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                  <text>A Gannett Co. Newspaper
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·'

WHEEL DRIVII

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sion..

., to modify public part:icipation s.tirs
. ·fHJtween Gallipolis city commissioners

COME BY·
EORJITEST·
DRIVE TODJJYI.

BY·=dYitiiU.!..,
_ . ~-·

ation
department theagendaa· week.~ !Odays .
sought answers on the before the nieeting, or to dis"'
S - A
program's operation. cuss the problem first with
: rcvirioa -of the
City
Discussion and the city manager.
·
. ommiQion'a
of the
'referral of some ques"The rationale is to give
fl~ . ;:- ' · ·
tioils to Recreation the city manager as well as .
Director Shannon the commissioners the
S~yer lasted for near- oppanuriity to be prepared to w..-.::1=
ly ati hour. · · · answenome·questions," O'Rourke explained.
Because commis- ·
"If we knew in advance what someline's concerns
s~:~~~~~:~~~;respand to all of the questions and con- are, we might be able to ·do some research and come
cems,
said having some knowledge of the closer to having some answers," she said.
public's
concern
before
the meeting would be helpful in
Cqmmissioners agreed to bring suggeJtions to their
of tbC'
next meeting on Tuesday.
,
frOm
panicl' attempting to answer them.
Among suggestions initially raised. at the commis- .
But' Commissioner Dow Saunders said there is no
wiJen parents of
the rinkya
Jlftlltarn. s~d by the city's icc,. sion's last meeting was ti&gt; have people request to be on need to transform privilege bf floor or have the public
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AS LOW AS:·

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'Haves' and 'have nots'

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Medicare formula ·

creates unequal

playing field
for befleficiaries

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.. Nat•.Avg.

*" Servk:e,

O.nnett

nma• Santilli Rapo!U

WASHINOTON - hi Dade
Ft.:'; seniors ciln join
~lroe-u~·ed health fuainte-

:· .~

422.19

·10%

275.21 . 143~ 418;58

·10%

Athens 288.75

135.~

·21%

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259.67

are

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But in Iowa, there are no
·15%
Medicare HM0s and no free perks,
VInton 273.03 . 123.11 396.14
only traditiOnal fee-for-service
arrangementl'llwith high out-of-15%
Muon Co., WV ·262.72 133.34 396.06
packet exjleniiCS, cosdy Medigap
insunuic:e premiums and confusins
A !annuli tile,_... .,..,.:-. _
_to Cllcu!Me per ctpltll relminiurance claiins.
~to
hellltl
~
argMtutlont
tMt •roll ......,..
Created in •f96S, Medicare was
llenlflcllriH 11M CIWIId ., unequll plitytng field. The ...ult: AmeriCM
suppOsed· to give older Americans
Mlllorl'ln bla cftlw heve KCIII IO "gold pllted" llellth C.. plane !hill
a,ccess to maililtream medical care,
.,. vlrtulllly free, while rwtt.... e1....n.. 1111 by wltll much lell et 1111"
nlftceljt aut-of.pocket expenae.
. ·
·
.
·
·
no matler wl\at their health or
·
The
cMrl
above
lncludel
a
regl-1
cwnty-by-eounty
k
n
to
income status 'and no ·matter where
allOW What Medic.. wll pay hellth maintenance organization• per bonthey lived. tl• · .
eflelary, per month In 11111. The number 11 IIC:hnlcally known •• tha
'
What has evolved is a network
"AdJueted Avw.ge Per Cepltll ~.· or AAPCC. Tllllll PIYIMIItl are
of "gold-plate41' health care plans
!llvldH Into two columnt:
oflert A: For holplta~ lldlled nuralng lllcHtty end home hllllth cera ur·
concentrated in a·few states, while
vi~
.
.
recipients elsewhere get fewer benoflert 8: For phr-lclan and othat , . . _ oulp8tlent urvlcee.
efits' at more cost.
A ~ comp8rlson of HCh of .the county'• total Mlldlcat11
'. '
AAPCC to tile !Ill' Mllcnl awragala tncludlld. ·
.
"It is an issue of fairness," said
The
.
.
.
.
_
lncludel
only
tha
Madleara
population
over oge 65. 11
. i&lt;eti Rud¢dge, p~identof the Orenotlnctude
clllllbled
benellc!MH
or
tlloH with !;nd Stege Renal
gon Association of Hospitals and
Health Syste11111•, "If you paid the
same into Medicare and retired in
Oregori, there is no re~011 why you
for signing up $437.97. Lawrence County has the
should get signi(icandy fewer ben- reimburses
highest payinent per beneficiary; at
efits thin. sollllione who is rclired Medicare beneficiaries.
·$367.91,
Jackson County is the
For example, Medicare will pay
and living in Miami." ·
lowest.
·
Unliko: Iowa, Oregon has · an HMO $728 per lllOnth, per ben·
AAPCC payments in other
Medicare HMOs,.but lheir benefits eficiary in BronK, N.Y. But in
paekajes are ,leaner and they Chippewa, Minn., a Medicare regional counties include Athens,
charp benefi~arics more than patient is wonh just $227 per $422.19; Gallia, $418.~8; Meigs,
$389.78; Scioto, $_408; Vinton,
month.
plans elsewhere.
In southeastern Ohio, AAPCC $396.13; and Mason County,
, Fllelillg this illequity is a federal
Continued on page A2
flinding formula"- · the Adjusted ,payments can vary by as much as

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··RgJ p ~. mUl·.protesters consider civ i1 disobed ien ce
· · E Cl VE W:¥ ( ·
· APPL _ . RO , . a.. Ap~ -. An env_i~.·me
. !'tll ·~up _opJIIll!~ .to. p ~ Sl.l,btlh~
MISiln .~ty pulp msll !JIIf t,rtuned membersJn
:.civiflll~icncetactii:s. , . ·.
Thil oii)oJlnvi~~tai &lt;;:otjlition has waled
·.other battles apinst w~t it ~\led as dangerous·poltution, apjnst Clllllp"!!iea from the ll'gion.
·But ~ tithe, the ~tiqn is in .outsider, mill
developer Parsc_ms ~ . ~t!Cmor;e Inc. of Rye
Br!)Ok, ,N,Y.,.s&amp;Jd coalition ~llll!zer, Laura Forman ·sat~.
.
.
Withqut roots in the t"ommlioity, .Parsons &amp;
Wliitremore is a bet\Cr t~Vgel f«:l!' civil disobedi·

'M
· 'd
· ·
en_ce.•, I. Forman su ·
'"f{e've never ~nina situation where membera \Jave wantedJo do $0mething like this,"Ms.
Foi1J1iaRsaid. · .
· ·
·.
"PoOpie are angry," she said. "People aren't
·&amp;eal1d 'of this company. There's a different attitude !here." ·
·
.
·
· c&amp;lstrw:tion pllllls for the mill in Apple Grove
have been indefinitely po!!lponed, with Parsons &amp;
Whiqemorc citing market conditions for pulp.
But the coalition is staying active in case.environ, mentfl permits, which remain under i:onsidera·
tion, aie granted.
.
.

Vol. 32, No.1
meet with the city manaP,L
before coming to the commii-

,rivilege of·the floor!

\.

JILL ·IIEW CHIVY fRONt
~

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • February 16, 1997

.

He feels prOpOSed chan~
will limit the public's contact
with the commission.
"Being in my third term 011 .
· the commission, we have nof
experienced a · problem with '
privilege of the floor," he said.
''Privilege of the floor is a bell::
efit to the people coming IQ.
the commission and to tile•
commission."
. Parliamentary procedure
outlined in Rliben's Rules cif
Orders, the long-accepted
method for conducting publiC. ·
meetings, would handle an'
problems assOciated with priv• .
liege of the floor, Saunders added.
·
.~
· ··we don't need' to structure this," Saunders ·Said. "It
is·a democratic process and I feel that setting this kind 0(
precedent will remove the spontaneity from the proce-

as

dure.11

Allowing the public to speak openly before commi.;,.
Continued on page A2

Meigs co·unty calling~:

Toll-free phone service to ·;
Mason, W.Va., now in effec(
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlm..·Sentlnel Staff

POMEROY -GTE customers in' all
· five Meigs County viilages can now call
toll-(ree to Mason, W.Va.; but residents
in MilSon are still awaiting the same
privilege.
·
. Information about the extended area
service calling for Ohio customers came
with little fanfare from GTE 'Nonh .
Incorporated: it was included in the
. rii~i.., fll~~iii &lt;teleph&lt;!ne billing whi4,h
indic«ttl~ 1the t service went into elfegt·.
earlier this month.
·
Meigs County telephone customers
in Middlepon. Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland or Syracuse areas wanting to call ·
Mason from the 992, 742, 949
exchanges must still dial 1-304-773 followed by the four-digit local Mason
number.
·
The imponant thing to remember is to make the call just as if they were
calling long distance, a GTE SpOkeswoman explained.
•.
While the move comes as good news to some Meigs County residen~
Public .Utilities Commission of Ohio records show Mason County resi!lents
would have the most to gainfrom local phone servi~e to Meigs County. •-,·
• Mason residents make an average of 17.4 calls per access line to ~ ..
Pomeroy exchange while Pomeroy residents mllke an average of 1.01 calls
per month to the Mason exchange, according to the PUCO. Local catlina
would also be of added value to Mason-area computer usets, allowing the•
local Internet access.
GTE serves ap,proximately 6,481 cus10mers in its Pomeroy exchange
while Bell Atlantic serves about 922 in its Mason exchange.
'
'We are waiting on Bell Atlantic of West Virginia to get permission from
the FCC to provide inter-LATA service," said Danny Walker, acting manag· ·
er of telecommunications systems for the West Virginia Public Service Commission, the West Virginia counterpan to PUCO. ,.
..
Bell 'Atlantic hopes to.get that authority by, Ay.gust of.lbis year, Walker
said, adding that it could still be later.
·
"We don't know when it is going to be," he said. "We are helping all we
can."
·
Howe~er, as of March 31, residents of Ne;. Haven, W.Va., will have toll~
free access to .the Pomeroy area. New Haven is served by Citizens Telecom
instead of Bell Atlantic.
·
· ·
·
"
New Haven is in a different situation, Walke~ said.
Meanwhile, GTE is considering the passibility of implementing toll-free .
service from the three Meigs County exchanges ·to the New .Haven
exchange, a GTE spokeswoman. said.
''
The move came as a surprise after PUCO officials said in December that ·
implementation of the Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996 had created

~~~~hii~ ~fv~~~!~~~~~:::. of extended area service calling between ~

Th oa1·1110
·
d
· · fi
th ·n
PUCO spokes!Jian Dick Kimmins said last week· that the extended ansa
.
ec
n conte~ s errussmn~ .rom e rru
service at that time was awaiting certification by the Federal Communicawould damage forests m West Vtrgmla, Kentucky tions Commission.
.
and Ohio.
·
. As a resuit of the legislation passed by Congress and signed into law.on
Opponents also argue the plant's chlorine Feb. 8, 1996, by· President Clinton, ah decisions on waivers to establisl)
dioxide bleaching process would release toxic inter-local ilecess trruispon area (LATA) service are now being handled &amp;y
dioxin into the Ohio River. The federal Environ· the Federal Communications Comlllission.
·
.
mental Protection Agency has linked. dioxin, a
Effons to establish· local telephone service between the Pomeroy
known carcinogen, to human reproductive and exchange and the Mason, W.Va. exchange began in November, 1994, when
immune.system problems. ·
the- PUCO held a public hearing in Pomeroy attended by about 100 Meip
n.e,coatition has yet to decide what form fif ami Mason County residents supporting the plan.
civil disobedience it would consider except to
The many who testified at the hearing said the issue wu important
rule ()Ut violence, Ms. Forman said. "And that ~Sj: the Mason and Pomeroy-Middlepon areas are cl~ly linked both
includes damage to propeny," she said. .
· ··~onomically and socially.
· ·.
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.."yP8i1ie$ tjplore land 'swap' in Buffington Island.Battlefield disput'

CHAJIILINI HOEFLICH ' · ·
, ',
Inc. of Racine wbi&lt;:h is planning a gravel mining opera· · preferably no mOOl than to miles oway, on tbe Ohio side Society suppOrting the site's preservation and opposinc
TtiliN' a ' 11till 'Staff
·
,
·
lion on land it owns at Portland on or near the site where . and down-ri.ver if possible.
the gravel mining operation.
11 1
· Poi\'IEROY ~ Sw~ing 1~ a 1111 optioa iow~ ·• Union and Confederate soldiers cl~hed in July,, 1863.
., Part~r said the ne~l step is to locate land to be con·
He _also presen~ a letW: fro!~" Oov. ~ V.
resolving the developmenl and .historical preaervilllll!l . AI a result of I~ week's !Mctm~, Parker s11d M~ . sttlercd m an e~cha_n~e. She ~ked that land owpers or Vomov1ch calhng for a ~~ontinuatJotl of the ~nt o(i
illuea involyed in J!1e B.ulfineton Island Battlefield pro- Sbelly ~ ·mat ~f ~temauve tan~ can be found. the anyone with suggesuons or 1deas on locatmn contract cooperJIIton and comprorruse that ~ placed ~ U.
ject ia pnder discussion. !..
,
·
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.compaay will be wtlbng to look at 11 for content value, her at 992-38.10.
busmess leader among other states while IJIPR'CIIIIIJI ~
Laat WednOiday Marg~t Padter and David Glueck· and to fut1her conl)der a land exchapge.
.
. While that option is being explored, the Meigs County need to pr~t its hisJOricalsitca for future, atnenliGu;R
ncr, of th• Meigs County Historical SoCiety, and Amos \ A basic description of land needed for an exchange. Htstoricol Society and the company ~reed. to do more
"We remain optimistic ~~!lout this paervatioa pnt;
•Loveday lad Pnnco Ruffini; .director and asiistant of \oould be SQO to 600 acres, river frontile for dock con- . reaearch on the current 111e:, Parker satd tbkt Shelly h~ jecl," ~aid Parker, w~o. streaed that cantillued auppcq
the Ohll&gt;HiatOrical PreservpliOb office, met in c;otUI!I· ' iltrul:tiOI). an4 Wtil and ara~el !content, 114'C0Cding to · ~ toh1re an archaeologist Ill study the
froQl the public is euential. She 11ala liked that lelllb '
bus \vi"' .Mark Shelly and Pilul R~o oflhe Shelly Com- ,•Parker.
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· To emphasi:te public concern ~ut Ohiols only Civil . of ,iupport be sent to Loveday at the Ohio Historlqll.
. pan~ lo di~~:UNihll pO&amp;tlbility,
"
,
' She Hid the company would requi~ the aame quili· War battlefield, Parker said Lo~eday called attention to Pn:tervation Offi~. 567 Eut Hu&lt;lson Street.~
sbe\ly ~~· Jhe
complllly of Rlchlil'da 111d :Ions, _. ,ty o'f' ll&amp;lld and grlvel.foutld in the ,Portland bOttoms, theJIIIJe v&lt;,llume of mail recei~e~ by the Ohio Historical ' . 43211•1030,

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formula·
creates unequal
playing field
for beneficiaries

Media.coverage of juvenile
crime studied _by press, jurists
•

•, By KEITH RQBINSON
. Ala acUitilcl Prall Wr liar
COLUMBUS - As the P\Ublic
presses tbe COIUU ·10 BetloulhU on

:towiJ crimiotoli, I!Cl¥IPIPCI" editon
are facine· a toup ·clecision them-

iesldenuofthosc villaps have'wllil
AUJ. 21 at 4 p.m. tO fit~. . .
In November, Racine voters will
elect a mayor, a member 10 the Boanl
Qf Public Affairs, and four CO!Ino:il
membera.
terms expirins are lhllle~fJulian
Scott Hill, who was appointed *a
Jeff Thornton ~miiried after 'being
elected commissioner': John Hoi·
rnaf,, Racine Board of Public Affairs;
and Oary Wilford, Lany Wolfe,
Robert Beeaki .and Dale Hart, coun·
cilmen.
\'
·. On Rutland Council, the lenns
expiring this year are those of Din·
ny Davis, Judy Denney and Herb
Elliou, who was appointed to fill an
unexpired tcnn.
·
Expirins .this year on $y111Cute
Council are tbe ienns of council
members, Lany Lavendel; Eber 0.
Pickens Jr.. Donna !'eterson and
Kalhryn Crow; and the 1«1111 ofOor'
don Winebrenner and Robert Cunningham on tbe village Board of
Public Affairs.

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DONATION TO CHAMBER -Jim Cochnm, right, lil8nager or
., Fai'III!IR Bank a Snvlngs Co. 'a GaiHpolfa branch offtce, prllllltl. ICI I $1,000 daMtlon ta Gnllln County Chllm!Mr or COmlpPrelident Gary ROIICh Jo bl ulld for the~·· building funcL
Theu funcla will 1kl In ~lng and upnncllng the c:hlmbfr'l
fncllltlea, Rolch IBid. "It II I moat dl I lrYing project 10 IH or you
who have.WOitld 10 hlrd ta 11110 a good lmpraulon to tllMe
· who vlalt G.-Hipolla," Cochran llkl.
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JobnMIIer
~&amp;,CIIIi,
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441 ~econd AYemle 1..

G.Wpolls, OR. 45631: •
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(614) 446-2125; .

1·1100-48'7·1129
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to cover yo1·
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'Jypical winter weather continued
over the state with cloudy skies and
snow flurries.
A cold front"was to move into the
stare from the central plains Saturday"
and Sunday.. Moisture associaied
with this system will produce snow
across the slale with.some accumu·
lation expected, especially in llle
north.
'A few peaks of sunshine are pos- ·
sible late Sunday as the fro~t pushes
to the east of the state.
!Jelow normal tempentures are
expected to return on Monday, ·as a
. high .pressure system moves in and
cold dry air spreads IC~ the state.

\

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Mom was
.
you. tl.
. ~ bo~
thr~h JDU.r'headt so cover
jDU.r htad ~tnd stAy wil~ ~trul htalthy.
Fot health care concerns call the
.

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HOLZER HEALTH HOniNE

~

-1•'8 00·462·5255

·-

Speak to a RN seven days a w~k
from 6 a.m. until 2 a.m. ·
Please
t4lk
to yow
plqllcJon.about 1Mdictztiorll.'
'·
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$405.599.

OFF

. 448 422?

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CoUectiona
Domestic Relationa
Workeri Com"mation

Ap~intmenll

Avail1dJie in GaiJipolia
Convenient Evenial. Houn
.
I

Oftlcee in Jacluon and Columbu
Of Counael to: Buder, Claeione,
'DiCuccio~ Drita 4 Barnhart

s~.479,7". so.

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Dual~,

Purantenno

••·•·L BLOCK CIIVY BEAD

, .Brig~ r~ I" color. Fell o.u t ~- gray Chevy Pickup
· TuMday mOmlng, Feb. 11tl1 on Rt 7 between
Cheshire and Gallipolis. This head i.s worth a lot
tome. ·

VERY NICE REWARD FOR IIIFORMITIOII
OR RETURNED IliAD
PLEASE CALl 256·1970
AIID LEAVE MESSAGE

t

Monday, February 17
. . 9 am to 4:30pm
French 500 Room
Holzer Medical Center

··-v··
•

GENERAL PRACTICE OF LAW
.Probate

AMFM C0111,

•

·

~eal Eetat~

pwrseat,
keyleu entry,
alum lllheeU,

Learn how to have a hea.lthy heart during the

DONALD A. COX .&amp; MAR
. SHAL
. LB. DOUT
. HETT
Penonal Injury

emile control,

·Annual Heart Fair

'

Cholesterol
Screenings

Door
Prizes &amp;

Pressure
Checks

Calll-838-796-3779.Toll Fre'e

'

The Ohio Lottery will pay .ou,t
$719,591 .50'"to winners in Friday's
Pjck 3 Numbera daily game.
,j~siilea' in Pick 3 Numbers totliled

••

••

5%

rjba~il[yi4~:13-0-E6-~4!i~~2...-~~~~~~~~~~~
A'ITO"R
' NEYS
·

: Buckeye 5: 9-11-18-25-36
; No one picked all five numbers to
•tahn tbe SlOO,ooo prize in Friday's
Buckeye 5 drawing. the Ohio Louery
wd.
·
Tile Ohio Lottery will pay
$124,520 to Buckeye 5 players,
ibcluding $2So io 124 players who ·
selected four of the five numbqs. ·
Prizes of $10 went to 4, 708 who
picJce4 three numbers, and 46,440
players will receive $1 for getting one
of the .numbers.
·
· Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled

Pur lllindoNil;
pwr door loda,

..,,~You~

· POMEROY - Three charges were filed against a Pomeroy roan after
; he ·tost control of h!s vehicle and went into a ditch on ~atwoods Road
ilat~ Fri.day.
·. ·
.·
·•
·
· Aceoriling to a rtport from the Meigs County 'Sherili'$ Department,
•·~Mays, Pomeroy Pike, was charge&lt;! with driving undlt.the influence,
; driving 11nder suspension and failure to control.
..,..
.
: His 1984 Chevrolet pickup was impounded. subject te.forfeiture, the
: ~partmeni reportell.
. .
·
!•
'
;· ., t1ays is to appear in Meigs County Coun, it was r~po(!ed.

~·~ Aaaocilted Prell

· ·t Slmday..• Becomina cloudy )llith a
•· cflallce ofliJht snow by tare mombls.
Any accumulation seneraJiy Jess dllil
an inch. HiJhs in tbe mid lOs. West
winds 5 to IS mph: Chance ofsnow
50pm:ent.
.
Su~ niJht. ..MOIIIy cloudy with
a chancC of flurries. Lows &amp;om the
upper toCIIs 10 the lower 20s.
~~ .P1111y cloudy. Hlahs in
'the m.id
upper 30&amp;. •
Monday niJht .•.J"II'IIy cloudy. IOfoiiN

. the'lowlf !Jot.
.
.
ftti t'wj...Moldyc:loudy.

Witness in drug trafficker's
sentencing cited. fo~ perjury . ·

· .

In the other dail~ game, Pick 4
. 'J"he ' following numbers were Numbers
pla~ers
wagered .
&amp;elected in Friday's Ohio and West $388,837.50 and wdl share $2! I,600.
Yirtinia lotteries:
WEST VIJI~INIA
· · ·· · owo
Daily 3: o.8-2 · ,~
3 7•1.9 ·
: ·Pick
i=.
Pic114:, 9-1-6-2
Cash 25: 12- 13-14-16-19-21

fication process that supplied light to
the prison buildings at the tum of the
cenll!JY.
·

LOST

•

Qh1o, W.Va. lottery picks

W. . . . lorecut:

' 1far II Ill .
Lows in£d
tho 20i.
, ~.. hdy cloudy. Hiaha in

•

' . otit'a

'

mining tbat the' boy only drove the
getaway car. ·
· Klugman said his paper covered
the story "in a straightforward way"
and even editorialized against prosecutors, contending that they were too
eager to send juveniles to adult court
to satisfy public pressun:.
' "I think we did our job the way
we were supposed to do it," he said.
To Kris.ten E. Haskins, a clinical
psychologist from Grove City, Ohio,
tbe case is an example of j uveniles
~ng a victim of news coverage.
"What's going to happen to this
kid now?" she said. "fie 's tainted in
some way."
Ms. Haskins contends that publicity about .such cases . can hinder
efforts to rehabilitate young offend·
ers. She believes juveniles should
remain anonymous in most cases.

TeStS reveal old penitentiary site contaminated

· HUNTINOTON, w-va. (AP)- ,!be lack o~e~idence tyins_Peflning·
Federal prosecutlll'{~arg~ a Minao top 10 ~n ·was evidence that PenCounty man with jll!tiUry for bis res- nihgioll wutY\Diwhen lie said War.timony during the 5eniencing of a ren ordered the girl's execution.
drug trafficker implicated in . tbe
During testimony at Warren's senTheft reported to Gsllill deputies
dealh of a popul,ar Willillll)son High tencinJ, ~udge Joseph R. Goodwin
PATRIOT-The theft ofa tailgate and trailer hitch from an area man's .· School teen-ager.
.
tried to learn whether nncher could
_truck WIJS rewrted Friday to the Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
A federal grand jury meeting in have introduced Pennington to War·
Bradf9rd B. Massey, 44~6 SR 325· South, Patriot, infonned deputies
Huntington on Thursday charged ren.
that the items were laken someti111e between 8 p.m. Thursday and 10 a.m.
John Lewis nncher, 24, of
The perjury indic~nt did not
Friday while the vehicle was parked at the Patriot Auction Bam. ·
Williamson, with committing perjury stale what prosecutors believe nnch· ·
The incident is under investigation.
· in his 1996testimony durina tbe sen- er lied about.
tencing of Robert Jerome Warren.
Gallipolis officers cite two for DUI
Warren hud pleaded guilty to se.ll~
OALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis City Police cited two men for driving under
ing
c.ocaine aod was sentenced to life .
the influence early Saturday.
·
in
prison:
·
.
Charged wer:e Nicholas I, Adkins, 18, Huntington, W.Va., and Eddie
Prosecutors
have
been
unable
to
R. Wagoner, 40. 631 SR 141, Gallipolis, according to' police records.
produce
a
witness
who
could
tie
War-.
Adkins was lodged in the Galli a County Jail at 3:24a.m.
ren to James C. "Chris" Pennington,
In other police activity, the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State Highway,
who said he killed Michael Ann
Patrol placed Craig D. Durham, 36, 733 McClaskey Road, Vinton, into
"Miki'' Koontz in August 1995 on
the county jail at 7:41a.m. Saturday on a charge of being an intoxicated
Warren's orders. .
or drugged pede~trian hazard on the highway.
Pennington said he owed Warren
$3,000 for cocaine purchases. Pros.Nails. found scattered along rpsd
ecutors contei11led Warren wanted
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soultby reported that
Ms. Koontz killed because he feared
· ori friday around 4:30 p.m., an Antiquity resident said'h,e was walking
she would give evidence against him ·
along SR 338 and found several pounds of roofing nails scattered on .the
to the FBI, w!lich was investjgating
road.,i·ay . .
his drug trafficking.
. Deputies estimated that there were between three and four pounds of
. · Warren 's family and friends said
nails. ~ey said there were no repons of any flat tires. .

• (J()meroy man. cited by
deputl's
.

reminder will persi~t

.~ more _sipi_fi~ story, he
wd, ts how JUventle cnme affects
' ~ety, including family life, neigh· .
bodiOOCk and ichools.
.Moderalor Kirla Oarreu Harshaw,
·ed!tor o~ tbe .Springfield News-Sun,
~d scx:•ety, t~ tbe.face of mcreasing
cnme, ts askins 1tJelf whether the
COI!fiS sbould treat juveniles tbe same
as ad!llts in criininal cases,
Judge Joseph Monnin of Clark
~~Domestic Relations COurt,
which tncludes Juvenile Coun, said
state. lesislllltres are responding to
· publiC pressure by enacting laws
that do more 10 punish young crimi·
nals than 10 rehabilitate them.
"The juvenile court system is ·
becoming a substitute criminA\ sys·

COLUMBUS(AP)-1estsofthe eliminate above-ground hazardous dry-cleaning operation.
Other troublesome chemicals
snil'at tbe site of the former Ohio materiats in the old Pen buildings.
"I look for it 10 be in tbe mil· include the byproductsofacoal gasi·
Penitentiary have found exactly whal
lions," Ranney said.
was expected - health haurds.
The city hopes to seek bids for the
· A preliminary report' by DodsonClosings set for Mpndsy holiday
cleanup
by c:arly May, he said.
SriIson, u engineering linn, has
·~ALLIPOLIS - Offices and organizations that ~ill be closed Mol)Lautzenheiser said the city should
found significant amounts of heavy
day 111 observance of Preident's Day include:
. metals, petroleum and •cilvents In tbe be ab~ to do the wotk under the
• The Gallipolis City Building.
state's Voluntary Action Program,
.Soil and groundwater.
· • The·Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library.
. TheY must be remov'ld, neutral- · which allows contaminants to be
• The Gallia County Senior.Resource Center.
.,
ized or contain~ before uy devei- reduced to an acceptable level rather
OJ1ment can occur on the 23-acre site than eliminated.
Gsllls .Lincoln Day Dinner slated
"As long as public health and the
being considciied for a proposed socGALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County Republican Linco!n Day Dinner
environment
are protected, it doesn't
cer
stadium.
·
has been set for Thursday, Feb. 27 at 7 p.m. in the Student Annex at tbe
really
have
10
be cleued up to a non"Even though there is contamina·
Univ~ity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College. .
detectable
level,"
he said. "I don't
tion pretty much over the whole site,
Scheduled speak~r is Lt. Oov. Nancy P. Hollister.
tbere is nothing coming off tbe site think we C?uld even get the.site down
City Commission meets Tuesday
that is posing a risk to the public," to a non-detectable level."
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis City Commission will meet in spe·
Lautzenheiser said much of the
said Robert Lautzen)leiser, the city's
cial session at 7 p.m. 1\tesday in the Gallipolis Munic.ipal courtroom.
contamination
-. identified by Dod·
supervisor for hazardous materials:
Copies of the agenda are available at the City Building and tbe Dr.
"The peo(lle ai risk w()lild be those son-Stilson through rest drilling- is
Samuel L..Bossard Memorial Library.
..
. ' doing tbe excavation work."
a result of the numerous industries
~.meeting wit! he preceded at 6 p.m. by a Galllp.olis Planning ComThe city's project muiger, Ron that used inmate labor during the
mission session, in which a request for a conditional use permit for the
Ranney, expects the cost 'o f dealing prison) 160;-some years of operation.
erection of a shopping center off Eastern Avenue iS ·exi1CCted to be h~ard.'
with the contamination to exceed the · Among the lnost dangerous chemi·
$750,QOO' already being spent to cals are chlorinated solvents from a
Citation Issued In two-car sec/dent

CHESHIRE- A Langsville man was cited for assured clear distAnce
by the Galli a-Meigs Post of the. State. Highway Patrol following a two·
car accident Friday on State Route 7.
·
~
Troopers said Wilbur L. Ward Jr., 18, 33967 Jacks.Road, was north·
bound. 20 feet south of County Road 15·(Lillle Kyger') at6: 15 p.m. wheti
he was unable to stop in time and struck the rear of a stopped car driven
by Scott Vf. Brinker, 2.3, 32649 Bailey-Run·Road. Pdlti&amp;oy: · ' · '
.Brinker was stopped fur traffic at the time of tbe.collision, according
: to the report. Brinker's car lll(aS slightly damaged and nd damage was list·
, · ed to Ward's.vehicle.
. ·
_ _
,
.

"

Contact:

crimes.

tem," he said. "We're in the punishment stage in the juvenile court systcm. And that's a drlmatic chanae
from SO years ago."
. In Indiana, roost recOrds involving
JUVel)lles are now open 10 tbe public.
Craig Klugman, editor of The Journal Gazette in Fort Wayne, said tbe
11ewspaper publishes tbe names of
juveniles charged with a felony.
"If th~ crime is significant
enough, he1nous enough ... it is in the .
public's interest" to know who stands
ICCUsed, Klugman said. ·
Klugman stood by Fort Wayne
mediacoverageofa 12-year-oldboy
c~ed with murder for the shooting
of a 17-year-old boy. The accused's
name was used extensively in news
reports.
·
Although the boy had confessed.
prosecutors larer ~uced the charge
to assisting a criminal after deter-

~ Tri~County .· er~~fs:·

·,

' 'JI j'

selves: Should we publish tbe IUIIIIes
. of juveniles ICCuted of a crime?
The answer is not always a mat·
ter of a yes-or-no policy.
"We have a biJ obligalion 10 draw
distinctions, and muy times I think
we don' t oo that well," said David
Hall,·editor of The Plain ~er of
Cleveland
Hall was one of two newspaper
editors, a judge and a ~linical psy-.
chologist who debated the issue of
media coveraie of juvenile crime in·
a panel discussiOn Friday during tbe
mnual Ohio Newspaper Association
convention.
·
Hall said newspapen should pub-

!ish the names o(juveniles involved
in heinous crimes such as murder but
' use ~on when reporting lesser

'

FREE .-ad oa- to t~. ' public '

·'

HtiftMir}' Holur Ml411:1d CelltD' CCU, PCU, lllUl H~ Clbtk C.ri~IM ReW
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Commerltarx
2000 presidential race·formlng
=:,eon
··~HINGTON

~i:

w.-""

825 Thlni Awnue, 01112:;, Ohio.
114 441 2342 • FIIX:3008

. 111 Court SbNI,

P~,

Ohio

114-992-2158 • Fu: 982-2157

.!1

A )Gannett Co. Newspaper

.,
I

'

I

ROBERT.L WINGETT ·
Publlaher

I

Hobart Wllaon Jr.

I

. Marv-et IAhew

Eucutlve Editor

Controller

Environmentalist ·gives
Mound cleanup guarded OK

=ry,

'

•• Vou won't'
•
hear it l'rorn the candidates themselves, but preparations are already
well underway for the presidential
election in year 2000.
In Arizona, former Vice President
Dan Quayle is already gearing up for .
a run at the White House in four
years. Last time around, Quayle sal
·on tbe sidelines, partly becau5e ofthe
herculean fund-raising task that must
accompany any serious run for the
office.
'
Sources tell us Quayle haS already
recruited CNN talk ·show host John
Sununu'to help him with his bid. The
portly Sununu, the brilliant but irnperial chief of staff to fonner President
George Bush, but was bounc!'(l from
the White House after his frequent ski
vacations aboard inilitary aircraft
became a public controversy.
·
Quayle and Sunimu were spotted
dl·n1·n8 together 1·n Phoen1·•• late last
Year, and Sununu has told friends that
~C)--t11lo11.11i'iil

IIUL.ti\E' ,_

.

. ......

By JAMES HANNAH

,.......

n:e

J

'
I
i

a

up already~··

he ~w~! Quayle with his bid. C&amp;ll'tlp!lear omu&amp;er. or neaJi.- '·. vice pnsident wiD · JIMIQ.m,hlr
eL--~1. t-'"'1'" the ~pest wt . of his
prmnl dulles.
oftice is to . . " ...... panill CNCiil
........, 11 for Vice President AI Gore,
1biJ - . y ~·t always wuk, for ro¥x ICCOIIIPIIfl' 11811 while
whose campaign effectively began on •of c011r1e. Conaervldiye, Sen. Phil '. avQidlng beiJII;()Q;dby the pubby
Gramm, R-nJIU, wu the fint Clll' de~ls of daily perninJ.
didate out of the pte for tile 1996
As ~ next Cllllpaip nears, one
A
v .,
election. He had the beat 111ac11en ~n:e ®ted. Gore will ; be ~r
money Cl,lllhl bll)', llld tbe most moo- inqeuinl jlressure from ¥.JIM ~vii,
ey. But his ambitllms ' ran l8fOUIId ers to distance himself froQI Clinton
when New Hampshire ·vocen didn't and hlJ scandals. But that 'stnieiY
cotton to hill Texas twans ind his stri~ could backfire. the day that Bill Clinton was sworn dent rhetoric.
, .
~hutting oneself ~ff frOIJI I~
in for his second term.
Gole's problem ~~ cclmpouacled by White House could ~~ pt.one ~~
On that day, Gore began a diffi- the · inYe&amp;lisations t!lat continue 10 · off from the fund-1'11151~
poli!J·
Cl!l(. Washington-style kabuki dance: plague the CJ;aton presidency cal infrastructllfC that Clcn WtJI.need
Officially, he must continue to play . Though 0o1e hall·escaped untwmed .to fight off his expected riV:als for the
the straight man, the lo.yal No. 2 fiorn Clinton's Whitewater ttavlils, nomination: a stouP that, jnciQs ·
behind Clinton. He has to stay the ongoing investigation irito the House Minority Leader R~h.ard
focused on governing. Behind the Democratic fund-raisins bonanu llf Geph.ardt.
. · ·
,
scenes, the vice president must spend ·last year could tarnish the vice presNEWT'S ALL WET •• roor.!llewt
every free moment preparing himself · idenl.
Gingrich. ,As if tbe embattled Houst
for his presid~ntial run.
"YQu have lei remember, the pres- speaker didn:thave enqullh to.wOfl)'
Now is the time when potential'' ident is riding high right now,:· one about having to pay back $300,000 to
candidates are quietly lining up key · insider explained. "But ·(Gore) aJso the House Ethics Cornrni~ - . the
supponers and money men -- · the h 1
1 fb
(&amp; th
· · r the ·
· · .__
, as o cany a 01 o agsage .or e cost o
mvesllsallon·u... eventiJs
!lSsential
for a cam- presl
•· ·den t) ."
hi
J..
.
" building blocks
d
. . . · ally ~opnd th.at he. J'ed
I .,.to . s co
prugn. .et a can idate-in;waiting
The obvious tricl!: for any sitting lea,ues.
..
,
·
•
· . ~ow, our sources tell us, Gil!grich
has lande4 on ~ .wrong side pf one
of.the GOP's t110st venei'ablc ,elc!ef
Statesmen.
OF ME 'IIOLATI~
Retired Sen. Barry GOldwater, Rnlf AGJZ.EEMEtolT ON .
A!iz.. who ran ~nsuccessfully for the
MV n-t\IC~ HEMING~
·presidency in 1964, bas' .~ver ·beea
shy with his opinions-- eyen when it
otrends the party , hierarchy. After
watching Gingrich rise -· *!!d fall -Goldwater has concluded that the
controvenial Georgian . is sirnpl:t
·
"wet behind the ears."
(WHITE) VA.LENTINBS ••
. Valentine's Day is one of the busi~
times of the year for florists. But it's
also a hectic time for' the fi:cletat dl\lg
agents Who gual'd our 'oorilers.
Besides being a mo,jor exporter of
cocaine and heroin, Colombia is·one
of the world's teac!inll exW!'tqrs of
flowers. Millions
of Colombian
flow-.
..
' l'
ers wem g~ven out to sweetheart• and·
lovers this Valentine's nay.
· But sourees tell us that with the
.seasonal boost in impgn~ .flowers
comes an increase in cocaine shipments. Some cocaine traffickers find
these legal impons to be a perfect
. camouflage for ~ir illicit ~oOds.
Jack AJJdei'IOII and Jan Mon.r
are Wrlten for United Feature
Sylldkate, Inc.
•• '
.

By J·•ck And·•r.·..on .
and
Jan Mol/er

lni:f

.

_Was~ing_ton..· at~(J J..i~co~ln--t~~. 9~~~t ~.~~~~r.~

:.Tpday in history

~

l

~ ~!\i~:::i:i~:~uc~~:,~:::::~p~:~':.o~;ho;.~~~;.~:;
'\ mMI[h in Philadelphia 'Kas""ov had dra:wn twice and lost once).
1

t"' th' e·· ed.l·tor

.:

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.,

. ·

·

.

of ,."!, , walk
A.pt/1 27 ,.
. ,
D.

,

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·

.

eilitor: ....
geled to prevent birth defecls and
of ;rear once •aiq to · decreue infai!t mortality.
.
:, ..;JI.:l[•";;c·'iw,MII;jk ~a,. ajld the .. Those inte~sted in parti~ipating,
of Da-.
1 •
or dioie wJlo need infOiliii!UOn Or
Tri-Cqunty (tii.-Qn, matejiala ttlloukl call Jane Grabam,
11 walll~ be 111+1 Sun- . 446-1479, faa 446-,7031, or Carol
lt Hlimon 111n: in Blliqe, ~119, EXt 115, fax 446,1~~=~ J1e1tint !II 2 p,m.
'-613fi. ·.
. . .
-~IOpar·
,S~r.

,i:=

~~ar.J;t!"!l_.

_ , tJ11i!12:0Diwllk·
· .¥on thin $t$,000
J. 111 i t ~H k ....

a,

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£X p

•d t'
·
.'
res1 en s smugness reQpens old wounds ~

· ·
· ·
·
•
1
By Joaeph Speer
he says something or wriies someThis is how it is with me and Jim- thins that blows it open and! am i:onmy Carter: ·
·
sumed by vjvid Ojllihb~ks and fits of
I like the man, in tl!e abstract. Our- the heebje-j.~ebies. .
ing his 16-year post-presidency, I
.have 6ad . many positive thOughtS ,
a~ut him. I likehis _good d~s,-his
.
· ~uvc pan1c1pa~on ~n housJn~ pro- .
~ negauve thoughts '!'at flood
Jects.for t1!e P?&lt;&gt;r•. h~s ded1cat1on to . themmd~t1h~tpo1nth4vehttletodo
worJd peace, pjs W~jbngness 'to pllf8,- With politiCS. ~ei' Was a middfe·Of,
~hute mto such hot spots Ill' ·North the;road popuhs~ 1 fiscal conservaKorea'..,d Haiti lllldhelp worlc: lhin&amp;s live and a social progressive, and that
out. He is · a ~it. of a I~ cannon • !s a fair description of my own leanwh.en he gees mvolved m these fra. mgs. And he was a 1gu1sy guy; I
cues,but.hetrie~.Hesiqcerelytries. al~ays adqaired thai pin of him.

Joseph Spear

."

•

•

to do with JlC!SOnality. He was.srnus.
humorless,and insuffeOibly self-righteous. He was.J!CitY ~preachy and
deviously vain, He was sure of his
moral and intel,ectual superiori!Y· He
rarely too~ re$ponsibility for any of
his shortcomings, aru1 even when he
, did, you were usually ten· with an
ozonic odor of insincerity in . your
. nostrils.
,
.
Thanks to an oil embargo, the
eounlly faced an energy crisis in
1979, and ~·s ipproval rating~
Sl!ffered. Bqt_he didn'~ see it as 1
problem of \eadei'ship. It wu our

;.;;.,~·, ~

Jl!s

..

..
·~

1

~ fired a fow. •

,.u

·

·· '
~er·~ favori~ ~goA! was
:the press., They .were biasad aaaiilst
~uthe.m potilicians, and agilihst hijn
m particular. They were never inter- .
ested in issues..They were frequenily 'wrong. They lied about him 81111 1'p .
deeds. Tell.years aft.ef he ten otlb,
~sa~ .for an iiltei:yicw with public
teiCVtlion,and 1!(~ stiiJ &amp;pewiq IOf•
sers or spite:
f
"There ha~ been scllolarly analyses dope th~ sll9!" tliat 1 wu treaUfd .
more negatively by the presa than illY ·
Olber~denJintlriscentury-~

er.fhaU::::tt.e~i::::::; · :~~~o~ro=~:;ri::;~ ~:;:e~n~n&amp;::J:i~o;~::~ t:!~te~i~~~i~f: .::~

a ~nt of enmity for Jimmy · cy, nor do they campaign to sive·die further, but it w_..'l because of
C.W, tt was sealecllhut IJld lcx:bid, · Panllna Canal to the Panamanians. something be:laid or did. It was the
loallfiQ~-.nd lt....., IIi• ~~~~ ~ . . _MY. av~!'ll JOr .&lt;;arter had more- 'luality of ~net secretlllies. So

:.
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o:

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that t wu president, I only halt'fl.vq-,
able press one month .... 1 nevtr
undenlood wh.y.~· ' ·

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••

·. Cases resolved in Meigs County C.o urt ·

POMEROY - 'l'he followiiiJ protecti~ order, coau, 30 days jail Holter, Racine, speed, $30 plus cosu; · Marietta, seat bell, $25 plus costs;'
were resolved recendy in the suspended, two yean probation; Raben J. Lawrence, Lona Bottom, Ron D. Frame, Liule Hocking. speed,
Meip County Cowl ofJudge Pllrick Lucille Y. Wi~e, Rutlllld, reallliq scat bell, $25 plus costs; Pecgy S. $30 plus costs; Dennio Tillis, Rut,·
·
H. O'Brieq.
arrest, $SO plus costs, two yean pi'Q- Hetzer. Racine, seal bel~ $25 plus lipld, seal bell, $15 plus costs; Jef.
· 1: POII'n'PLEASANT,W.'\\.-- ~ d"•C.Bidl.87,1'vintPir 'W,died . Filled were: Sean L. Walton, blrion, 30 days jail suspended to costs; Edward D. Robe, Westerville, fcrson D. Boiter, Barboursville,
•~Friday. Feb. 14, 1997 ill Htl r Medt:ll Center.
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus cosls; three days; disonlerty conduct, $50 speed, $30 plus coa11; Aqela C. W.Va.; seat bell, $25 plus cosu;
~1 Bonl Oct. 8, 1909 iri.....,.J'It'll. MIIOI County, W.\11., dlloalller ofibe RobertG. McDeweii,Ral:ine, usault, plus costs; ....Wt, $100 plus coau, $cOG, Marieaa, speed, $30 plus cosu; Tammy D. Holte!'. Westerville, speed.
•.I bile Wallllr W.llld Ada Eftie c.- Ooob.lhe - a Jllllllbet of the Heipls ·$300 plus costs, 10 days jail sus: two yean probation, 30 days jail sus- . M. Jill Burdette, Coolville, speed, $30 plus costs; Brent L. Bowen,
,. United Methodist'Own:h in Point Pllullll, ~~was wu a member pended; Misti D. Lane, Middleport, pended to three days; Paul J. Chad- $30 plus cosls; Bobby Jo Nitz, Vin- Akron, speed, S30plus~osts : Gerald
~r .or the Friendship Sunday School Class and the Unitod Methodist.Women. disorderly · conduct, costs only, well, Middlepon, DID, $750 plus ton, usured clear distance; $20 plus R. Gaskill, Brook Park, speed, $30
1: She _wu a member of the Col. Ow1es Lewis·Chlpter National Society of restraining order issued; Mark A. costs, one year OL suspension, 30 cosu; Don M. Rose, Portland, seat plus costs; Byron W. James,
~ · the J:?aulllten of the AmmC&amp;II Revolution, the West V'qinia State Fartn Gard, 'Middleport, driving under days jail suspended to 10 days with belt, 525 plus cosls; Todd A. Morris, Guysville, speed, 530 plu$ cost$.
.h~ Museum anol the Mason COunty Fartn Bureau. She also belqnsod to the Point financial responsibility action sus- option of house arrest, one year pro~~~Women's Club.
· · ,.,
, ·
pension, $200 plus costs, six months bation;
·
Dusty D. Tillis; Rudand, sea1 bel~
• , She wu also preceded in death by her husband, J. Oral Eads, on June 29, jail suspended to 30 days suspended
~1! 1984; !Ill inflllt liOn, Joseph Ray Eads; a sister, Roma C. Rothpb; and 1 broth'- to 10 days if valid operator's license $25 plus costs; Ran\ona D. Mirchell .
tJ. ~. Walter Crooks. ·
'"
p-esented within 60days, vehicle for- . Bidwell, seat bell,' $2S plus costs;
· ;if SIJ!"ivins are two sons, l&gt;jlvid A. (Nancy) Eads of Point Pleasant, ind feited, two years probation; Stacy J. Connie L. Grimm, Huntington,
!:~ l~J~!~e$ W. (Lois) Eads of Benton, Ky.; and four grandchildren and six great- Lamben, Rutlal)d, seat belt, $25 plus W.Va., speed, $30 plui; costs; Robert
~11 ..
-""'"hi'". -.
. I Park, Pa., speed,
- - """"
cos~; Brian K. Frederick; Long Bot- ""' Caner Jr., Bethe
~~ ~will be:! p.m. Monday in theCrow-Huuell Fitneral Home, Point tom, seat bell, $25 pi"' costs;
$30 plus cosls; Donald R. Hall, RutIn Pleuant, with the Rev. Ben Stevens and the Rev. Louis A. Hussell officiatJohn L. Stumbo, Pomeroy, speed,. land, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Roben
: ins . .Burial will be; in the Suncre5t Ccmelay, Point Pleasant. Friends rna,y $24 plus costs; Nels G. Pickens, L. Hall Jr., Rutland, seat belt. $15
J.'! call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
Racine, disOrderly conduct, cosls, plus costs; Jeffrey Wickersham,
GALLIPOLIS - Anna Marie Houck Prose, 96, of Gallipolis, died Fri- ·
"':' ln lieu of flowers, friends may donate ta the Heishts United Methodist reStraining order issued; William T. Pomeroy, stop signs, $20 plus cqsts;
.
(. Church Building Fund, 2016 N. Main St., Point Pleawit, W.Va. 25550.
Hendricks, Pomeroy,. driving under Jeffrey D. English, Pomeroy, speed, day, Fe~ary 14, 1997. ·
Born
October
II.
1900
in
Guy
an
Township,
Gallia County, Ohio, she was
w~
'' '
·, .
·
·
''"
·
the influence, $300 plus costs, 10 $30 plus costs; Todd E. Evans, Midthe daughter of the late Strothard Houck and Nellie Swindler Houck. She
~~
daysjailsuspendedtothreedays.jail · dlepon, seat belt, s2s plus costs;
,
and fine suspended upon completion Ronald·T. Pinson, Proctorville, speed, was a homemaker.
She
was
preceded
in
death
by
her
husband,
Orner
L.
Prose;
her son, Earl
-1~ V1N1'QN- IsaCiore Jfanis, 88, Vtnion, died Priday; Feb. 14, 1997 in Holz- · of residential treatment program, two $30 plus costs;
· . ·
er Medical Center. ··
.
·•
years probation; failure to conuol, · Ryan K. Bowe, Middleport, ~peed. L. Prose; and three ~ihCrs.
Surviving are three grandchildren, Susan (Mike) Adams ofWorthing(9,n.
,;, BomAus. 17, 1908 in Hollybush, Ky., son of the lateCeaberry and Elvi- $25 plus costs; Janice M. Taylor, $30 plus costs; Sandra K. Pullen, ..
Tom
(Jayne) Prose of Westerville, and Martha (Mark) Slyman of Gahanna;
;,Ita Oiblon Harri$, he was a retired coat miner.
··
Albany, DUI, $850 plus costS, 10 Marietta, speed, $30 plus costs;
eight
great-grandchildren; a brother, Lee Houck of Columbus; and two sis'i'..l Qe wu also preceded in death by l!is wife, Sarah Howell Hartis, whom days jail susP&lt;m~ed !0. three days, 90- Steven Vance, Albany, stop sign,
ters, Plurna Shong of Gallipolis, and Margaret Hardesty of Crown City. .
,he ftlallied Sept. 30, 1930 in Melvi.n,,Ky.; .and hy a' aon, a dauafiter, a sister . day OL suspens1on, Jill! and .$5~ sus- $20 plus cos[$; Willie L. Pierce, Rand
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday, February 17, 1997 in the Waugh-Rai·.iiand two brothers. ·
.
.
pended upon compleuon of res1den- Kana, W.Va., speed, $30 plus cos!S;
ley-Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. Ralph Workinan officiating. Burial
~. ~ ~vins~re rlli;D' sons,_ ~Jd·~~ Mae)~.~ (FJizabeth) Har- . tial_tre~nt program, one year pro- Duane 0 . 'futtle, Racine, stop sign, · will follow in Mollnd Hill Cemetery. friends may call ~~ the funeral horne
•~ns, Cblfol'd (I&gt;Onn1) Hanis ai1cJ Rindle (Beverly) Harri{, all of Columbus; , bauon,
.
$20 plus ·costs; Kelly D. Spencer,
ii !Jix dausJ!ters, Dorothy Johnson, Nannie Hams and Mildred Harris, 111 ~f . Steplum!e L. Jones, Racine, crim- Long Bottom, speed, $30 plus costs; from 6-8 p.m. Sunday, February 16, 1997 . .
·bNinton, Wanda (EiliJ) Moore and ~- ~is) ~. both ,of mal ~ag1~g, cos~, ·40 hour:s com- James H. Anderson, Racine, failum to
;c Colunibu•· and Christine Ward of fjwinJW~; 24 p.ndc;IQJdm,l, ,nd sevefl!l rnumty serv1c~, r~~utuuon; Lmda L control, $20 plus costs; Angela D.
:lo'!Jieat·sraniJchildren and great-~:~hlldrea; and t1Wo bloihers; Hasi; Hoffman, Galltpobs•. speed~ $23 plus Young. Reedsville, seat belt; $15 plus
·i!·dore Hlrris anil Roben Harris tiOt!i of Melvin.
' ·
·
costs; Roben Cundiff, Mtddleport, costs; Rachel F. Robinson, Rutland,
Services will be 11 a.m.
.iii tl)fl McCoy-M~ Funeral Home, assault, $500 sus.~nded to $250 plus seat belt, $25 plus costs; Lance
~- Vuiton, with the Reir. Charles I5111C officiating. Friends may call at the tuner- cosls, 10 days Jail suspe,nded, two Spencer'"Parkersburg, W.Va., speed,
i&gt;&lt;al hotile l'rorn 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
~ .
years probation, r~straining order $3~ plus costs; James F. Powell, .
,;·,
·
issued; Brian K. Harold, Langsville,. Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
~J Et·hel
huntingdeerwithoutwearinghunter
Amy E. Nell, Cincinnati, speed,
•
orange, $25 suspended, costs; Dean- $30 plus costs; Charles D. Wilson,
See
'!~ PROCTORVILLE - Bthel R. Hineman, 92, ProcliirviJie, formerly of na D. Kruscamp, Langsville, seat . Racine; failure to control, $20 plus
Jerry
Bibbee
~~CI'OWI) City, died Friday,' Jan. 31,1997.in the Sunset Nursin&amp; Center, Coal belt, $25 plus cosls; Eric S. Walker. costs; James D. Tackett, Ashland,
Mlirvln
Ktlebaugh
'" Grove.
•
·
.~ . . .•
,
.
Middleport, failure to yield, $20 pl~s Ky., seat belt, $25 plus costs; .Jamie ·
.Clark Reed
~~ B~ Jllj. 22, 1905 in Gallia County, she was t!ierdaughtei'ofthe late costs;
· ;'
L. Miller. Pleasantville, ,no child
"''Lafayette and 'Ida MOOR Barry.
.
·~
·
.
Kevin Knapp, Rutland, violatins restraint, $35 plus cosls; Glenda D.
. She was idso preceded in death. by her h.us~. Ruiiell C. Hinemali.
~rl · Survivinl are three daughters, Helen (Jimmie Joe) Brig and Delma (Ciif- :
4 Dr. Tahoe 4X4, Vortec 4.3, auto., AC,
stereo cass., power steering, power
I:'!' ford) Edwards. !loth of Proctorville, and Ruth (Gene)';pllis of BnglewQQCI,
locks, lilt, cruise, rear
alloy
~'f:la.; {line gt'8!Kichildren. and six great-gtlllldchildren;· ~11114/ a half-brother,
PQMEROYUnils
of
the
Meigs
.
·
rt\U)DLEPORT
·
.
wheels,
forest
919811
w/lan
cloth
i
. ,.Lafayette Barry Jr. of Dayton.
,
· . .
·
..
1'" Ser)li~s were held at 3 p.m. Monday, Feb. 3, J99ljn the Hall Funenl Couiity Emergency Medical Service
7:43 p,rli~. 760 Laurel St., Gail
'
.. Home, ProctcirVille, with Dr. Kermit Taylor officiating. BUrial wu ia Mound recorded 10 calls for assistance Fri- McCave, treated not transported;
day. . .
3:31 ,p.m. , Maples Apanment
~!'llll, ~mf~ry. Gallipolis: . .
.
·
· . · . . ·
..
. Units responding were:
Jean Hallr VMH;
CENTilAL DISPATCH
IQ:\16 P,m. 128 ~uth Fourth
7:28 a.m., Middleport Police Ave., Middleport, Emery Gordon,

-

Anna Marie Houck Prose

sadore Harris

...

· ·

1994 CHEVROLET
S-10 BLAZER

Monday

R H·lneman

EMS ·units log 10 calls

F. Leo James

If:, CROWN'Cl'FY ..,;, F. Uo }lines, 51 •.868 T..ns, R'!l'lRoac!. Crowp CitY!, ~~·~ Da'f:id Bush, ~MH,;_ '&gt;V,MH.
.-...!RO~ ~ ,I
,.cfietfl'riciay/Feb~ f4;' t997 at'liiireaide.Kle: ' · ·i ' ' \, • ·' 1 '*, ' 9:~9a.m., FifthandPeart •.RaCme,
.,,,...,
RomMa 7,1945inGalliaCounty,son'btPrankandNorma8M:)ISJames Pa~CII Cundiff, VMH; assiSted by
4:23 p.m. ru.s. 33, two-car acciH! ·&amp;f OaUIPoJi~ he was il self-employed c:arpet layer, and lfmemlier of the J'rov• l;bcme;
' .
'
dent, David Mqli'~. Lynn Shaw and
"i idenee Miksi~ '·Baptist Cliwch.
... ·: · :" · . . ''' '' • ' 1 ··&lt; .. ' , · ·1·:29 p.m.. Hyil!ll Run, ~omeroy. John J'olley, VMH!• .. · · ·
. ·" · SurViving ill addlti_on to.his parents llfC hts w1fe, Jl(anc\l Kay James, w~ Arthur Musser, Holzer Medtcal Cen.,,1 he mlrried Sept. 15, 1962 aiJ!Weka; two sons, 'ICrry iJoe (Shelley) James. ter,ljststed by Rudaild.
ni and KellY Shawn ('!Crri) James, both on:::rown City; two'~hildren; three . .
R~ANJ:!
.
'» brotheii, Mll'lin (Pat) James and Don' (Nancy) J8rnes, bOih of Gallipolis; and .
3:18 P·",l·• Me'f.s Mme 31, Rick
~.l Cart (J081tn) James of Crown Cily; and two sisters, Charliltte (Charles) Beal:h Tho?'as, 0 Blenes. •
~.~of Vinton, and Joyce (GeofiiC') .VJdland of Crown City. ·
.
_9.4S p.m., Hampton Hollow Run,
,!!! Services will be 1 p.m. ~onday hi the Provide!ICC Mission.arr Baptist Er1ca Large, VMH.
: ~Church, with the Rev. Mel Mock and the Rev. John ArnOld officl~!ns. BurII ial will be in the Providence Cemetery. Friends may call il the Willis' funer0
Slihl Carries a ~I line d•'
~f al Home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sullfjay, .. ,
•·. •
~
.
Ve~ Memorial
'
-~
·, , •
.- • ·
·•'
• '· , 1•
•
Friday &amp;dlilissions - Raymond
0\lldoor power tools;·
;;. 1
~::.
Lembert, Jtutland; Patricia Cundiff,
Bidw~ll.
.
~· GALLIPOLIS - Aniui MariF Houc~ Profe·;9tl: Gal!ipotis, di(d Fri~Y:~, Fri~y discharges- none.
.
·
,
.'
· r.~-~-~~~~~~
; ; Feb.l4,1997.
''" Bom Oct 1I· 1900 in Guyan Towuship, Gallia CountY, daushter of the
I'" late Sti'otliarct~ Nellie Swindler Houck, she was a holjtCmaker.
.
· .,;; Slle was also JirccedCcl in death by Jier husband. Orncf L. Prose; a son, ~~~~~~~~#~
~J Earl L. Prose; and three brothers.
. . . .
edgets &amp;power leaf blowers,
~~. Surviving are three grandchildren~ eight great-~chddre~; •.broth.~ er, i..ee Hoock of Columbus; am!.two Sl$tei'S\ J'lwna Sbon~ pf Galhpohs, and
Waeerproof boola you ars
. ~ HardestY of Crown C1ty.
·
·
count on all.mnter
~~- Sc;rvices will )le 1 p.m. Monday iii ~ ~augh-~ai~Y:·W~ Funeral
.f, HOme. with the Jtev, )Wph Worlcinan offic~u~g. Burial ~Ill be,,Ill t,toul)d
, ~.; Hill ~meter)'. Friends may call at the funeral home fro"l6-8 p:m..~unday;

The Power of

STIH£

Hoaplta
' 1.news

Ann.a Marie Pro.·.se.

lorsB·

:;;,,

~Clara

~~

Ridenour

1997 NISSAN SENTRA GXE .
W'&amp;th Value Option Package!
Air, cal5effe, all power, tilt, cruise, mu.c h, much more: .
MSRP • $15,298

Special ·
Sale Price

THE SHOE CAFE

.

'

Lee Wall. .

.

l

,.
SCOTI'OWN- Clara Lee Wall, 77, 10013 State Route '/75, Scott.OWJ!,
' viformerly ofGie.n Daniel, W.Va,, died Thursday, f'eb. 13, 1997 in the Pinecrest
l.iCare Center; Oallipolis.
· ,
··:
~ 1 • • BomJUIIC tO; 1919 in Rcx:k, W,Va., daughter of the late•Coatney Preston
1!:.rid Ida Lusk Shrewsbury, she was a bomemaker. ~he was a member of the
· Coal·MarSh Missionary Batitist Church, Glen Dan~el, and a former member
:•'Of tile Rej)ecca Lodp.
. . .
.
.
;.; She w.. also fii'CCeded In death by her husband.
·
. .
~· Surviving are a son, Jolin Wall of New Yorlc, N.Y.; a daughter. Pa~c1a
.'.JAnn (taurent) Daniels of Sconown; four gran4Sons and four great-grand·
· · dau~; and two·brothers, Dqnald Shrewsbury of Cullman·, Ala.. and Jack ·
li1Shrewsbury of Aurora, Colo.
.
&amp;micos will be 3 p:m. Saturll$y, Feb. 2~. 1997 in·~ Melton Mort.u!II'Y.
Beckley, W.Va. Burial will be in the Blue Rid&amp;e Memonal Cilll;dens: Ff!ends
may call ar the mortuary on Saturday. Feb. 22, 1991 from· I p.m. until the
lime of the service.
.
. . . .
Local arrangements are by tbe Cremee~s Funeral Ch~l;Galhpol1s.
.
.
..

see our most unigue
~ have to see our liome
imder construction.

e.

: c..-..

4x4

Value option package! Air, cass, 5 spd, air bag, po\Ver sleering,
·
rear slider, alloy wheels, PS, 3 power brakes, all-terrain tires.
yr/36,000 mile bumper to bumper
and 5
,
mile power train
or lease for

JMI' mci.ptua

l!lx 36 mo.

Gallia ·County -~.~urt news

Galli a Count Pleu Court:'
Court!
.
1
.; Divorce filed - Brend8 M. GraTammy Louise Leach and Brantl.n; Vinton. froin )irnmjt Graham, don ,Lee Sipnan, botH of Clleshite;
'~ B. Bethel ctWrch Road, Oil· }:.in Marie Dixon llil!ll!JIICS Derl:k
!ipotis; Bobby.J. Skidmore, 52 west- Dixon. bolh ofVipll)ll;: ~u~hJane
~ [)rive, GallipoUs, from Mary Noll,n and William RIChlld ~·
. _. stcidinole, .MarieUI: 1lmi !.,. . bodi of Bjdwell; ~IIY Jo Mom;on
-Waite ·l'raal Micbel Wol~. 'no . and Gene KetrWOOcl tl8l'k. both of
ilti s' lllled.
. •
Bidweii;Jodi'Ann~IIICIDanlel
· Diieolulion tiled - Ralldy D. BnlliC Sickds, both ·of Gal!ipolis.
t .•2j() .stale. lloule 1, Gal'
,.

1997 NISSAN
4x2XE

or lease lor

Diecorer the qual!ty txiiiiUilCiion llld
added value built Into.-w, I Miet!m.. Home:
.
.
.
·• Hip ~ Stcd Frunie4 Coalttuetlon
Mllllidpel
· lipolis, 81111 MiSty Michelle Crews,
•Super Bfllcacnt lnlwatioll (ll-30)
·
•• GALLIPOLIS - The followins 229 Burkhart l,anc. Gallipolis.
• Plft llld Tcrmi~ Jaie•"'CC
j~ was reeendy ~sol·ved ill GalDis59lution granted - Eaflie
eOwa-10 A1l'ordabJe Sancla,d Models
' lolipolis Municipal ~:
Carr. 9SO Liule Bullskin Road, Gal• And Much, Much More
-l - Micllel L. Wllite, 3~. Proc· . lipolis, and · Audrec Carr. same .
V'llit with 111 llld diaeowr
·iorville, chaipd with driving ~nder addresS.
.
1
how
~lhe infllienli Wlli f1ned $4SO.
Pt'obllte-Juye~ ,
..
.•
• •
'
. J!111 WI iffilrd the. bat.
:~ · .' ' ti±m• "-1 .
'
. GAWPOLIS .-- The fnllnwing
,1 QAWPOLIS ...:.. The follbwiiiJ couples :n;cently filed for mlll'riqc' in
-~ons were recendy filed·in :the
the Otllia County ~te-Juvcnile

v

,.

t

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

Bern adlne C• Ead8

1 . .

'

d·

--

•

Fr:hry 11, 1'; .

AaiOCI!Ited Pren Writer
11' WAS W~&amp; FOil.
·
DAYIPN - ~ environmental activist is glad that the fCderal govern"'«)Se, ~OPLE TO
. mentis on schedule to clean up radioactive'soil and buildings at the.Mound
' MAI&lt;E A TAPe
nuclear weapons plant but says she will tolerate no shortcuts. ·
~baron Cowdrey, head ofMiamiburg's Environmental' Safety and Ho:alth,
wanls
to ensure that the 306-acre site in her suburb is cpmpletely clean when
1
' it is returned to the community.
.
For decades, Mound used radioactive materials to make pans for nuclear
! v:'eapons. U.S. Dep~ent of Energy is in the fmal stages of.transfer' nng Mound s bomb-making work to other plants, leaving environmental
t clea~~up as the primary activity at the site.
.
:
Q&gt;mmunity leaden plan to convert the site into a high-tech business park.
f M~ .than 30 private businesses employing a total of 250 workers are oper·
atins at Mound.
.
.
Qlwdrey said a significant amount. of radioactive and hazardous mateUHL.ESS ONE Of M
. ~Is ·at Mound has been cleaned up in the past few years.
.
WI'ON~S 1'0 MV WROI'CG
~
' "We're making some progress," she said. "Probably more work has been
done up there than has been done up there in 50 years." '
: Under President Clinton's 1998 budget, money for cleanup at Mo4nd
' would increase from $82 million to $91 million.
· ·
~Energy Department said the funding will allow the cleanup'to remain
. on ~le for completion by 2005. .
· ·
·
. : J¥JC Green.walt, spokesw9ffl811 for the depanment's Ohio.field office,.said
the ~oney will enable workers to complete a $25 million cleanup of a canal
bed··lhat was contaminated with plutonium in 1969. The canal bed is next
: to t~ Mound plant. .
I~ addition, the money will allow for continued treatment of contarni-.
· nated groundwater. and' the shipment and disposal of contaminated soil.
q,wdrey said that while Mound is one of the Energy Department's smatter onerations, il is located in a largely residential area.
.
"""e feel it's impacted the health 6f tbe community," she said. "So the·
quic~er .w_e get i~ cleaned up, the less suffering the' community will feel.''
, Slle s11d her group 1s conducting a survey of residents to 11y to deter' mine if health problems may. be connected to the plant.
. .
for h1m, ~new..not how to !"Iss... lo~mg &amp;eneral .,order was Jssued: . Wllller,doih!ng was in:~~. ~l)ort
C4)~ said that while sbe wants to see the radioactive materials cleaned · By ROBERT WEEPY · · . .
Without
a
doq~l
the
most
s•amfi'Twas all m v111n;· a power m1ghUer The General most earnestly requ1res supply' that Washington had 'to issue
t up, slie beli~ves it is dangerous to transpon it over highways for disposal.
benefit
of
honoring
two.
,
g~t
than we sh~elded him from hlllll.'. and ex~cts a due obse~ance of a general order threatening punishcant
• . "f would rather see each site maintain their waste as best they could until leaders of the past on Pres1dents far
ije
can not d1e m battle ... there 1s those articles of,war estabhshe4 for mcnt to anyone cytting up a tent .to
• techaology comes to the point where\vt can-destroy it," she said.
Day is the remembrance of the kind something that bids me speak ·in the lire government of tile army, which make a·coat out of it. 'EKpOsurc 10
'
of character both Washington and voiceofprophesy:Listen!TheGreat forbidprofaneciJI'Sing,swearingand the elements along with the starvaLincoln possessed. Little room is Spirit protects that man, and guides ' drunkenness. And.in lik~ manner, he tion diet insu~ the best cooditions
available in histo- his destinies. •: he will become the · requires and expecls of all officers for the diseases that now ra~aged the
• By '!'he' AaBoclated Preaa
. ·
ry books of today ch1ef of nat1ons. and a people yet . and soldiers not engagecl in actual ~amp. One in four was lost to flu
1bday is Sunday, Feb. 16, the 47th day of 1997. There are 318 days left
.to cover this · unbo~ will hail hi~?, ali the founder d~t~, a pu~ctual att.endance of ·smallpox: typhus, and e_xposure:
in ~~~~year.
·
·'
~spect .~f the1r of a rn1ghty · e~p1re . . . .
. DIVI~e serv1ces, to . Implore · the Washinstop djd not spare himself,
'!belay's Highlight in History:
hves, wh1ch may
Confirmauon of thiS, ep1sode_ can blessmg of Heaven upon ·the means . !ll&amp;king the rounds of the CII)IP early
~In Feb. 16, 186;2, during tbe Civil War, some 1.11,000 Confede~ate solhelp to e_xplam l?e found m ~ancrofts defin1t1ve used for our safety and defense.
in the morning, riding from one res. die~1 .surrendered at Fort Donelson, Tenn. (Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's victory
why certam . of nmeteen-century H1story of the
Throughout the long struggle for i~ent tp the next, ,talking ~th ~
earned him the nickname "Unconditional Surrender Grant.")
these tra1ts COflle Umted States.
independence, miracle after ·miracle men. ..
· .· · ·
In this date:
.
·
. up short today.
In 1775~ following the Battle' of attended the eff!J~s oflhi~ army:
My mid-Febl:uary the camp was
· 11804, Lt. Stephen Decatur led.a successful mid into Tripoli Harbor to Yes, Feb. 17 ought to be more than Bunker Hill, Congress sought a
,. Washington's decision to take down to the last 25 bam:ls of flour
, bu rthe U.S. Navy frigate Philadelphia, which had fallen into the hands of just a holiday from work or school. steady hand _to assume the ,leader- .the entire IIITllY off Brook!yn by and Washingto~ was convinced thai
. pir~s.
.· .
. ·
In early childhood days Washmg- sh1pufthe rn1htary. John Adams was small boat sccnielf doomed as dawn "unless some great and · capital
~
~ 1868, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks was organiz~d in ton's mother was a strong source of known for his shrewd judgment of came and three more liours would be change suddenly takes PlaCe... this
; N1r York City.
.
.
spiritual hk On . th~ day he left . character, and aloilg with Ben needed to get the last man across the army must inevitably 00 feduced io
·;
~ 1918, Lithuania. proclaimed its independence.
•.
h?me to beg1n a hfetu~e of serv!ng Fran.klln, was one of the most per- . Enst River. Ju~t 1 the'\~ very dense one or ot~r of these three .tlllngs:
l
' 1923, the burial chamber of King Tutankhamen's recently uneanhed
~1s country, she sa1d to. h1rn : suaSJve members of Congress. The fog began to "!'C. ani;! 11 seemed to Sll!fVe, dissolve or'dispersc, in order
_
p
was
unsealed
in
Egypt.
,
.
.
·
Remember that God only 1s our man whom Adams wanted to be scule in a peculiar manner over both to find subsi.stence."
' ·, ~
1 10
i ' 1937, Dr. Wall~ce H. Carothers, a research chcO)ist for DuPont who sure nils!. To Him!. corn~end you." Commander-in-Chief of the new cncarnpm.cnts'. ,The fog remained · The miracle of Valley Forge Will
t inv~nted nylon, rece1ved a p~tent for the synthetic fiber.
·
. To,th1s she ll!lded, My son, neglect Contmental Army was the only mtact until the lnst boat, with Wash- the· patience and fidelity of the SQI~' 1945,Arnerican troops landed on the island of Corregidor in the Philip· not the duty of secret prayer." The qualified man who did not want thC ington In it. h8d depaned. Then it diers, that they were not excilcll to a
: pi s duri~g World War 11.
. . · euensiv~ notes on the_margins of his job. .
..
.
lifted. The British ranto the shore general mutiny and dispersion. The
j · . 11948, NBC-TV began· airing its first night~y newscast, "The Camel prayer-f1lled notebook show . that
Adams remarked: ·M~. washmg- and started firing a1. them, but they reason they cn&lt;jured, the n;ason \heY
; Ne 1sreel Theatre,'~ wh1ch consiSted of FoK Mov1e1one newsreels.
Washmgton remembered that ton , who happened to s11 ncar the were out.ofrange. Nearly 8,000 men ·'believed in God's dCii~cc was
t
'· t959,Fidel Castro became premier of Cuba afterthe overthrow of Ful- adv1ce.
door. as soon as he heard me allude · had been saved from certain death cir · simple: theY could .be!i~ve beCause .
sen ,10 Bat1sta.
·
. It would not be lo~g before the · to h1m, from hJS usual modesty dan- imprisonment without the loss of a tilo:ir gencral.did helicye·. , "'..
.
·~ 1968, the nation:s first 911 emergency telephone system was inaugu- d1vme hand ~f protecuo~ would be 'ed into . •~ library room:' But. to single life. .
Yes,' Vallcy' Forse was ·certainty'·
. ~~in Haleyville, Ala.
. revealed, for 1n 1755 dunng the bat- Adams 1t was that selflessness and
··The wmlcr at Valley Forge was the crucible of freedom. From this
l.
t977,Janani
Luwum,l/leAnglical\archbishop
of
Uganda,
and
twoothtie
of
Monongahela.
many
around
abhorrence
ofpositionlhat
most
reca
time
of unbelievable sufferins1 an point' on 'God. wa.• foraing·an army
1
[ er en were killed in what Ugandan authorities said was an automobile acci- h1rn d1ed m combat. The record . ornmendcd htm. 'The II)Otion was unbearable niglltrnarc. 'The log cabin that wo~ld wip· tile freedom. Their
r· den.
.
shows that at the that baule the 23- i'rcscnted, and George Washington . huts, 16 feet long, 14 feet wide, and . invisible Ally was doing His part, ,·.
,
years ago: John Demjanjuk went on trial in Jerusalem, accused of year-old colonel had two-horses shot ·~as u.nanirno,sly cho5cn. He ~loscd six feet hijjh would·be easy to heat
For more fll!Cinating history,
I· bei g "Ivan the Terrible," a guard at the .Treblinka concentration camp. out from under h1rn a~d four musket h1s b~cf acceptance rei!Uil'ks w1th: :·t and would shelter a dozen men on please read The Liglit and t~ Glory
' 1• (
njanjuk was convicted, but the conviction was overturned by the Israeli balls pass through h1s coat. . be~ 1t to be remembered by every four tnp,c-decker bunks. Upward to by Peter · Marshall·. publil\!ICd • by .
. s oeme Court,)
,
.
·
~iftee~ years later the chief.ofthe · gentleman in .this room that . I tbis 700 cabins were erected in less than .Revell (Baker). If i10t on, 1111: .If, •
1
t,
ive years ago1Two days before the New ij~pshirc primary, five Demo- lnd1an trJbj: mvolved 1_n that b~llle day declare with _lhc utmost smceri- a rno.nth. Meal .after meal, their food yO!Jr library will gladly order , , .•
; 'era c presidential caiw1idates de~atc~ on CN!Ij! directing most of !beir.crit· · requested a rnccu~g wnh Washmg- ty that I do.not th1nk myself equal to ~ons1stcd of 'firecakc' -- wheat or
Bob W~ Is a c"'J'f''...;;;.L..
_4
~- ici ~at Pres1deqt Bush. Jsraeh helicopters attacked a c.onvoy '" S1don, ton ncar the JunctiOn of the ·the-c,o{llrnand I am honored with." . cornmeal poured, 'Into a kettle of lor the SWulay n._.seniiiMJJ~ Le~ on. killing Sheik Abbas Musawi, leader of the pro-Iranian group Kanawha and Oh10 nvers. Among ,
Many changes were tp come for water, mixed •.and ladled out-On a big
.
i'
He~ llah.
.
.
..
other things this chief said: O~r. the Continental Army. 'The day after stone in the middle of an open' fire,
'
•if.!
1
e·year ago: Eleven people were killed. in _• fiery collision between an nfles.were leveled, rifles which, but Washington took command the fol- . where it baked. ·
·
··.e,,,' ,f (II . !I, .
;·
passenger train and a Maryland comJ!lultr train in'Silver Spring, Md.
,.
• ·~ · '• .
J; r.r California Gov. Edmund G. "Pa)'' Brown died in Beverly Hills,

! .

..Iunday, Febru.y 11, 1117

BANIS
,CONSTRUCTION
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.

STRIKE OFF FOR NOW- .An unldentHied pauenger kla141d
hla daughter at tha Amarlcan Alrllnea counter at Miami International Airport Saturday. President Clinton blocklld an AA pilots
atrlkl Slturda)' morning, ordering a 60-day "cooling-off" period
Jutt minutes after union leaders ordered a walkout that would
have ahut down the nation's largest airline. (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) - Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
Friday offered Syria a chance to
reopen peace talks that would "take
note" of territorial concessions on the
Golan Heights placed on the table by
past Israeli governments.
He said the talks, which broke
down in disagreement a year ago,
could be 'revived without precondi·tions and that ·he was. ready to meet
with Syrian President Hafez Assad.
Once the two sides meet they can
press any demand, Netanyahu said.
" If President Assad chooses the path
of peace, he will find us. a reasonable
partner,'' the Israeli lea!ler told
reporters.
Before the talks collapsed last year
in a spate of terrorist attacks against
. Israelis, the Labor government in
Jerusalem had offered Syria a pull·
back on the contested Golan Heights
in exchange for a secure peace.
.
Syrian negotiator Walid Mouallem
has insisted the offer is binding and,
if talks are reopened with
Netanyahu's government, they
. should begin from that point.
Israel has rejected this approach,
·. and Netanyahu said, "We can only
honor signed agreements." But his
offer to "take note" of what transpired during past talks was seen as
a gesture toward Damascus. He also

did not rule out a territorial compromise.
Netanyahu said he would insist the
Palestinian Authority s(op releasing
convicted terrorists from prison, close
its quasi-government offices in east
Jerusalem, and revise the Palestinian
covenant so that it docs not reflect ·
hostility to die Jewish state. ·
"The glorification of terrorism is
still part of the Palestinian lexicon,"
he said.
While insisting Israel had fulfilled •
its pledges under its agreements with
the Arabs, Netanyahu affirmed a
right to develop existing Jewish settlements on the West Bank..Also, he
vowed Israel would never relinquish
any part of Jerusalem.
Netanyahu also met with Treasury
Secretary Robert Rubin on· invest-

By TOM STRONG

Aaaoclatld Presa Writer

,.
~·
ment opportunities in Israel for
American businesses before leaving
for New York.
' ·
Based on undi!'Closed proposals
Netanyaliu brought with him to
Washington, President Clinton said
Thursday be was encouraged peace
talks with Syria can be revived.
· " Both nations want to conclude a
peace agreement, and the United
States will work with both nation~ to
trytoachievethatgoal,"Cllntonsaid
Thursday after meeting with
Netanyahu at the White House.
Netanyahtl, speaking at a dinner
Thursday night 'at the Israeli
Embassy • was similarly upbeat. "I,
too, am.confi&lt;;lent we can reach our
goal," he said.
The prime minister said Israel was
not interested in just the mechanics of

Sports
in brief

'lhe Shoe

e.a6e

Lafayette Mall •
Gallipolis .

I

JAWIIEY

424 SECOND AYE. ,

ill • •

TELEPHONE

WASHINGTON - A slrike by
American Airlines pilots was just
four minutes old' Saturday morning
when President Clinton intervened to
prevent the shuttering of the nation's , whole."
Clinton said he acted in hopes of
largest dolliestic carrier at the start.of
speeding
an ·agreement and because
a busy holiday weekend.
he
believed
a strike "would ·have an
While the pilots continue to fly, a
fmmediate
and
adverse impact on the
three-member emergency board
named by Clinton will take 30 days traveling public."
In addition to stranding passen-.
to propose a settlement. The union
gers,
an adnlinistration study said the
and the airline then have 30 days t&lt;i
.
slrike
would have cost about $100
reach an agreement. Failing · that,
million
a day and forced layoffs of
Congress could impose a settlement.
''"This dispute needs to be resolved 90,000 airline workers.
Clinton acted under the Railway
as soon as possible," the president
Labor
Act, designed to protect the
said in a statement authorizing the ·
economy
against labor strikes. A
emergency board.
··
president
had
not invoked that law in
It was not known when the board .
will meet. Negotiators for the airline an airline strike for more than three
and.its pilots can continUe their inde- decades.
Unions· have called two strikes
pendent talks ·during the "cooling .
against
American in the last four
off" period while the board meets, ·
yeilrs,
but
Clinton interceded in both.
·but a strike is not allowed.
Early Satur~ay, negotiators for In 1993, the company agrj:ed to his
American Airlines and its pilots were request for binding arbitration "after
getting ready togo home to wait for flight attendants voted to walk out.
With a strike looming, White
the emergency board to come up with
House adviser Bruce Lindsey broke
a way to settle their dispute. .
American officials said fewer than · away from reporters about 11:45 p.m.
100 flights worldwide were affected Friday to take calls from both parties.
. by the strike that .had threatened to He was told the union rejected Amerspoil a holiday weekepd for more ican 's final offer. He then went to the
president's office in the White House
than 40,000 travelers.
residence
to break the news. ·
"If it hurt us ~t all il was less than
"If
you're
going to act, the time to
a bad·storm at one of our hubs," said
do
it
is
now,"
Lindsey told Clinton.
AI Comeaux, an airline spokesman.
The president quietly . took the
The White House announced
executive
order and signed it.
Clinton's decision at 12:07 EST.
The
three.
members of the Presi'
after four days of marathon talks pro.dential
Emergency
Board appointed
duced few results. ('our minutes ear.
·lier, James .Savich, president of the by Clinton are:
• Chairman Robert R. Harris of
· Allied Pilots Association, had ordered
local strike leaders around the coun- . Maryland, a former chairman of the
National Mediation Board who led a
try to shut down the airline.
While airline executives praised speeial board that resolved a nation·
the president for staving off a poten- al railroad dispute in 1991. That
ti\11 finimeial disaster, union officials board was appointed by Congress.
• Helen M. Witt, alSo was chair- .
,
. questioned his decision.
man
of ihe National Mediation
"There is no deal, there is no con. tract, there is no labor peace," Savich Board.
• Anthony V. Sinicropt, an arbisaid. "I prefer that it not have
tration
specialist and professor emer6ccurred."
itus
at
the
University of Iowa.
Sovich's strike announcement
American's pilots want raises
elicited loud cheers at a meeting of
totaling
11 percent through 2000 and
union members and their families .in
increased
stock options . The compaDallas-Fort Worlh, the airline's head-·
ny
has
offered
6 percent and smaller
quarters. Boos greeted the news of
stock options.
Clinton's decision.

'•

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SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP)
- The keen-eyed Hubble Space
Telescope was upgraded Saturday
with an instrument so sensitive jt can
spot an airplane flying a continent
away by merely tracking the motion
of its landing light.
The new guidanc;e sensor, a colJection of mirrors and lenses that
locate a target star and point the huge
telescope, replaced one that was
nearing the end of its life. ·
Working in the dark much of the
time, their work site illuminated
mostly by floodlights built into their
•helmets, astronauts Joe Tanner and
Oreaory Harbaugh installed the 465., pound instrument - the .size of a
~~
piano -. with apparent
' ..,. The job Of remqving the old and
ln~ng
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•

Whalers beat Senators 2-t
.
. HARTFORD, Conn . (AP) - ·
Keith Primeau, back from a hospi ,:.~ .
tal stay .with asthma, scored twice '"
as the Hartford Whalers beat the ..
Ottawa Senators 2- 1 Saturday. . .:
Primeau, who was hospitalized .
after an asthma attack and missed .''
one game, scored both of his gO.Is :
on his only two shots in the second
period as the Whalers extended ·
their unbeaten streak agains1 ·the :
Senators to seven games (S-0-2),
~With the crowd chanting his : ·
name when he was on the icc in the •
third period, Primeau took four ·
more shots as he tried for his first : ·
career hat frick, his best chance
winding up in Damian Rhodes'
glove with under two minUtes lefi. • •
Lance Pitlick was the on lye :
.Senator to beat, Sean Burko, who
finished with ~6 saves in ,ltel11ini ·
the Wllalers sn1tp a three-P!IIC 1- .,
One Rucker, Cody Lane, Andray H
, liMe ing streak. H11rtfonl also al.napc1 ··
Stiundera, Aaron Beaver and Chrla Lawla and to fend off lix f~s in its own • '
liNd ooeoh Jim Qabome. GalllpOIII and Warren end in the final S7111C011ds,
• ..'
Looll flnllhed taegue play with 114 recorda to
.......... ,....., 810Al. tltla,
.
.

Daytona qualifying speeds deellne
NASCAA adopted carbwalor rastrictor plataaln 1988 aa a salaty measure
to reduce racing apaeda by rulricting the floW of air and gas to the · ·
engine. Daytona and·'fallm.Ga (Alii.) are the only traclla that require
t'- pl..... last Sunday, Mike Skinner won the Daytona 500 pole
position at 189.813 ~- .
MPH

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American's chief executive officer, Robert Crandall, thanked the
president "for his wisdom in pre·
venting a slrike that would have been
very harmful to American's many
constituencies and to the natiOn as a

· They could have avoided doing
the job during. a nighttime pass, but,
in their eagerness to start, they began
tbe spaccwalk an . h.our ahead of
schedule. The space shuttle Discovcry circles Earth once every 90 minutes - nearly half the time in daylight, half in darkness - with flash- ··
es of dawn and dusk in between.
They also were to install an elec·
tronic package for the guidance sensor and a new data recorder before
winding lip the second of four spacec
walks of the mission.
The Hubble has been in space
since April 1990 and this renovation
mission was planned before the orig.irlallaunch. The planned lifetime of
tile telescope, which already has rev· olutionizcd astronomy with its observations, is IS years.
.
The effects of aging in the' harsh
environm~nt of space were apparent
to Tanner and· Harbaugh. Insulation
ner. •
, .•
aro'und one comptutmcnt door had
'. 1'0h Me,"llid Harbaugh. "Any·
'!VIIblikc crK!ts up to 8 inches long.
·
•• body clll dO it in the daytim~."

·

Minnesota, .Kentucky and
Clemson .w in; '-'Closes

peacemaking: " We are interested ·~
results."
Clinton sbied away frolli:
divulging the overtures NetanyahiC
authorized the United States to relaJC:
to Assad in Damascus. Any disci~
sure could undermine prospects f~ .
success, ClintOJI said.
,...
Diplol!latic sources stres~
Netanyahu had offered a resumptioli: ·
of the negotiations that broke dowl1':
a year ago without preconditionC
That indicates he may be prepared q!!
relinquish part of the Golan HeighW:
in an agreement with Syria.
:::
"I do feel encouraged that thearc things working through," Clintoi:
said during ajoint news conferenciii:
. with Netanyahu in which the twU:
leaders he\IPed praise on each oth~

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In T~ 25 college hoops,

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lin••• 40 Boots

Clinton order postpones
4""minute-old AA strike

'I
'

Sports

Israeli leader sweetens prOmise g
of open discussions With Syria ....-~

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Pomeroy • llcklllport • GIIHpOII, 0H • Point PleMenl, WV '

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Blue Devil• best River Valley 67-51,

·

·

~ ~~~w;·"=dly=~·~F=•~b=~~~=My~1~~~~1~98~7~·~~~~~~~~~p:~:m~MW~~·oy
~•;;M~Id~~~s:p;~:~·~O=n=•="~:;~~~~·~OH~;•:P:oh:-:d~P::s•:•:n:nt~~:-~v~~~~~~~~~~JI~=·~:!'P~~JI~=1r=·~'~•!P:~~ge~:~B3~

Sunclly, Ftbru8ry 11. 1tf7

·Hannan defeats
South Gallia 71-66

.

Gallia Academy shares $EOAL .crown with Warren Local
ly G. .IMC!It QIIQNIE
11mI I •• 11111111 ...,
IUO ORANDE - In Friday
'ai...' &amp; ScJ!rt ndenl Ohio Alblelic
I eqDe Y81ity bn!retbtJI jlme II
the Uaivenity of Rio Onade's Newt
Oliver Arena. the Oallia Academy
Blue DevU• .cnckcd a 12-12 tie in
die final minute of the first quarter,
.pi never lost !he lead thcreaftcr en
lpUie to a 67-SI victory over !he River Valley Raiders..
: The OAHS victoly accomplished .
tjle following:
1 • The Blue Devils (13'6 overall
.ahi 11·3 in !he SEOAL) won their
(ourth league cbampionship in seveta yean And !heir fifth lide in 10
&gt;;ears. It was their eigbth crown
~r the guidance of inentor Jim
I
,

Osborne (366-229 overall SDd 218120 iD 28 yean 11 OAHS).
• This title wu the Aramy's
14111 inn yean., a SEOAL cblr1« membet. Only Atbeas (19)· SDd
Loaaa (IS) 1re the onty ' ones with
more league lilies than Gallipolis. .
• It gave the Blue Devils a sweep
in this season's sene. and a S-4 Jelld
in their four-year-old rivalry with
Raide~.
·
• It gave the Raiders (3·17 and 113) their seventh ·sttaight defeat and
their lith consecutive league los:s. ·
Callipolis, in takiq only thrao
shots outside the middle third of the
court in the first quarter, took advantage of the Raiders' blizzard of ear~
ly missed shOIS and led 10-4 with
3:071eft. Then the hide~. by scor-

me

hal~sJue Devits· .s.ror-13 field-

"!",·- ---Cage standings

i-

=

1

9fl6.97 : ·

e ....._ .. 18
Local ....... 17
rsburg ......14
~~ .............. 13
J4ogan .....•............13
Nlarielta ............... 12
~reenflelcl... ......... 11
l!ortamoulh .......•:.11
Ghio Valley ..........10

~TP

l!oint Pleasant .......8

eaatem ..................9
Jackson .................8
Falrland .................6
~m ................s
South Ga1Ha ...........4

OP
213801040
31356 967
51368 126t
61062 976
712921125
811851104
81054 976
812031162
91349 1335 :
9 . 966 983

1112131222
121158 1248
1311581242
13 974 1104
14 973 1220
Athens ...................5 15 926 1101
Melg$ .....................5 . 15 .998 1141
Rlvtir Vlllay ...........3 17 981 1309
·
SIEOAL VARSITY

l

(FIMI)
W L

TEAM

POP

Wa1n111Local ....... 11 3
Gallipolls .............•11 3
Logan .................. 10 . 4
Marietta .................9 5

941 700
804 715

912 836
732 691

$EOALcege
titles won by
.Blue Devils
Y'EAR
1938-39
1948-49
1953,54
1954-55
l9SS-S6
1958-59
1973-74
1981-82
1983-84
. 1986-87
199().91
1991-92
1992-93
1996·97

RECORD
)().0

.

12-2
'14-0 '
14-0
14-0
10.4
13-1
13-1
6-2
10.0
7-3
8-2
8-2
11-3

Poi ""---7 7
nt r-•1....... ·
Ath- ................... f 10
JICicson .................3 11
River Vallay ........... 1 13

SEOAL 1'ESERVES
TEAM
~) L .p
9 5 794
L
. P':rm"PieaS8iii":::::::9 5 792
Marielta ......... :....... 8 6 702
Warren Locai... ...... B 6 738
Jackson ... .............. &amp; 6 895
Galllpolis ..............:.5 9 699
River Vallay ........... 5 9 655
Athena ..... ........:.....4 10 704
Totala

46

:ria
ll':. ll
" .760
Ed.
Mtaml .................... ]l
New v..t... ........... J6 14 :no

26~

CalniDI~o.. ................44
6 .8110
Detroit ....................l6 13 .735
AI..... ...................J2 16 .667
Cllllrlotle ................ :'D 21 .S88
• : CI.£VFUND ....... 27 22 .551
lodi... .,................. 23 2l .479
Milwtukee .............2.1 26 .469
TOfOftto .................. l7 J2 .347

7t
II

14~

161
20

-·-

20 1!
1

26'~

lle•ley 65, Wuhii.if011 C.H. 54
Bia WPlnut 88, Uckina Val. 49
Billlop (W.VL) Donohue78. Bellai10

lllldwtalot.lolon

.r.l. . Iii

Utah ............. .......... 3:5 14 .714
llouAOO ................. 33 17 .1160
26

Si.lohn62

21

.480

Bb:k River .SS. 'Medina Buckeye 49
Bloom-Carroll .S9, Amanda·

Il l

:10 J411

17\

34 J20
16 .2."0
43 .204

19'6

22'~

hdlklli......
' LA Lalom ............ 37 1-3 .700
- k .................... 34 15 .694
....... ................. 26 24 .llO
Slawjllo ............ 22 29 .4.11
'LII.'~ ......... 20 27 .426
' OoldoaSiooe .......... l9 29 .396
~"""'""''"' "" '' ]2 .l73

IS~
15~

c..-s. 65,W. Branch4J

TdJ'&amp;pbl
.

Cln. Qalo HiDo'15. CIO:·c - a 58

.,.....~~ ; lOp. "'~
MPllilllliljll ,a, I P'"'·

Cio. Plloicetl!l 7J. W. &lt;llesl&lt;r .....,.

63 .

a ..

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l
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OrWIIIIO I

•

II 1;, 7:~p.a

- • - . I : J O p.a
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oa,IOp.•.

70
63

Olllo .J!.S. . ,.....

.

'

••

--43

_

'

.
Clo. • ..;.... n. Co. Ol&gt;o . . 50
011. WJOII!III M. Clo.llioar 111111&lt;.,
~

IU ... ~IJIOJ'I

~.::,~ill 'r 14.

.-..II.v..-

Cio.CIIIinlll'lli, v...~IZ
'

.

Raiders

71-47

. '·'121.
. '

.'12,100

'

,.,.jG IW'Y'""''
''

.J'
;
'

'

EASTERN CONFERENCE

-·-y . . .

...

Newooo Folio 65. ....... l0

1U 117 UK
69 161 12M
., ... 1.10
6) I 'Ill 162
52 149 156
46 1:14 167
T..,.. S.y ....... .1 ~ 29 6 44 146 l1l

_._,

58

47 160 IY6

WFSI'ERN CONFERENL'E

C"""'IIN.......
Ila
!! &amp;. I Ell. lif GA
llallu ....., ........... 3J 21 • 70 176 146

l&gt;eiJUit;...... :........ 2611J
SI. Luuls ............ 272.'i
, Pltocala .............. l~ 2M
t1M:aau.~............12l7
TORJtKo ........ :u 34
¥

....

10 62 17.l l:t\
6 60176 17M
4

$4 15M U~

ColuiDclo ........:... 34 14 K 711 190
Edm&lt;- ..........28 24 5 61 1!!0
~ v.-ouvcr .........n lK :l 52 i76
c.Jiooy ............ 2ll8 6 '2 lli
Analoei01 ...........,222K 6 lO 159
SanJ~JS~: ............. 2030 6 4ft 146
LooAnFb ....... 19ll 1 4l IU

·

$250 MCJOir .. . . FOil .......

H ~2 1~ l!lt
2 44 164 101

l'odlkDI.-

m

161

'.
''

1n

16l .
172
IM:'i
19~

Frldsy'siCQI"e!l

WaaiHqlllft ,1, t-lllly 4 (OTJ
' llallu 4. Doonolt liOT)

•

.

''

· · '!'hey pJ.yed S.1Unla7
llf!IWo'" H~ I :30 p.m.

Pliulow&amp;h. -plolo.l p.m.
N. Y. Ranpnal~lp.Ja.

w....,..... r..,.a..,

. . l6 .
,

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1
.

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'·

va, ·

va, ·

I·{~·

Colundo • St. t.o.is,l P.m.
!Joaon ............ l p.m.
Florid. a1 N.Y. Is ...... 7 p.m. ·
7:30p.m.
Neoo Ja1ey • ,.......,,1:30 p.m.
r - • Calpoy, 7:JCI·p.m. .
A.....m. v..... fO:'~ p..m.
-uoMLooaA..... I)l:lOp.m.
•

'1,4.

Flyers defeat
Penguins S-t

.

(OT)

61 .

znr

HlWirvnJ .............ll 2'7 7· 49 t:n uu
Otmw~t .. ;............ l K2S 12 4K I!'l:l 165
Btliimn ............. ... 20 2Y ..,

4

_____
..__ _

Norta..t Di•Won
Ruflaln ...............2919 9 6i I!W 141
Pillsbui'Jh ......... JO 20 ~ M 206 17;\
Mnncn:al .............l! 27 II ~0 IK~

ll.llllyfiold"' " .
Naroudy 96, Garftold 1111. •
llot I t! 59, .11_,;. VII. 41 (01')
Nente ~~ 10, Klllll ..... 6.1

Glt'iti"i~, ~ville Val

!! &amp;. I Ell. lif GA

Phi~lphi. ....... JI16 II
Fklrida ............... 211~ ll
28 17 9
N.Y. R........... U 23 7
Wllhinaroa ........ l:i 2'1 6
14.Y. Idanolois .... I82MIO

~.

·250 BIG.
tO BUYNOVL

'

..U...,klllt-. '

lOT)

~~ ;?~.:::?~;,..,

............... 52·.

.· Holfaiool s~. •2.

. NHL standings

·Now Rh:hrno!MI 69, lcta.J.Tile 6.S

Hliln 10, W........ N. 6r ·

Hlllloo67:

Zanesville RO, Wheclina (W.Va.)
Po.t67(0T)
Zanesville Roiecrans U . Col. [)e.
5Uts .''7

Ml-di~t~A

-"'·"
:::::~;:..:.;;.:~6

...

You. Wilton 71 Vi1ion Qurs1 _,)

Highlwl 64. Hud110n, S~
Me11:or lake Ca1h. 66, Hoi)' Nan:: ~:t
MiW E. 73, SidiM:y Lehman 51
MiddleTown Madiafln 41l, Ouy.
•Nortlvid!&lt;46
'
Mi'lln Edison 74, Saltduky 51 .
Mory 'lll
~
.
' Mll"'lii. R.._-.,4., ,
Minerll Ridp S9, LdweHvil~ $:'i
Minmo II, Akron Srrina. 69
Mohlrowk 6.1. Stft«• £, ..) .
,
Mount ·VCfDDfi 70. Wlllim Mcmuriul
27
' ,,
N. ...... l6, '11/, Un!ooolO . .
N. Cunooo 65, New.,_ladclphla&lt;14
N. Ctntnlllll, Snykw. 78
•.
N""""" 711. f jndl,y 63
•
Ne....,_YC)I1t74, V-Co. 69 •
New K-\'UII55, Plltwty 45
Newl.otMkM~l.M.;tll 39

50

'

, Zane TrillO 61, Paint Val. S2

.

Malvern 62. Tu sc..'lf'nwa~ C1.11ll. ~fl
Mo~Mficlt.l MadiJ~lP .'iij, Mom.•r~eld

,.

You. Ursuline 82. Warren Hllfdina 60

Ila

,

'13,900

43

Sl. J--.lo
R7 New Rrlael 9l,
. ·p,._
' 'T'~-~ •
.._,...

43, Cllotrio Falla :Ill
-911. Ulaonj UIIIOo ~
~
4! t4ooolodo Millar 51,
.. .

Pcoriavllk'l6, Edoa &amp;II
Pil.:tmnaltln r.K, Ouhlin Scio1u ~·
PK,ua ,U Vllllllnlia-Butlcr !i I
Poland~. Yot~ . Chaney 4~
Porummub W. 64, McVcrmoil NW .

New Mlallli .., ~ · $11

Homyn.~"= ·

.

a.. ""*"" n. a..
• w- -

70

~~~~ 71

.... , •• IIi

Patrick tknry 6\1, Wa.con ~

·~ ... B&lt;rbhio: 41

· Manillon JLtcbon ·63 . Cantnn
OlenUak.lK
.
Mautu~:c J7: SYiv:mia Nurthvit:w.27
Mc[)nnuW Kll, Jo~elumn· Millun 12
Medinu lfl, N. Ruyuhnn .SO
Mlldiaa fi~ Bapl. IM. &lt;.'k:. KL'I'11t!JC!

.... s,n.,. NortbweJiornj9
0.... Cloy 72:11:7ooldoloora 45 .

a..~-as.ao.Clo.
·-·

OxiOnl Tabtwundl66. Ed~nod M

41

Oi-91,8nootlyn78
Oloonl61 , 10il&lt;o 50
Oleowood 111. Sr-o Val. lO
0n1-. 12. Day. s........ s~~ ·
Onoioohiew 64, W. loti'..... 5.1
OraoviUe 62. New ......., 4S

'
Cio. -~~~·
65. Cio. ljilb a.m.

Ornn~~: 61 . Chon&amp;oo S9 &lt;l1n

Oran.l c (br. liS. Luke R~gc 4H
Omil~ Ill, Clc. S-114
OIM:CJ') IOQ, Oi~rg 64
·
Ouawu Hill5 51, OfeJon Slril~o"h.'i4
Clt!Awa-Ginndorf 64, Umn 'Bit!h. 4K

Marunalha Chr. KO. Xenia Chr. 6h
MnrJarcllb ilK. Hr.m111 ~
Munc!lla 71 . Ja~:kson 47
Muritm EIJiA 59, Sp111'1;1 Hi¢110 51
Marion Riv.:r V1!1. YK, N. Union 51
Mnrtins Ferry W. ~~~ubcnvilh: Calh.

.

" Ooml""ll!! 17,

. Cia. - · 5 1 , Clo. Toylof 36
'QL lOpr l1cete II , Cin. NcNI·

.....
• $ ,. ...

....

.'O .....ay l7, Ridle•ood '2
Olrfie:ld Ht•. Trinity.68. Elyria Coth.

~-4P

I' ..~
...

.11
""'_,.

r.:r:• ~-- ~&amp; O.y. Oami-

-·..._..

_II,__,IOp.m.
-·""'
9p.JIL
I

'I'

.

Wayne Tnu: 7Kl Fain'icw 69 '
WaJnnf~eiii·Ooshcn 7:\, Mc~o:tulllii:iboq6.1
WnyncsviUc 1l; Ciin1Qn-Music 6;\
Wa~era Brown 74. Blailches&amp;cr 68
W1.'11m'i1~ S. 77. O.llticOLLhe ~
Wellluk.c61 . Bay60
'
WheclcrstM!rJ 10, Minford 57
WillninJian. ~7. M1110a ~2
Wwdml.n 71 . Oe110.1. SH
Woollef47, Alli~- 46
Wndd Hrncst 74. Uncoln Bapt !'iO
Wonbinpot~ Chr. 96, Jutm11owa ).l
Worihin&amp;IOIIICilltoumt tJO, Upprr Af.
IIOJIOII ~ 1011
Wynfonl76. lluo:l&lt;&amp;yo Caooml64
Xenia 70, Sprinc. Norm 66
•
You. MOMey 49, Auslintown-Fih:h

.

Olmsfed Falls M, Avon l...:tkc 61
On!ario 68, C~liuc: .at .

l7

'

~:l

r::N\d.:

-;17

a..,,

(OT)

Uberty &amp;n10a49. M~..&lt;Cumb )7
Libl.'l'ly Center 6K. Mnmpelk'f 41
Lil.'klnJ 'His . 7-J; Berne Uniun 70
tOT!
UITIII71 , MilrlWd ~~
Lima Chr. AcaU. 6J. Cnl. Nonhsitlc
au. 59
Umu Perry 74, S f'l¢n~o~-ntillc ,l b
Lfncolf!Yi~w 9~. llclphc.MO Jcfli..'rWn .\9
Link: Miuhli 57. Nurwood 43
U1~1111 63. Point (W .Vu,, Pkla!!llnt 62
U.lJiiP Elm 74, Cird~vilk 6j
Lolldon KO, Jnnluhun Alder 74
Lurpin At.lm . Kin~ 61.1, l.orahl
Southview 46
·
Lomin C.11h. 61 . Hcrill•Jte Or. 51
Louisville 79. Corrollron 4K
Louiavilk: A11uina.• 7l RavmM :'ill ·
Loveland 19, ~own 69
: ,
.blhcran W. ~9 . tk. lndc('ll!ndcn«

lO .
Filher l!.alb. ~. Mi&amp;lmpon 48
* ~klin6S. f.cmon.Monme 61
Frankll• fo'ur••ce Oreen Kl,
Port""'*'h Clay $9 \
fr¥ftkUa Hts. S4, Whitehall !'i2
Prw!ldin..,._ 91 , Tri-Villoae .64..,
· PremoiiiRoea67. FvltoriaSr. 66 •
GalloO :t7, Sl!elby J5
•
01llipoli1 67, Cheshtre Rlver Valley
51
Oalloway weoollnd 69, 11oomu w ...

Man....,.,

....... Nnr. Yolk.l2:l0p.m.
,[)euoil n , TOilMIIIO 11 Maple Leaf

...

~~~:.;

'
Hubban17M.
57
Hubl.'f Hl:5. Wayne ·59, Sprina. Scllllh

.,

Oberlin' K4, WellinJlun 79
Old Fon 68. r-o11otia St. W~lil'l 62

.

Lcbllnon 84, Fcnwi~.:k 61
Lcipdc 66. Han:H• Nm~n 49
Lcxing1on !i2. M;trion Hatdinit oM

F~lioaookl~. 1iiadlll
Fairfield 56, Middletown 4S
Fairf~eld Ulioa 69."H:unihon Twp. 49
Fairvtew 46, N. Olmued 4:1
'
Feder:al Hockfna 68, Reedsville 66
(OTJ
.

~75,Foidl0d,-

7:30p.m.
P - - aMNewleney,
t M1ami, 7:30p.M.
AIIIMI 11 S.. "'-tooio, 8::10 p.II'L
Doower Mlllll-. 9 p.m.
llrlllll• u... 9 p.m:
-•Pon-.IOp."' ·

pa~~ 'w ith·

iii

s...,....

n.

Evetpeen 69, BryM·66

Cardi11Jron LinWID 60, Marion PleMant~
.
.
Cotoy '(7. Beasvllle 54 ·"
c.
...nk 62. Kenerin1 Jl.
a-171 . ...... 41
a.- NI&gt;'CL47, Cle. Cad!olic 42

""=·

ott l :30 p.II'L

.

Cin. ADM~oa· 49. Cia. 1\nia 38 .
· Cin. Chrillian 56. Lilllny 0.: 4.~
. Cin. co..uy o.,. 71 . Cin. SMmmil
C.Unoiy Day 55
.
Cin. H~aJbet;IO. Cia. Walraut Hilh 73
{111')
'
.
Clo. lldian 1111112. Cia.
6~
.
Ctoo. La Sale"· Cio. Eldtr l()
1Cia.
Mldeirl'72, Cin. Armcytown 60
Clo. - - 78, Cio. So. Xavier 68
' : ~~~- ~Idly 69. Cln. Nonll""'1 • .
a • . lj. Colleae HIP 64, Cln. l.olld·
mBOor. 49
'

signs
five-year

. 1995 TOYOTA CELICA 2 DR. ST. LIFEBACK

. 'FI.YINC to TJfll! ·HOOP - River Vllley'1 Rtehtircf St.phen~ galS
•lrboml on hll wey to ICOI'Ing on 1 ..yup lill Gillie Acadlnly'•
Andnt~ Ito ~nil (44) .~ 0!11 of the wey during Frldliy nlght'8 game
It Newt OIIVei' Arllnl,·whenl the Blut Devll1 .won &amp;7·51.
tlnl•hed Wltll13 points. (Photo by A~ Brumflikl)
·

• Hutbor\ Wc51crn Re~c 71. Unsl)'.
Pa. ~9
.
Juckson Ccnler 53. Fan Loramie ~I
(aT!
JCffmM 16. Geneva!!()
. John Olen 62, W. Muslc.ingum 4~
KoluJa-63, Conlincnlai.S7
Ktnlon Ridge 70, Utba.llll67 (()'f)
Kidron
Open Door l6
•
Lakeview S9, You. Libe11y $4
Lnnc:wa 7K. Cle. East 46

=

Caalleld 61. Salem 47
Canto~~ McKinley 60. You. Bollnl11111n
.

.

Della 62, Archbold 46
'"
Di11ic 6.1, C~U"Iiale .S4
Dover 69, Cantun Timbn )7
Dublin c(lrrman 6.1. Qrovepon 51
E. Canron :19. Tuslaw l~l
E Cleveland Shaw M, l...a..Uwood 61
E. Oinlon 82, Oreencview 71
·
E. Liverpool IJO, Beawr ~a14.~
Eu1ern Brown 80, Ly09J,burl Clay
7!5
.,
Eastern Pike 72. Ponsnwum E. ~IJ
Eoitlal&lt;e N. 58, Willoulhby S. 31.
Euowood "· lllillbony Lake 66
&amp;J, Ayersvillc 61· COT}
Ef lO. Cellnl 37
'
Elyria 61. Saoduaky 50
Euclid 69, Bl\llh , 3,
·

Car.a Pulron NW 69•.M.tinaton ~
:'l:'i

49

43

8uffalo, .W.Vo. 70, Coa.l Orove 67

. ,. 'l1ltJ played S.IUrday

,,._...II ,u · I

.

.

Horcwdi·LoUI.Ion 50, Tiffin Culvert

n

(OT)

100 ·

Oonlloa. 12:30 , ... '.
lollllilti·LA .......... J P·"'

..

Druatwk:k 62.1era S9

17
11:,

((IT)

n

Brookfield 54, w.,.. Cllaqlion J8
Bruokville 6S. Preble Sh!lwnce 4~

Mil~ ..lcee 106, Tor01110 102
Wuh.lnJIDn 1-1.1. New Jtney 107
Dtt1:vitl09. Qarloue 1q3
o;..,ol9, Allantalll
~~~-••04. 0r1.,...
OoljleO So• I 08. Sill AMOIIIo 94
.....,., 110, LA. CII!'P"19l
S.k lOll. Hwooon Ill ,
Vwouw:r 109. lotion 106

•

Cle. Univmil)' 56, Ki1ki Prep 48
C~arvi~w 32, Brookside 41
Clyde 7Ulak Hadoor &amp;3 .
. Col. Brig• Col. Tree t1f Ufe 60
Col. CcnreMial96. Wellingtun-42
Col. EM!moor4~. Col. Bm:hL;roft .40
Ct~l. HnnM:y 12. Col. St. Cburh:s 61
Col. Ready .SS. Newurk Quit o&amp;9
Cui. Wnt!c..Tiun 60. Col. ACIIIlcmy ~4
Cui: We~ ! 102. Col. Unden·M\::Kinl&lt;y l&amp;
Coklwnrer -ll . Millllr....,. Jr.
l 'ulumbia 61. B~achwood .Sll
ColumbiRM J6, E. p.,.Jc51ilkl' J~
Cononon Val. Sl. StrasburJ4K
Convoy Crestvia=W 62. Columbus
Grove 47
Covin{lton 6;t, Miu iuinawo Val. 46
t~~lwood ~2. Windham 48
Crooksville 64, New U.\il;lgtoa ~S
CuyohoJa Falls SR. Ken1 RooscveiJ
50
Danbury 117; Mnumc.: Val. 77
Danville :'ia, Lu.:as 42
DAy . Be ln1on1 71. Dny. Colonel
White69
·
Duy. CurTull .S.S. Miomisbura 4~
Do)'. P1111crson
Gay. Meadowd:!.le
64
•
Du)'. Wayne 59, Sf1'iog. Soulh 4.~ •
Dcflaoc~ 70. Krnroo.61
Delaware 66. Mary1viUe 6.S (OT)
Delphos Sl. John 's 64, Morion Local

Boolciol66, lloulf0ft.l9

Frid•J'I""""

·

SEOAL game on the Unlver•lty of Rio Grandi campil1. Slunder•
~eored .nine points to help the Blue DevU1 Win &amp;7·51. (Photo by
Roger Brumfield)

Bnxlford 65, Tri-COUIII}' N. :14
Brecksville 8.'5, Clom-lcaf 47
BrWol 69, OrPAd Vol. 5l

21
II

~eorge

~Miller gets 58~45
·~win over Southern
'.

TIE-BREAKING JUMPER- Gallla f\Cidemy fonoilrd 1 - Seun-

dlra put1 up hlajumper emcingllt Rlv8r VllleY,'• ,Aaron Adami (far
left), Rlche~~tepMIII.jln front of Seulldlra), Joey JarnH 122) end
Nick ROcchi to crack li 12·12 tle.ln the 1Irtt quarter ot,Fridly nlgtlt'l

Clearcreek 46
BlufftOn S9, Allen E. S4

26!1

By Tile ••oalllnd ...._.
Kidd played ror the fiiS.I lime in points and nine assists in 22 minutes.
Dennis Rodman jawed ..,.t jos. 22 games since brealcing his clavicle
Ceballos finished with 24 points'
tied with Dikemhe Mutombo, and on Dec. 28 in his Suns debut against and 10 rebounds, and Kevin Johnson:
tangled SDd taunted with Christian Vancouver, He finished· wilh eight had 27 points for rhe Suns.
"
Laettner. Michael Jordan, or COUrSe,
look Chicagil's last shot - and
missed. ·
·
. The Bulls won anyway.
Chicago ended Adanta's 20-pme ·
JEFF GEORGE
home winning .,WC Friday night
~'th an ' 89-88 victory over the
Rawles, who showed the defending
NBA champions they'll be a team to
watch in the playoffs.
"Ncthing comes·easy in Adanta."
Jordan said. "Their derense was
active and they play hard. Adanta's
a team to be re4;koned with. They' n:
trying to get over thC hump into the
elite class.
"Wh!on they beat us, they'll he
there."
· ' ·
Laettner, whose college career at
Duke. included several ' dramatic
'
.
.
game-winning ·shots, •missed an
'
o~n. but hurried, three-pointer at the
By DENNIS OEOROATOS
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -Jeff buzzer, ·
George is ready to sign a new deal . · Rodman, playing his second
game since coming back from an I 1with the Oakland Raiders.
George and the Raiders ~bed game 'Suspension ror kicking a cam•
terms Frida)' on a five-year, $26 mil- e~an. didn't stan. Instead, Chica•
lion conuact, and he left his· Indi- go coach Phil Jackson went with
: HEMLOCK - The Miller Fal- last night in the seaso,n finale.
anapolis home and :was headed to .Toni Kulcoc at forward, deciding that
:co~ avenged a ioss earlier in the sea- Ouarter ll!lllb
Oakland for a news conference Sat- was a better rllatchup against Laet;son, by defeating Southern 58-45 in Southern •
8-7-ll -19=45 urday at which he was scheduled to tner•.Allaritll's AII-Star'forward who
•a Tri-Valley Conrerence Hocking . Miller
,, 8-12-16-22=58 . be introduced .as ~ team's new sctnd 37 on the Bull,s in December.
4 cyl.. OHC, five;speed, air, cruise, power steering,· power
. Kukoc sc~ 2 I ' points while
' :Division gam~ Friday night at Miller.
Southern: Adam Roush 0-0- · quarterb!\C,It ..
brakes, AM/FM stereo cassette; Jll)wer windows &amp; locks, rear
:Miner (8-12) wrapped·up a tie with 3/4=3. Ryan Nl?n:is 2-0.2/2;:6 ,
Team offi~iila W!luld say only Rodnlan finisjjed with two points
spoil~r. rear defroster. ~ on!! owner. on~ii
:Jlederal Hocking for second in .the Jamie Evans 0-2•3"/4=9, Jesse'.May- that · the club intended to make a and ·12 t:ebounds before foulilig.out
~ivision with a 7-8 league mark.'
nard 2·1 -112=8, Pete Sisson 2-0-0=4, major announcement:. How~ver; ,with jusi over two minuics ~main­
: • The Tornadoes (S-13) haven't Jarrod Mills'3-0.:n2=8 ,1\'oy Hoback George's agent, Leigh ~teinberg said log. Rodman had several physical
~on since their 67-64 victory over 0-0.212=2, Tyson' Buckley 1-0=:2, be and his client'IOIIld. be among exchanges with hoth Laettner and
Miller on Jan. 19,
Jason Allen l-112=3. Totals: Il-3· those in attendan . ·
Mutornbo.
·
1996 PONTIAC
1996 CHEVROLET S10
: ·Miller broke an 8-8 lie after the 14/18=45
{
SupuSoalcs
105
Steinberg said ·a few contnlet
2 DR. SE
.:t"lfS_t frame al)d led the rest of the
Miller: Shaun'Neal2-0.9/IO=IO; details n:mail!ed to be worked out.
Roc:kell85
SUPERCAB 4X2 TRUCK GRAND
:Way.
Nick Altier 1-0.2/4=4, David Riley but he didn't anticipate any hangups
At Seattle, Oary Payton scored 23
'
cyl,, 5-speed,
· power V6. auto., air, ps; PB,
·:. Southern won the reserve contest , 0-0.112=2 , Je~y Massey 2.'1"It's pretty muc!J done/' he said: poiqts .and Deder Schrempf had i6
steering, power brakes, ait, cruise, ·power windows
;49-42, although no further stats were 2/4'=9, Doug Gi!I,.9-0.2/S=;20, Ryan . "We're j~st fme-tuning the lan- of. his 20 points in the second hair for
lilt, cruise, . AM/FM stereo locks, cast aluminum wh,.•ell~
;,available for the g11me.
. · Beal Q-J -3/4=6,.. Nick'Airman 2-0- guage."
seaUc.
• .
. , .
·
cassette; i:asl aluminum AM/FM stereo casserte,
:··,;Southern played Newark Catholic 0=4 . Totals: 16•~20129=58
'the addition of Oeorgc almost . .The . win was Se~ltle 's first in
It ·(;
, 'I
' ·~'
,
,
wheelS, ~hor1 bed. 11 '000 window . defroster, 15,000
certainly means the departut:e,, by . ihrao games against the Rockets this
miles. Local one .owner.
miles, Local one owner.
trade or waiver. of Jeff Hostetler, ·season. The Son,lcs entered the game
· who bas been the Raiders' storling ().7 this season qainst.Western Conrcrence powe~ Houstoq, Utah and
quanerback since 1993.
.
the
Los Angeles Lake~.
George, who has had an impn:s•
Mario
Elie led the Rockets with
sive but volatilecareerthathas seeo
1995 FORD .
him wear out his welcome with his 17 points: and Charles Barkley had
1995
FORD
ESCORT
.
14 points and 12 rebounds.
, TH~NDERBIRD LX
:ay ODIE O'DONNELL
·
Reserve score: Jackson 52, Mari- hometown Indianapolis Colts and
.Houston's Hflkeem Olajuwon
4 DR. LX
most recently the Atlanta Falcons,
:T.s Comt1pondent ·
·
etta 41
·
VB, auto., air, power steering,
joins a team with a renegade image w~ held to six poinis in 29 minules
4 Cylinder, automatic, power . power brakes, dual power
! GALLIPOUS-Oneofthemost
and did not play in the fourth quarsteering, power brakes, air seals, leather interior, lilt,
:exciting basketball championship
· Opening shoit in the Divison III that matches !lis own. ·
ter.
·
'
Raiders
owner
AI
Davis
has
been
:races in recent yenrs concluded Fri- sectional basketball' tournament at the
C(llldilioning, AM/FM stereo cruise, power windows &amp;
BuUets 125, Nets 107 .
!daY. V~~t il), d;l.~ SR~!IJ(\81\ler,n Oh!o . University. of RifllQrande will be tak- kqown (or bringin~. wayward play·
cassette,
rear · · window locks, AM/FM. slereo cass.,
Ar Baltimore, · Ju~an Howald
: AihYetlc . L~a&amp;ue .. wlien Gallipoli~ en Mmiday with two big games rca~· eri to tfie organizatio!i and getting scored 2S points and Cal ben
· lraction assist, rear defroster.
defroster, one owner.
the most .out or them. He welcomed
:defealed R1ver Valley by a 67-51 luring area teams.
Cheaney added 22 . as .Washington
Local One Owner.
: •.core. .
·. . . .
A total of 14' boys' high school such castoffs as Jim Plunken, John gave Bernie Bickerstaff his first vic: It was, a cruc1al vt~tory ~or ·ti)c- teaml wil.l play i~ the Newt Oliver Matuszak. Aundray Bruce arid Todd tory as Bullets coach.
, Blue Devils, who en~red the contest Arena during the six-day toumlllilenl. · Christensen and watched them nour·
Rod Strickland added 19 points
!knowtng that · Warren ' Local had Fourofthem will advance· to the dis- ish as Raiile~.
Davis also has taken risks ·and and 10 assisL• for the Bullets, who
buried Athens 87-57 on Thursday to tricl tournament al Ohio University ·in
1994 FORD EXPLORER .''
gotten burned, mOst notahly when he · played without Chris Wcbher. side·
. cli.nch a shan:·of the league Iitie al II - 1wo weeks.
·
lined with-a lower back sprain.
4 DR. 4X4.XLT
'.!.
·
There will be two games each day. gll"'bled and lost with Todd MariBicke~taff was coaching his sec·
Wf!vich,
a
l9?
I
first-round
pick
with
.A capacity crowd , in the Ne~t at 6: 15 and 8 p.m. eocept Thursday'
ond game since laking over the BulOhver Arena at the U~•versJiy of R1o with the bracket championship con: a troubled h1story.
George was suspended and then lets after the All-Star break.
· Grande saw the Blue Dev.1ls respond ·tests scheduled r&lt;\~ Saturday aJ'ter:
•
Kendall Oillled New Jersey with
released aJ'ter a sideline shouting
·j
to the ptessure of a mllst wtn contest noon Feb 22.
.,
25
points.
•
ioeam the victory and a shar~ of the · M~nday's games will · see , match last ~~pt. 22 with then Ailanta
Suns 110, Cllppen 93
1996-97 ~EOAL crown wtth , lhe Crooksville meeting Wells10n a16: IS cilach June Jones. He n:jccted a c·onAt
Phoenix, Cedric Ceballos
Warnors from Washmgton Cou~ly. fqllowed by Minfo~d vs Ironton at 8 tract proposol from Seattle after he
scorixl
nine
poims in a 2:3S span earWhen the . firmg stoPJ~eC! Fnday .'p.m. On Tuesday il will Oak Hill vs, was let go last year, and had heen
ly
in
the
founh qUJJrter 10. lead .
the ~gan Chteftams too~ thtrd pl~ce Trimble in the first game and Coal pursued by hoth Oakland and.Kansas Phoenix, which welcomed back
City in recent weeks before settling
!!VIlli a narrow 63;62 wm at Poml drove vs Belpre in the nightcap.
point ~ Jason Kidd. ·
l'leasant an~ Manetta wrapped up
Wednesday 's lineup has Wheel- on the Raiders,
1994 GMC C1SOO
1990 PONTIAC
{ounh plliCe tn a 71-47 rout of Jack- ersburg meeting Federal Hocking al
son.
6:i5 followed by Nelsonville-York
SIERRA 4X2 TRUCK
GRAND PRIX 4 DR.
·Final league standings reveal Warren and South Webster at 8 p.m.
V6, . liutomalic, air, power 350 VB, auto., air, PS, PB,
andGallipolis at I 1-3, Logan 10.4,
Thursday is an ,off day before
Marietta 9-S, Point Pleasant 7-7, action resumes on Friday with the
steering, ' power brakes, lilt, tilt, cruise, power windows
Athens 4- IO, Jackson 3-11 , and Riv- Alexander Spartans facing the winner
cruise, AM/FM stereo cass- locks, .B ·fl. bed, rear
er'Valley 1-13.
of the Crooksville-Wellston game
'
ette, power windows and bumper, running bo&lt;ud:s,
. ;,
Marietta 71, Jaclcson 47
. prior to top-seeded 'Chesapcakc playloCks, cast alumil)um wheels. AM/FM stereo cass.,
. At .Marietta, the Tigers raked the ing the winner or llie Minford-Iron- ,
rf!&amp;r defroster. . Local one sliding window. Local
lronmen 43-~0 jn the second half to ton game. The winners or these two .
owner. ·
conclude regular season play at 12·8 Friday games will earn a bcl'lh in the ·
overall. and 9-5 in league comp.lti· district at Ohio University.
tion. ·salvaging the fin)ll game of an
On Saturday 1he two Tuesday
!
oth~rwise dismal seasOn.
winnc.rs ·will meet at 12 noon foi:'
1987 CHEVROLET GHl 1989 FORD TAURUS
I
'The Tigers il!ld heen projected to lowed by a 3 p.m. conlcst belwccn .
!
l1c a strong .contcnder lo repeal their Wednesday's winners. Both of rhcsc
l
CONVERSION
VAN
DR.
GL
championship season of last year by Saturday winners advance to Ohio
ll
VB engine, auto.; air, power
returning a young, but veteran, team. University for the district
Automatic, power steering,
steering, power brakes, tilt,
On Friday, the Tigers took a I J-7
Keith Caner of tbc Gallia County
power brakes, air, AM/FM
fi~t quaner lend and· were in control Local Schools will serve as touma·
cru'R&gt;II, power windows, quad
stereo cassette, power
· all the way as they ourrehounded men1 manager. 1'hc game ollicials
captain chairs wilh sofa bed,
-41W
windows and .locks, 'rear
Jackson 36-25, hit si~ of 18 three· will be assigned by the Ohio High
AM/FM
slereq cassette,
defroster.
pain! shots, and forced 22 Jackson School Athletic Association's Southluggage rack.
tufbovers. •.
..
.
eastern Boaid of Control.
. 1unior center Joe Vukovic led four
Tige~ into double digit scoring with
IS points. Adlllil Trautner had 14,
Jarred Edgar b!Jd 12 and Jeremy
, I'
1984
MERCURY
Albrecht had 10.
1981 MERCURY
Shone Shanlon neued l 5 points to
GRAND MARQUIS
COUGAR.LS
.lead· the Jackson offense with Chris
PHILADELPfiiA (AP)
4 OR., LS,
auto'
Wagner adding 10. Jackson closed Philadelphia, playing without injured
a\Jtomatlc,
air
condiout season play with records of8-12 Eric Lindros, beat the Piusburgh
malic, power brakes, air,
• Save big money on a Toro Wheel Horse lawn and
and 3· I I.
.
Penguins for the sixth straight time
tioner,
power
steering,
tilt, · . cruise,
power
g!ll'den traclor. ·
Jacklon: ~liris Wagner 3-1- 1= l 0; at home, winning S-1 Saturday.
power
.brakes,
AM/FM
. windows and locks, rear
• ·Big 16}IPToro Power Plu.s"' engine handles tough
'
·Craig Sturgt!ll2-0.3=7; Matt Jenkins
John Druce, Eric Desjardins, Pat
stereo
cassette;
rear
i
defroster.
Only
72,500
1·0.0=2; Shane Shanton S-0-5= I 5; · Falloon, John, LeClair and Daniel
mowing jobs quickly an(i easily.
•
·defroster..
,,
·'Rodney Campbell Q-0.1=1; Mike Lacroix scon;d. and Trent Klatt
miles.
•
Hurry
in
tQdAy
lhe
best
selection
of
the season.
Rouse 1-(1-1::3; Joel Schoeff· l-0: . ·addedl\pairof!ISSi~tsforthe ,Fiye~.
.
Joi3· Jon McDonlild l+o*5; 'Vince
I.;i~dros, who strained his lower
t
Jentdns 0.0.1;•1. TOTA~ 14·1· b&amp;l'kin Thursda~'s 4-2victory over
.
I
131041
· ·
.
··
Ottawa, skated hefore the game bul
II
MmeUru Scott Strablt-r3-~6; . did not play,
.
Adam Trautner 2-3· 1= 14;Todd · On:a Johnson scored PiusburJh's ·
Woodrich 1-0-2=4; Janed lidgar2,2- goal. ThePei\Suins play the Flyers at
2=12; Jeremy Alb~cht 3- 1-1=10;'' home ioday. ·
.ReeceW~ 3-QJ2=g; Drew Pienall
- Pi!tsburgh.the NHL's top-scoring
I
1-0.0.2; Joe Vukovi~ 7-0-1 ,.15. offense, had only one sl)ot in !he first
, . . U+,Mi
· half ofthe second period ll!'d nine ·
'I
9f · w~a~~~~
overall in the first 40 11/inutes: The
~'
'
J~ · ·.
· 7-IO.IS"iS::47 Pen1uins were outshot lS-18 ~
" ' Jist
~~ ·
13-IS-23-20a71 ~ir. I)Ower plpy went 0-for-S,

.

'

ferent' PI Hanll&amp;ll ruintained !he
eight point lead thanJcs to Travis
Brunty who scored eight points and
hauled down six rebounds to give
Hannan a 3S-25 balftirne lead.
"Phe Rebels turned up. the heat in
the third period as'lhey cut the lead
to nine points, but the Wildcats continued their pace and led Sl -40 after
the third period and n.ever looked
back.
.souih Gallia's Jeremy Davis ted'
the · Rebels with ·18 points while
Johnson added I 6: ·
. In the junior varsity ·game, Han-·
nan won its first game of the season
by defeating South Oallia 72-60.
Ha-n (7.1): John Hagley 21,
Anthony Manin 18, Thlvis• Brunty
16, Derek Gibbs J,J , Shane Neal 3,
.Jason Wray I, Roy Canterbury 1'. '
S«iuth Galli&amp; · (66): Davis 18, .
Johnso~ 16, Stanley 13, Cook 1·,.
Michael6, Boothe 4, Montgomery 2.

-'*-

Raille-19

. WES'nRN CONFERENCE

-·-·

!

Thesecond~odprovednodif-

Win ·over Jackson

Alllwcrp 71, Hid-.svillc 67
Arcadia .59. Pandofa.Oilboa :Iii

A1h1abula Htwbor .97, Ashtabula St.
Johrt41
· Aurora·64. Wickliffe n
Avon 74. Keystone t,7
Barberton 46, Stow 4!i
BMmeJville SO. Unioe Loca14M
B.navia 77. S1. BMwd !i6
Beaver Eutcrn 72. Ponsmouth E. ~9
lkaY«Cn:ek 65. Fairbonl.S7
~tlbr'oM 82. Eaton 70
Bclleronrainc 63. ,SprinJ. Norlhensl·
em 55
Belk-ttuc 67, Willard 30
Belpre 64, Meip 48
Bcajamin Loaan 74, W. LiberTy
Salom5l
Berlin Cenler Wesrem Reserve 69 ..S.
'

23'1r
2l

-·-

B\IIIS outlast Hawks 89-88;
·Bullets, Sonics and Suns win

"'

65

12~
14~

.$11
W•hiftCton ............ 2) 26 ..t69
Now Jeney ............ 14 ]~ .286
·Phlloddphia ......... .12 J6 .250
....ort.................... ll
38 .224

By ZACH LITTLETON
T.S Conupol1dent
ASHTON. W.Va.
1be
inevitable was bound to happen ror
the Hannan boys basketball team.
And what better way to Jlotcb.
their fi~t win of the season and end ·
a 2 112 year winless drought than on
Senior night.
lbat's exactly what the Wildcats
did as they defeated first year South
·Gallia 71-66 Friday nigbt.
Hannan's John Hagley put the
jcing on lhe cake as he hit seven
three-pointers for 21 points while
leammate Thlvis Brunty bad a dou-. .
, ble-double with 16 points and 17
rebounds:
..
'Hannan's offense caught fi~ ear1Ywhen the Wildcats hit four threepointe~ early thanb 10 Hagley and
Anthony Manin, who scored 18
\loints on the night.
: The Wildcais led 20-12 after the
.. ~first period. of play. ·

~NJar.ietta posts

A1hlan~ Crutvlew 47, Plymouth .18
A1hlabula Edscwood 81, Connf)aut

2

!he roulline and a mi""''l daw pDial p.m. The winner will flee
shot • the 1111 lecOIId by o.Jiia ~ in the BIIICbl 3 tlal
Acsderuy to outlast the Blue lmpl Sntunlay nt6: 15 p.m.
.52-49.
GallipOiia. alao a South We~ 1111
The · Raide~ (7· 13 and S-9), MCtionnl entry, Will flee Fairlalld In
whose lead shrunk ftom a !~point the Bracket 4 final Salurday 118 p.m.
Jlllllin ll halftime to a one-point
advantage at the thUd quarter's end, OurfetJII&amp;IIa
saw Cbris Lewis 'layup with 28 sec- Oallipolis
14-18-12-23=67
onds left in !he same cut their lead Rive~ Valley .
12-13-14-12=51
to a 50-48 margin.
Ga!UpoHt• Howell 6-0-4/4-16,
'1\'evor Kern's two· trips to the McKinniss 1-4-111=15, Lloyd 5.()chari~ stripe in the next 13 seconds 212=12, Rucker 2-1-2/4=9, S.unden
64-Sl.
n:sulted in two free throws and a S2- 440/0=:8, Beaver 1-1-0.Q:S, Sniith
48 River Valley lead. With eight sec- 1-0.0i0=2. Totals: 20131-6(15· ·
Thesbootus: Howell's 16points
'
came mosdy from 6-for-8 field-goal onds left, Lewis sank the front end . !1112-67
of
a
one-and~ne.
but
missed
the
secTotal FG: 26-47 (:55.3%)
s~ooting. He didn't miss in siX tries
ond. Gallipolis had to settle for cutReboaacll: 24 (Lloyd 6, HoweU
inside the at:e.
.
ling the lead to what stood as the 5)
Most of McKinniss' I 5 points
final score.
'
Blocked aholl: 3 (Rucm 2) .
came from · a 5-for' 11 field-goal
After
Kern's
last
trip
to
the
iine
Aalltts: 21 (Howell 6)
sbooling effon that included a 4-forStellls; 8 (Lloyd 5)
. 9 showing'from ~-point country. (:07) n:SUited in two missed shots,
Tumoven: 8
Lloyd's I 2 potnts game mostly · Gallipolis got the bell across !he balrcoun stripe and intcS the hands of
Fouls: 12
from 5.-for-10 field-goal shooting.
Kevin.Walker. Walker's three-point
James' 22-point show was mainattempt bounced off the rim and into
River Valley: )ames 10.0ly the product ot I().far-20 field-goal
the Raide~' hands as time expired. 2/3:22, Stephens S-1-Ml=J3, Jackshoaling. He made two-thirds of his
J.B. Boso led the hide~ with 13 son 1-0-0/0=:5, Rocchi 2-0-0i0=4, ·
IS attempts i.nside the arc. His sixpoints. 10 ffi&gt;m Ryan Fowble haiiiO. Pitchrord I -0-111=3. Adams t.ofoot jumper and bonus .foul shot at
The Imps (7-12 overall prior to 0/0=2, 'J&gt;rummond J-0-010=2.
the 6:II mark of the second quaner
put him past the 300-point mark for · Saturday nigh I's. Wheelersburg Totals: 21/41-2/14-:3/4=51
Total FG: 23·5~ (41 .8%)
match and S-9 in the' SEOAL) we~
the season.
Reboundl: 27 (James 12, Adams
paced by Cody Lane's 13 pointS,
Senior forward Richard Stephens'
Lewi~'
II
and
Chad
Frazier's
10.
7)
13 points came'frorn 6-for-12 fieldThe l'llture: This weeJ,'s age!Mia
Alslslll: 7
goal shooting.
.
has ihe RaicJeis taking on Jaclcson in
. Steals: N/A
Reserve notes: In the reserve
the Division .il sectional at South
Thfl!oven: 12
~;~:~~~:~~:~~~
led most of the
Sc~cool
Tuesday
at
8
Fouls: 16
"
:l-t!Gr-&lt;!6 effort at

"

AM

Arlhlal9f162. V~~tlue -'9

Iii

Ortando ..................24 2~

' Mlo......, ............. 24
Dollot ......,.............. l6
Deawer ................... l6
S..AIIt0No ........... l 2
VUC~M~ver ............. 11

56 58.5798 5798

Wanen Lo¢11 (17-3), the othercoc:hlmpion, beaiAtbeas 87-57Thunday nilht to end league play with a
13-3mark.
River Valley hnd one: moment of
personal glory left.
With Gallipolis , leading 64-48,.
River Valley's Ouis Pitchfonl scored
on a layup with 16 seconds Jert to
collect'his fi~t points of the season
from the field . The 6-foot-4 senior .
~serve center sank tht. bonus free
throw to trim the Academy's lead to

Thur~dey'• rMUita:

AtiiRtkDI•..._

ll "

OP
714
763
694
708
705
725
762
740

Warren Local 87 Athens 57
Re11rv.
Warren Local 87 Athans 58
Frldnly'8I'HIIItl:
Gallipolis 67 River Valley 51 .
Marlena 71 Jackson 49 .
Logan 63 Point Plaasant 62
·
All em ICDrH:
. River YaNey 52 Gallipolis 49
"Jackson 52 Mariatta 41 ·
Point Pleanan1 62 Loga(l 49.
Other eree tcorn:
Chesapeake 75 Failland 59
Wheelersbu.g 70 Minford 57Miller 58 SOutham 45
Hannan 71 South Gallia 66
Belp18 64 Meigs 48
Federal Hocking 68 Easlem 66 (ol)
Lilt nlght'li 9111!11:
Gallipolis ai.WheeletsbiJrg
Fai~and al Vinson
Greenfield at Paint Vallay
Portsmouth a1 Lewis County
Newart Catholic at Southern
Pt. PleaS&amp;nl at Wahama·
Feb. 18 911!111:
GraceatOVC
River Valley vs. Jackson, a p,m. at
South Webster
·
,
·
Feb. 19 gemH:
Wheelersburg vs. Federai•Hocking,
6:15p.m.,aiURG
.
Feb. 20 gem•:
·
Buffalo Putnam al Point Pleasant

EASTERN CONFE~CE

r- .

lead from a nine-point advantage
early in the frame to three-point margins on two occasions. Sophomore
forward/center Joey James had two
. turnaround jumpe~ at the 3:07 and
2:24 marks to accomplish those·
deeds.
The Blue Devils, who led by no
fewer than · five points in the last
quarter, inflated their lead into double-digit country en route lo claiming their half of the league crown.

687 786

Amelia 61. Cin. Tllft j8
AnM 66, Ruuia .SB
Ansoaia67, Tipp Cily Btfhel :'i;\ ..
Anlbony Wayne 6l BowtinJ Green

. NBA standingS

.

shooting in the third quaner
793 .810 · goal
·836
helped the Raiders cut the GAHS
782 .
,

859 909
. 5&amp; 5&amp; 8254 6254

Tollll

in1 oiabt of the next 10 points ill the
next tine minutrtt, cst pr d the nlly
wlat Nick Rocchi's llyup in
with 44 __,. left.
.
The 12·1~ tie lnsMd mtil GAHS
fOITianl Isaac Ssunden 11111t an in·
tho-lane jumper with 'nine 3eCOnds
left. That gave the Blue Devils n 14121ead that stood It the period's end.
The Rllidels didn' t repW their 6for-:18 lirst-cjuarter field-goahbooting effon in the mnaining quarten.
But their su~SO% shoOting helped
give the Blue Devils enougb chances
to sink better diiUI balf their shots !he
rest of.the way.
·
That SDd the f111t-half offense of
Andniy Howell (10 points), Oreg
Lloyd (eight) and senior guard Heath
McKinniss (five) gave Gallipolis
enough steam to lead by seven at

In the NBA,

.,

'

\

J

�•

-

Belpre· gets 64-48
win over Meigs
By DAY! HARRIS
T-8 Co!Tupo.,..,t
ROCK SPRINGS - · Belpre
outscored Meias 46-19 in the second
and fourth period and went on to
defat the Meigs Marauders 64-48 in
boys' Tri- Valley ConfeROnce Ohio
Division Ba.sketball action Friday
evening at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
·
Belpre ends their R&gt;gular season
with a 8-6 mark in the 'IVC and finishes with a 8-12 mark overall. llie
Golden Eagles will open up sectional tournament play on Thesday at the
University of Rio Grande against
Coal Grove. Meigs will travel to
South Webster Friday evening to laJ)- ·
gle with Vinton Couhty in tournament action. The Marauders end
their R&gt;gular season with a 4-10 malt
in the division 'and 5-I 5 overall.
Meigs jumped out on top early 70 on a. Josh Witherell&lt;-1/ucket with
5:20 remaining in the first period.
Meigs held an eight point lead (146) with I: 15 .left in the period on a
Daniel Hannan bucket: But Zach
Klein drained a trey and added .a
short jumper the last c;oming wit4 17
se&lt;:oncls left in the period to cut the
Meigs lead to 14-I I.
.
Brad Whitlatch drained a three
poinlert() give Meigs a 19-13 lead at
the 7:02 mark of the first' half, but
Belpre battled back to take ·a 20-19
lead on a three point play by Chad
Gre~· with 5:32 remaining.
· ·Vern Reams drilled two straight
three pointers to give Belpre a 26- I9
lead with 4:25 left in the half. Two
free throws by Klein at the 2:3 I mark
of the half gave Belpre a 30.21 lead
heading inio the locker room at the
half.
GROss gave Belpre a 32-21 to start
· the third period. But Meigs. starled to
chip away at the Golden Eagle lead,
· the Marauders pulled to within 3736 heading into the final period on a
pair of Collin Roush free throws with
·seven seconds left in the periOd.
Kyle B'radford drained a three
pointer with 7:24 left in the·game to
give 8elpre a 40-36 advantage. But
. the JiCixt Belpre possession change
· the cQmplexion of the game. A foul
and C!lsuing technical on Meigs sent
Bclpif to the line for four foul shots.
Klein made one of two from the line,
and •radford made both foul shots
on ~ technical foul to put Belpre on
tClp 4l-J6.
M'igs was able to cut it back to

a three point game on a Hannan
bucket wilh 4:321eft. But tbllt was as
close as Meigs would get the rest of
the way. Belpre went to the line 17
times in the fourth period and canned
14to pull away for the 16 point victory.
Klein led alf scorers with 19
points, he was joined in dotible fig_uROs by.BradfordWith 12. A big dif- •
ference in the contest was at the line,
Beii!R&gt; went to the line 26 times hitting 18 for 69%. Meigs wctit to the
line nine limes hitting eight for
~9%. Meigs was called for 22 personal fouls, and Belpre only six.
Hannan led a trio of Marauders in
double figures with 1S points, Witherell added 13 and Brad Whitlllleh
added 12. Meigs hit 18 of 49 including four of 12 from three point range
for 37%.
·
. Meigs pulled down 19 rebounds
led by Hannan with six, the Marauders had eight turnovers. Meigs had
IS assists Jed by Qualls and Whitlatch with three each, two sleals with
Hannan and 'o/illiams with one each.
Meigs blocked four shots Jed by
Williams with two.
Seni!'rs playing their final game
at home for Meigs were Whitlatch,
Witherell, Robert Qualls, Jason
Mullen and Aaron Hockman.
In the reserve game Meigs
outscored Bel pre t4-6 in the reserve
. game and went on to post a 53-44
win. The win gives the Marauders a
I 1-9 record overall and I 0.4 in the
Ohio Divison good enough to ·give
the Lillie Marauders the Ohio Division championship.
John Davidson led four Marauders in double figures with 15, J.T.
Humphreys and Steve Beha added
I I each and Chuck Murray added
10. Mike Allander Jed Belpre with
10.
. '
Ogartcr iillala
Belpre .
I 1-19-7-27=64
Meigs
)4-7-.IS-12=48
Belpre: Jim Randolph 2-0.2=6,
Brad West 0-0-2=2, Vern Reams 02-0=6, Kyle Bradford 3-I -3= I2,
Mark Wilcoxen I-0-0=2, Josh
Struthers 3-0-3=9, Chad Gress 3-02=8, Zach Klein 5-1-6=19. Totals:· ·
I
17+18=64
Meigs: Robert Qualls 2-0.0=4,
Brad Whitlaich 4-1-1=12, Collin
Roush 0-0.2=2, Matt Williams 1-&lt;i0=2, Daniel Hannan 4- I-4= I5, Josh
Witherell 3-2- I= 13. Totals: 14'-4-

.

.

.

CONTESTS SHOT- Belpre's Jo1h Sti'odNII .(32) con!Hts a
polnt-blllnk-111nge Jumper by Melga fOIWird Daniel Hannen (40) dur·
lng Friday night's TVC affair at Melg• High School. The Golden
Eegtee survived Ha.nnan's teem-high 15-polnt effort to win lf-48,
(Times-Sentll1el photo by Dave Harrl1)
.
.
.
.

. By GARY CLARK
. .
T-8 CotTIIpandlnt
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va Point PleaSIInt boys basketball coach
Lennie BarneUc's team delivered
one of the most courageous displays
of hean ~n the hardwOod in a long
time on Friday nisht before falling to
Logan 63-62 as BJ. Buchantlll's last
second shot fell short.
..
Logan's Lucas Kline sank one·
foul shot with 5.7 seconds left to give
the Chieftains the win.
~ .game w~ a. nip and tuck
affatr w1th the Oti~ns largest lead
at four points,' while the Big Blacks
led by as much as six at one point
"We. w~RO iip by six ,points and
. came down ~ floor and threw the
. bal! away w1thout getting a shot
whic~. proved to ..be the turning
pomt, ·Barnette satd. "We played a
good te~ an~ took them to the wiRO
b~t we JUSt ~~!ed to get the Job don
em the end.
Two weeks ago, Logan handed
the Big Bl~eks a 103-69 Joss with
Point Pleasant pulling all thest9p5 in
taking the Chieftains to the final second before a winner.was crowned.
With the loss, the Big Blacks lllC
8-9 overall, 7-7 in Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League play. The
Chieftains have won eight in a row.
Both teams· blistered the nets in
the opening quarter as the two league
rivals pushed and shoved their way
, while trying to establiJh its territory:
The ·Big Blacks·received .a balanced scoring elTon in the first period to lead 23-22 after eight minutes
of play.
However, the Chieftains came
. back :in the second ·period ancj
claimed a 39-36 halftime lead. . .
In the third period, Point Pleasant
got a pair of 'thm:-pointers from
Buchanan and one.from Mike Stanley io ou!Score Logan I2- I I and
close the gap to two points, 50-48 ·
· with eight minules left.
· Logan I'OIII'e(l back to score eight
straight points 19,regain the lead at
6058 before Buchanan stole the ball
and scored a b~et with :57 left.
Logan elected to hold the ball for
the last shot wheu Kline wu fouled.
Kline missed tJie first foul shot but
notched the second to scicure the win
for the Chieftains.

8=48

-

WHO'S OPEN? - Malge for·
ward Joah Witherell (left) lookl
for en open teammate .while BelOblO Division
- -50UJ'HERN ............4 I I 5 14 pre's Jo1h Strud ,.., (32) trill to
keep him from pa~~Jng to the
~DIL ~era~ *denotes division ~hamp!on
Maraudenl' Robert Qualls dUring
Friday .night's Ohio Dlvlalon
fJtfonville;York .. l I 3 16 4
·Friday'sscom .
. · coun1y..........
' 9 ~• 12 8
Nelsonville- Yo·rk 74, Vinton game at Melga High School,
V1nton
where the Goldan Ellglea won
I ·ton ................ ...8 6 10 I 0 County 69
114-48. (Times-Sentinel photo by
Bel ....................... 8 . . 6 8 I 2
Miller 58, 'SOUTHE~N 45
Dave Herrle)
$S ..................... 4 10 5 IS
Trimble'S9,'Aiexander55 ·
Federal Hocking 68, EASTERN
66 (OT)
_..._ _ _ _ _...;.....,._
Hoc"'ng DiviSion
Belpre
64,
MEIGS
48
. • Ale:~ander ............. I I 4 14 5
Jerry Rice of the 49ers has
They playO:d Saturday
opened a wide lead in NFL career
Newark Catholic at.SOUTHERN receptions.
Tri;~ .....................6 9 9 I I
EA
RN ................5 10 9 I I

.Gallip~lis Daily Tribune,

Tlie pally Senrmd. and the Sundav

. ii~ ' their readers make to the sports
scct~ ~ns of these papers, and they
i will J~ontirue to he published.
. HP.wever, certain deadlines for
, suj;ssions will be observed.
• . 1e deadline for photos and relat·ocl .,jioles for football and othedall
~- is the Saturday before the
Sup~~r Bowl.
.
ie dCadline for photos and relat·.
jii:Jcs for bas~ethall (summer .
~ball and related camps fall
.
:~ the summer sports deadline)
·~ · · r Winl!;r sports is the last day
of
NBA finals.
je deadline for submissions of
Joc;al !baseball- and softball-related .
piiOtqf,' and related ~icles, 'from
!Jall the majors, as well as other
· apri_~ arid summer sports, is the day
~f~ 1 llitplne of the World Series.
'Tijc~e deadlines are in place to
allo.~ 1 contributorit the time they

1

~~·

RODNEY, OHIO

•Backhoe·.
•Dozer.
Work
UIIPanAI..• COMMDCIAt
· UMESTONE .
TOP SOIL . MUSHROOM
RIVER GRAVEL
·COMPOST
~ MOnday thru Friday 7:30 em ttl .11:30 pm.

r-

·

·:

You Pie/c. Up or We DeUwr

•

446-2i14 or 245-6318

fi:TI?rr-H~

•

PLY

Jpat f •
The NSAAU-S• pm ._ Stlllday wu.lipifa., hec:e!se it .... ted • · cbMplg o( the
.apatd.
.
.
"'' The next ge-.Jioa of supentan (you Janow,
h youtPJ kidtt who left collep arty, or didn't
bilther llfendina. for millions of,dollan and sboe
~-). ~ lbcir 4P ~ II'IIII:C in Ound Aletui .. full-flqdaed stln.
~nc· I llljoyed wllclting tbia pme over recent all-118r
-"OfiiiiiiCCs. Of
· · 1"'1'•'
course, the put '-ames weren't
duB, b.ut it wu like watChing a
pickup famC among · olcl

••

Point's Mike Anderson led tl!
Big Bl~eks with 18 points, 17 ,W
those in the first half.
· :n
"We probably should've got!i9
the ball to Anderson moRO in the sec•··
.ond half," Barnette said. "But~
changed defenses and made : tt
extremely difficult for .us to poultd
the ball inside for him.• ·
':.;
Mike Stanley scored IS poitftl
· while'Buchanan scored I I points . .
Oliver added 10.
~
· Logan's Coy Lindsey led all~
ers with 22 points while KlihC hlld ~?
pointS.
.
'
In tJie junior varsity game, the
Little BIIICks earned at least a tie (\1r
the 'SEOAL title after defeaiiv•
Logan 62-49.
'
Point's Jimmy Hall scored. '- ,
points while Doug Boyles had : ·
and Dusty Higginbotham added , .
· The Big Blacks traveled - ~
Mason, W.Va, to battle county pvid
. Wahama Saturday night .
"'

frietidS.

I

.

Did you eVq notice how we

refer to the olci ,NIIblished st1n

in a penon~ sen~e? when .

someone meations Charles, .

x;

~~~

~·:
:il

'&lt;!

ATIIENS - A baseball teWib
from the Athens area is being fonrii:tl
to conipete this summer in the Ce.n.tral Ohio Baseball League.
·• ·1i .
To participate, playe!S must be~t
least 19 years old before Aug. l"iif
this year. There is no maximum ay,
for participation.
·. ~
The Central Ohio · Baselilill
League is very competitive and'W
composed of teams from Columbus,
Zanesville and Lancaster.
.;:;
Interested players or their reptesentatives may obtain tnore inflll;mation by contacting Phillip St.
Angelo at 662-28 I9, Chuck Duulits
at 797-4049,John Wharton at
2558 or• Fred' Gibson
at 797-4961'.10
•

m

George Musso o!'- tl)l; Beun:l;
Hall of Farner, played against two
U.S. presidents, Gjl()IJe Bush .\lld
Ronald R,cagan.
.,
. :t. ·

Michael or S«lt1ie, we know
CltiCdy whott1 they are talking
.
.
about It scetJ!S that I have
~~B!Irldey for so long that I feel we should be SC!Iding each other
lri
cards. He's now a member of the family.
.
· The NBA has gradually let fans know that it is now till¥!,to gel acquaint:~with i~ new ceneration of up-and-coming stln. Soon, Milwaukee's Vin
. , MillliCSOI,I~s Kevin Oameu and the MVP of the a11:11!81' game, Char. , '1 Glenn Rice, will soon supplant those stars .with whom we have
~so .familiar.
·
·~·· The NBA, is doing a marveiOUJ job of marketinsthese new stars. Yes, we
)'Jill miu Jordan, Hakeem and Barkley wl)en they're gone, but the game will
Continue to Jrow tl,ild prosper. Remember, we missed Kareem, Julius Erving
aftd Lant Binf:when they retired, but there always seems to be someone
_diere to C:at"Y the torch. ~~ Sunday, we lot a glimpse of those players the
NBA watitl to f1181'ket as. it new eli~. One thing is for certaill, the NBA really kno~ how to do things right!
1n case you missed it, the Columbus Quest of the ABL has won the Eastern Division and clinched hOme court advantage for the playoffs. Columbus
illfs the best basketball team in the league, but few people .know about it or
~- That'• a shame, bel;ause they really are an exceptional team.
·
..;.. Even with the success of the women's Olympic team, it's going to take
liine for women's professional sports to catch oil among .fans. But if you
i!l~ve the opp&lt;H:tunily to watch women's sports, particularly basketball, you
'(!fOuld be amazed at the skill and competitiveness of its players.
~~i lbelieve the University of Connecticut's women's team could c~te in
_tne men's Big Ten. They wouldn't win it, but there are teams they could
~~fat on 1 given day. The most remarkable thing is that I wouldn't have
. ,.U such 1 statement a few years ago.
.
''"' The positive aspect of the ABL and the future ~A is the opportunity
that will be offered to women i" professional teatn sports. Up to this point,
..oilly women in individual sports, such as tennis, golf, track or figure skat·iqi had •the Opportunity to make a living in professional athletics.
.
.1~ It's important for young girls to have the same dreams as their male
• . , Stliates for a career in professional athletics. It would be nice to see them
·-in Lisa Leslie jerseys in the future.
.I a.m WU.an, Ph.D. Ia .n uaoclate prolaeM ol hletary"""' Unlventlly of
Rlo Cino'lde. An IIYkl,., olaH 811CHb- and
IMIIIK&amp;I,lol'- of........_
liiti - ,he Ja 'a ....... of G8ry, Ind., and I .....,... ofJnd
.... llliiYwally '-which

SCORES ON LAYUP- Eatem'e ·
. Otto (24 In white jereey)
gate above Federal Hocking's Chuck Vogt (24) end the Eagles' Eric ·.
Dllll_rd (12) and Rick ·HoUon (14) for a successful layup during Friday nlght'a Hocking Dlvl1lon game at Ellatern High School where
the visiting Lancers won 6&amp;66 In overtime.
'

In overtime,

Federal-Hocking tops Eastern 68-66
a

SCOTT WOLFE
sank both ends of a two shot foul.
T~ Correepondent
Hollon drove the Jane on the HS end
EAST MEIGS_ A pair of Josh to again cut the scor~ to three, 66-63
Oiapman free throws with eight sec- with 23 seconds left: Brown missed
onds remaining in overtime, sealed the first of. a two shot foul, then
a hard-fought 68-66 Federal Hoi:~­ leaned across the line, despite making victory over the Eastern Eagles ing the .second. Otto then drilled a
Friday night.
·
clutch three pointer to tie the game
Played befoR&gt; a huge crowd at with just eight seconds remaining,
Eastern High School, the exciling but fouled on the inbounds play (his
gamedeterminedasecondplacefin- fifth) and Chapman went to the line
ish in the . Tri-Valley Conference for the game-winning safeties.
H;ocking Division fQr the Lance!S.
The scoriug
An Eastern win could have thrown
Chapman had 28, followed by
second place into ·a "three way tie
Neil Nelson with 15 points, Beha
behind champion Alexander, pend· ·and Hill added eight and Brown had
ing the finish of the Miller/Southern five .
game.
For Eastern, Ouo led· in scoring
Chapman's game-high 28 points, as well as two other categories with
including 'nine clut&lt;:h goals in
17 points, Jos~ Casto had 14, Dill.ird
overtime; pushed the..talented guard .· had II, and Steve Durst 12.
~Mifnadtlu-flllaltoul.....,.hlaheed(encl"-*lleartlla.
past the 400-point mark for his
The D &amp; 0 express (Dillard &amp;
"" ·
.
·
senior year; 423 totill so far with the Olio) .steamed to a 12-4 lead.".then
;;~v·UC
C'ag
·
upcoming tournament to go. Earlier Dillard and Ours~ the 0 &amp; 0 express
&amp;;!A'
c;r
r1
Ill
111
against Southern, Chapman .set the ran the rails to the tune of a I7-8 first
lead.
~~:~; ~:w~~.!':"~~nn~~game period
Federal went on a I4-4 run in the
In iegulation, Eastern led 5 I-49 at second canto, behind Chapman and
CINCINNATI (AP)- It is close LeGree,isgeuing ready for~ball. the 4:47 mark, but Federal went on Nelson as Federal took a 22-21 lead
which means Keith But his days as a·former UniversitY a 4-0 run going down the stretch. when Nelson canned . a ·rolling
· · ' ·'·
"·' "
of Cincinnati liiilfetball play~r · Saved only by a pair of clutch free jumper rrom the paint. Hollon got a
· ·
· remain very much on his mind.
· throws by Daniel Otto with two sec- crucial rebound and gave EHS a 23- ·
He knows that his former ' onds on the clock, Eastern tied the 22 lead. Federal then went .on a 7-0
. · .
~ ;He~ is the Bearcats teamm~
.. are sm.e~Jin~ to score at 53-53. A 60-fwt. shot by run to lead 29-23. Apair of Josh Cas1si:hlciluli
Sunday, Feb: 23 at-- find a po1nts~, fill h1s old Job: Chapman at the buzzer was on tar- to free throws at the :40 mark cui the
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
He finds n s . nge th~t the get, but about a fopt s))ort. ·
lead 'to 29-25 a score that stood until
Bearcats fans who booed htm for
Overtime
the half.
,
I Cenh~.
· two years are saying how much they
Eastern took the Iipper hand in the
Eii!ht Casto points in the third
~,:~: · , miss his play. ·
·
four-minute extension, when at the frame, coupled with a Durst trey, ral"When they say that, I'm not · 3:48 mark Jeremy Kehl hit the first lied the Eagles to a 38-33 ,advan'IDday- 1-3 p.m. and 6-IO p.m. going to be rude, so I just -smile," of two free throws (54-53). Jl!Son tage.Chapmat) and Nelson turned the
Mliltday- 6-IO p.in.
LeGree said "Butj t kills me: I feel Brown retaliated with a drive to give . tables fpr a 4 I-40 Federal lead arter
n..,laJ-:- ~.a.m.· 10 p.m.
. ' 'de Whe r::w he the
WJ..,.. 6 li'm.·IO·p.m.
tl tnSI •
n 'f as re,
Y FH a SS-54 tally, then Eric Dillard three.
,
weren't sayins that.
·
canna;d two free throws to swing the
The final round was nip-and-tuck
Tl:antlay,.... 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
"We were 28-S last !ieason and lead in Eastern's favor, 56-55. Hill with live lead changes. A follow-up
Friday - 6 a.m.-9 p.m. .
we still got booed every time we hnd a follow,-up off Beha rim out Otto goal gave EHS a 48-47 edge,
Setarda7- 1-.6 p.m. "
' lost." LeGree said.
(57,56, Federal), then at the 2:32 then Beha safeties made it 49,48,
SlPilday, Fell. 23- 1-3 p.m. and
LeGree is getting ready to report mark, Otto, the hero of regulation Federal. Durst nailed a trey at the
16-·IOp.m. ·
to spring training fQr die Minnesota .missed three straight free throws 4:47 mark 51-49, the, Eastern
r·
•
.Twins. The 25-year-old outfielder hit after gelling foul beyond the perime- regained PoS!i&lt;lssion an·C. played very
na~ cl::t .
.273 in 58 games last year at Class ter..
deliberate around the perimeter. A
r oac1a
1 ·d
A.
·
.. ·
.
At the 2: I4 mark, hapman turnover and foul n:sulted in a Nel1:. M · Y-:""" 6c ~0- 30
He expects to beil~ this.season at dtovethe lane and gave Federal a 59- son free throw, and Bcha otT the
:, 6 3().
: 9 p.m.
·
CJ ass AA. He h"""'"
L---baJI 56 edge. Eastem cal)ed ~me
· out at missed second shot drove home the
~ hi s .,....,
•f 1'uead87-;:-•
30
p.m.
career will blossom pow that he can the I:49 mark, then just seconds lat- rebound for a 52-SI Fedcrollcad. ··
. 1· -6-96·31)-9·30 p.m.
play the game fullti.flle;
' er Chapman went undefended back ' . c:hapman mi~scd 3-4 fn:c throws
t:- Fridayp.m. ·
·
.
He knows playin• basketball ,hurt door for a 61'56tally.
from the i : I4 mark to the :25 mark.
' Slntu~ -1·3 p.m.
"'
""Siincll8y, Fell. 23 -'- 1_3 p.m. and his development as lt.baseball play- .
Eastern frO)e throw shooting went That set the stage for Olio's heroics:
r
er, and vice versa, but he also knows · awry in the overtime as Dill~~td
Eastern hit I8-41, 6-21 threeit was his choice to play both. Some missed both ends of a two shot foul, pointers, and was I2-20 from the line
. . H~ •lliietk emsts
Twins personnel have .told U:Gree he the fifth straight EHS miss from the with 34 reOO,.nds (Otto 13). Ea.•tcrn
...:...
S fib ·u II . ~
could be.tn the maJors now 1f he had charity stripe. Chapman went 1-2 on
0
· ~
.auuey c me or played o~ly baselillll1, ,
. . the other end extending the score to
9_-121'rom 1:3:30 p.m. .
But if he had todottover, LeGree 62-56 tho.l biggest EHS lead of the .
Mciaday 1- · DIVISIOn Ill high S~~id he'would do the same- or play night.
boys sectaonal_tournament just basketball. · ·
·
Rickie Hollon drilled . a three(6: IS .t 8 P·.m:&gt;.
.
LeGree came•to. «;:incinnati as a pointer to tighten the score with 56
1\aaday . - DIVISIOn III hagh ' two-year starter at Louisville. He sat seconds and EHS .called time. Atthe
~~~ boys , sectiOnal tournament outthe 1993-94 season and couldn't 53 second mark, Benh Beha canned ·
I
(6:·15 .t 8 p.m,.&gt;. .
.
play until the !iCVenth galile of 1994- 'both ends of a ten-foultwo-shot foul ·
W~y - . .DIVISIOn III high 95. He was supposed to be the next (64-59), then on the .next possessi.on
la£11001 , ~ys -uon~l tournament point guard .who would 'lead Cincin- Kehl canned a ten-footer-(36 seconds
(6. 15 &amp;: 8 p.m.) ·,
nati to the Final Four.
left).
Women s baskethalt
·
.
. B ..
College at 5 p.m. ~. He still calls has ~a~ te.~ure
With 28 seconds left, Chapman's
baskethall vs.
the besuwo years ol'my ltfe.
veins flowed with ice watet as he

6

9x 26
16.9%28

8
6
6·

18.4%
14.9z 36

6

· Ex-Presidlint Dwighl D. EiJihowcr was a hallback .on the 191:Z
Army football team,

'"I ·

12.4" 38
9.5%36

6
4

'

· •

w•

l

SPECIAJ.. PRICE

_

[.::r.:a•.Y:-. :' :: .

'

Traction

'224.
1169.95 ..
'234.95
' '224~95

18.4%26

11.25" 28
9.5% 16.1 '
12.4% 16.1

Field &amp; Road

10
4
8
8

.

a

'1

l':.rlin

Federal won the reserve game 4729 led by James Cotterill's 1J. Joey
Dollon and Eric Smith each had six
for Eastern.
Eastern plays Miller in the Divison IV sectional at Alexander Friday.
Quarter .1!!1111
Eastern
17-8-15-13-13=66
(See EAGLES on B-6)

Center slate

..

'lhzcSure
'lhzc Sure
'lhzc ·

fouls.
·
Federal hit 25-50, 0-6 three-pointers, and was 17.-28 at the line with 33
rebounds (Nelson IS, Beha 8). FH
had 6 steals, 15 assists (Hill5); nine
turnovers, 19 fouls and six blocks
(Nelson S).
I

..

me

a,_

9

14.9 i;'~6

had.S steals (Otto 2), 9 assists (Dillard 4, Otto 3); I1 turnovers, and 23 ·

er tu•ns a.,.e·n·,•'on
:io spring training with Twins

.

,.,

TYPE

' , . _ ... •='•Page .BS

l~W.::O::a I

'"

. ,;, }

·

s.turdey 7:30 em-12 noon .

their photos from the · ~t¥tt~~
.!·~=~F~~restud.
io/.developer of ~

' Credit, Slow Credit
Credit, Blllkruptcy?

SIZE

. ~@1&lt;1'.·

UP 011 Fill IIIII .

nm.~-Senrinel value the contribu-

..;,
.·..-,.

Ath
enS·area·
baseball team
SeekS p' layerS.

~

New generation of
up-and-coming·stars

•

Farm Tractor . .
·D ays!

~~~.~~~i-~S.:::::::~ ~ : ::

·HOLLEY BROS. ,
CONSTRUCTION CO., :,INC.

t

nre·

=

ttund&amp;JV, ,....._.., 11,1117
n

Ajpalae

.

'J1!'e

..-

.Logan outlas~s
Point Pleasant
in 63-62 nail-biter

- - TVC boys' cage standings"'~"---

Spprts deadlines

Sundlly, ,.... •.., 18, 1lf

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gatllpolle, OH • Point P11111nt, WV .

r .

(

Rib

'\ f I

From San Frandsco's Cow Palace
·
•

'

7 P.M to 10 P.-M. (Feature Event)
6:30 P.M. Pre-Event Show

.

C: j . ~~1 1H1 1 1 f i..Ul.(

's Booster l)liaht) -.--••-lllllillllllillllill_aiei_lllitiifii!tiiil~~---lilll•l
..,. Division III high
boys' ·. sectional . tournament ·
.
· (6:J$&amp;8p,m.)
'
Moaday - Dl ~lsion III high
.
st.
Rt. 7; Cheshlra, Ohio
~~ boys' .secti~al t~urnament
(noon 'and 3 p.m.); softball
DNTAJ,
for Jtades '·8 -from I-3:30
· ' 30 &amp;35 TON GR()VE
l'!n1.; men's basketball vs. Urhana at
p.m. (Foodland Booster Night)
ROUGH TERRAIN CRANES
Fell. :iJ- Softball clin~ZERSD7·D-9·1150 '
9-12from 1-3:30 p.m.;
LO~RS 8888 ~Me· 1845
vs. i!ide~ndents at 5 ·

I

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11,1li7

WRI.I.y PIKE'S OUDOOI LD'E

Antique.button
collection real
family heirloom

..

Section

Disney·World,
here we come

By DOROTHY IAYRI!
Leavina Myrtle S.Ch, S.C., we
drove another nearly ~mile day
to Merritt Island, FIL We checked
into lhe only motel in the city, a HoJ.
iday Inn, arid called ,;c:IISOIIII Meigs
County residents now residing .there.
We arranged a coffee hour the .ncxt
morning and caught them up on
local news before
heading on for
Orlando.
·
in
. While
South Carolina,
we had excep·
'
.
tionally
good
,•
~NY TREASURES- T ' - ~II antlq~ ~~ buttortaln Jewa1 ~ -.ura ~~. ~ .,
. '
weather and it
· remained wilh us
·throughout our
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
•
week in Florida.
We
drove from Merritt Island to
nmea-SantJneJ Staff
.
• · MIDDLEPORT -- For Middleport's Patricia Si)erman Mills the beautiful
Orfando and checked into our' condo
antique buttons she possesses are reminders of the past ,_ not a mere button
for the week on a Chamber of Corncollec'tion but instead family heirlooms. · .
. . .
mCfCe type day... sunshine, Clear air
. They were used as fasteners for clothing worn by lhe Middleton women
and a sparkling, clean look to all the
and their descendants over·a very long period of time.
flora along the roadway. We had
· "These represent four generations of used buttons," commented Pat as
traded our time-share in Ne"'
!ihe displayed an array of colorful and ornate ones which she had attached to
Orleans for the one in Florida Ibis
material for a display at lhe Middleport Library.
year. It was a real _upgrade at the
• · Since lhe early 1900's lhe buttons have been used over and over again on
Marriott's Cypress Harbour. The
the dresses, vests, jackets, and coats worn by the family of Mrs. Thomas
buildings housing the ondos were
Middleton, her daughters, daughters,in-law. granddaughters, and greatgray, trimmed in white with decks
. and columns reminiscent of planta, gran&lt;ldaughters. .
·
· Pat remembers admiring some of lhe buttons on garments worn by her
'tion mansions.,They were four sto: ~dmO!I)e(, Mrs. Middleton, het mother and aunts, and !hen later seeing
ries. taiL Our ground-floor condo's
: !hem removed to· be sewn on someihing for het. She recalls how delighted ·
master ~droom and bath boasted a
Jacuzzi large enough for four peo· ; she always was when the family butto~s were put on her·clothing, and later
: observed that same appreciation on lhe faee of,her daughter; Cynthia, when
ple, and all the rooms wer~ spacious,
elegant and exceptionally clean: The
·the heirlooms were transferred to something of hers.
: • The buttons in Pat's collection came from lhe button boxes of MI'S. MidJiving/dining area was about 20 by
14, as was the master bed/hath.
dleton and her daugljters, Genevieve Sherman, Vivienne Waddell, and Elsie
Another bedroom and bath, a
·Chambers, and the ~ivcs and families of the Middleton men.
kitchen equipped with everything, a
Tiley are made from a variety of materials -- metal, glass, wood, onyx,
lauadry room, and a ·screened in
ivory. IIIII plush fabrics - 8nd come in many sizes and shapes.
porch with table and chairs complet• Some of the glass buttons are of deep jewel-tone~. red, green, and blue,
. ed our living quarters. The grounds
· enhanced with delicate gold.etchings.Others feature faux gemstone insets,
were elegant. We had a barbecue just
• some wilh facets to deflect light. Several of lhe wO\)IIen buttons are carved .
~d have painted designs, while many of lhe metal buttons are engraved.
. outside, a lovely lakcquipped with
water lilies and ducks, and behind
· ' Pat reports that most of lhe buttons ~arne 'from a company store in
· Mason, W.Va. where her great-uncle, David C. Davis was employed for
,
.
.
.,
.
.
.
our po~h was lawn ringed with a
HEIRLOOM BIJTTONS - Pfll Mlllt! of Mlddlaport hal 1 collection of .buttCX!I uaad on clothing warn . jungle of trees. A break .in the trees
- inany years. ·
. · . .
by
four ganaratlona of her family. Dating bat;:k lc! the tum of the century, the buttona ars made of a veri- and shrubs revealed the quiet green
.. · · Davis came to Middleport from Ryhmncy, Wales in 1851 wilh his ·par' ents w.hen he was four. He went to a coinmercjal college. and afterwards ety of materlala,lncludlng gina, onyx. wood, metal, ivory and pluah fabrlca. Mills' cliaplllyad part of her of a golf course. There were three
..
outside pools to enjoy, a boat and
. worked for the Hope Salt Store in Mason. Buttons )IICre purchased from that family halrlopm buttonaln an educetlont~lexhlbH at the Middleport Library.
·
•
driver to whisk us across the larger
· store through the years but lhc collection was really enlarged when the store
portion. of the lake, if we chose nc•
' went out of business about 1910 and Davis pu!'th!ISed t~ remaining button
to walk across one of the bridges.
· stock.
Several type of watercraft were
Pat recalls taki1~g
available to rent as were canopied
. ' late'r so !hill they
bicycles for five, and rejui,lr bicyDisplljYing s~
cles. George saw the price.listed for
a

..

.

DOW's open house
, format receives
· favorable reviews

WINS TOP HONORS...,.. With Love'a First Admll'lliln her mount,
Toler, the dllughtiar of Maurice and Petrk:lll Toler of Blclwltll,
won the 1996 Tri.State High iPolnt champlonahlp for Junior
ExhlbHor, Flve:Galted Amlrlcan Saddlebred. Toler, a trnhman ~
River Valley High School, h.. received varloua Tri:Stat. High Point
awarda alnca 1893. Tllell awarda ara IOught by riders from lndl·
an., Kitntucky, Michigan, Pennaylvarlla and Weat VIrginia n wall
I 11 Ohio. · . ·
·
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Trl~lll

DOW says_Tycoon
.Lake fishing pier .,
will be ready by Junt!J.

ATHENS- The Ohio Division
of Wildlife's new open house process
received favorable comments from
lhe 130 sportsmen who attended the
event at the Alben~ Recreation Center on Feb. 9, according to Division
of Will!life· spokeswoman Carol
Wells.
·
The open house format replaced
.the annual public hearing process for
lhe first time this year. Sportsmen,
wildlife enthusiasts and the general
public had the opportunity to speak
wilh Division of Wildlife biologists,
ask questions, voice opinions and
offer counter proposals to 1997-98
proposed regulations.
While man of the hunting seasons
proposed for next fall were changed
very little from a year ago, there are
new regulations and seasons proposed for deer hunting in Ohio
which drew the most attention from
the open house attendees, Wells

will spopsor a two-day, 10 hour Ohio ·
Boating Education Course on Satur·
days, March I and' 8, from noon to
. S p.m. at lhe Meigs County Council
on Aging, Multipurpose Building. ·
Topics covered in the colirse will
include required equipment, alcohol
and boaters, Ohio boating Jaws,
rules of the road,.aids lo navigation,
commercial traffic and locking
through.
Instruction will be gi'ven by the
Division of Watercraft at a cost of $5
per person; A certificate will be
issued upon successful completion of
the course and may be honored by
insurance agencies for a discount on
boat insurance rates.
'
. Anyone interested in attending
must register by calling the Division
of Watercraft at 614-353-7668
between 8 a.m. and S p.m :, Monday.
through Friday.

said. .

In addition, a free boating skills
course sponsored by the U.S. Coast
Guard Auxiliary will be held starting
March 4 at St. Paul Lutheran Church
in Pomeroy. Classes run from 7:30 to
9:30 p.m . and cover 13 topics.
· Class lessons include selecting
ihe righfbuat, equipment, trailering,
boat. handling, rules, piloting .your
l&gt;oat, power choices, lines·and knots,
weather and boating, yourc boat's
radio, and inland boating.
Fbr rnore infonnation call Jim
Goodrich at 949-330 I or Donna
Davis at 992-6107.

.

Included in lhe proposed changes
were the establishment of three deer .
hunting zones, ·the opportunity for
hunters to take three deer in 18
southeastern Ohio counties comprising Zone 3, establishing a new
antlerless primitive season in lhe fall,
and changes in how deer permits will
be sold allowing hunters to purchase
Separately any antlerless deer permit.
Attendees that provided a mailing
address will receive a summary of
the statewide results of the open
houses.
·
"We are very pleased with the
attendance and app,reciate the public's input regarding our prop6sals,"
said District 4 manager Jim Mar·
shall. "We.consider Ibis new process.
a success and look forward to greeting our public at future open hous-

Ohio's.spring wild turkey hunting ·
season is just around the comer
(April 28 to May .t 7) and to help set
the mood the Ohio River .Valley
Chapter of lhcNational Wild Thrkey
Federation is holding its third annues."
al Super Fund membership dinner
Marshall said the most feedback on March 5 at Royal Oak Resort near
came from bowhunters concerned Pomeroy.
. By ODIE O'DONNELL
The evening includes ·a year's
dents who will be judged on their over the proposed antlcrlcss primitive
sedson
and
provisions
allowing
T·S Correapondent
NWfF m~mbership, a meal and live
knowledge of Acquatics, ·forestry,
GALLIPOLIS- Members of the
and silent auctions including limited
wild life, and environmental issues hunters to take three deer.
Gallia Co,unty Conservation Club during the day-long event'
· Hunters in s6me areas are con- . edition artwork, cxclusi\'e tireanns
this week learned lhat a new fishing
The club approved sponsorship of cerned that the whitetail deer popu- and sporting goods and equipment.
pier at Tycoon Lake will be com·
two teams from Gallia Academy, and . latio~ is not as high as th~ Division
Tickets cost $~5 for singles and ·
.pleted and ready for use by June,
$65 per coupie·and a sponsor memone team each from River Valley and of Wildlife estimates .
according to an update report by Sout!l Gallia high schools. The teams
Marshall said many hunters were bership is available for $250.
Mike McConnell, Gallia County
enthusiastic
about a proposal .making
will be accompanied by their respec·
For more information or for tickWildlife Officer.
shotguns
firing
.410 and 28-gauge ets contact Ron Snyder at 985-4304.
live instructors, Harold Benson,
The 45 members in attendance
GAHS; ·Jim Walker, River Valley, rifled slugs legal for hunting during Deadline for .the early bird rame
also voted to sponsor four high and Dave Pope, South Gallia. The the statewide deer gun season.
drawing is March I , 1997.
school competition .teams in the . Area 5 winners will then advance
The smaller shotguns are popular
The NW1F is a 24-year-old nonArea 5 Envirothon, and voted to coninto the three-day state competition with youths, (emal.e hunters and profit conservation and, educational
tribute the sum of $2,000 toward the
other hunters who are uncomfortable organization dedicated · to the conlater in lhe spring.
Ohio Wildlife Council's war-chest to
· In other business, President Ed shooting the larger 12 and 20 ga~ge servation and management of the
stave off efforts by anti-hunting Clary remi~ded lhe group of the firearms, Marshall said. . American wild turkey as a valuable
groups in Ohio, who are mounilng a upcoming TUrkey Expo in Canton on
The State Fish and Wildlife Hear- natural resource.
drive to have a dove-season referen- Man;h 14-16 and or the Youth Sports ing and the Administrative Proce·
dum placed before Ohio voters in the
Fest sponsored by the National Rille dures Act hearing will be held Murch
November election.
. AssociatiOn Ibis spring. This event 21 at 9 a.m. at the Wildlife District
Another highlight of the meeting
will fcnture exhibits of hunting, fish· One headquarters, 1500 Dublin ·
oceoured when Gallia County Kening, trap-shooting, plus numerous Road, Columbus.
tlic:k)' Colonel Ernie Null, presented
other outdoor sporting classes.
four ai'ea wildlife officers with their
Two safe boating classes will be
McConnell reported that hunter
·commissions as Kentucky Colonels. · safety classes will be offered local- held in Pomeroy starting next month,
The four men include Jim Marshall
ly this year by qualified instructOrs. giving boats own~rs plenty of'time
and Terry Hawk, supervisors from He noted that Bob Donnet and 'Ed for additional safety instruction
the At.hens !fistrict office; Keith
Clary have completed the instruc- . before the annual buating season
Woods, Meigs County wildlife offi- tor's cou.rsc of stU!fy; but two others begins.
cer, and Bill Carper, Jackson Coun·
will ·be added at a later date.
· ty wildlife off'~eer.
·
The Ohio Department .of Natural
In his status report, Marshall told
Lois Snyder. program adminisResources,
Division of Wateicraft,
the m.;mjlers that lhe preliminary
trator for the Gallia County Soil and
studies for·a lake at Cooper Hollow
Water office, explained to the club are continuing, that money is still
the need for a·iocal sponsor to send
available to construct more boat
four teams of Gallia County high
nunps alonalhe Ohio River, and lha~
school swdents to the annual Envi- a decision had ~n made by.ODNR
rothon, This competition event is
to tear down the block building that
scheduled at the Slate Run State Park
house~ public rest-rooms at Tycoon
in Pickaway Co. on April 23, where
Lake. He requested input from the
lhe stuclents will compete against club on lhls decision, . stating that
other hish school from all over Area
vandalism to the building and its use
5.
.
for illegal purposes had prompted
~ Each team will consist of five stuOl&gt;NR to destroy the. facility and
replace it with Porlli-Johns. Club
ag~ with tliis decision.
Ellgles.•• CCcmlinupd
a..s&gt; me.mben
Mll'sllall rcmiildi:d the club that a
'
'
!
Wild 1\JI-key Stmi11ar will be conFederal
8·21·12·12·13=68
Sale Prlce..~ ..,.......... $13,495
ducted
ai lhe QUalitY Inn in Nel·
' " a: Eric Diil.-d 3-0-'-11=11,
Cuatome,
··
Rick Hollon 2·1.0.7, JoJh Cato S- sonville lin Man:h 8. .
, Larry Boiz announced tliat the
~4=14, Daniel Otto 3-3-216:oJ7,
Ceah Rebate ............. • $500
~eeond
unual
NitA
banquet
ia
134 horsepowtr,
Sieve Duni 3-2.0.! 2, Jeremy Kehl ·
Your Price
,
uchoduled ll the Bib Club in .QaJ,
J-().J/2a3, ~ Yonker 1.0.0:0:1:.
5
speed,
ftertL
Rebate..
1
~: J"""l21»o66 .
. lipolia on Apri116, ~•1 ar 6 p.m.
.
i
nd
du!t
lil:kcts
for
chis
blnquetn
t ...... Rt.....:iOih Ollpman'
now avliilble.
..
9-Q.J~J:Ji=ll, Ben lleha 2-CJ-.416-1,
Clary
l,
o
itlilided
the
IJiliiP
.... the
. I'll Quinn 1..().().2, Neil. Nc11011 6-().
IIUIIIIII"i• ~Jub II ~Jed
y.c.J5, V'qil R.oeror 1~2. 1111011
ll
the &lt;Wia
.Oun Club on ' .
lilrotri $-0- 11.4-s, ~" Jlill +O12-~p
.m.
. .
W ."Ill
. .,,,;._.
'-:·· .' ..

SPECIAL 4X4 ftUCI

)

tr9m

·1997 NISSAN

REGULAR CAB 4X4's

r..ner

I

,...,.,/.11 "

....

.

12 995

'; ~~Mll.l!Y ~jght ip . qltf.:&lt;;nn~o. "~Jd I

, ·can assure yoo we would never have
s(1iyed lhero without a trade!
We quickly unpacked and hough! ·
groceries before heading to the airport .to collect daughter Holly and
grandson Jim, 6. Their nighi from
Denver arrived on schedule and we
were ready for :i week 1&gt;f adveQturc
in Orlando.
As Holly believed their lrip was a
.once-in-a-life-time vacation, she.
planned an event for every day eve!(
though she reali1.ed they would go
home exhausted. Sunday. we visited~
Sea World. I found tile Shamu sh&lt;1w"
even better than the one I'd .visited
years ago in San Diego's
World.:
How lhc trainers work such miracles
in behavior• from killer whales is
bCyond me. · ·
,
· Monday wa.&lt; the Magic Kingdom. 1996 wa.&lt; the 2Sth liDniversary '
for [)isney World and it was crowded, and .especially fnr Noveniher.
according to local visitors. Thelongest wait for u ride wa.&lt; 35 minutes but most were .appreciably'
Continued on page C8
Include a variety of sizes ancl shapes
•

••
•
•
•••
•
•
•
•;.-.

: •ENGR~VEP.- .Intricate tngravlnga dlstlngulah the metal bunona
In Pat
extanalve collection.
- '
.

•IU•'

ASSORTMENT - The antique buttona In Pat Mille;
conatruc:tlon materlala.
11

-11 ..

~olliK:tlon

sea

Stbri9s .·of sUccess from Lincoln School students
·.:

J~

,

By JAMES SANDS .

For instance'''in 1884 AfricanAmerican O.l .W. Scott sought
The subject of keeping schools in admission to the white high school.
Gallipolis separated by race was a then called Union•School because of
controversial subject for many ' the fact lhat only three actual high
years. When Lincoln. School was school courses (algebra, ~ivil govbtiilt i~ 1868, all the African-Ameri- emment and physics) •were offered ·
· can children were required to attend at Lincoln. Admission was refused.
Lincoln, School. Segresation of Scott lhen actually taught himself
sci)oolr for high school .aged cbil- .the other ·subject$ he wanted to
'
dren did not end in sludy. Scott, who was born in 1867,
1own until 1918, and went on to attend Ohio Wesleyan
segregation of .grade University in Delaware. He gradualschool aged children ed wilh lhe highest honors i~ the
came to an end in oratory department. He then went to
1951 , with the clos-· Drew Seminary where he received a
ing of Lincoln bachelors degree. He got degrees
Scltool.
from the University of Denver and
Most Gallipolis Payne Theological Seminary . at ..
blacks favored segregation to some Wilberforce. Scott pastored some of
degree, They believed that it was the largest black churches in Ameri·
advantageous to have · a school for ca includinl the Metropolitan
Africll!l·Americans where children ·. A:M.E. Church iri Wasllington D.C.
could lie·taught some black culture
fn 1907 Scott entered the army as
and ·historr,. The schpol was a source . a. chaplain IIIII I st. ~itu~~ant of the ·
of great pn(je for lhe black commu- ·2Sih lnfutry. Scott s ';Vtfe was Net·
nity, and il· provided opportunities tic Poindexter, the granddaughter of
for blacks to become school teach- Dr. Poindexter of Columbus, who
ers. It •WaS believed lhat integration hec~me one of the first Africanof the ,schools would mean !hill there Americans to be elected to the Ohio
would be fewer bl~ek teachers. ,·
House of Represenlalives. As a '
. The controversy over segregation c~ain Scott was instrumental in
in Gl!ilipolis, at least in. the black instisutina a number of reforms to
community, usually revolved around help soldiers - like recreatio~al
equity in.counc work off~ in lhe teams, buildina a library u~ sponsqhocil~
·
sorina soeia11i:tivities.

. $paellll Corr8apondent

•

•

I I

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•

ignored for twp w,cks by Several of the Mitchell children and ·
the ' teachers. A white grandchildren went on to get doctorlawyer was enlisted to ate degrees.
;
-·
help Ale&lt;ander and How- · It was Wilbert Howell in 1918 ·as:
ell . He took the retainer the principal of Lincoln School who·
and then decided there petitioned the Gallipolis Board 0 (
j
"!ere no grounds for a Education tQ allow admission ro the.
suit. Alexander and How, Gallipolis High School of seven:·
ell went back to Lincoln. black students. Howell argued that,
Cousins, Alexand~r . and the black community had helped to •
Howell all went on to get · pa.~s a levy intended to build a new :·
college degrees , They, high school and upgrade Lineoln; '
like Scott, taught them- · Since the former was done but ·nell
selves the subjects that · the latter, Howell asked for penni$-'
they wanted to learn and sion to enroll seven of his better stU- ~·
would have been taught dents at the new Gallia Academy. ,
them had · they been
His petition was denied, and a·
allowed to attend Union lengthy court battle ensued. The .
School.
· upshot of the court decision was lhat .
In the first decade of the Gallipolis Board of Education
Ibis century John Arnett was "perpetually· enjoined from '
Mitchell ' sought admis- mainlllining a high school of color." ..
sian to some of the cours- Howell wa.• helped in his suit by
es taught at Union. He · Rohcrt ·Mi.tchcll, the father of John '
was · denied admission. Arnett Mitchell. The tirsi bhick stu- ·-.
·Mitchell graduated from dents enrolled far classes at ·Gallipo.
Lincoln and went to Bow- lis Hi~h Sci]O&lt;!I in January of 1919. •
~ Ia II9W die . ,
uraatYte Fumlture waa . fine
Sc"ool frOm Bdoruinnsw'ckCMoll~ge . . . in Ow~lktched ·our.rs,.t,· n~ll2c5s·t,wbuhitteotbestur~ :, 1188 to 1111. Tllare waaafllgh IChoolltMrs untll1t18.
acholara
. I • amc.
•
,...
u...,
cama out d the echoolln ..,n. of the obataclel placed In front of 1hel'n.
M1tch~ll who gradual- that the thransitiun :""elm:d to go fair; ;
ed fifth 111 a class of 87, ly smcK&gt;t .
. .
, ;
received Phi Beta KappQ
J - Sanda Ia 1 apscllll 011r1- :
Scott was not. lhe last person 'o He was denied admission. In 1896
honors
and
.was
the
first
Africanraapclr!dent·
of the S!lndar
Claude
Alcx111der
IIIII
Wilbert
Howseek admission to the all white
American
in
the
history
of
Bowdoin
Tin
tal
lalllllliii!L
Hla 1 Ult n II:
Union School in h11pe5 of IJeins ell sought admission to Gallipolis
COllege
to
aive
a
graduatin&amp;
speech.
·
81
_
Willow
Dr.,
lplli
giiDfO, Ohio
tauaht subjeCts not covered at Lin- lligh School. The two were aiven
His
topic
w~
"Race
Adjustment."
45011.
··
coln. W.A. Cousins tried it in 18115. seats irr the clasSroom bUt we~;e·
••

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P1i*C2• .. , aT

Pom.-oy • ..ddleport • Galllpolle, Ott • Point P1eaant, WV

.. n I

Yogurt,

By BARBARA NACHMAN
Gaa~..U Suburben ~-~~.

Be~t qf thefBend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

•
nie Trinity Congregational
Some years ago lilde piutic
Church in · Ponw:roy ¥ tnllt:ing iu . pars were available hither ud
I 50th annivenary and an usual and I believe were
event is planned in conjunction wilh designed to be pin cushions.
· that observance.
needS some of these for IMhe~r:::-;
If you were manied at Trinity and : would appreciate b
Church, also known as Fedei'IICd yours or will even buy them if
and Peace Evangelical over the will let her know. If you have ,...,,lrlf
years, you're invited to renew your the slippers please give Sabra a
.vows during the morning wonhip a1 992-7386.
service next Sunday, Feb. 23. ·
•
Not only that..but there will be a
You might want to make a •
reception following the renewal of that Mattie and Clifford · (Doyllol)
VOWS and' thiS Will be held in the Beegle of Racine will mart thijr
Bethany Educational Auditorium.
60th wedding anniversary . 6n ·
:·
If you were married at the c~urdl Wednesday, March 19.
and. would like to participate in the
The observance, due .to helllth
renewal ceremonies, just ·call 992- reasons, will he a quiet one but r'~t~
3172 and get signed in.
· sure !hey would appreciale a line or
By the way, Belh Perrin Johnson a card from you extending congraiwho liyes in Mason, . Ohio these uiations. 'J'he 'address is 48680 Sta~
MICHELLE MYERS AND GEORGE RELDS
days has designed a most 'attractive Route i 2.4, Racine, Ohio 45711. ·''
logo for the ISOth anniversary
Congratulations to the Beeg~ .
observance. Beth is a daughter of May they have many more. . :
:
...
Gay · Perrin, Meigs Local teacher,
•
GALLIPOLIS : Michelle LyM 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy .and a former pastor at the church,
In
his
busy
world,
Pomeroy's
Jlle
Myers and Oecqe Alexander Fields High School.
the late Bill Perrin.
Gloecknl!r corresponds with Doi!Y
announce their engagement and
AMY BUSH AND
DAVIS
Fields· is the son of Willie Mjle
Higginbottom, formerly of M~
upcoming .wedding:
Fields of Col~m~us. He is a 1~2
Marisha Nelson of Fairlane . County. Dolly who was 88 la5t May
Myers is the daugh~ of Paul and graduate of. Mtffitn Htgh School tn · ' Drive, MiddlepOrt, reports that
married lhe late Bob Kleinsmidt and
Brenda Myers of Oallip&lt;ilis: She·is a Columbus.
- ·
·
spring is right upon us.
is now living ·in Logan. Ohio.
GALLIPOLIS - Amy Lynn Bush Schools . .
This,
she
says,
she
bases
on
·tlie
She 111CI Joe both enjoy mu5ic
of Gallipolis and William C. "Coby"
Davis is tbe son of Bill Davis and .
fact
that:Anna
and
Harold
Fitch
who
·
and
especially · share . tidbits about
Davis announce tbeii' engagement Judy HasSerty both of Gallipolis.
live
near
Fairlane
Dri.
v
i:
"have
daf· the golden oldies. In her latest letter
aiKI upcoming wedding.
.
He is a 1989 gf&amp;duate of Gallia
fodils
in
bud
almost
ready
to
bursa
DoUy sent Joe the lyrics to two
Bush is the daughter of Mr..and · Academy High Scliool and auendec! ·
into
full
bloom.
There
are
a
lot
of
songs
from way back when, • Amer.Mrs. Lewis Bush of Gallipolis and the University Of Rio Grande. He is
spring
flowers
which
seem.
to
be
ica,
I
Love
You" and "Don~ Bite tbe
Sharon Ann Bush. She is · a 1990 employed with Wiljo Inc. and a
pushing
forth
regardless
of
the
Hand That's.Feedinli You." .
graduate of Oallia Academy Hi&amp;h member of the Elks.
weather
but
few
are
as
far
along
as
Dolly hopes thai sometime the
School and a 1995 graduate of the
the
Filches.
two songs will enjoy a revival.c I
University of Rio Grande. Sbe is ·a .
The· wedding will be Saturoay,
I hope Marisha's nghL rm ready, have sheet music on both of thein
fii'St grade teacher at &lt;men Elemen- · July 26 at Grace United Methodist
aren't you?
but somehow I don't anticipate aay
wy School with Gallipolis City Church. .
would bave been, without volunteer
By' STAN VOrr
big upswing in their popularity.
labor and gifts ljke Kenny Cofield's,
.
.
.
M~ntgromery (Ale.) AclvertiMr
an impossible job. Hodge estim~s
. Chtldrtn and ~andchlld'."'n of Todat, they .are gone but.not forgotWhen Kenny Cofteld mis-sized rebuilding would have. cost . Mary K R~ush wtll be hosbng an ten by few. Unfortunately, one day
·
·
• open recepbon at the Forest Run , they will be just plain gone. •
sev~n s~n~-glass church windows . $SSO 000
'
·
Church from 2 to 4 p.m., next Sunfour y~ ago, h.~ figured he'd never
The
volunteers
have.
been
fed
and
day afternoon, Feb. 23,. in celebrabe able to get rid of !hem.
I warned you that Friday w'tis
housed by the most!Y African-Alner· lion of Mary K.'s 85th birthday. Valentine's Day and you'd hetter
He couldn't sell them. · ·
ican congregation, usually starting They hope .to see you on hand for function but you didn't 'pay- any
He couldn't give !hem aivay.
with a get-acquainted gathering Sat- the observance.
attentio,n. Don't look to me for s~­
wday
~&lt;?On·
••The
Rising
Star
pathy. A word to the wise, yl!u
But he says he always knew lhat
ladies
have
been
feeding
.
u
s
all
very
Ambitious
Sabra
Ash;
Pomeroy,
know. Now it's really going !0 be
God had a plan for those winctows,
is on another project and needs your difficult ·to keep smiling.
· ·that one day he'd·know .wby he had well on Saturday," Pittm111 says.
mad~ such an expensive mistake.,
· The roof ~endy. went on the help.
new buildin.g· and lhe in~riot will be
Now he knows.
tackled next-Cofield's gift windows
.' .
·~! I'' :·Jl~Cj ;r I '!~
After reading about Rising. Star will be installed soon, as well as
.
.
..
" .
..
Baptist, a burned church in Greens- additional glass the chiJrch ordered . 1n an e.~ort t~ provtde our re~htp wtth curret:tt news, t~ Sun&lt;fay
boro, Ala., Cofteld donated those from him. Completion of the build· , Times-Senttnel wtll not accept weddtngs after 60 days from lhc date of the
seven windows - worth more than ing is anticipated for April, Hodge event. .
.·
.
. . .
. •
$9,000- to the church's rebuilding says .
·
Weddmgs submttted after the 60-day dendhne wtll appear during the
·
week in The Daily Sentinel and the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
•
.project.
There are 52 fa~ilies in the
All club meetings and other news articles in the society section must :be
"I feel God supplied my needs lis
Greensboro
congregatton,
he
says,
submitted
within 60 days of occurrence. All birthdays must be·'submittCd
. well as theirs," he says.
and they are not wealthy people. within 60 days of the occum:nce.
·
Rising Star is in tile midst of "We wouldn't be able to build it if
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.
rebuilding after a June 3, 1996, fire. we ·didn't have the volunteers and ·
·
Every week a new crew of volun- donations."
teers arrives from the Washington
Meanwhile, Cofield says nearly
Quaker Work Camps, says Ed
everything
he does these .days is
Pittman of Jaffre~, N.H. .
affected by his hom-again relation"I came· on Aug. 15 from New ship with God.
Hampshire to help · for a · few
More !han 20 years ago his haul ~
weeks," Pittman says .. His time
turned into monlhs when he "wound irig business failed, his marriage'
up as the projeCt manager," Pillman ended, he was an abSc:ntee father and
he spent most of his nights visiting
says.
bars.
"We have people from all over
JENNIFER APPLEGATE AND TODD CASEY
Then, he says, he found the Lord
coming down to give their time to
and
began Stained Glass Creations ·
'·help rebuild the church," says
church deacon John Hodge. " A in Beulah, the east Alabama commucpLUMBUS - Jennifer. Apple- 1989 graduate of Gallia Academy . group of cadets from the Air Force ni!~ where he grew up. Since !hen,
gate 'P.f Columbus and T~d Casey· High School and a 1994 graduate of l\cademy came for one day to help he's made. windows ·for many
of G!ihanna announce thetr engage· The Ohio State University with a with the roof. It was a blessing to homes, businesses and churches.
bachelor·of science degree in cxer· have them here.
ment 'and upcoming wedding.
Those seven windows he sized
cise
science and a 1996 graduate of
plegate is the daughter or
"And all denominations ate com- incorrectly had been stuck in a'coras and Linda Applegate. She is University of Kentucky with a mas- ing to help, also'. A group of Jews . ncr at his business for years, gathera· 19 . graduate of Beechcroft High ter of science degree in exercise from California came·and we helped ing dust. When he learned six
SciKd in Columbus and a 1994 physiology. He is an ~xercise physi· . celebrate Hannukah with them here. months ago of the firc .that d.estroyed
grad\ te ofnte Ohio State Univer· ologist with Nova Car~ . Outpatient It's been not only the donation of the Rising Star, he got together with
sity I ilh a ·degree in fashion mer· Rehabilitation.
time, but an education and enrich- deacon Hodge and the gift was
ising. She is a manager for
made.
.The. wedding will be May I0 at . ment for a l.ot of us."
"God wanted those windows to
People have come from around
C ~y is the son of Daniel T. and North Broadway United Methodist
be
there,·~ Cofield says.
Church
in
Columbus.
the
country
to
help.
work
on
what
Ros' I Casey of Gallipolis. He is a
'
.

Bush-Davis

•

.. .

.

Myers-Fields
..

a

...

News poI'ICY. .

I.

· shed. u • friNI. ~«~~fee
to non·
'-~· •••
.
Whirlpool LSR8858E
roftt group• wl•hlng .. to . GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Busi· .· Whirlpool LSR5233E
27:
Super
Plus
·
Super Capacity Plus
ni\O!II!ce !"eetiRP 8l1d lpiiOial ness .and Professional Women's
1
Automatic
Waaher
Electric Dryer
. . ven,ta. The C8lendar · I• . not Club meeting 6:30 p.m. Holzer
•
Cycle
Logic'"
Color
.Coded
Controls
•
Cycle Loglc'M Color-Coded CoMtrOts
IIJitlil'*' to promote 1111• or · Medical Center French '500 Room.
•
5
Autorriatic
Cycles
•
8 Automaltc Cycles
~Itera ol M!f type. Item•..
•••
!
• White·on·White Styling
• While-on-While Styling
~ntlld u •pece permlte and C8ll·
·
ilot l!t g01ranteec1 to rune apeclfVINTON - American Legion
~"""''* Of'dayi.
·
Auxiliary Unit 161 meeting I p.m.
at Beatrice Bush's home: .
Su-"'- Feb. 16
1
i
. "
··.~· '
•• ljl
~ 'POIN'r · PLEASANT, W.Va.
Thesday, l"eb. 18,
~arcotic;s Anon~mous Tri County
•••
P!Oup 7:30 p.m.lill Viand St.
dALLIPOLIS
. Alcoholics
; 1· ·
••t
.
Anonymous 8 p.m. St . Peter's Epi.s· 't
; ; qALLII'OLIS- Joh~ and Debbie . copal Church.
·
.
Cardwell aild Scott and Paula Kap·
•••
:
~I ict 'sing. 6 · p.m. Faitb Baptist
GALLJPOLIS - .Choose to Lose
"'"
'·
h'
·
Diet
' Chiss
9 · a.m. Grace United
'"'nurc ;L ,
.
.~
. ~~
:· ..
•••
Methodist Church.
Whlrt~oollSR7233E
QUIET WASH"' Plua Soriel Ollbw111ttr
: ','dAi.UPoLIS - Gallia County
•••
.
·
27" Sttper Capacity Ptua
with SOUND-LOCK"' Syatem
· ~jstprical Society Board Meeting 1 GALLIPOLIS · Comnwnlly Can~er
~utti'motlc Wuher
Motlll DU915QWDB
:m.'witli election of officers. Betty Suppon Group 2 P·ll)'·· New -Ltfe ·
• 7 Automatic Cycles
• CLEAN TOUCH'" Console with 11 Cycle/
/
.
I
· Optiop Combinations
. to review Mcintyre bOok 2:30 . Lutheran Church:
• 2 Wash/Spin Speeds
~ ··
.
.
• 3-Level POWER CLEAN'" Wash System
•
Whlte-on·White
and
v.m.
.
.
.
.
wltfl Heavy-Duty Food Disposer
Almond·on·Atmond
Styling
• · ·. y
•••
GALLIPOLIS
American
Eliminates Prermsing
1459•
' CROWN CITY - Rev. Keith Lcgi~n Auxiliary"Lafayette l,lnit 27 ,
• ln·the·Ooor Silverware Baskat
Frees Up Rack Space
• Eblin to preach and Sharon Eblin to meeung . 7:30 p.m. Post Home :
I ,
. 130" Cn~~.a
t sing II a.m. Good Hope Baptist McConn.•ck Road. Regular mccttng 1
5429" . ~
fbur_ch. Rev. Carl Black to preach in , and readmg of br~~ws.
.
·
,.evcnmg.
IRONTON · Lower Ohio River .
Valley
Basin Chapter No. 9 archae·
~
Monday, Feb. 17
ology meeting 6:3Q to 8:30 p.m.
~ MERCERVILLE
- South Gallia · Briggs Library with program on
.
·
•High School Boosters Club 7:30 mummies.

husband was killed during Reconstruction for makirig
political speeches for an unpopular candidate.
'
.
(Ala.) ~Hr
Three of the former slaves - . Alice Gaston, Joe
1
"if!en Black History Month rolls around in 1998 • .. McDonald and Isom Mosley - lived in lhe Wilcox
we'II!be able to hear firslhand accounts of slavery from County community· of Gees B'end, Ala. They are
tiJ081 who expepencedit. ·
·
believed to be the only known Alabamians interviewed
'jn ~ngs made in 1937 are to be examined and . as part of the Fede!,il \Vriters Project launched during
, e
~ by a Clanton, Ala., group that was awarded a the Depression.
··
SlO, . grant last fall from the National. Endowment for
Gaston tells what it was like when Union troops
, the
· 'ties.
· arrived at the end of the Civil W.:, and her mistress ran
' · jndina for the Institu~ of Language and Culture to the aarderi aftei' instructinJ Gaston "not to tell the
1 was ' J1C only NI!H pJan~nJ. grant awarded in the Unued
Yankees where she was hiding."
I ~ast year~ to l!tJdget cuts, and the project direcHuohes ~id sl~ves were iiot. ali:,Wed to :hi\Ve,. money
: 19".. · ittcd th."'
•• the. ,finis'-~
. uct, sh. ould become a until they
.. were 21 and were not allowed to cross. a s.treet
•-r prod
: coli tor's item. . ' ' . .
. .
.
:·without writien pennission from .their master.:·
.
l .·, ·a will an opportunity to hear about the daUy ·
The tentative title of~ nilio documentAry .is "In
i lhw·ofslavesandwliathappenedlothemafteremanc!- Their own Voices," and aitd more thAn 3,000 'former
I plliGjl " ·says Kathie Farnell .of Monliomery, who ts
slaves were interview~.
.;
! .~~~ wilh historian Richard Baile)'. on the project.
.
.
• . M. oi' die iiiiCI'Vicws were in written form, but sevFarnell says. Wayne ~ynt of Auburn Untverstty ~
IIIII ~ recotded on tape a1 a time when that type of · Robert McEivatne of Millsaps College both are working
•
,
· on the project and are focusing on the Depression-era
WM
in
ill
inotiiiCy.
,'
,
,
.
'
,
'
I ......a.-tt
~--.; .., ·
setting under which the interviews·
WCJe cond
. uclcd . .
:
"'lbe -"c oxi.,..... of •
recORii..,s .of ~Ic
, .
·u·be.
.
fthe
.
'th
r bcin . . ~ 'il.•Jmor.t • ~II." ·SIYI Ftmoll.
M'!'IC also WI
~ maJor ~"
project, WI
' •1'1tlr Ill* Povkllauoiquni,' !ina ID billoly.~·
selectiona from ~tnp_ of aptl'ltuala made II &lt;lees
1
: .
•
•
.8llld durina the I~. ·
~ P ~lniMW:S:":ct"'t*'n:t. ~tt-:: ~ **!IIIII
have liDCti broidcll!t ~are

'

.'

.-

'A_._~
·
llavll, H1rri1t Smlih. telb bow
.
,,. l)ei' tint
.

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'

.

'

.

aewt

stared at tile Binnin,._ Public'.~ibrary.
.
i,:l

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Of Charlotte, NC

•

C\ · Example 30 X 48 ..................... '315
Del &amp; lnst.................. • 70
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Tile Community Caltndar is United Methodtst L'hurch, 7 p.m.
;,ubtlllled 115 a free
to non· Sunday. Everyone ·welcome.
!Proftt al'OUps wlshhaa to anaounce MONDAY
and special events. The · LET'•RT -- Letart Township
lcaleJidar Is not deslped to. pron
~ IJales or llaad rallen qf any . Trustees, 6 p.m. ~onday, office
~ Ite1111 an printed M 1pate building.
:-mila and canaot be paranteed
.
,
I'!IR a speciftc number of·cla~.
RACINE-· RaCine Village Coun·
. •SUNDAY
.
.
cil; recessed session, Monday, 7.
: • MIDDLEPORT -- John Elswick p.m. at the 111~nicipal building.
:io speak at. Hobson Chris~an Fel"' :j~w~hip, ·Sunday, 1 p.m.. Spectal ~~:~OY -- Meigs County unii
:amgmg.
. .
of the American Cancer Society,
POMEROY· -· The Meigs Hilh Tuesday, S p.m., VMfi conference
'kt!oOt class .of 1972, Meigs Vet room. Board members urged to
. t:linic, Sunday, 2 p.m. to plan 2Sth . attend. ·
.

•·

.. .-~-----~-~------IIIia--IIIia---;.;..);;;;;
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fMe·igs community ·calendar .

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I HEfiLSWiNG

fll: These dairy products are exceilllURleS of vitamin D, calcium
aad B vitamins. They are also low in
cholesterol and high in protein.
- Peppers: Green, yellow, orange
and red peppers are very low in calories and high in vitamins A and C. A
serving of green peppers, which has
only 12 calories, contains 100 pqrcent of the recommended dietary
allowance for vitamin C. Red,
orange and yellow peppers, which
renect different levels of ripening,
are lower in vitamin C but are a bet·
ter source &lt;&gt;f bionavonoids, which
help. prevent cancer.
Mindy Hennann of Mount Kisco,
N.Y., is a dietitian and contributing
editor at Shape magazine. She ·also
writes a nutrition column for Child
magazine .
"The No. t reason people eat
what they eat, is taste," she says.
"Why not·find things that taste good
first? " .
Her choices:
- .Sweet potatoes: "They're not just
for Thanksgiving,'.' Hennann says. ,
Sweet potatoes are high in vitamin C
and beta carot~ne , a nutrient that the
body converts to vitamin A. They're
also low in calories, between 60 and
100 calories a potato.
-Broccoli: This is oile of the most
nutritious vegetables and an excellent source of vitamin C. as well as
· good source of protein, vitamin A,
calcium, iron and minerals. Broccoli
is also considered a cancer fighter
and' an aid to fighting heart disease.
-Mangoes: This fruit is high in vit·
aminsA and C and beta carotene and
is also high in potassium and iron
and a source.of niacin .

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.Appl~gate-Casey

p·.oject to preserve voices of ex-slaves

iron, potasSium and vitamin C.~;·: ' Otristophen of fatty acids," Craytier laboratory tests also shoW thCY bon says. "They make peace in the

Ftnally the Cahfornta Rats!ns may lower levels ~ blood c~Jes. body." They're a Jood source of
have something tmponant to smg terol, thereby reductng the nsk of protein and omega-3 fatty acids,
about. But they. didn't hear it heart auao:ks.
.
wbich increase the levels of HDI..
throuJh the grapevme.
All this should pvc sra1q a cholesterol, the type of cholesterol
The news, wbich comes from the prominent place in any well-bat- that helps prevent heart attacks.
. ~rrent issue of the journal Science, anced diet. (Raisins offer ~ same - Soy products: Tofu and other soy
IS· about resveratrol, a natural subhealth benefitS but are high m calo- pi'oducts are a good source of prostance fou~ in raisins and grapes.
ries since it takes about 4 pounds of tein, iron, 8 vitamins, calcium,
Accordtng to a group of!.(niversi· grapes to make one pound of potassiiun and zinc . .There also is
ty of lllinois.scientists, the subs~ce raisins.) ,
evidence they may protect against
found most abu~dandy tn the skin of
What are other foods lhat deserve cancer and heart disease.
· llJliPCS might be a power;ful cancer- special attention when you are buildNalini Rajegowda, a dietitian at
fighting agent that !&lt;eeps healthy ing a healthy diet? That's the ques- Nyack (N.Y.) Hospital, says health·
cells .from.. becoming cancerous lion we asked lhree experts.
conscious people are turning to a
Robert Crayhon of New diet that's high in fiber and low in
while mhibtbng the. sprend of cells
!hat are already maltgnant.
Rochelle, N.Y., ts the author of fat. She says foods are a gond source
Researchers say fulther swdies "~obert Crayhon's Nutrition Made of fiber if they contain at least 2.5
are needed to prove that eattng or Stmple" (Evans, $12.95). He =om- grai!Js per serving. But if you're
drinking the fruit of the vine will mends:
looking for high-fiber foods, each
offer the same benefits found in lab- .- Aax seed oil: "Yes, Virginia, serving should contain close to 5
Oratory and animal studies. Still, the there are good fats," says Crayhon. grams.
ne--:s is promising and provides one "If I could put one food in the hands
Her picks:
. more reason to grab those grapes lhe of every American, it would be nax - Dry beans: Pinto beans. navy
next time you're at.the supermarket~ seed oii.".The oil helps absorb vita· beans, kidney beans, black beans
It's too soon to say if grapes will mins and provides fatty acids neces- and chick peas are low in. fat and
become the next •oat bran, which sary for hormone production: It also . sodium and excellent sources of
recently· received FDA approval to offe~ protection against cancer and · dietary fiber and protein. They may
include lteallh claims on the labels heart disease.
·
also ,' hav~ cholesterol-lowering
of some producu. The message - Walnuts and almonds: .When effects' and might be htilpfui in pre·
. "may· reduce heart disease" can be eaten raw, these nuts are ·a good venting certain types · of cancer.
written on oat products that contain source of ·vitamins, minerals, fiber, S.ome studies show !hat this versatile
at least.75 grams of soluble fiber per protein and essential fats. Crayhori food, which can .be added to many
serving.
says they also help lower LDL cho- dishes, inight improve l!lood sugar
Will hordes of heafth..conscious lesterol, the type of cholesterol asso- control· for, people with non-insulin
Americans now stan p!Jttin~ grilpes ciated with heart disease. ·
dependent diabetes.
on everything from breakfast cereal - Beiries: Raspberries and cranber- -Potatoes: When they're prepa{ed
to beef stew as !hey did wilh oat bran ries are low in calories and high in without fat and sodium, potatoes are
when health claims began surfacing , 1aste and are a good source of vita- relatively low in calOries. They're
JAY AND AMY SAXTON
in the 1980s? And should they? .
min C ·and fiber. .Cranberries also . also a good source of fiber, especialWhat Is clear at this time is that help prevent 'urinary tract infections. ly lhe potato skin and are rich in vit. '
the tasty treats are JQw in calories, - Cold water fish: Salmon, ' sar- amins C and B6 as well as potassium
' • BRANSON, Mo. '. Amy Renee with a triangiJlar peplum bow.
high in biqnavonoids (needed for dines, mackerel, snapper and white and several other minerals.
'Haefe!cer and Jay Allen Saxton were ·
The bridal gow9 was accented by capillary walls) .and a good source of albacore ' tuna are "the Warren -Skim milk 'or milk ~ith I percent
.married Dec. 21, 1996 at BraiJSOII a pearled V-band headdress with
1fnited Methodist Church in Bran· ' Ve_ni!!C left sided floral accenting the\
·'5011, Mo.
ved and blusher.
Amy is the daughter of Judith
A combination of color and shape
.Haefeker of Hollisier, Mo. and the was represented in the crescent liou~ granddaughter
of Ernest and quet. The clustering of · gerbera
•EIIadean Leatherman of Point Look- dai~es, burgundy carnations, red
oout; Mo.
amaranthus, cream roses and ming
· :· Jay i~ the son of Okey and Mary fern created the center of the bou- !
LOu Tawney of .Gallipolis al!(l the quet, while.sJ)rays of purple dendra- ·
:Jrandson of Howard and Lida Gar- billfll orchids and fragrant eucalypland of GalliJ!9lis Ferry, W.Va.
Ius completed the shape.
The double-ring ceremony· wa$
Maid of honor was Kristy Card·
,tJCrfOrmed by Dr. Steve House. · well of Hollister. Victoria Marie was
, ,. A Christmas theme was carried jhe flower girl also of Hollister. len·
. Qllt in the church decorations. Can- nifer Leatherman, cousin of the
'4elabras and decorated archway bride from Omaha, Ark. served as 1
..were el!)tanced by poinsettiaS on the taper lighter. Besl·man was Okey A. •
~liiter.
·
Tawney, father of the groom, and
The bride was escorted to the ring bearer .was Darrin 'Leatherman,
aitar by her brother, Jerry !iaefeker. cousin of the bride from Omaha. . .
For hei' wedding, she wore a gown
_!?Y..P!ll!!£trious. The off-the..shoulder . • . The bri!le is a .graduate of .Hollis·
candlelight gown had long sleeves ter High School and attended North
vc::!IJbellished with Alencon lace and Arkansas C::ommunity1College. The
;,pearls. The empire waist flowed into · groom is a graduate ~f Galli a Acad·
a full circulai skirt trimmed with emy High School and attended Ohio
, ~Jiatching lace and pearls . . The_ ~orthem University and the Univer·
detachable Empire length train had sity of Rio Grande. He is employed ,
.,,illusion cut out designs with ·glisten~ as ~tore manager for J. Crew Facto· I
Ling Alencon lace, pearls and irides' ry Store in Branson.· The couple 1
cent beads, attached at the waist reside in Powersite, Mo.

'

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and beans build a healthy diet

Haefeker-Saxton

Religion: .Mistq_ke
became windfall for a
fire~r~vaged .church

.,'

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Whirlpool RF385PXE
:Ill" Self.Cieonllll FntiiiHllf
Eltcllfc Rttip
•
• Super Capaclty-4.65 Cu. fl Oven
• AccuBalle'".Advanced Temperature
1
Management Systtll)
• Wh~e or Almond Styling
·

$64910 -

·.

Whirlpool RF325PXE
30".Electric Range
• Super Capacity 4.65 Cu. Ft. Oven
• AccuBake'" Adlilnced Temperature

Management Syatem

• White or Almond Styling

$48910 ~

+lit~
.... f...IPICIPIII
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Monday 9:30;-8:00

Tues.-sat.

Floor Coverl

9:30-5:00

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.992-4671 ·
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-....,, Februery 11, 1187

Sunday, ~ 11, 1117 •

Pomeroy • Middleport • O.Uipolll, Ott • Point PI runt, WV

Mwl

Those salty little fish eggs are catching on.
ber to October," say1 Paul Broun· membrane. Ossetra has "a rich,
stein, co-founder of mail order com- brolld taste, wilb a nuay highliJht,"
pany Fancy Foods Gourmet. he says. The color runs from dark
"Because it's liJhUy salted and ~ys and blacks to a light brassy .
doesn't freeze if properly ston:d, JOior.
caviar stays in preay pristine concli- Sevruga has tbe smallest berry
tion.••
of tbe Caspian Sea caviars. It is simCaviar is tradjtionally the eggs, or . ilar to beluJa in appearance but with
"berries," of sturgeon fished from more pronounced, robust flavor.
the Caspian Sea, where m~ture fish Average price: SI6-S2J.
can reach 1,000 pounds or more.
. Overfishing in tbe Caspian has
The two major sources for sturgeon, led to rumors of scarcity.
Magnotta says, are Russia and Iran.
"In five years Caspian caviar
"You can't get the Iranian variety · production is going to come to a
now because of a trade embargo."
halt,'' Engstrom says.
Of tbe Clll!l!ian Sea caviar, there
But companies such as California
are three nlain ty'pes. Cost is based Sunshine are pioneering. sturgeon
on rarity.
fanning and bolstering American
. - Beluga is tbe most expensive, caviar.
ranging in price from $30 to sso·an
''We 've h8d sturgeon farms sinCe
ounce. It ranges in color from light 1980,'' Engstrom says, predicting
pewter to jet black. "The membrane that within five years ~alifomia will
of th~ berries is so delicate, it's like be the world's main supplier.
butter .melting in your mouth,''
Braunstein agrees. hi the long
Braunstein says.
.
term, he says, overfishing will be
- Ossetra is cheaper (about $20 . reflected in .even higher· prices and
an ounce) and hilS a more durable

BY CATHY HAINER
USA TODAY
For caviar faM, it's tbe ftsh, not
tbe goose, that lays lhe golden eggs.
"Caviar is associated with a way
of life that people want to achieve,"
says Mats Engslrolll,'owner of California Sunshine Fine Foods, which
imports caviar. "Caviar' is not just a
food product, it's tbe pinnacle ·of a
lifestyle."
.
A. recent boom in caviar restaurantS and bars, s·uch as Tony Clark's
in Philadelphia and the soon-to-open
Cayiar Russe in ,New York, will
widen access to that lifestyle.
"Caviar Russe is all about celebrating caviar," says ownet David
Magnotta. The restaurant will offer a
full range of caviars; plus traditional
accompaniments such as blinis and
baked potatoes.
Caviar-lovers can celebrate year
round. "There are basically two
times of year when caviar is harvested: late March to June and Septem-

I

increased rarity.
American "-viar vlrieliea include!
salmon from lhe Pacific and white~
fllh harvested from tbe Great Lakes.:
Bec•1se of its color, whitefish roe ii
often referred to u "Americar£
Golden" caviar.
,
So what about tbe eggs y011 can'
buy in the grocery store?
•
Says Engstrom! "Basically what
y011 find in the grocery store is roe
from lump fish," common to the
north Atlantic. "They're very large
berries, red or blal!lc:. It has il. very.
strong flavor. It's tbe kind of roe you
want to eat on a bed of sour cream or
mashed on top of potatoes." Prices
are about $8-S 10 per ounce.
How to tell quatity caviar?
"It has to have a specific texture,
consistency and the right amount of
salt,'' Magnotta says. "The berries;
should be moist but not too soft.
What people must understand is that
there's no such thing as the . 'best' ·
caviar. It's all amatter of taste ....

By KARL LEIF BATES

· ROBERT AND ELIZABETH FISHER

I

Fishers m·ark 32nd
.

.

i RACINE -- Robert "Bob" and .at Apple Grove by Rev. James Early.
Elizabeth "Libby" Fisher' of John's
S!feet, Racine, are observing their
3~nd wedding anniversary tOday.
I They were married Feb: 16, 1965

Mr. and Mrs. Fisher are the parents
of two sons, Ralph (Leslie) and
Damon both of Racine.

While Americans are busily gorging on nearly $700 million worth of
chocolate this week in· the name of
affection, some scientists are left
wondering :. Is it a food or is it a
drug?
· The bottom line of several studies
is that cho8'olate, so deeply loved
and craved, has an element of magic
to it. Several, actually. .
Chocolate mimics the brain
chemistry of romantic love.
It tickles the same brain regions
as marijuana and coffee.
·· The fat in it, cocoa butter, is
heavily saturated, yet it does~'t raise
serum cholesterol:
A 2-ounce piece of chocolate can
kill a ~og.
"It is probably one of the most
complicated foods,' ' says Jonathan
Hoskin, a food scientist at Clemson
University in South Carolina.
For starters, there are literally
thousands of chemical compounds
in an ordinary chocolate bar. "You
start with a relatively small num!ler
of components, in the-hundreds, and
end up with components in the .thousands" after grinding and roasting
the cocoa beans, Hoskin says. "For
some ofthe chemical cbanges noted,
the re~ulting (color, f.lavor and texture) changes may · never be fully
understood," he wrote in a 1994
ppper.
Hoskin is working on a book on
the history and science of chocolate.
"It's a rather complex book,'' he
acknowledges. ''I'm trying to
encompass everything about choco·
late." Most books on the subject arc
"fluff,'' he added, because they are
written by people who love the stuff
too much. "I like chocolate, · but I
think in a way it's a little easier to be
more critical of it if you hold back a
bit."
But sometitncs ii's so hard to
hold back . .
The love-drug in chocolate is a
family of compounds known as
phenylethyamines (FEEN-ci-E;th-el·
a-mecn). These work on the brain
like the natural stimulants dopamine
. ·and adrenaline, · leaving a person
with heightened s&lt;mses and a feeling
of well-being. Blood pressure and
sugar levels ·rise slightly and the
pulse quickens.
Caffeine relatives methylxanthinc (METH·ci-Zan·thene). and
'I

JACK AND JOAN SORDEN

Sordens celebrate 50th

!

RUTI.AND '-- Jack and Joan Sorden of Rutland celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary on Valentine's
Day.
They wcre.married Feb. t4, 1947
at the Methodist parsonage in
Pomeroy by Rev. Bitters.

Mr. ·and Mrs. Sorden are the par·
en\)&gt; of four children, Dan Sotdcn of
West Palm Beach. Aa.; Debbie Tan·
ncr of Orlando, Fla.; Dave Sordcn of
Rutland; and Dawn Tucker of Wcis·
baden • .Germany. They have four
grandchildren .

Atsln

..

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By LARRY NAGER

Pull out the handle and heft that
baby. If' you' re looking for a system
Capt. Kirk and Mr. Spock, their you can take out on 'the back deck
· bus ride through San Francisco dis- for parties,' portability probably isn't
turbed by a boom-box-blaring punk, much of an issue . But if you want a
. had had enough. Mr. Spock, logical boombox to take hiking, make sure
as always, reached across the aisle, you pick one · that matches your
applied tbe old Vulcan death grip, biceps along with your budget . . ,
knoc~ed out the pun~ and casually
The front-loading CD changer is
flic~ed off•the offendmg boombox.
the hottest new item in boom-box
But if that scene from 1986's · technology. Gone are the days when
"Star ,'l)·eti 4: The Voyage Home" . you had to open that top-loading CD
was filnied tOday, even Mr. Spock player ·, exposing he delicate laser
might have troulile finding the off. mechanism to dust, pet hair, curious
. switch.
toddlers and greasy fingers.
The newest CD boomboxcs
Today's boombcixes are complica:ed ' iound systems light years mimic the familiar front-loading
ahead of those firsi-generation drawers of your home CD deck;
radio-and-cassette players.
·
with some models .as cheap asS 100.
Fbr· $300 or so, you can .find a For S 120·$ 160, you can find several
bOOII)boX that probably sounds bet- name-brand players with changers
.ter aT!d has more feature,s than your for three to six COs.
·
home slcreo.
Of course, along with a few more
No~ys, ~m!ioxes ate full- bucks; you' ll pay for those multiple
service mtnl-stereo systems. stocked CD changers for years to come m
. . .. ..
with such op~ons· as "-itacbable . the qattery dram.
multiple ~peallcr systems; doubleMost boomboxes eat eaght D
well, ll)lnchronized . caseette decks; cells, with radio taking the least
front-~inJ, 10-CD changers; ancj, power, COs the most and ta~s in
for til&lt;* who want to retain couch- the middle. In general, the ratiO of
powo status even at' !he beach or time is around 3-2-1 for radio~ta~­
whilc cunp\nJ, full ternote control, CD. If you have a fancy multl-d1sc
And a h8ndle, so·you can lug it changer, that means even more
around with you. But keep i11 mind . power will go to shuffling those CDs
thilt betler sound and more features ~nd.
u1ually weigh JIIQI'I, More boom in
If you're p)anning t,o us~ the
your box Will
mean mon: boornbo~ as a remote stereo wtth an
~ -~11.
, '.
· ele¢ic outlet elose by, that's not a
; JOol:wllle yoa lhQp, Jive your problem. Virtually all, but the. very
• ••wetllljourulu'wGi'koul.
lowcist.:end llOoinboxes come with
'
. .
The Cincinnati Enquirer

Ullllllr
'

.

;

,.

a simple cassette ·setup. Even the
most basic allows you to tape directly from CD or radio.
If you w~nt to replicate your
home system right down to the.
stereo separation, ypu might want
detachable speakers.
But no matter what type boombox you choose, to test its speakers.
bring along a favorite CD when yo~ ·
shop. You should .know it by heart,
from the. lowest to highe~t sections,
and try them on several different
boom boxes.

•I ---·-·I

. LOSE f: 10 LIS.

I
·1

·-CJI.-

1113 DAYS

WII\CIWOIIUIIQ M

_,.MCICCICMIWfr&amp;
.--cas. 1111, 11!11' 11

FlmiPU••CY
. ttl

.

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

Galllpolb

.

--~

change models frequently, you can
often pick up · a ~·I bargain just
because it looks a l&gt;it different than
the newest model. Note: Make sure
the demos offer thC same warranty
as .a new machine.
And one last tip, if you're on a ::
bus and the guy. across the aisle has
pointy cars, keep.the volume down. . ·

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PUCTICE

.

•!

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
·WEIGHT CONTROL

I'
I

.'

o••• .

SERVI~E

•

TO

"'SE WOIIIII PEOPLE,

WE IRE OPEII 'TIL 7 P.M. 01 TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

.

251'11 &amp; JIFfEISOI AVENUE

Niii ......IIIT
304 675·1675

Btinldng the 117ft,
tDCU rnef,lftt to

,,
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1-

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'•P~~geC5 , .

veterinarian. He said C.U do have ·
Pasteurella bacteria in !heir mouths,
although he has never hwd of such
a radical prosression for this type of
infection, except for those who are
diabetic or elderly or have AIDS or
other immune system disorden.
With Pasteurella infection, a
swelliilg 'or abscess generally develops at the location ·of lhe bite -- in
tour case,-· tbe arm. If not treated
immediately with antibiotics, the .
infection could travel .up the arm,
although even then·, treaiment with
antibiotics should work.
Dr. Rubin said. all animals have
bacteria in their mouths, which is
nonnal for them but can be harmful
for humans. If you are bitten by anY,
animal and the skin is broken, please

Jet trcaled at once.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband ·
passed away a few months ago.
While going through his chest of
drawen, I found an old column of
yours on "Maturity." It seems a lot
of people lbese days need to grow up
and realize . what maturity really
means. I bope you will run that column again. -- Widow in Hamilton,
Ont.
Dear Friend: Here it is. Tharik
you for asking. Maturity
Maturity js the abilit,y to control
anger and settle differences wilbout
violence.
, Maturity is patience. It is the
willingness to pass up immediate
pleasure in favor of a long-term
gain.

Maturity means dependability,
Maturity is perseverance, the
ability to sweat out a project or a sit- keepinJ one's wor'd and cominJ
uation in spite of heavy opposition thi'Ough in a crisis. The immature are ·
nwters of lhe alibi. They are tbe :
and discouraging setbacks.
Maturity is the c~ity to face confused and tbe conflicted. Their ,
unpleasantness and frustration, dis- lives are a maze of broken promises, ·
comfort and defeat, wilbout com- former friends, unfinished business :
and good intentions that somehow :
plaint or collapse.
Maturity is being big enough to never materialize.
say, ul was wrong." And, when
·Maturity is tbe art of living in :
,right, the mature penon need 'not
experience 'tbe satisfaction of say- · peace with what we cannot change, : ·
· the courage to change what sbould :
ing, "hold you so.''
be changed and tbe wisdom to know .
tbe
difference.
·
Maturity is the ability to make a
decision and stand by it. The imma'
Send questions to Aim Luden, '
ture spend 1)1eir lives exploring endless possibilities and then do noth· CRaton Syndicate, 5777 W, Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, LoCI Anceles,
ing.
Calif, 90045

I

·

· MAMMOTH ART - A worker on the Crazy Horse Memorial uses a superaonlc finishing torch on ,
. Crazy's Horus chin Jan. 30. The lace of the world's largeet aculpture Is scheduled to be dedlcat· .·· "
eel In 1998. The project is being done by the ~lolkowsky family,
·, .

City directory lends ·insight into the downtown Gallipolis of 1897 ,',~

,;;,,

AX TAWNEY

Sccond.Sireet, 'opposite the park."
Streets and Avenues were listed
s~u~~~ ~;re~it~~~icl!r~~~·o"r.naat~:~~ as: Front-From cast to we~t. next
w·
Rec~ntly, Manhall north of Ohio River. Secoqd-from
CaitadGy offered east to west, next nonh of Front.
me the use of the Third-From east to west, next
Gallipolis
City north of Second. fourth-From cast
Directoty of 1897. to west, next north of Third. VineOne .hundred years From eastern boundary of the city.
ago · the Gallipolis Grape-;-From Ohio River north,
directory was pub- next east of Vine. Ccun-From
tished· by The Ohio River north, next west of State.
American Directo- These · streets · extend through
ry Co.. of Locli. Lodi is located on Sycamore.
·
· ·
Route 7, just across the river and
Harry Frank's Sons': Gents'
south of New Martinsville,· W.Va. Clothiers, Furr.:shers and Halter
The directory was compiled by advertised that they were "Handlers
. Mel bert Selden and was sold for ' ·of high grade Clothing; The best
$2, Selders explalned its contents by obtainabl'e makes 'of Shirts; Both
stating in the Preface:
Foreign and Domestic Hosiery and
.~Within will be found the correct Underwear. Always up to date on
census of the inhabitants of Gallipo- Neckwear. The first to get the new
lis, their occupations and th~ streets shapes in Collars and Cuffs. In fact
· upon which they live; the h1story of are wide awake and up with 'the
the .Public Institutions, churches, times on .apparel for men and boys.
seti'et orde1s, schools and every- We are sole agents for the celebrated
thing of public interest. 111jl census · 'Knox' Hats, also the famous 'Rosstaken by a hou~ to house can- more' Hats and Caps. Full line of
vass, and if any of the names have, , Stetson's goods always on hand~en omitted it is the fault of the ·
p4qple who gave the names.
; The · compilers have been very
/IC!It' /o't lil//1'.'
c~rtful in gathering the facts, and
:)t._Jn fosr :)~ /Jl~,
have aimed to make the book thoro~ghly reliable." · .
.
,. I was interested 111 readmg the ads
that appeared in the directory. Some
of them listed business· addresses,
and $ome did not. Property address- .
es were not assigned in the same
way they are today: For instance,
~Mtich, The· Popular Clothier and
Haberdasher, was loca1ed at I 57

··

'd

·

.

was

nao_.

UNITY
Savings Bank
500TIIIrdA..-ue .

•
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:•
::
·:
·:
:•

------

GttiiiJ all, 011
•

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Then there arc the personal
quirks like remote conll'OI, shortwave radio bands, headphone jacks.
A microphone jack ·in the 'cassette
recorder comes in handy for recording that campfire sing-along.
After you've decided ·what you
want your boombox to do, it's time
to shop around. Big discount appli: .
ancc stores offer a wider selection
and frequently sell demos and discontinued models ·at even deeper
discounts. ~iricc audio cqmpanics

••

a life o·r death situation

By PETER SMOLOWITZ
tbe white man to know the red man attack on Custer's 7th Cavalry in the
· Associated Press Writer
has. great heroes, too," the chief · Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876. ·
· CRAZYHORSE,S .D. (AP)~A · wrote. ·
Crazy Horse's face is nearing
family of dreamers .has spent' most
After pondering tbe project for completion, as workers shave his
:qf 50 yeats' carving a Black Hills seven years, Ziolkows)&lt;i accepted chin with a powerful finishing torch.
mountain into what' will be the aDd moved his family from Cil~t·
The 'sculpture's scope is
world's largest sculpture : Sioux · necticut to the Black Hills.
· immense.
.
warrior Crazy Horse, astride a stalThe family, which later bought , Crazy Horse's outstretched lltlll
Hon, pointing to hls sacred land. · ·
tbe mountain and 328 surrounding will be almost as long as a football
But it could take another 50 years acres from the federal government, fil:ld, and a five-room house could
to finish tbe.monument, which is so lives at the foot of the hills and runs fit inside one nostril of the warrior's
big that all four presidents from tbe Indian Museum of North Ameri- horse. At 563 feet high~y 641 feet
nearby Mount Rushmore National ca and a cultural center, which long, it will be taller than the WashMemorial could fit inside Crazy attract more than I million tourists a . ington Monument an~ almost twice
Horse's head.
year.
the size.of the Statue of Liberty.
' "When it's all said and done,
Wife Ruth Ziolkowski,. 70; and
"It's the biggest armpit in the
· there will be something left for cen- · seven oftbe couphi's 10 children use wdrld,'' said · project spokesman
turies," said Casimir Ziolkowski, .dynamite,- drills and detennination Robb DeWall as he strolled throush
the son of the original sculptor, Kor- to carry on tbe dream, creating a a tunnel in the mountain.
czak Ziolkowslti, who died in 1982. sculpture that has become a lesson
The sculpture is intended to pay
Sioux Chief Henry Standing Bear . in hard work and family love. At homage to all tribes, arid when it's
suggested the project in 1939 to times, they employ as many as 100 done, a university and medical trainZiqlkowski · (pronounced jool- people.
ing center for American IndiaM are
CUFF-ski), a self-taught sculptor
So far, 8 112 million tons of rock to be built at tbe base of the moun',Vho worked on Mount Rushmore. have l)een removed to make way for lain.
~My fellow chiefs and I would like a tribute to the warrior who ,led the
"My dad said .it best, 'It's being
~"'""'~::--~=-= done to right some of the wrongs
"'
that were done to a race of ~le, "'
· said the younger Ziolkowski, who
has worked on the mountain for ~S
of his 42 years. ·
May 3 will be the 50th anniver- .
sllry of his father's arrival in tbe
Black Hills, sacred Sioux burial
· grounds. The first blast at lbe top of
lbe mountain was in June 1948.
"It's a dream that's coming
true," Ruth Ziolkowski said, ''and
it'sjust plain fun to watch."
No one even guesses when the .
family will complete. the Jl!'(lject,
funded by donations and tourist fees.
·' Despite the roughly ~20 million that
haJ been raised in tl)e put SO yeats,
money is tight. Another problem are
the harsh South Dakota winters,
which make work especially difficult.
The · elder Ziolkowski twice
declined $10 million in federal
funds, fearing he'd jeopardize the
university and medical center if he
relinquished his nonprofit status.
"The govefllment would have
taken control of the project,'' his
widow said. :
.
· Through the hardships, the fami'
ly has persevered. While all tile
Ziolkowski children traveled to
other parts' of the world, most
retilmed to work at Crazy Horse. .
Ruth Ziolkowski said her hus,
; BEFORE AND AFTER • The Black HHII MoUntllln thllt Is being band would have been proud.
a'.rved into .e lilieiJesl of the 19th century Slox Leact.r Crazy Horae
''He didn't want to be just anothIs shown, top; •• It was In 1948 before the work begin. The carving er white man who promised the
in progress as of 1816, bottom, slllnde behind e ICIIIe model that Indian something and didn't finish,"
ahows whet the mountain will look like once tha project ,Ia complet· she said.
·
·
.tid near Custer, S.D.
•
·

.., M

and so have the features available

an ACcord.
,But if you're camping, pack a lot
of " D" cells if you'll be loading that
I0-disc player. And always usc alka·
line batteries; the others tend to leak
if you leave them in the player too
. long .
For tapes, the biggest question is·
one cassette player or two? If you
want to copy tape-to-tape, double·
well boomboxes are common, many
with high-speed dubbing. .
On a two-cassette rr.-tchinc,
you'll want sy,nchronous play and
automatic reverse, allowing for bcith
· sides of both tapes to play in
sequcn~e. If you'·re programming
tapes for a party, tho!!' Jeatures can
gi vc you three houn of inusic out of
two 90-minute cassettes.
Full automatic stop is anolher
nice feature that turns your machine
off even in fast-forward modes, saving batteries•.
But if you're buying your box·
mostly 'tci play COs, you can go with

t

·

Scientifically speaking,
chocolate is .perfect

...,,.

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Crazy.Hors,~ sculpture lesson in hard work, ·pride, .famiiy love

theobromine
(THEO-bro-meen) real thing .is so much more satisfying chocolata - a bitter cocktail much :
impart a slight stimulant effect. But than a bushel basket of the other like mode~ coffee- cured "weak. .
don't change your morning routine crud.'•
phlegmatic and windy stomachs .... .
just yet. It would take more than a
Whatever negative effects choco- strengthened the brain and womb ... ,
doten Hershey Bars to equal the caf· late mi~ht have on one's waistline instantly allayed · hypochoQdriacal
feine dose in a clip of coffee.
are more than offset ~y the sense of vapors" and, fought coughs and :
· Ditto for the stimulants in choco· well-being, Herzog says. "It makes venereal disease, Stubbe said.
late that work on cannabinoid recep· yo~ feel good."
·
Of course; like any medicine, you
tors, the areas of the. brain addressed
For his 1662. work· on chocolate,
by marijuana. Those would be. the "The Indian Nectar:" Stubbe had to have the right stuff, he
N-acylethanolamines (AY-siii-ETH- researched the accouius of warned. Hypochondriacs who took
an-all-a-meens). But a study by Spaniards who drank liquid cocoa Spanish ~hoc"olaia "have instantly
three researchers at the Neuro· with the Aztec emperor Montezuma, been molested with the .(hemorsciences Institute in San Diego last catalogued its alleged mediCinal . rhoids)."
year failed to identify whether they qualities and performed his own
Hoskins notes that lots o£ foods
are strong enough· in chocolate to experiments, after which he couldn't
have some or all of the supposedly
actually be felt by a person.
·help but gush a little.
magical properties of chocolate. "If
·"You'd have to eat so much,''
In various formulations, the you look at anything deep enough,
says Paula Herzog, a nutritionist for
. tbe housing department at the Uni- · chocolate beverage then known ·as you're going to find so!"ething."
versity of Michigan. "You'd be feelin'g so nauseated and sick that you. d
· miss all the good effect."
In short, not a good way to get
stoned.
The fatal component for a dog is ·
'
the theobromines, which stimulate
By KARL LEIF BATES
the heart, kidneys and other organs.
The
Detroit News
Too much can make a person vomit, ,
"It's
wonderful stuff; everybody will tell you that, but chocolate is
particularly a 45-pound kid. The
very complicaied," says James Steffe, a professor of food process engiconcentnitions in ·chocolate aren't
neering at Michigan State University. "It has a memory."
enough to strongly affect al) adult
What he means is that. if you heat it too far, chocolate changes its •
but smaller creatures, like dogs and
character
and there's no going back. "If I do that with com oil: it's no
children, might be in trouble.
big deal."
·
. .
, ~&gt;· .;,
Then there's the fat, ah, the fat.
recently'.
ovcliaw
•f
tw'b-ytnr·
jii'ojcct'
by"
Ph.IJ
.andi!latc&gt;
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Steffe
The 'cocoa bean' c61itains both the
Christopher
Daubert
in
which
they
.showed
conclusively
that
chocolate
•
flavor of.chocolate and the fat.
.
is
an
''clcctr6rheologica!
fluid."
That
is,
its
now
can
be
stopped
and
Seventeenth century British sci·
started by an 'electric charge~
. ·
·
. ..
cntist Henry Stubbe described seeTo be clectrorheological (elcctro·REE-o-logical), a fluid needs to
ing fine veins of a white substance in
have
particles that can be polarized by electrical current which arc sus·
the bean under a microscope. and
pcndcd
in oil. Chocolate- cocoa powder suspended in cocoa huttcrafter some heat processing came up
is
perfect.
with ·"fat globules. They were very'
The auto industry is very interested in J;R fluids a&lt; a way of making
solid, and melted .on the tongue
·smart shock absorbers or valves with no moving parL&lt;, hut chocolate •
totally as fat or butter would, or clarprobably wouldn't be on their list of candidate fluids.
· ified deer's suet, to which they were
It took Daubert abcilll a year to set up the experiment·. which dcliv·
equal in hardness."
cred
a 300-volt currcrit to a beaker of carefully melted milk chocolate
We know this· today as white
and.
then
mca.&lt;ured the fluid's resistance to l,liotion.
chocolate.
.
When they published their results, in the Journal of Texture Studies.
A chocolate bar, a saturate!~ fat
th&lt;;
chocolate industry" sat up and took notice .
;
with more · than 25 percent cocoa
companies
called
and
"n.&lt;~cd
some'
pretty
pointed
qucs·
Chocolate
butter. has no measurable effect or!'
tinns." Stcftc says. Media called from around the world and c-mails
Serum cholesterol.
frpm curious high school kids working on science fair projc'Cts 'poured
"Chocolate never hurt anybody,"
in.
Stcftc says. "It's fun :;cicncc and, I mea~ . it's chocolate. '.'
says Herzog. who admits to always ·
The
trouble with experimenting on chocolalc is that it just abciut ruins
haVing some in her houSe . .. Never,
a
good
thing.
"Everybody in our lab got sick of chocolate," Stene says.
ever deny the urge," Herzog·advis"None vf us could cat it anymore." But everybody else in the buildi.ng
es. "You set yourself up for terrible
learned
they could stop by for a snack anytime.
.
·
cmviitgs. ··
The
experiments
used
several
cases
of
milk
chocolate
barilprovided
But if you arc .weight-conscious.
by an American candy maker that Daubert declines to identify for fear
go· for only the best, richest ctiocoof
future funding troubles. ·
· . latc, Herzog adds. "Just get yourself
one good Dove (candy) biu and call
it a day." she says. "A little bit of the

The boombox business has boomed

A·cat bite can become
organ5 were funciioning. At flrst, tbe ·
doctors thought I had an E. coli
infection, but when. my husband
Landers
mentioned lhe cat bite, a specialist
diagnosed PasteurellL
I had major s1111ery and was on
kidney dialysis and a respirator.
Eventually, I needed to have my legs
tiY ANN LANDERS ·
amputated below tbe knees .. I was
! Dear Ann Landers: Please warn fortunate to receive excellent care
'yo\lr readers about cat bites.
and can now walk quite well with
Last y&lt;:ar, my cat bit me 'on t)le my new legs. My husband has been
am:r as I was brushing her. I devel- · wonderful throughout the whole
oped. flu sympt?ms, )Yhich I didn't . ordeal. ·
·
.
connect to~ b1te. Two days later, I · · Please.tell your readers iflbey are
had a temperature of I04. My hus- bitten by a cat and develop flu·like
band rushed me to the hospital.
symptoms to see ·a doctor immedi. The ·.doctors f011nd a perirectal ately. --Mercer Island, Wash.
,abscess, and norie of my major
Dear Mercer' Island: I contacted
Dr. Sheldon Rubin, a Chicago-area

Chocolate: food -or drug. Or maybe both.
The Detroit News ·

Pomeroy •llddlepott • o.ltlpolle, Ott • Point P11111nt, WV

'(.

160 Second St., (Jallipolis, Ohio." · ager.
·
Charles D. Kerr advertised dan·
The Bulletin, a Democratic week
de lion and blackroot pills that were ly, was established in 1857 by Col.
strictly. vegetable, for biliousness, · John L. Vane:. In 1897. Vance st1ll
liv~r, kidney and · bladder com- owned and ed1ted the paper.
plamts.
The Park Central Hotel. adver·
The Gallipolis Joumal said it tised "new and elegant SCfviCC With
was "always ahe:ad," and was the; steam heat, bath and all modem
"Lead in Character and amount of improvements-Bryan &amp; Bryan
Ne'l's." It was l~ated 11t .144 112 Props." .
.
Sccand St., Frontmg the Park. The
J.V. Gtll advertised butter, ·eggs,
· Daily Journal was a seven column; poultry and dried fruits at his wholefour-page paper that was Republican sale store. .
in politics.lfhe Weekly Journal was
The Hotel ~a had rates of $1
an eight-page, six .coh1mn paper . per' day. Its propne.tor was Mrs. M.J.
with I.F. Chlipman as ed1tor.
Thomasson, and It was located at
the Gallipolis Tri/June said it had Second Street, near the south-west.
"The. biggest pai~ up Circulation in corner o~ the park.
Southern Oh1o. Its .rates were:
Cbemngton &amp; Co., spld books,
. Daily. Sundays exceptell, per year, stationery and wall .paper, school·
$4. and Wcckl.y, $1. I~ advertising supplies and was at 2nd St., between
rates were:. da•ly. per 1nch, $6,. and Coun and State.
.
weekly, per me~ $4. It mamtatned 11
Dr. Chas. Warrcncr smd he was
was "a daily and weekly fan~ily ."The only. Eng!ish. Veterinary Surpaper, .bnght and newsy; pamouc geo~ and Dent1st m !he .Oh1o Valand wuh clear; well-defined v1ews ley. H1s office ·and stable were on
on all current subjects . .Republican Grape, between Third and Fourth
in politics from outside to center." streets.
,
W.G.'Sibley was the editor and man·
Halliday's Dry G~s. N()tlons,

local Internet accees
· lftfltt. -a talllile.
http:Jiwww.eurekanet.com

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and Shoes ~as at 152 Second St.;
Max Tawney a longtime Gal· }~'
opposite the park. These are JUSt a llpolis businessman occaaslon· i
few of the ads. I saw and found mter- . ally wrltes.columns for the Sun·
estmg. Next lime: I Will try I~ wrote dayoT':!!n~~~: ~~:~:~c:;
another aspect of what was '" Gal- ~s travels.
P
1 ;;
m I 897.

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J.llr BATES
1fle tlsoll tlua

OMAHA, Neb. {AP)~ Bryant Gumbel, comedian Bill Murray and biJ..
lionlire Warren Buffea will hit the links
alongside spons greats at a benefit golf
wurnament. .

·=

Gibson, the fom~er St: Louis Cardinils
Bryant Gumbel
pitcher wbo lives in lhe Omaha IIJla, suffers from asthma and is a strong supponer of the lung associaiion. .

sa~s .

UUca ObMrYIII'-DIIpatch
recordings:
"Remember Two
. "Dave is very high energy -like
Dave Matthews was bartending Things;· on Barna Rags, Matthews' yoil would not believe. He's . very
at a modest nightclub in Char· independent label, 1993; "Under the funny, but super kind," he says.
Iottes viiie, Va., in 1990 when he Table and Dreaming," 1994, RC~
11!e acoustic show is a perfec;t
befriended fellow musician Tim Records, and "Crash," I996, RCA setting for the pair since the
Reynolds.
Records.
unplugged music requires more.
Known as the namesake of the
"They had serious manage- expression than electronic music,
popular Charlottesyille-area band ment," Reynolds says of Matthews' Reynolds notes. •
TR3, Reynolds was a regular solo . band's success.
'It's a little more honest," he
performer at the club, set apan by
"I had· lhese other thing$ going says. "Electric insttumenu are cool,
his versatile talents and off-beat, on with my band. I was half toying hut lhey're .a little easier to play. A
folk-jazz style.
with the idea of goins big, but this lot of musicians like playing
"At first I didn't really notice has worked out better for me."
acoustic. It's something ahuut how
Reynolds and Mi111hews took the · you feel the notes again,st your body
him," ~eynolds recalled during a
recent telephone interview from acoustic show on the road last year inside the wood."
Bloomington, Ind. "He {Matthews) "as an experiment," Reynolds says.
was just this guy who had rcally "Obviously it went over well."
longhair- really hippie hair."
The current tt&gt;ur, launched Jan.
Matthews approac~ the per- .13, is more of a "for fun" tour for
• former, however, and the two made . Matthews, according to his publi- ·
a musical connection. "We started cist, Ambrosia Healy. · ·
.·
Reynolds "describtis the perfor. messing around in his basement,
beating on the drums.'!.,Reynold• mances, . which include mostly .
' •:'
says.
, Matthews' songs, as intimate 'but
Now sporting a clo~e-to·the-head . high-eneiJy shows.
Family Night Is '. ·
cut, the 30-year-old lead singer,
"It's like a love bubble, man,"
Baclc•• ,Qnly Bett~rl
songwriter and guitarist of the Dave Reynolds says, explaining the analo· .
Matthews Band would hardly be lost gy as .a derivation of his experiences
11111
in a crowd. Matthews' work has as a new father. "We're like musical
·4 ..
. become so . weJI respected he has lovers and the audience ·is the baby..
been nominated for three Grammy ... Dave's smiling the wllole show.
awards: Best Roc)&lt; Perfomancc by a It's so relaxed, in a way, and so
Duo or Group with Vocal for "So down to earth."
·
Much to Say"; Best Rock Song for · · Reynolds enjoys pla)'ing with
"Too Much"; and Best Rock Album Matthews professiOI)ally, but also as
for "Crash." The Grammys will air .a·friend.
·&lt;~ •
on Feb. 26-at 8 p.m. on CBS.
"I'm obviously aware that he's
Although Reynolds, -39, is not • really famous, but !te's.really a not·
• fonnally part of Matthews' hand, he mal guy into being really silly." he

Dave Matthews Band

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&amp;

"

Although .this is Drescher's first
starring role in a big movie, she has
extensive e&lt;pericncc in films and
television.
She made her screen debut in
"Saturday Night Fever" and moved
on to ·"The Big Picture.'' "Rag.
time," '.'Dr. Detroit." lier appear·
anc~ in "This Is Spinal Tap" led to a
role in "Cadillac Man··· with Robin
Williams.
"I came to consider myself a
good luck charm. I made .movies
with Travolta, Rosie O'Donnell,
Rosanna Arquette. Michelle Pfeiffer.
All have moved on to super stardom,
while I continued to plod along. At
least they still speak to me kindly."
Drescher's biggest break. she
concedes, was "The Nanny."

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: : · Drescher made ht~r screen debut In ''Saturday
!'t Night Fever" and moved on _to "The Big Picture,"
:·~ "R1gtlme," "Dr. Dtltrolt." Her appearance in "This Is .
' Spilflll Tap" led to a role In "Cadillac Man" with
[, Robin Williams.

Winkler, who had created one of the
strongest characters on television,
tried to move into movies as somctXxty very different from The Fonz,
it was a disaster."
·
· Even so, Drescher says her TV
and movie characters are somewhat
different. ~."The Nanny is m~inly
concerned with getting married. Joy
Miller·is concerned with finding the
best place in life she can find. That is
a big difference."
Drescher's I,000 hours of beauty
school undou!;nedly assisted her in
tHe movie, but she h'ad a lot of help
from · others. The movie credits
report no fewer than 14 personal
costume designers and make-up
artists to make sure she looks good.
She does:
.
"I know that some people ques·
tion whether an audience will hold
up under an hour and 40 minutes of
my accent, but I didn't really ('.hange

tBY NICOLE BONDI .
.! The Dettolt Newa ·

r.

Come along and spend three nights at the beautiful W~tin Hotel
located right on the ocean. While,,in Hilton Head we .will. attend a
performance at the Hilton Head Playhouse and take a Harbor .Dinner
Cruise. Also a .v'isit to the low country and a lesson on the·early Gullah
· culture is included. Of cou.-se, shopping, eating, and sightseeing will be
·a part of our visit. ·
. . ··
.
Enroute to Hilton Head we will b~ spending one nfght ·at the
Amerisuites in Columbia, S.C. where everyone will have a suite!! ·On
the way ·home we will overnight in the Charlotte area, All breakfasts
and two dinners in Hilton Head
are .included.
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Tour Cost· - *6~5 Per Person Double Occupancy
17SO Per Person Single Occupancy
I

viii•••···
446 6939or

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Noa Members·¥d $50

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· continue using the doll's name for its aimuat'Bar- spokeswoman Lisa McKendall. But Barbie's pop·
ularity is soaring now and "hundreds and huridreds more (clubs) w~nt to form."
So Mallei .wants to issue rules detailing how
lhe Barbie trademark c.an and cannot be used.
"This is a doll, and the (Barbie Grants a Wish)
cause is worthwhile," said Mike Bernacchi, profes~or of marketing at the University of Detroit
Mercy. ''This seems. inore a maner of control of
the brand and the brand name - not letting Barbie prostitute herself (even) for an honorable
cause ...
,..' ' .
The whole.thing has upset Balanecki.

--·----

. HOIPITAi.IIEDS

., PAnENT LjFT8 . ~L CHAIRI

SALES • REN'fALS • REPAIRS
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SET UP
e HOSPITAl liDS

MIDICAIE

• WHEEl OIUIS

MEDICAID
PIIYAIE IIISIJIAIKI

•liFT OlliiS.
•IAJHROOII AIDS
•IIEIUUZEIS

. OWIID &amp;OPW1ID

LOCAllY IY
IIIIIIOWIIAII FAIIILY

• STAll GLIDES
1.\1111'1111-

"It's taken all the fun out of Barbies for me,"
she said. '"It's really sad when something I do for
fun becomes a hea4aclili'and a legal issue.':

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: GALuPOLIS • In recognition of
:Black History month, a program is·
:planned for Fe~. 21 and 22 to be
':~Josted . by Paint Creek Baptist
PtUn:h, 833 Thind.Ave., Gallipoli~ . .
: · The program will highlight por·
tions of the many contributions peot'l!e of African descent have made to
the great~ss of f\,merica.
. Friday's program will stan at 7
. p.m. and feature hymns and, spirituals unique to the Black church. Several area choirs will lend their tal. e~ts 10 this ~ion of the program
II¥ Wtll be JOined by loCO! soloists.
. Bliti:k memcirabilia and local ans
and crafts will be .displayed. Light
. refreshments will . he served in the .
dininJ hall.
·
·
Saturday morning's program:wilt'
SW1 at I 0 a.in. This ponion of .lhe ·
· proJilUil will highlight local history'
and interesting facts. The theme will
.around the work herita.ge of
Blac~ Americans. Their suuggle for
meaningful employment and fair
'wqes will be seen through the .life
11oric:s of y-roay's heroes. High·
liahting the momins program will
be thousftts delivered by George
Gilmore. m. Gilmore ia I native of
Gallipolis and a retired Lieutenant
cc:11oiteJ of: ' IM·United Sta!C5 Aimed.

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Force. He reside~ in Arlington, Va · lhroitgh her church work. Site also .
A noon meal will be served, ancl · ha~ ·served faithfully in many profcs- ·
the afternoon session will begin at t. .sional organizations in the area.
p.m. with award presentatiops to he · · Th~ hist award winner is Pcarlic
made to several area residents. The Scott, a former resident of Gallipo·
awards are present~ 'I&lt;' reoplc that lis, Mw residing .in Middleport.
demonstrate, . 'lhrough their life, a, Scou will be honored for her work
will to work toward a greater Amer· as o member of the old Lincoln
ica, {or all Americans.
School P.T.A. As president of that
Blaine Gilmore ·will be the recip- · body, she distinguished herself by
ient of .the first annual George and ·'Seeking equal educali9rlal opportu·
Esther Gilm9fe · Yooth Award. This nities for all Btack students.
·
award is l!iven to a. young person
The keynote speaker for the after·
who demoustrates. both community noop will be Mrs. Ivin Lee. Mrs. Lee
involvement and high character.
is the Chief Qf Police for Dunbar;
'Jack Carr will be honored for pre- W.Va. She has been featured in "Jet"
Jerving history ~Jh photova· magazine and is .the motlier of Carl
phy.
Joyce Davts w~ selected .... Lee, a former standout a\hlcte at
for her commitment to young people Marshall University.

SPAS - S P A S - SPAS!

Come •• oar larlt .·
display or call tOclayl·

OXYGEN

COMPLETE ROME MEDICAL EQmPMENT 4 SUPPUES

1 I 1,
~II

-:- ~; , :

/O il 11:11
I

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I I; : f I;; I 1

11 1'\1 ... I

March~

cen..-

Due March
1, 1997
. . .

-

Sate11/
ll'tes that now monJtor
' space weather

, Black History prQgram.scheduled
·[for Paint Creek Baptist Church

'l

'lor All row
Vfaolfeedsf
' Wtddl..s,
Special
Let us "' tWs •

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•

M'IRC:H OF ..DIMES BENEI'lT : The Gallipolis Chspter of Herley Owners Group recently sponsored a
:~~:~=btl~n~e~fl~tthil! March of Dlmel. Winner. of the car the group gave away was Keith Miller oi'Cen·
left, are Mike POhlman director, Keith Miller, Zachary Miller, Tony Beek and Lisa Fowler

Hilton Head, April12-17, 1997

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we wouldn't probe before 1957."
Many satellites now aiding the
.forecasting effect are actually
research missions aimed at some
·
detectors and cameras.
boggling mysteries. Why is .the
The Debolt Hen
Asency: European Space Asency
corona, the bot gas that surrounds
. Where~ the eyes in the slcy? Some of the satel-·
WIND
.
I
the .sun, nearly 1 million degrees
htes that WJU be or are monttormg space weather:
Launch: Nov. 1,1994 .
_. .
I
Celsius, when,the surface sun is only
ACE: AdYUCed Composition Ellplorer
Orbtt:
Expected
to
move
to
[...I
posttion
tn
Febru·l
about 5,600 degrees? And how do
Launc~: Au~stl99~
..
. .
the storms accelerate froni hundreds
Orbtt: Stauonary at lhe L·l posttion, I mtlbon ary 1997. Has been circling froiD day side to night side:
I
of kilometers per hour to hundfeds ·miles from Earth, where it will stay in a constant posi· of Earlh, and,around the moon.
Mission: Measuring solar wind magnetic fields,!
· of thousands per hour?
·
tioo ~~een the sun. and the Earth.
.
. The sun's powerful and ever=
Mts~ton: . Measunng ?'~gnetic fields, plasm_a and plasma, energetic particles, waves and gamma radia-l
changing magnetic fields are
~ne111euc parucles, provuling a one-hour ·warmng of don. Geomagnetic stonn warning: .
Agency: NASA
believed behind the mysteries.
nnpending geomagnetic storms.
.
"From these ex~riments, . we
Ageney: NASA
GOES 8 and GOES 9
. ~
Launch: April I 994; May I995
gain new knowledge to improve our
. CLUSTER-:!
Orbit: Geostationary at equator;.GOES 8 over Gu!
. operations in the future," Singer
Launch: Tentatively late 1997 and 199~ (CLUSTERof
Mexico,
GOES 9 over Pacific Oc~.
said. "We learn what clues we can
I was desb'Oyed·wtlh an aborted launch m June 1996).
1
Mission: Solar magnetic fields, energetic particleil
take .advantage of."
. Oibit: Four identical satellites Dying in fonnatipn •
solar X-rays and images for Eanh weather foreca5ting;l
For example, scientists have
around Earlh 's magnetic field .
·
. noticed, that just before a stonn, the
Mission: Provide a three-dimensional picture of the Updates every five minutes.
Agency:
NOANDepartment
of
Commerce ·
sun's corona dims slightly and there
magnetosphere's sha~ and rel!Ctions to solar wind.
. I
EQUATOR-S
is a burst of radio energy. If scienAgency: European :.pace Agency
Launch: Late 1997.
tists can show a clear relationship
· SOHO: Solar and ·HeUospherie Observatory
Orbit: Highly eccentric around equator .
.1
belween lhe energy o( an outburst
Launch: February. 1996 . ·
·
.
Mission: Measuring solar electrical and m~gneti&lt;1
and the size of the dimming of a
Ot:bit: Stationllry atthe L·l position.
i
radio signal, it could .J&gt;e ~sed to proMtsston: Provtde a complete ptcture of the comw- fields, plasma, and eneiJetic particles. . ·
Agency: Max Planck Institute, Gennany.
,vide a couple of days' warninJ!.
sition of lhe sun's escapin~ radiation with panicle
1
North America bears the greatest
risk from geomagnetic storms, Kap- in the year 200o, whe~
· ns·pot
large stretch of rock from Huds~n times of equinox - March a~
penman said.
The magnetic nonh pole is the activity is expected to incre
as Bay to Michigan's Upper Peninsula: April, September and October. saii:l
Ontario and Quebec Bruce Whitney, director of electr~­
11
lightning rod the incoming energy .
~e )["y~~~~~~~:~ solar . Minnesota,
have
all
those
thinJ!s.
·
magnetic field engineering for·
flows down, he said. The same magSolar
flares
are
more
common
at
Detroit
Edison.
netic field lines that create the color- maximums, there are a lot of sate!lites
that
haven'
t
weathered
one
of
ful aurora borealis- nonhem lights
~ are the forces that attract geo- . these big electromagnetic stonns,"
· magnetic storms.
. ·
Singer said.. .
The tilt of the magnetic north
And the stonns can wreak havoc
pole toward Can~. roc.k geology on satellites. For example, the 1989
and long transmtsston ltnes make . geomagnetic storm that hit Quebec
Nonh America more vulnerable, also caused Canadian Broadcasting
·
to lose conb'OI of one of itS satellites
Kappenman said. "'The fanher.north for six months.
you are, the closer you are to the
auroral electiical fields."
Utilims are more susceptible to
Geomagnetic storms can occur the stonns if they have long transany time. The sun now·is in a rela- mission lines and are standing on
lively quiet phase. But that changes n~.!condhuctivthee, Lasoil-lik.e ig~eous
.
· r...., .. sue as
urenuan shteld, a

·
bie Grants a Wish fund-raiser, which last year
PJITROf!' __, Httrd4tearted Barbie may be a . raised.$22.090 for lhe Rainbow Connection. This
. .
year's event, a mini-convention, is in 'Livonia,
.doll after all. .
FOr•,pow, the Mattei loy company is backing Mich., April 4-6.
toff its order for the Great Lakes Chapter Bubic
"Using the name Barbie obviously brings a lot
JDol! Collectors' Club to "cease and desist using . of people," said Suzanne Jones, exec,ulive direc·
~thf ilamit BM'bie" for a charity · fund-raiser ~. tor of the ·Rainbow Connection, which grants
aboutl70 wishes each year to desperately ill chi I·
1gnijt the wishes of sick and dying children.
:' .~ SliD; ,Bilrtiie·s fans · are shaken and worri::d dren. "There's .nothing self-serving about why
f,abeilllhe future. . . ·
·
· · . they do this and whatthey do with lhe money."
P ~· ;.o!We.lfljjrtikc they're bitins the hand that feeds
Mattei supported the event, and donated dolls ·
it~~a. ~0~1 Bitt~~~~. of Orion Town- for it, for eight years. And while it's giving the
· f ~· .R'iesl~nl of, the 7'-member club. "All ofus . fund-raiser: the green light to proceed this year,
rccimb.tbcd spe~&lt;! t.ho!'"""ds ~~ .!housands of dl))· there's no guarantee about the future of Barbie
t laril' on laib,•e.t&amp;.itls. '
·
·
Grants a Wish.
: . Soon after sending Balanecki a "cease and
When there were only a few Barbie fan clubs,
•deSist"
letter, Mattei decided
to allow the club .to "it. was OK" to use her name, said Mattei
I •
'

t

REUX WITH.. US AT••••

"Those kind of audiences arc
hard to argue with," she says.
"When I decided to do 'Beautician,'
I made a strategic choice: I would ·
not play a character that was soJf~t/
away from the ~anny everybody
knew that it. would he too much to
take at one titiu:. A lot of actors have
taken that route. When John Travol·
ta moved from 'Welcome Back Kot,
teaclles.
·
,
; ·' It will surprise no one that she ter' to 'Saturday Night Fever,' he
j and t~ president (Timothy Dalton) was ·still essenti'ally a New York guy
from Brooklyn. Tim Allen and
1(all in love.
.
.
•l ''In a way, I guess this is· type· · Michael J. Pox did the same thing.
iuting," says Drescher. wl)ose On the other hand, when Henry
l Nanny" character talles care of the
~hi!dren qf a rich and llandsome
J*halor.
.
.,
·. l "I had more than 1,000. holirs
. •udyi~g cO$meto)oBY, 14 a gifl, and I
' nk 11m prcuy good ,at it: ~n 001'
.ene ~~ tl)c. rno~ic, li brllg .about ·,
IISUrGICI,
int llble to. Jll!l on eyeliner under.
1yery strained .circumstances. It
bills~
lttdenlltes my skill. Over the years,
iven after· I started, acting, I have
cuttins an occuional
ltlurvived

lhe.d

3

it in the movie.
"That is the way I talk. Maybe
it's a little less comical because the
tone is different and I'm not goinl!
for the laugh in every line. I have
friends I've known for years who
say they don't even notice my
voice.··

,;eaaer to find a tutor 'to Westernize
!'their (J!eSident's children. Through a
!)!onumental misunderstanding of a
[J~Ru rcpon, they belie~~ Joy M.iller
I (Orc:scher), is a top Amen can
' teachi!r. She is 'hired. although as it
. i!'lms.!lllt,.shi: had only a ~rief hero·
;rc: role in a fire 'that destroyed the .
c;osmetol.ogy ·school where .•he

~
l

.

"JMatt~l . backs down on "B~rbie \)rant a wish benefit .

trhe Nanny na,med Frar takes .a turn on the big screen
; ~ GENE WYATT . .
:;tile Naahville Tennessean
,.: She's glamorous, she's beautiful
:.~ maybe even a little bit exotic. But
::When she opens her mouth, she
~ sounds like a recent refugee from
,·Que~ns.
·
·
i ': "At least I got sotne things
:nght,"•says Fran Drescher. "I could
;. w~. .
,
.
1-&gt;l For years now she has exploited
:her charms and that infectious whin·
;ing voice as the star of TV's "The
t ~anny," to continuous high ratings.
'Now she has .cxpanded her horizon
l~nd stars in a movie, largely of her
:own devising, "The Beautician and
'.ihe Beast,' which open's Friday.
l'i The whimsical story involves an
I\magi nary East European country

which provides space weather fore.

·
.
aolicechomeuniiiUalsUIJesofeJec"The .effects can be disastrous.
~ mei;y On their wires in 1847, Shonly before 3 a.m. on March 13,
a : ~ v.ben the lua was showing 1989, for example, operators at the
IIICft llwl the IIIUal sunspot activity.
Hydro-Que~ po":'er company in
I They didn't ·know they were being MD;Dtrcal ":'atched m horror .as .the
:" lwnbllded by tons of matter slmt- entire provtnce blacked out tn JUSI
~ .ming into tltt Earth at I million .over a minute. 1
I Dlph.
They had been blind-sided by a
:0 · What the telegnph wires. sensed ~orm of ~"~!"81"etic storm known
to is now .Jcnown as a ceomagnetic · tn the ~te~tific world as a coronal
storm, a blast of hilh-eneiJY matter mass eJ.CCtion, or Cl,IE. It caused a
·I: llllide a aot..- flare.
power surge in.Quebec's power grid,
,. A lltn Is. literally a tonaue of frying transformers and tripping cir·
f!arne lbat bluts off the ·surface of cuit breakers. Some areas were with·
.. ~ sun. Some flares collllPSO back out electricity for. d~ys . Tile utility
tnto tl)e sun. B.ut theae geom~~~~ettc lost at least $10 mtlbon.
~tO!IIIS can ~ off and take off · Any long wire - telegraph line,'
. ;· tnlo sjN!i:e IOWard Earth;
. .
. high•tension electric line or even .a
· · Suth ·.11~· ~ laSh out across pi~line -IICIS like an anteMa, caplbe 93 mtlbon mtleJ between the sun . tunng the flow of eneiJY from these
and.the Earth wilh such force that solar flares. Tiny wires; like the
they can ~k. satellites silly, fuzz micro-circuits. in ~atellites and wire~·up c~umcattons and even cause less communtcauons, .are also· SUS·
" eleccncal power systems .to suxge, ceptible.
,
• then eras~. ·
.
.
A new armada of satellites is
~~ -~And wtth the adv~nt of new, more betng Iau~ched to me~ure the .chaos
- · ...vanced electrome technology, 1&gt;f the sun s e~eiJy. 11\e hope ts that
:;: co,ncems about. geomagnetic slonns lhey will provide at least a few min'fi ·
·
· of an. tmpen
·
d'tng geo·-y·· and.~...
u ... tr ranu tcauons are growtng.
utes • warmng
•
"This is one of the biggest night- magn~c stOflll.
.;. mares 'that .~e have in the ·power · . Several of these devices are b!'ing
1. industry,'' ·Slid John Kappeninan, s'tali!&gt;ned like sentries at a gravityt director of the tran.smission planni~g .neutral' spot between the s.un and the
,. dep8!1111ent for Mmnesota Power tn Earlh known as L-t. It tS about I
, Duluth.
million mileS from Earlh and could
~
Th
h · ·
· ·
·
rh '
h
·
·l .. oug sctentists are comtng to a gtve
pe IpS a OtiC· . our wammg.
· much better u~rstanding of the , "We're sOrt of at lhe dawn of a
forces of solar weather, technology new age here.'' Singer said. Most of
is bec:oming more. vulnerable to its. the understandins· of the magnetic
damaging effects, . said Howard fields suno11nding the Earth and the
Singer, chief of~ Space Environ- sun have come from space, "an area
.
.
.
. ·
.

mu.M.·9PAOILY
"••'

'
'•

me~t Cent:er in Boulder, Colo.,

Deiby-\O..lqby line in England adv~ wamtng.

The tournament, announced Thursday.
is l)lllled after base..I Hall of Farner Bob
Gibson and will benefit the American
Lung Association of Nebraska and Base·.
bail Assislanee Tham. which helps former
ballplayers wbo have fallen on hard times.
More than 3Q•star athletes, including
baseball's Willie Mays and Owe Smith,
basketball's Oscar Robenson and football's Gale Sayers bave a&amp;l:=fto take pan
June 14.
'
.

has played on all three of the group:s

·

• '11111 fint d~ dill the sun pro- CISIS.
••.
•
vitlllllhe Eanb wid! more than just a
Powa- utditlea, atellite openrors
- i - faolilc wilb tbe firsl and the military i~ingly are
.a Ill &amp;•lied Jeleanph wires.
~ntcrestec! in geltinJ better . storm
'IWel(nllb operators on the tnformatton -:- perhaps ' even

ave Matthews mixing it up with folk and jazz
By JUUA FERRANTE

.

,«

··Sun QO&lt;?d ·for more than just givi~g e~rthlings a·warm feeling .

People in the news,-------------'-

: BRAINERD, Minn. (AP) - The rocker known for brealcing guitars was a holy relic," he said, "which in a way it is." ·
• UIJed a college theater department to "break a leg" with iu production of
: The Who"s 1969 rock opera, "Tommy."
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A block of Hollywood Bdulevard will be
:
Patrick Spradlin, who directed lhe Cen- renamed Elizabeth Taylor Way for a day.
·
:
·
tral Lakes College show, received a handHollywood's honorary mayor, Johnny Grant, said the stretch from Vine
written note from Who guitarist Pete Street to AIJyle Avenue 'will get the name chanae on Sunday in hoilor of
·
Townshend. It read:
Miss Taylor's 651h birlhday AIDS fund-raiser at the Pantages Theatre . .
"Oear Patrick and your Tommy compaThe Oscar-winning actress, whose binhday is actually Feb. 27, faces
• ny,
·
surgery next week to "'move a benign brain tumor.
.
"I
wish
you
the
very
best
for
your
opCn1
1
ing on February 6th. I will be wilh you in . BUENOS A~. Argentina (AP) - Great cinematography, good
l
spirit and feel sure lhat you will have a smgmg, faulty history.
.
.
.
.
!
wonderful time with this show - I've
Thc1se we"" Argentine critics' first impressions Friday of "Evita" in
personally never had a bad night with it! Evita's homeland. The movie, starring MadoMa, was shown to an audience
Break a leg!!"
·
of 400 at a press preview.
.
I
Theater department secretary Rebecca
""The cinematography is ve..Y good, but the film did not move me at all.
Souhrada prompted Townshend's letter It lacks passion," radio and 1V critic Romulo Berutti said in an'interview:
wilh one of her own, in which she said "And it fails as far as the history of Peronism is concerned."
how excited the cast was about doing the
Juana Patino, a film critic for cable TV, praised director Alan Parker's
. Pete Townshend
show. Spradlin said he shouted with joy cinematography and called MadonPB's singing great. &amp; f91' the portrait of
,
when he read the reply.
.
the fanner AIJentine first lady, he complained: "Eva.rose from poveny to
f "I took it to Rebecca and she cried. The note was sh~wn to people like .it power, but the film dwells only on her sex life."
.

Pomeroy •Middle~ • Gellpoll1, ott • Point Pll ..lnt, wv

·· Cannon Ball Bedroom Suite ·

Prime
Star
Satellite

HOME
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•lllldlrpat • G1111poll8, Ott • Poilat Pin rnnt. wv

I

••

FarmA

Iuten is a 11idden nemesis ~or those with intolerance

s1ness

8r AF1Y BECKER

lil'e.
skin cnuti111 and irchy blisters. pt sick."
II
Once people lie clilpoled With Many people wilh this discue are
When she fiully cliapoced
1"bae was a lime when Ullian celiac sprue
a ~laled dileue also seuitive to aJillal.
wilh . celiac disease, she was
Slid! Me lou of pecan rolls and Ice called dermatitis betpetifonois, lhey
Stich couldn't believe lhe number ~lieved.
Clalll and stilllosl35 pounds.
1111111 follow a gluteo-tiee diet to of pr-oducts tlw made ber sick.
"Oh my gosh, I'm 1101 cruy,"
The bad news: Stich was plagued heallbeir inlcstille$.
Obviously, breads and putties made she ~mbers thinking.
1
by C"~"'l"\ ilomach ,.oblems.
Ill people with celiac sprue, .nti- from wheat flour. Less evidcnl were
Blanner still struQles with bidHer physician thought it might be bodies MUck certain molecules in sauces, spices, medicine and cos- den gl~ten. Sbe gets sick if sbe sets
an ulcer, but an endosccpy in 1991 parts of the small intestine wben metics that conlain .glulen - even flour on bet skin. Sbe once got sick
broughtl!u a far diff-nt diagnosis. gluten is COIISUDICd. SymptOms can some brands of t~thpaste.
from licking stamps. And she
Stich. of SL Cloud, Minn., had include diarrbe'l, vomiting. bloating
And in~ents can change with- believes sbe had an illness following
' celiac sprue disease, a permanent gas, anemia, j'lint" pain, easy bruis- out much notice. One balCh of a par- a •urgery because ber IV solutioll
ticular product ~Y be made from may have had gluten. ·
coadition market by intolerance to ing and fatigue.
gluten. a prolein found in wheat, rye,
The symptoms of demiatitis her- flour. The next balCh may conlain
1'0( people with food allel'llies
._as and barley. The diaonosiS
ntCan( ,_.....,,
-ti•omus·• I ChroniC SL'n
°•-h.
.
-..··
"' di~•~
cOfn
. s...,~
and
_ .int.oleranccs, gcrti.ng the d;•"""rell'lallmng
her kitchen -""!"'~_
·-'
her
~laled
....,,.;
a·ncl··'""
h
to ,...,..
-·-'lhe label every SIS IS JUS! the first step. Following
-..··__...______
..._
__
_ _to
_celiac
_..,;-..;"r;.,·-_·,;,
;,;
·may
..,;__
.....,
____
.._ou_.,.avc
r
time," she Said.
dietary restrictions can be difficult.
Stich relics on Gluten can masquerade on ingft;Or::-'
J
small books compiled ent list as flour, Slan:h, modified
by the national Celiac food slan:h, emulsifier$ and
Sprue
Association · hydrolyzed vcgcti.ble prolein.
·
By AMY BECKER
all"'''lies, sueh as millt and wheal Howev- USA chapter and
Grocery sl'iopping can take a long
St. Cloud
er, allergies to peanuts and shellfish tend another from a Michi- time.
·
Parties, picnics, family get-togethers. to remain, be said:
giln suppon group thai
"Some of the companies will
For people .with conditions ranging from
It is important to avoid giving peanuts . list a range of gluten- · give it to you in writing, which is
food allel'llies to diabetes, those normally or shellfish to children younger than 3, . free products.
· great," Stich said. OtherS have
fun events can be a recipe f()f disaster.
Yassin said. It can trigger the first allergy.
Even the smallest changed their policies: . Kraft, for .
Holidays in particular make· handling symptoms.
·
amount of gluten will example, no longer provides whole
food allergies difficult; said Dr. Mary
In handling holiday invitations, parents make Stich ill. Some lists .of gluien~fru products. Stich
Keating, a pediatric allergist at the St. whose children have allergies should people react to breath- said. She has to call and get infor· Cloud, Minn., Women and Children's bring the child's food, Yassin recommend·
ing it. A couple of mation one product at a time.
Medical Center. When people get togcth- ed.
·
bread crumbs can
For cooking, she buys rice flour,
er, Keating sees more patients.
. "1bey know what to shop for, they
malce Lois Blattner potato starch flour, tapioca flour and
"It's especially hard when you go to have safe food at home - they should sick.
garbanzo bean flour.
Blattner, of Avon,
"You just have to learn to make
someone's house," she said. The burden bring it )oVith them," he said.
of research tends to Cl\11 on the person
'This is"particularly imponant when one •Minn., is 56 and has do. It's amazing the things you come
with the allergy. " The key is, know what considers how difficult it .is to tell exactly been ill since child" up with," Stich said.
you're eating! '
.
what is in !he foods you buy.
hood.
Hospitalized
ltstill frustrates her thnt identify"The labels are very poor," he said. repeatedly, she wasn't ing gluten-containing products can
. If you~ inviled to a hl&gt;liday gathering, talk to the bost in advance or take the "The layperson has a difficult time under- diagnosed with celiac be so bani. "There's a lot of ptobhost aside. When in doubt, do without.
· standing what the label means."
disease until.l989.
lems that could be limited for u.~ if
While many people remcmbertowau:h For people with diabetes, there is some
"They don'i actu· we could put some teeth in the FDA
out for the peanuts, si1CIIfish or eggs- all hope on .the
New dietary recom- ally say it's in your (labeling) rules," she said. .
common causes of food allergies- they mendations call for keeping track of total head. They say you' re
Events outside the home · often
can be tripped up by the unexpected.
· carbohydrale. intake. not just the amount that type of person, revolve around food, presenting pit·
If you an: allergic to fish, for example, of sugar, said Karen Reisdorf, a dietician that's how stress ~acts falls for people with gluten intoler·
you may react to fast, food f~nch fries, and diabetes educator at St. Cloud Hospi- on you," she said. "I'd ance.
which are cooked in the same vat of oil as tal .
·
think, 'What's wrong
"If it w= me alone, 1 would not
fish patties. Peanut flour may be used in
·"The main players ~ your starches with me? Why don't I go" Stich said. Her husband,
conjunction wilh other kinds of flour. And and your fruits and your milk and your just shaPe up? It's my Earl!an, enjoys social events. so she
. people allel'lliC to latex are tol4 they must sweets," Reisdorf said.
fault I get sick.' "
accompanies him.
be cmful around kiwi and bananas.
The good news: You can have that
She
tried
to
"If they have a fruit plate or a
· Such cross-reactions can be common . cookie. if you ~uce other carbohydrates change · her diet. She vegetable plate,· I'll have it," she
adults who have allergies to cerlain (pass \IP the mashed potatoes, for exam- would start fasting on said. " If I take my own ,plate, it's
· pollens, said Dr. Mohamed Yassin, a spe- pie). The had news: You can't overindulge Fridays in hopes of sit· going to look like I don't trust some- ·
. cialist with Allergy and Asthma Associ- in sugar-free foods that an: loaded with ling !hrough a church body's else's cooking.''
; .ates in St. Cloud.
other carbohydrates.
sermon.
Sundays
But when the local gluten intolerDiabetics who ~havFn 't checked with before church. she ancc support ·group meets; it's like a
. Seven to 14 percent of children 10 and
.' younger h.ave food allel'llies, Yassin said. their specialists or dietitians may be rely- would have tea and feast. Members bring· gluaen-frcc
' The figures lend to be lower in adults. ing on outdated recommendations. Reis- "toast.
foods to sample and ohen exchange
~with 2 to 3 pen:ent of adults having some dorf suggested they touch base for a nutri"Toast never hurt recipes. People drive to St Cloud
':form of f.,oo allergy.
tion ufldlite lhat may help them manage anybody, right?" Blat- .from ac!toss central Minnesota for
tncr asked . ."Every · the meetings. There are even on-line
: Many children will outgrow some lheir diabetes more easily.
'
time
(I ate it), I would .connections.
. _ . . . ,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ; . . _ . . .
• . ,. , •• •
, •••

It Cloud 'nil

.~,

~

~uttons .. .___~------~~~from~ C1

1,:,,;

;·

·According to "The History of the
.. Some of Pat's vintage buuons Button" by Roy Earnshaw, buttons
(~lite floral designs, so popular have held an important place in ~isduring the early 1900s. Since mosl- _tory · smce the 13th century when
P"eOJte like flowers, the early button buttonholes were invented.
mak~rs responded to that .affection
In lhose early times, Earnshaw
whb a multitude of floral de~iglis on says. commoners could not wear
a' warjcty of materials including met- finely crafted buttons even if they
415.
·
. could afford them, because a royal
·;. Th~t
a period in time when decree ~strlcled the com~t~oncr to
ga:eat. significance was given to . plain cloth ·or thread-covered but·
flowers and their symbolic meaning tons. .
:-:. rpses for love, pansies for
Early French and English kings
tllouJhts; the lily for purity, forget- . ~ere button.f~atics and-King Franrii"e-nots for remembrance. .
c1s I had h1s jeweler make 13,400
•• 111 recent years button collecling gold bJittons that were fas.tcncd to ·a
~a.~ become a popular hobby. There black vcivCI suit for his meeting
is e~n a National Buuon Society .with England's Henry Vfi. King
,;lth
membership of over 4·,000 Henry himself wore ornate gold but·
c'ollci:tors, according to ti hobby tons patterned after Jtis rings,
rilanzinc at the fibrary. Lois Pool of according to Earnshaw.
.
2333 Juno Place in.Akron is listed as
t\oother popular story about but@ offictr.
·
tons and their importance pertains to
,~
President Andrew .Jackson who is

.wis

I

a

said to owe his life to a buuom cJackson had ag~ed to a duel with
Charles Dickinson and a friend suggested to Jackson .that he .wear a coat
~!domed with large, heavy silver buttons. One of the buttons deflected
the bullet fi~ at Jackscin's heart by
Dickinson. ·so the story goes.
While Pat's buttons might lack
the drama of the stories or kings and
a president, they contain great sentimen! for her
"All of my buuons have a family
history," comments Pat who readily
admits that she didn't come to a full ·
aP,preciation or them and what they
represented in her family until just a
few years ago.

"They were just something we
·always had and used, and I still can't
think of them as a 'collection'," she
concl11ded. ·

••

Pisney World .. ..___ _ _....,...-___·
f Qontlnuecl from paga C1

and grounds. The orchid center had drove to the Kennedy Space· Center.
· SliO!Y'; However, with the distance no blooms i)t.n . a · brightly-colored · There. we boarded. a bus and were
f,Jkfd. and the peoplo ti~d. it made pair of m~ws posed for a picture. fortunate to have the front seats on
tem"rs amongst all .the visitors Right after I snapped it. tliey kissed. the top of a sccni -cruiser. As we had .
short There were quite a few crying The lighting was perfect and had I last spring, we ·saw alligators and
n, too, and some kids were so been a little more timely in my pho- many shore birds. •
ted, ·. they slept throuJh the tography, the picture would have
The next morning reality set in
and we had to leave. After dropping
rilles.jhc parents had "wailed in line been priceless. ·
t&amp;.~tbem on. In all our fiays, the
W~ncsday. I begged off froin the kid!\ at the airport, we . left the
w11g t waits were for soh drinks re~urning to the Magic K!ngdom palm trees and sunshine and headed
alld , , which we~ very expen· Wllh the olhers. I swam, ~~cycled , north for Ohio and winter1
stie.&lt;~veral days were over 85 walked. s~nbathed and .finl$hed a
~sand fluids were important. · book .while the~ whtrle~ and
mo...r bock
·• ~ay was Epcot Center day churned 10 Fantasy Land. 1'J.'ursday ·'"""""' al llolgaagoCounty,
lnd , _ rooklo In o
.
.
_
r.ctng
Jlle
Olllo
Rlvw
Juot -.,
+.+;the crowds were less and 1 we went to the MGM Stud1os. By
' .,u~.~enjoyed \he beautif~l flo.we~ Friday, we we~ all dragging but
..

.

Gallipolis bank to take
part in Ag Lin~ program
DIETARY
- Ulllln Stich of St. Cloud, Mll'n~~;·~:=t
lprue ·d l - • , • Plfllllllellt" condition tnarket by I~
gluten, • pt'OIIaln found In whNt, rye, OlD and blirley.ln people
celllc •prue, •ntlbodln llttaek. certain molecuiH In para. of
ilmlllllntHtlne when gluten 18 cOn8Utnec!.
·
"The lnterhet.is really getting to methods to cope."
be something great for us becauSe
For Thanksgiving, Stich
we're in contact with celiacs all over turkey (there's one brand wilil*t
·the country," Stic~ said. Members of gluten), pie with a gluk:n·frec
the local group helped a wom~ crust and dressing with glll\Cri-~!C
with cel.iac find a doctor in a differ- bn:ad. .
·
ent state.
·
Stich and· Blattner both
Over time. managing gluten intoler- are much healthier now. Folli&gt;w:
ance gets easier.
.
the gluten -free diet - althcl~
Stichjust. pun:hased an electronic restrictive - is worthwhile.
Olllanizer. It will let her type in payoff is feeling better.
._
names of specific products she can
"I don't mind the diet at ~
cat, so she can refer to it while shop- There are so many good sub911"
pmg. She hopes to cut the time She tutes.~· Blattner said. "If you ,c.;ti
spends i"n the grocery store.
yourself, and know cverythinftJi;i
"I think it's going to work just goes into it, it's n.ot a pr-oblem." '::
fine,"
she ~aid.
"There's no......
end to
'l(fli-..6.
.... •
• · ... ·
..;!.~':".

~

''#'Vol'

.
e
: TIIC

Sunday nmcs-Sentincl
.....,.,. the weddi1111 of . 911lia,

tot-. ~tiel •

•

MWS

Illes :wcdtlinl .~ and
Without chirp. · ·
&lt;11 ilciwever, weddinl news 1111111
·t..~aent ilandlrda ,of ·timeli- · 1'he
~·· 10 pub-

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JijJI

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I.,.

nn.....,.,
iri'PiaiJ of wUfiiii.-IOotl •
l'kaktheiVIIII:

,

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·

t To ;~ publilbed in ibe Su~
••

~

•

poli«?y----'---

editioa, the wecldins must have
talcfa pl8l:e within 60 days prior to
the publicati011, and may be up,to
"600' ~ in leaath• Material (or
Alotla River 1111111 be received !ly
the edlrorial depi!l,un&amp;t by Thunday, 4 p.m. priqr to the dale of pub-

II-

1lcldoa.

·..... :.......

...-.

Photographs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be publisbed with wedding 11ories · if
dcsi~. PbO!olf6plq I!IIIY be either
blai:k and white or · good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
· Poor quality~ will not
· jlc ICCCflled ..Ocncrally. snapshots or
tbe
. ........_ instut-developin1
an: not.of

Pbotos

. · ·-:not~.
-~ . ~..,._~i1y,
d•?•!w wjll be -publittllecll~ tbe
All ·~ 1\lbnlitted for publicWiy Jllljlln • lf*elllows. ·
catloit is subject to edili!lg.
.

.. .

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'

~~~02~~leyBankat(6I 4 )446 - 2631 '

Ohio Farm Bureau .introduces new web page
By KIM HAR'I,.ESS .
JACKSON - If you're like me, if
you hear one more word of hype
about the in!emed and. all its promises, you'll scream. But you mu,st,
admit, the idea of all that infonnation
at your fi~~ertips is pretty exciting.
Now, with Ohio Fann .Bureau's newly established Web page, agriculture
hsa one mote resource for"info-seck-

years ago, or even three years ago -- Food, Agri cultural, and Environh~d you even heard of it? Now they .mentai Sciences' Ohioline Web page
are saying that our televisions and makes accessible all of the Extension
cqmputers will in the future become {act sheets available. The page also
contains information on current
one iri the same".
. If you count yourself as pan of the research and updates on .the latest
eight pen:ent of the farm families findings . ~ou can also e-inail any of .
who uses the Internet, you probably the university's faculty who may lie
know about some of the wonderful able to answer your gardening, farm·
World Wide Web pages out there. l ng or oiher questions. Ohioline's
. "'"'"
....... ;. . ; "'l' ' -.1
Web.pages are a son of subset of the addres ~ is http://www.ag.ohio·
ID5
nC b Swn;fS.
1\vo recent surveys by Ohio Farm Internet. The· interned is a vast, state.eduf' ohiolinel. .
American Farm Bureau's home ·
Bureau (OFBF) and American Farm worldwide. network of computers.
Bureau (AFBF) indicate that approx- Web pages are graphic "electronic · page (http://www.fb.coml) is also a
imately eight percent of farm families . brochures" where individuals, com-' great resource of information about
usc the Internet regularly. That may panics or organizations can tell about current, national legislative issues.
not seem like a lot, but consider themselves.
AFBFs Web page, and all agricuiOhio State University's College of tural Web pages for .that maUer, prowhere the interned was five or six

~-........-l$~· ~··.t

""You. Have The .qh.t To Choos~"

,c

If you or a loved one . ar~ ~e hospital and ne·~; ·

'HOME MEDICAL EQUIPM .,. TOR ~OME OXYC!:N·

when you return hom.e ••• 1!W
or a family member
"
..
.
should CHOOSE. YOUR~ PROVIDER!!.
'
Hospital ~mployees such · &amp;1!1 · nurses, discharge i
· pl8J'l)lers or even respiratori·therapists SHOULD show
you a list of Homecare. PrO\iders.
·
If .they · show you ~. . list for ·Home Oxygen
Companie~... MAKE YOUR OWN DECISION!! '
\
.
.
Choos~ Pre~cription ·Oxxgen••• The ONLY l~c.ally
owned company in the Tri Co1mty ·Area .Speci~ in: : ·
home oxygen servi_ee.
'

.

.

~INc. ·
'With The Big SenJice"

PRES£RIPTION OXYGEN
.
.

.

·"The Little C

By RYAN SMITH
GALLIPOLIS - Have you ever
sat down and thought hard about .
ypur financial goals? In m811Y cases, ·
TOP SALESMAN -. Cllrl Sanden!, left # Gene John•on
to put pen to
Chavrolet-olda, Gallipolis Wll honored by owner Gene John801'1,
and write
right, for being named the top ul•man of the year.
out, we find
that they're not as
clear a~ we might
1
maria.
believe they are.
I
This lack of
EIGHTY FOUR. Pa. _Chris Metclarity is no acciGALLIPOLIS - Cindy Greenlee, zger, a native of Rio Grande, has been
dent. In the book ·
a resident of Gal- appointed manager of the 84 Lumber ·
Ad vilipolis, hils joined Store in .Morehead, Ky,, and David so r," author Nick Murray says finanthe staff of Mane Patt~rson, a native of Gallipolis, has cial goals aien ' t only saving a speciDesigners full Ser- been appointed co· manager of the 84 tied amount of money.
vice hairstyling Lumber Store in Huntington, w. Va. .
According to Murray, most peosalon, located at ·
Metzger graduated from South· pie's financial goals represent their
760 First Ave., western High School in !991. He is most primal emotional needs, such
actording
to the son of Johq and Sheila Metzger, as ensuring· a long, comfortable
Cindy
Sexton, · Patriot.
retirement, ·being able to help their
GREENLEE owner.
Metzger started with the 84 chain children, educating their grandchilMiss Green lee, in 1995 at the Jtipley, w. Va,, store. dren, providing ·quality care to their
a 1994 graduate of River Vl\lley Re and his Wife Sherri reside in aging parents or leaving a legacy for
~
their loved ones. It's no wonder we
High SChool, received her training ai Morehead.
the Huntington School of Beauty
Patterson graduated from GAHS · feel uncomfortable quantifying our
Culture.
in 1987, and the•University of Rio goals. It 's hard to be objective when
She is licensed by both West Vir· Grande ·in t996 He is the son of it comes to pursuing our dreams. ..
·
That's why creating an invest:ginia and the Ohio State Board of Richard and Sue \L'
Patterson, Gallipo.
men!
policy is useful. An investment
Cosmetology. ·
I

.

.

Greenlee joins
Gallipolis staff .

'

Crlsenbery takes part
' In district contest

"REMEMBER•..
YOU DO HAVE. A. CHOICE'~
. .
.
'

'

I'DSOUPfiOIV OXYGEN\ Oz IN«:.
2.1oE. Miln Street
· :Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) .992-7287
'

Melga County~• .
Only .
Locally .Owned •
Operated
.
By: Randy -.unhout
·'

AfterHoura,l

WHk-enda
1 IOC).3e4..0115
Home 114
C.ll AnyUme , .

tt•a•a ·
l/

,.,....

vide links to many other v!lluablc
farm-related Web pages
Ohio Farm Bureau's Web. page,
which is a link from Americ110 Farm
Bureau's page, is one of the new kids
on the block. The OFBF page
includes legislative information, link&amp;
to member service providers, current
news releases and articles·from Buck-eye Farm News, Since tb6:sitc is.!tew
il is still being modified 111td ~fined.
Let us·know if you have any suggestions or comments about the page..
You can reach us on the Web:
http://www.fb.com/ohfb.
Kim Harless Is the Farm
Bureau's area org~tlon dinetor.
·

Your financial blueprint for building your dreams

84 Lumber names·
neW
getS

IS.

·$~ring begins with cancer society's Daffodil Days

-iilr
t ....,..
,l J
r -. ~.~~~·~ed~ing

·
·
must document that proceeds of lhe
loan will go toward operating costs,
such as seed or machinery.
. Ohio Valle)' Bank, a designated
state depository, offers this program
which is available 10 borrowers from
Ohio. This Pf'gram provides Ohio
farmers an opportunity 10 obtain
lower interest rate crop loans· for the
1997 planting season.
For more ·infonnation and program requin;inents contact the Com· mercia! Lending Department of the

. ~·.. IS H! R;E T~..JSiij
. ·... ~JIVE Oy~~--. \ .·",)·""' ' ~~.t~
·
EIGS OUNTY,••

·-··

qJII'tc!il Days. ,
.
.. Vilun1eers from the Galli a Coun, t~ Brant ~ offering llaffodil~ for
~ns of~ cents for a smgle
. fliiwtf, SS for a bot!quet·of 10, $10
· pfr pbllcd daffodils and SI for each
~le lollipop.
'!' . .

GALLIPOLIS - Richard Maban,
senior vice president of the commer·cial bailk group at Ohio Valley Bank,
Gallipolis, recently announced that
the 1997 Agricultural Linked Deposit
schedule has been released from the
Ohio State Treas=r's office.
Applications must .be completed
and returned to OVB for processing
prior to March 5, 1997. Funding for
approved applicants begins ·o n April
21.
Tlie Agri-Linked Qeposit Pro·
gram was developed to meet the
increasing cost of borrowing funds to
grow crops. To qualify, the farmer.

=

.:.~.

obaut-,....

Last year, the Gallia · ~nit raised Ebinger, Gallia County Board prcsincl!fiY $3,000 for.the soc1e~y's pro- dent.
"The~ daffodils give th~
grams of resc~. education and donor an add1t1onal sense. of sal is- service.
. "factibn that be or she h85 helped can'·l&gt;utting a breath of spring· in cer patients in the community."
your home. business .or chwch will
Deadline for orders is Wedncsbelp to raise your spirits.and making day,_Feb. 26. For nio~ infonnation
a donation to lhe Amcncan Cancer · call tbe &lt;:anccr ~ociety toll·free at 1- .
Society's Daffodil Days special 888-ACS-OH10.
event will help raise the hopes of
·
many cancer ·.P.Jltients," said Sara

.

SCORING A TOUCHDOWN- Allstate ln1111111nce Company has
ln~ucted Dllvls-Qulckel Agency, Inc. of Pomeroy Into the Hall of
Fame tor "acorlng a touchdown' In commarclal bu•lnualnaurence production. Ona of the award8 wa• an aUtographed toot. . ball and prnentlltlon ca• algned by Gale Sayers, the Kan . .a
Comet, member of tha NFL Hall of Fame, and rarneinbered for
the movie 'Brlan'a Song. • Mike Flcznar, lndepencllnt agency
manger.for Ohio, mada thit pf.nntlltlon to Bill Quickel owner of
the local agancy, left.
.
..

llorolhy..,._...,h_ -...

;~ G~LLIPOLIS .-. Even . t~ough
d!Cre!ssull a bat of wmter chlll_m ~
ali:
. , ~ A~ncan Cancer Socacty 1s
~v.f~ing a touch of Spring duri"ng

Sundly, Ftlllrwry 11, 1117

s.

nmn

:\for

D

By JENNIFER L BYRNES
Summit that producers can keep m ue every 7 days It is very important 25, To anend the tour, plan to meet al
GALLIPOLIS - The annual edu- mind and plan to implement this to begin spraying BEFORE you sec the C H McKenzie Agricultural een:
·
blue mold. Acrobat MZ is a blue · ter at 9:3() a.m. The tour will begin at
calional meeting for tobacco produc- · spring and summer:
ers and other interested panics is
- Blue mold is controllable with mold preventative, not a curative,- "10a.m. inMasonCounty, W. Va..IIKI,
scheduled for Thesday, February 18, changes in attitude and activities.
therefore it must be on the tobacco conclude in Gallia County around I
beginning at 7:30 p.m. at Hannan
- "(Grow your own plants •. or buy plant before blue mold spores land in p.m. Laler that evening. at 7 p.m:;
Trace Elementary SChool This meet- lhem from a reputable local sourc.e.
the fields.
DR. Larry Brown, OSU Agriculturing .is sponso~ by the OSU Exten. - For gfeenhouse \lr float plants,
- Acrobat MZ is a highly effective . al Engineer will spealc to interested
sion office in Gallia County and the use one of the following chemicals; prevenlive measure when applied to producers about stabilized fcediiiJi
Gallia County Pride· ln. Tobacco 2 -3 tablespoons/gal of Carbamate, all parts of the plant. and must be · areas and the use of geo-textile clol.
Association The featured speaker is · one teaspoon/gal of Dithane DF,"' 1- · sprayed so that all the leaves are cov- The program will be offered at the C ..
Clyde Allen, Extension Agent, Emer- 2 teaspoons/gal of Acrobat MZ (if ered.
H. McKenzie Agricultural Center,
itus, from Indiana with specialty in l$eled). Choose o~ and begin appli- Top and apply sucker control as and light refreshments --:ill be avail~
tobaCco His program· will focus on cations as soon as the plants are dime early as poss ible.
.
able . Al so today the Gallia Counl):
blue mold and ·year-round consider- size and repeat every S-7 days ·until
·Don't cut fields too early in Cattleman'sAssociation is holding its
alions for controlling the disease.
· plants life transplanted to !he field . . attempts !O avoid losses to l&gt;lue annual Preview Open Steer and I ·
Other items on the program "for
- For conventional plant beds, note mold.
· IHeifer Show at the fairgrounds fron\
Tuesday include a short insurance that the concentrations are higher 2- Don't forget about other diseases. I l a.m. until 4 p.m.
.•.
repon from a representative out of 3tablespoonslgal of Carbamate, one and always do what works best on
SHEEP PRODUCERS; The
·.
monthly meeting of the Ohio Valley .
.Kentucky, an update on basic and tablespoon/gal of Dithane OF, or one your farm.
·As we get closer to transplant Sheep Association will be Monday
effective quota from the Gallia- tablespoon/gal of Acrobat MZ . (if
Lawrence Farm Service Agency, labeled). Continue weekly until trans- time, watch the paper for more details February 24, and Don Kirts will be
on controlling the disease in the field. here to share unique production and
CED, Jim ~'Jerrell, and a report from planting time.
Danny MciGnnes's office. The spon·3-7 days prior to transplant apply
There are many ways to control · marketing schemes
·
sors hope to see the traditional great · Ridomil (Gold pre-plant incorpotat- and prevent blue mold, for more spe- , PESTICIDE APPLICATORS: The
ed at a.rate of I pint/100 gal of water cific infonnation about spray pro- first of two pesticide recertification
tum out, and all are welcome.
This is an excellent time to visit and at lay by (time of last cultivation) grams, nozzles to use, or other ques- programs is being offered oo
with other producers and learn the lat- apply 112·pint/100 gal of water to row tions about the facts in this article, Wednesday,' February 26, from 5:3!1
est news about one of the biggest middles.
.
pl'c;ase call the OSlj,Extension office. to 9 p.m. at the C. H. McKenzie Agriobstacles tobacco growers face .
- Avoid setting tobacco· in shady. As preparations are made for the next cultural Center. If your card reads
Blue mold is a serious threat to · . poorly.drained soils with limited aii growing season, producers will have March of 1997, plan to. atlend !hi$
tobacco production in Gallia County . circulation,
·
to build control plans that
. session or the next. on March 19, from
·
and the entire 5urley Belt. Universi· -Avoid close plant .spacing that thwart the arrival of sporulation of, · 8:30 ·a.m. -12 noon Program presenty of Kentucky experts are urging favor disease development; consider and spread of blue mold The key tations will be made by OSU Extcn·
· tobacco producers to look at the dis- 48" rows with 20" plant spacings and principle to remember this spring and sion agents from Gallia, Brown, and .
ease as a community issue, and work use of skip rows for effective fungi· summer is that blue inold control is Highland counties. New applicators
together to prevent it instead of act- · cide application.
dependent on prevention of the dis- - ihe certification lest is scheduled far
ing individually. Since the ,1997
- Avoid e.cess Nitrogen fertiliza- ease, not rescue 6f the plant
March 6 at 3 p.m. at the C H McKcti·
tobacco expo and Blue MoldSummit tion.
AG, NEWS ·
zie Agricultural Center with a revie'!'
in Lexington, there have been
- When Ridomil resistant blue.
session on March 4, from 7- I 0 p.m.,
numerous requests for the informa- mold is predicted in the area begin
CATI1..E PRODUCERS There at the same location.
•·
lion shared at the Summit. The fol- spray applications of Dithane OF or will be both a meeting and a tour of
Jennifer ·L Bymes Is Gallla
lowing are key points from the
Acrobat MZ (if labeled ) and contin- stabilized feeding areas on February County's extension qent In Jill'!•
.
culture and natural resources. '

.

horizon.

Section

LOcal tobacco meeti.n g on
Feb~ 1.8 will focus on blue mold

or

For some eaters.' normaJ/v tun events .
can be. a dietary disaster

•

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.

Patterson started with the 84 chain
in 1996 at their Jackson store. He and
his two children, Amanda and David,
Jr.,
. . reside in Proctorville.

.

.

policy is a written statement that investing as.well as focus on diversi- as possible in terms of time horizon
spells otlt your financial goals fication in order to develop a per- and dollar amounts.
and the best methods for achieving sonalized model for asset allocation.
Second, you: can refer to you.~ .
them.
·
· The benefits of asset allocation trusty blueprint when times get.
, The process ·
are clear. According to an article by tough and your ·emotions want 10
In many ways, an investment pol· Gary Brinson, ,Randy H\l(ld and Gil take over. Your invesunent policy
iCy sta1e10ent is like a "blueprint" Beebower in the Finan~ial Analysts can help you stay disciplined in a
for your wealth-building, with the Journal, asset allocation accounts for market turndown because it pro- ·
investment executive in the role of more than 9o percent of your portfo- vides a visual reminder of your pro- ·
the financial "architect." By work· lio's performance. However, the gram. Even if your emotions are geting together, you and your invest· authors point out that making the · ling the best of you, sticking with
ment professional will be able to key decisions necessary to create the your plan is lhe .best way to keep
identify your risk parameters and set right asset allocation model for your movjng toward your goals.
realistic goals. . investment program fs not easy. It
Finally, you can use your invest· Your investment executive will requires teamwork between an men! policy to · measure your
ask you a series or questions to lliCm investor and a financial professional. progress. Since your goals ~sum- ·
more about your attitudes toward
After all the inform.ation gather· marized for you, it makes it much
.risk, your current and future income ing is complete , your investm~nt easier to measure perforq~ance and
needs, how m~ch liquidity you'll professional will be well-prepared to rates of return , as well as make
need, your expectations for perfor· recommend specific investment adjustments if needed.
mance and · rate of return , and the strategies for achieving your goals.
By putting your objectives i.p
·source of your assets. Your current
·
The advantages
writing, you'll have a workin'
investment mix will also . be
How can having an investment financial blueprint for building yolll
reviewed to ensure that you have policy statement help you? First, by ' dreams. Con(act your illvestraerlt
enough di-.:ersification among asset putting your objectives in writing, professional today to set up an
classes to help you achieve your you are given the opportunity to appointment to develop a persona)
goals.
. .
clarify your goal s. Documenting investment po.Jicy for financial suC::Once you have clarified your your investment policy puts every- cess.
.
needs, your investment professional thing ··on the record ," and your
(Ryan Smith Ia an lnv. .tment
can help ·you set a course of action . · goals become more real once they ' re executive wtlh Advast Inc. In Ia
·
G8 lllpolla office)
He or she will discuss the basics of · in writing. Be sure to be as specific
•

Farmers should prune orchards within next 30 d'ys
By HAL KNEEN
POMEROY - Do your frt~it trees
need pruning? Sometime ..lithin the
next 30 days is the best lime to prune
your orchard. The key to pruning is
to develop a symmetrical branching
habit that ·maximizes the amount of
stlnlight shining onio the fruit and to
cut out branches that cross over each
other. Apple and pear·trees. ar&lt;! nor·
mally pruned to a central leader. The
lowest· branches on dwarf trees need
to be at least 18 inches off the ground.
The secondary tier . of branches
sbould be 18-24 inches above the first
tier of branches. Most trees $hould
have 3-4 tiers of branches. Most
apple/peach growers use wooden
spreaders to ensure wide angled
bianches horizontal to the ground.
Peach, cherry ·and plum tr!)es are
trained in an open center system. This
is necessary to allow even greater
amounts or sunlight and air circula·
tion to lessen disease activity. Once
again up to 4 symmetrical tiers of
branches are allowed to ~row. Cutting

back the growing tips-of branches Town and Country Expo held at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds (Meigs
increases the branch strength ..
·
·
County)'!
Use sharp pruning shears for
Plans are being fonnulated for the
smaller branches less than inch
. dialjleter, loppers for branches up to · Big Bend, Region's Town and Coun- ·
I inches or saws if over 1- 112 inch try E~po '97 to be. held on Sept. 20
diameter. Current Ohio State Uni- and 21.
versity Extension advice is not to . · This free two day event caught
.paint the wounds made. natural plant the int~rest of over·2,000 local citihealing will occur at a faster pace.as zen s who wanted to see what hob-"
long as the limbs are cleanly cut off. bies, businesses and talents, area
This is also a good time of year to residents had. Who can forget the
apply donnant/horticultural oil sprays tractor pulls, antique · tractor and
to smother the overwintering egg equipment displays, .the Community
masses of various Insects and ·scale Band, "Grease" Musical Show, cookInsects. Remember to follow label ing in a box by the Girl Scouts, local
directives when applying pesticides. . flower club displays, largest pumpkin
Temperatures need to be above 40 and com display. and many other
degrees Fabrenheit and no leaves or attractions? Add!tional ~olunteers are
· .flowers should he showing . .For fur- needed to contmue thts sucoessful
1
the·r information order Extension bul- .event. Won 1youjom in by attending
letin 591 "Grow.ing and Using fruit the 1997 Kick-Off Meeting" being
held Thursday, February 27 at 7:30
At HoiPe".
p.m. at the Senior Fairboard Office
located on the Rock Springs FairDid you enjoy last' September's grounds (near the intersec)ion of SR

.,

33 and SR 7), For further information call the Extension Office at (614)
992-6696, ask. for Hai·Kneen.
------·---·---.
· Cat!lcmen, are you looking to
improve your herd qual.ity by pu~­
chasing a new bull? The 56 day
weight test results from .the 1996-97
Ohio Bull Test just became availabl~ •
copies are available from our offic~
or calling directly to Gary Wililon at
(614) 8723468. The bull testing is
being conducted·under the guida!ICl=
of the Ohio Agricultural Research
and Development center, Belle Val·
ley Branch. Over 163 Junio:x: Bul~
(Born January 1-February 28, 199&lt;\)
and Senior Bulls (Born March , I.April30, 1996) an: on test Keep Saturday, April 19th at 1 p.m. open to
anend the ahnual Ohio Bull Test~~.
·
Harold H. Krtnn II liMo M1f11 .
Coul)' ~ ..n Nllltlnl ·

Raources Aant, Tile·Oillo Scaii
Unl~nlty E'JitMialon.

·
l

.

~·

�.' P P ~· ~ t

a••--·~•,._....._.,

-

SOlid.and solphisticated

~~~~~l
A SOLID BRICK FACADE conveys a·sense of aturdlneaa, while elepnt window treatmenll add eophlatlcatlon to thla eprawllns home.

place and a 1.0-rt., 4-in.· stepped
ceiling add to the rooms
grandeur.
·
The formal dining room faces
the front or the home and Is sel
oiT by 1hree eleganl columns. A
14-n. stepped ceiling "eleva,tes"
any meal .
Ample workspace is found in lhe
kllchen, which shares a snack
cnunler wilh lhe bayed breakfast
room. This sunny area Is nextlo a
rear porch and Is topped by a 10n., 9-in. vaulted ceiling.

plan conveys a sense or openness,

. particularly In the main living
areas.
Beyond the H-n. foyer, the great
room's expanse. or glass becomes
the Immediate center of attention.
· · llere, sliding slass doors to the
b8ckyard oiTer a view. ·" cozy fire-

Seduded for·priYacy, lhe miller
bedroom -has a b8y -willdow 8Dd a
10-fL, 8-in. vaulted eelllns. The
private b8th Includes a whirlpool
tub, a separate shower, dual tlnks
and a compartmenaallzed toilet. A
walk-In closet and two additional
closets supply plenty or storage
space.
A hallway off lhe toyer links two
secondary bedrooms to a convenient hall b81h. ·
.
Wider doorways and an ahema' live fllrll!e plaA with a ramp
instead or I sto~a1e area make
this home adaptable to wheelchair use.

By POPULAR MECHANICS

solved minerals and metals, or that is cme ad chemill:lll safety.

For AP Speclll ....._

100 acidic or buic, and

~ ........

HIGH
SrtPP(D .CLG

SUIIIAG£1'\HIL

&gt;

--;-

89 Chicle

ACROSS

90 Ubarated
93. GOblet
95 Weight unH

1 Jelly flavor

TWO CAR GARAGE

I

6 Parade vehicle

20'-0'lC 23'-4'

....

96 The Louvre and

11 Mentioned

m

16 Shoestrings'
21 Happen again
22 Part ot AWOL
23 Uke a lot
24 "Gone With lhe
Wind' heroine
25 Kilns .
26 Long-plumed bird
27 Enamel
28 Nobleman

,. ............... ,
· f'
o 14'

HIGH. ' •

~[PP(O CL~

Ria
'· : J0'-6·x:'

· i:liNING

G-41

i FOYER
i
.IJEl--"3..

BEDRW 12
ll'~o·,.

10'-0'

\14'-0') . lr---1

ST~

- ~-----~

~~BI

70' -0' OVERALL
11IE FOYER le8dl to lhll peat room, IUid to lhe side to lhe formal
d~lq room.,_ ueu are deftnecl, but nolaeparated, by three
columaa. Tbere Ia a door belween the kllchen and the laundry
room. The Jr.ltchea llhlll'el a anatk bar wlt.h the bayed brealdast
· room, which r.turea alldlas glasa doors to a rear poreh. Acroao the
home, alld aOOeuecl &amp;om lbe rear of the sreat room, is the private
muter aulte. A hallway from lhe foyer leads to t!"o Bjldltlonal bed·
. roomJ 'l ind • ball bath.

otheni
100 Fal
101 Luau tare
102 Playing card
104 Plalter ·
105 Spinning toy
106- Maria
107 Not at all spicy
109 Where Oslo is:'
abbr.

110 Graat composer
111 Name lora pooch
112 Play
115 "A Strllelcar Named

29 -capita
30 Car for hira

'(For a mo... detoiled, ramd pltJn
Q/ lhls house, including guides lo

32 Writer ~acOonald
34 Springl36 Out of the ordinary
37 Exile's island
39 Earns u profil
41 su~tlve ·

ertimaiing cosu and financing,
send $1 to House Qf IM W,eek, P. 0.
Box 1162, Ntw York, N.Y, 10116·
1162. Be '""' lo ·i nclude 1/u plun
number.

117 Cargo ship
_118 A baing
11!1 Steep roc!&lt; . . ·'
·121 Fac1111ate ' ·
122 Take lnlo custody
123 Orink In cans
125 Wei earth
127 Traats wllh T\.C ·
· 129 By ~ and slarts
132 Johnny134 Frond .
t 36 Aslronaut
Armltrong
137 Sepulcher
141 Winglike part
142 Beasts of burden
144 Length times width
148 Very laoge
148 Life: comb. form
149 PoisonOus.
'substance
151 Special plaasura
153 Another time
155 Place of contest
157 Occurrence
158 Rub out · ·
159 Costly fur
160 Defealed one
161 Schoolroom Hems
162 Office gadget
163 Lock of hair
164 Wanton looks

• 43 Knightly inte .

44 Be compliant
45 RObbers
48 Shajletess mass
50 Show 1M way
52 ·- Don'l Eal the
Dalaies'
.att8ck lhe brick-and monar. Eventu- with overlapped joiniS that are sealed
55
Waler-filled trench
ally, i:racks will oP.,n and flue gas · wilh heavy-duty plastic tape, 'The
57
Merit
will escape.
sheets are run several inches lip the
59 NovaWhen lhe chimney is in the house, sides of the foundation and are taped
63 Unwilling
rather than outside; flue gases can to lhe wall.
84 Something shot at
seep through the cracks and in1o the
You should not !eave spaces
66 Nol easily restrained
auic or living areas. This is a fin; haz- between pieces of lhe vap&lt;ir barrier.
66 Poker stake
69 Door in a fence
ard if wood framing is near the chim- · To be effective, it must be continu7.0 legandaoy bird
ney, and it's a health hazard: flue gas ous. The spaces would allow mois72Wipes
conlains·carbon mono~ide.
ture vapor into lhe crawl space.
. The safest correction is 10 Have a . Some background is helpful in ; 73 Place in Eur.
74 So-so grade
new flue lining insll!lled. Many chim- underslanding how a vapor barrier
75 Auction ·.
ney sweep companies do Ibis. Check works. It is installed to stop the cap76 Boy Seoul group
in 1he Yellow P,11ges for ~himney illary rise of moisture in the soil from
78 Crimson
sweeps. 1be company should be cer- becoming air-borne vapor. It can '.I
79 Neck part
tified by lhe National . Chimney prevcnl water from collecting in lhe · 80 lnconslslent
Sweep yuild.
·
soil under the crawl space.82 Bashful
93 Piece of turf
Q: I have received conflicling
If you find lhallhe ground in lhe
85 Pough
advice regarding vapor barriers for crawl space is wei, you should lake
86 Roll olljair
crawl spaces. Some · advise leaving measures to dry il oqt For c~ample,
87 Naval rank: abbr.
small spaces between lhe sheets to lhc ground' should slope away from
66 Ordinance
allow lhe ground to dry out under the the house o~ all sides. foundalion
. barrier. Others advise leaving no ·drains should he inslallcd In move
gaps. Also, should the barrier be ' wa1cr away from lhc foundalion, and
· exlended up the con.crete walls?
downspouls should disch~'!~C walcr
A: In~ crawl space,lhe vapor bar- far enough from the house soil docsrier is usually polyelhylene sheets n't seep into lhe basement ,

Homes·: Questions and answers
.

'

. By POPULAR MECHANICS

-

For AP Specl81 Feelurea
Q: A brick c)limney . goes up
between two unheated rooms in our
attic. For lhe last 3S yl*$, creos01e
appears to have leaked out . of lhe
chimney and stained the wallpaper. Is
Ibis dangerous, and if it needs repair,
what kind of technician handles this?
·A: 1be problem is tlangerous, and
· it .shl&gt;uld' be· looked after. The ereasci~ indicates there are opening; in
lhe chimney wall that ex lend to ·lhe
flue.lricidentally, lhe black stains you
see WIRY not be creosote. Creosote is
fonncd from the incomplete com·
buslion of wood or coil. Instead, the
malerial may be a sooty, oily film
from lhe incomplete combustion of
fuel ()it
~gardless, both creosole and fuel
oil film have corrosive elements' A£
flue ¥as rises, it cools to the poinllhat
a corrosive condensate may fort11 and
.adhefe 10 the chimney liner. This corrosive malerial ittli!Cks _the flue lining
and 4ts mortar joints. If there is no
flue lining, 1he corrosive deposits

.

SU.NDAY 'P U·ZZLER ·

0

...•

81 Under lhe. covers
82 Mineralaprif1g
84 Commerical vehicle
85 Shove
87 Hospital facility
89 PourO\!l
90 Fiery signal
91 Black bird
92 Pei'J)(Indii:ular
93 Homed 'arlim&amp;l
94 .Transgress.ion
95 The -: SIOCJQ!III
· 96 Rodents

DOWN

.1 Feel abol,rt in the
.dark
2 Carouse
,3 Sour
4

Play on woods

.

5 Formerly, formerly
6 Moved, as muscles
7 Lawful

8 Rowing ~em
9 Declare
10 Wyoming ranga
1t Tibial's cousin
12 Actress Lupino
13 Labor
14 Sea eagles
15 Fine pont
16 Throws in a high
curve
17 Triumphant cry
. 18 St. John's bread
19 pntroy !IY dagreea
20 ""'' a beacll .......
3'1 .~roi Bancroft
33Weep
35 froned
·
380led0wn
40 Boullque
42 Ark builder
44 Fragrance
48 C~r l'8lldue

K.JIIOXVILLE,Tem. (AP) -Ida- thing you loye abou1 home" is push· network's commercials, lhe Big ,
ho rptiree Chris Hoobs has ·been ing into lhe major markels of Chica- . ·Three automakers arc among !hose .
hooked on Home &amp; Garden TeJevi- go, New York and Los Angeles. Late finding HGTV a place to be.
'
, sion ~ver since it wen\ on the air in this year, it-will become 24 h9urs a
Meanwhile, !he response contin- ·
Dcc~mber 1994. ·
·day in'Canada. Deals for Europe and ues to surprise even HGTV ilself.
A;p avid woodworker and hOme Auslralia aren:t far off.
One recenl Saturday morning, 1he
rcm~Fier, Hoobs wrole to tile
"They have earned the distribu- network aired its first viewer call-in
Knq ville-based cable · ~·~orlqhat tion they are gelling," said Mike show, wilh hosl Spencer Christian, a ·
he u his wife "feel like kids in a Sinith, spokesman for Colorado- weatherman and wine connoisseur.
' ' shop" tuning in at home in based Tele-Communications Inc., HGtv e~perts look ques1ions on
Em
some 30.miles from Boise. which in December began aggres- everylhing from gardening to interi're not alone. Two years sively promoting HGTV 1o ils local · or decorating and building (o rebuild'
after ita launch, media analysts are syslem operators. ·
·
ing.
· ·
callhtB . H
_ GTV one of the most
TCI, 1he nation's largest cable
"We purposely didn't promote il
prontllinJ cable networks in recent company with 14 million subscribers; -at ' -all," said Ken Lo.we, HGTV
yqn,
is impressed lhat J-IGTV has spent a founder, president and CEO. "We
(A,allty proaramming, str.ong lot of time ,and money "creating a wanted to make sure, since this was
ld~r support and "an attra&lt;;livc · vision •nd following thai vision with our first one, 'let's get il right.' )I was
nichtjj in a pretty crowded ~kel· original programming," Smith said. almost'likc a dress rehearsal."
,p Jq' are sotne of lhe reasons why
HGTV's list of natiopal advertisThe response? Ten thousand calls
HGIW is ex'*-'ed 10 ·suc~eed, said · ers lias grown ftcim 40 to nearly 700. .in two Jtoup;.
.
. ' le~i Kupililki of A.G. ·Edwards &amp; · While do-it-your,elf chains like . · "Ii w"spectacul!1f,"·Lowe said.
· Soil41n SL Louil. · · . ·
. U&gt;we's and HOille Depot and their "We were truly Ov~helmed."
~ &amp; ~n 'sllibscriber base product manulilctl!fel's dominate 'the
~
i.
quadiupled jil two
to
22
ian homes- nelrly one out
of e
line clble. ~eo in the
C01111fY - 'With commiiinenu for 6
CHICAOO (AP) - Automakcr itlllllC after i lawsuit list year by !he
mllliclit ~­
Ml~.
,conftonlcd with sexual U.S. Equal Employment Opportuni• "~ hive DOt seen ' -cxb or
hnllment
lllcplioas, unveiled 1 lY Commiuion. .
·
.... . . 1111, hlitGriCIIIy, .. said Llr·
Jt IIC:CIIIed llllllllcment.of tolcr10 improve the~ lit ita
~INMdl. l!i ~ widi ·Piul plu
DliJ!ois
pllnt
and
III)MI
~
atina"--ment
and allea~ that as
~f'U lllc. iD CIJifonit
CJIIma
.
.
liken
llrioiaaly.
.
.
many
u
700
women
wOrkers may
*110 ~'den IJIII '1111 Of Cllblc
The
,,..
~ Wednesday
1
have
~
IJ'(IIIcd,
propotitioned
and
, l)$lsll peas I •lOp pria9JY, for MW
by fola.-u.). .,...SeeN~ 4'nn inlllhcd
the YCII'S It Mitsubishi 's ·,
- - - ·'
·
! '
·
..
,
Mlilin.lllo
wu
allql
tOward
repairNortn~~laubsidlary
in cenlnlllllinois.
~ 10 ''avlly· ,
'-!
illl tJ, ~ Clllllpllly'a ~
'
. - ~
.

yean

'

108

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operaleS tn four

- · But the operation's prospecu
for this y- make clear that lhe economica of the recycling business .,.-ticullll'ly curbside recycling ....:.
have cbiiiJCd.
Prices for plastic and newspaper '
reacbed astronomical Ieve.. in- 1995,
Sorted newspaper briefly sold for
$190 a 1on; plastic soda boules sold
for· $600 or more a ton. The phe- .
noinenon distorted lhe economics of
recycling,
.
Sorted newsprint now sells for.
aboilt $20 a ton. Mixed newsplp!'rwhich contaias lhe magazines. cata,logs and glossy inserts included in
curbside recycling programs -sellS
f?r $Sa ton or le!is. Plastic·soda botties sell for $60 il ton.
Sorting and baling recyclable bot·
ties and cans at a recycling center
costs abOut$100 a ton. The economics are equally bleak for newspapers.
Baling a ton of newspaper, which
accounts for about 70 percent of the
material collected in eurb~ide recycli.Dg progr8JI)S, costs as much as $30
a ton..
, And those f\gures do not include
lhc cost of curbside collection.
"Residential recycling, by its very
nature, js thjlleast efficienl recycling
you can do," said Ed Taylor, president of Reeycling Concepls Inc., a
consulting company based in Covington; Ky.
Recycling newspapers, plastiC
bottles and tjn cans saves energy,
reduces pollijtion from manufacturing and conserves natural resources,
proponents say. .
·
"The big environmental impact of
consumption occurs upstream - in
either extracting ,the raw malerial or
manufactilring," said John Rus1on, an
econOmic analyst with lhe Environmental Defense Fund.
That holds true even when taking

·11 0 Buffalo
. · • 11.l ;.GNiwllill ~k;Jn ,,,

47. Droop

4!1'Ralaed
Si 'Patta ot plays

5;! Put
53 Aloof one
54 Aaatauranl·palron
56 Bathrobe material
58 Not wide
-60 Old garmenta
81 Bungling
62 See ey&amp;-to-eye
84 Soft mineral

e5 In addition

01 WeighJ..Iosa
program

. 69 Profit
71 Food lish
75 Kind or poi&lt;er
76 A pronoun
77 Cockpil occupanl

113 CUrvedb&lt;M!ti8'1

114 •Bnld

·

'/'

' •. ,, ';
.'
''ii'i'

l

.,

~·

116 Plant pOUch ' .,.
117 Mine's output
120 Biggar '

122 ·-We» Th8l Ends
Weir
124 Took it eaay
126 Hearing organ
128 Kealcln and Lane
1,28 Dettined ' • ' '
130 '.,-.- Lycy"·

·, •

133 Yogi Ot'baseball

.

131 Sales and income

•.-

135 Elaborate meal
138 Much 1oo heavy
1_:,9 Coal digger .
I 40 Wild hogs
1421neects
143 Chair
145 Chi"f!Sa gelatin
147 Lotty
, 150 Writlilg Huid
152 Ibsen ctraracter
154 Honest-'
156 Caviar
',,

Love and th~ bottom line: Couples in
•
~· d b th
'""" · fiS
• k.s h19
•h
.d_
n . 0 .rewarus,
bu_ Stness
,

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Puzzle Answer .on Page B4
.

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•

'

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... i ..... J

now is what it boib down to,"
Rwnpke said.
Recycling has become a'badge of
civic virtue and c0!p01'8te responsi·
bility - a litmus test of environmental stewardship.
"Fro_m grammar school on. lhey
~ l!~ttmg a steady dose .of "Recy.
cling ts good . 'The more you do, the
better,' " Taylor of. Recycling Con·
cepts said.
. But people have come to lhink lhat
JUSt about anything can be recycled.
And some companies have done litde to tell them otherwise.
Manufacturei'S put on lheir prod- ·
uciS lhe continuous arrows $ymbol
that subdy admonishes consumers lo
recycle. But~ logo doesn'l mean a
market extsts.
"We have to sell the product 10
some~ody," Rumpke said. "And if
there tsn't a market, we can;uake it.''
·
"'There are diminishing ~tur_ns fo~
every acttvlly, and recYcling ts not
ex~mpt," Rus1on of the Environmental Defense Fund satd.
Plaslic is lightweighl, bulky and
inexpensive. There als~ are hundreds of fonnulations.
"The diversity of plaslics is really .defeating its ability to be recycled," Ruslon said.
Most plastic conlainers now iden,
tify lhe resin type with a number
inside lhe conlinuous arrows symbol.
It's misleading. 1be American Plaslies Council contends the conlinuous
arrows are not· a recycling symbol.
Bill that's probably news 10 mos1 peopie. ·
"Tiie realily is lhat for lhe majority of plastic packaging, recycting
options simply are not available."
Ruslon said. .
Tile Environmental Defense Fund
encourages consumers lo buy produ.cts that conlain recycled malerials
and to shun producls with wasteful
packaging.

_J!eel •

Page 03

"Waste reductiOn il even more a ton bat account for only 2 percent
important than m:ycling," Ruston of the material collected.
said.
'The price for aluminum cans is
Some complllies know lhli. Proc- lucrative enough 10 atlract seavter &amp; Gamble Co. bas reduced the engers who get to the curbside recyamount of packaging in a case of its cling bins before Rumpke Recy product$ by 27 percent since 1989. It cling.
also requires its plastic containers to
But sorting the plaslic and glass
contain a certain percentage of recy- . bottles is a cosdy, labor-intensive
cled maierials,
•
lask. Al)d glass, hard to handle withlbat's helped create a market for out breaking, is a true headache.
recycled No. 2 plaslic used to make
Broken glass, which has the con ~
milk jugs and liquid-ojetergent bol- sistency of sand, wears on conveyor
lies. Recycled milk jugs now sell for belts and loader buckets. Moreover, ·.
$360 10$400 a ton; colored detergent · prices arc low- $25 a ton for clear
bottles sell for $200 to $260 a Ibn.
glass and $10 a ton for brown glass.
1be problem is all the other types No one pays for green glass.
of plastic that gel thrown inlo recy"We can'l make monh sorting
cling binS.
. Slass," Rumpke said.
In recycling, il's called "die
Rumpke -Recycling has invesled
drag." You ask for one material, and $3 million in its recycling center and
it drags in everything else.
an additional $1.5 million in collec· People might have the best of lion trucks . Il's a sleep investmenl for
intentions ':"hen they throw dinner an unprofilable business. · .
trays, plasttc bags; cereal boxes or
'The company also has smaller
pizza boxes into their recycling binsc reeycling cenlers in Dayton, Colum- .
Bul they are making recycling more bus, Indianapolis and Louisville.
costly -and more inefficient.
Rumpke said mosl of them also will
Rumpke Recycling's cenler in St. lose money this year.
Bernard runs two conveyor belts 'to
"We went through a learning
sort recyclable items from !raSh. One curve on the lrue costs of recycling,"
line has 13 or 14 workers; 1he olher, Rumpke said.
eight or nine. The workers. many of
Rumpke Recycling had hoped the
lhem from a temporary employment recovered materials would offset coiagency, make $6 an ho11r 10 separale lection. costs. And Rumpkc said
plaslic bollles and glass from old cal- Rumpke Recycling made "very good
endars, egg cartons, plastic packaging money" in 1995.
.and all the other junk placed in recyPrices l!fC unlikely to f(lach lhose
cling bins.
·
levels in the near future. Prices for 1he
The conipa~y·s employees try 10 plaslic used to make soda boltles are
leave materials that aren't recyclable low. And, for now, supplyloulslrips
atlhe curb: But several tons-of !rash demand for newspapers ..
~iill make their way 10 the cent_
er each
In the fulurc, recycling could cost
month.
more.
Newspapers are separated at the
"There needs to be a public -realcurb. Metal cans are easily separiued ization that this is not going 10 be a
by a magnet and sell for aboul $60 a free service." Rumpke said.
lon. Aluminum cans are separated by
a device called an eddy current.
They now sell for a whopping $1,200

'('

B,y -MAGGIE JACKSON
crs - increases the allure of entreAP ·Buak\eSI Writer
preneurial work,.
For Lori and Steve Leveen, run"More and more people are wanlning a mail-order business bas been · ing a sense of independence and a
a shared passion. lbey look for new sense of security, and feellhey can't
produciS during vacations, lalk busi- trusl the corporate world," says Jane
_!lOSS in bedtAI night, shin: their lives , Hilburt-Davis, a Lexington, Mass.almost.complctely.
based family-business consultaftl.
For
Picco and $amantha
For Liz Curtis Higgs, working
Koumanelis, opening a golf.equip- with her husblirid also mean I time
ment store led to the end oflheir 15· together -a rarity 'When she !raveled
year marriage.
. tq m~ motivational speeches and lfe
. In a sense, couples bet lhc house wot~ed 50-hour w~ks as a compulwhen lhey go into business iogelher. er systems specialist. .
~larting a busineSs is -risky enough.
"One night I was looking al lhe
Starting a company with your spiluse Atlantic Ocean and he was looking a1
tests not only your financial acumen, lhc Pacific Ocean and our children
'
.
but yo~:~r mamage vows.
were wilh lheir gr&amp;lldparenls in Ken"'lllere are days when you wanl JO lucky," said Liz Higgs. "We though!,
lUll elicit other," says Mary Duty, who 'Is this any way to fun a family?'"
has been running P!'PPa Rollo's ~izNow, when she's n011raveling, she
za restaurant in Waco, Texas for '18 joiltJ her husband and manager Bill
years with her husband. "Bullhere's in a converted garaae behind their
nothing beller than working side by , Louisville, Ky,, home, Even their two
side wit_ll ,tlle man you love."
·. children -pitch in, earning !heir
Such, teant)¥orlc is- hardly _new. . allowances by licking envelopes,
Generations of stores h~ve been
. '"it was -the best 1hing we .could
,minded by a mom and a pop. Farms have done," says Mrs. Higgs.
ha~ Ions been worked by bolh husStill, the Higgs are careful nol to,
band and wife.let the business overrun hearth and
Big businesses 100 are run by home- a danger especially common
"clipmtcurs." Estee Lauder !lunched among entrepreneurial couples in
her cosmetics empire. with her hus- the all-consuming early days of lhe
b8nd Joseph In 1946. DonM Karan enterprise.
~run her fashion company'with her
The Higgs maintain separate
spouse, artisi'Siephan Weiss, for 13 offices to give each olher breathing
years.
room and keep "trappings of work"
Joining one's spouse in the 'shop - such as computet'S and Liz's
=ms to be growing more popular. books - out of theif house as much as
TechnoloJY has made working .from possible, says Bill Higgs. AI day's
ho~ feasible. while corporate tur•
end, they I!JCk the office doors and lry
bulence - from downsizln1 to merg·. nOt to look back.

'

4

-Cleaning up tar and sludge
left over from the gaslight era

pia work together running a bualnaaa from ·
home which makes cards printed wllh lnsplrar
tlonal ..ylngs. (AP)

COUPLES IN BUSINESS· Dave and Marlena
· Bruno_stand 11411r one of their card displays in
their home office In GI'MIIdale, Wis. The cou·

i

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By GEORGE ANTHAN
, .
ty problem he didn't even menlion, Smilh's legislalion passed in the late
The Des "'olnea Register .
and the one he could do somelhing 1960s.
WASHINGTON- Neal Smith, about immediately, is 10 force the
He said of Cl!_p10n's latest food
who for nearly lhree decades was poultry induslry 10 cui the filthy, safely program: "The most posilive
considered lhe leading congressio~- fecally contaminaled parts otT the lhing you can say about il is lhatlhcy
al authority on meat safety, said he's chickens."
· are aware !here are 'problems. Bul
been '_'dQing a slow burn" for lhc last
Smilh.was referring 10 one of lhe · whallhe president announced didn 'l
1wo weeks.
few meat safely defeaiS he suffered in · do much to tlcal wjth the problems. "
His consternalion stems from his 36 years in Congress. The USDA
Smilh noled lhai ·Ciinton has
. · President Clinton's much-promoled agreed in lhe late 1970s to a poullry inslalled an inspection setup under
announcemenl that he wants a new industry ~uestlhat fecally con tam- · which meal and poultry products for
$43 million program 10 fight food · i_nated parts of chicken carcasses the first lime musl meet stan~ards for
contaminalion.
could be washed, inslead of con- bacterial contamination, ·· · . .
Smilh authored 1he 1967 Whole- demned,
But~ like soflle other food safely
some Meat Acl and the 1968 WholeAssistant Agriculture Secretary activists, Smith questions whether lhc
some Poultry Producls Act. which Carol Foreman, who made that deci- syslem · is designed eventually to
closed some huge loopholes ·in fed- · sion, aclcnowledged in an inlerview' eliminale lhe legal requircme~llhal a ·
eral inspeclion . From Ihe 1960s with The Des Moines Regisler a federal inspeclor mus1 examine each
lhrough his defeat in 1994, Smilh decade later thai, "I made a mistake." carcass before it can he sold 10 the
siOod as sort of a Horalius at the And she has since been a leading 'JlUblic, wilh processing companies
bridge; rcpealedly slopping allempts food safe1y ·ac1ivisl.
.
lhen allowed 10 certify thai lhcy are
by various adminislralions and indus·
"Ever since 1977," said Smith, :·1 mceling federal slandards.
try inlerests 10 dihtlc federal inspec· 1ried to get it changed. The Reagan _ "If this new syslcm is in addition
lion:
and Bush administrations not only 10 having federal inspcclors in the
Smith said he had tried lo remain . didn't wantlo change it. they tried to planls and ex~mining every carcass.
silenl afler Clinlon's Jan. 25 radio gel rid of federal inspeclors in lhe !hal's fine." Smilh said . "Bul if this
address; in which lhe president said planls by subsliluting whal they is a _subslilutc for·federal inspeclian,
the Agricullure Dcpartmenl, lhc Food called a 'scientific-based: system, in· lhal would be a bad. had mislnkc .
and Drug Administralion and 1he whiCh lhe companies would-jus! cer"More .lhan anylhing else, my
Center's for Disease Conlroland Pre- :1ify !hat 1hey were producing clean problem is that bul for visual inspcc·
vcnlion would establish an "early producls."
lion, you would have carcasses dragwarning system" on out~rcaks of
Rodney Leonard of lhe Commu- ging on dirty floors ; the syslcm
food~bornc illness.
.
nity Nulrition lnslilule was lhe ·would nol reflccl il when there arc
Bul, said Smilh, "The fnod safe- USDA food safety chief when ral's running over carcasses."

"'il

. '

into account _the eneigy and poilulion
from collection trucks, Ruston said.
Proponents also note prices are at
a cyclicall&lt;&gt;w.
"Price nuctuations are a natural
phenomenon in. commodily markets," Ruslon said,
Further, recycling saves landfill
space- one of its main goals. .
In the Cincinnati area, Rumpke
Recycling recovers 5,000 tons of
recyclable material a month, lbat's
up from ·SOO tons a month in 1991. In
all, lhe curbside recycling programs
divert about 15 percent of all residential !raSh. And that rate would
double if every residence panieipated in curbside programs.
· Hauling trash ihat can be recycled
to a landfill also would cost money.
Landfill costs are now lower than the
cost of curbside recycling programs,
Rumpke said. But landfill and lransportati&lt;in costs will increase significantly wqen new ones ~ built.
Some opponeQtS of curbside recycling contend landfill costs will
remain low in mosl parts of 1he country. California and the Northeast are
lhe exceptions. But -lhe fear thai the
counlry was running oul of landfills
helped set off a recycling boom.
The numbe_r of communities wilh
curbside recycling increased from
2,449 in 1990 to 6,038 in 1996,
according 10 the American Plastics
Council, an induslry trade group. And
about 5,500 ·communilies have
municipal drop-off sites.
The cost of 'those programs,
!hough, is likely lo.increase.
· ·New contracts are being bid for as
much as $36 a year.· for each residence, Rumpke said. The city of
Cincinnali, in conlraSI, pays $11.16 a
year for each residence and receives
a floor of $20 for each ton of newspaper collecled. The contracl runs
through March 1999.
"The city has a good deal right

,
' •

---- Busin•ss·highlights-

•

busincu, which

I

c:a.,.,... buildif(g'

79 ldenlify .

over

I

of~tnpke 't o_vcrall w~lection

li
•

•

•

actresses· .

103 D8lty

e

Meat safety still Smith's concern

gg Play , "&lt;'_
101 _Actorur!(l ''

104 Bold pnes
107 -' nolte:

D

industry struggles to stay afloat

97 Serviceable
98 Fashions .

i

.
- .n..-ork

.

I

Htme &amp; Garden TV becoming a cable hit

l)lll!y

.

a

12'-4'x
15'-'8'

GREAT llW
14'-0'• .
20'-0'

IX
lo.l

ClNCINNA11 - A tnlc:k blckJ
iniO the recyclina center IIIII dumps
. d?SC to dtree tons ofplutic soda and
!JIIlk boales, dcte~Jent conllinerr, tin
:"'cans, glass bottles and aluminum
L cans
· That, though, is not all.
'
Strewn imid the recyclable items
· are plastic bass stuffed wlthjplastic
, , bags, pizza boxes, egg cartons and
plastic containers - none of .which
•· is recyclable, ,
· Rwnpke Recycling will pay workers about $6 an hour to soil lhe
• g!Ubage from the recyclable ilems.
: It's ju_st one of the problems niaking
! curbstde recycling a costly and money-losing endeavor.
.. Ofteri overlooked ·in lhe zeal to
, ~ycle is the economic titct that curb- .
, s~ and many other types of tecychng cosl money. And those pro- ·
• grams ' - which both compete wilh
' and .supplement commerQial recy. cling - could become more cosily,
• Prices for so-caned post-consumer
· goods - newspapers; plastic soda,
milk and detergenl boUies; metal
cans; glass .- plummeted last year.
"And lliere's no forecasl of their
'. changing," said Jeff Rwnpke, who
~ oversees Rumpke Recycling's center
' in St. Bernard, Oliio.
' 'The city of Cincinnati pays Ruinpke Recycling almost $1.2 million a
year to provide curbside recycHns.ln
, tum, Rumpke Recycling pays the city
I· a minimu'll of $20 for each ton of
' newspapej: collccled ..... about ,
$132,000 to $144,000 a year. ·
· Other communities in lhe Cincinl nati area pay two-to three times more
per residence.. Yet Rwnpke Recycling,which provides curbsiderecycling for most of lhe communities in
. Greater Cincinnati, will lose several
hundred thousaild dollars this year.
Rumpke Recycling is a small pan

D

.

·7'-0'

By GUY BOULTON
The Cfnoclowllltl &amp;nqunr

then add air1be key to effective dwmiceJ While yciu're lliinking lbout the borne IIIII swimmer-borne bacteria, is the relative pH biiii!Ce ot dte
enjoyment you'll have with a new · sunlan loeion,' body oils and vittuM· water. On lhe pH scale, which fiiiiCI
swimming pool; also be aware that ly 111y substance that could fall from between 0 and 14, the idell biiii!Ce
every pool must have ~uppon equip- the sky, you have a mix lhat can grow is 7.4 to 7.6. If the balance is tipped
ment (pump and filter system) and_ aJaae, damage equipment and make too far toward the alkaline ·side, the
req\Jites maintenance.
swimmers sick. Though there arc a bacleria killing capacity of lhe cliloThe pump piping is alaacbed to a broad ranse of chemical treatments rine is reduced, *Iller may appear
skimmer box, usually located in .the available, chlorine comJ)OIInds are the cloudy and scale will begip to form
side of lhe pool and partially sub-· most common.
·,
·
·on pool walls and filtration equipmerged. The box is equipped wilh a
While you don;t have to be a ment.
vacuum fitting and a basket. Floating chemist to treat your pool water.
If the water is 100 acidic, equipdebris, such as leaves and twigs, are some people would rather not botb- ment -.·jll begin to corrode, chlOrine
caught in the baskel; while smaller cr. These homeowners wm lhe job . residual (chlorine left after the initial
impurities, such as dirt and oils, are over to professionals, who lest and killing shock) ·will !lroP IJid ihe
drawn through lhe skimmer and treat on a weekly basis. This adds to water will irritate eyes i.nd akin..Millpump, into the filler.
the cost of operation, of cpursc, and ufacturers package produciS fQI'IIluThree types of filler media are may ·not be ril!ht for you,
lated to raise pH _(soda &amp;$11, ~~
commonly used. One of lhe most .. Another approach Is to have the · carbonate) or lower pH (lllllnallc
popular is J!!e sand filter. In these, dealer test lhe first water in the pool acid, sodium bisulfate), but lhe Irick
esign G-41 has • ·g reat
water is drawn across layers of sand, -or of the season- treat it for min: is in knowing when to use one or the
.
room, d'inlns ro01n·,
·
which trap impurities. Next are car- . erals, metals and pH balance, and other.
.
, • ·
kitchen, breakfast ro(lm,
!ridge
filters
Jhat
contain
.a
fibrous
·
·then
set
up
a
purificluion
regimen
for
How
can
you
lrnow
what
the 'pH
three bedrooms, two run balhs .
fabric
that
screens
impurilies.
And
·
you
to
follow.
And
finally.
you
can
balance
of
your
waler
is
at
iny
giv. and • laundry room, 'totaling
finally,
some
filters
conlain
a
white,
choose
a
line
of
chemicals
from
lilY
en
time?
The
usual
choice
is
a
chem1,595 square feet of living space.
P?wdery substance known as dealer, buy the lesting kitlhat goes leal reagenl test, In this case, you'd
This plan. Includes a standard
.
)Vith il, do some reading and hllndlc take a sample of water in atest tube,
dtalomaceous earth.
basement, crawlspace or slab
If you suspect lhat waler-quality the job yourself. The National Spa &amp; add a few drops of resgen), shake tl
foundolion, and !tx+ exterior wall
maintenance is a perpetual nuisance, Pool Institute (2111 Eisenhower Ave., up and compare the color change to
framins. The two-car sarase,
whh Its storage/ullllty area, proyou're at least partly right. If you stan Alexandria, VA 22314) also .offers a graduated color chart. Otlorine convides an area of 548 square feel.
wilh water lhat may be high in dis- easy-tO-follow infonnatipn on pool : 'tent can be tested in similll( manner.

PORCH
10'-0'x

:::lc(

~. Recycling

Swimming pools need suppo~
equipment .arid ·maintenance .

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

By BRUCE A. NATHAN
.AP Newsfeatures
Plan. C-41, by llomeStyles
r&gt;eislsners Network, makes good
use nr its 1,595 ~uare reel or IIV·
log spac-e. Its w.ell-organized Door

----------

-

~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pllll8nt, WV

' Sunct.y, Febnllry 11,1117'

Sundly, Febrully 11, 1117

Pomeroy •lllddlcport • Glllllpolll, 0H • Point P111~nt, W

~~

Steve and Lori Lcveen, who slart·
ed lhe Levenger calalog of reading
lamps and other accessories in 1987,
also lry 10 .keep the business from
eclipsing their personal life.
"Somelimes il'll be II al nigh!,
and we'll say~ &lt;Jimc ot(tf~e have to
1
stop lalking business,
"' laioghs Steve.
Nonel hel ess, 1hey arc unapologelically passion ale ·aboul !heir worK,
spending vacalions and off-hours
looking for anlique reading lables.or
chairs thai might be updated for modem produclion.
That devotion helped lhem
through lhc: grueling first days when
they barely slepped ouldoors for fear
of losing a customer phone call .
~We 're both doing something we
love," says Lori. "Having a common
goal is very rewarding." ·
. A business partnership wilhout
that shared passion can be disastrous.
Koumanelis and Picco had been
married for nine· years' when he
opened a golfing range and golf
equipme'nl slore in PeabOdy; Mass.
Picco, a firefighler, planned 10 ruti the
business during off-duty hours.,
Although Koumanelis loathes
solf, she reluctantly agreed 10 hel.P
run· lhe slore when Picco couldn't be
!here. That arrangement didn -1 suit
anyone.
" I knew nothing abom the business, and he was losing a lol of man·
ey bticause of . lhal," says
Koumanelis.
"Samantha wasn •1into it," agrees
Picco. "She wasn't as supportive as
I wanted her to be."

By 'MARY ESCH
er silcs pose no problem," says M'!f·
Associated Press Writer
lenc Berg, a scienliSI with lhe EPA's
UTjCA, N.Y. - Black sludge Superfund program. Many are being
undulales under lc!l·Colored walcr as cleaned up under slate aulhority
Dave King lifts a. container lo 1he ralher lhan federal, she says.
light. Dirt reeking of molhballs fills
The wasle includes known and ·
another jar. A walnut-size ball of tar suspected cancer-causing agent.&lt;,
rolls around in a lhird.
including benzene, toluene and
·The samples are remnant' of the xylene.
·· gaslighl era, le,fl over from a time
Bul David Sterman, a deputy
when this cily was the biggesl ener- commissioner in New York's Depart·
ment of Environmenlal Conscrvalion
gy. producer in the coun1ry.
'
·The Harbor Point gasworks have says lhe human hcahh risk is gener·
long been tom down. Gone too are · ally low, unlc~s contaminanls seep
the factories lhey fueled, leaving this inlo waler supplies, arc e~posed dur·
· cily slruggling for economic survjval. ing e~cava1ion, or arc in areas used '
But the ~yproducts of the days when ·by the general public .
gios was made by cooking coal
As utililies have soughllo market
remain, polluting soil, ground walcr real cstale, as Niagara Mohawk hopes
and river sediment
. lo do al Harbor Point, lhc cleanup lias ·
King heads a learn of researchers become more urgenl, says King, who
studying ways IO deal wilh the buried runs Niagara Mohawk's manufactar, sludge. and chemical residues lured gas plant program.
here. · Ulility groups and a federal ·
Cleanup also has become a prior.rgrant have supported lhe work. which.· ity in ·communities where contamicould provide informalion useful in nation has been found beyond industhe cleanup of-lhousands of similar trial areas.
· siles across lhe counlry.
Residues have been found in sedHarbor Point is a 65-acre sile for· imcnt dredged from rivers. including.
mcrly.used b~ two manufactured gas · the Mohawk River here, New Hampplants and now owned by Niagara shire's Winnipesaukee River, the Big
Mohawk P()wcr Corp.. King's Sioux River in Soulh Dakota and the
employer. The sile was ideal for Flal River in Michigan.
developing sampling a~d cleanup
In Taylorville, Ill., parenls blamed
methods because of lhe v.riely of gas plant'chemicals in air and ground
chemicals in 600,000 tons of con Ia· water when five children contracted
minated soils here, King s~ys.
a rare form of cancer. Stale and uti!- ·
There are lhousands of silcs ity studies found no evidence linking
aruund the counlry where coalaar and lhe waste to lhe illness .
olher residues are buried at defunct
The gaslight era, between 1830 .
gas manufacturing planiS. Only 14 and 191S•.fiaeled the lnduslrill Revare among the 1,200 siles·on the-U.S. olution. Bef~ !hat, light 'was pro-_
Environmenlal ProteCtion Agency's vided by candles and whale-oil
· Superfu11d prior'ity cleanup list.
limps. Easy access to coal shipmeniS
~·That c\oesn't mean thilt the oth- via the Erie Canal allowed dozens of

,,
0

...

gasworks 10 locale across cenlrai
New York. Factories followed .
·
The gas wasn 'llhc nalural gas
used loday, bul a product nianufac- .
turcd by cooking coal. Oven workers
shoveled coal into large "retorts."
where il was healed to give off
mclhanc gas. As Ihe gas was cooled,
lar and oil byproducls flowed inlo a
storage tank. A purifier removed
ammonia, which was stored. and suifur, which was absorbed ijy wood
c_hips.
,
The gasworks became obsolclc
wilhlhc advenl of electric lights and
an interstalc nclwork of pipelines
supplying natural gas. They left a
variety of contaminants, mainly tar,
sludges, oils and cyanide compounds.
The waste was disposed of in pils,
ponds and landfills.
At Harbor Poinl, bordered by
vacan1 indumial land and 1hc
Mohawk River on lhe fringe of lhc
city, King displays j'!fl or wasle producls found on some of the 150 leSt
wells drilled on the sile.
There's molasses-like coal lar
emulsion, lhe stuff used in driveway
scaler: It floats qn water which is colored brown by soluble waste compounds. The mosl dense byprOduct is
1ar, which is heavier than water.
·
In seven open-faced' sheds, ha\f.'
lon hills of soil and rock dug frorii.
different ateu are sbeltered for test-' \
ing. Some piles have visible gobs of
tar. 1'!1e rotten-eJII smell of sulfur
wafts from a pile of puri(ier was1e,1
which includes wood chips stai~
bright lil_ue by cy111ide corppouncb,
Holdmg ponds Coll{a~n 111noft
wa1er wllich is pomped throyib ,'a1
treatment plant.
t

�.

,

Cllr .., '
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440 ·•

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ID-,..,.lluet .... .,.

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pond, 1111114 Dot'H
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......,~11a

,,,.

111'11 . .... , •• It . . . .

1711, EOII,

1

or Cll , , _

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

IT'S. BIG. 1117 4BR, 28ATH

Col---

.,'

Ldcal Yendlng Roult Fot Yout
Bit
II&lt;
1111

awn.ao...

DOUBLEWIDE, ., 141 DOWN,
Ull/110, FREE DELIVERY I
SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOliES, NITRO, WV. 304-751·
51111. Umltod Ollw, Wllh ap-·
,--

Bo

ca.,-··
1

MYPHiltEFIJUIE

35~1&amp;ttl
' ·Yold]t
-Earn Up 1b ,,,5110
1

230

.1.aeoe nn
PIOIII.IIonll
SeiVIcls

•loti, two car

~ IInce. 014-112
.

v...

s::e·

540S,

:.1088 12x80, good
··- e n d .,..., -

,-or
.,. . ., r-· . --

. . , .,.., 1:00pm, .. jail ..
10 BIG. W\'0212lltl
Llvlngeton'e b&amp;eement waler·
prDOflna. all ba..,.,.nl repalre
done, ltH elllmalt·a. IHedmo

lng, lllnlmum Of 5 VII. Experl·
.... Requited. Saii!J And

-

:!lln
11x10 3 Bodlwm.. 2 Bllw.·
··~
• •illll Eltcrlc, ~ llnclerpiMinQ.

Anlllllle,

P.ll. 7 DI¥L

170 Mlac:ellaiiiCKil
C-or-Onlan•- .

es, cheerleaders, fans and parents met In the

wJo and WUflliztr.

.

W For

.I

PROBATE COURT OF
OALUA COUNTY, OHIO
. PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
flevlilld Code,
S.C. 2108.32·.33

, I

·

l
ALL PERSONS
i · TOINTEREBTED
IN THE'
FOLLOWING ESTATES
I

I

1

PENDING IN THE OALLIA
COUNTY PROBATE,COURT.
The flducillry In - h 1 haa mod an account e~f hla
' tru1t, A hearing on the
- .CCount In - h - wll be
held Ill the date and lima
ahawn below. Tlte court ,..
local1od Ill ihe Gallla Coun1J
Court Hou1a, Locuat St.,
Gllllpollo, Ohio 4&amp;31.
Decedent'• Nama, Caaa
·I Nu-. Date .of Hearing,
.. Time

f

1. John W. Annatronsj,
!.. 15,545, March 20, . 1H7,
i 10:00 o'clock a.m.
2. Donald R. W.....,lme,
1
; 19,441, March 2D, 1997,
( 10:00 o'clock a.m.
. 3. Ray Barker, 831039,
· March 20,1987, 10:00 a.m,
· 4. All L. Mo.. barger,
: 841171, M1rch · 2D, 1997,

.

.

-

; 'MHM-0'• . E"
• P•r

:·..

.

____

t2.ll PER lltl.
MUST BE 11 VAS.
SER\1-IJ. (118) &amp;IU«M

' ,...;::;.;;.~,;;:..;;.:.;..;,.;;;..;,.,

i

.

~lt.oblli1\0~. LDI Appll.noet,
. ~tuara.e 'Piu.oh· caipot EuNka
' 2D,oiio Will Soli ~- 114.

'

ri
~.}11101 .... ,.7 14l7Q .... - lticklcltl I ..,,..,. FREE lot
Onlr
.,05.57 ,., .,.,., wtfl

-.s_,c.a 1~7·3238.
:

31)4.731-72115, _ _ _ _ _ ,
" c.;;,;,::;,;,::::;,
I

" )low ..,;k Aopo'el OniJ 3 lth,
·• .owner fln•nclng .vallabte. With

.

: 'sppou.dcnclt: :1)4..711-~111.

In Memory

•., In Loving Memory of

BOOTS

Ef&lt;1PL0Yf.1 ENT
SER VICES

no

Help wanted

Able Avon RepreMntatlvea
needed. Earn money fQ.r Chrl1t·

and Auction

•

Bor~er Collie . I Lab mix·, 8 Wedemeyer' a Auction Service.
monlllo old, verJ plaJiul. 304- Galllpolll, Ohio e14-378-2720.
·~6721.

All Leather Westem Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock ·
Engineer ........ .. .............. $49.00
Welllngton ............. :........ $49.00
Loggers ,.,,., .. ., .., .., .....,., $50-55
Hamess ..., .............. :...... $59.00
Carolina-Georgia • H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex

SWAIN FURNITURE

••'-tworii. 1.8QO.
IG2·tl35e or 304~82·2145, Ind.

Aunt Clara's Collection of
Fine Amish Things

Acciounra Payable proctuora.
Muet be accurate and abte 10
wark at a faat pace. Computer

Our Amish builders have been
working all winter to complete
new furniture just in time tor
spring. We have oak and
cherry tabl.e s and chairs,
beSroom suites, pie and jelly
sales, rockers, coffee and end
tables, curios and many more
Amish crafted items. Brides
. invited to register at Aunt ·
. Clara's. Amish baked goods
fresh daily. Monday thru
Saturday 10 a :m. tillS p.m.
Sunday 12 noon till 5 p ,rn. ·
4·446·0205

11

Public Sale

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!

entrJ obllltlto holpful. Sond ••

Lemley'o Aucllon Sorvlce, Leollt oume tD Bo.1 11-13, 'IIPI,Piouont
Lemley, AucdoneO&lt;. HouHhold, Rogloter, 200 llaln SL, Pt Pl....
Estate, Fatm Saln Colllloi-441: om W\/25560. ,
~824~1~,8~1!:438:!!:BG~4~43:_..,..__ AN 'l!&gt;u Good Netuted, Frttndly,
Rick Peoroon Auction ConlpenJ, Outgoing, And Sincere? Woufd
tu~l time auc:llonHr, complete Yau Like To Work lo An AI·
auction ltntlct. Llcanted mcophore Whale Your CO.WOrk·
III,Ohlo I Wul VIrginia, 304- ers Art FaoNve And Upbaat And
The Job lo Rewarding? Scenic
773-5716 Or 304-773-5«7.
Hlllo Nulllnt Cantor Oflltl Such
50
Happy Adl ,
Opporlunlllfo In Empl~&gt;tmtlnt. In
Arldliqn To E•clllof!l Skilled And
Give lllurHII Tlto Sporto Edge 90 Wanted to Buy
Intermediate Cart, We Have A
Spolta Enllt..umant llnol ·t·IIOQ. =_,.....,.,........,...,,.,...,....,::~.., ~amprthtntiWII Rehab·Deparl·
151-$1100 Ext 5245, •2,11/llln. Com~lo:. Houllholcl Or Ellaltll ment And .ASpecialized Unllllellutl ._ 18 Sarv·U 118·145· AnJ lYPt 01 FurniiUN, Appllitnc- tlgn.d 'Etpeciallr F~r People
1434.
•a. Anlkluo'o, Et&lt;. Aloo Apprallll With Alzheimer' • Dl..aae. We
--10144711-2720.
Aro CurrendJ Seeking Cortlllod
All U,ll, Sli· Nurtlng Alliatantl (CNA'a} Or
Peo:r:o Who WOuld Like To AI·
50 L01flnd Found
ltn CNA CIIIMI For Employ·
mant AI Scan1c: Hils In AI 01 OUt
Found: Spotlod Brown I While
Ootoot.,_, Wi;liiiwll!d Como In
Doe No Collor Or T•o•
Pot- 1lt Olnaln An Atlllllcatlon
814-441·3012 F01 llore ln.,rme·
AI at 1 Bucfotldge fld,, llldwoll. .No
llan.

Serta Mattress
Bed Frames
Recliners
4 Drawer CheSI .
Ui·Z·Bo.v Recliners
4 pc. Bedroom
Suite

FLAIR

$59.00
$19.95
$99.00 .
$49,95
$299;00
$499.00

FUFlNITUR~

675-1371
Gallipolis, Ferry, WV

Graham's Upholstery
Get ready for Spring Sale
- Selected Robert Allsn
Fabrics ori Sale 15% off
Feb. 17·March 3.
Come see our wide
selection of sample
fabrics and quality
workmanship.
F.:ree Estimates ·

,.

.
NowOpen '
Elhe Look Full Service Salon &amp; ·
Tanning, Owners Debbie Clary &amp;
Christi McGuire. .
1479 St. Rl. 160, Gallipolis, across
· from Bulavllle Pk, 446-2B91

Hurtey Borden

"

,,

Feb. 14, 1995
lime swlfUy moves on.
It has been. two years
iincu rou left. ~ aU
still miss you, but rou
went to be In a better

AEROBICS
Tuesday &amp; Thursday·
$2 per session

place,

LoVIng you always,
Wile, Clara Marge,

6:30-7:30 '

In loving memory of

Thomas E~ Ragan
who passed away 5
years aga. .
·Sadly mlaaed by w!fll;
children and grand·
children; and all Who
kn!IW 8nd loved him

PhonoCollo,-

4\lonth Old Ba!* PUPPI'
/White Wllh Block IIOik
Tho_.....,, VI·
llchllol - . .,...

Aaalu•nrM~n~Det

-

CIICUIIIEI

A9PIJ TodaJ, Slllrl Tomorrow. II
Yau'ro Notllaklllfl 11.10 111our
Col
Tlnll Toll free AI 1 · - ·
7.171.
I

~

To Door, •aonu...• Fun I

EIOJII·IOII-127·4140 lnd/8111
Alp.

Babplqer,....... In our hoN.
Ill. AIIO lrH. IIUII hovo awn
..,_..,., Hours ney. 804'
-

We would.like to
thsnkour
friends for the
money, cards
and phone C.lls
onour44th .

We would like to
thank · everyone for
tl1elr prayers, fOOd,
flowers, cards and
beltig there lOr us at
our time ·of loss,
Everyone's thoughtfulness was greatly
appreciated,
The family of
Edwin Dwight

AimtverAry ·

llr. .. ,,.._ Gerilld

StMit:W

Woodo{ar~

AIIIJCII'ICf 11f

Ill~

In LDvlng Memory of
Roblrt W. Htn10n •

DATES!!!

'who p111ed away
Feb.15,1912
You never really ·
leave the place you

experienced. self..motlvated
lndlvldual·to lead property &amp;
casualty and life sales effort.
Responsible for developing
p~duct linea and carrier
relationships. If you are a team ·
player with excellent
cQmmunlcatlon shills and a
bachelor's degree, send resume
and salary requirements to: ,
Box CD 404 c/o Sunday Times..
· · Sentinel, P.O. Box.469,
·
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
EOE

:·.,! · '-' pc·
:~etv

Part of it you take
with yilu, leaving part
of yourself behind,
. You will always be
With ua, In our hearts
and memories.
sadly 111issed by
wife, children, .
grandchildren and

we.worider why
were taken from
but then God must.
had a reason. Vnoi'wa'''"loved when YO!I
'were with us and we shared so many happy
times along with the sad.
· ·
You will always be loved al')d In Qur hearts,
Sadly mlsssd by Alta. cynthia, Sir..'&amp;. Dennie
and lhe!r lemlllee

Happy

LANE MOTION SETS

Qeliremeilt
. ,.aoml
(Ove.U.rf)
Durst, R.N;
'
.

•

FOR MORE INFORMATION.

•'•

.

fisCal agent The coordinator will report to llle sate Bard of•
Dlrect011. Tha pooillon Is fUnded lor one ''"' and Is potenUally
renewable con1lngenl upon lhe coordlnitor's sua:tt1 at oeclitillfl
oddlllonollunding. The ,.,..,.,.., ltiiYi&lt;:eo con1tact amoum wiM be
~II $30,011010 $40.000. based on qu-.,..
·Please lorward ......,..10 Jal&lt;t Bapsl, Director oflnsltuetional
Medlo·Cenlot, Tha Universlly of Rio Grande. Wood Hall 127, AI&lt;&gt;

Grande. OhiO 45874.
The Unlvotllly of Rio Gnl~ is n EQCJIJI Oppollunlty Employer.
EEOIAA Emplayflr, WOm&lt;ltland minorlliH orrt:OUiaged to appl)&lt;

.. ' ,

'

'

F~bruary, 17, 1997, 10:00 a.m.
I

taot
taot
taot

MINE YOURS AND OURS
COLLECflBLESAND TANNING SALON
JL Rt. 325 and Rt. 180 VInton, Ohio
The AntlqLie MallllltOckld wltl'l antique •
collectlbtl glan, stonewarJ, toyl, pottary,

"

·celt Iron, plul much more. The 1W1nlng
Salon featUI'IS Wolf beds In ""'liY
· conatructld large binning booll11. We atock a
~mpt... llne of binning productl • . t!oura will
, be tro,n 10:00 a.m •. untl18:00 p.m.
·

· ,

NVIn dapa "'"k·

·

Grand·Opening Specltil:

.

12.00 I* uaelon on binil

Owners: Ike and

A~

Isaac

Must have at least 3 years experience
HVAC installation. · EPS R~frigeratlon
RSES Certification a plus. Must
knowlec:lgellble.of Heat Pumps, .90% gas
ductWork • both commercial

I

The cocrdlnalor po_oilion will 1&gt;e estobllshed as a personal

1t11Yi&lt;:eo contrecllllrough lhe u.-.ily of RiO Grande, SOTHC's

CALL NOW!!!
1·900·476·9393, Ext. 5217

. SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450TO $995

IDII Mkllr RhoncM.

commu...,_, journalism/communications or a rallied litld Is

prtlotred.

"LIVE"???

WANTED HVAC INSTALLERS

'

and lhe ability to organize committees, facilitate meetinl)l and
Coordinate with muttlpte entities to,achieve connrion goals. A
mester"a degree In educational administration. maas

WANT TO TALK TO BEAUTIFUL LADIES,

·LIVfNG ROOM SUITES-

,'

experience, an understanding of basic telecommunications·

technology, oxpertance wllll uslnt interactivo video conlotencint,

:.

residential. Overtime required wh1!1nl
$6.00 ~ $8:00 .per hour
mens4rate with ·experience.
\(ac:atlcm health ·insur-.nce and grc•wtlll

1948-1950 ~lley'a Drive In
19SCJ..1966 HolZer Ho•pltal
1985-1972 Galllpolla Clinic and
Medical Center Hospital.
II Send resume to:
1972.,1996 GSI· GDC
wam,r Htatlng.ll ~oollng. Inc.
Family and Frletnd•rl
P.O.
8

aox

.....

Plymouth~ $:1.7,.&amp;::LIS'(MIIi)' ~QIIPPIIi•• W. ....

Happy Ad

''
•

The successful candidate will have at least fiVe .yeare o1
professional experience, Including grant &amp;Wicallon developmenl

GUYS

fami

foraKllten. as each .
Vie Visit Y9UI'

ANGELL .ACCOUNTING

I

SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. lhru Sat, 9-5 p,m. 446-0322
3 miles out Bulavllle Pike

fu!ldlftt IOUIC. . Ior lmplemenlillflthe networl&lt;.

u',t iJt 1il·.r'.
U j\&gt;1'J· C-h ,-\.!._l-1
11·11

LAYNE FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION

entities including, but not limited to , consortium members,
lllecommunlcallons 1(811dors. consultants, lhe Ohio Oepanment
of Admlnlolralive'Ser.ric:es, the ,Ohio Depanmem of Educlllion.
and tho Ohio Appalachian Center .lor Higher Educolion: The
coordinator will be responsible for Identifying end pursuing

1·900·825·7970
Ext. 6099

loVe.

left Ul 4 years 1110
on Februlry 11, 11113
You will peVer be · ·

614-446,3438

Call446-2342 or 992-2156~

..,_

wlu.-. cc--t•a••..,.•l

...... tl:s) . .lrM•oal I

,

c...,.._._. .. ,

•:w,

I

I &amp;•••I

II d

I .

I d.

on a

•

I I 7 d.to:

•PIJ!

G~aver Ida• artn -~tl ar.

*

ii _, 8 ....... -........

.
.
'
,.,._ . . . . . . ~ • ...,._,_..,._... • • • 41:1

1

r , u rt

ii4~-----~· ..: ........... _..., . . _

I , IIi! _ _ .....,,__ .... ., II

I

ns

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

_ . • • p II .......... I ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , TTIIIJ
PI

'T

i t 't

II

G

II

t'a

I a

ha '

~.
'.

.

l~~~~~~~~~~Jfl_~~~~~OH~~~B~~~ ~--~--~~~~~~~~~ ••~
,

.,

~ of Ttumka

Harold F. Hill .

;

AVON IIIII, II ·tiS /Hr. No

·-01

. In Loving Memory of

Gallipolis, OH 45631

a:t

NO BLIND

I

F.,..,.

==::;;...·

S3 99 per nw1 r.lu&lt;-il be 18 yr ,,
SU\.'· Ll ((l 1q) U·h·li-lJ.l

Saddles, Rockport, limbe~and,
Cole Haan, Red Wing;Johnston &amp;
Murphy, AMen-Edmonds,
More genuine Vebram 'soles. ·
B&amp;E Shoe Service- 614·446-4172

· 2205 Graham. School RAAd.

can

"'Ired.

Luggage,

I

iiwiia~n~te~diiiiiiiio--..i~

-· ,.,.....

'"

For Compline, Prolesslonollndlvklual
and Business Tax Prepatlllion
ASK us ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
738 Second Ave .

... .

.;.:;::::::'":=ll:;•:;m:;I!IIY;:=:;:;:;

" !ll.r..llllil

French City Child Care Center ·
300 Thir:d Avenue, Gallipolis.
~.,;oars.

•

.,,.._,830.

' ,;New Bank Rtpo'o Onlr 3 lth,

'

••••

I

. .. . . .

I

lie

sz.•

;::wv,'SM-716 ••

.

lluot Be 11 Yro. Germen Shephord/Collle · mix
-114-113-5421.
~·~~~~~~~!!~~5~··~~:_
J;;.
llale GrtJ ·Cat Liller Boxed
QUI'S AND GALS
WAITWG TO IIEET'ICU
Trained, VerJ FrtendiJ, 114·245tllOOAAREA
;;.0!25.;;ii;;;;iw;;:ei'+.;~iiiiii:-:1100 tta-57111
Ulld Duct WOrtc.ll.+ UI 8100.
. EXT:tlll
.I'
lllnu~e.

Humlltd Ollorltte7 c~ouliiow~c~e,
-~:lllr, 2balll, ,,7H down, t27tl
- monlll. FrM dellvarJ I MIUP.
~"0111• ' 11 Oollwocid Homoo, Nlito

,•

11001.ni111L1111

A011 1 NCII

nEAL ESTATE

BULLETIN·
. BOARD

:~·t2.M~Coli~..=·-=·~·=·~·I.,.._
~~OUV8. GALl

~onlY II 0111 Wloocl - 0 , Nitro·
\lWI( SM-716&amp;P•

.

' PUBUC NOTICEr•
The Board of Addlaon
twp. Truateea, Gallla
County will receive Sealed
e1c11 until 9:00 p,m, lhe 29th
of March, 1997 lor the sale

-I

:•HIQO.eilt.em,
.
. ;~~~~~~~~
1H7-14xl0 w/Oiamcur
In M1mory
1
.,711mc._.,
...,bltll.
,..,p,

ate ..,.,..,.~
• - onbulB,
an-equal

I

: 1111-145-8434.

J

0

.. i~ •

: AN You 'An ExciUno RomanUc~
. 1·800-443-57111 En 8212. 112.•
· "'"' llln. lluot ae 11 Vrt. s.r.-u.

I

i t22Q/ma. ft.. dellviiJ &amp;. MIIIP,

Goorllft Portable Sowmlll, don1 310 Homll for Salt
mil juotcal

.

-room

1

I

·haul rour logo tD h
-.675-1857.

: 005

'_:_:::....
~·~0&gt;(1~11~1~··~·~-~··t:...-

papar wll not

3038.

Middleport
&amp; Vlclnny

pot ..... -

It·

lies, outbulldlnga,· etC. -....us-

Poiiiii'Dy,

' .j ·

ollgln, or ony - n 10
make II1Y such prefeoence,

Our read&amp;" ara heteby

304 ~

Cloonlng &amp; dmovoi. a -

10:00a,m.
5. Thomaa Rebert Adamo,
951145, March 20, 1997,
10:00 o'clock a. in.
&amp;. Charlea David DaVault,
1151163, March 20, 1997,
10:00 o'clock a.m.
.
1. Mary Anil Adklna,
952020,' March 20, 1997,·
10:00 o'clock a.m.
8, llebal G. Niday, 961012,
March 20, 1997, 10:00
o'clock a.m.
9; J.ulla Ann Butler,
961050, Marclr 20, 1997;
10:00 o'clock a,m,
10. Stanley Aualln
Brumfield, 961056, March
20, 1997, 10:00 o'clock a!m.
11. Helen G. Seundera,
961121, r-tarch 20, 1997,
10:00 o'clock a.m .
February 16, 1997 .

Imitation"'based on taee. c:olot, Mltglon,
sex famlial statue or nationa!

Informed that an dWelllnge
adwlrdslid In this new ..,......

Arry odd jobl, pelnUn1, gutltro

!.

-Lied

•' 1111 SUnohlnt 14x80 3 Bed·
114-71Ni73
.; fOCMM, 2 Bdl' EJCIII nt Co,....
. ...
'
~ 1Dn,l1&amp;,2&amp;11.11t 4• r12.
~ C..:.Gu;uao, 2 111M Out
~
NelghbotiUiod Rd.. 10 Acrn
, .-1.714 - 1 both,._ .17,0110 Or 22 Actn Wllh Pond
, -n, , , _ , with oppnlftd UI,IIOO, JUII OH S.R, 2tl,
. , ,....., Cd 1-.em.
frlendiJ Ridge • e + Aeteo
'
ta.ooo. OniJ ,, ,ooo Down a
-,1111114j181! Gltmcur Balli. ti1W t101,22 llo. For 1 Yrs. Or a +
: .Mo., f,.. Deljiiii&lt;J And Set Up, ,..,., 17,100, T..no Run. Rd.·
, ·CIII30t-731l-7215:
,
(3) 10 Acre
rciiL .10,000 +.
. "'
.
ChambeN Rd., La•t. On11 VIr~
r 1017 llxiO 3 ~room, 2 ~~~~. Nice 11 Acret • Roduced
·:'11,32!11-.. li21lllllc, " " -- . , 51101
~·lnt. with applavod aredll 1-100'
.~60t.em.
Call TodaJ For Free Mop• &amp;
·
OWner Flnanclllfl Info. Toke lOY.
. • 1187 rloublowlcle •1445 - · CiH Lloltd Prien On Cuh Pur·

whk:n fsln Yloltllon of tile law.

180 wanted To Do
or

In-·

•

knoWIInOIY accept
.
adverti88tnenls t01 rail eltate

11!!!r!f ....,...

~leaned. 114-2 .. 5-&amp;lft
·~7112.

.u 1881 Htale adVertlllrG In
this . . . .,.,Is ouiJ!eCIIO
tile Federal Folr Houolng Act
ol19118 wHch lllllk8s Hllogll
10 ·-....., ptlllo""ICO.

1ljs ne11111

2323

0

""" ..

P
.
o

ExcolloniConcltlon One Ownor.
Colt 814 38t 21140 or 114-31N-

Blue Devil gym for a post-game celebration
after Gallipolla tied WBrftn Local for the 199697 SEOAL championship. (See game datalla on
Bn2),

I

limitation o t - n.'

uivo s ... GNol For Church. .

",1100,

!"'*

e1 And Reliable Vehlcl• R•

0010 Ext 8710,·8 A.ll, To 11

,.......,.

~14-2-16:511011.
·
· ,,.,1182
l4a70 lloblla Home On u

mltolon. E•calllnl Opportunity.
AIJPMCinll ..., CoN Fot
Appointment At 11•·441·4514,'
II·F, I A,ll, To 4 P,ll, Rlllerel)c·

MLDLIFE/COII RV.110N '
J08S
Geme Wltdana, Securi!J, lloln·
- - Eoc. No Exp, N......,.
- Hlrlno. Fot ,., Col 21 ..7114-

340 Buallilela
. au. - llid.

Golnt bullneoo lor HI~ Second
Steel. RL :13
304-773lil51.
,:Acreo, Parchoo,.l15,100, 5111- 350 Loll&amp;~ •
,.574-25110.
~~:"":"~,...,.,.....,.,..
. .....,.,......, ee Acreo Located In Walnut
Scrollz lloblla Ho.,..., 2 1ltwnohlp·Bar...,~
· wa~ne Na·
· ,•~elllnt.
hath, 8x20
txP&amp;ndo.
calllredal
"onol
Foreo,• Ex ~
un"~
llland
ln
lllt&lt;han,
11111nt
•
~..
.....
1
~•on 3 large loll, wtth _.., nice Good Ac..O... PaoiiHelullcllnt
: :nelghborh&lt;&gt;od. Call alter 5pm. -.no.aoo ,,~,.,
• ,--3502.
'·'RIIIrigowlolar, Aango. .Air,

904.e'/So2145.

.QIIIIIIfled

""'*•

....., 7pni...,..,.

IN7131l.

c.,

~ llonell

hDmM.....,

In•-

,!"~ ~.!~4~~.;, -~ 1~5~~~~~~

..,_, eonntu...715. Shenln. · pondo, 20140 Intround pooI• 2
tllliiMirn 6 out bulkllntl. 1I'IC1+4112-!il37.
tors • an farm equipment. s.n~ 1074 twa bedroom 12150. mutt ouolnqulrleo only. 30t t&amp;e·1112
suut••
;a.ll lnvneclleiiiJ, t3000. 11+4112-

SALE-RION
WANTED:
Mutt Bo Experienced In All guo,.,.tH. tO,ro on job expOtlAltl~tndal Rem1~11

1111 2

81

330 F.-ma for Sale
Rolli~ mea- rarm In '"""·
candlttOrl. t'fid ::,-,;.~~~10': ,·
1111 fut..

T•k• over
:porriwlio.waahroom.
3114.e~7112.

HARTS IIASONARY • Block,
30 ,_. ...

PhUM Of

I

~ kltcHiln ,

,nJ

balfio. . . Call lit 3111111121 Ilk
~~
., .._

141170 ()lkwood, 2br, 2 bllh, lr,

•

1

lltlclc ...... - .

1

ct.ln link

Glvo plano ,._.. In "" 1t0me.
aile teoch chonllnt a lrlntpaa·

lng, If lntereotorl call 114·112·.

1

ESTATES, 52 -!Woo&lt;~ DriM
...., _.,. ar. II electrtc. I movleo, Call 114-441~2511 .
,., HUO liP cued
IPPifanceo lurnlohed. on ollt Equol-.g OpparUiiJ,
1or
clellwrr. T~• man .. oment. ,. • ..., laclllll'.
~ H Outll JuiiCIIIII lnl ••'co .... Your choice: abr $IU HUD VOIIC,.,.t 10ce..,..uEHO. Don'l Lot Thlo One llllollyll Roomolor Nllt • ., ........_ bedroom oulltl. 'Pallfo Now a
t17SIIne. llltt10f0 Old Alii~ lfl I 0eoove 8L One Bed,.,_ With loll 01 Ell· swtnt
e1 I t - Gollla - . Uoed Fumllll,._ ·2101 Jelltroon
bilL W.- l)ryer, 6...0, Frig
dawn, en 1110/me. •uonltM NlwHiwrW\WV304•111e.
410 Hoi II I for Rllil
alze ape al 11KIQ',__pur1
lftolude!l. W• PaJ Wotor And .,, 111 • ••
=~~~~-~-~Nice 2
Furnlolled, Borllege. v., Clean, Na
2 I S - - I n " " " - only t1110 - ·· ·-~
f10 "-lpWanted
,.,. t27S. pluo t300 depallt ,._ - ~Include_,
l(lloNn, AI E_,., Sprtftt
-.. NcIU·«&lt;-2205,
- - t300 llopoolt.
131D1Ucr,,
114·
·qulred. no poll, daJ 114·18~· up. ,, ..,. - -, trr ol VollrNo---a~ tal.
own.,. lnllu,.,ce ~ In lull. Paid; •111/llo., Pluo O.paol~
Look •.. Look ... Look
Plul·ll,.. ... - · , . . . , - ""~· ••1......117.
Efflct.nq. peln~ cetpe~
ol lr" lklrllna or • - "" let 'an. .....,..... apertmen~ lur· 010,
Reltrenc••· DepooiL No
rent • petit Ill rour choice. No
LIMITS
IPPIIcaUon Nlulldll Phone In hiWd, extra nice &amp; ciMn. No pill. ao4-175-1112.
~ "'-3114.eJS.1,..., tree application lor . Now open under new mgmt,
. . - .. !IQI-Ir.wl13........
Karaoke lovers, come hear the fantaStic sound
..,, ...,. .IWM and number an
system • . Y&lt;~~.~'ll think you're In NashviHe Uve .
·----ii1ii10iiiiii"-iiilp
Karaoke rNery Mon,, Tues., Thurs. starting next
Troller.,- In s - . mutt
have relorenceo, 114 •812-2721
· RESPIRATORY THERAPY POSmONS
week from 7-10. Cash prize paid nightly,
D,J, with Debbie &amp; All American Sound System
::ollorfj;Sem~;;;;:;Rio VIllage 4 BOdniOml, Ror.· 440 Apat bliinta
pwt-llme and per diem positions are
f1Very Thurs., FrL, Sat 9:30 p,m. ~ 2 a,m.
enceo. DOJIOolt Rectulrod, Total
for Rent
I;;!~=~ In the Holzet' Medical Center's Respiratory
Every Thursday ladies get In free. ·
Get. WIO tiOO. P.O. a.. 25S. 11o· ";;;di~h;;ftij;i;;Mi;iW: 1
Department
and Skilled N~111lng Home
Gran*, 0H •7', 1. and 2 t d DDIII •ps ••ieallll turPool Tournament every Mon, , Tues,, Wed,. &amp;
==.;;.;;...;;;..;.;.,;,_.....,.~ nlllhed end unUnlohed. -~If
Extended Care o.partment for the following:
Thuril,, 6-8. ·
Smali tilt llou• w/-ln Pt. depilolt required, no peto, 114&lt;&gt;-IM..-.o
Pleaoan~ ...liable .lloroh IlL 11112-2ltl. . .
.._,....,...,
Reaplndolr
Therapia!,
Cerlllled
Come meet Barbie.&amp; Debbie and have fun!
c.a Morlfl&gt;m
Respindory Therafiy Technician, All '""""'lcants must
2 Bedroom Brick Townhow...
.....,.,.
Also...Check this out!
_.one boiwm - I n lla· o\CroN From Cinema Theoter
be llcenaad by the OhiO Respiratory Care Board. For
We
supply
parking, seating, game room,
-. w1111 .., .,... w1111 w ,., 1 , _ Hook ..
· -ssl"'~
~
luml.....
••
~·~,.
lmr'ledilte
...........
atlon:
cash
b$r,
the
entertainment, professional .
.,...~.
~-. Stove; Rtlrlg.,.IOr Furnlthed,
carp«, no dopooito water, s.wor, Troth Included,
Contact: Rosie Ward
karaoke &amp; D.J , by All American Sound Systems,
.....,..., 'caii304-77S- 54104 ollor UIIMia,, Nc-. Dtpo""" Re"""---of Human Resour~
huge dance floor with lights for your weddjng,
.::S:3D:;.·- - - - - - Fo•'~'lcMiono Calll14""""""
lWo llodfoom houte• ...,,.,.,.. 441·0001; 114-441·0857, 114Holzer Medical Center
private parties, employee oartles, family
o'nd · ';"~ depollt Ill-Ill I. '
.
100 JIICklon Pike .
r1111nlons, whatever. you need!
;.:-::c:Lod,::..:,l1
--·12
'GIIlllpolle, OH 45631
·Call City Umits at 448-4801 after 5 p.m,
or Pete or Deborah Peck 367· 7177 any time.
420 llloblle'Homta
Phone: (614) 446. 6000
for R...-.
Come. have fun and enjoy,
.,,.
Fax: (814) 446-5106
5
C
-•
A
H
EEO·'•"•
E
· Must be 21 to enter. ·
14 "' """"' 11 ' ..t - ·
'""""'\ mplorer
11o: Pluo Ullltlllo, 5200 Depool~
Goad Looellon In KanWgo. ., ...
::•·~·1:.::07~
, _. _ _,...._ _
SoulltemOhlo~-c...­
COordiMtor Paaltloft Dn tplloii
OPPORTUNnYIN INSURANCE
2 Bedroom Tr.aller For Ronl Or .;;;;i'ij;iiiji'anditli;iiiiiim
-.IIWig.l lind 2 bid,..,
Tha 5oulhem Ohio TelecommUnlcallo ~orl&lt; ~m
- · On Land Connct In Cti1IO: 11 Vlll1o- .,_ 1!111
Is -IIIII• coordlnotor to help Implement alalecommu...,_
..,II(IIIEDul11++tl:1110.
Alvenlclt A,.,_llln lllcldl•
Start..up southeastern Ohio
pori, fnlm t232-13111 • Cd 114, _ llnklnQ - ·· medical fecMities, and public Institutions
me bile home lot ~ 11112·111114. Equal Houolnt Oppor·
In soudlotn Ohio. The coordinator will organiZe and laeilllate
Insurance agency looking for
In IIUon. no pe11, 304-773:6751.
..,._
SOTNC metllngo and cootdinaiO wllh a vatlely of indlvi!:luallllnd

CITY

~141115 ~-,..,.,., ....

Paotol Jobo S Paoldono A..ll.
able. No Ex...,..... N-I&amp;IJ,
for lnlotmotlan, P,.ll1~1 ..71411011 EliL 22H.

Own----·...,,=
·

1 Modlm 1 laioam ,.. ....... IIUDQET PRICES fir JACKSON

.,.

I

.,

•'•

�,·G.E. ........... - . . : ; : ;
l .................: G.E.
i
~IN; G.E.

.

l:i:'•••

aumo•

....

GM . ..._, 1000-., 11Gt
140 . . . _ ; 1 . .lion lull - :
llrllll• I 1.,.11011 lftOIM: uMd
INn 50 houro, fiOO, 10+

~ --=·~Ftoei-,.
~=

: Colerlo ~ RMto'DouiM
• 0... 1110; Q.E.

· - f1H; Y1rJ10 ~
:• ·
W...I150;Holp0int.._
a Or,.. let, HOS Eacll 1 -

SAT., .IL 22, 1997
~~~~dl LocMed10&amp;001
.••
iiiiii
It the Auction C..olw an Rl '33

Gnllolo'l f'llnD. 11!1*'0 I Nlllliro.
Po •• rn? Neod Tunid'l c.l till
ploroo Or. 814 ... 11525 •

.VIne-.

' ........ . _ """'""- 71
Gllllpolo, ., ..........

LOG HOMES

f Mll.l ::olle'f'l •f •;

t.

Coaafort, convenience,

ll'/f~~TCC K

loJoor·c'r ' ofllcioncy,

i&amp;1HDiiF1Fii;mi&amp;qu~ii;~m;;t-

1.11 du•rabtllir and flexibility
dcoip are a few of lhc

.IFill
+ftllllt
1eee Fonl 800.Dumro Tovc:ll And
A Four llulooiHorT-· 14 FL tlrouono why . 2,000
-11441NiS10.
lll'alllilleo will buUd a
Gl•- K 10.H GIIIIIMM, JD · I hcomc thio year!
12 Ft Dille, locUli Poota, 11,4·

iaHD11.

Hr,draulic

on 112.10·11111 pall.

8 ...,. Equlpmem, Handaroon,
W.:311M15-7421.

Appalaehlan Lo1
I Stracluro•o haa hcoa
llco1dcr In the 1... .bon•e I

for over
lvciaro. Choooo from ••••r I ·

Building

SUpplltll.

1taadard nlodels
we 'It euotom doolp

Wood Realty,

Win-.

- · bric:t, - p l ..... windNntalo, n:. Clau...
Rio Granda, OH Call114·245·

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

5121.

446-1066
REALTORS:

Allen c. Wood, Realtor/Broker 446 '4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanene IIIJoore, Realtor- 266-1'746
llm Wateon, Resltor-256-6102
· Patricia Roee Realtor · ;

.

~

')C,";'ge IBath.
Don
Crill&lt; Rd.

~

::.:.e:..::.~S::'~~~a"'t,.tou'i:ino. IIOYA~
.-..~- ·~· ••

.--lor-.
.-.-...•~

,

r.1 111

-soo .,.,.....,..

.Tobia, I togo, claw IH1,
1111, 2 1111anolon1 W/4

E

JELLY With Siberian
eo Capoulao, 120. Cal
et.t ot8 13rt,1-81J0.281-008&amp;
01111111g

Snoonad Flrowood Sdcko 1
Stoneo Inc. 814·988-1120 Or

11~783.

rt. Older A¥on Capo Cod
leodon. Wtl1tm bOOkl

111&lt;1$100. Wadding~~~~~ HI,
olu U100. 904-773-llt 11.
[Mtl Han... 4x4 4 Whoolar STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gollon
13,300·1X8 Faotory Modo UtUity Uprlgh~ Ron Evano En1irprlooo,

.00.. 10447S-211411;

Tl1'hk,l700, 814 148 2Dfill.

Jockoqn. Ohio, 1-81J0.537·8528.

WOLFF TAHNING BEDS
TonAl Home
au, DIRECT ont1 SAVEl

~Uroi•Fnom

$100.00
lJoor llonthir l'toyroaa_FREE
Color Cltllog Coil TOOAY
1-«)0.71 Hl151.

•.

br1C1&lt; loON. loll

AKC Boxor llala 8 Waab Old;
111 Shocl &amp; Woo mad, Sir &amp; Domo
On

. . , ..... ptOud of, Low

of-·

m - WWIIIdln!l- a

811 1180281.

gaNg~:.
1/2 -

pool.
ut·lhow It to
· lullLet
-·

~~. 1131

Promloao UOO, 814-2&amp;e·

-od

3 SR, 1

2 pc. Contempora,Y style L.R. aulte~ recliner,
table t. 81ld tables, booki:ae, mah. deak, ~~~OKj
19" cOlor TV wlremote, 19" Zenith color
·5
wood dinelle .eel, 4 oak bar stools, credenZ8, 3
1940's B.A. aulte, 3 pc. B.A. suite, maple chesl,
wardrobe, B&amp;W PQ118b18 TV, file cabinal, Whl~
cu. ft. refrigerator, like new; 14 cu, ft. Kelvinetor
free refrigerlltor, G.S. trash compactor, ch88t

'

tor SGld StMcl

-

-

iii)\ ,it oti i im..n;;-.;.-- -. =·~

21103.
Chrioty'll'lto

271N.Socond-...o
Midclojl Or1. Ott
11&lt;'1182-1614

rM AORAHDIIAH

····~

94 Cindy Driv&amp;, Bidweli, OH

Sundriy, February 16,1997

2:00P.M. to 5:00P.M.

=~~

cenud .... _.lolon. Rl ...nour
Electra~, WY000008, 304-875-

"""'- Plno And. s.m..,~

1iR~..;-,;...,;;;11al~o.on
· Contm«c~~;j~~~~Wir~·
Ex· lng, s.Mct Or Rapalro. IJ.

....... lltlndt 0¥1&lt; 25 l*ilnot All Wort&lt; Gut&lt;-. ·EieCirlclan. We1o11 EltoFr.anch City Mo,tae. 114-4441· trio lf 4 -1441..850, Ga.lpollo,
ms.
CIHo.
'

AUCTIQNEER: RICK PEARSON He

.

· • . . _ , W'l
Ex-.trlx: Da1e Zulplln

.•

Auction Center: 304-773-5447 or

wv 25271

·•
~

Hcirne lot Malure Pine TrHe on the three ·
aides. Access to Raccoon Creak.
'
'
~In HObert Dillon Subd. $11,900.
. RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY. ·~
111110111 brand new ranch style home
OWNER FINANCING- 106 acres in reels In over 7 BaliS of woodl ·with
Guyan Township, mostly wooded approic. 800 It of creek frontage."Some
Tobaoco Base $29,000. ·
of the ·many lealures ere 4 ~ 2.
baths, 16x21 Kit w/range, refrig, :disp &amp;
RENTAL , PROPERTY INVESTMENT: OW. 15x15 DR, 16x21 LA w/frenc'h
This package consists of 2 houees and 2 doors, 2 large treated decks,.-)llllyl
lingle apartmante. The income from this siding &amp; an unattached 2 car garage. If
wiH more t11sn make your paymante. They you don~ want · to look at· yru
111e located in the Village of Vinton neighbors,
YOU MUST SEE THIS
$19,900.
.
ONe. ASKING $115,DDO.
.•

•

=~":r,:::."t.':

lor ~- COMIII!ACIAL
IUilDING
oppnox.
14,1110
oq.
ft_, _hoi
_
., _
_

~f1&amp;.~

RAC:COC)N CREEK LCIVEA:Sthis ~ and return to· quiet and
Feacefulliving. This 1 1/2 etory semichalet oilers 4 bedrooms. 2 1/2 baths.
$88,000
ovel'8ized · equipped kltchfn, sunken
•
living room. heat pump and · IIIIlCh
· EWMTON MY· 42 acres MIL fronts more. You must see the 60 to 900 fl.
St. Rt. 160. Mobile home site, old houee. creek lllew from this 6 acre· trect.
'Get out your tractor and bush hog. This $119,000.
one can be cleaned up. Priced at
$39,900;
.
RACCOON CREEK FARM· Located on .
Stale Rout 160 In northern Gallia County.
Approle. 1 mil$ creek frontage. 30 flatlote
surveyed. Water and electric available.

EXTRA NICE BUILDING· or Mobile

A•:: 304-773-6115 .
·. Terms: c..h ar Cloeck w11:o. ·
'
"~ofp~~

'

IN 0000

1':-!E!
COUN111YPARAIIIIEI-

,.wng of iPPfOx. 2.7 KfM, WI

•..

1

Reel Eetate Ge!MII'III

8UIDIY,I810N • line
bedroom ranch located In
_ _ ,...,...loDod, 1110111
will love U.. -

.

'

laid out

kltcnen wttn oak caolitett,

dad will love tilt attiCited

-andtna24•24llhop, u.. kJdo .......... fn.
........ pooi.Miho•••-

cozy Ranch nas a ttnlthld fol on en)oyllill llfeo¥-1
.
"
wlth fireploco, lllflllly .1:13
room, 3 br's, 2 batt., deck, 2 c
j ·.
•
garage, clototo -1120
-

, " DID YOU KNOW? .
.
-~··~C... be bought «w ulow a.

~-·-

H'emy E. Oeland Jr••~2259

il.~·?~:~~~ .
~,..\_ Aliltloilr &amp;And (»., . . . . fO%
· !IOwn.iiiMICO.IIIIICt prog.W.a ,ou c.i ~ •

"'

lor an.,.lor'

""""· 130.00. Cal
l"linlmlni ...-,. Spoclll .....

Sherrl L Hart............ 70-2357
... ...... .
-··~:

.

;,.._,M. &amp;land 99Utti
.
'

. ~bUilding .....'.iMUn!lpllill!ly, ~

lana ""'" .....
Thori
"'"'212ll/V7
Clvlaty.
Elcplrao

Office-......- ............992-2ZS9 .

. ' •·~
11bNtl
HJO(iw.nt
MOIUijorl or,
., ·_,.,
•
.••
,.r,

LAST

1~)

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
1-8(}0-585-7'1 01 or 446-7101

CUitOIII

· . .Oad1, open mud awl, f!lllng hill,, ;,
l!fuiJ:$IIoldllg vl1w1, WE HAVE in b:lta tr,ln
· · ·3iioreund up 8la1lng It 110.000 In ·
' .~~!*ion, Rail, Pib, Altii,Ja. Clift fOI'I'(_}.

ReaiEetatB

IJ!'

1-

lmprovetnellll

Comple• 10ial V-1111' II

OPEN BOUSE

':.

,_211.-a,

It 4 441 , •• w-1. qoatl.·.

-

oltlorhl or 111---. •10.
Holr c:lpping or - r cull.

'.

Eolimllllo,

Conc1111oNng, •
We llllol

,NEW LIST1NG· 1
mobile home Ia
eel up &amp; readY IQ move Into. This 6 yr.
old spec:letl oilers 2 BR'i, 2 baths, Plu8 a Pike. 1 1/2 story cottage Ia ldall
.
WB· fireplace . Lllcated at 157 Gr• . small families &amp; features 2 BR'a, plus ·
Tenilce Oriw $19,900.
,_ ¢arpel, heal pump, vinyl aiding &amp; a
OFFJCES, .OFFICES, OFFICES· Thai's . full baemant. $35,900.
what this 3,000 sq./ft. b.UIIdlng oilers.
'
.
Loc:atad on SR 160 near Holzer. Ideal for
many USM. Call lor more lnt&lt;lim~.
GREAT HUNTING LAND- 20 acr.as .
$19,000.

three bedrooms, 2 baths,
enclosed po~c:h, 48x20 shed,
allulled on 2 acres m/1. 14001 PORTERIIIOOK

oNr 110; no.l'ollpplngo. 110:
taoho,'10;._dlppo'IJ, I1G;con-

' 23 Locust St., Gallipolis, OH 45631 .
'Office: 446-M106 Home: 446-3884

'lllu Dool'1 Cll

A FABULOUS BUY! For
$3 •• 500 Mobile home with

-10-ga-l-ton_k_l_t_1u-p-,-,..-:-lai:-L-:F:-1,:-h
Tonk &amp; Pit Shop. .2•18.Jeolloon ·
Avo. Point Pleaaon1. 304-875·

Palrlcla M. Heyo, Realtor

-...._Allu.

lnfoornalton.

AKC Got- R o - pupL 904- .
771-IIIICM.

REAL ESTATE .-

.Rlfrlgefltlon

Now .., llnkl. 1 !On truoll I--:,::1 :::ES:':CER:;::r::F'=ED=~=··=
~WIItllol-toro.D&amp;RAult,
~
RlpNy, wv. aoH7Z-31113 .. 1LA~ EN.LU araws

~

-~~~~ -lait-11'¥ oiJit

VIRGINIA L. SMITH

oar,IO,DOO

... ••• 41·

-

~onlri1D;wconolo,

Genenol ·

""*

4WD, 3110 -..otne, CI!IW,. uMd Celli......,,.; piUW ......
OM 111011th M ...dH. tor .... Coil TGm 1104-875-4181.20 1Mf1
wucll.
_ . ,&amp;rod
- Wlrra~
· oooeOila•COli
fn. 1
· --·;...;....:_:.:_~
lltUC~Onl
I'~~-~-~
.
•110, oeu lot •100.
IU· 1140 EIICIIICallncl

•

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
Lunch

''

'
•
llRI'WMJ.
HYMfiiCh "'"""" Cnlp t11 It '14 Hona. Mol\

•a.-...........
._
=.--.....

COURT STREET RESIDENCE · · Older DUPLEX FOR SALE · IIIII o1c p1tr1 of
home hila lZ eep. units or could be town, live In one unit and rent the other.
back to 1 family dwelling. Face the parlland ei1joy the view.
•. ,

tM ll1ioMa Cll Clool. .,.._,
.

;a:-.:wm;;;---.1

Whlr1pool washer &amp; dryer, glaasware, baSkela,
books, set of lloule Lamour books, WOl1d
pictures, ruga, amal kitchen appliances,
pans, linens, lalllP!!. eafln type B.FI. lamps,
·
s~r. Seals Stereo. ·exerclee bike, · American
Tourist luggage, air conditioner, g8s heeler, harl!li
tools, ~w hl&gt;rees. ges grill, lawn furniture, 2
houeee, lumber 2x6'e &amp; 4x4's plus·more.
·
Auctlon11no -Note: All appliances and furniture ere
.like brand new. Don, miss ltlis onell.

ca. No. 211840'

l-800-45~9990

'

POIIIII~ITII8

Ripl,y,

llllllo.tt-~4111

. . , _ - . wli do o, - .
- - . . , . . . , n1 . _ For

. AUCTION CONDUCTED Bj

·Appalachian
. Lo1l
Strueturee, Inc.

'

=

1..,
........
.... _ Gin"""'
. . .,. 211a........

4111 Cllaoy ~ CHpe. •
lioo!IW, .ti,OOO ........... 1 =~;:-:E* . . . . . . . 4 . . .1
14 ClllwiOif! .081111t, 14,000

CIC cteneral. HolM Main-

...,_ Pall!ttno. ¥1~ llding,

Pftce Tranlllllollono,
111118.00 nl Up, Utocll
Reloul ~ All Typoo, 0... 10,000
Tra,...lliono. Clutci&gt;H 'Fii'·
~ Ovemooll Kill. .14-24$-

120117 • 124 ,.,, ~
roiMng, public: IAIIIM MtRibli,
Rollor ownocl. CIM lor more

11811.

AKC ~ChoW
814 ... 8547

Call or write for motre I

wv. For yow oonvenJence the Ht1~1

of Thamu A. B181ne of 1!60 Logan
Nlcldlepo!1. Ohio, hu been mCMCI ~
A~c:tlon c.nter In Muon, WV.

Dept. COT,.
P.O. Box614

.· 11·
I'I'YIAH RANCH! A l'lomt -

fO&lt;you.

M11011,

inl'ormalioa.

32 LOCUST STREBT, OALUPOUS, OHIO 4S631

Fnturine
Shull. S7S

-

··-"

Olllgn.

~~~
Mil..

'~
:-.

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Tammie DcWin ...................-.............245-0022 ·
446-4618
Judy DeWitt .............................. 44t -0262 Martha Smith ......................... /......... 379-2651
J. M~rrill Carter.. .......................379-2i84 Cheryl Lcmly ...........................,....... 742·3171
Ru1h Barr................................... 446-1093 Dana A1ha............. ............................ 379-9209 .

t..·

__ .,....

115,000.00 VLa 448·~
8828. :
12001 RAMIUNG TIU-LEYI!L
PERFECT
FOR
THE
town
EXECU11Vi!
•
loldroomo,
2
.1/2 . 3 bednn.,~ ~;;~i
bathl, lonnll jMng nn.
homo, goaat rm,
~- Fonnal
noi, c:arpal, 3 bay
wry nt.e . - In lilt
cor 111'111"· ..,.,ooo •·

:IS:

It a:M 50 ocm mil or prtma
development lind c:lo•• to
- , lf1&lt;l State Routt. PuiJIIc
UINitlll IWIIIII&gt;It. 1,.-c! level Ill
3811126'448 8808.
' for an 4»Poht.n•lt3U-1821.
·roMinQ. Excelentfor illwel~
12012 LOCATED ON 8R 810 12141 -ClOut QUALITY • Of COIIImerclal uoo. $155,000.
111'(. 4 - ·-· 1 batn, 3 , CONI111UCTEO HOME lillian COlt Patty Hayor "6 3118'.

loldroom 11 'RNIIY Ultra, liara'.
ft.. dick in tt.
""'· 2 c:or · 1 ac. Mt\. to¥o1
lawr1. FREE GAS.. Clll V1og1n1a
Appro• . 4500·sq.

Oldor'

acres mfl pluo a largo oam.
f35,000 .00 ~all VLS 381·

ee2e/U6 61108
.
121124 ITARTER HOME wHh 3

bodroomo, 1 bath. WBsiiOt

a

drjer wlhtay. Location In a good
NOigl-. C8ll Etta ~I'·

........

,,
~

_ , ..!....~·--:-

US SHOW
.
PRICED AT
$65,000 • Very
location.
Approx. 31 acres
a
• 28' x
60' Skyline Modular. . Home has 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bath In
t,laster bedroom hes a garden tub,
double sink, shower stell, Iota of
atorage apece, .caramlc top bar. lliand
range, thermo peyne wlndowa. C(A,
elec. heat with gas heater 1or backup.
10' x 15' front porch, new wall,
appliances. gravel driveway and large .
perking are.a. COME CHECK IT
OUTII
.
'

"•

kitchen

.

. belutlful
'
hardwocd. 11oono, ftlll

MORNING . STAR ROAD , 2 acre
building lite. Frontage•on Paved Roed.
Etectrtc an&lt;l water aYalleble. NC) Single
Wklea.. Lol 114 ASKING $12,000
,. .

.

.
I

'

.

M1DDU:PORT • ·N. 2nd Street · •
Commercial building • clownaml,. • 2
I'W)tall - buelioeaa room rents 1or $300
&amp; $200 mth. 4 apertmanll up and ·rent
at $200 each. $1,300/mlh. Potential
' GI'OA lnoome. ASKING $511,500.
.

j

dMdad
~am.lbii!O~;
car garage, fenced ltMil

POMEROY • . River Vleyv . • Houae ,.
needa aome ~~~:•· 5 room1, 2-3
bedrooms, part · ement• .could be
greet _rental . Stilet may con1ldlf
1lnanCing wtt11 down ·peyinllll. ASKING
$12,000

,.placement wlndowa, 1

lot, etonoge' bulldlllg. Ali
. ~.110011 Better hl.fl'Y,
laetlonglll136 "

won,

WISEMAN REAL-ESTATE, INC.

RUT'I.AND • One 1101Y rllich wtthliving

-~

446-3644 .
'. liil
DAVID WISEMAN, BROQR ~ 446-9555 ·'
IMeCtaMcDide•446-'1729
· ~wioido.44lolW7
.
'
• ~ Dirhtie Wqe •

1

Huge entertllnlng rm, malfer 882tf448 8108 ·

'

What More could
wlnl?? In town loQatiOrt.
Nloe neighborhood.
malntananca brick,
bedrOQIIII, ·1 1/2 · - . .
~ 1n LA, eql'lpped

u.. -·

12111. IIEAUTIFUL 3 ACRE
loOT MIL (no mobllt llomot)

IB

. ,..

In

.kllchon,
• pond 1- , . okl,- Ia~ call
1/1rGi1111381-11121- It&amp; 881l8.

.. (614)74l-3171orl......., ••
• . RUSSn.LD. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley,,.. :.. ,,,,.,742•3i71 •IIAIIOO

..

COIW-IICI

large

"~-.f'

L.lnd .Co. . ·
or 814-28&amp;008('·

a

treed yard

formll DR an.. nn w!WBFP, 1kll
ttoor MBA hD1 IIIIo ollil - I n

. .MEiGS COUNT¥·
. -BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

•

car

pool I pool

further ln1ormaUon .
11013· LUXURY HbME

oomtotntno etaeanca
wtrnoclem
4/!l 8flo, 3 balllo

. . . . . of . . . . . . For ..... iiiiPI ~

il

. 12013 ~AND CONTRACT· ·
8 rental · unite, . greet
Income &amp;low maintenance.
New root, ••little l
wl ndowo . Call Vlrglofla
381· 8828 or 448·8806 ror ·

190111. kitchen, dlnlno room, family
room, 3 beclrooma, 2 batha, home
held wtt11 B.B. hMI Md wood burnet

t.c11 up. 2 unit' 11r concllla neq, c.pet
1ll'ld vinyl noorlnp._ ~atalllte dllh,
. . I i r..ftellr..t UfiCI_aCI. Shingled roof

-lilouM
~
Ntfo fllllllp,
eov.
With wlr\ciOM.
dl;tl\"'IJ, n.w
lllelr II 11nef, 2 C1ll' ~ iond 12' X
14' lllld with 1 roll up dOor'. A$1&lt;1~

.....

..

·

mn WE
UVE IN IIEIGS COUNTY.
SHOULDN'TWE IIUPPORT.
OUR OWN??? CLELAND.·
REALTY IS THE. HOllE ·
:TEAM IN IIEIGS
THINK~ur

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kM., - - ron W/ bay - · Creek &amp; pao1tlng tor your iloal
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droam homo Call Pony Hoyo

thdureo, 2 o a r - goir., -

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' ·1 much mooe. Now rD!H lilt homo
lo malntaloance lrH.. Call VLS
3811 811:!8.
. · 12002 NSW IR1CK RANCH·
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largo livlllll room. Sltuotad on 2
ac. mn with I hOOk up 1&lt;X

anot11er mobllt nome. Smell
t.lc.e pride owning a beautiful pond on property. Juel ·· 10
BRICK - . Central foyllr entry mlnuttl lrCrn town. MUll NO 1D
-llrtio 1001111 tlwough out. ._..tol Only 120,0001 Coil
2800 oq. n. 2 car anaohocl Patty Mayor 448-3880.
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Poloo II right 131.,000. Coil Elit

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Gordon wins
·Daytona 500
crown
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VOL .7, NO. 201
011117, Ohio Y.llef Publlllllng c:omp.ny

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P~eroy-Middleport, Ohio, MOnday, Fe~uary 17, 1997

A Qoull'lllt Co. New ; ;

II

Speaker: like ~incoln,
GO·P··m-ust have· v.ision
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LOW
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By JIM FREEMAN
. Lincoln's inauguration . on 1861 Meigs, Gallia and Jackson counties
Sentinel Nfts Staff
was closely f~llowed by the C_ivil and eastern Lawrence Couoty, haS
. Meigs County Republicaps cele- . W~r. During his lint term he issued . not shared in the cun-ent economic
brated the legacy of President Abra- the Emancipation Proclamation, development u~ing thai has beneham Lincoln at Saturday evening's which oidered the freeing of slaves filed other parts of the -state like
annual Lincoln Day.Dinner at Meigs and pro¢1aimfd the fint Thanksgiv- Columbus and Cleveland.
High School.
.
·
ing Day during.his 5econd term.
, }~if! have til~ agRSsivc. No one
· · · J&lt;eynote speaker State Rep: John
Caiey, said Republicans today, from CoiUlnblls will take on the fight
A. Carey Jr., R-Wellston, fl:told t,he like Lincoln, mu~t have a vision.
· for us," he said.
s(!Jry of Lincoln starting wilh his
' Carey said his vision is to focus on
Efforts io secure economic devel~umble beginnings in a Kentucky log jobs_, highways · and education in opment in soulheastem Ohio have
cabin.
· southeastern Ohio.
been hampered by a Jack of infra·
A -self~ucated man who lost
He pointed out some of the goals structure: water, sewer, highways
more elections than he won, Lincoln of state Republican officeholders, and oilier utilities.
·
SerVed in' the lllinois Legislature includitig promoting self-sufficiency
Meanwhile, the Ohio House is
before being selected by the fledg· · through welfare reform, overhauling demonsJrating fiscally conservatism,- ·
ling, anti-slavery Republican Party as the criminal justice system and pro- controlling the growth of soate govits messenger, Carey said.
· moting ecooomic development.
emment and leading to the building_
Carey said Lincoln . stopped in
"We be)ieve in a strong, stable of a substantial rainy-day .fund.
Colll11!bus.on his way to his inaugu- economy that will help improve our
Carey pointed out three chal. ration in y.'ashington; D.C. While in schools and assist in highway devel- lenges facing the state in the .future:
Columbus, •he spoke on .the steps of opmel\t," he said.
·
electric utility deregulation, a new
t~e Ohio Statehouse. .
He said his district, CO!Rprised of
(Contlnu.d on Pqe 3).

UNCOLN
SPEAKER-:-- 511118 Rep. John
A.. C.rey of Welllton, etandlng at lfft, waa tha
apealler ·tor
Uncoln Day Dinner

Party. Seated '" right are county GOP Execu- ·
tlve Commlttea Chairman Charlie B8mllt and
·. Central Commlttea Chairman Bernard Gilkey. ·

·Rock slide.'s' aftermath·still
~ coveri· n ·g section of sR·62
By MINDY KEARNS

have been in it," she added.
tomers was restored by 9:30 p.m.,
OVP News Edhor
Following the initial · fall of the with a few minor_outages in the West
. WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.- A boulder, the dirt,
and smaller ·Columbia ~rea until S a.m. Morlday.
bOulder "igger than a school · bus, rocks fell, which caused damage to
Errett said lines will have to.be
.along with, earth, t.rees a.nd . po!¥er American EJs«tric Ilower facilities,
rerouted after cl~an·I&amp;Jl
1~;; ...
. lifleS,A:D~_ ~~ Route 62 Jl_lortlr~~ . · ~~!!IJing:irl' iJ1 ,intenul!tiol\•tl! -J .300 ., :f:i~~~l~~t
·~~~~, IJI~I\l!liJt'l~OhJr!itioa " cuSkl!JICrs served by the!Wds~f:q)WJI- ·
todliy, •ft~r a sll~ thdi llecurred Sun- bia 's~j~tion, accordjng to Mary Kent,
n.itoiw.ltion of
day shortly after_7:30 a.ni. . ,
district manager with AEP.
..
·~oip~ews had 19 wait
; l'hil ·Mason COlunty 911 Cen":"- - ~majority of custbm~rs we~
some time until
felt the
~ceoved lhe ~II from a nearby rest- swotched to be fed from the Soom area was safe to work in, and cable
dent. and Chuck Blake, Office of station temporarily, and were back in television crews also had to wait for
Emergency Services director, as well power by 3 p.m. Appro~imately 20 the power company to work on their
.,
. a'S membil,s of the Mason and New customers were still without power at lines farst.
·
Haven fire Clepartments, responded. that time.
·
Meanwhile, di_strlct engineers
A.lth~~~b. ~~ on,c: has bee? reported
A temporary tie-line was built to from the Department of Highways in
,•
rpossong; '\ os stotl uolknown of any supply power to West Columbia sta· Charleston .were evaluating the site
'
l'ehocles are unde"'!cath the boulder tion, and power was restored to ioll this morning, along with geologists, '
.,
or dit't.
,
customers by 7 a.m. today. Once the survey crews and officials. from t~
• Betty p_oush; who loves on debris has been cleared, the ·existing state Bureau of Abandoned Mine
, . Spilllf-111! Rlj~~
- .~ o~ ?f the first to faciliti's will b1f! re~?Wit. Kent said.
Reclamation.
s~e ~~·· M~ 'cil~ 9~1,. .
Temporary shelter was set up _at
IM:al DOH officials, including
. RouS.If'slil , hilil11/as in the b•· lhe Mason fire station for those with- . Superintendent Thomas D. "1\ocker"
ROCK SLIDE SCENE - Chuck Blake, aarly Sunday. The
the Hi:k·
mcnt of her home when she.heard a out power, however, due to the sw'ifl- Mayes and Assistant Supeiin.lenden~
dlreotor of the Ma1011 County Office of Emer· ground, nearest to Blake, Ia larger than a
I!Jud noose, whoch was the huge l)oul- ness of power company officials, it Ross Roush, were at the scene Sungency Servleea, Ia ehown above •• ha sur· school bus and. Is eattmatecl to weigh
der falling. She ran upstairs and ·went unused.
day. Crews worked throughout the
veya
damage that occurred in a huge rock . approximately 150 tona. Clean-Qp Ia expectlooked out the win~ow to see dirt fly·
APJ)f!lximately 1,000 cuslomen day to set up ,road bloeks and warn:
slide along Stata Route 62 In West Columbia eel to take several days.
ong, sandstone falltng and fire .shoot- were wiihoutcable television service ing_signs at all major road\V&amp;YS that
ing.. from the elec.~c !ines.
,
Sunday, 'which was also affected by connect with SR 62.
~~~~~--~--------------~--~----~~~-~
One resident said if the road was officials with the DOH &amp;cided not to ·
Some West Columbia residents
It was scary, saod· Roush, and the slide.
A local DOH official said this
do the necessary work needed, say- ..
really w,eird." She said she didn:t s~
Lester Errett, Cable Vision morning thatthey are looking at sev- were up in arms Sunday over the fact open, traffic would not have to be ing it would cost approximately
any cats near the. area, and woth II spokesman, said the line running eral days of clean-up efforts, and state that efforts had been made to reopen rerouted during the course of the
$36,000 to repair.
• ~ •
. ·
being Sund~y. traffic was slow.
aJong the slide was the main fiber officials are considering hiring a pri· a dirt access road through the West cleanup. .
Repair
work
was
taking
place •
.
Blake
said
efforts
had
been
made
"It was time for my son, Joe, oo get · link to all of Jackson County, W.Va., vate oontnoctor with heavy equipment . Columbia area, below the railroad
today,
however,
that
will
allow
emer.
to
have
the
road
opened,
but
district
tracks and near the. river.
home from ·working at A~erican · and Meigs, County, as well as upper to do the work.
gcncy
vehicles
only
to
usc
the
r&lt;iad
.
. A~loys.lt scared me iothink he oould ' Mason County. S~rvice to mosi cus-

Jtrees

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Tougher
prison rules
.. ~nder study

·Area twins taking th.eir
S &amp; L success story
on .the ·road with.book
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COLUMBUS (AP) - State law- ;.
want to make life behind bars •:
tougher for violen~ repeat and sex ; :
offenders.
;. ·
The free'wcights popular in prison ;:
recreation rooms arc already gone; •:
and.now proposals call for eliminat· ;,
ing smoking in prisons.
·
:.
Legislat(){s also want to house •:
prisonen in inexpensive, temporary :.
structures and give judges veto·pow. :~
cr over parole.
• ;. ·
State Rep. EJ. Thomas, R-Colum-· •~
bus, author of the proposed parole :.;
veto, said he hopes to see parole elim- : ·
inated someday.
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· HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) "The interviews brought back so
TWins Faye Hudson and Maye Smith many n)emories we had forgotten,"
are back at work after retiring as inil- Ms. Smith s~d.
. ·
Jionaires from the savings and loan
M$. Smitli was president and chief
bu~iness.
.
·
e~eciative, while Ms. Hudson' was
The two, now 73, are on a tout for, · vice preside~t and secretary. Ms.·
their book that details how they Smith generally handled the loans
a&lt;ivanced from bank tellers to exec- and Ms. Hudson handled the savings.
utives a1 the Point Pleasant Federal
Their rise, in banking began in
· Savings Bank.
' 1957, when Ms. Smith took a job as
In 1995, the two sold their 102- a teller. Her husband had died and left
· year-old thrift to Charlestlln's One het with an inf.nt son,
Valley Bancorp. Shareholders
I'
·
·
received·about $17.5 million in stock
About 10 y..,-s Iller, Ms. Hudson
and cash, although the sisters . staned as :a teller and Ms. Smith was
declined to say exactly how much appointed ~asow:r. Ms. Hudson foltheir shaie totaled.
lowed Ms. S!Rilli up the little bank's.
· Harper Collins Publishen bf New , cOI'p\lflle ladder.
YO..k approached the owo with a book
Ms. Smith was apwin~ presiProJlOS.~! shonly lifter the. sisten dent apout 16 years aao. In her
tired
tenUR, she helped-assets grow'steadi·
re "We didn'tthink it was astory at ly froin $2, million in, 1_952 to $S7
· rorst," Ms. Hudson said at a recent million at the end of 1994 as other
b9ok signing.
, ·
.
savinas am! loans folded.
Their families encOIII'IIpi them to
The sistcn, who still live in Point
pUrsue the idea and they started a· Pleasan~ say their lifelons •!'Ccess
year of interviews with Leslie was accomplished tJ!rough investi(lg
Whitaker. She wrote the'' 209,p~~e cautiously, watching'every dlme and
book titled "Maye and Faye's !Juild- lfeliting customen u close friends.
ing &amp;: Loan: The Story of a Remark·
"People say the~ want to read the
.
_,....,ood,
How
Twin
Sisters
boOk
tb see how we 101 to be millble Sl
.....
,
li_
....
.n
....
," Ms..Hudsotuaid. "Things
R.!U' the Cleanest, ~ildest B~k in .
Ainerica and Did l{ight by a Whole have 'changed so milCh since diem,
'JbWtt."
though. What we did was so simple."

•
•

make~

"'

"~re should be no parole -

Vtrslty. The twtna' book, "MIIye

Mel

Joayn

Bulk;llng and Loan," ...Ia their atory of going
from tallarl to 0WM11 of I banking bulfneaa
1n Point Pli8llnt, w:va. (AP)

: ·
period, end of story," Thomas said. :;
last week. "If you get nailed for I !I :'
yean.:,:ou'regonefor IOycars. That ~ ·
sends ~ ~age out." .
:
~ •
· House Bill 130 would allow :
jodges to object' in writini 1o I •
,parole approved by the Ohio Adult ' : ·
· Parole Authority. A 1111111imous vote ~ . :: " ~
of the parole bolni *ould be neces- ::, ' '
sary to overturn the Joadae's veto. . :"'
But not -.y.- ia happy t(ith 1
Ohio'spt·~"'JPiod•~ : ·
"We believe thiiJ r " as i&amp; iu11n •
now, is c!lnoplllllly -· ~lpd," :
said Dayton ' - - t Pluta Byte, : :
Ohio pr II idut ~ CitiYu U&amp;liled far ;. .
Re'IW!ilitaliotl of~~~·'
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