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                  <text>3ork• 1 IZun:

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • April 27, 1997

Vol.

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Ill

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~H~!I!lnd residents weigh·ftood mitigation options ~
~tlne.l StaH
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: Rf!Il:AND - .With hazard m.ugauon mo~tes apparently on·the11war,
f~umhes 1n the floOdw.ay and floodplam m Rutland must make some 4cct·
~tons :- what to do.~lt~ thetr homes, o~ where t? go.
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, Thirty·seven famlltes mtwo groups Will be eligtble for the mtttgaUon grant
funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, accordmg to Vii·
. ~age ~Jerk Rose~ary ~skew.
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: 1')1e pro~ IS destgned to prevenr future property damage to homes m
J11e8S ~specta!IY prone to floodmg.
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: , 'Eske~ e~ttmates that as much 115 a $1 mtlhon could be spent, tncludmg
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•local matchmg funds .
; FEMA has made no col!lmiltment as to when the funds wt.ll_!le avatla~le
:to lhevtllage, but &amp;kew slild she has been told that the process IS progressmg
·nicely.''
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. The group_s of homes are dtvtded mto two ~ro~ps. The first gro_upu !Dade
of homes m the flood way, whtch Eskew satd IS next to a waterway, 10 the
of the
The second
are in the floodplain, which is the

ews

area that floods when a tnbutary overflow~.
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pzygrim is voluntary.
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The h9_m"?wnen aff~ted ha~e stx cbPtces, ac~ordi~g I~ &amp;kew:
. Rtsults of a survey that Eskew conducted of affected houlebolds result- '
. • Acqutsttto~ of property, whtch tnvolves the vtllage s outnght purchase ed in a v&lt;1fiety of preferences, basically divided ~ong llllaix optiops.
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of the prop&lt;:rty. .
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The vtllage has considered the possiblity tllallhis project might lead to a ~
• AcqutstUon wtth relocauon, which also mvolv~s the villages purchase dramatic exodus fr~m R~tland , and although Eskew $aid she hopes that does-;
of the property, ~ut also provt~s funds for rel&lt;&gt;&lt;:au~n of the family wtthm . n't happen, she stressed the fact that the program is 1 voluntarY one.
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the .corporatiOn hmtts of the villa~. The ~location m~olves purchase of ·a
"All aspects of this prograin are voluntary, \)lid the residen~ ~ffected will ~ .
h~ co~parable.· to the home betng ~tllred by the vlllag~;
have to make their own decisions," she said. "We want to p~ ~ home- :
_Ph~stcal relocatmn_of the home, whtch allows for movmg the structure owner, even if that involves their moving awaY. from o11r coln'nliinll)'." , •
O!l~tde of ~e flood pla~n,_and also follows; .
.
"In f~t," Eskew said, "we l!idn't want 'to give ~ option of mo~ing 011t;
· . Elev~uo~ of the extstt~g structure: keepmg the home tn the same loca- of the vtllage, l:)ecausc we.dQn't want to Jose people, but that oplldn h8d to f
tlo~, but hfts .n out of the .nsk ~f floodi~g;
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be given."
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Retrofimn~, a ~roces~ whtch pro~tdes fundtng for nc;&gt;od-proofing a
In cases where families are relocated and the properties purch~ by the ~
· structure. That IS, remforct_ng and se.altng ·basem~nts, lt~ong ele~tncal out- village, the village would be required to destroy the home and tum the vii- ; .
. lets and boxes out ofpotenual floodwater; and placmg furnaces and hot water !age to greenways.'
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· heaters on blocks.
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• Residents may opt to do nothing, since parlicipatiolf in the mitigation
(Continued on A2)
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No~ ice

of appeal ·
Watch submltted in CSX
rail line dispute-

ahil a $ ,. increase for
plates.
·
''1~ we don'i come up and say
we ~ill' acc·ept c~ltain things ... all
1. m•.,,c, bureaucrats and do-gooders
'Oh ·wo'll. just incre115e the
gasoline tax by IOcents,' an&lt;l that's
.nol goocj for Ohio oi- Ohio businesses.!' Dreyer told Tlie ColumDispatch.
His plan would use the' $ISO
mi Ilion a ye_ar .from the ' license
incirease rather thim gasolli)e taxes
to pay for State Highway Patrol
operations, a move to free up money for highways.
Ohio ~pt~sts pay 22 cents in
state tu and 18.3 .cents in federal
tax on each gallon of gasoline.
Truckers•pay an additional 3 cents
in state tax and 6 cents in federal
iax o~ each gall&lt;in of diesel fuel.
Oreyer's proposal would raise
li¢ense fees next year and increase
the state gasoline tax a penny, or
more than $50 mi.llion a year, fol lowed by another penny increase in
1999 . .

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'He also wants a 4-cent-a-gallon
reduction ,in the state tax on diesel
fuel , which he· said would make
Ohio fuel.sellers iJtore competitive
with those .in surrounding states.
Michelle May, q spokeswoman
for the Ohio Department of Trans.ponation, said Friday the agency
agrees there is a need fot addition-.
al ~venue for highways but prefers
to focus effoits on funding issues
at the federal level.
.
.She said ODOT would .like to .
see .a greater return of th~ lederal
gas taxes the state sends to the government.
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, -''Each year. we send roushly $1
billion to Washington, btu we get
back $62S million," she said.
Ms. May said the money is given· to the states based on' a formula that Congress created. She said
the agency also wants the federal
government to give control to the
states on how to distribute the
money.

Welcome badk; sbltllers..........,.
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develop
nonhem
end of the county.
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. Cain ruled that the landowners had not filed their suit, tl)e second in two
in a timely fashion and found that the railroad's deeding the right-ofu;.,, .,, the park·system for recreational pt!rposes .was ilot an abandonment,
as claimed by the landowqers.
The landown~rs. who originally filed suit in May 1995, voluntarily dismissed the action four months later. A new suit was filed in December 1996.
Cain agreed widi, Russell's con\ention that the new action should hare been
filed within 12 t;rtonths rath~r than .l4.
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"On the statute .or limitations, in my opinion, the co'!f! has failed to follow the limit on aquiet title, w.hich is four years rather than two," Boulger
said.
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Boulge( is the uncle of James T. Boulser, the attorney who has.represcnied
the landowners since the filing of the original suit. James Bolliger is attending to other duties at this time, William Boulger said.
The original suit carried the names of nearly 20 landownen, but the refil.
ing nariled as pl~intiffs· Roben H. and Diana R. McCarley of Vinton. and .
Beach Enterprises Inc .. Peggy Sext~. Joho Sexton, Ross Sexton Jr. and James
Sexton, all of BidW.ell. The suit names as defendants the members ofthe park
district Board of Commissioners- Dr. William B. Thomas, Dr. Alle11 Boster
.and Thomas Jones.
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Citing agreemenls with CSX's predecesson, some dating back more than
a century, the landowners claim the previous railroads thai owned the line, ·
su~h as the Gallipolis, MeArthut &amp; Columbus Railroad, agreed to dc;e4 the
right-of-way to the froperty ownen if the line was abandoned. .

Planning ·Commission
·. t• d.
t• .
ac •on-' raws ques tons

Gllllpolll took

I ltep

biCk

lhe.~~c:.vc::~==:~:

GALLIPOLIS - Minutes of the
"This is the ·31st day. no action has Homecoming. Itt ur Clmp In . ·. ·
Maich 25 Gallipolis-'Pianning Com-· been taken, therefore. any action the City Plll'k. Ful ICtivltlel · •
mission meeting ihat ' saw the taken is invalid," said Gallipolis dlmonltrlllng •nd I)UIIIning ·
approval of a conditiOnal use permit attorney David T. Evans, ~ho rc,preI I - of the Y1nk1 •nd
for the ·erection of .a new shopping sented Jenkins at the meeung.
Rlbl who fought In
War
center have been amended and · Evans also voiced concerns that Bllween th1 Slltll, lllpcl by
approved, bul with an objection over procedut:l' was not followed proper- Civil W•r ..-n~Ctor~, ccintlnue
the move's timeliness.
ly.
until 4 p.m. SundiY. Among
lthOH IICIIvltiel, Jlcob ttlnton
The commission met briefly FriThe commission had planned a of Wlllerford demonltrlted the
day to act on the .minutes of that mcetinl! for April IS, but it was can- wttr dlly tl'lcll, of Rllklng Iron
meeting antf its February session, but celled.
llllt llllrH (top photo), while
former city solicitor R. William Jenk·
"We had to amend the minutes,
Mlrlin of lndllllllpolil,
ins said the action relating to the and we feel we have met the lime
billing hlmulf 11 m1gi- .
~ch meeting was ta~en one \lay _con~trainls.'', Comlllission Chairman
ProfMIIOI' 'Cecil Rodney,
later than the codified ordinances . Caroi"O'Rourke said: .
. • : : : : hll tlllnb (cenllr),. .
allow.
The minutes of last month's meet· II
·f11101c toura to thl ·, .
' Jenkins, who . hal refeatedly · inJ!. on . a motion by lnterim ·City
courtlofEuropelndthe
objected-to ttl: commi,sion s procc- · ltllln~~S.er Bob Condee, ~!re amendto 11ehoollour group on
dure in. approving the jlermit, cited a ed to read that the proposed shopping
In • demonltrlllon of
. ·section ofthc code decreeing that the center would.cover 20.506 acres, and
of
·toiiOWirl.
commission must •take action . ·- . not. 20,()(J().plus acres, as it originalthe •rmlle.
including approval or disapproval of }y appeared. · ·
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bottom, loCI I re-en•ctor
re-«&lt;lc:tor8 from Glllilpoli:e.
1
~n
appeal - . within 30 d~ys of a pub(Continued on ~)
!pro=~.r~
•.~J :,.~oa!~·~~~y!~~
photoe by .Jill Wlllillms) .
he hear•!'g·
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Hig~, court won't take -jurisdiction in sc ool
CQLUM8US (AP) ..:..I The Ohio · next yeir tQ replace the formula.
Supreme Counwilhllow the state.to
The Supreme Court ruled March
include school-funding improve· 241hat Ohio's formula of local propments it hu ptJt jn place IS pan of a etty taxes and slate aid to fund pubnew formula to pay for education.
lie schools wiS unconstih!tional. It
But the heild of a coalition whose ·. said the reliance 'on local taxes WIS
lawsuit threw out the current fonnu· ·unfair 1o poor districts. '
1a said those improvemellts don't
The court reireraled ·Friday lhllt
IIIIOUIIt to muc:h.
Ohio's reliance on pOjNii1y lUes •
The cot~{~ ruled 4-3 Friday thll . • primary means of J111i"' for lliluPerry Coutlly Common Pleas Judp calion.w• unconllitulional, but that
'Liillon LeWis Jr. should oversee ally such taxeure !*IIJ!oible '!'put of
p11n the Lepl- cre11e1 within the a 1\andmJ IOIUiloa. ·
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The state also can present to
Lewis measures the Legislature has
taken· 10 improve fun~ing since the
coalition filed the lawsuit in 1991, the
Supreme Court said.
That opinion pleased Gov. George
Voinovich and leaislative leaders.
"The high coun ~now olearly
ruled t1w positiYe' actions takcn ·by
the Oeneral ~mbly, on a biputi·
san blais, carlier•this decade can be
~~IS a part of~ sol~ion,"
Voinovtch, Senate Presidenl Ric hand

s

ndin,g issue :·

Fimin, R-Cincinnati, and House
Speaker Jo An_n . Davtdson, R·
Reynoldsbur~. satd ·~ ~ statemcn!.
But Wtlham Phtlhs, ex~uuvc
director of the Ghto Coalttlon for
Equity &amp; Adequacy of School Fund·
ia11. said it was the state's ptecemcal
IJIPIOIIOh 1ooducalion ~ron:n .lhal,led
to the court's M!~fCh 24 ruhng.
"The lweaktng and l~e · token
elTon the state has made stnce . l~3
don't by any standa_rd measure.~p ~o
a dtoroulh andeffictent system, satd

Philli~, ~hose group repre~nts. most
of Ohto s 611 school d1stncts. ·
Attorney General Betty Mont· ,
.go!IICry asked the court on April3 to
retain its authority in the case. The
state claimed'that Jiving Lewis juris~ictio11 would lead to delays ~ause
his decisions could be subjecl to
appeal.
The court's ruling allows any )Ill· ,
ty dissatisfied with Lewis's decisions
to appeal direcily to the Supreme
Court.

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lp~,April27,1117 ~

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p II AI .,
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•J._RIW'
Pomeroy • Middleport• GelliPOIIa. .OH • Pol~ P11111nt, WV
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Lott ·pitches deal on CPI adjustment into talks ·1

s naAprB27
Accv'll' It • lbnx:ut for

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ITollc»lS1· I .

• l9olumbus Iss•

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W. VA.

iJ soing to have to address at this end of their t.pining with ilans too
point," Loll told reporters.
politically explosive to discuss preNoting that Clinton was scheduled tnaturely, such as alterinJ the way the
to appear on television over the CPI is adjusted every year.
weekend, the Senate leader said, "I
Last December, a conaresslonal
hope he will not just talk about vol- advisory panel ·eoncluded that the
unteerjsm. I hope he will make some . CPI overstates inflation by l .t Ilerreally bold move 011 the budgei."
centage points per year. Lott has been
At ·a ·news conference, Clinton . searching for a way for the two sides ·
made no mention of the specific bud- to· em brace a change in that formula
get give ·and ' take. But he said of and use the !;ll.vings to help balance ·
Repl\blican leaders, "They have been the budget. .
working with us in comple:e good
Clinton backed away from endorsfaith."
·
ing the idea after hearing strenuous
Even though negotiators' goal objections , from organized labor,
was to balance the budge: by UJ02, groups representing the elderly and
the White House and GOP lawmak- top Democrats such as House Minorers were exchanging proposals in ity Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.
w.hich each left a deficit that year
Panicipaitts cautioned that new
exceeding $50 billion , people from offers were being exchanged and the
both parties said following the talks numbers were changing.
Friday. They spoke on condition of
But according to people familiar
anonymity:
with the talks, one of the key' remainThat gap was left because both ing · disputes was over .. annually
sides envision closing it at the very approved domestic programs, includ-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Budjlet
btqlinen; tnlded offers that left tlieir
domestic spending proposals $60
billion apart as Senate Majority
Leader Trent Lou urged President
Clinton to endorse restraints in costof-living increases for Social Security .and other benefits.
"We will do it," Clinton predicted Friday of the •r(osed-door search
for a bipartisan deal on balancing the
budget by 2002 while paring taxes
and spending. ''We want to keep this
long (economic) expansion going. " ·
But Lou, R-Miss., brought up one
of the keys to a quicli so.lution: the
politically dicey idea of slowing the
annual adjustments in the Consumer
Price Index. The proposal would
save the government billions of dolIars by slowing the growth of annual inflation.increases for many benefit programs and adjustments to the
income tax system.
"This is something the president

ins education, environmental .:
cleanups and ocher ptoiralDi tlw
Clinton considen a top priority. ;
RepubliC(UIS ~ant those pn:llnlris :
held $118 bilhon below what they •
would need to stay even with infta- :
lion over the next fi.ve yean; the prea- 1•
ident wants a scalel!ack half thai size. I
In other lcey differences:
• Republicaris were seeking $t5b
billion in tax cuts through 2002, Clin- :
ton$126billion. TheGOPwasoffet· '
ing to also raise revenues by Cllten4ing :he airline ticket tax and 'by otli- ·
er measures w~rth SSCJ, ~~~~ioni CIJ,n,;,
ton was proposmg $60 btlhon tn new .1
revenue.
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• Clinion was ·asking ~3 billion ~·
over five years for .his· initiatives, for •
children's health care and other areas;
the GOP was offering $15.S billion. :
• The two sides seemed cl&lt;?se to l
agreements over Medicare lind Medicaid, the health insuom~ program~.
respectively, for the elderly ll!1ii P&lt;x/r.

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O:ALLIPOLIS- Scholarships for local graduating high school seniors

1,1"' ayadable from the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club.

.Selection for these awards is to be based on students' written essays
llftd community service involvement. The number of scholarships and
.arnQUnts of the .awards are yet to be decided since the Kiwanis is waiting
.to see how many students apply first.
. · For mo~~ infonnation and an application, interested students should
pon~t their high school guidance caunselors; odocal )Gwanis Secretary
He~ry Thrapp, P.O. Box 182, Gal:ipolis, Ohio 4S631. The deadline for
applications is May 15.
.

·. springfield Trustees. slate meeti119
· EVERGREEN- Springfield Township Trustees·will meet in special
sess1on Wedn~sday, April30 at 1! a.m. in the townhouse at EveJgreen, Clerk
.Herman 'Sprague announced.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss insurance, Sprague said.

'Donation aids chambfr building fund
GALLIPOLIS - The building fund for th~ Galli a County Chamber
of Commerce and Community Improvement Corporation was enriched
by $5,000 following a donation from the Peoples Bank &amp; Trust Co. of
Gallipolis.
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John Cornett of Peoples Bank.presenttld a check to R.V. "~uddy" ora:
.ham, senior vic~ president of the CIC and chamber. Chamber President
9a¥'Y Roach and ClC President Tom Wiseman.
·
. The funds will go toward the rebovation and expansion project under'
way at the chamber/CIC headquarters.

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GALLIPOLIS - Plans for the elderly. Established ·in 1977. Equipment has been in business for . employs four pe~ple.
,
Pinecrest
employs
approximately
.II
0
Paul
Davies
Jewelers
Located
25
years.
• third Annual Business Appreciation
Unity Savings- Located at 500. at' 404 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Paul
Breakfast have been set for 7:30a.m.. people. Future plans include expanding
its
services
offered
by.
training
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Unity Savings Davies Jewelers have been in busiThursday, May I.
The breakfast honors 15 area their professional staff to do more in- has ·been in business for over 100 ness for 51 years and emph?Y§ sill
businesses that have been chosen b~ house services arid out-patient care years. Formerly known .as Buckeye people. Dan Davies is a second gen,;
Building &amp; Loan , Unity locally eration owner.
. the Galli a County Chamber of Com- services.
Willis
Funeral
Hom~
Located'
merce for their contribuiions to the
By The Associated .Press
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at the comer.of Portsmouth Road and
county
throughout the years.
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The dry and pleasant weather will come to an end as a storm system
This year's honorees include Garfield Avenue, Gallipolis, Willis
approaches Ohio on Sunday.
Funeral Home has been in business
Rain will spread into southwest Ohio toward morning. The rain will spread · Buckeye Rural Electric Cooprative, since March 20, 1974. The funeral
•
oyer the entire state by mid-afternoon. Scattered thunderstorms are possible Paul Davies Jewelers, 0'Dell True home employs five people and is sec- (Continued from' A1)
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Value
Lumber,
W.R.
"Dick"
Brown
.
over the southern counties.
ond generation- owned.
Insurance
Agency,
Shake
Shoppe,
No
homes
could
ever
be
built
on
those
properties
again.
lnste,
a
d,
the
·vilHighs on Sunday will range from 55 to 6o.
Southeastern Equipment
Smith Buick-Pontiac Inc., Pinecrest
lage
would
have
the
option
of
converting
the
lands
to
parks
and
other
pub-.
Rain will diminish in the west Sunday night and early Monday in the east.
Care Center, Gravel Hill Farms, Uni- Located at 228 State Route 7, Gal- lie areas, but nothing insurable could be built, Eskew said.
High temperatures on Monday will range from 55 to 60. ·
ty Savings Bank, Foster Sales &amp; lipolis, Southeastern Equipment speInitially. the project was estimated at $350,000. but has steadily increased
Fair weather will prevail Tuesday and Wednesday with highs '!lainly iri
cializes in the rental, sales and service to become a nearly one million dollar project. The source of the required local
Delivery
!nc.,
Southeastern
Equipthe 60s. A chance of showers is forecast for Thursday.
ment Co. Inc., Jaymar Inc., Willis of .heavy construction equipment. matching funds is yet to be detel1!lined, although county discretionary fund&amp;
The record high for Saturday at the Columbus weather station was 89 in
With J 0 employees, Southeastern and funds from the Appalachian Regional Commission have both been men1948. The record low was 26 in 1972. Sunrise Sunday will at 6:37a.m. Sun- Funeral 'Home Inc., Steven B. Chapman, CPA imd WMGG-MagiciOI.
tioned as possible sources.
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•set will be at 8:21 p:m.
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The following is a brief overview
Weather rorecast:
.
.
five
of
the
businesses
to
be
honof
Sunday ... Rain, possibly heavy at times. Highs riear 60. Southeast winds
ored. Profiles of the other business· On May 2, 1997, Meigs County Court will be serving warrants on all
around 10 mph. Chance of rain near 100 percent.
es will appear later.
·
Sunday night.. .Rain. Lows in the upper 40s. Chan~e of rain near 100 perindividuals who owe the Court deliquent fines or have failed to appear to
Pinecrest Care Center- Located
cent.
at 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, the
serve their Court Ordered jail sentences.
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Monday ... Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Highs in the lower
center
specializes
in
care
for
the
60s. Chance of rain 50 percent.
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Rain

:Kit."aflls seeks scholarship applicants

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Flul'l'ies

Rain to rule immediate
area weather forecast

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:Area NAACP branch·to meet
JACKSON- The Southeastern Ohio Branch of the NAACP's monthly business meeting will be Thursday, Ma) I at 7 p.m. in the Jackson
Municipal Building, 145 Broadway. ·
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. The, organization holds its business meetings on the first Thursday of
every month, rotating meeting locations between Jackson; Gallia and
Lawrence counties. The public is invited to attend.

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Flood mitigation options
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Case bound over to grand jury sesston

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Extended forecast:

·Alleged killer apparently
ignoring court gag order
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - An attorney Rogers shouted from the defense
trying to lift a gag order in the·mur- table, surprising Ms. Allen . and
der trial of a former Hamilton, Ohio. -lawyen; grouped around her bench at
resident told a judge Friday that the front of the courtroom.
lawyers in . t~e case arc not talking
"Shhhh .... " admonished defense
about the slaying, but the defendant attorney Sam Sinardi. Rogers sat
is. ·
through the rest of the 90-minute
Gregg Thomas. attorney for The . hearing silently, with his hands and
Tampa Tribune, said (Jien Rogers had legs shackled.
called an Ohio newspaper last week
Rogers is charged with firstto proclaim his innocence in the death . . degree murder. Investigators say he
of Tina Marie Cribbs. His trial is to and Ms.· Cribbs met at a bar in
begin Monday.
··
'*'vembcr 1995. ·Her slashed body
Hillsborough Circuit Judge Diana later was discovered in a Tampa
Allen refused to lift tilt gag order and motel bathtub.
·
did not extend it to Rogers, 34. who ·
Rogers, a carnival ·worker, was
interrupted the hearing with an out- arrested following a 15-mile chase in
burst.
.
Kentucky. He was driving Ms.
''Your honor, I have not made one ' Cribbs' car.
ph~ call to no news agency,"

Planning Commission
(Continued from A1)
The permit was requested by Jay
qnd Marlene Hall of Cheshire, and
l .DN Development Co. Inc., Atlanta. .
Ga., covering land along J;:astem
Avenue between the Ohio River
Plaza and Smith Buick-Pontiac for a ·
new retail center featuring an as-yet
~nnamed anchor store.
The area is presently zoned traffic
oriented. commercial arid river com merce district, but a conditional usc
permit allows for non-zoned·activity

{USPS 525-100)
Publi11hed each Sunda~. 82S Third . Ave .•
.Ot~llipoli~. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publi11hina
t Compan~IOan~u Co .. Second cW• poltaJC
paid ·at G4liipoli~. Ohio 4$6~1 . EnaFJd 11
~ond dM• Mailing matter a Pomero)'. Oijo,

p.,.,otr....

MHIIttf; The AR.wciaccd Pwa~o and. lhe Ohio
NewlfCIPC'I' AMoei&amp;Mion.

-t.. . ... . . . ... . . .....
SVNDAYONLY

.

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. S\JIICIIIPTION RATES

., Corrler .. Motor .....

s' .21

·o..v.. ...... ................ ~ ......................... $6$.00

.
SINGLI COPY PRICE

s-, .........................................~ ........... sr.oo

-

-.

No IUbtcripriom by .... pennilled ,.......

willie~~

aemce is aVIillble.

,.,.....,.,.,_ .......be..,,..,.
'

'!lie - , ThM·Sendnel will not

l'lollliiiiU- .... """ ....j ...........
..... _poi.. .periool. Subo&lt;ripoioo ....
....,.,..yblit ;·
I Uy ....... lllthe
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MA~~
...... ~c..y

IJ - - ....................,............................ S71.30
, . -................................._ .. _ .,. .... 1Sl.l2
S2 ......_ .................. - ..........~ ...... $105-"
-Ooii!No~c-r

-

,.-...............................
-. ....., .....
.............................-. .....

IJ - ...................................._ ........11t.25

to occur in the area.
Approvmg the pcnnil under that
delinition is chief among Jenkins'·
reasons for opposing the commission's approval, since the application
filed hy JON's engineers docs not
n\eet the requirements for conditional usc. he said.
.
Jenkins has instead suggeSted that
the Halls and JON apply for a wning change. requiring hearings and
action by the planning commission
and the City Commission.
"(The permit ·application) docs.not
meet the strict requirements of that
section." Jenkins said .
Jenkins had submit!cd a letter
April 14 to City .Code Enforcement
Officer Mike Null noting that as of
that date, the minutes had not been
certified.
He asked 'for notificatiop when
approval was to be made, and !'or a
copy of the minutes "properly
approved and certified showing the
b&lt;&gt;ard's action. '
'
"I intend to appeal tbe board's vote
when it is properly dcieumented and
approved," Jenkins said in the letter.
Prior to the commission's vote Friday, he asked it to reconsider its
approval of the permit request The
request was approved last month on
a 4-0 vole, with John Cornett abstain-·
ing. Cornett has since resigned his
scat on the commission.
Jenkins rei:erated.objections aired
at the March meeting, and also told
the commission It had not followed
procedure by takin&amp; sworn testimony, considering additional information and f~lin&amp; to follow time constraintS as set by the code.
Be.yond approval of the minutes,
the commission · took no addi:ional
action .

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All Ohio
Easy Pay Auto
lnsur;mce
Any Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&lt;

•

SEOEMS trustees meet Wednesday
• JACKSON -A SEOEMS District Board ofliustees meeting has been
'J;et for Wednesday, April 30 at 7 p.m. in the Jackson County Common Pleas
polmroom.
•
·
• For more information, contact SEOEMS at 446-9840.

'Driver ticketed in two-car crash

All Law Enforcement agencies of Meigs County will be assisting the ,
.,
court in making these arrests.
.
. .
If you owe a fine that has not been paid or you are not current on your
payments; or if you have failed to show on your scheduled date to se,ve .
jail time, you must personally contact the Court at 992-2279 prior to May
2, 1997.
.
.
..
·;
All those arrested qn May 2, !997, w~U be jitile~ .m;t~iJ,theitjjne~ .~~t~. ,Pf\J~ /j
in full or their sentences are served.
·
:
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien •'
•'

Monday night ... Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 50s.
Tuesday... Panly cloudy. Highs near 70..
Wednesday...Panly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms.
Lows near 50 and highs in the mid 70s.
·
. Thursday.. :Panly cloudy with a chance ·of showers. Lows in the lower 50s
and highs in the lower 70s.
·

. GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis Municipal Judge William S. Medley has
ordered that the case of a Gallipolis man be bound over to the next se~sion of the Galli a County grand jury.
··
Dwayne A. Cordell, 54 Chillicothe Road, allegedly trespassed i'n a single wide mobile home at 2110 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, according to coun
documents.
·

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Di sco unts &gt;

Compute r Quotes

(6 14) 992-7040
Pom eroy

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Your Heart's Desire!

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to finance a project or purchase,
now's the best time to check out
Peoples Batik home equity loans.
Peoples Bank Equiline loans are great for financing all kinds of projects and purchases!

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Closing costs waived!

'

• lANDSCAPING • REMODEUNG • GIFfS .
• VACATIONS • EDUCATION

If you have something in mind, stop in and
take advantage of our limited time, exclusive rate
with no closing fees to qualified borrowers.

And the interest you pay on your home equil)i
loan may be tax deductible. Stop by or call
1-800-374-6123 for more information.

· Tbls special rale (9%UR 4f ot:;:_-97) ts efftcttve for tb.
jim 5yt1IM'S after~ getyMir
Your rr11e tbll•~wlll
1111 based on tbe PrlnN Ra'- as defined bere 4f the
. BaniiPrlTMLoanplus 1.5% (10%&lt;Ut,J/4-7-97)
1111r1
~bange montbly. 71111 AIRsfor bome equity lfneswlll nd aaJflll
18%. Mlnlmummdtt lfrw Is $5,(XJ()subjtct toC1'111/116jJprfJfJa/,
Tbls producl bas IIIIUtmum loan to vtilullinrltallons.l'rof~Mt1
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dediiCIIblltty oflnlerrist.

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: Cf!ESTER -The Gallia-Meigs Post of.the State Highway Patrol citt~ James E. Spangler, 17, 148 Main St., Rutland, forfailure to yield folAowing a two-car accident Friday at the intersection of County Road 20
(Rockspfings) and CR 26 (Flatwoods).
·
: Troopers said Spangler was westbound on Aatwoods at 6:20p.m. when
he failed to stop for the stop sign at the intersection and collided with a
~ar driven by Eldon L Sauters, 55, 37477 Wickham Road , Pomeroy, that
was southbound on Rocksprings.
·
: The collision forced Sauters ' car into a guardrail, according to ·the
tepon.
·
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• Damage to both cars was moderate.
.
·

Gallipolis officers· Issue citations to six ·
! GALLIPOLIS -The following citations were issued Friday and earlY'Saturday by Gallipolis City Police: .

• Missy K Tate, 27, Pomeroy, improper backing; Kristina N. Villers; 19,
Ashton, W.Va., theft; Barbara L. Cas-ey; 21, Apple Grove, W.Va.; Pamela
S. Lee, 38, Point Pleasant, W.Va., theft; James H. Skeen, 19, 1031.7 SR
7, Gallipolis , reckless operation;Aian B. Roush , 50,2961 BulavillcPike,
Gallipolis, driving under the inllucncc; and Mike Shelton, 32, 5876 SR
7, Gallipolis, open container.

Officers cite driver following crash
GAI!.LIPOLIS - . An Oak Hill woman was cited for failure to control
Friday at the scene ofa two-vehicle accident, Gallipolis City Police reponed.
·
•
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Officers said that Kimberly S. Christopher, 34, was anempting to park
along Second Avenue at 2:25 p.m. when she struck a vehicle owned by
Sheila L. Mitchell, 2018 Chatham Ave., Gallipolis.
Both vehicles were slightly damaged, according to officers.

Details incomplete on accident
MIDDLEPORT- The Middlepon Police Department invesiigated an
accident on Mill Street late Friday in which one person was struck by an
automobile.
The department's report on the accident had not been completed on Saturday and did not indicate who was ~ri~ing the vehicle involved, or other infol1llation relating to the incident.
Records a' Meigs Emergency Services indicate that Gene .Kellcr, age·
an!i address unknown, was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Middleport squad, but he was not admined.

Ex-attorney admits to violation
POMEROY - Fonner Pomeroy attorney D. Michael Mullen admitted to violating tenns of his probation at a hearing in Meigs County COtn. mon Pleas Coun on Friday..
·
.
According to Prosecuting Atto.rney John Lentes. Mullen appeared
before Judge Dan Favreau of Morgan County and admined that he consumed alcohol while on probation, as contained in a motion to revoke probation filed by Lentes' office.
Favreau accepted the admission, but found 'that there were mi:lgating
factors, and ordered that M~llen be continued on probation until August
1998, and that he not be returned to prison. Mullen was ordered to pay
$1 ,000 to ihe Mei$s County Victims Assistance. Program and ordered to
continue psychological £ounseling, including·any counseling or tl'\latment
recommended hy Health Recovery Services relating to substance abuse.
Lcntcs· said in court that he believed Mullen had both substance abuse
and mental health problems, and agreed with Favreau's order ofcontinued counseling.
"This will be his last chance 10 deal with his problems,'' Lcntes said
in court. "Any future, violations of the terms of probation will be actively pursued,
.
. and the s:nte will recommend that he be returned to prison.''

Meigs ·EMS units answer ·7 c~lls . ·

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APR Variable
based on current ipdex and margin
Gallipolis

AIIBA OODit FOR AU OmCIS IS (61t)
•

Middleport.

Pomeroy

Rudand

1

1DD Only

446-o902 992-6661 992-2133 742-2888 376-7123

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'1 ri-County .Briefs:- Summer ·
.Piti'Q/ s/a~es church bus /nspectlc&gt;ns
school set
afBHCC
• . GALLIPOLIS -Church bus inspections will be conducted by the State
H:ghway Patrol at the Gallia-Meiss Post, Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, on May
.2, 1II and 27 from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. .
: . N~ lppOintments are ~ssary. For more information, contact the Galhpolt~ Post at 446-2433 , or the CDIJsatvage Facility at 614-286-3457.

l

Breakfast to honor _Gallia ·County·businesses
.
.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point.Pluunt,

POMEROY - · Units of Meiss . Road for Edward Maktmczak, to
County
Emergency
Services Holzer Medical Center. · .
answered seven calls for assistance
TUPPERS PLAINS
on Friday, '
2:51 p.m., to State Route 681.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Chris _Griffin to Camden-Clark
9:S9 a.m., to II 00 Powell St., Car- Memonal
ol Wines to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
.
II :30 p.m., to West Main Street
for Charles T. Rinsom, to VMH.
MIDDLEPORT
II :58 p.m., to Mill Street for Gene
Keller, to VMH.
POMEROY
10:47 p.in .. to Condor Street for
. Betty Mankin, to VMH;
11:30 p.m. , io West Mlin SJreet
for ntrany Gallqher, to VMH.
RV'I'LANQ
10:46 p.m., to Carpenter Hill

for June
Vo-ed Board,·
acts on .hirings
for school year
. RIO GRANDE - · The summer
school session at Buckeye Hills
Career Center, set for June 16 until
July 3, was approved by the Gallia- .
Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational ·
Board of Educa(ion during last
week 's meeting at BHCC.
The board gave its approval tp
tuition, fees. rates, Cfedits, hours and
regulations for the single 14-day seSsion.
The board also granted permission
to apply for llood damage assistance.
and adopted a resolution to modify
the VEPD plan to provide for local
. f!lDING FOR CHARITY - Doing Ita part to
donations to the effort. The event elso lnoluO- .
board representation .
asstst with the March of Dimes fight .against ed a poker run. Tha fund-raising wu done pri·
. The board accepted the donation
or to the March tit Dimes WaiiCAmerlce camchildhood Illnesses and disease, members of
of a 1994 Escort sedan from Mike
the Gallipolis Chapter of the Harley OWners
palgn, conducted locally for Gellla, Meigs and
Vallery Ford, Circleville, and a surGroup recently formed Bikers for Babies, glvMason counties on Sunday In Point Ple:lunt,
lng rides on their motorcycles In retum for
W.Va.
·
.
·
face grinderfrom BorgWarner Automotive Inc., Gallipolis.
·
The board also approved the following ceniflcated personnel contracts, starting with the 1997-98
school year:
GALLIPOLIS - The annual. Condee said the city encourages all lil)lits, includin~ Weavcnown , upper
One-year - Sharon Bittner, spring cleanup in Gallipolis will be residents to recycle.
Second Avenue, Mill Creek and East
Option IV; Christine Davi s, Voca- May 5-9, Interim City Manager Bob
The cleanup schedule is as fol- Gallipolis .
lows:
Thursday, May 8 - ·Pickup of
tional Evaluation; Sharon Hanover, Condee announced.
Monday, May 5 - The south end items missed during the first three
Severe Behavior Disorder; Carrie
"The cleanup provides us with the
Martin, Community Services; David opportunity to do our spring cleaning· of town up to State Street. This days.
Williamson, Security Services/Law and inaimenance, with the end result includes the Garfield Avenue area,
Friday, May 9 - Regula{ resiEnforcement.
being a more attractive city," Candee State Route 588, Portsmouth Road dential trash pickup day lor the entire
·
city.
and the Hedgewood Drive area.
Two years - Tim Bartee, Food said .
Tuesday.- May 6- The main part
All material is to be set at the curb
Preparation;
Bernice ·Duffy,
GRADS/Impact.
line. Material must be prepared for of town from State to Sycamore
ASCAP begins
Three years - Keith Adkins, easy handling. Tree branches less streets, including the Vinton, Neil,
In 1914, the American Society of
Machine Shop . (Jackson); Randy than two inches in diameter should be Kineon , Bastiani and Ohio Aven11e Composers, Authors and Publishers
McKinney, Auto Mechanics; Jim- cut inio four-foot lengths and tied in areas.
(ASCAP) ·Was founded by Jnhn ·
. Wednesday, May 7 - Beginning . Philip Sousa, Victor Herbert and
Phillips, Social Studies; Phil Powell, -bundles.
·
·
Auto Collision Technology. ·
Other materials should be placed at Sycamore Street north to the city others to protect m'usical copyrights.
· Continuing Mike Jacobs, in containers and should be at the
Physics.
curb by 6 a.m . during cleanup week.
Supplemental contracts non - Any questions or missed pickups
renewed for 1997-98 were for Lisle should be addre ssed to Rumpke
Dill, David Williamson , Christine Waste Systems at 1-800-852-2687.
· Davis and Patty Jones, extended . During these special cleanup days ,
time : Elva. Davis, Thomas Jenkins, residents can make arrangements
Thomas Neal and Phil Powell, plan- with Rum,pke Waste for pickup of
ning period; and Joan · Cornelius, large items and household appli· .
ances ·su~h as hot water heaters,
bo0 k· ·
year
·
· Limited supplemental contracts was hers, dryers , stoves, re fngerators
approved for 1997-98 included Amy (CFCs must be removed), .furniture,
Barr, five days; Harold Benson, 60 . bedding, child play equipment, fencdays ; Sharon Bittner, 15 days; ing, etc. A fee of $5 per item will be
Charles Bush, 60 days; Jean Curtis, charg~. Founoreinfonnati.on. s all
•
•Krogers
Alcove BoQks
10 days; Christine Davis, 10 days; RumpkeWaste at 1-800-852-2687.
~~
. '
Bernice Duffy, 10 days; Ira Egoleton ,
In .order to save landfill space and
L&amp;E
Advertising
Basket
Delights
c
reduce the amo.unt of material to be
.•
five dayg; Donna Gorrell, 10 days ;
Lorobi's
Piz~
Big
Bear
Sherry Headley, 10 days; Thomas collected during· cleanup week,
Lynch Agency
Bob Evans
Jenkins, 20 days; James McCarley,
five days; Laura McFarlin, 10 day s;
Bob's Market and
Marathon Food Mart
Michael McPherson, 35 days; Tom
. · Probate-i uvenile
Matt Richards-Racine
Greenhouse
Reid. 15 days; Jon Rothgeb, 15 days ;
GALLIPOLIS - The following
· Police Chief
Bowman's Home
Penny Roush , 10 days; .and Manin couples recently filed for marriage in
Wallace. 20 days.
the Galli a County Probate ·Court:
I McDonalds
Medical
The following non-certificated
Linda Lou Barnell of West
Michael &amp; Friends
Burgandy &amp; Roses
personnel contracts for she next Columbia, W.Va., and Thomas Glenn
Neighborhood ·
school year were ·approvcd : :Stewart Saunders of Gallipolis: Heather Mac
Burger King
Holmes. pan-time night watchman, Rayhor and Jacol) Shane Hall, both of
.'
Racing Team ·
China One
casual-part-time ; Pat Browning.·cus- Gallipolis; Michelle Leigh Woodall
·Ohio River Bear.
Codner's
todian. two years; Janet Hutchins, of Gallipolis and Michael David Tertreasurer's office clerk/secretary, two ry of Vinton; Pamela Faye Chapman
Company
Colony Theatre
years; and Joanne Roberts. SBD and Kevin Lee Price, both of dalPonderosa ·
Criminal Records
aidC tw,o years.
·
.
lipolis; Sar ~ Jean McCombs and
Racine Barber Shop• '.
The resi gnations of Verna Daniels. Bruce Deleon, both of Gallipolis;
Dairy Land
English instructor, effective Junc30, Alisha Jane Herick of Vinton and
Tom Woods · ·
Dairy Queen
and John R. Richards, marketing edu- Marvin Christopher Hunt of EwingRax
.
Domino's Pizza
cation ins.tructor. effective in May, ton : Kelly Lynn Scott ofChcshill! and
were approved by t~c board. The res- Justin Chad Hesson of Gallipolis;
Robbie's Tobacco Hut .~·. 1 · I ~"!\
Ebers'
ignations arc due to retirement.
Stacey M,ichclle Kingrey of Gall ipoSo~thern Heating
·~
Fantastic Sams
· In the Adult Education Division, lis and James Monroe Harrison of
Cooling
·· '
' li •
Fashion Bug
the board: ·
Crown City.
• Non-renewed hourly/consuliant
Speedo's Pizza
· •' F,
Finest Styling
contracts for 1997-98 for Belly
Spring Valley Video
,, ·
Fruths Pharmacy
Adkins, technical assistance grants
Subway
Gingerbread
coordinator: Glenn Graham, farm
business planning consuhant; and
Summer Image Hair,
,.
People .t o lose weight
. House of Gifts
Kathleen Sheridan, D1splaced Home• .100% Natural •
Nails and Tanning
Hallmark
maker Program .
Sunshine Video and
*Doctor
I·
Holzer Senior
• Employed the following for the·
.
I
.
next school year: ·Phyllis Brown,
Recommended*
.· Tanning Salon
Care Center
Health Occupations coorwnator, and
* 30 Day Money Back •
· Taco Bell
Huttons Car Wash
Tammy Roush. Business and EducaGuarantee
Tom's Auto Clinic
The Image Gallery
tion Partnership. each on a one-year
contract ; and Mike McPherso n, TranWagner J::Iardware
Kountry Kitchen
:.I
sitions, on a three-year contract ·
• Approved the · following partI
I
time hourly ·contracts: Betty Finney.
''
Basic Skills instructor and ABl:E
instructor; Andy Fisher, l'ire instruc••
tor; .Cathy Hammond, ABLE aide;
.~
Crystal Hannon , ABLE and PETE
••
clerk; Sue Holeski, ABLE and PETE
~
instructor; Timothy Milici, fire
i•
i~tnlclor; Mike Null , lire-instructor;
~
Lili Roush, PETE Program; Randy
Roy ster, Auto Technology; Jimmie
••
Shato, fire instruc:or; Rebecca
Stump, LPN Program; Jody Walker,
PETE instructor; Steven Wallis, fire
instrucior; William Wells, Corrections i'nstructor; and &lt;:;indy Wilson,
Basic Skills and ABLE aide.
•

City sets annual spring cleanup

THANKS!!!
To The Following .Businesses For
Their Donations To

Southeastern Business College For Our
National Secretary's Day Celyhrationl!! . ,

Gallia court news ·

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WANTED!//

(614) 441·1982 .

.Re-vival Sen1ees!

:•

Mag 4-7, .1997

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Providence Baptist Church
Teens Run Road
1 mile off St. Rt. 218

Let us copy your old
flmlly photos. Speclil

· ~7's for $14.95. Reg.
$19.96. SAVE $5.00. Wt
1110 do pa11port photos,
ldtntltiCitlon photos am~••
photO flnllhlng.

TAWNEY.STUDIO

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Rev. Montg Sheets
·

EvaogeUst

·

Call 441-1971 or 441.0914 .

· .for more information
Mel Mock - Pt1Sto'

424IICONO /INI.

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:~ Qotnmentary
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'E.st®Bsftd in 1966
125 Third Avenue,

jtntin:d .

Galllpolla, Ohio

814 446-2342 • Fax: 446-3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
1114-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

c-)
&amp;VIlER'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper .
. ROBERT L. WING Eli'
Publisher

Margaret Lehew ·

Hobart Wilson Jr.
Executive Editor

,.

Controller

The...... ,

I nile.,... ,.,.,.. to ft. dor tnHn,...,. on •~NoN,..,
or lfou) hove , . ""'' • - o1 1»/ng ~
, _ , Tl'I*IMtlon.,. pnfwrod- 4/1 m•y bo odllod. Eoclo•'-hllnclude • ol!l'
- · - . , •na tllljlllmo phono num/Mr. Spodfy • - If Hwo'• • ,..,_..
10 • , . _ ltlfk:lo
lloll 10: ,.,.,. 10 IIIJ - . . , OM·olflll - - or FAJt
•bow. The Nltor el1o nokGONII trrwrMt tu11 from our

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or-·
nwrr,_.. ,__,

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~ Lp..:;=:s::.:·;::~=~:~~~~~~~~~.~::o::~::=~~::..-c-a-m~p-a-ig_n-l
·r :·:' .

MBDA spends emergency funds, needed or
Jeck Andlrlon
and JM Moller

sour n01e: Nearly 40 months after the claims.
earth moved in California, federal
Paul Webber, the deputy director
. WASHINGTON •• More than relief dollars continue to flow .. and of the MBDA, told us in a written
three years after an earthquake not always to their intended recipi- · statement that government officials
rocked the quiet Los Ahgeles suburb ents.
should avoid contacts with contrac.t
In a highly unusual move, the bidders "to preserve the integrity of
of Northridge, the U.S. Department
of Commerce is still doling out Commerce Depanment's Minority the solicitation process. " But this
•'emergency" aSsistance 10 its vic- Business Development Agency sent · case was an exception, because the
five of its employees to !he Univer- recipient of the funds .. Jhe Univertims.
As you 'II recall, the government sity of Southern California to help sity of Southern California -- was the
got rave reviews for its handling of officials there write a S 1.2 million· only bidder ever considered by the
the aftermath of the Northridge federal grant proposal on behalf of its MBDA. .
quake . The Federal Emergency Man- recipients, our associate Kathryn
That still doesn't answer the obvi - ·
agement Agency, which had come Wallace has learned. This " emer- ous questi'o n; Why .i s the Commerce
under fire for bungling previous gency assistance" grant was s.up- Departmeni'l!oling out "emergency"
relief effortS, responded in record . posed to be used. IQ give advice to assistance three years after the actu·
time. Highways and overpaSses were minority-run companies on how to al emergency'!The obvious answer is
rebuilt months ahead of schedule. and file insurance forms .. even though that federal •bureaucrats loath~ seeing
Washington doled out record the statute of limitaiions have prob- any money go unspent -.· even if its
amounts of aid-- more tilan $12 bil- alily expired on most claims;
usefulness haS long since been outlion in aiL
Three or the staffers came from lived , and even if there are no obvi .
When the rebuilding effort was · the MBDA's Washington headquar- ous takers.
nearly complete, government offi. ters , and one staffer each was dis·
Internal MBDA documents shed
cials gen~rously congratulated theme patched from offices in San Francis- further light on things: It turns out the
selves for a job well done. The key, co and Chicago. All five staffers had $1.2 million was originally given to
they said, ,was cutting through the their travel and per-diem expenses the MBDA in June 1994 .. six
usual r.ed tapt: to get assistance out to paid for by earthquake relief fund s - months after the earthquake .. by the
those who needed it most.
• money that should have gone to Economic Development Administra·
But this success story has hit a helping victims with their insurance lion. But it took 18 more months

By

before the MBDA 1101 around to
handing out the money. And even
though USC was "uniquely" qualified to carry out the contract, according to MBDA documents, the university 's Business Expansion Network still required the help of five
agency staffers just to set its application to~ether.
Debra Esparta, who directs the
rel ief fund at USC, told us the
MBDA officials only showed up for
a couple of days of "T crossing and
I dotting," and claims lhat USC was
awarded the contract on a compt:titive basis. But MBDA officials deny
that the contract was ever open to
compt:lition, and say that USC was
the only bidder that. was ever seriously considered.
One of the MBDA officials who
worked' ori the proposal, Maggie ·
Faulkner, also says that she spent two
weeks in the Los Angeles aiea helping USC redraft their bid. A followup memo from Faulkner's boss confirm s thi s. recognizing the "very
capabl e job" she performed at USC
"over a two-week peri'od," .add.ing
that through her "direct assistance "
the university produced "substantially complete" proposal.
It is sadly ironic to note that USC
. would not even have been considered
for the earthquake contract had the
MBDA not bungled an earlier effort
to set up the one-stop Mega Center
for minority businesses in the ·area.
As we've already reported, the .
MBDA selected Cordoba Corp. to
run the Mega Center, despite the
objections.of several agency officials.
In the bidding for the Mega Center &lt;:antract, the accounting firm of
Grant Thoronton scored considerably
higher than Cordoba. But Cordoba
won the hid after several well-connected local politicos intervened on
its hchalf.
Had the Mega Center been successful. documents note, the earthquake funds would have gone there .
But Cordoba botched the contract,
forcing the Mega Center to close -and forcing MBDA officials to look
for a new patron .
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
SyndiCate, Inc.

SORRY, JOE ...

KIDS ARE INTO
TIGER \WODf.

TODAY

Creation of new. life a remarkable process

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weight to around seven pounds and tion tci be sure these communicagrew to 20 inches in length . As you tions arc posiiive and loving with
settled into waiting you found a one another within the family? We
favorite positi on, sometimes just ask the mother to cat properly, to
curling up with .you knees up to control her weight gain. to avoid
your nose . You determined your · drugs and alcohol, and to get plenty
own birthday.
of rest. To, produce a child that
. Is this not an awesome and won- knows she or he is loved, should we
dcrful &lt;;levelopmcnt of transcendent not avoid harsh remarks to one
beauty? Anyone who can grasp this another or express bitterness of any ·
concept without being excited must kind?
be stone-cold dead . The two have
Developing 'healthy personalities
become one'
in offspri'rf1l.J:~ of supreme impor· Among the many fantastic things tan~,:;c . There 1s no substitute for ten we have learned in recent decades is der loving care prior to birth as well
the ability adults; especially parents, as following birth. The child goes
have to communitate with their from continual feeding to perhaps
unborn child. We met a fami ly years six feedings a day. Major adjustago from cast central Ohio who ments arc !icing made. The wiring
daily practiced talking to their haby of the female. as well as the plumbwhile still in the womb . Upon get· ing. honors her with the privelcge of
ting ready to leave the house for mothering the next generation. Is
work , the father would place a kiss this not the highest of callings'/
on his wife. and at th e same time
While this is a glorious calling. it
address the baby. He would say is not easy. The father has . the
"Daddy is going to work . and I wi II . responsibility to. sec that the needs
be hack in the evening . Talk to you of his family arc met , whether they
then." ThOse parents played music. he emotional. physical, material, or
sang to the haby. read to the baby. financial. Having participated in
told the baby what was going on, such a wonderful process and develand never had a child with an IQ opment, to do otherwise, by running
under 150. When the child was from responsibility, has nu rational
horn , and would hccnmc restless, basis. This is just a pan of what it
the father as well as the mother was means lo .he a man. The \vi ring of
able .to give comfon and quiet the the male makes him cspeci311y suitbaby. Having talked to the hahy ed to perform this calling .
before birth, the v&lt;)ice of the father
Bob Weedy is a correspondent
was also known as a friendly and for the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
loving voice .
,.
If the unborn hear our communi cations. do ·wc not have an obliga· .

vous system is laid down by the ,
20th .day. By six weeks the skeleton
is complete and reflexes are ·present.
Electrical brain waves have been
recorded. as early as 43 days. The
brain and all body systems arc present by eight weeks. By II to 12
weeks you sucked your thumb.
breathed amniotic nuid to develop
the organs of respiration. and had
fingernails.
By the time you moved into your
second trimester of life y.ou grew to
more than two inches in length and
weighed one ounce. At this time
you had a body that would appear
female . the first trimester model is
always lemale. After the basic body
is formed the father' s X chromosome may match the mother's chromosome. or the faihcr's Y chromo·
some may overpower the X and this.
modification command customi t.cs
a baby boy.
The ovary-looking pair of sexual
organs in the . first trimester baby
will now become ovaries in the
female and testicles in the male.
These testicles will be transformed
iino a pair of spcnn prcxlucing factorics which will manufacture up to
3 million sperm per day through
most of adult lilc. When the moth·
er's ilndrogcns ai the sixteenth week
hegin to specialize the young boy's
brain, hi s own andmgcns , especially the testosterone from the tiny tcslicles. arc also put to use ·in modifying his own brain.
During · the last three months
befo·re your. binh you tripled in

.

By Joseph Spear
mously 'talcntcd and magnetic Tiger
It is just possible that the world Woods, who is probably still too
may enter the 21st century he fore young to he in~red to racial innucnprofessional golfers get out of the do. And I felt bad because I lost a
19th.
hero, .o f sorts. Fuuy Zoeller " ..
Talk about your plantation ani - when a bad back penn its it,;· a superb
tudes . Here is what golfer Frank golfer himself, with victories in ihc.
Urban." Fu,.zy " Zoelle~ blld to say to 1979 Mristers artd the 1984 U.S.
a CNN spons reporter on the.day that · Open. He is an immensely personable
'21-ycar-old A(rican-Asian-Amcrican · guy. He is funny, laid back, even
Tiger Woods clobbered his more whistles when ~e works. I pulled for
expt:rienced competitors by an his- him every weekend.
toric 12 strokes in the venerable MasZoeller claims that his allusions to
ter~ Tournament in Augusta, Ga. :
'"that little boy, " '"fried chicken" and
'"That linle boy is driving well and " collard greens '' were meant' as a
he 's putting well . He 's doing every- ioke. His '"comments ~ere not
inte~ded' to be racially derogator:y,"
thing it takes to ·win . So, you know
· whaJ you ,guys do when he gets in
he satd m a statement released by his
manager, '"and 1 apologize for the
here? You pal him on the back and
fac:t they were misconstrUed in that
say congratulations and enjoy it and
tell him nO! to serve fried chicken fashion ." In subsequent interviews he
next year.' Got it?"
seemed genuinely remorseful.
Z-oeller was referring to the ChamI believe him. Still, there is no way
pions Dinne.r, held on the Tuesday of to . excuse the insensitivity of
Masters week, tn wh•ch the previous Zoeller's words, not to mention the
year's winner selects an entree. Fuzzy stupidity of them . They are indicastarted to turn away from the camera,
tive, I fear, of an attitude that pennethen added: " Or collard greens or ates this middle-class, while-man 's
whatever the hell they serve. , .
game, at all levels.
A century·a~d-a-third after the
I felt personal pain when I saw
that tape. I felt bad for the enor- Civil War, five decades after Jackie

· Rohinson l)urst o~ the scene, four the professional tour react'! The only
decades after Brown vs. thC Board of two black members of the group
Education, three decades after the entered mild protests: But with the
assassin~tion of Manin Luther Ki.ng exception of Lee Trevino, who grew
Jr., hundreds of country clubs in the up in a barrio, the remaining tour
United States still discriminate members seemed more interested in
against blacks, not to me~tion Jews their checks than in taking a stand
and women . If they arc wholly pri- against segregation.
·
vate, 11 IS ' legal; they can wallow in
" I think the whole thing gO! "
btgotry to their hearts' content.' But it blown way out of proportion," said
seems ~o me that, as public figures, knickers-wearing Payne Stewart:
~rofcss1onal players have an obliga- "That's something (the media) are
llon toopposc the tmmorality or it. pretty good at, blowing things out of
. Unttl 1990, however, .Pro golfers proportion ."
casually abetted these pr~judices.
"We're golfers, not the ' U.N ., "
That was the year the Professional said Paul Azinger.
Golfers Association, which until 1961
" I play golf, not politics," said one
had a "Caucasian only" clause in its Fuz1.y Zoeller.
.
bylaws, held its annual tournament at
th.e Shoal Creek Country Club in
· Despite these sentiments, ' the
Btrmlngham, Ala. The club founder Shoal Creek embarrassment spurred
and president, Hall Thompson, gave' thePGA Tour and the PGA to proan mtemew tn which he said his ·h1btt tournaments at clubs that pracorganization would never admit a tice discrimination.lt was a huge step
black because "that'sjust nO! done in forward .
Binningham."· He added: "I lflink
Fuzzy's foozle shows
gOlf still ·
~e 've said that we don't discriminate has a long way to go. .
.
·
m every other area except the · J-ph Speer Is a synclkaied
blacks."
. .
writer
Newwpaper' . Ente~
And how did the nOI)Ie players of Auocletlon.
·

I

Ohio/W.Va.
Anger mo~nts as .steel strike drags on
t

-not

a

AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - President Clinton 's deadline is a dud - there won't
be an overhaul of campaign finance laws by the Fourth of July. Or by Labor
Day. And probably not by Christmas.
·
Not without a surge of voter demand. which isn't happening. Although .
,polls indicate that most people believe. the political money system should
be changed, not many think it will be.
Would-be reformers, most of them Democrats, rai~e the issue in Congress
pt:riodically, but in speeches that draw scant notice, urging action on bills
that have been proposed but haven't progressed.
Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., say s there is "surprisingly little pressure from
constituents" ·for reform. He called it a slow-motion crisis.
Would-be reformers pressed for a spt:edup on the issue, thinking action
would be propelled by the controversy over Democratic fund-raising e·xcesses in the 1996 campaign . They're still waiting .
Congressional investigations into 1996 fund raising could change that ;
Senate arid House hearings will stir the ·issue this summer. They will deal
wiih illegal or questionable cpnduct, including White House inducements
to major donors, and illicit foreign contributions.
The legislation that Clinton, Democratic leaders, and a handful of Republicans are seeking would cover donations and practices that are pennitted
by current law, notably the unrestricted contributions that political parties.
unlike individual candidates, can accept. The line between unlimited party
donations and limited contributions to candidates blurred to the vanishing .
point in 1996, on both political sides.
Dealing with Democratic excesses that have led the national committee
to promise the return of n~arly $3 million in improper or questionable donations, Clinton urged ·enactment of a Senate reform bill that would ban unlimited pany contributions and offer incentives to House and Senate candidates
·
·
·
who accept campaign spending limits.
He said he'd press the issue in every forum available. " You know and I
know that this can be delayed, and you know and I know that delay will
By ROBERT W~EDY
mean the death of reform: " Clinton said in his State of the Union address
God created · community by
' on Feb~ 4. "So let's set _our own deadline .'' He said it should be done by
'forming woman and man from the
July 4.
:---, same Adam. GencThat was unrealistic from the stan. Republican leaders aren't interested
5 says "God erein the bill Clinton endorsed, although the winter campaign did prompt them
them male and
.to say they were working on GOP alternatives. None have been proposed,
female .. . and called
and interest in the issue has ebbed. · - .
·
them Adam."·
The
only
congressional
action
on
camj&gt;aign
finance
was
a meaningless
'
The word Adam
. I vote in. the Senate on a constitutional amendment ·to permit legislative limis Hebrew for man.
its on candidate ·spending, barred by the Supreme Court in 1976. It was reject·
·not the gender. but
ed, 61 to 38. Reform advocates said it was a diversion that would enable :
the human race.
Republican opponents to say they've already voted on the subject:
·
A pattern of this process is pre~:
At about the same time, the White House set up a campaign reform edu- sent to this day in the procreation o(
~.; cation and awareness .project to press for legislation. ''We're at a critical
the next generation. As the window
;; moment in the dtjve toward .reform ," Vice President AI Gore said on Man;h
to the womb is 'opened more for us
~·
17 . " We have unprecedented public focus ."
to sec the m;~estic fonnation of that
i
It isn't showing. When leading sponsors of the Senate relonn hill held
linlc person. the more remarkable it
; public forums to mobilize support, turnout was sparse.
. .
become~ to us.
j _ When pollsters ask them,. people say they think the politi~al finance sysFrom the time the male spcnn :
1
fi
ghts
its way upstream to penetrate
tern should be overhauled. In a New York Times-CBS News poll earl y thi s
-i month. nearly 9 out of 10 said so, alihough most of them .doubted there is the egg. the process is awesome .
~ ' a commitment to change in Washington. But that isn't translating into prcsOnce that special sperm fertilize s
the egg no other spcim can do the
sure for action:
~~~ · The system hasn ' t been changed. in 25 years, during which time the rules same. A new life has hegun with
1l
have loosened and campaign spending has soared. It has been an issue much
characlcristi~s that arc unique to
ofthat time; there have been 17 Senate filibusters involving campaign reform
that person. You bcgan·.'You never
· bills in the past decade.
existed behlfc in the history of the
!1. . There'll surely be another should any variation of the current reform pro- world. and you arc not entirely like
posal getto the point of Senate debate _That isn ~~going to happen soon. and
either of your parents nor arc you
~~ sponsors know that unless something is done this year. it will o'nly get more entirely like any of your ancestors .
WhCn ·yuu were conceived you were
'!I difliclilt as the 1998 congressional election campaign begins.
.
so tiny, smaller than a grain of sand.
Hamilton. who is retiring from Con gress. said earlier this month that
t sweeping reform may bc 'impossihlc. but at least the worst abuses should be
You continued to grow at a rapid
. rate . By week one you looked like a
~ [ confronted, one by one. •
~~
Then he acknowledged the obstnclc to change;
· • variety of l&gt;crry. Your mother had no
idea you had nested into her womb,
" The blunt fact is that most members of Congress arid both political par. ~ j, tics prefer the system under which they were elected over some untested · and she h'ad not yet missed a men~ ; scheme that might re-place it. ..
·
strual period. Your heartbeat begins
between the 18th and 25th day. and
the foundation for the entire , ncr1
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist
~ ~· for The Associated Press~ has reported on Washington and national pol·
~
itlcs for more than 30 years.

i

(

Sundly,April27,1897

finance
reform deadline a dud
By WALTER R. MEARS

·i

•

TOBACCO POINTS -Arizona Attqrney General Grant Wood1
9'1turad as he spoke Friday to the Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers
In Clevala.r\d. Woods rapreaents attorneys general from eight
states In negotiations wjth Philip Morrla and R.JR Nabisco. (AP)

Tobacco fight advocate
pushes industry ·control
on marketing to youths
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
·
.
· . - Associated Press Writer
·
. (:LEVELAND 1 Any settlement of tobacco liability lawsuits must
mdude a ban on promoting smoking to children·, a lead negotiator for states
sa1d Fnday.
.Arizona Attorney General Grant Woods spoke to the Ohio Academy of
Tnal Lawyers rnmutes after hearing that a federal judge in Greensboro, N.C. ,
had ruled that federal Ia'\' does not allow the government to restrict cigarette
advenising and promotion. ·
.
U.S. District Court Judge William Osteen said the government did have
the right to regulate tobacco as a drug.
The nation's two largest tobacco companies, Philip Morris and RJR Tobacco, are negotiating with 24 states seeking to recover smoking-related health
costs. Ohio was not among the states.
_
. The companies hopt: to end litigation by offering to pay about $300 bil hon, submnung to some Food a~d Drug Administration regulation and stopptng much ctgarctte advertising. In exchaQ ge. they want Congress to pass
leg1slatton protecting them from future lawsuits.
. "There ~ertainly would never be any deal that doesn't take them (tobac~
co~pmpantes) completely out of the business of marketing to children in the
Untted States," Woods said. He is one of six attorneys general negotiating
.
a posstblc settlement. ..
"If they th.i nk they are going to get off the roP.,s here on the issue of marketing, they ' re sadly mistaken," Woods told a luncheon audience of 500 attorneys who specialize in trial work.
If tobacco companies don't agree to stop promoting cigarettes to children
"Wc'rcall tri~llawyers- we ' ll go to trial in Mississippi in July, we'll g~
· to tnal tn Flonda tn August, then we'll go Texas in September, Minnesota
tn January, in March we'll go in Washington and in October we'll go inAri.
- zona," Wonds said.
If the. industry loses those sox lawsuits , it could face liability of $15 billion to $20 billion, Woods said. If the states lose , another. 18 states are ready
to proceed with similar. litigation, he said.
·
A message seeking comme~t on Woods' statements was l,eft for Philip.
Moms Cos. RJR Tobacco satd tl wouldn ' t comment beyond a statement the
· tndustry had given saying issues can best be addressed by the legislative
process. ·
.
·
- •
·
Woods first confirmed March 20 that Liggett, maker of Chesterfields,
would settle 22 state I.awsuits by putting warning labels o~ cigareite packs
that smoktng IS addtcttve and causes cancer. Talks toward ·a settlement have
·. been ongoirig 'wilh other tobacr;o companies .

By DAVID SHARP
AIIOCIM8d p,._ Writer
•
WHEELING, W.Va. _ Workers
stepped up the heat in their strike
against ~ling-Pit~ burgh ~teel
Corp. arntd an analyst s dire predicbon of plant closings if the sides cannot get together soon.
Wheeling-Pitt will consider selling asset~ '!"hen the costs of restan- ·
tng tiS mills and dtscounting steel to
attract old customers become · too
steep, said Michael Gambardella, a
steel analyst for J.P. Morgan in New ·
York
"Th
.
·
e strike can't go on forever. At
some point, the company would .
either give in to the union's demands ,
or they would start selling off assets."
Gambardella said Friday. ·
'Meanwhile, · union officials
expressed concerns that workers life
beyond frustration as their strike
against Wheeling-Pitt plants in West
Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania
·approaches seven months.
"They' re not frustrated any more.
They're just . mad," said Mickey
Forte, president of United Steelworkers Local 1187 in Allenport, Pa.
Steel workers formed informational pickets this week at two plants
panly owned by WHX Corp., W~eel­
ing-Pitt's parent. They also stopped
traflic at Wheeling-Pitt's coke plant
in Follansbee.
Forte said there is no guaran.tee
pickets will remain "informational"

as their tension i~creascs.

'"It' s getting more and more difficult 10 control the members," said
Larry. Matias , president of Local
1190 in Steubenville, Ohio, the
largest union local with 2.500 members of the approximately 4,500 on
strike.
.
The last straw for workers came
when, the union contends, the chairmllil of WHX Corp. allegedly ordered
his negotiators 10 break away from
talks brokered by Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va.
. .,
rorte Sat'd he and other union ·prestdents were told to pack enough
clothes for a week or more in Pittsbur~h for the llilks.Instead, the negottatwns slammed to a halt after just
three hours.
Gambardella said the union underestimated · WHX Corp. Chairman
Ron_ LaBow because, unlike . other
steel executives, he dOes not have a
steel background .
··
"The emotional ties to the business are not there and that's .s~me­
h'
h ·
·
t mg I . e union has neverhadto de'!.~

· 'I he
.. o l,ic)
Cc 1fll! li lll }

. ,
. ,
.
Wtth, he sa~d. U seems to me at this
pomt thatthe umo~ has more at stake
than Ro~ LaBo~.
Despne the stnke,
Cdrp. has
been pursumg opportunities:
·A wholly owned s~bsldlary has
propos~:r;t boosung tts stake '"
Dy ~amtcs Co rp .. m,a deal worth Sl60
np •on. Dynamtcs Pro&lt;!Ucts tnclude
apphances, atr condmonmg pans
an~.~lect~om~ goods.
LaB 1 seem s 10 tell . me. thai Mr. .
ow •s gomg on wtth hts It e and

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·
WHX 's business. And their business
1s not JUSt to make steel, but primar•ly to make money, and to provide
value for shareholders," GambardeiIa sa•d.
The strike staned Oct. 1 when
contracts expired without a resolution
of a dispute over pensions .
.
The union w.ants to return to a
guaranteed pensiOn common iii the
st~el mdustry, including Wheeling·
Pm-be fore it emerged from Chapter
II bankruptcy in the 1980s.

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S~nday,Ap~l27,1117

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleuant, WY

PlilgaM•• ',;•

Vance A. Dray
.:· G;ALI;JPOLIS- Vance A. Dray, 74, 1690 Sh~string Ridge Road, 0.1h_Jiolls, d1ed Friday, April 25, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center.
' Born Jan. 2S. 1923 in Gallia County, son of the late Raymond Nelson and
Mable Plymale Dray, he was a construction worker, and a U.S. Army vet·
eran of World Warn.
.
Surviving are his former wife, Rosa lee McGuire Dray of Gallipolis; six
sons, Gary ~ Dray, Bruce Lynn Dray, Terry Joe Dray, Calvin Roy Dray
and Jeffrey AlliSOn Dray, all of Gallipolis. and Carl Bryan Dray of Cincin~atJ; .two daughters, Pauicia Kay Ferrell and Loretta Sue Shaffer, both ofGalbpohs; 13 grandcltildren and lhree great-grandchildren ; three brothers, Divers
D~ay and Jack ~ay. both of Gallipolis, and Raymond Junior Dray of Flint, .
f1icla.; and two SISters, Edith Irene Dray of Gallipolis, and Betty Camden of
Bidwell.
· ·
He was also ~receded in death by two. brothers, Kenneth Dray and Claude
Dray ; and tw~ Sisters, Virginia Jamison and Juanita Wallace.
Serv~ces will be 2:30p.m. Monday io the Willis Funeral Home with the
R~v. Bruce Unroe officiating. Burial will be in the Mina Chapel Cemetery.·
Fnends may call at the fun~ral home from 6-9 p.m . Sunday.
VFW Post 4464 and American Legion Lafayette Post 27 will fold and present the flag at the gravesite .. _

Wilma E. Elliott
. NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Wilma E. Elliott,'/7, New Haven, died Saturday, April 26, 1997 in Holzer Medical Center. ·
.
'Born Dec: 13, 1919 in Graham Station. W.Va., daughter of the late Sadie
F. Gnmm, she was a homemaker and a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church
in .New Haven.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Pearl H. Elliott; and by
a granddaughter.
Surviving are a daughter, Doris M. (Luke E.) Coffee of Vinton; a son,
.Eugene P. (Tracy Latan) ElliottofWest Palm Beach, Fla.; five grandchildren;
and two sisters. Mildred F. Thompson of Letart, W.Va., and Connie S.
·E&lt;IwarQs of Columbus.
··
'
:.Services will be II a.m. Monday in the St. Paul Lutheran Church, with
P1$1or George Weirick officiating. Burial will be In Graham Cemetery. Friends
~y call at the Fogleso ng Funeral Home. Mason; W.Va.; from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Sunday. and one hour prior to the ser~ice on Monday.
1
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1

Vance B. Rees
_ •GALLIPOLIS- Vance Boyd Rees, 75, Gallipolis, died Friday April 25,
1997 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born May 10, 1921 in Walnut To~nship, Gallia County, son of the late
John Jenkin and Ruby Jane Dailey Rees, he was a retired service manager
and mechanic from Smith Buick-Pontiac.
' A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, having served in the Navy Seabees .
1
a.Senior Chief. CM .. he retired from the service in 1981 . He was a memIJer of tlie Navy Seabees Veterans of America, VFW Post 4464. American
Legion Lafayette Post 27, 4018 Voiture 1216, and the National Boxcar Assot iation of the 4018.
: Surviving are his wife, Elaine Hawley Rees, whom he married Jan . 31.
,942 · in Mingo Junction ; two sons, David Leon,ard (Len) Rees of
fiuntersville. N.C. and John Rees of Gallipolis; a daughter, Ann Louise Grywalskl of Naperville, Ill .; and five grandchildren.
.
: He was.also preceded in death by a sister, Virginia B. Rees.
: There will be rio visitation and burial will be at a later date, at the convenience of the family.
Arrangements are by the.Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
'

as

Edna G. Ashley White

Nation/World

International fear
of terr·orism gQod
_
f or Ohio company
By KEVIN O'HANLON
Associated Preas Writer
FAIRAELD - Terrorism and
crime are a threat worldwide. And in
Bill O'Gara's world: that 's good for
business.
O'Gara is chief executive officer
of the O'Gara ·Co., which made its
mark fitting limousines with armor
for use by U.S. presidents, Pope John
Paul II and Queen Elizabeth II.
But the compan y now is seeing
significant growth doing the same for
officials and business people in countries rife with crime because of drug
wars and unstable governments.
"Our business was driven by terrorism in the 1980s, and today, we've
seen a much greater shift to crime, .
particularly in _places like Mexico,
Brazil , the Philippines and Russia,"
O'Gara said during stroll through
the company's ·]30,000-square foot
plant in suburban Cincinnati.
"That's our real growth area, people who are concerned about kidnapping and random acts of violence. "
While the company siill outfits
limousines, it now offers the likes of
armored Jeep Cherokees and Chevrolet Suburbans, which are popular with
officials and executives who don 't
want a high profile. ·
· O'Gara's goal is to have enough
armored Suburbans, popular because
they are large, powerful and good for
"walk-up" business."
"When the incident happens or a
threat is identified, they want the
vehicle right away," O' Gara said.
"But we haven't gotten to that point
yet- we sell out before the vehicles
are through being fitted ."
The company. which turned out
about 500 vehic.les last year, can refit
a Suburban in about 400 hours. compared to I ,400 a few years ago.
Depending on the. amount of protection ordered, a vehicle cari be
made to withstand 9mm bullets,
armor-piercing rounds, bomb blasts
and land mines.
Besides putting armor inside and
under the veliiclc's body. the process
can include addmg :l-inch-thick window glass and special hard nylon
wheel rims that can be driven for
about 50 miles at high speeds if the
rubber tires are destroyed in an
attack.
The process can add up to a ton to
the weight of a vehicle and cost any. where from $40,000 't&lt;&gt; $1 million
But- O'Gara cauiions clients thai
the vehicles don 't make them invin. cible.
''One of the worst things a person
can do is buy an armored vehicle and
think he 's. completely safe." O'Gara
said. "The annored vehicle is really
buying you time to get out of a situ-

a

By SANDY SHORE

ation. because there's really no such
thing as bulletproof - it's bulletresisrant."
·
O'Gara recently bought International Training Inc. of West Point,
Va., and Palmer Associates of Mexico City. The companies specialize 'in
providing training to counter terrorism, kidnapping and other crimes.
O'Gara Co. plans to open another
training facility in San Antonio,
Texas, this year.
.
"We feel there 's an opportunity to
offer one-stop shopping where a customer can get an armored vehicle.
driver training, security training and
site protection," O'Gara said. "As far
as we can tell right .now ~e are
unique in the industry to have that
capability."
The. demand for the company's
products and services doesn't surprise
S~an Milinowski, director of the
Office of International Criminal Justice at, the University of Illinois at
Chicago. The office private nonprofit organiza.tion founded by the _
school to study international crime
and crime trends.
"If this company is not ahead of
the curve, then they certainly are right
on it," he said. "Kidnapping and violence is a real concern for business
people in many countries."
· In Colombia, for example, more
than 260 people have been kidnapped this year.
· The company, whiCh opened as a
carriage shop in the 1800s, now has
operati'ons in Moscow, Geneva. Sao
Paulo, Brazil, Mexico City, Nairobi,
Kenya, London, Torino, Italy, Los
Angeles and Washingto,n. D.C. The
O'Gara family bought the company
in 1982.
Bill O'Gara's older brother, Tom,
is chairman of a board that includes
former ·FBI Director William Sessions, former CIA Dep'uty Director
Hugh Pri&lt;:c and Raymond Mabus,
fanner governor of Mississippi and .
ambassador to Saudi Arabia.
· O'Gara's_net sales in 1996 were
$82.8 millipn - a whopping increase
from $32.8 million in 1995 . The rising sales arc partly attributed 10 the
company's contract to install annor in
the Army 's Hum Vee utility vehicles.
Net income in 1996 was $6.6 million, compared to a ·1995 loss of $1 .1
million, caused by_ a delay in the shipment of the Humvee's chassis to
O' Gara.
The company in November completed its first public stock offering.
which netted about $17 million.
.
In a prospectus issued before the ·
company went public last .year,
O'Gara estimated that the international market for security. equipment
alone will be $44 billion by 2000

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. TREES 'DISTRIBUTED - Trees donated by the Our House
Museum were distributed to customers of participating Galllpolla ratall marchants last week In honor of Arbor Day, From left ara
Dave Tawney, Tawney's Studio; Barbara Kemper, Our House; Edy
Smith, Mogle's American Cafe; and Tommie Vaughn of Paul
Daviis Jewelers and president of the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association.
,
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· SEARCH EFFORT· Air Force Parareecue tAm member Sgt. Ishmael Antonio cllmba down on e
13,0011-foat Gold Dust Peak In the HolY Croea wll~a area near Vall; Colo. Friday. To the lift 11
debris from the attllc:k !Itt- The tAm found fl'llgnMnt.d human remelns near the erea.

Air Force: Human remains
found amongA-10 1S wreckage

Comedic candidate\
Paulsen dies at 69

By ROBERT WELlER
Associated Prase Writer
EAGLE, Colo. (AP)- An elite
team of Air Force searchers found
human body parts among the
wreckage of an A-10 warplane that
crashed into a snowy. mountain a sign that the pilot probably went
down with the plane.
"What we found was fragmentary human remains," Maj. Gen.
Nels Running.said Friday. "We are
positive they are human remains.
We are not positive whose human
remains they are." ·
The remains were being.sent to
a military lab for PNA and other
testing, Running said.

LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Pat 1968 when he announced that he was .
Paulsen, the deadpan, droopy-faced running for president under the
comic whose career was launched on S.T.A.G. (Straight Talking American ·
the Smothers Brothers' TV show and Government) Party. He won an
sustained by satirical campaigns for Emmy that year.
the White House. has died. He was
"He was a dear friend and a great
69 .
'
part of the Smothers Brothers' sue· .
. Paulsen , who had colon and brain cess was due to him,' ' Tom Smothers
cancer, died Thursday in Mexico said in a statement. "He was one of
from pneumonia and kidney failure the great comedians of our time ....
after recent surgery to remove scar He will be missed."
tissue from previous surgery, publiThe Smothers show was controCISt Glenn Schwanz said Friday.
versial for its liberal jabs at the VietDoctors had said Paulsen ·s cancer · nam War and the White House ·and.
was inoperable. He had been under- . CBS canceled it in . 1969 after 'three.
going alternative cancer treatment in seasons.
Mexico for about a month. "His canPaulsen , however, was not ·
cer was under control~ " Schwartz . through. He became a perennial pres.
said. ·idential candidate. He was on the baiHc did not know the nature of the. lot for real in 197'2. A!'l told; he camtreatments or where Paulsen had paigned in five presidential elections
died.
· and claimed to have finished second
Paulsen made his name on "The to President 'clinton in last 'year's
Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour" in New Hampshire primary.
,

.

·

By TERRI LANGFORD
Associated Pre. . Writer
BEAUMONT. Texas (AP) - A
truck driver abandoned four dummy
Air Force missiles' after he ran out of
moneY '1111&lt;1" llis bosses refused to
send him more cash, the Houston
Chronicle reported Saturday.
Ronald Coy or Middletown,
. Ohio, was arrested at a truck stop
Friday in Orange, near the l-ouisiana
state -line, FBI agent Robert Loosle
• ./said. A court appearance on a charge
of .wire fraud was scheduled for Saturday.
The bombs were found at a lumber yard 300 miles away. in Ranger,
110 miles west of Dallas.
The Chronicle, citing sources
familiar with the search, said Coy
spent all his cash, then called his
contractor, Cheetah 'rransponation
Co. in Colorado Springs, Colo.,
seeking more money.
He dropped t!te cargo whett the

. NEWARK !AP) - Two people ·appearance in Licking Coumy Juvehave been charged in bomb scares at nile Court.
three schools in the city school disThe high school was closed . for
trict. a Newark police detective said. three days after the device was found.
Deputy ChicfDetcctiveAI Zellner Classes were canceled at both middle
said Fnday that a 13-year-old male schools Friday. Zellner said he
has .been charged with inducing pan- dpccts all students will .hC ahlc to
ic. He also said two more people may rciurn Monday.
be arrested in the threats at Wilson . . Authori tics conducted cxtensi ve
and Roosevelt middle schools.
searches of the sch&lt;x&gt;ls to ensure ·safeNo devices were found at either . ly.
sc hool. ZeHner refused to identify 1hc
.Zellner said P~ulson could face
13-year-old, saying he has been more charges if the device is found to ' ·
released to his parents.
contain an explosive powder. It was '
On Thursday, John if;:. Paulson, 16. scm to a laboratory to be examined.
was charged with inducing panic and No results have been obtained.
-placed under house'· arrest after a
Zellner said the device was made
device that looked ll~e a bomb was out of a copper pipe commonly used
found in a Newark High School lock- for plumbing. It was about 12 incher. Zellner said.
es long . with a 90-degrce, 3,inch
. Both youths ar~ · awaiting an elbow ·section.
·

GALLIPOLIS - Booked into . day at I: I0 a.m. hy Gallipolis City
the Gallia Coun1y Jai( following Police for dof\lestic violence and
arrests by authorities were:
undcra~e alcohol consumption.
• Gregory S. Forest. 36. PatriQt.
• CJndy L Grimmett, 21, 5 Court
St..
Gallipolis, Saturday at-2:03a.m. '
Friday at 6 p.m. by the Gallia Counby
officers
l(&gt;r domestic violence.
:
ty Sheriff's Department l(&gt;r nonsu'p·

·report on Coy Jan. II. In the report,
Coy also was named 'in January
. Mrs. Coy said he took $17,000 in as a suspect in a theft case reported
cash advances from 'their credii card by SOS Transport Inc. of Monroe,
aceount.
. Ohio, said Monroe police Capt. Tom
"I~ad to_i~ke a secon&lt;!job to l!ay Bishop. . .
.
.
my rent," Mrs. Coy said. "He finanAuthonues had sa1d the veh1cle
cially ruined me."
had a trackmg !Jeacon and W8l; bemg
Coy's commercial driver's momtored by satellite until 11 vanlicense w~s suspended indefinitely 1shed from computer screen~ Thurs_ in March because of an unspecified day. Loosle told the Chromcle that
violalion .. in another state, the O~io wasn't the case- 11 had no trackmg
Departmenl'ofMotor Vehicles said. system.
,....:.,·.,;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;·- - - - - - - - - - - - : - - ,
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Special Care
For·Our
Little Patients

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pim of dc'flcndents.
• Jimmy A. Graham. 44. Vinton.
Friday at 7:16p.m. hy ·deputies for
passing had checks.
• Donald C. Wray. IM. 2235 Graham School RoadnGallipoli.s. Satur-

Open Your 1998

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Hos-pital news

Veterans Memorial
Friday admissions - none.
Friday discharges- Mary MeAn- "
gus.

· company · refused, apparently ·
unaware of what he was hauling and
hoping to find another load elsewhere.
.
A vacation Club Is a
Club·
"It wasa't 'a · sinister plot," a
out In April • a great way
sotirce told the newspaper. "It was
just goofhall."
·
to
The Air Force said the TGM-130.
gui(led missiles weren't equipped
home lmprovementsl
with . working warheads or explosive' and po~d no risk II? the public.
'The devices. each worth .about
vacation
are available In plans of
$1 SO.OOO, carry infrared and laser
$5, $10, Md $20 a
You,maRe ·
guidance equipment allowin&amp; pilots
to fly attack patterns and get compayments ..d the Ia one
. Is on usl
puterized data.
:·we tielieve the crates are still
sealed and intact," Air Fon;e
spoltesman Maj. Rob Koon said.
1be containen, marked "transformer," .were left at tbe fenced-in
yard Wednesday. !tanger Police
'
Chief Don Enix said. "1be truck
' ..... OfMilft
,.. ••'IMPnpla
II
driver told them he had bald tire&amp;
and that the floor of his trailer had
'
.Omt problems, so he had to get that
'fixed."
·
'
• Mnson • New Haven • Pt.
1be missiles had been piCked up
1174-1000
77sa&amp;l4_
883-2135
at a •oeina plant in PuJulh, Oa., anc1
were suppand ·to be taken 10 CanR , PDIC
-Air Force a- in Clovis. N.M.
The ..ell beplllbil week .... the
lhipaleat 11ever ~bowed up.
: $11 ., . . . fllltA . . . . . . . . . . 11Apllll,lll7.
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16141446-7619

Armed with that information,
three searchers were lowered from
a 111-53 helicopter by cable to the
surface to look for Button's
· remains, then snatched back up and
returned to search headquarters.
:The pilot's parents wete notified
of the discovery and "await the
results of the investigation," Run-ning said.
The Air Force's biggest remaining task is figuring out why the
plane veered off course and
crashed in the Rockies, 800 miles
away, said Capt. Andy- White,
spokesman fpr Davis-Monthan Air
Force Base in Tucson, Ariz.

Authorities lodge four in county -jail

.

1ft.,

11le announcement culminaled
a three-week searcb for Capt. Craig
Bution and his plane, which veered
away from an April 2 training formation of A-lOs over Arizona.
Spring snow has hampered the
search.
The Air Force's p11J11rescuers,
who are trained to retrieve downed
pilots from behind enemy lines,
took advantage of improved weather Friday and knew just where to
look.
Aerial photos taken last week·
end and enhanced in Washington
showed Button's ejection seat in a
gorge on Gold Dust Peak, near the
crash site.

Report: Missing dummy bombs
mystery not '.s inister' but 'goofball'

Second youth is charged
in series of bomb scares-

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People in today' s society ar~ often aware of the .
dangers ououd sound, but do utue to avoid them. .
Exposure to inten~e noise from sports and machinery .
.sllch as skeeshooting, lawn mowers, and
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PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
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Prosecutors allege McVeigh
Another missing piece was an
methodically planned the bombing alibi for McVeigh, who was arrested,
DENVER (~) . - 'The !oretgn for more than half a y~ar to avenge on unrelated chiiJies on an intenlllle
terrorists were mtsstag, ~ a1_1b1 was the deaths of 8'1 people in the gov- - _north of Oklahoma City shortly after
glossed over~ ~ FBI s ~nme l~b emment raid on the Branch Davidi· the bombing.
·
..
!J'O"bles were dtsm1ssed With a b1t· .an compound near Was:.o, Texas.
·
mg co~meat. .
Much of the prosecution's case is ·
In his Opent~g statement, Timo- circumstantial, .with the exception of
thy . Mc~e•gh s lead . attorney Michael Fortier, McVeigh's former
prom1sed Jurors a scrappy defense Army buddy, who will testify that he
~es1gned ~o poke holes m prosecu- knew in advance of McVeigh's plans
tton -~nes and challenge wnness to bomb the federal build'
cred1bthty.
H· 1 •·
mg..
- .
.
.
artz er s statements mmored
. In o~ten tedtous deta1l, Stephen the government's pretrial accusa., .The jury listened to emotional
Jones dtspensed dates, places and lions.
testimOily from prosecution
names.
It
was
a
contrast
from
the
Jones'
statements
h
d'd
witn8$Ses, as weM as audiO
fl bo
J
f
d
, owever, 1
,.
am yant one~ o pre1na1 ay_s, not mirror what he has s id i th
recordings, and saw 'Jkjec,. ol
who ~ften used p1thy phras.;s t~ spm past.
a n e
the aftennath.
., Defense atiomeya objec:led
the~me_s a~ut McVe1gh s. tnnoFor nearly a year, Jones has pur· several times to eO'IOiiooW
cen.ce, mcludmg one th~t foretgn ter- sued a theory that the bo b'
testimony and elchlbita. U.S.
k r
.
m mg was
ronsts were responsible for the th
Okl h
C't
f
d
b
'ld'
e
wor
o
-fore1gn
terronsts.
ProseDistrict Judge Richard MaiBch
bO ~ ·~rna 1 Y e era1 u• mg cutors have repeatedly_ said they
overruled most, but refuted to
admit at least one photogr.pll.
mAit•hg. h
haye no evidence that foreign terror1
1
1
Aside lrom the ~iOns·,
au~ some ega ana ysts ists had any role.
defense
lawyeJS kept qulal,
w~re. surpnsed by the change, they
In the week before the trial Jones
declinin~ to croes-examine most
srud It probabl~ was a crafty strate- fil~d a request 10 delay it~ start,
, of the n•ne witnesses called,
gy...,..,at was on f th
-1- - · alleging two people with ties to the
., For the second day, repo~e,. ·
..,
e0
e en ICISms I aq' govern
t s·
F .
d
were allowed to sij on the right· . c,.
in the O.J. (Simpson) case, you'll r . 1
men • . mn em ~n
hand side of the ·courtroom.
recall wh n the de'
II d'd rural Arkansas wh1te supremaCISts
During jury selection, the media
.'
e
aense rea Y 1 were Involved
was kept on the lett side, out of
. prom1se more than they could deliv_·
S
1 al. a1
1 d
" 'd R be H d
.
orne eg an ysts specu ate
view of the iury box.
er. .SaJ
o rt ar away, a Um· that Jones will use the theory whe
'
vers1~y of Den~er law profess~r, " If he begins presenting his case. ·..Tha~
·•
'
there s somethmg t~ey could mtro- doesn't mean they can't weave the
duce_that they. were11 t sure wo~ld be conspiracy theory. throughout the
Jones' only reference to an aliJii;·i
adm1ss•ble -11 s _l;letter not to, mtro- trial and then say at the end there was reJieating what McVeigh told
duce 11 &lt;m oi'Cnmg argument. .
was a conspiracy, .. Hardaway said. the trooper who arrested him ·_ tha{ !
The opemng statements by Jones · Others weren't so sure.
McVeigh was on his way back from and lead prosecutor Joseph Hartzler
"It's going 10 be unlikely for that Arkansas where he was moving. ''-' ·
budt the framework for · the case · stuff 10 play prominently during the
''There is evidence that McVeigh ,.
agamst McVe1gh, _who fas:.es .the course of the trial." said lawyer Jef- . had spent a lot of time in Arkansllt(
death penalty 1f convicted ofmurder frey Pagliuca, who has kept track of over the years and had gone over
a~d consp1racy 1~ the bombmg that the case. "I don't think there's any there to look for real estate in westkilled 168 people.
.
real substance 10 it."
em Arkansas," Jones said.

Anoclldld PIWI WriW

Dorothy -C~ Baxter

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McVeigh's defense to attack-credibility ·:
of evidence, witnesses in bombing trial ·:

· POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Edna G. Ashley White, 91, Point Pleasant died Friday, April 25. 1.997 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
, Born Oct. 28, 1905 in ll&gt;everette , Ky., daughter of the late William and
Alma James Ashley, she was a homemaker. She was a member of Pine Grove
Church of Christ In Scott Depot, W.Va., and attended Good Shepherd Unit·
od Methodist Church in Flatrock. W.Y.a. _
. ·
, She was_also preceded in death by her husband, Jennings E. White; a
qau¥hter, Donna White; two sons•.Carl E. White and Rayniond li:. White;
1wo mfant sons; three brothers; and a sister.
: Surviving arc six daughters. June (David) Hesson of Seymour, Tenn.,
Marigolc and Reed Wilson of Circleville, Delena Howery of Hurricane,
W.Va .. Delores (Gcorge)Russell of St. Albans, W.Va .. Dar lin (Keith) Thornton of PointPieasant,·and Dixie Martin of Pliny, W.Va.; eight sons, James
(Genny ) Whnc of Clearwater, Fla., Clayton H. (Rita) White of Dunedin, Fla.,
~cnneth E. (Shirley) White of West Lafayette, Ohio, Clifford L. White of .
Warren, J. Douglas (Pat) White of Concord, Ohio, C. .Franklin (Nicole) White
of Madison, Ohio. Ralph W. White of Painesville, and Richard E. (Brenda)
-.White of Quinton, Va.; 52 'grandchildren, three stepgrandchildren . .88 great·
grandchildren, two step-great-grandchildren and 27 great-great-grandchildren;
and two sisters, Ethel Barringer of Culloden, W.Va., and Nora Bryant of Clear
Creek. W.Va.
:· Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant. with Rev. the Mike Radar officiating. Burial will be in the White
Cemetery, Long Bottom. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
COLUMBUS - Dorothy C. Baxter. Columbus, deceased ThurSday, April
Monday.
•
24, 1997 at The Gardens of Whetstone. Columbus.
.
. S~e w~s the widow of Earl H. Baxter. M.D.. ·a member of several orga:
niZauons 10 Columbus. and a member of the Gallipolis Order of the Eastern
with their families.
: HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Star.
·
"'Every night we do this, we send - She was preceded in death by her parents. George E. and Louisa King
'the families of Monroe Elementary
S:Chool pupils have a solution to the a slip home and the parents have to Craft: and by several brothers and sisters.
oft-heard complaint . that there is 'fill out what they did that evening
Sutyivors are niece Mary G. Jay (Denny). nephew Albert W. Goodwin
nothing good to watch on television: together.'' Ms. Pancake said. ·
(Juanita), both of Columbus, nephew Ahm E. Klemm (Geraldine) of Glan·
'they turned it off.
dorf. Ohio. and niece Beverly J. Munsell (John) of Florida. .
point of TV Turn-OffWcek is
F
1
: National "TV Turn-Off Week" to The
change the· focus of the debate .
unera arrangcmc~ts arc hy 1hc Willis Funeral Home, Gallipolis.
])egan Thursday. but Monroe swdents
, GraveSide scrv1ces arc Monday, April 2X, 1997 at 1 p.m. in Mound Hill
the quality of television pro- C
G
~nd their families have been Jogging about
gramming 10 the number of hours • emctcry. allip?lis. Memorial services will be 3 p.m. Wednesday. April )(i.
~purs spent not watching _
television
ople spend in front ofthc tube. said ; 1997 at. St. Luke s Chapel at the Whetstone Care Center. 3710 Olentangy
si.nce February, said teacher Jane Pan· pe
River Road, Columbus.
Monty Burke. director of TV-Free · In_ lieu of no_wcrs , con. trihulions can he made to one's favorite ch:irily.
cake.
i If the s1udents rack up I,000 America, a non -profit organization
that spo~sors TV Turn•Off Week. .
~(&gt;Urs of not watching television by
May, they'll earn themselves a field
~hand a picnic.
"People arc having dinner with
l But it is more than just turning off Pat Sajak instead of their families:·. IJIIIII
.11!1
tile· tube. StUdents must spend the Burke said.
1lill
lll;l
t~cvision - lcss time doing something

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OH • Point Plue•nt. WV

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By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
Aeeacl lad Pmu Writer '
WASIUNG'I'ON- FOR claimed'
not lei want it, 40 yean of bickering .
delayed it, and now . that it's here,
there's stiii111JU111ent about it. Despire
all that, lbc "Franklin Delano Roosevelt memorial is almost ready for
visitors.
, 1be cllinor to build a memorial to
\he only president elec!ed to four
tenns began days after his death on ·
April , 12, 1945. But it was nearlySO
. years later, in October 1994, that cone
struction started. In the meanlime. the
capital's only official remembrance to
FOR is a 39-inch-high marble block,
flanked by greenery, in front of the
National Archives.
That's how Rousevelt wanted it.
" We should let sleeping heroes
lie," he said.
·
"If any memorial is erected to me,
I know eucily what I should like it
to be," Roosevelt told Justice Felix
Frankfurter. Putting his hand on his
desk, Roosevelt said, "I should like .
it to consist of a block about the size
of this, and placed in the center of

orts

.

COntroversy yields to erection 1
of memorial to 4-term preside.n t
that · green plot in front of the
Archives Building .
"I don' t care what it is made of,
whether lirile$tonc or granite or whatever, but I want it plain without any
ornamentation, with the simple carving 'In Memory of--' . That is all."
The new memorial, to be dedicated May 2, is much more.than that. II
sits on 7S acres and consists ,of a
series of four outdoor garden
"rooms." each symbolizing an FOR
presidential .tenn, a walk-through
historical narrative of the years 1933
to 1945.
.
Room one is Roosevelt's inauguration period; room two focuses on
the condition of America during the
Depression and FOR's New Deal.
Roum three covers World War II, and
the last room ,symbolizes the transition to peace, which FPR set in place
but did not live to see. The war in·
Europe ended less than a month after
Roosevelt's death.
The design is by architect
lawrence Halprin. whose work
includes San Francisco's Ghirardelli.
Square, Seattle's Freeway Park and

the .Walter &amp; Elise Haas Promenade,
a 1-112 mile stone walkway overlooking the Old City of Jerusalem.
"Halprin really unveils the memorial as you walk through," said Tom
Fitzpatrick, a civil engineer for the
U.S. Park Service who was in charge
ofconstruction. "You are a p&amp;I:licipant in the memorial. It's not templelike, something to be in awe of."
Unusual for such arf edifice, the
. memorial also, will honor Eleanor ·
Roosevelt, the highly visible ·first
lady who acted as her husband's eyes
and ears in 1'\er travels and also as his
liberal conscience.
There has been controversy over
whether Roosevelt should be depicted in a wheelchair, given that he went
to great lengths to conceal his disability. None of the monument's
three statues of Roosevelt suggests a
wl\eelchair or the steel braces he
wore.
But the references to his disabili~
ty are there. Ori the wall in room four,
in a listing of significant events, is
this inscription: "1921 , Stricken with
Poliomyelitis. He never again walked

unaided." ADd in the memorial's
entry .building is 111 euct .eplica of
on~ ofFPR's wheek:hain; nearby is
one of two. known photognphs of
him in one.
·
Sixteen of Roosevelt~s 29 grandchildren issued a statement last week
calling for greater representation of
FOR's disability and expressing con'
cern that divisions over .the issue
"will seriously detrac't from and disrupt the mem0rial's public dedicalilin

Honoring FOR
.

Sports
in brief

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Wesl Potomac
The memorial is on a·spit of land
~
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Parle
east' of · ihe lincoln Memorial,
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between the Tidal Basin -where the
"~
~
cherry blossoms. bloom and the
.
Potomac River.
Its walls are tlesh.,colored granite,
.
native to the South ,Dakota and Min--- - ~·..,
nesota border. The finish of the walls
11/4 mile · i &lt;:at the start. of the memorial is fine but
i 1/4 km
_j
.
.
it coarsens and at the end appe.ars to
be coming off, representing FOR's
-~~--deterioration.
·
It may have been long in coming,
but the memorial is in a spectacular Monument and the Jefferson Memo- lincoln Memorial.
setting. From room four, visitors can rial. Seen from the entrance is the
see th.e White House, the Washington

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and took charge. In Roosevelt's first
him in 1937 when he tried to "pack
I00 days, Congress passed 15 major the court," adding as many as six jusAesocleted Pres• Writer
. laws. The legislation reopened hanks,
WASHINGTON - In 1933,
tices to a nine-man Supreme Coun
provided relief for the jobless, that had overturned New Deal laws,
when Franklin Delano Roosevelt
insured bank deposits and created the one after another. He was slappt\1
became president. this ·nation was
Tennessee
Valley Authority to· bring down.
desperate. A quarter of the country
electricity,
work and water to seven
was out of work. Millions were hunDependent on Southern support in
impoverished
Southern states.
gry. Farmers ·aimed guns at creditors
Congress, he. ignored the racism in
One law created the Civilian Con- American law and society. He sancto keep their land. The banking sysservation
Corps, which put. half a 'mil- tioned the ·wartime detention of
tem simply ceased to functiop . The
lion
young
men to work planting IIO,OOOpeople of Japanese descent.
Communist Party staged hunger
trees,
fighting
erosion, protecting He ignored pleas to save European
marches.
wildlife, developing parks, rcworing
· It was terrifying. A revolution
Jewry from the Holocaust. He was
historical sites and building dams.
seemed possible. The Great DepresIn those 100 days, Roosevelt held arrogantly indifferent toward his
sion had been under way for four
30 news conferences, delivered two three vice presidents, not even
years. It was worldwide, and limes
"fireside chats" on the radio and sent informing Harry TruQJan about work
had gotten only worse. ·
IS messages to Congress, asking for on the atom bomb. A dying man, he
And then came Roosevelt: buoyc.
ant, charming. optimistic, cheerful, ·within two days, " my left leg new laws. In 1935, he got Social ran for a fourth tenn that he was too
resourceful, energetic. With a rich, lagged," he recalle!llater. "Present- Security through Congress, giving infirm to handle.
He led!
reassuring voice and a jaunty smile, ly, it refused to work, and then the . ordinary people a measure of finanHe connived .to find ways to ship
a battered fedora and a cigarette hold- other." He would never walk again cial security in old age, infirmity and
.
tons
of arms to Britain and China
unemployment. ·
er cQCkily held between his teeth.
unaided.
before
the country entered the ·war,
He took the oath and boldly assert' He fought back with endless hours
If something did not work. Roo·
against
the advice of military leaders
ed: "The only thing we have to fear of exercise. He regained use of his sevelt would try something else.
and
the
oj&gt;posilion
of the isolationists.
·is fear itself."
hands. Heavy steel braces allowed Through it all, he governed from a
After Pearl Harbor, he laid out
And the country _took bean.
him to stand. But his political career wheelchair, but made great efforts to
breathtaking
mobilization plans FOR went on to be re-elected for Seemed over.
· conceal his disability. Many were
.
one-year
production
goals of 60,000
three more terms, the only president
Roosevelt found relief in the barely aware of it.
pllmes,
45,000
tanks,
20;000 anti-airelected to more than two. In the I 2 re'stlirative mineral waters of Warm
"He may have become president
,
years before he died in office, he took Springs, Ga., an old resort that he even if he hadn't contracted polio," craft· ~lls . "'· , ·
On[April
12,
1945,
Roosevelt
was
the country through i!s greatest bought and that provided low-cost one historian said, "but with the disin
his
little
White
House,
in
Warm
domestic crisis since the Civil War treatmeiu for his fellow victims :.... ' ability he became more compassionate, made more widespread contacts, Springs, sitting for a portrait when he
and forged the alliance that defeated "the _polios," be called ~em.
.
suffered a cerebral, hemorrhage and
fascism.
Hts mother wanted htm to reure, concentrated on his priorities and died.
·
And now, 52 years after his pass-- but with . ·the encouragement of learned to bide his time before mak·The entire nation ·mourned; thouing, America honors this 'man Roo- Eleanor, h.e ll\ade aspectacular_reap- ing a cr11cial decision."
sand~ waited through the night to
Eleanor Roosevelt, doing what no
seveh with a garden memorial, close pearance tn 1924: leanmg 'heavily on
to the Potomac, of trees and moving a son, he pam fully struggled down . first lady ever had done, went every- glimpse the funeral train on its 800. water and stone belll'ing the words the aisle to the pOdium of the Demo- where, serving as FOR's eyes .and mile trip to Washington.1-!e had held
that roused the country.
.cratic . convention to no~inate New ears. A consummate politician and an . office so long that many could not
Roosevelt was the most imponant .York Gov. Alfred E. Smtth for pres- uncompromisirlg humanitarian, she imagine anyone else in the job.
The · Warm Springs portrait
pestered him ceaselessly with the
president of the 20th Century,
ident.
.
remained
unfinished, hazy. But his
deeply loved and as bitterly hated as
Four years later, Smnh persuaded social problems · that she had ·
legacy
is
in
fine focus:· A compasLincoln the century before.
Roosevelt to run for the govern?r· observed.
sionate,
activist
government.
His conservative .critics said . he shtp. He won, .ran a progresstve
Roosevelt cherished Eleanor for
That's his monument too: he gave
her wisdom, but he turned to his
: sei1.cd unconstitutional power. They administration. and_ won ~gain . .
America
a new deal.
: accused him of taking America
Some thought ht'!' a hghtwetght. wife 's social sec(etary, lucy Mercer
· toward socialism. The rich, through · ~olu~mst Walter ltppmann wrote, Rutherford, for emotional sustenance,
· clenchcd.teeth, called him a tr.aitor to
He .•s a pleasant man w.ho. without forever straining his .!Jiarriage.
He was wily. He played one aide
: his class. Reformers and radicals on any tmportant quahficattons for the
against
another. His denunciation of
, the left decried his caution aitd his office, w~~ld very much hke to be
"economic
royalists" smacked of
:de.votion to capitalism .
presodent.
,
And
as German
armies
No on~ thought that way after he class warfare. He was disorganized.
His acute political judgment failed
blitzkrieged Europe in the late 1930s defeated 11\l:umbent Herbert Hoover
and Japan invaded Asoan neighbors.
Roosevelt was denounced anew. Isolationists said he connived to s.ucker
the country into a war that was none
of its business. Interventionists said
he was · timid about shoring' up
Britain, France and China in their
. darkest hours.
Roosevelt's unexpe.:ted death on
the verge of victory in 1945 touched
the nation a' had the death of no president since Lincoln. In 19ll8. a poll of
historians listed only three presidents
as "great" - Washington, lincoln
and Roosevelt. Another historians'
poll this year agreed.
. Before Roosevelt, Wa.•hington
was a sleepy capital with little impact
on the everyday life of a large nation. ·
Before Roosevelt, the federal government wa.' indifferent 10 the plight
of the poor. It .did not concern i~lf ·
with. the hours, wages and worktnll
conditions of Americans or provide
for them in their old age. Roosevelt's
st Annullll
New Deal gave America the government it has now. '
. And the man who did it wa.• a
patrician. The only child of a distant
father and a domineering mother. be
Over 80 Styles To Choose From!
studied under tutors and goveme!!Ses until he was 14 and. was a shy
Plus Over 150 Colon in 'fie,

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15'-1925.00
U'-1995.00
24'-$1225.00

boarding school student and an indifferent scho.lar at Harvard. ·
A fifth cousin of President
Theodore Roosevelt, he dropped out
of law schoo.l and,·over his mother's
objections, married a distant cousin,
Eleanor Rousevelt. He dabbled in
business, got elected a state .senatof
&amp;lid served as undersecretary. of the
Navy in World War I. In 1920, the
Democrats nominated him, at age 38,
for vice president.
The ticket lost, but the dashing
Rousevelt was seen as a rising star.
Then polio struck. He was vacationing with his five children on
Canada's Campobello Island in 1921. ·

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Ready h waiting~..

Gallipolis

WlUiam B•.Strait

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1213 Rear Eastern Avenue
614-44H104

I

For discount• on home a auto ........... Beine In good handle le the oniy place to be:
D1996 Allnat~ ln1unnce Comptny. Nonllbrook.lllinoil.
.·
SubjKt to laal availtbi!itJ IU'Id Cf.Jlllifie~tioos. 01her tums, conditions :and a:lusions m~y :apply.

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In ' 1918. the U.S. Post Office

MJm.9am-8pm
Tuee., Wed. &amp; Thun •.9 am • 6 pni

\!Urned issues of the American maguinc "Little ·Review" containing
fn11allments of James Joyce's
"Ulysses" which was judged
oblceae"
I
tdiiHIIk
Durin1 World War I, the New
York Philblnnonic Society banned
the worlc of living Oennan compoiG's; IUid Karl Muck, the Oei'IIWI
conductor of~ Boston Symphony
Orchlllra. wu ~neSted u .,. enemy
alien.

Fri. 9

am· 8 pm l'ettln
·• Sat. 9 am • 5 pm
Downtown

LJJJIId _ _ . , _ Clry

The

Phone

Gti.,Ditt

CaD L FRt:E •

I ~800-560-5384

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:

stand as afternoon victors;
,
The All-Star second baseman singled and scored. in;
the first inning. His first homer, the IOOth of his career,:
came ill the second with Brady Anderson on first base·
and ga~'e Baltimore a 5-4 lead against Aaron Scle (3-1). -~
Alomar hit his second.home run in the fourth inning:
against Pat Mahomes. His third came against Rick ,
Trlicek in the fifth .·
·:
Jimmy Key (4-0) gave up five runs, eight hits and ~
walked four in six innings. Rookie Mike Johnson •
worked the final three innings for his first major league~
save.
•
Yankees IO, White Sox 2....;. At New York, Cecil:
Fielder finally hit his first home run of the season. driv- .
ing in five runs•with tbe ·ftrst five"hit Bll'll\l of his .c'lreer~
to lell(l New York Yl!nkecll,qvct'the Chicago White Sox .
I0-2·Saturday.
''· ·
. ·
. :
Fielder, hitting just .189 coming in. went 5-for-5. He!
ended the lnogc't homcrlcss streak of his career.at 98 at ·
hats anJ also dnublcd twice.
·
· ·:
Ficldct ;inglc&lt;,l in the first and sevcnth ·innings. dou-~
bled in th~ third and fifth and hit a three-run homer:down the lcf'J .fid&lt;l line in t!Jc eighth: connecting ·on an!
0- 2 pitch l&gt;y f'arlns Castillo. ·
'
Tinn Maninc1 homered and drove in two runs to set;
a Yankcc\Tc,·ord for·RBis in April with 30.
~
David Cone 12 ·2) stru.:k out nine in seven innint;s as.
the Yankee' wun for the fourth time in five games.
..
Martine' drnvc in the go-ahead run in the fit'lit on a:
oases-luadcll walk by lames Baldwin (0-3). then made it ~
4,(1 in 'the third with his eighth homer of the season .
:
. R!lCkits 4, Cardinals 2 -At St. louis. Bill Swift :
pttched '" S&lt;:urcless onnongs and Dante Btchette drnve •
· in three run' us the Colnrado Rockies extended their :
team-rcc&lt;Nd wad winning streak to eight games with u ~
4-2 win uvct the St.louis Cardinals Saturday .
.
Swift (2 II allowed the Cardinals just two hits and
tw•• walks while striking out two. It was s·wift's lhunh"!
start, 11nc murc thnn he ma~e all last year.
, ·
Darren lfolmcs worked into the ninth and Bruce ;
Ruffin got the linal out for his fifth save.
larry Walker singled and scored for Colorado. ·
Andres Galarraga also had a double and s.:orcd a run for ;
the R•11.:kics.
:
Colnrado hroke open a scoreless game with three :
runs in the lounh off Cardinals stancr Matt Morris (()- t
I) . Walkeo led .nfl' with a single to .:enter and moved to 1
third nn Oularruga's douhle down the left-field line. :
Bichcttc'lhen douhl.cd the runners· home.
:
Cubs'?, Pirates 6 - At Chicago. Summy Sosa's ;
bloop s ingl~ hrnkc an eighth-inning tic and the Chicago :
Cubs dcli:atcJ Pinshurgh 7-6 on Saturday.
•
Brian M&lt;·Rac opened the cigh(h with a single nrC:
·Ricardu Rincon 12-2) and reached second on Dous l
Glanville'; '-ltcrificc. Glanville wa' safe on n thrnwing ;
error by li.-t l&gt;ascman Mark Johnson; Mark Grace then '
sacriliccd. advancing both runners, and Sosa's single
centeo . scming McRae.
'
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Earlie• , Rync Sandberg hitliis 267th career home run ~
a~ a second ba~cman to break Hall of Farner Joe ~
Murgan· s record for most home runs all-time at that
position . Sandberg, who tied Morgan in his last at-but in ·
the eighth ironing Friday with his first home run of the:·
. season, '"'nnected nn a 2-2 pitch of( siarter Steve C&lt;Mlkc
with one nut in the second inning lor the 272nd homer ~
·of his carcco
· '
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(See MAJORs on B-8)
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OSU's Gray squad beats Scarlet 20-7 in·annual
spring scrimmage ~
.

2 4oon, eo11putt,

Not alease ••Just
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Sport mo4olt.

take
OVer
the
payments.
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Norris
Northup
Dodsze
Upper Rt. 7 ·
.,
Gallipoiif,\)H
614-446-0842

,,

~n 1Q-7, (AP) ·

I

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ud take over the payments.

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Penn Relays .counts
Slaney among victors .

No p•y•utt for 45 .

4 4oou

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the fourth lnnJng of Saturday's Natlonat.
a..trgue contest In Clnclnnatt, where the R~

Reds, Blue Jays and Cubs!

'd

WE ARE NOW OPENING THIS SALE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC.

EztendedStore Houn To Help You!!

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SPECIAL
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·~T-wolves 96~84;

DUI TO THE TREMEitDOUS RESPONSE TO THIS WEEKENDS

Cummerbunds &amp;r: Vesl8 to Select.from.

.

Roc.k ets defeat

· OVAL POOlS

as

Haskins Tallner
. Prom T-Shirt

VllleaatYe capCures
fourth ltraJpt pole
IMOLA, Italy (AP) - Jacques
Villeneuve, a past Indy-car cl1ampion and the newest Formula. One
wonder, showed Saturday he
charges when it counts.
A distant and dull fifth in
Friday •s practice dominated by the
home team Ferrari, the ~6:yeu-old
Canadian driver of WilliamsRenault shattered the lap record in
qualifying for the San Marino
Grand Prix to claim his fourth conseculive pole PoSition this season.
For the books, it was
· Villeneuve's "fifth pole in a row
from last yev - and the seventh of
his career - as he had also led
qualifying in the closing event in
Japan. .
.
In the one-hour sessio·n which
decided the starting grid for today' s
race, Villeneuve edged German ·
teammate Heinz-Harald Frentzen in
an eKe iring duel of fastest laps .
Villene11ve prevailed at last, edging
Frentzen by 0.343 seconds ·and
CROWDED .....;. Mlnneeota'e Dou.g Weet (22) and Kevin
setting
a record lap of 133.152 mph
Garnett (5) crowd out Houlton'• Mario Ella for Jhe rebound In
over
the
3.063-mile Enzo and Dino
the flrlt quarter of Game 2 of their NBA Wntem Conference
flrst-rou'n d playoff game Saturday Jn Houston, whre the Ferrari circuit. Frentzen' s best lap
was 132.606.
Rockets won.96-84. (AP)
Michael Schumacher came in
third in a Ferrari at 132.118, causing mixed reactions among a huge
crowd possibly deceived by the 1-2
firiish. by the drivers of the Italian
STEALS THIRD - Cincinnati'• Delon
team in the previous.day's practice. ·
Sanders
eteale third base ae Phlladelphle
·
M!lrtin des Busch
third ucklr Scott Rolen ~kes the late tag In
victory leader Jnaram
TALlADEGA, Ala. (AP)Mark· Martin ; is carving out a
remarkable Busch Grand National
record, especially considering he
isn't even a.series regu!ar.
The Winston Cup star took
another· shot at the BGN series
Saturday and came up with his fifth
flagrant foul and ejected with 9:25 . victory in eight starts this season,
CINCINNATI
left in the game following a con- winning the Birmingham Auto
frontatiml with Kevin Willis. Dealers EasyCare SOO, Kilomeler
(AP)
Pete
Mitchell hit Willis from behind with race and tying Jack Ingram's record
Schourek hit his
a forearm as Willis drove for a of 31 career victories.
second career
·
1
Th
h
d
d
Ing
·
ram,
who
rett'red
•ev·
e
ral
hotrier and . picked
. ayup.
~ two exc ange
wor s
•
·
HOUSTQN (AP~ - . Charles and had to be separ-ated by team- years ago, earn~d . his last win in
up his first viCtory
Barkley scor~d 20 po~nts and led a mates.
1987, the saine year that Martin gol
in nearly a year a5
spurt m the fmal .cructal mmutes as
Knlcks 100, Hornets 93
his first. Martin's 3) victories have
the Cincinnati
the Houston Rockets broke away
At New York Glen Rice did all come in I 50 starts.
Reds snapped a
late ..to beat .the Minnesota 'he could for thr~e quarters. but he
This time. Martin held off a . IIVI:·lllllRPh:~:~~:!i~ Saturday with a 10-2 victory
""tmberwolvcs
96
84
on
Saturday
nd
h
f
th
"h
1
H
etermt·
ned bt'd by roo.kt' e Steve
Phillies.
1
.
•
•
a t e rest o e ... arotte omets ·
The Rockets lead the best-of- didn't do much in the fourth.
· Park, Dale Earnhardt's protege who
hit one of three homers off Curt
five-game series 2-0 and could
The New York Knicks withstood was coming off his .first Busch Schilling (
as the Reds pulled ahead 6-0, their
•. sweep the series with a ~ic~ory in 39 poi'nts from . Rice .and held t~e Series victory a week. earlier .at biggesq~~~,d si!lce o~iiJg day._Th~ left-haitd.er lh~n
· (Jame 3 Tu~sday at Mm~esota, ijornets w, ithout a field goal for Na~ville , Tenn:
'
' I
held oil for five innings to get his firsr victory since
~here the Ttmberwolves wtll c~n- more than 8 112 minutes of the
Park ttieil hard · to get 11ast May 8. .
.
.
tmue to seek thetr first· playoff v1c·
Ruben Sierra hit a three-run homer - his first ~,vith
" tory ever.
fourth quarter Saturday for a 100-93 Martin's Jack Roush Racing Ford. the Reds .... in the eighth inning. as Cincinnati rolled to
The Rockets jumped on the victory.
:
·
but the wiley veteran zigged and its biggest run total since opening day. Hal Morris and
Timber":olves early for an easy 112-- • It ~ve New York a 2-0 lead in zagged up and down the Talladega · Eddie Talibensee added two-nin homers.
95 victory in Game I. But it tclok.the the best-of-five series , whjch moves Supcrspeedway banking to keep the
The Phillies managed three singles off four Reds
whole game this time to put away to Cha~loue for Game 3 on Monday . rookie's Chevrolet behind him pitchers, one day after-they,had a season-high 15 hits in
·.youthful Minnesota, playing in its night.
•
numerous times over the J'inal 10 a 10-7 win. The Reds' pitching stall entered the game
Patrick Ewing led New York laps on the 2.66-mile track.
with a 6.23 ERA, worst in the National league.
:first playoff series.
The Timberwol ves led · for the with 30 points on 1,5-lor-21 .shooting
As the leaders neared the J'inish
Expos 8, Mets I - At Montreal. Pedro Martincl
'final time 79-78 on a three-point with six rebounds and three blocks. line, Park made a desJl!)ration move · struck out .I 0 Mcts in seven strong innings and
basket by Stephon Marbury with Chris Childs added 17, including . to the low side of the banking and improved tu 10-0 lifetime against New York, leading
5:47 to play. But a free throw and three straight jumpers late in the managed to move up to Martin's MOntreal io its sixth straight vidory. 8-1 Saturday.
'three-point play by Mario Elie gave fourth that helped New York wrap it rear deck. But the margin of victory
Martinel won his third straight stan. He allowed fuur
Houston .an 82-79 lead with 5:22 to up.
was 0.100 seconds.
hits and lowerl'd his earned-run av.crage In 0.44.
go.
· The. Knicks. who shot 58.4'ii- in Central State football coach fired
Darrin Aetcher hit a twn-run homer and Joe Orsulak.
After a basket by Hakcem Game I. almost ,malched ·it by ~hootWilBERFORCE. Ohio (APJ who entered the game in the founh inning after David
Olajuwon and ' two free throws hy ing 56.4'k. John Starks added 14 Ccntral .Statc University football Segui was ejected. hit a two-run (jouhle in Montreal's
.
·
.
,Eiic, aarkley stretched the lead tn points and Allan Houston had 12 to coach Jack Bush has been fired in live-rim fifth inning. .
89-81 with a rebound and b&lt;lsket at help New York to a 45-29 edge in . the wake 'ol' sanctions leveled
Mike Lansing hit a solo home run. off reliever Greg
2:20 to··go and a free throw with backc.ourt scoring. .
against the school hy the National McMichael in the eighth inning l'or Montreal's final run.
2:05 to play an&lt;! Clyde Drexler
Tony Delk. starting at point Association of Intercollegiate
Martine?, !3-!1) was charged with an unearned run in
sealed i't with a three -point basket guard in place of Muggsy Bogues. Athletics. the Oarrmo /)ail.· Nell's the second and retired II straight through the middle
with I : 12 to go.
had 15 points lor Charlotte. Vlade reported Saturday .·
·
innin!Js in, his first start at Olympic Stadium since la't
Barkley alsq had 15 rebounds and Di v.ac had 14 points and 12
The school's board of trustees is· Sept. 1.1. sending New York to its fourth loss in six
Olajuwon finished with IS points nd rebounds and Antllony Mason had expected to approve Bush's ·firing. games.
10 rebounds . Marbury led the 13 ,points and 12 rehuunds.
formally at its next meeting. which
Blue Jays 4, Mariners 3 - At Toronto. Joe Carter
Timbcrwolves with 22 points and
New York also overcarrie a huge is in May.
.
· singled home the winning run with two outs in the hotTom Gugliotta had 17.
disparity in free' throw attempts and
The Marauders · fuotball pro- tom nf.the ninth inning Saturday. giving the Toronto
J:he game turned rough in the accuracy. The Knicks were just 5- gram '1-'3.' placed on suspension Tor Blue lays a 4-l victory over the Seattle Mariners.
founh quaner. whii:h hcgan with the of- 13 from the. lin~. ,not even match- the 1997 season by the NAIA' in
Ken Griffey Jr.. who hit three homers Friday night in
Rockets leading 66-65 after six leaa ing Rice's attempts. tfe went 15-for- February. .
a I ~-8 win, douhlcd home a run in the Seattle first.
changes and two ties .
· 17 as part of Charl&lt;l,tte ' s 24-for-31
Dr. George Ayers. Central
With' one out in the Toronto ninth •. Otis Nixon
, Sam Mitc.hell was called for n effort. hut it wusri't CJlough. •. , ' State's executive managemeni team reached on an error by third hascmun Russ Davis. Nixon
leader, said he cKpects 'to make n stole second and stay&lt;XJ there us Carlos .Garcia go' an
recommendation this week on the infield hit.
future ol' the foutball program. One
Norm Charllon ·rclicved Derek Lowe (0·1) and
option is tq drop the program. Ayers retired Orlando Merced on a lly ball. Carter ·followed
has said . .The trustees would have to with a line single, and right fielder Jay Buhncr would
approve such a decision.
have had a play at the plate. hut he bobbled the ball.
Paul Quantrill (3-1) gave up.three hits and struck out
Bush could nnt he reached fur
comment Saturday.
. two in two innings. ·
.
By BERT ROSENTHAL .
.
The susp~nsion is more severe
Orioles 14; Red S!IX 5- At Baltimore, Roberto
. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -· Mary Slaney. applauded by her
than. probation an·d pmhihits the Alomar hit three home ru~s. his first extra-base .hits of
compeiitors before the race. rewarded them and the 46.216 fans at
team for post-season participation the sea~on , and went 4-for-4 with a career-high six RBis
Franklin Field with a dazzling display bf runnmg.
n~xt season.
as the Baltimore Orioles defeated the Boston .Red Sox
· Belying her 38 yel!l's, the indefatigable Slaney made her fi_rsl
It came fnllowi n11 an NAJA 14-5 Saturday. _
'
investigation that found 15 ineligiAlomar came into the game in a 2-for-21 slump that
·appearance in the .Penn Relays a memorable one Saturday. wmble . pl~ycrs participated in football dropped his batting average to .205. ·He is the third playning the invitational mile in 4 minutes. 26. 10 seconds, eclipsint
last
sca.•on. •
· .er in two days to hit three homers in a game, join'ing
, the meet record of 4 :33.06 set by Alissa Harvey in 1986.
. .
Ken Griffey Jr. and Matt Williams.
·
I

Homehauto
discounts..

B

11,1-

~- .....,.

Denounced in his day, America now halls FDR
By MIKE FEINSILBER

Section

The Ftanklln Delano Roosevelt Memorial will lit on the
lhorea of the Tidal Basin in Washington, D.C. The
memorial will be dedicated May 2.

MEMOI.IAL

ceremonies."

t

..•

i

•
.

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'

By RUSt:Y MILLER
AP Sportl Writer
.
· COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP) Ohio State lost eight starters from
l•st year's stingy. defense, but that
doesn't mean the Buckeyes are
e~actly JOQthless.
·
·
"They expected to come in· and
tear us up, " linebacker Andy
Katzenmoyer said after his Gray
defense forced four turnove!S in a
Z0-7 romp over. die Sclllll In the
·llnual spring intruqllld aerimmage
Sllurday. "Thll's why they say
det'ense wins'championships."
' 1be Buckeyes' lint-team ~t
offense 'had the ball for 12 poaessloes but eould onfy dell! lR end
Z&lt;lle oace api111t 111e Grey, which

.

'

featured the first -lin'e defcns~.
When the Gray defense wasn ' t
stonewaJiing the acclaimed Scarlet
of~ense, Mark. Garcia and Mich.ael
Wtley were dotng enough on offense
· to keep the ball away from •them,
Wiley rushed for
yards and a
touchdown and Garcta showed ~p
the two quarterbacks ahead of htm.
on tbe depth chan. It wasn't necessarily pretty, but it w~ enouJh to
please a~ estimated crowd-of .SS,OOO
and Ohto State head coach John
Cooper.
"An.y time we can play that
many snaps live in the stadium llld
not let anybody hurt, I'm satisfied,"

receiver and a tailback last season as
a freshman , carried 19 times. He
scored ori a nine-yard run in the
J!31lle's final minute.
. Ga(Cia completed I0-of-28 passes for I S6 yards with, one interception. Garcia missed all ol'last year
after ~ustainina a knee injury in
August, but led. the way on four
Gray scoring drives.
"I thot~ght he m~de some good
plays and some bad ones," Cooper
said of Garcia. "Based on what he
did this spnng and in today's game,
we 'll all feel more cornfonable with
.what he can do."
Joe Germaine, the Rose Bowl
most
valuable player, completed 6Cooper said.
of-13
passes for 84 ya~tis and a
Wiley, used 11 both a wide

9?

touchdown with une interception for from 2S and 19 yards.
the Scarlet squad. Stanley Jackson,
Brent Bartholomew did the JlUnt·
·11 -0 as a starter last season, man· ing for both squads and was brilliant
aged to complete just lw'! of seven for each. He punted five times ijnd
_passes for 61 yards with,an intcri:ep- averaged 47.2 yards a kick for the
lion.
·
SCjlllet and averaged 49.7 yards on
"I wasn't thinking in terms of 5cven tries for !he Gray.
closing ,the gap," Garcia said, referAhmed Plummer picked otf two
ri!lg to the difference between the passes and Gaty Berry and Sean
top two quarterbacks and himself. "I Colosimo each had one interception.
was just doing my best, not worry- They will be in the mix as Ohio
ing about what they were doing. State tries to replace three of its four
Hopefully. my best wtll be good starters in the secondary.
enough."
Stultz kicked a field goal to cap a
· Kickers were among the biggest 1Garcia-led nine-play, 57-yard drive
stars of the day. Dan Stultz, who l on the Gray's opening possession.
missed most of .last year with a Garcia hit Kevin Griffin for 36 yards
hyperactive thyroid, converted both on the first play from S(rimmage
of his field-goal atlempt,s , hittin1 and later scrambled for a 19-yard

'

~

gain.
:
The Gray made it I 0-0 midway ~
through the second quarter on a. I· •·
yard run by Nick Goings, who bad ;
32 yards on 1.2 carries. A 22-yard :
pass from Garcia to Vaness Provitt t
was the biggest gainer of the drive. t
It took orily I :56 for the Scarlet :
to answer, with Gcnnaine complet- •
ing three passes in a four-play drive :
that was capped by a 35-yard touch- •
down toss to Dee Miller.
·
·
The Gray defense t~k over from ~
there. II produced five sacks for 26 •
lost yards, intercepted three passes •
·and broke up three others.
~
"We had the first team defense, :
and it's going to be really flood ·:
again," Wiley said.

l

. ..
1

\

I,,

•

.•

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�"'.

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•

P•a·• .,._..,.,..

..

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..
Sunday, Aprtl 'l7, 1tl7;:

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

-

••

·NBA playoffs continue

.

•

.

.

.-j

·Lakers, Suns, Bulls &amp; Hawks capture fi_
r st-round triumphs
By CIIAII SHERIDAN

·

AP lltiZIIAIH WlllWi
. Sorry, Rex Chapman. Even Y,our

ttl'S

I

.\ 997
.

nme ilne-pOinten; and 42 potnts
weron'len~lllgh to outdo Shaq.. .
. On, a ll!&amp;ht of outstandang tndl·
vtdual ·performances, and one btg
upsel. . Shaqu1lle 0 Nea.l o~tdt_d
everyo~. He scored 46 pomts 1n hts
fi!St playoff game as a member of the
Lal\ers and led '='os Angeles past
Portland 95-77 Fnday ~•ght.
.
Chapm~n •. meanwhile, had ~e
game of ltts hfe to lead the Phoemx
Suns to the night's biggest upset -

u

'~

a 106-101 victory ova' the Seaule
SuperSonics. Chapman surpassed
his season hiJh of 32 aJKI his career
high of 39, He also broke Dan
Majerle's NBArecord of eight.lhreepointers in a playoff game.
"It was one of the great moments
in playoff history," Kevin Johnson

in the night's other game, scoring 26 in double figures.
ers outscored them 27-15 m the pen· pomts and 10 asSISts for the Suns, ..:
points and grabbing 15 rebounds as
Rasheed Wallace and Kenny od.
. .
who won desp1te bemg o"trebound·
the Atlanta Hawks defeated the Anderson had the first two baskets of
Suns 106, SuperSonlct 101
ed 45-33.
Detroit Pistons 89-75.
the fourtlt quarter to draw Portland
At Seaule, Chapman was 9-of-17
First-round action resumes today within two. but the Blazers got no on three-pointauempts and 12-of-22
••
with three games: Minnesota at closer the rest of the way as the Lak- overall. Jason K.idd contributed II
(See PLAYOFFS on 8-4)
Houston, Charlotte at New York and
the Los Angeles Clippers at Utah.
said.
The other five best-of-5 series ·
Michael Jordan also had his usuresume Sunday.
al supe~b game, scoring 29 points
O'Neal thoroughly dominated?with eight rebounds-and eight assists foot-3 Arvydas Sabonis, one of the
••
•
as the Chicago Bulls outlasted the
few centers who can match the bulk
College
of
Business
Washington Bullets 98-86.
of the 7-1 O'NeaL Sabonis had 18
•••
· Oikembe Mutombo was the ·Star poin,ts and nine rebounds, but could· . ·
n't control O'Neal under the basket.
"We prefer to play him with one
person," Portland coach P.I.Carles.
.
Thursday- 6:30-9;30 p.m.
imo said. "We usually get good help
•
·
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
and fouls in other games, but we did-.
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
'
n't get that tonight."
Sunday, May 4- 1· 3 p.m . and
With less than a minute remain- .
6-9 p.m.
ing·, O'Neal scored· his final two· -"'7'~
points on a rim-rauling. alley-oop
H~me athledc events
dunk that sent Sabonis sprawling
· Saturday -: Soccer vs. Shawnee. backward into courts ide ·photograState at 2 p.m.
phers.
·
••
It was an emphatic ending to the
The College of Business of Ohio Univeriily is currently recruiting the 21st group for its
::
Notes
most prolific scoring night anyone in
weekend Executive MBA PrOgram' at the lanca.ster campus. .
·
• A Lyne Center membership is tile league has had over the first two
Classes will begin in September 1997.
required to use the facilitie~. ·Fac_ul- nights of playoff games.
. ty, sta(f, students and admtmstrat1on
"I wanted to come out and play
For datalls
,
will be admitted with their ID cards. well because I really played awful
Call614·593·2028
or
614-593-2019
or
•
. _ • Racquetball court reservations Sunday," O'Neal said. "I let my
vis~ our Web site at hnp://www.cob.ohiou.edu/-embal
can be made orie day in advance by guys down. I thought about it all
••
Ohio Univerti~ is 111 affirmative aaion institution.
calling 245-7495 or '1-S00-282· 7201. week."
• All guests must be accompanied
•
;
· ............... ~
~ .............•... ~ ......... .
Elden Campbell, O'Neal's
by a Lyne Center membership hold' replacement when the center missed
\
.
To reeelva lnform•tlon on the Oltlo Unllffltslty Executi'H MBA
er ($2 fee).
31 games witlt a knee injury, added
Program complete this form end mall It to: Director, Executive MBA
20 points. Nick Van Exel, who had
II'
Prog1am, College of Business, Ohio University, Copeland Hall, Athens OH 45701 -2979
10, was the only other Laker to'score

•

·--·••

I

Executive
MBA Program

-.,...--- Lyne Center slate - - - - - RIO GRANDE - Here is this
week's schedule for events at the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center.

.,

Fitness center, JlYmnaslum
and racque.tball courts
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.
'Monday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Thesday- 6 a.m.-·10 p.m.
Wednesday-,6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Thursday - ·6 a.m.-10 p.m.
friday...-..(! a.m,-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m. ·
Sunday, May 4- 1-3 p.m~ and
6-IOp.m.
Pool
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Monday - 6:30-9:30 p.m.
'l\tesday- 6:30-9:30 p.m.
Wedne5day- 6:30-9:30 p.m.

,•

...... ...

Allnnlu H9, Detroit

t, ~more

~ ~

.... .........
Boston .......... ........ 11
Toronlu .......... .... .... IJ

·,

m

.

10
IU

S24
.474

f'iew YurL ............ Hl 12 .4SS
Dl:troil .' ..... ...... ...... :..iJ

14

.GJl
3
4

4'•l

.J91

1'1

Atlanta I!!:...Ss ·
·
Chif:lto 9K. WashiftJinn K6: Chit.'l.lgn
lends ~&gt;Cries 1·0
Phc'tlnix I06. Seuule 101: Pho~.:ni11
leud~ sc:ries 1.0
LA. Lakc:n ~ . PortlaruJ i7 ; Lus An·
g.:l&amp;!s leuds serict I~

...

-

l

I

!

~

S24

'

Milwauktt ...............lt

10

.444

Chicagu .................... J

14

J .l \

I'
I ~·-·
4

Wah:rn Divi1km
.. ..... 14
8 .636
..... It
H .S79

I '·

• Sealtle ...
Tcx&amp;.\

~ OakhmU .................. I I
'Anah~im

.474

II
10

.. ............. . 10

3
3

"mulcan Ltaaut

They played Saturday

al Huu~lon . I p.m.
Charlotte 111 New York . JJO p.m.
LA. Clippc:rs m Ut11b. H:)O p.m.

Dulcimore 2. Bus1m10

~.
I - Senn~

Orlando a~ Miumi. 12::\0p.m.
Porlland :11 L.A. Laker~ . J p.m . ·
Wushing.IOIJI\1 Cluc:litU. ~JO p.m.
. Detroit ul Atlanta. Kp.m.
PhOI!ni!l. at Seanle. IO:JO p.m.
N!!w York at Charlonc, Kp.m.
Ulnh ul L.A. Clippl.'f"ll. IO:.:W p.n1

Gro'!ing Honda

13. Toroi\lo M'lJ

Kun_
!l.l" Oty 101Oukland ;\.

'

·

Toro~to

CW .

•
8o51un (Sc:k: ~-0) 111 Bahimori (Key)-

r .m. .

.,_ (Komny ()..2), 4 :0~ p.m.
·
.
·.
CI.!.EVELAND (Colon 0-11 ur Milwnu' k~ (M~Andrtw 1..0). 7:0~ p.m.
.
TcM;a.~ (Will :\-01 oil Minm:.w1a (Ak.l~d

·. UNTIL
ID·NIGHT

ONLY

. ' I · IJ. K:n5 p.n1.

••

O~:truh ( Mochlcr J - I) o1t Anaheim
.(FinJcy0-0). 10 :0~ p.m.

.
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1

Sc:unle (R. Johnson 2-01 nt Toron1n

·aostoU (Avery 2-1) :11 Baltimore
· (Mussinu J-1 ), I:J5 Jl.m.
· • Chic:t*o While: Sox IDmbek 1-2) "'
'N.Y ·Ynnlilecs (Pcuine 4-0}. I :3!1 p.m.
CLEVELA ND COf!ea 2·2) nt Milwau. kec 40' Amicn 0-1 1. 2:05 p.m
·
,
TeA us ( Purkell 1-1) al Minllt:Jola
.
• IRm.lkc I· I J. 2:0!1 p.m.
' ,· Knn~a~''Cily cBclchi!r 1-:\) nl Oakln!w.l
(Mohler 1-2). 4:05p.m.
f'
Dctmit (Binir Jl-21 :u Atl:lhtim ·(Wut:· sun ().2), 4:05p.m.

&gt;·

· NL standings

In Stock Units

•••

First Come Gets The Pick, Over 40 Units In Stock

I D:u1

s

PiU11hurgh .............. to

Stl...llilis .................,7

l c:nl.~

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS : As RHP Carl Sdvo1nun 10 SilTI!\'ciport
of the Texas Lcaeue.

, . New York ), FloritJa 2 (OT); Ntw
·
Edmunton I. Dallas 0 f2 OTJ : Etl ·
moncnn leuu~·.scric~&gt; .l-2

Nalional Football Ltacu~
All.ANTA FALCONS: N1uoed RL-cc.l

Monrr~ul 111 N~.:w le~y .

7:.l0 p.m.
Piu~bur!!-h 111 Philaddphia. 7:JU p.m.
Co lurndu :\1 Chicagn. H;.l() p.m

. Today's Jlllmes
Dn ll:ts at Etlmumun. 2 p.m.
J).:froit id St. l.ouis. 2 jun .
, Anaheim at PlllM:ni!l. ~ 11.'m.

~
.I

ol :
7' ·
K

Otli1Wll. 7:].(}

Monday'~

I" nt

games

New Jcrsl!y ai -Monrrcal. 7:;\C.I p.m.. if

I~
I~

6 ':

.2KI'l
.1!10

K
10'·.-

San Oi.:gu ............. ...tJ

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10

.&amp;7-1

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5

Friday's scores

Chic:~o Cubs II , Pi tt $bur~h I
; -Fioridn 4. lAs An~t:lt!s 2
Muntrtul ol . N.Y. Mc!IJ I
Phillt&amp;k:lllhia' 10. C:INCINNI\11 7
Atloolh ~. San D~go 4
Colomdu ~.St . Lluis o1
Hnu~ton ~-

'

•

:. ~bs(F. caa~moi ·:\J, 2: 2or, nt . .
• Los An~kel (1. Valdel ·ll lll Aun..S:t
•(A. """"""'' Hl. 7~ p.m.

.

I

II .

''

• ·San OieJo tA1hby l·ll 111 Atlanta
• (Smollz 2·:\), 7:10 p.1n. ·
11 · Slln Frnndl\!o (Esl~s 1.{1) 111 HOUston
(Halt 2-1 ), ·R:05 r.nt
.

!
•

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Friday's first-round scores
Detroit 5. !11. Louis 2: Dctruil

' · Chi~ngo While Sox (BIIh.lw'in 0·2) 111
. N.Y. YanliM _ {CPrt~: 1-l),I :J!Ip.m . .
,.
Kun."Ui Ciry (Rn~nW.1 1-0) at Onkland

ONE

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WillinmJO-I) . I : O~p . m .

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Steve Finl~ y on the I ~-tl:.ty di ~abl ~d li~l.
nMI'OUCIIVe 10 Arnl 20. PUrchased.I~ ~on­
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rit;:s J-2

They played Saturday

, . Scmdc (Woloon l-1) ar
·

SAN DIEGO PADRES : Ph.u.:~d OF

NHL playoffs

Chicago While So.~~; 9; N.Y. Y:mket:s ~
Annheim K. Oetrpil ~

City

.

N111iunal Ltu;ue
·
C J~C INNATI REDS : Placed OF
.Reggie Sandtn on the l!i -day disabled
' list Rc:called OF Cunis Goodwin (rom ln. dianapoli5 of the lntc:-mntionitl Leagu~ .
FLORIDA MARLIN~ : Pluccd . OF
Dc:von While on lhe 15·day disabled list.
retroo~live to April24. Pul'\:hased the conrntct of INF-Of John -Wehner from au11·
lone of tht: lmem:.lionall..eugue.
ST. LOUIS CARDINAlS: Activated
C. Tom Po1gnozzi and LHP Rick Hone~ ·
~uti fwm thc I ~ - d.;l)' diMlhl~d lise Op·
tiolk:d INF Slt.:vc Sc;tnonc td Louis'\lillc
of lhe Amc:ric:m Assudal inn. Dl:signow:d
C Danny Sheaffer for u~signm~nl.

CLEVELAND II. Milwallkoe 4

TextL; 6. MinacsqeoJ

%

BALTIMORE OR IOLES : Plucc:d OF
Jerome Walton on lht I!1-tlay lJisabl~d .
list. ReL"allcd OF Tony Tunm:o from
Rochcs1cr of 1he lmc:rnmional Lc:~u&amp;: .

Friday's scores ·
,·

••

Baseball

Monday's games

}iOO
500

•

Address

Today's games

.~00

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'Minne~ot:.

Centl'll Otwlsion
CLEVELAND ...... II 10
,_- Minncwu1 .............. II · II
.K~RS&lt;l$Cil)i ............. \1 10

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Eu"m Dhl~on

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Name

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Mr. Ms.

AL standings

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The big· news
'in Colum·bus

Williams &amp; Justice hit five of Tribe's eight homers

.

threw tip there, and every change-up
we threw up there, they tattooed it,"
Milwaukee manager Phil Garner
said. "They didn't miss it. They hit
it as hard as you can."
Toronto and Baltimore were the
.last teams to hit II homers in a game
-on Sept. 14, 1987.
In the founh inning, the Indians
and Ilrewers combined to tie the
major league record of fiv.e home
runs. Williams, Ramirez and Curtis
homered for a 4-0 lead, and in the
bottom of the inning John Jaha and
Jeromy Bumitz homered ' for the
Brewers to make it 4-3. It was the
17th time that has been done, the last
time on June 19, 1994 when Cincinnati and Atlanta did it.

..

By DAVE ttARRIS
T-S Comlspondent
Meigs picked up two more TriValley Conference wins on Thursday
and Friday. .
The Marauders (12-4 overall &amp;
10-2 in the 1VC's Ohio Division) are
currently tied for first place with
Alexander and Wellston. This week
will be a big week going toward who
wins the division crown. Meigs
plays at Alexander on Wednesday
and then will host Wellston on Fri- .
day.
.
On Thursday the Marauders
behind senior Scott George defeated
Belpre 7-1, and on Friday the
Marauders defeated Vinton County .
8-2 behind sophomore Jeremiah
Bentley.
Meigs played long ball against
Belpre as the Marauders went deep
three.times. George led off the game
by taking a 3-2 pilch over the fence
in right center field, Two outs later
Rick Hoover went deep over the left
center field fence:
·
Meigs increased the lead to 3-0 in
the second inning With one out Jason
Mullen walked and advanced to
third on a single by Robert Qualls.
Collin Roush then hit a sacrifice Oy
'to right to score Mullen.
Belpre scored their only run in the
founh inning·when Keith wal~ed and
carne into score on back-to-hack sin·gles off the bats of McCoy and
Chevalier.
·
Meigs added three more runs in
the fifth inning to take a 6-l lead.
George singled and stole second and

(See INDIANS on B-S)

.

Phillies notch 10-7 victory over Red$

NBA
playoffs...

614-992-6614

·Auto, .air, power locks, power
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one against Sugar Creek and one . ·ruled that he did not. George then hit
against the host· Tigers.
his second .home run of the year. ·
The beat goes on for George, the
After only three home runs in the
senior whO was hit by a pitch in the first 14 games the Marauders have
sixth inning against Belpre, and in hit five in the last two including two
the founh inning against Vinton by Rick Hoover.
County. He has been hit 14times in
Meigs will travel to Nelsonville16 game, including the last four York on Monday.
·games. He appeared to be hit in the loojng kdal1
first inning al Belpre, but the umpire Meigs
210-031-0:7-9-0

Belpre
000-100-0:1 -S-?
George (WP) and Mullen
Keith (LP), Hines (S} and
McGuire (7) and McCoy

lnpjng &amp;mall

Vinton County 020-000-0:2-5-0
Meig' ·
410-012-x=S•ll-0
Bentley (WP) and Mullen
Daft (LP). McFeren (5) and Beckett

17

HOMECOMING RECEP1lON- Several members of the Meigs baseball team greet teammate
Jeremiah Bentley (far right) after Bentley's
.

homer in the filth inning of Friday's TVC game
against VInton County, which the Mlrsudtrs won
8-2. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
.
.

hits, walking six and fanning Jour.
Alicia Highland came on in relief
with one walk and one hit on her
record. Fel)eral committed six errors.
Southern took a 2-0 lead in the
first when Cynthia Caldwell walked,
Renee Turley had a bunt single, ·
Amber Thomas walked and Sayre .
walked. Keri Caldwell hit a sacrifice
·ny, and SHS .led 2-0.
'Federal came right back to tie the
game 2-2 on three walks, a Sue Bond
snlgle and a tly out. Regina Manuel
scored tor Souithern in the second ,
when after walkiqg she stole two

Southern baseball
·team tallies 5-4 win
over Federai .Hocking
.

Meigs softball crew
blasts B·e lpre 11-2

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Indians ...
(tontinued from B-4)
leave the park. ·
"We've got a number of guys
who arc capable of hitting tbe ball
out of the park. i\nd tonight was a
case of we just put it together. The
most jmrortant thing is we won."
Despite giving up three homers.
Hersbiser pitched solidly. allowing
four runs on five hits in eight innings.
"After awhile, I just hat! to try not to
lose the game," he said.
· Jusiice Jed off the sixth with a
solo homer and then hit back-to-back
homers with Williams in the seventh
for his 12th career multihomer game.
Four of the homers came off Scott
Katl (0-4), who also gave up five
other hits and six runs in S 1/3
inninaa.

Detrdit coach Doug Collins said.
. I

third. One out later Tony Dugan hit Vinton pitcher Daft reached bao::k and
his second home run of the year over was able to work out of funher uouthe Ieft~enter field fence. Hoover ble.
.
then singled advanced on a .ground
Beckett 1¢ off the top of the secout and scored on a single by Bent- ond by driving a Bentley pitch over
ley.
the fence in left to pull Vinton
Meigs closed out the scoring in County to within 4-1. McFeren
the sixth in_ning. Brad Davenrort sin- walked and later scored on a Kirby
gled and moved to second when double to make it a 4-2 contest.
George was hit by a pitch. Davenrort
George led off the Marauders secthen scored on a Vinton County ond with a single and a pair of stolen
error.
bases. He scored on a sac.rifice fly to
George scattered five hits, struck right by Whitlatch. Bentley helped
out II and walked two in picking up himself by going deep over the Ieftthe win. Hoover led the winners with center fence leading off the Maraudhis home run and a pair of singles in · er fifth inning to increase the Meigs
three at bats. George added a single lead to 6-2.
and a his home run, Dugan had his
·Meigs closed out the scoring in
home run, and Bentley, Qualls and the bottom of the ·sixth inning.
Davenpon added singles.
George singled and advanced to
Keith was the starter and loser for third on a Dugan single. George then
Belpre with help from Hines and scored on a passed ball with Dugan
McGuire. The .three combined 10 moving to second. Hoover then sinstrike out eight, scalier nine hits and gled to left to score Dugan with the
walk four. Hamilton Jed Belpre at the Marauders final run in their 8-2 win.
plate with three singles.
Bentley picked up the win strik-·
ing outl2 wa1J9ng two and giving up
on Friday, Meigs scored four · five .hits. Dugan went three for four
runs in the.bottom of the first Inning. for Meigs with three singles. Bentand was never tieaded as they coast- ley and Hoover each had ahome run ·
ed to a 8-2 victory.
and a single. George added two sinGeorge and Whitlatch staned the gles. Whitlatch and Chris Roush had
inning off for Meigs by drawing base a single each.
on balls. Dugan followed with a sinDaft was the staner and loser for
gle 10 score George with the games the Vikings and help from McFeren.
first run. Hoover then went deep over The two gave up II hits, walked
the right-center field ·fence to give three and struck out three. Kirby led
the maroon and gold a 4-0 lead.
Vinton with a double and a single.
Chris Roush and Bentley the'! fol- Beckett singled and hit his borne run.
.lowed with·singles as the Marauders
Marauder notes: Meigs played
put their first six batters on base. But . two games Saturday at Marieua -

bases and came home on a Bird Sell- Hocking comeback bid leU shon and
ley's three hit night (3-4), two by Carrie Russell, Jessica Mahonie/
ers ground out. An unearned run Southern added insurance runs in the
Cynthia Caldwell, a Sayre double. a and Alicia. Highland. Southern
allowed Federal to tic the game at 3- sixth and seventh innings for a I 2-7
Thomas smgle, a Ashti Davis single played Beaver Eastern Saturday.
3 in the second.
·
and Ashley McKinney single .
.tally.
!nnim: t!!ll!li
Southern scored two runs in each
2 12-2 12-2:12-8-2 .
Southern hitters were led by TurFedral hillers were Susie Bond, Southern
of the third and four innings. The big
Federal Hocking 210-030-1=7-5-6 '
.blow in the fourth was a two-run
LP-Pullins
Sayre double that made the score 7WP-Sayre
3.
SHS added a single run in the
sixth on Cynthia ·Caldwell .and Turley singles, a Thomas sacrilice and
a ground out. Federal got three runs
in the fifth, but Southern avoided the
.
big inning and clung to an 8-6 lead
going into the sixth. A late Federal
runs. then Kjrby Sacrificed and Lisle
By SCOTT WOLFE
· reached on an error to produce
T·S Correspondent
Southern's · .
STEWART ...:._ The Southern Tor- another run to make the score' 5-2. ·
Federal came back in the sixth with
diamond agenda
nadoes. struggJ.ed early, but came up
with some big .league wins to move · two runs. Dixon reached on j' error,
Opponent
12m
to the top of the Tri-Valley Confer- Josh Chapman sing l~d. J.R. :fringcr
at Beaver Eastern ence Hocking Division race after a reached on an error, followed by a
April 26
(softball DH-1 p.m.) thrilling 5-4 win over contender fielder's choice' and B. Dixon walk.
sixth inning to build its lead to 10By DAVE HARRIS
Lance Richards singled home the
Cadiz (baseball)
Federal Hocking Friday night.
0. Facklefdoubled, Gilkey walked Ap~il 26
:r-s Correspondent
Trimble
April 28
Southern threatened in the first, second run .of the frame with two
• BELPRE - Meigs took advan- and Williams and Miller followed April29
at
South
Gallia
but. came up empty handed after outs, then J. Brown flew out to end
tage of a-six run third innings and with back-to-back singles.
at
Eastern
April30
pulling two men on . SHS went the inning' to make the score 5-4. . .
The Golden Eagles added a run in
went on. 10 post a 11 -2 victory over
Pork Dill g&lt;it the win with five
at
Waterford
.May 2
-BANKRUPT?
-NO CREDIT?
down 1-2-3 in the second, but FedBelpre 'in Tri-Vallcy Conference - in the bonom of the sixth and the two May 5
scattered
hits,
three
strikeouts.
nne
Miller
CREDIT?
oOIVORCEi&gt;?
eral came back to take a two run lead
teams traded runs in the_ seventh
softball action Th.ursday.
Wahama-4:30 p.m.
May6
•TAX LIENS?
&gt;CHARGE OFFS?
on a Sam Sechkar double. Jim Jack- walk and 1\mr runs givch up. Southinning
to
make
the
linal
score
11
-2.
· The game was scheduled to be
ern
made
three
errors.
•1ST
TIME
BUYER?
-REPOSSESSIONS?
son triple and sacrifice by B. Dixon.·
Fackler led Meigs.with. two sinplayed at Meigs, but an aftemooJl.
Sechkar
stillcrcd.thc
loss
with
six
•SLOW
PAYS?
·
&gt;MEDICAL
BILLS
Southern came back to within on ci n
ai)understorm made the field gles anil a double. Williams and san- Eastern's
sc.:attcrcd
hits.
five
strikeout
s,
one
oNO
CO-SIGNS
NEEDED
the fourth when Joe Kirby doubled
diamond agenda
unplayable and the game had to be ford added three singles each. Miller
.
and
.scored on a Travis Lisle single walk and five runs given ·up. Federhad
two
singles,
and
Lee
and
Kong
IYlOved the Belpre.
al made three errors.
to make the score 2- I .
· · Coach Dale Harrison's Marauders a single each.
Qpoonent
!llm
'
Southern's gamc-winn·ing rally !nnjn~ 1l!lllh .
· Fackler picked up the win givi ng April 28
jumped out to 2-0 lead in the sccat Waterford came i·n the fifth when Pete Sisson Southern
(lfl0-140-0=5-6-3
(lnd inning. Brooke Williams and up six hits, striking out five while April 29
River Valley (softball) singled, Corey Williams singled and Federal Hocking 020-002' 0,;,4-5-3 ·
stole second and Casey Sanford wal ~in g. none.
· Southern
April 30
WP-Dill
Michael Ash singled back to back.
Forake.r was · the losing pitcher 'May 2
scored her with a base hit. Sanford
at Miller-3:30p.m. Jesse Maynard doubled home ·two
LP'Sechkar
also stole second and s~orcd on a hit giving up 15 hits, striking out three M;cy5
at Federal Hocking
and wall\.i.rig two. Mays and Chapby Melissa Ramsburg.
Meigs blew the game wide open . man had two singles caoh to,lcd BelBaseball
in the third inning. Meigs plntcd six pre. Mollohan and Star each added
NEW
YORK
(AP)- Pete Harruns in the inning and sent II girls a single.
nisch,
who
left
the
New York Mets
Meigs defeated Vinton County on
to the plate. Julie King had two sinthis mo~th under puzzling circumgles in the inning to pace Meigs, Friday, details of that game were not . stances, is being treated for depresEmily Fackler, Williams and Tony a available at press .time. The Maraud- simi and is not sure when he will
Miller also had singles in the inning. ers also playe'd River Valley in a return to the tcain.
Meigs ad~cd two more runs in the reserve varsity doubleheader on SatHarnisch said doctors told him
urday.
that his problem was caused by a
lnnin&amp;~
Meigs
026-002-1 = 11 -15-5 chemical imbalance. He said there·
(Continued from B-4)
Belpre .
(KJ0-00 1-1=2-6-4 . was "some family history" of
Emily Fackler (WPJ and Casey depression, but declined to give
pcrfor.rnance against the Phillies. In
details. Also. his withdrawal from
his 15 previous appearances, Ru~ba San lord
using chewing to)Aacco "possibly
Foraker (LPJ arid-Chapman
had allowed only six earned runs in
TJIU.IEST.
prccipitatcd
·it or brought it on."
37 1/3 innings (1.45 ERA) for a 6-1
Latex Drywall ~=~
record.
Primer
\1\ . [
"We're not hilling. we're not
pitching, we 're not playing defense."
.
galon
Burba s~id. "We're just in this funk
t- -·
Quiet&lt; drying,
and there's nothing we can do to get
\Nhite latex
use
under
latex
out ofit."
buedceiMng
paints for a smooth. ·
paint for a fast and alfordable
Mark-Leiter (3-1) held the Reds'
quality
ftnish. 133843
finish. 319913
struggling offense to eight hils and

:By SCOTT WOLFE
J·S Correapondent .
· . STEWART- The Southern softballteamwon its ninth straight game .
:Ond boosted their Tri-Valley Conference record to :in undefeated 11 -0
Friday night with a 12-7 triumph
:Over the Federal Hocking Lancers.
:· Southern's Kim Sayre pitched
anotber fine ·game. scattering five
hits and walking live and striking out
pne: Souther_n ( 13-3) committed two
'errors.
: Jennifer Pullins sul'fered the loss
i'or Federal Hocking. scauering eight

Jtfo..V

£UTIASS
SUPREMESL

' , • .._.~ a ••P-ueBS

Southern softball team notches 11-0.win over Federal Hocking

308 E. Main Pomeroy, Oh . 1-800-837-1094 ·

1997 CHEVY M.t\IJBU

dan said. ''This is the toughest game
to play of all 15, to get the lirst one
out of your system, to get a (f~cling)
of what the playoffs arc going to be

Hawks 89, Pistons 75
At Atlanta. Mutombo, in his first
~ason with the Hawks, eclipsed his
previous playoff career high of 23
·points set in a 1994 game against
Utah when he played with the Denver Nuggets.' He made IOof 14 shots
and also had 15 rebounds.
"He playca one of the better
games I' vc ever seen him have,"

.(See REDS on B-5)

.Hottest ·oeals on the Hottest Wheels!!.!

returned after miss!ng several Weeks
with injuries.
· "It's not displeasing at all," 1m-

"It's a feeling-out . game. You
have some tension and ovcrconlidence. whatever. we just didn't seem
to now. That's good. 1ll~l gives us
something to b~ild on. It doesn 't
worry me. We won the game: why
should we be worried''"
Rodman. who missed tbc linal 13
games with a knee injury, played
with a knee brace and had nine
rebounds and one point before being
ejected for his second technical foul
with 6:23to play. Kukoc, who sat out
22 of the final 26 regular-season
games with a foot injury, was 1-of10 from the noor.

ing the lead to 10-0.
It was by far Burba's worst career

7171 M

(Continued from B-3)
"I got going pretty good in the
first half, but! was cramping up and
didn't feel good at all in the second
tialf," said Chapman. a nine-year
veteran now with his fourth club.
"Things arc good when all your.
shots seem to fall."
The Suns, who beat the Sonics
twice in a four-day stretch in March,
used Chapman 's eighth three-pointer to go ahead 95-93 with 2:42 left
and his ninth lor a 102-95lead with
55 seconds on the clock.
G·ary Payton had 23 points,
• Hersey Hawkins 20 and Shawn
Kemp 19 roints and 15 rebounds for
Seattle, last season's Western. Con:
·terence champions.
"Losing like this can also be a ·
benefit because if puts your back up
against the wall and you have no
choice but to come out and play
uggrcssi.vc a lithe time." Kemp said.
Said Phoenix .couch Danny
Aingc : "It's big. but it's only one .
We have to try and get two more, and
that 's not an easy job against Seattle."
Bulls.911. Bullets 86
At Chicago. the Bul.ls seemed
pleased to have escaped with a victory against a team that stayed close
tor almost 3 112 quarters.
The defending champions won
l)espite shooting 38 percent and getting little production from Dennis
Rodman and Torii Kukoc. who

li~

hits in the third inning, when they
sent 10 batters to the plate and scored
five runs. They added three more in
the fifth and two in the sixth, extend-

~

Bas_
eball Marauders get si·x-run victori~s against' Belpre &amp; VC

·The Indians and Brewers set club
records for most homers in a game
(Cleveland's record was seven in a
game against Deuoit on July 17,
1966) and most homers given up
(Milwaukee's record was seven
against Seattle on July 31 , 1996).
The overall single-game record of .
12 homers was set by Detroit and
Chicago on May 28, 1995.
.
Wiliiams seemed unimpressed'
with his first three-homer game.
"All you have to do is hit the bal)
hard," Williams said. ''I'm just worried about making good contact. If
you make good contact often
enough, then some balls are going to
fall in and some balls are going to

qincy's pitching woes continue

\ Pomeroy • M~ePort ~ Gllllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

~.~127,1987

Indians pound Brewers in 11-4 rout

MILWAUKEE (AP)- Orel Her- outfield instead of out.
By SAM WILSON
"Many's real humble . But it was
shiser said if the game hadn't been
1111111 Sentinel C~ncltnt ·
.
played in chilly weather, he's not Matty's night," Hershiser (2-0) said
Two items seem to dormnate the sports news out
sure how · many more balls might of Matt Williams, who hit three
of Columbus. Obviously, the continued success of
have rocketed into the stands of Mil- homers. " To hit the ball the way he
Obio State football players in the NFL draft is one
did ... on a summer night here, those
)Yaukee County Stadium.
of those.
The Cleveland Indians outhome- are five home runs, noi three. It usuWith Orlando Pace going first to the Rams and
.
red the 'Milwaukee Brewers 8-3 Fri- ~lly doesn 'i carry that well here this
early."
Shawn Springs goil1g third to Seattle, the Buckeyes have continued their day night for an 11-4 victory. The II
!Jnpressive showing in the draft this decade. Pace is the second No. l.pick homers tied a major league· record ·
Williams led off the founh and
an the last four years.,"Big Daddt' Dan Wilkinson was selected· by the Ben- .for homers in a nine-inning night . seventh innings with homers, and·his
~als in 1994, .
· .
.
·
game. The teams also hit five homers third was a two-run shot in the eighth
for a I 0-4 lead. David Justice hit two
1'
The state of Florida was the big winner in the draft. Florida State had four in one inning to tie another record.
homers,
one right after Williams'
The homer bonanza came on a
~~;;~:;(~~~~~=~
players
taken,
Miami
three
and
Florida
home ruri, and . Manny
second
k
two in the first round. The Buckeye!~) coot April night, when the ball n\)rhowever, just missed being the first team mally doesn't carry much in Mil- Ramirez, Chad Curtis and Sandy
to have three players taken in the first waukee. Game-time temperature was Alomar Junior also hit balls out.
"It was one of ihose nights where
round in three consecutive years. Defen- 55 degrees and the '!lind was only
sive back Rob Kelly was chosen 33rd by about eight mph, blowing across the every fastball', every cutter that we
Mike Ditka and the New Orleans Saints.
With all the media auention given the
draft, recruiting will be easier for these
Florida schools and Ohio State. That is
where the NFL draft really pays off,
because today's high school players
know their value. They want to attend .
we 've· not been able to do that,"
schools where they can be noticed, play a By JOE KAY
M'
orandini said of the group offenCINCINNATI
(AP)
The
style.of.offense and defense that is conducive to the pro game •. and have the
Philadelphia Phillies got a I 0-run · sive effon. "The key was getting the
opportunity to go high in the NFL draft.
big two-out hits. That kind of put the
.
All this becomes possible if they attend Ohio State. Ken Yon Rambo, a lead, then had to use iheir closer to
icing on the cake.''
hold
it.
No
wonder
they're
struggling
highly regarded receiver, signed with the Buckeyes because o("their histoIt was just another demoralizing
along
at
7-13.
ry of getting receivers to the league." Such success translates into victories,
night
for the Re&lt;ls, who have lost five
The Cincinnati Reds had yet
and a greater longevity .for Coach John Cooper.
in a row and nine of 10 primarily
Another interesting development in Columbus is the future of the NHL. another staner fail to make it even
·
because their staning pitching is
halfway
through
a
game.
There's
no
Columbus is doing the right thing by not trying to compete with Cleveland
awful.
Dave Burba (3-2) gave up
myst~ry
about
why
they
're
·orr
to
and Cincinnati in the professional sports market. The addition of professeven
runs
in only 4 213 innings,
sional hockey- will continue Columbus' drive to be a major league city. It their worst start in II years.
Neither manager came away hap- . increasing the rotation's earned run
will translate into success since they won 'I be competing with the profesaverage to 7.44.
·
py Friday night afier the Phillies held
sional teams in the other major Ohio cities.
Reds
staners
have
gone
five or
on
for
a
I
0-7
victory
that
showed
The addition of a professional football, basketball Qr baseball team is out
why
both
teams
are
falling
apan
earfewer
innings
in
12
of
the
21
games.
~f the question for Columbus. A s~ccessf)ll hockey team, just like the Crew
the main reason Cincinnati is 6-15.
m soccer, would dommate the Ohm market m that srort. I al)l .lookmg for- ly. Ricky Bottalico came on and got
The Reds haven't started this. badly
ward to seeing my favorite team, the Chicago Blackhawks, play against the the last out in a game that left both
since 1986, when they opened 5-16.
Columbus Whalers next fall. Granted, this is predicated on whether the sides exasperated.
"We gave up 10 runs. lt's'tough
"If
we've
got
to
use
Bottalico
to
Whalers chose to relocate in Columbus.
I am cOncerned, however, about how this new hockey franchise would · win those games, we've got a lot of to win when you give up 10 runs,"
shortstop Barry Larkin said.
affect attendance at the minor leagues around the state. The rivalry between trouble," Phillies manager Terry
"We're just not pitching. That's a
the Chill and. Huntington Blizzard would be over, but would a successful Francona said.
At
least
he
had
a
few
good
things
simple
fact," manager Ray. Knight
professional team in Columbus help 01 hinder hockey in Huntington or Dayto
talk
about.
Mickey
Morandini,
said. "Until 'we do, we're going to
ton?
.
get our brains beat out. ··
Be adviiled that professional hockey is expensive. Tickets io Blackhawks. Rico Brogna and Rob Butler each
Every Phillies starter except Scou
games average around $75 a ticket. Minor league hockey will probably sur- had three hits as Philadelphia piled
up
season
highs
in
hits
(
15)
and
douRolen
had at least one . hit. Rolen
vive because most of us can't afford a family day in professional hockey.
bles
(seven)
and
matched
its
season
walked
three times as th&lt; Reds
:r;ckets for a family at an ECHLgame are affordable. In actuality, .a family
high
for
runs
in
a
game.
·
padded their league-leading walk
of four can attend a Blizzard game for significantly Jess than $75.
"There 's a few games that we.' vc
total to l 05.
Be that as it may, I am still watching the hockey situation in Columbus
The Phillies had a season-high six
with great interest and anticipation. Hockey is a great sport and a welcome been able to do that, . but overall
addition to Columbus. ·
~

Sundlly, April 'ZT, 1117•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll•, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

Ptll 84•.- ' , ........ •WI

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O'DELL LUMBER COHPAHY
SEE MATT COOKE, MGR.; BOB HOWARD, DAN POOLE,
TOM DAUGHERTY, JOE PHJWPS

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# r ,

River Valley track ·.
teams t~lly 15 wins
in triangular meet

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acade· Jackson's Joey Boggs had a twomy's baseball · team killed it• 16- · run homer in the seventh.
.game losing streak Friday by ham·
1l1e Blue Devils' top hitters were
mering Jackson 13-4 Friday at Isaac S.aiinders (2·2 &amp; two RB!s),
Memorial Field.
Jason Ratliff (2·2 4t a double),
Senior Heath McKinnisHossed a Davis (2·4 &amp; two RB!s), Haynes and
five-hitter and held the lronmen Woodward (three RBis each). Also
( 1.1 ,5 overall &amp; 7-3 in the SEOAL) . gelling a hit was Aaron Beaver
scoreless for four of the last five (two-run single in the sixth).
innings.
Here is what's on this week's
The Blue Devils (1-16 &amp; 1-10) agenda for the Blue Devils.
got staned with Rob Woodward's .
Monday: home vs. Warren Local
two-out, three-run homer in the first.
· Thesday: home vs. Fairland at
Jackson cut the Academy's lead 4:30p.m. .
to 4-2 on Roger Rafferty 's two-run
Wednesday: at Point Pleasant
homer in the second. But the Blue
T.hursday: home vs. Vinton
Devils, who matqhed their guests' · · County at 4:30p.m.
run production in their half of the
· Friday: home vs. LOgan
second, ·padded their lead to an Ioojpg lllllill
THROWS FIVE-HITTER- Gallla Academy pitcher Heath McKineight-run rih in the fourth with Jackson
020-000-2=4-5-4 nles tolled a five-hitter In Friday's SEOAL baseball game against
back-to-back homers by Ron Haynes Gallipolis
420-403-x= 13-9-1 . .the vl&amp;lllng Jackson lronmen, who lost 13-4. The decision g•ve the
(his was a three-run blast) and Seth
WP: H. McKinniss
Blue Devils their flrat win of the '"eon and kept the Jronmen 1 112
Davis.
LP: .King
games behind front-running Athens In the league title chase. (TimesSentinel photo by .G. Spencer Osborne)

Jackson softball club
gets by Gallipolis2-1
lin and Rachael Waechler got sin'
gles).
The decision gave Jackson a 9-7
overall mark and a 4-5 league record.
GAHS fell to 3-13 and 2-9 in" the
league.
Here is what's on this week's
agenda for the Blue Angels.
Monday: at Warren Local
Thesday: home vs. Fairland at
4:30 p:m. ·
Wednesday: home vs. Point
Pleasant
·
Thursday: home vs. Vinton
County at4:30 p.m.
Friday: at Logan
IDpjng Milb
000-100-0= 1-2-2
Gallipolis
OIO-OJ0-x=2-2-4
Jackson
WP: Pratt
LP:- Darst

By SCOTT WOLFE
T·S Correspondent
STEWART- A good field in all
cjivosions made for a grand opening
~ight of racing at Skyline Speedway
Friday mght. where the return of the
wmgcd outlaw Super Sprints made
their debut for the 1997 racing sca..spn.
One of lasl year's lc-Jturc winners.
Jim ,Nier of Piketon, · overcame
~ nother Skyline winner Jason DUkes
· qf Findlay with three laps to go to
f!OSI the sprint win.
Durwin\ Chris Siotts powered
TR. Cullums #59 to victory in the
J,..ate Model division. while veteran
Donnie Kinnis()n captured the Street
~locks.

A moderate crowd. decimated by
ljcavy rains all around the track,
strongly expressed their approval &lt;if
tre fast, furious sprim cars which
t~rncd some record laps on the
. smooth. tacky red-clay surface.
Several wheehc .stands hy .some
Q,f ihc drivers exemplified the
~·cmen~ous power for the sprinters
~nd the nice. racy track surface. The
ljllle side shows also provided a lot
'lf action for the fans.
Ja"'" Dukes in the Charlie Brown
119'i led the first 26 laps and looked
, 1\kc u sure winner. He oV~rcarnc several early r~cc accidents that saw the
r1icc red-flagged when Brian Benson.
14-ycar-old Jonathan Stevens and
Mike Imler tangled. Imler hacked it
over the hack chute and Benson took
a couple end-for-end tumbles. hut all
drivers emerged in good shape.

-r-Sports briefs-Baseball
TORONTO (AP) ---' Seattle's
Jien Griffey Jr. hit three home runs
~ainst Toronto to set the_majorl~ngue record fot homers m Aprtl
"'ith 13.
. . "
· · Griffey's second homer, a solo
sjlot in the se.venth off Roger ·
Clemen~. gave him 12 homers in
~pril, breaking the record of II that
ll: had tied carl icr in the night and
shared · with Barry Bpnds, Gary
Sheffield, Brady Anderson, Willie
Siargell. Graig Nettles. and Mike
Schmidt,
.
.
The Mariners deJeated the Blue
· Jays 13-8.
Baseball
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Mall
Williams hit three homers an!l David
Justice homered twice as the Cloveland Indians and Milwauke Brewers
combined 10 match a major-league
record for home runs in a nine-inning
night game with II .
_
Cleveland hil a club record e1ghL
in all, including three in one inning
as the Indians beat the Brewers I I-

on a grcar show.
·
··
Stults, Precision Automotive car

#59. came home lirst ahead of Eaton,
Jim Amick: Donnie DoLSon. Ed Yenham, Greg Bumbergcr, John Wca,el
Rhodes, Kemp Kelly. Roger Dunlap
and AIBakcr.
Heats went to Stalls over Scon
Wolfe in the McDonald's #14 and
Eaton over Dunlap.
Veteran racer Donnie Kennison
grabhcd the early lead and never
looked hack en route to a popular
vi,tory in the .Pure Stock Division.
Kinnison fo~ght off the charges &lt;&gt;f
Terry Labo~tc look-alike Mitch
Gillian in the #5 and blitzed on to
victory.
Following Gilli;m across Lhe line
were Tony Roush , John Vandalc, Jim
Jones. Rick Kapplc. Roy Roush.
Ma,rcus Powell. Roush and Mantic.

SHELLED- South Gallla starlll'!g pitcher Rick Bailey was shelled
tor five runs in the first Inning of Friday's baseball game against
visllng Symmes Valley. The PL 13 patch on Belley's right sleeve Is
In memory of sophomore teammate Patrlc.k Lawrence, who died as
a result of an injury suffered in a game against ironton St. Joe ear·
tier this month. Against Symmes V•lley, the Rebels were behind 5·
.0 after one Inning. No other details were reported at pre11s time. ·
.
·
(Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spimcer Osborne)

"J;~LI.-ADEGA, Ala. (AP). John Andrelti can only hope that this
weekend is the start of better days.
Andret.ti. ·a member of a famed
racing family . that includes Uncle
· Mario and cousin Michael, has struggled in his fjrsl full season driving
Cale•Yarborough's RCA Ford.
Until Friday. his best qualifying
effo~ was 22nd early in the season
at Richmond, and his best finish in
the first eight r~~Ces of 1.997 was 12th
earlier this month at Texas Motor
•Speedway.
"We've had a lol of things happen," Andreui explained. "We're a
small team. We Qnly have so many
tire changers, and one of our tire
changers broke his hand riding a
molorcycle, and that's really hun us
on pit stops. ·
'"]'here has been a loi of things
•
·

CHESHIRE- in Friday's Southeastern Ohio Athletic League baseball encounter at Kyger Creek Middle School, Levi Weppler fired a
one-hit shutout to pace the Marietta
Tigers to an 8-0 win over River Valley.
Weppler fanned 13 and walked
one in a complete-game victory. Brian Bradbury and Kevin Ward pitched
for the Raiders (7-8 overall &amp;.4-7 1n
the SEOAL).
Ben Arnold's three-run douhlc
wa&lt; the centerpiece of Marietta's sixrun riot in the l"ourth inning. Joel
Thrash also had two RB!s for the
Tigers.
The Tigers (8-5 &amp; 7-3) moved
into a second-place lie with Jackson.
Here is what's on .this · week's
agenda for the Raiders. .

SEOAL diamond
standings posted
GALLIPOLIS - Athens and
Warren Local stand on the summits ·
of the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
'
League in baschall
and softball,
respectively. ·
In bascball,thc Bulldogs lead the
rest of the pack with a IS-3 overall
record und a 9-2 mark in league play.
Behind them arc Jackson. Maricua.
Warren Local (8-6 &amp; 6-4). Logna (76 &amp; 4-5 ), River Valley, Point Pleas- .
ant (5-10 &amp; 3-8) and Gallia Academy.
. In sufthall, the Warrinrs rule with
a 14-1 overall m;irk and a 10-1
league rcc&lt;&gt;rd. Behind them urc Point
Pleasant (I K-3 &amp; 9-2), Logan (K-6 &amp;
7-4), Marietta (6-4 ·overall &amp; in the
league after Friday's6-5 win over
River Valley). Jackson. Athens (!i-K
&amp;-4-6), Galliu Acadcrn~Jind River
Valley (1-12 &amp; 0-11 ).
·

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Marietta
0 I0-61 0-0=8-6-2
River Valley
000-!Kl0-0=0- 1-3
WP: Weppler
LP: Bradbury

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NHL playQffs continue

'.

.

"You never want to lose the pole to By VINCENT CINISOMO
the last guy.
·
·
A11oclllled !'rill Writer
· "We didn't come here to sit on
Wayne Gretzky delivered a hat
the pole," be added: "(Crew chief) trick to win a game. Esa Tikkanen
Tony Furr wanted to test here, but! scored overtime goals. Mark Messier
just didn't want to come because had two goals in the clinching game
there's other places we need to con- and set up the winner.
cenLrale on. So this is a little bit of a
·The effons of the three helped the
surprise to us. Tome, it'sjustagreat Edmonton Oilers- make that the
feeling because we've struggled all New York Rangers- become lbe
year."
firs11eain to reach the second round
Andreu I's only previous pole of the NI;{L playoffs. '
came at Darlington in September of
Tikkanen, one · of five cx-Oilel'll
1995 while he was driving for Lhe · on the Rangers' roster, delivered an
Kranefuss' Haas team. L8te in the overtime goal in Game 3 on Tuesday
1996 season, he. and Jeremy May- · · night and then scored al 12:08 of
lield swapped rides.
. .
ovet1ime Friday night as New York
Hillin, whose only Winston Cup · beat the Florida Panthers 3-21o elimwin was at Talladega in July 1986. inate the defending Eastern Confcrfinds himself in prelly . much the ence champions.
same position as Andrelli- both of
The. Rangers look the series 4-1,
them with small. struggling teams winning the final four games.
trying 1o move up in a very_compelTikkanen, who played an imporitive series.
tanl role in New York's Stanley Cup
·
·
• -• chainpionshjp in . I994,. was reac·
quircdfromVancouverinMarchfor
I"
his clutch play: He had only two
· ter.
Huggins angrily ordered O'Dell out . ·goals in 15 regular-season games
· The newspaper quoted two pco· of the team's dressing room after the
. . . with the Rangers down the stretch,
lJie who were not identi lied
1 who said . deo' eat.
· · but already has three in the playoffs.
In Game 3, he drilled a sholthat
·
IV I •
.T · .
ricocheted oft" the inside of the Flori~~,·e
da ncl and out in ovenime, causing
J;;UU1
It
·several minutes of review before lhc
shot was ruled good.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ...,
The Cowboys originally were
"I have two lucky overtime winOhio SLate will play Wyoming Aug. scheduled to open their season Aug. ncrs," Tikkanen said. "HOpefully
2H al Ohio Stadium in the inaugural 30 at home against Montana. they don't stop there. I'm doing
Eddie Robinson Football Classie,thc Wyoming athletics director Lee everything·I can 10 win the Stanley
Buckeyes' athletic director said.
Moon said the Cowboys and Griz- , Cup for the New York Rangers."
· er s·a'd
Fn"day
.
the
zlies
have agreed to move their game
Mcssler
· score d h"IS ·fiJrsltwo goa1s
Andy ·Gelg
t
game w1"ll be sponsored by lhc Black to Oct. 4, originally an open date for
·
Coaches Ass~~~:ialion· to honor both teams.
Robinson, who coaches at Gram- ·
The game will be the first meet·
No Crlldil, Slow Credit
hling 'stale University in Louisiana ing between ihc Cowboys and the
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
and has won more games than any Buckeyes in football. It ljlill slllrt al
other college.foolllall coach.
8:07p.m. and will he the third home
Some proceeds from the game night game in Ohi'o State history_.
AI Dutch Miller Chevrolet, ·
will go 10 Lhe BCA. a nonprolil orga11 also will be Ohio State's fourth
WECANBUP
mza11on. for usc 1r var1ous mner-crty preseason g'ame and third in four
HYou Have At Least$1,300
youth programs and :scholarships years. The Budcyes have played
for inmority studenK
twice at the Kickoff Classic in Easl
• month lae0111e
"'When you think of Eddie Rutherl"nrd, N.J., losing to Alabama
(304-) 529-2301
Robinson. you think of a very spc- in 19111\ and defeating Boston Colcia! coach and person who has had lege in , 1995. and defeated Fresno
a tremendously positive impact on Stale in the 1994 Pigskin Classit; at
$ SAVE THOUSANDS •
college athletics and the thOusands of Anaheim, Calif.
young .men that he has till!ght and
The Buckeyes linishcd' last seaDon't P.y n.o. High Kentucky
end Ohio 1 - t R-1
coached over the years. This game is son Il - l and ranked second in Lhc
Manr
llehlciH Ani AVIIIIble With
cet1ainly a fitting tribute to him," nation aflor winning a share of the
NO
MONEY DOWNI
. Geiger said.
:.
Big T~n Conference championship
CALL
24 HOURI A DAY·
"It's a great challenge for our and be·ating .Arilona State in the
7DAYSA
IIIOtballteam nod we arc looking for- Rose Bowl. . ·
ward to lt," Wyoming coach Dana
The Cowboys finished 10-2 and
Dime! said. "I was born and raised were ranked 22nd. They won the
about 10 minutes away from Ohio Western Athletic Conference's Pacif. Stadium, so this is a special thrill for ic Division title but lost in overtime
me. P[aying the game in honor of' to Brigham Ypung in the WAC
couch Robinson makes iL even more championship game .

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The Gql/ipt~lis lhlil_,. Tril11m&lt;',
771r /Juifl· Smtinel and tbc SrmJC/,1'
1imn-Sci1tintl value the cnnlrihulinns•Lheir·relllicrs make tnlhc spnns
sectit)ns of thi:sc Jillf!Cni. nnd theY
will ~ontin~~ '"be puhlisltcll.
Hnwcvcr. .cct1oin dem.llincs fi~r
· soomissitms will be vbscrve&lt;f..
·
·'The deadline for plmtns and tclutcd artiCles for hM•ihall and other. full
spon~ is the Suturd"Y before the
Surcr Bowl.
Tile dcadUne liw prnll&lt;lil and related anicles for ha.'kctboll (summer
bo.•kt:thall and related .cmnP,. fall
under tbc summer spons deadline)
and cllher winter ~pons is the hL•L day
orlh&amp;) NBA finals.
-'
1l1e deadline [or submissions of,
lix:al baseball· and softball-related .
•· Jll!ot&lt;ll IIndoreiated articles. from T·
holt to tbe majon, as well o.• uthcr
sprlntlllid summer Sf'OO$, is the day
of the 1ut pmc of the Wc..-Jd Series.
' n- dclldlines arc in plocc to
allow COIItributon the ·lime they
necti'ID MlqUUe their ('hoiOII from the
photopaphy atudiolclcveloper of
~ . t 10 J1vc the ~~an:• tho
d cc to puWilll.._ 1tem11n the
. . . . ., 111 !Iii ilr II101Uportl.

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'

of the playoffs, with Tikkanen assisting on both.
"This is one step toward the ullimale goal," said Messier. who now
has 108 career playotl' goals, second
behind Gretzl&gt;y's 116.
Gretzky had all of New York's

_happen behind the "scenes, and .
because we're not up front, people
don't take notice," he added. "Bul
it's our job to get up fronl so that
people do (notice). That's.whal we're
· trying 10 do."
·
That's ex.actly what be did Friday
in the opening round of qualifying
for today's Winston 500, knocking ·
· Dale Earnhardt off lhe top spot late
in the qualifying. Andrclli then had
lo hold his breath !IS Bobby Hillin Jr.
· narrowly missed ·taking the pole on
the last lap of the long qualifying.
session at Talladega Superspeedway:
. .
.
Andrelli turned a lap of 193.6~7
mph. while Hillin took the· outside
fronl row position with a lap of
19).271 on the 2.66-mile, high. banked oval.
.
.
"That was a prelly · anxious
moment al the end." Andrctti said.

inves!igation
into possible irregular'
..
.
tttes involv~ng a University of
Cinci,nnati basketball player winds
down, a rift between coach Bob
Huggins and athletic director Gerald
O'Dell has intensified, The Cincin11uti Enqui"r reported Sat.urday.
.School and NCAA officials arc
investigating !he eligibility of point
guard '.Charlcs Williams. The probe
report¢ly is focused on how he puid
for summcr.!ichool classes taken oulside California. wh_erc he is 'eligible
·
for tuition remission.
The newspaper quotcr;l Huggins:
lawyer as saying O'Dell is out to get
Huggins. · .
.
. Allorney Ron Grinkcr said lhe
coach was no longer comfortable
using his office telephone lor fear it ·
is buiJ!cd.
''Maybe Gerald wants to get his
own·guy.in there;" Grinkcr said. "He
won't bc. "fhe first guy lo challenge
Bob an¢ IO!;C. I think Bob's too
strong for Gerald. ·•
The relationship bctw.cen Huggins and O'Dell has been strainc~
almost since the start: but·the breach
has g~own bigger since the universi·
ty suspend~ Wiliiam~ Qn Feb. 26.
. Wt/cn ihe BCdrcats subsequently
lostt!l tdarqueuc in the ConferenceUSA Tournament in St .. Louis, Hug- '
· gins and O',Dcll clashed at Kicl Ccn-

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Renee Turley (holding the No. 14 JiiMW') will con-

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Wednesd11y: home vs. Warren
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rebouttds durina the '96-'97 campaian.
· She scoml lbe I,OO()Ih point of her high school
CllleCI" on Dec. 12, 1996 against Nelsonville-York in a
63-6 I overtime win. Turley poured in 33 points to
eclipse the millennium mark.
"Renee is a high-motor player who gets after il all. .
the time," addedSmalley: "I think her cii{CCr stals bear
that out."
Turley ied Southern.to 16-8 record and a sectional title her senior year. She was voted honorable DJerition all-Ohio for the third straight season and was thC .
co-MVP of District 13. She was voted first team allDistrict 13 by. the ASsociated Press. It was the third
straight year for that award as well.
She picked up her third consecutive Tri-Valley Conference MVP award in '97 and was voted first team all·
TVC for the third Lime.
Turley played forth~ Logan Lady Bobcats for four
years, appearing in two YBOA national tournaments.
The Lady Bobcats finished fifth in the nation once. ·
'"Renee's AAU experience will help her greatly," he
said. "The chance to play at a national level prior to:
entering the intercollegiate game is a plus for any player.'"
Turley is the daughter of Ed Turley.
Rio Grande finished 23-12 in 1996-97, posting a 12·
6 record in the Mid·Ohfo Conference which earned the .
Re~women third place. ·The team captured the 'Great ·
Lakes Region championship and earned a place in the
NAIA National Touniamenl in Jackson, Tenn., but
bowed in flrsl round play to Southwestern Oklahoma
State University.

Ex-Oilers help Raf1gers beat
Andretti puts past behind
him .&amp; ·wins Winston 500pole Panthers 3·2 in series· finale

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RIO GRANDE -After tumilla in u 111·111111 per·
· f01'1111111Ce in her ~nior ~. Southern Hiah School's
Renee Turley w1ll take her conliderable t.lenl to the
Uni~nity of Rio Onnde.
·
1\arley ·~ed a ~le-double per aamc for
Southern an semor, sconng23.4 points per outing and
snatching!O.I rebounds per game. Sbe also handed out
4.9..assisiS ~ blocked 1.8 shots per game.
Renee brings the toW packa&amp;e to college," said Rio
Grande head coach Dav1d Smalley. "She can score and
rebound and is a great athlete. She .was our camp MVP
last sum~r and we're excited about her joining our
progr\'m· ' .
·
Thrley has been familiar with Rio Grande basketball tlw!ks to her high school coach·Jennifer (Couch)
. Roush- Roush was a member of the Redwomen program from &gt;l987-91.
•
Roush, an '87 graduate of Meigs High School, was
the Redwomen's team MVP as a senior in '91. Sbe
scored 226 poi~ts that season and totaled 549 points
for ~r career. Sbe was an all-Mid-Ohio Conference
selection in softball and also played volleyballal Rio .
Gral)de. .
.
.·
''We have· a great tradition of women's athletics at
Rio Grande and I want to thank Coach Roush for helping to cootinue that tradition," said Smalley. "She was
one Qf the players who paved the way for'6uccess that'
we have had at Rio Grande."
·
Tllrley's career numbers al Southern included 1,40S
points, S63 rebounds, ·362 steals, 320 assists and 204
blocked shots. The S-fool- 10 swing player accounted
for 44% of Southern's scoring and 28% of the team's

By Mil(!; HARRIS

AS
LOW AS

~·

Southern's Turley commits
to Rio women's basketball

"•

~ ;..,l\1111.!."'

4.

..

McARTHU!t - River Valley's meter (1:09.4), 1,600-meter ((i:l3) · '
track teams recorded 15 victories in and 3,'200-meter (13:41) runs; Amy
various evenLS in Thursday's Irian- _ McCoy in tbe 100-meter (: 13.3) and •. ;:
gular meet with Eastern and .Vinton 200-meter (:28) dashes; Penny Sal· , ....
County al Vinton County High isbury in the long jump (I 4-8) &amp; ' )
School, according to a rcpon su~ 100-meter hurdles (: 16.6); Ashly .
Roberts in the discu~ (107-7); Ang~ ' '
milled Saturday.
. In the girls' session, River Valley ie DeGarmo in the 300-meter hur- ,: c&gt;
defeated the Vikings 8I -70. Eastern · dies (:58.6); 4 x 100-meler (no run- · " "
ncrs' names or lime reported) and 4 , "
had 10 points.
No information was reported for · x 400-meter (Chisa Briggs, Sasha
Shriver, Kasee Justice and J. RobertS ..~
Eastern's athletes. .
finished in 4:54) relays.
Boys' session
· Se&lt;ond: A RobertS in 'the shot ··:;
First: Nate Polcyn in the discus
put
(31-8 ); DeGarmo in the discus
( 124-0.5) and shot put (43-0); Jay
Stout in the 200-meter dash (:24.7): (101 ' 2); Justice in the 200-meter . ''
··
Jeff Lundy in the 400-meter dash dash (:30.8): Shriver in the 400- .,,
meter
dash
(U2)
:55.3
Third: Salisbury in the high ,..
. Second: C:hris Pitchford in ·high
jump'(4-4);
DeGarmo in the shot put ::
jump (6-0); Gabe Saunders in the
shot put (38-0) ; Jeremiah Triplett in (30-1 0); Mary Hughes -in the 1,600.....:_.
the 200-meter dash (:25,6); Josh mctcr run (7-:35)
Fourth:
DeGarmo
in
the
long
,.
Mollohan in the 800-meter run
'
.(2:20); 4 x 100-mcte,r relay (Stout, jump (14' 1)
T.J. Stroud, Lundy &amp; Tim Wellington-no time ' rcpor~d)
GolF
Third: Jerry Brammer in the
STOCKBRIDGE,
Ga. (,A,P) .;
discus ( 108-25); Aaron Adams in
Vicki
Fergon
used
four
birdies
in
a
-'
the shot put (37-0); Lundy in the
ruw
to
shoot
a
4-under-par
68
and
IDO-meter dash (: 12); Mollohan in
share the first-round lead with Loric .
the. 1,600-mcter run (5 :20):
Fourth: Jcrei-Qy Webb in the Kane in the LPGA Chiek-fii.A
· ' · •·\.
higp jump (5-8); J.B. Boso in the championship. .
The
pair
had
a
on~-shotlead o•·cr
100-meler dash (: 12.2); Whulden
Karrie Webb, Marianne Morrjs, ~
in the 3,200-melcr run (14:58)
Hiromi
Kobayashi. Judy Dickinson,,'J '!
Girls' session
Deb
Richard
and Susie Redman.
First: Jessica Robens in the 400-

Stotts stands among
latest champions
at Skyline Spe~dway Marietta.shuts out
baseball Raiders-8-0
·Another incident saw someone
tap Dewey Cassell from behind,
where he was tagged ·hcad-on by" an
oncoming Billy Jarrell. Dukes, Nier
-.md s~cond place Ronnie Myers
diced it up most of theracc. but
Dukes grew orein conlrol us the race
wore on. A caution for Casey
McGuire late in the race bunched up
the field . setting the stage t'or a Nier,
Myers, Dukes and Mike Bowlmg
shoot-out.
.
Nier got the jump on the start and
powered on to victory in the 'Nicr
Fabrication #00. Dukes settled f(&gt;r
second, Myers, third and Bowling
fourth. Jimmy Stinson, Chris Fraley,
Dave Dickson,Casey McGuire, Eric
tfysong and Rob Chancy rounded
outlhc top 10. Heats went to Nicr
and Bowling.
In the Late Models, Greg Eaton,
on~ of the four racing Eaton brothers. tnok the curly lead and battled
side-hy-side with Chris Stotts. ·several skirmishes slowed the field early and dented the shiny new paint
jnhs, hut once the green flag waved
again the steel block Late Models put

Aprl27. 1117

Sunday,~l27,1117 ..

Pomeroy • Mlcklleport • Gllllpol._, OH •-Point PI• ..

GAHS diamondmen
hammer Jackson
13-4 to get first win

JACKSON - In Friday's Southeastern Ohio Athletic League softball
game. the Jackson lronladies broke
a 1- 1 tic in the fifth and weathered
Galli a Acade!Jly seventh-inning challenge to beat the Blue Angels 2-1.
In the Angels' seventh, Grace
Cochran reached on an error and
moved to second on another error.
. April Donnally's single sent Cochran
'on a dash to the plate. but Cochran
was called out for failing to touch the
plate. Then Jackson hurler Amber
Pratt struck oul Julie Merry and Jennifer Mullins to end the game.
Pratt struck ou\ seven, gave up
two hits - senior catcher Valerie
Spence got the other one - walked
one. Bridget Darst, the Blue Angels'
pitcher. struck out six, walked four
and gave up two hits (Susie McNer-

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Outdoors

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. By Jim Freeman

By-The Anoct.t.cl PrHa

Tin 11 Sinllnel Staff

The J997NASCAR Winston Cup
Sept. 21 - MBNA.SOO, Dover,
stock,car racing schedule, with win- Del.
ners in parentheses and driver point
Sept. 28 - Hanes 500, Marstandings:.
tinsville, Va . .
Feb. t'6 - Daytona 500, Day-.
()ct. 5 - UAW-GM Quality 500.
tona. Fla. (Jeff Gordon). ·
Concord, N.C.
Feb. 23 - Goodwrench Service
Oct. 12. -:- !!ears' Diehiltd 500,
400, Rockingham, N.C. (Jeff Gor- Thlladega, Ala.
don).
Oct. 26 - A.C Delco 400, Rockbirds
found
in
North
America
and
•
March
2
.
Pontiac
Excitement
ingham,
N.C.
A magical thing happens in the
Nov. 2 - . Dura Lube 500,
woods this time of year. one that the .birds that were native to local 400, Richmond, Va. (Rusly Wallace).
. southe4stem Ohio turkey hunters are. woods were of the Eastern Wild . March 9 - 1 Primestar 500, Phoenix .
Turkey sub-species. The turkeys liv- Hampton, Ga. (D~Ie Jarrett). ·
Nov. 16 - NAPA 500, Hampton,
ill an ideal position to observe.
March 23 - TranSouth Financial Ga.
At the beginning of Ohio's three- ing in Ohio now are descendent from
x-non-points race.
week wild turkey season, which birds transplanted into the area after 400, Darlington, ·S.C. (Dale Jarrett).
the
native
wild
turkeys
were
expaApril
6
ll!terstate
Batteries
Driver staadlnp
.
starts Monday morning, the woods
·
500, Fort Worth, Texas. (Jeff Bur1. Dale Jarrett, 1,269.
are relatively bare, just beginning to triated.
Although large and ung~inly I ton). .
. · . ·
·· .
2. Terry Labonte, 1.224.
show the promise of lush, green
ApnH3 -Foo&lt;J Cny 500, Bns3. Jeff Gordon. 1,175.
foliage. But as the season progress- looking-a fully grown gobbler can .
weigh
as
much
as
20
pounds
or
more
tol,
Tenn.
(Jeff
Gorilon).
4.
Bobby Labonte, 1,061 .
es. God applies.the finishing brush·
April 20 - Goody's Headache
5. Mark Martin, 1,029.
strokes, filling in the ~Res aild under- -turkeys can fly SO toSS miles per
6. Jeff Burton, 992.
growth with a luxurious emerald · hour and run at speeds higher than 25 Powders.500, MarlinsviiJi,, Va. (Jeff
miles per hour. They have excellent Gordon).
7. Ricky Rudd, 981.
blanket.
April 27 - Winston 500, Tal8. Dale Earnhardt, 980.
The best way to Celebrate the sea- . eyesight and hearing and present a
sonal shift is to be a part of it, hid- terrific challenge to the hunter.
ladega, Ala.
9. Rusty Wallace, 977.
ing out in the woods. fully alert to
Turkey hunting, although enjoyMay 4 - Save Mart Supermar10. Bobby Hamilton, 945.
able, also involves special safety kets 300, Sonoma. Calif.
II . Ward Burton, 927.
your surroundings.
Allbaugh I tend to prefer the concerns. Bear in mind that the aver.May 17- x-The Winston, Con,12. Jeremy Mayfield, 892.
autumn hunting seasons, I concur the age hunter will .be out in the woods, cord, .N.C.
13. Sterling Marlin, 885.
·May 25 - Coca-Cola 600, Con:
14. Bill Elliott, 882.
woods are more full oflife during the dressed head to toe in camouflage.
spring turkey season. At first the riretenr' ing to be another bird. and cord, N.C.
1·5. Geoff BOdine, 880.
June I - Miller 500, Dover, Del.
· 16. Michael Waltrip, 854.
woods seem fairly quiet and peace- you can eaSily see the potential for
June 8 - Pocono 500, Long
17. Ken Schrader, 831.
ful - perhaps somehow alerted to trouble.
Hunters sbould not wear bright Pond, Pa.
.
·
18. Johnny Benson, 824.
the presence of the clumsy hunter,
June 15 - Miller 400, Brooklyn,
19. Darrell Waltrip, 821 . ,
but in time, the volume of noise colors when turkey hunting, espe.
20. Brett Bodine, 804. ·
increases until it seems the hunter is cially red, white and blue, because Mich.
June 22 - California 500,
21. Ted Musgrave, 783.
.
literally suirounded by birds, insects · these colors resemble the male
turkey's
marking.·
Hunters
sbould
Fontana,
Calif.
22.
Morgan
Shepherd,
769.
and reptiles. (For the hunter with an
July 5 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
23. Ernie Irvan, 757.
active imagination, every · critter wear blaze orange when moving
24. Lake Speed, 746.
rustling leaves nearby is a .reptile ... through the wQods. They can remove Beach, Fla.
the ora~ge before calling if they so
July 13 - ·Jiffy Lube 300,
25 . John Andretti, 722.
or more precisely a snake.)
Loudon. N.H.
26. Kyle Petty, 720.
Despite all this noise and activi- desire.
Hunters
should
also
sil
with
their
July
20
Pennsylvania
500,
27.
Mike Skinner, 710.
ty, the gobble of a wise, old tom is
1
28. Kenny Wallace, 691.
almost earsplitting; seemingly halt- backs against a large Ire~. rock or Long Pond, Pa.
· Aug. 2 - Brickyard 400, lndi29. Rick Masl, 664.
.ing the pandemonium for just a other obstacle to protect their body
30. Jimmy Spencer, 661.
· from shotgun pellets fired by care- . anapolis.
moment.
less
hunters.
The
obstacle
will
also
Aug.
10
Bud
at
the
Glen,
31. Ricky Craven. 639.
In the first few days ofturkey seahelp
the
hunter
by
breaking
up
his
or
Watkins
Glen.
N.Y.
32.
Steve Grissom, 632.
son, the hunter has an almost uninAug. 17- I1W Devilbiss 400,
33. Dick Trickle, 631.
terrupted view of the forest floor. As her outline:
Do not altempt to take a turkey by Brooklyn. Mich.
34·. Hut Stricklin, 628. ·
the days go by, however, the scenery
stalking.
It
may
actually
be
another
Aug.
23'Goody's
Headache
35.
Robby Gordon, 580.
changes as the leaves sproul in the
.
hunter
calling
a
bird,
and
besides,
the
Powders
500.
Bristol.
Tenn.
36.
Dave Marcis, 556.
trees and undergrowth.
Aug. 31 -Mountain Dew South37. Joe Nemechek, 52S.
The transformation is also turkey's senses are too keen to allow ·
.
38. Derrike Cope, 517.
marked by a change in hunting you to sneak up on it. Most turkey ern 500, Darlington, S.C.
.Sept 6 - Winston Cup 400,
39. Chad Little. 513.
clothes. Veteran turkey hunters occa- huntingaccidentsoccurwhilestalkRichmond, Va.
40. Robert Pressley, 469.
sionally start out with a fall-type ing.
.
Hunters
need
to
be
alert
to
other
Sept.
14New
J:lampshire
300,
41. David Green, 346.
camouflage. such as Realtrec or
hunters in their area. It is best to let
Loudon. N.H.
42. Greg Sacks, 304.
Advantage. gradually working other
hunters' know they.are coming · . .
.. ..,.... . ... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...
toward a spring or summer style, like
· the more traditional woodland pat- close to your stand by speaking or
shouting out- rather than using an
tern; by the end of ihe season.
·
. .( .
The same thing happens in the animal call or waving your hand or
fall. from early October to late Oc.to- doing any other action that could be
ber,just in reverse. But by then, most mistaken for an animal.
If hunters keep these .and other
UP 011 Fill 11111
of the birds have flown for warmer
climes and the woods are .a little basic safety precautions in mind, no
,..,,,!-...,.
'11oubt tbey will enjoy their front row
I
.
. .-... . J7.
more peaceful ... and colorful.
A little about the wild turkey. seats in nature's marvelou~ spring. Turkey~ are the largest upland game time extravagan:ut

'

Along the River

Winston Cup slate
,and standings posted

In the Open

·-

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..l'•••rlllwli-w/Apfmetl~ .... hJIIIIIISIJIIIII.W, 1ft7 w/..,.ovetl
~

Huhters have front row
seat In spring extravaganza

.,..... ',.,...,. O••tr ... •
WIMIIWal•s
.,.. s. fig Dept. far Slnb Aft• ... We
-cr. .... tllills Art._ .........

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18

A/C,

AM/FM ca.._,

u~~rutu, ~1 pL. P.11111; ~port whlttL....................S11.450

1..-.: CHEVY wiiiMAAPV fl517, v.. eng., 7 pau;, A/C, Atr,

:.=·:~r::tr;e':e~tiiiii·iiiiitii;·iiiiCii;·AiC··::-

AII/FM ciu., ttlt,blllnca olflctoiY wtiTinty-..........$1o,ioo
1114 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX SE 18551, Whit, All/Fit cau.,
tilt, crullt,A/C, A/T, P. wtndowl &amp; Joc:ka ...- ................. $11,120

1. . CHEVY CORSICA 18589 30,1100 mllea balanca of
flctory WMIMI~~i!z.U~ A/f, PW, PL..............;$11;299
1tltl3 CHEVY B
R '1114
, Blue, 4 Dr., AC, A/T, 1111,

Majc,r leagues...

By Jill FREEMAN
.
. Tim I I Sentinel Staff .
REEDSVILLE -- Long billed as
"Ohio's best kept secret", the word is
gelling out about Forked Run State ·
Park. . ,
.
That's ·according to park manager
Randy,Wachter, who recently pointed out··sOII!e of the improvements
made lo the faeili!y, which is located
along- sJate Route 124 between the
Meigs ·County
communities
Reedsville and Long Bottom.
Some of the improvements may
be hard to notice at first, but some
are Obvious... such as a newly paved
ramp at the Curtis Hollpw Landing
. and a wooden courtesy dock
installed for fishermen.
'At the other end of the 102-acre
lake, new plastic, floating docks
have replaced the older wooden .
. ' dock housing rental cahoes and
boats- A new concrete ilbutment for
the docks was also installed and a
. nearby floating fisll · pier was .
repaired, Wachter said. .
Campers using the park's facilities will see.new plcnic taiJles, grills,
and equiprqent for the park's RentA-Camps. To c.omplement the RentA-Camps, 'two wooden Reni-ACabins have been constructed.

Many of the c~ges were made
last year after the summer camping
season, so they will be new to
campers frequenting · ihe - park.
Wachter expl~ned . To facilitate construction of the· new"Curtis ,Hollow
ramp, the level of the lake was lowered several feet.
Younger campers should appredate new playground equipment
installed in the camping areas and
near the sh!:lter houses. Plans call
for installing additional playground
equipment and renovating the shower hous~s. Wachter said.
On Saturday nights and . Sunday
mornings between Memorial Day
and .Labor Day. park naturalist
Diana Kimes . will instruct the
"Hooked on Fishing, Not on Drugs''
program.
The free program is designed to
introduce youngsters and their fami·
ties to fishing as a wholesome alternative to drug use . The park .provides the fishing poles and equipment, bait and Other items along
with the instruction. At the end of
the program, the . youngsters get a
certificate and a badge..
For .Jast year, ·the park staff
Continued on page C4

The crowd of 29,323 gave
Sandberg a standing ovaiion and he
responded by tipping his cap at the
top of the dugout steps. .
Bob Patterson (1-1 ) p1cked up the
win in one inning of one-hit relief.
Mel Rojas picked up his first save
with one inning of relief.
In 1hc Pirates' first, Cubs starter
Frank Castillo was knocked out
without retiring a batter. He walked
Tony Womack and gave up a 'single
10 Jermainc Allensworth. AI Martin
~ingled, scoring Womack, and
~ohnson walked to load the base.s.
Kevin Elster doubled, dnvt.ng m
Allensworth and Martin, chasing
ca..illo.
After Sandberg' s home.r in the
~econd made it 3-1 , Emil Brown's.
RBI double with two out in the

Pirates' 1hird made it 4-1.
Johnson singled home Womack
with two out in the fourth for a 5-1
lead.
With two out and the bases loaded in lhe Cubs' fourth , Glanville
delivered a two-run single. Grace
walked to load the bases again, chasing Cooke , and reliev er Marc
Wilkins ·walked Sosa to force ·in a
run, making it 5-4.
The Cubs tied the game 5-5 in the
sixth when McRae tripled with one
out and scored on Glanville's sacrifice fly. .
·
The Pirates took a 6-5 lead in the
seventh on Jason Kendall's RBI
double but the Cubs tied it in their
half when Sandberg scored from
third on a wild pitch by Ricardo
Rincon.

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.,.r,Apri?Z7,1-

Tying up .
loose ends:
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By DOROTHY SAYRE
.~:
Numerous items keep poppina ~
in my mind to tell "TTie Rest of thC .
Slo':f,"' lhe way Paul lUrvey ~- '1,
dee1ded to devote one column . (o
sequels.
·• ~
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. IMPROVED BOAT RAMP- Fouru eportsll*l, .,..-Mpe
.
I~ at ForUcl
Run·State Park le • naw concrete boat ramp at the Curtis Hollow.Landing. Hera, rl Brum, right. and
Larry Holeteln, both of Parkareburg, w.Va., uae the new ramp to load Brum'e boat af?ar a momlng ot
flahlng. Bl'\lm, who had uaad the launching area prior to the u,pgracle, aalll the new ramp Is a c?ellnl?a
lmprovemen,t. N• the woocten .!lOUrteey c?oqk Ill right which WM eleQ tnlltallad.

••

After my sisler's Chrillmll stOI)o '
was published, I wondered lbout tht
litde boy, Roy. On a eall10 my sistet,·
I inquired ibhe lalew whai had haP.-.
pened to sui:h a IoVins. Jiving child
who thou~ of his liule brother arlit:
everyone else before himself. ~
sisiU said Roy and his farriily had,
moved out of her school district
rel!laitied · in the
same
county.
When Roy was
·about nille, his
f~ily's
l)ouse
caught on fire.
The father managed·to rescile all
the children and
. had placed .them outside. Howev~r,
Roy. believipg his little brolher was
still in the · ~ouse, ran· bqck into die
burning building and Jl!'rished. Aft~
teaming such a tragic e~d.ing tp.,
Roy's life~ I · ~Y related 1t to ,.a'
friend. The friend said. "Oh, he must.
have ~n an an1el placed here ~
elrih to watCh over his littie brother
until the brother liVa.~ capilbiC of tak,
ing care of1himself.:' I like .that 5e!i."
timenl; it helped soften · the Joss - I
felt.
, •.,
Durin1 the March flood this yef¥',
Stripes ~ resident chipmunk, ~ ,
to leave his burrow. He was one pf
the homeless· and his food st~
area flooded. I saw him checking Old
Ol!f walnut IRe just upriver from the
deck. The tree had a hollow~'(! ~i
knothole atiout I0 feet off t~
grou1Jd. On .his second .trip (lha( l
observed) to the hollowed area. fill
· ·had disappealed in· the tree when,.~
~ladinj! decided il wanted lhe plac~
for'a nest. Stripes stuck his head
of the 'hole to the bird's wrath. Til!'
bird must ha~e . terrifiec!' St{ipei
because he wailed a long iime td
come out. Stripes then climbed
down and ran swiftly 'for e,ovcr, atj'd
I never saw him return -lo the t.;ee -··1
know wh!:re Stripes slilyed fflt

oot

~~~!;~~~

6t
., ,

JI£5JD.ENTIAL • COMMIRCIAJ.

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL· MUSHROOM
RIVER GRAVEL
. COMPOST
Open Monday thru Friday 7:30am til 4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30' am-12 noqn

or We Deliver .
446-2114 or 245·5316

You Pick Up

•

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Crul~ f1.!1Pl., Tahoe Pkg., aplllt whlell ..........- ......... $14,410
1985.~,;H~:v. CAVAUER *3, Blue, A/T, AJC, All/Fit

•Backhoe
•Dozer
Work

ccon;inued (rom B-1&gt;

Section

.

HOLLEY BRO.S.
CON.STRUCTION .CO., Ill •
RODNEY. OHIO

·'

Word getting:out
om Ohio's 'bestkept s·ecret' -·
.

0

RENT·A.CABINS -One recent offering at F~ad Run Sta?a Park
1ra ttwo Rant·A.Ciblne. Each cabin featuraa ·acraenad doora and
Wlnda\ft, 't wo cote, a atove, table 1nd lantern.,ttare; P1rk Malll{ler
·
. Randy W1cht!ll' ehowe
. one ot tha park'e two A4i!ilt·A-Ciblne,
.

.

'

but eventually lie had'a
-:
our
I
pllicqcJ suiiflowcr ~s. out for
worked a11 day,:carrying
seeds to his new home. George and I
both noticed Stripes sitting on tl'lc ·
stump watching tbe' raging river. ' I
had never seen Stripes sir fadng t~c
· river and remaining so still: B'veri .
after the high .waters subsided, . we : .
spw Stripes siuing staring at the
.v.ater. (Whai he was thinking?) Ten
days passed witbout any· sight ~f
Stripes. I worried he had s!lccumb\'(1
to a predator. ,One day I glanced &lt;iut
the window and saw a chipmunk
scurrying fro,m the lower river bank·
across a grassy area. The ti il
appeared ratty, like Stripes'laii.·Two
weeks laler, I definitely saw Slripe~.
1'1!1 baffied by his disappearances,
~ut I'm ·hoping like the proverbial
bad penny. Stripes will keep return~
ing.
•
.
The Philadelphia Flower Show
was npl attended by mc... not enough
people signed up to go. Twenty were
ft!lC!Ied for cost effecti-veness and the
final count was 16 or. 17. Meigs
Counly will pro!IBbly sponsor another tour for ihe next year·~ sbow. If a
tour is plailncd next year. advertisements will be placed much ·earlier,
NEW DOCKS - Thttlll new floating pleetic docka replaced the older wooden dock Ill Forked Run
in neighboring counties, to
includins
Stata Park ·a nd houee the park' a. canoe and boat rentela. Hera, park natu,..llet Diana Klmee 111ft the
attract
.~le. Several people comdocks to examine tha lake'a water. In addition to 1he new floating docka, acceel w11 lmprov~ with the
addition of a concrata abutment.
Contlnlllid on.page C4 ·

:Qf hotels and area baseball teams up to the 19708
.

um.mer Leagues
WI"

We4s

c

w

lout·~·.....,.
May 21,
~12-llldtllli-bd)

·iATV 011 THI

May ao, 7:00 p.m.

u.y 21. 12 noon

12 noon

May 14, 8:30p.m.

May 14, 7:00p.m.

MoJ 22. e::JO p.m.

llor( 112. 1:00 p.m. •

~·-'-'"

Mlw15,12Noan

MIIJ15, 12Noan

,....., T
at4Jia.,... •

MoJ 13. e:30 p.m. MoJ 21. 7:00 p.m.

Yt1tllrl I I fiJ ............

By JAMES SANDS

....

May 20, 8:30 p.m.

(2Monllld2-..on)

......,.,..'-'"

(Froolon:ll•you_,

a.. ................. ,

_ _,_,

(I _.tnl1-·4107,.._oldl

·.NM 1, 8:30 p.m.

. . _ ........, .... .., . . I IMiltll ,,. ..

.NM 1, 7:00 p.m.
I

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ln....

. C111446·3362 for .More Information
I

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2

S'flf'lllllil ..... .:....- ,

Special Corraepondent
·:
In 1901 Adolphus Mink erected a
-·hotel at the corner of Second and
· Olive. 'That building would be
known by a number of na!lllls until
'
1977- when it was
destroyed by fire .
Among the. ·names
used by Mink were:
Alma Hotel (named
after his wi(e) and
Ho1el
Adolphus
(named after himself). Mink was born
.in 1859 in Addison Township. He
. came to Gallipolis. in the 18%5. In
I 899 he buik what has beeh called
. the Happy Corner building and in
I 90 I he . buill ttic three-story hotel
• across Olive S~Ret. In due lime
• Mink's brolher bouaht the Hotel
· ~lphus al)d r:han,ed the name to
· . the .Fr:enc:h Cily HOI~I . That name
. w• retained by the next two owners
· Otto Hunter and Stanley Evans.
The latter bou1ht the business in
: 1924 and opened the first Evans
Grocery there lhlt lillie year. Mr.
_Ev- ifipe81S to have sold the hotel
buli- to Robert~ in the late
19201. Ii wu Qucel! who chanJed
the of the ho!clto the Queen
Bee, a aamclhll would stkk for the
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· next five decades under Queen, Dale
Gilkey and others.
·
The Queen Bee Hotel; for several
years, . sponsored ' a baseball team .
rhat played in' the Ohio Valley Association. The ,OVA was a summer
aduh baseball league rhat numbered
among others: Gallipolis, Hanford.
Syracuse, Reedsville, Po111eroyMiddleport, Iloint Pleasant, W.Va.
Racine,,Bradbury and Clifton, W.Va.
The league operated from 1938
until the 1950s. Gallipolis' first entry
in that league in 1938 was called the ·
Gauls. The manarer was "Colt" Wilson' and the players were: Brothers,
Haskins, P. Valentine, W. Valentine,
Troth. ·. Clart-. Wilson and Allen
among others, The Gauls and Point
Pleasant· fought it Ol!t for ·the title.
Bradbury finished with only three
wins and Clifton was "0 for the sea-

In one key game late . in
1950 whco second place Hart·
Ji~rd was only a game behind
ttlc Bees, Bob Evims·tripled i~
the ninth in~ing off Dave Diles
with the ·ha.Cs loaded to win
the s~mc for .the Bees. The
title was won for the Bees
when Bernie Guinther threw a
no hitter against the Syracuse
Reds. Ironically Guinther had
started the year with Syracuse.
He had a dispute with the team
and joined Nelsonvill e in
another league before hooking
up with the Bees. The cKampionship game was played . by
'the way in early October:
· The pennant won by the
Bees was 9 feet by 4 feet and
~ung in the AII-Amcri~an TavC111 in !he Queen Bee Hotel for
Son."
,cvera' years. Members of !hat
In the late 1940s Syracuse hlld · ·
1950 team included: Emil
the best learn wldl the Gallipolis
· Thomas, Vic Hager, Bob
Bees coming in second•. Other
Wion, · Tommy Thompson,
league members in the tale 1940s ·
CORNER LOtiOPNG. ·
bJ Mu Tl~ lhOwa QuMn a. Frank Valenline , Fred Burincluded Racille, Reedsville. Poinl HNI.,....... wae ai'IO?al on
corner from 11101 to 1m. The I'IO?allfiOI'I': dette, John Lee, Leo Valentine,
Pleasant and Poqteroy-Middleport. - . d I 111111111111 talfllln the Ohio Valley Anoclatlon In the 1140e ,InC? Aldo Jeffers, Carl Baker, Gene
,
·
Welherholt, Eugene Pickens
Gallipolis had a line~up that had the 11SCM.
and
'lawrence Lee. The coach
catcher (Johnson) u the lead otT only nine losses. Hanfocd was sec- place team finished at 4-33. The
. man.
.
ond. Then came Rccd~vil~ Raclpe, pitchia11 sw in 1950 was Gene wu Dale Gilkey.,
•t-4 1951 the 'Bees started oul
In 19~ the Bees 1A!on the OVA Pomeroy-Mi!ldltport, Syracuse, Wctherholt who won his first 10 oat-,
by winning over 30 pmes against Point Pleullll and Portltlllll. Thlllut inp of the year.
111"'*1• Jhly played in the first half

"lit

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title game. · losing to Hartford.
Jumho Hall beat the Bees 3-1.· Top
hitters in 1951 were John Lee and
Leo Valenlinc. And · once again i~
1951 , the Bees had the ca1cher lis the
lead off hittc~. This time it was Larry
Lee. In the second half of the 1951
season the Bees fell apart. They
committed II errors in one garil!:
against Middleport. Fan interest
waned as the team slrugglcd to a 5'-8
record ovcl' tile. second -hal r of the
season.

Interest became so weak in thC
1952 season that about · halfway
through the sca~on the OVA wa~ dissolved. Reedsville beat Albany for
the title ..
Gallipolis finished 6-8, gOOd .
fifth place out of eight teams, The
line-up for the Bees' last game· 1mi1
.year was: Thomas, Wctberholt,
Wion and Canaday in lhe infield aNI
Ecker, Wilson and Gordon dn the
outfield. Holley wa.• the catcher, alld
Valentine wa.• the pitcher. After OIIC
more ·year Bees baseball came tO' a ,
close, though the OVA continued
for a few inorc years.
'
JIIMI._.. II I 'fNICIII.;,:.
raapondent ot the lunCI!ily'
Tim II 11 1111111. Hllllddt II WI'
II Wlluw Dr., Spr"dtgbDtO, Oltlt

for

on·

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�Pllgi

C2 •.- · ·•--J.-1..,.

Sunday, April rt, 1117
-------------------- ----

Pomauoy •lllddl1port •·PI!IIIpolle, OH • Paint P11111nt, WV

ilt"1181'

1

.......,, April

•
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Beat
of the
Bend

~--

Is loving therapist a martyr of miracle?
By ANN LANDIRS "
Dear Ann Landen: Our 22-ycwold claupa is • beautiful, loving

takes and Ill- but we grieve for her
lost yi&gt;utb and the years of diffiCUlty

and religious penon who recently

completed her training as a physical

therapist Much to our dismay, she
bu announced that she is in love and
planning to marry her first patient.
'The maJI is 20 years her Sj:nior and
bedridden. Even after years of physical ther:apy, the best he can hope for
is a wheelchair. He will never walk.
We· have tried to explain to
"Dolores" that patients sometimes
transfer feelings of gratitude and
hero 'worship, which are mistaken
for love, to their nurses and doctors.
She does not believe this and insists
that compassion is as strong a bond
as love. Moreover, she is convinced
that God gave her to this man as ·a
gift and whatever sacrifices she
must make are · "the will of the
Lord." We respect her religious
views but fear that she is turning
herself into a maityr.
This man has . suffered terribly
and considers Dolores a "miracle" ,
that has enhanced his sad existence
enormously. I know we should keep
quiet and let her live her life -· mis-

CARL AND SARA DILL

Dills celebrate 53rd
lipolis, they have a son, ·Paul (Betty)
Dill, and a daughter, Carla (David)
Carter, all of Pomeroy. They have
four grandchildren and three great· ·
grandchildren. .

POMEROY·· Carl and Sara Curtis Dill of Pomeroy celebrated their
53rd anniversary 'recently wiih a
family celebration at their home.
: Married on April IS, 1944 in Gal·

MILLARD AND EDNA COE

Coes to observe 50th
COOLVILLE -- Millard R. and He retired from Union . Carbide
Edna J. Coe or Coolville will cele- Chemicals and Plastics in Marietta.
bra te their 50th wedding anniversary - - They are the parents of eight chil·
Saturday, May 3, with an open dren , Roger of Edmon\), Okla.;
reception at the North Bethel U.M. Ronald of Hilliard; . Dennis of
Chlirch Fellowship Hall, old Route Coolville; Donna Wolf of long Bot·
7,.Coolville from 2 to 5 p .m·.
. tom; Roben in the U.S. Air Force ,
·The couple was married Satur- Little Rock, Ark.; Diane Wolfe of
day, May 3, 1947 in Parkersburg. Reedsville ; Pamela Bond of
Guysville; and Paul at home. They
W.Va. by Rev. Marvin E. Hall. '
' Edna is the daughter of the late have 17 grandchildren and three
Frank C . and Brittie Jane Tedrow great-grandchildren,
.
.
The family requests that gifts be
Conley,
Millard is the son of the late Willia!R omitted.
·QJtl and Dovie Myrtle Counts Coc.

community Calendar is published as a free ser·
me to non·proflt groups wishing to announce meet·
lilgs and special ·events. Tne calendar Is not
Oealgned to promote sales · or fund-raisers of any
pec Items are prlnte. d as space permits and cannot
guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
·
Sunday, April 27 .
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.

:: LECTA. Norman Snyder of Gideon religion to ~peak
:t0 :30 a.m. Walnut Ridge Church with Sun\lay School at
j'30a.m.

.·

'

.• ••

.

til clean

tl1cir

rooms, put every'thina away in its
that lie ahead. Please advise us. •• proper. place, clean the floor and
Heartbroken in Orlando
change. the shee~ every Satunlay
Dear Orlando: There is little that morning. If everything was done
can be done to counteract the "m•- properly by noon, theY got to go to
tyr complex." These individuais are the movies or whatever. If not, they
compelled til sacrifice themselves helped me with the rest or the cleanfor what they perceive as a noble ing and did yardwork.
Dear Ann Landen: Sum won
. cause. Trying tolalk them out of it is
There is a simple way to deal tolled me wee wood knot knad two
an exercise in futility.
.
with children effectively. Let them learn how too spell becaUse computThere's always the .chance that know · exactly what you expect of ers wood dew it four us. Eye disthis really is love. Pull back, say no them. Yelling is not the answer. It agree. Dew ewe? •• I&gt;; E. in St. Loui·s
more and be there for her when real- accomplishes nothing. Taking away Park, Minn.
ity sets in. Dolores is going to need privileges is what works. Take my
a lot of support in the days ahead, word for it. I've been there. -Dear St. louis Park: Ewe our
and it will be up to you to provide it. H.T.B. in Encinitas, Calif.
. write. Thank ewe four a good
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
Dear H.T.B. : YoU.. words of wis- clothes look at what "progress" has
reply to a leiter you received from a dom deserve to be taped on refriger- dun fore education.
mother who said she was tired of ator doors in every home where chilyelling at her kids to pick up after dren from S years of age through .18
My laugh for the day (Credit
themselves. Nothing , is accom- ·reside . They 11re inclined to , be Dick E. Bird): A father answered the
plished by yelling_ except a Sore "motber-deaf" untill)ley hear some- phone when · his daughter 's
throat and frazzled nerves.
. . thing that jeopardizes their social boyfriend called. "No, ibis . is not
I am a 73-year-old grandmother , life. Being grou.nded is the . most Dreamboat," he said, "This is the
with an excellent memory. I ·raised effective way to. get ICCRS to shape Supply Ship."
two sons alone. Their father was one up. I recommend it. '
of those famous "deadbeat dads." I
Dear .Readers: What follows . is
Send questions to Ann LaJiclen,
supponed my children without help something for computer buffs who Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenfrom the state or federal govern- rely on spell checkers to contem- . lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Aqeles,
ment. By the time my sons were 10 plate:
Calif. 90045

Ann
Landers

, NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
· We are overwhelmed with
"Where can I find ... '' questions, so
we're going to do anothe~ column
devoted to answers for these. Please,
· dear readers, clip this and other
columns we write about "where to
find" items when we print catalog
addresses.
It will take you a phone call to
order the catalog, and .you'll probably find not only the item you are
looking "for but many others you
might eventually need. For
instance ... readers are looking for:
. A ZIPPER PULLER, A MANUAL CARD SHUFFLER AND- A
"GRABBER" (a .long-handled
device that will extend to grab items
from off shel'vt:s or from across the
room): These are ali available from
the best and most comprehensive
catalog we have found yet for aids
and appliances for. independentliv.
ing. This 162-page publication &lt;;ontains a wide range of products
designed especiallr, for the visually
impaired, blind, hearing impaired,
arthritic and physically challenged ~
· and their new catalog also includes
a section specifically for children·~ '
needs.
·
· WE LOVE THIS CATALOG!
The catalog costs $1 and is wonh
every penny. To order, write to
MAXI AIDS, P.O. Box 3209, Farmingdale, NY 11735; 1-800-522·
6294.
BARREL STOVE: James Ryan
of Greeley, Neb., is looking for a kit
to make a two-barrel stove. The kit
and directions (you supply the 55gallon barrels) are available from
Lehman's Hardware, P.O. Box 41,
Kidron, OH 44636; 3.3()-857-5757. '

To our readers: If you can't find baked-good recipes as well.
w.hat you · are looking for because ·
Aspic cullers are tiny lillie cutters
yoU' don't think it's being fllade any- in the shapes of diiUJionds. spade$.
more, send for the Lehman's caialog hearts ·and clubs used to cut aspic
($3). If it's still being made, they into decorative bits ·· but lots of
probably · have it. One of the things people (including the person who
we really appreciate when ordering wrote to· us) uses them to make
from Lehman's is that orders over "sculpture" dough decorations for
$25 are shipped at no charge.
craft projects.
·
BAKER'S . AMMONIA . AND
SEWING . MACHINE NEE-.
ASPIC CUTI'ERS: We love a cata- DLES AND SEWING MACHINE
log called "Sweet Celebrations;'' . PARTS: We get a huge number of
7009 Washington Ave. S., Edina, requests· for these. Unfonunately, we
·MN 55439; 1-800-328-6722. They · can't answer each one. However, for
have anything and everyihirig you all of you who have wrillen, we sug-·
will ever 'need for baking, candy- gest you send for the Atlama Thread .
making and decorating •• tllcy will and Supply Co. catalog, 69~ Red
even make an "edible image" for Oak Road; Stockbridge, GA 30281;
you. Send them aS- by 7-inch photo 1-80Q..847-IOOI. · They carry an
and they will transfer it onto edible enormous inventory of almost
wafer paper! the catalog costs '$3, everything you will ever need for
but again is worth every penny. It's tailoring and sewing, from thread to
the only place to find impossible:to· . · needles. for sewing machines, to
find bakers' and confectionery ·repair and replacement parts .. and
items.
on and on. The people who answer
. .P.S. For those of you who might the phones, if you decide to call, are
wonder what Baker's ammonia is, helpful and knowledgeable.
CLIP-IT: Repl;u:ement pao;ts for
it's an ingredient in Scandinavian
cookies and, before baking powder Presto cookers and cooker-canners
came along, was used in other are available from the Service

I&gt;epartment, National Presti&gt; Indus·
tries, Inc., Eau Claire, WI 54703'
3'703. When you send for their pans ·.
list/order form, please include a
business-sized, stamped, · selfaddressed envelope.
I
.

'

Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at ·
P.O .. Box 240, Hanland, VT 05048.
Questions of general interest will
appear in the column. Due to the
volume · of mail, personal . replies
cannot be provided. .

Talk is cheap.
So's the heep.

a

***

***

CHESHIRE ·TOPS meeting 10 to. II a.m. Cheshire
United Methodist Church.

•••

THURMAN. Thurman Grange lt1416 meeting 7:30
p.m.

***

GALLIPOLIS • Hearthne mu!racuve and educatiOnal
=upport group 2 p.m. French 500 Room at Holzer Med1Cal Center.
·

GALLII&gt;OLIS - Choose to Lose Diet Class 9 a.m.
Grace Unite~ Methodist Church.

•

PATRIOT · Southwestern Alumni Association meeting 7 p.m. at the elementary schQol to finalize plans for

••• •

GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and Fishes from 12 to I :30

.

..

•••

.

•

WELCOMED

I

'

i

I
Pager Special

Mitsubishi
AH 129/$29
. .

3 months service and

Motorola TVM200/$2.9

page~ lor $69.95 .

Motorola DPC550/$29

Offer expires May 9, 1997.

.

'

., '

l.

Is·blood sugar.level a health ri ·'
ByrfiJf'b~~

~c~;~.:Mf~outine .

fasting blood test iecently showed
and my sugar is 140. Should I
worry?
DEAR READER: The blood
contains two major fats : cholesterol
and triglycerides. A normal triglyceride level should not exceed 150
milligram s per deciliter. ' Levels
above that are commonly associated
· with pancreatic disease, a high-fat
diet, alcoholism. certain prescription
drugs (oral contraceptives, steroids .
and others), kidney disorders , genet"
ic fJictors -- and diabetes .
Although your tri~lycerides are
unquestionably high, I am also
intrigued by your abnormal fasting
blood sugar. which should not
exceed 120 mgldL. I suspect that
you.have diabetes, with an associated triglyceride elevation. Of course,
your primary-care physician is the .
.
·
best judge of this .
r II bet that if you begin a diet for
your diabetes· (no sugar or concentrated sweets), your triglyceride ·
level will fall as your blood sugar
. becomes normal .
·
. Most people a!J'· aware of the
dangers ·of diabetes (heart .disease,
kidney disorders, retinal damage,
and so forth), but recent medical
studies have suggested that elevated
trigI ycerides can contribute to heart
disease and other ailments. There·
fore. your attention to diet may yield
. two important benefits:'· control of
both the sugar .and the triglycerides,

According to the television promos. the Dukes of Hazard and Knots
Landing casts are doing reunion
. shows. Shucks, they wouldn't have
had to d.o that for me. Do keep smil~
ing.

.

~

.....

·$ /,;()/{!/

BEDROOM SUITE

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NOW

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May 9, 1997.

·CELLULA

G lip I 1502 Easiwr! Avenue 614/441-1547 PanliiiOf 204 Watt 2nd Street 614/992-7070
Jade- 384 Main Street 614/286-6073

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with resulting health benefits.
As~ your doctor about this and
.follow his instructions. While you
may need prescription drugs (~ ·
lower botb the sugar and the blood•·:1
fat levels, a prudent ·diet· alone majQ
solve the problem.
. , ~~'i
To give you more infonnauon , J,;•
am sending you a copy of my Heal~
Report "Diabetes Mellitus." OthiD:
readers who would like a co~~
should send $2 plus a long, self;,.;l
addressed, stamped envelope 1!&gt; P.~..,
Box 2017, Murray Hill Station. Ne~j
York, NY 10156. Be sure to menu~

.,e.
t he 111

.
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. ""M
DEAR DR. GOTI: I have fou~
that two cod liver oil gel caplets siG:
nificantly reduce my pain of arth ~,
tis .-What is your opinic'm?
.~
· DEAR READER: As I've sa ~
before, you can argue with success:
Nonetheless, cod liver oil is not co
sidered by ·most authorities to ~ 11':! ·
particularly effective antidote f41:i:
arthritis pain.
'Jf:"
Non-steroidal antl-inflammatol:lrt
drugs, such as ibuprofen and othe~
generally work better and . wi~~.
greater consistency.
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111 IAIT MI!MQRIAL DRIVI
.
IIIN1M

PETER
GOT'r, M.D.

there.
from Nazi pressure.
..
.'
The enchantment of the Kennedy
"F~rsts ' : play a prcv'admg role m .•
dan inevitably plays a part. On disthe e.xhthlt, :larg~ly becau s.e t~ ~"'
play is a handwritten letter by
copynght ofhcc IS located .m the
Jacqueline Kennedy pra1smg her
Library of Congress. In add111on \'L,
wedding photographer .for taking
the first rough draft of the Declara... .
" unbelievably perfect" pictures that , tion of Independence, there' s an
"get all the things it is fun to
application from Frank Sinatra and ·
remember."
' his "Hoboken Four " to appear on
Above thi s happy memory is a \one of the first radio shows (tile .,
typed memo signed by Josef Stalin, . group made it); a first -edition Wa!t
admonishing the United · States for Disney comic book and a No. 32 1
refusing to open a second front in Superman; a map of Alcx.andna, Va;~ ·:;.
World War II to protect the Soviets drawn . b~ _9_e~~~e Washmgton · ',-' ,

Motorola Piper/$49

•

DR. OOT1'

th~t my triglyceride level is 2.000

Audiovox 430/$39

·.

.

good service is about helpitig people to approach customers, Semczuk
have a pleasurable dining experi- says:
•
ence.
- As soon as they sit. Thal ini~,
"A lot of. times when I teach peo- contact is imponant. Cusromers
pie I try to put them in the guesU ' should be brought something
shoes," Semczuk says. "I ask them menu, water, bread, etc.
'why do you want to make it plea- When drinks are low. "Wlli!li::
surable for the guesu?' The. answer there's no water or iced tea, tba1t:a:.
is because you want thCm to come frustrating . People feel you're
back, ask for you and get a nice tip ." being auemive," says Semczuk.
· Maria Castro, who works as a
~ When dine'rs finish ~ii';l;
pantime waitress at Casa Maitinez " There's nothing worse than a
in Paradise Hills, Calif., didn't have plate of food staring at you. It
a clue about her job before watching be cleared within 30 seconds."
the video.
- When it's time for dessen.
''You really take things for grant· · important to offer coffee !or
ed. It's nice to know there is actual· promptly because many tifRCS
ly a format for this . l've implement· pie have to get back to work.
edit at work and things have gone a
- Time for the check. " A lot
lot smoother and I have gotten better times. people are running late or
tips."·
lun~h and it' s important to get
check there quickly."
Rest optional breakout
To order· .the video
There are five key times for servers call 1-800-637 -3770.

Motorola TVS200/$29

Offer expires

'•hgeC3

Not 12199.9$ I. tl~hJ CO/or
. Now S.v, 63.63\

Birkenstock

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PI

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VIllAr

'10 Off

•••

........

Library of c ·angress ·displays pi.ec~es ··ulustrating~.merican life

Copyright1997 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

·r ----=:---------------------------:---'-----,

Tuesday, Aprill9

.

..

'' 'J J

Moaday, April28
'

ly VANillA WlWAII8 SNYDER

a........ Nlwa &amp;.rvlce

)

service takes more than -a smile ~

Quiz Team
advances in
competition

Turning up those .hard-to-find items
By ANNE 8. ADAr.tS and

~·Delivering ·good

..

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p.m. St. Peter!s Episcopal Church.

.

$

.•
....

old, they h8d

Pome:oy •lllddlaport • o.lllpolla, OH • Point Plelunt, WV

need to know," .says Semczuk, whO Angeles Professional Servers Inc.
worked as a waitress in college, but arid created a trainin.a video. "A lot
now trains restaurant and hotel staffs of people set hired and don' t know
,
Being a waiter or waitress isn 't in food service techniques.
these things. It's a refresher course.
1 jU&gt;t about carrying plates and taking
When a waiter returns with a It's also for people who want to get
By BOB
check,, it's proper to place it in the ~tlirted in food ~rvice."
orders.
HO~UCH
It's about realizing that when a diner middle of the table and not ask
The 42-minute video covers all
squinns in· his seat or toys with his . who's paying. Also, a server should the basics - technical skills, cusWith so many of us having food that he 's probably dissatisfied approach your table within 30 sec- tomer attitude. appearance' and even
learned the power of l"'•yer through with the meal. It's also about posi- onds afler you ' re seated.
proper etiquette tips like " don 't
personal' experiences involving life· tioning yourself to take an order
She says part of ,the problem with touch the guests" and '.'don't inject
threatening illnesses and emotional without blocking or invading any- getting good service is the profes· yourself into conversation" and
situations which occur in our lives, one's ·personai space. It's even about sion 's. lack of regard .
.
" maintain good eye contact."
it's ·small wonder that · the Meigs knowing when to stay out of a cone
. " In Europe they have a different
The .video even instructs on
.
'
· County observance ·of National Day versat1on.
approach," says ~emczuk . ' lt'i . a " suggestive selling" techniques like
.
of Prayer has been so w.ell attended. ·
Those are just some of the inter- high profession. Over here you have offering the house wine an~ dessen.
Nearly 500 people were .in atten- esting tidbiu you' ll get from " How some longtime waiters who work in Viewers are told to practice key
dance at last year's observance an.d To Be The Perfect Waiter and Wait· nice restaurants and make $50,000 phrases and use terms such as
this year . the total attendance is ress ... and Earn Great Tips !," a train- and love ·it, but on the other hand " fresh, " "fluffy" and "light" to
expected to go even higher.
you have actors or students who are peak interest in . appetizers and
ing video.
The ·annual observance has been
'dessens . Because, as the narrator
Food service is not nearly as easy just doing it temporarily."
set for this Thursday, May I, in front ai it seems, according t.o Nadia SemCustomers eKpect- and demand says in the video, "better service
of the Courthouse in Pomeroy from .. czuk, creator or the video.
- good service. That' s why Sem- means better tips."
11:30 a.m . to 12:30 a.m ., and resiBut the video also in&lt;i&lt;tli th•t
"There are some basic thin2s vou czuk started her comoanv. T.os
dents are invited to attend for the full
hour or even for as little as five minutes if that's all the time .they can
•
manage.
During the service public prayers
will be offered on behalf of natipnal,
state and local government leaders
for for churches, families, schools
land communities. There will be
music by members of the Rejoicing
. GALLIPOLIS - From Gallipolis,
Ohio to San Antonio , Te ..s - that's
Life Christian · School and Sheriff
James .Soulsby. Drew Webster Post
where members of the Junior Quiz
39, American Legion, will present
Team at the First Church of tbe
Nazarene · have worked their way
the flags and a balloon launch will.
follow the observance. Pomeroy
from.
They have panicipated in three
· officials have authorized closing
regional invitational tournaments, a
Coun St., during the hour-long service.··
zone ioumamerU and a district tour. TOP· NOTCH • Megan Lucaa,
Rodgers, Trlcla
Related activities will get under'
nament, allowing them to represent
Lucas, Meghin Mills and Candice
·
members of the
the Gallipolis church · at the
way today at4 p.m., with the· beginFirst Church of the Nazarane Junior Quiz team, will travel to San
ning ·of a Bible reading marathon at
Nazarene denominational General Antonio, Texas June 21 for 1 national comPetition.
·
·1
the stage on the Pomeroy. parking
.Assembly in San Antonio, JQne 21.
Megan Lucas, Tricia Lucas, Candice Lindeman,
lot. A prayer vigil at the Ppmeroy
United Methodist Church will begin
Meghan Mills and Mallory Rodgers have been meetat the same hour. These two ·activiing twice a week during Sunday School ~nd ag~in o.n ·
ties ,i,m continue each day from 8
Wednesday evenings srnce September w1th their
a.m. to 8 p.m. concluding at IOa.m.
coaches, Anita Littlejohn 311d Marsha Rodgers to
study Matthew's Gospel. The 28 chapters of Matthew
on Thursday, May I, the day of the
large public service on the Counhave been divided into divisions. Each member has
studied the scriptures in depth ; an&lt;l Lindeman, team
house steps.
·
· Also on Thursday there will be a , captain this year, found it necessary to memorize
prayer breakfast for public officials . many complete passages of scriptures.
The team was quizzed over different sections dur·
and · members of the clergy at the ,
Pomeroy· United M¢thodist Church : ing the invitationa)s and the entire book·of Matthew at
and a 7"'.m. on Thursday a concert · the zqne quiz and again at the district quiz.
of prayer will .be held at the Ash ,
Street Baptist Cjlurch in Middlepon. 1
At the district level, three of the girls had perfect
Les Hayman. coordinator for the
rounds. Lindeman ,- Lucas and Rodgers also received a
SHOW OF EXCELLENCE • At the dletrlct
Meigs County observances, notes
'total score or 285 out of a possible 300 qualifying
level,
Mallory Rodgers, Megan Lucas and Can· ·
that the public is invited to attend the
them to travel to San Antonio. While in Texas, they
dice
Lindeman
r-Ived 1 total score of 285 out
marathon, the prayer vigil, the Courwill ~ quizzing with other Junior Quizzers from
of I pOSSible 300•
tho11se observance and. the concert
across the United States and many fore1gn countnes.
of prayer. :
.'
_Th~R)e .,Qf this year's . observance
is "In God We Trust". Pomeroy and
Middleport officials and the county
comll)issioners have signed proclapermanent show in the library' s his· 109 Smart.Ways \o Serve Bread, Our
mations proclaiming Thursday as a· _ay JENNIFER ROTHACKER
.
tory,
Librarian . of Congress . James Outstanding Energy Food ," offers a
. ·
AssoCiated Preslt Writer
day of prayer. ·
few suggestions. The 1934 manual
1 somehow get a bit nostalgic
. WASHINGTON (AP) - ·Bread: Billington said Friday.
Editing the collection w~ the not only gives recipes for croutons
when 1 see the wrecking ball It's tough to pass ~p wnh a steammg
toughest
challenge, although it will . and Melba toast , but also provides
destroying older buildings and older plate .of spaghe111, b~t how ~any
homes being tom down to make Amencans realtze II s a national be changed occasionally, said cura- ''Roll Etiouette."
And there's Johnny Carson as
room for "progress".
treasure - even when it's .Melba tor Abby Smith. The staff wanted to
host
of "The Tonight Show" in 1965
select items that would create "a
Often it seems a shame when toast, cheese rolls and croutons?
with a little tender loving care the
How about the dime novel "Mer· portrait of who we are, who we ' ve with Groucho Marx as tne guest.
structures could be restored to seryc ciless Matt," featuring rogue Indi - been, and what the pos sibilities for The video clip features Carson reading a letter - "don't roll through it"
well for many more years.
an who thrives on killing hapless our future are," Smith said.
Marx warns - from the Librar.y of
So who are we?
We're observing the 60th birthday backwoods settlers? Or the senti Congress
asking if Marx ~ould be
Well . the Betty Crocker cookof our home on High St., in Pomeroy mental show tune "Some Enchanted
book, "Vitality Demands Energy: interested in depositing h1s letters
this year. The house· was built in Evening."
1937 by the Pomeroy Cement Block
· These histi&gt;&lt;:ical gems a~e pan of
Co. for Mrs. Grctta Price. Mrs . "The Treasures of the .Library. of
Pri~e · had been stuck on the low- Congress," an exhibit slated to open
hinds in the severe flooding that year May I to celebrate the library 's ·
and apparently chose the high on gra.ndly restored Thomas Jeffe.rson
Lincoln Hill location for her new Butldmg dunng. •ts IOOth anmver·
home so that she never again would sary ~ear.
. .
have to reside in the flood zone.
Wrth a $1 . 1 mtlhon grant from
The home has served us well for · xerox, the library has pulled .240
32 years and sin~e it docs provide rare anifaCIS from liS · JIO·mllhon·
comfortable accommodations for all 1tem cdllect1on to create the largest
of our "good stuff'. this is where
we'll undoubtedly "wrap it up" .
Much of the home still has the "original" so small wonder that one thing
or another frequently needs repair.
But that's okay we can handle ihat so
much easier than even. thinking of
lOlA- lO
.
'
cDIIntry Flor,
moving all of the "good stuff'.
All . .

Galli a community calendar~--

:
J.

F
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rt, 1117

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�DANIEL AND JODI SICKELS

Adams-Sickels

...
...

.,.

GALLIPOLIS - Jodi A. Adams
and Daniel B. Sickels were united in
.,.: marriage March 15 with a private
. .: ceremony anheir residence officiated by Jim Patterson.
Jodi wore a gown cr~ated by Sew
Perfect. She wore a hat designed and
made by hei mother, Ann Adams .
Maid of honor was Tandra

Adams, sister &lt;if the bride. Best man
was Mike Sickels, brother of the
groom . .
Escorted to the altar by her father,
the bride was given in marriage by
her parent~.
f'ollowing the ceremony, an open
reception was held at thetr residence.

By KAREN S. PETERSON
·
USA TODAY
· Men benefit from marriage more than women. ·
Or do they?
Researchers agree that both sexes generally do
·better married than single.
But in terms of their physical and mental
health, men seem to have the edge.
Well- maybe.
·
Experts have been quarreling for decades over
which sex benefits more from marriage. ·They
come down firmly on both sides. ·
.•
"Marriage protects men from depression and
makes women more vulnerable," says University
of Washington psychologist Neil Jacobson. "It is ·
the best evidence that marriage is an institution
that primarily benefits men."
Married women. are twice as likely to be
depressed as married men, Jacobson says. His
work on women and depression has been recognized by the American Association for Marriage
and Family Therapy.
Psychologist David Myers represents the flip
side. "In all industrialized .countries that I am
aware of, married adults report themselves as
happier than unmarrieds - and ·the ·findings are
similar for married men and for women,". says
Myers, author · of "The Pursuit of Happiness"
(Morro.w, $20).
While women tend to be more depressed than
men, men are five times more apt to be alcoholics,
Myers says. "Men have ptoblems that are equally dysfunctional.,.
·
·
. Such researchers debate from the protected
turf in academia. But a new book just may propel
the issue into the mainstream: "Marriage Shock:
The Transformation of Women Into Wives" (Viilard, $23). · '
The author is Dalma Heyn, whose "The Erot-

Association. He is a member of the
American Medical Association
Council on Ethics and Judicial
Affairs, and was recently honored as
Internal Medicine Physician of the
Decade by the American Medical
Association. Dr. Clade will speak
on "A Physicians Perspective on
Ethical issues." .
The day's events· will close with
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, director of
Chaplaincy Services at Holzer Medical Center and Nancy Smith .. R.N.,
patient represeptative at the hospital
addressing "pthical Issues at Hoizer
Medical Center: Pastoral Involve· ..

ment"
Seating
is
limited so an
immediate
reservation is
recommended.
Th~ cost of the
seminar
includes · coffee
breaks, lunch,
materials and a
certificate
of
Rev. Peul
attendance. Reg·
Btirlflln
istration may be
made by calling
the Chaplams office at 446-5053.

"Molt parents are reluctant to
"To children, a strancer is a
bogeyman. a scary cuy," says Cope, bear about and talk to their children
,
Everyday the news is filled with · author of "Stranger Danger: How · about this subject," says Cope.
• stories about adults who abduct and To Keep Your Child Safe" (Cader "They think it can't happen here."
Cope was inspired 10 write the
hann children, feeding fears that the Books; $7.95). "He is not a pleasant
world is a dangerous place.
guy who maylJG knows your name. book after a neighborbood 9-year• ::
Keepins children safe is a par• Parents need to have a simple rule old boy was abducted at gunpoint
; •: enl's primary responsibility, a chal- with children - not to talk or go while walking.home from the school
::: lenge even when children are tots with·any adult except a trusted adult bus stop. He was later murdered.
Violent crimes against children
•: • teth\lred to our side; infinitely harder that the parent designates - Grand::: when they head to school beyond ma, Aunt Suzy, whoever. The child have reached "epidemic" propor·
should never he il) the position of lions. Cope says, quoting studies by
• • our protective reach.
How can we teach children to be having to decide whether to trust an the American Medical Association.
"You can hardly pick up a newspaweful' without being afraid?
adult or talk lo an adult"
"Stranger Danger" provides per or tum on TV without seeing
Carol Soret Cope, a· Miami psy- ·
· .chologist and lawyer, says warning safety rules and dialogues to help that someone has been abducted or
kids, ''Don't talk to ·strangers!" is parents teach their children. how to missing. They say when a child is
abducted, his life expectancy is 48
not enough.
be cautious.

ic. Silence of the American Wife'[ created·a buzz cal work associated with this responsibility is
on tile talk-show circuit in 1992. Then she said extracted from their mental and phys1cal health
women's sexuality is stifled as they try to become reserves," Gottman says.
perfect wives.
-Bowling Green University sociologist Gary
Now she says their voices are squelched out- Lee says research has supported "a gender differside the bedroom as they try to accomplish the ence for quite a long time. We have a lot of studsame impossible task.
ies that show, in a variety of ~ifferenr ways, men
From largely anecdotal evidence, Heyn benefit more from marriage than women."
believes that when even assertive, independent
. Lee· speculate. the happiness gap. may have
women hear wedding bells, they give iQ to latent something to·do with the fact that ma~ed women
voices in their heads telling them to become duti- still have more roles to play than mamed men.
ful wives.
.
"Study after study shows that even when men
:'They unwittingly give up much of what they and women both work full time, wome~ do more
enjoyed and enjoyed about themselves as well as of the housework and chtld care. That IS narrowwhat their husbands enjoyed about them, in order ing, but it is still a very real gap."
to aspire to a more conventional, more conformYounger married women· may be unhappy, he
ing, more proper and modest and toned-down ver- says, because today coupks go into marriage
sion of themselves called a 'wife."' she says.
"firmly committed to equahty, but then usually
Although men feel . pressured to earn money, the woman gets the short end of the: stick."
they don't face what women do: an internal
He also muses that marriage tends to be idealdemand "to give up their own goals and become ized more by women than men. "Women are still
selfless," she says.
socialized to believe marriage is the most imporSeveral a~Cademic heavyweights might agree timt life transition they will make. It is not the
with her, although she calls on :'boxes ~f letters" same for men. So when the marriage.isn't perfect,
from frustrated women to illustrate her point, it may be a bigger. disappointment for women
while they point to studies:
·
than men."
.
- University of Washington psychologist
Lee, however, 'sounds a vety big cautionary
John Gottman reviewed the literature on marital alarm about the male-female happiness gap.
happiness and found "substantial evidence that "What is easy to exaggerate is the degree of this
marriage disproponionately benefits men" in difference. It tends to be relatively small."
marital satisfaction, life satisfaction and rates of
Other respected researchers debunk what they
physical and mental health problems.
call the myth that legions of married women are
His own study of long-term marriages found unhappy.
that in happy marriages, the health of husbands
Texas . A&amp;M . psychologist · Wendy Wood
and wives are similar. But in unhappy marriages, recently completed a major review of marital
the wives nave more. mental and physical prob- studies, primarily in North America. She finds the
lems.
tried and true: Marriage makes both men and
He speculates that women take on the burden women happier. But she also finds "married
of fixing such unions.' "The emotional and physi- women a're slightly happier than married men."

Hill-Towne

·~Loose
ends .. ··--------•
Continued from page C1
they would have loved to
:have gone , but they didn't learn of
the tn p in time and had other c?m.mitments. The package of overmght
s lodgings, tickets to the flower show
g and h1stonc cuy bus tnp, and bus
fare including tips, was very reasonable. The buses provided for such

mented

~

to.urs are usually comfortable.
roomy and the drivers friendly, safe
and couneous. So, hope to see all of
you on the tour in 1998.

At 35 a ISO
(Across from Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, OH) .

Dorothy Sayre and her huaband George,
formerly of Meiga County, moved back

about 'thrH yura ago Md now realde In 1
houu lacing the Ohio RIY&lt;Ir juat bolow

Syrec::uae.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Tlme•Senllnel Staff
POMEROY •• If enthusiasm is
any measure of the success of a program, then this year's "Yesteryear"
is a hit
Two mornings a week for the
past two months classes of fifth
graders from around tbe county
. have been bused from their schools
10 the Meigs Museum in Pomeroy
to participate in the program, one
class at a time on a designated day.
They come knowing ,about the
pioneer craft work offered by s~riior
citizen volunieers and excited about
leariling to make something they
can take home and enjoy.
"This is a lot of fun," comment·
ed one Riverview Elementary student as he hammered away· on his
. tin punching project. He was creating a teddy bear pi'cture.
·The activities conducted by volunteers from the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program .(RSVP) con·
sists of learning a new skill ·lealhercnift, candle dipping, tin
punching, embroi(lering, quilting.
rag basket making, cooking and
hakin~. or genealogy -- their
choice ..
The program is g~ared to
encourage youngsters to look•back
to the crafts and skills of generalions past as a creative source for
enjoyment in their own time. It is a
call to reflect on the lifestyle of
their gran&lt;lparents and to come to
an appreciation of thai .
During their time at the museum
they also see a moYie on Meigs
County to gain some perspective.on
.... bistory, an,d view the many artifacts
on display there.
. This is the lith year that the
program has been held at the Meigs

~ Elks scholarships available
~

GALLIPOLIS - Educational
are available to gradu:ftUing Seniors from.Gallia and Meigs
:p:ountics and Mason County, W.Va.
fhrough the Gallipolis Elks Lodge
~holarships

J1107.

·

~

All amounts awarded will be p~id
irectly to the college or umvers1ty
f the applicant's · choice. Awards
ill be based on the applicant's
IIIIICial need and. scholastic and
qualilles. The applicant
~
print in ink or type the needml'wa a.-ion and should see that

t:::=·p

Toys
Everyday Needs. · ·

all parts of the application are completed.
The application must be accompanied with a transcript of the student's grades and a letter of recom. mendation. The deadline for submission of the applications to the lodge
IS June 9.
Scholarship founs should be
returned to: Gallipolis Elks Lodge
1;107, Past Exalted Ruler's Associa· tion, c/o Dan Vance; P.O. Box 303,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . ·

I •

Customer &amp; Employee Appreciation
·Celebration of
MARGO SWISHER
Retail Office Manager
being named top
Community Bank manager in the
Star Bank Corporation ·

Uu;; t , t i

#t('tb.t,

Uft lo Alglll: Nancy Hokt, Tiller; Glenna Snydtr, CSR; M1rgo,llrlnc:h
1liiJneger; ~ Veith, Tiller Supervl-; Mary Enna, Ttller.
·

Margo ·and Staffinvile their ()Wtomen to' atop by the
office tlais UJeek. Refre•hment• "'ill be ae111ed:

380 Upper Rlvtr'
.

MAKING RAG BASKETS - Using carpet rags wound around
craft rope, baskets were created by the filth gredera attending
Yeateryeer. Here Brandl Thomas of Pomeroy Elementary works
on her basket under the watchful eye of RSVP volunteer June
Ashley.

,

•

..

•' .....

-A~"'&lt;'-'••'

-~- ~=="'

~

Galllpo118, Ohio ·

..
•
'

'·
.'&gt;

,.
••

'

f-.

nN PUNCHING- The skill of j)unching lin to create pictures was taught by RSVP volunteers, Ethel
Brendt eeated and Evelyn Clark, to students attending Yesteryear. Shown here working on the art,
from the left a~ound the table, are Annette TUcker, Jason Berringer, Troy Boggs, Brian White, and
Samanth~ Allen.

~
;,,
'

LEARNING TO EMBROIDER'- A 'first" for Amanda Barringer
was embroidering e design on a lea towel at Yesteryear. Here
she gets Instruction from ~SVP volunteers, Polly Curtis, left, and
Eileen Bowers.
·

:., t.:::::::.:==:;_~~---:-:----:---:----;-~--:-:---;---:-;:---:-;-:--i'iiiiiiiiiiii;===

•

r '•PIIgeCI

- ' Don't talk to . stran1ers.
"Stranger" means anyone you don't
know.
-Don't go anywhere with anyone without a parent's pennission.
- If someone approaches you,
say " no," then leave. ·
- In case or an emergency, go
only with a trusted adult.
- Let your parents know where
you are at all times.
- Don't go out alone. Use the
buddy system.
- Follow danger instincts.
- Secreis can be dangerous.
Don't keep secrets from your parents.

79 units
donated at
Galli a
bloodmobile
GALLIPOLIS - The Tri-State
Red Cross Bloodmobile collected 79
units of blood during Thursday's
stop at St. Peter's Episcopal Church.
Local Red Cross officials said 91
people presented themselves to give
blood. To dale this year, the organization has collected 1,234 units from
Gallia County.
•
Volunteers who assisted with the
collection were 'Mary James • .:hair;
Bonnie Young, Joan Schmidt, Bea
Stephenson, Helen Jennings, Evelena Williams. Evelyn Brandeberry,
Virginia Wriglit, Sadie Notter,
Shirley Godwin, Ellabelle ,McDonald, Wilma Webster, Gail Russell.
Mary Clendenin, Emelyn Scarberry
and Janet Hughes. ·
Presenting themselves to give
blood were:
·
Ricky A. Swain, Steven M.
Edwards, Farrell Houck, Calvin
Stewart, Lee Burcham, Henry K.
Milam, Keith E. Snyder. Brian L.
Wood, John H. Roush, . Rliymond-J.
Boles, Charles W. Sibley, Ro~rt
Rothgeb, Barbara C. Fulks, John I.
Jones, Robert L. Lucas, Janel L.
Anderson, James A. Cozza, Charles
M. Null, Hoben F. Tackett. Angela
R. Elkins, Kristina M. Kisner, Jodi
Burnette, Randy Patterson, Paul M.
Cochran, Amanda M. Harrison,
Brooke N. Barton, C. Lindsey Easton, Amanda N. Davis, Amanda D.
Clagg, Matthew C. Blackford;
Starr Adkins, Ruth A. Greenlee,
· Harold KWhiu, Tobias D. Cunningham, Jeremy A Wray, Paulette M.
Saunders, Boqnie Young, Maurice
R. DeLille, Beverly Dunkle, Ralph
L. Bennett, Amanda F. Darst, .H. .
Glenn Ward, Randy Syrus, Mia ll.' ,.
Patterson, Shirley R. Liichfield,
Charles R. Landon, Douglas Spur·lock, Earl L. Wonn, Leland P.
Hamihon, Otis s. Young III, Robert
T. Polcyn, Amy Stanley, Twyllia Y.
Connelley, Joseph P. Greenlee, Vernon W. Bumheimer, Judith Webster,
Joseph W. Webster, Casby Meadows
III, Dorothy L. Meeks, Leonard
Mollohan;
· John W. Barcus, Frank E.
Naskey, Kate Gills, Nicole France,
Caroline Petrie, Roy J. Pierson, John
D. Markley.- Ronald R. Plantz, Teresa Davis. James Young. David A.
Walker,• Lora Smith, John R.
DeLi lie, WilliamS. Medley, Barbara
A. Mills, Brenda L. Duke, Jim
Duke, Phillip Weatherholt, William
L. Ball, Dorotby S. Esque, Bruce
Scarberry, Marvin L. Baird, John W.
· Haffelt, Gary L Lyons, Jennifer E.
Fleming, Tamira l . Scarberry,
Wayne King, Paul W. Morgan Jr.,
David E. Clay. Adrah Neal, James C.
Fife. ·
,
The next visit by tbe bloodmobile
will be June 26.

?Aggressive American drivers are t~rning freeways into free~for-ails

•· By PAULA STORY
screamin-g at .each other is now one
..~ Aaaoclated Preas Writer
person losing it a.nd pulling the trig.,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Armed ger." said security expert . Lou
with everything from firearms to Mizell, who conducted the AAA
Perrier bottles, pepper spray and the study.
The results are only. "t~e tip _of
, occasional egg, America's drivers
: are taking their frustrations out on the iceberg," the orgamzatton s31d.
• each other in startling numbers.
Few states e~~n track mstances .of
:
II was road rage that ]ed two dri- roadway hosuhty. Although there IS
;, vers 10 chase, .one another in rush- ' no one typical aggressive driver, pat·, hour traffic on the George Washing· terns do emerge from the AAA
: ton Memorial Parkway in McLean, study.
·
·
.
: va., reaching · speeds ' o.f 80 mph · The majority are m~les age 18 to
: before crashing into oncoming traf- 26. Most are "relauvely young,
• fie. The four-car crash left three peo· poorly educated ·with criminal.
: pie dead
· .
.
record$, histori~s of .violence, and
:
Near Cicero, N.Y.. the drivers of drug or l!lcohol problems. and many
nd a Mack truek tried to. cut have rei:entl)' suffered an emotional
acara
' . I set back"
each other off for about 25 ·miles on or pro.essrona
, 1he report
&lt;Interstate 81 _ until one pointed a said.
t .43-caliber semiautomatic handgun
Only about 4 percent of .aggres·
• tit the other. .
sive driving incidents mvolve
"What'~ common is the f~ling women. And when. most. women
of.hostility," says Leon James, pro- attack, they use the1r veh1cle as a
fessor of psychology at the Univer· weapon . about 70 IJC:rcent of the
sity of Haw11ii. "As soon as that's . time, the study de!ermmed.
In Dayton, .OhJO, a ~oman reargenerated among millions of drivers,
you have the potential for open war- ended a 59-year-old reured carpenfare."
ter at a traffic light. Both stoppect.
'J'bere was a 51 percent jump in but when the .man asked for her dnI'OIId violence from 1990 to 1995, ver's license, the woman Sped away
according to a study by the Ameri· -she was late. ~or a n.ew,Job, she
an Automobile Association for said. The man satd he d1dn t get out
ITraff'JC s.rety. It reported that of the way fast ehougb•. bounced
. 10,037 violent clvhes led 10 218 onto the hood and was carried along
;dqdllllld 12 610 injuries.
until he rolled off.
"Willi
to be just two people
Her story? DayiOII police Dctec·

ttve larry Dav1s sa1d the woman
told police she drove away because
the man appeared angry, and he
Jumped on her car. .
. .
In Southern Cahforma, where
freeways are a way of hfe, those takml! the wheel face a d~1ly barrage of
hosuhty. Fre~way v1olence · " so
common tha! 1t has become accept- ·
able P,'~rody m such mov1es ~s :'L~
Story. where d~vers are as hke.l_y to
carry spare .cartndges as spare ures.
"It's one thmg to have negauve
thoughts, but when 11-turn~. mto
action, then they need help, sa1.d
'Arnold Nerenberg, a Southern Cah- .
fomia-based psychologist who has
developed "The 10-Step Compas. Pr
' overcommg roa d
s1on
. ogram " .or
rage.
.
.·
.
. Lessons. •~clude ups_on constder~uon •.. sm1hng, forgiveness and

by yelhng or makmg obscene geslures, someone may get senously
~~rt. Take a deep breath and Jlj~t ~ay,
I !'1 angry: ~~t not for long. It s Just
not wonh 11.
.
.
Nerenberg encourages chents to
call h1m by cellular phone_ when
they feel a burst of rage commg.o.n.
For the senousl~ perturbed, he II
even perform nde-along therapy
sess1ons.
..
.
Nerenberg and Haw an professor
James agree that people need to
practtce more pat1~nce. .
. Rather ihan seemg the.tr.c_ar as an
ISolated bubble of mvmcJblhty, they
need to see therils~lves as part of a
cohes1ve movement, James srud.

"A lot of it's just integr.ating
y.ourself into a cooperative rather
than a competitive situation," James
,s;;.u:::rv~lv;,:a::,lii"lo'~lf·o:;:u~s~h~o~w:...;o::;u;r.;ra;,~~;:i;e;;..,:s;:ai;;:d:;..- - - - - - - - - . . . ,

t

u..d

eA~~ 8(Jiliw;
in- 9?Jeauti/ut ~: .·
~r.u-,~~llfii{'R.,...

79~
g~C(J~
Lafayette Mall .-G~~

--I .

'

-

·• '

Monday, April 28, 1997 .
thru Saturday, May 3rd, 1997 ·

Sliver Bridge Ofnc:e

'

Wo&lt;ids, Margaret Parker, and
Leland Parker, · genealogical
research.
Becky Baer and Linda King of
the Meigs County Extension Ser-.
vice have assisted with the kitchen
skills program, and Alice Wolfe,
retired RSVP director. made the
embroidery and quilting kits for the
students.
The students pay a small amount for supplies and the balance of the cost for
. ~ ~~cational program is handle&lt;!
through contributions from United
Fund of Meigs County and the
· Meigs County Council on Aging.

.

OPEN HOUSE

STARIIANK
. . li,_, lhiMarirtl

.

.LEATHERCRAFT - Paul Will of Pomeroy Elementary lecee up aleether coln'pureelie made at Yes·
teryeer. RSVP volunteer Ro1alle Story holds the purH .whlle Paul does the stitching. Each atudent
taking the leatharcraft project made an arm band anc! e coin purH.

•

. ·•·1'&lt;.'

..

••

Museum. Prior to that RSVP had a
traveling exhibit and demonstration .
program, but after two years of the
hassle of hauling materials and
"making do" with whatever facilities were available at the schools, it
was decided the program .could be
better organized and offer more to
the students by being in a permanent location. The Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
offe~ use of the museum, ·
Since 1984 when the program
began; 'more than 3,000 · fifth
graders have been given the opportunity to work with senior volunteers in· the skills-of-yesteryear pro·
gram, according . to Diana Coates,
RSVP director.
Emphasis is not only on teaching
children the skills of yesteryear so
that they can be continued int.o the
future, but also to help them devel·
op pride 'in their heritage, said June
Ashley of Letart Falls, volunteer
since the inception·of Yesteryear.
The crafts offered and tbe volunteers sharing their expertise over
the past two months have been -Dolores Will, Ann Rupe, Gladys
Cumin11s, Helen Bodimer, Jane
Walton, Jean Nease and·Sabra Ash,
kitchen skills, bread making and
noodles; Leafy Chasteen, Ro~alie
Story, and Dorothy Chaney, quilting; Dorothy Downie, Rosanna
Manley. Ruth Moore, Eileen Bowers, Polly c;::unis and Sarah Gibbs,
embroidering.
William Middleswarth, Barbara
Grueser, Ethel· Brandt, and Edwin
Ash leathercraft; Evelyn Clark,
Charlene Thomas, Ethel Brandt,
Gladys. Cum::J and Dolores Will,
and tin punchinjf;
candle . maki
Catherine Crist ·and June Ashley,
rag basket' making; and Paula

.

Thursday, Friday, Saturday •
·
May 1·2·3
9 a.m. til 4:30 p.m.
In :the parking lot at Fruth's

50%fD
75%.
Appll.-nces, Gifts,
and

"With a young child, bathing and
dressing are opportunities to talk
about our bodies and our right to privacy .... For school-age children, the
beginning of each school year is an
occasion to establish safety
rules ....At home, a TV news .story
may provide an opportunity to discuss safety concerns."
To avoid frightening children,
preface discu.ssions with, "I don't
expect that would happen to you.
But just in case, I want you to be
safe and know whallo do. These are
safety rules."
Rest optional b~akout
.
Here are Cope's Basic Safety Rules
'for Children.

· Please Attend Our

GIGANTIC YARD SALE
park' souvenirs.
. W~chter said most of the people
who patronize the park live within a
two-hour drive. He .said many peopie come from the Columbus and
Charleston, W.Va., areas with many
others coming from Washington
County and Parkersburg, W.Va.

hours."
Still, parents often become
tongue-lied when tackling the subject willt children. Even Cope avoided the subject with her daughter,
· now 23.
"I didn't know how," she says .
"My mother never talked to me
about these things. I didn't know the
words to use."'
Children should be taught how to
respon4 to strangers just like they
are taught other safety rules, such as
looking both ways before ~rossing
the street and tiever playing with
matches.
"Take advantage of opportunities
which occur naturally," Cope writes.

Reflections of YeSteryear

&lt; •I

She has also been a delegate to 4-H as a member of the National Honor
Club Congress,
Roll. Hu~son has been accepted to
leadership .
.!.,Ohio State, where she "!ill major iri
Camp an&lt;;! Sea
~ .physical therapy.
Camp.
Other 1997 OVB 4-H scholarship
Hudson
. recipients arc Jarrod Coffee and
attends the Uni·r"IMelis's;a Armstrong of Jackson
versity of Rio
ty; Deanna Bapst of Pike
· Grap.~ : through
:county; and Jessica Williams of
Valley
River
'Mason County, W.Va. A luncheon
High , School 's
honoring the recipients will be held
postsecondary 'J;;;;;j;jfu;~;-' Saturday, May 3 at the Lewis Famioption program. Jamie
ly Restaurant in Jackson.
At River Valley.
A total of 65 4-H members have
she is a varsity cheerleader and shared in $105,000 of scholarship
holds offices in the Key Club and monel provided by OVB.
SADD. She has also been se lected

Margo attributes her success to her staff: Glenna
Snyder, Subina Veigh, Nancy Hoke and Mary Evans
as well as the Silver Bridge office customers.
·

ecret.. ---~---:------• Continued from page C1
,
eceived an award from the Ohio
, epanment of Natural Resources
ue to the high number of flattering
ustomer survey cards the park
eceived, For the customers, the
ark now offers a gifl shop featunng

•......

By USA FAYE KAPLAN
Gennett ..... Service .

'

.

,

GALLiPOLIS • The continuing Pastoral Care at St. Luke's Hospital
Education Committee of the Volun- in Maumee. He is· a fanner parish '
teer Chaplains Association at Holzer · pastor who did his clinical pastoral
Medical Center will hold an all-Gay education at Methodist Hospital and
seminar on "Medical Ethics, Pas- the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.
He will give three major presentatoral Perspective and Presence."
The educational event for area tions on "Medical Ethics: Surveying
clergy and lay leadership will be the Landscape and Reclaiming a
held in the hospiial's French 500 Pastoral Role"; "Difficult Decisions:
Room Tuesday, April 29, from 8:45 Getting Down to Cases"; and "Ethia.m. to 3:30p.m. witb registration cal Dialogue: Reasserting the Pastoral Voice."
beginning at 8:15 a.m.
The program will be presented by
The day will also feature Oscar
a multidisciplinary faculty. High- Clarke, M.D. Dr. Clarke, foniler
lighting the day will be Rev. Paul president of Holzer Medical Center'
Berlein, M.Div., B.A., director of .Medical Staff and Ohio Medical

GALLIPOLIS - Jill Carter, Hall of Crown City. He is a seven'
Jonathan . Hall and Jamie Hudson year member of 4-H, and through
have
been
the Adventurers 4-H Club, .he ~as
selected as the
taken a variety of projectS' ranging
1997 winners
from veterinary science to tree
of the Ohio
planting. He is a four-time winner at
Valley Bank
the Ohio State .
4-H ScholarFair, and is a
shi p Program.
member
of
·Winners
.Junior Leaders
were selected
and the Fair
by t.wo select
Youth Board. '
Jill
carter
committees of
He has also
4-H officials. The winners receive been selected
$2,000 in scholarship money over as an Ohio 4four years.
H ambassador.
A senior at
Jonalhan Hall
Caner is the daughter of Mike
TIMOTHY AND SHERRY TOWNE
•
and Betty Jo Caner of Gallipolis, Ohio Valley
•
and is a 10-year memb&lt;;r of 4-H. She Christian School, Hall has earned
is active· in the UBU 4-H Club. She several academic awards. He is
has competed at · the state level in noted fpr his community lind church
·,, GALLIPOLIS - Sherry Lachelle 1994 graduate of Hocking College, welding and livestock judging. As leadership in such projects as SerHill and Timothy David Towne were Nelsonville with an associates the president of the Fair Youth vathon and the Bible BowL He has
. united in marriage March 21 at the degree in business. She is employed Board,' she is currently leading' the also represented the school as a
Our House Historical Museum in · with the City of Gallipolis Tax organization of a new Gallia County member of its varsity soccer and
.,..Gallipolis.
,
Ocpartment as an assistant. tax livestock judging contest.
basketball teams. He plans to attend
, Sherry is the daughter of Jerry A. Administrator.
· Carter attends Gallia Academy Marshall University with a medical
.. Hill and Lissa M. Adkins of GallipoThe grqom is a 1986 graduate High School , where she is active in · technology major.. . ·
·.t li&gt;. Tim is the son of David Towne from Milton High SchooL He served FFA. She is a member of the NationHudson is the daughter of Polly
. and Elizabeth Frazier of· Miiton, a four-year term with the United· al Honor Societ-y and a varsity Bowcou of Bidwell, and John Hud., W.Va.
States Navy and a four-year term cheerleader. This fall, she plans to son of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. She is a
Chaplin Bob Hood performed the with the United States Army. He is .attend Ohio State University with a member of the Rio Wranglers 4-H .
• ,double ring ceremony. Bart and employed with the General James double major in animal science and Club, serving her lOth year. Known
;Teresa Davis of New Haven, W, Va. M. Gavin Plant as a junior clerk.
biology. After earning her bachelor's for her horse projects, she has exhib~ witnessed the ceremony.
They spent their honeymoon at degree, she plans to enroll in veteri- ited several grand. champion horse
·
The bride is a 1990 graduate of North Bend .State Park in West Vir- nary school.
.
projects and has represented the
. : Gallia Academy Higti School and a gina. The couple resides in Addison.
Hall is .the son of David and Jada county' three times at the state fair.

•

•

Be ·specific when .talking with your child about talking to strangers

Ohio
Valley Bank selects Gallia 4-H. scholarship winners
.

....

Pomeroy • Middleport • Ga1Upoll8, OH • Pcilnt Pl1111nt, WY

Volunteer Chaplains Association to conduct seminar

Do men.ber]efit more from marriage than women?

....

Iunday, A.,..u27, 1197

Sund8y,Aprll27,1117

Pomeroy •Middleport • Galllpo118, OH • Pcilnt P11111int, WV

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SundiiJ, April rt, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport • ~lllpolla, Ott • Point PII 111nt, WV

Parents need .to find ways to make-divorce less destructive ~
By BETSY RUBINER
The Des Molnel Aeglatw
Connie Ahrons recently attended the
funeral of a man she divorced more than 30
years ago. She went because her ex-husband
was'her daughters' father.
"I was mourning my daughters' loss, not
my loss," says Ahrons, who arranged with
her ex-husband's widow to be at the funeral.
~·It was something we were able to do for
the sake of the ~hildren. It ffil\kes a differ·
ence. At a time like that, wouldn't it have
been awful if there had been inc~ stress
in the children's lives? I could be~ for
them in a very1il)lportant wa " ·
It's all also part of having "a good
divorce;" something Ahrons has not only
practiced but preached as a leading expert on
post-divorce families.
Ahrons is a sociologist who is director of
theiJniversity of Southern California's Mar-

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Poineroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ott • Point Pllltlnt, WV

. . . . Aprl27, 1997

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lfuel • Page C1
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ri~~ llld F~ly ,Program.
Parents who divorce have a responsibiliGettina past the pain and anaer t1f an acri- negative and that they can't resolve."
~
One tbina I see as a major pitfall is the. ty, no matter how painful, to remain on good monious divorce is no easy task, as Alvons · This doesn't mean the ex-spoutes m~
sense tb.t 'Once I get over the divorce it's terms - for the sake of their children's knows from her own "very bad" divorce. like each other, she says. Bill they must~
over, · and I'm done with that person,"' healthy development. says Ahrons.
'BIIt with time and the proper attitude. she to "soinchow cope with (CICh ocher.}"
Ahrons says.
·
"Not all divorce buns children," !he says, that pain Cllf\ diminish to the point
She adds that effons to chaap no-fault
But if there are children involved, Ahrons says. "What buns children is divorce where where u-spouses can maintain, at a mini- divorce laws will be co11nterproductive. tea
points out, "you're still a family system. It there's continuing conflict between parents mum, a businesslike working relationship- producing good divorces. "A fault sysient
. gets more complex. We always . talk about or the child loses a relationship with one "a limited partnership."
doesn't stop people from getting divorced,·~
the nuclear family - mom, dad and the kids ·parent."
'
·
·
Most often, it takes about two to five says Ahrons, whose own divorce occurrecl!
in one houaehold. With the bi-nuclear fami- .
Remaining on good terms is also in the years for the acrimony to die down or for ex~ before there was a no-fault system. ·
~
ly, it's niom and dad living in two separate ex-spouses' best interest because it will spouses to learn to "compartmentalize"
Instead it will just make divorces mof'l$
househ!)lds, raising the kids together."
increase their chances of succeeding in a their anger toward each other, Ahrons says. acrimonious and life more difficult for t~
"The Good Divorce" - also the title of subsequent marriage, Ahrons says.
Some of ·this counseling might bring children of these divorces, she says.
•
a 1994·bookAhrons wrote (HarperPerennial
Divorced people with children "carry together not only ex-spouses but their new
f'or ex-spouses who share the san"e.oomoo~&gt;
Library; $13) - may sound like. a contra- that divorce into their remarriage," she says. partners and children.
·.
- and often, their extended familiesdiction in terms or an endorsement of "Their children are carrying that (other) parTherapists must go through a similar sons of events will bring them back togo:tb~
divorce, Ahrons acknowledges.
ent in."
.
·
learning curve, according to Ahrons.
er for the rest of their lives," Ahrons notes;
"A lot of people have attacked me (for
The ~hallenge, Ahrons adds, is "to learn . "The job of the therapist is to help fami- It starts with the child's school play and
being) pro-divorce," sbe says. "I'm not pro how to integrate tha! without letting it inter- ly members figure out how they can h~ve ent-teacher conferences•.then school gradlll~
or negative. (DivO.,;e) is a fact of life. Now . fere with new relationships, without letting child-related relationships and how not to lions, weddinkS, births of grandcl\ildren
what can we do to make it less destructive?" the conflict infuse everything."
avoid talking about the other things that are yes, funerals.
'

Older moms
- giving birth
to controversy

Three-lens
camera
the picture

By NANCI HELLMICH . , ,
end KAREN S. PETERSON
USA TODAY
The 63-year-old California
woman who gave birth to her first
child late last year - the world's
oldest new mother - is doing very
well with her baby girl, says the
head of the fertility clinic where she
was treated.
"I've spoken to them (the parents) several times," says Richard
Paulson, director of the University
of Southern California Program for
Assisted Reproduction. "They seem
to be thrilled. They are very happy.
They keep saying, 'Thank you,
thank you, thank you.' "
· The woman, whose name has not
been released, is home with her 5month-old daughter while the dad,
60, is working. Helping on the home
front:. the new mom's own mother,
who is ·in her 80s, Paulson says.
The center announced Wednesday that the woman became pregnant witlj an egg donated from
UNIQUE PRESENTATION • Cinerama movies were shot with a apecla.l camera, with three lenses recording on three separate reels
another wbman and fertilized by her
of film. One lens pointed straight ahud, one left and one right. The flnlsh~d film Is shown with three synchronized projectors - left,
, Husband's sperm. She lied about her
·
right and middle.
age.when she sought treatment at the
center; its cutoff is 55. The headline-.
grabbing story challenges preconceived notions of biology, aging and
·parenting. And it arouses passi&lt;Jns
on all sides. ·
Is medical science simply helping people who have longed to have
a child, or are couples like this comtown Cincinnati to see "This Is
. Harvey built a makeshift system Edward.
By MARGARET A. McGURK
mitting a selfish act? Where will
The
Cln~lnnall
Enquirer
Cinerama"
at
•the
Capitol
Theater,
at
his home, using three 35mm pro"It just brought back so many
tliese .parents get the energy to rear
It
began
in
1953
as
a
diversion.
which
that
year
had
been
converted
jectors
and
a
7-by-16-foot
screen.
memories,"
she says. "I never .
· this child? Will they be around for
II
turned
into
a
hobby,
then
a
to
show
movies
in
a
form
as
amazFred
Waller's
widow
provided
thought
I
would
ever see Cinerama
her high school graduation? Should
career,
then
an
obsession.
ing
in
its
day
as
Omnimax
looks
to
blueprints
so
he
could
build
parts
he
again."
we be stretching the bounds of natNow John Harvey's love affair modern eyes.
couldn 'I find. He met directors,
Smith is hopong' to keep the audi. ural biology just because it's possiis
becoming
a
phe.
The
Dayton,
Ohio,
teen-ager
producers,
film
buffs.'
He
became
with-Cinerama
ences
coming for a ful.l year, and
ble?
nomenon
that
has
drawq
the
attenwas
struck
by
the
colors,
the
sound,
an
expert
in
a
rare
field
.
perhaps
in time. to create a nonThe questions "will fill breakfast
tion
of
film
fans
around
the
world
the
intensity
of
the
WJap.-around
In
1988,
he
decided'
the
time
had
profit
foundation
tHat can collect,
and coffee-table conversations for
to
a
small
movie
th
ater
in
downimage
that
the
three-lens
system
come
to
put
it
together
and
show
restore
and
display
all the Cinerama
days to come," says Mary Suchenstown
Dayton,
Ohio.
producclj.
movies.
He
tore
out
two
bedrooms,
mov1es.
ki, spokeswoman for the American
There, at the New Neon Movies,
"I just couldn't get it mit of my part of the living room. most of the
That's a long way off. For now,
Society for Reproductive Medicine. ·
Cinerama
features
are
shown
in
mind
because
of
the
feeling
of
kitchen
and
1he
attic.
he's
grateful for small breaks, such ·
Parenting expert T. Berry Brazeltheir
·
origonal
format
three
weekbeing
there,"
he
recalled
in
a
recent
He
used
the
installation
to
show
as
Turner
Films ' decision to charge
ton. 78, is scratching his head. "I
ends
a
month.
interview
with
The
Associated
·
his
collection
to
(riends,
who
evenonly
a
30
percent rental fee for
pity her," he says.· "We're trying to
The
experiment
started
on
Labor
Press.
.
tually
included
Larry
Smith.
"How the West Was Won," instead
deal with our grandchildren at home
Day weekend I 996; it was supThe system that so captured his
Finally last year, Smith persuad- of the !ypical 35 percent.
now, and we 're too old for it." Two
posed to last about two . months. imagination was invented by spe-· ed him to take the system apart and
"Gremlins" director Joe Dante,
of hos grandchildren, a 6-month-old
Now,
its
run
will
total
at
least
nine
cia!
effects
wizard
Fred
Waller,
rebuild
it
inside
the
New
Neon
who
until last month had seen
and a 3-year-old, live with him now,
months.
·
based
on
a
system
for
training
antiMovies.
''How the We.st Was Won" only on
as does hi• daughter. " I'm exhaustThat demand has been fueled by aircraft gunners, which itself was
Letters ·of encouragement have. a flat screen, acknowledged returned all the time, and·I don't even have
newspaper stories, . by techno- born from machinery Waller built come from Eli Wallach, a star of ing Cinerama lo even one theater
to take care of them."
fanzines with names such as Big for the 1939 New York World's Fair · ~ How the West Was Won" (shot in was the product of more than a litBrazelton had 'his son· at 46. "He
Reel and Wide Gauge and by the to show pictures on the inside of a Cinerama), and from David Fran- tle fanaticism in the men behind the
~aid to me. 'Will you be here wllen I
electronic
grapevine on the Inter- dome.
.
.
cis, chief of the motion picture divi - show.
gr&lt;Jw up?' And I said, 'You keep me
ne!.
After seeing every Cinerama sion of the Library of Congress,
"Thank God," he said. ':Withyoung so I will be.' And fortunately,
TV
documeniary
crews
have
movie
he
could
find,
Harvey
which
oversees
the
National
Film
out
them, we wouldn't have this at
I have been."
·
all.''
·
visited.
Articles
have
appeared
in
·became
a
projectionist
and
learned
Registry.
More
letters
came
from
Paulson and other ex pens say the
Premiere
magazine,
American
Cinabout
the
heavy
machinery,
90film
critics,
archivists
and
historiShow times
new mom very well may be around
ematographer
and
Starlog;
Film
pound
wheels
of
film,
the
pretiscly
ans.
New
Neon
Movies Cinerama spewhile the child grows up. For ages,
Comment
may
be
next.
curved
screens
and
the
seven-track
The
most
promising
response
cialist
John
Harvey
says screenings
he says, men have become parents in
The
attention
has
inspired
·
audio
system
that
still
delivers
starhas
been
the
delight
of
audiences
will
conti~ue
Saturdays
and Suntheir 50s and 60s with " no reproach
dreams
of
a
·permanent
Cinerama
tlingly
true
sound.
who
come•to
see
the
films
.
days through Memorial Day. The
. ~xcept a wink or a nod.''
-In the mid-1960s, new film sysMovie fans such as Tim William theater shows "How the West Was
museum (or Larry Smith, coNow medical science has "just
owner-operator of · the theater aild terns came along that were cheaper of Belleyue, Ohio, and Renana Won," "This is Cinerama" and
leveled the playing field," he says.
Harvey's apprentice, promoter and to shoot and show - Cinerama Gross of College Hill, Ohio, trav- "Cinerama Holiday" on a·rotating
"Our society is changing.. People are
fellow
film addict.
required a projection crew of at eled.to Dayton out of curiosity. Rob schedule.
living longer. This new mother has
It also has vindicated the man · least five - and Cinerama disap- Pearse of Oalclcy, Ohio, brought his
Show times are I· p.m., preceded
~ least 22 or 23 years ahead of her."
whose
devotion
·
to
an
all-but-forpeared.
mother,
Mary
Reilly,
to
see
"How
at
II
:30 a.m. by coffee and snacks,
' An average American woman
gotten
invention
could,
in
certain
For
Harvey,
\he
format's
comthe
West
Was
Won"
because
and
at
noon by mini-tours, a lecture
lives almost 79 years.
for
pure
eccentricity.
merciill
end
launched
three
decades
decades
ago
she
worked
at
the
Lonlights,
pass
and slides.
Alan DeCherney, chairman of the
John Harvey was 17 years old in of stu\lying, collecting . and build- 'dori Casino, a luxurious Cinerama
The theater is a~ 130 E. Fifth St.,
oftepartment of obstetrics and gyne1953
when
he
traveled
to
downing.
·
theater
now
called.
The
Prince
in
downtown
Dayton, Ohio.
!Jl(ogy at the University of CaliforIJia. Los Angeles, Medical School,
~ays he lias no problem with older
~men becoming mothers as long
; · ·they're healthy. There's no guarGALLIPOLIS - Southeastern
~tee how long anybody's parent;
Business
College of Gallipalis host'l"•lllive, he says.
' Many expens actively applaud ed a celebration in honor of Nation'Fact. "I think if any woman wants al Secretary's Day Tuesday,· April
~ shol at parenthood, she should· 22.·Over 50 students, staff and advi!laY• the opportunity," says Joan sory committee members attended.
Joy Staten, coordinator of Secre; J;.iebrnun-Smith, author of "In Puruit of Prcpancy' .' "I don't see tarial Studies at the college, and stu..ythins horrific about this. Good dents in the various secretarial programs hosted the celebration which
ftrber!"
featured hair stylings, manicures and
Others question those who pre· pedicures by Rita Rogers · and her
to say just who "should" have team from Summer Image Hair,
y. Denying the woman a child . • Nails, Tanning Salon; makeovers- by
be lkin to sayinJ no to a Lorri HiN"ely of Beauticontrol Cos,
metics; and blood press11relblood
! fi011W1 "who's not going to be able
.. Jive loog enough because s.he has sugar screl:nings by .Andrea Wright •
of Holzer Medical Center Home
- ~ di•e•e ... or she has a handi·
" uys Alexander Capron, co- Health Services.
Subjects such as professional
tor, the Pacific Center for
involvement and carpal tunnel synPolicy and Ethics at USC.
drome wert di~ussed in presenta· .
•
SECRETARY'S DAY • ~ Wright of Holzer Medical Center
by Joyce Davis of the Glllipotioos
. . 1101t iafertility lpCCialists at
Home
HMlth Servlcft checka the blood ,....u,. of Southe..tlm ·
lis
Business
and
Professional
.
•i
said they
Bual,_.
Collegletudent, Elelne ForbM u pert of t.tlvltiH held
6111 •a• en over 50 should Women and Brooke Miller of Holz...... Win, oea-y er Clinic OcCIIpatiOMI Therapy. A :e.~ of NldloNti81CI~'I Dly It~ Bual,_. Colbabecue lunchoon provided by the
" J c:ollep
~;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiil;
l:appecl the day's events.

Revival draws worldwide support
for small Dayton (Ohio) theater

By MARGARET A. McGURK
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Cinerama movies were shot
with a special camera, with three
lenses recording on three separate reels of film. One lens pointed straight ahead, one left and.
one right.
The finished film is shown
with three synchroni~d projec·
· tors - left, right and middle.
The images overlap in the center•.
which helps provide exceptional
clarity and depth of field - that
is, images in the background are
almost as sharp as images in the
foreground.
The
Cinerama
screen
installed at the New Neon
Movies. in Dayton, Ohio, con- .
sists of hundreds of inch-wide
ribbons hung in overlapping pate
tern to create a smooth curve.
The viewing area is 48 feet wide
and 1_7.feet high, a ratio of2.35: I
(that means it is 2.35 times wider
than it is tall). The screen curves
146 degrees side to side.
To install it, the New Neon
siaff took out a third of the ceil.
iitg and 88 seats to 'accommodate
three projection booths, eight
stereo speakers, five miles of
wiring and iron tracks bolied to
the roof to hold the special
screen and curtains.
·
·Film fans consider-Cinerama
a precursor of innovations to fol,
low, such as Todd-AOJ
maScope and Panavision.
·, WideG~ulle,, newsletter
aficimiados, credits Cinerama
with starting the "wide-screen
revolution" because it incorpo-·
rated key elements that lafer sys- ·
telfts would emulate. They
include large format film, wide·
aspect ratio, curved screen,
directional-reflection screen (to
prevent light from bouncing
acros~ and washing out the
image at the edges), and multi,
track sound.
. :" . ' '
Cinerama Inc. specified that
theaters built io shqw the fonrnat
include an entire wall for
screen, one-color decor to
heighten the audience's foc11s on
the screen, plus meet detailcid
requirements
for
seating,
acoustics and projection an~les.
At its peak, Cinerama was
shown in 240 theaters worldwide.
Cinerama films
Seven films were shot with
three-lens Cinerama format:
"This Is Cinerama" (1952);
"Cinerama Holiday" (1~55) ;
"Seven Wonders of the. World"
(1955); "Search For Paradise"
( 1957); "South Seas Adventure"
(1958): "The Wonderful World
of the Brothers Grinim" (1963);
and "How the West Was Won"
( 1963).
"Windjammer" (1958) was.
shot in a competing three-lens
process that was bought out by
Cinerama.

CATHERINE McKAY AND

''
t

NEVELLA WRIGHT AND JEFFERY GRIMM

CROTHERS

Wright-Grimm

McKay-Crothers .

RACINE -- Jeffery Grimm of
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. by King's Daughters Hospital in Belpre, formerly of Racine, and
~~~~~ ;c. McKay, Jr, of Chat- Ashland, Ky.
Wright of Vienna, W.Va.
11 Va. announce the engage- Crothers is a graduate of Morrow · Nevella
tc
announce their upcoming marriage.
of their daughter, Catherine Senior High School in Morrow, Ga.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
to Michael Wayne Crothers, and attends Shawnee State Universi- Mrs. Walter Wright, Jr. of Vienna. A
of M.r. and . Mrs. Clarence ty in Ponsmouth.
graduate of Parkersburg High
·of Gallipolis. ·
School in 1996, she is employed by
is a graduate of Western ·
The wedding will be Sept. 6 at Stone and Thomas. ·
High School, Mary Holy Redeemer Church .in
Giimm is the son of Mary Lou
College and PVCC Portsmouth. A reception will follow H'oughtaling of Greenacres, Fla.,
Nursing. She is employed at Shawnee State Lodge.

,.

REGINA RANDOLPH AND RYAN McCREA

'f

··Randolph-McCrea

'

: GALL!Pbqs - Dale and Diana
:R.andolph of Gallipolis announce the
)l~gagement an~. approaching_,mart!age of .their daughter. Regina
Michele, to Ryan Mark McCrea, son
of Robert and Lynn . McCrea of
Hbby, Mont. ·
·.
· .
I ' Randolph, a 1995 graduate of
)ttver Valley High School, is a stul!ent at Harding University in
:&gt;~arcy, Ark. She is employed by
J:iaptain D's in Searcy.
• • McCrea, a 1994 graduate of
'
High School, is a student at

ANGELA WHITE AND DARIN LOGAN
'

Harding University pursuing'ait education in marriage and family counseling. He Is an employee in the psychiatric unit of Central Arkansas
Hospital in Searcy. He. is also
employed b~ the Harding University. .
Brackett l,.ibrary ·and serves in the
National Guard.
The open ceremony will be I 0
a.m., June 21 at the Norway Avenue
Churc.h of Christ, Norway Avenue ·
and 21st Street, Huntington, W.Va.
The couple will reside in Searcy.

April 27th ·at 7:00 p.ot
.

"family Life Center"

Located at the comer of 5th «1 Main &amp;.,

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High School in 1993, and will complete his stodies and graduate from
DeVry Institute of Technology,
Columbus, June ·20. He is employed
at Sensotec in Columbus. Proffitt is
the grandson of Mrs. Betty James of.
Mason, W.Va . .
The open church wedding wiUbe
6 p.m., June 27 at the Racine First.
Baptist Church.

. The Community Calendar is MQNDAY
POMEROY
Meigs County
published as a free service to non·
profit poops wishing 't o 111111ounce Veterans Service Comm.ission, 7:30
meeting and special events. The p.m. · Monday l1-t the Veterans Sercaleildar is not designed to pro- vice Office, · Mulberry Ave .•.
mole sales or fund raisers qf any Pomeroy. ,
type. Items are printed 'till space
MIDDLEP9RT -· OH K~n Coin
pel'!llits and ,cannot be paranteed
Monday, !I p.m. Riverbend ·
Club,
to run a specillc number of days.
Ans Council, Mi&lt;ldleport.
'
St,JNDAY
EAST MEiGS -- Eastern Boar~!
HARTFORD -- Revival Church
.
of
Education;
special session, Mon-.
of Christ in Christian Union,
day,
6
p.m.
high
'school library for
through May 4. Huben Salley,
speaker, April 27; Bob Wiseman, · pu111ose of awarding contracts fot
April 28, Evangelist Leland Allman, construction of new building and
Cincinnati, April 29 to May 4. All renovation of high school.
services, 7 p.m.
·
RACINE -- Free skin testing
POMEROY -- Unity Singers to clinic, by Connie Karschnik, R. N .,
present "Heaven Bound" · 7 p.m. Meigs . Tuberculosis nurse, Racine
Fire Station, Monday, 4:30 to 6:30
Sunday, Zion Church of Christ.
p.m.
POMEROY-- Evangelist Charlie
SYRACUSE -- Southern Local
. Hargraves, speaker Sunday, 6 p.rn.
.Board of Education, 7:30 Monday at
at the Harvest Outreach Church.
Syracuse Elerncntary·School. ·

Scientists dispute
direction of universe

White-Logan

MIDDLEPOIIT -- Bill and Judy
Wliite of Middleport announce the
engagement and upcoming marriage
of their daughter, Angela Dawn
White to Darin· Paul Logan, son of
Ronald and Kay Logan of Middleport.
.
:White . is a 1994 graduate of
Meigs High School and will graduate as a medical office assistant from

Davis-Daniel

....

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and publisheS' wedding stories , and
photographs without charge.
However, wedding news mu~t
KEW POTTER AND BoZJDAR KUR10VIC
meet general standards of timeli·
ness. The newspaper prefers to publish accounts of weddings as soon as
ical engineering. Kunovic is possible after the event.
.
employed at Quality Farm &amp;: Fleet
To be ·published in the Sunday
in Gallipolis and will graduate from edition, the weddins must have
the University of Rio Grande in June taken place within 60 days prior to
with a bachelor of science degree in the publication, and may be up to
1nd11Strill teChnology.
6001words in length. Mllcrial for ,
Alon1 the River must be received by
The weddins will be S11nday, the cdiklrial departmenl b&gt;i ThursJime 29, at Oalbteath Chapel on the day, 4 p.m. prior to the dlle of pubcampus o.f Ohio University in · lication.
Athens.

Potter-Kurtovic

I

'

Pi-offirt graduated from Southern

the University of Rio Grande in
June. Logan graduated from Meigs
High School in 1992 and received
his teaching degree from the Universi)y of Rio Grande in 1996.

By MATT CRENSON
Auociated Pre11 Writer
· NEW YORK (AP) - Scientists
don't know which end IS up any-

The open church wedding will be
3:30p.m., July 19 at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene. A reception
will tollow at Royal Oak Resort.

more.

Advanced Study in Princeton , N.J.,
charge that Nod land · and Ralston
made one ihcorrect assumption in
their analysis.
J'&lt;!odland and Ral ston looked at
polarized radio waves, which oscillate in only one direction . That
direction at the moment when the
light starts its journey from cine or
1those ·distant galaxies is very 'important to t~e subsequent analysis. And
Eisenstein and Bunn claim Nodland
and Ralston didn 't correctly.takc thi s
into account.
When you correct for that error,
the evidence of directipnality in the
universe diminishes and prooably
disappears completely, Eis,enstein
and.Bo.inn said.
· Ralston insisted that he and Nodland did indeed account for the
_polarization direction correctly.

Just a few days -after a pair of
physicists. claimed to have found ah
1 "up" and a "down" to the universe.
1 their colleagues may have found an
1. analytical naw that could restore
· some degree of chaos to the cosmos.
Monday 's issue . of Physical
· Review Letters contained a paper by
· Borge Nodlapd of the University of
' Rochester and John Ralston of the
. University ·or Kansas, who reported
a subtle pattern in the radio waves
coming .from distant galaxies. Radio
signals coining 'from one direction
: - the constellation Sextans : appeared ever so slightly different
from the ones originating 90 degrees
· away in.the sky.
' . '.'That indicates that not all direc- r
tions are equal," Nodland said in an
interview last week.
If that's true, then physicists have
CHRISTI DAVIS
\ a lot of explaining to do. Their basic
ble: Afttir a honeymoon in Cancun, , laws rely on the assumption that the
the couple plans to reside in Big · universe looks more or less the same
Spring, Texas where they will ~th no matter which direction you're
be employed by Scenic Mountain facing.
Medical Center Hospital.
Such a find would·have profound
implicaiions, requiring the existence
of hitherto unknown particles,
policy--~ changes in the laws of electromag.netism or some other unsavory
11\ose not making the 60-day physical explanation .
deadline will be published in the
To the rescu-e come Daniel Eisendaily papers as space allows.
stein and Emory Buitn, two of many
Photographs of either the bride or researchers who have challenged
the bride and groom maj be pub- their colleagues' bold I!SSumption.
lished with wedding stories if · Bunn, a professor at Ba,es Coldesired. Photographs may be. either lege in Lewiston, Maine, and Eisenblack and white .or good quality stein, a researcher at tbe Institute for
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will not ,
be accepted. Generally; snapshots or
instant-developing photos are not of . GALLIPOLIS • A mistake was
acceptable q~ality. .
. inadvertently made in the SmithAll matenal submttted for pubh- Tackett wedding engagement story
cation is subject to editing.
appearing in last Sunday's TlltltSQuestions may be directed to the Sentinel. Amber Smith l!'d Scott
editorial department from I to 5 Tackett will be married 6 p.m., May
p.m. Monday through Friday at 446- . 17 at the Nazarene Church in Gal2342.
lipolis.
·

i

---Wedding.

A Dynamic Youth Musical
. by Michael W. ~mith

'

~

. HUMBLE, Te~as - Mr. and Mrs.
M. Baskin of Humble, Texas
and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Davis
of Daytona Beach, Fla. announce
the engagement and upcoming wedding of their daughter, Christi Davis
to Robert Daniel , son of Mr. and
Mrs. James R. Daniel of Cedar,Hill,
Texas.
Davis is the granddaughter of Mr. ·
and Mrs. James N.M. Davis of Gallipolis. She received her bachelor of
· science degree from Texas A&amp;M.
Univ.ersity.
.
Daniel received his bachelor of
science degree from Tarleton State
University.
,
Both are finishing their master of
physical therapy degrees .from the
Texas Tech University Health Sciences . Ce11ter and will graduate in
May-1997. .
.
The wedding will be M~y 24 at
tfo~_ Park Baptist Ch_
u.!:h in Hum-

"Living On the Ecfsel"

Middleport. Olio

.·

Georg~

Teen Choir D~nt.s · :

coamanee

RACINE -- Melvin and Ml\cy·
Forester of Racine announce the
engagement and approaching mar.-;.ge of their daughter, Mary Ellen
Smith, to Ray Roger Proffitt, Jr., son
of Ray and Sheila Proffitt, Racine.
Smith, granddaughter of Mrs.
Le0na Cline of Syracuse, is ~ 1993 ·
graduate of Southern High School,
arid is employed at McDonald's in
Ravenswood, W.Va.

Meigs community calendar

Middleport Church Of Christ ·

· In the Big New ·

The wedding will be May 17 at
Nonh Parkersburg Baptist Church in
Parkersburg, W.Va.

·Smith-Proffitt-

.

SBC secretaries get special treatment

~unday.

and Lawrence Grimm of Stuart, Fla.
and the grandson of Roderick and
Marjorie Grimm, Racine.
He attended Southern High
School and graduated from Belpre
High School in 1995. He is in Navy
recruit training at Great L$kes, Ill.

MARY ELLEN SMITH AND RAY PROfm"f, JR.

li

BC4680

'77

L4598

•s7

co·rrection .

f

cr;~,~

422 S8c0nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-1 1

�-

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Entertainment
--------,.---...;..__People in .the
.

..

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7 ••

Measures announced to help Midwest farmers ~.

P.HOENIX (AP) - Here's something y'oo can call tbe artist formerly
ATI.ANTA (AI') ~ Ted Turner has a challenge for hja fellow million- phy, " Personal History."
.
.
.
known u Prince: Speedy.
aires: Give it up.
.
.
"The only surprise in Kay's book," Buchwald wrote, "is the omission ol
11Je sinaer decided it was time to relwn to Phoenix, where he last perTurner, the vice chainnan ofnrne Warner Inc., challenged Microsoft's the weekend she and I spent in Atlantic City. I admire her for not tellill8 all."
funned in 1982. Promoters said Thursday the concen will be soon.
Bill Gates and Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffeuto give m&lt;ft 10 chariMrs. Graham joked about promotin1 her book in television i.mews:
"When u artist of his stature calls, we jump through hoops to present the ty.
l
" I've been interviewed so ofteJt
show he wants," Slid Duny Zelisko of Evening Star Productions.
"What good is wealth sitting in the bank?" Thmer said Thursday at the someone mistook me ·for an OJ.
To prevent ticket scalping. fans annual meeting of the Boys &amp; Girls Clubs of America. "It's a preuy pathet- juror...
. will be sold vouchers .and will have to ic thing to do with your money."
··
produce ID when they redeem the
Turner, whose Atlanta-based Turner Broadcasting System merged last
A'IJ..ANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) vouchers for tickets a few hours before . year with nmc Warner, ranked 47th on Forbes magazine's 1996 Jist of the When R. Kelly 'says he can fly, he 's
die concert at America West Arena.
400 richest Americans. His net worth was estimated at $2.1 billion.
not kidding.
'·
TWo-of his ventures - the Goodwil' Games and TBS Superstation- are
· The rhythm-and-blues singer R.
.
PULLMAN, Wash. (AP) forming a partnership with Boys &amp; Girls c;:lubs to challenge volunteers to Kelly, whQSC single "I Believe I Can
Deserving or· not, Sam Donaldson has give I million houri of time, which his companies would match with $1 mil- Ay" appeared on the soundtrack of
won a new journalism award ' from li&lt;m.
·
the Michael Jordan movie "Space
Washington State University.
· Jim," has signed to play minor league
, Donaldson received the first
NEW YORK (AP) - Journalists are gelling too nearsighted when it pro basketball.
.
Edward R Murrow Award on Thurs- comes to covering the globe, Katharine Graham says.
"It's not a gimmick," Ken Gross,
day in ·recognition of his 38 years in
The chainnan of the Washihgton Post Co. urged reporters to pay more owner of the Atlantic City Seagulls,
journalism.
auention to foreign news as she was honored by the Overseas Press Qub at said Friday. "He's· a ballplayer. He
Donaldson said he was flat- a black-tie dinner Thursday. ·
can play."
tered, "but I don 't deSc:rve it."
"Foreign news should do a beuer job of telling Americans what life in
Kelly, a 6-2, 180-pounder who will
The co-anchor of ABC's other countries is really like," she sai(j. "I believe the time has come for start at guard, plays regularly .in
"Prime nme Live" and "This Week" those of us in the press to 'make a new commitment to foreign news."
Chicago with former 'Chicago Bulls
also delivered WSU's annual Edward
Mrs. Graham· received the club's President's Award · for her lifetime sharpshooter Craig Hodges and brings ·
R. Murrow Symposium Lecture,
achievements . .The citation called her a "mother superior to a multimedia a collapsible basket with him when he goes on tour, Gross said.
Murrow, lhe . legendary . CSS family."
He will play in the team's season opener May 2 against the Connectic~ll
newsman, graduated from the university in 1930.
· During the tributes, CBS newsman Mike Wallace read a message from Skyhawks. As pan of his contract, he will be allowed to miss game.s or pr~Washington Post humorist Art Buchwald, referring to his boss' new biogta- tices to tend to his singing,career.
·:

Pointer- Sisters keep
the joint ]uf!Jpin'
BY GAVE DELAPLANE
Reno Gazette
The Pointer Sisters have come
· along .way, baby.
· They' vc taken !heir shows
around the world. For lwo decades
they ' vc whizzed up the record charts

" I gained a new respect for the est part. When the director of their
!heater," Anita says. "We did the own· show plans choreography, the
two-hour show eight times week. sisrers help decide what works. " We
Satu~ay and Sunday matinees were
have a lot of input. With the musical,
tough, because I usually don't even the director wanlcd · everything
try to sing before 6 o'clock (p.m.)' exactly the same as the original
Our schedule was so tight. But we Broadway show. We worked hard to
do that. Once I learned everything, I
did throw in a liule of my own per·
sonality."
BY GAVE DELAPLANE
Those personalities, full of
Reno Gazette-.loumal
humor and energetic warmth, have
The four Poin!er sisters - Anita, June, Ruth and Bonnie - have
been ~ b,ig part of the Pointers'
close relationships off srage. Anita and June live in Los Angeles. June
appeal. Add their strong voices and
has no children and Anila has a grown daughter, 1ada, and a 6-year-old
tight ~armonies to the mix and it's
granddaughter. Ruth lives near Boston, Mass., has three grown children
easy ·to undcrsrand why their popu- By MIKE HUGHES
and 3-year-old ·twins.·Bonnie Jell the Pointer Sislers act in 1977 to purlarity - that first picked up steam Gannett News Service
sue a solo career.
23 years ago - is stronger than ever , Olympia Dukakis was paying her
Anita recently became engaged· to songwriter-talent manager James
today.
co-star a high compliment.
Arceneaux, but has not set the date.
Their appeal even reached to the
"He's a wonderful. wann man,"
. ''!love my boyfriend," she says, "but we 're not in a hurry to get marWhite House where they were invit· she says of John Stamos. "And he's
ried. " After Anita's year on the road with "Ain't Misbchavin' ," her
ed to perform concerts for Presi- Greek, you kn.ow."
.
fiance &amp;larted a year's tour with the New Edition. "We. have a whale of
dents Reagan and Clinton. And
The Greeks, we're told, invented
·
·
a phone bill," Anita says.
besides inlcrnatiofial concert tours, theater, which is Dukakis' passion.
the Pointers recordcd .for the so11nd- They ·also . invented democracy,the
She now has some time to take long walks, work on her computer and
take her granddaughterto the "arcade."
·
track of the Whoopi Goldberg passion of her oousin , Michael .
"And I love to go to movies."
movie, " The Associate,'' and
(They didn 't invent drumming,
worked on tbc soundtrack of "The Sta~cis' hobby, but they had to leave
like yo-yos. They've won three ' Joyed it. We learned a lot and. met Nuuy Professor." Anita, who's also
something for tbc rest .of us.)
Grammys and in 1994 they were wonderful po:ople.
a songwriter, has done a solo rccordA few millennia later, they still
honored with their own star on Hol"l'd never seen a live show of ing of her own song, '·'Don't Let thrive at both.
lywood 's Hall of fame . Quite a jour- Fats Waller music until our man- Go," for an upcoming movie, "Fol"We arc very passionate, affecney for the· sisters who began ·agers ' had us sec 'Ain 't Misbe- low Your Heart." In 1994,thePointtionate
peo~le, " says actress Melinsinging gospel music in· their havin' .' Afterwards, 'I said; 'God, ers' last album, "Only Sisters Can
da J(anakaredcs. "This ._comes very
father's church in Oakland, Calif.
this is perfect, we shoul(j have been · Do That," was released on SBK ·casi!y to us."
."Bui' the hardest thing' I' ve ever in the original cast.' It's fun music." · Records.
done was 'Ain't Misbchavin' ,"
,Judging from the glowing
The sisters currently arc looking
Anita Pointer said recently in a tele- reviews, the audience thought it was at new material with anOiher album
phone conversation from her home fun, too. 'The sisterS were a hit.
in mind, Anita says. Now that the
in Los Angeles.
Anita said she had to remember · acting bug has bitten, " I' d love to
"Ain't Misbehavin' " was the to do things differently from the w"rk ~ A a feature film::·_
first musical fO!' Anita, June and Pointers concerts. "l had to remem• AnnOuncements .,
Ruth.
ber to stay in character. I couldn't
• Banners
' The Pointers starred i.n tbc road just start talking to someone in tbc
show of the; Broadway hit, traveling audience like I do in our concert
• Center Plecea
all across . the United States ·froin show."
.
.
• PlatH
July I 995 to July 1996.
'The choreography was the hard-

a

Poinler family portrait

J

r

Matchmaking with Olympia Dukakis •..

GRADUATION

SUPPUES

____,News policy·- - - in an etTortto provide our reader- · occurrence.
All binhdays must be submiued
ship with current news. the Sunday .
within
60 days of the occurrence.
times-Sentinel will not acc.epl .wed·
All
material
submitted for publidings after 60 days from the date of
cation is subject to editing.
the ~vent.
·
· Weddings submincd after t~ 60day de8dline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentmel and the
o.Jiipolia Daily Tribune.
·
All club meetinp and ocher news
anic:let ill 'die society ~eetion must
be submitted within 60 days of·
•)

•'

'

PorAII Your
VW.oN•..•f
Wed...s,IIISWIIIct,.
.Sptdal Ev.ts.
l.tf IS pit fWs •
v'.dll tape.
41416-6939 or
41416·1370

VIDEO
'TUNSFERS
•

woman linking her playboy son wilh
a level-headed nurse.
.
The nurse is played by. Kelly,
Rowan and the.son is Stamos, '!'hom
Dukakis praises. "He's very cl9se to
his family and he loves all the tradi,
tions."
· ,.

•

PLAms - Coelle
Th)~pers· ·Plains has been ·
appointed to serve
as a member of
Chevrolet Motor
Division's 1997
National Business
Advisory Board.
She is employed.
at
Gribble
Chevrolet-Geo i'n
Athens.
. Salser, tl)e dealership's Business
' ·Accounting Manager, was selected
to join the National Advisory Board
by virtue of her outstanding profes·sional performance and·membership
level earned in the Business
Accounting Managers Council ,
' Chevrolet's national recognition pro·
·gram. The National Board f(ICCls

annually and will meet next in June
near San Diego, California. Their
primary goal is to actively seek.and
identify additional ways to improve
day-to-day business practices, procedures and
communications
between Dealers and Chevrolet,
John Foxworth; National Business
Manager for Chevrolet said.
She 'has 'o/Orked for Gribble
Chevrolet-Geo. Inc. for 19 years and
has been a member of ·chevrolet
Business Accounting Managers
Council for twelve years and . was
appointed to the National Business
Advisory Board for 1997 and 1998.
She resides in·Tuppers Plains, and is
member of the First Southern Baptist Church o'f Pomeroy, Ohio and
belongs to Pomeroy Chapter of the
Order of Eastern Star.

a

:Renovation, addition of
Super 8 Motel complete
GALLIPOLIS - Refurbishment
to the existing building and a 16-unit
addition to the Gallipolis Super 8
Motel is now complete.
The 16-unit addition, which has
all new furnishings, includes a suite
with a jacuzzi tub, bringing the total
number of suites at the motel up to
.three.
.
The new wing also has two hand.icap accessible rooms, and all rooms

in the addrtion are non-smoking.
The existing building, which
opened for business in September,
1992, was' refurbished as well. All
carpeling and beds were replaced,
and electronic locks were installed for
added security.
The 65-unit Gallipolis Super is
located at 321 Upper river Rd., next
to Bob Evans·.

·Gallipolis FFA prom.otes
·conservation practice
: GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis 10 feet and reduce chemical runoff
· F~ture Fanners of America chapter, by up to 50%. Sediment and chemin cooperation · with Monsanto ical runoff are sources of pollution
Chemical Company, the Ohio from fanning practices.
Area farmers/producers are
~parnnent of Natural Resources'
encoura~~
to consid~r. tl:\is..,cQiose~­
Soil andWater Division an"' Ihe .U$ .
vation
praelice
as they approach the
Fish &amp; Wildlife Service, is promotplanting
season.
A green stripe needs
ing.lite conservation practice known .
as buffer strip along stream banks. to be 16.5 feet in width and run the
:This project is known as Operation . length of the stream or lake.
qallipolis FFA members are pre· Green Stripe.
·
pared
to assist area famiers in a site
A buffer strip is a designated
grassy .strip along stream banks or. assessment
Those ihterested in such a con·
lakes used for human drinking water
supplies. These strips are seeded to · servation practice may contact the
a perennial grass which provides Gallipolis FFA at 446-3520.
Adviser Harold Benson and an
vegetation that will protect streams
and lakes fron\ sedimentation and FFA member will ·assist with an ·Onsite assessment and arrange for grass
runoff.'
ltesearch has shown that green seed to be donated by a local agristripes can remove 70 percent of sed- cultural supplier.
iment from runoff water in the first

Stackhouse installed trustee
representing District 7 OPA
.

· COLUMBUS - Paul Stackhouse
R.Ph. of Bidwell, was installed as ~
trust~· representing District 7 of the
Ohio Pharmacists Association (OPA)
during its I 19th annual conference
held earlier this month in Columbus.
· Stackhouse, a graduate of the
Philadelphia College of Pharmacy
and·Science presently practices phar,
macy at Holzer Medical Center
where he serves as diredor of the
Holzer Family Pharmacy.
'

.1

r--Reserve grand champion-

ciALuPOLIS • Gallia-Lawrence
FSA ofiace llas received reports of
damage to crops due to lhe recent
cold weatlter. If you have damage,
please contact the FSA office and
report your losses. .
The fruit and vegetable crops in
both counties are covered ·under the
· · red- Assastant
·
program
Non-msu
(NAP) which covers all crops fQr
·
· n?t avau
·1 bl e.
. 19surance
whaoh
as
NAP area eligibility occulli if a naF
ural disM!er causes a crop to suffer an
aggregate 'area loss in excess of 35
percent of area-expected .yield. 'I'IJ!'
losSes on each, farm will be accumillated to: determine an area ,Ioss;

'

Bae~... Orily Better/

IRIY liESIAY IIIII
OilY

•TebleC~ra

• Balloons

•

• Crepe Paper, Etc.

••
'

.

CINCJNNATI - Stiu Bank recent·
ly recognized its top performing
branch managers at its annual "Pinnacle Awards" ceremony held at the
Cincinnati Art Museum. ·
·
The Pinnacle Award is'o11e of Star
Bank's highest retail employee
acliicvement honors and is a tribute
to outstanding customer service ·and
excellence in banking. ·
11Je ceremony included the nam~
ing of the top overall community and
metrOpOlitan branch managers.
MafiO Swisher, of Star Bank's
Sil- BricJce offJCeln Gallipolis, was
named top community bank manag-

,. .
w

~·

. ,'

}.1-&lt;~'-':'!'

•r....,

I:,\

root

Fruit crops affected by April freeze

..

A past president and founding
member of the Mid-Ohio Valley
Pharmacists As\ odation, Stackhous.e
cun:ently serves OPA_as. member of
the lndepende~t Specaal Interest
Group, Legtslau~e and Long Range
Planning C!Jmlnittee..
.
· The OPA, estabhshed m · 1879,
represents more than 4,000 pharrnacasts, p~annacy educators, students.
·
and alhed groups throughout the By JAY CALDWELL .
GALLIPOLIS - Richard J. Waystate.
·
man, CFA, of The Ohio Company
recently issued a report highlighting
' third qUarter results fcir Bob Evans
Farms, hie . The following is a sum0
mary of his report.
Therefore it is illlportanl that each
Key investment points
producer report their Joss. Funds for
Restaurant results show some
these losses have ~01 been requested
improvemenl afrer
or approved.
.•
,
removing
the
lf·you have afiy questions coneffects of the Cancemirig this P.roJll!!ll please contact
tinas. Same store
the office and we 'can be more spesales were slightly
cific abo.ut your crop and what you
positive on a nom•need 1o do .· ,
'
inal basis (includ, .
The o-.la·Lawren~e FSA is a
ing menu increasUn ited States "'·partm
1
fA-'
es).
However,
""'
en o ,.. ••
culture omce located In the C.H. competition
customers arid labor
McKenzie Agricyllural Center at remains intense.
111JacksonPike,Room 1571,Gal- · High hog costs continue to
Jipolls, Ohio. Phone 446-8686 or 1· depress food segment results. Man·
~211·1~26 (1011 ~In 614 area agemenl expects prices to decline
during the summer.
cod )
. e, •
A streamlined menu that empha-

-,
...."'. .
Competition for restaurant custo.rriers remains ·inten~e ...

Swisher wins Star Bank
award
.
,

•.Napklna

Beware
!
of tobacco:·
diseases

By JENNIFER BYRNES
·;··
GALLIPOliS - The 1996 battl~ :.
witl1 blue mold has tobacc~ product:~
ers bracing for more problems i'!.~
1997.
'
RESfRV~ OllANO
The number of calls to the eJtten=: ·
CHIII;'IPION
1ft&gt;
. sion office inquirin~ about blue mol&lt;l~;
control is very encouraging, howev,;..
er, in the detennined efforts to pre-,.
vent blue mold, ilo not forget abour .·
· other tobacco diseales. With nearlY.:,
80 percent of Gallia County on a&gt;•
floa1-bed system . of t:aising trans!":
· planiS, many prOducers are at risk for,.~
Pythium
rot and damping off !rt;
their greenhouses and float-beds. .,...
Tobacco plants affected by Py_.. ..
• um appear in clusterS, stunted and
yellowed compared to the greener, .
·
taller, healthier. surrounding plants: '
The roots of Pythium infected plants
are light brown and .. '1!/ater-soaked•.:
compared with the white roots of a
healthy plant. Til!= fl031,system is ide; : .
al for the development of this diSease. ' ·
exhibited the January, .1996 aon of Rlto 9FB3
Champion Hill Fullback 395 waa named the
The worst cases in Kentucky have '
of 5-H11 Fullback. (J;Ihoto by American Angu' .
reserve·grand champion bull lit the 1997 Ohio
heen.associated witli hi11her temper~ •
Asaoclatlon).
·
Angus Aaaoclatlori Super Star Show and Sale
atures, usually ·~ose trays closes! tQ ••
in Columbus recently, Champion Hill, Bldwall,
the heaters, and 1Ji9se in the center of
the greenhouse. The number o~ ..
cases .and severity of the disease
increases as the teqtperature rises in',
for our dry April weather or the com Extension will be tbe speaker. He will the season. ·. '
By HAROLD H. KNEEN
. Recognize' that it is comtnon fQi" ·
seed would have rotted in the field. cover the question: "Why Would I
Melga County Agent
the disease to be present in low
POMEROY - Were your fruit Sweet com planled now in succession Grow Fish". Expect an overview of enough numbers so that symptoms do ·;
crops affected by the deep freeze of of earlier plantings should sprout the aquacuiture industry, how to ·
· lllctfe Rui~ ldy as our spi\ temperatures, develop. a .business plan for your not appear. The Qniv_eraily of Ken·
•. ,
April 9 anq 10?
tucky repons that 60 PERCENT of
The consensus is in: local chemes: -increase'anto the high' ~Os and lower _ aquaculture · venture, and where to 'the
greenhouses and 'float beds' in ·
obtain atldiiional aquaculture inforpeaches, plums, nectarines, pears 60s degrees Fahrenheit. ·
1996 were infected with some level
If you are traveling along State mation. The cost is $5.00 per person
and apples have all been affected. ·
of
Pythium diseases. Most new floal:
The flowers that bloom may appear Route 338 near the Ravenswood payable at the door. Please call Judy systems are relatively free of the dis;..;,
to be all right, however. when you Bridge take notice. of the acres of May at 1-800-297-2072 to help in ease because they· have "not ver:.:.. ·
look at the pistil (ovaries) within the sweet corn being grown under clear eslimating the number of handouts. . become contaminated with ·the ;
A Meigs County Pond Clinic is
flowers you will discpver that m~sl plastic. This production practice
have rurned black and are dead. The allows the soil to wann up faster than scheduled for May 13, from 6:30 pathogen, but in lime tbe disease , •
commercial growers in our region bare ground and the plastic film acts . p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Robert &amp; builds to damaging levels. As more
will not harvest much tree fruit this like a mini greenhouse promoting Ruth Graham Farm, 37120 Rock- items within the . float system are
summer. Later flowering varieties, earlier foliage growth. There is mo~e springs R~ad , Pomeroy Ohio. Four reused pythium diseases are expect..
like Rome apples, may have been expense in growing sweet com thrs short. sessrons wall be presented on a ed to become increasingly common;
Dr. William Nesmith of the Uni- ':
spared a complete loss. Ho.,vever, it way, however, I'm told the sweet com walking tour around the farm pond.
is expected tha! over 90 percent of sold from this parch will be going ~ about "Pon~ ~ni.mal Conuol", velliity of Kentucky reports that there. ·•
southern Ohio's Red'Delicious apples into a high price Pittsburgh retarl Pond Run Off , Fash Stockang, are no chelnical controls available to."
in the t'loal"·
ma~ker.
·
What Kinds?, Stocking Levels, Fish manage Pythium diseases
were lost ·
.
'•
Parasites"
and
"Plant
Control
Around
Continued on D-2
'
Small fruits such as strawbeiTies
Do you have a pond? Are you the Pond". This is .,.,intly sponsored
and blueberries had their crown flowinterested
in fish farming? If so, there event by the Ohio Depl. of Natural Presents workshop
ers frozen out. Jhe secondary blooms
appear 10 have survived in the fields are two local programs that may Resources-Division of Wildlife,
PORTSMOI.JTII- Karen L. Mar: ,
· I checked in lhe Racine and Portland answer some of your questions. On Meigs County Soil &amp; Wa~r Conser- shall, MS. RC. C, director .of hom\\',
areas. Hopefully, strawb\:rries will be May 7, from 7-10 p.m., plan IO'attend vation District and Auxiliary, Farm care services for Southern Ohio Med~
ready in· thirty days. I can't wait to "Introduction to Aquacul!ure", an Service Agency-Meigs County and · ical Center in Portsmouth, presented
initial aquaculture workshop befog The Ohio State Univelliily Extensiontaste a home grown strawberry. .
a workshop for the International·
held at Ohio State University Exten· Meigs County. Admission is free!
Institute of Research in San Francis~~
11
· Harold H. Kneen Is the Melp
Early yellow sweet corn (lncred- sion's Piketon Research Center 1864
co, Calif., recently.
ible,Seneca Chief) has · finally Shyville Road, Piketon, Ohio. Dr. County Agricultural &amp; Naturat
Ms. Marshall's topic was, "Data\
emerged from the soil after being John Hochheimer, ali aquaculture Resources A11ent, The Ohio State Collection and Reporting RequireS
planted for 21 days. Thank goodness engineer for Ohio Staie University University Extension.
ments forJiome Care Providers." ,.:

·r h··088 who .ha·ve crop
· ·dama.ge·
•.'h.olo.,
,vu.ld. .repo rt I"t t fSA o·ffl ce

Family NitJht l•

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·::tuppers ·Plains woman
~to serve ·o n national.. board

before being loaded 'on a truck for Stockton, Calif., leaving a chalk oUtChicago. From Chicago it drives to line in the street.
,• .
Ann Arbor, Mich., Columbus, Ohio,
The new bus also was named
and arrives in Cleveland on May I 0. Funher, but spelled correctly this
At the end of August, Kesey time, and it has a new paint job. 'ln
plans to drive the bus to New York, place of !he continually chainging
where he hopes to put on perfor- psychedelic swirls is a mural created
mances of his apocalyptic play, by a host of Kescy pals.
Michelangelo's Adam from \he
"Twister."
·
Kesey was fresh from the success Sistine Chapel graces the right side,,
of his book, "One Flew Over the along with Kesey 's contribution.
Cuckoo's Nest/ ' when he embarked' Dorothy, nn Man and Scarecrow
on the original trip with a band of walking up the Yellow Brick Roail.
friends that included driver Neal' A golden jester by Pete Helzer; who·
Cassady; immortalized in Jack Ker- coached Kesey's kids in wrestling,
ouac'·s "On the Road."
graces !he hood. On the ·tailgate,
The original · 1939 International Kcsey 's grandson, Caleb, i's making
school bus . was named Furthur by his mark with alligator decals. .
artist Roy Sebern as a kind of ·one·
"It's an historical docu~ent,"
word poem and inspiration to keep said Ken Babbs,' one of the
on goinll whenever the bus broke pranksters making the trip again
down. ·
with Kcsey.
"That was the destination, it
Jus! as it did when it roarCd into
looked like to me," Sebern said as New York City )Nith music blaring In
he sat at the big round table in the 1964, the bUs still auracts a crowd.
kitchen of the bam that is the Kesey While.insialling a new clut¢1\,·drivco
family home in Pleasant Hill.
train, brak~· and rear axle, niecha~­
"lt was much later tha! I discov- ic Kushner said he had to keep the:
ered I had misspelled it," Sebcm doors of his shop closed to keep out
ad~ed, referring to fact Ire spelled the curious.
•
the name "Furthur" inste'nd of "Fur- ~·
One innovation this lime around
ther."
is the bus will be equipped with a
Kesey said the spelling doesn ' t computer and modem to posJ .
mauer, as long a.~ people remember updates on an Internet site.
the name. "I tell people .' farther' is a
Mosl of tbc . old Pranksters arc
distance, 'further' is a bus," he said. making at least part of the \rip,.
The old bus lies moldering away ·which Babbs has dubbed "The
in th~ back woods at Kcscy 's farm, Grandfurthur Tour," in honor of the
too far gone to be resurrected. group's grandchildren, complct~
except in spirit
with misspelling . . ·
.
The Smithsonian Institution once
"There arc moments whcri I have
expressed an interest in rc.sloring to shake my head and say, ' Whoa/
Furthur, but decided against it In everybody looks so old, " Kcscy '
1990, in conjunction with the puh- said. "l .had them in my mind from
lishing of his , book, "Furthur the movies that )NC too.k. Everybody
lnqu~ry, " Kesey · bought a 1947 is forever young in tfte movies.
!ntemational school hus and passed · "I am often.askcd wh;ir ,evcr hap,rt off as the oragmal, saymg he maghl pencil to the '60s," he added. "I tell
give it to the Smithsonian and might . them, the '60s ain't over 'til the fat ·
not The joke ended when some of lady gels high. "
.
the Pranksters highjacked it in

Kanakarcdes ha.~ used that for
everything from a short stint on
"NYPD Blue" (as Jimmy Smits'
troubled girlfriend) to her current
one. She plays a mof!!uC worker in
"Leaving L;A.," the offbeat series at
9 p.m. Saturdays on ABC.
·
'Meanwhile, Dukakis and Stamos
combine . for "A Match Made in·
Heaven," at 9 p.m. Sunilay on CBS.
It goes against all trends for
"sweeps" movieS: .. " .
·
·:Match" is a sweet story o( a

priations Committee to provide $8.2 minion for emergency spending ~ some emergency spending legislation.
.
And as of May I , fanners in the Dakotas and Minnesota will be permit~
of which would be used for disaster relief in Minnesota and the Dakotas.
A temporary .USDA rule change will allow Fann Service Agency bor- ted to use land set aside in the Conservation Reserve Program for emergency
grazing,'although they will receive a'S percenlleduction in monthly stipends··
rowers to defer one payment to the end of their Joan. even if they have already
the government pays for participation in the Cl{p, A decision on ~ying would
used the deferral. Under normal rules, borrowers are entitled. to only one
defermenL USDA also will assist borrowers who want to completely restrucbe made after June 1.
·
. ·
;..
While ranchers' contend with how to care for surviving livestock, anoth-:!'
ture loans . .
However, the USDA has no plans to suspend foreclosure proceedings at er problem facing communities is the removal of animal earcuses. Sen. Tmw
Daschle, D-S.D., said a blizzard earlier this month killed 1{)8,000 cattle, i
this time, Glickman said. Such a move would be premature because, in many
·
addition
to more than 100,000 which perished during earlier winter storms::
caSes, the next loan payments are not due until early 1998, and such proRanchers
in Nonh Dakota have lost an estirnatA:d 155,000 head of callle. :.,.
ceedings often last two to three years anywa~. he said.
·
But family fanners who live in counties that have been declared federal · To help with the cleimup, the Federal EmerJCRCY Man~~pment AgencY,::
disaster areas can apply for low-interest loans from a $46 million fund ·avai l- : will reimburse federal, stale and local governments for carcus removal,,
although costs incurred by individual farmers and ranc!lers will nOI be reim:,:
able now. President Clinton is seeking another $60 million in the pe~ding
bursed, Glickman said.

By DESIREE F. HICKS
Gal•lelt Newa $ervlce
.WASHINGTON -A-griculture Secretary Dan Glickman announced a
: ntllllber.of initiatives Thursday, including increased federal loan assistance,
for.rarmers and ranchers crippled by paralyzing winter stonns and devas·Wing flooding in the upper Midwest region . ·
.
· Glickman's announcement followed a vote earlier by the HouSe Appro-

Author Ken Kesey takes magi.q
·bus to Rock Hall of Fame · F

The Pointer Slatera

o·

Iunday, Apltl Z7, 1..,

news---__;,.__--------~~

By JEJ::F BARNARD
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
SPRINGFIELQ, Ore. (AP)
Ken Kesey proudly walked around ·
the latest incarnation of! the magic
bus named Further that Kas come to
• symbolize the long strange trip tha,t
was the 1960s.
·
. "I was so glad we rebuilt this
bus," Kesey said Thursday after it
got a final check from mechanic
David Kushner in .the parking lot of
the Springfield Creamery. "A lot of
people have cared for it. If I'd let it
go 10 the Smithsonian. it would have
bee'\an old dead bus. It's alive!"
· Kesey and the surviving members of the Merry Pranksters, whose
.cross-country bus trip to the 1964
World's Fair in New York City was
chronicled in Tom Wolfe's "The
. Electric Kooi-Aid Acid Test,"
embark o.n a new trip Saturday that
ends at the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame and Museum in Cleveland.
There. it will be part of an exhib'
it called, "I Want To Take You Higher, the Psychedelic Era 1965-1969."
"Ke5ey's bus was such a central
part of the San Francisco scene,,partiCularly with introducing to the
world The Warlocks, which obvi·
ciusly became The Grateful Dead, as
well as the famous ·acid tests, which
were so much a part of the )ieriod,"
museum spokesman Tim Moore
said.
'The acid tests helped introduce
the world to LSD, which ·was legal
at the time, and defined the psychedelic era.
"Having them re-create the great
trip across America, to some degree,
is as appropriate a kickoff as we
.could imagine short of having (Jimi)
Hendrix or (Timothy) Leary come
back," Moore added.
·
The bus leaves Lane Community
College in Eugene at about noon
Saturday for San Francisco, where ii
will take part in a series of events

.Section.

,...pe .

er. Adrian Pasquale of the bank's
Highland Heights office in the Cleveland East district was Dilmed IQp met·
ropolit;ur bank manaa~r.
·. ~asqliale opted for a cash prize.
Swisher chose a cash ~1.C. Each Pinnacle Award willner received. a personalized lucile sculpture at the
evening's festivities.
To be.recognized with a Pinnacle
Award , it .means the · individual
ranked among the top 10 percent of
all Star Bank branch managers. Star
Bank has 270 branch locations in
Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.

margms at last year's levels. Earn- annual basas.
·
ings per share for the quarter was ·
Outlook
$0:19 compared to $0.18 earned in
Managemenl announced several
- 3Q95.
·
new initiative for both the restaurant
Total revenues increased 2.3 and f9od segments.
percent.
However, because !hese initiaRestaurant sales grew almost Lives are relatively recent (some
2.0% as the number 'of restaurants were introduced last fall and orhers
increased and same store sales grew are to be .implemented this April),
0.8 percent. Excluding the cantinas their impact will not be felt until the
(which were closed in August, company's first or second fiscal
1996), restaurant revenues increased quarters. Wh jle there are several
6.0 percent. Net inco!Jle increased new food products scheduled for
62 percent to $6.7 million a• ·.a introduction, high hog costs are
decline in food- costs was slightly expected to dominate the results.
. offset bJI hioher
·Management currently expects hogs
., labor expense.
·
Food segment sales were $39.6 to remain at historically high levels
. million, a 3.0 percent increase, as until mid-summer.
new product introductions. and a
Restaurant initiatives include a
sausage price increase offset a 7.0 redesigned menu, a return to "homepercent decline ·in sausage volume. style" .items, new operating proceThe dedine in sausage vGiume ·dures and a media campaign. A
appears to be a respon.se· to the streamlined menu' will be introduced
recent price increase which pushed in Aptil that will focus attention on
the price of the company's bench- BODE's mosl popular "homesty 1e'•
·Sizes ' Bob Evans "homestyl e" mark one pound roll above the $3 items. New operating. procedures
entrees will be un veiled in April. .
level. Net income declined signifi- will also be implemented that are
The new menu is expected to candy due to high hog co~l and con- designe&lt;j to increase customer serincrease customer satisfaction and tinued expenses associated with the vice and 'operating efficiencies.
increase operating efficiencies.
11ew Hickory Specialties charcoal There will also be a new advertising
While we feel that most of the plant.
,
·
campaign, starting April 7, 1997 that
bad news has been factored in the··
Hog costs continue to linger at will highlight breakfasts.
share pric~. we reiterate our "hold" $54 per nundredweight, a 50.0 perProduct extensions and increased
rating until we see evidence of lower cent increase over last year's price of distribution are planned for the food
hog· costs and restaurant margin $36.
segment. The company plans to
improvement
The financial condition of the increase distribution of ·its frozen
Recent results • Third quarter company remains good. While debt Homestyle Bntree ~ throughout Ohio
199'7
levels have increased, financial and western New York state. BOBE
Results for the third quaner were leverage remains low, both on ..an . will also introduce ~ sriackwich li~e
·in-line with our revised expects- absolute basis and relative to the extensaon and a manr hotcake wtth
tions. Lower than expo:cted SG&amp;A industry. Interest coverage is more maple sausage pauy. However, any
expenses were offset by higher hog than adequate as BOBE has usually benefits from these programs m*y
' and labor costs, keepin11 operating generated net interest ineome on an be offset by continued high hog

costs.
·
·
:!:.
Our EPS forecast for 1997::;
remains $0.84, but . we've reduced~
our forecast for 1998 10 s1.o3 from::·
$1.09. Our estimates assume 20 new""
restaurants in 1998; flat to ' slightly::'
negative restaurant same store sales'.'."
and high hog cosiS until later this:
summer. While we are maintaining :·
- our "!lold" rating, we think that the.').
shares are becoming more attractive. ~·
After 10 quarters of negative same::;
· store sales and shrinking margins •
caused by stubborn hog co~ts; we : .
feel that . the bad news is already ·~·..
reflected in t.he share price; The •·
stoc!c'srecentriseoffthe lowof$12. •1;
13 .may be due to increased expecta-·. ,.
lions that hog costs will decline this•.. ;
· summer. With the shares trading at a:•.
·forward PIE of 13.6x, an argument ':~
could ·be made· that the shares are •;'
undervalued based on our EPS fore- ~,.
cast of 22.6 percent EPS growth l·n ''''
1998 . However, we remain cautious '"

ab!)ut sales growth and margins in '"'
the restaurant segment, whkh iv
aiccouniS for 70 percent of BODE's ..;;
business.ln addition, hog costs have '
remained at historically high levels ,...
for almost two years.
"~
, -·
·•::
~ Ohao Company makes • mar- ,...
ket 10 shares of BOBE and, as a mat- '·;
ter of course, Amay.ffibuy orfseThellfoOhrats :;!
1~ .;,;
ownaccou~t. no cero
1
Company ~ a member of BOllEs '
Board of Directors.
(Jay
11 aa bl\'etliDellt -:•
executhe wltla The 010o c-pa.' :
ny In 111 C.polll alike.)
·•
; :
""

Caldwdl

••
,

�.

,..oz._. , .._,,.,. r

'

Pomeroy • Middleport • GIIIHpolll, OH • Point PIMunt, WY

Tips on door repair

Sund8y, April 'D, 1117

'!

'

. . -1.

LHt· a - · a gold Selu
•tell, loat Ill
K.......
~ Colle, - . . ,

Area agricultural news
TOBACCO PRODUCERS: The
North Carolina State University pr().
vides a Blue Mold Forecast available
on the Internet. These forecasts
attempt to predict ·with a two day
warning, when blue mold spores
will land in our area. As of Wednesday, April 23, there were confirmed
reports of active sporulating blue
mold in Florida. However, the report
also indicated that there are no serious source threats, and that the areas
at high risk to developing bl.ue mold
in production areas are currently
limited to Mexico, parts ofTexas, and
Gainesville, Florida.
Tobacco prOducers in this area are
still encouraged to prepare a fungicide spray plan to control blue mold
this summer. Chemic;al control can
begin in the float beds, as soon as the
plants arc dime size.
Remember prevention is the best
method, and that means chemical
coverage before blue mold spores
land in your fields. Please call the
OSU Extension office at 446-7007
for the UK recommended control
plan.
CATTITE PRODUCERS: The
Gallia County Cattleman's Associa-

pel, 81•·tt2.. S51, l14-tl2· '
3471,orl1--.._

.,l

· .AI.L.'flnl'-lllual

..,.•••a:oo
~~~~
. •41rlliiilDm-

\ 8il111Ntaldo
• I

I

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~illing

master

suite

Dt',si~nt'rs Network, nfft'rs simple · includes a drt"ssing ro•~m, u large
lines. r:c.·nnumit·nl t.:cu1!Hruc: liut1· · walk-in dnsr.lnnd a privale bulh ..
;md' umplt&gt; s.pUt't" lin both fnmily
Tht' thret' t't"maining bedroihns

life and formal entertain in@ - all

are larger than overage and oiler

un nne lltH»r. This fnur -bedronm

am pit&gt; t•ln~t'l

dr•ign pntvldes 1,751 square feet
nf living spat:e.
Thr. d1arming t:ntta@e-slyle

~putt'.

Two exto·a dos~ts in the hallway

t"Xlerior gi\'t'S way ln a SJlUC..'ious .

lnlerinr. A I ~ - l'nnt vnnllt&lt;d,
beam~d t•eilln,; ""I" the huge livin~ ruum, whi~·h l't'Hiures H IHrf:!;t'

G-55 STATISTICS ·;,,:· ; . 1

nrt'a and I hr. furmal dining

ruom.
The deluxe

AI' Newsff'atul't's
l'hon G-53, by llnm~Styles

ac:c·umnuuhll~ l'amily linens Hl)d
st:asunal it~ms. ~
1\ niee -5it.ed SIHI'lige ltr~H nnd u
ulilily rumu nn~ nt:t:es.s lhle l'rt~lll
the I wn-t·nr gnrnge.

·n·

e~ign G-53. ha~ a living
ron111, di·ning room,

m ~t.·t"·ss

lu a

fhur bedr'o~nns, iwo rull baths an~

a utility room, totalinll 1,7.51
square reet nf llvlnll space. This
plan includes a crawlspace nr
slab foundation, and llx4 exterior ·
walll'ramlnll· The two-car ~arage
spnns 484 square feet, . ~ ·nd Its
ultacloed storuse areu provides
. 105 square l'eet ol' add'l'tlonel t

·

~

'· '

bal"l~. ­

yaniJ&gt;Utlu.
The .. mdent ~nll,.y -style. kikhen
l'lnws betwt'en a sunny bnyed

(For a mm't' rkltliltd, .~cult•d pluu uf Ihill lwu.w~. irtt.· ludill# ~-ruidt." lo esli- .
cusls undjiuam:illlf, send $4 lo /Joust~ tif lhe Wt.ek~ 1'.0. /lux I JIS2,
New l'11rlr, N.l'. 1011~·1 562. /Inure to include tile plan numbr-r.
malin~-:

u-... ' -·

~

!:.

JI

'l

LARRY'S LAWN CARE
• Mowing (Residential &amp;
' · Commercial)

j ' '1

. P'' IJ
~

•

•Weedeating
• Tree Trimming
Shubbery Maintenance.
Plan Ahead, Call today
for free estimate
742-2803 or 446-3622

l~

I.' ,,l .
I

I

'

I

1

speech
'
88 Low-calorie lunch
90 Ethereal .

•,

91 To a higher floor
95 Stuck with adhesive
97 Door

42 Serf
44 Strictness

46 Fond wish
. 48 Not quite dry
49 Elevate
50 Indian instrument
52 Tossed
54 -ink
56 Lacking lreshness
57 Facilitated
58 Ball of yam
60 Bristle
63 -firma
65. Remainder
67 Pole for walking tall
69 Speaker's platform
70 Varnish cousin
71 Long piece
74 Inventor Howe
76 Cliff ·

'

11'xl0'

BEORM. ·

G-53 ·

12'a10'

-

i

~),

. DINING

POliCH

BED AM.

BEOAM.

'

12'xt1'

12'a12'

: 1J '!

I

Sew Creative
2427 Mill Creek Rd, Gallipolis
Inventory Reduction Sale
2 Days Only
Mon 28th • Tue-29111 ·9:00-6:00
· Fabric 45"-60" at $1 .50 yd
Lace Single AssortBCI
4 ydS/$1.00
25% off all stock

''

,

,

'

l'

,J

i

I

'

BEYOND TilE COVERED FRONT PORCH, t"e entry opens to the formal dining room on the len, and · • i
to the ·nvlng room ahead. The kitchen lies between lhe dln!ns room and the eollng area. Nearby, a · : . 1
·utility room provides access to the two-car sarage, The sle~plng areas ore located across 'tile h01he1 1'~ '
Here, three secondary bedrooms share a hall bath, while the m1111ler bedroom contains a private bath, a
i
dreS8lng area and a walk-In closet
·
·

Window films block sunlight .,. ],

r

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Few structural. features make a
house more aitractive and livable
than windows.
In fact, for most of us. the more
windows the better. Yet window
glass is not a very good energy barrier. And, it's paradoxical that for all
we invest in windows, most of us
rush to draw the blinds to block out
the summer sun .' Not only is direct
sunlight often too bright and too hot,
it carries tQO mUch ultraviolet radiation and produces glare.
In fact. single-pain window glass
blocks less than 25 petcent of the UV
rays that damage skin and fade
drapes, carpets and furnishings . It
reflects less than 8 percent of the light
and heat that strikes it and absorbs
only 5 percent, while allowing roughly 87 percent to pass through.
The year-round numbers for dou- .·
ble-glazcd windows are only ....,....

e~clud~ ·~ ~·I

LAYNE FURNITURE

ly better. What we really need is a ible lighCas we want, while
:
window lhat's a little more discrimi- ing some of sunlight's less demable ·
nating- one that lets in as much vis- characteristics.
r--~~~ ....,~~--·
'

....

LAf'IGE SELECTION
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
· PRICED $450 TO $995
LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
MON. THAU SAT. 9-5 P.M. 4o46:0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE ·

_.___..;.._..;.._____..,

'ROOFING SALE

• Fa$1,, easy 1{18tallatlon
.
• Goes dlr~over ol~ roof· .
• Won't rust of'corrode
• Reduces noise
• Provldas llddtid lnautalion '
: • Ufetime limited warranty

'
j

.•: ..,

I .;"' .

~

I would like lo thank the
for all of their
during "The week of
ChUd" 4/13-4/19

SALE

$1148~~sq,

Sheet

(26.3

1 ......... Pt ""'••••1...
111111

114-17&amp;-2710

Ft)

WMe *Brown *Red Black
"Gray Green Tan Blue
•tn Stock Colors
At least 32 squares In $lOCk

'
j

I

....'

.

IIII ~~!~~:~~~~~~Y
Paul Davies
City Perk, Gallipolis
IIE~:=~~:SupRiy,
Dominoes,Foodland
Lorobles,
and LitUe Caesars.
. I also want to thank my staff, the

.''

grandparents and
for all of their help
this special week a great

"

..

·•,

Hlgll Street,
Ohlo43215

2."F.W. Dodge Plll!l ~:
1. Columbua, OH
·
2. ClncfnDIII, OH ,
3. Chlrltltlton, wv
3. Tilt Prtlldent o1 lht

Public
NOTIC£ TO II)DIR8

Stlltd bide "'Ill be

Qalllt
County
CommiHI-ra: 11 Loculi
Street, Qalllpolla, Ohio

411131

Olllo , Dept. of
.rteltvtd lOr
.Devalopmtnt, Minority
WASTIWATiR FACILITIIS . . . . _ , 77 loutll High pfKU 1. ..
IMPROViMEHT8
Fir., Columbu8, Ott ·AP,ril 13, 20, 27, 18t7
BIDWILL/POIITER, OHIO
JIIOR,
4.

1. ..l

,. 1.29 ACRES
St. At. 588 (1 mile . ·
trom Gallipolis)
2 Old Trailers on lot

'(304) 675-6325 .
'·. (304) 675-6165

MINDY&amp;SAM
SMITH
ON THE ARRIVAL
OF
CHAC~ JENNINGS

I

•·

,.... ·uu ..

8 LBS. 140Z.
22" LONG.

..

_._

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-3

•

dacu....,ladon of rllldanio .,.._
ualed Ond/or -ted "r coat aocounolng purpotea. II poltlbft,
-rIO bill Medlcald!lloclcare
ancllar 1111)' lhlrd porty Ogtneioa;
llllt&lt;talltd peracnt colllael 300171-1110 EXT 102 or 101
1:00olo·4:00~m. llon·fll for blcl
lorm. Lakin otpllol ta an EEO
E._.,
Conaulting Phyalcal Theroptalto
worl&lt; at· [oktn Hoapllal, laklri,
WV. lluat be certified lhoraplat.
Provklt aorvlcta twice a monlh
or u -.reclllual prvvklo wrll·
ian clocumtntallon of realdanll
-lUlled and/or troaled for ceil!
accauntlng purpoua. H poatllllt,
to bll Mltdlcaklll,lltdlcore
anlflor ""' lhlrd party agencitl.
lnltrHI&amp;d peraona con11ct 304·
175-0810 EXT. 102 or 101 .
1:00om,4:00pm llon-Fri lor bid
lorm. Lakin Hoapllella an EEO
~·

Tri-State Pressure Washing
"We Pressure Wash Anytime"
Houses, ·Decks, Mobile Homes &amp;
Equip. etc.
Call for Free Estimates
614-367-0433

$aturday, May 3,
1:00-4:00
Green Elementary
. School
. 113 Centenary Church Rd.
Gallipolis
Free Admission·
Free Enlertainment
Games and ActMties- $1.00
· for tt)e day
Hcimsma~e Pie, Homemade
Ice-cream, Hot dogs, Popcorn,
Slush, Drinks
Pie Judging Conlest and.

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!
Serta Mattrass
$59,00
$19,g5 .
Bed Frames
Recliners
$99.00
4 Drawer Chast
$49.95
Le-Z-Boy Recliners
$299.00
4 pc. Bedroom ·
Suite
. $499.00
FLAIR. FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

Auction .
· ·. Fqf entry lnfonnatton call
· 441·1571 or 446-3236
Second Chance Shop
. is. now accepting all used
sports items balls, gloves,
shoes, bats, any item
related to any sport!
Bring in now for re-sale!
446-8858
701 Second Ave.
inside Movie Station

Special Unlimited Tanning For
May for .$30 at
Ussa's River View Salon of
Beauty
446~ Hair Stylist Needed
PUBUC SERVICE
ANNOUNCEMENT
The Galli&amp; Area Herbal Guild
invites you to .o ur 2nd Annual
"Plants, Tastes and Tsas" Sale
Saturday, May 3rd, 1oam • 4pm
Davison's Greenhouse on Clay
Ctlapel Road, half mile off St.
Rt. 218. Creative crafts by
Lois Nibert and
Mary Ja.ne Wolfe is exhibited.
come and have a great tlmel

CLIFFSIDE CARTPATH
FUND
. , I TOURNAMENT
.

· Saturday,
May 3, 1997 .
8:30 Shotgun ..
Details-

Call 446-4653 .

Missing Slack &amp; Brown
Male Yourkshire Terrier
with red collar that has
rhinestones on it. He
· answers to Dewey.
Raward will be given. If
found please return at
·eM) ~ate Route 588.
Last seen on Texas Rd.

"Going Out of Business Sale"
20% Off Startlhg April '28 ·
Crawford's Grocery &amp;
Sport Shop
Henderson, WV
1 block from Blue Ridge

·'·

FOR SALE .

Public Nodoe .
· 1tl7 Ill ·tht Glllla County
C:Ommlaalonere ·Offlca, 1e
!,OCUli Strtlt, Gllllpolla,
OH 41831, 11114) 441-4374. · • l
Tile bide '111111 bt publicly
1
,opened lmmtdllltly
~_,.. tnd ralld aloucl. , · 1
· Contraota'for work Under . . l
thl1 Bid will obllgete · tht.'' '',
Contractor to comply 'rllh •
fadartl, e~ta tnd local , ·
lawa, •••tutu, and
.ordlnanc.. l.neludtnl
'llct111lng . ol ContrMtore.
·wag• ratea, ilnd non, "
'dltcrlmlnttlng hlrln~ · .,

IU.21Xl •

once And Education /35 Houra

Now Selling. Fresh Meats

"-t WHk /County EmptoyM
llenatiiL

Beef Cube Steak .. ............... $1.991b
Ground Chuck Patties .... ~ .... $1.191b
Ground Chuck ..... .. ... ... .. ..... .. . 99e lb.
Chuck Roast .. ..... : ........ .. ..... $1.391b
Chuck Steak .......................$1.49 lb.
Ribe Eye Steak .................. $4.991b.
Center Cut Pork Chops .. .. .. $1.991b.
End Cuts Pork Chops ........ $1 .29 .lb.
Pork Cube Steak ... ...... ... .... $1.991b.
Home Made Fresh Sausage $1.491b.
Pork Steak , ........................ $1 .99 lb.
Fresh Pork Side B~con ...... $1.491b.

Que r ·a;·
Auoc~a.. DoorH Or Eqiolvolenl Plut
3

-Driftrl Ucer.&amp;

fdHJOUtJCU.IUI Is

:W:..pi:~ llua:~r=~·!rf.~=
Prov

Official Harley Davisons
Biker Boots by Carolina
· $99.00 also
Sincerely, Usa. Col.tahenour
· Loggers .... " ............. $50.00
The French City Child care ·
Wellington ................$50.00
Canter
Harness .. .. ............... $59.00
•'-:::::::::;:======~
$49to $150
lr';:::::::;::::::;::::::;::::::;::::::::::::;::::::;:::::::==,j Western
' Safety,...........
Insulated, Gortex
Swain Furniture &amp; Boots
.62 Olive St Gallipolis

",
·•

388·8801

1111,200
•' According
a • · · To Experl·
To 4 YHrt Of Rolalecl E1porl·
enco /Gallie County Rotldancy I

Bl GO
n4M"'"!
Contltct
All Clerical Aapecll Of The Oflice, Enter Clltnl 0.11 lniD The
TASC lltS.S,attm, Prepere Sla·
tiotlcol And Direct Service At·
porll And Prtpert Ali Purcha•
B

Ordltl.

[IIIII[!M; Appllcatlono · Mull
Bt RocelvH By May 2. 111117. •

ptlcatiano Are Avallabfe AI 414
Sulla 200, Gattl-

Sacond -.....
poll, OH

Gatlia -Jockaon To\SC Ia An
Equal Opportunlly Emptayar
Fundocl By The Ohio Deparunont
Of Alcohol And Drug Addlcllon
Sarvlc11 Through The Pallia .
Jac:ktan - llolga Board 01 Atco·
hoi, Drug Addiction And llellllll ·

'·

POST 467 .
MON.&amp; WED.

6:30P.M.
·.STAR BURST
$1500.00
$50.00 ·-·

---

"

"

u·

.,•

Custom Cutting
USI).t\ Inspected Freezer Beef,
Quarters, Sides, Whole

.......

Call for prices
6 mUes west on Rt.l60

BEECHGROVE
ROAD

··~

.\

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

, I

n

Bidwell, Ohio 202 Clark Chapel R~.
M·F H Sat 9-12

A.D ....... 3rdloalt

BULLETIN BOARD

! . . l.

il

1 Batman's sidekick
2 "Gone With the
Wind' heroine
3 False f11ces
4 Brislleiike
appendage
5 Born&lt; Fr.
6 Cleaning cloth
7 War god
8 Haughty
9 Polliwog
10 Fitting
1t Pasternak character
12 In reserve: 2 wds.
13 Glittering
headbands
14 Actress Gardner
t5 Realm
16 Oneat-17 "For ,....,. sake!"
18 Lovers' meeting ·
21 - - evil
23 Priest
31 Pulls oars
33 Play a guitar
36 Devilkin .
37 Black
38 Objecllrom .
antiquity
40 Tutor

•-1

I::M:.

kitl'hen, an eating area,

und llrnud l'ire;&gt;lnt·e, buill-in
·IHmksht&gt;l\"t"S and

::n;

:' J

STONE Fo\CING, rustle shullel'!l and acozy covernlrmrch slve this home a warm, simple beauty.
By BRUCE A; NATIIAN

'

Walled to Buy
Abooline Top lloltar: All U.S. Sl·
- And Gokl Co ina. Proofatll,
DIIUIIIlllda, Anliquo ~ry. Gokl 110 Help Wanted
Rim,p,._1t30 U.S. CUrftiiCY.
sw EIO. AcqulallloN .-try
t Col Silo 151 e - nc1 AlTENTION: Semi dump
• II. ·
n P.
-•
• .,.,...... T~ltd of lh1ing empty,
Pno I ill WI Go 10
Galltda, 81 ...-:1142.
n..d • change, nol afraid of
lloy 11~ 2nd, 3rd, 4tlo, 1:00 A.M. AI)U..ta, furnll!lre, gtau, chino, work, you aupply lhe ldruclos .J
To I P.M. 41 Chllllcolht Roed, colna, ID,a,'lampo, ouna, loola, drl..r, wo auppty lhe loa 1. ~
:Clothing, Adulll &amp; Iliac. •-•lolaa1:1 ~'!:'. ~~;"fula, Oab,
'='i~~~.':.\:i =mudl·
· ' ~· '
·lfl u well u non-hazardoua
AnUquta, IDP pr~ peid, Rl..,- and h0zordoua moltrlola. CoM
----.;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:---~ int
Anllqutl, Pomeroy, Ohio, Rlclo Brown·IDII frH. 1·800·847·
Pomeroy,
Run Moore ownar, 114·012· &lt;15114.
25:!11.
·
·~
. Mlcldla......,
_,..,. '
~
&amp; VIcinity
Clton LOll · Model Cora Or
$8-$18/ Hou•. No DcD· ToTruc:ka._ 1090 Modell Or Newer,
. · Door.
AU Yonl ..... lltluat Bt Pold ln. Smltlo aulc:k Pontiac, 1800 Eoa~
QuldtCIIIII
Ad._.
DeaiiiiM: 1:110pm the em........._ Gollpollt
dty -oto;o the ad lo to run,
·~
Iunday 6 Monday edition• J &amp; D'a AulD Parra. Buying ial·
1:GOpn Fllday.
vage vohlciH. Balling porll. 300FUN!
.
773-5033,
1-11»827.- tNOIDLDIREP
:: . -1
..,.. s l!daf.
Churd\ ~ Salt: Friclay lleio 2.
1887, H: ·llalu~ U., S. 1087,
1·3. Houaellold llemt, Toya,
Clolhlnt&gt; o\110 Balw Salt llama,
Popcorn I
3773 Gaorgt'a
C...., Galli 1 OH ••••1 o\11
r....
0.
•

.

78 Long-necked bird
81 PHch
83 First king of Israel
85 Pancake lopping
87 Threesome
89 Sandwich store, lor
short ·
91 Neplus92 Braid
93 - ollhe earth
94 Shopping 96 Delaware's capital · ·
98 Snare
99 Of an fl&amp;Siem
region
100 Slow, in music
101 Concerning: 2 wds.
103 Louver boards
105 Mystical card
107 Cook in juices
109 Also-ran
. 111 Angry
11 ;l Wanderer
116 Scandinavian
119 Poet Teasdale
123 Is frugal
125 Nol at all wild
126 Yellow fruh
127 DC VIP
129 Drinklng'bout
i 30 Places for travelers
132 Golden-touch king
134 Rare
135 Bette or Jefferson
136-- ear and out
the other
137 Beholdl: Fr.
138 Neighbor of India
140 Private room
142 Gladden
143 Assessed
144 Chairs
147 Singer McEnlire
149 Top perlonner .
152 Ads.
154 Shrlh sense: abbr.
156 Native of: suffix
157 Deily
·

......,n Aucllan Cornparor.
full u... auctioneer. comptell
awctlon Hrvlc•. llcentH
Ohi 1 Vlr..nl 1104·
o
I
.,. 0.
17S-51150ril04-~7·
Rick

r Jr ! , . i r • ; , J

; '; r •

OHIO VALJ.E.Y CUSTOM MEATS

ea.W,

U41•114 :IIIDid

'

Grand OpenlJqJ
April 28th Sale

.. P08TAL .1018Wanlecl To lu, UHd Mobile Perma..nt, Full-lime 113/Hr.,
=
· Call' IU.,..I.0175 Or Wltlo a. ...Bonofl~
..
;;.;..:.;7$-..;,.;;lle;,;.l;;__ _..,..._ .'lildow For Clerk ICalrier
.......
c.tl
'
A.ll.
To
'
!II.,
1·
WonledTo Buy: .link
114- -2JIH0111, Ext H.
Ul mo.
Wanlecl To Buy: Wt Bu, Junk Camelery Salea, evary body
car. IU Ul PART, •Or 11 ~ -II. 11--·74-40.
110112.
Compultr Uura Netdltd. Work
Wonlld: Ulld Hood od F-.g own·houra. S20kiro $50k/yr 1·
In Goad Condition, c.tl 11._2 45- ~71111111508.
11111.
Con au !ling Oocupedonal 't:hara.
pill ID work
at Lokln
Lakin,.
WV, llull
be Hoaptlaf,
certlflod

:-~'~'=~=~!·~·;·~·~·;(~·;'~-~ 10

SUNDAY PUZZLER
DOWN

O',

Ia ....... • _._
_,_,
....,. _ _ ,..,.

'I , .

101- breve
t02 Cuts
1 Kind of numeral
104 ApportiOn
6 Transported
106 Hospilal workers
10 "Thanks - -1·
.108 Delay
14 Make suhable
110 Flavoring plant
19 Chicago's airport
112 -the Terrible
20 Wall hanging
114 Enamel .
22 Sudden fear
115 Poseidon's son
24 Polls visitor
117 Expensive
25 Musical Count
118 Love personified
26 Crystal· filled stone ·
120 Edible paste
27 Courtroom event
" 121 Cereal grass
28 Friendship
122 Dis1ress-call letters ·
29 Annoys
124 Coup d'30 Firsl·rate
126 Pleasant odors
32 "Green-"
128 The present 34 Singer Ed 129 Bed on a ship
35 More spoteful
131 Postal item
39 - - disturb
133 Vetches
41 Most
135 Something that
· unsophisticated
amuses .
43 Yellow color
139 Arab VIPs
45 Mooed
141 Ballerinas
47 Femme fatale
145 Belore long
48-Moines
146 Stage direction
51 Courteous
148 Uses a blue pencil
· 53 Rani's garment
150 Wings
55 --de-sac
151 Makes null
56 dry, said of wine
153 ·COI)e-shaped lent
59 Line of rotation
155 Sharp
61 Near
157 Persona non-.
62 Penny
t58 Creek
64 Human being
159 Thick slices
66 Spouses
160 Ice cream paMor
66 Quantity of wood
drinks
70 Ghosts
.161 Group of eight
72 Tantalize
162 Scorches
163 H.ll .
73 River In Nebraska
75 Extimd lo
164 British wMewall
77 Merriment
165 Acts
79 Did in
sO Follows closelY
82 Sends by telegraph
84 Took into custody
'86 Buoyant quality of

nNIII.

10
Yw'd Sale
Wtde!MJM'• Auction Service;
:====:=:;~;==:::::::j ·a It •a,Ctt~e144.,.21211,
GI.IIIpolll
L-.ra Auction s.r-. Ltlll•
Lemley, Auclla-. HouHilold,
l VJcJnlty
E....; Form Salol. Cell 114-441-

'

•J

ACROSS

Wanoecl Tlm!M&lt; a or ~
Land Pro'"*"'nal lefflcta.
liNd "-f*' "'oodlonda, 11•·

Union 1M./

11.-ry AN., vlcfnlfY, clolltl'a

tion is taking bids on a set of scales.
These scales will go to the highest
scaled bid, and will be sold as they
are at the present time. To inspect the
scales, and plac;c a bid, siop by the
OSU Extension office on Jackson
Pike.
Bids will be accepted until May I,
1997.
SHEEP PRODUCERS: There
will be a meeting of the Ohio Valley
Sheep Association on Monday, April
28, 1997 at 7:30p.m.. Plan to meet
at the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural'
Center.
HOMEOWNERS: ' With the
plight of the lady beetle drawing to a
close for .this season, the calls · are
focusing on concern about termites . .
This is the season for termites to fly
around and alarm homeowners. If ·
they are flying inside yciur home,
there is cause for concern, however,
if they are spotted outside, the
chances are that they have emerged
from an outdoor wood source such as
wood piles, etc. For more information
about termites, please call the OSU
Extension office at 614-446-7007 and
request a fact sheet..
.
Jennifer Byrnes is GaUU! County's county extension a1enl · fo~
agriculture and natural resources.

110 HelpWaact

UMd ....r---~
•u•;
-~:&amp;

111'--.

.

7007.

110 Help Wadi If

llal - en
· IMNIIy
• at p(
n
; ,2DOIIohlt

Beware of tobacco ·diseases..•
•• Continued from D-1
SJ'!llems. Metai\Uyl-containing fungicides (Ridomil) are not labeled for
uiie in the float or greenhouse, and the
belle fits from using these products
ari highly variable because there are
sli:; many different · strains of the
p@logen. ·
~:Some strains have already exhibited resistant to Metalaxyl-contalning
flf,gicides. Thus, in time, we do not
e~ect products such as Ridornil (o
provide effective control for Pythium
rc;it rot.
",Furthermore, off-label use of these
p(lldu.cts may accelerate the devel Oll.l"ent of resistant strains.
•:Sanitation from the very beginni':.g is important for control. . In
ad'dition, adequate ventilation, avoiding compacted soil in trays, avoiding
stre)seS on the plants, and ~voiding
high root temperatures are s_pme cuitural methods of control and prevenlion. Even though this disease is not
comparable to. the wide-spread
destructive nature.of blue mold, it is
impCJlant that producers be on the
loo~out for it as well as other diseases. For more information about
Pythiumor other tobacco diseases
including blue mold. please call the
OSU Extension .office at 614-446-

110 Help Wlldld

FOUIIO: ...... at lternwn Patk

me

~

............
au---.

!'!'!f,·~~=~

Simply. beautiful

ICREADIR • DIOUT 11001(8
. shape. You may need to callin a proslightly enlqed, drill a pilot hole
Afllp1a111 ~
fessional to ~pair- or replace- a. goinc lhrough the jamb into the stud
,If a door won I open and close metal door wuh a warped frame.
behind it. Insert a lonJer screw.
~y. the source of the problem
Hinge-related rcpaiJs are easier to
Here are some other troublefi!I!Y be the door itself- the hinges, make. Check them first Look for shooting tips: ·
~inge screws that have worked loose
·
tit, latch or the _frame.
~.If a . d~ IS ba4ly defonned, or that arc turning in their holes with·
_ If the door rubs at
top or
~lace 11. Mmor wuping can some- QUt gripping. Plug an enlarged screw bottom corner, check and tighten
Ull)es be corrected by ac;Jding qoth- ho.le with a glue-coated wooden golf loose hinge screws. Or place a thin
ec hingc,
.'
.
tee or dowel, or use matchsticks or . piece of wood or cardboard behind a
~ If the house'S' settling has pushed toothpicks. ,
. hinge leaf on the jamb. Do it on the
t~ door's frame. or jambs - out
When the glue is dry, triiJI the plug
1
the bb'
0 ~; square, the door can often be · · flush. Then drill a pilot hole and hinge that is c oscst to
ru mg
rliined or trimmed to fit the new insert the screw. For a hole that's only area.

...

PoiMroy • Middleport • Galllpo118, OH • Point Plllllnl. WV

10 Loet lnd Faund

House of the week

. ...

.

lundlly, April 'D, 1117

-·

FOR SALE
. Addi$on·, Ohio
10' X 30'

Turkey -Ham Djnner

Trailer on River lot
"Beautiful View"

Homemade Noodles - Green
- . Beans, Slaw- MashBCI

(304) 675-6325
. (304) 675-~165

Tea- Lemonade • Co'flee

Potatoes • Roll· Dessert.
Sunday, May 4
11
at
Southern High School
· Take outs available
Adults $4.75 Students $3.50

:oo-2:oo

Monday, April 28th
GaiNpolls Chapter N283.
O.E.S. annual
of
. ln8pectlon
.
officers. Inspecting officer
W.A.. M. ~G. David.
Home Chapter of lhe Di81124
Deputy Grand Matron,
Jeanie Howell. 7:30 pm
All Eaeten1 Star ~embers are
. WelCome to Allend

.

, GALLIPOLIS CONVENIENT MINI
.STORAGE
i Q9 Flamingo Dr.
Spring .storage Speclai. .. Pay 3
months and gel 4th monlh free.
.. . 446-8592.

1

Does Your Child Want To
Be ln. Parades?
Flag Corp. Classes to
Begin For Information
Call: Kim Vanmeter
.446-7644
Gina EUiott 367-7549
NOW OPEN
SFS TRUCK SALES,
INC.
614/446·03511/800/280·6088
Specializing In Heavy Duty
Truck Parts &amp; Service
Truck Repair, Engine Machine
Shop, Complete line of: Air &amp;
Hydraulic hoses and fittings,
Baldwin fiHers, Chains and
binders, Deka batteries, CR
seals and bearings, U-jointS,
Brake shoes, Suspension·
parts, TRC lubricant
'COME AND SEE US AT ·
2\50 EASTERN AVE,
~bL(POLIS, OHIO

Holz r Medical
Center
Diabetic Education
.Team·
diabetes classes
May 5-6-7
2 to 5 PM
To register
call

446-5313
We appreciate the love,
the kindness, and the
caring that has been
extended to our family
during the loss of our
son, Patrick Michael
Lawrence. Thank you
everyone and may ,God
bless yo~ all.
J&amp;MMUSIC

NOW HAS AN ASSOCIATE
PIANO TUNER AND .

REPAIRMAN
JOSEPH WHITE, JR.
CALL 614 36J.&lt;l204

New Television Station
· in Pomeroy

TV27
OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, APRiL 27th
2 to 6 P.M.
212 Rock St, Pomeroy
992·2727
Churches: Enter to win .a
FREE 30 Min. Program.
Businesses: Enter to win a
FREE 30 Sec. Commercial
Serving Meigs, Gallia

..

'&amp;Mason

. Your Hometown Connection!
· SPRING CLEANING?
.Call Captsln Steamer
Carpel Cleaner .
Deodorizing, Scotchgarding,
· Free Estimates
675-1304

BREATH EASY
An educational support
group for adults with chronic
lung disease will meet
Wednesday, May 7 at2 PM
in lhe French 500 Room at
Holzer Medical Cenler
Speaker: John Viall; M.D.
Department of
Otolaryngology ·
Holier Clinic
Topic: Sinus Problems For
more information call the
Holzer Health Hotline at
1-800-462-5255

Flea Market
Mason Co.
Fairgrounds

UNIQUE
652· Jackson Pike
Gallil)!:)lis, Ohio

446-4848
· Assorted Blooming
Perennials Choice
Clematis Varieties
Open Mon .through Fri
, 8:30 to 5:00

CHANNEL .
Condo Renlals
N. Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Sleeps 6
$650/Wk
Dates Available
May- All Weeks
June 28-July 5, 1997
Sept. -All Weeks
Oct.- All Weeks
446-2734 Weekends after 5

446-2206
BOOTS
All Leather Westem Boots
Req. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer ........................ $49,00
Wellington .................... :.$49.00
Loggers ...... ........ ........... $50.55
Harness ........................ .'$59.00
· Carolina-Georgia ' H&amp;H .
·
Insulated, Safety, Goltex
SWAIN F,U RNITURE

',•.

'"

..

\!~'

,

-,
''

...."

'

Aunt Clara's
Collection of Fine
Amish Things
now has Grandville
Hollow Pottery
Featuring:
. Meigs County, Ohio
Vinton County. Ohio
Gallia County, Ohio
Mason County, West Virginia
Four miles west on State
Route 141 Gallipolis, Ohio

Fri. 512. Set. 513 Sun.5/4 •
(You can set up on Thurs. 511) ·
· Inside &amp; outside space ·
Call 304~675-5463 for rate
. information
.
. Hours: Monday thru Saturday
At. 62 6 miles north of Point .
10:00 11115:00
Pleasant, WV
Sunday 12:00 noon till 5:00

~.

"w.

,.,.
,~....
.'

614-446-0205

HEARTLINE
Interactive &amp; edlJCa1:iori•all
support group Sunday,

April 27

2 PM . ·

French 500 Room
Holzer Medi¥al Center
Featuring Holzer Clinic
ausiness Office &amp; S()(:iall
Security Office "Money
Matters of the Heart"
For more information

call 446·5280
.

.446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION.
'

•

'

�SUndly, Aprti1:1,1JI7
110 Helpw._

110 Help Wentild

CAlLI TV OIIDIIIWCIIIII
;:i Eom •15 -$18 PwHour • c...,.
; lftlttlono. Exllemely High CUI·
.,.,.r OMiand, No O..nlghl
Trav... lmmt&lt;llllt ope~~~"''·
~. l:andida111 Mull Bt AooliiUia To
. Sllr1"--d T..... , _ _ .....
.
CALI.IWillOI.ll'llll

Canoul~"9 ~

l'Mrullt 10
work at lakin Haopltal, laklft,
WV. llult be cartilled flttlllloL
Pnmdo .... ~ca. a manlll
or u noodod lapproxlmatoly 11
howllmonlh) . lolu11
wrk·
len .docu,.,.taUon or realdenla
w.lu•*' and/or tt•rM IDt eDit
OCCGUnting p u r - H paulblo,
lo biN llodic:aldlllodl..,.
andlor anr third I)Oitfl agone'".
lnltrutt&lt;l I)Oiroano canltct 304875·0880 EXT t02 or 101
I:OOam-4 :OOpfll. llon-Frl tor bid
!Qrm. lakin Hotpllal It an EEO

!

-r

1--l'IJI

..,.-__:.::=::.:::::.:.::.::.___
•

a
l

110 Help WlniM

DlltYEAI· Alii 'IOU 'TilED
OFLON0-1
LOW PAY?

-Ide

•• ROEJtL Hu "Top 10 ..., Full- Eq&gt;toyor.
- Pw TM Notional s....., 01
Orivor Wogaa BJ Slgnl'l&gt;ol GrNt
Homo TIIM. U% No Touch. Talk Food Sorvlca At TM Unlvarai'Y
"j Ta OUr Oriva&lt;l.
·
• 01 Rio Grandt .Now Acctpllng
·,
1Appllcatlono For Kllchon Help. ·
Sodtlha Food Service, Unl..rol·
_,llflwlra ·Fit1Y 01 Rio Gnond_•· 814·245-5880

"·

-·7-

I

::EOE:::..
. _ _....;_~--

HEW Piy -.got

'! $1,00C) Sign-On Bonuolllonthly
'aor- l'nlgrwnl Need CDI.-A • e
,t ,Moo. OTR ECKIIIIIor 100·811 ·
~ NSI, Owner 'Oporatoro Alto
"' ' -..
·

HELP WANTEO·IIan/Womon
ottn $480 wttkty aooambllng
clrculflioardlloloctronlc cornpanonto at homo. E~ unnec:euary, will train. lmmtdlate
aponlngo In your local arao. Call

; DRIVERS GOOD HEWS .
,::1·=520-eeo-==711D=t:•lll=Ot=4=55.==
If You Have Proftlllonal ·Truck· . ,.. Exporionco. Vbu Can Robulld
Happy Ad
.1 YOur FuiUio By Ortvl"' OVar Tile _ __,..:..::=:.!...=;__-' Road In Vbur Own Tractor. Our
Flnoncl"9 Opdano llaka h i'loul-

-; ~ta.

.

IOTTLID WLL I'OWIIII LOSE
.. Iii 30 ,....,., 30 OAV IIOHEV BACK GUARANTEE! NIIIIMI,
Doc111r ~- 8t4-44t·
I...
Hol2ar llanlor c... Conllr It

Frot......

-.n~ngForThtAIGII-.

a1 Ta a.como Port Ol Our loam '
AI A Part•TltM Diet Taohnlclan.
Thlo lndhrlduol lluot Be Riltlt·
terOd In Tho SUllO 01 Ol1lo AI A
Dltt Ttelt CMnlcat Ex...,- In
A lo"9 Torm Cart Prtllrrad. 111-

---...ICar-=

Coroi-RDT
3110 CotoMI Aolld
llidlllll, Ol1lo 4!1114
81......socn.
--~;,;_;_...;.,._- - HOIIITVP18111;
PC uaera needed. 145,000 In·
como patanUal. Caii1·10G-5134303 En 8-83118.

110

210

NurN AIIM Trall11nl P"""mAoaoap;trwo A111111111111or Cen11r
will be ............... - I n
IM manlli qfMaJ. Apjlllcadona
.,, ,_ bel"' acoep..,. at
111711 FlooiiiGffnal Fld., ~
OH. Clua ol• li 11-. Tine
~-- .........
~=-• App!J
·
'" 11 dlat • • -11 ' ' 01 ·
tl1e TCE clan wll be ollgt lor
~ - . . . , no phono

:J.::
;':;'II-

=
·
-=

.I!IIEIIIILIJ!II

·
Tho Galli a · lletoo Comno~nllf
Aellon AgancJ Ia SHklng An
Exocutlvo Olroctor. Thil tndlvldu·
al Will Ba Roopanalblo For Adminlatoring Cou011, SUllO Or fad.
. eral And·Paverry Pr~gram1 In
Gallla And ll..gl Countltt. The
Bllccaulut C.ndldall Will E--

Uie Guud AppUcadono Ata ila- ~~.:~c:·,:~';',nl~ ~
1"9 ~cctpltd For london Paal In ct&lt;luroo Eltabloht&lt;l TKrough
SJrtCUit Far Thil 1111 ........ IIIII&gt;: Slllt And FHtral ~~omtnll
mil Applcatlcno, lnoludl"9 Train- And Admlnloiorad By Tho Go~ •
lng And Exporlonca lnlormatlcn, llolgo Communl!y Action Agency
Ta Jonlce Zllllllng. VUiaga Clark· 11o1rc1 Of P!NcTr•ourar, At The SJr-M IIU·

DNr1lrook
- In ~'
Ohio
II - c
aaoep
leadana lor part dm.'
a, all
1111111. For .... lnlilr. .tlon call

1ifN

1111124412.

_..,.and

WANTED- Port dma - - 1111
Faotal Jaba s Poaltiana Avail·
alltt, No Ex.,.n- Hocaoaary,
For lnlormallon, Call 1-81 ..7t4-

10te Ext: 4012.

. - . . - , ll*apio11 noHtcl 1ft
an acuta care laciHty. llul! be
cordfted and lcanud In lho
Sllta ol WV. Competidvl aalary
and ucollonl -~~- Send r•
IUIM • Suo
Coorclna·
tar of Roar.lratorJ TharaPf,
Ploaaant YaltJ Hoopltal, 2~
ValloJ Or iva, PL Plttoanr .WV
2559). MIECE.
-

Hu-.

Pro-nat Trae Sarvlce, Stump prant paltntt!f !~natruodon or
30S-71N200- 71011.
rial Haopltal, 115 E. lol.emarial Removal, Frea Ealimll81f In· Or iva, FamtrCif, Ohio 4B 711 ar auranct, llidvHII, Ohio. 114·388- 230
phana814fi2·2104,111.217. ' 11848, 814-3117-7010.
8PAIHO CUANINQ
WANTED·BabJoltltt, mull be
han~ll I apandabla, paoltlon Gat Vbur Spring Claanlng Ovar HARTS MASONARY • Blook,
• Spend Vbur 1111._ brick I llont Work, 30 ,_ra tx-.
avall•bl• l...,...lattiJ. 304-875· With 3041ft L.-ouro. Clll To a.. 'lbur
2124.
Spring Fwtr Claanlng Oloc:ountl .8115-3511 I:QOpm, na job D
.... ,.. ., BIG. WV.021201
.
WANTEO:·Wal1raottl, cooko • . 81 4-4411-3089.,
c:atl 304-837-27141 or 304837-2118.
Wanted· haute to ltlr down for lhllngaton'• blaement wateiproolll'\g, all t&gt;•••menl repaira
lumbor, I14-DD2·ZI22.

·111'-· _...,.. ......

Snu.tlona

120

Taklng~arlono

Call altar 6pm.

Cal 81 4. 441 33S8

EdyeeJ!on; Dttrtl In Social
Work, Public Or Buolnooo Adlftlnlotrollan, Educallon Or Rolatocl
FlaldPrtlanad.

ln11rw11H Poraano IIIJ Apply AI
Tht Gallla • llolgo Commun117.
ActiOn Agency Adlftlnlotradva 0 ·
float At 1010 North Still Route
7, Cl1eohlrt, 0111a .•5820. Appllcatlanl Muot Be Rocalved No Latar

Than•mpy M•rt 1 CIZ

dane, free lltlmatee. Hf,tlme

guaraniH. tOyr1 on job ••pari-

once: :l04-875-214S.
.

•••·•2·

~

-··-·-

'

..

--~--·

Will Sit Wllh Sick • EldoriJ In

10 ....... 'W1J tn~Mnoo.
lml1lllon or 1ltlcm*1don
on ,...., ootcr, r111g1on,

. . tamlltat-.; or""'"""

1.1f IH.IIfi'JIJI ,I

......_ or ""'t 1ntan11on 10

any ouch"""-·
_,-.....,_.
makt

Thlo nawopapar will not
ilr1clootlngly ICCOPI.
-llw-lortul-te
-Our· In Vlolitton
ol ""' law.
... hereby
'
Informed lhit .. (lll8ftlngs
--lniNI~

• .......... l!&lt;tUII
_.untybuls.

f1EAL ESTATE
Their Home. Hav• Referencta,

Alraal,.....~tl

1111 ........... 11 ..........
... Farlnl ,.ltaullng Ad
al11111 ~ makR lllgot

310 Homes for Sale

814-448-4233.
WIIU"9 10 like cara of oldoriJ In 2 bodroom houoa, 2 car garage,
thoir homo. Cell and alit tor Lin· . largo clack. now wlndowo,
- 5.
do. 304-675-1173.
Chtohlre .,.._ -.,•t II)Od, lt-4742·2183. .
.
•
Do you •nl a gardtn bul don'l
FINANCIAL
-alilorar-toworllkup?
Cal mo. I dall'lwlouiiJ and
110 Help Wanted

Far Emargancy
Olopatchlng Ctau
EIIT' Cardllad Or Pr0¥1oua EMS
Exi)Oirienct AoCiulrad. Full-Time
And Pari·lima ~mploymon! l'a• new gardena, evenings or WH·
olblo Wllh
Succeulul Com- kendo, call 814·742·2112 any·
limo.
.
pletion OfTrlillng c:au,..

_Th,

Sand Lettar 01 Appllcetlono, Stol· OHice Typo Work in Evonlngo,

210

Business
Opportunity

IN011CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

lngOulllftcallonoTo:
Exporlenct&lt;l In Wlndowo (lllcro·
· DISMTQITRAINHtl C0UA1E • 101! Word, E1col &amp; Accen) ; recommenda that you do bull~
P.D.BOIIIZJ
Word Ptrlecl &amp; lotuo . have t8
wllh poapla you knaw, and
KERR,OHIOWG
YrL Olftco E-lonce. Can WOrt&lt; nou
NOT 10 tond montJ through tilt
---....:,.--....;.--1 In Vbur Offtco Or Work Ou1 Ollly .mall
until you have lnvastigitad
Wantad: 42 People Loot 18 ·25 Hilma. No BanaiHo Packeao R•
Faundo In The Ne1t 30 Dayo. qulracl. Have Roleroncoo. Wagoa 1118 o111ring.
NoMal, Guaran1Hdl 1-800-800- Nogollable. Aloo Will Da Anr Gain Enttgr loot Fal Sale All
2285.
TJpo 01 ~ping Jobo, Roaumoo, Ha1Ufli814-245-5033.
Term Papers, Documents. Etc.

llall Jobo Dono Within 2• To 48
· · WANTED
41 Chrerwolght Paoplo ·To Looa Hra. Raoanablo Rolli 814~
Wolght &amp; llaka Ellra llonorl t· t228 (Aller 4:30 P.ll ,) Ask For
Ctrl~
I00-8DG-22115.

Public Sale l Auction
.. '

-dine

.........

10 C. Lialt, II.T., ,_..,. ...,._

Ntldad 10 LadiH To 5.-1 Avon,

w..kendo.

llaalariHtiln

- Btnd
Aala*'O
mldrigh1l.
noouma ar applf

304-675-2807.

Niod tcmtCno to •Ill' wloldariJ

on

Pr•Englnoerad otHI bulldl..i.
Hadonal comPit'1

j

Wlnted
SHklng ·Ratlatared Lang Term
cart Nuralng ANI..,tl tor lnllr· Opanl"' for poroan In prlvalt
'""""'- Long Tarm carw Nuralng carw holM, Darat Poraonal C110
Facility. Rollllng ohll!o, part llama, 114-IIG2-3324 ar
·dme. We1t Vlratnla certification !i023.
roqulrad. Jill Bumgardner. RN,
DOH, Point PJ.uant Nunl"9 and 180 Wanted To Do
RIMbllllltlcn Cantar, Stall Route 12, Route 1, Baa 121, Paint Babyoltdng In llorcorvll!• St.OO
Ploaoant, WV 25550. (I Gltn· Ptr Hour Or S1 0 A Day, Wllh
modl-lloMcn ~.EOE.
Nlct PltJ Araa For Kldo, 814·

nlcipoiBu~

t---

MY IIIIOHIIIIIII'II
iE*IIoi1MEarn Up Ta $1 ,100 Wlllp.

Sloe~~ I

Big Cash Wkly. Local Vend. Rio.
For Sale. Cafl Now 1·800·350·.
8383.

110 Help Wanted

Public Sale l Auction

.Demo People &amp; ·
Merchandisers
Needed Part-time
$6.50 per hour
Working with
consumer productS
in your local ·
grocery store.
Call J.A. Demos

. t-800-21 "~ 1452

. LICENSED SOCIAL WORKER OR
REGISTERED NURSE
The Area Agency on Aging Is seeking an
Thursday Evening May 1, 1991
individual to fill the position of. Assesaor/Case
5:30pm
Manager in the Home Care Division. Applicant
Located on Sr. Rt 124 In Reedsville, Ohio by the
MUST BE LICENSED INTHE STATE OF OHIO
Forked Run State Park at the Fellowship Church
AS A REGISTERED NURSE OR LICENSED
of the Nazarene 64936 St At 124.
SOCIAL WORKER with at least one year prior
experience in the home care for elderly .and/or
. "Mobile Home"
disabled adults, home health care, medical
12x50 Two bedroom, new carpet, new plumbing,
social work, geriatrics or appropriate substitute.
new windows, new paint
Must have the ability to communicate effectiv~ly
"Household"
with
the elderly and disabled. Must have ablltty
New love seat &amp; chair, new couch &amp;·chair, couch,
to access private homeS/locations which may not
end tables, living room suite, Fridigare Frost Free
be readily accessible. Position involves providing
refrigerator, ster~·s &amp; speakers, 25" RCA color
comprehensive assessment-of services needed
lV, Aut. Kenmore washer, wood kitchen table,
cherry 6nish· hutch, small childs desk, sewing · by homebound Medicaid eligible elderly cllants,
arrangement of in-home services, and case
machine, lamps, tables, bathroom storage rack,
management of client's nee&lt;Ss and services.
king wood stove, alec. G.E. range, misc. dishes,
Travel required. Position based in Rio Grande.
microwave.
Annualized salary: ·$23,000 plus excellent
·"Miec·&amp; collector's ltema"
benefits including fully paid hospitalization,
Witillzer organ, 6 childs wood chairs, Schaefer
denlfll and vision plans. All interested qualified
milk display, cooler, Silver Bridge album, sewing
persons should submit a resume, proof of
rockers, M.F. 12 H.P. &amp; garden tractor w/PTO
licensure ' and references, no later than 4:30
mower, new wood house door w/oval glass
p.m. on May 2, 1997, to Area Agency on Agtng
original ,cast $1,200 3 H.P. sprayer, water tanK,
District 7, Inc., MSC-F32, University of Rio
misc. tools, l~wn mowers, battery charger, fishing
Grande, 218 North College Ave., Rio Grande,
poles, row machine; drafting desk &amp; chair, misc.
Ohio45674·3131. EOE
electrical tools, scanner &amp; lots &amp; lots of misc.
Owners: .Fellowship Church of the Nazarene
Public

PUBLIC IUCftll

Eacononl opportunity J:J_otn tilt
io"9 tonn hoallh 0111
-lng plll·dmo·LPH'o and RN'o ..,.
..... ahllto lor lnllrmodla1e ,...
• term c•r• nursing fac:ility. 'Weat
• VIrginia · llcanao required. Jill
· Bumgardner, RN, OON, !'~oint
: Pleuanl Nurolng and RollebiNII·

:
•
•
':

'• lion Center, Stare Route 82, ·Ro·

• utt t, Bo• 328, Paint Plaaoant
· WV 25550. (a Glonmark·llulll·
: carelacillly). EOE.

: :eoomorologill! NoHad Ful And
' jPau: Time Guaran1aed Wagei
: .Paid Vacatlono, 014-448-7287.

"';:;:;ca;::rcl::;of:Th;::a:
·n:k;:s::::;
The family of Lola E.
Clark would like -to
thank everyone who
sent cards, food,
flowers
and . to
Overbrook Center,
Birchfield. Funeral
Home, the Harrisonville
~ Presbyterian Church,
' Pastor Joe Sayre, and
Jan &amp; Kathy during her
recent illness and death.
0

•

The family of Helen
~ Jeffers would like to
express our deepest
gratitude to our friends
and neighbors for
their prayers, phone
calls. visits, cards and
l. food during the illness
;. and death of our beloved .
l wife and mother.
' Special thanks to
; Sandy Kapp and Rose
~ Wolfe for theii devotion,
Witherell,
~ to · Dr.
•
j Veterans Memorial
: Hospital and Home
j Health Nurses for the
care .given to her.
Thanks to Benny
1
'
Ewing and Jamie
, Anderson of Ewings
j Funeral Home.
A Special Thank-you To
Rev. Ivan My~ts And
. Rev. Roy McCarty for
taking the time to make
our good)lye one we
could rejoice in.
To each of you that
1 shared with us during
this time of loss, words
will never show what
lov.e will always remain
.in our ~earts.
Husband; Bob Jeffers
Children: Roger, Sandy,
Donn•, Shirley &amp; Patty.

all

j

.
l

l
!

'"Memory

Carel of Thanks

The familld of
Larr11 (Jarr. woula
like to_express their
thanks .tma .
heartfelt
appreciation for all
the pra11ers.
flowers. caras ana
fooa auring his
illness ana aeath.
Special thanks to
Horne Health
nurses. Hospice
Nurses ana fliaes
anaDr.Mark
Walker.
Sharon. Dave.
Michelle ana Katie
(Jarr. (3rothers ana
Sisters.

2722.
loti tor aala In Hartlord, WV. Hu
~~:'.". wa_ t•~•. _.,_ 304· 773-

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 I 3 b,edroam mobile ham••

ollttlng at 1280-1300, - · WI·
lor and trash lncludod, 814·892·
2187.
E•tta Nice 2 lltdroom Trailer No
Poll, $300/llo.. $200 OoJICIII,
814-2!1111-11184.
~

IINiti"li

Noar Euroka Approx. 108.8 Acr- lWo 1Joc1room, 1111 1101~ ""' miloo
11, Rural Wallr, StpUc, 153,000 out of Rutland on Now Lima Rd.,
114-377-CI087. '
614-742-21103.

Real Eatate General

Dan Smith • Auctioneer
Ohio:#1344
Cash Posltfve ID Refr!lshments.
Note: These Items has been donated to the ·
.church for auction.
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of
Property"
.

PUBLIC IUCftOI
"AN'ftQUtx ·OOLLroJILtx •OOUn'RY ftlRII1JU"
FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1997, 6:30 PM

-v

blosBOm

AUCTIONEER: LESUE LEMLEY
614-3889443 .

.

1 AC • 2 AC loll lor oalo In
Sconlc Valley Subdlvlolan.
Wt&lt;lga Roal!y, Broker 304·6 75·

.

Sale Location: AMVETS Bldg., in Kanauga, Ohio
(North of Gallipolis) Intersection of' At. 7 &amp; Rt. 35
Beside Holiday Inn.
·
Galllpolla Items: Picture of Womeldorff Motor
Co. dated 6/8/1923, picture of E• .B. Morehouse
2nd Furniture Co., Gallipolis &amp; · Vinton milk
bottles, The. centennial Book of Gallipolis, Ohio
1790·1890. Small oak table, drop leaf table,
empire dresser, mission oak baby bed, two oak
dressers, parlor stand, two jelly cupboards (oak,
pine), poplar dry s!nk, small tables &amp; fem stands,
childs rocker, t~ cart, game table, Jenny Und
doll bed, Miniature ice cream parlor set, quilts
(pre '40's), 112019 Currier . &amp; Ivies print .
(Longfellow Home), Roseville candle holders and
!111 IIICIIIOI'Jt Of
planters
(Water Llly), AMF fire fighter pedal car,
}Karlr. t4/4111 Beegle
Griswold· and Wagnerware, cast iron, merry-gowho ptiSMd
round bank (Pat. 1875), horse weathervane,
011 rtprll26, 1992.
misc. linens, oriental tab!e covers, jewelry rack
Rcgal'dla$ of tl111e
(19 necklace$), pictorial histoly of WW · II (4
piUHdtltc
111c111or/a .t/U t111d
volume), · glassware to Include: depression,
.,_,. w.UIIbrrcr
cherry
cake. plate. kitchen glus' (green
. l11 ..,lleartiJ, We
&amp; other), Jumbo peanut, flow blue, majolica,
·love.. - .
Fenton, Carnival, advertising Items, · tins,
/KOIII di Dad, }llclc/,1 . thermometers, graniteware, collection of 1/2 pt.
milk bottles, kitchen .collectibles (red &amp; green); '
toys (board games, puzzles, models, Hubley,
Buddy L cash register, Tom Thumb cash register.
marionette puppet, ventriloquist dummy),
German . mantle clock, Beehive clock, German
Cuckoo clock, misc. figurines, stoneware, White
now we · fiave been
House Vinegar jar (green Ballerina pattern),
loss- 'But we hzow Sod
many quality smalls &amp; collectibles.....

tfor · one · year
sad~ened by our
is ~~appier for .Jkavens Sain- a very
9oo,d man: Jlarry J. Cougfienour II
IJJearly missed by nis wife :Hazel, kids,
tfat, ]fin, Catliy. Junior, Vernon, :Mi~,
:x.;ti,
¢,.'Dennie and many many friends.
.

350 Lots • Acreage

UcenMCI l Bonded by St. of Ohio
C..h/~Check
I FoodAwlllbJt·
T11111 Ia jullla brief-lilting of ltema. Plan to attend
lhill quality sale.
Thankll for nolllmOicing

.

Near Proctorville, Ohio. 2751 COunty Road No. 66 •

Ohio. From Proctorvlle

take s- R1e 775 North 6-miles, tum on1o Wolfe Crot1k
Road and follOw 2·112 mNe10 Fann.
.

SATURDAY, MAY 3, .1887
.a t IOaOO li.m.

The undtnlonad willlt81arm which Ia onuatod In tho beau·
llful rolling hlla o1 .t.awrenca Coun1y therefore muat sell the
following 11amolnllh the HOI.lE. BARN AND SHEDSI Very
brief lilting followt:
•
FARM TRACTOR &amp; LOADER: Good Ford 3000 gas farm
trector w/gcod . . - . anty 3,028 holn and a FREEMAN
4000 Front l01Ider will sell u a unit. FARM EQUIPMEN'r.
Good King·Kui1W 5' Rotary Mowar: .verv good 5' Ki"9 Kutter
3 pt bladt; 2·16 Dtarbome Plows; 4-Gang Disc; 1o· bed util·
1ty 1ralltr; 3 pt. Cony-All; aa-11 3 pt. post hole auger. MOWER
&amp; LAWN: Vary good ..hp TROV·BILT 11JFF CUr High
Wheel '--! Maar. Nearly new eet Searl 3-Gang Reel
Mowaro; .SulkY fCr GravaiJ; Choppar/Shrt&lt;ldor (needs
mat011, TOOLS &amp; FARM ITEMS: Excelant CRAFTSMAN
3HP 20-aal AIR COMPIIESSOR ...Good Powar·Craft AC-DC
ARC v.!L.DER wlextra long heavy du1y loada. Walding
hoM, 1orC11t1 and lips; 80/500 F.U I Cilarge Battary Charger;
StiN &amp; . Homellbt chain IIIWI; laddera; 20-log chains &amp;
~; LOT OF HAND T09LSI Hardware; stack a1 'Z' "I"
....,.,; rolo barb wlra; farm galea; Much Not
MentiooiiCII SHEDS &amp; BUILDINGS FULLI ANTIOUES &amp;
COLlECTOR IJ'EM$: FURNITURE: Elccellent.carved creo1
VloiDrW1 r.llodh beck ladln &amp; gonta chalra; Claw loot oak
lidellllnl WI 'Wtngad Clrf1!lnl" 1Uj)p011ing mirror allaH; wei.
Vlcl. drMW ~ - ; Ylet commode W/whlbt mart&gt;4e
tap (cntteked); ClUoen Anno 50~ china cabinet w/glua trorrt
and oldtl: Duncan Phyje table w/~alrt; country round oak
.- ; tO Vlcl•.ci1Ua; 8-0a~ Will Clock; 2·oval willie marble
ll1llle lope; 8lngar uwlnQ nwchlna; b/c organ lloot: O!har kl'·
nllunl. SMALL ANTIOIJES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS: Reel
.... glaH owrw ~amp - : ..... 'Ani Cl&gt;llr' and "Fire
Ftg111W' poc~e~ ...; tll58 SHOOPY TENNIS PLAYER Wri11
watch by King Featurea; 1877 ELVIS eor-rt ticket·
. _ , _ , CMc Canlat; CIO hatchot; . - juga; altvef·
pl*d lterna;- - - . g bDit1el; frarnad ~; 8&amp;H
lamp lrorrt; many other llorno. GLASS PORCELAIN CHINA:
1t 3-VIIt 2r 1JMn 111aN VIctOrian E!'ERONE
w
IIP9tlc*lana t o - and ., . _ - ; K&amp;A 8avarta
-"""'""a..... chiN; dtcot- 18" g1111rlmrnodliandlt- Dapmlaot; lloral ~weighl olgned "R.P"; 2·
t-3/4 art !111M marllln; dtcotllllel china; lot men glaH and .
china! OOl.LS: tMd~u; Gerber: Pretklut Momenta; 2·
.......; Aahlan Oraire; t8" ~I 'OrMrn Baby";
Oynaaly ROE I It dolla; ,.,till;~;
idMI oom·
POIIIIOn 11011; pot lain c.llblga PIIC:h "Pamtlll·~·;
Sheck1nln dol; bllqut mua1c11 co •OIIInt bltl:"'l
?O'o
ldaal, EUQIIII dalla; 2·11178 'Mort&amp; PIc Clilln dab; mMv
allier doh. Bell ~k ' of COINS and 01.0 TOK!NSI Aloo

or

:.?!:'*

...

eo a

MODERN~!

'

. Saturday, May 3, 1997 10:00 am

COUNTRY PUBUC AUCTION

Wolle CI'Hk fload, ProctoMIIe,

PUBLIC
AUCTION

LARGE AUCTION

wmt MANY QUALITY ITEIISI
Tltlllllllnl II W1Y lorllll .

.......................
..................

Otun••• ,_ I , . Fel:tJ
k tllanll"

•

Loclted on Rt. 33 etlhe AuctiDn center In M110n
WI(. Mr. Casto was an Attorney &amp; Collector In Pt;
Ple~Unt, WV for many yeen. We Will be Hlllng

hla peraonal CDIIec:tlona 11 Auction.
COLLEC11BLES
Denial cabinet, . dental chair, X-ray machine, meat
bl~k, VICtrola, shoel~tce case 36 drawer display
cabinets, occupied Japan teapot- 6 cups- 6 !l&amp;ucersplus other pieces, minlalurs china, punch boWl •
cups &amp; ladle, salt &amp; pepper shakers, small ,......,.1
compote, cookie jars- Old woman who lives in
Cat on top of Beehive &amp; Dutch girl, pitchers, 6 KAIItMa
&amp; cream pijchllrs, pop botlles- 2 coke • 1 RC, wtr• 1
bottles, old spice jars, collecllon of Blue fruit jars,
bottles, Horlick&amp;, malted, lg. collection of canning jars,
Hull, McCoy, collection Avon bottles, decorated flOwer
lamp; lanterns, enamelware pieces, Pt. Pleasant wv
memorabilia's, beer memorsblllas, very
times mirrored framed sign "4!)x17" repHea, ~1\J,~ht...i
runs like a Dears" rain geuge, old Coca Cola
trsy, pqlltlcal memorabilia Underwood pin &amp; picture
from first governors race &amp; others, 2, beautiful antique
accordlns, 1948 Mason County Bank Calendar, AdN.
Tins· butter nut eoffee. Tom Keene "The Cigar made
with good judgemenr, Snciw King Baking PoWder &amp;
others, antique cow bell, pr. of sterling candle Slicks, ·
dollies, baskets, 10 small elephants, toys- view
master, American mQdel builder set 1913• 1924,
Compos~lon Doll original box &amp; clothes, Magic Skin
Doll frORJ 40's in original box, books, Toyland coloring
boot&lt; 1933·1926 Doggie tray linen boot&lt;, 1850's
Sacred Melodeon- 1913 ·Hagar- 1917 The Chlfde
World Second ~ader· 1918 Rebecca of Sunny brook
Fanns • Marshall College hand book 1926· t927
others, lg. collection knives- Old timer· Barlowr·· •=~
Cola· Imperial &amp; others, 1g. collection razors, Joseph
Allen- H. Boker- 'Black Iamond- Union &amp; others,
Shaving muga, Brushes &amp; more, lg. co11ec11on of
antique.jewelry- necklaces· earrings- pins • rl11gs, 1OK
white gold wedding ring, 2 old typewr"ers· Royal a ·
Smith, Baseball collectors box, ahaped like blsebltll,
Anniversary Clock, Honey Bee- Sweel Snufl,
lnaulators. lunch boxes- Mickey &amp; Minnie t.touw- 101
Dalmations w/lhllrmOa- G.l. Joe w/lherrnoa &amp; others,
eesc.nmant of old recorde, old Chrlstmu 01-olli &amp;
dlcorallona, Rolls RDylle lolid state radio, Army
iteme, picture frames &amp; plcturea, bllnka • Uncle s.mMickey Mouae- Pig· mllal lafe. "Punch a. Judy I)IUII
many more, 881 of whist earda,11111que tilde hom fram
England. old Iron lklllll, co11ec11on of loeb a qy.,
antique too1a &amp; muoto more.

·. For ttlo, 1 badroom homo In Po·
mtrCif, will ..., an land caniiiC~
114-102-5158.
..
Houao and prapor1y, apprax. 41·
:croo. tdoet atarrtr holM. Baoch
,SL, l'atiWOj OH. 30&gt;HI2-21177.
2 bath In
lencad In

£anaday
Realty
25LOCUSTS~·GALIJPOUS

Audrey

F. Canaday, Broker

Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383

446-3636
YOU CAN BUY THIS FARM WITH OR
THE FARM MACHIN,ERY... APPROX. EIGHTY
ACRES ... LARGE BI·LEVEL HOME...BARNS... CORN
t;~~~.:~~::ll CRIB...TOBACCO BASE...'AEADY FOR SPRING

205 North Second Ave.
SYRACUSE· A Spacious 4 becfroom bl·lilvel with many
extrae Including a large recreational room with pool ·
table/ping pong 1able Included, a one car garage, etora_g e
building, buck stove, and 2 baths. The khc:hen comes
equipped and Is ready tor you 10 move in10. $M,5DO
LONG BOTTOM· Approx. 2 acres and a 1971 mobile
home Wl1h 2 becfrooms, bealrt~ul view of the river, and a
s1orage building. ONLY $15,000
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MIDDLEPORT·· A 2 .e1ory frame home With 3 bed•ooms,
dining room, large toyar, 2 enclosed porches, and a part
buement. Has a nice carpor1 and an ex1ra septic tank and
building alta with approx. 3 acres. $38,000
POMEROY· t 2x34 park Home with lots of eldras In lhe
home and Ia setting 0n a laasad lot at Royal Oak Park wllh
lull membetahip that
. . ONLY 130,000 ·

~~I
New Lilting In Rio Or~nd•·

Allordable ranch In Rio Grande

oftera 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 batha,
living room, family room witt\

IIIOOLEPOAT· Broadway
a 3 becf""'"''two otory
hOme with newer vinyl siding, bathroom Just remodeled,
gat forced air furnace with low bljdget $38,500 Also has
an - lot beeida lha property thai can be purc:hased.
'

firaplaca. eat-In kiUlt\an and bcnua
room in basement2 lola provide
piOOI1 of ourdocr racroatlon. Nice
~~~ patio witt, nice view. New vinyl
aiding. PrlcediO toll at $79,900 .

1

OWNER: TERRY CASTO

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearaon Auction Co.l88
MIIDn, Wol

RRe1Mikldle181IIIICile: 304 773-57811 or
Alldlon
304-773-5447
,_,.: Cllh or QleCk wilD
Not Rnp 111illble For Accldll• or LGII af

een.r

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THIS HOME HAS ESSENTIAL FEATURES MOST
NEEDED FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING . AI
CONSERVATIVE COST. SPACIOUS·LIVING ROOM,
3 BEDROOMS, EAT IN KITCHEN. :.UTILITY
AOOM ... GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE. CENTRAL
AIR COND ... CAI'IPORT. .. FENCED BACK
YARD...CONVENIENT LOCATION ... PR_
ICED TO
SEW

'
3 BEDROOM
CLAYTON MOBILE HOME, 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BA\HS...APPROX. 1.55 ACRE LOT.
SEVERAL OUTBUILDINGS...$24,000.
LARGE COUNTRY HOME.. .10 ROOM HOME
FEATURES A FIREPLACE IN THE UVING ROOM
AND FAMILY ROOM... FORMAL' DINING, LARGE
EAT IN KITCHEN. 8ASEMENT... 2 CAR ATTAQiED
GARAGE. PLUS AODmONAL 24'X2(!' GARAGE.

I'LATWOOOB AD.· a , _ one a1ory will1 1*1 bau:neul,
one
car garage, 3 badraornl, 1 bath, dining - . Ill lilting
on 1.73 _ __,41,5DO
RACIHI!· Apple Grove- llarclll Rd.· A 18113 Skyline 14x70
mobile ' - wljh 3 badn)Dffj lind 2 ballll. Vary lfllcieo~

CALL
US FOR
AN
APPOINTMENT

living ...... I l l lind mobllit h\11111 Ia In good Shape aH
a hall - lot with a 12'x18 IIIOI'age building.'-,
:

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3644

DOl liE TURNM, llroker..........................ll2 1112
JERRY SPRADlJNQ .................................. ltl-2131

E-Mail Address: wiseman@zoomnet.net

aittlng 001
$32,000

IP'R-.ot.JNG...........................

c~
...a-~31
lEn'\' .1() C!()ll .....,,...,1100 ooHOOOOtooooon ooooloo. . . .

IRIIIDA J&amp;Fihi ....... _ ..............._,,, ..........72'7S

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI· 446-9555
Carolya W~ • +11·110'7 ·

Loretta McDade • .._..7719

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Soaay.Gana 446-2187

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�Sunday, April ~. 1

•lllddl1port • Gllllpolla, OH • Point Pl•••nt. WV
710 .......... .... ::
1. . OldtWJUI Cllle. 4 Deortlr

All*tetiOO. IU

•• len.

I( . r

LOG HOMES

11111 Fotd Crown Vlclllrla, one
owner, A-1 conditio~. verr 1ewl
mileage, thor color. can

11111 Food "'llurua -~,.:100 II~
P8, PB, PW, Allf•ll ~
tt.JDO lt..-.a117. .
~

Comfort., coavellieace,
efCiolcucy,
durabl1ity ud flexibility
deoip ore a lew of the
why 2,000
familica will build a

104·J

tttl ClM!Ier, tNt Flrablrd, T·
r.tWith All o,..... 14,850;
1111 IIUICIII Cenlury 4 OOo(t.
SI,2Hi CMII. Moton, 114·448-

1817 Nluan MultM I 111M!!'
lMdld.t2.G.I14 111.017. "~·:
11111 T.,.. MR2 JVC ..,.._.
CO P101er tO Inch Klcllett,~
Ampo, Lookt I Runt G~,'.
S2.VVO. lt441HVO.
:·

-.

l171-~:-'827
-:-:-"'-300-171-~='---:-:--::­

11113 Buic:l&lt; -;;...,.,. ~
dtr, Loadtcl, Cielll, 18,800 ''""
~726.

t~year!

1888 Btrotto runo good, """'('
c~ · 11,700 OBO. i'04·e~;

Household
GoodS .

510

MJsc:eRineous

Appllanctt:
RocondiUonad
Watherl, Orytrt, Rlngeo, Rofri,
graton, 80 Day Guarant"l
French Cll1 Maytag, 814' 44·8'
7105.

FARM TIRE IEAVICE
T,..IDr, blcilhoe, lldddtr, mobile,
service. New I uaad tlrea and
-11. 814-888-3-438, et4-888847t ......rif1Go 814-583-81142.
AIIAICULlURAL UIIIE SER\L

CFA Hlmelayon klttono, tlamo
point mallo wlblue .,... t175.

llerc:hlndlse
304871-5171.
"'i~Pi;;;;:"~;;;"r;;!i;iii:" 1 u..oa Ap.O PuiiPieo, AKC, F~a

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Buy or 1111. Riverine An1lqua1,
1124 E. Main Slrao~ on Rt 124,

Pomeroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
Lm. 10 a:oo p.m., SUnday 1:110 .,
8:00 p.m. 814·882-2128. Ruoo
Moore awrer. ·

Dteuw /Mirror $375; Wall Mirror
$75; Two Plcrure Framea (3'xt 8')
(One Frame Hu Plr:lln) S70 Far
Doth; Small End Tillie $40; COli
114·448·1221 Alter 4;30 P.M. ·
tpricaa Nago-)

4:.0orat
. no extra chn - ' •

~;

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.... &amp; ...
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to
..a.,&amp; .....
__.-.vii~·

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H2E.2ndPomeroy

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~ Plymouth '\l'oy_.•r •~a::a.•·..,...
-rt•IIM
•AirconcC'flwll• •-.wnp· · ,.,...,.W •llddM'rllt ~- •
,V.., ...,... .,., ,..,. .,,.,_,. Gllaflla,

1IJALETII LAWN AND
CIMDEHCENTER
Vegetlllle Ptarita, Bedding Flowera, Hanging Btlllcllt, TrHI And

._,Out

1

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Shrubt, Stall Raull 218 In·II•·
carville, OH. Open 8:00 A.M. Till
8:00P.M.

4000.

••
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Wanltd· good u..d pool ladder
lor 4' abovo ground pool, 814·
99.2-5053.

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1868 S.tO AuiDmotlc,

' s.-tladt. $5,500,
KS, Automatic, 350,

•8so. at ........-at sa.

~

1097 JeeP.cirincf Chtroka Ltrwda, power dooro, wlndowo, and
locks. CD and cuootte player,

,. •
• •
•..
•' •
••

~ Plynaouth Breeze •SAo,.aea·~~~,.,-·d!'••--rtn•IIIUoillaltt
•Ak DOitdfb . . . •Ouf lilt ..... t •AIIh'M .,.,_

.

~~%··

tvir...., to eo nao•t

-=--=-=- - --- *1,.000::.:..-t..

1872 Chwrolor P.U. Truck $900:
1184 Pontiac Bonneville teoo
080; 1875 Coachman 27
$3,500, 814-388-8855.

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•• heavy corrugated pipe, 100h.

· Compft1t Tonnaeu Cover For

111111 .5-10 Srylo Slclo Uke Now 1
t/2 01 -Prlct, Bt4-4olfl.175t.
· Concrete &amp; PlotUc Sapcic Tanko,
3QO Tflfu 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evan• Enterprilfl, Jackson, OH
1-800-!537-11528.

naQ

dowrl P«YJ'!Minl, 25 000 for 4 yea111

4/SliRt, 3 bllht formal OR Great
nn w/WBFP, first floor MBA hot rub
::~~~i~J~~i
/,~Z
f''ila~'
lhe
oak
cabineta In kitchen, breokfasl
1
1
;
Hays area overlookt a pond 7 yrs old,
, large lor, call Virginia 388·88282 balh 448·8808.
acres Mil in 12- RAMeLINO Till· LEVEL
~~·:.~-:::..:~• e::..: 16 enclosed PERFECT ~OR THE EXECUTIVE

~

4

.3-m~vo,Ynicereslrictedareato
,._-.,_.

JET

.

ru.. - ...,
...
furni ture, children'• 1ummer

clolhoo. motornl11' clolhoo, baby
Item• and tarot toyo. Call1114'
SKJ2-372S.

-Shock
100 s,otom IIIlO Sino.
Ind.

Wan Amp. Tuner, Dual

~i=~~.'':~/Jo~

•- S yaltm 1
Slflfl Ill S poo-r
SrandL Sauder Cablntl. Mull
IIIII ou• TO Hearing Lou. Like
- · Pold St,eoo, Will Sacrifice
Fat t750. COI114-448 4220, AI·

P.W

we · ·

......,. Oialt.With Slot T,.k Ro..~r 2 ·YIIrt Old Paid t1,731
,..
0
Aaklng tt ,oop Or Boot ffor ;
Foaturat: lnttgrared R-ver,
DtaciM!tr; C &amp; KU Bond Cornpalillle Digital Bleroo Sound On
Video Clipper Programming 50
Satolllto Memorr Ill lj:h.,.,.l
_ , Prag;MIIftOblt Channel
AllowtTo
E ·• ~·enutl Lode
a.
~
Oul On Yldeo Cll- Programti·~ti'Dworln
~..~ ....~'~o)nOraftrH~

•-r

Bu

" ....,

""""'*
•

above the LA, w/log !replace,
equip kit., breakfasl rm w/ bay
windo~, stereo throughqut, braas
light .fixtures, 2 car attached gar.,

you.
vacant Ltnd 73.5 AC.
'IWp. Great place
and ....,ral nice areas to

I your dream home! Natural

Ltrg~

bedrooma. 2 1/2

batha, formal wllota

living rm., widlnlng area .
Equippad kitchen wito!-ln arot.
In ground pc!OI, ptdoand gazebo.
2 COt attached gorage pluo 25' •
31' bam. cemaru c:frcle drive. 2
ac. MIL. Vlrglttll L lmfth ·
UU4
ElCCIPTIONALLY
SMART We highly racommend
you 1011hls rene~ home before

you buy. Buih In !991. 3 bedrmt,

l 1/2 bltha·, Hugo kll. wioak
cllllnllo, 2 car lt1ached gorago.
8~oor1111wilh-galoio, VLS

388-882li/UIS!08.

'
112012 LOCATED ON Ill Ito
Older 2 IIY. 4 bodrmt., 1 bath, 3

_,...,

~--~Nr, -~!'0Chalrt.
~.
1 R-1·
11':
...,.
...,..
_,.,

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$tlji$_

_,,.__ _L

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Real Eltate General

"cwa

overiOOk the IOvety porid

RACCOON

Realty, Inc
446-1066

or oak cablneta,

buement

Yard

$119,000. OWNER WANTS

OFFER.

mora-

~

secluded block hunllng lodge.
located In Addison TWp. Galli a
County; propeny offers .lots o1
poealbllltles priced at 34,900... catl
· today for dlrectipne. .
.
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IDEALLY LOCATED I 10 IICI'8
more or leas vacant land with
pond. City schools, county
water availlble. 18110
. 110
AIRLINE ROAD·.
$31,000. 3 ·ecrae mora or , _
comes wllh lhil spruced up
mobile home. Remodeled. 2
nice garden apola. · 1 car
delached garage. loll or Into. ·
Cal lodaylll913 .
NI!W
LISTING!
SO
LDYAILI! l LIVEABLE!
Enjoy the comlortl of IIIII, w.ll
maiAtalned ranch. · Bay
window ennancee this nice
11zed living room, eat-In
kitchen, 4 bedrooms, family
loll 01 remodeling, flat
building appoox.
.
I

your own

-White Whirlpool
linll &amp; C IIDr'rer:
A: AC 2211
1110, 114-371,~"Weldor
_ AI'TIIIa , ....

'"' 10 build · publlcoutlllfl" ,_alai a1 f111iC81 COl
available. Pwlure/lihblt tmall
- owflol a -

2 cor

aH=~·

3

COULD Bl! THE , .
PERFECT. FIND! Enough '·
land lor the man of !he
houoe and a super nice
home for1he lady. Over 44 ·'
IICI. . with 2 11101 and pole 1,
barn. Uke MW apacloila 1 . v
112 atory home with 5
bedrooms, 3 ba!hs. foyer. •'
~R. Dr &amp; so mtK:h more. ;'
Cloll to Holzer Hotpltal. .:
You will be lmpraased ·•
the quality 1hil horne Olin.

·.

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ONE STORY HOME • TWo
bedroom homt, 15x12 room
be lhtl third bedroom,
dining combined,

,.

Ptlced In the

11M JAY DR. W

home.

rm .. COVOted polio &amp; ronc.. Thlo

· NIED ROAIIIN' ROOM?
Private' Hlllng cor!* with
,IN TOWN LOCATION!
. thla e acre mora or ....
Handy to juat about tract of land and 1 3
-~·
gae.l Family becltoom mobile horne,wllh
llzed 3 bedroom horne. Nice 2 ·addition• addecl. ~
ilzed living room, kHclten, aiding, anc1 ahlngll ,root
dining, ' * - '· Finilhed recenlly lnltelled. l.alge
attic area. Coverejl frGnt dining Very 11111ancl
dian. Road . . . . along
!WD fll!ldl. Call lor compbll
lilting ~itallftiiiOIL . .

charming clean home wiN make

yau ~- Call VLS 3118·11112e1448-

1808 will glsdiJ ahow you

anytime.
nan ON THIIIAUllPUL
OHIO A1YE11 t 8115 Oakwood
-home, 2 bodrmt., 2 bltho,
LR, Kit. hot lovaly cablnota, 2
dacka, t car garage. Very

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IPRIC.i JII!DUCI!O. Middleport- 0k111r 2
horne, 3 badloome, 1 bath. Home ~"" ·I
repailt.' I.OOated on Mill Street, would
a great sterter .home ·or rental property.

P.OOO

YLS 311'1 lo'~e. '

THHtl'ii ABOUT m1 We LM In Mllge County! I Shouldn't we SUPPO.RT OUf:l
eland
lslhe HOME
. In MEIGS COUNTYII HANK
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ac. r11i1 btautlful 3 btdrm., 2

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PRICE REDUCOONI I 113
Larlat Drive- roomy trl-llwl
ttui1 oilers 1.5 balha, foyer,
living room, dining room,
and kitchen. Basement,
· allached garage. Nice
landaca~ Convenient
location.

~ ::=::.'::'avo.~~

i.'i.i

111!111!11

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Nlol/ll·~Aaiw~nVI~In=Mor=f1111~n=Tlop=~B:n:•~~laiigo~~~n.-~~~~-~io~lo~~~~~w~""~~balht~~··~~~~~o~d.~ho~me~,~~Qf=lal:rmJ,
100

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NeW .
. Cheerfully
Cozyll Put CloWn rooll In this
easy to love · 3 bedroom
rand!. Kitchen &amp; dining room
comblnallon, living room •.
den, 1 car allaehed garage.
Nice sized lot w/lenc~Kf-ln
beck lawn. And more 'wllh a
comfortable price of
$49,500.00 11911

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lntmaculole . move-In . cendlllon.
~. 3 ,bedrma, a blihl, Fufl dMded bsCctment ~tor VLS ~.
boluiii\JI 1rM 1t ac m/1. CIOII to 1 3rd both, t ,lite oq. ft. MIL , _ LOCATIO IN TOWN w/8

=-~~~~~~LAND

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I'OU~r;:dlroomTrl-~
314 bodmw., f 1/2
botlil, Coiy .A., Di"l::~
tluOf hal now
noors (bolutl1ul)
fern. rm., Rec.

12112 OIIM!

' 8ELLERSI
Friendly 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home I Large open dining
area &amp; living room, family
room. Never vinyl siding &amp;
roof. Keep cook with cenrral
air this summer. · Approx .
' 2.95·acres wHh a 24' K 24'
bern wi attached shed and
additional
building.
IMMEDIATE - ·
POSSESSION!
City
schools, affordable prk:e
$40~. Owner wAI listen to
an offer. 11918

.r

bul!naool lnveniOry l~h at the
Umt of "" will go wKh !flo
butlnooo. Equipment InclUded:
moat OOOie&lt;, Ice croom lratz8f,
pop coo~tra, vag. cooler,
rwltigtia!OI, SIOVI, &lt;foublo door
commercial oven, Hobart meet
- · Hoban mut grind or,
tcalot, lllihelvat, much !1\0rtl
Al11hlt for one very low prlcel
COli Plllty H~ 448·3884 lor
che_nee to own

CREE~

TEXAS·BIZED HOME!
Spacious colOnial with lois of
· eXIra apace Inside and out 5
bedroomtl, 2 full baths, 2 1/2
baths, family room, l_onnal
living room; formal dining
room. enclosed sun porch,
basement that has 2nd
kitchen. Attached · 2 par
garage, over 5 acraa of land.
Nicely landscaped, shade
trees, lngtound , pool.
lmmediale po!1888alonl Call
, this sellar Is motivated

achools.~

22
ACA
COUNTRY· SIDE accompany

Finish this beauty and
.. quiet and peaceful living. This 1 112
story semi -chalet offers 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, oversize!!
equipped kitchen, sunken living
room, heat pump and much more.
You mtlst see the 60 to 900 II. creek
view · from this . 6 acre tract.

FAIRFIELD CH!JRCH - Acreage

111 ,DOO.liCI IS THE ASKING
PRICE OF THIS 20 PWS
acre tract of land. County
water available. County

whlr1pool tub, bsmt, acreined In

front porch, 2 c. garage.. storage
building. qtty. Much, much moral
Call Patty~
' Ha !Of you private
,.......,.toda 4411-3884 ..
"21811 C
.C:OM~ORTAILE
all brick ranch·w/IOvely
~- Betut~ul kitchen, 2 balhl,
calhedral coiling&amp;, fano lflrough
out Parquet floOring In lho entry
and lfvinn rm. use the 1arg,e deck

Remodeled a home at a
modes! price. Ovet liztd ..,•
In ldtchen. rDOftl1 living room,
bath, laundry room. N-r
vinyl aiding .&amp;. shingle roof.
· Close to church, grocery,
school , etc... . Immediate
poeaeaalonlll917
VACANT LOTI Buy Thlim All
lor $14,900.00, 3 level lois.
County water available,.
County achoolsiiiOI

room w/fireplace, den, storage
room wlthefves. targe beth with

~~~~:"=rna'":'~

w/family nn. 1 bedroom, ou1alde
ontrv 10 an above ground. pool
Srorago bldJI. 2 car allachtd
· VLS 3811 811281448 8108.
11DQ • 4 BEDftOOM8, 2 t/2
ba!lil lovely kitchen wieat In
breaklaor area, formal dining rm.,
ounken living nn. w/ftreplact,lamily
nn., n.W rumaca, tttocflod 2 car
garage .. detached 2 car garage,
"'VfOIJftd pool &amp; poot houtt. l.oYily
rrled 11n:t wigezlbo, deck In lhio
-· ran:t.
.
11034 to oc- m11 of prime
d.,olo,.•land ciOtl t o - y
and Stell Routt. Public utllltl"
available. Ltnd to roRing.
E•callonr tor development or
commercial u". aus,ooo. COli
Paav Hova 441131184.
il2ti04 IIACANT LAHD t .13 ao.
m/1, garnty !IIOptd. Raccoon Rd.
10 boat romp on llacooon
Creek a· parking lor your bOlt
- · Booutlful 1o1 10 build your
-home Call Patty ~11 4483884
120M WHAT A IAIIGAall 4-41
htlnn. Brick home W/21uit -

'-"Outen Wa-. Good

•

"

mortage. Large family room,

m

lllna- , ... . . . _ 11'
X 10' 0uttlan(llng mobile home
with a deck, fPICial cablntll,
wlndowa, and bulh·ln muoic

II- -~ u.n • -·---. -~

Gil----

••

'$1~50 pl&lt;g. va1Joo0Cl~W/22Tpkg. S596c:osh ~- an-llh door MSAP. 'B!IoeMMI'
.
_,..(Neon
~.-.dMi!RPtlllllpltwmTpkg.l c
41h doof (\llyagooj liclldol St.OOO C88h back on Neon lWld llrMze. lox ex1nt. llctutl ,.,.._ - , . llohlcle
bt-.
Flowoclng lor~~.·
·
.
rotai t&gt;uyn. eo monthly_. or Sta37taroach st,ooo bomlwed. t.~~ways
~~~lho-pltotlor-.
., .

loads of walk-In cloaoto . Ltundoy has been very nicely landKaped
l121112 VACANT !:AND 13 /tiJ. rm., kft. w/ialand bar, oak Clbineto, w-li olnn and many ,...
2
1 a 'dr&amp;am
4 43
MIL In Morgan _'TWp. Excellent all appliances, cement driveway Ac MIL Don't dream
Bulldi.\Wg Slle, Claude Daniels ~&amp; walks~ deck VLS 368· BUY ONEI
::.:., - 'PATRIOT AREA • A· 1107~ "1'RIENDLY HOME 12884 YOU WILL FIND LOTS
Frame and 1 Ac. MiL Renr Convenient ro overy,thlng . 3 0~ I!XTRA .FEATURU In thl~
income $250 mo. also mobile l&gt;edroomo,
kit., ovely LR,
homo.
$200
mo.
income,
work=
utiqnRu="ed
$39,900.
..
Bednn• w•""'-~
·~1• ~·
""""bltn CaiiEtta
I I
NYOUIIFUTURE
M
• ,......... . 7 w- .. ·~·
BuY A HOME TO LAST WITH A WONDERFUL ~AIIILY 4:io Homewood Or. $89,000.00
A i.IFETIME • All brick cuotom HOME lacaled In. suburban-· Vt.la~·381H8·
II 28
, · G MARKET
bulft home with a Spinloh Doolan. like new 314 bedroom ranch, bllh,
,
•
coun yard onrrv to 1hlo greaf 4. cory llvlngroom, vorv neal kNchon IU81NI88 ONLY. Here • your

P.M.
II

1·10o•PLl'M«&lt;nn•-,..

.

. Offlc;e ..........._
............... 992-2259

•

Reduced $12,000.00 VLS 38b·
8826/448-6606.
· NEW U811NGI4 Bll't, I
bathe, and loadt of storage room
In this t 112 srory homo. Thia
house could easily be madt Into
two rentals. L~e In one and let
the rent from tho Olhe&lt; poy your

spring, land level to rollmg. Nice . ft. 2 car attached·garage. -Eiee. H.P. to

ocroo mJI plut a largo born.
135,000.00 Call VL1! 318·
1128144881106
-~~- COIIItllltCIII IIIOg, 82
Qllvt St. Comer location. 11110
tq. ft . good klol. Owner will 1111
"-""'Y or building oeparata or

"'*'"""'

attic srorage, sorooned back porc;li,
much more. New root tho home Is
maJnlonance free. Coli VLS 38~·
8828.
12002 NEW BRICK RANCH·
Some discriminating family will take
~· ownong a beautiful BRICK
e. Central foyer entry wiextra
large rooms through out 2800 IQ.

ortce. COli Patty Hays 448·3854.

,_,_ Cennl Kit
_ , "'
811111111• Llsred In Orlllt Magelint.~'~*' n•r Can'I2N5 Chjtr&gt;o
ito! 'Per lattllltt Plua Por ,_r
YIIW HIO, Showtlmt, Dlsniy,
Noad An
On IIIah 1 At-

...... COl 114-441·1113 Aller 5

CONSTRUCTED HOME Italian

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

home. Also 8·ac. 'foyer, ce1hedrol collingol balcony . large equipped khchen, living

AERATION MOTORS
Ropoired, I RobuUr In SliCk.
Call Ron Evw'll, 1-800·537·g528.

. JB Kiln, kiln dried
d·
1
campo '"' pr coo.
773
Wtot Columbia WV. '"''- '
5080 or 1·8011-11118-7883.
~- Thrik sir.o~ now !Ju1ing

, _ - ....
lotii.,.DIIWIII-U~t~ -

area. Colt Patly Ho11 ue 3884.
1211111 IIEO!!CEDI LOVE A
SPECTACULAR VIEW? New
manufactured home and 1.5 ac.
MIL, offering 3 bedrms., 2 baths,
eel·ln-klt w'ioak cabinets, lovely

dl~ng

garage. 1 ac. MIL level lawn. FREE
GAS". Call VIrginia for an
appoinlmenr 3118-882e.
1173 Pill ME DEVELOPMENT
LAND 117 Ac. MiL Clo.. to
freewi!J &amp; hospital. Old home and
bam. Gallia Co.
ON LAKE VIEW CT. 12848 8PACIOU8 QUAUTY

sOlo: a Fr. Bt!lv Grand

.766 acre rl1/1. Very nice home at
a a1forllable price, Bidwell/Porter

room 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, formal carpet, p•neted doora, cathedral
""~'"'~· At living rm . w/gaa log IJtone fireplace. cefllnga, cement porch,
long. Formal
.rm, very nice breezewav. patio, 2 car garage,
for cabinets in tfle kitchen, Huge · bulldit'IG · VLS -US-68061388·
446- entertaining rm, master bedroom it 8826. $82,500.
'R~ally Ultra, UNra'. Approx. 4500 12032 RIO GRANDE orea, 2
sq. ft., deck .In the rear. ~ car acre lot M/l Aaccoon Twp.

~=~.~~~~ :~~~~

•

••

. .

1883 Commodore Clipper 14X70. 2 BR,
ea.• all appliances Including new dllhW81her, master balh, hat Brian garden
tub, akytlght. Oak faced cabinets wl1h
etched glass. 121110 deck. Many extras .
2'1~ too heat pump. On rented lot.

Real Eatate Gene""l

....•

heat. central air. This Is a must

elegance w/modern convenience Utffity Rm., above grouncf pool,

.

By Kawai AppraiHd At $10,000
Btllortorl8t ..2511-t 114.

refrigerator and

1

7'11 Int. Or 1 Bidg. wi3 unl!i; sea. Cell Potty Hays for your
$82,500 on terms. Call VIrginia =~ Showing. 4411-3884.
·
388·11826.
·
REDUCED! 3 br, 2 bathe,
11ot3'- WXUAY HOME combining Iorge LR Wlcelhedrol ceiling, OR,

bundle. 1120 a bundle, random
' longlfl &amp; random widlfl. 304·773-

For

diShwasher,

••-•••o •::a.a,.z70'"...• r •*-'*"'
•160pMtkhotlap:a•a'OOHC.,..,. ·~*"'-nfdM411t•llulllaJr ....., _.lGII 2 F - - - - - - - -

choo-. P~ynKoutt. . . _ _

$120 ooo on land conlroct, 20.000 atove. 2 car attech8d garage, goa

Farm Lumber approx. 800ft. per

5080 or 1-100·11911-11183.

APARTMENTS .. 6 unlit.

'

WINDING CROSS ROADS

Lots 1-2 wooded. 5-6-8 illmaln excellenl
localon. Quiet &amp; Peaceful.

Sherri L. l:fart ............ 742-2357

'

11012 VERY NICE HOME on
Oakwood Or. 4 btidrooms, 2.5
. baths. Formalomry, spacious LR,
Fll, OR , kHch&amp;n equipped wHh

SARA WINDS
are left In this new
~e~reiO!lm!lnl Batter 1ake a look before
are all gone.

Henry E. c;ieland Jr.. 992-2259

• t-

•

1QD5 Carter 5 hoflepower oft

1

a buSiness.

446-9649

Real Est1t1 Gene111l

•
' •

.. , -

. · road go-lrar~ t1collont co~n.
ridden very llttlt, Stoo, call 814687-ahlrepm.

2720, AFTER I P.ll.

...
•
...•,.
.'•
....
..-.

btild apts.,

. 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, central air/heat
· plus woo(l burner, Anderson ·
windows, 1.3 acre fruit trees, garden
spots, workshop with green house.
.On Centenary Road, Green School
District.

windoWo, leu than .5,000 mlltl .
Muot Soli. s2e.ooo. 304·875110110.

""

i

$78,000

tow packa.ga, rain guards over

•

. . . . . . . . . . . .PR

.

'88 ·S-15 Jimmy Bltrra, U4, 4.3
lltor, v., oiCellonl condlloll, aJic.
lng 15200,1114-11112-80211.

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Building
SupplieS

FOB SILl

. '.

aiiiiKitA"1n LANE ·

NEWLI8TING

730 Vsn1 &amp; 4-WDI

..•1 I

.,

NEWU8'11NG
311 ACRES- 6 acr8\:,more or lass,
COiiiil8rdal developmlfd.

ug3 Jeo~ Wranglar rod body,
block top, low 'l'lleage, auto,
oporto - I a I ~rot, el!C cond.
Cai-Spn.304-87fi.11180.
·ugs S-10 Chevy 11tend cab, 4
ely., 5 op., olr, dtt; cruloa, air boa.
3&amp;.000 mlltt, $10,000, 114-7d;

I

.

SPRiNGFIELD TWP. Next to Jtoteac:resl
propoaed Industrial Park. Five
mora ar las&amp;. Nice ~~~~ area you
beautiful home.

.

~

Comploto King I Ouoon Wat~rbed. Refrigerator. Electric
srovo, Sofa, Hldt·A·Way Bod,
Kitchen Table I Chain, 814-3111-

NEWUSTING

NEW LISTING· Skinner Rd., Pomeroy 3t acres .w/free goo &amp;

~

11826

sen

~~~~~~~--~t:•:~:±~~:a:~:e:'"-:~:5:=&amp;'=1&amp;==~~----~~--------

HAYES REAL
.n:n, ... Carsey, Realtor

...
..... .
.
...•
•
.;.;

Baby .,ed, high chair, Cit -•·
· - ' lllllng.304-t741-4!541.
Boolt By RedWing, Chippewa,
Rocky. Tony Lama. GuarontHd
I.OWM! AI Shoo Cala, Galipalit.

Rebul , All Typeo, OVer 10,000
Tranamlollona; A-a Tranoflr
C1111 1 Rear Endo, 114-245-

1185 Handa 300 EX 4 Whoeltr,

WITH A WINNING TEAM!

••

12187 LEVEL
utili11et available,
$13,000.00 VLS

Price Trantmlulont,

at SIID.OO and Up, ~ I

............
.. id •

roll, S2Ut. 1'1\lNT PLUS HARDWARE. 3048..,._,

~

814 448 43-44.

Block, brick, • ..., plptlo wind·
owe, ll~tala, ore. Claude Wlnltrt,
Rio Grondo, OH Call 114·2455121.

540. Miscellaneous
Merchandise

LitM, 4c)l, llrbo Chatatd IDr a tt.. Thund'orllltd.

....(.

. ......... ..'

550

ACCNIDI'III

Fonillzo Sprllder &amp; Seodtt 1 Ft
Disk· Oolh 3 ~ Hitch C.lllpocktr

Complete ott golden ram golf
clubo, leh handed Wlbag tso.
5a8 utllll1 lrlller t450 or t500
with loading rampL Floraholm
Crown Imperial wingtip ahoet
(new). llzo ac, 2palt llrvwn, 2P&lt;
black, 1851por pair. 304-a7fi.
. 2181 .

Antiques

Auto Plnl &amp;

ICE

Sholl I War~, 8 w..kl 01~,
t200 Firm, 814-388 111158, Ahlr 5
:~· 8,14 311 1434 lion Thru Frl,

SPRING SPECIALi Central Air
Candlrlonora: 2 Ton o1,1DS: 2 tiZ Malo Pu\!.:: 1 1 Monlh Old For Laa1t: ,,,, lb. Tobacco
Ton 11,215; 3 Ton 11,3g5: 3 112 For Slid
Or For Sale Cal Make Ollorl8t4-241-5382.
UMd Fumlluro 130 Bullvlle ..... Ton 11,595; 4 Ton $1,885; Prlcoo ~,11143. a;
Ford 3000 Diesel 5 Fr. Bruoh
Good Typowri-. ll'lllkl, llea1c AbOVe Include Normal lnt!allaHag, 7 Fr. Blade, 18,300, 814·
ti0¥1, Iampo, bOoke&amp;H. lloor don. Full 5·Yoer Warran11. "If li&gt;U ~tt Pluo, Sliver Bridge Plaza. . 370-0417.
model color TV, blcycla, bunk- Don't Call Uo Wt Borh Lo1tl" 814-441-0170.
bedt, manrauao, lolt or gootl Free Eollmareol Add-On Heat
.·
Mus'-•l
....
lurnllura. 814-4411-4782 HAS: u.F Pumpt Onl)o Sllgh!f. Higher. Call 570
Lawn Mower partl I rtpalr.
Uo Today. 1997 tl Tho Twenty
lnlti'Umentl
tH wa buy- fwrillro.
.Sklort Equipmont304-1175-7421.
Sevonlh Year In The Hntlng &amp;
Waoher US: lltf!W 1111 Electric CoolinG Bullnlltl 814-448-8308, -;::::::::-:-::~;::::::=::-:;o::::;:;;;-•1
Now Holland 1 H Hay Binder
FOR SALE: CONSOUl PIANO
Rarvo SiS: Gu Rlinlll wt25: At- t.aoo-»t- .
R•,.,._ParryWinlild
814-448-25'
4.
lrlgoraiOr US:._ I Drwr 1
To Moka LowMonrliiJ
Year Warran11 S205 Ea.ch: STORAGE TANK$ 3,000 Gillon
Paymouto On p;.,.,
POlE BUILDING SPECIAL
Skaggs Appllanceo, 78 Vine UPflgh~ Ron Evant Entarprlooo,
Sao Loc:ally.
30'o40'aD'. ~intod Steel Sldoo,
Sir..~ Galllpolll, 814-448-7388, Jackaon, Ohio, 1-1100-537-es:!ll.
Call: 1.8Q0.2811-8218.
Gtlvolumt Sllel Roof, 15'111' Stoet
Or 1-88H1f.Ot28. .
Slider, 3' Man Door, $6,777.
Sunirntt Special- jeta1r0tion Stor Guitar, Choohlre. Ohio- loti· ERECTED. Iron Hortolli!Hdtrt 1·
520
Sporting
moiOrt for MPII• lllnka $3119 pluo one and lnorruments- plano, .gul- 1100-352-1045.
rox. lnarallallon $35. ,814·448- I·
J ~tor~ond~dru~me,~81~4~38!7~-0302~~·~...!:=========
Good•
4182

530

.780

Appalaehian Los
Str'\cturca hat becu a
leader in 1hc los home
indu1try for ovar 15
years. Choose fro1n over
70 aloudard modcla or
~e•n· eu1tom de1iP, one
you.

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�Ohio Lottery

•

:Bulls post
: win over ·
Bullets

Super Lotto:
9-31-36-37-39-44
Kicker:
5..(14468
Plck3:

•

7-0-8

. : Sports on Page 4

· Moatly cle•r tonight,
Iowa neer 35. Tuesdey,
sunny, hlghe In the mid

Pick 4:
6-5-4-9

•

70..

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;o.tll. 41, NO. I

2 Secllona, 12 ,..., 31 oenee
A Gannett Co. Ill• F 5 I

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio;. Monday, Aprll28, 1997
.
.

;4fet7, OhiO~ Publlahlng eomp.ny

;tlostages still in hands
:of militant separatists
· nightfall, began negotiations . with
; :'FORT DAVIS, Texas (AP) ;&lt;'rmed militant separatists who the group from a mobile command
believe TexiiS should be its own coun- center, said Department of Public
'!iy' took two neighbors hostage Sun- Safety spokeswoman Lucila Torres.
The separatists stormed the home
dJly, and dozens of police moved into
of
Joe Rowe and his wife. M.A.
th6 remote area ot' West Texas.
Rowe,
about 15 miles away, firing
·· ; •RichiUd McLarea, the self-styled
shots
at
about noon. authorities said,
: ~bassador" of the Republic of
Thxas, told San Antonio radio station Rowe was injured by broken shards
)\'PAl that
group would end its of glass in the gunfire , . but
,standoff at the couple's hom~ in ""declined" to be exchanged for a vol,e)tchange for the. release of two unteer firefighter who offered to
Republic- members under arrest and replace him, a man identlf~ing himself as White Eagle, a chief aide til
airother key concession .
. ·.,we want them to ... agree to a McLaren, told WOAI.
Ms. Torres said Rowe also broke
'referendum to allow Texans to ·vote
.on the independence issue,'.' McLaren his right arm and was being cared for
.said from his group's headquart~rs in by his wife, who was a paramedic.
Ms. Torres said the Davis Moun·the Davis Mountains, 75 miles north
tains
Resort subdivision was sealed
of'the Mexico border.
· About three dozen local and state off, and other 1\J'Ca residents remained
'JlOiice surrounded the area and, by inside. "We would like to advise

me

them to stay calm," she said.
RellOrters were being kept several miles from the entrance to the subdivision . Telephone calls Sunday
night to the McLaren and Rowe ·
homes were answered ·by a message
saying . the lines · had been disconnected:
·
Authorities said the FBI also had
been contacted, but the FBI's El PaSo
office could not be reached Sunday
night.
.Ms. Torres refused to say how
many j:leople are believed to' belong
to McLaren's group or where they
were situated.
Residents had been complaining
for months about McLaren, a wildhaired, lanky rancher who woul.d file
property liens against his neighbors
and threaten them with machine
guns.

' '

'·.

:150 years
of.servi·ce

.

FESTIVAL ~OYALTY - Southern High
School senior MellaA Canan, center, waa
crowned the 1997 Flower F11tlYal Queen In cer·

emonill held ·s.turday aftlmoon It Star Mill

Park by the 1996 queen; Kelly Swlaher. Firat
runnerup was VaiiiiA Shuler, right

firefighters in
Pomeroy note
~anniversary
-';By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
;sentinel Newi Staff

• . It was in . q!~7. after a major fire .
• ;s.Nck'Por;iCroy, tllafii'smallgrouj)of ....,
· ;men "goL together .tQ, organize the
,i~oineroyFire Department: one of ihe
· ' l}tst voluni~r units in . the state of _
·ohio.:·
, Saturday night, current and former
firemen- several with more than 40
.years service - · along with others
AnENDS CELEBRATION- Ohio Fire Marshal Jamel MeNu-·
who have. been in supportive roles
mH, right, attended the · 150th annivereary celebration of the
_through the years, gathered at Meigs
Pomeroy Fire Department Saturday night at Meigs High SChool.
;r;Jigh School to celebrate the I 50th
He was preaented • plaque and • fremed replce of a Northwest
' ; anniversary of the department's
Territory m.ural by Tom Reed, right.
·
}&lt;atnding.
• : • It was a time for reflection. rccog- Rep. John Carey commended the unteer service to the community.
"The department has come a long
. :l)ition of longtime firemen and pre, firemen for their dedication and
· courage, and congratu!ated the way since 1847," said Carey, who
:sintation of s.pecial plaques.
; :; Speaking at the observance; State department on its ,150 years orval- . listed the Pomeroy Fire Department
tival 1tag~ Seturday In Racine. A prize of $75
as one of many such volunteer units
•
FI~ST PLACE WINNER - This flower gar·
den scene by Paul Hill Greenhouaes.took first . wn1 presented to .Hill by the Racine Area Comwhich are unique to America and date
munity Organization, the festivel's sponsors.
place in floats at the fourth annu1111 Flower Fesback 200 years.· .
He spoke of the necessi ty .for
organized fire protection in every
· c.ommunity, noted the cost involved
even for volunteer departments and
reponed on a bill which he has introduced in the Ohio Legislature which,
if passed, will provide financial assisOther contestants were Kristen
houses taking first, Karen's Green.tancc to volunteer departments across By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Hensler,
daughter of Bill and Sherry
houses
taking
second,
and
the
Lester
the state.
·
Sentinel News Stefl
Hensler'.
Racine. and Angie CarOn behalf of the department, Tom
·A beautiful spring day, coupled Manuel family taking third .
leton,
daughter
of Cathy and Bill Carin • add ilion lo the floats, other
Reed presented Carey with ~ plaque · with avariety of activities. spelled
and a bear costumed as a firefighter: success for lhe fourth annual Flower parade panicipants were contestants leton, Racine.
Attendants were Jayme Miller,.
Special · guest at the observance · Festival staged Saturday at Star Mill for Flower Festival queen and their
Jody
Hupp, Laura Hupp and Erin
who
rode
on
open
conaucndants,
was State Fire Marshal Jim McNu- Park in Racine.
The event, sponsored by the venibles·, numerous trnclors, Racine Bolin.
mee, who gave brief congratulatory
Entertainment was presented
.
Racine
Area Community Organiza- fire trucks and police vehicl es, and
remarks and presented a certificate of
throughout
the afternoon and includHoward
Mullen
driving
the
antique
commendation and achievement tion, featyrcd a parade, crow ning of
ed
the
Midnight
Cloggers. ·the Dix"Meigs
County
Car
JR
."
.
from all Ohio fire departments and the festival queen, a potpourri of
Melissa
Canan
,
daughter
of
ieland
Ja1z
Band,
country musician
the State Fire Marshal's office to entertainment; craft and food booths,
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle. · and flowers galore from local grow- Michael and Vicki Canan , Pomeroy . . Steven Pottmcyer, and CTM Magic
was · crowned queen in ceremoni es Productions. A kiddie tractor pull and
.
·• : CELEBRATION SPEAKER- State Rep.
' Cerey, right, Will
The fire cl'!ief was also given a crs.
Cash prizes of $75, .$~0 and $25 held at the park. First runncrup was R,acinc Ynuth League ball games
: : apeeklr II the 1501h ennlvlll'llry celebretion of the Pomeroy Fire
plaque by the Pomeroy department in
were awarded to the float winners in Vanessa Shuler, daughter of Steve rounded
• · Deplrtment Seturday at Meiga High School. He Wll pre..nted I
appreciation of his service.
. out the afternoon
. program.
the parade , with the Paul Hill Green- and Wanda Sh.ulcr, Lctan.
; : pllque and a be.- cot~tumed 11 1 firelighter by fireman Tom Reecl.
(Continued on Page 3)

___

,.,....

Potpourri ·of activity highlights
fourth Racine Flower Festival

!Lack
of finance reform leaves legislators
scrambling for ca$h
;.
.
.

.
a,y PAUL BARTON

.

.

'

DlnMtl Newe Seniice
;··: WASHINGTON - Cincinnati-area members of Congress say the
:Wsenee of campaign finance reforms leaves them no choice but to contin~ to be aggressive in seeking out campaign cash.
; · · Most members lament the. current campaign finance system and say they
~ant reforms. even as they gird themselves for raising 1998 election camjiaign money.
·
• . "Elections are often noi decided on the b;lsis of a superior candidate but
~ho is aiJic to raise and spend the most money," said Rep. Ted Strickland,
P..Lucuville.
.
·
' . ·"'Money is far too much a pltrt of politics," added Rep. Steve Chabot, R·
~iocinnati.
·
·.
·
· .
; More his been heard about the problems with campaign finance this year
jhan ever before, especiillly in .regard to special-ihtereit influence.
: · The Brookinp lnsti,utlon. a liberal think tank, recently declared that camPalJIII finance "is well on its way to becoming the blockbuster issue of the
)'car."
~ One l"lllirina member, l(ep. Lee Hamilton, D-Nasllville. Ind .• said )le can
~I)' - why.
: · "I think there iaa powina sense in America !Qdly that dollars speak loud~111M icleu, thll..:ceu is bouP and sold," Hamiltonaid.
~ Hip.prot'illl inveMiaatioU of the way the _c:ampalp finance system
worbd ill IWS-96 II'C expeciOd to bcpn soon tn House and Scrutle com·

•.

••

\,

(.

..

~
{

••
••

.,.

•

.

.

.

.

.

'

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mittees.
.
one for others in Congress.
- Rep. Rob Ponman;~-Tcrrace Park, will be participating in one of them,
"I think special-interest money buys access," Strickland said. "It may not
thanks to his recent appointment to the House Government Reform and Over- · . influence a particular vote, but it cenai nly buys access ."
sight Commiuee.
·
While differing in the specific remedies they advocate; area members arc
Rep. John Glenn. D-Ohio. will be involved in the other as rankin!! minoruniversal in calling for changes ..
ity member of tbe Senate Governmental Affairs Committee.
Meanwhile, members are starting to look ahead to the 1998 campaigns
Ponman, as he has in previous years. recently introduced campaign-finance
and the money they ""ill have to raise to keep their seats.
•
reform
legislation that would ban political action co'mmiuec money.from con"You have to make sure you have the resources to get the truth out," said
gressional
races and require House members to raise 60 percent of their funds
Chahot, who is still smarting from the advertising campaign that organized
from their own slates. ·
·
labor waged against hini' last year. •
.
Something like the AFL·CIO campaign, he said, "could very easily hap"Incumbents have too many advantages, a lot of which is connected to
pen again." .
.
the
campaign finance syst~m." Portman said.
.
.
Members should not he blamed for raising campaign money, so long as
.
Strickland,
on
the
other
hand,
suppons
PACs
as
way
for
average
voters
they stay within the law, others say.
·
.
.
· "Those who follow the law ... however they raise money for their cam- to pool their funds and have clout. He also said it would lle hard to raise mon paigns, should not be forced to stop," added Rep. John Boehner'stqp aide. ey in poorer congressional district~ without them.
Barry Jackson. "The usual fashion (for fund -raising) is legal." . •
Jackson decries the continuing charges that members of Congress ·are
But Strickland said he favors other steps. "I think every group that spends
bouJht and sold through campaign contributions.
money to try to influence an election ought to be required to make run dis"The system is so cynie~l, the coverage of it is so cynical. people are left
closure." he said.
with that impression," he said.
.
Strickland said he also questions Whether multiple $1,000 contributions
Cincinnati-area members deny that they themsclvcure susceptibh: to spefrom the same family are in keeping with the spirit of campaign laws.
cial·intereSI influence throUgh contributions while insisting the issue is a real

.,...

·~

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;

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