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.I .

·Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Wednesday, February 4, 1998

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·
htgh In upper 30s. .

•

en tine
VOl. 48, NO. 205
C1998, Ohio Valley

2 Socllono, 12 Pages, 35 cents
AGannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 5, 1998

Publishing Col"pany

'

Rep. Carey votes yes"
I

Ohio lawmakers regroup after
defeat of school-funding plan

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The tax increase was the centerpiece of a $1 bi Ilion package thai supporters hoped would satisfy the
court's ruling la.'t year, which deemed
as unconstitutional the state's current
method of paying for public education.
State Rep. John Carey. R-Wellston. voted yes on the proposed fullcent Ia~ hike to be placed before voters. He saitl yesterday lhal he thought
he had done "everything humanly
possible" to comply with the court
decision and get something through
the legislature .
"In mv heart. I know I've been a
real advocate for public education,"
he added.
Justices gave the slate until March
24 to find a way to make funding
more equal among districts and ease
the reliance on property taxes. The

money raised by the higher sales Ia•
would have been split between the
state's education budget and a plan to
. reduce residential property taxes.
"I didn'tlook at it as a ·defeat at
all," House Speaker Jo Ann Davidson. R-Reynoldsburg, said after a
lengthy and tense debate. "We came
very .close to a consensus."
The outcome was similar to a
House vote last August.
Gov. George Voinovich and legislative leaders tried 10 get a plan
before voters to increase the sales ta•
by a penny on the dollar. But that plan
died when Democrats and conservative House Republicans refused to
support it.
A similar alliance led to Wednesday's defeat. House conservatives
opposed any tax increase. arguing
thai the healthy economy would gen-

erate more than enough tax revenue
lo pay for the "hools. Some Democrats who represent rural districts said
. they did nol think the plan went far
enough.
OOTaxpayers.two: tax hikes. zero." said a gleeful Scoll Pullins. director
of the Ohio chapter of the National
Taxpayers Union.
The House vole came after legis·
lators jeuisoned a plan to increase
business property taxes and upped the
amount of · a proposed ·sales lax · ·
· inc rea...: from a half cent to a full pen·
ny in a last-ditch effort to win votes.
The House followed lhe vote by
accepting a stripped-down resolution
that only a.sks voters to expand the
Legislature's authority to issue stalebacked bonds. The resolution. which
state budget ..Jriters say could save up
Continued on pa2e 3

Crippling snowstorm surprises forecasters

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LB

By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - For the second
time in six months, lawmakers went
down the wire before opting not to ·
ask voters lo raise taxes to pay for a
court-ordered rewrite of Ohio's
school-funding system.
Less than two hours before a midnigh! Wednesday deadline. the House
voted 58-40 to seek an increa.'e in the
slate sales tax from 5 peri:entto 6 percent. But the tally fell just short of the
60 "yes" votes needed - a threelifih's majority -to put the proposed
amendment 10 the Ohio Constitution
on the May 5 primary ballot.
The defeat left lawmakers to craft
a response to an Ohio Supreme Court
order to develop a new funding plan
without a source of new money for
schools.

SCHOOL FUNDING SUPPORT SOUGHT • State Sen. Patrick
Sweeney, 0-Cieveland, holds a sign which was cirCulating around
the Ohio Statehouse In Columbus Wednelollay. The sign makes
reference to former House Speaker Vem Rlffe, who was known
for his abllfly to move legislation tllld..reflects negatively toward
current Speaker Jo Ann Davidson's lnablllty to ·gather enough
support to pass a school-funding plan. (AP)
·

Racine Council members
consider house numbering
Racine Village Council handled
mostly routine mailers during its
regular meeting Monday night with
Mayor Scou Hill presiding.
Judy Smith. Main Street, asked
council to install a street light near
her home. Council members will
check to see if the moving of a street
light can be justilied.
In addition. Max Boring add~ssed
council concerning house numbering
in the village. He was advised that
Councilman Henry Lyons is lhe
process of gelling the numbers and
has purchased severnl maps.
It is hoped the project will .becompleted by summer.
Fire Chief David Neigler reported
two firefighters will be anending the
basic firelighters course this spring.
St.reet Commissioner Glenn Rizer
reported the village pumped
2.692.000 gallons of water during
January.
Lee Layne. member of the board
of public affairs. a.'ked council if it
would be possible for the board 10 get
out of its contract with Leary Con·
struction Company for cleaning and
painting of the water tank.
He said the company did not do
the work during 1997.
It was noted the company had
been granted an extension to com·
plele the job by May.
Tina Neigler of the Racine Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary reportell on the group's finances and acliV'
ities for the year.
· She said the organization was saving its funds to·purchase cabinets and

other items for the kitchen in the new
fire station.
Council gave second reading to an
ordinance authorizing the village to
provide health insurance forthe clerk
and street commissioner.
Clerk Karen Lyons reported _the
poslaudit conference will be held
Thursday, today. al I p.m. and
requested as many council members
as possible to auend.
Council approved the purchase of
a new engine for !he police cruiser
from Codner's.
Mayor Hill reported the ceiling in
the downstairs hallway in the municipal building had been painted. Work
and sanding and refinishing the tloor
.will be started this month.
Hill also reported he is planning
on auending the Feb. 10 rally at the
Ohio Statehouse regarding electric
utility deregulation. adding that
receipts (rom the fire levy are in danger of being lowered as a result of
deregulation.
He said ihe deregulation would
also affect school. EMS and health
department levies.
Hill was also authorized to allend
the mayors training session in
Reynoldsburg.
Council will meet next on March
2. 7 p.m. at the Racine Municipal
Building.
Also present were council members. Robert Beegle, Henry Bentz.
John Dudding. Joe Evans and B.obbie
Ro~. police otTicer Brent Rose and
firefighter Dennis Wolfe.

- ~clean

cars' due in
showroooms this ·fa/1

· WASHINGTON (AP) - Cars
that emit substantially f'ewer smogcausing emissions are on their way
imo American showrooms.
The country's Big Three automakers - Geneml Motors. Ford and
Chrysler - said Wednesday that
beginning with new models. th~s fall.
cars sold in 12 states from Vtrgtnta to
Maine will produce at least 70 per. cent less pollution.
·
The cleaner cars will be sold
nationwide within !hrec years, begin\

~

ning with 200 I mod~ls. !he manufacturers said. Toyota also has commilled to the cleaner c'ars and other
companies are expected to follow,
according to industry executives.
The U.S. manufacturers notified
the Environmental Protection Agency
that they would produce and sell the
less polluting ·vehicles nationwide
even though four Northeast statesMassachuseus. New York. Maine
and Vermont - have demanded
more stringent _emission standards

By The Associated Press
Scores of schools and businesses
remained closed today following a
near-record snowstorm that surprised
forecasters. Police in several Ohio
cities were unable to keep up with
· hli'ridreds df to!potted aceitlfl!ts:The brunt of Wednesday's storm
hit the southwestern counties. but an
18-year-old man wa.' killed in an
apparent weather-related accident in
Fairfield County in central Ohio.
Sheriff's deputies said Chad
Welsh of Baltimore. Ohio .. lost control of his car on a snow-slickened
. portion of stale Route 158 about eight
miles north of Lancaster. The vehicle
slid left of center and into the path of
a pickup truck thai struck Welsh's car
on the passenger side. officers said.
Ohioans had been enjoying u mild
winter. with average temperatures
· higher than normal and snowfall
amounts lower than normal. Highs
reached into the 50s in much of lhe
state earlier this week.
But Wednesday's 11.6-inch snowfall al the Cincinnati-Northern Ken. tucky International Airport was a
record for February. and second only
10 the overall 24-hour record of 12.8
inches on Jan. 7. 1996.
More snow expected today meant
this system could eclipse the record
total snowfall t&lt;&gt;r a single storm 14.4 inches in thai storm two years
ago.
Many drivers caught in gridlock
during Cincinnati's aflernoon rush
hour reached for their cellular telephones. GTE Wireles.s said the number of cell phone calls il handled
increased 127 percent from the same
time period the day betore.
"II tells us that every,one is stuck
in traffic calling their office," said
spokeswoman Krysli Barnhill of
Ameritech Cellular, another of ihe

LOADING UP • Snow and Icy SIUSh·COIIInld
roads resulted In school cloalngs and numerous minor traffic accidents Wednesday. Snow
removal crews were kept particularly busy In
the western part of the county. Here, a Meigs
County Highway Department truck receives a
region's major cell phone companies.
Commutes that usually take min·
utes turned inlo hours. Polil:e told drivers involved in minor crashes to
exchange information and report the
details later. Two-hour waits for tow
trucks were not unusual.
Many people lound their way to
stores and stocked up on essentials.
"We've had about a 25 percent
increase in the number of shoppers
we normally get on W~dnesdays,"
said Carl Bosse. manager of a Kro~er
store on Ohio 747 in Butler County.
"We've sold a lot of ice sua per;,
rock sail. milk. eggs. hread and

•

fresh load of cinders and aalt at the county
garage at Rock Springs before heading back
Into action. Today, Meigs and Southern local
schools were open while Eastern Local schools
remained closed.

bananas...
said.
Sandier asked the miuni~ht shift to
By late Wednesday. about6 10 12
inches of snow had fallen between analyze and interpret the differing ·
Cincinnati and Portsmouth. whil'e 3 forecasts. Shortly he fore snow slart·
w5 inches was reported in Lebanon. ed -falling beli&gt;re J:~wn Wednesday.
Wilmington and Chillicothe. Only the weather service warned of a .seriabout an inch of snow had accumu- ous snowfall.
lated in Dayton and Columbus. ~
"It came farther west than we
Ryan Sandler. a meteorologist at thought." said meteorological tech·
the National Weather Service's li&gt;re· nician Don Hughes . .. If you're off hy
casting center in Wilmington. said 50 miles. you·r~ niT hy (&gt;inches.
By mi1Jday. Wilmington was
computer models Tuesday night hinted that a storm was approaching. But caught in a llurry of criticism. and
Ken Haydu. mdeorologh.;t in c.:har!!e.
evidence wa.\ not slrnng enough to
issue a prediction heyond "llurries." said his stalf will evaluate the missed
The weather service expected the c:~ll "to try.. In 'make it harder,. to h:~pstorm to stall "'"lh_of C'incinnali, he pen agam .
00

•

Clinton backed by Blair on Iraq, but Arabs wary
WASHINGTON &lt;AP) - Presi- cuss a timetable. rejecting appeals by
denl Clinton is winning strong sup- the International Olympic Commillee
port for his lrJq policies from visit· thai any such uction be delayed until
ing British Prime Minister Tony Blair after the winter Olympic games, set
an\l fr&lt;;&gt;m Congress. but the signals to start Friday in Japan ·and end Feb.
recelvea from the Arab ·"World are 22.
"First and foremost, the president
decidedly mixed.
Blair. who was meeting with Clin- has an obligation. as commander-in~
our chief diplomat. to
ton today, told reporters Wednesday chief and
while e·n roUJe.here' that he plans "to protect U.S. interests." presidential
tell people about the evils of Iraqi press .secretary Mike McCurry said
Wednesday.
President Saddam Hussein.
Clinton said Secretary of Stale
,"He is a nasty dictator silting on
an 'awful lot of nasty stuff," Blair Madeleine Albright. in six days of
consultations in Europe and the Persaid.
sian
Gulf, found a "strong consenSpeaking on condition · of
in suppon of the need for Iraq
sus"
affonymity. Blair's aides said Britain
to
allow
U.N. inspectors unfellered .
is contemplating a period of two to
three weeks. to educate the public access to search for forbidden
about the extent of Iraq's arsenal and · weapons.
te exhaust diplomatic options.
"All of us would prefer a genuine
Those comments left the impres. diplomatic solution .." Clinton said al
sion that the earliest period for U.S. a White House education event. "The
military action ogainstlroq would be best way to stop Saddam from bui.ldin the second half of February.
ing nuclear, biological or chemical
The administration has said that weapons is simply to getlh~ inlef11a·
no decision on military action has . tional inspectors back to work with
been made. lt also has refused to dis- no restraints."
c.
• ·~

as

•

Defense Secretary William C11hen
said Wednesday night that Clinton
will likely approve within the next
two days sending aduiti&lt;&gt;nal U.S.
forces to the Persian Gulf. Interviewed on CNN's "Larry King Live''
show, he specilically mentioned a
Marine Expeditionary Unit - normally a multipurpose contingent of
about2.&lt;Xl0 Marines aboard amphibious ships and equipped with a small
number of combat aircmft.
They would join 24.41Xl U.S. military men and women already in the
region, most at sea with two aircraft
combat currier bau.le groups that
includ.e 14 combat ships. II support
vessels and 325 warplanes. ·.
There were strong signs of united
bipartisan support in Congress for a
geHough policy with Iraq. Lawmakers were busy Wednesday fashioning a reliolution supporting air.
strikes against Iraq. if they are
deemed necessary. And McCurry
expressed confidence that international backing for a military solution
to the Iraq crisis.would be forthcom -

ing if diplomatic efli&gt;rts failed .
But Arah League Set:retary-Gen·
eral Esmat Abdel Moguid said in Jordan that it was Jiflicult for him to
believe "thai any Amb country W&lt;&gt;Uid
accept a miIitary mike on Ira4 . We
;.ut! endeavoring today to tind a
peaceful way oul of the crisis. Jordanian and Syrian ollicials also said
they oppose the use of force .
AI-Ahmm. Egypt 's leading state- ·
owned newspaper. said. "The Amer·
ican positron toward •iraq cannot he
described as anything but coercive.
aggressive. unwi se and uncaring
about the lives of Iraqi &lt;. who are
00

unneces:\i.lrily subjeL:I to .lianctions

and humiliation. "
. Clinton spoke for Ill minutes
Wednesday with Egyptian President
Hosni Mubar~k. , McCurry said they
agreed lhatlrJq must comply with rhe
United Nations' Security Council '
resolutions. He did nol mention
Mubar.ilt's position on the use of military force .

·~

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 5, 1998

Commentarr
.

Page2

'--

Local briefs-.....;.;.,

OHIO Weather
Friday, Feb. 6

Thursday, February 5, 1998

Meeting held

AocuWc,uhere lorc~:ast lor daytime cundntons and htgh temperatures

John Harding Folan

MICH

Will GOP topple or torture Clinton?

The Daily Sentinel
'Lst!Wii.Wtf m1948
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-1192·2156 • FIX 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genenl M111~ger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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'liN _ , 111 Ccturf St., -..,.. Oltlo

Budget has big numbers
for underwriting credit
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - In the back ol the budget book unmentioned m the
pohucal debate about the me and reach of government IS $7 9 tnlhon worth
of cv&amp;dence that Washmgton st&amp;ll IS a maJOr force shapmg the dectstons of
everyday Amcncan hfc
In buymg a home, paymg for college. guardmg a penston or plantmg an
uncertam crap, federal loans, guarantees and msurance underhe what people
can afford to do and nsk
President Chnton satd he IS balancmg the budget 'the nght way, by
rcducmg the s1ze and scope of our government ' Republicans m Congress
counter that he wants to spend too much take federal charge of too much
cxpandmg. not curbmg, government power
· Th1s IS a budget only a hbcral could love ' House Speaker Newt Gmgnch sa&amp;d of Chnton's $1 7'l tnllton spendmg plan for fiscal 1999 whtch
torcsces a surplus tor the lnst Umc m 30 years Tax and spend other Republicans complamed B1g government
There s another btg government apart from that famthar argument- the
gradually growmg federal role m underwntmg credit and msurance for a
wtdc assortment of programs and purposes
It makes the federal government the largest financtal mstltutton m the
Umted States, wnh $6 2 tnlhon tn d&amp;rect loans, guarantees and msurance
outstandmg at the end of 1997 Another $1 7 tnllton IS guaranteed throu~h
government-sponsored enterpnses - pnvately held federally chartered
lenders
Directly or md&amp;rectly, the government provtdes money for home buymg.
college costs small busmcsses. exports penswns. deposit msurance and an
ssottment of other 1tems
"L1ke other programs, they arc operating under t1ght hudgetary con
stramts, ·Clinton's budget says But unlike other programs they have httle
tmpact on year-to-year spend mg. a pohucal appeal that make them tmmune
from the d1spute over next year's dollars
That wasn't always so The cnsts 111 depoSit msurance that began w1th
savmgs and loans failures a decade ago made those guarantees mto budgetbustmg expenses for a batlout, as 2 500 banks and savmgs and loans went
broke
The bailout prompted a close look at the mterwovcn system of federal
financ•al guarantees and the new budget promtscs an effort to strengthen
government credit management - mcludmg a look at expandmg pnvate
markets to detcnnmc whether some tedcral loan programs arc still JUstified
by need
But cndmg any nf them would st&amp;r a pohi&amp;cal uproar Kccpmg them docs
not Since neither Rcpuhltcans nor Democrats arc likely to tackle mtcrests
thai henclll Irom tcderal guarantees at home
U S crcdu anu msurancc covers people who want to buy homes, helps
the contractnrs who hu&amp;ld them lets wllcgc students borrow tor tu&amp;tton wnh
• up to 25 yc.&amp;rs to pay helps butld farms msurcs agamst noocts and dtsastcrs
and more
Forc&amp;gn ltd loans and mtern.ltmnal guarantees to rcv&amp;vc shaken forc•gn
econum&amp;cs arc another matter wnservauvc Republicans arc balkmg at
them
By the budget numhers the government
-Backs $~ 2 tnlllon worth ot msurance underwntmg coverage that
could not h.tve hecn purchased pm ately
-Guarantees SK22 b&amp;lhon 10 loans
-Has S 18 I b&amp;lhon 111 dnect loans outstandmg
Those arc potential hahthtlcs and wtll stay that \lay s,l\c for normal
• ddault ro1tcs unless there were an c«.:onomu.: cra:-ih or lin.tnt.:lal u1'n Ilk..:
those that rnn.:cd the dcposll lnSUf'J.OlC h~u louts With the c~.:onomv s tron~
the network 11l loans and guarantees ts ,1low cost way ol achte\ln~ Ieder:,,
goals one nl wi\1ch the budget dcscnhes a.' the rcd&amp;Stnhutlon ot r~suurccs
by prov&amp;dtng suhs&amp;d&amp;es Irom the general taxpayer to the d&amp;S.td\,&amp;nlaged
Conscrvattvcs who get th:ll tar mto the Ime pnnt nught argue w&amp;th tll.lt
but not wuh other listed obJcctl\es mcludmg mcreaSing home owncrsh&amp;p
helpmg more peopk graduate Irum collc~c strengthcnm~ small bustncsscs
promoting exports crcat&amp;ng Johs
; The two government-sponsored entcrpnscs m housmg loans hold or
guarantee 47 percent ol $4 tnlllnn m restdcnt&amp;al mortgage loans now out
: standmg The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp covers ahout $2 7 tnll&amp;on
deposttcd 111 some I 100 sa\mgs mstnuuons

Letters to the editor
Commissioners at it again
Dear Ednor
Two ol our county commtsstoners arc at 'I agam Janet Howard .mLI Fred
Hollman have voted to close the county ho.nc The reSidents of the county
home arc at the mercy of these two coun• commt&gt;s&amp;oncrs
In a rc~.:cnt commtss1oncrs mccttng Jan ' was quoted as !iaymg 1h~.:rc arc
heHcr places for these people Yes thero arc better places hut arc these
places affordable to the rcstdcnts of the county home' The answer "no tor
the people under the age of 62 F&amp;vc out of 10 reSidents at the home arc under
the age ot 62 The average mcome for the rcs&amp;dcnts at the home " $461 a
month J&gt;nvatc care houstng statts at S700 a month SSI payments .trc g01ng
to stay the same The maXImum amount 1s $494 a month There IS no pro
gram to make up the dtffcrenec
The res&amp;dents over age 62 can go to an as&gt;tstcd hvmg fac&amp;llty Ass&amp;stcd
means that only the utlhUes arc pa1d Everyday tasks such as cookmg deantog manag10g finances shopp10g for essenttals dnvmg to doc10r appomt
mcnts etc "the sole rcspons&amp;bllny of the IOd&amp;v&amp;dual None ot the restdents
at the county home have a dnvcrs hccnse They don t know how to dmc
cook dean or handle !hen own hnanccs These da&amp;ly hvmg task' arc
.&amp;!ready take care of at the county home
In 1996 the comm&amp;Sstoncrs budgeted S II 700 to the count) home It d&amp;d
n t cost that much to run the county home Savmg the county If your lam&amp;ly had 14 members could you do as well'
I w1ll agree that there arc hetter places I would hke to h\c 10 the While
House but I cant afford It
Janet also proposed kcepmg the fauhty open for cmcrgenc&amp;es Talk about
p1c m the sky tdea It the county home ts to rematn open for emergenctes
only the stalf would have to he kept on ThiS would definttely he 10cffic1ent
I wall agree that there arc hettcr places to hvc than the county home I
would hkc to hvc 111 the Whuc House but I cant afford 11 Maybe the com
m&amp;sS&amp;oncrs could get me a room there
Cathy Hammon
Pomeroy

By Morton Kondracke
much of •t would
Rmgmg w1th pnde m hts accom
be fmanced by
pllshments and plans for the future
b•g tobacco taxes
Prestdent Clmton's State of the
But a cnppled
Umon address was a sad remmder of Clinton won 't be
the dam~that Clinton has &amp;nfltcted able to mducc
on h&amp;s o n estdcncy
Republicans to
A num
of factors - not least
respect any of hts
Republican reluctance to have Vtce proposals, and he
Pres&amp;dent AI Gore take over as pres
m&amp;ght be forced
&amp;dent may pennn Clmton to fimsh to y1eld to thetr Kondracka
demands -- encouragmg the GOP to
out hts tenn
But unless Momca Lewmsky's return to us hard hne 1995 agenda
As Rep John Lmder R-Ga told
tape-recorded charges agamst htm
prove totally groundless Clinton IS me Tuesday mght, Remember m
bound to be wounded
and, w1th 1974 all the (liberal) legtslatwn that
h1m chances for true btparttsan got passed that we're trymg to
soluuons to the country s problems
undo' That s what happens dunng a
Over the past two years a strong weakened pres&amp;dency ·
He was refemng of course to
Chnton has been able to force
Republicans mto comprom&amp;scs and legtslat10n forced on R&amp;chard Ntxon
forge a moderate natiOnal agenda by a DemocratiC Congress dunng
tncludmg college tax credus health Watergate
msurancc for poor ch&amp;ldrcn and a
No one can be sure how the
balanced budget that mcludcd both Lcwmsky scandal wtll develop but
tax cuts and soc&amp;al spendmg
tbe cv&amp;dcnce at hand suggests that
Even a strong Clmton would not Clinton could fight hiS way through
be able to get cvcrythmg on the the next three years and survtvc m
laundry hst he proposed tn the State office - partly because hard proof of
espec&amp;ally s&amp;nce so an 1mpeachable offense may be
of the Umon

lacking and partly because Republicans would prefer to deal wuh a
weakened Clinton than a newly
mmted Pres&amp;dent Gore
Just to keep the pot bothng GOP
pollster/constgllere Frank Luntz
says he's adv1smg House Republl
cans to drop thetr statesmanlike
stlence of the past week and begm
'askmg qucst10ns ' about the scandal
Clmton , of course now stoutly
dentes that he had sexual rcla
twos ' With Lcwmsky, and the hrst
lady ts trymg to blame the ent&amp;rc
case on a nght "'"g consptracy
That means the Whue House has
dectded on a hardball strategy but &amp;t
convmces only d&amp;e-hard loyaliSts
Clinton's earhcr hatr spllttmg on hiS
relat10nsh1p with Lewmsky strongly
suggests that he has somethtng to
htde
'
It seems probable that Lewmsky
wtll tell spectal prosecutor Kenneth
Starr that she had sexual relat&amp;on s ot
one sort or another w&amp;th Chnton
After all why would she mstst on
•mmunlly lrom prosecutiOn II she
d&amp;dn t plan to re,crsc her sworn alit

r------~~~~fiiiN~:!~IlnHIC:Li~~~----------------~~~~~~~
lNG
CUBA...

m the Paula Jones case

IMansfteld 138' I•

,, ~nod Joh (.1pprm al r.111ng'

rangm~

Irom 71 percent to ~4 percent) You
tlunk th.u Htllary Clmton m&amp;ght
have hecn correct when she sa&amp;d the
scandal was the handtwork ol a
'asl
nght· w•ng
'on~ru~tcy
( True 22 percent
coulu he
true 4 ~ percent
not true 29

percent, accord
mg to a Fox
News poll ) You
thmk the press "
tn one of those
ugly
scandal
modes and that
they arc ovc•the
playmg
story You thmk
Wattenberg
mdependent
counsel Kenneth
Stan IS actmg out a pohucal grudge
and that hts mvest&amp;gat&amp;on should he
shut down
Many conservatives lind yout
attitudes maddcnmg They ask Pubhe how could you' How c.m you
say th It a prcstdent who hnngs the
wnrd!&lt;i or~tl sex mto cH.:ry h\111g
room 1s dmng a good jOh' That·' ll.u
·~ dmng a good JOh' Th.&amp;t nwn
~~~c~am modn.lh:-l•hcr.ll ncy," org.,
011.H10ns arc d.m~.: ang 10 the tun~.: ol
n ght wang ~.:on,pu.uor''
Puhlrc wh.uts 11 you arc trymg to

sav'
Tell me II I m wrong hut It s not
as c.:nntradtc.:tmy .ts 11 ... ountls Prest
dent Clinton ts d01ng ,1 much hettc1
Jnh (Naturally I tlunk &amp;t st,&amp;rted m
199~ alter he re,&amp;J my hook uesc nhln£ how he h.u.l gone dov. n ,1 too ltheral path ) On Chntnn s w.llch Wdf.lrc IIi down nunc 1s down the
budget " h.tl.mceu mll .llwn .md
uncmp loynu.::nt Me down mulmc ts
up Puhl1c yow mutual lunds arc
domg \:cry well 01 t:nursc &lt;:UOS(; f V-

atlves say that they should get most
ot the cred•t It has hecomr a tru&amp;sm
that the best thtng that happened to
Chnton was the election ol ,, Rcpuhhcan Congress, but tru&amp;sms arc often
1ruc Anyway Clmton s sktlll ul
State ol the Umon message prov&amp;dcd
a bump " m the polls
Puhhc I don 't thmk there " a
vast nght-wmg consptracy at work
For sure 1t ISO t vast But I mterprct
your response to mean that there uc

some pohucat dnvcrs mvoh ed 111
thiS deal True As there were nn the
other s1dc, dunng the Wucrg He
scandal ,u the rwt ol wh&amp;ch was
.tl'o ~t (.;Over-up perJury suhmn 111on
ol perjury ~md ohstrudaon ol JU~tu.:c
The press ~ts usual goes n.tzy wllh
.&amp;n nngomg sc,md.&amp;l But Puhhc uh
why .&amp;rc you watchmg It so mtclltly'
Th.lt, wh.1t leeus the lced&amp;ng lr""Y
(CNN h,ts Its htghcst 1~11111gs \lnU:
OJ l
lnterestmgly and properly
tlunk that you Puhhc arc gmng to
1csohc th1s 1ssuc Dcmm:r,al:y
works Ru.:h~mJ St:ammnn has noted
that the p~bhc opmwn poll despite

us ahuscs 1s one ot Amcru.:a s !!rc,tl
t:ontnhutwns to dcmocratu.: th...cmy
and practice Th1s thmg wdl go on
lor a whtlc I tmagme Clmton w&amp;ll
ucny II but It Will hccomc at lc.ISt
ln&amp;ldly cle.&amp;r that he h.td sex with
Momea me.mmg that he l1ed to ,,
gr.tnd JUry '" well '" to the pubhc
But he w&amp;tl emphaSize tl1.11 he never
told anyone else to he .md that w&amp;ll

• IColumbus 138' I

~~u

-,

agent who traf
lu.:s 10 conscrva

Showers Tstorms Ram
1 As:.oc1ated

honks as a
rab&amp;d crttlc of
the preSident
Tnpp s nght
wmg credenttals
arc less pro
In
nounccd
recent months
she has nestled
Wickham
herself among a
group of nght
wmg advtsers mdudmg her attor
ncy James Moody who" also domg
legal work for a conservat&amp;ve foun
dation that has accused the Internal
Revenue Scrv&amp;cc harr.&amp;Ss&amp;ng GOP
orgamzat&amp;ons A lurmcr Wh&amp;te
House starter m the Bush admmiS
tratlon she stayed on after Clinton s
election long enough to hook up
w&amp;th Goldbl:rg to secretly peddle a
tell all book about h1m to a conscrv
at&amp;ve publlshmg house
Totlcd Behmd Closed Doors
What I Saw lnstde the Clinton White
House the book s OUIIme mduded
a chapter called The Prestdent s
Women " The ask mg pnce was
around $400,000
But an offic1al of the Regnery
pubhshmg company told Goldberg
her cltcnt d&amp;dn't have enough mformatton to produce a good book Not
long after gettmg that reJect&amp;on,
Tnpp gamed Lewmsky's conftdence
and at Goldberg's urgmg, staned
li VC

Snow

Ice

Sunny PI Cloudy

Cloudy

Press GraptucsNot

By The Associated Press
Southeastern Ohio
Today Ram Mtxmg w&amp;th snow
all&amp;mes Snow accumulatiOn by late
atternoon I to 2 mches H1ghs '" the
m&amp;d 30s Northwest wmd I0 to 20
mph Chance ot prec1p1t tllon 70 per
cent
Ton&amp;ght Mostly cloudy Ach.mce
of snow showers until m&amp;dntght
Lowstn the upper 20s North wmd I0
to 15 mph Chance ot snow 30 per-

(.:ent
Fnday Partly cloudy Htghs m the
upper •os
Extended forecast
Fnday n•ght Cle~r Lows 20 to
25
Saturday Mostly clear H•gh&gt; m
the 40s
Sunday Mostly clear Lows m the
20s and h&amp;ghs Jn the mtd 40s
Monday Mostly clear Lows m
the 20s and h&amp;ghs 111 the upper 40s

Precipitation to end
in most places tonight
By The Associated Press
Weather condlt&amp;ons are expected
to Improve across Ohto tontght as
sk&amp;es clear part&amp; ally and the sleet and
snow ends. forecasters smu
However, some snow may linger
m the southwest quadrant ot the state
the NatiOnal Weather Serv1ce smd
Partly sunny sk&amp;es are pred&amp;ctcd
for the ent•re state on Fnduy thanks
tQ an approachmg h&amp;gh pressure sys
tern
Temperatures w&amp;ll climb mto the
upper 30s to low 40s
The record-h&amp;gh temperature tor
thiS date at the Columbus weather
slat&amp;on was 64 degrees m 1986 wh&amp;le
the record low was I0 belo\1 zero m
1918 Sunset tomeht will be at 5 55
p m and sunnse Fnday at 7 35 am
Across the nation
A slow-movmg East Coast storm
contmued to dump ram anu snow

The only way &amp;t m&amp;ght happen Is
tf you Puhhc get thoroughly diSgusted with wlwt you learn about
thiS Only then would there he any
suhstantt.tl pressure on Conprcss to
act There "" t now nor should
there he There may never be One
way tiMtmcss.tgc wJIIc.:ornc through
wtll be v1.1 public opmton polls ThiS
w&amp;ll he ,, pull dnvcn &amp;»uc ,md 111
th1s ~.:.tsc that s g:oot..l h s your t:oun
try .tnd you set the 1ulcs

Jrom North Carolina through Pennsy lvan&amp;a earl y tod ty Another S) stem
1n the West showered more of the
same from Wash&amp;ngton to New Me&lt;•co
The center of the East Co.ISt
storm was pred&amp;cted to move north
mto New York then off the coa.st mto
the Atl.mt&amp;c O::ean later today ThiS
should d&amp;mmtsh the heavy snow and
ram acr~ss the n11d Atl.mt&amp;c and
Oh10 Valley reg&amp;ons &amp;!though .&amp; noth
er 2 to 6 tnche' nl snow w~t:\ expect
ed Wtnds shou ld remam gusty w&amp;th
speeds ol up to ~0 mph ,&amp; long the
coastline
Another storm was e~pect~d to
mO\e ou t of the Rock&amp;es mto the
Plums today bnngmg l&amp; ght showers
,&amp;
cross K msas Oklahoma and Texas
_ A th&amp;rd strong system was predicted to move onshore &amp;nto the
P.&amp;c&amp;tic Northwest

Soup dmner planned
The Rutland hee W&amp;ll Bapttst
Church wtll hold a soup dtnner on
Saturday w&amp;th servmg from 6 to 9
p m The dmner Will be serveu for a
donatiOn It IS sponsored by the Rutland Free W&amp;ll Baptist youth group

The tollowtng cases were settled
last week m the Metgs County Court
ot Juuge Patnck H 0 Bnen
Ftned were Ktrk D Chev.1her
Che,ter speed $23 plus costs Tunothy M Taylor, NelsonVIlle dnvmg
under tinanc&amp;a1 respons&amp;b&amp;hty act10n
suspenSIOn $200 plus "Costs live days
Ja&amp;l and $tOO suspended 11 vahd operators l&amp;cense presented w&amp;thm 60
days. one year probation stop stgn
costs only, possesston of drug paraphernalia $50 plus costs, Martin L
Spangler Rutland speed $21 plus
costs. Chad A Wolfe Racme
assured clear dtstance $30 suspend
ed costs Cunme Scharttger Middleport. dnvmg under FRA suspension $200 plus costs, Jive days Ja&amp;l
and $100 suspended 11 valtd OL presented w&amp;thtn 60 days
6)-' tnc R Mttchell Rutland, dnvmg
under suspens&amp;on $200 plus costs 30
daysjoul suspenued to three days one
year probalton Wendy L Long
Chesh&amp;re fa&amp; lure to control $2'i plus
costs. Bnan K Bened&amp;ct North

sound tng

tlunk&amp;ng Puhltc We II he

llstcnmg
Ben Wattenberg, a semor fellow at the American Enterprise
lnslttute, 1s the author of "Values
Matter Most" and IS the host of
the weekly pubhc teleVISIOn program "Thmk Tank "

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21\ 9601
Put111 shul ~vcr\ 1rlr.:tm1nn Mond w lhtnugh
I nc,l;tV II ( tlUrl St l'omr.:Jn~ Ohtn Py th ~
Ohkl V~llt:\ Put'lh~hmg Ctlmpanv/Ganncll ( o
Pnm~:rtlY Oh1o -'"i16C) Ph 1N:! :!l'ifl Ser.:l'ln I
clius pt1~ta~~: pud tt P n1u 1v Ohitl

Mrmbtr The i\ssoc1~11.:d
Ncwsp:~pt'r J\!!.JOCI3110n

Ptt s ~ ~ nd

POSTMASTER Se nd u h.lrns

the Ohm

~.;nlfe C IIOO ) 11

The: Da1l y Scn11nel Ill (nun St PomerO\'
OhiO .at; 769

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C1rrkr or Motor Rou1(

.One: Wc:di.

s:S~tz '"'
7n

Oil( Mt,nth
On( Yc •r

SI U41111

SINGLE COP't PRICt.:
Suhsu1llo:r$ nut d~.:s mng I&lt;) pay lh~ c nr1 ~.:r ma)
ail v~ nc~.: dHcct o 1 h( Da•lv Sentmel
a thr~ si ~ ,,, 12 momh h:ms Crrdn w1ll t,e
gtvtn (arrtcr ~ a c h w~d

rem 1t 111

\\fl

No s\Jiln: npB m hv m:u l

pl" rmlll~o: d

m areu

when: ho me c Hrll.:f M:IVI CI" 15 ~ Vi'lll~llh:

I

Pubhshtr rcStrvcs tht rt~ht ICl adJUSt rates dur
tng the suh!M: npt•on ptr•ud Sutampt1on rate
c:han};CS m~ v b..: rmphnnrntrd hy (hang•ng the
duntmn ,,r th~ sub5CnptiM

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Mtlgs Counly
13 ~cks
26 Weeks

$27 JU
$53 H2

52 Weeki
SIOS.Sti
RIIH Oulslde Melp Cou•IJ
ll Weeki

26 Weeki
52 Weeki

$29 25
$511 Ml
$109 72

Servtces whtch prov1de tree repre
sentauon m cml matters to those who
cannot altord an attorney m several
local count&amp;es w&amp;IJ hold a meetmg ot
1ts board ot d&amp;rectors on Feb 21 at I0
am at the OSLSA office 8 1 North
H1gh Street Columbus Quest&amp;ons
about the meetmg should be d&amp;rected
to J&gt;atnc&amp;a Brown at I (800) 589
5888

Board meehng
Ohto State Legal Sef\ tees Asso
c&amp;atlon and Southeastern Oh1o Legal

Bloodmobile vis1ted slated
The Amencan Red Cross Bloodmobtle wtll Vtsll the Metgs County
Semor CitiZens Center m Pomeroy on
Wednesday I 6 p m To be a blood
donor &amp;nd&amp;v&amp;duals must be .&amp;t least 17
years old we&amp;gh II 0 pounds or
more and not have donated blood
w11hm the past 56 days

to $50 m&amp;lhon overthe next 15 years
woulu allow the Leg&amp;slature to sell
general obhgatlon bonds for school
butldmgs and college and umvers&amp;ty
projects
The bonds, backed by the full fmth
and cred&amp;t ol the state carry lo\\er
tnterest rates than regular government
bonds backed by money .1ppropnat
ed every two years m the state bud
get
The Senate approved that vers&amp;on
by a 32 I vote later Wednesday
mghl
We know that baSically we have
fmled Senate M&amp;nonty Leader Ben
Espy D-Columbus told reporters
alter the vote
But Wtlham J&gt;h&amp;lhs execut&amp;ve
dtreclor for the Oh1o Coahtmn for
Equuy &amp; Adequacy of School Fundmg was dehghteu w&amp;th the outcome

111 the House The coah t&amp; on wh&amp;ch
pu&gt;hed the lawsu&amp;t that overturned
the tundmg system compla&amp;ned th.&amp;t
the Legtslature s proposals were not
adequate
It s beuer that the people ol Oh10
see fmlure he s.lld Now m.tybe
the Legtslature w1ll gu back to squ.&amp;rc
one
The House already was prep.&amp;nn g
to start work on a Jail back posl!&amp;on
next week
Instead of attemptmg to amend the
state consti\UtiOn the LegiSI.Iture
could utilize a rare constlluJion"l pro
VIS ion that would let them place the
&amp;Ssue before voters through the regu
lar legtslat&amp;ve process
, That would allow lawmakers to
take an e~tra two weeks or so to
develop the pl.m and would reqUire
only a s&amp;mple maJOrtty to pass

Today's livestock report

COLUMBUS "(AP) - lndmnaOh&amp;o dtrect hog pnces at sckcted
buymg p01nts Thursday as prov&amp;ded
by the U S Department ol Agnculture Market News
Barrows and g&amp;lts mostly steady.
demand moder~te on a hght to moderate movement
U S 1-2 230-260 lbs country
35 00 36 00 few 34 50 and
pomts
Hampton dnvtng under suspensiOn
36
50
plants
16 00-37 00 lew 37 50
$150 plus costs, live days Ja&amp;l plus
U
S
2
3
230-260 lbs 11 00$75 suspended 11 vahd OL presented
35
00.
210
230
lbs 28 00 31 00
w&amp;thm 60 d.tys John F Ae&amp;ker Jr
Sows
ste
&amp;dy
to weak
Albany. dnvmg under the mtluence
US
I
3
300
400 lbs 21 00$850 plus costs I0 days Ja&amp;l sus
23
00
400-500
lbs
21 CXl 24 (X)
pended to three d.&amp;ys 90 day OL sus500
600
lbs
2-1
00
27
00
few over
pellston one year probauon seat belt
600 lbs 28 00 29 00
$25 plus costs Charles H Bartels
Boars IS 00 17 00
Long Bottom no OL $300 plus
Estimated rece1pts 30 000
costs s&amp;x months JUII suspended to 30
Prices
from Producers L1vestock
days one year probation Carol A
Sm1th Syr,tcu'e DUI $1 000 plus
costs SIX months Ja&amp;l suspended to 90
d.tys one ye.tr OL suspens ton two
years prob,&amp;t &amp;on John W Knder
Producers L&amp;vestock Market
Porlland wrongtul entrustment $500 report lrom Gallipolis tor sales con
plus costs live days
suspended
uucted on Wednesd.ty Feb 4
one ye.tr probatiOn,
Feeder C.&amp;tt le
Michael G1bbs Reedsville DUI
200 'DO# St $7H $HI HI $61$850 plus costs 10 days Ja&amp;l ""
$76. 100-4(Xl# St $74 $82 HI $70
pended to 10 days two years proba
tton 90-day veh&amp;cle &amp;mmob&amp;hzatlon
Of\1! year OL suspensiOn no OL $ 11Kl
Holzer Medtcal Center
plus costs two years prob Itt on I0
Discharges
do&amp;ys JUII concurrent w&amp;th DUI Jason
Wednesday, Feb. 4
E Counts Syracuse sem belt $25
Darrell Ltvtng,ton Earnest Rus
plus costs
se ll Bobbt Montgomery Gladys
Bostic Mrs Arl&amp;e Frye and dau; hter
and Rebecca Perry
Birth
Wednesday, Feb. 4
Am Ele Power
49 '1,
Mr and Mrs Randall Gerlach
Akzo
.. 94
AmrTech .
41'1, son. Pomt Pleasant
Ashland 011
53'81,

As&lt;OC13llon
Hog molfket trend for Thursday
steady
Summary of Wednesday s auc
tlons at G~lhpohs and Mt Vernon
Ho2s I 00 to I 50 lower
Butcher hogs 28 00-39 00
Cattle 2 00 lower
Slaughter steers &gt;ho•ce 62 00
66 00 select 62 00 and down
Slaughter he&amp;!er' chotce 61 00
64 00 ;elect 61 00 and do\\ n
Cows steady to lower all cows
44 00 and down
Bulls lower all bul" 45 50 and
down
Sheep &amp; lambs I 00 to 2 00
h&amp;~her chmce wool' 7\IX) 7H (Xl
c h'U~ee clips 77 00 H2 50 Ieeder
Jambs IOS 00 and down aged sheep
54 flO and down

Gallipolis livestock auction results

J·"'

Hospital news

Stocks

AT&amp;T. .

64 1"

Bank One .
Bob Evans
Borg-Warner
Broughton
Champion
Charm Shps
City Holdtng
Federal Mogul
Gannett
Goodyear
Kmart
Kroger
Lands End
Limited • .
Oak Hill Fmt.

.6oi.

•

ova.......

21'1•
53 ''"•
15'1,
16',
4),
49
47'•
60').
63'1•
12~.

40'1•
40'1.

28~.
24~
34~

One Valley
35•1.
Peoples. . . . .
. 40~
Prem Flnl
23
Rockwell .. .
56•1
.
AD/Shell
53~.
Sears .. .. .... .. .... .. .... .. . .4 8~.
Shoney's
3~
Star Bank
. 57
Wendy's
23 ~
Worthington .. ....... .... .. ... ..17),

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 1 0:30
a m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

The E.IStern Local School Board met '" specoal sesston on Tuesday tor the purpo&lt;t ol cetttfytng payroll for the dtstnct s constructton
proJect
The board also accepted the reSignation of Vwlet Jenktns, htgh
school custodt.l'\, ettectlve Jan 27
The ne~t regular meetmg ol the board will be held on Feb 18 at
6 30 p m at the Chester Elementary School

Complaints received
A person ustng a bow .&amp;nd arrow shot a Pomeroy man s dog Saturua) attemoun accordmg to a Me•gs Coun ty Shentt's Department
report
D1ck Owe ns Skmner Road rcce&amp;ved a c&lt;1ll !rom ,, ne&amp; ghhor who
sa&amp;d hiS dog &lt;1chocolate Labrador retre&amp;ver hau been shot tn the head
wuhan arro\\ t1pped wllh a broadhead a po1nt wuh razor sharp blades
typiCally used'" ueer hunttng
fhe dog sttll altve w&lt;IS t &amp;ken to Metgs Vetennary Clime m
Pomeroy "here 11 lalcr d&amp;ed The .&amp;rrov. and broauhcad were recov
cred and the Metgs County Shcn lt\ Department ts tn\le~ttgat1ng the
IOC&amp;dent
In addu&amp;
on Sa11 y Fowler state Route 7 Pomeroy reported Mon
day that her cat w&lt;" shot and later Jound dead

Two-car accident reported
Icy roads resulted 111 one two car acc&amp;dent on Umon Avenue near
Pom ~ roy Wedn" day around I0 40 a m
JoAnn Straushaugh S) racuse was westbound when her 1995 Mtt
subtshl sltd oil the roadway 1010 a dnch accordmg to 1Me&amp;gs County Shenffs Department report La&amp;cr Almeda J M &amp;rshall M•ddlepolt
shd u\llhe rotdway &amp;nt o the same ditch her ll)l)() Oldsmob&amp;le stnkmg Strausbaugh s l:ar

Marsh.&amp;ll and a p.&amp;Ssenger Dakota L M.lrsh,&amp;ll were transported to
Vcter,ms Memon d Hosp&amp;t,tl&amp;n Pomeroy lor exam&amp;natlon and treatment
ol mmnr &amp;nJUr&amp;&lt;&gt; the report st &amp;ted Both vehtdes recetved moderate
damage

EMS logs 5 calls
Ohio lawmakers ... contmued from page, Meigs
Un&amp;ts of the Mc&amp; gs County Emer Shery l G&amp;bbs Dakota Marshall Lor-

Meigs County Court cases resolved

Take your time Puhhc Do not
hcltL:H; thts stull .1hout covcm
mcnt s hc111g un.1hlc to l;.m:tmn
whtlc undt:r ~• t: lnud ol .1lkgcJ sc.:.m
d.&amp;J Clmton has 10 show th.u the
sc.mual h.&amp;s not .&amp;llcueu h&amp;s ah&amp;hty to
get th&amp;n~ s done ll1e Repuhhc.&amp;n
Congress c.:.mnol he see n .IIi thwart
mg the pm(.:c:-.s nl ~ovcrnam.:c Just
hec.&amp;usc the sc.md.&amp;l trumpets .Ire

•

Flumes

Today's weather forecast

l:OOVICt

makmg tllcgal rccordmgs of thCir '"gcttmg Tnpp to tape her telcphnnc
convcrsatums accord10g to a Wash
conve rsations w&amp;th Lewmsky Asked
mgton Post report
recently II Tnpp plans to wntc a
Late last week Tnpp penned book ahnut all of thts, Goldherg sa&amp;d
wtstlully I hope she II do one
another chapter 10 that as yet-to he
wnttcn book when she announced m
01 course she docs
a press release that she was pr~sent
But there arc S&amp;gns Goldberg's
when Le" onsky rccc&amp;ved a late n&amp;ght rclatmnshtp wnh Tnpp ts beg tnt' mg
phone call Irom Clinton- an asscr
to lray In her press release, -rnpp
t&amp;on Lc •msky s lawyer says ts not tncd to dtstance herself fro111 the
true
htghly parttsan shots Goldber has
The statement released by Mrs taken at Clmton Since the 'story
Tnpp sounded ltke pre-publtclly lor hrokc
a hook Wtlham Gmsburj! dead
I want to emphame that wh&lt;\1
panned
ever poltt&amp;cal agenda Ms Goldberg
At the very least Tnpp and Gold
may have IS not mmc she satd
herg conspued to tape Lewmsky 's
Then over the weekend Gold
accusatiOns Whtlc Tnpp was secret
berg revealed that she had taped
ly tapmg her fnend an anonymous some ol her telephone conversatlflljs
caller alerted lawyers for Paula wtth Tnpp about her talks w&amp;th
Jones - the woma~ who has filed a Lcwmsky She clatms she dtd It k&gt;
sexual harassment sun agamst Clm
protect her client Maybe so Or
ton - that she and Lcwmsky mtght maybe the somct &amp;mes author w~s
have a &gt;~mtlar story to tell In collecting matcnal for a book ol her
December the two women were own
subpoenaed to g&amp;ve dcpostttons m
Enhcr way the consp&amp;racy she
that case
hatched w&amp;th Tnpp has hecn largely
Then, m January, Tnpp gave the played down by those who thmk th~t
tapes of her conversattons w&amp;th to acknowledge Hs extstcncc IS to
Lewmsky to Kenneth Starr the mde
somehow exonerate Clinton of
pendent counsel who has spent ncar
wrongdomg
ly $40 m•lllon of taxpayer money
That's a mtstake
mvesttgabng •the prestdent and hts
What s pamfully dear IS that
fnends As the story of Tnpp's role
Lmda
Tnpp and Lucmnne Goldhcrg
m the resulting mvesttgauon became
oeonsp&amp;rcd
agatnst Bill Clinton What
known, Goldberg stepped forward to
IS
yet
to
he
proved IS whether the)
clatm a share of the hmchght She
had
good
reason
to do so
bragged to rcponers about her role

Shoemaker to announce
State Sen Mtchael C Shoemaker
(D BourneVIlle) will announce h"
Me&amp;gs County campa1gn k1ck oil for
h~&gt; election to the 17th Senat~ Dtstnct
m the Steamboat Room of the Me&amp;gs
County J&gt;ubhc Ltbrary m Pomeroy on
Fnday II II 30 a m

KY

Tripp, Goldberg conspired against Clinton
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Ju,t hcc,JUse
H&amp;llary Clmton IS paranmd ahout the
role conscrvat&amp;vcs have played m the
sex scandal that threatens her hushand s preSidency d&lt;J&lt;:sn t mean that
'umconc 1sn 1 outt&lt;f get ht n
When the f&amp;rst lad' went on
national televiSIOn last week and
sa&amp;d atlcgauons that Still unum had
a tryst wtth a Wh&amp;te Hou,e mtcrn arc
the produt:t of ~ t:onscrvattvc con
sp&amp;racy a lot of people smckcrcd
Republicans stopped laughmg
-long enough to countq that&amp;t wasn t
them but rather two hast IOns of JOUr
nahst1c hherahsm- Newsweek and
The Washmglon Post - wh1ch Jed
the charge m repnrtmg Clmton s
alleged sexual allan with mtcrn
Momca Lcwmsky
Don t hehc\C It
That stampede was set off hy
Luctannc Goldher~ and Lmda Tnpp
who consp&amp;red - that s nght con
sptred - to tllegally tape Lewmsky s charactcnzatmn of her rclattonsh&amp;p with the preSident Go~d­
berg and Tnpp have adm&amp;ttcd th~tr
roles m thts plot even as conserva
uves and more than a few JOurnalists
sneer at the &amp;dea of a eonsp&amp;racy
agamst Chnton They arc the tap
root of the controversy that now
engulfs the While House
Goldberg a New York literary

Meigs announcements
WVA

be very d&amp;fficult to challenge He
won't resign Impeachment would
he a long and angutshed process. 11
takes two th&amp;rds ot the Senate to

Ke~p

Youngstown

\NO

Your country; you sefi'he rules
By Ben Wattenberg
Dear Public
I have been readtng about your
opm10ns these days Keep opmmg
Publtc You are the key to the reso
Iutton of thts current morass of sex
compulsiOn lymg and Jegal&amp;sms
Here , gleaned from an array of
recent publtc opmton polls IS what
you seem to he saymg about Pre 1
dent Chnton You don t want your
chtldren to grow up to he like h&amp;m
You d much rather have your chtld
grow up to he hkc Bill Gates than
8&amp;11 Chnton You thmk he (Cimton
not Gates) IS lymg when he says
starmg you nght m the eye that he
had no sc~ual rclat&amp;ons with that
woman Ms Lewms~y You thmk
that 11 he heu under oath and more
mtcnscly that&amp;! he .tskcd other pco
pic lU he under o.lth he should
rcs&amp;gn or be m1peachcd You thmk
that Clmton hrought lh&amp;s un hunscll
md has harmed the d&amp;gntty ol the
olllcc You tlunk Clmton s lcg.tcy
"&amp;II he th It he dropped h&amp;s p.mts
om: ~.: too nltcn Th.ll scl.!m!rri l auly
str ughtlorw.mJ
HnwC\ cr_ .n the same time Pub
he ) ou hehC\ c that Clinton IS domg

John Hardtng Folan. 77 dted on Saturday, January 3 1, 1998 at Boynton
Beach, Fla
He was the fanner owner of the Jewel Shop tn London Ohto .md was
a rettred busmess mana~er lor the OPI 1n correcttons factltttes tor the State
of Ohto He was a me,;ber ot the Chandler Lodge F&amp;AM 111 London
Surv&amp;vmg are hts w&amp;fe Rosella Pfarr Folan, formerly of Me&amp;gs County
a daughter Donna Sehorn Boynton Beach Fla a daughter and son 111 law
Karen and W&amp;lham Meter. Columbus two ststers Max me Miller ol Athens
and Ella Harm MoundsVIlle, W Va and four grandchildren
J&gt;nvate graveSide serv&amp;ces wtll be held at a later date Arrangements are
under the dtrectwn ot Deyo Davts Funeral Home m Columbus
Memonal contnbut&amp;ons may be made to a favonte chanty

PA

To threaten Chnton's survtval 111
office Starr will need conclustve
proof of an affa&amp;r •. and ot prestden
ttal perJury - and that may be hard
t_o come by
Ctrcumstant&amp;al evtdence, there
may be gtfts from Clinton, Whue
House logs showmg she made latcmght VISitS to hts offtce etc
But w&amp;thout conclustve proof hkc phystcal cvtdcnce of some sort
or tesumony from a th&amp;rd person
who actually saw them Starr will
be unable to prove perjury and the
House Jud1c1ary Commtttcc IS
unlikely to conSider •mpeachmcnt
It w&amp;ll he even harder to prove
Lewmsky s mote scrtous charge that
Clmton encouraged her to perJure
herself
•
Meantnnc Republicans have
made It plum they w&amp;ll not move to
open an &amp;mpc.~ehment mqutry unless
there "sol&amp;d ev&amp;dcncc beforehand ol
h1gh cnmc~ and nusdcmcanms
As House Jud1c1ary Chamnan
Henry Hyde R Ill s,ud on TV
The law &amp;cquncs (St.&amp;rr) to rcpo11
to us any ~.:rcd1hlc suh~tanllvc· C\11
dencc that &amp;mght he tmpc.~ehahlc
davit
ctcnytng and when thai happens 1t s tnne
an alfa~r'
But thiS enough lor us to k&amp;ck m
sets up a
Another Rcpuhhcan Sen Arlen
sa &amp;d, she Specter of Pennsyl vanta sa&amp;d
I
don
t
hehcve
the
Congress
IS
gomg
sa1d situatiOn
her word to 1mpeach the pres&amp;dent unless
there IS an open and shut case
agamst hts
On one level all thiS sounds
that
won t
ve ry urcumspect and
resolve for 'cr and ts
t.un
whether statesman II ke On .tnothcr 11 s
Clinton hed to mtenscly pohuc,tl
1 he prospect IS that the eVIdence
the pubhc Mon
day '" natty wtll \\Ound Chnton hut won't topple
dcnytng he had lum and Republicans wtiL torlHrc
sex
With lum hut w1ll keep h1m ahvc What ,,
Lcwmsky and pathetic way to prepare lor the 2Jst
whether
he century
commttted per
(Morton Kondracke 1s eucuJUry m denymg tne edttor of Roll Call, the new~­
1t under oath tn paper of Capitol Hill )

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

$74~ 500-65ll# St $64 $74 HI $63
$70 650-800# St $58 $64 HI $54
$60
(feeder Cattle s.ll ~ IS the ' econcl
Wednesuay ot e.&amp;ch month )
Steers
Heli'ers
Cull Cows

Well MuscleU/Fbheu ~17 S4-l
Medtum/Average $31 $16
Thm/L&amp;ght $25 $32 Bulls $41

n 1 Marshal refused treatment,
II 58 a m Long Hollow Road
Pomeroy LoUise Bearhs refused
treatment
I 43 p m Old Dexter Road
Shtrley VanMeter VMH. Rutland
squad ass&amp;sted
REEDSVILLE
2 26 p m Reedsvtlle. W&amp;lham
Coleman St Josephs Hospital

Land transfers posted
Thl! lollm\mg land lr.Ln,lers were
recorded recent ly 111 the oll~ee ol
Mt:1gs County Re~.:order Emmogene
Ham&amp;lton
E.lsement Thomas E and Nancy
J Tnpp to Southern Ohm Coal Com
puny Columb•a
R1ght ol w.&amp;y Wand 1and Dolphus
Burke Jr to SOCCO Columb•a
Deed Rollm IJ .md Nancy R.&amp;d
lord to Rubert L and Tamar,&amp; L
Mash S.&amp;hshury 4 956 acres
Deed Roscoe L Wedge to
Charb A R&amp;tch&amp;e Rac1ne parcels
Deed Charles T and Lmda K
Schoeppna to Markham Famll)
L1m1ted Bed lord parcels
Deed P.IUI Wlll,&amp;rd mu Mildred
Hudson It&gt; Mark D Hudson Paulette
Hamson and Rhonda Cull ums
Pomeroy 4 acre
Deed Lester W Howell to Carroll
Wayne Howell Sc 1p10 tr.tch
Deed SOCCO to Kathy J Ritter
beck md P.1ul Spry S &amp;!em p &amp;reel
Deed Bonnte Sue Qutvey Bunme
Sue Sm tih to Joseph C Qu&amp;vcy Jr
Sup10 parcels
Deed Debr.&amp; L Mar,hall to lei
fre y S and Enca R Dowell Lct.lrt
1 I 4X &amp;
cres
Deed Robert tnd Peggy Harns tO
Jerry R anu Bomta R Hayman
Lebanon parcel
Deed DaVI&lt;I J .&amp;nd Gwendolyn
Sayre to Mtchael J Robmson
Leb.&amp;nun
Deed Dw&amp;ght W ,md Elv.1Corbtn

SCREAM II

to Thom " R Warner Letart parcels
Deed Gordon Proltitt to Dwtght
G.&amp;bbaru George T Hays. Wendall
G &amp;bbard Kendall Gabbard Kenneth
G.&amp;bbaru Robert Wtlltams, Steve
Carroll , John Johnson and B•lly Ray
NorriS Lebanon.
Deed Larry V Romme to Con me
Lar.une Rumme Chester parcel,
Deed James S and Conme Ruck
er to Jerry L ,md Edla J Rucker,
Ol&amp; ve parcels
Deed Carl Roger and Nancy L
Hubbard to Floyd A and Marlene K
Graham Syr.&amp;cuse
Deed Lester and Susaij G Pittenger to Bruce and Leslie Ptttenger
Letart

R

ONE EVENING SHOW 7 30
STARTING FRIDAY
TIM ALLEN
KIASTI_ ALLEY IN

FOR rciCHER OR
PC.ORER """
ONE El ENING SHOW 7 30

$41

Back To The F,tnns
Cow/Calf Pa&amp;rs $435 Bred Cow'
$220 $625 Baby Calves $55 Goats
$21 $14
For free on -larm v&amp;stts plea'e
call 614 446 9696

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Cooking • Heating Water
* Unvented Heater Construction

szaao

100 lb. Cylinder
+ Tax
2-1 00 lb. Cylinders of Propane Gas
Installed, including regulator and
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$7999

RANDALL F. HAWKINS
MD
Board Certl.fled Internal Medicine
. . . _.., • Stress Tests
ECHO Cardiography
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1r.
· Cholesterol Counseling
«fj
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l1i
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OFFJCE HOURS:

,f ·

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MON·FRI 8:30·5:00, WED 8:30-NOON
Accepnng New Panents

+Tax

Offer expires Feb. 28, 1998

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS·
RUTLAND, OHIO
742·2511

gency Med&amp;cal Sen " e recorded live
c.&amp;lis for asststance \Vedncsday Umb
responumg •ncluueJ
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Spnn g Avenue
2 40 ,, m
Pomeroy Sh.&amp;ron Smuh Veterans
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10 53 a rn
Unllln Avenue
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304·675·
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Medical Office Bldg. 2520 Valley Dr.
Suite 212·Pt. Pleasant, WV.

�:Sports

The Daily Sent~~~

'

l

Thursday, February 5, 1998

-

f

'

i~tanford, Kansas, Kentucky record confere11ce victories
'
&lt;By
DENNIS GEORGATOS

' 11.
the fewest in the four games he has
The teams traded baskets down Raymond King
the stretch, with Cal going in fronl
"I don't know how the game played since returning from a broken
62-60 on Geno Carlisle'~ bank shot turned around like it did," said Cal's hand.
' Marcus Fizer and Paul Shidey
with 2:29 rematning.
Kenyon Jones, who had eight points.
Lee answered with a three-pomt- "It probably has something to do each had IS pomts for the Cyclpnes
er. was fouled and convened the free wtth our Jack of experience. but (10-12.3-6).
No.8 Kentucky 63, LSU 61
throw for a four-point play and a 64- we're a toltgh team . Once we get the
The Wildcats gotthetr final point&lt;
62 Stanford lead.
killer 1nstinct. 1guarantee you. we'll
of the game on a basket by Wayne
The C~rdinal dtdn't tr~il after be better."
that, getllng another tlnte-pninter
In other g~mes 111 v ~ lving ranked Turner w1th 2·:n to play. then held on
from Lee for a 67 -64 lead with a teams Wednesday, it was No. 3 to reach the 20-wm m;~rk for the 4ltd
minute remaining after Carhslc made Kansas 83.1owa State 62; No.8 Ken· lime.
Turner's field goal gave Kena 10-foot jumper to tie 11.
tucky 63, LSU 6 J. and No. 16 Michi·
tucky (20-3, 9-1 Southeastern ConStanford held off Cal hy making gan State 84, Ohio State 58
ference) a 63-Sh lead. and the vistt seven of etght free throws 111 the final
No.3 Kansas 83, Ioiva St. 62
40 seconds.
The Jay hawks (25-3. 9-1 Big 121 rng Wildcats mtssed their final three
"lthmk it was ,, case of St,mford reached the 25-wtn mark for the ntnth shots after the Ttgcrs (9- 11. 2-8I
making the big pl&lt;~ys down the stmightseasonwiththeirbiggestwin closed to 63-61 on Maunce Carter's
three-pointer Wtlh I :06 left LSU had
stretch." Cal coach Ben Braun sa1d
in Ames in 27 years.
"The thmg about the game. though.
Paul Pierce scoreJ 19 pomts and a chance to 11e the game. hut Caner's
IS our guys played awfully hard.
Lester Earl I8 for Kansas. whtch tonk shot bounced off the nm as time
Smnford is a veteran ballclub, but our control with a 25-6 nm in the second exptred.
Jeff Sheppard led Kentucky with
guys battled ,md battled "
half. Raef La Frentz. the Monona.
12
pomts, and Turner had I I. Carter
Cheaney. who sometimf' see ms
Carlisle had 25 points for Cal, Iowa. native playing in his home state
around pomt guard Rod Stnd l.md tll
Vtslble
1111he
Wt
zn
rds'
olfense.
had
had
19 points for LSU
and got a dommating performance 111
while Thomas K1lgore added I land for the final time, added 12 pomtsthe second ~uaner on the way to a 10 of his 20 points in the first periI04 -88 vtciDry over Cleveland on od.
Wednesday mght
But Clevel.md. wh1ch ha- dwpped
The VICtory gave ti)C Wizards a a season-high three strmgh t road
25-23 record. mean1ng the} will games, v.as still ahead :tftcr one quarhead mto the All -Star brea ~ With a ter Zydrunas 1\gauskas had I 0 of hts
Pomeroy, Ohio
wmnmg record for the ti rsttllnc since 18 points in the period to help the
1987. And 11 gave them l'onfidence Cavaltets to a 3:!-:!8 lead.
74Q-992·6614 or 1·800·837·1094
Coach Bernie Bickerstaff. wary
they could win wtthout Webber.
that the Cavaliers would start bombWashington 's leadtng scorer.
mg from the out"de. &lt;leCilled to IlOW~ bber !\tramed Jw.; nght ... houlder
m Monday 's Win nralllsl DetrOit He ker wtth hts oflense 111 the second
was scratched at gamet1me ami will qu.trtcr He let Stnckland run the
BWCK'
~
be reevaluated before ton1 ~ ht \ g.1me show around rour hig men 111 Orl:mdn.
Howard. Ben Wallace (Webber's
" It 's a lot harder when yo u don'i repl:tcement 111 the st;trt111g hneup).
have your superstar.'' sa1d Wash•ng- Terry Davrs and Har\'e)' Gntnt - for
ton 's Tracy Murray. who scor~d 24 a large Jl01110n or the periml.
"They created some mntchup
points. "It was rough . but eve• ybody
stepped up. "
problems." Bickerstaff s&lt;tu.l. "It took
E"en tf Webber " held nut of away some of their penmeter stuff
to111ght's game and gt~•enthe All-Star because they were intent on gomg
Sticker ..... .... .. $18,462 Sticker .......... $20,253 Sticker ........... $25,393
break to recupemte. the Wtzards down inside. A lot of what we did, we
Discount.. .... $1539.19 ' Discount ...... $1392.29 Discount... ... $2234:74
know what they h;l\'e to do to win did out or necessity."
.. ... $16,922.81 Invoice ..... $18,860.71 Invoice ..... $23,158.26
Invoice
The Cavaliers were outscored 25 without l1im.
·
Dealer Mark Up ... $10 Dealer Mark Up ... $10 Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Juwan Howard, who had ·n points 1I in the penod and made only five
Rebate ............. $1 000
Rebate ........ .. .. ... $750
and 13 rebounds. scored Washing- of 20 shots from the field
ton\ first etght pomts Guard Cal hen
'fo"'
'fo"'

scored 17 pomts. including four
three-pomters in the second half.
"We had a little slump at home and
we were still kmd of slow m the first
half.
"(Momgomery) was angry. very
angry at halftime. We dtdn 't come out
wllh any emot1on. but we knew we
were only down by five even though
we played hornbly mlhe first half "
Tim Young had 17 points and 15
rebounds for Stanford, whtcll
remamed unbeaten 111 seven road
games. Weems &lt;Jdded I 6 pomts.
1ncludmg two three-pomters '" the
second half and four free throws '"
the l.tst 26 secqnds as Stanford survtvcd a season-high 21 turnovers to
complete a season sweep of Cal (8-

OAKLAND. Calif. (AP) - A
stern hal fume talk from coach Mike
M on t ~nmery b10ught out Stanford's
better half I.\
Stanford. O'!!lor-7 from three-poir·
r,lllge 1111he first half. came bal'k w1th
"'three&lt;'" the second and rall1ed to
a 74 -72 victory over Caltforma on
Wednesday n1ght
The win snapped a two-game
shde by No. 9 Stanford ( 19-2, 8-2
Pac- 101. wh1ch Iosito No 4 Atwma
and Anwna Stat• at Maples Pav•l•on
1:1'1 week after npenmg the &lt;eason
wtth a school-record I H strmght
w1ns
" It 's not JUst another Wi n It's a
btg w1n ." said A1thur Lee. who

10. 4-6).
The wm was critical for Stanford,
especially since its next two games
also are on the road - at No. 7 Connechcut bn Saturday and at No. 6
UCLA on Feb I 2.
"In the first half we looked like
we doubted ourselves and played a
httle tentat•vely." Montgomery said.
"We had a dt&lt;cu&lt;sion at halfllme
about what we needed 10 do, and the
ktds 1esponded to that. We need tore·
estobhsh ourselves and gain some
confidence "
The Cmdmal, down by Jive potnts
at halftime. took their first lead since
early m the game when Pete Van
Elswykmadeoneoftwnfreethrows
for a 52-51 edge with 6:19 left.

Wizards beat Cavaliers 104-88
.

WASHINGTON (AP) .- Bern1e
Btckef'taff knows th:tl filling Chris
Webber's shoes is no easy tasl
So the Washington Wtzards coach
trolled out a big team - four big men

: Biddy league
: all-star cagefest
: set for Feb. 22
There wtll tic a htdJy leag ue all : stat tournament on Sunday. Feb. 22
· at the Pomt Pleasant Ht gh School
• gym 111 Poml Pleasant . W Va.
· Three dtiTerent dii'ISIOI" are bemg
. e&lt;tablished for competllton . There
will be a ftfth and sixth graJe boys
· d&amp;vision. a fourth ~rad.: boys di\· 1 ~ ion
, and a filth and m th grade gtrls dtvi-

'A'E 10,015, INC. ..,. ~
(j(!)

SIOO

The all -star tournament will be a
• double elrmnatron tourney. Any team
mtercsted in competing in the tourney
. needs to be registered by Tuesday.
· February 10 Entry fee is $50 00.
For more tnlorm:tllon ahout the
: tournament or to register. call Bill
· Buchanan .11 (304) 675-2675 or Gene
Moore at (3041 675-4064.

prte•

Scoreboard
Far West

Basketball
·NBA standings
Atluntn: lliviseun

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Ncwkruy
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1998 CADillAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

Sticker ........... $14,000 Sticker ........... $22, 197 Sticker ........... $39, 145
Discount ........ $868.77 Discount... ... $2729.75 Discciunt. ..... $2974.42
lnvotce ..... $13,131.23 Invoice ..... $19.467.25 Invoice ..... $36,170.58
Dealer Mark Up ... $1 0 Dealer Mark Up ... $10 Dealer Mark Up ... $1 0
Rebate ............ $2000
Rebate ...... ..... .$1500

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1998 CHEVY 4X1
PICKUP

Hockey

Division II

East
C.ttli\IU' '1 -"

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Sticker .......... $24,358
Discount. ..... $2273. 72
Invoice ..... $22,054.28
Dealer Mark Up ... $10
Rebate . ..........$1000

Uthers rrct'lvln« 11 ur nwr11 points: 11-Sc

Ohio H.S. girls' poll

Mutm• 'JH Plul.t•k·lplu .t K-1

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Sticker ........... $19,144
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NCAA Division I
women's scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE

, 1998 OLDS
AURORA

Division Ill

S, m (), .. ~,, S1 16 H.tw.ul h7
S i.Utlun.J 7 ~ C.thltlfll \,1 72

It:Jun

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Anahc1m 3 N 'I R.llt~..:rs 2

DIABETICS!
IF YOU HAVE MEDICARE OR PRIVATE
INSURANCE, YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE TO
RECEIVE YOUR DIABETIC SUPPLIES AT NO
COST! ~OR MORE INFORMATION, C~Ll.

DIABETIC SUPPORT PROGRAM
1-800-799-1477
'SOME RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY

95 BUICK CENTURY·oat owner very nice car ...........................- ........... _ ...._ ...................................58900
5
92 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE LoaHtl, leather, maroon...""'...........,.""""":""""'""""'"""""'"'"" •••••••• 12,850
5
93 LUMINA Z34 Extra Clean Bladt, '"""""""'"""'"""-..-·..-····-"""""""""-···-··---··........... _ 10,490
96 DODGE AVENGER loa4td, Rtd at~ly 23,000 mdts.........._ .._ ....................................................512,280
91 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE, loaded, leather, moroon/sllver..................- ...·-·-·-····-·......... 510,999
9S CHEVROL£1' 3/4 TON 4 WD va, 350, air, auto, lilt, cruise, AM/IM 1111, Red, Sharp"...- .....517,400
97 FORD EXPLORER XLT loadtd;only 15,000 milts, Maroon. hke new condttlan, .....- ......... Only 524,800
97 GMC SIERA 1/2 TON 4 WD EXT CAB WITH 3RD DOOR, VI, auto, air, tUt, uulse,
AM/FM IIS~tHt, GrHn, 14,000 mHts ....- ..................".........-~.....- ........_ .....- ....- .................. 522,900
97 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN FWD V6, air, tUt, aulse, 11ssttte, blue. a,ooo mles, and only ..... 519,860
96 DODGE RAM 0150 SWB 2 WO VI, auio, ~lr, tit, cruise, 11ssette, white, la,ooo mlles .. - ..... 517,450

.
s
B9 DOD~E 0150 PICKUP LWB, 2 WD, air, auto, VB, tlh, cruise, Pl., PW, n Bite, one owner............ 4,650
96 5·10 BLAZER V6, auto, air, tUt, cruise, 4 Dr, Red.......................- ..............- .............~...."••- 518,600
Low rate financing in lieu of rebate available on some models. This may affect your final price. $10

over invoice in stock and ordered vehicles. Copy of invoice available per request.

·

Bankruptcy does not mean that you
can never again finance a new
vehicle. Call me for details on how
you can drive a nice car now.
Ask for Mr. Barcus.

Thursday; February 5, 1998

Pof!1eroy • Middleport, O.hio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

· TVC division races head Into home stretch

Alexander, Vinton County,
Federal Hocking, Eastern rule
With most teams having only
four or five regular season games
remammg. the Alexander Spartans
and Fedeml Hocking Lan~e!S find
themselves at the top of th~
sions m the boys' Tn-Valley Conference basketball race.
In the g•rls dtvision, Vmton Count)' and Eastern are on top of the Ohio
and Hocking Dtvisions respectively.
wh1le Warren Local's girls are lookmg for a return trip to the state playoffs by heading the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic Conference at I 6-1
Marietta leads the boys SEOAL
action at 14-4.
In both boys and girls play. the
Ohio Division of the TVC has been
beatmg up on the Hocking Division.
In fact. no Hockmg Division team
other than Eastern's girls even has a
winning record. While the Hocking
Division is its weakest since the divi sional system went into effect, the
. Ohio Div1sron is thnving both in
. league play and overall. Only two
. games separate last from firs11n boys
play with Alexander on top by a
- game over Belpre. Nelsonville-York
: and Vinton County. Wellston and
- Meigs stlll have ;1 shot at the title.just
two games out in the loss column.
Stattstically.the Hocking Division

is 1-34 against the Ohio Division in
boys' basketball this year. That was
a Federal Hocking win over Nelsom·ille earlier in the season.
Trimble has been a disappoint ·
ment in the boys Hocking Di1•ision.
With everyone back. Trimble was
picked to wm the league. however,
the Tomcats have won on ly live
games all season Federal Hocking,
thought hy many to he re!nulding. has
come on strong the l.lst pan of the
season to head the league at 6-6.
However. a slow start h&lt;ls left the
league leaders with a lnsmg record
\)Verall at 7-9. Secon~ rlace is still up
for grabs with four

le ~1gue

games

rcmainin~ .

Even winless Southern
has an outside shot at second place 111
the dJVISIOil
Eastern has dominated the Hock ing Division in ~iris play. At 10-7. the
only school with a winning record
that Eastern has had to heat is Belpre.
xcepting non-league foe Ohin Valley
Christian (7-3). Eastern is the only
team with the luxury of not ha1 ing In
rebuild this season and has been
impressive in 11s sians thts year The
only thing rossihly st;mdmg 111 Eastern\ w;1y toward an unddi:;ucd rcstof-the-seastlll is Meigs at 114. Meigs
is two games out of first in the Oh•o

Division, strll in contention with
Vinton County. Alex;mder and Belpre.
Despite beating Eastern early,
Fedeml Hocking w11h three freshmen
111 the lineup has fnund the going
rough in replacing 1ts four stanmg
seniors of a year ago.
Locally. the Metgs boys have put
together a great rebound year under
new head coach Chris Stout. Stout
h.ts instilled .1strong destre to win in
hts troops thts se;~son and still has a
shot at the Oh1o Di1 iston tule after a
year in the ce llar htst year
SOlllhern is suni:nng its worst season since 1968-69, hm1e1cr. South·
ern is under total reconstruction with
a very young club
For many years the saymg went.
"Southern doesn't rebuild, they just
reload." Southern has shown bright
spots and looks to finish strong
gomg mto the tournament thi s year.
. Eastern. although pulling off a •
I our-pornt wm over Southern. has
that victory as its only dtviston win.
The Eagles h:tve suffered some disappomhng losses. but they too are
looking ahead for a strong fmish
On Friday, Southern hosts Waterford, Eastern hosts Miller and Meigs
goes to Nelsonville.

Prep Standings
BOYS BASKETBALL
Tri-Valley Conference
OHIO DIVISION
Alexander
10-2
r
Belpre
9-3
Nelsonvill~York
9-3
Vinton County
9-3
Wellston
8-4
Meigs
7-4
HOCKING DIVISION
Federal Hocking
6-6
Trimble
4-7
Miller
4-8
Waterford
4-8
Eastern
1-11
Southern
0-12

12-3
12-4
11-5
10-5
9·6
9-6

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Tri-Valley Conferenc~
OHIO DIVISION
Vinton County
14-2
12-1
Aleunder
15-2
11-2
"Belpre
10-7
10-3
Meig5
9-3
11-4
Neltonvill~ York
6-8
6-10
Wellston
5-9
6-10
HOCKING DIVISION

7-9
5-9
5-11
4-11
3-13
1-15

Eastern
Ftderal Horking
Waterford
Miller
Southern
Trimble

9-3

11-3

7-6

8-8

6-7

8-9
3-13
3-13
0-17

2-11
2-11
0-14

Monday night scores:
Tri-Vallry Conference
Aleundtr 55, Wtllston 32
Easttm 49, Miller 19
Ftder1l Hocking 50, Trimble 20
Meigi 76, Nelson\·iii~York 47
Vinton County 50, Belprt 47
Waterford 55, Southern 33

Tuesday night scores:
Tri-Valley Conference
Belpre 56, Trimble 40
Meigs 81, Federal Hocking 55
Aleunder 82, Miller 62
Nelsonviii~York 79, Waterford 51
Vinton County 61, Southern 46
Wellston 15, Eastern 72

Wolfe's 'Victory Circle' returns

Open enrollment, ACL casualty
_list, locals' success take stage
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
It's that time of year when area
. cage teams wrap up the regular season and begin looking toward the
tournament trail . Every year high
. school basketbalt fans can live the
. excitement of the tournament and it s
· numerous upsets. When tournament
time comes, everyone is 0-0. Only
the best teams beat the pressure.
. Our la st Vtctory Circle concentrated on loyalty. Open enrollment
· has had a drastic 1mpact on high
school ;~thletics, and as area fans have
. seen. several student athletes have
jumped shtp.
· One has to wonder 1f one such ath·
: Jete has hud any second thoughts; that
' being former Alexander star Jom
Gruhb. who twice won Tri-Valley
-Conference MVP honors. Grubb
:transferred to Athens via open enrollment this past year and mJividually
s having a good year. Athens. however. IS currently 6-7 111 the SEOAL
league and has,, losing record or 811.
Meanwhile. her former club, the
' Alexander Sparhtns own u fine 10-2
league mark. 12-3 over:tll ;mel ha\'en't
skipped a beal without Grubb.
. All that is cnupkd with Alexan·
:der's nun·t: from the H1Kking DiviSIOn I&lt;&gt; the tougher Ohio Divtston
Alexander had dnminated the Hock.ing Dt~• tston for the past Ji1•e years
:either winnmg the title nutrrght or
·shanng the top spot'" was the case
:in 1995-96, when 11 tied with Fedcr:al Hnckmg and E;tstcrn.
. Ea~lern\ g1rls overcame a lot that
-year. losing a couple of upper diviston games early. then losing a key
.game to Southern m their lirst game
:buck from i.l trag1c bus uccidenl that
-saw two people die in a head-on col'hston n Januay 24. 1991'1. Eastern per_severed and came ~:tck to upset a
tnugh He;~ther Haycs/Erica Hayes
-comho from Vmton County and
'upset Federal Hocking in the last
,game of the year to share a pan ol the
·crown. Emtem. 15-5 regular season
:thm ye;lf. showed a lnt of char.ICtcr.
:Te.tm members on that Eastern cluh
·were Rehecl'a E\'ans. Jessica Karr.
Nicole Nelson. Beth Bay. Crystal

Holsinger. Martie Holter. Jesstca
Brannon. M•chelle Caldwell. Amanda Milhoan. Patsy Aeike• ,md Tmcy
White.
Agam. Alexander coach Dan
Doseck has overcome a bad &lt;ttuatJOn
and w1th the suppon of the Spartan
administration and school board. ha•
shown that his way ts the nght way
despite who causes the ripples.
Enca Hayes has been p~rt of
Shawnee State's htgh scoring
women's basketb;lll club. which last
year e&lt;Jrned 'honors as one of the top
NAJA college teams in America.
Another former area athlete. Kathy
Coyner. who led Belpre to ne:~rly I00
wms •n-fourseasons. is a\'emging 10
points a game as a freshman .lt the
University of Massachusetts. U-Mass ·
is I0-9this season, hut after losing a
veteran club from last year. has some
young gals like Coyner getting valu·
able experience at the usually tough
' Di\'ision I school.
- Accor_ding to Jerry Hice, former
Vinton County girls cage coach and
former Southeastern-Rms star in the
days of Panther-Tornado doglights
(or should I say ,cat lights); Heather
Hayes was most likely going to
defect to Alexander if Htce lett as
coach. Well. capable Oak Hill assrstant coach Sites stepped in upon
Hice's depanure and Hayes chose to
stay. Hayes has recognized that her

eructate ligament.
Ten years ago no one ever heard
of the term ACL. If mentioned, one
thought perhaps it was a buzzword
for the American League. Now, all
two often we know 11 menns disaster
for an athlete.
Southern star, Jason Allen. who
was avemging 9.7 points a game this
season is slated to undergo surgery
February 19 to repair his ACL. Becky
Davis. a promising young sophomore
for the Lady Eagles at Eastern has
probable ACL damage after injuring
her knee early in the season against
Bdpre. then rei'njuring her knee l:tst
week at Wellston.
The same injury all. but ended
promising basketball prospect Sari
Putman's career, although she has
returned to be a good softball player
At Eastern, Joey Dillon. who figured
to be it key player on coach Tony
Deem's varsity has missed the entire
season· with an ACL injury and IS
now in therapy after surgery.
Just last week. Aaron Wtll, a
memher of the Eastern reserve squad
suffered the same fate. Two years
ago, Eastern football star Chris Bm·
ley was stri cken .
In 1995-96 Jamie Lewis, now a
star at Ohto State. led Oak Htll to a
3-0 stan before tearing her ACL. Oak
Hill went on to finish 3- 18. Last year.
her sc111or year, she and her near 30ch01ce wal\ the nght one as she and pomt average returned and O.lk Hill
cousin Belinda ha\'e led Vinton put together a 20-win season. What
County to another fine season and a difference a player c;m make
possible Tri-Valley onference chamBoy, what a joh rookie coach
pionship. VC is I2-1 in the TVC and Chris Stout has done at Meigs. The
14-2 overall.
Marauders are a threat in any game
AI Wellston this past year. point they lay and have really turned the
guard Ryan Bethel returned aft~r corner after last year's dismal season
defecting to Jackson for one year.
In g1rls' baskethall. Meigs again
Wellston was the main beneficiary of has emerged '" a league f&lt;(Voritc.
Bethel's retllrn its he again is averag- even after graduating some key play ing double dig1ts for the Golden ers from last ye:1r Congrats to hoth
Rockets. Bethel smd. "I don't really boys and gtrls Marauder clubs. MHS
know why I left in' the lirst pl.lce." mentor Ron I .(lgan h;ls ~~~~ a gnod
Bethel had staned at Wellston hts friend and a good coach. His reco1d
freshman :~nd sophomore years. then speaks for ttself.
went to Jackson last season
At Eastern, one ye:~r of seasoning
Occasionally. over the years one and the return of some key figures
would see an occasional knee injury have put the Lady Eagles on top in
or two. however, the past several sea- the Hocking Di\'ision. Good job
sons have seen a great increase in gtrls! Eastern is coached thi s season
knee inJunes. especially the anterior by Paul Brannon.

Marietta
Logan
Gallipolis
River Valley
Warren
Point Pleasant
Athrns
Jackson

SEOAL
11-1
14-4
9-3
11-6
7-5
10-7
7-5

6-6
3-8
3-9

I-10

10-6
6-9

4-10
6-11
2-13

Turley. now red,hll·t freshman at
the University of Rn1 Grande. ,\Ver·
aged 28.3 points a game last season.
Hope is on the horizon as reserve
guard Kalle Cummms has been
improving her shootmg eye and
cou ld be a big boost to a sputtering
Tornado offense The Tornadoes are

'•

6-8

co;1ched by Alan Cnsp.
In boys play. Southern has suffered through a disappointing year.
but one must realize they are still
very young. Southern st;trted two
freshmen m Nick Bolin :rml Jonmhan
J

Evans m a grei.ll dfurt ug;.untril Vinton

(See VICTORY CIRCLE on Page 6)

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We will be building a total of 10 new homes in Gallia and Meigs counties. The
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Agency's Housing program is offering a low-interest loan, which requires no down
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anyone with low to moderate incom_e.

Gallia-Meigs CAA will not discriminate in the sale of any homes in regard to Race,
Sex, Color, Natjonal Origin, Handicap, Age, Familial Status, Marital Status, or
Religion. We comply with ~II of the Federal Fair Housing Laws and Amendments
and the Equal Opportunity Act.

0-13

9-4

Logan 71, Athens 56
River Valley 61, Point Pleasant 46
Warrtn 74, Marietta 67
Gallipolis 60, Jackson 51 .

Home ownership can become a reality. The Gallia-Meigs Community Action

Applicatibn deadline is April 1, 1998. Applications will be t~ken by appointment
only. Please call Samantha Rumley, Housing Developer at 367-7341 or 992-6629
or schedule an appointment.

5-8

16-1
12-5
10-8
10-8
8·11
10-8
7-11

SEOAL

.

Potential homeowners must meet income guidelines and- a-local bank's .credit
guidelines.
·
Income guidelines are:
• 1 person $12,222- $17,654
• 2 person $13,968-$20,176
• 3 person $15,714-$22,698
,• 4 p1rson $17,496- $25,220
• 5 person $18,857 - $27,237
• 6 person $20,254- $29,255

Warrtn
Marietta
Jackson
Gallipolis
Athens
River Valley
Logan
Point Pleasant

SEOAL
Logan 75, Jaduon 63
Marietta 55, Gallipolis 51
River Valley 62, Athens 56
Warrrn 53, Pt. Pleasant 39

At Southern, the Litdy Tornadoes
have a lot of spunk. but have had
trouble putting the hull 111 the basket.
Southern has played serveral top
teams tough. but let a couple wins
slip their gntsp. They are mainly sufferi ng frnm post Renee Turley syndrome
·

SEOAL
12·1

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ThurSday, February 5, 1998

Thursday, February 5, 1998

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Michigan State

The .Daily Sentinel~com
@ Meigs High SchoOl

pounds OSU 84-5,8
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- Bad
news. Big Ten: No longer is Mateen
Cleaves the only weapon in .16thranked Michigan Staie 's arsenal.
Unheralded forward Jason Klein
C'Jme out of a slump to score a careerhigh 25 points as the Spartans maintained iiS conference lead with an
easy 84-58 victory over hapless Ohio
1
State.
" II seems like every day somebody comes out the woodwork.''
Michigan State coach Tom ·lzzo said.
This time it. was Klein . a junior
who had never -cored mQre than 17
point,_
"Mateen has shouldered most of
the load all year," Klein 'Jid. "Now
there o.1re other guys."
Klein had 14 points as Michig:m
State 116-4 overall. 9-1 Big Ten) buill
a 45-31 lead at the half. He also
scor&lt;d the firsdour points of the second half on a 15-foot jumper and a
pair of foul shots after he was intentionally fouled during a fast hreak.
Klein. averaging I0.6 points per
game. hit I0 of 15 shots from the
field including ~ of 5 three-pointers.
He added five rebounds and an assist .
Morris l'eterson chipped in with 10
points.
"Coach told me to shoot the ball.
shoot the ball.' ' said Klein. who had

totaled 15 pou11s in ·his last three
games. "And Mateen did a great job
of distributing the ball."
The Spartans' 9-1 nHirl is their
best record through I0 games since
joining the conference in ,1950-51 . It
was their seventh straight win and
I~th in the last 1:1 games.
By contrast, the loss was the lith
in a row fur Ohio State {7 - 1~ . 0-8).
ex tending the longe,tlosing . . trea~ in

the school's 99 years ph1ying .the
sport. It al'n was the Buckeye,· 14th
consccuti\'c Big Jen loss. c"tending

'

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Auto, VB, . AJC, AM/FM
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ONE OWNER
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va,

another rel'ord.

The ~6-point margin was the sec ond-biggest loss ever for Ohio State
at S1. John Arena. The 1e;1m moves
into new Value City Arena next season .
" I gues!'l yoll com ;tdd JTI!.! to the
growing list
coaches who ha\'e

or

HOOKED - That's the predicament In which Ohio State's Ken
Johnson (right) finds himself as Michigan State's A.J. Granger tries
to get through him to get to the basketball In the first half of Wednesday night's Big Ten contest In Columbus, where the Spartans won
84-58. (AP)

foul line. Ken Johnson added a
career-high 14 points.
Ohio State drew to within 19-17
on Neshaun Coleman "s tip-in at the
10:57 mark of the first half. but
Michigan State ran off eight of the
next 10 points- four by Klein on
they aFe hlmgry - very. 'cry lum - short jumpers - to bump the Spargry."
.
tans' lead to 27-19.
The Buckeyes got ns close as 31Michael Redd. leading the Big
Ten in scoring. topped Ohio State 26 before Klein had a tip-in and a
with :!3 points hut was jt1st seven of fastbreak haslet. The kad never
17 from the field and 9 of 16 at the · dropped helow seven again.
seen Michigan State play and have
been impressed with them." Ohio
State mach Jim O'Brien said. "They
are a tremendous h:"ketball team .
They do a lot of gre:\1 thing, . One of
the hig things is their depth . They
bring it to you for 40 mimttt: .... Ami

Michigan State then scored the
linal seven points of the half and the
first four of the second half. Most of
a crowd of I 0.626 left before the finish.
The victory was Michigan State"s
seventh on the road this season.
··Guys are talking n lot about leadership when we go on the rond," said
Cleaves. who had illmost as many
assists (six) as points (se.ven). ""You
get to be close '" a team and right
now we' re family.'"

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LOADED 57,941 MILES

UNDER CONSTRUCTION- The Schottanstaln Center, under construction on the Ohio State University campus, has received llddl-

tlonal funding, even after estimates were found to be well oft the
mark. (AP file photo)

Private donations to.cover additional cost
over the original c~ tim&lt;tte of $75 mil -

lion n~:llle in 1995.
Bul lhe additional cost will be
covered hy inaease(l don:u ions from
the private -eclor. not hy public
:funds. T/1&lt;· Co/uml&gt;ui
.reported Wednesday.
The Schottenstein ('enter. which

f)i'l'"'""

will seal 19.5110 for basketbalL will
Beside' basketball ;md hockey
replace the 13.500-seat St. John Are- games. the arena will host mck conna as the home of the Buckeyes' bas- certs. circuses. lrm.le shows and con·
ketb:illteams. The center also will be · ferencos. The university also may try
the home of the school\ hockey team to get NCAA men's and women's
_ ~&lt;·hen it opens in Oc;tnher.
basketball tournament games.
OSU oflkials estimated. thill 60
"This will he the linest college
filcility in the country. There is noth- percent of ticket rcrenucs will come
ing like it.' ' Silid Paul Krchs, Ohio from entertainment while 40 percent
StatC\ St!llinr associate otthletics will1..' 0mC from sports.
director. "Nn11e or them ha•·e the
Higher construction hills added
hrcilities .this has. "
hetwecn $5 million and $n mill inn tn
the arena's price tag in 19%. But ollicials said re~.:c-nt inrrct~scs - fmm a
fall estimate of $93 million- have

Carbone to speak at Rio
~Grande baseball day camp
:: Ohio University h;tsehall coach
·Joe Carhonc will be the featured
s'pc:ak~r t~l the Univcr,iry of Rio
Grande one-day baseball c:1mp
planned for S:~turd:~y. Feh. 1~ . The
Cm11p. open tu playl!rs ages ~ix to I R.
will be held from &lt;) :1 .111 . 11111il J p.m.
,ill the Paul R. Lync C'cnk·r in Rio
:Gronde.
C:trhonl! ha '&gt; hccn head co:tch at

resulted mainly from donminns that
have enahlcd university officials to
add items not included in the ori.giAUTO, A/C, POWER WINDOWS, LOCKS, CRUISE, TILT,
nal design nf the center.
ALUMINUM WHEELS.
Upgrading the scnrebomd. adding
a hall of f;1me and improving some f /6,"'-!'"" :"ii::!::EiE:i~~~:E:Z:!~~;:;;:::~
suites increased the price to $101 mil- 1\:f/'..,.,...,,..,...........,......,
linn in December. A terrazw llnor in
the lobby was ad&lt;led because of
another dnn;1tinn. mising the tolilllo
nearly 1105.K million. said William
Auto,
V6, front
J. Shkuni. the unil'ersity\ vice presAuto, V6, A/C,
ident fnr linance.
drive,
A/C,
AM/FM
only 14,000 miles.
cruise, tilt,
wheels.

1988 FORD THUNDERBIRD

1996 FORD
MUSTANG

JV Red_men slip past
M~rietta - College 64-63

OU since 19HH and ha' compiled "
record of 305 - ~0K . He l1a' led the
Bnbcal.s.tn two MAC titles ami his
1997 S&lt;)Uad set the singlc-,cason
schoo l record for win' wi th 43.
Mike Fout scored 21 points to le:1d
Twenty Bohcat . . have rntwed on to the University Rio Grande's junior
the profe"ional ra11ks 1111der Car- varsity haslet bull squad past Muriel ~
hone\ leadership. He pid,cd up two Ia College 6-1-6:1 Sunday afternoon in
MAC' Coach of the Year awards and Marietta.
i11 1997 was voted NCAA Mide:rst
Fnut drilled four three-pointers to
Region Coach of the Yc:1r.
guide the jay-vee Redmen to their
Carbone was cqu:rlly succc"ful as lith win of the season.
Victory Circle ...
a Bobcat pl;1ycr. From I%H to IY70.
Barry Krueger c;1shed in for nine
he was named second team &lt;Ill -MAC pnints. Andy Rash scored eight points
(Continued from Page 5)
twice and helped lead OU to three and J.R. Clark and Raymond Friend
MAC titles and a 'P"' in the 1970 uddcd six each to bolster the Redmen
County.
Althuugh Southern is in line for its College World Series. After cnllerc. elTon. Heath McKinnis chipped in
C':rrhnnc S)&gt;ent time with the Kansas five pnints.
wor..;t ,ea, on ~ince 196X-69. one c ~m
hi:t thut Southern wi ll rt!ll!rn to glo- C'ity Royals nr~ olllitation .
Marietta's Thad Smith scored a
Prior to taking ova at Ohio. C+Jr- game-high ~4 points. Dave Rucker
ry not yr:lf. That is "IF" the Tornabone coached at Tolc&lt;lo. Marshall added 16 and Mike Warden tallied I3
dnc-; hit thl: gym th i ~ surlllllcr. M!u.:h
and
Ohio State.
of Soulht:rn'..; \ lll'L'C'\ ~ in the ra' t
-for ihe home side. -In
May 'of thi s year. Carbone will
cam~ rrorn gnod work hahil'\ in lh~
'ummer. Much of last year. the gym be ·inducted into the Tioga County.
Pennsy lvania Hall of Fame for his
sat empty. If Ihe youn~sters hone the
performances
in ""-"cr. basketball
'raw talenl they lwvc. SHS will :~gain
and
hasehall.
rise to the top. If not . _it's awfully cold
The cnstt(u the Rio Grande onein thc Oat.~em c nt .
The Division II girls' sectional
Eastern\ boys ha ve suffered day baseball camp is $30 per player.
·
basketball
tournllment pairings .
through a disappointing season as . Each camper will receive a T-shirt
announced
Sunday
in Jackson. put
and lunch as part of the cost of the
wei( Currently. 3-13. the Eagles just
No
.
5
seed
Gallia
Academy
and No.
camp.
have not clicked like they had hoped
4
seed
River
Valley
into
tbe
first
Redmen head coach Brent Clark
in the preseason. Joey Brown. only a
game
of
the
Rio
Grande
sectional
on
and hi s players will instruct campers
freshman. has heen a key plus for the
Monday.
Feb.
16
at
7
p.m.
at
the
Uni. Eagles. Brown follow s in a long l ine__~ in hitting. pitching, catching, fielding
and base running. Campers will also versity of Rio Grande's Newt Oliver
of all-district players on both the
receive instruction regarding condi- Arena.
Brown and Bates side of the family.
The winner of that game will play
He certainly has a good stm1 on a tioning. weight training and wann-up
top-seeded Vinton County for the
techniques.
good t·areer.
upper-brackel'title on Thursday, Feb.
Registration
begins
at
8
a.m.
on
Congratu lation s to coach Tony '
19 at 6: 15 p.m.
Feb.
14.
but
players
are
encouraged
Deem on the birth of his first daughThe Rio Grande upper-bracket
to
sign
up
prior-to
that
d;1te.
ter. Allison Jane.
victor
will face the Dawson -Bryant
To regi ster. call 740- ~45- 7293 or
Until next time. "I'll see you in the
lower-bracket
·winner (Ponsmouth
740-245-7486.
Victory Circle."

1
CHRYSLER LHS

TRADE IN

Rio Grande 111-5) faces M;1rie1ta
on Sunday. Feb. H at 3 p.m. at the
Newt Oliver Arem1.

1990 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

1988 MERCURY
TRACER

IWf l!!!l!h

2 Door, auto, V6,

STATION WAGON,
4 cyl, AJC, cruise.

Rio Grande
29-35=64
Marietta
29-34=63
Rio Grande: Foul 4-4-111 =21 .
Clark 1-0-4/6=6. Friend 3-0-0/0=6.
R;1sh 2-0-4/4=H. McKinnis 1-IO/Il=5. Rllss 0-1-0/0::3. Krueger 2-1'21~=9. Lewis 2-0-010=4. Vollmth 10-010=~- Totals: 16-7-11/13• 64
Mariella: Eshman 1-0-010=2.
· Lallathin 2-0-IJ/1 =4. Ruder 4-2213= 16. Warden 4-1-~/~= 11. Scan inn
1-0-0f(l=~. Smith 5-4 -2/2=~4. Bennett 1-0-0/()=~ - Tolals: 18-7-6/8~63

Division II girls' basketball
sectional pairings posted

-

front, showing s move of the Sllotoksn style,
Ja101t Preut, left, and Marc JoMa,.who both
, train In the Til Kwon Do method.

By MEUSSA WILUAMS
with 19, Jason Young with 1.6, Ben- Kim -140. Adam Thomas -145, Vini
and ADAM BARNETT
. ji Call with 16, Joey Blazer with 12, , Broderick- I 60. Mike Parker -I 7 I
·
· The Meigs wrestling team has had Brian Young with 12, Franco ' , and Brian Young - 275 .
: a relatively successful season thus far. Romuno with 9, Chris Snouffer with . I In discussing the season Adam
· Despite some minor injuries. the 8, Paul Michael with 6, Chris lmbo- iThomas said that in this season the
team has stayed focused and kept den with 6, and Lester Parker with 6 i team has shown a lot of potential. and
' almost all of the 14 weight classes •points.
1 said he is both shocked and pleased·
i filled.
'j
Members of the team and their . with the effort of everyone, especialThis season has been exciting with respective weight classes arc:
ly the freshmen. He thinks that the
the team finishing third at both the . Freshmen Jeremy Jones -103, team's new members are working
· Warren Rivcrtown Motors, and Gal- ·Benji Call -112. Ben Mitchell -! 19, hard as a whole but said there is
' lipolis Rotary Tournaments. The ' Michael Stacy -130. Paul Michael- . always room for improvement.
: Marauders have also enjoyed indi- · · 130. Matt Stewart -135, and Joey
Eighteen members of the Meigs
I1 vidual success with Mike Parlcer ' Blazer -135.
Wrestling Team participated in the
(Sr.). Adam Thomas (Sr.), and David
Sophomore members arc Chris WSAZ Channel 3 Wrestling ToumaShulcr (Jr.) consistently finishing in . Snouffer -103, Cory Stewart -125. ment at Veterans Memorial Auditorithe top three in their respective Chris Krawsczyn -119, Chris lmbo- urn in Huntington on Jan. 23 and 24.
weight classes.
den 140, Lester Parker -140, Brant The team finished tifth out of 16
Contributing to this season's team Dixon -140, C.D. Ellis -170, Jeff teams in Division II.
' score has been Adam Thomas with Brown -189, and Andy Doczi- 215.
Captain Adam Thomas at 145
: 99 points, David Shuler with 78, Alan
Junior wrestlers arc Ben Molden- pounds, and Junior David Shuler at
Lee with 42, Ben Molden with 35, i 125, David Shul~r -152, Jason Young 152 pounds finished third and fourth
· Mike Parker with 34, Andy Doczi •-189, and Franco Romuno.
:out of 32 wm;tlers in their weight
. with 30, Chris Krawsczyn with 27,
Senior wres:lers arc Alan Lee - class.
. Brant Di~on with 23, Ben Mitchell ' 125, Ulises Barraza- 125. Hyung-Do

I

~ K~rite~~thu~a~ts demonstrate Juniors seek the past on field trip
:art to fe II ow students at Me.• gs
:

.

·
:
'
: By SARAH LARKINS
about kanite, described as a "very dis_ Realizing that few Meigs High ciplined sport, teaching self--disci-'
- School students have an understand- pline and self control."
: ing of karate, three involved in the art
The three karate students and
: presented a demonstration for the Eddie Willis put together a demon: physical education classes recently.
stration showing some of the techAndrew Kitchen, who does the niques involved with karate.
: Shotokan style, and Jason Prcast and
A very popular part of the demon· Marc Jones. both training in the Tae stration was when boards were bro· Kwon Do style. gave the demonstra- ' ken. Jason used his fingertips 10 break
tion tohelp students understand more ·boards. Marte and Andy used their

hands-and fcet to demonstrate the art
of breaking boards.
.
While some may think-it extremely difficult to break boards, Andy said
that "sometimes il is if you oo· it
wrong. •
"The hardest part", he said, "is
believing or thinking you can do it.
After you conquer the fear, every·
thing comes together.·

Marauders,show improved
:intensify as season prQ9Je$ses

By KRISTINA KENNEDY
A tield trip to Pomeroy in search
·of their ancestors was taken Jan. 23
by students in Joy Bentley's junior
English classes.
,
The ·moming began at the Coun
House where Mike Canan, chier of
security for the Common Pleas Court,
gave a guided tour of where to locate
.wills, deeds, and tax records.
From the counhouse the students

went to the library. Candy
Burkhamer, head of ciR:ulation, gave
a presentation on genealogy and
explained how to do research at the
libr.uy. The students were then on
their own to research their family history at the libr.uy.
Following a lunch break, the
group went to the Meigs County
Museum where Margaret Parker,

or Rock Hill) on Wednesday. Feh. 25
at8 p.m. at Chillicothe High School.

-·-

'

Following the Rio GrJnde upperbrackettitle game. the lower-bmcket final will pit second-seeded Jackson against third-seeded Meigs at
8:15p.m.
_The winner of the Jackson-Meigs
final will play the winner of the
Unioto upper-bracket sectional
(Waverly. Hillsboro or top-seeded
Washington Court House) in the dis-trict toumament on Thursdny. Feb. 26
at 8 p.m. at Chillicothe High School.

cruise, tilt, 54,000 miles.

$5995 $2995
1987 DODGE
ARIES
Auto, A/C, white car.

$199

1983 CHEV
CAVALIER ·
AJC

495

president of the Meigs County Historical Society, gave a presentation on
genealogy and explained how to do
research in the various resources
available at the library.
Upon completion of the field trip •
the students were well infonned on
how to find genealogy infonnation,
lind they had a good stan in finding
their ancestors.

~ Lady

.

-.

By MELISSA REEVES
has his favorite win which he calls Coach Darin Logan couldn't be much
Varsity Coach Ron Logan's Lady the most memorable game of the sea- happier. "I am very pleased with the·
Marauders are having an excellent son.
way our team has played this year. . •
season.
That was the win against Alexan- ·We lost ·our ftrSI game, but played
Although they staned out the sea- · der at borne (59-58). This proved that great !Jasketball ever since the loss,·
son with a loss to River Valley, it did· · they could play and beat a very good said Coach Logan.
.
.~
n't bring their spirits down. They fol- : team. Alexander i~now rankc_d in the '
Although they've had a great sea.;t~
lowed up the next four games with ; state.
';V.
!son, as with any team there is always
l;;_' &lt;
wins against Alexander, Waterford, ·
The vmity g~ arc only losing room forimprovement. "The sopho.-t # ·
,/t
,, .
Point Pleasant, and Nelsonville-York. ' - one senior this
Carissa Ash. mores have really improved from last
UP GO THE POSTERS- Dlnlelle Peckham,
··we have been improving every ' When asked if he ljad anything to say season. Also, playing 'time for my
left, lind Shlttnnon Jetotklna put up s Senior Splr·
game and our intensity has gotten ' about Carissa, Coach Logan replied, freshmen class is increasing because
Ita poatar In the Larry R. Morrt1011 Gymnaalum
better on defense," commented "Carissa is a very good scorer who they have learned our plays and arc
Coai:h Logan. ··so far our greatest has three yean oharsity experience, making a positive contribution in
improvements have bec!n in ball han- and she will be missed: Not only asr each game," replied Coach Logan.
. dling. free throw shooting, and hav_- a basketball player. but also for her
When asked about his most meming a balanced scoring attack."
unique personality."
.
'arable game, he said "When we
Every game for the Lady MaraudAs for the Reserve Lady Maraud- !defeated a tough Alexander team at
ers ·was exciting, but Coach Logan e!S team with a record of 12 and I, ,home by 4 points."

year,

New OSU arena cost estimate rises 41%
COLUMBUS. Ohio (API - The
lawst cost C\timatc for a new sports
arena being built •at Ohio State is
almost $105 .8 million. up 41 percent

THE KARATE KIDS _ These three Meigs
High Schoolstuclenbl gave s demorlaballon on
karate for physical education c i s - at the

4X4 AIC,_V6J. POWER WINDOWS-LOCKS,
CnUI;:,E, TILT, 18,000 MILES.

1996 JEEP

,.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

at Meigs High SchoOl. It Is just one-of numer-

ous ligna posted around the school to cheer

on the Marauders.

:Meigs seniors make 'spirit' bold
presence in school's corridors

. By MYCA HAYNES
When walking down a hallway at
Meigs High School, you will notice
colorful posters on the walls,
The posters arc supporting Meigs
High School teams and athletes.
The bright paper and large letters
ation to the Home National Bank of quickly catch your attention.
Racine and Syracuse for making the
Most people don't realize who
game one of the most exciting and . makes the signs. but if they looked
well attended of il)c season.
:closely in the lower right comer of a

Home National aank sponsors
admission to Me'igs-Vinton tilt
By STEPHANIE BURTON
Free admission and a money
scramble were features of the Jan. 20
Meigs-Vinton game held at Meigs
High School and won by the Meigs
Marauders.
The Home National Bank in
Racine and Syracuse not only gave
free admission to the sports enthusi-.
asts, but it also gave five lucky fans i
a chance to win some money.
· A total of 250 SI bills were dis. tributed evenly on the gym noor. Five
lucky ticket holders were given a
cbance to gather up the bills. Each

participant was given 45 seconds to
crawl on his/her hands and knees and
pick up as many of the bills as possible.
Amber Blackston of Meigs hustled onto the court and gathered up
$32. Vinton County participants
Brandi Partee, Susan Niple, Nick
Henderson. and Scott Murray collected about $185.
Beverly Stewart of Meigs held the
winning ticket 10 claim the money
left on the court after the scramble.
·The Mariiuden.extended appreci-

Poetry _corner----.
:

asked to pnrt1c1pate in the small
group where identities are a secret
until after graduation.
So the next time you are walking
1
down a hallway at Meigs High
: School and see a sign supporting a
' team, look closely. If you see a "spir! it" and the initials "S.S.", you l&lt;now
that the Senior Spirits have been
there.
.-

Support Your
Schools By
Advertising Jn thJs
Block.

For information
caD Dave or Don at
992·2155.

Love's True Meaning

,By LAURA PAYNE
· Love is something that you find in everything
Whether it fs an animal. a friend, or a smile that you receive.
Love is something thatfNe cannot control,
Somehow it can happen out of nowhere and till our hearts.
That is why one day out of the year, heaven has set aside a day
For us to announce our feelings
To that special someone or something in our life.
We must not hold our feelings inside ourselves,
.
For it is the greatest feeling to be loved or to love someone.
LOve is indeed one of the most misundmtood words.
Not many people realize what love is,
Love is the happiness we find in ourselves,
'How can someone filled with hatred love-his or her true self?
If you can find happiness in yourself. then you have found
Your ability to love.
'So on this Valentine's Day, tell someone you care or give them
A heartwarming smile.
Because if you like someone or think you may love someone,
Don't hold it in. because someday that person might not be here
Or another person could declare their love before you.
So hold your bead high and make this Valentine's day a loving one.

sign. they would find a little "spirit"
and the initials "S.S."
The "spirit• ,and initials represent
a group of seniors who call themsel.ves "Senior Spirits." The Senior
· Spirits are a silent yet bold presence
· in school cheering for the teams.
Each year the role of the "Senior
. Spirits" is passed down from one
. senior class to the next. Their goal is
to Jiromote school spirit. Seniors are

333 Page Stntt
Midlleport, ow.
45760
(614·992-6472

COOLSPOT

QUALITY

CONVENIENCE STORE

fURNITURE PLUS.

Ellll:fi~l

Elmlll a..uumlll
CooMBe Exit off Rt. 7
667-6100 Store
687-8101 Restaurant
Owner: Bryan White

Wheel Horse
TRACTORS
and RIDING
. MOWERS

BAUMLUMBER
State Route 248
Cheater
985-3301
I ...

~·-·l ....Cooling,
Inc.
Hill Rd.
01145720 .

WV2115&amp;0 .

Feed Supply
"Stuff" Cor Pets • farm
An!m•l• Stable
Joe Evan• 992·2164
Owner

Home of the
Action Lane
Showcase Series.
I ·IOG-200-4005

Ohio River r;.fJ.I(et~ rlu~t~t
Your Friendly Home
Bear
1hwn
·company
"Aoral Art"
992-4055

Emporium
992-2644

Tomacellis

~utland

Good Fun

Bottle Gas

Good
Pool-Vitko Games ·
Muiic- Dances

Supporting all the
area IChOOII &amp; youth
Stop In and uy "HI"
to Dave or Herb.

Middleport

992-2817

742-2211

�'

'

Thursday, February 5, 1998.

-

'·

•

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
By The Bend
Life in a throw away society leaves us lacking

The Daily Sentinel o Page 9

..

· Page 8 ;:
Thursday, February 5, 1998 '

you for sending it on . Here it i's:
Consumer's Prayer by Joyce M.
Shutt
Throwaway bottics,
Throwaway can,,
IW7. L"' A.n1cb n~,
Syn.l•••tc .nd Crntlln
Throwaway friendships.
Synilk;atc
Throwaway far.,
Disposable dia,•~ rs.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
Disposable plates.
ran across this poem. which mirrors
Disposable pcc.plc.
life today in such a way that it made ·
Disposable wastes.
me think of the value of permaInstant puddings.
nence . h was wriuen hy Joyce M.
Instant rice.
Shutt. and I hope you will print it.
Instant intimacy.
Thanks. -- DL in San Diego
Instant icc .
Dear D.L.: There's a great deal
Plastic dishes.
of substance in these hncs. ;.md rm
Plastic laces .
sure my readers will agree . Thank
Plastic Oowcrs.

Ann
Landers

Plastic faces.
Lord of the living.
Transcending our lives,
Infuse us with meaning.
Recycle our lives.
Dear Ann Landers: A distant
relative left me a substantial amount
of money in her Wtll, and frankly, I
don 'I need it or deserve it
Although her will was written
when we were quite close. I had not
seen her in more than a year. She
was in a nursing home in another
city, and her great-niece was the person responsible for ali the tough
decisions concerning her care and
well-be ing .
I feel this niece should receive

the bulk of my relative 's estate, but I
handiy know her and don't know
how to tell her this without aP,pearing haughty and superior.
There arc three other heirs who
s ~ould come before me, although
th~~ did not do as much for this rdative as the niece. If I refuse the
inheritance, they will benefit equally
with her, which is also not fair.
If I contribute the amount to charity. none of the heirs will benefit If
I keep the sum, how do I express my
appreciation to the niece who did so
much more than I?
I would like to gtve this niece my .
portion of the inheritance. but I
don't know how 10 achieve this

without ruffling some feathers. Also,
what are the tax ramifi cations? If I
accept the inheritance and then turn
it over to the niece, whr pays the
taxes.?
Please answer in your column.
I'm reasonably sure that this situation occurs more often thau most
people realize. -- L.G. in Houston
Dear L.G.: Your candor and generosity are refreshing. You are certainly taking the high road.
I suggest that y0u consult a tax
lawyer about your unanswered questions. You need the advice and guidance of a professional in estate planning .
Dear Readers: Many of you

,.

/ .

·. '

_; . . ~
r.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

./.
/

have asked me to repeat the address;
cs of our servicemen and women 1~
Bosnia. I also discovered that we
had been given some incorrect info·r;
mation , so here they arc again :
For personnel on land : Any Ser~
vice Member, Operation Joint
.
Guard , APO AE. 09397-0001.
For personnel aboard ship: Any
Service Member, Operation Joint
Guard, FPO AE. 09398-0001.

t\rt..'a hc rhah ~ t ~ \\Ill

ho~l i.l

Valcn ·

tlllC tea tn he heiJ at the M;1urcen
Burns home nl'.ll" Alh;.u1y frnm I hl
-I p.m. '"' Feh. 1-1 .
The tea os hcmg hnsteJ hy Cindy
P:u·kt..'r.

!

Burn~ .

:md

Rch~~ca

Wood.

"Whether it \ tea fnr two or tea
f,,r ~ou . it IS an cnjoyahk treat you
''"''" ' t want to miss ... said Burns
11hn noted that there will he vintage
:tl'l.'cssorics ttl set the mood for
learning more ahout the history of
afternoon tea and hcrhs.
There will be a presentation on
hl\'e hcrhs and magical potions.
More infonnation may he obtained
hy contacting Burns at Box 205.
Rutland. 742-7243.
Tile group's winter herb series is
continuing with upcoming sessions
including hemal healing for women
on May 7 and kitchen cosmettcs
and skin care on March 28.
Social Security News
. Social Security beneficiaries arc
discovering that having their checks
sent directly to the bank is safe, reliable, economical and convenient.
Ed Peterson , manager of the
Athens ~ocial Security office, said
thai with direct deposit recipient's
money is avatlabie the same day,
there is no risk of theft or loss
through the mail, there is an elecIronic record of payments. and paymcnls arc credited on the scheduled
payment day.
Peterson said that
the government saves 40 cents each
time someone uses direct deposit
instead of a check . h costs 42 cents
to process and mail each chccL
compared to rwo cents for direct
deposit.
for those who already have a
hank account hut their checks arc
not ~oin£ into their accounts. the
switch can be made hy calling 1H00-772-12 13.

w. Grand Chapter of Royal Arch Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Oh bot her.
Ma,ons . and the First Lady o(
The
Bntish want Winnie the Pooh
Capitular Masonry will be honored
and
his
four friends to come home.
lll " reception to be held Feb. 21,
A
mcmhcr
of Parltamcnt says the
(dO p.m. at the McArthur Masonic
original
stuffed
animals on whtch
Temple. I07 N. Markel St.,
A.A.
Milne
's
beloved
stories arc
McArthur.
hascd
should
be
taken
from
a di splay
·
Entertainment will follow din-.
at
the
New
York
Puhiic
Libra')'
case
ncr. Tickets arc $10 and arc availand
returned
to
England.
ahlc through Warren Lotz. 740-596" I saw them recently and they
2994. Gl~nna Jarvis will he coordi look
very unhappy indeed, .. Labor
nating the dinner assisted by memParty
legislator Gwyneth Dunwoody
hers of Sereno Chapter 13K. Order
satd
.
"I
am not surprised. considerof the Eastern Star. Barbara Slade.
ing
lhcy
have hecn mcarccratcd in a
worthy matron. and Glen Slade.
case
in a foreign country for all
glass
worthy patron.
these years."
Pooh. Tiggcr. Kanga. Eeyore and
Piglet
could be in for another advcnAuxiliary looking for yard sale
lure
and this one wouldn't be in
donations
the Hundred-Acre Wood. "Oh bothThe Rutland Fire Department
cr:·
Pooh might say of this tempest
Auxiliary will hold a yard sale on
in
a
honey
pot "Oh dear. oh dear.''
March 7 at the Fire Department
Piglet
would
add.
wllh all proceeds to be used for
Mrs.
Dunwoody
is asking what
community activities.
culture
secretary has
plans
Britain's
Donations arc needed for the
lo
arrange
for
the
stuffed
animals'
sale and anyone with items to con- .
repatriation
after
half
a
century.
trihutc are asked to leave them at
" Just like the Greeks want their
the fire station or contact village
offices. 742-2121 &lt;ir 742-3703.
The sale will be held 8 am. to 5
p.m at the station.

our Winnie the Pooh back, along "Good Morning America" today.
with all his splendid friends, " Mrs. didn 't sound 1\)0 interested in pursuDunwoody said . referring to the mg the maucr.
ancient sculptures from the
"I think it · will come slightly
Parthenon that Britam·s Lord Elgin down the agenda. if you don·lmtnd
brought to England nearly two ccn- me saying so ... Blair said.
turics ago.
''I' m sure they arc perfectly wellThe New York Public Library is looked after where they arc.·· he
treating the sticky issue very cau- said. Asked whether the stu fled lint tiously. " Until we get a speci fic mals arc unhappy in their New York
request. wc· rc not commenting:· home . he said. •" I seem to remember
spokeswoman Carolinc·Oyama said. from the old stories they ;tlways did
A more combative Diane Powers. look a bit unhappy."
associate chief librarian at the DonThe Winnie the Pooh Five,.along
nell Lihrary Center, the branch with early editions of their hook;.
where the stuffed toys are on di splay. have resided in a large display case
said Wednesday: " If England in the Children's R(lOm of the Don returns the Elgin Marbles to Greece, nell Library Center since 1987.
we might consider returning Pooh."
Their sojourn to the United Stales
Mrs. Dunwoody's comments- a began in 1947 when American puhday hcfore Prime Minister Tony lishcr E.P. DuHon and Co. invited
Blair's visit 10 Washington on them for a national (our to promote
Wednesday - posed no threat to Milne 's books .. said Tim Moses.
relations between the two countries. publicity director at Duuon ChilThe British Consulat.c in New York drcn 's Books. an imprint of Penguin.
called The Associated Pre ss to insist Putnam Inc .
the prime minister 's office knew
Insured for $50,000 , Po&lt;;h and
nothing about Mrs . Dunwoody's · friends toured the United States for
proposal.
about I0 years , Moses said. The

Skin testing clinic set for
Cohambia township
A free skin testing clinic will be
conducted by Connie Karschnik .
R.N .. Meigs County Tuberculosis
nurse at the Columbia Township
F'rc Department Monday. 6 to 7
p.m.
. Karschnik said that all individuals who arc in food service arc
r£quircd to obtain yearly-skin tests.
f'e She encouraged area resident&lt; In
take advantage of the evening dinics which arc provided in various
areas of the county each year.
Karschnik said that the agcnry is
ahlc to provide the service hecausc
Reception to be held honor of the· continued .support of the
tuherculosis levy.
~rand high priest
Gr;md High Priest Terry B. Mcy-

of sexual abuse. As part of a plea
bargain, the judge suspended all but
18 months of a 30-year sentence.

OaJdusek won the 1976 Nohel
Prize ;u medicine for his work on
"slow viruses" that lie dormant

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middl~ort
Literary Club. Wednesday. 2 p.m.
home of Betsy Parsons. Middleport.
Martha Hoover to review "Fmal
Judgment."

1/2 Price

before anacking the body. These
include the virus implicated i.1 madcow di sease .

Triple Seented Candles
Croeks, Cakes &amp; Refills

Books

-30% off

EAST MEIGS - TI1e Ea&gt;tcrn
Local Technology Commill~c.
Thursday. K p.m .. Eastern High
School. Anyone intcre&gt;tcd on serving
on the committee asked to aucnd .

SATURD!\Y
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange 778 and Star Juni or Grange
K78. Saturday. potluc·k· supper at
6 : ~0 p.m. followed hy fourth degree
team practice at 7 : ~0 p.m. and meeting at8 p.m. Junior Orange will hold
its baking contest.

•

Thomas Rowe from the Center for Disease Control loads speciman trays with H5N1 avian flu speci·
man from Hong Kong.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - DAY. Meigs
Chapter 53. Monday, at the hail with
dinner qt 6:30 p.m. and the meeting
at 7 pJ11.

you come out."
tims caught the virus directly irbm
The lab's safety level is one notch .chickens. If the virus had spread
below 'the ma&lt;tnium.scc urity room from person to person, it would have
where scicnt i• ts don spacesuit s to mutated.
study Eho la . Lassa and other deadly
SJ how did it jump fro m birds to
diSeases for wht&lt;:h there arc no vac- humans' Scientists aren' t sure.
cines . . flu !ah workers have had
medical chcc kups and arc offered an
antiviral drug, rimamadinc, as a prePublic Notice
cau11on.
The scienti sts arc looki ng al.vt rus
PUBLIC NOTICE
·On Saturday, February 14,
specimens and more than 3.000
1998 at 10:00 a.m.. the
hlood samples from the nu victims.
Home National Bank will
their relati ves an&lt;) others who had
offer lor sale at public
contact with them :
auction on the bank parking
In another lah. the CDC's llu
loltha following vehicles:
1986 PLYMOUTH FURRY
team is makin g a blueprint of the
VIN 1P3BB26P7GX589181
vtru s. Thi s will help them come up
1986 BUICK LESABRE
with a vi rus that doscly mall.:hl!s .
VIN 1G4HR3737GH425674
H5N I. That . m turn . could he used
1977 RV
to mak e'-~ \'~ccinc .
VIN M50CA6J026619
199o ISUZU 4)(4
·
One potcnti:lf ''1rus that clo&gt;c ly'
VtN JAACR11E5L7254341
matches the Ho n~ Kon&lt; llu strain
1991 TOYOTA 4X4
has hccn tsolatcJ•i'rom J~c k s in SinVIN JT4RN01P5M0012865
~ aporc . l t is hcing injected mto fert994 CHEVROLET VAN
1-.:ts-to f[nd out Whether antihodic&gt;
VIN 1GBEG25K9RF171495
1988 OLDSMOBILE
Gill be produced. ,..
VIN 1G3WR14W7JD357108
kry-powcrcd res pirators and shower
The__ s~ i c nti st sfh op~ to · release
The terms of sale are
b~lorc leaving .
some hnl11ngs lat\3F th1 s month . •
cash.
So far. they know th at most of the
· ~ " You could take the virus out on
The Home National Ban.k
reserves the right to retect
n•ur clothing and it could be in fcc - Hon g Kong llu victims were young
any or all bids or to remove
li[lUs to animals you encounter... - hal f of them under I0. Most dtd
any unit from the sale at
~aid Henry Mauhe ws. salc ty coordi-· not li ve ncar chi cke n farm s and all
anytime.
n:ttilf for tile CDC's National Center were from different corners of the
Arrangements may be
i·&lt;ir lnlccli,ous Di seases. "That 's why densely popul ated city.
mode lo Inspect any of the
above named vehicles prior
Yl•u remove all your street clothes
Another clue " that the viruses
lo sale by calling 949-2210.
~nd put on scruhs. You go into the from each sick person look the
(1) 21, 23, 28, 30;
i_ab and then you take a shower when same. which suggests that most vic(2) 4, 6, 11 , t3 Btc

Public Notice
Public Notice
the purchase and delivery
PUBLIC NOTICE
lor use by the Scipio
REQUEST FOR COST
Volunteer Fire Department
PROPOSALS
of the following equipment: Jan. 21, 1998
.~ three (3) Akron 2 1/2"
Cost Proposals will be
Bt:eak Apart Turbojet received by the Meigs
Nozzles w/Piston Grip
County Commissioners at
Four (4) Akron 1 1/2 their
office
at
the
N-'es with Pistol Grip
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio .
two (2) Scott Air Packs 50 45769 until 1:00 p.m.
NFPA 30 Minute SCBA with
Monday, Feb. 16, 1998 lor
Aluminum Cylinders (or the purchase and delivery
Equivalent)
Provide lor use by the Scipio
description of all attach- Volunteer Fire Department
mente plus any options ollhe following equipment.
available with coats.
Fltteen (15) UHF (Minimum
Tin (10) Finlay BOOW lost 8 Channel) 4 Watt Handheld
(3 "x50') 3 Inch by 50 teet
Portable Radios to Include
Fire Hoae wllh 2 1/2' lor each radio: antenna,
Aluminum Couplings (or battery, carry holder with 3"
Equivalent)
spring bolt clip, doak chargCoat proposals may be . er, programming, and minimel~ or delivered to the
mum one year warranty.
Meigs County Commls- Coot propoaal ahould also
sloQers,
Courthouse, Include any other options
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. or extended warranties
Questions In regard to this available and costs.
request may be addressed
Cost proposals may be
to Jean Trussell, Meigs mailed or delivered to the
Grants Administrator at - Meigs County Commlo740·992-7908.
stoners,
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Janel Howard, President
Meigs County
Questions In regard to this
Commlasloners
request may be addressed
(1) 23:'29
to Jean Truuell, Meigs
(2)_;_5_
. 3TC
Administrator at
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . Grants
740-992-7908.
Janet Howard, Prnldent
Meigs County

30 Announcements

50% off
Prices Good Until Thesday, February lOth

J

22, 29

(2) 5 3TC

Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00
saturday 9:30·1 :30

--

CORNER SECOND AND GRAPE, &lt;IAWPOUS 44121M2

Mon. thnu Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 9:00p.m.
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992-2955
E. Main
Pomeroy, Oh.

11 MIU STREET, IIIIDOLEPORT
EXPERT JEWELRY REPAIR SEFMCE

..

••••••••••••••

I .

Cell Phone

591·1897

POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest lnv~ed

you see
""-•"- Ann
toa!ay, wish Iter
a Happy 7th
Birthday.
We love you,
Mom, Dad, Jaah,
'

'

RUTLAND
AMERICAN
lEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Factory Choke Only

Chapter 7

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614-592-5025
Athens, Ohio

•Garages

•Complete
. Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

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ESTIMATEES

985·4473
7/22/tln

COMPLETE TREE CARE

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Top • Trim • Cable • Removal ·Crane· Hauling
• Stump Grinding •

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290 N. 2nd Ave.,
MlddiQport, OH

ACE TREE SERVICE
179 Rand St.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Rick Johnson

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COHSTROCTIOH
Over 20 years experience.

Free Est. • Fully Insured
1-614-992-9057
Middleport, Oh.

61~84]-5426,,,.. ,mo. ,.
Remodeling

Ro L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

M&amp;J

..

VA LENTIN E TEA HERBALLY
SPICED Tea lor two! Tea tor you! '
Live ly presen tatiOn on Love
Herbs &amp; ·Potions Teas &amp; a tasty
lunch provided ! Jo1n us lor thts
special Herbal Affair. Feb 14th. 1

to 4pm, contact Maureen at 740742-7243.

40

Good Hom e, Very Lova ble, 740-

256-9121.
1 0 Wk . old mate puppy, very
playfuL to good home only 304- ·

675-6752.
4 -Adorable Puppie s To A Good
Home . Terr ier MiKed . Wilt Be
Very Small Dogs, 740 - 446 ~ 7538,

Between 5 &amp; 7 P.M. Only.

4 Cute. cuddly. lat. Swk old. dark

Female· Beagte Spayed, Good
Rahbtt Hunter, 740·245-5130

Free puppies to anyone wtUtng to
giVe them a gOOd Mme. can 740·
992·6451 between 8 ooa m5:00pm Monday lhru Friday
Male puppy, 10 weeks old. 740·

992-0040.
Pupptes 2 mates , 3 females , free
to good home. 304·895·3659
Ta n &amp; While. Female Puppy To
Good Home. 740-446-8402.

60

s i20/97/1 mo. od.

Found: gray long -hatred to:l!len . SA
1241 Hysell Run v1C1mty. 740·9925112
lost· 5 yr old, while , long htllled,
Jack Russell te me r, McCumber
Hilt Ad behtnd Ru lland toward
Dex ter. $1 00 reward , no ques ·
uons asked, Ratpl"l Spencer . 740·

742 -2904

70

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free Estimates

740·742·3411
HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rat11s

Limestone Hauling
House &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Estimates

(614) 992-3838
12/18/tfn

Be Paid In Advance .
PEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
is to run. Sunday

edition · 2:00 p .m.
Friday. Monday edition
• 10:00 a.m. Saturd ay.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

CARPENTER SEVICE

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

SAYRE
TRUCKING

A1J. Yard Sates Must

YOUNG'S
•Room Addition s
·New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
(Li me StoneLow Rates)
J

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·9~2-3470

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

10/25196Jttn

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

Lost and Found

Found· Boxer m111: on Union Avenue. call 740 992-6591 .

Agricultural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

Giveaway

1 Aottwteler Boarder Collie Mtxed
Puppy, App ro~ 4 Months Old. To

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

"Build Your Dream"

Joe N. Sayre
614-742·2138

Cathy Criner

9 Adorable pu ppies born Jan
3rd , Mother Reg Lab Retrieve r.
Call Marsha 304-576·2014.

Ouallly Work Guaranteed

Free Estimates

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I. Cathy Cr iner Will Not Be Re sponsibl e For Any Other Debts

D!strlbutor

Speclollzlng In:
New Roofs, Roof Repairs,
Gutters, Interior &amp; ·
Exterior Painting ,
Drywall Repair.
Loweat rates during the
winter months of
Jan.-Feb.-Mar.

Vinyl Siding o Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Custom Homes

30 Announcements

gray kittens, will deliver to Point
Pleasant. 304·895-3590.

McFEE ROOFING
&amp; PAINTING

o

Call

Start datmg tonight! Have run,
play OhiO's dattng game. 1-800ROMANCE. extension '7484.

Pat Arnold

VItamins, Herbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss
Products

Free Estimates

Phone : (6t4) 446-4759
(740) 441-1191

20YRS. E~P-

16191645-8434

98.

Chapter 13

Full~ Insured

S2.99/Mm &amp; 18+ Serv-U

Other Th an My Own As 0 1 1/30/

1

By T~RA MEYER .
Assoctated Press Wrtter
· . ATLANTA (AP) Hands
scrubbed. faces covered, a team ol
scientists in a sealed lab have their
.eyes tramcd on the Hong Kong
"l&gt;irJ Ou " virus.
It has mfcctcd 18, killing six, hut
!&gt;as yet In give up its secrets. Did II
pass from person to person·' And
why did the viru s jump from poultry
to people'
Scientists who went IO Hong
Kong to track the new H5N I virus
arc back at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention this wee k 10
cont inue the painstaking task of
sorting through hlood samp~cs and
v1 rus spcc nncns.
Room s where dangerous nckcttsia ba&lt;.:tcritl were studied at the
GDC have hccn converted to llu
lahs. where a half-dozen scient ists
wear face masks and hahy bl.uc
.gnw ns to work. with the virus
• • After a few houts . the men wil l
&lt;bed their gow ns. remove th eir ha t-

Todayl
1·900-263-5900 Ex1 7021

614-992-3141

POMEROY, OH.
3/27/l'FN

(1)

•FREE PARKING
•FREE GIFT
WRAPPING

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE

Personals

SPORTS
EnthusiasasiS
Have Fun W1!h Our
Sports!Entertalnment Line

Call Anytime
Home

Scientists -in sealed lab seek
614-992-5479
answers to Hong Kong flu
BANKRUPTCY

Thnes Watches
Complete Stock 30% off
Extra Special Fridtly only

TWO LOCATIONS:

...

113 W. 2ND ST.

005

Driveways,
Parking Lots, etc.

360° Communications

"

ANNOUNCEMENTS

I

CELLULAR PHONES REMOVAL

Commll&amp;lonera

McCulloug~h.~R~
. Ph~-~=~
Ronald Hanning. A. Ph.

614-742-3090
614-742-3324
614-742-3076'

SNOW

77¢

Kenneth

Call Us For A Free Estimate

Rt. 124, Minersville, OH
F40) 992·3980 1!12/98 1 mo pe.

Public Notice
of a heating/cooling syatolil
,
PUBLIC NOTICE
on bOth floors of the build•
HISTORICAL
·CHESTER COURTHOUSE Ing,
The public Is encouraged
AEHABILrrATION
Tho
lllalga
County to provide comments as to
Commlaalonera Intend to any poaiUve or negative
provide
Community Impact the planned rehabililllvtlopmont Block Grant tation project will have on
t»ods through the Meigs the historic nature of the
Cllunty FY, '97 Formula building by sending written
Allocation Program lor the commenta to the Meigs
rehobllltatlon of the Historic County Grants Office,
IOIIeater Courthouse In 39350 Union Avenue, Sullo
Chester, Meigs County, B-1 , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ohio. The Hlotorlc Cheater or by contacting Jean
Grants
Courthouat Ia the oldest Trussell,
axtatlng courthouse In the Admlnlalrator, at 740·992s(ate of Ohio and Is oft the 7908.
Regletar of Historic Places. Joan Trussell,
The purpoae of this notice Grants Administrator,
Is-to garner public Input as Meigs County
to any adverso affects or (2) 5 , 11 , 17 3TC
Impact tho plllnned rehabiliPublic Notice
tation will have on the his·
toile nature of the building.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The planned rehabilitation
REQUEST FOR COST
prpject will entail the placePROPOSALS
ment of new oak flooring on Jan. 21 , 1998
thellrat floor of the building Coat Proposals will be
tmd the rehabllltaUon of tha received by the Milga
twpport ayattm and the County Commlaslonars at
ln$tallatlon of pine flooring their
office
at tho
on the oecond atory of the ·Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
bUilding. The . protect will 45769 until I :00 p.m.,
atao Include the Installation Monctay - Feb. 16, 1998 lor
'

Reg. $1.09

Only

33151 Happy Hollow Road
Middleport, Ohio 45769
Additions, Roofing,
Siding,
Pole Barns,
Decks, Painting

Tues. 10-8, Wed. -Sat. 10·2

turning them over In the library in
1YH7.
Moses said Milne had given the
toys to Duuon permanently as a gift.
"There tsn't any'4ucstion ah)tl\l
the legal ownership of Winnie ulid
his friends ." Moses s;ud.
The hugely s~ccessful hooks center &lt;m the ad ve ntures uf Pooh. ihc
honey- lovin g hear olliule hrain. and
his fricnd s· thc gloomy donkey Ecyore. the excitable Piglet. houncy Tiggc r and maternal Kanga (with her
hahy. Roo). Milne began the se ries
in 1926 for his son . Christopher
Robin . who figures prominently _ill
the stories.
The stuffed ;minwls. which Mihic
nought for his son at Harrods. were
the hasis for the bonks' original line
drawings. by Ernest Howard Shcpard.
"They arc pan of our h'critagc
and they want to come home ," :Mrs.
Dunwoody said . "A nd 11 is ahoul
time we got them hack. Thi s is
where they belong. They plainly
want to come home ...

Chocolates Heart
13/4 oz

Home Improvements

AND MORE

..

THURSD!\Y
POMEROY · - AA . 7 p.m.
Thursday . Sacred Heart Cathohc
Church. Mulberry Aw Pomeroy.
POM EROY PERS-PERI.
noon luncheon, Seni ...· Cittzcns Center. Thursday. Rcscrnuon' arc to he
made hy 9 a.m . TI1Ursday at 9922 161.

KINGS'

Come Smell Ihe Sweet Scent of Country Candles

CHESTER - Chester Garden
Club. meet at Chester United
· Methodist Church. Take copper
craft. 7·30 Wednesday.

,,

(No Sunday Calls)

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP

Calif. 90045

Paperback

Nf!W SeU!ction

614-992-7643

.Estlnoat•s

Public Notice

Amity Billfolds
Mens &amp;: Womens

(6141 367·0266
1·800·950·3359

20 .Yr s. Exp . • Ins . Owner: Ronnie .Jones

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Century Blvd .. Suite 700. Los Angeles,

Jailed Nobel Prize winner sued for alleged child sexual abuse

FREDERICK, Md (AP) - A
Nnhel-Prize winning &gt;eientisl who
is in jail for child sexual abuse has
been sued for $2.2 million by a victim .
The suit against Daniel Carleton
Gajdusck, 74, was fi led in Frederick
County Circuit Court by John Clayton Harongsc mal . 25. of Frederick.
Harongsemai was one of the two
boys in Oajdusck 's care that he
admiucd sex ually ahusing at his
home in Middletown while they
, were under the age of I X. Harongscmal came at age 16 from Micronesia
to live with Gajdusck.
Gajdusck. pronounced OUY-dllshek. hrought &lt;home 56 children.
mostly hoys. from research trips 111
the Pacilic islands beg inning in the
1960,. He 'aiJ he hrought them 10
he educated .
Glljdusek was convicted in April

GALLIPOLIS , OHIO 45631
."{rltn

."{o9

Society Scrapbook ~~~~Jz: the ~~~~:""T~~.~rit:. ~~~,! .~~.~i~.,:,~~~~ ?.~~.~
Herbalists to host Valentine
tea

New Homes ·Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

All Ya rd Sa le s Must Be Paid In

Advance. Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sund ay &amp; Mond ay edition1:00pm Frida~.
Basement sale · February 6 · 7.
307 Spnng Avenue. Pomeroy
9am -3pm Nothmg ove r $1 00,
much mtsc $1 00/ bag. you hll ,

some cotlect10ies

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Auc t •o n Fr tOay &amp; , Satu1day
7.00pm Mt Alto AucltOn AI 2 &amp;
· cross roads· Frt· Groce r1es &amp;
us ed co n stgnment Sat· Ron

Pnce. all new. Ed Fraz.er 11930.
Rick Pearson AI.Jclion Company,
lull hme au cliOneer. comple te
· auct1on
servi ce
l•cansed
•66,0h1o &amp; West V1rg1nta . 304·

773-5785 Of 304-773-544 7.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sll·
ver And Gold Cotns , Prootsets,
D1amonds , Ant1que Jewelry, Gol d
Ames . Pre-1930 u .s . Currency,
StP.rltng. Etc Acqu iS1110ns Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coi n S~op , 151 Secon d
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·446·2842.

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given .
that on Saturday, February
7, 1998, at 10:00 a.m., a public salt will be held at 40418
Laurel CHI! Road, Pomeroy,'
Ohio 45789, to sell lor cash
the following collateral:
1988 'Chevrolet Celebrity
1(l1AW11 R4J8188624

Public Notice
Tho Farmers Bank and
Savi ngs
· Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves

the right to bld·at this sale,
and to withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company
reservee the right to reject
any or all bids submitted.

Public Notice
Further, the above collateral will be sold In the·condillon II Is In,. with no
express or Implied warranties given.
For further Information,
contact Tim at 9115-4289.
(2) 3, 4, 5 3tC

Antiques. top pr1ces paid . RIVerine Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moo re o wner , 740· 992·

2526.
Wanted To Buy: AKC Registered
Chinese Pug Ta n Or Black , 740:
446-1511 .
'
Wanted To Buy : Used Mobile
Homes. 7~0- 446·0 175, 304·6755965.

�,,
•

Thurllfay, February 5, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

::··. ALLEY OOP

.....,• '

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.....
'•

320
Ant~oes· no Item too large or too

Dependable Lady Will Do House·

small Also es tates appra tsals
rel lnlshtng custom orders 74 0~

cleaning 304-675-8736

992-6576
Cle an lat e Model Gars Or
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer
Sm tth Burck Pont rac 1900 East
ern Avenue Galhpolts
J &amp; 0 Aut o Pa r ts Buyrng
wrecked or salva ged vehtcles

304 773-5033
TIMBER We pay cash for tracts
ol trmber II roterested In se lling
your ttmoer please let our pro
fess ro nal forestry staff man age
your tr mber lor rnco me wlldhfe
an d a pla ce to enjoy the out
doo rs Sup eri or Hardwoods of
Ohio l umber Co PO Box 606
Wellsto n Ohro 45692 (740)384

5677

Furnrture repair refinish and res
torauon, also custom orders Ohio
Valley Reltmshlng Shop larry

PhUI\ps 740992 6576
Georges Portable Sawmil l don t
haul your togs to the mtll just call

304-675- 1957
Prolassronal Tree Service Stump
~emo v al Free Es!lmatesl In
surance Bidwell Ohio 614 388

9648 614·367 7010
Tu10rrng Avartable All math mid
die schoo l thru co llege plus
Cheml sl ry &amp; other Sc1encas In
dl\llduallgroup rate s available
17yrs expenence 304 675 6504

WE WANT TO WORKI Do You

We Buy Autos In Any Condnton

Call 740 388 9062 Or 740 446
PART
Wrll Work For $3 00 An Hou r

AskForT1m 74().4411473

Nigh!

I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110
I

All Area s

I

Will Care For Elderly Or Handi
capped Person 's In My Home
Reference&amp; 740 441 1536
Writ do cu stom sawing S 01 to
S 12 a br 11 and plamng $10hr

Help Wanted

AVON

Need An Extra Pair Of Hands ?
We Have Them Male Or Female
Will Work Inside &amp; Out Clean
Haul Do Odd Jobs Aun Errands
Do Laundry Call us To Do Your
Drrty Wor!( 74Q..44t 1290 Day Or

Sh1tley

Spears 304-675 1429
A.dvert1 sl ng Assistant needed lor
Publtshmg Dept Digital lmagrng
Deskt op PuOIIshmg Macintosh
or Windows experrence preferred
Send re sume to Box CW 3 c/o
Porn r Plea sant Register 200
Marn St pt Pleasant WV 25550
Carleton Schoot/Mergs Industries
seeks a substitute Health Servtc
es Coordtnator (RN or LPN) to
work with students and adults wtth
developmental dl!i abrltttes Mu!i t
be a registered nurse or ltcensed
practical nur;~ currently lrcensed
m the State of Ohto Send resume

10
Steve Beha Executrve Director
Carleton Schooi/Mergs lndustnes

• PO Box 307

lor new lumber Also have lumber
for sale and will take orde rs
Slabs lor sate $5
plck · UP
truck toad West Columbia olf At
62 on Ltevtng Ad 3 2 mrles

oo

Wtll haul JUnk or trash awav $351

pk:kl.llload 304 675-5035
Wlll take care of elderly person
tn theu home ha ve 1Oyrs ex
perlence Wit! do housekeeping
anytrme Call 304 675 1426
leave message ~ no answer

Willing 10 clean homes Call 304
675 1173 Ask lol Linda Love

FINANCIAL

210

CNA or HMK needed to provtda
m home services lor the elde rl-y /
dtsablad In Ma so n County
$6 OOhl Call I 886·453-4992
Computer Useres Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K ·SSOK Nr 1 800-

Business
Opportunity

348 7186 X1173
Dependable And Flextble Certt
fled Nurse A1d Needed For In
Home Care Call Adnanne Or An

gle 1 800 481 6334
Ortvers Needed Local Company
OTR Flatbed Operators For Mtd
west &amp; Southern U S Age 23
Vear Mmimum Experienced Mrn
lmum 01 2 Years Good Equ ip
ment, Good Pay. Plenty Of Work
Home 98% Weekends Insurance
Avarlable 740 446-1922

large

2592 Sq F1

3 Bedrooms. 2

2 Bedroom apartment for rent In
Pt Pleasant 304· 675·2174 or

2baths, owner financing avail

able

~736-7285

614-448·2200

New 1998 14ll70 three bedroom
lndudes 6 months FREE lot rent
Include&amp; skirting deluxe steps

Baths F1mshed Basment, 2 1/2
Car Garage 1 Acre MOL Galli·

and selup Only $187 08 per

polls Reduced $106,000, 740-

month with $107!5 down Cal! 1·

2bdrm apts , total electric ap
pllances furnished laundry room
facilities, clOse to school In lawn
AppUcattons available at VIllage
Green Apt&amp; 149 or call 740 992·

S~AUGHT£R

0008

691-6777

(740)2~9595

Grubbs Plano· tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

3 Bedroom Ranch On 1 5 Acre
lot Full Ba&amp;ement, Attached Ga·
rage &amp; Carport Mora AC &amp;

50 x70 Bldg Wllh Loll, 740·367·
7465
3 or 4 bedroom b1 le\'el 2 baths ,

1 car garage 90 by 175 \01 304·
862 2669

New aouble wide repo $9991 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
down Free dallvery and setup
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
_304
__· ~7~~7~28_:5___________ : ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
1rom $260 10 $334 Walk lo shop
New Aepos Never Lived In, Only
&amp; movies Ce11 740·446 2568
2 Left Free Delivery &amp; Set-up
Equal Housing Opportunity
prova1 1-800-e.B 5678

Grac10us Hvlng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
FUverslde Apartments In Middle

With Electric Forced Air Heat
And 2 Tory Central AJC Unlt One

port From $236-$304 Call 740
992-5064 Equal Housing Oppor
tunitles

1987 12 x69 0111ce Trailer Wllh

River Frontage Galllpohs Brrck
Ranch
Wrap Around Deck,
Cathedral LA, 3 BA, 2 Baths low·
er level 2 Aec Rooms Wet Bar
F P 1 Bath , 2 Car Garage Ap

Electric Forced Air Heat And
Central AJC Untt, Please Call 740

256·6327 From 6 00 A M To 4 30
PM Monday Thru Friday

pomtmon1, 740-797·4468

Quiet Country Setting wllh beau-

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Financing available 304 755·
5566

'NOW AVA1LAB~E'

Single Parent Program Special
financing on 2, 3 &amp; 4 bedroom
homes Paymenta •• low ea

A beautiful repossessed mobile

home on large 1o11n Gallipolis
1995 Norris 1•4x80 2br, 2 bath ,
exc cond Must Seat Bank must
see Immediately price neg 3
months free lot rent Call
Mtchelle or Krlstl at 1·600·787·

In New Haven 1br furnished apt,
Includes washer &amp; dr;er deposit

&amp;references 304-882 2566
Middleport , North 4th A\'e 2br
furnished apt deposit &amp; referenc

tiful mobile home. forced to se ll

es 304 882 2566

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bechoom Townhouse

Aparlments $295/Mo 740-446
0006

$180 Call now 304-755 5885

One bedroom apartment In Mid

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM

d"por1, all uti1111es paid $270 per

Special llnanclng avarlable 304 ·

month $100 deposit, 740·992
7806

736-7285

6663

One bedroom apartment In Mid

12x:65 Tra1ler 3br 1 bath $5 500

d"por1 740-992-2178 .

Call304 675-4678

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

MUST SELL, 14K80 3 Bedrooms,

120 lee! lOng, 80 feet long on olh

2 B11ths Owner F.nancing Avail·

able 304 736-7285

Up stairs 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Fur
n1shed, Clean, No Pets. Reference
&amp; Oepostt Requ1red 740 446

tr side , 75 feet wide , level lot In

Mlddlepor1 $23 000 OBO 740- 1519
992·2280
I Upstairs and Downstairs apart·

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths •• $17,900,

740446

~53

1997 Kentuckian 14x70 3br. 2
full bath $19 900 Oehvery &amp; set·

372 3400
1998 3br, 2 baths, lots of extras
set on lol Call tor more Info 304

755 7191
1998 Conlessed 28x70 3br 2 lu11

800 242-8292

1998 Gries 14K70 all electric de·
ltvery &amp; set up, 3br 2 bath vinyl
&amp; sklr!mg Installed $19,900

$57 000 304-372·3400

304 372 3400

450

34 acres Route t60 near Galllpo·
lis hall cleared and wooded
pond road frontage water and
electric accessible $22 000 Call

740742·2045 alter 5 30 p m
TAX REFUND
·auy LAND·

up 304-372 3400
1998 14x:80 Kentuckian all elec·
trrc 3br 2 bath delrvery &amp; set ·
up, ale mstalled $26,900 304

Invest vour Refund In
Something That lasts Forever
•LAND"
All OVer Southern OhiO

we

Up $1 290 Down
Also Have
Land In Gallia Jackson Scioto
Pike Ross Athens, Meigs Coun
ties
,
Land Contrads 10% Down

Real Estate
Wanted

2 Chairs rose &amp; blue very
Brass bed 304-675 7643

--~

1\polls 740446-4514

RENTALS

Moving To Galllpolls In Need 01
Babysitter In My Home Or Close
To Butav111e Road Call Alter 5

REAL ESTATE

PM Wee kdays 740 384 4288
740-446-1817
OAK HI~~ COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENTER
JOB POSTING

310

Homes for Sale

1985 Ranch 3 Bed10oms 1 Balh
La rge L1vtngroom large Kitchen
1 Acre Gai11po1t s Clty Schools,

DIRECTOR OF HOME HEA~TH

$67 000 740 446-4323

We Are Seektng A Nurstng Man
ager Prole ssto nal To Asst.J me

Home For Sale By Owner Beautt
lui Lot A1ver V1ew St At 7 Soutl'1
3 Bedrooms Garage. Outburld1ng ,
Welt Keptad W11l Trade Help

Leader&amp;hlp In Ou r Home Health
Oepa ~ tment Qu altltcall ons In
elude An Ohm Regrstered Nurse
License And Two (2) Years Ex
parlance In Home Health Nursing
Home Care Management Experl·
ance And BSN Prele rred WorkIng Knowleelge 01 Medteare And
JCAHO Requirement s Compell·
tt ve Salary And Benel its Send
Resume To Oa k Hrll Community
Medical Center Attentro n Brenda
McKenz ie 350 Charlone Avenue

Oak H1n OH 45656

Pleasant Valley Hospttal I&amp; cur·
rently sed lng a lull· time/part
time/per diem Medical Records
Coder Must be able to code us

lng 1CD 9 CM and CPT4 codmg
system Must have completed
Medical Te rminology Anatomy

ond PhysiOlogy College courses

House and properly approx 4a
cres Ideal starter home Beech

51 Pomeroy OH 304 862 2!!77
K1tchen, dmlng room 2 bedroom .
bath ltvmg room lront &amp; back lull·
length porches , gas ltJrnace ctty
water outbulldmg garage 1/2
mrle Ea st of Aactne 740 94 9·

2118
Beau-

trlut Two Story Coklnlal -414 Th~rd
Avenue , Gallrpolls 3 Bedrooms. 2

1/2 Balhs LA &amp; FA Formal D1n1ng
Room Oak Trim Fireplace Much
Homa El1gtble For Ta~~:

Abil1en1ent $179 500 304-273POMEROY·

~AND

CONTRACT

ART RRA and CCS required
Spacious 3 br house with 2 car
Send resume to Pe rsonnel at garage, new roof, new heating
Pleasant Valley Hospital 250!&gt;0 I unit, corner lot only $22,000 Dale

Ve11oy Dr , PI P1oasan1 WV
25550AAIEOE
W.ttNTED Class A COL truc:k
drivers ' Resume &amp; relereflCB&amp; ra·
questtd w/appUcatlon Apply at
Valley Brook Concrete, Robarts·
burg plant or phone lor appotnt

Technician W11~ Cllenttle, 74025&amp;-63311. 740-441 ·1880
,. Do
180 Wanted ,.0
Car11flad day care, 1hree openlnga

3509

call

Melissa at 740 992· 1

Cuotom mode llcmoo whenl
Ulecuatomsruta the
pric:e &amp; we own the blnk.

Only At
OakWOOd Homes
o!N~ro

WV

304-755-SIIeS
Dis count Mobtl&amp; Home Pans &amp;
Accessories Water Heaters Vt·
nyt Sk lrt1ng K11s $299 95 An
chors Wood &amp; Fiberglass Steps,
Root Coatings Doors Windows
Plumb1ng &amp; Electncal Supplies,
Block ing Wood &amp; Wedges And
More t Ca ll Bennett s Mobile

DREAM HOME SERIES
ENTERTAINER
3bodrooms,
2Da1hs, s1an1ng a1 $219/mo
SUNRISE Loadod wl\h GE a~
f&gt;lances, starong at S299/mo
FAMILY 4bearooms 2 large
balhs Slorllng $359/mo Llmlled
lime oller only at Oakwood, Bilr·

boursvl10!, WV 304-736-3o409

3br ttome , 1 acre lot, located In
Gallipolis Ferry across from 84
Lumber Price reduced. ni ce
3()4-67~10 arter 5pm

Bank Repo'a Call 1 800 522

2730

~

1709

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

Movtng Sate used Furniture
Store 130 Bulavllle Pike Galllpo

992·3090

11s Oh1o 50% 011 Gl11 Shop And

Newly decorated 30r wllult base ·
ment references &amp; depos1t no

Mosr Furniture Mon Tues. Wed

10-4 Only

pelS 304 675-5162

520

Pomeroy HUD approved , $300
or 740·
992 7511

Remlnglon High Power Artie Mod
e1 BDL 700 Calibe r 243 $450
740-446 4855

Ato Grande Area 3 Bedroom .

Balh &amp; 1/2 $450/Mo DepoSit Required WID Hook·Up 1 888 840

0521

530

Small clean quiet carpeted no
pets $275/mo $250 depostt

Mobile Homes
for Rent

6 00 p m 740 ·992 2526 Ruos
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous

14x16 2 Bedrooms AC W&amp;D

Sm Porch $300 740286-1044

Merchandise
1 Tinted Insulated Sliding Wind·

!rash lncloded 740992 2167
2 Bedroom Mobtle Home You
Pay Uliltltes &amp; Deposrt In Porter

Area 614 388 9162

______ ,

side of Pomeroy, 740-992·5039
Trailer For Rent 2 Bedrooms ,

614-448-411 0
Two 2 badroom trailers on New

Lima Rd , call 740-742-2803 affer

Large selection of used homea 2

440

SINO~E PARENT PROGRAM
Groo1 Neighborhood, 5
South Of GalflpoliS, 3 Bedrooma, 1 Special Financing Available, 304112 Balhs F~repl a c e, Oak Cabl· 7'36-7:195
nets Carpor t 1 Acre M/ l
New Double Wldo Repo $999 00
$79 500, Addlllona1 Land Ava11 1 DOivD Free Deliver, And Sei-Upl
abls 74().446-0035
304-7~ 7285

1and2

I

gy 372 State Route 160 Gallipo·

lis
Waterltne Spec1a 1 314 200 PSI

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson, OhiO 1 800 537 9528

COs &amp; tapes not Included

,fur

630

Base Excellent Condition Must

256-6762

3 Year Old Black Standard Bread
Tall &amp; Very Gen11e 740-

1988 Ford Ranger XLT Extended
Cab 6 Cylinder, PS, PB, PW, Air,
AM/FM Cassone $3,300, Excel-

·I Very

256-6367

lent ConditiOn No Rust 614·446·

640

1619

&amp; Grain

BAF4NED Round batls mixed
hay ~r wet 304 882 20n
delivery avatlable

Round hay bales. 1200 tbs $14,
delr\'ery possible SA 143 lour
m11es north ot Harrisonville 740 ·
Square Bales $2 00 Each 1 M1le

Excellent Condition v a Auto
82 000 Mrles Cook Motors, 740

N On R1 2 304 675·3960, Leave

4~103

Message

73Q

TRANSPORTATION

1969 Buick GS $3,000 740 6827512

loaded clean looks and runs

682-7512

$6,500 304 675- 1916

1983 Ford LTD 4-door, 6 cylinder
automatiC, PS. PB air new ltres.
good clean condrtton $1500, 740·

11 ·6

FISh Tank &amp; Pel Shop

Dalma11on Full Blooded Puppies
Wormed &amp; Shots $50 Each 740
368 8922
German Shepherds- Pure While

AKC 3 Pups Loll $330 2 Lelled
740286-8753 740286-6851
Golden Relr\evar Pups, AKC
Regrstered, 6 Weeks 1st Shots,

And Wormed, $225, 740·446·
6651, 7~2899

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

ECONOMY
HeaUrg And Coollrg

0 Farm
rg Ft

Equipment

Hayblne With Extra Cutting

Bar $1.200, Rond Hay Baler Infernational 2-400 Sx:!i Balea Good

Conditlon, $3,000, 740-3711-2366

Fora Model 1715 4wd tractor.
230hrs w/6 extra attachments

304-675-5724

760

skms, &amp; Clulches 740 245-5677

1988 Ford Fresta $300, front end

New gas tanks 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radiators D &amp; R Auto

Access

damage 304-675-4684

31 Woman
37 Roman 1,002
38 Punctllll

40 Conductor
Prevln
41 Singer

Hendrix

42 Preoontly
43 Non·AKC dog
45 Mi..,i•a
county
46 Willow
47 Recover
49 GIMk

-

50 Pootlc time

52AIIobbley
twin
53 Author

Anala-

HDLV

u

UE L

'XVHDZ

IELIIILTH

GUZHL

WP

H J XL.

IEWBELZZJWT . ·

OUEOEU
ZHELJZUTA.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The courage of 1ho poe! IS !o keep a1ar tho door !hal
leads Into madness ' - Chnstopher Mo~ey

WOlD
'~~::;~' S©\\~lA-L&amp;£trs·
UMI
141te4
ClAY I 'OLIAN __;;___ _ __
0 scrambled
letters of the
be·
~r

Rearrange
four
low to form four

I

words

srmple words

ZALEB

rI

I

--rK:...:;E,.:Wo:....;:L'-H:.:,...._,, :,'

1 16 ..

5
1 ---J.L..-..1•.-J..
L..:...J.-L.

~II

When I reJect go•ng to work,
my husband lectures me that
professionals can do the1r best

_,.;:.I_;R;.. .;. F...P:_:E:,...:;X..,...-1 ~~~~~ when they don t • • • •

I I

1 18
_ ....J.1
L-.1.-..J.L-..J.._.J__ ..J.

C)

••

Complete Ike ckuckle quoled

by Ml1ng m rhe mtutng words
you de'4elop from step No 3 below

e PRINT NUMBERED

LETTERS 1N SQUARES

_8__;~.::.~;.;~.;.;R;;;~:..M-BL_e_F_o...~RIL......J.I_._I_,~l_.
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Mikado • ~eat- Graft- Immune - TAKE IT

Afnend told me that h1s boss clatms he always keeps
h1s word Laughmg he added, "but that's because no
one else w1ll TAKE IT'

FEBRUARY 51

o. . er to,ooo Transmls·

Ripley, WV 304 372-3933 or 1
800-273-9329

1988 01ds 4 door 1n Good CondrtiOn $1 60000 740-367-0544

ASTRO·GRAPH

SERVICES

l:-:-:--------81 0

1989 Chevy Celebrity 4 cylinder
au!Omallc, runs good, lOoks good ,

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

$1200
with arcall
without
parts car t~~;~:~~~~:~;;;~ll~f:etlme
guarantee
price firm
740-949-2252
lurnlshea
Esevenlngs
II
1975 Call (7 40) 446 '
1969 Dodge Omnl New Paln1 Job, 0870 Or 1-800-267 0576 Rogers
EKct\lent Condition 5 Speed Wa\erproollng
$2,200 OBO, 740-446-7252 Aller

Friday. Feb 6, i998
Improvements m status, post!Ion
and n:puration are m the offing for,
you m the year ahead
0

1992 Chevy Caprice, Good
working Order, Needs Ll111o 1:-:-::-::---~---Work. Asls 740-441-9511
I Home Main- - - - - - - - - - ~~~:~:~~~
, vinyl aiding,

J:

windows, baths,

Garage Kept, Excellan1
rope&lt; and more For
740-387- 7871
ftlr!'~- E1SIInna1e call Chel, 740-992-

1992 Chrysler LeBaron Convert·
lble, V 6, Aulo, Air, SMOO, 740·
2S0·1W. 7402S0-1738

'Ht:·l!30
Dlllued

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

good. uoo, 1982 Dodge Aries
runs good $500 740 992 5528

1992 Delta 68 Loaded , $6,500,
740662-7512

luxuriant
23 Tekl oil
(Cit'QO)

Greall 740-446-3580

BUDGET PRICE TRANSM1S·
SIONS, Us$d /Rebu11l, All Types

lumina Euro, Fully

22:ro:

24 tau!lld
agony to
25 Producer
Jouph26 Go-..
hr+--+--1 1,27 Anclotlterl

AMI FM Ca ssette New Ti res
New Exhaust Body Good Runs

1987 Chrysler F1fth Avenue run

1991 GEO Strom G S I air, aulo
ps, pb, exc cond &amp;14-388-8258

~~~

1984 K5 Blazer Camper Special

1986 Monte Carlo 305, Needs
Work $500, 740-367-Q303

Old EngliSh Shesp Dog Pups, 2
Males 1 Female, 30ol-ii23-3719

....

10 Waterproof

94K Miles AC, AT PS PB, Tilt

cassette, $1299,740 949·2045

slon High Miles And Ne~ds
Some Work, $200, Or Best Offer,
740-245-9841 Aner7~M

By Phillip Alder
The oldest 1ssue of The Bndge
World that I own IS from Januan •
1948 lnterestmgly. the address tu'r
correspondence IS 39 West 01th
Street. New York, NY, as 1t was unttl
late last year The annual subscnpuon
was $3 50, compared to the present
$48 I beheve th1s means the magazme ts cheaper m real tenns today
This deul caught my eye Accordmg to the report from the 1947 Wmtcr Nationals m Atlant1c Clly, most
Souths were m lour hearts (no blddmg was g•ven) and " wh1 lc all the
others were noundcnng all over the
place and gomg down one or two
tncks, Hany sa1lcd home hkc il
b1rd.' The Harry m qucs11on was the
colorful Mr F1Shhe1n
All the other declarers discarded
thc1r d1amond losers on the second
and 1h1rd sp.tdcs Fmc, tl the h~arts
and clubs had hrokcn no worse than
4 -2 Bul w!lh the ac!ual 5- 1 frump
break. del cat proved mcv!lable
F1&gt;hbcm counted wmncrs. not
losers He rulled the second spade
played a club to dummy's queen
overtook the club Jack w11h Ius ace.
and thcatncally led the cluh km~
Even tf Wcs1 had followed su~
declarer planned to rull m the dummy Here though , West rulled and
dummy overrulled F!Shhem rulkd
dummy s spade Jack wllh hiS heart
SIX trumped another club m the dum
my. played,, d1amond to hiS ace .wd
ruffed h1s las t dub Thai gave hun
c1ght tncks (two spade ruffs. one diamond, two clubs and three club
ruffs). and he sull held the ace-queen
of trumps "for a •amy day ··

ITHURSDAY

oeo 740-367-o629

1986 Dodge 600 n1ce dapend

5 ~M

&amp; up cal1740· 992·4186 leave
message

cel lent Condition 26 000 Mrles,
Loaoed Rear Au Caplalns
Cha~rs Tinted Windows Rose·
wood Color Automattc, $19 000

Shape 98 534 Miles, $900, 740·
446-7020

1988 Volkswagen Jetta Diesel, 4
Door s· Three Speed Transmls·

Flllgarald
12 - and nlgh18
19 Aclreo•Weat

Bet11

1g96 Dodge Grande Caravan Ex

1984 Buick Century limited, AC.
PW 4 Cylmder, New Tires, Good

able car, PS. PB automatiC anv'tm

614 949-2126

Pass

1995 Toyola T-100 4x4, $13 500,
740-448 3040

949·2411

85 000 Aclual Miles 4 Speed
$700 (740)-446-9853

2•

There's no ·.way around it, N
Classified Ads

1989 GMC Safan Full Cu stom

3326

A Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng
Featurtng Hydr o Bath Don

Pass

gOOd! h1gh m1\es, $3600 740 247
4292.

1978 Chrysler Cordoba $400
1989 Chevy Cavalier $300 30-4 ·

1985 Olds Cutlass BrotJgham,
V8 Engine Good Interior and Ex
tenor S1 000 1984 Pontiac T100

Pass
Pass
Pass

••

......,

1969 Nova SS 398 , 375, Less • 1989 Bronco 4x4 V tJ automatiC,

Motor &amp; Trans • $3 ,000, (740 ·

6046

Eut

Pass
Pass

speed bed llner $3 950 7 40

949 3403

!¥)4-875-7946

Pre&amp;ent Syslem
From $38 oo /Can For 001ans
746-246-110011

1988 Ford Ranger XLT, 4X4 5

3960

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron

Current Ty Beanie babies, $9 00

$5,300 740 446--4207

1969 Mustang 6 Cylinder. Auto,
Excellent lnt 1 $5,000, 304·675·

Evans Enterprises Jackson OH

1-800-537-9626

1987 Ford Bronco II XLT 4K4
New Jasper Motor Rebuilt Auto
Transm1sston Exce ll ent Condl ·
lion! Serlo1.1s lnquhtes On ly

1993 Ford Explorer 4 Doors AC,

AKC registered Chmese Shar·Pel
pups lots ot wnnkles $250 &amp; up

~IZE.I

6154

Au1oma11c PW PO PL 4 WD
Luggage Rack 740 446 4999

AKC Reg German Shepha rd
12wks old male, blackllan.
shots &amp; wormed 304 576-2209

WE. loJm

19fH3 Chevv Astro Ca rgo van
good condrllon . $2795, may con ·
stder guns on trade 740 99 2·

7396

740.446~31

~II:.D,

1-\N..f

4172 740-256 1619

550

Sheo1S 373 Georges Creek Ad

WI~.EJ-.1 \-E.~ tl~T ""~

1-Jf\Y DO "1'00 W*IT TO
1\ KING!'JIZE.De£07

Runs Good Askrng
Steve Work 740 446·

1983 Chevette, $100, 740 992

8 AKC Reg Black Labs born 12/
25197 wormed $200ea 304·675·

THE BORN LOSER

&amp; ~-WDs

Deliver 740 386 8010

Pets for Sale

Tri~V~S' 2~)

1985 Dodge 4x4 SWB 318 4
Speed
$3 600

Autos for Sale

Jack Russell-Rat Terrier puppies,
shots &amp; wormad, tails docked,
ready to go Valentines S7~ea

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,

Vans

1990 Astro Van 71,000 m1les
garage kept exc·cond loaded
pd l, plm lrrors
TV VCR pw

560

.491

1989 GMC Sierra LWB Pick-Up

698-8254

710

GOOICitS

1997 Dodge 4x4 Otesel 1 Ton
Dually Compenely loaded Excel·
lent Condrtlon Must Sell! 740·
441-o996 After4 P:M

Ph 740-446-1104 740441 -0450

198 1 Monte Carlo dependable
power seats V 8, qu1dc 304 882·

Block bnck sewer prpes wind·
ows lintels etc Cla ude Wrnlers
R io Grande OH Call 7-40 245

B'~OIC~N

Warronly$9 700 614-446--2847

Wrza rd Rrdt ng Mower 18 HP
740 256 1424 Ask For l awrence

Building
Supplies

OATMtAt. ~AISIN 1.39

MtKed Hay Delano Jackson Farm

Van $3 950 740-446 4222

Wood For Sale $35 A Load , W1U

COO~IfS
GtiOCOL.Art C.~IP 1.49

1996 Ford Ranger XLT AM IFM
Cassene Automatic AC PS PB
Bedllner Cover Original Ford

Hay lor sale 304-675 2891

9 Pleywrlg~t

My earliest
issue

'IIWW frankandlfnest com

1994 S-1 0 P1ck Up LS, Black 5
Speed V-6 AM/FM Till CrUise
$8 995 740446 9664

West North

II
'"

21 Storage

11 Singer

(2 wda.)

1985 Chevy 314 ton pickup 350
742·2879, 740992·3394

'

covering

a Spenlah gold

Openmg lead· • A

automatic 76 000 miles, second
owner excellent condition, 740·

2 Horse Trailer With New Tires &amp;
Brakes $975 Call Aller 4 P loA
740 446-3S70

8 - end hawed
a poker 7 PrlnUng need

pot
38 Martinique
volelno
37 Lick of

South

4•

Se\11740-367-7117

12yr old AOHA Gelding $1 200
Ho&lt;se Shoeing 304·675 7409

1about

Vulnerable North-South
Dealer: South

1984 Chevy Pick-Up Long Wheel

Livestock

30 HouHbrolcen
• •1 Fruit~
13 French
.U TYDe of pick?
muaeum
45 NOt bright
14lYPt of atork 48 HlbltueteQ
15 Pan of 1
51 Inborn
lrouaer log
54 Fomalo JN!rent
16 Inferiorly
55 Uklaome
17 Dine
voyage~
f8 Mother ol M!lo. 56 Chant
~ Dance llep
57 Group of nine
21 Uncloud
(2 Wdl.j
DOWN
25 !ntroductlon
28 Perlllnlngto
1 Ballot
birth
movement
32 Slaba and
2 A Chaplin
Volvoa
3 Crevlng
33 Tropical vlno
4 - Got 1 Secret
lt Spa11
liter (liquid) 5 Malllga lllra.
35 Startlld

•AQ64
• A63
•AK852

1976 GMC aump 1ruck, no COl

675-3734

u~­

Apartments
for Rent

required good condition $3250
call740.742 3800 after 4pm

We1gN! Loss ~OSE UP TO 30
LBS 30 Days Dr Recommended
100'1&lt;. GUARANTEED RESU~TS
1 888 294 8079

en1 304 675 2063

q\1 740·992·6636 a11er 8 pm

$2,500 304 773-5616

T09 Dozer 10' Blade Isaac
Wench Good Under Carriage
Gas I01esel Engme Alter 5 740·

Processor $140 J&amp;B Technolo-

Counter 95• By 58' Wtth Slatn
le ss Steel Sink &amp; Faucets Plu s
24" Countertop, 740.256-6512

Brand New! Great Grill CDMdeo
storage unit Black and cherry
Never out ol box: $125 Holds up
to 940 discs, also holds tapes

Whals New1 740·446·2412 1·
800-594-1111

8

• 1

1975 Chevy short wheel base
4K4 , new paint &amp;Khaust tires
350 engine while In color

Channel Hand Held Scanner

2413 Jackson Ave Porn! Pleas·

675-1504

720 Trucks for Sale

Farm &amp; lawn Inc 668 Pinecrest
Drive Gallipolrs OH Come See

,

South

Aval-.ble 304·458·1069

VHS·C Camcorder $250, 200

ows 5 x5 L Shaped Kitchen

Ac ros compuler Windows 3 1
13in monitor Epson pnnler Ml
croso ft Wo rks several ott1er
games &amp; programs $275 304

3 Bedroom Traller, Mercerville

Three bedroom mobile home out-

740 446-1214 Affer 5 PM

Now Open Sundays 1 4 Mon Sat

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
$260· $300 sewer water and

Two bedroom trailer In Long Bot·
tom, no Inside pets, no depostl

9ti21

Antiques

Buy or sell Riverine Anllques
1124 E Mam St reet on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T w 10 00
am to600pm Sunday100to

304-773-9192

Valley Gem Woodburner Brick
lined Excellent Condttlon $150

5121
Sporting
Goods

per month 740·992·5986

Handyman Speclo1-Casn Only2&amp;3 Bedrooms $1,500 1 Up1
On~ 3 leh 304-755-5561
or 3 boclrooms Starling a1 ~5
Quick delivery Call 740 38S·

APP~IANCES

3 bedroom house stove , refug·
erator washer/dryer clean no tn ·
side pets depostt requtred 740·

Mobtla Home For Rent, 740 -446
1279

T)Yenty Seventh Year In The
Healing &amp; Cooling Buslnes 1 740

$37 00 Par 100 All Brass Com·
preSSIOn Ftrtlngs In StOCk

Magic Chef gas range. good con
ditton. 740..742·2997

Area 740·256-6574

Call us Today 1997 IS The

$21 95 Per 100 1• 200 PSI

PC $275 Can740886-6373

--~~~~.:._

er ·n You Don 1 Call Us We Bolh
lose!" Free Estimates! Add· On
Heat Pumps Only Sltghty H•gher

Chair &amp; Matching Sola Good
Condl1on $125, 740367-&lt;i279

410 Houses for Rent

2 Bed room trailer, references &amp;
depos1t reQu ired Leave mes ·
Double wide 10% down $196 /
mo Free dehvery &amp; setup t-.800· 1 sage 304-675-1076

691 6777

WARM UP: High E11\c\ency Nalu
ral And LP Gas Furnaces lrfa
time Warranty On Heat Exchang·

• Q 10 1
• 10 1 6 4

4 wheelers motor homes turn!
ture, electronics. computers etc

John Deere Day February 6.

sHaw

• K4

CARS FOR $1001 Truck&amp; , boa1&amp;

South ol leon, WV Financing

Hay &amp;

• K Q 10 9 3

• 93

Trac1o11 &amp; Equlpmonl

Hay

East

I A 6 52
"97532

Jackson Pike 740·446 0724
Bank ~lnanclng

304-675 5724

or used $285 740 886·6373

living Room Suite Never used 2

420

304·675-4808

Box Sprrng &amp; Matress New Nev

1 800-499-3499

Home Supp~ A11 74().446-9416

air lrte skirt, t6x80 3 or 4
E Taylor Really 740 992-5333, 1 Free
bedroom $1,350/down, $299/mo
740992 1064 740-446-1529
I cat\1-800-691-tim

ment304-Q37·3o410
BUY HOMES AS ~OW AS
- - - - - - -: -:---:-:--:: r $4,000 1 -5 Bdrm Local Gov"t &amp;
Wanted Hair Dresser And Nail

&amp; CLG 1 800-872 5967

F1nance $47 500 740 256-6056.
740-866 9236

NEW CONSTRUCTION

EOE

Attention Mobrle Home OWners
Areas largest Inventory Of Inter
therm &amp; Coleman Heat Pumps
A1r Condltroners Furnaces &amp;
Parts Huga Buying Power Means
The Lowest Installed Price, Easy
Over The Phone Bank Financing
Call Bennetts Mobrle Home HTG

6pm

Inch Sylvanra TV $100, Panaso
nlc Microwave $70 Brother Word

Washers dryers, re!Hgerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
V1ne Street Call 740·446 7398

9384

vile WVA 304-736-3409

Mason, wv

Buy, Sen Tredo
Used &amp; Anllques

7795

GOOD USED

site , Any Acreage , 740 379-

4 Bedrooms 2 Large Baths
Starling $359/Mo limited Time
Offer Only At Oakwood Barbours

R &amp; S Furniture

$125, 14 Inch NEC SVGA Mon l
tor S150 Yamaha Keyboard
$125 19• Zen~lh TV $60 20

DP Slepper $125 740 245-9019
Aner 6 PM

Wanted To ~Buy land In Gallla
County Area For Future Home·

Slarhng AI $299/Mo

nice

Bunk Bed Set Solid Wood with
Inner Spnng Mattress New Nev

Fron1age &amp; Woods APlus
CALL N1KETODAY1
ANTHONY LAND CO ,LTD
1-800-213-8365

fAMJl.Y..

lowes\ priCe 868·265 2123

Jackson Otio 1-11011-537-9528

er Used , $199 Call 740·866
6373

land 20 To 300 Acres Road

Loaded Wnh GE Appliances

PRIMESTAR winter blowout
special All tnventory must goll
170 tree channels tree monthly
guide free bonus g1H Guaranteed

Uprrght Ron Evans Enterprr ses

Appliances
AecondlttOned
WasMrs Dryers Ranges Aefrl
grators 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty Maytag 740 446

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AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19) A
reereattonal break could serve as a
healthy rcleose ioday to allev1ate
pent-up tension Set adequate ume
as1dc for a pleasurable activity Get a
JUmp on hfe by unde!llandmg the
mOuences that will govern you m the
ye;u- ahead. Send for your Astra- G1 aph prediCtions by mathng $2 to
Astro-Graph. c/o thts newspaper.
P.O Box 1758, Murray H1ll Stauon,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
state your zod1ac s1gn.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Give
pnonty today to mvolvements that

mdudc your Immediate lam•ly and
rclauvc &lt; You arc apl to have more
lun w11h kmslolk 1han w!lh o utSiders
ARIES (Marc h 21 -Apnl 19)
There ISn't much that woll escape
your mtcnuon 1oday You w1ll he cun ous and a qu1ck study What you learn
youll he eager to shatc w1th your
peers
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20) Condu•ons m general look favorable for
you 10d.1y where your malenal mtercsts arc concerned You should be
able to 1rnprovc upon somethmg
good
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) There
IS somethmg you can do better than
most. and that 1s to JUggle several
ass1gnments stmultaneously. You will
work well under th1s pressure
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II
wtll be obvrous to your fnends today
that you're pretty good al keepmg
se·crcu. You won't reveal any confidenltal 1nfonnation.
LEO (July 23-.\ug 22) You are
likely to be more at ease 1oday wilh
people wbo don't take themselves or
('

h fe too scnous ly Let the womcrs
focus on one another' s woes
VIRGO (Aug 23-Scpl 22) Suhstantml personal grauficauon w1ll be
acqutrcd today from situauons where
you_ usc your mentaf prowess to
meet and overcome chall~figc s
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Usually, 111sn 't too w1se to offer unsolicited advtce Today, however. 1f you
have any suggesttons\hat could help
a confused fnend, speak up
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) If
someone mv1tes you to part1e1pa1e m
a JOint endeavor today, don 't reJect 11
before analyzmg 11 m depth. H1s or
her proposal may have ment
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec
21) Today, you may have to dec1de an
Issue m which !he allemauves appear
to'6e of equal value. -Tilt your Judgment toward what was recently most
successful.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19)
This is a
day 10 talk lhmgs over
with co-workers m order to resolve
any misundetStandings and improve
productivity.

good

~ ,

�I ,

Pomeroy • Mlddlepo~ Ohio

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

· Thursday, February 5, 1998

Ohio Lottery

Former World Wa II Tuskegee
Airman promotes avfation to youth

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Barnett

----tGannaway-Barnett
maids were Elo zabcth Down1e of
Columbu s. Tiffany Sherman of
Youngstown, and Robyn DeRosa,
.sister of the groom. of Charlotte, N.
C. The attendants wore floor length
black halter bodice gow ns and carried nosegays and fire and ice roses .
Shawn Bush of CheSler was best
man. Groomsmen were Michael
Smith. Gallipolis, Randall Johnston
of Quantico, Va. and Jake Gannaway. brmher of the bride. Marieua.
A dinner-dance reception was
held at the Blcnnerhasset Hotel in
Parkersburg. The rehearsal dinner
hosted by the groom's parents was
the Lafayelle Hotel in Marietta.
The bride is a 1997 graduate of
Ohio University and a graduate stu1cnt in the Ohio University physical
therapy program. The groom is also
a 1997 graduate of Ohio University
and is employed by Archer Daniels
Midland of Fostoria as a cbemical
cngmeer.
Following a honeym oon 10
lire and icc roses.
Jamaica.
the couple resides 10
lorena Turley of Point Pleasant,
Athens
a
nd
Ftndlay.
W. Va. was maid of honor. Brides-

Allison NiCoc Gannaway and
Steven Ronald Barnett were married
on Aug. 2. 1997 at the First Presbyterian Church in Mariella with the
Rev. Craig Butler offi ciating the
double-rin g ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas ..Gannaway of
Salem Center, and the granddaughter of Charlie and Bracci Coe, and
Mary Gannaway of Draper, Va., and
the late Thomas Gannaway.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Barnell of Tuppers
Plains. He is the grandson of
Edward and Irene Rakowitt of San
Antonio, Texas. Clarence Barnell of
Tuppers Plains. and the late Georgia
Barnett.
Given in noJmage by her parent~
and escorted to the altar by her
father. the bride wore a candlelight
ivory off-the-shoulder gown will:
&gt;Ced pearl bodice. She carried a cascadi ng bouquet of V~rginia roses and

For basic luning, he was sent to
Keesler Fieldt- Miss" which was
strictly segregated, "separate but
equal." Blaclt, trainees lived separately, ate septrately "and had our
own PX."
•
Harmon hall· experienced' scgregalion as a boy in Los Angeles. "We
had to si t . in the balcony at the
movies; there '¥as o".ly one restaurant (Clinton '!!~, Cafeteria) in Los
Angeles that served blacks."
But he camt&lt;from an integrated
school and neighborhood. so resented the need for an all-black outfit.
"It was a paradox," he says. " We
wanted to fly, but we objected to
being segregated."
Trained black pilots didn 't fly in
combat until ~er Eleanor Rooseve h. intcreste\ in the possibility.
visited Tuskegee Institute. an allblack college in Alabama, and tlcw
as a passenger ; ith Alfred Anderson, a black pilot who had taught
himself to fly.
After the flight, Mrs. Roosevelt
went on the rcl!!lnd: "That's one
myth we can gel rid of- black pen1
pic can fly."
Airfields at Tuskegee became a
~~ining ground !9! black pilots in
1941. Not evcry''~plicant got in.
says Harmon. w~se college-prep
courses in algcbj)l, physics and
trigonometry keptifilm going.
He was assig~c~ to the 477th
Composite Group"'which included
new bomber pilotsAJid fighter pilots
back from the war i!) Europe.
The 477th was:VUining to go to
Japan when the war ended. After
four years, in 194~. the Tuskegee
program closed down.

Discharged · from service, Harmon enrolled at Pepperdine C9llegc
to study music composition and conducting.
When the K11rean War broke out,
he was recalled In duty to a desegregated and nev ty organized U.S. Air
Force.
By then. he' was accustomed to a
desegregated world - in college. at
businesses wnere he worked as an
insurance salesman. bowling pin setter. and actor in several movies.
During his hitch. Hannon was
often the only black crcwmember
and he was both pilot and commanding officer. He flew B-29s, B-36s.
B-50s and other big planes.

"Dreams of a Promised Land"
The leader and three appointed with many opinions.''
was the theme of the pledge service readers presented the program.
Close to $20 million in undcsigpresented by Karen Walker at the Afterwards, each member walked to nated giving by the one million
January meeting of the Racine Unit- the altar and placed her pledge card member UMW. is used for provided Methodist Women.
in the basket and poured her cup of ing food, shelter, education. humanOn an altar table there was a soil in the container with four bulbs. rights advocacy, and empowcnnent
cross, a basket for t~c pledge cards
The seeds were planted as a of women, children and youth withand an empty plant container.
reminder of the seeds of hope grow- in the United States and beyond.
The program f0c•sed on seeking ing in the lives of people whose Lee said.
a promised land. it ...,as noted that strength . cour1ge and faith in God
Ti:e business meeting opened
many have wandered in the wilder- are nunured. _Prayer ended the· pro- with memhers repeating the UMW .
ness for long years, persevering gram.
purpose. One new member was
through faith and commitment.
Lee Lee gave the mission repon. welcomed.
Walker said that we must share the She stated that mission in the 21st
Karen Walkc1 gave the secretary's
repon and correspondence
dreams and realities of searching . century will not be the same as in
for Christians in Brazil. this year's the 20th or 19th centuries.
was read.
The new prayer chain list was
mission study topic of UMW.
Global mission will mean a
After scripture was read from change 10 environment and distributed and the new program
J,oshua. a hymn was sung. pledge resources.
book was explained.
Ladies will start working on
cards were distributed and small
Mission will have to be interaccup~ of polling soil were given to
tive and will involve people within Monday morn.ings at the ~·burch
each member.
the church and the secular world staning at 9:30. Trying . to increase

membership was discussed. It was
agreed to serve Alpha Delta Kappa
dinner on April 21.
Spring retreat will be April 25
and School of Christian Missiorl
will be in July and some mcmhers
arc planning to attend.
The 1998 Prayer Calendar is on
order. Get well cards were signed
and the next meeting was
announced for Feh. 23.
Refreshments were served by
Chris Hill and Ella Mac Hill.
Aucnding were those named and
Alice Wolfe, Jennifer Walker,
Melissa Harkness Ruth Frank, Tara
Norman. Mar~ic West, M:~rilyn
Bogard . Judy Papc. Cindy Winebrenner, :md guest Belly Jean
Bryant .

By BETH ASHLEY
Marin Independent Journal
Anhur Harmon was one of the
legendary black pilots who rna~
World War II history in a group
called the Tuskegee Airmen.
Toda-'. he no longer flies, but is a
proud member of the Tusk( ~ee Airmen Inc. (TAl), a national organizalion of ex -pilots. FAA officials and
civilians (not necessarily black)
founded in 1972 to promote aviation
as a career for economically disadvantaged youth.
" 1 was glad to be part of the
Tuskegee Airmen - proud to be
pan of it,'' says Harm~n . 72, of San
Rafael, Calif.
But as a youth in 1943 he didn't
care about making history: " I just
had this burning desire to fly."
The Tuskegee Aonnen - 992 of
them - were ihe f~rst-cver African
Americans to be trained as pilots in
thc Anny Air Corps (precursor to the
Air Force. who ch was limned in
1947).
The military services were stnctly segregated then . and opr,ortunities
for black people were few. In fact.
the black airmen flew in one-man
li ghter planes instead of mul:ieng10cd bombers hecause no one in
authority thought a black man could
command a flight crew: The compromise was "one man , one plane."
says Hannon.
Training for hlack pilots came
only after very public pressure from
the black press. the NAACP, thenSen. Harry S. Truman and first lady
Eleanor Roosevelt.
The black pilots' record was
impeccable: Those who flew protec-

tive escon for B-17 missions over
Europe never lost a single bomber,
Harmon says, although 66 of their
• own number were killed.
Ron Lucas, 65, of Terra Linda,
Calif., is national president for the
Tuskegee Airmen Inc. and has been
in touch with filmmaker G,urge
Lucas about another film about the
Tu~kegee Ainnen.
·
Lucasfilm spokesman Lynne
Hale says, "George is still very
muc~ interested in the Tuske.gee
story. The project is still in development."
Such a film would not be the
lirst. An original HBO production,
" Tuskeegee Airmen," aired in
August 1995, starring Laurence
Fishburne, Counney Vance and
Allen Payne.
In reality, Tuskegee Ainnen Inc.
has I,900 members nationwide, but
there arc only 300 of the original airmen left - and only half belong.
Most of the 300 are in their 70s.
Their wanime commander,
retired Gen. Benjamin 0 . Davis Jr..
is 85.
But they were mostly teen-agers
when World War II broke out. A rule
change in 1942 allowed young men
to apply for pilot training at age 17
and be called up as soon as they finishcd high school and turned 18.
Before that. pilot-trainees were older
and had to be college graduates.
Harmon, who had made model
airplanes as a kid and belonged to
the radio-sponsored Jimmy Allen
Flying Club, 'enlisted while a senior
in high school and joined at 18 .
"Somehow. I was going to fly," he
says.

Racine United Methodist Women host

Bobcats, Herd
post victories
in league play
Sports on Page 5

en tine
'Vol. 48, NO. zoe

:Sy JOHN McCARTHY
'Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Republican Gov. George Voinovich said he would veto
any pan of Ohio's new school-funding plan that was not paid for after the
·next school year.
The Senate's top Democrat agreed with Voinovich and added that the governor also should look at two accountability laws that took effect last year.
Those laws have no funding beyond June 30, 1999, either.
"He has to take a close look at that and see if they're funded, if he's responsible, .. said Sen"!" Minority Leader Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
Voinovich 's threat came Thursday, one day after the Legislature decided
not to ask voters to raise the state sales tax by a penny per dollar- t'rom 5
percent to 6 percent - a.&lt; pan of a change in the Ohio Constitution. The deadline for putting constitutional issues on the May 5 primary ballot was Wednesday.
Lawmakers may consider a similar bill that would ask voters to raise the
sales tax without changing the constitution, which would give legislators a

Far East that he won't name.
He was transferred to Alaska and
in 1904 becmno chief of lloght sa iCty for the Alaskan Air Command.
retiring four years later.
mu~: h

Air-

alive.

Two years ago. he attended a
reunion in Tuskegee .
"They sent an csc(lrl for us a~ the

Alabama border. and we drove in
four buses hack to Tuskegee." he
said. "It was a highly emotional
""t.
.
Harmon regrets that he missed
becoming a fighter pilot. " I was
very gung -ho then. and I yearned f&lt;ir
comhat.l still do ."
But mostly he's grateful that he
got to fly: "My hoyhood dream
came true ... ·

From AP, Staff Reports
Meigs County's routine was
mostly unaffected by overnight
snowfall and ice that plagued other parts Of Ohio.
·
Southern local Schools operated this morning on a normal sehed:
ule on all bus routes with the
exception of Roy Jones Road.
according to Superintendent James
Lawrence.
. Syracuse Elementary iti South·
I sent its students home at
noon Thursday due to heating
problems that were correCted in Ihe
afternoon.
The geographic area associated
with Southern LoctJI escaped much
of the snow and ice that was
expected to fall during the night.
Lawrence said.
Eastern and Meigs Local
schools were operating on a
delayed schedule this morning,
mostly due to ice-covered roads in
the we.&lt;tern and nonhero pans of
the county.
Some cancellations were noted.
including Access Head Stan classes and home visits.
No accidents were reported
overnight by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Depanment.
Rush-hour ·commuters had to
negotiate icy bridges and mads
again today as the Cincinnati area
coped with a record-breaking
snowstorm that kept most schools
and many businesses closed in
southern Ohio for,.:u~ird consecutoveday.
~

By MARGE COLBORN
The Detroit News
You·,.~

seen

' Jl&lt;.~ - lil~

m~•g~11incs. t~nd
t l(h.' . li~ht!

in shd1cr

hathroom!'o
yuu \\i.lnl

llnlortunatdy. your h:tthrnom
TCIHUtklin~

hudgct IS limitcLI .
A~.· t:nn..lin~ to Los Ang~lc..; Jc~1gnl!r

Cohn Cowie and Vaseline market in!!
pcr-.;onncJ ,. ynu 'it ill c:m turn your ho-

hum hathroom onto a pleasure palace
simpl y arid inexpensively. Here arc
their enhance- the-sen ses tips for
transformi ng a hathronm into a.
0

. mouJ roo m:

EDISON ALIVE -A portrayal on the life and times of Thomas E_dison, his curiosity as a youngster and his career as an inventor, was
presented at the Pomeroy Elementary School recently by Mobile Ed
Productions. The actor portraying Edison was in authentic costume
lor the program which emphasized the inventor's fascination with
electricity and the telegraph. Jake Venoy was one of several students who assisted with demonstrations,

~
- .__~

' ~
"-'

- Usc and display bath additives
(foaming creams. beads) for fragrance. color. ski n pampering and
decoration. Clear d~cantcrs or an
. antique bowl arc ideal containers.
- Turn storage space into decorative accents. Consider rolling bath
towels and placing them in a large
wicker basket. Sachets and cedar
balls stored with towels will keep
them fresh and fragrant.
•
- Create atmosphere with candles . Gro'up candles together for
visual impact.
- lnstall'a dimmer switch or buy
soft white light bulbs to control
light. Avoid using fluorescent lighting because it can cast unnattering .
shadows on skin.
- Line drawers with inexpenSive fabric such as terry cloth cotton.
- Acccssori&gt;.e with decorative
mirrors . A group of smaller mirrors
around the vanity adds depth to the
room .
- ·...:.... fill the air with music by placing a speaker or ponable radio in the
bathroom.
-- Strategically arrange fresh
fl owers, polled plants or flowering
orchids . - ·

I

Bur.-,,
Sale Encls
Soon!

Se~st

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Outen Ill ,
King set '·'

dt any Sllllptrdllie.

FREE
Set-Up
wllb any Sllll ptrdllie.

Roe-

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" ',.'
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Roe$699
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......
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ltH

Cba~arral Elite

ill , " \.,.,I'"'' tl d 1\ ,,..... "'"

By KATHRYN CROW
sentinel Correspondent
Water rates will be increased in
Syracuse next month, according to
information presented to Syracuse
Village Council at Thursday night's

$239~~~
Full Ill

Outf'lll
Ki1!1 Ill

Full set
Queen set

King set

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' $669
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PM, Congress lend
support to military strike
But Arab world's signals on Iraqi action stay mixed

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ICY REMINDER - Central Ohio was hit with freezing rain
Thursday, enca1ing everything with a thick layer of Ice, lnclud·
lng these signa at Hlghbanks Metro Park In Columbus. (AP)
Sleet and freezing rain uggra-

vateu the problems caused by two
days of heavy snowfall.
"We haven't won this until the
roads are dry and the tempemture
gets above 32 degrees. There's no

snow on the roads now. but as long

as it's below freezing , bridges
have a tendency to refreeze." saii.l
Dave Yacchqri. an Ohio Dcpanment of Transportation supervisor
who oversees maintenance of the
interstate highways in Hamilton
County.

Water rate increase described
to Syracuse Council members

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Larry Ebersbach, presodent of the
Syracuse Board of Public Atl'airs. mel
with council to inlorrn them of th~
planned increase. The increase,
according lo Ebersbach. will be as
follows :
Residents 64 years of age or
younger, now paying $10.75, will
pay $12. an increase of $1.25: those
65 and older now paying $10 will pay
$10.75, an increase of 75 cents: and
those uutside Jhe corporation paying
a $12 base rate will pay $13.25, an
increase of $1.25.
Roben Wingett. grants administrJtor. met wirh council to discuss the

Bridgeman Street project.
Advertising will begin next week .
for bids on the repair/slope stabilization project. according to Wingell.
Advertising will be done over a twoweek ,peri&lt;;{J. he said.
Wingell reported that he had met
with the engineer Thursday and was
given verbal approval to proceed with
the advertising. Bids on the project
will be OIJ(ned on feb . 26 at 2 p.m.
A grant in the amount of $104.788
has been approved for the project,
. according to Wingett. Estimated cost
of construction is $100,113.25, with
the total cost of the proje~· t
$114,11 3.25. The $14,()()() is for
design and conslruction supervision,
he said.
Wingett also noted rhat easements
will have to be obtained from residents living in the area of the pro'posed construction. It was also not-

By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Preas Writer
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton is winning strong suppon for
his Iraq policies from visiting British
Prime Minister Tony Blair and from
Congress. but the signals received
from the Arab world are decidedly
mixed.
Blair, preparing to meet with Clinton, said today while making the
roun'ds of morning television talk
c
'
shtlws: "We· Jrnve got to make it
absolutely clear to Suddam Hussein
that he is not allowed to develop
weapons of mass destruction. If he
doesn't come back into Iine to let
weapons insiJ(clors in. then we will
have to force him to do so."
Clinton, at the National Prayer
Breakfast, spoke of the "diflicult
. decision we are facing now ...
because of the concern all Americans
have that we not expose our children
- if we can help it - to the dangers
of chemical and biological warfare.''
Blair told reponers Wednesday
while en route here that he plans "to
tell people about the evils of Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein. He is a
nasty dictator sitting on an awful lot
of nasty sruff.''
Speaking on condition of
anonymity. Blair's aides said Brituin
is contemplating a period of two to
three weeks to educate the public
about the extent of lmq's arsenal and
to exhaust diplomatic options.
Those comments left the impression that the earliest period for U.S.
military action againstlr~q would be
in the second half of February.
The admini stration has said that
no decision on military action has
been made. It also has refused In discuss a timetable. rejecting appeals by
the Internati onal Olympic Committee
that any such action be delayed until

after the winter Olympic games, set
to stan friday in Japan and end Feb.
22.
"First and foremost, the president
has an obligation, as commander-inchief and as our chief diplomat. to
protect U.S. interests.'' presidential.
press secretary Mike McCurry said
Wednesday.
Clinton said Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright. in sox days of
consu ltations in Europe and the Persian Gulf. found ,l\ ."strong consensus" in suppon of the need for lra4
to allow U.N. inspectors unfettered
access to search for forbidden
weapons.
.. All of us would prefer a genuine
diplomatic solution,'' Clinton suid at
a White House education even t. "The
best way to stop Saddam from build~
ing nuclear, biological or chemical
weapons is si mply to get the international inspectors back to work with
no rel\lraints .- "

strokes against Iraq. if they are
deemed necessary. And McCurry
expressed confidence th:ot interna tional backing for a military solution
to the Iraq crisis would be fonhcom ing if diplomatic eflons fai led.
Arab League Secretary-General
Esonat Abdel Meguid said in Jordan
that il was difticult for him to believe
" that any Arab country would accept
a military strike on lmq. w~ ore
endeavoring today to find a peaceful
way out of the crisis." Jor~ani:10 and
Syrian olticials also said they oppose
the usc of l(&gt;rce.
AI-Ahram. Egypt's leading stateowned newspaiJ(r, s:oid. "The Amerilan position towan.J Iraq cannot be'
described as anything but ux:n.:ive.
aggressive. unwise anJ um.:~uin g
ahout the lives uf lrm~i s. who ar..:
unnecessarily subject In san~:tions

Defense Secretary William Cohen
said Wednesday night that Clinton agrt!t!Ll thatlrat~ mw. t comply w1th tht!
will likely approve within the ne xt United Nation s' Sccurny Co.uncil
t"o days sen·ding additional U.S. . resolut1mh . He Llicl not ment ion
lorces to the Persian Gull. Inter- Mubi..irak\ position on the u:-.e ot milviewed on CNN'&gt; "Lorry King live" itary force .
show. he siJ(c ificall y mentioned a
Albright returned amund dawn
Marine Expeditionary Unit - nor- WeUncsllay fnHH her "ix-J;1y jt1urm:y
mally a multipurpose: contmgcnt of and spent the ua} conferring wi th
about 2.01Kl Marines aboard amphibi - administration. congrc'i..,llln&lt;.d ~and
ous ships and eq uipped with a small foreign k ad..:r-; &lt;.1bout thl· latcst dcvdnumber of combat aircraft.
opmcnt:-..
They would JOin 24At~l U.S. military men and women already in the
She sU!.!!.!t:steJ th:.t t Arah lc~u.Jers '
regmn. mo' r at s~~~ with rwo aircraft public pn.;ilinns may differ sharp ly
mmbat carrier battk group&gt; that from what they say pri valo:'ly. hinting
include 14 combat &gt;hips, II suppon th:ot several she la"cd to were willvessels and .125 warplanes. ,
ing to provide military su pport.
There were strong signs ur united
" We helieve we have all the
bipanisan support in Congress for a cooperation we need across the
get-tough policy with Iraq. law - bnard." she '"id Tuesday in Bahrain
makers were busy Wednesday fa.sh- lifter meet in !.! with the emir, Sheik Isa
ioning a re~olurion supportin g air hin Sa lman AI Khalifa .

ed that Winuett has obtained a grant ·
for the pool-proj&lt;eltn the amount uf
$17,625 through the Nature Works
Program.
Council President Larry lavender
suggested that council purchase two
diving boards and two lifeguard
chairs at a total cost of $4.640, with
the money to come of the pool fund.
Total cost of planned pool projects is
$23,500. Other expenses include
electric wiring and roof repair.
Lavender also noted that council
should consider hiring a pool managel'- and lifeguards, apll_ setting
wages. He also talked about the
parade for the ba.•eball kickoff and
suggested trying to increase craft
stands at the ali-day even!.
Mayor George Connolly noted
that new picnic tables are needed for
the shelter. and suggested that the old
· (~ntlnued on Page 3)

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MA«£ fW) f£EL liC£ AKH;
SHJfRlR liM,., M~ • •

Athens County Prosecutor Bill they saw him accept the money, Bid• ATHENS (AP) - A grJnd jury
indicted an environmental activist for Biddlestone said Kister approached _dlestone said.
As a spokesman for the group
allegedly taking money in exchange United Mine Workers Local 1340
tor not lighting against a proposed President Don Nunley and offered to ·ohio University Campus Greens,
keep activists away from mine hear- Kister has protested proposed mining
~a l mine.
at Ohio University's Dysan Woods in
ings
in exchange for S 1.750.
• Chad Kister. 27, was indicted
Belmont County. plans by Bucking·
Dunley
contacted
the
Athens
i'hursdny on two counts of exton ion.
ham
Coal Co. lo open mines in
County
Sheriff's
Department
about
He faces up to five years in jail, if
Athens
and Perry .counties and the
the alleged plot and helped secretly
c):mvicted.
reopening
of a road in part of the
·. Kister has denied the accusation tape record Kister.
Wayne
National
F&lt;irest.
.Authorities aves ted Kister after
and ha.• said that he wa.~ sel up .
'

"

..

EXHIBITS JUDGED · - Science projects
completed by eighth grade students at the
Meigs Middle School were judged Thursday In
preparation for the annual Science Fair and ·
open hOuse to be held Monday evening. The
open house, where students, parents and oth·
'• er visitors will have the opportunity to view the
more than a hundred exhibits, will begin at 5:30
p.m., with an awards aasembly to be held a~
. Jf5:30 p.m. From the left are, Jason Hershberg·

er,' whose project dealt with moving air and
density, and Rees Wyant, center, who did an
experiment on cryogenics. He used six worms
In a glass jar which were frozen for three days,
then thawed In the refrigerator. Two survived
for saveral minutes after they were removed
from refrigeration. Pictured judging Wyant's
project Is Vinton Rankin, an environmental
technician at Philip Sporn, (Sentinel photo by
Cfharlene Hoeflich)
,
tl

\

:ond humil iation."
Clinton spnkc for 10 minules
Wednesday with Egyptian Prc, idcnt
H'"ni Muharak. McCurry saou they

Environmental activist faces indictments
CONFLICT RESOLUTION - E;rin Perkins, Amorette Salser,
Jeremy Vincent, and Eric Sydenstrlcker, left to right, were the
December and January winners of the "peace" p~ogram awar~. T!le
program is designed to assist students In solvmg their own con·
flicts, As winners the students served as "principal for a day" at the
school.

f

Brit~sh

· Coca

Simple pleasures
in the home bath

payment

couple of more weeks to work on the plan.
sizes in poo school districts. The failed tax increase would have paid for
The failed constitutional amendment would have needed 60 votes, or a them beyond he cum:nt budget.
three-tifths majority in the 99-member House. ;The final vote wa.~ 58 in favor
Mike Daws n. the governor 's press secretary. would not say which item•
and 40 opposed. The new bill would require a simpl" majority for passage. Voinovich migH veto. including increases in the state's IJ(r-pupil spending.
The Legislature on Sunday also pa.o;.~ed House Bill650, which implements The state current •uarantees per-pupil spending of $3,66 3: the_new plan
the funding changes that the tax increa.&lt;e was intended to pay for.
would raise that tigu o $3,851 next schQol year. the only year for which
Voinovich said in a news relea-;e thai he "intends to veto sections of House money is in place. and to $4,414 in four years.
Bi11650 that are unfunded beyond FY (fiscal year) 1999."
Dawson also declined to say whether Voinovich would sign the new verIf the state implemented the plan without the money, cuts lo other agen- sion of the bill, which the Legislature will begin debating next week .
"We' re having some preliminary discussions with the Legislature about
cies could averoge 3.5 percent, if the ei:onomy stays healthy, the relea.&lt;e said.
If a recession occurs in 2000, a.&lt; some economists predict. cuts could reach that and I'm nol willing to comment on that at this point," Dawson said.
Meanwhile, Espy suggested that Voinovich. in addition to vetoing the
25 percent in the budget year beginning July I, 1999, the relea.&lt;e said.
· The state's economic analysts and lawyers were studying the bill to deter- unfunded changes. also take a look at two school and student accountabili·
mine what won't be fuiuled beyond June 30, 1999. when the current budget ly bills. He urged Voinovich to seek a repeal of any unfunded programs.
Dawson played down the costs of those progmms, which include more
period ends.
The current budget has money to pay for new programs in the bill that . credits needed for gmduation and money for chaner school programs.
lawmakers passed Sunday, including ali-day kindergarten and smaller class
"Either one of those bills htiS nowhere near the financial consequences
of (House Bill) 650. It's comparing apples to buildings." Dawson said.

Snowfall
postpones·
day's start
~in schools

meeti~g on ·~,earn~ of a Promised Land'

35 cents

AGannell Co. Newspaper

Voinovich wants assurance on pia

more than 100 rcconnaisancc missions over "scnsiti,·c·· ~rcas in the

Tus~egce

1 Section, 10 Pages,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 6, 1998

:c 1998, Ohio Valley Publlohlllfl Compony

Harmon's time in the service -

For Hannon. the

Cloudy tonl,g ht with a
chance of snow flurries,
lows In the mid 20s.
Saturclay, cloudy, flurries
possible. Highs near 40. ·

•

he didn't rctir,c until 1968 - coin cided with the Cold War. and he flew

men story is still very

Pick 3: .
5-3-9
Pick 4:
5-9-3-1
Buckeye 5:
9·16-18·20·23

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