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Ohio Lottery

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:No. 1 Kansas
edges Okla~

Pick 3:

7-3-6

pol~t&amp; ·

by two

Plck4:
6-3-5-4
Buckeye 5:

$porta on Page 4

6-21·23-29-32

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Vol. 47, .NO, @7
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01117, Ohio V.lley Publr.hlnil Company

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1 Sectlon,10PagM,35- ·
A Gannen Co.--~·

•Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday,
February.25,
1997
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Middleport studies bridg~ closing problems
By CH
. ARLENE HO
' E'"LICH .
Sentinel Newe Staff I"

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bon a ut e.over con IliOn o the, structure, whether repair is feasible,
She proposed reducing the speed limit and coming up with additional sfii:
or repll\(:ement will be necessary, B~owning said.
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nage to alert motorists.
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• An u""·•·
on
the
status
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ofthe
Hobson
Bridge,
closed
to
traffic
two.
weeks
""'e're·
at
the
mercy
of
the
eng1'neers
now
but
th
thi'
len
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e one ng we ow IS
rowmng e.xp ained that part of the road is within the village limitS, whjle•
and l'lisulting problems as traffic moves across County Road 3 to State that.if th~ bridge isn't safe, we don't want anyone crossing,it," he added.
the other part 1s a county road and the two have different speed limits,
• oute 7, wu given at Middlepon Village.Council Monday night.
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He srud th~t right now the only thi~g to d,? is.to wait ~or th~ ~nginee!'S'
He agreed the speed limit needs reduced and other safety steps need to
Village Administrator Bill Browning reponed he is in touch with Meigs reco"!"!endall~ns . He reiOlnd~ council that wh1le the bndge 1s !n the vii-. . : be taken to avert acq\lents. He said he will meet with county officials to come
f;ounty Engineer Robert Eason, who is working with the Ohio Department lage, 11 IS not village propeny.
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up wnh towered speed hmits on the bypass road .
Browning said the average number of vehicles crossing the bridge daily
In other business:
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pfTransportation DistriCt 10 erigil)eers to determine whether the 70-year-old
bridge CBI) be repaired or needs to be replaced. '
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was 3,920,. whBe the average us.e ·of CR 3 was 1,8001 according to figures
• Council approved the purchase of a new cruiser at a cost of about $18,000
:. Browning said Eason (91d him Monday thai ODOTengineers are "crunch. P':'JVI~ed h1m ~y the county engmeer..
. .
. at !he request of Police Chief Bruce Swift;
ing" numbers to de~l)e the cost of either repairing or replacing the bridge. . W1t!' tbe bndge closed, traffi~ 1s directed over CR 3 at Ho~son to SR 7.
\ voted tohire Randy Might as a part time laborer;
as a first step tow¥&lt;~ applying for.funding.
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Council member Sandy Iannarelh exp~ssed concern about~ 1nqre~ traf· :
• met with representatives of General Refuse, the company contracted to
· State bridge inspectors have been in .and there seems to be· some·ques-' fie
on
that
narrow
road,
the
speed
hm1t
m
effect,
and
the·
bhnd
ex1t
onto
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Co'n."~ract&lt;?r·s get flrst
~t TP ·sewer ·creation

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look ,_ ··
plans

.~ JIM FREEM~N

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.The seco~d ~on tract. will be set ject manager Douglas Uhren.
Sentinel New1 Staff
as1de for Mmonty Busmess Enter·
"We're excited to be part of it" he
.' Construetion .plansfortheTuppers prise. contractors. and includes the added.
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l'lains Regional Sewer District were installatio~ of .13 grinder pump staThe system is expected to be a
!!fCsented tO COntracto~ fO! .the first tmns, SeedI~~ and Other .work. .
boon for economic development in
time Monday afternoon.
· · Construcbonshould be done With- . eastem Meigs County, according to
·• Members of the 1PRSD board and · in Q(le year a(ter the project is bid.
ProsecutingAttomey Johl! R. Lentes,
-engineers froin URS Greinc:r of
The most innovative portion of the who said that several retailers and
Colum~us met with about a dozen project is the ilrip · irrigation field ot.her bu'sinesses have expressed
interested contractors arid material · which will dispose of 50,000 gallons · interest in locating in Tuppers Piains
·.suppliers at the Tuppers Plains Fire· of water daily. from the sewage once the system is in place.
house to discuss bid speclfi'cations.
lagoons.
In addition to the new sewer, the
. . Funding for the $2,695,400 pro"The drip irrigation system is an Thppers Plains area has alsO been tarji:ct will come from a combination of · alternative to land application of geted for hpusing and economic
·loans and public grants ff(lm ·the waste' effluent," · e'xplained URS . dev.elopment, having received an
· J)nited . States Department of Agri· Greiner engineer Jim Stumpp. )' You influx ofntojtey recently in the form
.~ult~'s . ~ Qevelopment .Pro· will .see more of this in the futlire." . of grants including a $500,000 slljte
..wn. (~qn,ne.rly the Farrn~rs: H~e . 'The Tuppers Plains drip irrigation ~rant for developme11t of a proposed
:A
...d\\!ill.ll!~atratiOI\), . .Appa·l·achi.an fteld, the f~ of i•• kind in Obi.·o, will industrial plirk
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· :ltelJ~ !CbJbrillsston,~ De~lil'tnJel!t ''1e1ilo'Ve'llquid ~asle tiolltihC sewaie . '.. ~tlieitt.\\t·litiF~~~~­
Qf:'~'ei9PJIIent: Water: .~nd· ¥~!"' lagoon and distribtlte it'liniler an &amp;dja- fii!Y.~hillll'~:·! tild6l:ated near . ,
Corilpetiuve ,program· (CD(iG) anjl cent field.
Thpper5 Plains o tAte Route 7.
the Obio Public Works Commission ·
Pfoject specifications call for the
Member$
1PRSD bOard
(Issue 11),. ,
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main contractor to subcontract instal- attending ·were Lindsey Lfons,
&gt; , 'Jlae .proJCC! WI!II!e broken into tation of the drip irrigation field to the Hollier. Cole, Sue .Maison; Marvin ·
tw~ con~ts. w1t1! . the first and Atfanta-based Waste Water Systems Keebaugh and Joe Boyles.
largest contract covering the in.stal· . Inc~ . ·
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Bids on the project will be opened
lation of sewer lines, pump stations,
!'This will be looked on as ·a show- Tuesday, March II at 3 p.m. at the
sewag~. lagoons and a drip irrigation casg ... a p~ssor of other systems Thppers l'lains-Otester Water District
~ystem.
m (!le state,' srud URS Gremer pro- . ofli.ce near Thppers Plains.

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:Health carewo.rkers' union argue
i•ga.inst state s.ubcontracti.ng·.... practice

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COLUMBUS (AP) - A state , set~· the tone for other state contracts
:union ofli.cial said he doesn't expect as far as pay goes, but that's all,
:m6remoney. for his workers than the . Regan said. .
· .
•3 percent annual increase negotiated
When Regan'sunion begins nego·
·{or members of Ohio's largest public tiali,ons for .a n~w co.ntract on Mru:ch
employees umon.
6, subcontracung Will be the maJor
But he said the state can help his 1ssue on the table, he said. The SEIU
ul)ion- and save money· by k~p- r~presents about 4,400 doctors, nurs-.
ittg down the number of contracts that es and other health care workers.
~~ogencies award to the private sector.
· "All those issues are open fpr
·Dave Regan, presi"ent of District negotiation. They've never been set
1199 of the Service Employees Inter· by OCSEA," Regafl sai\1.
national .. Union, said Monday that . · The $39,6 million is what the state
seven state agencies wasted $3~.6 ~ould have saved had it ~ired full- ·
million between Novel!l'ler 1995, and tJm~ : do~tors and others !nst~ad ~f
. ·~ovember 1996 by giving contracts paym~ more for the same semces 10
to workers who were' not full-time the private sector, Regan said. The
state employees.
· savinl!s would have come even if the
' Tile three-year tentative agree- agencies' paid full benefits and penment reached Sarurday1between the . sions, something it dOes not do for
state and ·the 38,000-member Ohio . most 'outside contracts, he said,
(::ivil Service Employees Association · "That $39 million repreSents worlc
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Meigs County Commissioners
thai could have,.should have and not· . will meet tbis afternoon to decide a
mally would have been perforined by labor contract with Meigs County
members of District 1199;" Regan Sheriff's Department deputies.
said.
Commissioners met in executive
The Department ofAdminis~tive · session Monday with a mediator
Serviees, which is responsible for who presented a recommendation to
contract negotiations, had noi seen the board.
the union's study and could not com- .
Commissioners came out of execment, spokeswoman Gretchen Hull utive session and agreed ,to recess the
s&amp;i~.
mfeethtinguntilsed2:45 p.m. today. Terms
o · e propo
contract have not
But the state generally finds it dif· been made public.
ticult to hire some health care workSheriff's deputies voted last s(Jmers- especially doctors and physi- mer to join the Ohio Patrolman's
cal therapistS _ to work on the . Benevolent Association union.
state's schedule.
Today is the deadline for the
commissioners i&lt;raccept or reject the
. "Physical therapists are willing to proposed agreement. If commissiongo out to,provide services on a sub- ers do not reject t!le agreement·today,
contracting basis, where they would · it will automaticall~ go into effect,
have more control over their sched- according io Commission Vice Presule," Ms. Hull said.
· ident Fred Hoffman .
In. other business, commissioners

met with members . of the
Chester/Shade Historical Association concerning the group's upcoming
fundraiser.
The group will hold a . dinner
March 21 at the Royal Oak Resort.
In addition; commissioners dis·
cussed installing a light bn a pole
behind the buildin~;
Denver Curtis, ·Ripresenting the
Disabled American Veterans, asked
commissioners if any grants were
available to assist in repairing the
·roof of the DAY building on ·State
Route 7 below Middleport.
Commissioners said they would
see ~~ the building qualified for a
Community Development Blm;k
Grant, but added that even if the
building did qualify, a grant would
not ·be available any time soon ..
Commission President Janet
Howard said she would assist the.
group in locating a contractor for the
roofing project.
.The old Sugar Run School build-

Angry not, offers · possibl~
cause ·to landmark rampage

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Commissioners to decide on new
deputies' •contract this afternoon

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;, NEW YORK (AJ') -· An angry, with ahead wound; the rest ,_;ere in
· rliJJ)b)ing not" lbund in the pocket of serious but stable condition . ·
the Empire State Building gunm31! .
The shQOting prompted ·tougher
iccitses' the United States of using security at the art deco landmark,
ISniel as "an instrument" against · .long a• ·symbol of romance arid
(!alestinians, a. high-ranking PQlice tourismr and raised . questions over
source said. ·
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how Abu Kamal was able to buy the
' The letter; ~tten in English and weapon illegally at .a Florida gun
•Arabic, suggests that Ali Ha5san sbop.
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Abu Kamal had a political motive in
New •York Police Commissioner
.o,pening tire Sunday ni~ht on the Howard Satir called Abu Kamal
86th-floor observation · deck. But · "one deranged-individual working 'on ·
palice said Abu ,Kamal apparently · his own"· and said there was "zero"
acted alone, and his relatives said he evidence so far'that he was linked to
wu. upset·after losing his life savings. any terrorist group.
: Abl! Kamal's note also expre~ses
In .Abu Kamal's hometown of
-'"" inimosity•toward' France and Eng- . G~City, relatives said he had been
·lflld and indicates. that he planned to .distraught over losing more titan
\oenj his anger in an attack at the .$300,000 and bad no ties to Palesll!lll9us skyscraper, the police source tinian radical groups. It was not
said Monday night on condition on immediately 'clear how he lost the
'anonymity.
m9ney, .•
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·, Tho 'fi!l-year-otd· Palestinian
Abu Kamal called home on Sun·teacber, who hllll rep&lt;~n~ly visited day and said lie had fin~mcial prob-,
·tlic building the day ~fore the attack, terns and could not send tuition monkilled a Danish tourist and·wounded · ey to one of hif sons, who is study~ X other sightseen before commit· ing ~ivil engineering in Russia. a sOII•Il'ng suicide w.ith a.shot in his1head. irt·l~w said.
,Olio touriSt was iri qrit!cfl cqftdition
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ing and the Pomeroy Masonic Build"
ing were also discussed with Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes, who ·
recommended that the county reimbUrse people who have donated to
restore the Sugar Run SchooL
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The building, located in Pomeroy,
was the subject of a restoration drive
several years ago, but has since fall. en into hopeless disrepair with crum,
bling walls ~nd a collapsed ceiling.
Lentes suggested that commis.
sioners examine the Masonic build~
ing · and determine if it can be
repaired. The building, which one
time housed the county board of elections, is currently suffering from
neglect.
Present were Heffinan . and
· Howard.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton was
out of the county attending a Coun~
, ty Commi~sioners Association of
Ohio training . session , Howar'&lt;l
explained.
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Drug testing &gt;

causes. area ::~ ·
prison· t'o be ·:
locked ·down .
CHILLICOTHE (AP) -· thi
2, 700 inmates at the Ross Corre~·
tionallnstitution l'limained locked in'
their cells today while the entire'pop:..' '
ulation ·was tested for dfu~. . •
Corrections officials srud the sur- •
prise tests were ordeq:d after'months .
of random tests indicated a high inci- •
dence of drug use BJ11ong ifimates. :
A~out IS ~rcent tes~ J1(1$itivej'
· compared wnh the 24 perce!'l typi··~
cal at most prisons.
::
inrpate testing positive ·wii.J:
face
action within ~

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·TRAILER DESTROYeD - Th• tnrller home ' . when In ~I lemp tiPPid over. The treller we~
9f the Alln WIIIOII fi!IIIJY, Fro,rt Street. Racine,
fullY engulr.d when tiJen,en arriVed. 1'hel-. _ .
- gutNd by fire Jutt lfllllr noqn.~f. 8qott
no lnf1!11.... Five truckll .in&lt;l 11 firefighterS ·
HIH, anletant chtilt, Aeclne·Fire .Depl.rlufttilt,
reeponcled end _.. jill tht acene Jor llbollt twO
reported ftlat Wllhn tokl 111m the fire .ltllrted
hou~a. (PIIoto by Dennie Wolfe) ·
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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Military subordinates ~hould be accountable

·The Daily Sentinel

llr DeWAYNI WICIOtAM
Glnnllt ..... 8IMoe

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AecuWellher" forecast for
MICH.

Harry E. Clark, 64, of Pomeroy, died unexpectedly at his residence on
'Monday, February 24, 1997.
·
.; · He was born February 21, 1933 in Downington. son of the late Hetben
hod Edith f{uddnelf Clark. He was the owner/operator of the Clark Cab Com·
'•pany, and amember of the Pomeroy Eagles Gllub.
' He is suryived by his wife, Donna Kay S~ Clark of Pomeroy; sons
)ind a daughter-in-law, Ricky Clark of Metam~ Indiana. ~nd Terry:~ Bev·
, "erly Clark'lif Ellenwood, Georgia; daughters and a son·m·law, Vtcki Han·
. '"son of Pomeroy, and Sherri and Harry King of Minford; a foster daughter,
Vanessa Bell of Columbus; sisters and brothers•in-law, Hazel and Lester Hen·
':d~rson of Dcaberry, Florida, Ffalcie and Bob Collen of Dea~qy. Florida,
Hildred and Charles Gwinn of Athens, and Hester Sickels of Athens; broth·
1
~ers and a sister-in-law, Homer Clark of Lehigh Acres, Florida, and Harold
,. and Vickie Clark of Albany.
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' '. Also surviving are six grandchildren, Brent and Chad Hanson, sons of Vic."ki Hal\sbn; Jerica Clark, daughter of Rick dark; Leigh Ann King, &lt;!&amp;ughter
''of Sherr! arid Harry King; Amber Joann and Clayton Ray Clark, children of
·"Terry anii Beverly Clark; and several nieces 'ftnd nephews.
.
• . He was prece.ded in dCI!Ih by his paren!N, Herbert and Ed1th Huddnell
:Clark; and by a brother, Howard &lt;;:lark.
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· Services will be 7 p.m. Wednesday. FebruiiiY 26, 1997 m the F1sher Funcr·
at Home, Middleport. Friends may cal\ one ~our prior tO _services. The Rev.
Peter Tremblay and the Rev. Eugene Gill wdl be offiCJatmg. : · . . ,
·' In lieu of nowers, contributions for the family may be mat led to Vicki
' ·Ha11son, P.O. Box 522, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769:·
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to court

Ruby Augusta Diehl, 93, of R!!tland, died Monday, February 24·, 1997 at
:':Veterans MemoriaJ Hospital in Pomeroy. ·~
,
.· ' She was born on June 26, 1903 in Red 6ak, Iowa, daughter of the late
:·~ush and MillY,.Scott J:?iehl, and --:as·employ¢ as a laborer a~ American Elec'tric Coil before she retired,
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,.. She was a member of the Rutland.Garden Club, the Harrisonville Order
:'ofEas~m Star; the Wbi~ Shrint'in Gallipolis, and the Zion Church of Christ.
''She. attended the Harrisonville PJ;'esbyterian Chun:h.
· .
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' ·· She is survived by a sister; Stella Atkins of Rutland; a niece, Gloria and
-iPaui.Kloes of Pomeroy; anephew, Gordon and Maty Atkins, Mercer Island,
· Washington; a foster nephew, Roger Alkire of Pomeroy; foster meces, Sh~rley
'j;tanhiy of Pomeroy, and Marilyn Wilt of Lancaster; great nieces, Lmda
1
;.McConnell an4 Lisa Carefoot; gr~at nephews, David, Mark. Danny .and Paul
:;'Riggs, an(l ~ichael and l'!hn Atkins; great-great-meces_. Cass1e and Rachel
Riggs; and great-great-nephews, Michael and Danny Rtggs.
,
:;. Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a foster brother, Fehx
· Alkire: lind an infant brother.
· Services will be I p.m. on Wednesday, February 26, ·1997 in the Fisher
~)uncral Home, Middleport_. Burial will be in Wells, Ceme~ery, and th~ Rev.
· Krisana Robinson and the Rev. Eugene Underwood w1ll be offictaung.
' 'Friends may call at the funeral home fron(1-9 p.m ·Tuesday, February 25,
-, 1997. Eastern Star :&gt;ervices will be held at1~:30 p.m. .

;faye ·Will

·predit' union ' m_,~bership
~r.uling

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Harry E. Clark

IND.

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Chance of rainfall increases

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tonight thr-ough Wednes ay

' HarrY E. Clark. 64. of Pomeroy. died Monday, Feb. 24, 1997 ai his reii. dence .
·
Born Feb. 21 , 1933 in Downington, son of the late Herbert and Edith Hu?dnell Clark, he was the owner/operator of t.he Clark Cab Co. and ·a mem'*r
of the Pomeroy Eagles Club.
. · ·
He is survived by his wife, Donna Kay Swaitz Clark; sons and a daughter-in-law, Ricky Clark of Metamora, Ind., and 'ferry and Beverly Clark ~f
Ellenwood, Ga.; daughters and a son-.in-law, Vicki Hanson of Pomeroy, arid
Sherri and Harry King of Minford; a foster d!Jughter, Vanessa Bell of,Colum· ·
bus; six grandchildren; sisters and brothers-in-law, Hazel and Lester Hen·
derson, and Halcie and Bob Collen, all of Dcaherry. A~ .• and Hildted and
Charles Gwinn, ..and Hester Sickels, all of Athens; brothers and a sister-inlaw, Homer Clark of Lehigh Acres, Fla., and Harold and Vickie Clark of
Albany; and several nieces and nephews.
·
He was also preceded in dea[h by a brother, Howard Clark. :' . , .
Services _will be 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, . Mid· •
dleport, with the the Revs. Peter Tremblay and Eugene Gill "officiating.
· Friends may call one hour prior to services.
. .' ·
· In lieu of flowers, contributions for the family may be mailed til Vicki
Hanson. P.O. Box 522. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

Ruby A. :·oiehl

(Continued from Page 1)

provide trash service for the village, ~ho were there to get teedback on the
quality i)f service being provided;
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• agreed to advertise for bids oil health insurance for employees;
• he8fCI from Roger Manley on an excessive water bill and the po~sibili. ty 'of l!- (lieter problem:
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· • agreed to reduce the speed to 20 mph on Beech Street behmd Vaugh·
~n·s IGA while construction goes on, with the change .to go into effect as soon
as signs can·be erected;
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• and discussed asking the Middleport Fire Department to handle the fireworks on July 4 this year instead of hiring a proressionallirm. ·
Mayor Dewey HQI'!on said he felt the firemen did a better job than the
· professionals.
He noted that letters have gone out soliciting donations for the fireworks
display, and said that his hope is that donations ·will be adil(juate to make
this year's display "bigger than usual" because of-the 200th anmversary obser·
vance of Middleport's first settlement,,
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. ,.,. Atlen4J.nglhC ·m&lt;;J:.ting ~ereJ;lorton,-Fou~cd m~mbers lannarelh, George
Hoffman, John Nevj)le•.Ra~ Gwiadowsky, Mtck Chtlds and Beth Suvers. Filling in for Cler~reasurefQennis l!ockman:was Linda Broderick .
\
'

Rachel Back Hicks ·
. Rachel Carroll Back Hicks, 92, South New Jersey Avenue. Wellston. died
Saturday, Feb. 22. 1997 at her residence.
Born Jan. 12, 1905 in Carter County, Ky .. daughter of the late Luke .P.
aQd Sabra W'llker Carroll, she was a homemaker and al!cndcd the Wcflston.
No. 3 Church of Christ in Christian Union .
Sh~ was also preceded in death by her first husband, Otha Back; in 1941;
a second husband, Sam Hicks, in 1984; two sons, Lukic A. Back and Virgil
N. Back; three daughters, Cora Back, Mary Lucille Riffe and Gamet Smith; ·
an infant son; a grandson, Eric Frocsch;-and by 2 1 brothers and sisters.
Suryiving arc three daughters, Sabra Miller of Port Chariol!c, Fla., Barbara Frocsch of Wellston. and Linda Rife of E'tcro, Fla.; two sons, Bob Ba.:k of Gallipolis, and Sam Hicks Jr. of Rutland; several grandchildren and great·
grandchildren; a sister, Alice Back of Grayson, Ky.; and . scv~ral nic.:cs and
~~~-

.

'

"

president. "
Taft pen;uaded lawmakers in 1993
to move the primary . to the same
Tuesday in mid-March when Illinois,
Michigan and Wisconsin vote.
Taft and GOP legislative leaders
thought that lhc races for president
still would be hotly contested in
March and tho candidates would he
forced ·to campaign heavily .in Ohio.
But Bob 'Dole had the GOP nominalion finnly in hand by mid-March

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home

Owners and
Mobile Home

Owners Special
Savings.
Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. So it's
only fair to charge you less for
your insurance. insure your
home and car with us and save
even more with our special

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'*'

-~....,be;,. ........ by

&lt;IIMiilll ....

illomdOnoltbeoubocripdoo,

•,

MAILSUasCIUPr!ONS
- -~c-!J

.

.

13 Weeki ................ ,;......................... 1. .... S27.30
76 ~ ........................................:........1$3.82
52\\ab:..o................ ~........................... SIOS.56

.~Moll!tc.Mr
llWeob..................................
,,.............S29.l'

ltWiob.........., ..,,,,,, ..................... ,....$.!6,68
' !12'Neetl... ,;.. ,.....:, .... ~ ......;........... ~·....... 1109.72

,,

Fii\1. .............................. 15'4

Rockwell '.·~ .............. ~ ..............&amp;?\

Rb-8Mt1 ................................ 178
Shoney'1 .........:....... ~ ........... :.. 7\
Stir Blink ..............................40\

. .Ire
---

Wertdv'a .............., .................22'M
Worthlngton .......n ....... ..........20'1.
.~

SI~~rl·

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.

the 10:30
a.m. q , provlcMcl by Adwat
of Qllllpo!ll.
'.
t

.,

1,.-

'

·

Announcements
Tnlstees to meet

The Board of Trustees of Colum·
bia Township will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the fire station.
ROid dollinl slated
·
P;uldnson Road in Rutland Township will be closed starling WCllnes- .·
day until further notice for road
repair.

'
'

.

.

•

and paid liulc attention to Ohio
before its primary, while President
Clinton. who had no major Democratic Party opposition, waited until
after the primary to visit Ohio.
Taft predicts that the 2000 election
will be more compctitive, ma~ing a
March primary date more cffccti.vc.

•

By
Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture
Our friend's vacation cottage
summer was so small, people
kept dropping on their film at the
window to be developed.

***

You've-reached middle age when
it's a doctor and not a cop who
tells you to slow down.
·

** * •~··~ft·••
*rough
* *. One week
'·,

Memory: the lhil)g we
with.
PoliUcs is

you're on. the cover of ..Time,•

and the
it.

ne~l

week you're dOing

***

Teacher to firs!·grade class: "II
you can't write·your name when
you grow up, you'll have to pay
cash for everything.•

'·

P.blbllej ......., die ril!&gt;t lollllj'" ''
dur;
....... AUbo&lt;ripll&lt;\o periO&lt;I. S•bo&lt;ripllon n&gt;Je

.

Lawmakers •want Ohio presidential primary back in May

Hospital

,m.
home nnjcr servh:e'b •vailoble.
.
.

'

Services will he II a.m. Wednesday in lhc Rogers-McWilliams ftWC~dl
1-lomc. 125 E. Fir.;t St., Wc!lst&lt;in . with lhc Rev. JctfThacker·nfliciating. Burial will he in the Greenlawn Memory Gardens, Coalton .. Friends may call ut
the funeral home from 6-Y t&lt;might.

Stocks

.

· - · •· . ·

Middleport studies bridge

·

'

·

RubyAugustaDiehl,93 , ofRutland, diedMonday,Feb. 24 , 1997atVet·
By The A..pclated Pr•••
becoming mostly cloudy. Lows in the erans MemoriaLHospital .
.
.
Southerly winds were carrying upper 30s. Southwest wind 5 to 10
She was. born on June 26, 1903 in Red Oak, Iowa, daughte~ of the late
Rush and Mary Scott Diehl, and was employed as a laborer at American Eleccloud-building moisture into Ohio mph.
today, increasing tho chances of rain
Wcdnesday...Cioudy: A chance of · tric Coil before she retired.
tonight and Wednesday,_the ,Nation·. rain in the a(ternoon. Highs in the
She was a member of the Rutland Garden Club, the Harrisonville onter
al Weather Service said,
·
upper 50s. Chance of rain 5.0 percent , of Eastern Star, the White Shrine in Gallipolis, and the Zion C~urch ofChrjst.
The rain will begin· in souihern
Wednesday night ...Occasional She auended the Harrisonville Presbyterian Church.
. .
Ohio· tonight and spread northward ·rain. Lows in the mid 40s.
S)le' is survived by a sister, Stella Atkins of Rutland; and by a niece, a ·
on Wednesday, fo~asters said. Lows
Extended forecast:
nephew, a foster nephew, several foster niecqs, great nephews, and great-great·
tonight will be in the 30s.
·
Thursday
through nieces and great-great nephews. ·
.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy Wt!h a · Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a foster brother, Fel,1x
Wealller t'orecast:
chance of showers, Lows m the Alkire· and ail infant brother.
.
T?night...Partly cloudy... Then ·upper 40s and highs in the lower 60s.
Se~ices will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in ihe Fisher Funeral Home, Middle. port, with the Rev. Krisana Robinson and the Rev. Eugene Underwood officating. Burial will be in the Wells Cemetery. Fncnds may call at the funer·
a1 jlome from 7-9 tonight, with Eastern Star serVIces to be held at 8:30p.m.

COLUMBUS (AP) - .Two legis- . betrer for people to 'fcss up to that '
·"· COL:tlt.tBtJS (AP)-An'.official wc'fc not p;.rt of their traditional
Iiiith ihe Ohio Banliers ' Association · mci\lbership, The Columbus Dis· lators say Ohio's decision to move . artd move on."
lasryear's presidential primary elec- . Only 31 percent of the state's reg'jai&lt;l a court t;~~ling that limits mcm- pat&lt;;h reported Monday.
1
lion
to March instead of May was a istcred voters went to the poll s in
'llcrship in · federally charted credit
Tm not surprised at all that the
·
m
istake.
and they want a May date March - one of the lowest primary
unions should be upheld by thj: U.S. Sunrcme Court is looking at this case.
voter turnout showings in memory.
~upreme Court. .
.
·
Wc' b n•t take in ne.w people and·arc reinstated: ·
.
''Tlw
Ma'rch
primary
was
a
wor·
A vote by the House is expected
,,. Bui the ·credit unions hope the · vc~ limited in what we can do.
thy
·
e
xperiment,
but
in
my
opinion
it
soon
on a Kasputis-Brady bill that · ·
Y.igh coun will strike down the rilling · Wc 1re def;..itely hopeful that it will ·
wa~
not
successful,"
s'
a
id
Rep.
would
change the •presidential pri·
that said fed.erally charted credit b~ 'l~~rturnod , " Janet Gaal , manager
tin·ions 'no longer could solicit 'llusi- aQd1 treasurer of the 63-year-old Edward·, F.; ·Kasputis, R-Oim.:ted mary from the third Tuesday in
March back to tho first · Tuesday in
ness ffOm groups not sharing a tom· Chd~ie &amp; Industrial Federal Credit Township.
He
said
the
March
dale
gave
the
May. The House 's Ethics and Elcclnon bond. The court said M()nday it Union. said.
state
and
local
parties
less
time
to
lions
Committee voted 8-1 to rec~ill hear arguments.
"J)le (lower court) ruling has
recruit
candidates.
and
candidates
ommend
approval.of the hill on Feb.
• "When' the common bond limit'£d us trpmendously. We started
13.
becomes a'Joke anci' essentially any- lakihg in small groups when the rail· less time to campaign. .
Kasputis,
who
plans
to
run
for
secBut Secrctaiy of State Bob Taft
one can .join, there's no difference roa&lt;l'was declining," she said .
rctaty
of
state
in
1998,
has
added
said
·the March primary· deserves
C~X Transportation jobs in
¥tween ~credit uniOQ and a mutual
majority-party
musde
in
the
House
to
another
shot in 2000.
savings ~nd loan, and they should be Columbus have dwindled to 230
a proposal advanc¢ la&lt;t year by Rep.
"We've only had one try at it," he
iaxed· and re~ulaled," said Michael froni~ .500 a decade ago. Chessie &amp;
Van B~Rifk, executive viee PreSident · l~dJslnal ha.~ survived by letting Cllh· Dan Brady. a Cleveland-area Demo- said. "My cpnccrn is for the voters of
crat who mn. unsuccessfully for sec- Ohio and whelher they have an
~ft~e)l~\i~"!s: as~ociliti?n.
. . .er ~yps of cmplo~ccs join. Since rctaty of state in 1994. ·
opportunity to have a say in an
· · Ban'k:ers ha.ve long ObJected to IIJe 1984;·p groups outside the raJiroad
"The March primary was a disas- extremely . important national dec itax~fr~c status or credit u_nions. The : have]olncd the credit union. althoogh ter," Brady said. "It would he much sion- who will be the candidates for
Amenoan Bankers Assoctahon est1· · member accounts 'have fallen · to
mates the annual'lax saving~ of cred- 1,190 from the 1983 peak of I.S23.
it union.• is.$800 million.
·
· Siil1le 1983, the number of credit
But Il)llny Q~io credjt u'nipos have unionS""ln Ohio has dropped 16 696
said thei.r livelihood is threatened if from 1, 163, mostly due to mergers.
Units of the Meigs County Emer7:48 a.m., Holly Lane, Pomeroy,
~hey ca~'t.,enroll ,new me~ be~ who Mcmqership stands at 2.7million and
gency
Medical
Service
answered
Karen Triplett, treated ai the scene;
L
··
· industty assets arc $9.8 btlhon - up
·seven calls -for assistance Monday:
9:29a.m .. Liberty Lane, Pomeroy.
~The
y Sentin~t' from 1.~88 n~ures of 2.3 million and Units responding included: · · Avanellc
Pass, Veterans Memorial
$5.(l bi)lion respectively.
·I '
...
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
Hospital;
, tUSJ'S liJ.'tO)
,.'
· 6:47 a.m. : Laurel Cliff Road. . 9 p.m ..'Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
'i
·hbllahed every afternoon: Monday through
· Pomeroy, Harry Clark, dead on Brian Hayes, VMH;
,fridoy.- Ill Cou~ St. Poll?'rttY· 9hio, by, the
arrival; ·
9:57 p.m.; State Route 143,
.n,
'Phio Valley Publi1hina CompanyJqonncu Co ..
J l '".
il'oinoroy, Oh;o 4l7~9; Pit. 992-21l6. Se&lt;:ood.
Dwight Carl, VMH.
tla~~• pottqe paid ot ~~.Ohio. _,
,I
RACINE
Am Eie Power ........................42~.
~ews
.
. .
1·1It...........................·......~73'4
AkZ0
12:40
a.m.,
volunteer fire departMintbtr: The A8.ocillled PrtSA. uild ttl~! Ohio
Veterans Memorial
AmrTech .~ .............................64\
~.N,cwlpaper A'86ciutton.
I
'' '
'
Monday admissions - Earl L. , ment and squad to Front Street;
Aehl•nd 011 ...........................43\
structure fire at Alan Wilson rcsi·
!PosrM'AS'QR: Send n~re~~ correcttom to
AT•T i.;, ................................... . 44 . Lockett, Middleport.
-;Jbt .Oall)' Sentinel. Ill Codrt St .. Pomeroy.
il~nk Onli ......,........ :... ~ .......... 46l
· Mon'day discharges - Janet dcncc .. no injuries reponed.
•.~io 4,_769.
.1
RUTLAND
Bqb E¥ilns .............. :~ ............13'1.
ffawk, Middleport.
9:
II
a.m.,
Main Street. Sandy
SUIISCiiiPTION RATES
Borg ~Warner .........................'40%
Holler
Medical
Center
a, Carrltr: or Motor Route ' ·· ··
Chempkin ............................. 17'1.
Smith..Pleasant Valley Hospital.
015charges Feb. 23 - Judith
.,One \Yee:k ,, ,,, ,,,.i' \' ''''~NO~OOOOOOOO..OOO" ''1'"''1'''"$2.00,
Che!'llllntl
Shopa
............
;
......
4'!.
One MOfllh ................................................$8.10
Sanders, Willia Scites, 'IYier Young,
~'::ldlng .......................... 33%
':0~ Year ............................................... $104.00
Erica Hesson, Carolyn Atkins.
.1~ogul ...........,...........25/o
Gannet;A ...................................81 ~
.
SIN.GLI COI'Y PR!CI!
Births -' Mr. and Mrs. James.
Doily .................................................... ~s CemA
Goodyfi!r .............................. 54~
Knapp,
son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
•
f
i \' i
-~'
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K-mert ~:...................................12
Steven Norvell. daughter, Leon,
Su~riberl ~ deHirh•a·.to pny ~·.c:af'lier. lt'l3)'
1oanc1s End ............................. 2n.
¥mrit in adviufCe·Ui~t 10 1be Daily' .Sentinel
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Sparks,
Limited
,;
...
:.,
..........................
18~
Ollll three, Mx oi' ll100nth ~iA. Crecfit will be
son,
Gallipolis.
Jhen carrier each week.
· ,: · { ·
Ohio VJ!IIey Banjt ....................;tJ
(Published with permission)
OrMt Vel-.y ...... o.............. -. ...... 31 :1.
NO subabiption by mall Permlned In aftu
ft~plas ...... ~ ....... ~ .................... 28

,Dail
..

I

dtia

Avanelle Bass, Pomeroy, died Monday, Feb. 24, )997 in Holzer Medical ·
Center.
Arrangements will_be announced later by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport,

.Squads answer seven calls

,,

a

u,.s:

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aso-1

·:.~

·

" Faye Will, 82, of Pomeroy, died Saturday, ·February 22, 1997 at Veterans
' 'Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
·•
.
)'\housewife. she was born October 3, 1914, in Pomeroy, daughter of the
late Henry and Clara Lehew Young.
, ·
·.
.
. • .
She ls.&amp;ittvivecfby a daughter, Susie Hi1i; a grandd•ughter, Kristen Htll;
a sister, Vttgillia Will; a niece, Betty Butt~r. all of Pomeroy, and several
·
·
.
other nieces and nephews.
. .
.• She was precede.d in death by her husl!and, Willis "Red" Will.
'"' Se~ic:es will be held at 3 p.m.loday/Ji\wsday, February 25, 1997_m_the
,,J&gt;'Y,h)g F~neral HOJ?!e in romeroy~. with t~ Rev. Lester Hayman offictaung.
,,J)lffi.ll/ will f9llow ,n.the·Rqck,$11"tlliJS C';elll!lt~,., •.. •· :· · .. ~ ., "· ,, •· .~, .

•

Today irt history

.

·:!

Eek"

hea~ed

.

;Ruby Augusta Diehl ·

The surviva.l of two Bosnian women

Widow's property-rights fight

IToledo I 46" I

1

Tile womeo who'~ lldmilled 10
CllpliJia in c:oate....t 1ex wid! drill
lefJUIIII at AbeJdee• Provin1
Orouad sbouJd have known .beaer.
They brolce lhe nt1es ~shouldn't be
'I1IOMd to act away .wilh it, just •
the aerpants who had sex widl them
nuut be punished.
·
But lhcre n those who diaaaree
- people who believe sex\w
enc:ounren between. y01111g female
soldim and die meri who eommancJ
lhem can be nothing Jess than
"recruit abuse."
Ironically, how the milituy treats
lhe women who broke die uti-frat·
emizing rule at Aberdeen m1 y
depend on what 1t deeidef in tbe case
of an alleged adulterous n:l~onship
between .a female Air Fo~;CC officer
and an enlisred man.
· Sci fu, the woman has. been

Organization women

\

Avanelle Bass

•

E. Clark

Harry

'leu ohuk.

qiiOIIIons milillry Je.knliiUitde widl110w 111M a aipificiM IIUIIIber of lhe women who claimed they
had tbeen sex.wty abused at tbe
Mlliyland trainina facility bad
chanpllhoir stories.
Most experts inside and out of die
mililll}' aaree lhat lhe f~ tbal the.e
sexual contacts were consensual
doesn' t get the hiaher nnking Pll'•
. ticipants in these forbidden liailons..
off lhe hook. But there is'widc disagreement over the culplbility of
women who willingly had sex wilh
lhem.
·There shouidn't be.
In the milituy, .discipline is not
just something for the upper tanks,
it's supposed to govern the behavior
of everyone who puts on the uniform.
Oood discipline begins with an
adherence to rules. Anyime who fails
· lodososhouldbepunished,n:gud·

£
A Gannett CO. NewspaP.r

Wedlltllday, Feb. 26

J

cllqed wid! --.1 ·violllioas of
milillly law, but 1101 the 111M wilh
WASHINGTON -This ia where
w11om she w• inwlved. She fac:es a
it pll complicated.
.court·martial and poaillly a diahon·
111 Coult .... '-"roy, Ohio
Derense Depaltment offk:ials now
Olllblfl clilc:harF· ll'sunlila:ly, an Air
t1+112-21M • F•: 112-2157
say lilaC 40 .percent of lhe female
Force spola:spmouaid,lhat he will
. recruits who reported being sexually
.be charpd with any serious viola·
abused by hiaher ranking enlisted
lions of rules. If·thai decision holds
men at Abefdecn Proving Ground
up. tbe women in the Abenlcoen case
actulily had consensual sex with
also 'llhould act off scot-free.
them:
But just how, fu is tbe military
Meting
out
punishment
to
nonwiUing
to IIIIa: such insanity?
ROBI!RT L WINGETT
commissioned
officen
who
forced
If
in
combat enlisted personnel
Publl8her
join with !heir off~een in torturinaa
. lhemselves uJion young female
recruits will be easy camp~ to lhe
prisoner or raping a·noncombatant,
decisions thai must be made about
will the military's "led-~tray"lope
who's to blame for this consensual
·. save !hem from prosecutiOn? If some
sex.
lunatic .commander oon~nces his
Sexual ~lations between superiors
troops to storm the Wbtte House
; :-:: '::':pars::::, ~
~·~=
and their subordinates is a nulituy
grounds, should lhey be absoiNed of
_,.,_,.,._
• ~·-•---•....._.,.,...
. taiJ9o. But when it happens who is 10
. blame because some higho;r up C()ll·
- . . . . . , . , - - . . , .__..,.,. ~ 7llo StaiiMI, "' eo.r It;
bllune? A!l(l more important, who
vineed them to do il?
-~---CIIIIo-·----ar;-I'AX..o'"'-".•.•_ft_~_.,
should be punished? These are the
l.don'tthinkso.
,
And
neither
should
enlisred
per·
•
.......-------,--------~--------------------·-·., sonnel -male or· female' - wbo
knowingly ~.n. with !heir superiors in .
breaking mtbtuy rules. 'Ill ,prevent .
'future abuses like those thai toOk
lly DONALD M. ROTHBERG ·
place atAbenlcen, the mililaly should
Aleocltlled ,.... Wrltw
go back 10 training and housing
WASHJNGTON - -Rumpled, gruff, street-smut Paul Tully always
women in same-sex units. Enlisred
·oponec1 lhe meetings with exageratecl politeness. "Madam, and h()w are you
personnel uc lhe ·most ·vulnerable
todly?" Slender, cool Alexis Herman unfailingly teSponded in bet' soft Alaba· during the first months of lheir mili·
ma drllwl, "I'm just fine, Paul."
·
·
tuy service. Having young women
Then the bellle bepn, Tully demanding mj)I'C money for Democratic camle1111 lhe bisies of milillry life'from
l'liiDI and Herman keeping a firm hand on lhe purse suings.
olher women should s-.,Jy reduce
In thall992 eampaisn year•.Ttiliy, lhen the Democratic Party's political
the chances of them falling prey to a
. director, smelled vic:tary and was always looking for more money for this
lecherouuupcribr.
·
· or thai House or Senate campaign. As puty executive director, He!1ftan was
The number of wolnen and their
tbe one who often had to say no.
roles in the Armea Services have
Now, President Clinton i1 pre5sing a Republican-run Senile to say yes ·
increased dramatically in recent
10 Herman's nominatinn 1~1111)' of labor. ·
· yean. They are more than·14 percent
"She deserv.. a heuinj and if s&amp;.gets a hearina she's going to be con.o f lhe Army's enlisred ranks, from
firmed," Clinton aald Jut week:. Sen. James Jeffonls, R·Vt., chairman of the
which most of the reports of sexual
senate Labor Committee, has said he will not schedule a hearins until he
abuse and 5exual miSCOnduct have
. p -wt;n to q~ons · aboul Herman's past.mvities.
·
,
come.
Herman, in a chance encounter '!lilh rq,orters at the White House today,
Wi&gt;inen must be prok;Cred from
wu.aslled if ihe would ltic:k with the fight. She smiled and said, ~Of course."
. the unwanred sexual advances of
As ~ .often is tbe case with Herman, most of lhe questions involve mon·
their suPeriors- and punished when
· cy and politics, puticularly her work for Democratic causes while on the
they violate t!te rule against {rau;r·
White House staff.
·
··
nization with hig~er ups.
' .
Amonalhe questions being asked: What role did she have in arranging
To do any less, would be to de•y
the White House coffee klatch that gave political contributors from the bank·
women in lhe mililll)' both lhe rigHts
. _.....com
in1 industry a chance to chat with the president and the govemme·nt's chief
and obliaations lhal derive' from.lhe
banking n~gulatoi'? ·
·
'
oath of-allegiance !hey have sworn.to
White Hiluse officials say documenll show that Herman did n&lt;?t illtend
this country. ·
'
lhe event and did not know that it was amnged by die Democratic National Committee and thai Complroller of lhe Currency Eugene Ludwig was on
tbe gueat list. ·
Haman's strongest supporters describe her as highly &lt;qanized, a mas·
ter of detail.
·
By S.. Ec:lcel
taken to.camps. llhought that was in hav.e some sort of effect, our speak· lion 'Why' for which I do qot have an
"Alexis is a vety stron.(!.IJianager,'' said Mark Steitz, who was commu·
It's 12 p.m. on a Febn••"' Monthe past, something I used to watch ing out," says Sivae. "Our efforts answer," says Cigelj: "We ~an allo:ov "
nic:ations director of lhe DNC whcn Herman was executive director and Tul•- ,
. 1y - nml)ing the political diviSion.
.
.
.
.
.
day, and l.am sitting _in lhe coffee in movies,"
have taken·a long time. 'I'h&amp;re have for say 3 percent of the aclolulatiOn
' Alonj With 34 ' olbi!r women, been some mulls and SOJJMJ ·dlup- beina bam ·evil. •Maybe' I 1' '~tt~in
"111c skill of knowin1 how to imdentand:r.:le, undentand situations . ~ of the New'York'Slitl'liloii' *iih
h·
ed h 10 be 1he
h iwo Bosnian conccntration-cimp' vic- Cigelj and,Sivac ~lept in t\vo former pointments."
born piy~hotic. But how di&gt; ,yqu
and ·manage lhem, those were the 1 mgs 1 allow
er
toug
tims, their interpietel'i and two pub- business offices. 'Which were used as
•
One
of
the
resultS
is
that
fot.
lhe
explain
lhe rest of them?" ' '
;
cop 10 Ron Brown's always smil~y. funny cop," said Steitz. Brown, who licists from Cinemix. The situation, interrogation rooms during the day.
first time in histury, rape has 6een ·
Though they have tboulftl about
1a1er became Clinton's commerce secretuy, was puty chairman and Her- . in other words, is surreal. .
Each
evening
the
women
would
identified
IS
a
weapOn
of
wu.
Which
·this
often, Cigelj and Si:vac .-, •
..._•s pc)Jitical J181n1n:
··
.
B
has bee
When Clinton took office in 199!, Herman was named direc:tor of lhe
ut surreal
orne a way of wash lhe blood from the walls, the is to say thai the international i!om- lhey have no insight. And·11 the Wll1·
While House Office of Public Liaison.
·
life for Jadranka Cigelj and Nusreta noors,,lhe furniture befon: curling on munity now recogni~s thallhe some er clears away our Pellegrino bottles
·
20,000 rapes committed dltring lhe and salad plates, the talk turns to
Oilton has described Henilan as one of Brown's closest advisers. When Sivac. And by their standards, this is ihe noor to sleep.
And
if
you
were
lucky
you
did
wu in Bosnia were not isolared acts, more mundane topics. CNN neecis
die COI1IIIICliCC secretlliy was killed in a plane crash in the Balkans Jut April, nothing. The two women, a lawyer
Herman played the lead role in making arrangements for his funeral.
and a civil judge reSpectively, new sl_eep. Or at least remained curled on but rather part of a systematic scheme room to set up their cameras. ~
·Herman's White House job involves building coalitions around issues and into JFK this morning, and Cigelj the noor undisturbed. But each night, of ethnic cleansing. Sivac _·and will be a caiJ,in.' Julia Ormond, m,
·
·
He says she just had ~cognac to tty and at least .one woman was unlucky, and. Cigelj's testiinonies also helped indict iletress who is also an executive p~
~.. wilh constit~ groups, especially when !hey are unhappy. r revive herself. Unfortunarely, ·she Cigelj's
fust bad nigh,t clme 011 July 22 guards at Omanka.
.
ducor, is talking up ·~~ling lhC
lbility to miap and sooth ruffled feelings eamed bet: the sobriquet ~·Queen jokes, it had the opposite effect.
· Unfortunately, neuly two yean Qhosts" on her press junket fCJf
17. It was 9:30p.m. and the com.of Scltmooze."
.
But as I say, this is nothing. Fo~
,
of the guards, leljko Meja· later, . none of those guilds have "Smilla's Sense of Snow."
"I fceJ like I've known Alexis fon:ver," said Bill Lynch, who was a deJ!Iily Cigelj and Sivac know a surreillthat mander,
Has all of lhis ileen ~h it?~
kic, took her 10 a room Where •sever- been arrared. In fact, muy se'ibian
mayor of New York during the administration of David Dinkins. Lynch has no mati:h.ln July 1992, Ihey wc.e · al olher suds waited. She was war criminals are living coinfonably women say yes, !hey had to speak 0'\1
worked wilh ~ and Brown when they joined the Jesse Jackson pres- liken from their homes in Prijedor, raped and bearen unlil 2 a.m.
in the homes of .lhe people they for the women who did not survivj:
idential c:amplign just before lhe '1988 Democratic National Convention. . Bosnia. to the Otmu:ska concentration
Ciaelj and Sivac don'tlila: to talk expelled - as are a number of civil· Ommka. As to whether they will see
"She ha !his kind of aenreel facade," said Lynch. "But she's tough as camp. The guw:ds at Omarska were about lhese nights. And yetlhey do. ians. After Sivac was released, she justice, !hey are not so sure. "I ha;ve
nails mlidO and~ no prisonen."
.
once their neighbors and co-w.orkers, Constantly. In July 199S lhey restified · found that a fanner colleaguc,"a t:OUrt no reason to be optimistic," sayp
. The 49-year.old llenMI.wa born into politics in Mobile, Ala. Her father people they •d have coffee wilh. But before lhe International War Crimes reporter who she thought was' her Cigelj, "and evety reason to .,
sued lhe llllje DeaiOCilltic Puty 10 force 'it logive blacks the vore. He later now they pretended not to recognize Thbunal. Last year, they went on a friend, was living ·in her apanment wary."
·
,
beclmc lhe lint blllc&lt;k wltd leader in the awe.
them. The other prisonen were also speaking tour sponsored by Amnesty and had no intention of leaving.
Send comments to 1!14:
Presidelll c.ter named l!er director of die Women's Bureau in the Labor familiar faces, though those faces lnrernational. This week, they are
Which brings us back lo !hat dis- author in cue of this newspaper '?r
Deputmetlt. When abe left aovernmenl service, Herman formed a compa- were now giunt from hunger and promoling the doeumentuy "Calling turbing question:· How can ordinary seild her e-mail at saraeumaol.com~
ny to-help n:auil black women for corporations:
·
wild-eyed .from tortu.e. "I was ·in the Ghosts," which will air on Cine- people tum on their friends and
Sara.
Is a ayacilcateil
ne Rev. Calvin H8rper worked with Horman in the mid 1980s when he shocj(," says Sivac, in a documentary max
March3.
. neighbon? How are they capable of writer ror N~r Ellterprlle
- i1 c:hqe of NduitiOI for lhe research~ development division of Proe· li!m about. their ordeal. "Is such ~ ·
"We hoped, we thought it would such evil? "That is part of the qucs- Alloda!hm,,
ter A Gamble Co.
.
thing possible in this century? People
Heiman was hired to help C!ftployees "develop the skills to help them
.,
fullction in lhe corporate enviroiiii)Cnt."
·
.
· Halper cited the case ofa bh!ck woman with a doctorate in biochemistry
who - having difftc:ulty fitling _in at Procrer A Gunble.
"A pld scientist but having trouble working into the system," he said.
Herman pointed out the need to Jet the wriman plugged into the informal By FREDREKA SCHOUTEN
on the side of lhe Tahoe Re'gional mountains brilliantly photographed being crunmed down (Suitum's).
CCIIIIpii\Y netwOrk thai involved socillizing over lunch or at the company
o.m.tt NeWa Servloe
·
Planning Agency. !f lhe Supreme· upon its still surface." ·
throat,'' said Nancic Muzulla, pres.!
fiu*l cluiJ.
.
. ·
..
·
WASHINGTON - Bernadine Court sides with Suitum,lhey feu it
Raehelle Nicolle; the planning identofDefenderofProperty Rilhts~
"Alexis was able to make.that ktnd of thina happen and thts young lady Suitum started planning to. build a could undermine government efforts agency's attprney, said TORs work ·
one of lhe property·rilhll 1f0UPS ~ .
nciw is probably at the associate directlll' level." .said Harper.
retirement home above Lake 'Illhot to protect the environment and hi$- because ~' they shift the benefits and has joined in tbe ease. "We think i~
2S years ago.
toric buildings.
.
burdens of proteeliftl Lake Tahoe n~ in the fiCC of lhe COIISiitutionlll
.IDl'l'f)R'J NOTE-:- Doaald M. Ro&lt;' • 11'1 111M covered polllcl ud
AtthehemofthecaseislheFiltb among all people." The loa·of TORs
But those plans were blocked in
requirement that wh!:n governinf:n~
ph' llllilfnlpt W•n'lnpla rorn.,Aattlpttld ~ rl.eelM6. ·
1989 when the agency that controls Amendment to the Constitution, would deprive the agency of one of lakes
privlle ·property,, it m1111 pa
deYelopment around the lake deemed which says the govemmen1 can1101 .iiS key larid rellrictiQJis.
j~Jit climpensatiim. ~·
·. ,
'
her Incline Village lot a sensitive'wel· "takc'1 private JliO!il!riY for -1111blie use
The Tahoe Jl'Oup isn 'I alone in
Two lower courts threw oudluit·
"land area illl)lOrtant to prorectina the "wilhout just conipenaalion." .
!using TORs, ·New Je~y has lfans. urn's case because she has 1101 tried
. lala:. _The decision, by the Taltoe
Government ilei!Ciea 11f1UC lhat ferred development rights for IS
to sell the development rights
8r Tile ~sncl I d ,._. .
..
·
Regional Planning Agency, triggered th~ simply isn't money availabl~ in years to mailage iJrowth in t1Je !-few ciated
with her land. And lhe Taboe
. 'Ibday ts1\!esday. Feb. 2Sth, lhe S61h day pf 1997. There are 309 day&amp; a legal battle that will go before lhe state and city Coffcn to.JIIY off e~ty Jersey Pinelands, a l·million-ICre Rcaional Planning~y wiiiiiJUC
.. i.lhe,..-.
.
U.S."Supreme Court ~neaday. · prpperty owner aft'ecied by I gov· uea in southeastern New Jersey that
before . the nation's high court that!
Along the way, Suitum, now 111 eriimerit regulation. So poups like is home to rare plant and . animal SuillllJI'IIfluments
Today'• Highlilhl in History:
of an unconstithe'lihoCRegionaiPIIIIIIiftiApncy, ·species and sits atop a large aquifer.. tutional taking of her land can.'t be
On fllb. 2Sth.' 1793. lhe department~ of the U.S. aovernment met 112-year-old widow, hu. become
With' Pmidenl WMhinaton • his home. for the fint dbinet meetina on symbol for a JWopaty·riJbta move· created by Conpess, Joievl!da .and
And the S&amp;ipremc Court in 1978 heard until she tries to sell those I
M;onl
.
mcnt fed up with •on1 IUiiiijt regu- California in 1969 to re,ulale de'vel- upheld the use ofTPRa by ~w York TDIU.
•
. Otp
d.: .. ,. '
.
latina what can be~ on privare !Jpmcnl uound the 'lake, have City to keep r.nn Cennl 1\'anaThe Supreme .Court ·¢oitld very •
land.
.
' auigned pro~y "'trusferablc · portation from ~l!linga 1ky!1Craper ~II J;'es~t its ~ision to that ~ ~
Ia 1$70,,~ Piua V excommunicated ~gland's Queen Elizabeth I.
"Mn. Suitum liu done nothin1 deVelopment rights" thai can he sold on lop or the hiltoric Orand Central '*lunl pomt, said Jerold Kydon, whO . ·
In II~ !II~. Samuel Colt patellred h11 revolver. .
.
· In 1870, Hlnin R. ReYCls. R-Mi.u., became the first,black nw:ulbet of wron1:" said R.S. a.«~ lito attor· off. .
Station.
•
leaches Jli:OPCI'IY rights l~w at Har,
ney
·with
the
consei-vliliw
l&gt;acirtc
·
·
1n
Suitum's
case,
apftl:y
offi~ials
!itl ~~~~It u jlo in to
Out tbe uiteXpirod tenn of Jef.
But property·rig~ts grqilps lrJtll vard University.
·
•
Legal Foundation, WhiCh has' taken., 1ay,' she could sell · her 'IOocalled that TDits are , lillie rilote than a
~ ~ -DaviS. , :r •
·
.
·
.
But, jle sald. "any time !he court ·
up Suitum's case: ·''Sba haan't via- TORs 10 aOOther 'IIhoe ' prupel'l)l scheme that allows~ government to
' 1.! 1901, U.S. Steel Qllp. ~c!lporated by J.P. Mcqan.
~lv'cs into ~ cleblk!~ of. property
lateil py permit iOijaiJUIIUta. Slle owilei' whoee land ia 1101_ip an envi· shirk its retpll!)Sibllity 10 ' popelly nghts
·, Ia 191f, CJNaicftnt ilate 10 .tax ploline.
..
and 10\lernment replations, lJ
hasn't · violated uy environmental ronmcntally .senl!itiw-. Her lot . 0~ ~ho are-affected by aovem- can, with one wave of a hand, shift
, Ia 1941. C ;. teeitg lliaecl J10WeJ in Czecbollovakia. ·
'
Ia J!l83,~'1liii!IIFIC, WiUiamJ wu fOIIIIddead ia biiNewYork ·Jaws. She hasn't liannecliiny lenlitive then woukl bt "reWed." from uae, II!NI replationa.
·
lbe playen on the playina fteld into
wetlands or endanpi'll!llpeCia.
while abe walked away with li9fiiC
110111111111; ... 1.
.
' .
Transfenble de~lopment riJhts different positions." .
· ·'
"She hun 't done IIOYthing tlU:ept cash.
•
· In .J916, Pi 11 t itil ,__.. d B. ~ fled till PhiliAfll uftttr 210 ,_.
arc "a eonvolured 111111. which ia
Thele TORs have proved ..
ofllllt . . . . . . IJI1 .e.i. . . ellccion;
Aquillo IIPf'llld the ...... apply for 1 permit to built one mod·
est home on her vaeant lot."
important tool ia controlliag de~lToday's BirthdAys: Country sinpr Ralph Stanley is 70. Musician
idJ .,.
'
.
Sti111
her
citeha.
caplinred
optDCnt
~
die
lila:.
Louinl,
my Newsom is 68. ,'\ctor Tom Couninay is 60. CBS nic\VIIJiali Bob Scbi~~
· lal9!10. Nh 41 , . ~~~~ tbe polls l!l••h,liiJn dial .-lied in 111
1f01!PS on both sides of the JliOI*tY· road-buildilll and other &amp;Clivi!)' haw effer is 60. A~ Diane Baker is 59. Rock ainger·musician OCcqe Har- 1
.... ¥iclol7 fcJr
Ill of 1ht rufiq SIP fn!stas.
.'
Lake rison is '-4. nlk show host Sally .leuy Raphael is '-4. Aetras Karen Ol'llllle: ·
1 a1Jowed aedinlint,IO IIIII
la!WI:.'i ill Pa ··• OulfW., ~+..U.icllia ~tiDed whe,n righil 'itllje.
.._ ._. ..U.ile hila U.S. bllndta II
• • ., Sltlld; AbiiiL
· · Cllifomia Gov. ~- WU.O.., the , llht)e, ~i~dy reduc:iftl the C'Uttle HOIIIle on ·lhe Ptiii:R") is 53.1tock .sineer~~an Mila: Pe~~~p @be t
·.
.
·
·
. • ..
ulder
Ooldllllloi.
&amp;I JVi!h •
·••IMic NliiDnaiOovetnor'•AI'QOI~..a ..c~of'iMw.t.-~by Allnn) is 38. Actor Soan A*tla is 26.
lliGb u NeW~ llli4 He~ ' foCailt ~ ... "Dalile lhael Of~
Thoupu for~y: "lfpeu~ti.havtd iP t1te way nations do they would
.............. ot ... ~jp-__,.
~York
"J;have
plubliNI
into
die
cu.
~
~
..
.
wilt
the
shadows
of
tha
all
be Jlll.' in·~·"-~..-, Williims (1911-1983). '
li
bfllaaliiWM~ciMdlby, ~
.. ' (, .
' ·.

~inl!NI

OHIO We&lt;~ther

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IL'IUlce Services

214 EAST MAIN
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.TIIUMy, r:ebru-r ,21,1117

The Daily Sen~in,!}

Sports

Southern, Symmes Valley square. off.in sectional finals

.

••
• wednesday at 8 p.m.. the .Southern

Tueedlly, FebruiiY 21, 1117

'TDrnaloes flee the Symmes Valley
V'tk.inp in the Division IV Boys Sectioul Championship II the Alexander Alley in Albany.
T h 1 1
pme will follow the Easlem-Green
tame 116:15 p.m. Southern will be
kin1 its lint Sectional Champinship in several years, ll$1 year losng to in lbe Sectional finals at Rio
rande.
.Spike Rizer's dramatic tip-in with
ust :0 I second left gave the South·
m Tornadoes a thrilling 68-67 first
und sectional tournament win over
be Symmes Valley Viltings in · the
'vision IV Sectional first round at
University of Rio Grande last
ear.
·
With just :08 seconds remaining
l&gt;outhem's Spike · Rizer grabbecl a
kutsy rebound and the SHS big man

So-uthern girls gain district ·finals :
By SCOTT WOLFE,

8 ltttenll

COI'fMDipoiiW-wlldetlolnlnt

· Led by a brilliant offensive perfor-

manc:e from senior Renee Turley, the
· Southern Tornadoes (16-7) defeated .
Portsmouth-Clay, 56-:n ,Monday
night in the nightcap of the Division
IV girls' District Semi-finals at
Ross-Southeastern High School in
Richmondale. '
Crooksville, a 70-52 winner over
Meigs-Eastern in the Sectional
Championship, defeated Leesburg
· Fairfield 44-38 in the preliminary
semi-final match. Leesburg had led
38-36 in a game that was tied most
of the way, however, Crooksville
took the upper hand at crunch time
and scored the last j! points of the
game. The two winners play Friday,
February 28 at Ross- Southeastern
for the District Championship.
Southern was led by Renee Turley
with 20 p(,ints and ten assists in
roughl¥ playing only half the game.
Brianne Proffitt had I 2, Kim Sayre
·9, and Stacy Lyons five. Southef!l
controlled the tip and notched the
FORCE$ PASS • Kanua forward B. J. Williams, left, forcaa
first score of the game, when Turley
Oklahomli foi'WIIrd Eduardo Najera to paSI the ball rather than
4rove
___the left passing lane, then
lllke a ahol.durlng the flra1 half of a Big 12 pmsln Norman, Okla.,
'
dipped
off to ·Brianne Proffitt near
Monday. The No. 1 Jayhawke escaped with • 7N8 win. (AP)
the foul line. Proffitt hit the jumper
and SHS led 2-0. Turley hit the second of two .free throws and the Tor·
nadoes went into their full court
· pres'Sfor ·the second straight trip.
Clay rad the shuffle offense and
found Abby Workman open, but' she
missed and Turley ran coast til coast
By The Aaaoclated Preas ·
Central Connecticut State to a 60-52 for the ~ames' second field goal, 5-0
Otterbein and Muskingum 'have victory over Youngstown State.
' f.&gt;dvanced to the quarterfinals of the
In the second half, Youngstown
;-ohio Conference tournament.
cut Central's lead to five, 31-26, on
:\ Otterbein beat Capital 89.-73 on a dunk by Matt McMurray with
t :!Monday, while M~skingum defeated
18: 10 remaining.
·~\Hiram 69:59.
Central countered with a 10-3 run By OWEN CANFIELD
~ ~yan Roston and Kevin Weakl~y as freshman point guard Karl Greg&lt;&gt;- AP Sparta Writer
NORMAN, Okla. - For one
::lcombined (or 50 points for Otterbetn. ry had four or his 10 points in the
''Roston had 26 · points and 12 spun: Gregory also added seven eight-minute stretch against Okla~&gt;rebounds. while Weakley scored 24 assists, three .rebounds and a.steal for homa, Kansas · showcased the talent
of the No. l tc:im in the couptry, The
~nd had I I assists. Trevor Younkin the game.
. .
rest
of the time, theJayhawks' hearts
: •added 11 points for Otterbetn.
In the Midwestern Collegiate
:• Russell Hall led Capital with 26 Conference, Rob Welch sank two free were on display.
Playing in front of the largest
:~ points and II rebounds, Tony Joseph throws with four-tenths of a second
crowd
in Oklahoma hiSI'?fY. Kansas
,.,added 15 points and Bren Obrovac to play giving Wright State a 56-54
didn't
get
rattled when shots would· scored 14. Joseph and Obrovac each victory over Loyola of Chicago.
-&lt;grabbed ei!lhl rebounds.
·
Wright State forced a turnover and n'I fall early. And the Jayhawks did·
:
Hiram led 24-23 at the half. But got ·Welch's two free throws after n' t crumble when Oklahoma put
' Travis Robenson 's 3-pointcr with ·Loyola tied the game and had a together a second-half rally that twice
. brought the Sooners within a point.
:, 14:58 remaining sparked a · 25- 12 chance for the last shot.
In the end, Kansas won 70-68
., Hiram run. He hit two more treys.
Keion Brooks lei! Wright Stale
1
including one at the 9:23 mark to giVe. with 20 points, Welch added II , and Monday night after · Oklahoma
., Muskingum a 48-38 lead .
· Mark Oliver had eight points, 17 missed three shots.in the dosing sec·
·
Robertson led with 25 points.
rebounds and three steals.
·• Muskingum faces Ohio Nonhcrn
Derek Malis ·.and Charles Smith
., Wednesday, while Otterbein plays · scored 14 apieoe .to lead Loyola.
Mount Union.
In the Mid-American Conference,
PLANT CITY. Fla. (AP) - Bar·
.• In.the Mid-Continent Conference, ·- Akron beat Kent 71 -51 and Miami ry Larkin will wear the leuer "C" on
.• Scan Scali's ~I points propelled beal Eastern Michigan 86:77.
his uniform this season, recognizing
something that's been widely recog-,
. nized for years: He is the Cincinnati
Reds' captain.
.
Larkin will become the first Reds
player to have the designation on his
uniform since shortstop Davey Concepcion.
Larkin's predecessor was
~ The Eastern. Pep Club urges area arc asked to decorate their homes.
named
team
captain in 1983 and left
:.basketball fans ~nd Eagle supporters make signs. and decorate their cars in ·
: to wear.Green and White to Wcdncs- suppor1 of the team as well as com· the Reds after the 1988 season.
:·day night's Sectional Championship ing out and showing their support.
Also. two Lndy Eagle, Nikc-madc .
~game at Alexander High School
: between the Eastern Eagles and Grcc cJufllc hags with IWO wet pouches.
and ft)ur compartments remain at a
: B.obcats. The game begins at 6: I~ .
~
The Pep Club still has .len Pep cosl of only $30. · The hags arc
• Club shins remaining at the school .iurahlc canvas and arc black with
~store at a cost of $10 apiece . Five white lettering. The bags retail al
rtncdium and five large shins ~cmain $~'1.9~ .
· on a first come, first serve basis. Fans

Otterbein, Muskingum
advance in tournament ·

SHS. Tirrley had a steal and hit the
·shon jumper for a 7-0 tally,then
turned around and grabbed another
theft. hitting Kim Sayre in the paint.
Sayre drew the foul and I1C coach
Jeff Rase called for a time at the
5:15 mark. Caldwell drilled a comer
jumper, 9-0. tben after a Cottle miss,
Turley rebounded and drove the
paint, dipping off to ·Proffit. who
was fouled. Proffitt his the second
of two for a I 0-0 lead.
Turley, dominating tbe early
action, had her founh steal of the
game and unselfishly dished off to
Jenny Friend, who was fouled but
missed . both ends of the two shoi
foul. Turley threaded the needle
through the 1-4 offense, hitting Prof;
fitt for a baseline jumper and a 12-0
SHS lead. At the I :4.1 mark Clay
had not even come dose to a score
and was 0-5 froin the field. Finally,
at the 1:22 mark, Cottle hit a 4-foot
baselilne jumper for a .12-2 tally.
Southern pulled it out for just one
shot, and·senl Turley and Friend to a
double low post. SHS pulled the
trigger early ·and Turley drilled a
paint j~mper for a 14-2 tally. SHS
substituted and made only its second
turnover of the game. then . fouled
Tiffany Pollard on the break-away.
Pollard canned the first of two and
Proffitt grabbed the rebound. Ttme
ran out and SHS led 14-3. . ·
Southern went on a .12-3 ruri to stan
the second quaner, but when Turley
left at the 5:00 mark, Southern's
offense cooled oft consi~erably,

.......
10 Stacy Lyons
II Cynthia Caldwell
12 Connie Horst
13 Jenny Friend
14 Kim lhle
~0 Renee Turley.
23 Kim Sayre
30 Patty Lawrence
32 Briannc Proffitt
35 Ashli Davis
· 42 Healher Dailey

-

Portsmouth Clay

Player

45 Abby Workman
II Leigha King
13 1iffany Pollard
21 Bobbie Jo Graff
23 Kristy Cottle
25 Autumn Hysell
43 Mendy Justice
although they held a 24-6 lead.
Sayre, Proffit, and Turley each had
four in the run.
Workman hit a
goal at the 2:20 mark, then fouled on
the other end as Lyons made her second trip to the foul line. This time
Lyons hit both ends, tbe score 28-8.
King hit a foul line jumper as Clay's
press with Turley on ihe sideline
saw limited success• .
Ashli Davis hit a pair of free
throws and Sayre c;mn'Cd another as
Southern rushed to a 31-14 halllime
lead.
Without too much effon Southern
outscored Clay 17-9 to leod 48-23
· after three rounds. Southern took it

.
b

I
2
0
2
0

.!o

fT

0 3-8
0 ().0
0 ().0
0 0-2
0 ().0

s

4
4

0
20

.

0 6-9
0
0 · 0 ().0
0
0 ().0
0
12
0 6-8
3
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0 ().0
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17 0 2l-38 =
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3 0
0 0
0 0
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6

5-10
0-1 i
2-3

5
0

•

0

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.,''

'

I

I

j).
~

·' Ea$tern Pep Club members are
: asked to wear green, white to game

.

'

'

onship game that will be plaY.cd on
Friday night.at Ross Southeastern
al the high school.
Tickets are also available for
Wednesday evening's Sectional
Tournament game between East·
ern and Green at 'Eastern High
School. Game time is 6:15 p.m. at
Alexander High School.

'

" I want to play in the big lcaguCl;'
slop is arguably the Reds' most pop·
ular player. He has done some local with my tlrother... he said.
commercials but had no . major
Stephen Larkin is a first baseman
endorsement deals until after the in the Reds' minor league system.
1996 sea•on, when he became the · who hasn't yet played above the
first shor1slop in major-league histo- Class A level. ·
.
•:
ry to hit 30 home runs and steal 30 · Shortly after winning the Nation-•
bases in a season. ,
.
.I
at League MVPAward for 1995, Bar~
The.e1ghHm\e all-star, thrcc-umc ry Larkin signed a contract extensioni
Gold Glove winner and seven time to ·stay with his hometown learn alj
Silver Slugger now can be seen in a least through ' 2000. The annual $5.3:
' Nikc footwear commercial and an ad million salary he accepted angcrect
· for Game Faccclothhig.
some members of the players' union.
Larkin has been on a World Series who thought it might hun other play•.
championship team ( 1990), won the crs in negotiations. Larkin could
MVP and rcached .30-30. He ha• one h~vc goncn much more .., a f~
major goal left as a player.
agent.

INC.= excellence in Home Oxygen Care

'

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Cin. Wyoming 72. Fdicity 68

Morxllly s Resulll

Ch:. Lullk:ran

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Ak!On Cent.·Ho":er 88. A~ron Spnn~. 46

BA.RRY LARKIN

, Cle. Lmcoln-We5166. Cle. Rhodes 44
Cle. _ S~h 75. Cle .. ~ennedy .63
at
.. Col. Wesr 76,. Wonhinpon Kilbourne • 7
1!. Cleveland ShAw 78. Willoughby S. 68

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Uppe•Arlinglon jJ, Dublin CofTil!llll 49

VounJ. Wilson ·S8. Ca.nton Timke:n .:li2 ·

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JTPA locations:
8010 ~rth State Route 7, Chnhlra, Ohio

Cll!siVi&lt;.'W 57
,. 14 ~

Dl 111o

Edle·
.
Sr . Pnris Gmham 59. Umana 41
)'oung. Mooney SO, Young. East 39

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"rJI• Little Conapan, With TIN Bf8 Ser~c"
'

Locally OWned &amp; Opel'lted

Neworl&lt; Cath. 46, TI&lt;C of Life 43
Newlon 61. Arcanum 58

Howilld U. 73. N. Carolina A&amp;T 70
Motpn St 80. S. Carolino Sr . 76
Old Dominio~ 72. laiiiCs ModiSOR 66
SW Louision• M, SoUth Alabam3 62
Tn.-ChallliiiOOIG 92, Cumberland. Tena.

sUbmiMiorl ola PIGI~ doel not gumnlie enrollnMnt Of funding.

Pomeroy, Ohio

By Randy Mamhout

'

Syrocuoe 91 , Pmvidence 82. OT
1Cmple t!J, Fonlham 53

'. Bclhuoe-Coollmaa 74, Md.·E. Shill&lt; 61
, Qolawm Sl. 84. Floricla A&amp;M 80, OT
. East c..,lino 59. William &amp; Mary 58
' Georae Muon 79, Americt111 U. 70

Hoine 614-949-2963 •
Call .Anytlm,e

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Frees Up Rack Space

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Lorijstown 75. Badger 54

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are

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Dl....... tV
.
Crooksville 44. Lees!*IJ Fairfield 31
Rocint Soulhel)l 56. Ponsmoulh Clay 37

Dlv]llon OJ
· Ollk Hill 51. Piketon 24
Peebl&lt;s 59. We11foll 45

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Green runs man. runs a 2-3 zone. and . The Pep Club still has · ten Pep
has specialized in a diamond and one Club shins remaining atthe school
defense and a triangle and two.
store at a cost of $10 apiece . Five
Tickets arc also avai lable for medium and five large shins remain
Wednesday evening's Sectional Tour- on a first come, first serve basis. Fans
namenl game between Eastern and arc asked to decorate their homes,
Green at Eastern High SchooL · make signs, and decorate their cars in .•
Game time is 6:15 al AlcKander support of the team as well. as com- ·
High SchooL
in~ out and showing their suppon. The Eastern Pep Club urges area
Also. two.Lady Eagle, Nikc·m~.'
basketball fans and Eagle supporters dufnc bags with two wet pouche.s. ..
to wear Green and White to Wcdncs- and four compartments remain at a
day night's Sectional Championship cost of only $30.
_..,
·game at Alexander High School Tllc hags arc durable canvas and
between the Eastern Eagles and Grcc black with white lcucrmg. The bagsBobcats. The game begins at 6:15. · retail at $59.95.
,.;'
,.

tolumbiMa 7(). Calvary Chistian 69 .
Doy. Jo1Tooon6~. Doy. Miami Vull. 4j
Franklin Monroe 66. Covington 6~ OT

Morrow Lmie Miami 49. Trenton

wood 48

.
.
is known for his defense. He is also
the tearn'sbest ball handler.
.
Off the bench are two giant posts in
6'4" Powell, a good reboundcr. but
poor shOQter; and Tennani a 6-point
scorer and good rebounder, tipping
the tape measure at 6'5" . He is the
team's top shot blocker.
Another player, 5' II" Bennett and
pan of the twin tandem, is a similar
player to his brother.
. Green runs an Open Motion
offense, a four-out/one-in, UCLA '
offense, and the Flex. 'Much of the
man offense is run out of the Aex formation and the baseline .Flex · cut.

"CM:infon 8;\. ~wion Cath. 48

Kcnlo~ R1d1e 68. Malton-~n•on 4S

992·7267

Sheppard and Allen give the Tor·
nadoes the depth they've been searching for all season with outside shoot·
ing and driving capabilities.
Adam Roush, Pete Sisson, and
Jerrod Mills each had four, Troy
.Hoback lldd three and Jesse Maynani,
and Joe Kirby each added two points.
Roush has .been a pivotal person in
Southern's season. When he is on the
Tornadoes seem to roll.
For Southern. lerrnd Mills has "
come on strong off ih.c reserve club, and Jesse Maynard has had some red· :.
hot games, where he has utilized hi~­
speed to !!Ct tbc steals and spark th ,;
fast break. Tyson Buklcy has become
much stronger in the post as well.
Tickets for lhc game are on sale at a cost of $3 at thc·high school. Fans arc..
urged to buy tickets in advance a• t~
school gets a percentage of all presale tickets.

SD:rahsvillc Sh.:n:mdt1Dh 70.. Monroe Ccn-

. Keuennf Aller U, lk:ll~k 43
· Loveland 54. NoiWODd 3.

We consider· it a privilege to service MEIGS County
patients ... and since
Home Oxygen is all we do, you.can alwayil be sure that if you have a need .. .
WE WILL BE THERE FOR YOU 24 HOURS A DAY!! .
RANDY MARNHOUT
FAMILY ~NO STAFF

2-2 zone and likewise man to man. for foul trOuble: Southern has to play
Symmes is most susceptible to defeat · with its fullest intensity and reduce its
when it is in a mill defense, thus· number 'of fouls .
prompting Southern to break the
Coach Howie Caldwell noted
zone early and force the Vikings out that this is the 22nd straight year that
of their strang suit. Tbe Vikings do a Southern team has been in the Seenot li~e' to press, but rather set the tiona! finals. Caldwell feels that tratempo in a half coun game. When dition is a key factor in this match and
they do press it is a 2-2- 1 with an that his club will be frghting for the
occasion intluction of man-to-man win as well as pride.
full-court.
The Viking offense
Southern's Jamie Evans earries the
revolves around Hunt out of a Flex three-point threat as well as the
· alignment. They run the Aex and an threat 10 drive. Evans can break a
open niotipn game wi!h lillie gadget game wide. open. as can Senior Guard
plays and quick hillers. ntC key to ·Ryan Norris, who is a great drive and
a Southern win is thal Southern lt)USI outstanding outside shooter.
· set the tempo by pressing, forCing
In the last game, all 12 Tornadoes
Symmes out of its half coun game . hit the scoring column : ihat t harge
. ·and into a full court game. Southern was led by Ryan Norri s with 15
hopes to force many turnovers in the · points, while .another senior Jamie
transition. Offensively. Southern Evans canned 12. Tyson Buckley had
must pick and cut and get enough seven , and Billy Sheppard and Jason
penetration to put the Vikes at a risk Allen each had five .

ROOistown 46, Waterloo 40
.
1
N. Lima
RllnJt 64. Columhum~

C!n· McN1chohu 97, Clennont NE :'I
· Girard~): Poland 51.
.

859 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
33105 f:llland Road. Pomeroy, Ohio
G..t Malga CAlUtenlqUII appoitul)lly ampkl~r

Marlon PIC3.'iant ~9. Rivcr Vnll. ~4
Orwell Grand Vall. 6l Bruokitcld 5J
Riu 111ao 58. Loudonville ~2

Dlrillon.U .

1

see

GraJwillc61. H~ath ~7
Louis viii..: Aquin'a.li 71. Tu.~law b6

1

Elyna 82. ClovcrleD:f 44
Gartield His. 61, Cle. loh9 Hoy 60

Call to
if you may qualify at 614-367-7342 Ext. .11A or 614-992-6629
~. 11 A. Preapplications may be obtained at any of the following GMCAA·

,

Gam:ns,•illc 9~ . Pym:llunini! V~ll . 1M

Bruft!lwack 74. P""""' Holy ~amc 47
Cle. ~t Tech BJ. Wnrrensvllle_Hts . 69.

STILlUNEMPLOYEO??? READ 0!'1 ...

Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency- JTPA has~ a limited amot~nt of
funds.available at this time. This program is not income based;
·
Cooperating educational facilities i~clude: Univer~ity of Rio Grand~,
Buckeye Hills Career Center, Hockmg College, Tn-County JVS, Oh1o
University, .Washington State Community College, and Shawnee State
University. .

7()

Alhance 42.Austmlown·fllch J9
Anthers~ 80, ~sd:lke 46

PAST OR PRESENT
UNEMPLOYMENT CONPENSATION RECIPIENTS

w. 6~ . Columbia 43

Cu)'3Mg3 Foils \'•II. Chr. 7J. Elyria Calh.

1 1
111\'~&amp;Oft

.L

'

'

Dlvt.lnn Ill ' '
Cin. N . Coli&lt;~&lt; Hill 67. Riplcy'loO

'.

1'00,_RNAMENT

If you are attending vocational training or college or-plan to attend Spring
Quarter, you may be eligibl~ for classroom training funds.
. · ·

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'

tournament scores

~ :~~:.:.."::"'
-3• ~

.,

•

Tornadoes will have their
hands full in the painL To complicate
matten. Symmes has 6'3" post Josh
Clmpbell, ajunior. at the other post.
Campbell is a nice. aggressive
rebounder and a good shooler for the
Vikings.
Eric Simpson. a 5'10"
senior, is an excellent three-point
shooter who had 16 points against
Southern in the Sectional finals last
year. Simpson can also drive and
shoot off the run, while he is flanked
by left-handed point guard John
. Sharp. a S-10 senior. Sharp too is a
good driver and shooter, leading a
ve~ Viki!IR club. Joey Furguson
is the .off guard, a 6'0" senior. Top
subs off the bench include Matt Wit~on a 6'1" senior, and Jeremy Hoi·
land, a talented S' 10" sophomore.
Symmes Valley is a zone oriented
club defensively with a 2-3 their
dominant defense. SV will also go 1-

has

Rx =Prescription· 02 ~Oxygen

R\ ( )2

:Tic"ets available for sectional games ·
~ Tleket• are available for
·Wednesday evening's Sectional
~Tournament
1ame between .
fsymmett Valley and S~thern are .
U.vallable at Southern Htgh School.
· ·. Game time IS 8 p.m. from Alexan·
'der Hlih School.
• ' You c:an also buy tickets for the
:'southern girls District Champi-

"This is his house, and wc'rcjust
sharing his house on his way to the
Hall of Fame," said general manager Jim Bowden. who ordered the designation.
Even though Larkin had not been
· officially recognized as the learn's
captain, everyone considered him
the clubhouse leader and the . fran -·
chisc's most inOucntial player.
"Barry is the foundation on w~ich
this organization i.s built," said manager Ray K:night . "The man is a win·
ncr, and everything here starts with
him ."
·
Larkin grew up in Cincinnati and
as he enters his 12th sca,•on al shor1-

~ the

good shot selection from the Eastern in his coaches eyes. He is a capable
Wednesday at6:15 p.fll. the East- wings
shooter, but his strong suit and .perem Eagles will fly into "'!be Alley"
· Second year senior. Josh Casto sonal preference is to go hard to the
atAiexander High School in hopes of eniled the season strong last year and bucket. Wben he doesn't score, he is
Claiming their first Sectional Cham- has been a strong asset ro Eastern's atop assist man with a good stop and
pionship since tbe 1984-85 season, success in 1996-97. Ca'stocanshoot popmove. Becauseofan.injury,Stid·
when tbe Eagles defeated Southern the three, but is a deadly force in the ham has not played for two weeks,
49-44·at Meigs High School. Ironi- paint. Casto is also a good rebound· but could be healthy Wednesday.
c~ly. Eastern advanced 10 the District er and Eastern's defensive hustler. He
Brumfield, a 6' I" off-guard is a
193 points on the sc;ason with a strong offensive rebounder, also
at· Chillicothe High School, where
the'y met Franklin Flll[liace Green and 9. 7 sbooting clip per game.
strong in the transition. He takes the
lost 61-54.
1
.
Senior Rickie Hollon, despite his ·ball to the hole strong and is a 10
Easll\fll's last championship was' small frame plays big, and led the point scorer. Theotherstaneris half
master-minded by Coach Dennis Eastern attack on several occasions of a twin duet, 5'11" Bennett. Not
Eichinger, now assisllint principal at this season. Hollon can hit the three much of scorer, Bennett is a good
. Meigs. That club finished at 12-11 and is a good penetrator. He is very shootedf left open, but moSt notably
overall. This year's club, now 10-1 1. selective in hi.s shooting and perhaps
i,• guided by Coach Tony Deem, now gives up his. own shot to feed the
in his founh year at the helm of the Eastern post men. Hollon owns a 4.7
Eagles.
scoring mark. Corey Yonker and
Rather ·than at the district level, Jeremy Kehl have· been spot staners
Eastern will square off against anolh- for the Eagles this season and both
er Franklin Furnace Green team ( 12- have produced well on occa.•ion.
8) in Wednesday's Sectional Cham- Kehl's steady and consistent play and
pionship. Green drew a first round basketball sense are his main assets.
bye by being the tournament's top · He is a good passer and has a good
seed.
shot selection. ,Yonker has been a
. Eastern is led by Friday's bero. p!)lentially strong scorer in the post,
senior Eric Dillard who owns a 17.8 but his strength is his rebounding
point scoring average · and is the with a 3.5 clip per game.
Other
team's ball handler, both a great . Eagles offth~ bench are Roben Har$hooter and good penetrating guard. ris, Adam McDaniel, the team's spir·
Dillard owns a 36.9 overall shooting itual leader; Joe Weeks, John Drlggs,
percentage (113-306) and a 43.3 Chris Bailey, and Andy Vance, who
mark on two-point shots, good for " is out with a bout of appendicitis. ·
Eastern averages 62.1 points per
352total points. Eastern shows great
balance across the searing ~h as game, 1,242 points in all as opposed
four players have hit for triple figures to giving up 1338 points for a 66.9
this season. Three lopped the 200- average. Eastern's defense has been
Point mark.
its downfall all sca~on. It's defensive
Dillard also led the team with 73 lapse aiOI!g lhe baseline almost cost
assists aal!, as guard;.wtis;ll)e team's' it · ~n · for the Sectional · champi·
second leading rebounder heliind onship against Miller. The Falcons's
Daniel ·Otto, who owns a 7.5 double post picked aP.an the Eagle
rebounding mark, ISO overall. - baseline with too much rcgularit~.
Senior Olio is the team's top per·
As a team the _Eagles an: shootmg
ttentage shooler with a 49.0 mark 40.6 pe~enl(442-1089) and arc 64.5
ft'om the tw&lt;&gt;-point range. He is tbe at the hne (263-408). Opponents .
second leading production leader in have sh~l an tdcnucal 64.5 from the
three pointers behind Dillard (36 hne, whtle edgtng the Eagles 44.6to
treys) with 20 for 55 from the three 40.6 from the field (517· 1158).
point mark. Otto can shoot the long Eastern ha.~ the advantage of,pla~mg
.ball and also drive and score in the on the floor. Green has a dtslincl
paint. Many of his points have come height advantage, led by Darnell. 6'6"
Whirlpool LSR5233E
Gff the follow-up rebound. He has center, who averages 16 pomts a
27:
Super Plua
1 163 total points for a 13.2 average.
game, a~d ctght rebounds per game.
Automatic Washer
• Cyc,le -LogicN Color-COded Controls
Third in scoring is Jr: Stevie Durst, Darnell IS a g.ood shooter and almost
• 5 Automatic Cycles ·
avcmging ' 12.4 per game and the third unstoppable If he Catches lhC ball In
White-on-While Slyllng .
•
in the bloodline of talented Eastern the post.
. .
.
guards. Durst had a gre~l game
Green shows much balance m the
against Waterford early in the sea.•on. fact that Brumfield and Sudham also
:J:ell of the pace for a few ga~es, then . average 16 pmnts per game. mak~ng
iias come on super-strong to ltmsh the lltmposstble '? k_cy on any.onc play·
, 'I
r,cgular season and toumamcn! .with cr.. Blankenship ts deadly Irom three
a very hot hand. Durst is versatile, ~1nl range. and IS strong from the
but yet more the outside shooting nght stdc. Hts !,!~me·h1gh for the sea- ·
threat. He has a 91 -2 14 overall son was 27 pomts vs Ponsmouth·
. hootingclipfor42.5%andahot70- Clay. Lafc Sudham. #33 ,a 6.1
144 mark for 48.7% on two's alone. JUnto~. also averages 16 pmnts per
·•Durst and .Ouo's marks illustrate a game and ranks as the tcnm;'s MVP
"fhlrtpool

Erdmann made two for Oklahoma to
Eduardo Najera grabbed lhe
get tho Sooners to 68-66. Then Jcrod · rebound and missed, .then Erdmann &lt;
Haase made one of 1wo for Kansas,· got off one la•t shot in close that ;
and.Corey Brewer countered with a wouldn't fall .
"I don't know when I've ever"
shot inside to make it 69-68 with 17
seconds to rlay.
been more proud of a team, win ~
Jacque Vaughn, who led the Jay- lose;" Oklahoma coach Kelvm '·
hawks with 16 points, got fouled with Sampson said. '.'When you talk abOut ;
16 seconds lcfl. He missed the first, competing and playing hard and'
then made the second for a 70-68 want to, I rank this team very high."·
lead.
·
In Other games involving rdnked :
Oklahoma (16-9. 8-7) SCI up a shot teams on Monday night, it was Nn. 4;
for Erdmann. Hegotoffashon, lean- Utah 75. Rice 66; No. 19 Colorado•
ing bank shot that missed.
65, Wofford 58; and No. 25 Stanford
" We shoot that shot in practice · 97, San Diego State SO.
every day," said Erdmann, who
Kansa• coach Roy Williams '
scored 17 of his 20 points in the sec- expected a tight game.
ood half. " I thought it was going in."
.

Larkin officially
recognized
as
Reds·
captain
..

drove the lcnllh of the floor, weaved
through the Symmes Valley defense
and drove the lane for a lily-up. The
shot went in and OUL then wu tipped
by Harmon, bul it too missed the
mark. Rizer got the follow up tip with
one second left to win a wild finish.
Southern is now 9- I 2 and
advances to the sectional finals. while
Symmes bows out at S- I 5.
Ponsmouth East6-5 senior center
Chris Boggs poured in 38 of the Tartans 61 points, as East broke away
from the Southern Tornadoes midway
through the second half to claim the
1996 upper bracket championship in
the Division· IV Sectional Tournament at the Lyne ' Center, 61-49.
Southern will he facing 6'5" AII· Diy
trict player Chris Hunt, wbo avemses
22 points a game. Hunt is a great post
man with an outstanding jump shot,

·,.

.

By SCOTT WOJ,.FE

No. 1 Kansas edges Oklahoma 70-68;
onds. The victory snapped· a twogame .losing streak in Norman, . ·
"Wc're .just happy to gel out of ·
here alive," said Kansas forward Paul .
Pierce, who scored 12 of his 14 points
in the se~ond half. "We fo~ght har.d
at\d stayed poised when they made
their run . Evon though we didn 't
make our free throws like we should
at the end, we didn't panic . We kepi
our heads when we had to."
Kansas (28-1. 14-1 Big 12)misscd
five of I0 free throws in the final
I :26. which helped allow Oklahoma•
10 bring the crowd of 12,875 to a
frenzy.
.
·
Aflcr Pierce missed two free
throws with 46 seconds left, Nate

.

~astern,
Green
battle
for
district
berth
Wedne$day
.

8

0
J) ().()
6
13 0 ll·lll• 37
easy the final round, but sull held on
for the ·win.
,
Southern hit 17-55 from the field
and Clay 13-41. SHS lost the battle'
of the boards 33-38 led by Turley's,
ei'ght. SHS had 20 tumov~rs. and 24;
_
steals led by Turley'siO.
· Abby Workman had 12 rebounds ·
for Ciay and Cottle 7. Southern. ·
forced Clay into 29 turnovers.
,
Southern plays in the District.
Championship against Crooksville'
at Ross.-Southcastem.this Friday at.7,
p.m.
Score by·quarie.-.:
Southern
14 17 17 8-=56 ;
Clay
3 II 9 14=37 ,
0
3

T:he Dally Sentinel• Page '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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.9lffi(}YE/l~S09-{;S
&amp; Floor ·

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992~671

�•

Pllsle I • The Dally s.ntlnel
· Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio
TUMdtly, Febru8ry 25, 1111 ·
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Ste.pmother's interest in children's Jife wit I
Ann
Landers

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T.-.~

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•• By ANN LANDERS
·;.; Dear. Ann Landers: I'm · a
.., divorced mother of two. My ex-husband married a young woman who
had never been married before or
had any kids. I always invite
""' "Vanessa" to come with my ex-hus. "'band to my daughters' birthday par-- ties. but she has yet to say one word
me. It's as if I don't exist. 1
, ·· Here's too problem. Vanessa is
•:.'.:constantly overstepping her bounds

;.to

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with my children. For example, a
few days ago, she decided my oldest
daughter, who is in the sixth arade,
needed to start shaving her legs and
helped her do ot. She also keeps cutting my girls' hair in whatever styles
she wants.
I've spoken to my ex-husband
about this, but he doesn 't think
Vanessa is doing anything wrong.
We' ve ~n to mediation over some
of our areas of disagreement, an&lt;l the
mediator has told Vanessa she
should respect certain boundaries,
but she goes back to doing whatever
she wants. The final straw was when
she volunteered to be a room mother ·
for my youngest dijughter's class.
That really burned me up.
How do I handle this? The ·

woman . is really getting to me. ••
Annoyed in Texas
Dear Tew: Vanessa may be a bil
ham-handed, but she is lryins to
develop a closer re~ionship with
her stepdaughters, and you should
not resent it
Most second wives seem man:
glamorous to children than their
own mothers. (They are usually
younger.) Sometimes, a new wife
will cozy up to the kids to get their
approval · and make points with the
new· husband.
Don't compete. Stay in the background, and refrain from making
any critical remarks. When the nov·
elty wears off, things will settle
down.
Dear Ann .Landers: After reading

-!-....TOPS begins walking program

A program, "Walking -- What a
- 'Way to Go," was presented by Geri
Gibson, Gallipolis, at the Feb. 17
meeting of TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) held at the Cheshire Unit·
ed Methodost Church.
'" As part of its ongoing effort to
.:.JJelp members achieve and maintain
a healthy weight, TOPS #OH 1383,
Cheshire. is launching an ortgoing
""Rroup walking program with the
''iliemc "Get in TOPShare. Keep in
--TOPShape--One Step at a Time."
~ Geri Gibson said, when walking
· ~ .'.Jor exercise, you can do it anywhere,
...anyume. SCI your own pace, go it
· alone or walk with a . partner, get
involved inexpensively, and all you

need is the right footwear.
Pledges were lead by Barbara
Gibson said 1111 active lifestyle Colrner and Mamie Stephenson and ,
provided numerous· benefits · - Helen Trout, Cheshire·, read a verse
greater energy and stamina, tit_\ed "When Tempted to Quit."
improvements
in
nexibility
It was announced that 1997 Area
improvements in mood, enhanced Recognition Dny (ARD)
be
self-esteem, cardiovascular health, held on April 19 at Lancaster High
prevention and control of diabetes, School. Theme is "April Showers
muscle and bone strength, and Bring May
weight control.
TOPS members weigh-in from
She suggested checking ·with a 8:30 to 9:45 a.m. on Mondays at
doctor before beginning a program . Cheshire United Methodist Church.
Plans were made for TOPS mem- . The meeting is from 10 to II a.m.
bers to participate in the March of Anyone inte.rested in losing weight
Dimes Walk America walk which or mainJaining their weight is invitwill be held on April 27, at Harmon ed 10 auend a TOPS mee_ting. For·
Park in Point Pleasant, WV, starting more information residen\S may call
at 2 p.m.
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367-0274.

will

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.:-_:-------.Community calendar-;;j;'

Tbe Community Calendar is
..published as a free service to non·
.J!rolitgroujls wishing to announce
meelial and special events. The
-lendar
is not designed
to pro·
11 •
•
_:,.Wte sales or fund raisers of any
.,!YP•· Items are printed as space
~rmill and cannot be guaranteed
_10 run a specific number of days.

• .TUESDAY
· &gt;: RACINE -- · Southern Local
..SChool Board, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
-'Letart Elementary
School.
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Tuesday,

RACINE ·- RACO,
...(),30 potluck dinner, new members
·':'welcome, Star Mill Park . .

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MIDDLEPORT -- The Auxiliary
-':Qf Drew Webster Post 39. American
~gion, will meet at the Downing
'"'flousc in Middleport, Tuesday. 2
~. m.

WEDNESDAY

The Big Bend Youth• League, den Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. HickWednesday, 6 p.m. on meeting room _ ory Hills Church of Christ. Take fin·
of Middleport Council.
ger foods, fruit for fruit baskets.
Auction will be held.
THURSDAY
POMEROY ,. Meigs County
POMEROY •• 1997 Big Bend
Churches
of Christ ·Women's FelTowns and Country Expo reorganilowsbip.
Thursday.
7 p:m. at the
zational meeting, 7:30 p.m . Thursday at the senior fair board office, Pomeroy Church of Christ. BradRock _Springs Fairgrounds. All inter- bury Church will - have devotions.
Jennifer Grover Hicks will he the
ested citizens welcome to auend.
speaker.
POMEROY •• Community
Lenten services sponsored by tbe SATURDAY
Star Grange 77 8 and Star Junior
Meigs County Ministerial Association will be held Thursday at 7:30 Grange 878 will meet in regular scsp.m. at the Laurel Cliff Free sion Saturday woth a potluck supper
'Methodist Church. The Rev. Bill at 6:30 p.m. followed by a regular
Hoback will speak_.
meeting at 8 p.m. Hemlock drange
is to visit. All members urged to
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta auend.
Beta Chapter, Bcia Sign:oa Phi Sorority, Thursday. 6:30 for salad supper SUNDAY
al the &lt;homc o Clarice Krautter.
POMEROY
Hillside Baptist
Church, hymn sing, Sunday, 6 p.m.
REEDSVILLE·· Riverview Gar-

~.,..;AHA offers brochure
_

.,, As many as 50 moll ion Americans
,..aged six 'and older have high blood
pressure or hypertension.
Thirty-five percent of those indi. . ~i&lt;,luals with hypcriension arc ·
. ;;rvoaware or their conditions while "
~~tgnificant number of those whn arc.
1ware · of their condition. fail to
l':'li\take the consostent, ongoing
-lifestyle changes necessary to control the problem despite ong&lt;&gt;ing
advice from their physicians.
Elevated blood pressure indicates
~~at the heart is working harder than
normal, pulling both the heart and

-·

on hypertension control

the arteries 'under a -greater strain.
Untreated. the condition can lead to
heart attack. ·strnkc. kidney fail~re.
dama~e to c~esight and athcrosde·

often help-control blood pressure .
Cutting back on sodoum and alcohol,
as weir as losing weight through a
healthy diet and exercise, can enable
people with mild hypertension to
rosis (damage to the arteries) ..
High ,hlood pressure occurs in control their blood prc5sure without
children l&gt;r adults. hut is particular!~ any medication and improve the
prevalent in African Americans. erJccts of medication in those people
middle-aged and elderly people. with more serious condiuons.
obese people. heavy drinkers and
To learrr more about•controlling
women taking oral cnntmccptivcs . y&lt;iur blood pressure. call I-AHAPrescription medications arc avail- USA I to order a copy of "Helping
ahlc for those with high blood pres- Your Doct~r Treat Your High Blood
sure. hut T&gt;hysocians also stress that Pressure. o new color brochure fen·
d1ctary and ·lifestyle c~angcs can . turing l:tfl!e print.

the warnipg signs of cancer in your
column a few months &amp;JO, I felt
compelled 10 add a comment.
With the prevalence of managed
health care today, please tell your
readers 10 INSIST that a newly dis·
covered mole be removed or
demand to be referred to a specialist.
Do not accept the diagnosis of.a gen·eral practitioner that such a mole is
of no consequence and can be safely
ignored.
.
We auended our beloved son's
memorial service last month, and i\
is a virtual cenainty that he would be
alive today, enjoying his beautifu17month-old daughter, i{ the general
practiiioner he saw last year had
removed the new mole when my son
first discovered it. When the mole

nized the couple's plight and
niTcrcd to open the courthouse
office on that Sunday morning in
October .and issue the license .
Roger and Connie .were married
thai same day at noon. Their hon·
cymoon lasted only two hours
hccausc Roger had to return to Fort
Knox.
Suon after he was shipped to ·
Germany. and a few months later
was joined there· by his I (\-year-o)d
bride. About two years later she
returned to the States to .await the
birth or their son. Roger was sent
hack Ill the states i~ lime to be at
his wife's side when. Roger, Jr. was
horn.
The story of the Manley's

The resignation of Rhonda Ames. mcmher public libraries. OVAL proOVAl,. Access Services Coordinator. vi des resources sharing. library
was accepted when the Boord of development' and hooks by ·mail scrTrustecs of the Ohm Valley Area vices tn more than 260,000 residents
Lihrarics held its regular monthly . in Athens. · Hocking, Jackson,
\ mccttng at system headquarters Lawrence. Meigs. Pike. Ross, Scioto
Thursday.
" - . and Vinton counties.
It was reported that Arne/ has "-wanda Ehlin serves on the OVAL
accepted a job with the State Library .Board as a representative of the
o_f Ohio. She was. along with OVAL
Meigs County Puhlie Library.
Access Services Assistant Karen
Hamilton. responsihle for connecting the library networks in Hocking.
Jackson. Meigs, Pike. Vinton and
news
Wellston to the OPLIN lntcme.t con- • tl,., c•ll
ncclion.

•: Dares aild Mildred Arnold of.
3Jii23 . Hiland Road, Pomeroy, will
~¢ their 60th wedding annivcr·
.;iy Saturday.
· Mr. and Mrs. Amold were marriod Mluch I, 1937-in Meigs Couniy
~ Rev. Alonza Stark.
'!)ley are thC ~nts of six ~hil­
~ Mary Kil!l of L'oi'J Botdl!n;
.f'ilrlda ~Jysellllld JW!Ietrm ol

,.

"'"·

60th

Pomeroy; Robert Amold of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; and Jimmy Joe and
Henry Guy: both deceased. They
have sev~ral grand£!1ildrel\, 1reat
grandchildren, ana great-great
Jrandchildren. _

..

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold have been
Mei1s County' residents all their

lives.

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992-2156

N~ oF PUBLIC

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The Company's eleclric power supply facilities-- inchldingl
power generating plants, major transmission facilities and iritQrcon~
nections with neighboring electric utility systems·· are adequate to
provide reliable eleptric s~rvice to its customers. During1996 ~
excluding Jemporary power sales to olher utility systems: gen,erat· ;
ing-capacity reserves of Jhe American Eleclric Power (AEP) Syslem,
of which Ohio Po\'ler tS pafl, were approximalely 15 percel'lt (or 1
more) of load, Margins ar.e expected to be somewhat less at 14% Of
more lhroughoul1997 ~Od into the peak load_period of · n~xt Yl!nterl
(1997··1998). .
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Generating-capactty•reserves are required iri order 10 meet t
unexpected increases in Syslem load. IO provide for an effect(\/!! ::
program of preventtve maintenance of generating facilities and lo -1
allow for random shuldo:wns and -loading curtailments ol generatind

units.

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Approximalely 87% of the AEP Syslem's povver generating
capactly is coaHired, 9% is nuclear and the remainder is oiH)re~ o4
ELECTR!C ENERGY ~OPPLY

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hydroelectric .. The Company believes that its coal supp,ieS'are 1 ' -~
adequate to enable it to meet the anticipated electric energy require~
menls or its customers during the year.
,
"This not~e pertams to lilt ittt,ilin ot
Oh10 Power Co.ml)illy, which IS
regiStere~ to tranSICI ousiness '"OhiO
as Amerk:an Electric Power

Public Notice

Public Notice

614·992·7643

(614) 992-3838

(NO

211111 mo.

Public Notice

•••vii•

',

... Vldao And Rn eno or a...
Adu~ Vldeoo. 1380 Ea-.onua, Galllpollo, Or Coli 61~
11122_

.

DATEIII

ouvaa CIAl.l

FREE 3 min.
Psychic
reading for
*Love *Money
*Career *Health
18+

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(614) 367·0266
1-800-950·3359
• Top • Trim • Removal
• stump Grinding
20 Vrs.

• Ina. Owner; ROMie Jones .

Estimates

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTilUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

l-QOO-fi$A-Q5M fiJ M
IZ.M
Pa; Uln.ute. Muat a. tl YrL
Seov-\J t810) tw5-l-&lt;30.
•
Gond.man Saeld"' Co...,.,ton-

ahip From Nloo Female Far Tal&lt;a,

Walks &amp;. Frlendahlp. Send Raolieo To: CLA 301, c/o GaiUpoHa
Ooity Ttlbune, 825 Tl*d - ,
Galipotto, OH 45113t .
• -•

Give You ..ell Tho Sporto Edge

Spons Enrertainrnlnl L.i'lel 1.eoo. •
856·5800 Ext 5245, f2.801Min.
Mu01 Be 18 Sorv·U 81i-145·
8034.

1-800-992-4·170
vlsatmc
1-900-567-3727

HEY GUYS!
LONELY?
LIVE GIALSII

$3.89 niln . ..,.,_

(

:.

Seov-U (8t9) 645-&amp;134.

Authorized AGA Distributor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sates &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Toot.Dressing • Omamental
Steps '• Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
llems, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stulfll

LNE PSYatiCII
TELL 'IOUII
FUTUREI

1-800-?ftZ-"M f•t 2721 $3.01
Per Min. Uuat Be 18 Yra. Serv-U
(e19) 845-&amp;134.
•

PLEASE BE liNE
H00-825-7910 Ext 3818. $2.80

"No Job Too Lllrge or Too Small"

s.r.;.u, .

Per Min. Mutt Be 18 Yrs.
819-645-84:W.

We will work w~hln your budget.
Ph. 773·9173
· FAX n3-5861

7/22/tfn

..

C:ALLNOWI
l·'lD":flt.IMJ
Ed mz

~

985-4473

"

13.D9 Per Minute Mull Be 18 Yra.

'

SPORTSFUNt

POINT SPREADStl

wv

108

HOROSCOPESI

FINANCE, SOAPS!
t . Q00.528-580Q E¥1 2888 S2.N

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
linancial obligations and arrange a fair
distribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep ·exempt" property for their personal use.
This may include a car, a house. clothes, and
household goods. .
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Attorney William Safranek
·
· Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025

Athens, Ohio

~=======::;-;==::;==::==
Need Any·Type
GRUESER'S

r

of Cleani•l
Done?

GARAGE
Body work, car, truck
&amp; truck painting,
mlnor mechanical
repair.
Tune-upa, 011 Change,
WIIX, Butting
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Ask tor Kip
7110/lln

Honest, Dependable
and Trustworthy ladles
·ready to clean your
home or business.
-Reasonable Rates
992-6342 (Diane)
or 992·7275 (Brenda)
21'1Gt1-. .

ALL OHIO

Per Minute. Mu11 Be 18 Yr1.

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

You Can find Your Special
Someone Nowlll t-;oo.ne ...7ee
Ext "125 $2.99 Per Mtn. Mult Be
18 Yra Old Se,-U(8t9) 645·

Any Ca r
Any Dr~ver
DUI &amp; S R- 22
&gt; Disco unts &lt;
Compute r Quo tes '
(6 14) 992 -6677
Pomeroy

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

KINGS'.
Halle lmpravetttents
3351 Happy Hollow Road
Middlepor1, Ohio 45760
New Homes, Additions,
Siding, Pole Borns,
Decks, Painting,
Garages, Porches.
Call Us For AFrH
-Estimate
614·742·3090
614-742·3324
614-742·3076 .....

537 BRYAN

PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
992·2772

a.m.-3:30 p.m.
•RepkKenMmlVfindl~
8:00

•luild Garages
•Storm Doors &amp;

Windlws

•Room Atkliti•s

Seov-U (619)645-&amp;134.

8034.

40

Sentinel Classified$
110

4-lt -0804.
Garage door,

~,. ..

wood, must 'M

,

removed. 304-273-00911.
La~

Parr Blaek

8 Months Old.

81•-.wa-22QO. '

Pupp1.a To Qlvaway, 11 4·250-

12511.

Tp Giveowar To A Good Homo: I
Ylor Old Female FuU Btoodocl t.a.

U IMBUlEm SEIYICI
Transportation for
Individuals using
wro.etcllolrs. MediCflkl r.

- - - 311«75-3453.

60 Lost and Fotlncl
Black lab wlpurpla c:allar, ......
REWARD! Traffic: Circle area.
30«7!HI359 Of 304-875-2151.

Medlc:ln IICC!Ipled.

Doctor's visits,

IIOepltlt Yill.., etc.

Missing- $100 reward, 3 year ak(
fawn colored ftl'l&amp;le Boxer,
•Pearl•, on 4rnedlcallon, G14-6b83055.

Phone &amp;14-992--3053

Fax. 614-992·3053
Pager 1-8011-9112·2327
Pln2849

.. .-

GallipoliS
. &amp; VIcinity

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

"

ofloom Addltiona

All Yard Salta llull Be Paid In
A&lt;Nan... DEAOLINE: 2:00 p.m.

oflootlng

the day before the ad is to run.
SUnday adilion • 2:00 p.m. Fridor.
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Saturday. .

oNew Glll'llgea
•Eiectric:al &amp; Plumbing

,olnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Al•o Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Y.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy; Ohio-

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Sale1 Must Be Paid In
A&lt;Nanco. Ooadllno: 1:ODpm tho
day before the ad 11 ID run, Sundar &amp; Monday adltlon- 1:ao~m

Friday.

To plac• aa tttl, call
992"2156

Help Wanted

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

985-4422

EARN EXTRA MONEY
No Experience Necessary

Chester, Ohio
1M"""""

Deliveries Start Mid;March

People needed .to cleliver the new Ohio Valley,
OH telephone directories in: Glenw·ood, Apple
Grove, Ashton, Poiot Pleasant, Grimms Landing,
Leon, Gallipolis Ferry, Lelar1, New Haven, Hartford,
Mason, West Columbia, Lakin, Clifton, Southside.
Henderson &amp; surrounding areas.
_
\
To deliver you must be at leasl18 yeais old, have_
the use Ql an insured vehicle, and be ·available a
minimum of 5 daylight hours_daily..

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Public Sale
and Auction

Auction &amp; FlU Markel Mercha('tdise. For Sale By The Skid. 814·

256·1210.

Lemtey'a Auction Strvlce, LHii•
Lemley, Auctioneer. Houuhold,
Eota&lt;e. Farl)'l Salol. Call6t4-4486241, 614-3111-114-13.
-

Ohia Valley Bank Will Offer Fer
Sale A U02 Mercury Tra~r,
Vtnl 3MAPM10J6NR6118119, A
1989 International Truett, Vln•

2HSFBG2R9KC021358 With~
1986 Fruehauf Trailer, VI~
1H4P04537GF110801 l A 1915

•••60

,,,,.!!:"'*t
FLEAMAUET
Frlclar, Manh 7
10AM·9PM
FeeiMiy-S.nnett Poot128
American t.aglon Annex
Mill Street, Middleport
Venctora-$5.00, a• Tllbte8

To deliver a route In your neighborhood
Oall1·8()().827·1200 Job 8094-G
American Directory Service Corp.
EOE

80

R. L. HOLlON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

•

Yard Sale

70

~W71mo.

1/Min

.DELIVER TELEPHONE BOOKS
,

Glve&amp;Wiy

3 Male Puppies, Part Chaw &amp;
. Lab, Good Wilh Children, 1111-

H.O.M.M.
TRANSPORTAnON

'

Call Ruaa Mozengo
742·2094

liberty Walford 2 Br
tH·
bile Home, Serial 101l317d'.
PubUc Auction Will Be Held At
The OVB Annar, f43 Third AvC,
Gallipoh, OH On 318197 At 10;®
A.M. They Will Be Sold To Hi~­
esl Bidder "A1 Is" Without je_~essed Or Implied Warran • .
They May Be Seen By Conllcilll
Keith Johnson Al814·,._41~. ·

OVB Roao•vao Tho Righi To Mcopt Or Re~r Arrr And All 8i&lt;!t.
And Wirhdraw

Proportr

Fr~

Salt Prior To Sale. Terms 01 ~
CASH OR CEI'\TIFIED CHECK. ti

Rick P.araon Aucllon CompaJ!il
full lime au,tloneer, c:ompt.tit
au,tlon orifice. Uc:en1
~~.Ohio I Walt Virginia,
713-5785 Or 304-773-5..7.

90

na

Pick up di.c:arded
appilanc:es, bltterlea,
anany metals &amp;
motor blocks.

1114·992-4025 8 em-a
(UmaStone-

LowRitn)

WICKS
HAULING

· YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

Umtatone, .
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill 01,.·

Thellwre~

614-992-3470

f'Oulh Ftm1Iy

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AIIENTDI
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Haa 'lllut llanta• Or - !!hlp Got Up ' W.O. ...,. In -

Stlnlr1Rv

II THE COURT OF ·

r_lvl,..

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cditin~.

letklng foraeloaura and 21th day of Aprt~ 1"7Tha Laador llor1gago
.........
that the O.ndlllll
HEAIIING .
COMMON PLEAS
Company
June II. Ba.um and John
The'"" ·•IIIIi• ' County
IIEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
By
ShiPiro
&amp;
Fatty,
P.LL
Oft,
-Unknown
Spouae,
II
Commlaalonaro will !loki
. c.. Ho. ~7
Unda
J,
Hablnlk,
Atto.,.y
any,
of
Ju"'
M.
ll•um
hav•
the flr•t of two pu-llc
Affidavit tor NI'Yk:e ~
at Law
or claim to have an lntaN&amp;t
haarlnga at tha Maige
publicAttomay
lor
Pllllntlll·
In
111e
Nil
•tate
dMCribed
County . coMmla•tonara
Tile Lelftr Mor1gega
' Petitioner
below:
0111Cit, CourthOUII,
-Compiny, ,.._.rillfl
84111
Roekolda
Wooda
lttuatad
In
the
Vlllaga
of
P-oy; Ohio on M"'"'h 3,
1/a.
,
Bllld
..
South.
Sulta
340
Mlddlaport,
County
of
1H7 II I :OD P·m· f!lr tha'
David 8. Baum at II.,
lndapendanca, OH 44131
Malge, State of ·Ohlo, and
purpoae ·of proVIding the
Dtifendm..
(2161447-0100
public Information and
Undtt J. Habtnak, baing bou~d&amp;d and dl&amp;cribed as
(2)
25;
(3)
4,
11,
18, 25;
comiMIIIo 11 1o flrsl dOlly swom, -depoaas ""'-· to wit:
Iaing filly ISO) fMt off tile (4) 1;6TC
IM IYallabllftY Of ir~nt and lata that aha II IM
lunda from the Ohio piJintllf'a attorney In the 8outhe.. t part of Lot
NuMber Two 12) &amp;dJolnh\g
Drp srtmllnl of O.WtapiMnt ibov• entitled ectlon for the
Carel of Thanka
ptOperly olllr. Brownalt
FY 1-117 CoMmunity
'-loaura,MoMyRata.t&amp;
HouaJne t•provemant JudgaiMnt, that s•rvice of and running back to the
two hundred Italy
Proantin
.lllfiiiiiOnl cannot bl m&amp;da fence
We would like to
(2tO)IHL
Tlia~. program (CHIPI upon the Defendants JuiMI
thank everyone
Tile Defendant• named
provldea fundlni for 1111 lfl, 8aum 11111d John ON,
halped during ttie
t•pro•••IMI 11nd p;owtllon unknown Spou~e, If •nY, of above ar• raqulrad to
"' ·affllrdabl• houtlnt ' lor
M• Baum; that plalnlfll anawar on or balora ttia
alcknesa and death of
low end' inodantte IIIOGIM Ml aicarcla&amp;d reeaonabla
our daughter . and
Card of Th1111k1
perMM. I. · ·
·· lllllgance to ascar1aln tha
•slater, Gloria (Roush)
CltlzeM .,. enoour...d · realdance 111 the 11ld
' Harbour, ·
·to att..!ld thla meeting on dtl~ndanta, Including
are extremely
W!J would like to
*roll · :1, 1117 to makl
attam"ll by
•ua••tlo.-...lllllto proVkll - certified tnall, - r11ldent
gratefullo the
th-nk the doctors and
pu lc · Input on varloua MrviOe and 1111 hiring ol •
, Syracuse and
nurses et St. Mary's
aotlvltlea which may lla aklp trace 8gancy, ..,d IMI
undut.....,ln IIIIa fii'OIIt'llll. th• r..tdanca of llld
Middleport _
Hospital.
If a portlclpa!lt will nHd d•fandants Ia, ' other than
. Emergency Squads,
A speclarthanks to
aondtlerJ' aida (lnterpre!l!, ~n. all tor1h._Wtknown,
our frlendl and nei'Jh·l
llrlll~ or lapM -rill, and cannot with rHHMbte
also the .P omeroy
bars who sent flowalllfl\litlP llatanlng dlvloa, dl~c• bl aecwtaln&amp;d; and Middleport Fire
era, cards, prepared
otltel);'ciiN ' II 1 diNIItltty,. and thtlllita caM Ia of
Departments and
filod or vlaltaclanci sat
_....- taat ...... ~. .._ m.,.uon&amp;d In s.et1on
ttertc.'ptter to·lhllch ·:a, 1tl7 2703.14 andlor 3tt!S.oe of
Meigs County
• the hospltll with us.
.. 11+tll·211!11n order lo the RmNd c- of Ohio.
.
Shtrifffor
tlJeir·
Thanks to thole
tllll your ..... Wit Lltldl J. llablf!alc
help. The churches
who d~nated blood,
II• ICCOI!Imodated. Tha Alaocliite Cowoaal
.
Malp County COIII1h11UH e,.aeme CL Reg.11 ODIIDt
a. hllndloippld •cnttltle. .1'-e 11: a•um end John and individuals who thl churchea, New
E=~~r1C:::.'I
HIVen Maeon
W,llh&gt;l'1· -manta ~It I
U!lk'""'!l SpoiiM, If
have expressed their
Squad,
acoR!I*I until 1:00 p....,
of J~¥~• 11. aaum,
concern for
Citizen Centw, Foglella!Cli' l. 1tl7, ..,.. _ , bl
1111 place of
through their
aong Funarel Ho'!'••
....... - 1M lflllga eount,&gt;
•• ~ . . . .
CoM•taalonera, ll•lt•
d
d
Rw. TII'I'Y. ~ ancl
County Courtheull,
pray~p. car s II\
Rev. Damon Altodel
·
calls.
, _ " ' Olllo 4l1tl.
Jlnlt Ito d. PI II 'd II
Our Sincere Thanks
:::..::::.- II1CI
llllgeeount,&gt;
Ca ml r'JIMtl
Paul !ltld
May Goci bless eec:h
C111l.~llil rrc ·
Darnell; lla Darnell,
of you 1ncl_lteep us In
Don and Lindal,•-- •·-· PI'II)WS.

' '

(all 992 2156

New Homn • VInyl Siding New
·Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Backhoe, Trllc:khoct.
Septic Syatems
Installed

fllitl '" ..st Hylll '"

Public Notice

1 pl ... o·.-ud

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIIC~

Drtvewey L.IIMRone
Complete Houae
and Tl'llller Site
Work, Bulkfozlng,

outstanding
student

c.uiun is suhjcct lo

In accordance with the Company's Capacity arid En11roy Eme~gen¢~
Control Ptogram approved ,by the PubliC, Utilitie~ Commission'Ol · 1
Ohio. the C'ompany hereby apprises the public of the state of , '
;
electric supply in its servi?e area.
·
.. _

..

. HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Blake.named

-7--News polity-

1

_

For this book. he Ytlent to the site
where Genovese died in 1964,
Austin Street in Kew Gardens.
Queens. On that Marth 31, she was
assaulted outside her apertrnenl and
stabbed seven,! times over a half
hour. No one called the police until
after she was dead. The incident provoked a nationwide crisis of conscience.
The street stayed in Sternfeld's.
mind ; he went there 31 years later
and photographed the pale gray
cement sidewalk, brick facade of the
.3J"'r1ment building, the liquor store
across the street, the benches down
the block.
,
Austin Street is as ordinary a
s.:ene ._,the turquoise, tan and white
LtMTaine Motel in Memphis, where
Martin Luther King Jr. was murdercd; the h~zy green Lillie League
Philip Blake. son of David and
_ field in East St. Louis, Mo., where
Tammy
Blake and a student at BenIt
1 · •, "· , couch Cunis Fair fired his pistol,
jamin
Logan
School, Bellefontaine,
not a8 ifl was drawn li~~ a . (and missed) (our times at 16-yearreceived
the
"Real Raiders" award
·•-ft•h to these places, :• ·he says froril old umpire Roderick Fisher because
New York liome. "I drellded it Fi.s~cr'' threw him out of the game for January.
The award is given to the student
my life really wasn't very pleas, after arguing a call; the yellow
that
shows outstanding efforts by
for ti:Je past three years as I did autumn leaves on Sunset Avenue in
_
doing
his best in behavior, grades,
work. I didn't enjoy it. I never Fair Oaks, Calif., where 13-year-old
and
the
ability to get along well with
good about the pictures-! mlide." Kari L•ghtner was j&lt;illcd by a drunk
Stem photographed these U.S. driver, ,leading to Candy Lightner his teachers and classmates. The stujplatees- ~post office parking lot f&lt;!UIIding Mothc,.,; Against Drunk dents arc selected by the 1cachers
and the award is presented at an
Oklahoma where Patrick -Henry Droving (MADDJ.
assemhly.
ls~••mill began killing 14 cowqrl&lt;er.;
"Every time I started thinking
Philip is the grandson of John E.
1986, the starkly lighted culven in almul a rc~ion of the country, I could
Blake
of Pomeroy, and the late
·
' where 11-ycar-old Robert think of an event that ,happened
"Yummy" Sandifer · was killed· by there. :· Sternfeld says. ::Bit by bit. I' Sylvia Blake. nnd Marvin and Eva
M_illiron of _Middleport. Philip
I fellow .l!ang members in 1994, the. sturtcd 10 do thos work.
attends
the Church of Christ at
IP~::~~~- on Kansas-- state . highway 74
He slopped only brieny at each .
Bellefontaine.
li
~l!nti-nuclear activist Karen . place.
&lt;7
died in a mysterious 1974
But. he says; each visit was long
enough.
"When you're '(reading) The
one •. there was for me a
lsltnpJ;j;~!r~U;;IIh Of place," he says New York Times or some secondary
i, · the place whe~ it hap- source. you've got the comtilM of
soiling there with your cup of coffee
lpen&lt;:d.
"t'ye . always been involved · in and ynur bagel. We read about these
tile landscape for what il horrific events.
"They don' I have a reality, bul
humanity. I seem to he
Robert Hoffman , Long Bouom,
re faced with a place is a new junior member of the Amerthis interpretation of the when
lnndscape;' that the landseape_con- -where u happened ... there's some- . ican Angus Association,
tains ;meaning, contains clues about thing abou\ it that forces a different · Dick Spader. executive vice
.
kind nf thought. It breaks up the nor- dent of the national organi:iation.
He was ICd to 'the boo~ by twi&gt; . m'll· consumption of these events
headquanets in St. Joseph. Mo.
images, one on paper1 one_ in his that we as a society have taken. I · withJunior
members Of the a.&lt;&gt;ociathink that anything that jars that pal· tiun arc eligihle to register caule in
was a Civif War-~ra tern offers ·rhe opportunity for a the American Angus Association
~~:~!:~~ of tile place where a frcsh 'thOugh\.''
and take· par1 in Association spon11
was killed in battle . &amp;~
· ..
. That's what he hopes will happcR sored shows and other national and
"All you see is the edge or~ :~
' to his reader&lt;.
.
regoonal events.
. woods behind it and a~~ --- ·.·
Only two of the image~ contain
The-American Angus Association
which we can assun.e is · ··• visillle JlCI&gt;pl~ - the l,.os Angeles is the largest beef registry associahorse of Oeneral McPI)erson." be 91.1 desk where Nicole Brown tion in the world. with over 29.000
- - ' from his ho~ in New 'York Simpson's culls were answered in active adull and JUnior members.
"l~vc th.ought allout that,plioto·
tlu:' years. be lore her death.- and the
t~:,P~~n:•iSain and"';~hi'1""\¥1th6ut•· · ~~~er'Prc ., restaurant co-fouriood
II
why." '·;
'l · ' .
.hy·.Vicina'1'_-era·radii:l!l and one-time
In an effort to provide our readerThe other was a· Qu~ns. N.Y.. lit~itivc Katherine Ann Power.
ship
with current-news. the Sunday
lsll'Ctt where Kitty . ~oove.oc was· , Tho rest arc intentionally empty.
Times-Sentinel
will not accept wedlm,ur&lt;len!d in 1964 w~ilc . 38 neigh.' uf -humans to give the viewer room
heard her .cries (or help and did tv '"' alone in the place where these dings after 60 days from the date of
lhin~s happened. And to think nhout the event.
l not~~~~r the years I caught myself tho
Weddings submitled after the 60vi&lt;~en.:c .
day
deadline will appear during the
ab9ut her and !~ paniculnr
"One of the ways I justified this
week
on The Daily Sentinel and the
about the plj!Ce where it tu myself.'' he says. "was In ask
· ''What thai mu.~l wJoat's the obligation of me average Gallipolis Daily Tribu-ne.
All clut&gt; meetings and other news
. how It ~as con II~- uti ten on the limO of the Holocaust'/
· · must have happened. 1. kit ,orne sense of duty ... of hcar- ar1iclc~ in the . soc1cty scctmn must
he suhmittcd within 60 days nf
.,,~, ,~a., an imaac of this pla.:c · in~ witness and just pointing . out
occurrence. All hirthdays must he
to me. l"d never seen it. lh~J~ things.
.myself, not Qftcn b111 ollcn _ :; If cvcryhody pointed t&gt;Utnr did suhmitted within 60 days of lhe
occurrence ,
je~~~~f~ .. thin~ing about ~cr and .a httk part. w&lt;&gt;Uid it he hcuer'/
All matcriul suhmottcd fnr puhliIt
nboutthis place."
" I dnn'tlnnw. hut why nut try'!''

.

.

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES ·

~'I HOLLII L. INGL!!Y
}a8nMtt Newl lervloe
.. For three yean, pllotoJraPher
'~oel St.crnfeld was hauated by 'blood
;~ landiiCAp".
·
Criss-crossing the Uniled States
with his tripod and bulky ·8-by-1 0
.~iew camera, he stopped as briefly
IS · I~ minutes or u Ions as a day,
.t\1!COfdins in finely detailed color the
Jjbanalil)' of places where eyiJ events
happened, where people were stran·
sled, raped, shot, beaten, where
,,P..struction was ploUed, lives ruined
..sw lost/ · •
.;. Sternfeld's last boo'll of photographs wa.. a sunstruck, lyrical
essay on the Italian couinryside outROine. His new one. "On Thos
"
published b~ Chronicle
a collection of ~2 deceplti~eh'peaceful il)lages of unremark~~~~~~~&amp;c"!~ peopled by ghos1s 1&gt;f

Business Services

'roo.

TRAVELING IN STYLE·- Roger and Cof!nla Manley, triY·
eled in style to an out·of-town dinner In ctlebration of being
named Vaughan's IGA "Hometown Swee~hearta. • A dozen
red roses, a plaqu·e and a· gift certificate were preaented to
the couple.
unique marriage was told in the let- pita!. They still hold hands and sit
ter written hy his sister and niece.
close together in the car. They do
"They have never hccn apart at sweci things for each other and
night even at the hirth of lhcor ,chil- help anyone they can," they wrnte .
.
dren. He stayed with her atthc ·hos-

PUBLIC NOTICE
,··
FROM AMERICAN ELECTRIC POWER*

witness to t~e
banality of violence

Long Bottom
youth joins
Association

where licenses arc issued recog-

j

Arn.olds~ mark

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Being named "Hometown
Sweethearts" - by Vaughan's IGA
came as quite a surprise to Roger
and Connie Manley.
"We didl!'l even know we were
in the running," commented Roger
who said he wasn't aware that his
sister, Rosemary Man Icy, and
niece, Connie Little, had wntten a
letter nominating them.
The sweetheart competition is a
part of the . "Hometown Proud"
.theme of the supermarket,
Don • Vaughan,
explained
owner/manager.
"We want to accent the positive
things of this community," he
added. "The contest provided our
customers an opportunity to recognize touples who have made good
impressions on them ... bcen kind of
role models," said Vaughan.
A plaque displayed at the store
bears the name of the first "Hometown Sweethearts." Red roses
were presented .to the e,ouple and
they were given a gift certificate
for dinner and transportation to the
'
restaurant in a limousine.
YOUNG' LOVE·· Roger ·wa818years old, In 1ervlce, and
Roger and Conni.e were rparried about to be sent to Germany. Hie sweetheart, Connll, Wll ·
tin Oct. 25; 1964. He was 18 years just 16, They were married at noon on Oct. 25, 1111-t and
old ' and -stationed with the U. S. had !l two-hour honeymoon before Roger left for Fort Knox.
Army at Fori Knox, Ky. coming
home un occasional weekends to
see his sweetheart who was just 16.
Manley said that what they
wanted to do was get married
hcforc he shipped out. Getting the
marriage license was the problem.
The weCkends were the only time ·
he could got home and it was "
always after noon when the Meigs
Count)&lt; Gol!rlhou•c .had flbsCd that
· he arrived.
An employee m the office

OVAL -services coordinator
submits resignation

The Board authori-.i:J the opening of lhe posi(ion. as well as r~vi­
sions-to the joh description for that
position. Applicants should have n
Master's Degree. prcfenohly in Computer Science, and a working knowledge of ttle Unix operating system
and be ·able to develop and· manage
web sites for OVAL and :mcm!&gt;er
libraries. Job descriptions arc avail- .
aJ&gt;Ie from OVAL and letters of ap,plication must be received hy March
28.
..
In other business.' the· Board
approved the purchase uf computer
equipment for web &lt;ile develop. .,..nt. They also applll.YCd the printi'ng of the ' liflring Books· By Mail
Specialty .catalogs with' The Print
Shop of Jackson.
. Founded in 1973, 0VAL · is
O.hlo'$ oldest c_hartered regional .
libnr1 ayllell). In c'oopj!ratlon with
" .' i .
."
.
,; -ltd&lt;
.

Sweethearts' named
.

The o.tly SenUnel• hue t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

B~aring

was finally removed sill' months save a life. Pleaae -yfNtreade!S.
later, it was discovered to be malig- •• Mary and Bob in Eu,eM, OR.
nant •• a Stage 4 melanoma.
Dear Mary and Bob: My ~t
My son knew the chances for survival were extremely slim -- less condolences on the lou of yaur sol..
than I percent -- despite treatment The voice of experience speaks
with interferon, interleukin and louder than anything -1 might say.
chemotherapy. He tried everything, Thanks for an excellent letter. It
but in the end, it didn't mauer. It was could save lives . .
too late .
Gem of the Day: Before you crit·
Not all preferred health providers
icize
a man, walk a mile in his shoci.
are trained 'to recognize melanoma.
Friends in the medical community Then, after you have criticized him.
share our opinion that such tragedies you will be a mile away and you will
'
will occur more often with the also have his shbes.
prevalence o~ managcd~health care
and the efforts to control costs . Cor- · Send questions to Ann Landert,
ners arc cut, a'nd often , t~e patient Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
gets shan shrift.
I hope our son 's tragedy can help Calif. 90045
·
·
:

~Hometown

m.diy, ~ 21,1117

'

••

Abloluta Top Dollar: All U.S.
-

And Gold Colno, Proof

Olamonclo, Antiquo _ , _

Rm··
p,..1930 u.s. c.
S
E10. Acqulilllono
- II.T. Coin ShoP.
all, ,,.....,.ag;
~.Gal,

151

Antiquoo, flitnlture, gae.-,

coin,, toy&amp;, Iampi, ount, to ,
allatoo: alto opprofoalo, OobJ·
Matlin, 114-112·7-Mt.

N-.

Clttn late Modtl Care'" Or

T•ueko, 1890 Modolo Or

Smith Buick Pontiac, 1800 E..,,

. om -..., GalipoliL

oat·.
--Soltlnt- _...
713-5033.
••,

'J &amp; o:a Auta PatiO. Burlnt

Uaed Bronco or BIIZII, In .....
runnt~condition. for work ar.
3D« · .•
·au,;..: AllfMtue FumlluN • ~

.. lluMI, a Clot .
, . . . . . - . li. . . .llll, .

IICIIIIIIII. Ro

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·=
••

7 .....
5 5
. . . - .....

... , ,==-·
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1 ...........
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5 lola (10012101 - (110&gt;3211
...100. Call304-t75-lt01 """'
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llllrtll .._ tdYOttillng In
thll nauu PIPI'i&amp;~ Ia
tho F - Folr Houoinglfct
of llllllwlllch mak• Mllogol
to ldvertiM
llmbtiDn or dllclln*iillkw•

·anv P4••1Ct.

''

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-on race, color, llllglon.

. I.OCRE?Wt ... -.g a .n
• • .. ad Forern~BC.......

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-Good

88)1

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T i l l s _ ... not
knoW!ngiy8CCopl . •
adYinlstmonllfofrNIwlilch Is in -lion of the
. law.,Our ,_,. 110 horet&gt;y
inlonned thallll.-lingoo

AVON Saloo: $a ·115 /Hr. No
Door To Door, ·ao,..aao' Fun &amp;
EU~I 1' 800·827·4640 lnd/SIII
~

.

721 1tUdl8 .tor 8111
1112 foftl F-1111, aoo-ecrt. 5iPd.

,..,.,
Cliff Avlrua.
'+ ···~
~DeadII
ll •l41 Orion
AMMID'i
now accepting appllcadano for
ono bodroom aportlntnll. &lt;:on-

.l lct mantaament tt the office

Mondor through Friday, 8am5pm.

lM &amp;1111- M or L lllfl -

lmill fllrnllhfld upotalro lporl•

polo.

J£r

AERAllON MOTORS
AABopoiloclod, &amp;in Block.
Coli Ron
t.-.5.'17-

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1110111. lbr, - ' " ' , ........ 402-

no - · no......., .. raloranc"
'dapooiL 304-e75-2151.

Twfll·-

410 Houlllfor Rent .
2 .. 3 """'"""' ..... In l'loonoouy,

rent 1275,. pluo ~ dopooh r•
qulrod, no pall, dor 114-gU,
2381.

T-. i- •:=

epplicallo,. .. r tbr. HUD
lzod apt. lor
~nd handl-

::t;:l
cappod,·EOH

'Ill.

Uppar leVel apartment In Paint
Plaaoanl TWC!, bedrQomo, ldlehon
appl. lncludocl. Dopoolt I rtftr·
oncoo required. Coli 804·875·
2144. .

450

actvenlsad 1n Wt newspaper

air, am-fm coooatto, 74,000
:11!4-1175o5424 •
2 HorN LIYootAck Troller, t Ouorllf ..... ~Coli- 1HZ Nl..an Plt:lo-Up I &amp;pHd,
AMIFM Sporty, 11;300 It,__
8 P.M. 114
a BrNd llmouelnl Helaera. 1 4782..
RtgllltfOd Bull a Milici - .
Out Around Uoy. IlliG Otlvtr,
NH Hoy Jlack, JD Baler; 7 Ft
&amp; .... C.I\114 4tl3174.

•••*· . · .

.... lUNd, Bawman't Ilew;
81...-.7213.

..

Milici F - . 13Q.A Plcll Up,
I tOO Pw OUmp Truci load Oo·

ctniiYo Fund, ~~~- • •:
F.eoo dump trudt;814-143-517t.

Hay&amp;Graln

lliltrr Available. Hauling limo 455 Round BalM H., 125 illalo.
SDW and Gtattll11 - M71.
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Two bedroom houae. carpeted

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nOr Required. s.nd Ae1ume to:
PO Box 808, Galllpcllo, Ohio

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Comou• K,_ledgo Prelorablo,
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Expari-. Froo SUpplleo, Into.
No Obligation. Sand LSASE To:
ACE, llopl: 1351, Box 5137, Ola·
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Will Do Computer Typing
Profeatlonll

WIN haul junk or llllh pldlup laid. 304-1176-5035.

tlla foftl Pick-Up Slip Sido 302
~ No Ruot R.IOO. 814-251-

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21

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BUlin ISS .

Opportunity

'

I

Ii

II

Fufi.Timt Floral OotlgriOI, E~· VENDING: New, ExciUng, And
anced &amp; Aaltifanceo, Sind R• Moot Of AH Prufilllolel 1•500-820Ct.A 408, Cia Galllpollo 4363.
'"'""·
&amp;25 Tlllnl ...........
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230

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1184 Chivy 4x4 Good Wor~ .
Truci, High Mlloogo, Aoklng
18.200,814-441-0744.

·•'

•' I &amp;e!N ON MY

BODACIOUS DIET
.• 4 DAYS
NOW II

7LIItlc.d . . .
I S.lh
1

11

II

17 -llalnM
11 NYC' llal

Nertli Ball

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l'ltill

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Pue

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The king is alivefor now

JtO,OOOOIIO, 814-256-11270.
-:.

111110 foftl Ring« 4ll4, m~ accettories, CD, 8 ape~~ket amp,
nice 1ruck, undor 85,0~ mltoo.
S700Q 080•.814·111l2-ilt8li 589· .

Wei&amp;

Opening lead: u

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tHO Chwp it2 Ton 414, BlaFko

350, 5 Spaid,- Tinted Wlndowo,

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FREE 101or cotolog.

, _,..

THE' BORN
LOSER. .
~ ~
. .
· BEMOCD, ~5, ~ Cf' 11-'f. .
, ~OF~UfETIMf.:WE.
AA£.£:130PP (J:JII£T !
'

~

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TANATHDME
bur DIRECT ond SAVEl
9ommor- unill hm

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

~~~e

wDHtTIMing -

2 ·- ..m located on Brotd·Run
Rei In Now Ha•on, UIO por

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PAEVIOUS SOWTION: "An a1helllls 1 fll' W110 wlkl• • -.o.n.e-....
laolllllg1mund doMn~-. WhO wlnl. -~D.
Eloollhour.
-t-tl
~..

HOW ORI~T
tiXJI..,._T ITOO, !NOW!

month deposit I utlllti... 304773-!811.

-·1351·

Enthuolutlc Paoplo Ntodod To
Promote Product• ·Hand Out
INOI"ICEI
Slmploo ·&amp; Coupono In local OHIO VAlU.Y PUBLISHING CO.
. ~ S-1 Worll F~~~ recommend• that-you do bUal· ut&lt;lay. Sundoy, Atxlblo
1wllh people you know, and
lltg. t-7W 1248 E111. 15&amp;
ID oond mai1ey through tho
:::;~encec~ Clt!Wri, ·wa11era &amp; moll unlll you hoYt lnvellfgorad ·
fltoflorlng.
- · · - - • wanted. Send r1tum11
.,, Ia• G-20 Clo Point Pleollnl !Mgt Prufit Polontiol From SIHI
Roal- 200 Main SL Pt. Plooo- Bldg Buolnon Naln. Cc. _,.._
.._YN25!10
I
lng Dotlorlhlp In Open Market.
EXPERIENCED .FURNITURE SIJH Or ConatrucUo.n. 303-751·
,_
ITAIPPIA I REfiNISHER 32DOEII.51150.
Wilted. MUll haV'• ~ckground local Veftding Route Far Sale.
In WCiodworklng. Pan-Time or Big Coorll Wloldr. CaH t -800-350FuH·dme available. ,Slllrt lmrnedlallly.. Call 814-448' 4514 M-F, 11383• .
1-5 or drop Oil Application at ~)moll Doll &amp; Grocory, 814-448·
1403-3310.

:
=

~·

11WIIIIIIIIp
BOllin

FINANCIAL

EIIY Work! E1ce1Jent Payl AI·
Nmbft Products at Home. Cell

Toll Free 1-1100· 417-5588 EXT.
12170. .

or Pttaonal Oocu-

""""- Alflel- Prien, 614245-5323.

--., ..
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,.,..,
....
.....
...
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:w.::r
.....
.....
....
......... ·"=' . ?=tr"
9 KQ It

. •AISII
t 7 SI I

-ted.

and c:1ttn. no 1 - poll, di!IO•II
roqoirod, 114-1182-30110.

,...._
t I z.e-

•

. FurniShed

2 hdroom HouH Rirtloerator Kinga Motel Lowell Rate1 In
TRANSPnRTATION
SID•• Fum lolled, Waohor, Dryot
'
Hook-Up, t 701 112 Choonl~ Gal- Town, Nowlr ·Romodolod, HBO.
lipollo, 1250/Mo.• $150 Dopoolr. Clnomu, ShoiOtimt &amp; Disney. Ouoon Wator lad With 8 DraW- 1 -..;...;...:......;.o~....:....---­
Woakl~ Raloo, Or Monlhly AoiM.. on, inoulaltd Brown Shadoo For 710 Autos tor Sl..
614-44&amp;0427.
Bt4-441111122.114-441-5t87. .
I Fl. Wide Wind~IOI , DtaP&lt;!I,
'
.
CMI.IlY oRDERTAKiiB
., 1971 Bulcll Eloctre 225, seoo,
z· Bedroom• 'In Eureka, et4-25&amp; Rooms lor rent • Wll8k or monlh. &amp;1...-.1731.
Earn SIS ·S11 Pw Hour+ Ccm11401·
S101ing at St:!Ohno. GaHia Hotol. RCA Conoolt T.V. $80; l'arllblo 61 4-702-Zi 18.
mlulana. Exlremelr High Cua~
tamor Demand, No Ovtrnlght
2323 Jolloroon Ava. 2Bodroom, !8~14;1~18~;115580~~-;;;;;-;;;-;;~; Ztnllh $50, Wor~lng Condition! .t gnc-ntfDiponoot,...lll
l - t 185; -I.Mng Room
Trani. lmmodlato Optnlngo.
...
parllal baaement, ~·\.• t2711 Sleeping rooma with
. 114-378-«1111-!5pm.
1
Chalro 125 Eacll; lnoulatod Nloo
Condldo110 loluot Be -1&gt;18 To
mca.dlpoliL 3H-87
Alao trailer ap~~ce an
DIIG
HOUM
145;
814·378•2720
Start PlldT...,. Proal am 110o&lt;
3 ladroom Hotloa In Paint Plou- hook-ups. Coli ahor 2:00 p.m.,
1881 Ford Bronco Troller Spoi;i•
•
CALL MIL lOLL Filii i
an~ CA I Hat- Corpot t 112 304-773-!;e51, MaoonWV.
. AfTER I P.M.
35tM; ttso ford Bronco ' for
·I Ill a:l·llll
. .
Three Bedroom .Brick In Tara Bartoo. SID\Io, . Aofrlgora10r, 01111- 460 S
fo Rent
Relr.lg.,atora, StoYII, Washers Parll. BoCh Ru"' $1,500 For 8oth
Subdillltlon . Two Full Ctrlmlc walher Furnlohod, 1376/Mo., I
.
pact r
And Drro11, All Rtoandlflontd f14-3117-o3811-3:110.
ca,afOd'pds
lalh' 1Wo C. Garage. 172.000. Dapooh, 304-e75-7873.
And Gaurantoedll100 And Up,
Holill&lt;i trailer "'"· oeclud_.. trot, WMI Dollv!lf. 014-611H441.
ltol-317-7454.
1983 Camara Z-28 305 AulD
•lwlliiiOg PDOI-g•r
180 Wanted To Do
clip
oor.
IIYiilablt.
~211n.
•
3 Bldroom. Rt. 2 ·Applogro••·
Willi 0.0. T-Tot&gt;ii PIW, Tilt. SSOO.
.
~ LIItgAny odd jobs, painting, gutters 320 Mobile Homes
Clooo to Sholl Plant. 304·578·
ROYAL JELLY With Siberian Allor 5 P.M. 61ol-446-t306. .
2842.
.
claanod. 814·245·5879 or 304Glnoang
MERCHANDISE
10 Capsuleo, 120. Call
rorSIIe
a.plicatlona Are A•allable In i75-7112.
111 .ueeaoe. t.-.2nOOQ&amp;
Tfto Parlta - · Aocrettlon Of·
312 Wezgal 3 -oo.mo. PomorUoe. 111 lecond Annue, Fer
ay Aroo, S3501Mo., Oopoolt A• 510
8moll hocioy &amp; ~.alketball
Household
.._,. lolo-tlon Plo- Conapor11 card collectkln. 304-87S..
""'""' 51~574-25311.
tool 114-441•1022. Dotdllno
Goods
2413.
. . . . 1.
Nice 2br, buernent, ptllge, rafReconditiOned STORAGE TANKS 3.000 O«&lt;lon
orencoo &amp; depooi~ No F'olll 304- Appllaneet:
Ccmputar Uooro Noodod. WOrk
875-5182.
Walhort, Oryoto, Aongeo, Aofrl- UprlghL Ron Evant EntOI'priooo,
own hou ro. S20k "' ISOklrr t·.
graton . . eo Oar Guitantttl
. . :11171. X1508.
ThrH bedroom houN In Pomer- Fronch Cllr Moy~eg. 814-448- - · Ol'io, t-800-537or. ·new carpet, rtctntl' painted 7'1115.
. SUpor Nlnttndo No Oorne&amp;; S75;
Computer Uoon Noadocl. Wor~
inllrior, c:lttn. 1375/mo.. &amp;14-742·
Twin Bod Manr- I Bolt Springo
OW,n 11\luro. ZOK To ISOK /Yr. 1·
Zl87.
.1 Year $71; Bear Cat Scanner
-,-7t811X117.l
·
FrHzor. Walhor. Dryor. VCR, l50lll4-245-5323
Throo bedroom. froo goo, Iorge Rofr!Ooratoro. Mlcrowavo, 814·
C~•tomer Strvtce Rtpt'lltnta·
'tlrll. TPC woler, 132.5 mo., szoo 2511-1238.
Uud 22oo Oltc:li WIICh Tranc:hoi
...... lnlllllatnt.
c.....
dlpoll~ CooiViHo Rd., ,Aotdo•lle,
81-7842.
OriOntod ""-' Sought For Fui81oHII7-8278.---Tima l'aoiUOn, In Fall Poco Offlee. E•callent Organizational
Skllli Partnorad With Excotlenl

11.........
148

11CI
. .. .-......
llfiON
llll ' W~ ·
1tF5 I
11C7MeflleM
11u..t . . . . . . . .
:lOIII 7 I
12.11'1( ......

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a

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· ·n
"7
7. . . . .... " 7
.1
7

Rooms

ara avaiiable on an equal
. . opJ)OI1Unlty bUll.

't.aTTLEII WILL JIQWEAI. LOSE
up 1D 30 poundo, 30 DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE! Nollral.
OoC10r Atco...__, 814-441 ·
11ie2.-..,...

lmpotlid Handmade C~Gtro FOf
Slit, 422 -..! Avtnut, Gall-

--Cioll~-o.w
RnMolnv
wllh dowa popmonL 2111 SL 1250/mo. plua electric, Uft Chllro, Eloc:lrtc Whooloholro. AOHA olllllon, two yaaro
-~ta.
.
.
. Stair Lilli, Van Lillo, Scootoro,

tamllialatatua or f"'lllonnl

llmbllon or-inio-1.'

andup.ID 1 tr Uiliilllwllli4~al

.....

..

origin, or any Ueutioro 10
mak811Pfluehptl.......

?' hod,&lt;MIIIJT-Cira

....,.To:llldOhiQTtaos.qo
11110
-Phonoi14-U7-&amp;o!Oa.
-'l.an:ullt, Ohio
,, 43130'

I

•

..

Profllllorial
serviCes

-22.

An Hour. Call Carol King, 814· Fumlllre feflnllhlng, realoration,
repair and upholstery. Superior
work. Buy and Still A Countrr
.
HELP WANTED - E1parlonctd Crtfllmon. 304-741100
llooi- Cerpanlora. lollnlmum HARTS MASONARY • Block,
Of'S Yea" E•perienc:e, Truck I
&amp; stone work, 30 yNrs ••·
Hand Toole iAol8toncoo A M~oL btk:k
AppiiCIIIDftl Art Available At perience, reasonable ratet. 304·
895-3591 aflor 6:00pm, no job to
1403 Eoa*" - · Gallloolia, OH. omtll or to BIG. WV-021 ZD11
.
· lion -F~. I A.M. To 5 P.lol. (8t4)
~14; .
.
HAVE ADYEATI8tNO NEEDS ?
Sign-Inc. 304-IIM702

- ....v:-"0::::.

-lcloltono

' LlvlngaiOn'a ba11m•..n1 water~
proofing, all bllsemenr repalrt
done, fr" ea11m1111, litetlme
guarantM. 10yra an job experl·
. 145,000 ln- tnCO. 304-e75-2t45.
C:all t-100-51:1-

REAL ESTATE

·, ... TIIM •

..,.n.. ..z,.,a.. a•••· .

2or3Btdoaom, iliOiindtm'mo.
-lit-up &amp; dolvorylrr~¥a1Cl41

.. NDl Paynwrt .,...,

2br trailer In M"""-L rtltronc• I dopooiL 304-11112-32117.
Nico 2 Bitdroo!fto, $225/Mo, 8
Mlieo Down 211. Nlco; Reloroncoo. Dipoolt Aaquired, 814-448·
81 72. 814-25e-ll251.

...7.

C~Uno,

•Apartmentl
for Rent

2 hdro.o mt, 1 Bath, Must ~elll

304-131· 7295.
3 Troiloro lbr 1111. 30+4175-1071.
A1,1prax. 4 ~rea With. tD88 Mob• I• Home On Raccoon Road,

Connec:tlrig To Raccoon Creek,
Ahef 5:30 114-448-11515.
In Srrocuoe. 121e0. 2 bedloom, 1
112 bafl, WI-., rofrigooaiOr, wid,
tic, 114·892·4571 or 114·1435112.

IT'S BIG. · 1997 4BR, 2BATH
DOUBLEWIDE. Jt,g48 DOWN,
$3t&amp;rMO. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOO
HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304· 755·
5885. Limited Offer. With ap~crodiL
~imiled Olforl 1997 dculrltwlde,
3br, 2batll, St 7118 down, I27G/

month. Free delivery &amp;.
Only at Oakwood Hamea,

wv. 304-755-58115.

Mull eell· 1997 14170 1hrte bed·

.room, inr:ludot I monllur FREE leO
renL

Ont~

St85.57 per month wilh

1 I 2tlodroomt. Unfurnlohod &amp;
lumi-. No poto. Wedge Apart·
monii30+417S.liJ72.

1 and 2 bo&lt;looom aparlr!*111. furnished and unfurnlahlld, aecuriiJ'
dl(lposit req~lred, no pets, 814!

Sale On Room Slzt Corptll In
Slack Mollohan CarP&lt;!to, 814-7444.
·
· Mtlll roofing, overetocked, In·
vonrory ialo .. Sav.. 30'11. whllt
Sofa choir S250. Bunk .bocfo wl oupplloo loll. Man~ colars. 20yr
mattr..l . Cedar cheat. Curkl. warrlllty. Call RC Roofing 304·
Bedroom IUite. ,....., and CDI'I· 372·5301.
ere• !lema. Cou1trr f.urnllure "'"'" ......_ tor o.le
304·675-11820. Rt 2 N PI Plaaoarw. Clooad Moudayo.
1 AKC . Blaci lob, foll)alo, I
Uood Fum"" 130 Bulaville Pike weeki old, 111 shots &amp; wormed.
We Bur And SoH Uoad furniture 304.07S.215tor304-875-11358.
014-446·4712 Hro. t 0·4 Chock
Shop -Pol Grooming.
.
UtOull
Hydro· Bllh . Don
&lt;;leorgoo CrHk, Rd.

""" ......

....

F011- LX 2dr, hbll,
lie.
caiMtte, blaCIII

sa-..
leo gllltor,

w1-., -.
lent condition, Gr.-,t a•• mil•
Cal304-8l5-'!l'lll

:•~·;:;:;.:-;....;;;.;..;.;;.;;;·· -111110 Modol S.banlloyal • WD,
88.000 liMn. S4;250, 080 lit42511-1252, 814-2!111-1818.

Cutloll S\IP&lt;tmt; In Vory
Kopo Condition, With Hlglo
Make An 'Offer, 8t4·441·

· NoW ltnk Aopo'el Onlj 31oiL
owner financing tYtllablt. With

- - ci- 304-755-7181.

4 Doort,

.Aoklng

1182-2218. .

1 Bedroom Near" Holzer · Elrtra
Niee, Goi Hoi~ S26GIIolo.. • Ullll·

760

,...IU

...

r•,.

"'

;"'·
lo

Bud~at
$tart~nt~

Price Tr~~namieaions ,
at aiiO.OO lllld'Up, .Uood I
R.billfil All Trpoo, ~tr IO,Ooq
ltanom oolono, Acctn T11nollir
Caooo &amp; Reac Endo, 81,0·246·
5177

• .o(/

.,
'{

~I, CllARLES .. Ii:EME/t\~R
.. 'I'ESTEROA'f' WHEN I WENT
TO 'I'OOR HOUSE'? ·
~M-LITS AN!SWIIS.

ea....,.,., ·

Yah.weh Owner -·Chord· Gentle ·ANYWHERE
By the time you get enough experience to watch your
. step you usually l!ren't going ANYWHERE.
a

1971lllaloli 24'FL With Awrti!IO

43,100; 197• Coechmarf 2t 'l't .

Air I Awning 1$,200; 't978.Wil·
dornooo H'ft. With Air $2,500;· •
tNO Flooalwlng 17 Ftl3.700 witt
IWDino. ni~e.. 18iQ McCormick
Rd, Galllpolio, Ohio 41iG3t.814·
-1511

:.::~-~~~-~8.

40,000 BTU Warm lolorrolng Natrual Gaa Stove $40, 614·448·

0518.

.

lno

F4RM SU PPLIE :o
S. LIVlS I OCK

Horne
lmprovlfii8Rtl

Cttdlt Problema? Gturanroocl Flf'JAMing, ,10% l;)qwn, Payment.•
AI l-ow llo SteO Ptr M•nrh. No
Turn Oownal Call Ruth 014-.t"4128117.
~
..

· BASE!IENT

WATERP!iOoFING

Uncondillonollilollmo
~·~~·-·
L~X:al rt.ferehcea furntahtd. Ea~
robliolied 1,&amp;75. Coil (814} 4480570 Or, 1-500-287-0571. AoOora
Waterproo~.

.

• AppMiflCe"Parta And ·Senrfce: All

• Name Branda OVer 25 Year• E•·

perlenc• All Work Guarante•d,

Fr,nch City May1ag, 814·448 •

)Wr ...... by tN11!rg " end SASE
ASTRO·ORAPH .
, .
. to AllrO-OriPt· clo lhll •• . fiiiM, P.O.
___...__:....:.,_.. . Box ;751; ..unty Hill Sl*tlon. IMw Yorll,
NV 101118. Be 111n 10 _.. ,our zodlltc

General Home Main.
tenenC,e · Pl inling:, vinr't aiding;
eorpon•y. dooro. ~ """"
- , . . . , . rapol&lt; and . _, For
- oolimato call CliO• tfol-1182-

C&amp;C

tuni.._ .

~

k

.

h

7~

Graclouo living. i and 2 bldroom
-lmttlllal VHIOgt Manor ond
Riverside Al)lrtrMntl in Mldcn•
porL From ~1304. can &amp;14&amp;82·5084. Eqioal Hauling Oppor-

llgn. •.

.

I

. lniJL

*"'
IOI*ou?loraeclto!ltlf'a••·•••

·---·

1'17CA CM. • " 1171 lit 11 t. IIMI
IDclly lo 11t!it your _,II 1 ,a !WIll to
~ dli#•• lllllatlllal -.1 ptt1a •

4 4 - 1171 ~~·70 ...... . .

·~~.==
I

1111. ~~~~~-

•

.

110) Vou might ICOII!'IO (0111. It lin II) ....., w111t
· waltilll slaW gol7lntj 1tatltd IOdly~ In yOI.If-andnal.yaurl'rcla • . . . ,.
fact. you; prodUCIIYUy could wana II II you~ ·loolingo do/nln•ta. lharw Ia •
p'Je na1, UllllliniJ VOUf'CIItllti.. !lllnll.
chlnca .you:tiiNII'IIII by ICNIIIII·III-. . 1 (lily It""-"" Gllugl your no?wl-~• •1t. .
·
ltldinOe -My IOdly .m don, come tAGIITNIIUI (Mtlwo. D Dllc It) llllin
on too ...,.
~ IMt ilacw
. mellllllll •ap~~...,.. you•rw llnldola to
llllpptrlld to you ,.,....,, . . I IS) fa · buf but CM1 llllont, Will unlit you t.w
7I
ljlpllll lo INi .,.a..
.. fundl-l~ lnllllld ol IUIII1Ing up
c ..rec...,.at..lu?yii)Ta.lliMto .......,.., • . ·
JUS your - I n 0t111r todl¥· 10 lllat CAfllj:ORN (O.C.INan. 11t Needllllr when ,OU'I'W luoltlllll ·lor IOIIIIIIIiolg laM MUllaly ccQd _.,.... your PIOIJI=
rou Uflllllll noid. • _,,
I today. Do not •ccldtntaNy ta•ve the
,
.
, 01111y • 11 .._
P!IOfta off· the lloolt and th•n panic
U10 (.lu?I·D·IIfl II) 7llln f ling n •I"'"_,.,,_,IMig..-.

*"' --'*'8

'*

-lit)•
Cltllat.,mllfq •,...... lllf .-. * •·
,
lnf~t .... •J?

IV or .._ IIJ NpUieiiOn to Ill .......

..

comperiaon , ~lll ~-mall·
ln(l .coatly pu~. If ,au don'!, you
_!!liQ!I! liD tallcod inlo paying more for

ARIII (llanll UaAprll II) It could

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

I f , .... 28, 11!17
JoltUI .II 11ft loolc ptCMIIilltllllor you In
.,.,_.,... ..,..w lyouiiM!tup
wlllta.,..... ... - ; . . . _ . . .
II Nil boncll. 8o11t o1 you -MI t1t11n

VIRGO (Aug. 28-lep?. 22) Oo tOIM

. -"*9hnllley'rallelli.
........ (81111. ~ :D) Wilen "--lnn\l
make matter~ W9f18 .• you 1QN1 to do l"'h Ill ;lilt ladltr.. flllaty illi, lljiiiO
~~~lodlty -Iii . . Jll 11 Ill (1111 • IMPDI'· If you ...... 10
to uy 10 ~liM a ....... fltend'o ,..._ c:omplil'*l! · INI CMaln M or

'

'

~----- TAUIIUi (April iO Ill'

LOla . . ....

HI7 1"!"• 4!!:;•
..~ 11P~.!!,.'
1
?lie laGtalb . I I I !fr.....-I',U• , • --..-

taln your

............... loa!lfol.,tit dl .... .,.,.,_.., . . . . . . . ~ . . . .~.:::..-

llntllor VC!U'·~ Pl'l ?IIU•Ior

i,

ooll

' '"'""

""" ....., es-.

Motor Holnes .

BEAUTIFUL fe"RTMENTS. AT
BUDGET PRt S AT JACKSON
ESTATES, $2 ootwood Drlvo
from $210 to 1334. Walk 10 ohop

~::n
·~;i

. ,]1

1985 Slratea 28&amp; PROiXUDC
175 HP Evindrudo Uka
Mu• Sao, Un• II tiM--It4-44t.Q801
........ -....
. &amp;.

790

2bdrm. aptt., t~ual electric, appliancoe luml&amp;had, laUndo:Y room
lilc:illtie"o, cloll&lt;i to ichoolln IOWn.
Applicatlono l'ltllable at: Vlllagt
Groan ApiL 14g or cal 614-"2·
3711.EOH.
.

.P

,..,;

s...

~~

Water, Sewer, Traah "Included,
$2951Mo .. No Poll, Depooill R.
qulrod, Fot Appli&lt;Jiiono Ca118t4448·0001, ~~··448·0957, 614·
441 -1811.

~ It

\ ,11'

750 Bolts &amp; Motors
for

Now gu tanko, 1 tan !ruck
&amp; radiatorL D &amp; .R AulD,
Alploy, WV. ·304 •172· 31133 rir 1800-27H321.

Acro11 From Cinema Theater
With Waatter I Dryer Hook·UP.,
St0¥"t, Refrigerator Fvrniahed,

-.

~z,

Modolt75,81~1t.

Furnlohod 3 Aooma I Bath. No
Poli, Rollrenco And Oopo~l R.
C!Mnod,614-IOB-1518.

310

I

0.11. 125 Transmloolon 188&amp;

"'"' 8t..-.21157.
2 Bedroom ·Brick Tow'nhouaea

Booch Sl. lollddloport. 2br lurH1co 11117 Oakwood 14x'M Thrao nlohocl epl, utillclao pilei, depooll
Bedrooms, T:wo BlttvOOflll, Hut &amp;--.304-812-2511.
Pump Equippltd , Loca1ed On
Ran1al lot At Tyf.Oon lake, Dan't ll1 TJoio Ont Slip llfll Sonil
Pl1oiot814-24S.1141V.
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A Gannatt Co~ Newaprper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednead~y, February 26, 1997

I

!
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Commissi-o n rejects propos·ed contract for deputie·s

IIEW CHEVY lROIIi
WHIII DRIVE.'
COAti BY
FOR Tlsr ·
DRIVI TODAYI
'

'

'

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentlnlll Nawa StaH
• Citing a lack of money, and fairness to other county employees, two
members of the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners Tllesday after·
doon rejected a proposed contract
with sheriff's department deputies.
, A mediator pn:sented a proposal to
the commissioners 1111d to· the union.
which would he a not-quite-two-year
:contract. with sheriff's dt}lartment
·employees who 'are members of the
. · Ohio Patrolman's Benevolent Asso·Ciation.
· · Now the issue will he handed over
·rna conciliator who will make a bind·
·ing decision.
· Commission President Janet
Howard and Vice·president Fred
:Soffman said they thollght the con-

'•

•

'

tract WaS fair, bill said the county Cllll
not afford the pay raises at this time.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton was
absent Tllesday afternoon 1111d had no
input on the decision. ·
The two also said they are unwilling to jncn:ase the pay, of sheriff's
deputies without giving a pay raise to
other·county employees.
· u.approved, the deputies would
have received an immediate 4.2 per·
cent pay increase with 1111 additional
fou~ percent effective Jan. I, 1998.
Sergellllts would have received an ..
additional five percent above the top.
rol!lf officer with lieutenants getting
an extra 3;5 Jtercent.
,
The contract would also require
. the county to contribute more toward·
employees' health insurance while
holiday, overtime and uniform poli-

cy would · have remained mostly this year for the sheriffs department
alone. If similar increases were givunchllllged.
Howard and Hoffman had a pre- · en to other courthouse employees,
pared statement indicating their there would be an additional cost of .
approximillely $35,000 or a total cost
views: ·
"We feel that the sheriff's depart- of approximately $50,000 for 1997.
"ln 1998, there would be another
ment employees, along with other
employees in · the courthouse, are a&lt;jdiiional cost of approximately
deserving of a w~e increase. How- $12.000 for ihe shenffs department
ever, . our problem is not having and approximately $50,000 addienough funds to pay for these pro- tional for other courthouse employees for a total increase in 1998 of .
posed wage increases.
. ..
"We feel that it would not he fair $62,000.
"Over a tw&lt;&gt;-year period the total
to other employees iii the courthouse '
to provide a wag~ increase for sher- cost to county taxpayers would be
·
iffs employees without providing well over $112.000.
"As
everyone
knows,
department
some additional 'compensation to
budgets were cut this year in order for
other employees of the county. .
''The recommendations of the fact the county to operate · within the .
·finlfer would cost the taxpayers of .amount of funds that have been cerMeigs Couniy a minimum of S15,000 tifled by the budget commission. To

Man said
.· in critical
condition .
.following
wreck

AS.LOW AS:

believe that additional cuts could be mal\e a decision on this." said
made to support wage increases is Howard. "I didn't sleep .a bit last
unrealistic. We can only do what we night. I'm in support of the union but
have the funds to. afford.
we have to look at (county employ"We can not. in good faith, accept ees) as a whole unit, even though the
a proposal which obligates Meigs sheriffs office takes care of the secuCounty to providing funds which we rity of the whole county. County
do not have at the present time nor do employees in general take care ofthe
we foresee having these funds·in the .everyday operations... it's a really
near future. . ·
tough decision ."
"We're open to working out a solu- . · "Nobody is denying they need to
tion before the conciliator makes a· get more money," said Hoffman.
binding decision."
"They (the deputies) risk their
· Commissioners also indicated lives every day for the people of. the
they would have liked more time.to county," Howard noted . .
considerthe contract. Commissioners ·· Hoffman ndded: "I don't think it is '
said they were obligated to respond a had recommendation. We were Impto the recommendation by 4:30 ,p.m. ing for something that would take
Tuesday and added they were not effect next year."
presented with the mediator's r~com'Howard summed up the board's
mendation until Monday afternoon. perspective: ·:we'd like to do it but we
"We had 25 and-a-half hours to can't."

'

· A Pomeroy 'man was in' critically
uristable condition today in the intensive care unit of Grant Medical Cenler; Columbus, with injuries suffered
·in a~ crash Tllesday on U.S: 33
I
Pomeroy.
. .
Jr., 26, l687 Lin-

near

the scene the
by the·
MedPlight air ambulance, the Gallia- ·
· P!xMroy .! lleli- . 26, wM elrllfteci
Meigs Post of the State Highway
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· InJunc:l the Cl'llh of thl.-car..on .LhS. 33 na~~r
COtumbua; wHII lnlurlea •
In
Patrol reported.
.
' PomlrOy Tueed1y. DriWr Jackie"Ill Large Jr., p.m. accld.,n.
•
.
1 Terry A. Day II, 18, 380 E. Sec- .
ond St., Pomeroy, a passenger in the
car Large drove, was also injured and
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
'SAVING ENERGY- JeH Tackett, right, vice praldent of operby the Meigs EMS. He was later
ations and sngin!Hiring at Buckeye Rural Elactrlc Cooper1tiva,
treated and released, troopers said.
demonstrated the usa of a heat pump at Tuatday'a p..aa conThe patrol said Large was eastference announcing rate reductions for BREC'I residential conrepresents about4,400 doctors, nurs- bound at 6:30 p.m. when the car he
e~ to do the job.
From AP, Staff Reports
8umera.
·At !aft Is Executive VIce Praaldent l!ld Ganeral Manag• A· state .union official said he . "You can do it for 30 to 40 percent es and other health care workers.
drove went off the right side of the
er Jim Weaver. ·
·
"All those issues are. open for road, struck a ditch and continUed on.
doesn't expect more money for his less with our employees, who are a
•'forkcrs tl\an the 3 perccn1 annual hig~ly trained group of professionals negotiation. They've never been set
The car then struck a tree, a dri·
Jncn:ase negotiated for members of who can handle the work," Proctor by OCSEA," Regan 'said.
veway culvert and a utility pole
"We're going to continl,le this before coming to a stop against an
Ohio's largest public employees said. "We're looking at waste in the
government
itself."
·
process
through tlic negotiations," emb1111kment in a creek, according to
·union.
;The
SEIU
represents
approxi· Proctor added. "So far, we· ve had no the report.
·: But he said the state can help his
mately
34
employees
at
·
G
allipolis
success in addressing the issue."
The car was severely damaged
.~nion -and save money -by keepDevelopmehtal
Center.
including
The $39.6 million is what the state and the accident remains under invcs- ·
Buckeye Rural Electric Coopera- exchange of the usual utility industry
Htg down the number of contracts thoit
·agencies award to the private sector. nuriles, social wqrkers. psychologists would have saved h8d it hired full- tigation, troopers said.
'• live residential consumers will soon tactics of laying off employees and
see a 1.74 percent rate reduction, delaying maintena'nce .
• _ Dave Regan, president of Districl and dieticians. GDC is under the time doctors and others instead of
paying
more
for·
the.same
services
in
supervision
of
the
state
Department
Executive Vice President and Gener- · · Consumers made it possible to
:1199 of the Service Employees Inter·
of
Mental
Retardation.
the
private
sector.
Regan
said.
The
al Manager Jim Weaver announced further reduce rate hy listening to
·national Union, said that seven state
The
three-year
tentative
agree·
savings
would
have
come
even
if
the
radio· messages asking consumers to
Tuesday.
:agencies wasted $39.6 mil)ion
A residential consumer who uses reduce thci r usc during peak periods.
· :between . November 1995 ~nd ment reached Saturday between the agencies paid full benefits and pen·
BREC offered a dual fuel P.'D'November 1996 by giving contracts state and the 38,()()()..member Ohio sions, something it does not do for
an average of 1,000 kilowatts \lcr
most
outside
contracts,
he
said.
Civil
Service
Employees
Association
gram,
allowing electric heat loads to
•
•
month pays approximately $92.
workerS who were not full-time
"That
$39.million
represents
work
set~
the
tone
for
other
state
contracts
tninsfcr
·ro gas at 20,~5 depccs.
·Beginning with bills received .in
·:state employees. ·
·.
that
could
have,
should
have
and
as
far
as
pay
goes,
but
.that's
all.
"· Harry Proctor, SEIU's adminisMay, the consumer will see their bill Additionally. using radio control . normally w~uld have been performed -, PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)- go doWn nearly $7. In part. the fixed switches. clcciric water heaters arc
lrative organizer for ' central . and Regan said.
When Regan's union begins nego- by members ofOistrict lt99," Regan Wood County authorities will usc change will be rolled back from $14 prevented from operating during pcaik
$outhem Ohio, hit upon the same
information from psychics to deter.
•
hours .
.point during a stop in Gallipolis Tiles- . tiations for a new contract on March said.
mine
where dogs will,. search this to $10.
really
saying
to
the
gov·
"We're
6.
subcontraciing
will
be
the
major
·
In January of this .year the comhi 1996 BREC invested nearly
day; noting that subcontracted labor
weekend for a Ravenswood ·man
Contlnutd on page 3
$1.5 million on main.tcnance pro- bined efforts paid off. according to
costs .more than allowing sta\e work· issue pn the table, he said. The SEIU
missing for more than a month:
1
Kenny Parsons, 20, was last seen grams and over three million dollars Weaver.
in rebuilding and adding new lines.
"We not only averted a peak but
Jan. 22 walking on the front end of a
"BREC is sinking its roots deep- reduced our historical peak,.. said
barge where he was to attach a cord
er into the community it serves, not Weaver. '"The resultant savings are
.. to a bilge pump.
culling off its branches." Weaver stal- being given to the consumer."
. Fellow deckhands did not realize
ed.
·.
.
Percentage· wise BREC is the secParsons was missing until arriving at
He c~plained that BREC's invest- ond fastest growing cooperative in
Atlas Towing's landing on the Lillie . ments in plant and equipment is 'in ,
the·state.
· from other dtstrict or states that · the test.
Katia)llha River in Parkersburg. 'An
By JIM FREEMAN
1
• The student will have another
haven't passed the test.or haven't been
electric cord waSfol,lnd hanging over
Sentinel News StaH
in
intervention
programs,"
he
said.
chance
next
week
to
pass
that
portion
the front end of one of the harges .
. Southern's performance in ·the
"If
soflleone
comes
in
from
West
of
the
test,
Fisher
said.
Johtr Borgy, chief of tbc Wood
ninth grade proficiency test was one
Virginia,
they
haven't
taken
the
test,
In
a!ldition,the
class
of7001
will
County
Rescue Squad, called in the
of the subjects discussed at Tllesday
they
haven't
had
Ohio
h'fstoiy
or
the
have
to
pass
a
fifth
portion
of
the
les.t;
psychics
after making tittle progress
night's ineeting of the Southern Local
. using more conventional means.
ll.oard of Education at Letart Falls history of the Northwest Territory. lt S'Cience.
makes
it
very
.difficult
to
pass
the
citIn
other
business,
the
board
met
including divers.
for using the building as an adminisBy JIM FREEMAN
l:lementary School.
traiive
office for the district and a bus
izenship
portion
of
the
test
and
with
athletic
director
Howie
Caldwell
BurgY.
has
used
psychics
before.
Santlnal
Nawa
Staff
· Southern High School students
garage,
the.heating/ventilating system
throw~
more
burden
on
the
local
who
suggested
admission
be
charged
lbey
were
dispatched
in
the
search
Bradbury
.Elementary
was
saved
performed at the top, or near the top.
would
have
to physically ~parated
to attend school baseball and softhall for Willard "Pete" Burch last year in from the school ·closing chopping
of 27 school districts in southeastern schools," he said.
and not utilized for both the offices
· Foreign exchange students who g~es to d~fray the cost of the pro- · Ritchie County. Burch drowned on block Monday evening.
Ohio, depending · on grade level,
and bus garage," he explained. ·
took
thl:
test
did
not
take.
the
citizengrams.
.feb.·
8,
1996,
when
he
trie.
d
to
save
The
Meigs
Local
Board
.of
Edu·
according to Prin~ipal Gordon Ftsh·
"There would have to be fire
ship
.
portion
of
the
test.
This
is
The
board
set
admission
at
S
I
per
his'
daughter,
Aminda,
and
father,in·
voted
three-to-one
to
approve
.
·calion
Ct
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'
inst8lled and there is a definite
walls
reflected
on·
the
school's
overall
test
gal!le.
·
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·
law.
Paul
Mcti.
·
a proposal submitted by Superinten: Students must pass all ponions of
possibjlity
that a sprin!cler system
' ln addition Joyce 'Thoren and Jan"The psychic' told us where to dent Bill Buckley whi~h would keep
the test in order to receive a high· scores ,fisher said.
may have to be installed. At this time,
''Th~y know liule of A.m~ric1111 ice Curry met with the board and dis· look and the dogs found him there." students at the building. ·
·
sdtool diploma.
given
our financial resources, that.
history
and
nothing
of
Ohio
history,"
cussed
the
needs
o(
wheelchatr·conBurgy
said.
·
·
Earlier,
the
board
had
voted
to
· ~ The school's junior class was
would
be a hard sell to the public,~
he
said.
fined
student
the
district
\Viii
have.
Three
of
the
psychics
'live
in
the
close
the
school
to
students
and
use.
ranktd first in the region in all four
·.
ljnder
the plan :
Fisher said·tile district can not rest
_Southern Junior Hish School l'ti.n- area and have asked to remain anony- the building for maintei.ance, bus
JX,rtions of the test: writing, reading,
..
Bradbury
Elementary will
on its laurels. '
,
cipal Michaela Kucsma got perm~s- rnous untif the search is completed, maintenance and administrative pur·
math .and citizenship.
·
"We would still would like to do sian from the board to proceed w~th Burgy said.
poses. The students wen: to be divid- house Students lf'RIIeS four n five
• : "It's an ongoing f!~ing," Fisher
including spccill education students
better.
Until
you
get
to
100
'
p
ercent
a
hunter
cducatton
clan
for
JUniOr
Burgy
said
he
took
one
psychic
ed
among ~r schools.
explained. "We ~ tid~ ttme have done
from the Middleport .Eiementar}
"If
the
decision
is
to
use
Bradbury
you're never done. ~·s no worse high students. ·
.
·
out on the boat Sunday, concentratvery well, we think. . . ·
The I O..h~ur clas~ wtll be tau~ -i~g on whcle the Hocking River emp- all ·of the abo~e listed uses, the School attendance lreL The mlinie. • Fisher said one ongotng problem feelirig. thllll to hayc a stu~nt not
havepassedit.''
·
·
•
hy
volunteerOhi~HunterEducattoa tics into thil Ohio River below architecturallbuildina·code considei- DUK:C shop ~ill be ~ed in the I 00.
ill ~II Meigs Coonty sc~J?ols is a hi1h ·
:
Of
m,
district's
69
seniors
sc!lcd·
Instructors
n s~udcnts who ptW the Blcnnerhusett Island. Volunteers. . lllions could become very expensive,• · plus-y..,--Oid rear se.;tion and· occu- ..
DIIIDber of students COtlllnJ from othpy three rooms.
,
·
uled to graduate, one student needs to ctlltrsc will be eligible to ~hue an · went as far as the Belleville Locks Buckley said.
' '
er dlstricia or stateS.
,
"In
order
to
meet
buildit)g
codes
c.da
.......
3
pus.
~
pass
:lhe
I'Cllding
portion,
nf
·
Contlallld
on
,...
3
and
Dam
.
. • ''We have~ many people move),n
'
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Graarn~t·::~~l ~:,e:~c:;

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Health care workers' union targets .
state .'waste' iJ'I subcontracting lab~r

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Buckeye Rural' rates
reduced 1.74 percent

Psychics join
search for
m1ss1ng man

:IP

. southe~n's

ninth .grade .students
·do .well in latest proficiency test

Bradbury school saved
from chopping blo.c k

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