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•
Page 12 • The Dally Seritlnel

\

states

Weather
TOdiY: Cloudy
High: SO.; Low:40a
Tomorrow: Mild

High: eoa; .Low:40a
. . ·

Thursday

ports

January 21, 1M

'Akron beats Ohio University, Page 4
Mind your own business? Page 8 Southern school activity, Page 7 · ·

Kentucky
defe$ts #1
ranked Aubum
-Page4

•

'

a1

Meigs Col!llty's · . Hometown Newspaper·
Volume ·19. NumiH'r 1llO

Middle po r t • Pomero y. Ohto

Singl e Copy - 35 Cents

;.President's defense wrapping up opening presentation
By LARRY MARGASAK
:Aeaoclatecl PreM Wrlt.lr

POTATO
CHIPS

By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- The Supreme
Court left intact California's threestrikes law, the nation's toughest on
repeat.offenders, even though four of

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FRESH HEAD
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" In thi s particular case. the sentence wa~ , not cruel and unusual pun-

' I

...

I •

!

t . ...,

Good Afternoon

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OPTIMUM
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Today's Sentinel
2 Sections • 12 Pai!es

.-

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Lotteries
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9

Ishment, state Deputy Attorney ·
~
# General Cratg Nelson said in a tele·,
phone interview from his San Diego
.
offi ce. " But if the justices were IASST'l
t4.25-15.2.5
inclined to believe il might have
.
OZ,
been, they were right to let it perco(LJMIT12 PLEASE ADD PUI~CH 21~)
late in the lower courts."

•

hd.

SHEDD'S SPilEID

But Stevens said other courts
should determine 'whether California's law yie ld s se nlcnces that are so
."gross ly di sproportiona te" as to be

. fie Previously had been convicted
e•ght ·ttmes - Journonviolentcrimes
and four robberies.

.

Lettuce•••••~•.•••••••••

(ASST

. '

25.5 • 26.5

•

tence."

socks.

. (PLAIN OR SELF RISING)

169
S'a,dsage ''tialti·:~.89 c DEL MONTE
,

Another exception is Georgia,
whi ch· has sentenced nearly 2,000
people under its three-strikes law.
Washington state was the first to'
enact such a law, in 1993, an\1 has
used it to imprison about 120 people
· for life without chance of parole.
Ju stice Joh n Paul Stevens, writing
for him self and Justices David H.
Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, noted that California " appears to he the
onl y state in which a misdemeanor
could receive suc h a severe sen-

"It is prudent ... for this court to
- awai t review by other courts," he
satd.
Riggs was convi cted of shoplifting
a boule of vitamins· from an Alberston's Store in Banning. Calif., in
1995 . When arrested. he had a hypodernuc sy nnge hidden in one of hi s

89!.

·

California has been the major
exception. The state has used its 1'994
law to put away more than 40,000
peop lr: for second and third strikes a quarter of the state's prison population. About 4,4QO of them were sentenc~d to 25 years to life.

unconst itu ti onal .

GOLD
MEDAL
FLOUR

. . ~~....
' . $149.
·squa'...es ..•..•••.

court;

that deepens by the .day."
During Clinton's defense before senators Wednesday,
Deputy White House Counsel Cheryl Mills argued that
House managers ignored testimony from Mrs. Currie in
order .to falsely accuse the president of trying to obStruct
the Paula Jones sexual harassment lawsuit against the
president.
The defense lawyer cited Mrs. Currie's testimony that
Clinton never asked her to pick up gifts from Ms.
Lewinsky after the presents were subpoenaed by the
Jones lawyers. Mrs. Currie testified it was Ms. Lewinsky
who asked her to retrieve the gifts.
·
FuJthermore, Ms. Mills said the prosecutors ignored
Mrs. Currie'~ testimony that Clinton was not trying to
pressure his secretary when he questioned her about her
recollection of his actions with M.s. Lewinsky.
"It's those facts, those stubborn facts ,that just don't
fit," Ms. Mills said.
.
While contesting the details of !he prosecutors' case,
the lawyer asked senators to retain "the big picture."
"The president had a relationship with a young
.woman. His conduct was inappropriate, but it was not
obstruction of justice. During the course of their relationship, the president and the young woman pledged
not to talk about it with others. That is not obstruction of

Strickland to serve
on energy and
health committees

2/$

the · nm e justices voiced concerns

Tuesday about its constitutionality.
· The justices rejected the appeal of
a ~an sentenced to 25 years to life in
pnson after he stole a bottle of vitamins from a supermarket; a,crime one
California court called "a petly theft
motivated by homelessness and
hunger."
.
Nine-time loser Michael Riggs, in ·
ail appeal be wrote himself, had
attacked the three-strikes law as cruel arid unusual pu nishment.
In ot her matters Tuesday, the
• Let Florida continue using the
electric chair as the sole means of
imposing· the death penalty, rejecting
a condem ned man 's contention that
electrocution is a &lt;:ruel and outmod·ed method of capital punishment.
• Rejected a bid by the nation's
biggest ,local phone companies to
ease their way into the $90 billion ·
long-distance market. Three of the
five regional Bell telephone companoes had chall enged the special hurdle~ Congress placed. in the way of
thCir offermg long-distance service.
In the Ca lifornia three-strikes
. case, only Ju stice Stephen G. Breyer
vot~d to hear Riggs ' appeal. Four ·
votes are needed to grant suc h full
,review. Three other j usti ces, however, ~a id his case raised "obviously
substantial " issues that first should be
considered by lower courts.
Abo ut half the states adopted
three-strikes earli er this decade but
those laws generally have not bee n
invoked often.

. . WASWNOTON (AP) - Concluding the first phase
of.Pt'esident Clinton's impeachment trial, his lawyers are
U!Jiing senators to reject allegations of legal wrongdoing
and focus on "the big picture"- an attempt by a married m.an to hide an extnimarital affair. ·
&lt; For their thiril and final day of oral presentations to
rebut perj!lf)' .and obstruction ·of justice cltarges, the
Clinton .team is combining the methodical arguments of
' .private liwyer David Kendall with the oratory· of Dale
Bumpers. Bumpers, a fanner Democratic senator from
Arkansas and longtime friend of Ointon, is known as a
gifted pliblic speaker.
. Once Bumpers finishes, senators who have been
forced under trial rules to sit in uncharacteristic silence
will have another unfamiliac task - submitting q~estions in writing to Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who
as-presiding officer will read them and ask the lawyers
and House prosecutors to respond.
-The question period may be the phase ofthe trial conducted in a bipartisan spirit. Subsequent motions to dismiss the case and c;all witnesses such as former White
House inte.m Monica Lewinsky likely will break down
largely along pany lines.

RepUblicans have said they oppose dismissal and dismiss this impeachment hearing and get on with somesupport the need for limited live testimony from key witelse," he said on " The 700 Club" broadcast.
n~s such as Ms. Lewin·
Butmpe:n was chosen to make the argument that the
sky, Clinton friend Vernon
House case was a
Jordan and presidential sec" partisan rush to .
retary Betty Currie - and
judgme11t"
that .
doesn't meet with
should get their way with a
the "higher duty the
55-45 majority,
Senate has always
With a, two-thirds majorhad," an adviser to
ity needed to make Clinton
the first president evicted
the White . House
said
Wednesday.
from his job, Democrats
Bumpers,
who
hold the votes for ~cquittal
retired this year after
and show no 'signs of backing a move to remove him
24 years in the Senate, also was chosen
from office.
'· Rej,ublicans know the trial is unpopular 'with Ameri· because he ~an talk ex-senator to senator, the -adviser
.
.
.cans. Clinton's job a[iproval ratings rose after his State said.
Clinton's
predecessor,
George
Bush,
in town to
of the Union address Tuesdlly night, ranging from 66
percent in an ABC poll to 72 percent in a CBS survey to attend a Senate lecture series sponsoted by Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lot!, R-Miss., declined a chance
76 percent for NBC.
·
·
·
One well-known conservative Republican, evangelist to discuss the impeachment trial. But speaking in the
and broadcaster Pat Robertson, sai~ Clinton pulled off Old Senate Chamber Wednesday evening, the former
such a public relations coup in the address that there is Republican president lamented that today in Washingno chance he will he convicted. "They might as well ton, "we are confronted with ·a deficit of decency- one

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Commentary

Thuraday, January 21,1999
•

I Death.Notices

..... AI

Thuredar• ...,Lin

rl1. t...

The Daily Sentinel State of.Ciinton's presidency: -weak
cut taxes and let Individuals make their way in the
More than anything, Presiworld aa best they can. .
dent Clinton's State of the
Bill Galslon, a University of Muyland profea· ·
Union address is a poignant
sor and former Ointon domestic adviacr, aucrta
reminder of what an awful
that Clinton's defeat of this brand of conacrvaliam .
waste this presidency has
in HillS has led the Republican Party to moderate
become.
. its aims.
The progress the nation has
The GOP front-runner for 2000, Texas Gov.
m~ economically and socially
Geor~e W. Bush, advocaiea "compassionate con·
since Clinton took office only
'servative" policies that Golston labels "CiiniOI\·
lite."
·
·
serves to dramatize how little
probably will get done during the I'CIJ!ainder of his
Thanks to Clinton, Golston bets the country
term.
,
will look to aovernment to fix continuina .,robHe and some of his advisers .think he has lems ·such as the increasing ·percentagea of citi·
achieved a historic legacy · ' shaving government zens lacking health insurance and private pento save it -- but no one can forget how his legacy sions. ·
is so permanently soiled.
Galston and Bser's evaluation of Ointon's
There probably never was a chance that Ciin- legacy is disputed, of course. Historian' Michsel
ton could be classed as a "great" president by his- Besch loss thinks his position is much more analtorians -· that designation requires overcoming ogous to that of Dwight Eisenhower than Franklin
some huge challenge •• but now he'll be lucky to D. Roosevelt - aa the Democrat who accepted the .
rate more than ''below average."
Reagan revolution the way Eisenhower did the
In fact, last week's devastating exposition of New Deal.
the obstruction of justice case
against Clinton by Rep. Asa
Hutchinson, R-Ark., even makes it
thinkable for the first time that Clinton might be forced out of office.
That eventuality - stili unlikely - would render Clinton a "failure"
along with Ulysses S. Grant, Warren
THIS MY
G. Harding and Richard Nixon.
IMPEACHAlEHT
The tawdry reality of Clinton's
lying under oath and witness-coachWHXJ"ISTHE
ing is such a far cry from Clinton's .
achievements and bright hopes -which· some advisers haven't given
up on yet -, that the whole adds up to
a m\15Sive tragedy.
Some advisers bravely assert that;
· in spite of scandal, Clinton stili
should be judged "near-great."
Echoing a claim that Clinton has
made for . himself, former White
House .communications director Don
Baer says Clinton "saved government from its excesses the way FOR
saved capitalism from its," preventing it from being discredited with the
public and dismantled by Republi·
By Morlan Kondracke

'E.stu&amp;Maln 1948
111 Court St., PorMroy, Ohio

740.1102-215.8 • Fu: 1102·2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlshsr
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Oeneral M1neger

DIANE HILL
Controller

·

,.. Sentinel a:M::MtM .....,. to lfN ed/tot from I'NCI!frli on • bf'oMi,.,. ot topIce. llholl (3(10 tw ,...) h•vo lho ,_, chof- of to.lng publioh«&lt;.
ptelwrod- . , ...,. "- odllod. &amp;oh ohould lnoludo • • ,...,,.,
- .·•IHI
numbot. BPHHI' • flat• If thoro'o • ,.,.,.,., to • ,..
WOIMI atfiGie or,.,., ll.tU let: Uft.,.. ro liNt .nror, nr. Sentinel, 111 Coutt sr.,

!)pod-.,.
Ayl-,.,.,.

POINIO)j Olllo 411fll;

or, FAX lo 1ofQ41241U.

..

·:Are there crocodiles
Jn the Amazon?
. ·By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bu ..n_ An1Jyat

IS

J

•

••
W. VA.
· KY.

C 1Q99AccuWeather, tnc.

&lt;.'Ita••- ~-~

Sumy Pt. Cioul!y Cloudy

•'

FIRST

Almost continuous min is predicted for Ohio into the weekend. ·
With rivers and streams already running, high and with some snowpack
still left in northern Ohio, the National Weather Service said there is a
chance of flooding in parts of tlie state by Saturday.
Temperatures will continue to be mild through the period, forecasters
said.
Highs on Friday will range from the low 50s to low 60s.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather station Walj,-72 degrees in 19Qfi'.while the rCC9rd low was 16 below zero in
1985. Silnset.to_night will be at 5:37p.m. 81\!! sunrise Friday at 7:48a.m.
· . ·
' Weather forecast: ·
,
Tonight::..Cioudy with rain.at times. Lows-in t~e upper 40s. Southeast
wind around 10 mph. ChaQCe Of rain 80 percent. · .
Friday...Miid and becoming windy late, especially M hilltops. Clouds
and occasional sun with the chance for a shower. Highs 60 to 65. Chance
of rain 40 percent.
Friday night ...Showers and thunderstorms likely. Windy. Lows from
the upper .40s to the lower 50s.
.Extended forecast:
: Saturday...Showers .and thunderstorm~ in the morning, then .variable
cloudiness. Windy with highs in the mid .50s.
.
Sunday... A chance of showers during the day, otherwise partly cloudy.
lows in the upper 30s and highs in the mid 40s. ·
Monday...Partly cloudy. Lows !rom the upper 205 to the lower 30s and
highs in the lower and mid 50s.
•
,
.
&lt;

•

.rendum petitions have
enough signatures for ~ay ballot

State wants to know how many .
foreign students getting free ride

Beryl Wilson, 74, Williamstown, W.Va., died Thesday, Jan. 19, 1999 at
Heartland of Marietta.
•
· He was born Sept. 2, 1924 in St. Mary's, W.Va., a·son of the late George
and Loye Oliver Wilson. He was a 1942 gmduate of St. Mary's High School,
a member of the Little United Methodist Church, Little, W.Va., and a member o'f the Phoenix Lodge 73 AF &amp; AM, Sistersville, W.Va.
He was retired as Tyler County road superintendent with the West Virginia Department of Highways and worked for Sollitt Construction Co.,
South Bend, Ind., Union Boiler and American Electric Power. He was a
charter member of the Carpenter's Local 2023 in St. Mary's.
He is surviv~ by his wife of 52 years, Virginia Hart Wilson; three sons
and two daughters-in-law, Beryl and Linda Wiloon of Reedsville, Gerald
Wilsiln of Williamstown, and Michael and Mary Ann Wilson of Yulee, Fla.;
eight grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; three brothers, J.C. Wilson of New Cumberland, W.Va., Harold E. Wilson of Belmont, W.Va., and
Donald R. Wilson of St. Mary's; one siste,r, Freda Wilson of St. Mary's; and
several nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by three brothers, Carl Wilson, George
Wilson and Denzil Wilson.
Services will be 2 p.m. Frida in the Ruttencutter Funeral Home, St.
Mary's, with the Rev. Bill Williamson officiating. Burial will be in the
Friendly Cemetery, Friendly, W.Va., with Masonic graveside rites. Friends
may call today from 2-9 p.m., and Friday from 9 a.m. to.2 p.m. at the funeral home.
·

' TOLEDO (AP) -. The agency that $74 mill ion of that amount. going 'i o
oversees Ohio's universities wants to foreign students.
·
know how many foreign graduate
Sen . Scott Oeislager, R-Canton,
students are a~tending state schools · wrote to Chu critici zing the practice
free of charge.
of subsidizing tuit ion for of foreign
The Ohio Board of Regents wants graduate students.
· ·
the information by early February so
"We have Ohio families borro\)'it can determine whether the benefits ing money, Ohio students 1:\orro:wing
of handing out free tuition outwiegh money to attend school, and yet we
the costs, said Richard Petrick, the have foreign students going on a fr~e
board 's vice chancellor for finance.
ride," Oelslager said. "I just don't
"If it doesn't make sense, perhaps think that's appropriate whatsoever.
we should stop it," Petrick said
"I think there 's a fairness issue
Wednesday.
here."
He stressed that nothing would be
Thomas Noe, a member of the
decided until the survey is complet- board, said ~h e issue is to be dised.
cussed at its next meeting on Feb. 11
Free tuition to foreign students and 12.
has become a key component for
. The purpose of the survey is " to
gmduate ·schools. Most universities find out how wid espread it (free
tie their assistance to specific fellow - tuition) is statewide and decide if
ships, so students get their tuition . something needs to be done about
·paid and receive a stipend so they it, " Noe said.
can work on research or in the classUnder pressure from the regents,
room. .
some universities already have made
At the University of Toledo, many changes in funding, The Blade said.
Last year, the University of
of the 631 foreign gmduate students
who have full or partial tuition sc~ol- Cincinnati began requiring that its
arships aren't required to do more than 1,300 gradu"te scholarresearch, teach classes or write a the- ship recipients pay from 5 to 25 persis.
cent of their $10,359 annual out-ofTuition waivers for foreign gmdu· state tuition. ·
'
ate students cost the university nearToledo President Vik Kapoor said
ly $6 million a. year, The Blade the university 's use of scholarships
reported in December. They cost the for international students was a way
state even more.
to keep its graduate programs strong.
The board.of regeins said that for He said American students have first
fiscal1996, Ohio spent $465 million priority for graduate scholarships at
to subsidize graduate students, with Toledo.

Newspaper files lawsuit
over closed-door meeting ·
LEBANON (AP)- The Cincinnati E~quirer has sued City Council and
the' city manager, claiming that a closed-door session of the council violated
the city charter and the Ohio Open Meetings Act.
The suit, filed Wednesday in Warren County Common Pleas Court, also
alleges that City Manager Richard Hayward refused to give copies of minutes' from the Jan. 12 e/(ecutive session to an Enquirer reporter and told her
no minutes were written.
·
The complaint asks for a 1emporary restraining order, a preliminary
injunction and a· permanent injunction to block the city from conducting
more executive sessions.
The council's decision to meet in executive session and its refusal to provide minutes blocked The Enquirer's right to gather and report news concerning matters of public interest, the lawsuit says.
The city's charter states that "all meetings of Council shall be open to the
public," and does not allow executive sessions, the newspaper said.
.
"I just don't know and haven't heard any justificalion or legitim'ate
excuse for this," said.Jack Greiner, attorney for The Enquirer.
City Attorney Bi)i Duning said the executive session was conducted so
council members COI!ld discuss a pending claim by a retired employee for
payment for compensatory time.

Hospital news
,
Holzer Medical Ceoler
Discharges Jan. 20- Geneive Smith, Mary Taylor.
(Published with permission)

EMS logs 4 ·cans ·

• . COLUMBUS (A,P) - Columbus
City ,Council, which unanimously
~oters will get to vote on whether to approved the· 'benefits ordinance in Units of the Meigs County Emer- possible struciure fire at Denise
ripeal a city ordinance providing health December, wift' have 30 days to decide gency Medical Service recorded Quails residence, Pomeroy· VFD
insuraooe to the unmarried live-in part- whether to repeal it or place it on the four calls for assistance Wednes- assisted.
ners of city workers, unless City Coun- May ballot.
,
day. Units responding included:
RUTLAND
cil decides to do it.
· ·
Councilman, Matt Habash, who
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4:01 p.m., McCumber Road ,
· · Franklin County Board of Elections sponsored'the legislation, said Tuesday
11 a.m., Lincoln Heights, Beulah Collier, Pleasant Valley
Din+~or Barbara Cash said Thesday
he sees ·no rea5pn for the council to Pomeroy, Robert Cummins, Veter- Hospital, Central Dispatch squad
pi:titions calling for a referendum on back down and that he expects to place an~ Memorial Hospital.
assisted;
•
the issue contained more than enough the referendum on the ballot.
MIDDLEPORT
4:39 p.m., state Route 325, Carl
valid signatures of registered voters. .
"I've been clear tha~ to me, .this is
10:16 a.m., volunteer fire Corby, Holzer Medical Center;
• ' She expected to have the eXact fig- , about equal access to health care and I department to South Third Avenue, Central Dispatch squad assisted.
'
ul"es today.
strongly support that," Habash said. "I
. ........ •. ... ........
...•.. .
"We know we have found at least firmly believe that we should be proCOLONY THEATRE
8,400 valid signatures," Cash said. The viding health care 1o all dependents."
TONIGHT
ABUGSUFE 0
petitions neooed 6,760 '? qualify for the Tony's CanyaUI named Lottery
••
b~lot. The group seeking the referenSTARTING FRIDAY JAN 22
Am Ele Power ...............·....... 4&amp;1.
ADAM SANDLER IN
dum !umcd in 10,023 signatures Jan. Retailer of the Week
Akzo ........................................38
Am
rTech
...............................
69'·
WATER
BOY'""
l2.
The Ohio Lottery Commission is
.
.
.
. ..
Ashland
011
.........................
47-,.
recognizing Tony's Carryout of
AT&amp;T .....................................90'1.
Middleport as this week 's Lottery's
Bank One ..............................52~.
Retailer of the Week.
Bob Evans ........................ .... 24~
(USPJ; UJ-960)
The carryout will appear. on the
Borg-Warner .........................51 'l.
· CommuniiJ Newspaper Holdlap, ln.c.
Broughlon ............................... 17
lottery 's television show, Cash
C
htlm pI on .......................... ,....9),
Explosion Double Play, Saturday.
Publi!1hed every afternoon, Monday through
Charm
Shps .......................... .4~.
friday, 111) Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Owners of the business are Beth
City Holding ............................ 28
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Second class
and Donald Stivers and they have
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Federal Mogui ...................... ~.. &amp;S
' Member: The Associated Press and the Ohio
been lottery agents since August, Gannett .................................66),
Newap~per Msoc:iat ion.
Goodyear ........................ .....48,.
1994. '"The people of this town
l'oltmuter: Sud address co"ettions to The
Kmart .. :................................15"1•
-Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
made us a winner so I owe them
Kroger ........................ :.........56"1.
' 45769.
'
thanks," said Beth Stivers. "Be as · Lands
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Once a week, Tony's Carryour One Valley:~ .............................32
Oaily..~.~~~~'f.~~-~~~-~ .•35 CeniA has a second . chance drawing for Peoples ........................... ........25
' ..SubKTiben not desiring to pay the carri er may
"l'CMil in actv~ dlred to'l'hC. Dally Sentinel on
non-wining tickets. Tjckets ,are · Prem Fln1 .............................. .15'·
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the wining ticket drawn is five Sears ................................. .... 41 11
No subscription b7 matl perm1ned Ill areas
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instant lottery tickets.
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Publisher reserves the ri&amp;ht to adjust rat es durThe Carryout is located at 221 First Star ..............................86'·
ina the subscrip1ion period. Sub$CT"ipt ion utc
Wendy's ............................... 22'·
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Mill Street in Middleport .
Uu1111tion o£ the MJbsctiptio.n.
·Each week the Ohio Lo\tcry rec- Worthington .........................13' ·
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
ognizes one retail partner. Selection
Stock reports are the 10:30
Inside Meip County
is based on recommendations by a.m. quotes provided by Advest
13 Wccu ........................... .$27.30
their lottery sales representative and of Gallipolis.
Section
26 WeeD ........ ................... .$5 3.82
the regional sales office staff.'
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32 \YeeU ......... , .. ,,............ JIM.56
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The Daily Sentinel

CE

JANUARYCL. . . . . .

~£11~

French protect Gabon's Bongo

•••• NOW IN PROGRESS ••••

.,.:

Today In History.

•

Aurrlu

By The Associated Press

tetter to the editor

•

Rain

Chance of wet weather· ·
continues into weekend

TRIAL ...

\.

Show8ra T-tiOmla

A Long Bottom woman was arrested on charges of failure to comply
with ,the signal of a police officer, reckless operation, resisting arrest
and parking in the roadway after a deputy of the Meigs County Sher•
iffs Office attempted to arrest her on a complaint of criminal trespassing.
,
·
Tammy S. Blouin, 26, 36420 Bashan Road, was placed in the Southeast Regional Jail, according to a MCSO report.
A deputy was attempting to arrest her on an earli er co mpl aint when
she left the scene in a car, according to the report. She was arrested on
State Route"7'near Eastern High School.

Beryl Wilson

.:.-.- ~· ·'

for

.

•

-.. ... .; • •I Columbua 148'158',s l

Daniel passed on love-child story

•

MICH.

Woman jailed on numerous charges ·

' Eva Schreiber, 96, Middleport, died Wednesday, Jan. 2o, 1999 at Overbrook Center, Middleport.
.
.
A homemaker and sales clerk, she was born Dec. 6, 1902 in Bunker Hill,
daughter of the late Harry H. and Elizabeth Heilman Genheimer. She attended the St. Paul LAitheran Church.
She is survived by two daughters and a son-in-l.aw, Martha Mayer, ~nd
Hazel and Edward Ball, all of Pomeroy; two brothers, Victor Genhcimer of
Lancaster, and Evan Genheimer of Columbus; and three grandchildren and
five great -grandchildren.
· ·
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Walter Schreiber.
,Services will be 1 p.m. Saturday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with the Revs. Don Genheimer and Keith Rader officiating. Burial will be in
the Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends may call at the funemi home from 2-4
·and 7-9 p.m. Friday.

•••

I Manoflotd l.a'/8jl' I •

PRO'IOCOL?

•

•

Local·briefs:

I

Eva Schreiber

..

•

:Friday, Jan. 22

thinp happen, or hun 'I stood In lhe ~ay. For
sure, he ·hu transformed the Democratic .Party.
dcmonatratina how it can modernize and wan. :
The wutc is that he could have used the budr
·aeuurplua; his .own ·.popullritr and th~ country'•
good feelina ab?ut itaclf 10 1Chleve m•Jil!' accom:
plishments ln h1s second term •• educatton llan·
dania, Jut Y.ear's promised 21st century medical
research imtiative, Social Security and Medicare
reform.
.
Galslon thinks Clinton still could act e process
aoing for Social Security reform and push it in the
direc:don Of partial privatization, but some admin·
istratlon insiders say he'~l.shy away from that to
please the AFL-CIO, wh1ch he may need to help
him stay in office.
·
It will be a miracle if anything gets ICCOIII;.
plished in Ointon'~ seventh year in &lt;;&gt;ffice, any
more than in his s1xth, ,because o.f hts reckless
self-indulgence and deceit.
.
·
Before the Senate last week, Hutchmson m~
a compelling case that Clinton systematically
iniluced subordinates lo lie under oath for him. ·

NEW YORK (AP)- Some of those Internet stocks have risen so far so
·fast they defy comparison with anything in the past. They arc in a class by
.themselves, a rather unruly one where students set the standards.
They put a firecracker under eBay's shares and rocketed it more than
1,000 percent in a few months. They put Yahoo! on a catapult a~d snapped
.the rope. They multiplied Amazon.com's price :;5 times smce it went pub.iic.
"Why can't Johnny add?" asks Michael Flament as he viewed such lack
-of decorum. Could this be rational, wondered Flament, economist' and market analyst for Wright Investors' Service, a conservative money manager.
- His wonderment led him to America Online's performance, whiclr by
mid-January had multiplied its market value 200 times over 1999 earnings.
.Note: That's 200 times expected earnings, not last year's actual earnings.
. "Does it make any sense?" he asked after doing some additional calcu)ations. He decided to find out how large America Online's market value was
-in terms that could provide some relationship with the past.
This is what he found:
AOL's market value is as large as the entire Standard &amp; Poor's publishing group, including Dow Jones, McGraw-Hill, Times Mirror, Gannett, cans.
There's some truth in the analyKnight-Ridder, Tribune Co. and The New York Times - pius Eastman
sis.
Clin(on adopted Republican pro'Kodak.
posals
-- the balanced budget, weiTQese are all wonderful companies, tested in the marketplace and through
fare
reform,
government downsizing-- but for the
Similarly, historian Nathan Miller claims that
. Hutchinson's argument virtually assures thBt
various economic conditions. They have long histories, great products, lots ·
purpose ofkeeping government alive and credible Clinton has been "the classic transitional figure ... witnesses will have 1o be called in Clinton's Sen•
of real estate, and experienced workers and managements.
almost literally just a passive bridge over which ale trial, which increases chances that Clintoo will
Such comparisons, however, serve only to convince some investors that as· a problem-solving engine for the future.
His vision of government was not that .of tradi- the society has traveled 1o the 21st century."
be convicted and ousted.
stocks such as AOL are once-in-a-lifetime opportunities, and others to argue
tiona! liberals -- to manage national life and guar. According to Miller, Clinton-era prosperity · Even if he survives in office, hi.s chances of
that they are· incredibly overpriced.
·
, Flament, therefore, chose Amazon.com for comparison with a relatively antee outcomes-- but to cr~ate opportunities for isn't .his doing. but the private economy's. Th.e achievementsre nearly nil. The state of the Union
-newer company most people, perhaps excepting regulators, think they people to advance on their own. His education balanced budget and welfare reform aren't his may be strong, but the Clinton presidency is mo,r;
and jOb training initiatives are the best examples. ideas, but the GOP's. And improved social statis- bidly weak.
:
:understand. Microsoft was the 1980s version of a nc:W-age stock.
(Morton Kondracki II tx.cutlve edHor OJ
: In 1988,. when Microsoft's annual sales were in.the same $500 range as , Atthe same time, Clinton's vision is vastly, dif; L tics are the result of.the ~iety's recovery from
Roll Clll, the n.w1p1per Of C.PIIol Hill.)
:Amazon's are now, it was earning $125 million and its stock was valued at ferent from that of conservative Republicans who 1960s excesses.
For sure, though, Clinton has helped good Coprrtghl1- NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A88N. • .
-a high of $4 billion. It had a price-to-sales ratio of 8 and a price-to-earnings wanted to decimate the government, .massively
:ratio of 32.
, Today, the market value of Amazon stock exceeds $20 billion, five times
-what Microsoft was worth a decade ago. It sells at 40 times sales and, since
:it has yet to earn a profit, an infinite P-E ratio.
.
, It .took Microsoft's shares almost 10 years from its 1986 initial public By Ben Wattenberg
that tape looked like a junkie lo me. believed the story was journal istical- trooper who was the main source
;offering, during which earnings rose nearly 50 percent a year, to expand by
Whew! President Clinton stili has No reporter of sound mind would ly solid or publishable. (Nor, inci· an article I was then workins on
.as much as no-profit Amazon has in little more than 18 months.
. no " love child," and I .stili have a have gambled his journalistic repu- dentally, did David Broc~. 'who, about efforta by the Ointon machine
: With professional reserve, Fiament concludes that "it appears then that career in journalism.
·
tation on an unauthenticated tape ·of since an ideological' rebirth, has to deter and punish revelations about
~nvestors in Amazon.com are making some extremely generous assumptions
A DNA test paid for by the Star this woman.
come to remember himself then aa his extramarital adventures, wu on
·about the potential for selling books on the internet."
tabloid excluded the president as the
While she provided much detail an unscrupulous, partisari execution- Qinton's security detail in 1984, at
' It may be argued that nobody can say with certainty that Internet stocks father of 13-yenr-old Danny on the tape, some of it superficially er without journalistic standards.) To the time of the·alleged sessions with
;are overpriced. Some investors maintain we are in a new age were old rules Williams. The teen is the son of plausible, she was guided through my relief, we never reached the Williams. The two state cars she
-do not apply, and that only the marketplace itself has answers.
Bobbie Ann Williams, a Little Rock her tale by an interviewer asking point of having lo decide whether described did not match any in the
: That might be true, and probably the majority of investors hope it is, but prostitute who claimed that the pres- friendly, then-what-happened? ques- the story merited publication if true. governor's fleet at the time, accord;the past,' including the recent past, has stories to tell, and one of them is how ident had fathered her son during tions. There was no tough cross- Part of the reason it was unpublish- ing lo Brown. Brown himself had
;often it's heard that ,one about the dawning of a new era. .
paid sex sessions in 1984.
examination.
able is inconvenient for Hillary, Sid- never laid eyes on Williams nor
Bobbie Ann's tale was one of
I was unable to interview her ney, and Salon magazine's vast heard anything about her from Oin;
those Little Rock legends that has directly. After being told that the right-wing conspiracy theorists.
ton or other troopers at the time. In
haunted the untamed border regions Spectator did not pay for stories, her
Williams alleged that her encoun- short, he didn't buy the story. And
of the mind of the political 'press. " handlers" refused to make her ters with Clinton had taken place in after some · additional fruitless
available. The tape, incidentally, did 1984. On the tape, she des_cribed two inquiries (I verified the existence of
Well Meigs County, we the voters have changed the guard at the county Mine more tlian most.
In
1994,
as
an
investigative
not come from the handlers, but different state limos driven by a state one of the other prostitutes Williams
seat. The people have sent a message that jobs and better roads and water
reporter
for
the
American
Spectator,
·
from
a different (still confidential) trooper to transport her and Clinton had named, but her parole officer
service throughout the county is what we want. And as 'for voting ali one
I
obtained
Bobbie
Ann
Williams'
source.
along with two other prostitutes she declined 1o let me interview her);
party into office: so be it.
videotaped
·"confession."
My
notes
I'd
like
to
say
that
I
never
identified by name to a country neither did I.
Now they can get to work. Let's see our 'highways built, our industrial
of
the
tape
describe
her
as
"addled"
believelt,her
story
for
a
minute,
but
house for partiu. These weekend
Matt Drudge's habit of goosing
park built or, even better, several little industrial parks spread across our
and
her
speech
as
"slurred,"
but
actually
my
initial,
unsupported
revels
were
graphically
detailed,
or,
reporters
into prematurely divuigina
county leading to one big park for jobs. Let's see our commissioners push
that's
unfair
to
crack
addicts:
The
hunch
was
that
her
talc
was
true.
it
now
seems,
concocted.
raw,
untested
materia! serves no use·
and get money for county water to all areas such as Galiia County has.
noddy,
scratchy,
mumbly
woman
on
'
At
the
same
time,
I
never
L.D.
Brown,
an
Arkansas
State
fui
purpose.
·
Jobs mean only one thing: more taxes for our countY. to use, more people
eating out, more people buying goods here, more people building homes and
buying them here. Ali this means jobs and more business for evetyone who
owns ~ business here. Even our local paper will be better off it ali spells
good t1mes not bad. Our county needs jobs and why we haven't pushed hard er for them in the past one only wonders.
By Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
1964, French troops reversed Gabon's only mili- European fashion. Thtee
The "French connection" is proving injurious tary coup, reinstalling M'Ba as president.
Who knows, but the change of the guard is a done deal for our great counyears ago, a · scandal
Three years later, after M'Ba peacefully died, erupted in ~aris when his
ty. So let's push ali for one and one for ali; jobs for all who want one here in to democracy-seeking, corruption-angry west
MeigS County. So come on Meigs, get together and make our county grow. Africans io their former French colony of Gabon. Omar Bongo came to power. The French weren 'I expensive Italian fashion
This Coiorado.sized country was blessed with thrilled with him initially, but he soon proved designer testified in court
Let's ali push for jobs for our county. We the people can make it happen and
if you have an idea for our area, speak out. Let's make our county a better oil riches that gave their relatively small 1.2 mil- . willing 1o bend to Parisian desires. So they kept that he provided Bongo
place for all .
.
Hon-member population one of the nighest per- the French paratroopers and military police, who beautiful Parisian prostinow number 600 in Libreville.
Floyd H. Cleland capita incomes in oil of black Africa.
tutes in order to keep the $600,000-a-year tailorBut that's only the average. More than half the
Rutland
They protect Bongo and his seaside m&amp;rble ing contract
population lives in poverty after billions of dol - fortress, which was built because ..is mother-inBongo has not brooked dissent or revelations
lars were squandered, and the oil is running out. law felt his cheaper palace was haunted by evil about his personal life well. Some years . ago,
.This serious crisis was brought on by longtime spirits from an old tribal burial ground.
when a few students shouted that it was time for
- By The Aaaoclated Prase
dictator Omar Bongo and his French protectors.
And what a $300 million palace it is -- from him to step down, Bongo closed the university.
Today is Thursday, Jan. 21, the 21st day of 1999. There are 344 days left Last month, his mismanagement was rewarded the magnificent carpets to the Carrara-marble
Meanwhile, the French made out by pumping
in the year.
with "re-election" to another seven-year presi- halls, the swimming pools and c~andeliers, the and selling the bulk of Gabon's oil reserves. Their
T\)day's Highlight in History:
dentialterm.
private nightclub and modem gymnasium. It was influence became so extensive that the French
On Jan. 21, 1793, during the French Revolution, King Louis XVI, con" Bongo wasn 't as bad as (Zaire 's) Mob~tu but built in the Iate 1970s, when Bongo decided to expatriate community in Gabon now numbers
demned for treason, was executed on the guillotine.
he's stili taken a lot of money, enriched his friends spend an estimated $2 billion on his own resi- more than 25,000 -- fi:ve times the number of
On this date:
and wasted large amounts," a State Department dences, as well as facilities and amenities intend- French citizens living there in colonial times. ·
In 186·1, Jefferson Davis of Mississippi and .four other -southerners analyst told our associate Dale Van Alta.
ed to impress African leaders coming 10 Gabon
In 1990, Bongo finally promised a multi-pariy
resigned from the U.S. Senate.
The bantam-size, 64-year-old Bongo, who for an Organization of African Unity meeting . .
democracy after increasing protests from the citi·
In _1908, Ne":' :ork City's Board of Ai~er~en passed an ordinance that asked his people for years to call him th,e
But it was something of a bust. The French zenry. But in 1993, he rigged the elections to win
effectively proh1b1ted women 'from smoking 1ft public. Mayor George B. " Enlightened Guide," has been kept in power by waiters flown in from Bordeaux were impressive, another seven~year presidential term· with barely .
McClellan Jr. vetoed the measure.
,
. - a French miliiary acting as ihe same type of pres- as was the cham,P.agne, but the planeload of 51 percent of the vote. Rioting followed.
In 1915, the first Kiwanis Club was founded in Detroit.
identiai protectors that the "rented" British Kenyan beef rotted" at the airport and Gabonese
International monitors were not hopeful th~t
In 1924, Russian revolutionary Vladimir llyich Lenin died at age 54.
Gurkhas do for the-Sultan of Brunei.
chauffeurs hired to drive the delegates' Rolls- !ast month's. elections ·would be fair. Not surprisIn 1942, Count Basie and His Orchestra recorded "One O'Clock Jump"
French inOuence goes back to the mid 1800s, Royces, Cadiiincs and armored Mercedes-Benzes l~gly, after mdependent reports of massive voter
in 'New York for Okeh Records.
when French warships rel~ased African captives were always napping when they ' were needed. fraud, Bongo has won again.
In 19SO, a federal jury in New York found former State Department offi - liberated from slave ships onto Gabon's Atlantic "There's only one man in Gabon who really
In the, wake of that win, it's become apparent
cial Alger Hiss guilty of perjury.
•
Ocean shores. The country's capital, " Librc- works -- and that's me," Bongo huffed.
that the tmported French "monitors" were less
ln 1950, George Orwell, author of "1984," died in London.
ville," means " place of liberation." In the late
And he's kept that attitude for his ·32'years in than impartial. Never mind that Bongo has conIn 1954, the' first atomic submarine, the' USS Nautilus; was launched at · 1950s, as a wave of independence swept IICI'OS$ power. It's the workers' fault, not the Enlightened tributed miUions of dollars to victorious French
Groton, Conn.
the African colonies, Gabon.became the only one Guide 's warped vision, that has CllllSCd billions of candidates back in Paris, including Jacques Chi rae.
In 1976, the supersonic Concorde jet was put into service by Britain and of 14 French colonies to vote to remain with dollars to be wasted on four-lane highways that
It's enough lo know that one of the team's key
France.
France as a "department" of their country.
lead nowhere, and a still-unfinished, $4.S million- figures, French lawyer Robert Bourgi, has been 5o
In 1977, President Carter pardoned almost all Vietnam War draft 'evaders.
Paris nixed this wish and forced independence a-mile railroad cut through the rain forest.
close to Bongo that he addresses him as "Papa,"
In 1997, Speaker Newt Gingrich was reprimanded and fined as the House on Gabon in 1960. Its fir.;t president, Leon M'BB.
Then there are Bongo's personal peccadilloes. and·signs his letters, "Your Son," according to
voted for the first time in history to discipline its leader for ethical miscon- patterned the new flag symbolically after the He favored Napoleon-style cl.oaks for years, final - ·French press reports.
·
,
duel
·
French tricolor, intending to keep strong ties. In ly tossing off this predilection for the best of
Copyright 1-. unnld FMture SyndtCIIIe, tnc.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

(DRESS • CASUAL • ATHLETIC)

40o/o OFF ALL SALE ROOM SHOES

-·-·-

13 Weeks ................... .........$29.25
'26 WeeU ............ ....... ...... ,••SS6.68
32 Weeks ......................... .$ 109.72

F

ALL SHOES

Athletic Shoes

LEGAL NOTICE .

owsl

Notl£e is given that LCI International Telecom Corp. (LCI), has Oled a
self-complaint
with the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (Case No. 98Reader Services
1628-TP-SLF), requesting that It be allowed to Increase Its operator sel'l'lce
rates, and· Institute a per call operator sun:harge or $2.25 for calling card
Correction Polley
calls,
when operator assistance Is requested. LCI Is also proposing to
·our maln_concern In au·storiu. Is to he _
restructure
lts operator servl&lt;e per nilnule usage rate• to a nat charge of
accurate. If y~u know ·of an error In •
$.35
per
minute.
·
atory, call the new~room at (740) 99:Z·
llSS. We will cbtck yo•r lnrormalion
Any interested person, ftrm , corporation, or entity desiring an oral hearing
and make 11 (OI'I'tCiio• If warnnted. '
in this matter should me a request with the commission stating the .reasons
for the request, along wUh·a motion to Intervene In the aforementioned c:ase,
.
News Departments
on or before February 15, 1999.
Th• main number Is 992-2155. DepartUnless the commission received such a request for an oral hearing and·an
ment extensions artt
accompanying motion io Intervene, the case will be detlded on the b!s of
Gono111l Monago&lt; .................. ..... E•L 1101
the information contained In the complaint ·and the attached ex Its.
Now~ ............................................. E&gt;t. IIOJ
Further
l.nformallon may be ob!alned by contacting the Public U Illes
or Elt. lt06
Commission of Ohio, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215·3793, by
viewing the Commission's web paxe at b!!p:l/www,oyc.syte.oh.ys or
Othsr Services
contacting
the commission 's hotllne at 1-800-686-7826. The hearing
Ad .. rttlloi. .................................E•L 1104
Impaired
can
reach the Commission via ITY-TDD at 1-800-6867-1570 or In
Cln:utatlon ................................. E••· 1103
·
Ctasslftod Ad&amp; ............................. Ell. 1100 Columbus at466-8180.

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....

The Daily· Sentinel

Sports

Pege4
Thuredly,Jenuary21,1198

Miami, ·Ohio ~lose,
but RedHawks · \ .
stay
top ·i~fMAC:~·.

UConn remains
unbeaten; UK
defeats Auburn
before losing at Kentucky 75-56.
In other Top 25 games, it was.No.
Top 25 men's
2 Duke 82, Clemson 60; No. 8 St.
college basketball John's 84, Providence 57;. No. 13
· UCLA 98, S9uthern California 80;
· By The Aaaoclated Pritas
No. IS Wisconsin 75, Illinois 53; No.
And then there was one.
17 Minnesota 76, Michigan .· 70;
Top-ranked Connecticut edged Alabama 67, No. 22 Arkansas 60;
No. 25 Miami 70-68 in overtime and and No. 23 Oklahoma State . 75,
·
No. 7 Kentucky handed No. 6 Baylor 47.
Auburn its first loss of the season,
No. l Duke 82, Clemson 60
72-62, Wednesday night, leaving
Elton Brand scored 17 of his 22
UConn as the only unbeaten team in points in the second half as D4ke
Division I.
won at Clemson.
· The Huskies (16-0) got a major
The Blue Devils (18-1, 7-0ACC),
scare at Miami, which blew a chance who led by only three points at halfto win when John Salmons missed a time before taking command -in the
wlde-open three-poin~ shot at the second half for their 13th straight
victory. Clemson (12· 7, 1-5) 'played
buzzer.
· "The shot was off maybe a cen- without suspended starters Vincent·
timeter and a half, or we would have Whitt and Johnny Miller ,and injured
beaten the No. I team in the coun- sixth man Tony Christie.
If)'," Miami's Mario Bland said.
. No.8 St. John's 84, Providence 57
Richard Hamilton .scored 31
Erick Barkley scored 18 points
points for UConn, which had been and St. John's held Providence to its
winning by an average of.26 points. lowest point total of the season,
"People wondered if we could
The visiting Red Stann (16-3, 7-1
win a close game," Hamilton said. Big East) won their fourih straight
"We showed them that we can:"
game ·and the 13th of their last 14
Heshimu Evans had 20 points and despite playing without leading
nine rebounds as Kentucky beat rebounder Tyrone Grant, out with a
Auburn for the 13th straight time.
broken wrist.
Auburn ( 17-1) shot only 31 perNo. 13 UCLA 98
cent from the fiel.d and tied its seaSouthern California 80
son-low in points.
Freshman reserve Ray Young
.:'Our team put everything we had scored 12 points, including nine
into the game tonight," Tigers coach straight at the stan of the second half,
Cliff Ellis said. "We will be all right. as UCLA beat Southern California
It's a long season. "
,
for the ninth straight time.
Auburn hadn't been undefeated
UCLA (13-4, 5-2 Pac-10), last in
this late in the season since 1958-59, the ~ac-10 in three-point shooting,
when the Tigers started 19-0 and hit a season-high 10 shots from
were ranked No. 2 in the country beyond the arc. USC ( 10-6, 2·5),

•
•

•

'

'

on

.

By TIM PUE:J' · .
.40·32 and made 'i6-of·33 'free· ·
throws, compared -with 9-;&lt;~f-14 for
AaiOCiatld Prtll Wrlttr
Wally Szczerbiak is · Miami of the RedHawks (12-4, 7: 1), who ' ·
Ohio's top !ico~;er, but Kent. coach retained the East Division lead ..
Gary Waters says the secret to ·beat· bel:ause S.cond·plac~ Ohi!' also lost.
ing•the··RedHawks involves-foFget·
"In •no way ·were we ,as good as t
ling about his paint total.
,, . . , Kent tonight,'' aekndw'!edged Miami
. . .".We knew Szczerbiak W9Uid ' coach' Charlie' Coles: ·''They're one
score 2Q points," Wateruaid'follow- · of the beller teams in .the .. leligue.
ing the Oolden _Fiashes:.•,. game What makest.hem good ·is what you. I
Wednesday night against Miami. like to see1in a team. It appears Gary· •
"We' said we had to stop the other has got some tough kids 'an~ some
$uys." &lt;._.; -1',
. &lt; ' ,J •
kids who accept their roles.:•
l;.
• ,T hat str&amp;legy. J?fci~e.d e'ffectl~e: ~
JJiiiii ".B.o&amp;ley.'s , 26, pojn~Gel~d!·
Kent defeited 'M1am1 68.:62, gtvurg l\kron(I0-61 4-4) snap a four-game
, the ~Hawk~ lljeir fjrs! \~ss in,Mi~; , losing streak by defe,ati,ng-Oh\9 (12- · ,
Amencan Conference play.. , ··'· .5, 7-2).
,,••, ,.,. ,..
,,
·Akron, ou.tsco';ed Ohio ,9~-8~ and
Fl'l'shma\1 David, FA!knor had a ·
E~'tefl' ,,M,\chigan. ~dged , ,9,entral , career, higll ,16 points l,lnd _
Ryan .
Mach1gan 56-53 1n other MA.C . · Andrick, who returned tl&gt; the hneup
. games Wednesday. Ball &amp;~1~ 1 ~~ at for.,rthe Zips .after i'QlissiQg t)le last ,
,
.
Buffalo a~d No[~hern ,,Ilh~pis _at foqr gll!JleS, a!sohaq .l6. ,
Toledo tomght.
.·
LaDrell Whitehead. led the
'Trevor Huffman scored ?-f.pQints Bobcats .with 31 poinls· Sanj~)' Adell
and ,made lt·of-p free thro~s fb,r ad,l)ed !8 , poipts .wl)jJ&lt;: , Shaun :
.
BUMPED - Kentucky's H8shlmu Evans (141 le bumped by Kent (13·4 overall, 6-3 c&lt;:&gt;~ference). Stonerook .had 14 rebounds&gt;. .
'Eastern Michigan (2-14, 2-7) has
Auburn's Scott Pohlman during Wadnest!ay night a SEC contest In He was 7-of-8 from the line in the
Lexington, Ky., where Evans' 2D-polnt effort helped the host final 1:04 to \lelp,&lt;;linch tlje .v.ictory. won its last two games.after an 0'-14
Wlldcata defeat the previously-unbeaten Tigers 72-62. (AP)
" Huffman's the m.ost f~lax~d, stari. GoaQh.Mi\ton Barnes said he's
player I'~e . ever . been. 'a'ro~d,'; .• pleased with the team-'g, ,attitude .
which hasn't beaten the Bruins since No. 17 Minnesota 76, Ml~bigan 70 Waters said. "Down the stretcb;·l'll doward . adver~jty. .
Quincy Lewis scored 30 pdints · keep hill) \n the g,ame . be~ause he
1994, have lost four in a row overall.
~·we've siayed upbeat !)espite our .
No. 15 Wis~onsin 75, Dlinois 53 ·and Minnesota tied a Big Ten rei:ord won't lose 'the ball and he II make record and I keejJtelling the guys it's.,
Jon Bryant scored a season-high by sinking its first ~5 free throws.
free throws.''
important io ,keep having fu~ and
The Gophers (12-3, 3-2), who
17 poin~ as Wisconsin routed visitKyrem Massey ~.nd John Whonon. working har.d a~d we.' II be OK," he .,
entered the game as the league's sec· added 10 points ·eai:h for Kent and said.
ing Illinois.
.
,·
Bryant had five three-pointers to ond-worst foul shooting team at 64 Whorton pulled down II rebounds.
DeSean Had)ey's j4mper with 22
help the Badgers ( 17-3, 5-2 Big Ten) percent, were perfect from the line
Szczerbiak indeed go! his. 2~ - se~onds left in ovenim~ gave the.
overcome .an off night by leading until Miles Tarver missed a pair with 23, to be exact, and had 12 rebounds, .Eagles their · victory over the
scorer Sean Mason, who got into 7:03 left. Minnesota finished 34-of- while teammate Rob Mestas added Chippewas (7-9, 4-4),
early foul trouble and finished with 39 from the line. Louis Bullock led 17 points.
• .
Central Michigan led 53-52 when
only seven points, 12 below ·his averBut Kent outrebounded Miami
'
(See r.J~C oa Page 5) .
age.
(See TOP :ZS on Page 5)

L .'

Scoreboard
NCAA Division I
women's scores

Basketball
MAC men's standings
:w ..

Ium

Coot.

l&lt;l.

:w. ..

2 .750 II
3 .667 13

BowlingGrecn ............ 6
Kent .............................6
MARSHALL ...............6
Alcron .................: ........ ,4
Buffalo ............ . ........0

Buffalo S9, Cc:m, Michigllll 56
Colgnre S4, Butknell 44
Connecricut 89, Miami (Aa.) SS
Lafayclle 82, Lehigh 73
Loyola. Md. 64, Fairfield 49
Monmouth, N.J. 73, Long, Island U. 53
Notre Dame 87, Seton Hall 47
Pituburgh 1S, S1. John's 58
Rutaen 67, Georgetown 64
Siena 72, Marist SS
South Carolina 73, George M!lMln 70

Ovtnll

I .875 12
2 .778 12

Miami .......................... 7

·OHI0 ....................... .... 7

East
fl:l.

4 .750

5 .106
5 .688

&lt;l .7M
4 .1500 II · 6 .6&lt;47
4 .500 10 6 .625
7 .000 4 14 .222 ·

West DIVlsion
3 .571 12 3 .800
3 .571 10 S .667
~ . Michipn ............4
4 .500 1 9 .438
W. Mlclllpn ................3 6 .lll I 9 .471
E. Mkhi11"" .................2 1 .222 2 14 .125

St. Peter's 66, lona 57

Tolcdo ..........................4
Ball St .........................4

N. lllinoit ..................... O 7 .000

4 II

West Virginia 76, Syfacuse 70

South

Cboolmon -61, Bedou...COO- 4i
High Poin168, N.C.· Asheville 41
Kentucky 69, Louisville 56
Winthrop 61, EJQn 49

.267

Wednesday's scores

Midwest

Atmn 94, OHIO 87
E. MichiJan S6. C. Michiaan Sl-OT
Kent 68, Miami 62

Akron 62. N. Illinois 47
Baylor H2, Kansas Sl. H
BoWling Green 97, OHIO 89
Miami. Ohio 7f MARSHALL 58
Michigan 76. MichiaarrSt. 7S·OT
Toledo 86. w. Michiao.n 63

Tonight's games
a1 Buffalo
N. 1Jiinoi1 at Toledo

Ball St

Saturday's games

Southwest

Ball St. a1 Kenl
C. Michigan at Buffalo
Miami at MARSHALL
N. IIUnois at Akron
OHIO at Bowling Green
W. Michigan at Toledo

·TeiUlS7~. OklahofTlll St. !'i3
Te~tas Tech 71 , Iowa St. 47

:w

lowa .............................4
.......\
. Michigo.11.1S1.
... 5
Wisconsin ...
.. .4
OHIO ST.
.. ....l
Minne51Jip .....
...... ]
Indiana ..
....\
NorthwesiCrn .
Michigan .......................'
Purdue ............... .......... .l
Penn S1. ...................... 1
Illinois............... .......... .0

Cont.

L l&lt;l.

:w

.1 .867

Over• II

l&lt;l.

I .800 u
I .750 14 4 .778
1 .714 17
.85Q
1 .667 14 5 .704
2 .1500 i2 3 .800
3 .500 16 5 .762
3 .500 10 s .667
3 .500 9 JO ..474
I .-100 14 5 .704
s .167 9 7 .S63
6 .000 g 10 .444

We~nesday's

·'

scores

Cit:. Chanel62, Normandy 47
Ck: . Hoi)'_ Name 77. Chardon ND-Cl34
Cit. VA·SJ 64, Cle. Heights 39
Col. Mifflin 76; Marion Franklin 75. lOT
Col. Ohio Deaf 50. Toroh Acad. 42
Crestline 43. Ontario 30
Da~. Colonel While 59, Belmont 27
Day. Dunbar 45. Day, Meadowdale 28
Dresden Tri·Valley 50. New Lexingtan 4J

Tonight's game
a1

Michigan State

Saturday's games
Penn State or Illinois
Tun!·Pan American at Nor1hwestern
Wi1oon1in at Iowa
Midligan at Purdue
Minnuota ot OHIO STATE

Andover Pymatunins Yal . !'i~ . Painesville
Harvey ]I
Ashtabula Edgewood 50, Ashtabula 49
Atwntcr Waterloo 47. Ravenna Southeast .1.7
Avon .55, Oberlin ol-7
Avon Lake 48. Lakewood .10
BDIIlvio. 64. Western Brown .57
Bellevue .5.\. Galion .\8
Deloit W: Branch 53, 1\kron Spring. 48
Berlin Hiland 7~. Stro.sbutt24
Brooke. W.Va. 57. Indian Creek 44
Brunswick 38. Parma 29
C.ndiz 50, Toronto 46
Caldwell 55, Frontier 38
Canal Fulton NW 44, Louis~ille ~8
Ca~ o n S. 40. Mnrlington 33
Chagrin Fall! 60, Kirtland 44
Chc5terland W. Geauga 51 , Auwra 13
Chilli cothe Zane Trace 62. Richmond Dale SE

41

Wisconsin 75 . Illinois 53
Minnesota 76, Michigan 10
Northwestern 62, Penn Stale 60-0T
Iowa

.

.'

Euclid 56. Elyria 5~

Fairmont SO. Kellering Alter 30
Garfield Hu . 4.l Maple Hts. J2
Geneva 70. Conneaut 65

'

Parma Padua 68, Garfield HIS. Trinity 33
Philo S3. River View 32
Pikctan 83, Western Latham 39·
Polaad 76, Warren Howland 31
PontlnNh 62. s. Pohw49

Soutb

Cent. Florida 82, Aorida Atlantic 72
Connccdcut 70, Miami 68·0T
Duke 82, Clemson 60
E. Tennes~ St. 96, 8ehnon1 9S
Aorido 77, LSU 58
Florida St. 74, Wake Forest 68
Geor&amp;e Mason 77, Va. Commonwealth 6g
Jame1 Madison 75, William~ Mary ~9
Kentucky 72. Auburn 62
Miuissij)pi 81. Miu iuippi St. 68
N. Carolina A&amp;T73. N.C. Central 61
N. Carolina Sc. 77, Wofford 65
N.C.· Asheville 89, Hiah Point 78
Old Dominion 76, N.C.-Wilmington 62
Tennes.ee 85 , Georgia 69
Vanderbill 77, South Carolina 66
Wlntllrop 81 , Eton 12

Midwest
Btlldlcy 69, Illinois St. 68
Creiahton ~. E11ansville 80
, Kansas St, 76, CoiQrado 52
.S. Illinois 64, Indiana St. 63
StUnt Louis 69, South Florida 60
Wis.·Green Boy 60, Cle\·eilllnd St. 51

94 138

46

110 Ill

Northwest Division

Colorad0 ........................... 2119

4

Colgory ............ ,.,............. .15 26

4

SEATTLE

34

110 135

Paelne Division

DoJI................ ,................. 27 9 7 61 117 89
Phoenix ..... ...........,............. 24 11 6 54 110 84
Anohelm .........,.... ,........... 1719 8 42 110 lOS
SanJosc ... ,........................ J.S 18 H
LosAnacles ,..................... l624 4

41 101 103
36 104 118

Wednesday's scores

.

I?

JoaiKht'a P"!P ,

Ottawa at 8o1tpr1, 7 p.m. .
Florida at N.Y. Rangers, 7:30p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia. 7:30p.m.
N.Y. Islanders at Pinsburgb. 7:30p.m.
Clll'olina at Oc&amp;roit, 7:30p.m.
Toronto at St. Louis, 8 p.m. ·
Tampa Bay at Nashville, 8 p,m.
Montreal at Olicigo, 8:30p.m.
Calgary at Colorado, 9 p.m.
Anaheim at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
New Jersey a&amp; Los Angeles, IO:JO p.m.
Edmonton at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

,.p

.

a1

Patrick Lallme from Kansu CitY o( dlc IHL. ·
LOS ANGELES KINOS: Placed ,f Craig
Johnson on injuted rcterve, retrqactive to Jan. IS.

NASHVILLE PREDATOR!!; Re&lt;alled G Chris
Mason from Milwaukee of the IHL.
PHOENIX COYOTES: Recalled C . Trevor
Lctuwski from Spring(teld of t~ ' AHL.
. PITrSBURGH PENGUINS ) Named David
Andrews elu:cutive vice p~sident and chief opera!·
ing officer.
.
ST. LOUIS BLUES: Recalled G Rich Parent
from Worcester of the AHL , AsiliJned E Jocben
Hecht to Worcc;str::r.

Tampa, Aa., 4 p.m.

BasebaU

NHL standings

Hockey

Natlonll Hodtey Lta1ue ·
ANAHEIM MIGKTY DUCKS: Recalled G

Sunday's game .
All-Star game

College

Ameriun L1ague

team ru~o .

'

News
News
News
News
News

Hotline Hotline _,
Hotline
Hotline '
Hotline

Allantit Dtvislon

l!: L .1' fll, !if GA

1&lt;am

Philadelphia ...................... B 10 10
NewJersey ..... :.............. ...2414 5
Piusbursh ......................... 20 1.\ 7
N.Y.. Rangers .................... l7l0 7
N.'(. lslanders .................. . n 29 3

Torooto ....
Ouawa ...... ..
BuO'al o... ..
805ton ..
Montreal.

56

1.~1

86

53 126 114
47 110 1og
41 116 122
29 101

134

Northeast Dlt&lt;lsiun
...... 2616 3 55 148 131
.... .2 4 14 6 54 I]() 100.
........ 23 13 7 · S .~ 119 86
........ ,20 1 ~ 1 47 11 5 ' 94
...... 17 20 8

Sout~si Dh,lslon
Carolina
.2017 7
Florida ... :.................... 1616 II
Washington..
.. ... 16 22 4
Tampa Bay ..
. ..... 10 30 4

4 2 106 111

47115108
43 108 114
36

99 109

24 .91

-•WESTERN·CONFERENCE '

l.'i 2

Central DMsion

1&lt;am

l!: L I l'U. !if GA

Dctroit .............................. 2220 :t
Sc. Loui s ........................... 16 16 9
Nashville .......................... 16 24 4

47 131 121
41 109 104
36 102 140

(fM ·

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The Deily Sentinel• Page 5

Rio beats Central State 73-60, wins seventh straight game;

=ro~~~~ARTER

·
.
.
Aft er surgmg to ~n l.l:poant lead·
at .the half,, the, UnaversJty of Rio
Grande sumved a strong second half
per.form,ance _by Central .State
Umversaty to p1ck up a 73-60 Vtctory
Wednesd~y mght.
'
The v~cto~ keeps th~ Redmen s
cun:ent wJnmng streak abve at seven .
strat~ht.
.
Rto Grande (l2-,7, AMC .S-1)
p~lled away
(rom .the 'Marauders
~tdwa( 1~ough t~ fi~st. half thanks
a~v!ntag~ wrr~
,:IIIIaa i;g. ~6
P Y 1e
haIf· The Redm
·
en
led
35-24
at the
break
·
,

3

::lO

In t~ second half, Central· State Jere,ny May chipped in 10 points off AMC 2-3) on Wednesday niKht. The
(11-6) pieced together an 11·3 spurt the bench. Justin Blackstone added R d
th ped P · t r k 100-79
to close to within 45-40 at the II :52 nine points and three boards Shane ine J:nc~ionshf~n g.,! of the
miuk. That was as close as the visi - . Shanton had five rebounds. .
Bevo Francis Classic back in
tors would get· however as the
Chris Granltopped th
. ~
November.
Redmen hit 19:of.-28 fre~ throws Central State with 17 ~:~~~~~fl,::~
In other AMC action last ·night,
down the stretch to seal the win.
hit 3-of-7 three-point shots John Geneva ("· 13, AMC 1-3) edged
Chris Beard'lcd .Rio Grande with Hester had 13 points and a ,game- M I
(12 9
a game-high 18 points. Beard was 4- high nine rebounds. Chris Clark C:/ne
• ' AMC 2-3) 86-77,
of-6 from ihe field and 8-for-10 at . reached double digits off the bench off &amp;.'~~.;-~~~t3~n~n;~d:
the charity stripe. He also grabbed with 10 points.
.
.
(13-5, AMC 4·1) handed Tiffin (14seven rebounds.
. .
,
· Rio Grande lilts the road this S AMC 8·1) its first Joss in conferEric ' ~eitz had 14 points and', six ·weekend for ~ . Saturday evening e~ce pia b an 83-75 count
rebounds. Seitz hit 4-of,~ ·field goal matchup with Point Park College in
On t!p
tonight in th~ league
~ttempts: and was 6-of-.7 at the foul Pittsburgh•. Pa/ ~arne time is 7:30 . Urbana travels to Ohio Dominican:
hne.
P·lll·
Shawnee State VISits Malone on
Nathan. Copas
Point Park (7-7) dropped a 7~55
Fn'd ay. saturday 'aeatures the usua1
. added II points •
ufour assJSts and three . rebounds. decision to Saint Vincent (II· 7, full weekend slate of games. .

for

Half.&amp;llllla

.
Fou'· 30
C
IS
•
;:
entra tate .......... :..........24-36=60
Fouled out: Hester .
·~
Rio~ra~
35-38=73
Rio Grande: DaviS 1/3-0/0D
late:
ey 010-1/3- 010=2, Copas 215-1/2-415= II, Beard
~~~h-~~17~.S~~~;~~8'1iJ8~~~~ 214:_212-8/10=18, Seitz 4/5-010"':
3/4=13, Walker ln-0/6-ci/0=2, Price 617-14,
Grant
l/l -0/0-3/4=5tBlackstone 3/4-1/1 -010=9, Kreischer '
0/0-0/3-CVO=O, Burke 1/2-0/1-0/0=2, 012-010-0/2=0, May 012-214-4/6=1(&gt;;:
~to. l~j!;'~~~~6.~~0..~o~~!~ Keaung_0/1-0/0-212=~· Shanton III:~:
011-0/0-0/0=0. Totals: 16/.. 5-6126- 0/0-0/2-2.
Totals.
14/16-6/9,~-;
17138=73
10/14=60
~
:~
Total FG: 22-71 (.310)
Tola' FG: 0-3? (.5 4!)
.•::;
Rebounds: 33 (Hester 9)
!e~~n~;~o (Be.:')d ?)
Assists: 6 (Walker 3)
Th:.:o~ers: ~ras
Thrnovers• 10
Bl k d h
Bl~k~
sh.ots·. 2
oc e s ols: 4
~
Steals·
2
•
..,
Steals:,6
Fouls; 15

S.......... B;;.i;;..

....

.NB~ lockout ends; trade day may yield 100-plus transactions·:
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
parison can offer h' th . ·
AP Basketball Writer
.
•.
1m . e max1mum .
NEW YORK (AP) - Get read Wit~ 12 112 l'"rcent raises - a total
f th b . d . NB h'
Y of $86.2 m1lhon over,seven yearsor e USiest ay m
A ISiory.
and then possibly tram! him to anothTons of trades ·are waiting be er team
d
ar1 . 200 ~ ·
· .
. .
~:d~· t~e stir. signi:geeanar~~~~d~g~ 1
&lt;;Jughotta could choose s1mply
.
o stay m Mmnesota.
ca~f~.!';~1 6:~~:g~raziest d' . th
That ans":er, and so many others
historv of the 1
ay ~ . ~ ·about who ~tll play _where, lllhat the
,
·.' . .. eag~e, age~t ell schedul~ w1ll look hke and whether
. ~~~~s ~~~:~; and 1 m lookmg for- ~~~~ans will return, will be answered

pr,

He's not the on! one
.
.
After 204 days,yhund~eds of mil- W. MdcDdyess
. decaded
early
. 1
d
e nes ay evemng to return to the
.
f d II
I1ons
·
I fito ol ars fim hassesdan counth Nuggets ' the team he played for m
~~A \~ko:sfin~~lytsc:~e :~~\}fi~ his .~rsttwo NBA1seasons. , .
cial end Wednesda
t w~s a rea close call, s~.'d
Six and a half ~onths of ~t-u McDyess agent, Jam~s Bryant. It
business was to be conduct: I ~ came d~when '? a que~uon. of do you
.
.
a
want tom. rll a contender or do you
p.m ..EST todhay, Wholthldtheb flood gates want to budd one? Pboemx IS a great
11
opemng
on w ·at s U ewe
1, .a lot
· over franch1'se
.. ' but. De'nver a's do'ng
100 transac tJOns.
The schedule of exc1tmg lhmgs that haven t come
co~es. out at 5 p.m. . "
. out yet."
. It s a .great feeh_ng, commts·
Rod Strickland was wondering
swner Dav1d Stern sa1d after he ~nd whether the Washington Wizards
u.mon prestdent Patnck Ew~ng would improve theit offer of $30
,S!&amp;ne~ t.he.nearly 30Q-pa~; collective million guaranteed ·for three years,
~ga1~mg .a~~.ment. It was an with two additional non-guaranteed
11il:redlble re)1ef.
.
years. The Wizards issued a take-it or
t The day began with ihe biggest leave-it ·'deadline of midnight
un.answered free agent q?esti6n · Wednesday.
·
·
bc!mg the futu~e of Tom Gughotta.
Strickland's ag~nt, David Falk,
. The Pboemx Suns made a last- was trying to engineer a sign,anddttcb eff~rt to woo h1m to the desen trade deal, while als9 contemplating
after ~hetr own pnzed. free agent, · whether to advise Strickland· to sign
Antomo McDyess, dec1ded to take a one-year deal with another team
l~ss money to play for the Denver and then re-enter the free-agent marNuggets.
ket next summer.
: Phoenix can make moves to get
Dennis Rodman meanwhile said 1
about $8 million under the salary he win not retire. '
'
cap. That would mean the Suns could
"OK, so here's the deal "
n~t ~ffer Gugliotta the maximum $9 Rodman wrote in a message post~
.ll).llhon. The Timberwolves, by com- on his Web site. "I've had some Ion2

d.
·
·h .h
1 11
1scusstons wtl ~ ~ peo~ e ove,
the ones wh~se opn~JOns matter most
to me, and I ve dectded not to retue
after all "
Sayl·n· • he has would l'k l I
.
. ~,
1 e o pay
m Ch1cago, Los Angeles, New York
or overseas, Rodman also wrote:
"There's one thing I have always
told my fans I would do in my last
game that I st1ll hayen·' t done. I'm
sure you know what it i~, but I still
have to come back for at least one
more game so tha~. I can get buck
naked on the coun.
Oth er payers
1
· agents
an d theJr
worked feverishly to finalize deals.
Among th~ l~nlallve agreements:
- Chr~sqa~ Laetmer headmg to
the Detroit Pistons '.n a ~Jgn-and. trade deal
sendmg , Charles
O'Bannon and Scot Pollard to
At! an ta.
- Damon Stoudamire agreed to

Colorado hi·res Barnett
.
.
.
as new football .coach
.

.

By JOHN MOSSMAN .
dinator Gary Kubiak turned down a
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) ..,-'- Gary · chance at the Colorado job.
Barnett, Wooed by many schools
Barnett was Colorado's original
since leading Nonhwestern to the choice, but Tharp had trouble dealing
I~6 Rose Bowl, is the new coach at with Barnel!'s expensive buyout.
Colorado.
Barnett s1gned an 11-year contract
: Barnett, who resigned as ·with Northwestern in 1996, but
Northwestern's coach after ·seven Denver's KCNC-TV said Colorado
seasons, told his players of his deci- won't have to pay Barnett's
. sion Tuesday night, and was expect- .$250,000 buyout fee. Barnett appared to arrive in Boulder tonight.
ently will settle with Northwestern
The school· called a Friday news on his ow.n.
conference to introduce him.
Nonhwestern was one of the
Barnett's hiring is subject to the worst programs ~n the counlry before
approval of CU's Soard of Regents, Barnett arrived, having failed to win
which has its regularly scheduled more than four games in a season
monthly meeting Thursday.
since 1911.
Barnett replaces Rick Neuheisel.
The Wildcats won only eight
who lefl Colorado on Jan. 9 to coach games in Barnett's first three seaWashington at $1 million a year. The sons, but the following year he led
52-year-old Barnett planned to spend them to a 10-1 mark, including a 41Thursday assembling a staff and 32 loss to Southern California in the
preparing to meet recruits.
Rose Bowl.
Northwestern has a 4:30 p.m..
The Wildcats wenl9-3 Jhe followEST news conference and is expect- ing season, which ended with a 48e\1 to announce that Miami (Ohio) 28 loss to Tennessee in the Citrus
coach Randy Walke( will repla:ce Bowl.
Barnett.
Nonhwestern returned to ils los- ·
· In the past few years, Barnett has · ing ways the last two years, going 5turned down coaching opportunities 7 in 1997 and 3-S in 1998. Also,
at' such top. schools as Notre Dame, Northwestern has been rocked by a
UCLA and •Texas. He is returning to sports betting scandal in which four
the school where be was once. an fonner Wildcat football players were
assistant under Bill McCartl}l:y.
indicted Dec: 3, accused of lying
: Barnett met with Tharp on about their gambling ~ctivities.
Tuesday in Houston,. where the
Barnett's record at Nonhwestem
agreement was set, according to was 35-45-1 in Seven seasons. His
media reports in Chicago al)d only other head coaching job was at
Denver,
Fort Lewis, a Division U sChool in
Barnett's hiring came one day Durango, Colo., where be had an 8after Denver Broncos offensive coor· Il-l record in 1982-83.

~~~

·
·
'
· ·
re-s1gn with Portland for$81 m1Ihon.
. - Dell Curry, the last of l~e o':'gmal Hornets was cons1denng
p nl d M'i
k
o anAtlor I wda~ eef.
f
anta an Its ree-agent orward, Alan Henderson, were far
apan on money
- Rick Fo~ agreed to take the
$1.75 ·million exception· from the
Lakers.
- The Knicks reportedly reached
agreements With their two free
agents. Charhe Ward and Chris
Dudley.
·
..
- Olden polymce·
was decJdmg
between the SuperSonics and Lakers.
- Derek Harper was JOining the
Los An~eles Lakers.
. .
"
- Billy Owens was sJgnmg wnh
Seattle.
.
- Jud Buechler was set to sign
·
Wit· h Detr01t.
- Michael Stewart was close to

.

'1999 ESCORT LX 4DR
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(Continued from Page 4) '
· visiting Michigan (9·1 0, 3-3) with 33
No. 23 Oklahoma Sl 75·
points.
,
Baylor 47
Alabama 67, No. ll Arllansas 60
Oklahoma State went on a 33-4
Jeremy Hays scored a season-high first-half run and coasted to a victory
24 points, including his first three· over Baylor.
pointer of the season , and Brian
Desmond Mason scored 18 points
Williams added 21 as Alabama won and Adrian Peterson had 16 for the
at Arkansas.
Cowboys (13-4, 5-1 Big 12). Kish
• Derek Hood led Arkansas (13-5, Lewis had 22 points and 10 rebounds
3-3 SEC) with 18 points. Williams for Baylor (6-13, 0-6), which shot
scored two baskets to trigger an 8-0· just 32 percent ·and committed 18
run thai put Alabama -(12-7, 2-4) turnovers in losing its sixth straight.
ahead for good .'at 47-39.

MAC games..•

AIR, SRW, AM FM, CRUISE, TILT, CASS

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0

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were making a!ale push for Divac . .. .
Other free a ents, includin liol "
R d w ·11 ·
_g d il
B g .
o
' Jams an rent arry, su 11- ·•
were not sure where they would be
signin
Th!;e also were a slew of uncon: ·
firm ~ 1 d
· 1 · -"

Don~ell :la~sh~~m~r~b ~nuvr~ v~~~··'

John Starks
"Th • ·

FarW•sf
CS Northridge 84. Sacramento St. 68
UC Sa nt a Barbara 78, Cal Poly-SLO 75
UCLA 911. Southern Ca l 80

' .

SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) The San ' Francisco 49ers reached
into their past for stability and direc·
tion by hiring Bill Walsh as general
manager.
· Walsh, 57, the Hall of Fame coach
who laid the groundwork for the
49~rs' long-running success, signed a
four-year contract. He coached the
49ers to three Super Bowl victories
in the 19,80s.

•

'

ing, not. about negoliaiOrs and nc o•.
tiating," Stem said. "We're ready~ to ~
get back to wo k ,
·
The league rreleased
th
hd I
of exhibilion games, wil~ ~~: fr.s~,~·
Sunday night at the United Center,
with the Indiana Pacers taking on a.
team no one will recognize - the :
Chica 0 Bulls
''
Theg regula·,
season will begi11
Feb. 5.

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l77EXIT 132

RIPLEY. WV
(304) 372.;s&amp;73 '
(800) 964-36'13
')

·

infonn:{;~~ a~J.:;n~j~~e~e~:;~~~~~

AIR CONDITION, SPORT
SPOILER, STEREO, ALUM
WHEElS

.

(Continued
from .·Page4)
.
Hadley nailed the jump shot. Avin
Howard ·sank two free throws with
eight seconds remaining to clinch 1he
victory.
Hadley, the only Eastern player 10
score in double figures. finished with
·IS points and pulled down nine
rebounds.
Central Michigan (7-9, 4-4) was
led by Mike Manciel 's I g points and
, 10 rebounds.

0

't\~~ 1998 FISO 4X4

1"1"011»0 RANGER SPORT
SPORT PICI~ STEREO,
· OWL TIRES

AUTO, Alii,. V6, LX PICI

Top 25 hoops ...

:'tl

"-~ t999 WINDSTAR SE

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· ·
·
s1gmng with Boston .
.
- Jerome Kersey was headed to
San Antonio
.
S
. .
.
. -hI am Perkins was ready to Sign
w1t nd1ana.
- Eric Murdock was joining
New Jersey '
_ Rap. impresario Master p
recently of the CBA's Fort Wayn~
Fur was re onedl re ortin 10
Ho(~ts traini~g cam~. p g
Among the other unresolved
questions was where Charlotte freeagent center Vlade Divac would
·
Sign
The Suns were interested if
they.. lose both McDyess and
Gughotta, and the Sacramento Kings
were weighing whether they should
renounce the rights to free-agent
Corliss Williamson in order to cij,ar
eneugh salary cap room 10 meet
· · •s askmg
· price. Several lea ue
D1vac
sources insisted the · SuperSo~cs

.

&amp;outhWest

-

.

Thu....tay, January 21,.1998

Nlners name Walsh
general m~nager

Alabama 67. Ark!lnsas 60
Nebraska 96. Okhihoma 81
· Oklahort1.1 Sl. 75. Baylor 47

'

CLEMSOI'I: S,uapendo&lt;J G Johnny Miller one! F.
Vinceat Whitt 'one game fqr violating unspecified

Taylor to a minor-league con~ct. DeliJI1'Ued OF ,
IOWA: Named Norm Parker defen1ive coordina- ·,·
Janik Broc:k for assignment
tor.
TAMPA ~AY DEVIL 'RAYS: Signed R.HP
METHODIST: Nllltll!!d Christina Mullin men'•
Bobby ,Wllf, RHP Steve Ontiveros, RHP Marc tenni• COKh.
.
Valdes, LHP Steve Cooke and LHP Nonn Charlton
NEW MEXICO: Named Gerald Bradley widl!'tO minor-league contracts.
receivers coach and Robert Anderson runaing bacb ·'
coach.
•·
NORTHWES~RN : Annou~d the reaignatioo
Football
of Ouy 81U11C'~t. football coach, 110 he can take the
' National Footballl.e111ut
MINNESOTA VIKINGS, Promoted Chip Myers 1une po1ition at Colorado. Named Randy Wjl)kd •
from quarterbacks coach to offensive coordinator. football coach. Annouoced the miremcnt of ~
Perrelli, wOITie'n'l bukttball coacb, at the end of lhe ·
Named Ray Shennan qu.-terbacks coach.
.
PITISBURGH STEELERS: Named Bob ' ~eason .
"' PENNSYLVANIA: Announced tht retirement of ,
Bratkow11c.i wide receiven coach.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS:.Sjaned CB Charles Julie Soriero, women's basket:ball coach, at the end
oflhe ICUOO. • ~ .... ..,.
, . . - 1 ,.
"
'",
DinYy·to a two-year contract '1..
·
·
THE CITADEL: Named Bruce Johnson ddeo- •
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Signed OT Dave
Fiore to a roil,.yw contrlct. Nairied. Biii·Walab &amp;en· tlve tine cod.
era! manager and si~ 'fllm 10 a four-¥Car con1rac1.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: Named • Mike
Sheppard q~artcrbackl coach.

Edmonton ....... ,................. l819 6 42 123 113
Vancauver .... L ................. I5 24 6 36 liS 135

.

Announced lhe rea.O,
MARINERS·: Signed LHP Brien'

MINNESOTA lWINS:

ment of RHP Bob Tewksbury.

Toronto 6, O.flu 4
New Jersey -4, Anaheim 3

Hockey

East

.

3t

Transactions

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Bucknell 63, Col&amp;lle 60
Lafayene 73, Lehigh 70
Massachuseus 63, St.loseph's 5S
Richmond 66, Ameri can U. 63
S1. John 's 84. Providence 51
Xavier 76, For(flam 56

ChiCIIj!O ............................ 1225 7

Aoricla 5, N.Y. blandcn 2

-ProctOAtne Faht.nd S1, Symmes Val. 3)
Rock.y Rivet Magnificat 59, Walsh Jesuit 46
Rootstown 67, Streetsboro 53
Sidney 46, Troy 40
Spring. North 55 , Sprin~. SQuth 46
Steubenville 65, St. Oamvillt: 62
Struthcn 41, Niles 35
·Thornville Shcridap 60, Croolc.Jvil.le 50
Vermilion 65, N. Ridgeville 49
W. Holme• 61 . Coshocton 40
. W.lcfferson 46, Wellington 30
Warrell Hardin&amp; 72. ·Younc. Chaney 32
Wa~nc S6. Plqun 49
·
Wellington 46, 'Firelands 42
WirKlham 59, Garfield 27
Young. Boardmnn 39. Young. Mooney J!'i
Zane1ville Ros~rans 76, Col. Watterson 64

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Big Ten men's standings
Ium

38

Grafton Midview ~. Brookside 33
Hudson76, Brocks"¥ille 54
Jefferson Area 52, Ashtabula Harbor 13
Usbon Beaver 46, Well!ville 32
Lorain Cath. 43, Amherst 35
Lorain Clearvirw ~5. Keystone 44
Madison 60, ChllJ'don 30
Mentor Lake Calh. 60, Willoughby S. 5&lt;4
Middlt:lown 'fenwick 58, Edgewood 42
Minerva 51, Carrollton &gt;41
Mogadore 54, Crestwood ~2 ·
Mosadore Field 57. WoodridJe 53
New Madison Tri- Village 48, Braclrord 23
Newark Licking Val. ~6 . Madison Plair)! 44
Parma Hts. Valley Forge 39, Lorain Adm. King

.

.··'
.

'

'

�...

~;

. Thur~day, January 21, 1999

Pomeroy • Ml~dleport, Ohio

Page 6 • The Deily Sentinel

·e-Daily Sentinel@
Si111.P1..ern Hig·h School

·N un's commitment to cause lead$ to prison sentence
.BV TIM WHITMIRE
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
LEXINGTON, Ky. -For Sister
.Marge Eilerman, inmate 88106-020
· at the Federal Women's Prison Camp,
'suffering is relative.
There is the restriction of not
'being able to come and go as she
· pleases, the inconvenience of not
being able to pick up the phone and
freely call her siblings, the sadness of
.missing Christmas services at the
Holy Family Parish inthe Appalachian town of Booneville, where she
worked as a pastoral associate.
But as ihe former Ohioan fills her
days with reading, letter-writing,
study and work, the soft-voiced 61year-old Franciscan nun places her
suffering next to that of Latin American civilians she believes have been
~icti m ized by soldiers trained at the
· U.S. Army's School of the Americas
· in Fort Benning, Ga .. and finds there
is no comparison.
. " Even here, there 's nothing any'body could do to me that could begin
io reflect the pain and suffering those
· people go through," Eilerman said
during a recent interview at the minimum-security prison camp on the
outskirts of Lexington. where she. is
serving a 14-month se ntence for her
. protest actions. "Their lives will
·'never be restructured, they will ne v-

er put them back together. I can walk
out of here and I'll have memories of
this place, but my life will gQ on."
· Eilennan has bt::en in prison since
late September, serving a sentence
imposed last year by a federal judge
in Georgia for acts of civil disobedience at the School of the Americas.
The school, which cou nts among its
alumni former Panamanian dictator
Manuel Noriega and officers closely
associated with former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, trains 900 to.
2,000 soldiers a year from -Latin
America.
Critics say the school, which
teaches combat methods, military
intelligence and commando opera- ·
tions, is responsible for human rights
abuses committed in Latin America
by its alumni. The critics call it the
"School of Assassins."
"We have to be embarrassed as a
country" about the School. (If the
Americas, Eilerman said.
"!just think there 's been far too
many instances in which the school
has honored its graduates who have
been found guilty of some terrible
atrocities," she added. "I can understand that the school cannot be
responsiple for everything that its
graduates do, and .I believe that. But
in no way and at no time should you
ever honor someone as a graduate of

that school that has done· what has
been done."
Eilerman was sentenced to prison
and tined $3,000 for a pair of 1997
incidents. In September, she removed
letters from a sign at the school and
marked it with ploody handprints and
slogans. When she returned two
months later and w'alked onto the
base, she and 21other protesters were
arrested and charged with trespassing.
'
Carol Richardson, co-director of
the Washington-based SOA Watch, a
grass-roots lobbying campaign
against the school, was one of those
arrested in the November 1997
protest. She served six months in a
minimum -sec urity West Virginia
prison last year.
·
" I know Marge well enough at
this point to know that she really does
make the best of any situation that
she 's in." Richardson .&lt;aid. " But.the
bottom line is that prison is hard."
- "It's physically difficult, often- ·
times," she said. It's very difficult to
be subject to searches, having everything pawed through- just that constant sense of having lost control of
your life. You just have to sort of give
in to that."
But Eilerman declined to dwell on
the difficulties of her prison exis. tence.
"My biggest surprise has come in

the goodness of ihe women who are
here," she said. '.::Jliere's a lot of caring, that's a real pleasant surprise."
And though the Christmas season
was "a very sad time,'' Eilerman said
she found beauty in it as well.
"It was really· wonderful having
midnight Mass here," she said. "It
probably was an Opportunity to spend
Christmas in a very spiritual way."
Eilerman spends much of her
time reading and writing letters about
the School of the Americas and ~he
is visited frequently by her eight living brothers and sisters and other reiRtives.
Eilerman grew up 60 miles north
of Dayton, Ohio, in rural Fon
Loramie, the daughter of a World War
I veteran and sister of two World War
II veterans. ·
" I guess that's part of the reason
why I'm so grateful for my family's
support, because we did come from
a very law-abiding, patriotic, respectful family," Eilerman said.
Eilerman left Miami (Ohio) University during her junior year to enter
a convent, the Sisters of St. Francis
in Tiffin, Ohio, and spent I 0 years
teaching.
In 1970, she went to Mexico to
serve as a missionary among the poor
in the southern Mexican state·ofChiapas.

J3udget
crunch causes Alaska to tighten
belt
.
.
.

By PAUL QUEARY
Associated Press Writer
JUNEAU, Alaska - The prospect
of billion-dollar budget shortfalls
has Alaska's governor making two
proposals once considered political
'death: reinstating an income tax and
·slicing off a chunk ofthe state's most
sacred cow, the $24 billion Alaska
'Permanent Fund.
Low prices for oil that provides
· ,most of the state's general revenue
lire expected to cause huge budget
. gaps several years. Keeping state
. government operating will require
transfusions from a cash reserve that
'could ~exhausted in three years.
Meanwhile, Alaskans pay no state
income tax and no state sales tax
while taking home an annual dividend from the Permanent Fund. The
. wildly popular payout reached a
record $1,540.88 last fall.
."The fact is we have the wealth
and
resources to fix the problem of
,-

stabilizing our fiscal future," Gov.
Tony Knowles said Wednesday in his
State of the State speech. "The queslion is, do we have the wisdom and
the will to make the savings and
investment necessary to achieve a
sustainable balanced budget or will
we continue to borrow from the
future?"
The state ditched its income tax in
1980 after oil money began flowing
into the treasury in massive amounts.
· The state took in $4.1 billion in 1982,
more than three times its projected
general revenue for this year.
Every time the average annual
price for a· barrel of North Slope
crude drops · a dollar, Alaska loses
about $95 million. The price slipped
under $9 a barrel in December, a
record low for a commodity that usually sells for about $16 a barrel.
The new income tax would fall
most heavily on people who come to
Alaska only to work before returning

to homes in the Lower 48. A family
of four with a household income of
less than $60,000 would pay nothing ,
Knowles said.
The tax is expected to taJse in $350
million, about a third of the projected shonfall.
The part of the plan that could
spark outrage from the public and
send nervous politicians running for
the exits is the dip into earnings of the
sacrosanct Permanent Fund.
The fund was created as a rainy- ·
day account to guard against an
inevitable decline in oil revenue, but
the Legislature's decision to · begin
paying dividends in 1982 turned it
·into a political minefield. Elections
turn on the barest hint that a candidate might support raiding the fund
or reducing the dividend.
Knowles, a Democrat ,beginning
his second and last term in the governor 's mansion, wants to take $4 billion of the profits tbe fund has rolled

up in the booming stock market and
add it to the state's cash reserve. The
reserve would then theoretically earn
enough every year to bridge the
remaining budget gap for years to
come.
Knowles has promised to submit
any plan to spend Permanent Fund
dollars to a public vote. ·
The first hurdle the proposal must
clear is the Republican-dominated
Legislature, where any mention of an
income tax is unpopular and tapping
the fund is no more attractive.
•
"Any solution to the fiscal gap
will not be adopted by this Legislature until we make further reductions
to sta!e spending," Senate President
Drue Pearce said of Knowles' plan.
Rank-and-file Republicans wete
even more blunt.
"It's robbing Alaskans' pocket·
books without cuts in government,"
said Rep. Ramona Barnes, a Republican from Anchorage.

"Thai's when 1began to see some
"I didn't feel that as a Christian
of the reality of what is happening in that I had a choice to make about
their country," Eilennan said. ~ this," she said. " lthinlc Christianity
experience affinned her commitment calls us to f&lt;!llow in the footsteps of
to liberation theology, which sees the Jesus, who cenainly spoke for the
church's primary mission to be free. poor." ~
ing people from oppression and
Eilerman said she has learned to
poveny.
view her time in prison, even the
Leftist Zapatista rebels have. be~n menial jobs at w~ich sbe works, as an
active in Chiapas since 1994, and Eil- extension of her protest against the
erman said School of the Americas School of the Americas.
graduates are among. the more than
"They're not meaningful tasks. To
125 'people arrested in connection continue to do them as ifthis is a part
with the December 1997 massacre of of the action, apart of what I believe
Indian villagers by ·pro-government in, occasionally m~es one dig a litgunmen in Acteal, Chiapas.. The vic- tle deeper, knowing that it's faith,"
tims of the massacre· were men, she said.
women and children suspected of aidJust by being behind bars,
ing the rebels.
Richardson said Eilerman is helping
Alumni of the school also are the campaign to close the school. The
accused by the school's . critics of opponents hope to . win passage of
involvement in the Nov. 16, 1989, congressional bills this year to close
massacre of siK Jesuit priests and two the school.
female co-workers in El Salvador.
Eilerman's
well-publicized
Eilerman returned to the United imprisonment is' "an opportunity to
States in . 1974. She ·did not learn reach out to people and communities
about the School of the Americas that you just don't have an opportuuntil 1996.
nity .to reach normally," Richardson
Eilerman and another Booneville said. "A Catholic sister in her 60s
nun "decided We would· spend our who's willing to give up over a year
Monday evenings researching what of her freedom- it causes people to
we could about the School of the ask that question and find out .more"
Americas," she recalled. That led to about the anti-School of the Ameriinvolvement in the campaign !O close ca campaign.
the school. She attended demonstraThough Eilerman will not be able
tions against it .. including the anrual to attend protests at the Pentagon and
rally at Fort Benning commemorat- White House that SOA Watch has
ing the El Salvador murders.
scheduled for May, Richardson said
Eilerman said her experience in she hopes the nun will be at Novem·
Mexico and her religious •training ber's rally in Fort Benning.
compelled her to speak out against
"We miss her," Richardson said.
the school, which was founded in "We miss her presence and her gen1946 in Panama and moved to Fort tleness and the power of just wh&lt;,&gt; she
Benning in 1984.
is .... She's a remarkable lady."

PICTURE YOUR PET
AMONG THE •••
PET VALENTINES! ·

,.

Greenspa-n"' greets SS proposal with doubts
By ERIC R. QUINONES .
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK- President Clinton
wants to invest nearly $700 billion in
Social Security reserves in stocks, but
market watchers believe the ambitious plan will face too many political obstacles to have much impact on
l~e long-running bull market.
• And objections to the plan raised
Wednesday by Federal Reserve
..Chairman Alan Greenspan could
make it that much harder for tbe idea
to become a reality.
. Clinton's proposal, unveiled Tues• &lt;\ay in his State of the Union address ,
must conquer worries about the wis,dom of investing Americans' retirement money in pctentially volatile
S\OCks.
"Ultimately, I thin~ it happensbut I 'think it happens with such a
. small sliver of the Social Security pie
that it will not have a noteworthy
effect on stocks in the near term, "
s•id Charles Crane, chief market
strategi st at Key Asset Management.
Clinton proposed using more tl\an
$2.7 tri lli on in expected budget surpluses over the next 15 years- or 62
percent of the total-to directly bolster Slxtial Security's cash reserves.
Qfthat, nearly $700 billion would be
i~vested in the stock market by a.n
mdepcndent government board in
~opes of gaini ng higher returns.
• · The rest would be kept, as they are
how, in safer but historically loweryielding U.S. Treasury honds.
· _: Greenspan told the House Ways

··and Means Con;tmittee Wednesday he · climbed too fast and are too risky.
was concerned that investment deci- Blue-chip stocks managed only a
sions for Social Security would be slight gain Tuesday as investors
influenced by political pressures.
reacted to warnings from the Fed
. He said the plan is bad for the chairman that the market may be too
economy. Social Security purchases optimistic about corporate profits.
of stocks would channel trillions of
"People are probably .scratching
dollars over the years into U.S. com- their heads a,nd saying the Social
panies; that would allow some indus- Security system ... is mi ssi ng out on
tries to become less efficient because great investment opportunities · by
government action are deciding not having been in the market in the
which companies should be funded. last eight years. But widows and
''I am fearful that we would use orphans also haven'( lost money
those assets in a way that would ere- either at any point," said Arthur
ate a lower rate of return for Social Hogan, chief market analyst at JefSecurity recipients and even greater fries &amp; Co.
concern it would create sub-optimal
"It's very difficult to explain to
use of capital and a lower standard of people: 'You lost money, you lost part ·
living," Greenspan said.
of your Social Security,·because we
Also standing in the proposal's made bad investment decisions,"'
path are Republicans who oppose
government participation in private
financial markets, preferring to see
CLEVELAND (AP)- The Ohio
Social Security money divened into
personal accounts. Clinton is siding Lottery jackpot for the .Super Loito
with Democrats who say that would drawing Saturday will be $8 million.No S4per Lotto·game tickets were
expose Americans to too much financial risk.
sold with the six-number combina"So far the market regards this tion drawn Wednesday, when $4
·
possible outcome with keen interest, million was at stake.
but WithOUt tremendOUS COnVictiOn, n
Sales for the Super Lotto game
said Tom Madden, chief investment totaled $2,125,579 and players shared.
officer for domestic equities at Fed- $241,915. Sales forthe Kicker game
erated Investors. "Given the presi- totaled $382,061 and players shared
dent's current difficulties and the $237,960.
entire focus of the Congress on the
There were 88 Super Lotto tickets
impeachment trial, how fast such an with five of the numbe"""and each is
initiative could go forward is an open wonh $664. The 3,219 Super Lotto
question."
tickets with four of the numbers are
Fears also remai n that stocks have each wonh $57.
There was one Kicker game ticket with all the numbers and it is worth
$100,000. The winning ticket was
sold at Dairy Mart No. 4292 in Con-

Jackpot goes to $8 million

New York governor planning
to hike his national visibility

Sy MARC HUMBERT
Aasoclated Press Writer
. , ALBANY, N.Y. -:- Gov. George Patald, boosted by supporters as a poten.ual candtdate for nattonal office next•year, has created political action committees to finance a stepped- up national travel schedule aides said Wednes-

day.

·

Hogan said. "That can't happen in
the boring old bonds that they 're
invested in now."
Clinton also proposed that another II percent of the ·total surplus,
aboul'$500 billion, would go to subsidize new accounts. to supplement
Social Security benefits that would be
simihir to the 40 I (k) plans many
companies offer.
·The Clinton plan promises to pour
millions more into the ,market, but the
more significant impact may be psychological, said Robbins.
"It adds a little more credibility to
the stock market and may cause peo- .
pie to separately move more money
from relatively low-return investments and realize that long-term
stocks are the place to be," he said.

'

. The New York .governor 's PACs, one a federal entity and the other operaung under Vtrgmta state election rules, will also make contributions toother Republican s across the country.
The activity could help set the stage for a national run by the 53-year-old
governor, ·who began a second term this month.
·-Patalci spgkeswoman Zenia ~ucha said Pataki plans a series of speech'
es ·across .the country m the comtng months stressing hi s brand of Republicamsm - generally fiscally conservative and socially moderate.
·Patalci plans to k1ck off his stepped up schedule with a speech Feb. 5 at
the Untverstty ofCh1cago followed by a mid-February appearance in Spring- ·
field, Mo .. as keynote speaker for the Missouri state Republican Party's annual Lincoln Day dinner.
·
·P¥taki has dOdged questions about whether he wants to rim for national
office, but has said that as governor of New York he can't help but think about
it now and then.
·Since the November elections, Pataki has been highly critical of the par- ·
ty 's national leadership for focusing on the Monica Lewinsky scandal in its
attacks on President Clinton .
·
Pataki, complaining about the nati onal GOP's '" horrible blunders " said .
it was up to the nation's Republican governors to show the way and that he
planned to speak out more on national issues 'i n the coming months.

•

neaut.
.
Thc'six Kicker tickets showing the
first five digits are each worth $5;000.
The 40 with the first four numbers are
each worth $1,000. The 333 with the
first three numbers are each wonh
$100

MEIGS CO. KARATE
CLUB WILL START
· WINTER QUARTER
.BEGINNING ON MONDAY JANUARY 25TH
AT CARLETON
SCHOOL IN SYRACUSE
AT 6s00 P.M.
For More lnfonnation
'--___,c~

992-6839

NOTICE
A hearing on the Meigs County Title
XX Comprehensive Social Services
'
Plan (CSSP) will be held at lO:OO.A.M.
on Friday, ~ Fehruary 5, 1999, in the
Common .:Pleas Courtroom of the
Meigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Public comments on the proposed Plan will be received at this
time.
Michael L. Swisher
•
MCDHS Director

..

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thuraday, January 21, 1999

'·

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)

"FOR PETS ONLY"
WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 11TH IN
Also a special section for ln.Memory Valentine Pets.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
ONLY

~600
PER PICTURE .
PRE·PAID

Hurry! Deadline
Thursday, february 4th at 3 p.m.
f

Ir--------------------------,
.
VALENTINE PETS

!Pet's Name_·_._________,__

IOwner's N a m e - - - - - - - - - IAddress ___________
ICilY----------IAmount Enclosed:
For -pictures
•at $6 each . .

L--------------------------~
Deadline Thursday, February 4th at 3 p.m.
Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
111 CQurt St.

..
•

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'

.What are student$ reading?
distracting people from reading. So
By AMBER MAYNARD
• . Wi\11 smiling faces, a few students · what are teens reading when they
answered with the T.V. Guide. aren't watching television or being
Besides this, what else has captivat- bored?
Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles
ed the student mind?
seen'\
to be popular with the spellBooks are a wonderful alternative
binding
story of a vampire's life that
to the television, .which seems to be
taking over with extreme force. But seems all too real for fiction . She also
when the cable goes out and there's has the critically acclaimed The
nothing to do, isn't it nice to sit down Witching Hour, which is followed by
and let your imagination run wild as its haunting sequel, La;her. T~ tale
you read some great story that you of a family of powerful witchcraft
and·spirit that haunts and helps for its
· just can:t put down?
.
Think about it, with books there own pleasures .
Stephen King, master of ·horror,
are no commercials, no dumb advertisements, no noise, and no static. Just has several books being passed
you, your imagination, and the pages. around as well. The Dark Tower
You never have .to worry aboul the Series and The Green Mile seem to
electric going out when you're read- be quite popular. Carrie, Cujo, The
ing, because there's always a flash- Stand, Needful Things, and It have all
light or a candle. You can stop read- been made into movies, but the
ing whenever you want and not wor- books are muc h better and the mind
. ry about missing \\'hat's happening has a way about picturing· King's gory
details. His newest work, Bag Of
while you're gone.
The love'of reading seems to have Bones, is definitely a must read.
Danielle Steele's variety of books,
gone down hill a little. People seem
to think with most books being made Message From 'Nam, Vanished, and
into mo,vies, who needs to read? Accident also seem to capture the
Once again, television plays part in attention of some students. Also,

' '

:

Y2K BUG? _; Since many oldar. computers 't o an en~: NeWer comp,. , . , ,like thl!l onE! b!ttlng
read the year •• two dlglta lnataad of foUr '' used at Southern High ~chool by students
(example 11199o:99), thay are expected to lntar· Autumn Hill and Sarah Brewer, from left, will
pret, the year 2000 aa 1900, ,p oaalbly creating likely ancountel'!lO prOb,Jems alnce,they record
numeroua problaml aa the currant.yaar co~e• ![ a year u !&lt;'ur. ~l~lts. !.P hoto by l'!renna Sisson)

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:Sy .CARLY CROW
examples of what might happenifthe
' "As our nation prepares for the problem isn't taken care of: I. When
:year 2000 (Y2K) we face an urgent ·the clock turns from II :59 p.m. on
need to address the Y2K problem, Dec. 31, 19??;•1".' 12 a.m. on Jan. I,
which may cause computers a~d ' 2~, many c~m~.uters -. for examembedded systems that run Amenc- pie computers .~~ the ~~dt~al field -as critical infrastrUcture to malfunc- may malfu~ctrf$0\ mtsmterpret prelion or even shut down."
seriptio(\S. ~efuse· to distribute medThese words hail straight from the ication1 ~ive thtJ'wmng di~~rtosis for
mouth of the filii\ in charge, President the wrong pa:l;tor \DaYil\Y&gt;'i~ deny
Bill. Clinton. These M-.or\15' stre~s'~ ·lpsurlJ.lce c~ , ,
fur !lr~ttent; 2.
need to recognize the •Y'2K problem ·M~st C'bmptller syst~~s ~fore the
and correct it. But we must ask our- · year 1·997 use 1\"0 dtgtts mstead of
selves this question: The government 'the no~ us~d ~~~qr digits. The probhas known about the Y2K bug n,!&gt;w lem wtth thts t~ ·,~o~ld be the comfor quite some time, why wait until puter ~uld· not iltsttngutsh between
the last minute to fix it?
• the,y~ar ~000 and 1900, therefore an
Well this is no surprise to many · eld~rly P'IJient who is, for instanc~ ,
Americans, as the government usu- I04,' meanmg he or she was born m
ally waits until the last minute to do 1894, would be known· as a 4-yearalmost everything, and sometimes, old in computer systems ev,erywhere;
. but not always, gets the job done. · 3. If the Y2K ordeal causes sy~tems
: This just so happens to be the case worldwide to fail, , impo~ant . tnfo~with 'the Y2K b4g. Here are a few · mation co'\ld be l~st, a patt~nt who1s

, criti~allr de,Pende~t on a cenam
medtcabon to survtve, could walk
'.into a phannacy or doctor's office and
the. ~?mputer could deny .the prescn~tton t~erefore the pauent could
·posstbly dte.
· These are aU perfectly good exampies of why we need to ~ake the
.Y2K bug a top priority .~nd .~nd a
f ay .to make everythmg ~ K .
. If·the · prestde~t . and liis people
hmk t~at ad~ressmg the Y2K prob'lem wtth a Nattonal Y4K Actton
Week", . ":ill help matte~s they, in
· most optntons, are hv10g 10 a Utopta,
,because thts.•s untrue . Sure lhts may
help 10 !",akmg Amen cans aware of
;this senous problem and hopefully
.prepare them for what hes ahead tf
·they have not attacked the problem
already.
.
; What we reaiiy need now" some,one to sl&lt;;&gt;P talktng about 11 and take
some act ton before tl ts too late.

.
.
Sometimes learning about
organa requires a close,
hands-on · look:
usu~~tiiY
obtained only by cutting
something open - fetal pigs,
In this ceae. Students ahown
at right dissecting fetal plgi
In Ann Sisson's Biology II
class are Kayla Pulllna and
M!lcyn Ervin. Also ahown
studying In the SHS media
center for an upcoming Bioi·
ogy II class are, bottom photo, Garrett Kiser, Jeremy Hill,.
Kayla Pullins, Macyn Ervin
ane!._Roy Ro~:.

;~ . reflection · c:;n1 4-wheel~r : tragedies
great danger.
become of it.
By CHRIS RANDOLPH
Some of my classmates told me
·
In
the
past
few;years,
4.-wheelers
No more than a year and a half
about
another acciden't involving an
have
become
very.
popular,
especialago, I witnessed a very tragic acciATV.
They
just wish they would be
dent in my family. My cousin was ly with teenagers. There is nothing
involved . in a 4-wheeler wreck. It wrong with that, tlut there is some- banned.
I do not·believe that way, but there
thing 'Vrong lllith the impt'o~ use of
would cost him his life.
'
.
'
really
is not much \ve can do but to
'
them.
'
.
w
•
ll
Almost a year later, another all'
j'ust
hope
some people will get a
People
nowadays
tend
to
think
of
terrain vehicle accident occurred.
sense
of
what
they are doing.
The person involved in that one also 4-wheelers as toys , and forget about
After
witnessing
two deaths to feltheir dangers.
would suffer the consequences.
.low classmates and to a family memI do Rot want to ,bring back any
1
have
JJeen
aiou~d
4-wheelers;
I
·
'ber, I do not want to go through
more haunting. memories of those
use
them
;.ith
respect,and··know
they
another one. There really is not much
two accidents so !'will not go into any
not
toys
-altho\{gh
some
people
'that
I can do, but just hope that everyare
detail of the accidents.? However, I
would like to say something about the · do not approach it that way~' There- one is more careful next time they go
use of 4:wheelers, ' and what has fore they are putting themselves in 'riding.

University gets media 'center gift
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP)- The Scripps Howard Found~tioi\ has given
$200.0.00 to the University of Southern Indiana for a media cepter for communications students.
.
The grant also establishes merit and minorily scholarships, finances a two' · week summePworkshop for minority st~dents 'and sets up two multimedia '
computer laboratories.
. ,
, .
· Judith Clabes, president and chief executive of the Cincinna~-basljd· fo~~­
dation , announced the gift on Monday. The project will be call¢ the Scripps
Howard Center for Media Studies.

The Writer's -Biock
.
You woke up this morning with the pen in your liand ..
Hoping and praying that they would understand.
Within 'your walls, a safety duplex.
Keep yourself focused by balancing checks:
You woke up this morning, lethargic and sad.
They're asking for impeachment, does it make you mad ?
Put on your mask and secrets won't show.
If you smile just right, maybe they won't know.
You woke up this morning with tears in ·your eyes.
Was it Iraq that tilled you wilh despise?
One sweaty hand touches the mirror. '
. •
The reflection is you, why.isn't it clearer?
You woke up this morning screaming ovt loud.
Thought you were someone in which yod could be proud.
Look at your hand s, all covered in lies. ··
1
Look in the TV, can'tlook in their eyes. ,
We woke up thi s morning to a nuclear blast.
We've killed all we, love, destroyed our o.wn.past.

'

· 408 General
Hartlnge!_Parkway
992-3471

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS
Supporting all the area
. s¢hools &amp; youth.
Stop In and sav "HI"
to Dave or Herb.
,

- AMBER MAYNARD

•

Vaug~an's

~upe,market

Lament for the Apocalypse

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
•

....---Hands-on learning·.-._......,.

Take action ·now
~:to address
.
Y2K's ·pote. ~t·i;~lfpr· ; disaster
'

John Grisham's The Client and The
Rainmaker (both made into movies)
are gn;at books with pages full of
suspense.
In The Classroom
. Even those who aren 't big fans of
reading are required to read every
now and then. But who can resist
classics from Shakespeare like ·
Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, and
Macbeth. The bard of Avon would be
proud to know that even now, we
read his masterpieces.
Some other classics being read are
The Adventures of.Huck Finn by
Mark Twain, East of Eden by John
Steinbeck; and Great Expectations by
Charles Dickens. Reading books like
these alone may not be much fun, but
when you have the advantage.to read
it in the classroom, you have a better
chance of understanding the purpose
and main point of the book. .
So ne•t time when you're bored,
instead of reaching' for the remote ,
reach for a book like The Picture of
Dorian Gray or The Catcher In The
Rye. You may find that it's better
entertainment than you expected.

742-2211

COOLSPOT
CONVENIENCE STORE·'
.

~(/)~

'

F!.!!ll - y[Q!.&lt;!UI~i • Q~ll
Esnnll~ B~ilsumml
Coolville Exit off Rt. 7
667-6100 Store
667-6101 Restaurant
Owner: Bryan White

R&amp;G
Feed Supply
.. · "Stuff"
for Pets'
'
Farm Animals • Stable
Joe Evens, Owner
992-2164

.333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740) 992-6472

0 liio !Rjver .
'Bear
Company
992-4055

HOME

NATIONAL
BANK
Racine 949-2210
· Syracuse 99~·«}333

ning _Childs
Mullen Musser ·
Insurance
111 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
992-3381 '

OMIO CliUAtTT GIOUP

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Thursday, January

21, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

T~~ ·oan~ Sentinel • Page

9

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By The Bend

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The Daily Sentinel
Paaee

Thurectey, January 21,1999

Is ·MYOB always a good idea? Not if someone is in danger
pounding my head into the pave·
ment. ·1 was screaming for help, begging someone to c·all the police.
No one came. After he left me
199?, U:11 A.nJCk:~ T1me5
alone
a woman came out of her
Syndicate a!KI Cre11or1
Sylldicale.
house and said s he "hoped we had
resolved our problems."
Fortunately, I survived, and
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing through At-Anon, counse li ng and ·
.about something that happened in good frie nds, 1 fi nally got my life
our t~wn ~ot long ago. A woman together. I know others who, like
w as killed In her own home _by her (lle, needed to be resc ued but weren't
. husband. The woman had nerghbors · because people "didn't want to ge t
. .who heard her scream for_help, but involved ." When I hear about such
. ~hey chose n ot to become mvolved.
incidents, it makes me angry. People
: , T hrs wrll haun t them fo rever need to help one another Even if
. knowmg they mrght have saved her they call 9 11 and it turns out to be a
: hfe and mstcad drd nothmg. I have false alann , so whar? You never
. been m a srmdar sHuatro,n.I was out know ·when you might be saving a
: m the street one mght, trymg to get life.
. : ·away. from my abusive husband. He
Please, tell your readers : Take a
: ~ad knocked me d own and was chance. C et invol ved.~· SANTA

BARBARA, CALIF.
DEAR SANTA BARBARA:
There are ti mes when MYOB is the
best policy, but when someone is
screaming for help is not one of
those times. "The next leiter says it
far better than anything I could
come up with :
•
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
saw this poem at work. The author is
unknown, but apparently, she witnessed the death of her mother. I
cried when I read it, not only
because of the pain I felt but because
so many women out there -need a
wake-up call.
Please print it so others might
benefi t from the message. -- D.R. IN
WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. .
DEAR D.R.: Here it is. Poignant
and powerful. Thank you 'for sending

Ann
Landers

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it on.

I got flo wers today. II wasn't my
birthday or any other special day.
We had our first argument last
night, And , he said a lot of cruel
things that really hurt me.
I know he is sorry an4 didn't
mean the things he said
· Because he ·sent . me flowers
today.
·
• I got fl owers today. It wasn't our
anniversary or any other special day.
Last night, he threw me into a
wall
and started to choke me.
It seemed like a nightmare.
I couldn't believe it was real.
I woke up this morning sore and
bruised all over.
I know he must be sorry
Because he sent me nowers
today.

He beat me to death. ·
If only I had gathered
I got flowers today, and it wasn't
Mothef's Day or any other special 1 . Enough courage and strength to
leave him,
day.
I wquld not have gotten flowers.
Last night, he heat me up again.
toclay.
·
And it was much worse than all
the
Do you have questions about sex,
other. times.
but no one to talk to? Ann Landen'
If I leave him, what will I do?
booklet, "Sell and the Teenager," is
How will I take c~ of my kids? frank and to the point. Send a selfVVhatahdutmoney?
addressed, long, business-size enveI'm afraid o f him and scared to lope and a cbeckor money order for
leave.
$3.75 (this includes postage aile!
But I know he must he sorry
handling) to: Teens, c/o AnnLanBecause he sent me fl owers ders, P.O . Box 11562, Chicago; Dl.
·
today.
60611- 0562. (In Canada, send
$455.)
I got flowers tQday. Today was a
To find out more about Ann Lanvery
ders and read her past columns, visit
special day.
' the Creators Syndicate web page at
It was the day of my funeral.
www. creators. com.
Last night, he finally killed me.

Loca_
l H~art Association discontinues February campaign :·
There will be no door-to-door A HA is continuing . several other
Another way that individuals
canvas for donations to the Meigs projects. School children will be may donate is through the :·Have A
County Di vision of the American participating in the Jump Rope or Heart" campaign that will be con·
Heart Assoc iation this year.
Hoops for Heart programs.
dueled in numerous business~s and
"This has been a di fficult dec iIn these programs, the schools ·organi zations throughout Meigs ·
s ion to make because a great deal of earn educational materials and stu· County. For a one dollar or more
our support carne from that cam- d ents earn prize incentives for dona· · donation, patrons of the business or
paign," explained Dr. W ilma Mans- lions. Schools ·can conduct these club may purchase a paper heart and
fi eld , president of the Meigs County programs whenever they wish put their name on i\ for display.
AHA .
.
throughout the school year. With
The Meigs County AHA will
"Howeve r, each yea r it has these programs , individuals may also conduct their special gift·busi·
become increas ingly difficult to · sti II he asked to donate to the Amer· ness campaign by mailing to select
find volunteers wit h time to do ican Heart Association.
individuals and businesses wh~ ·
neighborhood collecti ons and those
·Students participating will be have been past supporters.
that were able to help found few using AHA collection envelopes
Anyone wishing to make a dona·
people at home. We truly thank all with the heart and .torch logo to tion who is not contacted by these
the volunteers who have helped in identify them as legitimate volun- . projects can mail a check or money
the neighbo rhood collection over teers of the AHA. Residents are order to Meigs County American
the years," she said.
urged to donate with a check so that Heart Association; Nancy CampIn place of the February reside n- they have a receipt of their don~­ bell , Treasurer; PO Box 177;
tial campaign, the Meigs County ti on.
Racine, Ohio 4577 I .

Money from these campaigns
will go the Meigs County Qivision
of the American Heart Association
for research and educational programs such as the "HeartP&lt;iwer"
kits plac ed in schools through6ut
th~ county.
The AHA wants to remind peo·
pie that heart disease is the number
one cause of death in Meigs County.
Proper medical attention, regular
exercise, a ·diet low in fat and clio·
!estero! as well as tobacco avoidance all play key parts in maintaining good heart health.
For more information about the
American Heart Association or cardiovascular disease and preve ntion,
residents may call 1-800-AHA·
USA!.

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AWARDED PLAQUE - In recognition of her long service and
; dedication to the Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital,
· Clara Burris was presented a plaque by Fern Grimm, president Mrs.
: Burris who joined the Auxiliary in 1966, Is the oldest active member
, In years of service. She was recognized during the Auxiliary's meet, lng Tue!lday afternoon at the hospital. The Auxiliary was organized
: in 1962· just before the hospital was opened.

Community Calendar·--THURSDAY
POMEROY
Alcoholi cs
.Anonymous open disc ussion meet' ing, 7 p.m ., Sacred Heart Catholic
. Church , 160 Mulberry Ave. ,
1
• Pomeroy:
. FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Evangelis ts Mark
• and Jennifer Tucker, .Danville, Va.,
· formerly of Meigs County, Rutl and
Civic Ce nter for services, Friday and
Saturday, 7 p.m. ·

POM EROY - Revival services,
Sund ay, I 0:45 a .m . and Sund ay
through Thursday, 7 p.m. First
Southern Bapti st C hurch, 4 1872
Pomeroy P.ike, Po meroy. Paul Brewer, evangeli st; Mars hall Ke ll am,

music evangelist.
POM E ROY
Al coho lics
Anonym ous study group mee ting, 7
p.m. s·acred Heart Church, 160 Mul ·
berry Ave., Pomeroy.

POM EROY Women's AA. MONDAY
meeting, 7 p.m. Fri day, 1608 Nye
POMERO Y - Veterans Service
Co mmi ssion, 7:30 p.m . Monday at
Ave. , Pomeroy.
the new location, 117 Memor ial
:SATURDAY
Drive, Pomeroy.
POMEROY
Alc oho li cs
Anonymous study group meeting, 8 TUES DAY
p.m. Saturday, Sacred Heart Church,
SYRACUSE
Alcoho lics
160- Mulberry, Pomeroy.
Anonymous open discussion meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Carl eto n
SUNDAY
School.
RUTLAND - Rutland Baseball
League meeting, Sunday, 6 p.m. at
LANGSV ILLE - Salem Townthe Rutland firehouse. New officers ship Trustees, 8 a.m. Tuesday at the
will he elected and field li ghts will Salem Center firehouse.
be discussed .

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Birth announced
Frederick, · Ella Osborne, Jean these
even though I have y o~r own pace are · ·advantages,"
Carol and David Williams of Welsh, Opal Eichinger, Inzy Newell, only seen [otir of them."
she said. "The time you would gen·
38345 Murray · Road , Pomeroy . E li zabeth Hay es, and Mary K.
Students taking the course ranged erally spend in the classroom you
announce the birth of a son, Josiah Holter.
from first-time HC students to a can use elsewhere. !t was easy to
Patrick Williams on . Dec. 9, . at
police officer to a student from read and follow, and sending and
O ' Bl eness Memorial Hospital,
Brazil who took the course to com- receiving email was painless also.
Athens.
·
Revival services set at First Bap- plete work toward finishing a degree The fact that you are actually teachMr. and Mrs. Williams have three ~ tist
that she had started as a student on ing yourself (and) being able to
other children, two daughters,
Revival services will begin Sun· campus two years ago. Ten students accomplish such things on your
Gabriel and Rachel Gayle, and a day at the First Southern Baptist were in the inaugural online class.
own , with an instructor's guidance,
son, Isaac.
c;hurch· and co~tinue Jhrough Jan.
Kim Denbow, a,. back country is an achievement." ·
.
,
Paternal grandparents are Patrick 28.
horsemanship student, took the job
. "Most students are ·in the Ohio
and Bertha William s of McArthur;
One of the speakers is the Rev. communications online course dur- area," Tripp said . "One new student
and maternal grandparents are. Don- Paul Brewer who is involved in ing fall quarterQher first as a Hoc kwho signed up for the class for win·
ald Leedy of Oak Hill and the late starting and ·strengthening · black ing studentQand was very happy
ter quarter is a mother of three who
Letha Leedy. Hazel Arnold of churches in Ohio for the Southern with the results.
thought she would have to give up
Pomeroy is a· paternal great-grand- Baptist Convention. The other· is
· "I really liked the course being on her studies for the winter."
mother.
·
Marshall Kellam, a full -time music online. I could do it at my own pace;
evangelist from Louisv ille, Ky.
with no paperwork involved. That is
Students completed assignments
. Services will be held at 10:45 a bonus," she said. "I didn ' t have to at the same rate as on-campus PACE
D of A officers installed
a. m. Sunday and 7· p.m. Sunday go anywhere. I did it from my com s.tudents, Tripp added, noting that
New officers were installed when through Thursday.
·
puter at my apartment, which was plans are in the works for online job
the Past C~unci lors C lub of Chester
Pastor Lamar 0 ' Bryant and the . Very convenient."
searc h techniques and grammar
Counci l 323, ·Daughters of America, church ex rends a Welcome to the
Denbow said she signed up for courses.
met at the home of Esther Smith.
public.
the class late but "caught up in no
In stalled by Delores Wolfe, prestime . I usually did something every . For more information , residents
id ~ nt , were Enna Cleland, president ;
night and everything worked out just may contact Tripp at 740' 753 -3591
Betty Young, vi ce president; Mary Online courses offered by Hock· fine. "
2373
(emafl :
ext. ·
Jo Barringer, secretary ;. Laura. Mac ing College
One of the course's primary ben· tripp @hocking.edu) regarding the
Ni ce, treasurer; Opal Hollon , fl ower
O nline courses- the wave of the efits, Denbow said, was the time it general studies courses; or Morel at
committee; Margaret Amberger, 2 1st centcry - have arrived at saved. She dido 't have to sit in a 740-753-3591 , ext. 2873 (e mail:
sentinel. The new officers will serve Hocking College, Nelsonv ille.
cl assroom for three hours a week.
morel s@ hocking.edu ) regarding the
for six months. ·
While Hoc king 's online program
"Convenience and (working at) program analysis course.
·
The meeting opened w1th scri JY- is in its infancy, the school plans to
ture from Psa lm s I 05, the Lord's ex pand its online curriculum to help
.' ·t
•'
Prayer and the pledge to th~ Ameri- meet the ever-increasing needs of
can n ag. For ro ll call membe rs traditional and non-traditional stunamed their favori te gi ft for Christ· de nts alike , according to Carolyn
mas.
Tripp, general studies instructor and
Officers' rep6ns were given and coordinator for the college's first
the next meting was announced for online course.
Feb. I0 with each member to take an
Hocking began "cyber-school"
un signed valentine. They will be last September by offering its job
signed by all members present and ' communications class as an online
sent to shutin s and sick people. Door course as well as in the classroom
prizes were won by O pal Hollon ond and via PACE. Results of the online
Deloris Wolfe. Refreshments were course exceeded expectation s,
served by the hos.tesses. Games were
"It was one of the most ~njoyable
conducted by Esther Smit_h and things I've ever experienced as a
pri zes were awarded to the winne~;S . teacher," said Tri'pp, ·fonn erly of
Other&amp; attending were Goldie Meigs County. "I felt really close to

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NOTICE! OF BALE

By VIrtue 01 an Ali• Order

Public Notice
Bigley Ridge, Long Bottom,
OH 4S743. .
Rtat Eatate and Mobile
Homoa Appraised AI:
~,000.00. The rtll ealatt
and mobile homtt cannot
be aold lor late than .two.
lhlrdatha appnrltld value.
Tarmt of Sale: Cuh·10%,
down on day ol ..,,, .
balance on delivery ol dtld.
Sold aublect to accruttd real
11tate toxaa and mobile
hometaxN.
Jemot M. Soul,by
(1) 7,14,21 3TC .

. of S.Io luuttd out 01 the
.Common Plua Court or
:Melga County, Ohio, In the
.e. .. ollht Home Notlonol
Blink, Plalntlll, ve. Jimmie
L Young, tl at., Delandante,
4pon 1 Judgment lhtnrln
· nrn~rtld. being C.n No. 98
CV S3 In Hid Court, I Will
. ·ollar lor Hie It tho front
door or tho courthouu In
Pomtroy, Malga County,
. Ohio, on !he 12th day or
"Ftbruaty, ' 11199, ·at 10:30
a.m., the· following Iande,
molll!a
· Public Notice
tanamtma;· -_n\1
homta, locotttd t1 51791
· •lllgley Ridge, Long Bottom, COUNTY: MEIGS
..OH 4S743. A compltta
PUBUC NOTICE
Inat dtecrlpllon or the real The lotlowtng application•
and/or verified complalntw
i8tate lila lollowa:
_&lt; 'The lollowlng reol eotate w•r• · rociltvad and the
altuatttd In Olive Township, following draft, propond,
Soctlon 30, TOV.n 3N, R111111 or ftnol actlona wore Ioouttd
11W,
baing
more by th• Ohio Environmental
particularly deecrlbad •• Protection Agency (OEPA)
lollowa:
tut wuk. "Actions: Include
' Beginning at an Iron pin lht adoption, modlllcatlon,
..found being tho Southuet or repeal ol ordara (other
·- corner ol Jim Naal'o
than emorgency ordere);
'acre lrtcl and on the North the
laouance, denial,
lint 1 10 acre tract tormarly modlllcttlon or revocation '
'owned by Margaret Greet olllceneea, permlll, leo eta, .
.and being the aouthw111 varloncae, or cartlllcat11;
cornor ol property and the approval or
.purchaaod by Kenneth ond dloapprovol · ol plano and
• lllltty Young !rom Albert R. opaolllcotlono: "Dralt
'ond Wllmo Dangelo; thence Actlont": era. written atall·
North 300' along .the Eotl mtnll ol tht Director ol . .lint ol Neal'• property to on Environmental Protac-tlon't
Iron pin 11t; thence Eoet (Diroctcr'e) Intor!l with
1105.5' to a point on tho roapacl to the laouonce,
Eoat aida ol Bigley Ridge danltl, etc. ol 1 permit,
Road and on tho wool line llctnll, order, otc. Inter·
·or an 8 aero tract tormorly 11ted peraona may aubmlt .
··owned by Dale and Donno written comment• or
Connolly; thence South 300' raqu111 a pubic meeting
·to 1 point, thence Well regarding draft actions.
1105.5' to . the point ol Comment• cr public
bttglnnlng containing 7.8 meeting requeots muat be
' ~ern, more or leu, · aubmlttttd wtthtn 30 days ol
6xceptlng
all legal notice ol the draft action.
eaeemante and rlghta ol "Propootd Acllone•.' iie
way.
wrltitn stattrhente ol the
Excepting any mlntralo Director'• Intent with
prevtouaty conveyttd.
. . reapoct to the leauanca,
' Being 1 part ol the . real denial, niodlllcatlon, revo·
etlete deocrlbed In deed calion, or renewal ol a
recorded In Volume 257,

pe~h,

:

Slug &amp;Shot
Matches

·RACINE f?IZZA
EXPRESS
will open on Sundays

Snow
Removal

due to customer request.

591·1897

Hrs :

4

Cellphone

pm- 10 pm

Starting Sun.. , Jan. 24th

Clo~ed on Mondays

·

949-4900
AT.

Written comments end
requeata lor s public
pert
real
meeting regerdlng ' a
Identlllld by Audltor'o propoltd action may be
·Pirrcei · Number oe- aubmlttad within 30 daya ol
00352.000.
notice ol thl propooed
' The ileacrlptlon lor this action . An adjudlcatlpn
, .. , eatata hll blln hearing may be held on a
provldod by tht Grantee.
propooad aotlon He hearing
Reltrtnca Deed: Volume requut or objection Is
333, P_a ge 541, Melgo rtcelvod by the OEPAwlthln
County Doed Recorda.
30 daya ol Iaauanc.a ol the
Auditor'• Perce! No.: 09- propooed action. Written
commenta, requeota lor
00352.001 . ·
.· Tho Tax Map Olllce public meeting a, and
lndlcatoa thla parcel to be adludlcetlon hearing rt·
7.211 acrte. There Ia • queoll mull be 11nt to:
dlacrtpancy In the atartlng H11rlng Clark, Ohio Envl·
point which cauoeo on ronmentel Protection
overtop ol 18 1111 on the Agency, P.O. Box 1049,
iouth aide ol the reo! Columbua, Ohio 43218-1049
eotate.
(Telephone: 614-644-2129).
Alao 1 1978 Baron mobile '.'Finell\ctlona" ara acllona
Iioma, 10" 4369 , Ohio ol the Dlrecto·r which ·ar•
·certlltcata
ol
Title ellacdve upon 111uence ""a
·N5300010612, and a t9B7 otated eflactlva dote. ·
Clayton mobile home, Purauant to Ohio Revlaod
ION41030, Oblo Certlllceta Code Section 3745.04, 1
ol Title N5300009154.
llnal action mey be ap·
• Property Addreaa: 5179t pealed to the. Envlronmentol

SWISHER LOHSE

Pharmacy
,

·

;o

•

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0

•

•

. ;

.:...

Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
.
Mon. t~ru Fri. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Sat. 8:00 a.m. 1o 8:00
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

992-3141

Home
Call Anytime

7 PIZZA EXPRESS
18" X - Large Four

toppings '12.99
Fast, Fresh &amp; Friendly
992-9200
"Notice"
from WAYNES PLACE
Vicky Dent, the new manager
invites you for the following
Saturday, Jan. 23rd
Live Music By "Symms Creek"
9:30 p.m . to 1:30 a.m.
Monday night, Karaoke
Thursday night, Ladies Night
Watch Thursday ad for new
upcoming events.

license, or variance.

the

RUIUND, OH.
AMERICAN
.
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
•'

Good Times Presents
Music by "Blitzkrieg" .
Friday &amp; Saturday
Jan . 22nd &amp; 23rd
9 p.m. to 1 a .m.

~~

Public Notice
Review Appaalo Commie·
olon (ERAC). formerly
known 11 the Environ·
mental Board ol Review) by
a person who has a party to
a procoadlng before tho
director by llllng an appeal
within 30 daya ol notlca ol
the llnal action. Pursuant to
Ohio Ravtlld Code Section
3745.07, a llnal action
laaulng, denying, rilodlly·
lng, revoking, or renewing a
permit, llcanaa, or variance
which 11 not preceded by a
propoaed action, IT!ay ba
irp~otal•td to the ERAC by
appeal within 30
laauance ollhellnal.

Public Notice
acilon. ERAC appealo "muat
be Iliad with: Environmental Review Appeala
Commlollon, 238 Eaat Town
Street,
Room
3oo ;
Columbua, Ohio 43215. A
-copy ol the appeal muat bl
aervad on the director
. Within 3 daya altar llllng the
apptltl with the ERAC.
Application lor permit to
lnllall
Fo.r11t Run Ready Mix
32760 Twp. Rd. 202
Raclne,OH
Facility Oeacrlpllon: Air
Application No. os-5709
Concrete Batch Plent.
21 lTC

Quality Prescription Service
at Competitive Prices.

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.
COUPON

.1999

Public Notice ,

FRBB
Pick uP dlecardttd
appllanc11, bettarl11,
manymotala&amp;
motor blocks
740-1112-4025 8 ·~ m

-HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO•
Jig gtoM HapQns
Bull.do•er &amp;: Backhoe
S"enice a
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Syolem &amp;
Utilitiee

(7401 992·3838
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE
No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy

•Room Additions
•Remodeling &amp; Siding
•Garages &amp; Decks
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
, •Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
•Roofing &amp; Gutters
•Concrete Work

·wiiaviYiNG!!!

No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect!

(Free. Estimates)

V.C. Young Ill
(Owner-21 yrs)

(740) 992·6215
"Fully Insured"
Reduced Winter Rates

Custom Homes

Don't Need A
. Big One
Call a Little
One .
Public Notice

Remodeling

M&amp;J

Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
up to 8 ton.
992-5455

"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wilson:
(614) 992·4271.

Tho L11dlng Creek
7
Conatniancy Dlotrlct public
wtlar auppty hao complotttd
the t9118 monitoring cycle
lor volatlls organic
chtmlcalo (VOCo) ••
required by chapter 3745-81 have been etudled and
· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
ol. th• .Ohio Admlnletratlve . rovlewttd. 11 Ia understood
Codt(OAC).
· that In eome aepecta theae
G
a ·
R. · 1
t Wj d
ar ges • ep acemen
ows·
Upon completion ol eaoh apeclltcatlona are detailed
VOC monitoring cycle, otate In their design and alao that
R. oom Additions • Roofing
regulation• alao roqulred exceptlone may be taken by
tht owner or optrotor of a aome btddora. Exception•
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
public water oupply to wilt be allowed II they are
notlly Ill conaumara o1 the determined
by the '
FREE ESTIMATES
avaltoblllty . ol the VOC Middleport Fire DeP.artment
anolyllcal reaulta lor the to be equal to or auporlor to
period taottd. Paraona that epocllled, and provided
wanting to review the VOC they are ltated on a separate
(No Sunday Calls)
2lt2/02/lln
page entitled "Exceptions L..---:--...:.-..;;.,;_..;,;,~.:.;.:.:;:___...!:,!,::::J
raautta llhoutd contact:
. L.ettdlng Cretk
to Speclllcallona". The
Conservancy Dlot~ct
exception llat shalt relor to
(Lime StoneC/O Martin Broderick,
the page number and
General Manager
paragraph ol these
Low Rates)
34481 Corn .Hollow Rd.
opecHlcatlons.
Rutland, OH 45n5
The VIllage ol Middleport,
Furniture ~efinUiting
(740) 742-2411
Ohio reaervea the right to
&amp;: Repair
(1) 21 lTC
reject any or all bids
received and to waive any
P ickup &amp; Delivery
lnlormaltty In the bidding.
Public Notice
Available
(1) 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 ,
Limestone;
22, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, .
982~1100
PUBUC NOTICE
Tht Flninctat Report for 1999
Gravel, Sand,
Out of A r e a
1998 lor Lllart Townehlp Ia
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
complete and avtltable to 30 Announcements
1-800-564-3227
public. By appointment
1!20f.l9 1 mo. pel.
614-992-3470
only.
_
Joyce Whhe, Clerk
(1) 211TC
every Saturday

appa::~u~'ca~e:~~~:.uon•

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC •.
n

_ _
614 992 7643

WICKS
HAULING

BINGO

LOS ANGELES (AP)
- Stone Temple Pil ots
lead singer Scott ·w eilaud has been released
from jail five days after
his arrest on a possible
probation violation . ·
Weiland, placed on
thre~ years' probation
last summer after pleading guilty to fe lony
heroin possession, was
Weiland
arrested Friday after a
drug rehabilitafion program di rec tor told a judge
Weiland hadn 't been following the rules. The
nature of the violat ion was n 't disc losed.
At Wednesday's hearing, Superior Court Judge
Larry Fidler released Weiland, put him back on
probation and rei nstated him in an out patient re~ab
program. Fidler also warned that "rules are rul es,"
and said if Wei land breaks them, · ~ You 're going to

jail."
Weiland has had a strin g of drug arrests dating
back to 1995.
,
The Stone Temple Pi lots won a Grammy Award
in 1994 for the song "Plus h ...

lowed by government agents suspictous
moti ves and views toward whites .
A 1964 falling out with Nation founder Elijah
1
Muhammad led Malcolm to start a splinter group,
the Organization of Afro-American Unity, and to
found a mosque in Harlem. Three black Muslims
were convicted of Malcolm's murder, which was
wi tnessed by his famil y.
CULVER CITY, Calif. (AP) - Adam Sandler
will co-produce a fulllength anim ated film
featuring a character
based
on
himse lf,
Columbia Pictures said.
The project, described
as a musical comedy, is
based on a Sandler idea
and he will provide the

character's voice, the
studio said Wednesday.
Sandier, star of " The
Sandler
Waterboy" and ' The
Weddi ng Singer," wi ll
produce the film with -panne r Jack Giarraputo.

•
NEW· YORK (AP) - A •ommemorative postal
TORONTO (AP) - American rocker Ted
stamp honori ng__ Malcolm X goes on sa~ ~oda~ Nugent is sci angry at O ntario's decision to ban its
honori ng the man who once was shadowed by the spring bear hunt that he's organizing a U.S. boycott or Canadian tourism.
FB I because of his activism.
Nugen t, an @tspoken hunti ng and pro-gun cru· Malcolm X, who was assassi nated in a Harlem
ballroom in 1%5, "was a v.isionary, a man who sader who Iivcs in :rural Jackson County. Mich.,
dreamed of a better world -and dared to do some- said he wanr s Canada to pay for what he calls 1he
·
thing about it," Postal Se rvice Governor S. David pro vince's " tomfoolery."
" I am going to shut off the now of American
Fineman said in un veiling the 33-ccnt stamp
dollars inro Ca nada, not just for bear hun ting, for
Wednesday at Harlem 's Apollo Theatre.
Malcolm X joined the Nation of Islam in 1952 anything. and I can do it," said Nugent, who
and became a fiery orator who advocated black be lieves the ban will bring a surplus of hears.
nationalism in the early 1960s. He was often fol·

PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-289S
E. Main
Pomeroy, OH
Open WIOI&lt; Nights ~~ 9

.'

FriendtySeMce

Public Notice
Staled bldo will be
racelv•d until 3:00 p.m.
January 29, 1988 at the
mayore ofllct, 237 Race
Street, Middleport, Ohio lor
tho lollowlng equlpmont.
One 1750 GPM pumping
lira engine. Speclllcattona
lor thla equipment ere
avallotile upon request at
the Moyora olllco or !rom
the Fire Chlel ol t he
Middleport Flrt Department.
In any contract entered
Into batwetn the VIllage ot
Middleport ond the
oucctollful bidder It ohall ba
tho raaponalblllly . of the
controctor to meet all
requirement~ ol NFPA
booklet 1901 . All required
tell results oholl be made
avalloble to th.e Chlal oltht
Middleport Fire Depirtmant
at or before delivery ol tht
completttd apperolue.
Eoch bid ohell be
accompanlttd by a dotalttd
daocrlptlon ol the lire
apparatus and equipment
which Ia propo11d to bo
furnlohed Including a copy
Dl all warrontlea that will
apply . to the tpparotua
Including engine ond drtvt
line, pump and related
componento, booater tonk,
etc. A dtlolled blueprint
ahall aloo be provldttd with
all blda.
'
Eoch bid aholl be
accompanlttd by a 10% bid
bo nd
ond
100 %
parlormanct bond. Eoch
btd ohalt conblln 1 olgntd
alll1t11111t of the blddor that
the Vltltgt ol Middleport,
Ohio Fire Deportment lire

'
'

night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst $ 2 ,300
Door Pri:oe $300
145 people or
more will play
$ 1000 cover aU.
Average $ 90 per
regular game.
110

•

· 29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949-2217

Computer G raph ics
Desig lls
All Land scap in g &amp;
Lawn S ervic e s
•Co mme rci al
·Resid e ntial
Own er, Mickle Hollon
Chester, Ohio
740· 985·4422.,

Sizes

5' x 10'

• to 10' x 30'

1/4199 1 mo. pd.

~OBERT

BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes
•Garages
··Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
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MEDICAL
ASSISTANT
NEEDED

ESTIMATEES ·
985-4473
. 7/22/tfn

f or an estabiUhed
lnternalAte dlcure
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Prior bUling
experience
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required.
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P.O . Box 729-n
Pomeroy, OH

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

Porn
y Eagles
Club ·Bingo On
Thursda ys
AT6:30 P.M.
· · Main St.,
P omeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progreaslve top line.
Lit., 00.50

11 9 n

GUN SHOOT

Racine Gun Club
Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday
12:30-pm
Umit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore

R:-L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
D UMP T RU CK

S~ RVIC E,
A grlt;ulturl!l Li me,
Limest one • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio
1M 5/!161t!n

•

•

•

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..

.... -·

.·

~.·--

·· - ~ ···-

.... , .

~

......

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..... - - -

..... -....

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...

~

~;.·

......

.•....:
'

..

tl..tl.

.

Thursday, J.,uary 21, 1999 ,

The Dally Sentinel • Page 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~

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4602.

TRANSPORTATION

Runs Good; Blue M•.tiiiiiC In CCII· ,~ ,!t

19118 Ootte 811,' Ldoka Oood, Runs
Goodt $1,500, 740-3B8.-(]()13.

2 Boijroom Mobile Home, You
Pay Utilities. &amp; Deposit. In Porter
...... $285/Mo, 81&lt;1'388-9182,

EMPLOYr~ENT

homo only 304-882·2668.

SERVICES

Beagle Basset Female, Black &amp;
White, Lesa Than 1 Year Old, To
Good Home, 740·446-9243 Even·

lngo

Collie Shepherd Mix, 8 Months
Old, To Good Home, 740-441·
0.70 Gall Aller 3:00.
Female Ho~se Cat to loving
home: Houaebroken; Has Had

Shots and Is Spayed. (304)675·

1359
Free Puppies to good home; Lab

mixed, about 6 wks old; 3 males/
3 llmalos; (304)576·4052.
Free swimming pool, must disasoamble, 740-742·28111 after6pm.

Free to good home; one year,
mala blue Australian Shepherd,

Good with kids; Good watch dog.
(304)458-2218.

Six monll1 old mate Bnl18ny span·
, Ill. 740·742· 1507 aher Spm
To good home only, Female pup-

PI'. 12 wooks old; part Boxer, part
Black La~. Has had shots and
wormed, (304)675· 7693 or
(304)675-5094.

Will Give Awey lWo Ml•ed Breed
Dogs, To Loving Homo With
Plenty 01 Land, 740-~314.

60 Lost and Found
Found: Black &amp; White Small Po"'
dlo, Named 'Fele' Registered To
M.F. Cool! In 1997 740-446-7558
Lost Dog: 3 Beagles; 2 trl·cotored , 1 black &amp; tan, Sand Hill

Road area, Reward , (304)743·

aM&lt;t.

l.olt Black, spayed tomale Gor·

man Shepherd. $100 reward;
' (304)675-2277.

Missing: Rottwellor, 3 Years Old,
Mate, Scar On Left Paw, Nama·
Bear, Friendly Blue Collar, Hart·
sook, Keystone, Mount Tabor

Area, Reward Offered! 740·388·

0876
70

Yard Sale

180

Electric maintenance service

11 0

Help Wanted

Babysitter needed, 18mo old, my

Valley Refinishing 'Shop, Larry
Reply OJB, AR2, Box 877A, Pl. Philips, 740-1192-6576
PI , WV2S550
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
Computer Usor• Noedod, 1'/ork haul your your logs to a mill just
Own Hrs. $20K ·$75K /Vi, 1-BD0- .call ~75-1957
348-7186 Ext. 1173. www.amp-

lnc.com

Handyman·Ouallty Work: lad·

ders, tools, truck, skill; Also,
quality, shingled, bluebird &lt;10&amp;1
CREW LEADER
Land Development Company Is box&amp;~ $16 aach; (304)675-6925.
Looking For A Mature, Reliable
And Comperent Crew Leader To Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Find Conrractors For And To Home Care 01 Elderly Or Hendlcapped, 740-441-1538,
Oversee Mowing, Week ·Wack·
lng And Bush Hogging On Com· Seamstress· can do window
pany Owned Land For Sale All treatment&amp;, bedroom accent, etc.

Over Southeastern Ohio. Some Will do clothing alterations, 35
Construction AM Maintenance years experience, 741l-992-3220.
Experience Is Helpful Seniors
And Retired Pen~ons Are Urged
To Apply This IS A Part Time,
Permanenet Position. Hours And

Salary Are Nogollable. Call Mike
Anthony 0 740-286-0081

Will Sll Wllh Elderly Persons
Deyllght Hours Call 740-367·
0280

Chrl1ty'1 Family Living, Is
seeking a maintenace person,

qualifications are, heating, coolIng, plumbing, eloctrlc &amp; cerpon·
try, drivers licence &amp; Insurance

required, pollee check required,
drug treo work piSco, e.o e .. appllcations can bo picked up at 204
North Second Avo., Middleport In

Delivery Driver /Technician
Needed For Home Medical
Equipment Company Full Time,
Exc:ellent P~ And Benefits. Must
Be Able To Move Heavy Equip·
ment A.nd Take After Hours Call.
Prior, Experience Preferred

Please Send A Copy 01 Resume
To P.O. Bo• 152, Athens, Ohio
45701.

.

Housekeeper (Live-In) For Dl&amp;a·
bled Pracltclng Columbus Altor-

ney Cooking, Cleaning Laundry,

Some Care, Some Orivtng, 614·
267·5354

day before the 1d 11 to run,

80

Sharing• Benetlts GREAT CUS..
TOMER SERVICE And Comput·

SOMS. Commissions

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctlonesrlng
Services, Little Hocklr'lg, Ohio

AppraisalsFarm·
Estate·
Household· Commercial Ohio ll·

conoe 17693 740-989-2623

1

Double Wide New $999-Down
$237-per mo Free delivery &amp; set·

up. 1·8D0-~1-67n.

Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms. Starting at

$3995. Quick delivery. Call 740·
385-9621.

er Skills Necessary, Business.
Team Management E~~:pertance
Or Osgree ReqUirad Pleaoa Sond
Resume And Retarences To

New 14x7o $500·Down $199-per

mlleslrom Gallipolis $650 month
plus 1 month securtly. (610) 588·
8252

6777

440

New 16•80 $500·0own $245·por

Amazing I Income $ producer-

yours free wrtra SA Melbourne

727 Utica Ave. Suite 177, Brooklyn NY, 11203

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur-

nlshad and unfurnlstted, saeurlty
deposlt required, no pets, 740~
992·2218

1 bedroom apartment for rent In

Professional
Services

Plano Service· tumng
repair, expert service since

1985, 740·742·2951, Lane Dan·
lois, Rutland

Lhtlng1ton'e B111m1nt Water·
Proofing, all basement repairs
done. free estimates. llfeUme
guarantee. 12yrs on Job expert•~. 304

).a88·582·3345

New bank repos. only two left,
never lived In call 1·800·948·

5!!78.

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
Gallipolis. Ohio 740-379-2720

Opanlpg, Apply: Lllostyle Furnl·

E•perlence Prollrrod. Apply Tope

Salesperson Needed: Furntlure
Store, Full· Time. Immediate

-to

"" familial status or 111111on11
oltgln. Of III1V
make any such p~er..ance,

limllltlon f/1 di&amp;Qki.atloit.•

T h l l - wtn not
knowingly 1CC1P1

ture, 856 Third Avenue , Gallipolis,

No Phone Colts Pleasol

Antiques &amp; clean used furniture,
will buy one place or complete
houaehold, Osby Martin , 740·

992-6578.

--lor!Hiootall
which II In violation of ""

law 0... -

call 1-800·948·5678.
We Finance Land &amp; Home With

2bdrm. apta , total electric, ap·

per. mon , delivered and set up

As Little As $500 Down 1-606·
928-3426.
ments, 304-736-7295

340

3 Bedrooms. Living Room, Dining
Room, Kitchen, Bath, Partial Fin·
lslled Family Room. Call 740-441~3.

5 Court St , Small One Sadrm ,
Kitchen Wllh Stove &amp; Aefrlgora·

Business and
Buildings

tor, No Pets. $225.00 Monll1

Commerclai-OflloJt or Retail, 87
$400 mo. Corner Building. 740·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENtS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 5~ Westwood Drive

992·6250 Acquisitions (n"t
door)
7.5ACRES
In The Country, Northwest Gallia

ChriiiY'I flmlly Uvlng,

740-992·4514, has apartments
avaiiabM Immediately, Hud accopted, chllctren welcome,

ZOACRES

' Hur.tlng Or Recreation Tracts
Touching Wayne National Forest.
Meadow In Front With Rolling

Woods, Only $22,000. Land Con·
tract Available Froe Maps. 1·600·
213-8365.
Approximately

17 Acres

In

Green/ City School Dl&amp;lltct. Beau·
Uful Home Silo. 740·448·3545.
360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land: 30 -500 Acres,

We Pay Cash. 1·800·213·8365 ,
Anthony Land Co

41 0 Houses for Rent

0720

French Ci ty Maytag, 740·4'46·
771!5.
GOOD ' l/SED

IIPP~IANCES

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 78

New and Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Day
Beds, Bunk Beds, Beds, Computer Desk, Entertainment Center,
Dressers., Couches, Dinettes,

7-·4'182.
Antiques

Grande College, $300/Mo. Wator
Sewer, Garbage, Utilities Paid ,

540 Mlacellaneous
Merchandise
"WARM UPJ"

Furn8ce, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Condlllonlng. FrH Eotimatool It 'lou
Don't Call Us, We Both Losel

740-446-6306, 1·800·291-0()88

18" DlrecTY Satellite Syatems$69 00 purchase price with up lo

$20,0 worth ot tree programming.
Limited limo offer, call 1-800.7798194.
1994 Pace Shadow enclosed
trailer, delu~~:e model 7000 GVW
with winch, used only on wee·
kends, retailed new for $8, 100,

soil tor $4,995, call140-949-2045.

2 Piece LIOJing Room Sutte, Good

Condition, $150, 741).446-3581

Attentlo{ll New Years Resolution.

Loose Weight, Earn Monayl 740··
44H982.froo Samples.
rellrod, $5·$1 0, 'Wiso' &amp; boars:

Church pews

lor

sa~e.

12 twelve

toot, 4 ten toot, $200 each, 740·
949-2217.

740·441-1005

(304)675-51 B2

2 Bedroom, Neighborhood Road,

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,

Color TV Monitor $25;

I Sot, $35, P.VA.E.Y
$50, or OBOI 740·

Heavy• winter clothing, Sam
Somerville's Army Surplus by

Sandyville P.O., Friday-Sunday,

ap~olnt·

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red, New &amp; Rl!buHt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-800-537·9528
Mixed seasoned firewood, cut
and split, delivered , $30 load,

tlon, First Shots &amp; Wormed,
740-245·8823. •

$350,

Now Open Sundays 1-4 Mon-Sat

11·6. Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
POint Pleas·
anl(304-675-2063. ••
2413 Jackson Ava.

1997 ASVE low Boy Trailer
1080897, A 1985 Prentice 150
Kunckleboom l oader 112;1733, &amp;
A 1973 Vagabond Motorhome

Tho Above Will Be Sold To High·

ast

Bidder •As Is - Where_Js•
Without Expressed Or Implied

740· Terms Ot Salo: CASH OR CER·
TIFIEDCIIECK.

2pm, M thru F, (304)882· 3716
Equal Housing Opportunity

and transmlaalon,
steel riiOCk T&amp;H 436

wfBrodlx l'leads all $8,500,

only $6,000, call 74()-949-

.
1991 Ford pick up Stopoldo, six • ;

cylinder, runs great, $900, must " .

sell , call · 740·992·7478 loave :.
message or 140-949-2045.
•

.

1993 Ford, F150, XLT Pkg., 4x4; • '
5 Spood! 305 Englns; 47,000 ·:
Clean; Rod on Red; $13,000 . ;
{304)8112·3358.
.

Youm:.~N&amp;

1995 GMC Jimmy 4 WD, 4 Doors,

Excellent Condition, Lots 01 E•trasl740-446-7269.

II-&lt; ~'( (.Ol)l:l"I&lt;:OOM. .

1995 GMC Sierra 1500 Series
••4. 80,000 MHos, Loadad, Exco~ ,

Stud Sorvlqo For AKC 'Goldon
Retrlvor, $150 Foa, 74Q·441·
0615.

m.&amp;592.

v-e "utomatic,

730

BIG NATE
'1'01)

l!!.ARELY

KNOW
THt!&gt;

I( I [)I.

FRIEND~HIP

•

GROWS'

By Phillip Alder
It is fun playing in junior events.
But eventually you become too old.
Well, Morten Lund Madsen isn't too
old, but last year his brother, Lars,
edged past the cutoff point. Freddi
Brondum , who moved into the vacant
chair, found a nerve-tingling play in
this deal from the Danish Jumor Pan-s
Championship.
The original auction followed my
route until. three no-trump. (Two
beans was fourth-suit forcing, just
showing game-forcmg values -- a
standard agreement in the tournament
world. Three hearts asked South to
btd three no-trump with at least half
a stopper in hearts -- an unusual treat·
ment.) After that, Madsen made several artificial bids before selecting
seven no-trump.
At first glance, there are 13 top
tricks: one spade, two hearts, four
diamonds and six clubs. Even if an
opponent has all four missing clubs,
the jack can be captured. However,
the heart lead made a dent in South's
communications.
Not being blessed wtth X-ray
vtstOn, Brondum led a low club to
dummy's ace at trick twe,utting the
bad news Now Brondum needed two
hand entnes : one to penmt a finesse
of dummy's club I 0, and a second to
get back to cash the last three clyb
wimiers. But he had only one. the dtamond ki,ng. What would you have
done?
Brondum m1ght have cashed the
spade ace, in case the ktng was a sin·
gleton. Instead, he called for the diamond four, and when East played low
(Madsen says it was early Sunday
morning), Brondum put his eight
onto the table! When It won, he
claimed.
'

WOOd; (304)675-35\)6.

FARM SUPP LIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

Deere Hey EQulpmentll Financing

As Low As 3.8% On Used Hay
Equipment Now. Thru Jan. 30
Carmichael's Farm &amp; lawn, Inc.
Midway Between Gallipolis And

paaaagN

33 Dlopatch
38 Labor org.
40 Edlton1'
wordl

~lo Grande On Old 35 (Jackoon
Pike) 140·446·2412 Or 1·800·

E•tendo 85 Foot, $5,200, A40
Ditch Witch, $7,500, 8x12 Trench

Tractors In Stock 7.75% Fixed

Rate John Deere Credll Financing

Available. New 4000 Series Compacta In Stock. New John Deere
McCos And Round Balers O% -

12 Mo a, 1.75% ·24 Mos. 3 5% .
3B Mos • 4 5% ·48 Mos., 5.5% -60
Mos Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn,
"ldwa~ Between Gallipolis And
Rio Grande On Jackson Pike

Or 1·800·594·

ny, 30ol-675-7421 .

Low As 6.5% Fl"d Rate On
Qualltylng Tractors Wlih John
Deere Credit Approval. Car·
michael's Farm &amp; lawn, Midway

46 Scot'• attire . •')
47 Above
48 Baoeball'e

'

Livestock

Colorful Suckokln Stallion. 740·
446-3659.

ITHURSDAY

campers &amp;
MotorHomea

1997 Wilderness camper, Filth
condition, aoklng $16,000 080,
:JIM-773-5484

-

SERVICES

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
IJncondlttonal lifetime guarantee.
Local reterenc11 lurnlahed. Es-

tablished 1975. Call 24 Hrs 1740)
448·0870, 1·800-287·0576. Rog·
ora WOtarprootlng.
Appliance Parts And Service· All
Name Brands Over 2.5 Years Ex·
parlance All Work Guaranteed

French City Maytag, 740·446:
7785.
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence - Painting. vinyl aiding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repair and more. For

treo osumato call Chot, 740·982·
8323

Professlonll. ~Oyrs

experience

with all masonery, brick, block &amp;
stone. Aleo room additions, garages. etc. Free ••Umates. 304-

773-95!50

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs Master u.
censed electrician . Ridenour

Etectrtcat, WV0003o'8, 304·875·
17811

' 1':;

1' ·, '

Roae
;.;;
50 Collector'a , y , .

vote:.;;

sz J:'111ve
53 ~rtecl ICON •

.,

, ,,n
• &gt;

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cetebflty Cipher Cf'W)IOgfams are cree.1ec1 from QI.ICII81ions by famous people, past and pn~aent
Each lettei ln the cipher stands lor another Today's c/118 M equals U

'D

HZ K' E

LA

N DC F

LMTDG

ZYDKDZK

S WJ E

DT

L R

EWJE

zp

LDNNDZKT

zp

.,...
.." ,-

A M.. E

JIJDKTE
ZEWFVT.

•' ·'•
(GZLYZTFV). PVFHFVDGC
NZFSF
"
PREVIOUS SOLUTION· 'The Illegal we do immediately The unconst•tutlonal
' •'
takes a little longer.' - Henry Kissinger

.-·.
~ ·'

r::~:t:~' S@1'-ct\lA-Lt£trs·
_ _ _ _...;......;; ldllod by CLAY R. POLLAN
0

WOlD
OAMI

letters of the
lour scrambled words be-

Reorronge

.' .
' '

...

low to form four words

~·'

C AT J E K

...

P Hl EW

" _,,,

~
I CIS I

~

..

__,s_u...,...r_,o..,..,.E..---11~,
I 14 j" I ."
L-...L.-.1..-.1..-.1..--1~

fi~e

A mother of
teenagers
once told me that the secret of
be1ng successful Wllh a Child IS
. - - - - - - - - - - . , ,not to be 1t's - - -- --

R ril6

a, 8 I

0

~

_,
•' -

Complete lhe chuckle quoted

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
TH ESE SQUARES

Unmask- Crown - Fable -Kettle - WALK BACK

The trouble with start1ng a Jogg1ng rout1ne , IS that when
you figure out you aren't 1n shape, It's too far to WALK

..·''...

.

' •~"

I' , J

,r • •

BACK

Wheel wl1h Slide-out, excellent

Between Gallipolis And Rio '840
Pike . 740-

You'H buM a b•g nest egg when
you save with the clossl(ieds

Now gao tanks &amp; body parts. D &amp; •
R Aulo, Rlploy, WV. • 304·372·
3933 or 1-800-273-9328.

Home
Improvement&amp;

,..., t

SCRAM·lETS ANSWERS

740.245-S!!n:

810

... •

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Budget Priced Transmissions •
and Engines, All Types, Access •
To Over 10,000 Transmiaalons, ·

Box, $3,500, Top Con Transient

43 Licking

color
rJr
44 Actor Sherif -

@

EVER'r'T~ING ..

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Ball, Extendable Flat Trailer That

'' '"
'" I
• ·~

_.J..._L.-..1.-.J.L-..J..-..J
by ldhng 1n tfle misstng word1
·L
you develop from srep No. 3 below.

895-3884.

,

, ',
• . ,,

41 First-rate
12 wds.)
42 Fr. holy

women

C.C excel. shape, new tires 304· ·

790

..

' .'~,. .

center

0

Motorcycles

760

13 Waterte11
18 Filch,
old·ltyll
·20 Madtocre
21 Shnnod
, "
22 Stickle&lt;
. ·'
23 Photocopy
24 ElectrHied
particle•
25 Act like a
atevedore
27 Trading
,,. ·' '
28 --about ' .r.
29 Singer
.; •
WilHam• ,
··31 Narrow
:,~

Pass
All pass ,

GRAMPA
REMEM8Eii5

,

'

'

ASTRO·GRAP~
Friday, Jan. 22, 1999
In the year ahead, a marked
improvement could take place that
will contribute to your mat~rial wellbeing This major trend could allow
you to establish a sound savings program for the future.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Even though you're a creative and
imaginative person in your own right,
~~- transforming the basic ideas of others into somethina better will be your
grenlest asset today. Get a jump on
life by understandina the influences
that'll govern you in the year ahead.
Send the required refund form and for
, your Astro·Graph predictions by
mailing $2 to Aslro-Graph, cJo this
newspaper, P.O. Box 17S8, Murray
Hill Station, New York, NY JOJS6.
Be sure to slate yoor zodiac sign.
, PISCBS (Feb. 20-Ma~h 20)
There's a possibility today that something pleasing could develop with
your career and financial position.
Look for a chance to .profit in both

• ARIBS (March 21-Aprll 19) Provided you strive for achievement in

•

Pass
Paes

PEANUTS

areas.

I

E11t

1990 Honda 4 wheeler 4~~:4 300

For Sale • Seasoned Oak Fire:

630

WE'RE t&gt;OIN(; WHAT
FRtEKDS DO! WE'RE
5HARIN(, ElCPE~IEN·
CES WI-IICH WE'LL
LOOt&lt;. Bkt&lt;, ON
FOiol Ill.'( A!&gt; OU!l;.

Two 1979 Jeep Cherokees, one
runs, one for paha, $700 OBO.

590

446-24120r1-800-594·1111

COUll\ ON TV !

t

1994 Chovy Dloaol 4 Whool
Oilvo, 740-446;4531

740

On~a.ckaon

Tf\E.'( DO IT I~
.l\J\X£ JUDY~

1

Vans &amp; 4·WDs

cal Ron 741). 742·2050

Grande

WIU.. fOLLOW
1'\'( m£') Of
..lUitl"&gt;~!&lt;:UDEtK£.!

r ool\l'r (.N:£ flOW .,

International 304-875-1993.

Kimball Oigan With Bench, Gobd
Condlllqn, Coil Anytime, 740·441·
0021.

11 . ~

~"&gt; ~1\, YOU"'

;

Ohio Valley Bank Will Dtler For
Sale 8y Public ,Auction A 1989
lWo AKC Regtotorod Shar-Pel • Chevy Astro Van 1243897 On 21
13199 At 10.00 1\.M. AI The OVB
puppies for sale, one chocolate
, 1-3 Third Ave., GaNipolls, '
male, one apricot female, 740·
OHI •ifl,. Above Will eo Sold To
992-7378.' •.
Htghl!at Bidder •As Is - Where
"
Youl\g pair ol Lovoblrda &amp; .Cook· Is' WII~OUI Exprosood Or l..,ltod ,
Warrenty And May Bo Soen By
atlolo tor oalo, (304)882·3Qat
c,mng Keith John1on At 740·
441·1038. OVB Reserves The
570 •
Mualcal ,
Righi To Acoopt Or Rolect Any .
Instruments
And All Bids, And Withdraw
open-hole llute, Property From Sale Prior To sate.
740, 985·3655 attar Terms Of Sale CASH OR CEA·
nFIED CHECK.
'

For Sale
or·Trade

N-ID,

lent Condition! Evenings: 740· ~

Registered Border Collie Pup&amp;,
Working Parents, Imported

Bloodlines, Good Markings, First
Sllotsl740-379-9110
'

BOitNLOSER
.---~'-J~SIIit£L~Tf.;

miles; VerY. Good Condition, ...

1991 Toyota 4•4. E"ended Cob, •
Automatic, IVC, V·6, Good Condl·
lion, 740-446-6688.
''

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tractor• In Stock. Financing As

$~95/Mo. ,

•
•:

towing package, 23,100 miles, '•
asking $11900, 740-742·2263,
'·
80 Ford F· 350 super ~uly , 7 3

New 5010, 6010, 7010 Series

Mack' Truck tT12797, A 1974
John Deere Dozer t152874T, A

,

Four, lull btooaed ,o,tmallan pu~·
plea ; 2 mates, 21om~lis, 740·
992-3147 alter2pm.
,
Puro 'Siberlan HuskY With' Pa·
pors, 6 Montna Old, $100, 740·
446·2398 A11ar 5 P.M

Ohlo Valley Bank Will Offer For

Sale By Public Auction A 1976

•;
•

or, PoWer Mlrrono, PoWer Sunroot, • •

1997 Ford Ft50,

Wast 2 Bedroom Townftouu And All Bids, And WiUidr'aw
Apartments, Includes Water Property From Sale Prior To Sale.

maintenance on atle 10 am •

sible attar a year, 740-698·7244.

celient Temperment &amp; Dlsposl·

keroscene Heater Wlcs &amp; Re palrs, Siders Equipment Compa-

furnished, plenry of closet space.
water &amp; trash paid. manager &amp;

Clean 2 bedroom house In Po..
maroy, 1350 per month plus de·
posit, no pett, land contract pos..

Bloodline, E•·

HCORRECTION-

740-742·2263

Stock Car·Dirt LM Stock Ct~r.
Now accepting applications, 2 1993 Rocket Chaulo ; Track
8 R., electric heat, appllcancea ChJimJ&gt;Ion In 1997, some extrao:

Required 1·88B-B40-0521

Champlonoh~

$4,500, Pipe Lazor $4,500, CJ5
Jeep, New Top, El&lt;collent Condl·
lion, $2,350, 740·843-2916, 7-40·
843-2844 Aftar 6 P.M.

OLD ASH VILLAGE

House, 1350.00 Month, Oepoalt

piss,

North 3rd Mlddlflpot" 2 br unrur. Warranty And May Be Seen By
apt dap &amp; rol :JIM-882·25!!6
Calling Marion Wilson At ·l40·

Sowege, Trash,
448-0008

312 WOtzgal St Pomeroy 3 Bdrm

AKC Registered Ron Weller Pup·

553 Cot Rollers For Salt, 45 Fool
Parts Trailer For Sale, 1982 GMC
Flatbed Single Axlo Diesel
$5,000, 2,000 Pound Headache

446·4060. 0\18 Aasarveo Tho
Now Taking Applications- 35 Right To Accept Or Rsloct Any

es required; 130. )675·1972 alter

plat~ male andlemalo, great hunt.
ors and lo~al family pets, $200,
740-1192·7888.

304-273-5!!55.

Newly Remodeled one bedroom
apartrnent . Prima location In
downtown Gallipolis No Petal 11187 On 218199 At 10·00 A M.
$300 00 month plus utilities Ref- At MJW Moving &amp; Towing, 506
erences &amp; Deposit Required. Stars Route 7 N., Gallipolis. OH.
ment. -~--

A~Q Registered Airedale pup· ,

noon-5pm. Other days after 4pm.

446·3111

Call. (740) 446·3302 tor

.

594-1111

74()-448-0390

$275 dep. available on t·1Bth,

Sheets. 373 Georges Creak Rd.

1~~1.

Llhs, Bowman's Homecaro, 740· ;.
- --"""'--"'-----448·7263.
610 Farm Equipment
Rldsr, $150, Nord~ Track, 1 0% Financ ing On New John

$275/Mo .. 5200 Oeposll , 740·
2 br house on 2219 1/2 Lincoln
Ava . Pt. Pleasant $275 mon

A,.Groom Shop ·Pel Grooming.
F(t,tyrlng Hvdro Bath. Don

date

12 Chalm
Welzmann,
lor one

Looking for a
younger partner

,;

E•cellant Condition; 70,000
mllaa; $13,500; (304)67.5·2780;
~(304::_;;)458-=.:.1.:.077.:..r.;,L:::eavo;;;.:...:.M.;,
...
=ogo::._
1997 Chevy cave11ar, 2 Dooro, AI
q. Tilt, Cruise, 5 ~~ CD Play·

9 Require
11 1944 lnvtlalon

Openin lead: • 5

Groen, 38,000 Ml,o, $9 1500, 740- • ;
1192·7102.
: •
•
was $48,630 Now $32,350il
100•175x20 Was S9_8,650 ,NoW'' 91 Butck skylark , very goOd : •
oond. 35000 miles, $4500 00 call • :
$78,650, l-800,j08-51i!6
304-875-3353
'
580 Pets for Sale
720 Trucks for Sale

Electric Scooters, Wheelchairs,
New And Used, Stairway Eleva~
tors. Wheelchair And Scooter

Furnished Upstairs Apartment
Close To Grocery &amp; Downtown
Gallipolis . No Pets, Refrences

Ground floor aptartment, 2 bed·
room wllh WID hook-upno pets.

Steel Buildings, Now, Must Sell
40•60x14 Was $17,430 Now
$10,871; 50•120x1.~. was
$33,560 Now $23,1165; 60Xl50•16

sage

448 9279

AndOepoolt 741l-«&amp;1158

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121

C!lll 740-985 -4442, leave mes-

Furnished 3 Roams &amp; Bath, 740·
Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, References, &amp; De·

ows, lintels. 'etc. Claude Winters~

~ntlques,

Moore owner.

I .;._.,_· •

tuniUes

Spin.

secluded and privata, appoint·
mem. ean 740-992-5696.

$350 oo, Utilities paid (740) 441·

port From $249·$373. Call 740·
982·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·

3 BR House In Henderson: OJtry
clean; 1300 + deposit; Referenc-

CLASSIFIEDS-!

For ren1 one bedroom apartment.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle-

RENTALS

3034.

on 12 acres, Village Mlddloport.

Pomeroy/Middleport area.

posit Required, UtiiiUeo Paid, 740·
448-1519.

$375mo. plus dopooll. 304·675·

Restored Viclorlan home situated

Appllancaa.
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrl·
graters. 90 Day Guarantee!

Beanie Babies 1or sale· current &amp;

from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call 740·44~·2568
Equal Housing Opportunity

2306 Jefferson Ave . 5 room
house, central heat &amp; air.

Log Houso Situated On 1 Acre, 3
Bdrms,1 112 Baths, 2 Cor Garage,
Nicety Landscape&lt;!, $92,500, Call
740-367-0451 AIIM'5 ~M

PI~&amp;

9560

appliances furn 304-882·2099

AND MONEY
SHOP THE

Household

Retrence &amp; Deposit 740·446-

Mill St Middleport 1,450 Sq Ft.

altar Bpm ielMI message

SAYE

pllances furnished, laundry room
facllllles, close to school in town.
Applications available at: VIllage

Green Apts. •49 or call 740·992·
3711 EDH
'

Aelocallng? Take Over Pay-

ldvtf'tiMd In lhll MWIP'f"'

310 Homea for Sele

Plus Utilities, Deposit, Releranc·
es, No Pets, 7-·9580.

2 Bedrooms, $425/Mo. $100 De·
posll, All Ulllltlos Paid No Pots,
74()-448·1637, 7-·3437.

1 Bedroom House. Close To Rio

Looking To Buy Used Hockey
(Ciotrtea) Equipment For Young
llaf Slzt B-10, 740-245-5887

Heat, WID Hook·Up, Near C""ma
$279/Mo., Plus l/Uitlos, Deposll &amp;
Lease Requlroct, 741l-446-2957.
Street, Gallipolis, Klichen Wllh

Limited offer 1998 doubl• wide, 3
br, 2 ba $1,199 down , $275.00

1/UIIO&lt;Iby

REAL ESTATE

1 Bedroom, Economical Gas

Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo ,

lniormad lhet Ill """Ilk lgO
. . -011111 oquol
~unity-.

74()-1192·9191.

Used single wide, around $1 oo.

"

-on r.,., - · religiOn.

510

Buy or aelt. Riverine

call1·8()().948·5678.

Barn &amp; Fencing In Back Yard,
Qnly $14,500

Mmltallon"' - -

MERCHANDISE

7806.

2 Bedroom Apartment, 1 112
Baths, Great locetionl 15 Court

Factory goof Ill Save thousantls,

County. Beautltul Rolling Maadow,

Sale&amp;- Home Furnishing. Aatan '

740-365-.a87.

1124 E. Main Stroot, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M.TW. 10.00
am to 8 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to
3!~~~-_;__!:;.::.;_....:,!~i ,, ~·:· p.,.i. 740~Q92·2528, Russ

350 Lola &amp; Acreage

PO Box 2116
MarOttta, OH 45750

Mobile home site available batween Athens and Pomeroy, call

1 Bedroom Apartment, All Utili'"
Paid, Bidwell, 740-388,9770, 740-

Btl&amp; 31187.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY IS&amp;I?
No Fee UnleO&amp; We Win I

460 , Space for Rent

530

7~992·

PAW··

•

Block. brick, sowor pipes, wind·

1 MINr MllrMr
42 Blemllh
,__
41-JIIM
10 Kept undw
41 Keyatone
chttourvelllence
12 UMd 1 -utln 48 Moat docile
' CIR*I lttnl
51 Orlgllllll
14 c- to tomtl
lnhebiUtnt
15 MoN llu equid 54 Mekle very
nuld
h•ppy
16 Lltrge an1ke
55 81111111 hole
17 YNr (Sp.)
'56 Formerly,
18 Slllllll Wlllrlpool
!Qrrnerly
20 P - 57 - nOUI
23 Farm building•
'
2 1 - rne.IIUN
DOWN
27 Extinct bird
1 1n1ure with a
30 Bruldaat
knife
brudl
2 VIllain In
32 Author
Othello
Jacqueline 3 IUtllan currency
34 Down-4 Sudoy brew
(dea-)
5 VIew
35 Car part
8 Actor Sliver
(2 wdo.)
7 Oxhei'IIH...
38 Mllo-·tung
8 Surrounded by
37 Prefix lor pod
I S.VInt

... ~
~
9!

-to-~PUDio

40T-Ihe

I

1994 Fo~ Explorer )(LTjtoaded, ·: •

Oak wood Mobile

Middleport, 1210 per month, $100

deposit, all ulllltles patd,

per. mon. 1-IJ00.94B-5678
230

755-7191

VIne Street, Call 740·446·7398 ,
1·88B-811Hl128.

Apartments
for Rent

TH C:lVlC: CLUB,

:

i

available 304-

Goods

430 Farms for Rent
65 fenced In acres, 3 badrooma,
2 baths, central ali', fireplace. 30ft
x 40ft' garage, barn with-' stalls,
electric and frost free water 10

mo Free air, skirt 1- 900· 691·

llna~cJng

5039

Mlddlepor~

All real a~tare advertising In
IIQ -.paper b Wljoct to
the Fodonll Fair HDUIIng Act
ol1tiB8 wt11c11 makes MIllegal
to advertise ·onv preforlnco,

Furniture, 151 Second Avenue.
Gallipolis, No Phone COlts Ploasol

Two bedroom mobile hOJfiB In
Middleport, no pets, 740·992·

Taking Applications, On 3 Bed·
room Repo, Pre-Approval In 10

Ml...,osl BD0-383-6882.

ownor

949-2833•

·•
t bedroom furnished apartment In

"Profit

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auctton
service
licensed
f66,0hlo &amp; Wost VIrginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-n:J-5447

Wanted to, Buy

and trash Included, references
and deposit required, call 740·

INOTICEI

PROGRESSIVE, EXPANDING

1:OOplll F~doy.

Auction
and Flea Markel

TWo bedroom In country, water

Doublewlde Repo, Call For VIewIng, 800-383-6862

Local Business Has Immediate

Opening For RETAIL STORE
MANAGER AND SALES PER·

lundoy a Monday ldltlon-

Ferry 304-675-4075.

.o

.1994 ClfeYV van, Gtadletor ABs:.i1
All Wheel Drive , 59,000 mllo•:ih
New T.Jro~: Black Colorllnlerlor h
Leather; (30.)675·1637, 8-5PM;
(304)675-6914;675-6534. '

Why Aeot , you Ca11 own your
own home for as low as $499.
down low monthly payments,

Homos.

Mobile home for sale
rent,
pertly furn. for a couple In Gal.

I ---..:..:..,_....,....;....-

Nuralng 111latant1 needed to
provide In-home services for the
elderly/ disabled, call 1·888-242·
MO..

All Yord Beloo Muot Bo Plld In
Advonco. Ooodllno: 1:OOpm tho

no pets; 740-992·5!!5!!.

Mitchell Road, $20,000, Lot &amp;
Trailer, 740.843"2918, Or Cell AI·
tor 6 P.M. 740-643-2844.

$200 74 per month with $1150
down. Call 1-1101).637-32311.

Opportunity

-J

3 bedroom mobile home tor rent,

70x14 Vlndale, With Lot, On

Bualness

210

Experienced Professional Phlebotomist, M· F, Early Mornlrigs,
Rooume To: ~0. Bo• 33, Galllpo-

4779.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

740-388-1100

AtoZ buslneas, between , the
hOui'a ol1()-6pm, 1-18 IIYu 1·22.

Aveda Products. Raphael's Hair
Remedies, 40 North Court Street,
Athens, Ohto Phone: 740-592·

Mondoy edlflon

2 Bedrooms. Water And Trash
Paid No Pets. On Butavtlle Pike

With Shingles, 2 Bdrms .. 2 Baths,
All Electric Appllanc09. Porches.
carport, . 740-2M-6338.

FINANCIAL

e1ea.

2 Bedrooms, Nice, Air, Natural
Gas Furnace, In Gallipolis, 740·
448-2003; 7-·1408. '

1992 Norris, 16Ft)( 70FT, VInyl

I

,1992 Chryolef LeBardn. "4·oooro, :
Autom.,.AJC, Ortiloo, Till. 74,000 . •
' MIIN $2,800.00 OBO '740·2S8- &gt;'

2351,AI1ar6~M.

1988 14x70 Manorwood, 2 Bod·
rooms, 2 Baths, Eloc.,' AC, Good
Condition, $10,500.00. Call 740·
245-5332.

New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
lnchldas e months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting,
deluxe steps and setup. Only

;304-675-2722, I

, Pus
Pus
Pus
Pass

DON'T DOZE Of:F AT

acce~&amp;orles, "

great 1UJI~ mil••~•· ~ar phone, • '

Grande JThurmari Area, 740-3J9.1.

mo. Free air, skirt 1·800·8916n7.

Fuii·Time Hair Stylist Needed
Signing Bonus, Other Benefits,

- 10:00 a.m. Sotunlay.

90

and restoration, also custom orders Ohio

home, Part-time, tlexlble hra.

llo, OH 45631 Or Call 740·446·

ALJ. Yllrd Soloo Mull
Be Paid In Advonco.
Df!IM !HE: 2:00 p.m.
tho cloy bolant "" oct
lo to run. Sunclly
ldltton - 2:00 p.m.

F~.

Wiring, breaker boxes, light fix·
lure, healing system&amp;, and Re·

AVON I All Areas I Shlrloy modeling. 304-674-0126
Spears, 30ol-675-1429.
Furniture repair, retlnlah

03S3.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Wanted To Do

.dan, loaded with

1 Acre

Wet~ I

BARNEY

t 991 CadiUac Sevilla 4 door •• •

Privata Wooded lot, Total Eloc·
trlc, OA, 10•12 Outbuilding, Rio

1979 Fairmont 14Ft X 60Ft. Can
So Soon At K&amp;K Pt. Pleasant.
Call740-446-5310.

American Eskimo dog, female,
man old has 1st shots, to good

'

K8

31!!9W•

Vulllerable: Both
Dealer: South

19B61'c!dT·Bird,7~

Ractne, 740-992·150311

Batli~1 On

t

•K97642

or; (304)882·3133.

•

2 bedroom mObue home In

2 Bedrooms, 1

.

• K 9 4 2

•K

710,. Autos for Sale
1981 Monte carto, VB; LOOtca and . ·,'

2 &amp; 3 bedroom moblto homos, air
conditioned, $280:$300, IIWtrt
water and trash included. 740·
'J

QJ 4
Q 10
East

.109652
• QJ 7 3
• 62
tl09753
...
• J 8 53
SouIll
• Q J 53

.

982·2187.

76
84

• 10 8

420 Mobile Homes
fo,f Rent

-kl old. 740-985-4231.

No
• A
• A
t A
• A

•

RENTAL IN CITY: $3~0/Mo., De·
posll $200, Pay U1illtlos, 2 Bed·
rooms, LA, DR. Kitchen, Waohsr,
Dryer Hook·Up, Vliglnla 740-446·

Amazing only $999. down on
large selection of double wldes,
free delivery &amp; setup owner fi-

11 puppies. hall Collie &amp; Lab, 8

ooch, 740-982·2070.

Rlo Grande Unlv&amp;ralty; Deposit

Nitro Wv 304·755-5885

Giveaway

MIXED HAYI (740)

reqUiroct; no pe111; (304)675-7624.

nancing avallalllo 304-755-5885.

40

~alo:

J

216-2958
'
Hay tor olio. oqlilrt bOlos, l1.25 ,.;;

Older Home ln; country; 2 story; 3
BR; approxlmaloly 3 miles trom

of 2·3·4 bedrooms lroe deiiY8ry&amp;

aponslble for

For Solo
Beanll Babies;
(304)77:J.5m.
Grubb's Plano· tunjng '&amp; rapa~o
Problems? NHd TUned? Coli

Nice 2 Bedrooms, $300 Deposit,

for

www.lhlho~ .com/n&amp;'ptiy·

Fpr

3 BR, 2 Bath; detached 2 car ga·

Nicely LendscaP1Jd, Surrounded

-n

ACAOIS

a methodical and practical manner,
' today's favorable aspects will grati·
fy your hopes and expectations.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Operate on all levels with an open
mi(ld today, because there'o a chance
lhat somelh1ng your casually
involved wllh could turn out to have

JANUARY21l

,,.

�.

.
~

.•.

..

•

.P:IIG812 • The Dally Sentinel
.

Pomeroy • Middleport_ Ohio

- ·-~&gt;&lt;&gt;

'

•

--·

~-

•

Thurwday, Jan'*J 21,1891

Slates won $246 b~llio~, .mostly through lawsuit added by Conaresa. it will. ,ue a terrible impact on suade Co)IIJ'CII to jive tho Food aad Drug Admlnis-,
settlements, plus new restncttons on tobac&lt;:o ads and the industry," he .aid. Cigarette ·mw~ called tbe tratiO!IIIIe .power to repllllo lobiiCGD aad !!doPt other
?lher industry practices. Federal attorneys have stud- potential federal suit "political."
~
policies me111t to 1:111 youth lmokiaJ.
'
ted the. ~t~tes' ~trategy: .
. .
Administration officials say the lawsuit is i~4n.. · ThC president also bas proposed an additional 55- ·
Admmtstratmn offtctals tnststed Wednesday that dent from Clinton's push to pass robacco le&amp;tslattoa cents-per-pack tax on cigarettes.
the decision was made after they dete1111ined the gov- in Congress, but they acknowledae ,a pending auil
It's unclear how the administration and its allies
ernment has legal ~!oun?s to ~ake its ~se.
could put increased pressure &lt;!!·tlif~nd'Ustry to cut a · will .fare on thi:ir second try in Congress.
•
Tommy P~yne ; ·.semor vtce prestdent of R.J. deal.
. .~., ;&lt; ~~·
·
lisfyear, there was considerably I!IO!'C i'/gmentum
Reynolds. satd . Chnton apparently wants "more
The government released few•,ditatls abcjut the for 1Qb1Fco legi~latjon, i.n part because state lawsuits
money from the mdustry and some political gain from upcoming lawsuit, wh,ch is meant to reco'ver titr\10)- had nol yet been settled . But the deal ,!lied.
.•
the industry. "
. .
Iars spent treating sick smokers in Medicare, tbe
Administration ·officials argue they have a bettet"The federal government already makes more Defense Department Veterans Affairs, federal chance this time because the legislation is less •mbi-:
money per pack on cigaretlef th]ln the companies employee health benefits and other federal programs. tious and doesn't directly tie tobacco penalties to:
make," he said. "The federa~ . government makes 24
It's expected to be months ~efor~ .! suit'is filed. ·
domestic spending.
. .
. :
cents per ·pack, and R.J. Reynolds makes 9 or 10 . A task force within the Justice. ~~e.nt, yet to
Stlll.-'·Republicans fiercely oppose hikirig the cigacents .."
• '
be appointed, will soon begin wbr~ to' cleVlilop the rette tax, arid the industry is sure to renew its fight:
Phtl · ~arlton, a tobacco industry-lawyer, said the
precise legal strategy. Officials .w0 uld' nol say where agailisl new regulations.
'
comr,ames would fight any federal suit " to the last the suit might be filed or· ho&gt;¥ . m~ch mon,~y it might ,
Carlton said the settlement with the states doesn't:
day.
seek.
. .
" ''.
set any legal precedent and that• ••unfortunately, the·
"If there's any federal lawsuit, ~f new taxes ·are . Separately,the adm,i.~ist~rio~ )~lllf{~~~-~~~~5-. pollJ~,!~a;enHy sh~w that suing toba:o.is popular.'~

~rem1er fest1valLa~l ~ear,c~n
~r1ng
b1g
b~,
C
;
I
$1&amp;,9~'~~~·
·
'1~nown
~~·
~
.
~
~
·~stance,
h~a~ ·~i~.prt·
~"t
~'..,.; ~

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
AP. Entertainment Wrllar ,
.
· ~OS AN_GELES (AP)- Its a documen!ary about
a gntty subject and almost no one has seen 11.
.But after a showing at this week's Sundance Film
~estival, "American l?imp" could capture a distribu!•on deal. worth big buck.s.- and its creators are hopmg..to mtlk the opportumty. for every .pot.enllal penny.
.. We ,held out sh~wmg ttto any dtstnb~tors to put
11 !n a.!fie~dly stluallon for us as far as gelling t~e be~t
pn~e. satd Allen Hughes, who ha~;eamed wtth h!s
brother to make the fllm as well as Menace II Soctety" and "Dead Presidents."
. " Even though we 've gotten great offers, you don't
know how great they are until you get them all in on~
room."
.
.
.
Sundance, held each year in Utah, is the nation's
top showcase for independent films. Overrun by Hoil~woo~, players~ entertainment reporters and publictsts, 11 s a feshval where buzz leads to more buzz,
whi~h lea.d~ to more hype, which leads to film. studios
paymg mtlhons of dollars for films- somethmg they
. may or may not regret in the morning.

.
for
Mtramax spent a stagger!ng after Sundance critics
h_!:r dan ng
fil.._ including 6!1 pre'micres.
'··
.
.: .
S6. mtlhon for N.e~t ~top, Wonderl~nd," whtch formance as~ drug.addtct;~ "J,ttghiArt," har. star,was . · EVeryone expects film producers to ,HiYe the•t
grossed only $3.4 mtlhon tn North Amencan theaters. back on the ,nse. Now she'~ a cont~pder :for an Oscar ~ ch~kboo~ ready.. Although "Wonderland''. fizzledt,
But for every bust, there are deals hke the reported nomination.
. " , · _, , t •·
··
•
' Miramax has scored with numerous indejlcndept ftlms.
$1 million spent.last ye.ar by Artisan Entertainmt;_llt for
"I'd have to say tl).llj Sqnd~ liu :PIM:~'~~ majiif!ll! pickeiN•P. at Su.ndan"Cc.a!i'd.otlltir festivals.~ .. .
"
"Pi," which grossedJ3.:Z million, making it one Of the role in my life.'' Miu iSii&amp;;~Yl aafq.,••Wljii~ •tHt;l '-'
"~ax is, the kind of QQmpany; w~eil we ,..;_
year·~ most profitab~e indie films. .
year been like? Dunlbf!lui)C¥'d}' bliria.sid~d::.Od ~ber· sonietlli.n• . '(i.e )ove•. we will pro9ably ~ pe .the most:
~tth such. potenllal fo_r succe~, tl's·no wonder the gasted are words tha~,~teetn e,ppr~pnlk:: · , , .~.";
t aggfCSI!!VC, ,11nd passiOnate co!"pa.ny on thq block1'f
festtval was mundated wtth entnes. A ~rd 8~ ~eaSundance , was essentiaiiYi. li'\1~ 'lil;"\~85 wlie,n~~ said,~uiisltjons e~ecuti~e Af!ty brlel. ~· · '. ". '
~
lure films ~ere su~mtlled f~r.the 16 slots m the h•gh- ~obert Redford's Su~dance Insllt~teJ 'htch fosters.
Mtss Sheedy wtll be. m Parle City to help promote&gt;
ly cove~e~ ~ramattc. compelltton. ~t~ers were ch~sen mdependent filmmakl.ng, too~ ,t,~e retns of what .was;l another IJ).Oyie genemttng early e1Jcitement, "Su~
for exhtbtllon outstde the compettllon. The feshval then called the U.S. FtJm ;Festn.ai.!It'adopttd the Sun· Town," a story of Hollywood hustling and double~
also includes documentaries, foreign films and shorts. dance name in 1991.
. ·
· ·
dealing, with Miss Sheedy as a production designer·
At this movie marketplace, films that have no busiIt ·bas gotten so big that.one fesii ~ahi11ih enough and Rosanna Arquette as an actress.
'{' . &gt; · ; .
ness going for so much money end up going for big anyl)IOre.
·
" • •··
With "Sugar Town" lind many other films-tantljlii~
bucks, all in the frenzied hope · of 'finding that next ·
l'hl: .alternative Slamdance, now in ' its fifth year, ingJy· unkoown, the anticipation is building. So is tha:
"Shine" or "sex; lies &amp; videotape" ·or striking a selected,l4 features out of 1,716 entrie~. When it start· ' ttress.
·
·· .
' · · ••
multi-picture deal with the next Quentin Tarantino.
ed, only 43 films were entered. There are still other :. ."We've not allowed anybody to see the film," sail
. While the .festival .provides a major boos~ to fledg- alternative film festiva!s. :
. ..
\'fim Roth, who· directed the family dra'ma '"the· wU; .
hng film producers, 11 can also mark the btrtb - or
But the centerpiece Is Slindance. It starts todaY Salt ~ne," which acquisitions people are watching carerebirth -of a performer's career.
Lake City with tho· pre}l)~ere of ,Robert Al.tman's fully. "I see (the screening) as very nerve-racking. A
A year ago, Ally Sheedy' was considered by many to "Cookie's Fortune," then moves to the nearby ski lot of the crew is coming out. Financiers will be there.
be a has-been actress of the '80s "Brat Pack.'' But resort Of Park City through Jan. 31.11 will feature 114 If it goes wrong, I can just sort of go and hide."
·

Northwest controllers first to get new radar M~snms.: sav.;.9~Q.oy'~. delib~ratelyu~ing

ag~. ~all

By GEORGE TIBBITS
it about a month
Lake
Asaoclatad Presa Writer
Ctty and Cleveland are nextm hne.
AUBURN, Wash: (AP) - New,· more
Although the new system is considered
reliable computer equipment to help fed- faster and more reliable than the 1970seral air traffic controllers across the Unit- era technology it is replacing, it is not
ed ~tates has been introduced first in the immune to gli'tche~ like the one Auburn
Pactftc Northwest.
controllers dealt wtlh on Friday. A battery
All 20 national air traffic control cen- failure during a routine check of a backup
t~rs are to have the new systems by the power supply cut power to the center and
summer of 2000 to replace vacuum-type the new equipment.
·
.
radar display equipment that is prone to
Controllers were able to maintain conb~e~kdowns. The project will cost Sl.05 'tact with jetliners with" a backup radio
btlhon..
.
system, but radar used to prevent calliJane Garvey, adminjstrator of .the Fed- sions was shut down for 35 minutes. Hunelal ~viation Administration, and Trans- dreds of flights were delayed and airline
portatton Secretary Rodney. Slater. dedi· traffic was frozen for an bout. There were
cated the new system Wednesday at the , no reports of planes flying too close
Seattle Air Route Traffic Control Center; together.
which oversees flights over Washington,
Controllers said one of the advantages
most of Oregon and P!'rtio~s of Idaho, of !he .new system is that it's easier to
Montana, Northern Ca)lforma and Neva-. matntam . Parts needed for the old system
are no longer made. · '' .
da.
~The new syste~ will "help ke~p o~r
"The problem was the. co~ponents -:
skte~ the s_af~st tn the world whtl_e ~!If they would bteak and you JUSt couldn't
tra(ftc contmues to grow," Slater satd.
get them anymore," controller Mark Blair
'The Auburn. syste~ was installed last said.
October and atr trafftc controllers began
.lockheed Martin Air Traffic Manage-

Construction worker rescued
after being buried in a trench

ay P.H. FERGusoN
·
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Cold and dirty, a constmction worker who had
been buried for nearly eight hours smiled broadly as he was pulled from a
deep trench to the cheers of 175 rescue workers. ·
' The worker, identified by friends as Arturo Garcia, talked to rescue crews
and clutched the hands of others as he was strapped to astretcher and taken
to a hospital just before midnight Wednesday. He suffered cuts and bruises
and was in good condition today at a hospitaL
"The only thing he said was, 'I feel fine, thank you,"' said Mark Eckstein, medical director of the los Angeles City Fire l'lepartment. "He was
awake and alert and said he was cold."
· Garcia was helping place a 54~ inch pipeline for Mladen-Buntich, a company under contract for the Department of Water and Power, said utility
spokesman Walter ZetsL
The construction crew was placing the last200 yards or a 13-mile project .
wpen the Irene~ collapsed about;. p.m.
. .
Rescue ~orkers had to shore up walls of the trench to prevent a further
collapse whlle crews used a machine called an "air knife," which works like
a big vacuum, to suck dirt out. Others carried dirt out with buckets.
. Garcia had been buried over his head several times during the rescue, and
crews feared they had lost him, said city fire Capt. Steve Resnick. .
. " But when we uncovered his head, he began moving and the crews were
re~e nergized, " Resnick said.
• Officials ~id n?l i~medi~tely know what caused the walls to collapse at
the constructton stte m Pacotma, about 10 miles north of downtown.
: Southern Pacific railroad and Metrolink trains that run on• tracks near the ·
construction site were stopped out of fear that vibration could cause further
collapse of the trench.

shppe~ •:pork.~~~~ thel.f meals .

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Sijles said his "soul was poisoned."

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~

Eastern d Meigs girls win, Page 4
Is your
gay? Use your instincts, Page 8
Pressure b Ids on·Yugoslav leader,.Page 6
''

•

Big changes In
NBArosters
leading up to
season-Page 5

•

a1
Meigs County's

Hometown N~wspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 49 Nurnilr!r 181

Single Copy- 35 Cent s

Senators preparing written questions for trial
By LARRY MARGASAK
the Paula Jones sexual harassment ease against him?
justice regarding ainton's efforts to cover up his affair
Aaaoclated Preu Writer
Republicans are in a political bind once the question with Ms. Lewinsky.
WASHJNOTON ·(AP)- Senators are preparing writ- period is complete. The GOP's 55-45 majority will not be
Even some Republicans seemed undecided about the
ten questions for White House lawyers and House prose- enough to remove ainton by the required two-thirds vote. need (or witnesses.
cutors in President ainton 's impeachment trial, possibly · Mean"l"hile, the president's popularity .continues to soar
" I'm more apt .0 cast a vote, yes, the deJlOSilion
the last act of bipartisanship before crucial decisions neKI while the GOP's call for witnesses could extend the trial should be held, than 1 am to cast a vote the witnesses
week on dismissing the case and calling witnesses.
that- according to polls- is widely unpopular.
. should be called. But we'll wait and see," Sen. Robert
The questions will be submitted to O!ief Justice
Democrats were buoyed by Thursday's defense Bennett, R-Utah, said Ibis momirig on ~'Today."
William Rehnquist, who will ask the two sides to respond spe~ches on the. president's ~half, bu~ Sen: Robert TorriThe motion to di~miss and votes on witnesses, proba·
in trial sessions today and tomorrow.
celh, D-N.J., s111d today he ts counsehng hts fellow party bly Monday, probably would end the bipartisanship that
Alternating between Republicans and Democrats, the members not to become smug and declare victory.
has sustained the trial inside the Senate, although political
procedure will be as awkward for senl!lors as the require"I think we need to give out Republican colleagues a · unity already has evaporated iri front of television cammentlhat they sit silently at the lrijll "on pain of impris- ·dignified retr~at out ·of this case," he said on NBC's eras stationed just outside the chamber.
o·nmenl"
"Today."
,
"There's so much acrimony in Washington, tr~cally,
. The examitiation will try 'to narrow the conflicts in the
· Even one of the House managers prosecuting the case and so m~ch division over issues and personalities.... You
record that were highlighted by House prosecutors and indicated that the defense seemed likely to prevail. ain- may dislike Bill Ointon, and God knows he's given us all
the White' House.
· ·
·
ton's lawyers have succeeded 'in "challenging every some reasons to be disappointed. Rise above it,"Torricel. : · Was· t!Je job search for former White House intern phase of the case we made," Rep. George W. Gekas, .R- li added today.
Monica Lewinsky an effort to persuade her to sign a court Pa., told the Lancaster, Pa., lntelligencer Journal. When
Former Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., ill a closing White
.affidavit denying a sexual relationship with Ointon? Who the trial is over, ainton w~ll still he president, the news- House presentation Thuisday that was praised (or its eloa,sked the president's secretary, Betty Currie, to ·pick up paper quoted Oekas as saymg.
quence by Republicans and Democrats alike, asked senapresidenlial gifts from Ms. Lewinsky -the president or
Democrats generally oppose witnesses. Most would tors to give the public a break.
Ms. Lewinsky herself/ Did ainton try to coach Mrs. Atr- likely vote for an expected motion to dismiss the case
"The American people arc now and for some til)le
rie for possible testimony the day after his deposition in without voting on charges of perjury and obstruction or have been asking to be allowed a good night's sleep.

They're asking for an end to this nightmare. It is a legitimate request," he said.
After Bumpers spoke, not all Republicans were echoing the party line on witnesses or the strength of the case
presented last week by the all-Republican House prosecution team.
Sen: Gordon Smith, R-Ore., said the White House
"created reasonable doubt for-me and many of my col·
leagues" on a majority of the contested issues. "It doesn't
mean they can't be reclarified to the comfort of all of us,"
he said, holding open his ultimate judgment.
Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Aia., said, " I don't think we
ought to hear witnesses unless they will add a .lot to the
case. I would want to know what they would say over and
above what they already said" in testimony that is now
part of the written, record developed by Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr.
Bumpers' folksy, storytelling style contrasted sharply
with Ointon lawyer David Kendall, who stood before the
senators Thursday to make strict legal arguments. Kendall
recited Ms. Lewinsky's testimony that "no one ever asked
me to lie and I was never promised a job for my silence."
He asked senators: "Is there something difficult to
understand here?"

High water covers roads, · fo~ces some people
Sam Eblen of Middleport bas· filed as a ·
Republican candidate for mayor.
He filed his petitions last week with the
Meigs County Board of Elections and is the
only candidate to file as of Friday.
Eblen currently serves as a member of
the Parks and Recreation Committee, and
has wotked to: upgrade the village's parks.
A native of Meigs County, ·Eblen is a
veteran of the U.S. Army Air Force, havipg.

''I•P'a;:Hl~l'1':.;;.;~;,.;.F~ir.t~~~!~~~~-i?,!~~ s~~~

t

By Thl o IIOCiatld PrHeavy rains overnight produced
floodwaters that covered rural roads,
and a car fell into a crater left when
pari of one centrll Ohio road was
washed out. One man ·was injured.
Anthony Limato, 23, of
Roseville, wits taken to Fairfield
Medical Center, then ·Down to Grant
Medical Center in Columbus, the
Fairfie.ld County sheriff's office
said. He was in critical condition ·
this morning.
Sheriff's dispatcher Mel · Meloy
said a second ca.r found nearby may

~~;;:~~~~s:·, ~~,h~·~~· and·
by ·
,
did
anyone was ,,..,uc.

li'!!"""'IJI

swollen streams to overflow their
banks. ·
· The western Ohio counties of ·
Preble, Darke ·and Shelby appeared
to be the hardest hit, with authorities
reporting floodwaters up to four feet
deep in some areas.
·
.
· Some evacuations were reported
in Preble County. Sheriff's dispatcher Judy Smith said residents . o( a
trailer park in New Paris and a few
other people in the area had to be
evacuated because of high water.
. Smith said a woman reported the
weight of the floodwaters burst open

homes

·her cellar
door 1l!ldwtiterdASbe
her.,buement
'liiJe!l·
w~tllsll-&lt;&gt;f·
said'.·...
it
coniuig 'lifllhe stairi;" S'!flith
said.
· '· '
movaa aiciWIIv
Smi!h said the.· rain had tapered against I strong current near Cincinnati Tliunidary•
off to a drizzle by daybreak and the recelvec:l 3.1 lnchea of rain.
unaware of any evacuations,
Ooodwaters should start receding if storms tonighl
although
some people may have left
there are no inore downpours. The
Sheriff's departments · in Darke
weather service was predicting more and Shelby counties said they were tlieir homes voJuntarily.

wu

'""'HiGiH\

He is .a retired employee ,of General
Company of OtJio, for which he
A few evacuations were reported
.directed and taught training schools.
elsewhere
in the state.
He also formed a credit union, now ·known as United Telephone
The
National
Weather Service
Credit Union, Inc., based in Rocky River.
said rainfalls of 2·3 inches on
Eblen also worked as a real estate assistant for John White Realty
already saturated ground caused
in Athens, ahd as a building supervisor for Pova and Balli"tine Con·
struction ·eo., Fort Myers, Fla.
·
He served for nine and a half years with the Ohio State Highway
Patrol, attaining the Auxiliary Rank of Captain, commander of the
Athens County unit, and served for three years as a deputy sheriff in
By JIM FREEMAN
·
Southern local Superintendent James lawrence. · school report card, Southern was one of the best
Athens County.
Sentinel
Newt
Staff
"She
had been principal of Albany Elementary overall districts in the region, meeting nine of the
He is a member of the l)uckeye State Sheriff's Association, the
The
Southern
local
School
District,
in
conSchool
in (the Alexander Local School District)." 18 performance standards. The state average is
Disabled Amerjcan Veterans, Chapter 53 of American Legion, Feeney
junction with the Alexander School District and
"She's gotten us off and running,'' he said.
ni~e.
.
Bennett Post.
1·u·s ironic we got this (grant) based on fourthAthens-Meigs Educational Service Center has
Lawrence said Southern was offered a
"M : oals wo ld be to ·m o e the efficiency of the police departapproved a continuous improvement plan facili- $45,300 grant to improve its fourth-grade profi- grade proficiency test scores since we are ranked
ment, improving the maintenance Ialor in an effort to improve the district's fourth' ciency test scores, which are low, along with a with Belpre as one of the highest two school disdepartment, repairing streets grade proficiency test scores.
distrkt-wide improvement plan.
.trict,&lt;; in southeast Ohio," Lawrence said.
and the general appearance of
Meyer was eKpected to be hired at Thursday
"W~ thought by pooling our resources we
According to John Costanzo,. su~rintendent
the business district," Eblen of the Athens-Meigs ESC, four area school dis- night's meeting of the Athens-Meigs ESC in could get · a better person on board,'' Lawrence
said.
tricts received state funding to help in the devel - Athens.
said. "(Meyer) is very familiar with the process
want to work to improve opment of their plans - Southern Local, AlexanSentinE~JI the "Iwater
The action addresses proficiency test scores and has worked with it for several years."
and sewer systems in der, Federal Hocking and Trimble.
and follows the release last year of a state report
"We've got one of the best people in the state
2 Sections - J2 Pages
our community, and to make all
The money is earmarked to go towards out- card on schools which .rates each district based . helping I!S with this,'' he added.
city buildings more accessible side consultant and data analysis costs.
on 18 performance standards established by the
Plans call for two teams at Southern, a K-4
to the public."
Southern and Alexander pooled their funding Ohio General Assembly.
team and a distriot-wide improvement team,
Eblen said that he supports and created the continuous improvement plan
Future report cards will contain a school dis- which will work with the facilitator, he
police officers on foot patrol in
facilitator position, with assistance from the trict rating based on the number of performance eKplained. ."We have to develop a plan and send
the downtown Middleport area . Ath~ns-Meigs ESC and the Southeast Ohio standards met. Each district will be placed in one it to the state by June for approval."
.at nighttime, to allev.iate what . Regional Professional Development Center at of four categories: effective, continuous
. The project is supposed to last five years, he
he sees as a problem with drug Ohio University.
.•
improvement, academic watch and academic said. "Starting the third ,year of the project we
trafficking.
.
"We interviewed three different people and emergency.
have to start showing a certain level .of improveAcc.ordi ng to Eblen, he would agreed to employ· Micbaelene Meyer," said
Overall, according to last year's preliminary ment."
also ·make orderly council meetings a priority and encourage
Lotteries
residents to contact the mayor's
office or ·council member-s
QHIO
In Ohio, nearly 60 percent of in the spoils of their victories puts these initiaBy KATHERINE RIZZO
regarding concerns about the
Pick 3: 0-2·9; Pick 4: 1·5·5·8
Medicaid
spending comes from tives at risk."
. Aaaoclated Prasa Wrltlf'
village.
Buckeye 5: 3-20-25-3 I ·35
Graham and Hutchison introduced a similar
Washington.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Ebjen and his wife, Vera,
W.VA.
But the tobacco lawsuit settled bill last year, but it died when anti-tobacco leg·
and other states are threatening lawreside on Hudson Street, where suits if the federal government doesDally 3: 0-5-6; Dally 4: 7-8-2-4
by Ohio didn 'I use the Medicaid islation stalled in the Senate.
they have lived since his retire- n'I drop its attempt to take a share of
C 1999 Obio Vallty Publishi111 Co.
President Clinton, in Tuesday's State of the
argument; it dealt with fraud and
ment tw.o years ago.
Union address, said the government would initi·
other issues.
their tobacco settlement money.
"Health care costs were not ate its own lawsuit against the tobacco industry,
"It's much akin to skipping the
part
of the Ohio lawsuit," said separate from the ' states, to recoup billions of
,team practices and missing the big
dollars that Med icare and other federal health
Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio
galne then ·showing up to lead the
' Voinovich was one of three programs must pay to treat smoking-related disvictory parade," siate Attorney
senators with pending legislation eases.
General Betty Montgomery told a
Facing tough resistance from the states, the
ordering the federal government
Capitol Hill news conference
Volnovlch
not to take any settlement money .. administration has backed off an immediate
Thursday.
He also cosponsored the bills by Sens. Kay move to ,'reduce Medicaid payments to the states
"You don't get what you didn't earn."
The administration said in 1997 it was enti- Baily Hutchison, R-Texas, and ·Bob Graham, D· as a means of recouping the medical costs of
smoking.
tled to part of any settlement the states reach F1a.
Administration officials now say they are
with tobacco companies because the states were · The administration "never offered the states
trying to recover Medicaid money - at least any assistance · while they were pursuing their willing to strike a deal in which states would
keep the money but would agree to use it for
half of which comes from the federal govern- own cases," Grah~m said:
public
health.
The "Johnny-come-lately attempt to share
ment- spent on smoking-related illnesses.
Telepl!o~c

Southern addresses state·improvement mandate

.

Good Afternoon

Today's

Making their case

Chief defends police officers for stopping car at cemetery

at$499

99

TRIAL- Senior Government atudenta at Eastern High
School conductetl • mock trial for their claaamataa on Thuraday.
Aaron Will; who urved • - defense attorney In tha trial, Ia pictured making o~nlng remarks. Alao pictured are, 1-r, Melody
Lawrence, Stephania Evan~, WHiey Karr, Jeremy Coleman,
Erran Aldridge and Soott Stephana. The trial waa directed and
judged by Arch Rou.

SAVE!!

Middleport

..
~

\

Jttnuary 22, 10110

Starling

•
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.

Montgomery threatens lawsuit, Voinovich pushes bill

20 to 50% OFF

·~~

..

Friday

-

ment of Bethesda •. Md .• is the prime contractor for the proJect.
. By AUSSA Ro,eSMAN
, ,·' Watson Slid he had yo ,purge hunself byOther improvements under way or AIIOCIIItld P.... Wrltlf'
'· · · ·
vomiting the meal ani! was unable to read
planned by the FAA include a new syste'rit&lt; " HELENA, Mont (AP) -1\vo'Muslims thil&lt;Otan or pray for :40 dtiys. ,,,
· ·
that helps pilots make precision landings who lilY a' Denny's restaurant in Billings , The two filed a r'eligious discrimination
guided by the Global Positioning System, del!berately slippe~ bacon and, h.am into complaint with the Human Rights Bureau,.
and an e-mail system between computers tbetr meals are asking for $1 mtii!On each seeking the apology and $1 million. If the '
on the ground and in the cockpit. That and a written apology.
. . ·'
.
Muslims and the restaurant can't reach a
should reduce the time lag and chance of
Abdussalam Sipes and aarence'Watson settlement, the complaint will go before a
errors in voice communications.
told investigators with the Montana Human bureau hearing officer.
The FAA's announcement came only Rights B~reau that they specifically asked
The bureau agreed with their charge. ·
hours after a single-engine Cessna came for their· meals to be prepared in lcparate
"The fact tbatthe ingredients fur these
within 100 feet of a Southwest Airlines skill~lli to avoid contamination by pork dur- meals are packaged separately aild do not
jet as the two were taking off . from inglunch at the restaurant last Marcb.
contain any pOrk products ... implies that
Austin, Texas, on runways that crossed,
Sipes, whose religion forbids the 'eating these ·products ,were placed in the food
authorities said.
of polk, said the ' men asked for IJI~ls of intentionally," an itlvestigator wrote in a
The smaller plane passed just under eggs and bash browns.
report released this week.
the Boeing 737 with 125 people aboard.
Sipes said he noticed pieces of ham hidA lawyer for Denny's, which has been
"Fortunately,. the captain noticed the den in the food and complained. The man- dogged by charg.es of racism for years, did
smaller plane out of the corner of his aa.er offered them U?'her meal, b~t S,ipes not return calls Wednesday. .
eye," Southwest spokesman Ed Stewart Slid that whe~ he mspccted the gnlled The manager of the Billings restaurant,
said. "He immediately pulled the air- chicken dish, he found a strip of bacon.
R:ichard Gmves, denied the incident was
. plane into .a much sleeper climb."
~They're clai.~ing it's a giant ~inci- intentio.naL
.
· Doug Murphy, a regional air traffic dence _that hii!D- not once buttwtce.Denny's, based lD Spananbu.rg, S.C.,
manager for the .FAA, said the Cessna found tiS way mto both of their meals," said ~tiled a $46 million discrimination suit in
pilot could face diS'cipline ranging:from a the men's attorney, Jeff Ferguson. "They're 1994 fil~ by black ,Secret Service agents
warning to license suspension.
saying it was a comedy of errors."
who complained they were denied service

Twin Sets
Starting

DAN'S-SEASONAL
CLEARANCE CONTINUES

·~ ·,..

-

'

•

1

..

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'

By ESTES THOMPSON
AaiOCIItld Preee Wrltlt'
•.DURHAM, ~.C. (AP)- Tobacco company execu~tves an_d offictals tn states ~pende~t. on ,'he crop
had nothmg ~ut sc~rn for _Prestdent Chnton s threat~n~d lawsuit agatnst ctgarette makers an.• an
tn~~--d !obacco t~x.
·.
..
• Tlits mdu~try ts under ~tege, , Ke~tu~ky Gov.
~~!Jl Patton·satd Wednesday. There ~a hmtt to what
• l~ts. product can bear, and we're commg close to that
bnht."
.
_Patton was among representallves from 11 tot&gt;acco
states and four companies who discussed Clinton's
speech~ they met in Durham to work out plans for a
S5.1S bllhon trust fund !O assist farmers hurt by the
settlem~nl' of state.lawsutts.
_In bts ~tate of the· Umon ·speech Tuesday night,
Chnton satd the federal government wo~ld follow the
lead of states and sue tobaet? compantes to recover
health care costs of tr:hng ~•ck smokers.
•

992-3604

----·-----

0 ·

•

Tobacco states heap scorn on -Clinton .lawsuit, tax proposals~

.290 N~ 2nd

- ... -. -·-· - .... -

•

...

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.,

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Officers. who . family and friends.
Browning said Wednesday that his officers
stopped a family car leaving a cemetery acted
properly because they were looking fo~ a fugitive, acted in the interest of public safety because they
Kenton County Police O!ief Mike Browning said. were looking for a potentially dangerous fugitive
The incident happened Tuesday after burial and because they believed it was safest to stop the
services for Harold Thornberry. a Covington car before it was in a more public place.
The· chief said Jamie Thornberry's criminal
nightlife figure. Police were seeking Thornberry's
son, Jamie, on drug charg~.
. record is long.
"Since lumina 18, this guy has committed
Police, with their weapons drawn, asked the
men in the car to get out and put their hands on multiple, multiple felony crimes and has thumbed
his nose at our community and the criminal jus·
the hood.
The actions, which frightened children who . tice system and remains a fugitive today," arown·were in the car, drew criticisRJ..from Thornberry's ing said.

The chief said his officers apologi~ed to the
family for the disruption. But he said they wouldn'I change what ·happened if they had to do it over
again.
Kenton County officers have been looking for
Jamie Thornberry, who is wanted on cocain~
charges and violation of parole, for six months.
The parole violation stems from ·five couniS of
burglary dating back to 1987, Browning said.
After .hearing about the elder Thornberry's
death, the Kenton County police put together a
plan to apprehend Jamie Thornberry, who they
expected at the funeral .

•

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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="25783">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="25782">
              <text>January 21, 1999</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="863">
      <name>genheimer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2406">
      <name>schreiber</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
