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Distance learning makes impact
on edu·cafion in southern Ohio

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By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme..Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Long distance learning~ little seen outside· of the· state's metropolitan centers, is beginning to make its
--pres,ence felt in southern Ohio. ·
Three fully-funded programs are planning
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the proc'ess of transmitting class·

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' HISTORiAN JAMES 8AtrtDI
deicrlbea the role Ollila·
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'tnt'ci!J of'lhe !Jrldeillloolncl FllliI'OIId betiiiMn 1144 and 1110.
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position and research
paper courses from
the classroom "stu·
dio." in Wood Hall. to
students at RVHS and
Ike career , cente,r.
Some instruction is
also, beamed fr\)m
~~~~t~~~~~,~~~:s:~~~~
ar~a-higb ·-cRVHS,
Rapol said:·:
till; next few
In the ·course of a
1 'lubamu,e
years.
year, students at each teachtr . In thl .
. City
The Soulhern· Ohio Telecommunications site have earned the SchODll, lnapei:tad the controll oil
.Network Consortium looks to fonnulate the equivalent of is col- the Interactive Instruction lltchnQio. availability of interactive television instruc· . lege credit hours with gy the Unlve,.lly Df RID Grandelion to high schools within an 11-county the Ria Grande to beam videO Instruction to Rlv1r,
district, while the Appalachian Center for courses, Bapst said. CValley HCelgh School end BuckeYe Hilla
Higher.'Education is working on a feasibili,
Of
immediate a-r nter.
ty study initially aimed at offering instruc· interest to the local operation is the SOTNC's plans to create
tiona! services among the 10. regional col- long di~tance learning in the counties represented by the Ohio
leges and universities representing a 28· Valley Regional Development Commission, the Waverly.IJased~
county area.
agency assisting local government and schools in devel~pment·
MAGIC NET (Medical arid Government efforts.
OVRDC oversaw the planning phase, completed· last year,. ·
Internet Coalition Network) looks to provide, at first, medical instruction to a num- and turned the operation over to the consonium, with Rio
ber. of regional sites. including the Grande serving as the, fiscal agent. A $50,000 grant from the
SEOEMS headquafters near Gallipolis. ARC has allowed the consortium to hire a coordinator to start
Instruction (rom the Ohio University Col· ' establishing links with area high schools about interactive
lege of Osteopathic Medicine will be a sig- instruction.
nlficant _pan of the system's educational
The coordinator is expected to be hired by mid·March,
content.
Bapst said. The position is funded for a year and by then the
"It's a way to spread the curriculum around consonium hopes to have at least a dozen .schools ready to par·
to the schools," said Jake Bapst, director of· ticipate, he added,.
instructional media at the University of Rio
The consortium has been in development since 1990 and
· Grande/Rio Grande Community College, now counts 34 schools, hospitals and libraries among its memwho has helped oversee an interactive edu· bers, Bapst said.
cation program in Gallia County-· one of
The Appalachian Center's program looks to operate mostly
the first in the state.
between the colleges and universities. although in the future it
'Technology will never replace the class· may -reach out .to the high schools, he noted.
room teacher," Bapstcontinued. "Technolo·
"Theoretically,jnabout three years, they look to llave class,.
gy serves as a suppleanent, and the system es at River Valley, and in Adams and Jackson counties, being
becomes so transparent after awhile that taught at the same time," Bapst said.
. · .:
teaching at one site to another location
Four new high schools are being planned in Adams County'··
miles away makes no difference."
and instruction in one subject, such as a language, coul~ , be
Locilllong l!istance learning was first pro· offered over the system to all four,
·
wsed by the Galli a County Local Schools
Rio Grande may tap .into the offerings from MAGIC' NET,.
in 1987 and, armed with ,grants from the targeted for completion in September. Bapst said.
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Appalachian Regional , Commission and
"Everything together will· add immeasurably to the cali!Jer,;
partnerships with. Rio Grande and Buckeye of education in the area," Bapst said. "Entering the 21st ceniu-·
Hills Career Center. was in operation three ry, it should .bring the area closer together,
• CINPY . .MAN, a •acbtr at J~lcHn High SchOOl, leltlllld to opera• the yeThars later. .
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"lnste.ad of traveling the roa4s, we'll be traveling on ph~··.
oontrola Oftfhelm.ractlri ltlrnlng hookUp trom·the UnlveraiiY. of Fllo Grande . e program, transmatted ~a a a. r optics, lines," he added.
• · '"
dilrlng a dejnoi)atratlon laet ww11. JIIU Bapal, the demonlltretlon'alnatructor, sun o~rates betweo:n the unaversaty, BHCC .
"I think when the public sees what this offers 1111d tlu!l it,
II vlalble oll,lhe monitor tn the.bllckground, giving lnatructlonllrom River Val- and Raver.Valley Hagh Sch.ool. ~ao Grande nearly eliminates the distance factor, it .will llopefully
ley, Hig~ _ ScFI. ,. ,
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faculty have lllught comtnunacataons, com· things up." . , ·
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"If we have the tools.in Meigs County, we're going to "mlinities, she explained.
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be successful. We're going to get the jobs and peopll: off
"The old rule was that you couldn't get help· like this
: • POMEROY - Ohio Lieutenant ·Governor Nancy of welfare," he said.
·
unless someone was going to' move in," she said. . ·
Next Reed introduced Hollister, who.first began her
"This is a regional effort," she said. "As you develop
. Hollister presented the Meigs County Community .
!mprovement Corporati&lt;ll! a large, 'symbolic check Fri- political career 17 years ago a.s a Miuietta council· that s!te it benefits nc_&gt;t only M~ig~ County, but Athens,
day afternoon representmg a large amount of real woman. Later she became ll)ayor of Miuietta before Washmgton and Morgan counttes .
tooney.
.
being appointed di~tor of tl\e( Oovemor's Office of
"Think of yourselves not only as Meigs Countians,
·..'!'h~ CIC was awarded a ~500,000 Urban and Rural Appalachia and then ultimately lieutenant governor.
but as residents of southeast Ohio," she said.
lmuauve Grant frolfllhe Ohto Departmeqt of Develop- · Efforts to locate a Meigs County industrial site began
Reed then recogmzed . numerous others who have
mentto further construction of \he future·Tuppers Plains · on March 25. 1993, Hollister said.
contributed in the effort to secure the industrial site
. hidustrial Park:
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One problem W;IS that no site was ready for develop- including former Meigs County Economic Development
• The money will go toward engineering and construe- merit, she explained. Companies need to go inti) sites director Julia Houdashelt, who prepared the grant for the
lion of a road into the site, a water main and -a waste· that are ready for them, she added.
.
··. ·
CIC, and the Meigs County Boanl"of Commissioners.
water treatment system, aecording to HoUister. ··: ,
.· . Hollister said she spear!leaded Ohio Jobs Bill [[[ with,
Also recognized were Dan Neff, director of the Gov.·
.
. . ·, . , ,
· • ' . emor~s Office of Appalachia; Elizabeth Schaail, gover'
· , Meigs CIC President Paul Reed first iqtrili!uced State .. lissJstance fiom Garey.
Representative John A. Carey Jr. (R·Wcllston) who. said! '• ·. '-~ I:Jman.·and 'Rwil lnitiative.Pubd is one of four . • por's regionill representative with the Ohio Department
Meigs Coun_ty has won·an important battl'e_towanl ceo.! :. legislative components of. Jobs · Bill Ill which
of Development and fonner Meigs County Economic
nomic progress.
designed to target Ohio's distre~ urban and rural com· Contln.IMII on page A2·

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Vol. 32, No. 2

ElY JIM FREEMAN ·

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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Plea sant • February 23, 1997

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:Meigs CIC welcomes $500,000 industrial grant

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Sunny Sundlr

Details on

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City expl~ores Vtays to 'put things right' at- Pi·ne Street Cem
GALLIPOLIS - In the wake of
· a rampage through Gallipolis' Pine
Street Cemetery that sa~ more than
70 headstones .destroyed or damaged, city officials are investigating
ways of "putting.things right," Interim City Manager Bob Condee said.
City cotinnissioners learned last
week that the insurance the city has .
for the Cemetery only cO"Ve(S liobi,li·
ty and does not pay repairs for head, ·
'stones. That responsibili'y lies with
the families, commissioners discovered.
At the commission's request:
Condee is now trying to contact the
· ·families - including those who no
longer live in the area - and .work
with local monument companaes to
see if some of the headstones can be
restored to their original condition.
Vandals struck the . cemetery in
No\!ember 1996, with most qf the

Roa:h said he will continu~ to
work o~ the matter with officials.
Since the meeting, ·Condee ,and
·.Ed Wagoner, the sexton for Pine
Street and Mound Hill cemeteries,
have begun expl~ng repair options.
"This is a humanitarian issue for
the city," Condee said. "We want to
get the names and make everr effon
to contact the families. The critical
thing is, when you're dealing with
..:..;:.;:;..:l:.::;:.;;.;=~...:.-.-=-:-..;....;.. people's gravesiles, you oove to be
damage done in its older section. exact.
The inci~nt remains under investi"We're quite concerned about this
galion by p&lt;ilice,
and doing our besttpward putting it
Questions about the extent of the right again," he added.
city's responsibility in correcting the
damage were addressed at last.Tuesday's commission' meeting by Gary
Roach of The Wiseman Agency,
who said prese.nt cQverage for tbe ·
~emetery doesn't extend to property
damage.

Coridee said lie's currently meeting with four to five monument
companies to see if they will partie·
ipate in a project to restore head·
stones that can be repaired .
"Hopefully, we'll have all of them
worl&lt;;ing"on it and the i:ity will help
in any way we can," he said.
· The vandalism is considered by
offacers as' the worstt.o a city-opernt·
ed cemetery in neiii"IY 20 years.
Desecration of a grave is a felony .
offense, and Police Chief Roger
Brandeberry said any information in
helping solve the case would be wei·
cotne.

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/iegional

Pomlloy •lllddlaport • Glllpall, OH • Point Plnllnt, WV

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OH I0 \Vc;Jt h cr

Balanced budget amend·m ent
Prorupts _volley of accusations

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AccuW

foHasl ror daytime conditions and

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urrected the specter of an amendment fon:in1 judses to bait Social SecwiBy SANDRA SOBEAAJ
ty cliecks and the T~ury Depanment to cut benefits in order to keep Ill(
AIIIG clal d Pi II Wrtllw
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WASHING'ION - Squaring off for a showdown on the lillanced bud- budget ill line.
"'J'bqe
are
results
no
oac
wants
to
see
happen,
but
a
balanced
budget
gel amendment, President Qinton warned Salulday •gainst ~wrilin&amp; the Con•
stitution when a black~inlt biJdset "only requm Congress' vote and my sig- IIIICildmeat could surely produce them," Clinton said.
nature."
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RespOOdins for Republicans, New Jersey Rep. Bob Franks called threats)
to Social Security a "searetactic beins used by those who don' t want to rein ·
Republicans accused him of demaaoguay and scare tactics.
The volley of charges broadcast Saturday morning in the pMident's week- in federal spendins."
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"It's thewO!SI fonno{ demagoguery," said franks. "The truth IS this Vital-~
ly radio address and GOP reaponse came u co~onal Republicans scnmbled after votes for the amendment. It is e~pected on the Senate floor by ear- ly imponant program needs the protection of a balanced budget requirement.:
It's the only way to make sure Social Security stays solvent and. can conly next month.
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"We must balance the budget, but a balanced bUdget amenlment could tinue to selid out the monthly checks seniors count on."
He asked listeners to call their senators and demand a "Yes" vote.
.cause more harm tban aood.:: Clinton said. "Instead, we sbould simply act
this year and act tosether."
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stin, the~ .are signs that the amendment's fate could tum on the Social·
The president argued that the $1 .6!1 ttillion spending plan he.submiHed Security question. Several Republicans already on record with their support .
to Conp-ess earlier Jhis month would balance the budget by 2002. '.'That is · have privately acknowledged ~luctance to vote for the measure this year with-.
the ngbt way to balance the budget. And balancing the budget only requm out cl*' safepards for Social Security.
..
Con~ss· vote and my sign~." the president said.
.
While the amendment p•ssed the House two years ago, it is now stalled ·
"It does no!' require us to rewrite our Constitution." .
in a House commiuee. In the Senate, both sides count supporters with. two.
· Democrats, led by Clinton, have labored for two·yeats to paint the GOP- votes shY of the necessary two-thirds majority.
1~
drafted iunendment u a threat to Social Security. On Saturday~ Clinton res-

IND.

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Kasich talks up amendment in Ohio stop.
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Winter
makes itself felt
.
once again thi$ week
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By 11le Auoc:l.t.d Preas
Winterlike temperatures are back. ..
,.
~I ~!IS mainly diy Saturday night, with panly to,11105tly cloudy skies across
most of the. state. Some flurries were expected to persist in the northeast.
• ·Lows were from 15 to 20 degrees in the north to the middle 20s in ~
. 5041dl.

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. A weak area of low pressure will slide into the Great Lakes area on Sunday. Moisture will he limifed, btit some light snow is possible in the north.
Mostly cloudy skies are expected across the .state. Highs will be mostly
in the 30s, with some 40s in the southeast.
The record-high temperature for Saturday at the Columbus weather sta~
lion wu 70 degrees in 1930, while the record low wu minus 8 in 1963. Sunrise Sunday is at 7;13 a.m.
Weather forecast:
• Sunday.. .Mostly sunny in the inoming...Then becoming mostly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 40s. West winds 5 to 15 mph.
·
Sunday nigbt...Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower to mid 20s.

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~r::.;~~~~~J;.s~~~~ei~o:ru:rtecns.
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Extended forecast:

By KEVIN O'HANLON
Alloclllted Prete Writer'

balanCed budJCI by 2002 and a threefifths vote (\(both houses of Congress
CINCINNATI - With time run, for the federal govemment.to have a
ning out before the Senate votes on deficit any year thereafter.
wbetber to require a balanced feder· A two-thirds majority in each
al budget, the chainnan of the House house is required for pusase · of a
Budget COmmittee says he is worried constitutional amendment. A .teeent
the~ isn't enough support for the poll showed 33 Democratic senators
meuure.
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opposed the amendment; it would
· "The balanced budget · amend- ta1ce 34 votes to defeat it.
ment is in trouble - it's very, very
AnOther 10 Demacrats and all 55
close," said U.S. Rep. John Kasich, Se~ate Republicans are expected to
R-Ohio. . "I'm deeply concerned vote for the meuure.
Tlvo senators remained uncom,
about it."
Kasich was in Cincinnati on Fri- miUed: Democrats Mary Laildrieu. or
day to speak at the Hamilton Coun- Louisiana, and Robert Torricelli. or
ty Republican Party's annual Lincoln New Jersey, both of whom were
(lay fund-raising.dinner.
.
elCFted in November after promising
. A vote could come ·early next to support the amen~.ent.
"I feel like Paul Revere. I'm just
month on a proposed amendment to
the Constitution. It would require a

trying to ride from city to city warning people that they need to help support this," Kasich said. "They need
to call their senator. They need to
become forceful with their senator
that this is an 'opportunity to begin to
stabili~ the country financially."
If Con~ss approves the amendment, three-fourths of the states also
must approve it before it' becomes
law.
"If we don't balance the biJdset .. ,
our *tandafll .of living is going to
erode." Kasich said. "Median family wages are not going up. Savings
are at a 40-year low. This is about the
very survival or our culture...
He said people. who ~ntend ·that
passing the amendment 1 would
require cuts in SOC:ial Security are

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"They are dead wrong. Whether
we pass a balanced budget amend.'
ment or not bu nothinJ to d9 with the
long-tenn solvency of Social Security," he said. "Social Security is:
going·· bankrupt and needs to be • ·
saved. but its success or failure bas :
nothing to do with a.balanced budget :
amendment." .
:
He said suggestions that taXes •
would have to be raised to eliminate :
the deficit confuse him.
,
"I don't get it. All we have to do :
is slow the growth in spending to •
meet ... revenue," he said prior to his :
speCch.
:
Kasich is to talk about the bat- '
anced budget propos&amp;l Sunday · &lt;in i :
CBS television's "Face the Nation." :
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D.NC .chief predicts more donation refunding·
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Thesday... Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 30s.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The' sources.
Romer said he bu faced consicJ.: which is in the process of being :
Wednesday...Panly cloudy. Lows in the lower 20s and highs in the mid Democratic National COIIIJiliuee may · . In several cases, the contributors erable criticism about the restrictions acquired by British Telcom. ·
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40s. ·
·
have been unfair when it decided to were of modest financial means, and on accepting legal donitions · from
Rmner clto$e his wot;ds carefully ;
Thursdny...Cioudy wilh a chance of rain. Lows in the lower 30s and highs · refuse contributions from noncitizens there have·been allegations that par- Asian and Hispanic organizations when .ukec! wllether Clinton should :
in tite lower 50s.
wh• are legally in the United Stali:s ty fund-raiser lohn HuanJ and other with members who are legally in the aecept sreater bliune for too Oemoc- •
•
and from U.S. subsidiaries offoreign supporters of President Clinton tried United .States but not yetcitit.ens. and rats' fund-raiSing practices. 'He said ~
COlp0111tions, the new party chainnan to launder illegal COntributions from from . representatives fof companies the systelll that required miitions tO :
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says:
foreign·s&lt;iurces. ·
thataresiantemployelsofAm\:rican be raised tp pay fQI'.FIIMJI8!$11S WIS J
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Colorado .Gov. Roy Romer pro. .
An exhaustive audit and internal workers but are controlled by foreigl! more to blame than any one individ-:
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nounced himself "open to having a review ofDNC fund raisins is due to corporations.. ·
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dialogue" about changingthe new becompletedbynextweek.AWhite
. The1&gt;NC ·'may-4i.ve boelr " • ·,Jiti\·. llli&gt;:saichliii9NO'"s~~
By DAV'D SHARP
received $35,000 for each of the four rules. But he said the.spotlight on lhe . H~se tm~i~ ;farJ.Iiliar with the fair'' in doing this; Romer said. He up'' by not carefully screenins con- i
Anoclltlld p,.•• Writer
indictmenls returned in .the case.
pany' because of its questionable revtew
the~ Democrats would noted the ·pWty could accept money tributions. He asaerted that perhaps \
WHEELING, W.Va. _ Mounhooker, being.Ptid in the North- 1996 fund raising likely would make soon return more tban $1 million iii from U.S.-tiascd global tclecommu- Clint~;m's ccJffee reccj)tioris with ':
~r Militia leader Aoyd "Ray" em Regional Jail ~ndsville, said it politically impossible to retreat additional contributions.
nicatio~s giantAT&amp;Twhile refusing prospective Democratic · donors :
Looker' has lost the. services of the- Jle d~s not need Mitchell's help.
from the restrictions.
· "Sure,·they ate soing to find some to' accept money from rival MCI, shciuld not hsve been held .in the ·
"He's not my chief strategist," he
"We've got to get some confi· things ·that we haven't yet found,"
·
White House.
'
Arizoqa man responsible for developing his defense.
said. "I'm my chief strategist."
dence back in the system," Romer Romer said. He declined to.he speThe decision leaves Looker withLooker also supports the kickback told The Associated Press on Friday. · cific.
· ·
· ·
·
out his defense strategist six months theory but would not say whether he ·
Romer also ~knowledged ~h.at a .
Clinton· announced the DNC's
befol'\l trial on charges Looker and six planned to pursue Mitchell's strategy . DNC a~tt has dtscov~red addmon- vo,untary restrictions on f1111d raising ·
otllet$ with militia ties, including .two or trying 10 subpoena ainton 10 ask at contr•but•ons. that w11I have to be a month ago in -conjunction with
Ohioans, plotted to blow up the FBI him about the allegations.
returned because ~ey came from . naming Romer to the pany pOll. "My
complex in Clarksburg.
. .. A .war is fought with many 1mproper or unvenliable sources. day job is a little euier than my night
Paul Mitchell said he decided to . strategies, many tactics. If you can The pa!"~ already h~ returned some job," .the governor joked about his
juinp ship because neither Looker ~or fight the war without ever firing a S1.6 mdhon because II could-not v.er- l!f'!Cling first month in the · chairthe militia bad money to pay him.
shot, then you're considered a more 1fy t.hat the money came from legal ·· manship.
"It was Jie&lt;;oming pretty clear that capable commander," Looker said.
"l think•he rules under which we
they we~en't going to pay anything.
The loss may not be critical.
work are very bad," said Roilier,
1 had to pull teeth to ge[ them·to ~ovFranklin Cleckley, professor atthc
whoSe pany, S12 million in debt,
er expenses," Mitchell said Friday West Virginia University Law School
Continued from page A1 ·
hopes 19 raise $50 million this year.
llevelopment Director; and Bemeu
.
·
from his home in Tucson.
and a former state Supreme Court
He Wiled Con~ss to outlaw "soft
· Mitchell, who · is not a licensed justice, reviewed Mitche!J's docu- Brumfield, Meigs County Chamber money" donations to,tbC parties and
lawyer. crafted more than 20 docu- ments and said they were more of Ii of Co.mmerce sccret,ary. ·
limit con~ssional campaign spend., ments for Looker, who is-represent- crusade than a legal defense.
Also representing the CIC were ing in exchange for discounted tete~ ing himself in .U.S, District Court
"These motions thin w'ere foled, I · Jennifer Sheets, treasurer; Judy vision time and mailings. "I think
after .fi.ring two ~ourt-appointed think they somewhat underscore my Williams, vice;president, and Steve campaign finance needs substantial
· tawyer5.
·
concern. when a defendant facing Stoti'~'.fih':,?· c~mmended. toea] reform," he said.
Those motions demanded a spe- serious criminal charges deci!les to go
cial three-judge panel to hear the prose (represent himself)," Cleckley businessmen Horace Karr, .Eugene.·
Irene lost J(! lh ,'
Facemyer and Roscoe Mills who
case, attaclied the. federal grand jury said. .
Stan ,,,q ;, , II&gt;·:"
process and questioned the qualifi, Mitchell, who calls himself guaranteed a $240,000 loan to pur- ' .
cations of Attorney General Janet "Counselor at Law" and has said he chase a 60-aere site west of Tuppers
Reno and otherS. ,
operates an Internet-based taw :sChool Plains for the industrial park. Mills
But Mitchell neve( got the chance from his home, said .he decided 10 in turn commended Reed, president
to prc$Cnl his belief ·lhat everyone leave the case because he was owed of Fanners Bank and Savings Com- ·
from U.S. Auorney William Wilmoth· $7,000.
pany, for issuing the loan.
to President Clinton received kick"I .realized I was heing pul in an
"Last year we reorganized the
backs for the anests.
. impossible . situatiOn 10 do all the CIC," Reed said. "We've done a
• Mitchell ~ contends Clinton work, not. get paid and then get crit· great deal in our first year."
icized for it," Mitchell said. "So I put '
Carey clased: "We wouldn't have
a halt to it."
been able to do this without the local
Either with or without Mitchell's commitment. Meigs County made
services, at least one defendant's this happen."
·auorney said,be does not want 1o·be
· He acknowledged that some peain the same courtroom with Looker pte took personal risks to promote
whei\ Looker presents his .defense· the industrial park.
this Augusl.
'
· "In order to be su&lt;!cessful... you
...
Jerald Jones, lawyer for Jack have to take risks," he said. "We're
Phillips ofFainnont, said he will like- going to get results. We're going to
ly seek a separate trial for his client. prove we can make it ~appen."
At trial, Looker will have a la~er . - A-pproximately . 100 people
·
&lt;
attended the conference.
"The Ohio Bureau of Wort&lt;er's
on band to answ,
e~ questions.

. 6_ense st··a •egl•st b1'*'s
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.AND EMPLOYEES

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. ATTORNEYS

$1.:15

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DONALD A.

cox a: MARSHALL 8. DOtiTHEri

·ewe

Compensation has Required all StateFunded employers to Select a Managed
Care O.-ga.nization (MCO).

Re.d Eeaahi

...

Probate ·

..

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·CoUectione
Dome1tic Relatione
Workel'l Compe01ation

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Appointment• AVIIU.ble in Gdipolil
Co~~na E•l!tld'W Ho~.

Calll-888-796-3.7 79 ToO Free
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...Colwm....
toe Bader, . Cia...,~ .
Drlls 4: Blll'llhart

Holzer Clinic IS an Ohio Bureau of Worker's Compensation
certified medical provider.
if Ho.lzer Clinic 'is not listed on the
MCO provider panel that your company selected, Holzer Clinic IS
certified to provide medical services to all injufed workers. ·

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· Employers • .

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GALLIPOLIS -I.A. Gov. Nancy
P. Hollister will be the speaker at the
Gallia County Republican Li'IColn
Day Dinner set for Thursday, Feb. 27
at 6:30 p.m. in the Student Annex at
the University of Rio· Grande/Rio
Grande Community Cotlese.
Hollister, who was elected lieutenant governor in 1994, began her
cmeer 'in public service in Marietta
more than 17 years ago.
After serving on the cit}r council
and as Marietta's mayor, she wu
appointed by Gov. George Voinovich
to serve as director of the Governor's
Office of Appalachia in 199I.In:,.bat
position, she managed economic
development, funding and policy
issues for 29 southeastern t;ura1 counties.
.
As part of her cunent duties, Hollister chairs the State and Local Government Cpmmission, co-chairs the
Governor's Human~ InveStment Council, and co-chairs the

still accepted until March 31
.
.
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency wi11 conlinue

Farmland Preservation Task Force.
Among her other duties, Hollister
manages state efforts to ~truCture
Ohio's work force development syslj:m and oversees tiie Ohio School-toWork Initiative.
·
She .is also chief architect of Jobs
Bill m, the State's newest economic
development stimulus package that
specifically targets Obio.'s distressed
utban and rural communities. ·
She and her husband of 26 years,
Jeff, continue to reside in Marietta.
There are six members.of the immediate Hollister family: Jonathan and
his wife, Laj.ie, Jeremy, Justin, Emily and Kate.
·

enrolled in the Percentage of Income Plan (PIP) to be eligible for emergency
to accept Em«gency HEAP applicatiOR$ for the 1996-97 heating scuon benefits.
·
through Mll'Ch 31.
Home visits can be arranged to assist the elderly, disabled or homebound
~·s cbillins winds, coupled with the escalating price of home beatwho are unable to get to one of the CAA intake ~tes .
ing fuet·, continues to~ a profound hardship on the working poor, as well
Applications are also available for the Regular'HEAP program, which is
u for households on a fixed income throughout our area," HEAP/Outreach additional beating assistance on a non-emergency nature. 1be income guide·Coori1inator Letha Proffitt said.
lines are the same ror both programs. The deadline ror Regular HEAP appliEmergency HEAP can provide financiil assistance to low-income !louse- cations is March 31 .
holds that are threatened with disconnection of their beating source, have
Both Emergency HEAP and Regular HEAP applications can be completed.
already had seryice disconn~ted,.. or have less than a l(}.(lay supply of bulk Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. until noon, and 1-3 p.m. at the CAA
fuel.
·
.
Central Office in Cheshire; the GaUia County CAA Qutreach Office at 863
To be eligible 'ror the program, both the income guidelines and the emer: Porter Road, Porter; and the Meigs County Outreach Office, 393SO Union
geney ~uirements m~t be meL
·
·
Ave., Pomeroy.
No applications will be taken on Friday. Regular HEAP applications can
. Household income is defined as gross income of all household members,
except earned income of dependent minors under age 18. Allow&amp;:lle annu- also be filed through the Senior Citizens Center.
ai income for a one-person household is $11,610; two persons, $15.540; ~ For more information, the phone number for the Cheshire office is 367people, $19,470; four people, $23,400; five people, $27,330; and six pe
7341 in Gallia County; 992-6629 in Meigs County; 388-8232 for the Gallia
pte, $)1 ,260. For each additional member, add $3,390.
County Outreach office; and 992-5605 at the Meigs County Outreach office.
·The program allows a one-time payment of up to $175 per heating seaAssistance can also be obtained by calling the HEAP toiJ.free number lit
son to resto~ or maintain home healing services.
1-800-282-0880. Hearing impaired applicants with a telecommunications
Household with heat supplied by PUCO-regulated utilities must be device for the deaf (TOO) can call toll-free, 1-800-686-1557.
·

Ex-Chillicothe mayor adju.s ts
to routine in the Statehouse

window shelf. Jlut Sulzer, who was
sworn
in Feb. 12, didn't seem to
Gannett NeWI Service .
mind.
COLUMBUS - Everi _those
jammed into ilie back of the crowd· · "It's just like I started last lime,"
ed Ohio House Education Commiuec he said. "It comes with the territory.
hearing room at.the Ohio Statehouse I mean I just got my assignment this
POMEROY - ne·Meigs C011nty Cbaniber of Commerce is sponTuesday night could tell State Rep. (Tuesday) afternoon. A little painl, a
. soring a revolving loan fund and techoical assistance program orienlation
Joe Sulzer was. in his first committee little better furniture and I'll be rendy
on ~sday, March 4 frinn.6-7:30 p.m. at ilie chamber office, West Main
to go." By next week, Sulzer said he
·
meeting.
· Street, Pomeroy.
should.have
his office repainted and
It wasn't anything he said. It wasThe program is designed to assist people with low-to-moderate incomes
a
slaff
assistant
in place.
n't anything he did. It was right there
in starting their own businesses.
·
·.
·
Catching up on legislative matters
in front of him.
Start-up business classes wiU.b,: held Thesdays and Thursdays, 6-9 p.m ..
and
anepding committee hearings
While
all
other
20
members
or
the
from March II to May I at the chamber office.
and
floor
sessions consumed much of
committee had wood-grained plaques
Those completing the eight: week business class and business plan are
Sulzer's
first week. He said he
bearing their full names, Sulzer. bad
eligible to apply for up'to $10,000 from the Meigs County Loan Fund.
a makeshift plaque consisting or his plowed though copies of bill's
name and title scrawled in marker on appearing before his committees,
RIO GRANDE - A previously announced ptess conference sched· · a folded up manila paper.
read the mail and met colleagues duruled for Monday at Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, 4848 Sque Route
ing
his spare time.
But such is life for new members
325 ~outh, to discuss a rate reduction for .-eside~lial consumers. has been . during the first few weeks.in Siate•
Although ·sutzer has only bad a.
ROTARY DO~ATION - John M. ·:.Jake" Koebel, repra111t11tlng
canceled, General Manager Jim Weaver annou~ed.
the Gallipolis Rotary Club, presented a Rotary do01tlon to Sue
bouse office' as the former three-term few days wnder his belt at the StateJohnson, director of the Outreach Center In Gallipolis. The cenChilicothe mayor found out this house, he said he doesn't fec:llost in
week.
_
· Columbus.
.
ter provides ••slatence in various ways to Galli a County real.
. GALUPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by the Gallia
dents;
"I had a lot of contact with (for. A stop by Sulzer's office this past
County:Health Department this week at the following dates and locations:
mer
Sen.) Jan Long and (State Sen:)
week
revealed
that
makeshift
is
also
• Monday- Coilrtbouse lobby, 4-6 ·p.m. ·J
Mike Shoemaker when I was mayor,
the
operative
phrue
in
his
new
state
• Wednesday- Galli&amp; Metrupolitan Estates, I :30-2:30 p.m.
rep's digs.
so I understand how the process
• Thursday- Head Start (ol!l Clay Elementary School), 11 :30 a.m.Greeting visitors to his office works."
1:30 p.m.
.
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-State tdward Butler Jr., Hobert F. Tackeu.
were
dingy bare walls, two plain
Sulzer realizes that two genera• Thursday -Crown City Village Hall, 2-3 p.m.
Ruth A. Greenlee, Joseph P. Greenchairs masquerading as furniture and . tions of Shoemakers that proceed him Region Blood Services Bloudmobile lee. Lesa l. Caldwell. Lance 1.. HughChildren in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a parent
. Sulzer's multivolume copy of the in. his seat have cast a long shafjow. .. colleCted ~ 22 units of blood during es, Charles R. Landon, Warren J. Saland bring a cunent immunization record with them.
Thursday's stop at St. Peter's EpisOhio Revised Code resting on the,
copal
Church. local, Red Cross offi- isbury, Clarence B. Stout, Phillip H.
' .,, 1'
OK
Weatherholt, Dorothy L. Meeks,
reported.
.
cials
• GALLIPOLIS - )'Ius bids fOl' 1he Gallia County BOard of Mental
·
Edward
A. Midkiff, Rachel D.
· Official,o; said 135.people present·
·Retardati01111Jevelopmental.Disabilities were awirded at Thursday's weeked themselves to give blood, among Pullins, Beverly B. Dunkle, Ralph L.
, ly meeting of the Gallia County Board of Commissioners.
·
them 22 students from Gallia Acad- Bennett, Carl E. James, Laura Bar• · Bids awarded were to; R.F. Steilll'r, Huntington, W.Va., $34,826.54,
emy
High School.
•
. cus, Lawrence H. Phillips, Belinda L.
• for a chassis; and Edw-in H. Davis &amp; Sons, Langsville, $20,258 for a body..
. The blood drive was chaired local- Broyles, Brent A. Saunders, Joan E.
In other business, commissioners:
Riebel noted that the Ohio School ly by Mary L. James. Other volun- Schmid!, Dawna M. Hall, Otis S.
POMEROY- The Meigs Coun•. nlet with Jerry Barnes for the presentatiO!l of ihe Family and Chi I·
ty Educational Service . Center Board Association's Southeast .teers included Joan Schmidt, Evelyn Young Ill. Amanda F. Darst, DCnise
· dren Fi"t budget. ,
approved a firearms safety grant at its Region Spring Conference will he Brandeberry, Eula Adkins, Robin Rice, Wanda L. Boggs. Robert G.
• receivcil an update from the Keep Gallia Beautiful Committee on its
regular meeting held recently at the held March 18 at the Ohio Untversi· Pasquale. Evelena Williams, Helen Rothgeb, John W. Barcus;
accomplishments. 1be group·also discussed a clean-up week to take place : service center office in Pomeroy.
ty Inn in Athens.
Doyle J. Saunders, Peggy Phillips.
Jennings. Bea Stevenson, Janet
· in ,o\pti(
.
· ·
Jennifer Sheets of Pomeroy, pres-· Hughes, Mary Lou Harrison, Shirley . Twyllia Y. Connelley, Tara D. Cheva. 1be Eddie Eagle Gun Safety Pro\ gram sponsored by the National Rifle · idenrofthe State Board of Education, Godwin, Wilma Webster, Gail Rus(Continued on A&amp;) .
will
be
the
featured
speaker.
Association
is
designed
to
increase
sell
and
Roger
Brumfield.
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stat~ Highway Patrol
Also. the county Academic Excel- ·
awareness of strategies that will proGiving blood were:
c'Jted a Mason County, W.Va., man for failure to yield in a two-vehicle
LET US REMOUNT YOUR
lence
Banquet has been scheduled for
mote
fireanns
safety
for
school-aged
Linda White, Ricky Swain, John
accident Frida,y on County Road 7 (Georges Creek).
7
p.m.
on
May
6
at
Meigs
High
children,
said
Superintendent
John
D.
DIAMONDS AT ASAYINGS OF
Haffelt, John H. Gill, Henry '1&lt;. MilTroopers satd Gary L. Matheny, 40, Leon, pulled the truck he was dri·
School.
·
Riebel
Sr.
am,
Calvin
Stewart,
Bruce
Scarberry,
ving onto the road in order to cross to the other side at II :40 a.m. and .
The next meeting will be held B.ob Hennesy, Roben Lucas, Steven
10
~
In personnel matters. the board
applied his brakes When he saw a westbound car approaching him driven
March
13
at
7
p.m.
on
al
the
service
employed
Jared
Spencer
as
a
substiM. Edwards. Raymond C. Weiher Jr.,
. by Lisa A. Tawney, 31, 2037 Georges Creek Road. Gallipolis.
·
REG.$140 '
center
office
on
the
second
floor
of
tute
teach.
e
r
aide
on
an
as-needed
Barbara
Fulks,
John
H.
Roush,
Tawney also hit the brakes on her car and .struck the truck's front,.
basis, and employed James Hayman the Pomeroy Municipal Building.
Beverly E. 'Voss, Casby Meadows Ill.
according to the report. Slight damage was reported to \he truck. owned
Present were board President Jeff Mau Blackford, Janel S. Williams,
as
a
substitute
teacher
on
an
as-needby Cremeans Concrete Suppll Co., Gallipolis, and to Taw~ey 'scar.
Harris, Vice President Robert Banon, Mabel Copley. Wesley E. Mullet,
ed basis.
The board alsq approved bus dri- Howard Caldwell. 1.0. McCoy and Harold E. While, Randy Syrus,
'
CHESHIRE-· Steven P. StiMon. 18, 405 Ri&gt;ush Lane, Cheshire, was ~ ver certificates for Eric Diddle and Jcaneue Thomas.
Melissa B. Phillips, Kasey A1kinson,
'
'
Ben Upion.
: cited for failure to conb'Ol by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Lee F. Burcham. Jim Duke. Hcrben
.14K6
PRONG
. • Patrol following a one-car accident Friday on State Route 554.
E. Schucuc. Jodi Burneuc, Ginn
Tro&lt;iPers said Stinson was westbound at 10:34 p.m. ·when he lost con:
Kisner, Lea A. Car1cr;
. ; trol of the car in a right-hand curve, slid off, the left side of the road and
. Amanda M. Harrison, Brook.e N.
Barton, Drcama Jividen, Raymond J.
: struck a fence.
. .
t
Tl)e car was moderately damaged.
Boles, Sct.h A. Richards, Julia R.
Meny. Angela R Elkins, Bridget N.
· Darst, Amanda D. Clagg, Cheryl L.
:
GALLipOLIS - . Gallipolis City Police are invesiigating the theft of
14K IUUSION SAlE $19.
· Easton, John R. DcLillc. Thomas R.
• prescriptio.n medication from a ,Crown City area man's car on Friday.
Hutchins. Amanda N. Davis, Va!eric
Ketirietlt Calhoun, 406 Sheets Road. infonned c;&gt;fficers that the med:
"Serving You Since 1933'•
G. Spence, Kim Kerns, Amber D.
; ication was taken from his car sometime between I :30 and 2 p.m. while
Brumfield, Tobias D. Cunningham,
; the car was parked in the municipal lot across from the City Buildin~.
'Charles H. Sibley, Earl L. Wonn, Roy
:
1" O!her ml!Uers. wlicc on early Saturday cited Rol;M:rtA. Sommer:v•ll~,
IJ. Pierson Jr.• Kathryn' Henderson,
• 37 2131 Chestnut St .. Gallipolis, on a bench warrant and lodged ~·rn •n
Barbara A. Mills. Marcella Gilliam,
: ~~ Gallia County Jail at 1:23 a.m.; Charles P. Lewis Ill, 29, 3198 Kerr
John Gilliam, Maurice R. DcLillc,
: Road. Bidwell, for disorderly by inloxicali~n; and Jenifer Cannan. 22.
Paul M. Cochran, Mike Shaffer,
422 SECOND lVI.
' Middlep&lt;Jn, for.operi container.
Sam.uel K. Annstrong, Lynn S. Hill;
GALLIPOUS, OliO
Vernon W. Burnheimcr, Paul
.Apparent suicide'under in~stigation
POMEROY - A 23-year-old Pomeroy man is d~nd the result of an
apparent self-inflicted gunsh.ot wound early Saturday.
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department was called to a Rocksprings
"
Rond residence and round the body of Robert· B' Yonker at the scene,
according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
•
St. Rt. 7, Cheshire, Ohio
' '
Responding to the scene were Soulsby and deputies Bill Gilkey and
Danny Leonard, and Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter. :The body was .transVIEWING WORK- Elizabeth SChaad of the Governor's Office
ported to the Ewing FJJneral Home in Pomeroy. "
.' . · ·of Appillllc:hla twcently ,.viewed Work In progrtaa at the old
30 &amp;. 35 TON
Chllter CourlhouH. The flrat phaM of conetructlon on the buUd-:
ROUGH TERRAIN CRANES
lng has bettn completlld.with a new roof, cupola, d,.lnage, roof
SALEM CENTER '- Thieves with a taste for beer targeted the Pick
. DOZERS 07-0-9 ·1150
support, ~ and plllare; three-qUirtenl of the building Ia sup&amp; Shovel C!lffY·OUI at Salem Cente•late Friday or early Saturday, accordported on four plllarL Shown are, from left, Pat Holter, Elale
LOADERS 9888 • ~ ·- 1845
ing t.o a Meigs County Sheriffs Department report.
Folmer, Mary Powtlland SChaad.
·
,
The owner noticed at 6 a.m. Saturday that thieves bad entered through
TWO 631C SCRAPERS
:ihc front door, smashing out the glus with a cen\ent block. The lock on
CASE 580 BACKHOE
.the front door security gate wu cut, Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed.
'l'he only items reported missina were a case of Budweiser and a 12·
CAT 320 TRACK HOE
:pact of Bud Light. An investigation continues, Sou~~by said.
~CK WATER TRUCKS

~
- Tri-County Brief~: .......

By AA,_ON MARSHALL

· t;hsmber to sponsor orientation

· BREC press conference cance#ed . .
Immunizations slated forO
this week

Bloodmobile nets 122 units

.

'·Gsllis commissioners.

bids

Educational Service Center
OKs firearms safety grant

Driver cited in ·two-vehicle crash

30"

•

11 ·

50"

c.-

Patrol issues c1tstlon after accident

; ·Theft from man's car inv(Jstigsted

TAWNEY
JEWELERS.

INC.

.IQVIPM.INT RENTAl.
GROVE

UNITY.
·savings Bank

:sheriff looks.into hsy·flre'cause .

!

I 0 ..

Emergency HEAP applications

·Ares csrryout.target of break-In

'GENERAL. PRACTICE OF LAW
Penonallnjvy

Hollister
to address
GOP event
this week

I

: EAST MEIGS -An investiaation continues in a hay fire that occurred
:'1\Jcsday morning on East Shade Road in Chester Thwns!UP·. .
·
· David Vale heard a car with a loud auto exhaust tum m hts dnve and
:head toward SR 7 and then tum·toward Chester. He then noticed bay on
:the back or·a 1991 truck ·owned by Eastcom Contncting wu on fire,
:according to a Meigs County Sheriff's Department repon.
: Vale used ali~ ~xtinguisher to put out the fire, acconbng to the report.
·The truck wu not damaged but the load of; hay was destroyed.

..

of So•.. eUCera Oldo

SERVICE

G•lllpolh .

Bonlciiag the .M!OY it
11101 meonl Co be!!

446-0315

.

'

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'

35 I 50 TON LOW·BOY SERVICE
MU. DO COMMERCIAL
DIRTWORic ,

. 61 ...92·6637,.,
614 446·9716
Jeriy Hall

'

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.

•

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lundiV. ,....,

~

:comtnentary

2S, 111'7

.

They just ;couldn't leave H well enough alone

•

•

~------------------------~~--~~~--------------------------·
0

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OhiaM.V.a
:Ex-astro.
naut Glenn would
..
~still explore the outer limits
•• rc.r21,1W7

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',',By KA'I'HIIUtll NZZO

AIIUIII d PI ill Wrllr
~ WHINOTON - The farmer

·; ui!Oa\ut swiveled to his dcaktop

•cOIIIfllll«•
"Look il thll. Did yau kitow they

.:1

,~

01 1

have Ripta~eheduled lhroup out to

20037"

'

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John Olem, one of the most .
••.fUIOIII f~Ct~ln apace, Ia navipdns
~n cybcnpacc, domontlrllins how if
. ,;.he dirocll tho Uttlc arrow jUit ao, it
·,will be in the pttfect polldon to fetch
.~ 'ho lon1•ran1e Space Shuttle "hod, .Uie;
·
;, There.aro two official John Olenn
. .,_.ea on the Interne~ but Olenn'a
~~~r It permanently pointed at
' "NASA.
·
: Olenn, 75, hu joked for yean
~ut belna the pedect chOice for a
, seriatric atudy .1n ·~e. But now,
,inapcctinJ lhc NASA pase on the
,World Wide Web; Olenn Ia lerioua;
~· He's examlnlna the shuttle ~hod·
:;ule'tlllt of orbltera, launth datesand
; ,million purpotel, po(ntlna out onea
,.l"ukcd "SpaceHab·DM."
•.. "Por thole, they put In a cqo
bay," he aaya, uplalnlns that the
, "larpr lrea would bo needed to bring
,.anntra penon alonJ.
.
·; If thcro'l ever to be room for
.,Oietin on a apace ahuule. it would bo
.,pn a craft outfitted with the sp~e
, babiw, ho uya. ·
,; "I'm reedy when theyuy 'Oo.'"
NASA and the Natlonli lnttltutes
"of Health heve belun di~eussina
''ilalna the lhutde to study the effect of ·
. microaravity on "oldar orsanisms...

A Gannett Co. Newapaper
'·

,ubi...,.,

•

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IIOIUT L. WINOm

•

Buttllltdaelll'tiiiCIIIIhey~ lllaketho

viewfinder.
He JIOWI quiet ODiy wllan told
on bis offer to be tho fint aeptuqe- lhM it'1 baon 35 yean Iince his ftiJ(II.
narian In lpiiCC.
and that hla Rilbt - 35 yean after
Public affaira officer Michael the then·lnercdlblc Adlllde croaaina
B,.-ut uid civilian• ~ecepted for by avlltor Chn. LitldbeiJh.
ahutde milli0111 usually are medlct1
"My 101h." ho 11y1. "Ia that
docton or Ph.D.a familiar with the rililt?~' .
,xperimeniJ 11 hand.
Quickly doins the mlth - the
"There aro no pllnlto ny Sena- combat pilot of two wan .doetn't
tor Olean." taya Br~ukus.
.
have to be told the "Spirit of St.
In other wonlt, what matters most Louis" landa4 in 1927'- ho Hid.
illhc rilhi dearoe- noc ·~ the rlpt "Well, that's rlsht." lnd reluewitly
IIUff.''
'
offen historical peupectlve•.
· That' I a wotld of chanJe since
"Think ohll the pioptll we hi~
NASA aouaht tho alile minds and · made in thai period. When you look
ttoely JUII of experlenl!cd iest pil011. at the equipment ud the kinds of
Orialnal Attronaut Olonn now is a thin11 tiW hlvo Come since then it's
civilian, albeit Olio who hal remained almoll iniraculout," he llid.
In the public eye u a Democratic 1011·
"My ded wu born oilbi yeen
litor from Ohio. He announced Thun- before the Wrlallt BI'Oihen flew. He
day ho would nOI seek a fifth term in wu born in 189S and ho lived·to Itt
1998. ·
.
.' ·
me make 1pace Oi(ht. 'That's even
Thirty-live yean have paslcd mort~ IIIIIIZiaa, I think;·my dad liter·
since Olenn feltlhc jolt of lhc miahty ally went from hone and buaiY days
Atlas rocket and proved that humans to seeing space Oiallt.
.
could survive hi weightleaaneu with·
"I'll always be lflleful that my
out lo11 of vi lion, coordination or dad and mother were allll alive when
nauaea.
I went up because tlicy were able to
·On Feb. 20, 1962, wau:hina the shari in all that."
·
world from the distance Qtl60 milel,
Olcnn wondon whctber people
the then·Marine exclaimed, "Oh, atill remember the ro11011 for all the
that view is tremendous!" .
fuss, and why il was.such a bis deal .
The senator of today is just as to be the third human - but fint
tinthuflaatic.
American - in orbit. .
. He arabs .a lqe book that has
"People tend to foraet that thia
obviously. been opened to the .same . was the Cold War at ill coldc1t," he
spot many times. It falls open to a said.
arainy color phO!ograph- one of the
The Ru11ians had put men up
fi111 from sp~e - as he talks of twice whilo tbc American~ were still
wonders he saw through the plannina unmanned teats lnd subor·

ftnl American to orbit lh&amp; Ell1h up

Feb. 20 merbd ~ 3~th 1nnht11'111ry of Gltnn'l
blaat.off Into epace, proving lhlt hu11111n1
could turvlva In welghtlettnell without loll
of vlelon, coordination or nau-. (AP)

FRIENDSHIP 7 MEMORIES - Rlillrlng U.S.
John Glenn, O.Ohla, lltoocl nexl to hie Mer·
cury Frlenclthlp 7 IJIIICKrlll'al the Smlthaon·
lln'l AJr lnd Splice MUIIUm 11rlllr lhlr month.

a.n.

bilal missions.
"They were outdoing the United
States of America in technology.
That was unbelievable to most Amer·
leans. We knew that they would usc
this thing in propaganda around the
world to show that communism was·
aupcrior to everything else.
.
"It wun'r just a science race, if

was a race for the hearts and minds
of people," ht: said. "America realty
felt threatened."
The response was huge: New
York City threw its bigges! ticker tape
parade ever: 4 million people turned
out. Another 250,000 watched !he
Mercury Seven parade from the
White House to \he Capitol, where

Glenn addressed a joint session of
Congress .
Glenn has lost count of the numberof Schools and streets named after·.
him. But ·each day's mail st.ill carries
requests for autographs.
Some are from children.
•
More arc from grownups

.

:. Trial may Federal agents. join search 'or fugitiv~ brothers
: pro/o ng ,
~c~slng
Keh~
tor
' fill'S U gatl•on .
" l/•tJ•g·atJ•on
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.CINCINNATI (AP) ~ Thtee
: ' memben of a claaa-lction lawauit
• want to JO to trial, which could
• scuttle a propolcd $4.27 million
' · settlement for relative• of cancer
' patienta who received experimon·
• · tat radiation treatment.
One woman who uid her mothcr suffered a painful deith ~r her
irradiation In 196' told ajudae Fri·
:.

WILMINOTON (AP)- The FBI Executive motor homo with areen
has joined the search
two broth· trim and Montana license plates.
ers charg'!d with tryinl to kill Ohio The ~hicl~ is reaisterod to Chovie
law officen durins a pair of shoot· Kehoe s wtfo, Jeu:ena Oumm, 23.
inss.
·
The FBI conatden the brothcn
The FBI said Friday it had . anned and e~tromely danaeroua.
obtained federal arrest . warrants They were bchevcd to bo· travollna
clwJina clievie O'Brien Kehoe, 24. with Ms. Oumm and Cheyne Kehoe's
and Cheyne c. Kehoe, 20, both of wife. Tanna Wilburn, who i~ in her
Colville Wuh. with unlawful flight early 20s, and four young thildren.
to avoid prose~udon. The warrants
Three of ·the child~n, all under
allow FBI aaents to work with the age S, bolona to Chev1e Kehoe and
Sllte HiJhway Patrol and Clinton his w!fC. The other child wu bo':ft
County authorities to track down the last July to Cheyne Kehoe ud h11
brothers.
.
.
. wife. the FBI said.
Police suspctted that the brothcn . A .Clinton County Jrand jury
were drjwing a white 1977· Dodse tndteted the brotbcn on Thunday,

In history

ly Tilt A•toollted PrHI
Todny 11 Sund.a~. flab. 2), tho 54th dny of I1197, Thoro 1110 311 day1lcfl

In the yoar.
Today'• tlllhlilhtlnHI!Iocy:
· · ·
On Peb. 23, 1945, durlnJ World War II, U.S. Marine• on lwo Jima cnp·
lilted Mount Surlbachl, where 1hoy rai!Cd the Amarlcan nua.
On 1hl1 date:
•
.
In 16M5, ~ompour Oo0r11 Prleklrlo Handel w~8 horn In Oarm~ny.
•
· In 1822, BoatOft WDIJran~ a chartor 10 lncorpor~t• 11 a city.
In 18)6, tho 11011 or tho Alamo boaan In San Antonio.
· In 184?, J5Q y1ar1 aao, U.S. troop• under Otn. Z110harr. Taylor dofaat·
eel Moxlu~ Oen. Santa Anna lithe Bftlllo of Buono.VI811 n Moxlto. .
In 1148, the 1b.lh proaldont of the United St"tot. John Quincy Ad1m1,
died or 1 11roko at ••• 80. 1
.
In 1161. Prt•ldent·tltot LlnQoln arrived 10eretly In Wuhtnston to tako
· ·olfl~r. ld ·~••••lnatlo,n plot ha~lnl hecn follod In Baltimore.
Jn 1170, Mlutulppl Wll ro•dmlntd to tho Union.
.
In lfOJ,Ihl Rottll')' Club WAI fou~doll. '
.
.
1ft 1921, Pnlldont CoolldiO t ltnod 1 bill oroauna tho Pcdorlll Radio Com·
...,lolt1 !~runner of the PildorAI Communication• Commlulon.
1ft jJ~G, thit llrtt lhtltln.. tho U.S. malnllnd durlnl World War II
11 tlapaMM tubmtll'lno fired on an oil ,.tlnory In Bit wood, Calif.
"~' tho 111'11 mill Inoculation or ohlldretllllinlt polio with tho Salk
•
bl11n In Pllltbllrah.
. ·
.
:
ll , '" ltttmpcod coup boaan In llptl~ 11
memben of the Clv·
lnvadld.lht Parll~~~~tnl, talllnalawm.,. hoJtaet. ThiMttmpt col·
I hOIIrt f1111r. ·
• ,,t Qn ~au •1111 ttflNOuJ'i oon&amp;NII..,. Riohard ~.. Otpbll'dt IMOIIIII4I
• -~ac;y tor lila O.moiratlo pi'Uidtntlal ~!
•
pjw ~~ •1M'Wltllli' Olymptt CIMIN t!MMtlln N~ll. ,_.,
l~M!iw.. lhlJulllldt o1 pro-oo!lllllllftlll dlmonli!Miri, 10111t ehoutln1,
''Dow~~ wllll
ltuttillt ~nil'~ ci111Nc1 wlch ~licit.

or

aoo

i

m.

'I

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...

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It's now or never for-finance reform
•

•

'

I

fund ralalnal• pataod up~fi)cchancc Burton, R·lnd .. rho probably wears · would alter . tho system in ml)or
ly JOIIPh l"lr
If we could 101 1 tow ml)or play· mlaht nut coma aaatn r another hit panlun hlindan to boP. tho bet· wayil. Fred Thompaon of Tennessee .
ert In tho U.S. Senate ro road 1ome quarter of 1 century. Ona c pelllna · lcr to keap hiN mind frea of Democ· has 1l1o spoken up for reform, but .

Hor~ee, we eould nx thl1 camptlan· atatlatlc tolla it all: In the lut nulon
rinlnL'O mr11.
..
·"Salzo lhc d1y, '.'wrote tha Roman
.
. .
poet and utlrlll, 1nd that Ia. precl"·
Jy whit the Jawmtken In tho Upper of Conarota, 92 l}lform proPOMit
Chambcir ahould do. Tho Clinton wore codaidarod, ariif9Z '(ere ldlt~.
I put the onut on the Sena~e
oampalan'l fllnd·raltlni acandal1
proHnt ~m with tho 11011 qf oPI*· btcauia the Hou" It hopel111.
iunjty lhathlln't been lttn In Wuh· Speakrr Newt Olnpillh II -,1y Into
lnpon tillllt ~ Nlllon tldlilllltd an llllifo-NOov., phul, ,....,..
tldtldrpaliDanllllll ccflltl'ar . . . . 11111111 hi tel 111 hl1 own fllncl-rattlnJ ~bu"'·
tm lltd 1M IIWI10 lilt f!tdelll Tile tnvttlll•llon of oampelan·
ft111no1 W1'0111do1111 hal fallen to the
llllollanCIOtmnlttlon. ,
·
. If thll Oppai'Qinl~ to rtwrite lhl Oovemment ltrorm and O~nlaht
Jawa thai·purpor110 a,oyem pol~llcal Cnmmlll001 ' chaired by Rep. Dan

JOffiJh §Rtlf

•

r11ic alieriloao. · .
So tl!alloavaa ua at the mercy of
.tho Senile. Ancl, truth be told, the
protpecta in thia arona' are not AO
1ood oltiM!r. Majority Leader Trent
Loll ~eama aeiluly indiffoNnt to .
roform. Majority Whip ·Mitch
McConnell Ia an lmpJ110able foe of

chanl•·

Onl~

thrte tlltol'l l&amp;lillft wind·
milia have come to tho foro. ReptlbUcan John McCain of,Ari&amp;ana ud
Democrat Ruuell Fainaokl of Wlacontln ue. donedly punuins th.e
latue and have introduced 1 bill that

aome wonder whether hi1 support is
show or aubatance.
..
Thompaon ro10 to fama ·u the .
minority coun~elto the Sanate Wur· .
1110 Commillee, altd into' lobbylna, ; ·
became a movie actor, lhcn campiiJilcd for the Sanlle in pllld thlru ·I
and a pickup truck. AI chlinnan of
tho Oovenimental Aff1in Cbmmlttee,
ho is hoadln1 up the Senate i!lvtall·
lilion of Clmplilft misdaeda. He hal · ·
promiaed 1 blputlun efl'on, but hl1
· early maneuven hne · been 'dis·
turbinsly antaaonistlc. He hu uked
for an open-ended probe,.

w"

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The newspaper .said Chcvie
~ad ttes _to skmheads and whtte
supremac1sts m the Spokane area.
A video camera mounted in a
trooper's cruiser captured a Feb. IS
shootout involving two men pulled
over during a traffic stop, a troilper
and a Clinton County sheriff's
depuiy. Authorities said they believe
Cheyne Kehoe tired shots at the
deputy and Chevic Kehoe .was the
vehicle's driver,
·

the .~olv1llc Statesman-Exammer.
We are m the schools, government, law enforcement. health and
~.verywher~ you look,". he wrote.
Someone s scared and 11 1s not us. .
We have Yahweh (a name for GOd)'
and we are not ~fraid to die."
Spokane pohce had no record of
either Keh?"• police spokesman Dick
Cottom saad 'friday.
The Spokesman;Review of
Chcvie Kehoe then allegedly tired
Spokane reponed Fnday that the
brothers ~hared interests in firearms, several shots at a Wilmington police
survivalist octivi_tie~ and anti·g~&gt;V· officer's car several minutes taler.
ernment and m1 htta philosophies.

•

' . lightin&amp; ~ack tears.
WILBERFORCE (AP}- Central already asked the Legislature for .
. "Why can't we make these
State
Univanlty deserve' continued $10.3 million in emeraency money
' people tell the truth; why can't we
.. · make them admit · what they did state support even if the financially and forgiveness of a SI.S million
troubled sehool is as much as $20 state loan. That money would be uicd
' ' was wrong1"
to pay off oporatina debt such as
,.
Mrs. Paaano and two other ' million in deb~ supportcn say.
The
Dayton
Daily
News
reponed
water. foOd service and telephone
objectors want to bo excuaed from
;. , the aroup of plaintiffs thatsucd the Friday that a state audit co bo released biHs.
thisaprinallkely will putrhe .univer· · The Senate hu approv~d the
~ ci.ty, the University of Cincinnati
shy's debt al $20 million. Earlie.r csti· packaJe, ud tho House could vote on
. and several doctors.
Defendants say the daal is off mates htd put the figure botwocn the measurc,by mid-March.
State ,t.uditor Jim Petra told tho
• unless it includes tho entire class. $11.6 million and $16 mi.llion.
San. Jeff Johnson, president of the Dally News that be would neither
:. , U.S. Discrict Judse Sandra •Beck·
Black Elected Legislators of phio. confirm nor disput~ the $20 million
v , with held.cwo days of hcarinas on
said
Central State has providea aca· figure. But he said he .believes that ..
the proposed settlement, whith
dcmic
excellence and should re&lt;:eive ·once the current fiscal crisis puses,
~~ , she must approve or set uide . .
the school can operate on a break, ·
..
The lawsuit stems from radtO· continued state support.
. "Wha! we're hearin1 haro is noth- even basis.
;,~ ' lion treatments pcrf()rii1Cd .at the
Futuro audits will seck to recover
.. former General Hospiul m the ina new," said Johnson. 0-Cievcland.
"What's
4iffcront
is
the
·amount
of
money
that Petro's office has dater·
·, • 1960~ and early 1970.. Plaintiffs
allege there were no boneli1s, and money. We -know that pooplc mis· mined was improperly spent, pri·
·
marlly durlna 1992-94. He declined.
, •. there were hidden motives because managed the school.''
Fred
Ransier,
chainnan
of
the
uni·
to release additional details.
,, .the u.s. Department or Defense
versity's
board
af
trustees.
ques·
Central State Trustee Vicki Pegg
,. . paid pan .of the cost, · aboul
tioncd
the
$20
million
fiaure.
said
she thinks reports that tho dcbr ·
: · S6S 1.000. to learn what could hap"That's not the kind gf number we is more than previously estimated and
. : pen to soldiers expo~ed to radia·
had
anticipated," ho said.
that money wu improperly spent will
~· tinn
.
·
Plaintiffs contend thatlhc treatRansier acknowledged that the ~tually increase support amQJII tax' ' ments caused pain and hastened the Lcgi&amp;lature would not favorably payers.
'· death of their relatives. The defen· receive news of additional debt. But
"If tlic truth of what happened is
dants say the treatments were .bon· he said tbc school's ·problems stcm there were funds that were misspen!,
clicial i11 some cues, and any . from put manqcme~t problems and they hove a right to know that," M~.
effect they had on death could not lack of ovelli&amp;ht of that man..clllllnl. Pegg said. "I think the citizens of
Centnil State can operate 1n a fis- Ohio would bo far more willina 10
· . be determined because the pttients
colly'so¥nd
manner if properly man· help out Central State if thay felt
were in adv•nced slliJCI of cancer.
there wussomc IICl!OUntahillty for !he
. Ninety patients received radl.. aaed, he added. ·
· "I fa decision notlo fund the uni· past." . · ·
tion. and most of their families
But at least one key legislator dis·
approve of the settlement. But If versity is goina to be basel! solely
disputes with the ronlllni.n~ rt:l•· . upon past deeds, chon all that ! and agreed.
-rives cann.ot be re10lved, husauon the board have done up to thi• point · ''I dun'tthink it helps," said Rep.
is really of no value to anyone." Ran· . Bob Corbin. ~-Dayton. who sits or,
could go on for yean.
-!he House Finance C.11111miuce. ' I
• The nesotiated soulement sicr said.
Central
State,
Ohio's
only
histor•
think It's one more nail In the coffin.''
·.would pay each family $36,000 tQ
$.66,000; require placement of a ically blatk public univcrshy, has
·memorial plaque on th.e Univor•l·
ty of Cincinnati campus; and
require the federul aovernment to
apologize.
·
worth S2SO. 'rho 4,306 tickets show·
Mrs. Pagano said money wu
By The Aeoocllted Prill '
· 'Th• followlnr numbers were ing throe of the l)l!mbors are each
not an i11uc, but ahe wanted areater
selected
in Friday's Ohio and West worth SI0; and the 45,812 tickets
recoilnilion for her mother and lhc
show ina twa ofthe numbon are each
Vlralnialotterlea:
other cancer palicnll.
worth $1. ·
OHIO
"I'm aoin&amp;to fiJ~l it to the end,
. Sales In Pick 3 Numbers tOIIIcd
for my motbcr. She wa1 a areal
Pick 3: 6-S·9
$1,486.421, anil winners will recielvo
woman," Mn. Paaano uid. "My
Pick 4: 4·7·9.0
$400,627..50.
' "
,realeSt loal would bo tO 100 thole
Buc~;yc ~: 8-9-21-31-36
Pick
4
Numbora
playen
WIIOred
docl0111l!P in front of this coun."
No tlcketa l!llll:hcd all five nu111·
Another objector, Owendon . ben ~elected in r:riday nlpt 's Buck· $396,724 and will share 588,300.
The jackpot for Satunlay't Super
Plair, told tile judp that tile mon·
eyeS drawlna, tho Ohio Loucry said.
A wiMi"l ticket WO\Jid have been Lotto draw ina wu $4.rnilllon,
ey ~ettlcmant
not adequate. He
WIST VIRGINIA
Slid e110h family ouaht 10 receive
worth $100,000.
Daily·
3: 6-3·3
$1.5 million.
·
Sales in Buckeye S .totaled
Daily 4: 9·5·2·1
, .MI. Becltwilh WN expecied to
$409,409.
Cash
2S: 2·4·5·8·12-15
rule on the ~eUie11111nt next week.
· There were \62 BuckeyeS tickets
with four of the numbers, and each is
•

Ohio,

•

lower of the Christian ldent1;y wh1te

suprcm~1st movement m the leiter to

·~~rc~~:::~~~~~::.s:~~~: - Central State boosters call ·
· gy from docton.
.
d t
f ,. dl
rea;·~r,;.:dwim,~~~~~~·67, for continue s ate un ng
0

~Today

them of shooting at police.
duona. two clashes Saturday near
Wilr':'in..on, ~bout SO miles northeast
of Cmcmna11. The officers were not
hun.
. C~vie Kehoe leftColvill~, about
70 nules north of Spokane, 1~ July
1993. A Washington state driver's
license thai expired in.January listed
him as a Spokane restdenl. There is
little ~nformati?n ab.out Cheyne ·
Kehoa s past rcstdcnpes.
Newspapers reported Fri~~y that
Chevie Kehoe wrote a letter an 1992
to his bomeaown newspaper declaring
that ho wu "not afraid to die" for his
beliefs. He idantitied himself as a fol·

••

W.Va. lottery picks

~I

,,.-~·
.

sa\f&amp;

,
••
(.\&amp;~ ·On• On.,. ••
.

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.

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~-

5hp Sickle Bar Mower
5hp SP ~ulchlng Mower
5hp Pony Tiller (recoil)
6hp Horse Tiller· (elec start)
4hR ChipperNac
4.5hp ChipperNac
6hp ChipperNac (elec start)

....,.

IMIII/Mmml'l UIT

Slo ,......
LiST

MODEL

DESCRIPTION

IA'VE 10'/, , ,

34064
34022
15008
12090

$ 1729

S 569

$ 1249
$ 2339
47260 $ 910
47035 $ 499

47287 $ 1869

.. SAVINGS FREIGHT

$300
$ 80
$250
$320
$ 90
minus
minus

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

SALE PRICE

$ 130
$ 50
$ 100
155
0
$ 50
$ 150

s
s

I Zl7t

'110
il71f

"Two Only" In Sto ;:llllelll
MODEL

. DESCRIPTION

Mini Tiller
4hp Sickle Bar Mower
5hp ChipperNac
5hp ChipperNac {elec start)
7hp Standard Horse Tiller (recoil)
6hp Standard Horse Tiller

LIST . SAVINCS FREICHT

12001 $ 329
157.9
34062
47291 S. 1099
47292 $ 1559
12067 $ 1899
12089 $2139

s

$ 30
$280
minus
minus
$310
,$320

$
$
$
$
$
$

''"'''

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110

,,.,
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70
120
140

,,,.,
'""

150

Oilier In
4hp Mulching Mower
Shp Pony Tiller (elec·start)
6hp Econo Horse Tiller (recoil)

~

1: ..

599

\,J\ I' '

DESCiiPTION

.

"

11 5
'· ' '

MODEL

.,

•

......

LIST

'
,_,.

SAVINGS 'fllfiGHT

$ 359 $ 35

li~
.·.

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$ (}
15009 $ 1449 $250 . $ 115
15010 $ 1599 $300 $ 140

34020

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20

""'SPECIAL SAVINGS .'
;)li'lttll\

SALENIQ

·~

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,,,.
,,,.
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SAUPIIQ
•

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PoiMroy •llllldllport elk"lpalll, Ott. Point Plnnnt, wv

Pill AI•" · a ..........
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-

------

Elnora Adams
LONG BOTJ'OM - Elnon Adams, 92, Long Jloaoul, died Prid&amp;y, Feb..
21, 1997 mille Rock Sprillp Rehlbilitalion Ceala', 1\Jmeioy.
Born July 20, 1904 in VUJinia. daughter of the lite Bentonllld Alice
Underwood Lillard, she retired from nwsill&amp; at !he aae of 79.
SUI'Yiviog 1re a dal,lsJtter, Lula Carolyn Adams of Brooklyn, N.Y.; tblee
. pandchildren and duee gru1 grandsons; two half-bnllbm, Noclllld Eston
Dickmon; and ltio half-sisters, Katbleen Walton and Olene East.
She was also pfeceded in death by her husband, Franklyn Griffith Adams;
and.a son, ltoben Adams.
.
Private services will be held at a later date. Arrangements w= completed by the Fisher Funcnil Home, Mi~port.

'*'-Y 2S, 1187

P.aying ·
for aide
may.head
into court

LOVELAND (AP) - A fiJhl
over who pays for an aide at private
school who helps teach ~ youngster
with Down's syndrqme could be
headed to court.
Two youngsters with Down's syndrome share the teaching aide in
classes at the private Children's
Meeting House Montessori school.
MIDDLEPORI' - Evelyn L. cBsto died .Friday, Feb. 21, 1997 in !he
The parents of Chase Doppler, 10,
Columbus Commuruty Hospital, Columbus.
pay his portion of the aide. But the
Friends may call at !he Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport, from 2-4 and Sycimore Com'lftunity School Dis7-9 p.m. Sunday. Services will be in the funeral home at 11 a;m. Monday. trict covers !he cost for 8-yeat-old
Burial will be in the Riverview Cemetery, Middleport·
.
Ry811 Mavriplis, the other youngster.
Greg 811d Peggy Doppler, Chase's
Funher arrangements will be announced later by the funeral home.
parents,- want the Loveland City
School District to do the same and are
going to the $chool hoard to malce
l CHEsHIRE-. Homer Cline, 81: Cheshire, fortnerly of Marysville, died their plea. The couple may sue in fed!latwday. Feb. 22, 1997 in Pleasant Valley HQspital; following a lengthy ill· eral coun to force Lovel811d schools
rjess. .
"
.
to cover the cost, said Phyllis Brown,
Born May 27, 1915 in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., son of.the late Brent and the Dopplers' lawyer.
'losy Patterson Cline, he had been employed by Nestle Inc,, for 24 years.
"We pay taxes to Loveland, but'
a A U.S. Army veteran of World War U, he was a member of' the Hender- they pay zero to educate him," Greg
sj)n (W.Va.) Tabernacle.
Doppler said. "All we ask for is just
t He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Vausia F. Gardner Cline;· a lillie bit."
~grandchild; two brothers, Wade Cline aild Gus CliJIC; and three sisiCrs, Daisy
The Dopplm, who moved into the
IJrofford, Amy ~line and Rillic Younger.
Loveland district in 1991, estimate
! Surviving are his second wife, Ruth Pyles Cline; two sons, Ricky (Alice) ·that providing Chase with 811 aide at
~ineofMarysville, and Larry (Mary) Cline of Westerville; a daughter, JoAnn his school for two hours'daily costs
~oben) Conkle of Cheshire; live grandc!Uidren, two great•grandchitdri:n and the Dopplers $3,600 an11ually. They
question why the district is willing to
, great-great-granddaughter; and a brother, Worthy Cline of Columbus.
, Service~ will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Mannasmith-Hale Funeral · pay the legal fees to fight their
lfome, 621 W. Fifth St., Marysville, with Pastor Robert H. Hall officiating. request.
·
durial wiii be in the Olikdale Cemetery, Marysville. Friends may call at the
The federal Individuals with Dis· fimerat home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
abilities Education Act (IDEA) entic
ties children to special-education services, including speech and occupa\
tional therapy, instructional aides
£ SPRINGFIELD- Joseph Wyatt Gilbert, 76, Springfield, died Friday, Feb. and interpreters for the deaf. The law
21, 1997 m the Hope House Manor, followmg a lengthy Illness.
requires that school'districts provide
~ Born Feb. 23, 1920 in Pomeroy, son of the late James A. Gilben and Marie children "(ith special needs a "free,
Gilben Niday, he had resided in Champaign and Clark counties for the past
35

Nation/World

Homer Cline.

. ~~~~tanktruckdriverfortheAshlandOi1Co.for25yearsandretired

::prennen H. G0 ldsberry ·
i ·

·

:; ATHENS - Dfennen Harding GQidsberry, 82, Athens, died Thursday,
feb. 20, 1997 in O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
.
· ·
:1 Born June 2, 1914 in Marion, son of the late Roy E. and Dora Gilliand
ldsberry. he worked for the Athens Water-Department for 21 years, retiri ng !IS superintendent. He was also a 13-year employee of the ~cBee ~o.
l A graduate of Shade_High School, he studied water treatment technolo-

·

SHARING A GAME - ChaM Doppler, 10,

appropriate" educ,tion in the least
restrictive environment' possible.
How that should be done isn't
clearly addressed, according to
lawyers who have fought bat)les
over the issue in coun.
Two similar cases are under
review for possible consideration by
the U.S. Supreme Coun. Statewide,
there are 201 ,000 students from 6to
21 with disabilities.
A recent ruling by a state hearing
offi~er frees the Loveland district
~m the responsibility of providing

wlttt Down'• ayndrome. (AP) .

the aide for Chase Doppler at the pri· . ing us to do more." said Michael Fis- .
vate school.
·
cher; laWYer for the schools,
·
' Loveland officials argue they are
The Dopplers and their lawyer

ftittowing the law by agCI'eing to
transpon Chase to·a Loveland school ·
for !Us speech and occupational ther- ·
apy, and by providing 811 instnlctional aide only if he attends LOveland
Miami Elementary School. '
The district is willing to provide
Chase's services at Loveland schools,
Superintendent Ron DeWilt said.
"We have done all we are required
to do. They (The Dopplcrs) are ask-

. By TARA MEYER

said federal law requjres that the ser- .
vices come to Chase. ·
·. "My child has rights. We have to
be his adVOCJIIes," said Peggy
Doppler, of Symmes Township.
"He's entitled, and he's not getting
it.

AIIOCIIIIH Pntaa Writer

tl

Ryan Mavriplis' case was settled
this fall when Sycamore schonl officials opted not to appeal a hearing
decision in .the family's favor.

..

.

at . fo~r "!'CIS: .~~nality, coping
skills, family Situations imd drug use.
~eis said preliminary results indi~
cate that youths who comrpuniqtte
more with their families and are able
to relax are less likely to (:(Insider suicide. ·
·
He said youths who are high-risk
are more likely to take their problems
to a teacher, a coui)selor or~ mental
health professional. They also are less
likely to have a male·role m~l i~
the(amily.
' . . ,,· '
A 10-year study by 'the Carnegie
Council on Adolescent Development
found _that many youngsters are not
receiVIng the adult suppon and guidance they need primarily because of
.social and economic ch811ges. .
·

The program was developed by
Ms. Grossman 811d a group of psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses, edu- ·
cators and social workers at the
lnSiitute for Juvenile Research at the
University of Illinois at Chicago. •
Ronald McDonald House Charities
financed the creation of the cornputer software program, Team Up to
Save Lives, which has been distributed to high schools nationwlCie.
Two University of. Akron
teSeiii'Chersareconeluding:tt;1!1rfiveyear study of at-risk Sludent b-aits.
"The point of the study is we want
to be able to predict who is actually
going to attempt" suicide, Dr. Ron
Bobner said.
.
He and Dr. Dave Weis are looking
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r.Surviving.;, his wife of6l years •. Lotus.Chapman Goldsberry
. ; two dau.gh- .
11

POMEROY -. UnitsoftheMeigs TuppcrsPiainssquadassisted.
Counl)' Emergency
Medical Service
TUPPERS PLAINS
·
recordedl2callsforassislanceFril:llp.m.,voluit.tccrfiredepanday. Units responding included:
ment and squad to State Route 7.
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
·
brush fire on Wayne Caldwell. prop·
5:06 a.m.: Darst Nursing Home, · eny, no injuries reported.
Pomeroy, Ruby Diehl, ·Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
9' 19· a.m.; Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middleport, Pam West,
(Continued from Aal
VMH;
.
tier, Henry E. Oilton, Richard i..
10:55 a.m., Carpenter Hill Road, Neal, Alben L. Earley, Karen . F.
William Musser, Holzer Medical . Wonn, Gregory L. Kratzer, Shirley
Center, Rutland squadassisted; " McDonald, Adrah L. Neal, Carolyn
1:21 r.m., Bucktown Road, Letan . S.. Plymale, John I. Jones, John D.
i
i CROWN CITY- Roger Lee Montgomery, 49, 364 Johns Creek Road,
Falls. Woodrow Hall, VMH, Racine Markley, Roy Meade, David A.
rown City, died Thursday, Feb. 20, 1997 at his residence.
. squad assisted;
Walker, Lel811d P, Hamilton, Mia L.
Born June 16, 1947 in Gallipolis, son of Thurman Lee and Hazel F. White
7:56 p.m., Kerr Street, Pomeroy, . Patterson, Lora A. Smith, David T.
ontgolriery of Cro.wn City, he was a.fanner. · ·
·
Faye Will, VMH;
·
Carmin, Roger P. Brandeberry, Ken, Surviving in addition to his parents are a brother, William Eugene "Bill"
IO:I) p.m., Stonewood Apan- nison N. Saunders, Suzanne Wine_iintgomery of Crown City; four sisters; Shirley Lilly and Gloria Jean Mont- ments, Middlepon, Lola Kovalchik, brenner, Roger C. Winebrenner,
· Mooney, both of Oallipolis, and Ellen Addis and Nancy Brumlield, Pleasant Valley Hospital. .
Dorothy S. Esque, William Ball,
of Crown City; an" "veral nieces and nephews. . .
RACINE ·
Marvin L. Baird, Paul W. Morg811 Jr.,
"' by a daughter, Ti ftiany Mont~mery; and a broth
II :53 a.m., Elm Stre.et, Cora Bee- Kev1n
.. R. Roac h;
He was preceded in death
. -·
.
,
.
,
. gle, VMH. ·
. Ed Wagoner, Farrell A. Houck, ·
, James Monroe-Montgomery.
REEDSVILLE
Carlos E.·swisher, Marilyn R. King,
· Services will be 1 p.m,:tUesday in the Will!s•Fu!ICf&amp;l Home, with the Rev.. ·
10' 44 a.m., Founh Street, Melvin Wayne R. King, Carolyn S. Petrie,
arland Montgomery offiCiating. Burial will be in the Mount Zion Cemediry. State I,touiC 7 SOuth; Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday Smith, HMC.James A. Coz~ James C. Fife,
II a.m. until the time of the service.
RUTLAND
· Da•id R. Cannan, B&lt;innie Young,
4:56p.m., Meigs Mine 2, Lauehey David Z. Clay, Teresa A. D~vis,John
1
McCoy, HMC.
.
Sipple, Gary L. Lyons, Charles M.
a
.
.
·
SYRACUSE ·
Null, ·James Young, Samantha Rum,
- n' 1ftiiny Jean Mootgnnu:rv, 22
ths, Crow. n City,
II ' 39 a.m., Owl Hollow Road, ley, ·Debbie R. .George, Frank E.
-·
..
-'
Long
Bottom. N811cy Watson, VMH, Nas key, Darren L.' Hofi'm an.
20. '1997.
·
1995 in Huntington, W.Va., she wu the daughter'of the
Roger,~·::;~ IIIII ~~Sheets,
~
Surviviltl
Ill
IIIOCbc1' is a btbroiotherlhel, DollfiU Sh6eQ. ·
ServicM will be . p.m. Monday iD the Wauab-Halley·Wtiod Pulleral
p~e, widl . . t.v. W•'"'' \\bodylrd oflicUIInJ. Bwill Will be in the BelhC Jt''111y.
.
., .•
.
'
rs, Phyllis (Dr. William R.) Cuckler of Athens, and Judith (Michael) Fiorenof Canerville,· Ill:, eight grandchildren and II_great-grandchildren; a sis' r, Mary Elizabeth Parker of Cosby, Tenn.; a br01her, Glenn Goldsberry of. .
thens·, and several nieces and nephews.
.
.
.
j; He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Eugene Goldsberry and
navid Goldsberry.
;,... Services will be 1. p.m. Tuesday in the Hughes-Blower Funeral Home,
thens, with the Rev.. 'llld Cuc.kler officiating. Burial will be in the Mount
ion Cemetery, Athens County. Friends roay call at the funeral home from
-4 and 7_9 p.m. Mond!IY·
Masonic servi~s will be conducted in the funeral home at 7 p.m. Moo- .
.h. ·Lod 25 F &amp; AM
.
Y bY Ihe Paramut ta
ge '
·

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'BI.OOdmobUe

J Montgomery

·

Ferry, W.Va., charged with underage
alcohol consumption, w~s fined
$100, six months probation 811d. 80
hour~ community service. · ·
Rachel Siders, 19, 2136 Chatham
Ave., Gallipolis, charged with underage alcohol consumption; was fined
$100, six months probation and 80
hours community service.
Jeremy L. Williams, 19, 361
Pleasant Hill Road, Gallipolis, uqderage alcohol consumption, was fined
$100, 80hourscommunity·5ervicc.
Eric M. SmallwOod, 19, Wash· ton Con
mg
u House, charged WI'th
nde
·
u rage a1coho1 consump t'1on, was
fied$100
·
h
ba
'
m
, SIX mont s pro t1on. 80
hours community service.
Ch ns
· toph.er Campbell , 19, Fred•
eric~town, charged with underage
a1co ho1 co nsump t'aon, was f'med
$100, six months probation and 80
hours community service.
Michael A. Harvey, 18, 151
LeGrande Blvd., Gallipolis..charged

·

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local Internet acce••
with a smile•.

WHE1L C1WM

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By KARIN MILLER
Alloclllted PreP Wrltlr

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TV tal~ show host

Williams plans t6 air on Feh. 28. Ray
gave the interview because Williams
. NASHVILLE, Tenn. -Suffering promised to help ip the search for a
from tenninal' liver disease, James liver · transpl811t donor, said Ray's
Earl Ray says oo one will learn !he lirother, Jerry Ray. Williams denied it.
true story'ofManin L'uther King Jr.'s
Speaking from a wheelchair at a
asSISsination unless he is granted a state prison hospital; Ray said he
trial.
.
W811ts to take back his guilty plea and
"Put me on the witnel$ stand and get trial in the 1968 slayina.
you'll find out what really, what real- ·
Ray pleaded guilty a year after
.Jy, what took place," Ray, 68, said King's slaying aniJ ·was Sentenced to
· haltingly to talk show host Montel 99 years in prison. But he almost
Willi11111'Friday.
immediaiCiy recanted and has bCcn
Aa1(ed lf 110 kiUed !he civil ri&amp;hts rcq~~CStins a trial ever since.
. leader, · ~ ,.lpol.ded, "No, no. I · Conspiracy theorists have long
did a'I. clidn 'tiki it."
argued that ~· a bunaling, petty
· Ray 11p1 Jill hi! but lien dUring ·,criminal, could not have pulled off
the IS-minute interview, which .the assiSsination alone.·

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MENDENHALL, Miss. (AP) A convict. saitenccd houn earlier to
40 years in prison, is accused of
somehow smuggling a gun into a
police car 1!111 killing two deputies
before eluding authorities for nine
hours in the woods of Mississippi.
Police want to know if someone
gave F,ric Leondnl Snow a gun during his coun appearance Friday,
when he pleaded . :guilty to
l!'anslaughter.
Witnesses said Snow, 21, pulled a
pistol from lletween his legs and shot
deputies J.P. Rutl811d 811d Tommy
Bourne in the head and the neck as
·the patrol car traveled on a iura!, rwolane highway in southern Mississippi.
.
.Another prisoner ·in the car, a
woman convicted of fraud, was fotind
screiiJiing in the back seat as the two
deputies slumped in the frol)t The car
had rio cage separating the prisoners
from the front seat.
· Snow, who escaped from a Mis~
sissippi jail tlllU years ago l)y cutting
window bars with a smuggled saw
blade, fled into the woods. He was
caprurM late· Friday near a Mendenhall' grocery at'ter police spotted him
with night-vision equipment. ·
· Earlier Friday; Snow pleaded
guilty to manslaughter in the 1994
shooting death of Jerome Keyes, ·19,
and to aggravated assault for shooting 8110ther man thai·year.
Authorities said they were looking
into the possibility that someone
slipped a gun to Snow· in the coun-

room, but had 110 other details.
After Snow escaPed from a county jail in 1~. he remained ail large
for several months before being caplUred in Missouri.
Comctions spokesman Ken Jpnes
said the deputies wete taking Snow ·
and the other convic~ Patricia Gholar, to the Centtat Mississippi Correctional Facility outside Jackson.
Ms. Gholar told authorities that
· they,had been driving for about 20
ntinuies when Snow staned shooting.
.Becky Mon~ said she saw the
patrol car run off the road 811d then
heard four or five shots as she backed
her car out of a driveway.

•

"lbat's when I saw a man run
from the scene," sbe said. "He had Ill
long·barreled pistol in his hands." I
Mn. Monk said Ms. Gholar was
screaming in the ·car when she.
arrived. A trucker Slopped to helilr'llld ----they called 91 L
.~
The deputies still had
weapons on them when they .
found. Their loodies remained in the·
car for three hours as investiBators.
took notes and photographs.
'.
.There was a bullet hole in the pas-_
senger side windshield and another in ·.
the roof; blood had soaked the froritb
seats and head rests. ·
·

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OXYGEN

'l1laAPirr

Al'LANTA .- A .bomb blut thai
injured at least five people at a
crowiled nightclub - the founh to
rock this city in seven months- has
forced authorities to consider the possibility of a serial bomber.
"Clearly, we believe that we 1re
dealing with a deranged killer, but
pne who is very clever as well,"
Atlanta Mayor Bill Campbell said
Saturday.
.
Friday night's bombing rocked
The Otherside Lounge, whose clien,
tele is mostly gay and lesbian. The ·
nail-packed device exploded in a rear
patio crowded with.about I50 people.
Memrie Wells-Griswell of Snel• lville, the most seriously wounded
: with a 3- to 4-inch nail in her arm,
' was in slallle condition Saturday
after surgery at Grady Memorial
Hospital. The other four were treated at hospitals.
Police found a "suspicious" back· ·
pack- with a second bomb shonly
after arriving. That device, set n.C!I( a,.
low brick wall in a parking lot beside

Ray promises n:-uch,_reveals ·Iittle-

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I.OC.'I'YIY

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the buildina. was detoriated by a in the Iatesrblas\5. Friday's bombing
remote-controlled robot
· was called into the·city's 911 center
. ~peels of Friday's bombing . at 9:58p.m. as a shooting, said Police
ej:hotd the July 27, 1996, Centenni- Chief Beverly Harvard.
a1 Olympic Park attack, which kill~
"Several custolllers thought a lildy
one woinan and injured 100 people, had been shot," said bartender Rhonand ~Jan. 16 bombings ai Atl811ta . da Armstrong, who was mixing
Nonhside Family Planning Services, drinks when she saw a flash of light
which injured seven.
811d heard the blast. "She rolled her
Like both previous attacks, nails ~leeve up and had a spike nail
were used as shrapnel; like the through her ann."
Olympic bombing, a. backpack was
· Police closed off traffic to a sixused to deliver a bomb; and, like.the· block, mostly: commercial area of
Northside clinic hoii.bing, a second restaurants, nightclubs and businessdevice, intended for police and med- es before ewtoding the setond, more
ical team~, was used. In the prcviirus powerful bomb, authorities' said.
CjiSC, the )econd device exploded. .
"This is the second inci&lt;jent with
t\nd like both previous attacks. two devices we've liad," said Jack
-there have been no arrests..
Killorin;a Bureau 'of Alcohol, Tobac- ·
Authorities drew no immediate co and Firearms agent. "We have nQ .
connections between the attacks.
information to match them up but we
· · "They will be worked-as separate would be unwise not to be prepared
investigations but 'we all recognize for that possibility."
the ·similarities here," FBI agent
The federal task force investigat,Woody Johnson said. "We will be ing the ahonion dinic explosions ~ill
searching out the possibility that we take over the mghtclub b~mbmg,
have a serial bomber."
·
, Jomed by an ATF team amvmg Sat·
:Unlike the pa~:k bombing, author- urllay from Washington, D.C:A sepitiesdon't know of 811Y warning calls arat~ ~earn as lookmg into the
Olyll)plcs blast.
.
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with underage alcohol consumption, .
~as fined SIOO, one year probation
and 80 hours community sc.rvic~.
. Angela L. Robbins, 28, Vinton;
charged with driving under the influ- .
ence, was fined $4SO, three days jail .
and six months probation.
·
Coamioal'leu
· ·
GALLIPOLIS - n.. following
actions were recently filed in the Gal- :
l.ia County Pleas Coon: ·
Dissolution granted ._ Trianzy
McGuire, Bidwell, and Roger
McGuire, SlSS State Route 588,
Ga tl 1po
' t'as; patr1c1a
· · Jcan Dav1s,
· 9804
. '
SR 7, GaII'1poI'IS, and Robeit.
.
D&amp;VIS,
· t802Eas
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G'
ll'pol'
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tern vc., a 1 as; .
Vicki L. Barnes, Gallipolis, and. :
James F. Bames, Racme
· .
Div&lt;irce tiled -Tracy John~on,
553 . Sccond Ave., GaII'1poI'IS,· from. '
Michael Morland, St. Ann, Ill.; John ·
Taylor, 3923 SR 218, Gallipolis, ·
from Lora K. Taylor, 3861 SR 21.8,
Gallipolis. ·

~LFnl

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chrysanthemums to mourn De~g's .interred, soldiers held mock ceredeath.
monies to practice for Deng's. ereMore
than
10,000
mourriers
.
mation. .
·
BEIJING - Soldiers rehearsing
The memorial' service will be
for Deng Xiaoping's cremation prac- descended on Deng's binhplace, isoticed carrying a glass bier with an lated Paifang village in the hills of altended by 10,000 of Communist
off'~eer inside Saturday, 811d police ·southwestern Sichuan province. The China's elite. It will be closed to fortigh!ened security to prevent demon· mourners swamped the village of eigners because Deng, who retired
strarions of grief from spiraling into · 2,000 people, said Huang Heping of from his last post in 1990. officially
the regi(\1\altelevision station.
was a private citizen.
political protests.
·
"They took flowers and cried
Using his death to rally suppon, .
Workers unloaded truckloads of
and
bowed,"
said
Fu
Qiang,
anothe
Deng
Xiaoping's political heirs urged
flowers at the Great Hall of the Peo1
the public to unite with them. The
ple, the cavemo~s 'tegisiBtive_cham- television journalist. '
State-run television &amp;howed stu- leaders have long promised to follow
bers adjacent to Tiananmen Square
where Deng's lftCmorial will be held dents. intellectuals, fanners and oth- Deng's policies of market-oriented
Tuesday. ·
,
ers throughout the nation gathe~ing economics and severe limits on disExtra patrols of police on bicycles before ponraits of Dcng, bowing and sent for at least 100 years,
. In~ display of unity, Communist
circled Beijing.'s main streets · and weeping'. Bookstores did a-thriving
stood · ~ intersections. Plain~lothes •business in Dcng posters and record- party· leaders and senior military
officials pledged their allegiance to
poliee co.~fiscated flowers from peo- i~gs of his speeches.
China Central Television devoted Jiang Zcmin, the Chinese president
ple hea~ed toward a memorial for .
revolutionary manyrs in the center of nearly all,the national nightly news and Communist Pany se.:retary choTiananmen Square, w!terc flags.flew broadcast to images and teary tributes sen by Deng to succeed him.
at half-staff.
that were slightly more morose than
Although the pany ap'pears to be
In the politically volatile ChineSil the previous two nights. 1
•
united behind Jiang, it faces huge
capital, authorities have tried to conNear government offices in central challenges in governing this nation of
fine public reaction to Dcng's death Beijing, there was evidence of ·an 1.2 billion people. State-rl!n indusWednesday at ·age 92 to the eulogies increased poli~e presence. The gov- tries,' once lhc backbone of the econpoured out by the state-run news emment ordered discos. karaoke omy, are ·near collapse. Crime is rismedia.
, lounges and other entertainment spots ing and corruption is rampant. Rapid
Subdued displays of sorrow took to close during the si~-day mourning economic growth under Deng has
place elsewhere in the cou~iry.
· period that began Thursday. But most brought prosperity, while sharply
In Shenzhen, the southern boom- restaurants kept their bright neon dividing 1i&lt;h and poor.
town 'nc;u- Hong Kong thilt Deng's lights blazing.
Jiang is likely to welcome Men.. reforms created. hundreds of people
the governmeni busied it:;clf with day's visit by U.S. Secretary of State
laid.yellow fl()wers for the third day , preparations · for Deng's ,memorial Madeleine Albright as a chance to
in arow beneath a billl1oard. bearing service Tuesday.
highlight international recognition
his likeness. P.olice watched the
At the Bilbaoshan cemetery in for his leadership. ·
mourners closely, telling them to western Beijing, where many of ChiAlbright has cut short her visit move on at'ter leaving bouquets of na's revolutionary veterans are which was . supposed to continue
throuph Tue~dav .

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By ELAINE KUSTENBACH
Alaoclated PI'HI Writer

·
·
oger L.ee Mont gomery.

'*

7

Chinese subdued as plans made
· for Deng's memorial
on.
Tuesday
..

,

.Ac'tl•ons r·es·o·lv.e·'d ··n Ga·ll_l·a c·oun·ty c·o
· .urt·s
·
and 80 hours community service;
. charged w1'th public indecency, ·he
'was fined $7S and six months probation.
Brad Lee Bowman, 19, Gallipolis ·
. Ferry, W.Va., charged with underage
alcohol consumption, was fined
$100, six months probation and 80
hours community service.
Chad W. Sommerville; Gallipolis

(AP)

Possibility of·. serial bomber
arises in latest Atlanta :.b last

c~a at .the private Chlldren'l Meatlng
~ Montuaorl School w1tb ariolher child

and hi• bi'Other Kyle, 8, play a computer pnw
at their home In Lovelilnd. ChaM, whci haa
Down'• •yndrome, lhares a 11111chlng aldtt In

AKRON (AP) - With the · con Journal reponed Saturday.
increase in youth suicides and the
With ypuths spending much of
socia1 and economical changes in the . their time in school, _it lftay be up to
family, educators are sometimes find, the educators to curb this dangerous
ing themselves the firSt and last trend.
resort to help suici~alteens.
"From our work with schools, we
So l.ocal and nauonal researchers know sc"ools are the frontline," said
. are developing ~grams to teach Dr. Janet Grossman, a suicidologist
educators how to adenufy alid help with a national project for educators.
troubled students.
"If you help schools be prepared to
Suicide has gradually risen to the deal with crjsis, you ·can reach the
third leading cause ·of death among youngsters. They can save their·
those _IS to 24: -~ording _.~ the lives."
•
Amencan Assoc1auon of Su1c1doloThe project developed a special
gy.
. .
program that teaches educators how
Records from the, Ohio .Health to notice the warning signs, how to
Depanmentshow that 887 people 21 intervene and how to communicate
~or younger killed themselves from
with at-risk students and their par1990 throush 1995,_!he Akron Bea- enis.
.
.
•

&amp;

bllclcground 81'1 Atlanta Pollcl Chlei 'Baverly
HaMrd, en unldettllllttd 1111n, IoQI FBI dtr.c·
tor llllton Nix and Atlanta Mayor Blh Campbell.

Alcohol; Tobllc:co .-.ct FhWIIII egant Jeck.KIJ.
lorlnanauue~ qua1tl11t18 about a Friday night
bombing at an Atlanta, Ga., nlahtclub during a
n - eot1fele.lce Sldurclay. From ·llft·ln lhl

E.ducators _lear·· n.how to' tack'·le te·.en .SUI·c.·.de ·.

andbkteriaatOhioStateUniversityandVirtJiniaPolytechniclnstitute,
for many years was the only certified water bacteriologist and consult in the Athens area.
·
A
National
Guard
off'ICet'
at
the
Ordnance
F!1Cility in Point Plusan~ W.Va.,
Mu-'-'pal
I
· "' rid w U he
'
be
f
h
A
he
Co
R
L ·
.....
l!flng
.no
ar
• was 8 •Ormer mem r 0 1 e 1 ns unty epu.,.:
GALLIPOLIS - The followin~e
an Executive
Commiltee.
He was a major in the Ohio Civilian Defense Corps,'a charter member of actions were ~ecently resolved in GalHocking Valley Sponsman ~ssociation and the Athens County Anqtiue lip&lt;!lis Municipal Coun:
!IChin~ry Club, and a member of the Ewing Chapter of the Sons of the
Wanda L. Garnes, S2, 258 State
~1CI'I·can Revolution, 811 d the Brooks-G.rant Camp of the Sons of Union Vet- St., Gallipolis, charged with disor· derly conduct, was fined $100.
s~ d'
be 0f 1he A
1 A 1 h' F8 11 H ·
Sh
he
JasonA.Jones, 18,297LariatDril A .oun mg mem r
nnua ppa ac Ian
entage ow,
ve, Gallipolis, charged with underage ·
as also a member of !he Athens County Historical and Genealogical soci' tics, Athens Paramuthia Lodge 25 , F &amp; AM; the York Rite of Athens, the alcohol consumption was fined $100
ncient and Accepted Scottish Rite ,Valley of Columbus, the Washington
ounty Scottish Rite Club, !'nd the Order of the Eastern Star Minear.Chap- .

- .·iBureeu af

A

J

•from the Kelsey, Hayes Co. He was a member of the East High Street Church
~~a .
:; SUI'Yiving are his wife, Betty Hunnell Oilben; a son, James W. (Karen)
:Gilben of Springfield; two grandchildren;·a brother, Robert rqiday ofDay:ton; two sisters, Wanda Jean Niday and Je8Jinette Preston; and several nieces,
,nephews and cousins.
.
,; He was also preceiled in death by his stepfalher, Roben Niday; and broth;~r, Chatles Niday. · ·
·
" . Friends may call Sunday at the Richatds, Raff &amp; Dunbar Memorial·Home
:ln Springfield, where services will be held Monday at9:30 a.m., with Evan:gelist Brian Jones officiating.
:i Graveside services will be 3 p.m. Monday in the Beech. Grove Cemetery,
•J&gt;omeroy.
·

,

Authorities hunt fugitive 1
aCcused of killing deputies ,

Evelyn L. Casto

.

,.

•

a

.Joseph W. Gilbert

.•

'

'

.

"

-

· Ray's bid for trial was kept alive
Thursday by a ¥emphis judge who
ruled that new technology might be .
able to prove if a hunting rifle with
Ray's fiDgerprints on it was the murder ~capon. . ·
. Before the judge can order teS~ on
the rifle and the bullet, his decision
mil_stlle reviewed by a state appeals
coun.
.
King's family spppons a trial f()r
Ray, hopi~g that more infonnatiori
will come out in coun.

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P . "w

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LBJ style: tapes reveal
lessons in manipulation

and less when it became evident that difficulty Johnson and other's had in
the Post wasn't caving' in.
persuading Chief Justice Earl Warren
USATocl8y
"I
think
he
understood
that
the
to head a commission looking into
Manipulating the media and riding
the Kennedy assassination.
. herd on aides are great sport for most paper was independent," she said.
In the tape, Johnson fretted that
presidents. Lyndon Baines Johnson
"I had to come in here and plead
was just less subtle and more per- the civil rights bill was tied up in the with him and finally got him to do
sonally involved than most.
. Senate Rules Committee and worried it," Johnson told Graham, whose ediExcerpts from two of the more aloUd that the Senate and House lead- torial page supported the creation of
than 64!Lhours of tapes Johnson ership wouldn't do anything for the commission.
secretly recorded in the Oval Office months. Christmas vacation and hearJohnson appeared to be trying to
show the Texan at his pushy-yet- ings were expected to eat up time butter Graham up by pointing out his
well into the spring.
channing best.
progress on the Warren Commission
"Dick Ru.~sell (Democratic sena- in hope of getting her to hetp on ci v'
A telephone conversation on Dec.
2, 1963, with Washington Post P,.es- tor from · Georgia and head of the il rights. Johnson flatteringly refers to
. i~nt Katharine Graham, in which Rules Comminee) will say it's East- the Warren Commission as the " Kay
Johnson tried to enlist her newspa- er and Lincoln's birthday and by the Graham Commission." .
per's aid in prodding congressional time you get him he will screw them
"That was typical Johnson exagleaders to pass a . landmark civil to death because be's so much geration," Graham said.
rights bill, gives .a glimpse of John- ·smarter than they are," I ohnson says.
Reedy, now retired after spending
Graham said she rememberS that 24 years as a journalism professor at
son's heavy-handed style.
"I'd like for (your reporters) to be part of the conversation "because he Marquette University, said he doesasking these fellows ·(members of .(Johnson) was right" about Russell . . n't recall the 1964 conversation on
Johnson railed against the Thanks- the tape. But its theme - Reedy's
Congress), 'Where did you spend
your Thanksgiving holidays? Tell giving vacations congressional lead- unkempt physical appearan~ - was
me about it. Was it warm and nice?' ers had taken while he remained hard a familiar one.
And write a linle story on it," John- at work in Washington, and he want"My clothes were one of his pet
'son tells Graham.
ed Washington Post reporters to point grievances against J11e. He was an
The other, on Jan. 25, 1964, with out that fact.
·
absolute fanatic about personal
Johnson press spokesman George
"We are here functioning and
appearance, and I never cared about
Reedy, finds an earnest Johnson we're going to have to do it now,"
it a bit. He just irritated me about that
bluntly telling Reedy that his style of Johnson tells Graham.
sort of thing," Reedy said.
· dress is too sloppy for an adminis- · He derisively pointed out that durOn the tape, Johnson tells the
.Iration ·press secretary and needs ing tht:: Thanksgiving break Senate rqtund Reedy he -vants to give him a
sprucing up.
Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, higher profile as a spokesman, but
" You 'look like a (expletive) D-Mont., and Sen. Hubert poor grooming is holding him back. ·
. reporter," Johnson complains. ,
HumpJuey, D-Minn:, were "on. the
"I want to do it, ·but you've .got to ·
These tapes, available to scholars beach"; House Minority Leader • help yourself," Johnson pleads. '"You
and .visitors at the .Johnson Presiden- Charles Halleck, R-Ind., was "out don't help yourself. You come in with
tial Library in Austin, Texas, for more hunting turkey."
a wrinkled .suit and you come in with
than two years, have never been
"There wasn't a human here, and a dirty shirt, you come in with your
heard by the public. .
they're nofhere now and they're not tie screwed up. I want you to look
About 118 of the 640 hours of tape working now and they're not passing real nice. Get yourself a corset if you
have been released to the public. anything and they're not going to," have to."
Another batch will be released this · he said, shifting into his pitch for the
"OK, sir," Reedy replies . .
year.
Post to write about the vacations.
Reedy said the president even
The Johnson-Graham conversaGraham said that while she passed assigned a White House doorman· to
tion took place just 10 days after the content of ber conversation with look 11im over and signal tlie boss
Johnson was thrust into the presi- the president 0n to her editors, ·she when his appearance wasn't up to par.
gave no directive to follow his orders. Then Johnson would call Reedy. ·
denc~ by the assassination of John F.
"Get a haircut, George!" the pres,Kennedy. lt.illustrates that the presi- The Post.never.wrote about the vaca- ·
'
dent was already moving ahead · lions, she said; to do so in the way ident would growl.
Reedy said Johnson's obsession
aggressively on his legislative agen- Johnson suggested'would have been
"ridiculous. ,,
.
· over personal appearance was driven
.da and was impatient for results.
"Johnson
was
Johnson,"
she
said.
by feelings of insecurity about being
And he badly wanted the Post's
"He tried to lean on people, but you ljlllong the many Ivy League-educathelp in getting Congress to move.
· Graham, in an interview, recalled learned to live with it and take it with ed members of the Kennedy admin.
istration.
.the conversatimi but expressed sur, a grain of salt."
On
the
tape.
Graham
never
made
"As a boy from the Texas hill
.prise to learn that it had been taped.
any
commitments
to
Jc;&gt;hnson
's
country, he regarded clothes as suit of
She called · Johnson "a great civil
·rights president" but said she never requests for aid, replying "Yes," armor ag_ainst these people. He. was
"Yeah" and "'Yt:s; sir" to His VarioUS blinll.to !hi: fact that 11e was so much
gave in to his demands.
more· intelligent lhan they l)lere,"
She said Johnson .called often a1 points.
The
same
tape
also
alludes
to
the
Reedy ~ said. ~·In a sense, he felt like
the beginning of his tenure but less
a fish out of water."

Top 25 college liaJ.Icetbalt

By RICHARD BENEDI!TTO

•

Whitewater prosecutor must calm
uproar ~n light of staying ·with job
· And as a witness, you've g91 to feel
Walsh said the other chief area that
By PETE YOST
you· can trust the prosecutor," Walsh stari· will have to attend 10 is the
Aaeoclated Preai Writer
WASHINGTON- After a tumul- said, ·
morale of-his staff, which disagreed
tuous week sparked by his announced
"I don't know if that kind of deci- with Starr'.s decision to leave and perdeparture, then sudden reversal, sion" about leaving the office of. inde- suaded him to change his mind.
'']' think he's going to have to ·
Whitewater independent counsel pendent counsel. "would shake tile .
Kenneth Starr needs to regain ·tlie · confidence of witnesses, but· it restore his relationship with his staff
· and probably what he did with Friconfidence of his staff, witnesses and could." he said.
the public, veteran prosecutors say.
Walsh has a uniqu.e perspective on day's announcement to stay on went
Starr acknowledged he erred in independent counsel investigations. a )ong way in that direction,·: Walsh
announcing ·he lvould accept the His was the longest ever - seven .said. ,
Joseph diGenova, another former
deanships at two graduate schools by years - ·and featured a dimension
independent
counsel, agreed that
Aug. l. The uproar left little time last similar to Starr's, cooperation from a
rebuilding the staff and public's con-.
week lo do work in the Whitewater major wimess well into the probe.
probe, Starr s.iid.
The Clintons' former Whitewater fidence is a necessity for Starr.
The 3-year-qld Whitewater inves- partner, Jim McDougal, began coop- · "I think he made the ISO-degree
tigation is entering a crucial stage of erating with prosecutors last August turn because the people in his office
·evaluating evidence involving Pres- and his information has proven valu- were furious about not being proper.·
. ident and Hillary Rodham Clinton able, prosecutors said in court papers; ly consulted," diGenova said. "They
and other high government officials.
In Walsh's i11vestigation, former fell they were being abandoned."
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., a forOn Saturday, Senate Republican CIA officer Alan Piers - after year~
Whip Don Nickles said on CNN's of evasive answeQ to Walsh's inves- mer prosecutor in Philadelphia, says
"Evans· &amp; Novak" that he's glad· tigators - decided to cooperate. Starr's decision D:~ay send a message
Starr decided to stay but added that Fiers' switch enabled Walsh to pros- to uncooperative Whitewater figures
he hopes the prosecutor will bring the . ecute the CIA's former spymaster, such as Susan McDougal, who is
Whitewater probe "to closure pretty Clair George, who oversaw the jailed for refusing to answer pros~
quick."
agency's espionage opera~ons world- cutors' questions in front of a grand
·
· jury.
Former Iran-Contra prosecutor wide.
Lawrence Walsh said he believes
"When Piers did that cooperation
"There were people who were
Starr. can sidestep this past week's with us that was an enormous deci- · going to wait him out, but now they
blunder but cautioned that a primary sion, and I'm not sure he would have know he's not leaving," said Specter.
question will be .how witnesses react. done it if we'd not made sure we
In Specter's view, Starr's decision
"When you persuade a witness to would stand by him the best we to remain avoided what would have
talk, he puts his future in your hahds. could," Walsh said. ·
been "a terrific setback, perhaps
fatal, for the. investigation."

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water reactors to the North to replace Korea to hold the peace talks.
He also said ")Ve have to avoid
reacton believed to have been used
any arm.P clashes between the two.
to develop nuclear weapons.
South Korea and Japan are pro- sides on the Korean peninsula."
vidini most of the $5 billion cost of . Albright began the Asian leg of an
If-day, nine-nation trip around the
the reactors and oil sl)ipments.
world
bere after.flying from Moscow,
After her talks in Seoul, Albright
headed· for the Demilitarized Zone .where she met with ailing Russian
betwee~ North and South Korea that Pfl'sident Boris Yeltsin and prowas created under !hi: '1953 armistice nounced him mentally "at the top of
his game."
·
that ended the Korean War.
The issue of enlargement of
Albright said the preliminary
peace talks - a U.S. briefing for NATO, which Moscow opposes,
North Korea - would be held in remained unresolved after the 50minute meeting.
·
New, York Olt MiliCh 5.
Yeltsin's spokesman, Sergei Yas1be Ointon administration this
week approved $10 million in food trzhembsky, ~d. "!t would he pre~
aid to North Korea. while South mature to say·that a breakthrough was
freeze 011 a nuclear~ J*OjlMI Korea pledge4 ,$6 million worth. . · achieved at Russia-U.S. talks on the
Yoo said :at • joint. II4IWI confer- question of NATO enlargement. One
must b6 .,.,.......... on sdit!dule.
ence
with AlbriJha dii&amp;lhe .Wstance can only,express cautious optimism."
It
a~
wamiJII 10 ~.
6
whlat h~' I d to provhlll ~ ' wu nol • it)alajlt... 111 Nortb ' .
•
•
•,

aar•

.

.

w•

· ·

Nwagwu
discovers
lesson
in battle
to remain
with·team .

Minnesota, UK and ·wake
Forest stan .among victors

MINNEAPOUS, Minn. (AP) ..:.._ allowed j
fo11r baslrets the ·rest of final minute that gave the Cavaliers
John Thomas sank two ffell throws the half and · lied to a 30-30 half- ·a chance to tie. Rutland atoned by
with 4.7 seconds left, lifting second- time tie.
sinking two free throws to seal the
ranked Minnesota over l'lo. 23 . · Minncs a is attempting 'to victory.
Dlinois 67-66 Saturday and aiving become the fmt Gophers team since
Virginia (16-11, 6-9) lost for the
the Gophers at least a share of the · 1949 to go undefeated at home. The fifth time in six games, further damBig Ten championship.
Gophers are 13-0 at home, 12-0 at aging its chances of earning an
. ,1bomas, a senior center who had Williams. Arena and 1-0 at the NCAA Tournament berth. The
been · shooting only 59% from the Target Center.
·
Cavaliers have sames aaainst
By ROCHELLE RILEY .
line this season, was fouled by Chris No.3 Keqtuclly 81, Vaaclerllllt 79 Virginia Tee!\ and No. 14 Maryland
The Loultvlllt
Gandy and sank both shots for
At Nashville, .Tenn., Ron Mercer before the ACC toumalllenl
Court.r.Joul'lllll
Minnesota (24-2 , 13- 1), whic!l scored 11.9f his 23 points in an 8
Alexander and Staples paced
Chuck Nwagwu has already'
trailed for much of the gllliC.
112-minute',span of .JI,le second half Virgi~ia wilh 13 points each.
learned that life offers harsh lessons:
Illinois guard Kiwane Garris, and·No. 3 kentucky ·Overcame a 22Neb1'81ka 74,
Sometimes such lessons make us
who led all scorers with 23 points, point first-half 'deficit to beat
No.7 Iowa SL 69 (OT)
scro
tried to drive for a final shot butlosi Vanderbilt'82-79 Saturday.
· · ·At Ames, Iowa, Tyronn Lue frus~~ryear the 24-year-old Jackson
control of the ball at the free-throw
Kentucl!:y
(26-3,
12·2. trated No. 7 Iowa State with his
. State University student walked ori
line as the game ended.. . .
· · Southeastern Conference) pulled quickness and clutch shooting. sc~rto the basketbaiLteam, no scholar-·
· Bobby Jackson scored 18 points within 10 points at halftime on ing 21 of his 30 points after halftime
ship, no guarantees. He just wanteil
for Minnesota, which can win th.e Wayne turner's three-pointer at the Saturday to lead Nebraska past the
to play. Coach Andy Stoglin chose
Big Ten title outright for the first buzzer.
. ' seventh-ranked Cyclones 74-69 in
him, but let him ride the bench until
time · since 1982 by beating
A . three-pointer by Pax overtime.
.
·
.
this season, wben the 6-foot-3, 215Michigan on Wednesday.
Whitcheajl, who led Vaaderbilt with
Down by five points with a·little
pound guard who's "real strong, real
•
Thomas had 12 points and seven 27 points, gave the Commodores a more than a minute to play,
. smart and has a knack for being
rebounds for the Gophers, who tied 53-4llead with 18 minutes left.
Nebraska (15-12, 6°8 Big 12) sent
where you ' re supposed to ))e"·
the school record far most victories
Mercer led the big surge midway the giune into ov~rtime on Bernard
earned a starting position.
in a season. set by the 1976-77 te8lll through ,the half, scoring four Garner!s three-pointer with 24 sec"He's the kid that 1 like to talk
that featured Mychal Thompson; · straight. ~. baskets
all off onds left, then ·scored on five of its
FINGER ROLL?~ lndlallll'a A.J. Guyton (right) u-ta ready to put about," Stoglin said. "He's a pretty
Kevin McHale and Ray Williams.
Commod~re turnovers - to g1ve six possessions in the extra session. 'In a cloa•nmge baaktlt In front .of' Northwestern postman Evan good athlete . not a great athlete.
, The .hard-fought victory avenged · Kentucky 'its first lead of the g~e at
Nebraska broke a 12-game losing f!'hemever (42) during the aecond half of Saturctay'a Big 'ren con- He's the kind of kid most people
Minnesota's only Big Te.n loss, .a '· 58-57 on a breakaway· stuff With II streak in conference road games,dat- te1t In SloomlngtOI'I, Ind., where the 24th-ranked Mooalel'll won 64- would ha•e cut early. Bull couldn't
96-90 decision at Illinois on Jan. 14. minutes 1_11!\•
ing back to la5t season and handed 49. lAP) .
cut him because he was such a good .·
· The· Gophers, who have won 19 of ' ·But Ml'r.er was called for a tech- Iowa Sta.te (18-6, 9-5) its second league. . .
ward, had tw&lt;l three-pointers to key kid."
..
·
tlieir last 20 games, also lo~t at nical for hangh•g on the. t!m, and straillhl loss.
'
Tennessee (11-13, + 10 SEC) was a 20-7 run late in the second half as
· But Chuck's father, Jackson Stall:
Alabama by three points in early Drew M~ux hit l&gt;oth techmcal free
Dedric ·Wmoughby led Iowa led by .Brandon Wharton and CJ. Indiana (21-8, 8-7 Big Ten) put the professor Emeka Nwagwu, made
DeceJllher.
·
throws IQfPUt the Commodores (19- State with 22 points , but the Black, each with 17 points.
game out of reach.
Chuck quit the team because he
·Bryant Notree scored 12 points · 9, 8-6) ~ad 59-58.
Cyclones' last hopes ended when he
The Volunteers had a 4 1/2Indiana coach Bob Knight, in earned two C's that threatened his
, for Illinois (18-8, 8-6).
Two free throws by Vanderbilt's dribbled the ball off his foot and' out minute scoring drought early in the achieving his 699th career win. had 3.2 grade-point average. The deciJackson , who fouled out with Austin Bates tied the ·game at 64 of bounds with 18 seconds remain· first half as South Carolina .scored started Mandeville with freshmen sion sent TV news crews scurrying
.. 3:25. left in the game, had a three- with 7:30 remaining.
.
ing.
12 straight, points to go up 17-4. A Luke Jimenez, Jason Collier, A.J: to the small campus in Jackson,
poi lit play after a steal to give
Kentucky score.d the next e1ght
Iowa State led only once in over- late run keyed ))y two Wharton Guyton and Michael Lewis.
Miss., · to question whether
Minnesota its first lead pf the game, points on three:pomters by Mercer time, 65-64 when Matt Knoll sank a three-pointers closed the gap to 31Knight was ejected with 35.4 sec- Nwagwu 's decision was fair.
46-!IS, in the second half.
and Allen Edwards and a re~und free throw with 4:38 left. ·
28 with 2:171eft, but South Carolina onds remaining in the first half by
Stoglin, who has been coaching
Charles Thomps. then scored basket .by Mercer. That made 11 72No.9 Soutla C•rollaa 69
held a 35-30 lead at halftjme.
referee Steve Weimer. KnigHt for 30 years, eight years at JljCkson,
twice on fast breaks during an',8-2 · 64 with ·five minutes to go.
·
T e n - 58
The Volunteers didn't get closer received his first technical in front of has got Dr; Nwagwu's back. . ·, .
~ Minnesota spurt that put the No.4 Wue·Forest ~· VlraJnill ~
. At Knoxville, Tenn., Larry Davis than nine points the rest of the way.
the Indiana bench while arguing that
Chuck "came in tearful. He shut
_ Gophers up 54-48, but Illinois
At Charloltesvalle, Va;, Ttm led South Carolina's three-guard
No.l41ndlana64 ·
Northwestern . center
Evan my door, and he broke .down and
fought back and led 66-65 with 25 Du~can had 21 points, 23 rebounds attack· with 19 points as the No. 9
Northwestem4!1
Eschmeyer was holding .Haris started io cry," Stoglin said. "He
seconds to play following .a dunk by and became the ACC's .career shot- Gamecocks beat Tennessee .69-58
At .Bloomington, l.nd., Richard Mujezinovic inside the paint.
wanted to know if I'd put him on
Notree.
· blocking leader Saturday as No. 4 Saturday.
·.
Mandeville, the' only non-freshman '
Northwestern was led by scholarship. because he considered
Teammates Melvin Watson and in the starting lineup for No. 24 Escl)meyer' s 23 points and I 0 moving out of the ~ouse.
- Garris helped Illinois take a 20- Wake Forest ended its two-game
tl lead in the first half by hitting losing streak with a 66-60 victory BJ McKie had 18 and 14 points, Indiana, led the Hoosiers with 16 rebounds.
"I explained to him, 'You don't
- four of six shots , including six against Virginia.
,
respectively, lis the Southeastern points and nine rebounds as they
The Wildcats shot 45% from the want me to talk to your dad, because
. straight points in a 10-2 run.
, .
. Wake Forest (21-4, 10-4 Atlantic Conference Eastern Division leaders defeated'Northwestern (7-19, 2·13) field in the first half, but were then it would be two against one." ' •
• But the Gophers'. defense, the Coast Conference) won despite two won their third game :n five day's ~49 in a Big Ten game Saturday.
allowed just 20 shots. They commitStoglin said the decision isn't
: s11cond stingiest in the B·ig Ten, turnove~s by Tony Rutland IR the and improved lo 21-6, 13-1 in the
Mandeville, a redshirt juni?r for- ted 19turnovers before the break.
about two C's. It's about priorities,
something more families should set.

·

· ~•.-.Ma
. rt.in .gets~·:
~~.i.c
. ·to.
ry.
.

s
·
oodw.ten...ch . er.·:v. ice..2...oo

G

in..r··

.

0
1
tea~
h;s~is~~::,.:~?.u~h:!fd
~·~:~
the tougb decisions in the bla,c·k

116.256 mph. He won $30,895.
community that's missing. Th.ere
When Martin's Ford moved to sec· about four car-lengths. .
"Thai last set of Goodyears we
li was (h 27th Buseh Series vic- aren't enough fathers there to help
ond place on .lap . 183, Jarrett'.s
'"'
make those decisions . .
was
awesome,"
Martin
.
tory
for Martin, who now has won
·11•
bolted
on
Thunderbird was still 2.2 seco~ds
"fie
just
passed
us
there
(on
four
of
the
last
six
and
seven
of
the
·
..
sTeasy to gert caught up on
said
..
ahead.
.
' lap 170) and I knew the only way I last 10 Busch Grand National races sports. en years rom now, he'·ll
· With those fresh tires making the
·
be h'
k at Rockingham.
· embrace his father because he'll ·
.
know he's one .of the lucky ones. I
difference, Martin steadily caught was gmng to al· 1m was to 11 e
tires.''
Randy
LaJoie,
the
winner
of
last
finally
talked to his father. I congratJarrett, finally moving up to his rear·
Jarrett
said,
"I
thought
I
could
get
week's
BGN
season-opener
at
ulated
him.
1 support him fully."
bumper on lap· l95. The next time
around, Martin drove high onto the far enough ahead. Mark just out- Daytona, edged Phil Parsons for . · Stoglin now meets with Chuck
Jurn four Milking and passed Jarrett smarted us. He just ran me down. I third place,. Elliott Sadler, the regularly to counsel and console..
made him go outside and he just o"t- Daytona polc-wmner, was fifth.
•'This story needs to be told
· on the outs1de. . .
Thet:e .w~r~ no senous accidents because there's too many fathers
· · The stubborn Jarrett remained dragged me. You've .got to give him
nearly side-by-side with Martin into credit."
and no mJun~s reponed. · . · who'd rather watch their sons play
Martin,
who
will
'
s
tart
from
the
· Saturday s esllmated crowd of .. than do·well in school," he said.
~"'"""'"""'""""~·'~;,~;"-':P',t;::&gt;~:"-,;'-'mm""'"=~.n=..-.,,,_.,_~-,.,.,,7::m&lt;":;;;cC"&lt;llll"i1 the second turn on the final lap
Stoglin is no stranger to the. acabefore Martin pulled ahead to stay, pole in today's Goodwrench Service 55,000. was a Rockmgham record
·400
Winston
Cup
race,
averaged
for
a
Busch
Scnes
race.
demic
vs. athletics debate. He used
moving off to win by .16 seconds - ·
I
to run twice-a-day practices but can-

: By MIKE HARRIS

· Winston Cup star, passed Miutin for
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP)-, the lead n lap 170.
·
Mark Martin. chased down and
M~nts later, Tracy ~slie spun
passc:d Dale Jarrett late in Saturday's- and hjt die wall coming off tum two,
Goodwrench Service 200, winning bringing o~t the fifth and final cauhis third straiaht Busch Grand tion flag~f the race. Martin chose to
National race ai North Carolina gamble, itting for four fresh tires
and fal _ g fp si~tth place for the
: Motor Speedway.
: Ma,i'tin cjominated ·the 19Hap restart oil lap 177.
· event, leading six times for 133 laps
As Martin .picke!l his way
: : on Rockingham's 1.017-mile. oval . . through lapped cars and around con. : But Jarrett. his fellow .NASCAR tenden, Jarrett opened a big lead.
';

North Carolina
Motor Speedway

•

"The Rock" l8 a wide, ligiHiank8ll one-mite laJOut
which ennually protluCIIa 1011111 o1 the moe1
exclllng IJIOIIIIIIIIln NASCAR'a .
Buach i!nd Wlllllon Cup

•

made the dean's list last

Goodwrench Service 400
lliAC!( 1,.£NGTH: 1.01 7 miles
·RAC£ t.£.NGTH: 3931aps, 400 mijes
DEFENDING CIWIP: Oala Earnhardt
RACE RECQIID: Ricky Rudel, :
122.320 mph,..,, Oct. 20, 1996
QUALJFYIIIG RECORD: Jeft Gordon
157.620 mph, aetfeb. 24, 1995

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

...
Stoglin said. '"Their academics have
to have priority. It cost me games
By·MIKE HARRIS
500, when he led 30 laps and fin- point.
and could gel me fired, but I chose '
RoCKINGHAM, N.C. (AP) - ished seventh despite a loose lug nut
" My knees were a little shaky not to (jeopardize their grades)."
·After two weeks of mostly frustra- problem. on his last scheduled ~it ' (See GOODWRENCH on B-8)
He shares that philosophy with
tion and unanswered questions at visit that forced him to make an
Nwagwu, who came to this country
Daytona International Speedway, ex~rastop .
in 1987, and said in news reports
the world looks a lot brighter for . I! disappeared entirely Friday. as
that his "job is to educate young
Mark Martin at North Carolina he grabbed the Busch pole with a lap
black men . That should be the prilMotor Speedway.
'~Of151.t 64 mph and, less than two
mary objective. Basketball is sec"An awful lot of bottled up frus: o n "'ater, took the Winston Cup l'
on~ary . "
Irati on was unleashed for me ;" . · e with a record-smashing lap of ·Top 10 drivera
It \Vas an extraordinary choice
i
'
.
Poin18 that has caused bitterness between
Martin said Frida1 after sweeping 157.885.
· . Drhier
the tiote for Saturday's Good~v~~~nch
"The Busch pole was normal,"
180 fa.ther and son. But when Montell
' 1. Randy LaJoie
200 Busch Grand National race. and Martin said. "The Winston Cup deal
170 Jordan sings "This Is How We Do
2. Todd Bodine
today's featured Goodwrench 400 was something that felt spectacular.
165 It." the lyrics shouldn't be juS:t
Winston Cup event.
.
"I'll tell you about the lap . I ! 3. Mlcliatl Wlaltrlp
160 · about partying . They should be
· "!took a lot of whippings in·the drove it in deeper than I should ' 4. Joe Nemechek
making hard choices.
155 about
races leading up to the (Daytona) have, and it stuck and I slammed • 5. Tracy .......
:rhi s .is how we do it: Do more
11io than just keep kids out of trouble,
6. Greg sacks
SOO," he e~plained . "Our .Winston (the accelerator) to the Ooor. The car
148
Cup car had a speed deficit until the came off turn two runnins · what fell i 7, Sttwhrk
the reason some parents push Blhlet143 ics. ·We encourage them to excel '
big race when we found the right like 250 miles per hour. I knew that
8 .. MarkG.,..n
combination in the draft."
if I didn' t wreck. I would sit on the . : g. JefiPurvt.
138 mentally, to learn something to. use
· · Man in •s frustration began to dis- pole because it didn't matter what 1 10. Phil PiniOnS
' 134 aficr the game.
·
sipate during last Sunday's Daytona did in· (turns) three and four at that
AP
This is how we do it: Estal!lilh
rules and discipline. Coiehes do;
Parents should, too.
This is how we do it: ·Help .cfu1dren make decisions, not leave decF
- Aug. 17- ITW Devilbiss 400, Hampton, Ga. ,
.
20. Hut Stricklin, 106.
sions to them before thef~ rudy.
Brooklyn, Mich.
.
x-non-points race.
, 21. Bobby Labonte, 100.
Some aren't prepwed uaul tlleir flqa ,
Aug. 23- ~oody's Headache
22. KennyWallace,97.
paycheck.
.
~
Powders 500, Bnstol, Tenn. •
Driver studlnp
23. Dale Jarrett, 94.
This is how we do it: Set • •
AuJ. 31 - . Mountain Dew
I.JeffGordon, 180.
24.LakcSpecd,?l.
dl!fds tha! don't get lowered c~
Southern 500, Dar!ington,S.C.
2. Terry I.:abonte, 170.
25. John Andrett1, 88.
week.
•
Sep.t. 6 - Wmston Cup 400,
3. Ricky Craven, 165.
26. Loy Allen, 85.
This is how we do It: Lilul &amp;nla
Richmond, Va.
.
..
(tie) Bill Elliott, 165.
27. Joe Nemec""k, 82.
Nwagwu did. He knewhis 1011 Wlllll•
. . Sept. 14- New Hampshare 300,
S. Sterling Marlin, 160. ·
. 28. Johnny Benson, 79.
· starter and has potcnlilll. 'rhlt•a *~~it
Loudon, N.H. .
.
· 6. Mark Marlin, 1,6.
29. Morgan Shepherd, 76.
he wantS to save.
· , .
, Sept. 21 -:- MBNA 500, Dover,
7. Jeremy Mayfaeld, 150.
30. ~e ~hardt, 75.
The NBA, the ~ I r 1'
Del.
.
·
.
8. Ward Burton, 142.
.. 31. D1ck Tnckle, ~3.
the NFL do await some atuda.U:.
· · Sept. 28, Hanes 500,
9. Ricky Rudd, 138.
32. Machael Walb1p, 72.
But for ·~ little baskebll - ia
Martinsville, Va.
10. Darrell Wllltrip, 134.
33. Ken Schrader, 64.
our hometown, there are hvllllr1ll
Oct S- UAW-GM &lt;;2uality.~. · I I. Mike Skinner, 132.
34. ~ffBod•ne. 61.
more .in hundreds of cities ~
Concord, N.C.
.
12.leffBunon, 130.
35. J1mmy Spencer, 58,
America. &amp;baing hopes on ...._..
Oct. 1~. - Sears Diehard 500,
13. Ted Musgrave, 124.
36. Greg_ Sacks, 57.
careers is 1101 for the faint of~
Tlll)ade•a, Ala.
.
14. Kyle Peuy,l21.
37. Demke&lt;7ope. 55.
and it's no1 for every child. But ..
Oct. 26 - · AC Delco 400,
Is'. Bobby Hamilton, 118.
38. Bobby Hilhn, 49. .
acadelllic education is for every
Rockingham, N.C.
16. Robby Gordon, 115.
39. Robert ~sley, 46.
child. It's what they use when ,the.
Nov. 2 - Dura Lube .500,
17.DaveMarcis,ll2.
40.Stcve&lt;lrissam,43. ,
pme il over. ·
'
PbOenix.
18.BrettBodine,109.41.RustyWallace,~.•
Wben the Ql'ller is over.
Nov. 16 NAPA 500,
19. Ernie lrvan, 108.
42. Wally,Dalleabach, 37. .
Wben the li&amp;ll'- out.
'

'~~i~~:l

·GI'IJnd NstitJniJI

Winst~.n Cup scbed·u le and driver standings

\

~STAR

.

·

NEW YORK (APi - The 1997
May 4 · Save Mart
NASCAR Winston Cup stock car Supermarkets 300, Sonoma, ~alif.
; . · racing schedule, with winneFS in
May 17 ~ x-The WJRston,
· • parenthesei and driver point stand- Concord, N.C.
·• ings·
·•
I
Mtty 25- Coca~Cola 600,
F~b. 1.6 -. Daytona 500, C,encord, N.C. . ·
June 1·- Maller·soo, Dover; Del.
. · Daytona, Fla. (Jeff Gordoll').
· Feb. 23 - GOodwrench Service
June 8 - Pocono 500, Long
400, Rockinghain. N.~: . . . . . ,Pond. Pa. . .
~ . ·.
March 2 - Ponttac EJtcJiement
June 15. ·M•ller 400, Brooklyn,
•.. 400, ltichmond, Va. .
.. · ., Mich. , : ' .
•
.
·. . Match· 9 - Prlmestar 500,
June 2 ~ Cahfor01~ 500,
Ga.
·
Fontana. CAlif.
""'~~· 23 _ TranSouth Financial · July s-::! Pepsi 400•. Daytona
. 400, Darlington, S.C. . .
Beach. Fla.
.
.
·
A~ 6 _Interstate Batteries
July 13 - Jiffy Lube 300,
, 500,
Warth, Texas.
Loudon, N.H.
,
.
Aprif 13 - F,ood City 500, . July 20- Pennsylval)ta 500,
: · Bristol Tenn
·
- LonJ Pond, Pa.
Aug. 2 - Brickyard 400 ,
: - AJHll 20 :.._ Goody's Headache
: PowllenSOO.M-.tiNville,Va.
. llldiaJIIpol~
i .
:. April 27 - ' Winston · SOO, . Aua. IIi- Bud at the Glen,
: tal..,.,.., Ala.· · ·
W:.tltillll Glen, N.Y.

u.-...

.i;» Bank Without Boundaries
• . • ' Member f1DIC

Check us out on the Internet 111 http://www.ttarbank.com ·
•

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.
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'"· . ..

•

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1

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sem~ster.

8

1,

·Noflll Cerollnil
Motor·Sp' udWey

6

Martin ca.·ptures pole positions . ~£}:~,:eg~a~~: ~~~~o:t~~;.~~~
·tor weekend Goodwrench races ·~.t~:~s:;:~r~~:~i ithlctes

·

SeJtea-.

N. Korea agrees to join peace talks,
but gets·tactful warning. by Albright
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Dlplometlc Writer
·
SEOUL, South Korea - t&gt;{orth
Korea's decision ·to attend preliminary peace talks in New YOrk was
hailed Saturday by ~ qf $tate
Madeleine Albrishi.
, .
·
She C&amp;IJtioned the •c!)mmunist
North, however, t!l4t the United
States cannot be dil'~lrom ill ally,
South Korea, in pe8f:C nel(lllllions or
on other issues.
Mter talks with Soulh Korean
President Kim Youna SuD IIIII foreign Minister Yoo CbuiiJ Ka 011 her
· first of th!oe Maps in Aaia, Alllriaht
said an
b 111 to provide Ncllth
Korea witb 11 tar in el!CblnJI ~Ill

·

•

,.

; ""t .

ao

�Sunday, Febru8ry 23, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gllllpolls, OH • Point P11111nt, WV

.

It's nice to have.
baseball back
By SAil WILSON
Till II

.
S1tltliilll Corrnponcllnt

In the

I

'*'*'

NO MONEY OOWNI
With~ Credit!
Prices and P8l(ITIEII1ts

-·-

Losing con_trol
spurred Bow·e's
exl•t fr·om boot camp

'

I
f

!

oon snub$ $500,'000 • ""::~man
"er "o' .be ! !J.i'o• 2,.QB . .

. '"'ngs rele.ase 'him

1b see our most Uni!:Jue
~have

to see our liome
imder construction. .

'.

._., .......,...... .

or W I l l - , _ Dlretihla•

CH
'.

RAGRI SERVICE

.OPEN·HOUSE

, I.

1

t1

IPRCH·J ,.-11 AAt·TO 3 '"
.

.

-Pri.-

.J·0% llsc~lt O• ~II FMd

.,..,,..k
••
_o. ......, .
....... c......,.Twln• •'
-*'• t•le .

cpf (:halter

far&amp; ...........

1113

GL-.

GUE SHOOTS -chanp•ke't 81 IItty ~ (00) fl,.. I Jumper
o_.lhree lron10n T!gar cltfenden during flrat qua111r action at
• the Untverdy of Rio Gnndl Friday night. JleHher 188m ICOI'8d
untl2;40 ...,..lnaclln IMJMrlod. CHSied 2-4 ll'ler 1he tint b111lt,
1hln Went on to win, 3&amp;431n 1he Dlvlllon RIMC1Ional tout'IIII1Wil
ng. cWendera- E. J. IWI!IIa (33}, Ryan Ully (31} and John
Farrow (46}.
. .
,
.

~~~~~~d~-=·~~~~~~~::
Gt'Uiie,powerwludowal~~~i;;;:;;p;;;t;i;~~

1113 FORD TEMPO

PLYIIOUTH DUllER 114011, V.feng., eport

~~.~··~paMI•err.-~-------~---------·-··-·-~--

1113 FORD MUSTANG 11371. G!Mn, A/C, ~ ~ •.
cruilt, IUIWGOI, sport whllll ......- ••-.;.,_ _ __.. ~111111
1111 FORD PROBE 18421, A/C, ~ t:UIIItl-------.111111
111311ERCURV
TOPAZ
GS fll443,
-A/T,
eport whnte,
32,11110
mn.Blul,
________
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1884 FORD TAURUS GL18448, 'H 1111·• NT, A/C, AIIIFII
Clla., til, crulll .........~......... ~................"'!........ , _............ . .
1• FORD ESCORT WAGON LX 18401. U. pawltr, AIC, AfT,
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~

Clll., cruiM .. -,.,. .. __ ,,,, ..,.._,_ ..,..,,.. ,_,....,.......

1 • FORD ESCORT WAGOIILX 18317, Gllln, A/C, AfT, tOOf
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1 • FORD ESCORT WAGON LX 11311, Dlllt blue, NC, NT,
~.roof rack..,,_. __ ,__ ,__ ,_, __ ,..
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1 • HYUNDAI ACCENT 11323, 11,0011 mills,
Ill
flcloiy Wll'lallty, llr blat. AILfll Clll ........ - ••••- ........ . . .
1• CtEV. CORSICAII317, Whlll, AIC,A/T,AIItftl, . .
big, clatlllr1lerlor ..... __ .........·-·-·-····----·-.....
1885 OLDS ACHIEVAII274, Rid, A/C,A/T, \1.1 eng., A111FM
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AJC. AII/FII cua., til, crulll............- ..........- ..........- ..$7185
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cat., tOOf I'IICit, pfttl' wlndowlllocb...---$7185

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cruiM, powM' wlndoWI llackl, All/fll _ _........:.... $10,585
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cruiH, ~ wtndowlllocb..........._ .......,.......:.. __.,,..,.
19M PONTIAC GRAND AM SE 11361, Whitt, \1.1 eng., A/C,
Alf, tilt, crulll, AII/FII Clll•••••••••••.•.•
·····~-··· $10,130
1885 FORD CONTOUR GL 11315, Burgllldy, A/C, M, AII/FII
CUI., dull air blgi.......- ••••••._......,,,_,,,,_,....,.. _ ........$1G,a
1885 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE lt435, lllul, 42,000 mila, A/C,
AfT, AM/FII ~.1111, crulle, PW, PL......................- .....110,.
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NT, AM/FM cat~:, PW, PL, tilt, crulll, 44,00111'11111 ...... $1G,I50
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caaa.,llft, cruill, PW, PL............._ ..................................$12,915
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AM/FM caaa., 1111, c~l.., ~.- .... - .......................... $10,810

scm after building up a 40-34 Iliad
finally started to fall.
Rylll Mount llld Fizer each with three millllleS left in replefioe
scorod I0 poi DIS for the winners play.
In lbe other Division 1 ~~etnnl
while Meyers accounllld for 14 of the
llgen' 33 poillts.lnlaton goes to the tournament conieS!, the Cbilljooc!w
sid~lines with an 8-12 record. Cavaliers whipped lbe l.opiJ Chief·
C&gt;esiiFnk: moves into district com- tains 79-51. Coy Undley ICONd 23
points for Logan in his lut pme u
petiton·ll 19-2.
·
a
Chieftaln. but lhc Cavs were jllll
The Division m district 'tourna'
,ment will open at Ohio University's too strong in outscOring Lopn 4~27
.
Convocation Center on 1\aesday in lbe second half.
In
the
f~rst
game,
Marietta's
Joe
when Alexander meeiS Westfall at
Vukovic
was
in
foul
trouble
lhc
6:15 p.m. Chesapeake is idle until
entire
game'before
finally
fouling
out
Thursday, whe11 the Patllbers will
meet eithCr Piketon or Adena in the with 5:41 left in regulation wilb only
two poiniS to his credit.
:.
second game Ill·8 p.m.
.
'
·
Athens
tied
lhc
score
at
40-40
itJ
· Atbeu willa; LopD outed
regulation
and
converted
seven
of
14
At I:.ancaster on Friday night the
Albens Bulldogs eliminated SEOAL .. free •lbrows in the overtime while the
rival Marietta 49-40 in an overtime llgers failed to con~t on an)' of
!heir seven f~etd ·goaJ attempts. Adam
COllieS! which saw Marietta fail to
.Trautner led Marietta with I4 poiniS.

PLANT CTI'Y, Fla. (APJ- Contrary ~_what~ Cincinnati Reels~.
Jose RiJO bebeves he can pitch again ·
this season,
And Rijo bas one expen in his
corner: The doctor who rebuilt -his
right elbow twice in a IS-month period.
.
"We lbink he's going to get
well," said Dr. James Andrews, who
accompanied lUjo on a visit to lbe
Reds' training camp. "If,we dido 't, .
we would have given up. As long as
he's . 1101 experiencins any elbow
pain, he's not . going to lose any
velocity."
·
·
Rijo, 3 I, is on his third comeback
from elbow' surgefY. G!'neral manager Jim Bowden has said Rijo will
not be able to pitch this season, but
the pitcher expects to prove him
wrong.
· "My only goal now is to pitch at
least one game this year, and I'm
going to make it happen," Rijo said .
. "I'd give everylbing I have to get my
arm back to pitch. This is my las1
shot."
Rijo had the ligament in his.right
elbow replaced by Andrews in ·
August I 995. Andrews transplanted
a tendon from Rijo 's forearm to
replace the damaged ligament.

h.-·-..

..
•

:
LOOKS FOR BIG MAN • Alexander's Nath*n HutchlniiOR (40)
• loob ln81de for 6-10 Junior Spanan cen1er Thoma• ·Huktll
: (behinlt CrooksVIlle'• Brett O.trymple, 30), during flrl1 perloet
1.actiOn of Friday's Dwt.lon II eacttonat tourilllment game 11 URG.
1 The Spilt lint exploded for 40 eecond tlalf polnta to\ rout
: Crooksville 68-36.

';sowe... (Coiuinued from B-2&gt; ·
.

·

. ·

.·

.

'•Andrew. Golota
'
'
in July and Decem-

· basic training .
"I'm ~ery anxious 1o speak to
;&amp;.:ore:cards, but won when Golota him myself," Newman said. ·.·w!" it
:Was disqualified for low blows that
any one thing, or was it a regiment·
1eft Bowe writhing on the canvas. · ed system ~here you lose control of
: Newman said that after Bowe . a life of luxury?"
•
)'eturns to his Fort Washington, Md.,
Bowe ·111d Newman toured the
'home, the two will discuss "a wide Parris Island facility las1 August,
~a'!ge .of options" thai includes
Newman said, so Bowecould gel an ·
,
idea of what was ahead.
.retirement.
: Bowe is currently in the SavanWhat he saw was quite different
;nah• Ga., area, Newman sajd, and from 'what 'he's accusJomed to: Not
.making plans to return to Fort Wash- only are recruils yelled ai almost
lngton sometime in the next 'week,
from the moment lhey ·arrive, but
:Newman said he hoped to speak to. · they are foi;ced to shave their heads.
-Bowe late Friday; he added that
wear identically drah military garb,
:SOwe's wife Judy, who hlill family in and work from ihe predawn hours
)he Savannah area, was contemplatuntillatc;.4,t night.
· ..
~ng traveling there to oo with her
· "There'~ a big difference between
ohusband.
·
observing it and living it," Newman
! According to lbe Marine Corps, sai&amp; ,"Livjng it, Riddick has had a'
:ahout 43,000 persons enlist each change of heart."
•year; 13 pereenl fail to complete
~r. Bowe was behind on all official .

l ' .

Emmette J!aunden with 2S poiniS

· GALLiPOLIS - The Gallia
Acljdemy High School .Athletic
BoosterS Club will hold its rtgular
meeting Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the
GAHS .library annex.

Eastern alumni ·
basketball twinbill
set fos: Saturday
EAST MEIGS - The annual
EIISterii High School alumni basketball 'game will be held 'on Saturday.
. The. women's gaine will get
underway .at 5:30' with the men's
game to follow. For more information, call Dan Spencer at 667-3342,
or Tim Bourn at98S-3301.

Rijo showed up for spring train- ing," Andrews said. "JoSe's experi- (transplant). Usually that's lhc end of
ing last year and went too fast, ence has been a little unique. Seldom your .career if it doesn't wotk lbe first
throwing sliders during an exhibition do you go back11nd redo.a ligament time. ·
game. Pain soon returned. .
"His wotk ethic is so intense that
he tries to do too much,'' Andrews
sai4. . "He pushed it too hard last
year. Normally a player will back off
some, but Jose wouldn't back off at
all. He was supposed to be outlhere
411 SOUTH THIRD
to get his arm in shape, and all of a
4ftoot
sudden he's throwing lbe ball 92
~ph and·ihrowing breaking balls."
Rijo needed surgery in A~!ril to
clean out the elbow. He never fully ·
recovered, and Andiews operated
again last November. He found .that
the transplanied tendon had come .
loose from lbe bone, so he reattached
it:
"That injury is career-threater

-t1:\~~llt.J.

Cage standing~
1996-117 All gamtiS
Team
·w ·L' TP OP
Chesapeake ........ 19 214161073
Warren Local....... 17 31356 967
Wheelersb4rg ...... 17 4 1507 1384
Gallipolls .............. 13 71122.1037
x-Logan ............... 13 8 1343 1204
x-Marietta ............ 12 9 1225 1204
Greenlield ............ 12 !11172 1075
Portsmouth .......... 11 9 1256 1229
Ohio Valley .......... 11 101488 1435
Point Pleasant.. ...10 91126·1088
Eastem .................. 9 11 12131222
Jackson .................9 121229 1296 ·
Fairland ...... ........... 6 141217 1320
Southem ................ 5 ,1510871239 ,
South Gallia .. ,.:. .'.... 4 15 973 1220
Athens ................... 6 15 975 1141
x-Meigs ............. ;....5 161053'1226
x-River.Valley ... .....3 .181029 1380
x-Comple1ed -liOn.
Feb. 20 multi:
' Pt. Pleasant 85 Buffalo 67
Feb. 21 l'tiSUI1t:
Athens 49 Marietta 40 (ot)
Chilicothe 79 Logan 51
OVC 82 Fairhaven 41
Chesapeake 36lronton 33 .
Greenfield 63 Miami Trace 39
Miller 59 Eastern 57 ·
Vinton County 85 Meigs 55
Feb. 22 games:
South Gallla vs.Southem at
Alexander, 8 p. m.
Jackson vs. Portsmouth, at South
Webster, 6:15p.m.
Gallipolis vs. Fairland at South
Webster, 8 p.m.
Warren Local vs. Washington
CH, at Chillicothe, 7 p.m.

·250

TO BUY

1_.

BOWLING GREI&gt;N, Ohio (AP)
~ BOwling Green State University ·
stands to make up to $850,000 from
.)Ill; sale of a piece of baseball hi~to-

I'Y·

.J

AII/FM
_~~ioai'nir~~~i~~~~i;;~~~
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RANGER liLT~. Grlln,
~ 111r..

llldtlr• eport wh
. - ....................
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runntna bolrda, crulle, PW, PL,-eport w111111................... . .
1113 NISSAH TRUCK~,.._, ~~·~• . . ..

.,

• vI.

.

., The university owns the lineup
card used d)lring the g..me in which
lhe BaliiniOrC Orjoles' Cal Ripken Jr.
broke Lou Gehrig's record of2,139·
i:onsecl!live games played. Umpire
. Larry Barnetl donated the card to
!rowling Green in December 1995 in
hapes_of raiiing n\oney for studen1
ithletes. •
' 'The ·c,ard was to be on ~i~tay
today at the Eldersburg Wal-~art. ·
The school expects to sell it for up
to $1 million.
.
Proceeds from the sale, minus a
IS petcent seller's fee, will be u~
to fun4 football scholarships in the
name of Barnett, ., a native of
l'rolpoCt, Ohio.
I
down 111_
.
"Wo can ·llways come
price; but die whole point is to raise
as mUd! ' money liS .· possible for
BQwii~g,,.O~n ·· studoniS.~'. said
ti l

1997 FORD
F1SO 4X4 SUPERCAB TRUCK
va engine, auto .. PS, PB, tilt cruise, air, am/lm stereo

XLT, 4.6 L.

cassene, limited slip rear axle, all terrain tires, sliding rear window,
trailer towing, cast aluminum wheels, remote ke~less entry, power
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..

1997 FORD F250 4X4 TRUCK

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7.3 power stroke diesel, auto., tilt, cruise. air, PW, PL. am/lm
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1885 GEO TRACKER 4X4 16311, 11,11110 mllll, btllance Ill
fac:tcNy wamnty, tport wheela ........................................l10.418
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whleta. cuatam 1trtp1a, clullllllrrorl......... _ ..... - .. .;..$1~
1884 FORD RAHGER.LOIIG BED 4X4 liLT 18311, Orten, .
A/C, rtar alldtlr, ~ wiiiiiJ, 'H ~.,lltltltlntlr,

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wheels, conventional
tire, remote keyless entry. Special Cere
$1
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·lpf historic 'lineup·~·card

.

aport whMia ....... ~................- •....• ~.................................-$7115
1884 FORD RANGER SUPER CAB H454, 26,11110 mlltll, AIC, .
M, AM/FM e~~~.IJII&gt;rt wllllll, 'H 1111......................., __,.,.
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AMIFM Clllltlt............. ,_,,,......;..- .......................... _.........$7111
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••

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1113 NISSAH TRUCK 11430, "*-'• AI&amp;'FII, mrllkllr,

fo~ Wed~esday

•
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1991 DODGE CARAVAN H417, 7 p111., 'H eng., A/C, Air. tilt,
CNIH,AMIFM e~~~:.,.~....,.....;.............."!'......................
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AMJFM ~. 1tl1, cruiM, PW, PL. 7 paa...........- ......... $10,to8
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A/C, A/T, AM/FII cat.,·tllt, crulll, PW, PL....- .............$11,310
1t95 DODGE CARAVAN 18432, Burgundy, V-41111.; A/C, AAir.
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1884 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN H401, G'"n, A/C, A/T1
AII/FM ca..., Ul1, crullt, PW, PL. V.feng.; 7 plll........$11,100
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can., tilt, erul.., 37,11110 mliK ...................$10,760

AII/FM

.GAHS boosters
set meeting

•
•
•

124W-MIIn
Pom.roy
112 5001

'

By ODE O'DOIIHELL
T-8 ColT I lp IMCIInt
GAWPOLIS-Two11101earu
lwbd.alt lclllnl adVIIDCed into DivisioD mtournament actioa followina
Friday's twiabill in the Newt OliArena at the · Univenity of Rio

1885FORD.£SCORT LX H437, 11,0011mllll, 'lienee Ill

liNKS
CONSTRUCTION ·

.

,

· ·

flelory ..-nnty, AMIFII ~. AIC, ~ wltllll ......_ . . .

powlt ......;................................;....................................... . .

DiacoYu tlic ~n' conatruction ancl ·
.
Hided value bUilt Into ewry U~ Home:
• Hip StrcnKth Steel Pr• ed COn.auction
•Super Bfticbt llll'illatlon (11..·30) .
• Pin and Termite l.lesiltaac;c
.
• ~ 80 AfFordable StutcWd Modcb
• .And Much, Much ~ore
V'Mit with ua 111d dilcoftr
how you can affOrd tbe beat.' ·

.

Rijo and doctor believe he _can pitch in 1997

-·-

I.

' I

In area:H.S. toumsment play,

led Alexander, now IS-6, while
Crooksville bows outot14-8. Kyle
Schooley topped the losers wilb 13
poiniS.
. The second game was a player's
ru~ as lbe Panthers and n 1ers
Grande.
mtssed a combii\ed 27 shoiS in lhc
In the flfS! game lhc Alexander first quarter, including .11 layups.
Spartans shocked lhc Crooksville before Chesapeake's Olris Fizer.
C:erBmics 68-36 and Chesapeake . goaled wilb 2:40 remaining. Meandisposed of Lawrence County rival, while, the Ironton team did not
lront&lt;!n, in a b~ 36-33 viCtofY.
score at all in lhc first eight minutes,
Crooksville, located in Perry · ending wilb the Panthers leading 2County near Zanesville, featured lhc . 0.
·
tallest team in lhc tournament, and · Ironton finally got on the score. ~ocked Wellston out on Monday hoard at the 7:33 mark of lhc second
n•gbt by a 78-63 score.
·
period when Kyle Meyers drilled a
The shorter, but much quicker lbree-point shot to put his team on
Spartans, broke out of a 15-15 first , top 3-2. From lbat point on, it was a
quarter lie, led 28-22 at halftime, anjl routine basketball game as the shots
were never lbreatened.

when

I

,.

Al·exander,.Chesapeake and Athens win

Defenders pound
Fairhaven 82~41

41.
SC01T DEPOT, W.Va. Adam Holcomb and Josh SimAndlew Meyn, Micah Lanier, Ryan
mons
led lhc Defenders (7-2) with
~- and Do Pottlld provided
I
2-point
efforts. NLCA's Kevin
ov~ ~w labor agreement should mike this' lhc
d~ble-digit ot:fe~se that helped
led
all scorers wilb 27.
Stover
most enjoyable season in years. Consider that lhc
. . ~0 Valley CJu:isttan tally an 82"'!1
The
filtllft:
This week's agenda
·
.,
·
· · ... _
"'
·r v1ctory over Fauhaven Olrisban m
Illlil two bmes went to spnng tnllmng, ""''~ was none. ne11, at 1east unb the 'Ie Vall 1 · · at F 'da
2001
ihis present agn:e- •
ays
ey nVltabon n y has lhc Defenders hosting Parkers- .
ment'ends.
night at Teays Valley Christian burg Christian Mo~y at 6:30p.m.
This contest, originally scheduled for
_ .
School.
I dont. believe·.....,.,.~
IS a more
TheDefenden .( ll tO) ho
Feb. 13 but postponed because of
beautiful sound than baseballs
·
• • w were weather, is a. varsity-i&gt;nly affair.
hiuing a leather glove or the slated to ptar Teays Valley for the
. hi ,..._ tournament btle Sabllday, got startk of a bat when 1t IS ""' ed ··'"Lani ·• ..,
crac
· eIIiort m
·
Qnerftri1811
ball In tel · · · te ·
Wlu•
er s e1,...t-po1nt
1
lhc first quarter en route to taking a · Fairhaven
·
evwon m mews
Jl).4.9-t8=41
have watched so ~ar. the players four-point lead at the quaner's end. Ohio Valley
14-28-24-1'11:82
seem t_o be . exc1ted ~~ the
The second quar1er belonged to
Fairhaven: J. Mayse 3-2-3/4=15,
5
upc~tmng season: ~ ~- McCleese and Pollard. McCleese Townsend S4-4/IO=l4, George 2..(}.
tant. Fans share In Ibis excite- had eight poiniS in it, white Pollard 4/4=8, Panons 2-G-0/0::4. Tolllb:
ment.
had seven. The Defenders took U-l-1V11=41
The ganie bas changed. nie corporate chaoges can be seen in lhc O'Mal- advantage of Fairhaven's mid-gaine
Foull: 15 ·
ley family selling the Dodgeis and lhc Disney company's purchase of the scoring drought (13' points in lbe
California Angels.
Ohio Vllley: .Meyn 7-0:.3/5=17,
middle frames) and ted by 20 points
. The sale of lbe Dodgers represeniS an end of an era for family ownership at halftime and 43 atlhc thlrd.quar- Lanier 7-0-212=16, McCleese 1-G. of franchises. This is ironic because the sale lakes place during the SOth ter's end.
IIS=lS, Pollard 6-0-111=13, Sizeanniversary of Jackie Robinson's entrance into the major leagues ·wilb the
more
3-t-010=9, Newbold 2-0- •
Jason !'dayse led Fairhaven (3-19)
Dodgers. Last year it was the Busch family in St. Louis. This year it's. the wilb IS points.·
0/0=4, Sanders 1-0-010=2, Staley t:O'Malley family in Los Angeles.
•
'
The sbooten: Meyn's 17 poiniS O-O/b;o2, Wolfe 2-G-010=4,. Totals: .
Farther down ~ highway, the Disney Corp. purchased lhc Anaels to go came on 7-for-10 field-goal shoot- 361'77·113-14118=82
f.along wilh their ownership of lhc Mighty Ducks in lhc NHL. Naturally, Dis- ing. Lanier's }6 points cam mostly
Total FG: 37-80 (46.3%)
,ney has changed lhc name of tbeir franchise t.s1l'e Anaheim Angels. They from 7-for-IS field-goal shC!O(ing.
Reboolnds: 45 (McCleese I4)
;have a new, highly marketable logo which ~peal to young~r fans.
Most of McOeese 's IS poiniS came
Aaslsts: 8
.I
In lbe game 1tself, look for Roger Clemens to have a great year m ToronSteals: IS. (Meyn &amp; Pollard 4
from 7-for-14 field-goal shooting. . each)
~to. He's been reborn wilb this .move up norlb.
·
·
·
( Change is Bood for players. It rejuvenates them. Remember Frank·Robin· Polla!d's 13 points came mostly
Tunoven: II
•son once he 1was .traded to Baltimore in 1966? How ahoUI Jerome Bettis after from 6-fbr-9 field-goal shooting.
.foul;: 18
Junior hip notes: OVC defeat'
fhe arrived in PitiSburgh last football season? Now lbe Blue Jays have lbe
fmost formidable pitching staffs in baseball. It doesn't compare wilh the ed New Life C::hristiah Academy 46- .
;Braves, but wilb Clem~ns; Hentgen.aDd Guzman, they have lbe best starting
· tstaff in the American League. .
·
,
According to Marine Instructors,
I Anolber interesting part of baseball's new reality is the return of players
!;after a yearofffu:&gt;minjuriesand otherproblems.lnthepast few years. playters such as Kitk Gibson, Ryan Sandberg and Eric Davis returned from seri·
,ous injuries and personal problems to have solid years.
i. This year wilt see Andy Van Styke,· Howard Johnson, Kelly .Gruber,
fMitch Williams and Deion Sanders retura to lbe game. Van Slyke wants to
·
·
~lay, for lbe Cardinals again, while Johnson returns to where he had his
, greatest success by signing with the Mets. Dcion, however, waniS anolber
~hallenge to overcome by returning to the Reds. Your g~ess is as good as
·
.
.
,mine if he will )le in Cincinnati when the NFL training camps begin in July.
wilb·fulfilling a lifelong dream than
t Wilb all the demands, particularly physical, il might be a sign for lbe . By RICHARD KEIL
lfuture. Players in ail spOriS may need to take additional time off to allow · WASHINGTON (AP)- Former in advancing his boxing career. Olb- .
!their bodies and their minds enough time to recover sufficiently from the heavyweight champion Riddick ers, however, suggested that Bowe,
tstress that comes wilb Ibis level of competition.
· .
Bowe. who stunned the boxing who looked nabby and out of shape
1 Look: for VanSlyke and Deion to havnolid years."Van Slyke has recov- world by bolting to lhe Marines last · in each of his last two hoots, could
red fr back bl
and De' ·
d
d
·t ·
·
Dall
month, found out in a hurry thatlbe benefit from the discipline lbe mili·
le
om
pro ems
lon s ego . eman s sail~ acllon smce
as radical change in his lifestyle wasn't tary provides.
didn't make it back to lbe Super Bowl.
'
· · ·
· Newman .was quick to dismiss
To tell the trulb, that's lhe soit of spirit I like to see from athletes. It should going to wotk.
,·any suggestions that the boxer couldt be,a great season. I told you it was nice to have baseball back.
The strict demands of lbe military
1
-and a longing to be with his fam- n't handle lbe physical intensity of
11 hill Wilson, Ph.D. Ia an euocla1a proiHoor of ht.tory at the Unlveralty of ily - likely caused Bowe to drop basic training.
Rio Grande. An liVId fen of all oports - ond • near n111nlacat follower of blllbt·
"What I am gelling is lhat Ibis
ball- !lela • native of Gary, Ind., and a.gracluata of Ind._ Unlverelty- wlllch out of tbe U.S. Marine Corps' basic
was
not the rigors of the physical
tlllould llll ...clelw.•omalhlngobout-. hie heed (and Hooelor heart) 11.
training program after just three
part
of
the'program," said Newman,
·
·
·
·
· .
days; manager Rock Newman said
who has spoken with 'Marine Corps
said that while he had officials since Bowe decided Thurs.
·
·
not yet talked to the fighter, two of · day to leave. "In the past, the vefY
A
their main concerns before Bowe hard part for Riddick Bowe was not
1
I It
.&amp;
J
traveled to Pains Island, S.C., was his ring work and training - it was
·
•
•I, •
· wheiher he could stand being 'away the training that separated him from
his wife lllld kids. That nagged him
fromhisfamilyforthethree-month
and pained him a great deal.."
training course.
. The first few days of training
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ·- A $3.8· available, then we would next look
They also wondered and whether begin at 5:30a.m. and involve mostilliPn pay cut was too much for . at situations where he could play a someone so accustomed to living life .ly physical exercise, running and
arren Moon 10 swallow.
backup role." · .
on his own terms could put up wit~
boxing, although Bowe was not
The Minnesota Vikings ·relea.o;ed
After Moon failed to get the Oil- the lack of privacy and heavily allowed to box because there was no
.
structured schedule that come with
oon on Friday when .the 40-Y.earers mto an AFC championship gaine
one of his size and skill to match him
ld quarterback turned down a during his 10 seasons lbere,IJe was joining the military.
. with, Demar said . .
SOO,OOO offer to back up Brad
traded to Minnesoul for two mid·
':It has 10 do with a JUY who's 29',
The boxer was also granted age
ohnson next season. Moon's agent,
round draft picks in what amounted who's a multi-millionaire, who's .and weight waivers upon enlisting,
igh Steinberg, said it was an'~mito a money-saving move for the oil: had control over his life ... coming
.
able parting, a~d he expects Moon ers.
and going whenever he pleased, los- Demar added. .
Bowe's brief Marine Corps oddo sign with another team in a few
The Vikings hailed Moon's ing control." Newman said. "That
{veeks.
.,
arrival as the piece that would give was a big .culture shock - some- yscy .- something of a lark, almost,
for a man wealthy enough to indulge
"We're pleased that lbey went
them a chance to gel back 10 the thing very hard for Riddick to deal his dream~ leaves Newmllll uncer1
with."
ahead and did this now instead of Super Bowl for lbe first time since
tain what is next for the fighter, who
Waiting, because now we'll have a
1976, and lhcy started 7-2 in his first
Initial word froni lhe Marines has a 39-1 career record, including
much better chance to find a new season.
indicates Newman's suspicions arc
32 knockouts.
.
correct.
'
hotne." Steinberg said.
The Vikings lost four of their next
Bowe
won
1he
undi;-puted
heavy"II was just that he couldn' t hanMoon had been scheduled. to earn seven games, although th.ey clinched
weight championship over Evandcr
$4.3 million in 1997 in lbe second· lhc NFC Central title on the final day die the. regimented training Holyfield in November 1992. Holyyear ofa 'three-year, SIS million i:on- of the season when backup Scan Sal- lifestyle," Master Sgt. Chuck Demar field won it back a year later, handtract. Whc!n he refused ihe $3.8 mil- isbufY, filling in for an injured said at the U.S. Marine. Corps ing Bowe his only defeat.
·
lion pay' cui. the Vikings let him go. Moon, heat San Fnincisco. Moon Recruit Depot at Parris Island:
In
his
la.'t
two
lights,
against
· Bowe said his decision to enlist in
Moon Oew to Minnesota for a'phys· returned for lhe playoffs the follow· (See BOWE on B·3)
i®l Friday - he passed. Steinberg ing weekend, but he was ineffective the Marine &lt;:;orps had more to do ·
said- and then returned.to hissub- as th~ Chicago Bears shocked the
urban Houston home.
Vikings 35-18 at ·the Metrodome.
. Houston, where Moon spent his
The 1995 season was preceded by
first 10 NFL seasons, is among sev- a widely publicized fight between
cralteams believed to be interested. Moon and his wife, in which she
Seattle, Tampa Bay ·and St. Louis accused him of heatins her near the
also might have interest in Moon.
point of unc.onsciousness. Moon's
So put ,Oil your jelll&amp; and old lhoea and
"OIIr firsl J1riorify will be to look domes.tic troubles lingered over a
~
walt tbe altc of a unique ccincept
for a' potential starting job," Stein- disappointing 8-8 season, although
lo home buildinJ.
berg said. "Then are ~I many .that he still set team records with 33 ·
are obvi10 ',sp .&lt;!Yf se,cond goal Aouchdowns and4,228 passing yards
would ~ t~,' fqid a jqtl where be and played i!' his eighlb consecutive
· laaelbiiiiD ,.. . .,, Olda
could compC!l;. If not even that is · Pro Bowl.

.

Pom11oy • Mldcl1port • Gelllpolls, ott • Point Plunnt, wY

23, 1117

Tear• Valley Invitational,

Spring ll'liniog bas ~gun. Baseball is back
wilbout lhc threat of a strike or lockout looming

1

lundly,

Robert , UrbiJn, a Maryland sporiS
memorabilia expert con1racted by the
school to sell the lineup card. "The
most money ever paid for o~e spons- ·
related item was $640,000 for the
Honus Wagner baseball card. Anything paid above that will . set lhe
record." · '
Urban also ~ill be asking $1 mil- ·
lion for the h9me run ball Ripken hit
during the Jllme in which he tied .
Gehrig's recqrd.
the lineup card, which Riplcen ·
signed, is mounted in a framed aisplay lbal ajso includes a game program siglled by the umpiring crew
and Ripke11, 111 uncut ticket from the
· record-tyin&amp; game and an uncut
licket from ' \he record-breaking
game.
There are six lineup cards in all,
but the one donated by Bameu who wid beMnd lhc plate for the
·record-setting game on Sept. 6, I99S
- is the orjginal.

.

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~tdt.

THis

lri the Division II sectlonst flnsls,

Vinton Coun~y ·
beats Meigs 85-55
.

.

By DAVE HAI'U\118 .
10 lead with :i:2i ·left on a three '
T-S Correapondent ~:
pointer by: Ryan · Caudill. Caudill
SOtrrH WEBSTER i""c Vinton scored I0 points in 'the opening peri- .
County outscored Meigs 411-20 in the od.
··
second half and went on to defeat the
But ·Meigs started to scrap back
Meigs Marauders 85-55 hi the finals into the contest. Brad Whitlatch
of the Division II sectional touma- scored otT • steal and a technical was '
ment held Friday evening at South called on V,inton County for slapping '
Webster.
the back l!oard- ~Hannan hit one of
The Vikings with the win is 13-8· the two fnle throws, and then scored : •
on the season and ·will advance to ·offtheinboundspasstopuiiMeigs. :·
district play this coming Friday at' . to within 25-1 S with I:20 left in the .:
Ohio. Unive(sity's Convocation Cen- period. ·
'
ter. Meigs finishes the season with a
Hannan '.ltailed a three l"Jintcr · ·
5-16 mark.
· with 52 seeo~tds ~flo pull Meigs to "
Vintonjumpedoutontopearly.7- within IOpoints ai 28-18. Waylon •·
0 lead befon: Daniel H\Uinan scored · McKinney pulled Meigs to within
with 6: 12 left-in the period to make 28-20 with 17.4 seconds left when he '·
it a 7-2 contest. Vinton looJ&lt;ed like hit two free throws.
. •
they would blow lhe Marauders out
The Vikings buiit up a 32-22 lead : ~
in the period .with some red hot with just over five minutes left in the
shooting from three point.range.
half.. Bu\ Meigs weni on a 13-5 run
The Vikings hit 5 of 8 from long and pulled to within 37-31 at the )!alf :
range in the J1Criod and built up a 25(See THIS
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1997 CROWN VIC LX

1917 F150 XLT, 4x4, CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM CASS, POWER
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AUTO, All, FULL POWER EQUIPMENT, CRUISE, TILT, AII/FII
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t.eigs
20-15-20-II=SS,
Vinton County
28-9-19-29:8S
1\felp: Brad Whitlatch 1-0-0=2,
BJDd Whitlatch 7-0-1= I 5. Collin
ROush 1-1-4=9. Matt Williams 2.00M. Waylon McKinney ()..1)..2=2,
Daniel Hannan 8-1-4=23. Totall:
lJ-2-liO.SS
~,VIiatoD Ceuaty: Mall Hatem 10!Qoo2, Matt·Bethel I -3-2= 13, Caset
NH:e H-2a7;'Jessie Reynolds 1-0~. Todd Braden 7-2-2=22. Ryan
cludill S-iZ-&lt;2&amp;17, Nathan Henderson
2.:iJ.I=J1 ·Jason tctaaer 2-0-4•8,
CW DamrOn . 0-0-4=4, Jeremy .
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':
(Continued from B-4)
lihen Collin Roush .hit IWO free
tftrows with 31.8 seconds left.
. •, Meigs was still within striki11g
distance with S:42 left in the third
. ;e,riod when fta!tnan ;J&lt;:Ored in the
pl(lnt iilll~ni' 1t -a 42-39 sam~;- 8u\
Casey Nice and Todd Braden hit
~ack,to-back three pointer.s in a 33
~nd span to put the Vikings on top
i8-39.
.
. I
: · Meigs cut.ittO seven points when
Bard Davenpon hit a I5 footer at the
j:35 mark io make it a 48-41 contest !'
aut the Vikings built up a 56-43 lead '
Y,.ith I0 seconds left on a buc:l&lt;et by j
t;:.audill. Roush·hk one or two from
tfte line with 2.4 seconds left to make,
it a S6-44 game ltcading into the final :
·· i\eriod.
·
·
:
: The fourth period was all Vinton
County as the VIking outscored
Meigs 24- I I to pull away to post the .
lO .point win. Braden had the hot
~and for the Vikings in the second
~alf with IS points, Caudill also did
some damage with eight in the half.
: Braden led Vinton County witlt
l2 points, he was joined in double
Agures by Caudill with 17 and Matt
Bethel with 13. The Vikings hit 3I
elf 69 from the floor including eight
t)f" 23 from three points range for :
f5%. The Vikings went to the line 24 1
rimes hitting 17 for 71 %.
,
· : The Vikings pulled down 43 ;
ft:bounds led by Nathan Henderson 1
· IIIith eight and Caudill with se~en.l
:Vinton County turned the ball over
~ 3 times and had 16 steals led by
,Uuger with three. The Vikings were
called for 18 fouls.
. : · Daniel Hannan had an excellent
game for Meigs with 23 points: H~· .
was joined in double figures by Brad
Whitlatch with IS. The Marauders
hit 21 of 52 from tbe floor for 43%
and went the line 16 times hitting II
for 69%.
.
Hannan had six ofthe Marauders
24 rebounds. Meig~ turned the ball
over 21 times and had six steals led
by Whitlatch with two'. Whitlatch
hid three of the Marauders sev.ln
aJl;ists. Meigs was called for 2l.persiiital fouls.
•
·
~ Six seniors - . Brad Whitlatch,
J415h Witherell, Jason Mullen, Robert
~ails, Aaron Hockman and Naku·
11!11 1)&lt;ree - played their last game
ir(;the maroon and gold: .

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SPORTS :

614·992·2184

99 5

•----lllll!!!~-------lllll!l--------•----------------'"'!"---11.-------------.

1)\lt on the second, a ·miss, Eastern
!fuled and sent Nick Altier to the
line where he canned one to pull
J\filler back to within one. .Otto
~the ever-important rebound
lind kt what looked to be an Eastern
tiln at the clock. The untimely
tlt.issed EHS shot then set the ,~age
·tp~a mQre dramatic .fiitish and S9-S7
~nal.
.
• Deem added, "It was good to.get
this one under our belt. 1lte first
ajame is always tense. Having this
dne in will give us a little advantage
!(gains! Green, but we'll have to play
·.!letter than what we did toniaht. "
: Eastern was led by Otto's 19, Dil•
lard's 18 and Dumt's 16. Massey led
·Miller with 21. Teammate Shaun
Neal had IS.'
.
! Eosl\lm hit S·l2 threes, 2I -32: .
tlvos aJ\d had 23 rebounds (Otto 12).
!~tiller hil24-54 overall an!l9-IS at
lite Une with 28 rebounds (Massey
~8). 'Eastern had three steals, n
turnovers. seVen assists (Dillard 3;
Otto 3) and 17fouls.
·
~ Deem said, "I appreciate the fans
We had tonight, but I expect to see
· tlte stands full on Wedneaday."
• Eastern will play ror.the sectiontitle at6: IS at Alexander Wednes-

. NOT
TIMEI ....;. VInton County's Ryan Caudill (40) knock&amp; ::.
away a Meigs shot while getting the uat of hla ahorta In the face
of the Marauclera' ~nlel Hannan during F~lday night's Division H
MCIIonel finals at Soutll Webatar High School, wh- 1M VIkings ,
won 85-55. (Timaa Santlnel photo by DaVe Harrla) ·

-

· 134 hol'ltpower, · Your Price
5 II)Hd, flare..
Attw Rt...SJ

..

"I was very pleased with that 1 Bill Pulsipher continued his come"My 11111 feels. good," said Wells, saw," Yankees pitchin&amp; coach Mel · back from elbow IIIIIJCIY·
who tbn&gt;w 1 mixture offllllblllnnd Stottlemyre said. "He threw the ball
Pulsipher tore an elhow li~
cbanaeups. "It felt aood throwing." well and had no signs of anything during I spriJIIIniningpmnpinst
Wells c1111e 10 camp overweiaht • bothering him. He didn't favor the Montreal last :YCir season .00 miaad
at about 248, and has talked to team
foot at all."
the wholey- after surgery April 11:
doctonaboutii'C&amp;IIIIentandhi,diet.
Wells went 11-14 with 15.14
OnFriday,hepitchedtwohisftnt
The Yankees were anxious to see the ERA at Baltimore last year.
batters this spring in Port St. Lucie.
pitcher they signed for three years
Meta: Meanwhile, New York's
"I'm happy to go out then: ud let
and $13.S million.
other club watched with interest as (See SPRING TRAINING .oa 11-6)

1mnpa. Fla.

: Butern took a S6-S4 lead on the
(iQt of a bonus free throw by Otto,

-

·

1-2.13=19, c«,y Yoeker 0-0-21'2=2,
Stelle Dun! 746'10rol6. ~ :&amp;21-l:ll20-59 ·

bHcO_ytopressed
pin an
co.
• 48-43to lilly
andoffensive
Eut.em
four by Otto .and IWO free
·11\rowa from Dillard.pushed EHS to
I 49--48 tally, then 1 tildtt nip-and~ battle ensued goino down the

1

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¥iller'• own intensity lifted the Fal-

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-

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REGUlAR CAB 4X4's

OCber tlwt limp 011 his sqe left toe.

0.0. Rickie Hollon,

.Dillard's clutch
~trey · helps Eastern,
!ge~ .· by Miller 5_ 9~57· '

w111 ranked 11 hiah as fifth in
state early in.'thtf ~n. tllen
sl~ped to a 9-6 mark at the time or
tournament draw.
in the 1ame, Jeremy
~IICIY posted SI!Qni Olf·the blocks
dual
Miller offense and
.tidte-a,fter-ti~rte -li!astiCm was un!lble

Wells pitdled ~ fot the.fint
time this ltpl'iJIIIIW miuinJ four
days with JCIUL The condition,
c•l'lld by ellaiU uric ICid in the
blood, made it clifticult fot Wella 10
walk, 1110vw mind pitdl.
But Weill, acquired u a flee
agent this willlll', tbn&gt;w from a
bullpen mound fot about 10 minutes
at the Yankees' lrlinini complex in

l'lliO see Devid Wells do Mxncthina

II

. Esg'lbeNew York _YMhll flaaJJy

'
RACINE- Last Monday, South- 6,000 girls basketball playm in
em coach Jeimi Roush's wish list Ohio's 621 ·s.anctiOIII:d schools. 1\Jrcame true! A sectional champi- ley, the 199S-96 Co-Tri-Valley Con. onship.
·
ference "Player of the Year" with
Tomorrow, Roush has added a Alexander's Joni Grubb, rated secnew wish to the list; a victory over ond statewide in alt four Ohio diviPortsmouth-Clay (8-14) in the 8 sions with her 27.5 mark.
p.m. Division IV distriCt semifinal
Garfteld Heigs Trinity's Semeka
game cit Southeastern High ~hool in Randall paced Ohio scorers •with
Richmond Dale. Clay scored a sur- 32.5 points per game. Randall has
prising 32-29 victory over Eastern- already signed a· national letter of
Pike last Thwsday at Lucasville.
intent to play at defending NCAA
Conipliments of senior point national champion Tennessee, a
guard Renee Torley and company, perennial "Final Four" Division I
the Southern Tornadoes stearnrolled school.
to a 67-44 sectional championship
Turley, who scored 35 points
victory over the Green Bobcats last earlier in the season against Belpre,
Monday night in the Southeast Divi- got the I,OOOth point of her career. ·
sion IV sectional at Alexander High Turley was honored prior to the stan
School.
of the Southern-Nelsonville-York
Turley had 12 second-period boys' basketball contest recently Jor .
points in leadin~outhem to it fii'St her landmark achievement. .
..
. PASS OR SHOoT?- That's tha question facing Eaat8m•a Steve · sectional crown on at least I0 years.
Turley, who now has more than
Durst (41) while Miller's Nick Allman (11) defends on the pley durThe talented shooter and ballhandler 1.300 points overall, is one of four
Ing Friday nlght'a Division IV HCIIpnal semifinal conteat at Alexanended the night with 26 markei'S, total Southern girls to ever achieve
der High School,~ the Eaglea won 59-,57.
·
nine rebounds, seven steals .and five ·the 1,000 point mark .. The awards
assists. Kim Sayre came into her presentation was made by .coach Jenown with a great second ·half, pump- ni Roush and athletic director Howie
In the Division IV sectional semis,
ing in two three pointers an&lt;! storm- Caldwell. Turley is the daughter of
ing. to a IS point. finish, while Sri- Ed Turley of Racine.
anne Proffitt added 10 points and II
· Since achieving those recent
rebounds.
accolll!)es, Turley has "slipped" to a
Southern placed eight people in 25 ptsJgame scoring mark, still one
of the tops in the state. She has hit
_. the scoring column. Leading the rest
1
of the list was Conny Horst with 154-331 from the field for 46.5%
eight points. Erica Amell with four, and in free throws ha5 hit 98-147 for
Jenny Friend with two a:.d one point 66.7 percent for 478 points this seaeach from' Heather Dailey and Patty son.
Lawrence.
· _
Turley is the Southern leader,
.
.
Roush
said,
"Going
into
the
tourcapable
of the stop and pop shot, a
:tly SCOTT WOLFE ·
to cover the spot with the help of the
nament
and
even
after
doing
some
long three pointer, or her lrllll.emark
Comtapondent
weak side defense.
ALBANY- "Some days you're
Eastern's inability to roll to the scouting, we thought Eastern-Pike twisting drives to the bucket. Turley
hero; some days you're a zero."- baseline was nearly fatal and got was the better of the two.teams (Clay also leads the team in assists with 97,
print car driver Doug Wolfgang, Miller off to a great start; a 6-0 lead · and Pike). Clay kind of surprised . nearly six per game, led the team in /
everyone. Right now they are hot rebounds with 208, in steals with 114
~ 986, on his philosophy of life and
on three Massey lay-ins.
oriented competition.
Ironically, the first two scorers of though. We've got a good shot on and had 39 blocked shots.
Southern also has Proffitt. who
Fri•dav
Eastern point guard the game were also the last two scor- Monday, but we've got to be focused.
We're
going
to
have
to
play
our
tallied
171 points on the year for 10.7
Dillard was a "hero," as . ~e ers a5 Dillard and Massey took there
garrle."
·
.
ppg.
and
107 rebounds ( 10,4 avg.).
~~~:;I:! an NBA three-pointer under
personal battle to the wire. Eastern's
Recently,
four
area
athletes
were
.
Junior Cynthia Caldwell has a 3.5 ·
lr
pressure at the buzzer to nail · first score did not come until the 4:49
Miller Falcons 59-57 in the mark when Dillard hit a jumper off · honored by the Ohio Girls' Basket- avetage. Eri~aAmott has a 3.2 averball Magazine based in Westerville. age, Jenny Friend has a 2.5 average ·
Di11isicln IV secf,ional semifinals at · the in bounds pass.
Eastern's
Valerie Karr of was fea- ' and Conny Horst has a 1.8 avt;rage.
~~~~xartder High School.
·
After a Doug Gill tally, Dillard hit
lured
in
the
"Young Guns" section of·
Southern's third leading scorer is
Trailing 57-56 with just four sec- a free throw 8-3, but Miller took a
remaining, Eastern got the ball
12-5 lead and twice had the chance the publication for outstanding Sayre, who shot 32.8 percent from
the field for 161 points and 8.1 ppg.
coun and called time out. In an to push the score above the seven sophomore athletes.
Others
honored
by
the
publication
As a toam, Southe"' scored I043
t~ ~i~t:J chess game, Miller point spread. Eastern had the ball
were
Turley,
wlio
at
the
time
or
pubpoints
or 52.2 per game, while gi vfc
with a time out and East- with 26 seconds. but didn't go for
lication
averaged
27.5
points
per
ing up ,\157 for 47.5 per game.
reset its offensive alignment. one shot and luckily Miller. came
game;
Proffitt,
a
senior
post
player;
~~~~~~ Otto in bounded the ball to
down and missed as Otto saved the
••
Josh .Casto, as Dillard was · ·day with a strong defensive board. and Jessica Brannon, a sophomore .
guard and post player for Eastern.
pm,otht~red in an intense double team
_The period ended 12-7. ·
These Meigs Countians gained
the entry pass.
.
With I :25 left in that frame,
Intending to roll off the· screen · Miller's Gill scored but went to the top honors from a pool or more' than ' .
drive to the bucket, Dillard floor with an agonizing ankle injury,
his marehbut was repelled by believed to be a tom tendon or pesof Falcons. Upon his. retreat. sible fracture.
tlililard faded as he cocked for the - - Ea!tem's Steve Durst grabt_&gt;ed
then pulled the trigger well over the tiger by the tail in the second
RIO GRANDE - Here is the
feet from the goal at the top of the quarter. With fire in his eyes, Durst schedule through Sunday, March 2 at
Just after his release. the buzzer had that "give-me-the-ball" look and the University of Rio 'Grande's Lyne
tou,ndc:d and the· ball's (lrbit led went right to work. Durst drilled Center.
·
through the.nets, sparking a· three straight jumpers after a Massey
victory celebration at score along the baseline. Durst's
Fitness center, gymnasium
effort reeled in the Falcons to a 14and racquetball courts
13 tally, then behind a Durst drive,
Eastern coach Tony Deem said,
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-10 p.m .
virtually speechless. I · don't a Casto . jumper and Dillard free
Monday- 6-10 p.m.
what to say! We played poor, throws, Eastern took a 20-191cad, iL~· .
Thesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
defense, we didn't hit the first of the night.
Wednesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Eastern led once more when Otto
1\il~ll'lls well, we didn't get the moveThursday - 6 a.m.-1 O.p.m.
,out of our offense. Yet, when I responded with a three pointer to
Friday- 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
lqoked up at the clock Ia~ in the answer Massey's trey and give the
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
quarter and we were still in it, Eagles a 23-221cad. However, David
Sunjlay, Marchl- 1-3 p.m: and
had a feeling we would some. Riley drilled a three to give Mil.lcr a 6-10 p.m.
win. I just felt like so!"Cone \\las · 25-23lead at the half. .
)
Deem added, "I told the boys at
Pool
Iqtll&lt;mg after us."
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Someone was definitely looking the half we had to stop Massey if we
Monday- 6:30-9:30 p.m.
after the Eagles. Not only did ·were going to win. We also had to
JET SKI" I /IX! ZXi m''''"'"!li
Thesday6:30-9:30 p.m.
lllostem overcome a six-point Miller get the rotation to slop them at the
Wednesday- 6:30-9:30 p.m.
late in the game and the dclicit blocks. Sometimes we had it covered
Thursday6:30-9:30 p.m.
und
some
times
we.
didn't."
af::~:i~'but they also overcame an
Friday_;_ 6-9 p.m.
Dillard tied the score on a steal
ill
shot with 26 seconds left
Saturday- 1-3 p.rn.
the game. With Eastern leading. and drive right after the half, 25-25,
but
tben
Miller
went
on
a
baseline
Sunday, March 2- 1-3 p.m. and
the Eagles had the ball and
·
,..;.,trollied the outcome of the game: layup shooting spree that gave them 6-9 p.m. ·
Not needing a score, Eastern was leads of 30-25 and 36-30. An Olio
·to run out the clock, but an steal, driving layup and ensuing free
Home athletic events
prematurely pulled the throw added some spark to a stagToday - Softball clinic for
as the Eagle crowd moaned nant EHS offense: Durst nailed a grades 9-12 from 1-3:30 p.m.
Thesday ....,. JV basketball vs. ·
agony. Miller called time and set . three from the kCY to tie .the score at
.
a final play, ~ust like he started. the 1:40 mark of the third ·quarter, Columbus State at 7 p.m.
·then
Eastern.
again
(three
times)
ler\ Jeremy Massey drove the
Saturda;~~ - JV basketball vs.
and hit a baby hook from three gave up the opposite block, baseline URO alumni at ·S p.m.; men's basketball vs. Michigan-Dearborn at
with eight seconds remaining. for a 42-38 third quarter finish.
A Durst three and Otto two gave 7:30 p.m. (Senior Night and Jerry's
Fistem quickly in bounded the ball
drove past half court, then called Eastern a 43-42 advantage early in Do-lt Center booster
.... Night).
out to set up the fin~l play, stag(See I!;AGLES on 0·5)
Dillard's hei'ok:s.
·
!A:tter upsetting the number four
or the tournament, Eastern, now ·
750SXI
I, faces the top seeded Green

Br~~~~~;
·F u:k~n:o~w~Cn~s:;t~atewide
as
p,
'
Green, now

,

W~lls, Pulsipher and Lankford co~tinue- recovering from ·i njuri.es

Southern to face
Portsmouth. Clay

Lyne Center slate

, ....

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Spring ti'IJinln!..notM

On this week~ girls' district slate,

Let

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••

Sundlly, Mrulry 23, 18f ,

Pomeroy •llddl•port • Glllllpoll8, QH • Point Plnnnt, WV

n '

TOURNAMENT CHAMPS. - The Bidwell
cettlca won the four-day VInton RlnlfY-Dink Invitational Tournament, which ended on Jan. &lt;!0
with the Celtlce' 30-211 win over the Bidwell Rocl!eta. In fronf 1re (L·R) Jim Wolfe, Brien Thomaa,
Weblter Sweln, Craig Barker, Carl Michael Wolfe

.

.

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Ge1Hpoll8, 0H • Point PI I Mint, WV

,.

Jlrrld "'"' 111C1 Mlit Archlblld. S 1111 d Is c-=h
PhH Skldmonl. Standing- coach SCott Holpn,
Joeh Slddmonl, Brian Newman, Rlyahlwn Allen,
Daniel Slmmone end Adam Freklr and coaCh .
Derrell Sh1W1
ROCKETS GET SECOND- The BldwaH Rocketa r.tl to U. Bldlftll Celtlclln the VInton RlnkyDink lnvltlllonal Toumament finale, hild In tate
January. In fronf- (l-R) Kyle Caeey, Cadle Marria, Pille Saundara and Eric Dlngua. Stenclng are

w•.

'·
.
. coeqh cart Tacker., playerJ JuJIIn
l;)ol11n..
Johnlon, Jetemy Slroud, Dakota Stone, Sitqulya:
Radman and Robert Yoat and coed\ Chrla Tack'

RUNNERS-UP- Taking IICOIId piEe In the Galllpoh Elka Locige
No. 1o'l:a loclll HOOp Shoot
(L-R In front rcnil) Mered,.lth Addi'::J!on (12-13 yaar-otd champion), Karl Ann Adklne (1G-11
~ 41lltplon) enclt.alla w.d (M year-old chtlrnplon). Behind
them are Elka co-chairmen Jack HeniOn and Tom Meedowa end
Elka Exalted Ruler Homer Hennon.

c:ontnt _..

ett.

Jack .Henson end Tom
Adam Holcomb (12-13 year-old champion) and
Elka Exalted Ruler Homer Hennon.

·,

:t/CICI .IHE CWIIfiEDI fOR All

.

IEEDI

HOLLEY BROS.

CONSIRUCIION CO., IIC.
UP 01 FIIIIU

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iODIEY, OHIO

•Backhoe
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Work

:Spr,ing training... &lt;=co=ntin=ued=·fro=·m;..;:.B-~5&gt;.;_.,the ball fly with as much as I've got ·
' for om¥ and not feel any 'problems."
the n-ycar-old lefty said. ··so.far, so
good."
.
_
Pulsipher, along with young
.pitchers Paul Wilson and Jason
lsringhausen, was expected to help
the Mets get back into playoff con-

Friday's tournaments
Dhillon I
Athent49. Muriella 40 (QT)

OtilliCOihe_79,l.opn ~·
Cin. Princeton 71 , W. Oatcr LakOia

EASTERN CONFEREN.CE
I.-

Allo-Divleloo
~ L fa.

.

Miami ................... .41
New York.. ............39
Orlando ..................26
W•hinaton ............:u
New Jen.ey .:.:........ 1:1
l'tlllodelphio ........... IJ
Bailon .................... II

· 13 .7S9
IS .722
2S
29

.SIO
.4S:\

38 .28..1
39 .2.'10
42 · .2011

!ill
-

2

- IJ ~
16~
~';:

------:..-

tention. But all 'three were injured
".We make it seem like April first
last season.
is a magical finish line," Valentine
New Mets manager Bobby Valensaid. "It isn't. Tomorrow is the test
tine watched from ~ tower as Pul-· of 'heallh. There's a difference
sipheF pitched 10 four batters. Valen- ·between soreness and pain. Pain is
tine doesn 'I want his yoil~g pitcher when the red flag goes up. Soreness,
to worry about mak1ng any dead- vou can work through."
lines.

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
NDA stluldings · .

-

Cin. 5~ 60. t-fiddlctown :\4
Fairfield ~. Minmilburg Sot

Hamihon 56. Lebanon SO

Big Walnut 66. U1iea 40
Cambridse ~l Carrolltua ~9
Duver 41, Claymont 4:\ (OT) ·
Hillsboro 60, New Lcxin11011 S6

lohn Glenn 11. M011an 42
Maryn·ille 10, Whi1chall60
Mt.&gt;CII!;in 61. Miomi Trac:c ~
Milto~t-Union 64.1ndian lalu: 61
Philo 46. Maysville: 44, 20T
Rock Hill60, S. ~IK 40
Steuben'Ville 68. Ril:hmond"Edi&amp;on 61

u.-11. o.y. Noolwidac ss

Vima. Co. 85, Meip .SS

21

29~

n-ee.

Dlvillen
Oli"''0 ..................41 6 .887
De!roil.................., 39 IJ .7$0
t r:
Adzmta ................... JS 17 '. 673
11 ~•.
Clwlotte ................ :\3 21 .611
14'~
CLEVELAND ....... 29 23 .m
,~ ..........~........ 2., 27 .481 . 21 \
. Milwalkec ............. 2S 2~ .472
22
. Toronto .... .............. IK JS .:WO
29

·COMING. f\t10NDAY fv1ARCH 3RD 1997;
.

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MARCH 3RD. ALL DAY. HAVE YOUR · :
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n

.ll L fd.
14 .7.11
19 .Mtl

4

·r

s~r;:'tfc':~~~ is beginning to pay
·ol
Person just when the
t:P'hoe,nix Suns need it.
Person scored 14 of his 22 points
the fourth period, hitting four
•tllrc:e-poinlt·e,rs in a six-minute span,
Suns rallied to beat the
G:le•1el11nd Cavaliers 94-88 Friday

yo~ want to call it a zone, I
in a ZOQ:C," said Person, who has
'''"'erat~ed 18 points in his last 23

!

~:~~~rra~fter averaging
onlyI've
1oinbeen
the
31. "Lately,
ball really well and getlooks.

needed thein." ·
nuity:"
Cedric (kballos added 20 points
Bobby .Phills, who scored 13 of
and II relioi.mds and Kevin Johnson his IS points in the fourth quarter, hit
.had 20 points for the Suns, who won two jumpers and a three-pointer to
thei;ijiurtH·consecutive home game ·give the Cavaliers a 69-65 lend with
after coming off an 0.3 road trip.
9:50 to play,
·
·
Bob Sura scored a career-high 23
But Wayman Tisdale hit a jumper,
points for Cleveland - 19. coming Ceballos added a thnie·point play
in the first half as the Cavaliers built and Johnson. ma&lt;Je a layup JIS
a 5 J-43 lead.
Phoenix went ahead to stay, 72-69
But Phoenix got its uplempo with 8: 14 temaining.
game going in the third quarter to
· Person, who made six threeforge a 62-62 tie and then took con- . pointers in i I at,tempts, sank his sec- ·
trot behind the hot. shooting of Per- ond of the final period with 7:291eft.
son to end Cleveland 's four-game
He madeanother with 6:04 showwinning· streak.
· .
ing and then sank one from the base" llie Suns just did a terrific job line with 4: 15 left to put Phoenix
in the second half," Cavaliers coach ahead 83-77.
Mike Fratello said. ''They were ·
Johnson ·~ layup gave the Suns an
more. aggressive, tQ&lt;!k good shots · 88-77 lead with 2:53 remaining, but
and harassed our shots. We just the Cavaliers closed to 88-84 on
defended poorly and lost our coriti-. Chris Mills' three-point
. play.
: It',

!ill

Mil.nw &gt;en ..............27 27 .500
12
Dalw ..................... l7 JJ .140
20
lleaYCr .. ,,,.,,N,.'•"'" ' ' 38 ,309 22~~
s.. A,.ooio:.......... ll )9 · .2.'10
2s
VMCOUvtt ............. 1,1 46 .19)_ 29~

BERRY

.

. WESTERN CONFERENCE .
Urah ...................... 38
Hou Jtoo .................~S

WALTER

:~PJ;JOIWX (AP) -;-- All that extra. ·

4/25 Sh•iu Special.........~......._ .. s6,250
.4/~5. Shenniu •Uve PTO &amp;PS..........S7,750
4/%5 :~euiu •Uve PTO...~.~............s7,000 ·
2125 ·st~enniu ...- ......;.....~••~...........s5,250 .

1: :::::fiN

oNO CREDm

SUPERIOR
TOYOTA/SUZUKI
SO East•

O-ur

lt/s

(12-13 Y.r-olc;!chamPJon). Behind lllem ere Elka
co-chairmen Jack Hen1011 end· Tom Meadows,
Jackie Gle11bum (8-9 year-old champion), Cliff
WMeler (12-13 yeer-old champion) end Elka
Exaltad Ruler Horner Hannon•

u·ns rally to beat Cays 94-88

~

NASCAR RACING

-·-

I.-

Theu youthe captured
third place In ~ GaHipolll Elka Lodge No. 107'1
Hoop Shoot contest. Seated - (L·R) Trl.Lucea (8-9_year-old ch•nplon), Briana Wlllla
year-old champion) and-«:1181~ Gqoch

•

171,

Mid- Dlvleloo

MUSHROOM
COMPOST

· You Pick. Vp or We DeliHr
446-21'14 or 245-5316

CAPTU~E. THIRD -

DON'T LET
CREDIT
PROBLEMS
STOP' YOU!

o!IAD CAEDI1'7
oOIVOACED?
•TAX UENS?
.CHARGE OFFS?
BUYER? ~EP&lt;lSSES$K)NS?
oSLOW PAYS? .
-MEDICAL BILLS
oNQ CO-SIGNS NEEDED ..

Open Monday ihru Frldlly 7:30 am til 4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon
·

u

~tntnl

.

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL
. RIVER GRAVEL

s-:::s

The GnWpolis DeW, Tri61aa1,
TU Daily StluiMI IIIII die 51'7 t J
TUtU$-Sftuilwl v.lue tbe coatll 1
lions their tadeos llllb to the lfiGIU
sections of thele plpeft. IIIII IIIey
will continue to be publiJhed.
However, cenain daldli- for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos lllld !elaled anicles for football and Other fill
sports is the Saturday bef~ Jilt
Super Bowl.
· .
•
The deadline fQr photos llllil ;et.a~ articles for basketball (summer
basketball and related camps fill
under the summer sports deldlii!C)
and other winter sports is the last day
of the NBA finals.
·
'
The deadline for submissions tir
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and related articles, from Tball to the majors, as well as other
spring and·summer spans, is the day
of the last game of the World Series. ·
These deadlines are in place to
allow contri llutors. the lime they
need to acquire their photos from the
photography studio/developer of
choice and to give the sraffs the
chance to publish these items in the
appropriate season for those sports. ·.

oBANKRUPT?

.Ba.ID.IN'I'IAI. • COJOfDCIAt

FINISH
- The VInton .. Magic · Paul MuHina, Daniel Fai'IMI', Glann Chick,
. .
advanced to the VInton Rlnky-Pink lnvltatlontl
,my Wellen and Nlthen Nottingham.
Tou)'llll1111!11'a 11!11! four by beating·the Hannan
c; •
•. Sam, Firmer, . ptar- .Daniel s
·· "
Sclntci·44-23 'In ..conckouncl ect1011 and ' !J'Ii'endOn •8u"'1 and Jaeon Lewilon and ' ~
knOc:klng off the Vlnon Hornete 38-26 In thh'd- · Glenn Lewaon:
.
· .
·
·
round play. KnMtlng era (L-R) Juatl!l Laweon,

.

a

..

. . I

comb. The knaellng plar- are Joeh Eddie,
SIXERS TAKE THIRD - The Bidwell 76erl
Brandon Unroe, Antllony Ferrell, Ronny Burna
took 1hlrd place In the VInton Rlnky-Dink Invitaand Kyle Tipton. Standing ant coech Dale Hoitional Touma'!!8'\t by beating the VInton Magic
. comb, players Shawn Northup, Chrll Brown,
38-32 conaolatlon geme In late January. KneelMichael Wofford, EfiC Pugh, jaaon Pennington
Ing behind the trophies are (L·R) ball boy Brett
end
David Burdell end coech Gue Thavenlr.
Unroe, player Kyle Hively and ball boy lYier Hoi- .

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•••. .

In the Open

'

s

By Jim Freeman

Junbav ~imn- i'entind

Lessons on
vacations

•

Ohio sportsmen unite
to face anti-hunters

Ulf·I .

I

tA!IP·

tap!

Attention Ohio sporumen: all cessful last ye.r in statu like Ore- ·
hunting, fishing arid lntpping SCISOtiS gon, Idaho and in neighborini
have been pennanently rePeaJed.
Michigan where outdoorsmen coopNot really. But bad jokes aside, crated with each other, ins\C&amp;d of
animal rights activists would dearly bickering. In West Virginia, out_
love to see that message become a doorsrnen saw. to it that money
reality.
.
raised from hunting and fishing
The top 2S star,;ng positions either stand on their first·rou~
Groups s~~&lt;:h as the Fund for licenses will go toward wildlife and wbea lgotoutofthecar, bull had a Gordon at_156.'166, the Ford of
~ track' record of Geoff Bodtne at I ~6.048 and the were locluid in Friday, with the rest speed or try to improve upon it w~
Animals Inc. and its comrade orza· fish management, and not be squan7
.6
set
in
.
of Ken Schrader at 155.?28, of tb~ 4.2-car field determined · defending race winner D
,
nization the Humane Society of the dered on other concerns.
157 20
199~by Jeff Gonion Chevys
Steve Gnssom at ~~~.1175 aad Ricky . Saturday tn further limp ~als.
· Earnhardt, who was 27th; Jarre
United States are no strangers to
So far, OWC has gotten great Ott what was then a newly repaved Craven at 155.743.
Amon1 the dri11'4f.s who can. teammate Brnie lrvan, 32ni.
infringing on our spotting heritage. cooperation from the Ohio Division oval.
Bolstered by successful anti-hunting of Wildlife which helped spearhead
li WIS. the 33rd pole of Martin~s '
•.
. .
' and anti-trapping ballot bo• victories the group's resurrection and is taking Winston Cup career and his third at
in Massachusetts, Colorado. Wash· a lead role in the issue to help pro- Rockingham.
·
ington and Alaska; the antis smell teet scientifiC wildlife management.
· Martin gave a lot of credit for his
blood.
Meanwhile, OWC is not wliiting strong showing to his Roulh Racing
Their next target... Ohio.
· for the antis to act, bUt has seiud the team, and notably new crew chief
Even as you read this, antis are initiative now in efforts 10 secure a Jimmy Fennig, who once worked
· collecting signatures for a group $2.5 million war chest for the . with Manin in the American Speed
·
called Save The Doves in a bid to upcominJ battle. With any_ luck the Association.
Fennig
has
been
able
to
"Jimmy
outlaw mourning dove hunting in antis will decide 0hio is not worth
!!ring
some
fresh,
new
ideas
to
QUr
Ohio. If they have their way, this the trouble and expense, but we'll be
program," Martin said. "And, .
wildlife decision will not be f1t8lle by ready fur them if they do.
because Jimmy is here now, it's
professional game biologists or
So .what can you do? ·
..
.
given
(fonner crew chief and n0w
based on scientific data. rather it will
First, suppon CiWC in its
he decided at the ballot box follow- fundraising efforts by pun:hasing a general manager) Steve Hmiel a
·o~.
ing a rele.ntless,well-funded barrage .$5 ticket i!' the Save Our Heritage chance to' concentrate his efforts on
.
. )01
of emotional advertising and misin- Sweepstakes•.The grand prize win· some things·he didn't have time for
formation ·- most likely in Novem- n.er .will receive 40
of prime befon:. It's a much smoother opel'&amp;·
ber, 1998. .
.
hunting land adjacent the Wolf C=k tion.''
Labonte was the runner· .
It is imponant to realize these Wildlife Area in nearby Morg8n . lip·Bobby
in Winston Cup qualifying at
groups aren't out to stop just mourn- County along with a 20-by-24-foot 156.495 in a Pontiac, followed by
ing dove hunting. They want to stop log cabin kit Dozens of other prizes Dale Jarrett at 156.475 in a Ford, the
ALL hunting beginning with the eas- including fishing and hunting trips, Chevrolet of Daytona 500 winner
iest 'sell.' They believe that dove firearms and bows will also be
hunting is the easiest sell; after that awarded.
·
Coast Guard offers
· they can come back for more. '
Second, get your friends to buy
: · For in.stance, on the opening day tickets.
boating class .
: of last year's dove . season. Mike
Third, if you are a member or
,,'
: Markarian of the Fund.for Animals offieer of a sporting club in Gallia or
POMEROY ..,;,. A free boating
'•
, told The Co/umbusDisparc/Jthathis Meigs counties, get your group . skills course sponsored.by the u.s.
· : group is opposed to all .hunting.
direcdy involved by helping your
Coast Guard Au.xiliary will be held
; ·But these peojlle aren't op[lOSI:d to county OWC committee in fundraisstarting March 4 at St. Paul Luther·
an Church in Pomeroy. Classes run
; hunting only. Trappers ICC well ing activities by selling tickets. All
.
· acquainted with the antis' s~~&lt;:cessful sportsmen should be united on this
from 7:30 to 9:30p.m. and cover ·13 ·
: campaign against fur, tiut. what about issue. The antis are most successful
topics.
,•
; anglers? Just recently, People for the · when they can tum outdoorsmen .
Class tenons include selecting
· Ethical Treatment of Animals'began against each other.
the right bo~t,.equipml'nt, trailering,
; a nationwide campaign ·to erode
We also welcome the suppon of . boat handli!lg, rules, piloting your .
; public suppon for fishing. Of course our brothers and sisters in West Vir·
boat, power choices, lines and knots,
; these groups are also against the use ginia in helping raise the funds to
weather and boating, your boat's
· of animals for life-saving medical fight this battle. If we beat the antis
radio, and inland boating. .
.
~ research or· for any other purpose, soundly here in Ohio, .il may be
For more information, call Jim
including their use.as food for pco- awhile until they decide to take on · . .Goodrich at 949-3301. or Donna
pie.
· .. ..
sponsmen elsewhere. ·
·Davis at 992-6107.
But here in Ohio, unlike those
Sweepstakes tickets· will be
states ·mentioned above, the Coi urn- offered at various locations across
DOW notes error
bus-based1Wildlifc Legislative Fund the state until November. Area .
In fishing' rules
of America, outdoor clubs and oth- -groups are just now getting the ball
,ers have baqded to resunect Ohioans rolling. As the campaign' progresses
COLUMBUS - Area fishing
·for Wildlife Conservation -a group throughout the state, I will keep readlicense agents and anglers are being
thai .successfully defeated an anti- ers updated on what progress is
alened to an error on page four of the
trapping ballot initiative in 1978.
being made, where Jickets are avail·
. owe consists of sponsmen, able and what else can be done to 1997 Ohio Fislling Regulations.
The Ohio Division of Wildlife
'firearm owners, farmers. medical protect our outdoOr heritage.
made 311 error concerning treble
;resean:hers, educators. and many
For more information abOut the
·othen. (l is
up of national, OWC or IO get sweepstakes tickets, . -hooks under the method of taking.
:sta(llwide atid local groups such as contact Jim Freeman at 614-992- The correct' interpretation is: treble
hooks may not be used on tloatlines,
the wt.FA. the National RiHe Asso- 215~ in Meigs County or Bob Don:cilllion, National Trappers Associa- nett at 614-388-9436 in.Gallia Coun- set or banklines. Treble. hooks are
1997 DODGE RAM 1500 Work Sptdal,
long~.
~
$28.2 mo.
legal for all other methods of fishing.
1ion; ·l.ealliC of Ohio · Sportsmen, ty.
I'
:Ohill BASS Chapter Federation,
1997 DODGE CARAVAN Fami~ Value Package, air, till, cruise, driver side door, teat.....;........$310
. Ohio Sllite Thappers Association and
SPAS - SPAS - SPAS!

Goodwrench 400•.• &lt;~: :!=Dn: : u: : ·n=ucd: -:r o: : m: :.:=: B·.:. ~.I)

_:_~---.;.._-------.;_---..;i

smi4;:i;C"o-:·

~

·

N~RRIS

NORTHUP
~ODGE~ 1I,NC~

..

'~

, · .·

· ·.

' NEW t

·.

auto., air,

.

Come see our large .
cllspiCIY or call toclayl

owe is not treating the proposed
ballot issue as an anti-dove hunting
issue, but ralher a5 an anti-btl hunt·
ilig, triiPpins and fishing issue. .
· H1111ters pod trappers were suc·

l!g6 nrvy
Fill Size cenms111 VII
Bran~ New

.

a~riPR
.UP IIi
'
~

'

.

.

MAY1
.

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HU!tiiiY L.llotiiTKD Tl ...t: ONL;-VI CON IISIELt:CTifD ·MoDIEUI)
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Continued on page .C7

. .

. Members of Tl'oop 299 watch their fi,.. bum a string at the fire building station.

1996 PONTIAC SUNFIRE 2 DR., auto., air, st~eo. 14,000 miles, factory warranty, green....... $233 1110.
1996 DODGE NEON 2 DR., 5-speed. air, •oster, 12,000 miles, whfte factory warranty......;..$189 mo.
1995 DODGE INTREPID 4DR., auto,, V6; all power, loaded, Program Car, burgundy.............$276 mo.
1994 BUICK REGAL 4 DR., V6, loaded, neW tires,' keyle~ enlly, -green..;,:.......:..................... mo.
1994 DODGE SHADOW 4 DR., auto.,-air; defroster, stereo, 50,000 miles, white..................;,.$145 mo.
1994 EAGLE TALON, 5-sp8ed, sunroof, ai, cassette, 39,000 miles, rerl ...............'".............. $187 mo.
1993 DODGE ~TH,Ioaded, Ike new, 15,Q00miles, never seen Snow, red ....~.......,...:.... $289mo.
1992 MERCURY COUGAR LS, an power, auto., V6, silver, nice car......................................$195 mo.
1991 DODGE DYNASTY, loaded, full p1Wt111', V6, runs great, nice luxtJY car, blue:.......:.............$99 mo.
1991 PONTIAC GRAND A114 Dr., pwr.locks, al!tO.• cassette, air, alum. 'MI8els, while.;...........$99 mo.
1995 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT 4DR•• aUto.; 6cyl., air, cassett&amp;, tinted; 29,0oo fllies .........$349 nio.
1995 NISSAN PICKUP. Auto., air, cassette, nice whee~; wl!~..............:.............;,.........;......$215 mo.
1994 DO~E DAKOTA CLUB CAB 4~ VB ~agnu~. 5-speed, cruise tik, black, 40K........;,$279mp..
1994 CHEVY S.1 0, 5-speed, air, cassetle, topper ...~.......t........
~
~ $129 M.
~992 DQQGE CARAVAN, V6, tit, cruis8, 7passerlger, grey ..."'"'"'""'"............~.................. S171.mo.
...... mo.
1991 FORD. EXPLORER Eddie Bll* 4X4, ~e&lt;f leather, sunroof, new tires,
.
See: Mike Northup, Dwiabt Stev! n, Mo.rria Sheets, AI Durst,
Eric. IJiaekbum,..
eal. Peifer .
.
.
.

l!

.~

. founder of the city of Iron-·
'
were shonly there·
Special Correspondent
ton, readily supplied horses,
after cnught by
: Gallla Furnace in Gallia County wagons anrl' other ·supplies
&lt;
slave traders, who
•nd Olive Furnace in Lawrence necessary ',lo make the
returned them to
•
County were Underground, ~ailroad a suctheir
plantation
iniponatit stops cess,
,
home. Ironically
on the UnderAbout iOO'runaw11yswere
these two were the
ground Rail- helped by members of the
only ones .under
road from 1844 Stewart faljlily at .Poke
Dicher's c~ that
to 1860, as was P~!~Ch. The Sfllwarts were an·
ever got caught.
the
point · interesting family, as most of
Occasionally .
alniOilhalfwlly the membenl became well
slavehunters would
between
the educated;n lllj era when not
come into the area
two furnaces. mw:y ed~~&lt;:nti\111al opponuni·
to nab free lllacks
Thai poidt was ties were gi~~n to blacks.
as well as run·
J&gt;.ateh, and it was a The Stewarts were largely·
aways, There was
African-American · self-educated. Several memone
company
be!S 'of that f&amp;fttiiY became
known as L.C.
•
the ~Dembers of the Poke teachers· and 11\'nisters. Mrs.
Roberts Co. of
Patch communitl( worked for either John S. Stewatt once told for
New Orleans that
tlallia or Olive 'FurtUtCe. One of the Wilbur Siebert' of Ohio State
regularly
kid~iracka" of the Underground Rail- Univers. ily tha~!
the fi11t runnapped free blacks
toad in western Oallia C91!nty ,o~gi- away to come o 'Poke Patch
who lived near the
nated atthe Ohio River near Ironton. came ill 1844. '·. re wu juar
Ohio River. These
h tariely followed a path near the one· 1111111 who6e name wu
people, many of
tron Railroad loa town callicl CCD:· WilSon. He had come . from
whom were born
tre'Station in Lawrence' County.~ Vilginia .-nd '" ossed the
. ,
free,• were then
Ihie depancd from the ·railroad river ai BurliiJ~ton. Probably
. . ·
· ·
·
.
,
.
·
sold.
tracks to Olive Furnace, Poke Patch, the second perspn to make
UNDERGRQUND RAILROAD • Thle gl...
p~ura of 1173 ehowl GaUl• Fumac.,
There was a
:OalliaPulllace, AdlltDiville and then the run· was a William Scott fnlm the 1140'1. to 1880. Oallla ·Fum~t pia
an Important part In the underground rail• 'case in Lawrence
to lllfrfm Crossroads in Jackson who had eacap¢ l'rom slav- road. The ptKitO II fnlm tht Olllo tlltOrlcll oclety Collection.
County involving
'tclll). Another trail originated at ery in Kentucky. From Poke
from 'Lawrence County were usually He was believed to have brought 75 .
.·
se_verallnembelll of
'Pnll!torville or Burlington and came Patch runaw~ys we~ taken by the . one of two men, Mr. Matthews, lin runaway slaves !lions this route. The the Polley . famoly . . A Roberts
IntO Poke Patch from the eut II Wll Stewarts to Berhn Crossroads. African-American employed by last run Dicher made was in 1860 employee h~ taken .some of the
jlelieved •that about 200 ·runaways (another earl)' black setdement), The Olive Fum~~~:e or a Mr. Dicher.
. with a brother and sister named Julia Polleys clwmmg that they were runjiaased through J&gt;oke Patclt. · Jojm five Stewart brothers were named
James Dicher or "The Red Fox" and Tom. They came from Big Bot- away slaves. The~ had in fact bee_n
l;:arnpbell, one of the principal own· ' Thomas, J~mes,, Issac, John and as .he. w~ ,~nown was a black m,an toni, Va. They hl\d rested at John freed five years pnor to that by thetr
of Oallia Furnace atld · the · Jac;ob. Leadmg ~ople to Poke Pateh with a Rale complex !a" and red hair. St~wan'$ hblise near Poke Patch 81Jd o~ner 1'1~ had become morally out-

aatlve

ORRIS ORTHUP DODGE/I
•.

Gallpohs,.OIL

.

illY JAMES SANDS

TIX,'tlh,lleenle lee,.,. nol Included In ..... Pl)llllftta. C,. iio!tlolrotr' tUY lfleol . ..~

''·

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The .important role of Gallia ·Furnace in the Underground ·Railro·ad

~

252 ·upper River Rd.·

POMEROY · After touring the Disney World
area with a grandson, several· years·agtH:xperiences with children at Disney Land, and observa·
lion, we learned a few imponantlessbns on fami·
ly amusemenl/theme park e,xcursions.
First. age has to be a consideration. Unle..
· you live in the Orlando area and annual passes
can be purchased for short
visits, five is about the minimum age for walking and
, staying alen all day. That age
and older do ' not require frequent rest room use, they can
' walk great distances, and a
nap isn't a necessity. Our
grandson, Jim, age six, was
exceptionally well-behaved
and good on our .daily trips.
(His beh'avior was much' better than some of the
· adults we observed) Strollers are available; how·
ever, i_n crowded situations, they. are hare! to
maneuver and many areas/rides state: "No .
strollers ~eyond this point." The heat and frustra·.
lion of delays was apparent one afternoon as .we,
obse!,V.ed . a father carrying two children under
four. Sweat was pouring down his face and ·one.
litde kid said, "You're choking me." The other
said, "Well, you're killing me." I was tempted to
1\Sk the father if he was having fun yet. · ·
,,
After determining Orlando is the perfect place.
for a the family vacation, budgeting heavily is a.
.must. It is expensive. From Ohio; driving is the
easiest and cheapest fora family. After our. very
busy week with our gr.andsoti and daughter, al~
·,four of us agreed IO 'to 14 days should be the time
allotted, rather thati the week we had. That would
allow days off between events 'to recuperate a bit.
Most motels have ,,Ols, as do condos for rent in
the area. Renting a place with a kitchen is a
money saver. Air conditionina is a must We
agreed we would not want to visit Orlando in the
middle of summer.
For Disney World, we purchased four-day
passes ($123 per adult, plus tax, and about 70 per·
cent of an adult ticket price for children) that,
allowed us to visit MGM Studios, Epcot Center
and the Magic- Kingdom. T~e passes allowed uS:
one place each day,_not multiple places in one.
day. All places charged $5 for parking. Disney
does not give seniors discounts but some other' ·
places do; so as~. ·The Kennedy Space Center is;
about an hour's drive from Orlando and ·can be
toured in one day. The entrance and parking · are
free but the bu.s rides and movies require pur·
chased tickets. The Space,Center is tho best v!llut.
in the area, but not .quite as exciting tor children. ·
under 10.' ·
The most s~vvy parents · we saw .carried day
packs. As the weather was in the SO's most days
we were touring, all of us were constantly thill!ty.
Day packs can carry water, frozen boxed juice~ to
thaw; snacks of cookies and fruit, or even lunch.'
AlsO;·sweaiers were in order for small children as .
some late afternoons and evenings cooled w:d had
wind before ~ nightly t!tunderstor.fns. Again,
store them in the day packs. Food throughout the
entertainment grounds was expensive. T.he ·
cheapest jce cream bar observed· was $1. 7~~ Soft
drinks averaged at least that and were mostly ice
unless you could ask .the servers' not'to place
much ice in the cup. ·The vendors were very busy
and not always in ai:commodating moods. Bot·
tied water was $2, but drinking fountains were
numerous. The restaurants on the grounds also .
offered poor service, although we did not patron'
ize any of t.he expensive ones. A light lunch can
easily run twice what it would at a fast food chain
outside the complex.
·
. .
As always, comfonable shoes are a mus~
Walking shons were worn by nearly everyone and
casual dress was the code. Sunscreen lotion and
sunglasses are another necessity. Hats are seen
but rides and wind lose a few. Fanny packs are
the norm. If · renting a motel or condo, probably
laundry facilities would be present I find it is
easier to wash every other day than to try and take
more clothes.
Again, emphasis is on .the need to have a few
Continued on page .C7

.,

'

Altnew veltlc'-pa'"*ola baMcl on72 mo. Pll"fllll wlllt •• . Clllt otlnllMICiuilrdoMo~
All UMd Vlhloll ....,_ baMcl on 48'w 10 1110. puriihue wlllt ti,OOO OMit or lnllM eqully ~.

&lt;

.

other events ,the Cub S.couts were follollrihg thelr.Qwn
Conl)ie' McCormick, unit commissioner from
set up·. mini-coulle of fun events. cutiS tried cross-country skiing With boards, egg toss and the most PQpularevent,
the f1jp Aop with waffles, and spatulas: , '"They work
on•balanc.e and hltlldoi~ye coordination; its well as learning
Scoulllr.ills s~~&lt;:h as team work,· McConnick said. ·
Newly appointed M-G-M Scout ·Executive. Barry
Hlllilm was enjoying his first Klondike in, the district, and
was pleased with wha:t he- saw. .
li.
1
"'The tum out for this event is great. We have nearly 100
percent panicipation. I'm very happy to say this district
supports the principals o~outing." he aid. "The leaders
work very hard to prov!d .quality programs for lhe boys.
M-0-M is filled with loy volunteel'B milking a good pro·
.gl'&amp;m for f11BRY area boys."
Scoulmaster Filkins
Agreed, saying, "we're here having a lot offun and the boys
are learning some gcJod Scout skills. There are also other
things being taught. Things like getting along and morals;

N ................. ...................... ....

·-

com~S)q·~ry .

. Jn,-.:lkuli
are .!!IW
rreqlknt!¥'
~&gt;y'l!Qyawjih
.....
d·out o1r~~i~;;~~::1;;~~~~~e~::
While 'iH~
Boy Scouts
~ontinue&lt;~
111 map: ~ing

cass., white ..... ..................

USEDif.

more than

At the mouse lrJlp station parent volunteer Andy Miller, Troop
fishmg~, C:.\ing Ute po(e.a/J,ike a 1fiahing lu~,.the bpys
in&amp;' II' set Off ihe ll)OUSC u'ap.!Mfll~ ~~~that k1Jot

1997 JEEP WAANG~R 4.wheel drive, 5-speed, soft top......................................................$259 ~.
1997 DODGE AVENGER.DOHC, 16 valve eng., ai, cruip,lilt, cassette, green ...................... ~45 mo.
1997 PLYMOUTH BREEZE 4DR. Auto.,air, Cruise, till, DoHC, 16 valve eng., red................. $245 1110.

,

.

:. Camp builds·

~591, wateh"'! as boys, lashed together t~ pol~ to resemble

..0.

others.

.·t

~.

HERE ARE JUST A FEW fHAT WE LASSOED

made

!

.~'

'' noticeable IIJ!d the
The falling sno~ was barely
abundance of mud presented a probleJil' for the
sl~ds, but the Mason, Gallia. Meigs (M·G·M) Boy
Scouts of America District's Klondike Derby was still a
day of challenging fun for near!)' 65 Boy Scouts and
Cubs.
·
.
·
.'-ump Kiashu'ta, located .outside Pomeroy, was the
Feb. IS, event designed to showcase basic
·
in such areas· as lashing, fire building and overall
wint~r Q-mping skills.
.
BSA Troop 259, from Point Pleasant. W.Va., hosted the Derby for
the M-0-M District
1
KIQD,dikes lire excellent ,ways for Scouts to prefect winter ,camp·
ing sli:ills via competition, said Scoutmaster Lariy Filkins.
· ':-'bis is good training for !he boys, and· they really enjoy racing
agmnst each other. Of.coull!e the main purpose .is to have fun. That
is what scouting is all about, learning while having fun."
•·
Pulling sleds loaded with necessities such as fil'Bt aid kits w:d fire
starters, the Scouts began the trek around' the course. Steve Weeks
and Matt Caldwell from Troop 235 in Chester, boasted about the
prowess of their award winning sled.
· With shouts of excltemeill they set off and m~t their first obstacle---how to maneuver the sled across a swinging bridge. As other
troops observed their efforts, volunteers made final prnparations for
the various stations.
.
·
At fire building, Chip Spears of Le~, watched as membell! of
Troop 299 from Hemlock Grove, began combing the area for dry
twi~s and leaves. Ty Gonzalez and RYBIJ· Well prepared the wood,
addmg fire starter items such as coUOI! balls, steel
· ·
wool and lint.
,
Making sparks with Oint and steel, the boys labored
to ignite the pile of carefully plaeed material. Blowing
on tlil( fii'CliQ keep it going,.they were mindful of both
time being u!ilized and of the ultimate goal of creating
a fire strong enough to bu.in a pi~ of string into.
"A lot of the troops work really well together. They
can gel a fire going in no ~me. You know that you can
count on th!lm to build a good fire under any conditions," Spears

The Dodge,:aoys Are

acres

CUb Scouta enj~y the egg tau. ·
.'

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·AT

C

Sundey, Fellr\Mry 21, t ll1

TlliitU 81 1111111
. Stltlf

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Section

•

Jn
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raged by the whole slave system.
• The Lawrence County prosecutor
pursued this injustice in the courts
. for several years before the Polleys
were freed.
·
People who led people from Poke
Patch nonh included, ·· besides the
Stewarts , Tolliver toker. · Peter
Coker and Benjam!n Holly.
In due course the next ·stop was .
established al Rio Grande wluire
Joseph Cousins was the operator.
There was also a black settlement
between Rio Grande and Vintoq
called Shiloh where Gilliam Hocks ·
was the operator, At Berlin Cross·
ro!!ds there were several blacks who
ra\;:;lt_he railroad, including Rev.
Noab Nooks, a wealthy fanper and
minister. It appears thai Nooks wu
the key operator of the whole line u ·
he had connections clear in~ Cana- '
da.
It is interesting that the line in .
western Galli.a County Wl4 run
lnostly by African-Amerieaos
altbough heavily subsidized by . ~ .
Gallia and Olive Furnaces, whenu
the line from Gallipolis to Vlllkln
County throug!l Kyger, Porter and
Morgan Centre was mostly a whl..
run line.
· ·
,
. Jamtl Sandi II aepralll.,.
r..pondent of. the lllft ..J
nm.. Sentlriii. ·His ......_til

61 WIIUow Dr., lprlnflll OfS, Olltl
4SCMJI.
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�......,, February 23,' 1117 'L

•

F*'*Y 23, 1117-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Glllllpolla, OH • PQint Pl•ntnt, WV

~ " I

Pomeroy • MddllpDI't • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Looking back ·to the local .business district in 1897
ByUXTAWNEY
Here is IU!!ltbc:• ..UCie baed on
infllrlllliion found in the Gallipolis
City Diredoly of 1897.
1be Gallipolil MWiicipll ao.ter
lllid M.F. Merriman wu myor;
E.H. KuhD wu -mar; T.E. a•
bury wls city clerk; R.E. Dunn was
city solicitor; W.R. White was city
• engineer; John Pepple was street
commiuionc:r; Frank Brown was
fire chief; and 1.T. Hanson wu
health officer,
·

.Beat of.the Bend ...
by Bob HoefliCh

HEATHER HUDSON AND SHAWN HAWLEY

.l:ludsoh-Hawley
POMEROY -· Heather . Bess in veterinary medicine.
Hudson.and Shawn Michael Hawley
Hawley is the son uf Mr. and
announce their engagement and Mrs. Randall Hawley of Middleport.
upcoming marriage.
He is the grandson ot Betty Hawley,
Hudson is the daughter of Mr.. · the late Norman Hawley and the late
and Mrs. Henry HoPPe of Pomero)' · Mr. and Mfs. William Sheridan. He
and the late Bryant Hudson. St,e is is a 1992 !p11duate of Meigs Hish
the granddaughter or George Hud- School: He IS employed at Rockwell
•
.son, and the late Bessie Hudson, Automati&lt;in.
.
1
Loretta Rogers of Pomeroy and Mr.
Ail open church wed!ling 'Will be
and Mrs. William Arthur of Ripley, · March 27 at tl)e Middleport Church
STEPHANIE SEE AND CHRI~TOPHER BLANK ·
.
pf Cluist. The m~ic will begin at 4
W.Va.
She is a 1994 graduate of Meigs . p.m. A re&lt;:CP.Iion will be held fatHigh School and attends Ohio Uni- · lowing the ·ceremony at Royal Oak
·
POMEROY -- Stephanie See of 1995 graduate of the University of versity were she is pursuing a degRC . Reson;
Rio
Grande,
is
the
son
-of
l8111CS
and
·
Pomeroy and Cluistopher Blank of
Gallipolis announce their engage- Carel Blank and the grandson of
James and Dorothy Hanson, all of
ment and upcoming marriage. .
.
Stephanie, a 1994 graduate of Gallipolis.
He allends the University of Rio
Meigs High School, is the daughter
of Dave and Cherie See, and the Grande, where he is pursuing a
granddaughter of Samuel and bachelor of science degree-in industrial technology. He is employed at
Martha Fry, all of Pomeroy.
She is allending the University Rockwell Automation.in Gallipolis.
of Rio Grande and will graduate in
A private wedding ceremony will .
June 1997 with an associate of
be
held MllrCh 14. A reception will
applied business degree in office
technology. She is ·employed at the be held from 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday,
. Holzer Medical Center in Gallipc:ilis. March IS in the Rhodes Student
Christopher, a 1993 graduate of Center at the University of Rio
Gallia Academy High School and a Grande.

See-Blank

·

A viaitins vocal aroup from
Columbus will be puenud in concert oell Sunday, Mlreh 2•. at the .
U11iled · .Methodist Church .in
Pomero~.
.
.
. Known . u the llng's Way
Singers, lhe grolip comes from tbe
Kin1 Avenue M~ ChW'Ch in
Columbus. Elizabeth Downie, a
senior at Ojlio State Uni'!mity, hiS
been one of lhe singers for the past
four years. She is lhe . daughter of
Mr. ·and Mrs. All~n Do)VIIie and the
grandda11ghter of Mn. Dorothy
Downie, all of Pomeroy, and ·Mr.
and Mn: Edison Baker of Middleport.
.
.
The public is inyited to attend.the
program Sunday. l understand the
singers III'C. a lively group so yoo'll
prObably enjoy.

I, at the Scipio 'fclniNp.fin&lt;
in Harrisonville. ,' .

w..-

how!i ~·

. GC&lt;qe·
9! CantQD w~l'
hu performid llil Elvis acts for fan!_:~
Ill over NOI1henl Ohio will he
imperlolla!cr ud Willi him will . , .

. ~ Ariel Loclae, I()OF, bllilt !he

Opera House in 1896. It was a three·
story stru~tu(C, with frontage on
Second Sbeet of!! 1 feet. It extended
·back 161 ·feet. The Opera House hlld
~ seating capacity of 800 and a large
.·stage.·lt ,C0$1 $28,000, and was loCated on Second Street. between State
and Locust.
·
In 1893, the ' Ohio Hospital for
Epileptics (OHE) opened at a cost of
$500,000. There were 17 edifices,
and Lwo more were under construe-.
lion. Upon completion of the project, there woul4 be 37 buildings. In
1897, the institution had 369 males

D. 1. Rick Will whci will spin Ill!:•
·pe.t rock IIIICI toO cliiUics of thi;:
"50's and.60's. .
: ~~:
l The ·ShoW takes place from 8 tq ::
II p.m. and food and beverales will :~
lle available. It's suggested that you· •
lllke along yo11r lawn chairs so ym)::
can enjoy the Elvis antics in com• : •
fort.
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The U. S. Air Force S?tl! .~
Squadron, presently serving in Saudi :
Arabia, and con\manded by former ·.
Meigs resident, U. Col: Mark ·Ai ' :1
Morris has been·extensivel~ recog.; 1
nized for having completed I 00,000; ,
Meigs County Tteasurer lfoward flight hours in die F-ISC with&lt;iut
Frank reports !hal some taxpayers mishap.
j~=
The accomplishment marks ont; ;~ ·
may he getting calls about delinquent taxes and some offen of help . lhe second F-15 ' squadron t'! sue; :~
from mortgage companies. He cessfully perform sitch a feat in ~ ·1
points out that these companies are Air Force's 50-year his)ory. Incident !1
in no way associated with the Meigs tally, Col. Morris was the pilot 10 ·
Treasurer's OffiCe, nor hAve they land his F-1 SC to a safe landing to
received any i~fonnation through complete the 100,000 flight hours ,
his office.
·
for the squadrpn witbouJ a mishap. ·
·Incidentally, lhe squadron's annual
The l997 Ohio Newsp'&amp;per Asso- safety .inspection W!IS ~ excellent
ciation held its 64th annual conven- across all areas--ground, weapons. '
tion in Columbus this month and · and flying safety•-without a single ,;
, ,
hired a staff to publish a newspaper . discrepancy.
pointing up convention ~etivilies.
And the undoubtedly proud pari : •
Among the staff was Nichola G. ents of Col. Morris are Janet IIIICI '
..: , ;
Pickens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris of Rudand.
Ray Pickens of the Pomeroy area.
who has several by-line stOries in
The tetnperature is dipping again" .
the publication distributed after the Geez. And just when I "(as gettinlj~ ~
clqse of lhe convention. Nichola is ready to go to a greenhouse to pic~, ~
currently the .editor-in-chief of The · up the summer flower plants. OQ •1
Lantern, .the Ohio Stale Vnivenlty k~p smiling.
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newspaper.

1

u\0 317 females for a total of 686 e11trances. They were a present from
inmates. There wen: 72 offiCCI1 and the United States. Twenty y.-s ago
employees. H.C. Rutter was the this park was a cow pasture," wrote
superintendent.
the directory.
Acconling to the directory, "the
A miliwy band was organized in
names of the unfortunates are omit- 1893 and bad 16 members who
ted out of feeling for their friends." played clarinets, comets, trombones,
The OHE later was named the a Tuba, a SIIII'C drum and a bass
Gallipolis State Institute (GSI) and drum.
sometime after !hal, named the Gal·
The Gallia Academy wu a landlipolis Development Center (GDC). mark in educational. institutions. It
Street cars served Gallipolis and was chartered by lhe Legislature of
Point Pleasant, W.Va. The Gallipolis ·Ohio, Feb. 18, 1810. ID its early days
and Poirir Pleasant Railway was . The Gallia Academy jurisdiction
bought at a master commissioner extended far into the State of Virsale in 1895. It was· rebuilt in 1895 ginia. It was considered as being
and equipped with electricity. Cars "first place" among educational
ran to Point Pleasant. a distance of institutions.
five miles, every 30 minutes.
The city hall was originally built
The city park was described as as the county jail, but was purchased
one of the most beautiful spots in the from lhe county about 1887. The
state of Ohio.
mayor's court; council chamber,
"It is located on the top of the,'.
·
· · · · · .. · ...... · ·-·..
river bank, -just above the steamboat '
wharf. It occupies one square of a: ·
trifle more than five acres. It is laid
out with walks and shade trees. A
band stand is in the center; while
four cannons ·guard the four corner

KEVIN AND CARRIE MARTIN

Chambers~Martin
'POINT PLE!ASANT, W.Vi.' - necked white satip gown with a
Carrie Lynn~tte · Chambers ·and Basqw: waist and modified puffed
KeVin Dean Martin were united in long .sleeves. The dress and semimarriage Dec. 21 at the Point Pleas- cathedral train was ·adorned -with .
ani Church of lhe Nazatene. Rev. · reembroidered alencon lace.
Cliilrles Muter officiated lhe douNevada Chambers served as maid
ble-ring ceremo,ny.
of bonor. Bridesmaids were Sheila
The bride is the daughter of Re,.. Oehler, Mar)i B~ Martin and Laura
and Mn. Richard Chambers of Man, Ireland.
W:Va. The groom is the son of Mr.
The gro?m wore a black peak
and Mn. Dean Martin of Crown· tuxedo with a white tie and ·vest.
City.
Scott Birchfield served as best man.
The church was adorned with two Groomsmen were Brett Cremeans,
caJidelabras covered ·with white , Jasqn Chlil!lbers and Brian ·Birch- ·
ti&amp;fus, ivy and the traditional unity 1 field.
c8ildle. · " ,
.
· , A reception followed in the
bride' was escorted doWn the • chUrch fellowship hall.
ai~~ by bet fail!ef 1111C1 giVen in mar-Y After a short honeymoon trip the
ri., 'by her. pmntS. Sl\i! wor, a" 1. couple resides in Crown City.

You may think Elvis is gone but
he'll be back Saturday night, March·

•:The
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The Community Cal.ndar Ia pubHihed ill a· free Mrllice to non-

Methodist Church.

profit

CHESHIRE · Kyger Creek
Junior High School Boosters meeting 7 p.m. at the school.

groupa wlahlng to
announce IMitlng8 and apeelal
eventa. The calendar · Ia not
dealgned to promote •lea or
fund-falaera of any type. Hema are
printed •• apace pennlta .nd cannot be gUBrentaed to run • apaclflc number of daye.
' Sunday,Feb.23

•••

POINT PLE,&amp;.SANT, . W.Va.
Narcotics Anonymous 1\i County
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.

.•

. GALLIPOLIS - Heiu1line meeting 2 p.m. French 500 Room of
Holzer Medical Center.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - &amp;I Crawford 10
~ing J0;30a.m. and6p.m. EliZabeth
Chapel thW'Ch.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and Fish- .
es 12 to I :30 p.m. St. feter's Episcopal Church.

,;.
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&lt;J 1.f~·
·.1.1&lt;/-..
Monday, F.t~. 24
l t ';'"''

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.CHESHIRE - TOPS meeting i 0
to II a.m. Cheshire United
Methodist Church.

....

GALLIPOLIS - All current I0
· and 11th graders interes!ed in Post
Secondary Option Prograin for next
. year allend meeting 7·p.m. in Gallia
Acadeiny 'High School library with
at least one parent to be eligible.

•••

. GALLIPOLIS .c Gallia County
Veterans Ass&lt;X:iation meeting· 7:30
p.m. American Legion Post27. . ·

ID..st4iek

PitlM'DI

Page~ Williams

POINT PLEASANT, W.Ya: - Mr.
and Mrs. James Page of 20· Wakefield Rd.. Point Pleasant, W.Va.
announce the engagement and forthooming marriage of their daughter,
Kelly Erin, to Kenneth E. Williams,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Williams,
also·of Point Pleasant.
The open church wedding will be
5:30 p.m., Saturday, March 8 at
Christ Episc&lt;;Jpal Church; 804 Main
St., Point Pleasant, with Rev. James

Hamilton-Ridenour
COOLVIU.E -- Steve Hamilton and Marilynn Trussell and Pauline
and Jane McKee of Coolville Ridenour, all of Chester, and the late
announce !he engagement and Duel Ridenour. He graduated from
approaching marriage of their Eastern High School in '1991 and is .
daughter, Natasha Mae Hamilton, to employed with Gallia County EMS
.JasQ,II Brian Ri(itnour son of Rober· as an Adv~nced Emergen~y Medical
.
ta Jti4eri9ur ofl'omeltlf, and Johri B. Technician. · · · ·
·
The
open
church
wedding
will
he
R~ur of Ches~r.
·.
~ilion is the sranc!daughter of Sunday, March 9 at 3 p.m. at the
&amp;l..t Virginia Hlllllilton of Dayton Chester United · Methodist Church
with Rev. Sharon Hausman
and.J'!Ua'Mae Sanner o( Troy.
. officiat.
ing.
Ridenour is·the grandson of Bob

- ',.,..----:---Wedding policy--Those not milking the' 60-day
. The ·sunday Times-Sentinel
regard; the , weddings . of Gallia, deadline will be published in the
Meijl IIIICI Uason C!Jtlnlles as news daily papers as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride or
and pu~j~s wedding stories and
:the bride ancl groom may be pub. P~'Wilhi&gt;U! el!a,rge. .
HIYMo-.'er, weddms news must lished with wedding stories if
meet' pllel'll IIW!dard$. of timeli' desired. Photographs may he either
ness. Thln.wspaper· prefers to pub- black and white or good quality
lish poomt• of weddings as soon as color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality phcilognplu will not
pouible 1ft« the event
be accepted. Generally, snapshots or
1b Ill pilblished in the Sunday in&amp;tant-developing photos are not or
.
.
edition, · tbe ~ding must have ~le quality.
' AU marmUJ ·submitted for publiliken 111- wllhi• tiO days pior to
cation
il.subJectiO editiJii.
tbe ~
Mil
be up 10
may be. dilllC!ed.to tbe
Queltiola
600 _ . ill I.... M...W for
editorial
deplnment
from I to S
~-.,.,. . . be-.IWd by
a MO!Ida7 dlrough ~j
11446.. .a , ..,
Thun.
~t
.. . . . ~. pdarto
o!.,W.
,,
llclllm.
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CADMUS - Walnut Township
Neighborhood Crime WatJ::h meeting 7:30 p:m. at Cadmus SchQol.'

500~ ·0FF

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A mistake was inadvertently
made in the Bush-Davis engagement
article in the Feb. 16 edition of the
Sunday Times-Sentinel.

BoQk ·Pd~l

WALLPAPER AND
·lUND SHOP

'·.·G~LfPOLIS, ,..,. I,i~a. B~-ck and .. also ~ gradua!e of the Buckeye Hil.ls
•

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ROCK fiH.D ROLL DfiHCE ·.

"

-.~·

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in .business administration

~lanping in.

.

MARCH 1", 1997··

I&lt;

~nd

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ELVIS
lmP.,...Onator

'

I P.&amp;•1 ,1 P.IL
Scipio Townllllp ·

..,. .....

'
ReWards.CbecklnQ"'

I

...It's a atme not to

'

Nur~mg· Pro8llJII: She ts anU!N

nursmg homi!!s
' Middleport. l.o

•

10

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.,.m.

is.' . lliiiThe.-l'l.co•u.ip.le"'.r•es•id•e•s•in-G.al•li•po•lll!lis•.----------~~~
1

W~Jft to re11sUr for

Don

· tJa1si upeo11ait11 elluus:

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eW1 ldl""'
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•Corre;tlo11 .
•lr
.
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....
to,
Welln.
e
ss'
g~~' '
. ~is year's Expo will be held on
.Computer
:fr~!~~~~;a-.;'
!"!~~d •.lntro a..~ lon~lratlltlon•l Car.eer•
~ · Harold 'Kneen or ,Becky Baer ,
at
-6696. .
•Smallltusl~e11 •••aement
L~ lhan 2,000 attended Jut
·
irf:f;~:~~~&amp;! ·auCIEYE HILU
CEITEI
1

check wtth us.

HarriMIIwllle
Tick... are $5.00 per person

etf.~~=;~:f.:b~:,q~~:

12 and under FREE
For lnformitlon or adva~ tlcketa:

After Dark Uualc.Promotlona
Phone: (.._4) 7~2111

U

(614) 245-5334 ADILI EDUCATIOI
· .fllltensioniM~igs County., l.ltlillillit..;._-.______~----lli!IJI--.~~~'
,.

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Narcotics Anonymous Clean and ·
Free Group 7:30p.m. 804 Main S1.

Columbus and
GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
.
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peter's Epis-.
~~ .
.
•
. copal Church.
· The groom has a bachelor of sct· ence degree in b~ine~ maitag~- ·
PATRIOT • Southwestern High
· ment from ~Untvenn~ of ·Rio School Alumni Association planning ·
· Grande. Emplo~ed as an mstructor · meeting 7
at Southwestern Eleat S!)utheastern Business Coli~&amp;:, he . mentary School:
.. ·is in partnership with his father at
•••
the Lynch·Agency in Gallipolis, speGALLIPOLIS - Choose to Lose
cializing in AFLAC Insurance,
Diet Class 9 a.m. Grace United .

:POMEROY -- Pl'lloning for the
19P7 Big 'Bend Town and «;ou~try
Elf&lt;' will begin at a reorgamzattonat ~ting to "" held at 7tl0 nurs• . ·
da~ night in the ·senior faif ~d
oftce ' on the Rock Spr:tngs Fatr• .

HOllE WIIIIEI

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Jlrogress.'for Big
· Send Expo '97 ·

Featuring ·

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R 1ue LyJ\Cfl .w~ ,untted m Jllar~
ri e Friday, ·Dec. 20, 1996 10 the
S key Mountain Wedding Chapel
in )i'igeon Forge, Tenn.
·
!The bride is the daughter of
tAlie aft!~ Doris Jean Beck of Gal;
lipj,lis. The groom is the son of HerLynch of Gallipolis, IIIICI the
late Sandra· J. Lynch.
'
. ~Rev. Melvin Lonas officiated the
c mony. ·
· .
the bride has an associate degree

50's: and 60's

1

Tuesdar, Feb. 2S

Beck-Lynch

m4!1

From C•nton, Ohio
· ~nd D. ·J. Rick Wilt
Of Massillon· .
Spinning Great Rock &amp; ·
Roll Classics

•••
•••

RONNIE 4ND LISA LYNCH

Amy Lynn. Bush is the di.ughter
Lewis arid Sharon Ann Bush of Gallipolis.

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GALLIPOLIS - Seniors will he at
Bossard Library from II a.m. to I
p.m. for Golden Buckeye Card signups.

--,..--~correction

NATASHA HAMILTON AND JASON RIDENOUR

•rW:•aa.

. BUFFALO, W.Va. -ll!e children .'
of Wanda Smith of Buffalo, W.Va.
Bernacki officiqting. Following the announce the engaiement of their
wedding, a reception will be hosted mother to A.ivin Wayne Yoder for- ·
by Kell y"s parents at the Holiday Inn merly of Walthain, Mass., now Vinbanquet room in Gallipolis.
The couple are both graduates of ton.Marriage plans are iincomplete. '
Point Pleasant High School. The
Kelly is a junior at Marshall University majoring in fashion merchandising. Kenneth also a~ilded ¥arshall
University and is the proprietor of
Flair Furniture in Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.

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RIO GRANDE - Open Gate Gar"
den Club meeting 7:30 p.m. Nancy
Skagg's home with program "The
Wild Ones."

•••

VINTON - American Legion
Post 161 meeting '7:·30 p.m.
!**

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PORTER - Calvin Minnis
preaching 7 .p.m. .. Clark
. Chapel
Chlln:h.

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GALLIPO.LIS - Morning Dawn
Lodge
7 F. &amp; A'.M. meeting 7.:30
GALLIPOLIS • Ron Donohoe .
p.m.
E.A.
Degree Steve Gate, W.M.
and Christian Messengers to sing 7
·and Gordon Fisher, sec.
p.m. Bell Chapel Church.

•••

- .,

KELLY PAGE AND ·KENNETH WIWAMS

Package With A Cho ice !

Gallia community calendar

I•:

Water Works offtce. City Clerk's
office, City Auditor's offiCe and Second District Fll'C Company were
located there. It was on Second
Street, between
Cedar 111&lt;1 Locust.
The
Central
Union was established for telephone
service.
Seventy-one people and businesses
had phones.
Next week, I'll
write about those listed in the busi•
ness directory. ·
Max Tawney • longtime o.illpolla bliSI.-eman occauJon.
ally wiltn C:Ol\IIMI far the Sunday Tkne• Sentinel on the hlllory Of downtown Galllpoll• M4
hla travela.

Revival
KANAUGA - Revival with Rev.
Andrew Parsons preaching 6 p.m.,
~~~and 7 p.m., Monday through

�.

Sunday, February 23. 1997
••

Separating between ·normal and deviant
er f?ecanse " it helps him wake up," to my aunt when all ~ hunJry
Dear Ann Landen: I m:cndy sbC bad better wake up IDd teac:b mourners showed up.
started dating a wonderful WOIIWI him how to shower by himself.
. Secondly. please don' t expect die
who is in her Jllid.30s. "Madp" bu
A aood way to ~hlntc the pattern bereaved to talk about their loved
a tenific .5-year-old son.
would be for Madae to say to the oae durina or immcdillDiy Iller tbl
1 need to know if I'm overreact· child, "You're pretty poim up now funeral. My moche( IDd I were vay
ing about something. At what age- and should not be sbowerinr with · close. When people came up to me
shOuld a child and parent of the. ladies. From now on, you're going and said,· "Your mom wu so
opposite sexstop sleeping together? ·to take showers by yOIIE!Ielf." (If ·strong" or "She bad such a hard
Madge's son has slept in her bed Madge needs ll)ore help, she should life," it was hard fOr me 10 pt my
since be was a baby, and now, he talk to her pediauician.)
thoughts, together.,I did not want to
refuses lp sleep in his own room.
Dear Ann Lander&amp;: I illll writing mmnisce about my mother when
' 1be boy also takes a shower with his about funeral ·etiquette, if there is the loss was so fresh. I'm sure some·
· mother every morning. He says it such a thing. My mother passed day I will want to talk about Mom,
helps him wake up.
.
away recently, and I cannot believe but not right after she died. l bad
Is Ibis nonnal, Ann? Is it bealthy? some of the things that . ~appened. I enough stuff going through my·
. ld Mad thi .
d
II
bl h
llll'nd.
. .
I have
to
ge s Is wrong an
hope you wi pu is my letter
she needs to stop it, but she says I'm because it is very clear .to me that a
·And finally, solne·~le actUally
being ridiculous. She insists that . lot offolks .need to be educated.
had tbe'nerve to tell me lbst my pain
when the boy is ready to ~arate · .If you · know someone itt the was not as bad ft$,theirs because my
from her, he will do it OJJ his own.
neighbOrhood who has lost a Ifamily mother bad been sick ·a long time,
. I care very deeply for both member, please bring food to their whereas their loss had.been sudden.
Madke and her son, and I need an home. My mother was one of 12 I can't tell you how many times
expen to comment on Ibis situation. ·children, and all the relatives wound . someone said to me, "I( was much
Please help me out. ·- Concerned in up at my aunt's home after tbC tuner· · worse when my husband died in ttiat
California
al. That dear woman was stuck fix- ·car accident - healthy . one minute
Dear California: Madge should ing supp.r for Ibis huge group. and gone the next." It jloesp't'matter .
have put her 5-year-old son in a bed Believe me, a couple of casseroles !f the person di~ ~?m a ling4:ring y
of his own three years ago. And lis and a cake or two don 't sound like 11Iness or an accident The death 1s
for the kid showering with his moth- much •.but it would have meant a lot still painful \0 the survivors. And

By ANN LANDERS

Ann

_
·-Landers

'"'· ...

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please don 'lever say, "I knOw bow .
you feel ." No · one can . possibly
know how Ifeel.
.
I hope you will print my letter,
Ann. An awful lot of people need to
read it. Thanks for letting J11C vent. - .
• Salt Lake City, Utah
· · ·
Dear s L c "
" ti " ·
. . . .: .our ven ng IS
going to educate a great number of ·
readen today. On behalf of all of
them, thank fOil for writing:
. Gem of the Day (Credit . Dr.
·Theodore Rubin): Kindness is more
important than wisdom, and the
recognition of this is the beginning
of l!!isdo'm . .

.___

. s.end quatlons to Ann Landen,
CreatorS Syadk:ate, S777 W. Ceo· ·
~lvd., SU!k700, Los AngeJe~,
Calif. 90045
··
·
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tuey

'First Ladies' reviewed at Middleport Literary ·club
POME~OY

CARROLL AND LU&lt;;ILL.E (:ANAD,AV

Canaqays .mark 40th
GALLIPOLIS - . Canoll and
• Lucille Waugh-Canaday of Gallipo-·
· lis ·celebrated their 40th wedding
anniversary recently with a surprise
: family party at their home. They
.• were married by Rev. Earl Cremeens
: Feb. 3. 1957.
·
: They are the parents of three chi!• dren, Carroll Jr. Canaday . of Mer' cerville and ·Cathy Parsons and
; Randy Canaday both of Gallipolis.

•

They alsQ have eight grandchildren .
Those attending were Carroll Jr.,
Pam, Chelsea and Chimdra Canaday; Elmer, Cathy, Jessica, Jeremy,
Joshua and Janelle Parsons; Randy,.
Kim, Brooke and Tylor Canaday;
Marshall Canaday Rio Grande; Darrell and Alma Canaday, Laura, D.J.
and Wesley Mon.tgomery all of
Northup; and Bob and Kathryn Masters of Qallipolis ,

•• Margaret· Truman politicians have rarely given a · ble in lheir diiTICult roles anil.to pru· piesident, John Quincy Adams.
Daniel, daughter of Bess and Harry . though[ as to what a First Lady dendy set the tone for the adminlsOne must read the whole booli: to
Truman, fs well-qualified . by might do. One prominent role is that tration. They try to appeal to the realize the.qitalities of the women of
research and experience to comment of hostess to hundreds of guests.
heart of our nation while presidents the White House:•intelligence, dedion wives of the Presidents.
Sometimes, the reviewer poin!CII must appeal to the head, she s;lid.
cation to the good of the country; not
This she does in "First Ladies: an . out, wives have enjoyed a behindThe reviewer said it was difficult a one of lbein should be overlooked.
· Intimate Group Portrait. of White . the:S&lt;:enes political partnership with to choose wliat stories to relate from · Most of them bad their own impact
House Wives'' reviewed by Eileen their husbands but ihey always risk the many anecdotes nanated--from on the nation: promotion of literai1Y·
Buck at a recent meeting of the being themselves. They have little Dolly Madison fleeing the White beautification of the countrysic;le,
Middleport Literary . Club at the privacy. and are often criticized for· House during the War of 1812 with child welfare, worker's rights among
home oflda Diehl.
·
crossing ill-defined boundaries red velvet draperies. chioa and a many other projects. Varied as their
The women who ha~e occupied between too ml!Ch aristocratic luxu- portrait of George Washington, to . personalities were, each made her
the White House, the reviewer stat· ry and democratic simplicity, she Bess Truman leaving to s~nd mark in whilt tbl author called "The
ed, are a varied ·and interesting said.
.
Christmas in Independence causing world's second toughest job", the
group frequently in the .limelight
One quality, Buck brought out, quite a tiff with Harry. Buck told of rel(iewer concluded. ' . ·
,
enduring remarks from .the media badly needed by the White House the families who called the White
Fifteen members responded to
and other observers. The pre~ident's wives is strength--to protect and House home and of Abigail Adams roll call with a comment on the work
role is defined, Buck ·said, but 1male comfort their husbands when possi- · who became the mother of another. or about their favorite Fint Lady.

-~---Meigs
The . Community Calendar ·ts
pu!111sbed as a free sel'\lke to noa·
profit groups wishing to anaoutiee
· meellag and special ennts. The
calendar Is not detliped to. promote sales or fund ralsen of iiiiY
type.
are prilited u apace
permits and CIUIII.Ot be pa~
to nm a speclflc nJilnberof days,
MONDAY .
. 1J
POMEROY ·' Meigs . County
Veterans' Service Commission, 7:30
p.m Mondax, I at the Veterans
Service
,
•

community calendar· _ _;,___.....__ _,. .

Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. ,
· RA&lt;i:fNE -- Racine lloard of Public Affairs s~ial meeting Monday,
10:30 a.m. at .lbe mul\icipal building.
Members to discuss water ordinance.
.

RACINE -- RACO, Tuesday,
6:30 potlilck dinner, new members
welcome, Star Mill Park.

zatjonal meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs-.
day at the senior fair board office,.
R,ock Springs·Fairgrounds. J\)1 interested citizens welcome to attend.

MIDDLEPORT •• The Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39, American
POMEROY . •• . Community
Legion, will meet ~i. the Downing l-enten :scrvi~s sp&lt;insored \ by lbe
House, in Middlel"'n, Tuesday, 2 · Meias County Ministerial A~i•
TUESOAY
p.m.
, .,
&amp;Ori will be· l\eld'l;'huriday \a\. 7~30
RACINE , •• S.o~them Local ·
: p.m. at the , Laurel . Ct!ff ,1'1~
School Bbard, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at · niURSDAY
.
" •
Methodist Churl:h. 1bC' Rev~ Bill
Letart Elementary School. ·
, POMEROY -· 1917 B!l Bend 'Hoback will speak.
'
Towns and Country Expo reorgani·
.
·

"'tems

Gre·at Lakes states. have, adopt rules for eating tro_ut, salmon ·
· By JEREMY PEARCE
The Detroit News ·

LILLIAN

Maynards celebrate 50th
. RODNEY - Lillian and Richard
Maynard of Rodney celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary Feb. 8 ·
with dieir children, grandchildren;
great-grandchildren and friends at a
dinner held in their honor at the Iron
Gate.
.
.
They were martied by Rev. Johnnie Tqmlin Feb. 28; 1947 at Logan,

W.Va. They became residents of
Gallia
Th County
h'ld in 1966.L' d S .
1 1
f S e ~~ • r~~ are C mka ftuMrgl 11
o toe a1e,
ns . oo o
artmsburg, W.Va.; Nanc1 LeMaster of
Decatur, Ill.; Danny Maynard o{
Rav~nswood, W.Va.; and Connie
· Rees, Mary Young, Patti Jones and
Greg Maynard of Galli a County.

In a step that . leaye~ Michigan
nearly alone among Great Lakes
states, Wisconsin officials have
· adopted new rules for eating Great
Lakes trout and salmon.
. Six of ' eight Great Lakes states
now follow some form of uniform
guidelines in·advising·residents how
much· fish is safe to eat and how
often.
·
· Only Michigan, which dropped
· war~tiig
· 'aor PCB sm.........,
· ' .L" M'tchiliS
gan Chmook salmon a year ago, has
not adopted some part of lhe uni.
· ·
·

fonn advisory.
Large salmon and Jake trout are cologist and chairman of lbe Michi·
· New York is taking aspects of tbe known to contain varying levels of gan Environmental Science Soard,
advisory and combining them with PCBs, sbonhand for toxic .industrial _which reviewed and ultimately ··
· its own regulations.
compOunds ,called, polychlorinated rejected· the unifonn cqde. ,
"We felt we couldn't..wait any biphenyls.
"We think their nuqibers are con•
longer," Dr. Henry Anderson of the
Michigan health offiCials, who do . servative. There's also no discuasion
Wisconsin Department of Public not dispute the coniamination, said of me:l\ealth .benelits of eating Oreat
Healt!J said Wednesday. "We think cleaner lake conditions. in recent Lakes fish," he said. "There ·are
it's going to give the public greater years merited softening the state's • demollstrated benefits for pe.opl~
confidence in ·Lake Michigan warnings for Lake ·Michigan with asthma and cardiovascular:
salmon."
salmon. .
.
problems.' ~
.
At issue iS'lhe health of children
Michigan officials question the
But; Michigan legislators wiJI,
:. and pregnant women, two groups science of the unifonn advisory.
· consider a bill this. w.cek that would
·
1offi. 1cial~ insist
"How did ihey decide on the . bypas~ s!ate health.' officials and
· 'oede ~a1envtronmenta
are m danger from exposure to · warning level for PE:Bs in fish?" force .adoption of the unif01'111 advi- .
PCBs. ·
asked Dr. Lawrence Fischer. a ·toxi- · sory, .
· · ·
\

E(jible bubbles add tasty · ,
tWist to~:simple timeless fun •

' .

By ERIC HENRICKSON ·

How do you make bubbles withThe D!ttroit ~.
.
out soap? The active agent in Candy
Gelle(ations of kids have been . B~bbles is sodium Iaury I sulfate, an
·chasin'g bubbles ·with their tongues, , ingredient · commonly found in i
only .to wind .!l(l with a mouthful of toothpaste, says Tracey Leacona,
sol\11, B,ut now, a new candy·product marketing assistant for .the manuJac·
is. givirig an ~t\zwg new dimen· turer, Cap Toys.
. Choruses of "cool!" and the like
sion to lbe age-otd· p~!ime.
· G;tndy llul)bles .{"Bubbles you erupted when the bubbles were put
c(ltl eat!" tlie b9ttle eitcl!"ms) are so to use .at a recent family gathering.
fun; you'\night want to .get out lbe (Ages ranged from grandparents to
.Don lfo reeo)'!b, and the video cam- . their teen-~ged grandsons.)
When
whole farnily gets in
Even the cats got involved, which
·
·
. ops are wor· proltlpled the desire for a video cam- ·
Funniest Home era ·as adults darted around the living
~ ,urprised if these room trying to catch bubbles on
' ll,oating do~n their tongues While the felines '
~;~lsiDetroit junior stalked ·the ones that made it to the .
.s
floor: ·

·HARDWAY'S

· ~HOE .HARBOUR .·
. "Y~ur Family Shoe. Store"

...

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...

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l0%•30% ON' AL.L

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'I

•VIALLPAPER' BOUTIQUE
IALLIPOUS
Ne•tto HAFFELT'S MILL OUTLET·
PHONE (6l4) 446·0490

• £

, they are de.spaate, bitter or nging

at all hours and from all
over.
The '76-year.-old woman .who
, .wants to prjnt out a recipe on her
. new computer; b~t can' t make (ler
· printer work. The man wl)\l is so
..angry at his new PC that be bu to
:, band the phOne to his wife. The first: grader .trying to. install a new color
"printer so she can print out her draw- ,
)ng.
·
·
· ; · 1be person at the other end of lbe
.',Jine who must calmly walk pe(&gt;ple
.through the ·techno traumas · sometimes having to·explain wha! a
mOIIseanddiskdriveare-isMally
Simmons.
·
·; And she, like any of the teChnical
;.support representatives fielding calls
· · h&amp;S heard it all.
, ·
·
.
"I've had people yell at me over
the phone or cry in frustration," says
Simmons, ·who is one of 650.
,employees at Hewlett Packard's cus' tomer suppon center in Boise,
Idaho.
. :., just have to .tell people, 'Let's
·. "take Ibis one step at a time.· Some:times that starts with how to use a
•mou5e."
HP's support center is one of a
1
I few dozen sites across the country
' where the most personal dramas of
·the. digital age are played out over
: lbe phone lines. No\"hete else do·the
: nation's anxieties ahout new tech·· nology come to focus with such
.. naked intensity.
No one is more familiar with the
' traumas of entering the computerized world than tbc "tecbs."
"I. deal wilh a lot of first-time
~ home users," says .HP teChnician
Chris Mustafa, whose work station
is decked out with posters and a sign
that ·reads: . "The· job that ate my
brain." ·
·
"A lot of my calls.are from peopic who'tbiQ. 'l·jusi spent $500 on
·a prinrer. I dQn't waltf to tead ,n 9

,mad -

·manual.'"

· "

;

... · Those arc the times that teclts
wpuld love to'yell "IUFM" ("Read
lbe ,..-•.• Manual!!,!!"), Ji computer
: worjd ,colloquialism ihat techs
0

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. · PLANNING SESSION - Pictured at the planning session for the March 4 cholesterol testing
PI'OIJ'Im are front; left; Norma Torrea, health department director of. nuralrig; Diana Coataa,
director of the Melga RSVP; and back, left, directors of the three participating home health aer·
vk:el, Conn .. Carleton, HolZer Medical Canter; Tina Hannan, Oak HHI Coml)lunlty ·Medlc!ll Can·
tltr and Paula Eichinger, Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
·

Chote· ·te·n'o·l 5··0· ,./:len·
· ·0 I-~~l.le {!ed
lv_
Ing.
.. .
s·

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POMEROY --Free cholesterol testing will be

ing part are to fast from midnight until their testing is
COil)]!(eted.
offered at the Meigs County Health Department TuesOnly from 50 to 75 persons will be accepted and
day, Mar. 4, from .8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
·
pre-testing
appoinrments must be made by .calling the
1be testing will be done by the Home Health
Departments of Veterans Memorial Hospital, Holzer health department at 992-6626.
Medical Center and the Oak Hill Community Medical
Center. . .
·
The Meigs County RSVP will assist with clerical
The free testing is open to the public.
. details and health department personnel will also
The finger slick method will be used and tbose tak- · assist with the program.
·
· '

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Ho~rs: · 10 .a.m:l· to ' 6 . p.ll) . . 438-3~43. Hours: 24 hoiu-S, seven
llttp:(slash)(slash)www.activisi~n-co_ days,
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. .week.
·
.
. http:(slll$h)(slash)www.met.mtcron.
m
: • ,..- Apple Macintosh , Perfoma ' I com. '::·
. .
(800) S(J().. 7078. Hours: 24 hours,
- Mtcro.soft Home kids products
seven · • 'days ·
a
week: I (Z06) 63:S-7140; multimedia I
~http :(slash)(slash)info.apple.com
(206) 635-7172; games I (206) 637. , - Broderbund I (415)'382-4700, 9308. Hours: 7 a.m. to 7 .p.m.
' Print Shop products· I (415) 382' hup:(slash)(sl8$h)www.microsoft.co ·
-4750: Hours: 7 a.m. ·to 6 p.m. m(slash)support(slash)holiday, I'
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- Packard
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week
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http:(slash)(slash)www.packardbell.co~.
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week - . http:(slash)(slash)computers.tosh!b~.com. . .
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to cover JOur
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decision you need to make to have the.
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you select from hundreds and hundreds
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SOCiety
·scrapbook

BIRtHDAY SHOWJ!:R.
;, . VINTON - A card shower is
...ing held for Gamet StJ:aight's .90th
~irthday March I. Cards lillY be.sent
(o, Holzer Senior Care C~nter, 380
.· l::oloni.al Dr., Rm. 103.• Bi~well,
f:&gt;bio 45614,
. ' · .
·
: ,ANI\IIVERSAR.Y SHOWER ·
• GALUPOLIS - A card shower is
king hilld for Richard and Gamel
JG,or'.s 60th wedding anniversary
fo(arch 3. Cards may be sent to 207!1 .
j\llce Rd., Vinton Ohio ~5686. :
1'
VISITING HOME
i GALLIPOLIS - Chris. Vernon,
·o~ of John and Pa!ricia Vernon of . ·
p~llipolis, ,is visiting born~ after
fo.mpleting (ecruit training ·at
M'"ne Corps Recruit Depot Panis
f-land, S.C.
. I Private :Vernon is a 1!196 grifluale
· tf.Oallia Academy High SchoOl.
' His next duty ·station will be at
· C&amp;,mp Lejeune N.C. for Marine
· ¢ombat Training after whicb lie will
besin formal training in the field of.
Maril!C Corps Security Forces.. ' .
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• - He:wleu Packilrd. I'Cs I (800)
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. (208) :!23-2551. Hours: For PCs, 24 .
~ )lours, seven days-a week; far print~ ers and,·scahners, 6 a.m. to 10
·
~:Monda~;F~iday, ci a.Jil. to 4 p.m.
· , Saturday
.·
.~ http:(sl~.~)(shislt)www.hp.com. · .
1
1 - IBM I (800) 772-2227 or I
~ (800) 426-2968. Hours: 24 hours,.
·' seven . days 'a · week
· http:(slash)(slash)www.pc.ibm.com
. -The Learning co. 1 (800) 8528161. Hours: 6 a.in. to. 7 p;m. Mop1
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SALE

l¥11

.

.'

:).

restrain tbemselvel from ever aniculbey 11re prevliledupoa to bclp
latina.
solve the emotional crisos that
lrutead they lillen. They talk ill accomp111y .tbe teChnical aJiiChes ol
soothing touei. They · bolSter self- their callers, (llidin&amp; them lbrougb
esteem. With Zenlike calm, they the vagaries ofthe new infOIIIIIIi.on
&amp;bscirb the hostility often leveled at society, easing the sling of techllolo-them personally, as .rePrellentadves gy's treacllcories.
of the teehnologieal. elite. And someFor some whOfC lives have
times they break, especially during become in~parably intertwin~
tbl at\er.Christmas ~h;
• with their teebnology, a computer ·
First limen sit paralyzed before ' crisis can' seems. much more ll'ire
the new Pentium ~ click on the than an unscheduled change of trav·
wrollg icon, and the whole thing el plans.
could go up in · smoke ~ and
Being deprived of e-mail when
advanced users discover their hard· you're trying to condUct an on.line
leaJ11ed skills arc no longer compat- romance, for example; l:an be intol'ible with version 5.0. .
.
erable. For · othen; the breaking
.· '·'We bad one customer put her 5-- point comes when they are denied ·
year-old daughter on the phone and access to stock quotes.
tell .the tech: ''You . tell her why
· "I bad a rnemher call up one day,
Santa brought her a broken com put· she was crying so hard she couldli 't
er," said a. tech at Gateway 2000's hear me," says Erin Watten, 27, a
Kansas City · hel(l center. "That's teeh at ~merica Onli~'s Thcson,
pretty harsh." · · . · .
. Ariz.,' supp!lr! center. "She said 'I
· · DUring an average month Sim- have to get online, I have to get into
mons, Mustafa and all the _other my chat rOQJris.' I had 8: supervisor
tecbs·at HP support centen wiD field contact her and we told her we were
abqut 600;000 calli. Most of thOSe:' working on it, but she kept calling
will go through the Boise support back. She was still crying."
center.
.
There are ligh!er moments: A stuThe building is a maze of com- dent called Packard Bell pleading
puler work siations set up in quads . for help to unsnarl his girl-friend's
of technicians wearing headphones. ·' hair from her computer's fan.
·
Each quad is equipped with HP
Every tech bas· ha!l a customer
products so the tec.bs can work .on who mistook lbe.CD-ROM drive for
printers or scanners along )Vith cus-· . a cup holder. Most have helped a kid
.tomers they are helping on the who is trying to resllire the familyes
phone.
·
finances IIi the hard drive bef!lre
The center typically sees a 30 Dad comes horne. . . . . .
-percent to 50 percent increase in call
"lbe main thing we have to tell
volume after Christmas, when a lot them is they're not stupid, like they
of home custoll)ers purchased HP's feel," says Steve Banuelos, 29, . a
printers, scanners, and computers, Packard Bell tech.
U.S. Support Manager ,Kriss KirchAnd as stressful as lbe job may
hciff says.
.
be, the rewards of cmpowerings
HP uies to reduce the job stress caller or finally getting the printer
by hiring temporilry help through operating are enough to keep teebs
the busy season. It also offers aero- like Simmons coming ·,back for
bics Classes and a. fitness facility more.
.
:
connected to lbe building and free
"Sometimes-·you feel like you're
movie tickets, food and other bonus- there with the customCJ', holding .
es. lbere's no.doubt, lbis .is not your their band," she says. "And .look at I
av~ge customer-service job. ·
• Ibis letter I got from Amber."
A tech's job ostensibly. is .to .
Simmons proudly . unfolds ·a
c~plain to callers with a valid war- thank-you note printed out on a HP
rant:y bow to fix what's wrong.But color printer.
.
lbe techs, whose ranks are rapidly
Amber is the. first-grader who
expanding alo~g with the popularity successfullr installed a printer - :
of horne coll)puters, also ltave.been · after spendtnl! an hour and a half on
drafted to fill , an urgent societal lbe phone wiih Simmons.
. .
need. ·· '
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4279 sT. 11. 160 ·

l tliemselves shaken. They call when

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TAKE 15% OFF OF ·ALL WALLPAPER
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The~ call when their flith in rechts shattered and their flilb in

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The III Ilk» IIIII I 111M .

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Suppqrting players -~· ·the
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PorMroy •ltlldriiiiOfl • Odpalll, Ott • Polnl P11 liD"\ WV

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For health Car-e concerns call the ·.

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f*'-Y 23, 1887

!

What·we choose to be remembered by·
4n
authentic piece.of history worth telling and c~ltivating
'

Shoppers
can
.

lly STACEY lfARTiiANN

to pick up ebout 2S i - , but - a't ia a rub.
N.ASHVILU!, Tean. - The
"I thinlt it's JOin&amp; to mab lliiqs
Bellevue ICfOIIr hu fiml up ill do- I Jot e&amp;Jier Jelling out," he said IS
it-younelf had-held ICMMn ia .a be pi
t the "plus" bullOn on his
teSt to - if·the lecliaolocY iJ peo. ICUner IIIII swiped it over lite bat
pl1-friendly IIJid suited for more code oa a box of Q eae Nips to
atares ia 1lle chain.
. .
read lheir price. " It's kind of a trade. GrqBlact, 39,opencorofahot- " off. They've moved lite work from
II!''*'- COU4J1111y, gniiiJed one of lite cbecb:r 10 lite customer. But in
lite va•·ers Monday from ill stor- the lon1 run; I thinlt it's going to pay
qe liCit and made his way down lite off in the line." {'
.produce lille. AJ lite coolr. ia his
The band·helCI
are
household, be mata JfOCCIIY stops meani to save st. w u time a1 lite
every fawdays. This time he needed checlcouc by elimillllling lite need to

•

The Teura n

He did 110( .heir ~ tbc illslillllion Pf""'u&lt;*&lt; its OWII electrici\Y, lllld ill
own firefilhten, bosptlaland IIIOIJUC.
·
But. he did hear of 1be cemetery ("Notmuch you cu see !hem now. Just
•
·ltollll't Coabl
. bnmbles. brush and brim'').
; GALUPOLIS - But. what about a town? Wbat should it choose to be
. Had you been wilit Gov. Ciecqe Voi110vicb lite year he C8111eloolring tcir
~bet¢ by?
·
•
his gnndflllher's (or grandmother's - I don't remember whicb) pave, you
•
n•s
lite
Potter's
Fl.
e
ld
yoil
are
looking
for,"
was
the
instruCtion
given
to
.
would probably have wished he lllld never. 8$Jied, bec••arc hardly anyone
11
ailtranpr lookin&amp; for a .gnvesite &amp;I lite Ohio Hospital for Epileptics..
knew where lite.Ohio Home for Epileptics residents were buried.
~ "'n lite hill side from Mound Hill Cemetery ... that's where lbe d .H.B.
Lot tr1.7 was assigned and set aside as lite po«er's field. 1be burials took ·
~nil aR&gt; buried. Not much.you can see there now. Just brambles, brush plac:e and lite residents were laid to~ in wh8t is now bown u '"The Pot·
ll!id briars." .
•
· ter's Field" of Mound Hill Cemetery.
( So, lhal's all lite stranger came to know of the many
When lhey tell yoo that a picture can tell a story of a
lliin11 about litis town from lite time his relative lived at lite
thousand wonts, follow me on lite road to Mound Hill
Jti,sPiw for Epileptics. ·
Cemetery.
~ He was not told of the instimtion's beautiful pules and .
You are forewarned that litere is not much to see, but
II¥ stone buildings on lite banks of ihe Ohio River.
when you 11n: looking toward ihe hillside on lite left side
· : And, he was not told:
.
of thC road, you can see heavy underbruSh, briars and.
. oof lite m111y crafts lhal wen: taught litere and trades that
weeds.
tJ;e residents living in lite home practiced; nor,
'The two or tluee mound· like fonns you spot are the few remaining rec: oof-lite orchards on the hillside with grapes, deli~ious apples and ~y ognizable, or almost recognizable, graves. They are just some indislinguishrire fruits. crafted and raised as starters in the greenhouses -. along Wllit able bumpt in lite overgrown pound,
•
ROwers in bloom to be sent to the dining room any season of the year; nor,
And liten litere are two markers - one flat stone on .the ground; and .
~ oof the self-sufficien.t dairy fann. and dairy canle carefully inseminated anoliter closer to the road - an upright monument with an inscription. ·
fftlhe best production which supplied all the dairy products required: butGeorge Voinovich came with lite intention to erect a monument for his
t~. cheese and sour cream always fresh at hand for lite kitche
. n and for lite forbear and he was handed a heartache.
,
:
!Able.
If everyone would remember - it is our home and it tells a story for a
'I
He was not told of lite many years ofcarefully-done canning, wilit excess stranger who rides in and never comes back. Or, consider: it is a unique, a
Cl)llned goods traded to other institutions for liteir commodities in rerum;
picturesque and sulitentic piece of history wonh telling and cultivating as a ·
·
·
cornentone of one of the oldest settlements in
·a
Ohio and the territory.
·
:
The care you give your Barbie doll collection
"The.Ohio State
for Epltepttc. &amp;I the eeal edge ot tQIIWIIIe
1
and the baseball cards you are so proud of, olde81 lllld I• ge81
hoepltal In lhe United Slates. It hee 2,000 •
young people, please add your hometown to it. · p8llenta and 80 bulldiOll'. on a .l,OCJO.acn~ grouncle." · .
.•
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• •••••••• ••••
·
Co/umbu. Sunday DlfiiMtch • April 25, 1948 ,
. OK, David- so, Y!&gt;ll don't care for herbs, According to Mark Twain, it is a plant whose usefulness bas not yet been :
and you would rather talk about dinosaurs. How · .discovered.
.
· ·
about a compromise? What abouta D-garden?
So, who knows? Maybe it is you who discovers a new use of some now ·
. Of course, 1:&gt; stands for David and it also useless weed. .
·
· •
stands for many plants in litis garden and I
Just think of penicUiin ••aspirin and digitalis and admire 'the soft willow ·
promise, they all have something to do with sci· leaves and m~jestic beautY.of Foxglove blooms.
•
ence- your favorite subject. I know.
Watch for your "Learning Ladder" in the D-section.ofthe Riverby Physic I
Like digging for dinosaur bones, we start Garden on First Avenue. As you remember, Riverby was the senior Dr. Holzdigging in lite garden. We shift the soil careful- er's .home and he started liis career as a surgeon in the Ohio Hospital for ~
ly and look for any broken bones, old bottles, Epileptics.
·
·
. ,
big stones or plain pieces of wood or. pesky
P.S. D stand~ for Discovery and yes, David - the dinosaurs had to be dis- :
niotsC that don't belong th~~herbs
.
covered by digging them up and placing them together before we could learn •
.. are not niDre about1hein. ·
,
ontrary to your · opm1on,
10
YOU ARE FOREWARNED: There ·Js not much 10 - ... The two or thi'H mound-like forms you weeds ~d grow herbs we clear out the roots
So are-the herbs. First. we dig ihe ground, liten we plant and grow lite i
,.,,..,..,. the taw ,.malnlng recognizable, or 81m011 recognl~ble, graves. They are Ju.t some lnclll- litardeat(jon 1 belonfgeedliten:. 'It helps to. k~p your herb and then we-discover liteir use and liteir history. It is a living story book. !
'"'~uhlha,ble bumpe In the _ _grown ground. And then there are two markere ~one ft81 8101141 on g " n c1ear 0 w s when you staJ1 WJiit well- ·· And we have fun discovering the story.
· . •
·
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ground; 1ncl al'lolhlr clollr to the. road- tlll 'uprtjjht'lnonument with an lnacrlpUon. (Photo by cleaned ground.
·
.
VIlma PlkkoJa Ia • llfe-lqng liardener and·. a founding member 'o f the •
Sldelw}
.
And always remember: what IS a weed? . .~~~~· AJ'H Herbal Guild.
. ·I· .
·
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• "A- ··"-'~ c6 " ' , . -.jrll.,~ n.lltbep tow 111 •• ,,.., 6y"

seannen

How to use the scanner
Jl!ll from lome space movie - tab your pick.
· D 1pi11o.the scanaer's famili• 1~ it might aeem unwieldy to lite
technologically challenJed. Fear not, lite scanner's makers say. It's -Y·
Here's how it wollcs: ·
• ·
·
· I. Sign up and set an access card, . .
.
•
· 2. Slide lite card tlvough a · ~ a1 the scanner ·station, which
ilnlocks 1 scaniiCI'. (Bellevue Kroger has 64 SC8JIJierl.) ·
3. Place lite sc;.nner in hand or $hopping ctJTt. Pick up an item, press
"plll!l" and scan lite bat code. To remove an item, press "lftinus" and
. scan lite bat code•.To arce toral bill, including laJI.; hit "equal." A !fisplay
window also tells lite number of items scanned and other instruCtions.
4. Walch for bar~ exceptions sUch as procluce•.to!lacco products
or alcobol. They lll!ed to be scanned a1 lite che!:kouL
·
S. When finished Shopping, place lite scanner in any vacant slot at lite
scanner station.
6. Take groceries to ~ checkout. Give lite cashier access card. Present all exception items a!ld coupons.
7. On lite first trip, the cashier will recheck items to mske sure you
·understalld lite sySiem. '
· ·
·. · ·
8. After that, purchases are randomly audited to guard against liteft.

j'

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I

map that is very valuable in u.nderstanding the geography of . !he
West," Reese says.
·
"In 1984, I sold a nice copy .in
original binding for $6,500. In 1996,
two copies in equivalent condition
each sold for a net price of
$28,750."
.
He hJI.' put a $50,000 pnce tag on .
an orijinal diary by Charles Baur, a
sealnan with an 1830s French expedition in lite far Sooth Pacific. Baur
went to the ice pack south ofTasma·
nia, closer to Antarctica'litan anyone
had ever been before.
Thomas cii'es another benchmark
book, lite collected travels of Captain Cook, the foremost English
explorer. It sold for $7,500 just IS
years ago and now fetches nearly
$30,()()().
"He's a hero, and people love to
read about heroes," Thomas says.
The Saine people drawn to stir·
ring accounts of today's· push·theenvelope ventures in magazines
such 1!5 Outside and Men's Health
. are looking for antiquarian advenlures, too.
·
"A lot of our generation has trav·
eled . widely, more widely than any
generation before," says Reese. "In
our early 20s, we wete able to treat
the world as our . playground and
h1ke around a lot of exollc places.
Now we want to re,ad about other
people who have done this, too."
"We want to kriow liow people
gel 10 extraordinary places, what
they saw and how they got out alive.
despite the hardships," says David

Lilburne of Antipodean Books, McBiain'ofHIUlKicn, Conn., 5pe~:ial"
Maps &amp;: Prints in Garrison, N.Y.
ists in black antiquarian llooks. have
Among lite 'most energetic new a 1951 '"Railroad Edition" of the
collectors: "People who have made "Negro Motorist Green Book," a ·
a tremendous amqunt
money in guide series for black travelen dur- .
lite computer industry. They're ing segregation. Published 1936 to
smart and well-ed~ated and OA!I -·· 1963, its lisll.of lodg¥, rooJOing:
place litey're looking to spend their .homes, restauran
. ·ts, ~ sh&lt;lps Ind.·
money is the nire book market.'~ beauty parlors where b~ks ,were
Reese says.
,
.
well'()med show lite soc1al bound~ look for books offering rare aries of the past
·
· .
experiences, vivid writing, hand"African-American material is
some bindings o.r eye-popping illus- scarce,llld.there ~R&gt;n't many travel·
trations.
. ogues," says Sharon McBlain, who
These can range. from a dealit· will offer lite "Green Book" from
. defying polar journey to lite com- the McBiain Books catalog at d!e
plete archive (original manuscript fair for $300.
·
and illustrations ·and a first edition
.• Tales of daily life and customs in ·
copy) for "Little Toot Through the exotic places are as popular as namrGolden Gate," a little tugboat's . al history and .political tomes, LiladvllniUres b~ \he late Disney ani· bume says. Buyers .also look f~ the
mator Hard1e Gramatky. Cost: antecedents of lite.•r modern mter$95,000. .
ests.
,
Most pnce tags are closer to
"One year everyone ·wanted old
earth. And wealthy private, coffee- books on bike riding in California,"
tors, university libraries and muse- he says. "Montana is really big now.
ums aren't the only buyers.
' Everyone wants an out-of-print copy !
Beginner bibliophiles often start oflvanDoig's 1978book "House of
. with relatively affordable books in Sky, Landscapes of a Western
special interest areas, from women's Mind."
,
·
diaries to black literature and cui·
"It's a fabulous book, ·almost
•ture.
autobiographical, and everyone
Thomas' copy of "The Indian ·movi?g to Montana or buying a
Alps and How We Crossed Them," · vacation house there wants to read
a large, illustrated story of British it."
colonial travelers who went to the
Toll-free lulormatl!lll ·oo the
Himalayas by sedan chair, written California lnJernatlonal Anti·
by Nina Elizabeth . Mazuchelli, quartan Book Fair: 8118-:zo8.81189, .
recently sold for $750.
Other antiquarian travel books
trace social and cultural landscapes.
Booksellers . Phil ~nd Sharon

' '(t)DAY
utA

AntiQuarian travel and exploradon books portray the physical,
s~al and' c1,1lmral, land~capes .or
tillleS· JOIKI by. A sampling (l!lllh
~ller 11JK1 priee):
,.- "An ACC&lt;Kint of an· Embnssy
to llhe Court of the Teshoo Lama in
nliet" (Jelftey Thomas Fine &amp;: Rare
BiJPu, $.2.~). ~uel ..Tum~r, .a
.Btiliab c&amp;p!am ~oned 1ft lncba .m
11,90; js lite iulhor of d)e tirst s1zabiC. illtioilll tM' E!Dalish accou~t of a
viJit to nbet. Tunier was m the
~ when the guardilll of the
Telhoo Llml, thea .. infMt. rCally
nil TIIIet.
. .
·
.- "Aullnlia Etiquette: Rul~s
......... of lite Bell Society m
the'
~ucrltuian
. Colonies"
(,_tip 1 dllll aoot.. &amp;bps·.t Prinll,

$250). This handbook. pub Iished in
Sydney in 1885, is akin to today's
travel etiquette guides. It includes
· wood engravings illustrating proper
public conduct and proscribes certain behavior.
·
· - "The Negro Motorist Green
. Book Railroad Edition 195 I"
(McBlain Books, $300). This is a
1uide for black travelers to the United States, Bennuda, Canada, Me xi·
co and Costa Rica. It was published
" to give the traveler information
that will keep him from running into
difficulties, (and) embarrassments,
and to mske his trips more enjoy·
able."
·
·
~ "The Shirley Le!ters"
(Wilb~ Reese Co., $37S). Th1s collection of letters by LoujseA. Cllll'l;',
who followed her husblnd to Call-

rr;:::
·"·..=·

...·1.

~=====-======~=====;t'

ROBERT M, HOLLEY, ii.D.·
---FAMILY PUCnCE

'

'Ill 811 elfm 10 provide our readership wilit current news; lite Sunday
~ will liCK accept weddings after 60 days from lite diiiC of the

a

'~lid!.,. IIDnitled ,after the 60-day deadline win appcll' durin the
j; 1111 DliiJ SeaciMI &amp;ltd • Oallipolia Daily 1iibu110.

..tk~ club ...... llld Olber news artic:lel in tbe IOCiety aeCtion m~t be

p 1 liMe! ..... ~ dlya of oec~. All ~J1hcllys ~~~~~ be submiaed

.

· ,. Mllliilll M 'Med fell' pllblkeriotduu~Hulili~
.
.

·

.·

Chester, Keno
Church
of Chrisi,
Scoutmalter
. Gale
Osborne;
Assis. tant SM Bob Keaton; SPL Matt
Keaton. Troop 2S9; Point Pleasant,
· Heights UMC and First Church of
9od; Scoutmaster Larry ' Filkins,
Assistant . S~ Terry Tyree; SPL
Frankie Rime. Troop 205, South·
western Elementary; Scoutmaster
Jim Skidmore, Assistant SM
Richard Dutst; SPL Jay Durst.
froop 249 American . Le1ion,
PQmeroy; ScoutmJI!lter ·DOn frymycir, Assis""t . SM nni Selvy, Bob

,,••

n
A

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Weight Watchers .
member$110st :2 1f2 times
mor~ weight than people
·who tried losing alone.'

,,'"' .
••

Doroi!W..,..nd..,h• h

·~· .

....•

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10 LDL • 6 p.m.

...··-

ST. PmR'S
. EPISCOPAL CHURCH

-

•

juot -

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.

No Credit, Slow Credi.
Bad Credit, B•nkruptey'

541 Seco_nd Avenue
Tue:
6 Pcm.
Wed: 9:JQ a.m. ·

COMFORT INN
' r

'

f

SAVE THOUSANDS

f

ICJfl I 'y

enc!OIIIDLIIJ ... IIa8ael
1 AN As I lit Will
NO

lllny'i11l~sl

Spouual by:
Mason County Exleidioft Homemllken
Wahama High SchoOl Home-l!am Ones
GFWC Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Oub
.

DONATlON- Repflaentatlvee from 0.11111 Acaderiiy High Sc:hool'a
Key Club recently pn1aenled a portion of their remaining toya from
the Toytown project to the Holzer Medical' Center Pedlairic Department Pictured ant, left, Barblna Sheltoro, eupervl.or, Klzma Slmpkina, Nanc:y Caetael, RN, pedlitrlc nurw manager and Jenny
Fowler, .

.

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a~

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Ill

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Amy M. Cec;targren, M.D.
Pediatrics · ,

llr6plea: Flllklria, OH
•

. Medlcalldw;etloa: Medical

Colhs: oCObio- Toledo
' Dr' a J! WyB'J
Chilcllen'1 Holpilll, Unlvenity
oCQic;ep,R.,

Vishwanath N. Shenoy, M.D.
. Gastroenterology· .·

Roel A. Gallo, Jr., M.D.
Pathology

Steven N. Sokoloski, M.D.

. .

O~opedici

· llnlipllice: Pullinln, WA

Medic.. .ldKatiH:Univenity

· Medlcall.illrlfaa: Medic:ll
College of Ollio •·TOiedio

· of North Dakota,

Sd1ool oC

Medicine • Grud FOib, ND

=

P'lldeaq-: Miami Vllley
lb(Aiil, Wrigbt State Ulliwnlty
• Dllylan. OH

Raldeacy: UaMnity of North

Scbool ofMedicinC ~

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. Brit ey: Loyola Uoiw:nity
Medial( Ccn7er. Mlywuod, n.,: '

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. Forks, ND

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Bolrd Cc~: . 1992,
Americaa Baud o(Ju 7 r:ul .
Medicine, 1917, Bolid oC ha?euwl

INrd Ccrtiflcadell: 1993,
.American Boud of PlilholOI)',
Anatomic 8lid Clinical Pltbology

Medicine, IDdia
'
,,,,'

HOLZER CLINIC

'l'bele WUed phJiicMn• join Holler CJiDic's fl'ft decade phi1010phy of ·
. piVfilliociUP qulitr be.Jtla care ia a cO.rtcou aad 1.1apetlletic IDIIUla'.
With IZ plaJiit !au ill 26 •edical ·•ped•litia aad aiae locatioN, Hoba Qiaic
• · il powilil' to amtiauUymeet JODI' health c:ue aed• .

..

·

Blrtliplacf: Fon sill, OK

Here for your health... Here for your ltfotillfet
Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 44~S411

'

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I~

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. li!l!

..

..

..,

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.

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Don,~ Tao. Hlgll

--~====-

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lnnl Ceollfk•kw: 1995 •
Amc:lialll BoiJd oC Pediatrics

JACKSON

605 East Main
Mon: ·6:30 p1m.

National Guard ArJnocy
Rooqte 62 North
Point Pleasant. WV

HOLZER CLINIC ANNOUNCES OUR
MEDICAL ·STAFF
ADDITIONS... WELCOME!

~~~-...

-

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....
•••
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• •

·--·

lalmttty "' ...... c:aunc,.
.,.,.... ........... Ohio' -

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llll&amp;affiiSOIIYII..
POIII PIUWII

&lt;

·

lm•as-te•r•Joe-C•re•amean--s··- · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ···· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •

days off· between events to relax.
'I)Vo or three ·days of Wet 'n Wild,
Disney · World, Universal Studios,'
etc., and everyone is reidyto play in
the motel pool and work on a tan
befo~ starting back lo the parks.
Going to Disney World is a spe'Cial
treat, something everyone might ·
want to do just once. So, go, enjoy,
pll!fl caref.. lly for a few months Or .
years and ,let lite kids vote on which
parks to'visit. But, do expect it to be
expensive•. it is!

'

GALLIPQLIS

---==-iiiiilii- 67J.1671

March 8, 1997

Continued from page

At U.teh Mlllei' Chevrolet,

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL C~tER)

··

Vacation ...C1 .

I

PAIN CONTROL ·CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL .

TO ACCctMPOIIil11011 WOIIIII NOPU,
Willi QPII 'IlL 1 P.M. 01 IIISHYS

• \,..OUIHOI&amp;

- .Nms. Rick Willi~mson; SPL Jeff
lessons ·that thOy.will ~ all their BroW... Tr'uop 152 Louisa, Ky., l?irst
lives. SomebOdy did it l"or me when UMC; Sc0¥tmaster ~~~ley. Bsl. 1.was a boy and now I'm doing. it. lard, Ass~t SM Ronrue Castle;
Scouting preptii'Gs them.for life, just SPL Josh Pdlon.
·
like it ptqlal:ed me. I dida't realize it
Cub Scout. Packs represented
until .I got 0111 of Scouting, but the I were: Pack 20.5, Southwestern ; Cub! master ~ack Jones. Pack 1 249,
lessons were very impotl8!1t..
TroopS panicipating were: Tniop . Pomeroy, Cu~aster ~ky Depoy.
299 · Hemlock Gro
Ch . r
.Pack 214, American Leg1on, Vmton;
Chu~h;· Scoutmaster ~':.: M~~~ C~bm~ter Lin~ Angles. 'P~ck 204,_
SPL . Dale Thoene. T~!op 23 ~ ; F_1rst Prcsbytenan, Galbpohsl Cub- ,

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· Conllnued ·~ ~ Ct

I·

_,_.- .- News policy

.......,........II"·

fornia .during the Gold Ru'sh, is considered one of the best pictures ·of
life in the gold mines a~d a wonderful portrait of San Francisco in the
1850S.

, .. '

Boy Scouts':: .. &gt;

A·sampling of ~ntiq'!arian .books
.

Spring Craft Show ·

~Jt,.~~rcP~•r\~~-~ u~·
SuJ!stance.t.~:~ia~l, ··•
ftlvetllt)'.
·' '

n '•P&amp;gliC7 "

Handmade Holiday Treasures.

Officials cracked down on lite
o·'IMa .... s.mo.
stores and t1Je. sale of tobllcco to
Dr. Beinlld HealY fipa he has minors in lite area after lite study
few frienc!s llllO'lJ nearby Wilkes- · was released earlier litis year.
.. Healy found 8 percent of fourthBene, h., convenience SCore own•
ers since his landmill:k st~y graders smoke. Smoking rises from
revealed~ than ~f of uea !llgh 16.5 percent in sixlit grade to S4.3
scbool kids smoke ct~Ues, and . percent in ninlit grade. The average '
~.~ besan ~ e&amp;{ly ~ ~ S. . number of cigii'Cttes smoked each
I ve ~ IICIIII!C eeenues, Said day rise .from 2. 7 in fourth grade to
Healy, a Kina'• College professor, J 1.4 in 12th grade.
whose atqdy sjlowtd lhac teen-qers
Arilong lite most stunning find·
ha,ve, •9 ,ll'Oublf bliyiq cisiNtte5 &amp;I i~gs: Some of lite kids start as early
~~-!ICC SCores.
.
· · · u age 5 and develop habits by
· HOlly's lltudy, !bought to be lite founh grade. ·
.
·
biggest ;,e.ul:h. Jlu4y ·o f its kind. : "The reduction in age. is stunfocused on lite sinoting habits of ainJ," said Joseph Califano, PteSi141S32 f(ltalh,JPdeh tllniugh 12JII· ; dent of the Narional Center · im
I,

•

tally IIIII bq items at the reg· the - site for
isser.
lite Ciac:iruwiSboppers use lbe hend·held SC.IIIo '-1 clilin of
nen by swipiDs lite scanaer's reader 1,300 stores,
over the blir code on each p-ocery 110t bec"Jse -of
i- . 1be scan- reads lite price tbe
muscle
and keeps a running tally lhal is being flexed
. viewed on lite sCanner's small· win- down lite road
dow. Shoppers can subtract an item by the; new
by hitting lite "minus" button on lite Bruno's slore,
scanner and swiping il over the but bec•nse of
item's bar code. Sboppen experi· · lite high volenced wilit lite scanners eventually ume and crosscan _b q lheir items as litey pick litem section of cusup off lite shelves.
lomers, . Eads
Ponable scanning systems are said.
just anolher example· of grocery
"We're ju~
stores accommodating . lite time- taking it slow
, si&amp;IVed shopper. It comes quickly on · right now and
the heels of prepared dinners and making sure
grocers who also offer banking, dry this is somecleaning and video rental.
thing we want
· The scannerS debuted in Europe to expand,"
more lhan five years ago and are rei· Eads said. · ~ 1
alively new to the United States. In ·don't think it's
October 199S, finast Supermarkets · ever something
introduced a scanning system b~ we•d put in all
Symbol Technologies of Holtsville, stores. I think ·
N~ Y., the same makers of lite system you •d have to
Kroger is testing at a store in Lake- look at lite vol,
·
wood, Ohio:
·
ume of lite busiUSER FRIENDLY? - HaJid.fleld ecanners at grocery atoree are m.nt to eave ~
Developers of the' scanners say ness of each pera time at the checkout by eliminating the Mid to acan, tally and bJJg n.ma at&lt;the"
lhey c!ecrease what shoppers say is store " .
naglatar. Shoppera u• the hand-held ac:annera by awlplng lhe.acanner'a rndei
·
the ·worst pan of getting groceries:
The Belle- the bar code on eacl! grocery ltam.
·
·
wailing in lite checkout line, wbere vue
Kroger
his scan-job audited, a ·requirement chases and compared it to the
there's little lo do but lean on lite started signing up customers last of all first-time scanners.
from his scanner. They marched
cart. browse the magazines and pon- week for "SpeedScan," showing
."1 probably won't use it every lite clert rewarded him with aSS
der lite candy.
litem a shon video -and walking time I shop, but when I come in here ·cenificate.
"In (oday 's times, Lord knows, them. through a demonstration. and I size up the queues at the regiseverybody's busier and busier," said Thursday was lite first day shoppers . ter, I'll decide whether to pick it
"I didn't save time, but I
Melissa Eads, assistant adverliiing • could scan on their own. ·
up."
.money," he said, and headed QUI
manager for Kroger.
· .·
Black, after picking up his 2S
door with his bags.
The Bellevue store was chosen as items, headed for lite checkout to
The clerl&lt; ·tallied up Black's pur-

By JERIIIY SINGER

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Kids start smoking at 5; teens buy
cigarettes at convenience stores .

ropularity of antiquarian travel books -rising
lilA TODAY
1The advenmres of yestcr)'CB!' are
tfie delight of today's annchair trave~rs.
•
l Anliquarilll booksellers say trav·
and exploration books, diaries,
' d manuscripts on the frontiers of
perience- from ,Captaip Cook 'to
; California Gold Rush - are
re popular lhan ever.
San Francisco bookseller Jeffrey
omas says 25 percent of the
• ks he'll display at lite 30th annu·
California International Antiquar·
Book Fair in San Francisco, Friy through Sunday, will be in litis
c tegory, up from ld percent in
1~.
.
l "People are interested in anyo::e
f.qi11.....,w trails or having interestitla .. cxpotiences on the road,"
Thom&amp;s says. He's chllinnan of the
fair where so of 220 bookseller~
wili offer rare, old or out-of·pri-t
travel books.
At William Reese ~Co. in New
Haven, Conn., one of the nation's
lop dCalers in Americana &amp;lid world
travel·. owner Willil\111 Reese says his
sales in ihese categories have doubled since 1993.
,Pri~ are 'climbing, too. Ree~
·poilils to one of the benchmarks m
lite' IJltiquariln domain: a first ed\0011 of.the Lewis and Chlrk Ex~• tiDn p.blisheddn 1814. . ·
,;It's lite · first' account of explo-'
ration in lite .Louisiana Territory. It's
full of important natural history. It's
· the first tp visit places such as Montarr· ~it's imfiOrtanlto.map col-

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· · 1be paiOJW scanaer lookS like a remote conb'ol, a phone or a t.SU

t,_

rj(. C~THY l.YNN GROSSMAN · lectors because it has a big folding

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n own items at this supermarket

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lllr VILIL\ PIKKG.IA

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• ..dl11port • d"11CJIII, Ott • Poli1t Ph111nt, WV
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rr.br\lary 23, 111~

--------------------------People in the news.------------------------~'
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Martin Scorsese, who gave up his aspirations for lhe priesthood to make movies, was honored by lhe American
Film Institute with a lifetime achievement award.
" I have !he best job in the world: it's not really work," lhe director of
·
such films as "Raging Bull," "Goodfel·
las," "Taxi Driver," , and .. Mean St:rccts"'
said in his acceplance speech Thursday. '
"Those who know him know that he
instead is the high priest of film," Robert
De Niro, one of Scorsese's most-used
actors, said during the ceremony.
Joe Pesci, who won a supporting actor
Oscar for "Goodfellas," told of cracking
his ribs in violent scenes in "Raging Bull"
and "Casino. " He added,' "I'd break a rib
for him any time." ~
CRANFORD, N.J. (AP) - Lawrence
Taylor knew what "it .was like to be in control on the football field. Drugs made him
lose thatlevetage off the field.
LlwntnCI Taylor
"My name is Lawrence Taylor and I am
an addict," the retired New York Giants
linebacker told nearly 900 students and facult~ at Cranford High School on
Thursday.
·
Taylor's appearance was part of an agreement he made with prosecutors
after his arrest last May in Myrtle Beach, S.C.. for trying to buy crack
cocaine from an undercover police officer. He enrolled in a pretrial intervention program that requires him to perform 60 ho!Jrs of community ser-

By ODIE O'DONNELL

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you you .;an ' I do som~thing, hUt
there's also lhe people that tell you
you can do it, so you kind of have to
go where your own mind leads you
and thiu's it," lie said. ·· ·
"There ain't no comp.etilion ·
· thing. to me. I'm not womed about
beating anybody. I just pretty much
cater to the people who appreciate
what I'm doing. 1be people who
don't appreciate it, they simply
don't have to buy it. This is something I' ve been in for my whole life
pretty much since I was 14 break
dancing at the malls."
Although he hints that fame had a
price, he doesn't want"to talk about
how high a price he pai&lt;!.
"I don't want to go into muoh
detail.'' he says. "You l)ave a bunch
of snakes - and I don't want to
mention too many name.s - people
thill will come ~p and take from you.
That's what happened to me. So I.
live and learn but, like I say, I'm past
all those days and everything is
· great now."
"Prime Time Live" aired an ,
in,erview last month where Ice said
imprisoned Death Row llecords
chief Marion "Suge"''Kilight took
!)irn up to a 11!ll~"y;-!JIB,de him lj)p)t
over as a threat and told him to sign
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Ice
By BRIAN SERAILE
"I guess I was in the house at the said. "I like to dance, and hip hop
The (Shreveport, La.) Times
right time;" says Ice, 28. "One day I came up and then all of a sudden I'm
He once was everywhere, a chartwas doing a talent contest where I onto it."
topper in rap and pop music.
· had done a couple songs and had my ·
One high-profile critic was for·
His "To the Extreme" album
little gig. After 15 minutes on stage mer talk-show host Arsenio Hall,
soared tP No. I on the Billboard and the right people in the crowd, I who brought Ice on. his show and
chart in 1990 and the bad boy, signed a contract with . Ichiban . then verbally , attacked him·. The
described as having the "lethal · Records."
-audience boOed Hall.
combo of dance, attitude and .
He sold about 48,000 recordin~
Ice said he ·looks back on the
looks," · was chased by power bro- in just a few weeks with lchiban and episode and laughs.
ke~ from Coca-Cola to Nike for .. laterreleased a video to thesong Ice
"It's kind of funny, •: he says. "It
endorsements.
lee Baby.
was obvious that he was trying to
Then he vanished. The D.B.
That won him a cmitract with beat me up. !let him be himself and
Cooper of rap music.
SBK records and a recording that that prei!Y much says the whole pic, Today Vanilla lee returns.
·earned him the distinction of being ture."
He's part of li to~r that he hopes the first rap artist with a No. I song
. Ice says he's not competing
against other rap artists and he
will propel him from being the on the pop charts. ·
apswer IQ Trivial Pursuit question
"At lint it was pretty stressful ignores critics who denounce him.
about one-hit wonder's, back to the for me at a young age to get into
"I've always had people tell me,
top of the music charts. ·
this," he says. "!thought music Wa!&gt; 'There-'s a white guy that ain't going
. He's got a new life and a new all aboui money and girls, doing to make it' in the hip-hop market.'
spund that he describes as altema- something you really love and enjoy There's always the people who tell
live rnus.ic mixed with hip-hop. He's doing and getting paid for it. I never ,.
l!rT
also shortened his name to Ice.
saw there were going to be a lot of
lXI
. Asked to describe wliai kind of other things I was going to have to·
/
· music\ fans can expect of him, he deal with."
responds "high-energy, stage-driOne thing he had to deal with
ving, mosh-pitting, crazy, jump- were critics who said he was capital·
around, head-bobbing rnosic.''
izing on music popularized by
· In a phone.interview fro111 Miami . blacks, 'that · some felt only gain.ed
where he's lived for the past eight · acceptance whi!n it was recorded by
years, he talked about how Robert someone white.
Van Winkle danced arid sang his
He said he didn't choose to be a
\l!ay lo fame as Vanilla Ice at the pre- rapper. :Jbe music chose,him.
dominately black club City Lights in
"I ·grew up listening to Rick
south · Dallas and what happened James, Roger Troutman imd ZAPP
afterward.
·
·
and Parliament Funkadelic,'' he

over the rights t6 his sohg, "Ice Ice ·
Baby." Knight, who was driving the
car the night rapper 1\ipac Shakur ·
was killed, has denied it.
lee admits to a drllg addiction
thaL he kicked three yeats ago.
. "l foond God, be, says. "That's
one of the good things that happened
to me. I got a great girl aAd l'm on to
the next phase."
·
·
He wouldn't ·say what drugs he
was addicted to, but he says he was
down and out.
• "l was really caught I!P in a bad
scene," he says. ''I'm ou( of it. It's
lhe best thing thaL ever llappened to
me, and l think God helped me
straighten my life up .and everything.
Now l can concentrate oil the music
and come back down to reality. it's
great.
.

Family Night Is
Back••• Only Better! ·

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MRYIUESIAY
·- 4P.II.·9P.&amp;

He owns a sports store ·in South
Beach called "To 1be Exuerne."
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Gardeners need to plan now for future crops

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ON THE ROAD l=o.RECOVERY .
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HOLDING LITTLE FRIENDS • Noreen Saunclera,left, and Jan·
nHII' Byrne1, O.llla County Extln1lon Agent.for agriculture end
nature! reaourcea, ere lhown with two 11-clly old plga born at
Clurvlew Fenn. At their yoling age the Utili plgl spend their
growing dly1 nurllng from their mothtlrs, aiHplng, end 101111
pllylng. 1llly ceu.. q~ltla commotion whel!·purllng tlma occul'l
every 511-60 minutes.

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(had tlllmL . . . . fiJitlfl tXJirl ~01 pafphel/lleiw ~

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At Pleasant Valley Qospital, we want to put you on the road to
5 offers
recovery.· OUTPATIENT REHABILitATION
S RVJCP
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quality care for clients who haveexperien~ any of the following
problems or complications: ·
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'Y Oldlopecuc ~ndltloas
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(pelllbte liD~&amp;*"* dflllllfs b-~ li'ltc:iun!l.

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'Y Desenendlve Netlrol..-w Disorders

(Oft' lllrla mull$iUdll

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OljCICOIIItlll't~~
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Our proresslonals hope to gul~ our-a:JStomers on a critiCal pa~
oflnterislverehabllltatlon In the areas of:
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TRANSPORT SERVICE - Robert end Debcireh .Llwaon of
. Pomeroy, owner1 of H.O.M.M. TrenaportritloiJ, provk!e 1rtlnl·
· .po~tlon for people co)lflnld to wheelchllre,Jhe cciupfe own1
: two epeclllly equipped ven1 1nd ecceptl Me&lt;t,~~re or Mldlclld.
: Mr. Llwe,o n dl1plly1 one of the trenlport ven1.
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IIJIIIde
IIIGCitlfl. NIIMIMtlJd d II lnd ... dltJntiiiD ....
I !lYe dti"t/.,; (

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1tieutrlllfiD-..r.hmt*nAIII•~
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{SJreech l1leiJpy pttA 11\WII wwlt ~ ~ MiD n ltll/ilf •cu'des
Mlfupn ~ J~Jr awJWircv*'J, qrt11to11 otllenl cl : deis. I
Wit •
,., 1 ' . . ,.. I' fltli.r II bo1tdiiUw1 7; 21 _A

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: POMEROY -- Handic~pped'peo· and others
·
_pie
con fined
1
to whee1•
chairs now have another transport&amp;,;on
option.
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,.. H.O.M.M.
Transportation. an
ami!Uieite service owned by Robert
n
. and Deborah 'Lawson f r.omeroy.
Provides non-emergency transportaU•on for people us. ing wheelchairs.· '
: The couple has two specially
"nuipped vans and accepts_Medicaid,
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rnfl _Pleasant Valley . . . · . M:ll OUtpatl~nt RehabllitatiQn Services

: GALLIPOLIS - Champion Hilf,
Bidwell, and Champion Farms, Galiipolis, owns bulls l_isted in the 1997
Spring Sire 'Evaluation Report by the .
, i\inerican Angus Association.
. Champion Farms has one and
t"hampion Hill has six bulls accord- ·

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1520 VIney Dllve
• Point
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.. Phis It, WV 25550 • (304) 675-8369

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$15.00 and includes a light lunch. For
more information call Tom Wall at
(614) 289-2071.
The Piketon Research Center is
located at 1864 Shyville Road, Piketon Ohio. I.t is actually southeait of
Piketon, Ohio. Take SR 32 approximately 2 jniles east of the US 23 and
SR 32 interseetion, follow green
highway signs (it is a1 the entrance ol
the Piketon Uranium Enrichment
Plant).
.
Ajoint Athens-Meigs Winter Beef
Meeting is being held on 1\Jesday,
March II fivm 6-9 p.m. at the Athens
Ponderosa. Topics include "Positioning Beef for the Future: How Do We ·
Regain Market Share?" by Dr Tom
Turner, O.S.U. Extension Beef Specialist; "Beer' Outlook" by District
Dave.
Mangione;
Specialist,
"Orchardgrass and Fescue Update"
by Chris Penrose, Athens County
Agricultural Agent; and "New Product Update" by Stacia . Brickner,

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The tour will begin at9:30 a.m., erplant will be addressed in addition
By JENNIFER BYRNES
and
participants will meet at the C H. to the cost-share status. The tour will
.
OALtiPOLIS-AcommoncomMcKenzie Agricultural Center. The give interesied producers .a chance to
plaint among caul~ producers this
winter and in year's past'are the mud- group . will -visit several ·farms in view the concept and then program
Mason County, W: Va., that have con- that evening will offer the details. and
Medicare or pri:yate pay. People not dy conditions created by cattle that ·crete pads. The tour will conclude in provide the oppononity to ask the
~~ 1chrurs
· can n·de as are concentrated in one area. usually
confimed to Wuce
Galli a · County at Hidden · Valley necessary questions. As always both
private .pay only:
the feeding and loafing_area. One of Ranch, site of a' stabilized feeding po_rtions of this program are open to
"
k'
be
the proposed solutions to this probwe ~an ta e.•'M
you w rever you Iem IS
. thC COnStru'Ct'lOR 0 f Slab"!IJZe
' d area that was constructed as a func- any interested party and no reservaneed to go;" s_aiiF rs. Lawson.
tional demonstration unit using the tions are needed.
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For service, call 992· 3053, 24 feeding areas and heavy use walk- by-prixluct from one of the local
For
more
information
about
this
h
d
d
k
ways. The traditional feeding pads
ours a ay, se~~ ays a wee , or · iui: either constructed of' concrete or power plants . . There is a growing tour and meeting, please call the
page at l-800-9![.!·23,27 (PIN 2849).
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a geotelttile cloth wllh crusher run interest in using different by-products (OSU Extension office in Qallia
CurrentIY. Ih_~,.coup
e IS an mg
in place of concrete and geotextile . County al614-446-7007.
· · 1or
• 0 ve."""roo k Nurs- limestone.
transport
service
cloth.
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These feeding pads raise the livemg enter m iddleoon.
At
7
p.m.
on
the
25th,
Dr.
Larry
CATI'LE
PRODUCERS: The
st"!'k out of the muddy, overused
Brown,
Agricultural
Engineer
with
1997
Gallia
bounty
Preview open
areas, and allow for stable footing for
the animal. while eatirig.1bese struc- OSU will speak to the ,group about Steer and Heifer Show was a success,
tures also reduce the risk of non-point . the use of concrete and geo'tellolile now mark your calendars for the
source
pollution and reduce animal cloth .. He will share the key con- Ohio BeefE'xpo, March 13· 16atthe
ing to.John Cr~, director of per· .
formance programs for the American health problems associated with mud- struction considerations, different Ohio Exposition Center.
cost
options.
and
o~tcomes
of
impleTOBACCO
PROD\]CERS:
Great
dy conditions.
Angus Association.
On February 25. 1997 the osu menting these feeding areas in pther turnout al the annual educational
Issued in both·lhe spring and fall ,
Extension
office is offering a morn- counties in Ohio 1be possibility of meeting! If you could not attend,
the new report features the latest per- ·
in
g
tour
and
an evening program \ISing the by-product from the pow· ·. please call the OSU Extension office
forinance information available on
about these stabili'zed Seeding areas.
4,424 sires. .
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Are . you interested in raising '
plants and livestock organically?
Plan to attend the 18th Annual Ohio
Ecological Food &amp; Farm Association
Conference on March I &amp; 2 at Skou
Hall located on the Ohio State University Agricultural Technical Institute campus, Wooster, Ohio.
Workshops on livestock; grain :
production, market gardens, soil ·
health and organic certification :
requirements · are being presented :
between 9 a.m. and 3:30p.m. on each :
day. Call Ohio Ecological Food &amp; •
Farm Association at (614)-294-3663 :
for further information.
· Harold H. Kneen ·is the Melp
County Agricultural &amp; Natural
·Resources Agent, The ·OhiO State
. University Extension.

to oblliin information about how to .'
light blue mold tbis season. Begin
thinking prevention now .
' SHEEP PRODUCERS: 1bere will
be a meeting of the Ohio Valley
Sheep Association on Monday, February 24. Don Kirts will be here to
share his unique production and marketing schemes.
STRAWBERRY GROWERS: ,
There will be a strawberry.schOI)Ifor · i •
on February 28, at 7 p.m., and on ' ,- '
March I, 8-4 p.m.• 'at the Piketon ; , .
Research and Extension Center. · i '
Please call 446-7001 for more infor. '
mation. .
·
ALL PRODUCERS. - April IS is
drawing closer, and lhe extelllion
office still has your 'FUffiel''s 'JI.x .
Guide. Also, the first of two peaticlde '
recertifi~ation courses will be olfend
Wednesday, Feb. 26, from 5;30-!1 '
p.m.
:
Jennlleri.. Bym~~ll
dl n •
and natul'll .-rces ..... ....
· Gallll Coaaty.
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Pfeizer Genetics. Dinner is courtesy
of Pfeizer Genetics, Athens Landmark and Hubbard Seed. Reserva·
tions required as space is limited,
please call.(614)5938555 by March

Feeding areas to be topic. of cattle producers meeting

Angus breeders _recognized

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strawberries.
Give us a call ·at 992· .
I
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6696 or stop by. .
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Interested in growing strawberries
on a commercial basis? Plan on
attending the Southern Obio Berry
School on March I from 8 a.in. to 4
p.m. at Ohio State University Piketon
Research and Extension Center. The
day's program is entitled, "Strawberries: Back To The Basics!". Topics
covered will include: "Getting Start_.
ed Out Right", "Cultural Practices to .
Prevent Diseases", "New Sprayer
Technology", '',Season Extension", ·
"New Production Systems" and
"Economics of Strawberry Production". Several new resource books
will be on display including the
Midwest Small Fruit Pest Manage·
ment Guide. An informal Friday
eveoing discussion group is planned
by O.S.U. Small Frui~ Specialist,
Dick Funt for those growers planning
to stay the night before in Piketon.
Re~stration for the Berry School is

..·transport serv
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BYHALKNEEN
POMEROY- Many homeowners
are looking through the multitude of
gardening catalogs for fruit plants to
grow in their yards. A little foresight
in planning and soil preparation can
improve your success. Invest in a soil
sample which will inform you of the
nutrients available and the pH of the
soil. While blueberries need a soil pH
of 4.5, most other fruit crops need a ·
soil pH closer to 6.0. soil.
Prepare you ground before the plants
airixe. Most crops need well drained
soil sites. Add organic mat.ter such as
aged manure, aged sawdust. or compost to existing soil.
Variety selection is important.
Look for varieties that have resistance_
to diseases. Some fruit varieties are
.better for canning or preserving, .
while others are for fresh eating only.
Our office has homeowner fact sheets
on selecting. varieties and raising
apples, plums, peaches &amp; nectarines,
· raspberries, blueberries, grapes and

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(OTII'Iri.r IID-*Ifle dfent tJ
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See puule on 'page 02·

SUndey, ~ 23, 1117

. Of lhe 1,800 pigs born each year 8 a.m. each day or supper by 4 p.m.
about two-thirds become finishing
Tile Clearvltw procesa
• GALLIPOLIS - Agriculture has hogs in a furrow to finish process
Five gillS Dr sows per week are .
been a mainstay of Gallia County for done at the farm. 1be other one third hand-mated or artificially inseminat·
· several decades and to most non- are sold as feeder pigs to other farms ed to the selected boar which starts
farmers this carries a meaning of . to finish. All ~eL hogs are sold to . the first phase ofthe process. Females
farmers who grow crops that are sold a meat-packer mColumbus and when - will farrow in tjlree months, three
for a profit.
brood-sow~ be&lt;;o'!'e non-p~uct!ve, weeks, and .lhree days (114 days). and
· However, there is a 220-acre th~y are.qu•ck·limshed (rapid we1g~t usually about 3 a.m. This date is the
diversified family farm located about gam) and sol.d to. ll\e Bob Evans key to knowing future management
seven miles south of Gallipolis where Sausage Plant at Bidwell.
of this parity (litter). Each female has
lhe mass production of pigs 'hall been
Pig nursuy
a new record started in the database
the prill\ll'y source of income for the
Anyone enterin_g the bam where . at the point of breeding. During gesMatt Saunders family since 1978.
the p1gs are ,born 1s Impressed w1th tation sows are fed 4-5 pounds of 14
, The Clearview Farm is located the precautions that are taken to pre- percent protein feed comprised 'of
adjacent to the Ohio River at the serve and mil!~ lain a germ-free en vi- corn, soybean meal, and supplemenmouth of Raccoon Creek and has ronment. Spec1al foo)wear, hats, and tal minerals necessary for health and
l!een a very productive operation for clothmg must be worn to keep the development of female and litter. .
three generations of ·the Saunders p1gs free of mfechons.
They are also vaccinated for disease
family. This operation was Started by
The nurS~fY bam is _thoroughly prevention at timely intervals during
the late Clyde Saunders over 60 years cleaned on a regular bas1s w1th bllf · gestation.
. .
~go as a dairy farm, later it was oper- degradable, ~nvironmenlally s'afe,
At 112 days, sows or gilts are
ated by Clyde's son, Jim, his wife chemicals while the manure from the ·moved into one of 24 clean farrowAnn, and their family.
~imals is stored in · underground _ing crates . in a climate-controlled
.: Motorists see this farm as a typi- · p1ts, removed by a vacuum system room called a "farrowing house1' .
cal flat piece of land with a hot~se and that exits into an easily_ ~cessible Tiley are bathed and treated for par- .
6arns, just like dozens of othel farms area. It then becomes fert1hzer when . asites and started on a different feed
iii Southern Ohio. The Saunders fam- . spre~ on the fields where the crops ration containing higher protein, a
A TYPICAL PIG LITTER AT CLEARVIEW·
by computerization from the time ·of their ·
~y does raise 160 acres ·of tillaJ:&gt;Ie · are raised. . .
. . .
laxative to combat consupallon, and
lnMmlnation,untll they leave the firm. Each lit·
crops, rolating com, soybeans, and
Nursmg ume IS a notsy u_me'" the a preventative level of medication to · These 11-day old pigs ere resting following en
ell-out eHort to nurse from their mother sow In
ter born In the nurllf'Y wlllevll'age 11 plga end
some tobacco. However, most of the bam, when !he dozens of httle o~es combat infections. During lactation,
the climate controlled nursery. About 1,800 of
ere raised using 1 c_omblnetlon of state of the
com produced is used to feed the all head for. marna, whose large dm- sows are hand fed twice a day and at
these pigs ere bom each year, and are tracked
•r:t technology and herd work.
some 100 adult hogs that are housed ners arefull'of nourishing milk. The peak milk production (IS-21' days),
in three balns (Jom where 1,800 pigs sow ~m1ts s~?riS and grunts ~.f JOY as are fed as much as 15-20 pounds of
a yelll" are born to the brood-sows.
h~r btt~t of,httle ones _fill the•.r tu~- · feed Per day. .·
: This is afull-time operation for m1es_ With.UW warm m_llk. Durtng this
Careful monitoring of sows during
Matt, Non;en, and their three chi!- Jeedmg llmF t~e no1se an~ racket farrowing is necessary to optimize
dren, 14 year old Kate, 10 yelll" old made by the,ammals would nval the the .. number of live pigs born.
Patrick, and seven-year old Lauren. no•se com•11g from a rock concert.
Although the room is kept at conKate is a student at Gallia Acl!demy
F~ding ,time occurs every .59 to· .. stant 70-12 degrees, heat lamps sup·
High School, Patrick at.tends Gallia 60 rn•~utevround the clock, 1s fin- plement the baby pigs' sleeping areas
Academy Junior High, and Lauren 1shed m abc_\ut four mmutes, ani! then · to enhance comfort and survival rate
goes to Waihington Elementary.
quietness in the stalls as the animals by detracting them away from the
All of the children are active 4-H play, rest, o_r slee~.
.
sow who may accidentally smash
members and sbow steers and hogs_as
The so~s receiVe tl)eu water any . them when getting up and down.
their Gallia County Junior Fair pro- tilDe they want it by squeezing their
Each'lilter•of new-born pigs will
jeciS, and all have daily chores to per- ·mouth a_ro11nd a pres~urized nozzle average II with each pig weighing
form at the farm.1be family lives and that squ~ water unul they release abolit2-3 pounds per pig. In order to
operates.out of a 13-room farm house the_ nozzle. The little pill6 receive maintain a weaning average of ~.5
thaL · was erected sometime around theu water,from small.tanks that have · pigs per litter, Saunders may use a
1850 or 1866. One downstairs room baby-like ~pPles on the bottom, and technique called cross-fostering,
contains all of the computerized they just sl/ck the fluid out. . .
which involves .spreading babies
records of each boai, brood-sow, and
The fr~~t of eacl) metal crate (pen). between large and small liters, Breedpig-litters. These records are main- co~tains a large feeder for the· sows ing four or five females at a .time
tained on a daily basis and reveal a and they are hand fed twice daily. 1be gives Saunders the option of cross- .
Noreen Saunders and their three children, the
MASS PRODUCTION OF PIGS • Shown
complete history of each l!llit'nal from big mama.hogs will start their own fostering when necessary.
220 acre apr..il not only produces tillable
above Ia 1 motorllt'a view of tha. Cleervllw
time of insemination until it leaves brand of "oise in lhe barn if no one
At one day old babies are given
crops,
but Ia one of the largeat pig-producing
Farm
located
eeven
miles
South
of
Gallipolis
!_he
shows up to feed !hem breakfast by iron, vitamin E, and sefenium,. and
Ianni
In
Southam Ohio.
on
State·
Route
·
7.
Operated
by
Mitt
and
·
also a scour preventative anti-biotic.
. Needle teeth are also clipped to preOn about 28-35 days when the consisting of ground com, soymeal, .
Average life of a sow is 4-5 years,
vent pigs from injuring each other
sow's
milk
production
has
pe_
a
ked
vitamin
and
mineral
feed
which
is
~uring
which she will produce 6-8
when playing or lighting over morn's
~ruj,~~~gs
l)ave
begun
eati_!lg
"!ell,
the;
,
ble~ed
111
tile
farm.
~fter
1'\"o
weeks
.
liters
an~
5.50 pounc;ls of feed to conmilk. Tpils are alsp docked at this
lit'.hr-ditrrweancd,
we,ghed;~at;-,_1~·
th1s,-nursertthe
p1g~·are
ready
to
---•ert,a
fe~-Jllg
to. a_fim~ed hos•time IO'eliminate ·tail· biting, a probe«!
for
parasites,
·
and
moyed
lnto
.
e1ther
sell
as
feeder
p1gs
(about
50
Contrary
to
mov1es
or ~opular ·
lem common lo pigs fed in confine·
ment. Birth information is · then anoth~r environmenlally controlled pounds) or to be kept c\n at the farm tJ&lt;:hef,_p•gs tend toPe. aggressive and
pre-nursery kept a1 78-80 degrees to to become finished hogs (240-260 -will kill weak or InJured penmates
~ntered into the computer.
reduce
the stress during the weaning pounds) at about five months of age. With no remorse..
. ..
.
. Attwo weeks, male pigs are cas-process.
At
weaning
the
sow's
record
Sows
are
rebred
five
days
after
weanThe
Saunders
motto
1s
A
com·
. trated and_ prospective breeding
·
fortable pig is a happy pig and _hat;, ·
females are identified for future herd is !lien analyzed and the decision is ing to begin a new parity.
O!bn points of the pro&lt;:ess
PY p1gs are profitable p1gs.
replacements. Pigs are then intro- made whether to rebreed her or cull
(terminate
jmxiuction
from
the
herd).
There
is
one
boar
per
20
sows
Clearview
Farm combines hard work
duced to feed that is highly fortified,
After
about
one
week
in
the
pre(hand
mating
practiced
to
improve
with
state
of
the art tec~nology but is
pelletized, and sweetened to improve
nursery,
pigs
·are
moved
to
another
·
boar_
longev1ty
and
to
contr&lt;ll
pro3
proven
success
10 th1s steady pro- .
the taste. This is done to minimize the
duchon of p•gs.
sLress of..Lhe pig in going from a milk nursery suited to the older pigs. duct,on flow).
They
are
.
also
con
vetted
'to·
a
f~ed
·
diet to grain.
.

!.S eon.lp!)lldent

Music: Ice without the .Vanilla is back
with new sound, ·new look
.
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D

r-'lass production of pigs main source of income for Gallia family

'
vice, undergo drug counseling and submit to random drug testinJ.
Ia Ohio for the Dly1011 Urban League's ~ bil1hday celebration Thurs:
Taylor, 38, who led the Giants to two Super Bowl titles, said be turned to day, Cosby thanked those wbo have otfeml comfort to his "family since his
druJs after he started playing pro ball and soon, drugs were making his deci- · 1011, Ennis, WIS shot to death last IDOIIth in Los Angeles. There have
. been nOI'
llt'eltJ.
''
sions for him.
.
"It's 1 painful thing to go through," he said. " I wouldn't wish it on my
''The Cosby family is fine. The Cosbys pray every day,:• he said.
enemies. It's very· difficult to get involved in drugs and have no negllive
consequences. n
LOS ANGELES (AP) --..,. Ken Wahl has
a date in court to answer charges that be
LOS ANGELES (AP) - So what if Oscar didn;t like her in "Evita"? rou1hed up a couqtertop at the Beverly
Madonna thinks politi.cal activism fits her quite nicely.
.
.
. Hills Plaza Hotel whl\n a bartender refused
She signed with Mick Jagger's Jagged Films to star opposite Gabriel to serve him alcohol. ·
Wahl, best known for his starrins·role in
Byrne in an upcomi"g film ai)out Tina Modotti, who gained some measure
the television series "Wiseguy," had his
.
of fame for her photography and activism in the 1930s.
"I' ve always been intrigued by the life of Tina Modotti. She was an attorney enter a plea of innocent Thursday.
incnedible woman and as an acLress, it is a great role for me to play," Madon1\ial was set for March 28 on misdena said in a statement Thursday.
.
meanor charges of mikins terrorist ~.
1be Italian-born Modotti came to the United Slates in 1913 and later had assault with a deadly weapon, brandishing
a brief career as an acLress in Hollywood silent iilms. She died 'mysterious- a knife and vandalism. 1be 40-year-old.
ly in 1942 at age 45.
actor was accused by 'police ohepeitedly
stabbing the couhtertop with a 6-inch huntCAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - Bill Cosby will make his first visit ing knife in December.'
to South Afric~ next month to help raise money for destitute former political
Wahl bas a history of alcohol-related
. prisoners.
.
.
cncounten with the law, including a drunk·
The entertainer, a vocal op::JOnenl of apartheid, will also raise money for en ~ving· charge last May. He recently said · '
Medclnnl .
•
· .,
•a planned museum at Robben Island prison, President Nelson Mandela~ s he drinks to kill the pain caused by a 1992
office announced Friday. Mandel a spent 18 of his 27 years at Robben Island motorcycle crash.
.
.
.
..
He faces up to a year in jail and a maximum fine of $10,000, if convict;·
. as a prisoner of the former white regime.
·
One of the fund-raising events will be held on the island, which ret:ently ed.
·.'
reopened as· a national monument.
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Sundlly, Februery 23, 1117

Pomeroy • M~leport • Gallipolis, oH • Point Pleeeent, wv

.,...--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - -

~farm

~omes: Que~tions and answers~

Ia'"PJ:~Y~es
it's
d·, ' .

owner upon lcavina the house. Since !into the colcl-water feed liae 10 ~ . J
ate there should not be any water Oow- tank.
•'
~ 11 s avatlable through Q.P. &amp; H. ing when no one is home, if this is
Q: Our 8-year-old propane gas: :J
A:"uQufactunngj.f·~- B ox 967 Jessup detccbld, the shut-off valve is acti- fired watcr heall:r has been making
, e.. ogu_e, · ·
. The syc- valed.
crackling and bumping noises in · 1·
tem can be: tnstalled ~n a variety of
' Q: How come Wr. toilet tank recent months. The noises start
I.
~onligurauo~s, but the averaged sweats? It gets so bad, it forms a pud- hoi water is drawn and continue fof '
.=~ed cost ts ahour ~600.1t wo~14 die on the floor. Leaving the lid up or a time after the flow stops; Any hell_) '~
,
re or less expensive dependmg down doesn't seem 10 matter. Any you can lend is greatly ajlpm:iated. . '
ftn how elabor~te yo_u want to make suggestions?
·
A: Your appliance has a condilion ' 1
· The system IS destgned to sense a
A: A toilet sweats because its sur- that is tommon among old water
:ate_r leak due to a malfunc;ti~ning . face is .cool and moistuie in the air heaters: the . formation oi' sediment '"
f:ltanc_e, burst hose, _crack'ed and condenses Qn iL The wall ofthe toi- . and'scalc on _the base of the tank:·:'
zen P1pe or o-:erOowmg fixture. It · let is cooled by the water standing in Manufacturers suggest that a few · )
shuts off the mam wate~ flow to the the bowl and the tank: There
t
quarts of water~ drained from the·"1
house preven_l extenSIV~ damag~. . ways to prevent this. One w:Cis~~ heater periodically to help remove me ~ 'Heres how 1t !"'compltshes th1s. i~l an i~sulation kit available ai deposits. However, this is not always ~ ' 1
The system u~s air-temperature sen- hardware stores and home centen
effeclive, and if sufficient depositS ·)
~~:!c~~~.::;Dislu~ sensors, a ~ow The insulation is rigid f0J1111, and it'~ accumulate, a rumlil1ng or pi&gt;undin• 2·
ofT
an ~u mabc water s Ut· plao;cd along the walls on the inside · sound can be heard wl\en the heater"_
mo~fv: · The 111r-te111perature_sensor of.'the tank. By preventing il)e cool i.s firing. J~'s. not dangerous, but ca6.: '
G-46
to s the te~nperature m the water from touching the wall of the · be annoytng. Also, the deposit~ ~ ·
~~~e,
and If t~ te!"perature falls to tank, the insulation keeps lhC tank's redu,ce the heater's efficiency bi:ai~ . ''
A WIDE FRONT PORCH wit" stately columns and a brick fttcade gives this ranch home real curb appe_al.
1
. valvf7:~h~g~l _acnva~es the s~ut.: surface temperature W811'11 enough to they insulate the !'later in the bolt~ ;
wa
Y· the prevent ~QJJdensalion from forming. · of the tank from the Oiltne.,
: -q
&amp;y BRUCE A.. NATHAN
which is ideal for entertainins or
. G-46 STATISTICS · ; moisture sens:'n
rs are P
. on
These·kits do not scilvQ the problem .
'"
AP Newsfeatures .
just relaxing.
Plan G-46, by HomeStyles
The kitchen is centrally located
esign G-46 has three bedDesigners NetwJ)rk, with 2,485 and provides direct access to both
rooms,· two and 'one half
square feel of living space, offers the' informal breakfast area and
.
.
.
baths, a study, great ,
a wealth of options. for 8 family
the formal dining room.
room,
dining
.room, kitchen,
that enjoys the outdoors.
The mauer suite has 8 huge
breakfa51
area
and
a utility room
A wide front porch with six
bathroom with a spa tub and two
2,485
square
feet
or Jiving
columns introduc~s this sprawlwalk-in closets, as well ,s entry
space
In
all.
This
plan
Includes
a
Ins ranch.
to the expansive back deck.
daylight
basement
or
crawlspace
The heart ot the home is· the
A study. orr the foyer and tWO
GALLIPOLIS· 'The U.S. Depart- and d) discretionary adjllStment.
' notices will be mailed around Febru!· ·"
· · great room,. with its grand fire- , bedrooms in the right w(ng com- foundation, and 2x4 exterior wall menl of Agnc~~ture announced the
The
1996
basic
quota
in
yallia
ary 28, 1997. ProduC!=rs are remind: :,&gt;•
framlnf!. The •!tached garage Is
place and built-fn bookshelves.
plete this appealing plan.
followmg
proviSions
of
the
1997
bur.
County
was
~.133,256
pounds.
The
ed
lhal marketing cards must be· ·r,
484 square feet.
French doors lead w a deck
ley _tobacco program. .For 1997 the 11.2 percent mcrease from 1996 will returned before 1997 notiCes will be:' ,,.,
~as1c quota for each farm will be ~suit in approximately 238,925 addi- mailed (sale bills will be required fot · "
mcreased
~y I L2 perce~t from 1996.
bonal pounds, for the cOI:'nty.
sales after Jimuary 30,1997).
• ".'·
THE LARGE GREAT
1·
The
nauonal
markoung
quota
for
The
1996
bas1c
quota
m
Lawrence
The
Gallia-Lawrence
Farm
scr:
ROOM has built-in
the 1997 crop is 704.5 million County was 835,680 pounds. The vice Agency is a United States
bookshelves that frame
.
the fireplace on one
pounds, _up from the 199~ quota of 11.2 ~rcent inc~ease from 1996 will Department of Agriculture Office' . ,.
side, while the kilchen
633.8 trull~on pounds and·~ based on ~suit m approxunately 93,596 addi- loc;ated in the C.H. McKenzie Agri· · ~
and the brukfasl area
the follow1ng :_ a) purchase mtentions ltonal pounds for the couoty.
cullural Center at 1II Jackson Pike, · ''
open the room to an
by domestic Cigarette manufacturers; . ~ effective quota for the coun- · Room I571, -Gallipolis OH 45631 : , "
abundance of natural
b) unmanufactured export~ (3-year ltes Will~ much higher due to under: Phone 446-8686 or 1-888-211-1626· ..
light from the outside.
average); c) reserve stock adJustment; markebngs fr.otri 1996. Tobacco (Toll free in 614-area code). ·
,.c?
IB EIDM
The ma's ter :suite is
u
..
..
....
liMA' 1100111
separated from the
other ·bedrooms,. and
! ' &gt;!
oilers lailish bath with
a spa tub, -a sepatale

By DAVID JUDSON -

aar.-.. Newt 8arYice

ller

1 1 9 59

.WASHINGTON- With the ros~~ of TV channels rapidly growing
iJu;pugh ~ alphabet, from the pro- ·
poSed antique channel to an exclusive
~able lin~. among reitl estate qeniS,
11 was a high-tech idea bound to hlppen.
.
.
:An alniost-round-the-clock.alobal ~hannel dedicated to fanners pre- ·
mi~res March 28. It'sled by the dean
of -~ nation's farm joumali•m fratel111ty: 63-year-old Orion Samuel• sop, whose daily baritone farm
re~ bavc !reen a staple on farm
country transi~ton since 1956.
J'ecbnologically,' said Max AnnSIIVJII· Samu~son's co-an~;;hor at the
. sy_~~iellted rad!o operation, which
~JillateS m Chicago, the new project
1s s;omparable to the theme in' the
1978 movie "Convoy" where indepeitdent truckers lake to the airwaves of CB radio. In place of Kris Kristofferson
leading legions of independent truck•
ers, Sam\IC!l~n is leacllng the loosely networked pack of farm reporters
- .a unique national niche of journahsts - "onto the big bird in \he

when.

\!!

;;:r

n

USDA announ~es '97 crop :;
burley ·tobacco program· &gt;~

sky."

a

shower, dual vanftit:S

.......

..... I ft•4

and two walk-In closets.
Across the home, two
additional bedrooms
share a second full bath.
A wide front porch and
a spacious rear .deck
oiTer.lols or options for
outdoor recreation and
relaxation.
.

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,.... .

...... ,...

;a 1:111

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

G-46

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(For a more detailed, scaled plan Q/ this house, includi"tf guides to estiiMIIng costs and financing send $4 1a
House Q/lhe W~ek, P.O. Box IJ62, New York, N.Y. 10116-1562. Be.surelo lllclude lhe plan number. '
·

· ATTENDS EXPO -Cannlchael'a Fann and
Lawn waa represented recently at the annual :
John Deere Aftermarkel Expo, held 11n San
Antonio, TaXIta. Attending from tha loclll deal- ·
enhlll Ml'8 John and Loralee Cermlchlel, dealer prlnclpllla; Bobble Fisher, parta manager end
'SCott Donahue, after market manager. They
were among more than 4,000 da"ler personnel

I::

SUNDAY PUZZt.ER.

from the United States and Canada who were
on hand for. the event. The lhr..-clay meellngl
were designed to help John Deant dealers and
parta and nrvlce personnel Increase their
knowledge about the bualneaa of providing
except,lonal parta and nrvlce to their customera. This year's theme was "People with a
,.
·
Ml•slon. •
· ·

Joins staff
ORANDE : Rick Biggs, ·
CPA,
recently .
joiq~ the staff of
the Area Agency
on Aging, District
7, Inc at the Rio
Grande office.
Biggs gradual·
ed from the University of Kentuclry and i• a cer·
tified
public .
accountant in both Kentucky and
Ohio.
Pam Matura, executive director
of the AAA7, said, "Mr. Biggs will
be an asset to the agency."
_ ,
AAA7 is a nonprofit organization"
funded through the Older American
Act" with funds administered through
the Ohio Department of Aging. .
District 7 covers I 0 counties
· inc:lildiag Adams, Brown, Gallia'
·Hipland, J~ekson, Lawrence,·Pike:
Rou, Scioto and Vintoo. ·
• '

ACROSS
1 Chuckle
6 Sat of steps
11 Smudge
16 Float
20 Loosen '! knot
21 Fling
22 Agreeting
23 Musical drama
2s Nam~~:.:..
26 Gol up
27 Pleasant smell
28 Take it easy
29 Summer, in Paris
. 30 Juicy fruits
32 l•!ade ready ·
34 Work by Pindur
35 PoeiTeasdale
37 Cans
38 Kind of syrup
39 Endorsed
41 Held fast
43 New-York'sIsland
44 Restaurant of a kind·
46 Ci!Y in Calnomla · ,
49 Safe place
50 Movie Set worker
54 Ebb
55 "- Godunov"
56 Twi'st out of shape
57 Brass Instrument
58 Rodent
59-Dame
60 Closes ·
61 Antitoxin
6~ Declare openly
64 Dollars and cents
ss·Goblet
66 Express in words
67 Withered
68 Cain's victim
69 Layered rock
70_Big snake
71 ·- Mlserebles"
72 Pastry maker
74 Push '
75 Sha1p teeth ·
..77 Uncleeo Become more solid
81 Balance
82 Quantity of wood

73
74
75
76
77
76

DOWN
1 Old instruments
2 Actress Ekberg
3 Say
4 Hollges of baseball
· 5Foorpart
6 Staying power

t J I;
\- ~d

.[)iacoYered

l

Unhappy
Digging in\plemant
Sprite in "'The

f )jJ

7 Crowd

79 EthiCal
.81 Simple

8 Preaes ·

82 Apple r&amp;mlll\11\5

•

. Tempest'

31~101

piano
32 Glass squar111
33 Sail .
36 High point ·
38 Fnm
40.Kitchen gadget
42 Conductad
43 Tote
44 Pub game

45 ()evtlcins
46 Wall hanging
47 Goawa~
48 Movie star
49 Place for ttavelefs
50 B~ng about

511Nall painting
· 52 Milllreat
53 ¢1111s

55 !ltupiQ mistake
56 Moby·Click was one
59 Peaea prize name
eo Thrall
61 -Long nap of a, rug
63 Delicate trap
· 64 Creator
85 Spectei
6&amp; Bodies of water
119 Lustrous
70 Singer

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86 Parton the singer.
88 Dangere

l

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9 Deprivation

i

I ; :.

',,
·-" ~
. ,,

10 Female sheep
-· 11 Hone
12 Nolhlng but
13 Run off to marty
14 ·- mater
15 LaUgh vary loudly
16 More Yelboae '
17 Chimpanzee
'18 Ctlminal
19 ExChange
_
24 Chopped with a
·hatchet
-

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' ' 1•

Matures .
Individuals

f ; .:.

·

,I J

I

P18judiC811 one

'• •·~I\

90 Naine!Y: 2 wds.
93 Wagers ·
94 Perkins and

. .'\I.

San&lt;llurg
98 Embere .

~ 11]

.·-

99 Pink shade
100 Color • .
101 Taverns
.
103 Stinging plants
104 Deep cut
,105 Tikes oui ·
'106 Fortress
108 Obtain 11om·a
source

0

' . oi·

..

(.

; , • ,If
4'

!,

"Y •

i1

•• J ~

1011 Unruflled

110 catch
111 Ripples ;,
112 Silly
113 Steady and sober,
,114 Sire
.116 Zip and l!rei
117 Overhead
11.8 Makas ,._ary ·
121 School in ~ngiand
122·St , "--~"'l!!f'"""""'
123 Rabbit
.124 Rilcipe amount
121 Frost .
·
129 Abone
131 -de Janeiro

~' ~

More headaches for pork councii

~~
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,'• 11

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·build upon his radio programming, Line" of (arm&gt;news from the capital, . the mainstreain pack. Their heros w)uch now goes from Oagship WON and assorted features from around the manure salesmen, gypsum dealers
in tile Windy City lo 350 stationS.
nation and world.
..
and tree pruners - are hardly the
:'We've put together the team of
"We're going to be the CNN of talking heads sought by the New
traditional farm broadcasters to agriculture," said Patrick J-laggerty, York Times or NBC.
become the world's first global TV Samuelson's.point man in Washing- .
So Samuel$on's call to go global
net)Nork for farmers," said Arm· ton since 1980 who has joined the has generated excitement, explained
strong, who, like Samuelson and convoy to become the Washington Haggerty, who like many of his farm
m~t ag reporters, grew up on a farm. bureau chief.•
reporting colleagues has worn many
Samuelson and Armstrong · Already
Haggeny notes that satellite deliv- hats along with his boots. In addition
·.have a taste oftv as producers ofthe cry of "tV is~ Qatural in rural areas, to being a farm reporter, he's been a
weekly . half-ho 1tr "U.S. Farm · where isolation prompted farmers campaign media adviser, congres- ·
Report," which goes to 180 stations. and ranchetl;to be among the first sional press secretary and circuit-ridThe challenge is that in today's itiStilling the'20-foot satellite dishes ing lecturer.
electronic world, the tools offlll'lners in the early 1980s. ~ow the ch.,.per
Among thol'C signing up to join
and .rural' residents are fast evolving dishes of Din:cTV and iiS competi- Samuelson , in Chicago . are Jane
beyond early-morning radio reports tors are fast becoming standard fare Kingseed, reporter-broadcaster on
and the half hour on local television. in areas distant from cable service WLFI Radio in West Lafayetle, Ind.,
You can check the price of and are the logical means for farm and adjunct professor at Purdue Unichardonnay on the Wine Spectalor reponers to reach their audience.
versity. Coming from Sioux Falls.
magazine'slntemet home ll"Be or log
In journalism circles, farm S.D., is KELO Radio's (arin reporter
onto the Italy-based United Nations reporters always. have been low ·on Tom Stever, who has long doubled as
trade database to·check last munth's · the status totem,-finding pride in their exec_utive director of the Sioux Falls
soybean exports from Brazil to Tai~. work but few ipvitations to run with Stockman's Exchange.
wan.
..,._,,., - · - ·- -·
. - .,, •'G'•'
."Rural America has )ong been
Fanners in air~coitditioned tractor
. ignored, by those who connect the
cabs monitor grain futun;s on the
world by hard wires - by electrical
qicago Board of Trade via a comcompanies in the 1930s or by the telepany called Digital Transmission - _ · ·
phQne companies later or by the cable
Networks, which delivers reports TV companies of today," said Hagover cellular -phones.
geny. "Now ti-e 25 percent of Amer·
Samuelson and Armstrong's high- .
ica lhat doesn't live in the cities and
tech hootenaimy, called Channel
suburbs will have its own voi"ce."
Earth, will steer those rivulets of data
Farm news, of course, is where the
into a single river; channel 283 for
project begins. But rural health news,
·anyone with the pizza-size dish sold
such issues as home schooling, en viby DirecTV.
(
ronmental issues and land stewardThe lineup will begin a1 5 a.m.
\(OMMUNICATIO_ N S
_
ship are all topics which Channel
with markets ancl weather. Segments ·
\
Eanh will explore, say the team
·through the day will include "Reports
· LOGo
·
members.
from ·tlle Ag SchO()Is, ...~'Live Trading·
·
FOR NEWTORK •
"We're going to be the channelfor
Reports" , from the commodity ~~~~ the; logo lor Channel
rural America," said .Armstrong.
exchanges, the "Wuhington Party

HA_NN EL EARTH

, " L'

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•
· EARTH - · Veteran aQrtcultute .-~m•n Orion
Samuelson has assembled a "farm ·
Samuel•on,
II
making the move to televlllon when chann11 earth
reporting dream team',' and cobbled
pramleres
In
Mlrch·(QNS)
•
· .
together a partnership of satellite
· cooperalives.W.d
op&lt;:rator Din:cTV,private
a coalition
offann
investors.
to 'I·-:-_ _.....,_ _..;..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;.._ _ _.,....._

-.........

.

"'·

honed baiLie ~tics.
NPPC, like many companies and
industry associations facing opposi:
lion, turned to·a public affairs company to keep an eye on "groups and
individuals that may have a negative
impact on our ability to produce
pork," according to NPPC President
Bob Ruggles, -, a (s111all) McCook,
Neb., hog farmer.
NPPC's I!Ction in hiring · Mongoven, Biscoe &amp; Duchinlno. -like
General Motors' attempt in lhe 1960s
to discredit IUiph Nader - may
act.ually advance its opponents' causes .
Ronald A: J;&gt;.uchin, senior vice
president of the eonsulting firm , said
"activisJs,"like mos1 people, fall into
four categories: '"Radicals. opportunists, idealists and realists." He said
that MBD has strategies to i~olate;
eduCate and cultivate such activists so
they don'tthreaten the interests of its
clients.

By GEORGE ANTHAN
The OM Moines Raglatlr
. WASHINGTON-The National
Pork Producers Council's hiring a
consultant to monitor "activist"
grilups opposed to large hog operalions is turning into · yet another
predicament for th~ livestOck organization.
·
· NP~ is 'l'alking a tightrope. It's
trying to represent the large industri·
al operations that . are a growing
force in the industry and provide an
increasing share of NPPC's finances.
Still, most of its members are the
small, independent producers, many
of whom are a111111ied over the threat.
. , to their livelihOods.
'
The opposition to Big Pork . is
becoming broader based. with rural
activists being at least loosely joined
by environmental. animal-welfare
•and militant animal-rights and vege·
tarian organi~tioM- some of them·
amply financeihnd employing well-

Yet, NPPCdidit'l advance its owli
cause by contending - without
offering proof or even some details
- that small-farm, groups are being
infiltrated by combative animal rightists who seek lo destroy the livestock
industry. .
·
Also, tile controversy over .
whether 1\II'PC used federally sponsored industry "checkoff" money to
pay the consulting firm (whiCh NPPC
denies) further complicates the issue .
It focuses allention on how the commodity industry funds are used at a
time when · the Supreme Court is
about to decide.wbether they're legal.
·Another complication is that
MBD - · without the Pork Council's
knowledge. its officials say included in its "monitoring" the
National Farmers Union, which Ruggles acknowledged is "a respecte(!
national agricultural organization."
NPPC apologized to the Farmers
Union .
'

:'i Purity o~ water is major
:t factor of pool _maintenance
.
.
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J.iJ elJ
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! ··:ls
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Worlo;J Indus~s Jntemalional ( 17955· sm'all, electrified cartridge spliced
By POPULAR MECHANICS ·
into the piping, is easily installed on
For AP,Spec!al Futuret · . . . Arenth Ave., City. Oil Industry, Calif. new
pools and just u easily retrofit-

I

1

.

'

'

' ,;jt

A large part of pOOl maintenance,
is maintainilli purity ·of the water.' usUIIIy lly adding chlorine. 'The most
common ~· of testing chlorine
content is by taking a sample of the
w~ter, adding afew .;lrops of reagent
and comparing 'the color to a gradu•
ated color chttrt.
While this method is still the most
popul.-. electronic pi-obes are now 011
the market that do all the work for
Y9U· without the mess. _One s~h
prodi!Ct is the Elettro-1blter, which
retaillfor about $40, and,isJitlde'bj
'

91748; (80Q) S3S-PIDOL). You do,
however, have some alternatives to
chlorine 'treatment. Here are three.
Ozone has long been used in
purifying drinking water, so it stands
to reason that it might work in swim·
ming pOOls as ·welL Because ozone
has little' residual - it reverts to oxy·
gen- some chlorine is still needed,
but the reduction in c,lllorine is said
tQ approach 90 percen~ which is quite
1 savinp.
Ozone does require a balanced
pH, however. The equipment, .a

ted to existing pools, and prices start
at about $350.
•
Another
. ,reduced-chemical
approach uses electrolytic ion
exchanges to strip microorganisms of
their sustaining atomic structures.
Keep in ml'nd that ionization, like the
ozone treatmctit method, does require
managemeat of the water's pH bal·
ance, plus enough chlorine to sustain
a 0.4 parts-pet-million residual. EJec.
trolyti&lt;: ionizers for pools stan at
about$900. '
.

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of teeth.
The tab on a slider may bn:ak or
To make a repair, note that there fall off. Replace it with a small paper
The zipper is one of the most com- is a metal staple that aciS as a slop at clip threaded through the hole in the
moo fasteners known to man the lower end of the zipper. It holds slider. For a garment. wind thread or
Although most frequently found i~ the two tracks together and prevents fine yam around the clip in a mau:bclothing, zippers are also used in the slider from corning off at the bot- ing color. Or attach a very small key
applicalions as diverse as camping tom.
ring to the slider and tie a piece of
gear and lawn-mower bags.
, To reattach the llicler, tum the item twine or leather shoelace to make a
inside out. Pry open the staple with pull cord.
.
Plutlc zlppen
While some plastic: zippers have ' needle-nose pliers or tweezers and N~w zippers ·
teeth. most are made of continuous remove it. Move the slider he;ld all
Replacement zippc~ can be purnylon coils. As long as the coils aren't lhe way down the teeth to the bottom chased to size at any store that car- .
damaged this type ofzipper can,usu- of the. row·and carefully thread the . riessewing supplies. Or you can buy
ally be fixed. U the coils are pulled loose track of teeth through the open zippers by the yard at a sewing cen·
apan, rezip them ~y simply running side of the slider. WOrk the ilider ler.
the slider down-and then back up. If head liP both tracks of teeth. Then
Before you sew a new zipper in,
the cods are crushed or llallened, crimp the staple back in place with . presluink any tape that is not 100 perhowever, they won't resume their · plieis. - ·
··
cent polyester by submerging the zipshape. Als.o, sin~~ they are attached Other repairs
per in hot water for three minuleS.
to the tape ~y deb~ate shtchmg, they
[f the staple is damaged or miss- Then -let the tape dry before pressin&amp;
pull out ~1ly. In e1ther case, the only ing, you can make a stop to replace il llal.
solubon IS to replace the z1pper.
it. Install the slider and zip it up. Then
Metal zlpJien
. _,
sew the tracks together Yiith a zigzag
Metal z1ppers ha~e . md1v1dual stitch of heavy thread over both
teeth. T? keep them shdmg smooth- . tracks just above the bottom teeth.
ly, lubnca~ them penodrcally. Rub The stitching must hold the teeth
the teeth With a l!ry bar of soap, a can- tightly together and should have
die, -~araffin or w~x paper.. Rubbing enough loops to make the sJop finn .
the Zlpper_teeth w1th graphlle from a This only works if the zipper can be ·
lead penctl also works, .Be sure to permanently aitached at the bottom.
n:move the_ excess l~bncant. e$pe·
If the_slider on a zipper is badly
Cl_ally graphite. If the Zipper becomes bent or broken., you may avoid
d1ny. ~lean 11 ":'th a toothbrush installing a new zipper by recycling
d1pped mto a solution of dishwashmg a replacement slider of the same size
detergent and water.
from an old zipper. Remove the
Heaclless zippers
stops of both zippers and take off
One. of the ~ost ~ommon pr~b- both sliders. Aft~r tracking the
lems With any Zipper IS that the shd- replacement slider, remake the stop .
er head comes off one of the tracks with thread.

lly READ!II'S DKEliT lOOKS
For AI 8p I I F-..

March
28
.

called theW . Cl

...

Keep the zip io zippers

channel to
P.remiere

PO~LAA MI!CHANICS
floorbya-hwer dishWIIheror of coodensation that fOl'DII OD ~ For ~P lp1 clel Fteturea
fixt~n. lfthe K!IIDr ~;11ctu puddk, bowl, ho\r.e-.
•·2
9· Is ~ 1 wller daiM&amp;e pro- it activates the shut-off vaJve. ·
The other method is to have ~ 'l
tecbon system available that can
As with a t&gt;ursW alarm system plumber install a valve IIIII- pipe to•4
sense a leak and shut off lilc water the flow detector is 1e1 by the home: introduce all1IIIIIIIQOUIIt tl hot Wllllt · .1
By

Outdoor Options, Front and Back

'

Suncley, Februlry'23, 1eer-·
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Pomeroy • lllklapart • O.Uipolls, OH • Point PIJeeent, WV

BULLETIN BOARD
Largest
used

of

Fishing Tac~le
in the Tri-State ·.
Buy-Sell - Trade
Fishing Stuff
Coming in March
Watch here for more
information

Gallipolis.
Bass Busters
us take the WOR
out of your WATER!

Hometown
Water DepOt
1802 Eastern Ave .
Gallipolis ·

441-1121
Coolers- Bulk Water Conditioners - Drinking
Water Systems.
Talk.with Jerry Or Bob!
Gallia Co.
~incoln
Day Dinner
Feb. 27, 1997
7:00 pm • Dinner
. Rio Grande University Student
Annex Center
Guest Speaker: Lt. Governqr
Nancy Hollister
For Tickets Call:
Wanda Waugh- 256-1243
Connie SmHh - 388-8823
Connie Hemphill 446-4968
Your Central
"Everything's Mardi Gras !lf\d
Silent Auction• at The French
.Art Colony, 530 First Avenue
March 1st, 7:30 10:00 p.m.
New. Orleans style fun ... music
and food, Jambalaya, red
beans and rice, pralines,
french bread, tossed .·salad,
vegelables and dip, cheese
balls and cnickers and much
more.
Come and bid on over fifty
ltems... a hot tub party tor tour,
dinner for B allhe S1rauss·, an
area rlig, decorator wreath, art
work, Cincinnati Reds tickets...
Call for tickets, 446-3834

SHOP AND $AVE. NOW! .
Serta Mattress

$59.00
Bed Frames .
$19.95
Recliners
_$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
La-Z-Boy Recliners · $299.00
4 pc. Bedroom
Suite
$499o00
FLAIR FURNITURE

675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WI/

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5: Ph. 44S-0322
Out I

Graham's Upholstery

HEARTLINE,

Get ready for Spring Sale
Selected Robert Allen
Fabrics on Sale 15% off
Feb. 17-March 3.
Come see our wide
selection of sample
fabrics and quality
workmanship. ·
Free Estimates

an educational and
interactive cardiac
support group meets ·
Sunday, Feb. 23 2 PM
French 500 Room
Holzer Medical Center

.

~205 Graham School Road.

Gallipolis, OH 45631
614-446·3438
B&amp;E Shoe SeiVice
427 2nd Ave. Gallipolis ,
(614) 446·4172
We repair all shoes, work or
western boots. cOals. luggage,
saddle, and custom leather goods.

Building Sites
1 to 2 1/2 acres
Slarting Price $12,500 and up

446-2885
March Computer Glasses at
FOTODISK '
beginning computer, Windows 95,
word processing, Internet,
spreadsheet/database, children's
eomputer classes. Call 446-9955
.::u:;t.t.

ACCOUNTING

For Cornptele., Professional Individual
and Business Tax Preparation

ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
736 Second Ave.
COUNTERPARTS
of Gallipolis is proud lo
introduce Ter,esa Albrech .Nail Technician Specializing .
in acrylic nails &amp; manicures.
Ask Teresa about her special
introductory offer for
Prom Season!

Coming Soon
Floral Fashions
Gallipolis, Ohio
Watch for Grand Opening
Specials and Discounts ·

Call446-2342 or 992-2156
'

LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
OVER 100 IN STOCK!
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGER$, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250 ·- $450 .
FREE DELIVERY

'

FOR MORE INFORMATION

TOPIC: 'The
Circulator''
SPEAKERS: Critical
Care Nurses
Refreshments

THE OUTREACH
CENTER
275 $tate St.

446-7555

Donations
needed
Clothing, shoes, fUrniture
Donations accepted 8 a.m .
to 3 p.m., Mon. thru Fri.
Aunt Clara's Collection of
Fine Amish Things
Our Amish builders have ~n
working all winter to complete
new t.umiture just in time ·tor·
spring. We have oak and·
cherry tables and chairs,
bedroom suites, pie and jelly
-safes, rockers; coffee and end
taples, curios and many more
Amish crafted item~ . Brides .
invited to register at Aunt
Clara's. Amish baked goods
fresh daily. Monday thru
Saturday 1o a.tn: till 5 p:m.
Sunday 12 noon till 5 p .m.
614-446-Q205

I

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1*11............

·WWI"ADS

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•
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._.._
IIM-77MUJ

1rua1 Gu

a•...,•.,40, e1•.we·

Public Sale &amp; AuctiOn .

01.1e. .

Fumllhlel
Rooms '

Kllltl• llohil 'Lo-1 llaiH In
TIIWII, Nowly Re.........,, HBQ,

Cinema•, Showdme 4· DIIMJ.
WMidy Ralill, Or llonlhly Ra•e,
11~ •• 11122,814-441-5117.
Beech St. Middleport. 2br lur· Room. far. rant • .,... or ,_,th.
nllhld 0JM: UIIIIIM pold, dltiolh S•rfnt II .120/mD. G1111a Ho•t

.I.
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1

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wlllllerl, dr,era, mrl..ra!Dro,

..,..•. suoo• Apptianc;eo. 11

FRIDAY, FEBRUIIY 28TH
7aOOPM
1M YE1S POST 23 IN GALLIPOLIS,
~ OHIO
Come &amp; Join us for some
great bargains
Computers, ·camcorders, stereos,
VCRs, shop lights, collectibles,
radios, dolls, .linens as seen on the
Shop at Home Channels. 100's of
name brand items such as Cobra,
RCA; . George Foreman, Sharp,
All major credit cards
accepted . .
For more info call
CROWDER WHOLESALE

Boola Br -1111, Chlp~::d
:!:':!~ T'anr
Guora
·
..,_MSII&gt;ecalt,Qal.

La.,..
VInes-., Calleu..ue-7:101,
1--.
llpollo.
.
llonmora _ ........ almond.
c. ....... h.ld_
.,DO.\10447$-1121111 .
and exlarlar. Foi -..~....
In

Sale On Room Sire j)arpeiO
Stock lloHah•n CarpeiO, 114·
-7444.

11~742-i!DII.

cancr.te ' PrUdc..Sooilc Tanka,
300 ·:rti!U 2,000 G'allon• llan
Sola eMir •250. Bunk bed• w/ Evana EnllrJWI-. Jacluon, OH
&amp;--.~ .
81~
maHrtll. .Cedar che1t. Curio•. 1.aoo.li37. '
~~~~--------'"lr.. Ptuler and"""' Covell. Picture•. Dl1hi1, 1DI7
1 llodlm 1 llldnlam.Apor1mlnt. SIHplng room• With coolclng.
11--.
·
Aloo lrlllet 1pace on river. All Ctell llernl!· f:ou•trY Fumltute Foni ....NI Sla11on 'Nagar~. 114-

1

,OokwM4 Apt. 1 8r Efftd-. =~~~=~~r p.m.,
Furnllhed Or Unlvnlllllod. llodem, ~~ t.o.llon. Qulel 46!) ,Space for.
~ _. Fer Single Pn&gt;: IMIIonal. llecilrltr OepoiiL No - - llle.·MCIUded ....
, ....., e111M1o.,
-~n
• 8144411-ZS&amp;EI'ftiOL
•• One bedroom apartmen~ .lur· 110

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"'"'-Cell ....

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One

304..75-81120. Ill 2lt Pt Pl--

1111. CloMd ..........

,..,..,0rll~

IJMd Furri.,re130 Pika
Wll Buy And Sell \laM Fumllure
e1•oWI·4782 Hro. 10' 4 Check

Diamond

UIOUd

Ent~ageNnl

Wedding

RII1G lilt """ •730 Win Sell Fer
t685.114-4*7221.

1'1¥1•

lte..· Include• Rocordo,
Dolla, Platt&amp;, Concarr ·Photo•. ·

' C.U14412-7114:

••tra

nice &amp; ••n. No
pltL Phana 3G4e15-13M.

:

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: • houoe; hi lllddl-~ 11
rr 21JI. r .·

:

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(304) 925~8107)

Gunl,

~~~~~~~:~~~~Am~IB~u~~,c~~~N

Clfl

=======~~Sale~~·~~~~==~
PUBLIC AUCTION

- - · .... " ' -2 t=
ctJiohor5pm...

~" •

SAT., MARCH l, 1997.
Rio lraiHie, OH

HOSPICE REGISTt:RED NURSE

Anytillll
Positions .

A part-time Registered Nurse is needed
for the Holzer Medical Center's Ho1spk:e
Department. Applicants should ·have at
least one year mecVsurg·experience
must also reside in the Me1igs r:ntonru
area.
For immediate
contact: .
.
... .·' ,- ·
Aosi&amp; Ward, olrai:tor rif Human Rtihllreeli

PROJECT OFFICE

·~·"···&lt;.TIRE

ADMINISTRATOR

MECHANIC

Located on St. Rt. 33 In
Hartford, W, Va. Wawh for signs.
. "ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS'~
Oak dreeaer made -by G$111polls Fumtttire Co.,
besUIIIul church organ , real fancy, hall tree w/mirror,
oak ftatwall .cabinets. w/original finish (nice), oak

l!lbles. hutch, round oak table w/4 leaves·, big melal
box, two nice high mantels, large dinner bell on pole,
pon:h swing. rockers, 6 legged table, oak stands,
lstter
rockers, .rare Amie;s pitcher &amp; bowl set,
of smoking pipes, McCoy &amp; other_ cookie
collecllon of arrowheads, very nice old lime
water cooler (blue &amp; while), (2) wine presses, old
(Free Spirit), chicken coop, tool boxes. boHies,
baskets, collection knives, approx. · 50 sets salt &amp;
pepper shakers, gia8s &amp; stone chums, Grlswald
skillets, dlahware (Hull, depression &amp; etc.), lanterns,
carbide lamps, McCoy pieces, several stone jars ..

HoiDr Medical Center
JOO llec!laon Pike
Qal!lpOHs, OH 411831
Phone: (814) 44MOOO

F.X:

'

(814)~5101

Ine

LOOKING TO SELL OR BUY A HOME? .
LET US WORK FOR YOU!CALL US TODAY!

'446-1066 ' .
.

'

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOLIS, OHIO 45631

.

REALTORS:

Allen C. Wood, Reakor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971 '
Jeanette Moore, Reattor· 256-1745 ·
lim Watson, Reattor-256-61 02
Patricia Ross, Realtor

Thl1 Sporkllng Rlnch Is
located in a nice ancl quite, i
·popular :1amlly area . II
faalunls 3 br's, 1.5 baths, 2 c
garage·.work aho ioground
pool. vlnvt fence 'sunounds·
pool area. Let uolhow ft 10
youl Must 1881o apprecla1e.
.
1133

ONE STORY· With In w••w..
c-..
distance ro Aaccoorr refPk.
This could ba a got·l ·

way.or 8 permai1!Ed residenCe,
It has 2 bedrooms, nk:e I liD
deck, garage, wooded 1,-15311
IICI9S 111/t. Prtced lo ... $30 L

' 1131

-fiMch-Wkh •Into
Ulli • .,......
"PTtYate aettlng". It
has 3 br't. 1 1/2 bltht, a full

Haement, a1ta9hed garaue.

ltKierlor, low maintenance vll'lyl

aiding wAtrlc:k, above ground
pool. . 1131

· 10:00 A.M.

110

HELP

Wood Realty~

WHY RENT WHEN YOU CAN
OWN
THIS
THIIII
BEDROOM TWO iATH
MOBILE HOMEI F.OR THE
PRICE 'OF »4,11011.00 two acrea mit E - pon:h.

-1

large. shed .. can r.or more
details!

NEITI.ED ON APPAOX.
ACRII. Thla Ranc:h it a real
flmlly homt, " ·~ • peaceful
setting, clole to. county SChOOlS;

--·--3 bf '•, 2 baths, tamUy room,

COMIEIICIAL WITH

PO$SIBIUTIESI·
I
atanlng up yOur
IN TOWN LOCA'IIOH· Two about
-...m home, thln:l bedroom business? This could be
·possible, kitchen ancl dining what your looldng lor, Bldg:
combined, full basement, 81Jp!OX. 14600 oq, ft. wl1h - y
Prlcodln lho S30's.
· ·1134 ac:ceu 10 nlco size parking lot,
.... ......,. 1110

In good location.

-

"MISC." ,

EOfi'ADA~~~===~

Large owl Ia~ approx. 20 lishlrtg reels; bango, gas
cooking stove, dishes, live guns (double barrel· &amp;
pump), tools, gas stove and some modem pieces
lumllure, plus lots nofllstad. .

OWNER, JIM FIELDS
DAN SMITH, Auctlonee~- W. Va. 1515

In lAming Memory of

Patricia A. Kuhn

BINGO

who ~ft '" one year
ago today,
.
February 23, 1996

,,

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MON.&amp;WED~

HOWERY'S
.ANTIQUES i. COLLECTIBLES SALE

6:30P.M.
STAR BURST

$1500.00

sso.oo .... '

........
.
BEECHGROVE

&amp; TraiiOr'l
'llw IICJHEV &amp; Go! HOME I

ROAD·

C.ITOOAY.

~841~

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8001142483

PAST OR PRESENT .
UNEMPLOYMENT CONPENSATION RECIPIENTS

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H~~:!l!:.t.&amp;~Ladlee !'lome Jouinals, t~'a 'CIIh ,.,..,., ,1
' · oY~rter tin, 191'4 Tholins lln, mtllallunch
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DOJON Jumbo peanut butter Jara. bana; ~ Wire;
bnich .frog, Davy .Crockett
McCoY cookie ~
,blaCk Gl!flll gl.. v-, occ: Jlpan, tall! prsa,
leather s.-Mng . machine, Star wa~ potller, .
lamps, post cardl, ~portlcarifs, old gamee, ilonB jiiS;
Teh Practical OliiO Famlsr ~r late 1800'1, old
coins, blow glasa, crackle glasa, Ohio art apln top, art
glass, metal fannall tractor, GriiiWOki d&amp;mpsr,
,depression glasa, Gonder, elv$r plate, PlcJ!dy Rosa
platter, salt &amp; pepper sets, GllchriiiU50 .Ice crueher,
Satuauma . 4" Ginger jar, celluloid ~-.
Welltmollland, printed ~fed
pluunilch more.

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8ubmtelion of a Prwa~:allon doe. not gull'tl(dliaiiiiOIInlent, Of funding.

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Locatild 95 miles SE bl Cokunbus, Ohio. Take 23S t9
l .3!iE,I'ollow 35 to·St Rt; 325 N. Go appiox. 8 miles.
This 18 only • partial listing · due lo advertising
deadlines.
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Cabinet lof watch repel~. Hotel ~tchboaf'\1, calenda18
• 1942 F.J:. Kerr Gro. $101'8 &amp; 1958 Dar\ IJiwi8 RoiHIII
· · 1~'•1&amp;$0•a Galllponl Trtbunea &amp; GaiH8
Magazinee' 1930's Farmer'• Wife, succe.stut

• AUCTIONEER FINIS "IKE" ISAAC
PHONE 6~4-38. 1370 ANP 3$8 8880
Llcll tiCi ancl
Ohio

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8010 North $tate Route 7, Chaahlre, OhiO
859 Thfrd Avenue, Gltlllpotla
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~1,05 Hiland Road, Pomer,oy, Ohio · ·

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HouM lor .... In Aul\anol, 114~·
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Call to see if you may qualify at 614-367·73421:Jrt. 11Aor$14·
992·6629 Ext. 11A. Preapplications inay,be obtained at ,any of
foiiOYfing GMCM·JTPA locat~ns: '
·· ·

GOY'T FORECLOSED
For l'ltlnle• On
Dellnquonl
T11, Aepo'1, REO'•· Vour Ar•.
1'1111 FIN (1)1io0-21 ..1!000 EJd,

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If you are attending vocatiQnal training or cO,IIege or plan ·to
attend Spring Quarter, .you may be ·eligible for :classroom
training funds. . ,
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Gallia·~igs Community Action Agency· JTPA has a .limited ·
amount of funds available at this tlinta. This program Is riot
incom~ baSed
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Cooperating educational facilities includ~: Unlv.nll,Y 'of Rio
Grande, ·Buckeye Hills Career Center, Hocking College, Tri·
County JVS, Ohio l,.l,ntve~lty. Washl!"gton State CoiT)munlty
C9ilege, and Sh~wnee
Sta:te University.
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ANtiQUE OR COLLECniLE AUCnOII
lsws llctlo• House
Vlntin, OWo
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Saturday, Ml!f(h 1 997 7:00 p.lll.
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STILL UNEMPLOYED??? READ ON ...

Public Ncitlce

I Pagevllle Rd.· A
ranch thai's never
been lived in. Has 3 bedrooms, 2
and a heal pump.
Well insulated and sitting on a two and .one half acre
wooded lot ·
~9,900.00

POST.467

· God saw that you
· were . getting · rired.
and the cure was not to be, eo He
wrnpped Hu amu around you and
whupered, come with me. Now you're
at peace .and we're in pam with jiUt a
memory. Sadly ,m illed by your children
Sandy, Cathy, R~y &amp;: Bob

Driver .
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DWNEIIIOPEIIAlORS
HIIOI MOlder Modol True!&lt;

C.lh Poaltlve ID R.treehments
At.ictloneer's Note: His building Ia tul~ his wallet
Is 111m, eo won't yo11 come and buy and help old
Jim II
"Not Reeponllble tor Accident •
orLoasol

1\IHilliHi'.. H .I• I l l '

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AI the same old location, 5 miles West of,AI hens,
Ohio on Rt. 32 and 50· Sunday, March 2, 1997 at
11:ooam. ·
FURNrrURE: Outstanding, early grain painted,
top Mule Chest, excellent condition; 7' oak knockdown
~-~~~~ w/2 drawers; so• oak S roll top desk wnarge
II
high roll; Excellent oak .48" round glass china
.
lett &amp;·large ·mirror on top; round glass oak
secretary w/round hood &amp; · double mirrors; oak hall
aeat In original finish; nice small Bakers cabinei;
Hoosier iltyl oak kitchen cabinet with flour bin;
Sheraton cherry chest 18x37; walnut primitive 4
csll,fnel 48' x 81" all mortised and ·pegged original;
walnut 12 II~ pie sale w/drawer on top &amp;
~~~~:d'- all pegged &amp; llound bu) painted; oak
wTth claw feel· top and bottorn:.palr of cane
bottoll) pf11uback chairs; ~ak file cabinet; primitive
walnut stapback baae; nice lrg, spinning wheel; 60
drawer card file cabinet; 40 · drawer oak jewelers
oak llatwall; nlca walnut wardrobe; oak Hotel
oak china: library table; Splnnen
table; oak serpentine front dresser;
drum
. table; highboy office chair; lrg.
and MORE;! .
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Approxi)'nately 40 •
American bisque pig
Depression; cut

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DEXTER· A very private · setllng wllh . 1
3
bedroom home sitting on one acre plus 4 lois. Has slorage
building and many fruH t.rees.
$35,000.00

POMEROY· 12x34 Park Home with lots ol extras In the
home and is selling on a leased lot et Royal Oak Park with
full membership thai passes 3 generation. ONLY $30,1100 ,
BfiOADWAY ST.· Middleport, A 1 112 stoty home witl]3 to
4 bedrooms. dining room, lull basement, and a 2 1/2 car
garage. Has a 50• 2251ol and aluminum siding.

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$35,1100.00

1666 UNCOLN HEIGHT&amp;- Pomeroy· looking lor your fllli
home or maybe a raHremont cottage. Hare's just what you
need. A2 bedroom, 1 balli, one slory home.
$22,000
Thla home haa old world ch1rin lnalde. Large ..,.,.,.,
Beautiful woodwork. Glass pock!t doors batWeen L.R. &amp;
D. R • 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1 ear garage. In Pomeroy

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S3t000

~;~~~Including
marked jars· 4 gallon
West VIrginia jar; Hamltton &amp; J9nes;
jars 8, jugs; Heinz baked bean pot·

Exc-ml old upright lentth radiO plus case of
.. mlec.; several. old clocks; good old
lamps; candle etind: unusual old store wallpaper
cutler; ·aaeorlld,iterllnll jewelery; original Coke and
other old .adVertlalng . pes; Bsa~ signs· .Falls City,
Ca~lng Black .l,abel, Old Dutch and MOREl 2 yellOw
hair china doll8 1r &amp; 20' tall; old quilt8 (pre' war): type
trayS; Iron pea.; copper boll..-s; very large German
bailie ftag In txeelr.nt CC!fldillon; World War .1felt 1\at;
good old clnner bel!; buggy seat and MOREll '

COME EAJILY AND LOOKII
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE AND PLENTY OF ·
,
PARKIN.G
AUcnoNEER:RODNEYHOWERY
POl' MORII$1NPQAMATION CALL: 1..acJ0:28.W390
1..14 81!1 7231

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Corlldor Street· 3 .lois with a one beq~

home lhel
more room If you fix · ~p ~
basement. Has equipped kllehen 'nd washer and dryw
included:
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ONLY $12,001

Pomeroy, Hidden behind the City ~~~ 18 a 1lllgl ·2 l)ii!Y"
horne wtlh 16 rooms and ·4 bitlis. qould bt 4 ~
or a large home. Has some newer "*'Pet and cllllilgl., •
newer deck, and a carport.
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Alld DrJafO, All Roc:ondldaned
AIM! - - - 1 II GO And Up,
WIIDoiMr.llt-IUI,·
IIO'I'AL ~ILLY With Siberian
Cllft-10 C-IH, 120. tall

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BIG BENP R.EALTY, INC.
IB I-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 a

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RUSSElL D. WOOD, BROKER

A Groom Shop •.,., Groorntno.

. DRI'WAI.I.

4-46-4618

FooiUrtno '1¥.~';:..:"'"'' DOn
8hHia. S7S

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Judy DeWitt .............................. 44 I-0262

CrMit Ad.

Collngo~,._._..,

J. Merrill Carter.........................379-2184

ll~lt~t~ti~D~23~1.--.:.:.:..:..__;.:..
10gel HI up lptCiaiL Floh
Tank ..... Shop. 2 4 t i Ave. Point Pleuen~ :IOW711-

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cal Tam SOW7'-41a 2113. .... '

Ruth Barr.,.. ,....:........:................ 446.1093

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21113.

li'oAAGE TANKS 1,000 Golan
u,...,., Ron e- Entotprlt I , Clllil, 1.eao.537.-,

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WQI.Ff'WIHINGIIEDS
'IWIAI~

a.yORCTn MIEI
Cu:u.lllftfiM kllv• ~ Ftom
1111.111

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Color~ Col Talo\Y

t.a.711.011511.
S..por Ntm,ndo Na Qomoo, 175:

Twin Bod lllllrooi ' Ba• Sprlngo
1 Year '75i .'BHr Cat Scanner

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COIIIIIRCIAIJ

NIE·STUTES REALTOR!

Truck Bumper And Mounta For
tHo: Pulh Lawn .,.,. Pluo, Sll•tr Brtctv• Plaza.

~ llokola
~tal. eu

750 .Boeta ' Moten

&gt;

MD:I14;2.15-11323

81-t.OJlll.

446·4206
PUT SOME EXPERIENCE TO WORK FOR YOU!
Give Cheryl Lemler • ..tl ror aU your re.. eotate
noedii.D "MEIGS COUNTY''. 20 Yean •mug
•''MEIGS COUNTY", nperte...., lpealls for Itself,

NEW USTING - GIHn TWp. 141 area.
3 bedroom ranch home. this home
featums a spa and !qJ of ground pool
surrOunded by lots of decking from the
master bedroom. Large living room, eatIn kitchen, a pant1y &amp; laundry room, 1'/,
baths, BR. Baclc yald Is chain link
fenced. 121&lt;15 storage building and
one-car garage. all lhls priced In

47151 EAGLE . RIDGE
ROADI Alunllnum sided 1
112 8loly home, living room,
kllchen, over sized
detllchad 2 car garage. FA
alactr1c furnace. Additional
mobile home hook-up. Must
call today lor . an
appointment. 1558

60's.

NEWUSTING
WATI!R I'RONTAGE
18 ecr81 more or 1_, 731, feet of
Raccoon Creek lronlaga. Sits high
overlooking the cr81k. Some woodland,
Would make a beauUiul home aile and
docking lor a boat and IIUIMler fun~
SARA WINDS
Also a new development. Falrjleld
Centenary Road. Green Tl\rp. Land
rnosUy all flat. Acmaga size vary. One

wooded lot.

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fAIRFIELD CHURCH

NEW USTINGI TAKE
ADVANTAGE OF THIS

Acreage - Select the amount you need.

EXCE~ENT

GreenTwp.

. OPPORTUNITY

We are oflerlng two
1'118taurants lor sale. One In
Syracuoe and· one In
Mlcldteport. Everylhlng Is set
up ready lor a new owner,
building, equipment and
Inventory. Included In sales
price. Both currently In
operation and !here Is evari
room to expand the hoora W
you want. Take a tool&lt; at
baing yOur own boast Call
Cheryl today! .
1902

lllnohll4 ,.,.._

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. . . ""'11 1 -1170.

A down-home feel PIMidee
lhillnvl1ing brick
1lzod roomo lnefuaee
room, kitchen, 2 bedroom•
mare. Breezeway allachod to
a-rage. 0\w 2.5 acres, and a
30'x.O' barn. Plus more.
Clola 10 amenltlee.
1178
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RUIDINTIAL 2 dwellings
ahualed on Second Avenue
and loll lltuated at• Thlld
Avenue. Lots of potential and
poealbllttl81. Lat us tell you
about this one. Call todeyl

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CONVENIENT I COIII'Y INCOME PROI'iRTYI
HQIIII!! 193 Lariat Drive, lrl· :=~
levet,tnat ollera .3 bedr~s. more. Lalga blol:k '·bullillng
1 l/2 baths, Ioyer, loving wl1h 2 iplrtments, store room
HUNTER'S SPECIAL! 25.5 room, dining room &amp; kttchen, that Is open for many
Acree rnJI &amp; older home that plus basement for additional possibilities, mobiie home
wOuld make a hunting cabin spa~ e. Nlco lawn &amp; space, lots more vecent ~
AHachod 10 be finlohed lor what you
&amp; older barn. Moslly all landsca.plng.
garage.
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DI ATE want. Over 1 acre tot. Cll fOr·
wooded. Aflordably priced
OCCUPANCY!
• IIGO n\ore lnlormllllon.
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$23,500
lata

S:,::r.;::O:.n

RIVER LOVERS. Enjoy your . weekends fishng &amp;
wall:hlng the barges ftoat by. This like new eyecatchar
Ia empty &amp; ready 10 move Into. Spec:lal feaJures are
approx.. 1.8 acres, 2 car gerege, large cedar dac:k,
IIIICUI11y ayatam &amp; located approx. 4 mi. south of the
Eunlka Dam. $89,900
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NEW UBnNQ. 2 BA, 1 bath located on 127 River St.
Roof 5· yrs., double .pain windows, large storage
building. 2 lois each measure 5011150. Cal us today.

NEW LISTINQI Enormous
tract of lend! Consisting of 5
different . farm a·. , Road ,
frontage, partially wooded:
Being approx. 542.04 acres.
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11901

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If A......-.Raur CMI'Your Held llin't Enough... lhen come view 2151 E. Bethel
Church Road and e"""*1011 ttMI liner things in Ufe. From~ n\om8nt you drive up,
y!)u will ilppreCiille the ~ landlcaped grounds wHh lovely brick patio and
2 goldflih P!lndl. Thill qudty brick ranch olle111 aH the practJc:al nee aaaltlea such ss
· · badroom8; 3 balhl, lormai!Mng 109111 &amp; dining room. lamily room with flreplaca, 2
oar garage and s1orage bulking. Thll property h08l8 an urilall8vable .pool and hot
·
IIAIII. Complelely enckl1.ed wllh IINI8cl !lldWOod and skylights, you wt1 think ·
you're at a I'IIOft. bul irs al you111 lo ~ ye.- ~nd: H you wanllh8 .best life hae

2 LOTS ·• HOUSEl Low price
of $15,000 Older 1 t/2 story
home that has 3 bedrooms,
beth, living room, kitchen &amp;
more.
ISSS
WHY WAIT ON BUILDING
THT NEW HOllE, WHEN
YOU CAN HAVE THIS ONE
ntAT'I READY TO MOVI
INTO? Gorgous spacious
homo wHh a 3 car anached
and 45 plus wooded acres,
fully equipped .kit. 3 BR, 2
bath, so much moral Call at
once! 1120 REDUCED

to ollar, theri.call for your'priYata vlewll~g , ol11ita truly exceptiO~! property. Prlc:ed at

~tM«l9- ~·' Yn~EMAN RiA' ESTATE, INC.

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OWNER WILL
DO
FINANCING! ATTRACTIVE
CORNER LOTI This 3
bedroom ranch style home.
Living room, kitchen,
laundry and bath. Partial
basement. (Immediate
poaaeulonj.

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new

YOUR 111881NG THIS ONE $41,100 Just like brand
4
1 acre tot. So
cuta, )'OU wll belmpre- at lhls pr.lce.- • ' -

llilidlt,OO,, 2 beth home lhua1ed on approx.

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EXTRA NICE BUILDING· or MObile Home Lot.
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RACCOON CREEK FARM- located on State Rout Mature Pine Trees ·onthe. three sides.. Acc:ess
1eo tn northern Ganta Co!Jnty. .Approx. 1 mile creek toAaccoon Creek. Locted In Hobart Dillon Subd.
fi:ontage. 30 flat lola surveyed. Water and electric $11,900.
.
available. $88,000
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NEW LISTINQ. 14x70 moblla home is sat up l 188dy
COI.IERCIAL USnNG- Rio Grande area, 1.6 acras to move into. This 6 yr. old special offers 2 BR's, 2
located on the NE comer of U.S. 4 lane 35 and baths, Plus a WB fireplace. locted at 157 Green
SA 325, lots of potential. $49,000.
Terrace Drive $19,900.
ON THE OHIO RIVER· ~ chac:k out this 2 atoty
colonial !ann house with more t!lan 7 ac:r.~~~~. Located
just minutee fmm GallpoU~. nestled on lhe 'banks of
the Ohio River. You can .have a 3 BR, 1 112 bath
c:otc:intal style home With a 25x30 bam to keep your
hcirae In; Don't let this river.property flow away wllhout
a look. Price reduced.
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OFFICES, OFFICES, OFFICES· that's whal lhia
3,000 sq. ft. building offal'S. Located on SA 1eo near·
Holzer. · Ideal for many uses. Call for more
lnfo,rinatton.

RENTAL PRoPERTY INVESTMENT: This package
conslats of ·2 houses and 2 single apartments. The
Income lrom this w11 more lhll!l make your payments.
CoURT STREET RESIDENCE· Older home ~ 2 They are located lnlhe Vdlage of Vinton $79,900.
slip. unlls or culd be converted back lo 1 lamlly
RACCOON .CREEK LOVERS. Finish this beauty
dr•eillng. Facea clly park.
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and relum Jo quiet and peacetul living. This 1 112
RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY· This almosl brand story semk:ltalat oilers ~ bedrooms, 2 112 baths,
"" ranch style home rests in owr 7 acres of woods o~rslzed equipped ldtdWiot, IIUrlken living·room, heat
with approx. 800 It · ol oreek fronlage. 5011!8 ol the pump and much mora. You must see the eo to 900 It
m.ny featuree ere 4 BRe, 2 balhs. 16x21 LR creek view fiOm thl&amp; 6 acre tract. $119,000.
w/F1811Ch ~. 2 Ia~ lr!lated decks, vinyl sklng, &amp;
8fl 11nattac~ 2 c:a(~,.g&amp;.. !! You dor!.'t .wAA,t 19 \OOkE. ENJOY A BEA\mFUL VIEW OF·ntE OHIO.RIVER
a1 .ytlU1' · Miahbor'l; 'YOU' ,MU51 SEE THIS ON . AND THE GALUPOLIS PARK· Half of this duplu
has been completely remodeled. There are 2
AEOOCED fO $1~,000
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bedrooms, 1. 112 batha, and a large eat In kitchen. Let
the other half help make your payment.
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Shem·L. Hart'""'"·' "' 742·2357

(614) 742-3171 or 1·800-585-7101

Proud......_..or

Kl!thleen M. Cleland 992-6191
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Office•.••••.•.•..•..•••.••.•••• 992-22.59

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~ Chel)'llemley...... ~ ..:....742·3171

CORNER LOT· at SR 141 &amp; Lincoln Pike. 1 1/2 llory
collage Is Ideal lor small families &amp; features 2 BR'a,
plus new carpet, heat pump, vinyl siding &amp; a fuU
basemen!. $35,900.
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EWINGTON AREA· 42 8CteS MIL frqnts 51. AI. 1eo.
MObile home sfte••old house. Gat ouJ yourtractor and
· b!llh liog. This one can ba ~leaned up. Priced at
$39,900.
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Henry E. Cleland Jr.:992-2259

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
11J RUsSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

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Co..Cart, cua•~u,lli~;,.~'*'il);:::;:;
f.ilu&gt;rabWityand ~Jiilt~~~
ch.;p arc a few .,.~.. I ·
why . 2,000
ramiaiet' wi~ build ~

Realty

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Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. FIQyd, 446-3383 ·

446-3636
ROOM TO ROAM...
· HUNT AND THERE IS A
STABLE FOR YOUR HORSE! 46 ACRES MIL 2
STORY FARM HOME IS VERY COMFORTABLE
WITH FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM ... 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS .. . KITCHEN FE1IHUIRE~~~
$NACK E!AR, RANGE WITH GRILL.
DINING AREA. BARN...POND.,..CALL SOON!

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inCormation.

Ap.-.ebian Lol
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Ripley, wv 25271
l.-800458-9990

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BEAUTIFUL LAND...OVER 300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR . WAYNE
NATIONAL
FOREST
~EA. .. F'AQl?UCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE GREAT
OUTDOORS. ' 3 BEDROOM HOME, 3 BAIANSI.I
OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. POND, TOBACCO BASE.
THERE ARE VERY FEW FARMS THIS SIZE ON THE
MARKET...OO NOT MISS OUT ON THIS ONEI

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SlrUeture•, lue.
Dept. GDT,
p,Q, B,o x'614

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YOU •WONi' OUTGROW THIS HOMEI 1D ROOM
~.e:~· HAS 8 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS... LARGE
ROOM ·~[) FAMILY ROOM BOTH HAVE
~~~~~FOR~MAL DINING...EAT IN "''To•u
),
CAR A'fTi\CHI!D GI,AA&lt;:IE II
24'X20'
ONE
(1)
CITY SC~ SYSTEM. NICE

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Elderly Palestinian gunman kills self.
following rampage at N.Y. landmar~

. OPEN
MOll Fil9-9

. NEW Y()RK (AP) - A gunman
fired into a crowd
the Empire
State ~uildina's 86th-floor observation deck, sending tourists diving for
cover and stampeding toward exits.
One person was killed and six others
injured before· the gunman fatally
slwt himself in the head.
The gunm111's passport identified
him as Ali Abu Kamal, a 69-year-old
Palestinian who came to the United
Sllles on Christmas E• from Ramal- ·
lab in the West B111k, Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani said. The man died without
reSJ.ining consciousness five hours
a(\er the shootings.
Witnesses said the man muttered
something about Egypt seconds
before he began firing at about s .p.m.
Sunday onto the panoramic, outdoor
deck that surrounds a large, windowed room.
"I heard a loud poppins noise,"
said ~Luec Will , 40, a 'French
.toprlst visiting New York with hi•
r..uty. "I thought at first it was lit·
de•cllikt playina witll . fireworks.
Mi Qne shot, then two or line
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