"'~r...u'"".a COLLECTIBLES AUCTION

"'"''"'

8580 ST. RT. 588 (OLD RT. H
.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
tml.ltiT. QJIII Calf Set (Tht, ElL Cood.), De lml
..... Maldt tilrr (Good Cml.), l'rittltilt 'flnltdir (Ori&amp;
'Paint; Sq. Nlil), 5lrt*U I'Mr Cupboanl (plinetl), Smil
StqW Cupboanlln Ori&amp; Ptit~ TwO lluckrt llcndtei, Early
hintld Dak, Early !lmnl11idt Cltamlcd Dtm (I ()tQ on
'Rip, Dnwet ia Midtlk, I ()tQon'i!4XUJn)ll bt bvle in-otdiH I
Gtmt .... Sq. N*l Chutdt.ftw, 1IWt Stlnd ~Bar,
. EadJ • l'mh Bendt, Flatdi ~ .,.,. so, 'Rip,
l'inlld lfalllll, Nllilllll'lad a. lf.1&amp;lc on lniltt lJid
- Scl!nl Cl]:lioanla.s illl 'Ripl, Old llcRr 11m,
Old ·~ ll'llnul De!i,'SIIIII'IIItle I sands, Otblr
llllc. !11r0bt, Gl•••t (~ IMlwltlt), ~
ClilmJa Piper Holder, Old rdnil oolladt, Old
bp, /odr. Tn, litdlen Ulaillll, Bllitlts, Blroit. ,
llln, 1-' .tlbldr Dolb, Old Glatmtr; Nutr.

work out fine. If there comef a lime
when you are unable to do tli~t. then
the home equity loan bec!&gt;mes·,Jl
·
· chotce,
· · wtl· h'''
muc h more
altracttve
m!!l'
mterest
· t~
dlower
d 'b'l'
. . rate : and
. 1 tls
, , ~·
e uctt Illy.
'
· ·--··
1
· Interested in buying or ~llin'' ~
house? Let.Bruce Williams'. "Ho~
Smart" be your guide. Pri~~i: $!4.~
plus shipping and handling: ~
(800) 994-6733.
·
·;if,
(S d .
,.
d ' S ·.Jli
· en \'our qlleStlOIIS ,..,; ma,,

. .wv.
.

Help Wanted

Environment

The Family of Charles
William "Buck" Dean
would li/ce to thanlc
everyone for their
prayers, food, flowers
and supf'!'rl during om:
time of loss. A special
. thank you to McCoy
Moore Funeral Home,
Gdllia County.EMS,
·Holzer Medical Center,
St. Mary. ~ Hospital,
Simpson Chapel and
Rev. Jack Berry.

Computer Proficient
with Microsoft
Excel. Bachelor
Degree with Major
in Accounting.
Minimum ofTwo ·
Years Experience
Familiarity with
Inter-Company
Entries a plus
Send Resume to
Box 492.

Auto Insurance Monthiy ·
Payments "Problems with
your driving record; OUt's
speeding tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's issued.
.Call for a quote.
t;lrown lnsuran~e Agency
446-1.960

5:30 Po Mo
'

.

.

(740) 245-9880
(740) 446·0526

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT

336 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-'8235
Start your business
today..
Prime Shopping
Center Space ..

Needed Will Tra in. Call t -888·

251 ·7475.

11 o Help Wanted
·
Job ·Postinsg
SEPTA Correctional Facility
Nelsonville, Ohio
Application s may be obtai ned from and returned
at

th e OBES office . The deadline for

application for this po sting is Friday January 28,
1999. BE SURE TO INDICATE FOR WHICH POS!TlON
YOU ARE APPLYING ON THE APPUCA TION FORM.

Learning Lab Instrucor-futl

Position 1:
time

Work Schedule : 2:00p.m . ~ 10:00 p.m.
· Monday through Friday
Hourly Rate:
$10.86 @ hour
Minimum Quatlrtcattons: Valid Ohio teaching
in Adult Basic Literacy
Education ot teaching e ~&lt;perience . Knowledge of
comp·uter h a rdware , software and operating
Certificate. Experi e n c e

Skill s

and

Abilities : Abilit'y to administer and score

the Tests of Adult Basic Educ.ation.

Knowlcdg~

..... lillltl .... tl. .

Clt/tlill••,..Gil Ollr

brucebrucewil•~·

'Iiams.
com. Questions of general
illttrtst will be answertd in future

)I

of

GED. Knowledge and ability to work with various
software including Windows 95 and Windows NT.
Ability to maintain a local area network. Ability to
Organize. prepare and te"!ch from daily . lesson plans

for individuals, small groups and large groups.
Ability to work independently . Skill in oral and
writ~en ~ommunications.

'

.

·~·················
2:
Transportation Monitor -part

Position

t'ime

Work Schedule:
Hourly Rate:

2:00 p.m. to 6:00p.m.
Monday through Friday
$7 . 37 @ bou,r

Minimum Quaiiflcallons: Valid Ohio drivers
license and good driving record. High School

diploma or GilD required.
Summary of dull~s: Oper.ates a 15 passenger
yan, transporting . re~idents to j'ob · sites, · for
Interviews, appointments

and for other

faCility

business . Must be able to make minor repairs to
assist with vehic:;le mai . ntenan~e. Must be able to

Serenity House
serves Victims of domestic
viqlence
call 446-6752 or
1-800·942-9577

Mollohao Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
ll3f3B-&lt;)173 or 446-

?===~====~

Classes
Ballet, Tap, Jazz,
Teen Jazz, Teen Flag
Pi=ltty' Fellure

~

Fo1 Computer, Professional Individual
and Business Tax Preparation
ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
735 Second Ave. · 446-8677

(740) 245-9880
(

)
40 4 4 6 05

1 -c).i.):;?:ljr.;;:h';~-r.;:~2:::;6:-;:-'il

II

,
Night
University Of Rio Grande
VS .
Cedarville College
January 18, 2000 7:30P.M.
Pick up your complimentary
tickets at O'Dell Lumber
· Company
61 Vine St. Gallipolis
634 E. Main St. Pomeroy .
French City Mall
Antiques Crafts &amp; Collectiblas
350 2nd. Ave. Gallipolis
Store Wide Sale.:.
. Jim. 12th. · 16th
10% · 20% off
on seleCted items,
Discounted Items &amp; more

Saturoay

22
10:00 am-2:00pm

Unbelievably Low Prices
On All Furniture, Linens,
TVs, Etc.
Cash &amp; Carry Only
990 State Route 160

Two Grave Lots At Qhlo Valley
Memory Gardena . .Good Location
In Veterans Section $385.00
Valued at $t ,600.00.
Call446·0711i Aller 5:00P.M.

For More
~S~p~~i~g~ll~~=~~~~6~1~~~f~:za~~~44~6~·2342 Or 992·~156
• available at
affordable r~te.

• I.Ill,.~-=WIIIII~
!MI . .
.

'

polis.

PCA &amp; LPN Pooillona Fo1 A Local Home Health Agencv. Train- DATA ENTRY • National Billing
Ing Available, Good Pay. Reliable Seeks A Full IPan Time Medical
Transportation Is A Mu&amp;t. App ly Biller. .Salary At $46K Per Year.
At: 2M Upper Rive r Road , Gam- PC Required. No Experience ·

WANTED: Buckeye Community Services currently
has openings in Meigs County: ·.
+++++++++++++++++++
1) 33 hrs/wk: 8 am Sat. thru 8 am Mon; sleep-over
Position 3:
Cook-on call
required;
·
·
Work Schedule:
Works as nee(jed .
2) 25 hrs/Wk: 8 pm · 8 am SaVSun;
Hourly Rate:
$7.59@ hour
3) Emergency Relief (Substitutes): hours scheduled
Minimum Qualtllcatlons: High School diploma
as needed;
or GED required. At least one year's experience in
We are searching for compassionate professionals
institutional food service .
with a team vision and a desire to teach per~onal
1
and community skills to Individuals with mental
Summary of dulles: Responsible f~H preparation
retardation. The work environment is informal and
and serving of meals to residents . Must assist in the
rewarding. The re,quirements are: high school
supervision of residents working in the dining roa·m
dlploma/GED, valid driver's license, three years good
~nd kitchen. · Also assists in the .daily accountability
driving experience and adequate automobile
of inventory, invoices, meals served, and various
insurance coverage. B.C.S, offers comprehensive
documentation. Ability to fiJJ.in for absent
training in the field of MR/DD. Starting salary:
personnel and ability to perform duties without
$5.50/hour. Interested applicants need to specify
su'pervision is required ,
·
position of interest and send resume Io: P.O. Box
SEPTA Correctional Facility is o Dr.ug-Free
604, Jackson, OH 45640-0604. All applications must
,
Workptac.e and an Equal Opportunlly
be post-marked by 1/26/00. Equal Opponunity
Employer.
~~------------~E~m~~I~o~er~-~------------..1

Lynch Agency

1lo ~ 'RI Adlatilellft

.,

1-800·

complete reports, job site verifications, trip logs,
and other reports . Must be able to direct activities
of residents and to enforce facility rules .

Help Wanted

Call for a quote
Ronnie Lynch

Nutr. Melt ratty lt1tittJtirC lim

Mont.\', PO::. Box 5Q3,' Elfirs, FtQJ."'

Annually. Coli

291·4ti83Dtpl. fl09.

systems .

ACCOUNTANT
IBMAS400

Baton Classes
Instructor
World Class Twirler
Jill Georges
22 Locust St., Gallipolis

AUCTION

Public Salt and Auction

· LEMLEY's"AUCTION

150,000

Immediate Openings For CNA ,

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

· LARGE PUBLIC

FRIDAY, JAN. 21, 6:30

•o.r Third Avenue ,

available

OH 45631

110

OH.

Auto Technician 5 Years Experl·
ence Auto Mechanic 2 Years Ex·
perlenee Rate Of Pay Is Nagotl·
able Hours 9 A.M. To 6 P.M. Paid

825 Third Avenue
Ga~lpolis,

Gallpol~ .

EMERG ING COMPANY NEEDS

Medical Insurance Billing Mall·
tance Immediately. If Vou Hlvt A
PC Vou Can Earn $25 ,000 To

to the Athen s Office:: of the O hio Bureau of
E11Jployment Ser vices. Co~ple"t e j o b de sc riptions are

740-992-64.19 TDD #1-600· 750-0750 .
Equal Housin'ji
Opportunity

IH1. PT 1FT

Professional Glamour Picture

• Send Resume to:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
RE: Advertising Sales Rep

Comlort Air,

Help Wanted

aa8--491·1224, www.work&lt;oOut•Of·
your-home .com

·.t.VONI All Areesl To Buy or Sell.
'Must have good CommunicatiOn
,
skills
• Must have good driving f8COfd
&amp; Provide own Transportation
'Must have ability to be a TEAM

Htlpar NHdtd, Mechanically In ~
cllnecl. WIU Train. Appty In Person
Botwttn 9 A.M. &amp; 10 A.M. At

ASSEMBLY AT HOllEtt Crall&amp;,
Toys. Jewelry. Wood , Sewing ,
Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1·BOO•
795-0380 El!l. t201 (24 HNl).
To Workt

110

Help Wll'lttd

.e -u LLETIN .BOARD

..Water's Edge Of Syracuse
. Taking Applications For
.'.
1 Bedroom Apartment
Seniors. disabled, handicapped
Range, refrigerator, NC, on-site
laundry, community room, 24 hour
maintenance providee
Clill or Come By Our Office Located At
· 2070 St. Rt. 124
Office Hours
,'
Mon. 10-3 Thurs. 10-3 ·

Offers Top Salary Commensurate,
with experienCe. Benefits inchJde
401K, Health &amp; Lite Insurance,
e Mileage. S&amp;nd Resume &amp; 5alary
History to : HMNS/UHC, PO Box
t042 Proclo&lt;vllte, Ohio •sees

110

NO Vou Connecled?
Internet Users Wanted!
$350 ·1800 mee•
1·663-681-6750
www D'lOOfrtthatstyn rom

Card of Thanks

Complete Site
· Pn:puation
Land Clearing,
Buanena, Footcn, ·
Diu:hing, Ponds,
Topooll, dtivcway stone,,
peral truckina. onow
n:moval
Call w (740) 446-7903

Apartments
for Rent

201 Stewart Avenue , Worth!·

ngton, KY 41183, Or Fax To 808836-9617.

actlon·now.com

BrocHures! Satisfaction Guar·
anteedl Postage &amp; SupplieS Provided! Rush Self·Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Bolt 1438, ANTIOCH, TN .

~

Submit RHumt At Gatllpollt

Arby 'a Of-Mall To Cartee Land
Oevelopmant, Inc . dba Arby'a ,

net Users Wanted! $350 ·$800 I
Week 1·888-718·4944 www.take-

Betty E. Jones
9/9!29 -1!16!61

P~o.

Phontt 740·388·9516 , If You
Have No Variable Experience
Please Don't Apply.

Complate Household Or Estates!
Any T~pe Of Furniture , Appllanc·
es, Antique's, Ele. Also Applalsal

A\'Onue,

In f.-oving
Memory
Wife &amp; Mother

Recorded Message) 1·800-8548469 El&lt;l. 5046.

Ohio 740-379·2720.
Wanted. to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit·
ver And Gold Coins. Proofsets,
DiamondS, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterllf'lg, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 15'1 Second

'*

ABlY' S RESTAURANT M&amp;N.

AQEMENT OPfORTUN!TIII
(All Ltvtl') AVAILABLE. Rapid
Expanilon Taking Plac::e In Trl·
Slllt Artl . Good Pay And Bent·
fltl . Reataurant ExperltnC:a A

Gallipot~.

Availablei 740·379·2720,

&lt;WouU!Li% 'I'o '17itJn.(,

CROSS POINTE
· APARTMENTS

l

Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
dty b'efort the •d 11 to run,

SSO reward· lost Jan. 11th, Brltta·
ny spaniel, "Rusty' , Hockingport
area, Medlana dog tag. 330·334·

I

~tr(jraiM/na

i

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Ylrd Stlto lluot Bo Plltd In

Australian

3366.

,7olin. '"'· !J{oud(_

440

Pomeroy,

Help Wanted

$800

"Ot.Jalilicatlons must inclUde;
Energetic. Ro6fJOOsiblo, Caring
and PrOYide Quality Care.

Lab &amp; 8oard01 Coe

llpoll$. (740)·4411-!1292

440

·10:00 o.m. Stturdty,

(700~-44 1 2

shepherd : two pups: 740-992·

!-.11f.l.
'lie 1flllil1,,.'W. ~

'

Frlday.~­

·Free Mixed Pups to good home.

110

'Home Helltn RN
·s...,.,.,1... 'lmmodO!Ia Opening tor FT.
RN SI.I&gt;8Ni601 in Gallia County.

Ia to "'"· Sunclly
tdlllon · 2:00p.m.

Good Homo, 740-256-8284.

Sunda-. a Monday edition·
Rlchlrd w. Clay-you need to gaf Puppies. Aonweller 'mlx . 740-742-· 1:OIIpm F~day.
hold of the famlty Law Master In . 2036.

'* ..,_.

.,

.... day btl&lt;&gt;&lt;wlllt td

/tl.

D

Sunday, January 16,2000

Help Wlnted

WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN·
MENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY! (24 H1.

AlJ. Ylrd '"'" llutl
Btl&gt;old tn . -.
DE &amp;PitH£: 2:00 p.m.

Five Amer ic an Spit z Puppies.

Fret

110

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Free to ,good home. ( 30o4 )615-

Free Lop - Eared Aabbil To

'(!times -~entintl

Yard Sate

derful wJchildren, lOves to hunt.

IIIIJ""""

•'
following the report. Americatt
Express gained 3 112to 159 1/2 ana
J.P; Morgan.rose 5 3/16 to 128.
:
Optimism aboyt earnings extend{
ed beyond the technology $CCtoq
Lands' End rose 2 7116 to 17 5/lfi
after ')Vall Street anal~sts nQted thai
in' spite of s1uhiptifg' sal~' in II\~ ~ghtj "
week holiday shopping season, prof•
its improved.
.
~
. J..ucent Te~hnologies dec,lined ~
1116 to 53 3/16 in heavy trading ami~
rumors that the ·Securities ano
Exchange Commission was investii
gating the company's · accouritin~
practices. Lucent officials -said the~
were unaware of any investigati!J~
and the SEC. would not confirm o;
deny an inquiry.
·,
Th~ market's gains wer.e broad
based. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by an 8-tO· 7 margin
on the New·York Stock Exchange and,
by a 4-to-3 margin on the Nasdaq. !
NY~E composite volume totalee
I :~3 btlhon shares, compared witf 1
I .25 billion in the previous.session. 1
· The Russell 2000 indeK of small.. ;
er companies rose 6.37 to 507.56. :
Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stoc~'
average rose 0.7 percent. Germany''
. Xetra DAX tndex rose 3.1 . percent 1

34680. · E-111ail to:

Items. $1 .00 ba.g Jill every

~""frtlllil,lllfim 1111hJIItt .. w,u 1111/j
. . . 1111""'""" 1luiai. f-1111 gr.Jfdw.
. Spa:ltii!Maqt.
6rnjdfool, ..,_, tl
. , 9bdltm. 11M ,_MItlic f-tl. $1p'd''!
t{ptU Ill tlic 4rfl jfw&amp;nfor iMirj,fllll~ lilfwN.
'1MitQ,. 1M .,.,.~WHI

7·1

i

740-592·1842
Quality clothlnQ and household

70

Found Ohio License Plate In Gal·

.. ~

I

lind th 1
1 . '
for es~ 8-~w r~es, It sehoems to w~k
loanmeh.. h •so ave 1• 1me-equuy
'cent w
, bottc ints currentthyon
. y .59
· per·
11
· ' I havea aI)IOD
goesdebt
up of
to
pnme.
credit card
$4 000 d · fi
·
· .
' '~n tn tVe ~b~lhs the mterest on thts amoun~wtll mcrease 10 14
~;rcent. A.~ I better, otT with the
orne . equny loan,_ which is
deducttble, or the credtt card loans?
-C.M., Topeka Kan
,
.
'
'
as ~:;:! 1~-~~l:lse ~in~ equ~
d' ·
eep P aymg t .
ere,/ card roulette and · ~et new
car . sat the teaser rates, thtngs will

9 West Stinson, Athens

Card of Thankl

Intermediate crude for February ister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh said he
"Thirty-dollar oil is going to have
deltvery oti seltled up $1.33 at $28.02 anticipates a six-month extension, .to be inventory-d_riven," the analyst l
a barrel on the New York Mercantile while Kuwait ahd Saudi Arabia indi- · said. ";Ilte news ts out on OPEC-~
Exchange .,..... jumping 16 percent for cated Thursday it cduld go through that's a )mown quantity. The
the week and su'J)assing the previous 2000. ·
·
.unknown is what happens in the near
nin~-y~ar high reached in No.vember.
OPEC \"ill vote on the length ·of term. with supply."
.
. :; 1
. Its a btg move,,and w_c ve.seen · anextensionatitsMarch27meeting.
Key mvenlory reports will ti~
close to fo.~r dollars ~atn m the last
AlsO underpinning the rally were released a day later than usual next
lew ~ays, . satd Chrts Sta~ros, an the season's first subnormal temper- ~eek - Wednesday and Thursday.
analys~. tor Pmne Webber m New aturcs . in ·. the northeastern United mstead of Tuesday and Wedn~sday
York. Most of It seems to be dnv~n States, the major heating oil-cori- - d~e to the Monday obse1="ance of
by what OPEC has come out and satd suming region. Parts of New En land Martm Luther King Jr. Day&gt;
clearly - that they would extend the saw wind-chill factor temperatu!s f
February heating oil rose '4.53
cuts beyond March."
minus 20 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit~ cents to 73.81 ceQts ·a gallon; Feb~FU·
Meettng tn Vtenna, the market conditions certain to send demand ary unleaded gasoline rose 3.25 cents
momtonng commme,e ot the Orga- soaring.
·
· to 7.4.52 cents a gallon; February npt·
mzatmn ot the Petroleum Exporttng
After hurdling the $27 d 528 ural gas rose 7 cents to $2.322 per
Countnesagrced to strongly recom- barriers in a single day, oil~~ $JO a 1 ~000 cubic f~et.
mend that the 10-month-oid .produc- liarrel may'be just around the
Coffee pnces fell 5 percent ,on
uon cutbacks be contmucd beyond • Stavros says it. de n~orner. technically inspired trading; despite .a
thetr scheduled March 3I exptratton. whether world and U.S.' ~ sus ~~~ · Iack of fresh news. M;arch coffee sc1;
The e~tenston could be longer continue 10 fall, 'since OPEC'spaeci- tied down 5.80 cents to $1~ 127S, a
than expected, whtch helped a~cel~r- sion an extending cuts takes the spec- pound on the Co~ee, Sugar.~ Coed~
ate the pnce runup. lraman Oti.Mtn· ulative factor out of the rally. .
Exchange in New York.. ·:, ~

in our life?_ K K ·via e-mail
DEAR ·K K . think that you are
doing well If r'h' ad 10 guess I would
. · majority of the money
•
bet that the
is
be'mg eame
. d bYyou· an d 1·•th'mk that
bears some consideration. If our
husband chooses to go the "star~ing
artist" route 1 thin.k that's fine 85 long·
as you agre~ 10 it. Over a long periad of time it mi ht he ""'tter 10 tum
the art t'nto an avgocatt'on~.
DEAR BRUCE· I am constant}
. I'
'th
d't ards I aky

-To 'tb\1 Thrih Shoppe

Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

Have Fun Meeting Eligible Singles In Your Area. Cau For Mor•

:i;.

a year combined. I comtributc 6 percent to a 401 (k} program which
matches 50 cents on the &lt;)ollar. My
hus band ts· a self-employed artist and
puts $50 a month in an SEP. I also put
$H)() a month into a regular savings
account whtch we do touch when
things gel tight. We also take $50 a
t•1onth from our chec~ing accouin to .
buy mutual funds. We would eventually hke. t.o use thts invested mon·
b
ey ~o uy a home. We .owe $10,500
on a low-interest school loan $1 500 ·
on our car and our rent is' $5JO a
month . .My question is, are we sav-

t Glen Paulk WiU Not Be Rtspon·
llbll For Any BIUI Madt By An·
yone Other Than MyHI.
Glen Paulk

MASTECTOMY Supptlos AI Lilllt

~;~~.!:..dis~~~.i~~~~~?.~,.. ~~!~.,~..e'"~J~::,.P.!~..~~~! ~~~Y.".!~~~~~perly paiq ~·
DEAR BRU~E: . My children
gave. me a s~tellue dtsh, a receiver
and mstallauon for tny birthday. I
called. the pho ne company to have the
pr,ovtderh tum on the service. I could·
n 1l!e1I e vo1ume up to a decent lev·
e). ' After three dtfferent recetvers
were Installed, which took over a
month, thts . problem still P,ersisted.
The techmctan advtsed me· to return
the re~etver to the store'and g.et one
,
t
,
by
. adlfoeren manu.acturer. I d1d, and
It solved lhe problem. In the meantime_,I have been hilled for satellite
scrv1ce stncc day one. After com-

•Are vou contulld, In 1 crltll, dO
you need haaUng? Ltt'l Prayl
Clod grot lhlngo w11en people come together In prayer. Do
you want answer&amp;? FrM Prayerll
Sand me your requ111a and 1
SASE lo: Believing In God for
Victor;, Mo. R. Moyhugh, EI03 Co·
lonlal Rd. Bldwll, Olt •5111 • '

~unba!'

Giveaway

40

60

[

Oil prices hit 9-year high at $28 per barrel
By DAVE CARI;'ENTER
AP ~us~ness W{iter •
. ·
Otl prtces roared 5 percent htgher to a n.ew nine-year high Friday,
t'oppmg $28 a barrel for the first time
si~ce 1991 and the Gulf War. The
gam came afterOPECremoved vtrtually ail doubt tl wtll extend tis
agreement on lowered productton for
several more months.
Fng1d weather.m the northeastern
Untted States also contrtbuted to a
sharp rise in crude ·as well as gasoline, heating oil and natural gas
futures .
.
. In other markets, coffee pnces
sank to a stx-wcek tow and soybeans
m?ved significantly higher for a
thtrd consecuuve day.
.
Crude climbed as high as $28.10
a barrel, the highest since Ja~: 16,
199 I, ·before the Alhed rtuittary
strtkes on Iraq that brought about an
end to the Gulf War. ·

005

elnglea .lontght. Call .toll fret 1·
1100-766-~. Oidonoion 6176 . .

The Wilshire Associates Equ~y!
Index - which represents the com•'
bined market
value of all NYSE,:
·
American and Nasdaq issue,s - rosC:
$298 29 btl !ton durtng the week to;
. $13.795 tnlhon. A year ago }pe tndex•
was $11.451 tnlhon.

·
. . is likely to
many mvestors
the· Fed
raise rates no more than a quarter-percentage point at the next Federal
Open Market Com.mittee meeting an
Feb. 1-:!:.
Although rate increases are usually. troublesome, market .watchers
said th~y were impressed that
Greenspan indicated he won't let
inflation get in the way of a surging
U.S. economy.
'.'Greenspan has demonstrated that'
he understands the world has changed
and that he doesn't intend to do anything scary to the market," said
Charles Pradilia, chief investment
strategist at SO Cowen Securities.
"We are
comfortable with
Greenspan's comments because it
shows he is not behind the curve, and
won't· let inflation raise its mighty
head."
The .latest economic data released
Friday once again showed inflation
remains under control.
The government said consumer
prices rose by 0.2 percent in December, slightly below forecasts. Exciuding energy prices, the gain was just
0.1 percent. The report was the latest
confirmation that fears about accel·
crating inflation remain unfounded.
The Dow's financial stocks rose

30 Announcements

lnlo•mallpn. 1-SOO·ROMANCE ,
Ext.8735.
Why wolt? Start mooting Ohio

ey for many years," Keon said.
This past week, the technologydominated Nasdaq composite
remained the most volatile of U.S.
market indexes, but rounded out the
week with substantial gains. The.
Nasdaq, which dipped 10 perce~
below its record high last week, ·il
now just 1.6 percent below its peak\(
•••
For the week, th~ Nasiijlq rose!(
181.65 points. A gain of 107.!16 Fli.;
day left tlie index ai 4,06ll.27. ·· :;
The Dow Jones industrials ros~
200.42 during the week. The blue;;
chip index rose 140.55 on Friday t~
finish the week at 11,722.98, a new:
record high.
.
::
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 rose ~
23.68 over the course of the week;•
adding 15.47 on Friday to -finish at;
....
I ,465 .15.
.
·~
.
~The Russell 2000 index of small:
er companies rose )9.25 during the
week. A gain of 6.37 on Friday left
the index at 507.56.

Stocks· soar on positive economi·c ' news

ClaSSifieds
-

Section

'

•

�•

r

•
Page 04 • 6anh41 ltimftl-6tnlinrl
110

Help wam.cr

DENTAL BILLING S1S ·$45 /Hr
Denial BMIIng-..., C NHdl "*'Pie To p,...,... Modi· .
cal Claims From Homo. Tl11inlng
PnMdo&lt;l. Muol Own Compular. 1·
~=1 141

e.t. 410.

DrMit • """"""""'

-TI'IEOIOIW.
PDIIfNlE, .. T I - L
VERY

Cot•••
•
,
.
_
.
Low-

--lYA-

OTR PolilloN

$1Q,DDO IOHIII
(1/EII'I' I YIAIISI
liiJIIHow COL (A)
KLLMT-

IIOCH26-IIIIa 1112

110

MaJor Marketing Firm s..t&lt;o Prr,
EnthutlltUc And Profeaalanal
Selt Sllrlert To Work AI Mer·
chendiJera In The Chllllcolhe,
Galipolil, Now Boolon And Jack·
ton ArtM. Fltalblo Houro, E•col·
!tnt Ply, Will Bt Working With
Dl1playa And Interact Wlth All
L...lt 01 lollJ1agomonL ROQunments : A Computer, email Addrtaa , tntarnet, Mlcrosolt Word
A.nd E•c•l And Tranapon•tk)n .
Training Provldtd. Fall Resume
To 100-1&amp;4·1812 ·Rtf: DTV

-1011112
.
EDE

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn E•cel·
lent S S $ I Procesalng Claims
From Home. Full Training Provid·
ed. CoMputer Required . Call
Modi·Proo Toll Free. 1·888-313·
'11008 Ed. 31 25.

Drivers: 2 WHk Paid COl TrainNo Cr1&lt;111? No Problomi Earn Up
To $32,000 1111 Yr. W lfuU Btnt1110. Apply On ·lint At: www"lr·
drlvers.com Or Call h817-230·

6002 PAM.'ll1naport

Both Ashland, KY &amp; Golilpojla, OH
Area. Opportunity For Advance·
ment And E11celtent Blneftl Pldc·

age Available Mutt HIYI A Drtv·
tr's License And Be At Uatl 18
Yeera Of Age. Wt Are E.O.E .
And Drug Free Work Plact. Ap·

ply In Person On Thurtday 1120/
00 With Drivers License And SO·
clal Security Card At BOt Hoods
Creek Pike, Ashland, KY •1101
Between 9 A.M. ·11 A.M . And 1

P.M. ·3 P.M. NO Phone lnlalll-.
Llceneld Pr'lctlcal Nuraea. Ex~

cellent opportunity to join ll'lt
lOng term neatrh care fleld. Aotlt~
lng elilll&amp;. lntarmedlate cara ctn·
tar. West VIrginia Llcenae rt ~

qulred . Point Pleasant Canter,
Genesis EldtrCart, State Routt
62, Aouta 1, Bo11 326, point
Pleasant. WV 2SSSO. EOE.

Cerlillod Nuntt Aldoo. Rotating
ahllta. Intermediate cart canter.
Wtat Virginia Certification rt·
ctUirad. Point P11111n1 Canter,
9tatt Route 02, Routt 1, Box
326, Poino Pte..ant, WV 21550.

Owner Operators • Butler Truck·
ing Company Has Vour Road To
Succenl 80% Of Gross Revenue. 9tit To $1 .10 Per Mile -All
Milnl We Supply: Platts. Permits, C&amp;L InsUrance. Comdata
Fuel Card w /Advances, Fuel &amp;
Road Taxes. No Aoe Rttlflctlons
Oo Your Equipment Flatbed. No •
Forced Olspalch. Call Don .i.t; 1·
800-li2 1·2437.

Par1-T1me X-Ray Tech For A Mo·
bile X·Ray Company Evenings
Ancf Weekends. Call 1·800·999·
9708.
Planned ParenthOOd of Southeast
Ohio Is In search of a physician/
cltnlclan 10 provide family planning
services In our Jackson and Gallla offices. Interested candidates
&amp;hall have a current Ohio license
and· sensitive to reproductive
cholc•s. Submit letter of •nterest
and ra&amp;LJma to· Planned Pir·
anthood -of Southeast Ohio. Ann:
Frank Myers, D 0 : 396 Richland
Avenue, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Emall:ppseoOfrognet.net EOE/
ESP

Moma Wanted : America's *1
Home Business MOms Work At
Home, FrM Coosatte. 1·888·613·
S27~.

Ltadlng lnduatrlal ComPany 01·
taring Entry -Level Poaltlont In

Help Wanted

,Part.tlme Babysitter needed 3d/
;wk In my Apple Grove ,WV, hamt
for toddler May call/or leave
mt&amp;&amp;ago/(304)576-9955.

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn E•ctl·
ltnt Income . Full Training. Com·
puter Required. Call Midi Works
Toii·Frtt IOO·S40·6333 Eat.

2301 .

Ing. No Exp Nltded. NO Money,

110

Help Wentld

Olf:fo (OTR Only) Col;
www.~lm. com

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

NMd 7 Ladies To Stii Avon, 740·
446-33S8.
NHd A Job? Work For Yourself.
Be A Dittributor For Flowers Baking Co. Pick-Up Application At
101 Jackson Pike 2 To 5 P.M.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, &amp; Saturday, Ask For Don
Waners.
·

110

Help Wentld

Position A.valtablt:
FOREMAN. Mull Bt Talented,
Atilt To Make OecisiOns, Want A
Permanenl Job, Work Well With
People And Poueu Exceplional
Aoollf"9 51&lt;11~ (3- Ta~. DtmtnAion·
11. Single Ply Rubbtr, Tin). Wt
Are An Eatabllshed Company,
The Work I&amp; Local. PWi io Good,
Bonuses Paid. If You Are looking
For A Good. Stable Job • Please
Submit YOUR RESUME To 1403
Entern A.ve .. Gallipolis, OH
.cse31. Ann Foreman PoSitiOn
Position ,Available : ROOFING
FOREMAN. Must Be Talented,
Able To Make Deci&amp;ions, Want A
Permanent Job, Work Well With
People. And Possen Eaceptlonat
Roollng Skills
Demenslonal. Single Ply
Wt
Are An Established
The Work Is Local\ Pay
Boi'IUSfiS Paid II You Are
I
For A Good, Stable Job • Please

Submit YOUR RESUME To 1"03
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis, OH
~5631 , Attn: Foreman Position.
Postal Jobs $48,323 .00 Yr. Now
Hiring -No E~~:perience -Paid
Traming ·Great Benefits , Call 7
Oays 800.429-3660 E•t J-365
PrpduCI!on SUIMNIIQ(

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Jackson General Hospital has an
opening lor two full time Rad1olo·
gist Tachnolog1st with benefits .
Mldmght Shill with posstble
evenings. Interested applicants
may call (304)372·2731, ext. 264,
lor more Information. EOE.

NEW MILLENNIUM DIETl Sue·
cea&amp; Guaranteed. High Pro(aln f
low Carba. Eat All Day, .. Melt
Awayl 970-870·2828

Bellin , inc .. a leading national

manufacture' of athJetlc uniforms,
has an Immediate need for a sewing plant supervisor at our new
facility In Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Tt)e successful candidate will

have responsibility lor supervisIng 12·24 hourly sewmg opera·
CANA
tors for a start-up Satellite sewmg
Jackson General Hospital has an
facility. Responslbil!l1es will In·
opening lor a full lime Certified
elude hiring and !raining of new
operators, the eJfectlve utilization
Registered Nurse Anesthetist
with benellts :·tnterest applicants · of personnel and equipment to
niay call (304)372-2731 eMf. 313 meet schedule requirements.• and
for more lnlormat1on. EOE.
resolving production problems
Qualified candidates should have
Secretary Needed For A Gal!lpo·
a background In the sawing Inlis Area Business. Part-Time. Apdustry w1th e~eperlence in a superproximately t 5 a20 Hours Per
visory position We offer a comWeek. May Work Into Full -Time
petitive pay and benefits package.
Must Be Sell Starter &amp; Enjoy . Please send a resume with salary
Working With The P!Jbtlc Previhistory to : Betlln, Inc .. 1441
ous Office Experience Preferred.
Marion Rd., Columbul, OH
Send Flesumes To : P 0 Box
43201, Attn: Super:vltor Poala
1ttl9, Gaiii&gt;Oiis, Oli-45631 .
lion.

Own A Computar1
Put HTo Worki
~ ·$75 /Hr. PT 1FT
1-888-881-6750
WWW DX)n.,nMtsfyo PPm

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR.
INC . BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE. FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO. CALL 1·800·813·3585,
EXT 14210. I A.M. ·9 P.M .. 7
DAYS fell. inC.

toe.

Reel Estate Gen1r11

iluoy Phyolciano Olllco neodo
Qttlco Monogor, CPT
ICDO
Electronic Filing Coder wlminl ·
r!tum of 3 yro OICPirlel'fCI. Elfl)fri•
ence Wllh medlctl manager a
plus . Send Rttumta In cart or:
EB13, Point Plaa18nt Regltttr,
200 Main St .. Pt: Pil'loant, wv

a

FO

110

Help Wanted

110

Help W1nted

110

ovt-

Southea•tern Water Company
lito
in mtri&lt;Ol·

WELDEit APPRENTICE
W~ Train In All Phattl 01 Weld·
C1ll 740·992· lng. Excelltnt Pay Plul Grtal
ttuaugf\ ThurSday, Mldtcal N.calion Btntlitsl Must
3:30-e:OOpm.
· • Bo HS Dlpiomo Grad, At: 19 •
START YOUR CAREER: LEARN 31. Mutt~Reiocala. But e Pay.
To Oriva The •etg Riga• 14 Day Colt 1-80Q&gt;S33- 1857.:..
· _ _ __

TEMPORARY ~ELP NEEDED

Carpet Cleaning Gtl your 1at
chtck In 1 wetk lnattad of 2.
Large Ohio Company located In
tlflga and GaUia coun1r.. a htvt
openings. No axptrlenca ntctl·
tary. Will work wllh our equip·
ment. Duo to heavy wort&lt; 1o0t1 you
muot slart irnmtdiatoiy. Cali: lion·
6pm Monday . and Tu11day.
· (7&lt;10)-44HI835

WANTED: Buckeye Community
Services Currently Has Openings
In Meigs Counrv:
t ) 33 Hrs /Wk: 8 A.M. Sat Thru
6 AM Mon; Sleep-Over
Req~red;

/Sun;
3) Em,rgoncy ReiioljSub&amp;tilutos):
Hours Scheduled As Needed;
We Are Searching For Compas·
slonale Professionals Wllh A
Team Vision And A Deaire· To
Teach Personal And Communlry
Skills To Individuals Wllh Mental
Fletardatlon. The Work Environ·
ment Is Informal And Rewarding.
The Requlramsnts Are: High
School Dfploma IGED, Valid Orlv·
er's License, Three Years Good
Driving Experience And Ader
quate Automobile ineurance
Covorege. B.C.$. Offart Compro·
henslve Training In .The Field Of
MR/00. Slartln~ Salary: $S.SO I
Hour. Interested Applicants Need
To Specify Position Of Interest
And Send Reeuma To: P.O. Box
604-, Jackson, OM 45840 ·060~ .
Ali Applications Must Be Pool·
Marked By t/26100. Equal Opporluniiy Employtr.

CLERICAL SpECIWJIT· Qaltll •
Jackson ·Mtlgs Trtitment Altlf·
Aatlves To Street Crime Program

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..••..•• ;••••.

tTASC). Full·Time Position Wilh
Competitive Salary And County
£mployee Bentflll. AIIOCiltll
Degreo Or Equivalent Plua Aolal·
I'd Ellperience JGallla County
Aesldency /Valid Drivers Ll·
~enae. Office ICrerlcal, Account·
lng,
Word
Proceaalng I
Spreadoheata. AbiNty To .Ttpe 50
IVorda Par Minute. IIEIPONII·
(llLITlEI: Conduct All Cioricai I
Qtctptlon Atpecta Of Tilt Ollict,
Clata Entry; Aotill Adrolnial111tlvt
A$Sialanr With Preparation Ot
Fiscal Reports. Sand Raaumtt
to G·J·M TASC, P.O. So• 88,
Galiipoilo. OH 4~831 Or FAX To
7~0-~46·789~ By Janutry 31,
~· ECE IAA Employer.

'

•
'

!

1!10 W1ntedTo Do ,

TRISH SHYOER ..................................M 1 JOHNNIE RUSSEU......................... ~--

Caregiver In Your Home For El·
derly Parton, 5 Days A Wee.k,
71160-388-9783.

A t Ctnt PHONE CARD ROUTEI
Make $100,000 +/Yr • ALL
CASH ! Local S1t11. Free Info.
This Is Not A Job. $5,1100 R~. 1.
11110-997·9668 Ext. 1!55 (24 Hrs)
AVAILABLE VENDI NO ROUTE
10 ·30 Locatio ns. $~K ·S9K. E•·
Cllltnl Income - ALL CASHI
Finance Avail able. 1·800-380·
261S ·(24 Hrs.)

:Clre

Rm.,

Formal

Entry

Viow Ct. 2.3 Ac. MIL $22,900 also
5 Ac. MIL $25,900.-Beeutlful
location jull off Cllarolaia Lk. Dr.

~~=~~·~--------------1
Houttclaening, 1 Story· $40.110; 2 MEDICAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hr.
Storlea $80.00 Have References!
Call Teri, Leave Mesaage, 7~0·
3e&amp;-9oe5

Lorge
2 sty. 7~;•:·
1/2 baths,
new :~~~~~1
insulation. lol
flower garden. Pomeroy
$45,0Dil.

1

Roofing, Roof Repairs and Siding.
Reasonable Rates . Free Esli·
lftatos. Fully insured (740)·245·
.341. L88Ve Meuagel

1.5 story, 3BR, 28A, eat In
kttt:han, LR W/""" carpet. Ubrary,
lot ~oor laundry, ceramiC
flooring, heat pump &amp; CA. copper
plumbrng. Huge covered porch-on
the ~ont. Quaiily conatructkln &amp;
much morel15 minutes to Holzer
Hotpltal. VLS. 3Ac. MIL
i3oa LAROE STOCKED
FISHING LAKE. 33 Acrot more or
tass. Comfortable mobile home.
Park like area may be used aa a
camp ground or build new homes

NEW AUTOMATED Home Su&amp;i·
ness . Quickly Earn A Full-Time
210 . BuBin"s
Income With Spare ·Time Effort.
Internet Required No Selling. UnOpportunlly
limited In coma. Cali 800·821.
Its ·S45 Per Houri Country's 4889 For Automated P8rsenta·
l.totl Estal&gt;ished Medical /Oental tion.
BUIIra Software Company Na.ds
People To Procets Clalma From PEPSI /CO~E IFAITO. LAY
Home . Training Provided. Must SNACK AND SODA VENDING
• O!Vn Compuler. 1·800·223·1149 ROUTE. BE YOUR OWN BOSS.
$$$ALL CASH BUSINESS$$$
E¥!.423.
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL·
INOTICEI
bHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. LENT PROFITS 1-800·731-7233
.
recommends that you do bu&amp;l· EXT. 303.
ni11 wllh people you know, and
NOT to send money through thl
lnall until you have Investigated

LUXURY
HOME
under
eonetruction.
Located In a
~ious area in Green Twp. s
min. lrom Holzer Hospital. 5
bednns.. 4 balht, Fonnli entry
w/Skylignt &amp; cetltedral ceiling,
dining rm., liVing rrn • corNonient
also commercial business VLS ktt.. ook 'cablnata, 111 floor
laundry, Muter sutte on 1Sl floor
448-8806.
ir&lt;:iudlng a super balh rm. &amp;
closet. 4 Bedrrn8., 2 bath&amp; on 2nc(
floor. 24'&gt;124' family rm. epprox.
4,000 oq. ft. Beartlfui 3 acre
ravtnocl lot and live otrum.
would be my plaaaure .to
VIrginia 448-68()6
BRICK

Take Action Today!! Make Man·
ey Tomorrowll Hamaworktrl
Needed For Alltmbly, Cltrlc:al ,
Mall Proceulng Jobl . For Fr11
In formation /Application Write :
Charnn, Boll 522-A, Marion, C

JOI'IT¥-VCR M l'llll111T111ATH

The Moment

acrt~

AU~ CIIIAIWITEID.

l o - •any P&lt;alororlce.

.............................. 992·2259

u---

f o.t.....,.,,..
OOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDEOI GOV'T FORE·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·

310
t NO

CBih For Remaining Paymonlt
On Property Sold I Mortgaglli
Annulllesi Setllementoi lmmo·
diato Cuot..lll •Nobody Stall
Our Prien." National Contract
Buyers 800-~90 ·0731 Ext. 101
www.nationalcon~actbuyert .oom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
wealthy Famlllot Unloading Mil·
lions Of Dollan, To HelP Minimize
Their Tlllll. Write Immediately:
Windfalls, 647-A SECOND AVE..
1350 , NEW YORK. NEW YORK
111017 ·

or _,.

PROVALI 1·800·310·4120 EXT
·
8509 .
=:::.-..,----:----:~
1993 Jim Wliflro Homo. 4BR,
2fuil bath. livingroom, kitchen/
dining artl &amp; utlllly roam; wt3
Acr•• ln Ashton Area. $81,500.
~(304:::.)::5;.:76-:.;23:::;118:;.._________
2 Story, 3 Bodroom. on 7th
Strtot. $18,1100. (304)1175-5270.

CONSOLIDATE BILLS.
From $3,000 ·$150,11001
(9% -ego Rtlo).
LOANS O.A.C.
ForFastResulta.
Cat1To41-Frte
• 1-MH1WIM.

COUNTRY HOME
Betweon Gallipolis And Jackoon.
2 BR t 112 Bttho. Full Ba,_t,
That Could Ettily be lltmed lnlo
More Btdroomt . 10 Vear1 Old.
Ne.,.. Septle Syttem, Excellent
COndition. Brick &amp; Vinyl Bi·Levtl.

CREDIT CARD UP TO $3,000. I. ~Ha.~~·~~B!ar~n a -~~ OUibulldinga.
Unsecured VISA IMC. Bad Credit 1
Water, Great Buy,
Or No Cred~. 1·80Q.2M-81118 Ed.
Col For Appointmtnl Or
41100.
1·800-213-838S.
CREDIT AEPAIAI AS SEEN ON
TV! Erate Bad Credit Legalfu.
•
Free Info. 888-e59-215e0.

FORECLOSED HOMES. Low Or o
Down! Govn'\ And Bank Rtpo'a
Baing Bold Nottrl Flnan&lt;&gt;lng Avtl~
ablo. Call NowI 1·800·3SS·0024,

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Applicalion W /Service. Rlduce
Payments To 65% 11CASH INCENTIVE OFFER II Cali 1-800·
328·65t0Ext.29.

:El&lt;L::.:8040::::;.·- - - - - - -

~OMEI FROM '1H.IO IMo. 1 •
3 BR Rtpol /Fortcloaurea, Fee,
4.,., DO&gt;!n. For Lilllngll Payment
DttaHt. 1·800-719-3001 xf185.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accopt
adver11otmarrta lor realetlat8
wflicll is in lfiolation of the
."'!'·Our-.. are hetel&gt;y

~-- all-irvt
edverttaed in this n&amp;WIIpaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baels. •

Houu for sale (reduced). 2 bed·
room• &amp; 2 blthl, heat pump,
clott tO' schooL lree main·
ttnance, .5 years old, 132 Mil St.,
New Haven, VN. 304-882·22&lt;10.
Houae tar sale, two story, 2·3
bedrooms, one bath , Mkldleport,
ao~ing $29,000 , call 800·388·
8194.
Lovely ten acres In a country aatung, lour' btdrooml, two and half
baths, fmmal IMng room and family room, two llrapfacoa, two &amp;partmenta, tour car garage and twa

ttorago building. Pteou coli 740·
992·2292.

Non-OuaiJfylng
Anumabtt.
S.C ,d'OO Down I Take Over Pay·
rnontl, 74o-446-32t8.

Home for the Holldava on a Nice
Lot. All Utiiitteo. 1·1304)-738-ms
JANUARY SPECIAL
ALL HOMES ON SAlE

h.ooo.oo ofl Soioctod Single
Wide Homes. Super Low Pay·
mental Oak Wood Homes, Bar·
bouravlllt, Wv. H30~)-736·7295
or 1·(304)·738-239S

$499 DOWN ON SINGLEWIDES
$999 ON DOUBLEWIDES
1·800-948·5878.

330 Farma far

$lie

5TO 10ACRES
Betwun Gallipolis &amp; Jackson ,-..
Near Thurman , Baautllul Rolling ..
Mt1dow1 , With Lots 01 Roal:l ,
Frontage. 6 Aerts With t Acrt ,
Pond, Aw~&amp;ome Building Stte Be· l
hind Pond . Prices Start At "
$12 ,500. Land Contracts Avail - ·
Bblt . Fret Mapa. ANTHONY ~
LAND CO., lTD 1·800-213-836S.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

BRUNER UNO
740-441·1492
Must Sacrifice My New Modal 16
Ft . Wide Home . Financing Avail·
allie, 304-736-89158.
. Gtlllt Co.: Nice Preserved Farm
••••LOOt&lt;' ...
Homes One On 6 ACfei $69,000,
5 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, over 2,000
Now 21100 Doul&gt;ttwlde, 3BR/2BA. The Other With 47 Acres
sq. it. , lor less than $450 mo .
$299 per month. Free Air &amp; Oellv· $98 ,000 Botl'l On Jessie Cree-k
Rd., In Kyger. Also In Same Area
FREE Delivery &amp; Sot. 1·800-948·
ery, 1-1188-928-3428.
6 Acres $12,000. 16 Acres
5678.
NEW BAN~ AEPOS
$20,000 Or 37 Acres $47 ,000 . ·
12x68 Nice Must Sea , $10 ,000
ONLY TWO LEFT, NEVER LIVED
Great Selection With 25 Parcels I
740-24S·937~.
Eureka , Marabel Rd., 1 t Acres ~
CALL 1
$20,000 Or 31 Acre&amp; With Barn ~
1988 Redman Oanvollle 14M70
$37.000, Gallia Academy Water,.
Also Has Expando, Vary Nice,
NO ""YMENT TILL MAY, 20110
Fr~ndly Rldg'- IS Acres $12,500
$13,1100. 740-388-833S.
ANY HOME PURCHASED IN
· Cuh Price.
.
THE MONTH OF JANUARY
199~ Clayton, 141152 ft. All alec· .
WE WILL MAKE FIRST 3 PAYMelge Co.: Carpenter, Harmon
tric, 2 bedrooms. Very nice .
MENTS.
Rd., Remote .5 Acres Wilh Farm
$10,1100. (304)882·2662.
1-8110-948-5878
House $35 ,500. Rutland, Whltea '
1997 14X70 Oakwood, 3 bed·
Repo 141180 Extra Nice Norris, Hili Ad.. N~e 9 Acros Sf2,000 Or·.
room , 2 bath, all electric. Payofl $30,000 Bank Sacrifice 11 Acre&amp; su.ooo. wattr oan. J
ville , SR 325, 5 Acre~ $16,000 . ·
$22,000.(304)882·3899.
$25,000, $6,000 Solow Book. Water Or Briar Ridge Rd., • 7 Aa·
Cali: HI00~9t~7n.
IS $13,000.
1997 14•70 Oakwood; 2 Balhs, 2
Bedrooms, Laundry. 2 Acres, Factory Renovated 3 Bedrooms,
Many Nice Lots To Choose From •
101112 Building. County water
$499 &amp; Assume. Oa~wood, Galli~ For
Home Sites And Hunting. Call '
New Septic. $35,000 .00 (740)· polo. 74o-446-3083.
·
Now For FREE Maps And Fl~ ,
388-D434
.
Special, New t6x80, Low Down nanclng Into. tO% OFF Cash ..
·
1997 c·layton 1~1166 Owner Mav Payment and $289 per month. Buys!
Finance, Will Rent Set·Up On Lot Free Air. can for quk:e E·Z approCloaa To Vinton, 740-388-8260 , val. 1·888-~8-3428.
After~ P.M.
64 Acres In Mason County. Good
Country Living 3 Or 4 Bedrooms.
tor Hunting . Electnc/Phona ,AWl· ..
Pay Closing Costs &amp; Move ln . Will Pay Ail Moving &amp; Setup tsr al available. (304)4118·18118.
·
740-448-3093.
Co&amp;tll Must Sell lmmedlatelyl

-~948-5678.

.

Ooublewlde Repo, Never lived In,
28X80 . $1 ,000 Down Delivers. w/
A.C. No Dealers Allowed . 1·888·
!128-9898.

304-733-4883.
Land Home Packag11. AU Areas.
All Crldtt Risko. 740-&lt;WI·3583,

Nlca Home, Plenty of Room, 3
Bedroom, Brick. Reduced Price.

2 ... 4 Acres, Homesite, Green ·, '
Township , Gallia County, Flat,,..
Scenic, Close To Gallipolis, Soma ...
Reetrlc:tlons, 740-245-5776 .

(304)273-9485.
Nice Houu lor sale In New Ha·
von Aroa. 11 8.~oo . (304)773-

ssn.

MONEY TO LOAN Bed Crodll
O,KI Frea Application US Appiicanoa Only 1·Sn-&amp;'70-1938.

SERVING YOU SINCE 1967.
"Remember a SOW aiBn in your
yard il jwt a phone caU.away!"
441-8888 or 446-1933
311 3rd Ave., GaUipoU., OH

om
;t"

'•

t :
' •

Glo·nn HoiJ,.r\•,
11• ,Ill or
I 1 t I (' / ll

llnnrou ".tul• •,
llt.H" h M• p
R&lt; "

· 1·1 1&gt; ,' \H',

'
NO MORE
When you SEll. OR BUY a ttomel Our •ttome Wtrt'lnty;" Progntm pr:oteciS the aeller
the llsllng, the Buyer !rom date ol closing lor one year wfth right ol renewal. YOU
nt&gt;NI;;. PAY FOil rr UNTIL WE SELL YOUII HOMI!I CALL FOil MOllE DETAILS •

f:'"'

!uKury log home ycar·round. Call
for our free ln&lt;X:hurc or 104-plase
S12 oolo1 ~Malo(!: wilh floor plans

limitation or dtscrimination
buld on raco, color, re&lt;lgion,
..X famlllalltafUI or national
origin, or ~ ini:Bnlle!n to
make any such PAifBietiCe,
limitation or dloalmlnatlon."

HeAl ESTAlE

~olforfng.

lovely LA, wood buming fireplace.
Kit. w/oak cabinet, dining area.
Level to miiing land. Some
wooded &amp; putute. Bem. Coli for
an ,appointment. VLS 4460-6808
12117
COUNTRY · PRIDE.
'--1&lt;1 0.. SA 32!1. 2 m11to N. o1
SR 35. Approx. 2 Ac.. pond, o~k
level a 3 Bldrmi .. 2 1/2 baths •
LA, DR, Laundry Am, Den, l;al·in
kltohen. 2 car atlaeholf garage.
New Roof, siding, heat pump,
in 11112 years.
358 311 EVERGREEN RQ. 3
bedrm , Broadmore Mobile Home
&amp; Lota. Range Refrlg., Washer &amp;
Dryer., Elec Heat &amp; CA, Deck ·&amp;
Outbuilding. $28,000
13317 HIDE·A·WAY. W/L.ota of
trees, land, &amp; wildlife. 50 At:.. MIL
Some limber, mineral rights.
I

lol/t. . VLS 446-8806

All reallllala ~in
thia ntW IPIPM illutJtlcl: to
1ht Ftdoral Faif Houairv Act
of 1188 wi"kf&gt; makoo MIllegal

220 Money to Loen

homo. 4/8 ,bedrm. homo. 2 balM,

. .Live for

320 Mabile Home•
far Sale

(104)e11-1724

Prico ·Reduced for quick I or
make an offer. Newer 1 1/2 story

the hoine.
w/large workShop. Treed
8111! " -.jg&lt;l) troea. One
for certalrrybu can have a
family Hfe growing a garden
havlnafllrm pela. Buy 4 or t 6

320 Mobile Homet
lor Sale

310 Hom" for Sale
Spacroua River VIew Home, St·
eluded, Near Town. 7tAcrts,
Heated Pool, 5 Bedrooms, 3 1f2
8atha.$t60 ,000 .00 . 740·446·
9897.

Dozltrlllr 1ft. 7 -·7945.

29571.

Medical Billing Soflware JCorT'C)Sny
Needs People To Process Mtdl·
cat Claims From Home. Tra ining
Providtd. Must Own Computer. 1·
800-434·5518Elll.667.

MEDICAL BILLING . Unllmiled In·
come Potential. No E11parlenca
.Necessary. Fret InforMation &amp;
W111 clean I'IOUSS! or business . CO·AOM. Investment $4 ,995 •
Havt reterences. Pleast call $8,99.5. Flnancl{lg Available. Is·
t304)675-3827. If no answer land Automated Medical Ser·vic·
1aave me&amp;sege.
es, Inc . 100·322·1139, Ext. 050.
'"
Void In KY, IN, CT.
..,..111 Do Bebysi~ing MondQY -Fri·
clay, Buiaviiia Pike Area Call 740· Need A Loan? Try Oebt Consoli·
44HI223.
dation . $~. 000 • $200,000. Bad
Credit O.K. FH. f-800·770·0092.
Ed. 215.
FINANCIAL

133151
home Ia in ,MINT

Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Altordabll Rate.
Sprtng·Vailoy Plaza. Cal 740-4460101 .

$$$ NEEO CASH71 WE Pay

RIVER EDOE. Spnng, SUmmtr,
Winter 01' Fall will be moat
enjayable 11\ling here.
26'x28'

AN EARLY ,AYDAY"
No Ofllct Violt Nt6ootary. Up To
$500 Instantly. Toll-Fret 1~177·
IAIILYMY.licfoc700311.

Start .Your euain111 Tod•y ...

Financial Backer Needed for
General Commercial Product Li·

FAEE MONEYI Cash Givea·
ways, Private Grants, Loans,
$Millions A~iallablel Call Ton-Free
1•871-4"·944 5 x133.
International Company Seeking
Dynamic Individuals For 'E-Com·
merce Sales Flexible Houra/ Un·
1
t mitod income. f-888·474·4703.
www.ri&amp;OUrces·r·lM\!Imited.com

310 Home• for Sale

itunlla!' 11ttmr• -&amp;tntintl • Page 05

NE~D

SS Auto Loans. Personal Loana,
Debt Consolidation, Mortgagtl
And Rellnanclng. Credit 'Pf'QbMma
OK . Consumers Financlt11·800·
247-5125 En 1134. VOiriClH, KS.

'Handyman Service , 740·256·
for ana In countr.y 5840
·month . Mobile, Honest. NonSmoker. (304)882·3880.
ftontll, . Dependable, Waakly
r.
,_.Ouatcleanlng .
Reasonable
Rjtoo. !;rae Eatimtteo. 1304 )675 •

220 Money to Loin .

EARN $1 ,000'8 WEEKLYiii fiiOO
ENVELOPES •$4,000 FROM ·
HOME $4 PER ENVELOPE 24
.HAS. 1·888·761-7012.

RMR.
1711 SR 7 SOUTH OH THE

et20.

Buaii"MMII

Opportunity

ability · lnauranca lor Sates
Through WaiMsrt &amp; Other Aetall·
ers. (304)882·34n.

446·4802.
ltmlll VACANT. LOTS on Lake

CL£AICALIPECIAURT

d'actor Sales Repraaentatlve&amp; In
:fhe Gallipolis Ferry Market To
Call On And Servtce Prolestiof\.
el Buildera, Cohtreclore And Fie~
MOdelers. Ideal Gandldllel Mutt
f.tave A Proven Saln Allulta
And Established Contracts In
The C~n•tructlon Industry. De·
\'eloping New Account• And
~ervicing Eotabllahod Accounto
At Job1ltt1 Ia E11ent1al To Our
6al11 Succel8. Wt Offer A Com·
1!"1111.._ Slarting Saiiry Pluo So~ Or Commioaion. Btnelito In·
cludo Huilh And Denial Plono,
Ula And DlaabllitV lnsur1nce At
Wtii AI A 401~ And Profit Shar·
lllg 'P)I~. Send Ropilea To: CL.A
{91 wo Oolllpollt Dally Tribune,
125 third AYonuo, GaHipolls, OH
415031.

School•
Instruction

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... Ut I C.

w/jel ski
ramp. Satollno.
LIFE
WORTH
LIVING. MAKE
Cali
VIRGINIA L. SMITH. 448·6806 or

2) 25 Hrs /Wk: 8 P.M ·8 A.M. Sat

210

'Georgtt Portabli Sawmill, don't
,_.ul your loga to the miU )Uit call
304-8711-1957.

Great

74D-592·68St.

Bualne11
Opportunlly

A 1' PHONE CARD ROUTEI
Maile $ t110.0110 +l'lr ·AI.L CASH!
Eaoyl Local Sileo. Frto info.
t-800-997-9MB (24hrs) X: 110

EARN A LEOAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachtloro,
Mllttrs, Doctorate. By Corre. apondenco Betld Upon Prior Ed·
ue~tlon And Short Study Courae.
Far FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERS11'1 t-8110-964-8316.

•

w/Parquel flool8. IMng rm .. dining
rm .. Equipped k!.. Ill floor bath &amp;
bedrm .. Deck W/Ho1 T~b, ,Carport
for entertainment. 3 bedrma. up.
Basemen!, Wrsp front porch,
attached 2 car garage. Plus a
24'x..• garage epanment. 3.2n . H350 oN.,;,•.•...,;;
acres more 01" less. Floating dock FROM

4S83t Or FAX To 740·448·7884
~y January 31. 2000. EOE IAA
Employer.

A Company, With Annual 8atu

150

PLACI WITH
VI!W OF THE

URGENTLY NEEDED for plasma
donors . earned $35 to' 14!!1 for 2
or 3 hOurs w.ekly. can Sera·Tee,

210

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Ple18ant, WV

.t:r~

Home located on Maple Grove Road along Raccoon
:~~u~:~,;~:,~~;~: ::~:;:r.~
Creek, 10 miles from Gallipolis contains 3 BRs. 1 BA,
Bacnelor'a Degree In Social
Work Or Equivalent Eduoalion I
2·1.5 BAs, LG FR, LG KT, LR, DR, all woodwork incl.
E~perlence. Cerllfled ChtmiCal
Dependency counoetor (Ccoc)
cabinets, stairway and balcony are Cherry Wood,
Or Llcenlld Social Worker
(LSW) Prolorrod. Valid Drivofo
cathedral ceilings in LR and FR, stone FRPL, LG LLicenaa. RE8PON8181LlTlEI:
Screening, As. .amtnt, R1f1rral,
-k 1II"'x32 &amp;. 12X48, 1 Car garage ID
• fiU'II filOIS
" hed
Caso Management, Monitoring,
Shaped d eC
&lt;turd Random Urinaiylia For Court
b8Sement On 3 ·BCreS, more Or JeSS, CALL 740•379•9236,
Referred Subolanct ·Abuolng
TASC,
Boo
88, Galipotlo,
OH 1&amp;..-----=::::=============~=====-----....1
Adults. P.O.
Send
Resumes
To G·J·M

Of 1.7 Billion II Looking For Con-

Working Mom Needt Nuturing, •
Respon1lbla Caregiver To Cart
For 14 Moo. Otd Boy. Non·
Smoker, Re•erencea Required,
Minimum 3 Dayo A Week. 74Q·

OUR WEB PAGE IS,.......viomllh.oom :
I vlomllh.com

USDA IFSA Is An Equal Oppor·
run lty EmplOyer.

Bualn"'
Tl'lllnlng

· ~It C.... Colltto .
(Co,_. Clolt To Homo)
. Callodayt 7-3e7.
'
1-800-2f4-0452,
RtQfll0.45-t2748.

OAIL IILVIL.LI. ................................. ttl 1201

..,,;,::; I

CONTRACTOI'IBALIS REP

wo" From Homt 1511 ~se.ooo
PlrH1mt /Full-Tlmt Conllcl Kti1)'. 1· 111-IU-2831, www.2morl·
II'IDni'/.QOm ~ I . ... f'OWII'I.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE .
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE·

GaU ls !Lawrence county Farm
Sarvlce Agency. Salary To Be
Determined By Oua~rtcatlons And
E11perlence Of Applicant. AppU·
cations Can Bt Obtained AI The
Gallla /Lawrence Farm Service
Agency Office, 11 1 Jacks011 Piko,
Room 1571 , Gallipolis, Ohio
4S631 Or Cali 7&lt;10-446·8687. Ail
Applications Must Be Complete
And Returned To Ttle Office By
Close Of Business Frktev. Jtnuary21,2000.

CASE MANAOER:
son ·Maigs Adult Troatl!tant
ternetivos
To Throe
Stroot(3)
v•;;~;;I
gram
(TASC).

Computer Clet'k. Full or Part·tl~.
Qood Salary. Experience w/
Windows necessary. Call lor In·
t•rview (304)87s-8808, Ill. 384/
f.I!00-720-4022.

140

Help Wented '

--------~------------------~~~~2~1~~~A-~~5.
\
Rill Eltatl General

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17.21 /Hr.
Guaranteed Hire. For Application
And Exam Information Ceh 8 A.M.
• 9 P.M. M·F 1-888·898-5627 E•t.
24·1007.

mso.

110

Help Wanted

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21.10 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS,
SECURITY, MAIN·
TENANCE, ""RK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. ANO
EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·813·
358S, EXT. 14211. 8 A.M. ·9 P.lol.
7 DAYS lilt, Inc.

Couru. Job 'tacemenr A Zaro

Down Financing A~all1blt It
Qualified. Commeu:l•l Driving
Acatlemy f.877-213-1303.

Sunday, J1nuary 18, 2000

Sunday, January 18, 2000

Re11 Eltlte Gener~l

for over 60 model bomu.

1-800-458·9990
Sh1arrl l. Hart .•••.•••• 742·2357

.

hffp:/twww.apploa.com

1f00B BEJILTY, INC

c·mail :apptoa@cltyncl.nct

t~~H~!1
PO

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631
Allen C. Wood, Broker • 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker • 446-0971
Jeanetle Moore, • 256-1745
Palricia Rbss
74Q.446.1066 or 1-800-894-1066

built to
operation alnce
includH inventory. Cali Jo;,,;;;;;;t
367·0323 or 44H808.

Box 614 • Ripley, WV 25271

.. ,

Real Eltlte Qen1ral

'

~aoad~y

NEW LISTING , SALEM TOWNSHIP • A
1990 Shultz Mobile Home with 3 bedrooms, 2
bathe . gas furnace. public water, arealor
aepllc, 5 acres ol nice laying ground. quiet
country selling. Approximately 30 minutes
!rom Pomeroy, Gallipolis, Jackson &amp; Athens.
Immediate .PossessionI ASKING $35.000

Wllr1Un'a ·Ia buy your IIret
this )t Ill Vinyl
wilh 2 BR's
BR, 1 bath, LR,
· downstairs.
on St. Rt. 554.
In the 20's. Letlhls
be your first. 'A ek lor

·Realty ·
446-3636

a

Attention builder• or
mobile homo ownera.
Vacant Land lust mlntues
!rom lhe hospital &amp; town.
Approx. 9 acres M/L. Call
lor the location &amp; .price.

Ji

'

'

to- -to

2) ·Pricing i'JUf lltme lrt oell

3) Haw

yo..Ill.
Cd4&lt;11 .-~or oppolr-~

..

Juet Uatedl Farm in GrHn
onlyl TC1wnehlp. Th!l farm has
your load8 ol potential with Ita 80
acrea or 1111. Ma~e
dreams come tru''·.J~•II"•
build a new home.
your Imagination go .
better call nowl It !l'ay not
laallong. Ask for 12025
•

JUST RIDUCED 'TO $225,000. EIGHT RENTAL
UNITS, ALL OCCUPIED, BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETTING WITH ROOM FOR EXPANSION.
' CONVeNIENT LOCATION NEAR '!tiE CITY..

We Work llAB.D. lor :l'ou/'

a••••

.

448-1011.

.

.
••

·

Two Offices JenliijTol,With Ustlng1 In
O.llla, Jackson
ColniJa , .

We arellwaya glad to llelp you Nil or bitr propwty.
Ran181 propet'ly It Ilea tvlll~. G~ ue a 0111 at

.
'

Call for

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC •
.(740) 446-3644

CALL 44,1•8188.,,

Vl.ewtngl
.

•

offlra
blith, 1 - kitchen with pantry, buiR·in hutctund toling
otaya. Etoctrlc 11tat pump. 5tt up on a -.ct lot at
Prlctd 81$14.11110. iiiOe

Your

TWO VACANT LOTS FOR SALE 1N THE CITY OF
GALL1POLIS. EACH lOT IS 40' X 150': $10.000
.EACH OR PURCHASE BOtH 'LOTS.FOR,S111,1100; ·

\J

Buy on a 11t7 -~~ -~~ 14 x sa ~

Call For

.

'

-llttnonlhiH-IMM"taciLD7
There It a reason.
Let us show you poealbly why:
t) Haw to otiecl 1 ·AIIII Etlato Agonl.

Homealtea In Ouran Twp.
Available In 5 acre tracts
f110re or leas. Public. water
available. Driveway&amp; and
culverts already present.
Give Allen a call. 12023

..
(•

For Your Home

Lotel Lotel Latal From
acre lracls lo 6 acre
M/L. Jull a lew miles
Galllpolja. Some restriction •
. Count{ water available. Call
minute&amp; and ask lor 12022

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES ·

IF YOU ARE LOOKIN!l FOR A COMFORTABLE
TWO STOijY HOME IN A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETTING. WE ~UST I.ISTED ONEI 3 BEDROOMS.
2' BATHS, FORMAL DINING ROQM. SCREENED
PORCH ... BETTER CALL SOON, THE PRICE IS
$59.00011
.

This Space Has
Been Reserved

12020

2!5 LOCUST ST, • QAWPOL!S
Audr1y F. C1naday, Broker
Ronald K. Canlday, Broker
' . '
Mery P. Floyd, AaiOCiate

$81,1100 IS THE NEW LOW ,PRICE ON THIS
INvESTMENT, PIIOPI!IITY. LOCATED NEAR RIO
GRANDE · COLLEGE IN THE VILLAGE OF RIO
GRANDE. FOj.IR UNIT ~AR'I'ME~ HOUSE. ONE
UNIT FRAME DWELLING, PLUS MOBILE HOME.
ALL PRESENTLY OCCUPIED. CALL SOON I

For Sale: Six lots In
Waner's Hill Subdivision.
Call today and ask lor

12018

"""""""'

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOI'EA MIF DY
OI'IUG FREE ENVIRONMENT

NHd • realdontltlllat(tlln
Gallipolis?
We
have
something for you. 12017
Broltor owned

\.

e:Mall Addraut wlseman@zaomnst.net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Games 446-l7!17

.
Rc!bert Bnice 446..o6ll

Carolyn Wueb 441·1007
Rill Wlaemaa 446-9555

�•

r

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Page 04 • 6anh41 ltimftl-6tnlinrl
110

Help wam.cr

DENTAL BILLING S1S ·$45 /Hr
Denial BMIIng-..., C NHdl "*'Pie To p,...,... Modi· .
cal Claims From Homo. Tl11inlng
PnMdo&lt;l. Muol Own Compular. 1·
~=1 141

e.t. 410.

DrMit • """"""""'

-TI'IEOIOIW.
PDIIfNlE, .. T I - L
VERY

Cot•••
•
,
.
_
.
Low-

--lYA-

OTR PolilloN

$1Q,DDO IOHIII
(1/EII'I' I YIAIISI
liiJIIHow COL (A)
KLLMT-

IIOCH26-IIIIa 1112

110

MaJor Marketing Firm s..t&lt;o Prr,
EnthutlltUc And Profeaalanal
Selt Sllrlert To Work AI Mer·
chendiJera In The Chllllcolhe,
Galipolil, Now Boolon And Jack·
ton ArtM. Fltalblo Houro, E•col·
!tnt Ply, Will Bt Working With
Dl1playa And Interact Wlth All
L...lt 01 lollJ1agomonL ROQunments : A Computer, email Addrtaa , tntarnet, Mlcrosolt Word
A.nd E•c•l And Tranapon•tk)n .
Training Provldtd. Fall Resume
To 100-1&amp;4·1812 ·Rtf: DTV

-1011112
.
EDE

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn E•cel·
lent S S $ I Procesalng Claims
From Home. Full Training Provid·
ed. CoMputer Required . Call
Modi·Proo Toll Free. 1·888-313·
'11008 Ed. 31 25.

Drivers: 2 WHk Paid COl TrainNo Cr1&lt;111? No Problomi Earn Up
To $32,000 1111 Yr. W lfuU Btnt1110. Apply On ·lint At: www"lr·
drlvers.com Or Call h817-230·

6002 PAM.'ll1naport

Both Ashland, KY &amp; Golilpojla, OH
Area. Opportunity For Advance·
ment And E11celtent Blneftl Pldc·

age Available Mutt HIYI A Drtv·
tr's License And Be At Uatl 18
Yeera Of Age. Wt Are E.O.E .
And Drug Free Work Plact. Ap·

ply In Person On Thurtday 1120/
00 With Drivers License And SO·
clal Security Card At BOt Hoods
Creek Pike, Ashland, KY •1101
Between 9 A.M. ·11 A.M . And 1

P.M. ·3 P.M. NO Phone lnlalll-.
Llceneld Pr'lctlcal Nuraea. Ex~

cellent opportunity to join ll'lt
lOng term neatrh care fleld. Aotlt~
lng elilll&amp;. lntarmedlate cara ctn·
tar. West VIrginia Llcenae rt ~

qulred . Point Pleasant Canter,
Genesis EldtrCart, State Routt
62, Aouta 1, Bo11 326, point
Pleasant. WV 2SSSO. EOE.

Cerlillod Nuntt Aldoo. Rotating
ahllta. Intermediate cart canter.
Wtat Virginia Certification rt·
ctUirad. Point P11111n1 Canter,
9tatt Route 02, Routt 1, Box
326, Poino Pte..ant, WV 21550.

Owner Operators • Butler Truck·
ing Company Has Vour Road To
Succenl 80% Of Gross Revenue. 9tit To $1 .10 Per Mile -All
Milnl We Supply: Platts. Permits, C&amp;L InsUrance. Comdata
Fuel Card w /Advances, Fuel &amp;
Road Taxes. No Aoe Rttlflctlons
Oo Your Equipment Flatbed. No •
Forced Olspalch. Call Don .i.t; 1·
800-li2 1·2437.

Par1-T1me X-Ray Tech For A Mo·
bile X·Ray Company Evenings
Ancf Weekends. Call 1·800·999·
9708.
Planned ParenthOOd of Southeast
Ohio Is In search of a physician/
cltnlclan 10 provide family planning
services In our Jackson and Gallla offices. Interested candidates
&amp;hall have a current Ohio license
and· sensitive to reproductive
cholc•s. Submit letter of •nterest
and ra&amp;LJma to· Planned Pir·
anthood -of Southeast Ohio. Ann:
Frank Myers, D 0 : 396 Richland
Avenue, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Emall:ppseoOfrognet.net EOE/
ESP

Moma Wanted : America's *1
Home Business MOms Work At
Home, FrM Coosatte. 1·888·613·
S27~.

Ltadlng lnduatrlal ComPany 01·
taring Entry -Level Poaltlont In

Help Wanted

,Part.tlme Babysitter needed 3d/
;wk In my Apple Grove ,WV, hamt
for toddler May call/or leave
mt&amp;&amp;ago/(304)576-9955.

MEDICAL BILLING. Earn E•ctl·
ltnt Income . Full Training. Com·
puter Required. Call Midi Works
Toii·Frtt IOO·S40·6333 Eat.

2301 .

Ing. No Exp Nltded. NO Money,

110

Help Wentld

Olf:fo (OTR Only) Col;
www.~lm. com

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

NMd 7 Ladies To Stii Avon, 740·
446-33S8.
NHd A Job? Work For Yourself.
Be A Dittributor For Flowers Baking Co. Pick-Up Application At
101 Jackson Pike 2 To 5 P.M.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, &amp; Saturday, Ask For Don
Waners.
·

110

Help Wentld

Position A.valtablt:
FOREMAN. Mull Bt Talented,
Atilt To Make OecisiOns, Want A
Permanenl Job, Work Well With
People And Poueu Exceplional
Aoollf"9 51&lt;11~ (3- Ta~. DtmtnAion·
11. Single Ply Rubbtr, Tin). Wt
Are An Eatabllshed Company,
The Work I&amp; Local. PWi io Good,
Bonuses Paid. If You Are looking
For A Good. Stable Job • Please
Submit YOUR RESUME To 1403
Entern A.ve .. Gallipolis, OH
.cse31. Ann Foreman PoSitiOn
Position ,Available : ROOFING
FOREMAN. Must Be Talented,
Able To Make Deci&amp;ions, Want A
Permanent Job, Work Well With
People. And Possen Eaceptlonat
Roollng Skills
Demenslonal. Single Ply
Wt
Are An Established
The Work Is Local\ Pay
Boi'IUSfiS Paid II You Are
I
For A Good, Stable Job • Please

Submit YOUR RESUME To 1"03
Eastern Ave .. Gallipolis, OH
~5631 , Attn: Foreman Position.
Postal Jobs $48,323 .00 Yr. Now
Hiring -No E~~:perience -Paid
Traming ·Great Benefits , Call 7
Oays 800.429-3660 E•t J-365
PrpduCI!on SUIMNIIQ(

RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Jackson General Hospital has an
opening lor two full time Rad1olo·
gist Tachnolog1st with benefits .
Mldmght Shill with posstble
evenings. Interested applicants
may call (304)372·2731, ext. 264,
lor more Information. EOE.

NEW MILLENNIUM DIETl Sue·
cea&amp; Guaranteed. High Pro(aln f
low Carba. Eat All Day, .. Melt
Awayl 970-870·2828

Bellin , inc .. a leading national

manufacture' of athJetlc uniforms,
has an Immediate need for a sewing plant supervisor at our new
facility In Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Tt)e successful candidate will

have responsibility lor supervisIng 12·24 hourly sewmg opera·
CANA
tors for a start-up Satellite sewmg
Jackson General Hospital has an
facility. Responslbil!l1es will In·
opening lor a full lime Certified
elude hiring and !raining of new
operators, the eJfectlve utilization
Registered Nurse Anesthetist
with benellts :·tnterest applicants · of personnel and equipment to
niay call (304)372-2731 eMf. 313 meet schedule requirements.• and
for more lnlormat1on. EOE.
resolving production problems
Qualified candidates should have
Secretary Needed For A Gal!lpo·
a background In the sawing Inlis Area Business. Part-Time. Apdustry w1th e~eperlence in a superproximately t 5 a20 Hours Per
visory position We offer a comWeek. May Work Into Full -Time
petitive pay and benefits package.
Must Be Sell Starter &amp; Enjoy . Please send a resume with salary
Working With The P!Jbtlc Previhistory to : Betlln, Inc .. 1441
ous Office Experience Preferred.
Marion Rd., Columbul, OH
Send Flesumes To : P 0 Box
43201, Attn: Super:vltor Poala
1ttl9, Gaiii&gt;Oiis, Oli-45631 .
lion.

Own A Computar1
Put HTo Worki
~ ·$75 /Hr. PT 1FT
1-888-881-6750
WWW DX)n.,nMtsfyo PPm

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR.
INC . BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE. FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO. CALL 1·800·813·3585,
EXT 14210. I A.M. ·9 P.M .. 7
DAYS fell. inC.

toe.

Reel Estate Gen1r11

iluoy Phyolciano Olllco neodo
Qttlco Monogor, CPT
ICDO
Electronic Filing Coder wlminl ·
r!tum of 3 yro OICPirlel'fCI. Elfl)fri•
ence Wllh medlctl manager a
plus . Send Rttumta In cart or:
EB13, Point Plaa18nt Regltttr,
200 Main St .. Pt: Pil'loant, wv

a

FO

110

Help Wanted

110

Help W1nted

110

ovt-

Southea•tern Water Company
lito
in mtri&lt;Ol·

WELDEit APPRENTICE
W~ Train In All Phattl 01 Weld·
C1ll 740·992· lng. Excelltnt Pay Plul Grtal
ttuaugf\ ThurSday, Mldtcal N.calion Btntlitsl Must
3:30-e:OOpm.
· • Bo HS Dlpiomo Grad, At: 19 •
START YOUR CAREER: LEARN 31. Mutt~Reiocala. But e Pay.
To Oriva The •etg Riga• 14 Day Colt 1-80Q&gt;S33- 1857.:..
· _ _ __

TEMPORARY ~ELP NEEDED

Carpet Cleaning Gtl your 1at
chtck In 1 wetk lnattad of 2.
Large Ohio Company located In
tlflga and GaUia coun1r.. a htvt
openings. No axptrlenca ntctl·
tary. Will work wllh our equip·
ment. Duo to heavy wort&lt; 1o0t1 you
muot slart irnmtdiatoiy. Cali: lion·
6pm Monday . and Tu11day.
· (7&lt;10)-44HI835

WANTED: Buckeye Community
Services Currently Has Openings
In Meigs Counrv:
t ) 33 Hrs /Wk: 8 A.M. Sat Thru
6 AM Mon; Sleep-Over
Req~red;

/Sun;
3) Em,rgoncy ReiioljSub&amp;tilutos):
Hours Scheduled As Needed;
We Are Searching For Compas·
slonale Professionals Wllh A
Team Vision And A Deaire· To
Teach Personal And Communlry
Skills To Individuals Wllh Mental
Fletardatlon. The Work Environ·
ment Is Informal And Rewarding.
The Requlramsnts Are: High
School Dfploma IGED, Valid Orlv·
er's License, Three Years Good
Driving Experience And Ader
quate Automobile ineurance
Covorege. B.C.$. Offart Compro·
henslve Training In .The Field Of
MR/00. Slartln~ Salary: $S.SO I
Hour. Interested Applicants Need
To Specify Position Of Interest
And Send Reeuma To: P.O. Box
604-, Jackson, OM 45840 ·060~ .
Ali Applications Must Be Pool·
Marked By t/26100. Equal Opporluniiy Employtr.

CLERICAL SpECIWJIT· Qaltll •
Jackson ·Mtlgs Trtitment Altlf·
Aatlves To Street Crime Program

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..••..•• ;••••.

tTASC). Full·Time Position Wilh
Competitive Salary And County
£mployee Bentflll. AIIOCiltll
Degreo Or Equivalent Plua Aolal·
I'd Ellperience JGallla County
Aesldency /Valid Drivers Ll·
~enae. Office ICrerlcal, Account·
lng,
Word
Proceaalng I
Spreadoheata. AbiNty To .Ttpe 50
IVorda Par Minute. IIEIPONII·
(llLITlEI: Conduct All Cioricai I
Qtctptlon Atpecta Of Tilt Ollict,
Clata Entry; Aotill Adrolnial111tlvt
A$Sialanr With Preparation Ot
Fiscal Reports. Sand Raaumtt
to G·J·M TASC, P.O. So• 88,
Galiipoilo. OH 4~831 Or FAX To
7~0-~46·789~ By Janutry 31,
~· ECE IAA Employer.

'

•
'

!

1!10 W1ntedTo Do ,

TRISH SHYOER ..................................M 1 JOHNNIE RUSSEU......................... ~--

Caregiver In Your Home For El·
derly Parton, 5 Days A Wee.k,
71160-388-9783.

A t Ctnt PHONE CARD ROUTEI
Make $100,000 +/Yr • ALL
CASH ! Local S1t11. Free Info.
This Is Not A Job. $5,1100 R~. 1.
11110-997·9668 Ext. 1!55 (24 Hrs)
AVAILABLE VENDI NO ROUTE
10 ·30 Locatio ns. $~K ·S9K. E•·
Cllltnl Income - ALL CASHI
Finance Avail able. 1·800-380·
261S ·(24 Hrs.)

:Clre

Rm.,

Formal

Entry

Viow Ct. 2.3 Ac. MIL $22,900 also
5 Ac. MIL $25,900.-Beeutlful
location jull off Cllarolaia Lk. Dr.

~~=~~·~--------------1
Houttclaening, 1 Story· $40.110; 2 MEDICAL BILLER $15 ·$45 /Hr.
Storlea $80.00 Have References!
Call Teri, Leave Mesaage, 7~0·
3e&amp;-9oe5

Lorge
2 sty. 7~;•:·
1/2 baths,
new :~~~~~1
insulation. lol
flower garden. Pomeroy
$45,0Dil.

1

Roofing, Roof Repairs and Siding.
Reasonable Rates . Free Esli·
lftatos. Fully insured (740)·245·
.341. L88Ve Meuagel

1.5 story, 3BR, 28A, eat In
kttt:han, LR W/""" carpet. Ubrary,
lot ~oor laundry, ceramiC
flooring, heat pump &amp; CA. copper
plumbrng. Huge covered porch-on
the ~ont. Quaiily conatructkln &amp;
much morel15 minutes to Holzer
Hotpltal. VLS. 3Ac. MIL
i3oa LAROE STOCKED
FISHING LAKE. 33 Acrot more or
tass. Comfortable mobile home.
Park like area may be used aa a
camp ground or build new homes

NEW AUTOMATED Home Su&amp;i·
ness . Quickly Earn A Full-Time
210 . BuBin"s
Income With Spare ·Time Effort.
Internet Required No Selling. UnOpportunlly
limited In coma. Cali 800·821.
Its ·S45 Per Houri Country's 4889 For Automated P8rsenta·
l.totl Estal&gt;ished Medical /Oental tion.
BUIIra Software Company Na.ds
People To Procets Clalma From PEPSI /CO~E IFAITO. LAY
Home . Training Provided. Must SNACK AND SODA VENDING
• O!Vn Compuler. 1·800·223·1149 ROUTE. BE YOUR OWN BOSS.
$$$ALL CASH BUSINESS$$$
E¥!.423.
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL·
INOTICEI
bHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. LENT PROFITS 1-800·731-7233
.
recommends that you do bu&amp;l· EXT. 303.
ni11 wllh people you know, and
NOT to send money through thl
lnall until you have Investigated

LUXURY
HOME
under
eonetruction.
Located In a
~ious area in Green Twp. s
min. lrom Holzer Hospital. 5
bednns.. 4 balht, Fonnli entry
w/Skylignt &amp; cetltedral ceiling,
dining rm., liVing rrn • corNonient
also commercial business VLS ktt.. ook 'cablnata, 111 floor
laundry, Muter sutte on 1Sl floor
448-8806.
ir&lt;:iudlng a super balh rm. &amp;
closet. 4 Bedrrn8., 2 bath&amp; on 2nc(
floor. 24'&gt;124' family rm. epprox.
4,000 oq. ft. Beartlfui 3 acre
ravtnocl lot and live otrum.
would be my plaaaure .to
VIrginia 448-68()6
BRICK

Take Action Today!! Make Man·
ey Tomorrowll Hamaworktrl
Needed For Alltmbly, Cltrlc:al ,
Mall Proceulng Jobl . For Fr11
In formation /Application Write :
Charnn, Boll 522-A, Marion, C

JOI'IT¥-VCR M l'llll111T111ATH

The Moment

acrt~

AU~ CIIIAIWITEID.

l o - •any P&lt;alororlce.

.............................. 992·2259

u---

f o.t.....,.,,..
OOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDEOI GOV'T FORE·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP·

310
t NO

CBih For Remaining Paymonlt
On Property Sold I Mortgaglli
Annulllesi Setllementoi lmmo·
diato Cuot..lll •Nobody Stall
Our Prien." National Contract
Buyers 800-~90 ·0731 Ext. 101
www.nationalcon~actbuyert .oom
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
wealthy Famlllot Unloading Mil·
lions Of Dollan, To HelP Minimize
Their Tlllll. Write Immediately:
Windfalls, 647-A SECOND AVE..
1350 , NEW YORK. NEW YORK
111017 ·

or _,.

PROVALI 1·800·310·4120 EXT
·
8509 .
=:::.-..,----:----:~
1993 Jim Wliflro Homo. 4BR,
2fuil bath. livingroom, kitchen/
dining artl &amp; utlllly roam; wt3
Acr•• ln Ashton Area. $81,500.
~(304:::.)::5;.:76-:.;23:::;118:;.._________
2 Story, 3 Bodroom. on 7th
Strtot. $18,1100. (304)1175-5270.

CONSOLIDATE BILLS.
From $3,000 ·$150,11001
(9% -ego Rtlo).
LOANS O.A.C.
ForFastResulta.
Cat1To41-Frte
• 1-MH1WIM.

COUNTRY HOME
Betweon Gallipolis And Jackoon.
2 BR t 112 Bttho. Full Ba,_t,
That Could Ettily be lltmed lnlo
More Btdroomt . 10 Vear1 Old.
Ne.,.. Septle Syttem, Excellent
COndition. Brick &amp; Vinyl Bi·Levtl.

CREDIT CARD UP TO $3,000. I. ~Ha.~~·~~B!ar~n a -~~ OUibulldinga.
Unsecured VISA IMC. Bad Credit 1
Water, Great Buy,
Or No Cred~. 1·80Q.2M-81118 Ed.
Col For Appointmtnl Or
41100.
1·800-213-838S.
CREDIT AEPAIAI AS SEEN ON
TV! Erate Bad Credit Legalfu.
•
Free Info. 888-e59-215e0.

FORECLOSED HOMES. Low Or o
Down! Govn'\ And Bank Rtpo'a
Baing Bold Nottrl Flnan&lt;&gt;lng Avtl~
ablo. Call NowI 1·800·3SS·0024,

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION
Applicalion W /Service. Rlduce
Payments To 65% 11CASH INCENTIVE OFFER II Cali 1-800·
328·65t0Ext.29.

:El&lt;L::.:8040::::;.·- - - - - - -

~OMEI FROM '1H.IO IMo. 1 •
3 BR Rtpol /Fortcloaurea, Fee,
4.,., DO&gt;!n. For Lilllngll Payment
DttaHt. 1·800-719-3001 xf185.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accopt
adver11otmarrta lor realetlat8
wflicll is in lfiolation of the
."'!'·Our-.. are hetel&gt;y

~-- all-irvt
edverttaed in this n&amp;WIIpaper
are available on an equal
opportunity baels. •

Houu for sale (reduced). 2 bed·
room• &amp; 2 blthl, heat pump,
clott tO' schooL lree main·
ttnance, .5 years old, 132 Mil St.,
New Haven, VN. 304-882·22&lt;10.
Houae tar sale, two story, 2·3
bedrooms, one bath , Mkldleport,
ao~ing $29,000 , call 800·388·
8194.
Lovely ten acres In a country aatung, lour' btdrooml, two and half
baths, fmmal IMng room and family room, two llrapfacoa, two &amp;partmenta, tour car garage and twa

ttorago building. Pteou coli 740·
992·2292.

Non-OuaiJfylng
Anumabtt.
S.C ,d'OO Down I Take Over Pay·
rnontl, 74o-446-32t8.

Home for the Holldava on a Nice
Lot. All Utiiitteo. 1·1304)-738-ms
JANUARY SPECIAL
ALL HOMES ON SAlE

h.ooo.oo ofl Soioctod Single
Wide Homes. Super Low Pay·
mental Oak Wood Homes, Bar·
bouravlllt, Wv. H30~)-736·7295
or 1·(304)·738-239S

$499 DOWN ON SINGLEWIDES
$999 ON DOUBLEWIDES
1·800-948·5878.

330 Farma far

$lie

5TO 10ACRES
Betwun Gallipolis &amp; Jackson ,-..
Near Thurman , Baautllul Rolling ..
Mt1dow1 , With Lots 01 Roal:l ,
Frontage. 6 Aerts With t Acrt ,
Pond, Aw~&amp;ome Building Stte Be· l
hind Pond . Prices Start At "
$12 ,500. Land Contracts Avail - ·
Bblt . Fret Mapa. ANTHONY ~
LAND CO., lTD 1·800-213-836S.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

BRUNER UNO
740-441·1492
Must Sacrifice My New Modal 16
Ft . Wide Home . Financing Avail·
allie, 304-736-89158.
. Gtlllt Co.: Nice Preserved Farm
••••LOOt&lt;' ...
Homes One On 6 ACfei $69,000,
5 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, over 2,000
Now 21100 Doul&gt;ttwlde, 3BR/2BA. The Other With 47 Acres
sq. it. , lor less than $450 mo .
$299 per month. Free Air &amp; Oellv· $98 ,000 Botl'l On Jessie Cree-k
Rd., In Kyger. Also In Same Area
FREE Delivery &amp; Sot. 1·800-948·
ery, 1-1188-928-3428.
6 Acres $12,000. 16 Acres
5678.
NEW BAN~ AEPOS
$20,000 Or 37 Acres $47 ,000 . ·
12x68 Nice Must Sea , $10 ,000
ONLY TWO LEFT, NEVER LIVED
Great Selection With 25 Parcels I
740-24S·937~.
Eureka , Marabel Rd., 1 t Acres ~
CALL 1
$20,000 Or 31 Acre&amp; With Barn ~
1988 Redman Oanvollle 14M70
$37.000, Gallia Academy Water,.
Also Has Expando, Vary Nice,
NO ""YMENT TILL MAY, 20110
Fr~ndly Rldg'- IS Acres $12,500
$13,1100. 740-388-833S.
ANY HOME PURCHASED IN
· Cuh Price.
.
THE MONTH OF JANUARY
199~ Clayton, 141152 ft. All alec· .
WE WILL MAKE FIRST 3 PAYMelge Co.: Carpenter, Harmon
tric, 2 bedrooms. Very nice .
MENTS.
Rd., Remote .5 Acres Wilh Farm
$10,1100. (304)882·2662.
1-8110-948-5878
House $35 ,500. Rutland, Whltea '
1997 14X70 Oakwood, 3 bed·
Repo 141180 Extra Nice Norris, Hili Ad.. N~e 9 Acros Sf2,000 Or·.
room , 2 bath, all electric. Payofl $30,000 Bank Sacrifice 11 Acre&amp; su.ooo. wattr oan. J
ville , SR 325, 5 Acre~ $16,000 . ·
$22,000.(304)882·3899.
$25,000, $6,000 Solow Book. Water Or Briar Ridge Rd., • 7 Aa·
Cali: HI00~9t~7n.
IS $13,000.
1997 14•70 Oakwood; 2 Balhs, 2
Bedrooms, Laundry. 2 Acres, Factory Renovated 3 Bedrooms,
Many Nice Lots To Choose From •
101112 Building. County water
$499 &amp; Assume. Oa~wood, Galli~ For
Home Sites And Hunting. Call '
New Septic. $35,000 .00 (740)· polo. 74o-446-3083.
·
Now For FREE Maps And Fl~ ,
388-D434
.
Special, New t6x80, Low Down nanclng Into. tO% OFF Cash ..
·
1997 c·layton 1~1166 Owner Mav Payment and $289 per month. Buys!
Finance, Will Rent Set·Up On Lot Free Air. can for quk:e E·Z approCloaa To Vinton, 740-388-8260 , val. 1·888-~8-3428.
After~ P.M.
64 Acres In Mason County. Good
Country Living 3 Or 4 Bedrooms.
tor Hunting . Electnc/Phona ,AWl· ..
Pay Closing Costs &amp; Move ln . Will Pay Ail Moving &amp; Setup tsr al available. (304)4118·18118.
·
740-448-3093.
Co&amp;tll Must Sell lmmedlatelyl

-~948-5678.

.

Ooublewlde Repo, Never lived In,
28X80 . $1 ,000 Down Delivers. w/
A.C. No Dealers Allowed . 1·888·
!128-9898.

304-733-4883.
Land Home Packag11. AU Areas.
All Crldtt Risko. 740-&lt;WI·3583,

Nlca Home, Plenty of Room, 3
Bedroom, Brick. Reduced Price.

2 ... 4 Acres, Homesite, Green ·, '
Township , Gallia County, Flat,,..
Scenic, Close To Gallipolis, Soma ...
Reetrlc:tlons, 740-245-5776 .

(304)273-9485.
Nice Houu lor sale In New Ha·
von Aroa. 11 8.~oo . (304)773-

ssn.

MONEY TO LOAN Bed Crodll
O,KI Frea Application US Appiicanoa Only 1·Sn-&amp;'70-1938.

SERVING YOU SINCE 1967.
"Remember a SOW aiBn in your
yard il jwt a phone caU.away!"
441-8888 or 446-1933
311 3rd Ave., GaUipoU., OH

om
;t"

'•

t :
' •

Glo·nn HoiJ,.r\•,
11• ,Ill or
I 1 t I (' / ll

llnnrou ".tul• •,
llt.H" h M• p
R&lt; "

· 1·1 1&gt; ,' \H',

'
NO MORE
When you SEll. OR BUY a ttomel Our •ttome Wtrt'lnty;" Progntm pr:oteciS the aeller
the llsllng, the Buyer !rom date ol closing lor one year wfth right ol renewal. YOU
nt&gt;NI;;. PAY FOil rr UNTIL WE SELL YOUII HOMI!I CALL FOil MOllE DETAILS •

f:'"'

!uKury log home ycar·round. Call
for our free ln&lt;X:hurc or 104-plase
S12 oolo1 ~Malo(!: wilh floor plans

limitation or dtscrimination
buld on raco, color, re&lt;lgion,
..X famlllalltafUI or national
origin, or ~ ini:Bnlle!n to
make any such PAifBietiCe,
limitation or dloalmlnatlon."

HeAl ESTAlE

~olforfng.

lovely LA, wood buming fireplace.
Kit. w/oak cabinet, dining area.
Level to miiing land. Some
wooded &amp; putute. Bem. Coli for
an ,appointment. VLS 4460-6808
12117
COUNTRY · PRIDE.
'--1&lt;1 0.. SA 32!1. 2 m11to N. o1
SR 35. Approx. 2 Ac.. pond, o~k
level a 3 Bldrmi .. 2 1/2 baths •
LA, DR, Laundry Am, Den, l;al·in
kltohen. 2 car atlaeholf garage.
New Roof, siding, heat pump,
in 11112 years.
358 311 EVERGREEN RQ. 3
bedrm , Broadmore Mobile Home
&amp; Lota. Range Refrlg., Washer &amp;
Dryer., Elec Heat &amp; CA, Deck ·&amp;
Outbuilding. $28,000
13317 HIDE·A·WAY. W/L.ota of
trees, land, &amp; wildlife. 50 At:.. MIL
Some limber, mineral rights.
I

lol/t. . VLS 446-8806

All reallllala ~in
thia ntW IPIPM illutJtlcl: to
1ht Ftdoral Faif Houairv Act
of 1188 wi"kf&gt; makoo MIllegal

220 Money to Loen

homo. 4/8 ,bedrm. homo. 2 balM,

. .Live for

320 Mabile Home•
far Sale

(104)e11-1724

Prico ·Reduced for quick I or
make an offer. Newer 1 1/2 story

the hoine.
w/large workShop. Treed
8111! " -.jg&lt;l) troea. One
for certalrrybu can have a
family Hfe growing a garden
havlnafllrm pela. Buy 4 or t 6

320 Mobile Homet
lor Sale

310 Hom" for Sale
Spacroua River VIew Home, St·
eluded, Near Town. 7tAcrts,
Heated Pool, 5 Bedrooms, 3 1f2
8atha.$t60 ,000 .00 . 740·446·
9897.

Dozltrlllr 1ft. 7 -·7945.

29571.

Medical Billing Soflware JCorT'C)Sny
Needs People To Process Mtdl·
cat Claims From Home. Tra ining
Providtd. Must Own Computer. 1·
800-434·5518Elll.667.

MEDICAL BILLING . Unllmiled In·
come Potential. No E11parlenca
.Necessary. Fret InforMation &amp;
W111 clean I'IOUSS! or business . CO·AOM. Investment $4 ,995 •
Havt reterences. Pleast call $8,99.5. Flnancl{lg Available. Is·
t304)675-3827. If no answer land Automated Medical Ser·vic·
1aave me&amp;sege.
es, Inc . 100·322·1139, Ext. 050.
'"
Void In KY, IN, CT.
..,..111 Do Bebysi~ing MondQY -Fri·
clay, Buiaviiia Pike Area Call 740· Need A Loan? Try Oebt Consoli·
44HI223.
dation . $~. 000 • $200,000. Bad
Credit O.K. FH. f-800·770·0092.
Ed. 215.
FINANCIAL

133151
home Ia in ,MINT

Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Altordabll Rate.
Sprtng·Vailoy Plaza. Cal 740-4460101 .

$$$ NEEO CASH71 WE Pay

RIVER EDOE. Spnng, SUmmtr,
Winter 01' Fall will be moat
enjayable 11\ling here.
26'x28'

AN EARLY ,AYDAY"
No Ofllct Violt Nt6ootary. Up To
$500 Instantly. Toll-Fret 1~177·
IAIILYMY.licfoc700311.

Start .Your euain111 Tod•y ...

Financial Backer Needed for
General Commercial Product Li·

FAEE MONEYI Cash Givea·
ways, Private Grants, Loans,
$Millions A~iallablel Call Ton-Free
1•871-4"·944 5 x133.
International Company Seeking
Dynamic Individuals For 'E-Com·
merce Sales Flexible Houra/ Un·
1
t mitod income. f-888·474·4703.
www.ri&amp;OUrces·r·lM\!Imited.com

310 Home• for Sale

itunlla!' 11ttmr• -&amp;tntintl • Page 05

NE~D

SS Auto Loans. Personal Loana,
Debt Consolidation, Mortgagtl
And Rellnanclng. Credit 'Pf'QbMma
OK . Consumers Financlt11·800·
247-5125 En 1134. VOiriClH, KS.

'Handyman Service , 740·256·
for ana In countr.y 5840
·month . Mobile, Honest. NonSmoker. (304)882·3880.
ftontll, . Dependable, Waakly
r.
,_.Ouatcleanlng .
Reasonable
Rjtoo. !;rae Eatimtteo. 1304 )675 •

220 Money to Loin .

EARN $1 ,000'8 WEEKLYiii fiiOO
ENVELOPES •$4,000 FROM ·
HOME $4 PER ENVELOPE 24
.HAS. 1·888·761-7012.

RMR.
1711 SR 7 SOUTH OH THE

et20.

Buaii"MMII

Opportunity

ability · lnauranca lor Sates
Through WaiMsrt &amp; Other Aetall·
ers. (304)882·34n.

446·4802.
ltmlll VACANT. LOTS on Lake

CL£AICALIPECIAURT

d'actor Sales Repraaentatlve&amp; In
:fhe Gallipolis Ferry Market To
Call On And Servtce Prolestiof\.
el Buildera, Cohtreclore And Fie~
MOdelers. Ideal Gandldllel Mutt
f.tave A Proven Saln Allulta
And Established Contracts In
The C~n•tructlon Industry. De·
\'eloping New Account• And
~ervicing Eotabllahod Accounto
At Job1ltt1 Ia E11ent1al To Our
6al11 Succel8. Wt Offer A Com·
1!"1111.._ Slarting Saiiry Pluo So~ Or Commioaion. Btnelito In·
cludo Huilh And Denial Plono,
Ula And DlaabllitV lnsur1nce At
Wtii AI A 401~ And Profit Shar·
lllg 'P)I~. Send Ropilea To: CL.A
{91 wo Oolllpollt Dally Tribune,
125 third AYonuo, GaHipolls, OH
415031.

School•
Instruction

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... Ut I C.

w/jel ski
ramp. Satollno.
LIFE
WORTH
LIVING. MAKE
Cali
VIRGINIA L. SMITH. 448·6806 or

2) 25 Hrs /Wk: 8 P.M ·8 A.M. Sat

210

'Georgtt Portabli Sawmill, don't
,_.ul your loga to the miU )Uit call
304-8711-1957.

Great

74D-592·68St.

Bualne11
Opportunlly

A 1' PHONE CARD ROUTEI
Maile $ t110.0110 +l'lr ·AI.L CASH!
Eaoyl Local Sileo. Frto info.
t-800-997-9MB (24hrs) X: 110

EARN A LEOAL COLLEGE DE·
GREE QUICKLY, Bachtloro,
Mllttrs, Doctorate. By Corre. apondenco Betld Upon Prior Ed·
ue~tlon And Short Study Courae.
Far FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERS11'1 t-8110-964-8316.

•

w/Parquel flool8. IMng rm .. dining
rm .. Equipped k!.. Ill floor bath &amp;
bedrm .. Deck W/Ho1 T~b, ,Carport
for entertainment. 3 bedrma. up.
Basemen!, Wrsp front porch,
attached 2 car garage. Plus a
24'x..• garage epanment. 3.2n . H350 oN.,;,•.•...,;;
acres more 01" less. Floating dock FROM

4S83t Or FAX To 740·448·7884
~y January 31. 2000. EOE IAA
Employer.

A Company, With Annual 8atu

150

PLACI WITH
VI!W OF THE

URGENTLY NEEDED for plasma
donors . earned $35 to' 14!!1 for 2
or 3 hOurs w.ekly. can Sera·Tee,

210

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Ple18ant, WV

.t:r~

Home located on Maple Grove Road along Raccoon
:~~u~:~,;~:,~~;~: ::~:;:r.~
Creek, 10 miles from Gallipolis contains 3 BRs. 1 BA,
Bacnelor'a Degree In Social
Work Or Equivalent Eduoalion I
2·1.5 BAs, LG FR, LG KT, LR, DR, all woodwork incl.
E~perlence. Cerllfled ChtmiCal
Dependency counoetor (Ccoc)
cabinets, stairway and balcony are Cherry Wood,
Or Llcenlld Social Worker
(LSW) Prolorrod. Valid Drivofo
cathedral ceilings in LR and FR, stone FRPL, LG LLicenaa. RE8PON8181LlTlEI:
Screening, As. .amtnt, R1f1rral,
-k 1II"'x32 &amp;. 12X48, 1 Car garage ID
• fiU'II filOIS
" hed
Caso Management, Monitoring,
Shaped d eC
&lt;turd Random Urinaiylia For Court
b8Sement On 3 ·BCreS, more Or JeSS, CALL 740•379•9236,
Referred Subolanct ·Abuolng
TASC,
Boo
88, Galipotlo,
OH 1&amp;..-----=::::=============~=====-----....1
Adults. P.O.
Send
Resumes
To G·J·M

Of 1.7 Billion II Looking For Con-

Working Mom Needt Nuturing, •
Respon1lbla Caregiver To Cart
For 14 Moo. Otd Boy. Non·
Smoker, Re•erencea Required,
Minimum 3 Dayo A Week. 74Q·

OUR WEB PAGE IS,.......viomllh.oom :
I vlomllh.com

USDA IFSA Is An Equal Oppor·
run lty EmplOyer.

Bualn"'
Tl'lllnlng

· ~It C.... Colltto .
(Co,_. Clolt To Homo)
. Callodayt 7-3e7.
'
1-800-2f4-0452,
RtQfll0.45-t2748.

OAIL IILVIL.LI. ................................. ttl 1201

..,,;,::; I

CONTRACTOI'IBALIS REP

wo" From Homt 1511 ~se.ooo
PlrH1mt /Full-Tlmt Conllcl Kti1)'. 1· 111-IU-2831, www.2morl·
II'IDni'/.QOm ~ I . ... f'OWII'I.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE .
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE·

GaU ls !Lawrence county Farm
Sarvlce Agency. Salary To Be
Determined By Oua~rtcatlons And
E11perlence Of Applicant. AppU·
cations Can Bt Obtained AI The
Gallla /Lawrence Farm Service
Agency Office, 11 1 Jacks011 Piko,
Room 1571 , Gallipolis, Ohio
4S631 Or Cali 7&lt;10-446·8687. Ail
Applications Must Be Complete
And Returned To Ttle Office By
Close Of Business Frktev. Jtnuary21,2000.

CASE MANAOER:
son ·Maigs Adult Troatl!tant
ternetivos
To Throe
Stroot(3)
v•;;~;;I
gram
(TASC).

Computer Clet'k. Full or Part·tl~.
Qood Salary. Experience w/
Windows necessary. Call lor In·
t•rview (304)87s-8808, Ill. 384/
f.I!00-720-4022.

140

Help Wented '

--------~------------------~~~~2~1~~~A-~~5.
\
Rill Eltatl General

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17.21 /Hr.
Guaranteed Hire. For Application
And Exam Information Ceh 8 A.M.
• 9 P.M. M·F 1-888·898-5627 E•t.
24·1007.

mso.

110

Help Wanted

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21.10 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS,
SECURITY, MAIN·
TENANCE, ""RK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. ANO
EXAM INFO, CALL 1·800·813·
358S, EXT. 14211. 8 A.M. ·9 P.lol.
7 DAYS lilt, Inc.

Couru. Job 'tacemenr A Zaro

Down Financing A~all1blt It
Qualified. Commeu:l•l Driving
Acatlemy f.877-213-1303.

Sunday, J1nuary 18, 2000

Sunday, January 18, 2000

Re11 Eltlte Gener~l

for over 60 model bomu.

1-800-458·9990
Sh1arrl l. Hart .•••.•••• 742·2357

.

hffp:/twww.apploa.com

1f00B BEJILTY, INC

c·mail :apptoa@cltyncl.nct

t~~H~!1
PO

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631
Allen C. Wood, Broker • 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker • 446-0971
Jeanetle Moore, • 256-1745
Palricia Rbss
74Q.446.1066 or 1-800-894-1066

built to
operation alnce
includH inventory. Cali Jo;,,;;;;;;t
367·0323 or 44H808.

Box 614 • Ripley, WV 25271

.. ,

Real Eltlte Qen1ral

'

~aoad~y

NEW LISTING , SALEM TOWNSHIP • A
1990 Shultz Mobile Home with 3 bedrooms, 2
bathe . gas furnace. public water, arealor
aepllc, 5 acres ol nice laying ground. quiet
country selling. Approximately 30 minutes
!rom Pomeroy, Gallipolis, Jackson &amp; Athens.
Immediate .PossessionI ASKING $35.000

Wllr1Un'a ·Ia buy your IIret
this )t Ill Vinyl
wilh 2 BR's
BR, 1 bath, LR,
· downstairs.
on St. Rt. 554.
In the 20's. Letlhls
be your first. 'A ek lor

·Realty ·
446-3636

a

Attention builder• or
mobile homo ownera.
Vacant Land lust mlntues
!rom lhe hospital &amp; town.
Approx. 9 acres M/L. Call
lor the location &amp; .price.

Ji

'

'

to- -to

2) ·Pricing i'JUf lltme lrt oell

3) Haw

yo..Ill.
Cd4&lt;11 .-~or oppolr-~

..

Juet Uatedl Farm in GrHn
onlyl TC1wnehlp. Th!l farm has
your load8 ol potential with Ita 80
acrea or 1111. Ma~e
dreams come tru''·.J~•II"•
build a new home.
your Imagination go .
better call nowl It !l'ay not
laallong. Ask for 12025
•

JUST RIDUCED 'TO $225,000. EIGHT RENTAL
UNITS, ALL OCCUPIED, BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETTING WITH ROOM FOR EXPANSION.
' CONVeNIENT LOCATION NEAR '!tiE CITY..

We Work llAB.D. lor :l'ou/'

a••••

.

448-1011.

.

.
••

·

Two Offices JenliijTol,With Ustlng1 In
O.llla, Jackson
ColniJa , .

We arellwaya glad to llelp you Nil or bitr propwty.
Ran181 propet'ly It Ilea tvlll~. G~ ue a 0111 at

.
'

Call for

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC •
.(740) 446-3644

CALL 44,1•8188.,,

Vl.ewtngl
.

•

offlra
blith, 1 - kitchen with pantry, buiR·in hutctund toling
otaya. Etoctrlc 11tat pump. 5tt up on a -.ct lot at
Prlctd 81$14.11110. iiiOe

Your

TWO VACANT LOTS FOR SALE 1N THE CITY OF
GALL1POLIS. EACH lOT IS 40' X 150': $10.000
.EACH OR PURCHASE BOtH 'LOTS.FOR,S111,1100; ·

\J

Buy on a 11t7 -~~ -~~ 14 x sa ~

Call For

.

'

-llttnonlhiH-IMM"taciLD7
There It a reason.
Let us show you poealbly why:
t) Haw to otiecl 1 ·AIIII Etlato Agonl.

Homealtea In Ouran Twp.
Available In 5 acre tracts
f110re or leas. Public. water
available. Driveway&amp; and
culverts already present.
Give Allen a call. 12023

..
(•

For Your Home

Lotel Lotel Latal From
acre lracls lo 6 acre
M/L. Jull a lew miles
Galllpolja. Some restriction •
. Count{ water available. Call
minute&amp; and ask lor 12022

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES ·

IF YOU ARE LOOKIN!l FOR A COMFORTABLE
TWO STOijY HOME IN A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETTING. WE ~UST I.ISTED ONEI 3 BEDROOMS.
2' BATHS, FORMAL DINING ROQM. SCREENED
PORCH ... BETTER CALL SOON, THE PRICE IS
$59.00011
.

This Space Has
Been Reserved

12020

2!5 LOCUST ST, • QAWPOL!S
Audr1y F. C1naday, Broker
Ronald K. Canlday, Broker
' . '
Mery P. Floyd, AaiOCiate

$81,1100 IS THE NEW LOW ,PRICE ON THIS
INvESTMENT, PIIOPI!IITY. LOCATED NEAR RIO
GRANDE · COLLEGE IN THE VILLAGE OF RIO
GRANDE. FOj.IR UNIT ~AR'I'ME~ HOUSE. ONE
UNIT FRAME DWELLING, PLUS MOBILE HOME.
ALL PRESENTLY OCCUPIED. CALL SOON I

For Sale: Six lots In
Waner's Hill Subdivision.
Call today and ask lor

12018

"""""""'

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOI'EA MIF DY
OI'IUG FREE ENVIRONMENT

NHd • realdontltlllat(tlln
Gallipolis?
We
have
something for you. 12017
Broltor owned

\.

e:Mall Addraut wlseman@zaomnst.net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Games 446-l7!17

.
Rc!bert Bnice 446..o6ll

Carolyn Wueb 441·1007
Rill Wlaemaa 446-9555

�•
Page D8 • itunbnp 11tm~ itrnllnrl
350 Lola

a. Acreage

20ACMS
7 SOuth Ot Ga

Off SA
po II SA
2 8 &amp; Neighborhood Road A ea
Rough &amp; WoodeO Road Cut n

NEEDS TI.C Slnglewidel A!owed
$2 300 Down
MEIGS COUNTY

Up To 17 Ac I T ac 1 For Re
c eel on 0 Res dent a Olf SA
12-t 20 M nu u F om A o
G ande S9 500 t S950 Down
Land Coni act Ava lab e AN

THONY LAND CO LTD 1 800
213-8365 Fo FREE Mapo

360

Real Estate
Wanted
Wt Poy l&lt;ASit
For LAND

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point

CtH Ryan
8001213-83115
An hony land Company LTIJ
www coynlrvtvma corn

Sunday, January 11, 20QO

440

410 Hou- for Rent
2 bed oom houn (Un on Tt
ace) Jo ant on Feb 11 w/d
hookup efa nces dapos t r•
qu td $400 month w h d scount

llvlnu 1 tnd 2 -oom
11J1r1lnentl II Vtuege Menor and
Rlvtr1lde Apartm.nta In M dd..
port From $248 1373 Call 740
992 50&amp;1 Equal HouSing Of&gt;I&gt;Or
Gloc:loul

House And T aile 2 Bedrooms
Each ReffencH aM Deposit Requ ld Wata And Trash Pad

740-388 100

740-99~5502

2 Btd oom Apartment Upatl 1
Stove &amp; RtfrtgerttO{ Furn thtd
34 112 Sm lherw A~~~nuo GlipoHa $250/Mo I1SO ~ 740-

2 Bad oom Hou$1 36 Ch UcotM

Road $325/Mo W1111 Doposn No
Pets Good Aafe ences 1•0

«e

2 Bed oom Houae 36 Ch lcothe

""' ...,.. (304)173-116n
28A No Pete Refe ences Ae

qu ed Send HI Road (304)676
3834

M IU Down Route 7 $350 Mo
Must Have Good Re a ences

3 Bed oom Mob le Home In Pllrt

740-446- 615 740-446 1243

e &amp;dopoSI Nope s (304)675
2749

2 Bed oom wl1h Anached Garage
2 Bath Good loca on Ref
e ences Requ red (304)675

724

s

Smal 1 Bed oom ova &amp; Reflig
e ato Fu n shed $300 Mo Oe
posll Re e encea Requ ed No

Pels

740 446 3667

Two bed oom mobile home In

Middleport, $250 mon h 740 992

12x65 2 Bedrooms No Pets
$280 Mo $300 Depos 1 Wattr
Pad Kempe Ho low Road Ca

14x70 3 Bedrooms S300 Mo +
Ut tes Oepos 1 Requ ad 740

245-5184 Aha 6 RM

410 Houses for Rent
Buv Fo ec osed Homes F om
$199 Mo 4% Down Fo l s ngs
&amp; PaYmen Deta s BOO 319 3323

Br1ck Home lor Ran 3 bedrooms
bath 3 Refe ences and Oepos t

{740)-448-0722

420 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Ahe 7 RM 740-446-7321

RENTALS

a Area You Pay Depot &amp; Ut I
tiaa. No Pats 740-388-9162

Between A hens and Pome o~ 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob t homes

1260-$300 740-992 2167

5039
l'oo bedroom Sll oloctric CA and
heat prtvtte n the country ettr
ences and deposit requ red 740

Gtlilpo11a 132!/MO

Damage DepoSit Requ NCI Raltr
...... Nol'eta,740-446-10M
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 5~ WIIIWOO&lt;I 0r1..
1om $279 lo $358 Wtlk 10 1lhop
I mov 11 Call 740 448 ~588
Equal HouSing Opponunlty

Btd oom With Wlb Hook Up
Apanmenl 74Q-4.08.!1811

Ch laty s Fam ly llv ng apart
menta home &amp; trailer renta 1

440

Countryside Apartmenta Nice 2

Bodrooma 1 Btlh CIA WID

$365/Mo

1 and 2 bed oom &amp;pi!nments fu
n ahed and unfu nlahtd securlly
dapoau aqu ad no pets 740

Now Tak ng Appllcallona 35

a

Bedroom TownhOUII
Apartmtntt lncludta Watt
Stwlgt Truh $315 Mo 740

Wilt

-rtc

House Size 2 Btd

rooms 2 Belhl $39!5/Mo. 1-888-

840-0521

510
CA 1 112 Beth Fully Ca

ptttd Adu t Poo &amp;. Baby Poo

Pat o Slarl $350/Mo No Peta
LMM Plua S.cu~ly Depoall Rt
qulrad 7&lt;10-4411-3481
TW n Towere now accept no ap
pllceftono lor 1 BR HUD auba d
lzed apt for tldtrly and hand

EOH (304)67-79

~

Furn ahed 2 l'tooml &amp; Be111 Show-

Below Holiday Inn Konaugt Dar

look 740-446-4782
RIO I Uaed F.. nllu e Grot So-

App aneta
Rtcond ontd
Waehers Orytra Ranges Rtlrl
grato 1 tO Cay Guarantee!
f:rench C ty Maylag 740 •46

7795

Babr btd a~roller cer •••'
awing high chailr well"' 304
6752801

llo

IJ

~

G~
Taylor Made F 110 t Graph te
Regu ar R 80 10 5 dagret drlvtr
3 wood and 5 wood Like new
ullld 1 Umo 1550 firm (304)67581~

740-446-1518

Kanauga S27! Mo 740 886
7102 Afte 5 PM

N ce G ound Floor 2BR W D
Hook up Atlerohce Depoab No

PelS (304)67!1-5 162

~~~

BY&amp;
PICK UP A QUALITY HOMES BOOKLET IN COLOR!

Place Llv ng Room Su te 740

""1-0405
AIIAZINGLY LOW PRICES

WOLFf TANNING IEot
Buy Factory D1red
E-nt S.rvlc:l
F - Fln8nclng Avai1abla
HooniiCommercla1 Unlls
FREE Colo Catalog
ca• Today 1-8CJOo711-G1A
AWESOME GETAWAYS Only
1~8 951 2 NGHTS Orlando DR
1291 For lnformaton

lloril For CourtllY Tw

3 Go den Retr ever pups 2 ft
maea 1 mae AKC reg w pa
ptra have had 2nd shots 304

ma 1 Fo That Specls Someone
On •valentine s " $300 DE

Do.•nll Low Monthly Payments

FiiEE Spocla

~~~:r;.:ro~~

k~chen

• iwvrnwn
lots .l • :

Offer! CALL
1 1188-479-2345 (T01l F""')

NDW1

Pup 7mo s Has had tra n ng

RANCH
ol appeal Inside &amp; out1
Ivlng room &amp; formal

L·

area

newer

Ove 75 Tanka ol F eahwater
F sh Local y Rased Parak"ls
Supp IS F sh Tank Pel Shop
24f3 Jackson
Avenue Pt

kitchen

Plolllnt (304)875 2083 Sun 1
4PM Mon-S.! 11AM-6PM

bedrooms 2 1/2 baths
double car garage full
balament 0\f&amp; 4 5 acres
only a few short minutes from
lawn 120t3

family

Looking for female longha
Dachehund o b etd Pleue call

740-448 2055- rnooaaagot

wot!)od RCA D eel TV olde

nw31iiel wth acceu ca d top dol
lal""Nolf a 740 949 3315 leave

maihge

11061 Pmnel.oCitlonl lot feel
Auatlon Hou.:uik;';.;c;;;,;;; 1
olltontoge on 2nd Avon.., La~ 11010
the world over u lha "
2 story brick house two moble
Auction HDUII thll
l•ndmark oftn reta epace
rental Income and etoraga

lncludn 2 BR houea neK1

Collordetslla

11071 Wtnllht lolgfMI,

moll

a11lud1d lat In lhe neweat

Coli and 11 ua

110111 Lott ol room1 Thla 5 BR
colonial home with many me or
updates Is nestled just 10
Thll
mtnute1 f om Holzer

p operty a so ncludoa a 2 BR

GO!&gt;JI Uaed App11ancea And Fu
~ Col 740-448-4039 Or 74041f'1004 AnytimO

ilnd move In tomorrow 1 1/2

IIDry cape CQd that haa all the

extras 4 Bedrooms 3 Bathe
foyor living room kitchen plus
full basement with outs de
entry 40 x72 newer pole
build ng Private setting with a
apectacular country view 71
aetea of mostly all pallure &amp;
tillable !and road frontage
along 2 roada Too much to
mention In thla ad call for
delaNo Hurry ba the first to
live In lhla horr\8 120112

FARM S UPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

H your looking
a ole• on• .,!!OOr plan
honli ~tit iMuyn ,.,.,;IMO
rQOm Inside &amp; out and don~
want to lille In town then call
today to vlevt this one!
Com!lllla w!th·large fOrmal
living room &amp; dining k~chen
full of cabinet space large
sized bedrooms 3 car
carport Quick poaseaslon
So much must call lor
complete lstlng 12018

610 Farm Equipment
12 t ansport disc 500 gal on
crop sprayer a ectr c cont o's

740-992 7302 aile 6 3CI!1m

l JANITROL HEAnNG AND
COOUNG EOUPMENT
1N8TALLEO

II You Don I Call Uo Wo Both
L&lt;*o Frao Estlmatoa1 740 446
8308 1-800-29Hl0911

11072
H - With no · nelghbortl
Have wtoat outry0111
wanto In lilt 3 BR 2BA ronch
'"'' ng on 8 7~ ac:reo m/1 In

AERAT ON MOTORS
Now &amp; Robul 1 n S ock
Call Ron Evan' 1 800-537-9528
TRANSPORTATION

M081LE HOME OWNERS

... -.

w th

Rood 1 33 aqre
Land Cont act

GoHipolla Townoto p 7 5 1CtM 11\'1
Super potentia tor houa ng

aeclucled

faml y home lite mlnutu from
downtown Galllpolle and

lnlkle lha corporltlon UmHI

country

II10itly

'

~~:~~~~~ WR:1Gi11T ST

Always wanted to live In a A
home Here 9 the one for you II has over 3 000
I scluaie feet and 9 3 star es ta Has 5 bedrooms 2 baths
famtly room and a g gant c main bedroom Dtcks
I 2 car ga age with workshop above paved drive
s nestled 1n a provate hollow
S85 000 DO
MAR11N ST A 95 double wide with 3 bedrooms 2 baths
dining area equ pped k!&lt;:hen &amp; laundry roo'\W~and
living
room w th bay area Has a big lot 2 docks and a rlcshop
Well taken ca e of a must see
$48
00
IIIODLEPORT CORNER LOT Aone story home with 2 to
3 bedrooms g gant c Iv ng room w~h newer fireplace One
bath and laundry oom Has newer carpet ng and ceramic ti~
everywhere Newer ttlt down windows &amp; much more
$41900DO
CORNER OF 4TH &amp; MAIN Has 2 Iota with a
Mob! e Home that Is approx 12x60 Nice lot but
needs lots of work Alao an older garage, and

porch
DOmE TURNER Broker
JERRY SPRADLING
CHARMELE SPRADLING
BETTY JO COLLINS
BRENDA JEFFERS
OFFICE

v

It 900 DO
11112-5892
949-2131
949-2131
949-2048
11112 1444
11112

z.-

EXT 71!32

CARS $100 $800 &amp;U~ POLICE
IMPOUND

1984 Oldamob le Cutlall Su
preme Runs Good/Looks Jielr

$700

DkocTV

Good Cond non S1 995 740

OWNERS

446-0390

1987 Olda De ta 88 loaded runs
great oaks great $2595 call

740 992 5700

'!Ol Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp;

1988 Pol'lche 944 Turbo stone

Free e Year Parta &amp;La

groy melaNic Wl111 burgtnrly 1nlar1-

Ccti:l11ng 1-600-872-51187

I
[==~~~=I
Allordably prlcoa Ill

11 oeo country living 11 111
-~ Thla a BR 2 s,t.doubl-

Allortlably po1c.d ........

Horae ,.nn Ill lhe
In 11M! 11013
cauntoyl
llo!o
ol
thlo 36 acr11 Enjoy
of rollng hllla Largo
bom w11n 111111 oleclric ond
U..~lnltapol
the line-~- with
1000- fHI of llvli1V
..,.ct ond olllot Cilllor

_,,.ion

DCIIoeful Nl1lnQ Ia the
loca1lon of lhll (OOII1y brtclc
rwtlng on

acrea

or 3300 actual miles looks and
...,.,,. now minor rlghllront damago 114 000 740-et2 1501! dayl

--

Rona Gun Shop 740-742-&amp;0 2
S'l"mlll $3 795 Saw Logo Into
BC[,Irdo Plonka Beama large
Capac1ly But 5ewrnl11 VBI111 An
y:wloeno FREE lnlormollon 1-900578 1383 NORWOOD SAW
l.ti~LS 282 6onwll olive Bullalo.
N'( 14225

THIS 18 THE ANSWEII TO
NO
MORE
CLOSE
I(IIGHBORS private and

24
Full ,I , \t;JIIc-out

~ml!leiY

baement wllh ... through

·~
kltchoin3-iwith bedrooma
pt.nly ol
Cli6inet1 lvlng room 2
bathal'letty=vtew
eat! lor your
11013

or 740 848 ~844 evenings and
1888 Ponlloc Sunblrd IU10notUc

4 cy nder

SeeiOned ftrewood $35 loed (ko-

740-388 91193 or740-742 2:170
1990 Chovr Lum no 2 6 Au

Soli Repelled Lawn Boy Push

tomatlc new motorltrane Sharp

12150 DBO Parlllllfldtoo con
1 dtrad 1888 Pontile Grand
Pr ~ 3 1 Automat c Now ptlnl
Loodeoi/Shorp Ill 500 (3041076

M6Wtr $100 2 Weadtatere

11110 For Both Smoll Frttzer
~~ 740 387-7578 740 ~88

MEIGS ·COUNTY
THIS IS. YOUR CHANCEl
GrJvely Tractor Salee
buelnese all set up and
,..elY to go Evet'ylhlng II
lltrt that you ne~ to
optra1e your own bualr1ell
from the bulldlnga to the
~
Thle tum kay
operation Ia a great
~unity lor a ·peroon
1'110 haa ... dealre lb be In
~- lor youi'MII Give
Uli • Cllt yaU wll be pltllld
with the Inventory and

. . . at 1hll plicel 11011

!IJIIAT LOCATION! G""''

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

room with
French dooia that lAd to
munt 11'111 decl&lt; perfect lor
entertaining lhla eummer
Over 2 ...... All Ill view tl1la
quall1y A!l "'--ean
Ho111e atluattd at Crew
family

Road 1140

St- Mlddlepcirt Lovely 14710

W11TU

eesl

Sla piece wood living room lurnl

1890 Dodge DIIYIOna Aulomllllc
Air AMIFM CtiMllt Ground El
ltcll Runa Good Orlvea Gr"ll
$1100 Neg 740-441 1083
1981 Cavtlltr Aulomotlr: AC Till,
$1 BOO 740-368-8008
1991 Cheuy Bertuo 4 cylinder

tulll eel good conduton color

...... and blue $300 740-8t2

22fl lit« 5pm

~h ::.~ftt -r.~,.. t11'\wt~staJrs

,.,..r ofllce ol bullneqet
aa well ae loads of ator11{18

lor

81/PEA NICEII YOUR
OFI'IR MIGNT BUT THIS
HOM! ,3 4 becl1'oorna 2

holt bathe

COIIIIIIICIAL BUII.DIHG
Main Strett In Pomeroy
This bUilding O!M

So many poulblldln with
this convenient location In
the heart of Pomeroy
Whether you nttd off!OI
apaot or ]ull went to 11ar1 a
epeclalty ttore of your own
you Will want to look at thla
one for a price 61 only
S3I.IDODO

IXCELLINT
CORNER
ji!LL Only you

IWO !iDY horne with loade ol A0-'0 .... 900 Alum/Brick
~ Cozy breakfaat ....c:h wl1lt 3 biodr 0011.
d!r*1il ....
...... 3 bedrooml INtng formal dining_ room full kitchen I car ld1llchld
Apprux 113 ... lot
bUIINIII ,_..

TMnng10n Futl

door ookl aood

MIJ Auto Vln10n OH.

........

-•ljh1!

.t

runt good 1800 1990 Dodge
Grend Geravan 3 3 V-e a~mat
lc, runa good lookt good $1400

caij to $40 load w II deH1101 cal
740 849 2567 w01kend1 apd

large

675-a711

FIA'fiiCel 011 Furnaces 12 8eer
H•t Pump &amp; Air Cond onlng
S~temo

blocks lrom

(304

1986 Ti ana Am 350 Autom1tlc

800-2113-2840

Tajr.Jian HI Ell c oncy 90% Gaa
to town
down1own

Honda a Toyota I

ChiiYYI Joepa And Sporl Utili
tlao Call Nowl BOO 772 7470

Ptlmaa•r

~DINTIAL HOllE

from
propoaad now high aehool 1\ ..,.~ooh rolling pootlon of the propony a 1oc:alad the lront ond be~k doclc

11014 Sumouncl
Inviting

7"2"411 11182

-

110M Land Land Loncll wllhln
a ahor1
home offera
complex aubd vision o

3357

!

covered poJches 2 car attached
garage w th wo k area and a
24)(24 workshop for the
handyman
Ca
for your
appoiotmem loclay 11211100

$3000 or beat oiler 740 992

Mcrtola Homo Supply 740 448
ll&lt;ll6
N~ l.t 1onium D1al1 Ea AI Day
And Moll Away Call T ocy AI

Fr4f oattiUit ayoltm Cal lor dl

from town This low ma ntenance
home ofte s a peacefu
nelghbo hood front and back

and garage
a ding
I•·~=~~: onacor

85 Chevy tuck $1000 or bill
olfer 88 wh tt Monte Ca o SS

Anchors Water H11tera

~

110117 Groon Townohlpl 3 BR
2BA b lck ranch wllh lull
buement Ia localiod jual mlnuloa

14

o

naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts

one story frame home In the
vi age Ql Rio G onde Ia o muo1
seel Finished basement w th
extra arge eat n k tchan and
large rec /family oom Enc osed
t on porch and large lot

Further reduction!
want• It IOid Located
180 this 3 BR 1 BB rasta
unrestricted ac ea Newe

710 Autos lor Slla

P-lumbing &amp; Eaetrical Pa II Fur

11061 Rio Grondtol Thla a BR

~~~!~

I
H~ Inventory Discount Prices

0 VInyl Sk I ng Doo 1 Wnd

Ontyt37.-

MIDDLEPORT N 3RD A ranch style home !hal s only 7
yea s o d Home has bed ooms 2 baths and a storage
bulldong Also has v nyl s d ng Andersen windows and some
new carpel ng
NDW $45,obo DO

Hay &amp; Grein

~i'ed

ground pool P Iced In the 70 I
cal11or-

a

640

JET

1107411711 Llmoln Pille. Cure 2
8R ranch homo buiH In 1883
largt kftctoen ~ 8 ICIII m/1
OWner will COilllder land -

&amp;

Pet Profess ona s S ttara Walk
era Groomers Etc Reach Mil
I ons 01 Potential Customers!
F ee L st ng On nte net 1 Moat
Popu a Pet /Travel Databall
Contact www petswt come com
Or 1 en ""' n1p

a

peaceful va ley near Holzer
Extraa Include a full wa kout
basement and a large ebova

basement Has 3 bedrooms dining
living room wth
flrep ace n ce kitchen a sun room and several rooms n the
~asement An ce detached 2 car garage
178,900 DO

AKC Reglo e ed malo Black Lab
1740)-446-ooeo

Foe! salt Prime Star Sys em alSO

BEECH ST A ranch style home with alum num s ding and
bedrooms One of the bed ooms s huge Also ncluded s
above ground pool w lh newer declclng around 1 and a
lro,nr.rvl back yard to privacy Freshly painted and wallpaper
Is very cute
$49 000 00

718Thlrt1Auonue Gallpala

PAQ M CRON eMach nes Desk
tops Laptops Merchant Ac
countt Weba tea Almost Everv

room reo room &amp; mare Plus
a 3 car detached garage
Country setting with privacy
MUST SEW 110110

updated mob le ad 1BK24 cabin
at on Just under an acre $74 toO

9428 Eve y hlng Can Be Seen

CdMPUTER BLOWOUT COM

l!lodrooms

POMEROY LINCOLN HILL RD
Th s 3 4 bedroom 1
bath home s ts on a small knot affordong a nce v ew of your
surround ngs Vinyl s d ng sh ogles roof a heat pump w~h
NG backup An ce s l1J lot and ready to move Into
$5700000

71 BTh d Avenue 0 740 446

POSIT WILL HOLD 740 aaa
9325

Approx &lt;43 acres &amp; t11e
option to purchaae a total of
113 11\1 Roomy home with 3-4

lrom tho City Paok Ull1111ol •'-you
already p eoent on lhe property

Cog a) 1 F be o ass Dog House
Contact Paul Evans

New Sea

onj! Approvad11 No Money

Real Estate General

eubciMolon?

S50 (Acceuo '" Go wlh

Qualfca

RUSSELLD WOOD BROKER
446-4618

ACRI!AGE WITH PLENTY
OF ROAD FRONTAGE

lol located Just a couple blocks

Pan Clvidad 10 w•8 W th LOcks
ICha na Cog Pen S ta On A
10 w•10 w woode" Foundation
S350 1 Wooden Dog Housa New

~ l!'aJor Atlracllon Admlaalons 0
Dloner Inc udod Call 800 539

•mall ua for Information on our 118tlnga
blgbendreelty@dregonbbe com

FomuJrly BlaeldNuw Reolty
So~ Southem 0/olo For
O..r .( QU4rler Century"

hard to find eo take a look at lhla

(Papo a) $150 1 Cyclone Dog

Adorab e AKC Registe ed Show
Qua lty Boaton Terrier Pupp 11
Shots &amp; Wormed
Male 1 Fe

evansmoo@zoomnet net

11010 VtC8nt land In townl Itt

Back rran Ma 1 $150 1 Beag •
3 Yea 8 0 d Copper Tone Ma 1

273-0044

514 Second Ave , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 0994
740..446 0008
740-441 1111

hOme enta a and a mob e home
wth a t arne add tlon that a
cul'l'lntty be ng used as a baa~
sa on Cal tar mo e details

Building
Suppllea

GIU!nbu g TN AccommOdat ona

Efl4«4·- ~ ~tatt,

1--~~~~0H

550

740-3N.()1130r1 800-292-0842
1~ Gun Solid Pine Gun Cab nil
$400 Rugt MKII Comp S an
1011 3 Mag• 350 1700 Fo Both 560 Pete for Sale
740-441..()172
(2 E1C81lenl Running Beag e Rat&gt;'
30 0 8 RUIIt Boll Acl\on A 110 3 b 1DCJ11&amp;) 1 Beagle 3 Years 0 d

1-800 585-7101 or 446-7101

205 North Second Ave.

Wh tt Wh rlpool Waehtr $75 2
Wh It Wt)lrlpool Drvera $65

ment Free Installation F tt 6
Months P og ammlng Ca I Tom

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT 12 acres w/4 BR Home $137 500
JACKS RD Beaut lui 3 BR $62 500
SYRACUSE 4 BR Home $74 SQO
MIDDLEPORT 3 BR Home $32 500
RUTLAND 3 BR Home $59 500
MIDDLEPORT 4 BR Home $46 500
RACINE 2 1/2 Acres W/3 Br Home $39 500
MIDDLEPORT Duplex 2 BR each $45 000
MIDDLEPORT Downtown Bus ness $55 000
KANAUGA 2 Bldgs 6 Am &amp; Bath $32 000
POMEROY 2, story bldg Extra lot $22 000
We
I

Merchandise

Eacn Whfte Wh 111100 D yo S50
Cal After 5 30 PM UO ua
540 Mlacelleneou•
1ICMI6
Mel'c:Mndlae
II8AD CREDIT? Gt Caoh WANT ACOMPUTER???? BUT
oono To $5 ooo Debt Conao I NO CASH?? MMX TECH NOLO
:1tllon To $200 000 Crtell Cllfda GY We F nanct o Down! Pllt
'Aortgagu Refinanc ng And C ed l P oblem1 OKII Even 11
~u p Lo11n1 Ava table Me ~an
Tu ned Down Befort I RHitabllh
:mt Cop 1 800 471 51 9 E• Your CrediUI 1 800-659-0~9
Altlnt on P mes1,11r Customers

er Downs a ra Ctqn No Ptta
Cepos t &amp; References Requ td

1 Bedroom Garage Apartmen In

540 Mlecellanaoua

Juy or 1111 R verlnt Anllqutl
1121 Ell! Main on SR 124 E f'o.

Want A S.Htr Ooa ? F.. Equip

740-367-0280
washe $9~ 0 yer $95 Rongl
$95 Relrlgeralo&lt; S17S Rtfrlgera ,.
lD l kl New 1~0 washer $205 "!
C ~· 8 $205
Yea Wananty
Skaggs Appllancea 78 Vlno

Household
Good I
St HI Ga flpols 740 448 7398
4 Cha ra and Table (wood) $50
eee B1&amp;.0128
21162
1304
.:..--'--)W--------,--:-------.1 520
Sporting

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt,

1160

lure

MERCHANDISE

Tara Towhhoull Apf tments
Ve Spac oue 2 Bedrooms 2

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

lee lion P cad To Sell! Com•
And BrowN Corne 01 RoU!o 7
&amp; Add son P ke -we Buy Fu n

Antlquea

15311 R... Moore -

Wathe a dryert ,.frlgeratort ,3.
rang11 Skaggs Appllanctl 11
v ne St 11t Ct 740 44e 7388
1-888-818.01211

0111ct build ng Pome oy 600

il&lt;lUIIO ft $350 pe month S150
dtpooll. ctll740-849-2093

530

nerov 740 m 252e or 740 m

- - . . . (9001075-7388

Btdt Bunk Btdt Beda D tM
Ill Couehel D MUll Slop And

8191

Floors.

Thompaona Awlance 3407

New And Uttd Fu nlture Slorrt

One bedroom ru nlshed apart
ment In M dd aport 740 992

v

For Salt ~tcond tlontd With •
trt drytrt and refrigerator• .fF

Ilona 1100 00 P • Month (740)

141 0001

B ookslde Apartmtntt Now Ac
cepUng ~ppllcat ons For One

992 1201 1oavo moaaege

Apartments
for Rant

G~

Village G ten Apartmtntt 2
beclrooma, !Dial
appllanc
11 ru n thtd taund y room lac II
nes and c:IOM to ICI'IOO appllca
llono tv11lltlllo 11 olllca 740-992

~

740 992-4514 aporrmon11 avaH
able lurn11hedluM.mlll'..t.

9922218

Elll 1709

2-

SUnday, January 16, 2000

510 • HOUHhold

Mobl t Home Space o Rtnt
Centenary Arll Soma A81trlc

2 Bedroom Apartmtnt Ntw Ha

Road $325/Mo w 111 Dlpoan No
Pet&amp; Good Refa ences 740 «s.
2419 74Q-4.1&amp;.0720
2 Bedroom Sma House Clean 3

2 Bed oom House $325 mo p us

-

AfN!rtmenta
for R..,t

3711 TIJD 1 888-233-Uilol Equal GOOD UIID AiJO'LIANCI.
Houoilg~

446-110&amp;1

2419 7 40..w6.0720

Even If lis Lis ed
20 500 Acfes

Pleaunt, WV

01 S!OYO 70 000 runs and d vea good $1250
S3SO 74o-266 OBO ca 1 740 992 3160 altor

sru 2 Ytara Old

4pm

113l8

l'4t• &amp; Socktlo w!Tool BQ•

175 1"' Chevy Cavo11tr 11 K vtry
Dr II w!Cua &amp; go9d cond lion new brolcoo
•:r.,:eorl.. Also SuptrNinl•n aeBOO 080 &lt;*11740-986-31105
$80. (304)87&amp;-445J
1883 Ford Probe a11ver good
condlllori 84800 740-tllfi.m7
1883 Gto Metro 2 Dooro Rtd
l&gt;ll'"~Cieloargable

W th Grey Cloth lnttrlor Au

tomtllc A/C 37 OOOK Runt I
LOOkl C/rUll t2 110 740 448

I
WIIIIO Fflgldl II

gallery Rtlrlg·

...., 3yoa o1o1 Ulol orll· pr1oe Atl&lt;)ng $580

8222

11183 Batum 8L2 4 door 4 cytln

11 250

Grutlcor der ltont wlltll drlvt a.-atle
""" homt louytr or bulldtor H 42t ml1ll 1111 w1lh lin {:104)8715-4011
IC, Uldng 84800
740-882 11101 doyo or 740.Iloll

j

.......... and;UIIndl.

'

II

710 Autoa for Slit

740

MotorcyciiS

1994 C1vane 2 door 4 cy 5
1983 Yamaha Baa" 200 Bor ad
,,.,d C D Pjayt AIC 13000 30
ove GoOd Cond lion Need
oeo 1900)67~
To So 11 11 000 OBO 338 0819
1994 Muttang CGilVO Hbla 3 8 V No! Avao-LOOM Meaaege

WV

Post-harvest stress boosts calls

By MARK THIESSEN
Aaeoclated Praaa Writer
OMAHA Neb -Callers seek ng
8 IUIOINIIc b Ul wllh Wh t Op
either mental health or fann financtal
19H Honda 250R Good Shape
ar•'l' cloth nte lo 1m lm caa
Runs Very We Ask ng $800
counsehng have rncreased to the
une ..53 716 miAM left 1 ont dam- Ca11740-245-5652 Ahor 8 ~M
Farm Cnsts HOI I ne srnce the harvest
age una and dr VII asking
$5500 740 8t2 1506 days or
ended JUSt as coordrnator Mtchelle
740 948 2644 even nos and weeSoli feared 1t would
It has ptcked up hke we had
I 895 Bu ck Lesab a Custom o4
Auto
Parts
&amp;
expected
Soli satd Tuesday Near
Ooo 1
Loaded
alum num
Whetla A C T
C u 11 Pw
~==A:-:c::ca-;s::ao=r-:-le-:-s=-:-::--l record low crop pnces dod not
Locka Pw Windows Pw Sea s
tmprove through the harvest and
$8 200 oo (2 000 Undo Book
pressure from financtal rnsututrons~o
Valuci) 740-682 7512
pay debts wtll only mcrease as loans
1995 Cama o V 8 a.otoma c
come due at the end of the month
custom snow car custom wnee s
790
Campare &amp;
and dash back 71 187 m ea
The Walthtll based hothne heard
m nor front damage runs and
Motor Homes
from
112 first ume callers m July and
d lves ask ng $5000 740 992
I 506 daya o 740 949 2644 1983 Reso t Campe Fullv Con
August but that number rose to 12 (
ta ,ad Exce ent Cond 1on New
oovoninglondnew calls m September and October
Air Cond on ng Batte s And
1995 Fo d Muatang V 6 au o T1 .. $3 500 740-388-11659
Wh le that may be li(Jpear to be only
37 000 mles white w th gay n
a sl ght rncrease Soli S3ld It rs srg
It or I onl damage $3 sao 740
SERVICES
mficant t&gt;ecause the mcrease came
992 1~08 days 740 949 2644
dunng harvest when fanners are
busy rn the fields November figures
Home
1996 Mustang GT cqnve tlb e 810
4 6 \I 8 automat c black w h
are
not yet avatlable
Improvements
back leather nte lo
Alloy
More
dramattc however 1s the
whee a 41 641 m ts eft font
BASEMENT
number
of
vouchers t&lt;sued for men
damage ask ng $5500 740 992
WATERPROOFING
1506 days o 740 949 2844 Uncond ona fat me gua anree tal health counsehng
evenings
Local references u nlshed Es
In cooperauon with the Nebraska
lab ohad 1975 ca 24 Hrs (740)
1997 Dodge 1ntrep cl; 3 5 V 6 «6
Health and Human Serv ces Syste n
0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
front wheel dr ve 59 833 m as
ers Wate~rool ng
the hotlrne ssued vouchers so callers
ma oon wllh grav n ._,or c Usa
ac am fm casaettt PS recov
could auend free counsel ng sess ons
e ·~ rholl aaklng $7800 740 Appliance Pa ts And Serv ce All at about 220 mental health agencres
992 1506-days o 740.9C9 2644 Name B ands Ove 25 Yea s Ex
ac oss the state
BY8fllngs and weekltnda
pe ence AI Wark Gua anteed

-

..

.......,

_

1998 Pontiac F reb d Trans Am

F ench C

~

The n ual 200 vouchers wen:
exhausled w thm i"o months Son e
then the sate has funded 50 vouch
crs per momh and a $50 000 federal
grant on Oct ( extended the I fe ol
the pr gram
In November 175 vouchers were
rna led leav ng the h lllme only 105
ouchers 10 ssue m De~embcr when

Iarm loans trad uonally come due
days hef re Chr stmas
We are 1ssumg more vouchers
than we thought we would Soli
sard The stress s st1ll there
Soli sad the best mdtcatton of the
farm ens scan be found n thos fall s
most utr( zed ser•rce the hothne
offers - lhe Fann Fmance Chn cs
The elm cs offer free fann restruc
tunng and legal tssue counsehng wtth
an anorney and farm counselor
As many as 10 fanners attend
each sess on for the one on one coun
sehng and that s a full day Soil
satd
Chmcs are held twtce monthly tn
Norfolk and once a month tn Grand
Island Lexmgton Amswonh Nonh
Platte and Beatrtce
Last October s $8 7 btlhon con
gresstonal fann rehef package helped
soften the cnsts bemg felt on the
fann Soli sard buill only provtded

a Band Atd to a few muauons and
made II a httle easter to manage 11!ey
know the cnsts s sullthere
Roy Frcdenck an agncultural
econom st wnh the Un1versny of
Nebraska sad hundreds rf not thou
sands of Nebraska agncultural pro
ducers are hurt ng but there also are
many fanners and ranchers who arc
dmng fine
There ought to be some huma
compass10n for those that are suffer
ng Fredencks satd but s no
e' ery srngle farmer
If larmers had decent yrelds and
recerved lederal ass stance Freder k

s d you should be OK probah!)
nol greal but OK
1 here s always var ab lo y (r n
one Iarmer 1 the next but lor 1hose
that aren t domg well It s of en •
because of a ~.,;on b nat on of L:lrcun

stances

he sad Tl ose nclude the

co 11bmatwn of low pnces lor c rn

soybeans and hog
Those c rcu nstam:es we gh heav

tly on the sh&lt;fnlders of farn crs
mvolved n what Soli called border
I ne cases

They are somewhat bttter bul on
the other hand they are Just ready to
move on They JUSt don 1 want to deal ;
wtth thts anymore Soli satd
•

May ag 740 446

2 dr tops 11000 mlas. auto 00

7795

damage $14 300 740 992 1506

C&amp;C Gene a Home Ma n
tenenca Pa nt ng v ny s d ng
ca pantry doo s w ndows baths
mob e home epa and more For
free as mae cal Chat 740 992

1 ver metall c with da k pew a
eatha r ght front au spans on

itunbap ll!:tmr• itrntmrl • Page 07

Digital cameras stake place in market

Don t I ke the p eture you JUSt took'
By THE EDITORS
ng that uses or gmal tmages
• You have the pat ence lo learn to Delete 11 and try agarn
OF CONSUMER REPORTS
6323
D grtals also come w th soil ware
Amencans ttus year wtll take use the camera and mage handl ng
1999 Dodge Noon a Doors Fu ly
that
lets you transfer mages fr m
software
about
23
btlhon
photos
What
makes
Loadod 18 ooo OBO 23 ooo L" ng8 on s Basemen Water
Miles 1993 P ymouth Ace a m P ooflng all basement repal s
to computer and then prepare
camera
!his year dtfferent from years past
Each of lhe several 35mm and
88 000 Milot A C ulae T II done f ee est ma as fe me however IS the growmg presence of APS (advanced photo system) poml
for
pr nt ng e marl or whalov
them
gua an ee 12y son ob expe I
$2 950 080 740-258-8169
cr You can crop and res zc pho os
tO&lt;» (304)895 3887
dtgttal cameras Of those 23 btlhon and shoal cameras we recenlly test
1869 Core sa 4 dr Body In good
adJUSI col r br ghlness and contrast
cd
performed
well
Among
the
35mm
photos
nearly
one
tmage
m
12
wtll
cond ton Needs head gaskets
640 Electrical and
even el n na e red eyl!
models
the
Canon
Sure
Shot
85
Asking $700 OBO Call 304
he
drgrtal
Refrigeration
8373348LOOM~
We es cd 2 megaprxel po nl and
Most people use film because tt s Zoom and the FUJtllm Zoom Date 70
shoo
dtg tal cameras whtch can have
95 Cnavy COli ca 3 1l V-6 Air
srmple and low cost Dtgttal cameras were JUdged to be one of our Best
PW PO AM FM casoelle Baau
a
max
mum f I 6 m 11 on to I 9 n I
meanwh le are strll more for com
Buys at $130 and $120 respecttve
1 lu Car $7 ooo QO (740) 388
I on prxels (short for picture cl
puler savvy hobbyrsts Yet the appeal ly Top rated overall was the Olym
8210
of d gnals wrll surely broaden as the pus LT Zoom I05 a $265 camera men s ) n the mage The greater lhc
CARl FROM $21/MO 1m
cameras come down m pnce and the that features a spot metenng mode number of p xels the h gher the cam
poundl /RepoL Fee $0 Down 124
Public NotlCI
era s resolu on and the sharper the
Moe 019 9o/, For Lollnga 1 800process of usmg them becomes s1m for tncky hghtmg s!lualoons
319-3323 )(2156
pier
If you want a very small camera rmage t can produce A 2 megap x
PROBATE
COURT
OF
Ohio Va ey Bank W11 Olle Fo
Whrch type of oamera s r ght for wtth foolproof film loadmg try an el mage ha uff crent resoluuon to
GAWA COUNT't OHIO
Sate By PubUc Auet on A 1992
PUBUCATIONOFNOTICE you? Here s a gu de to help you APS model APS cameras use a make an SxiO nch pr nt of near pho
Pvmoulh Ace am 000 AM On
Revlald Code
dectde
1 29 00 AI The OVB Annox 143
umque film canndge that also holds 10 qual ty
Sac 210832 33
Th rd Avo Go pols OH Sold To
Of the four models tested Nrkon s
You should choose a film camera the negauves after the ftlm ts
HlghHI Blddo Aa Is Whe o s
TO ALL INTERESTED IN
f
Wltl'lout E)(presaed Or Imp ed THE FOLLOWING ESTATES
processed The cameras can swttch Coolptx 950 ($860) the Olympus C
Wa ranty &amp; Ma~ ~~ Sean By PENDING IN THE GALLIA
• You want the w des! selecuon of lrom normal to w1de angle to 2000 Zoom ($887) and the Kodak
Calling The Co act on Depl AI COUNTY PROBATE COURl mexpenstve yet versat le cameras
panoramtc shots from one frame to DC265 Zoom ($764) perf&lt; rmed very
740 441 1038 Ova Rea• ves
The
fiduciary
In
each
estate
•
You
want
true
pom
and
shoot
The R gh1 To Accept Re ec Any
the next wuhm a roll Both APS film good or excellent overall The $748
&amp; All B do &amp; Wlhd aw 1lem• hae flied an account of hlo stmphclly m a camera
and processmg generally cost more Sony Cyber Shot DSC F55 d dn 1
F om Sal Pror To Sae Ta m1 truet A hearing on lhe
• You want color prmls wrthout a than 35mm while the quahty of the measure up Its pnnt quahty was
01 Sa 1 CASH OR CERTIFIED account In each caM will be
hold at the date and time lol of fuss and )OU aren t thai con resulting pnnts ts comparable
JUdged merely good and u lacks
CHECK
ahown below Tho court If cerned about order ng repr nts or Among APS zoom cameras the a zoom
located 11 tho Gallla County manrpulat ng the photos color bat
If you want a dtgrtal camera but
Kodak Advanttx C700 was top rated
CourthOUH LOCUli Street
ance
etc
don
t want to pay $700 or more lor
and at $165 a Best Buy Komca s
Galllpollt Ohio 45631
You
should
cho
sea
d
grtal
cam
Name Call Nu111ber Dall1
Super Btg M nt BM S I00 ($89) IS an a 2 mcgaprxel model shop around
of Heorlng Tima
era 1f
for a I megaptxel model Its lower
excellent
chotec m a nonzoom cam
1 Anna L Llndtmood
You re regula I) on the Internet era
resolutton cames a smaller prtce tag
15 629 Februacy 18 2000 send ng lo s ol e n a I d splay ng
- some cost about $400 Dtg tal
Unhke film cameras dtgtlal mod
10 00 o clock AM
tems
to
am:tJOn
r
p
oduc
g
y
u
2 Robert Caaey Sommer
els store •mages on a memory card cameras wrth sttll lower resoluhons
18 895 February 18 2000 own Web s te
and let you exam me them on a small can be had for $100 or less
1DDOoclockAM
• You plan lo d desktop pub! sh I qurd crystal drsplay (LCD) vtewer
3 Dorio Ruby 981183
Fabruary 18 2000 10 00
oclockAM
720 Trucks 10!' Slle
4 WI lilt Wella Jr 971038
February
16 2000 10 00
1972 Ford 1 2 Ton \1 8 Au
o clock AM
tomat c A/C 87 5815/m lea ga
temperature
5 Elale Margaret Hunnol By BECKY COLLINS
rage kept Great COndit on Info
• Sugar Sugar wtll keep two or btt hardter It wtll keep m the refng
GALLIPOLIS
Dtd
you
buy
a
981178
February
18
2000
mallon ca11 740-a79-2601
erator four to sox months or a year m
lot of flour sugar butter and nuts for more years at room temperature It s
10 DO o clock A.M
the freezer
1978 F 250 400 ~nglne Goat Thomu S
Moulton hohday bakmg -- or even for Y2K often used as a sweet tastmg preser
Work Truck S1 201j. 740 245 Probata Judge
preparauon and end up not usmg tt? vauve so u s no wonder lha ~lasts
8498
January 16 2000
How long wtll tt last? Should you a long ttme Store u man arrt1~ht con
• Nuts Lef1over nuts wtll keep m
1991 Forti EI&lt;Piorel 5 Speed High 1---=-~::--:-:--.--tamer to prevent 1t from hardemng the freezer for stx 10 e1ght months tf
freeze everythmg?
MHoaga Runs Geat Good Work
Public Notice
Or School VOhldt 740-388 9873. 1--..:..::::::..:..:.;.::.:::;;::__
Staples usually last a long ttme at and clump ng together
they re salted Whtle unsalted nuts
Brown sugar also should be stored freeze well for none to 12 months
STATE OF OHIO
1983 Ford Rlenger Splash 4 cyt 5
room temperature but freezmg can
ap 90 000 mllft ·~ lan1 condi- OHIO SCHOOL FACILITIES help them keep even longer Here are m an atrught contamer and s besl Stored at room temperature m shell
tion $5900 740 982 1182 or 304
COMMISSION
used wlthm four mon1hs If o gels so nuts woll last about four months
some storage bastes
n:l-5305
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
hard
that you can 1 break t apart Unopened packages of nutmeats wrll
• Flour If stored man atntght con
1 Bide will be racetved by
1994 Dodge P ck u~ 5 Sp11d
11 on a cookte sheet and heat t
place
318 2Jc4 114 000- 740-256- the Southern Loeel School lamer Hour eastly wtll keep for srx to
he fine for about three months or up
47725
Dlatrlct
Boord
at
m
a
warm
O\en 250 to 300 degrees
8224
etght months a1 room lempera1ure
to
a year 1f rn an unopened vacuum
State Route 124 P 0 Box
1998 5-10 21 000 M 01 S! 285 176 Raclna Ohio 45771 Dunng hot humrd wea1her you Fahrenhe 1untrl t softens Measure ll packed can Opened packages last
1981 S 10 Durongo AJC 12 795 AHn Dannla Hill lor tho m1ght want to store t m the refrrger whtle ll s still wann because 1t w II only about two weeks at room tern
18SB 5-10 Auto V 8 A1C 12 195 following Pro)ICI
ator or freezer to preventmsects from harden agam when cool
perature
Cook MoloOB 74Q.44e.OJ03
New K BSchool and
• Butter and margar ne The rec
mfestmg tt Keepmg !l cool won 1
Addition and Renovattona hun Hour a b!l Smce people don 1 ommended ttme to stoJe butter m the
1987 Ford F-250 HI~ Duty 4&lt;4
Low Mileage Excelltnl Condl1 on
to Southern High School
usually freeze flour 1t s hard to tell refngerator has a scant two weeks It
Anar 6 PM Call 740'388-97\K'
SOU1hem Local School
(Becky Collins Is Gallla Coun
Dlllrlct Board
JUSt how long rl would last m the w11l keep up to Stx ton ne months m ly • sxtenelon agenl for family and
95 Ford F 150 4x4 excel en con
the freezer after thai ots flavor and
Raclne,Melga
freezer
dillon Fully loac1ed and mo o Go
consumer sclancea Ohio Stille
In accordance wl1h the
rage kept 32 ooo actual m es
texture could decl ne Margarone s a University )
Whote
wheat
flour
should
always
and
aharp lruckl &amp;17 000:-(740) 268 Drawlngt
1243
Spaclficatlona preparld by be stored m the refr gerator The orl
n the gram could tum ranctd at room
Marr Knapp Craw11a
GMC 1889 Sarra F~~~ Pkg 2
Anocllltalnc
Wheel Dr ve 1/2Ton $4 700
Public Notice
PubliC NotiCI
104 Fair Avenue NE
PubliC NotiCI
Public Notlcl
1982 300 so Mercedes Auto
Full Pkg Tu bo 5 Cyl New y ~0 Box1002
New Phll-lphla
Contract No OS 0088 non-refundable ~ncl are to Columbua Ohio
RtbuiH Eng no $3 000 {304)6752897
Ohio80061101 D6
lllumlnum be paid via a eaparate ~w Dodge Plan Rooms In
Eaat Central Ohio 2521
Phona (114) 148-21188
Entrance• Wind- Gl111 check In the amount of the following cltln
730 Van1 I 4-WDa
Cincinnati Ohio (45202 34th Streat NE Conlon
125 00 atao made out to the
Fu (614) 848-3309
&amp; Gluing
Contract No 06 0088 Southern Local School 11001) Tho Grend Baldwin Ohio 44705
11186 Mod uno SIZed Bla,Uii 4x4 6 Tho Conatruotlon Managar
Central Ohio Minority
the
Prolaclla
Q00680t.CJ7
Food Service Dlatrlot and forwarded to Building 855 Edan Parte
lor
Cyl nder Runs Good Looks
Admlnlttratlon 815 E11t
tht Conttructlon Manager Drtva Sullo 1115
The Quandt! Group Inc
Equipment
Good 13 500 740 3BT 7576
Independence Ohio Mound Street Columbua
740-288-1833
3518 Rlva..tde Drive
Contract No 08 00811 with ... dlpOitt check.
s lntareated blddera (44131) 8200 Rockalde Ohlo43205
SUitlt01
8008801
08
cuework
1987 Fo d full llze conve 1 on
Ohio Volley Conetn~ctlon
ahould contact Tammy Wooda BlVd (Cievetand)
Columbua, Ohto 43221
(Ubrary ond Sci.,_)
van 302 automatiC lvo y Coast
Columbut Ohio (43211- Employara Council 21
Smith
at
(114)
442-DIOO
or
Phone
f740)
442.1J50D
Contract
No
08
0081
Convers on (Houelon Taus)
Armory Drive Wh11llng
l"ax f740) 442-o501
1008801 01 Plumbing ad llt1d depoott check directly 1073) 1175 OUblln Road
gl1)' valour nltrloc 1ront -.nlt roar
to
tl1e
Quandel
Grou111
lno
Ohio
(411431)
WV
211003
•Dayton
quandel com
a r til lXI aa $3400 0119 740
Fire P-on
7 A pre bid mHIIng will
2 Any propoHCI Equal lor
Controct No 08 0081 3511 Alva,... Drlva Suite 30'1'7 Kettering Boulevard
: : : 6 daya or 740 9~'2 844
a Btandard eliall be 11D08101 1Q HVAC
101 'Columbua OH 43221 Point Wtll OHice Perk bt htld on Januery 20
8u!W001
2D00 II 4 00 p 111 II lhl
aubmlto
the
ArchltiCI
Contract
No
Oi
D
..
l
No more than 1hrw (3) 1988 5-10 Red Automallo.rTinled no lator than tan (10) daya 100880111 Eleotrloat
Totado
Ohio
(43823).
lollowtnglocatlon
wltl be provfdid on a
W nclr:wl, BO 000 M lei 414 PowSouthern Local School
prior to the bid opening tl Contract No 01 0088 refundable baala to a 3130 Sunloreat Court P 0
• Sturlng Power B akls 740
Dtllrlct omca
no Addenda It IMutd tn 11D08101 12 Tlohnology
Blddtr Depoell will be 11ox 1511
379-2786
;()ha-..n WHI VIrginia
Roclne Ohio llllgt
IIIOOilllon wl1h I hi until Bid Date of l'abn1ary 3 refunded to Prf~ lkldere
1982 Dodge Grend Clara•• 3 3 Bidder a requnt the 2000 at 4 00 p m (local only who raturn their (25302) 401 Capitol . _
a. The OWner retltrvot tho
V 8 Dual Htll &amp; Ar,_91PII n propooed E~ual ahall bt lltnctard time) when they
the
following
add-1
right
to relact any or all blda
and
drewtnga wltltln ltiiMn (11)
$2 toO 740-317 7""'1,
and to wolve any or oil
oonalclered re acted
wHIIMI opened and Nld
daYt of the bid opening and plan n10m1
Allied ConetrUotlon 1010 trregularltlea mlatokoa
Sealed b da will ba
3 Bidding Documentt tubmlt a bonafide bid per
1888 Toyoto Tocoma 41'4 5
Bpood 33 ooo Mill 113 •oo racelved-lor
may be obtained tro111 the Article 1 1D or tht VIle Avenue Clnolnnatl omlaelone or lnlormalltlta
1887 Toyoto RAV4 22000 H,Ntl PIIIM 1
OhiO 4II20e
l'llliiMI thereto
Conetruotlon Manager by lnltrUc:tlona to lllddtre.
LOtdld, Au1onotllr:. $1A '10Q, pBO
DOdge/Bean Bank One All queatlona perlolnlng
Contract No 08 00811 Prime Biddertt only upen
8
Tha
Contract
740-441.ql18 ;
~
8D011101 01
Sltework, racetpl of a ohtok wltlollll DOCUIIIIntl may be Building 3fd l'loor t211t1 to eecurlng Controct
Docurnema Bidder a Ltat
AlrMdy Under Coorth101
Nlllnilllble In the • - 01 reviewed tor bidding luclld Cltvttand Ohio etc
ehall be directed to
Coubact No No CJioDOII UDO DO CtltOb lftalt be pulpoea without oharga 44115
•The
llulldera
Exchange
1limmy
Smith The OUindtl
8008801 U
arlok made p~yable to 1111 during bualne• houn at
Bulla Ona Conetructlon Group Inc 3511 Rlvertlde
Proouremant
AlrHdy louthern Looat School the foftowl~:::uoa·
Carrlll' M1 Keynote Circle Drtva 8ultl101 Columbua,
Uncllr Conbaat
Dlllrlot and lorwlinled lo Arohlltcta
0H 43221 (814) 442.IJIDO
PhiM II
the ContiNotlon Manager
Marr Knapp Crawlle Clevlltncl Ohio 44131
The autldere Exo=• Ownar 8outhern Loot!
Contract No 08 00111- Upen reoelpt or a requat AIIOclltll Inc N100811)1-o;l .... Utlllt...
IDDDmPinled by I dapottl Phfladllpllla, Ohio
of c..tret OhiO 1175
n 8chool Dlatrlol
AMCI. pt11o43211
(1) I 10 1t 12 18 17 11.
Contract No 08 0011- •• named aliove the Owner Ollloe
Daytoll
Bulldera
11 23 24 25 U 12TC
Southern
Local
achool
IDDII01o03 o-1 Tnldee ConatnJctlon Manager will
740 Motorcycln
Contract No 08 00111 forward oopt" of bidding Dtatrlot BHnt, llooclne1Olllo Exchange 1077 lmbury
clocurMnla to the btdder
Conatrucllon Manager a Park Rood Dayton Ohio
1887 Hondo Z 50 R Excellent iooll01o04 M-.y
condlr on runa and took• good
Contract No 011.1J081
4 Shlpplllfl olla111tl tor Olltoe
48414
$8590Q 080(740) 448 88!11
Bulldera Exohl1nge of
1101111101,(15 Rooftng
au lltddlng doou- are
Tile OUindel Group lno
I I

dava 1•0 s•9 264&lt;4 eves wee

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350 Lola

a. Acreage

20ACMS
7 SOuth Ot Ga

Off SA
po II SA
2 8 &amp; Neighborhood Road A ea
Rough &amp; WoodeO Road Cut n

NEEDS TI.C Slnglewidel A!owed
$2 300 Down
MEIGS COUNTY

Up To 17 Ac I T ac 1 For Re
c eel on 0 Res dent a Olf SA
12-t 20 M nu u F om A o
G ande S9 500 t S950 Down
Land Coni act Ava lab e AN

THONY LAND CO LTD 1 800
213-8365 Fo FREE Mapo

360

Real Estate
Wanted
Wt Poy l&lt;ASit
For LAND

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point

CtH Ryan
8001213-83115
An hony land Company LTIJ
www coynlrvtvma corn

Sunday, January 11, 20QO

440

410 Hou- for Rent
2 bed oom houn (Un on Tt
ace) Jo ant on Feb 11 w/d
hookup efa nces dapos t r•
qu td $400 month w h d scount

llvlnu 1 tnd 2 -oom
11J1r1lnentl II Vtuege Menor and
Rlvtr1lde Apartm.nta In M dd..
port From $248 1373 Call 740
992 50&amp;1 Equal HouSing Of&gt;I&gt;Or
Gloc:loul

House And T aile 2 Bedrooms
Each ReffencH aM Deposit Requ ld Wata And Trash Pad

740-388 100

740-99~5502

2 Btd oom Apartment Upatl 1
Stove &amp; RtfrtgerttO{ Furn thtd
34 112 Sm lherw A~~~nuo GlipoHa $250/Mo I1SO ~ 740-

2 Bad oom Hou$1 36 Ch UcotM

Road $325/Mo W1111 Doposn No
Pets Good Aafe ences 1•0

«e

2 Bed oom Houae 36 Ch lcothe

""' ...,.. (304)173-116n
28A No Pete Refe ences Ae

qu ed Send HI Road (304)676
3834

M IU Down Route 7 $350 Mo
Must Have Good Re a ences

3 Bed oom Mob le Home In Pllrt

740-446- 615 740-446 1243

e &amp;dopoSI Nope s (304)675
2749

2 Bed oom wl1h Anached Garage
2 Bath Good loca on Ref
e ences Requ red (304)675

724

s

Smal 1 Bed oom ova &amp; Reflig
e ato Fu n shed $300 Mo Oe
posll Re e encea Requ ed No

Pels

740 446 3667

Two bed oom mobile home In

Middleport, $250 mon h 740 992

12x65 2 Bedrooms No Pets
$280 Mo $300 Depos 1 Wattr
Pad Kempe Ho low Road Ca

14x70 3 Bedrooms S300 Mo +
Ut tes Oepos 1 Requ ad 740

245-5184 Aha 6 RM

410 Houses for Rent
Buv Fo ec osed Homes F om
$199 Mo 4% Down Fo l s ngs
&amp; PaYmen Deta s BOO 319 3323

Br1ck Home lor Ran 3 bedrooms
bath 3 Refe ences and Oepos t

{740)-448-0722

420 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Ahe 7 RM 740-446-7321

RENTALS

a Area You Pay Depot &amp; Ut I
tiaa. No Pats 740-388-9162

Between A hens and Pome o~ 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob t homes

1260-$300 740-992 2167

5039
l'oo bedroom Sll oloctric CA and
heat prtvtte n the country ettr
ences and deposit requ red 740

Gtlilpo11a 132!/MO

Damage DepoSit Requ NCI Raltr
...... Nol'eta,740-446-10M
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 5~ WIIIWOO&lt;I 0r1..
1om $279 lo $358 Wtlk 10 1lhop
I mov 11 Call 740 448 ~588
Equal HouSing Opponunlty

Btd oom With Wlb Hook Up
Apanmenl 74Q-4.08.!1811

Ch laty s Fam ly llv ng apart
menta home &amp; trailer renta 1

440

Countryside Apartmenta Nice 2

Bodrooma 1 Btlh CIA WID

$365/Mo

1 and 2 bed oom &amp;pi!nments fu
n ahed and unfu nlahtd securlly
dapoau aqu ad no pets 740

Now Tak ng Appllcallona 35

a

Bedroom TownhOUII
Apartmtntt lncludta Watt
Stwlgt Truh $315 Mo 740

Wilt

-rtc

House Size 2 Btd

rooms 2 Belhl $39!5/Mo. 1-888-

840-0521

510
CA 1 112 Beth Fully Ca

ptttd Adu t Poo &amp;. Baby Poo

Pat o Slarl $350/Mo No Peta
LMM Plua S.cu~ly Depoall Rt
qulrad 7&lt;10-4411-3481
TW n Towere now accept no ap
pllceftono lor 1 BR HUD auba d
lzed apt for tldtrly and hand

EOH (304)67-79

~

Furn ahed 2 l'tooml &amp; Be111 Show-

Below Holiday Inn Konaugt Dar

look 740-446-4782
RIO I Uaed F.. nllu e Grot So-

App aneta
Rtcond ontd
Waehers Orytra Ranges Rtlrl
grato 1 tO Cay Guarantee!
f:rench C ty Maylag 740 •46

7795

Babr btd a~roller cer •••'
awing high chailr well"' 304
6752801

llo

IJ

~

G~
Taylor Made F 110 t Graph te
Regu ar R 80 10 5 dagret drlvtr
3 wood and 5 wood Like new
ullld 1 Umo 1550 firm (304)67581~

740-446-1518

Kanauga S27! Mo 740 886
7102 Afte 5 PM

N ce G ound Floor 2BR W D
Hook up Atlerohce Depoab No

PelS (304)67!1-5 162

~~~

BY&amp;
PICK UP A QUALITY HOMES BOOKLET IN COLOR!

Place Llv ng Room Su te 740

""1-0405
AIIAZINGLY LOW PRICES

WOLFf TANNING IEot
Buy Factory D1red
E-nt S.rvlc:l
F - Fln8nclng Avai1abla
HooniiCommercla1 Unlls
FREE Colo Catalog
ca• Today 1-8CJOo711-G1A
AWESOME GETAWAYS Only
1~8 951 2 NGHTS Orlando DR
1291 For lnformaton

lloril For CourtllY Tw

3 Go den Retr ever pups 2 ft
maea 1 mae AKC reg w pa
ptra have had 2nd shots 304

ma 1 Fo That Specls Someone
On •valentine s " $300 DE

Do.•nll Low Monthly Payments

FiiEE Spocla

~~~:r;.:ro~~

k~chen

• iwvrnwn
lots .l • :

Offer! CALL
1 1188-479-2345 (T01l F""')

NDW1

Pup 7mo s Has had tra n ng

RANCH
ol appeal Inside &amp; out1
Ivlng room &amp; formal

L·

area

newer

Ove 75 Tanka ol F eahwater
F sh Local y Rased Parak"ls
Supp IS F sh Tank Pel Shop
24f3 Jackson
Avenue Pt

kitchen

Plolllnt (304)875 2083 Sun 1
4PM Mon-S.! 11AM-6PM

bedrooms 2 1/2 baths
double car garage full
balament 0\f&amp; 4 5 acres
only a few short minutes from
lawn 120t3

family

Looking for female longha
Dachehund o b etd Pleue call

740-448 2055- rnooaaagot

wot!)od RCA D eel TV olde

nw31iiel wth acceu ca d top dol
lal""Nolf a 740 949 3315 leave

maihge

11061 Pmnel.oCitlonl lot feel
Auatlon Hou.:uik;';.;c;;;,;;; 1
olltontoge on 2nd Avon.., La~ 11010
the world over u lha "
2 story brick house two moble
Auction HDUII thll
l•ndmark oftn reta epace
rental Income and etoraga

lncludn 2 BR houea neK1

Collordetslla

11071 Wtnllht lolgfMI,

moll

a11lud1d lat In lhe neweat

Coli and 11 ua

110111 Lott ol room1 Thla 5 BR
colonial home with many me or
updates Is nestled just 10
Thll
mtnute1 f om Holzer

p operty a so ncludoa a 2 BR

GO!&gt;JI Uaed App11ancea And Fu
~ Col 740-448-4039 Or 74041f'1004 AnytimO

ilnd move In tomorrow 1 1/2

IIDry cape CQd that haa all the

extras 4 Bedrooms 3 Bathe
foyor living room kitchen plus
full basement with outs de
entry 40 x72 newer pole
build ng Private setting with a
apectacular country view 71
aetea of mostly all pallure &amp;
tillable !and road frontage
along 2 roada Too much to
mention In thla ad call for
delaNo Hurry ba the first to
live In lhla horr\8 120112

FARM S UPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

H your looking
a ole• on• .,!!OOr plan
honli ~tit iMuyn ,.,.,;IMO
rQOm Inside &amp; out and don~
want to lille In town then call
today to vlevt this one!
Com!lllla w!th·large fOrmal
living room &amp; dining k~chen
full of cabinet space large
sized bedrooms 3 car
carport Quick poaseaslon
So much must call lor
complete lstlng 12018

610 Farm Equipment
12 t ansport disc 500 gal on
crop sprayer a ectr c cont o's

740-992 7302 aile 6 3CI!1m

l JANITROL HEAnNG AND
COOUNG EOUPMENT
1N8TALLEO

II You Don I Call Uo Wo Both
L&lt;*o Frao Estlmatoa1 740 446
8308 1-800-29Hl0911

11072
H - With no · nelghbortl
Have wtoat outry0111
wanto In lilt 3 BR 2BA ronch
'"'' ng on 8 7~ ac:reo m/1 In

AERAT ON MOTORS
Now &amp; Robul 1 n S ock
Call Ron Evan' 1 800-537-9528
TRANSPORTATION

M081LE HOME OWNERS

... -.

w th

Rood 1 33 aqre
Land Cont act

GoHipolla Townoto p 7 5 1CtM 11\'1
Super potentia tor houa ng

aeclucled

faml y home lite mlnutu from
downtown Galllpolle and

lnlkle lha corporltlon UmHI

country

II10itly

'

~~:~~~~~ WR:1Gi11T ST

Always wanted to live In a A
home Here 9 the one for you II has over 3 000
I scluaie feet and 9 3 star es ta Has 5 bedrooms 2 baths
famtly room and a g gant c main bedroom Dtcks
I 2 car ga age with workshop above paved drive
s nestled 1n a provate hollow
S85 000 DO
MAR11N ST A 95 double wide with 3 bedrooms 2 baths
dining area equ pped k!&lt;:hen &amp; laundry roo'\W~and
living
room w th bay area Has a big lot 2 docks and a rlcshop
Well taken ca e of a must see
$48
00
IIIODLEPORT CORNER LOT Aone story home with 2 to
3 bedrooms g gant c Iv ng room w~h newer fireplace One
bath and laundry oom Has newer carpet ng and ceramic ti~
everywhere Newer ttlt down windows &amp; much more
$41900DO
CORNER OF 4TH &amp; MAIN Has 2 Iota with a
Mob! e Home that Is approx 12x60 Nice lot but
needs lots of work Alao an older garage, and

porch
DOmE TURNER Broker
JERRY SPRADLING
CHARMELE SPRADLING
BETTY JO COLLINS
BRENDA JEFFERS
OFFICE

v

It 900 DO
11112-5892
949-2131
949-2131
949-2048
11112 1444
11112

z.-

EXT 71!32

CARS $100 $800 &amp;U~ POLICE
IMPOUND

1984 Oldamob le Cutlall Su
preme Runs Good/Looks Jielr

$700

DkocTV

Good Cond non S1 995 740

OWNERS

446-0390

1987 Olda De ta 88 loaded runs
great oaks great $2595 call

740 992 5700

'!Ol Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp;

1988 Pol'lche 944 Turbo stone

Free e Year Parta &amp;La

groy melaNic Wl111 burgtnrly 1nlar1-

Ccti:l11ng 1-600-872-51187

I
[==~~~=I
Allordably prlcoa Ill

11 oeo country living 11 111
-~ Thla a BR 2 s,t.doubl-

Allortlably po1c.d ........

Horae ,.nn Ill lhe
In 11M! 11013
cauntoyl
llo!o
ol
thlo 36 acr11 Enjoy
of rollng hllla Largo
bom w11n 111111 oleclric ond
U..~lnltapol
the line-~- with
1000- fHI of llvli1V
..,.ct ond olllot Cilllor

_,,.ion

DCIIoeful Nl1lnQ Ia the
loca1lon of lhll (OOII1y brtclc
rwtlng on

acrea

or 3300 actual miles looks and
...,.,,. now minor rlghllront damago 114 000 740-et2 1501! dayl

--

Rona Gun Shop 740-742-&amp;0 2
S'l"mlll $3 795 Saw Logo Into
BC[,Irdo Plonka Beama large
Capac1ly But 5ewrnl11 VBI111 An
y:wloeno FREE lnlormollon 1-900578 1383 NORWOOD SAW
l.ti~LS 282 6onwll olive Bullalo.
N'( 14225

THIS 18 THE ANSWEII TO
NO
MORE
CLOSE
I(IIGHBORS private and

24
Full ,I , \t;JIIc-out

~ml!leiY

baement wllh ... through

·~
kltchoin3-iwith bedrooma
pt.nly ol
Cli6inet1 lvlng room 2
bathal'letty=vtew
eat! lor your
11013

or 740 848 ~844 evenings and
1888 Ponlloc Sunblrd IU10notUc

4 cy nder

SeeiOned ftrewood $35 loed (ko-

740-388 91193 or740-742 2:170
1990 Chovr Lum no 2 6 Au

Soli Repelled Lawn Boy Push

tomatlc new motorltrane Sharp

12150 DBO Parlllllfldtoo con
1 dtrad 1888 Pontile Grand
Pr ~ 3 1 Automat c Now ptlnl
Loodeoi/Shorp Ill 500 (3041076

M6Wtr $100 2 Weadtatere

11110 For Both Smoll Frttzer
~~ 740 387-7578 740 ~88

MEIGS ·COUNTY
THIS IS. YOUR CHANCEl
GrJvely Tractor Salee
buelnese all set up and
,..elY to go Evet'ylhlng II
lltrt that you ne~ to
optra1e your own bualr1ell
from the bulldlnga to the
~
Thle tum kay
operation Ia a great
~unity lor a ·peroon
1'110 haa ... dealre lb be In
~- lor youi'MII Give
Uli • Cllt yaU wll be pltllld
with the Inventory and

. . . at 1hll plicel 11011

!IJIIAT LOCATION! G""''

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

room with
French dooia that lAd to
munt 11'111 decl&lt; perfect lor
entertaining lhla eummer
Over 2 ...... All Ill view tl1la
quall1y A!l "'--ean
Ho111e atluattd at Crew
family

Road 1140

St- Mlddlepcirt Lovely 14710

W11TU

eesl

Sla piece wood living room lurnl

1890 Dodge DIIYIOna Aulomllllc
Air AMIFM CtiMllt Ground El
ltcll Runa Good Orlvea Gr"ll
$1100 Neg 740-441 1083
1981 Cavtlltr Aulomotlr: AC Till,
$1 BOO 740-368-8008
1991 Cheuy Bertuo 4 cylinder

tulll eel good conduton color

...... and blue $300 740-8t2

22fl lit« 5pm

~h ::.~ftt -r.~,.. t11'\wt~staJrs

,.,..r ofllce ol bullneqet
aa well ae loads of ator11{18

lor

81/PEA NICEII YOUR
OFI'IR MIGNT BUT THIS
HOM! ,3 4 becl1'oorna 2

holt bathe

COIIIIIIICIAL BUII.DIHG
Main Strett In Pomeroy
This bUilding O!M

So many poulblldln with
this convenient location In
the heart of Pomeroy
Whether you nttd off!OI
apaot or ]ull went to 11ar1 a
epeclalty ttore of your own
you Will want to look at thla
one for a price 61 only
S3I.IDODO

IXCELLINT
CORNER
ji!LL Only you

IWO !iDY horne with loade ol A0-'0 .... 900 Alum/Brick
~ Cozy breakfaat ....c:h wl1lt 3 biodr 0011.
d!r*1il ....
...... 3 bedrooml INtng formal dining_ room full kitchen I car ld1llchld
Apprux 113 ... lot
bUIINIII ,_..

TMnng10n Futl

door ookl aood

MIJ Auto Vln10n OH.

........

-•ljh1!

.t

runt good 1800 1990 Dodge
Grend Geravan 3 3 V-e a~mat
lc, runa good lookt good $1400

caij to $40 load w II deH1101 cal
740 849 2567 w01kend1 apd

large

675-a711

FIA'fiiCel 011 Furnaces 12 8eer
H•t Pump &amp; Air Cond onlng
S~temo

blocks lrom

(304

1986 Ti ana Am 350 Autom1tlc

800-2113-2840

Tajr.Jian HI Ell c oncy 90% Gaa
to town
down1own

Honda a Toyota I

ChiiYYI Joepa And Sporl Utili
tlao Call Nowl BOO 772 7470

Ptlmaa•r

~DINTIAL HOllE

from
propoaad now high aehool 1\ ..,.~ooh rolling pootlon of the propony a 1oc:alad the lront ond be~k doclc

11014 Sumouncl
Inviting

7"2"411 11182

-

110M Land Land Loncll wllhln
a ahor1
home offera
complex aubd vision o

3357

!

covered poJches 2 car attached
garage w th wo k area and a
24)(24 workshop for the
handyman
Ca
for your
appoiotmem loclay 11211100

$3000 or beat oiler 740 992

Mcrtola Homo Supply 740 448
ll&lt;ll6
N~ l.t 1onium D1al1 Ea AI Day
And Moll Away Call T ocy AI

Fr4f oattiUit ayoltm Cal lor dl

from town This low ma ntenance
home ofte s a peacefu
nelghbo hood front and back

and garage
a ding
I•·~=~~: onacor

85 Chevy tuck $1000 or bill
olfer 88 wh tt Monte Ca o SS

Anchors Water H11tera

~

110117 Groon Townohlpl 3 BR
2BA b lck ranch wllh lull
buement Ia localiod jual mlnuloa

14

o

naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts

one story frame home In the
vi age Ql Rio G onde Ia o muo1
seel Finished basement w th
extra arge eat n k tchan and
large rec /family oom Enc osed
t on porch and large lot

Further reduction!
want• It IOid Located
180 this 3 BR 1 BB rasta
unrestricted ac ea Newe

710 Autos lor Slla

P-lumbing &amp; Eaetrical Pa II Fur

11061 Rio Grondtol Thla a BR

~~~!~

I
H~ Inventory Discount Prices

0 VInyl Sk I ng Doo 1 Wnd

Ontyt37.-

MIDDLEPORT N 3RD A ranch style home !hal s only 7
yea s o d Home has bed ooms 2 baths and a storage
bulldong Also has v nyl s d ng Andersen windows and some
new carpel ng
NDW $45,obo DO

Hay &amp; Grein

~i'ed

ground pool P Iced In the 70 I
cal11or-

a

640

JET

1107411711 Llmoln Pille. Cure 2
8R ranch homo buiH In 1883
largt kftctoen ~ 8 ICIII m/1
OWner will COilllder land -

&amp;

Pet Profess ona s S ttara Walk
era Groomers Etc Reach Mil
I ons 01 Potential Customers!
F ee L st ng On nte net 1 Moat
Popu a Pet /Travel Databall
Contact www petswt come com
Or 1 en ""' n1p

a

peaceful va ley near Holzer
Extraa Include a full wa kout
basement and a large ebova

basement Has 3 bedrooms dining
living room wth
flrep ace n ce kitchen a sun room and several rooms n the
~asement An ce detached 2 car garage
178,900 DO

AKC Reglo e ed malo Black Lab
1740)-446-ooeo

Foe! salt Prime Star Sys em alSO

BEECH ST A ranch style home with alum num s ding and
bedrooms One of the bed ooms s huge Also ncluded s
above ground pool w lh newer declclng around 1 and a
lro,nr.rvl back yard to privacy Freshly painted and wallpaper
Is very cute
$49 000 00

718Thlrt1Auonue Gallpala

PAQ M CRON eMach nes Desk
tops Laptops Merchant Ac
countt Weba tea Almost Everv

room reo room &amp; mare Plus
a 3 car detached garage
Country setting with privacy
MUST SEW 110110

updated mob le ad 1BK24 cabin
at on Just under an acre $74 toO

9428 Eve y hlng Can Be Seen

CdMPUTER BLOWOUT COM

l!lodrooms

POMEROY LINCOLN HILL RD
Th s 3 4 bedroom 1
bath home s ts on a small knot affordong a nce v ew of your
surround ngs Vinyl s d ng sh ogles roof a heat pump w~h
NG backup An ce s l1J lot and ready to move Into
$5700000

71 BTh d Avenue 0 740 446

POSIT WILL HOLD 740 aaa
9325

Approx &lt;43 acres &amp; t11e
option to purchaae a total of
113 11\1 Roomy home with 3-4

lrom tho City Paok Ull1111ol •'-you
already p eoent on lhe property

Cog a) 1 F be o ass Dog House
Contact Paul Evans

New Sea

onj! Approvad11 No Money

Real Estate General

eubciMolon?

S50 (Acceuo '" Go wlh

Qualfca

RUSSELLD WOOD BROKER
446-4618

ACRI!AGE WITH PLENTY
OF ROAD FRONTAGE

lol located Just a couple blocks

Pan Clvidad 10 w•8 W th LOcks
ICha na Cog Pen S ta On A
10 w•10 w woode" Foundation
S350 1 Wooden Dog Housa New

~ l!'aJor Atlracllon Admlaalons 0
Dloner Inc udod Call 800 539

•mall ua for Information on our 118tlnga
blgbendreelty@dregonbbe com

FomuJrly BlaeldNuw Reolty
So~ Southem 0/olo For
O..r .( QU4rler Century"

hard to find eo take a look at lhla

(Papo a) $150 1 Cyclone Dog

Adorab e AKC Registe ed Show
Qua lty Boaton Terrier Pupp 11
Shots &amp; Wormed
Male 1 Fe

evansmoo@zoomnet net

11010 VtC8nt land In townl Itt

Back rran Ma 1 $150 1 Beag •
3 Yea 8 0 d Copper Tone Ma 1

273-0044

514 Second Ave , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 0994
740..446 0008
740-441 1111

hOme enta a and a mob e home
wth a t arne add tlon that a
cul'l'lntty be ng used as a baa~
sa on Cal tar mo e details

Building
Suppllea

GIU!nbu g TN AccommOdat ona

Efl4«4·- ~ ~tatt,

1--~~~~0H

550

740-3N.()1130r1 800-292-0842
1~ Gun Solid Pine Gun Cab nil
$400 Rugt MKII Comp S an
1011 3 Mag• 350 1700 Fo Both 560 Pete for Sale
740-441..()172
(2 E1C81lenl Running Beag e Rat&gt;'
30 0 8 RUIIt Boll Acl\on A 110 3 b 1DCJ11&amp;) 1 Beagle 3 Years 0 d

1-800 585-7101 or 446-7101

205 North Second Ave.

Wh tt Wh rlpool Waehtr $75 2
Wh It Wt)lrlpool Drvera $65

ment Free Installation F tt 6
Months P og ammlng Ca I Tom

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
MIDDLEPORT 12 acres w/4 BR Home $137 500
JACKS RD Beaut lui 3 BR $62 500
SYRACUSE 4 BR Home $74 SQO
MIDDLEPORT 3 BR Home $32 500
RUTLAND 3 BR Home $59 500
MIDDLEPORT 4 BR Home $46 500
RACINE 2 1/2 Acres W/3 Br Home $39 500
MIDDLEPORT Duplex 2 BR each $45 000
MIDDLEPORT Downtown Bus ness $55 000
KANAUGA 2 Bldgs 6 Am &amp; Bath $32 000
POMEROY 2, story bldg Extra lot $22 000
We
I

Merchandise

Eacn Whfte Wh 111100 D yo S50
Cal After 5 30 PM UO ua
540 Mlacelleneou•
1ICMI6
Mel'c:Mndlae
II8AD CREDIT? Gt Caoh WANT ACOMPUTER???? BUT
oono To $5 ooo Debt Conao I NO CASH?? MMX TECH NOLO
:1tllon To $200 000 Crtell Cllfda GY We F nanct o Down! Pllt
'Aortgagu Refinanc ng And C ed l P oblem1 OKII Even 11
~u p Lo11n1 Ava table Me ~an
Tu ned Down Befort I RHitabllh
:mt Cop 1 800 471 51 9 E• Your CrediUI 1 800-659-0~9
Altlnt on P mes1,11r Customers

er Downs a ra Ctqn No Ptta
Cepos t &amp; References Requ td

1 Bedroom Garage Apartmen In

540 Mlecellanaoua

Juy or 1111 R verlnt Anllqutl
1121 Ell! Main on SR 124 E f'o.

Want A S.Htr Ooa ? F.. Equip

740-367-0280
washe $9~ 0 yer $95 Rongl
$95 Relrlgeralo&lt; S17S Rtfrlgera ,.
lD l kl New 1~0 washer $205 "!
C ~· 8 $205
Yea Wananty
Skaggs Appllancea 78 Vlno

Household
Good I
St HI Ga flpols 740 448 7398
4 Cha ra and Table (wood) $50
eee B1&amp;.0128
21162
1304
.:..--'--)W--------,--:-------.1 520
Sporting

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaunt,

1160

lure

MERCHANDISE

Tara Towhhoull Apf tments
Ve Spac oue 2 Bedrooms 2

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

lee lion P cad To Sell! Com•
And BrowN Corne 01 RoU!o 7
&amp; Add son P ke -we Buy Fu n

Antlquea

15311 R... Moore -

Wathe a dryert ,.frlgeratort ,3.
rang11 Skaggs Appllanctl 11
v ne St 11t Ct 740 44e 7388
1-888-818.01211

0111ct build ng Pome oy 600

il&lt;lUIIO ft $350 pe month S150
dtpooll. ctll740-849-2093

530

nerov 740 m 252e or 740 m

- - . . . (9001075-7388

Btdt Bunk Btdt Beda D tM
Ill Couehel D MUll Slop And

8191

Floors.

Thompaona Awlance 3407

New And Uttd Fu nlture Slorrt

One bedroom ru nlshed apart
ment In M dd aport 740 992

v

For Salt ~tcond tlontd With •
trt drytrt and refrigerator• .fF

Ilona 1100 00 P • Month (740)

141 0001

B ookslde Apartmtntt Now Ac
cepUng ~ppllcat ons For One

992 1201 1oavo moaaege

Apartments
for Rant

G~

Village G ten Apartmtntt 2
beclrooma, !Dial
appllanc
11 ru n thtd taund y room lac II
nes and c:IOM to ICI'IOO appllca
llono tv11lltlllo 11 olllca 740-992

~

740 992-4514 aporrmon11 avaH
able lurn11hedluM.mlll'..t.

9922218

Elll 1709

2-

SUnday, January 16, 2000

510 • HOUHhold

Mobl t Home Space o Rtnt
Centenary Arll Soma A81trlc

2 Bedroom Apartmtnt Ntw Ha

Road $325/Mo w 111 Dlpoan No
Pet&amp; Good Refa ences 740 «s.
2419 74Q-4.1&amp;.0720
2 Bedroom Sma House Clean 3

2 Bed oom House $325 mo p us

-

AfN!rtmenta
for R..,t

3711 TIJD 1 888-233-Uilol Equal GOOD UIID AiJO'LIANCI.
Houoilg~

446-110&amp;1

2419 7 40..w6.0720

Even If lis Lis ed
20 500 Acfes

Pleaunt, WV

01 S!OYO 70 000 runs and d vea good $1250
S3SO 74o-266 OBO ca 1 740 992 3160 altor

sru 2 Ytara Old

4pm

113l8

l'4t• &amp; Socktlo w!Tool BQ•

175 1"' Chevy Cavo11tr 11 K vtry
Dr II w!Cua &amp; go9d cond lion new brolcoo
•:r.,:eorl.. Also SuptrNinl•n aeBOO 080 &lt;*11740-986-31105
$80. (304)87&amp;-445J
1883 Ford Probe a11ver good
condlllori 84800 740-tllfi.m7
1883 Gto Metro 2 Dooro Rtd
l&gt;ll'"~Cieloargable

W th Grey Cloth lnttrlor Au

tomtllc A/C 37 OOOK Runt I
LOOkl C/rUll t2 110 740 448

I
WIIIIO Fflgldl II

gallery Rtlrlg·

...., 3yoa o1o1 Ulol orll· pr1oe Atl&lt;)ng $580

8222

11183 Batum 8L2 4 door 4 cytln

11 250

Grutlcor der ltont wlltll drlvt a.-atle
""" homt louytr or bulldtor H 42t ml1ll 1111 w1lh lin {:104)8715-4011
IC, Uldng 84800
740-882 11101 doyo or 740.Iloll

j

.......... and;UIIndl.

'

II

710 Autoa for Slit

740

MotorcyciiS

1994 C1vane 2 door 4 cy 5
1983 Yamaha Baa" 200 Bor ad
,,.,d C D Pjayt AIC 13000 30
ove GoOd Cond lion Need
oeo 1900)67~
To So 11 11 000 OBO 338 0819
1994 Muttang CGilVO Hbla 3 8 V No! Avao-LOOM Meaaege

WV

Post-harvest stress boosts calls

By MARK THIESSEN
Aaeoclated Praaa Writer
OMAHA Neb -Callers seek ng
8 IUIOINIIc b Ul wllh Wh t Op
either mental health or fann financtal
19H Honda 250R Good Shape
ar•'l' cloth nte lo 1m lm caa
Runs Very We Ask ng $800
counsehng have rncreased to the
une ..53 716 miAM left 1 ont dam- Ca11740-245-5652 Ahor 8 ~M
Farm Cnsts HOI I ne srnce the harvest
age una and dr VII asking
$5500 740 8t2 1506 days or
ended JUSt as coordrnator Mtchelle
740 948 2644 even nos and weeSoli feared 1t would
It has ptcked up hke we had
I 895 Bu ck Lesab a Custom o4
Auto
Parts
&amp;
expected
Soli satd Tuesday Near
Ooo 1
Loaded
alum num
Whetla A C T
C u 11 Pw
~==A:-:c::ca-;s::ao=r-:-le-:-s=-:-::--l record low crop pnces dod not
Locka Pw Windows Pw Sea s
tmprove through the harvest and
$8 200 oo (2 000 Undo Book
pressure from financtal rnsututrons~o
Valuci) 740-682 7512
pay debts wtll only mcrease as loans
1995 Cama o V 8 a.otoma c
come due at the end of the month
custom snow car custom wnee s
790
Campare &amp;
and dash back 71 187 m ea
The Walthtll based hothne heard
m nor front damage runs and
Motor Homes
from
112 first ume callers m July and
d lves ask ng $5000 740 992
I 506 daya o 740 949 2644 1983 Reso t Campe Fullv Con
August but that number rose to 12 (
ta ,ad Exce ent Cond 1on New
oovoninglondnew calls m September and October
Air Cond on ng Batte s And
1995 Fo d Muatang V 6 au o T1 .. $3 500 740-388-11659
Wh le that may be li(Jpear to be only
37 000 mles white w th gay n
a sl ght rncrease Soli S3ld It rs srg
It or I onl damage $3 sao 740
SERVICES
mficant t&gt;ecause the mcrease came
992 1~08 days 740 949 2644
dunng harvest when fanners are
busy rn the fields November figures
Home
1996 Mustang GT cqnve tlb e 810
4 6 \I 8 automat c black w h
are
not yet avatlable
Improvements
back leather nte lo
Alloy
More
dramattc however 1s the
whee a 41 641 m ts eft font
BASEMENT
number
of
vouchers t&lt;sued for men
damage ask ng $5500 740 992
WATERPROOFING
1506 days o 740 949 2844 Uncond ona fat me gua anree tal health counsehng
evenings
Local references u nlshed Es
In cooperauon with the Nebraska
lab ohad 1975 ca 24 Hrs (740)
1997 Dodge 1ntrep cl; 3 5 V 6 «6
Health and Human Serv ces Syste n
0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
front wheel dr ve 59 833 m as
ers Wate~rool ng
the hotlrne ssued vouchers so callers
ma oon wllh grav n ._,or c Usa
ac am fm casaettt PS recov
could auend free counsel ng sess ons
e ·~ rholl aaklng $7800 740 Appliance Pa ts And Serv ce All at about 220 mental health agencres
992 1506-days o 740.9C9 2644 Name B ands Ove 25 Yea s Ex
ac oss the state
BY8fllngs and weekltnda
pe ence AI Wark Gua anteed

-

..

.......,

_

1998 Pontiac F reb d Trans Am

F ench C

~

The n ual 200 vouchers wen:
exhausled w thm i"o months Son e
then the sate has funded 50 vouch
crs per momh and a $50 000 federal
grant on Oct ( extended the I fe ol
the pr gram
In November 175 vouchers were
rna led leav ng the h lllme only 105
ouchers 10 ssue m De~embcr when

Iarm loans trad uonally come due
days hef re Chr stmas
We are 1ssumg more vouchers
than we thought we would Soli
sard The stress s st1ll there
Soli sad the best mdtcatton of the
farm ens scan be found n thos fall s
most utr( zed ser•rce the hothne
offers - lhe Fann Fmance Chn cs
The elm cs offer free fann restruc
tunng and legal tssue counsehng wtth
an anorney and farm counselor
As many as 10 fanners attend
each sess on for the one on one coun
sehng and that s a full day Soil
satd
Chmcs are held twtce monthly tn
Norfolk and once a month tn Grand
Island Lexmgton Amswonh Nonh
Platte and Beatrtce
Last October s $8 7 btlhon con
gresstonal fann rehef package helped
soften the cnsts bemg felt on the
fann Soli sard buill only provtded

a Band Atd to a few muauons and
made II a httle easter to manage 11!ey
know the cnsts s sullthere
Roy Frcdenck an agncultural
econom st wnh the Un1versny of
Nebraska sad hundreds rf not thou
sands of Nebraska agncultural pro
ducers are hurt ng but there also are
many fanners and ranchers who arc
dmng fine
There ought to be some huma
compass10n for those that are suffer
ng Fredencks satd but s no
e' ery srngle farmer
If larmers had decent yrelds and
recerved lederal ass stance Freder k

s d you should be OK probah!)
nol greal but OK
1 here s always var ab lo y (r n
one Iarmer 1 the next but lor 1hose
that aren t domg well It s of en •
because of a ~.,;on b nat on of L:lrcun

stances

he sad Tl ose nclude the

co 11bmatwn of low pnces lor c rn

soybeans and hog
Those c rcu nstam:es we gh heav

tly on the sh&lt;fnlders of farn crs
mvolved n what Soli called border
I ne cases

They are somewhat bttter bul on
the other hand they are Just ready to
move on They JUSt don 1 want to deal ;
wtth thts anymore Soli satd
•

May ag 740 446

2 dr tops 11000 mlas. auto 00

7795

damage $14 300 740 992 1506

C&amp;C Gene a Home Ma n
tenenca Pa nt ng v ny s d ng
ca pantry doo s w ndows baths
mob e home epa and more For
free as mae cal Chat 740 992

1 ver metall c with da k pew a
eatha r ght front au spans on

itunbap ll!:tmr• itrntmrl • Page 07

Digital cameras stake place in market

Don t I ke the p eture you JUSt took'
By THE EDITORS
ng that uses or gmal tmages
• You have the pat ence lo learn to Delete 11 and try agarn
OF CONSUMER REPORTS
6323
D grtals also come w th soil ware
Amencans ttus year wtll take use the camera and mage handl ng
1999 Dodge Noon a Doors Fu ly
that
lets you transfer mages fr m
software
about
23
btlhon
photos
What
makes
Loadod 18 ooo OBO 23 ooo L" ng8 on s Basemen Water
Miles 1993 P ymouth Ace a m P ooflng all basement repal s
to computer and then prepare
camera
!his year dtfferent from years past
Each of lhe several 35mm and
88 000 Milot A C ulae T II done f ee est ma as fe me however IS the growmg presence of APS (advanced photo system) poml
for
pr nt ng e marl or whalov
them
gua an ee 12y son ob expe I
$2 950 080 740-258-8169
cr You can crop and res zc pho os
tO&lt;» (304)895 3887
dtgttal cameras Of those 23 btlhon and shoal cameras we recenlly test
1869 Core sa 4 dr Body In good
adJUSI col r br ghlness and contrast
cd
performed
well
Among
the
35mm
photos
nearly
one
tmage
m
12
wtll
cond ton Needs head gaskets
640 Electrical and
even el n na e red eyl!
models
the
Canon
Sure
Shot
85
Asking $700 OBO Call 304
he
drgrtal
Refrigeration
8373348LOOM~
We es cd 2 megaprxel po nl and
Most people use film because tt s Zoom and the FUJtllm Zoom Date 70
shoo
dtg tal cameras whtch can have
95 Cnavy COli ca 3 1l V-6 Air
srmple and low cost Dtgttal cameras were JUdged to be one of our Best
PW PO AM FM casoelle Baau
a
max
mum f I 6 m 11 on to I 9 n I
meanwh le are strll more for com
Buys at $130 and $120 respecttve
1 lu Car $7 ooo QO (740) 388
I on prxels (short for picture cl
puler savvy hobbyrsts Yet the appeal ly Top rated overall was the Olym
8210
of d gnals wrll surely broaden as the pus LT Zoom I05 a $265 camera men s ) n the mage The greater lhc
CARl FROM $21/MO 1m
cameras come down m pnce and the that features a spot metenng mode number of p xels the h gher the cam
poundl /RepoL Fee $0 Down 124
Public NotlCI
era s resolu on and the sharper the
Moe 019 9o/, For Lollnga 1 800process of usmg them becomes s1m for tncky hghtmg s!lualoons
319-3323 )(2156
pier
If you want a very small camera rmage t can produce A 2 megap x
PROBATE
COURT
OF
Ohio Va ey Bank W11 Olle Fo
Whrch type of oamera s r ght for wtth foolproof film loadmg try an el mage ha uff crent resoluuon to
GAWA COUNT't OHIO
Sate By PubUc Auet on A 1992
PUBUCATIONOFNOTICE you? Here s a gu de to help you APS model APS cameras use a make an SxiO nch pr nt of near pho
Pvmoulh Ace am 000 AM On
Revlald Code
dectde
1 29 00 AI The OVB Annox 143
umque film canndge that also holds 10 qual ty
Sac 210832 33
Th rd Avo Go pols OH Sold To
Of the four models tested Nrkon s
You should choose a film camera the negauves after the ftlm ts
HlghHI Blddo Aa Is Whe o s
TO ALL INTERESTED IN
f
Wltl'lout E)(presaed Or Imp ed THE FOLLOWING ESTATES
processed The cameras can swttch Coolptx 950 ($860) the Olympus C
Wa ranty &amp; Ma~ ~~ Sean By PENDING IN THE GALLIA
• You want the w des! selecuon of lrom normal to w1de angle to 2000 Zoom ($887) and the Kodak
Calling The Co act on Depl AI COUNTY PROBATE COURl mexpenstve yet versat le cameras
panoramtc shots from one frame to DC265 Zoom ($764) perf&lt; rmed very
740 441 1038 Ova Rea• ves
The
fiduciary
In
each
estate
•
You
want
true
pom
and
shoot
The R gh1 To Accept Re ec Any
the next wuhm a roll Both APS film good or excellent overall The $748
&amp; All B do &amp; Wlhd aw 1lem• hae flied an account of hlo stmphclly m a camera
and processmg generally cost more Sony Cyber Shot DSC F55 d dn 1
F om Sal Pror To Sae Ta m1 truet A hearing on lhe
• You want color prmls wrthout a than 35mm while the quahty of the measure up Its pnnt quahty was
01 Sa 1 CASH OR CERTIFIED account In each caM will be
hold at the date and time lol of fuss and )OU aren t thai con resulting pnnts ts comparable
JUdged merely good and u lacks
CHECK
ahown below Tho court If cerned about order ng repr nts or Among APS zoom cameras the a zoom
located 11 tho Gallla County manrpulat ng the photos color bat
If you want a dtgrtal camera but
Kodak Advanttx C700 was top rated
CourthOUH LOCUli Street
ance
etc
don
t want to pay $700 or more lor
and at $165 a Best Buy Komca s
Galllpollt Ohio 45631
You
should
cho
sea
d
grtal
cam
Name Call Nu111ber Dall1
Super Btg M nt BM S I00 ($89) IS an a 2 mcgaprxel model shop around
of Heorlng Tima
era 1f
for a I megaptxel model Its lower
excellent
chotec m a nonzoom cam
1 Anna L Llndtmood
You re regula I) on the Internet era
resolutton cames a smaller prtce tag
15 629 Februacy 18 2000 send ng lo s ol e n a I d splay ng
- some cost about $400 Dtg tal
Unhke film cameras dtgtlal mod
10 00 o clock AM
tems
to
am:tJOn
r
p
oduc
g
y
u
2 Robert Caaey Sommer
els store •mages on a memory card cameras wrth sttll lower resoluhons
18 895 February 18 2000 own Web s te
and let you exam me them on a small can be had for $100 or less
1DDOoclockAM
• You plan lo d desktop pub! sh I qurd crystal drsplay (LCD) vtewer
3 Dorio Ruby 981183
Fabruary 18 2000 10 00
oclockAM
720 Trucks 10!' Slle
4 WI lilt Wella Jr 971038
February
16 2000 10 00
1972 Ford 1 2 Ton \1 8 Au
o clock AM
tomat c A/C 87 5815/m lea ga
temperature
5 Elale Margaret Hunnol By BECKY COLLINS
rage kept Great COndit on Info
• Sugar Sugar wtll keep two or btt hardter It wtll keep m the refng
GALLIPOLIS
Dtd
you
buy
a
981178
February
18
2000
mallon ca11 740-a79-2601
erator four to sox months or a year m
lot of flour sugar butter and nuts for more years at room temperature It s
10 DO o clock A.M
the freezer
1978 F 250 400 ~nglne Goat Thomu S
Moulton hohday bakmg -- or even for Y2K often used as a sweet tastmg preser
Work Truck S1 201j. 740 245 Probata Judge
preparauon and end up not usmg tt? vauve so u s no wonder lha ~lasts
8498
January 16 2000
How long wtll tt last? Should you a long ttme Store u man arrt1~ht con
• Nuts Lef1over nuts wtll keep m
1991 Forti EI&lt;Piorel 5 Speed High 1---=-~::--:-:--.--tamer to prevent 1t from hardemng the freezer for stx 10 e1ght months tf
freeze everythmg?
MHoaga Runs Geat Good Work
Public Notice
Or School VOhldt 740-388 9873. 1--..:..::::::..:..:.;.::.:::;;::__
Staples usually last a long ttme at and clump ng together
they re salted Whtle unsalted nuts
Brown sugar also should be stored freeze well for none to 12 months
STATE OF OHIO
1983 Ford Rlenger Splash 4 cyt 5
room temperature but freezmg can
ap 90 000 mllft ·~ lan1 condi- OHIO SCHOOL FACILITIES help them keep even longer Here are m an atrught contamer and s besl Stored at room temperature m shell
tion $5900 740 982 1182 or 304
COMMISSION
used wlthm four mon1hs If o gels so nuts woll last about four months
some storage bastes
n:l-5305
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
hard
that you can 1 break t apart Unopened packages of nutmeats wrll
• Flour If stored man atntght con
1 Bide will be racetved by
1994 Dodge P ck u~ 5 Sp11d
11 on a cookte sheet and heat t
place
318 2Jc4 114 000- 740-256- the Southern Loeel School lamer Hour eastly wtll keep for srx to
he fine for about three months or up
47725
Dlatrlct
Boord
at
m
a
warm
O\en 250 to 300 degrees
8224
etght months a1 room lempera1ure
to
a year 1f rn an unopened vacuum
State Route 124 P 0 Box
1998 5-10 21 000 M 01 S! 285 176 Raclna Ohio 45771 Dunng hot humrd wea1her you Fahrenhe 1untrl t softens Measure ll packed can Opened packages last
1981 S 10 Durongo AJC 12 795 AHn Dannla Hill lor tho m1ght want to store t m the refrrger whtle ll s still wann because 1t w II only about two weeks at room tern
18SB 5-10 Auto V 8 A1C 12 195 following Pro)ICI
ator or freezer to preventmsects from harden agam when cool
perature
Cook MoloOB 74Q.44e.OJ03
New K BSchool and
• Butter and margar ne The rec
mfestmg tt Keepmg !l cool won 1
Addition and Renovattona hun Hour a b!l Smce people don 1 ommended ttme to stoJe butter m the
1987 Ford F-250 HI~ Duty 4&lt;4
Low Mileage Excelltnl Condl1 on
to Southern High School
usually freeze flour 1t s hard to tell refngerator has a scant two weeks It
Anar 6 PM Call 740'388-97\K'
SOU1hem Local School
(Becky Collins Is Gallla Coun
Dlllrlct Board
JUSt how long rl would last m the w11l keep up to Stx ton ne months m ly • sxtenelon agenl for family and
95 Ford F 150 4x4 excel en con
the freezer after thai ots flavor and
Raclne,Melga
freezer
dillon Fully loac1ed and mo o Go
consumer sclancea Ohio Stille
In accordance wl1h the
rage kept 32 ooo actual m es
texture could decl ne Margarone s a University )
Whote
wheat
flour
should
always
and
aharp lruckl &amp;17 000:-(740) 268 Drawlngt
1243
Spaclficatlona preparld by be stored m the refr gerator The orl
n the gram could tum ranctd at room
Marr Knapp Craw11a
GMC 1889 Sarra F~~~ Pkg 2
Anocllltalnc
Wheel Dr ve 1/2Ton $4 700
Public Notice
PubliC NotiCI
104 Fair Avenue NE
PubliC NotiCI
Public Notlcl
1982 300 so Mercedes Auto
Full Pkg Tu bo 5 Cyl New y ~0 Box1002
New Phll-lphla
Contract No OS 0088 non-refundable ~ncl are to Columbua Ohio
RtbuiH Eng no $3 000 {304)6752897
Ohio80061101 D6
lllumlnum be paid via a eaparate ~w Dodge Plan Rooms In
Eaat Central Ohio 2521
Phona (114) 148-21188
Entrance• Wind- Gl111 check In the amount of the following cltln
730 Van1 I 4-WDa
Cincinnati Ohio (45202 34th Streat NE Conlon
125 00 atao made out to the
Fu (614) 848-3309
&amp; Gluing
Contract No 06 0088 Southern Local School 11001) Tho Grend Baldwin Ohio 44705
11186 Mod uno SIZed Bla,Uii 4x4 6 Tho Conatruotlon Managar
Central Ohio Minority
the
Prolaclla
Q00680t.CJ7
Food Service Dlatrlot and forwarded to Building 855 Edan Parte
lor
Cyl nder Runs Good Looks
Admlnlttratlon 815 E11t
tht Conttructlon Manager Drtva Sullo 1115
The Quandt! Group Inc
Equipment
Good 13 500 740 3BT 7576
Independence Ohio Mound Street Columbua
740-288-1833
3518 Rlva..tde Drive
Contract No 08 00811 with ... dlpOitt check.
s lntareated blddera (44131) 8200 Rockalde Ohlo43205
SUitlt01
8008801
08
cuework
1987 Fo d full llze conve 1 on
Ohio Volley Conetn~ctlon
ahould contact Tammy Wooda BlVd (Cievetand)
Columbua, Ohto 43221
(Ubrary ond Sci.,_)
van 302 automatiC lvo y Coast
Columbut Ohio (43211- Employara Council 21
Smith
at
(114)
442-DIOO
or
Phone
f740)
442.1J50D
Contract
No
08
0081
Convers on (Houelon Taus)
Armory Drive Wh11llng
l"ax f740) 442-o501
1008801 01 Plumbing ad llt1d depoott check directly 1073) 1175 OUblln Road
gl1)' valour nltrloc 1ront -.nlt roar
to
tl1e
Quandel
Grou111
lno
Ohio
(411431)
WV
211003
•Dayton
quandel com
a r til lXI aa $3400 0119 740
Fire P-on
7 A pre bid mHIIng will
2 Any propoHCI Equal lor
Controct No 08 0081 3511 Alva,... Drlva Suite 30'1'7 Kettering Boulevard
: : : 6 daya or 740 9~'2 844
a Btandard eliall be 11D08101 1Q HVAC
101 'Columbua OH 43221 Point Wtll OHice Perk bt htld on Januery 20
8u!W001
2D00 II 4 00 p 111 II lhl
aubmlto
the
ArchltiCI
Contract
No
Oi
D
..
l
No more than 1hrw (3) 1988 5-10 Red Automallo.rTinled no lator than tan (10) daya 100880111 Eleotrloat
Totado
Ohio
(43823).
lollowtnglocatlon
wltl be provfdid on a
W nclr:wl, BO 000 M lei 414 PowSouthern Local School
prior to the bid opening tl Contract No 01 0088 refundable baala to a 3130 Sunloreat Court P 0
• Sturlng Power B akls 740
Dtllrlct omca
no Addenda It IMutd tn 11D08101 12 Tlohnology
Blddtr Depoell will be 11ox 1511
379-2786
;()ha-..n WHI VIrginia
Roclne Ohio llllgt
IIIOOilllon wl1h I hi until Bid Date of l'abn1ary 3 refunded to Prf~ lkldere
1982 Dodge Grend Clara•• 3 3 Bidder a requnt the 2000 at 4 00 p m (local only who raturn their (25302) 401 Capitol . _
a. The OWner retltrvot tho
V 8 Dual Htll &amp; Ar,_91PII n propooed E~ual ahall bt lltnctard time) when they
the
following
add-1
right
to relact any or all blda
and
drewtnga wltltln ltiiMn (11)
$2 toO 740-317 7""'1,
and to wolve any or oil
oonalclered re acted
wHIIMI opened and Nld
daYt of the bid opening and plan n10m1
Allied ConetrUotlon 1010 trregularltlea mlatokoa
Sealed b da will ba
3 Bidding Documentt tubmlt a bonafide bid per
1888 Toyoto Tocoma 41'4 5
Bpood 33 ooo Mill 113 •oo racelved-lor
may be obtained tro111 the Article 1 1D or tht VIle Avenue Clnolnnatl omlaelone or lnlormalltlta
1887 Toyoto RAV4 22000 H,Ntl PIIIM 1
OhiO 4II20e
l'llliiMI thereto
Conetruotlon Manager by lnltrUc:tlona to lllddtre.
LOtdld, Au1onotllr:. $1A '10Q, pBO
DOdge/Bean Bank One All queatlona perlolnlng
Contract No 08 00811 Prime Biddertt only upen
8
Tha
Contract
740-441.ql18 ;
~
8D011101 01
Sltework, racetpl of a ohtok wltlollll DOCUIIIIntl may be Building 3fd l'loor t211t1 to eecurlng Controct
Docurnema Bidder a Ltat
AlrMdy Under Coorth101
Nlllnilllble In the • - 01 reviewed tor bidding luclld Cltvttand Ohio etc
ehall be directed to
Coubact No No CJioDOII UDO DO CtltOb lftalt be pulpoea without oharga 44115
•The
llulldera
Exchange
1limmy
Smith The OUindtl
8008801 U
arlok made p~yable to 1111 during bualne• houn at
Bulla Ona Conetructlon Group Inc 3511 Rlvertlde
Proouremant
AlrHdy louthern Looat School the foftowl~:::uoa·
Carrlll' M1 Keynote Circle Drtva 8ultl101 Columbua,
Uncllr Conbaat
Dlllrlot and lorwlinled lo Arohlltcta
0H 43221 (814) 442.IJIDO
PhiM II
the ContiNotlon Manager
Marr Knapp Crawlle Clevlltncl Ohio 44131
The autldere Exo=• Ownar 8outhern Loot!
Contract No 08 00111- Upen reoelpt or a requat AIIOclltll Inc N100811)1-o;l .... Utlllt...
IDDDmPinled by I dapottl Phfladllpllla, Ohio
of c..tret OhiO 1175
n 8chool Dlatrlol
AMCI. pt11o43211
(1) I 10 1t 12 18 17 11.
Contract No 08 0011- •• named aliove the Owner Ollloe
Daytoll
Bulldera
11 23 24 25 U 12TC
Southern
Local
achool
IDDII01o03 o-1 Tnldee ConatnJctlon Manager will
740 Motorcycln
Contract No 08 00111 forward oopt" of bidding Dtatrlot BHnt, llooclne1Olllo Exchange 1077 lmbury
clocurMnla to the btdder
Conatrucllon Manager a Park Rood Dayton Ohio
1887 Hondo Z 50 R Excellent iooll01o04 M-.y
condlr on runa and took• good
Contract No 011.1J081
4 Shlpplllfl olla111tl tor Olltoe
48414
$8590Q 080(740) 448 88!11
Bulldera Exohl1nge of
1101111101,(15 Rooftng
au lltddlng doou- are
Tile OUindel Group lno
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J•u_, 17, 2000

.

:Todey: Cloudy
·ftlgh: 308; Low:
\.
.

Meigs Community Calendilr, PageA2
Our View: Ohio Reads worthwhile, Page A4
Jimmy-Johnson resigns, Page A6

*

'TUn dry: Snow chance
.f!llgh: 308; Low: Teena

•
WORKERS
- Rockwell
: emploY"~ were recently recognized et the
company plant on McCormick ROid by 1M Gil. lie Academy High School Key Club for their
• food drive .rtort. Key Club atudenta and lldvleor Barbara Shelton ere ~ food drive

committee ·
.dere, Joella
SIWinne

row, Frencee S.un·

Linda Johneon and
row, Roumary Hy1111,
Cochren, Maude Crewe,
B.J.
and Ev• McConnell. Absent from
photo want committee membere Jan Brown
Robin Lewle, Bob Adame end 'Petty Metzger. '

Rockw~ll, club team for food drive
.. GALLIPOLIS- A year-long project by Rockwell employees and the
Gallia Academy High .School Key
Club has once again resulted in the
true spirit of giving during Christmas.
Since 1995.. the company has
been dedicated to ~elping make the
. holiday season a more enjoyable
experience for less fortunate families
in the local area.
The Rockwell Food Drive com·
~ittee was established last January to
111eet on a regular basis tg plan and
coordinate fund-raising activities for
1999.
· Committee members include Bob
Adams, Jan Brown, Beverly Byus,
Donna Cochran, Maude Crews,
Suzanne Durst, Rosemary Hysell,
Linda Johnson, Robin Lewis, Eva
McConnell, Patty Metzger, Joella
~oberts, B.J. Rocchi and Frances
Saunders. ·

a

Through diversity of fund·rais· ees in various fund-raising activities,
ing activities and donations from the the purchase of food supplies, labor
company and Rockwell employee's. to load and unload food items and
approximately $13,000 was raised to coordinate the distribution of food to
purchase food supplies and some toys local residents. ·
for the GAHS Key Club. Many local
B b
businesses donated items to the
ar ara Shelton, Key Club advi·
Rockwell food drive. committee to sor, noted that "we are sincerely
thankful for Rockwell's dedication to
support the company's fund-raising helpi
.. k h h I'd
efforts.
ng us m~ e I e o 1 ay season
·. The c. c. Caldwell Trucking Co. ~u~~ter expenence for those less f?~·
also provided all transportation ser· · n e. Man~ .children, semor Cltl·
vices required for the movement of zens and fam•hes wdl benefit from
food supplies to and from the plant. the efforts of Rockwell employees
Johnson's Supermarket has donal- and other local businesses:" .
ed a building on the 111 pper 700 block
Rockwell em~loy~es will enjoy a
of First Avenue behind Johnson's two-hour early diSmissal from work
Sup.etmarket to the Key Club to on Dec. 22 for reaching the compa·
house food and toys for distribution ··"¥goal of$(0,000 to ~uppon lhe Key
to the community. ToyTown was Club project. Approximately 24,000
open Friday and Saturday.
p~unds. of food was purchased w1th
The GalliaAcademy High School · the money.
Key Club helped Rockwell employ-

. Freed from Spain

·. Nominations acce·pted
for LAA representatives

In 1821. Simon Bolivar freed
Venezuela from Spanish rule. The
. campaign Jed to widesprea&lt;j inde.Pendence in South America.
·

GALLIPOLIS - The GalliaA farmer is eligible to be a coun·
Lawrence Area Committee election ' ty FSA coml]littee member if the
will be , held · this year for Local farmer lives in the LAA and is an eli·
Administrative Area (LAA,) No. 1 gible voter. County FSA comminee
members may not hold positions in
and No.2.
certain
farm and commodity .orgarii·· .
LAA I is made up of Cheshire, .
Addison, Gallipolis, Clay; Ohio and zations, if these positions pose a conGuyan townships, and is currently flict of interest with FSA duties.
These positions include function·
represented by Paul Butler. LAA 2 is
made up of Morgan, Springfield, al offices such as president, vice pres·
Green and Harrison townships, and is ident, secretary and positions on
currently represented by Tom Wood· boards or executive committees.
Additional infonnation of eligibility
ward.
Eligible voters have the right to to hold office may be obtained at th~
- nominate candidates of !heir choice county FSA.office.
.
on form FSA-669A. Blank FSA·
The duties of lhe county FSA
669As may be obtained at the coun- committee include:
. ty FSA office. Each FSA-669A sub•lnforniing farmers of tbe purpose
·:'mitted must be:
and provisions of lhe PSi\ programs.
•• • Limited to one nominee.
• Keeping the state FSA commit·
' • Signed by the preparer, if coin· tee·infonned of LAA conditions. '
pleted
other lhan the ' • Recommending needed changes
. by someone
.
nomanee.
in farm programs.
• Signed by the nominee, indicat•l&gt;articipatiqg in county meetings
, lng willingness to serve, if elected. as necessary.
&gt; • Postmarked or delivered to the . • Performing o.ther ·duties as
:'County FSA office no later than Jim. · assigned by the state FSAcommittee.
' ~I.
.
For more infonnation, contact the ..
·, · Persons nominated should be cur· Gallia-Lawrence County FSA office 1
rently engaged in lhe operation of a at Ill Jackson Pike, Room 1571,
· fann or canch and be well-qualified Gallipulis, Ohio 45631, or call 1-800·
for comminee work.
391·6638 or 446-8687.
r

By JENNIFER L BYRNES
'lowed by a messqe from the OSU 446-7007 and meet at the office at 6
GALLIPOLIS -The South Dis· ,Animal ScieiiCC Department about its a.m.
. OffiIce ·IS p1anntng
· a ,goals and vt' ••t'on. At 6·. 30 p.m., all of
Palldde recerilflredaa is schedtn.ct EXtens10n
professional cattlemen's seminar on .the speakers will split up into differ- uled for Jan. 26 in Jackson County
"Feeding the Brood Cow" on Friday, ent areas, and the ,participants may from 9 a.m.·noon and 6:3().9:30 p.m.
Feb. 4 and Saturday, Feb. 5 at Lewis ,visit each station in small groups for at the South District Exten&gt;ion
Family Restaurant in Jackson.
one-on-one time with the instructors. Office, and then again, in Gallia
The purpose of the seminar is to
On Saturday, the seminar will County on Feb. I at the C.H. McKen·
'd
·
1
d
wrap
up w1'th Dr. Fnme• 1·s Fluharty', zie Agricultural Center, at the siune
provt e cornmercta .an purebred
beef producers with intense lnlining Dr. Tom Thrner anc!'JeffFisher, all of times as listed above. You are only
in beef cattle nutrition. The focus of OSU Extension, with apresentation · required to attend if your private
·nclud•'ng calf applicator's
·
license expires in March
the meetings
WI·11 be on •--•·
•=umg the . on early wean 1'n•,
e 1
2000
brood cow and managing feed requirements, bunk management and
·
•
resources.
early weaning diets.
Pepper p~ueers should mark
The agenda offers an impressive t.. . At 10 a.m., Extension educators their calendars for Wednesday. Feb.
list of speakers and a variety of top- oo Vollbom, Dave Samples, John 2 for the annual pepper marketing .
· Reg1stra110n
·
· Will
· begin at 8 a.m. Gn'mes and Chn·s Pen·rose w1''11 d1·5• Th
meeting with {:herokee Products. ·
ICS.
on Feb. 4 and John Surber, nutrition· cuss grass and alternative forages,
e meeting will begin at 7:30p.m.
ist and president of Premier Feeds, including stockPiling fescue, forage at the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
· will kick off the seminar with a dis· · rye, summer forages ana use of bras· Center. ·
·
d
·
sicas.
·
•
Pesticide
disposal:
Start gather·
·
CUSSIOR es1gned tO help US uncjer·
·
The
sem1'nar
w1'll
conclude
a'ter
mg
your
unwanted
pesticides
for pick
stand more about the digestive sys"
A ·r 5 · · ·
tern of a cow.
lunch on Saturc!ay. The registration up on pn m Gallia County. The
OSU Animal Science Professor deadline is Jan. 28, and the cost is $75 location will be announced at a later
Steve Loerc h WI'II'•O 11 Olf' w1t· h a dis· . per person, wh1'ch ·,·ncludes· two date.
h The
h program is coordinated
·
·
'
b
·
'
lunches,
a
d•'nn·
e
r
and
a
cont
nental
t
roug
1
A · 1 the Ohio Department of
cuss1on a out wmter ·~inl strate·
. wh'•c h WI'II me
. lude stages of pro- . breakfast, t'n add•'tt'on to educational · gncu
g•es,
9 lure, and was last conducted
·
d
fib
·1
·
·
rnater•·als.
'".I
96. This year, however,
there is ·
ductwn an 1 er uu 1zauon, altema·
·
·
'
For
·more
n'orma
·
n,
call
the
no
chance
that
the
collection
site
will
·
·
·
1
11
0
t1 ve feedstuffs, management of crop
•·
residues, and use of byproduct feeds. OSU Extension Office at 446-7007, be moved to another county. Look for
· · ed on or Dave Mang1'one at the d•'str,·ct .. more information in the coming .
Loca I educators WI'II be JOin
months.
the program by Purdue University office at 740-286·21 77..
Extension Beef Specialist Kern Hen.
Aa news.
drix, who will present information on
The Ohio Power Show is sched·
· nutrition management and cow con· uled for Jan. 28-30 at the Ohio Expo
dition. Dr. Jack Cline is a familiar Center in Columbus . . Displays
name to Galli a County. anc! as a include agricultural, construction and
. retired OSU professor of.animal sci- outdoor power equipment in four
Electronic Filing.
ences, he will share his knowledge on buildings. A limited number of free
I
minera.l Supplementation and utiliza· tickets are available at the Extension
tion. Steve Boyles, Extension beef Office.
Get It free Wwe prepare
specialist, wilf follow Cline's pre·
.'J'he Tobacco Expo is scheduled your return. Bank products
sentation with irifonnation.about vit. fonhis coining Wednesday in Lex·
amin ~ and other supplements.
inglon, Ky. Several Gallia Coui!IY
excluded. Participating
On Friday evening, participants tobac:co producers will be carpooling.
locations only. ·
will enjoy a prime rib dinner, fol- 'If you would like to join the carp01,&gt;l,
. cllll the OSU Extension Office at . Offer expires 4-17-00.
ROCK SPRINGS- ShopKo Stores Inc. reponed total retail sales for the
fi~e weeks ~nded on Jan. I increased 37.5 percent to $523 million to $380.4
m1lllon durmg the same period last year.
· ·
Included in the results are $25.7 million in sales from 13 new stores which
opened this year, and $101.1 million from the Pamida stores, which Shop·
Ko acquired in July 1999. .
··
ShopKo retail comparable store sales generated a 4.3 percent increase over
a.4.6 percent mcrease for the same period last year. ·
.
. For the combi~ed inonths of November and December, consolidated sales '
mcreased 37.6 percent to ,$831.6 million from $604.5 million for the same
period last year, and retail comparable store sales increased 3.2 percent over
·
a 4.0 percent increase for the same period last year.

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Taft expected to urge
in.ereased spending for
Appalachian.counties,

FIRST BABY OF 2000

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you need to hit The Trail.
·FREEZING over a putt isn't ju~t an expression, Unless you head

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Of .1,000 from

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CAMPAIGN 2000 FILINGSJ
.Thornton eyes
r.eturn to seat

ber of COmmerce,
"I'm also very proud: of my
reCord on taxes. I voted 'no' on a
permit fee, a permissive tax, and a
~CINE ~ Democratic Com- sales tax and as long as I'm your
fllisaioncr.Jeffrey Thornton is seek, commissioner, I will, continue to
ing reelection to the county commis- vote 'no: on any new tax!" he said. ·
1 Scicdons. 10 ..... .
·' sion seal expiring Jan. 2, 2001.
Thornton said he baa worked for
·
"Since
veterans, senior citizens and youth
be~cimina your. by giving more than $700,090 to .
co111mission~f I · local. schools for after-sc:hool tutor·
7-8
ClusJI!M•
.three ye~ ago, ing, writing gr~nts for recrellion·
9· ,,
COFtg
over $56 'l"illion· projects, new fire truckS and equip4
been ment. and a grant to market local
'have
Ed"mi"'
3.
awarded to help artisans. .
.
, OlplbadM
I'!leigs ·Coun"I've also acted quicl&lt;ly to help ··
5. §.10
. tiaris,? Thomtpn our county. farmers with·disaster aid
3 '
Wgtber
"I have of over $2 million in cash and low·
' '
worked ·as a full- · Interest ' loans, as well u workina
'ThomliOn
time commis· cloiely with all viii"'CC and town.
· ,
sioner every day . ahlps witll .~t money."
h61pins people and ll'avelina outside
ThQfllton 11 the son of Florence.
r-teita County to learn .about new Thornton of Letart Falls and the
prosrarns that will bring money into nephew ·of Bob ,ape! Hue! Roy of
,. the county."
. Racine. He is the llf&amp;lldson of Addie
· ' Thornton aaid one. of his main· · ~· Cummint and.the IIIIC Floyd
:priorities has been tO f'I'OnlOte ·eco- · "Buster" Cummins.
, ' · ·
napmc development and job lrlinln&amp; · "I pew up an •' farm railed by
tor county realdcnti in cooperation . my family. I lumed .to wortc hard,
with ihe Department of Human Ser"'
·
vices and the Meip County Olam·
Pl....... Flll!'lp, P8tlt Aa ,

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AIHrlcan Legion Poat of'J'uttan!l•Show~:~ a..., trom left, I!~ Flt\k of ..a RutBrian Whaeler, Joe llfown, Matt $m(ilcitl,
'
.and ~nii,.·McKlnllt!V of th• Rut}

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Good
Afternoon!

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In addition, floods have ravaged 27 or' Otiio.'s 29
Appalachian counties in the past two years. .
· "In tb'esc times of prosperity, Appalachia is sinkin&amp;o"
Padgett said. "We are at a time of greatest need." .
· Nine Appalachian · counties are in what the federal
government describes as severe economic distress, with
unemployment rates higher than 8.5 percent and.averaae
~r-capita income&amp; lawer than $12,935. At least 19 per·
cent of residents live in poverty in Adams, Athens, Galli a, Meigs, Monrqe, Morgan, Pike, Scioto and Vinton
counties.
·
Nineteen other counties struggle to fend off econom·
ic distrCSI!. ·Only ,aerrnont County is considered eco·
nomically healthy.
However, 'Padgett thinks momentum is building to
help Aptjalachia, especially in the governor's office.
"There's so much work to be done," Padgett said.
"We need something more aaareasive."
Taft's speech also is expected to call on cleaning up
abandoned industrial sites in Ohio cities, helping urban
centers pay for a bigger share of pavins state routes and
a summjl of education experts to help Ohio improve its
reading curriculum.

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for the sunny South and the heralded Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail. The word has gotten around in Cold Co!inuy that the .
beautiful courses,
the nice weather
and the low rates in
'
.
Alabama are nothing 'to sneeze at. And while we can't
'·
guarjlntee the weather, w~ .can promise you great golf.
Call 1-800·949-4444 for fnformation about our 3~aay/
'
2-night golf
and
hotel
packages
as
low
as
·
$
162.
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.

ATLANTA (Ati) - The Rev. · ,
"There is no better lltay to hotwr Dr. King
Martin Luth~r King !.r.'s \vidow
than to spend Mo~y giving back
wants All)encans to . connect to
· ·
•
• • •· h..·
"
the divine" and hono'r her bus·
. , • to our communrties In IS memory.
'band's legacy by serving others.
·
N.H. GOv. Jeerine Sh...Hn
Corella Scott King said Sunday
. that the slain civil rights leader's planned, including blOod drives, legacy.'ln Washington, D.C., vol·
·
for the country comes closer neighborh09(i cleanups and Habitat unteers plan to renovaie the Martin .
,to reality each time someone helps f'!r Humaniiy bouse-building pto· Luther King Homeless Shelter.
.another
person.
The laigest citywide service
j'ects .
'~::1~~~
~r Allen Roa, ,eon of ctie* a~ Mlety Roa, Ia ih~ wlnnar of tile
''i
conteat ~ by local men:han18 and Tha !)elly Sentinel.
. •
"The greatness of a community
In New Hampshire, ·Gov. Jeanne project is planned in Philadelphia,
•, 'f'&lt;
~·
. is most accurately measured by the · Shaheen lias asked residents to eel· · where more than 18,000 volunteers
Compassionate actions of ill. mem· ebrate the state's first day honoring are expected to join in . projects
beis," Mrs. King, 72, told a service King by giving something back to including plariling trees, painting
summit at Georgia State University their oommunities. .
schools, clearing out abandoned
,. . .
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houses and sorting groceries · at
in
Atlanta.
·
·
.
After
20
ye,
a
rs
of
debate,
the
,
.
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· ·~qm 'S,_ff Reporta · .
·
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As winner of the contest. Tyler •nd ,his parents will To serve, she said, quoting h•r New Hampshire Legislature last food banks.
husband,
all
one
needs
is
"a
heart
year
added
'King's
name
to
the
\,
The
federal
King
holiday,
which
. :'1-.POMflROY -· Tyler Allen Ross, bo~n at 1:4'7 p:m. • · .~ive a variely of gif\5 provided by the participiting
of grace and a soul generated by state's Civil Rights holiday. Sha· fresident Reagan signed Into law
Fnday, Jan. 7, 2000, at Hol~r Medical Center to , merchants. .
· ·
·
hten signed the legislation in June. '" 1983, has widely become known
· Chester'Allen and ~isty-Jean Ross of'Pomeroy, is the
· They include a free meal to tti~ parents at Crow's love.''.
The
summit
at
.Georgia
State
"There is no better way to honor as a day of volunteerism and com, ~~inner~ MeiS;S County's "First Baby of 2000'~ contest. Family ' Restaurant, a S50· saving bond from Farmers
, The contest,Is spo~red by.Pomeroy and Mu:ldlcpoi1 Bank, a $10. gift certificate from Swisher· Lohse Phar· 1 University and services at Kina's 'or. King than to spend Monday munity service.
"The concept here is that ser·
~erchan~ ":"d The D~1ly Sentmel.
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maoy, a baby picture frame from Clark's Jewelry, a $50 church, Ebenezer Baptist, were th~ giving back to our co.mmunities in
focal
point
of
Atlanta's
King
holihis·memory.
He
encouraged
us
to
·
vice
to others is a way to connect to
• . TJie.ongmal deadline of J~n. 7 for entenng tile con· . savings bond ·from City National Bank, a three-piece
day
observances
Sunday.
King
work
together
to
build
better,
the
divine,"
Mrs. King ~~&amp;id Sun·
test :-was· extended to noon Fnday when no entnes were feeder .fiom K&amp;C Jewelers, and 8 $20 gift certificate
would have turned 71 on Saturday. stronger ~ more united. comm11·, day. She urged the service summit
rece1ved.
£r F h Ph ·
·
To mark the federal holiday ·nities and he' shOwed us that we can audience to fight against racism,
i:· The infant weighed 6 pounds and 14 ounce~. Mr. and
om . rut ~macy,
. .
.
Mrs.
Ross.
have
another
son,
Dalton,
21
.
months,
and
.
Pr1ze~
also
•~elude
a
case
of
Pam~rs
from
Food!
and,
honoring
King. today, Vice Presi·· make a difference," Shah~en . said . sexism, homophobia, diac:rimina·
1
· Mrs. Ross' has a.daughter, Toai~ Richm~md, 4. The farn-' a ~25 g1ft ce.rt•fi.cate from Vaughan.~. ~permarket;. a dent AI Gore was scheduled to A Community leaders in New tion and environmental destruction
· j[y resjdes on Mulberry Avenue.
,.
·
sllU~Iess steel 'trruner.c~p from ~cq~JSltl~i. a $20 g~ft speak at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Orleans plan to announce a new with "a healing and&lt;·hopeful
; : Paternal grandparents are Joyce and aarence Weddle ce~1fieate froll! Po~~~~ s, a Baby s·f'•rst Btble f~m Mill and Gov.. Roy Barnes and Atlanta gun buyback 'prosram. In Boston, heart."
"History is calling for this gen·
Of P01:tland, and great-grandparents are Clarence .and Street BOoks, a $5 g1ft certificate from the Fabnc Shop,. Mayor Bill Campbell plan to lead a volunteers plan to clean up trash
eration
to put right the .injustices of
march
in
King's
honor.
·
near
Northeastern
University
and
Gladys Weddle, also of Ponlarld. Mateinal grandparents a $1_5 gift certificate from The Shoe Place, $25 worth of
this
nation
and this world," she
Meanwhile, around the country,: hold an educational fair to. teach
are Kathy 'lll'd Jerry Stri.ckland ~ Miildle'porl ·and the baby fotmula from. Kroger&amp;, and a baby arrangement
several service activities are youngsten 1\b;u,t King's life · and said.
great-grandmother is Dori.s ~ayn•, .!also::&gt;! Middleport. .. frOin Fr\"'cis FIO.rist. . ·
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· ~6ss.· ·baby·takes.First ~~aby ·hpnors

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COLUMBUS (AP) - · Gov. Bob Taft is exPected. to·
· ask the Legislature to more thari double the amount (t
spends on public works projects targeted for Appalachi·
an counties.
In his State of the State speech Wednesday, Taft will
ask for $9 million for the Governor's Office of
Appalachia, TheColumbus Dispatch reported Sunday.
The office receives $4.4 million under the current state
· budget.
The office combines the state money with Qhio's
·allocation from the Appalachian .Regional Commission,
. a federal agency created in 1965 to help West Virginia
and parts of 12 othel states t~at make up Apflalachia.
In fiscal 1999, the $4.7 million Ohio received from
ihe commission was used to obtain $16.4 million in
local, state, federal and private .matching funds.
Director Joy Padgett noted that while businesses in
other parts of Ohio have found it tough tO find workers,
Appalachian counties are losing jobs that were scarce to
begin with.
During the past few months, I ,500 jobs have been
lost in Lawrence County and 450 have disappeared in
Hockin&amp; County. By 2002, 800 mini'ng jobs in Meigs
and surrounding counties will be go~e.

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King's widow says serv'ice to others
way
to·
honor·slain
ciyiJ
rights
leader
,.
.
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'

tt &amp; ...~.. '

'

Single Copy· 35 Cents

REMEMBERING KING

...
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•

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•.. .a.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume SO, Number 155

"1!000 H&amp;R Block Till Service Inc. '

If this is who you call when ·you ·need a fourth •••
..
•

;.·e-retailers l·osing ·favor
~ .with investment crowd

'

Hometown Newspaper

CORNER 2ND &amp; SYCAMORE
GALUPOUS, OHIO
448-0303
MON·FRI9 AM-6 PM
SAT9AM-5PM

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Meigs County's

c:&gt;

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ShopKo notes ·s,.. ales hike .

-PageA5

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Rapid Refund

1

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:,BY RACttEL BECK
: AP Bualne.. Writer
• ' NEW YORK - Wall Street is sounding a loud cry to •·retailers: Show ·
·,us the money! .
' . Investors seem to be losing patience with online companies like Aina·
; ~on.com and eToys that. have no immediate. prospects ·of turning a profit.
:· ln.ternet. retailing stocks have been in a free fall recently, and analysis .are
steenng clients away from such investments until there are signs .that these
cdmpanies are reducing their losses.
, ._ That's a big change from earlier this year, when it seemed lhe stock mar·
• ket couldn't get enough of the money-losing cybershops. .
. ·
.
•. Amazon.com 's st.ock is down more than 40 percent from its ·high of$113 •
; m early December, m part because of its announcement earlier this month
that it.would post a bigger fourth-quarter loss than expected.
·
, ;. Value America, an online department store, spent heavily on advertising
• fast &gt;:ear liut ~ontinued to bleed money and decided in late December to chop
.· 'half Its 600 JObs. and cut back. substantially on its prOduct line. Its shares,
..which peaked at about $50 in April, now sell for about $5. ·
; . Many other stocks, including eToys, music retailer CDnow and software
".rperchant Beyond.com, hare lost more than 60 percent of their value in recent
:tnonths.
:·•. ."People are starting to.look at these online retailers a lot more crit.ically,
: ttymg to assess whether their business models will really ever work," said
· 1ohn Sviokla of Diamond Technology Partners, a Chicago-based consulting ,'
firm.
·
' ~-~iJin_g StOCkS began SOari~g lifter a SUrprisi~gly Strong holiday sea·
; son I" 1998, when it became clear that people were interested in buying on
..'the Web.
·
' ·_" F~mos! of 1999, investors ignored the fact thatthese ·companies weren't
~ making a d1me. They believed it was a critical .for tbese companies to spend
'heavily to ~uild their busi.nesses.
'
"· · ~ventually, investors hoped, profits would come. :
.
We went crazy last year as we watched the mouse-and-click world take
:. '.off," said Alfred E. Goldman, chiefmarketstrategist at A. G. Edwards &amp; Sons
inc. in St. Louis. "If there was a dot-com in its name, people wanted to get
1
m on It, regardless of what the balance sheet looked like."
.

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High·flyin 'Rams
.bounce Vikings

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