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•

7.... 12•The Dally Se11linel

Friday, February 9, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NBA All-Star preview- Page s1

HI: 301

Low: 30• ··

.

Weekly Wall Street . Page o1

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fra Fa..- Rdpalr By Danca
Mae...,.. Of The Chain Saw Woodcal'lllne
The Color Doctor, John Croel&gt;)l Freeman
Jueglea Tho Clown

..... celer ...... ..

Energlur &amp;un..y
Mae...,.. Of The Chain Saw Woodcal'lllne
Free Plcturee With The Pink Panther
The Mid-Ohio Veil~ Chapter
Of The American Rod Croeo
VIenna Fire ~artment

11om· 4pm
lpm • 6pm.

12pm- 5p~

Evere,acly·
9am • 4pm
lOam· 2pm
lpm ·1:30pm
lpm ·4pm

Sunday, February 18:
lpm -'4pm

Depa~ment

Energizer
Bunny!·

Saturday:

'

....

Smith out

12pm

f.ocuses on
. Eastern Avenue
traffic problems

lpm
2pm
3pm

4pm

12pm
2pm

t .. ceL.TA R't'Oin ......_

S~/1-, 7haKU~

freud'

4pm

~;o.romo ~nloh •A&lt;~I• han&lt;lleo 124&amp;31

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SHARP.

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km (051120'-WJ ~70

buuon (R·3W97) lf56306

· POMEROY • Women who are
'victims of domestic violence now
~ave a new opportunily lo seek sup·
I?Ort in lheir efforts to bring an end to
Qbu~ive relationships, thro~gh a n~w
"ct1ms support program 1n Meags
-s;ounty•.
, The support group, organized by
'C:onnie J. Dodson, viclims advocate
i&lt;ilh the Meigs Counly Prosecu1ing
~uorney's Office, is offered in conjunction with Serenily House, GaiIlpolis . . According to Dodson, the

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32" 6-Pa

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Braided Flcu&amp;
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•lneulated wre •Wood eill•• •nd r11lle

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molet •Awold draetlc: cha"S"
1t1 temperature •nd eun •po~
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.I V TOM HUNTER
tl--8en1inel Staff

oComl""" 18" &lt;lloh ~nlen •DitJtol

MIGrowave Oven·
CO&lt;&gt;Id"f •E&gt;&lt;pro•• &lt;ltfro"'

""eigs support .
Satellite Syetem

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36" Door

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lneulatlng Foam
o&amp;tc&gt;pt mfta b.v.flllnt. ...lint .....
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300 Grand C•••••al Avenue ·
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group is the .firsl &lt;if its kind in Meigs the group sesCounly and.is providing a beneficial sions has been
means of oulr!:ill:h to viclims of vel)' good thus
physical and mental abuse.
far,
largely
"You don't hnv,e to be victim of because of the
crime to auend lhC. suppon sessions. need for such a
If you're a womail in a violent silua- group in Meigs
lion, you can come and lake part in County.
open discussion with olhers in simi"We · defilar cases. The suJIP.ort group is also nilely fell there
beneficial in I~ way it allows was need for a
women lo know exaclly whal their group in Pomeroy. Serenily House
oplions are in dealing with abusive offers support groups and counselsituations,'~ said DOdson.
ing in Gallipolis, bul the closeness is
Organized in January, response to a big faclor in being able to help

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,.

By JILL WILLIAMS

Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
• GALLIPOLIS - City officials are slicking 10
a mid-summer completion dale for a stud,y of
Eas1ern Avenue traffic problem~ lhat the city
hopes to use as justificalion to obtain federal
lmprovernenl money.
1be Gallipolis City Commission
approval!o two -emerge~:,: ordinances
allowing lht e~'ly lo· mler mlo contract
Ohio Depi11111!Cnl of Transportation and Burgess
,.t Niele Lid., Columbus, 1o conduct lhe study.
Burge~s' a Niple will j&gt;repare the stl!'dy,
designed to focus on safety issues and-flow P!llen·
tial development will impacl on the primarily .
commercial section of Slate Roule 7 where "a
rale of vehicular liccidenls reil!lhing in
inJunes and propeny damages" occur,' Ci1y Manager Mauhew Coppler said. ·
•
"This won't be lhe standard lraffic-relaled
study," he explained. "Tile last one on Eas1em
t\venue was done in lhe rnid-'80s and was concerned wilh X amounl of cars on lhe road al a cersEt FOR STUDY- A lnllllc proi;IIDm .rudy an Glllllpalla' Eastern Avenue, a aectlan at which
lime.
Is •bow • the lntaractlon with the Ohio Rivw PIHII, will focus mostly on ufely l.. uea,
C::ttY ,~.,.... Mlllthew Coppler saki. The study Is due for completion by July.
Contln.ued on Pll9' A2

•Unl'l"" """"'" &lt;INI 1u1ot ~ ftnu co
· rollot Impact twlthout buokllne or Nfilne
•Knot I• •mooth on ~ .W.. to prwwm

~nr::;1v

On split vote, board determines
GOP candidate may not seek
party nomination for engineer

By KEVIN KELLY

DREMEL:

Woven Field Fence

e&amp;eo wotto of pOWtr •CorouNI •lnttont

ing would qualify for help.
It also recommends a change in federal rules to qualify all-purpose shelters for more aid,
Exising rules now target aid to specialiZed shelters
for single men, single women, families and single-parent
families.
·

Board of eiectjons rules:

39" x 330/363, t~·Gauge

·•'1'•-1¥

grounds, ou1buildings and even caves," said Jill Long
Thomps.on, lhe undersecrelary for rural matters.
Homeless people in rural areas have a few cushions,
1he report says.
Counlry people tend 10 be more neighborly, helping
with a bag of groceries, a place to slay or a free 'aoctor's
visit when someone they know faces hard limes.
Rural communities rarely have the shelter&gt;, soup
kitchens and services to help people find jobs and a
place 10 live, Thompson said.
Among its recommendalions, the report says the government should widen the definition of homeless so that
the rural poor who live in shacks withoul heal or plumb-

lOam
llam

Sponge P,inting &amp; Stenciling
Hardwood Floor lnataliation
Organize Your Stonoge Space

· ~.1 co 10.ton-.......,... topt ~.,., ~riH pottorn-no moaourl"f
o5tunly viJ\yl-coato&lt;l otool won'l ... or w1rp 162114

homelessness, development can push people over the
· edge, too, lhe Agriculture Department noled in a .report
released Friday. Ski resons and vaca1ion homes can ereale new jobs, but they often drive up the cost ofland and
sheller. New indus1ries in small towns can attract more
job seekers lhan jobs.
No one knows how many rural homeless there are,
the report says, allhough slate-level sludies in Arizona,
Kentucky, Michigan and Ohio give a sn•pshot Counting
the homeless in cilies is hard enough. lbere are few
sidewalks, shelters and underpasses. The problem is
spread out over vas1 miles.
"The rural homeless are of1en 'hidden' in camp-

~

Fauc:at lnetallation
Storm Door Installation
Motion Datlctor ln•tallatlon'
Ceramic Tile Installation
Spone• P,lnting &amp; Stenciling
How To UM A P,lnt Spnoyer
Oreanlze Your Stonoga Space
How To UM A P,int Spnoyer

Sunday:

:Cloeet Organizer

Vol. 31 , No. 1

.

~ • WASHINGTON (AP)- Their m8keshif1 shelters are
;'shacks, junked school buses, even caves bul homeless
~people can be found in rural America alllhe same.
~ . Joblessness and mental illness lake lheir toll on lhe
• rural homeless, as do problems walh alcohol and drugs,
:.just as in cilies. Women become stranded after fleeing
;,libuse al home. The rural homeless also include migrant
~workers who run out of money belween fann jobs, or
"People in places where single industries like mining,
:;;logging and fanning-have collapsed.
- Allhough lhe loss of economic mainslays cah cause

lOam· 6pm

lpm • 4pm

The Mlci·Ohlo V.lley Chapter
Of The American Red Croee
Fire Safety f'lltrol
VIenna Fire ~artment

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 11, 1996

.· AP Ferm Writer

lOam· 5pm

100 Free Home S.Curity VIdeotape•
Will &amp;e Given Out &amp;y Welaer Lock

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

:ay ROBERT GREENE

Saturday, February 17: ·

Tof/

mt

:RepQrt: While hidden in shacks, junked buses - even caves iCOuntless
homeless people can be found in rural America
.

9am • 2pm
9om • !5pm
lOam· 6pm

Friday, February 16:

&gt;Kitchen Fauc;et ...,,..,..

•

;RUral hOmeless: They're out there!

. Sunday:

VIenna Are

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Sa~urday:

John Crosby

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~l-fl- WIIII 1he c.ler DDciDI',

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pageA2

PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Rep. Frank Cremean&lt; ranked lhird among lhe
Ohio delegation with $209,474 conttibuted by polilical action committees in
(995, Citizen Aclion said.
,
1 1be group said lhal Cremeans, R-Ohio, received $401,438 in overall
'
po.litical contributions
last year.
Barry Bcnneil, Cre·
means' chief of staff,
as.m d with ihe aCI:uracy of· the figure Citizen
Action released, but
said it is being misinterpreted. '
'
''That figure is for the
flfSI 12 months (of his
lerm)," said Bennett,
"The second 12 monlhs
he raised S21S,7SO. It
: just worked out that
Rep. Cremeans raised
his money in the first 12
monlhs, but PACs are
limiled to what they can
give, so he can't raise
that much money' in the .
next 12 monlha."
Jim Lowe, member'
din:ctor of Citizen Action, said a1 a news conference Friday that
Ctl~~~-~~~"~et-11-StlftC!IIIIll in tlking lobbyist money.
: "Wilh elel:cions coming up Ibis November, people need to ask whal do
IIIeY (coqnu memben) give in order to aet the money?" he said.
,
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' COJittnuld On .... A2
•
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more battered women. Some victims
will probably atlend the sessions
now, where they wouldn 'l have
attended if they were only offered in
Gallipolis," said Jessica Jones , support group leader for Serenily
House.
According lo Jones, the group is
only a discussion group and nol a
counseling group. "The group discussions offer a release for batlered
women. We don'l necessarily discuss abuse silualions a majorily of
the lime. The discussions can range
Continued on page A2

Times-Sentinel SIBff
GALLIPOLIS - On a 2- 1 vote·, lhe Galli a County Board of Elections ruled Friday to remove Glenn
A. Smith as a Republican candidale for county engineer in the March 19 primary.
'
The board did not give a reason for ils decision,
but said a written st,temenl detailing 1he reasons for
invalidaling Smith's candidacy would be released by
Feb. 16.
David T. Evans, the Gallipolis auomey wh9 repre·
sented Smith in a complaim agains1 his candidacy
filed with lhe board, said he and his clienl .would
await release of lhe wrillen stalement before deciding
to appeal .ot not.
The board 11nnounced ils decision several days ahead of lhe original dale
il planned lo do so after il conducted a hearing last Tuesday on lhe complaint, filed by Harlan and James Northup of Gallipolis .
In a let(er 10 Eleclions Board Chainnan Elaine Rouse. the Northups
claimed !here were a number of inadequacies to Smith filing for engineer. At
the lime, lhey claimed 1ha1 Smilh was the Guernsey Counly engineer, reside$
in Guernsey County, and yel filed pelilions wilh a Gallia County address. ·
Smith, 60, who served as Gallia engineer from 1969 to 1975, was the sole
Republican 10 file in 1he primary 10 challenge Democratic incumbent Josepll
L. Leach this fall.
During lhe hearing, the board heard Smith declare that he has cJ..:nged his ,
residency three limes since September.
The board noled at the hearing that Smith is currenlly a resident of Gal,
iia County, and has been since Jan. 12, at which lime he had not yel circulated petitions for his primary candidacy. .
Evans argued at lhe hearing thai his client was staying on as Guernsey
engineer as a gesture to help 1he counly until a replacement could be found,
Smith, who was appoinled 10 fill an unexpired tenn as Guernsey engineer ·
in June 1994, resigned 1he position effective Friday.
"I fail to sec how, afler this board has acknowledged (Smith's) residency,
1ha1 lhey can now say that he's nol a registered voter," Evans said after the
board released the decision.
Smith can appeal the decision to Gallia County Common Pleas Coun, the
Fourth Dislricl Court of Appeals or the Ohio Supreme Court, depending on
lhe reason lhe board cites for removal from lhc ballot
·'
"I will have (the reason) by lhe 16th in wriling, and at lhal poinl,l will
decide wha1 to do," Evans added. "We are going lo e•plon: whal options we
have."
Smith, who was also Gallipolis city manager from 199 I until 1994, was ...
not present at Friday's announcemenl, as he was serving his last day as
Guernsey engineer.

News capsules
For Iowa voters it's decision time

Good Morning
Today's Gl'm. ~· IW

' ' .
18 Sedions • 164 Pates
OSKALOOSA, Iowa (AP)- The Republicans looking to oust Presi- .
"ll 's decision time," was how
dent Clinton from the White House are welcoming him to Iowa for ·a · Sena.te Majority Leader Bob
CaJcodan
weekend of camj,aigning- and urging GOP volers to use the president's Dole ·put ii Friday night as the
trip to focus on their choice to replace him .
campaigning for Monday's Iowa
Qassifieds
03-7
caucuses enlered a crilical final
Comiu
lpprt
weekend.
Editori!!ls
A4
Dole, lrying to frame lhc
Obituaries
AS
dehale in his favor, said he had
soorts
thC'Ieadership abilities and expeBJ.8
rience to go up againsl Clinton in
Al
Wea!hcr
November and said caucus-goers
should ask lhemselves: "Should
I vote for someone who has no
Column s .-chance of heing elected president
of the United Slates?"
JackAI"k09D
The GOP race remained
A4
volatile 10 lhe end, and mosl of
John Cuggll
A4
the~ wen~ criiSCrossing
lobHndkh
AS
Iowa Ibis weekend to malce their
case.
,
.
A Des Moines Resister poll
Doro!hy Sure
C$ ·
published Saturday 'found diat
Dole had the backing of 28 percent of likely caucus·soe~:~o to 16
percent for publishing heir.Sieve Fodlcs, II percent for commentator Pat
Buchanan, 10 percent for Alcxanc)er and 8 percent for Texas Sea. Phil
Gramm, wilh others traiU.,..
·
·
11.1'!1o
But the poll, which c.m.ct 11 marsilf'of enor of 3.9 percenlaie poiniS,
also showed ·19 percent wafN, UIIIIecided wbia ~11om. Sa.turday
(.·~
through Thursday.

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Study focuses on Eastern Avenue traffic prpblems..

AccuWadler• forecast for daytime Conditions and

Continued from pege A1
"This one will focus on safetyrelated issues, especially on how
eiiiCIJency vehicles will operate in
thlltarea," Coppler added.
The city manager said a multijurisdictional approach will be taken
and input is to be obt$ned not only
frol!l city offices, but from a !ask
force including the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depanment, the Gallia
&lt;;ounty ·EMS, the sl!eriff's department and the county Emergency
·
Management Agency.
The task force will relll8ln m
place after the project is completed
"to review the effectiveness of the

.... -

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co11nter·measures and to detennine . then apply fiJI' federal funding;

11111-ftld ,.,...

By B.J. REYEs
Aaaocletecl Preas Writer
MILTON, W.Va. -Bill Champe
doesn't want to sell his farm for $2.5
million to the Toyota Motor Corp. so
.. the auto maker can build an engine
.plant. Neither docs his neighbor.
.
' "We don't know where we would
go," Champe said. "We've always
lived here."
His decision has angered residents
who wanted to work at the plant and
frustrated politicians who are court·
ing the Japanese car maker to come
sometime late Monday. 1
to the state. It has afso sent Toyota
,
Weather forecast:
searching for a new site for its 200Sunday... Snow showers likely acre. $200 million plant.
north with scattered snow showers
. Bill and Janice Champe and their
central and south. Blustery with west neighbors, siblings Trim and V'uginia
winds 20 to 30 mph with higher Berkeley, each own I 00-acre farms in
gusts. Highs 30 to 35.
Milton, about 30 miles west of
Sunday night ... Cloudy east half Charleston.
with scattered snow showers. Partial
Both families. say the land has
clearing elsewhere with scattered
flurries. Cold with lows in the teens.
Monday ... Snow showers nonheast...Otherwise variably cloudy with
scattered flurries or snow showers.
Highs mostly 20 to 25.
By PAMELA BROGAN
Extended forecast:
Thesday... Lingering snow showers Gennett News Service
WASHINGTON - Sen. Jay
nonheast...Otherwise dry. Lows 10 to
1
Rockefeller,
0-W. Va., said. Friday
15. Highs in the 20s .
that he doesn't think he'll lose face
Wednesday... A chance of snow
with Toyota Motor Co. officials or
showers north and rain showers
Huntinglo'l voters after plans for the
south. Lows in the teens. Highs in the
. company to build a new engine plant
30s.
in Miltqn got scuttled.
Thursday...A chance of rain or
Rockefeller said the deal was
snow. lows in the 20s. Highs in the
nixed Friday morning after longtime
30s.
Milton residents . Bill and Janice

end in Ohio Sunday

By The Anoclattd Preis
The short taste _of spring should
• quickly end as another blast of arctic
• au hiIS 0"''
auo.
.
: .f Temperatures will fall .a little
~ ·Jiel'ow freezing by daybreak Sunday
\ ·111orning and then rise very liUie dur~ ing the day as cold arctic air contin~ ues to ~t tedr int? thetharea. Tesmpedra1 tures ~~
rop mto e teens un ay
• night and fighlto get much above 20
t ·degrees for most of the state 011 Mon-

,

0

'

11

~ JayA large band of light snow and

' snow show~rs will spread across the
: state on Sunday and sbould end by
: Sunday night. In the nonheast, lake
r...effcct snow showers will persi~t into
• ~onday. .
.·
r. : Snowfall amounts will be on the
~ )lght.side ~ifh ~und an inch of l?tal
~ accumuial!oil 111 the nonh and httle
~ accunlutation in'the south. However,
in northeastern Oliio I to 2 additiont al -inches may ·~ur Sunday night
" with another inch or two Monday
giving tOtals of fio S_inches there by

t

J

lie Safety.
OOPS approved a $25,000 award
to the city late in 1995 to proC_eed
with the study.
The, commission's approval was
one of the last components needed
to move forward, beCause the need
.to complete the study and apply for
fun!ling to improve Eastern is•
becoming critical, Coppler noted.
Coppler said he expects to have
the study completed by July and

region that are coming together
now," he said. "The timing, the need
and the justifi~;ation are very importan I now."
In another traffic-related development, Coppler revealed that
OOPS believes fe«ral money for
the city to place a ,stop light at Second Avenue and Olive Street will be
approved .
.
OOPS has requested additional
information from the city on traffic

~ ~;~ow
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.loct,ged in federal prison
r

" •·

pbJNrPJ.EASANT, W.Va.- A employee after he allegedly stole regt dbarleston ·man who staged a bogus · istered mail containing money froin
~ Silicide allep!P.t earl~ Friday on the the post office, Phanco said.
~lver ~~on!tl· Bndge 1s now tn · • • He was to repon to federal prispn
·f~deral ·prison i~ Ashland, Ky., to serve a 12-month and one-day sen·~
· pcording to U.S. Postal Inspeclor. tence on the' charge at 2 p.m. Friday.
, arty Phaf!CO. .
When Marcum was questioned
: Dennis Marcum Jr. was appre- about his vehicle being found on the
i:en~ed by postal inspectors at his bridge and the note, · Phanco said
T.ance's home ill'Charleston around Marcum denied both actions. Mar'11 a.m. Friday. His vehiCle and a sui- cum later reported to the Kentucky
tide note were found by the Mason prison to serve his time.
'County S)leriff's Department on the
Mason County officials have not
·bridge around 4:27 a.m.
said if charge~ will be brought against
~ : Marcum, a former postal employ- Marcum.
te, had pleaded guilty to theft bY. an

~oard will look to contractor

to
.. site nuclear waste facility
.

., : COLUMBUS (AP) -The state
J.i9ard in·charge of finding a stora~e
lite for radioactive waste from Ohro
.nd five other states plans to select a
£(mtractor who would recommend
Where to build the center.
; : The,Ohio Low-level Radioactive
Waste Facility-Development A,uthor-,
'ity decided Ftiday to liy and hire the
·iontt:)ICtOr by September.
·~ , The authority, which was created
1&gt;¥ a 1995 law, must find a site to
tiQre the waste .from nuplear power
· f!!ants, hospitals, res~arch C~=nters
fJ1(I .businesses. 'f!1c waste would

f~e fromMissouri
Ohio, Indiana,
Iowa,
f'lnnesota,
,and Wisconsin.
Astate requirement ~s the board

operate the center.
The board concluded that was not
enough time, and voted to tiy the
two-step process. The initial con·
tractor would study the state's geol·
ogy to eliminate unsuitable areas, and
come up with a map of suitable sites.
The board on Friday also selected
Jane Harf, the board's acting director
since October, as its first executive
director. She will assinne the job
March 4 and resign from the Ohio
Environmental l'totection Agency.
Half, 47, had hecn overseeing
Ohio's efforts since 1993

0

'·

The study indicated. a light is not
justified at Coun, but. was needed
for Olive and Sycamore.

The city commission opted to gel .
a traffic signal at Olive. Sycamore
was· discounted because the com- ,
mission felt that intersection's Scurve design would make a signal
there more hindrance than help.
"
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library trustees to meet Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County District Library .Board of
Trustees will meet at 5 p.m. Thesday at the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Libniry, 7 Spruce St.

Court issues sentence in assault case

l-

Contributions
, Continued from page A1
Bennen accused the' group of not
being interested in· "good government."

"Citizen Action is nothing more
than an extension of the Democratic
Party," he said. "If they were really
interested in good government, they
would have held a press conference
on Ted Strickland and not Rep. Cremeans because he (Strickland)
raised $.100,000 more from PACs
sinceJan. I, 1993,thanCreineails."
Citizen Action reported that
Strickland raised $82,650 in campaign contributions from PACs in
1993.
Cremeans defeated Strickland, a
Dem~rat. in 1994. Strickland plans
to run against Cremeans 11gain in
this November's election.
Lowe said Citizen Action data
showed that Cremeans deposited
checks from oil and chemical companies, banks and other lobbyists.

appeared Friday to concel!e the effOrt
had failed.
' ·
"I understand and appreciate the
Charnpes' .decision and greatly
respect their attachment to this land,"
he said.
'
. Caperton said two other sites in
the state are still under consideration.
"We just have one less site for them
to choose," he said.
·
A. Micfia:el Perry, chairman of
Bank One and one of the business
executives who visited the Champes, . ,
said the families were offered an
above average price for their land, but
money wasn't thC issue.
"There's a great deal of disappointment, but everybody's trying to
compassionately' understand how we
would feel or how our parents would .
feel in that situation," Perry said.
"That's a tough position to find
oneself."

Publicworks committee meets Monday
MARIETIA - A meeting of the District 18 Public Works Integrating Committee will he' held at 10:30 a.m . Monday at the Holiday
Inn in Marietta to discuss recommendations for changes to legislation
for renewal of the State Issue II program.
·
For more information, contact Rick Hin~man of the Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development District at614-374-9436.

Authonties probe series of thefts

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Winter Clear·ance
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, Save

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Domestic' violence
1 C!!ntlnuecl from. page A 1
from •ny itumber o( topics. This
allows . the women to flow off 'of
each others thoughts. The key is a
lot of listening."
The group meets evei'Y Wednesday evening from 5:30 to 7:30p.m.
at the Meigs Coun'y Prosecutor's
Office on Se~on4 Street, Pomeroy.
The s~epon gf&lt;lup is only a small

oPOMEROY -A 32-year-old Pomeroy man received an 18-month
suspended sentence in Meigs County Commqn Pleas Court, accord·
mg to a court entry.
Carl Allen Stamper was charged with aggravated assault in the
shooting of 18-year-old Travis Arnold, Pomeroy, on Pomeroy's Main
Street in July 1995.
.
·
•
• Though not struck by the round, Arnold was reportedly hit by concrete dislodged from the i111pact of the shot.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill noted that Stamper was originally charged
with felonious assault, a more serious offense, that was reduced at the
request of the prosecution,
Stamper was also sentenced to five years' probation and fined $501).

KipRRg Shoe Co.'s

Champe told him they loved their
family farm and didn't want .to sell it
to any company at any price.
Toyota officials had offered the
family $2.5 million for I 00 acres that ·
would have been part of a 200-acre
Corolla-model engine plant.·
Rockefeller and state officials led
by Gov. Gaston .€apenon supponed .
the deal to bring hundreds of new
jobs to th~ Huntington area.

brands like Reebok,
. , Rockport, ~ics, ·

.
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part of the two-ye'at~olll Victims ·
Assistance l'rogram, Dodson stated. ·,
:·&lt;&gt;ur progr&amp;!ll serv~ every cri~
victim in Meigs County. The services range from coun s~p
rt
vices and counseling 1
· cial.
assistance with medical ·• I , cOunseling costs,' lost wages; an Other
costs associated wip! victims
through the .Ohio &lt;;oult 9f Claims
Victims Compensation Fund," said
DOdson.
The Victims Assistarice Program
is funded through ihe office of Ohio
Attemey General Betty Mont'omery, and is administered and
mstituted through the Prosecuting
Attorney's ·office, according to
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney
John R. Lentes.
"The program assures that victi!JIS- rightS are protected before, during, and after any criminal proceedbigs. The implementation of the support group occurs at a time during
which we've seen a substantial
increase in domestic violence cases.
We hope that the group will encourage more vidimf to come forward,
and help put a stop to the increase in ·
domestic violence," said lentes.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County authorities are investigating a series
of th.eft reportS filed Friday.
Filing repons were:
• Mary Holcomb, 47 Spruce St., Gallipolis, who infornied Gallipolis
Cit\- Police that a ..357-caliber handRun was removed from her resi·
dence. Time of the theft was unknown.
• Tricia Fendeibosch, 227 Third Ave., Gallipolis, who notified city
police that an anniversary band and pinky ring were removed from her
residence sometime between Feb. 3 and Friday.
'
• Ronald E. Coibin, 117 Fourth. Ave., Gallipolis, who reported to
Qjty police the theft of a first aid kit, car registration, auto manual and
mileage book from his car while parked at 117 Vine St.'during the day
Friday.
•
·
• Deborah Maynard, 1936 Graham School Road, Gallipolis, who
informed city officers that cassette tapes, an insurance card and auto
registration were taken from her car while parked behind the Dock Inn,
92 Vine St.
· • Grace Walker, I 17 Pine St., Gallipolis, who told officers a CB
antenna was detached from her car sometime between Thursday and
Friday.
.
• Alford ,Wheeler Jr., leading Creek Road, Middlepon, who
informed the Gallia County Sheriff's Department that a hot water
heater, electrical breaker box and concrete block were taken from a
mobile home he owns in Gallia County, ·
•
·
All incidents are under investigation.
;_·

Appellate
court post
.accepted ·
by Klint(

Gallia Couoty court news

CIRCLEVIlLE- Judge Roger
L. Kline of Circleville has been
appointed administrative judge by his
colleagues on the Fourth District
Court of Appeals, which hears cases
on appeal from all state trial courtS in
14 southern Ohio counties.
In his new capacity, Kline will be
responsible for the supe..Vision of the ·
administration, docket and calendar
of the coun. Kline will also be
Roger L. Kline
responsible for presiding over all
court sessions and meetings when'the
presiding judge is absent.
decided in' a fair and impanial man"! am honored that my colleagues ner. I have enjoyed serving the cition the court have selected me to serve zens of southern Ohio and I look foras the administrative judge," Kline ward to serving the citizens and the
said. "I will strive to continue o~~:_. court in this new role."
effortS .tQ improve this court's effi~ \ Kline is serving his first term on
ciency and to ensure that all cases are the court.

Deputies jail Darwin man
following high-speed chase
. POMEROY - An 18-year-old the juvenile were apprehended near
Darwin man was jailed early ~atur­ Eastman Ridge around 12:15 a.m.
day after he allegedly led Meigs
Smith was arrested and charged
County sheriffs deputies on a high- with felony eluding, driving under the
speed chase late Friday and fled into influence, underage consumption and
a wooded area near Skinner Road, traveling left of center. The female
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
juvenile was charged with underage
.According to police reports, consumption and later released to the
William A. Smith was traveling on custody of her parents.
Rocksprings Road &lt;U"Ound 11:30 p.m.
A hearing date for Smith is pendwhen a Meigs de!luty noticed Smith's ing in. Meigs County Court.
1986 Pontiac weaying across the center line.
After a brief chase in an attempt
to stop Smith's vehicle, Smith and a
16 year-pi~ female passenger abandoned the vehicle on Skinner Road
and fled to a nearby residence,
deputies reponed.
When authorities came to \II• residence, Smith and the juvenile
allegedly fled from the rea{ of the res·
idence and into a wooded area. After
being tracked by police dogs in the
wooded area between Skinner and
Eastman Ridge roads, both Smith and

liquor permit transfer requested

NEW OFFICER - Aaron Metzler, 26, had been hired •• e new
officer by Gelllpolle CitY Pollee,
f91Jowtng the Ntlrament of Petrol·
men- Charles Reynolds. Metzler
enllefed In the U.S. Marine Corps
following high school In 1987,
Hrvlld until he wae honorably
chclulrged In 1189 end moved to
By The Associated Prus
. The following numbers were selected in Friday's Ohio and West Virginia Gellla County. He graduated from
Ohlo'e Beale PMce Officer Trainlotteries:
·
Ing program In 1991 end aerved
omo .
•• e Gellle County deputy eher·
Pick 3: 8-6-1
Iff until being hie rnlgnetton
Pick 4: 1-9·8-8
.
·becllme . effective on Feb. 8.
Buckeye 5: 17-22-27-28-29
"Aaron 11 • talented end dedi·
The jackpOt for Saturday's Super Lotto drawing was $16 million. '
·ceted young. officer, end - ere
WEST VIRG\NIA
plaaeed to have been able to find
Daily 3: 9-6-6
1omeone locally with hie queiHIDaily 4: 3-6-3-7
catlona," Pollee Chief Roger
Cash 25: 2·8-16-18-23-24
Brandeberry eeid. •

Ohio, West VIrginia tottery picks

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NO FALSE

Common Pleas
The following actions were rec;ently filed in the Gallia County Common
Pleas Court:
Divorce granted- Gary McGuire,
Patriot, from Nina McGuire, 133 Sun
Vidley Drive, Gallipolis.

.

CROWN CITY- A reljuestto transfet two liquor permits to a Gallia County business has been filed with i~,phio Department of Liquor
Control.
,
Vert in L. and Joann Swain, doing business as the Guy all Valley Gen- .
eral Store, 13330 State Route 218, Crown City, are seeking to transfer their Cl· (hecr only in original sealed containers for carryout until
I a.m.) and C2 (wine and certain prepackaged mixed drinks in sealed
containers for carryout until I a.m.) permits to Thomas Belville, also
doing business as the Guyan Valley General Store.
Applications are processed within six to eight weeks following a
thorough investigation of the applicant and intended premises, Liquor
Control Director Michael A. Akrouche said.

•

Road, Gallipolis, charged with DUI,
$750. I0 davs iail. one vear
prot&gt;anon and one year license suspenston.
Mary E. Conwell, 31, Urbana,
charged with DUI, was fined $950,
one year probation, 10 days jail and
one year license suspension.
Wll$ fiped

I.IIT OIAIB SAI.E

· GALLIPOLIS -Cited by Gallipolis City Police early Saturday Jor
driving under the influence was Alan H. McKillips, 40, Strausburg,
according to police records.
Cited Friday by city officers were Dougie Miller, 420 Neil Ave., Gallipolis; contributing tq unruliness i1bd interference' with custody; Tracell A. Det~eiler. 26, Apartment 25, 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell,
shoplifting; and William D. Scott Jr., 18, "3538 Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis, following 100 closely.
·

..

, ,.,._ pick a contractor by September
· would find a site, then build and

Municipal
GALLIPOLIS - The following
actions were recently resolved in the
Gallipolis Municipal Coun:
Antaiawan Smith, 19, 77 Pine St.,
Gallipolis, charged with underage
consumption of alcohol, was charged
$250, one year probation and five
days community service.
Dalbena C. Briggs, 18, 1261 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, charged with
petty theft, was charged $150, one
yeat probation and 10 days community service.
Forrest R. Russell II, 19, 1706
Chestnut St., Gallipolis, charged with
petty theft, was fined $100, one y,ear
probation and I 0 days community
service.
·
George R. Kelle~, 57, 2216 Eastem Ave., Gallipolis, charged with dri·
ving .undef' the influence, was fined
$500, three days jail, one year pro·bation and I80 days license suspension; charged with failure to obey a
traffic control device, he was fined
$25.
Charles A. Breakiron, 21, Rio
Grande, charged with DUI, was fined
$450, three days jail and 180 day
license susJII'nsion.
Regina Coutler, 35, 1554 Bunce
Road, Gallipolis, charged with DUI,
was fined $450, three days 'jail, one
· year probation and six months license
suspension. ·
William Coulter, 46, 1554 Bunce
Road, Gallipolis, charged with DUI,
was fined $600, seven days jail , one
year probation and one year license
suspension .
Charles Miller, 68, 331 Tayi&lt;;Jr
Road, Gallipolis, charged with DUI,
was fined .$450, four days jail, one
year probation and 180 day license
suspensiOn.
Mark Davis, 32, 64 Mill Creek

City. poUce issue citlltiflns to JOUr · ., ·

Converse, Hush
Puppies, Clothing and
more.

ser-

Health agency slates-immunizations
. GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations will be provided by the Galha County Health Department on Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. in the courthouse lobby.
· Childre.n in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a .parent and bnng a current immunization record with them.
Pneu1_11onia ~accine is also available for residents age 6S or &lt;Mer,
or f~r chents With heart disease, lung disease, diabetes or other serious Illnesses.

that .. perience a large number of .
accidents.

)

been theirs for generations. Chamrie -years.
.
moved here'in 1933, when he was 10
Robe.n C. Gabordi, executive cdi·
years old, Bnd has raised everything tor of The Herald-Dispatch of Huntfrom cattle to com.
ington, suggested in a column Friday
"We don't bother anybody. We that the Champes sell forthe good of
just mina our own business," he said. the community.
"I just wantto be out here and be left
."As it stands, hundreds and hunalone."
·
'
dred of people across generations wtll
The Berkeleys feel the same way. be denied a cll,ance for a better life in
"We prefer to stay where we are West Virginia," Gabordi said.
and .~Toyota) can g~ somewhere . Although a Toyota spokeswoman
else, Ms. Berkeley SBid.
.in New York said the company has
But in a county where the most not yet made a'decision on the toearecent figures show S.6 percent of the tion of the plant, a Japanese newspa,
population was unemployed, resi- per reponed last week that Toyota
dents can't understand why the had chosen West Virginia.
ChamJMis and the Berkeleys· won 'I
Gov. GaSton Capenon, Sen. Jay
sell their farms fdr $5 million to make Rockefeller, D-W.Va., and local busiway for the plant1111d the 150 jobs it ness executives visited the Champes
would bring.
. in the past two weeks to persuade
"Heck yes, I'd sell. I'd sell it in a them to sell to the state for $25,000
heartbeat for the people," said Mar- an acre.
ty Morgan, who has lived here SO
R,ockefeller, like the others,

Rockefeller.doesn't expect
to lose face with car maker

~ Sqs-t in 'bogus suicide

Tri-·C ounty Briefs:

Farm far:nilies say n~ to W.V~. ·Toyota plant

tBrief. spring-like respite
~ Will

usage and accidents . before a deci-

areas of the initial ret;?' that. need • "It'' a Iicht lim. frame ·i'n tenns . sion is made, he said.
amended or ~~ned, -:cordii1J ~ of freeing up money for widening or
The light was the result of a study
the grant appl~cation the c1ty sub1111t- improvement Projects, because dv:re · 011 three intersectiOIU ..ong Second
ted to the Ohio Departmcnt .of Pub- are a lot of major projects in the _ Sycamore, Olive and Coun -

•

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February 11, 1esii

1~Commentar
r
II iunbav ~hntt· jentintl Beware of.band:i ts on ·the infobahn

Page~
Sunday, Februery 11, 19t6

By Jack Anderson

'Esttlbfislid in 1966

I

end MlchMI Blneteln

825 Third Avenue, 01111=18, Ohio
814 448 2342 ' fiX:
3008
111 Cowt StrMI, Pomeroy, Ohio
814 812-2156 • FIX: 192-2157
•

-~
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Robert L Wingett
Publllhlr

Hoblrt WIIIOII Jr.
Euc:utlw Editor

•.

MllrpntLe'Controller

ucww Jo llleledltol'.,.. • 1tn~ne. J7ley Mould

1»,...

lfl8n 3011 -*·
AM ,....,.. .,.. auiJINf 1D adJIIng arid niwt h alflned arid Include adchU
arid ..,.,._ nllllllllr. No ,.,.,_ ,.,._ will I» puiJIIallad. LMW8
ahoullllleln pood ...... llddNalllf ........

not,..,.,_,.,

•Letters to the editor
'

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WASHINGTON -- Federal and
·state regula\ors have finally thrown
up II roadblock against the modemday version of "highway robbery."
One year after we first warned
abOut scam artists using the infor·
mation superhighway to peddle var·
ious investment scams, the Federal
Trade Commission and 20 state securities agencies have joined forces to
crack down on the croo)ls.
Dubbed "Project Roadblock," the
campaign has produced 85 law
enf9fcement actions against bandits
prOilloting more than a quarter of a
billion dollars wonli .of bogus invest·
ments. Despite the stepped-up
enforcement, regulators caution that
the high-tech sche~es are ~till bilking hundreds of mtlljons of dollars
from unsuspecting investors across
the country.
The ~:rooks :prey mostly on elde'rly consumers, many of whom have

risked their nest egg on . the false
belief that any investment connected
with the information superhighway is
the road to prosperity. One house·
bound, elderly woman in Alexandria,
Va., was fleeced in four high-tech
scams. The woman lost her life sav- ings of $100,000, which was earned
over four decades of baby-sitting.
Reg~lators note that more than a
quarter of all investment dollar losses reported to a federal-state database
between March and October of 1995
involved high-tech inforrnjltion
superhighway scams. Thougb the
scams are not perpetrated on line -the crooks tout the explosive growth
of the internet to convince victims
that they ' re getting i~volved in a get·
rich-quick investment.
.
According to. one regulator, the
promoters of the scams ~rge unwary
investors to "just sit' back and ride the
coattails of the information superhighway" by malting money off the
boom in pagers and the proliferation

of pay-per-call 900 phone numbers.
Here's how the two most-reported
frauds work:
In the first, a telemartcter offers to
secure a license that covers a paging.
frequency in a portion of the United
States. The caller tells 'the investor
that a fortune can be made on the
resale or lease of the license. To further entice and to huny the potential
victim, the caller goes on to say that
the license is coveted by major paging operators because the federal
government only allows one license
per market. In fact, there is no limit
on the number of licenses, and legit·
imate paging operators would never
buy or lease I' license from an individual.
'The second scam involves 900number investments. Telemarketers
encourag&amp; the victim to purchase an
interest in an "information provider"
partnership. What the investor is not
told is that inf~tion providers
must pay promotional costs and must

•

.Feels citizens disturbed by remarks
Many of the citizens to whom I
:.have spoken here. in Gallia County
are deeply disturbed and offended by
the contemptuous remarks of "for· mer" Congressman Ted Strickland.
' Referring to ihcumbent Con· gressman Frank Cremeans, Mr.
Strickland is reported (Tribune
'216196) to have said: "I don't know if
'· he has the capacity to understand an
issue 9f this complexity."
r Such a contemptuous remark in
· and of itself is reprehensible, but coupled with the intellectual arrogance
and rhetorical obfuscation if reflects
the typically aloof mindset of the
1: politically-correct, liberaVelitist vin-

L

j

dictive thinking of the defeated, frus1rated,'hungry and angry politician.
It kind of reminds me of that fat
liule rooster out in the barnyard
slrUtting and scratching around on the
dung-hill of his own self·righteous- .
ness, convinced that without his
crow, the sun would not
come up.in ·
1
the . morning ... little realizing, that
before the day was over he would be
the main cowse for the family dinner.
For a time, the voters may have to
put up with the strutting and crowing
but dinner will be served on election
day, Nov. 5, 1996.
Bob Murphy,
Vinton

LET ME

TEACH YOU
SOME Ri&amp;

PHVSIC5.

i:.Urges citizens to 'speak out'
was tear up all the floors, replace all
' ' Dear Editor
the
walls and sit in this mess for 3 to
. . As a yictim of the May 14, 1995

~elg$

June Bastiani

also fork over fees to 'an'y endorsers
used In infomercials or other adv'er·
tisements. 'These'CQSts sap most of the
victim's stalce in the.investment. ·
"If these promoters complied with
state and federal requirements on disclosing risks and profits, very few
investors would go within .a mile;of
these investments," one state regulator told our associate' Ed Henry.·
"The truth is that these investments,
if properly presented, are suitable
only for sophisticated high,rollers
\vho ~ff&lt;lrd to lose every penny
that they put into them."
'
From the files of state and feder·
at regulators, we've pieced together
some of the more egregious croob
caught by Project Roadblock:
•• In Arizona, a California company selling $5,000 shares in a 900number scheme told investors that
their investments were "backed by a
U.S. Treasury bond thill secures their
principaiiOO percent." Accordinglto
the FTC, the president of the company threatened to sue a 78-year~old
woman when she refused to increase
her investment. The co;&gt;mpany . falsely told
investors that. it had alread~ .~t ¥P
300 phone IJnes . .Qpe mj!lltng 'iiO
investors claimed that with 300 lines,
somebody who invested $10,000
would get an annual return of
$23,530. In fact, not a single line had
been set up and investors' f~nds s·
ply paid for sales commissions • d
expens.es.
•. A Florida telemarketing ou 11
pushing paging licenses ~ot o y
falsely claimed to be a member::,f
two trade associations, buralso Jj)d
about the location of its offipes.
Telcmarketers were instructed to 'y ·
that they were calling from the co~­
pany's headquarters in the Wi d
Trade Center. In fact, they w · e
making calls from a boiler.room n
Florida.
1
. .. A firm that sold bogus pagmg
licenses out of New York City netl$d
over $1 million in sales last
. . year.
Another company was ent1cmg 11n
average of I 0 cu~tomers a week for
a JllOnthly take of $200,000.
Jack Anderson and Mlcb~l
'BiMtcin are writ~ for UnitCd
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

.

flood, I, as' a Meigs County citizen 4 weeks as you worked 12 hour days
T h c n
would like to express my feelings of just to see the light.
when
the
Small
Business
Adminis·
this most recent flood event of 1996.
In relding the Sentinel of Januaiy !ration Loan came through going out
. 31, 1996 the statistics show that there and finding the necessary items to put
were more than 7S individuals and 37 your home back in place. Of course
businesses, with a possibility of inore with the debt now hanging over your
, that have not sought help. I do not head. This was the only way to make
. have ficts in my possession from the a new start•.
. May. 14, '9S ,flood but .1 feel there
I vvantto praise the Red Cross for
,,.were many more individuals and their efforts and time spent in help'I
some businesses that were effected. ing to make this· time easier to han·
.~, oli
·· The area that was hit was much dle. They were good to come tci the
··,larger and those involved were work- homes and assist with all they were By JOHN CUNNIFF
gets used for free-time activities. - Or to make thepoint another way, quite high by historic standards,.)!e
· ing citizens much of whom did not able to offer. This helped a great dql AP Buslnelis Analyst
.
The rest is absorbe&lt;l by such things as many of us focus near-sightedly on comments:
. have insurance or any way to be and helped to ,make that expense bur"Many if not most oftoday's ptor
the immediate situation without a
NEW YORK - Many of our sleeping.
; reimbursed other than go out and get den much eas!er but st1ll hard'? take. pop11lar notions just are)l't true, but
Robinson is a scholar, one of proper reference pbint, and in addi- Americans have a material standard
:: a loan to reestablish their Jives. These·- - I ~ould hke to also take .ume to . that doesn't mean they'll become any more than 50 contributing to "The lion let our psychoJ9gical perceptions that would have been considered
: ·people struggle on a day to day basis tha~k th.e Cooperative .Pan~h f?r less popular.
middle class or better by Americalls
·State of Humanity," a com11ilation of . intrude on objective analysis.
• justte millie a living and have some- the1r. assistance and cooperatto~ m
earlier
in the century,"
·I.
Go back far enough in years,
For example: The work demands ' studies challenging pessimism about
: thing in life. But of course at that time helpmg ~s to make our reestab.hsh- of modem life, including commuting, the quality of lit\: and the future of the these writers sugg~st, and you can see
And in many respects, he adds
·; the area was not declared a disaster ment eas1er th~ough the1r donations. leave little free time for activities such planet.
the !fends, most of which are improv· after examining living standards ~n
: by the President and so the funds I also would hke to thank all those · as education, reading, sports. hobbies,
The issue is a lot more complex ing: health, wealth. nutrition, housing, other countries, "they compare fa~\lr­
: were very limited.
f~ends and coworkers that supported watching TV, reading and the like.
than described. and to suggest it isn't productivity, natUJal resource subsli· ably to the current general population
·• 1am now, as others, repaying for w1th donations and thoughtful~css tn
of )Y.estem Europe and would he CI'O ·
A scientific examination, base'il on is to de10ean the scholarly nature of tutes, recreatio(\. air qualiiy. .
: the rest of my lifc .for what! had to my 11mc of need. W1thoutthe1r sup- diarieS kept by people of --:orking age, the study. But , the point is made: , Consider poverty, which is said to sidered affluent in .most parts of .the
. gel to reestablish rily~lf and family. port I would have at Urnes not been showed that in 1985, American men There's a lot more free iime for you be rising in the United States. Robert 'globe"
.
F'
; This caused an unforeseen burden of able to make it from day to day. Also had 41 hours of free time each week, than there was 20 or 30 years ago.
Many
even!S
that
people
tend:at
Rector si(lesteps. the usual (and
1extra expense that I have to pay each without the lundness and su~port ?f and women 40 hours, and that more
And more than there was a cent~· skewed) dollar measurements. and first to consider bad ~ave on refl,ec·month. So bow is the common citi- our land lady. we would not st1ll be m workers were gaining free time than ry ago. Julian Snyder, also of Mary- measures poverty on the basis of food tion more l!ood than bad about thern.
zen able to ~e on a job, get ahead the home we our in today, she was .losing it.
land and editor of the volume, attrib- consumption, properly ownership and If we act on that first negative ' ~­
; and have somcthina in life.
able to hel.P as put our home back
tion, says Snyder, "we risk maki!lll
Part of the e·xplanation, says John utes to 'o/inston Churchil,l the obser- housing.
: , ~ing back to this most recent together wnh alo,t of our hard work Robinson, University of Maryland vation that the further bac~ward you
Concluding that living standards unsound social decisions."
It happens all the time, and is esf*': eve~t it looks in my eyes that because m\'olv~.
..
sociologist, is that out of an hour of look, the further forward you can see. of the poor are improving and are
• the river front businesses were most
Mc1gs County cmrpns speak out reduced work time, only 60 percent
cially obvious in the media, he sal".
'
: c::lfccted that is why the President and tell your community where y~u
· step,~ in to give the grants for stand an4 how you feel. We Will
; reesiiblilliing those businesses. It always get this kind of lreatment if
.,
sense to feel that you would · we .do not speak. out. It is always
: not \Y'IIili. to lose the most important Mc1gs·County res1dents that get ln'
;partofyourtown, but was there areal tle or no support when it comes to the By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
tied up. A healthy Haitian economy · poncnt of the international force that military backing, or the means to~­
'losi?
·
.
state or the government.
· G1nnett News Service
is a boon to the United States. Before · ousted the coup Jeaders, will be ret out those who would use force to
; , · 'Th!Ke places have seen this time
W,e could be a prosperous comWASHINGTON_:. Jean-Bertrand its most recent period .of political withdrawn, When this happens, Hait- topple Haiti's ypung ,democracy,
10
. ;ima ~ain and most places are ready mumty lfthere.were funds broufht Aristide kept his word.
instability, Haiti was a source of ian leaders fear the enemies of Rene Preval has little chance ~f
\ for th1s tQ happen aitd well prepared to make businesses. Jobs cou d be
On Wednesday, Haiti's fust demo- cheap labor for dozens 9f American· :democracy will . laun~h another mur· serving out his five-year presiden~y.
Without the. intelligence the~e
; In advance. And of course, you must established from new businesses and craticl!ily elected president turned corporations that used the Caribbean derous campaign against supporters
documents
can provide him, what~
ofthc
country's
elected
govem!lle~t.
! rel\l!ze that most businesses have' the ~nemployment rate would not be over the government to Rene Preval, island nation as an assembly point for
Such
an
onslaught
can
he
avoidhas to look forwllrd to is the very ~-1
:Jnirurance, and also can use this as a so hig~. There ~ould not be so many the man voters in the impoverished ~oods sold here at home.
•tali write off for damages. ·
on asststance With nothmg 10 do With Caribbean nation chose to succeed · And there's something eJse Clio- ' ed if the records the United States possibility that the dark days ~f
. ~ Think aboui the individual that their time, ~~ 10 wail for their check him. For the first time in Haiti's 192· ton can do for Haiti. He can order the took from Haiti are turned over to its Haitrs past soon will become part' of
.•
·l never was ready for this and woke up each ~o~ili. There are people out year history. power has been handed U.S. military to give to .Haiti's gov- legitimate government. Without U.S. its future.
'
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~ to have "X" number of inches of there wtlhng to work and take care of over peacefully from one popularly emment, intact, the ·thousands of
'
.
)f~
' w~runningtbroughyourhousc. no the!"setve~ ~1 why bother t~at elected presidentto another.
pages of dQCuments it .seized from
· n vllere to gq and no· way to save what ass~m;ce,~stl ways ~!"mg: w Y
Aristide, whose five-year term coup leaders and supporters during ll
·
·
_
you had no chance to get out of the wo or · I! e or no mg w n you ·
· 1 rrupted by a m'l[tary
coup
the
military
intervention
that
retu~
1
thethin
chance
tn e
·'.!!
water. Then when the water went never
d h ~ve
. to getHahead was
was urged
by followers to unilateral-• ·Aristide to power. Thus far. efforts by . By The AIIIOCialed PrMI
''ii
~ dOwn,' your carpet soa_ked and ruined · an A al . ~foregs~~~~: e. " Jy extend his term of office to make Haiti to·get these · papers have been · TOday is Sunday, Feb. II, the 42nd day of 19%. 'There lire 324 days left
' , , aDd the floors bubbling up and no
s
Nu J 'eta k up for the years he spent in exile. And thwarted. The speculation is that in the year. .
.
', i'!liSCisions left. 'The only way to s~
eyp'
r
for a brief while last year, he flirted they contain information about the
Today's Highlight in ijistory: ·
·
·
,
\J
1: ;
omeroy with doing just that.
makeup of Haiti's anti-democracy
On Feb. II, 1812, M~acliusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry signed into law a;
;. ·I
Bt~t. eventually. he backed away . forces and embamssing proof that re-districting' law that favorell his party~)iving rise to the term "ge~
· .,
from that bad idea.
rogue clements of the U.S. govern- mandering.:·
·
·
·
"~
~
While in eKile and clamoring for mellt conspired with them to underOn this date:
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the United States to roust Haiti's coup mine the pro-deinocflll:y movement
In 1847, inventor. Thomas Alva Edison was born in Milan, Ohio.
''
leaders from power, Aristide that Aristide led.
·
In JgSB, a French girl, Bernadette Soubirous, claimed for the first lilllt&lt;;
l"
promised Bill Clinton he would not
For months. deliFate negotiations 'to have seen a vision of the Virgin Mary near Lourdes.
. .:.1
: &gt;,, •
·try to stay in power beyond the sin- have gone on betwe'en Haitian and
Inl861. President-elect Abraham Lincoln departed Springfield, Ill., (qr.i
'~
gle term permitted him by Haiti's U.S. government offici,als over when Washington. .
.
.
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; ·~ '
constitution.
and under what conditjons the docu·
In 1929. ~Lateran Treaty was signed, with Italy recognizing the indo,_,
i ~.:;, ·. 1
And now that Aristidc has made ments will bC: retumQd. Hoping to pendence and I!OVereigitty of Vatican City.
·
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1
good on his commitment to Cli':'ton, stave off the .political fallout that
In 1937, a si~'Ciown strike qainst General Motors ended, with the coni~
there is something the pre.siden\ ~ would follow their public di.sclosure; · pany aareeing 'kl recognize thC United Automobile Workers Unlotl.
'I'~
; '
- and should -do for llim and h1s U.S. officials want to expunge CCI18in
In 194!5; l'teJidcnt Roqsevelt, British P,ime Minister WinstOn Churchi .l '
succqsor. Haiti's economy still tan- information from these records,: ' ,11114 Soviet *
:JosefStidin signed the Yal~&amp;~greemcnt, duripg :Wprld W~
guishes just beyond ~ point of col- That's an outraae.
·D.:
•
·
.
""' '
lapse. The financial aid pro111ised the
This is . property that rigHtfully 1
in' 11172, McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. and Life magazine c8jleele4 pl. .i
Haitian governme-nt' by the United belongs to~ Haitian government in ~ publi,sl) ,what~had turned o\11 to he a fake autobiography of reclusive blf-'1
States following Aris,tid~'s retllm to ' the.samc way that evi4ence found in· lionaire Howard Hushes.
'
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. . I
office has been slow m coming. this coun!ry of domestic terrorismIn 1979, followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini seized power in Iran,
Much of this money haa been tied up · and the coll~ion of f~igners with nine days afte~ the religious leader ~turned to his home country followin,f·•
•,
in (:ongrcss by Sen.Jcsse Helms, R• those.wbo haiCh such violent plots "--" 15 yean of eule.
'
..;
N.C., who accused Aristidc of being would he claimed by our govern- ·
In '1989', the.~~~ B~' C. Hirris became the first woman coitsecraf.
1
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&gt;
more despot than democrat.
ment. ~o de.ny Haiti ~documents ed as a bishop •.n the .~scopU Ch~h.
.
. . . •l :
J
I
•
.
Now
that
~ti's
prei~ncy
has
is
to
reJCCills;soverelgnty.
.
.
·
In
~990.
~~
~IC:IIVIs+Netso
..
Mandela
wuliWd
a'fter.21j
~or ,_Wifl'l ,..,, I COCJfdn't 1top ~ lllk
•I •
changed hand( Clinton should press
In a few. wee~. the re~ani1n1 ~ 111 capbVIty, watkins.~ the pte of.Vtetor VenterpriiOfl outsidl ·
~· 111at .wOuld be CHEATING. •
..
'
·
C
ongress
to
relcue.the
money
lielms
U.~.
troops' m Ha~u, tile· nuun com- c.pe town.
.
. .·
• •

,.

Popular doesn't

me~n

it's true·

•i

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;

i

Clinton should try to free foreign .aid for Haiti

:makOs

'!

,
l

.

;Today .• n h•. stor·y

·Be rry•s Wo rid

n

H

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,.;:. ~!POLIS -June Bas\iani, Gallipolis, died Friday, Feb. 9, 1996 at
... her residence.
·
4:i· She was the former owner of Oscar's Restaurant in Gallipolis with her
late husband, Lawrence "Panza" Bastiani.
.
, ; ,~ Arrangements will be announced by the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral

_,. ,Home.

{:.Earl U. Goode·
'

:. . SANDYVILLE, W.Va. - Earl Ulysses Goode, 79, Sandyville, died Fri. ·day, Feb. 9, 1996 at his residence.
.•
·,,' Born Dec. 17, 1916 in Princeton; W.Va., slfll of the late Garland and Eliz.•, abeth Cloud) Goode, he retired from Kaiser Aluminum Corp. in 1978.
&lt;· , In recent years, he was an active member of the National Gold Wing Road
Riders Association. He was also a member of the Freedom Riders Associa. tion of Ravenswood, W.Va.
• ·· He was a member of the Beni Kedem Temple of Charleston, W.Va.; a
• Mason of the Washington Lodge of St. Albans, W.Va.; a member of the Amcr·
ican Legion; and a U.S. Navy veteran of World War n.
· • Surviving are two sons: Robert Goode of New Martinsville, W.Va., and .
:Jim Goode of Ravenswood, and 15 grandchildren and 17 great·grandchil·
,.. dren.
.• · He was also preceded in death by his wife, Mary Runnion Goode; two
c daughters, Betty Jane Goode and Peggy Goode Hutchison; and a son, Jack
. •Goode.
, • Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Straight-Tucker &amp; Rousn Funer~ .at Home, Ravensw.ood, with the Rev. Anton Hager officiating. Burial will
;,he in the Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday. .
• · Masonic services will he conducted at the gravesite.

..:.Richard H. Lawhorn
,. , BIDWELL- Richard H. Lawhorn, 75, Bidwell, died Friday, Feb. 9,
. 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
,.,
Born Sept. 8, 1920 in Amherst, Va., he was
an ornamental construction worker who
retired in 1.983.
'A U.S. Army veteran of World Warn, he
was a member of Ironworkers Local 787,
Pllrktnburg, W.Va., a 32nd Degree Mason
aftd a member of the Vinton F &amp; AM Lodge
131. He was also a member of the York Rite,
Scottish Rite, Aladdin Temple Shrine of
Columbus, and the Gallipolis Shrine Club.
A Kentucky Colonel, he was a member
ud a board member of the Southeastern
. Chapter of the Arthritis Foundation.
Surviving are his wife, Alma Roberts
Lai(Vhorn, whom he martied Sept. 22. 1945 in
Buena Vista, Va.; a son, Ted Lawhorn of New
York; five daughters, Peggy (Thomas) Neal
of Mamoroneck, N.Y., Carolyn Dusty of
Rlchlrd H Lawhom Grayling, Mich., Barbara .&lt;William) Hopkins
•
of Porter, Marilyn (Michael) Neal of Wilming·
. tpn, N.C., and Deborah Chevalier of Gallipolis; seven grandchildren; ·a
:;brother, Roy Beverly of Buena Vista; and four sisters, Ruby Scott, Betty
&amp;lw.ros, Polly Staton and Marie Seaman, all of Buena Vtsta.
He was also preceded in death a brother, Ottie Beverly; and two sisters,
Blanch Flint and Ruth Flint.
'
Services will be l p.m. Tuesday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton, with the Rev. Ronnie Lemley officiating. ,Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial Park. Friends ,n.t•Y call at the funeral hpllie from 3-8 p.m.
Monday..
. Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral !tome at 7:45 p.m.
··Mofl\lay.
·
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County Court

POMEROY '- The following
cases we~ resolved Wednesday in
the Meiss County ·court of Judge
Patric.k H. O'Brien.
Fined were: Kevin E. Manley,
Middleport, seat belt, $15 plus costs;
Okcy H. Schartiger Jr., Middleport,
scat belt, $25 plus costs; Karen S.
Schartiger, Middleport, seat belt. $1 S
plus costs; Brenda N. Stiles, Dexter,
failure to control, $20 ,plus costs;
Gary W. Adams, Rutland, scat belt,
$2S plus costs; Roy Bailey D, Racine,
improper tagging, -$50 plus costs;
Kevin Clark, Racine, consumption in
a motor vehicle,. $30 plus costs;
Robert Blankenship, Shade, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Daniel J. Robers,
Logan, speed, $30 plus costs; Kevin
E. Heaton, Reedsville, failure to con·
trol, $20 plus costs; Angela A. Duck·
worth, Middleport, speed, $30 plus
costs; Bruce A. Coiner, Ravenswood,
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Jessica
L. Jones, Huntington, W.Va., seat
belt, $15 plus costs; Daniel C.
Hensler, Racine, speed, $30 plus
costs; Timothy B. Freeman,
RavenswoOO, speed, $30 plus· costs;
Johnathan L. Barton, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs; Doug E. Mar·
cum; Chesapeake, seat belt, $25 P!Us
costs; Ronald N. Downey, Jackson,
stop sign violation, $20 plus costs;
William G. McLeigh, West Chester,
speed, $30 plus costs; Mark A. Beaty,
Proctorville, seat belt, $25 plus cosiS;
Margaret L. Turley, Crown City,
speed, $10 plus costs; Anthony W.
Adams, Grove City, failure to conlrUl,
$20 plus cosiS; Ronald D. Arms,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; seat
belt, $25 plus costs;
· Gary L. Crihfield, Albany, expired
operator's license, $100 suspended to
$75 plus costs, three days jail suspended; failure to control, $25 plus
costs; expired plates, $10 plus costs;
Joann Grady, Pomeroy, passing bad
checks, $50 plus costs, three days jail
suspended, 6ne 'year probation; resti·
tution; Brian Long, Reedsville,
underage consumption, cosiS, five
days jail suspended, probation, 40
hours community service;
Jason M. Jenkins, Pomeroy,
underage consumption, costs, five
days jail suspended, probation, 40
hours community service; Fred
Houghton, Racine, underage consumption, costs, ftve days jail suspended, probation, 40 houl'l! community service; Michael W. Roush,

day OL sus~nsion, 10 days jail sus·
pended to three 'days, one year probation, $2SO of fine and jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment program; Kenneth L.
Swartz, Pomeroy, wrongful cnlrUst·
ment, $SO plus costs, three days jail
suspended, one year probation;
Richard Caruthers, Pomeroy, dis·
orderly conduct, $100 suspended to
$50 plus costs, restraining order
issued; Robert Sawyers, Shade, $100
suspeaded to $50 plus _costs, two
years probation, restraining order
issued; Scott Ross, Circleville, hunting during deer season without wearing hunter orange, $30 plus cosiS.
Forfeiting bonds were: Johnny
Whittington, Thornville, speed, $100;
Robert Hendrix, Syracuse, speed,
$1 00; unsafe' vehicle, $80; Tonia
Jewell, Rut!~. passing bad checks,
$115.21 ;Anna Farley, Rutland, passing bad checks, $375; Donna Pearson, West Columbia, W.Va., passing
bad checks, $120; Michael Amodio,
Buchtel, passing bad checks,
$110.66;Amy Wood, Racine, passing •
bad checks, $85; Ginger Cunis, Rutland, passing'bad checks, $92.
Pomeroy, underage consumption,
costs, five days jail suspended, probation, 40 hours community service;
Archie D. McKinney, .Cheshire,
speed, $26 plus costs; Angela S.
Spangler, Syracuse, assured. clear
distance, $30 plus costs; William C.
Cook, Shade, speed, $21 plus costs;
Robert P. Schneider, Middleport,
menacing by stalking, $75 plus costs,
30 days jail suspended, two years
probation, restraining order issued;
Curtis Estep, Mason, W.Va., seat belt,
$ 15 plus costs;
Tony A. Brown, Pomeroy, driving
· under the influence, $500 plus costs,
I 0 days jail suspended to three days,
90-day OL suspension, one year probation, $250 of fine and jail suspended upon completion of residential treatment program; marked lanes,
costs only; Robert L. Miller, Recine,
DUI, $500 plus costs, 90-day OL suspension, one year probation, 10 days
jail suspended \O •hree days, $250 of
fine and jail suSjlended upon completion of residential treatment program;
Luke R. Holman, Racine, underage consumption, costs, five days jail
suspended, probation, 40 hours community service; Timothy T. Klein,
Pomeroy, DUI, $500 plus costs, 90..

Resnick enters deposition
iri civil action against O.J.

NEW YORK (AP) - Faye offices of Brown family attorney
Resnick, a friend of OJ. Simpson's . John Q. Kelly.
"She's been threatened with
slain ex-wife and author of a tell-all
book about her, brushed silently past death, but she's agreed to testify vol·
:' ' FRAZIERS BOTIOM, W.Va.- Mary Malinda Wray Wilcoxen, 71, 900 reporters and photographers Saturday untarily," her attorney, Leonard
:· Evergreen Road, Fraziers Bottom, died Friday, Feb. 9, 1996 in Thomas as she arrived for a deposition in the Marks, told reporters without elabo· Memorial Hospital, South Charleston, W.Va., following • lengthy illness.
rating.
civil lawsuit against Simpson.
1
"
Born April 9, 1924 in Fraziers Bottom, daughter of the late Ward E. and
The families of Ms. Brown and
The deposition was expected to
.,.Emma Kay Crist Wray, she was a homemaker and a member of the Ever- focus on Resnick's admitted drug use. Goldman are pursuing wrongful
. :green Church of Christ, Fraziers Bottom.
Simpson has cl'limed that Resnick death claims against Simpson, despite
•r · Surviving are her husband, Han:non Wilcoxen; three daughters, Alice had drug-world ties that were to his acquittal on criminal charges.
•Akers of Pliny. w.va:, Velma Wroten of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Brenda blame for the murders ' of Nicole
Resnick, 37, maintains that Simp• :Foster of Fraziers Bottom; six son.s. Leslie Wilcoxen, Kenny Wilcoxen and Brown Simpson and her friend son was the killer.
Rex Wilcoxen, all of Frazi~rs Bottom, Lonnie Wilcoxen and Rick Wilcox- Ronald Goldman.
Simpson's laWYers also will ques:
" en, both of Hurricane, W.Va., and Gary Wilcoxen of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.;
Resni€k, and the deposition
!ion
Resnick. who lives in New York
-·28 grandchildren and 27 great-grandchildren; four sisters, Emma Jean Ollis City, gave the deposition at the could last through Monday.
:or Grove City, Mildred Powers of Hilliard, and Margie Long and Wanda
&lt;Akers, both of Delaware; and two brothers, Earl Wray of Fraziers Bottom,
.Hind Glendale Wray of Marysville.
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Poini
'Pleasant, with Minister George Erwin officiating. Burial will be in Evergreen
'Cemetery, Fraziers Bottom. Frie.nds may call at the funeral home from 2-8
p.m. Sunday.
~

~~ary

,_....,at.__.. sd'•' •Page A5

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

Wray Wilcoxen .·

Beat of the Bend ..
by Bob Hoeflich
.Holidays of the year will be the
theme of the second electric light
parade, which has been set for Sat·
urday, Aug. 10 in Middleport.
The Midnight Cloggers, directed
by Bruce Wolfe, who also heads the
parade of lights, will be staging
"Celebration in the Park" Aug. 10.
The celebration will feature entertainmentthroughout the day, refreshment staQds, game booths, craft dis·
plays and souvenir stands and will he
held in an around the Dave Diles Park
all day.
The parade route this year will be
extended and the various holidays of
the year will be represented in the
parade. Parade costuming design
work has already begun in Florida,
where Wolfe is employed, as well as
float construction. As the costumes
and float pieces are completed, they
are shipped from Florida to Ohio for
cleaning and fitting and then are to be
stored until two weeks before the
parade.
This year, auditions. are being
held for individuals and groups who
want to take part in the parade, with
Wolfe conducting them. Wolfe is
looking for dancers. banner carriers,
flag caOTiers, "comedic" actors, float
drivers and performers with special
variety talents.
Auditions for individuals will be
begin at 3:30p.m. next Saturday, with
auditions by groups to be held at 6
p.m. All auditions will be held at
Pomeroy Village Hall. Participation
will be on a voluntary basis. In oth·
er words, no one will be paid for taking part.
Fonner Middleport resident Paul
Cunningham, now living in Oklahoma as I understand it, is getting
considerable local publicity these
days since a recent column or two
mentioned that he played with the
Sammy Kaye Band at one time. It
seems that a good many people

A mention of Paul brought bad
some memories for Carl D. Kern~.
also formerly of Middleport, now liY·
ing in Union City, Ga.
'
Carl recalls that in about 1928 ..;...
now that's been a while ....:.. the powers that he decided that Mi~Jdle~
High School would have a band. A
Mr. Vanover was hired as director arid
the school system purchased a ba$s
drum, a tuba and a baritone horn, c.t
remembers.
·
The late Professor A.W. McKay
was superintendent of the MiddleJ1011
Schools at the time, and he quicldy
found someone to beat the drum. He
then decided that Carl and Paul
would play the baritone hom and the
tuba. The two young men pulled :a
few tricks out of the hat to try io
escape the musical bit, but ProfesSQr
McKay insisted.
Carl decided he would take the
baritone hom because it was somewhat smaller and Paul - let's call it
fate - ended up with the tuba.
Carl says he never became very
proficient on his instrument, but Paul
became a standout: Carl eventually
gave up the hom to become a member of the Middleport Yellow Jacket
football team and feels he was much
more successful in the sports world.
He remembers his coach as Clyde
Batten.
After high school, Paul joined the
Sammy Kaye band for a successful
career in the big band era.
By the way, Carl graduated from
Middleport High in 1932, and I'm
assuming that Paul also graduated
about that time.
I wonder sometimes if it wouldn't
be a good idea for Democrats to forget they're Democrats and Republicans forget they're Republicans and
to work together for the good of the
country. regardless of party affiliation. Dumb idea, huh? Do keep smilmg.

Victims' family observes
as Texas executes killer
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - in
the end, Linda Kelley had no qualms
about watching the killer of her son
and daughter put to death.
"It was easy," she said. "I'm glad
it's done and glad it's over and glad
he's off this Earth."
"I had total anger. This man murdered my children."
Leo Jenkins, 38. was executed by
injection Friday for the 1988 murders
of Mart Kelley, 25, and his sister
Kara Voss, 20, in their family-owned
pawn shop.
It was the first time in Texas that
family members were able to watch
the execution. Six of the 39 deathpenalty states already offer that
option.
The victims' mother. Linda Ke.lley, was accompanied to the death
house by her husband, mother-in-law,
daughter and daughter-in -law. A

soundproof wall separated them from
Jenkins' designated witneSies .
''I'm sorry for the Kelleys' loss,
but my death today is not going to
bring their children back/ Jenkins
said. "I think the state of Thxas is
wrorig to eKccute me. lllere 's no way
to justify this."

,.

'

.. ----·--

...

POMEROY

Near Pomeroy·Mnon Bridge

992·2588
VINTON
GalUa County Dt8pllly YMI
155 .._In st

388-8603

Teen, grar-dfather drown
.~hile tryi~g to cross creek
' PETROLEUM, W.Va. (AP) -A
~ i~enager and her grandfather, who
·were malting a dangerous trip across.
· a ·swollen creek so the girl wouldn't
· miss school, were washed off a
'bhdge as horrified relatives looked
'tin.
" · Search crews Friday found the
bQdy of 67-year-old Paul Metz. He
and 17-year-old Amanda Burch had
been missing since Thursday
evening.

Off.icials were still searching for·
Ms. Burch.
Metz had crossed a private bridge
over the Goose Creek around 6 p.m.
Thursday to pick up Ms. Burch so she
wouldn't be trapped by high water
and miss school on Friday, sheriff's
Lt. Gary Hissem said. While trying to
cross back over the creek 20 minutes
later, swift water and ice forced the :
pickllp over the side and into the '
water.

EMS
units answer 12 calls
.,
POMEROY- Units of the Meigs. ~~residCnce, State Route 124, no
County Emergency Medical Service . . tntune~; ,
recorded 12 calls for assistance ,Fri·
6:56 p.m., Apple Grove-Dorcas
day, including fo~ transfer calls. Road, Chad Wolfe, VMH.
Units responding in(luded:
Rtrn.~ND
POMEROY
~:42 a.m., Beech Grove Road, ,
I :28 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili- Clyde Davis, Pleasant Valley Hospi- ;
t~ion, Ray Garlinger, Veterans · 181;
.
.
Memorial Hospilal, assisted by Syra.7:30p.m., Mc1gs M1ne 2, Dwane
Clise.Squad 33;
L. Reese, Holzer Medical Center. 1
10:24 p.m., Mulbeny t\vcnue,
Chulcne Goodman, VMH.
RACINE
' 12:01 p.m., volunteer ftrc depanmc:nt and sqiJIIC!, ·slrUCture fire .81
't..l

'

-41

"

~

eommlsstoners.
~lan '96 budget
review session
•' OALUPbUS .:_ 'The Gallipolis
dty Conuniasion will conduct a
~t ieview sesaion atS:30 p.m.
niunday ill tbi OaiJipolil Municipll
~ City
Mallhew
€qppler -OUJIC:t!d·

M-.•

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WE·OVERPURCHASED I
WE'RE OVERSTOCKED I

$

LOW~~

Perf.aSia•pn
~~S2H

"

lWIN
EA.

I !41•7111.
Ttlr.llll . .. ...

I

PC.

._OPEN
MONDAY NIGHTS
TILIIOO

•399 PUU.f!ET '

~Pc; 1 119
lWIN Ea.

lWINEa.

.· •499~.,. , ·

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Nation/World

' c...._,Jt.tt"-.1'

.

~~------------------------~----~--------------~--~------~~----~Ji

truce
a•' t en d?~.

.'

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
AaiOCieted p.,.ll Writer

'8y RON KAMPEAS

Pren Writer

·: WNDON -The Irish Republi·
:~Army claimed responsibility Sat·
llloday for a bombing that shook a
'LOndon business distri.ct and chilled.·
hopes ·for a durable peaco in North·
em Ireland.
· · · One body was found in the rubble
Saturday afternoon, police said, but
·they could not immediately say
·Whether it was a man or a woman.
·. : The bomb exploded Friday night
:iri a parlcing garage in the Doclclands
·8l)la of east London, ·one hour after
the UneXpected announcement that
·the IRA was calling off a 17-moilth
.cease fire to protest the slow pace of
: ~~process. Atleast36 people
injured,
' ' The IRA accused the British gov:emment of sabotaging the peace
'j)I'OCCSS by stalling on all-party negotiations, but President Clinton and
'Irish .Prime Minister John Bruton
·joined the British in condemning the
altllek.
· The bombers' political allies,
'caught by surprise, pleaded Saturday
for urgent meetings with the British
atid Irish governments.
·
. "I had no prior knowledge of what
··was .going to happen," said Gerry
Adams, president of the IRA-allied
Sinn ·Fein.
_· "Following last night's events, I ·
;am now .seeking urgent meetings with
the British and Irish governments,"
"Ailams said in a statement issued in
'Belfast, capital of Nonhem Ireland.
·' • Britain gave no immediate answer,
although both 1he British and Irish
governments said Friday the attack
:would not stop them from seeking
peace in the British-ruled province.
Rescue workers continued Saturday to search the buildings wrecked
·~y a bomb that Scotland Yard police
"commissioner Sir Paul Condon swd
contained up to half a ton of homemade explosives.
· · London Weekend Television said
'two people were feared missing in the
rubble, and the London Fire and Civ:il Defense Authority confirmed that
not everyone had been accounted for.
In daylight. the full eKtent !Jf the
damage appeared far worse than
originally feared. Twisted pipes,
crumbled concrete and glass from
·five badly damaged buildings near
Canary Wharf Tower, Britain's tall' st
high rise in London's Docldands, littered streets. ..
Heavily anned police were stoppi,ng cars and true~ in London, and
ttash bins were hasuly removed from
railway stations so they could not be
used to hide explosi~s.
. British troops re~~J~peared in flak
jai:kets on Belfast s~ts immediatety after the 7 p.m. (2 p.m. Esn

Were

stitutional by the courts, the Defense
Department will discharge scrvtce
members testing positive for IDV, the
virus that causes AIDS.
..
Those known to be mv-.postttvc
now number 1,049 ·~ ~ acuve-duty
force of some I.S mtlhon. All have
~en deemed healthy and fit for scr·
vtce. .
.
.
.
.
Qutnn s111d the Pentagon wtll w~!
" until the last posstblc moment. ·
before act~aUy removing anybody
from the mtl~tary.
The prestdent also ordered the
Defense and Veterans Affairs departments to "take all steps" to ensure
full benefits to any mi~i'!UY pc:rsonncl dtscharged lor haYJng the tnfeclion.
.
Only the Supreme Court has final
authority to declare laws unconstitu·
tiona! , ~ereby in~alidating them.
But Qumn s111d Chnton hopes that
setting the dtschargc process tn
m01ion will.lea_d to ~nearly coun test
of tts constttutlonaltty.
. .
The president also endorsed btpartisan repeal efforts in Congress.
Sitp!iorters of repeal counted 71
co-sponsors of their legislation in the
House and 34 in the Senate. The Senate version is sponsored chiefly by
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass.,
and William Cohen, R-Maine; House
sponsors include Reps. Connie
Morella, R-Md., and Ron Dell urns,
D-.
Calif.
1
i But Doman, the provision's span: sor, predicted that "Clinton's allies
·will lose i~ court and they will lose
in Congress."
·
"Bill Clinton continues to ignore
the needs and requirements of the
military while deferring to the wish-

•,

'

'

\

.

• : PORl'LAND, Ore. (AP)- While ning dangerously low because of
ri.llst riycr5 across. the flOod-ravaged cloudiness in water brought from the
Nqnhwest had done their worst, a Cascade Range. City officials banned
stublxiril one .kept rising and over- outdoor watering and said orders to
whelmed an affluent suburb south of boil all drinking water would be
Portland, swamping some homes to ·issued by Sunday unless consumption
is reduced by 30 percent to 50 perthe rooftops.
cent.
A gazebo floated past as Don
"People are not conserving," said
Mete stood on his deck nervously
Frank
Mauldin, Salem public works
puffing a cigat and . watching the
directo,r.
Many other towns were
rogue 1\talatin River creep higher and
reporting
water shortages, and four
higher ihrough the ·community of
Lake Oswego. It wu expec)ed to were · without water altogether
cr~st Saturday afte111000 in nearby because treatment plants had flooded.
1
President Clinton declared disasWest Linn.
•
ters
in waterlogged Oregon and
"You can watch 1V all yolt want, .
'Washington
counties, providing flldbut when it happens to y'ou, it's a lit·
tie different," Mete said. "What's
unnerving is it's unpredictable, SO no
one can give you any comfort."
Katherine and Mark Frandsen
siacked sandbags Friday around their
newly remodeled million-dollar
hoine to uy t~ bo\d off the rising
Wl!,ter.•, They slid they had .no flood
irisunnce· ~use they were told they
WOuldn't need it.
""This is really shocking," FraudSCI) said. ','But you can't blame anybbdy because everybody's doing the
bell they can." ·
However, riven began droppi11g in:.
most areas Friday, as the sun finally,
popped through. It gave residents a
chinc:c 10 assess tj.e damage after
fmli' days of'rain aDd melting snow • li'iif'ri.,..~
s~bighways, unleashed mudslitks aail flooded tens of thousands
of pedple out of their homes.
' 111 downtown Portland, .where
lnajllr floodini .had ~a expected,
residents OJCaped ·the crest of the
w~ Rive~ with little damage.
' ,"I'd, ..y .~'re over it now," Fire : 1*1¥+if+iM,_
Chief IJOb,Wall iiid u he inspected·
a~...&amp;ohift. mJio-!ong barrier atop
·~1- flaldand. "I'd cal.'I ita

- -·

,.

llfll ,.Giita11 for the city now

..

. that there's
eaoug water to dritik.
.
' Portland's water supply was run•J

shocks
tloyas; OSU
falls
-·
.

WASHINGTON - President
Clinton signed the $265 billion
defense bill into law Saturday while
condemning as "lilatantly discriminatory" its requirement that service
members liviDg with tbe AIDS virus
be discharged.
·
Administration officials say, however that if the provision is not
repe~led by Congress or tlVown out
by the Supreme Court by the time it
takes effect in six months, the Pentagon will havC' no choice but to
enforce it.
But Clinton said he strongly sDpports efforts in Congress "to repeal
ad101nt~bon . s firmcommttmcnt .~ . ,
this provision before a single service
ovenurmng this _hetnous ~easure. . .
The overall btl! authonzes spend- ,
member is discharged from the scrvice."
ing by the armed forces through .the ·
1996 fiscal year.
"This provision is blatantly discriminatory and highly punitive to
service members and their families "
the president said in a statement. '
;·People living with HIV (the
..."_..e
virus
that causes AIDS) can and do
SURVEYS WRECKAGE - Brltllh Home Secrtltary MlchHI
lead full and productive lives, provide
Howard, left, end Metropolitan Pollee Commlnloner Sir Paul Condon were on hand Saturday at the site of Frldsy's bomb attack
for their families, and contribute to
at South Quay In London'a Docklandl. The lrlah Republican Army
the well being of our nation," Clinclaimed responsibility for the blaet, which lnjurvd 34 people. (AP)
' •.
ton said.
~
'
" The men and women affected by
eKplosion. They sealed off roads process, the British government actthis provision' are ready, wiHing and
.
I
around the airport and mounted street ed in bad faith," the IRA statement
able to serve their country with hon- ·
checkpoints - all depressingly said.
per photo
or and should he allowed to continfamiliar sights in the sect&lt;Uian-divid"The blame for the failure thus far
1
plus $5 per VHS copy
.
ed British province. The patrols had of the Irish peace process lies square- ue to do so.'
Briefing
reporters
on
Friday,
hch copy le IIIII IId llld
been withdrawn after the IRA cease- ly with John Major and his govern&gt;
White
House
counsel
Jack
Quinn
come.
with I platlc:,Clle.
fire which started Sept. I, 1994.
ment," it said.
1' '
'
said:
"This
provision,
in
the
presiIn Washington, President Clinton
Peace negotiations have stalled in
dent's judgment, is mean-spirited
called the bombing "terrible and recent weeks over demands .by
,'
cowardly and said today he will do all British Prime Minister John Major and serves no purpose. other than to
punish
people
who
deserve
the
govin his power " to make sure the ene- and Nonhern Ireland Protestants that
the Catholic-based IRA start handing ernment's help, not its hatred."
mies of peace do not prevail."
Clinton believes the AIDS pro vi"This attack was aimed at the over. its weapons before all-party sion, placed in the bill by Rep. Bob
growing prospects for peace, a just negotiations.
A cbmmission headed by Senator Doman, R-Calif., is unconstitutionand lasting peace," he said.
Bruton Saturday demanded that George Mitchell, D-Maine, met with ally discriminatory, Quinn said.
Acting on that belief, Clinton
the IRA and Sinn Fein promise the various sides in the Nonhem Ire"
instructed
Attorney General ·Janet
unequivocally to forswear violence land conflict recently and recommended Britain soften its stance. But Reno not to defend the AIDS provifor good.
sion as constitutional in any court
" It must stop. It must stop per- that has not happened.
.,
manently because if we are to restore
The IRA also blamed British secu- test.
Nonetheless,
the
administration
the momentum of the peace process rity services for the injuries called by
' '
made clear that if the AIDS language
there cannot be the constant looking the blast. The caller said the "regret'' I I
over the shoulder," Bruton said table injuries" could have been is neither repealed nor found uncon...,
before an emergency Cabinet meet- avoided if security forces had acted
I ,
promptly on an IRA warning.
ing in Dublin.
The IRA t ease-fire had halted its
Queen Elizabeth II, using unusually strong language, condemned long bomb-and-bullet campaign
' ··.
against British rule in which nearly
"this sickening act of violence."
"This is a very grave as well as a 3,200 people died. Protes\ant paravery wicked and disgusting episode," military groups, who responded by
said Sir Patrick Mayhew, the British calling their own cease-fire, gave no
Cabinet minister responsible for immediate indication whether they
Northern Ireland. "And although it will resume violence.
':.~
The blast, which partially demol_d~sn't prevent one from being'hope·
ful, it does make it more difficult to
ished a· six-story building and dam- . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . , ;
be hopeful. "
.
aged a commuter rail station, South
~
The IRA claimed responsibility Quay, reverberated four miles across
for the bombing in a telephone call to London, blowing out windows in
Ireland's RTE broadcasting service. offices and apartments. Blood-splatBlaming British foot-dragging over tered people streamed out of pubs and
.'
peace talks, the IRA called the same offices and some collapsed on sidenetwork Friday to announce it was walks.
Police said they received a warnaborting the cease-fire just an hour
before the bomb exploded near ing with a recognized IRA codeword
Canary Wharf Tower.
and were still trying to clear the train
"Instead of embracing the peace station when the bomb went off.
'
' r'

PISCATAWAY, N.J. (AP) -:
The Musketeet:s cut the do;ubleJason Lawson scored 18 of his 22 · digit lead to 71).68tn the finaliDinute,
points in the secotld half as No. 6 Vii- but never had a chance to tie or go
·lanova 'defeated stubborn Rutgers 76- ahead as Virginia Tech hit its last nine .
64 Saturday.
free thio)lls.
. After Rutgers (6- J4, 3·9 Big East)
got . within 63-S9 with 3:22 left,
No. 14 Punlue 69
I,.a'wson scoied six straight points for
No. D Mlcblpa 64
t!lc Wildcats tO make it 69-61 with 57
At West Lafayette, Ind., l:lrad
seconds remaining. With Rutgers' big Miller hit four free throws in the final
men in foul trouble, Lawson scored . minute and Brandon Brantley had a
'two straight baskets inside, then crucial ·tip-in with 43 secotlds to go
twice made one of two from the foul Saturday·as No. 14 Purdue held off
line.
No. 23 Michigan 69-64.
. The WildCats (20.3, 11 ·2) opened
The Boilermakers (19-4, 9-2 Sig
a 72-61 lead with 4S seconds left to Ten) retained first place in their bid
seal their seventh ~traight win. Vii- , for a third straight conference title.
lahova sl)ot64.3% in the second half
Michigan, which lost for the
t~ finish at 48.4% overall .
founh time in five games, had trailed
Lawson was 9-for-11 from the by 16 .points with I 0:35 to play and
'field and scored his I,OOOth car~r was 'down 58-44 when Justin Jen")Sc)int during 'the game, while Kerry nings hit an 18-footer for Purdue with
KlttJes had 15 points and Eric Eberz, 9: 13 to go. Bu~ Michigan (15-8, S:lifter sitting out a game with hip con- 5) rallied to tie the score at 60-60 on
DRIVING "pea,t Wlaconaln'a Sam Okay Is the taek of the moment
TIPPED AWAY -North Carolina's Antawn Jamleon tipl the ball
tusion, added 12. Damon Santiago a three-pointer by Travis Conlan as for Ohio State'e Robert SheHon In the first half of Strturdsy's Big Ten
away
from Georgia Tech 'a Drew Barry during the flrlt half of s.turhSa 26 points for the Scarl.ct Knights Purdue went nearly nine minutes contaet In Madison, Wle., where lhe Badgers won 62-56. (AP)
day's
ACC matchup In Chapel Hill, N.C., where the Yellow Jacata
arid Andrew Kolbasovsky added 14. without a field goal.
won
92-83
In overtime. (AP)
1
. .
No. 18 Syrac~ 85
.. ..,
No.8 Georgetown 64
Maurice Taylor, who led Michi". At Syracuse, N.Y., John Wallace gan with 21 points, and Robert Tray~:f -25 points and 13 rebounds .and lor each had four points in the spurt.
No. 18 Syracuse held a foul -plagued
Miller, who finished with 14
A(len Iverson in check as the Orange- points, made two free throws with 55
"
m~ n routed No. 8 Georgetown 85-64 seconds left to put Purdue ahead to
AlliENS, Ohio (AP)- Gcno Ford scored 25
Kent (11 -9, 5-7), which trailed by as many as
Masciola hit a three-pointer with 22 seconds
.Saturday.
stay, 62-60. Jennings, who led Purdue points and led Ohio to its fourth win in five
13 points in the first half, cut the deficit to 72left to tie the game at 78-78 and force overtime.
. Syracu~ (18-6, 8-5 Big East) won with 16 points, then missed two free games, an 83-67 victory Saturday over Bowling 1 66 with 58 seconds left on a pair of Ed Norvell
His three-pointer with I :07 to play in the extra
(or the fifth lime in six games since throws with 4~ seconds remaining, Green.
free throws.
period broke an 85-85 tie and put the Gators
a i9-poit1tloss to the Hoyas on Jan . but Brantley tipped in the second
Jason Terry added 14 points and Curtis SimNorvell was called for a foul two seconds latabead for good.
24. It was the third loss in five games miss to make it 64-60. It was Pur- mons had 13 for the Bobcats (12-11 overall, 7er and Kent coach Dave Grube was called for two
Alleg~eny led 37-32 at overtime.
Georgetown (19-S, 9-4), which due's only field goal in the final nine 5 Mid-American Conference). The victory
technical fouls. Krahulik made two free throws,
Other top scorers for Allegheny (14-8 overs'till ll)aintains a one-game lead over minutes as the Boilennakers scored pushed the Bobcats over the .500 mark for the
then Thames hit fo11r more in a row. On the ensuall, 9-6 North Coast Conference) were Ben
the Orangemen in the Big East 7 14 of tlfe'ir final 18 points from the first time since they beat Xavier I 03-72 on Dec.
ing possession, Thames was fouled and added
Schult~ with 18, Mike Houser with 17 and Jerstandings.
foul line.
9 to get to 3-2.
another foul shot.
·
ry Ambooken, who added 14.
: Otis Hill added 17 points for SyraWisconsin 62, Oblo SL 56
Anthony Stacey scored 29 points and had 12
One second ticked off the cloc"- while the
Ohio Wesleyan (6-15, 4-10) was led by J.R.
cuse, which got an emotional boost
At Madison, Wis., Hennssy Auri- rebounds for Bowling Green (11 -9, 6-6). Jay LarRockets scored the seven potnts.
Shumate with 33 points. Ty Langerderfer had IS,
from a vocal crowd of 32,589, the an tal scored 12 orWiseonsin's last 15 ranaga had 19 points.
Toledo enjoyed a 4i -25 upper hand in
Josh Peoples 12, Andy Seddelmeyer II and Matt
largest in the Carrier Dome this sea- points as the Badgers pulled away to
The Falcons played without starting point
rebounding, with Shaw grabbing eight, Thames
Uritus 10.
s'On and iOth largest ever. Marius Jan· a 62-56 victory Saturday over Ohio · guard Antonio Daniels, who missed the game to
getitng seven and Kevin Baker and Brett Fedak
Wlttenbef170, Denison 63- At Granville,
til is, Todd Burgan and J.D. Reafsny- State.
be with his family. His brother, Chris Daniels, the
getting six apiece.
all of Lou Stahl 's 21 points came on three-point
d,er added 10 points apiec;e for SyraThe Badgers ( 14-9 overall, 6-5 starting center forth~ University of Dayton, colThe Rockets hit 5-of-9 three-pointers, with
field goals as Wittenberg defeated Denison 70elise.
. Big Ten) led 49-42 on a layup by . lapsed and died Thursday morning. ·
Krahulik leading the way with three in four tries.
63 Saturday.
::;Georgetown was within 55-47
.
.
. .
Ohio, which led 37-26 atthe half, pulled away
John Carroll66, Muskingum 65 -At UniStahl made seven three-pointers, six Of them
with f2:H to phly when Syracuse Aunantal wtth 5:35 remamtqg. After with a 14-5 run midway through the second half
versity Heights, Ryan Eskridge made 'two fr~
in the second half. The Tigers, who clinched the
wnt!:lli,.jl3:3 run to push its .lead to thrt;'C free throws by Steve Belter for that culminated in Simmons' three-point play
throws with six seconds to play Saturday, giving
North Coast Conference championship earlier
"'I jloilltS with 5e¥eaminutes to pbjy. ~Ohto State (9-11 • 2-9), Aunantal - witli'8:21 to go. That gave the Bobcats a 61-43
John Carroll a 66-65 victory over Muskingum
this week, finished with II long-range baskets,
and was never challenged again.
sank two free throws and a three- lead.
that kept the Blue Streaks atop the Ohio Conincluding eight in the final half.
; ;I'Jo.rU. Virgiala'lecb 78
point goal for 11,54-45 lead.
The lead twice reached 19 points - once
ference.
Mark Balusik put in 14 points, Aaron Smith
:··
lavier (Oblo) 73
, Aurian~l .then .hit 5-of:6 free when Gus Johnson made a pair of free throws
J.J . Richardson scored 18 points, Jeff Ses12 and Scott Schwartz 10 for the Tigers (19-4
·• At Cincinnati '-Ohio Damon · throws, fintshtng wtth 18 potnts.
with 5:23 left and again on raul shots by Andy
plankis 13 with IOrebounds, and Joey Bigler 12
overall. 14-1 conference).
iatJington hit a 'p~ir of three-point- ·• - Mosezell Peterson . and Sean Kanzig with I :58 remaining.
for John Carroll ( 16-6 overall, 12-4 conrerence ),
Casey Chroust scored 19 and Eric Royse, Brien .In a second-half run that set up a Daughe~y added II pomts each ror
Stacey scored Bowling Green's first II points
which leads the OAC standings by one game with
an Malinowski and Brian Sommcrhauser had 12
13-73 victory over Xavier of Ohio on , Wtsco.nsm.
·
of the game, giving the Falcons an 11-10 lead by
two to play. .
apiece ror the Big Red (13-9, 9-6).
Saturday,
·
Ohto, State w~ led by Damon the 10:25 mark of the first half.
·
Christian Toombs put in 20, Kevin Troyer 14
Denison led 35-27 at halftime, but Wittenberg
· 'l;1le Jlth-ran~ed Hokics put up Strmger ~ 13 pomts and Neshaun
Simmons' consecutivelayups - onefromthe
and Chad Oliver 10 forthe Muskies (8-14, 5-11 ).
came back to tie the score at 56-56 with 3:36'to
tbe 'best 20.game record in school Coleman s 12.
low post and the other in transition - opened a
John Carroll led 31 -27 at the half and by as
play. The Tigers took the·lead for good 62-61 on
hiltory by extending their winning
The Badgers led by 12 points in four-minute span in which Ohio outscored Bowlmuch as 48-35 with 10:48 to play. But Muska three-pointer by Stahl with 2:03 left and
·
the first half, converting 63 % from ing Green 16-6. The Falcons did not lead again
ingum gradually reduced the lead and went ahead
s!(tak to six games. .
outscored Denison 8-2 the rest of the way.
~ VirginiaTech(l8-2, 10.1 Atlantic the field. Ohio State outscored the
and came no closer than five points the rest of
for the first time at 63-62 on a jumger by Travis
Fordham 68, Dayton 58 - At New York,
fO)pushedatwo-pointhalftimelead Badgers 11 _0 laie in the half and the way.
Robertson with I :29 to play.
N.Y., Fordham ended a !().game losing streak
to 44-34 by outscoring Xavier 18-10 started the second half with a 9•2 run
Toledo 86, Kent 70 - At Kent, Craig
Sesplank.is hit a layup at the I :07 mark to put
an1l earned its first Atlantic 10 victory, 68-58 over
in"the first seven minutes of the sec- for a 36- 34 lead.
Thames scored 27 points and Bobby Krahulik
John Carroll abead again, then Troyer made two
Dayton on Saturday, the Ayers ' first game since
ond[ half. Watlington hit a floating
Wisconsin regained the lead 38_36 added 15- and they had all the points in a 7-0
free throws with 52 seconds to go, giving Muskthe death of starting center Chris Daniels.
ingum the lead once more.
J'b""'pe
'" · rand two three-pointers in the on a ,.ree throw by pctcrson and a run in the final minute - a&lt; Toledo beat Kent
Daniels, 22, died early Thursday of heartAfter Eskridge closed out the scoring, Musk· sp\trt.
·
three-point play by Shawn Carlin. 86-70 Saturday.
related problems, and a home game that night
"'Xavier (9-11, 5-S) had none of the The Badgers then went nearly seven
Casey Shaw chipped in with 20 points ror the
ingum's Chad Oliver tried for a three-pointer with
against La Salle was postponed. The team decidfi~ or firepower that led to its near- minutes without 8 field goal but
Rockets (14-9 overall . 7-5 Mid-American Contwo seconds to play, but it hit the rim and went
ed to make the trip to New York and will return
upset of No. I Massachusetts last stayed ahead 4-S-42.
ference).
out.
for the funeral, to be held Monday in Daniels'
Sunday. Nineteen turnovers left
Daugherty's !7-foot jumper end·
Thames hii 8-of-15 shots from the field ,
Allegheny 94, Ohio Wesleyan 87 (OT)- At
hometown of Columbus, Ohio.
Xavier too far behind to have a shot ed the field goal drought and put including 2-of-3 three-pointers, and also made 9Delaware, David Masciola scored 12 of his 27
Damien Berrien had 18 points to lead Fordat ~ .end against Virginia Tech.
Wisconsin ahead 47-42.
of-10 free throws. He also had seven rebounds
points in overtime to help Allegheny get past
ham(3 -17, 1-10).
and two assists.
Ohio Wesleyan 94-87 Saturday.

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large this year's levy would he.
ing or anything, but I think he defi- percent of the participants in today's
Jordan's teammate, Rodman , is nitety deserves to be here for his game will have someone f~iliar
leading the league in rebounds and is play, his hard work and effort out on alongside them.
one of the best defenders in the the court. He's been the top rebound·
Why so many teammates?
er for the last three seasons. HopeNBA.
"I think it's a lot tougher 1o get
After finishing third in v01ing by fully someone will learn to appreci- two guys on the team if your team is
fans for Eastern Conference for- ate his work," Chicago's Scottie Pip- below .500. If you're a winning team
wards, Rodman was passed over by pen said.
and you' re at the top, you can get
This
year's
All-Stars
are
h~avy
on
two," Elliott said.
the coaches who pick the reserves .
Asked last week what he expected to teammates. With Jordan and Pippen
Television exposure has somedo this weekend,. Rodman replied representing the Bulls, 0 ' Neal and thing to do with it too.
Anfernee Hardaway of Orlando,
"Viva Las Vegas."
"That's the popularity part of it.
Nike Inc. took out a full -page Gary Payton and Shawn Kemp from
advertisement in USA Today that · Seattle, Sean Elliott and David You get seen more, coaChes sec that,
was blank except for two words in Robinson of San Antoni o, John . sponsors see it, you get· the shoe
Stockton and Karl Malone from deals and it's something that haptiny print: "Where's Dennis?"
"I wish Dennis was here. Not that Utah and Clyde Drexler and Hakeem pens," Payton said.
we 'd be sitting at the same table talk· Olajuwon from Houston. a full 50

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supporting cast willing to talk.
O'Neal went through about 15
minutes of questions and answers,
then turned to a reporter, asked what
time it was, shrugged, got up and
• walked out
O'Neal's presence for the hourlong interview session may preclude
a fine, but Jordan and Barkley won 't
escape without penalty.
"He has a lot of pressures thBI are
maybe unique , but the rules are the
,rules, and he ' II get fined," deputy
commissioner Russ Granik said of
Jordan. ·
When Jordan skipped a media
session in 1993, the fine was
$10,000. Granik did not say how

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the Chicago Bulls are 42-5, last week
alleged there had been a conspiracy

• SAN ANlONIO (AP) - The
biggest talk at the start of NBA All- to keep him out of the spotlight in
StAr Weekend concerned who wasn't San Antonio, where he had two
tllere, rather than who was.
tumultuous seasons with the Spurs.
· " Michael Jordan and Charles
"I can assure Dennis there's no
Barkley skipped Media Availability conspiracy to keep him out of the
Day. They were off playing golf, · game," commissioner David Stem
either in Las Vegas or Phoenix said. "He's a great player with
:nObody could say for sure: .
tremendous talents. I think Dennis is
Hakeem Olajuwon arrived after a very interesting person and has
· ~ session was over Friday, saying developed a significant internationHe'd had ai~li!lll irouble. Shaqui.lle al following, and I'm kind of sorry
d'Neal showed up, but stuck t!fOUnd he's not on the team, for a lot of reaSOfiS."
.
for just a short. while.
There were, howe.,yer, plenty of
Then there was the guy who did·
n'1t even make tl)e All-Star team. rookies, slam dunkers, three-point
Dennis R:odman, a key reason why shooters and members of the i\11-Star

.

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Rodm.an kept out of NBA All-Star lineup featuring teammates

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·es o~ a vocal .minoiit_Y w~ don~
heavily to his prestden_ual c~paign," Doman, a Rcpubbcan prest-.,
dential candidate, said in a statement.;
AIDS has occurred most ere9uently amoog homosexual men and
mtravenous drug users..
.
One gay and lesbtan lobbymg. ,.
or.g~ni~ation welcomed Clinton
wtlhn~ness to fight to ovcnum the . ,
proviSion.
" This _was ~. momen~ous ~tep
toward f111111ess, SIUd· Kim Mills,. ,
spokes!loman f?r the Hu.man Rights ;
Campatgn, ' which momtors AIDS , .
issues. "What the administration did :
today . cle~l~ demonstr~tes the ~ ,

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· Grand
but the brand new Pontuic
Prix and the retitmin" Ford Thunderbirds both have .,shown some
muscle in winter tcstin&amp; and in the
one day of official practice this
week.
One thing that seems certain,
though, is that the pole-winning
speed is ·going1o be slower than the
" 193.498 mpb·laprecorded a year -i!o
bY Dale J~tt's Ford.
·
. That's because NASCAR has
made changes in . the e11gine rules
sincc4ast season, cutting borsepow·
er.
"The rules to slow us down have
dictated that we become a -littlemore creative in other wa~s,'-~

•aastest on Fn'day, the opemng
· day of
Winston Cup practice at Daytona
International Speedway.
"Obviously, it has to be legal
ways because Gary (Winston Cup
director Gary Nelson) and his people
have so many templates, there's no
way around those. We know that
cverybOO}' "is--s&lt;rciO'Se to the same
thing there that there's nothing to
gain, and they've got templates for
the spoilcrs, _so there's nothinR to
gain !here, either.
"You've got to find another way,
and the chassis is the way to do it,"
Jarrett added. "It's nqsecret the way
people-arc-trying-to·ehlllge1he-cii'S
by softening the spriiiJS. ~gives

up and down and st' de to st'dc a lot
from Ford to Pontiac over the win- tiac at 187.982, Jeff Purvt"s' Monte .c;,
ter. """-times
are all over the place. Carlo at 187.813, the Pontiac o'f • •
more "
• ·~
·
There are a lot of cars out there and Ward Bunon at 187 .582 , 11crry il'
"They're
real1Y a hand'au1 out
there right now. But, for one lap
everyone is picking up some draft off Labonte's Chevy at 187.500 and ln
of other cars. I don 't know what we Rus tY Wa IIace ' s .Thunde'rb'rd
you 've got to hold Qn and go as •aast
1
at
as you can."
can run, I really don't."
187.414.
. :m
· Sterling Marlin, the two-time
Richard Childress, owner of the
Brett Bodine, entered in hi. firlt ::ro
defending Daytona winner, and fel·
cars that Earnhardt has driven to six · race since buying the team frOni- w:low Chevrolet driver Dale Eapthardt of his seven Winston Cup titles, said, Junior Johnson over the winter, hid ··~
led the way Friday, turning fast laps
"I think we'll be right in there for the to go to a backup Ford d\er
pd•, .;:::&gt;
of 189.478 mph and 189.418.
pole. The whole deal will depend on mary car had a fuel . lipe f11Jur,, &lt; ll • · '
Rick Mast, drivina one of the
how hard· they (NASCAR) are on CI!Ughton fireatidcrashed~tia- ,.il
1·
,
brand new Pontiac G(and Prix, was
everybody when we go through morning practice.
,jJ;~
riext at 189.278, followed by Ford inspection."
"It's·nota very JOOIIe~~"
drivers Jarrett at I 89.207 and Jeremy
Other fast drivers in practi~e Fri'
Bodine said. ''Btit, f~ , .... ~~
Mayfield at 189.016.
day included Roben Pressey at we're all right. We'll fix ihlie~t• ~~~
"l~honcstLy__don't ..Jiaw: a~ci!IC~l88.S84-in a Chevy, the Ford of 1991 it'll be back down next weeldil.. . .
what it will take_to win the pole,"
Daytona winner Ernie lrv~ at we need a backup."

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• M,
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point PleMant, WV
out~ern- boyS record 78-74 victory over Eastern

Sunday,F~ry11,1918

~:I=OLFE .
T.~dant
. BAST

S - Casting as
tu lMI:k over white,
. Iii' OJc:it!q ..... lletween the Eut,
erD. &amp;It I llld Saulbern Tornadoes
IIW !lnoidten lib 1 dominlnt lead
ill IW lint hllf, then ~~ I spectacviii!.Pssiern Con~l: bid at the.
mud! c• ,

fittll!l,

' Whon 11\e

filial buzzer finally

scMidacl, Southern had posted

In

i&lt;gp-ive 78-74 Tri-Valley ConfCI'•
~over the fi,lales at Eastel"\' tliah SchoOl Friday llight. .
· ~(7-IO)waslcdbyjunior
allll;d J,tyan Norris, who is just stanina to como into his own, as a ballhipdler llld ahOoting auud- Nonis
potnd in 25 points, inciluding II of
Sou!IJem's lut 13 points, when the
giQie was on the line,
Southern head coach Howie
Caldwell Slid. "This was a great
team win, but I think Butch (Norris)
had a coming out party tonight. He
did 10111e things that really sparked
us wbOa we needed a spark."
IICbind Norris in scoring was
J~Bv~ with 17 points. Evans
caftied: a hot halld throughout the
ftnt batf, ipili11g Southern's initial
ofl'en@ve e~~:plosion,
John ·Harmon dominated the
boards early and tallied , 16 points,
•despite missing the entire founh
q!Wier wjth five fouls,
· Bastem (9-~) was led by senior
post man Micah Otto's 20 points.
while Eric Dillard, who sparked the
Eastern comeback with three tbreepointen, ended the night with 16.
Brian Bowen added 13.
Both coaches agreed on one key ·
fli!Ctor i_n the game's outcome. Caldwell cOIIIinued, "One of the keys was
our ~y domination on the boards.·
Our kids really pounded the boards
well lftd sat the ball out on the
~- ·'
'
''.We wanted to control the tempo
and we did a good job of that the first
bllf,'' Caldwell said, "It was just a
tY.Picai -Eastern-Southem game--a
nice crowd, a nice'atmosphere, a nice
gamC.~

Bistem mentor Tony Deem concecbt, "Rebounded really killed us.
We ~ to control the boards to
ll!k~ away their break and they
(SHS) just dOminated. I give the kids
credit for coming back.
"We kept our composure and took
~- leild after being down 18-19
""nts,'' Deem uid. "The kids made
.a'·bock&gt;of a run and we had them
~We wanted them. Harmon was
(live fouls) and we jusi handed
riJht back :CO 'em."
Southern • oulreboul1ded Eastern
21-7 in
.the. first
'.,
,. half
. and maintained

oYl

·

CLEVELAND (AP) .~-. No one,
not even the Cleveland Cavaliers
the~lves, expected a record this
g~ · atthe break.
·
Since .gettinil oft' to an 0-7 stan
that fulfilled every preseason pt:ediction they had heard, the rebuilding Cavs have turned themselves into
a pesky team with a reasonable
chance of malting a dent in the pia)'offs.
"When we were 0-7. if anybody
in the medii had suggested we'd be
six games .over ,SOO at the All-Star
brelk. we would have thought they
wm nuts.'~ center Michael Cage
saiil: "But here we are, and there's
nothing·nuti about it,"
tCIOvellnd's 26-20 record certainJy wa'tas noteworthy IS the Chicaso ·IIIIIs' incredible start, but it is
~a mollkable given the Cavs'
c~s:
·~ They are playing their second

fo'n witbolit five-time All-Star
coW' 9nld baugherty, still out with

1;

1 W back. ·
~ ~ treded away four-time
AJi:!lur pard' Mark Price and verAtiW John Williams, stockpiling
. dnjA,l:hoices and sipaling clearly
tb1ifi they hlld little hope of compelii.J'l\'for ~nythjng meaningful this

,..I;J:t · ·
~-

They lost All-Star forward
' Hill ~games into the sea-.
n his spinal cord was bruised
'
.
.

Huntet:)
Eastern had two missed possessions and a traveling violation. Ouring the same span Southern got back
on its feet
Evans canned a baseline jumper,
Maynard hit a free throw and Rizer
had an uncontested .break-away layup to make the score 62-57.
Otto hit a baseline jumper and
brother Daniel Otto nailed a three at
the 4:41 mark to knot the score at62.
Eastern's comeback came wlien
Southern was still pressing, but in the
finale SHS with drew the press and
forced Eastern into a patterned offensive game. The result kept Eastern
from running with the ball and was
key in killing the Eagles momentum.
After SHS led 65-63, Micah Otto
nailed another baseline jumper to
again tie the score.
Southern '!,lissed after calling
time out with 2:30 left in the game.
Eastern lost a golden opportunity
when getting called for a travel
(palm) near mid-court_. 1Jten, Ryan
Norris took charge.
First nailing a three (68-65), Norris scored II of the last 13 SHS
points. As both teams fouled numer-

ous times, the last 2:00 lasted nearly 20 minutes in real time.
Both clubs traded free throws, but
Eastern never got closer that two,
when Josh Casto canned a three
pointer that drew the score closer at
76-74. Norris coned both ends of
the two shot foul following the
in bounds pass with five seconds lef1.
Di liard got off a shot at the buzzer,
but it fell short.
Caldwell concluded, "Jay McKelvey may not have scored many
points tonight, but he did a heck of
a defensive job on Eric Hill. That
was a key factor in this game.
Another factor was that we were
totally focused.
"Also, Jamie Evans scored early
and Jesse; John and Spike were all
right there," Caldwell said. "I'll give
Eastern credit for a great comeback,
but I also give our kids credit for
regrouping when the game was· on
the line. It took a lot.of poise to pull
off this win."
Deem added, "The first quarter
killed us. We didn't play smart and
let Southern be the aggressor. We
had our chances, but let them slip

Danny Ferry have also developed streak heading into the All-Star
break, which began two days earlier
into
consistentlhree~point shooters.
returned in a limited role.
for
them than for many other teams.
Dan
Majerle
adds
a
three-point
"We've got a 34-year-old playing
threat
off
the
bench,
The
Cavs resume play Tuesday nilht
. center," said Cage, who turned 34 on
at
home
against Charlotte.
On
Feb.
2,
the
Cavs
tied
the
NBA
Jan. 28. "We haven't had the lineup
record for threes in a half by making
"The break produces the same
we'v~ \?."ted all year. It'sjust good,
I
0
in
the
first
half
of
a
victory
over
thing
every season: Teams that are
hard work. It's everybody believing
·Phoenix.
They
sank
a
team-record
playing
poorly are happy that. the
in themselves and in the team. W~
in
one
quaner
of
a
loss
at
break
comes,
and teams that are
seven
don't have the lu~ury of having our
Chicago
in
November.
playing
well
want
to continue to play
·top players, but we don't hang our
''They
do
the
best
job
of
being
in
and keep the momentum going,"
heads."
the
spots
they
wapt
to
be
in
when
.
Fratello said. "Let's hope that the
Mostly, the Cavs win J&gt;ecause
you
double-team
them,"
Phoenix
positive side is that these extra days
coach Mike Fratello has sold them
Cotton
Fitzsimmons
said.
coach
give
us some rest and some zip, and
on defense. Rarely does an opponent
The
victory'
over
Boston
gave
give
some strength back in our legs
with the ball manage to get into the
Cleveland
a
four-game
winning
and bodies."
paint without attracting two defen~
ers. Rarely do the Cavs fail to rotate
in time to protect themselves from
the 0penings that result from their
double-teaming.
They are allowing a league-low
90.S points per game, and they have 1
held opponents under 90 points for
five straight ganies, Last Tuesday
night; they beat Boston 91-73, lim"
iting the Celtics to their fourth-lowest output since the shot clock was
· installed in the 1950s.
Offensively, the Cavaliers pose
little threat down low- not with the ·
6-9 Cage, a rebounding specialist, in
the post- so they've moved their
game outside. Point guard Terrell .
Brandon has pushed his shooting
range beyond the three-point arc,
becoming an All-Star in the process,
and Bobby Phills. Chris Mills and
'
SWEEPSTAKES WJNNU - Larry Wolfe of R8clne (lift) WM the
winner In The Dally Santlttel'a1111 Super Bowl Swaapellka Conteat. Wolfe prec:lk:liad t111t tile Dallas Cowboys would win by a score
of 'D to 17 over Plttaburgh Stuln. Wolfe end . .. _ peraon accu• ;- retaly predlc:ttd the .I!CC!re and the coniHt winner was Mlectecl In •
dw.wlng. Bob Atwood of The DIIJY S.ntlnal pntlln. . . . .SO clttck
. toWole.

"

Other weekend action: Southern ...
played at Nelsonville-York Saturday.' '
while Eastern went to B.eallsville. · ·~

Ouarter llltlll

,....

Southern ................26-12-16-24=78 "'"
Eastem .................. IS-11-28-20=74 · :

2-·:::

SOUTHERN- Ryan Norris
3-12/15=25, Jamie Evans 4-3-·; ,:
012= 17; Jesse Maynard 2-0-In=5~ .. :
Spike Rizer 4-0-112=9, Jay McK-":"
elvey 1-0-1/3=3; John Harmon 7-0-., n:
2f1= 16; Tyson Buckley 1-112=3.
Totals: 21-6-18134=78
... ·

EASTERN- Brian Bowen '3-0- .
718=13, Eric Dillard 0-4-4n=t6, . ~
Josh Casto 1-1-0=S, Stevie Durst t-· ,. ·
0-010=2. Daniel Otto 0-2-3/4=9, Eric•·o·
Hill 1-1-4/4=9, Micah Oito 7-IJ·" '
316=20. Totals: 13-9·21129=74
.

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HELPI - With two Meigs Maraudera covering her from the front
andirom behind, Eastern's Beth Bay look• to pass to an open teammate during Friday night's TVC game at Melg1 High School, whare
the Eagles won 51·35. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

TAKES SHOT- Alter getting paat Eastern's Patsy Aelker (right),
Meigs forward Taryn Doidge takes the ahot during Friday night's
hardwood affair In Rock Springs, where the Eagles won 51-35.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

I

31-25 victory. Meigs had a balanced
really, tired basketball team.''
Eastern hit 21-48 twos, was 1-3 scoring attack led by six-point efforts
on threes. and was 6-9 at the line by Tricia Davis and Tony a Miller.
Eastern's Valerie Karr led all
with 38 rebounds (Evans 10. Aeiker
8, Karr 6). Eastern had five steals scorers with 12.
(Karr 2, Evans 2); 16 turnovers, 16 Ouarter llUIII
assists (Nelson 7. Karr 6) and 15 Eastern ........... ...... ... l7-ll-14-9=51
fouls.
Meigs .... ...... .. ...... ..... I0-4- 15-6=35
Eastem-RebectaEvans 10-1The Lady Marauders traveled
3=26,
Jessica Karr 3-0-2=8. Nicole
Saturday to Belpre to play the
eighth-ranked team in the state. The Nelson 1-0-0=2. Patsy Aeiker 2-0reserve game will get underway at 0=4, Martie Holter 0-0-1 =I, Tracy
noon. On Mon&lt;!ay, the Marauders White I,Q-0=2, Michelle Caldwell 1will take to the court for the sixth 0-0=2, Jessica Brannon 2-0-0=6.
game in eight days when they trav- · Totals: 21-1-6=51
el to the University of Rio Grande.
Meigs - Cynthia Cotterill 2-0,
for sectional tournament play against
0=4, Cheryl Jewell 3-0-4= I0, Taryn
River Valley.
Doidge 0-0-1=1, Anne Brown 5-0Resene notes: Meigs overcame 0= I 0, Ashley Roach 2-0-1=5, Jenny
a I0-4 fir.t period deficit to take a Clifford0-0-1=1. Totals: 14·0-7=35

(• f

.•

CHECK THE CWSifiEDS fOR ILL YOUR

" .

' CINE - Host Southern fell just one first period point.
.
(54) arid hit 6-9 threes, while hitting
38 to TVC foe Belpre Thursday
Southe~ (9-_8 overall &amp; 7-7 m the
1-4 at .the line. Belpre had 26
'' as JUntor pomt guard Kathy Hockmg Dlvlslort) got a handle on rebounds, 13 steals, 12 assists, 22
ner ripped off six three-pointers the momentum m the second round turnovers, and 14 fouls. Coyner had
~nd slowed the pace to result m a 29two of three blocked shots.
· _ute to • .28-point night
tghth-rankedBelpre(l8-l over- ·-17 sco~ at the half. ·
. .
Southern hit 14-45 twos for 31
'~.O. i~the~hio,Division)took
. Belpre turned up th.e WICk m the percent, hit 2-8 threes, and hit4, 13
a -lll firs~ pen~ lead on the coat third quarter, _outsconng Southern at the line. Southem•had 33 rebounds
tl!lj\of Cllplll~ Enn Humph~y and · 17-5. The penod ~nded 46-22.
(Moore 9. Manuel 8, Turley 8); 11
Cflinc:lr, w~ ~h notched etght
. Southern made a mtld comeback steals (Moore .2, Turley 2, Cynthia
· !!oulhem s Bnanne Proffit and With a 16-13 ru~ tn the finale, but fell Caldwell2. Bnanne Proffill2); eight
y .Moore each had SIX pomts, ~h'ort at the fimsh for a 59-38 tally. · assists (Turley 4), 22 turnover., 11
w. le ace Renee Turley was led to
, Jonna Manuel kept_Southern m fouls and six blocks (Turley 4).
. . l : ,:
1
the game Wl_th a 15-pomt effort.
Southern, which played at River
Belpre hn 20-37 from the Hoor

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11
11 .,-,

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Bo)'s..Oblo Dlvlsloa '
Dlvlsloa Overall

l! 1.. l! l.

Boi!f!re ..... ., .. ., ..,.::-:,..11 1 14 . 4
W~ilston .....,,. ......... ll
1 JS 3
M~IGS . ....... .............8 s 10 1
N~sonvtlle- York ..... J
8 6 II
V~ton County1... ., . ... 0 1•
1 16

ve engine. 5

...

speed, power

tlleerlng, pobnikllll, low miles

Boys-Hocking Division
·ralljocking ..,.. IO 4 14
ander ....-,.... ,. .. ... 7 5 9
. TERN ... ;., .. ., ..... :? 6 9
RN ............ 6 6 7 .
r.... .,......,. ..... ,. ... 5 9 7
ble.,.":.:............. l n 3

L-4 engine,
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'·"

Friday's resuiiB
OUTHERN 78, EASTERN 74 .
elpre 104, Vinton County 79
· lexander 43, Federal Hocking
42 .
.
•Wellston 8 i, Nelsonville- York
1
65 ! I
Trimble 76
.

.rille~ ~6,,

-·-·-

..!i

cond~ioning,

Gl.rls·Ohio Divlsloa
Division Overall

. •·

locally owned and
low miles.

~., ................... ~ ~ ~ ~
:Vi~onCounty .... ...... 7

w !_ston ...... ...... ....... 6

os ................... .,3

N
For .

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,: .

Carl Sande.--, Mike

Serpnt;·Jim Walker or Larry Thaxton.

• GEO

·

•

•
'•

6 10 9
8 9 ·to

to

nville-York.. .... 3 II

s

t3

4 14

Girls-Hocking DiviSion
3 12 7
"I:ERN., ............ IO 3 13 4
AI ander ... " .......... 11 4 13 6
S
RN ............ 6 7 8 8
'Trilhble .. .,......... ........ s 9 5 13 '
Miber ................... ..... O 14 0 19
r~l Hocking .~ .. ll

'•

Friday's results

a,..s'ItRN sl, MEIGS 35
P.lw

'l .

•

GaUipolU .
446~36.72 . ·· ,; ~~· ·

6 ·Eastem Ave.

(614)

• ~They played Saturday
OS ~Bel~ (noon)
.
inton County at EASTERN'

•I

('fgJn)UnlERN River Valley
mbl~ at Newark Catholic (I '
,

p.

. '.

T.lt

'

I

.

at

'."'&lt; . •. .,

.

J

J, t.J

~~·'

s249y',

Jr;,

~dVU IJ'-,:)

Humphrey 7-0-0= 14, Kri sty Rhodes
4-0-012=8,Angie Roush 1-0-0/0=2.
Totals: 21-6-1/4=59

DIABETES•••
Education and Management are the Key.

Call or stop in before 2/17/96
and save.
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II

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4

OUTHERN at NelsonvilleY&lt;J!k .
.
tTnmble at Vmton County ·

Auto
transmission. alr

PGA Tour's ~teadiest perfo111Jers both shot 70 after carding 63 on
since 1994, making the cut in 44of Thursday. Doug Martin, the other
49 starts. His best finish was a tie fdr leader on Thursday, shot a 71 and fell
second in the 1994 Bob Hope.
fi xe shots off the lead . tied with
Couples matched Clements for Steve Stricker, Mark Calcavecchia
the best round on the cool, overcast and Joey Gullion.
day, shooting a 65 on the longer ·
The final two rounds will be
South Course. Triplett and Lehman · played on the South Course. .

Valley Saturday, will play Miller
Monday. Belpre played Meigs Saturday and will start tournament play
Monday.
'
Quarter llUIJI
Southern .. ................ l4-3-22-t6=3S
Belpre ....... ........ ....... 22-7-17-13=59
Southern ~ Becky Moore 40=8, Bea Lisle 1-0=2, lonna Manuel
6-1-0= 15, Renee Turley 1-1-117=6,
Bnanne Proffitt 2-0,3/6=7. Totals
14-2-4/13=38
Belpre - Kathy Coyner 5-6010=28, Crystal Goin 1-0-0=2, Angie Haynes 2-0, 112=5. Erin

7
8
10 .
iI•
14

. Tltei 'played Saturday

...
'li•• •

\

·'

M

..1..........
a.
,....................

'u
ii,_,
....................... t
N,...... .,...,_..,...,....
..... 441·· · .. ''

P..,.
W

'

/Jelpre~ girls tally 59-38 victory over Southern

MIJC OI'RClii.S=

WILSON

~

away."
Southern hit 18-34 twos, 6-IS
threes and was 18-34 at the line with
40 rebounds (Harmon 10, Maynard
6, Rizer 6, Evans 6), four steals
(Maynard 3). 16 turnovers and 22
fouls.
Eastern hit 13-48 twos, 3-6 threes,
hit 21-29 at the line, had 25 rebo~nds
(Hill eight, Dan Otto five, Micah
Otto four), eight steals (Bowen 2); II
turnovers, six assists (Daniel Otto 4)
and 26 fouls.
Reserve notes: Eastern endured
a Southern comeback to win the
reserve game 36-34. Stevie Durst
had II and Rickie Hollon had to for
the Eagles.
Billy Sheppard had 13 for SHS
and J, Mills had seven.

· in a car accident; he only recently

·· tt•

make it a 25· 10 contest with 3:05
mark of the half.
·
,ROCK SPRINGS - Eastern
Carissa Ash broke the Eastern
edllan~ of a 19-21'\ln sparked streak with a bucket from 10 feet out
Rei-hoi ~onng 1\:om Rebecca with 2:44 left. Brown added a b~~~:k­
f~s to pqst ,a Sl -35 win over ~t off the offensive boards at the 2:13
~gs m girls basketball action mark of the half to make it a 25-14
Pqday evening at Larry R. Morrison game.
Qyrimasium.
Evans hit three of four from the
' The win gives Scott Wolfe's Lady charity stripe in the final30 secondS
Eagles a 13-4 mark overall. The . to give Eastern a 28- 14 advantage at
Marauders, playing their fourth intermission. Evans, in the first half,
gllnle in five days, feU to S-14 over- poured in 22 points, and Karr added
all. This contest WaS a non-confer- the other six for the Lady Eagles.
Despite the big Eastern lead, the
ence game between the two teams
with the first game played this sea: Marauders continued to battle and
son between the two teams, a 65-51 stay within striking distance. FreshEastern win on Nov. 30 counting as man Jessica Brannon scored two
the leag\ae contest in the round robin straight buckets for Eastern giving
an~. a Half format in the Tri-Valley
them a 34-18 lead with 4:43 left.
Conference.·
, Jewell scored on a three-point play
'Meias jumped out to 11n early 4- with 4:081eft to cut the Eastern lead
0 lead .dna ljucket by Anne Brown to 34,21.
and .• · steat 'nd layup by Cynthia
Patsy Aeiker scor!'d at the 3:49
Cqtterillat' ilie 6:43 mark of the first
mark of the period to make it a 36penod.
.1
21 game. But two straight baskets by
i.Rebeccia vans hit a jumper from
Brown pulled the Lady Marauders to
just iaside the circle at the 6:24 mark
within 3~25 . Karr hit a pair of-free
of the Period' to make it a 4-2 conthrows with five seconds leftto give
test Brown st ored in the paint with
Eastern a 42-291ead heading into the
6:071eft in the period to give Meigs
final eight minutes. Nicole Nelson
a 6·2 a4vanul,ge.
had a couple l)ig assists and a key
. But Eastern came back on buck- lay-in in the frame for Eastern.
The closest the Marauders would
ets jlyJessica1 Karr and Evans to tie
the g8jnp at six with 5:06 left in the
get in the final period was II points
period. Meigs came right back and
(42-31 ) when Jewell hit a pair bf free
took an 8-6 lead when Cotterill
throws at the 7:03 mark of the peris~pred in the paint
od.
'
EHS coach Scott Wolfe said,
: But Eastern · retaliated and took
t~ lead for good when Evans hit
"We tried to get a comfortable lead
~k-to-back buckets to give Eastern
in the second half, then slow it down
tho 10-8 lead with 3:32 left in the
to save our legs for Saturday. Meigs
period.
just kept coming back at us. They
Ashley Roach cut the Eagle lead
have a lot of fight Another plus was
to J0-9 at the 3:041eft in the period
that we got the win without showing
when she hit one of two free throws. scouts much of our offense."
But Evans drained a three-pointer
Evans took scoring honors for the
from the right wing to take a 13-9 contest with 26 points.
lend,
Brow.n and Jewell led the
. Cheryiiewell hit one of two from
Marauders with 10 points each .
the line with 2: 141eft to cut the score
Meigs hit 14 of 50 from the Hoor
back to 13-10 .. Eastern' ended the
(28%) and seven of 12 from the line
period on buckets by Karr and Evans
(58%). Meigs pulled down 16
to take a 17-10 lead intQ the second
rebounds. with Brown grabbing five .
period. All told, Evans scored 13 in
Meigs had nine turnovers , three
the first period for the Eagles. Karr
assists and six steals, led by Rebekah
added the other four.
Smith's three.
Karr quickly hit a I0-footer 22
"We played well this week against
seconds into the second period to
Belpre and River Valley, but we
increase the Eagle lead to 19-10. probably peaked for this week last
-Evans then continued her torrid
night i'll.the win over River Valley,"
scoring with six straight points 'in a Maraud!r coach Ron Logan said
span of two and a half minutes to
after the game. "Right now we are a

' Cc!rrMpondent

..

.

tense of winning and what comes
MUC ASSISTAiiCE IDIIIG
.
DIEOO (AP) - Lennie ' with it, and I think that's been a !&gt;ig
GAc..ty .. ._Gali•hr••A _klnn~•lti. . hrWI• t"J
· · ,.
il l6 ,lloles away from his difference in my game the IIJ!It cou~wr 14;'1"'•_,&amp;&amp;11'-SICIIIIfillr ..... l_ef ... CWiltt
)tk;t~y-in 16 ye!lfl on the PGA · pie of years," said Clements, 39,
•·
' • .1
·.
'
• ·who lives in su~urban Poway: "Y~
1
~
efltcl.. pelltlcll •••~~...... ••• pr.flt
llllll Wcp tile.pace be set in get so complacent when you l!aveo.t
· ~-~ l6 bola of the Buick In~i- won in so long.. t~·~ jb51 nice to wi,~ --:=~~·=
•ddlh• ...,
.~ thin that elusive victory wtll anylhtng, even 1f 11 s a club champ1- 11111 '"•·~~~~~~~u
_.,
11W
JUI
............
AIM.,
ud
~ ,Us hometQwn. .
on~p or so'!'ethins," .
. . . . 111
t~tllicWshr
!I~ .,~, very fortunate lQ
. Hts last VICtory WII!S IQ I
on
I
...
(
.
.
In
I
II
..........
,fi!Jtb;
-.wk
jtlllll)
' , :llilltt
~ thi• Ions and mx the Ni~e Tour,
.•
· ...,;
tsd¢1y be playjng ,Ill!!
Clementi had a, lWIHII'Oke lead
-:r~.,
IIICNIIIr*••'z . · . r'_ atl·ltNrh
-~·ofiiiY '"'·"Clements aailt: oVer John WiiiOn, who shot a 66 on
'lltll,111 It Wt ltidaelnl's._.
.,...~•sn~,!'l••••lr
':,i .,._,.,;x yem after he s..-1 lhe Honh c~ for atwll,-day total . ~fiLl
I I PIIJ./fiiiWihl ••
4
. l u I ttill
!he Torrey Pines 1~ of I~ I. Tied • m wae Fred Cou·
Jill I., 6 ..., . . . . . . .
~shot a 7-under-par 65 on pies, Duffy Wlldorf lftd Kirk Triplett
I
W
1
'
. ·
, f11
Coorse ~ Friday to take , and Tom L.ehmlli, who held a ~
_.
. ..
_._&amp;..~~..oW
I
.a.....
.
,..'P.'" . . . l'f.... - ,
'"ike/~ ~iW 1 ~ ~~ -lf of die fll'it:rouoo le~t, .
. ..
' lecOid of'IS-undi!' 129.
J ' 1 , Qemr a ·l!u Mll ono ·of • ·
'
'
'
· "rlll ready to ~ IW ~ - · , ~ JNmATI~8f1~).
..
'
/

,

By DAVE HARRIS

HOOK SHOT --Eutem front~IJIIII' .Micah Otto.(32) puts up hll hook' ..
, SUCCESSFUL PASS - Soulhern'a Jay McKelvey (25) u-t• hla
pass over and beyond EaaMrn'a Micah ~ (left) and Brian Bowen 1hot OYir Southern center John Harmon during Friday night's 118111L.
(10) during Friday night's Hocking Dlvlalon coniHt at Eastern High on the E1g1H' home court, where the Tom1doe1 overcame ~'f
School, where the Tomadoea won 78-74 to •m • split In the · 2G-polnt storm to win 78-74. (Tlme1·Sentlnel photo by Tom Hu~:;:
son sarles wHh their erchrlvala, (TJ---sentlnel photo by Tom

lliJ.
Buick Invitational
•

f ··~
·

.

•

a

fJ1ements takes lead

•••n•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

Evans' .offense leads Eastern .girls to S1-35 win over Meigs;

game.

From that point on, John ijannon
became the main beneficiary of
Southern's elusive running ' garno.
Spike Rizer was another key mu,
then Norris came off the berich and
drilled two threes en route to a sizzling 26-15 SHS lead at quarter's
1r'
end.
Eastern gotagrasponthe ,game's
tempo in the second canto, slowing
its part of the game with a c!cliber·
·ate pattenled game plu. The: strategy worked as EHS made a mild
comeback after falling down' 36-19,
Southern led 38-26 at halftime. Norris, Evans and Harmon each had 10.
Eastern's early press was a mere
ripple in the first half, while .Southem was tenacious from baseline to
baseline.
In the second half, however,'Eastem's full court press intensified and
Southern went cold offensively.
Before the latter transpired, Southern
had raced to leads of 17 and later 19
points (50-31).
Eastern broke the SHS press and
started· a mini-running game of its
own. Brian Bowen cashed in two big
scores, along with Daniel Otto.
Before exijing with four foul's, Micah Otto had two key drives.
Led by three Eric Dillard threepointer., Eastern fought ack to 52-40
forcing Southern's first time·out,
Stevie Durst had two straight
steals on the press, coupled with a
barrage of Southern turnoverS,
Shooting 6-6 at the line and gaining
a Daniel Otto field goal, Eastern lied
the score at 52 as Harmon picked up
a personal foul and technical for his :
fifth foul. Bowen hit both ends of the
bonus and Dillard canned both technicals, but on the inbounds play,
EHS went over and back.
SHS missed a free throw and
Eastern rebounded. Daniel Otto
drilled both ends of a two shot foul
to give Eastern its first lead (54-52)
with 32 seconds.
'
· Tyson Buckley then had a lay-in
for Southern to lie it at 54-54 all
going into the last round. Tied two
more times. the game saw Eastern
take its last lead at 57-56 on Dillard's
two baskets in a two-minute span.
._ _

11,1996

~

Defense &amp; three-pointers helping Cavs win
By CI:IUCI( MELVIN

.

.."t,

a 40-25 spread at the end of the
gllnle. From the potent reboundina
offset, Southern fueled a potent fut
bRak that totally dominated Eastern
in the transition.
Southern took a 2-0 lead on a
Iamie Evins jumper, but &amp;item's
Miclh Otto penetrated the plint fcir
a 2·2 tie, Evans then drilled a lon'J
three pointer that spatked u 11-4
Soulhem lead. Evans drained anodi,er deuce in what was to be the last
resemblance of a Southern half court

~day, february

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••

Sunday,Febtuary11,1~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleeunt, WY

111,the NHL,

·-

.

I'

l' 1ilENVER
"'ottN M08SMAN
~
(AP) - Patrick Roy has beate
Hanfqnt ·Wb8lers more than any other opponent - 3'1
1

~. It seemed only fining, then, that he would poll
,b&amp; ~· career win against his personal palSies.. ·
' But~ Burt, Kevin Dineen, Jaion Muizani and
· Cl!f. u.tade .sure that it wouldn't happen Friday night.
,,Burt scored with 1:36 left in overtime, giving the
'WJiale~ a 3-2 victory over Roy and the Colorado
,A\Iall\Dche.
• In the only other NHL game, Vancouver beat
Edmonton 3-2 in overtime.
(: ~oy, bie:n~.to become only the 12th player in NHL
~l!'!rY to •n 300 games, made a brilliant save earli'frill overtime but couldn't stop Burt's long shot, which
.was-screened by Dineen.
· .
i; Roy, who still figures to become the secondtouniest and thin;l-fastest to reach 300 wins when it
, 1.~Iy happens, said his next stan will be Thursday
1{11Jht at Tampa Bay.
' l:"I -wisl't it had happened tonight, but now I'll just
g~t ready for T81)1pa Bay," Roy said. "I think we had
bliil,!uclc tonight .. I dido 't ~ the last goal at alt I fell

In _CI,veland,

•

i'

·.

'

1

"

1't hit my ..A.A. and go a
·n. ""'~
""' gu'y took a shot from the
''Our euys playe&lt;~ very well together." Whalers·
blue line and it went ihro!Jgh everybody."
coach Paul Maurice said. ''111e more they pill)' like this,, ·
On the winning score, Andrew ~Is reversed the
the more confident they get."
puck behind the net to Geoff Sanderso;$when the
Allhou81\ only 21-2.5-6 for the season,.\be Whalers
defense converged on Sanderson, he s
it to Burt. . are 11-4-1 since the first of t11e year.
"Dineen made a great play," said Burt,
'ng for
Avalanche coach Marc Crawford said his team
only the second time Ibis season. "He screened Patrick
"played a solid game, b11tlthink the team that worked
all the way. The shot g!lllhrough. He (Roy) got a pieu
a little ~it harder tonight won the game. We've talked
of it, but it went in.
about paying the pri9\l. about giving a super effort, in
"Patrick will have to wait another night."
order to win, and tonight the other team did that."
Muzzatti, the Vfhalers' goaltender, outperformed
Joe S~c and Peter Forsberg scored first-period
Roy, tilming in 30 saye&amp; compared to Roy's 21 to earn
goals to g1ve Colorlldo a 2-1 lead.
.
his second NHL victory in as many games. Hartford's
Sakic pushed the· puck between the legs of Andre
regular ·goalie, Seari Burlce, did not play because of ' 1Niko)ishin. slipped past the defender and fired a shot
back spasms suffe~ in Wednesday's game.
:
off the rightside at 5:37 for his team-leading 37th goal.
"The guys needed a good effort from me," Muz. Hanfl'lrd tied it at 11:00 oq :&gt;teve Rice's rebound
zatti said. "Sean has tieen t1te heart and soul of oUr . goaL After a shot by Scott Daniels was stopped by Roy,
team. I haven't had a whole lot of starts, but enough
Rice pivoted and discovered a loose puck in front of
to be comfortable. I really haven't had time to be nerthe net. He drove it past a S.,rawling Roy•.
vous."
Forsberg scored his 18th at 13:32, tajcing a faceoff
It was the Whalen' fourth straight win, all on the
pass from Saldc and scoring just three seconds into a
road. And their fi..St overtime win of the season. '
power play.

wilt

,..1~

\

.

•

DivisioQ I '
men's scores '

Millon~-'

Columbiana 96, Soulhcm Lbcal 66

Eo..

Brown 74, Columbio 62
Oertmouth 54, Penn 5J
, ·· Maine17,DelawareM
Princeton 49, Harvard 44
Towaon St 79, New H11mpah1rc 70

Yale H. Comell49
..
South
. lt.ibc:rty ~~. N C -Ashcvtlle 43
NE Louisiana 80, NW Loutsuma 70
, ,
I

~

FarWeat

lP!&gt;s.-ta
'•' CJara
. 72. SM Dieao 52

7~

~i

I

&lt;

1 .. ···'

'..,O'bio H.,S. boys' scores
.~ }

!

~....,...,.ll,

• • Frtd•y,'s

action

. 1""'"" (!:o.....-y 70. E. Canron ll

, . '\i.•~E.~l.AktoiiCent. ·Howerll
1ft _,:; i\IOOft·l!llel 71, Akron N. 411
~ Akron Fimtone 71, Kenmore ~I
\Akron Mnnclleittt SO. Indian Val ~6
1i-J Afuaodi!r 41, .,_,. Hoc:lcinR4l
t, ., ,Alter 76, Cin McNidmllli 60
' 1 Annn 73. Fort Lorarrue 61
t1t~ Ansonin 67, Betllel 65
Anlwerp 84, Hicksvtlle 76
• · l.Arlinston 53, Liberty Benton 48
~ ' A1hland Cte1IV1ew 71, Colluta WI!SI·

~

.'

8,

' em~•l4

n.

'

,' " AUrora
Beachwood ~9
~ · ' Aullint«rNn-Filch :'iJ, Yoo Unulme 49
i:.. 'Avon 75, &lt;*rltn 66
Batavia 62. lockland 45
BeavertrCek 58, Frurborn ~7
,Bedrcxd 86, M"Jlle "" 64
' Bellbnlok32, Eacoo61
)
Belp~ 104, Vinlon Co. 79
1
Benj:un1n Loaan 65, Ridgemonr ~2
I, Bert:a91 , Ciovc:rlcaB6
'
Berlm Htland 88, Malvem ~9
Be•lq 60. Washington C.H. ~7
"1
811 Walnul62, UcldnB Val ~:i
Bluffton 61. Ada 60
, . Bowlin&amp; ~n 7\, Holland SprinB 66
f Brookfield 53, Newlon Falls 49
' Bryan87. 'Sw&lt;anhJn 76
; · .' B~~tl}!cl $7, Akron Garfield ~0
~
81JCke)le v..1 49. Sp811a Highland 48
' Bucyrus !UI, SMiby S6
'
1:..
lCaldwe1167, Frontier S2

Sl

411

t

,, Cordii•

! :Canton ~· 6.l. Akron Spnng. 43
80, Rldg&lt;dole 66
•.' :c.rey 74.llil)lville l8

60

·Cartide 61, Dhue ~~
I · Qvrolllqll 62. W Bmnchll
CenuniUe S8, F:urmonl49
• ·CKa8cl8.5: Cle. Cathoh~: 62
.; ,Ct\ardolt 72, ~ngrin Falls43
~~' f ~ilke 69, River Val. 4."i
't.: ~ Oi~ Aiken 8:', Cin Colemin 4S
• 1 ~· Cin. Deer PMk 48, Cn11 Wyorruna40

H

Oregon Strilch ~9. Tol Chm1111n 41
Orrv1lle Mi, MAnsfield Mad1son ~8
Onawa Htlls 34, Danbury Luke5idc S3
QllnWA·Giandorf 74, St Marys 6S

lOTI

47
8~

Nonhweat 48. Walnut Hilla 41

Ht~m1kon ROSI 70, Norwood 47
Hanlin Nonllern 67. McComb 4l
H.-:b 57, GriU'Ivllle47
Hemlock Miller 86. Tnmble 76
Hlllaboro 72, Felicity 4S
Hilltop 74, Edon ~·
Hou11on 68, flllrlawn .SS
Hudlo• 82. H•&amp;hlnnd ~

=74

Ke)'IIOI'II! 56, Broobide 47
Kidron 76. Tt!mp)e tllr. 59
LaBrac 59, B3daer 46
Lakeview 62. Hubbard.SJ
l.olcewood 62&gt;Parma l j
Lebanon 78, Edgewood 47

Revere 77, Green 7~
Reynoktsburr Sf. Upper Arhnaton 46
Ru:hrnolld Hll. I0~. Brooklyn 65
Rocky River ~S. Amherst S~
S Central 57, New London 46
S. Range 74, Molhews 71
S. Weblter68, Lucasville Vol. 48
S11k:m 81. Gird 66
Smndusky Perkins 64. Clyde 5:\
Sebnn&amp; S7. L.eeton1a46
Shabr H11 IGI, Garfield Hts 4J
Shenandoah 72, Lakeland 49
SidllC)' 80. Troy S9
S1dney lehman 6~ . M1llon Union S7
Solon 66, Kenston 64
Spnng. Catholic 76, M1arm E. ~
Spline. Nordteaslem 72, Tecumaeh ~~
Spnng. Shawntl! 62, Greenoa 51
SJlrins. Sooth 91. Huber Htsr Wayne

7l
l8

tions Cleveland Stadium. T)le
or noted that the city and coUJity
approved increases in four differen~
types oflalles in 1995 (auto, jlarkint;
excise and "~m" taxes) to pay for~
stadium renCJ.vation Modell had
requested.
- ·
"Am I upset with Art Modell~
Would I like to go out in the alley'
and wring his neck? Believe me: r
would," White said. "There's noth·' •
ing to be gained from retribution. u
One aspect of the settlement with• '
the NFL that has angered some fans
is the prospect that they may have t() ·
pay for personal ·seat licenses in1
order to buy tickets in the new sta-. '
dium. White's staff said the averag'e'
cost of Cleveland's PSLs, if they art·
implemented at all, would be below' •
$1,000. •
:' .
And lhere will be no PSLs for the· '
Dawg Pounil bleacher area, which i~ · '
to be rebuih in the new place.

' .
~

.

r ....... s9, arid,_. 42

Tri.County N Si, Briidfont49
Tri·VIIIcy l7, W. Mlllli...m31
Td·VIIIap 56, frlnkliq Monroe S.
1
niwl)' 76, W. Holme~ S6
1'roc..-Modi100 89, Q,..nvllle 67
:J\IoCinllllu Clib. "· Oonway 76
Tuo.... 56. Saady Vol, 40
Twin \Ill. S. 70, A""""nt SS
'twlool&gt;ort 67, O..p 63 '
illioJo 7( Waofoll69
~iiJ SdM&gt;ql 65, ~rtl (l'o.) ......

.

MlllmeeS8,RaafmiS)(on .
Mayftdd +4, Nonlotlia 3S
Mayrvli~51,Ri,.Vlow ~ l /

MoCioin 61. Faidleld 4'/'.

·

•

MeciiiOICIIiwa 75, .-loito " ' •.

..

I

,'

Medina 61,11NonwlcH~
·
. 66-- Finl8tpl. lf1, ....... ctor, '
1' t,t..... ~Catll. 92.,~~

'

' .

~, ............
', Oolioil 53 51

' • lO Upper
;
Urlllllll66.
.

Vol. Fcqi I , Shaw 52
VaiJoy VIew 10, Ool1riiod Sf
97, - 7 4 •
.van

a-

.

6
7
8
8

WESTERN CONFERENCE

58 1~1 1~9
53 13-' 127
52 ISS 169
36 ll2 202

Hanford ........... 22 2~ 6

8uffalo .......2228 J

SO

1~2

168

4

78 189 I ll
II 71 19!i 146
9 ~S 161 162
9 .51141 154
4 48 184 191~
II 41 147 IU

" Fri&lt;IIIJ. ~• _,... ...

47·•1.S. 171

Honronl 1, Colo&lt;ado 2 (OT)
VIU'HXluver ~. Edmonton 2 (Uf)

Ottawa ..............942 2 20 119 211

HENDRICKS HELD IN CHECK- Glilllpolll dNndn held highscoring Wernn Local guard Scott Hendrlclca to 11 polntl Friday
night, and kept the WlrriOI'I' ICI from )1111\elrltlng tha IIIIHII molt
of the evening, but WLHS edgad visiting GAHS et the buzzar, 51·
50.

LOOKS FOR OPEN MAN • Gallipolis' Rob Woodward (42, left)
look• for en open man underneath tha hoop while taammete
Devld Rucker (20) rear looks on In Frlcley'e SEOAL game at Vln·
cent Warren Local. The warrior• ecored at the buzzer to edge
GAHS, 51·50.

GAHS drops 51-50 heartbreaker to Warriors

~hawn Taylor's 'stick back' at buzzer gives WLHS victory

VINCENT. Shawn Taylor's lastAs it was, it d1dn't and Taylor,
second "stick back" of a missed field who paced Warren to a 26-2S over·
goal attempt by Wanen Loclll's Mike time football vjctory over Jhe GalWarden gave host Wani~ a Sl -SO hans in last fall's Southeastern Ohio
victory over Gallipolis at the final League opener at Gallipolis, was the
buzzer Friday night.
game's hero.
·Coach Jim Osborne's visiting
GAHS got off to a slow stan, JrailBII!e Devils battled back from a 38- ing 14-S after four and one-half min31third period deficit to go ahea4148- utes before Greg Lloyd, Dave Ruck47, on a jumper by Isaac Saunders er, Saunders and Howell cut the lead
with 1:25 remaining in the hard· to 17-J3.afler one period.
fought contest.
GAHS tied it at 17-all with 6:24
.With 1:08 left to . play, SaunderS left i~ the second quarter, and
· "took a legitimate charge" said Coach grabbed its.fint lead 19-17 with 4:13
Osborne after viewing game films, left in the half on a reverse layup by
but on the officials' judgment call, Greg Lloyd. Rob Woodward's short
Sapnders was charged with a blocll- jumper gave the Blue Devils a 23·19
ing foul.
advantage with I :48 left in the half.
Seth Bamtt, who led the Waniors
Banin, in pne of his best games of
scoring attack with 19 points, calm· the season, kept the Waniors alive by
I~ .sank Jwo free throws to give Warscoring five points in the final :36 of
r&lt;n a 49-48 advantage.
play in the second stanza. GAHS led
: "Isaac did exactly what he was 25-24 at intermission.
s•pposed to do," remarked Osborne.
"We were able to stop their pene"flie game films show he was clear- Jration most of the night." Osborne
took a
GAHS then worlced the ball up
c urt. Waiting patiently for a good
s ot as the final seconds ticked off.
s~phomore guard Andray Howell
d!ove inside for· a layup with 11.4
seconds left to give the Blue Devils
a S0-49 advantage.
'Wairen moved up court. After
Ptfing it around a couple times.
:(tden took a IS-foot jumper with
~;,seconds left, but it was an air ball.
, ~r:;n Taylor scored the game-winn~ goal.
.
.."Had the ball hit the rim, the game
..q.ld have tieen over and we would
h~e won," Said Osborne.

ll L I I'll. lil liA

Deno11
J7 10
Ch1eqo. .. ..... :W IS
Toronto.. .
23 22
St.LouiS . ,.... 212.1
Winnifez . . .. 22 26
Dllllas ......... ... 1.5 27

;:It~;=~:~~0.:!;~~~::!\;~
layups. That was the game's turning
point," Osborne said. The Waniots
erased a 27-24 Blue Devil lead to
take a 32-27 advantage with 5:341eft
in the quarter.
Banitt continued his tomd play to
push the Warriors lead to 38·31 with
3:13leftintheperiod.Thencamethe
Blue Devils comeback.
- - "Other than the Jackson game, it
was our best overall effort of the
· year," Osborne said. "It's ·a shame
that our boys do most of the things
the way they are supposed to, and still
get beat. It's hard to explain to them
why that happens."

Gallipolis shot S2 percent from the
field (21·40), Warren Local 50 percent (20 of 40). The Blue Devils were
seven of nine at the line. Warren was
seven for seven. GAHS had 14 personals, Warren 12, and GAHS,Ied by
Greg Lloyd's seven rebounds, controlled the boards 19-16. Barritt had
five, including the one which counted most at the end. GAHS had only
eight turnovers, the Warriors 12.
Gallipolis was one of eight from the
three point range while Warre11 was
four of six.
Gallipolis had IS assists, five
each by Rucker .and Saunders, six
steals, two each by Rucker and
Lloyd. Lloyd had iwo blocked shots
and Richard Stephens took the only
'Dffictal charge of the game for
GAHS.
Besides Banitt's 19 points, Scott
Hendricks had II, Taylor mne and
Warden eight for Warren, now 10-7
overall and S-S in league play.
Saunders paced Gallipolis, now 5·
12 overall and 3-8 in league play,
with 14 points. Lloyd finished wi1h
12 and Woodward nine. Heath McKinniss tallied seven while Howell
came off Jhe bench to score six.
According ·to Osborne, "Howell
played his best'game of the season."
Gallipolis played at Point Pleasant
in a non-league outing last night.
Warren was host to powerful Fort
Frye.
GAHS plays at Jackson Friday
and will host Wheelersburg in its season finale Saturday.
The Warriors will host River Valley Tuesday, and travel to Marielta
Friday.

In Friday's preliminary game,
Coach Gary Hanison 's Blue Imps
threw a scare into league-leading
Warren before dropping a Sl -39.contesl.
The game was much closer than
the final score indicates.
GAHS trailed 9-7 after one period, and 26-20 at halftime. II was 3229 going mlo the final period.
With Warren leading 34-31 at the
5:40 mark, the Little Warriors began
stalling, forcing the Imps to come out
and foul . Warren then sank 10
straight free throws during the final
3:29 of action.
Aaron Beaver led the Gallians
with II points. Jennaine Jackson
added I0 and Jason Johnson eight.
Jacob Hall led the winners with 20
points. Chris Spencer added 12. Gallipolis dropped to 12-S overall and 74 in league play. Warren improved lb
14-3 overall and 10-0 in conference
play.
Varsily box score:
GALLIPOLIS (50) • Heath
McKinniss, 2-(1)·0-7; Isaac Saunders. 5·4·14; Dave Rucker, 1-0-2;
Greg Lloyd, 6-0-12; Richard
Stephens, 0-0-0; Rob Woodward, 33-9; Andray Howell, 3-0-6; Chris
Smith, 0.0-0. TOTALS 20-(1)·7-50.
WARREN LOCAL (51) • Scott
Hendricks, 4-3-11 , Mike Warden, 1(2)-0-8; Seth Banitt, 6-(1 )·4·19; Chip
Robinson, 2-0-4; Shawn Taylor, 3(1 )-0-9; Jeremy Thomas, 0.0.0; Steve
Elder, 0-0-0. TOTALS 16-(4)·7-51.
Score by quarters:
Gallipolis 13 12 10 15 ·50
Warren
17 7 14 13-SI

,,._other SEOAL action,

~ogan and Marietta top Jackson &amp; Athens

B~ODIE O'DONNELL

8C

c1en1
·, OAL~ _ Crunch time is
heft in the Southeastern .Ohio Ath·
lelif League, with Marietta and
L~an embroiled in a battle for the
leajue crown, Jackson and Warren
ho~ng for second place, with Gallipl!lis, River Valley, and Athens all
seebng to escape the league baseme4t in the final week of action.
~ Friday's league basketball
action Logan maintained a tie with
Maiieua by holding off Jackson 6357 j,hile the Tigers downed visiting
Atitns 67-58. Both teams are 9-2
with one league game remaining.
is week Marietta entertains
w. n Local while Logan makes 10
sh
hop to Atl)ens in the league
finlfe.
. .
I!J other Frjday night gam'es War'f

69

Woodmore71 . Nonhwood4J
Wooster Tnway 78, W Holmes 63 •
WoMhln&amp;ton Chr. 88. Northridge R!i
lOT)
Worthington K1lboume 61. Ch1 llu.:othc
55
Wynford 57,-Crcstlme 41
Xenia 7"1, Sprmg Nonh 67
You. Boardman 40. You Mooney 39
You Ctuulty ~9. Campbell ~7
You fml8 1, Wam:n Hard1ng 1"i
You U!Jc:ny ~.Warren ChampiOn SO
You. Ra)'(fl69, Akron St.V·StM 64
You. Wikon 81, Yoo. C:\lvary 49
Zllnaville ROseaiUis 64. Col. Ready
~6
.

NUL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AllanllcDitlslon

rll L I fll. lil li&amp;
N.Y. Ranpn ..... 32 1210 74 199 llO
FloridA .. . ... llll 6
Phllodelpllla ...... l6 llll

...

~~~
11181 FORD,l~~·G~~~::~:~~·~·;~&amp;~:~
GLS 15596, A/C, A/T, P. Mltl &amp; locks,

~~i.!~ position and he really

Central Division

Idm

-DhiPiusburgh . . 32 17 4 68 24.5 177
Monn..l ........... 2711 6 60 l7l 164
Bos1on . .
. 22 22 7 .51 181 18~

Wllrrensv•lle Hts. 64, Normandy S6
-Waterloo 83. Rootstown 48
Waverly 71, MeDeiTI'k&gt;lt Northwl!st 47
Wayne Tnce48, Holgate JJ
W aynelfleld·Goshen 60, DeGraff
R1vers1dt !i6
Welling~on 68. Mnmnmha Cht . 47
Wellston 81 , Nel soav11le·York 6~
We11em Brown 18, Loveland 42
Western Resene Acad 61 . Linaly
(W Va) ln11iru1e "17
Westtn1llc! N 71, Gahannn66
We5tenillc: S 61, Pickenngton 47
Wesllilkl! 68. Bay ~'li
Wheelenburg88, Oak H•ll ~9
,
Wheehn,c Park, W.Va. 98,
Steubenvi lle 86
W1ckhffe 78, W. Geauga S8
Williamsburg 90, Blandater 72
W!llo-Hdl Chr. SO, Elyna Ftrst Bapt
4l
W•llou!hby s . n. Eas1lokc N. 66
Wilnun&amp;toa67. Goshen '*7
Windham 70, Garreusville 62
Winton Woods 74. C1n Mt. Healthy

72 187 147
6l 1110 116

ren edged Gallipolis S l-50 on a
buzzer-beater shot while River Valley fell to undefeated Chesapeake
69-4S in a non-league encounter.
Logan 63, Jackson 57
At Logan, the Chieftains converted eight free throws in the final·
S7 seconds sandwiched aroun!l a pair
of three-point goals by Jackson's
Brad Howe to capture the vicJOF)'.
Howe took game-scoring honors
with 24 points, including six goals
from three-point range, but could not
offset Logan's balanced scoring and
deadly free throw shooting.
111e Chieftains led 23-15 after
one quaner and held a comfortable
3h7e-n26eruhaptedlftimne LleaSd- . 111eear thiraotnkmn en_
0 a 1 61
01
1
led the score at 43 before Logan's
Chad Slack nailed a buzzer-beater
for a 45-43 Logan lead.

Logan was clinging to a SS:S I
lead wJth two mmules remammg
wh~n Howe dramed a 24-foot trey,
shrmkmg the lead to ss.-S4 at I:.S3.
At 57 seconds Logan s Coy Lmd~
seY. made two free lhrows.• Lucas
Khne added two ~ore f~eb1es at 32
seconds, Jeff Ma1bach got one, and
Chad Moore got another at 16 seconds to make ti61-S7. .
Howe then gunned m a~other
three-pomter for Jackson and It was
61-S7 . w1th JUSt e1ght seconds
remammg. Chad Slack sw1shed two
free t!n'ows at two seconds to secure
the VICtory:
The. Ch1efs made 21 of 49 field
goals, mcludmg five of 17 threes,
converted 16 of 19 free 1hrows, and
outrebounded Jackson 29·21.
Maib&amp;_"h and Slack each grabbed s1x
boards.

The lronmen connected on eight
of 19 treys, s1x by Howe and two by
Jarod Wolford as they finished with
a 23 of S4 effort on fielders. JHS
attempted only four free throws,
making three.
Quarter~
Jackson .................. IS-II-17-14=S7
Logan ...................... 23-14-8-18=63
JACKSON- Jarod Wolford 22·0=10; Brad Howe 3·6-0=24; Jason
Brown 4-0-0=8; Chad Grow 4-00=8; Jeremy Coffey 2.().3=7. Totalll:
15-8-3=57
LOGAN - Craig Frasure 1-00=2; Scot Thrapp 1-0·0=2; Coy
Lindsey 2·2-2=12; Chad Moore 2-06= 10; Jeff Maibach 6-0.2= 14; Lucas ·
(See SEOAL oa B-6)

LOSE : 10 LIS.
------·:SEOAL
. boys' cage standingss-----

HOLZER•
ME-DICAL
CENTER

S1. Henry 70. Minsler 68

n.

Wau:hlagton ..... 2621
New Jersey ..... 2~ 22
TmmpaBny
. 222 1
NY . blonden .. 14 30

.

Sprin1. blheutc:m 74. Oiecne"iew

Stow 86, Rawnu l2
Syhania Southview 54. Anthony
Wayne 41
Teays Val 6J, A.manda.Cican:reek 44
Tiffin Cal~erl 86, Hopewell-loudCia
7S
Tiffin Coh.tmbian 6:\, Bel~'Yue 60
npp City Day. Stebbl\!163
TCII Emanuel Rapt 61 , Maumee Val.
4l
· Tol Lllliley 76, Tol. St., 71 (l 01'1
Tol. Ropn 100, Tol. Woodwanl67
'l'ol. Scolt S9. Tol. St. Jobn'r Sl
Tol. St Fnncio 72. Tol. Cidlollc S7
• Tol. Woi1&lt;6l :Tol. BowollerS7.
Tol. Wllluner 7115, Fiemoat l011 S4

~

))

49

Vandaliil-Buller 32, Piqua 48
Venrulion 76, Lorain Soulhvtew 50
Versailles 57. Gillham 53
Vincenl Warren ~I. GAllipolis 30
W. Chesler Lakota 62. Mitldletown 61
W Uberty Saltm 91, Triad ;,
W. Un10n 68, Fayettevdle45
Wadswonh 70, Copley !H
Walsh Jesutt 64, Canton Co.fh. 44
Wapakoneta 7'1i, Van Wert 67
Wancn K~npedy .51,,Warrca HowlaM

Sprinab«o l8.1(ings 49
SI.'CIIinvtl\e 15, Coshocloa ~j

rrun Adm KinJ l4, Sondurky 47 •
ram Cath. 82, Elyria CGih. 74
udo111ville 60, Medina Buckt!ye 39
LowellVIlle~ . McDonald )7
Lutheran E 78, Drand Rivl!f Acad ~S
Lulheran W. 66, Cohunbia 56
Manchc~ter· 80 . IMian Val. 56
Mansfteld Sr. 91, Manon Hardini 6:l
Mnpk:1on 56, Monroev1l&amp;e 4~
Manetta 67, Alhens S8
MnrionEIJin61, RivuVaJ.49 ,
Marion L.cxal SZ. Fort RKoYery 34
M&lt;Wi'J" Plearant74, N. 1,Jnloo·l2
Marhn&amp;to• 62. Lotinme 59
• Marysville 73, WbiiCholl 65 (On .
Muon 70, Ullle Milml 64
Mauillon 81 . LDWiwi!leAQI&amp;iftll '18
Mutillon Cbr. 87.,'Oe. Hlftr.,e 7l
Matillon Jacbon 63, Wcktater 52
Mudllon r.tty S7, New Phlladelpbio

Hill,l 80. Cin. :Wetltrn Hilla

Pandora-Gilboa,, Vaalu~:.!il
Pootdina ~7. Umoa Perry H
~sburg 94, Millbary Lake ~2
Pctus'Yillc: 60. N Central ~R
Piketon 58, Adena :\9
Pollll1d !'iti, Canfiek145
Port Oin10n 71, Oak Harbor ~I
Poftersv1Uc (Pa) Chr. 62, Victory Chr.

Portsmoulh Clay 86, Ponsmouth 1:::. 78
Portsmouth Notre Dllme M, Franklm
Fumace Green62
Preble Shawnee 74, BrookVllle 69
Roc:lne Southern 78, Reedsville Eut-

Leipsic 79, Cor)'•Rilwson 64
l.e1t1nglon 68, Ashland 48
Ubef\y CZenter 53, P11rick Ht!nry ~2
Uberty Union 62, Filher Cath 48
Uck1n, Hti 54. Millen.pon S2
Uma Shawnee 70, Ol!fiance 61
Uncolnv1ew 90. (7olumbus Oro~~ 64
Lognn 61, l11Cbotl Sl

• ·' ,Cin. El...,.79, Cin Moeller70
• .,. 'Cm.,HuJhel 67, Cm. Harri1011 41
" ~
. M-ira J4., Cin Finneytown H
.. , t
, MDriemonl II, Cin. Indian Hi1161

. Oak

Ohio Deaf ?J, Weuern Penn. (Pa.)
Deaf 50
Old Fon 64, Folroria S1 Wendehn 49
Olent411JY 68, Uuca48
Olmsted Falls 69. Avon Lnkt! 49
Ontono 67, Colonel Crawford 42
Oritnac: Chr Acad 37, N Coas1 Chr

Jackson Center 57, Botkina S6 (OT)
.lewet:t·Scio 61, StmsbuiJ ~
Jolltn Glenn 12. Sheridan 46
JC1bn11own 89, Cen1erburg 83 (2 OT&gt;
Jonathan Alder 65, London 59
Kalida 1,2. Miller C11y 49
Kenton 70. Cehna S5
Kenton Ridge 6.1. Fkllc:lon1ru~ 61
Kettcnng ~ Iter 76, C1n McN1cholns

Canton GknOak 72. Un1on1own Lake

'- • .

Georgetown 90, lk1hcl·Tate 68
GibsonbtJrJ 93, Grnoa 81
Gl'1lnlt\l1ew 67, W. Jdferson 38
Harrulton 71 , Faufield 64
Harrulton Badm 49, Cm. Roger

47

Huron 44, Mnrs~na42

· • Cambrilflo 61. Claymom 48
CIIIUd Witlchr:siCT 70. Hllmillon Twp .
' 67 (OT)

~.n':

Moraan 8), Philo 69
Mount Gilead 69, Northmoor 50
Moonl Vernon 62, Fr.mklin Hts 58
N. Admm 82, Wluleook 67
N Canton 49, Allillllce 42
N Olmsred 68, Frurv1ew 5~
Napoleon 75, Oregon Clay 12 (OT)
New Albll!ly 4~. Berne Union :n
New Bremen 8~ . Pnrkway 64
New Relgel72, Fremont St JoSI!ph 61
New Ridunond 64, Clermont Nonheastern 60
.
Newcome:utown 62, R1dgewood ~7
N1les 70, Strulhers :U
Nonhndge 68, M1ddle1own f\bdisnn
l4
Norton 90. Tallmadg~ 64
.Norwalk 81, W1llard 71
Norwalk St Paul61. Plymoutll4:'1
Oak Glen, W.Va 53, Bu~ktye !Acal

Delta~$ , Wauseon ~2
Dublin Coffman 68. Hilliard 6:l (QT)
E. Chntoh 72, M1anu Trace 68
E. Knox 70. Danville 44
E. Uverpool 81 , Rk:hmond Edt son ~~
E. Palestine 80, United 62
Eastern Brown 6S, Manchesler ~7
Eastwood 69, Olsego 52
Edaenon ~3 . Aymvllle 19
Ehda 74. LIITID B•h 63 (011
Elmwood 66. Kansas L.akola 60
El)'lla68, Mklview 49
&amp;did 64, Brush 4~
Ever&amp;rel!n 56, Montpelier S4
Fnirf~eld Union 71, Circlevillt! 66
Ftllrlen 41, TuiCGtDwas Val. 40
Fnir11iew 17. Tinera 41
Fayette 79, 'Stryker 62
Field 82, Moplorc: 61
Findlay 74, Bedford, Mich . .S9
Fireland1 ~8. WelltnJIOn 49
Fostona 51. Sylvuia Nonhview 49
F'rcdt!ricktown 70,,Buckeyc Ccatral64
Galloway Westland 6S, New:uk :W
Gilrfleld Hts Trinity 57, Holy Nnme

t•

" 31 '

Mohawk68.Senc&lt;aE. 61

47

Boise St. n.ldolho ~3

Idaho St. ~ E. Wa5hington 'li~
•. 1 Saa franaKo 19. St Mary's, C4l

Mmford 97. PortsiTIOllth W 78
MisSISSJnawa Val. 91, Covmglon 62

ColumlHana Cre"v1cw 64, Ulbon ~~
ConOiton Val. 68. Cadiz 61
Convoy Cres1view 66, AllenE 61
Crestwooct63, SlftCtsboro 42
Crooksville 51. New Lexington 48
Cuyahoaa Falls 62. Barberton 42
Coy...sn HIS ~ 1-nden&lt;O 411
Dalton S7, Norwayne ~~Day Carrt'1ll66, Lemon.Morvoe 51
Day Dunbov 88, Colonel Whtll! 68
' Day Nonhmonf 67, W. Carrollton ~
Delaware 94, Watkins Memorial48
' Delphos Jefferson S9, Spencirv1lle SJ
Delphos St. John's 6J, New Knoxville

Friday's action

-~

M1amisburg 76, FnmkJm ~6
M1ddldown Chr. 86, Calvary Or. 49
Middlclown Fenwick 76, Oa;ford Tnlawanda SO
Midpark 62, Brecksvillr: :'i7
Milan Ednon 78, St~ndusky Sl . Mary's
67
Mineral Ridge 61 , Spring. Local49

Col. Independence 76, Col West 73
lOT)
Col. M1ffiin8l. Col. Centennial41
Col. Wattenon 65, Ccl. St. Char~ 47
Col. Whetstone 76, Col . Linden·
MciOnley 46
_
Collin&amp; Wala'fl Rcscr'Ye 5~ . Jack10n

~CAA

\

White estimated the c05t of an enforce the final three yean of Modopen-air stadium at $220 million to ell 's lease but chose to negotiate a
$2SO million. It is not yet known settlement instead.
how much a dome and a convention
Modell had threatened to have his
center would add, or where that team practice in Baltimore and fly Jo
money would come from.
·
Cleveland the day before home
Even though domes and anificial games for the next Jhree yean if
turf are offensive to many football Cleveland held him to the lease.
fans, White said the c1ty has to
"He would have been for all
explore those options.
intents and purposes bankrupt,"
"There's no reason to do this just White said. " We would have
for sports," the mayor said. "Spend , wreaked more financial havoc on the
$17S million (the public's ,basic NFL than anything in their history.
share) for eight dates a year? Give But at the end of three years. what do
me a break. It makes no sense. That's
you have? We'd have three years of
why we need to continue looking at
beating our chest like Tarzan. The
lh1s as economic development and
day after three years, we would have
not as sports."
nothmg."
White empathized with fans
In spite of the settlement, White
who've been calling radio talk shows
showed no sign that he has mellowed
to condemn the deal because it lets
toward Modell, calling him a "bald·
Modell go through with his move.
faced liar" for accusing the city of
The city had filed a lawsuit to
acting too slowly 10 improve condJ·

'•

~

...
matil

'

beyond. White said Cleveland would ,
not ate;ept a team that would have to
break a lease.
That provision rules out the
Cincinnati Bengals. who were
rumored to be interested in moving
unless voters next month approve a
sales tax increase aimed at providing
a new stadium.
'
&lt;;:leveland officials identified only
three teams ' whose lease situalions
might pennit a move by 1999: Buffalo, Chicago and Tampa Bay. Of
those, only Tampa Bay has been
speculated to be a plausible candidate.
In the unlikely event a team
needs to move to Cleveland before
the new stadium is ready, one site
that has been discussed for home
games is Ohio State University in
Columbus, a 2 1/2-hour drive from
Cleveland.

11111 DODGE DAYTONA 15648, A/T, A/C, AM/FM
I'Mr def., sport ~els .............................................-..........
19112 GEO METRO 15633, Blue, AM!fM Clll., A/C, clolh

5:

. ..

owner Art Modell move his fran.CLEVEJ-A.ND (AJ') - The city chise to Baltimore in exchange for
be wodcing feverishly over the the NFL's promise to put anQiher
next monttl and a· half to detennine team in Cleveland by 1999. The NFL
if lt;c.u afford to add a dome and a also will contribute up to $48 million
cO..IJ~ntion center to the football sta- let the conslruction of a stadium on
djwn, it will build for its next NFL the site of crumbling Cleveland Sta,
tealn~
dium.
·~By Apiil1 , we'll either have the
Modell, who is breaking a lease
ll)~ltiplex-dome idea and the financ- that runs through 1998, will pay the
io~ 111 least generally in place, or city $9.3 million - the amount of
we ,ll 'go with an open-air stadium," incorwe the city government will lose
Mafor Mjchael R. White said Sat- in rent, taxes and other ~venues by
not having football for three yearsuf$y.
'! White Sai.d.there is a small winplus up to $2.2S millioJ! of the city's
~~.,.Y 9f oppQrtunity for. changing the legal costs. He 'II also leave behind
ctty:s plan for an open-air stadium to the name "Browns" and the team's
a1dome beCause detailed planning colors and records.
m,.t&amp;gi.!l•o.on if the stadium is to
Most likely, Cleveland will be
IJO;.ftjady for ~-NFL team by 1999. getting an expansion team, because
~ ,Vnder a 1¢ntative deal approved all but four or five existing NFL
Fri~py; by~ NFl. owners in Chicago, teams· have leases binding them to
ql)llcl.and" agreed to let Browns their current cities throu~h 1999 or

K··' •Page B5

second

Hanford got the only score of the
period.
lifter a Whalen' pow~r-play opportunity h$1 .exp•ire4~
a shot from near the blue ' line by G!en Wesley
deflected by Cassel~ past Roy.at 16:43. ·
Both Roy and Muzzatti had point-blank saves in
period.
In the third, the Avalanche killed off what amc1un£~J
ed to a 4:0S penalty when Claude Lemieux
assessed a g~e misconduct.
,, ..
Canu~b 3, Oilen 2 (OT) - In Eclmonton, R~t;!
Courtnall scored 21 seconds into overtime for Vant;
couver.
'• ·,-c.:
Courtnall's goal ruined an outstanding perf~:
mance.by Oilers backup goaltender Fr~ci'Btalh~
playing in his first game in a.month. Braibwai.t~ st . .·1
37 of 40 shots.
. , . ::;
For the third time in four games, the Oilcri' wete:~
unable to hold a lead through the third period.
...,.:
Scott Thornton and Jason Arnott gave Edmopton
2-0 lead in the first before the Canucks came baclc OIJ':
goals by Tim Hunter and Alexander Mogilny, whO!~
scored his 44th of the season at 10:39 of the third. • :

.

~;~UCK MELVIN

Jlws&amp;au Ct..-_.

.'

e:
o
.
l
iticians
to'find out .if city .c an afford domed stadium
...
1' •

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

.

Wh~alers &amp; Canucks defeat Avalanche and Oilers in OT
'r

~ Sundey,February11,1996

ANNUAL HEART
FAIR
.
.

with.Ho~
. CliJJic' Cardiac .Rf!hab participating

~~

Tuesday, F~bruary 13-

.10 a.m ..to ~ . p.m.
French: Five Hundred·Room
1

'

I

,

'y j
'

· Vanity
Leque Overall

Iafm

..

'

y

Free.~nd o~ to ,public

12
II

JAckson • .,....... .. ... . ...3

8

~RVAILEY

6
6
7
II
9

0
2
2
6
7

.. : .... ..0 10
Point Pleasant .. . .... ... ...x x·

.

••
:

Frldly's..-111

s4 Warren Loc!jl Sl, OALLIPOLIS
' C)lesapeake
V

69.

RIVER

Y45 ·

etra67;·Athens58
·'
, L!Jian 6~. JJII:kson 57
l ~nt Pleasant I02, Wihatila 6S

•

Fairland a1 Coal Grove; Greenfield
at East Clinlon; Point Pleasant at
Meigs
Thursday: Point Pleasant at
Wahama
This week'ugenda
Friday: GALLIPOLIS at
Tuesday: RIVER VALLEY at Jackson; Logan at Athens; Warren
Warren Local; Vinton County. at Local at Marietta'; Coal Grove at t
ke at South Pomt; ' Chesa eake.

All Nlitural T-Lite""
WHh Chromium Plcollnele

t•dllopoll~

TIE TAX BOOKS· NOW OPEN FOR THE
FIRST HALF 1995 COLLECTION OF
RIAL. ESTATE
TAXES. AND ALSO
.
FOR
'IllES.
·FINAL CLOS GDATE WILL BE
MARCH 4, 199&amp;.
"

I

1 .

HOWDD
E. FUll
.
.IGS COUm TIEASUIEI
-

:

·is American Heart Month

s

Maneua ....................9 2 13
Logan .......................9 2 12
Jilckson .....................6 S 12
\Yarren Locai ...........S S 10
RIVER VALLEY .....3 7 7
Point Pleasanl.. ......... x x S
OALLIPOLIS ..........3 8 S
Athens ...... ....... ......... 2 8 6
'
: Reserves (leape play only)
Warren Local ....... . .. . . 10
Marietta .......... . ......9
&lt;lALLIPOLIS ... ....... . .7
4&gt;gan .. . . ... ... . . : .. ... .S
Athens .. , .......... . ....3

.,.

•

WLWL

IN 3 DAYS

Parlcersburg South at Marietta
Fort Frye at Warren Local
Portsmouth at Alexander
Greenfield McClain at Hillsboro

TlaeJ ·played S.lurday

'! Gallipolis-It !&gt;oint Ple&amp;unt
A~ at 'Waverly

,_

•

\1

IIH411

tilt, Cftlil81 cloth lntertor..................................... ,........... $4550
1990 GEO STORM 15575, A/T, A/C, AM!fM CIIS., sport .
wtleela.............................................................................$5995
1990 OLDS CALAIS 15533, Blue, AM/FM, duel mii'I'OI'I,
cloth Interior...................................................................$4995
1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM LE 15642, Whlta, A!T, A/C,
AMJFII ceiL, sport Wheels, rear defroster ..........,...,_. $6995
11194 HYUNDAI EXCEL 15625, AfT, A/C, rear
fold
down rear Maa ...........-................._............. _.,.................... :mro
11194 FORD ~PIRE 15626, 4 Dr-, A/T, A/C, rear defroster,
air bag, clotl'llnterlor.....................................................$8220
1993 DODGE SHADOW 15628, WhHe, A/C, A/T, AM!fM,
rear defro.lter, cloth Interior ......................................... $8125
1993 DODGE SHADOW ES 15632, Green, AIT, A/C, AMJFM,
tilt, crulu, air beg, sunroof ..,.,. __ ,.,_.. ..........--....... ,...... $8495
1994 DODGE SHADOW 15621, Red, A/C, A/f, AII/FM, tilt,
rear defroster, cloth Interior......................................... $8870
1993 MERCURY SABLE 15634, A/f, AJC, P. Mill,
windows, locks, tilt, cruiM, AM/FM ceu., V-6 eng.....$8939
11194 MERCURY TRACER SfW 15637, A/T, A/C, AM/FM, air
bag, power mirrors ........................................................$9289
1992 CHEVY LUMINA EURO 15652, Red, A/C, A/T, til~
cruiM, AM/FM ceu., P. wlnclowe, clotlllntertor......... $8995
1989 BUICK REGAL CUSTOM 15617, V-6 eng., A!T,
A/C, AM/FM Clll., rear del., PW, locks &amp; Mill, tilt,
cruise ...............:..............................................................$7775
1994 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 15565,2 Dr., white, V-6 eng.,
A/C, AfT, AM/FM ceu., tilt, air bag; sport wheele ...... $9985
1993 PLYMOUTH LASER 15606, 2 Dr., red, AM/FM, AJC,
rear defroster, cloth Interior ......................................... $98'5
1993 FORD TAURUS 15564, Blue, 4 Dr., A!C, AfT, AM!fM
ceu., crulae, air beg, P. Mllll, windows &amp; locks ... $10,244
1992 FORD T-BIRD 15611, Red, A/C,A/T, AII/FM cess., P.
windows, locks &amp; Mall, tilt, crulae, air bag--.....-........$9700
1995 CHEVY CO~SICA 15639, White, A/C, A/T, AM/FM,
apt wltla., tilt, cruiM, rear del,, air bag, 30,000 mi.
1994 FORD TAURUS GL 1551-3, AJC, A/T, AMJFII .ceu., tilt,
crulu P. win,, rear del., air bag, cloth lnt ......__.. ........... ~:r.nr:»
1992 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE 15612, Blue, A/f,
crulu, PW &amp; locks, AM/FM, P. Mltl, cloth Int.......
11194 DODGE INTREPID, 15658, Brown, V-6 eng., AJC, A!T,
PW &amp; locks, tilt, cruiM, AM/FM cus .......... _.. ..._.. ..... ~110,!1189
1993 CHEV. LUMINA 15657,
A/T, A/C, AM!FM ceu.,
tilt, crulu, power wlndowa &amp; •oc:1s .......................... ,
1~ ~ONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 15656, Red, 4 Dr.,A!T,A/C,
AM/FM cass., til~ cruiM, power win. &amp; locka..........$1
1~ OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S 15655, Black, AlT. AJC,
AM/FM cess., tilt, cruiM, reer del., cloth lnt..... _.. .....$1
1994 DODGE INTREPID 15654, V-6 eng., A/C, A/T, tilt,
cruiM, AM/FM ceu., P. win. " locks, rear def......... $1
1994 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 15653, Red, V-6
A/T, tlH, cruiM, P. win. &amp; locks, air bag, rear IIIIR..... ;,n ,o:'lll
1994 OLDS CIERA 15659, Blue, A!T, A/C, AMJFII
cruiM, po- windows.\ locks, air 1111g1..........., .........;-uu
1993 CHEV. CAMARO 15561, Black,
A/f, AMJFM
ceu., tilt, crulu, PO, PL, P. •fll. whls, 34,000 ml .... S13,

ftUCKI

1990 FORD RANGER LONG BED 15650, AM!FM cut,
sport wheels, rear slider.... ._. ......................._. ............... $6200
1993 FORD RANGER XLT 15647, A/C, AMJFM cau., 'rur
slider. bed liner. aport wheels ...................................... $8905
1992 FORD RANGER 15592, Red, AMIFM cass., bad liner,
sport wheels,.cuttom etrlpea .......................................$7833
1989 CHEVY 5-1015522, 36,000 miles, AM/FM CIU.,
running boards, rear allder, duel mlrrors .................... $4995
1993 FORD RANGER XLT 15620, Long bad, AM/FM ceu.,
clllal mirrors, bed llner...................................................$8420
1994 MAZDA TRUCK 15552, 15,000 mil, bal. of fact war.,
blue, CUll stripes, AM/FM CISI., apt. wheeis ............. $9250
1993 FORD RANGER XLT 15623, Red, AM/FM, bad liner,
aport wheels ...................................................................$98100
19113 FORD RANGER XLT SUPER CAB 15539, V-6
A/T,.AJC, rnr slider, apt. wheels, 2tone palrlt ...., .... i$12,905·
1995 CHEVY 5-10 SUPER CAB LS. •""""'•
seat1, 11,000
air bag, sport whetle, dual mirrors, rear
miles, balance olfactory warranty ............................ $11,775
1995 CHEVY 5-10 SUPER CAB 15555, Black, A!r, AJC,
AMJFM cass., tilt, Cl')llll, topper, spt. whla., dual mir., rear
nip seats, 23,000.mlles, bal. of fact. warr................. $13,9115

414'•
1994 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4 15577, White, Lt. Tahoe, IIIIIMr
-~~. AJC, wr, V-6 eng., 4 Dr., AM!fM cau., power loeb
&amp; windows, tilt, crulu, sport whetla, roof rsc:K ... ,,.,.t.,tiUU
1994 FORD EXPLORER XLT 4X4 15585,4 Dr., sport
whetla, AJC, AfT, AMJFM cau., tilt, cruiM, rear clef., P.
wlndowl &amp; IDC;I(I.,_,,,._.,,,,,,, ........................................ 1~'"'
11194 GEO TRACKER 4X415589, Black, AM/FM ca11.,
sport wheels, dual mln'Ors ........._ ............................--....$111,34t•

�'1 198$• ,.
• ,Ie

.

.

•

Sunci8y, FebrUary 11', 11Ve

Po111eroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, 0H • Point PIIIAnt, WV

r '

....-

_Ct,esapeake beats
River .Valley· 6~.;45
to ·stay u.ndefeated
lyG.SPENC!ROSBO~NI

11m11 l1nllnel Sid

CHESHIRE - ' In Friday niJbt's
varsity boys· basketball contest at
~iver Valley Hig)l Schqol, the
Chesapeake Panthers uscd 8.0 and
19-0 runs in the first half to get ahead
pf the host Raide(s and claim a 6945 win.

•

The Raiders scored the game's
first four points on lay ups by 6-foot- ·
3 senior postman Bruce Ward. However. the Panthers started chipping
away at the 6-2 deficit they faced
after Joey James, River Valley's 6foot-2 freshrnan.forward, got his inthe-lane jumper to fall with 4:091eft.
in the opening 'act.
•
'Senior guard Greg James restored
.tw,o of the three points River Valley
~ost from its lead , with a layup
I). Then . Chesapeake scored
i&lt;C!&amp;ht unans~ered points,_ six carne
~rn three-point shots from opposite
!»ides of the basket by senior guard
Moon fire&lt;) 21 ~onds apart~o lead 13-18 with 59 seconds left.
~;,.. ~ River Valley power forward Man
e-pter got hi~ layup to fall with 46
·~econds left to cut Chesapeake's lead
llo 13-10. 11)en the Panthers went on
!11 19.0 run.fueled by five-point con!Jributioqs by sophomore guard Chris
::F~~t. -'\lex 6ue and Moon.
·.. f~ :'Chesapeake 's very quick, but it
..wu a basic press," said Raider men~ Carl Wolfe of what drove that
R• which continued until River Val:tJ!yJQtWard James Cochrane nailed
· '3 trey with 2:23 left in the second
quarter. "The press killed us."
~ss turned things around
fo( us;•: said Panther boss Norm
Pe!'Sin; whese troops stayed unbeat. en 'mainly because of lhose runs.
'.P.\:rsin said the press was respon~ible for the Panthers' hitting 10 of
I4 ·Q~ld·g.oaljlttempts in the second

ap:o
:He

't''mle

Lyne Center slate
• RIO GRANDE - Here is the
sc~ule for the week of Feb. I I-18

.
i

AVIQIHARP . /
~BASSE'ITI" VALLEY:

!!4!, (AP)

"'IP'!"''i

~
!D
~:te.iy Jor the win,,. , I · • •.! • ..
""' If., • '·~ /
1 •
~ Cit
.Jike'-Paul Schipper, a

i

· ·'
·f'¥=·t·~-'=~di'usiast
who under·
: ~~~heart surgery last

j

s
~.iecuperated in time
t(J ·. ~:;bts ;l4-ytar streak of skiiif)J;~~!i:4iY. the toSOrt is open.
'ff~l;fi~'now," slidt~chipper

.!

streak
anytime
soon.
"I don't
know
how long I'll go,
but I don't see any point in stopping
now," Schipper said.
The fQrmer fighter pilot began his
.

skiing streak at the start of the 1981 82 season. Every day since he has
made the two-mile trip from the ski
lodge he operates to the rcsort for a
few runs.
Schipper has skied i,n rain, blizzard conditions and rninus-70 windchills, so day No. 2,396 last month
was a piece of cake.
Using a system refined over the
years, Schipper called to check the
trails, put a note on the door saying

he was "going skiing" and then piled the mountain at midnight aboard a heed Constellation in 1969. He recuinto his Bronco, a timeworn machine snoweat, which is used to groom perated from the bums and broken
with missing door panels.
trails. He skied down the mountain bones, only to be grounded after
With ski poles on the dashboard, in the snowcat's headlights, then surgery to repair an aortic aneurism.
Schipper has broken his leg and
his Sugarloaf season pass on his arm drove to the graduation. The next
both collar bones. 'Then there was the
and a dog in the back seat, be eased day, he was back at Sugarloaf.
"With Paul, it's just business as surgery to remove his kidney. And
the Bronco onto Route 27 with care,
because it isn't easy to drive while usual," said Rich "Crusber"Wilkin- last summer, be underwent an aortic
wearing ski boots.
son, who is in charge of maintaining valve replacemen\ and triple bypass.
None of it has stopped Schipper,
Schipper has been known to use the ski surfaces. "To him, it's nothwho
retired in 1972. He bought the
ing
out
of
tbC
ordinary."
the plow on the front of his truck to
Lumberjack
Lodge seven years latAnother time, Schipper delayed
make a parking place if the lot is full.
But dra.&lt;tic steps weren't necessary surgery to remove a cancerous kid- er.
Schipper's skiing streak has made
ney for several weelcs during the
on this d~y. ·
"He's the iron man!" shouts his spring of 1993. When the resort shut him a legend at Sugarloaf, which
son, Jeff Schipper, who joined his . down in May, Schipper went in for boasts New England's tallest ski
surgery. When autumn carne, he mountain. Everyone knows him, and
father i,n the lift line.
people consider it an honor to ski
Half an hour later, it was over. was ready to continue skiing.
down
the mountain with him.
As a pilot for Eastern Airlines,
Schipper had completed three runs
Schipper
said his goal is to reach
and picked up his wife to take her to Schipper broke his ribs, wrists .and
at
least
5,000
consecutive days of
sternum jumping from the cockpit
the dentist in Skowhegan.
fuss over being held;" Homing said,
His face was bright pink from the when a strut collapsed on his Lock- skiing at Sugarloaf.
butthe sampling itself didn't seem to rninus-20 windchill, but in fact it was
bother them .
a fine day for skling. Nothing like the
A tiny sample of tissue was also time he looked like the lin Man in
taken from the peCtoral muscle. their "The Wizard of Oz" wben he finmain swimming JIIUscle, to investi· ished a run in freezing rain, he said.
gate the development of myoglobin,
"There have been some hairy
an oxygen-bearing protein crucial to days with the wind and cold," he
diving anim!lls ..
..•
said. "Then the nice days come
Eventually, some of the IS pen· along and you forget all about
guins developed individual person- them."
alities.
Keeping the streak alive requires
One that had a crest on its fore- careful planning in the face of grad·
All AIIIIOIIIICIIIG 1HfiiiEIOCA11011 10
head and a distinctive wiggle of its uations, doctors' appointments and
hips was dubbed Elvis. A particular- other obligations. Schipper has
ly portly Emperor became Winston, proven to be creative in his efforts to
ski every day.
as in Churchill.
I
During ski season in I 987, he
All went well until Jan. I 0, with
the birds making dives lasting as long faced the dilemma of making it to his '
as 25 seconds. Homing and Starke son's graduation in Poughkeepsie,
got worried when one of the Emper, N.Y.
His solution was to hitch a ride up
ors stayed down for four minutes.
Peering through the water, Homlng spotted the penguin in the jaws of
a seal. When the seal carne up to the
dive hole, Starke grabbed the penguin
and Homing whacked the seal on the
chest with a stick, startling it so it let
go.
The penguin had a cut chest and
foot, but it recovered.
As the end of summer neared, the
Emperors were suitably fattened up.
Homing and Starke called for a U.S.
Navy helicopter ·from McMurdo to
carry the Emperors to the edge of the
308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO 1·992-6614 -1-800-837-1094
sea ice and freedom.
"We had a couple_ who took off a
tttW
day, early," Starke sa1d. "They went
auto., air, cassette, · tilt, cruise,
down one dive hole, came up anothintermittent wipers.
·

cowboys' conduct
tesea·
r ch .o n largest species
.

Ouartn lldlll
Chesapeake............. IS-24·5-25=69 '
'River Valley............ W-8-12-15=45 .

t:J.c#d

461 SOUTH THIRD

~

PHONE 992. 2196

1111DDLePORT. o\'\

.
14,200 MILES. 3-8 V-6 eng., PS, PB,
Climate Control, air cond., AM/FM stereo cass., leather interior, tilt &amp; cruise,
power windows &amp; locks, cast aluminum
wheels, power mirrors, rear defroster. .
NADABOOK
$21,850.00

.

Total FG: 18-48 (37.5%)
R&amp;ound!i: 28 (J. James 8, Toler

7)

DRPIICI

"We try to do a good deed," said ,
Markus Homing, one of the chief
penguin wranglers, along with Lisa
Starke. The project was part of a
long-term study into penguin physiology by Gerald Kooyrnann lit the
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
at the University of California, San
Diego.
,
·
The 'penguin corral, on a small
patch of sea ice out by the iceberg,
captured the hearts of the staff at the
U.S. McMurdo Station and New
Zealand's Scott base. Homing and
Starke had to fend off visitors eager
to see the Emperors huddled by their
"swimming pool" chopped in the ice.
By January, all 15 penguins were
diving and swimming, each one with
a data recorder about the size of a cigareUe lighter glued to its back to measure the time it spent in the water, its
speed ahd dive depth.
Each bird had also swallowed a
tiny.radio transmitter, to monitor its
feeding habits by checking its stom·
ach ternperaturc. When a penguin
gulps down some fish, krill or squid,
its stomach temperature drops. The
Emperors had no problem accepting
the pill-sized radios since they also
swallow pebbles, which help their
digestion, Homing said. The radio
eventually passed through their sys·
tern.
'
Starke and Homing took ,blood
samples to study the red oxygenbearing hemoglobin cells, drawing it
from a vein under the wing. "111ey
~

~~-, p~blic

JOI'IN WISSE
otWHdllfe
Ohio (AP) Ajnong the first wildlife laws enact$J&amp;tehood were
bounty payand pan·

$9905.00

OR PRICE

XLT I..ARIAT. 351 V-8 eng., PS, PB,
auto. trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo ·
·Cal!Sette, P. windows &amp; P. ,locks, tilt &amp;
cruise, sliding rear window, 8 foot bed, ·
·rear step bumper, dual tanks, swing lock
· mirrors:

WAS $12,~5

what has ile&lt;;0111e the founda·
. for today's bunting and,fishing
lawmakers passed a bill that
p~~::~~ the killing of muskrats
~
,.Mpy 1-0cl. IS, except
they,_..yere deemed a nuisance
causii(g diullage•.
measures were passed
in 1857 to protect fish and
such as bluebirds,
and cardinals.
1'873, the first state wildlife

'II

... '

302 V-B eng., PS, PB, auto . .trans., .. .,

agency was created to evaluate ~ays
..IQ improve Ohio's fish population.
The Ohio Fish Commission had an
annual budget of $1,000. But it
served as the forerunner of tnday's
Division of Wildlife.
· "One can see how our agency's
mission differs little from the think·
ing of state lawmakers during the
early years of our statehood," Division of Wildlife chief Michael
Budzik said. •
Budzik each year sets forth proposed fishing and hunting regulations for the upcoming year as
required by state law. Public hearings
are scheduled around Ohio today to
review proposed hunting regulations
and season dates for next fall and
winter.
A statewide public fish and game
hearing is scheduled for March 8 in
Colu.mbus. Following these hearings, final hunting regulation proposals will be presented for a vote of
the. Ohio Wildlife Council during its
April 4 meeting:

TRI·STATE MEDICAL CENTER
611 nH AVENUE, HUNTINGTON, WV

.(304) 529·1100- (304) 529·0000

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
SWIITBIART OF A SALI

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~~~22o.oo . NOW

our.jlow
ger away."
The helicopter
flying in to pick up
the rest of the flock saw the pair waddling off toward the sea.

ttttl

-Outdoor shorts-

.....

W(4S $20,815

KERO~SUN
.

SJ3,599

1996 CHEVY LUMINA

V6, auto., air, ,cassette, PW, PL, tilt, cruise •.
more.

sailing access

WAS
$18,376.00

CHICAGO (AP) - The Community Sailing Council's second
annual national directory of public
access sailing programs lists 850 that
offer sailing instruction to the gen·
eral public, including non-profit,
commercial, state, county, high
school, college. military and Scouting programs.
The 60-page booklet includes
150 new programs.
For a free copy, wrtie Lee Parks,
U.S. Sailing, P.O. Box 209, Newport •
R.I. 02840.

NOW

$16,959
1996 GMC FULL SIZE SIERRA
350 ve, auto., air, SLT Pkg., Z-71 Off Ro;adl
Pkg., loaded.

WAS

NOW

$22,489

ttttl 1995 ~TON GMC PICKUP

EXT. CAB, 4X4, Z·71
"

Th e Bibb ee Mo tor Co.

1994 GMC JIMMY

NOW

SLE

$22,9~9~1~~~~~
1996 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX SE

Dr. 4.3 V6, auto, Blue wlblue
Interior, AC, stereo cass,
window-locks, mirrors, tilt,

4 Dr., auto., V-6, loaded. 2 to choou lrom.

:~~77.00

$17 989

NOW

1995 CHEV. IMPALA SS Only 13,000 mlles ................................... $21,999
1994 CADILLAC SEVILLE SLS One owner ................................... $24,999
1992 OLDS DELTA 88 ••••••.••...••.....•••......•••..................•••••.•••.•.••••••.•••• $8,189
1990 PONTIAC GRAN.PRIX ...............................................................$6.499
1993 CHEV. CAVAUER Z24 Sunroof, V-6, air, more......................$10,999
1990 CADILLAC BROUGHAM 58,000 miles. Hurry! ....................... $8,999
2-1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME .................................................$7,999
1993 CHEV. S10 BLAZER 2.Dr., auto., air, V&amp;, 4x4, Tahoe ........... $15,995
1991 CHEV. S10 PICKUP Group effects, custom strlplng ............~$41 995
1995 TOYOTA PICKUP Uke new, only 5,000 mlles......................... $9,999
1992 CHEV. ASTRO VAN Low miles, nice, conversion, ,
·
. only 5,000 miles ............................................. Priced To Sell $13,985
'
'
1995 CHEV.% TON CONVERSION VAN Loaded, one owner ....... $18,$85,
1988 CHEV. ~TON SILVERADO PICKUP ..... ..

4.0 eng., PS, P..B. autr;&gt;. ttans., ~
stereo Cll~e. tilt &amp; cruise controt-,~P. ·
w~ndows. &amp; P: locks, re.- wiper, .wash~
~r. &amp; defrOster,• air cor\d., cast alum.
wheels, . local: one owner; 31,000
miles:·Stk. 42~ .
';
. .

THE.
WEATHER IS BACK

Y(!) .•. . . . . . .

Ge•lll

350 ve. auto,
1w111ray cloth Interior, AC, stereo,
windows, locks, cruise,
rear window.

.

L'
D
W.U ,·,. .

(FAMILY PUCTICEJ

Dr; VB, auto, Brown wlbrown
Interior, AC. stenio cass,
seats, windows, lock, cruise,
rear defrost.

•11 '

fi

SANDU JOSEPH, M.D.

1983 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE

.,l

WAS $12,995

•ow .

AND

10

'I

air cond., AM!FM stereo cassette,
&amp; cruise, P. windows &amp; P. lock!l,
foot bed with bed liner, lock~ln
out hubs, chrome rear step bumper.

FRIDAY SIMPSON, M.D.

:~i:'!~~~~e:,:~~n~~o~~'=

hearings
·•· s·· Sla·ted
Wif'UAtl·fe·. ·law

54,000 MILES. V-6 eng., power steering
&amp; power brakes, air cond., AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, power windows &amp; locks, luggage rack, rear wiper
washer and defroster.
NADABOOK .

'':,Jf~~~~~
court
made oRe
dayreservations
in advance ~~=:::.=...::::::~~.!:::;::;::::::~
~

• .l~OSS SEA ICE SHELF, Antarcti~(AJ!) - There are few tasks so
seemingly hopeless as shoveling
snow in a blizzard in Antarctica.
cowboys" who
The
hiUI(I-raising IS Emperchicks had to break out
the howling winds
subfreezing cold to keep the
ijiJic:ks' corral clear.
.
If the drifts were to reach the top
of the corral fence, the penguins
walk away. With them would
months of scientific research on
development, feeding and divhabits.
itDurirlg one snowstorm, three pen·
wandered out, but the Emperwere so bonded to each other that
escapees loitered near their pals
than make a break for it.
Emperors already owed their ·
to the scientists who raised them
lffill COITIII, next to an iceberg tr8pped
Ross Sea ice.
' ' .,.,.,.v all had beell captored as
chicks that couldn't
SW'~iv~:d on their own. So in
~~~ani~ for being fattened up by
hand-feedings of 1.5 kilos of
New Zealand herring, they
to monitoring of their divand sampling of
and muscle tissue.
the project ended, the
riie•arcl~ would have to bailie a
ljlflgi')I;,.SIJ~to ~ve .one of thei/' penliS Jaws. . /

'4

RIVER VALLEY (7-11) - J.
James 6-0-212=14, W\ll'd 4-0-0/1=8,
G. James 1-1-212=7, Toler 2-0I/2=5. Cochrane 0-1-010=3, Fitch 10- U2=3, Justice 0- I-010=3, Adams
'I-0-0/0=2. Totals: 15/36·3/lZ·
~s

ay PETER J. SPIELMANN

't~\.. COU!lt..

-·-·-

CHESAPEAKE (15-0)- Moon
2-3-212=15, A. Gue 1-2-212=10,
Mount 5-0-010=1 0, Clark 2-1-010= 7,
Fizer 3-0-1/1=7, Monk 1-0-4{5=6, S.
Gue 2-0-1/2=5, David Jones 2-0011 =4, Donnie Jones 1-0-1/2=3,
Wilburn 1-0-0/0=2. Totals: :zo/386/16-11115;69
Total FG: 26-54 (48.1%)
Rebounds: 31 (Clark 9)
Assists: 13 (S. Gue 4)
Steals: 15 (Clark 4)
Turnoven: 12
Fouls: 18

.

..

TAKES AIM- Wlth .Ch...paake'l Sammy.Que (00) In hllr.c:...
River Valley forward Joey Jame1 keept 1111 ay• on thll biiUt In
the third quarter of Friday nlght'a.game on the Aalderl' court T'hougJ\
Jamealed hll club with points, thll Aalderl ten 69-45. (Timla s.~:
tlnel phOto by G. Spencer Osborne)
,:

WHO'S OPEN? - Aa two Cheupeake players, 'inclllding Ryan
Mount
(4), cut off one path to the buellne, River VBIIey'a Greg James
.
(20) looks to hil '-" for ari opjn teammate during the first quarter
of Friday night'• game at River Valley High School, where the Panthert won 69-45. James finished with seven pointl. (Timea·Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Oaborne)

c

-·

as he prepared recently for his
2,396th c.;~nsecutive dsy of skiing. "1
feel better than ever."
People who work at Sugarloaf say
the venerable skier loolcs better than
he has in years. He wd he has no
intention of dropping his skiing

~P·enguin

-·-·-

. ~"L·Y'l~ '-'F•ncr membership hold·

7 Ski resorts like Sug-

, l!llJSA ~~~mlintenance in

quarter. Chesapeake finished the
. half with a 16-for-29 showing from
the field.
The Raiders' 2-for-l'o effort in the
second quarter, the product of missing all of their six attempts in the
paint,, contributed to their 7-for-21
field-goal shootihg in the first h$lf.
.The Raiders'lO-for-27 field-goal
shooting after halftime assured the
Panthers of tying the all-time series
at 2-2, getting their first-ever win on
the RVHS court and their first victory over River Valley since their
first meeting on Jan. 29; I993.
Chesapeake won thljt game by a 6~48 margin.
The shooten: Moon led all scorers with IS points harvested mostly
. from 5-for-1 5 field-goal shooting.
Chesapeake, which got offense from
all but two players or. its 12-man roster, got 10-point efforts from Alex
Gue (3-7 FGs) and Ryan Mount (S·
8 FGs).
Joey James led the Raiders with
I4 points gained primarily from 6for- I2 field-goal shooting.
Reserve notes: River Valley's
reserve team captured its second win
of the season by overcoming an
eight-point deficit in the fourth quarter to beat Chesapeake 53-44.
The Panthers led 23-1 S at halftime and 40-34 at the third quarter's
end before leading by eight early in
prime time..Bunhe Raiders, getting
five points from Bryan Drummond,
four each from Joe Justice, Nick
Rocchi and Tim Wellington and two
from Matt Davidson in the frame.
overcame the deficit and captured
the win.
The hosts limited Chesapeake to
four points- baskets by Chris Lane
and ·Ryan Skeens - in the last act.
Rocchi led the Raiders (2-16)
with 13 paints, while Drummond
had 12 and Wellington finished with
10. Chesapeake's Bryan Brammer
led all scorers with I6, while Lane
had 12.
The fUture: This week's agenda
has the Raiders playing at Warren
Local Tuesday and returning horne
for their regular-season finale Saturday against Athens.

.SEOAL games..

;U·lB&lt;:sts)()-;alrei :t•o .be;m~c:::::::

'

·~Hi. pper heads for ski slOpes after tripie-bypass surgery

Assllls: II (Graham, G. James &amp;
at 1the University of Rio Grande's
J. James 3 each)
Ly)lll Center.
Steals: 4
., . Fitness center, gymnasium
Turnoven: 23
.
· and rac:quelball tourts
Fouls: 1.6
; ~·Today..;...l-3 and 6-H p.m.
Monday~ 7 a.rn.-U p.m.
' ,Thesd8y - 7 a.m.- II p.m.
· )yedue.clay- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
&lt;;ontinued from B-5l ,
: ; 'Qaursday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
• •.1 FridAy- 7 a.rn.-9 p.m.
: __S.atU.,._y..:.. 1-6 p.m.
Kline 2-2-4=14; Chad Slack 2-1- , 2-1=13; Tim Heslop 4-0-4=12;
; Sundjiy, Feb._l8..:.. I-3 and 6- U "2=9. Tetals: 16-5-16=63
Adam Trautner 1-1-7= 12; Jarred
p.m·. , ·.Rese~ve score: Jack~on 42,
Perrine 1-1-0=5; Joe Vukovic 9-0,·· \ .., .
Logan 41
3=21; Tim Binegar 2..()..0=4. Totals;
: ·,~;~·
Pool
20-4-15=67
. '.'~'oday- 1-3 and 6-9 p.m.
. Marietta 67, Albens 58
Reserve score: Marjeua 77.
1 ~O@daY, - 6-9 p.m.
At Marietta; the Tigers took
.TheSilaY - 6-9 p:m.
advantage of the absence of Athens'
·Wecm.My- closed
leading scorer, Mike Boyd, who was
,..unclay- 6-9 p.m.
· suspended for violating the school's
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
attendance policy Fridsy, as they
'SAturday- 1-3 p.m.
were never headed in running their
; ~ncl&amp;y, t;el!- 18 - 1-3 and 6-9 record to 13-5 and 9-2.
p.m .•
Except for an early 5-5 tie, the
Tigers were i'n cornpleteocornmand,
., .,:
F~:weJcht rooni
. posting quarter leads of 23-13, 35'1'0ii!Jy- closed
27, and 50-39.
M~tnCiaY - closed ·
Four ligers scored in double digits, led by Joe Vukovic's 21 points
Th~;r-:- closefl
.
\'Vedl'lejgdliy 3:30-8:30 p.m.
and seven of his team's.20 rebounds.
Thursday......, 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Kahieem Maxwell topped the Bull· Friday ;... closed
dog scoring with 17 points. Nathan
Silturday - clo~d
.
Meyer backed Maxwell with a
-Sunday, Feb; 18- closed
career-high 16 points and led Athens
in rebounding with seven.
Home ·~~ eve~ts ,
Statistics show Marietta hitting 74
.. ' fifonday'- DIVIS ton II g1rls sec- % on two-point field goals (20-27)
t'iol'l!l basketball: River Valley v.s. and ad4ing four of 15 threes to con~Ct!lS at 7 p.m.
. ,
elude .a S7% shooting night Athens
; :·~es:day-:- Women'~ ba&amp;ketball ' connected on 2I of 40 field goals, . '
vs.\Urbana at 7 p.m:· '
three of nine trifectas. ,
, Wednesday -i !,)(vision n.girls' ot1ertcr .tAIIJa. .
~tiona! bas~tb;lll: Galli a Academy Atherul .................... l3-14-12· 19=58
. Monday's winner at 6:30p.m.; Marietta................... 23-12-15-7=67
vs. Jackson at 8:15 p.m.
·~:rTHENS- Shamel Maxwell I·
I S; Kahieern Maxwell S-2-1=17;
: ~:~~~: A Lyne Center member- : ~rett Oathron 4-0-0=8; Mike
*.leep*Eagle
"'
, req~ired to use the facilities. Oriflpa 2·0-4=8; Nathan Meyer 5-07th a P!tum St.
jt=~y~ staff, students and adrnm1s- 6= 16; Terry Smith 1-0-2=4. Totall:
ParDrlburg,
WV
II'
are admitted wi~ their 10 111-3-1~8
30,4 424 5337
MARIETfA- Scott Strahler 3-

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Taxes and title fee flol included.

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DON TATE.MOIORS, ·Inc.
IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE/

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Pomeroy • Middleport
• Gelllpollt, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
'
'

'
SUncteY, February 11.19fl

.J

'

:In NFL owners' meetings,

Section
C
Sunday, February 11,1998

•'

Tagliabue avoids court date and satisfies battling .c iti'es
By DAVE GOt.DBERG
. · CHICAGO (AP) - Paul Tagli·abue had a legitimate reason to eel'oebn!e lifter solving the problems=ated by Art Modell's move to Ballimore.
, · The NFL commissioner stayed
out of court, ended up with a team in
Baltimore, saved the Browns' name
·and colors for Cleveland and said
1te' d help the Ohio city pay for a sta.dium.
·
. He has about a day to savor his
triumph before he stallS on the next
of his headaches.,
,., Seattle has already announced its
intention to move, something also
~ing considered in Cincinnati and
·,Tampa Bay. And the peripatetic Bill
Bidwill has just two years left on his
:lease in Tempe before he seeks the
"Cardinals' third home in a decade.
. Franchise free agency no longer
-requires quotation marks. It's now a
legitimate concept in the NFL.
flow CAll it be stopped? Perhaps
by keeping Seattle·in Seattle.
'' · Some owners think the league
'should have taken a ~land a year ago,
when the Rams proposed their move
'ft'om Anaheim to St. Louis. They
'first.turned it down (with Modell, of
; ~II people, vehemently denouncing
",!}le move), then backed off when the
Rams threatened suit.
... "We should have said then and
tbere that we were willing to fight
them in .court," says Ralph Wilson,
owner of the Buffalo Bills and one
of the last holdouts against the

"money fi~t. footballlut" anitude.
But he's in a minority in this era of
luxury suites and Pennanent Seat
Licenses. that new gimmick that
charges fans just for the right to buy
a ticket to a game.
A few otherS agree.
Wellington Mara of the New
York Giants, the league's patriarch,
conceded this week that if the NFL
had siood up to the Rams and
enforced the guidelines for moves
first · set down in 1984 by 'former
commissioner Pete Rozelle, Modell
still might be in Cleveland. Still,
Mara vo~ for Modell's move, in
part out of friendship, and in part
because he thought fighting it was
futile.
But there is a growing consensus
to take a stand with Seattle.
"We will have to see what will
happen," Tagliabue says. "But the
Seahawks have to know that they are
the league presence in the Pacific
Northwest. They, represent the league,
there."
The owners think they have a case
because they voted last year to allow
the league itself to control the Los
Angeles market. In other words,
Tagliabue, his staff and the owners
will decide what team or teams go
there.
That, they believe, will stand up
in court.
Just who will wind up in the
nation's second-largest market?
"It will not be a team breaking
their lease or violating a commitment .

to its current city," the commissionsaid in an interview Saturday on
NBC's "Today" show. "We will
address in 18 to 24 months whether
it will be an' existing or expansion
~r

of the San Andreas fault.
So, next season could well see the
Raiders prao::tice in·El Segundo and

the Seallawks in Anaheim. Then both
could fly home for eight days of~
regular serson.
·
'

A Question of

team."

But AI Davis, who moved to Los
Aqgele1, then IHM:k to Oalclanci, has
another view. It's one that . makes
some sense as long as the courts continue to hold that NFL teams are
individual business entities, not one
of 30 franchises controlled by the
whole.
·
"No one conttols Los Angeles,"
he said this week. "Anyone 'who
wants to go there has ev'ery tight to
go there."
In fact, it wouldn't astound anyone if Davis returned to his California shuttle.
·
He's already suggesting that he
can't.find suitabl~ractice facilities
in Oakland, and may have to once
again have the Raiders practice in El
Segundo, next to Los Angeles International Airport. They would fly 400
miles north for their home games.
Meanwhile, Seahawks owner
Ken Behring is contracting for the
Rams' former practice facility in
Anaheim. This, while 10 year remain
on Seattle franchise's Kingdome
lease.
Nobody in the leagu~ suggests the
dome is a great place. But they also
find Behring's alleged concerns
about earthqualces there ludicrous in
view of his desire to settle in the land

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - At last
glance, the Cincinnati Reds had a
. playoff team and a lot of empty seats.
· A winter of cost-cutting and procrast~nating has brought changes in
one area, but not the other. The Reds
open ttaining camp this'week with a
part&lt;:l-down team and a lot of empty seats.
Owner Marge Schott's decision to
slash several million dollars off the
payroll has carved holes in the team
that made it to the NLchampionship
series. Gone are home-run leader
Ron' Gaol, catcher Benito Santiago.
No. 3 starter David Wells and several
·valuable ba!:kups.
_
At the saine ,time, the Reds are
stru1gling . io-, win back fans ~ho
·desert¢ them last year. The thousan4s of empty upper-deck seats for
the two · NL championship series
g111110s •at Riverfront Stadium is a
haunting image of 19~5.
;"A :Iot of people missed a lot ·of
jZood . JJaseball last season," new
m~er Ray Knight said in a recent
ill,tetvi~w. "This is ~exciting baseball team. If they want to come and
see an exciting team that really
cares about Cincinnati and winning,
then they'll come out and watch us
play."
.
, S~hott's off-season promotmnal
moves have been at cross-purposes.
She kept ticket prices unchanged and

· 1 b 1 fS
LOCfll
re

Volleyb.U ·
ATHENS- The. Athens Volley·ball Program announced ·that tryouts
for iCS 14-year-old Wlm are ·scheduled for Sunday, Feb; 18 and Sunday,
Feb. 25 from 9 to II a.m. each day
al Ohio University'• -Convocation
Center.
Tryouts for the AVP's 16- and 18year-old teams will be held at the
Convocation Center on Feb. 25 and
Sunday, March 3 from II a.m. to I
p.m.
All teams will compete in a min- ~
inulll of fi've tournaments throughout
'
Ohio from March to May.
For ·more ·information, contact
OU volleyball coach Ellen Dempsey
at (614) 593-1189.

brought back popular third baseman
Chris Sabo to lure back fans. But the
le&amp;JTI called .off its customary media
day- which generates publicityand waited until January to put tick- .
ets on sale, mii'Sing the holiday shop. ping season.
As of last Friday, the Reds had
12,000 tickets left for the April 1.
opener against Montreal, an UOUSU•
ally high number. Before baseball's
turmoil in recent years, the Reds had
a history of quickly selling out open·
ing dl\)'.
Tickets for the 1991 opener 'when Cincinnati was coming off a
World Series'championship- were
gone 91 minutes after they went on
sale the previous December. Tickets
for the 1992 opener-. wl'en Cincinnati was coming off a fifth-place finish - sold out in 83 minutes.
... The Reds' season-ticket sales are
on about the same pace as last season.
.
Schott has demanded a new stadium to rekindle fan interest and
provide more money to pay players.
The Reds' payrolls have been among
the biggest in the National League
the last few years, but that will
change st_arting with 1996.
"We'v'e been reducing pay~oll,"
general manager Jim Bowden said.
"We're not going to be able to go out
and make big acquisitions to push us
over the top. Until we get a new stadium,- we're not going to he able to
do that. We're going to be reducing."
Schott missed another opportunity this. winter by snubbing promolers of a stad1um .tax h1~e. Hamilton
· County voter:s wtll ~ec1de M~h 19
whether to rwse theu sales tax a half-

\

•Billy Casey was the first black in kindergarten at Washington Elementary after Lincoln
School integrated Washington School. Miss
Marie Meal was his teacher according to D.
Casey, Gallipolis.
•John Gee AME Church, Pine Street between
Second and Third Avenue, was the first AME
Church on this side of the Appalachian Mountains. Per Orville Fer2uson-Portsmouth.

A REAR VIEW of the Lincoln School
Ill the comer Of Third Avenue •nd Olive .

Street In G•lllpolla

•Slave master George Moore of Mason
County, W.Va. .offered $200 for the return elf
Henry and Daniel Hutchinson. Age 22 and 2~.
who had crossed the Ohio River at the Steenbergen Ferry landing in a skiff.
iCOClNI2~NG VETERANS- Gallla Academy

girls' IH!sketball hod co•ch Re~Me
a.m.. (fer left} glvH • epaclally dec 01 allld game
ball to Mnlor Mindy Pope •flar giving one to feJ,.
low vetertlnl Whitney Heatwell (canwr} •nd Sa111

W•lker. The Mnlore - . honored for their fodr .
yu111 on the Btu• Angels' roster priOr to ~
club's game •galnst J•cklon Thurlduy nlghf(Times Sentinel photo)
•
'

•A good delu of fuss was raised about burying black soldiers in the white graveyard. The
city council was told it could save its self much
trouble by buying a couple acres outside the corporation.

RS

•Rev. Jefferson Cole, black Minister, died
and I ,000 people from the Mutual Aid Society
and friends went to his funeral .
•The black people of GaUipolis organized a
Building and Loan Association. The incorporators were Zach Allen, Gib Jones, Mulligan Connor, Daniel Whiting and Madison Bowls .
•Mrs. Mahala Viney, of Porter. blal:k, pieced
a quilt with 33,724 different pieces.

cent to build a football-only stadium
for the Cincinnati Bengals and a ball- .
park for the Reds.
No one from the Reds attended
Bengals IJiayers and Gov. George
Vdinovich, Even though Schott is
threatening to move the team unless
she gets a new stadium, she isn't
campaigning for the tax hike that .
would provide one.
"I think it's up to the public, what
they want to do," Schott said, in a ·
telephone interview.

•Elisha Barnes established 'the first Black
Private School on Pine Stteet, across from the
present John Gee AME Church.
•Pleasant Matthews was the richest farmer
black or white in Greenfield Township by 1860.
•Gallipolis' Harry Scott Jr. was inducted into
Columbia Gas of Ohio's Quarter Century Club.
For his 25 years of service in 1993

Loc•l briefs
RIO GRANDE - The Vinton
County National Bank recently contribu~ $1,000 to the University of
Rio Grande's track fund-raising campaign.
The campaign's goal is $500,000.
This is the latest venture into
which Vinton County National Bank
has joined forces with URG. Among
the bank's past contributions have
been the Vinton County Nati\)nal
Bank Scholarship as well as sponsorship of the American Free Enterprise Workship and the Library
Acquisition Endowment.
I o :; f IJP Tl) l l,lbs

111

•River Valley High School's Charles Peck
was among Ohio's top six · school hoy ShortRange Sprinters in 1993.

DR. EDWARD BOUCHET, 8 Y•le grad1111ta, began 11 prlnclpll8t Lincoln School In September 1908. He lalhown, b8ck left, with his
lltudenta In front of the achool
lilt, cruise, power windows,
mirrors, rear defrost.
MSRP ...........$18,852

GALLIPOLIS - The philosophy of "separate but equal" in the
rel11tionship between blacks and whites in America was practiced in
some form or another in Galli a County schools until about 1951, at
the insistence of some whites and blacks.
The "Gallipolis Union School- Colored," loca~ at the site
now occupied by Tope's Lifestyle Furniture Gallery. was built in
the late 1860s to provide public education for Gallipolis blacks. The
total cost of the then-six rOQm school was $9.300. The name of the
school would be changed later to honor "The Great Emancipator,"
Abraham Lincoln.
Separate schools were built to house white students.
.
.
f For the first decade ol;, its exisTracmg the htstory 0 tence only primary education
education integration at was offered at Lincoln. ~ut
toward the end of the 1870s h1gh
GalltpO./IS Lmcoln choo sl:hool courses were given and in
1882 Lincoln School had its first
graduation class: W.H. Haskins, Minnie Bat~es. !delia Black and
Mary Nease.
According to a history of the school written in 1919 for the
Cleveland Gazette, the issue of "separate but equal" was raised in
the 1880s by some young black students who found the Lincoln
High School to be inferior as only three high school subjects were
offered 'at Lincoln : physics, algebra and civil government. A great
many more were offered at the white Washington High School.
· For this reason 0.1.W. Scott, a black, applied for admission to
Washington School in 1884. He was denied enrollment. The fol:
·.lowing year when the high school program at Lincoln was suspended, another black student, William Cousins, sought admission to
Washington School. He, too, was refused. In conjunction with his ·
family and influen~al blacll citizens, a·lawsuit was brought against

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FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Dome Located at

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•Harvey Brown of Bidwell was named to the
1977 University of Rio Grande Hall of Fame for •
his outstanding Track Record.
•Gallipolis had a Black Automobile Manufacturer in J 936-1938, Fred Patterson, Jr. It was
called the Galli a Body Company, and they made
school bus bodies, trucks and the first twowheel horse trailer.
•Lincoln School was called Gallipolis Union
School - Colored, according to Plat map 18801910 - Gallipolis City - Deeds Records.
I

THE LINCOLN SCHOOL Ia loc•ted where today, Tope's Furniture G•llery
stands.

the Gallipolis Public Board of Education in 1885.
An agreement was reached, out of court. that would assure that a
first grade high school would be instituted at Lincoln in 1885 so that
blacks wishing to further their education could do so at their own
neighborhood school. For about I 5 years the Lincoln High School
was conducted by one teacher. A second teacher was added in 1900.
In 1887 the state of Ohio passed a law repealing the so called
"black laws" ..nd at this time many black schools in Ohio were
merged with the white ones. There was no attempt to court test the
law iri Gallipolis until 1896 when Claude Alexander and Wilbert
Howell sought admission to Washington School. These two were
given seats but were ignored by · the teachers for two weeks. Their
parents secured an attorney to bring suit against the school. After
accepting the $50 retainer fee, the attorney suggested that there were
no grounds for a suit.
Students at Lincoln in 1900 who were freshmen were required to
take .algebra, Latin, English, history, rhetoric and physiology. The
next two years added German, physics, botany, geometry. Greek and
Roman history. Seniors took - besides some of the above trigonometry, geology and chemistry.
In 1905 the school superintendent suggested in a board meeting
that it was too costly to maintain separate black and white schools.
It cost $65' per pupil to maintain Lincoln and only $32 per pupil ·at
Gallia Academy High School. He created such a furor that he was
fired the same year.
'
The issue of "separate but equal" was continued as the school policy without controversy from 1905 to the WW I period. Agreements
between officials and parents of Lincoln and Gallia Academy High
School were reached in 1916 that blacks and whites would wo!lc
tosether IO'suppon a bond issue to build a new Gallia Academy High
SchoOl and completely refurbish Lincoln School.
Continued on pege C-4

A Few Of Our Home Slandard Features

,.,l

'

-

&gt;Clarence
McCabe was
Ohio's Candidate for
International
Vice President at the
Key Club
International
held
in
Miami
Beach, Fla.,
July, 1978.

•Henry
"Hank," Doss. formerly of Gallipolis and a
Western Region Director for Coors Brewing
Co .. was named 19th of 50 Top Black Executives in America, according to Ebony.
·

/

$pOrts deadlines

..,..... • ·• AncleiNI1lll Wi~a

•There, was an active Knights of Pythias
Lodge in the black community in the early part
of this century. This fraternity of men were
inspired by the Ancient Greek Legend, a story
of true friendship between two men - Pythias
and Damon.
•Hattie Casey was the first blacll contestant
(to run) for Homecoming Queen at Gallia Academy High School, Gallipolis.

fleds to offer cheaper lineup
.&amp; more cost-cutting in 1996
By .JOE KAY

Black history facts:
from Gallia County

•The Paint Creek Baptist Church bell was
camed by six men from its former site, comer '
of Third-Spruc.e. to its present location, 800
Block of Third Avenue, arid was placed on a
frame outside h served a dual purpose bell and
church bell.

•l'he water used by the Colored Fi~ Depart:
ment came from · wells in the center of Pine ,
Street. Some of the firemen were John Burnett Bob Mitchell and Frank Hewitt.
'
•Sylvestor "Boose" Connor was a .furniture
molder at the Gallipolis Furniture Factory . Sec,
ond and Sycamore, and Thompson Casey and
Louis Green were apprentices.
·
. ·•Lincoln School's first graduating class wu .
1n 1882 w1th four students receiving diplomas . .
•

0

•Sadie Cousins gave Gallipolis its first mod; '.
em beauty shdp Jwac IS, 1924.

'

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•Henry Hutchinson, 60, in 1897, returned to
sch~l aiOhg with his adopted $On, Daniel and ·
rece1ved a reward of merit.
. •Henry Doss, Sr. )'Vas Gallipolis' first BJao:t :
D1sc Jockey at the local radio station • WJEH • :
The show was called "Diskin' with Doss."
•James Dewey Keels o( HarrisbwJ . wu ,( ~~
councilman of the Viii~~C of WOodlaw~ 1 allb. : ·
urb of Cincinnati fnn. 1969-1970 ind .the finl '·
elected Black Mayor of WOOdlawn from
19~0. He was the fi~~k tb.be elecced to ~lit~ ·: ·
Ohio Mayors Assocllllon aemns u
tntasurer and second vice praidetlii. He Nell, ad
Honor Commendation froni Ohio S... Sa q1
for • Outstanding Commllllily Ser-•ioo.• "-.
1979. He was included in the aeOOlld ~ cr1
"Who's Who in Black America. •
•

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JOHN AND BRENDA.PARK

Kemper-Park
BIDWELL - Brenda Darlene matching· earrings and a diamond
Kemper and John Edward Park were cluster ring, given to her by her ·
BO .AHD JENNIFER ADAMS .
united in marriage Dec. 16 at good
1
New Baptist Church in Gallipolis.
of honor was Tamara'
'
Rev. Clifford Curry performed the
Mead, daughter of !he bride. Bride's
RACINE .. Jennifer Lynn Weller, Duluth,-Ga., sister of the groom;
double ring ceremony following a
maid
was
Rebecca
Meade,
daugh~r
daughter
of Mr. an\! Mrs. Stephen K. Amy Hough of Lamoni, Iowa; and
program of music and songs by
of 'the bride. They wore burgundy Weller of Stone Mountain, Ga., and Lisa Jenkins of Stone Mountain, Ga.
Christian Scott, pianist and vocalist. velvet dresses accented with pearl . Bo Adams, son of Kay Adams of
The groom was attended by best
An archway decorated with clear
· necklaces and carried single bur- Lallirenceville, Ga. and,Gary Adams man, John Sheffield of Cedanown,
lights, burgundy and ivory roses
gundy roses. Flower girl was oflifton, Ga., were married Dec. 16 ,Ga., and by groom's men Beau Car·
adorned !he church. ,
McKenzi~ Greene granddaughter of at the Decatur First United riere of Stone Mountain, Ga.; Doug
Given in marriage by her son, the bride., She wore a white satin Methodist Chllpel in Decatur, Ga.
Fowler of Monroe, Ga.; Jeff Teems
Aaron Mulholand, !he bride wore a gown accented with burgundy ribThe ceremony was performed by of Lilburn, Ga.; Curtis Adcock of
lace over satin princess bodice bon. Josh Caruthers Served as ring Elder David Ford of the ReorgaLilburn, Ga.; and Clint Sikes of
gown, with sequins, pearls and lace
bearer.
nized
Church
of
Jesus
Christ
of
Lat·
Cumming,
Ga.
medallion accents. The B\l5que
The
groom
wore
a
double
breastter
Day
Saints
.
with
Deacon
Ray.
The
.flower
girl was Allison
waist lead to a full satin skirt with a
ed
gray
suit
with
a
boutonniere
M
mond
Boswell
assisting.
LeFeuvre,
and
the
ring hearer was
graduated hemline, back satin bow
,
burgundy
roses.
Best
man
was
GilThe
bride
is
the
granddaughter
of
Corey
Mink.
Prenuptial
piano rnusic
and key hole closure. The headpiece
ford
Thrley.
Clarence
Bradford
of
Racine
and
the
was provided by Donna Walters, and
was a satin ivory head band adorned
Daisy
Kell!per
and
Flo
Thrley
lit
late
·
Ruth
Bradford,
and
of
Audrey
organ
and trumpet music were prowith pearls, roses l!nd sequins with a
·!he
tapers.
Weller
Birks
of
Sun
City
West,
Ariz.
vided
by Henry McDowell and
shoulder length veil.
Mike
Barry.
Bobby Mink and David
·
The
bride's
mother
wore
a
bur.
and
the
late
George
Weller.
The
Her bouquet consisi&amp;l of ivory
and
Michelle
Mann were vocalists.
gundy
floor
length
dress
with
a
corgroom
is
!he
gran!lson
oft~
laie
Mr.
and burgundy roses accented with
The
bride
is a graduate of
sage
of
ivo
ry
and
burgundy
roses.
and
Mrs.
Hoyt
Adams
and
the
late
sprays of baby, s ·breath, streamers of
1
j\ir. and Mrs. David McElroy.
Parkview
High
School in Lilburn
pearls and lace. She wore a J!CII"I and
A reception was held at !he couEscorted by her father, the bride and attended Graceland College in
Australian crystal necklace with pte's home in Bidwell.
wore a full-length Demetrios gown Lamoni, Iowa. She is a senior at !he
of white satin, styled with a sweet- University of Georgia majoring in
heart neckline putlined with pearls. public relations. She is a private
The gown featured · fitted sleeve's pageant consultant.
with satin buttons, and a princess
The groom i,s a graduate of
. bodice with a basque waistline Parkview High School and attended
accented with clustel'$ of beads, iri· Troy State University in Troy, Ala.
descent sequins aJill pearls. Her full He is a graduate of the University of
skirt fell to a ca!he&lt;lral train adorned Georgia 'with a de~ in health and
with pe,arl outline. 'Her veil was physical education. He is employed
embellished with pearl clusters and by Gwinnett County schools as a
pearled and sequined headband. She health and physical education
carried a bouquet of red roses with a teacher and head coach for · girls'
cascade of roses and ivy.
cross country and track.
The bride's· maids wore forest
The reception was held at !he
green full-length iridescent taffeta Southland Country Club in Stone
strapless gowns with off !he shoul- Mountain. The couple traveled to
der jackets accented by rhinestone • Jamaica for ·a honeymoon, and now
buttons. They carried long-stemmed reside in Dacula, Ga.
red roses.
The bride was attended by her
sister, Julie Weller, as maid of honor, ''WN'tl be floating on G cloud wfrh
, and by bride's m~ids Monica H~rhe 1u .... Vn,,'// ~lnd
';, •'"; • nngton of Woodbme, Iowa, cousm
I1
t~ of the bride; Dena Hawkins of
c/ossl(leds.

mo~~on

JEROLD AND DEBORAH PROSEK

r

Greene-Prosek

'

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Weller-Adams

GALLIPOLIS • Deborah Denise dozen long-stemmed ivory roses.
Greene, daughter of Dannie and The bride's maids bouquets consistCarlene Greene of Gallipolis and ed of six long stemmed ivory roses.'
Jerold Philip Prosek, son of Cliff
The gr0om was attired in an ivory
and Betty Prosek of Huron were double breasted dinner jacket with
united in marriage Oec. 16 at lhe an. ivory tie and cummerbund a'nd
I First Presbyteriad Church of Gal- black pants. Cliff ~osek, brother.of
, I lipolis.
the groom,. was best man. The
• ,
Pastor Albert Earley performed groom's men and ushers were Doug
• !he double·ring ceremony following Knauer, Kenny Berlin, Steve Adel: classical yiano and organ selections man, Dave Ebert and Bill Spehn.
: 'by Ann Moody and vocal selections The honorary usher was Scott
Green, brother of the bride. The
· ; by C.L. Ecker lind Moody.
The chUrch was decorated with groom's men, ushers and fathers
; red poinsettias, a candelabra with . wore identical attire to the groom's
: Ivy bows and greenery, hurricane but with black ties and cummer; candle holders with ivory candles bunds. They wore boutonnieres of
• and gJl!CDCry. Ivory bows adorned ivory roses.
: e~h wjndow. . The' aisle was
The mother of !he bride wore a
; bedecke(l with ivory and gold bows floor length straight gown, accen!e!J
: and greenery.
with a bolero jacket with a rhine! . A Christmas tree with miniature stone clasp closure. The groom's
, white lights and a large cascading moiher wore a black street length
: ivory bow was decorated !he sanctu- dress of sequins and chiffon. Both
; ary.
.
wore corsages of ivory roses.
•
Giver in marriage by her parents
Attending the guest registry lind
! and escorted by her father, the bride programs was Heather Hastwell.
~ wore an ivory full length silk ·gown
A reception dinner and dance
: by Joette f~nJ an off !he .shout- were held at the University of Rio
, ller portrait .l:olJai with · i -fitted Grande Rhodes' Annex. Two 14 feet
; bodice of•Schifti lace,'. I!PPiii)ues; white pine Christmas trees decorat1 jleatls and sequin" The long sleeves ed·in ivory and gold adorned the din' wen; also in ld, pear.ls·andsequins ing room. Fiscus trees with minia: with,JI'Iiniature I~ covered·buttons. ture white lights were arranged
! ~ bili;i( of~ gown
eml!ell- . !J!roughoutthe room. White poinset1 ishC&lt;I with -lacl! cpvered buttons: The
lias, garland wiih miniature white
; apw111 all\!'· ,cit~~~~ ' teltgth,; train lights, and gold bows were placed
~
: Wie ~with a''il:altOj!Cd lace along the stairway to the reception.
; heioline: A,.,!Qe bO~ accen~· 1 the Wr,eaths completed · the Christmas
• .~k·'~tle. •. . ,
, .
theme. Each round table was deco: ,. She wore a 'tiara headpiece•.with rated with a five-branch candelabra
l teaidrop pe,arl~ and ~uirls' and a with ivory candles, greenery .and. :
: triple· length 'veiJ·'with an altllched miniature roses. Additionally vo~ve
( blusher.
candles were placed on each tabl.e: _
:
Her bo~quet was three.dqzen cas·
The three-tier wedding cake:, ~,
WALTER AND SHARON LANE
' cading ivory roses with Christmas red velvet decorated in ivory. It was •
/
: greenery and gold. ·She wore a pair topped and edged with a floral '
: of diamond eaiTings, a wedding gift arrangement of ivory roses, greeJ;~mY
;. · . .
'
; from the groom.
.
and holly.
;; ·. , ~ ,GAJ:.LIPOLIS ~ Walter Lincoln tied in love!'$ knots. Her jewelry a
Dena Greene, sister of the bride,
The bride· is a graduate of Galtia . ·~'e,. Jr. announces' his marriage to gift from the groom, was in dia;
' served as the maid of honor. Bride's Academy High School and The Sharon Roseann Combs Dec. 23 at monds and pearls.
.
~ mai&lt;l 'were Elizabeth Walker- Ohio State University. She is a phar- Trinity Church in Perisburg, Va.
Her daughters and granddaughter
: Knauer, Christin,e Konvotinka, Kate macist in Sandusky. The groom is a
The church was decorated for the served as' attendants.
: MacKeniie1 Dapella G~ne, s!s.ter graduate of Bowling Green State holiday Se&amp;$On in purple, forest
Beth Lovingood and Dawn
: of the bride and Tammy ~sek, sis- University and is the merchandise green and white. lbe pews were Woolwine served as their mother's
. ter-in-law of !he groom. They wore manager of Cedar Point in San- marked with while satin bows. maid and mauon of honor. Haley
.
Greenery, putple candles and white Shiloh Lovingood and Meagan
: dresses of evergreen with off·the- dusky.
: shoulder collars. The bodices were
Followiqg a ten-day honeymoon satin bows decorah~d each window. Leigh Freeman served as nowcr
· fitted velvet with ful' length shirts of to Kaancpali, Maui the couple reside The main altar was covered with girls. All were dressed in long dress: taffeta.' The maid of.honor carried a in Huron.
white bauenburg ·lace'with a purple es and carried bouquets identical to
overlay. An alabaster manger scene the bride's.
was the focal point on the altar. A
The groom wore ·a charcoal suit
white candelabra with purple can- b)' Nenny Grethel, Portfolio dress
dles, greenery and white satin bows shirt and silk jacquard tie in shades
lit !he main . ~nd side altars. A ten of gray, red, 'ecru and forest green.
foot Christmas tree decorated with He was accompanied by the bride's
600 white lights and handcrafted son-in-law, Wayne Lovingood.
GALLIPOLIS • Mr. and ,Mrs.
ornaments' flanked with white poin,
A wedding dinner was held for
: James Saunders announce !h~ marsettia stood to the right of the cou- the family and friends at a favorite
: riage of their daughter, Anita Jean ,to
ple.
.
local restaurant. After !he wedding
' Harry Bates Jr. Dec.· 23, 1995. The
The
bride
wore
an
Albert
Nipow
Mr. and Mrs. Lane spent the holiday
; ceremony was officiated by Rev. ·
• wedding suit in winter while. White season with their children in Viri Jack Holley.
satin piping highlighted the titpets ginia.
i ' The best man was Robert Bates,
and cuffs of the jacket and hem of
Walter is owner of Appalachian
~ brother of !he groom. Ring bearer
the
short
skirt.
Her
accessories
were
Fasteners,
and Sharon is employed
' was Adam Moss.
in
winter
white.
She
carried
a
l Maid of.h&lt;inor was Melinda Bish·
by Lakin .State Hospital C w!.ng.
freestyle bouquet of white roses They reside at 1688 Georges Creek
J op. Flower girl was Jamie Saunders.
with pe(lfls and white satin ribbons JUl., Gallipolis:
· · , Harry is . serving in !he l!Mny.
·r -· · -·-·Anil8 will graduate from Buckeye
1 Hills Career Center in June.
~- ihie coUple will reside In south·
.!em CalifOrnia in !he spring.
•

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GALLIPOLIS · In conjunction sticks, basic EKGs and blood preswith American Heart Month, Holzer sures checks will be provided. Staff
Medical Center will host its annual from various hospital depanments
Hean Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., will be participating, including
Feb. !3 in the hospital's French 500 (PCU), Critical Care
Room.
Unit, Nutrition Service dietitians
SHEILA KOENIG AND nMOTHY WHrTLATCH
"The Hean Fair's purpose is to and Warren Hayes of the Holzer
promote and provide infonnation
Clinic Sycamore Branch cardiac
. about heart disease, how to kee
rehabilitation. Each will display caryour heart healthy, including keep· diovascular information from their
CHESTER .. Timothy Michael planned. A reception will follow at
ing cholesterol level~ down through respective areas.
. Whitlatch and Sheila Ann Koenig of the
.. Long Bottom Community Build· ' controlled
far intake," said Pam
Alfred announce their engagement mg.
· For more information about the
Samons, RN of the Progressive Care Heart Fair, call !he Holzer Health
. and approaching marriage.
King is the daughter of Leonard
Unit (PCU).
Hotline at· 1-8()()..462-5255.
The open church wedding will be and Sandra Koenig. Jr. of Pomeroy.
· , Sunday, M!!fch 3, at the United She is a 1984 graduate of Eastern
• Methodist Church in Chester. Music High SchooL Whitlatch is the S!ln of
. : will be presented by Missy Smith of Harlan Whitlatch of Mason, W Va.
. , New Haven heginning at 3 p.m. with and Keitha Whitlatch of Chester. He
. the ceremony to follow at 3:30p.m. is a 1983 graduate of Eastern High
School and is employed by Ameri•
,l' jll
A western style wedding is being can Alloys of New Haven, W.Va.
POMER~Y -~ Amber B. Bennett, a student in the.nursing II$Sistant program at Me1gs H1gh School, has been named a local winner' in the Servistar
and Coast to Coast All-American Vocational Studenf Awards program.
As a. local winner; Bennett will receive a $100 U.S. Savings Bond .
. • , The Communily Calendar is
She IS one of 3:000 local wmners in the competition which is sponsored
published as a free service to nonPOMEROY •• Big Bend Farm ·
profit groups wlsbing to announce Antique Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m at nallonally by SemStar Corporation and Coast to Coast, and locally by King
Serv1star Hardware in Middlepon.
meeting .a nd special events. The Meigs High Sch~l Library.
She will be honored in conjunction with the observance of National Vocacalendar is not designed to pre).
tional
Education Week at Meigs High School this week.
mote sales or fund raisers of any .
PORTLAND •• The Lebanon
will now adva~ce to state com~iti~n.
She
, type. Items are printed as spac:e Township Board of Trustees will
, : _pel'lftils md cannot be paranteed meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the town·
. to run a specific numbet ol days.
ship building to discuss appointment
of a trustee.
MONDAY
. .
'
!sHaving A
RACINE •• Racine Village Board TUESDAY.
, of Public Affairs, 7 p.m. at the . POMEROY •• Meigs County
: anne~ . Monday.
Board of Elections, Thesd•Y· 9 a.m.
( Oirls of all ages )
at !he olf.CC.
. POMEROY ·- Chapter 53, DAV,
Monday, 7 p.m at !he Rock Springs
Holiday Inn • Oallipolls. Ohio
Fairgrounds grange building. A din· WEDNESDAY
ner will be served.
For Int;onnation and\or Rqistralion caJJ ·
MIDDLEPORT •• Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday.
• 't ••
- 1-304-472-9482
PORTLAND •• Portland PTO, · home of Mrs. Eldred Parsons. Mrs.
Monday, 7:30p.m. at schooL Speak· Dewey Horton to nwiew, "~t Me
er, Southern Building Committee Call Yclu Sweethean" and Mt:~~. W'~­
representatives.
soh Carpenter, "The Glass lake."

'.

Koenig-Whitlatch

M;ic~l;er;~~~=~t win~. All

American Vocational award

Meigs com.munity calendar

Dteam makcu P10ducllon1

Playing with and chasing ·
your pet all around the yard.

J

:. •

tit~ · ; iN~w.~ p'o~ioy~ .

· . , 1n .. edon 19 provide our ~~ c:umn&amp; aews, the Qallijlo-

·
'
•

· tie ~ubmi!ted within , 3() days of

oc:c:umnce. ~I birtl\days must be
'IWi...-ll!il'l'llill&gt;ailySen•• Al~ttad within 42 days . of the
.m.~
.r;,;;-~ weddiap after ~..
'
·
fO:...,. 'Ira • iWe of the Cf~Dt · All Dialaialsubinit&amp;l!d for publi,AIIchlll --~~;.ew~ ~ tP.; 1ubjcct to edilina.
-..._ Ia, li'» -~ aecti.ori lDUII
.

,-~
l

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Large_

l Carat

Selection of
Diamonds ·
in Stock at
Big
SavingsI

Diamond Tennis
Bracelets

5
ONLY

149

REG.$329
Limited Stack

DIAMOND
Pendant ANNIVERSARY
141
'BANDS
y. tw•
' Reg. $259*

SALE.

:. ;~bling,. an~ injuri~g yo~elf.

14 SESSIONS
.. .

,.

Tile price of gold Is up 8% In the last 90 days but•
prices remain the s.ne -My now before we reorder.

.linJMapPin•••:; U .~•.

FOI IIIII SPECW SOiiiOIE

.. .··1·400 ·._ '·.
OILY . . ·:.

Valentine's Da,
Speeials

.

TANNING.SES$JOlfS

!he ceremony.
.
The 8f00!11 is an employee of
Americl!D f.Uoys, New Haven,
W.Va. ,
' •
1be bride, mother of Melanie
Bfevi111,' is a homemaker.
·
'· ~ fami~ ruides in Pomeroy.
.,
' .

Su,nday February 25, 1996

Dla.

1

-- n ,na s;evins,'
·) dlu,ihter of Carl and ~artha Stewan
!of Middleport, and JeffGius, son of
' 1 -i~ 1I,Dd Belly OJ~ of Middleport,
f I we,e ullited iii m~~ Jan. 19 at
·&lt; !he ~n1 'c!Jipel in Cadeusburg,
· 'J'y. Rev. F. M~,n Qt;tte p¢ormed

-

GALLII'OLtS - ;'he Gallia and a graduate of tlallia Academy High
Hocking School. He is a fonner oHicer of the
Sub-Dis· Uniied States Air Force and a gradu·
tricts of ate of Ohio State University. In 1991
!he Prov- Hank was featured in Ebony Magai d e n c e zine as one of the 50 top executives
Regular in America. He is married and has
Mission- three children. His wife, Leslie,
ary Bap- sons, Hank Jll and Bran&lt;!on and
tist Assb- daught~r. Heather reside in Chicago,
ci a 1ion, Ill., wliere he is a businessman.
lpc. will
During Saturday's program four
spon"Sor individuals and one family will be
its fifth recognized. Those to be honored are
a n n u a I Bruce. Smith, in recognition of his
B I a c k athletic accomplishments; Barbara
HENRY DOSS
History ·scott, for her dedication in the
Program . preservation of Black History in
The program will be held at Paint Gallia l:;ounty; James Hogan, for his
Creek Baptist Church, 833 Third years 'of dedication and service to
Ave.. Gallipolis, Feb. 23 and 24. the youth and residents of Gallia
A concert ~lebrating Black' His· County; Brent Johnson, of Johnson's
10ry Month will launch the series of , Supennarket, for continued commuprograms Friday at 7 p.m. followed nity service in supporting area orgaby refreshments and viewing of dis- nizations. churches, and youth; and,
plays. dealing with black history. the Howard Family, for their
Minister Henry "Hank" M. Doss, longevity al)d agricultural success as
Jr. will speak at the program 10 a:m. , a minority-owned family fann .
Saturday, Feb. 24.
Doss is a native of Gallipolis and

Ba~es

Blevins-Glass

Beauty Pageant

.

Saunders-'

f ' . .
:j MIDOLEPORT

HMC to host Heart Fair

:· Black History Month to be
· qelebrated at Baptist church

Happiness is •••

Combs-Lane

HEART FAIR • Debbie Cundltl, RN, front •nd Pam Sainone, LPN
•re •mong the staff preparing for the Helrt Felr at Holzer Medical
Center ftom 10 a.m. to 4-p.m., Feb. 13 In the French 500 Room•

'

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Bu~lnlu Cardl~.......... ~.:·.,...,........ :~···~

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• ·" HQLzER HEALTH HOTUNE··
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~~our staff will .~elp ~ss~ss your .~ealth
,I

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7 days a week·~ 8

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.

Cell Kim ~ 441·1700 01-FIX order In 441-0919·
Stiu Locally Owned &amp; ()pet lied by Kim Christopher

.

HIIUIS by Af4iulnbil6!1t Only
~~~-~l'elt.: lnwilcla~ 10% 011

a.m:to 11:30 p.m.

Reg._.

Ytt c.at... Reg. 1149 ......'89
~ c.at.... Reg. '299 ....'199
%Clnlt.... Reg. '499 ..... .
'

.kquisitiotts :Jine.Jewe[rg
I

lWO LOCATIONS
1!111 SECND AVE.~ OAWPOUS

,.

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..

t1 MILL ST.

....,

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

us.

~&gt;£CvooornENm"ftt;;,ii: .

........,Qoolao ... -

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MAR;J.:~

.

.... ........,_ CHOJCI!CO-OilDINAO

~~~---FOOC.

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Copln Any ~·~ AII!Oilnt....... New Lower Prices
\

'

.. J.-800-462~255

Colol'ld
. lnk..................:...Call tor Special Ptlcts

Wedd~:.lnvltltlonl&amp; SUppl~ ............ 25% Off

problem; .A,s close as your' phone; .
I

*149
*299

277

S~LE

DO YOU THINK HE'S A REAL
CO\VBOIY, CHARLOTIE? WELL, YES HE
AND HE IS ALSO JIMMY C. Nf:UMAN
~Jii~l)I~R OF THE BEST CAJU!il BAND
E IS. HE WELCOMED ME
BACKSTAGE TO THE GRAND OLE OPRY WHERE WE ME't
AROUND 25 OF THE TOP COUNTRY ENTERTAINERS
PERSONALLY· AND WHAT GREAT·DOWN -TO-EAR'Ill PEOPLE
THEY ARE!!!
THE OPRYLAND HOTEL HOSTED BANK TRAVEL CLUB
DIRECJ'ORS AND MARKETING PERSONNEL FROM OVER 200
BANKS THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES TO ACONFERENC~
AND WE WERE HONORED TO BE AMONG THOSE INVITED.
ATTENDANCE REACHED OVER 600 AND THROUOHQUT THIO
DAY WE. ATTENDED SEMINARS WITH QUALIFIED SPEAKER~
AND MET WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF TRAVEL DESTINATIONS,
HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, ETC.. FROM ALL OVER THE NATION,
EVERY BANK WAS ASKED TO BRING COPIES OF
NEWSLETTERS, BROCHURES ETC. TO EXCHANGE AND
DISPLAY. WITH THE HELP OF MARILYN MARTIN, PEOPLE:) :
BANK MARKETING DIRECTOR, WHO IS A GREAT TALENT AND
A WONDERFUL HELP TO OUR PROGRAM, WE WERE TOLD
THAT OUR EXHIBIT WAS ONE OF THE BEST!! FORGIVE US FOR
BEING PROUD!!
.
WE STAYED AT THE BEAUTIFUL OPRYLAND HOTEL, ONE OF
MY PERSONAL FAVORITES. AND PUT THE FINAL TOUCHES ON
OUR PEOPLES CHOICE COUNTRY CHRISTMAS TRIP ALL SET
FOR DEC. 9-12 WHICH IS ALREADY NEARLY FILLED. IN
ADDITION TO THE BUSINESS DONE AND SEMINARS
ATTENDED, WE WERE HONORED WITH A DINNER AND
RECEPTION AT TH E COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME ANQ
ALSO A PRIVATE DINNER AT STUDIO C WHERE THE STATLER
BROTHERS FILM THEIR WEEKLY TV SHOW IT WAS HERE THAT
WE PASSED THROUGH SECURITY AND WERE ABLE TO VISIT
THE STARS OF THE OPRY IN THEIR DRESSING ROOMS AND
BEHIND THE CURTAIN BEFORE THEY WENT ON STAGE. PORTER
WAGONER, JIM ED BROWN, JEANNE SEELEY, WHO GAVE ,ME
HER PHONE NUMBER AND A SPECIAL INVITATION FOR OUR
GROUP ANYTIME TO AITEND HER BREAKFAST SHOW, THE
WHITES, THE FOUR GUYS, LITTLE JIMMY DICKENS. JAN
HOWARD, SKEETER DAVIS, JEANNE SHEPHERD. AND MANY
MORE. WHAT A TREAT FOR A COUNTRY MUSIC FAN SUCH AS I
AM!!
LAST WEEKEND WAS GREAT FUr-&lt; FOR US AS 50 PEOPLES
CHOICE MEMBERS AND CUilSTS ATTENDED THE BROADWAY
PRODUCilON OF "AIN'T MISBEHAVING" WITH THE POINTER
SISTERS AT THE BEAUTIFUL NEW ARNOFF CENTER IN
CINCINNATI. STAYING AT THE NEWLY· RENOVATED REGAL
CINCINNATI HOTEL IN DOWNTOWN (WITH SKYWALKS TO THE
~HOPS TO KEEP .US OUT OF THE COLD) AND HAVING Ai
DELIGHTFUL GOURMET DINNER IN THE REVOLVING
RESTAURANT ON THE 31ST FLOOR, WAS JUST WHAT WE
NEEDEQ TO BEAT THE WINTER BLAHS! A VISIT TO THE
MUSEUM CENTER FOLLOWING BREAKFAST AT THE HOTEL
THE NEXT MORNING, WAS HIGHLIGHTED WITH THE IMAX
PRESENTATION ON THE "LIVING SEAS". MOST IMPORTANT
HOWEVER, WAS THE EXCITEMENT OF lliE GROUP TO BE "ON
THE ROAD AGAIN" • WHAT FUN WE HAVE WITH OUR FRIENDS
ALONG THE WAY!!!
APRIL 3 WILL FIND US IN RESERVED FRONT ROW SEATS FOR
THE MATINEE-LUNCHEON PERFORMANCE OF THE BROADWA~
MUSICAL "OKLAHOMA" AT THE MIAMI VALLEY DINNER
THEATRE IN DAYTON: THIS ONE DAY TRIP (WITH AFTERNOON
OUTLET SHOPPING, OF COURSE) IS SO POPULAR THAT A
SECOND BUS HAS BEEN ADDED, MAKING ATOTAL OF 80 OF us'
TAKING THIS TRIP. THIS BUS IS ALMOST FILLED SO CALL ME
SOON IF YOU ARE INTERESTED.
OUR NEXT BIG· BIG TOUR WILL BE APRIL 23· 30 WHEN WI&gt;
WILL TAKE OFF ON OUR DELUXE MOTORCOACH FOR SAN
ANTONIO AND THE MEXICAN FIESTA!! WE ARE SO EXCITED
ABOUT THIS TRIP. OUR FIRST NIGHT WILL BE SPENT IN'
MEMPHIS WITH AN EVENING ON BEALE STREET, HOME OF
THE BLUES. THEN ITS ON TO DALLAS WHERE WE WILL HAVE
DINNER AND A "GOOD TIME" AT BILLY BOBS!! WE'LL GO ON .
TO FORT WORTH FOR A VISIT TO STOCKYARDS, A'
COLLECTION OF SPECIALTY SHOPS. OVERNIGHT WILL BE AT
THE STOUFFER HOTEL IN DALLAS. NEXT MORNING Wli WILL,
TOUR DALLAS WITH A STOP AT THE INFAMOUS SIXTH FLOOR
EXHIBIT (WHERE PRESfDENT JOHN KENNEDY WAS'
ALLEGEDLY SHOT), A TOUR OF FARMERS MARKET. AND.
OTHER INTERESTING POINTS . THEN WE' RE ON TO SAN
ANTONIO FOR THREE DAyS WITH ACCOMODATIONS NEAR
RIVERWALK. WE HAVE RESERVED SEATS FOR TWO PARADES;
A TOUR OF THE ALAMO, A RIDE OUT TO LBJ RANCH, A TEXAS
BARBEQUE AND A MEXICAN DINNER, ETC AS YOU KNOW, A:
RIVER RUNS THROUGHOUT DOWNTOWN SAN ANTONIO AND
DURING THE FIESTA, ALL SORTS OF SHOPS. DISPLAYS;
MARIACHI BANDS, COLORFUL DANCERS, ETC. ARE FEATURED'
ALONG THE RIVERWALK. WHAT ATREAT THAT WILL BE!!
IF THAT IS NOT ENOUGH, WE WILL DEPART THE NEXT DAY.
FOR OVERNIGHT IN TEXARKANA OF THE TEXAS-ARKANSAS:
BORDER, AND PROCEED TO NASHVILLE ~OR OUR LAST NIGH'I' ·
"ON THE ROAD". HERE OUR ACCOMODATIONS WILL Bll AT
EMBASSY SUITES, EVERYONE HAVING A B!'J)ROOM- LIVING
ROOM COMBINATION. AND GUESS WHAT? FOR DINNER AND
DANCING OR D.ANCE-WATCHING, WE ARE GOING TO THE
NEWLY OPENED AND TELEVISED WILDHORSE SALOON IN
DOWNTOWN NASHVILLE. NEXT MORNING WE WILL HAVE A
SHORT TOUR OF NASHVILLE BEFORE R,ETURI'jiNO HOME.
NOW, IF THAT IS TOO MUCH WESTERN FOR YO(J, HOW
ABOUT JOINING US FOR A VISIT TO PHILADELPHIA, VALLEY:
FORGE, CAPE MAY AND ATLANTIC CITY? THIS TOUR WILL'
COMBINE A LOT OF HISTORY. TWO WONDilRFUL STAGE'
SHOWS, A DAY AND NIGHT TO WALK THE FAMOUS .
. BOARDWALK OF ATLANTIC CITY. VISIT THE •SHOPS OR:
CASINOS, WHATEVER YOU PREFER, WITH DINNER AND SHOW
ATTRUMPTAJ MAHAL. STILL HAVE ROOM IFYOUCALLSOON .
THE DATES ARE MAY 28-JUNE 1. CALL ME FOR DETAILS.
'
. FOR THE NEXT THREE WF.EKS, I WILL BE ATTENDING A
HEARTLAND SHOWCASE, MARKETPLACE FOR THE CENTRAh
STATES IN COLUMBUS, OHIO AND THEN FLY ON
TO
CoLUMBIA, S.C. TO MEET OTHER OPERATORSANDTRAV.EL TO
HILTON HEAD, S.C. FOR SEVERAL DAYS, THEN ON TO MYll'll.E:
BEACH FOR SEVERAL DAYS . WE PICK UP ALL SORTS Of ·
INFORMATION FOR UPCOMING TRAVEL POSSIBILITIES AS
WELL AS VIEW THE LATEST IN Et.iTERTAINMENT, HOTEL ·
PACKAGES, ETC. I AM NOW ~USY WORKING ON A SCHEDULE
FOR 1997 SO THAT IS HOW EARLY ARRANGEMENTS MUST BE
TAKEN CARE OF.
.
.
. , .
PLANS FOR THIS YEAR INCLUDE OUR ALASKA' CRUISE IN .
JUNE WHICH IS SOLD OUT, OVERNIGHT TO REI'I.FRO VALLEY
CAPE COD AND NEW ENGLAND (NINE STATES W~TH A FINA(
NIGHT IN NIAGARA FALLS (SEPT. 28-0CT. 6), OVBRNIGHT AT :
'!t;!~io~S1PRINGS (ALSO SUITES) NEAR. BECKLEY WITH '
o
DRAMA "HATFIELDSAND MCCOVS" AND VISIT TO
lliE COAL MINE EXHIBITIQN. A FALL PICNIC AT THE FARM :
MUSEUM WITH A HAYRIDE AND SQUARE DANCING, MAYBE A •
BALLGAME, AND OF COURSE, OUR COUNTRY CHRISTMAS IN
NASHVILLE WILL ROUND OUT A YEAR OF FUN, HIGHLIGHTED .
AT THE END BY OUR· ORAND. AND OLORUOUS CIIRJSTMAS
PARTY!!
.
.
I so IF YOU HAVEN'T MADS PLANS TO JOIN
PJ:JiASE 00 so

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Sunday,. F~ry 11, 1996

PomtJOY • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Lincoln. School. ..
~fl'ampegeC-1

.
"
'
•
. .In 1917 the new Gallia Academy wis completed, but by early 1918 nb
·work hid been done on Lincoln School. The Board pfEducalion lllJIIed that
the war.bld puabccH~~~:k elfons tci do the Lincoln project•
.In.~ .spring of 1918, Lincoln High School was condemned. !?Y ~state
buildint•IIIJ*lOI' is an unsafe building. In May J918,·a petition WI¥! presented w the Board of EducaJion "praying that Lincoln School be made fmtclus or else Permit bUr high school students to attend Gallia Academy High
School."_The board took no action on the petition.
·
. On Sept. 9, 1918, Lincoln Principal Wilberi Howell brought seven eligi. ble black studcnts .to enroll' at Gallia Academy High School. They we~
.. ~fused admission. It was then that ~nt Robert Mitchell, in conj~nction
With Columbus Attorney Charles R. Doll, brought another suit against the
Glllipolis Board o(Education.
.'
· ·
· On Nov. 18, 1918, in Gallia Cuunty.Court of Common Plc;as the board
I o~ educa!ion was found~ have "Yt'il!fully, arbitrarily and illegally maintllined
n separate bish school for persons of separate races. • The school board was
"perpetually e11joined from maintaining a hish &amp;ehool of Cl)lor." The court
order ~as upheld by the Court of Appeals.
•
·
ln"January 1919,the first,black students enrolled at GalliaAcademy Hish
S.chool; Some 3S white students walked out.of class in protest, but re~
in a few d8ys.
,
, -r .
Whi,le the Gallipolis newspaper virtually ignomlthe event. the black·~·
·...,·~:(
. Cle_veland c;Jazette reported in one hilt inch type: , "~ Victory At Gallipolis,
0·
·4 Jim Crow Schools Wiped Out"
CHARLES AND FLORENCE BARRETT
· .The 1918 suit made no .mention of the grade school question of "separate but equal" and, thus, blacks continued to be educated separately until
the,schoQI was closed in 1951.
.
Minni~
Mos~y
was
lhe
firslblack
to
gradliat~
from
GAHS in 1920. .
RU'ILAND -- C:harles and Ao- M!lrion and Bob of Roseville; three
rence Barren will celebrate their daughters, Marlene Carpenter of . 'llle Lmcoln School, through 1\istory, auractcc! a number of highly eduSSth wedding anniversary Feb. 24 Rutland, Darlene 'Gilliam of Gahan- cated teachers, sevei'al had doctoral degrees. Probably the most famous was
with a family dinner ·at the home of na. and Teresa Wimbish of Colum- Edward Bouchet, who was principal arid.teacher at Lincoln school from 1908 ·
·
their daughter in Rutland.
bus. They also have 12 srandchil- to 1913.
In
1876,
Bouchet
became the first black to receive a doctoi'al degree from
They are the parents of three dren and three sreat-srandchildren. an American Univenity with.a Ph.D. in physics from Yale.
sons, Chsrles, Jr. of Rutland, Jim of
For many years Bouchet taught at the Quaker Run Institute for Colored
Youth in Philadelphia. From· 1902 to 1908 he' served as teaeher and businessman. coming to Gallipolis from Lawrenceville. Va.
1
While at Lincoln school, Bouchet was not only thJ: principal, he was also
the SCience and mathematics teacher.
!

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Barrens to observe 55th

·

JEFF AND VERA SNEDAKER

,

:·· Snedakers to mark 25th
GALLIPOLIS - Jeff and Vera
~nedaker observed their 25th wed- ·
anniversary Jan. 21.
wedding bad the distinction
!Ill&lt; .... ,~. the fmt one at Faith Baptist
Rodney. They were mar-

Tied by Rev Joseph C. Chapman.
They are the parents of two sons,
Ryan and Tim of Gallipolis. A surprise party was given by their sons
Feb. 3 at Faith Baptist Church.

triple by-pass heart surgery Friday
· morning at University Hospital,
Columbus. Family members report
that she is recuJ)erating nicely frpm
the 'surgery. They expect her' to be
transferred into a private room from
the intensive care unit this weekend.
and possibly be ready for discharge
from the hospital later this week.

HOSPITALIZED
SYRACUSE -- Emmogene
Hamilton · of Syracuse, underwent

· o\\O river 6e,,
;•
_ to
Bears

GORDON AND SOPHIA SWISHER

Swishers to mark 45th
DALE AND WILMA MCGRAW

.,. McGraws celebrate 50th
,. RACINE -- Dale and Wilma
Dillie' McGraw of Raci~te, are
erving their 50th wedding
ni.vcysary today. ,

dauJihter and son-in-law. Harold and
Garcia Adams, and three .grandchildren, Christi Hensley, William and
Joshua Adams. They also have a
great-grandson. Caleb Dylan Hens" ; They were married Feb. II, 1946 ley.
i , Racine. The late Rev. T.T. Shelton
Cards may be sent to the couple
onned the ceremony.
at Route 3, Box I, Elm Street,
•
: Mr. and Mrs. McDade have a Racine.

:.allia community c~lendar
Community Cllelldar Is
bUshed ill a free service to - ·
fit greu,. wllbilll w llllliii.IIKC
• tinp IUiil ·lp«iitt neaCI. The
ndar Is liCit dellped w prole sales «&lt;F IUd·nilen of llliy
Items are prtaled as spaee
_nails and c8111141t be ~nuiteed
' run a specific 111111111ier ol dey•.
'•

Sunday, Feb, II

.: GALLIPOLIS •••- "Attitude
'
Can
wer Your Blood Sligar" with Ed
olsclaw 2 to 4 p.m. Holzer Medi 'I Center French 500 Room.

•••
Monday, Feb. 12

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees
meeting 5.p.m. at Bossatd Library.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Riverside Study
Club meeting 12 p.m. Holiday Inn.

•••
GALLIPOLIS -. Faith Valley
Church services 7 p.m.

***

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Nan:oti~s Anonymous Clean and
F- Group 7:30 p.m. Episcopal
Church.

Citnllcleadal Service. for Wom• dd Me11
r,.
Funily PI111111!18
. .. ·
: . ~ ~~
~Related Services

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Bean for A.U Owuioru
204 N. 2nd., Middleport, OH

992-4055
10.S lion. thru Sll
VIla, llllt.c.rd, Dllcovlr,

'i=======================;w

MARIE'ITA --11\e fifth annual
teddy bear and doll show and sale
will be held in Marietta Feb. 18.
About 45 participants from Tennessee, Pen~sylvania, West Virginia •.
Indiana, Miksouri and Ohio will be
taking part in the show to be staged
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m at the
Lafayette Hotel, 101 Front St. M!lrietta.
Admission includes an entry to
win one of two. grand door prizes.
Prizes include collectible dolls from

ROBER.T.•• HOLLEY., M.D..•
fAIIILY PUCnCE

•

Pill CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL ·.

~cheduled

A videotape of the Teddy Bear

TO ACCOUODATI TIIOSE WOIIIIIG PEOPU,
.
WEARE.OPIII •nL 7 P.M. 01 TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICA~ CENTER)
.
2511· &amp; JEFFIISOI AVIIUE
POIIII PLEASIIT

Museum of Naples. Fla. will be
shown throughout the day.
ProCeeds from ticket and table
sales benefit the Marietta Area
Teddy Fund, a program that gives
(304): 675•1675
free bears to chilmn admitted to l.!:;::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::;5;;:·= ::::ii;i:=;:·::;:::::::;;::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::::!J
area community .liospitals.

..

340 SECOND AVE;, ~LUPOUS
(114) 448-2522
..

..... fl.,........ ..,....,...,

4-·A

Carulle of the Monih

Yankee Candle i

"u
. ea-*s

J OITI.

:~~an~~~t'~x~~~~~es~;';e t~~:~

ance of nature by predators. which
inturn become the prey. The thought
is .rather unsettlin!l to dwell upon .
W11l m1cro-orgamsms and worms

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OIIO.IMI PUZi. liD TO WIIO TOWlE
UliiPOLIS, 01. ·
tti tMO
·- OMI -~-. IH1 lUI. 1.16 \ - .

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CLOTHING FOR

~I 02
St.
Pomt Pleasant, WV
M·Sat 10 a.m.- 6 pm
Closed- Sunday

. . . .'IM . . . .Hf

.

,.,.,,,
IE
liVERY
........
...........__

OF ALL AGES

Pap Tests
STDS~
'
Prepanc:y Tests

: . . Birth Control ~ IJ;!dudins: . , .•llepo-Provera . ·~ . • lU.D.
-''' • 'B~ Q)ntroi fill . • C~SP¢mlicldt

~sHIVta&amp;aand~

GIFT'S •

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Bridge Plaza
GallipoHs, OH
M-Sat 10 a.m.. a p.m.
Sun. 12 Noon - 5 p.m.

:

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•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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Free Delive •

GJNGEIUJREAD
HOUSE
OF
Viand
Silver

.'

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F ebruary

•Snec. l G:A Wrap

...

CENEaATJONS

&amp; Flower.·" ''

Great GiA For Va. lentinei Day

MIDDLEPORT -- The name of roll list provided The Daily Sentinel
Bridget Johnson, an eighih sracler, last week. She received a grade of B
·was unintention~ly omitted from or above in all her subjects to be list·the Meigs Junior High School honor .ed on the honor roll.

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308 2nd Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio

fire protection from the state think kindly of me if I trade in my
.. 1 ~
.
forestry department.
hamburger for a soybean burger?
Atter1dlng Optometrist: Dr. Hufi-Molllca
One day as I was sitting on the
Dorotl!yS.yremclherhulbondClecqe.
catwalk. I observed a cottontail rab- lormlfly
of lletgo County, bock
1-800-852-8282
about throo ,..,. "10 and now In a
bit hopping along the road leading to houoa foctng tilt! 0111o. )1111 the towerd. At that point, the packed Syrocuoe.
.
••
c1ay roa was bordered on both .
•
sides by Bracken ferns . From the • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
concealment of the ferns. a weasel •
•
darted out ancl grabbed the rabbit. •
' 'f~' 411
There was a· squeal from the rabbit' •
··
as it was draJ18ed into the dense . .
foliage. For a second the ferns wig- •
gled slightly where the ·animals had •
disappeared. Then all was still and •
quiet. It was as though nothing had •
ever occurred. I felt very. sorry for •
the rabbit, but it was the natural •
course of nature.
•
What triggered my memory of •
the rabbit occurrence. after all those •
years, was a sight as cruel and as fast •
U 1
I 1o
in nature. Looking out .oor upstairs
O~ ,.,L
window into our yard, I glimpsed a •
70
~ lf,ru
falcon dive at a smaller bird and hit •
.
it in mid-air. The fatcon and bii-d •
tumbled to the ground with the fat - • ·
':1"
con on top. Within a split second, the •
• Boyd Bears • Uzzy High Dolls • Cats M.eow
falcon was off with the bird ih his •
.
talons. He was almost instantly out •
• Flower Arrangements made to order
of s1ght and left me wondering if I'd •
'
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seen what I knew I had seen. Moth1FT.
er Nature is everywhere revealing • r
UJ
~"
kindness to one species and cruelty
·

..----Omission----

Royal Vienna.Dolls of Little Hclct,ing, donated by Lloyd Middleton,
and a Virginia Turner Doll, donated

~Jl::~c~e~~~=r of The

,I

ly, the noise of loJ18elli
operating a chain saw was audible.
My curio'sity Sometimes a car would traverse the
about
Mother narrow, dirt road, or an airplane
· Natu~·s world can would fly over; those were the only
never be satisfied. foreign sounds in "my woods."
There is just too
As I was perched a considerable
much to team and distance from the ground, sound
enjoy. I believe waves magnified as they reached the
some . of the tower. Usually, the windows were
biggest surprises open (windows circled the towerj
in our lives come for fresh air and a sentle breeze.
.
from watching the Blacktail Deer would come under
birds ahd animals. There are glori- the tower to feed and it was ·an
ous wonders and there arc tragedies excellent observation post. The deer
in nature. Document!lries filmed in never thought to look up and I could
Africa, and elsewhere, have had the study them intently without ever
photography crew~ tom between being seen. I believe they seldom
wanting to feed starving animals ani! . picked up my fresh scent, althoush
not wanting· to upset the balance of residual odors from my uips to the
naiure. .
, ·
latrine, weather station; water cans,
R~pdy, I was thinking of an and woodpile, were always evident.
event' that occurred oiJ my second
·Much of my · observation for
year .~ .a s..e fores~. department "smoke" Wll$•• accomplishC!I sitting
lookout The three : summers after on · the catWlilk which rinsed the
my 16dl biithday, wen! spent suard- "'wer. l usUally bad a bOok while I
ing the 'forests of o~gon from one ~unbathed and watched for fires.
of their worst enemies, fire. !t was a Every, few minutes I'd walk around
24-hour-day job. My only communi- the catwalk to make sure I hadn't
cation with the outside world was a missed an~-SiiiQice:li w115 an' idj,Uic
short-wave radio. Roughly, three way to spend the summer. 11vee
months a
were spent.in relative times a day I took weather readings
sohtude m my wood and glass from the weather station at the bottpwer. A spring about one-half mile tom of my tower; these fil)dings
away was my source of water. I had • were nported to the disuict heada Coleman gas camp stove for cook- quarters via radio. When the humiding in ~ot weather (my own), and a ity dropped to'30 percent or less, the
pot-bellied wood stove in the tower logsers had to leave the woods. If I
for heat. !lived in the to~r. w~ich heard a chain saw during the closed
was between 50 and 60 feet off the time, I reported it to headquarters.
ground. My domain included forest- Ukewise, forestry being a conserva. ed hills close to wheR elk bugled, ~on organization, I reported spotdeer were abundant, !llld cousars hghting and other suspected game
and black bears ,...,;dered the forests violations. Game wardens (who in
seeking a meal. From observing paw Oregon were memben of the Oreprints, at least on one occasion, a gon State Police) 'Were occasional'
cougar had shared my spring. Also, visitors to all 14 lookouts in our diswhile driving to see me once, my trict. Our county was the largest in
sister chilsed a cougar a short di~- western Oregon 11nd encompassed
•tance up the road with her car. In this an area just east of Diamond Lake in
·remote area, the sounds of civiliza- the Cascades, to the Oregon coast.
:tion were seldom heard. Occasional- Most 't»f this huge area was under

rear

GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
Anonymous meetins 8 p.m. St.lr------~------------------------------------IIJ!I~-..
Peter's Episcopal Church.

PLANNED PARENTiiOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

~. (~(f)

HOMOSASSA. Fla. - On Feb, Daniel out and continued to riln the
. 18, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Swish- busilless until 1987 when they sold
er of Homosassa, Fla.·will celebrate out. Sophia worked at G.C. Mul]lhy
Co. until 1953. She then worked for
45 years of marrifge.
·
They weJ:C married at Gordon's The Evans Grocory Co. until 1969,
parent's home in Cheshi~ with Rev then at The Swisher Implement Co.
Shirley Woods performing the cereIn November 1987 they moved to
mony. Attendants we~ Bob SwishAa ..Sophia works part
er, nephew of the llf09lll and Wanda Homosassa,
time at The Crystal Paradise Restau- II
Thompson. Gordon is the youngest
&lt;
son of the late Erman and Vesta rant in Crystal River. Aa.
They have one son, William
Swisher of Cheshi~ 'and Sophia is
the youngest daughter of Robert E. "Bill" Keith. He and his wife, Carla
and the late Callie Roberts of Rod- ~~~~'::.hter. Lauren Ashley live in
ney.
Gordon worked oil the farm with
Those wishing to send good
· his father and brotber, Daniel until wishes may do so by sending .them
1969, when he and Daniel bought to Mr. anCI Mrs. Gordon H. Swisher
the John Dee!" De~lership fr:om Bill 6760 W. Ost West St. Homosassa,
·
Vanco. In 1975 Qordon bought Aa. 34446

Teddy bear, doll show

Thesday, Feb. i3

_____ ________

. : CHESHIRE - TOPS meeting 10
t
II a.m. Cheshire United
thodist Church.
-":'"

WEDNESDAY • FEBRUARY 14, 1996 ·
Revco

-Society ~ scrapbook\ ."

SPELLING BEE
:
POMER.OY • The-an~ual M~1gs
County spelhns ~ will he held
Tuesday at 7 p.m. m the vocal mus1c
room at Southern H1gh Sc~ool.
The county partiCipates •n ~con:
test spon~ored by the Hunttns~on
Herald-D.. spatc~ and the Me1~s
County --:mner ~ t1)e runner-up wdl.
compete tn flunttnJIIOn, W.Va. for the
championship and the opportunity to
go to Washington, D.C. for the
national contest

:Tile

FREE EYE SCREENING

OFf·TOtAL·.I

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Febrully 11,1111 .:.
.., ) .......~....lbl...

Entertain111ent

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People in the news

:

LOS ANGELES (AP)- A Beverly Hills house
CHATIANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) - bogged by 12
John fuvoha called home for a while is causing him
LOS ANGELES (AP)- James Brown's wife died from latina the illc- years of squabblinJ. the Bessie Smith Hall finally is ·
bcadaches long after he moved out.
gill drug PCP and from coronary artery disease, an autopsy showed.
set to honor the "Empress of the Blues."
He and his actress wife, Kelly Preston, are
Foul play already had been ruled out in the death of Adrienne Lois
. Tbc $4 million hallfearures music rooms and a jazz
accused of failing to pay rent on the house from Octo- Brown, who died Jan. 6 after collapsing at a Beverly Hills clinic. two days and bllles research center. But the centerpiece is a 264ber 1994 until July 199S, while Travoll4 was in town to after undergoing liposuction. ..)
seat cabaret-style performance hall, wbcre blues legfilm "Get Shorty." Tbc couple live in Aorida.
Mrs. Brown, 4S, also had taken therapeutic doses of several medications . end Koloo Taylor is tonight's scheduled bcadliner.
Bob Cobcn 's $500,000 lawsuit, filed Tuesday, prescribed for her, including Valium and morphine, coroner's spokesman
Exhibits at the hall chronicle the life and music of
alleges that Travolta and Preston took or damaged fur- Scott .Carrier said Friday.
Smith, who died in 1937.
niture, kitc!lenware, art and antiques.
Tbc drugs entered a body ravaged by the effects of bcart disease, obesity
Born into the humblest of beginnings in Aprill894;
· fuvolta's lawyer. Martin Singer, called the accu- ·and lung infection, and weakened by recent cosmetic surgery, he said.
and orphaned at age 9, Smith sang on Chattanooga
~
sations "absurd" and 1111 attempt to deprive the couple
During their stormy tO-year marriage, Mrs. Brown accused bcr husband street comer.; for nickels and dimes.
~
of their $8S,O!)O security deposit.
at least three times of assault, but each time either withdrew the accusations
By 1923, she ~as a premier blues singer, belting out Adrlet"n,. Brown ~
fuvolta stars, in the new action film "Broken · or the charges were dismissed. Brown denied beating his wife.
"Downhcarted,Biues," which sold more than 7SO,OOO
1.
copies. She made nine recordings with trumpeter Louts Armstrong.
·l

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Fa
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us1ness

.

earns award
'

Joari Collins BUILDING NOTICE '
book: Trashy Requirement to give notice to County ·t
or trash? Auditor of new construction or·
t
~

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i

improvements - penalty (Section
NEw YORK &lt;AP&gt; - Joan
5713,17 Ohio Revised Code)
t
Collins
hastheproduced
best-selling
i
books, but
manuscripts
for two ·--------------~---------·
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new novels aren't trashy - they're
trash, an editor testified.
Former Random House editor
Joni Evans was the first witness
Tuesday in a Random House·lawsuit
thatseekstotakebacka$1.3million
advance from Collins, saying she
failed to deliver two "ready for
press" manuscripts. Collins is countersuing for the rest of the $4 million
promised to her in the book deal.
The 62-year-otd British actress,
who played Alexis Carrington on
"Dynasty" and has appeared in 50
movies, marched into court wearing
high-heeled black leather boots, a
white silk blouse open at the collar
and a double-breasted black wool

.

UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE GRANDE CHORALE

lJRG Grande Chorale to perform
ih,
Point
Pleasant 'Artist Series
.
...

•

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., ro!Nt PLEASANT, W.Va. - The mance attire: vests and circle skirts throughout Ohio. They also tour

University of Rio Grande Grande
will perform at the State
:rhcairc in Point Pleasant, W.Va. 3
p~.,Fel?. 25. The concert is next in
~ seri~s of performances under the
Ppint·Pieasant Artist Series.
' · The Grande Chorale is a mixed
~""mble of 16 to 18 singers who
lie thosen by audition. Their wide
repertoire includes vocal jazz,
Broi!Ciy.'IIY show tunes, rock, spirituals,. gowel. inspirational and coun· l)'y,: Many•·of the songs are choreo-

Chorale

PJ~he4.,.

TJi:ey wear matching perfor-

for the girls and tuxedos for ·the Aorida biennially, and usually perguys. Some of the performers are form at Disney World.
During cqncerts, the Grande
music majors, but the majority are
from the other disciplines through- Chorale is accompanied by piano,
electric guitar, bass and drums. A
out the university.
The Grande Chorale is under the sound technician runs their state-ofdirection of Dr. Merv Murdock, the the-art Peavey sound system, which
URG M.usic Department Coordina- features individual microphones for
tor. He received a B.S. degree from each singer and instrument, and a 24
Hartwick College, M.S. degree from channel mixing board.
Tickets for the Sunday afternoon
Ithaca College, .and a Ph.D. from
show
are on sale. For more informaUniversity of North Texas.
The Grande.· Chorale sings at tion contact Becky Benson at Peomany University of Rio Grande ples Bank or the State Theaire.
events and tours extensively

.too ·much focus on crew nearly sinks 'White Squall'
are as interesting as even the short- the crew members learn from each
est scene between the students and other. Quite simply. none of these
QanMH ·Suburben Newapapera
. If ii offered more of Jeff Bridges Sheldon. Bridges draws the best out kids at his most strenuous is half as
,,nd tess 1 of "To Sir With Love," of his young co-stars, just as Shel- interesting as Jeff Bridges' Sheldon
'!White .Squall" would seem less don challenges his crew to be more at his most remote.
Bridges embodies quiet strength
cOn\mercially calculated and more than they think they can.
and
integrity like no other actor. He
The title refers to a sudden, deadheartfelt.
·
• As it is, "White Squall" amounts ly storm that anacks the ship without makes Sheldon quiet but accessible,
to ."The Floating .Pelld Poets Soci- warning, resulting in several de~ths a man whose values are solid and ·
et'f," movie about an inspirati~nal - and a legal inquiry by the. U.S. whose skills as a teacher are consid·tellcher that devotes far too hnle Coast Guard that threatens Shel- erable. Bridges locates his genuine
tinie to the teaclier ll!ld way too don's license. The squall itself is sense of both pain and shame as he
much to his callow, cliched students harrowingly shot by director Ridley attempts to cope with the accidental
Scon,.who fabricates a sequence that tragedy that provides the film's cliinSJead.
.
: •When Bridges is on screen, . suggests the puniness of man in the max . .
Scott Wolf, best known for his
"White squall" vibrates with em!r- face of nature's sheer unleashed
role
on Fox's "Party of Five," has
fury.
gy an4 feel.ing. His pre~ nee.~s ~g­
the
requisite
wide-eyed dewiness as
Tbe
whole
thing
looks
gorgeous;
neueiul!l htS character IS fasctnabng.
Chuck,
the
crew
member who serves
·He plays Christopher Sheldon, Scott is nothing if not a visual masas
narrator
and
the
audience's guide .
cap!ain of the Albatross, a two-mast- ter. And the messages of this film,
'ed.' sailing vessel that doubles as a tbc lessons Sheldon tries to impart to through the story. John Savage is
colorful as the cigar-chomping,
flo.ting prep school called the his.crew, are valuable ones.
chanty-singing
English teacher.
But
too
much
of
this
film
is
about
Ol:ean Academy. Each fall, Sheldon,
his" wif~ and. small staff accept a the more broadly emotional lessons
dOZen or 5o high school seniors for a ' ; - - - - - . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....- ,
yetr of lailin~ around the world ·
The Gallia Meigs Community Action Agency will be
lllliled with ata&amp;mi.c 'tudy.
'llased QD ,a true story, "White holding a public hearing at the Guiding Hand School
~ilill'' fOCII~S on the experiences . (Gallco Workshop) on Wednesday, February 21, 1996 at
~ bond the aroup of young men
.
wtio board the Albatros~ as its crew
1 p.m., to solicit input on community needs in Gallja
in'1 ),1ie fall of 1960. Sheldon'~ c~rand Meigs Counties.
·
rielilum calls for practical h fe
te+&gt;ns that teach his charges teamThere will also be an election to fill indigent vaci1Ilcies
w~. unity :~ inner strength lU the on the Gallia Meigs C.A.A.'s Board of Directors for
time tlWt .(J!s f~ulty is leachi. . them literaiiii'C, htstory and SCI- 1996.
t~. ·
'' ·
.
·
AILinterested citizens are encouraged to attend.
&lt;But Todd -Robinson's predictably
~malic , sc~enplay slows the
aOblg every. time' it threatens to gain
lllDtllentum. Each of the young
.-~ors represents a specific aspec!
of ;•een angst and coming-of-age
Everyone knoYi that a r= iymbolizes love. l'&gt;ul were you
bt*s, all of which we've seen

ey ~SHALL FINE

a

sui\·.Nobody held a gun to Random
House's head to pay me $4 million,"
she told reporters during a break in
the trial. "They were begging for
me."
Collins said .she was "completely
shattered and let down" by Random
House's handling of her writing. She
had submitted a pair of manuscripts,
"A Ruling Passion" and "Hell Hath
No Fury."
In his opening statement, Collins'
attorney Kenneth Burrows said Random Hou~e wanted out of the deal
because the publisher had badly
overpaid.
·

Any person that constructs any building or other !
...,., Th
d '
improvement COSting more than -nwO
OUSan
•
Dollars upon any lot or land within Gallia County
1 h
shall, within 60 days after construct on as .
commenced,_notify the County Auditor.
This notice shall be in writing on forms furnished ••
"
by the County ~uditor.
Failure to give notice and to return improvements -'
for taxation as provided by this section will result in ...•·
a tax penalty of fifty percent for each year from the
•
date of construction to the date of discovery.
'
The County Auditor or his deputy, withi_n ..
reasonable hours, may enter and fully examine all
buildings ·and improvements that are either liable to .
or exempt from taxation by the Ohio Revtsed Code. •
This does not apply to fesidents of Gallipolis City
since building permits are 'required.

1

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RONALD K. CANADAY
Gallia County Auditor
446-4612

Cabin
Fe\'er

Sate

...... jlridles .~~~
111e~·~~·· ~fet;!f,JU~nts
lf,f. . ·. ·

. . .;;,~.-;~sm~
ltJ'IPtfl ~ ijl,l!llilll skills, u the .,
~ .....,...... roiitla a crial.-19
filii-· ~ of.thtie, howewt,

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By JOYCE "· ROSENBERG .
AP Buslneaa Writer
The government gives media com. panies a clear channel to consolidate.
· And the health care industry continues to heal itself.
.. ' A look at what happened in business this past week:
"'t's alright b,.Wi
·· The media marketplace.is undergoing some big .changes. And Wash· ington says that's OK.
President Clinton signed into law
the bill expected to overhaul the
telecommuhications industry, allow"ing local long-distance phone com'panics and cable companies into each
_'lither.;' businesses. It also deregulates
-cable rates an\! allows media compa:nie~ to ~xpand their holdings more

Cities/ABC merger Is announced,
there·s grumbling.
But since Congress and the executive branch are apparently gomg
along with the trend, the media business will continue to determine its
own course.
· Makin&amp; health eare healthier
Health care merger.; aren't getting
the kind of publicity that media marriages are, but they also continue to
plug along.
Cardinal Health Inc., a drug wholesaler, is buying Pyxis Corp., a maker
of drug management systems for
hospitals, in a stock deal worth $920
million.
And the tussling continued over
W.R. Grace &amp; Co.'s National Medical
Care Inc. One suitor, Baxter lntema~ily,
tiona( Inc., said it won't raise its $3.8
· And the Federal Communica\ions billion offer. Baxter said it will try to
Commission approved the merger of persuade stiareholders that it has a
The Walt .Disney Co. and Capital better deal for them than a rival bid
.Cities/ABC Inc. The deal, completed · by Germany's Fresenius AG. •
:;flriday, ~ted the world's ·largest
Health care companies slatted
i!llledia company. It means Disney will downsizing and consolidating in the
'ibave a huge outlet.for its productions. early '90s in part because of the ClinT The FCC did tell Disney it would ton administration's unsuccessful
:have to sell or swap newspaper or attempt to reform the health care sys•radio holdings in Fort Worth, Texa., - tern. That effort failed, but the indus~~d in Pontiac-~tfoit, Mich.
try, motivated by lower costs and
: , The federal.government is getting higher profits, is still revamping
!Jiore lenient. •aboill the media busi: itself. And that trend is likely to con•J:O:ss, allowing the free market more tinue into the future, too.
·~ a hand in determining who owns Winners, losers
~hat and how.
WINNERS: IBM 'Corp.: whose
~ Consumer groups opposed the stock climbed above $110 a share and
otelecommunications bill, saying con- stayed there all week, the first time
l50lidations in the industry will limit since August that Big Blue has man)!toi.ices and that reduced competition aged that feat.
· mean higher rates . And whenevLOSERS: Workers at Maytag
Continued on 0-ll
a big deal like the Disney-Cap

be supported by Brazil's sale Thurs-i=
day of green, arabica coffee from its!~'
warehouse stocks - some' of il
decades old.
,
Ganes said Brazil managed to sell
68 peiCent of that offering of 250,000
132-pound bags and would have sold,
more if not for financing proli1ems.
"There are continued concems·
about tight supplies," Ganes said. '
"The thoughts are that whatever
·remains of deliverable stocks is going 1
to disappear."
~·
Brazil and Colombia, the world's\
leading coffee exporters, are shipping)
sharply lower amounts than a year
ago.
,
.•
Brazil's supply has been depleted
by increased consumption following;
Continued on page D-8 ~

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By PATRICIA LAMIELL
AP Bualnesa Writer
NEW YORK- Stocks ended Friday's whirlwind session barely higher, but enough to push several market
indexes to record levels for the fifth
consecutive session, and one to a
sixth-straight high.
The Dow Jones industrial average
ended up 2.17 points at a new high of
, 5,541.62. It was the fifth straight
record for Wall Street's best-known
indicator, its I Oth in the last II sessions and its 12th high in the past 15
trading days. .
The blue-chip average rallied more
than 45 points in the morning, then
slid to minus-26 on coinputer-driven
selling around midday. But the Dow
slowly trimmed its losses through the
afternoon, maintaining a pattern of
rallying into the close that has prevailed all week.
The Dow average ended up 167.63

.Municipal

for the week.
Advancing issues led decliners by
a slim margin on the New York Stock
Exchange. Volume was heavy at a
revised 476.64 million shares as of 4
p.m., ahead of Thursday's pace.
The broad market finished mostly
higher. The NYSE's composite index
rose 0.29 to 349.44, the Standard &amp;
Poor 's 500-stock index rose 0.30 to
656.37, and the Nasdaq composite
rose 1.43 to 1,094.60. All three indexes broke through Thursday 's record
highs. It was the sixth straight record
for the Nasdaq composite and the
fifth consecutive high for the other
two indicators.
But the American Stock
Exchange 's market value index fell
0.65 to 564.01, failing to top Thursday 's all-time high of 564.66.
Traders and analysts said the current strengthtrrthe stock market is in
large part the result of record invest-

Bond~: .Is

By Bryce L. Smith

GALLIPOLIS · With tax increases worrying many people, municipal
bonds have become an area of
renewed interest for many investors.
Margaret D. Patel, Se.nior Vice President with Boston Security Counsel·
tors (a subsidiary of The Advest
Group), manages the highly rated
Ad vest Government Securities Fund
as well as the new Advantage Municipal Bond Fund. Here is her response
to several frequently-asked questions
about municipal bonds and their
potential.
Q. Why is this a good time to be
investing in municipal bonds? A.
Interest rates presently are creeping
up from a 20-year low. However, with
the marginal tax rates increases of
1993 and possibly more in 1994,
municipals generally offer those tax payers higher pre-tax equivalent
yields than are available from Treasury or corporate bonds. To illustrate,
long-term, AAA rated municipal bond
yield approximatel.Y83 % as much as
long-term treasury bonds. However
the income is free of federal ·taxes
and, depending on the locality, may
escape state and local ta.es as welL
Q. What are your criteria for

.. ew pet store opens in area

GALLIPOLIS - Anyone familiar
with Farm Bureau knows that late
winter is membership time. In each
county in Ohio, membership drives
are underway. The fact that the membership campaign is conducted with
a virtual army of volunteers is unique
in itself. But Ohio Farm Bureau is
distinctive in many.area that you may
not even be aware of.
Ohio Farm Bureau is a state organization that is a compilation of
county Farm Bureaus. Over 170,000
member families belong -- each
member includes all immediate fam·
ily members. County d~es are Gallia,
$47. Most people find that the long
list of member benefits more t!lan
pays for '~ yearly dues. For example, the savings from workers' compensation premiums, special rates for
Nationwide Insurance or discounts
for telephone or prescription services

ments of cash into stock mutual
funds. ·
The Investment Company Institute, a mutual fund trade group, said
Wednesday that investors had put a
record $24.5 billion more into stock
mutual funds in January than they had
removed.
But the market's rise has not been
entirely driven by cash Hows, said
James Solloway, research director at
Advest Research. "The fact of the
matter is that ·when you look at the
stock market in the aggregate, it is
still priced reasonably well versus the
level of profits out there right now
and the level of interest rates."
Fourth-quaner earnings have been
surprisingly robust, adds Ron Hill, a
market strategist at Brown Brothel'S
Harriman &amp; Co., who cited earnings
gains as a reason why his firm raised
its 1996 target for the S&amp;P 500 Friday to 700 from 675.

· Some cyclical stocks, issues that ::
perform well when the economy is ::
growing, outperformed the rest of the ••
market, in a reversal of Thursday's :'
dominant strategy. Investors bought :.:
cyclicals on the hope that those -;
stocks would benefit the most from .;
any further interest rate cuts by the ; ~
Federal Reserve.
~'
Auto stocks gained. early in the day ..;;
after Chrysler announced a treaty · ·)
Thursday with dissident investor Kirk ~'
Kerkorian to improve the automak- ~~
er's shareholder value. Chrysler was
up as much as 2 S/8 points on an
intraday basis but ended do)lln I at 55 C
3/4.
'
•
The early strength in Chrysler •
boosted other auto stock,s, however. •
Ford climbed 3/4 to 30 1/4, and Gen:
eral Motors added 518 to ~2. both in
active trading on the Big Board.
Overseas stock markets finished JJ
mixed.
C

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n:

this a good time to buy?

selecting municipal bonds?
A. A primary criterion we utilize
on choosing bonds is stable for
improving credit quality. We evaluate
quality trough ratings and analyses
given to issue&lt;S by Standard &amp; Poor's
and Moody's the two major bond rating services. We also use our own
internal research to evaluate different
municipal market sectors . Those
bonds meeting our credit quality cri teria are then reviewed in terms of
their relative yields to. determine
which issues offer the best investment
value. Achieving adequate diversity
of holdings is a continuing goal for a
municipal bond fund . It is imponant
to maintain a wide range of issues in
a variety of sectors. Bonds held typically include general obligation
bonds backed by the taxing power of
the municipal borrower, as well as
revenue bonds, where interest is supported by revenues from toll roads,
hospitals. or utilities (water, sewage.
or power to name a few examples).
Q. Why buy municipal bonds via
a mutual fund?
· A. Purchasing shares of an appropriate munici'pal bond fund may well
be the best way for many investors to
panicipate in municipals.

• The investor has the opportunity to get far greater diversification
than from buying individual Issues.
• The fund investor gets to take
advantage of lower transaction costs
for purchases and sales which a multi-million dollar fund gets for volume
trades.
• An investors has immediate liquidity in an open-end fund, which
continuously will redeem (as well as
issue) new shares at the net market
value per share of securities held in
the fund.
• A bond fund offers continuous
management by monitoring credit
quality of holdings and automatocally reinvests interest income from
bond holdings.
Q. BrieHy, what are municipal
bonds and who issues them?
"A. periods of economic uncertainty--over interest rates and inflation,
for example-investors arc also concerned about the safety of their
investments . Municipal securities
·have an excellent record of paying
interest and principal on time. Each
bond must be judged on its own merit, but as a class. municipal bonds
offer a high degree of safety and security second only to U.S. Government

more than pay for the dues cost.
That's the dollars and cents reasons
10 join , but real strength of the organization is the representation it gives
its members at the statehouse.
Farm Bureau is an organization
for farmers but no necessarily ·an
organization of just farmers . Anyone
who has an interest in issues that
affect the rural community should be
a member. Anyone who thinks agriculture is an important industry in
Ohio and that more of the general
public should understand the industry should join the organization.
Maybe most of all, if you believe that
the best way to solve problems in
your town or community is by working with people through an organized
structure to achieve a goal, then you
should definitely join Farm Bureau.
Many people wrongly believe that
Farm Bureau is a government-affili-

ated agency. In its infancy Farm
Bureau had strong ties to Ohio State's
Extens.ion Service, but these ties
ended when Farm Bureau became
more politically inHuential and started in the insurance business .
Insurance and Farm Bureau hav~
been closely related since the early
days. In 1925, only IS percent of all
farmers were covered by automobile
insurance, and •75 percent of that
group on Iy had fitre and thef1 protection. High insurance rates di scouraged many from buying insurance,
which didn ' I seem fair since farmers
lived in low-risk areas. Farmers often
jacked up their cars and stored the
tires in the house for the year because
roads were impassable, yet they were
compelled to pay the same ra1es as
city drivers. So, with $10,000 working capital, the Farm Bureau Mutual
Automobile Insurance Company as

.,

ing foods, cages, and health and
groominil products for pets.
According to Rupe, availability_ on
pets and supplies is not a problem. "If
there a particular pet. or supply we
don~ have, we can order it and have
it in within a few days," Rupe said.
Two full time experience4
groomers, ·Rupe and Max Burton,
provide complete gt;OOming services
by appointment.
·
Business hours are Monday
•A ·larp sel~tion of AKC regis- through Thursday from 9 to 6, friday
puppies, kittens, birds, and ' and Saturday from 9 to 8, and Sun- ·
Otic pets is available, either on s,ite day froni 1-4, Tbc phone number is
'
' by Order. •Pampered Paws also 992,6244.
' ks dun line of supplies includ-

MIDDLEPORT- Pampered Paws
ily Pet Store, owned and operat'by B. Jolene Rupe, is ihe nQwest
t store In the Tri-County IR!I
·~ring a COQI~e selection Qf pets,
J!Piies fot all your pets needs, and
· ming ·services.
'lbe store, locatlld adjacent to The
.fltlcd Touth at 271 North Second
enue in Middleport. opened for
_iness on Feb. I, according to

.q
·~l

bonds. A wide variety of municipal
bonds are issued from virtuat!y every no
city and state to finance sucg projects •1£
as schools. roads, airports a11d sewer "'
facilities. The categories of bon :&gt;1
srange from general obligation, Which ·••
typically carry superior credit ratlngs ~11
with corresponding lower risk and ··~
yields to revenue bonds, which generally provide greater returns !han 1
general obligation bonds.
!
There are also insured bonds for 1 ~
addotoonal protcctoon and zero c'oupon ~
ISsues that are especially suit~ for "
building a retirement fund or college
~·

savings.

Municipal bonds can be purChased ~ .
individually in minimum denomina- c' '
tions of $5,000 or by investing in .,,
municipal bond mutual fiaitds illd unit
trusts. These investments
offer tax-. ''!,)
'" •
'
free compounding, diversification ·'
and professional investment' 1 man- · :·;:
agement for a low minimum invest- ·
ment. To find out more about how "'' ·
municipal bonds can help ease the tax '"'
bite in your portfolio, consult your taX ''"
advisor.
' f
Bryce L. Smith is asSociate vice ·a~
president or Advest Int. in its G.a. '!lo:
lipolis office.
·; l')
!. . . .

,..

··J~it.

. [)&lt;I
~n

Also C.rnatlon• In •II colore.
Weacc:.pt VIsa &amp; Mutwcard
Place your order now tP be sure.

·otafllerY orders blk• till noon 'feb, 14

EXPRESSIONS

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inoi-

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(304)m.iln

-wv

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!&gt;X
founded in 1926. In 19S~ thal ~ow.
ance company became ~ • ·
l'/attonw•de Insurance, ,
. ;•
pi
. Yes, Farm Bureaus is a spec;~. ,,;;
onterest group that repreSCI\ts fwmon 1
at the local, state and natiilnalkveJS "
but it is more than that. FI!DD ~- J~':
has programs for touth, Y_li"V,filidi~ ·~I
ers and women, plus !fCiv~oun- · .,
cils, marketing and safet&gt;! Pr"Biw '''
What's more, the directioft ~·
. ir. ~
· · o.L
_ JL
• 1llfaa- i tT!
nozauon
-~s every yew p .Cieta- ..,,
· mined by delegate me~ Who
vote on policy at ·~ ~QI)'s
annual meebng.
·. t , t
;~ ,
If this sounds like an .irotjQD vJ.I
you would like to be a ~l!f.~ .a 'I•'
call to your county F.nb
ic3
offi~e, 286-4598 or I-8QOitj7;~. ~'l
Or,Jusltalkto. yourflOi~·a ''''
a good chance they're '1\'odd"'oit.lh. ;'!I!
membership campaign, , , ,, , t :
Kim ~rless , II ~ ·m'
director of tbe area Fu)il 1•. ,. :a;&gt;
&lt;fl'

ll_SDA reveals 1996 crop ·burley tobacco program
'
By LISA MEADOWS
.
GALLIPOLIS- The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the
following provisions of the 1996 burley tobacco program. For 1996 the
basic quota for each fann will be
increased by.IS.5 peiCent from 199S.
The national marketing quota for
the 1996 crop is 633 .8 million
pounds, up from the 1995 quota of
549 million pounds and is based on
the following: a) purchase inteptions
by domestic cigarette manufacturers

•

• ' I '

(

The \!lore actively traded April con- a hedge against inHation.
Silver was hurt by Silver Valley
tract dropped $3.70 to $407.80 per
ounce. March silver dropped 5.9 Resources Corp.'s announcement that
cents to $5.6520 per ounce.
it will reopen two silver mines, Rap. April platinum dropped $6.00 to topoulos said.
$422.20 per ounce and March pallaAlthough the two mines won't
dium dropped $2.60 to $139.85 per have much of an overall effect on silounce.
ver supplies, Raptopoulos said il did
Raptopoulos said gold came under cause traders to worry whether other
heavy downside pressure in the morn- mines will reopen, too.
.
ing when traders and institution~(
"This casts a negative tone to the
banks began selling.
silver market, mostly psychologiA week ago, gold futures prices hit cal," she said.
.
a 5 112 year high after the Federal
On the New York Coffee, Sugar
Reserve lowered interest rates, caus- and Cocoa Exchange, green .,abica
ing inHation jitters.
coffee for March delivery rose 2.35
But Raplopoulos said a rally in cents to _$1.2605 pe·r pound, followstocks and bonds Friday diminished ing a S.IO cent rise on Thursday.
·Judith Ganes, analyst for Merrill
concerns some traders had about
inHation. Gold is regarded by most as Lynch &amp; Co., said coffee continued to

Stock market finishes strong Friday~

.; : PET STORE OPENS • Pltmpered Paws Family Pat Store, offer·
lftg a coiiiPiete line of ·pete, auppllet, and grooming urvlcet,
··
t1y opened at 271 North Second AWfl•ln Middleport. Own.; Jolene Rupa compllllta the grooming of • .._yle Knapper", •
ker ,...,,.. The 1t0111 .. open IIVIII daye a -k.

Dink
RO!Ie6,...
!or
Happiness
•
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Gold futures drop sharply'

By KIM HARLESS

of all the &amp;blle difTerence.s in meaning
between difTerenl oolor 1'01'0!1?
l'&gt;efore you SJy il Yith fbweri for VR{eptine'i Day. be 8Ufe
that you knoY exactly what you're Mying.
Red Q~,..:. ror Love
·. YylloY Qoea.- Friend!!hip

t
.
o

uovernment tells media
·firms 'do what you want'

..

Winter is membership time for Farm Byrea- ~ ~

8'1/l\I'C;

lbe· tough guy whose
~ho pos!U!C masks an inferiority
· cOillplex..about. his lack of smarts:
'IltCre's the overly sensitive one
wllnse fear of heights stems from
· un~solved : feeliflgs about his
~lOved · older brOther's death. And
tl\ifn: 's the rich jerk who C!lllld actu.ail'y tum out ~ be an OK IllY .if he
could ever s~ the inHuence of his
dorilin""rini.
'tathef.
. ,,
,. finally. of coune; tbere's the n~­
rilar; .. --~·~but pracb~&lt;kid wllildlit't 1\ll'e . . he wants .

·'

Sunday, February 11, 1998 -

'

A Qore Is A Qore

-~· ~·
' lbere's

Pomeroy Poatmuter Charles Grim present~ ru111I mall carrier Jack Walker (right) With a 20 year Safe Driving Award during
a ceremony recently at the Po1111r0y Post Office. Welker Ia a carrier on Ru1111 Route 2, Pomeroy, and haa ufety averaged arounall
. 80 militia each day on hla route of moatly county and townahlp
rOIIda.
.
·

Section D
'

By TARA BURGHART
Associated Press Writer
Gold futures .Prices fell sharply
Pnday, undeiCut by reduced worries
about inHation, a rising dollar and a
rally in U.S."stocl\s and bonds.
"There were a humber of negative
features and nothing on the positive
side," said Bette Raptopoulos, metals
analyst for Prudential Securities Inc.
In other markets, other precious
metals fell in sympathy with gold.
Both coffee and wheat futures rose.
· The Commodity Research Bureau's
. index of 17 commodities rose .46
point to 248.02.
In trading on the Comex division
of the New York Mercantile
Exchange, gold for February deli very
dropped $3.50 to $405.60 per ounce.

••

:~.:=LP':~~rtt•r

1timts- Jmtintl
·

!

· 424 million pounds; b) unmanufactured exports (3 year average) 155.4 million pounds; c) reserve
stock adjustment .. 54.5 million
pounds; and d) discretionary adjustment - zero.
The suppon ievel for the 1996
crop is $1.73~ perpound, up 1.2 cents
· per pound from 1995. The effective
quota is expected to be about 724
million polinds, wllich includes under
marketings. This is appro'ximately

'

146 million pounds above the 1995
effective quota.
The marketing assessment will be
.8685 cent per pound on both growe&lt;S and buyers, for a total of 1.737
cents per pound for the 1996 crop of
burley tobacco. The no-net-cost
assessment will be announced at a
later date. · ·
The 1995 basic quota in Gallia
County was I ,850,005 pounds. The
!5.S percent increase from 199S will

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Distinctive features mark home's facade

.... wnpor•1• porch wllh a
'ollllt-·
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;. ..L~'il:!£:.!:'::~
:ala! the

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Clip thll order and retum label

~:t~~~cs ~
t,lln F·ll boa a ll•ln1·
IUI'St room, lr"ell room,

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Er.ela11d la$4 for plian N6. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : -

dlnlnt room. bre•kftat
ldldlen, ltundoy room. oJu.. beol-

10011111

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Full lludy plan lnfonndon on this hotilt&gt; Ia avallltble In a $4 baby'
blueprint. Four booldels are alao avaJiabie at $4.95 ell:h:,your Home-How
to Build, Buy or s.llt Ranch Hom-. 24 ·pflhe most popular from lhlti
fllatu~e; Prrlaloal Home RBpa/15, which .... how to handle 35 c:ommon
problema; and, A,F/llllleS end Other Vacialloll Homes, a collection of 24
atytn, s.nd check or money order payable to the Aeaodated Pre81 and lhis
label to: HOUIII of the Week, The Sunday;7'/rJW Sentinel, P.0. Box 1562,
New VOlt!, N.Y. 101111-1562.
·

I

lla ablllbtH, _ . , ..
...b ceUIII and Rrepi~Ce, the
pelt ....,., It wd aulle&lt;l for Ill

evolved over centuries to handle a
specifii:' cuuingtask. Familiar Westem ~ws have recently been jQined in
tbil country . by equally ancient
desiJftl from Japan. These are aetting
rapid IICCCptance among wood craftspeople for fine work and even for fast
cuuing., ·
' ChoOsing a handsaw. as with lillY
tool, depends on the particular job at
hlllld. When the correct handsaw is
usc1fprpperly, it's an effective, accurate culling tool. '\'ou can tell its pur-

I, -, "' .....,,. . ·. To Order Study Plan ·:. . : . :I·
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lie ...... a ....,t . - . . - k
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miaiiHCI tool, each of !he many types

For AP ip1 =Ill,_..

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.. _ . . .., .. ll.ft.. 11-11.
1

11Y POPUUJIIIECHANICS

Whether you're a fine-furniture
builder, a house carpenter or an
·active do-it-yourselfer,lhe handsaw is
an essential tool. Although the
pOrtable power saw is !he choice for
many cutting jobs, hlllldsaws are far
from becoming obsolete. In fact,
there has been a renewed interest
recently in handsaws partly dUe to the
advent of the Japanese tools .
While after the screwdriver, the
hlllldsaw may be the secol!d most

lr.uc&amp;A.MIIIAN
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Enclaeld la$4.115 Nch for the booltlll(a)_ _ _ _ _ _ __

and three lull blthtl, toll~

ln1 2,874 tQIIte feet of llvln1
opoce. The plan It Palllble with
2xtl u.terior wall fnnaln1 and 1 .
ltHdlnl bllement. aaaJs&amp;w.;e or
1l1b fou•d•UoD. A thret:·Cir
pmldeo 624 ...... feel ol

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Na~·-----------------~---------------8~--------------~-----------------

City___________________
Stet. ~P) _ _ _ _ _ _;;..·- - - - - - - - - - - -

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Gstaad, a
place where
the elite ski
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pose by looking 11 the teed).
-.Jiy,lhe feweillie tecth.J]r_poinll. P.£:

1

inch, the rouaher the cut Iii the-«~~
er material. Agrealel' number of tectll";:
per inch (lpi) will produce a SIIIOOIIJctt
cut in harder workpieces.
'
~
Nearly all saws have Ieeth thai~
set. or bent, alternately to the left
to the right of the blade. Thi
enhancCs the cutting actjon and;mar(.'
imponantly, fonns a kerf, or cu~
slightly wider than !he bllde's thick!;
ness to prevent binding.
ground blade also prevents bindin
· and helps to ensure sm¢tl) ·s&amp;win , ,
Taper grinc!ing, a f~ture f!l'Jnd ~
almost. all quQiity saws, Jli'Oiluc4 C:
blade that is thinner at~ top edg4!t
than at the toothed edge. It's also thint-t·
ncr at the blade's toe, or tip, than ~
the handle. A taper-~ _bladirequires lesS set on the teeth SO It cut£;;:
· a narrower kerf which requires Jest::
effort to make the cut and wasies Jcs '
·material.
~ .., ..
The major difference betweell'!·
Japanese handsaws IIIIa_ Westerf;'
handsaws is that the JapaneSe hand• ••
saws cut on the pull stroke. Mosi Western ~aws cut on the push stroke.
The distinct advantage of~ 18Jllll,~'
esc saws is that since they are pUlled'
through the wood, the blades can
virtually p~r-~in.' a bi~ bel~ .W~
· cutting preciSe, mtrtcate JOI!Its. Will~
. em saw blades are made of heavy-.
. gauge s~eelto keep them fro11,1, buc~
. ling when !he saw is pushc;d. &amp;..Cf"l! ,
ing to use Ja~~Mese saws requires nq- ~
• special skills- only a liule patien~~
t and practice.
'•
l You probably already own some o~ .•
· these saws. Others will be new to yoU.; ··

A'; {'.

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.,, NIGt1'fiiARE CROSSING· School children and ~orlsts cro.s•
\lie NorfQic,&amp; Souu.nlnlc:klln LakeWood, just ahead of a ~lght
tJIIIn. The west Cleveland suburb Ia 1 nightmare for locomotive

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Questions and answers

ECONOMY WILD BIRDSEED
$499.

,IJ~ IECHANICS
• .,M'Ipectatfeol-

. Q: I have two cherry trees in my

frOnt yard that I have to net each sea'sciti ,~o the birds won't eat the cherries.
1s ;there a way to protect the trees
~~ using nets, perhaps using a
hijh technology device? I've wonCieRd how big·time growers protect
1beir treeS.
. .'A: There is no high-technology
sol~on to ~ problem. The local
horticuJ\Ural agent for the Cooperative B~silill ~ice said that many
comme,rcial growers pick the fruit
before it is ripe. The birds don't find
the unripe ·fruit very appealing and
leave it·alone. The cherries ripen during shipment or at' the stores.
The best approach is to cover the
trees with netting. This discourages
birda 'and will not hann the tree or
·fruiL Some people use plastic owls
and sound devices to scare off birds.
This is not as effective as nets, however, and some communities have a
noise ordinance that prohibits sound
devices.
Q: I have a problem with water
seepi!)g into my basement after a
heavy rainfall. Perforated drain pipes
und'er the basement floor do a good .
job of relieving hydrostatic pressure
below the slab. However, the cavities
ill, the concrete block .walls fill with
witer, which ·leaks into the basement.
Contractors recommended breakinJ .up the floor at the perimeter and
illllalling drain tiles· and a sump
pump. However, I recently heard
allout'a plastic molding, similar to a
llueboard radiator cqver, that is
iealed to the inside of the foundation
: wall alo!la the floor. Qoles are drilled
i!lio tile-blocks to drain the water from
1he Qllvities into !he molding which
.~ It I~ a sump. Does this really
·~7

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50 Ll.lll

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BUCK OIL SUNFLOWER SEEDS
79
25LLIAI

$6
$1099

35 Billy- WHHama

36 Tyrannlcel ruler
39 Took Into cuatocly
43 Aualrellan bird
« Curved letter
45 Earnings
47 Rhyihm
49 Energy
51 Monastery
54 Furnishes

57 Mechanlcel men
59 Pro(proportlonately)
63 il11l8ir
64 Numsrats on a clock
8G Woody plants
88 River In Egypt
691~ntgem

70 Type &amp;lyle: lbbr.
72 Adreaa Gardner
74 One of the Slates:
abbr.

76 PaYIIIon
78 Benelll

15191•wha St.

79 Chlld1911'a carataker
82 All&lt; buildar
64 Magician

8G - - a cuatomer
87 Make angry
89 Faatpece
91 Go.teaml

FREE FINANCING/
FOR 4 YEARS IS
COMINGIThe hay tool deal

92 Elcploaive stuff:
abbr.

93 War veetllll. lor
short .

108

Kinl:l ol market

110 Storms
114 Male llllllnga
117 Chrlstmae carol
119 Glaaa dllh Uled In

cooking
121 Detest

122 Quantity ol paper
124 Con1llalnt

126 Mlnerelep~ng
12:1-Scoua
128 Portent
129 Cain's victim
131 Secular
133 Opp, of WSW
135 Trenagn~aalon
136 Clnclmati team

137 lovea

139 French money
141 Board game
143 Shade trae
145 Colora
147 Characler
149 Gn~~k letter after
sigma

152 Game official
154 Wanner

f"'"

157 Gang
161 Latterw
182 HouaatiJP ;
164 Farming need
165 Tried lor office
187 Beck talk
168 Word of woe
170 Cut
173 Summary, for short
175 Location
1n Scoundrel
178 Uncanny

179 Fry qulcldy

1eo Nut on a hllgl'll
1111 "Avengers"
chllrao:ter
182 Exchanges
163 Lab compound

164 Barela

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1 Plant louse

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. 3 Flat-topped hUla
4 Fall mo.
5 Legal matter
6 long nap of a rug
7 Swindle: 2 wds.

8 Assoc. ralstlve
'9 Willow rod

10 Irritate ·
11 Suffer from the hallt
12 Sailor
13 A Gabor

14 OlllciaJ refusal
15 Wear away
16 Wide street

17 ShadOwy
18 Stage whisper
19 Warsaw natives
20 WOOftt plante
30 And so forth: lat.

abbr.
32 Ooctrlna

85 Job
88 lAs. Moran
90 Soft mineral

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96 Upplly one
4il ~ r.
98 Oo{ong, pekoe, IIC.
100 Fann structura
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101 Loathll
102 Tenn In boWling
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103 Carried
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50 Ordinary language
51 Spanish friend

52-Rouge
53 Courageous
55 Water barrier

58 Rind
58 Male singer

eo To pieces

61 Stolen
82 Wall:hful
85 Author Fleming .
67 Edinburgh native
71 Alowe
73 Flnal-aale worda
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eo Coarse

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112 Tlle '1&lt;lng" olll)Ck
113 Connery, et at.

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118 Frond

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125 Evergreen tnll
130 Jay ollate night

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138 Hldeeaway

48Functtons

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107 Ship pert
109Facet

37 -ala mode
41 England's College
42 Account entry
48 ·-Twist" (Dickens)

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94 Lager

34 Oevllkins
38 Semiprecious gem

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142 Skirt bol'der ·
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148 Coffee-tilled - 1

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By RICH HARRIS
we find it does work."
Aasoclatld Prell Writer
·DeWine also has brokered an
• LAKEWOOD - This west-side agreement between Ohio agencies to
Cleveland suburb is a locomotive halve the time it takes to install new
e111ineer's worst nightmare: Twenty- gates and flashers.
six crossings peppering a 2 1/2-mile
"It takes, on average. I 8 months
stretch of busy, main lin~: railroad.
to erect a crossing after the final deciTwenty-six chances for a car to be sion is made," DeWine said. "I
s!$1nded on the tracks. Twenty-six found that unacceptable."
o~portunities for some impatient
In I 994·, the last full year for
mp,torist to weave _around lowered which data is available, 610 people
gatrs because he thmks -thmks were killed and 1,923 were injured in
iilj can beat a train.
4,921 vehicle-rail 'collisions.
· ~'Lakewood is probably the worst
Figures for 1995 are not yet out,
area for crossings ·that I can re&lt;;all, but preliminary numbers are
and I travel all over the system," says "promising," Federal Railroad
Danny Gilbert, manager of grade- Administration chief Jolene Molitoris
crossing safety for Norfolk Southern. said. '
For almost as long as there have
Remarkably. Lakewood police
been cars and trains to collide, rail - report relatively few crossing acciroads and p6lice departments have dents- only seven in 1993 and three
struggled to prevent crossing acci- in I 994. Figures for 1995 were
dents. Lights, gates, bells, horns, incomplete, but only one accident had
whistles and all manner of signals been reported through July of last
have been employed to warn people year.
of approaching trains.
But that doesn't include the numBut not everyone is getting the I ber ofnear-collisions, which railroad
message, and railroads and federal · officials say happen several times
officials are Out to foil the' last of the daily.
.
die-hard violators.
Lakewood police Capt. Dan Clark
Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, has declined to comment on near-colliintroduced legislation that could help sions, or whether officers see many
convince communities to make the pedestrians as they patrol around the
"Oiitically unpopular decision to -ttacks.
close a crossing. Closings skew traf·
The railroads and !he FRA take a
fie patterns,. which can hu/1 local three-pronged approach -to grade
businesses and anger voters.
crossing safety: education, enforceThe bill, if passed, would pay up l"ent and engineering. .
to $15,000 per crossing closed · The best-known element is Opethalf from the federal government and atlb;; Lifesaver, an education prohalf from the railroads.
gram with· the motto "Look, Listen
"No local jurisdiction wants to and Live."
'Ill.
close a railroad crossing," DeWine
As for enforcement. police'\Mi·
said. "But if we give some induce· cers hand out thousands of tickets
ment or benefit to the community ... every year. Railroad security nabs

thousands more trespassers and like rungs on a ladder. Norfolk Southcrossing-jumpers.
ern's uacks cut cross the rungs.
But feyt of the 280,000 public and
Norfolk Southern and Lakewood
private railroad .crossings in the Unit- tried several years ago to agree on a
ed · States are foolproof. Gilbert plan to close some crossings, in
recalls a riding in State Highway exchange for the·railroad's promise to
Patrol helicopter and spotting a upgrade remaining crossings to lights
motorist skirting the gates at a Nor- and flashers.
folk Southern crossing near CincinPublic opposition scuttled the
nati.
plan. Few people wanted to keep the
The driver was stopjled and tick· crossings open, but opponents didn 't
eted - then was spotted a few min- 'want to be inconvenienced by
utes later driving around another set detours, or see an increase in traffic
of gatef at a Conrail crossing.
on streets that remained open.
"Evidently, enforcement just is
While other suburbs grew in the
not going to be a factor in the mind age of the automobile, Lakewood
didn't, and never has had a coherent
of that individual," Gilbert said.
Now safety officials are trying to plan for avoiding traffic congestion,
engineer a crossing that can't be said former Lakewood Mayor David
defeated.
Harbarger.
One technique is to add a second
"The same thing that causes the
pair of gates, so drivers can't weave railroad crossings to be unsafe- the
between the gates. Another is to use volume of traffic - is also what
concrete barriers, similar to those makes it difficult to close any 9f thf?
placed around highway construction crossings," said Harbarger, who was
sites, to block access to the opposite mayor when .the Norfolk Southern '
lane.
· • proposition was discussed.
"That traffic has to go someRailroads also are using video
.
cameras to spot motorists evading the where."
Harbarger thinks DeWine's pl1111
gates and zero in on their license
plates. Violators get a ticket in the could work, but only if the government provides enough money to
mail.
In Illinois, where an 6ct. 25 train- build an overpass or an underpass to
school bus crash killed seven stu- keep the roaCiway and the railroad
dents, a company is testing an barri· physically separated.
DeWine acknowledges his bill is
er net that drops down from overhead
to block all approaching lanes.
most likely to affect rural areas, The
But these solutions are expensive federal half of the $15,000 must be
- the net barriers can run as much used for safety programs, but no
as $700,000 to $1 million per cross- strings arc attached to the railroad's
ing - and no single solution will share. Smaller communities might
find that $7,500 handy for a play· work at every crossing.
Most of the Lakewood crossings ground or other community project.
"We had to start somewhere,"
are found on a network of residential
streets connecting two thoroughfares De Wine said. "We'll have to see."

Sp.orts star factory to honor its own
BY HANK KURZ Jr.
AP Sports Writer
FORK UNION, Va. -In the 98
years since Fork Union Military
· Academy opened in the bucolic Virginia countryside, it has prepared
thousands ·of young men for suc·
cessfullives and hundreds of boys for
athletic stardom.
. The private high school's postgraduate program has becmne a fin·
ishing school for unpolished athletes.
One.more. year of training there can
mean the difference between no
sports scholarship and a full ride.
And two alumni - Ohio State's
Eddie George and Miami's Vinny
Testaverde- won the Heisman Trophy after starring for the Blue De'l:ils .
The academy. on 500acres of flat,
open fields in central Virginia a~ut
30 miles southeast ofCiiarlonesvtlle.
has only 6SO ~dents but boasts ath·
letic facilities. that surpass those •of
many college$.
And while many Fork Uniqn graduales
stardom and honors lat'
. ' achieve
.

er in sports, the school itself has done
little until now to honor its own. On
Feb. 29, it will induct a charter class
of eight people into the Fork Union
Sports Hall of Fame.
Mike Quick, a Pro Bowl wide
receiver for the NFL's Philadelphia
Eagles, and Sonny Randle, a receiver who starred at Virginia and then
with several NFL teams, will be
among those honored at the ceremony in Richmond.
Four inductees will receive the
honor posthumously: longtime Fork
Union coach Cliarles Graham
"Rosie" Thomas; three-sport Fork
Union player and coach Edwin J .
Merrick; NFL player James Wesley
Bud Sherrill; lind Vernon T. Morgan,
who signed his first baseball contract
with the New York Giants at age IS .
John Hilton and Steve Meilinger,
both fonner NFL players, also will be
inducted. Testaveroe· would have
made the charter class, too, but attendance is mandatory for indue~ee&amp;, and
he had a conflicting engagel)lent .
''People told us to try to keep the

group to six, but we felt like we had
25 or 30 people that deserved to be
charter members," said retired foot·
ball coa&amp;h and administrator Col.
Robert L. "Red" Pulliam. He will be
the first recipient of a distinguished
leadership award, which is named in
his honor.
Only one other high school or prep
school has produced two Heisman
winners. David O'Brien, who won
the Heisman in 1938 at Texas Christian University, and Tim Brown,
Notre Dame's 1987 Heisman winner,
both auended Woodrow Wilson High
School in Dallas.
Students from all over the world
come to Fork Union, but school officials say they ~o almost no recruiting.
Instead, scores. of boys try out for
spots in postgraduate athletics, where
dozens of recruiters from major collegiate programs all over the nation ·
will see them:
The Jiostgraduate teams compete
mostly against junior varsity squads
from the Atlantic Coast Conference

and other respected East Coast collegiate leagues, often under the eyes
of coaches from those big-time programs.
Virginia basketball star Harold
Deane thought he was a hm prospecl
coming out of high school in Ettrick,
• Va., but the scholarship offers he got
were from lower-rung Division I programs. He enrolled as a postgraduate.
"I felt I could develop into a better player, become stronger, mature a
little bit more." Deane said. "I ·a)so
thought I'd learn more about life and
sacrifices and everything like that."
Deane's year at Fork Union did all
that for him, and earned him that bigtime scholarship. Eight of his team·
mates also landed at Division I
schools.
"It worked for me , but it's not for
everybody, " Deane said. "A lot of
time.s it doesn't work out for guys ·
because they don't put the effort in."
George didn't seem long for the
rogram
when he arrived as a high
P
school sophomore.

• d
recognize
Vitamin B-12 deficiency _often not

11 . . , . , . . . . .

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' do..~ But !he ideal way to cor·
iwllta ~tatic leakage prqblem in
r cuic:illte biQClr. wall is to intercept
llr•dl.,.rt !he w11er before it reaches
.... fuUndatiOII.
• ~;ifyoucan'tlaydrainage
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fotuttdlliOD is·paved or covered with
oliJIOIIIive lbJ:ul!bcry, Or is otherwise
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tJilndieyo!l
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___

1 Knlghfa p!Oiectlon
6 Serving of Ice cream
11 McQueen or Martin
16 Make suitable
·21 Fragment
22 Mr. Ed, lor one
23 Vacillate
24 Cap pan
25 Parly givers
26 AdM&amp; Dickinson
2:1 Mule of poetry
26 Mr. lola
29 Aclr8ls 1.14llno
30 Breakfaat Ham
31 Wicked
33 Norwgod

95 Gentlemen
97 Watar·ftlled trench
99 Unruly crowd
101 Astem
104 Understand
10ii' Carnation COlor

8nglneers with 26 croaslnga on the stretCh of busy mainline rell·
road. (AP)

$afety manager says West-side Cleveland
$uburb nation's worst area. fQr rail crossings

rt- want
but .may
sound
like
tool.s you will·
to. add
to your
collectJon.
'. .-...
.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
F-88

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple111nt, WV

~

Renewed interest shown in

... it

February 11,11M

Sunday, Febru8ry 11,111£

Pomeroy •Middleport '011111)9111, OH • Point Plelunt, WV

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,.. products that are intended for older molecules that are closely related to
people.
vitamin B-12 .
It's recommended that anyone
One such family of molecules is
who wants to take such a vitamip sup- the cobalamins, proteins that transport
plement should consult a doctor first vitamin B-12 through the blood. Low
excessiye vitamins can some· levels of cobalamin can indicate vii·
medical problems of m1111y older peotimes
be dangerous.and can lead to amin B 12 deficiency.
ple is a defiCiency of vitamin B 11.
diagnostic
confusion. In cenain casAnother test is based on the
. ' A num~ qf ~es )lave found
that anyw~
percent to IS es, some people cannot absorb the vii- knowledge that B-12 converts one
pe~nl of ol~r peOple suffer from amin through the gastrointestinal tract biological molecule called homocysand it must be given by injection.
teine to another, methionine. Abnorthis deficienc~.
.
The
defiCiency
is
not
always·easy
mally high blood levels of homocy s1'!le consequenc~s can ·be severe.
to
diagnose.
A
simple
measurement
of
,
teine can thus be a mark ofB-12 defiAmong !he conditions dial vitamin B. 12 deficiency can taltse are anemia, B·I2 levels in ·the blood often gives ciency. Another test measures eleva!·
•increased susceptibility to jnfection, inaccurate results, generally overes- ed methylmalonic .acid as B-12 1s
needed. to convert methylmaloni'c
.net:Vt·damage, difficulty in walking . timating the amount of vitamin.
Several more complicated and' acid to succinic acid.
and even dementia.
Some studies have linked high
• IThe basic dietary $0urce of vita·. more IICCurate tests have been'developed.
They
measure
'blood
levels'
of
,
blood
levels of homocysteine to llh·
· Qii~ B-12 is meat. 8•12 is also available iD scvetal .vitamin Sllpplement
By DR. MICHAEl. L .FREEDMAN
NewYerk
UniVerally llclloOI of Medicine
For AP Spac ..I·Featuree
One of the largely u11recognized

-7

•

erosclerosis and an increased risk of
heart attacks and strokes. An increase
in B-12 thus might reduce the risk of
heart attacks by lowering blood levels of homocysteine. · In addition,
folic acid and vitamin B-6 (pyridoxine) are also needed to convert homocysteine to methionine. These vitamins, to~ether with B-I 2, may be of
use in lowering the leve f homo. cysteine.
·
No one has yet ide tified a danger
in having high blood I els of vitamin
B·l2.
D.r. Michael L. Fnedmu Is dtt
Diane and Arthur Bell..- Ptolof Geriatric MedidDe Ill New York
University !;(bool ol Medldne.
l

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
A H11r1t Magazine
For AP Special Features
Gstaad is the place where the elite
meet to ski - from Julie Andrews
apd William F. Buckley, to the king
of Sweden and the Duke and Duchess
of Marlborough.
Amid bucolic fanns, antique
chalets and snow-covered pastures,
Linda Dannenberg wrote in the current issue of Town &amp; Country, winter revelers include Old Hollywood,
European nobility, American society
and multinational businessmen .
You will find members of the Getty, Rothschild and von Furstenberg
families, the Aga Khan, financier
George Soros and as unofficial leaders of Gstaad society, Prince Vittorio
Emanuele de Savoia, claimant to the
Italian throne, and his wife.
"Gstaad is what we all envision as
our favorite fairy -tale village," said
Elizabeth Taylor. who has been going
there for more than 30 years. "I first
visited Gstaad in the early 1960s, and
even though it has gr,own and has
more tourism today than it did back
then, the Staadites have always
worked very hard to keep it a special
quaint, tiny village.
"My chalet here - with a ruesmerizing mountain view from the living room - was the main hoine for
my children while they were growing
up. We always used Gstaad as our
base. I've never been able to ski due
to my back problems, but one of my
favorite pastimes is walking along the
mountain trails and having wonderful picnics in the summer."
Fashion designer Valentino has
been a leading resident for years.
"I chose Gstaad because it's one
of the few places in the world where
people respect each other's privacy,"
he said, "and where the villagers
respect people who invest their mon·
ey in their country. It's something you
don't find easily today."
Another reason for Gstaad's popularity is the prevailing sense of secu·

rity.
,
"Gstaad is unique in the world,"
said Count Alexandre de Lcsseps,
whose Chalet Seneca commands a
prime hill above town. "It has man·
aged to remain comparatively unde·
veloped, so you can still find peace, ,
harmony and nature here, and a
wonderful village life. An&lt;;! although
there 's a tremendous amount of mon·
ey here - some of the richest people in the world, in fact - it's never
flashy."
The community, a two hour's dri·
ve from Geneva, came of age ~ a
resort just.after the tum of the century. In 1905, a railway linked the
region to the outside world. Eight
years later, the Palace Hotel opened.
'Four years after that Le Rosey, board·
ing school for the sons of the superrich, installed its winter campus
aqove the village. Its graduates
include Prince Rainier, Prince Vittorio Emanuele, the Shah of Iran and
th¢ Aga Khan.
By the early 1920s, the village
was rampant with Russian princes
and Egyptian kings.
Gstaad today draws its crowd
predominantly from Europe's main
capitals, with a smattering of visitors
and residents from America's East
and West coasts; South America and
a few oil-producing nations.
"Gstaad is a small, very special
enclave of people from all over the
world, " said television producer Jane
Branneky. "In the village, you always
run into friends you saw three weeks
ago in London, or Vienna, or someone from Mexico City you met on a
Nile cruise in the '80s or an old friend
you last saw in Paris 20 years ago."
Despite the socJallife, the majority of Gstaad regulars still come there
to ski, at least some of the time, and
the slopes are sunny, temperate and
fun- perfect for intennediales, not
daunting for beginners but with
enough expert runs and trails to
entertain experts.

r-------------------------,
Vatican rejects appeal
to parish mergers
I

. HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)- A challenge to the merging of ethnic
Roman Catholic parishes has been rejected by the Vatican, the Diocese of Harrisburg said.
A Vatican tribunal decided it would not consider Jhe appeal "as it
is lacking any foundation," the diocese said.
The five parishes, located in Steelton. were joined inlo one congregation in July as part of a reorganization that reduced the numbc{
of parishes in the diocese from 125 to 99. Similar reslructurings are
taking place across the country in the Roman Catholic Church.
Members of a predominantly Croatian parish wanted to retain the
ethRic character of their church. Deaders of the appeal said they would
continue to press their cause
.

"

Catholic church takes strong
stance against welfare reform

1

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By DAVID BAUDER
criliquc of Pataki's proposals wa5 . I .
Allociated Press Writer
unusual.
· · 1
ALBANY, N.Y.- The Roman
Hubbard said he was inspircid; in ~·
Catholic Church's opposition to abor- part, by Pope John Paul ll's ·Vislt io· ~
tion is no secret to anyone with even New York Cit y last fall. The pontiff ' :
a cursory interest in politics. ·
in a homily delivered near the Statu~ '
Far fewer people seem aware of of Liberty, questioned whether Amer' ~
the suong stance church leaders have ican leaders were becoming Jess sell- iJ
recently taken against welfare cuts or sitive to the needy.
·
..,
are willing to follow their lead in the
Two Republican state senators
'' ~
· 1c1·ornate.
current poI'otoca
duly made known their respec(. for' "'..:
In little-noticed testimony recent· Hubbard. hos church and its 7.3 'mil- " 4.
ly before the New York Legislature's lion·member New York state flock in " 'f
fiscal committees, Albany Bishop recent interviews.
· ;
•)
Howard Hubbard said the church is
~y didn'thesitate to reject Hub- ~.
gravely concerned that the overall bard s stance on welfare . .
· '· :'
-ompac1 of a·ov. George patak',1 s proBolh senate sOC1a
· 1services-.::om.
·
.,. , '' "·.
· we Ifare wouJd .be monee
·
ChainnanJosephHollandand ; ' ''·
posed. changes m
devastating to the poor.
Sen. Hugh Farley; who leads the'' •!
Under Pataki 's proposalto cut the annual Senate debate 10 remove Med-' . ~
state's basic welfare grant by about25 · icaid funding for abortions from .lhe 'f'll
percent, a single mother with 1wo state budge.', said the church's· view , '
children could lose $153 per month, on welfare •gnores the &amp;tale's need't&lt;r'~" i!
Hubb ard sao'd.
br mg
'
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a b'og-spend'm" prdgram inl-',...
"She mog
· ht very we 11 1ose her con1ro1.
"
m•
•
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,•
apartment," he said. "She would be
"I know that theY take good~ i
forced to make daily choices about of peop_Je," said Holland, a Rockland li .
whether to feed her children or live in Republtcan. "I know that they), 10 ' i/
the streets."
do the best they can. But they don't , _,
• Hubbard questioned how realistic seem to see the entire picturo 1" ,,
' ·u
the Pataki,administratiou's push to get
The fraud in New·York's welf~~~e }j
people off the welfare rolls and into system, and overly ger•e£0\lS ._,~~..~;... , .li
jobs is in the real world, saying there that gove.money tope~ Who~ 't
are far fewer jobs than people look· be workrng, take away f~ lbe IN· ll'
ing for them.
ly needy, Farley said.
.
• • \;
"Moreover, child care is often
"I haye to do what 1 .lfllil*r l
inaccessible and necessary health right," said Farley, a
insurance unavailable," he testified. from Schenectady. "I do
"Even if she finds a job, it is doubt- . mind. When I was
ful her wages would come close to a debate on
lifting her and her family out of penalty, on the
poverty."
affected the ·poor."
Hubbard ·also criticized Pataki 's
Harley now• ~~:~~
effort to set limits on how long peo- lshment, not c•
pie can receive welfare benefits. "No hi111, .at odds witll
single time limit is right for·all peo· Oturch's advocacy 01. ~·;=~~
pie, given varying skills, education 18111
issue.
levels and child care demands," he \ · ~~~;=~~:!M=t
said.
like ~lfue
Church leaders have always advo- perspective and are
cated for the poor, but this. specific listen to !lie churcl!'s pbi~lf ..,_•.

••

�,

. ~P?Ig~l8~04~·~-~~·~·=·=~·~:n:"~~~~~~~P~omero=~y~•~U=Idd=:lepo~~rt~·~Ga::lll;po~l~ls~,~OH~•~P;ol~n;lP~lea~u;nt,~WV;~~~==f~~:!:

Sunday, February11, 1986

; · )Sunday, February 11, 1996

Louisiana's anti~masking law latest
~"'::;.
:::ooo:~=e~~n,.
~ battleground for F1rst Amendment ~~~:.~o~:d~nu:·.~&amp;~d.~ E~?:~;~~~r.:;: ;.;:Y~P:.,;~~~;.;;.:i ~::.
- 't.~~~l:.~~;:.~~~~~~
Compu~r

11

~

•

!

' - ·By
a ROXANA HEGEMAN
"'IOCiated Pl"'ll Writer
~
LAFAYE1TE, ba. - White~ robed Ku Klux Klan figures dance
around the 34-foot cross ablaze in an
eq~pty field.
Then the cameras cut to the panel inside the television studio. Seat" eel behind the Confederate flag and a
~
the
~ semiautomatic assault rifle is
:il' Klan's imperial wizard, wearing the
pu!ple robe that denotes his high
rimk. With him are three masked
· .guests, one draped in camouflage and
•
·
d
h
k -n..
Jl weanng a neue mes mas . 1 wo
others sit nearby, bandanas covering
their faces.
.. The discuss1on toptc ts preparc!d. n~ss ..
"l •am ·prepared. I have food. I
have ·weapons," a masked guest
. aud'1ence.
' ur11e d hts
~~ .:, It is Dec. 17, 1995. The call-in
L"
. lh " Kl
. Ak di
"
., suuw ts e
an on
a ana,
:: -broadcast twice monthly over public
:: 'acce~s television. The calls range
:! .ftom I'Redom of speech to lhe qua)-• ,ity,of public education.
-:
An obscure anti-masking law has
pitted the Klan and a black activist
group in a First Amendment fight
&lt;&gt;ver what can be aired over a public
:: access cable television channel.
~:
At issue is whether a state law lhat

1
I

t

:!:.I
'

prohibits wearing maskS or boods in
public can be applied to public access
cable television. The controversy has
escalated since three masked men
appeared on a Klan program lhat
aired Dec. 17 o'¢r Acadiana Open
Channel.
Charges are expected to be filed
against the masked men, and additiona! charges may be lodged against
others involved in the program,
Assistant District Attorney Floyd
Johnson said.
"The Jaw passed in 1\124. The ftrst
b oadc
· !930 1i II
television r
ast was on
. e
me how the framers could have const'dered television when lhey wrote
the law," says Darrell Flinn, imperial wizard of lhe Knights of White
Kamelia and lhe show's host.
The local NAACP chapter president, Aaron Wa1ker, argues lhat lhe
anti-masking law is clear: "They start
h . F' A
dm
out using t etr trsl men ent
rjght and the next thing you know we
have a full production of a. lynching
or cross-burning on TV."
The National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People ·backed by lhe black chairman of lhe
Lafayette Parish Council asked the
district attorney's office to prosecute.
"They are upset and lhey are
angry and !hey don't like what we

:r., Computer dating in the
:
PROVIDENCE, R.I . (AP) :: Have you ever sent an anonymous
·.~ Jove note? How spicy do you like
your taco sauce? Are you more like a
•• limousine or a sports car? What do ·
•l you prefer to drink at 9 p.m. - cola,
·f coffee, water or wine?
1 College students today face some
difficult questions.
That's why a group of students at
: B'town University has been asking
: ~ - some easy ones just in time for
:: Valentine's Day.
··1 ·•' More !han I ,500 of Brown's 5,600
:. undefgraduate students have filled out
: a survey asking 33 questions, includ·1 · g the ones abo"e A computer r· s
;: :Sing the answers·!~ match students
·: up according to compatibility - qr
• 0 lack !hereof.
" Fifteen hundred people don 't do
anything (together) at Brown," said
Rajib Chanda, chairman of Helping
Undergraduates Socialize (HUGS).
"Not football . not dances - people
• here are very individualistic. "
&gt;Datelesshess is almost a tradition
at · Brown, said Chanda, from
l;a'wrenceville, N.J. He and others in
student government formed HUGS

J:
',!
.

say·,'; Flinn said. "This mask thing is
a way to suppress IRe speegh."
H convicted, the mea could be
sentenOed to six months to three years
in the pan'sh
J'aii, Iobnson said. He
1:11:!
~aid his omce decided to pi'OHCute
because "iu s on the books and we
got a complaint. "
The NAACP contended _that lhc
th
appearance on e public access
channel, which is available in 4,800
holl)eSin Lafayette, constitutes a publie wearing of masks as prohibited by
the Louisiana slalute.
"I
t appears we have become a
pawn in this conflict between· the
NAACP and the Klan, " sru'd Pal
Soileau, executive din:ctor of Acadiana Open Channel.
The 1924 law, also known as lhe
anti-Klan law, spec.ifically targeted
the Klan, and was designed to help
identify Klansmen involved in illegal
activities. It does not apply to masks
worn during Halloween, theatrical
performances or Mardi Gras. ·
Flinn contended lhat the Klan
masks are historically symbolic and
therefore constitute freedom of
eKpression, which is protected by
Jaw. And he argued lhat even if lhe
masking law itself is held to tie constitutional, the masks were not worn
in public

entire student body. Also available 'is
a least-compatible list, for thost who
believe that opposites attract.
Students indicate wbether lhey
want to be paired with same or opposite sex students.
HUGS expectS to raise as much as
$4,500. All profits will be donated to
the finan cial aid od~ce -h .a re1!5on
many st 00ents c1te .or t eu parttc1pation.
"Saying it's all for lhe cause is like
saying you only read Playboy for the
articles," quipped Simon. "The cause
~!~.~akes it more palatable for
Whatever the reason for the survey's popularity, HUGS plans to use
the momentum to initiate other programs, such as televising a campus
vefsion of "The Dating Game" on the
university 's TV station.
B~t for now, group .members are
· lookmg forward to seemg how well
a computer can sharpen Cupid's
arrows.
" If it fosters a social ~n~ironrnent
where people are more wllltng to call
someone up,'' Chanda said, " that
would be a great first step."

Photographer denies_staging scenes
DENVER (AP)- A nat~• filmmaker has denied accusations he
' staged supposedly wild conf:ontations between animals - some of
• them in cages.
Marty, Stouffer, whose "Wild
·,
America" series~:: aired on PBS for
the past II years, did point out that
" staging" could he a matter of interpretation.
"Sometimes we will take a tame
animal out for a walt,, and if i chase
develops, we will film it," Stouffer
said.
The allegatioll$ ~ere made by former Stouffer employees and others,
and were reported Friday by The
Denver Post.
Stouffer denied alllhe allegations
in an interview with The Associated-

Press.
" My conscious is clear," he said.
"I love animals. I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not cruel. I don't torture animals."
Officials at the Public Broadcasting Service said they were unaware of
the allegations but planned to talk to
Stouffer about them.
" Mr. Stouffer's integrity has never been questioned before," said
Kathy Quattrone, vice president for
programming.
Chris Moaklin, who raises animals
near Aspen, said she rented several
raccoons to Stouffer 12 years ago. For
one scene, she told the paper, Stouffer tied a rabbit to a post with a fish ing line, then let a raccoon attack it.

Public Nollce

Public Notice

"You could see tbe fishing line,"
Moa)din said. "It looked totally ·
staged. ... I won 't work with Stouffer
aQymore. He's too exploitaiive of the
animals."
Former employees, speaking on ,
condition of anon,ymity, told the Post
lhat some of the scenes Stouffer shot
for "Wild America," including some
in which animals were killed, were
filmed i~ cages. The cages wen: edited out so lhe scenes appeared to be
filmed in the wild, lhey said.
They told the Post that a scene of
a mountain lion jumping on a mule
deer was shot in a pen and that Stouffer arranged for a,,mountain lion aod
lynx to fight to the death.

Public Noflce

-·fOllowing vehicle. ·

Public Nollce

BIDS FOR
aoparote RFP mu at be
Street, Wellatan, OH.
1 IIIW, one (1) ton, two (2) Phone: (114) 314-2114, Tht
HOUSE FOR SALE
aubmltlod for each county
. Bide are baing oeeaptH Identifying the county. wltMI drtve, wortc truck.
GJMV Solid Willi Dlatrtot
. by the MaiO• County Public , Pr:ogroma operated during
Specification• moy be t'eHI'VII 1111 right tO ICCtpl
· Llbrory Board of TNotue Progrom Yeor 191e, which obtained 11 the Dlatrlct or refiCIIIIy or all blda.
: for the ule and removel of meet
·c ontracted offtco • 722 E11t Tlilth Februouy 11, 11, 191e
· 8 11 room houu (formerly) performance etandtrde,
. :. Ptckant
known ••homo)
the Betay
may be axtandtd
for tn J.::::::::::t~~~~~~~~~!.
locotHTyree
et 1 ldd111onal
yMr of operdon.
Fl
. Pt~rt st., Racine, Otj. The oppllcatlon procaae
Giveaway
ANNO UNCEMEN TS
40
: Deadline for bide Feb. 27, requltea that oubml11ed
·· 1M at 5 p.l)l. Bide opened . propoaalo:
: Peb. 21, 11M 11 1 p.m.
(1) Confoln datolled, oos
Roolltrl, 814-258-8003 Allor 8
Personals
. Bldd- will be required to eccurote and complete
P.lol.
· have the hOUH moved 8lld progremmetlc and budget
AloiERICA'U1 DATELNE
To 'flOOd homo, fomtle Chow dot,
· lot oteaned by Aprtl1,11111. lnfo(nllllon.
1·1101l-381H13XIextQ730.
reddish tan, about Smoa old. very
Tho Board ruerve1 tht1 .. (2) Follow tho preecrlbu
;.,:,':reo':~~2o
lriondly, good watch dog. 304: right to refuie ony and
"'iiWWIiolldontlllld In .tho AFP
875-1958.
. bldo. For moro lntormlllon packll.
· 30 Announcements
Two nice white roosters, 814-742· call 1112-5813.
Thera will be 1 blddore
2532.
: (12)17,31;
conferonceonFebnltry20,
Anlndonolar~~Sta~ofOhll&gt;
· {1)14,28;
1111/1:30 p.m. RFP
Empi--nGontrll
Young male houu doa, hila boo~
· (2) 11,'211; eTC
piCkiGH will be given out
tlfli and - . r lou a Plf'OII · paper traln8d. AbancJoried nta,
··
,
·
1111111 tima. (All proapectlve
decluclart ~m -ed Ill'
my home and nursed back to
oervlca provldere who
"""-- .-,.- PR141ctsln· httlth. Very friencfly &amp; pllflul. Will
Public Noflce
olrOUid 111ut to eubntl1 an RFP
'*Ide Lit, c.r-. Holpitallnbe a small dog, needa a oood
Rtlll-ltend much more. homo. 304-0'15-6537 thor 8pm.
m..• e·1 be preeent 11 the ~.
ODin 10 II'IIIPIG,••• and...., fa.
GENERAL IOUCITAllON blddero , conference). All mito. Fj!r.llldotlila end inbrmo- 60 Losllnd Found
STATEMf!NT
IIFP pacltagea will be ·due
lion c6i1100Ct Rocky Hupp, Box
The Privott. lnduttry 'Morch 22, 1881/12:00
189, lolid&lt;lepor\ OH 451tiD, 614- FoUnd : male and female hunting
·Counl!ll (PIC) ond lhrvtce (Noon).
843-5284.
dogs with brawn and oranoo col·
: ~llvtry Ar11 Number 24 Located 11·
r
Fortuntl wil bo modo n-.., MLM Iori, black, - · - · 814-7422288.
' :p :tz4), whlott lnoludee lervtce
Arei 124 ltop IIIIOklng, 11 botanical, ...'(AIIiene, Gellta, HCIPklng, lronton•Ltwrtnoe County -ended, 10011. aunnttte!, · Lott block. 'whilt encr 11r1 aponad
; Lotalsnao, Mllga,,Pwry ttnd CAO, 301 North Pllth 8lreat, 1-100-17D-S1117.
fDx hound, Wolle Pwtn arH, 814• .&lt;)linton), oountl .., ·· ere Ironton, OH 4H31, (114) ~==..;;;;.._,;,;----.-y--- 11112-6273. .
40
0,_...,
• ,olloHing proponlt for 1314134 ·
'
Looi: whitt Gorman s;;i2htrd,
·.~::.~: ,P.,t~~~~..,y
. 11, 12, 13, 14, 11, 2 ml•ed puppill, black &amp; whl!t.: Llonglvllle - · 81ol-142·
,
Itt' (111te II-A) IfNI ,
==:~~~~~to ,70
Vll'd Sale
'f
workerl OW. II' · ~
·
·
'. .
) Ulldtr the JOlt '
Public Nollce
4 SO..n Wtf/I,~Qd KIUtnl, Born
..._._, · P rtn rthi~AIIL
()n Chriltmu ~•tt U1ltr Trilittd,
Glillpolls '
• ,._. na • e .
~IIOTICE lO IIIDOI!III
Rtody For Now Home, lnllcfe
&amp;_VIcinity
. ,...... Mlllllll wll
-.
Pleut,l14-.1lW.
AU Yalll Bolo &gt;lluaUa Plid In
C... tour flmljoolnd
..-mv 'l ltllt. IIMIII
Dl~re of 't he Galllo, togoOcrl'oin!ll.•i._••
· ~nco, DEADLINE: 2:00 p.rn.
!hi! dey before tho ed It to run.'
1' ,'VIMcllt Rolobllo 1!1 t!wol..•, .~tvck 'tlod. -.
. . . It( Mf•OIM 81\ W8 ~!!'!.ft.!)• M
. . ,....,.- 2:00 P,m. Fridlf.'
,........... lltYI.. ... ... " ~,
, Monday - n • 10:00 a.m. Slt. ......,.. ....... 1e IIIII ,Oft Dletrlot ulltll
~.
814- urdly•

.n

1 1

!

•~==·=~~~~R"' ••~== ~~:. ~ b~
. . . ......
'

(1)....,., •• lleiiNouy
!

H,

tfl!l
•'

0110-..
youno-: ~ ~~_:.._._,.~......;.:..

=

A-=::.JOBS

~..------===:::i:...=====:...~---i.

Help Wanted

110

DRIVERS
STOPI

Help wanted

,

!

HHA &amp; PCA

~:~~~cp:~~~~~~e~~sp~~:,~n!h:~~~:e,:,
approKimately one (1) year. JOB DUTIES: Asslft

F. .- , , . , . . .

pesltlols ......... Gtla
&amp; llllp C..ty. hollld
~~by. IINIIII &amp; lfe
' - - t ,.W. (OIIIfi'IY

LOOK NO FURTHER

phyl;iclans In patient care by perfonnlng skilled nursing
procedures; assisting physicians with physlcaf
examinations, tests and minor surgeries; admlnlstenrlji
medications; remove sutures, change dressings, etc;
observing and charting patients' conditions, behavlori,
and problems; preparing and-maintaining necessa'r\i
reports and records; communicating by phone w·
patients and others; and handling prescription ordeiS
and requests.
~·
QUALIFICATIONS: Current Ohio licensure atilt
certificate In pharmacology permitting medlcatld((
administration required; good Interpersonal skiQil:
essential. Six to twelve months cNnlcal experience 1Mf
an LPN . required; a minimum one year clinical:
experience as an LPN highly desirable, rece!!t
ambulatory care experience preferred. Hours of wo'!l

..... ""'' "with

CAL.l

ltiP sc11oo1 ....... GED

HARRIS •2 _
c.itla ':;!:.
TRUCKING

e•......_. II
•·-· ..,..._

tlderly.

u • ..w.

...,;._...

- .. . _

1·800•929-5003
EOE

NI!SIIt

762 5ta11tt1 av-,
Gttlpels
Ill
ails

r-----====j;::;:::::::::;.......,...,;,-.,
110

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE

Ohio University Human Resources Is currently
accepting applications lor two Intermittent term
(Intermittent means you are called in as needed)'

RN, CNA

Help Wanted

Of Regency Hoollh Sonrlceo io
~-··~
u•~~ lndivldu·
_....,. Ou""""
- ·• -·111 For The Following Polldon.
Tilt Jocltlon Aoency II JCAHO
Aecrodllod, Well Eooalrt11hed
And Fut Growing, StrWoa Joell·
oon, VInton, Plkt, Galllil, lo""""'· And SeioiiCountleL
R.N. Full-Time, Clinical Super-

,

====---__..

7

, ;::; ~c;l~·~~ ~ ~::y~S.:~P~I~::I~t~~t:6~:~.~
WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF COMMUNITY
, Feb
16 1996
SERVICE WORKERS
Al~~~vld~als lnierestad in this posHion are requireii
(Substitutes) needed at two community group homes 10 complete an application (resumes may accompa~
for persons with MR/00 In Galllpolls/Blclwell. High 1
school degree, valid driver's license, three years application) available at University Human Resourc
licensed driving experience, and good driving record ~ ~~:~~~:V~::~·t~~h~~~~O~~:~:~;: ~~
required. Hours: As scheduled/as needed; must be
able to work evenings and weekends. Salary: $4.75/hr, p.m. Monday through Friday.
;,
to start. Training provided. Send resume to: P.O. Box
OHIO IJIIIIVERSITY · &lt;'•
::
604, Jackson, OH 45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for
Athens, Ohio
:;
applicants: 2114196. Equal Opportunity Employer.
·Ohio Univ8181ty Is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative ;:
Act[on E 1o r
r

vlaar, Minimum 2 Yelrt Home

Htlllth Experience, MaM,
. _t
....
_ ..
And Strong Acute Care Back·

_ ... APIUI
·-.

"

-11.

I

....

""*"'"

Commercial Drivers Ucense~With

pliance issues. Excellent benefit
package. Rotllting 111111a required.

word proce111ng, delktap pub·

ASchool Bus Cla ..lflcation. Belloohlng, aecountlng proaromo, otc.
IJming Rale Of Pay lo $8.00 /Hr.
Call 814-eg2-8806 or oend re- (I.e. needs to be PC literate) .
sume to Rockspr'"'J Rehabilita· Muat be •~• to communicate
lon Conttr, Rock1prings Rd., Po· and lntwact with Chamber memmeroy, Olio. EOE
- · County offlclalo, proopectivo
bUalness persona and the pubtlc
Nttd 5 Ledin To Soli Avon, 81 4- on.etivtly. loluo1 bt wiling 1o wolk
odd hours and/or days whenever
«8-3351.
neceoury. Must be ablt 10 manNEEDED MoiEDIATELY
age multiple P,ojeote and com·
· 'Applicants For THIS /THESE Po· 1o Ptoplt To Fill Openings In An p1ttt ohlm within required dmt re: 1ltlon (a) Mull Have A Valid Expending Gallipolio Distribution ltrolnta
, Driver' s Licen se And A Clean Cantor. 11300 Weot&lt;ly Ptr Wrlnan
Send -mt .,,238 w. Main
' .P rNing Record. Employment Ap-- Agreement To Start, No Suikas
.• ..plications May Be Obtained AI Or layoffs, Quick Adwancement
s-~ Pomeroy, Ohio 45189.
: Gallia ·Meigl Head Start, P. 0 .
Box 316, 3086 State Route 160,

~

And Paid \lacalions Offertcf. No
Experience N~ettarv. For Appoln...- Call 814-441-1g75 lot on

• 'Gallipolis, The Deadline For Ac·
'i .ceprtng Applications It Thursday, 9-5any.
, February 13, 19D6 4:00 P.U. For
NEEDED MIEDL«JELY
• Additional Information Call 614·
2 PART-TIME SECRETARIES
, :« 6·8674, 6:00 - 4:00 P.M., lolon' ~ay Thru Friday. Gallia · Meigs loeal Company Needo 2 Pari' Httd Sllr\ AOrvllion Of Access Time
Secrata(les Could Possibly ·
: :"fo Human Resource Develop -

' mont Is An ,1,( IE EO E~er.
'

• ·"Hiring Seasonal Pool Manager

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For Complete, Professional lndMdual
and Business Tllll Preparation.
736 Sec()nd Ave.

446-8677 •

Serta Mattress
$59.00
Bed Frames
$19.95
Recliners
$99.00
4 Ora- Cheal'
$49.95
La-Z-Boy Recliners $299.00
Glider Rocker w/Giider
Ottoman
$199.00
FLAIR FURNITURE

675-1371
Gallipolis F$rry, WV

Part-time Bartender &amp;
Waitress •

Professional ExperienceTax Preparation

Apply at the: Elks Lodge
804 Sepond Avenue
Monday,
12, 1996

No job too small!
Call Sandra lor affordable
prices
614-446-0670

Brittany's Prom
Style Review Videos
ar available for $1'0
Call
!'A ike Thompson at

Oil Painting Classes
offered. Please contact
City Parks &amp; Recreation
Dept. for d~tails.

245-1519

to arrange delivery

LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
MA'ITRESS OR BOX SPRINGS

Firm ................~ ....... $1 05
0UI181'1 Size Satll...
&amp; Up
Size Sels ........ $350 &amp; Up
Mllltresa .......... $48 &amp; Up
Frames ...... $25·$35 - $50
Bad Replacement MBitrMS.
Mon. thru Set. 9-5 p.m. 448.0022
3 mite. out Bulavllle Pike
FREE DELIVERY

sm

441-6022 .

is how organizing a
S.E. Ohio Chapter of

Happy Birthday
Mike Canan

In
Memory
ORAL GREEN
2-1(}.13 - 2-9-95
year has passed,
"'e last said
goodbye.
lhink of you
e•eryday,
of times we even cry.
filled our hearts with
joy &amp; love but then you
left for heaven above.
miss you so, and love
you still You'.e in our
thoughts, and always
will. ·Sadly Missed by Leon,
Mary~ Kris, &amp; John

Euchre Tourpament .

ev~I'Y, ,M onday Night
at Jimmys Sports Bar
7:00 pm sign up

I FlftBEm years have past since the day.we sew you

·IMany things were left not said. We live with this

wilhdread.
· ·
we had
one tast'dlance, we could tell you what
:l'wllfldlllful Husband and Dad you were. With hands
,lae,ntte and a heart so pure.
For all your hardship you got a reward we know fMavl
Oed your with the Lord.
LoVe~UOad.
The beloved of the Lord shall dwell in safety by him; And
the Lord sbali cover hirn all tltC. day long, And he shell dwell

belween his shoulders. Deuteronomy 33:12
Sadly missed,
Wife Vltglnla, children, grandchildren, ~~=~~·::

Clrd of Thltn.ks

Club. Let's support the

his 8th Winston vUIJ11t
'
Call ASAP for special
"Birthday Club" rates.

FOR SALE
Singer Quantum XL-100
Sewing Machine with all
attacheme~ including the
embroidery attachemt. may
be seen at Drapes By .
Design 46 State Street
Gallipolis, OH
or Call 446-4199
10am- 5 pm

In Loving Mernory 01
GARFIELD BLAZER JR.
April t2,1914-Feb. 11,1981

the Dale Earnhardt l=::~rdl

ntimidator" in his quEisttl

614~446-1642

Ext. 233

, or614·441 -0406
Go #3, Win Daytona!

ice.

.._.. •.__,_.... •.,_.

To each lli1d everyone
The family of
we c;an1 begin to
HARVEY E. BROWN
lthlink-you
:'~~~ua!l
would like to
~port during our ion's
acknowledge Jay
.
All'ied
cards, flowers,
ljlolley, th~~uDes and
11""'1'· donations, phone
\!actors on 4ill-wti&amp;t,.-J4~1111s. drop-Ins and your
friends and family for
prayers, will never be
t~ir~llpre: ssi(m of
forgotten.
Syn1!Pad1y·and
Mark Sr,:,rtonhawn~

1

~==~~~::::=:!I

·;

Card ot ThlniUI

The r.muy of
Darlene Gnlwn
would lite liD mead
oar theillnt to Dr;
· Vallee &amp; staff, Holzer
~ VeterH!I
, MeatOI'illll:fCIIplbll,

·tialer-ray
RIICIM, SJ•111......,
Creaaee• Funenl

HOme.......,.. JIDl
S.tterfleld a .aJI
friadt, aetpbon a
t:n~~a~~t•wllo belped Iii
1
of oar

tile-:!:::.
- -

S~

========::!II
card of Thlnke

To
a II
my
relatives, friends
and neighbors for
the flowers, cards
and gifts. Also for
the ·phone calls.
f
. f
1
To my ami Y or
all the giftS and
food brought in
on my ninety •
first bi.rthday,
our anniversary.
- Oscar Weber

Wilt Babyl it lfl My Home For
Small Children. Come over, Lers

"ATH TUTOR - Will lutor high ·Talk or Call 15U -~41 · 05t3 ,
1931c~ s
M

achool &amp; college ltUdentl in ba·
l ie math, algebra ltrigonomell)'.
Conract JoiYiat 814-892-7098.

Private Ltssons • Percu ssion.

vrvU:

Ad·

IID'atnut l

Babysitling in my home, fl e~eible
l'lour a. Reuonable ratn, hiiYe
references. Close to schools.

304-875-2784.

Beginning Bra11. Beginning Pia- W
no, Reasonable rates. Rererenc·
ill Do Hou secl eaning, Have
•~ Ctl Jon at 304-67 ~273.
Opon ingo, Pay By Job, Experl·

ProfeS&amp;ional Tree Service, ComTrae c are, Bucket Truck
&amp;SI Golhen, 01145122 or Ltlvo 1 .""''•'i ·'~ -50 fl Reach, Srump Jlo.
a Message wiht Anawering Sef:y.
· Free Etllmatesl In-

05

anced &amp; Relerences, Evenings :

e

- · n•
14-~28.

AI roa1 -

a&lt;llltri*lg In

lhilFtderol
- Fe~
·
IIAljectAd.
lo
tho
Hotloing
ol1988 which ~ lltgll
to adverllse •"'' ji!Me...u,
limitation or dlscrlmlnolion
boatd on race, color, relgion,
11x larrillalllalul or ,.tfoool
oolgln. or any lnhlnlton 1o
make any BUCh
limitation 01' ~·

lht o&gt;llorq

Commercial building for rtnl in
tenter of down 1DWn arn Utddl•

port, 2500 sq. ft., call 814·gg2.
24511.

"'*""""•

For Rent 1271 Eaatern Avenu e,
Gallipolis, Suitable Fof Small
B u~in 1 11 Or Ofli ces, 614.- 448·
4423, 614·446-6515.

nw r.ewspaper _.not
k11owlo9Y tccepl
1111Yer111omtnlfor real-18
which Is In violation ollht law.
Our readm ore honoby
lniormed lhtlan dWellinge

REAL ES TATE

WWdo - l y or bi-weekly cillft· 310 Homes tor Sale
too or wil care for elderly in their
advertised Inthis . _
ice 0 (513(182-D501
surance, 24 Hr. Emergency Sir•- home 2-3 dayo per wook. Have 3bedroom hou ae. 4 ,0 00aq ft
are available on an equal
1ce -Call And Save l No Tree Too 12 yra. experience in balh areas building, Rt 33, Mason, WV. 304·
opporrunty bosla,
WANTED: LICENSED PRACTI- Big Or Too SmallI Bidwotl, Ohio. and many roforencoo. Contact 882-2587.
CAL NURSE For Two Community 614-388 9843, 614-387-7010.
Pta at 814-14Q-232Q attar 5pm.
Group Homes For Person With
MR/00 In BidWell And Gallipolis.
Public Sale
Public Sale
Houro: 11 A.M. ·7 ~lot . , Mon: 10
A.U . ·6 P.M., Tuea 11 A . ~ . · 7
&amp;Auction
&amp;Aucllon
P. M., Wed IThurs; e:30 A.M. 2:30 ~lot . Fri: Hours Include At-

tendan ce AI We ekly. Staf f Metling s: Or As Ottterwtae Scheduled. Vaca11on, Sick And Insuran ce Benefi ts. II lntareated
Con1act Cecili a At 1·800-53 12302. Deadline For Applicanls: 21

ESTATE AUCTION

ESTATE AUCTION
Saturday, February 17 at 10:00 am .
Due to uncertainty ol weather this sale is being
moved to the AmVet's Bldg. in Kanauga, Ohio,
'
Intersection off Rt. 7 &amp; 35.
This sale is the estate of the late Melba Miller
who resided at Bastiana Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio.
3 pc. bedroom suite wlbookcase headboard,
small Gibson chest typa freezer; smoker's stand,
apartment size dinette set, RCA stereo, Litton
microwave, 6" TV-Radio, upholstered liltchajr (like
new), 3 cushion sofa, 5 pc. matching end table set,
recliner rocker, GE console color TV w/remote,
vary nice walnut credenza, 5 pc. dining rm. set,
round table wlclaw feat, other small tables,
Realistic AMIFM cassette, Kenmore mixer &amp;
bowls, two presliure cookers, seve111l small kitchen
appliances, costume jewelry, misc. pictures, bad
linens, blankets, electric blanket, bath linens, 6
handstiched quilts (nsw), double wedding ring and
others, Bob Evans metal bank, Vinton National
Bank Thennometer, collectible glassware Fanton,
pressed &amp; pattern glass, Fiestaware, Shawnee 9"
bowl (com), slone jars, stoneware bowl, several
knick·knacks and misc. figurines, pots &amp; pans,
aluminum cookware, bakeware and misc. dishes,
lawn chairs, misc. hand tools and garden iools,
8&amp;0 weedeater, Snapper 21" mower w/grass bag,
other ~ems to numerous to mention.
Auto: 1988 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme (2 dr)
with less than 58,000 miles, bought nsw by Mrs.
Miller. Car will sell at 11 :00 am. Will sell wllh
reserve.

18/98. Equal Opporou.-ty £imploy-

or.

WILDLFE /CONSERVATION
JOBS
Game Wardens. Security, Maintenance, Ell:. No Exp. NecHHry.

Now Hiring. For Info Call (219)
794-0010 Ext 8710, 9 ~lot . To 11
P.M. 1 O.,L
180 Wanted~ Do

Brothers Constru ction &amp; Home
Improvements, 6 14-3 88 -899 7
Contact S1we Or BiH.

Electrical, Plumbi ng, Concrete
Foundationa, Garages, Room Ad&lt;lttion s, Remodeling, David, 814·

25tre949, IRogor 814-llf!ll-9118.

Card of Thanks

In

Happy Ad

Kell

Amy Charlene French

No phono colla pltoae.

192·2335 Spring cleaning aerv-

' Contact Parke &amp; Rocroalion Dept. For Appoinomtnt, 814-441-1Q7S.
' For Details, 814-441-8022.
Now Taking A.pplc.~tions For Gallipalll 1 Porneray Domino's Pizza.

You have our vote
everyday of the year.
lAve, Vicki, Moliooa ct

BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sal~ Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer_ .... ........ ...... .....$49,.00
Wellington ...................... $49.(10 '
Loggers .. ,.. .................... $50-55
Harness ....................... .$59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gonex
SWAIN FURNITURE
62 Olive St. Gallipolis

WV

J

lead Into Full-Time, Yust Be Experienced In Computers, lnvenllry conuol, Sllet Financing, Cal

In

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!

DRIVERS 1Rtslonol 14 Stotta,
••
ooOO Wk Po II bII, Con¥. Troc11&gt;r1, lolajonty Home Wkly, Cell 24
Hro 81XH27-511111.

pllcant Muat Have Sheetmetal local Financial lnlitution seeking
l ayo ut JAnd cFabrication
Ex pe ri· A Computlf Operator. Prior EX·
1
e nce. ob oord nation Skill. . per,·onco With • Sfslem 36 1••
WolkWoiWI'th-- e~
~
~
~7P&amp;y
400 Preferred. Full irhe PDsitiop.
Good Benlflta
M -F. 12:00 -9:00 P.M. f or lmme«ttK
diate Consideration. Send ReIlL ,, Exns
sume To: CLA Box 313, C/o Galli·
rN
Join Our Growing
T..m Today po I'•• ••·1Y Tr•'buna, 825 Th "' d
And Bt AL. .
AlloriJe, Gai~N~ 011 45631.
SendR• umeTo:
SHEETioiETAL POSITION
Ullloy Contractor ,_ Hiring Aer~
BoxeeJ
al Line CreWs &amp; Undergroung
Crews for ~eltpho- and Cable
Jad&lt;lon,OH 45840
''
·-to P.O, Box
TV. Send Rresume

1 Gov't Jobs S21 /Hr •
Wt Provide ACompeUtivo WOOt Poatal
Beneflta, No Exp. Will Train, For
And A Voritty Of
PSUiomlt Reaume By February Z!, Appi And lnb 1-11011·538·3040.
111118To:
_
POSTAL JOBS
S~rt S12.08 /Hr.. For'Exam And
Clwlll)'
Shay
RN.
OPS
' SUBSTITUTE BUS DRIVERS .
Applicallon Into. Call 2HI·789 ·
' 'GALLIA AND MEIGS COUNTIES
81!01 Ext. OHSII 9 A.M..g P.M.
HomoCare
731 E. loloin SVttl
• Applicants Must Have A High
Sun -fri.
...ckoon,
Ohio
45140
· School Diploma . Preference
Given To Applicants Po111111ng LPN and AN pert-time poalrtonl Screen Printer ExperienCed Or
A Comm•rctal Drivers License avail - tor progrHsiYe Rohlbil· Will Train The Right Poroon, 614·
With SchoOl Bu t Classification
itationl Skilled core ICF facility. 441 ·~ 4SI2.
'l&gt;rolorred. Begln.-ng Rott or Pay Oevelopn-..nt
of sub-acute unlt1
• Ia$6.00 /Hr. ,
Secrolllr)'
require these candidate• to be
loleigo Counor Chlmber of Comexp8rienced. nurses, willing to
mercoo1:conooroc o.vetc&gt;pmant
BUS DRIVER · GALLIA COUNTY
as a 1eam member with an
- Applieants Mull Have AHigh work
MUll be proficient m all general
txcellontotaff
of.theropllla
and
School Diploma. Preference
that have a hl~tory of 5 cktrtcallsecretarial akilla. Mull be
Gl•en To Applicants Wllh A Nurses
years without any regui-y com- capable of -utiliz ing PC bued

BULLETIN BOARD
GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING &amp; REPAIR
"Pianos Are My Buslness"Quallty
Tuning &amp; Sarvlce Since 1977
. BOB GRUBB (614) 446-4525
13 Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis, oH.

OH • Point PINunt,

~tnderoWI Iolko.inW~Intdnco, PIWinthing, OSmoiiE Homo Ropoor Drywall, Point
' "tt
or
r IC. Chtop Price, Quality
G
Cl
dn Uowo
h H 1111 ed
C~m•ro lc ~~~ id g 1•; ng, : rkl 814· 44 8-11881 · Aok For
l14-=04~. 01 en °' tovo:
ry,
NOTICE I
id toil.
Sun Valley Nuroorr School.
Gtorgoo Ponat;o Slwmlll, don't Cltlldcaro loi-F ear... 5:30pm Agn OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO.
POSITION AVAtlABLE
Homo l'y"'lll, PC userl needed. hltul your k&gt;go to the min jult etll 2-K, Young Sehool Age Du ring recommends that you do but!·
Loading Southern Ohio HVAC $45 ,000 rncome pooonolal. Can 1_ 304_-6_;75-_1.;,.85;_7_
. - - - - - Summer. 3 Ooya per Wtok Mini- nou wllh people you know. orid
NOT to lind manor lhrough thl
Contractor Hoo A Poollion For A
•••• E a--•
c
mum 81 Uole-31157.
Shottrntllll Shop Fortmln. Ap- 800-513-~ n .,...,.
Got ready lor Spring. eall 814·
mall undl you have invelligated

Part-Time 19 IHr. Anowtr Ttlt·
Phonoa, Fltxlblo HOUri lloctl
Aroa, No Experience Ntc0111ry
Coli 1-1101-474-6!548 E•t. 881 int

o

I

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

D.uv.rr

~ tlool&lt;l. Tall F1H (I) 1100-

"""'='="'===== -=-

110

Amortcwt Hon Inc., A Olvttlon

l.

dlf bolore the ld il 11 run, Suo&gt;- Tralnttl. For An Apcltw edition· o:oopm Friday, Non· J &amp; 0'1 Auto Plrll. Buying HI· Fret (1) 800-198·9778 Ext. T· pllclton &amp; Exam lnlormotion, Coil
.
.
Yehl.
Seltint
Plfll.
304·
26t4
For
Uottngo.
o-100·838-5801
Ext Pu3Q 9
-r
10:000.m. Slllmloy.
n:Hi033.
··· POSTAL JOIIS ...
~lot. -II P.lol. 7OayL
::::---::--:-:~-:-:---- Top PricH Pold: Old U.S. Coino, Sllrt $12.08 /Hr. Plus Btntfotl. BaiJYiittor For 1 SmariiActivo 3
80 Public Sale· . Sllvtr, Gold, Diamond I , All Old For Exam And Applicati on Info. Year Old, In My Home INon9
and Auction
~·~.~.d~:~~ ~~:-p.~~~h~~:!i ~~. ~~~-~~if;g;:
OH20n,
Smo~er Preferred, Non -Fri. J.p, ...
prox. 9:30 -~ :30 , References Re·
Wade moyer' I Auction Service, A-. Clollpolis, 814-4411-21142. 'ATTN:PolntPitlsant'{qcJ
GUired, etH-79, Evenings,
Gallipotlo, Ohio 81..,79-2720.
Postal Positions. Permanent tuii- Babyoltter needed in 1111 home.
Rick Ptoraon Aucdon Company,
tlmo lor clerkloortero. Full Bene- No lmo ~ln g . Referenceo. 304·
lull time auctlonaor, complete
~~~!0·nrboxcalan\!~~c411tl2!'. aEnxdt 87~.
auetlon .lervict . Lletnoed
-., 1
· ·- •• · .
- .Ohio &amp; WHt Virginia, 304. I - - - - - - - - - -- 31170, &amp;MI., &amp;pm
Dairy Form Wanting Form Homt
71'3-57850r304-773-S.U7.
HelpW' led
AVON 1 All Areas 1 Shirley With Exporlonce, 814-245-3175,
110
an
Spoors. 304-875-1429:
No ColoAfter 5:311 P.M.
90 wanted to Buy
S.WANTBl-$ ·
Able Avon Repreaentatlvts DRIVERS ·We Otter Top Ply To
,.....,....,.,.......,....,..,....,;..__, 10 .people who need &lt;o .loi o needed. Earn money for Chrilt· Start ·l-Or Empty (~cal
Comploto Hou11hoid Or Eata~sl weight &amp; mokt money, to try,_ mas blla at homo/at wor~ 1-80(). Hwy. loli. -8'4 Higher Than Book).
Any 'rype Of Furniture. Appiianc- pottnted weight-lou product. 992-6358 or 304.882. 2645 , Ind. 11.000 SIGN-ON BONusr Twice
ao, Antiquo'e, Ell:. Aloa Appraisal 304-773-S08324hrlldoy. ,
Rep. .
Wttkly Payroll &amp; Olr, Oop. Avell.
A-blel114-379-2721l.
••'• 000 w••kl'1 p rocetltng
. .. .1
All Air Rldo Conventionol Flootl
..... ,
AGENT: AVON SEUS ITSELF
Eitel lent Benafits. You Chooae
Andquoo, tolloetabltl, ootatto, Fret Info. Send Soii-Acjdruoed Need c.ASH For Winter Bills? NallonoiiRoolonol Flettl. 010
Riverine Anlllld2qutl, Rub lolooro, Stamped Envelope: l:Kprtll , Earn$8 ·S151Hr.AtWork -Home .loaot Purchaot ~van. 1 Yr. otR
owno&lt; 814-25211
Oopt.131 , 10Q Eut Whiteotono
l ·800-742-4138
E•p. Call TRL 10 A.M. ·2 P.M.
_..;...·;.__ _....,.
· -~-,J lilY~ .. Suite 148-345, Cedar Pork
Sun. lOr 7,30 A.M. .5 P.M. loi·F,', .
Used furniture- antlquts, ono TX 111113.
America'• looding Homo Heellh 800·•78-8754 Ext iE-12 ·CaM~-.
Care Pr&lt;illidtr Is now hiring quail· tiono Apply. •
~-or complete oolltos, Osby 1200 -1500 Wkly. Alllmble Pro- lied care givo ro in the Poinl
~ortl-·n.;,..8~1~4-:99:-2-·7~44_1_·~-,.,.,-,- 1 ductl, No Stlflng. Paid DirK~ Ful- PfoaoanvGalllpolls art1. AN, LPN, Eom $10001 -kly 1111ft1ng iili=
"w ... ~0 Bu J . .. With ly Guaranteed. No Exp. Neces- HHA or/Home Htolth experience. velopeo II homo. Be your Dcill.'
an~ • ~ : unk -ros
sary. 7 oar• 407·875-2022 Call 304 _52u_0728 lor appoint- s~ro now. No oxp., he ouppliH,
~~~~~~:~~·· Call Larry En052eH08.
mont. EEO.
Into., no olitlgolion; Sind &amp;A.U.
1
:::--'-:-::--:'"-:-~=-::--•
1
$200
$500
kl
.,.,
bl
-::--:---:--:-:---:-'!. ':'"!.'1 gwolun,nelrt .tl
. sp'r~ln.og,· , 8~
Wanled To Buy; little Tlkee Toy1,
•
wee Y· n am • BabySitter needed in my home, 1 • 5u 0 •
,. 1
6_,14.;,..2_45--::-58B
-:-7·_ _ _ -::-.,-,-- I ~:,c;~u~~ar~~..:;fli~0 ~i:.,~i~~~~ references rOGuiro..d:_
. a_o_4_-9_9_2-J:32:7:19:.
Wanted To Buy: Standing nmboir. noceaoary, 1 dlfs. 407-87S-2022 2508·
Any Amoun~ 81 4-386- 9008 .
ext OSD5H04.
, 110 Help Wantfld

Ivy League

last November, believing students
busy with their studies, internships
and career plans needed help 'dating.
"Groups at Brown tend to be very
segregated - by race, sexual orientation, fraternities - and people
don't interact outside their groups,"
Chanda said. "The manifestation is
., .
tha~nbo onS~ datesd:"
f d
10 y rmon, ean o stu ent 1he
for 14 years, agrees lhat lofty career
goals make dating difficult, but says
attitudes have also changed.
" I don't lhink the ritual of dating
is as alive and well as it once was,"
she said.
HUG"belda'ewdances, butlhey
were sp;rsely ~~tended. Then the
group came up with !he' idea for the
computer dating service, and lhe idea
took off.
"I eKpected about 400 peopleall freshmen - to do it;" said Amy
Joy Finkelstein, a freshman herself
and a HUGS member. "But everyone
wanted to get involved.''
For $2, a student completes a survey and gets a list of the 10 most
compatible matches in his or her
class; for $3, the 'list includes the

w.m.cltoBuy
Clean late llodel Cor1 Or

&amp; VIcinity

1

Gallipolis,

~~~~~~~;,w~.;n;~~d==1f1~=H~~~w~.;n;~;=~~1~0~*~~~~
~~~lR1~80~~
~~~~~Do~~~1~80~~
~~~~~~~~F.::=:=:::=::~~====~====:i

110

90

Pomeroy • Middleport •

Auctioneer:

'

Leslie Lemley
614-446-6241
Licensed and bonded In favor of State of Ohio
Exec. Mary L. Belles Probate Case 951144
Terms ot S&amp;le" Cash or approved check. Food
Available
"Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property"
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Thursday, February 15, 1996
1:()0 p.m.
Located .t 2013 Jeffenlon Ave. In Polllt PleUim

I

REAL ESTATE
1 1/2 story house 1st floor has kitchen, living room,
dining room, 2 bedrooms &amp; full bath upstairs has
large bedroom with lull basement &amp; garage. House
heated with gas fumaca and, sets on a 59 x 160 x 1
+/· triangle lot.
Voewing will be on Wad. Feb. 14 from 10:00 a.m.
2:00 p.m. or by appointment.

AOOION CONDUCTED IY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO. #66
MasonW.V.
Res. na-5785 Auction Center 773-5447
Executor: Chsrlell Stover 614-883-4024
Ho~ will be sold w/reserve.
Terms: 10% non refundable deposit day of sale.
Balance due In 30 day at closing.
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property.
,.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

ANTIQUE
AUCTIO
SATURDAY, FEB. 17, 1996
10:00 A..M.

Localed al the Auction Center on Rl. 33 In
Mason, W.V.
FURNITURE
Clrd of Thanks
PUBLIC AUCTION
Massive 3 pc. B.R suite-High back bed w/matching
10:00 a.m. Seturdey, February 17, 1996
dresser &amp; washstand w/mirror, outstanding (1920's) 4
IAIC'I
Auction
Houle
VIIIIIIA~Ohlo
pc. walnut french style B.A. suile Must seell 8 pc.
The Family of ELMO E. COE,N would like to
Owners:
Robert
and
Carrol
Nibert
(Sale
was
cancelled
walnut
O.R. suite· ta&amp;le &amp; 6 chairs &amp; china, 9 pc.
thank everyone for being so kind and helpful
at owner's home on 2·3-96 because of bad weather).
mahogany Q.R. su~e. beautnul 4 pc. mahogany posler .
during the time of hls short illness and recent
The Nlberts decided they did not want to
B.R. suite, oak roll top desk, oak 4 drawer spool
cabinet, cherry ViCtorian chest, laney oak di'BSlNir,
death. Randy Crossen lor arriving first to assist
another January in Ohio, so they sold their home
beautiful spoon carved oak ice box, oak &amp; lilct.
lhe squads. Holzer EMR resident especially Dr.
are heading south. They are seiHng many ~ems
washstands, tiger maple rope bed, tall walnut vietorlell
Christopher and nurses for all services and
cannot take with them. So dress wannly and spend
bed, cherry drop leaf table, oak drop leaf table, round
'instructions and informatipn they gave Dr. Duke
day at our auction because it's a good cure for
oak table, square oak table, ladles drop front
fever.
secretary, cherry wardrobe, pie sale, oak serp.
at O'Bieness to assist Elmo's care, Amber
FURNITURE
&amp;
HOUSEHOLD:
Love
seat
&amp;
boy w/mirror, victorian tables, stack oak book1 ~~=~
Powell, Joel BlttBrs on squad, O'Bieness staff,
wooden rocklng horse, coffee &amp;end tables, lamps,
victrola, superior cigarette &amp; matches .25¢ v1
the crew with Mad-Flight, the staff on dwty at
machlne1 sets of chairs, oak rockers, wicker
linilfl6,
patio
umbrellas,
patio
table
w/4
chairs,
4
matching chair, Hooser style kitchen cabinet,
Grant Hospital upon Elmo's arrival, Dr. on call
chairs, 2 picnic tables and benches, older
display cabinet, prim. type cupboard, oak chest, ~
and a very spacial thanks to Neurosurgeon Dr.
glassware &amp; dishes, lanterns, wall hangings,
claw &amp; ball lamp table, round walnut table &amp; 8 ~
W. Leinbach at Grant who did every medical
geriatric walkers, elect. heater, cassette &amp; B·lt'BCII U bottom &amp; beck chairs &amp; more.
GLASSWARE
tapes, 33 &amp; 45 records, gran~e caners, old
term possible 10 save Elmo's life, the Chaplain
mirrors,
elect.
roaster,
bar
stools,
spin~le
back
Flo
blue
"Louise"
saucer,
Flo blue bowl &amp; . pJIItt41f;
Tom Evllns at Grant, Rev. Willard Love for
spindle back rocker, metal stools, chalk board, sq. cutglass, Cambridge dish, attica milk
coming to Columbus, staying by our side with
Russian collector plates, A.S. Germany
pieces of Fenton, fluted white coln dot
center table, milk cans, stone jugs, Jas.
prayer and Phyllis for stopping by the' home to
vase, while frosted hand painted VIctorian
stone crock from Cinn., Oh, school desks, 4 oak
give prayer wilh our family, and friends , also
chairs (old), folding chairs, sadd Irons, kitchen
clear glass bunny, 6 spade blue 9" china 1
Mr. Jim Blower, Hughes &amp; Blower Funeral I cook &amp; bake ware, wooden bar stools, hamper,
different), royal d!iulton "Siamese Cat"
Home and staff for several trips to Columbus to I away bed, vanity, High Boy secretarx w/plgeon
Duck Decoy, Franciscan ware apple
and drop desk (old but nice), Chair cushions,
Zephyr Lily Basket-Florentine
complete lhe services, a speciallhanks to Dr.
Creamer-White Rose Creamer-Sugar-Freesia Alo.Aol
-'1
Iamp, sm. Sharp m1crowave, st.,,
Evans and Jackie at H.M.C., pallbearers Randy
ng pes., 3 pes. Vase-Yellow Peony Teapot-Yellow Peony-Creamer•
bedroom su~e. wrought Iron vanity stool, type writer, Sugar-Ciemeta Bud Vase, Stone jare- Bee Sting,
Lee Coen, Randy Dillinger, Todd Dillinger, Brian
vanity
bench (old), new wok, Hoover sweeper,
Indian.
' ·'
McDaniel, Mitchell Coon, Chris Tipton, Scott
Suaen, stereo w/speakers, Hot Point washer &amp; dryer,
COLLECTIBLES
.
Gilbert, Brian Lackey, Steve Dillinger and Murt
Ironing board, push sweeper, plus more.
Adv. print McConnick-Deering-lntemational Harvetl &amp;
Bailey, flower shops and any businsss or
MJSC: 2 sets go~ clubs (Irons &amp; woods, new go~ bag, adv. Print-Winchester-man w~h rille shooting ~ be~r
persons who may have assisted, especially his
bowling baD, trolling motor, step ladders, misc. tools, large double picture reverse painted moVIe:·
nuts, bolts, screws &amp; misc. hardware In cans,
original Stelff Teddy Bear fully jointed- wool &amp;
'
grand children &amp; spacial friend, children ant;!
.
old hand made twig basket, 1~Muslc ~·
insulation, dog chains, rope, hot dog roasters, sm. metal fire fighter pedal car, metal fire ·dllef
'
spouse, special friend and my mother who set,
pan,
smudge
pot,
shovels,
hoes,
racks,
metal
Murray
pedal
tractor,
Chiton
Wll'idutl
metal
cement
stood, and stayed with me to make me stronger
and other garden tools, sledge hemmers, 24 H.
!freyhound bus, Wolverine
in my lime of need, slsler and brother-In-law
extension pole, sm. table top grill, wooden boxes, machine, •sunny Hours• story
and families, in·laws and friends, employer of
Selision's Banjo clock plus other
trash cans, bird house, suit case, lawn chairs, gas
pltchir pumpa, cast iron bean pot (cracked),
adv. tin signs-M-K-T-Katy
family especially Ashland Petroleum Co. to let
tables
1sc
1
pipe
&amp;
wood,
sandl
discs
Coast
Line- Great Western
them have time off to go to Columbus to stand
• m · ron,
•
ng
~
Lines plus other, Daisy Chum,
by Elmo's side and slill being gracious to help
gun gloves, slllel cable, misc. hoes, 112 18•
Creamer·Sugar &amp; Tea Pot,
111mp&amp;, push mower, Murray lawn rnower, pry ber, lg. Remington cast Iron trap
us adjust, also for food, flowers, cards or
roll clear plastic, 13" tire chains, 4 heavy casters,
wooden fishing lures, Coca Cola
whalevar else. lhey may have done. Special
chokers, Coffing holst, sm. wash tub, welder's
"Hot Shol Band" ,Drum Sal &amp; Mote
thanks to Murl Bailey, Ted Mullins, Doc and
anny cot, triangle dinner bells, iron grating,
Auctioneers Note: Very nice·
Bonnie Greuey, Dels Ford Tractor Sales for
miter box w/saw, several beer sighs, pr.
' antique lumlture, glassware &amp;
snow removal , Eleanor McDaniel, Trudy
comic books, loads o1 games, Bear compound
spend the dayll Heated building,
w/case
and
arrows,
old
Tonks
toys,
2
wheel
of f)arldng. Motels ne11r by.
Monlle, · Uva McHarg and Irene Dishong for
traller, weight bench &amp; welghiB, plus more.
coming In lhe home to prBpare our meal alter
The
following Item hae a ,_rved bid: F580AV
services. Friends and neighbors fo sharing food
- a t e r wl•ltachment&amp;.
and fellowshiP also lhe sanitation driver who
~ts. food, and a 1118troom will be avallat!le.
stopped by to help me In Billing my mail box up.
Auclloneer: Flnla "Ike" IAIIC
.In Wonderful Memories,
Phone 81.waa.l370 or 388 8880
Lots of love and sadly miBSeCI by his family,
Llceneed end Bonded In Ohio 13728
'
Grace, Aletha, Pamela, Steven &amp;
'hmw; Celh or lpp!Oted check
Greai·Grandcliildran, speclallrtends,
Not 1111P0f111b1e lor accldiints or loet llama
: Lowell &amp; Lola Ziegler,
Statements made day olsale hD pracedeuce over
~ -- printed matertals.· - - - -- ·
-~
·· Dorl8 &amp; Bob Brown~
I.

�Page De•
310 IIOmel fOr Salt
~OV'T

Pfti!M,.~v • Middleport • Galllpc~ll•, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

e

FOfiECLOSEO Homeo
&lt;For Pennltt On
Delinquent
'foo, Ropo'o, REO'a, Your Area
)'oil FrM (1) eoo-tH-8778 En
.H-2514 For CUFNOI Ultingl.

e1

·HOUM &amp; Lat For Sale, Pomeroy
-~ru, 2 Boclroomo, 1 Both, Low

Down· Paymeont, Eaey Terma, 1·
~

"

.}lice hOmo In Rlclno, largo bUikiN'lg wltl houae amall bualneu,
·arso a one car garage, fenced
:~ard, out or flood area. aski,D
..7.000 8t4-84D-21104.

.

-

440

Furnlohecl. Elllclency AI Udlldoo
Pllcl, - - Ba...-.145/Mo.. 818
Second-· Galllpolla, e14·
..s 31145
G"ciou1 11v1ng. 1 anc1 2 boclo-.
IJIOflmOnla at Vliato IHnor and
RIYerlldo ,.,.,,.._ In ~~­
port From t232-f355 . Coli e14D82-5084. Equal Houolng OpporIUriHo.
-

-m,

N. 3td, ll~t
fur.
nlahed. Deposit I raterenc11.

304-812·21581.

.Thr•e bedroom home in country,

New 1bedroom apartment, all

'in-ground pool, 81 4-11112·50117.

olocllic, atovo &amp; rofrlgoro!Dr lurnllhld. •270/mo. + dlpooiL 304875-3100 or:!04.e75-11808.

·.l'vtitao Hll Rd .. Rutland. ano bolh.

:32o Mobile HOITIII fOrSIIIt
:1071 Schulll 3 8tdroom1, With
px 18 Addition; 814-3118-9355. _
·) 972 Buddy 14180

GOod Condl-

1ion, $8,800, 814-1143-2518 Attar 4

:p.M.

) 987 14170 llo~&gt;~ille 2 lloclrooms,
.f Balhs. CA. ,614·448-8374, Alter
~P.M.
.
.) 988 1•h:60 fxcellent Condition,

.Appr. 314 Acr• In Bidwell Area,
19,500 Firm, 814-388-8973
eaw Message..
,

t

·Limited Offer ! 1986 doublewlde,
~br, 2belh. $1799 down, S2751
:manlh. Free deliver~ &amp; 11tup.
.Only at Oakwood Homea, Nitro
'fi'l· 304-755-5865.

'ew 14180,
2 or 31&gt;edroom. Only
2
10
in.
n'\ak.e

payments
move
No
~~ments after •yea~. 30.t-75S·

Nle;e three ~room apertment,
nice ono bedroom. apartment In

"""- tt4-8112-N68.

•

Now Taklnt laalto For 1 Or 2
Boclroam Apartmenll, e14·3BI1100. .
One bedroom furnlohocl apart·
mont In lllddloporl, eu-448·
3081, 814-tl2·5304 or 814·11112·
2178.
Small One Bedroom, Excellent
Condllion, Counlly Stulng, Waoher, Oryar, Stove Refrlge"tor, Non
SrMklll. S300 Dopooi1, $350/Mo.
Apjilicationl At 1743 Centenary
Rood, Oollpolil, 814-441·2205.

Tara Townt'louae Apartments,

Very Spaclou 1, 2 Bedrooma, 2
Fioon, CA, 1 112 Balh, Fully Cor·
pttod, Adul1 Pool &amp; Blby Peol,
Polio, Storl t3401Mo. No Poll,
LeaH Plua Security Dopooil AI·
quirocl, 814-387-7850.

6566.

lWin -.Tower, ,,_ accopdng
·New Bank Atpos. Only 4 1111. Still appicationl lor t br. HUD oubsld·
:U, warranrj. ~4- 755-71&amp;1 .
· lzod apt. lor elderly and handl·
copped. EOH 304-875.ee7D.
:Price Bus~erl New 1~ll7.0, 2 or:
;lbr: Only $11115 down, $185/manlh. : lklllrnlehtd -tmen\ 118 112 E.
~ree delivery &amp; setup. Only at Main Strotl, Pomero~. $175/ma ..
Oakwood Homos, Nitro \I!V. 304- 814-8112-7511 .
75!&gt;5885.

850 Lots a. Acreage
'
.

Five acre1,
aerator, near
Aacjne,$US,OOO can linance wirh
(!all dawn, 814-949-2025.

Nice home site, cleared, react,t for
you to build. Rt 2 north. Smin. from
lawn. 3Q.Ioll7!&gt;2365.

Scenic VaHey, Apple Grave,
beautiful 2ac loti, public water,
Clyde eo_, Jr.. 304-578·23311.
WANlED TO BUY: 100 acres or '
more. Must be remote, ridge-top '
land with good access. Iota of
road frontage, woods, pasture a~
vi~. Coll814-593-8545.
·
Wanted- . 15 or mora acres in
Meigs Coun1y with or without
house, muat have some pasture,
614-11112·8534.

RENTALS

410 Houses tor Rent
2 Bedroom Houae, 2 Bedroom
trailer In Gallipolis, 614·448-ell49
For lnlarmolion.
Unfurnlaned twO bedroom house,
nice and clean, deposil required,
~ lll,lids polS, e14-11112-3080.

Vlr.f~ 8Jce

home in Pomeroy for
,.,., 1.14-ll82-5858.

V'(8tz8:al

Str..l. Pomeroy, WID,
$3!!MIO. Dopool\ 513-922-()-

420 - Mobile Homes
·
for Rent
2bedroam, total electric. no pets,
1 child. $275/nio. Includes 1raah
pici&lt;Up. $200 depo~il. New 1995
2btdroom. no pots, t child, $3501
mo. $300 deposit. 304-875-6277
alter 5pm.
3 Bedrooms For Rent, No Pets,
Deposit &amp; References, 614·2455582, A~er 5 RM. 6t4-24!&gt;58110.
3•,Bctciooms, 2 Full Bllhs In Por~
or 1!. o8 $275/Ma. You Pay Do·
po~lt:l Utili riel, Reference Rt·
qunll,-614-388-9182.
3bd .. , ; all aioculc 14170, GalllpolljJ'errr. $250/ma. No polo.•
~II ulii~H. 304-6~. ;
For ~ 1wlth ~~on ro l:lu~, 14x70:
three· Dedroom mobile home an
large lOt 1h Porneror. tOr more information. 814-.992~4570 or 81~·

450

FurniShed

Rooms

Rooms for rent • weetc or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Gaila Hotel.
814-448-8580. .
Sleeping rooms with cooking .
Also trailer apace on river. All
hook-ups. Call alter 2:00 p.m ..
304-773-5151, ...... wv

F\lRNfTUii

2 AJ(C Reg. mini Pamerian pup- Kttp Your Cattle In Place And
iJSIYour Houat Sale With Auatrallan
pleo. _ . 22211•
Shophordo Out Of Wori&lt;ing Plr7 Flog. Beagle pupa, 8 t&gt;Ova. 1 girt, onta, 8 Weeki Old, Vacc:inoltd &amp;
$50 ..ch. Roady Mar. 2. • cop- WOrmed, 11!50,814-441-1718.
per noll, 3 bltck, while &amp; tan. Puppies- mother Chihuahua, la3&lt;M-e75-181 s.

Antiquel

Mtrchancllae
2 PI- Socdonol Couch, Bilge

Color, Good Condition, $75, 814ZM D3115, Allor 8 P.ll.

haul klta, In Febtuarv. Sider's collont Condition , Nov" TlbiJIO:
Equipmonl 304-87!&gt; 7421 .
bo!edWilh$275,81ol-388--. :

"

.. .

oH51~2122.

1973 112 Tan, International Pick·
Up Truclt, $85Q, 814-448-4188.

eo.... yard ...tor. 11 horot, 41'
- . S700. 114-11112-4555.
Boata By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. Gu•ranteed Lowest
Prices AI Shoo Colo, Gollpolia.
Combuatlaneer arove, e•cellent
condllon, 814-742-3115.
Concrt1e &amp; Plaotlc Sapdc
300 Thru 2,000 Gollono
Evoana Enl8rpri..., Jacklo,n,
1-1100·537-11528.

1840
W(i)lfF TANNING BEDS
Tan AI Home
Buy DIRECT end SAVEl
ConrnercialMome Units 'From
$tiiii.OO
Low Mon!Ny Paymants FREE
Color Catalog Call TOOAY
1-800-a42- t 305.

Dlamoncl Flog, Tlflany Cut 113 CL Very nice home at11eo ayatem,
Uka Nowl AppoiHI Value $1,000 lncluclea: Kenwood receiver w1
Allklng $400, 814-440·2488, 814- 1oo..ano por t:han""' power, &amp; lull
audio·vldeo connections, Sony
448-78De. .
CO player, Pioneer turntable, &amp;
Electric Wheelchairs /Scooters, AOC graphic eq. Also lncludea
New /Uiad, Scoo1er JWhllichalr 1pr Pion- 1~ speakers w/15'
Lil16, Stairway Elavatora, Lift wolfera. Great deal, ssoo firm.
Chairs, Bowman's Homecare. 304-~141 anytime.
614-448-7283.
Wood,n Kitchen Table &amp; 4
GE 17.6cu.ft. reftlgerato~ frost· Chain, Good Condition, S 150,
814-379-2728.
rrae. s1oo. 304-87~._
HI-Etftciency L.P. Or Natural Gaa
02"4 ~urnacol 100,000 BTU 1·
aoo-20 1-~088, e 14·448·8308,
Duct Syot11!11 And AJr Condl~on­
ort.FnleEodmo..,

World Book 1998 Edition now on
sale. 22vol. encwclop8dia plus.
windowl 01 Mac Multimedia. Reg
$759, salt $598, (Piymtnl plan
available). 304-675-3775.

lnleftl1orm &amp; Miller Mabile Homo 550
~lldlng
Furnaces. Gas, Oil &amp; Electric In
SUpplies
SIDck. Largo OlotrlbUter Buy Out
of New Woblle Home Furnacea.
Bank Financing Available, Call Black, brick, ~..,., pipes, windBennett• Mobile Home HTG &amp; ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
CLG At 814.448-8418 or 1-800- Rio Grande, OH Call 614-245·
512t.

Sil~er

AKC Weimaraner Pups,

Gray, Bluo Eyas, Champion
Bloodllnes, Excellent Disposition,
Haw Parenti. 814·1182-7201.
1Ogal tank &amp;el up apeciala. Fish
Tank &amp; Pot Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave. Point Pleasant, 304·675·
20113.

LOG HOMES
Ct.mfort, convenience,

cflicicncy,

I duro,biJi,ty 'lnd flexibility

desipl are a few of the

why 2,000
families will build a los
home thle year!

rcaeons

Appalachian
Structures
leader

in

h11

Log

been a

tho log homo

industry for over

15

years. Choose from over
70 etandard modcla or
we'U euitom dcaign one
for you.

.C all or write for' more
iaf'ormation.

Appalachian Log
Sll'llcturee, Inc.
Dept. GDT,
P.O. Box 614Ripl~r.

wv 2s211

~NSTANTlY

APPEAUNG

LA, WBFP, Balcony • 3 bodrms, 2
1/2 betha, kit. wlbreak1all rm .. 2
car garage ._&amp; screened back
porch. VlS 358-88:!8.
It 053 STYUSH BRICK &amp;STONE
HOME.' A CLASSY QUALITY
BUilT HOME 3 or 4 bedrms ., 2
1/2 balltl, foyer entry, open dining
rm. &amp; living rm. wflog fireplace
lnlen. great eat·in kitchen. Patio 81
the rear w/lnground pool, P09l
houaa, fenced yard, beautiful
trees, Gazello. 2 cor att. ga~ &amp; 2
cor dstachad garage. A Woman's
Dream • VLS 388-8828 · 448·

~~~~~~~~~;~1987
GIIC e11cellent
Sierra Claoolc,
dually,•
low mllea,
condllion,

t

6808.

11071 SAY 'HELLO' TO A GOOD
"BUY' dsilghl1ul ranch 3 be&lt;lrms. 2
baths, LR, w/atone flreptace wall,
Fam rm. also has a fireplace. Kll.
w!lovaly cabinets NEW refrlg J.
range, new windows. din. rm.,
deck, 2 car att. gar. &amp; 1 car.
READY
F 0 R ·OCCUPANCY
$8&amp;,1100.00 VlS 388-8828 - 448-

(614) 742-3171 or 1·800-585-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOO, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley..............742-3171

Ul

a

LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

446-1066

1995 Honda •wo • Wheeler
$3,800 • WhUII /Tirea For Hondo 4 Whaolor, Llko Newl 814·
387-0554.

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631

REALTORS:

Allen C. Wood; Redor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Redor/BrOker-446-0971

7511 Boats &amp; Motors

for Salt

Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
Tlm Watson, Realtor-446-2027
Patricia Ross, Realtor

REMODELED 2 Story
Home • 3 bedrooms, garage,
located In Vinton. Call for
more details. 1113
DOUBLE WIDE- with a 112
lot more or less. 3
IMdrooms, 2 baths, &amp; a 3 car

garage. 1111

GREAT STARTER HOME •
2 bedrm, "lth reflnlshable
attic. 2 lots. Bidwell area.

$24,900.00

VACANT PROPERTY· 21B
acres more or lass. It Is
located In Gallla and
Jaclcaon county, bot~derlnl~ •
Little Raccoon
Excellent hunting ground.
IIUUTFUl HOlE • Spend $250 per acre. CALL
thOle COOl niGhts b~ 1 warm
fl18place In thls lovely 2 1t0ry TOOAYI Realtor Owned
11ame. I has 3 bedrooms anti a 12003
-tho ·GaliiPOIII
· ~ ori
Route 7 In
Cll~ School
Dlllrlct. PRICED TO SELL!

1111

INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY - 2 homes
located In downtown Vinton.
Live In one and rant ·the
other. $75,000 CALL TO
SEEI
1114

FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS, WHETHER
BUYING OR SELLING GIVE CHERYL LEMLEY A

742-3171.

ReaiEetate

1111

OFFICE 992-2886
BRAND NEW HOME • Tax
abatement Rea~or Owned. 3
bedroom, 2 batths. Located
In the cily. S52,1Kl0. 1109

... .
REAL NICE

RIO GRANDE AREA-

.

RANCH HOllE
THREE LOTS • Located In tocaltd on Roccoon Rd. n hU a
town with water and septic two CN Br!d a pool with I
available. $7,000.00 12004 apiH dsclc. Thia could ba
what y6ti'rr "lbllklng farl
1117

Beautiful Ranch home offers
3 bedrooms, formal dining,
lg. family room, cozy
ffraplaee. 2. 7 acres more or
18111 Call lor more details!
$120,000. 1120

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OURTOLLFAEENUIIBEA

14100 884 1088

. ;. , ,
"

,:
.'

condition,
~pay 'a"· 6~4:

Henry E. Cleland Jr.. 992-2259

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357 ·

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Oh 45631

Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phcine: (614) ~
YOU ASKED FOR ITII
Land close to Rio Granda lor a Mobile home or build you
home. 1.29 acnae wlllt ganage, county water, alech1t,
city schoOls. Phone lor more Information, before~ Is
GONE.
1742

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

•!!!ro~!!1!l1"~!C•

Budget Transmlaliono, Uoocl IRt·
111111 Ford Bronco II, clean body, built, All Typao, Accos1lblo To
10,000 T1anamlsalon,
~x4, runa good, new 11rea. 304· Over
882·3825 •ave moougo or 614· 814·24!&gt;5877
T-Topa, 448-1111011 alk for Porn.
New gaa tanks, one ton trur;k
lnlr. Wogan
$1,000, 814- 19BI Ranger 414 Supar Cob, V-8 whoela, radlaiOrl, floor mota, et:.
automatic, air, tlberglua topper, D &amp; R Aula, Ripley, WV. 304-372·
3933 ... 1-800-273-83211.
$7500, 814-882-70811aha&lt; Spm.
350 Engine, Au ·
campers&amp;
OVer Drive, Good 11189 Dodge Caravan 4 Cyllndsr, 790
Aaklng '$2500 et 4· Good Condition, 15,000, 814-448Motor Homes
1124.
Like new 1G94 35' Dutch min
t980 Dodto Coravan New Front camper, lr'ont living room, walk
Tirel, Brakea I BeUa, Looka .lhru bath, prica 511,700 firm. 814GTCIIII V-8 3.0 U•r. $4,800, 814- 882-11841 da~o or 614-992-2527
245-0717.
ahor5pm
·

-.o73 DELUXE COUNTRY
UVING WITH ALL ITS CHARM. 1
year aid brick ..nch, 3 bodrms., 2
baths. A very IQ. Great Rm., kll. &amp;
dirt rm Beautiful al oak cabinets.
Rear Oeck, 2 cor g8rage. 2 LOTS.
Dreams are made of this. Call VLS
388-8826
11072
DESIRABLE
RESIDENTIAL NEIGHBORHOOD
In town 3 bednn. ranch w/new
roof. hot water tank, furnace
w/cantral atr and vtnyt siding.
lMng.rrn. w/ flreplace, dining rrn
w/lrench dOOrs 10 a patio. $67,000.
VLS 388-8825.
*1023 I.Dcattd wlll'lln City Schoolo
• A bll of woodland. Huge 4
bedroom, 2 stor; wnh 2 112 batl1s,
formal living room &amp; dlnl~g room,
15' ' 23' family. LOadS of CObOISIS
In 'Bn equipped kitchen with
breakfast nook, large utllly room
eervea a1 an office, partial
bellmen~ ltlattd pool room 31' x
53' with love!~ 18' x 38' pool,
anachad garage 25' x 29' Home
con ba bOIJghl with small acreage
or all tf5 ec. m/1. The land Is
beautiful rolling &amp;traed llillh trailS.
CHERRY RIDGE RD. • Mobile
l1ame w/3 bodrms., pond, land and
. VLS.

MEIGS COUNTY

7195.

4opd,
cond. In-

6808.

Home

C&amp;C General Home. Malnttnenct- Painting, vlnrl siding,
carpanuy, doors, windowl, bllha, ·
RSES cERTFIED DEALER
BASEMENT
mobile hOmo rot&gt;lir and mort. For
LAWFIENCE
ENTERPRISES
WATt:RI'ROOFNG
f - esdmoto call Chot, 814-1182- Hocu Pumpo, Air Conditioning. II
Unconditional llotlmo guo'*''"· 8323.
You Don1 Call Uo Wo Both Loot!
local r•terencta furniahed. Call
Fr11 EotlmaiOo, 1·800-2D1-00118,
(814) 448·0870 Or (114) 237· Ron'o TV Sarvict, opeciollzlng In 114 .,8 1118, WV002D4S.
0488 Ro~ra Waterproofing. Es- Zenith alao aorviclng moll diller
tatjlllltd 1875.
branda. HouH ~alia, 1·800·71117·
0015, wv 304-571-2388.
Rllidontial or cam,.,.lal wlrlf!q.
Appliance Parts And Service: All
new llrVice or repejra. Master lt·
Name Branda Over 25 Veara Ex·
cenHd etectrlclln. Ridenour
perienct All Work Guaranteed,
ElacltiC'II, WV000308, 304-875·
Fronc~ City lloytag, 814-448 ·
!71111.

nHdl wark,

r=~=----iiiiiiiiiiiilll~~~---·'
BLACKBURN IJ,EALTY ..

Appllanctl:
Re~ncjltlanod ·
Wawro, Dryers, Ranges, Rof!l·
gratora, 90 Day ·Guaran1HI
French City Mayta8, 814·448·
7785.

door. extended cab, ut up ID pull
an~ trailer, one ton roll deck, .
$11,200, 8t4-11112-40113ii111r Opm.

..__, ,,_, • Page D7

Home

1988 5-10 5 Spoocl, Air, Sunroof, 1g93 201 Pro XL, 20' Strulos
Y.e, 814-418-4737 Altar 5 P.ll.
ball boat, 200 XPHP. 814·887·
7347"' 81~7D.
For Sale: 1982 Chevrolet S·IO
Truck 6 C~llnder. Standard 760
Auto Paris &amp;
Tranamisaion, $1,000, 304-675·
Accessories
5751 .

1-800-458-9990

HOusehold
Goods

740 . Motorcydll

wv

Improvements_

11184 4 WO Honda 300 4 Whoolor With S,_ Blade, $4,200, 814448-7371 , Allor 5 P.ll.
•.

lover enlry, cotheclral ceilings In

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111

Office .......................... 992-2259

PHONE OFFICE 446-7618

IG BEND REALTY, INC.

KENNETH AMS8ARY, PH. 245 5855
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-11539

LEIDJNGIIAM RE.L ESTIR

'

l-800-58S-7101 or 446-7101 ~

WOOD, BROKER
............... ............. t-uLJo~
SECLUSION- with the convenience of city
5 minutes from Holzer Medical Center,
home rests on 6.25 roRing acres and
bedrooms, 2 kitchens, and 4 bathrooms, wlh
other custom features. This home would be
IIJre•~l for the professional family or a two-family

Two 3 Bedroom Trailera For Rent.
6, 4-643-2757.

Tammie DeWin ................................ 24S-0022
Manha Smith ................................... 379-26S I
Cindy Drongowski ............ ............... 441-0736
Chclyl Lemly ................................... 742-3171
NEW LISTINGI ACREAGEI
Pioneer Trail Road! 60 acres
more or lass vacanl la~d.
County water available, 25
acres approx. tillable &amp;
pasture land with remaining
wooded. Approx. 4 miles from
Rio Granda.
1828

NEW liSTING • TUPPERS PLAINS • 1+
acres - Nice remodeled 1 1/2 Story Frame
Home, 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. 2 car garage,
screened porch. Skylights, calling fans. Nice
k~chen Wfth dishwasher for thOSe who love to
cook. TPC water. Cable, garden area.
Woodburner, electric B.B. heat. Nice clean
home. Excellent location. Make Appointment
to See Thlsll

LOT· being approx. 5 acre
mora or less. County water Is
available. Situated at a paved

Two and three bedroom mobile

homes. starting at S240-$300,
sewer, water and trash included,
614-992-2167.

~

Two bedroom, 12X60. lOcated on
Smilh Run Rd. auiSids of Rudond,
total electric:, $250/ mo. plua-ulili·
oie~ $1!50 depo~~ 614-742·20811. 1

AparbntntS
for Rent

'

cr... saw. El·

.,If.
nigo-.

810

1988 TRX2!50X 4 wheeler, ollra
Ford 414 $2,800 ; Chevy tirea and wheela, other misc.
388 5 Speocl, .1.!500; 1075 patti, one owner, 11800, 11~ Hauler, 4 Door, t 8 Ft. 1182·548.
81 4-388-1111011.
1089 Yamaha 350 Four WhNior
414 BIO Boar Goad Condlllon,
$2.8CO 080, &amp;14-387-02311 After
S:llO.

992-7272

440

gocxt,S1 ,800. 30olo117~.

10"' otf811 tractor engine over- For s.•: 0+1 Slihl

Ananclng Guo,.,__Wilh
Minimum OOWn or Trad•ln, Call 18DO Dodge Ram Von B-2!50:
72,000 lllloa, te,ooo, Can Bo
t _naport dlac.
Rulh 8toH48-21187
SMn AI: GaHipolil Dolly Tribune,
2~5.
lloot
1D84 Dodge Spirit, 4 125 Third Avonuo, Oalllpollo
cyl ..- ... - . . . condition, Ohio.
$DODO
814-1148-2718.
18 Month Old Aly Colt, 112 au.,.
111111 HI_, 414 XE - -. Ex·
1
ter HDrll, 112 Appalooaa, e 14· One woman owned green 1882 .. Low Ill... Sliding Roar WindDelta
81
Olda.
Naw
tlrea
,
oil
ow, Very Well Taken Care Of,
38&amp;-&amp;147.
chango ..,.ry 4000 mlleo, Zebort Uka N... 814-«8-3100.
4;r old Bay llaro wlcol~ will 1ell ruslprOOfing. rebuilt nnsmluion,
new water pump, lifetime apark 84 Ford F-1!50 4x4 XLT, loaded,
-lily.!104-875-4137.
18,200 mllea, excellent condition,
plug ...... $800, 814-982-etl88.
And Said, Horoo And
aaklng $17,200 114·387-0288 II'
Bv Tho Seni IJ&gt;Ida. 720 lhlcks for Sate
814-114i-2481a1Mrl!pm.

810

S E R\ ICl S

730 VIlli &amp; 4-WDI

bino, Owontona

.

MERCHANDI',f

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furnishings.
Hours: Man -Sat, 9·5 . 81 4·448·
0322, 3 milts out Bulavlllo pike
Froo Dolivery.

Cub uacnu wlcultivatorl, ruhC :

'.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaunt,

Gllll enna.r

1:-:-:-:-:--'-::::-=-:--:-:-:--

.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, r•trlgttatorl,
ranges. Skaggs Appllanco1, 78
Vlna Street. Coli til4-448·73ll8,
1-800-41111-3499.
.

AA !

Balo; 41t
Harblna, Both Ellcel~nt ConcUlf.
don, Andy Adomllllky, 814-3.,._,,
2744,
•
: ·~

-

Autoa tor Salt

11'\D F.-m Equipment

AKC Rogillerod Black &amp; While
Peklngo11 Pupo, Will Bo Ready
For That Valendna's Sweetheart,
$17SEIIdl, 814-251-eoua

540 llllclllaneoUI

!killding For LHM • (Price· Nogollable), Shop 1Warohou11, 57
Plno SUHI, 3500 Sal~ ov...Door, High Traffic, OKIUHt Pork·
lng, 3 Phaao Eloc .. Gas HN~ 14
Ft. Ceilings, Wall Shelving, Oayo:
· 404·880-8053, Night: 770-4280292, Ask For wayne,
'

Country Furniture. 304-e75-e820.
AI 2 N, 8milea, PI PltaoanL WV.
Tuee-Sat9-e, Sun 11-5.

Ro~nd

ther Rag . Pomeranian, will be

ForLease

51 o

610 Farm Equipment

"'il NH

AKC Cocl&lt;or Sponlol Pupa, Sholl, small hauaopota, ready Fed. 25,
Wormed, Dew Clawa Removed, S75,814-992-5CM2.
'
Tlltl Doclltd. 81H5HII87.

For Rent: Total Electric, Empty
Mobile Home Lol, Coooreteo Pad,
No Pets, 614-3117-74311.

'

FAR M SUPP t II'S
&amp; LI VI &lt;; TOCK

~c~~~-~~~!~~258~~~~·--------1

460 Spice for Rent

490

1H511auer , . _ _ Tree10r;Very Good Condlilon, Runa &amp;x,,'
col1111. 814-742-2467.
, .. -

Full blooded Slllhtzu pupplta, alo
~~~~~~;:.:=-=:=1
Wltkl old, two male· c:hoc:olate
-:and whl~. ono llmalo· blacli anti
12 Pupploo, Hall Boaglo, Hall "hito, $i !50 oach. Will bo rood~
aa...... WMkl Old, WHnod, far Va lentino'• Do~. 814·802·
5 Mall, 7 Fernoio $25 N .. One Tri 8458.

VI'RA
814-441-3181
Quilty Hau- Furni..,.And
Appll• lCOI. GIMI Doalo On
Cah And C8'Tfl RENT-2-aMI
And r..ay_, Alto-Fnlellcilivlry Within 25 llilol.

530

~~~560~~,_~=tor~===r;560~~=to=r;:,.,:;,:=~~e1~0!=:!Fiflft ~ulp!Min ·. ;:

540 :'.::' _.

510

........
fOrRtnt

Sunday, t:.t~oruarv 11, 18M!

-

. . , . , , February 11' 1991 ..

1818

LANGSVILLE - Crouser Road •
Story
Frame/Ranch Style Home with 3 bedrooms.
bat~. electric Heat Pump/Central Air. Allie
and cellar space, an attached one car
gatage also e detached one car garage.
Nice level 1.13 acre lot. Quiet area, nice
home approx. 1B yrs. old. Great for anyone
who loves the countryll ASKING $45,900
COME SEE THIS ONEil

FISHERMAN'S DREAM· This mobHe home is IQca~~
on St. Rt. 71n AddisOn. This Ohio
lot is . .
The mobile home is 3
a large
Etlecllrlcand water· is available.

1 and 2 bedroom apartmants, furnished and unfurnished, security
deposll required, no pets, 814·
9112·2218.

RACINE- Lois of room for a growing famllyil
This 2 story frame home faatures many
exterior repairs le.(rool, aiding, added
Insulation, new 81dwalks.) The Interior still
needs some work though-but that's O.K.·
just design, paint &amp; decorate to suR your
own taalel Then you'D have a beautiful·
lilajestic ~ your ownll Come see
thiS! ASKING $31,000

an

2 ~dtoom, in Racine, $250 per
mOnth plus utilities, 814·992·
6542.

P6MEROY· LOOKS SMALL, ....BUT... STEP
INSIDE-you'D be amazed! Roomy home with
3 bedrooms, bath, family room in the
basement, rear deck/porch, with a large
lnground pool, fenced yard. ASKING
$24,500 COME SEE ... May consider

2 Rooma, Furnilhed Efficiency, AI
Utilities Paid, Oownataira, 810

Second Avonuo, Gallipolis, $1851
Mo. e14-«8·3fl45.
2bdrm. apta., total electric, •P·
plloncoa furnished, loundry room .
llclllt"•· clooe ib scnaal In - ..
; Applications avallab4a at: VIMage
GroOn Apll. 1149 or call 614-11112·
371 t.El)H.

lre~nable o1111rl
MIODLEPORT· This place say's

'Welcome
.

home' as soon as you atep lnaldel · L~
, _
·-Ign
huge IMng room wlllt an open Iron! .... •
llfeplace w111t """
woodbumer
lnHrl." I d k
fbtlu
wtth dimming •.,...t
18, remoun
•
large family den/recreational area, utlll1y
hook-ups, 1 112 baths, luU bM8menl, 31arge
bedrooms with ample closet/IIOrage apace.
Attic area, encloaad front porch. ALOT OF
HOUSEl Aslcing $39,1100 (you QOIIIi- thlsl)

:::&amp;:'

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES loT JACK 59"
ESTATES, 52 WlltWJIOd Drovo
from $228 to $2D1 . Walk 10 shop
m~vies . Call 81-t~ua-~588. 1

MIODLEPORT· PRICE REDUCED! OWNER
RELOCATING WANTS TO SELL 'NOW"I

floor,_

w-- "'

•

becil'llllntS,

SYRACUSE· A secluded cattle farm wlllt aboul 80 acres in
pasture. abOut 10 tillable, and aboul231n woods. 13 acres
and a 1 1/2 story home that hae 4 ·bedrooms, 2 balha
skylight, decks, e~uipped kitchen. heat pump,
barns and out bulldongs, and much more.
St30,0ilo

-.i

POMEROY· Beech Street· A 2 story 15 Yr. Old ~I
home with a fantastic· view. Has 3-4 bedrooms 2
fireplilcet, 3 t/2 baths, family room, formal dining rocim
finished basement In ground swimming por~. aot. heal'
satellite dish, 2 car garage, and lOts of privacy, lilting
25 acres.
8133,000

ori

RUTLAND- Main Sltt_et· a one *lory horn. with · 3
bedrooms, dining room, one bath, big living room, on

·-age size lol.

payment.

aitd

RUTLAND- Depot Street- A 1 t 12 atory home with 4
bedrooms. dining room and enclOsed front porch. Also
home has nice fenced front yard. big back yard Storage
ONLY t31.0111
building, carpon and vinyl siding.

with financing with reasonable down
ITS ALMOST TIME

TOWNr

··-

POMEROY· A 2 story house on Main St. hae 2 nice
porches, 1 1/2 baths 3 to 4 bedrooms, part baeement .,..
a brick drivewa~.
t3i,oao

SYRACUSE· A large 112·acre lot with a ranch 111y1e houee
that has 3 bedrooms. big living room, family room eun
IJ)Om and 2 baths. Has a 3 car detached garage Wfth
bedroom apartment above. Some fruit and grapee_

REDUCEDT0$17,1100

w...,..
..w'

CHESTER· A one story stucco home with"2 bedrooms lui
basement, fireplace, built in bookshelves garage with
attached workshop, and a deep lot Wfth garden area.

COMMERCIAL BUILOIN~I l.:a(ge 2 story
brick bulld:ng Wfth cement llools, '&amp;&gt;mer lot ol
Middleport building consists of nearly.halla
block wllh 3 buslnesa aactlons and
overhead apartments. Unique
building, ondleaa poaai!&gt;llltles tor
a
atructure/locallon. AS!&lt;ING $60,000 may

vt.w o1 river, omall low maintenance yard.

Hlre'a 1 compromln located on Union
jUat Illite edge of Put1*0f Ia a 1·112
1t0ry f r - home with 8.87. +. - · nloe
Iron! yard, aome fencing, danlen
3

.

FIVE PPINTS AF,IEA• Qne floor ranc~ style
home with .3 bedrooms. family room, d•n.
beth• lui"'
· ,.....,. kltche - · ' - &amp; ""., equ..,.....
. n,
ys•,
tile toyer, cai'port.-nd en attached one car
-~ Yard •.,_,
n~ ~
garage. ..,....,
~·r """ ....,.,_ .. __
ASKING $64,500
'

COI1Iider o11n1 Owner mer conllder helping

-

'

,/

Don, Ieithia uo by! I One
home. 23 bedrooma, bath, utility room, large kitchen.
-newer repaln1, large wooden ,_ dec:k'I WAN
. T COUNTRVIII I

'

POMEROY- Naylors Run- A 3 bedroom ranch style home
just a little ways out of town. II you want the convenience
of being close to town but lhe feel of country you wil 111oe
this place .
ONLY$30,000
MIODLEPORT· South 2nd Ave.· A tan brick home thai • •
2 stories, an attic, 4-5 bedrooms, family room, dining room,
newer cabinets in kijchen, 1 t/2 baths, part bM&amp;ITIIItot, 3
really pretty fireplaces, front &amp; side porches, pertly fenced
yard and much more. Musl see .
$71,1100

'

I

outtolde Syt..ct•ll• on State
home that Is well Insulated that .has 1
Kenluckian
1/2 baths, 2 Brs., &amp; equipped kitchen. Has approx . 2t Ac.,
a 2 story .barn or storage building river view, and may haw
some timber.
$46,0111

TO

START THINKING

A80VT SPRING Ci.EANING .. .WHY· NOT
CLEAN YOURSELF RIGHT OUT OF THAT
OLD HOME AND INTO A NEW ONE?I
STOP SV ANO SEE OUR SELECTION! IF

YOU ARE READY FOR A CHANGE WEU

HELP WITH THAT TOO, ~ US SELL TI-lE
lltoriQI area, 1.-ge
HOME YOU CURRENnY HAVE...WE
: baaament, new wil.doww,_l HAVE BlJ.YERS. ..WE 'NEED i.ISTINGSI
CloM to 10Wn
WE'LL HELP MOVE YOU ALONGII

a.,.·

'!fAS . ..-NOW tl4,100

an

S».IG.il

MIODLEJIORT· Ruttand Sl. ·A 2 slory home thll 111111 jUII
had new siding put on, a new porch, and a upper deck lhai
you a~ MCI watch the rlwr. Home hae 3 bedrooml and 2
bathe, carpel, and klll:hen cabllllll. . . . . .

'·

�PllgeDI•,J • ,...__,

11 ,,

Sunday, February 11, 1"f5.

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

Ohio Lottery

. ...
•·

National farm group leader says

Eastern girls
post another
cage victory

Ethanol future looks bright: !
..

COMPLETE DESIGN COURSE- Jo Ann Francia and her dllugh-

tw, Suzie, from left, h111111 bHn certHied aa rn.atw floraf dealgnera
following a recent design courae. Jo Ann'• huablnd Bill Francia,
of Francia Florlat In Pomeroy, aeld the women are the flrat moth·
er/daughter pair certHied aa· rn.ater floral dealgnera In the atate.
'The filet that JoAnn and Suzie are doing thla program Ia another
example of thtlr dedication to thtlr craft and tht al'tl In which we
work, • Mr. Francia added. 'They do not want their dtllgna to be
mundane. They fael that tht paople of thla trtt ahould have acceaa
to the lateat In the floral dtllgn arena. • They will be continuing their
· education with other courses Including wedding dealgn. ·

JOhio ·Valley Bank stock
·now
listed on NASDAQ
.

GALLIPOLIS • The common trading day. Those pri~es are ~ail­
stock of Ohio Valley Bane Corp., a able in over 200,000 electronic terone bank holding company began minals in brokers'.offices throughout
trading on Friday, Feb. 9, t9%, in the the United States and the world. TradNASDAQ National Market, accord- ing data is also disiributed widely
. ~ng to Chairman and Chief Execu!ive through wire services for selective
dissemination by newspapers, radio
Officer James L. Dailey.
~ · Ohio Valley Bane Corp., whose . and television stations.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. had assets
lt'llding symbol is OVBC, operates
of
$317
million and $27.5 million in
Ohio VBlley Bank with offices in Galshareholders'
equity at year end
" lia, Jackson, and Pike Counties in
1995.
Current
market
makers of the
southern Ohio and the OVB Loan
Bane
Corp.'s
stock
are:
The Ohio
Origination ·center in Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va. The Bane Corp. recently Company, Advest, Inc. of Gallipolis;
fonned a consumer finance company Montgomery Securities of Buffalo,
that will open offices in Gallipolis N.Y., and Diversified of Columbus.
In addition to increased market
and South Point in March. The comvisibility,
NASDAQ offers Ohio Valpany has 12 directors and over 180
ley
Bane
Corp.
the advantage of mulemployees.
Entry into the NASDAQ national tiple market ·makers that compete to
market provides brokers !lnd others offer the best bid and ask prices, as '
wilh immediate access to the best bid opposed to a single specialist on the
and '&amp;Sk prices and other information ftoor of stock exchange.
about OVB's shares throughout the

·strawberry fields will
always need .: chemicals
WATSONVILLE, Calif. (AP) Strawberries are especially depen. Half a century ago, Mike Miller's dent upon the chemical because the
grandfather planted a strawberry fJeld fruit is prone to disease and expensive
in the heart of the nation's berry cap- · to plant. The plants grow in long
•ital.
: s)rips no more than I0 inches high,
That was when farmers battled imd II)Ust he picked by hand several
.bu1s an!~ fungi without chemicals.
times ' ~eek during the-long bar. 1 But Miller, 42, was raised in the
vesting season.
.~i'a of methyl bromide, a powerful
Sixty years ago, farmers discov·fum.igant pumped into the soil to kill ered they could sterilize the soil with
bugs and weeds. The third-generation a mixture of methyl bromide and
grower says banning that chemical chloropicrin, a wartime tear gas. The
·would devastate the strawberry indus- chemical doesn 'I taint the fruit.
,.try. '
Strawberry yields rose, making the
• "We'd be back to where we were fruit affordable to more Anlericans
befon 'fumi1ation. The price, would and guaranteeing growers a comfort_go
up, and the (number of) con- able profit.
.~ would go way 4own," he swd.
But there are problems. Methyl
"AJid ; the · people who'd be most bromide may help deplete the ozone
impliGred by this are the farmers."
layer that protects humans from can,Unfortilnjuely, say critics, what cer-causing sun rays.
kills bugS ~lip· harm humans, too.
The United farm Workers says .
In 1984, the state's Birth Defects repeated expos~re can lead to numbPrevention Act requife9 that pesticide · ness, muscle spasms and convulsions,
makers submit health risk studies by and can cause birth defects. March 1991 or face a production ban.
Scientists say they need more
Thedeadli~'formethyl bromide was time to .come up with an alternative.
extended to March 30, 1996.
But an all-in-one chemical substitute
Legislation to push the deadline · is unlikely, said Doug Gubler, a plant
back again, to Dec. 31, 1997, is pend- 'pathologist with the University of
ing in the state Senate. The U.S. Enyi- California-Davis.
ronmental Protection Agency plans to
Jim Cochran, who grows strawban production starting in 2001.
berries and vegetables on 45 acres in
Still, Miller says he hasn't given Watsonville and Davenport, says it's .
much thought to life without it. not easy making the switch from
"Either I'll be able to continue od chemicals to organic methOds, as he
·won't.lfl can't make money, I won't did 13 years ago;
do it," he said.
He rOtates sirawberries, a cover
The EPA estimates the United crop of barley and beans, and vegStates uses about 56 million J?OUnds etables, a process that replenishes the
of methyl bromide a year fu,nugating soil and fights bugs and disease natsoil, termite-infested buildings and urally.
post-harvest imports and exports.
As a result, his costs are about
California uses 18 million p(lupds, do'!_ble Miller's, his yield is abou~ a
mostly to fumigate soil for strawber- . third lower and consumers pay twtce
ries, carrots, grapes and flowers.
as m'!ch as they would for Miller's
chemtcally treated strawberries.

w.,

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP)
ETBE also works well in fuel
Ethanol as an additive in cleaner- blends because it has low volatility,
burning gasoline will be the primary he said. That means the fuel can be
fuel of the future - and South Dako- shipped through traditional pipelines
ta com farmers can reap the benefits, to areas of the country where ethanol
the head of a national farm group said is not readily available.
Friday.
.
Com-based alcohol as a gasoline
"We're on the fighting edge of the additive got a boost last January when
fuel of the future -and the future has an Environmental Protection Agency
arrived," American Com Growers directive went inio effect,
The EPA required reformulate
Association President Gary Goldberg told delegates to the group's gasoline in nine metropolitan areas
national convention in Sioux Falls. with the warst smog pollution: New
"We've got the facts on our side."
York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San
The group thinks the ethanol- Diego, Baltimore, Milwaukee, Housbased fuel known as ETBE is the best ton, Philadelphia and Hartford, Conn.
bet for expanding the market, GoldNationally, ethanol production
berg said. The gasoline bums clean- soared from 88 million gallons in
er and emits 20 percent less pollution _1 980 to 1.5 billion gallons last year,
because ofhighe{ levels of oxygen.
mostly because of the EPA require-

ment, said Goldberg, of Kearney,
Neb.
If consumers continue to fill their
tanks with reformulated gasoline,
. ethanol production could soar to
about 3 billion gallons by 2010, he
said.
Com growers should put aside dispules with those who favor other
kinds of fuel additives, Goldlierg said.
Outside the Com Belt, ethanol faces
tougH competition from the petroleurn-based methanol · derivative
,MTBE.
"When you're talking about
reformulates, you're talking about
every oxygenate ... they all have a
place," said Goldberg. Currently, 12
percent of the reformulate gasoline
programs consists of ethanol while

QUANAH, Texas (AP) .:- Wheat
farmer Butch Tabor traded his plowand-planting routine for grass management back in the '80s when the
government offered a payout program
for land prone to erosion.
He was far from alone.
The federal Conservation Reserve
Program enrolled 50,712 acres in
Hardeman County, where Tabor still
farms around Quanah, and about 36
million acres across the nation.
Texans signed 19,762 reserve contracts obligating them to plant grass
or trees instead of crops on erosion
plagued fields. Those :10-year contracts, some of which expire this year,
paid an average $39.50 in "rent" per

~old futures

acre . .
But the current budget standoff in
Washington gives no indication what
will become of the program which
was lauded for its benefits to air and
water quality, wildlife and the financial solvency of some farmers.
"The CRP's been a crutch to help
them through hard times,'' Tabor
said during a recent drive by his land.
"So were they better off with us
broke, or with us able to buy some
things?"

.

Ken Cook, president of the nonprofit Environmental Working Group
in Washington, supports the pro.
gram. He says it has anchoring the
dirt and provided brushy habitat for

drop..c.oatinued rrom o-•

a drought and frosts that led to a disastrous harvest. In Colombia, the
Colombian Coffee Federation is
keeping a tight h&lt;1ld on sgpplies unti:
the price is right, Ganes said.
•.
"It's not like there isn't coffee out
there,'" she said. "There is. The market just isn't attractive enough yet to
drop supplies."
Wheal futures price's rose 3 1/4
cents to $5.13 1/4 a bushel Friday on
tl\e Chicago Board of Trade on trader enthusiasm over a government crop
report.
In its supply and demand report,
the U.S. Department of Agflculture

reduced its forecast of May 31 U.S.
wheat reserves to 346 million bushels,
down from an estimate of 386 million
in January. The estimate for wheat
exports also increased.
"I don:t think anybody is tooterribly shocked by the numbers. But
still, there it is in print and it boosted
the market," said Jack Scoville, grain

:~lystforTheLinnGroupinChica\
Robert Lelcberg, an analyst for - ~~-=
Goldenberg, Hehmeyer &amp; Co. in
Chicago, said wheat was also supported by reports that Russia is interested in importing grain.

.

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~- Businees·'b riefl · · · ...

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f

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·

, 'IOKYO (Af) - 'nte United &amp;Ilion apraeQI otfcctive Jan. I,
comPWnl.•with--the dOYtlopad C!ll IIIia mUit~pnltA!et diP
;• .... 'hll C&gt;rpaizlliOII, denwtd· risl* Of~ .... forlhlit~ ·
laf ... s.,.D bo8or CODYrilitll for SO , od.
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.Huge Sale On Select

--Business briefs-RENO; Nev. (AP)- Dow ChemBOSTON (AP) - TRW Inc. bas
agreed to spin off iis division that ical Co. is asking a Nevada judge to
keeps c~dit records to two private throw outa $14 milli9njury award to
companies for more than $1 billionc a woman. who claimed leaky breast
Bain Capital Inc. and Thomas H.
made her seriously ill.
Lee Co., both of Boston, will buy the
Orange County, Calif.-based Information Systems and Services business of TRW. The sale, structured as
a recapitalization, is expected to be
completed in the second half of thi&amp;
year, the companies said Friday.
The TRW business keeps credit
information and sells informaiion to
businesses to help them target their
marketing.

Returns from seminar
GALLIPOLIS - 'fricia Fender- ·
bosch, R.D.H., B.S. recently returned
from Dallas, Texas, where she auended a Professional Healthcare Seminar
sponsored by Oxyfresh, USA. The
seminar was attended by dentists,
. hygienists, assistants and office man. agers throughout the country.
A featured. speaker, Belinda
Bryant, hygienist, consultant with the
Pride Institute and faculty member of
the L,D. Panky Institute gave a presentation · on implementing an
Oxyfresh Fresh Breath Center into
their practice.
Those seeking mo~e information
on the subject should ea'tl 1-800-9999SSI ext. 508-001. .

SA
· ' 'L'.E·

PEOPLE WHO APPRECIATEi..
The Value Of A Dollar,
Appreciate True L.ow Prices~i
I

~~95

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Grand Am

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The U.S. Public Health Service's Agency for ToKic Substances and Disease Registry surveyed plant records and health statistics from Pike and six
nearby counties. The report concluded that emissions from the plant did not
constitute a health threat.
But Roselle sent a letter to the Public Health Service citing a 1976 plant
report that technicium.leaked into a drainage ditch at the plant. She claimed
the report said the concentrations were 20 times more than the federal limit and siK million times more than the state limit.
The lener said the federal report ignored "voluminous" evidence of releases of hazardous chemicals.
She cited a 1976 study that reported chromium, copper, m'anganese, zinc,
and radioactive materials in excess of state standards were found in the Little Beaver Creek water and in the Big Beaver Creek sediments. Radioactive
materials also were found in fish.
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Roselle also said that in 1977, according to plant documents, tr:.Ces of
radioactive chemicals called transuranics were probably heing released into
Liule Beaver Creek.
Michael Greenwell, a Public Health Service spokesman, said the report
is considered a draft. He said the agency plans to respond to each of Roselle's
claims in the final report.
,
"When we do these health assessments, we review all environmental and
health data that we have access to. We look for levels of contamination that
will harm people's health and we look for ways for people to come into contact with the contamination," Greenwell said.
Maria Galanti, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency's site coordinator at the plant, said she is unaware of any environmental problems that
should make people nervous about living near the plant.

SR 7 slip
tackled
by ODOT

:hear call for unity
from officeholders
By JIM FREEMAN
·Sentlnal Newt Slllfl
Billing herself as an ambassador
for southeastern Ohio, former Marietta mayor and current Ohio Lt. Gov.
Nancy Hollister addressed Meigs
.County Republicans at the annual
"Lincoln Day Diimer Saturday at
~eigs High Sehool.
· After an introduction by master of
'ceremonies Beniard Fultz, Hollister
-briefly addressed two areas of con'cem to practically all Meigs coun..pans: highways and econQmic devel-

~~tr,r .,3

--•""
.
li · iects, Hollister commended
local project advocates and added,
:·we're coing to have to make some
·\~lings move, •
. "Decisions on 33 and the connector project by the local comminee
will have a major impact on what the
. ..........

" IQIV' .,;OIIneetor

state does," she said. .
On economic development, she
noted that the message from Meigs
County is "don't !~ave us out .. . don't
forget," she said. For 1996, Hollister
said she will focus on three topics:
work force development, training·
and employment.
Ohio's first woman lieutenant gov- .
emor -labeled herself as an ambassador for southeastern Ohio.
"I carry the banner of southeastern
Ohio to all parts of the state," she
said.
"I -..:lll con\i11ue .to be an ambas·nctor;• ·sJi~ said, remarking that' ihe
plans to spend more .time in southeastern Ohio.
_ , Hollister said she is looking forward to a year of transition, with the
state to assume more responsibilities
previously handled by the federal
government.

REGIONAL AM..ASSADOR- Ohio Lt. Gov.
Nancy Holllater of Marlena, Ohlo'a flrat woman
IJ9~~~·Mtlgs Republicans at the
annual Llht:Oin Day.Dinner Saturday. Holliltlll'
The state is willing to receive
block grants and administer them
responsibly, she explained. adding
one caveat:

"We have to be very careful not to
become what we have accused Wash-

termed htraeH as· an ambllaaedor for aouth·
eaattm Ohio. Holllater, It podium, Ia '""
speaking to the eatlmated 250 ,t1o attended
the meeting.

ington of being all these years."
In addition, Hollister conveyed a
greeting from Sen. Robert Dole, RKan., who is seeking the GOP presidential nomination.
"Dole needs your support," she

said.
After serving on the Marietla City
Council, Hollister was elected mayor, where she served from 1984 to
1991. In 1991, Gov. George
(Continued on Page 3)

·Murder suspect now in Mason County's custody
POINT PLEAS~T. W.Va. -A arrived at the Mason County Jail
Hanford woman who was indicted on around 12:30 a.m. from Uma Couna murder charge returned to Mason 1 ty, Ariz.
. .
County early today, according to 1 Leonard was indicted in January
Mason County Sheriff Ernie Watter- for the September murder of Jack
Roush, S2, Hartford. Watterson said
sbn.
Ri~. Lynne Sayre Leonard, 32,

Leonard should appear before Circuit
Judge O.C. "Hobby" Spaulding on
Tuesday to answer her indictment.
Leonard was transported back to
West Virginia by Extraditions International, with costs being covered by

the West Virginia Department of
Corrections, Watterson said. Leonard
was picked up by Arizona authorities
on Jan. 24.
Arizona authorities are continuing
the search for Timothy W. Gibbs, 36,

.GOP hopefuls brace
for decision in Iowa
Forbes, making the rounds of network talk shows this morning, sought
: DES MOINES, Iowa - Iowa to dampen expectations after his draRepublicans meet tonight in caucus- malic rise this past month from the
... ~~provide a keen test for politi- ranks of the unknown.
ul newcomer Steve Forbes and oth"I hope to finish in the top four,''
"r candidates jockeying furiously to Forbes said, eKplaining his 4-3-2-1
challenge front-runner Bob Dole .in strategy - fourth in Iowa, third in
w 1996 GOP presidential cam- New Hampshire's primary next ·
j\aien.
week, second in Delaware then first i
Pat Buchanan, Lamar AleKander in the Feb. 27 primary in Arizona,
and Phil GraJilBI were eKpected to where he enjoys front-runner status in I
&amp;ante Forbes for second place after the polls.
~se-caucus polling showed Dole, the
The full field of nine contenders is
.Senate majority leader from Kansas, matched for the first time in the cauli:ading in support from his farm-state cuses, and late polls appeared to give
neighbors.
Dole some breathing room at the top.
. . At a campaign breakfast this His hope was a "strong first" to
morning, Gramm told his precinct solidify his standing.
Chairmen that he expected a close
Dole portrayed himself as the
vote and he urged them to get as .veteran statesman, in contrast to his
ntany of his supporters as possible to rivals. "America is the leader of the
.attend the caucuses.
Free World and when America starts
: "We believe at this point we are this· process, the world listens," he
llmost in a tie, and it's going to told a rally in Waterloo.
ilepend on who 1eis their people
Fodles, publisher of Forbes magOut." said Gramm. who noted he won uine, emerged in the closing weeks ,
his first congressional race by only as a major challenger to Dole with a ·
1n votes.
self-financed advertising blitz. There
~ A relative handful oflowa Repub- were suggestions he was slipping as
licans - perhaps 130,000 or so - the caucus campaign wound down,
~ld enormous inftuence in the first but Forbes sounded a defiant theme
big event of the GOP nominating on Sunday, casting himself as an out. process.
·.
sider under assault.
··: Most of the candidates planned
"The whole political establish- 1
lbt-rninine campai1riing before par· meat is after me." he declared in sub!Y ac:tivists headed to fire slltions, urban Des Moines. "They know I
ohutdt basements and schools for 8 mean whatl say."
Documents obtained by The Asso· . P-m. EST caucuses in each of Iowa's
2, 142 precincts.
·
ciated Press showed that Forbes : The eampaign "organizations set up who has ~manded that Dole apolobllllb and c.r pools to doliv· gize far
a cotiUrion pr~~~:tice
~ the ac:tivists who will decide known as
tum vot-..c.,-.wJtom,to. .,.,~.-as:.~J~ilkl:-=,~-•:rs:l~a~c.E~~s:"'~~~ a similarIIC:OIId or· third - in the crowded technique to develop his own cam• ~blican field. ·
paign themes.

tibone
'

Hartford, who is also M&lt;anted in connection with the Roush murder.
When Leonard was picked up,
Gibbs was with her, but gave authorities false identification and remains
at large, Watterson said.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
A major slip Saturday afternoon
caused a section of State Route 7 to
give way and tumble down an
embankment near Tuppers Plains.
The slip possibly led to the closure
of this section of the busy north-south
highway while state officials make
repairs to the area.
One_-lane traffic is currently being
mamtamed wtth traffic signals, and
the area of the slip on the northbound
lane of 7 between Cline's Fruit Farm
and the Card BoK has been barricaded by state crews, accOrding to Nancy Yoachl)lll, public information officer wAh ODOT District Ill.
The section of the northbound lane
began to sink a few inches toward an
embankment late Saturday morning,
accordmg to several area residents.
Officials with Ohio Department of
Transportation District I 0 office in
Marietta, were notified of the slide
around noon on Saturday by the State
Highway Patrol, and the section of
road was closed to traffic, Yoacham
said.
The slip became more severe by
early Saturday evening, as the drop of
the northbound lane continued for
about I0 to 12 feet, taking with it the
berm, jlUardrail and much of the
under surface of the northbound lane,
Yoacham said.
A problem at the area which the
(Continued on Page 3)

Poll finds opposition
by Ohioans to public
funding of stadiums

By MIKE GLOVER
Aatoel~Hd p,... Writer

Au!Qmalic
Air.Condbillg'
• Cruise Control

A Gannett Co. Newa.,..,..

~Meigs . ·Republicans

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35.,.nta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 12, 1996

PIKETON (AP) -Agovemment report says the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant dio;l not have emissions that were health threatening. But an attor- ney representing area residents claims plant records prove otherwise.
• Some neighbors fear emissions from the plant, _70 miles south of Colum.'bus in Pike County, may be causing cancer and other ailments.
"There are lots and lots of documents that show the statements they're
·.'making jllst aren't right," said Louise Roselle. ofCincinnati. "Maybe they
.'looked at the documents and explained them away. But if they did, they didn't do it in that report."
Roselle represents residents within six miles of the plant in a $300 million lawsuit againsi the former Goodyear Atomic, now Divested Atomic, and
•'Martin Marietta Enefl}' Systems. The companies operated the plant for the
U.S. Department of EnefBY.
· A trial dale is set for June 3 in U.S. District Court in Columbus.

l

LARGE DISP·Iii\Avr_
I:

;Gorpis Indiana~lis kitchen range
plant: The appliance maker, in the
• mjd$t of a downsi;Ung, is closing the

'

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Super Lotto: ·

CIHr tonight, low
around 15. Tueedey,
tunny. High lll'ound 30.

Piketon residents dispute safety claims

&lt;

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8-22-26-31-39-43

Voi.48,N0.118
1 81Ctlon, 10 .......

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deer and·quail. Yet its annual price tag
Several sources said f~riners'
of $1.7 billion, he said, makes ii an would eagerly sign up their, land.for
easy target as politicians try balanc- another round of the reserve pro~
ing the federal budget. ,
if Congress cuts the rent amounts by
"It's as up in the air as the rest of no more than 25 percent.
Doug Sh.arer, state CO[!serva:dmi
agriculture policy in this Congress,"
Cook said. "And that's not a tribute." operations coordinator for the Naturt
House and Senate Republicans' al Resources Conservation Seryice it)
proposed $12.3 J;lillion in spending Thmple, TeKas, said many of the orig·
cuts for farm programs would allow ina! participants 10 years ago were
farmers to withdraw from the reserve trying to retire.
'
program before their contracts expire.
"They couldn't raise livestoelt
President Clinton has objected to the and make any more money than wi\h
early back-out idea.
CRP, and the same is tnie with farm~
House Majority Leader Dick ing " Sharer said.
:&lt;
Armey, R-Texas, over the years has · · Boosters say that ifthe progr~ is
crusaded against commodity pro- cut severely and grass-covered land
grams he views as unnecessary and gets plowed for crops, there will be
expensive intrusions into the market- mor~ dust storms, and _surplus P.fDplace. He is no supporter of the con- . ductton from . the addtttonal acres
servation reserve.
could cause pnces to drop at market
"In general, we have always had
As f~r Tabor, he said he likely ~i!l
problems with government programs fence hts land and put cattle on •! tf
that idle that many acres .. : (because . Congress makes the conserva~on
of) the cost factor and it's totally program unpalatable.
,
against the free market/' said Jim
"I think it will survive in SoJne
Wilkinson, a spokesman for Armey. form, but I don't know in what
"It messes up the prices and, we form," he added. "The whole farm·
think, hurts the farming industry.'~
ing economy is sort of uncertain .~·

- Super Lotto:

•

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Plck4:
1343

213295

•

Farmers concerned over uncertainty of progr~m

Go·vernment tells••• coatillued rrom o-•

house a plan to scf'!IP ihe ~eclkles-old
link between farJll price~ ·and gov·
emment subsiaies. Farmers would
fii:tory~
have a series of fixed and declining
·•
~mewbere Iii! between: The payments under t1te legislation ...
• . nalion's retailers, whOse January sales Exisling home prices rose in all parts ·
reports were a very 'mix~ bag, But of the country expect the Northeast.
· while blizzards· trnd biuer cold kept Falling monaage rates helped
· ·ihqppen out o(Eastern stotts, retail- increase the demand for new homes
, •en lin California were ~ing signs ... PepsiCo Inc.'s fourth-quarteuam•1 that business, which never fully ingi fei!6St~Cn:ent in lhefounh quar• : IICOYend .from the recession; was tor beca~ ofuequ~ ~n1
·filially picking up some molnentum. chan~e, ~tinvestors fOimd·~ty ~f:
• ~
promtse tn the eompany and j)id tis
1
':The Senate .voted ancllent t" •the . stock up more ~- $3 a sbiR on

MTBE makes up the rest, he said . .\
"Our goal is to grow the pie sp
everyone's slice is larger,'' said ()\,1~
berg.
.
l
Terry Wigglesworth. a spokeS:.
woman for Ashland Petroleum Co~
told convention goers her company
has committed a significant am011t1t
of money to produqing and markdipg
reformulate&lt;! gasolines.
J. ~
Ashland buys ethanol bec~;ur
officials believe ETBE will be a fu
of the future, Wiggleswonh said~
When two of every fiveAmeri&lt;:~
breathe 'air that makes them sic~ -~
doesn't make sense to continue tp
bum conventi~!lq) gasoline, she Wq,.
The conventt'bn attrac.ted about
160 delegates from slate$._ ' !
•

670

Sports, Page 5

;

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Plck3:

CINCINNATI (AP)- A poll released Sunday indicates that Ohioans are
overwhelmingly opposed to the use of state money for construction of sports
stadiums.
The statewide telephone poll of 803 adults found that 68 percent of those
questioned opposed the spending of state money to help build stadiums to
keep professional spons teams in Ohio. Thirty-one percent were in favor and
the rest were undecided.
Respondents were almost evenly di~ided on the idea of creating a state
sports lottery to provtde money for stadtums. Ftfty percent were in favor, 47
percent were opposed and the rest were undecided.
.
The poll, conducted by the lnstitut~ for Policy Research at the University of Cincinnati, was sponsored by The Cincinnati Enquirer, WLWT-1V and
the university.It was conducted fron Jan. II to 24. Its margin for error is 3.5percentage potnts.
Cleveland and Cincinnati are trying to build new stadiums for their sports
teams .. Cleveland made a deal last week with the National Football League
that woll gtve the ctty another team by 1999.Jn the meantime, Browns owner Art Modell will move his team to 'Baltimore and give it a new name and
uniforms .
· Residents of Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, approved a "sin.
tax" on alcoholic beverages and cigarettes last year for construction of a stadium. Gov. George Voinovich has pledged state money to cover 15 percent
·
of the stadium's cost.
Hamilton County voters will decide March 19 whether to increase their
.sales tax by one-half percent to build a baseball-only stadium for the Reds
and a football-only stadium for the Bengals. Voinovich also has pledged state
help for those projects.
Majorities of all demographic groups polled opposed use of state funds
for stadiums, the pollsters found. Such opposition also carne from a majortty of restdents of the Cleveland and Cincinnati metropolitan areas who
answered the poll's_questions.
__
Respondents also were asked whether they
of casinos in Ohio. There have been proposals for casinos on the
or Lake
AIDING
VICTIMS P-ay-Middleport Lions
Club sptnt tht weekend offilrlng help to victim. of tht recent
flooding In Mtlga County. Mont than II) baslwta with cleaning supplies, food and tollttrlts Wll't pnpired by Llont Club mtml*w
and dlltrlbt.ttecl from the formlr Riverfront Barballa building on
Main Stntt. Llont President INCI Ttlfold said the ralltf ltemt
werepurchtledwlth a $10;i)OO doMtlon trorn-t;lona llltematloriIL "Wt lpant moat of tht mOney hen with tht loctl IIMIChante.
It WIS very well MCiived and a huge IUCCIII," said TeafOrd.

Erie.
Fifty-eight percent supported ftoating casinos if !ileal voters approve, 41
percent were opposed and I percent were unsure. The figures were unchanged
from those included in a 1993 poll.
.
Respondents were more evenly divided on the question of legalized casi- ·
nos in m~ cities. Fifty-three percent ~ved, 46 percent wee opp010il .
and-1-percent-wete.utidocided
'
However, 42 percen~ favored casino gambling in rneclliun-sized Ohio
cities, 56 percent were opposed and the rest were undecided.
'

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