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                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport • Ga,lipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

'Pianning .your workbench
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
For AP Special Features
· ·A workbench 'is the hean of your
shop.
·
A free-staoding bench is usually
best because it is accessible from all
sides. Allow sufficient room to move
easily around the bench and to
~ommodate large projects bristling
wtth clamps.
For most people, the ideal height
for a workbench is 34 inches to 36
inches. If you need a shorter or taller
surface, choose a height midway
between your waist and your hips.
Make your workbench surface as
large as possible so that you have
room for features and have plenty of
work space. The ma~imum length of
a basic WQrkbench is usually 8 feet.
so that the top pieces can be cut from
Standard sheets of plywood.
Once you have decided on the size
of your bench and what shape would
work best for you. draw up detailed
plans on graph paper. Show where
special features such as drawers. a
lazy susan or shelves will be located.
Calculate the spaces required and
mark the measurements, on, the plan.
For example, if you want to store a
20-inch diameter shop vacuum under
the bench, you'll need to plan for a
space at least 24 inches wide to get
in and out easily.
Take maximum advantage of stan·
dard lumber sizes. to have as liule
.waste as possible. Also consider both
economy and practicality in choosing
wood for the workbench. You can use
construction-grade lumber and plywood for the bench framing. shelves
and leg panels. But for the top. buy
NC or B/C grade plywood. Put the
better grade facing up. This will give
you a smooth work surface. On the
other hand, if you want a bench top

Sunday, March 15,11$,8

The House of the Week
'

with the durability of hardwood
butcher block without the cost. gei a
birch solid-core flush door from your
lumberyard.
You can install electrical power
almost anywhere on the workbench.
Mount electrical power strips on the
workbench and plug them into nearby wall outl~ts . Or. for a permanent
installation, run plastic-sheathed
cable from a wall outlet or power
panel to various spots on. the workbench, protecting it with metal conduit. Install surface-mount electrical
boxes and receptacles on the edge of
the wort bench under the ovemanging
bench top. Have the work done by a
licensed electrician to make sure
that it conforms with your local
code.
Here are some other bench tips:
- Tack a cutting strip from a foil
or plastic wrap box to the edge of
your workbench and use it to cut tape
and cords. An old hacksaw blade will
also work. Mount the cutter on an
edge that's easily accessible but
where you're unlikely to brush
against it.
-To avoid staining your bench
top with paint. mount an old window
shade on one end. When you're
ready to paint, just pull out the shade
and hook it to a shade hook at the oth·
er end. Let it dry before rerolling it.
- A workbench top takes a lot of
punishment. To help save the bench
top from damage and avoid marring
your project as well. cover the work
area with a rubber bath mat or a scrap
of carpet.
- If you find it necessary to resurface your bench top, 114-inch hard·
board provides a smooth surface that
can take a lot of punishment. Tack it
in place and seal it with pure tung oil.

Sp~rts

By JAMES E. WALTERS
PHOENIX (AP)- To grow cactuses successfully indoors, select
globular types such as the mammillarias, golden barrels. pin cushions
and echinopsis. Avoid the columnar
types such as saguaros and cereus,
which require too much light.
While the globular t-ypes also
need good light, they don't require as
much. So they will adapt, grow and
flower in a south-facing window

. .i i'

By

A.NATHAN
AP Newsfeatures
Plan G-91, by HomeStyles
Designers Network, showcases a
Palladian window, and its brick
facade with quoins completes a
classic facade . This gracious
French-style home has 1, 707
square feet of living space.
Beyond the leaded-glass front

I

-- --(I

•0

door, the open entry Introduces
the living room, which Is topped
by a 9-foot, .6-lnch ceiling aqd
features an attractive fireplace. J,:
The formal dining room, which
has a 10-foot-high ceiling and 11
wall of windows that offers viewjl
of the covered porcti, is vlsibli .
over a half-wall.
The bayed morning room is an

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Ideal spot to begin the day; sunlight enters this space from three
windows. It opens by means of a
French door to the porch, a nice
spot for alfresco dining.
A snack bar is found In the
gourmet kitchen, and the sink, in
order to brighten daily chores, is
positioned for backyard views.
Other features include a corner
pantry and ample cupboard and
counter space.
The two-car garage is located
for easy unloading of groceries.
Across the home, the master
'suite is topped by an 11-foot-hlgh
vaulted ceiling. The well-appointed bath Includes a gartlen tub, a
dual-sink vanity and a walk-in
closet.
Two secondary bedrooms, a hall
bath and a central laundry room
round out the plan.

•

Many of the smaller-growing cactus can be purchased in 2-inch pots '
for a few dollm, particularly in the
Southwest. Move them to larger pots
as they grow. They are pretty easy to
care for and a lot of fun.
The larger cactuses also rriay be
available in tiny pots but soon
become unattractive and gangly
indoors.

___________________j~~ra~ln~-~~~~~--~

· Vol. 48, NO. 232

-·

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11 '-4 ' J; , .....

10'..' .CEtUNG

G-91

!HE ENTRY and the living room now. together and lead to the dlnmg room at the rear of the home. The kitchen opens to the niomln11:
room, and otTers access to the two-car garage.

Cremeans: Rio Grande to become state university
Gov. George Voinovich has decided "to' act" to make the University of
Rio Grande a' state university. according to a statement released by Con,gressional candidate Frank Cremeans. R-Gallipolis
Cremeans, who is seeking his pany's primary nomination to run for the
·U.S. Sixth District seat, called the action "a major leap forward" for educa. tion in southeastern Ohio.
The following is the text of a statement released by the Cremeans' campaign:
.
"As a graduate and active alumnus of the University of Rio Grande,! am .
excited to see a long-held dream become a reality. Many citizens of southeastern Ohio have worked hard campaigning to make the University of Rio
Grande a state university, and that campaign is now bearing fruit. Governor
George Voinovich has decided to act on this important issue to strengthen

Health officials
offer advisories
on prevention
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
National Poison Prevention
Week is being observed this week
with the Centml Ohio Poison Center reminding the public to "Call
the Poison Center first!"
"lt.can take only seconds for a
child to reach for poisonous cleaners. cosmetics or medications that
can result in serious injury. Nearly
one mi Ilion children are exposed to
poisonous products each . year,"
. according to the poison center.
"Never call medicine 'candy',
never," said Norma Torres R.N.,
director of nursing at the Meigs
County Health Depanment.
"Many medicines look like candy," she said. "Labels tell which is
which, but most kids cant read
between ages one and six."
Meanwhile, the Ohio Pharmacists Association offered parents
and guardians these additional
guidelines:
• Do not take medicine in front
of children.
• Keep harmful products locked
,in cabinets, away from children's
sight and rea .
• When ssible, e products
with child resistant pac . ging.
• After each use, sec
medicines with safety caps.
• Lock a small bottle of s rup of
ipecac in your medicine cabinet
and use it only·when ad,vised by a
poison control center or your doctor (check expiration date).
• Never give activated charcoal
with syrup of ipecac.
• Keep medicine in its original
container and properly labeled.
• Every time you take a medicine. read the product label.
• Never take medicine in the
dark.
• Properly dispose of out-ofdate medicines, most can be
flushed down the drain or toilet.
Some examples-of poisons are:
cleaning and beauty products,

.

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POISON PREVENTION - Norma Torrn, R.N., left, director of nursing lit the Melgl County
-:::. -_Hea!th Department, used a display to dlscuu the dangers of accidental poltiOIIIng with Brandl Stacy of Pomeroy, and her two children, Dakota Rice, 2, and Katelyn Stacy, 4. Torru urges
people who suspect their child has been accidentally poisoned to call the Central Ohio PoiIOII .Control Center at t -800-682·7625.
over-the counter medications (i.e .•
iron supplements and vitamins
containing iron), analgesics (i.e.,
aspirin, acetaminophen, or ibupro·
fen).
·antidepressants
(i.e.,
imipramine), and cardiovascular
drugs (i.e., digoxin). Ask your
pharmacist for more information
on poison prevention awareness
during this week and all year long.
the OPA suggested.
The Central Ohio Poison Center also reminds parents to "poison
proof' their home by looking for
"pretty poisons" - products that.
through the eyes of a child. look
like something good to eat or
drink.
Children under the age of five
are panicularly at risk for poisoning due to their stage of development. As a child's mobility increases, so does his or her ability to
reach for a dangerous product, the
poison center remarked.
"Remember that kids constantly explore the world around.them,
touching and tasting everything

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Abuse 1996 "Monitoring the
Future" survey.
"Younger kids try inhalants
· because they are legal, inexpensive
and easy to get. What most of them
don't realize is inhalants can also be
deadly." said Harvey Weiss, executive director of the National
Inhalant Prevention Coalition.
"Reponed sudden sniffing death
syndrome can occur when the user
inhales these toxic substances and
within minutes the heart can stop
beating. Inhalant use also can cause
damage to the brain, lungs, liver
and other vital organs."
What should adults do if they
suspect a child ll:is been poisoned?
Do not wait to see if the child
will be all right, act quickly and
call the Central Ohio Poison Center for advice at 1-800-682-7625 in
Ohio.
Have the container with you ·
when you call and keep the child
with .you and awake. the poison
center advised.

COLUMBUS (AP) - For some
Ohio prison inmates. death might
seem like a better option than life on
Death Row.
"One of the worst things is the
total isolation and utter loneliness,"
37-year-old James Filiaggi.
Filiaggi was one of 35 Death Row
inmates who responded to a survey
sent by The Columbus Dispatch.
Last month, the newspaper sent questionnaires to the · 174 inmates on
Death Row at the Mansfield Correctional Institution.
"You get no contact with your
loved ones. You talk on the phone in
chains when visiting. You're locked
in a tiny cell 23 hours a day," said Filiaggi, of Lorain County. who was
convicted 'of killing his former wife
on Jan. 24, 1994.
•
Of the already-condemned murderers in Ohio - some of whom
have been on Death Row for more
than a decade- half don't think they

will be e~ecuted, The Dispatch
reported Sunday.
" People like to think they don' t
fear death, and some don't. but that's
rare," said Robert VanHook. 38, who
killed 25-year-old David Self of
Cincinnati in 1985.
"I think it's a wake-up call to most
people who do take it seriously for a
while. but then a~ time passe• they
seem to forget or not think about it
much."
Wilford Berry. who came close
earlier this month to becoming the
first person executed in Ohio since
1963, did not respond. Among the
prisoners who did:
• More than four in I 0 did not
graduate from high school.
• Nearly two in three used drugs
or alcohol by their teen-age yearssome,as early as 8.or 9.
• Many were in trouble a• youngsters. Others had family members
who served time in prison.

Parents protest need
to give ~II grade·tests
COLUMBUS (AP)- Some parents who have found out that students
don't have to take three of the state's
proficiency test• are telling schools
not to give their children the examinations.
"I'm having more and more par·
ents caUa~king about it. I'm having
more districts call asking what should .
they do," said Paula Mahaley. a consu ltant in the state's Department of
Education.
Students must pass the ninthgrade test to graduate from high
school. But the tests that are given to
fourth, si~th and 12th grade students
aren't mandatory.
Parent~ who want their children to
be e~cused from the fourth· or sixthgrade tests can send a note to si:hool
as late as Monday. the first day of
statewide testing this school year.
"There isn't the actual language in
the law that says the student must
take !he test." said Jan Crandell,
assistant director of the assessment

and evaluation section of the Education Department.
'
The law only requires that districts
give the test.
Still, the number of students not
taking the tests is relatively small.
During the last school year. for
example. parents of 55 Columbus
public school students requested
e.emptions from the reading and
math sections of the fourth -grade test.
The parents said that chi ldren are
tested too much and their school districts already do enough to assess
how well pupils are doing . Some parents believe that extensive preparations to help children pass the tests
are "dun'lbing down" the curricu lum
and taking away class time.
The exemptions could become a
problem in 2002. In that year. a state
provision kicks in that says school
districts should hold back founhgraders who don't pass the reading
section of the proficiency test.

weapons before sanctions are lifted

CELLULARONE
--- - - - - - - - -- -

they see,"
In addition, Health Recovery
Services. with offices in Middleport. is alerting parents to the dangers of children intentionally inhal·
ing household products.
More th,an 1,000 common
household products, everything
from cleaning fluids to spray paint,
can be misused by . intentionally
inhaling concentrated fumes,
acconding to HRS.
According to the 1996 Ohio
PRIDE Survey Report, 10.4 percent of the students in eighth grade
reported using inhalants within the
. past year. This represents an
increase of nearly 80 percent in the
use of inhalants from the 1993 survey. For founh grade students,
there was a slight decrease in use
reported with comparing the two
survey years .
Inhalants are the fourth most
pop.ular "drug of choice· for middle school kids, after alcohoL
tobacco and marijuana, according
to the National Institute of Drug

Some on Death Row
prefer to be executed

U.S. wants proof of destroyed Iraqi

Call or stop by today for the best deal in town.

--- -- - --

higher education in southeastern Ohio.·
of renewal tor Ohio's Appalachian counties.
"Eight years ago, as George Voinovich ran for governor, he promised to
"As fanning and mining become less able to sustain southeastern Ohio's
focus on education in the State of Ohio. For southeastern Ohio, making high- economy. diversification is n~eded to find more sources for employment and
er education affondable and therefore attainable was a major part of that focus. investment. Keeping our most promising young students in the area is vital
In making Rio Grade a state university, Ohio is taking a major leap forward to building this diversified economy. As a state institution. the University of
in laying a foundation for economic and social success in some of its poor- Rio Grande will be better equipped to perform this task.f1y preventing poverest counties.
ty in southeastern Ohio, Rio Grande will also be contributing 10 the entire
"Residents of southeastern Ohio need a nurturing center of higher learn- · state's economic well-being. This is a win-win situation.
·
ing centered on returning fine young people back to the local area, ready to
"I would like to personally thank Governor Voinovich for his .attention to
sustain growth. Rio Grande is such a university, but as a private institution 'this issue, and for having heard the voice of the working poor in southeasthas often been financially inaccessible to the poorest, yet hardest-working, ern Ohio. This area's residents are proud and strong, and will use this new
rural Ohioans. With a relatively small investment of state funds, that is about opportunity for building exceptional growth . I am glad to see this dream come
to change._~s a :~tate university, Rio Gmnde will prove an affondable source true."

Parents: protect kids from poison

(For a more detailed, scaled plan
o./'this howe, including guides to
esJimating costs and financing,
send $4 to Howe qf the Week, P.O.
Box 1J62, New York, N.Y. 1011615 62. Be sure to include the plQn
number.).

a month

1 Section, 10 Pages. 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 16, 1998

1:&gt;1 998. OhiO Yatley Pubtllhlng Company

esign G-91 has a living
room, dining room,
, .
kitchen, morning room,
three bedrooms, two full baths
and a utility room, totaling 1, 707
~quare feet of living space. This
plan includes a slab foundation
•bd 2x4 exterior wall framing.
~e attached two-car garage adds
$,11'2 square feet to the plan.

~

To submit a question. write to
Popular Mechanics. Reader Service
Bureau. 224 W. 57th St.. New York.
N.Y. 10019. The most interesting
questions will ·be answered in a
future column.

e~ist.

Cloudy tonight with a
chance of light rain. Lows
In the mid 30s. Tuesday,

Pick 4:
8-8-1-5

ent1ne

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per formulated for adhesive and coatings removal. According to its manufacturer. it won'! damage terrazzo.
After it softens the adhesive, you
remove it using a long-hand led
scraper. If the adhesive i.s really
tough, you may have to scrub it with
u brush before scrapi ng it. You can
find it at paint stores. Contact
Dumond Chemicals. ISO I Broadway.
New York. N.Y. 10036.
Q: I have read quite a bit about the
dangers of lead in drinking water,
especially as it is associated with &lt;oldered pipe. Have newer solders or
techniques eliminated this problem?
A: Although lead-free solder is not
a source of contamination, lead -containing faucets may pose a problem.
Older solder contained equal
amounts of tin and lead. Today. there
are .several varieties of lead-free solder in use. and they may be a blend
·of two or three metals. A new type
consists of about 4 percent copper.
about one-half percent si lver and the
remainder tin. This solder melts at
452 degrees F to464 degrees F. while
lead-based solder melts in the 360
degrees F to 420 degrees F range.
Using the new solders is about the
same as the older lead-tin solder.
Though the appearance of a joint soldered with lead-free solder may not
be as nice as with the lead-tin type.
it is as strong and watertight.

where the larger types will at 'best

6.().1

on Page 4

•

t1omes: Questions and ~nswers

to plant cactuses successfully Indoors

2·9-5+9-3

~------------------------------------L-------------------------------------_J

By POPULAR MECHANICS
The stock sizes you use should
For AP Special Features
correspond to the proportions of
If you're adding a room or remod- your room. While you might use 1eling an existing space. don't take the by-6. 1-by-8 or 1-by-1 0 lumber for
interior trim for granted. The wood- the baseboand trim, the choice largework you select for the baseboard. ly depends on the scale of the room.
doors and windows goes a long way particularly the ceiling height. Simitoward adding personality to the larly. the door and window trim can
room - even before the curtains, vary from 1-by-4 to 1-by-6. For a
rugs and furnishings are brought in. width in between standard lumber
For a custom look. though. you'll sizes. simply rip wider stock to your
want something other than the off- . desired dimension.
the-shelf moldings. One alternative is
If you're renovating an exisling
based on a style t~at was popular space and have removed all the old
until the early 1950s. It's distin- woodwork, installing new material
guished by flat door and window ca.,. begins at the door. However, if you're
ings made from nominal l-inch stock taking over the trim carpenter's job
( 3/4- inch thick). with comer blocks on a new addition. you'll probably
at the upper comers of windows .and find that the doors first need to be
doors, and plinth blocks at the bottom hung . These days. most interior doors
of door casmgs. The comer and come pre-hung. The door is bored
plinth blocks are made from 514 . and mortised for a lockset. the hinges
material (about I 1116- inches thick). are -installed and the door is mountand the windows feature a tradition- ed to the jamb assembly. Once the
al stool and apron. A three-piec6 · pre-hung door is trimmed to size,
baseboard made up of l-inch stock. shimmed and secured to the wall
baseboard cap and quarter-round framing. it's time to install the trim.
shoe molding completes the job.

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The woodwork you select will
add lots of personality to a room

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Q: We have a moldy, musty odor
in our basement that seems more pungent in the spring and fall. We have
tried using mesh sacks f1lled with cal·
cium chloride to reduce the odor but
find them ineffective. Occasionally.
the sacks drip water. How can we
decrease the odor?
A: The sacks hanging in. your
basement absorb moisture in the air.
but they are not as effective as a
mechanical dehumidifier in reducing
the moisture that leads to mold and
mildew growth.
You need an electric dehumidifi er. These appliances have a humidity control and will run continuously
until the humidity selling is reached.
The water that they conden.se out of
1he air. known as condensate. collects
in a tank. You have to manually empty the tank. pump !he condensate to
a disposal drain. or drain it with a
hose to a floor drain.
The fact that you detect the odor
in the basement during the spring and
summer is significant. During warm
weather. the basement is cooler than
·the outdoors. Warm air can hold more
water vapor than cool air. When the
warm outside air works its way into
the basement. ils temperature drops
and causes the relative humidity in
the basemen! to increase. Aside from
contributing to mold and mildew
growth. this makes the basement air
feel clammy and uncomfortable during the summer.
Q: I'm removing a parquet floor
from terrazzo. How can I remove the
parquet adhesive left behind?
A: Try using Peel -Away 5. a strip-

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ically tipped or biologically tipped
By JIM ABRAMS
needles in a haystack which is the
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Iraq's Sad- size of the state of Wyoming. That 's
dam Hussein will not.gain an end to not the test and measure of success."
crippling tmde sanctions merely by
That is why, Cohen said. the Unitopening up his presidential sites to ed States will insist "before there can
U.N. weapons inspectors. Defense be any ·relief in sight for Saddam
Hussein or the Iraqi people. as far a•
Secretary William Cohen says.
the
sanctions are concerned. that
"What is required is Saddam
Hussein. and his officials. to produce they must produce proof positive."
The Iraqis must show proof that
evidence that they have in fact
destroyed weapons of mass destr:uc· · the) have destroyed all the missiles
tion. They have not done so to date," that had chemical and biological
Cohen said Sunday on CNN's "Late warheads, and destroyed all their 130
tons of chemical precursors and
Edition."
He said the deal worked out 15,600 biological munitions. Coben
between U.N. Secretary-General Kofi said.
Annan and Saddam last month. : But, he added: "They have failed
which averted aU .S. military strike, to do so, and until such time as they
has resulted in U.N. inspectors get· do, we cannot say there has been
ting ·atcess to previously off-limit compliance."
Destruction of all weapons of
sites in Iraq .
As expected, the inspectors have mass destruction was one of the comfound no evidence of chemical or mitments Iraq made to end the Perbiological weapons. Cohen said. sian Gulf War in 1991. U.N. inspecWhat is more important, he said. is 1 tors must verify that Iraq has done so
that people realize that "it's not sim· before trade sanctions against it can
ply a maner of these inspectors going be lifted.
nut and basically trying to find chemOn Friday, Richard Butler, chief of

the inspection teams . told Britain's
BBC·TV that inspectors were not satisfied that Iraq was revealing everything about its weapons, especially
"the black hole that is their biological progmm."
Butler. an Australian, also accused
Iraq of using propaganda to try to get
its allies on the U.N. Security Coun·
cil to restrain the inspectors.
Meanwhile, Newsweek magazine
reports in this week's issue that the
FBI investigated allegations that a
covert CIA agent encouraged an
ao;sassination auempt agamst Saddam
by an Iraqi resistance group.
The investigation turned up no
evidence of illegal activity. and the
agent - code-named Bob - later
was decorated by the CIA.
The agent informed CIA head'QUarters of a plan by the dissidents to
ambush the Iraqi president's convoy
on a vulnerable stretch of road and
kill him. Newsweek said. He was
ordered to discourage the resistance
fighters from attempting !he ambush.
and it was not clear whether the
attack ever took place.

�Monday, March 16, 1998

·commentary

Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Page2
Monday, March 16, 1998

Meigs ESC opposes
sales tax proposal

OHIO Weather
Thesday, March 17
AccuWeather'" forecast for dayltrne condtltons and

The Daily Sentinel
Esta6fz.sfwf zn 1948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

o!1
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

I·

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

The SrnliDrl w•lcomes letters to rh• tdlfor from readMe on 1 broad range of topics
Short /efttrt {300 word• or I•••J l'tave the Ntf chance of being published Typed J.t
ter• .,. prtt.rrtd end 1111 may tH edited E.ch should Include a slgn1ture address
and tMytlmt phOne number Specify a date It there 1 • reference to 1 previous article
or letter. 11111 to t..ttera to the Editor The SentltKJI 111 Court St Pomeroy Ohio
45769; 01; FAX

to 614-992-2157
.

VOA defends
downtown halfway
house in Dayton
By JAMES HANNAH
Assoctated Press Wr.ter
DAYTON Oh1o (AP) - Loc.11111g 1h 1llway hou$C for former felons m
the heolfl of downtown 1s no cnme s l\ s the man bchmd the proJect
We vc been cast a&lt; the demons •I Daylnn It s a mantle I rqccl said
Chns Loluman preSident of the Volunteers of Amenca of Oh10 R1 ve r Va l
Icy We don 1 thmk the p1ogr.11n "g01ng to cause undue stress and undue
ham1 to downtown
1 he 70 hed halfway hou;c sc hed uled to open m June will be used to
house fQimer fe lons makmg the tranSitiOn bet11een pnson and communuy
li vmg VOA Will provtdc cia"" ,lfld counse lmg but the men woll not be
prevented from leavmg the huildmg
TI1c pl.ms have alarmed co mmunlly and hus111e " leaders who fear th ol
ha\ln g former oflcndcrs 111 the lfC,! Will pose sccunty concerns and hurl
husancss
Downtown bus mcss rcprl: scnlJ ttvcs and rc stdc nl~ ha\c stgncd a petit iOn
opposmg the locallon saymg 11 s too close to a pre sc hool and Chammade
Juhenne H1gh School TI1cy ,lis&lt;&gt; saod the area IS already saturated unh
soc tal

~.;crv t ~..:c

CIA calls Arafat a 'psychological coward'
probably serve
the purpose of
do sgutsmg
h1s
ungamly body
Cenatnly
Ar.tfat ts no
Om.1r
Shanf,
be.mng more of a
resemblance to
Rmgo Starr of the
Beatlcs He 1s ccr
tamly short a Moeller &amp;
Anderson
platform was used
at the 1993 Whttc House peace
accord ceremony to gove h1m the
am:c Y~luch th~.: tcport saw as a psy
choiogtcal flav. because he has not same hctght at the podtum as Prest
set out nm m Hhtgcd to t:hann the
den t Clinton and the late Israeli
Wes tern leadership hy In s rather Prune Mm1 s1er Yttzhak Rabm And
he IS somewhat overwetghl But the
b1zarrc demeanor
The CIA then op1 ned that heard IS full Because 11 sa salt and
Arafat to " Westerner presents a pepper bc.lfd 11 tends to wash our
and appear unshaven m piCtures and
:-iOTTlC\\h.tt unauraunc pn.:turc H:c IS
physt ca ll y sh01 1 dnd so mcw h II on TV
p.tunch) wnh t l11n1 of deformlly
The CIA ack nowledged that ho s
HIS unkempt he lfd "' exc use 101 appcatance however btzarre did
one
adds w the 1111 H!l ol 1 d11 ty not lMvc an) ncgat1vc 1mpact on Jus
and t:t.ltclcss pc1-;on H1 ~ dothcs do P tles11n1an comrades or the Arab
httlc to add to h t~ 1ppcar .mu.: but world The y arc more mtcrcslcd m

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
The Central Intelhgcnce Agency
routinely mvesugates world leaders
tdcnufies thetr backgrounds and alii
tudes and then has psychtatnsts
make p sycho l og~ea l assessments
One of our CIA sources recently
leaked us an mlcresl! ng psycholog t
.al profil e on Palcstm1 an leader
Vasser Aralat whiCh was completed
before he moved to the We st Bank
1hc CIA profile began by d1s
pal agmg Arafat s phySical appeal

hts pollllcal power, hts leadershtp,
and h1s abtlity lo plan and recrull,
They are concerned about how the
PLO w11l fun ctiOn and what tnfluence 11 wtli have on senhng the
Palesttman quest ton Hts appearance
and style appear to be purposeful lo
add drama to make h1m stand out
from h1s Palesltman colleagues who
generally dress more Western and
more conservatiVely "
Arafat has eschewed opulence,
i1vmg somelhtng of an asceltc hfe
most of whtch he spent m atrplanes
fltllmg around the globe on d1plo
matte mtsstons The CIA observed
that ' he has always lived Simply and
somewhat chaoucally Another
pose" Probably agam 10 create
mtcrcst and al!enlion He ts one of
the few tdenufied PLO members
whose face 1s well known, eve n
though tactiCS and strategy arc a
commHlec responstbtiHy In th iS
case Arafal IS a spokesman but hiS
true power IS dtfftcultto fathom At
least for the CIA
The CIA proftle dtd ~ce Arafat as
fl cuhlc the
kmd of per
son who was

HOWOO
vou FEEL A~UT
P!/EI?TORICO
- BECOMING
THE 51~ 7

full of sur
pmcs pre
sagmg hiS
at fust
secret deal
mgs wllh hiS
sworn cne
llliCS
the
lsraelos
Mr
Arafat
appears to be

I THOVGHT
81LLGArES
WAS THE
SISTSTATE

STAT~?

a SCOSitiVC,

outwardly
onented
mdtvtdual
who seeks
constantly to
update bt s
mformauonal system
not JUS! rely
on
pa~l
VIeWS He IS

uses

rhc controversy comes .11 a lime when uflicmls arc wm kmg on a numhc1
of proJects to holster downtown mcludtng mmor league base ball and de1cl
opmcnt of the nvcrfron t

Lohrman s a~d the slate requested that VOA locale the halfway house m
the Dayton area He satd more than 90 percent of the e• offenders w1ll be
formcr Dayton rcSidcnl&gt;
The search for a location began 111 1993 Lohrman satd the sHe se lected
w"' the onl y place '" the county ,, llh zonmg regulations that made 11 easy
10 locate the half way house there
He sa1d the downtown IS used by a wtde van ely of people, mdudmg low
1neomc reSidents who usc pubhc lransportauon to come downtown .md fre
qucnt the SoCial scrv&amp;cc agencies

if people understand any downtown they would understand there s a

m" of people thai u11ll ze the downtown he said To stale that because
there , a program located downtown 11 s gomg to dramatically chan ge the
nature of down town I don l agree w!lh that
However Lohrm.m satd he IS ncgollallng Wllh locoil omc lal s mlcrms of
cx plur1111- an .litcrnat&amp;vc locauon

Valene Lemm1c has saod thai mov1ng the faCIIIly and buy

By Nat Hentoff
L1kc Jusucc Hugo Black Fred
Fncndiy always camed a copy of
the Constllulton 111 ht s pocket He
often gave II away to be qUickly
repleniShed Fncndly was mlngued
by !Is challen ge' as ,, persiStently
II\ 1n g doc ument When he was
buncd thiS )Car on March R two
co p~e s of the Conslilullon were
buncd "ilh hun 1\ few hours later
D md one of lm sons smd My

not a lawyer and
that my knowl edge of the Con
stlluto n
was
enttrely
selftaught
In 1966 Fnendly
a
passiOnate,
tmpaucnt dtspeller
of Ignorance, sa&amp;d

Letters to the editor

Community grade schools more

!'lt...hool or h.I\ C voh.:~ apprmc a lc\) for 1 new Raunc and/or SHt~..U\c.: Elc
mentary School' If the voter&gt; \\ISh to pav more f01 clcmcntancs 1n thur """
commumt1cs kt them do tlu~ h 1 ~ their n!.!lll

June Ashl•v
Rat.: me

Know the facts
Dc.u Edttor
My name •s Rev Bnan Harkn c" I ha'e three youn g chtidren one of
• '-'h1ch 1s 10th •d grade nte last lime we were voung on a levy for a new
'• school I had &lt;•nl\ hccn m the arc.1a lm le O\cr a year

•
flu s umc I dcctded tu lmd uut tht.: fatt~ A~ a Chnstlan I do not believe Jt •~ nght
'to make a dct.:ISIOn w11hou1 kn ow mg 1ll ol the taus pcrtmmng to the case at hand
: In mv mve~llgauon I have h und that many of the reasons people have been voung
: no on the IC\) are nut tonncdctlto fu. t ~ but to fcclmgs of bntcmcss (rom past
•c\Cill' \\here 1h~.:1r fcdmg~ uen.:: hun I m \urr that many mtstakes h&lt;ne been made
: over the )Can llw; YotlUid he tht.: ( 1~c myw hcrc One qucsuon I have • ~ Why
~ hould mv three d11lllrcn be pum~hcd for nm11k.c~ that were made 111 the past"

Bclorc I undciSI&lt;nf the facL' I had many concern.&gt; I Would the elderly on
thcd mcomcs be llflfll1"500 by the levy 1 Then I learned about !he Homestead
' ACI 2 Would !he fanners he opprc"'-"&lt;l by tltc levy&gt; Then I learned about the Cur
renl Agncultural Usc Valuallon progrrun (CALN) whtch qn reduce laxcs on land
:ocmg used lr~ agnculture
; 1also went to each school and s~ for mvself the cond1U0ns of the schools At
;Lc1a11 Fall&gt; I saw that chtidren who gel stck have 10 lay on a bed m !he hallway I
•saw knh hav1ng classes m the basement al Letart Falls and on gym stages and 111
:,mall rooms hUJit m the gym at Portland I saw hcaung systems wuh no filters to
:filler out the germs and dust I saw hooks and cquopment &gt;tacked m the halls ere
:aung fin: hazards
One 1""1thmg that ha.' really holhcrcd me IS to see so many Omslmn people
become unChrist1an over thiS ossue I ve heard of many argumcniS and thrcaiS that
have taken place over the years oo thiS 1ssuc Wltctltcr you are womcd aboct your
moocy or yOilr children nc1ther should be the source of unChnsuan behavtor I run
10 favor of the leV) and I thmk IllS only faiT to our ktds for us to know the facl'
before we \Ole on the levy
Rev. Bnan Harknoss
Rae me

a moderate, not steeped 111 one par
ltcular tdeoiogy, whose broad goal IS
to establish and undoubtedly per
sonally control a Paiestmmn stale
He behaves as If thiS ne.tbiloly '"
seekmg adaptaltons of old suluttons
1s a means of surv1val as much .ts
readtng the goal
1 he psyc hul og tcai assessmen t
called Arafat a psychologtca l cow
ard ' wht,h they qUickly wrote "
'no rcnecl!on On hi S ph) SICa I
courage Maybe II s the way the
CIA s psyc htatnc consultants who
contnbute to these kind of profil es
have of say1ng somebody h,ls ,m
ego and wants to rcmam a lc,tdcr
The CIA profi lc was accurate 1n
assessmg that Arafat 'seems to he
bothered th 11 he wtll fade from the
scene It IS believed that he spends
fully as much psychic energy 111

1

PA

IND

• IColumbusIso' I

50'

•

style and existence

Vis Assoclatfld Press Graph/c$Net

IS

all cm.:om

pussmg
The CIA d1d sec that Ar.tf,u had
the ahillly 10 comprunusc The y
wrote He 1s ,1 vacillator a t:ompro
llliSCr not hom stre ngth hut p1oln
bl y bee 1usc nu,tnccs of the pol111c 11
contc.t escape Iu s mmd
The report then conc luded by diS
miSsmg Araf,tl .tnd h" ic,tdetship
ahthty 111 the foilowtng words
There 1s mm c to Arafatth,mthc
general su mmary statement used h)
most Western wnh.:rs, hut then.: ts
less !han some of hiS comrades sec
He IS not really ,, producllvc th1nkcr
man Of acll011 Or lnCISIVC deciSIOn
maker
He IS mtr1n s~ea lly an madequ.11c
personality who has rccetved ,1nd
set zed opporlunii!Cs to reach a poht
~eal power level that would not he
gamed had there been a contest of
competence At the same 11mc as a
f01l a target of cnloc tsm a symbol
of hosulny to the rest of the world
he IS well cho&gt;en
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are wrtlers for Untied Feature
Syndicate, Ine.

1996 when FBI agent cum scandal
monger Gary Aldnch penned a hook
called Unhmtlcd Access,
,j,
whtch he made many preposlcrotis
charges among them the cta 1m \h~t
Chr•on stole out of the Wh 1te Hou ~
IO rncct paramours at a hotel Brock
sa~d he was the sole source lor that
tale and II was pure goSSip He
added I was outraged when co~scrvauvc outlets hke the Washmgron
Times (and) the Wall Street Journal
cduonai page let Aldnch brazen 11
out and perpetrated a hoax on the
pubhc by ce lcbratmg Unhmncd
Access as lcg1llmatc and we ll
researched
Lesson No 3 Truth IS lfrclcvant
10 Ideologues The paramount tlung,
the only lhmg that mailers, IS the
Calj~e
Concluded Brock 10 hiS July 1991
arttcle "I vc-scenaspectsofthcconservattve movement that makes me
re.sret havmg c.vcr been assocmted
With 11 And I part1c1patcd 1n a scan,
dal-fueied war agamst the Ch ntons
that produced Gary Aldnch 1f rhat 1s
what our conservauve cau&gt;e bmis
down IO, we re doomed
One can only pray
,
~oseph Spear is a syndicated:
wnter for Newspaper Enterprise'
Association.
•

Fturrlss

Ice

Denms R Ftelds, 69, New Haven, W Va, d1ed SundaY,. March 15, 1998
m the Pleasant Valley Nursmg and Rehabthlat!On Center, Poml Pleasant
WVa
A laborer for the F1elds Garage m New Haven, he was born Nov 14, 1928
m New Haven son of the late Davtd Ira and Mary Estella Parspns Fteids
He rs survtved by two brothers and ststers m-law, Leonard J and Etleen
N Ftelds, With whom he made hts home and Raymond H and Helen L
Fteids, all of New Haven, and several meces and nephews
He was also preceded m death by brother, Russell I Fteids, and by a half
SISler, Elma L Goodnlle
GraveSide serv1ces Will be I p m Tuesday m the Graham Cemetery wtlh
the Rev James H Lewts officiating Fnends may call on Tuesday from II 30
a m ·I 2 30 p m at the Foglesong Funeral Home Mason, W Va
in lieu of flowers, memonai conlnbuoo~s may be made to e1ther the New
Haven Fue Depanmem or the New Haven Emergency Squad

Dale F. Wamsley

WVA

Showers T-stonns Rs1n

111 schools, workplaces and bars on
pantc m a large aud!lonum
what had aored
As I was about to start the ft rsl
Fnendly pul all h1s bets on a fatth scsston, a helpful teacher satd You
on the ontelligence of ordonary CliO· won l find thiS pleasant They care
zens, ' as Davtd Haiberstam puts 11
about mus1c and clothes but on thi s
He believed 1f you gave them subJect you II be lucky 1&lt;1 hntsh the
reports on d1fficuh, troublmg sub
hour So 1f you don 1 expect much
JCCis, they would understand and you won 1 be dts,tpp01nlcd
th1s would be a beuer soc tely
The students were hard Iy allen
He was nght as Frontline on
11vc
at the start hut as we exp lored
PBS conunually venhcs And CBS s
for
e&gt;amplc the lu story of the
60 Monutcs " orchestrated hy Don
Amendment
how the
Fourth
Hewlll, a Fncndly dtsciplc, keeps
coloniSts
htllcrly
resented
Bnltsh
the fallh But at that same network
troops
scarchm
g
thw
homes
and
CBS ktllcd a scheduled repeat of
persons
at
w1ll
they
became
Si
lent
Roberta Baskm s documentary on
the naked truth about the ah) smal and leaned forw.trd AI the end 0f
workmg cond!Uons of employees 111 c.tch hour the you ngslciS stood .md
Vietnamese facloncs makmg Ntkc cheered They were checnng lor
sneakers and other c.pcnstve Ntkc themselves
goods
They diScovered they were
After all Ntkc was a pronuncnl Amcncans I told the surpnscd
teac her and I thought of how much
sponsor of CBS 's televiSIOn cover
age of the OlympiCs and you may I had learned from Fred Fnendly
have seen ns swoosh logo as an that went mto those scsstons Not
obligate to the rcportmg Fur a tmtc only hts conslilut mnal knowledge
CBS News reporters there were hut cspeco.tlly hiS fa!lh
•
commanded to wear Ntkc parkas
He also brought Supreme Court
Fred Fnendly never known to curh JUstices on h1s televised :-~c mtnar~
hiS mdtgnalton at anyone pollutmg and they turned out to be qwle
the news, would have c•ploded at human
and even vulnerable
that one
wuhoul their rohes as they too
I had Fred Fnendlv very much 1n shatcd hiS fa!lh
mmd a couple of months ago when I
Nat Hentoff IS a nahonally
dtd two sessiOns on constuuuonal
~uthor1tv on the Ftr~t
renowned
nghts - parttcularly those of stu
Amendment
and the rest of the
dents for pubhc school ch1ldrcn 111
Bill
of
Rtghts
M1am1 There were hundreds of
youngsters mostly black and H"

charlatans They concoct noble
mouves when m fact they are often
dnven by vtle purposes
Brock satd stmtlar lhmgs last July
m another Esqutre ptecc m wh1ch he
dtscussed a btography he wrote of
Htllary Clinton After the Rcpubll
can takeover of Congress, he wrote.
"I sold a proposal for a book on the
most tempting target I could lhmk
of, H1llary Clinton
My frank
mlent!On was to butcher my prey
The b1ography turned out to be
relauvely flancnng, and Brock's
nght-wmg assoctales went berserk
He had sold out they satd Brock
was on an ego lnp and hts book was
a whncwash
Wrote Brock 'Most conscrvauves have come 10 so revtle Htllary
Clinton and everythtng she repre
senls !hat they have lost thetr moormgs forgelllng that they had
opposed Htllary tn the first place on
pohucal grounds, not out of person
al ioalhmg '
Lesson No 2 Ideologues don 1
know when to qun Tiley start wnh
reasonable obJecuon and argument,
then are devoured by thetr obsess1ons and qUickly run thmgs toto the
ground
In yet another run '" wtlh h1s
ersrwhtle fnends, Brock objected m

e

he docs on the cause Tills cause and
revolution arc Ius way of life • nd the

Brock's real purpose for backing ofr
By Joseph Spear
sky revelatiOn s
The man who lnrhe fire that heal
whtch auracted the
ed the pot m which Btll Clmton IS aucn110n of the
I'OW b01hng apologtzcd to the pres1
nghteo us Kenneth
Jcnt the other day In so doong he Starr and h1s Cot
smd a mouthful about the od wcy of ton
Mather
1dcology
Bngade whiCh 1n
Dav 1d Brock the young conserv
turn led to the
alive who made ht s name w1th a frenzy that cur
muckraktng book about Anna Htll rcntly consumes
was the first 10 gtve natiOnal expo
the na11on
Now Brock says
S~ar
sure 10 the Arkansas stale troopers
on an arucle for
-uho clatmed they lta&lt;hlbeucd Chn
tons womaniZing when he was gov
Esqu11e Magazmc, he has doubts
ernor of Arkansa&gt;
about what he dtd He was steered to
Brock s 1993 ex pose appeared on the troopers hy dte hard Chnton
the Amencan Spectator a nght wmg haters he says The bodyguards
penodoca l thai spec tahLes m Clm
were greedy and had slimy
1011 bashmg fhe story was 1n the
moines ' 111 that they were lookong
author s words perhaps the most for a book contract and diSplayed a
hw1111iaung ponrall of a smong pres
palpable contempt for Hillary' He
15 su li not sure of the accuracy of
1dcnt and hts w1fc e'er published
Tite story mentiOned a woman what they told htm He laments hts
namcd Paula who had allegedly lack of skepllctsm and now reahzes
been csconed to Clinton s hotel thai he was blinded by Ideology
room and afterward ,olunteered 10
In h1s mea culpa to Clinton,
be the governor s gulfnend A few Brock says he was caught up 111 a
weeks later Paula Corhm Jones paroxysm of destrucuon and "con
declared that she was the Paula m spiTed to damage you and your pres
question and announced that she tdency Hts raltOnale for wrmng !he
would undertake to restore her story was a 'charade " Hts real pur·
name as well as seek a mod1cum of pose To pop you nght between the
remunerauon Clinton s resumony m eyes
that case led 19 the Momca Lewm
Lesson No I Ideologues are

Dennis R. Fields

MICH

mamtcnancc of hts own posH tOn as

Fred Friendly: The ghost of television past

TV 1s btgger than
Hentoff
any story 11 reports
111 ~ th~.: hud&lt;.lm£ where the halfway house Js schedu led to open wou ld cost
h s the greatest
g ucs~ I!'. he s ~lire 1dy g1vc n them
the"" $2 'i million to $3 million
1cachmg tool Since the pnnlmg
m ty
Fncndl) saw l111nsc lf as a teacher pre ss it Will dctermmc nothmg less
cxe111phflcil by the CBS tcievtsJOn !han what kmd of people we are So
11 TV extsts now on ly for the sake of
dot:umentanc~ he produ ced Wt lh
Edw ud R Mun ow such ts Har ,, huck somebody s goong to have to
ves t of Sl1.1mc whiCh brought the change thai
He and Murrow surely !ned but
hitter live~ ul nu grant workers Into
Deat EdtWr
Amcfl(nn I1V111g room~ A nother as an mdex ol the shameless reality
Al! un !he Southern Local School Dlstfl(.:l 1 ~ 1~ktlll! uo.; voters to 1pprm c.: 1lcv~ to exam pl e was then ~.:o nl10ntat1 o n of current telcv1s1on pnonues, Dan
hulld ~ umsohdatcd d1stru.::t grade sehoul D~.:~pllc '&gt;t:\~.: r 11 \ntc' 1~ ' ' " "' tlw. lh~.: "11h Sen Jose ph McCarthy at a tunc Rather told the New York Ttmcs that
s..:hool board 1s ag.un punmg. such a lc~y bdnn.: t h~.: \Oiu'
heforc amng Mr Fne,ndiy s ob1 tu
uhen mu&lt;h of the nation mciuJmg
As of yet I snll am unaware ul any 1\lcmpt 1o lmd nu l v.h} \OICI' uc IU IIlln~
ary
on March 4 there were ' OICCs at
the hroadc.:a~11ndustry \\,\s fro zen 111
r..lown this levy I Will offer my r..:rson llthOUl!ht on till ~
CBS
th at had argued ,tgam&lt;l so
kM olth\,; t.lmgcrously reck less se n
Whcn..:ummumues Jose thclrclcm~.:m try ~lhoul~ tht.:) l\l~ thctr ll.lcnttll~.:~ Olt.: {lUr~
mu~.:h
,ur time for a downer of a
llor hom WhUlll\10
our ~Lhuollcadcrs say that u IS less cxpcn'-1Vt.: lo hu1ld J t.:tl!l~flhd 11c grade ~dloollh 1n ICl
story
1bnu1
a man whose 11me had
opc r:.~h.: LO nrnumty g.ndc st:hools That nny hi.: UlK hu l lht.: tt.: trt.: I\\O ll lVw~ •nthl~ tdt.:.I
In 1 l1ta p 1rt ot h1 s career
long
passed
F1rsl any l:OSt ~.:ompan~on of ~.::ommumty gradt ~t:huob. Vl:T~u:, .1 t:umuhdot
I mndl) de l1etf all the rating odds
indeed 111s unlikel y that Murrow
cd gr.tdc sc hool os based on current transport.IIIOn costs What happens 111 a fc.,. hv ~o.n.:.ll tn g a ~r.: nt;s on the Public
and
Fncndly would be g1vcn au
years ,ts the supply of ml and g ts 1s dcpkt&lt;d' ntc «&gt;~I l1:1s 10 me Any new Brpalll.l~twg Sc rv1cc that consisted
tunc
at CBS now Documcntanes
h111 idtng would he c. peeled 10 last "vcr.!l dcc.tdcs and dunng Ihi&gt; t.mc the cost o! um\ t..:r atrons and arguments
arc
as
rare as regular sciJous cnt1
of fuel Will nsc much faster than other cosh Further I guarantee thai the liN ,thou! The Conslllul!on Thai Dch
ciSm
of
the press on commcrc~al TV
thmg thai w1ll happen ts greater costs 1n the h.!llowcd uhlcucs as grade sc hool em Balance
1 hose scm mars
I
remember
watchmg the Fnendteam&gt; wtll have to leave the dtslnct to piav
often repeated reached m11110nS of
Murrow
documentancs
woth thcu
ly
Second what IS wrong ""h allow1ng the voters to h111 ld a new Rae1nc Grade \leW~.:fS
ullc
r
lack
of
showbtz
clements
After
School JUst tor the R.~emc communny 1 II ncccss.ll')' wh,lt " wrong with build
He also took the nsk of askmg eac h program I would hear and
1
mg a new Syr.1cusc Elementary for th,u cnmmunlly If the voters pocfct thiS me to appear on a number of those
wluch " he ncr ha11ng voter&gt; rcpe.ucdly tum down a lc' y lor a consohdatcd scnunars although he knew I was someti mes he a pan of diScusstons
C ll ) M.um~cr

The Daily Sentinel o Page 3

Sunny PI Cloudy Cloudy

Low pressure promises
wet conditions this week

Dale F Wamsley, 49, New Haven W Va, dted Saturday, March 14 1998
111 Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born May 25 1948 111 Po1111 Pleasant W Va son of Loreua Thomas
Wamsley of Poml Pleasant. and the late Randall 0 Wamsley, who dted 111
1991, he was a mamlenance mechan1c at Amencan Alloys 111 New Haven
He was a member of the Moose Lodge No 731 of Poml Pleasant the Stew
art Johnson VFW Posl9926 of Mason W Va, and the Smuh..Capehart Amer·
1can Leg1on Post 140 of New Haven
SurviVIng m add!lion to hiS mother are hts wtfe, Bonn1e K1ser Wamsley,
two daughters, M1a (Jon) Slone of Crown Cuy, and Lea (Bubby) Bonecut
ter of Poml Pleasant a son, Bnan (Karen) Wamsley of Poml Pleasant a step·
daughter, Tammy (Jerry ) Roush of Ravenswood, W Va a stepson Bnan Var
tan ofCh1cago Ill , four grandchildren and a stepgrandson, four SISters, Juamta Shendan, Shetia Rollins and Kay Donahue ali of Poml Pleasant, and Margaret Davts of Deland Fla and two brothers, Timothy J Wamsley of Buf
falo, W Va , and Randall Davtd Wamsley of Washtngton Court House
He was also preceded m death by a grandson, Ethan Slone
Servtces w1il be II a m Tuesday 111 the Wilco•en Funeral Home, Poml
Pleasant Bunal w1U be tn the Ptsgah Cemetery, Gallipolis Ferry, W Va
Fnonds may call at the funeral home from 6·8 romghl

By The Associated Press
An advanctng low pressure system wtil bnng wann and motst Gulf atr
1nto Ohto Thai means conlmued ram unttl late m the week, the Nattonai
Weather Servtce satd
A gradual warmmg trend also wtll contmue through the end of rhe week
w1th readmgs expected m the 50s for dayltme htghs by Wednesday and
overntghtlows tn the 40s
The record-htgh temperature for lhts dare at the Columbus weather sla·
tton was 79 degrees m I945 whtie rhe record low was 4 m I900 Sunset
tomght wtli be at 6 39 p m and sunnse Tuesday al 6 40 a m
Weather forecast:
Tomght Cloudy wtth a chance of light ram Lows m the mtd 30s L1ght
COLUMBUS (AP) - In the past
east wmd Chance of ram 50 percent
three years Ohto s Repubi1can leg
Tuesday Ram Htghs 50 to 55 Chance of ram 80 percent
tslature has passed laws thai created
Tuesday mght Occastonal ram Lows 45 to 50
school vouchers restncted aborllon
Extended forecast:
.and limned poliucal spendmg by
Wednesdaf. Occasional showers Htghs 111 the upper 50s
Thursday Showers likely Lows m the upper 40s and h1ghs m the lower orgamzed labor
Bur these measures were struck
60s
down by courts that ruled lawmakers
Fnday Showers hkely Lows near 50 and htghs m the lower 60s
mfnnged on the constlluttonal nghts
ofOhtoans
In add111on to quest10nmg the
CLEVELAND (AP)- Two rock- $307 692 before federal and slate tax consutu110nainy of such measures,
ers marched all stx numbers drawn m es
cnltcs told The Clncmnall Enqu11er
Saturday mghl's Super Louo drawmg
The other w10nmg IIcker was pur for a story Saturday that they ques
worth $16 m!lhon, the Oh1o Lollery chased at Bombsheiter m Glandorf !ton the costs of such leg1slal10n
sa1d
Thai wmner chose the cash discount
"How much has 11 cost the slate of
One of the wmmng tickets was and Will recetve a lump sum payment Oh1o - so far - to defend ali of
purchased at BP No 04824 10 Cleve· of $3,592 239 before stare and federal these pteces of legtslauon?' asked
land That wmner woll recetve $8 mil- ta•es
Susannah Sagan execuuve dtrecror
lion tn 26 annual payments of
of the Nauonal Abon ton and Repro
duettve Rtghts Aclton League of
Ohto ' 11 s 1mposs1bie to tell , when
The detatls of two srarewtde tssues men! of captlai factlilles for local you add up ail the 11me of the legts·
to benefit schools are outlined 10 a public school dtstncls and stale-sup· Iaior&lt; and ali money spent to defend
publication from the Ohto Sec,retary ported or state asststed msUtuuons of them "
The most recent ruling came lhts
liigher learnmg
of State
week,
when the IOth D!Slncl Court of
is,sue Two asks voters to approve
The two ISsues - a proposed con
Appeals
upheld a port1on of a 1995
slllut10nal amendment and a pro- House Btll 697, whtch would levy a
slate
campatgn-finance
law that pro·
posed merease m the srare sales tax on cent sales tax on the dollar wuh
htblls
the
soiiCIIatton
of
conrnbullons
- wtil be dectded by Oh1o voters m the proceeds gomg toward pubhc
school educatiOn and/or fact hiles, and from public employees at the work
the May 5 pnmary
The publicatiOn. Oh1o Issues property tax relief accordmg to SecReport, mcludes ballot language for retary of State Bob Taft
More than 40,000 cop1es of Ohto
both slalewtde ISsues and provtdes
Umts of the Metgs County Emer.1rguments for and an e•planalton of Issues Report wtli be dtstnbuted to
gency
Medtcal Servtce recorded 17
Issue One, and arguments for an public llbranes, htgh schools, boards
calls
for
asSistance Saturday and
of elecuons and other public offices
qgamstlssue Two
Sunday,
Umts
respondmg mcluded
Issue One 1s a proposed consutuCENTRAL
DISPATCH
l,onai amendment authonzmg the
5
59
a
m
Saturday
Stare Route
state 10 tssue general obhgat1on
681,
Elmer
Batley,
Veterans
Memobonds wolh the proceeds earmarlced
nat
Hospllai,
Am Ele Power .................. 49'1•
for the constructiOn and/or tmproveAkzo .
.. ......... 105~.
6 10 p m Saturday, Ash Street,
AmrTech .......................... 45't .
Middleport Ella Stewart, Holzer
Marriage licenses
Ashland 011 .
. . ........ 56~.
Medtcal Center
AT&amp;T
..............................
64~.
The followmg couples were
I 57 a m Sunday, Chester Road
Bank One ..
. ....58.,.
ISsued marroage licenses recently 10
Pomeroy,
Blame Qualls, VMH,
Bob Evans ..... . .............. 21 ),
the Me1gs County Probate Court of
6 51 a m Sunday, Chtldren s
Borg-Warner . . .............61~
Judge Roben Buc~
Broughton .................. ....... 14),
Home Road Pomeroy Charles Kmg,
Waller Edmond Ramsey, 61,
Champion ........... ............. 14% VMH,
Charm Shps .................... 5
CrossVI lle Tenn and Carol Jean
8 34 am Sunday SR 681 Tup
City Holding.. . .... .... ..... • .. 48
JustiS, 50 Racme Jerry Allen Derenpers
Plams Vera Kre1mer, CamdenFederal Mogul ....................50
berger, 27 and Mtcheile Sue AnderClark Memonal llosp!lal Tuppers
Gannett
............................
65'·
son 29, both of Page;tlle, Jeffrey
Plams squad asmted
Goodyear .............. .......
Ray Gilland, 20 Columbus and
Kmart ................. ............. 16'•
I I 08 a m Sunday, Oak Grove
Rusty Demel Robtnson, 18 Mtddle
Kroger ......................... 46
Road Racme Earl P1ckens VMH,
Lands End .................... 39~
port
Racme squad assiSted
Limited ......................... 29'1.
12 0 I p m Sunday, East Mam
Oek Hill Flnl ....................... 27'1.
Street, Pomeroy, PhylliS Vomng
OVB ................ ....... ....... 41
The
Sentinel One Valley..................... 36~ HMC Syracuse squad asstsled
Peoples .................... .... 41 '!.
MIDDLEPORT
!USPS 213.9601
Prem Flnl .............. .......... 22).
5 33 p m Saturday, South Second
Published every ahernoo n M~day through
R'ockwell ......................... 59"•
Avenue Dorothy Roush HMC. CenFndA~ Ill Court Sr Pomeroy Ohao by the
RD/Shell .......................
tral
DISpatch squad asSISted
Oh 1o Valley Publl5hlnl Company/Oannell Co
Sears .. .
56'·
Pomeroy 01110 45769 Ph !J92 2156 Second
RACINE
Shoney'll ...... .... • .. . . . • .. .4'1.
cltu pmi.Rgt pard at Pomeroy Ohto
12 04 p m Saturday volunteer fire
Star Bank
. .
.59'Manba' The AU&lt;KI&amp;Icd Preu and I be Oh10
Wendy'a ............ ~ ...........21\
depanmenl and squad 10 SR 124,
Newspaper ASSQCIIIIOn
Worthlngton... .. .
. 1t,.
brush fire, no lllJUnes reported,
POSTMASTER Send •ddreu corr«llons 10
5 06 p m Sunday VFD 10 PortStock reports are the 10·30
The Da1ly Scnlloel Ill Cou11 St Pomeroy
land
Road brush fire
Otuo4S?69
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
2
56
p m Sunday, Perry Run
of Gallipolis
SUBSCRtmON RATES
Road, Gerald Moore, VMH ,

Critics call into question
costly legislation in Ohio

Two tickets claim jackpot

Guide outlines May 5 ballot language

place
But the coun struck down provi SIOns of the law that ban the use of
umon money for polillcal purposes
and proh1b11 payroll deduc11ons a.&gt; a
way for pubhc employees to con
rnbute
"Legtslatures have been lendmg
to do campatgn hnance regulation
and courts- espectaily federal ones
- lend ro keep rosstng them out
When you lhmk about 11 the courts
are there to protect our nghrs agamsl
abuses by the iegts lature sa1d
Columbus auorney Don McTtgue
who filed the lawsull on behalf of the
Oh10 Educalton Assoctat1on and the
Untied Auto Workers
But House Speaker JoAnn Davtd·
son, R Reynoldsburg, satd these
kmds of challenges are unavotdable
when the Legtslalure deals wllh controverstal 1op1cs
'We try to look very carefully at
these 1ssues and we try to craft them
m a way we thtnk w1ll be constlluuonal,' Davtdson srud
Tile slate IS conSidenng whether to
appeal the ruhng on the campa1gn
finance law

Squads answer 17 calls

Stocks

68.,.

Daily

54'•

-·-·-

By Curier «:Motor Route

Wee~~
One Year

One Month .. :::::. :' ::·

SH on
70
::·:~ ::~j$2
$104 no

SINGLE COPY PRICE
D••ly -................................................ )~ CtntJ
Sub~enbcrs

ool dl:5tnnato pay the earner may
rcm11 In advance dJrtctto The Dally Sen11nel
011 1 lhret Sll or 12 month bUll Cred1t Will be
given C:lrfiCf eiCtl week

Do you pay for child care or for
the care of a disabled dependent

9 27 p m Sunday, Portland Road,
Roy Powell treated at the scene
RUTLAND
7 17 a m Saturday, Overbrook
Nursmg Center, Mtddleport, Ralph
Carr HMC Central Dtspatch squad
ass !Sled
10 41 am Saturday, Swtck Road
Robert Swtck, PV H
4 05 p m Saturday VFD and
squad 10 Parkmson Road brush fire
no LnJUnes reported,
9 06 p m Saturday, Metgs Mme
31, Robert fl.anchm, 0 Bleness
Memonal Hosptlal, Central DISpatch
squad asstsled,
9 45 p m Sunday, Leadmg Creek
Road Mary Dav HMC

Hospital news
Holzer Medital Center
Discharges Man:h 13 ..:... Carl
Dotson Owen Barry, Raymond
Chtlders Helen Wtlherell, Evelyn
Stowe Mrs Douglas Pouer and
daughter James McCarley, Melody
Myers, Davtd Adkms Goldte DaVIS,
Sandra Moore Casey Ward Ronny
Evans Geraldone Benneu
Btrth - Mr and Mrs Jerry
Woods daughter, Crown C!ly
Discharges March 14 - Anthony Angelo, James Mullens, Rtchard
Fttch Frank Johnson, Wtlllam LoUie
Sterra Layne James McNerhn Mur·
ble Shelton Mrs Jeff Skmner and
son, Wtlllam S1zemore
Discharges Man:h 15 - Nancy
Edwards, Mrs Jerry Woods and
daughter, Douglas Brown
Bir1h - Mr and Mrs Paul Hard·
ee, son Leon W Va
(Published with permission)

LEARN TO CLOG

No subscr1pt10o by maal perm•lled 1n areas
whtre homt c•rner service IJ IVIIIIble

Village Hall, Pomeroy

Publisher reserves rhe riJhiiO JdjuJt ntes dur
101 the subscriptiOII pcnod SDblcnpt1oo rate
chanJt• rn~y be 1mpltmented by diln&amp;tnl the

March 20 • April
6·7 pm
Ages 12 yrs &amp;: up

duratron of the sublcnption"

MAILSUBSCRimONS
lnskle MeiJ• CoanfJ
13 Weeks

26 Weeks
l2Weeb

•

S2130
$$H2

- $10Sl6

RaiH Owllldt Mtlp Co..ty
!lW..u
- _. $29:2$

26 w..u _

s2w..u

- 5l6 611

- 510972

For more info. Call

618 EAST MAIN ST. • POMEROY
OPEN MON.·FRI. 9-8, SAT. 9-5
MaaterCardNJaa/Diacover

740-992-785 3

992-6674

Big Bend Cloggers

'

The Govemmg Board of the Metgs County Educaltonal Service Center
IS oppos111g a proposed half-cent sales ra• mcrease slated for the May 5 pr.mary elecl!on ballot
The board, meetmg 111 regular sess1on Thursday approved a resolution
opposmg the sales tax mcrease - half of wht ch IS reportedly for fundong
educauon wuh the other half slated for property tax rehef- and a financ1al
and fiscal accoumabtluy legtsiauon
The s~rv1ce center supports the Ohto Coal111on for Equtty and Adequacy
of School Fundmg whtch has 1obbted smce July 1990 to force the state to
change liS method of school ftmdmg
The Oh10 Supreme Coun heanng a Perry County case, agreed !he current educatiOn fundmg mechamsm IS unconsmuuonal, ordenng an overhaul
of the pubhc school fundmg system
The sales Ia. and accountablitty bills consl!lute a totally madequate
response to the order for a complete systematic overhaul,' the resolution reads
John R1ebel Sr supenntcndenl of the Me1gs ESC, sa1d the IWIJ measurers are certamly not the answer' to addressmg the school fundmg problems
Th1s IS not a complete overhaul, he sa1d
In personnel maners the board employed Shamn Wtckersham and Jane
Ann Htll as a substitute reacher and substnute teacher a1de, respecttvely, for
the remamder of the school year, and approved the restgnatton of Shtriey
Mttchell Adult Baste L1teracy Educallon mstrttcuonal a1de The board also
renewed employment of K111y Hazier. Talented and Gtfled coordmalor
In other busmess the board
• Approved the mmutes of the Feb 12 regular meetmg and the Feb 16
spectal mee11ng
• Approved the School to Work Equ!ly M1111 Grant for $5,000
• Approved a mamtenance agreement wllh CWS on the Canon copter and
wllh Best Office Machmes on the Sharp copter
Present were Rtebef Treasurer Carole Gilkey Board Prestdent Jeff Har
ns Vtce Prestdem Robert Barton and board members Howard Caldwell, I 0
McCoy and Jeaneue Thomas

Meigs announcements
Grange soup supper
Star Grange 778 wtll hold a soup
supper and program on Fnday Serv mg w1ll be from 4-7 p m w!lh the
program begmnmg al 7 p m The
public IS mv11ed to auend
Boil advisory lifted
Leadmg Creek Conservancy Dts
Inc! has lrfled the boil adviSory for
customers from Homer Htll Road to
Kmgsbury Road
Health Fair planned
A tree health fau w1ll be held
Apnl 16 10 am to 2 pm at the
Famtiy Center BU!Idmg cornet of
Ftflh and Mam streets, Mtddleport
sponsored by the M1ddleport Mtmstenal Assoc!Ul!On the Synod of the
Covenant Presbylenan Church
(USA), m conJunction With !he Metgs
County Health Department and Cancer Coahlton from Rtverstde Hospital Columbus included Will be mfor
mat10n on nulntton cancer heart di&lt;ease blood pressure checks and
more All welcome
Health Club
_ Rock Spnn~s Bener Health Club

w1ll meet at Thursday at the Rock
Spnngs Umted Methodtst Church, I
p m Dues are payable Nancy Moms
will be hostess
Board to meet
The Metgs Cunty Board of
MRIDD Will meet Thursday at 7 p m
at Carleton School
Plans meeting
The personnel commtllee of the
Me1gs County B.oard of MRIDD wtll
meet at Carleton School, 4 30 p m
Wednesday
RACO to meet
The Racme Area Commumty
Orgamza11on will meet Tuesday, 6 30
p m at Star Mtll Park, Racme New
members welcome
Computen down
The computers m the legal depanmenl of the Metgs County Clerk of
Courts Office Will be shut down
Tuesday from 8 30 a m to 12 30
p m however the office wtll remam
open, accordmg lo Larry E Spencer,
Metgs County Clerk of Courts

Scholars split over validity
of new Sheppard evidence
CLEVELAND (AP) - New ev1
dence may as a the Cuyahoga Coun
ry prosecutor beheves be too weak to
ment reopemng a cnmmal mvest1·
gatton to de1erm1ne who kolled Mar
tlyn Sheppard 111 1954 some legal
observers say
Cuyahoga County Prosecutor

Stephanie Tubbs Jones has sa1d there
tsn 1enough eVIdence for her to pros
ecule the Sheppard fam1ly's handy·
man R1chard Eberling orto e•oner·
are the vtcllm s husband Dr Sam
Sheppard m the case that mspued the
televiSion senes The Fugmve '

Meigs land transfers posted
The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently tn the office of
Metgs County Recorder Emmogene
Ham1hon
Ease ment, Homer E Hysell,
Paul meL Hysell, PL Hysell R Trus~
Bedford
Deed Robert 0 and Margaret L
Schmoll to Joseph Jeffrey and Beth
Ann Brown Monersvtlle,
Deed Ruby Mae Miller to Clay
ton P Sr and Karen M Conklm
Orange
Deed Dorothy B Woodard to
Irene B Miller and Morton L
Barnes Rutland
Deed A June Ashley 10 H Vtclor
and Ahce Wolfe Racone
Deed H V1ctor and Ahce Wolfe
to A June Ashley Suuon 25 acre
Deed, Donald E and Jandara D
N11z 10 Randall L and Carolyn R
Dav1s Rutland
Rtght of way Larry Klem to Tup
pers Plams Chesler Water Dtslncl,
Suuon, 41 acres,
Rtght of way Jason and Roger
Pullins to TPCWD Orange 117

Jane Staats to TPCWD Sunon I 002
acres
Deed, Paul und June Eochmger lo
Vtckt A Hanson Pomeroy 37 acres
Deed, Manon K and Elanor C
Fugate to Manon K Fugate Revocable Trust, Olive parcels
Deed Dav1d C and L01s G
Stnger 10 Lawrence and Carolyn
Darst, Chesler parcel,
Deed, Belly Strong to Sam and
Sherry Darst, Salem 6 4 acres
Deed, T H AssociUies, Jane F
Ohver to Thelma Whtle, Chesler,
Deed, Rhonda Wtlhtl~ ro Larry E
and Kelley Klem Mmersville,
Deed, Sam L and Sherry Darst ro
Robert A and Angela S Lemaster,
Columbia, 34 7 acre,
Deed Davod W and Lola J Prof
fin to Londa Dtane, Davtd W Jr and
Jack1e Lynn Proffiu, Letart
Deed, Bnan M and Dolly R Warden lo Horace W and Dorothy Karr,
Sunon parcels

acres

Rtghl of way, Manon and Cand1e
DaVIS to TPCWD Letart
Rtghl of way Raymond L and
Carol S Oliver to TPCWD Sunon
3 acres
Rtght of way Enoch J and Mary

11llftl: '"''~
Til W111B a.ll

taa.t21
(PG 13)

KIIIMI ARlll1111

lliiiiiiROWIRI ""'

LA. CINilN1W. 1111

IIAIII CITY 11'1
Mllllf lUll' ""'

u• u" 1111 '"''~
fiiiii !IG- ~

KJIIIIIIMQI'IliB

IIG-~

4:11, )'jfj

4:11
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1:41
7S
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tAl, 1:11

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U.l MAIISIWlS ll'G-131
l:ll,ntl
llllWII 111111111 . . '"''~ t11, 7:11

MOTIE~W•o
Just Jlortft of f!Jfttns on liS JJ

740.753-3400

'

�. .,

Sports

Monday, March-16, 1998

The Uaily Sentie.t;I
·

Quest down StingRays 86-81
£to capt~re ABL crown again

Monday, March 16, 1998

MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP
Firat round
March 13

Second round Regional•
March 15

Semlflnela

EAST

(81-lsland

:.7\

• ---

----

-·l

St Louts, Mo

1

(5) Texas 01nstJM rr
March 20 1
l FIJr'daSialen.or
,

IValparaiiiO 13
(13) Valparaiso 70
1
·-- - - --- - -·

1

St Lou1s, Mo
March 22

(81 Clo""son 72 __ W Michigan 811
(11) W M1ch1gan 7S ]

-

• S~&lt;!&lt;!_l!!l_

c d~ ~\i
- D

(7) St John s 84

(2) Purdue 85

p 5) Dela!are_!I.

GETTING AWAY from Kansas' Leater Earl (3) Is the task of the
moment for Rhode Island's Preston Murphy in the second half of Sunday's NCAA Midwest Regional second-round game in Oklahoma City,
where Rhode Island upset the Jayhawks 8()..75. (AP)

pMdt~o

couch Homer Du!w, whose

n.unent

10

the reg10n~ll semifinals -

"Nobody gave us a chance.· sa1d
J.nlll&lt; Sykes. who scored 19 potnls
lor V.t l p~u.u s o :·Now we c.an 'ay we

are mthc Sweel lti Tim IS beauttful
You JU' I w.mt lo cry Nobody knew
us and now people are t1ymg to buy

r-~

1(2)Purdue
I

-

NATIONAL
CHAMPION

-

_....J

San Antonio

SOUTH
Duke ro
- - - - - - \t) Duke

san Anlomo.
1

Texas

March

WEST

Texas

March 28

28

I ~ -----'

- - •

(5) Syracuse 83

I

March 20 1

I

I

I

(~) Sy!~~~se t

(4) New MeXlCO 70
~ -~- - - - New Mexico 48
1
(13) Butler G2
• • •
--

161 UCLA811

ltlmots 61

'
St Petersburg, I

'

(3) MtchiQan ao

Maryta~

I

Fla 'f~--

:._up_~~

__

Marylan~ ·~--1

Utah State 68
Arkansas 74

Marcil 21

March 22 I

--~ 16)_LlClA
1

87

Anahetm, Calif

I

--l

Arl(ansas 69
(3)

Ulah

:' Nebraska~ __
utah 85

1

· Michigan 82
(14L~!!I!'.'!!!..~2-

By BERNIE WILSON
PEORIA. Anz. (AP) - There 1t is
111 the boxscore. nghl under Joyner,
Ib: Brooks. pr.
That's not just any Brooks. e1ther
It was Ganh Brooks, real-life country music superstar, wearing No 7h1s lalesl album rs called Sevens and makmg a pmch-running appearance for the San Otego Padres on
Sunday.
" What a coolthmg- thts hasn' t
soaked 111 yet," Brooks said later 111
the clubhouse a~ players began lmmg
up yet agam to have bals and balls
autographed.
Brooks traded 10 hiS cowboy hat
for a baseball umform as he jmned
lhe Padres for two days of workouts
at their spnng traming complex.
&lt;\fler showmg a so-so stroke m the
battmg cage, and a decent arm and a
mcc slidmg catch whtle shagging fly
balls, Brooks found himself in lhe
Padres' exhtbttion game against lhe
Chrcago Cubs.
He ongmaily was going to watch
from a luxury box. but sat wrth manager Bruce Bochy and the coachmg
staff at the front of the dugoul
Brooks was easy to p1ck out - the
pale one who hasn't been out in the

llhnms State 4g

Cal1l
March 19

St Petersburg, Fla ,

Syracuse !8

Utah 75

,

Anahetm,
Calif

St Petersburg, Fla I•

[71Massachusetts4B
March 20 !
• - - - - - - St Louts 1!11
Valpo shtrts off us "
1
(10) $1 Lous &amp;1
l
In other Mtdwest Regtonal games
..
-I!21 _~~cky
(2) ~enlu_~kt ~ •
Su nday. Stanford beat Western
Kentucky 18 _ J
Mtch•gan 81-65 and Purdue dct eal(1S)_S Ca r~ _St M ~7 _
ed DetrOit X0-65
in the South Reg tonal. Duke beat
Oklahoma St.lte 79-73, Syracuse leader wnh II. and Kentucky IS next field
downed New Mexteo 56-46. Ken- wtth six
The Orangemen (26-8) shot JUst
tucky routed S.unt Louts 88-6 1, and
The most mterestmg thmg about 34 percent, but commttted only e1ght
UCLA defealed M1chtgan 85-82
the
Connecucut-Washmgton turnovers and oulrebounded the
On Satu rday. 111 lhe East. 11 was matchup mtght be the1r ntcknames
Lobos 49-36
N011h Carolma 93. North C.trohna Both teams are called the Husk1es. a
New Mex1co star Kenny Thomas
Charlolle 83 10 overtnne , Mtch1gan n1ckname used by only two other had 12 pomts and 12 rebounds, but
State 63. Pnnceton 56. Washmgton DIVISIOn I teams - Nonheastern and was only 4-of- I6 from the field
81. R1chmond 66 and Connecticut Northern llhnms
AI Atlanta
78. lndmna 68
South
Kentucky 88, Saint Louis 61
In the West. 11 was Maryland 67.
At Lexington, Ky.
Jeff Sheppard showed no hngerIllin OIS 61. A11zona 82. llhn&lt;liS State
Duke 79, Oklahoma State 73
mg effects from an ankle spram. scor49. West V~rguua 75. Cmcmnall 74.
Roshown McLeod had 22 points mg 18 pomts as Kentucky (31-4)
Utah 75, Arkans.ts 69
and 10 rebounds as Duke (31 -3 ) routed Samt loUis (22- I I)
The regtonal semtfmab start reached the final 16 for the first t1me
Chris Hemnch led Saml LouiS
Thursday n1ght w11h North Carolma- smce 1994.
wtth a career-high 16 pomts.
MKh•gan State .md ConneellcutUCLA 85, Michigan 82
The Blue Dev1ls made 7 of 8 free
Washmgton m the East at Greens- throws in the final 40 seconds to
Commg off the worst game of his
boro. N C . and Wesl Vtrgm1a-Utah clmch coach M1ke Krzyzewskl's career, sentor Kris Johnson sank
amiAnzona - M.~ryland mlhe West at
42nd lournament wm, tymg e•ght slrarght free throws over the
Anaheun. C.1hf
LouiSVIlle's Denny Crum for th1rd on final 37 seconds to hft UCLA (24-8)
On Fnd.ty mght. 1t 's Duke-Syra- the ail-ttme hsl
over Mrchrgan (25-9).
cuse .md UCLA -Kentucky 111 the
Joe Adkms led Oklahoma State
Mtch1gan cuj a late etght-pomt
South at St Petersburg. Fla . and Pur- (22-7) w11h 20 pomts
detictt to two on three occaSions m
due-Stanford and Rhode island- v,,lSyracuse 56, New Mexico 46
the final 30 seconds, only to see
par:uso 111 the M1dwest at St LoUis
Todd Burgan had 20 po111ts and 10 Johnson make hts free throws.
The UCLA-Kentucky game wtll rebounds. and Syracuse's zone
Johnson. who scored JUSt three
ma1ch the two '&lt;hools w1th the most defense held New Mex1co (24-8) to pomts in Friday's first-round wm
NCAA h,tsketh.tlltttles UCLA ts lhe a season-low 26 percent from the over Mtam1. finished w1th 25 Robert

March 19

Temple 52
West Vrrg1nra 75

West Vtrgtma 82

' (10)_WestVtrgrna

Ctncmnati 65
Cmcrnnal174
()seed

Traylor h.td 19 pomts lor Mtch•gan
Midwest
At Oklahoma City
Valparaiso 83, Florida St. 77
(OT)
Bryce Drew. whose buzzer-he.ttmg three-pornter upse(Mtssts'lppr 111
the first round, scored 22 pomts and
chnched the v1ctory for V.tlpanuso
w1th two free throws in the closmg
seconds .
Bob Jenk ms and Antanas Vilcmskas each made follow shots m the
final two mtnutes of overtime·" the
Crusaders (23-9) won thw 13th
stra1ght game
Valparatso IS only lhe second No
13 seed to reach the regtonal semiS 111
the NCAA tournamenl R1chmond
d1d II Ill 1988
Rhode Island 80, Kansas 75
Cuttmo Mobley had 27 pomts and
Tyson Wheeler had 20 pomts ,md
e1ght asststs as Rhode lsl,tnd (24-R)
stunned Kansas
Kansas (35-4) got 22 pomt s and
14 rebounds Irom Rael L:1Fren1z and
23 pomts from P.ml P1ercc. hut they
dtdn 't get enough help Billy Thom.ts

w.ts 2-ol-151rom the fjcld. 111duJmg
2-of-11 It om threc-pmnt range.
It '"" .mo1he1 btllel loss lor
Kansas coach Roy Wllllltms. who ,
hasn 't reached the Fmal Four smce.
1993. even though hts Jayhawks ,
have been ,,lop seed lhree of the last
four years
At Chicago
Stanford 83, W. Michigan 65
Arthur Lee scored from the outstde. ,md Tim Young and Mark Madsen dommated mSJde as Stanford (28- '
4) overpowe1ed Western M1ch1gan
(21-8).
•
Lee f1o1Shed w1th 24 pomts.:
Young. the Cardmal\ 7-fool-1 cen-:
ter. had 19 pomts and 13 rebounds.·
and 6-8 Madsen added ·19 points·and•
10 rebounds as Slantord malched the:
school record for v1ctones m a sea·.
son
Purdue 80, Detroit 65
Chad Austin scored 20 pomts and
Brad M1ller had 18 as Purdue (28-7 ).
advanced past the second round for ·
only the thtrd time 10 coach Gene
Keady\ 18 seasons

Reg tonal game That carne .lllt!r Har-

The game stayed ttght until •mdway lhrough the second half when the
F1ghtmg lnsh ran off 12 straoght
pomts to take a 55-44 lead. Tech.
wh1ch got 17 pomts from AII·Amer•can Alicia Thompson, never threatened agam and losl al home for the
first time in 10 NCAA tournament
games
Notre Dame won't· have to leave
Texas because the regional semifinals
and finals next weekend also are in
Lubbock
Allison Feaster, the na11on's leadmg scorer, sparked Harvard's upset
with 35 pomts and 13 rebounds as the
Cnmson broke Stanford's 59-game
home wmmng streak
Stanford played Without ieadmg
scorer Knstm Folk! and Vanessa
Nygaard. 1ts best outSide shooter

110 \.\

vard became the ltrst 16th seed •n

,Ril ey wen I 9-for- 12 from . the
t: tther mt!n \ or worn~n \ play to wm fi eld usmg her 6-lool-5 home to conan NCAA game when '' Ileal Sian - sert lob passes and 11p-ms mto easy
ford 71-07 late Saturday
baskels over lhe smaller Lady
One No I seed has made 11 10 the R.uders (26-5) She played only one
regwnal 'ienllltnal s howevt'r Old 111111ute mthe llrsl halfb&lt;cause ol earDomtnwn. lhe lOp seed 111 the East. ly foul trouble

Jagr had a near-open net when
Hasek miSsed on a poke check, but
the goaltender recovered to make a
shdmg save With slacked pads on a
shot that appeared destmed for the
top half of the net
"! thought I dtd everythtng nght,"
satd Jagr. who scored a game-wmniOg goal aga10st Hasek on Nov 24
·Probably on 99 percent of the
goahes. I score But he plays so much
d1fferently. from the other goahes.
He's so qutck "
Overshadowed by Hasek's addt tron to hrs league-leadmg shutout
total were M1chael Peca's two goals
and one asstst Peen's first goal gave
the Sabres a 2-0 lead late m the third
penod HIS second went mto an
em ply net with I 0 I left
Wayne Pnmeau scored the only
goal Buffalo needed 6 48 mto the
final penod when he denected Peca's
slap shol from the pomt past Pittsburgh goahe Tom Barrasso Hasek
then settled mto hts th1rd shutout thrs
month
"I never set goals about shutouiS,"
Hasek sa1d "My goalm November

was to have more w1ns than losses
Of course, tf you have mne shutouts,
you try to have I0 Ten os a spec tal
number"
The game was the second part of
a home-and-home senes between
_the Sabres and Pengums and marked

Carpenters Local Union 650
106 Years in Pomeroy
March 16, 1892·1998
•

Henry C. Peery
Business Representative
1954-1979, Retired

l ..

SENIOR ATHLETES - Southern High School
student-athletes Pete Sisson, Jenny Friend, Eri·
ca Arnott and Cynthia Caldwell (L·R) were the
seniors honored for their dedication to their

»:

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Kt.'ntu~ky KM s.um LuUI~ ~ I

211ii

II
II

respective sports at Saturday's winter awards
banquet at Southern High School. A story and
additional pictures are expected to appear later
this week In The Dally Sentinel.

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Tonight's games

" O..:nver 1.t Ch:trk111c 7 \0 p 111
Utuh til t.tlmii.'Sill.l II pIll

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RUTLAND, OHIO
742·25 11
1·800·837·8217

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. Woulungron Kl , Rtdnnond 66
• Crn1Jlt.'l.:lt~o:ut7K. Inti1Qn:t6S

Thunda,'s Rmlnnals
At Grunsboro Coliaftm, Grunlboro. N.C.
Nonh Cnrulm.'l (l2.1) \IS M1chraun Slate (22-

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Conntcllcut (ll -.f) v• Washtngt()n (20· 9)

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Ohio H.S. boys' scores

lmtl I r111.1y 61'111
AI Ath~n~
COAL GROVE 12 1 ll n
(1\ I J ful'~dl) h I ~ I' m

Saturday's distri~L

l) Tu~ ~ J.1 y I( I' Ill

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At fulnltt
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Prm~ et o n (l()

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(27-1 ) 9

S•lurday'a ttmlllnals
At Luhbor:k, TtuJ
Noire Dnme Tuu T~h wmner vs ColomJo
Slate Purdue WIMCf
Clcmson· Lou•alunn Tech Winner vs UCLA

S.mdusky lib L11m1 Sr 76

Shaker H1s 72 Cle

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Westerv1lle N 6Y Cui Ni1nhl ,m ~.t17

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Akr11n Hob.m 'i7 Tmamy 41
Akron Sl V-St M 72 Umv~n:ny 09 t&lt; ITI
Bellev~ 46 Shelby 4S
Cle Bened•c tu~~:: OlJ RI.)C ky R1 vcr 60
Otluwa Glandorf ~b Ehda ~I
Yuu MoorH:y4 1 You R.,ycn 2H
OMslun Ill

Ch«:sai'JCUke 41 Wheelmburg41
Coal Grovt bK, Pons mouth W 'il
Grbsonburg 64, Gennn 4~
Tudaw ~~~.Akron Manchester •n
Wayu~ Trn~.:f 69 Pnlndc Henry ~7

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M If~ lfl'll 1M Rlulll &lt;lll 60
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FASTERN CONFERENCE
\ l (.mlft Unl'mn

IV
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Nurw,,lk St P tul (22 11 vs HKHMONIJ
DALE SOUlHEASTERN (20 1) ThursJ1y 6 I\

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GLOUSTER TRIMBI E. ( 10 11 ) vs Grand
vtew {11 t;l) Thu rsd ~y Kp m
rmol Saturday l I' m
AI Uaytun
Day Jetrerson (18 'i J vs C1n Sev~n H1th (! I

21 Thursday. 6 I 'i p m
Jndson Center 12 1-IJ \ s
Thursd.ty 8 p m

Celebrating
Years lfl 13usllless!

Come ;out us as Jtle celebrate ow 10/fi year at
our Jrfrddleport, Ofiw 'Restaurant,
'Titesday, Jrf arcfi 17tfi.

rrHA.}JK you
reo Our }VIany Customers
rJ:hroughout the rJ:ri-County 14rea
for allowing us to serve you.

Stanley's

DIVISIOn IV

Mrn s l ~r

( 17 6)

Finol Suturilily, l p m

At roledo
L1bcrt y Bent on ( 19 4) 11s Pcttuvtllc (tfl . 'i)

Located beside &lt;&gt;ur
Middleport Restaurant
Millies Restaurant
992·7713
Bradbury Road
Middleport, Ohio

In

61.) 161 l'il

MILLIES
RESTAURANT
10

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Division II

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Ohio H.S. girls' state
tournament pairings
W uhworlh 121 21 \'s

ll: L I Cb. lit: 1iA

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Al11bnm.1 wmncr

H.1rvurd wrnm:r

1\lllll~r ~~

Hockey

Saturday's finals

DiVI!inn I

W GL' lll):t ( 11 Kl "' Akltrn H1•h.m 110 ~ ~
W c JUC l Joiy 7 p m
Yuu M&lt; lllllcy e1 !Ill' A.,_ro11 Sl VHh,\ llt Sl

IJu.,_~ Wlll l ~tl

On
On

Toda)"s nrst-round 1la1c
AI Wat tArayctlt,lnd.
COlorado Stale (24-~) n Purdue (21-9) K Jl'"
Te~.:h

ms.1 ~

()lvls6on I

Sunday'N Ht'Und·ruund KOrtS
AI L.uhhock, Tua~
Notre Dame 74 TelUI~ Ttrh 4i9
Alab«m:~ 711i UCLA 1-'

AI Ruston. La.
Clemson (2,·7) u LouuutnD

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2 ]\ Ill
Z IIW S\111..: R n\~lrlil '

( I I) 7) vs 1\,uctlll\
llnji\: Wdl l.tnnlvu 12-' I l I n•I••Y -1 p 111
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Ohio H.S. girls'
regional tournaments
i}

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Colomllo Stat~ KI Dr .1ke 71
Purdue IUt Washmj!lun 7 1
Cltmson 60 M1.1m1 -I'J
Li.ll.ll)l•lnll Tcd1 R6 H11ly Cm~s 'iK

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l~d1

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tournament uctmn

M1dwest Rogional

Sttunl•r'•~t«ond-round JCOI'ftl

711/ pm

Sl'lllllllloll Wllllll:r\

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l1111l S iunl'} 7\0pm
1\ 1 Tul~&lt;ilu
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Wulnt'tlny lo Wp 111
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117 (1) Wulil~l~l .l)' 1'1 t~p 111
lllt,ll StiUIIII} 7l!Jp m

lll

Monday.MIIHh 2.1

SalurdaJ •• nl'll-round KOrtS
AI Wt!il Llllrayrtlt,lnd.

NCAA men's tournament

Vlr)!IUII

67

Champ10Nhlp
Mondly. 1\brrh 2J

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• Mtlwnukec m Ht,uswn K \0 p m
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•
CLEVELAND 111 Ponln.nd. 10 p m
• LA ( hllflCn nt Gollkn Slllle, 10 10 p m

9 ~9pm

K uh .l~ t2l-IO \'s Ark

Old L&gt;nmmmn (29 2) VS North c.•nlllll.l St,l\l'
(2161
V 1rgtn i,I·Arn:o na Wl llllc= r v5 Co nnl'dl\ 111·
George Wnshm~ton wlnllt'r

New Jersey .11 Ch~t;,,su K \0 p m
Mllwauk...-.: nl S;~n Anlmuu K 10 p m
LA lakcr~~•St:.tllh: IOpm

Hi&lt;ITI

G~llf)!e W.l~ hlllj:ll\11

O~kland

li nHt~h.t nu 1 ~ 1

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(22 ')) ~~ I lund,, 122 K) KJl
AI UuJham, flrl &lt;.:

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Sa1urd11v's !M'IliRnab
AI lluJion. OMo

Tuesday's games

I

I utbv's wcond·round ~laic
,\t Sl:~nrurd , Calif.
Ark.ms,,~ ( 19 IUJ v:; H.U'vurJ (21 -' l M1J
AI &lt;i•lnt'sullt', f-l11

Suturdu)' stm •nnllll

Sunday's stumd·ruund StUkll
Old Donmuun 7'i N~hr.1 s ka ()()
North c.• mhna S1,1tl' !QI YtiUIIt:.SinWn Still

98 lOTI

Dclrml.u M1m11 7 'Up m

Kor~

AllOW II ('lfy. Iowa

East Regional

Cillllll.'l: ti\ UI 7'i

•

Sunday 's ~roo no ·round

lum ~v lllc(2tl Ill\ ~ l&gt;uk~t 127J

1\ nzon.t 9-' V1rl:IIIIA 77

•

lii\1\SY!IIl' ()'j Utlh hi
Dtlk ~· l/! M1tldlc l•· ntiC~~l'C S1 ,11~ 67

Vlt)!llll,t

NCAA women's
tournament

Atlant.l 91 Hmlnn 77
huh una ~I New Ymk Kh
Pur1lomJ 101 LA Chpf'\'u 92

first-round ~rurc~

Luw&lt;·lhdl.: ( 1-'

M[1 111
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l1n M.N I•hn ll' I IIJ ~1 y, Hmul1!111 11 .~&lt; 111
( IIJ ~~ w.·.lnl'"' 'Y II I 'i I' Ill
l 'ln l&lt;nt:n ilo~ ull l 1~1 21 '~ l ul lh:c~ h ll &lt;llt
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( 16 I( ) W\'tllk: MI,ty H I 'i p 111
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AI hlhrm
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Vlr~llllol fl'l h 71 WIM;UIIS!\1 b-1
1 klrltl.11'!\ Mnm 111.1 (l4

l /

, &lt;.:hampmn.o;h1p
S~aturday, March 21

Sunday's scores

:

Sulurd:~J"~

R•~innal

v~

•)' 2 I' U\
U 11p1u ll lh( 2t&gt;111"

t 111 11"1

lluu ~~~ I) -l I' 111
t 11111 S 11urd 1y

At ( anlun
\) ~~~ Blnomltll&lt;l ( I I I \)

Dmswn II

K ms.l\ 6~ 1nw,IIIH

Mlmn79 Orl.uultt7(l
Ucah 109 [A;uuu IJII
LA Lak.:u I IIJ. Vtlllllluvcr I 10

'

Rm

i\rk .m ~.I S

I hur.Wufs M'mlnnal~
•
At Arrowhtlld Pond, Arn~hrtm, C11 hr
Wl•stVrq:ml.l (l -'lll \~ Ut•hl l71) HU'ipm
Amun1t l1J -' l \~ M.uylu11l t:! l lU I IU !''i

HI.MISIIllliN ~ l(f,IIUCIIIU Kb

•• roron111 100

UMb.~r,,

'"' '

nmr ~&lt;la y

ml ty I.Jp Ill
AI Akron
Clnt S1 IJ! IliiHt \ 116 71"' I. lll\duul
Sh 11.11 (I tl 71 Wed nod •Y 7 1' tn
Aln ort Bu. h~~.:l Ill. 11 \, Sh ~~~ ~ H ~· , l! h" 111

tl wmncrs

West

Salurduy ~ scwnd·ruund scun"N
M ~ry l.mJ (,7 1111 1 101~ hi
Anz11n,l K2 11111111! ~ SlUe 4~
West Vtrt:lllt.l 7'i C'ln~ um. 111 7-1
Ur.1h 7'i Art.ms.ls (IY

Cll Vll .ANIJ HK New Ymk !Pi (0 I )
New krsl'Y It»&gt; 1),,11.1~ 1J \

01lh~ l)()
Gohkn S1.111~

s~·m 1h 11

(llnll lk: lll.11 (IK 'i ) v~ l&gt;dph1" S1 J11h11 s ( 17
f1l llMMl ly H l ~p 111
I ma l S.ttunli.y 1 p m

ll cr hn HilmJ (2(J -'1

lJ llll \thy 7 pIll
l mtuu Mt lo:lilll y 111 1) 1' \'h'l• r\llk N
( tY ~) W~:dn&lt;.' .. lly 7 1•111
I 111.1.1 S 11Uf1ily 7 10 p Ill
At lluytun
l 1n l'rm~du n t21 J) ~ ~ IJ,,y (,rlond WIHI\
(1 1) 1) w.. ,tn~&gt;~.l.l y , fl l'ipm
( In Wuhro w (I~ f1) \\ (HI A 1h•u ( I I) J1
\\o~·lhii.'SI I I}I iC IIlii

IJ

W~.: ~ t~rn Kcmu~ky· r~nnc ~N-C.: wmncr n
~cn· lnw.l S 1 . 11 ~ W lllll~r

West Regional

l-1'~

1))

Ch11n1plunsh1p
Monday, Murch 2.1

Sunda)'. l\lqrch ll
SCII\II In.ll WIORl'fS

Salurdt~y':s ~cores
Scalllt.• I l-l MHU'IC~t iJ,iKU
W,islunJ!ltln K\ l1t.~rlnlh:KO

100

1))

llntn J .ty h \0 p m

I IIIII I

wuma

ChampMm~hlp

x dmclk:d pl.l}lllfl ht.-r!h

Phncn1"

llhnn1s

10 2'i IIIII

21
14'•

Ch•l t}!u tJb S,m A nlumn M6
Ph111tldplu t tJl M1lw.uth&lt;t• !ltJ
INIIVI.'f 1)2 Ptltd.llli.l M2

lOpm

AI Nalihvlllc, T•nn
Ntmh (' ll'&lt;ll\0 1 (2h 61 vs UC S,ml,t

(2M-7) v~ St,ulhll'l.J [2 11·-11 iC ll'i 11m
Rhmk hl.md (2-1 K) h v.lltlolfo\I SU t 2l

ra,lnc Olvlsmn

U)

SalurduJ'!I Hmlflnall

PurJu~

Ill

S.1n An!tlmu
Hnus1t1n

1Intern IliOn 1171

AI Amr1. luw~o~
(1 1 Y)vs 111",1 ~l.lh!(2\ 71 7 p 111
•
AI ChampaJRn. Ill.
ur S.ml~ B.ub.tr.l (27 'i) \1~ llhmu s (IIJ
910pm

fr•duy ' s ~r mlnno~b
AI The Ktrl CC'nlu, Sl. Luub

I.

ll&lt;~nd

Rur ~:c r~

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l)unluc iCO IA.·Htlll O'i

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Pn•hdon

»:
r. Ul.lh, ........ ,........................ 47

1.)

Kt:UntJ I"UURII Sl.:Urt'S

V 1I1Mr nsn Kl l lnnJ.1 S1.111.: 77
Rhude hl.m..J llfl K.m•ot\ 7S

17'

AI (uhun bu ~
I II\ UIIIntl 119 lJ ~ ~ lui

Tudu\''s suund-ruund sl11lt
At Knunlllc, Tcnn
Wcstt:rn KL"ntudy (;!!1 H) v~ hnn~~~cc ( l -1

Midwest Re~innal
Suntluy's

·· North Cnrohnn 91 Nur1h Cnrohn'a Charlollt

RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS

Fabregas htt a grand slam with two Mtnnesota Texas starter Bobby Wilt
outs m the lOth mmng and Anzona allowed n1ne hus and stx runs 10 five
beat Milwaukee 10 a spht-squad tnnmgs
game
Yankees (ss) 9
Blue Jays (ss) 8 (10 inn.)
Brewers (ss) 10
At Dunedm. Fla. Darryl StrawDiamondbacks (ss) 7 (10 inn.)
At Tucson. Am. Jeromy Burnttz berry. T1m Rames and Paul O'Neill
hll a solo home run tn the IOth mnmg htt early home runs, and Homer Bush
and Milwaukee defeated Anzona 111 homered m the IOlh mnmg to hfl
another spht-squad game Burn11z New York over Toronto m a spill·
had four of the Brewers' 20 hils and squad game
Tigers 6, Devil Rays 5
stole a base.
AI Lakeland, Fla., LUis Gonzalez
White Sox 10, Rockies 9
At Tucson. Anz. Maggho homered. tnpled and stole home m
Ordonez had four of Chicago\ 21 Detro•t' s v1ctory over Tampa Bay.
Blue Jays (ss) 11, Royals 3
hils, mcludmg hiS lourth homerolthe
At Hames Cny, Fla . Shannon
spnng. to beat Colorado
Stewart went4-for-4 w1th a lhree-run
Mariners 10, Giants 5
At Scottsdale. Anz . Seattle's Jay homer as Toronto's spht squad beal
Buhner hu hiS fourth spnng homer. a Kansas C. ty Stewart scored three
three run shot off San Franctsco runs .md stole a base
Indians 2, Braves I
starler Osvaldo Fernandez
At Wtnter Haven. Flu. Travts
Athletics 12, Angels 4
At Phoen1x, Jason G1am~1 drove Fryman hu a game-wmmng sacnfice
m four runs and Scot! Sptel ro home- fly m the bottom of the nmth as
red for Oakland Rtckey Henderson Cleveland deleated Atlanta. Denms
was htt by a pllch from Anahe1m's Martmez puched live shutout1nnmgs
Jason Dtekson and left the game wtth for the Braves
Orioles 5, Mets 2
a bruiSed left knee
At
Port
St Luete. Fla.. Rafael
Twins 6, Rangers 5
Palme
~ro
h1t
a three-run homer m
At Port Charlotte, Fla . Jayhawk
Baltimore's
wm
over New York.
Owens homered and doubled for

lmk p.: nd c u •~ ( I )I
lhmd.1y fl t1'opm

Diviswn I

~~

AI Ch11pt"l Hill, N C.

Ntlrth l nt•lm.l H'i

S~m1h11,11 Wll\llCf~

1

ll.1y

Sund:~y'1 vcond·round !'iL'OrrA

(humplunshlp
Suml~). Murch 22

1'1~~

'\ 1 1
.U,()

•1u.
7l•l tllll

Kcnlu~ky( l l 4)v~ UCLA(2-IMJ9'i9pm

20

(l()l

1(1

Oukc (l l l ) v~ Syr.•~u~(2bl'l)

I~ ·

Wr s~nmm Gr~..~n

llhn01s 112

Prlrnbur~,

~~

Ohio H.S. boys'
regional pairings

RUI&amp;Cn 79 Uregun 76
Iowa St.lh! 71J Kcm 70
UC San1.1R 1rh.IJ',\ 7fl Vandcrbtlt 71 (OTJ

Ftiduy'!i M.'mlfiniiiM

-"' Tn1p1cun11 fltld , St

12' •

714
701

14

I.cam
11.

~21

lmnhlt: \I WIIIIW I..

T~nnc~SL'\' 102 l..llxny ~H

UCI A K~ M1dt1g.m K2

9'

CONFERENCE

tt11dw~l

Mideast Regional
Suturday's finl·n~und ~cous
Wt: ~tc rn Kcnlm;kr KH S1cphcn F Au~1111 76

l&gt;ukc 71J,
S)r.ILU!&gt;C

!ill

Un1Mun 1\'
Ul rllnlllhmi 7J kwtll s~1" ~t&gt;
Gr 1111.hltW (r7 Wollhlll/.!1 1111 (_ lt1 'i 1J
Ktd\111\llld () lk StUi l ht; .l ~ll; rll iH N All.tiU \ -1 1J

S~mt ftn,ll WlllTICfS

S&lt;.,th Re~ionol

AUantlr:-l)hl~lun

NEED PROPANE FOR
Cooking • Heating Water
• Unvented Heater Construction
100 lb. Cylinder $2830 + tax
2·1 00 lb. Cylinders of Propane Gas
Installed, including regulator and
10 feet of tubing

learned was the •mportance o( the
mental s1de of baseball. · especmlly
from Merv, thai hiltmg guy "
That hmmg guy. by the way.
played 111 four World Serres and
coached m three.
Bench coach Rob f&gt;1ccrolo asked
Brooks how h1s hands felt after the
first round of BP When asked agam
later, Brooks sard 'Trust me. You
can ask thrs quest1on to a m1lhon
guys m Amenca. they· II answer the
same way- who g1ves a .. ? It feels
great to be out here "
So IS Brooks gmng to ask to htt m
today's g~me agamst Colorado'
" I d1dn 't ask to run today." he
said, still surpnsed at maktng hiS bigleague debut.
Elsewhere on Sunday
Red Sox 5, Phillies 0
At Fort Myers. Fla . Mo Vaughn
hll hiS SIX th spnng home run and
Boston beat Phlladelphta
Cardinals 9, Dodgers 4
At Vero Beach. Fla .. Mark MeGWire hit hiS fifth homer and an RBI
smgle as St LoUis defeated Los
Angeles
Diamondbacks (ss) 9
Brewers (ss) 5 (10 inn.)
At Hermos11lo, Mextco. Jorge

Champlomhlp
Monda}. March 23

S111urthly

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Dommion 111 the second round last
No. 12 Florida lnternationa172
year. dtd tt aga111. Andrade sparked a
Tracy Retd became North Carol•·
15-2 run that broke a 43-43 he and na's career sconng leader w1th 17
pulthe Lady Monarchs (29-2) 1n con- pomts and the Tar Heels (26-6)
trol. She finiShed With 18 po10ts and advanced 10 the regronal semifinals .
II rebounds. whtle Nyree Roberts for the fifth t1me 111 siX years. North :
had 18 pomts and 15 rebounds for Carohna went on a 17-0 run to take ·
Old Domtmon, the nattonal runner-up control after Flonda International
last year
(29-2) made Its first n10e shots.
Anna DeForge led Nebraska (23Retd ran her career total to 2.160
10) wtth 17 points. TheCornhuskers pomts She had been hed woth Tonya
shol JUst 39 percent
Sampson at 2,143 Gergana BranzoAt Raleigh, N.C.
va 's 20 potnts led Flonda InternaNo. 10 North Carolina St. 88
tional, whtch had won 18 strmght.
Youngstown St. 61
WEST
Chastty Melv10 's 19 po10ts led
At Iowa City, Iowa
five North Carohna State players 111
Kansas 62, No. 23 Iowa 58
double ligures as the Wolfpack (23 Freshman Jenmfer Jackson scored
6) advanced past the second round lor 15 pomts and Suzt Rayman I added 13
the first ume smce 1995 Ann Mane as Kansas (23-8) won for the 12th
Manm scored 14 pomts for 12th- time thiS season after trathng at half·
seeded Youngstown Slate (28-3). lhe t1me Jaclyn Johnson had stx of her
first Mtd-Contment Conference team II p01nts 111 a 16-4 run lhat erased a
to get past the first round
48-44 Iowa lead and put the JayMIDEAST
hawks 111 control Angela Hambltn's
At Chapel Hill, N.C.
season-high 22 pomls topped Iowa,
Buffalo's first VICtory th1s season
No. 7 North Carolina 85
whtch led 32-25 at halft1me:"
against a top--five team 10 the league.
Ptttsburgh was badly outplayed on
Saturday, but Tom Barrasso made the
d1fference 111 a 2- 1 victory over Buffalo

CONGRATULATIONS

as a Javelin thrower for Oklahoma
State.
Joyner sa1d the next t1me he's at a
Brooks concen, he wants to get up on
stage and help sing, prov1ded he
knows what the song's gomg to be
It wasn't the first time an enter·
tamer had a spnng trammg appearance with a brg-league club Mus1c1an
Bruce Hornsby once pmch-ran for the
Angels. and actor Tom Selleck struck
out for the Detrott T1gers.
Brooks. who JUSt turned 36. satd
he'd always wanted to work out with
a big league club. He got hiS chaoce
with the Padres because the team's
VIce presidept of marketmg, Don
Johnson. is a fnend of one of Brooks'
closesl1nends.
Brooks seems to have diStant
dreams of playmg mmor league ball,
a Ia Mtchael Jordan. But he also realIzes he's pretty good at hiS day JOb,
111 wh1ch he's sold more than 62 mrlhon albums.
Earher Sunday, Brooks got per·
sonal attentiOn from battmg coach
Merv Renenmund and former Cy
Young Award wmner R1ck Sutchlfe.
a Padres broadcaster and pan·ttme
mmor-league mstructor.
Brooks satd the biggest thmg he

Ch~mpion'lhlp

NBA standings

Both were sidelined by torn knee ligaments.
In other second-round games Sunday. North Carohna advanced m the
Modeast woth an 85-72 VIctory over
Flonda lnternattonalm Chapel Hill,
North Carolina State
beat
Youngstown State 88-61 1n the East
'" Rale1gh. N C , and 111 the West.
kansas upset No. 23 Iowa 62-58 m
Iowa C1ty.
In Sunday's late games, tt was
Connecttcut vs. George Washmgton
and Anzona vs Virgmta 1n the East,
and UCLA vs Alabama 111 the Mtdwest.
EAST
At Norfolk, Va.
No. 2 Old Dominion 75
Nebraska 60
Mery Andrade, who saved Old

I·

Long Beach outscored Columbus
from the floor, h1ttmg 28-of-54 field
gpal altempts for 51 9 percent while
the Quest was 21-for-52 for 40.4 per·
cent.
Columbus look a 44-43 lead on a
basket by Sttll w1th 5.08 left 111 the
th1rd quarter. and never trmled agam
But the lead never got above nme
pomts at any t1me
A 10-2 Long Beach run cut the
Columbus ad•antage to 75-74 on a
three-pointer by Davts-Wnghtsll with
1·321eft. but Edwards made it 78-74
wtth a basket at lhe 57 -second mark
and a free lhrow two seconds later
The Quest hit 8-of-9 free throws the
rest of the way
Still scored the first seven pomts
for the Quest, and Columbus led 1412 alter one quarter The score was
t1ed at 3J at the half

Sc1mli n.1l wm 1\Cr~

Sabres notch 3-0 victory over Penguins
By BUCKY GLEASON
BUFFALO. NY lAP) - Dunng
1he Olymp1cs. alta thetr Clech
Repuhhc teammates left the tee,
Jarmm r J.tgr and Dommtk Hasek
would sta) laic 10 find oul who was
beue r
J.t~r ,md Hase k. two of the world's
be' I ;, thetr positi Ons. went head-tohead 111 the ultimate challenge
belween ,, goal scorer and goaltender They were the best shootout§
nobody saw
On Su11day. Hasek was the wmner
He m.tde 22 saves for hts lOth
shutout and stopped Jagr With a
spectacular stop from close range 10
the Bu tfalo Sabres' 3-0 VIctory over
the Pittsburgh Pengums
'Everybody has been ask10g me
about Jarornu Jagr and who ts beller." Hasek sa1d " I don't know I just
try 10 not let htm score ·
Among hiS saYes were no fewer
t/lan SIX that would make any htghhght reel Among those SIX was one
agatnst Jagr when 11 appeared Hasek
was beaten 1n a scoreless game 111 the
second penod

Anzona sun the last month
Bochy told Brooks he was going
111 as soon a~ someone got on m the
stxth Wally Joyner h1t a leadoff single and was slated to come out anyway. Then Brooks. lhe guy who smgs
aboul "Friends •n Low Places."
found h1mseif 1n one, dtv1og back
mto first on left-hander Ben VanRyn's p1ckoff throw
VanRyn, a non-roster mvttee trymg to make the club, sm1led He sa1d
later that he's not a country music
fan.
Ump1re Ed Montague appeared to
be generous wrth h1s call After a s.:cond p1ckoff throw, Brooks hugged
Montague.
Greg Vaughn. who earher had
homered, then grounded into a 5-4-3
double play Brooks made a popup
slide mto second base, way too late,
then hustled off the field The Padres
won 4·2
"They asked 1f I was nervous. and
I smd I was too busy thinkmg, 'I can't
belteve where I was,' " said Brooks.
"It was great. It was a p1ece of AmerIcana gomg nght down my throat "
Brooks smd it was h1s secohd·
b1ggest moment m spons, behmd
wmnm~ a medal at the Kansas Relays

Basketball

Notre Dame, Harvard oust top seeds Texas Tech, Stanford
heal Nebr.tska 75 60 10 Nortolk. Va,
on Sunday ntght
Delendmg natiOnal champ1on
Tennessee lhe lop seed 111 the
M•de,JSI , plays Western Kentucky m
Knox ville on Monday mght, when
the second rou nd Will be completed
RU!h Riley scored all 23 of her
pomts tn Ihe second half to lead Notre
Dame 122-91. wh1ch rea&lt;:hed the
Fmal Four as a SIXth seed last year
and IS trymg to do 11 as a No 9 seed

--~

Scoreboard

NCAA women's tournament continues second-round play

By CHUCK SCHOFFNER
AP Sports Writer
First. 11 was Stanford. then 11 was
Texas Tech
The second round of the NCAA
women's basketball tournament "" ' t
even timshed and already two No I
seeds are gone. And both lost on thetr
home noor
Notre Dame stunned top-seeded
Tex:~s Tech 74-59 Sunday mght m
Lubbock tn a second-round Midwest

_l_

Padres give C&amp;W superstar pinch-run duties against Cubs

Anzon~ 82

(l)Aiizona

Anahetm ,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Baseball spring training continues

Connecticut 78

--· ., Oklahoma State 73
(9) Geo Wash !!i r

(12) lone 11

~

March 20 ;

- -

· --

-~

I

March 30

_..~

(8) ~ S'tai3; 74

Valparaiso, Rhode
Island upset FSU,
Kansas; Duke wins

st,tr player IS hiS son Bryce
Rhode Island upset top-seeded
Kans.ts 80-75 Sunday mthe Mtdwest
Regllnl.tlto re.tch the fin.tl 161or the
,ccond 11mc 111 schoolluslqry Earhe• on 1he same court tn Oklo~homa
Clly. V.dp.n.n'o hc,ll 121h-secded
Flonda Stale 81-77 111 overttme to
send the smalleSI school 111 the tour-

Wash•ngton 81
(11) WashingtOn
-

Texas

_ - --·- ]
:

lPurdue 80

(16) Radford &amp;3_ ~.

NCAA men 's cagefest ends round two

By The Associated Press
One game w11l be a family affair
Another will le.llure two schools w1th
atot.tl of 17 n.tltonai champ1onsh1ps
And .mothe• w1il be a dogf1gh1
belw een Husk1cs
Rhode lsland-Vaipannso UCLAKemu&lt;:k y .md Connecttcut-Wash mgton are .tmong 1he e•ght mat&lt;:hups 111
the final 16 of the NCAA tourn.tment
The most n1tngumg game mtght
be etghth-seedeu Rhode Island vs
No 13 VHip.lr.nso on F11u.ty ntght
Rhode Is land " coached by l1m
Harnck . who led UCLA to the
nauonal lttle m 1995, bul was fired
:~ fter the tollowmg season H.trnck's
sun. J1m Jr . 1&lt; an asm1.101 to Val-

J(3) Slanlord

09l!oill5

{1 ) Duke 9-4

-

Greensboro, NC
March 21

National
Championship
San Antonio,

St Louis, Mo '

1~

(10)~~~~~~~

-l

- f~l~P.!!I!J

!! J

1•1 Mlssossw 1111

114)

Firat round
March 12

----- 'fi

181 RhOde Island
Rhode Island
191 M111ay s~ - - - - -

Beach set a league playoff record
w1th 36 points before fouling out m
the final second or play. Andrea Nagy
also- fouled out for Long Beach,
Which comm11ted 35 wh1le Columbus
was called for 22
Three other StmgRays committed
five fouls, wh1le three Quest players
had four
.
Kat1e Smtth added 19 pomts. allm
the second half, while SonJa Tate had
15 and Tonya Edwards 12 for the
Quest.
Beverly W1lhams had 13 pomts
and Yolanda Griffith I0 for Long
Beach.
The teams combmed to make 61of-65 free throws. w1th Sttll gomg
10-for-11 and Smtth 10-for-10 as
Columbus was 38-for-43 from the
line. DaviS-Wnghtsil made allmne of
her foul shots for the StingRays.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (1\l') ValerJe Stoll scored 25 po .ts and
repeated as the playoffs' Mv Pas the
Columbus Quesl won its second
slra1ghl American Basketball League
championship wuh an 86-81 victory
Sunday mght over the Long Beach
Sung Rays.
The Quest opened the best-of-Five
senes by losmg tw1ce at Long Beach,
but won three straoght games on its
home coun Columbus has won a
league-record 26 consecutive trmes
On its OWn noor after losing thiS sea·
son's home opener
The Quest also took live games to
win last year's maugural ABL ttlle,
defeatmg the Richmond Rage m the
final game in Columbus. The Rage
moved to Philadelphia in the offseason.
Clanssa DaYIS-Wnghtsil of Long

.] Kansas 75

Prv~A&amp;~D_Zr

SIOnford 87

Second round
March 14

Regional•

MIDWEST

(II Kansas 110

(3)

Semifinals

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Millies Restaurant
675-7201
509 Main Street
Point Pla:mlla1nt

�Page 6 e The Dally Sentinel

Monday, March

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

16, 1998

r :Monday, March

16, 1998

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Senttnel • Page

7

Woman tells '60 Minutes' Clinton lied about encounter
By PETE YOST
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Saymg she ts
telling her story now because too
many hves are bemg rumed Kath
leen W Hey called Pres dent Cl nton
a har on nat tonal telev son and
asserted he made a sexual advance
that she reJected
Cl n on supporters rephed that tf
what Mrs W lley descnbed really
happened she would not have stayed
n au h w th the prestdent s office as
she has n the years smce the 1993
o, al Oft ce meetmg between the
two
Cl nton h 1 no dea why she satd
wh 11 she d d or whether she now
belte\e ha vhat happened satd
1Wh te House sta ement tssued fol
low ng Mrs W lley s taped appear
ance Sunday n ght on CBS 60 Mm
Ult:S

In a soft omet mcs haltmg vmce
M
W Iley satd the pres dent
embraced her k ssed her on the hps
touched her breasts and placed one of

her hands on hts genuals
I thought Well maybe I ought
to JUSt gtve htm a good slap across the
face she satd And then I thought
Well I don t thmk you can slap the
prestdent of the Umted States
I dtdn t feel mum dated I JUSt
fell overpowered satd Mrs Wtlley
5 I Later on I was feeling angry
I was there askmg a fr end who
also happened to be the prestdenl of
the Umted States for help
Her famtly finances m a slate of
collapse Mrs Wtlley needed to
replace her Whtle House volunteer
JOb w th a paymg poSit on Her hus
band commmed su ctde the same day
'S he met wllh Chnton on Nov 29
1993
Clmton s Iawver Robert Bennett
satd on ABC s Tbts Week that
there IS substanllal matenal of what
she has sa d whtch ts under seal
whtch has not been released whtch
senously undercuts her story
I thmk n fatrness t s tmportant
to note that there have been at least

five verstons of thts encounter for
mer Whtte House counsel Jack Qumn
satd on CBS Face the Natton
The prestdent has srud he may
have ktssed Mrs W1lley on the fore
head to comfort her but that there was
noth ng sexual
Is Chnton lymg Mrs Wtlley was
asked on 60 Mmures
Yes she rephed
Asked why she ts gomg publ c
wtth a story she once reststed telhng
she satd too many hes are bemg
told too many hves are bemg rumed
I thmk 11 s !tme for the truth to
come out
Two sources close to Clmton s
defense speakmg on condtlton of
anonymtty satd that after the alleged
nc dent Mrs Wtlley wrote Chnton
and h s personal asststant Nancy
Hem retch several ttmes and called
on several occastons seekmg to
speak or meet wtth the prestdent
The tone of her letters was con
ststently fnendly and admtnng satd
one of the sources In addtt on she

asked Hernretch m November 1997
two months before she gave a depo
sttton m Paula Jones sexual harass
ment lawsutt aga nst Chnton for an
mvllatton to a Whtte House Chr st
mas party the sources satd
In her testimony tn the Jones case
Mrs Wtlley satd that to the best of
my recollectiOn she had not com
mumcated w th Clinton smce leavmg
the Whtte House
Mrs Wtlley sad the story she was
tell ng on televts on was the same one
she swore to before a Wh tewater
grand JUry last week Chntorl mean
whtle has gtven a sworn deposttton
denymg her account The confl tcts n
thelf stones means that one of them
has commll!ed pel)ury m the prest
dents case an tmpeachable offense
Its not JUst sex ual harassment tf
11 s true 11 s sexual assault Patnc a
Ireland prestdent of the Nat anal
Orgamzauon for Women satd on
CNN s Late Edttton NOW has
been cn uc zed for fatltng to support
Mrs Jones m her lawsu 1 aga nst

Clinton espectally after the femmtst
group strongly denounced Supreme
Court Justtce Clarence Thomas dur
ng hts 199 I nommatton heanngs for
alleged sexual harassment of Amta
Htll
Mrs Wtlley s accusation
tf
true IS certatnly a much btgger
problem than a question of woman
zmg or a pnvate sex I fe Ireland
added
Newsweek magaz ne reponed that
W11ley told the Whttewater grand
JUry last week that she spent two days
at the estate of DemocratiC fund rrus
er Nathan Landow and he repeated
ly pressed her not to say anythmg
about her verston of the encounter
w th Chnton
Newsweek also satd FBI agents
obtamed records showmg that last
Oct 6 Landow s real estate firm
chartered a plane to fly Mrs W lley
from her home near It chmond Va
to Landow s estate on Maryland s
Eastern Shore
Landow s~ys he spoke to Mrs

Wtlley about her mental angutsll
over the Jones case but that any su'g
gest ons of wttness tampenng are
absolutely untrue
On 60 Mmutes Mrs Wtlley
dechned to talk m detail about
Landow an area of her story that ts
under cnmmal mvesugat10n by
Wh tewater prosecutor Kenneth
Starr s office
But she dtd speak about the pres
tdent s lawyer saymg I felt PillS
sured by Mr Bennett who told hJ:r
at one potnl n the Jones case that he
had 1ust been at the Whtte House
and the prestdent ask,ed for me a,Dd
told htm that he JUSt thought the
world of me She srud she found that
sentiment laughable
A fnend of Mrs Wtlley Juhe
Steele has satd Mrs Wtlley asked her
to he about the encounter wnh Clm
ton To that Mrs Wtlley satd My
own personal behef s that she was
pressured I thmk that the Whtte
House wanted to try to dtscredtt me
and they found a pawn m her

Sinking States targeting cigarettes as new source of tax revenue
oil prices
concern
industry
WICHITA Kan ('I.P) - Otl
producer Danny Btggs was oplt
n tst c tour nonths ago - the aver
age pr ce or otl wa close to $20 a
barrel and h s company was plan
n ng to look for new 011 fields m
1)9g
But b) tl e ume March amved
the P ckrel D II ng Co Inc had
hut otr 40 of tls 300 wells And
F tday as the pnce a t otl hovered
above $1 1 a b rre m Kansas Btg
g and other execuuves were try
mg to dec de whether wells should
be hut down lorever
You cut back every way you
can a d B ggs v ce pres dent at
P ckrell wh ch "based m Wtcht
ta I d dn 1 th nk I d go through
th agu n I don t thmk anyone
really thought thiS vould hap
ld wtnter the Astan finan
c al en and ncreased otl pro
duct o by nembers of The Orga
n zauon f Pet oleum Exportmg
Countne have cut o I pnces near
ly m halt m some areas That s
been good news for consumers
v h ga &lt;I ne pr ces droppmg
below a Joll r per gallon at some
pu np
But t ha forced U S otl pro
ducers 10 shu down wel ls and con
v need some rei a ed tndus res to
gel ut of a bus mess that has trug
gled ott and on tor years
II has meant the end tor many
mag nally economc wells whtch
produce an average of less than
three barrels of o I a day and start
los ng n oney when the pr ce ot otl
d op below $15 a barrel About
500 000 margmal otl wells can be
found throughout the Un ted
State but Texas Oklahoma
Kan sa I I no sand Oh o have the
n sl
Margmal o I well s produce I 3
m II on barrels a day about one
s x h of the nation s total datly otl
p oduct on Although they can be
ny o I we ll n my e the large
metal arms bobbtn 0 m the m1ddle
of a whea t etd 01 on tl e open
pr r e
The problem s tha he market
pnce o o I dropped from $23 a
barrel n September to the current
pnce of about $14 hough pro
Jucer often rece ve less than that
locally Vo at e pr cesare nothmg
new to the ndust y hut many pro
ducers compa e the recent plunge
to a t 986 drop that drove many out
of the bu ne
The Jnd pendent Petroleum
Assoc at on '' Amen a based m
Wash ngton on Fnday called for a
m rg nat "e t tax cred t that would
ktck n wh n o pr ce are low for
extended penod ot ltme
But B ggs company mus do
someth ng now
Producuon w II top at some
wells and dnlhng plan are be ng
recons dered Other p oducers are
do ng the same whtch cou ld nean
lower domesuc 01 I productiOn and
a greater dependence on tore gn
o I B ggs warned
When people reJO ce about
the low gas pnce they don 1under
sand wha the repercusstons are
dpwn the road he a d
But although the pr ce drop
does hurt producers to ng mar
g nal wells IAOU dn 1have much ot
an unpac on the o I tndustry satd
Stephen Bull an analyst a Jet
ft nes &amp; Co n Houston
I h nk s good 10 have those
shut down because 1 wtll he p the
pnces a I 1 le b t Bu z sa d The
large o I praduc&lt;rs - hke the
g ant offshore otl ngs - make a
profit even at lower pnces Butz
satd

Control and Prevention
The goal s to ransack the btl!
folds of a mmonly of taxpayers to
generate revenue satd Gary Aux er
semor v ce prestdent of the Nattonal
Smokers Alltance whtch clatms 3
ml lwn members
States often earmark the funds for
popu ar programs hke ant tobacco
educat on health care school con
structton even parks
Backers of htgher ctgarette taxes
say they want o recoup health costs
racked up by smokers and JUSt as
mportant make smokmg too expen
tve for teen agers to start
We know that k ds are more
pnce sensu ve to tobacco tax mcreas
e than adults and we mtend to use
that fact 10 our advantage Satd
Delaware Gov Thomas R Carper
who wants to double hts slate s ctg
arene tax from 24 to 49 cents The
btll comes up for a heanng March 25
Smokers tend to have more health
problems and end up costmg states
more mon ey parttcularly for Medtc
atd pauents accordmg to Donald J
Boyd d rec tor of the Center for the
Study of the States at the Rockefeller
lnsttlute of Government tn Albany
NY
Shen L Woodruff a spokesman
for Carper satd states like Delaware
have been encouraged by recent law
suus that have exposed what she
called tobacco company s decepllve
pracuces If ctgarette compames have
known all along that the r products
caused dtsease certa10ly the) should
have to pay for health care
We thtnk that makes some sense

By CARL WEISER
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - More and
more stales are ptckmg up a new
habtt raiSing c1garette taxes
Last year I0 states ra sed c gareue
taxes the most smce 1993 Thts year
more than half the states arc constd
enng tax mcreases mcludmg some of
the same slates that rat sed taxes last
year
And tax tncreases are gettmg btg
ger Last year Alaska alone more than
lr pled tis tax to $1 per pack the
htghest m the country
Thts year Delaware Gov Thomas
Carper wants to double the state ctg
arette tax whtle West V~rgm a and
Maryland want to quadruple thelfs
Loutstana Gov M ke Foster last
month predtcted a whoppmg b g
ctgareue tax
On top of all that Prestdent Clln
ton .and some m Congress want to
phase n a $1 50 per pack federal tax
ncrease And money could flow to
states and the federal government
under the $368 btlhon tobacco agree
ment pendmg m Congress
Pohttctans always want more
money satd Patnck Fleenor econ
omtst at the nonparttsan Tax Foun
dalton There s sort or a bandwag
on gomg on nght now demon zmg
ctgarettes It a an attractiVe revenue
source
Smok~rs not surpnsmgly are
fummg about the tax mcreases They
bel eve they re betng targeted
because they re unpopular About
one m four A mer cans smoke
accordm~ to the Centers for Dtsease

to recoup what taxpayers have been suffer
bearmg the burden of for so many
Smokers s mply w11l dnve to the
years she satd
nearest state that offers lower pr ced
But experts mcludmg the federal ctgarettes
government s own cigarette mon
When New Jersey s new 80 cents
tors say such tax mcreases can have per pack tax took effect m January
unforeseen consequences rang10g sales dropped 32 percent that month
from mcreased smuggh ng to a drop as smokers !locked to Pennsylvama
n tax revenue Some stud es 10d cate to buy ctgareues
htgher taxes won l even reduce teen
• Btgger government
age smok ng
States are !lush w11h money so
Among the consequence s
new ctgareue taxes are bemg chan
• More orgamzed smuggl ng
neted to new progt:ams Nat onally
A General Accounung Office Chnton wants to use tobacco money
report released Dec 9 satd mterslate for chtld care tmllallves n states the
ctgarette smugghng ts a re emcrg money IS almost always earmarked
mg problem The problem s that the for antt smokmg programs educa
dtsparuy between htgh tax and tow
twn or ch1ld heal h m ttallves
tax states ts growmg The smuggl ng
Addt110nal lax revenue always
costs states hundreds of ll tlhons or auracts orgamzed groups that want to
dollars m annual tax revenues the spend that revenue and are qUick to
GAO reported
prmm e soctal benefits tf only they
The Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco are allowed to do so wrote Dwtght
and Ftrearrns ha.~ tnpled the number R Lee an economtcs professor wtth
of ctgarette smuggl ng tnvcst gatwns the Center for Amencan Busmess m
n the pa.~ t five years the agency s St LOUIS
director told Congress last December
Some stud es have shown that
Ctgarelte smuggling has become a htgher pnces do stop teens from
Jucrattve cnme for Nauve Amencans
smokmg Carper ctled a study by the
and Russtan Mtddle Eastern and Nattonal Bureau of Economtc
Astan mafias John Magaw told the Research showmg that a I0 percent
House Commerce Commtllee
ncrease 10 pnce causes a 7 percent
• Poor people wt I be dtSpropor
drop tn youth smokmg
l10nately hll
But a study by the Center for
Smokers tend to be poorer and less Amencan Bus ness m St LoutS
educated than nonsmokers studtes found that htgher taxes don t stop
show Ctgarette und other s10 tax
teen agers or anyone else from smok
es htt people wtlh lower mcomes the
ng People Jltsl buy ctgarettes 10 oth
hardest Boyd satd
They may er rates on m htary bases lnd an
smoke more and pay more rather reserval ons or on the black market
than cut consumptton
Wtll tht crusade reduce smok
• Local Cigarette merchants Will
ng parttcularly among teen agers?

Probably not wrote Lee the eco
nomtcs professor who wrote the July
1997 study
lromcally the tlood of ctgareue
tax mcreases come at a lime when
state coffers are overflow ng w th
revenues The NatiOnal Conference
ot State Legtslatures satd state gen
eral funds are at thetr htghest potnt tn
17 years and I998 ts expected to be
JUSt as good
So why the ctgareue tax h kes~
In economtc boom ltmes espe
ctally stn taxes tend to be more
acceptable to voters than general tax
mcreases accordtng to Arturo Perez
a pohcy specmllst wtlh the Nallonal
Conference of State Leg statures
Moreover because ctgareUe taxes
are set at a cenam amount per pack
(rather than a percentage) they need
to be adju ted penodtcally lor nfla
t on Boyd satd
In fact taxes made up about 30 5
percent or the medtan retatl pnce
($1 85) or a pa-k of ctgareue In
1996 almost exactly the same pro
portion as a decade earher satd
Thomas Launa a spokesman tor the
Tobacco Institute the ctgareue mak
ers trade assoctallon
Ftnally tobacco compames have
lost a lot of clout n recent years Pub
he optnton ha.~ become more and
more ant• tobacco and parents
mcreas ngly alarmed at the nse m
teen smok ng
There s no mdustry under fire m
qutte the same way the tobacco
mdustry ts Maybe not ever Launa
sad

Congress looks to partly curb incidence of teen smoking
By PAUL BARTON
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - A Congress
that doesn I care much for last year s
tobacco settlement nonetheless seems
ntent on workmg out a nat anal
obacco policy that at least takes a
stab at reducmg teen smokmg
S gn ftcant stumbhng blocks
rematn but the chorus calling for
acllon tht s year grows louder
Tobacco reform ts the ssue of
I998 s:ud Sen Tom Hark n D
Iowa It IS the crown jewel or thiS
Congress
Prestdent Chnton has started a
camp ngn to goad lawmakers mto
acuon noung that wnh every passmg
day an esll mated 3 000 ktds start
smokmg
A thousand k ds a day ts too h1gh
a pnce to pay for another years
delay he satd
And p omment Repubhcans votce

Poht cal fear could be entenng
mto he equation
I th nk there wtll be legtslauon
satd Rtchard Daynard head of the
Tobacco Products L t gatton ProJect
at Northeastern Umverstty If Con
gress does nothmg Repubhcans v II
thmk
they up
are by
rea IIhe
y womed
aboutI
be beaten
Democrats
,1
Already more than a half dozen
b lis have been mtroduced but Sen
ate Republican leaders have gtven
Sen John McCa n R Anz the JOb
of deve Iop ng th e one Ihat w II ma ke
It to the Senate floor
McCan s atm s to auract a btpar
usan consensus as well as Wh e
House suppon and the support of for
me Food an d Drug Ad mtnlstrauon
head Dav d Kessler and forn er Sur
geon General c Everell Koop
He ad m Is 11 may be utop an to
say we wtll get all of them bu we are
cert1 nIy gong to try sa1d McCatn
atde Nancy lvcs
McCa n target date for de&gt;elop
ng leg slat on 1 March 25
The only htng clear s that Con

concern over nact on

I m convmced we have to doth s
th s year satd Sen Omn G Hatch
chatrman of the Senate Judtctary
Commlllee

u

The Lewis Family
with
Little Roy &amp; Builder's Quartet
March 21st 7 pm

gress IS not go10g to rubber stamp the
$368 5 btlhon tobacco selllement as
t was presented by state attorneys
general and mdustry lawyers last
yea
Many thmk the settlement does
nol extract enough financtally from

the mdustry Others oppose tls pro
tecttons for tobacco co~pan es
aga nsl future class actton Jawsutts or
say 11 would do nolhmg to help tobac
co growers Many want a suff new
ctgarette ax to further dtscourage
sales

r=========T-=========-r====:;::=::::::::==:-r-=========
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE SHERIFFs
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
;)hto Revised Code Section
2329 26
•tate of Ohio Melge County
Bank One Athena N A
Plaintiff
Freedom Road Foundation
t I

~~~e~d:nta

Case No 97 CIV 116
In pursuance or an 0 rder
ol Sale In the abova 1111e d
action I wilt oHera lor aala
at public auction Friday
April 17 1998 at noon at the
door of the County
Courthouae Secon d Slroo t
lh •
Ohl o
Pomeroy
following deacrlbed roat
eotate
Situate In the VIllage of
Pomeroy County of Melga
StatooiOhlo to wit
Being a port olthe weal
end of Lot number one
hundred eighty nine (189) In
ea td vttlage
Beginning et the
northeast corner of the
George Addison tot on the
south aide o I BuIIernu I
Street Thence aouth 64
dogroeo 8111 177 1/2 Ieet t0
8 stake on the aouth aide of
Butternut Street Thence
south 21 degree• weal to
the north aide of the road

Pubhc Not1ce
running from said Butternut
Street over the htt to
Rutland Thence westerly
by and along the north atde
of said Rutland Road to the
easter1Y corner of said lot
heretofore told by Thomaa
Irwin to Charles J Whitaker
Thence along said
Whitaker 8 north Uno to the
corner ol said Addlton • lot
along the
Thence northeast
dA
line o1 sal bddlson a lot to
1 1 1
lh~~~~~~l~gl~~r~~~~
three
1
small paces
thareo1 aa
follows
one place
Jheretofore
h H 1convoyed
d 11 by
oala untoyan
wdeta
S
Joseph tarka by aad
dated December 19 1864
one ptaee baing that part of
uld tot conveyed by Josiah
Huntley and wile to Phillip
Miller by deed dated
September 28 1864 and

Public Notice
being Lot number two
hundred three (203) In aald
VIllage of Pomeroy said lot
lacing on Butternut Street
of aald VIllage with a
lrontene of sixty feet
according to the recorda
01
IChoe Atyuditor 1 office of said
un
Parcel ldenllllcallon
numbers 16-00382 000 and
16-02320
000
Deed Reference
"olume
•'
Page
Meigs
County
43
6
Ollfclal Recorda
Alao known 81 124
S
P
8 uhllloe4Srnu1 treet omeroy
769
0
Said premlaea are
d $2
d
appratae at 5 000 00 an
cannot be aold lor llltlhan
IWo-lhlrda of that amount.
All Shariff 1 Salt~ operate
under the doctrine ol
Caveat Emptor Proapectlve
purchaaara are urged to
check lor Ilene In the ollfce
one P,tece ol uldd tbol of the Malgo County
hareto
11 ore
A convaye
s
d
dy Recorder The Meigs
Made ne
aun ora afn
County Sheriff makeo no
Alonzo D Saundera to F
Gilmore by deed dated guaranlll 11 to statue of
January 8 1880
title
priorof
to Sate
ule 10% down
Terma
Alao another parcel aha at lime of accap~n•• of bld
lollowa number 2 Alao I I with balance In"'lull
- within
lottowtng real estate 30 daya
aituated In the VIllage of
Pomeroy County of Meigs Jamea M Soultby Melga
and State of Ohio and County Sheriff
(3) 9 1B 23 3 tc

at Southern High School
Food served at 5:00 p.m.
Tickets at
Racine Home Nat'l Bank
$6.00 each

Among the deas percolatmg on
Capllol Htll that McCam and hts
Senate Commerce Comm1ttee w•ll
have to cons der
• Imposmg a $1 50 a pack tax
mcrease 1mposed over two to three
years

Alzhe1mer s Support Group
Tues March 17 1998 7 p m
Pleasant Valley Nurs1ng &amp;
Rehab Center
For more tnformatton call
Carol Barr at (304) 675 5236

Public Notice
Road lnteraecta with RoU1e
124 thence with the
centerline ol Route 124, s
02 33 • Eh 153 97 feat to
a po1nt at I e canter o1 a
bridge thence N 37' 11 32
E 24 91 feet to the trua
point of baglnnlng aald
point Ia atao In the
Northerly right of way line
of Route 124 thence
1eavtng •• td r1g hI ol way
11 ne an d a1ong a aevaranca
line through the property of
Douglas Chapman DB 309
Pg 395 (Four Calla) and
following the centerlne or a
"·It a)
eme 11 crae k 1or (1'wo""
N 2'2513 E ~
.... 17 1eel N
35' 20 37 E 60 51 fill to a
point lhence leaving uld
creak s 54 • 08 43 'E
313 52 feat paaatng an Iron
pin at 2000 feet to an lrjln
pin S 41' 28 39 W 184 01
feet to an Iron pln In the
Northerly right of wey tine
of Route 124 the nee 1 1ong
aatd right alway tina N 48'
31 21 W 248 21 leal to lie
point of BEGINNING aM
•·tnl ng 1 00 Acree
con..
FOR LAST SOURCE GF
TITLE SEED B 324 pg 551'
the
County Ohio
Dt~da Parcel
No 1HI0025 001
Property Addreae Route
Box 28 Rutland Ohto
4576g
Publlc Notice
Slid premia.. ore iocatld
SHERIFFS SALE OF REAL
Route 11 Box 28
ESTATE
Rutland Ohio 45789 Seld
CASE NO 97.CV-083
premtua ware apprelaed 11
THE STATE OF OHIO
$44 000 00 and cannot 6a
MEIGS COUNTY
IO!d for leas than Jwo..thlrde
MID-STATE TRUSt IV
of that amount to wl\
PLAINTIFF;
$28,333 33
VS
TERMS OF SALE 10"
KEJ.LY 8 CHAPMAN ET AL
11 She rille Sale
DEFENDANTS
IB11tance on Delivery ol
tn pursuance of an Order
of Sate In the above enlltlad
II Souloby Shettfl
Malga Counl}l Ohio
action I will offer lor ule II
pubttc auction lnalda the David H McCown Attorney
door of the Courthou11 In
311 Park Avenue
Meigs County Ohio on the
Ironton Ohio 45838
10th day of Aprtt 1998 11
(814) 532-87&lt;M
11 00 am the following
2 B 18 3TC
deacrlbed real 1111lte
SitUate In the Townahlp of
Rutland Malga County
Ohio BEGINNING et 1 point
In lha centerttna of Route
124 uld point Ia where the
centerline of Com Hollow I--:--_._ _ _ __;..

LOHG'S

CO"STROCTIO"

• Vmyl S1dmg • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildmgs
• Room Additions
Over 20 years experience
Free Estimates

Call 614e843·5426

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

Public Notice

CORRECTED NOTICE OF and described aa follows
SALE
to wit Being In Section
By virtue of an Order 0 ( Number Twenty live (25)
Sate laaued out of the Town Number Three (3) and
Common Pteae Court of Range Number Eleven (11)
Melga County Ohto tn the of the Ohio Compeny a
au of Cheater Proffitt et Purchase and being the
al Plalntlllo va Peerl North one hall (1121 ol the
Proffitt et at Delendanta Southwaat quarter of
upon a Judgment therein Section Number twenty live
rendered being Caae No (25) containing Eighty (80)
94-CV 223 In aald Court 1 acres more ot leae and the
wtn offer for aala altha front right to Ull so much of the
door of the Courthouse tn surface as Ia nacaeaary lor
Pomeroy Matg 1 county operating and removing the
Ohio on the 17th day of ••::rerence Deede Vol
April 1998 at 10 00 a m
the following Ianda and 314 P 441 Vol 314 P 433
tenements A complete Vol 303 P 799 Vol 303 p
legal dtacrtplton ol the real 798 Vol 298 p 475 Vol
eetalele 11 followa
290 P 217 Vol 288 p 803
PARCEL NO 1 The Meigs County D11d
following premises altuata R~oprpd~ataed
Velut
In tha Townahlp of Lebanon $2 BOO
00
County of Melga and Slate
Parcel No 4 The
of Ohio and In tha Ohio
p
h
d
lottowtng
raal eetate
Company 1 urc 811 an oituated In the
County of
bounded and cleacrtbed aa
lollowe Being 8 part of tOO Malga In the State of Ohio
acre or 5th Dlvtaton Lot No and In the Township of
Lebanon bounded and
188 and Sect Iona14 and 15 doacrlbod aa follow• All
Townahlp 2 and Range 11
particularly bounded as that portion off the
fottowa Beginning et the following deocrlbad land
Southaaal corner of Lot No lying Northweat atde of
188 thence North ole etone State Routea 124 and 338
at the Northweat corner which are the same Known
)hence Weet 27 polea and 6 and dealgnalod aa Filth
ttnka to a post thenca Division or 100 acre Lot No
South to a etake on tho 194 In Sections No 20 21
bank of the Ohio thence and 22 In Town 2 Range 11
with the meander• and up of the Ohio Company s
tha aame South eaoiWardty Purchaae which wae
drawn In the
I0 lh 8 PIace 0I bag 1nn 1ng ortglnatty
dlvlalon ol land of the Ohio
making at right angle the Company 8 Purchase to one
eame width and front at the altha ahares In the name of
south and as at lht North Alexander Hamilton and lor
and which Ia 27 poles 6
links containing 76 end further ducrtptton aa
Beginning at a
148/1801h1 0 I an acre mora lollowa
stake or poat In the Eaat
or taea And being the aamo line off aeld 100 Acre Lot 60
property conveyed by laaac teat South of the
Parr and Ruth 'Parr hit wile Intersection of State Routea
10 Robert F Johnaon by 124 and 338 and running
deed dated April 20 1853 with aald Eaet ttne tn lho
and recorded In Book 16 at
Pege 324 of the Deed Northerly direction to the
Recorda of Metga County Northeast-corner of said
Ohio
Lot thence In a W11terty
Except a river bank which direction acroaa aald 100
h Acre tot No 194 to the
waa sold to Pfaff and Smll Northwest corner of said
Builders Supply Company tot thence In a aoulherly
See Deed Record Vol 161 direction with the West tina
Pego12
Reference Deeds Vol 4 of aatd 100 Acre Lot no
194 which Is the line
Page 133 (0 R) Vol 314 P between aald lot and land
433 Vol 288 p 475 Vol
290 p 217 Vot 288 p S03 now owned by Lloyd Harris
lletga county Deed to a poattn said llne20 rods
Recorda
South of State Route 124
Being a part 01 Auditor 1 thence acrose aatd Lot to
Parcel No 07-ootl78
the place of beginning
Appraised
containing 65 acreo more
$6! BOO 00
or tees
tt Ia agreed and
Parcel No 2 One
underetood by Iormor
II
d
I
I
• Hundred Acrao o an Yng Grantora and Granteea that
In the Townahlp of Lebenon
• County of Metga and State the Granteea shall have all
, pi Ohio attuated In minerals and the rights to
Townohlp Two and Range operate
the
aame
underlying 15 acrea more
11 olthe Ohio Company 1 or
lese acrose the South
' purchaaa Which tncludn end of tha above deecrlbed
-t)le entire 70 Acre Lot No premises 11 Ia further
, 189 and thirty acres off the undoretood by and beiWeen
Weal and tower eld'e of 100 both parlteo to lhlo Deed
•ere Lot No 188 plettod and thaf a Iormor Grantor haa
1Joun4ed 81 follows raaerved unto himself hta
Beginning et • atone or heirs and aaalgna ell tho
,taka on the bank of the
h
River at Gaorna Cummings mlnerato underly 1ng t e
•
bolence ol tho obove
upper corl)tr thence North described land with the
.with said Cummlnga line to right to teet and operate tho
e atake at the Northwest
f:Orner of aald 70 acre lot 181~~. further agree and
thence Eut ol the
Northtaat corner of the 70 understood by the Grantors
acre lot thence Eaat on the and Grantees that a former
North tine of 100 Acre Lot Grantor hla heirs and
No 188 10 Isaac Parr 1 aaatgno ahall have a right
Northw"l corner thence of way 121eet wide from tho
State Road 338 North along
• ;&gt;outh with Parr • Uno to the tho East Uno to the aouth
River thane• down tha
River to the place ol end of this property
"anlnntnn containing 1OO. Excepting therefrom 45
" •
•
ecros mar~ or leu
acrea more or teas within conveyed to Lloyd Harrla
the Ohio Company e and Suate Harris by Arthur
Purchue and lor a Roush and Sadie Rouah by
particular doacrtpllon of the deed dated September 2
premlaea reference Ia had 1948 recorded In Deed
t!l the Ohio booka And Book ltiO Page 486 of
being the aeme property Meigs County Deed
ccnveyed by Edward Roush Records It ta Intended
--.nd Julia A Rouah his however to Include and
wilt to Robert ~ Johnaon convey herein the free uao
by datd dated February of the aprtng that waa
24th 1863 and recorded In rt~erved In the daed to
Book 24 at Page 600 of the Lloyd and Susie Harris
deed Recorda of Malga 1 uld
«;oun~ Ohio
a oBrel
th part ol the
Reference Deada Vol 4
e ng
e
R)
Vol
p
aamo
real
eatate conveyed
314 441
133
(0
P.
to Sadie M Routh and
Vol 314 p 433 Vol 288 P Arthur E Roush by dlld
.475 Vol 290 P 21J, Vol recorded In Deed Book 160
218 P 803 Malt!• ounty Page 84 olthe Meigs county
Died Recorda
Deed Recorda
Being a part of Audltora
Tho leal pravloue
:Parcel No 07-ootl78 and all conveyance of the proparty
of Parcel No 07-ootl79
Ia recorded In Dead Book
Appralud
Value 175 Page 463 Dlld
~~~~0 3 Oil and gaa Racorde of Malga County
Ohio
rlghte convey•db Y Mayme
Thle deed Ia Intended to
and Leroy Homea to John convey 17 acres more or
Proffitt Relarenca Deed 1111 or 111 on the Northweat
Vol 141 Page 477 Dead
Ide 01 Stela Routaa 124
Recorda Melga County •
Ohto aa loltowa attuated In and 338 now or formerly
the County of Meigs State owned by the 11111 .Harry
Swan
of Ohio end In the 1iownahi P
Except 1 acre oold to
of Lebanon ancl bounded

CELLULAR PHONES
Galllpotta Ohio 45631

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

(614) 992·3838

12/18/ltn

Jt Call Me II
'I Buy Accumulations•
Cottectlblea Antiques
Mtacettaneoua
Households etc
Jean White
74()..245 9448
Public Notice

BAUM LUMBER

Public Notice
Robert and Elizabeth Faye
Proffitt as dtscrtbod tn Vol
178 Page 449 Deed
Recorda Melgo County
Ohio
Reference Daeda Vol 4 p
133 (0 R) Vol 314 p 441
Vol 314 p 433 Vol 298 p
475 Vol 290 p 217 Vol
288 p 803
Being Auditor a Parcel
No 07-ootl80
Appraleed Veluo $11 300 00
Parcel No SA Tho
following real eetate
eltuated In the County of
Motge Stale of Ohio and In
Lobenon
Township
bounded and daacrlbed ao
follows to wit
One
ttundred Acre Lot No One
Hundred and Eighty three
(183) Sections Noe 13 14
and 15 In Town No Two (2)
In Range No 11 Ohio
Companya Purchaaea
except three lourtho of an
ecre (3/41hs) on the Eeat
elde of aatd lot deeded to
the M E Church Also
except the Pioneer
Graveyard In the South Eall
corner of said tot deeded to
the Trueteaa of Lebanon
Township In Molge County
Ohio and further except
Two rode of land u11d 11 a
private burying ground
situated on the East aide of
aeld Lot and directly In front
of the M E Church above
referred to
Excepting 1/4 acre mora
fully dtscrlbed In Volume
168 Page 262 Meigs
County Deed Recorda
Also the coal underlying
tho above deecrlbed
premises Ia hereby
reaerved and excepted alto
tho exclusive right In
perpetuity Is reaerved and
excepted to use so much of
the surface above
described as mey be
nece11ary to open and
operate and equip a mining
property wtth bulldlnga
railroad awltchea necessary
to mining property with
bulldtnga railroad switches
neceaeary to carry away
said coat from aald
premlaea atao lor drainage
and deposit of relu11 and
the right to haul through
and over said premlaes coal
and from adjacent
properties end lhe grantors
to be relieved from any
surface damage by reason
of mining lor coal under
aald promises
Any eurlaco land required
lor use aa above by said
grantors or any pafaon or
persona now or In the
future owning eald coal and
other right excoptad and
reeerved or either or both
aa elated aloreoald to be
paid lor at the rate of
$300 00 per acre
Reference Deeds Vol
314 p 441 Vol 314 p 433
Vol 393 p 799 Vol 303 p
789 Vol 298 p 475 Vol
290 p 217 Vol 288 p 803
Vol 149 p 584 Meigs
County Deed Recorda
Being Auditor a Parcel
No 0Nl0677
Appra aod Value $74 000 00
Parcel No 58 Alto the
following premtaaa altuatad
tn the county of Meigs and
State of Oh o and In the
townahlp ol Lebanon and
bounded and described aa
lotlowo A triangular place
of land Included In the
dooryard ol the dwelling
house of Emetine L
Blcknel Beginning on tho
Eaet Uno of Lot No 184
where the lance ol the front
yard croaaaa tho Uno and
running parallel to the
public road eighty IWo feet
thence at right anglea with
aatd ttno running Eut ol N
Seventy-eight teet along the
aide ol the dooryard fence
and aida or wash houae to
the lntoraectlon ollhe E"aat
lint of Lot No 184
aloreaald thence South on
aetd East line to the place of
beginning and with all of the
appurtenancn lencea
gatu walt summer houaa
shrubbery fruit treoa waoh
houaa ate In and on aatd
tot of land aa alorauld eald
No 184 being known aa Lot
184 In Town 2 Range 11
Ohio ColiiPany a Purchaoe
In Malga County Ohio
Alao the coal undarlylng
the above ducrlbed
pram1a11 Ia hereby
ra11rvld and excepted aleo
tha exctuatve right In
perpetuity Ia reaorvod and

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding
Insurances
20 Yrs EKp
Ins Dwne R ck Johnson

"-..•

JEFF WARNER INSURANCE
113 W 2ND St

Free Eatunates
446-4759
441 1191

Lumber Building Mlllorlale
CUllom Built Roof Trueae•
Polo Barn Pockttlfl
Toro Wh11t Horae Tractoro
Hot Springe Spll

Custom Homes

Opon 7 30-5 00 Wookdayo

Remodeling

~~

"

~l

/lltCgTQUYC ID9WICC tubi!IHHCl

&gt;.

•mrgramtJ

c/5 ~

I'0
Q..

.c ~
~i

tfwl

QC£ hclnful for,

•dmmrc palll •mwsclt strwrulsprams

•chmnic fattgue

•.rtreiJ
•arthrrtu

'•I" m ••J•rylpontnlwn
540 WEST UNION STREET
ATHENS OHIO .-5701

~~

Joe Wilson

3171(TfH

JANICE S HAYNES, BA, MT
iuJ
MASSAGE THERAPIST
!

U'

- Your Dream"
"Build
1998 Martin Street

POMEROY, OH

614-992-5479

M&amp; J

7 30-4 00 Saturday

46384 SR 248 ChHt

Public Notice
excepted to Ull ao much of
the aurlaco 1bova
deacrlbed •• may be
neceaaary to open and
operate
equipbuildings
a mining
propertyandwith
railroad awllchea necesury
to carry away eeld coal from
said pramtaea atao lor
drainage and depoeit ol
refuse and the right to haul
through and over eald
premlaea coal and from
adjacent propertlea and the
grantors lo be ratlovld from
any aurlaca damage by
reaeon of mining lor coat
under utd promllll
Any surface land roqutrld
lor uoo aa above by aatd
grantora or any person or
peraona now or In the
future owning aald coat and
other right excepted and
rooervod or allher or both
aa alated aloroaald to be
paid lor at the rate or
$300 00 per a,cre
Reference Deeda Vol
314 p 441 Vol 314 p 433
Vol 393 p 799 Vol 303 p
789 Vol 298 p 475 Vol
290 p 217 Vat 288 p 803
Vol 149 p 584 Melga
County Deed Recorda
Being Auditor 1 Parcel
No 07-ootl81
Appraloed Value $50 00
Parcel No 6 tho
lottowlng
deecrlbod
premlaea ellualed In the
Township of Lebanon
County ol Melge and Slate
of Ohto
Being 100 Acre Lot No
182 In Townahlp No 2
Range No 11 ol the Ohio
Company 1
Purchaae
containing 100 acrea mora
or lou excepting about
6 26 acrea on tha North aide
thereof
which wu
conveyed by c M Brown
and Lucinda Brown his
wile to Jamea H Hughee
by deed recorded In Volume
69 Page 77 Melga County
Deed Recorda
Furthermore excepting
unlo Clair C Boao hie hetre
and aaalgna forever all that
part of aald 100 acre lot
which !lee South of the
Stata Route No 338 and
deacrlbed aelotlowa
The following real eatele
being In 100 acre Lot No
182 Lebanon TownShip
Melgo County Ohio
described aa lollowa
Beginning In the center of
State Route No 338 on the
Eaol line of 100 Acre Lot
No t 62 thence South 995
feel to the Ohio River
thence Southeaat along the
Ohio River to tho East tina
of aald 100 Acre Lot No
182 thence North 1057 8
feet to lhe center ol Stale
Route No 338 thence 60
dogreea North 20 woe!
647 221eot along the center
of eald State Route No 338
to the place of beginning
containing 13 2 acrea more
or Ieee aubject to all legal
hlghwaye
and atoo
excepting all tho land aouth
of the above deacrlbad 13 2
acreo which may be
Included In 100 Acre Lot No
182
The foregoing being part
of tho real estate which wea
conveyed to Ctatr C Booo
by deed recorded In Deed
Book 187 Page 698 of the
Matgo County Deed
Recorde
Reference Dteda Vol
314 p 441 Vol 314 p 433
Vol 290 p 217 Vol 288 p
801 Vol 222 p 59 Melga
County Deed Recorda
SubJect to Flowage
eaaemenll to the Untied
Statu of America recorded
In Vol 225 page 721 and
Vol 225 page 713 Melga
County Deed Rocorda and
to all other luau
oaeementa and rlghta of
way of record
Baing Auditor'• Parcel
No 07-ootl76
Appralead
Value
$8300000
Real Estate Appralaed at
Parcel No 1 $81 500 oo
Parcel No 2 $95 000 00
Parcel No 3 $2 600 oo
Parcel No 4 $I 1 300 00
Parcel No 5A $74 000 00
Parcel No 58 $50 00
Parcel No 6 $63 000 00
The real Illata cannot be
aotd lor taaa than IWo-thtrda
the appraloed value
Terme of Sate Caah on
delivery of deed
Jamea M Soutaby
Sheriff of Matga County
Ohio
(3) 9 16, 23 30 (4) 8 13 8
tc

...

360° Commumcat1ons

PHONE (7.0) 694 2227 FAX (7.0) 594 6624
'AMTA M&lt;mh&lt; 'Lie&lt; .. &lt;J /ry Om St• &lt; Mtd c•l &amp; .. rd

m_e_ro_y:.:_O_h.,l_o~45~7~6~9--,......-(:.,6..,1J4ii)~92i92ff-4L.tlll2M.71l171J' .~====Ac=c=•p3tli:ng==Worl&lt;:•:":c:o:m:po:•:•:•':"':":P:•':'":"::":1 31=m~o

••LP_o...

~~~~~~:c~~~~l0
~ JD CONSTRUCTION
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages Pole Bu ldtngs Roofmg Stdtng
~
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs exp
l1censed &amp; Insured

;:..
~·

C

Phone

Nl'&gt;
:t..":
-...
iii'

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vtnyl Stdtng New
Garages • Replacement Wtndows
Room Additions • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

7 40-992-3987

FREE ESTIMATES

Free Estimates

614-992-7643

Owner John Dean

(No Sunday Calls)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals
BEAUTIFUL GIRLSI
900 407 778 E" 1399 $2 99
M n Mus Be 8 Se v U 619
645 8434

Giveaway
Beau lu Puppy Black Mathe
AKC Go den Re eve Fathe
Unknown 74()..379-2639

YOUNG'S
bllnstWodt
We do C.stom Bending

SUSIE

Converter Back $84 9S

Rome for the
.ElderI'

Most Cars

Used llres 12.00 to lS 00
Stnkt Joll$16 95 4 qt all

At

General Repatr Work
Sugar Run Ashland
190 Mulberry
Pomeroy
Phone 992 9949

260 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992·7147

SAYRE
TRUCKING

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

985 4473

.

.

7/22/tln
.

Linda's
Custom Cakes

.

ALL OCCASIONS
Birthdays Holidays
Weddings Showers
Anniversaries
Graduations Etc
Home Bekery Licensed
and Inspected
Pies and Cookies
(740) 843 5544
Portland Ohio

Ji121Wl 1mo pd

LIMESTONE
Spec1al Thru
March

8 ton Delivered

$120
Mileage Umit
Call

Randy

992-5050
McFEE ROOFING &amp;
PAINTING
Specializing In
New Roofs Roof Repalra
Gutter• Interior &amp;
Exterior Painting
Drywall Repair
Low111 ra111 during the
winter months ol
Jen Feb Mar
Oulflly Work Gurr1ntHCI

Free Eat.• Fully lnaured
1-614-992 9057
Middle rt, Oh

Hauling Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
I
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rates
I Joe N Sayre

I
I!

I

CARPENTER SEVICE
•Room Additions
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing
Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete w~ rk
(FREE ESTIMATES)
VC YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy Ohio

60

$300 REWARD

Fo e u n of blaCklb own Ge man
Shepha d aken om Ed h Rog
e s fa m on Redmud R dg8 An

swe s to name Chance
1 800-287 0576

70

Yard Sale
Galltpohs
&amp; Vtcinlty
A1J. Yard Sa es Must
Be Pa d n Advance
PEAPLINE 2 00 p m
the day bela e he ad
Is to un sunday
~ on 200pm
F lday Monday edition
10 00 a m Saturday

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime
Limestone Gravel
Drrt Sand

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vrctnlty

985 4422
Chester Ohio
0/25MM

All Verd Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance Dead lne 1 OOpm the
day befo e the ad 1 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday ed lion
1 OOpm F day

614-742-2138

New Hours
Tues Fr 10 6 Sal tO 4
Closed Sun &amp; Mon
• Aeromatherapy Candles
&amp; Essen! at Otis
Easter Baskets
Handmade Stuff Rabb IS
Ass011ed Wooden Angels
Bnng you odds &amp; ends
and we w II f !I them
Rt 124 M ners lie OH
740 992-4559

No

ques ons ask Ca John Roge s

Re L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

(Lime Stone
Low Rates)

COUNTRY CANDlE
SHOP

Lost and Found

80

Auction
and Flea Market

90

Wanted to Buy

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

Sotl, Ftll Dtrt
614-992 3470

Top

1

P/8 Contractors Inc.
I •Bobcat Servtce
!•Concrete
Constructton
!·Masonry Constructton
!•General etc
Commercial and Res dentlal
24 Hr Bobcat Service
Ava lable

Free Est/males
No Job Too Small

Brian Morrison
(740) 985-3948

WILL RAULJUST CALL.
992·2646
Gravel Limestone
Topsoil Ftll Dtrt
Sand No Minimum
(RcasonaiJI• Kales)

RACINE MOWER CLINIC
Parts and Serv1ce 11
Mowers Chain Saws Weedeaters Authonzed
Dealer For
Briggs &amp; Stratton MTD Murray McCollough
Echo Ryobt Roper Rally Hydro Gear
ANOOTHERSI
Bnggs &amp; StroHon Master SerVIle Techntctan
Outdoor Power Equtpmenl Association (ertlfted 2 ( yde
State Route 338 At Vine Racine Ohto
(614) 949 2804
3 12;118 tin

CHECK THE
WANT ADS FIRST!

B~~ S~ll or Trade
~ In ""e ,ii ~"' 1

CtASSIFIEDSI

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ey

�Monday, March 16, 1998.

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

~

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

al pos~10n at Meigs Cooperative
Parish at 311 Condor Street Applications will be taken until
March 20 t 998 If you have
quest10r1s call the office at 740992 7400, Tuesday Friday 9am

bperlenced Ch•ld Care Available

441 9806

haul your togs to the mill just call
Pamtlng Plumbing Remodeling
Es

Soulb
3•

Pml

Will BabySit I n My Home
Hours Caii74Q.388 9689

•••••••
GREAT PAYI

5•

BARNEY

01 Spending Your Eve•nlntjS

Drivers

p1ckup load

Home Most Weekends!
85% No Toudl Fretght'
CDL·A &amp; t Yr OTR Roq

UP THAR

•••••••

TH' HOUSE

FRUSTRATED? NO REAL AO.
VANCEMENT POTENTIAL 7
GLASS CEILING?
If you a1e employed and !eel you

304·675·5035

Credll Problems? We Can Help
Easy Bank Financing For Used

210

I

Vehtcles, No Turn Downs, Call
Vlcl&lt;le 740-446-2897

Business
Opportunity

Upton Usad Cars AI 82·3 Milos
South of Leon, WV Financing
Available 304-458·1069

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busl
ness wuh people you know

are 1n a no gam sifua!lon you owe
II to yourself to cons1der JOmmg
the Loewen Group ThiS Is a htgtl
Income profession rapid ad vancement potential and sell
satlsfactton helpmg famtlles For
vour last job mtervtew call Steve

NOT to send money

ma11 until you
the offering

have in~&lt;iSt~Jat&lt;•d '

720

I

Have An Avon Party In Your
Get A Free G1ltl Call

falfa /Orc hard Grass Mlxeq Calf
740·446·2412. Or .f.800·594-

HOW TO STAAT AND OPERATE
YOUR OWN PROFITABLE BUSI·

9635

An Avon Independent Sales

\ Representative

NESS AT HOME Free Informa-

t ion, send business size SASE
to AB Hall At 1 BoK 476-B Galll-

740

polrs Forry wv 25515 Supplies
Are Limited WRITE TODAY!

379-2303
Immediate openmgs !or CNA PT/
FT ReqUires WV ce rtifica tion
Must be able to work all sh1fts
Excellent benefit package lor FT
employees Contact Sandra ABit·

II you have an established business and unused parking space,
you may qualify to be a U·Haul
Dealer If rnterosted call 800·282·
1
8575

mire AN DON 304·675 0860
Ext 124 Laktn Is an EEO Em -

230

ployer
MEDICAL OFFICE

Professional
Services

Large square bales of Timothy
$1 75 bale MIXBd hay $1 50
Grown on Crabcroek Ad 304-6752741

Discount Mob1le Home Parts &amp;
Accessones Water Heaters, VI -

M1xed grass
985-3902

nyl Sklrtrng Klls $299 95, An·
chors WoO&lt;! &amp; Fiberglass Steps,
Roof Coatings Doors, Windows
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Supplies,
Blocking Wood &amp; Wedges And
More! Call Bennatt's Mobile
Home Supply At 1-7-9416

lc, air,
runs

Pomeroy, 4 bedroom.
stove &amp; refrigerator, rof•oren1ces
no pets, call 740·992·6886

Datalb Saod Corn Kay Farms
Call 304·675·1508 If No Answer

baths
$1 ,699/down $259/mo Only at
Oakwood Homes Nttro, WV 304·
755-5885
1998 Ooublewide 3br 2

Middleport Park Recreation 1s
now taking applications lor l1le
guards Appllcauons can be
p1cked up at Village Hall between
8am-4pm Monday through Friday

Set Up And Service Of Manufac·
tured Homes ·Eliperlence Ae·
qulred Apply At French City
Homes Inc 269 Upper River Rd .1
Galllpolrs OH 741).446 9340

All real estate advertising m
th1s newspaper IS subject to
the Federal Fa1r Housmg Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes tl 1llegal
to adverttsa any preference
l1mttat1on or dtscnm1nat1on
based on race color rellgton,
sex famtltal status or national
ortgln or any mtentlon to
make any such preference
11rnttat1on or d1scnminal10n •

Shirt Presser

Needed For Card1n·
al Dry Cleaners 19 Ohio A1ver
Plaza Gallipolis, Apply Wednes·
day M,arch 18th, Be1ween 8 AM
&amp; to AM Will Tram

The Career Opportunity 01 A Lne
tlme One 01 The Nations Prem1er
Mortgage Co Will Soon Be
Openmg In The Ohio Valley In·
fin1ty Financial Solution Inc
Takas Pride In The Highest Qua~
lty Customer Service And EKten
slve variety Of Programs At
Some 01 The Lowest Interest
Rates Available In Todays Mar
ket We Are Now Accepting
Resumes From Seasonal loan
Officer And Experience Mortgage
Procusor Ca ndidate Should
Have Allea st 1 2 Years Expert
ence And /Or College Degree In
A Related Fteld Our Success r
Has led To Unimaginable Growth (
And Unlimited Opportun ity For!

Thts newspaper wtll not
knowmgtv accept
advertisements for real estate
WhiCh IS In VIOlatiOn Of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised .n thts newspaper
are available on an equal
opportuntty baSIS

REAL ESTATE

Located Johnson's Mobile Home
Park, Eastern Avenue With Ex

pando, 741).446-2003

New Doublewlde Aepo, 4
rooms 2 Baths Easy Terms. 1·

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Polly's - 6 Ulod FumhutW
Wa now have l&gt;rmy Surpluslll
21 Ot Joflor!on Avo
Open 9 30 • 500 Mon&amp;l
304-675-SOFA (7632)
$75, Dryer $75, Eloc·
$75, Waohar 195,
1 Year Warranty
78 Vlno

1 Bedroom Trailer Close
polls, Nice Clean With
Hoot-Up, $250/Mo. $200
lt, References Required, 74tli·UB·i

Jadoion, Ohio I·S00.537·9528

992-6563

Bleach and Sev·
TRANSPORTATION
on Day Joo uo Friday April 3rd,
7 30 at North Parkersbflll Baptist I' ::-:-::--:---------1
~~rch, call 74tJ.949·3098 for d.. 710 Autoa for Sale

t 994 Jeep 2 Dooro, Auto, Air,
39,000 Mileage, St t 500, 740·

large yard, 740·742·2714

Goods

Move! 1980 Windsor Mobile Home , Remodeled, Lennox
Heat Pump 2 Bedrooms. Dish·
washer Built In M1crowave 3

New 1998 t4x70 three bedroom
Includes 6 months FREE lot
Includes skirting, deluxe steps
and setup Only S187 08 per
month wlttl $1075 down can 1·

800-837·3238

Homes for Sale

Army Surplus
fuilllna of
In time for
turtcey

WHITE~

740

Building
Supplies
r

BloCk. brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245·
5121

New House Or Barn Trussals

42x60 Ft Wllh 10 · t 2 Roof Pilch,
Construction Coast $8,600
Sell $4,800, 740·894·9400, 74tJ.
886-5405

560

Motorcycles

750 Boats &amp; Moto111

-4336

selection of

, new and used boots, lots of new
and used camo, sizes 2 months
to 4X, backpacking and camping
Items. kid's clothu U S mada
1 • Smith &amp; Wasson knives and Jots
2 Bedroom trailer references &amp;
1
do posit 304·875· t 076 Leave more Coma and check us out
Wo are opon 8 30am·6 oopm
message
ovaryday Call us at 740-992·
7093 Of 1.60Q.J46.8176

0

BIG NATE
NATE

NATE

I

Asking

1994 Yamaha 2~0 Tlmborwolf 2
WD, Red, Adult Driven $2.600,
Stove 740·448·4 t 72 740·256·
1819

IIETAL DETECTORS

1986 Olds 98 Regency Maroon 4

for Sale

Struts, Asking $3,995, 740-446·
0795

1989 Bass Tracket t 811 fiber·
glass flsh/atl boat wlt50hP,. ·
Johnson trolling motor, axe.
cond $5,600 304-675-1178.

Dooro, Excellont Shape, Now Motor, Transmlulon, Tires, Starter &amp;

t 990 Pontiac Grond Prix LE, Automatic, AC, Stereo Cassette,
95,600 Milos, $4,000 Negotiable
Clood Condlllon 740·448Attor 5:30 ~M

LL~~~~~Lj~~~

Nonb

Pus
Pass

Eaot

4NT

Pass

5.

Allpaos

By Phillip Alder
Vtclor Mollo wrote four delightful
books about hts menagene of players.
The lhtrd, "Mo.-ters and Monsters,"
has been republished by Balstord
($22.95 posl pmd. 800-274-2221)
After opemng w11h a crazy pre·
empt. Kampet. the self-procla1med
unlucktesl player m hiStory. refused
to show hts ace because somethmg
always .went wrong when he btd a
slam '
Kiuapet wrote out the NorthSouth hands for a group at the
Gntfms Club. "What do you do at
tnck two'l Don't worry Whatever
you do w1ll be wrong You lead a
trump, but East shows out and your
queen faUs to West's ace . Back
comes the Jack of spades. If you
finesse, the ktng wtns, and the spade
return locks you m the dummy.
Should you go up with the spade ace
and lead clubs tn the hope of dlscardmg your two losmg spades, West
will ruff on the third round. There' s
no escape . The odds agamst gomg
down must be at least 30 to one."
The H1deous Hog. perhaps Mollo's alter e.go, could stand it no
longer
"I wtll wm 12 tncks Attnck two.
I lead the dtamond I 0 and ... "
"You happen 10 be in the dum·
my." protests Karapet
"On the contrary, you happen to
be in the dummy. bull happen to be
m my hand. for I overtake dummy's
hean kmg wtth my ace allnck one 10
run thai dtamond 10 Lei East wm
with the bare jack. if he has tl He can
do no harm. and I shall knock out the
diamond ace before Wesl can le;~d a
spade.
"Of course. tt's a different story
on an openmg spade lead Fancy get·
ling a heart t You lucky devtl, Kam·
pet'"

PEANUTS

SOMETIMES I LIE AWAKE AT NIGI-IT, AND
- I WORR'&lt;, AND WORR'&lt;. AND WORR'( ...

THEN A VOICE COME5TO ME OUT OF
THE DARK TfiAT SA'(S,"WE UNDERSTAND
'(OUR PR08L.EM .. DETAIL.S AT ELEVEN"

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipher cr,"Ptograms are created trom quotetlons by famou~ peop4e past and pr..-.t
Each letter rt the cipher stands tor another Today'sclt.HI I ~~~ W

. wy

v

M 0 B Z.

G B F V

RUC

HVBLVH
HOGGR

There's no
way around it,
Classified Ads

I

Expanence
Are Encouraged To Apply Fak
Resume To 717 346 5261 Or
Call Toll-Free t 888 779 4437
Finance Company

1993 Mazda 929 loaded, very
nice 30H75-1226
t 993 Tracker LSI 82,000 Milos,
Trailer Hllch, $8,800 740·446·
2739

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
wheals &amp; radiators o &amp; A Auto,
Ripley, WV 304·372·3933 or I·

t 994 Ford Probe GT w/20,000
, miles numerous extras, axe
coRd Blue book $12 700
$10000 firm 304~75·52n'attor
lspm
t 994 Mercury Cougar XR7
trlc Rod, 8 Cyl , PS, P8, PW,
Leather Interior, Double Overhead Cam, Wishbone Suspensio,, Air Bags, Excellent Condl·
1
tlon, Adult Driven, Well Taken
Care Of 44,000 Miles Tate Over
Paymenta, 814-44fl..7527 After 5

Ask For Mr Halley

I

I

WILDLIFE JOBS TO 12110/HR ,
INC BENEFITS Game War
dens Sec unty Mamtenace, Park
Rang ers NO EXP NEEOEO
FOR APP. AND EXAM INFO
CALL 1·800·813·3565. EXT
1475. I A M • 9 P M, 7 DAYS
fda,lnc

1995 Chryolor Concord 29,000
Milos Tilt $13,000, 1995 Jeop
Cherokee Country White &amp; Gold
$18,000 740·258-6495, 740-2581249

I

SERVICES
Home
Improvements

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1 Unconditional

lifetime guarantee

Local references furnished Ea·
tablllhad 1975 Call (740) 448·
0870 Or 1·fl00.287.0578 Rogero
Wattrproofi1g

l

Tuesday, March 17, 1998

FARr,l SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenance· Painting, vinyl siding,
· carpentry, dooro, windows, balhl,
mobile homo repair ond """" For
tree esumate call Chtt, 740·992·
1

832:l.

Farm Tiactor $2.800
Farm Tractor $4,000
" 741).448., 428

The Spring Rush,
mowtra &amp; trimmers
now. Slda~s Equlpmant

son.wv

840 Electrical and
Refrlge111tlon

IResidential or commorctal wlrtng,
1new service "' repairs Ma~\llr Ll·
censed electrician Ridenour
iEloctrltal, WV000308, 304·675·
1766

(IABWVA)

OXOBZ . '

OCSIT

3

One old timer to another, "I
remembP' when the prescnbed
drug o: cnotce was - - .. - •

I I;

Rl8 E IO Nl I 19

8

IO

Compleoe the chuckle quoted
by ftllmg m the mtssmg word$

you develop from step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED 11
LfllfRS

SCRAMUTS ANSWfRS

Touche - Ratny. Frank· Fngtd ·FIND the RIGHT
We are so ternfied of domg the wrong thmg that we

MARCH16I

IN

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1996 Dutchman 18ft oxc cond
loadect. no down payment, a&amp;·
SIJ1ltlioan 304-675-5522

:810

aw

I I I I 1· I

' 80().273-9329

790

CZWBG

MADNOL

11-t: !'CRCE
euoGET PRICE TRANSIItS·
SIONS, Used /Rebuilt, Alll'ypaa
Access Over 10,000 Transmls·
slons, &amp;Cfutchea 740-245-56n

B H

YUI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Its easter to get a health care plan through Congress
lhan 11 ts to get a piCture made todav • - Robert Evans

I MONDAY
l~tlt~LICA~~~ P.IPI'~I&lt;

Comprehenstve Med1cal Plan H
You Cons1der You rse tl Highly !
Ambi tiO US And Self Mottvated
Don 1 Let This Opportunrty Pass
You By Individuals With Bank Or

TUAXVW

scazz .

1111110\&lt; 1 -lVSl' fQ.T ~N
993 Dodge Shadow V·8, 5
Speod Runs Good, Looks Good,
$2 750 080 741).258-6169

RUC

BW

WVAABPGV

B H

HVOHUZ

TUUWPOGG

may never FIND the RIGHT thtng

Kawaaatl STS Jot ski, still undo!
warranty.. lhree seater 83 horae·
power, bought new July of '97,
three matching Kawasaki ski
vests and trailer all go. with It:
$5000, 741).949-2203 or 74tJ.9ol9wlll
trade for a

GEO Strom G.S I Exc
po pb, air, auto 740-:lllfl.

Wool

~urcea

L--.1.--.J.---L.__.J.__-1..--1.

1995 17ft. Pro Craft Baas Boat
12·24 501b thrust trolling motor,
90hp force engine, looks like
new $10,000 304-862·3852

Pets for Sale

Offer Top Pay In The Industry
Patd Vacations &amp; Holidays And

from 8 OOam-3 OOpm until 3120196

0

0

$16500080 304-675·5332

Ron Allison 1210 Second Ave,nua, Gallipolis, Ohio, 740·446·

Our Employees We Currenlly

WELL TENDER NEEDED apply
In person at J 0 Orlihng Campa
ny. Aacrne Oh io Must provide
own transporta!LOn applications
accepted Monday thru Friday

FEE.T'

flat:'

1998 Chevy 4wd t/2 ton, cruloo,
tnt, am-fm cassette

Jackson, Ohio t ·S00.537·9528

2x10

31 o

~ITO~ I-\'(

37~2726

Specie! 3/4 200 PSI
Par 100, 1' 200 PSI
Per 100, All Brass Com·
Fl~lngsln Stock
.
EVANS ENTERPA18E8

Must

$8,900, 740-367-Qolt5

l'lo\ &amp;01 t-IC. TO

rn:fZit-16 OJT

tires, $7000, 740·698 7019, 741).

Tk:kets tor sale

Sporting

2 bedroom, In """'"'""

.....

1992 Cltevy 5-10 81azar 4 3L, v.

6, two door, air conditioning, new

8()().383-6862

Year Old Refrigerator, Kitchen Is
land, Deck Included Askin g

~~?

f'DT C.UP Of (J)(J:)I\?

I

and
, 74tJ.24H292.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Uprrght, Ron Evans Enterprises,

934.2
t 4x70,

COfo\IN&amp; ~{,fiT UP I

Vtl, \2!:!:::~ I-JOJLD'\'00 fll( IAE. 1\

....

clea11, looks

1991 Plymouth Voyager All
Wheel Drive 94,000 Miles Only
1.000 Miles On New Transmission From Dodge Dealer At Cost
Of $1,700 $6,500 Coli After 6 ~M
/Boloro 1000 ~M 740-245-9487

~ ..... Mauage

420

....

U89 GMC Safari Full Custom
Van $3,950 741).448-4222

530pm

9621

LIMITED OFFER

,,

1989 Bronco IJ 4x4, V-8 automat

Large selection of used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starling at S2995
Quick dehvery Call 740·385·

ment dedtcated to qual1ty care
Back olftce skills a plus Sched
uhng mterviews ASAP Resume
to BOK CW 9 c/o Point Pleasant
Register 200 Mam St Pt Pleas
ant, WV 25550

(LAss.

1988 S·tO Extended Cab 4x4
$3,000, 1976 Chevy 314 Ton 4K4
$1,000 7~Hlt32

3426

pnortues High volum e environ-

YOGA

THE BORN LOSER

Mo , Only Oakwood Homes, Bar·
bounivllle, WV, 304·736-3409
Glenwood, Palestme Rd Mason
Co 1989 3 Bedroom mobile
home &amp; 314 acre land Appra1sed

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

740·

1984 Ranger H, Auto, 4x4 Top·
pot $2,700 814~9355

Huge 28x80 3BR I 1/2
Starting at ONLY $39 999 Many
options available 1·888·928·

essential Organized people oriented enthusiastic person preferred Ab1llty to manage multiple

hay for sale,

3 Bedroom, $995 Down, $199/

$29,700 sell for $27,000 No
calls anar 8 oapm 304·562-5640

Immediate ope nings for e~pert­
enced lront desk workers 81 11lng/CPT and lCD 9 coding/In
surance skills and computer fa ·
mlllarlly and good phone SkillS

$5,500, Factory Big Bloclc 454,
110.000 Milts
(304)451-111111
1990 Dodge Dakota v.e, 3 9 Utar,
Excellent Condition I 740·245-

tttt

8363

Home And

Trucks for Sale

111118 ChovyTI'\Ick
Custom 30, Black In Color, Loaded, Body In Rosl Good Sitepe,

Hay Round And Square Bales Al-

Earn $104 To $160 In 1 Day, lnv
lie Your Friends Over To Your
Home For A Professional Glamour Portrait Party Call 1-80()..42&amp;-

Smith al6 14 992·7440

robin a
8 Medical aufflx
9 LPapeed
10 Media
magnate
Murdoch
11 Juicy fruit
12 Water

19 Pen point
22 Imitation gold
, 24 Took In, a
f--+-+--1
aalary
26 Tamarl1k AH
tree
28 Foray
30 Certain
courting lOng
34 -of doll
35 Portland'•
I leta
36 Clumsy, alowwiHed pereon
36 Novelist
Jane39 Char.cter on
Fraaler
40 Writer'• need
42 E•ceulve
44 Endu49 -to Joy
50 Temp. unit
52 Soak, .. flax
53 Playwright
Bent

Self-inflicted
bad luck

TILL I TIDY UP

FINANCIAL

Call Ken 800 395 t045
Evenrngs (7 30 ·tO 30) &amp;
Weekends 800-893-6792

5 In the past
6 Comedian
Jerry7 Food lor

Opening lead: • Q

KEEP HIM

OL' BULLET RAN
HIM UP TH'

W1ll haul JUnk or trash away $35/

GREAT FREIGHT!
GREAT BENEFITS!

Answer to Prevloua Puzzle

34 SpJ~nllh dance
37 Like a
doornail?
40 Lima's country
counte~pJ~rt
41 - de cologne
13 Glacial epoch 43 Twofold
(2 wda.)
45 Veneration
14 lJnchule
46 Grlddara' org
15 Pre..nt, •• a 47 Health resort
gill
48 Oriental temple
16 Flutist Jean·
51 Realltlea
Plene 54 Wore awey
17 Medieval poem 55 Member of a
18 Neither Dam
governing
nor Rep.
board
20 Darkroom abbr. 56 Back out (of a
21 Opposite of
promloe)
ecto
57 Makes amends
23 Female rei.
24 Units of energy
DOWN
25 Antlto•lns
1 The- Belt
27 Chide
2 Atlantic and
29 Alps, e.g.
Pacific
abbr.)
3 Dwell
31 none- ...
32 Bullfight cheer 4 Have lunch

1 Of northern
region•
7 L.end'a

Vulnerable. Neither
Dealer· South

9648 614·367·7010
Or Weekends Ootng
Call 740 446 4818 Alter 6,
Help Cleamng Supplies Provided
Reasonable Rates

33 Upr.,.r

l

tQt09854
• 42

Proless1ona1 Tree Serv1ce Stump
Removal Free Estimates! Insurance 81dwell OhiO 614 388·

T~red

---

• 9 8 76

• 54 3
• A9

14 x70 3BR $999 Down &amp; ONLY
S159 per mo Free a1r &amp; free skirtIng t 888 928 3426

Any And All Odd Jobst Free
bmates 740.245-5151

K87 6

Soutb

can 304-675·4678

Dependable And Flex1ble Cerh ~
fled Nurs e Aid Needed For In
Home Care Call Adnanne Or An
gle I 800 48 I 6334

Gall1pohs

32,000 Miles Still
Asking $20,000,

12x65 Trailer 3br 1 bath $5,500

304-675-1957

.
e

e75432

• 5 3

Lincoln Town Car, Signature

10x50 mobile OOme 1973 model.

sale top quality 1n waterless
technology from ET I Call Scali
Smith 0 304 682 3972 Aeta11 01

In

Eut

• J 10 8
• Q J tO 8 6
+AJ 3

Joc.JtiWAU S'T:'5'

Mobile Homes
for Sale

740-742 2803

Georges Portable Sawmill don t

Dealers &amp; Dist ri butors Wanted
Great money makmg opportunity
car, hOme l'lealth bOdy care pro
du cts available For demo &amp;

Housekeepe r

320

Phillips 740·992-6576

8 00·4 30

740-245

EEK&amp;MEEK
'~SEX L(FE: Of

Furn1ture repa•r reflmsh and res
torahon also custom Ofders Ohkl
Valley Relmlsh1ng Shop Larry

Bates Bros Amusement Co
Must be 18 years or older Ffee
to travel Call 740 266 2950 M·F

eAQ2
eK
+K762
•AKQJtO

.

0~

9 Acres 3br doublewlda modular
home, detached 2 car garage
Asking $50 000 304 576·2972

Near Holzer Hospital, Accepting
Ages 4 + Any Days /ShillS 740·

Avon $8 $20 /Hr No Ooor To •
Door Easy Cash Fun 1·800·
736-0168 1ndlslslrep

Al lstla Rojas At

Condlton, 64,000 Milos, 740·387·

8251 After 5 PM

1

------~~p~m-------- 1

reel I 800 820 6893
163062

1991 Ford Taurue Very Gooct

3 Bedrooms, t t/2 Bsltls Tti·Lev·
al Spring Valley Area, 740·446·

Applications and )Oil dllscriJtlons
available for a pan tme secretarl-

ACROSS

PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) Usually we have to work quite hard to
reap even small rewards. Today,
however. Lady Luck mtght interv~ne
and drop a few plums into your lap.
Trymg to patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph Match·
maker can help you understand what
to do to make the relauonship work.
Matl $2.75 to Matchmaker. c/o thts
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758. Murray
H1ll Stauon. New York. NY 10156
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) Keep
your lmes of commumcaltOJI open

today. because you finally m1ght _get
through li,J someone you've been anxIOUs to confront Do nol g1ve up now
TAURUS (Apni2Q.May 20) Conltnue to keep your focus on unusual
developments that could have an
effect upon your matenal well- betng
today Opportuniues abound.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Do
not become dtscouraged today tf
early developments aren't workmg tn
your favor Later you may find ade·
quate reasons for hopefulness and
optimism
• CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Today, you m1ght benefit from an
ilrmngemenl thai dtd not ongmate
wtlh you, yel you 'II be treated a.s 1f
you· re the author
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you take
11me today to study all the aspects and
allemaltves. your JUdgment will be
)een. espectally in an arrangement
thai reqUtres negotiation.
VIRGO (A~g. 23-Stpt. 22) The
more s1gmficant the stakes, the ~I­
ter you 'II be able to handle them
today Elevate your s1ghts m this

cycle, do not mod1fy or lower them
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Your
four-leaf clover IS sending oul good
vtbes today. so listen carefully to
what tl has lo say A calculated nsk
could be necessary
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) You
mtghl ha\e some dtsrupttons m your
domesttc roultnes today, yet you
won' t mmd them, because they'll
stem from happy developments
you've been vtsuahzmg.
SAGITTARIUS ,(Nov 23-Dec.
21) Exctttng news could be in the offmg today relatmg to an endeavor you
share wtlh another Thts unique
alltance has promising potential.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19)
Larger than usual returns are lrkely
today from an endeavor in the works.
J{pwever, don't abuse its generosity,
because 11 has a ltd on tis hm1ts
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)
Somethmg could develop for you
today through your soctal contacts
When auending any gatherings. be
sure to sm1le and to acknowledge
everyone.

..

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page 10
Monday, March 16, 1998

Ann says man needs a vasectomy - not a bfgger house for his 22 children
Ann
Landers
IW1. lm Angeles T111\Cl
and Cr.::•h•rl

S~ml1c~tc
S)·ndiCa!C.

Dear Ann Landers: Recently,
read in The Washington Post about a
situation where maybe you can help.
Please, Ann, consider it. Here's the
news s1ory :

Police arc searching for a bigger
home for a Largo, Fla., man, his 22
children and two of their mothers
after finding all 25 living in a twobedroom, one-bath house.
The two mothers are sisters who
-have taken the man ·s last name,

even though neither is married to
him. One is the mother of nine of-his
children, the other the mother of
five. A third sister who no longer
lives with the family is the mother of
the other eight ch ildren. police said.
Police said they discovered the
family while investigating an unrelated complaint in the neighborhood.
They said the family was not breaking any laws and appealed to the·
public to help them find a house
with five or more bedrooms they
could afford.
Ann, according to the dictionary,
"bigamy" means to marry a second
time while knowing the first marriage is legally still in effect. No
marriages means no crime. Am I
right about this ' Please respond in

the paper, Ann. That man in Largo
needs your help. -Dismayed in Va.
Dear Dismayed: The man in
Largo did not ask for my help, and
it's just as well. I would have been
tempted to give htm more "help"
than he bargained for. He seems to
think his problem would be solved if
he had a Ngger house. In my opinion, what he really needs is a vasectomy.
. Dear Ann Landers: I own a
small but profitable business and
have made it a' practice to give annual bonuses based on time served and
category of sa laries. I've been doing
· this for 16 years. Only two employees ever said "thank you." Th0se
two are no longer with me . One
passed away, and the other one took

early retirement. ·
I have decided to give no bonuses this year. Of course, there will be
questions because .my employees
have come to expect that midyear
gift. I am prepared to give this brief
response : "There will be no bonuses
this year because not one employee
has taken the time and trouble to say
'thank you."' .
Please print my letter and your
reaction to my decision . -Philadelphia
Dear Phil.: Congratulations for
having the courage to put an end to
the handouts. For years, I have been
receiving letters from aunts, uncles,
grandparents and friends who want
to know what to do about gifts that
are not acknowledged . I suggest

they ask if lhe gift was received
since tbere is always the possibility
that it was lost in transit.
·
In your case, however, that possibility docs not exist. I applaud your
bravery and hope others who own
small businesses will follow your
example. People who can't crank up
the energy to say "thank you"
should not continue tJ be gifted and
let off the hook.
Dear Ann Landers: Raben M.
Hutchins, a tru.ly brilliant man (he
became president of the University
of Chicago at age 29), made this
pronouncement: " We have triumphantly invented, perfected and
distributed to the humblest cottage
throughout the land one of the greatest technical marvels in history, tele-

vlston. And for what? To bring
Coney Island into every home." Do
you agree, Ann?- J.H.E.
Dear J,H.E.: Hutchins was
indeed brilliant , but TV has
improved enormously since he made
that statement. He would be aston,
ished if he could see what splendid
fare TV offers today, especially on
public broadcasting.
To my dear daughter, Margo:
Happy binhday. May they all be as
joyous as this one.
Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calir. 90045

Early retirement still an option for many
By ED PETERSON, MANGER
Social Security Office, Athens.
by Bob Hoeflicn
While there is some indication that
early retirement is· no longer the
attraction it once was, Social Security data shows that more than half of
The Meigs County Common Pleas historic nearby Amesville communi- beneficiaries are retiring before age
65. For many, it's simply makes sense
Courtroom has been overhauled and ty the weekend on May I.
Art exhibits, historic homes, busi- to stop working as soon as possible.
it looks great.
More and more people are looking
Tying in with the improvements is nesses and points of interest within
a plan by Common Pleas Judge the village such as the Coonskin at their options however. Chief
Frederick W. Crow to collect as Library and Underground Railroad among these is the fact that they
probably have a longer time to plan
many photos offonner judges of the stops will be a pan of the tour.
on
living in retirement. They have to
If
you
need
information
or
have
court as possible and this is where
make
sure they have the resources to
any
input
for
the
planned
tour,
you
you might be able to help.
handle
the longer period. The fasiest
can
reach
Jim
at448-7269
Judges date back to 1819 with
growing
age group are people over
Fuller Elliott, Horatio Strong and
age
85.
Did
you
happen
to
catch
the
prime
James E. Phelps have served from
Social Security pays retirement
then to 1821. Chances of getting time television news type show
benefits
as early as age 62. Howevphotos, drawings or paintings of for- which charged that some of the
er,
benefits
are reduced five ninths of
Who's
Who
in
American
clothing
dismer judges that go !hat far back are
one
percent
for each month they
really slim but I'm going to list the tribution are allegedly using sweat
receive
benefits
before age 65, up to
ones that are needed just in case you shop type of situations in Saipan to
a
maximum
of
20
percent.
might be able to provide some help. have their garments made.
Yow
benefit
will
be reduced if you
The show personnel did a secret
The names of judges whose "likeretire
early
and
start
collecting
checks
nesses" are needed include George inside tilmlng of some of the condibefore
age
65.
Your
payments
may
be
Bums, Abel Larkin, Peter Grow, tions that exist in the Saipan situation.
increased
when
you
reach
age
65
if
Cushing Shaw, H. L. Osborn, Nial Saipan is officially an American terNye. John C. Bestow, Eli Sigler, ritory so the clothing labels can
Nathaniel Simpson, William Ledlie, legally carry a "Made in the U.S.A."
Samuel Bradbury, William McAboy. tag.
Interesting. Apparently the comW. Y. Peek, Simeon Nash, H. C.
The Community Calendar is
Whitman, John Welch, E. A. Guthrie, panies are getting the garments made
published as a free service to nonw. w. Jol!nson. Silas H. Wright, Mar- at a low cost which cenainly isn't profit groups wishing to announce
tin Crain, William F. Loomis, T. A. reflected in what we pay when we
meeting and special events. The
Plants. F. C. Russell, Rodolph de purchase the items in our stores.
calendar is not designed to promote
Steiguer, Hiram L. Sibley, Henry W. What was it you were saying about sales or fund raisers of any _type.
Coultrap. J; M. Wood, D. W. Jones, the great American way?
Items are printed as space permits
J. G. Reeves, and.George E. Manin.
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
Photos of more recent judges
Looks like Pomeroy and Middlespec:ific number of days.
have been secured. If anyone out port residents will be joining hands to
there can help Judge Crow with his provide one giant yard sale about the
MONDAY
project. please contact him at th~ first weekend in May. _ Myron
RACINE -- Racine Village CounMeigs Common Pleas Court.
'Duffteld, pres1dent of the M1ddlepon
Community Association, came up
Mildred Hauber of the Long Bot- with the iilea. I believe the idea is to
tom community is having some get everyone to take part simultanehealth problems and is undergoing ously not only to draw a lot of peo- By Sandy Stealey
treatment and testing at Camden- ple but as a step towards eliminating Meigs County
Humane Society
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va. a whole smear of yard sales through·
The Meigs County Humane SociCards will reach her at ~oom 511. out the summer. I'll be bringing you
ety
and Dog Warden Bill Dye are
the nitty gritty as we get closer to the
Fifth Floor.
delighted with the response we have
event. Sounds like a yard sale to end received from our adoption ·updates
Jim Lochary, formerly of all yard sales to me. Do keep smiland lists of dogs available at the
Pomeroy. is the contact person for a mg.
Meigs County Dog Pound.
guided walking tour planned for the
Therefore, this week's column
will be an updated report on the many
adoptable dogs at the pound, located
on
Rocksprings Road, near the Rock
The Benha M. Sayre Missionary sent to members who are ilL
Springs
Fairgrounds.
Society of Racine met at the home of
Martha Lou Beegle had the proThis
list
was compiled on March
Mildred Hart for its regular monthly gram using "Lent" starting with Ash
6.
and
so
availability
cannot be guarWednesday and gave readings "How
meeting.
anteed.
Remember.
it
is necessary to
Barbara Gheen opened the meet- to Live a Christian Life" and "fruits
euthanize
dogs
on
a
regular
basis to
ing with devotions "Tears and Joy" of the Spirit" and explained how our
make
room
for
additional
strays.
using Matthew 28: 7-8. MarJone deeds reflect how God work.' in our
- Yellow Labrddor retriever-mix
Grimm gave the prayer.
life. Readings were from an Ideal
(American
Kennel Club statistics
During the business meeting thank magazme.
show
that
the
Labmdor retriever is the
you notes were read and Lillian
House cleaning and complaints
most
popular
dog
in the country now.
Hayman reported Campbell's Soup followed. endi~g with prayer by
This
is
probably
because
of their easy
labels were needed by Bacone Col- Nondus Hendricks.
care,
happy
attitude
and
friendly
lege to help purcha.&lt;;e a van. She also
Refreshments were served to
temperaments.
)
The
mixed
Labrador
reponed on a youth program spon- Geraldine Cleland, Barbara Gheen.
sored by an area church and sug- Lillian Hayman, Martha Lou Beegle; retrievers like his one and "Old
gested the society help. Collectton Marjorie Grimm. Nondus Hendricks Yeller" in Pen Six are especially nice
because their coats are a little softer
was taken and get well cards were and Naomi Stoban.
and not as oily.
- Border collie/Australian shepherd. Very shy. Needs a very loving
Students from Southern High Jesse Little, Jeremiah Johnson and
home where she can be trained and
School recently panicipated in a Jennifer Carleton.
worked. Tricolored, medium/large
The students were matched Russ
shadowing program at Ohio Universize.
sity's Russ College of Engineering . College student' majoring in engiPEN FOUR: Cocker spaniel/goldneering or technology disciplines of
and Technology.
en retriever mix(?). Well-mannered,
Attending were Jason Roush, interest to high school students.

you work after you stan to receive
Social Security benefits. You'll get
credit for each month in which you
did not receive a benefit payment
because your earnings exceeded
Social Security's earnings limit.
If you retire early, you won't be
eligible for Medicare until you are
age 65. Because you will be receiving Social Security benefits, you
will automatically be enrolled in
Medicare at age 65. About three
months before your 65th birthday,
you should receive your Medicare
cand. If you don't, can the toll-free
number ( 1-800-772-1213) to let us
know.
Your automatic enrollment will
include both Part A (hospital insurance) and Pan B (medical insurance).
Part A coverage is free however, you
must pay a monthly premium for Part
B. You have the option to decline Pan
B coverage. If you are not receiving
Social Security at age 65, you will not
receive the notice from Medicare.
You will have to sign up for ft.
If you delay retirement past age

Letters had been sent to debtors in
October and November of last year
warning them that failure to repay the
debt could result in withholding their
tax refunds, and giving them 60days
to repay the money or appeal the
debt.
If you received a letter from.
Social Security about money you
owe, you can review your records
with a Social Security representative.
If you don't owe the money, your
record will be corrected. But, if you
do owe money, you can repay the
amount in full or in installment pay menl&lt;--whichever is most convenient for you. In some instances, the
debt may be waived comphitely.
In some ca.o;es, Treasury is authorized to withhold certain other federal payments--such a.' salaries-- to collect delinquent Social Security debts.
· To make an appointment with a
Social Security representative call the
toll-free number, 1-800-772- 1213.
Because the lines are busiest early in
the month, it is best to call later in the
week and later in the month.

· 65, your benefits will be increased for
each montlt you delay retirement, up
to 5.5 percent a year for those reaching age 65 in 1998. The retirement
credits are gradually increasing until
they reach 8 percent a year for people reaching age 65 in 2008.
Overpayments may be
deducted from tax refund
You may be a small fish in a large
ocean, but if you owe Social Security money, the ocean just gpt smaller.
This year Social Security can
withhold federal tax refunds to collect delinquent' overpayment debts
from former Supplemental Security
Income beneficiaries. The agency has
been able to withhold tax refunds to
collect debts from Social Security
benefi~iaries since 1991."
Fonner Social Security or Supplement Security beneficiaries who
.owe a past-due debt because they
received an overpayment of benefits
should know that the Depanment of
the Treasury is authorized to reduce
or withhold your Federal tax refund
to c\)llect the delinquent debt.

~---Community

calendar----

cil. Monday 7 p.m. at the municipal office building.
clinic, Meigs County Health Departbuilding.
ment, 5 to 7 p.m. Tuesday. Children
TUESDAY
to
be
accompanied
by'
POMEROY -- Free Ohio Hunter
RACINE-- Southern Local Build- parenliguardian. Take immunization
Education Course beginning Mon- ing Committee meeting Tuesday, 6 records.
day, 6-9 p.m. and continuing Tues- p.m. in the high school cafeteria. Pubday, Wednesday, 6-9 p.m. and Satur- lic welcome.
POMEROY
Registration,
day, 9 a.m. to noon at the Pomeroy
Meigs County Branch of the UniverGun Club.
POMEROY -- FOE Auxiliary. sity of Rio Grande, Tuesday, 5 to 7
Tuesday. 7:30p.m. at the hall .
p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center,
LETART -- Letart Township
Pomeroy.
Trustees. Monday, 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY -- Free immunization

Adoption update from Meigs County Dog Pound

Missionary Society meets

rich, golden C\)at, soft with some Good sized, muscular, healthy; evifluff, small to medium sized dog.-- dently good hunting hounds since
about 25 to 30 pounds. Cocker they were kept until the end of the
spaniel face with golden coat.
season. Blue tick/red tick. One is
PEN ONE: Young black German much more timid but will make eye
Shepherd mix pup. About five contact. Both warm up to people
months old. Will probably mature to . well.
look like a GSD but ears are not up
Golden retriever/German shepyet. Alen and interested in people but herd-mix. Likes people, but is not
already has the noble bearing and pus)Jy. Golden color, soft coat, some
impressive structure of a Shepherd. feathering, witb some shepherd charBeautiful, all-black coat.
acteristics. Should be a very intelli- Beagle/cocker spaniel mix pup- ·gent, trainable dog. (A recently pubpies. Very young. si~ to seven weeks lished book by Brian Kilcommons on
old, just ready to adopt. Tricolored. mixed breed dogs listed the Gold- Dachshund-mix. Young blltl en/Shepherd mix as the most desircalm, very happy and friendly. Shan able!)
- Border collie/Australian shephair, with short legs and long back,
but not too e~treme. Agile and herd. Very shy. Need~ a very loving
healthy. Nice size, some blackening home where she can be trained and
on tail and face like purebred "Dox- worked. Tricolored, medium/large
ies." Would make a very nice house size.
pet.
- Cocker spaniel/golden retriever
PEN THREE: English springer mix(?). Well-mannered. rich golden
spaniel-mix. Classic black and white colored coat, soft with some fluff,
springer spaniel markings and silky small to medium sized dog -- about
coat but not too much feathering. 25 to 30 pounds. Cocker spaniel face
Very quiet, but likes people.
with Golden coat. Adorable "Moppet
- TWo impressive coonhounds. of the Month" -- shaggy terrier coat-

SHS students participate in program

WIHTfl WEATHEIIS A&amp;MOST OVEII
IEAT THE HEAT ·IEAT Till lUSH

With spring just around the corner.
now is the time to stan planning and
ordering tree seedlings and ground
cover plants. advises the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District Auxiliary.
The Auxiliary is offering for sale
quantity bundles of a single variety of
White Pine, Scotch Pine. Norway
Spruce and Colorado Blue Spruce, 25
seedlings in a bundle for $10.
Also available this year is the
backyard packet that contains two
each of Forsythia, Oakleaf
Hydrangea, l'llrpleleaf Sand Cherry,
Butterfly Bush and Bittersweet for
SIO. New· this year is the Handwood
Packet which contains two each of
Sweet Gum, Sugar Maple, River
Birch and American Elm for $8 and
the homeowners pa~kct which contains two each of Sugar Maple,
Sweet Gum, forsythia, Bittersweet
and White Pine for S 10.

AIR CONDITIONING CHECK

Back this year is the ever popular type tree that is excellent for fresh
fruit tree packet which contains one Jllarket or processinS:_The Spanan
each of Galaxy Tart Cherry, Stella Apple is a finn Mcintosh type apple.
Cherry, Golden Glory Apple and It is deep rich ned color with excelSpartan Apple for S22. The Galaxy lent dessert quality.
Tart Cherry has fruiting limbs of wide
This year's ground cover plants
angled, strong, stocky and develops include the Crown Vetch, 72 plants
vigorous spurs along the total length. for $25 and English Ivy, 25 plants for
It has heavy, more consistent crops $10.
The tree is normal size and shakes
All the plants and tree seedlings
welL It requires less pruning and is we handle ane high quality, nursery
easier to maintajn. fruit ripens mid- stock. With reasonable care, a fine
July to early August.
planting can be developed. However,
The Stella Sweet Cherry is a goOd the Meigs. SWCD Auxiliary cannot
quality, self fertilizing, black cherry. be responsible for plants beyond the
It has good sized, black, bean-shaped announced pickup dates.
fruit. It is a good pollinizer for other
sweet varieties. The tree is productive paidAllordersmustbeplacedandpreby March 31 for April 9 and I I 0
but tender to winter cold. It ripens pickup. For more information, or to
mid to late July.
place your order residents lllllY stop
The Golden Glory Apple is an by or mail to: M~igs SWCD Auxil- '
attractive, very smooth golden deli- iary, 3310 I Hiland Road, Pomeroy, li
cious, producing fruit on a semi-spur Ohio45769orphone740-992-6647.

I

Adoption hours at the pound are 9
to 10 a.m. and 4 to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, and Saturday from II
a.m. to 2 p.m. Adoption fee is $10,
which includes license and registration fee. Feel free to visit anytime to
see the dogs. Remember that new
dogs generally arrive every day. By
the time you've read this colurrn.
some of these will have been adopted, while others will have arrived.

Ohio Lottery

Penn State
ousts Dayton
in NIT play ·

Pick 3:

5..()-1
Pick 4:

2-6-5-3
_Buckeye 5:

Sports on Page 4

9-1~31-32-33

$2143

Check Pre111re au Operatloa
'Any pallS or freon extra
'*If repairs are needed an estimate will be given

llol. 48, NO. 233
C111811, Ohio Vlll\ey Publishing compi,y

Five ·candidates back
county home proposal
All but one candidate for Meigs
County commissioner- incumbent
Fred Hoffman - hllve endorsed a
c()mmittee's proposal to maintain the
· Meigs County Home as it currently
exists.
The county has begun to look for
alternative housing for the 10 current
residents at the facility, whic~ is to
eventually be operated on a limited
b~sis for temporary housing for indigent residents of the county.
: · Dale Colburn and Bob Smiddie,
who serve on an ad-hoc community
£ommittee fanned to save·the home
from closing, met with the Meigs
~ounty Commissioners on Monday
tQ discuss a letter signed by the canaidates, which, in pan, states, "There
is· no need to close the County
Home."
'. Democratic candidates Mick Davenport, Charles E. Williams and
.Arthur Knight, and Republicans Patty. Goeglein Pickens and E. John
Sheets have signed the Jetter, prepared by ·the committee members.
Smiddie said that the letter would be
published as a paid advertisement in
The Daily Sentinel.
When asked Monday, Hoffman, a

Republican, declined to sign the letter, and said that his position on the
County Home issue has not changed:
that he favors "keeping the home
open, but only for temporary housing.
until permanent housing is found for
those in need."
•
In pan. the candidates' letter reads:
:·we, the undersigned candidates for
the office of commissioner, believe
that we are morally obligated to provide for individuals who require
assiSted care. "
. "It i~ our belief that the best, least
expens1ve a~d most assured w_ay of
decent care 1s through the contmued
operation of (a) traditional county
home."
.
The letter also ~roposes reforms to
the way the home IS funded and operated, with the figures based on present residents at the hol!IC: housing
two of the residents with funding
through the Meigs Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disability, which would provide $20,&lt;¥J(l •
in funding. according to the committee; housing nine residents through
forfeiture to the county of SSI payments of $5,820 per year, which
would generate $&lt;!_0,000 per year; and

housing one resident at a cash payment of $45 per day, which would
generate $16.425 annually, These
changes would provide $71),000 per
~ear through funds other than the
county general fund, according to the
letter .signed by the candidate$.
Last · year, the county provided
$71,625 of the home's $120,360 budget.
The letter also recommends an
appointed "advisory boand," which
would monitor the operation of the
facility, increasing the cash rate from
$12 to $45 per day for residents who
are able to pay cash, the establish•
ment of regulations governing the
operation ofth~ horne; and opc:rating·
th~ hom~ within state guidelines
wtth "special attention to the rights of
the residents."
"There is no need to close the
county home," the letter concludes.
"If the county home is closed, if elected we pledge to attempt to reopen tlie
county home."
Smiddie said that, by signing the
letter, the candidates were endorsing
1111 of the proposed changes, and were
not only endorsing keeping the home
open.

Commissioners award asphalt bids
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Bids for aggregate and a.1phalt
materials wene awanded for the 1998
road construction sellSOn when the
Meigs County Cqmmissioners met in
regular session on Monday.
Upon the recommendation of
County Engineer Robert Eason, bids _
for liquid asphalt were awarded to
Asphalt Materials of Marietta and
Middleport Terminal of Gallipolis.
Ea.1on was authorized to use his
discretion in choosing_a distributor
for each job ba.,ed on price and location.
Two bids for asphalt concrete,
from Shelly Materials of Letan and
United Asphalt of Marietta, were
accepted.
Ea.wn said that bid.1 for aggregate

materials were not in compliance ty's self-insurance fund for life insurwith the bid specifications outlined in ance and accidental death and disthe depanment's published notices. · memberment insurance for its
Vendors had' provided price lists employees. That cost, -which-the ESC
rather than the appropriate paperwork has been paying since October 1989,
with the proposals. All bids for has always been paid into tbe fund by
aggregate materials were rejected, the tommissioners for other depanand Eason was authorized by the ments covered under the plan.
commissioners to purchase aggregate
Riebel and Gilkey said that they
materials at his discretion, ba.o;ed on would be willing to accept increprice and location. .
- ·
mental payments of the $5,768.66
John Riebel, superinJendent of owed back to the ESC, so that the
the Meigs Cpunty Educational Ser- insurance fund is not drained. The
vice Center, and Carole Gilkey, commissioners, however, voted to
clerk/treasurer for the board. former- return the amount in a lump sum to
ly known as the Meigs County Boand · the board
of Education, mel with the commisRiebel also asked the commissioners to discuss an insurance pre- sioners to consider possible office
mium overpayment by the ESC.
space and funding assistance for that
According to Gilkey. the ESC has space, now that the Meigs ESC has
been paying premiums into the coun!Continued on Page 3)

Two held on burglary allegations ·
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Two men are awaiting extradition
from Key West, Fin., to face aggravated burglary charges stemming
from a series of break-ins in northeastern Meigs County.
Arrested by Key West police over
the weekend were James Marshall
Keffer, 20, of Little Hocking, and
David A. Rowe, 21. of 711 Warren
Ave ., Belpre. They should be
returned by March 27. according to
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.

Soulsby said ctCputies received
information concerning a person who
had been approached and asked to
purchase some stolen firearms.
Further questioning by deputies
Jim Heater and Scott Trussell resulted in statements implicating Rowe,
Soulsby said. The information and
warrants were then placed into a
national computer network in an
attempt to find Rowe. he explained.
Meanwhile, in Key West, police
had found a vehicle owned by
Chester Mason of Belpre with

expired Ohio license plates.
Rowe was being held in jail there
on a charge of shoplifting, Soulsby
said, and Keffer wa.~ arrested back at
the automobile. Mason was not
involved in the incidents, he said.
Rowe and Keffer are facing one
count of aggravated burglary and are
facing three other charges currently
pending, Soulsby said. The two
allegedly targeted homes in nonheastem Meigs Capnty, stealing guns
and electronic items, Soulsby said.
(Continued on Page 3)

lndutles air and hal filters and spark plugs.
•ather engines may vaoy slightly more or tess In price

Transmission Servlce-700R4 •• $87.95
011, Lube &amp; Filter with
FREE 1 Gal. of Solvent •••••.••.• $19.95
'All specials as per preVious advertisement

ao·N ~~~~ 1107 I RS

~----------------------------~

a

4

SPECIAL SERIES - Middleport Postmaeier Jim Sundqulat displayed the first In 118riea of
special stampa honoring the 20th century. The Middleport Poat Office will sponsor a stamp
tuturlng the "Teddy" bear, and will Join the Ohio River Bear Company In the celebration on
Thursday. ·

~

Postal Service .hails 20th centuly
Post offices throughout the area
will celebrate events from the early 20th century on Thursday, with
special events and promotions.
As a pan of its "Celebrate the
Century" promotion, the U.S.
P.ostal Serv.ice has unveiled the first
.
stamps honoring each "
decade of the century, beginning
with the 1900s and 1910-1920.
The postal service has released
'30 stamps so far, and post offices
in Middlejlort, Pomeroy, Rutland
and Syr.u:use will sponsor stamps
on Thursday. with open house and
promotional events.
Middleport Postmaster Jim
Sundquist selected a stamp honoring the teddy bear, which was ereated in 1902. A cartoon depicting
President Theodore Roosevelt's

Road repair

refusal to shoot a captured bear is which celebrated the centennial of
said to have inspired the creation of the Louisiana Purchase, popularthe popular toy.
ized a new creation - the ice
Sundquist has coordinated a cream cone.
display of collectible bears with
The Syracuse Post Office
Susan Baker of the Ohio . River selected a stamp honoring architect
Bear ComP.any. and will serve · Frank Lloyd. Wrights "Robie,
-'" ref~li~ts'lhliiughout the day on
House." Wright is considered one
Thursday.
of the nation's most ianovative
Pomeroy will highlight a stamp architects, and designed the Robie
featuring Ellis Island, the principal House in his Pruirie House style.
immigration station in New York
The first series of stamps is
Harbor, which operated between available at a cost of $4.80 at the
1892 and 1954. 11 is estimated that post office in a special collector's
over 40 percent of all U.S. citizens format.
can trace their ancestry to at least
Postal customers have completone person who came through ed voting on the series of stamps
Ellis Island.
which will honor the 1950s, and
The St. Louis World's Fair is·the voting on the stamps for the 1960s
topic of the stamp chosen by the will begin in May. according to
· Rutland Post Office. The fair. Sundquist.

n~eds

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Sineet repairs and village water
service on Pleasant Ridge were di scussed with residents of the area
when Pomeroy Village Council met
in regular session on Monday.
fay Craig. and. Bob, Mary and
Diane Bowles, all residents of Pleasant Ridge, met with council to discuss
needed road repairs in the area,
whicb according to Craig, were
promised a year ago.
Jack Krautter, street supervisor for
the village, said that holes were
hand-patched la.~t year on Plea.,ant
Ridge. but council maintained that it

aired with council _

lacks adequate funding to repair the water to the area would be approxiroad fully.
matell $100,000. and that Leading
Council President John Musser Creek Conservancy District. which
said that the village has been seeking provides water Jo nearby residents,
grant fund.ing to repair the road.
had expressed a'n interest in extendThe residents also noted that ing service to both Naylor's Run and
guardrail wa.~ needed on sections of Pleasant Ridge.
the road, but Krautter said that he had
Anderson said he would investiconsulted with the county highway gate the possibility of providing
depanment and PDK Construction. water to the area and asked the resiand had been told that guardrail dents to return to council's April 6
would be difficult to install because meeting.
.
there is not adequate room to install
Kmutter discussed the purchao;e of
the necessary piling.
a utility trailer that he and hi s fatherVillage Administrator John Ander- in-law own. which ha&lt; been used by
son said that he had been told live the villa~te. The price of the trailer,
years ago that the cost of providing
fContlnuecl on Page 3)

Brickbats, praise fly as Gingrich
st_um_
ps for Republican incumbent

$121 60

OPEN MON.-FRI.
8-5

1 Section, 10 Pages, 35 ctnta
A Gannett Co. Newap~~per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 17,1998

HOT IUIIIIIIIG IIGHT1
.POOl lUll ECOHOIIY?
TUNE YOUR ENGINE Jaoo"

CALL: WES HOLTER OR RICHARD COLLINS
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IIMI.Dfl 01 011111 SPitiAU SFI&amp;l AVAilABLE THIU MAitH 3 Jst
Flush Cooling System ............. $59.95
Rotate &amp; Balance Tlres ......•.•.•. $24.95
Rotate &amp; Balance Tires with
Front End Allgnment.............. $59.95

Occasional rain tonight,
lows In the upper 40s or .
lower 50s. Wednesdar.
showers likely. Highs
the 60s.
·

•

•Certified GM Technicians
•ASE Certified Technicians
•GM Diagnostic and Essential Tools,

liM

Tree seedlings, ground cover plants available

ed dog. Very dark eyes, white/light
_gray and beige coat. Tips of ears are
black. Unknown breed heritage, but
probably some Lhaso Apso or
Tibetan Terrier. Not a toy dog --about
25 pounds. Profuse, slightly corded
"silver" coat makes this dog a real
novelty and a definite eye catcher.
Looks like a big silver mop. Alert and
sensitive to people, too. ·
PEN SIX: "Old Yeller," our other
yellow Labrador retriever mix (probably mixed with shepherd or great
Dane.) Very large, loyal and quiet.
All-around good watchdog and family dog. Could be trained. Loves
attention but is generally very calm.

'

H-

VISITING .GOODWILL- U.$.
Spak- Zaneavllle on" Monday. Gingrich w.. In Ohio
er Newt Gingrich, center, met Richard alumplng for I,J.S. Rap. Bob Ney. (AP)
McConnell, right, at .l he Goodwill Indualllea In_

ZANESVILLE (AP) - While
House Speaker Newt Gingrich drew
a big crowd at a fundraiser for fellow
Republican and U.S. Rep. Bob Ney,
the. speaker drew a crowd outside as
well.
About 50 protesters gathered outside the Knights of Columbus Hall
where Gingrich spoke Monday night.
Holding signs that read "Will the
real Bob Ney stand up," "Education
saves our children, not Ney and
Newt" and "Newt and Ney- Dumb
and Dumber," members llf the crowd
chanted "Boot Newt, say no toNey. "
"Newt wants to get Bob Ney reelected to protect his position," said
Shirley Corbette. "If you look at
what they've done, Ney and Newt's
policies have made life worse for
working people and we need to get
rid of them. "
. But Gingrich also drew his share
of support Monday.
"I think he's doing a very good
job for this country," said Bob
Kessler, who attended Gingrich's
speech. "His speei:h was ambitious
and he had some very good ideas for
the country."
In addition to a $50-a-plate diimer
. and S1,000-a-head reception, Gin-

~·

grich visited a local Goodwill Inc.
retail store and workshop where he
praised the establishment's efforts at
taking people off welfare.
" In the la.&lt;t year. thi s place took 56
people off the welfare roll s and stalled teaching 'them about work," he
said. " Irs that kind of elfort that has
helped us reduce the number of people on welfare across the country and
enabled us to not only balance the
budget but run a surplus."
• The speaker's visit was not welcomed by Democratic hopeful Rob
Burch, who is challenging Ney for
the 18th District seat. Burch criticized
his opponent for using Gingrich a.~
the draw for the fundraiser.;.
Burch accused the incumbent of
flip-flopping by getting Gingrich 's
help this year, after spuming . such
help in 1996 when Gingrich was the
focus of an ethics ca.~e.

i Burch, who lost the election to
INey two years ago, on Monday distributed an excerpt from a 1996
radio interview in which Ney said,
"I'm not going to bring the Speaker
into the district."
Burch said it's clear Ney has

changed his mind about the speaker.
"We need a congressman who
will fight for working families, not
someone who embr~ces Newt Gingrich's policies that benefit the rich
at the expense of the middle class."
Burch said Monday in a news relea.o;e.
While Gingrich still has his opponents in public, Ney said the public's
perception of Gingrich seems to have
improved since 1996. when the ethics
case against Gingrich was still unresolved .
" Newt Gingri_ch this time around
is not the .whipping boy he was." said
Ney, adding that he didn't believe his
1996 campaign distanced itself from
Gingrich as much a.~ his words then
suggested.
"Last election. I ran on myself,''
he said. "I didn't embr~ce (Gingrich)
nor distance myself."
Two years ago, Ney pulled 50 percent of the vote in the eastern Ohio
district, compared with 46 percent for
Burch. On his return to Congress.
Ney emerged as one of Gingrich's
staunchest supponers and became a
trusted adviser at a time when some
other congressional Republicans
1were discussing a possible leadership
•overthrow.

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