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B6 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. ..Tuesday

Meigs County, ·council on Agi.ng,.Inc.·
Multipurpose Senior Center, 1st Floor
(740) 992-2161 FAX ~40) 992·7886 .
112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
E-Mail Address: mccoa@eurekanet.com
TIIANKS TO 1998
·Thank
for
support
SERVICES&amp;
. FOR SENIORS AT .

£0NTNIBIJTORS ·
SERVICES&amp;
PROGRAMS' FOR
SENlORS

'

THE MULnPURIOSE

SENIOR CENTER

Choir- MWclleport Chanlo of Clorioa
T._y TaYlor
Tam c..p-ter
&lt;lariat Aeocle..,. Bell Choir Billy Lee

Evening Meals

Re.p~~e
. who ....

.FIIDell Ceatet

F-...,..._.,,

·Rocklporlap Ualtecl Metbodlot Womea
.ML Mot1111 Cllllfth of God· Ladles Auxiliary ,
. ltadiM Ulllled MetWIIt W""'""
Rldllla.,ciiiS.S.&lt;laa14
Eut .Letart Unl!ed Methodist woHomlock Gron Chrllllu Cbuldl- Faithful

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Protectin/Lepl Aulstuce

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benefit quatloal)

Tax Asslstaace
Tnmspilrllllqa aad Escort
Wellaess and HUath Pnveatloa Pmg.-s

Saoufrer FIM ol Wety ·

llubetl a 'nooltu Oollila

=~= .

~~0:::~"

Eddie Gordon ,
Goldie Pr&gt;ham

,.._..~..._
Ioan ......
..Role Corliu

Pauline Atkins
Stella Atkins

WalttrOrccn .
JICt a Marthl Orccaaway

Erie4t Griffin

Raymond CotlcriU
Ida Cowd&lt;ty
Laun O&gt;mt
Anhu• ~

Ralph &amp;dgley

Ed Bae•
Ann Bliley
MII'JUCI Hill Baker
MuyBall
Mattie Ball
·Aarlan &amp;Aha Ballud
~ad &amp; Hazel Barnhill
Elizabclh Bur
RUMell Bart
Sybi!Blrr

co-ac. Craie

Oe.ald Crawford

l010ph a Lelia &lt;iortlcaM

C. Ricbanl Crow
Clwl01 Crow
Su• ~·'I
~ •ms
Gladys Cuminp.

)lob Bamlt

Robcn &amp; BoMie Barton
GoldicBuham

LewiJ .t Unda Ha~per
fM1eoc .t Janet Hurls
Hilda. Huria
Mary Huris ·
Ted It ~I Hatfield
•-~- u-·k
~- ...,.
CalvhiA Jean Hnk ·
01ar1c1 a Ocraldino Hawk

Hclca Dailey
• Olp Daniell
' Leo .t Mary ~ldaon

Lu""' Davidooo
Eliubtlh Davl•
Mu a Arlene Davia
Willie O..ls
•·
RetDay

4-dia DeLona

Bing
Guy A Freda Bin&amp;
•J:.owell Bin&amp;
.eo~ Bin:h
' Leota Birch
·. Mary Alice Bisc
· Aabley .t Mugorite Disltop
Uoyd Blackwood
John&amp; PJUc Blaatnar
Owks &amp; Daily BlatcaJcc
Wilda Blaney
Helen Bodimer

Ulllan llenloW:y
u.- ..___

Alta DDI

J, Dill
S. DiU

~

&amp;lii!IDoillla '

--

Fteda Doul!..,
IWbcn a lolulno Dural
~-•~ ~·
Muy-....y

--

Arena Bl1tklea

Em... Boodaklt

- -

Glldysllrotho..

lirodll!udlaaan
~.. a Ri~ llockley
· Dona a Mtwy o..nc:11
Mulot 8utc:kr

,

Elizabeth~
Frodl earpe• 18no ~-~,..··Deny ,Caney
.. Morice.l:&gt;wAina Wilnl.&lt;cOlldpCitafler:
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•

'Ridtud

··

1!.. "'- Cl!atObaa

iiliChaproan

.

M...,.~ Cllapman .

Mulha O&gt;apman
Leafy Ooutce•
William Otildo

Exa.MaeOuiolian

MaaleyOtrialy
Cin:le

fiOienr:o Clodo
LwlaOtdc

~QIHI&lt;

· ~~~_;CaB

.'~

Sua11 Hall
Haoy 0. H_,let

~--

' Mi1y Joll-

Nellie .ro_,.._

Sanh Powlor

Lewla
Vktl Ke•lllly

--~

-

~

......-

Hazel Smltll'

Nlcle

Holen~. Smitll

· ~Smith

~
""~••

MarySm11h

lol-stJ&lt;ne&lt;r
Vanoes.,e-t

'

- sL Maiic •
UllluStaloata

.......r • Sarah Piilcet

Hdllc~~
~= ~
·
Y

Duatte Slaftley .
1'111)' s-n.
Joaei&gt;hlne Slllea
Hany • Mary Slol!an
PemdoraSiory

llelterl'ect
Albertol'lodv~

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g:::;:r

, o,o1 Kfoa

dittdoo J11cor

,

A&lt;ldio h!RI

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........

~

~n=:

_.lcSiory
llvelyn siowo
A-.;e Stratton

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APPRECIATION TO:

Kroger

. Dri

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w;.:; ~.......

0 - · v ....... . . . _

a.-.......

~-OetoldPulluio

'

~-~~~·
·=~.!:.Rolph
- • .._..

y GIUian
n 8oei .
.,
Q:rol)'ll ~ · ElCa'!"f .Smllh

,

Qt. Kolly Jtoush. Chl!opnctorHOlzer PlniC

lilopb"!!ie Synder,)',T.A.
I\Hoizer Home Servl""'

Doll!ll GrOner· Appalodtlan

Al'ta l'luplmiOitio

Pricey 11eten

· l!x'-lon omco ·

=..v.-..

Ncv A Wlnaie Wltlte

~-

Blmcrl\lftl
Phyllis Turner
Opall)i"" •
Frltll: Upton

Iva Up10n
:l1teodore \ltr!Cooney
Frltll:\\.....

-""""""

Row.na 'l'ltiPu

·

Olen a

:

Roltena-wtlaoo

• I.

~~

· · ·• .

Cyndi
Seurklmp- Uoivellily
_,.
Wdtwottslohio
Aaron Wolfe

Jelf'l'homton "

I.ai 111111 Miiy DaVidoon
Bemodlne Synder ,
'Doa A Belty Maurer
Hal ~

.

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&gt;

Vl'JiiWJ-. .
~WI­

Don~
e..lytt .........

Alice ll!bt(;T'

...,..

'

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. Jim Vcnnori

Raymond -..iu
Mobel-11

JIIIC WaiiOII
Wlt'd

.,

:=~:.
_,..,_... "•

Maryn..itet

Daa .t """'''" '"""'...

CarlJewell Weld)
AudnW.K /

Heouy We!U

-·

..... Wells
Brneaine Werty

·8'

...~~~ ··

thing today, so that when this week's bill
comes.in on Thursday, y;e'\1 have the money
to pay It on Monday," Campbell .said.
"'INc desperately need your user fee to pay
the bills," Campbell said.
·
~ile the commi~ioljers discussed noli· ·
fying .Pmpbell ' of the ' unpaid balance of
their share oflhc user fee -$11,900- they ·
took no action Monday to pay it Other
de.,_,.ments paid their user fee last year on a
per-employee basjs,
The commissioners, in the meantime,
have begun considering purchase of insur·
ance from a priva.te provider, and eliminating·
the selfoinsurance program.
C~mpbell also discussed lhe county's
general finariciaj.bealth, noting that the com·
missioners will not be able ·to make payroll

t

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&lt;m•'

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Land use
ordinance
in works

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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Village Council wiil be asked ~
approve the first of a series of ordi·
nances relating to land use 'and
downtown improvements when it .
meets on Feb. 14.
The Middle·
One of~ ·
port Olmmuni·

........,..
l,uua dis·

lip of

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highway or considered neutral have
qulf the committee or refused to attend ·
any;additional meetings.
· ,
1'he highway has been the. topic of
sevFral public meelings in recent years,
beJAnnina w'ith a March 10, 1994,
m
g atAI~xandcr, Middle SchliQI in
Ath
Olupty"
, her meeting was held on Jan.
15, 991 at the Ohio University Inn in
Ath
with the most recent meeting
. 13, 1999 at Meigs High

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Candidates greet
poll day ~t dawn · ·

.

Good

'

· ~fternoon!
. ·,

Tod_.y's

.Sentinel

.
'
:·. CONCORD, N.t~. (~~Seeking a laSI-minule cc:!F,'

l Sedlons -12 Pa&amp;a

in a heated and compeliti~ primary, presidential candidates were heading IOffac:torytlltes and pc)lling place~
~ as notOriously cantankeroua New Ham~re voterl
jirepared lo leltle the islue.
. ., . As the,org1111lzatlonal muscle swung into play, the ·~cry
11\etoric of the pat few days ·w11 muted • bit, and lOme ·
C9nlellden cleartr were happier 1Mq others.
"Bring your · friends, brina your 'fimily, briaa your'·
· rJecc11ed friends," jOked 1111 upbeat RepUblican Sen. John
MCCain. "We have to aet our 1i0te ou'''··
. •, '"This is one of the most exhil~ng moments of my
RPiitical career," said pop rjval 'Thxu Gov. 0eorge W.
Bl»h. "lt's·all downhill (rom lim, I'm optimillticl" •
' · New Hampshi~e voters traditionally show up in helvy
""'"bers f9t the first•in·the·nation primary, and there was
· lillk 1a10n to believe that would dwtge. Forecasters
dlc:ied only II~ and lalllmld lltOW abqwers for the
tllllon'1 first presidelltial primary - hanDy enough to
all'ec:t IUIIIOUL
',
In the earliest v91ina today, VOtcll In the tiny norlhem
iilwits f. Dixville Notch and Han'J Location pvc Bradley
-.ill Mi:Cain .the early Ifill·in voting at midnljbl. Bradley

~

Clllodl[

i::IIIIIIDI!!I

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w~ ·

· Coml!1

1!5

i!lllorfall
:Slblbllrlel

M

·Sagl:ll
Wglbn:

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II·~
~

Lotteries

•

w.yA,
forlhe '

.'..

. PIMH ... Prtmlry, P~ge A3

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was

membelli
Iince Its
appointed by
re-fOi'mld ..
Mayor Sandy
lannarelli and · last year has
other interested bfenhOwto
Middleport
.
retDU
residents, met
last week to bUsinBSSn in
discuss
changes
in
MIIJdUport;
ordinances
dealing with
the physical appearance and the
business climate in downtown Mid·
dleport.
·
The group decided to ask Oerk
Bryan Swann to dr~fl a , proposed.
ordinance that would prohibit street·
level residences · in the downtown
business distric~ except in those
buildings specifically designed is
residential dwellings.
One of the issues discussed by
the CDA since its was ~e-formed last
year has been how to attract retail
businesses in downtown Middleport. One of the obstacles deter·
mined· to be a deterrent to potential
businesses is the lack.of appropriate
storefront buildings in good condi·
tion which could be used for ~etail
business locations.
·
At the present time, at least two
residences are loca.ted in downtown
storefronts, but lhe CDA discussed
the possibility of others unless
action is taken to prohibit such use
of business houses.
The group illso ~eviewed a zoning
map approv~ several years ago for
the village, that sets forth the confines of the business district, as well
as1residential and other areas.
The CDA will continue to review
ordinances in an attempt to "beef
·up" existing ·ordinances 1111d propose.
new ones designed to promote IQtal
ietail business and. small industry in
the village, according to Myron
Duffield, who is overseeing the ordi·
nance ~eview process.
'
· The sale of second-hand merchandise on village siclewalka, park·
ing issues and signage regulations
are , among the other topics to be
reviewed by the CDA in the next
few weeks.
Meigs County Commissioner
Mick Davenport attended the meet' ing to discuss economic development effortS in the county, 1111d how
Middleport can benefit from thole
efforts.
,, ·Davenport urged the atot!P, to
develop and muket , (191ential 11~
fbr •mill industrY, 1111d 10 ~eek jjrailt
funding for downtown improve- : •
ments.
· • ·
· The group will meet again on
Feb. 1o in village .counc;ll chlllilbin,
and the meetings IIJ'e open to tha
public.

downtown

.

$hopping

theCDA

.attract

U.S. 33, P1ge A3

~....;..,... Window

: , CAMPAIGN 2000

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.ROUTE OF CONTENT10N - The
.development of U.S. 33 from·
Athen1 to O.t'Win hu bHn • hot
topic locally alnce the Mrly 1Sie08.
TheM photographl, talcen It locatjonl two mllee ajlllrt on the high·
w1y, ahow tha v11t dlfferenc•
between the curving two-1- U.S.
33 from Athenl to O.IWin, which le
under conelderatlon for repllcetnllnt, and' • "modern" four-11118
portion of the highway ·betw•n
Rock Springe 1nd Dl!rwln completld more than 30 ynra 11110·

cic membelli e.ither opposed to the

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on Feb. 16 unless they approve an advance ·have traditionally taken 1111 advance draw .in
draw on first·half property tax collections.
order to meet·operating expenses prior to the
Campbell said that lhe general fund will tax seltlemen~ and noted that lasl year, that
have a balance of $24,000 after Wednesday's advance was approved on Feb. 16.
payroll, and that the commissioners could
In other business, the commissioneiS met
advance $37,000 inlo lhe general fund from wilh Bernard Kinder and Randall Lambert,
the collection of taxes to date.
representing Buckeye Joint-County Self·
The commissioners, by law, are allowed Insurance Council, about the commissioners'
to advance 90 percent of collections before request to withdraw from the council and to
!he first-half real estate settlement in March~ seek private liabilii,Y and comprehensive
"Whether we make payroll or not on .the insurance. ·
16th will depend on what we take in from tax
The county took action Monday to with·
revenue for an advarlce before then," Camp- draw from the council, but its actual with·
bell said.
drawal is dependent on the approval of other
In addition to February's second general counties participating.
fund payroll, payment for county bills will
The council atlows counties to join togeth·
go out on Feb. 7 and 14.
•
Howard noted that the commissiorieiS
Pleaee Budget, Page A3

r:e·'·

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Sec
,

Carol Tannehill

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Social urily Administration
MRP .
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Willie and .... Crabtree ........

U!lda King· ,OSU
Jlxteooion omco·
Meip 'Courily Sberilf's Dept.
Mlureen Bums
' 1'11111 ~ '-'
i
·
Keith Ashley '

Morio

You.. .

KeMy
Faye Wlldenolllll
Normon AAllepa WIU
Jolla Will II"'!
BellyWIIIo ,
Bemlec Wllt\&gt;n
,

Be!:ty
Doer- Offtce
OSU '
ElteMioo

Judy

Do~y Anthony
Art Conant &amp; The Happy
lfollow 11oys '

· Aria Council
Joon 'M&gt;lfe.. Peoples Bank
Sllaron Smilh- OSU

'

S&lt;bool F.F.A
Kina ond slaft
Nancy Porker Compbell and
staff

Beuy-.r

-TIOt&lt;noll
.

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Cay Crow
Elijah Routh
'Danny Routh
Dave Spencer' '
Aaron Say,.- Southern Hlah

TodW.....
DoMitl Wcavo•

Halon Swutz

-l'n&gt;llll

~ICIIde·

D Stewart

..

Roser I&lt; Belly 'lOney
Melvin a Oeryude 1l'ocy

JIJICI

OencvieveSwanz

Muy Prioi

Lain """" ,
ain Krldar

&lt;:::eo1 Oblinaer

I~~;~&amp;~Riftl=·~·~- ------~
Danay11Uio
Paijlinc 1111i&amp;

·Pat Thoaw
Margaret Parker
Scoll Powell

fl!iity Lonaenette.

PomeroyEiementatyScbool

Harieae Tllompaon.

Howud Frank &amp; Slalf
JUdge Robert lludt .l Slaft

E!jecn Buck

VauaJwt •s Onxiery , ,
• Coon ,... __ .__
Mctgs . ty .........,.r of Commen:c

HaroW,__

bavid Faro, Podlalrill

lop Corder ·
Dr. Mlf&amp;le Lawson

o.-Warnet ',

I!Ytlya....,_
AllcleSinobio

Elwoodftllltpo

Corlao~

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Pomeroy ~ Office
Meigs County Fair Bollrd

'llleltoa.-

· a - Knlpl .

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Alleeoiol.ar '
&amp;wlaA .

Elale Smith
Fndcriek SmUh

:llaroldot-o.tey , M~~

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lle!ty,.
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Qualily Print Shop

Met""".CountyPublic''...__
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RoseS!
Emcrgeocy
Man.scmcntAgency
F
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OeoqjoolPhylli&amp;Sitinao•l armers"""""' v•...,.. . .-Benjamlio .
Racine Home Na!iona18ank,
Bob Smilh

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Mmla Koller
Kellor

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Maples Sewing Circle .
Holzer Wellness Department
Feeney Bennett Post 11128
Pamlda
of¥RJDD Conlliluity of Care
Mineral Lodgc112421.0.0.F
The Gideons lntematiolW '
Snouffer Fire It Safety
Olive Orange Memorial Postl¥9053- Bingo
Dan's
Unit (VMH)
Francis FloriSI
Fund .
Meigs County Retired Teachers Association
• d..,_, o..l~
~~lh . Herbal
SUbway
~on&amp;.
....,
Sage Tea Company
AmericaD Elearic Power· General James M.
Servicei
Gavin Planl
•--t··hian ~~llDUDiiJ Vi . •
Locker 219
"'
lilting Fisher Funeral Home
Meiss County Employee Retirees. Inc. (PERI) ........-

HarietteSinelai•

MllckedSmitl!
MaloNanto
; · RUjhSBiith
JiooWIIIc~w ~•i · ' ' . 'Bemldlnc Snyde•
~· ""'
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ElloOtlloilio
B'lly
•- Mary Kay
Pearl~
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Pl!yllisSimpkins

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findllol

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PaweD's

Mary Sltamblln
Olldys Sl!elklo

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PlllkiaShaln

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•, .,.lleolllloc
Nev~le '

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Jo1fota ,
booothylrilno

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Ooi!o

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Walmart
Muiaolloboteller
O'Dell Lumber
IWbcn A Clwlc:nc Hoeflich Judy MdWrle
O!tdrua Schaekol
King Hardware
MltUa Holllun
J - M&lt;!Coo
Tn:U ~ Edna Sehoenleb
Ctarlell lolcLaln
Don&gt;tky Scllwonz
· Middleport Trophies &amp;: ~es
ACCESS
. =~·
~Hood
l!lltool&lt;ft]II~Mct.llllon Katltleen
I'NrlSamSam
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MlWiod 1. •
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Baum Lumber .
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Seliauil&gt;
~ia HOyt .
.1&lt; Nollie Mk:haol
Jean Seldenal&gt;l•
· Cbeslcr/Sbadc lliitorical Assoclatloo
tony A 1!41c H - ,
Wll- M -· ' Fnnols Shaelfe•
~ntinulty of Cm
0i1o-.,. ·
· • · ~ fo!lUer ' . ·' ,. •Ooldlc Shafrer
·-Htid.on
ru . • 1\Milloo
JoMJoc:SIIUn
BigBendFoocllaad

-..

-EBod&lt;y Fukao
AltoPtmll '

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'tor claims submitted by doctors and other
providers, for services provided those
employees who participate in the county's
health insuranc:oe plan.
For 2001Ho date, those bills ~ave . aw:r· .
aged around $20,009 a week, Campbell said.
· •The belaftt:l' ;in tho. inslirance fund, as 'of
· Monday, wai $8,000, without considering
the llddition of February pay-ins, but consid·
ering the payment of this week's.bills; Campbell said, as well • M¢ical Oaims SerVices' 1111d re-insurance administrative fees.
On Monday, Campbell urged the commis·
sioneiS to take action to pay the balance of
their 1999 users' fee into the fund. ' Cain~ll
said ttiat payment of the fcc Would al)ow the •
countr to pay this week's bill.- cin time. ··
"Once again, I'm asking you to do·some· .

By JIM FREEMAN
SenUnel N - Staff
COLUMBUS ,-·Ohio Department of
Transportation officials, in a letter submitted ¥onday a.ftemoon.to regional media
· outlets, defended both the,U.S. 33 project
from Athens to Darwin and a committee
.appointed to study issues surrounding the
" propliCd hi&amp;hway. •
.
.'. Q~ pirector 00rd&lt;?n 'J'roator 'Mii
. 'Chief-of Staff t;&gt;ave Celoil~ sign~ let·
ll!r, which states work Will jiioc:eedlln the
new. 13.3-mile, $90.9 :million ltiJhway
barrihg the development of any · new
issues..
'
"However, until such issues arise, we
will proceed with the new highway and ·in
the di~ection that the ·majority of the citi·
zens in the region.have advocated," they
wrote.
The two said the Cilizens Advisory
Committee was appainted by ODOT to
offer c.itizens the oppoftunity tO raise new
signifiCant issues about the proposed new
highway, ind itt that 'regard they say the
CAC has been successful.
However, they pointed out that high·
way opponents have raised no new signif·
icailt issues,
· ,.
Celona said ODOT was able to resolve
new issues over two ~egionally endan,gered species, the Burying Beetle and the
lhdi1111a Bat, by implementing mitigation
strategies in a revised environmental doc·
/ ·
.
'
'·
·ument.
The letter also shows the offiCials'
. frustration at trying to please both sides in
the debate - and failing. ODOT's contin·
ued design work on the project, dn an ·
effort not to penalize the apparent majori·
ty .who suppoJ1 the project, drew sharp .
criticism from highway opponents, while
hil!t"!'ay supporters criticiUd ODOT for'
bindina over ba.:kWards·to please people
opposed to the highway.
·
·
, In December, and also this month, six

Phone - - - - - : - - - - - - -

Holzer Hospice
Rocksprings llehlb
·s~ath of Life 1Cch ,
OU COM Arthritis Program
· Ohio River Bear Co.
Rite Aid
Wendy's
McCiures (Pomeroy)

Junes&amp;:: Pllrida McHiffie ~'!~Sa&amp;:,!.'rothy S•yrc

OlaH-

Edno-

SanhCaldwell

a lolanha Hill

• lol~~

Maipritcl!t*OI!' · :.

Dorltc.ider

Madelyo
Dub Mellaaldo
Ken MeEih-y
Paul &amp; Neva Mel!boy

ld&lt;aulll

-R.Hyaoll

~--

I'OIIyBI&lt;hloiler
Edna l!ppet'aoo,

Oktin ol

_.,.......,_,

~--~

Veta Buchinan

Vl...... lokacUI!Itd

;;:;;,..._" ·

- - ··

,Vl'Jinia B.ct.anon

lolapdalcnc Rusocll
~'I R••-ll.
·llarl&gt;ua Supnl
Daisy Saundm
Helen Saunde"
Joy"' Sallfe"
lleny Sayre

1

n

ODQT,terms
U.S. 33 group
successful -

t=

to~~ Kav Roush
-~
'
·
Ann Rupe
lldna R,...ll

---....

I

• I II~~
!Jttdo!IIIC
Myron A J-Dullold

Joya-.
Blleonllowots
JcnnlcF._IIoyce
Billy lkewcr
Pauline .&amp;ewer

Kathryn Robson
Jolanda Root '
Harold Roush
Holtn Rouah
Manning &amp;. Ramona
Rouoh

AvlolokCiollau

Bohbi Hoblteltcr

Nino~&gt;!.~ Dowtolc

lolale-

Nonp Robens

Nina ltoblnson
a, •-~
• 1- ·

~ MoAnp_

Mary Hlndy

· - Dilluot
Mltt!liolll.-

Dorothy BoiiJn&amp;a

,

IWbcn

ldal)id!l

llllllloolb

1

Jaddo Hlldcbftnd

Man:ia Deoloon
Carol Dennis
Earl 4: Betty DcMy

llorotlty Robt:ns

Sanlt Mt:Cany

··-..-

·-• ~·..-Y

OeMide Ritt•

Don A Bcay Miura
AIU; May
Bruce a lou May
1.. Moy
Betty Maynard

Hawk ·
leek It EllzabOth
Hawley
Tllelmo Hayes
K. u -

HolurHomeCareofVMH
Racine Gl1lJI8e 112606
AmericaD Red Cross

llulli Rillle

Elma Loob
' Beary Lowe
Anpll Lucu
Carol Lunafonl
Rc:.lnna Minllly
~ Mamnko

VI,.UA~Hamm

U.l&lt;hle Rill&amp;'
Muy Rinehan
Joaephlnc Ritchie ·

{barlcs Rife

Mary l.oudnu

Sompoon .tJ... Hall

Ellen Rife

•inc R;'dcnou•

r..u

--

-

'

Ualt

Fralcmal Order of Eagles
lnHearing
American Legion AWIUiary 11128

D... ••

M&lt;tdic loD&amp;

Mtolytt ol Ennal!ompton
Villl:illa Hanlon ·

,..,., Cummins
Polly Curt~

"---...oL
ru._.a_
Mli..-UI NIV\IR

S1nglt· Cnpy · JS
-

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ORGANIZATIONS AND BUSINESSES

John IIi"'

u;;:;;;

James &amp; Bubita o.....,
Lorry Onte~et
p, Ho1J

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Address - - - - - - - - - - - -

· Kathy M- Vloloa Reltaltlltadeal'hedo-. lac.
Sherilr J - !loaltoLy .. .
.
Roebpriap RohaiJ!I!tado. Cealeo' · •
Kathy Tloomu, R.N. Charleo Roher 4mW...,ry SMpry

Dianna Reynolds

Ptanc
. il r l..:..t(oot
Opal
Bill a lolulne Utdo
Doto4hy....,.

Mlljorie Grimm
Olrialno o.......
Doria o.......

Sentinel N - 811ft

NatDe---------------------

SHARING SUPPORT CROUP TOa
Be.kr a--LIP c-.1y ,......._ s.nieo. ·

=.~r

MaryLcc
Jeanne Lictwller

-Page B1

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: POMEROY- Olunty employees' insurance. claims may ~emain unpaid next week,
:d11e to ,a la.:k of funds in the Meigs County
employee health insurance fund,
. County Auditor Naliey Parker Campbell
· met with the commllllioncrs during their reg·
. )liar meeting on Mondly to discuu the elwin·
&lt;Uing bal1111ce in the self·il)lurance claims
fund . .
Campbell said that the county received a
Iiiii ·last Thursday for employee claims from.
Medical Oaims Services of Ravei!SWood,
w.~. the county's third-party health· insur·
. ance adr1rlnistrator, for $15,000. Another bill
for claims is due this week.
· ·· MCS bills the county on a weekly ba5is

Bob .t Golda Reed

freda LukJu
Walt Laudcnnill
Jcanenc Lawrence
An:hic &amp; June t.c
Billy Lee

.keep streak alive

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 166

By BRIAN J. REED

THANK YOU FROM THE CARINC &amp;:

.

Jack Uno&lt;

aan. &amp; MaxiM GacJiein

Bonnie Conde
RIIby ,.....,._..
......,....,
Zelia CoppM;I;

JuneAsh~y

· Judy Gcllle

---

:Auditor, commissioners tackle budget

··················~····

0

Linda Klaa-11... Couty r.........a Sonlee.. ·
Tom Lo-ry· Computer Perl-e. 4 U.......eo

Middleport Cbiii'Ch of Cbrlat· Senior Youth Group

Arlee Abtion
Emma Adallla
Coral AJexandar
Graa:AIIen
MIJilR:I Amberger
Shirley Appleby

You may atop Ia •t the Sealor Cea~r or
mall your membership to: Meigs County
Mallipurpose Sealor Center, P.O. Box 722,
.Pomeroy, Ohio 4576,, If possible, please
iadudt a stamped;· self-•ddresaed eavelope.
lballk you for your support.

Ron Eu1men

. Coolvlle AJitaheay Metllodlst Cbun:h

DO ATIONS

home~~enlces. .

W.....tlln,- Health ReooYcry Scnieeo
u-ard 4 Wilnut Porker
Dixie Say"'

~ Uallell Metbodllt Youth Group

•.

•.l

"""'•Y .

Mlllloaary Society
. PPI--roroy Ual!ed Methodill Church
Jlutb·d Cbun:b of the Naurene
l!alel po be Ulll!ed Metllodlst Cbun:b
'-no)' 8enll Day Adveadst Cbun:b
lllllolde Blptlat Churdl

so,

•

Allee Wolle

RadDe Ualted Metbodllt Mea't BreUfut FUnd
Flnt Bepdlt Cburcb· Berlhl M. Sayre

lnsuraoce/llledleal farms and UIIWertDa

The COlt of membenhlp for 2000 Is $5.00
per l,acllvldul. Whllt Is your $5.00 ued for?
Tile dollars r•ised throu1h tbe Mel11
MaiUpurpose Sealnr Ceater Membership
a!!llpalp wUI be used to PIIY for the COlt of ·
prilltiq ud malliDI the -slettet Iii limes
Per)ear aad. ~ local !DBtell clollan for Ia~

BettyLUb

Thppen l'lahll Cburcb ofCbrllt
'1\inlty Cburch
·

Support AMiatance (for example, fiWwa oat

.

BeUJDean

·Mlaloary Fellowlbip

. 'Redred alld Selllor Volunteer i')OjiUI

.

Mleholle Grepry. l'loum.c"""Boomie MeFuloood, R.N.- W Coordlaatorllloltter Med!eal Ceatet ·
K...,eth Wlfll- M... Coaaty lleey~uer Coottrol
Tile Scaior SoMe Tr.pe
· .
.

Followen O.U ·
PoDien&gt;J Cllurdl of Cbrllll· Adult Clua
Flnt Bepth! Clnin:b of RaclJie.. Ladlri

Reereatlo!WISodll Actl"dls

Your pd4 membenblp to the MelpCoua~ .
CouacU oa AaJ•I• laC. Ia 1 metaare of
support for the MDIUpllrpose Selllor Ceater
aad far the -•Y services II pnivltles. EKh
pahl membership received verifies to
rqlolial, 1t1te ucl uUoul faadl11 ap!ldes
th•t the Sealor &lt;::eater Ia provldlaa Deeded
prOji'lllllil to older adults.
·

A....,_,. ..

CHURCH DONATIONS
'

lleclly B-. M... c-y ,_......_ Sonleeo
Boy S.0111. Uoop 299- G,.. MeCioiiA ...... S!mlbl ~II... c-, Fse d D Sonleeo
Kay Flck.
fauliaeAtldiU

Be.Veeea
Grena J&gt;a.,.;
Low
laea B...U.,. .• ..., a..,. Caamh•M
Cathy Rudooa-lllary Kay c-J...
Amer!eaa Leflloa P- 139 ,
Voter- of FONip ~oni90SS
Amt!rlcaa LotPoa P -.1 128.
Dr. Seou Smidt- Hol.r,Clla!e
Shawa~F..............
Taauay Gna...Torry Uoyd- AEP
Pamela Bro..... eot-o111a c..·
Lia np~ooo, Oeeu,.lloul Tloora. .1, Robw Rehal&gt;

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Hometown Newspaper

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2000 MEMBERSHIP .

PRESENTERS'

rlimily

Volume

I

ll!ehelle G Rita Cnnninpam
Swiapl' ·~In
s - P"""... lllld Tbe , ....,..RlP.S.IaDol Choir
Eeloo. of .........

c..... (uoiollince ror ram~~~.,.
ail

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•

Meigs County's

. BUYA

Hill~

Abbie StnUoa
Guido! Clrolaml

Ia-HOIIIe
A•llMIIH!Dl
, . r
,
.Pen-a=" Care

- -

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SENIOR CENTER

Btotew

H-llllillalelwlce (minor home repall'l)

Eduatlol!ll ~

·Wedneaday: Sunny
High: 30s; Low: 1011

SUPPORT YOUR

Chlldre~~'•

Home fWh.ered Me.a.

· CRier rilaiaa (ulrl..- IDellla)

-

••

Joe llca...l
TQDy OU.,... A Tile Commu!ly Bud

Hom-elre'l'llleulh S.mcee ·

Commulty s...,.n l')otnU. (II lli.rl•
prullleJu uclniVI•Iwa anlr' ~) •

--

Our View: !levive Frontyard Brawl, A4
What's happening in Meigs County, AS
Meigs girls down Nelsonville York, 81

;Today: Sunny
High: 308; Low; 1011

Junior md RkA Wlo!te

Chore Semee (cle~UDdry)

paj ,·

mqiftl' tnl•'•ll!d 111pp011•

February 1, 2000

ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE HOME '

Alzheimer'• Dlwowiadaled Dlwodali (111111,• ·I

,

.

Dally 3: IJ·7-S Dally 4: 1-4-8-11
..
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C 2ooo a~;.. \!II~Y PubtJsh!. Co.

�·.
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~. Middleport, Ohio

P-ae A 2 • The o.tly Sentinel

BUCKEYE NEWS IN BRIEF
Lawyer: Ban original.·testimony
CLEVELAND (AP) -As the latest triallo decide whether Dr. Sam
Sheppard killed his wife began, an attorney llllked a judge to ban alltes·
timony from the origin~ trial in 19S4.
Nothing from that first cue should be allowed in the wrongful-impris·
onment trial, which began Monday, because the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled Sheppard's 19S4 conviction was unfair, lawyer Terry Gilbert told
Cuyahoga County Judge Ronald Susler.
Gilbert is the attorney for the Sheppards' son, Sam Reese Sheppard,
'who has brought a lawsuit againsl the stale of Ohio claiming his father
was wrongfully imprisoned for his mother's beating death 46 years ago.
· · The doctor's original trial was one of the most bi&amp;hly publicized.of the
l950s. The case partly inspired "The Fugitive" TV series. '
· · Sheppard was found guilty of murder and spent10 years in prison. But
the Supreme Court overturned the verdict in a: landmark ruling on the
, .unfair effeCt of pretrial publicity.
·
. ·
· :; The doctor was acquitted at a retrial in 1966 and died four years later.
• &lt; Because so many witnesses in the case havt died, (he jury might have
'to listen for days to their testimony being read aloud jn court. Prosecu,tors, who are defending the state in this case, want the.jury to hear testi·
~mony of 19 witnesses from the first trial.

'suspect accused of targeting fetus
_ .. TOLEDo (AP) - Prosecutors believe the person who fatally shot
Sonya Hayes six times in the belly and upper torso also was trying to kill
her unborn son.
'
· · They charged her boyfriend, Terrance Davis, in the shootings and are
·S!:eking the death penalty in the trial that began Monday.
• Death penalty experts in Ohjo think it's the fint time somepne in th.e.
slate has faced the death penalty in the killing of a fetus even though oth·
·e)'s have been convicted under Ohio:s fetal homicide law.
' Davis ·is facing three counts of aggravated murder for shooting and
)c:illing Hayes and her fetus and for unlawfully te~inating another per·
·,son's pregnancy. · ·
: In order to seek the death penalty against Davis, the fetus must be con·
'sjdered a person.
·
.. State lawmakers in 1996 passed the law that .allows prosecutors to
seek homicide charges if a defendant causes the termination of a viable
pregnancy.'
.
·
, "It's the slate's position that he would've survived outside the
womb, .. said Chris Andeno~. an assistant Lucas County prosecutor hanpiing the case.
The law says a fetus should be considered a.person when "there is
r~alistic possibility -of maintaining and nourishing·of a life outside the
womb."

•I
I

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_
Enviros: Attack lake pollution
WASHINGTON (AP) - · The Great Lakes are so polluted that a
change of strategy might be in order, say two environmental groups.
The Sierra Club and Great Lakes United think it's time to give one or
tWo contaminated bays, harbors or river mouths extra resources instead
of spreading available federal money to all eight Great Lakes Slates.
. · The dramatic change from current pfliCiice is needed beCause distrib·
uting the funds around the entire region hasn't yet resulted in lhe·com·
pleted cleanup of any of the lakes' toxic hot spots, said Emily Green, the
Sierra Club's Great Lakes expeit.
.
.
· "The Great Lakes are still toxic after all these years," she said.
·· .. Green and Margaret Wooster of Grea.t Lakes United proposed focusIng a new Great Lakes cleanup grant program, should it be approved b¥
Congress, on as few target areas as possible.
,
.
President Clinton has said he'll ask for $SO million for the proposed
grants, b~t Wooster said.that \'\'OIIld be a drop in the !l!!cket. ~ !0
the estimated cleanup ,pricetags: $100 million to si':I,IJ'Il!iJiiOJ "' \via:
cons in's Lower Fox River, $1 billion for New York'S Bufr,lo River and
$42 million to $210 million to rid the Detroit River of its wont contam·

,,i

inatlOn.

'·

G-OP seeks to unseat recorder

I

'l

DAYI'ON (AP)- Petitions seeking to unseal the Montgomery County recorder should be ready for distribution within a week, the chairman
of the county's Republican Party said.
Lawyers for the party have finally completed fine-tuning the language
for petitions to be used in the campaign to unseat Republican Joy.Clark,
county Republican Chairman Jeff Jacobson said Monday.
·
Clark's critics will have to gather the signatures of 24,278 registered
county voters and win a court trial to unseat her. .
• · The campaign was prompted by Clark's prolonged absence from her
effice, along with allegations that she .had suggested most elected officials perform no real work.
·• The petition will charge-Clark with "gross neglect of duty" resulting
from her long absences and with misconduct, related to allegations that
she coerced a campaign contribution from a former employee, party officials said.
.
Clark has said' she is innocent and there is not a single instance in
which they cim prove neglect.
• .. "This has all been a web of lies," she said Monday.
• ' Clark said she also has a file containing $40,000 in medicall!ills and
can prove she .had three major surgeries during 1998 and 1999. She also
has an affidavit signed by all of her employees that she discouraged them
from giving her political contributions.
. .
· · Clark has apologiZ~;d for her statements and returned to work, but
Jacobson and the Republican Party still
. want her removed from office.

~.

•

'"""*Y 1, 2000 :

Tueaday, February 1, 2000

O'Brien resolves cas~s in Meigs Court·
POMEROY - The following cases were Reny, speed, SSO plus coats; Jeffrey A. Fee, Ray, speed, $30 plus cosla; Thomas J. ~fid&amp;eman."
resolved recently in the Meigs County Court of speed, $30 plus cosls; seat bell, S2!i plus costs; ReynoldllbuJJ, speed, $30 plus cosla; Jobn A.
Judg~ Patrick H. O'Brien:
William L. Taylor, Pickerington, speed, $30 plus Smith Jr., GaUipolis, speed. $30 plus COlla;
.
aara N. Ohlinger, Syrac:use, seat belt, $~ plus costs; Jill L. Upscomb, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
Jamea P. Broderick, Middleport, speed, $30
~' Thomas E. Allen, Racine, speed, $30 plus COsiS; Tony W. Dicken, Athena, speed, $30 plus plua COlla; ICII belt, $25 plus COlla; Maria L Bear,
costs; Pam HOffman, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Anthony J. Beres, Rutland, seat belt, $25 ·Sciotoville, failure to pontrol, $20 plus costs; ~
costs; John David Church, Vinton, speed, $33 plus plus costs; failure to control, $30 plus COsiS; orah K. Glazer, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus COsiS;
costs; overload, $537 plus costs; Oteri M. Smith, Joshua E. Doerfer, Gallipolis, scat belt, $2S plus Willard A. Sheets, Gallipolis, seat belt, $2S plua
Johnslown, Sea.t belt, $25 plus costs; William P. costs;
costs; John G. HOrton, Athens, speed, $30 plus
Wolfe, Pomeroy, speed, $16 plus costs; William
Brian J. Knopp, Racine, seat belt, $2S plus costs; seat bell, $2S plus costt Jacob G. Hand,
A. Racer, Pomeroy, driving under suspension, 30 . costs; GlennA. Miller, Hurricane, W.Va., seat belt, GlouSter, speed, $30 plus costs; 'Ronald W. Habig,
days jail suspended to 10 days, $300 plus costs, $2.5 plus costs; Eric S. Grady, Pilrke"burg, W.Va., Wheeling, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt,
'one year probation; unauthorized plates, $20 plus seat belt, $25 plus costs; Brian J. Knopp, Racine, · $25 plus costs; Kuang Y. Peng, Athens, seat belt.
costs; Dennis Foley, Syracuse, driving under sus· stop sign, $20 plus costs; fictitious tags, $20 plus $2.5 plus costs;_Waitman D. Towns, Blacksvill~. ·
pensioil, 311 days jail suspended to seven days, costs; Kendall S. Church, Reedsvill\'. damage, W.Va., stop sign, $20 plus costs; Thomas A.
$2.50 fine plus &lt;iosts; speed, $2.5 plus costs; distrurb, or destroy property belonging to or under ·Myers, Langsville, gross overload, $340 .plus
Richard E. Sayre, Racine, speed, $75 plus costs;
control of the Division of Wildlife, $50 plus costs; COsiS; Jack L. 'CI~ Athens, .speed, $3() plus
Sean M. Sproii!C, Fremont, speed, $30 plus Harold Scarberry Jr.; Middleport, hunting without costs; Eric J. Johnson, seat belt, $2!i plus costs;
costs; Mark A. Robinette, Columbus, speed, $30 landowner pennission, $50 plus ·costs; Frank E. · Weridlle E. Rowley, Dunbar, W.Va., seat belt, $25 .
plus costs;' Virgil P. Phillip, Pomeroy, speed, $30 Varian, Cheshire, two counts· possess a deer not plus costs; Tnvis L Martin, Gallipolis, expired
plus costs; Avan Ilene McHenry, Cheshire, seat properly tagged or deer while not having an offi· trailer registration, $20 plus costs;
•.
belt, $25 plus costs; Leonard H. Wagner, Logan, cia! p.ermanent tag or sCal and valid non-resident
John F. Finnearty, Athens, speed, .$50 plus
.speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, S2S plus costs; license issued by another state, two counts possess costs; William H. Hutcheson, Cambndge, seat
Betty L. Goss, Logan, speed, $30 plus costs; or transport a deer which has been possessed ille- belt, $25 plus costs; Andrea D. Hill, Pomeroy,
Randy E. Davis, Prqctorville, seat hell, $25 plus gaily in West Vi,rginia, $150 plus costs on each;
speed, $30 plus costs; · Anthony Westiohn,
costs; David Elden Wood, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Melvin L Massie, Jackson, failure to wear a Pomeroy, mud flap violation, $20 plus costs; Milspeed, $30 plus costs; Steven P. Erwin, Pomeroy, hunter orange vest or jacket during"the·statewide ford M. Mowrey, Point Pleasant, speed, $30 plus
speed, $50 plus costs; James M. Werry Jr., deer hunliQg season, $40 plus costs; William R. costs; Edwin Alan Freitag, Batavia, speed, $30
Pomeroy, seat belt, $2.5 plus costs; Bridget R. Capehart, Middlep()rt, failure to yield, $20 plus plus costs; Tara L. Hawley, Pomeroy, speed, $30
Cross, Racine, window tint, $20 plus costs;
· costs; Robert H. McArthur, Ironton, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Larry F. Conrath, Athens, speed, $30
Billy J. Murphy, Reedsville, scat belt, $2S plus &lt;'plus costs; Robert L. Keenan, Thppen Plains, plus costs; Steven H. Holter, Coolville, failure fo
costs; Mitchell Perry, Hillirc, Ky., speed, $30 plus speed, $30 plus costs; Edward W. Morrison Dl, control, $20 plus costs; Wayne R. LoracoliQ,
costs; Cephis Gotr, Jackson, window tint, $20 Huntington, W.Va., speed, $30 plus COsiS; Adam Columbus, speed, .$30 plus costs; Sha,roil ~­
pius costs; Kevin A. Barley; Rutland, speed, $30 S. Koehler, Cincinnati, speed, $30 pl~s costs; Erin Warner, Pomeroy, seat belt, $2.5 plus costs; Wayne
plus· costs; Geronda L. Fultz, Westerville, speed, · K. ·Johnson, Greenfield, ~Jl!'Cd, $50 plus costs; o.: Bonnett, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs;_
$30 plus costs; Colin P. Patterson, Gallipolis, · Milford M. Mowrey, Point Pleasant, speed; $30 Anthony Moore, Racine, 'speed, $30 plus costs;
speed, $30 plus costs; Brian J. S&lt;;hmidt, Toledo, plus costs; David McComas, McArthur, ~peed, David R: Sparks, Rio Grande, failure to controi,
speed, $30 plus costs; Lawrence Tabler Jr., Mt. $30 plus costs; Laura L. Cox, Eleanor, W.Va., $20 plus costs.

GOP, DeWine enter election with large purses
COLUMBUS (AP) - Republi- · cans shored up their financial
cans entered 2000 having accumulat· strength in bot~ the House and Sen·
'ed large fund-raising balances in ate, according to the reports.
preparation for a busy political seaSenate Republicans reported a
son, according to campaign finance balanCe: of $1.5 million, including
reports. ·
·
contributions of $150,000 from the
U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine, a campaign comniiUee of Senate Pres·
Republican, raised $2.5 million so idenl Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati,
far compared with $26,821 raised by and $100,000 from the Jacobson for
his top Democratic challenger, Ted Senate Committee of Jeff Jacobson,
Celeste, according to the reports R-Brookville.
released Monday.
.,
House Republicans reported a
· But Celeste's camp isn't discour- balance of $1.4 million, including a
aged with early fund-raising totals.in $200,000 contribution from the
its Senate ·race to unseat DeWine.
Davidson .for State Representative
"Our feeling is, il's pretty encour- C!J,mmittee of House Speaker Jo An.n
·aging considering he only filed earli· Davidson, R·Reynoldsburg, and a
er this month;" Celeste spokes- $105,500 contribution from the
woman Elizabeth Moran said.
Committee to Elect Biil Harris. Har. In the Ohio Statehouse; Republi- ri_s, R-Ashlaild, is i'l line fot:' the

House spCakership in 2001.
Robert Bennett, chairman of the
Senate Democrats repurted.a bal· Ohio RepubliCijll Party, could not be
ance of $50,847. House Democrats reached for comment. Phone mesreported a balance of $107,523.
sages left Monday at his office were
But, David Leland, chairman of not returned.
the Ohio Democratic Party, said it's
DeWine last ran in 1994, when
still early in the season. The party Sen. Howard Metzenbaum's retire·
has experie11ced a number of record· ment created an open seat. DeWine's
setting fund-raisers in the past and campaign spent $5,9 million to win
expects those to continue, he said.
that race.
The party spent money on several
His challenger, Joel Hyatt, a
races in 1999, including the Colum· familiar name to Ohioans after years
bus mayor's rape;in which Michael of television commercials for his
Coleman beCame the first Democrat law-ilffice chpin, spent . $4.85 mil·
·
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to hold the seat since 1971, Leland lion.
$aid.
.
DeWine leads fotmer Congres&amp;"Now we're going to kick our man Frank Cremeans 88 percent to 8
fu11d-raising into gear.for 2000 just percent among likely Republican
like we did in '96 and '98," Leland primary voters, according I\) the lat•
said.
est statewide Ohio Poll.
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We man)/ l:eaves $.1· million to.. church's school_·.
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WILLOWICK (AP) '-.The big news came.
during routine announcements'atthe end Of Ma!s '
at. St.. Mary 'Magdalene Ron)an Catholic Church'.
There were gasps when the priest announced
that parishioner Cecelia B. Lul!ek, 82, who died
Jan. 11, had left $1 million in h~'r' will, to the
parish school in this Cleveland suburb in· Lake
County. ·
.
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Lukek lived in a modest Home in Willowic:k.
Neighbon said they. never suspetted she waa
wealthy.
After her death, her \Viii revealed ao estate
valued at $1.3 million, most of which was left to
St. Mary Magdalene School.
"It is a great shot in the arm for the ~ehool," ·
said the Rev. John Singler, a member of the
church's pastoral team. .
He said the parish staff was "all a little sur·

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priscil att~e amciun.t. A Jot of children will betic·
He said much of the estate's.value came frolll
fit from this." .
teal estate investments and developmeQts owned
Sl. Mary Magdl!lene School has 270 full-time · by Joseph Lukek, Cecelia's husband, who die!!
students and~ students in its.after·school reli· about 20 years ago.
, .
.
gion program for public•IChool youngsters.
Singler said Lukek and her husband, who had
"We will be establishing· a scholarship and no children, were active in the church and t~e
endowments," .Singler said. "We ire in lb~ · community, sponsoring baseball teams and other
process of working with the diocese."
' ' activities for ~hildren.
Gary Rosenthal, one of lhe lawyers '~Jandling
Niece T~my Vaughan of Willowick said her
Lukek's cs!ate, is taking an inventory of Ill•· uncle saved money while serving in the Army
estate's assets, which include properly in Florida, during World War .11 and· u~d it to purchase ·•
In additi~n to the school, Lukek listed 1071;1enll, farm and land. Many Willowick residents told the
ficiaries, including , many nieces and nephe\f~, family stories about the ,couple's generosity, sh~
and left $5,000 to each pf tbem. · . ..•
,
said.
"She was a member of the parish, and it was
Vaughan, whose children attend St.. M~r
, her wiah that children in the school bene,fit fr\1\'' Magdideile School, said the family was surprised
her estate,'' ):l.osenthal said. "It WI!S her desire to at the amount of money left to the school but was
·start a scholarship fund."
,'
grateful that many children will benefit.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.-Harriett L. VanMatre,87, West Columbia,
died Sunday, Jan. 30, 2000 in Pleuant Valley Hospital.
A homemaker, she was bom March 1, 1912 in West Columbia, daughter
1 of the late Grover Oeveland "Oeve" and Evalena Fisher Fowler. She was a
member of the West Columbia United Methodist Church.
She is survived by a son and daugbter-in·law, Herman A. and Patty L.
VanMatre of West Columbia; two daughters, Paula E. Camp and Madelyn
VanMatre, both of West Columbia; nine grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren; three great·grcat-grandchildren;-a sister, Josephine Keams of Point
Pleasani, W.Va.; and a brother, Jackson H. "Jack" Fowler of Mason, W.Va.
· She was atso·preceded in death by her husband, Arnold H. VanMatre, in
1985; two sisters, Elizabeth Wooten and Margaret Rosenberger; and two·
'
:'brothers, an infant baby brother and RichardS. Fowler.
Services will he 1 p.m. Thursday in Foglesong Funerai 'Home, Mascin,
'with the Revs. Terry Alvarez and Clyde Ferrell officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6·9 p.m.
Wednesday.

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Eva Frederick McBride

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MORE .WCAL NEWS.. .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

. areurtoror-laote

Weok..................................................$2.00
Monlh ................................................ $8.70
Ycar .............................. ................. SI04.00

,-r

Holzer
Clinic Jackson
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25 s. ·street •.
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Jackson,·Ohio .
286-6417
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SYRACUSE- Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will hold il5 month·
ly membership luncheon at noon Feb. 8 at Carleton School, Syracuse. Guest
speaker will be Jim Epperson, director of the Office of Travel and Tourism.

Dep~:~tles

arrest Gallipolis man

.·

EMS units respond to two calls

u.s~geA1
33

· commented supported the project. TRAC all the issues thai ahould be
The proponents wanted the TRAC to 'considered and to report on how
· · continue project funding while each side viewed the issues.
opponents wanted the project ·
,;In Ibis regard, the CAC was sucfrom
stopped.
cessful. It also allowed ODOT to
.
In addition, t!Jf. TRAC met in
"TRAC compromised and with· further document and .explain its
· Athena on Aug. ~ 1999 and heard · drew the construction and right of reasoning for selecting its preferred
·
f·
""· 1 ponent· way funds but continued design alternative for the new highway.
Whl'le the CAC reviewed the iaaues.
. testimony rom p,.;JeC op
Todd Acheson and highway advo·
ODOT was also able to resolve new
cale Steve Story.
·
The compromise was to not penalize . issues .· regarding two regionally
Celol)B said the project is facing the majority while also taking action endangered species. Further, the
two· j:rilical miles19J!es in the near to investigate the iaaues .raised by CAC elicited community feedback,
future. On Feb.a consultant opponents. Yes, design continued with the majority of elected leaders,
hired by the CAC is to report back to while lhe CAC was to act. Yes, there busineaa leaders and citizens
the group with its recommendation was a risk that some desi11n funds expressing support for the new high·
on the highway. pmjll\t.
would be wasted. However, the way. In fact, another public meeting
Also, 'in tale March, the state cAC was to act quickty,'within eight
Transportation Review Advisory months, thereby minimizing the was held this December, with more
Council will reconvene to consider risk. Although lhe opponents were than 350 people attending. ODOT
releasing construction funds for the critical of the TRACs decision to received more than 100 public comments at thai meeting, and fewer
. project.
coptinue design, the proponents 1
than ilO opposed' the new highway.
-~ ~'t
who appear to he the majority "Finally, the process is not over.
' The following I• ttM text o1 the would have been equally critical of
If
new
issues surface demonstrating
lebr from ODOT Dl~or Gordon slopping design.
Prclolor 1r1d Chief of St8tf o"Project opponents also point to why this project should not proceed,
Cel-:
.
procedural reasons for their discon· ODOT is required by federal law to
"There has been muCh controver- tent with the CAC. They state there mitigate any genuine impacts identi·
sy in southeast Ohio regarding t~e . was a philosophical divide between fled. Also, the TRAC must deter·
proposed new Athens to Darw1n opponents and supporte!' that could mine whether to release conslruetion
U.S. Route 33 highway project. not be reconciled, there . was too funding for the project. This deci·
ODOT has been criticiz~~ ,regarding much emphuis on procedure (vot· sion will be made in a public forum,
the \J.S. 33 Citizen~Ad~l}' Com· ing, etc), and ODOT's position on and opponents and supporten of the
mittee, created to off~r c1tizens the its preferred alternative for the .road project will be able to address the
oppo,rlunity to raise new ,!isni(icanl was strongly held. On these TRAC at that time.
issuca regarding lhe projibaed new accounts, lhe critics are right. They
"The CAC was created as an
highway to ODOT's atteq\ion.
neglect the most basic premise, unprecedented opportunity for pro·
"Tho CAC is almost ~mpletcd, however, that for six months the ject opponents to demonstrate tbey
and the citizens of the region should CAC meetings were held in Athens had issues whic~ . should change
know why ODOT established the and Mclgs counties every two ODOT's course of action on conCAC, and why it has been success· weeks, with project opponents
ful.
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(CASH and Buckeye Forcat Co_un- structing a new U.S. 33 highway
"The Transponatio.n Review · cil) rcprese~ted at every . mo:cllng, . between Athens and Darwin. The
Advlllory Council (stale body that re~ they raised no new ~tgntficant CAC is virtually.concluded, and we
Continue to stand ready to listen and
decides which projects to fund) wues. ·
.
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·faced a difficull decision last fall. · "Despite the surrounding conlro· address any new concerns that· may
The , TRAC proposed funding versy, in ODOT'Ii opinion~ the_CAC arise In the future.
"However, until such issues arise,
design; right' of way and conitruc- procesS was succc;aa~ul m fiCVeral .
tion for the pJOject. The TRAC lhen ways. The TRAC s mtent wu to we will proceed with the new high~
received 8,000 comments - 6,000 form the ·C::itizenli Advisory Co~ncil way and in the direction thai the
·supporting the project and 2,000 not to dec1de the fale of the proJect. majority of the citizens in the region
'
. opposing it. All elected officiW. 'who Rather the CAC wu to report to the have' advocated."

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SUBSCJUmON RATU

,rho...

To subscri~, cal/992-2156.

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Chamber membership lu.ncheon set

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TUPPERS PLAINS- East~m Local Board of Education will hold a special meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the conference room of the Eastern
Elementary Public Ubrary.

Weather forec•st:
Tonight ...Decreasing
clouds.
Lows 1S to 20. West wind 10 to lS
mph.
,.
Wednesday ...Sunny. Highs in the ·
mid 30s,
.,
Wednesday night ...Clear. Lows in
the teens.
•'
Extended forecast:
Thursday ... Mostly clear. HigHs
from the upper 30s to the lower 40s.
Friday...Partly cloudy, Lows near
20 and highs io the upper 40s.
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Saturday... Mostly cloudy with ·a
chance of showers. Lows in the mid
30s and highs in the lower and mid
50s.
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Survey: Job ·barriers persist for welfare recipients·

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Eastern Board sets speclar meeting

It will be another cold night
across Ohio with lows in· th~ teens,
forecasters said.
It will be a preny, mostly sunny
day on Wednesday, but still cold with
temperatures mostly below freezing,
the National Weather Service said.
A slight warming trend is forecast
for tfie next couple of days, with
highs on Thursday in the 30s and on
Friday in the low 40s.
The record-high tempei'Jture for
· this date at the Columbus weather
station was 66 degrees in 1989 while
the record low was 3 below zero in
1978. Sunset tonight will be at 5:51
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:40

a.m.

Citation Issued In two-vehicle crash

Holzer Clinic
Urgent: Core-Center

.Urgent Care Ccnte~
90 J'ackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio ..
. 446;..!5287
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ATHENS- Soulhem Consortium for Children's regular meeting will be
Feb. 29, 10 a.m. at the office.

By The A•eoclated Pr-

Primary

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Consortium plans regular meeting

Jay Lee Johnson .

The Dajly ~entinel

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Slight warming trend .-~.
predicted by Thursday·

. MIDDLEPORT- A 51-year&lt;ald Gallipolis man ·was arrested late Monday and charged with numerous counts, including assault on a police officer•.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies, responding to a domestic incident at a
GALLIPOUS - . Jay Lee Johrlson, 25, Gallipolis, die&lt;f~unday, Jan. 30, Leading Creek Road residence, attempted to arrest Danny C. Marrow, 1435
Iowa caucuses by nearly 2-to-L ,.
1.000 as a result of a traffic accident in Addison Township, 11
State Route 7 North, Gallipolis.
. ·
McCain focused heavily on New
. Bom March 4, 1974 in Gallipolis, son of Donna F. ~19.Johnson of Gal·
After being put into the sheriff's cruiser, Marrow allegedly kicked the
Hampo;hire in search of a bad Iy nce\1·
lipolis, and Gary G. JOhnsoq of Goshen, Ohio, he was a press operator at cruiser window, bending the door frame and knocking the window off track,
ed a win lo cement his status as the
from Page A1
GKN Sinter Metals Plant in GallipoliS.
. . &lt;'I
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said,
alternative to Bush, the national front~
He was a member of Local 1685 of the United Autorpobile, Aerospace
· During lhe struggle, Marrow allegedly ·kicked Deputy David Rees in the had 13 votes and AI Gore 5 in the runner. Most polls showed the Afi.
and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Elks Lodge 107 and the face, according to the report.
Democratic race. McCain had 19 to rona senator with a small lead, bu't
Kanauga Spprtsman Club. He attended the University o( Rio Grande.
Marrow was put in the Meigs County Jail and also charged with resisting Bush's 17 votes.
with Bush closing near the end,
Surviving in addition to his parents are his brother, Shawn JohnSen of arrest, burglary, domestic violence and felony vandalism.
While Bush may have been opti·
Publisher Steve Forbes hoped fora
Gallipolis; his stepmother, Barbara Johnson of Goshen; paternal grandpar·
mistic, none of lhe candidates were solid showing to bolster his standirig
ents, Othello and Dorothy Johnson of Cincinnati; three ~alf-sisters, Melissa
taking anyihing for granted as they among party conservatives, but was
Wilson, Tammy Wilson and Jes5ica Wilson, all of Goahen; and two aunts .
CHESTER - No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle acci· planned to open the campaign's final getting competition from fellow con·
and numerous cousins.
.
.
day in the pre-dawn darkness.
servatives Alan Keyes and Gary
He was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents, James and Alma dent on Flatwoods Road in Ches!er Township Sunday around 7:30 p.m.
Polls
showed
competi)ive
races
on
Bauer.
'
Crockett A, Roush, 22, Cheshire, was attempting to turn left onto SmithFaye Casto.
•i· ·
both
sides
of
the
partisan
aisle.
Forbes,
unfazed
by
polls
depicting
. Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in )he Cremeens Fdneral Chapel, Gal· Goeglein Road when his car was struck in the side by a vehicle driven by
Vice President AI Gore, "cam· his inability to get a bump from his
lipolis, with the Rev. Eugene Harmon officiating. Burial will be in Pine David J. Pooler,19, Long Bottom, Who was attempting to pass, according to
paigning
full blast every minute of strong second-place finish in Iowa,
·
SifCC! Cemetery, Gallipolis. Friends may call at the ch,apel from 2-4 and 7- a Meigs County Sheriff's Ofifce report.
every
hour,"
even planned a 3 ·a.m. vowed to press on with his largely.
Pool,er was cited for reckless operation, the report said.
9 p.m. Wednesday.
rally Wednesday in New York City.
self-financed campaign.
Democratic ·rival Bill Bradley was
"We're going to do to .the Wash'
'headed to a factory gate today ·, in ington politicians what you· do to
POMEROY - Units of the )l{eigs County Emergency Medical Service search of support, and was closing his these lobsters," he said while visiting
recorded two calls for assistance Monday. Units responding were:
campaign with a noisy round of voter a fish market in Exeter.
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CHESTER - ·Eva Frederick McBride, 95, a former Meigs County resi·
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
turnout rallies.
· In a symbol of a campaign thai's
8:03 a.m., SR 681, Tuppers Plains, Calvin Hawk, Camden Clark Memodent, died Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2000 atShepherd of the Valley Nursing Home at
The fight between Gore and been troubled, Bauer tumbled off a
Niles.
rial Hospital.
Bradley heated up over the weekend, stage during a pancake-flipping
POMEROY
,
Mrs. McBride was a 1922 graduate of Chesler High School.
but softened Monday as both rivals demonstration in Manchester.
Her funeral was held on Friday, Jan. 7, 2000 at Martin's Funeral Home in
11:31 a.m., Wesl Main Street, Gilbert Zwilling, Veterans Memorial Hos· focused on energizing backers.
"I'm a survivor," he declarc&lt;t,
pita!, pending transfer to Grant Medical 'Center.
·
East Liverpool, with burial in the Riverview Cemetery at East Uverpool.
"I hope you will feel if you cast after popping back up. Keyes lagged
that vote that you're part of something in lhe polls, but the conservative with
new and fresh that is part of a new the fiery rhetoric draws solid crowds
.beginning," . said Bradley, who. and about700 showed up for an elec:
intends to stsy in the race whatever lion-eve rally in Nashua.
,
,
.
the outcome is ih New Hampshire.
"If this i.s any indication, I
Pre-primary polls .showed mixed would venture to guess that we
. WASHINGTON (AP) - When hire ' more . people coming off the blned with a strong economy, have percentage points.
computers went missing at Omeda rolls, but there's a lot of room for . dramatically shrunk welfare rolls.
Employers reported that the results, though most gave Gore the . won't have a bad day (today)," h~
Communications Inc., fingers were improvement, accOrding to 'the Wei- Founded in 1997, the Welfare to biggest barrier to hiring someone off tiniest of edges. Gore won the leadoff said.
~- pointed at. former welfare ·recipients fare to Work Partnership's 1999 sU:r- Work Partnerships gets companies welfare wu that applicants had no
the company had hired just a few · vey of 600 member businesses.
to com mil to hiring at least one per- job or work history. The second
weeks before ihe theft.
Only l'PPCn:ent of company offi· 110n leaving welfare. Most of its most frequently mehtioped blirrier
The culprit tumed out to be a cials surveyed :last·.month said pco· . ' 1,200 members ate'small businesses:· .-wu that applicants liave pdor inter·
The group's survey, obtained by personal skills, sucb as showing
delivery penon. But the revelation . pie on welfare were productive and
'
that some employees harbored sus- 59 percent said it w,as. fair to The Associated Press, shows that courtesy .or being l!ble 1to resolve AEP-33'1.
Ud. -30 1w
picions about·the new hires' was an describe sonieone on welfare as une· hiring is on the rise. It estimated that conflicts.
Oak Hill Financial -14'/a
Akzo....., 41'"
eye-opener ·for . Omeda owner ducated.
its .memben hired 239,000 former
Also high on the list of barriers AmTech/SBC - 43'1.
OVB-33
Michael Oberman, whose company
,The numbers are slig!ltly better wei tare recipients last year, up near- was welfar~ hires often have prob· Aahland 011 - 32'·
One Valley .;...., 25~.
is a member of the Welfare to Work than Ihe previous year's survey, ly 10 ·percent from 1998, when an Iems traveling to work, which can be AT&amp;T-52~.
Peoplea- 18~.
Partnership, a group that aiins to when just 10 percent surveyed said estimated 218,000 were hired.
a long distance from lheir homes, Bank One - 29"1.
Premier -: 8'4
change negative stereotypes of peo· people on welfare were productive
In 1997 an estimated 192,000 and are struggling with child care.
Bob Eval')l -15\
Rockwell - 49'1•
pie on welfare and get companies to and 61 percent said they were uned· were hired, bringing the three-year
Oberman said three of the six BorgWamtr - 33'1.
RD Shell - 55~•
ucated..
,
•
lol~ lo 6SO,OOO.
·
·
employees
he
hired
didn't
stay
Saara ..... 30"!.
hire them.
·
,
· h'
b
f ·
·
bl
Champion - 4
·
"We were wide-eyed and do·
However, most businesses are
The percentage of compantes 1r·
eca~~ o lranspo_rta11on pro ems.
Charming Shopa- &amp;"!..
Shoney'a -:- H.
gooderish when we got into this," pleased with the people th~y hire. ina someone off welfare was abou.t · Eh Segal, prcs1dent of lhe Wei·
Wendy'a18"1.
City
Holding
12'1.
said Oberman, who has hired six Eighty percent of compames that the same .last year - S4 percent fare to Work Partnenhip, said the
Worthington
-14'/.,
Federal
Mo~ul15'!.
ptople off welfare to work his ISO· employed someone off welfare said as it was in 1998 - 55 percent, lhe latter set of problems arc tougher to ·
·
Dally etock reporta are th~
employee softWare firm in North· the new hires turned out to be good, survey showed. But the number of crack than the fact that welfare Flratar - 231.
4
p.m.
cloelng .quotea of the
Gannett
89
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brook, Ill. "I found that 1 had to do productive worken, the su':"ey companies thai didn't hire anyone recipients often have no work hislo·
day•a transactions,
·
prevloua
K
mart8'1.
,rnorc work and counseling of my showed.
.
increased to 33 percent in 1999 from ry_ because employen, many fa&lt;:ed
· ,:.provided by Advest of Gal·
existing employees." .
Tough new'tu)es limiting the time 27 percent in 1998. The survey has a wllh severe labor shortages, are will· Kroger- 17\
llpolla.
·.
Landa
End
34'·
· . Pen:eptions abl&gt;ut people on w~l- families can slay on welfare, com· margin of error of plus or minus 4 ing to train people.
fare arc getting better as compan1es

pamlly getting new dog

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RACINE- A turkey and ham dinner will be held Sunday at the Racine
American Legion Post 602 with serving to begin atll a.m. Dine in·or carry
out.

Harriett L. VanMatre

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Man held on $1 million bond

OHIO VALLEY WEATHER

Turkey, ham dinner slated Sunday

·Court: Woman
deserves trial
in GM case

CINCINNA'n(AP) -A woman
who says her arm was broken by an
air bag that deployed after she hit a
car in a parking lot is entilled to ·a
trial of her lawsuit against General
.
Motors
Corp., an appeals court
·· CLEVELAND (AP) ..:. A judge set bond at $1 million for a man
ruled.
·
charged with murder in the beating death of a 2-year&lt;ald in his care.
The
6th
U.S.
Circuit
Court
of
Cleveland· Municipal Court Judge Colleen Conway Cooney also set a
Appeals sent Ruby Harris' lawsuit
~- 10 hearing on Monday on whether enough evidence exists for the
back to federal court in Toledo for a
cJyarge against Ronnell L. Jeffries, 20, of suburban Maple Heights.
trial.
::Jeffries was arrested Jan. 24. after Tasharia Bennett was 11\ken to the
. Appeals Judges John Feikens,
hoispital with serious injuries. ·
James Ryan and Alan Norris unani·
:; she died Thursday. The coroner ruled that Tasharia died of a skull
mously reversed U.S. District Judge
fi]ICiure and abdominal injuries caused by blows from an undetermined
James Carr's 1998. pretrial rulina in
o!Jject.
.
favor of GM. A jury should be
;: Jeffries occasionally stayed with lhe girl's mother, Tiffany Bennett,
allowed 'to decide the iaaue, the
who was his girlfriend,.but he was not Tasharia's father. Police said he
appeals judges ruled Monday. ' •
~~ baby-sitting the girl on the day she was injured.
. Harris said !he. air bag deployed
and · broke her right arm. after Her '
1991 Otevmlet Corsica hit the other
car head-i&gt;n in Toledo on June 10, ·
· 1996. Both Hams, then 76, and a·
:: NEW MIAMI (AP)- A family .whose dog was shot by a sheriff's
passenger said the air bag hlld ·nQI
olflcer who mistakenly entered their house is getting a replacement dog.
inflated
and 'extended until after lhe
'· Erik Eads, 23, of Cincinnati, who breeds American pit bull terriers,
collision.
.•
s4ld he wu upset by the shooting and decided to offer Mike and .Angie
Carr
rejected
Hlirris'la~¥~Uit
lfter
Diefenbaeher a pit bull puppy at no charge. '
.
the Detroit;baaed autQmaker pre.
. ~ The fami)y had received offers of an adult pit bull terrier b.ut wanted a
~~ented teslimony · from two of its
p~py• .· •
.
experts
who. theorized that the air
. ;·Eads, who breeds the animals as a hobby, said he usually sells puppies
bag
properly
deployed during lhe
for about $~0 but is not charging the Diefenbachers.
,
collision,
rather
than -after it,
'
::"I ':"Ill furious about the whole incident," Eads said.
.
. ,
The
appeals
judges
$aid,
howev·
:·Oh J,n. 16 at about 2:20 a.m., Butler County sheriff's deputy Kevin
er, thai neither of OM's ex~rts .
Mofield entered lhe family's house without pent~ission; authorities aaid.
established the ."undisPuted phyai- .
POlice said Mofield was responding to a domestic viOlence call but went •: cal facia" neeesaary to justify reject·
to;)he wrong house in the neighborhood in New Miami, aboul 20 miles
'ing Harris' testimony before trial. .
narth of Cincinnati.
·
. ~bruto, th~ Diefenbachers' black and white pit bull terrier, confrOnted
tho deputy, who shot the dog once through the baCk. The family had
B~to put to sl~p.
.
;Mofield was suspended without pay for one month and ordered to
un4ergo more training in communications skills, the ~se offirearins, and
seirch and aeizure roccdurca.
·

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3 • •

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Budget

The commissioners also:
.
• Accepted bids for bituminous
materials
for February from Asphalt
from PageA1
Materials Inc., Marietta, and Middle-.
er for group iates on general liability, · port Terminal, Gallipolis;
auto insuiance, blanket bonding for
, Approved payment of bills in tlie
employees, Nurse/EMT and EMTA
malpractice insurance, and property am~unt of $233,743.67, with 19&amp;.
coverage on all county-ilwned facili· entries.
ties, and contents.
·Alsli present were Commissioner:
Howard said Monday that . the
commissioners have accepted a pro- Mick Davenport and Oerk Gloria
posal from Alliance Insurance Kloes.
through the Pomeroy agency Downing-Childs-Mullen and Musser,
which will reduce deductibles and
improve coverage in all areas.
Kinder, however, said that the
commissioners should Carefully consider their coverage through Buckeye
before their withdrawal. ·

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~. Middleport, Ohio

P-ae A 2 • The o.tly Sentinel

BUCKEYE NEWS IN BRIEF
Lawyer: Ban original.·testimony
CLEVELAND (AP) -As the latest triallo decide whether Dr. Sam
Sheppard killed his wife began, an attorney llllked a judge to ban alltes·
timony from the origin~ trial in 19S4.
Nothing from that first cue should be allowed in the wrongful-impris·
onment trial, which began Monday, because the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled Sheppard's 19S4 conviction was unfair, lawyer Terry Gilbert told
Cuyahoga County Judge Ronald Susler.
Gilbert is the attorney for the Sheppards' son, Sam Reese Sheppard,
'who has brought a lawsuit againsl the stale of Ohio claiming his father
was wrongfully imprisoned for his mother's beating death 46 years ago.
· · The doctor's original trial was one of the most bi&amp;hly publicized.of the
l950s. The case partly inspired "The Fugitive" TV series. '
· · Sheppard was found guilty of murder and spent10 years in prison. But
the Supreme Court overturned the verdict in a: landmark ruling on the
, .unfair effeCt of pretrial publicity.
·
. ·
· :; The doctor was acquitted at a retrial in 1966 and died four years later.
• &lt; Because so many witnesses in the case havt died, (he jury might have
'to listen for days to their testimony being read aloud jn court. Prosecu,tors, who are defending the state in this case, want the.jury to hear testi·
~mony of 19 witnesses from the first trial.

'suspect accused of targeting fetus
_ .. TOLEDo (AP) - Prosecutors believe the person who fatally shot
Sonya Hayes six times in the belly and upper torso also was trying to kill
her unborn son.
'
· · They charged her boyfriend, Terrance Davis, in the shootings and are
·S!:eking the death penalty in the trial that began Monday.
• Death penalty experts in Ohjo think it's the fint time somepne in th.e.
slate has faced the death penalty in the killing of a fetus even though oth·
·e)'s have been convicted under Ohio:s fetal homicide law.
' Davis ·is facing three counts of aggravated murder for shooting and
)c:illing Hayes and her fetus and for unlawfully te~inating another per·
·,son's pregnancy. · ·
: In order to seek the death penalty against Davis, the fetus must be con·
'sjdered a person.
·
.. State lawmakers in 1996 passed the law that .allows prosecutors to
seek homicide charges if a defendant causes the termination of a viable
pregnancy.'
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, "It's the slate's position that he would've survived outside the
womb, .. said Chris Andeno~. an assistant Lucas County prosecutor hanpiing the case.
The law says a fetus should be considered a.person when "there is
r~alistic possibility -of maintaining and nourishing·of a life outside the
womb."

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Enviros: Attack lake pollution
WASHINGTON (AP) - · The Great Lakes are so polluted that a
change of strategy might be in order, say two environmental groups.
The Sierra Club and Great Lakes United think it's time to give one or
tWo contaminated bays, harbors or river mouths extra resources instead
of spreading available federal money to all eight Great Lakes Slates.
. · The dramatic change from current pfliCiice is needed beCause distrib·
uting the funds around the entire region hasn't yet resulted in lhe·com·
pleted cleanup of any of the lakes' toxic hot spots, said Emily Green, the
Sierra Club's Great Lakes expeit.
.
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· "The Great Lakes are still toxic after all these years," she said.
·· .. Green and Margaret Wooster of Grea.t Lakes United proposed focusIng a new Great Lakes cleanup grant program, should it be approved b¥
Congress, on as few target areas as possible.
,
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President Clinton has said he'll ask for $SO million for the proposed
grants, b~t Wooster said.that \'\'OIIld be a drop in the !l!!cket. ~ !0
the estimated cleanup ,pricetags: $100 million to si':I,IJ'Il!iJiiOJ "' \via:
cons in's Lower Fox River, $1 billion for New York'S Bufr,lo River and
$42 million to $210 million to rid the Detroit River of its wont contam·

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G-OP seeks to unseat recorder

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DAYI'ON (AP)- Petitions seeking to unseal the Montgomery County recorder should be ready for distribution within a week, the chairman
of the county's Republican Party said.
Lawyers for the party have finally completed fine-tuning the language
for petitions to be used in the campaign to unseat Republican Joy.Clark,
county Republican Chairman Jeff Jacobson said Monday.
·
Clark's critics will have to gather the signatures of 24,278 registered
county voters and win a court trial to unseat her. .
• · The campaign was prompted by Clark's prolonged absence from her
effice, along with allegations that she .had suggested most elected officials perform no real work.
·• The petition will charge-Clark with "gross neglect of duty" resulting
from her long absences and with misconduct, related to allegations that
she coerced a campaign contribution from a former employee, party officials said.
.
Clark has said' she is innocent and there is not a single instance in
which they cim prove neglect.
• .. "This has all been a web of lies," she said Monday.
• ' Clark said she also has a file containing $40,000 in medicall!ills and
can prove she .had three major surgeries during 1998 and 1999. She also
has an affidavit signed by all of her employees that she discouraged them
from giving her political contributions.
. .
· · Clark has apologiZ~;d for her statements and returned to work, but
Jacobson and the Republican Party still
. want her removed from office.

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'"""*Y 1, 2000 :

Tueaday, February 1, 2000

O'Brien resolves cas~s in Meigs Court·
POMEROY - The following cases were Reny, speed, SSO plus coats; Jeffrey A. Fee, Ray, speed, $30 plus cosla; Thomas J. ~fid&amp;eman."
resolved recently in the Meigs County Court of speed, $30 plus cosls; seat bell, S2!i plus costs; ReynoldllbuJJ, speed, $30 plus cosla; Jobn A.
Judg~ Patrick H. O'Brien:
William L. Taylor, Pickerington, speed, $30 plus Smith Jr., GaUipolis, speed. $30 plus COlla;
.
aara N. Ohlinger, Syrac:use, seat belt, $~ plus costs; Jill L. Upscomb, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
Jamea P. Broderick, Middleport, speed, $30
~' Thomas E. Allen, Racine, speed, $30 plus COsiS; Tony W. Dicken, Athena, speed, $30 plus plua COlla; ICII belt, $25 plus COlla; Maria L Bear,
costs; Pam HOffman, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Anthony J. Beres, Rutland, seat belt, $25 ·Sciotoville, failure to pontrol, $20 plus costs; ~
costs; John David Church, Vinton, speed, $33 plus plus costs; failure to control, $30 plus COsiS; orah K. Glazer, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus COsiS;
costs; overload, $537 plus costs; Oteri M. Smith, Joshua E. Doerfer, Gallipolis, scat belt, $2S plus Willard A. Sheets, Gallipolis, seat belt, $2S plua
Johnslown, Sea.t belt, $25 plus costs; William P. costs;
costs; John G. HOrton, Athens, speed, $30 plus
Wolfe, Pomeroy, speed, $16 plus costs; William
Brian J. Knopp, Racine, seat belt, $2S plus costs; seat bell, $2S plus costt Jacob G. Hand,
A. Racer, Pomeroy, driving under suspension, 30 . costs; GlennA. Miller, Hurricane, W.Va., seat belt, GlouSter, speed, $30 plus costs; 'Ronald W. Habig,
days jail suspended to 10 days, $300 plus costs, $2.5 plus costs; Eric S. Grady, Pilrke"burg, W.Va., Wheeling, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt,
'one year probation; unauthorized plates, $20 plus seat belt, $25 plus costs; Brian J. Knopp, Racine, · $25 plus costs; Kuang Y. Peng, Athens, seat belt.
costs; Dennis Foley, Syracuse, driving under sus· stop sign, $20 plus costs; fictitious tags, $20 plus $2.5 plus costs;_Waitman D. Towns, Blacksvill~. ·
pensioil, 311 days jail suspended to seven days, costs; Kendall S. Church, Reedsvill\'. damage, W.Va., stop sign, $20 plus costs; Thomas A.
$2.50 fine plus &lt;iosts; speed, $2.5 plus costs; distrurb, or destroy property belonging to or under ·Myers, Langsville, gross overload, $340 .plus
Richard E. Sayre, Racine, speed, $75 plus costs;
control of the Division of Wildlife, $50 plus costs; COsiS; Jack L. 'CI~ Athens, .speed, $3() plus
Sean M. Sproii!C, Fremont, speed, $30 plus Harold Scarberry Jr.; Middleport, hunting without costs; Eric J. Johnson, seat belt, $2!i plus costs;
costs; Mark A. Robinette, Columbus, speed, $30 landowner pennission, $50 plus ·costs; Frank E. · Weridlle E. Rowley, Dunbar, W.Va., seat belt, $25 .
plus costs;' Virgil P. Phillip, Pomeroy, speed, $30 Varian, Cheshire, two counts· possess a deer not plus costs; Tnvis L Martin, Gallipolis, expired
plus costs; Avan Ilene McHenry, Cheshire, seat properly tagged or deer while not having an offi· trailer registration, $20 plus costs;
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belt, $25 plus costs; Leonard H. Wagner, Logan, cia! p.ermanent tag or sCal and valid non-resident
John F. Finnearty, Athens, speed, .$50 plus
.speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, S2S plus costs; license issued by another state, two counts possess costs; William H. Hutcheson, Cambndge, seat
Betty L. Goss, Logan, speed, $30 plus costs; or transport a deer which has been possessed ille- belt, $25 plus costs; Andrea D. Hill, Pomeroy,
Randy E. Davis, Prqctorville, seat hell, $25 plus gaily in West Vi,rginia, $150 plus costs on each;
speed, $30 plus costs; · Anthony Westiohn,
costs; David Elden Wood, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
Melvin L Massie, Jackson, failure to wear a Pomeroy, mud flap violation, $20 plus costs; Milspeed, $30 plus costs; Steven P. Erwin, Pomeroy, hunter orange vest or jacket during"the·statewide ford M. Mowrey, Point Pleasant, speed, $30 plus
speed, $50 plus costs; James M. Werry Jr., deer hunliQg season, $40 plus costs; William R. costs; Edwin Alan Freitag, Batavia, speed, $30
Pomeroy, seat belt, $2.5 plus costs; Bridget R. Capehart, Middlep()rt, failure to yield, $20 plus plus costs; Tara L. Hawley, Pomeroy, speed, $30
Cross, Racine, window tint, $20 plus costs;
· costs; Robert H. McArthur, Ironton, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Larry F. Conrath, Athens, speed, $30
Billy J. Murphy, Reedsville, scat belt, $2S plus &lt;'plus costs; Robert L. Keenan, Thppen Plains, plus costs; Steven H. Holter, Coolville, failure fo
costs; Mitchell Perry, Hillirc, Ky., speed, $30 plus speed, $30 plus costs; Edward W. Morrison Dl, control, $20 plus costs; Wayne R. LoracoliQ,
costs; Cephis Gotr, Jackson, window tint, $20 Huntington, W.Va., speed, $30 plus COsiS; Adam Columbus, speed, .$30 plus costs; Sha,roil ~­
pius costs; Kevin A. Barley; Rutland, speed, $30 S. Koehler, Cincinnati, speed, $30 pl~s costs; Erin Warner, Pomeroy, seat belt, $2.5 plus costs; Wayne
plus· costs; Geronda L. Fultz, Westerville, speed, · K. ·Johnson, Greenfield, ~Jl!'Cd, $50 plus costs; o.: Bonnett, Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs;_
$30 plus costs; Colin P. Patterson, Gallipolis, · Milford M. Mowrey, Point Pleasant, speed; $30 Anthony Moore, Racine, 'speed, $30 plus costs;
speed, $30 plus costs; Brian J. S&lt;;hmidt, Toledo, plus costs; David McComas, McArthur, ~peed, David R: Sparks, Rio Grande, failure to controi,
speed, $30 plus costs; Lawrence Tabler Jr., Mt. $30 plus costs; Laura L. Cox, Eleanor, W.Va., $20 plus costs.

GOP, DeWine enter election with large purses
COLUMBUS (AP) - Republi- · cans shored up their financial
cans entered 2000 having accumulat· strength in bot~ the House and Sen·
'ed large fund-raising balances in ate, according to the reports.
preparation for a busy political seaSenate Republicans reported a
son, according to campaign finance balanCe: of $1.5 million, including
reports. ·
·
contributions of $150,000 from the
U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine, a campaign comniiUee of Senate Pres·
Republican, raised $2.5 million so idenl Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati,
far compared with $26,821 raised by and $100,000 from the Jacobson for
his top Democratic challenger, Ted Senate Committee of Jeff Jacobson,
Celeste, according to the reports R-Brookville.
released Monday.
.,
House Republicans reported a
· But Celeste's camp isn't discour- balance of $1.4 million, including a
aged with early fund-raising totals.in $200,000 contribution from the
its Senate ·race to unseat DeWine.
Davidson .for State Representative
"Our feeling is, il's pretty encour- C!J,mmittee of House Speaker Jo An.n
·aging considering he only filed earli· Davidson, R·Reynoldsburg, and a
er this month;" Celeste spokes- $105,500 contribution from the
woman Elizabeth Moran said.
Committee to Elect Biil Harris. Har. In the Ohio Statehouse; Republi- ri_s, R-Ashlaild, is i'l line fot:' the

House spCakership in 2001.
Robert Bennett, chairman of the
Senate Democrats repurted.a bal· Ohio RepubliCijll Party, could not be
ance of $50,847. House Democrats reached for comment. Phone mesreported a balance of $107,523.
sages left Monday at his office were
But, David Leland, chairman of not returned.
the Ohio Democratic Party, said it's
DeWine last ran in 1994, when
still early in the season. The party Sen. Howard Metzenbaum's retire·
has experie11ced a number of record· ment created an open seat. DeWine's
setting fund-raisers in the past and campaign spent $5,9 million to win
expects those to continue, he said.
that race.
The party spent money on several
His challenger, Joel Hyatt, a
races in 1999, including the Colum· familiar name to Ohioans after years
bus mayor's rape;in which Michael of television commercials for his
Coleman beCame the first Democrat law-ilffice chpin, spent . $4.85 mil·
·
'.
to hold the seat since 1971, Leland lion.
$aid.
.
DeWine leads fotmer Congres&amp;"Now we're going to kick our man Frank Cremeans 88 percent to 8
fu11d-raising into gear.for 2000 just percent among likely Republican
like we did in '96 and '98," Leland primary voters, according I\) the lat•
said.
est statewide Ohio Poll.
·

We man)/ l:eaves $.1· million to.. church's school_·.
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WILLOWICK (AP) '-.The big news came.
during routine announcements'atthe end Of Ma!s '
at. St.. Mary 'Magdalene Ron)an Catholic Church'.
There were gasps when the priest announced
that parishioner Cecelia B. Lul!ek, 82, who died
Jan. 11, had left $1 million in h~'r' will, to the
parish school in this Cleveland suburb in· Lake
County. ·
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Lukek lived in a modest Home in Willowic:k.
Neighbon said they. never suspetted she waa
wealthy.
After her death, her \Viii revealed ao estate
valued at $1.3 million, most of which was left to
St. Mary Magdalene School.
"It is a great shot in the arm for the ~ehool," ·
said the Rev. John Singler, a member of the
church's pastoral team. .
He said the parish staff was "all a little sur·

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priscil att~e amciun.t. A Jot of children will betic·
He said much of the estate's.value came frolll
fit from this." .
teal estate investments and developmeQts owned
Sl. Mary Magdl!lene School has 270 full-time · by Joseph Lukek, Cecelia's husband, who die!!
students and~ students in its.after·school reli· about 20 years ago.
, .
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gion program for public•IChool youngsters.
Singler said Lukek and her husband, who had
"We will be establishing· a scholarship and no children, were active in the church and t~e
endowments," .Singler said. "We ire in lb~ · community, sponsoring baseball teams and other
process of working with the diocese."
' ' activities for ~hildren.
Gary Rosenthal, one of lhe lawyers '~Jandling
Niece T~my Vaughan of Willowick said her
Lukek's cs!ate, is taking an inventory of Ill•· uncle saved money while serving in the Army
estate's assets, which include properly in Florida, during World War .11 and· u~d it to purchase ·•
In additi~n to the school, Lukek listed 1071;1enll, farm and land. Many Willowick residents told the
ficiaries, including , many nieces and nephe\f~, family stories about the ,couple's generosity, sh~
and left $5,000 to each pf tbem. · . ..•
,
said.
"She was a member of the parish, and it was
Vaughan, whose children attend St.. M~r
, her wiah that children in the school bene,fit fr\1\'' Magdideile School, said the family was surprised
her estate,'' ):l.osenthal said. "It WI!S her desire to at the amount of money left to the school but was
·start a scholarship fund."
,'
grateful that many children will benefit.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va.-Harriett L. VanMatre,87, West Columbia,
died Sunday, Jan. 30, 2000 in Pleuant Valley Hospital.
A homemaker, she was bom March 1, 1912 in West Columbia, daughter
1 of the late Grover Oeveland "Oeve" and Evalena Fisher Fowler. She was a
member of the West Columbia United Methodist Church.
She is survived by a son and daugbter-in·law, Herman A. and Patty L.
VanMatre of West Columbia; two daughters, Paula E. Camp and Madelyn
VanMatre, both of West Columbia; nine grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren; three great·grcat-grandchildren;-a sister, Josephine Keams of Point
Pleasani, W.Va.; and a brother, Jackson H. "Jack" Fowler of Mason, W.Va.
· She was atso·preceded in death by her husband, Arnold H. VanMatre, in
1985; two sisters, Elizabeth Wooten and Margaret Rosenberger; and two·
'
:'brothers, an infant baby brother and RichardS. Fowler.
Services will he 1 p.m. Thursday in Foglesong Funerai 'Home, Mascin,
'with the Revs. Terry Alvarez and Clyde Ferrell officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6·9 p.m.
Wednesday.

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Eva Frederick McBride

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MORE .WCAL NEWS.. .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

. areurtoror-laote

Weok..................................................$2.00
Monlh ................................................ $8.70
Ycar .............................. ................. SI04.00

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Holzer
Clinic Jackson
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25 s. ·street •.
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Jackson,·Ohio .
286-6417
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SYRACUSE- Meigs County Chamber of Commerce will hold il5 month·
ly membership luncheon at noon Feb. 8 at Carleton School, Syracuse. Guest
speaker will be Jim Epperson, director of the Office of Travel and Tourism.

Dep~:~tles

arrest Gallipolis man

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EMS units respond to two calls

u.s~geA1
33

· commented supported the project. TRAC all the issues thai ahould be
The proponents wanted the TRAC to 'considered and to report on how
· · continue project funding while each side viewed the issues.
opponents wanted the project ·
,;In Ibis regard, the CAC was sucfrom
stopped.
cessful. It also allowed ODOT to
.
In addition, t!Jf. TRAC met in
"TRAC compromised and with· further document and .explain its
· Athena on Aug. ~ 1999 and heard · drew the construction and right of reasoning for selecting its preferred
·
f·
""· 1 ponent· way funds but continued design alternative for the new highway.
Whl'le the CAC reviewed the iaaues.
. testimony rom p,.;JeC op
Todd Acheson and highway advo·
ODOT was also able to resolve new
cale Steve Story.
·
The compromise was to not penalize . issues .· regarding two regionally
Celol)B said the project is facing the majority while also taking action endangered species. Further, the
two· j:rilical miles19J!es in the near to investigate the iaaues .raised by CAC elicited community feedback,
future. On Feb.a consultant opponents. Yes, design continued with the majority of elected leaders,
hired by the CAC is to report back to while lhe CAC was to act. Yes, there busineaa leaders and citizens
the group with its recommendation was a risk that some desi11n funds expressing support for the new high·
on the highway. pmjll\t.
would be wasted. However, the way. In fact, another public meeting
Also, 'in tale March, the state cAC was to act quickty,'within eight
Transportation Review Advisory months, thereby minimizing the was held this December, with more
Council will reconvene to consider risk. Although lhe opponents were than 350 people attending. ODOT
releasing construction funds for the critical of the TRACs decision to received more than 100 public comments at thai meeting, and fewer
. project.
coptinue design, the proponents 1
than ilO opposed' the new highway.
-~ ~'t
who appear to he the majority "Finally, the process is not over.
' The following I• ttM text o1 the would have been equally critical of
If
new
issues surface demonstrating
lebr from ODOT Dl~or Gordon slopping design.
Prclolor 1r1d Chief of St8tf o"Project opponents also point to why this project should not proceed,
Cel-:
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procedural reasons for their discon· ODOT is required by federal law to
"There has been muCh controver- tent with the CAC. They state there mitigate any genuine impacts identi·
sy in southeast Ohio regarding t~e . was a philosophical divide between fled. Also, the TRAC must deter·
proposed new Athens to Darw1n opponents and supporte!' that could mine whether to release conslruetion
U.S. Route 33 highway project. not be reconciled, there . was too funding for the project. This deci·
ODOT has been criticiz~~ ,regarding much emphuis on procedure (vot· sion will be made in a public forum,
the \J.S. 33 Citizen~Ad~l}' Com· ing, etc), and ODOT's position on and opponents and supporten of the
mittee, created to off~r c1tizens the its preferred alternative for the .road project will be able to address the
oppo,rlunity to raise new ,!isni(icanl was strongly held. On these TRAC at that time.
issuca regarding lhe projibaed new accounts, lhe critics are right. They
"The CAC was created as an
highway to ODOT's atteq\ion.
neglect the most basic premise, unprecedented opportunity for pro·
"Tho CAC is almost ~mpletcd, however, that for six months the ject opponents to demonstrate tbey
and the citizens of the region should CAC meetings were held in Athens had issues whic~ . should change
know why ODOT established the and Mclgs counties every two ODOT's course of action on conCAC, and why it has been success· weeks, with project opponents
ful.
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(CASH and Buckeye Forcat Co_un- structing a new U.S. 33 highway
"The Transponatio.n Review · cil) rcprese~ted at every . mo:cllng, . between Athens and Darwin. The
Advlllory Council (stale body that re~ they raised no new ~tgntficant CAC is virtually.concluded, and we
Continue to stand ready to listen and
decides which projects to fund) wues. ·
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·faced a difficull decision last fall. · "Despite the surrounding conlro· address any new concerns that· may
The , TRAC proposed funding versy, in ODOT'Ii opinion~ the_CAC arise In the future.
"However, until such issues arise,
design; right' of way and conitruc- procesS was succc;aa~ul m fiCVeral .
tion for the pJOject. The TRAC lhen ways. The TRAC s mtent wu to we will proceed with the new high~
received 8,000 comments - 6,000 form the ·C::itizenli Advisory Co~ncil way and in the direction thai the
·supporting the project and 2,000 not to dec1de the fale of the proJect. majority of the citizens in the region
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. opposing it. All elected officiW. 'who Rather the CAC wu to report to the have' advocated."

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SUBSCJUmON RATU

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To subscri~, cal/992-2156.

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TUPPERS PLAINS- East~m Local Board of Education will hold a special meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the conference room of the Eastern
Elementary Public Ubrary.

Weather forec•st:
Tonight ...Decreasing
clouds.
Lows 1S to 20. West wind 10 to lS
mph.
,.
Wednesday ...Sunny. Highs in the ·
mid 30s,
.,
Wednesday night ...Clear. Lows in
the teens.
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Extended forecast:
Thursday ... Mostly clear. HigHs
from the upper 30s to the lower 40s.
Friday...Partly cloudy, Lows near
20 and highs io the upper 40s.
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Saturday... Mostly cloudy with ·a
chance of showers. Lows in the mid
30s and highs in the lower and mid
50s.
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Survey: Job ·barriers persist for welfare recipients·

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Eastern Board sets speclar meeting

It will be another cold night
across Ohio with lows in· th~ teens,
forecasters said.
It will be a preny, mostly sunny
day on Wednesday, but still cold with
temperatures mostly below freezing,
the National Weather Service said.
A slight warming trend is forecast
for tfie next couple of days, with
highs on Thursday in the 30s and on
Friday in the low 40s.
The record-high tempei'Jture for
· this date at the Columbus weather
station was 66 degrees in 1989 while
the record low was 3 below zero in
1978. Sunset tonight will be at 5:51
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:40

a.m.

Citation Issued In two-vehicle crash

Holzer Clinic
Urgent: Core-Center

.Urgent Care Ccnte~
90 J'ackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio ..
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ATHENS- Soulhem Consortium for Children's regular meeting will be
Feb. 29, 10 a.m. at the office.

By The A•eoclated Pr-

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Consortium plans regular meeting

Jay Lee Johnson .

The Dajly ~entinel

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Slight warming trend .-~.
predicted by Thursday·

. MIDDLEPORT- A 51-year&lt;ald Gallipolis man ·was arrested late Monday and charged with numerous counts, including assault on a police officer•.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies, responding to a domestic incident at a
GALLIPOUS - . Jay Lee Johrlson, 25, Gallipolis, die&lt;f~unday, Jan. 30, Leading Creek Road residence, attempted to arrest Danny C. Marrow, 1435
Iowa caucuses by nearly 2-to-L ,.
1.000 as a result of a traffic accident in Addison Township, 11
State Route 7 North, Gallipolis.
. ·
McCain focused heavily on New
. Bom March 4, 1974 in Gallipolis, son of Donna F. ~19.Johnson of Gal·
After being put into the sheriff's cruiser, Marrow allegedly kicked the
Hampo;hire in search of a bad Iy nce\1·
lipolis, and Gary G. JOhnsoq of Goshen, Ohio, he was a press operator at cruiser window, bending the door frame and knocking the window off track,
ed a win lo cement his status as the
from Page A1
GKN Sinter Metals Plant in GallipoliS.
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Sheriff James M. Soulsby said,
alternative to Bush, the national front~
He was a member of Local 1685 of the United Autorpobile, Aerospace
· During lhe struggle, Marrow allegedly ·kicked Deputy David Rees in the had 13 votes and AI Gore 5 in the runner. Most polls showed the Afi.
and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Elks Lodge 107 and the face, according to the report.
Democratic race. McCain had 19 to rona senator with a small lead, bu't
Kanauga Spprtsman Club. He attended the University o( Rio Grande.
Marrow was put in the Meigs County Jail and also charged with resisting Bush's 17 votes.
with Bush closing near the end,
Surviving in addition to his parents are his brother, Shawn JohnSen of arrest, burglary, domestic violence and felony vandalism.
While Bush may have been opti·
Publisher Steve Forbes hoped fora
Gallipolis; his stepmother, Barbara Johnson of Goshen; paternal grandpar·
mistic, none of lhe candidates were solid showing to bolster his standirig
ents, Othello and Dorothy Johnson of Cincinnati; three ~alf-sisters, Melissa
taking anyihing for granted as they among party conservatives, but was
Wilson, Tammy Wilson and Jes5ica Wilson, all of Goahen; and two aunts .
CHESTER - No injuries were reported following a two-vehicle acci· planned to open the campaign's final getting competition from fellow con·
and numerous cousins.
.
.
day in the pre-dawn darkness.
servatives Alan Keyes and Gary
He was preceded in death by his maternal grandparents, James and Alma dent on Flatwoods Road in Ches!er Township Sunday around 7:30 p.m.
Polls
showed
competi)ive
races
on
Bauer.
'
Crockett A, Roush, 22, Cheshire, was attempting to turn left onto SmithFaye Casto.
•i· ·
both
sides
of
the
partisan
aisle.
Forbes,
unfazed
by
polls
depicting
. Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in )he Cremeens Fdneral Chapel, Gal· Goeglein Road when his car was struck in the side by a vehicle driven by
Vice President AI Gore, "cam· his inability to get a bump from his
lipolis, with the Rev. Eugene Harmon officiating. Burial will be in Pine David J. Pooler,19, Long Bottom, Who was attempting to pass, according to
paigning
full blast every minute of strong second-place finish in Iowa,
·
SifCC! Cemetery, Gallipolis. Friends may call at the ch,apel from 2-4 and 7- a Meigs County Sheriff's Ofifce report.
every
hour,"
even planned a 3 ·a.m. vowed to press on with his largely.
Pool,er was cited for reckless operation, the report said.
9 p.m. Wednesday.
rally Wednesday in New York City.
self-financed campaign.
Democratic ·rival Bill Bradley was
"We're going to do to .the Wash'
'headed to a factory gate today ·, in ington politicians what you· do to
POMEROY - Units of the )l{eigs County Emergency Medical Service search of support, and was closing his these lobsters," he said while visiting
recorded two calls for assistance Monday. Units responding were:
campaign with a noisy round of voter a fish market in Exeter.
-:
CHESTER - ·Eva Frederick McBride, 95, a former Meigs County resi·
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
turnout rallies.
· In a symbol of a campaign thai's
8:03 a.m., SR 681, Tuppers Plains, Calvin Hawk, Camden Clark Memodent, died Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2000 atShepherd of the Valley Nursing Home at
The fight between Gore and been troubled, Bauer tumbled off a
Niles.
rial Hospital.
Bradley heated up over the weekend, stage during a pancake-flipping
POMEROY
,
Mrs. McBride was a 1922 graduate of Chesler High School.
but softened Monday as both rivals demonstration in Manchester.
Her funeral was held on Friday, Jan. 7, 2000 at Martin's Funeral Home in
11:31 a.m., Wesl Main Street, Gilbert Zwilling, Veterans Memorial Hos· focused on energizing backers.
"I'm a survivor," he declarc&lt;t,
pita!, pending transfer to Grant Medical 'Center.
·
East Liverpool, with burial in the Riverview Cemetery at East Uverpool.
"I hope you will feel if you cast after popping back up. Keyes lagged
that vote that you're part of something in lhe polls, but the conservative with
new and fresh that is part of a new the fiery rhetoric draws solid crowds
.beginning," . said Bradley, who. and about700 showed up for an elec:
intends to stsy in the race whatever lion-eve rally in Nashua.
,
,
.
the outcome is ih New Hampshire.
"If this i.s any indication, I
Pre-primary polls .showed mixed would venture to guess that we
. WASHINGTON (AP) - When hire ' more . people coming off the blned with a strong economy, have percentage points.
computers went missing at Omeda rolls, but there's a lot of room for . dramatically shrunk welfare rolls.
Employers reported that the results, though most gave Gore the . won't have a bad day (today)," h~
Communications Inc., fingers were improvement, accOrding to 'the Wei- Founded in 1997, the Welfare to biggest barrier to hiring someone off tiniest of edges. Gore won the leadoff said.
~- pointed at. former welfare ·recipients fare to Work Partnership's 1999 sU:r- Work Partnerships gets companies welfare wu that applicants had no
the company had hired just a few · vey of 600 member businesses.
to com mil to hiring at least one per- job or work history. The second
weeks before ihe theft.
Only l'PPCn:ent of company offi· 110n leaving welfare. Most of its most frequently mehtioped blirrier
The culprit tumed out to be a cials surveyed :last·.month said pco· . ' 1,200 members ate'small businesses:· .-wu that applicants liave pdor inter·
The group's survey, obtained by personal skills, sucb as showing
delivery penon. But the revelation . pie on welfare were productive and
'
that some employees harbored sus- 59 percent said it w,as. fair to The Associated Press, shows that courtesy .or being l!ble 1to resolve AEP-33'1.
Ud. -30 1w
picions about·the new hires' was an describe sonieone on welfare as une· hiring is on the rise. It estimated that conflicts.
Oak Hill Financial -14'/a
Akzo....., 41'"
eye-opener ·for . Omeda owner ducated.
its .memben hired 239,000 former
Also high on the list of barriers AmTech/SBC - 43'1.
OVB-33
Michael Oberman, whose company
,The numbers are slig!ltly better wei tare recipients last year, up near- was welfar~ hires often have prob· Aahland 011 - 32'·
One Valley .;...., 25~.
is a member of the Welfare to Work than Ihe previous year's survey, ly 10 ·percent from 1998, when an Iems traveling to work, which can be AT&amp;T-52~.
Peoplea- 18~.
Partnership, a group that aiins to when just 10 percent surveyed said estimated 218,000 were hired.
a long distance from lheir homes, Bank One - 29"1.
Premier -: 8'4
change negative stereotypes of peo· people on welfare were productive
In 1997 an estimated 192,000 and are struggling with child care.
Bob Eval')l -15\
Rockwell - 49'1•
pie on welfare and get companies to and 61 percent said they were uned· were hired, bringing the three-year
Oberman said three of the six BorgWamtr - 33'1.
RD Shell - 55~•
ucated..
,
•
lol~ lo 6SO,OOO.
·
·
employees
he
hired
didn't
stay
Saara ..... 30"!.
hire them.
·
,
· h'
b
f ·
·
bl
Champion - 4
·
"We were wide-eyed and do·
However, most businesses are
The percentage of compantes 1r·
eca~~ o lranspo_rta11on pro ems.
Charming Shopa- &amp;"!..
Shoney'a -:- H.
gooderish when we got into this," pleased with the people th~y hire. ina someone off welfare was abou.t · Eh Segal, prcs1dent of lhe Wei·
Wendy'a18"1.
City
Holding
12'1.
said Oberman, who has hired six Eighty percent of compames that the same .last year - S4 percent fare to Work Partnenhip, said the
Worthington
-14'/.,
Federal
Mo~ul15'!.
ptople off welfare to work his ISO· employed someone off welfare said as it was in 1998 - 55 percent, lhe latter set of problems arc tougher to ·
·
Dally etock reporta are th~
employee softWare firm in North· the new hires turned out to be good, survey showed. But the number of crack than the fact that welfare Flratar - 231.
4
p.m.
cloelng .quotea of the
Gannett
89
'
!
.
brook, Ill. "I found that 1 had to do productive worken, the su':"ey companies thai didn't hire anyone recipients often have no work hislo·
day•a transactions,
·
prevloua
K
mart8'1.
,rnorc work and counseling of my showed.
.
increased to 33 percent in 1999 from ry_ because employen, many fa&lt;:ed
· ,:.provided by Advest of Gal·
existing employees." .
Tough new'tu)es limiting the time 27 percent in 1998. The survey has a wllh severe labor shortages, are will· Kroger- 17\
llpolla.
·.
Landa
End
34'·
· . Pen:eptions abl&gt;ut people on w~l- families can slay on welfare, com· margin of error of plus or minus 4 ing to train people.
fare arc getting better as compan1es

pamlly getting new dog

1

•

RACINE- A turkey and ham dinner will be held Sunday at the Racine
American Legion Post 602 with serving to begin atll a.m. Dine in·or carry
out.

Harriett L. VanMatre

'

Man held on $1 million bond

OHIO VALLEY WEATHER

Turkey, ham dinner slated Sunday

·Court: Woman
deserves trial
in GM case

CINCINNA'n(AP) -A woman
who says her arm was broken by an
air bag that deployed after she hit a
car in a parking lot is entilled to ·a
trial of her lawsuit against General
.
Motors
Corp., an appeals court
·· CLEVELAND (AP) ..:. A judge set bond at $1 million for a man
ruled.
·
charged with murder in the beating death of a 2-year&lt;ald in his care.
The
6th
U.S.
Circuit
Court
of
Cleveland· Municipal Court Judge Colleen Conway Cooney also set a
Appeals sent Ruby Harris' lawsuit
~- 10 hearing on Monday on whether enough evidence exists for the
back to federal court in Toledo for a
cJyarge against Ronnell L. Jeffries, 20, of suburban Maple Heights.
trial.
::Jeffries was arrested Jan. 24. after Tasharia Bennett was 11\ken to the
. Appeals Judges John Feikens,
hoispital with serious injuries. ·
James Ryan and Alan Norris unani·
:; she died Thursday. The coroner ruled that Tasharia died of a skull
mously reversed U.S. District Judge
fi]ICiure and abdominal injuries caused by blows from an undetermined
James Carr's 1998. pretrial rulina in
o!Jject.
.
favor of GM. A jury should be
;: Jeffries occasionally stayed with lhe girl's mother, Tiffany Bennett,
allowed 'to decide the iaaue, the
who was his girlfriend,.but he was not Tasharia's father. Police said he
appeals judges ruled Monday. ' •
~~ baby-sitting the girl on the day she was injured.
. Harris said !he. air bag deployed
and · broke her right arm. after Her '
1991 Otevmlet Corsica hit the other
car head-i&gt;n in Toledo on June 10, ·
· 1996. Both Hams, then 76, and a·
:: NEW MIAMI (AP)- A family .whose dog was shot by a sheriff's
passenger said the air bag hlld ·nQI
olflcer who mistakenly entered their house is getting a replacement dog.
inflated
and 'extended until after lhe
'· Erik Eads, 23, of Cincinnati, who breeds American pit bull terriers,
collision.
.•
s4ld he wu upset by the shooting and decided to offer Mike and .Angie
Carr
rejected
Hlirris'la~¥~Uit
lfter
Diefenbaeher a pit bull puppy at no charge. '
.
the Detroit;baaed autQmaker pre.
. ~ The fami)y had received offers of an adult pit bull terrier b.ut wanted a
~~ented teslimony · from two of its
p~py• .· •
.
experts
who. theorized that the air
. ;·Eads, who breeds the animals as a hobby, said he usually sells puppies
bag
properly
deployed during lhe
for about $~0 but is not charging the Diefenbachers.
,
collision,
rather
than -after it,
'
::"I ':"Ill furious about the whole incident," Eads said.
.
. ,
The
appeals
judges
$aid,
howev·
:·Oh J,n. 16 at about 2:20 a.m., Butler County sheriff's deputy Kevin
er, thai neither of OM's ex~rts .
Mofield entered lhe family's house without pent~ission; authorities aaid.
established the ."undisPuted phyai- .
POlice said Mofield was responding to a domestic viOlence call but went •: cal facia" neeesaary to justify reject·
to;)he wrong house in the neighborhood in New Miami, aboul 20 miles
'ing Harris' testimony before trial. .
narth of Cincinnati.
·
. ~bruto, th~ Diefenbachers' black and white pit bull terrier, confrOnted
tho deputy, who shot the dog once through the baCk. The family had
B~to put to sl~p.
.
;Mofield was suspended without pay for one month and ordered to
un4ergo more training in communications skills, the ~se offirearins, and
seirch and aeizure roccdurca.
·

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3 • •

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

• :1

,,,lolj; •• •

Budget

The commissioners also:
.
• Accepted bids for bituminous
materials
for February from Asphalt
from PageA1
Materials Inc., Marietta, and Middle-.
er for group iates on general liability, · port Terminal, Gallipolis;
auto insuiance, blanket bonding for
, Approved payment of bills in tlie
employees, Nurse/EMT and EMTA
malpractice insurance, and property am~unt of $233,743.67, with 19&amp;.
coverage on all county-ilwned facili· entries.
ties, and contents.
·Alsli present were Commissioner:
Howard said Monday that . the
commissioners have accepted a pro- Mick Davenport and Oerk Gloria
posal from Alliance Insurance Kloes.
through the Pomeroy agency Downing-Childs-Mullen and Musser,
which will reduce deductibles and
improve coverage in all areas.
Kinder, however, said that the
commissioners should Carefully consider their coverage through Buckeye
before their withdrawal. ·

�Com1nentary

Page A4

r

~av. '*'-Y 1, 200Q

--

The Daily Sentinel
••

111 CourtSt., Pomwoy, Ohio
740-11112-2158 • Fax: 11112·2157

"R&gt; 'REMl\tN

118n~~glng

.j

Editor

"

WHAT I'M
THINKING ...

S.tLENT. ..

("

01- Hill
Controller

J

11-IE RIGHT
TO GUESS

"THE RtGHT ·

Ch1rle1 W. Govay
Publllher

n

YOU HAVE

YOUH~VE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ch•rt- Ho41111eh
Gellenll M1n1ger

n

'

~

~.,

"

t.u,,..,

...,...~~~ ,,. __..,. ..w-.•. n., '""""" lmtiM11 JoiJ wora. AU
"''./fd
•• •11;, ftl ~.,.. ..,,._.• • iltdai•aMra.J •* tllq,_, .~. No ..,..,,._, ,.,.,.. wi/1
k ,ulld.t.IAII., MtNtM IH U. filM,...,
la11n,. M '"'"r't'n.
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.M,..,

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Co. 'I ..,.,.., a..N, ,.,_ «AI....U•IKML

I

j.

.
..
' -

'

Our view:

•

Play ball

I

'

.,•
~

WVU,·Marshall should
.meet each•• other every year
Sunday's Super Bowl thriller has a lot offolks talking foot. ball, not the least of which being some West Virginia legislators.
The Cabell County delegation has been
Rivalry joined by a Wayne County lawmaker in
an attempt to "encourage" West Virginia
games
University to play Marshall University in
ma/(efor Huntington sometime in the near future.
County is home to the Thundering
· ·great foot- Cabell
Herd.
·
. ball and
We don't think the West Virginia Legiseven better lature, or any governmental body for that
matter, has any business meddling in colcamalege football schedules. However, we do
think the lawmakers' intent is good. West
raderie~
Virginia and Marshall need to meet on. the
gridiron every year.
. Rivalry games make for great football and even better
camaraderie. Each state needs a game to decide in-state brag$ing rights. The South Carolina-Clemson matchup and the
annual Florida-Florida State classic are perfect examples.
The 1997 Frontyard Brawl played between Marshall and
WVU was an exciting game that captivated the Mountain
State. That game was in Morgantown, and WVU has since
refused to give Marshall a rematch in Huntington. The excuses rang~ from lack of seating at Marshall's stadium to sched~
uling conflicll!, mainly on the M&lt;?untainee,rs' behalf; · .
Most, if not all, of the excuses' are full of hooey. WVU frequently travels to 'Navy whose stadium seats less than Mar- '
shall's. That's also a non-conference game. In addition, the
Mountaineers make a regular habit of scheduling weaker MidAmerican Conference foes such as Western Michigan and
Miami (Ohio).
·
· ·
·
. We'd hate to think this is a case of Goliath - · WVU being .scared of David - Marshall - but with each passing
year, that conclusion becomes more apparent. Win or lose,
·playing Marshall can only do West Virginia good- and vice
versa.
' Both teams need more quality opponents. The Thundering
Herd is a budding Top 10 power, something usually lacking
,fromWest Virginia's weak Big East sehedule. Likewise for
Marshall, which suffers· come bowl time due to its MAC
schedule.
.
Making the Frontyard Brawl an annual event makes sense
for both teams - whether it's played in Morgantown or Huntington, a.lthough for fairness sake the site should rotate.
Speaking on behalf of thousands of c,razed Ohio Valley
football fans, inany of whom are Marshall and/or WVU fans,
we say bring back the brawl. We're ready for some football!

.,,

,.

'

"

~

"·

Kondracke's view:

Democrats' race co~ld be ove,r before - ~OP's ·~

Against all the early conventio~al wisdom, the
Democratic presidential· race co.uld be "over" ,
before the Republican battle - though the GOP
race should be decided soon enough.
. · the betting up to a few weeks ago had been that
Texas Gov. George W. Bush (R) wo~ld have the
GOP nomination locked up by March 7 at the latest, but that fonner Sen. Bill Bradley, D·N.J., couiH
keep challenging Vice President AI Gore for
months.
But after getting trounced in Iowa. Bradley has
to tum his campaign completely around- and fast
-or he could get beaten in New HampShire Tues·
day and be effectively dead as a contender.
Defeat in New Hampshire won't necessarily
. fo~be Bradley to quit running. He has the money to
keep going through March 7 or even beyond. And
presumably he feels hostile enough toward Gore to
want to stay in.
.
But polls al,ready show Bradley running behind
in New York and California. where he needs to
win, and the 64 to 35 percent drubbing he jilst too~ .
presumably will depress his numbers there even
more.
So if Bradley loses in New.Hampshire and his.
polls look bad, Democratic politicians are going to
start calling on him to withdraw and avoid the risk
of an expensive, divisive battle that coul(l hurt the
pany's chances in November.
Meantime, the Repu~icllli race could .be effec.
lively over Tuesday night, too, if Bush beats Sen.
John McCain, R·Ariz., in New Hampshire. But the
Iowa results did not create any great. expectation
that this will happen. ·
· Bush scored a solid victory with 41 percent But
the strong conservative second· and third-place fin·
isbers, Steve Forbes and Alan Keyes, respectively,
.together out-polled Bush. This indicates that grass·

.'

It's true that Gore has exaggerated the flaws in ~;
L
Bradley's health-care plan ;.... sul!8esting that the
poo£ would be left uninsured - and has unfairly·'''
branded Bradley "a quitter" for leaving the Senate,"
On the other hand, Bradley failed to prove in tho" '
debate that Gore has been ·underhanded and It
seemed a stretch for Bradley to liken Gore to";
Richard Nixon.
.
,
~.'
Gore used the right word about Bradley:·~
"defensive.'~ Bradley is still not making a full·
blown case why it would be bad for the Dcmocra-~
tic party to ~minale Gore.
.
The real case against Gore- as many ordillll)',,• .
citizens say on the campaign trail - is that "h(:
stood by THAT MAN,'' i.e. Ointon, helping him _;
r6ots Republicans aren't yet comfortable with the raise 1996-campaign funds and declaring . him'
estabHshinent's anointed front-runner.
. .,
New Hampshire voters are notoriously disre- . "one of America's greatest presidents" after he."
spectful of front-runnqs and McCain still holds a was impeached:
.
· ...,
lead there, so the chances are the G,OP r:ace will ,
Does -Bradley .dare bring up the ~-word retain its suspense until Feb. 19 in South Carolina. · "scandal"-. as the re&amp;Son not to nomiflale Gore? ,,
McCain and Forbes supporters can paint see- Not yet, and probably, not ever.
.. .~
narios for Bush actually losing the nomination, but . The closest Bradley comes is to say that ·
they are implausible. Bush may well lose New . ::Americans ":~t a fresh ~lart'' and that' he .wants.i~
Hampshire, but it's hard to see him losing in Soqth
to make pohtics someth~?g our people Cll), .~ .
Carolina or the big contests March 7.
.. 1 prou_d and not ashamed of.
·
• Bradley is hinti~~ an:&gt;und at what Republi~J
Only Forbes has the 'money to challenge Bush
nationwide, and he is unlikely to wrest the domi· .wdl not fear .to mention m Novem_ber - .Buddhipt..,.
nant GOP establishment vote away from·Bush.
temples, While House coffees, As1an money-launOf course, all of this is extrapolation from a sta· dering, Monica Lewinsky..
. · ,.
tus quo that could change, but on the Democratic
It would be extrerntly nsky for Bradley to bnne;:
side only Bradley can change it, and indications are ,all this.irito the; climpaign. Democrats sliD like Bill
he still docs not know how to thwart Gore's attack Ointon and might be offended at attacks on him. ·:~
machine.
But it's the mark of a gifted politician to say:o~
The two Democrais' final debate in New Hamp- what needs to be !laid in a convincing way and gain
shire indicalel;l that Bradley understands the imper~ S\Jpport for doirig il So far, Bradley is still stum-,;i
ative to be tougher on Gore, challenging distortions bling.
·
·
...
(Morton Kondraekt 11 executive editor ot~
of his record and proposals, but Bradley ended up
looking whiny, not masterful.
Roll Cell, the new~p~~per of C.pltol Hill.) ·

Morton
Kondracke·,

. ·on'

Ryan's view:

.

Teen-agers·speak out
and ambitions that girls even a few
yelllll ago wouldn 'I have taken ·for
.
ted " ,
gran.
,.
But as I' read through the report
land listened at Mills;. I heard the
echoes of the hall,;,ays and cafeterias
of· mY own girlhood. Fpr all the .
strides jn the claSsroom, today's girls
still stru8gle with : the pressure to
have seX! to tiC popular; to figure out
, what to tie 8nct how to fit in'. They're
still asking: How can I be myself and
still be i&lt;xeptable to the crowd? _
"It's not school (that's the problem ), " a 14-year-old in the AAUW
report wrote. "lt's1he people in it."
Amen,' sister, ·
' ..
Girls in the teport could desqibe
with meticulous clarity how they
_jll!kCd soc:i!llly' and how th4; bound'aries o{ '. the :sOcial hi~rlrchy ~~· ·
rigidly pOliced through humiliation
and rejcc:tion1 rumors and goSsip. At
one seminar ai the Mills symposium,
lhe facililator asked, "Ate girls mean
to one another?., ~- ·
Thegirls,.WCrcdasonc: "Yes!'.'
The girls say 'that the adults in
their lives talk openly .tiout the phys·
iological and posi!ble academic con·
sequen~ oten11a£ing in either drugs
or sex. But what remains largely .
undiscuSsed lh these enlightened
times are the messier, grayer issues of ·
Intimacy and rejed,ion and cruelly.
"Adults aren't . comfoJ11ble llilking ,
about them,'' ode girl Aill
I think I cail tell. h~ why: ~
never figured it.out ourselves.
.
I left the symposium thinking that
it surely is the best time in Americari:
hislory 19 be a girl. No one's telling ..
• her she can't ~ a judge or an asiTo- ,
01ut, as a social studies teacher once
told me•.But it's no . . being a girl
· today. Adolescence is an affliction
only timc Cal.' Ileal. And even then,
believe me, never' fully.
(Jain. ~ .. " ~lor
the 81111 1',...
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·CII(Oi • • ) ,
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Ohio Perspective:

·"

For gifted·kids, what'.s ri.ext?.~

"'
By JOHN SEE;WER
state's requirement "anothet,;
AIIOCIItecl Pr- Writer
unfunded mandate."
.. •
TOLEDO - ,This year, Ohio's
What scares some adminislraton
611 school distriC;ts will try to Piclc is )"hellier they will have aqy ..Yv
out their best 8\14 brightest-students. over new programs.lir ,if the instruc, " ·
The list will 1help determine how lion will be mandated by the state.
Ohio educale&amp;,its "gifted children"
"They have .an idea of what ~. J
and how m~~&lt;;h money hiwmakets want, but it's not concrete," Roi!J9Y,;
will spend on thalc programs.
said. "Yet we·~ being asked to but~
· "We hope that things will change into this.'' ,
'
dramatically· f9' gitlcd icids in this . . . The scope of the lesting alsO corb~
state," said ~n. Sheldqn, Of· Ohio · ' cems her; It will include all studenU.O
Association for Oitlcd Ouldren.
in kindergarten through high school,.\
. ,A,bout two-thirds of all gitlcd It will cover traditional academic
children 'in Ohio do not receive ilny areas including
and scienco,.
additional teaching from their but also the arts.
. 1:
schools, she said.
"The only thing they don't men~.
· "You see some distriel3 where lion · in here is athletics," Rothey
algebra is l!1e top 'math dass." , . .said . .
.
. . c...
More attentiOn hu been (ocuscd , She hopes once the state decides.-.
, over the .,.\.five years on how,Ohio how ~- gifted children should be
. ' educa~ gi~d children;,. iii ~ '. tauJh!. there ~ill ~ ~ough money,,
because of tbe Ohio SlipreiiiC' Court · ·. for telchers llid traimng. .
decision ihat ordered., ovcrhiul of
· "I think there's probably a ~ ·
the state's 'school funding system.
· to· increise the services," she said.-..
'
The court said more needS to be "I'm· not sure it needs to be ati
done wid) prpgrams fOr students sweeping u this.'' .
• -;
who excel in the classroom.
• AdVO!:&amp;IeS for gifted Jli'Oif'll1il"
Lawmake.._ decided that before say m~y people do·not understand
spending.extra.inoney 6n lhcsc'prcr that extremely smart c:ltildren Cllt';
grws. they wanted to know how suffer in the classroom just u thole,;
many gifted children there are. That with ~taming disabilities.
'
is why schools .are identifying the
"The Issue Is the~·" ShekJori:
students who ex&lt;iel.
said. / "It's · that the1r needs' aren't
Some administrators, while in being met because they have., edu)•
' support of it~creasing progranis for · c:ationaJ need that is different fronl.t'
aiftcd•childfen, say the state is not lfi(JIIt of ,the chil~'! in' the cl-,
giving them enough 1f1011CY to find ·11l0111.'' ' • ·
. ••
whic:lt.children are gifted. . ··
She said , sc:ltoois should ne~~'
·The state has allocated $5 million worry too·much llll!&gt;llt how the pro:'l
to the lchools, which l"ust use a test . gmns will be' implemented or lhe .
·to eviluate the studerits.
costs. She said . some prOifi!U' ~
"It will drastically change the could be as simple as moving alii-&lt;''
way'distriel3 identify and serve gift- dents up a arBde ill an aRe. whe!O~
ed children," said Marty Rothey, they are deemed to ~ &amp;ifted'.
~
president ·of the Fin!llay school
"I think we need to be very flex!'
board. "That's not a bad thing nee- · ible in tenns of how' we deal wltN''
· esArily, it:s just we · need the these kids," Sheldon said. "One o~, .
fund&amp;."
the things we've emphuizcd is thif&gt;
. Peter Silvennan, a ~J~Cmber of the you can't have cookie-cutter ~Toledo sc;hool ·board, called tile gmns ·IICIOii the state."
•· r

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Pomeroy,

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

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·. OXN~, &lt;?alit•. (AP) - lnvestigatms trying to learn what sent an
AlukaAirhncs Jet w1lh 88 people aboard plunging into the Pacific Ocean
hid at least one ~~?lid clue to. work with today: a pilot report that there was
lf:Puble Wit~ equ1pmen1 destgned to keep the plane airborne.
; No surv1vors had been found by this morning. Several bodies were
rtc:OVCFed 'from the 58-degree water, Coast Guard U . Chuck Diorio said
bilfhe could not give a specific number.
'
The Coast Guard and commercial squid boats continued to search the
debris.field 10 miles from shore in water from 300 feet to 750 feet deep.·
As the stench of airline fuel hung in the air, the boats used nets to haul in
gtim reminders of lives lost: a tennis shoe, a stuffed animal and a num~r of small souvenirs from Mexico. ,
• " Every resource is out there to lind people," Coa5t Guard· Capt.
~eo~e Wright said. "We're actively searching for survivors."
.
. Fhght 261 from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to San Francisco and Seattle
h!t the water 40 miles northwest of Los Angeles International Airport at
4;36 p.m. Monday. The weather was clear at the time.
.
.
' Moments before the crash -described by a witness as a nose dive o~e of the two pilots radioed that he was having trouble with "stabilizer
~m: an~ asked to be diverted to Los Angeles, airline spokesman Jack
· evans sa1d.
·
i "Radar indicates it fell from 17,000 feet and then was lost from ·
"dar," San Francisco airport spokesman Ron Wilson told ICRON-TV.

lilinols halts executions for :1\ow
, (AP) - . A temPorary halt to executions in Dlinois has ene.Qiized a move- ·
"ll)ent that questions tl)e fairness of capital punishment, though supporters·
acknowledge they're a long way from bringing change to Oilier stales.
. . ,A,IIeast _live stales are considering moratoriums or bans capital punlllhment thiS year. They are Considered long shots and similar previous
efforts have failed.
·
But opponents were invigorated when the moratorium was announced by
Gov. George Ryan on Monday: Ryan, saying "there is no margin for error
· when it comes to pulling a Jlllrson to death," called· for a special jlanel to
study the state's capital punishment system.
"It's like snowflakes adding up on the branch may cause the branch to
break at so~e point," said Richard Dieter.of the Death Penalty Information
. Center. "Th1s IS a big snowflake."
.
.
The center takes no position on the death penalty itself but has been crit·
ical of how it is applied:
·
. •Dlinois is the fust of the 38 states with the death· penlllty to hall execu·
liqns while the system is examined Thirteen inmates have been released
from the sta'e's deat~ row since 1987, exposing what critics SIIY are serious
flaws in the aiminal justice system.
·
. In most of those cases, prosecutms acknowledged they had the wrong
man .after they were confronted with DNA evidence, new witnesses or con'fessions from others. In other cases, the inmates' convictions were thrown
OU! on appeal~~td prosecutors have yet to JlUrsue a retrial.

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By JOAN RYAN
I remembered, as I listened to the
girls talk, what it was like to be 13.
I saw a picture of myself mcing on
my bike to the department store a
half-mile from home to buy Levi
oords before.my spin~ schoolday began. Had the store been·closed,
I would have faked illness or claimed
menstrual cramps rather ·than go to
·school in the suddenly out-of-style
By The AsiOCiated Pr· ·
clothes in my closet.
Today is Tuesday, Feb. I, the 32nd day of 2000. There are 334 days left
11ie teen-age girls panicipating in
in the year.
"What Girls Learn In and Out of
Today's Highlight in History:
School,"· a national symposium at
· On Feb. 1, 1960, four black co! lege students began a sit-in protest at a Mills College in Oakl~ Calif., last
lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C., where they had been refused service.
Ffiday•. seerped muCh differe~t from
· On this date:
my teen-age self. They w~re d1fferent
In 1861, Texas voted to secede ·from 'the Union.
even from the girls of eight years ago
, In 1893, inventor Thomas A. Edison compleied work on the world's first who populated the American Associ·
motion picture studio, his "Black Maria," in West Orange, N.J. . .
ation of University Wo111en's ground. In 1896, Puccini's opera "La Boheme" premiered in Turin. · · ·
breaking 1992 study, ·"How Schools
· . In 1920, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police came into existence.'
Shortchange Qirls."
. In 1943, one of America's .most highly decorated military units of World ·
The girls in the '92 study seemed,
War II, the 442d Regimental Combat Team, made up almost entirely of · for the most part, passive victints
J•panesc·Americans, was authorized.
· · '
·
· •
caught in an oppressive c'ulture.
In 1946, Norwegian statesman Trygve Lie was chosen to be the first ICC· Today's girls live in a world in which
retary general of the United Nations.
.
schools are seen to favor girls, in
; ' In 1968, during the Vielnam War, Saigon's police chief (Nguyen Naoc which, for the first time, more
.Loan) executed a Viet Cong officer with a· pistol shot to the head in a scene · women tllan men make up the fresh·
captured in a famous news photogmph.
man classes on Ame(ican college
; In 1979, Ayatollah Ruhollah,Khomeini received a tumultuous welcome in campuses,' in which teen pregnanCy is
'!):bran he ended nearly 15 years of exile.
.
.
down, and the genller gaps in math
• In 1979, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst, whose prison sentence for
bank robbery had been commuted by President Jimmy Carter, left a federal and science test scores are closing
(however slowly).
lfison near San Francisco.
. ·
Among eduqdors mid :fe':"inists,
· In 1991,35 people were killed when a USAir jetliner crashed atop a com- there exists today what Mills College
muter piMe at Los Angeles International Airport.
l 'ten yean ago: East Germany's Communist premier, Hans Modrow, president Janet Holmgren (quoting
appealed' for negotiations with West Gerrnany to forge· a ·~ united father· Toni Morrison) called "earned op\i·
land.''
mism." In the MUW's latest report,
: Today's Birthdays: Actor Stuart Whitman is 72. Former Russian Presi· "\bices of a Generation: Tccnagc
®rit Boris N. Yeltsin is 69..Singer Don Everly is 63.Actor Garrett Morris . Girls Report About Their Lives
is 63. Singer Ray Sawyer (Dr. Hook and the Medicine Sho.w) is 63. Actor Today," few girls reported sexist
Sherman Hemsley is 62. Bluegrass singer Del McCoury is 61 . Jazz musi· comments from teachers, counselors
ill an Joe Sample is 61 . Comedian-filmmaker Terry Jones is 58. Singer Rick or administrators. Fewer sdll report·
ll!JPCS is 48. Actor-writer-producer Bill Mumy is 46. Rock musician Mike ed that boys regularly dlsrup~ class.
Campbell (Tom Petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 46. Rocksinger Exene Cer·
"There's an assumption of sue·
liFnka is 44. Princess Stephanie of Monaco is 35. Actress Sherilyn Fenn is . cess among girls," said Jadwiga
.35. Lisa Marie l're61ey is 32. Co111edjan Pauly Shore is 30. Rappe( Big Boi Sebrechts, president of · Women's
(Outkut) is 25. ·
·College Coaliti&lt;ln. "They h&amp;Vll hopes

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On this date in history ....

~,· Febnwy1,2000

Middleport, Ohio

N.H. often~
puzzles
pollsters .'

Ice scraper

Equipment probed In crash

£st46{tsnd in 1948

R. ShftnL-Ia

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Report: CIA .Inquiry stalled at top

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WASHINGTON (AP)- With the .
blizzarct of polling prior to today's :
New Hampshire .Q!imary, some poll-;
Siers might feel "t.little sheepiah by •
Wednesday momjpg. .
;
Some polls showed Sen. John ;
McCain ahead in the Republican '
presidential race, .Dthers bad him tied;
wilh Gov. George W. Bush. Vice;
PreSident AI Gore leads in some J?OIIS:
of the Democratic candidates though •
the margin was narrowing, and a new;
one out Monday bad the race between"'
Gore and former Sen. Bill Bradley too
close to call.
For pollsters who get the winner
right, they could be far off on the margins of viaory, giving a candidale
with a close second-place finish . a
chance to claim that he's "beat the
expectatio1111." Or the results today
might embanilss most·of them. ·
New Hampshire, with its independent-minded voters who closely follow the primary ·campaigns, has a
habit of confounding at least some of
the pollste~ :-· a situation made
worse by the sheer number of polls.
Of the·late polls in the 1996GOP~
primary in New Hampshire, some,
said Bob Dole would win and some·
picked Pat Bucha,nan.
· Veteran New Hampshire pollsters
concede the public gets a little cynical
about all the polls and the differing
lin dings.
"II just reinforces people's notion
thai you can't believe what the polls
say," said Dick Bepnett of the American Research Grqup in Manchester,
who said getting an accumte picture
of the electorate is a tricky business•.
"It's like three-dimensional chess."
RKM Research of Portsmouth
asked during one of its recent presidential polls how many of the respont
dents had participated in a political
/
·
poll in the last six months.T\vo-third!t.
.said they had at least once, some several times.
,
"Nowhere else do so many poll·
Bill Stineman of Dayton, Ky., pushn·snow oft tha surface of Mirror Lilke Monday In Clnelnnatl'a sters compete for the attention of stJ"
Eden Park. (AP photo) . .
·
few .voters," sa~d R. Kelly Myers,"'
director of research for RKM.

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. NEW YORK (AP) -A dassified report by the CIA's inspector general
blamed the agency's top officials for stalling an internal investigation into
e\ijdence that former director John Deutch mishandled large volumes of
sc:c:rct material, The New York limes said today.
· ·Tho report said that current CIA Director George Tenet, then Deutch's
top deputy, should have done more to "forcefully ensure" the case was
properly jnvestigated.
..
.
,The report also said Tenet said he had slven directions for the investi~- .
'
tioilto proceed unimpeded. It does not accuse Tenet or his aides of violating ·
'
any laws in their handling of the matter:
· .
' ,The QA. at the inspector general's recommendation, ha5 established a
panel to examine whether Tenet and other top officials handled the case
aJlpropriately.
' · ·
The I;&gt;eutch probe began in December 1996, whe11 he was leaVing office.
.
.
~ 't't;iinj:illter security officials ·found that Dedtch had plac:Cd ·classified
,•
nlaterial ii)l his unsecured home computers, a violation of agency rules.
. ' 'WASHINGtoN .(AP) - The good economic times. Unemploy'
WASHINGTON (AP)- Repub ~ senior Democrat on the Ways anc\.
'The·CIA report said, however, ihat an inquiry by security officials was
current economic expansion, ment is at its lowest level in 30
licans and Democrats concur that Means Committee.
shelved within a few months and that the CIA failed .to notify the Justice
·which for more than a year has years - 4:1 percent - consumer
love and.marriage shouldn't mean a
Department about the case for mo.re than a year,
· ·
, ·
The bill is the first e,lement of this'
been
the country's longest peace- confidence is at record highs and
higher
income
tax
bill.
The
question
year's
House GOP strategy to break:
'The inspector general notified the JustiCe 'Department of the situation in
time expansion, now holds the all· Wall Street keeps hitting record
•
is
whether
Congress
can
agree
on
last year's failed $792 billion tax cut•
early 1998, after a CIA employee complained that the case had been improptime record, in war and peace.
hig~s.
·
how to fix the "marriage penalty" into. smaller individual pieces lhal
erly handled.
· ·
As of today, the current ex pan·
For the past three years, the .
thai affects 25 million couples.
~ lfenet learned of the alleged security breach almosi im.mediately but
are more difficult fo~ Democmts to,
sion has lasted 107. months, one total economy, as measured by the
House Republicans, timing their oppose.
failed to move to reprimand Deutch until the Justice Department had been
.month longer than the previous gross · domestic product, has
votes to Valentine's Day, proposed
White House officials say thC:
notified and the inspector general's office had aimpleted its report on CIA
record-holder, the 1960s expan· expanded by 4 percent or more
Monday . a lO·year, $182 billion president's support will depend oO:
handling of the case, the report said.
.
·:
sion that covered the Vietnam .annually, a pace -that normally
measure that would address the · how the GOP balances projected·
The Justice Department reviewed the case and decided in April not to
War.
trigger
fears
thai
the
dwinwould
penalty
by adjusting income tu budget surpluses among the overall
prosecute Deutch, who issued an apology in August.
.
. President Clinton, commenting dling supply of workers would
rates, boosting lhe slandard income priorities of Social Security,
That same month, Tenet pulled Deutch's security cl~ces. a highly .
last week · on ' t~e strong growth begin to demand inflationary wage
tax deduction and expanding a tax Medicare, government spending ~
unusual move.
· numbers in. the final months of increases.
credit program for the working poor. debt repayment and tax cuts.
·
J
'
•
1999,. said, "This unbelievable
· Instead, inflation has remained
"The
tax
code
is
tough
enough
.going
lo
depend
on
tht.:
"It's
1
.recovery marches on.''
well·behaved. The so-called core
on Americans as it is, but it should· entire picture,'' said .Clinton
And
on
that
point,
privale.ccon-.
rate of inflation, which takes out
DALLAS (AP)- Scientists say they have learned pa,rt of'lhe reason
n't pen;ilize couples just beCause spokesman Jake Siewert. "It's diffiomists lerid support- the current ·volatile energy and food products,
Why some people pass out when they stand up after dtinking alcohol:
I hey want to get married," said Rep. cult to address these items in isola.
expansion has been truly remark-. was up just 1.9 percent in 1999, • Bill Archer, R-Texas, chairman of tion."
lower blood pressure and wider blood vessels.
·
·•
able, not just in length but in terms the best performance in 34 years.
' ·T)vo or three beers on average is enough to impair the body's ability
the House Ways and Means Com·
The Treasury Department esli,'
of its ability to remain robust,
Clinton takes every opportunity
to:. maintain a steady blood pre~ure, accordi~g to a 1999·. \itudy believed
millee. ·
mates that 25 million married coudespite
its
advancing
year~
and
the sl!undness of the Clin·
to
cite
to De the first to explain the cardiovascular effecls of drinli;ing.
Archer's bill is about four limes ples pay higher income taxes than if,
without triggering rising inflation. ton·Gore deficit reduction proThose changes impair the body's ability to pump fleSh blood to the
as costly as a marriage penalty pro- they were single, mainly when both.
The eight years and 11 months gram as a key building block for · posal by President Clinton, bul rem- spouses have jobs. The tax strikes
brain, said Dr. Virend Somers, a co-auth!)r of the study pUblished today
of uninterrupted growth since the the good economy, hoping voters
in:lhe journal' Circulation. As a result, drinkelli who suddenly stood up
edying the marriage penalty is popu- most often when the higher-earning
lasl recession is in itself quite a will reward Democrats this faiL
often felt liibtheaded and sometimes fainted.
' I·
lar and stands a better·lhan·even spouse inakes between $20,000 an4
feat considering thai the average
Republicans are quick to note
·How alcohol causes those changes is.uaknown, said Somm, a cardichance of becoming law. .
$75,000 in adjusted' gross income it
of all U.S. expansions, dating back that the current recovery actually
"Just because this is aq election year, according to the Congressional
ologist at the· Mayo Clinic in Minnesota; He suggested the alcohol CO!Jiil
to 1854, is just 35 months, not started nearly two years before
be'blunting the nerve signal sent from the brain to the vessel'; or the alcoyear does not mean it can not be a Budget. Office, but some single ~
long enough to ce!ebrale a third Clinton took office, when Repubyear of bipartisan accomplishment," · earner households actually receive a'
hdl was·prcventing the blood vessel from constricting.
·
,
birthday, let alone a ninth.
lican George Bush was president.
.. ·Dr. Richard Lange, a professor of internal medicine at tile! University
said Rep. Charles Rangel, !).:N.Y., marriage bonus.
"This is an 'tinprecedented Some Republicans go back even
of'ICxas Southwestern Medical Center who wu not affilialed with the
economy," said David Wyss, chief further, dating the current good
study, said the research was the first to define why fainting 'inay occur
,_-........,;=.:.....;;;;~;;..;;;.;;;;;.;;..__~_
__,.,;,.::~·,
economist at Standard &amp; Poor's times to the supply-side tax cuts of
·after drinking.
DRI. "If you are not cheering for Ronald Reagan, saying there ha5
"It's more than jusl being inebriated. This explains in a ver)' mechan·
this
accomplishment, then you been only one, brief recessio.n
ical fashion on how ali:ohol can cause someone's blood pressure to fall,"
have awfully high standards.''
since the Reagan expansion start·
said Lange • .
By most measures, these are ed in 1982.
.. ·In the 1999 study, 18 healthy men and one woman averaging age 26 ·
were given the equivalent of I)YO to three beers.
·
.
Each participants' blood pressure dropped after t~e drinks.' Somers
~d none of the subjects passed out during the study, but several became.
lighlheaded.
·

Economists: Current House GOP.proposes::
' growth is a record
marriage penalty relief':
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Alcohol, fainting linked in study

.Protect . . ltnggrtant

people in your life.

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[).ate-rape bill passes Congres's
•. WASHINGTON (AP) ·- A bill that significantly toughens -federal
laws and priaon sente~ for possession ot a powerful "date rape?' drug
hu passed the House and been sent lo President Clinton for his signature.
· Rep. Fred Upton, R·Mich., the .bill's House sponsor, said Ointon indicoted he would sign the.bill.
.
·
.
•· '
: .GHB, .or gamma hydroxybutyrate, has been linked to at least 58 deaths
since 1990 and more than 5,700 recorded overdoses, the Drug Enforce·
. ment Administration has said.
,
, A few drops of' the drug, which is colorless and odorless, can be
slipped into a drink, reQdering a victim unconscious within 20 min\ltes.
V~C~ims frequently have no memory of what happened, and the drug is
diffic.ult to trace, often leaving the body within.24 hours.
r · •
,.,The House passed the bill Monday evening by a vote of 339·2, accept·
in&amp; minor· revisions to it made by the Senate. The Senate passed thdeg·
islation by Vl)ice .vote in November. The two House members voting
apirist it were Reps. Ron Paul, R-Texas, and Helen Ch·cnowcth, R-Idaho.
·Upton said GHB was a "dangerous and sometimes fatal drug used-to
fa~litate sexual assaults." He saiil deaths from the drug "are inc...Uinll
ra.l'!dly," from one in 1990·to 171ast )',ear. ,
~. ,
··, Under' the legislation, OHB would be place4 in ·a category of drugs
lh@tare the·most strictly regulated by the federal Controlled Substances
All!. Anyone who possesses, manufactures or diatribut~ 9HB could fiK:e .
a prison term of up to 20 years.
.
·
The legilllatic:in WO!Jid give the DEA authority for the first time to seek
federal criminal prosecutions against those possessina and distrjbuting
the drug, DEA officials·said.

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�Com1nentary

Page A4

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~av. '*'-Y 1, 200Q

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The Daily Sentinel
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111 CourtSt., Pomwoy, Ohio
740-11112-2158 • Fax: 11112·2157

"R&gt; 'REMl\tN

118n~~glng

.j

Editor

"

WHAT I'M
THINKING ...

S.tLENT. ..

("

01- Hill
Controller

J

11-IE RIGHT
TO GUESS

"THE RtGHT ·

Ch1rle1 W. Govay
Publllher

n

YOU HAVE

YOUH~VE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ch•rt- Ho41111eh
Gellenll M1n1ger

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Our view:

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Play ball

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WVU,·Marshall should
.meet each•• other every year
Sunday's Super Bowl thriller has a lot offolks talking foot. ball, not the least of which being some West Virginia legislators.
The Cabell County delegation has been
Rivalry joined by a Wayne County lawmaker in
an attempt to "encourage" West Virginia
games
University to play Marshall University in
ma/(efor Huntington sometime in the near future.
County is home to the Thundering
· ·great foot- Cabell
Herd.
·
. ball and
We don't think the West Virginia Legiseven better lature, or any governmental body for that
matter, has any business meddling in colcamalege football schedules. However, we do
think the lawmakers' intent is good. West
raderie~
Virginia and Marshall need to meet on. the
gridiron every year.
. Rivalry games make for great football and even better
camaraderie. Each state needs a game to decide in-state brag$ing rights. The South Carolina-Clemson matchup and the
annual Florida-Florida State classic are perfect examples.
The 1997 Frontyard Brawl played between Marshall and
WVU was an exciting game that captivated the Mountain
State. That game was in Morgantown, and WVU has since
refused to give Marshall a rematch in Huntington. The excuses rang~ from lack of seating at Marshall's stadium to sched~
uling conflicll!, mainly on the M&lt;?untainee,rs' behalf; · .
Most, if not all, of the excuses' are full of hooey. WVU frequently travels to 'Navy whose stadium seats less than Mar- '
shall's. That's also a non-conference game. In addition, the
Mountaineers make a regular habit of scheduling weaker MidAmerican Conference foes such as Western Michigan and
Miami (Ohio).
·
· ·
·
. We'd hate to think this is a case of Goliath - · WVU being .scared of David - Marshall - but with each passing
year, that conclusion becomes more apparent. Win or lose,
·playing Marshall can only do West Virginia good- and vice
versa.
' Both teams need more quality opponents. The Thundering
Herd is a budding Top 10 power, something usually lacking
,fromWest Virginia's weak Big East sehedule. Likewise for
Marshall, which suffers· come bowl time due to its MAC
schedule.
.
Making the Frontyard Brawl an annual event makes sense
for both teams - whether it's played in Morgantown or Huntington, a.lthough for fairness sake the site should rotate.
Speaking on behalf of thousands of c,razed Ohio Valley
football fans, inany of whom are Marshall and/or WVU fans,
we say bring back the brawl. We're ready for some football!

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Kondracke's view:

Democrats' race co~ld be ove,r before - ~OP's ·~

Against all the early conventio~al wisdom, the
Democratic presidential· race co.uld be "over" ,
before the Republican battle - though the GOP
race should be decided soon enough.
. · the betting up to a few weeks ago had been that
Texas Gov. George W. Bush (R) wo~ld have the
GOP nomination locked up by March 7 at the latest, but that fonner Sen. Bill Bradley, D·N.J., couiH
keep challenging Vice President AI Gore for
months.
But after getting trounced in Iowa. Bradley has
to tum his campaign completely around- and fast
-or he could get beaten in New HampShire Tues·
day and be effectively dead as a contender.
Defeat in New Hampshire won't necessarily
. fo~be Bradley to quit running. He has the money to
keep going through March 7 or even beyond. And
presumably he feels hostile enough toward Gore to
want to stay in.
.
But polls al,ready show Bradley running behind
in New York and California. where he needs to
win, and the 64 to 35 percent drubbing he jilst too~ .
presumably will depress his numbers there even
more.
So if Bradley loses in New.Hampshire and his.
polls look bad, Democratic politicians are going to
start calling on him to withdraw and avoid the risk
of an expensive, divisive battle that coul(l hurt the
pany's chances in November.
Meantime, the Repu~icllli race could .be effec.
lively over Tuesday night, too, if Bush beats Sen.
John McCain, R·Ariz., in New Hampshire. But the
Iowa results did not create any great. expectation
that this will happen. ·
· Bush scored a solid victory with 41 percent But
the strong conservative second· and third-place fin·
isbers, Steve Forbes and Alan Keyes, respectively,
.together out-polled Bush. This indicates that grass·

.'

It's true that Gore has exaggerated the flaws in ~;
L
Bradley's health-care plan ;.... sul!8esting that the
poo£ would be left uninsured - and has unfairly·'''
branded Bradley "a quitter" for leaving the Senate,"
On the other hand, Bradley failed to prove in tho" '
debate that Gore has been ·underhanded and It
seemed a stretch for Bradley to liken Gore to";
Richard Nixon.
.
,
~.'
Gore used the right word about Bradley:·~
"defensive.'~ Bradley is still not making a full·
blown case why it would be bad for the Dcmocra-~
tic party to ~minale Gore.
.
The real case against Gore- as many ordillll)',,• .
citizens say on the campaign trail - is that "h(:
stood by THAT MAN,'' i.e. Ointon, helping him _;
r6ots Republicans aren't yet comfortable with the raise 1996-campaign funds and declaring . him'
estabHshinent's anointed front-runner.
. .,
New Hampshire voters are notoriously disre- . "one of America's greatest presidents" after he."
spectful of front-runnqs and McCain still holds a was impeached:
.
· ...,
lead there, so the chances are the G,OP r:ace will ,
Does -Bradley .dare bring up the ~-word retain its suspense until Feb. 19 in South Carolina. · "scandal"-. as the re&amp;Son not to nomiflale Gore? ,,
McCain and Forbes supporters can paint see- Not yet, and probably, not ever.
.. .~
narios for Bush actually losing the nomination, but . The closest Bradley comes is to say that ·
they are implausible. Bush may well lose New . ::Americans ":~t a fresh ~lart'' and that' he .wants.i~
Hampshire, but it's hard to see him losing in Soqth
to make pohtics someth~?g our people Cll), .~ .
Carolina or the big contests March 7.
.. 1 prou_d and not ashamed of.
·
• Bradley is hinti~~ an:&gt;und at what Republi~J
Only Forbes has the 'money to challenge Bush
nationwide, and he is unlikely to wrest the domi· .wdl not fear .to mention m Novem_ber - .Buddhipt..,.
nant GOP establishment vote away from·Bush.
temples, While House coffees, As1an money-launOf course, all of this is extrapolation from a sta· dering, Monica Lewinsky..
. · ,.
tus quo that could change, but on the Democratic
It would be extrerntly nsky for Bradley to bnne;:
side only Bradley can change it, and indications are ,all this.irito the; climpaign. Democrats sliD like Bill
he still docs not know how to thwart Gore's attack Ointon and might be offended at attacks on him. ·:~
machine.
But it's the mark of a gifted politician to say:o~
The two Democrais' final debate in New Hamp- what needs to be !laid in a convincing way and gain
shire indicalel;l that Bradley understands the imper~ S\Jpport for doirig il So far, Bradley is still stum-,;i
ative to be tougher on Gore, challenging distortions bling.
·
·
...
(Morton Kondraekt 11 executive editor ot~
of his record and proposals, but Bradley ended up
looking whiny, not masterful.
Roll Cell, the new~p~~per of C.pltol Hill.) ·

Morton
Kondracke·,

. ·on'

Ryan's view:

.

Teen-agers·speak out
and ambitions that girls even a few
yelllll ago wouldn 'I have taken ·for
.
ted " ,
gran.
,.
But as I' read through the report
land listened at Mills;. I heard the
echoes of the hall,;,ays and cafeterias
of· mY own girlhood. Fpr all the .
strides jn the claSsroom, today's girls
still stru8gle with : the pressure to
have seX! to tiC popular; to figure out
, what to tie 8nct how to fit in'. They're
still asking: How can I be myself and
still be i&lt;xeptable to the crowd? _
"It's not school (that's the problem ), " a 14-year-old in the AAUW
report wrote. "lt's1he people in it."
Amen,' sister, ·
' ..
Girls in the teport could desqibe
with meticulous clarity how they
_jll!kCd soc:i!llly' and how th4; bound'aries o{ '. the :sOcial hi~rlrchy ~~· ·
rigidly pOliced through humiliation
and rejcc:tion1 rumors and goSsip. At
one seminar ai the Mills symposium,
lhe facililator asked, "Ate girls mean
to one another?., ~- ·
Thegirls,.WCrcdasonc: "Yes!'.'
The girls say 'that the adults in
their lives talk openly .tiout the phys·
iological and posi!ble academic con·
sequen~ oten11a£ing in either drugs
or sex. But what remains largely .
undiscuSsed lh these enlightened
times are the messier, grayer issues of ·
Intimacy and rejed,ion and cruelly.
"Adults aren't . comfoJ11ble llilking ,
about them,'' ode girl Aill
I think I cail tell. h~ why: ~
never figured it.out ourselves.
.
I left the symposium thinking that
it surely is the best time in Americari:
hislory 19 be a girl. No one's telling ..
• her she can't ~ a judge or an asiTo- ,
01ut, as a social studies teacher once
told me•.But it's no . . being a girl
· today. Adolescence is an affliction
only timc Cal.' Ileal. And even then,
believe me, never' fully.
(Jain. ~ .. " ~lor
the 81111 1',...
,
·CII(Oi • • ) ,
I .
.

Ohio Perspective:

·"

For gifted·kids, what'.s ri.ext?.~

"'
By JOHN SEE;WER
state's requirement "anothet,;
AIIOCIItecl Pr- Writer
unfunded mandate."
.. •
TOLEDO - ,This year, Ohio's
What scares some adminislraton
611 school distriC;ts will try to Piclc is )"hellier they will have aqy ..Yv
out their best 8\14 brightest-students. over new programs.lir ,if the instruc, " ·
The list will 1help determine how lion will be mandated by the state.
Ohio educale&amp;,its "gifted children"
"They have .an idea of what ~. J
and how m~~&lt;;h money hiwmakets want, but it's not concrete," Roi!J9Y,;
will spend on thalc programs.
said. "Yet we·~ being asked to but~
· "We hope that things will change into this.'' ,
'
dramatically· f9' gitlcd icids in this . . . The scope of the lesting alsO corb~
state," said ~n. Sheldqn, Of· Ohio · ' cems her; It will include all studenU.O
Association for Oitlcd Ouldren.
in kindergarten through high school,.\
. ,A,bout two-thirds of all gitlcd It will cover traditional academic
children 'in Ohio do not receive ilny areas including
and scienco,.
additional teaching from their but also the arts.
. 1:
schools, she said.
"The only thing they don't men~.
· "You see some distriel3 where lion · in here is athletics," Rothey
algebra is l!1e top 'math dass." , . .said . .
.
. . c...
More attentiOn hu been (ocuscd , She hopes once the state decides.-.
, over the .,.\.five years on how,Ohio how ~- gifted children should be
. ' educa~ gi~d children;,. iii ~ '. tauJh!. there ~ill ~ ~ough money,,
because of tbe Ohio SlipreiiiC' Court · ·. for telchers llid traimng. .
decision ihat ordered., ovcrhiul of
· "I think there's probably a ~ ·
the state's 'school funding system.
· to· increise the services," she said.-..
'
The court said more needS to be "I'm· not sure it needs to be ati
done wid) prpgrams fOr students sweeping u this.'' .
• -;
who excel in the classroom.
• AdVO!:&amp;IeS for gifted Jli'Oif'll1il"
Lawmake.._ decided that before say m~y people do·not understand
spending.extra.inoney 6n lhcsc'prcr that extremely smart c:ltildren Cllt';
grws. they wanted to know how suffer in the classroom just u thole,;
many gifted children there are. That with ~taming disabilities.
'
is why schools .are identifying the
"The Issue Is the~·" ShekJori:
students who ex&lt;iel.
said. / "It's · that the1r needs' aren't
Some administrators, while in being met because they have., edu)•
' support of it~creasing progranis for · c:ationaJ need that is different fronl.t'
aiftcd•childfen, say the state is not lfi(JIIt of ,the chil~'! in' the cl-,
giving them enough 1f1011CY to find ·11l0111.'' ' • ·
. ••
whic:lt.children are gifted. . ··
She said , sc:ltoois should ne~~'
·The state has allocated $5 million worry too·much llll!&gt;llt how the pro:'l
to the lchools, which l"ust use a test . gmns will be' implemented or lhe .
·to eviluate the studerits.
costs. She said . some prOifi!U' ~
"It will drastically change the could be as simple as moving alii-&lt;''
way'distriel3 identify and serve gift- dents up a arBde ill an aRe. whe!O~
ed children," said Marty Rothey, they are deemed to ~ &amp;ifted'.
~
president ·of the Fin!llay school
"I think we need to be very flex!'
board. "That's not a bad thing nee- · ible in tenns of how' we deal wltN''
· esArily, it:s just we · need the these kids," Sheldon said. "One o~, .
fund&amp;."
the things we've emphuizcd is thif&gt;
. Peter Silvennan, a ~J~Cmber of the you can't have cookie-cutter ~Toledo sc;hool ·board, called tile gmns ·IICIOii the state."
•· r

math

'

•[

"

.

,.

' ,.

l

Pomeroy,

NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

.,

..

·. OXN~, &lt;?alit•. (AP) - lnvestigatms trying to learn what sent an
AlukaAirhncs Jet w1lh 88 people aboard plunging into the Pacific Ocean
hid at least one ~~?lid clue to. work with today: a pilot report that there was
lf:Puble Wit~ equ1pmen1 destgned to keep the plane airborne.
; No surv1vors had been found by this morning. Several bodies were
rtc:OVCFed 'from the 58-degree water, Coast Guard U . Chuck Diorio said
bilfhe could not give a specific number.
'
The Coast Guard and commercial squid boats continued to search the
debris.field 10 miles from shore in water from 300 feet to 750 feet deep.·
As the stench of airline fuel hung in the air, the boats used nets to haul in
gtim reminders of lives lost: a tennis shoe, a stuffed animal and a num~r of small souvenirs from Mexico. ,
• " Every resource is out there to lind people," Coa5t Guard· Capt.
~eo~e Wright said. "We're actively searching for survivors."
.
. Fhght 261 from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to San Francisco and Seattle
h!t the water 40 miles northwest of Los Angeles International Airport at
4;36 p.m. Monday. The weather was clear at the time.
.
.
' Moments before the crash -described by a witness as a nose dive o~e of the two pilots radioed that he was having trouble with "stabilizer
~m: an~ asked to be diverted to Los Angeles, airline spokesman Jack
· evans sa1d.
·
i "Radar indicates it fell from 17,000 feet and then was lost from ·
"dar," San Francisco airport spokesman Ron Wilson told ICRON-TV.

lilinols halts executions for :1\ow
, (AP) - . A temPorary halt to executions in Dlinois has ene.Qiized a move- ·
"ll)ent that questions tl)e fairness of capital punishment, though supporters·
acknowledge they're a long way from bringing change to Oilier stales.
. . ,A,IIeast _live stales are considering moratoriums or bans capital punlllhment thiS year. They are Considered long shots and similar previous
efforts have failed.
·
But opponents were invigorated when the moratorium was announced by
Gov. George Ryan on Monday: Ryan, saying "there is no margin for error
· when it comes to pulling a Jlllrson to death," called· for a special jlanel to
study the state's capital punishment system.
"It's like snowflakes adding up on the branch may cause the branch to
break at so~e point," said Richard Dieter.of the Death Penalty Information
. Center. "Th1s IS a big snowflake."
.
.
The center takes no position on the death penalty itself but has been crit·
ical of how it is applied:
·
. •Dlinois is the fust of the 38 states with the death· penlllty to hall execu·
liqns while the system is examined Thirteen inmates have been released
from the sta'e's deat~ row since 1987, exposing what critics SIIY are serious
flaws in the aiminal justice system.
·
. In most of those cases, prosecutms acknowledged they had the wrong
man .after they were confronted with DNA evidence, new witnesses or con'fessions from others. In other cases, the inmates' convictions were thrown
OU! on appeal~~td prosecutors have yet to JlUrsue a retrial.

on

!

By JOAN RYAN
I remembered, as I listened to the
girls talk, what it was like to be 13.
I saw a picture of myself mcing on
my bike to the department store a
half-mile from home to buy Levi
oords before.my spin~ schoolday began. Had the store been·closed,
I would have faked illness or claimed
menstrual cramps rather ·than go to
·school in the suddenly out-of-style
By The AsiOCiated Pr· ·
clothes in my closet.
Today is Tuesday, Feb. I, the 32nd day of 2000. There are 334 days left
11ie teen-age girls panicipating in
in the year.
"What Girls Learn In and Out of
Today's Highlight in History:
School,"· a national symposium at
· On Feb. 1, 1960, four black co! lege students began a sit-in protest at a Mills College in Oakl~ Calif., last
lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C., where they had been refused service.
Ffiday•. seerped muCh differe~t from
· On this date:
my teen-age self. They w~re d1fferent
In 1861, Texas voted to secede ·from 'the Union.
even from the girls of eight years ago
, In 1893, inventor Thomas A. Edison compleied work on the world's first who populated the American Associ·
motion picture studio, his "Black Maria," in West Orange, N.J. . .
ation of University Wo111en's ground. In 1896, Puccini's opera "La Boheme" premiered in Turin. · · ·
breaking 1992 study, ·"How Schools
· . In 1920, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police came into existence.'
Shortchange Qirls."
. In 1943, one of America's .most highly decorated military units of World ·
The girls in the '92 study seemed,
War II, the 442d Regimental Combat Team, made up almost entirely of · for the most part, passive victints
J•panesc·Americans, was authorized.
· · '
·
· •
caught in an oppressive c'ulture.
In 1946, Norwegian statesman Trygve Lie was chosen to be the first ICC· Today's girls live in a world in which
retary general of the United Nations.
.
schools are seen to favor girls, in
; ' In 1968, during the Vielnam War, Saigon's police chief (Nguyen Naoc which, for the first time, more
.Loan) executed a Viet Cong officer with a· pistol shot to the head in a scene · women tllan men make up the fresh·
captured in a famous news photogmph.
man classes on Ame(ican college
; In 1979, Ayatollah Ruhollah,Khomeini received a tumultuous welcome in campuses,' in which teen pregnanCy is
'!):bran he ended nearly 15 years of exile.
.
.
down, and the genller gaps in math
• In 1979, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst, whose prison sentence for
bank robbery had been commuted by President Jimmy Carter, left a federal and science test scores are closing
(however slowly).
lfison near San Francisco.
. ·
Among eduqdors mid :fe':"inists,
· In 1991,35 people were killed when a USAir jetliner crashed atop a com- there exists today what Mills College
muter piMe at Los Angeles International Airport.
l 'ten yean ago: East Germany's Communist premier, Hans Modrow, president Janet Holmgren (quoting
appealed' for negotiations with West Gerrnany to forge· a ·~ united father· Toni Morrison) called "earned op\i·
land.''
mism." In the MUW's latest report,
: Today's Birthdays: Actor Stuart Whitman is 72. Former Russian Presi· "\bices of a Generation: Tccnagc
®rit Boris N. Yeltsin is 69..Singer Don Everly is 63.Actor Garrett Morris . Girls Report About Their Lives
is 63. Singer Ray Sawyer (Dr. Hook and the Medicine Sho.w) is 63. Actor Today," few girls reported sexist
Sherman Hemsley is 62. Bluegrass singer Del McCoury is 61 . Jazz musi· comments from teachers, counselors
ill an Joe Sample is 61 . Comedian-filmmaker Terry Jones is 58. Singer Rick or administrators. Fewer sdll report·
ll!JPCS is 48. Actor-writer-producer Bill Mumy is 46. Rock musician Mike ed that boys regularly dlsrup~ class.
Campbell (Tom Petty &amp; the Heartbreakers) is 46. Rocksinger Exene Cer·
"There's an assumption of sue·
liFnka is 44. Princess Stephanie of Monaco is 35. Actress Sherilyn Fenn is . cess among girls," said Jadwiga
.35. Lisa Marie l're61ey is 32. Co111edjan Pauly Shore is 30. Rappe( Big Boi Sebrechts, president of · Women's
(Outkut) is 25. ·
·College Coaliti&lt;ln. "They h&amp;Vll hopes

as

II

' '

·-

On this date in history ....

~,· Febnwy1,2000

Middleport, Ohio

N.H. often~
puzzles
pollsters .'

Ice scraper

Equipment probed In crash

£st46{tsnd in 1948

R. ShftnL-Ia

.

• !I''

.
Report: CIA .Inquiry stalled at top

'I

.

I
I

'

~

I

WASHINGTON (AP)- With the .
blizzarct of polling prior to today's :
New Hampshire .Q!imary, some poll-;
Siers might feel "t.little sheepiah by •
Wednesday momjpg. .
;
Some polls showed Sen. John ;
McCain ahead in the Republican '
presidential race, .Dthers bad him tied;
wilh Gov. George W. Bush. Vice;
PreSident AI Gore leads in some J?OIIS:
of the Democratic candidates though •
the margin was narrowing, and a new;
one out Monday bad the race between"'
Gore and former Sen. Bill Bradley too
close to call.
For pollsters who get the winner
right, they could be far off on the margins of viaory, giving a candidale
with a close second-place finish . a
chance to claim that he's "beat the
expectatio1111." Or the results today
might embanilss most·of them. ·
New Hampshire, with its independent-minded voters who closely follow the primary ·campaigns, has a
habit of confounding at least some of
the pollste~ :-· a situation made
worse by the sheer number of polls.
Of the·late polls in the 1996GOP~
primary in New Hampshire, some,
said Bob Dole would win and some·
picked Pat Bucha,nan.
· Veteran New Hampshire pollsters
concede the public gets a little cynical
about all the polls and the differing
lin dings.
"II just reinforces people's notion
thai you can't believe what the polls
say," said Dick Bepnett of the American Research Grqup in Manchester,
who said getting an accumte picture
of the electorate is a tricky business•.
"It's like three-dimensional chess."
RKM Research of Portsmouth
asked during one of its recent presidential polls how many of the respont
dents had participated in a political
/
·
poll in the last six months.T\vo-third!t.
.said they had at least once, some several times.
,
"Nowhere else do so many poll·
Bill Stineman of Dayton, Ky., pushn·snow oft tha surface of Mirror Lilke Monday In Clnelnnatl'a sters compete for the attention of stJ"
Eden Park. (AP photo) . .
·
few .voters," sa~d R. Kelly Myers,"'
director of research for RKM.

..

.

. NEW YORK (AP) -A dassified report by the CIA's inspector general
blamed the agency's top officials for stalling an internal investigation into
e\ijdence that former director John Deutch mishandled large volumes of
sc:c:rct material, The New York limes said today.
· ·Tho report said that current CIA Director George Tenet, then Deutch's
top deputy, should have done more to "forcefully ensure" the case was
properly jnvestigated.
..
.
,The report also said Tenet said he had slven directions for the investi~- .
'
tioilto proceed unimpeded. It does not accuse Tenet or his aides of violating ·
'
any laws in their handling of the matter:
· .
' ,The QA. at the inspector general's recommendation, ha5 established a
panel to examine whether Tenet and other top officials handled the case
aJlpropriately.
' · ·
The I;&gt;eutch probe began in December 1996, whe11 he was leaVing office.
.
.
~ 't't;iinj:illter security officials ·found that Dedtch had plac:Cd ·classified
,•
nlaterial ii)l his unsecured home computers, a violation of agency rules.
. ' 'WASHINGtoN .(AP) - The good economic times. Unemploy'
WASHINGTON (AP)- Repub ~ senior Democrat on the Ways anc\.
'The·CIA report said, however, ihat an inquiry by security officials was
current economic expansion, ment is at its lowest level in 30
licans and Democrats concur that Means Committee.
shelved within a few months and that the CIA failed .to notify the Justice
·which for more than a year has years - 4:1 percent - consumer
love and.marriage shouldn't mean a
Department about the case for mo.re than a year,
· ·
, ·
The bill is the first e,lement of this'
been
the country's longest peace- confidence is at record highs and
higher
income
tax
bill.
The
question
year's
House GOP strategy to break:
'The inspector general notified the JustiCe 'Department of the situation in
time expansion, now holds the all· Wall Street keeps hitting record
•
is
whether
Congress
can
agree
on
last year's failed $792 billion tax cut•
early 1998, after a CIA employee complained that the case had been improptime record, in war and peace.
hig~s.
·
how to fix the "marriage penalty" into. smaller individual pieces lhal
erly handled.
· ·
As of today, the current ex pan·
For the past three years, the .
thai affects 25 million couples.
~ lfenet learned of the alleged security breach almosi im.mediately but
are more difficult fo~ Democmts to,
sion has lasted 107. months, one total economy, as measured by the
House Republicans, timing their oppose.
failed to move to reprimand Deutch until the Justice Department had been
.month longer than the previous gross · domestic product, has
votes to Valentine's Day, proposed
White House officials say thC:
notified and the inspector general's office had aimpleted its report on CIA
record-holder, the 1960s expan· expanded by 4 percent or more
Monday . a lO·year, $182 billion president's support will depend oO:
handling of the case, the report said.
.
·:
sion that covered the Vietnam .annually, a pace -that normally
measure that would address the · how the GOP balances projected·
The Justice Department reviewed the case and decided in April not to
War.
trigger
fears
thai
the
dwinwould
penalty
by adjusting income tu budget surpluses among the overall
prosecute Deutch, who issued an apology in August.
.
. President Clinton, commenting dling supply of workers would
rates, boosting lhe slandard income priorities of Social Security,
That same month, Tenet pulled Deutch's security cl~ces. a highly .
last week · on ' t~e strong growth begin to demand inflationary wage
tax deduction and expanding a tax Medicare, government spending ~
unusual move.
· numbers in. the final months of increases.
credit program for the working poor. debt repayment and tax cuts.
·
J
'
•
1999,. said, "This unbelievable
· Instead, inflation has remained
"The
tax
code
is
tough
enough
.going
lo
depend
on
tht.:
"It's
1
.recovery marches on.''
well·behaved. The so-called core
on Americans as it is, but it should· entire picture,'' said .Clinton
And
on
that
point,
privale.ccon-.
rate of inflation, which takes out
DALLAS (AP)- Scientists say they have learned pa,rt of'lhe reason
n't pen;ilize couples just beCause spokesman Jake Siewert. "It's diffiomists lerid support- the current ·volatile energy and food products,
Why some people pass out when they stand up after dtinking alcohol:
I hey want to get married," said Rep. cult to address these items in isola.
expansion has been truly remark-. was up just 1.9 percent in 1999, • Bill Archer, R-Texas, chairman of tion."
lower blood pressure and wider blood vessels.
·
·•
able, not just in length but in terms the best performance in 34 years.
' ·T)vo or three beers on average is enough to impair the body's ability
the House Ways and Means Com·
The Treasury Department esli,'
of its ability to remain robust,
Clinton takes every opportunity
to:. maintain a steady blood pre~ure, accordi~g to a 1999·. \itudy believed
millee. ·
mates that 25 million married coudespite
its
advancing
year~
and
the sl!undness of the Clin·
to
cite
to De the first to explain the cardiovascular effecls of drinli;ing.
Archer's bill is about four limes ples pay higher income taxes than if,
without triggering rising inflation. ton·Gore deficit reduction proThose changes impair the body's ability to pump fleSh blood to the
as costly as a marriage penalty pro- they were single, mainly when both.
The eight years and 11 months gram as a key building block for · posal by President Clinton, bul rem- spouses have jobs. The tax strikes
brain, said Dr. Virend Somers, a co-auth!)r of the study pUblished today
of uninterrupted growth since the the good economy, hoping voters
in:lhe journal' Circulation. As a result, drinkelli who suddenly stood up
edying the marriage penalty is popu- most often when the higher-earning
lasl recession is in itself quite a will reward Democrats this faiL
often felt liibtheaded and sometimes fainted.
' I·
lar and stands a better·lhan·even spouse inakes between $20,000 an4
feat considering thai the average
Republicans are quick to note
·How alcohol causes those changes is.uaknown, said Somm, a cardichance of becoming law. .
$75,000 in adjusted' gross income it
of all U.S. expansions, dating back that the current recovery actually
"Just because this is aq election year, according to the Congressional
ologist at the· Mayo Clinic in Minnesota; He suggested the alcohol CO!Jiil
to 1854, is just 35 months, not started nearly two years before
be'blunting the nerve signal sent from the brain to the vessel'; or the alcoyear does not mean it can not be a Budget. Office, but some single ~
long enough to ce!ebrale a third Clinton took office, when Repubyear of bipartisan accomplishment," · earner households actually receive a'
hdl was·prcventing the blood vessel from constricting.
·
,
birthday, let alone a ninth.
lican George Bush was president.
.. ·Dr. Richard Lange, a professor of internal medicine at tile! University
said Rep. Charles Rangel, !).:N.Y., marriage bonus.
"This is an 'tinprecedented Some Republicans go back even
of'ICxas Southwestern Medical Center who wu not affilialed with the
economy," said David Wyss, chief further, dating the current good
study, said the research was the first to define why fainting 'inay occur
,_-........,;=.:.....;;;;~;;..;;;.;;;;;.;;..__~_
__,.,;,.::~·,
economist at Standard &amp; Poor's times to the supply-side tax cuts of
·after drinking.
DRI. "If you are not cheering for Ronald Reagan, saying there ha5
"It's more than jusl being inebriated. This explains in a ver)' mechan·
this
accomplishment, then you been only one, brief recessio.n
ical fashion on how ali:ohol can cause someone's blood pressure to fall,"
have awfully high standards.''
since the Reagan expansion start·
said Lange • .
By most measures, these are ed in 1982.
.. ·In the 1999 study, 18 healthy men and one woman averaging age 26 ·
were given the equivalent of I)YO to three beers.
·
.
Each participants' blood pressure dropped after t~e drinks.' Somers
~d none of the subjects passed out during the study, but several became.
lighlheaded.
·

Economists: Current House GOP.proposes::
' growth is a record
marriage penalty relief':
.

.

Alcohol, fainting linked in study

.Protect . . ltnggrtant

people in your life.

.

~

c

[).ate-rape bill passes Congres's
•. WASHINGTON (AP) ·- A bill that significantly toughens -federal
laws and priaon sente~ for possession ot a powerful "date rape?' drug
hu passed the House and been sent lo President Clinton for his signature.
· Rep. Fred Upton, R·Mich., the .bill's House sponsor, said Ointon indicoted he would sign the.bill.
.
·
.
•· '
: .GHB, .or gamma hydroxybutyrate, has been linked to at least 58 deaths
since 1990 and more than 5,700 recorded overdoses, the Drug Enforce·
. ment Administration has said.
,
, A few drops of' the drug, which is colorless and odorless, can be
slipped into a drink, reQdering a victim unconscious within 20 min\ltes.
V~C~ims frequently have no memory of what happened, and the drug is
diffic.ult to trace, often leaving the body within.24 hours.
r · •
,.,The House passed the bill Monday evening by a vote of 339·2, accept·
in&amp; minor· revisions to it made by the Senate. The Senate passed thdeg·
islation by Vl)ice .vote in November. The two House members voting
apirist it were Reps. Ron Paul, R-Texas, and Helen Ch·cnowcth, R-Idaho.
·Upton said GHB was a "dangerous and sometimes fatal drug used-to
fa~litate sexual assaults." He saiil deaths from the drug "are inc...Uinll
ra.l'!dly," from one in 1990·to 171ast )',ear. ,
~. ,
··, Under' the legislation, OHB would be place4 in ·a category of drugs
lh@tare the·most strictly regulated by the federal Controlled Substances
All!. Anyone who possesses, manufactures or diatribut~ 9HB could fiK:e .
a prison term of up to 20 years.
.
·
The legilllatic:in WO!Jid give the DEA authority for the first time to seek
federal criminal prosecutions against those possessina and distrjbuting
the drug, DEA officials·said.

,,

•

•

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•

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�.

By The Bend

The Daily

1

S~ntinel

Page 81
Tueeday, February 1, 2000.

Page AI ·

Tue.clay, Februa,Y 1, 2000

·Ann advises: Shrug off family favoritism with 'emotional rair'}coat'

II

Dear Ann Lander~: My letfavoritiam. No city, just -THE
ter is about favoritism in famiINFERIOR ONE
. lies. I hope you will print it,
DEAR ONE: This advice is
because there's a lot of it
for you. Get over it. Nobody can
make you feel inferior without
IU'Ound.
I have two .brothers, one
~n Lanclerw
your permission. The sibling
.
. rivalry pain you are experiencolder than me, the other
:IOunger. It drives me nuts the while, my parents put Keith ing goes way back to your ~hild­
way Mom and Dad always favor through medical school and hood. It's an old ·Story. Add to
dur younger brother "Keith.• now they brag to' everyone .the mix the fact that parents
~ery time we are with them, about tb.eir son the doctor.
have a tendency to brag abQut
we have to listen to how wonIt has reached the point children who are professionals,
derful Keith is, . even though where I can no longer stand to especially when they themt;lley have been supporting him be around my parents. It·hurts selves d,id .not attain that etafinancially for the last eight me to hear them rave about tus. Put on the "emotional rainyears.
Keith, knowing they never coat" I have spoken of in tbe
. My older brother and strug- · cared as much for me or· my put, and let their comments
. gled through school, and took older brother. Please, Ann, tell slide right off.
out bans to cover our living parents how harmful it is to.
Delli' Ann ~andere: Wilen
expen1!es. We received no help play favorites with their chi!- my husband retired ~ee years
from anybody. We would have dren. I cannot ' talk to my par- ago, he not only. ·retired from
loved to continue our schooling ents about this b~cause they work, he also retired from our
and receive advanced degrees, can't help how they feel. Also, marriage.\ Fer the first two
but we couldn't afford it. There I'm sure they see nothing · years, he was "too busy" to have
were no offers of help. Mean· wrong with their ·hurtful . sex. Now, he doesn't even both-

t

II

,·'.I
'

DEAR WYOMING: A marer to make excuses. He aimply
ried
woman who ia 62 should
is not interested. I 1poke to my
husband'a doctor about thi1, not have to settle for a sexless
and he gave him a prescription marriage. Don't give up on it.
for Viagra. My husband took it Please coneider cnunseling to
exactly twice, and then, quit, It find out hoy to turn' this man
seems he has better thinp to on.
Dear
Ann
Landers:
do than make love to his wife.
I am terribly hurt by his "Orville" and I became engaged
unwillingness to be intimate a few months ago .. Now, I am
with me. He is otherwise a good having second thoughts. He
husband, and I have no inten- used to bring me flowers for no
tion of leaving him, but I am reason.·Now, there are no flowonly. 62 years old, and would era and we don't even go out
·hate to think that my sex life is anymore. He expects me to cook
over. I have decided, no matter dinner for him every night (he
what, I am going to stay in this knows I hate to cook), and we
mamage the way it is. My New watch a lot of TV:
Year's resolution was to give up ' Should I break it off now,.
trying, and I'm sticking to it. Ann, or is this the way it's ·supPlease · tell your readers that posed to be? - SECOND
when a marriage is totally sex- THOUGHTS IN TEXAS D~
SECOND
less, it is not always the wife's
fault.- LIVING WITHOUT IN THOUGHTS: This is not the
WYOMING
way it's. supposed to lie. Tell

•

Orville you feel a distinct
change in the temperature, and
demand an explanation. If you
don't g0t s0111e satisfactory
answen, get 6llt now.
That first kiss, that first
embrace ... Remember all those
things that brought you arid
your loved one together?
;
Ann Landers' new booklet,
"How We Met," is now available.
· This collection of sentimental
love stori~ts will make
a terrific Valentine's Day gift for
that special someone. It's a per·
feet addition to that box of
chocolates or bouquet of flowers.
. For a -copy, please send a selfaddressed, long, business- site
envelope and a check or money
order for $5.50 (this includes
postage and handling) to: How
We Met, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, ·Chicago, lli 606~10562 (in Canada, $6:50).
:

TUESDAY'S

HIGllllGHTS
Prep Basketball
BOYS
-TVc....:
Ohio

3-6

4-9

Southern

Federal Hocking
Trimble
.
Miller

.

ALL

10-1 13-1
6.3 7-3
6-6 9-6

Waterford

. 4-6

1 .\j oi'UK o· ll o~ · lM-.M ~I • .. I••

:··MEIGS
.- - --. COMMUNITY CALENDAR-__;_
•

•

Commurilty Calend81' is pub- ·for sale. Workshop to be presented with Mass to precede the meetit:~g ..
1. Jisbed as a free se..Vice to oouby Jim Rogers of Jim Rogers &amp; Hostesses Olita'Heighton and Mari•
roflt groujls wishing to
Associates.
lyn Poulin.
nounc meellnp and special
vents.
alendar Is not
MIDDLEPORT Business
desi d o
ote sales or fund After Hours. sponsored by the Pf\GEVILLE - Scipio Town: raise of any type. Items are
Meigs County Chamber of Com- ship Trustees regular meeting
Jl.rinted only as space permib 8Dd . merce, Tuesday, S to 6 p.m., Univer- ,' Wednesday, 6:30 p.in. at .the
cannot be guaranteed to be prhlt- sity of Rio Grinde, Meigs Center, Pageville Town Hall.
Middleport. Admission, $5. For
'
: ed a specific number ol
more information cali992-SOOO.
TU{'PERS PLAINS - Eastern
Tuesday, February 1 .
· Local Sc;hool Board, speciaj .meeting,. 7:30 p;m., Eastern E!lementary,
~ ALFRED .:... Orange .Township
School Public Library Conference
-nus tees, regular meeting, Tuesday,
7!30 p.m. the home of the clerk,
Room, to discuss building projects
d'ssie Follrod.
and other business.

•IJ hllt~~l•ll~•u\

"~h ··~r , lum~1· r-~~~!!!!!!!~~~~.l!:~~::::~~··~"~'''~"'~'"::!"'~~~•:.::-~ ~~~~ ••~ Ullo•~l!illk •••lllo!f1

o.oll o
• IoM·•
-.!lhlllll,ll .mtl ~~·111 11 I
I ,II

If you don't need two ~ . .bring afriend and sh~
recliners.~.
·
. '

~

dar•·

' •nlun iu !lli- otr.'&gt;t"

·· ··--

'

. ; ~'

- ---.. -~

' ·-

the savings!. bane®
.

'

.

Buy 1bls Fltxback

$699

: POMEROY - ' Financial · worli:.
stiop on tax reduction, Tuesday, 7 to
~t;30 p.m. at the Meigs County Mul-'
tipurpose buildinJ. No cost. no
· obligation. No products or services
"

.

••

~

'
By SCOTT WOLFE
, s.ntlnel Corr11p IMident
ROCK SPRINGS -: totter opening up a
12-point halftime advantage, Meigs continued its outstanding season, cruising to a 64-40
win over the Nelsonville-York in Morrison
Gymnasium Monday night.
Meigs (15-1, T¥C U-1) is tied with
Alexander (14-2, TVC 11-1) for first place il)
the TVC Ohi9 Division. The two teams split
during the . regul,ar season with Alexander
edging Meigs last Thursday to hilt an unde. fcated season for II)~ Marauders. ·• .
Jennifer Shrim)llin led the Marauders with
lS points and a_,team-high seven rebounds,
while Marjorie Bratton added 12 points.
Amber Vining hit double figura with. 11
points. Vining also bad three assists and two
steals.
·

The third and
Lacey Whitlatch
decisive
blow to .the
led Nelsonville-York
Meigs (15-1, 1VC 11-1) and
Buckeyes cime in
with 14 points.
Alexander (14-2, JVC 11-1) are the third quarter
Coach
Ron
first place in the 1VC when Vining and
Logan's girls bar- tied
Shannon
Price
reled out of the gate Ohio Division.
drilled' three pointers
with much gusto to
in a well-balanced
put the game out of
.reach early. The exclamation point on the win Meigs attack. Shrimplin added six points and
came in a powerful 18-6 offset in the third Tiffany Halfhill notched four.
The Meigs defense completely stifled N-Y
quarter before. Logan subbed freely th(oughin
that stretch as Meigs blitzed to a 51-27
out the finll round.
.
advantage.
Meigs rolled on to lhe big win as
Shrimplin paced the 14•point first quarter
for Meigs with seven points, while Amy Bratton went 4-for-4 at the line (6-for-6 for
the game) and notched three field goals in the
Hysell add~ four points as Meigs led 14-8.
·,
Vining canned a long three-pointer in the last leg, for a .64-40 finale.
Meigs .out-rebounded N-Y 33-25, Jed by
se0011d period and w~nt 2-for-2 at the line
while Brooke Williams notched six points as Shrimplin with seven. Whitlatch grabbed
eight for Nelsonville-York.
Meigs stretched its lead to 33-21 at the half.

for

4-6

Friday'• IIChedule
Wellston at Alexander
Trimble at Fec:t..-al Hocking
Miller at Eastern
·
Malga at Nalaonvllla-York
Belpre at Viliton County
·Waterford at Southern

GIRLS
-TVCOhlo
TYC

Meigs
Alexander
Belpre ,
VInton County
-Wellston
Nelaonvlle·York

ALL

11-1 15-1 .
11-1 14-2
11-2 ·11-5
8-5 6-9
8-7 6-10

3-9 5-11

Hocldng
TYC

Federal Hocking
Waterford

9·2

ALL

11-6

8-2 11::3

4-7 5-10
2-9 4-10

Southern

Eastern
Trimble
P4111er; &amp;-

o.!, A•V'

1-14 1-15
... 0-,1j 0'13',,..:·. '

Monclay'a IIChedule .
Meigs 64, Nelsonville-York 40
Alexander 80, Wellston 42
Federal Hocking 61, Trimble 21
Southern at Waterford, ppd.
Eastern at Millar, ppd.
.
VInton County at Belpre, ppd.
'

Thureclay'e echedule
Federal Hocking at Southern
Waterord at Miller
Trimble Ill l:astem
Belpre 111 Melge
·
W'ellaton at Nelsonville-York
111nton County at Alexander

News &amp;.Notes
Eastern, Southern ·
girls games postponed
UNDATED ·- The EasternMiller and Southern·Waterford girls
games slated for Monday were postponed .because of htclemcnt weal her.
The Eastern-Miller g1111e may be
postponed until Wednesday in place
of a non-league game with. South
GalliL .
'
· The .SOulliem-Waterford game a1
Waterforil. will be February 14.
S9uthern atid Eastern play in .a
make-up pme Saturday at Eastern
beginning at 5:30p.m.
·
·

Syracuse
.
./.
.

•'

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I

WinS 8Q81f1
Playing with four fouls, he hit a
By JOHN KEKJS
clutch 3-pointer from the right corAP Sporta Writer
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)- If ner to forge a 54-54 tie with 3:27
the Syracuse Orangemen arc read- left, then u5ed a great pass to stuii
ing their press clippings, it sure the Red Storm again.
"We have a lot of confidence.
doesn't show. Even after winning
We didn't get to 18 (wins in a row)
18 games in a row.
"The record means nothing without any confidence,'' ·. said
when we're on the court," senior. Hart, who had 12 points ani! five
point guard Jason Hart said Mon- assists. "Whether ,we're down or
day night after No. 4 Syracuse ral- up, we have a will to pull the game
'
lied past St. John's 63-57 to out."
Hart, one of three seniors on the
remain the only unbeaten team in
team, then beat St. John's press,
Division 1.
"We just wanted to come back finding Damone· Brown alone
and win. Any game we have a · under .the basket for the go-ahead
chance to win, we have to take it" layup·. Brown, fouled on the play
And that's exactly what the by Bootsy Thornton, converted the
. Orangemen (18-0, Big East 8-0) . free throw for a 59-56 lead with
did against the Red Storm. Trailing 1:58 to go..
"It (the ptess) needed to have
most of the game, Syracuse shut
down St. John's over the final min- all five people in the right place,
utes; closing it out with a 20-8 run. and unfortunately one wasn't and
"They were a little hesitant and he made a great pass,'' Jarvis said.
our zone dill a great job-dhwn the "I don't know how' he. saw him,
stretch," Syracuse coach Jim Boe- but he did. It took both people to
heim said. "lt.was a real good grit-· make the play, and they both made
out performance at the . end. St. the play. It was a great play a1 a
· John's did everything you have to. great time, That's what great teams
do."
do to win."
St. John's appeared ready to
The victory matches Syracuse's
end
the winning streak when
best start in the conference, set in
1983-84, and leaves the Orange- Anthony Glover converted a three.men one· victory shy of equaling point play to put the Red Stonn up
the school's single-season winning 54-49 with 5:23 .)eft. They had
double-teamed Syracuse center
streak of 19, set in 1978-79.
St. John's (13-6, Big East 5-3), Elan Thomas all night, preventing
·. coming off a '73-60 loss at Notre the Orangcmen. from taking
Dame on Saturday, was seeking a advantage of his strong inside
reversal of its recent misfortune, game.
"We were in great position to.
having lost three of the previous
four. A week ago, Ohio State win the game," said St. John's
closed its one-point win over St. Erick Barkley, who hsd 12 points,
John's with an 11-0 run and Notre five assists and no turnovers. "We
Dame finished its victory with a were right there. It's just going to
take a little bit more effort in the
17-2 run.
.
"You have to learn how to fin- last five minutes to really put a
. ish,'' St. John's coach Mike Jarvis team away. I thought we had the
lamented. "We just haven't experience, but I guess not."
Thornton's jumper in close over
learned how to do that yet."
!he
outstretched arms of Brown
On this night, Hart would not
FACE ·JOB/~G EAST-· Etan Tliomaa of Syracuse (33) ewata awey a ehot by Erick Barkely of St, allow it. .
See TOP 211- B2
John'l durlntiJIIet
night'•
Blfl
Eaet
encounter,
whlcnthl
O~ngemen won, 113157. (AP)
. ., . ..

Ravens~

Lewis jail~d in Atlanta in
wake .-of';nightclub·stabbings .·...

ATLANTA (AP) - ~ay Lewis
the shooting Richard Lollar, 24, both of Decatur,
was supposed to lie in Hawaii this
·scene, ,police Ga. One man died at the scene, the
. NEW YORK (AP) - Richie
w~ek, preparing for his third
spokesman
other at Grady .Memorial Hospital ..
Phillips atid the Major ·League
straight Pro Bowl. Instead, he was
John .Quigley
Despite tbe report of shots,
Umpires ~ation. won't decide
jailed bn murder cljarges in the
said.
· Ue police said the preliminary investiuntil Friday whether to file another
stabbina deaths of ' two peopl~
declined
to galion indicated both victims were
appeal to overtum the election that
shortly after the Super Bowl.
~elease .others stabbed to.death.
·
kicked them out last November.
In another devastating blow to ·
details of the · . "We're trying to gather~ much
· ' Friday is .the deadline to appeal
the NFL's .image; the Baltimore
investigation or information as we can,'' team
t~e decision of David E. Leach Ill, a
Ravens' star linebacker was taken
a
possible. spokesman Kevin Byrne said late
National .- Labor · Relations Bqard
into custody late Monday .and ·
motive.
Monday. "We have not sp(&gt;ker\ to
hearin&amp; officer who ori Jan. 21
became the second player in less
Lewla
Charles
Ray Lewis yet or· ~is representarejected the objections filed by
.than a.month accused' qf murder.
Cook, operat- · tivc. ':Ve're waiiing until we get
P,hillips and the MLUA.
Lewis was ·charged after police
lrig partner of more informalion before we com. Umpires voted 57-35 in Novem·
spent most of the day :l~cstigating the Cobllt, said there was·no alter· menL"
be)' to replace the MLUA with a new ·
!b•
slayings ne~ the ~'bait lounge cation at the cl~b, which closed'
Lewis was scheduled to leave
union.
m Atlanta's trendy Buckhead about hill( an hour before the slay- Monday morning for Honolulu,
neighborhood about 4 a.m. Mon- ings. He &amp;aid Lewis had been al the where the Pro Bowl will be played
tams, Titans draw
day.
. .
7
club earlier in the week, but dld not next Sunday. He changed ,his Hight
Earlier
Monday,
Lewis
told
a
know if he was there Sunday night. to Tuesday when he learned he was
s'oUd TV ratingS
B!!ltimorc ne\vspapcr he was qucsThe Cobalt is a sleek, upscale wanted for questioning, Byrne said.
NEW YORK (AP)- Smlll-mar-.
tioned by police, but cleared of any lounge featuring vinyl-covered
Lewis joins former Carolina
kets don't hurt Super Bowl ratings
wrongdoing.
.fl;
.
chairs and chrome-plated (lxtures. Panthers receiver RIIC Carruth as
- especially when the game goes
· "I cooperated fully," f,tiwis Ibid It is ~ituatecl · in the heart of the only active NFL players to be
down to tile final play.
The Sun before his arrest ~.. As for Atlanta's nightclub ,distriCt, where cha~ with mur!ler.
•St. Louis' .•stirring victory o¥10r
the situation, I have no ~ment." thousandS of revelers spill into the . .U.t Friday, · in his state of the
'Tennessee on Sundt.y night drew a
.'IWo men were. sta~ 1~uring a -slrcets e~ry v.:c:ekend. i
• NFL address; commissioner Paul
4~.2 rating and .a 62 share on ABO,
fight thllt broke out about liD yards
The club was ~loHd Monday· Tagllabue commented on ihe recent
up 7 percent from last· year. That
away a~r a party a1 the~~· Wit• a{ler a "Super BoWl (,llamJ14&amp;1!C .~ash of criminal charaes e,galnst
rriakca it the 19th-highest r~~
nesscs said six men foulbt and ,,. Blowout" .. lhe previollll evenina~ players.
·
·
ll!l'ong the 34 Super Bowls. ABC
atgued with the two vic:li"'f .before The Cobalt has come under fire
.
"Can we separate ourselves
estimated 130,745,000 people , · fleeing in a black stretch Iirildtisine, li'om'neiJbborhood buSinesses after from society? Of. course · not,"
watched the g1111e, makina It lhe
firinJ at least fi¥10 g111111ho1S~U lbef ; twO fitaJ 'incidents only twO weel!s Tagliabue said.."'We Can't predict
f!fth most:watcbed telecast in ,U.S.
droye away. Lewis,. 24, was ' tM apart.OnJan.17,amanw~~tllhottb whatNFLplayerswilldoanymore
history, ·trailing four other Super·
only suspect identified by J)olice.
death near the club. •
. , th~ w~ can predict students shootBowls. ,.
l~veitlgatbn found the 'JYehiclc
The stabbing victims were 'iden: ing other students or workers
ilf a parking lot behi~ a hotel ncar tifled as Jacinla Baker~ 21, and , shouting fellow workers."
1\.
.~
,,
I

Meigll hit 23-of-46 field goal attempts,
including 3-for-3 three-pointers Bf!d IS-of-21
foul shots.
Nelsonville connected on 13-of-51 shots
from the field overall, including 2-of-3 thrce,point attempts. The Buckeyes knocked down
12-of-19 free throws.
Meigs had 12 usists (Vining, Williams
and Halfhill two each), four blocked blocks
and eight stells (Vining and Hysell two each).
Nelsonville: York (S-11, TVC 3-9) tallied
nine assists (Whitlatch and Hill three each),
two blocks and 18 steals (Newlun and Standall six each).
.
Meigs won the reserve pmc, 43-10. Ksyte
Davis and Shannon Soulsby each led. Meigs
with eight points apiece, while Alicia Werry
and Maria Drenner had six each.
· Erin Fcams had six for N-Y.

•.

Tocilly'e IIChedule ·
Miller at Alamnder
Fedel'lll Hocking et Melge
Belpre at Trimble
.
waterford at Nelaonvtlla-York
Vinton County at Southern
Wellston at Eastern

!

· POMEROY
Immunization
dinic, Meigs County Health Department, Tuesday. I to 7 p.m·. Children
ur be accqmpanied by parent/legal
guardian. Immunization records to
be taken to clinic.

Meigs wallops Nelsonville-York 64-40

6-4 7-4
0-10 0-13

Umps ponder appeal

~TUI.'II

.

.

Meigs

.

•

·I•

3-7 3·1ll
-:!-7 2-9

TYC

~•1

.

~elsonvllle-York
VInton County

Eastern

Grange ·hears
·about -pendi.ng
gun legislation

499

ALL

11-1 11-1
5-4 5-8
5-4 5-8

Hocldng

nate all ,milk other foods lower in fat to balance
POMEROY - Danny Roush of because putting water on hot Dint interested in be&lt;;oming a member of BY BECKY BAER
Meigs
County
E1tenalon
Agent
and
milk prod- . the diet. In a similar fashion , eati~g
Portland demonstrated the Indian would cause the flint to explode and the Chapter.
Family
and
Coneumer
Sciucts
from the lactose foods during a meal will
craft of flint knapping at last week's injure the whites.
lnfonnation was given on Ohio
diet.
Dairy also help slow down the speed of
meeting of Ewing Chapter, Sons of
James Lochary, president, wei- House Bill519 which would requite ences/Communlty Develop- ·
ment
.
products
are
an digestion because the strength of t~e ·
the American Revolution, held . at corned 33 members and guests· to· all Ohio probate.. courts to omit
Do
you
feel
bloated,
have
important
food
lactose is weakened.
the meeting where Michael Brawle~ Social · Security numbers and the
the Meigs Museum.
cramps,
nausea,
gas,
abdominal
group.
they
Be sure to read food labels to
.. Roush explained that the skill of Aihens ~nd James Oiler of Thur- mothers' maiden names on all propain
or
diarrhea
after
eating
foods
supply
'the
body
determine
if milk or milk produCts
was needed to turn chunks of crude man, based on their Revolutionary · . bate marriage records. The chapter
with the miner- are an ingredient in the food. Any
tlint into spearheads, arrowheads, . ancestors, were.sworn into member- voted to infonn the state representa- that contain milk? If so, you may
·
be
lactose
intolerant.
.
Backy
Bur
al
calcium that . food wi.th milk, buttermilk, cream,
·
tive tllat the requirement to.omit the
· and knives by the American Indians. ship.
People
who
have
this
condition
helps
build
and
maintain
strong cheese or "whey" in it could he a
Keith Ashley, chapter registry, mother's maiden name on the
In addition to the flint items, Roush
can'
t
properly
digest
lactose,
the
bones
and
teeth
agd
helps
prevent
problem.
·"
. displayed spear heads he h~d made announced that the chapter · has records . will cripple genealogical
natural sugar found in dairy prod- osteoporosis.
Because dairy products are su~h
from other items including glass, reached its highest membership in rese.ari:h.
\Jets.
They
don't
have
enough
of
·
What
can
be
done
to
reap
the
a
good
source of calcium, special
and tools made from things like its 63 year history, 69 members.
lnfonnation on the historical
the
lactose
enzyme
to
break
benefits
of
calcium-rich
dairy
care
11eeds
to he taken to ensure that
.moose and deer antlers, striking Prof., Samuel Girton of Athens, essay contest on the American Revdown
the
milk
sugar.
This
results·
foods,
without
suffering
the
lactose
the
recommended
amounts of the
stone, and copper.
Howard Wolfe of Belpre, and olution has been transmitted to the
in
fermentation
in
the
digestive
intolerance
consequences?
It
has
mineral
are
included
in the diet. Eat
· He noted that much of the local Michael Swisher of Syracuse, local high schools. Lochary called
been found that most people can eat a variety of dark green leafy v~gctsDint came from Flint Ridge in Ohio. potential members, were guests. · on members to consider more local track.
Even
though
people
may
not
small
amounts or certain types of bles and foods that have been fortiAccording to the speaker Indians
Michael Worley of New 'Marsh- involvement in its programming
have
had
trouble
with
dairy
prodmilk
products
withou~ the discom- fied with calcium. Canned sardines
purposely misled whites to believe field announced that the chapter including such things as Flag Day
ucts
in
the
past,
their
bodies
may
fort.
Eating
smaller
servings more and salmon with bones have a large
t)lal spearheads ·and · arrowheads web· site is running now. Ashley meetings, Constitution Week
the
ability
to
digest
lactose
~
frequently
mi\y
also
help.
amount of calcium in them, as
lose
-:oere made by plac~ng Dint in a fire announced thst he hss located a emphasis, gi(tS'for veterans hospiSome dairy foods have lower well. Only take calcium suppleand then using small droplets of descendant of the Revolutionary . tals, and participation ·in patriotic they age. It tends to be an inherited
affliction.
Asians,
Native
Ameramounts
of lactose. !Jy choosing ments on the advice of your !loctor.
water on areas to be chipped off. soldier, George Ewing, for .whom observances.
.
icans,
Africim-Americans
and
HisAmerican,
Swis·s·, blue, cheddar,
Other ways to avoid problems
The Indians, Roush said, told this the chapter is named and who is
panic AllljOricans are more likely to Parmesan, cottage ~U~d cream include .using lactose-reduced and
·experience lactose intolerance than · cheese, a person can obtain cillcium Jactose•free dairy products. Some
Caucasian Americans. 'l)te prob· without most of the problems asso- people choose to add the lactose
lem may also be attributed to ciatcd with the intolerance. Yogurt enzyme to the_ir dairy foods · before
stomach surgery, intestinal illness- with active bacteria cultores can eating. The enzyme can come in tbe
es· and the us~ of ·certain medica- ·even l!elp dig~st the .Jacto~.
· form of ohewable tablets or drops, _..
tions.
·
Whole milk products, instead of
If it bas been determined that you
If a person suspects lactose ·low-fat, or skim, slow down the arc lactose intolerant, you do not ·
intolenlflce, he or she should see a . digestion rate, .allm~ving the lactose h~ve to omit d~ry foods from your
~
l
'
~
physici~n . If the dtagno~is fscoii:" to enter the dtgesuve system ae a · dtet. By followmg these tips, you.
The House bill whi'ch would firmed, it does not mean that the s.lower pace. This makes it easier to can enjoy calcium-rich foods withmake it mandatory to lock up all person needs to completely elimi- digest If fat intake is a concern, eat out the associated difficulties.
guns to protect children was discussed by Legislative Agent Eldon
Barrows at a recent meeting of Star
Orange 77~ held at the hall.
Plans were announce\! by Janis
Macomber, youth .chairman, for the
'
county youth group to have a met. ing at the Golden Corral at 6 p.m on
Feb. 29, and Janis Macomber. deaf
chairman, announced that Campbell ,
soup labels and pop tabs are still
being collected.
Members decided to participate
in the ritualistic contest with first
degree and practices were scheduled for each Saturday at 6:30 p. at
the grange hall. The contest will be
held Feb. 26 at friendly Hills Camp
"""""'
lr.~&lt;ltlio~lilll o~1llo111 111;~&lt;1 ~oil...! '"'ill" ,1. l i'l' IIIH·
in Zanesville.
~ "·"lll•liluo• ,,.l,•• • uokll•l;lll"'l"'~-• · 11 -·
oiiii"Hil:llo-.! 1111ri111 :IIIII ,.,t.·.
The program carried out a "New
Year" theme with readings includ. ing"In Life's Garden by Rick
Macomber; "Trials and Smiles' by
Linda Montgomery; "A New Year ·
Wish" by Martha Bartley, and "10
Ways to Make 2000 a Better Year"
by Smith. A holiday quiz .and new
year's
resolutions were given by all.
: NEW PASTOR _:_The Rev. Don BIOM le new paetor of thl Mor1a
About 30 members attended the
Chapel Church of Portlend. He lind hli wile, Pat, reelda In
eharleston, W. Va. Church services atart at 11 a.m..followlng Sun· meeting prei:eded by a potluck supday school at 10 a.m.
·
per.

NEW .MINISTER

T'IC

Belpre
Wellston
Alexander

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

SAR hears about Indian craft of flint knapping

Inside: Baseball suspends Rocker- .,.._ •
Inside: NBA roundup- ..... •

Eastern checks in
at No. 11 in D-IV
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The sion Ill state champ, by 57 points. A
· top two teams held their positions io couple more heavyweights, Findlay
each of the four divisions - with Liberty-Benton and aeveland Villa
Worthington Christian, Akron St. · Angela-St. Joseph, held their ground
Vincent-St. Mary, Wooster Triway in the next two spots.
and Cincinnati St. Xavier again
Triway holds a 24-poinllead over '
No.1 - in the latest Associated Dayton Christian in Division II, ColPress boys state basketball poll lowed by Cincinnati Purcell Marian
released today.
and Willard. Olmsted Falls, fifth last
There were few wholesale week, was joined by Struthers in a •
changes in any' of the divisions as deadlock at that spot.
,
. the 49th annual ran kings passed the
St. Xavier's lead was cut from 40
midpoint.
.
to }I p&lt;)ints by Toledo Libbey in
The .top seven teams remained in Division I. Cincinnati Winton
the same order in Division' IV, the Woods moved up one spot to third,
top folll' were the same in Divisions Beavercreek climbeci two notches to
Ill and II and St. Xavier and Toledo fourth and Akron ' Buchtel climbed
Libbey maintained th.e No.I and 2 three wngs to the No. 5 spot with
spots, rapectively, in the big:school three weeks remaining in the media ·
division.
('
poll.
·
Defending state champion WorLocally, Eastern moved a spot to
thington Christian piled up the most No. I I, gaining 24 points·. · The
.firilt-place votes (all but one of · a · Eagles arc ti~with Centerburg.
·
possible 31) and the· most points
Fellow "fVc school Belpre is
(308) while building a56-point edge ranked 11th In the Division Ill poll
on No.2 Berlin Hiland in Division this week.
l_Y. Tiffin Calvert, 'Maria Stein Mari•
Gallia Academy moved up to
on Local, Cincinnati . Seven Hills, . I lth in the Division II' poll with 26
Springfield Catholic Central 'and points. Logan is ranked No. U In the .
Fort Jennings folli&gt;Wed, just ss they Division I poll, tied with Eat Uverdicl a week ago.
· pool.
·
Despite Wurthington Christian's
Franklin Furnace Green is ranlled
big totals, St . Vincent-St. Mary 16th in the Division IV poll.
owns the biggest lead of any of the
Chesapeake i.s ranked lOth In the
top teams. The Fighting Irish lead Division Ill poll. Fort Frye checks in
Bedford Chanel,lhe defending Divi- a1 No. 12 in Division Ill this week.

�.

By The Bend

The Daily

1

S~ntinel

Page 81
Tueeday, February 1, 2000.

Page AI ·

Tue.clay, Februa,Y 1, 2000

·Ann advises: Shrug off family favoritism with 'emotional rair'}coat'

II

Dear Ann Lander~: My letfavoritiam. No city, just -THE
ter is about favoritism in famiINFERIOR ONE
. lies. I hope you will print it,
DEAR ONE: This advice is
because there's a lot of it
for you. Get over it. Nobody can
make you feel inferior without
IU'Ound.
I have two .brothers, one
~n Lanclerw
your permission. The sibling
.
. rivalry pain you are experiencolder than me, the other
:IOunger. It drives me nuts the while, my parents put Keith ing goes way back to your ~hild­
way Mom and Dad always favor through medical school and hood. It's an old ·Story. Add to
dur younger brother "Keith.• now they brag to' everyone .the mix the fact that parents
~ery time we are with them, about tb.eir son the doctor.
have a tendency to brag abQut
we have to listen to how wonIt has reached the point children who are professionals,
derful Keith is, . even though where I can no longer stand to especially when they themt;lley have been supporting him be around my parents. It·hurts selves d,id .not attain that etafinancially for the last eight me to hear them rave about tus. Put on the "emotional rainyears.
Keith, knowing they never coat" I have spoken of in tbe
. My older brother and strug- · cared as much for me or· my put, and let their comments
. gled through school, and took older brother. Please, Ann, tell slide right off.
out bans to cover our living parents how harmful it is to.
Delli' Ann ~andere: Wilen
expen1!es. We received no help play favorites with their chi!- my husband retired ~ee years
from anybody. We would have dren. I cannot ' talk to my par- ago, he not only. ·retired from
loved to continue our schooling ents about this b~cause they work, he also retired from our
and receive advanced degrees, can't help how they feel. Also, marriage.\ Fer the first two
but we couldn't afford it. There I'm sure they see nothing · years, he was "too busy" to have
were no offers of help. Mean· wrong with their ·hurtful . sex. Now, he doesn't even both-

t

II

,·'.I
'

DEAR WYOMING: A marer to make excuses. He aimply
ried
woman who ia 62 should
is not interested. I 1poke to my
husband'a doctor about thi1, not have to settle for a sexless
and he gave him a prescription marriage. Don't give up on it.
for Viagra. My husband took it Please coneider cnunseling to
exactly twice, and then, quit, It find out hoy to turn' this man
seems he has better thinp to on.
Dear
Ann
Landers:
do than make love to his wife.
I am terribly hurt by his "Orville" and I became engaged
unwillingness to be intimate a few months ago .. Now, I am
with me. He is otherwise a good having second thoughts. He
husband, and I have no inten- used to bring me flowers for no
tion of leaving him, but I am reason.·Now, there are no flowonly. 62 years old, and would era and we don't even go out
·hate to think that my sex life is anymore. He expects me to cook
over. I have decided, no matter dinner for him every night (he
what, I am going to stay in this knows I hate to cook), and we
mamage the way it is. My New watch a lot of TV:
Year's resolution was to give up ' Should I break it off now,.
trying, and I'm sticking to it. Ann, or is this the way it's ·supPlease · tell your readers that posed to be? - SECOND
when a marriage is totally sex- THOUGHTS IN TEXAS D~
SECOND
less, it is not always the wife's
fault.- LIVING WITHOUT IN THOUGHTS: This is not the
WYOMING
way it's. supposed to lie. Tell

•

Orville you feel a distinct
change in the temperature, and
demand an explanation. If you
don't g0t s0111e satisfactory
answen, get 6llt now.
That first kiss, that first
embrace ... Remember all those
things that brought you arid
your loved one together?
;
Ann Landers' new booklet,
"How We Met," is now available.
· This collection of sentimental
love stori~ts will make
a terrific Valentine's Day gift for
that special someone. It's a per·
feet addition to that box of
chocolates or bouquet of flowers.
. For a -copy, please send a selfaddressed, long, business- site
envelope and a check or money
order for $5.50 (this includes
postage and handling) to: How
We Met, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, ·Chicago, lli 606~10562 (in Canada, $6:50).
:

TUESDAY'S

HIGllllGHTS
Prep Basketball
BOYS
-TVc....:
Ohio

3-6

4-9

Southern

Federal Hocking
Trimble
.
Miller

.

ALL

10-1 13-1
6.3 7-3
6-6 9-6

Waterford

. 4-6

1 .\j oi'UK o· ll o~ · lM-.M ~I • .. I••

:··MEIGS
.- - --. COMMUNITY CALENDAR-__;_
•

•

Commurilty Calend81' is pub- ·for sale. Workshop to be presented with Mass to precede the meetit:~g ..
1. Jisbed as a free se..Vice to oouby Jim Rogers of Jim Rogers &amp; Hostesses Olita'Heighton and Mari•
roflt groujls wishing to
Associates.
lyn Poulin.
nounc meellnp and special
vents.
alendar Is not
MIDDLEPORT Business
desi d o
ote sales or fund After Hours. sponsored by the Pf\GEVILLE - Scipio Town: raise of any type. Items are
Meigs County Chamber of Com- ship Trustees regular meeting
Jl.rinted only as space permib 8Dd . merce, Tuesday, S to 6 p.m., Univer- ,' Wednesday, 6:30 p.in. at .the
cannot be guaranteed to be prhlt- sity of Rio Grinde, Meigs Center, Pageville Town Hall.
Middleport. Admission, $5. For
'
: ed a specific number ol
more information cali992-SOOO.
TU{'PERS PLAINS - Eastern
Tuesday, February 1 .
· Local Sc;hool Board, speciaj .meeting,. 7:30 p;m., Eastern E!lementary,
~ ALFRED .:... Orange .Township
School Public Library Conference
-nus tees, regular meeting, Tuesday,
7!30 p.m. the home of the clerk,
Room, to discuss building projects
d'ssie Follrod.
and other business.

•IJ hllt~~l•ll~•u\

"~h ··~r , lum~1· r-~~~!!!!!!!~~~~.l!:~~::::~~··~"~'''~"'~'"::!"'~~~•:.::-~ ~~~~ ••~ Ullo•~l!illk •••lllo!f1

o.oll o
• IoM·•
-.!lhlllll,ll .mtl ~~·111 11 I
I ,II

If you don't need two ~ . .bring afriend and sh~
recliners.~.
·
. '

~

dar•·

' •nlun iu !lli- otr.'&gt;t"

·· ··--

'

. ; ~'

- ---.. -~

' ·-

the savings!. bane®
.

'

.

Buy 1bls Fltxback

$699

: POMEROY - ' Financial · worli:.
stiop on tax reduction, Tuesday, 7 to
~t;30 p.m. at the Meigs County Mul-'
tipurpose buildinJ. No cost. no
· obligation. No products or services
"

.

••

~

'
By SCOTT WOLFE
, s.ntlnel Corr11p IMident
ROCK SPRINGS -: totter opening up a
12-point halftime advantage, Meigs continued its outstanding season, cruising to a 64-40
win over the Nelsonville-York in Morrison
Gymnasium Monday night.
Meigs (15-1, T¥C U-1) is tied with
Alexander (14-2, TVC 11-1) for first place il)
the TVC Ohi9 Division. The two teams split
during the . regul,ar season with Alexander
edging Meigs last Thursday to hilt an unde. fcated season for II)~ Marauders. ·• .
Jennifer Shrim)llin led the Marauders with
lS points and a_,team-high seven rebounds,
while Marjorie Bratton added 12 points.
Amber Vining hit double figura with. 11
points. Vining also bad three assists and two
steals.
·

The third and
Lacey Whitlatch
decisive
blow to .the
led Nelsonville-York
Meigs (15-1, 1VC 11-1) and
Buckeyes cime in
with 14 points.
Alexander (14-2, JVC 11-1) are the third quarter
Coach
Ron
first place in the 1VC when Vining and
Logan's girls bar- tied
Shannon
Price
reled out of the gate Ohio Division.
drilled' three pointers
with much gusto to
in a well-balanced
put the game out of
.reach early. The exclamation point on the win Meigs attack. Shrimplin added six points and
came in a powerful 18-6 offset in the third Tiffany Halfhill notched four.
The Meigs defense completely stifled N-Y
quarter before. Logan subbed freely th(oughin
that stretch as Meigs blitzed to a 51-27
out the finll round.
.
advantage.
Meigs rolled on to lhe big win as
Shrimplin paced the 14•point first quarter
for Meigs with seven points, while Amy Bratton went 4-for-4 at the line (6-for-6 for
the game) and notched three field goals in the
Hysell add~ four points as Meigs led 14-8.
·,
Vining canned a long three-pointer in the last leg, for a .64-40 finale.
Meigs .out-rebounded N-Y 33-25, Jed by
se0011d period and w~nt 2-for-2 at the line
while Brooke Williams notched six points as Shrimplin with seven. Whitlatch grabbed
eight for Nelsonville-York.
Meigs stretched its lead to 33-21 at the half.

for

4-6

Friday'• IIChedule
Wellston at Alexander
Trimble at Fec:t..-al Hocking
Miller at Eastern
·
Malga at Nalaonvllla-York
Belpre at Viliton County
·Waterford at Southern

GIRLS
-TVCOhlo
TYC

Meigs
Alexander
Belpre ,
VInton County
-Wellston
Nelaonvlle·York

ALL

11-1 15-1 .
11-1 14-2
11-2 ·11-5
8-5 6-9
8-7 6-10

3-9 5-11

Hocldng
TYC

Federal Hocking
Waterford

9·2

ALL

11-6

8-2 11::3

4-7 5-10
2-9 4-10

Southern

Eastern
Trimble
P4111er; &amp;-

o.!, A•V'

1-14 1-15
... 0-,1j 0'13',,..:·. '

Monclay'a IIChedule .
Meigs 64, Nelsonville-York 40
Alexander 80, Wellston 42
Federal Hocking 61, Trimble 21
Southern at Waterford, ppd.
Eastern at Millar, ppd.
.
VInton County at Belpre, ppd.
'

Thureclay'e echedule
Federal Hocking at Southern
Waterord at Miller
Trimble Ill l:astem
Belpre 111 Melge
·
W'ellaton at Nelsonville-York
111nton County at Alexander

News &amp;.Notes
Eastern, Southern ·
girls games postponed
UNDATED ·- The EasternMiller and Southern·Waterford girls
games slated for Monday were postponed .because of htclemcnt weal her.
The Eastern-Miller g1111e may be
postponed until Wednesday in place
of a non-league game with. South
GalliL .
'
· The .SOulliem-Waterford game a1
Waterforil. will be February 14.
S9uthern atid Eastern play in .a
make-up pme Saturday at Eastern
beginning at 5:30p.m.
·
·

Syracuse
.
./.
.

•'

.

I

WinS 8Q81f1
Playing with four fouls, he hit a
By JOHN KEKJS
clutch 3-pointer from the right corAP Sporta Writer
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)- If ner to forge a 54-54 tie with 3:27
the Syracuse Orangemen arc read- left, then u5ed a great pass to stuii
ing their press clippings, it sure the Red Storm again.
"We have a lot of confidence.
doesn't show. Even after winning
We didn't get to 18 (wins in a row)
18 games in a row.
"The record means nothing without any confidence,'' ·. said
when we're on the court," senior. Hart, who had 12 points ani! five
point guard Jason Hart said Mon- assists. "Whether ,we're down or
day night after No. 4 Syracuse ral- up, we have a will to pull the game
'
lied past St. John's 63-57 to out."
Hart, one of three seniors on the
remain the only unbeaten team in
team, then beat St. John's press,
Division 1.
"We just wanted to come back finding Damone· Brown alone
and win. Any game we have a · under .the basket for the go-ahead
chance to win, we have to take it" layup·. Brown, fouled on the play
And that's exactly what the by Bootsy Thornton, converted the
. Orangemen (18-0, Big East 8-0) . free throw for a 59-56 lead with
did against the Red Storm. Trailing 1:58 to go..
"It (the ptess) needed to have
most of the game, Syracuse shut
down St. John's over the final min- all five people in the right place,
utes; closing it out with a 20-8 run. and unfortunately one wasn't and
"They were a little hesitant and he made a great pass,'' Jarvis said.
our zone dill a great job-dhwn the "I don't know how' he. saw him,
stretch," Syracuse coach Jim Boe- but he did. It took both people to
heim said. "lt.was a real good grit-· make the play, and they both made
out performance at the . end. St. the play. It was a great play a1 a
· John's did everything you have to. great time, That's what great teams
do."
do to win."
St. John's appeared ready to
The victory matches Syracuse's
end
the winning streak when
best start in the conference, set in
1983-84, and leaves the Orange- Anthony Glover converted a three.men one· victory shy of equaling point play to put the Red Stonn up
the school's single-season winning 54-49 with 5:23 .)eft. They had
double-teamed Syracuse center
streak of 19, set in 1978-79.
St. John's (13-6, Big East 5-3), Elan Thomas all night, preventing
·. coming off a '73-60 loss at Notre the Orangcmen. from taking
Dame on Saturday, was seeking a advantage of his strong inside
reversal of its recent misfortune, game.
"We were in great position to.
having lost three of the previous
four. A week ago, Ohio State win the game," said St. John's
closed its one-point win over St. Erick Barkley, who hsd 12 points,
John's with an 11-0 run and Notre five assists and no turnovers. "We
Dame finished its victory with a were right there. It's just going to
take a little bit more effort in the
17-2 run.
.
"You have to learn how to fin- last five minutes to really put a
. ish,'' St. John's coach Mike Jarvis team away. I thought we had the
lamented. "We just haven't experience, but I guess not."
Thornton's jumper in close over
learned how to do that yet."
!he
outstretched arms of Brown
On this night, Hart would not
FACE ·JOB/~G EAST-· Etan Tliomaa of Syracuse (33) ewata awey a ehot by Erick Barkely of St, allow it. .
See TOP 211- B2
John'l durlntiJIIet
night'•
Blfl
Eaet
encounter,
whlcnthl
O~ngemen won, 113157. (AP)
. ., . ..

Ravens~

Lewis jail~d in Atlanta in
wake .-of';nightclub·stabbings .·...

ATLANTA (AP) - ~ay Lewis
the shooting Richard Lollar, 24, both of Decatur,
was supposed to lie in Hawaii this
·scene, ,police Ga. One man died at the scene, the
. NEW YORK (AP) - Richie
w~ek, preparing for his third
spokesman
other at Grady .Memorial Hospital ..
Phillips atid the Major ·League
straight Pro Bowl. Instead, he was
John .Quigley
Despite tbe report of shots,
Umpires ~ation. won't decide
jailed bn murder cljarges in the
said.
· Ue police said the preliminary investiuntil Friday whether to file another
stabbina deaths of ' two peopl~
declined
to galion indicated both victims were
appeal to overtum the election that
shortly after the Super Bowl.
~elease .others stabbed to.death.
·
kicked them out last November.
In another devastating blow to ·
details of the · . "We're trying to gather~ much
· ' Friday is .the deadline to appeal
the NFL's .image; the Baltimore
investigation or information as we can,'' team
t~e decision of David E. Leach Ill, a
Ravens' star linebacker was taken
a
possible. spokesman Kevin Byrne said late
National .- Labor · Relations Bqard
into custody late Monday .and ·
motive.
Monday. "We have not sp(&gt;ker\ to
hearin&amp; officer who ori Jan. 21
became the second player in less
Lewla
Charles
Ray Lewis yet or· ~is representarejected the objections filed by
.than a.month accused' qf murder.
Cook, operat- · tivc. ':Ve're waiiing until we get
P,hillips and the MLUA.
Lewis was ·charged after police
lrig partner of more informalion before we com. Umpires voted 57-35 in Novem·
spent most of the day :l~cstigating the Cobllt, said there was·no alter· menL"
be)' to replace the MLUA with a new ·
!b•
slayings ne~ the ~'bait lounge cation at the cl~b, which closed'
Lewis was scheduled to leave
union.
m Atlanta's trendy Buckhead about hill( an hour before the slay- Monday morning for Honolulu,
neighborhood about 4 a.m. Mon- ings. He &amp;aid Lewis had been al the where the Pro Bowl will be played
tams, Titans draw
day.
. .
7
club earlier in the week, but dld not next Sunday. He changed ,his Hight
Earlier
Monday,
Lewis
told
a
know if he was there Sunday night. to Tuesday when he learned he was
s'oUd TV ratingS
B!!ltimorc ne\vspapcr he was qucsThe Cobalt is a sleek, upscale wanted for questioning, Byrne said.
NEW YORK (AP)- Smlll-mar-.
tioned by police, but cleared of any lounge featuring vinyl-covered
Lewis joins former Carolina
kets don't hurt Super Bowl ratings
wrongdoing.
.fl;
.
chairs and chrome-plated (lxtures. Panthers receiver RIIC Carruth as
- especially when the game goes
· "I cooperated fully," f,tiwis Ibid It is ~ituatecl · in the heart of the only active NFL players to be
down to tile final play.
The Sun before his arrest ~.. As for Atlanta's nightclub ,distriCt, where cha~ with mur!ler.
•St. Louis' .•stirring victory o¥10r
the situation, I have no ~ment." thousandS of revelers spill into the . .U.t Friday, · in his state of the
'Tennessee on Sundt.y night drew a
.'IWo men were. sta~ 1~uring a -slrcets e~ry v.:c:ekend. i
• NFL address; commissioner Paul
4~.2 rating and .a 62 share on ABO,
fight thllt broke out about liD yards
The club was ~loHd Monday· Tagllabue commented on ihe recent
up 7 percent from last· year. That
away a~r a party a1 the~~· Wit• a{ler a "Super BoWl (,llamJ14&amp;1!C .~ash of criminal charaes e,galnst
rriakca it the 19th-highest r~~
nesscs said six men foulbt and ,,. Blowout" .. lhe previollll evenina~ players.
·
·
ll!l'ong the 34 Super Bowls. ABC
atgued with the two vic:li"'f .before The Cobalt has come under fire
.
"Can we separate ourselves
estimated 130,745,000 people , · fleeing in a black stretch Iirildtisine, li'om'neiJbborhood buSinesses after from society? Of. course · not,"
watched the g1111e, makina It lhe
firinJ at least fi¥10 g111111ho1S~U lbef ; twO fitaJ 'incidents only twO weel!s Tagliabue said.."'We Can't predict
f!fth most:watcbed telecast in ,U.S.
droye away. Lewis,. 24, was ' tM apart.OnJan.17,amanw~~tllhottb whatNFLplayerswilldoanymore
history, ·trailing four other Super·
only suspect identified by J)olice.
death near the club. •
. , th~ w~ can predict students shootBowls. ,.
l~veitlgatbn found the 'JYehiclc
The stabbing victims were 'iden: ing other students or workers
ilf a parking lot behi~ a hotel ncar tifled as Jacinla Baker~ 21, and , shouting fellow workers."
1\.
.~
,,
I

Meigll hit 23-of-46 field goal attempts,
including 3-for-3 three-pointers Bf!d IS-of-21
foul shots.
Nelsonville connected on 13-of-51 shots
from the field overall, including 2-of-3 thrce,point attempts. The Buckeyes knocked down
12-of-19 free throws.
Meigs had 12 usists (Vining, Williams
and Halfhill two each), four blocked blocks
and eight stells (Vining and Hysell two each).
Nelsonville: York (S-11, TVC 3-9) tallied
nine assists (Whitlatch and Hill three each),
two blocks and 18 steals (Newlun and Standall six each).
.
Meigs won the reserve pmc, 43-10. Ksyte
Davis and Shannon Soulsby each led. Meigs
with eight points apiece, while Alicia Werry
and Maria Drenner had six each.
· Erin Fcams had six for N-Y.

•.

Tocilly'e IIChedule ·
Miller at Alamnder
Fedel'lll Hocking et Melge
Belpre at Trimble
.
waterford at Nelaonvtlla-York
Vinton County at Southern
Wellston at Eastern

!

· POMEROY
Immunization
dinic, Meigs County Health Department, Tuesday. I to 7 p.m·. Children
ur be accqmpanied by parent/legal
guardian. Immunization records to
be taken to clinic.

Meigs wallops Nelsonville-York 64-40

6-4 7-4
0-10 0-13

Umps ponder appeal

~TUI.'II

.

.

Meigs

.

•

·I•

3-7 3·1ll
-:!-7 2-9

TYC

~•1

.

~elsonvllle-York
VInton County

Eastern

Grange ·hears
·about -pendi.ng
gun legislation

499

ALL

11-1 11-1
5-4 5-8
5-4 5-8

Hocldng

nate all ,milk other foods lower in fat to balance
POMEROY - Danny Roush of because putting water on hot Dint interested in be&lt;;oming a member of BY BECKY BAER
Meigs
County
E1tenalon
Agent
and
milk prod- . the diet. In a similar fashion , eati~g
Portland demonstrated the Indian would cause the flint to explode and the Chapter.
Family
and
Coneumer
Sciucts
from the lactose foods during a meal will
craft of flint knapping at last week's injure the whites.
lnfonnation was given on Ohio
diet.
Dairy also help slow down the speed of
meeting of Ewing Chapter, Sons of
James Lochary, president, wei- House Bill519 which would requite ences/Communlty Develop- ·
ment
.
products
are
an digestion because the strength of t~e ·
the American Revolution, held . at corned 33 members and guests· to· all Ohio probate.. courts to omit
Do
you
feel
bloated,
have
important
food
lactose is weakened.
the meeting where Michael Brawle~ Social · Security numbers and the
the Meigs Museum.
cramps,
nausea,
gas,
abdominal
group.
they
Be sure to read food labels to
.. Roush explained that the skill of Aihens ~nd James Oiler of Thur- mothers' maiden names on all propain
or
diarrhea
after
eating
foods
supply
'the
body
determine
if milk or milk produCts
was needed to turn chunks of crude man, based on their Revolutionary · . bate marriage records. The chapter
with the miner- are an ingredient in the food. Any
tlint into spearheads, arrowheads, . ancestors, were.sworn into member- voted to infonn the state representa- that contain milk? If so, you may
·
be
lactose
intolerant.
.
Backy
Bur
al
calcium that . food wi.th milk, buttermilk, cream,
·
tive tllat the requirement to.omit the
· and knives by the American Indians. ship.
People
who
have
this
condition
helps
build
and
maintain
strong cheese or "whey" in it could he a
Keith Ashley, chapter registry, mother's maiden name on the
In addition to the flint items, Roush
can'
t
properly
digest
lactose,
the
bones
and
teeth
agd
helps
prevent
problem.
·"
. displayed spear heads he h~d made announced that the chapter · has records . will cripple genealogical
natural sugar found in dairy prod- osteoporosis.
Because dairy products are su~h
from other items including glass, reached its highest membership in rese.ari:h.
\Jets.
They
don't
have
enough
of
·
What
can
be
done
to
reap
the
a
good
source of calcium, special
and tools made from things like its 63 year history, 69 members.
lnfonnation on the historical
the
lactose
enzyme
to
break
benefits
of
calcium-rich
dairy
care
11eeds
to he taken to ensure that
.moose and deer antlers, striking Prof., Samuel Girton of Athens, essay contest on the American Revdown
the
milk
sugar.
This
results·
foods,
without
suffering
the
lactose
the
recommended
amounts of the
stone, and copper.
Howard Wolfe of Belpre, and olution has been transmitted to the
in
fermentation
in
the
digestive
intolerance
consequences?
It
has
mineral
are
included
in the diet. Eat
· He noted that much of the local Michael Swisher of Syracuse, local high schools. Lochary called
been found that most people can eat a variety of dark green leafy v~gctsDint came from Flint Ridge in Ohio. potential members, were guests. · on members to consider more local track.
Even
though
people
may
not
small
amounts or certain types of bles and foods that have been fortiAccording to the speaker Indians
Michael Worley of New 'Marsh- involvement in its programming
have
had
trouble
with
dairy
prodmilk
products
withou~ the discom- fied with calcium. Canned sardines
purposely misled whites to believe field announced that the chapter including such things as Flag Day
ucts
in
the
past,
their
bodies
may
fort.
Eating
smaller
servings more and salmon with bones have a large
t)lal spearheads ·and · arrowheads web· site is running now. Ashley meetings, Constitution Week
the
ability
to
digest
lactose
~
frequently
mi\y
also
help.
amount of calcium in them, as
lose
-:oere made by plac~ng Dint in a fire announced thst he hss located a emphasis, gi(tS'for veterans hospiSome dairy foods have lower well. Only take calcium suppleand then using small droplets of descendant of the Revolutionary . tals, and participation ·in patriotic they age. It tends to be an inherited
affliction.
Asians,
Native
Ameramounts
of lactose. !Jy choosing ments on the advice of your !loctor.
water on areas to be chipped off. soldier, George Ewing, for .whom observances.
.
icans,
Africim-Americans
and
HisAmerican,
Swis·s·, blue, cheddar,
Other ways to avoid problems
The Indians, Roush said, told this the chapter is named and who is
panic AllljOricans are more likely to Parmesan, cottage ~U~d cream include .using lactose-reduced and
·experience lactose intolerance than · cheese, a person can obtain cillcium Jactose•free dairy products. Some
Caucasian Americans. 'l)te prob· without most of the problems asso- people choose to add the lactose
lem may also be attributed to ciatcd with the intolerance. Yogurt enzyme to the_ir dairy foods · before
stomach surgery, intestinal illness- with active bacteria cultores can eating. The enzyme can come in tbe
es· and the us~ of ·certain medica- ·even l!elp dig~st the .Jacto~.
· form of ohewable tablets or drops, _..
tions.
·
Whole milk products, instead of
If it bas been determined that you
If a person suspects lactose ·low-fat, or skim, slow down the arc lactose intolerant, you do not ·
intolenlflce, he or she should see a . digestion rate, .allm~ving the lactose h~ve to omit d~ry foods from your
~
l
'
~
physici~n . If the dtagno~is fscoii:" to enter the dtgesuve system ae a · dtet. By followmg these tips, you.
The House bill whi'ch would firmed, it does not mean that the s.lower pace. This makes it easier to can enjoy calcium-rich foods withmake it mandatory to lock up all person needs to completely elimi- digest If fat intake is a concern, eat out the associated difficulties.
guns to protect children was discussed by Legislative Agent Eldon
Barrows at a recent meeting of Star
Orange 77~ held at the hall.
Plans were announce\! by Janis
Macomber, youth .chairman, for the
'
county youth group to have a met. ing at the Golden Corral at 6 p.m on
Feb. 29, and Janis Macomber. deaf
chairman, announced that Campbell ,
soup labels and pop tabs are still
being collected.
Members decided to participate
in the ritualistic contest with first
degree and practices were scheduled for each Saturday at 6:30 p. at
the grange hall. The contest will be
held Feb. 26 at friendly Hills Camp
"""""'
lr.~&lt;ltlio~lilll o~1llo111 111;~&lt;1 ~oil...! '"'ill" ,1. l i'l' IIIH·
in Zanesville.
~ "·"lll•liluo• ,,.l,•• • uokll•l;lll"'l"'~-• · 11 -·
oiiii"Hil:llo-.! 1111ri111 :IIIII ,.,t.·.
The program carried out a "New
Year" theme with readings includ. ing"In Life's Garden by Rick
Macomber; "Trials and Smiles' by
Linda Montgomery; "A New Year ·
Wish" by Martha Bartley, and "10
Ways to Make 2000 a Better Year"
by Smith. A holiday quiz .and new
year's
resolutions were given by all.
: NEW PASTOR _:_The Rev. Don BIOM le new paetor of thl Mor1a
About 30 members attended the
Chapel Church of Portlend. He lind hli wile, Pat, reelda In
eharleston, W. Va. Church services atart at 11 a.m..followlng Sun· meeting prei:eded by a potluck supday school at 10 a.m.
·
per.

NEW .MINISTER

T'IC

Belpre
Wellston
Alexander

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

SAR hears about Indian craft of flint knapping

Inside: Baseball suspends Rocker- .,.._ •
Inside: NBA roundup- ..... •

Eastern checks in
at No. 11 in D-IV
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The sion Ill state champ, by 57 points. A
· top two teams held their positions io couple more heavyweights, Findlay
each of the four divisions - with Liberty-Benton and aeveland Villa
Worthington Christian, Akron St. · Angela-St. Joseph, held their ground
Vincent-St. Mary, Wooster Triway in the next two spots.
and Cincinnati St. Xavier again
Triway holds a 24-poinllead over '
No.1 - in the latest Associated Dayton Christian in Division II, ColPress boys state basketball poll lowed by Cincinnati Purcell Marian
released today.
and Willard. Olmsted Falls, fifth last
There were few wholesale week, was joined by Struthers in a •
changes in any' of the divisions as deadlock at that spot.
,
. the 49th annual ran kings passed the
St. Xavier's lead was cut from 40
midpoint.
.
to }I p&lt;)ints by Toledo Libbey in
The .top seven teams remained in Division I. Cincinnati Winton
the same order in Division' IV, the Woods moved up one spot to third,
top folll' were the same in Divisions Beavercreek climbeci two notches to
Ill and II and St. Xavier and Toledo fourth and Akron ' Buchtel climbed
Libbey maintained th.e No.I and 2 three wngs to the No. 5 spot with
spots, rapectively, in the big:school three weeks remaining in the media ·
division.
('
poll.
·
Defending state champion WorLocally, Eastern moved a spot to
thington Christian piled up the most No. I I, gaining 24 points·. · The
.firilt-place votes (all but one of · a · Eagles arc ti~with Centerburg.
·
possible 31) and the· most points
Fellow "fVc school Belpre is
(308) while building a56-point edge ranked 11th In the Division Ill poll
on No.2 Berlin Hiland in Division this week.
l_Y. Tiffin Calvert, 'Maria Stein Mari•
Gallia Academy moved up to
on Local, Cincinnati . Seven Hills, . I lth in the Division II' poll with 26
Springfield Catholic Central 'and points. Logan is ranked No. U In the .
Fort Jennings folli&gt;Wed, just ss they Division I poll, tied with Eat Uverdicl a week ago.
· pool.
·
Despite Wurthington Christian's
Franklin Furnace Green is ranlled
big totals, St . Vincent-St. Mary 16th in the Division IV poll.
owns the biggest lead of any of the
Chesapeake i.s ranked lOth In the
top teams. The Fighting Irish lead Division Ill poll. Fort Frye checks in
Bedford Chanel,lhe defending Divi- a1 No. 12 in Division Ill this week.

�•

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Tu11day, Febru8ry 1, 2000 '••

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'Penny' leads Suns past Magic 117-113 ·
I'JBA action

II
II

By The AMoclated Prna
Even the constant bomng by
MagiC fans couldn t throw Penny
Hardaway off his game an hts first
tnp back to Orlando
Hardaway traded from the Magtc
to Phoem~ last summer scored 21
potnts Monday mghtto help the Suns
beat Orlando 117 113
'The four ttme All Star booed vtr
tually every ttme he touched the ball
hit hts first three shots and went II
for 14 from the foul hne
It was emottonal at first but I
understand how the busmess goes
Hardaway satd I learned a lot of
stuff while I was here and mostly 11
was how to deal wtth a lot of thmgs
Fans are fickle I was tn that sttuauon
a lot when I was here wtth the
Magtc
Not every fan showed up to vent
theu
frustratiOn over Hardaway s btl
GOES DOWN- Milwaukee forward Scott Williams (right) goes to
ter
spht
from the Magtc the team he
the floor after cluhlng with Vancouver forward Bry•nt Fl•vu (50)
while the Bucks D-In Ham (21) defend• during Monday nights helped lead to one appearance tn the
NBA game In Vancouver, B C where the Bucks won 92-87 (AP)
NBAFmals
One fan held up a stgn declanng

Scoreboard
UC'LA 11 DAY1UN I St Bontvenlure 4 UNLV
4 DePaul 1 St:ton Hall ~ Notre Dame 2 Ill no s I
KENT Lou s 11nm Utfayet t I TuiiW! I

Basketball
Local scormg summaries
eYok

81::16::1z40

3=

4 19 18

EruyHII

Courtney Pone
Eru y Carlsoo
EnFeams

cnn fe 0 lc
Totals

~

Albany N Y J1 YaJe 69 OT

EI
J--4
0-0
0-0
22
21

Ell.
7
4
6

0

~6

2

0
0
0

0.0

0
2
0

;bl.

2

2

0
0

0

2

0-4

0.0

6
I
0
0
0
Q
11

0

Carns us OS Manha tan 9S.40T
Cen Comtec cu S1 76 Munmoulh NJ ~ 8
Fa leigh Dickinson 60 Qummp ac 49
Hartford 75 Hnl'\lard 48
Long Is and U 78 Sacred Hr:nrt 74-0T
Navy 80 W II am&amp;. Mary 72
Ptnn 68 s~ Joseph 5 6~
S ena 90 N agora 69
S F a11cs NY 93 Wagne 90
S Fr31las Pa. 84 Moun St Mary s Md 66
Syracuse 63 S John s !57
UMBC .58 Robert Motns .54

1

2
14

26
00

Il:D

U

0.

1119

40

Assists 9 Wh dach H H 3) Blodlrd shots 2
Fouls 19 RtbcMindl 2.5 (Wh lach 8) Steals 18

Newun Standal 6) Total FGs
Turnovers

South
A abama A~ 81 MVSU 74
A com S 8~ Gmnblinf S 61

ll51(2SS)

21

wer:kly l'eJUlar stuon 999 2000 pol .s fo 1be
AsstX a cd Inn (~cordi hrou,1h Jllmes of Jllll 30

East

64

Nelton"llle York (S II TVC 3 9)

£lw&lt;
E zabe h Newlun
Ash ey 'S andall
Courtney Can
Jen a Nehon
La~!yWh lah

COLUMBUS Oh o (AP) - How a state paocl
of 5pons wn ers and brolclcas m rates Oh o hi&amp;h
school boys baske bal trams n the fourth of se ~n

NCAA Dlvaslon I
men's scores

Meigs 64 NelsonvUie York 40

Appalachian S 77 Davubon 72

Be hune Coolc.maa Ill Norfolk S 82
O.attaoooaa 70 Coli of O.arlea on 68
Coppin SL 76 N Carolina A&amp;T 64

Meip (IS I TVC II I)

~yHolfhll

~ ~

Amy Hyse I
Amber Viruns

4
1

Jenn fe Shrimptin
Sha!Uion Price

6
0

Brooke W !hams
MlllJone Bratton
Ash ey Thomas

2
3

Tiffany Qualls

I
Q

Slephan e Wigal

Totab

~ ~

0

2
0
0
0
0
0

12

10

0-1
J-4

8
11

J.J
0-0
22

1:5
3

Eu Caro na ~2. Amencan U 59

Geo&lt;zi• Soothe n69 VMI67
Geo111• S 68 Mercer l3

Hamp on 87 onde. A&amp;.M .59
Jackscmv le 75
rida Atlllltic 60
Md Eu em Shore
ward 81

6-6

6
12

0-2
0-1

2

S Carollaa S 79 Morgan S1 66

2

J.:l

1

Southern M n 61 Ceo enary 47
Southern U 79 Jackson St 12
Sceraon 7.5 Ceo Florida 61
1\oy So 69 Conopl&gt;ell 64
UNC Greensboro 79 Funnan 69

South Alabama 66 Aa llllr:matJonal 62

J 15-21
64
Assists 2 Blocked sllotl 4 Foub 14
Rebounds JJ (Shrimp n 7) Steals 8 ~I FGs
2 46 ( 500) 1\lmoven 18

W Kentucky 62 New Orleans 60-0T
Wofford 81 The C•tadcl68

NBI\ standmgs

Midwest

~n

EASTERN CONFERENCE

M ChiJAD 75 N' Dl no 1 6S
Wis -Green Bay 6.5 St Bouv~:Dlure 58

AUantle Dl\'lskln

lY L r.:!.
27 16 628
26 6
24 20

20 23
20 26
7 27
14

:m

619
545

465
435
386

318

Southweal
Far West

Dr:nver 88 Ark Littlr: Rock 73
Utah 82 New Melli co 70

13 h

Wyomlns 109 UNLV 98

Centnl Division

'··································· 28 15
24 18
ro on o
24 t9
Mtlwaukee
25 20
De rot
22 22

t:LEVELAND

18 26
16 26

A anta
Cb :~go

-·-

8 31

65
57

J

556

4
4
6

m

.500

409
381

195

Ohao men's college scores
Mid American Conference

14-0

~ 191

5 W Alex twin Va S

14-0
15 1
132
12 I

142

4-Cieve VA St loseplo

II 3

(1)

169

EVERCLR Into www Mocw oom
MASTECTOMY Supplltoo AI Lltlto
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Br'11 Prosthtctlca Every Six

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Ohto H S g1rls' scores

30 Announcement~
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Happ ly Marr Ill Couple WIU Pro
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l'MMOrDM

,•

1ii VaHey Conference

22
2J
Monday s scores
M atntl04 De 0182
PI oen x I 7 Orlando 13
M nneso a 105 Sacramen o 90
Den e 8J Ph adelph a 80

46

M lwaukce 92 Vancou.ve 87

ally
unprece
dented to tmpose
a penalty on a
player for pure
speech
offen
stve though the
speech may be
That
coupled
wuh the magnt
tude
of the
penalty JUst as
unprecedented
makes us opll
mtsttc about the
outcome of the
appeal
Whtle
the
suspenston cov
Rocker
ers 73 days start
mg wtth the openmg of spnng trrun
mg the season doesn t sUirt unul
Apnl 3 meanmg Rocker would mtSs
the first 28 days of the season A sUS'
penstoo wtll not affect hts salary
expected to be between $200 000
and $300 000

8~530.

~

80 Loet IIICI Found

Ch.icago at Ponland 10 p m
Go den Strole a LA Clippm 10 30 p m

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

12 6 2) which shot 34 percent, a far
cry from the 57 percent 11 shot m
beatmg Oklahoma 79 66 on Jan 15

....,_...,
&amp;IJ, Ylnl-lluat

Be Paid In A&lt;Mnce

QEAQUNE. 2 • p.m

No 19 Utah 82, New Mexico 70

lttorun......,

Alex Jensen was 8-of 10 from the
field and free throw hne scored a
career high 26 pomts and grabbed 12
rebounds as the Utes ( 17 3 MWC 6
0) won theu 47th consecuttve home
game the longest current streak tn
the natiOn Lamont Long had 18
pomts forthe Lobos (II 10 MWC 3
3). who were wllhtn one when Utah
went on an II 0 run to take a 51 39
lead wtth 12 56 to play

- lllonoJay2:00p.m
,....,
10 00 • "' 8atuntoy,
Rummage Sale Grace United

Methodlat Church Second Ave
nut &amp; Cedar Street Fridav Fe

bJniY4 B30To2 30
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Ylnl 111.. lluol le Paid In
l{dwonco DMdllno 1 OOpm a.
oloy boloro tho od lo to run
1 undOJ A IIORdOJ OdiiiOR
1
1 OOpn '"""'

Marnla Boson 7pm
M nnesa11 a Wuhiag on 7 p m
Atlanll 11 New Jersey 7 30 p m
Sac amen o 11 Detroit 7 30 p m
L A Cl ppm a Phoenix 9 p m
M lwaukee 1 Denver: 9 p m
01 CIIJO at Se11tdr: 10 p m
Va.ncouvr:r at Golden Sta e 10:30 p m

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Nav.u F11rleu 54 Tuscarawas VII
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St Cla&amp;rlvi le 67 Belmon URJon 55
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Tol Maulhll! Vo 69 Northwood 49
Tol Onawa H lis Sl Metaroora Eversretn 'i9

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W Carrolton 6) Day Meadowdnle S3
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Wn ern llt Indian Creek ~9 Toron o n 20T
Zartts lie 67 Dovn .5l

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IBB Ohio &amp; Wool Vrglnla 304

7,73-57B5 01 :JM.n:J-5«7

wanted to Buy

AbiOIUII Top Dollor All US S
ver And Gold Colna Proofaera

157 122
57 137 124

48 129 145

WESTERN CONFERENCE
lDat

CHIInl Dl•Wan

S
Loui•
UJ 135
Ill!!
Dotro
'[~•.:: . .' ::31Jl19 27141$ 66 04I 696848 179
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18 17 6 2 44 14l 1$9

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27 19 l 2 61 122 Ill
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22 26 6 6 56 14.5 142
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N Y Ranaert 5 Nashville I
Dallu 2 Edmonlon I

Pi sbUI'gh 2 Allan a I 0T
Phocru~

Damondo Anllquo Jowoloy Gold

R nga P t 1930 U S Currency

5 Detro 1 3

Los A.ngeles S N Y, b an&lt;krs 2

lbnlght 1 pmes
AnD m IIIBuft'•lo 7 pm

Boston at OltiWil. 1 p m

Was ma10n at Pittsbural\. 7 30 p n
Aor do a Carolina 7:30 p m
:Yoron oat Tamp~ lily 7 30 p m
Vanc::ov 'tt at Colorado 9 p m
SO lou I .. C~Ja&lt;y 9 p m
Phoen IIi al San be 10:30 p m

Wedndday's games
Nasbvllle o N Y Islanders 7 m p m

Newlmoy•NYRansm 7l0pm

Mo-..1 • Florida 7 lO p.m
Att.la a1. o.Jiu 8 :W p m
Cbica,o lit E&amp;non oo 9 p m

Slorllno Elc lt.cqultlllono Jeweloy
MT.S C9ln Shop 15 t Socond
AYirtUI ~· 740 448 ~

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that special10meone tid.
Valentine'• Day with a m-118e in

lY L I II lJI, Ia: !i&amp;

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~~~!n EY,0COIIOII39

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tnct Coordinator and TtiCh ng

pot 1ono moy bo comblnod lor
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~~ Opportunity Employi&lt;IPro-

rr.IPLOY~IE ,'H

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HNIU"
111 Court Sl
Pomeroy, Ohio 45788

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Mut be receiYed by Feb. !I

Above Average lncornt To

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45701
Up To $45 000 /Yr Bll ng Solt
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lent Income Fu I Training Com
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~er tnce Ntotnlry Btntflta
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Move From Succe11 To S gnUI

OK Consumers Financial 1 800

2475t25Ex1 !134 \lokiOH KS

SU NEED CASH?? WE Pay

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On Properly Soldl Morlgages
Annu t 111 Settlemenls lmme

date Ouolealll Nobody Beats
Our Pricea Nat ona Contract

Buyers BOO 490 0731 EKI 101
www natlonalconlroelbuyora com
US NEED CASH?? WE Pay

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On Prope ty So d Mortgages
Annu 1111 Settlements lmme

dale Ouoloalll Nobody Baals

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Nat onal Cont act
Buyara 800 490 0731 Ext 101

www.nallonolcontractbtJyell.com
$2 500 V SA /MASTERCARD
UNSECUREDII Guaran!eod Ap
p ovalll Bad Crodll /No Crod 1
OKI lncludf&amp; Ful Cred t Reatora
tlon 23 Years In Bus nasa Not A

seam 11100-568 9099 EJCI. 25
$FREE CASH NOW$ From

Smolrt! (304)882 aaao
J m1 0 ywal &amp; Conatructlon
New Conatruct1on &amp; RemodeiJ

D ywa 1 Sid ng Roolo Addl
Ilona IPalnllng elc (3041874
4823 01 (304)674-01 M

Want To Takt Cart Of Stnlor

Cltiztnl ¥dndly Sunday B AM
10 PM In Your Home 740 448
2025

I

Wll Do HOUHCitanlng $8 00 An
Hour Eyenlnga And Saturdays
Havt E:iplr tnce And Rettrenc

.. 740-388-8421
FINMK:IAL

210

Bualnna
Opportunity

INOTICII
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

01 Gellpollt

ANTHONY LAND CO LTD
BOO 213-8385 For PREI Mat&gt;t
1-IRLAHO
7-114!12
Oallla Co Opon Houoo And
Ltnd Provlew Sun Jon 30
From 1 4 PM From SR 7 In

Chtoh ro Tlorn Will Onto SR 554
For U Mlao Tlorn R OniO Kygor
Cam Rd lt.t Slop Sign TUrn L
Onlc JUliO Crook Rd Go 7 01
A M o And Properly lo Woll
Ma Mid loth ltaullful Parm

Hom11 And 21 P•raele Aw•lt
Your Atvltwl Eureka Mtrabll
Rd t 1 lt.crao S20 000 Or 31 Acr

11 Wllh Barn $37 ,ooo Oalllo
Academy Water Frland y Rdga
t 51t.ctu $12 500 CUh Prlco.
llalgo Co Rutland Whlloo Hill
Rd Nleo 8 Acroo S12 000 Or 11
Acr11 $1" 000 Water Danville

Or Br ar A dQI Rd

7 Acrll

S NO DOWN! HOMES NO CRED-

Mtny Nlca Lots To Choou From

IT NEEDED! GOV T FORE
CLOSURES GUARANTEED AP
PROVAL t BOO 380 4820 EXT

2br tbo Homo w/"ltaehtd Go
rago !30 South Park Drlvo
$311 000 (304)875-51117

380

Wanted
Noad 5 Socludod Acru Wllh
Homoo to Qu ol Road Golllo
County Doodad &amp; StlfVIyod Un
dor$!2000 740-448-2317

Being Sod NOWI F nanclng A';o
able Ca Now 1 BOO 355 0024

WV Land want1d au tab t for
hunt ng No utlllllea no acctll
no problom (740}288 7248

11ENTALS

House Fo Sa 1 -4 Bedroom 3

w-

with din ng room living room and
kitchen Newt carpet and kltchtn
cabinets makla the kitchen with
loll ol
...-y lirtglol. A10 a
large lot Cute as can be Ae
duced to $33 coo Pleaae cal
Dottle Turner Realty Dottle S

1

3

Bad room•

Foree oa•d

Homos """" $199/Mo 4% Down

For Listings &amp; Payment Deta a

1100-319-3323 EJCI 1709

Full Basement Heat Pump On
1 78 Aerts In Country On State

Roulo 775 PtJI 0 0 Mclnly o
Park Aak ng $79 000 Call 740
448-8280 Or 740-441 1859
Nlco Count y Selling 2 Miles
from town 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 2
Ca Garage HeatPump on 1

Aero lt.ppllancoo Stay
351B

(304)l~B2

Nice Home Plenty of Room 3
Bedroom B lck Reduced Price
(304)273-IM85

320 Mobile Homes
for Salt
$2 ooo oo off Selected Sing o

Wid• Womes Super Low Pay
mental Oak Wood Homea Ba

bou av e Wv 1 (3041 738 7295
or 1 (304) 736-2395

2 Bedroom House S32e mo p Ul

of &amp; depooll No pots (304)675
2749
3 Bad oom House 1 112 Baths
Good Location In Ga lpolls No
Pe a Oepoalt Aaterencea Small
1 Bedroom House Furnlahed
Good Locat on In Ga lpol s No
Pets Depostt':""References 740

448 1162

4 Bed ooms 2 Bath Two Story

~atea

+Ut It es Reference Required

AC No Ooallro AI owed t 888

FLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc
torvlllo 01o o GRANO OPI~INO

24 Hou Approval Coli Toll Free
1577-8047273
CREDIT CARO UP TO $3 000
Unucurld VISA /MC Bad Crodll
Or NO Crodll 1-800-2511 8818 EJCI
otOOO

CREO T CARDS GUARANTEED
APPROVAL! No Crodll Chock
NO Socu~Jy llei!OoH St 000 Lmit

420 Mobile Homu
for Rent

Largeat Ntw Inventory In South
e n Ohio Specials On Homes
And Finane ng n Progresa Call

For Oetaia 1 888 585-0!87
Non Qual ly ng

Altumab 1

$4 000 Oown &amp; Taka Over Pay
...... 7.W.44B-3218

Home tor the HoHdaya on a Nice

LOI All Ull lias

1-{304~738

7285

Unlu nlohld total otaetrle 2 bedroom 12x84 on n ce lot n Ma
son Deposit required Phone

(304IB82 3287

Belween Athans and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob le homes

FREE DEaT CONSOLIDATION

Depos t References 740 441

1913

2 o 3 bedroom mobile home for
rent no pall 7 40-992 5858

AppUcal on W /Swrv c• Aectuct

One bedroom furnlahad apart
mtnt n M dd aport 740 982

Land Homo Pacltagoo. lt.M Aroao
AIIC-Riolto 740-4*3583.

JANITROL IIEATING ANO
COOUNO EQUIPMENT
INITALLED

,•

8308 1 800.29 -01198 _ _:: •
,;.;,;.;;..;.,;..:.::..::.;_=.::..

JET
AERATION MOTORS
•
Rl!lll ad New &amp; Robullt In Stock '
Coil Ron Evano 1 110().537 8528

PallO SWI $350 Mo No Pals

qulred 740-448-3481

Twin Towers now accept ng ap

p cal ono lo 1 BR HUO oubald
lzed apt for elderly aJid hand

capped EOH (304)675-6679

VIllage G etn Apartments 2
bedrooma total eectr1c applanc
tB furnished laundry oom facti
ties and c oae to achoo app ca
tiona aval ab 1 at oH ce 740 992

371 TOO 1 888 233-6894 Equa
Hou~ng Opportunity
MERCHANDISE

Household
Goods

Appl anc11
Reconditioned
Washers Dryera Rangea Refr
orators 90 Day Gua antee
French C ty Maytag 740 448

7795

For Sa a Reconditioned wash
era dryers and ref ge ato s
Thompsons Appl ance 3407

Jackson Avonuo (304}675-7388

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

740-448-7803

1 Bedroom Near Arbors Nura ng

4782

$95 Whl lpoc Oryo Neo $95
Mavtag Goo Doyo $75 E act c
Range 30 $75 Sldo By Sldo Ro
friQe -tor S1aO Cotd Spol Relrlg
a ato $150 Skaggs App ancaa
76 Vine Strtet Gt I polla Ohio

740-446 7398 t 888-818-0128

530

Antique•

Buy or ull A vtrlne Anllquea
1124 East Men on SR 124 E Pomeroy 7&lt;40 992 2526 or 740 992
539 Auaa Moore owner

540 MlaQellaneous
Marchandin
SSBAD CREOIT? Got Cash
Loans To $15 000 Debl Conso I

dation To $200 000 Crodll Cards

1993 Nlaoon P ck up $3 9S5
1992 S 10 Pick up $3 895 28ft

li ave Trai~r $8 ooa Complet•
Stt or Nlw Kitchen Cabinets

$2 BOO 301on \VOOd Splltlor

-

740-992-4568

Prlmt1t1r
DlrtcTV
Frte sate! te eva em Ca 1 tor de
lalo BOO 263-2640

RESIIENTIAL HOllE OWNERS
Tappan H Eft c ency 90% Gaa
Furnaces 011 Fu naces 12 Sea~
Heat Pump I Air Cond t on ng
Systems Free 8 Yea PariS &amp; La
bor Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp;

Coo lng 1 1100-872 15867

Rona Gun Sloop 740-7oll!-8412
Set 01 Hoadllgh Cove s For A
1897 1998

Chevy

Cava er

$25 00 Only Uaod A Couple Or
Tlm8o Cal 304-n:l-5841
Waterline Spec al

314 200 PSI

$21 85 Po 100 I 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 A Bass Com
poaoalcn Fmtnosln S oe1&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Ja&lt;:l&lt;son Ohio BOO 537 952B

Woodburner Excellent Condition
A so wood For Sa e 740 245
5236

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

GY We F nance a Down Past
C ed 1 P ob ems OKI Even If
Tu ned Down Before Reeatab al'l

You Credltll t 800-659-0359

550

Building
Supplies

560

Pete for Sale

6 Ado able Rot we er Puppies
Tal s &amp; Dewclaws Now Taking
Deposits Males $125 Females
$150 Fleady For va enunes

740 256 9123

AKC Chocolate Lab Puppltl

G eal liamlly Dogs Raady To Go
740 367 0659
Ova 75 Tanks of F eshwater
Fish Locally Raised Parak. .tsf
Supplies F sh Tank Pet Shop
24 3 Jackson Avenue /Pt

P eaoanl (304)675 2063 Sun 1
•PM Mon-Sol 11 AM-&lt;IPM

Looking ro
emale longhair
Dachshund to b aed Please can
N.0-446--2055 leave I'Jlel&amp;agll
AKC Reglste ad M nlatur•
Dachshund 4 Fema 11 Call

(7401-245 5B98

Rottwelle Pups Ready To Go

$100 00 740-1192 3773
Thlo Year G vo A SPECIAL
•VALENTINE 'I To Mom Wh~
B chon F ae a 1 High Parenta
From South 11 Fam tv Petl 0et1v

eoy Pooolblo 740-3711-8061 740379 2699

740-992-3658 01740-949-2607

510

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?7 MMX Technology
W I Flnonco Wllh 0 Dnwn P8Sl
Crod~ PIObllmo No P - Cal

Hammond M300 0 :gan with Ltl"

Tel -

1-117 293-4082

Compl•t• DtSH NttWo k aatelllte

Homl Econom co Ul IIIIa OU!et
Locallon 1278 Mo + Ud Mltoo No
Pall 740-44828a7

oyotom brond now &amp;98 740
892 t 112 or 304 773 5305 oflor

2 Bedroom Apartment Ntw Ha
van Artl LIIVI Mtllage

COMPUTER BLOWOUn I COM
PAQ MICRON oMtchlneo Dook

(304)773-5577

Prem um Firewood Oak &amp; Aah
S50 load Fu S ze P ck Up De

1 see ats-ot28

(304)675-401Jo!

1 Btd oom wasner Orye Hook

901B

Lean Plus Secur ty Deposit Re

SOw $300 10 Tabla Saw $150
La go App oBullor Kame $400

UplnGellpot~

Huge Inventory o acount Pr cu
On Vlnv Sk rt ng Coors Wind
ow1 Anchor• Water Hitters
P umblng &amp; Electrical Partl Fur
nacu &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mobl e Home Supp y 740 .ue

8191

3 piece llv ng room suite $8!50
Hot Po nt m c owave w th probe
$75 muat 111 to apprtclate cal

VII 1oi8B 1128-3428

•~

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

$495 1 Craftsman Aad al Arm

Now 2000 Ooublowk:to 3BR/2BA
per monlh Air &amp; Dollveoy to18B-92B-3421

Sp•cltl New 18x80 Low Down
Payment ond $268 por month
Froo A~ Cot tor qulcl E Z oppro-

••8

lac!o 13041675-1824

Cred I Corp 1-900 471 5 19 E•l
180

ee11en1 CoRd 1on $350/Mo $300

D073

.., JI8HSI.25110

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

2 Bedrooms 2 Bath Tralle Ex

$299

Factory Rtnovtted 3 Bedrooms
$499 &amp; Aoouma DekWOOd Ga ~
polio 740-448-3093

Probllmo? NHd Tunocl? Colllho

740 448 0390

Mo tgagea Rtf nanc ng And
Auto Loans Avallab a Me ld an

a,

-

lunKlu

$260-$300 740 992 2!67

Much More. Stat Package On
Markel Uutt
18 &amp; Have
Chocking Account t BOO 737

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Er11o Bad Credll Legally

R vera do Aporlmoolo In Mlddlo
por From $249 $373 Cal 740
992 5084 Equol Houa ng Opoor

Wh r pool Washer Heavy Duty
$95 G E Waaher Heavy Duty
$95 Kenmort prye Heavy Duly

28X80 $1 000 Down I&gt;BHYII'S Wf

No Upfront Feaa Bad
Cred t And Bankruptcy Acctpttd

apartmenll at V llaga Manor and

Houae And Tral e 2 Bedrooma
Each Relrtnces and Deposit Re
qulrtc{ Water And Trash Paid
700.368-11 DO

3 Bedrooms Kitchen Farn y
Room 1 Balh SunRoom Large
Fenced BaCkYard wllatge Utll ty

9211-9886

Grubb 1 Plano tun ng &amp; repairs

II You Oon 1 Co I Uo W• Borlf'
Lo,. Frtt Est ma 111 740 44&amp;

R&amp;O s Ustd Furniture Great Be
action P Iced To Se II Coma
And 8 ow,. COrner. Of Route 7
&amp; Add aon Pika We Buy Furnl
tole 7&lt;40-367-()280

Located AI 453 Add son Pike

304 736 7295

Doublowlde Repo Never Ivod In

Good Uoad Applonceo And Fur
nlluro Cll 740-448,o4038 Or 740448-!004 Anytime

Oraclouo living 1 ond 2 llldroom

$550/Uo Depot t And Aeferenc
11 Raqu red W aeman Real Es
tate Inc 740-446-3644

1981 Vonlu a 14•70 Deck 10•8

Pay Closing Costs &amp; Move In
740-446-3093

DlooctTV or"

11()1

740-448-1518

2BR House 2219 Lince n Ave
nue Pt PI $275 month $275
Oeposll No PelS (3041882 2099

New Fwnaee ::JO.t-875-631 9
Also Has Eapando Va y N ce

RC~

Hughu systema with acetal
card pay $150 &amp; up caahll Coli
Wolllt 7o40 849 3315 leave mtt

plano Or 740

New And Uaed Fu nllu e Slore
Below HOI day nn Kanauga
Good Used Beds 0 use s
Couches o nenes Etc s g sav
ngs On New Furnltu e 740 446

Largo Vaod Waltr Paid $450 00
Pus Oopos 1 Phone (7401 2Be
1399 Avalable Feb 51h 2000

P lot Program Rente a Needed

1988 Redman Danville 14x70

For aa tJl Prlmt Sta Sya em alao

FwnllhocJ 2 Roomo &amp; llelh Stoow., Downstairs C tan No Pttl
Oepooll &amp; Roloroncao Roqu rod

Washers dryara ref ge ato s
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
VIne Street Call 740 446 7398

(3041675 B436 May Leave Mea
sago

Low

IIAUTIPUL APANTMENTI AT
IUDGIT PRICEI AT JACK
ION IITATII 52 Waolwood
Dr VI lrorn $!8t 10 $370 Wllk 1o
ohop I movlao Ct I 740 •46
2588 Equal Hollllng Opponunlly

3 Bed oom 1 1 2 Story House
Ntwly ramodeled Ga age and

Counloy L~lng 3 Qr 4 Bod ooma

Call Toll-Free
l.atlU1Wia!
CONSOLIDATE BILLS

Smokaro Only a•5o/Mo
Dopooll 740 448 t585 0
448-2205 Allo ForVIoglnll

Tlornor Broklf al740-992 2888

Thitir Taxes Wrne Immediately

For Feat Aeeutta

wonted oldar

510

Sited (500 Oepoall $500 month

CONSOliDATE BILLS

1 W11htr Dryer Stove Dish
wathtr ,..tlr gerator Provldtd
Wattr And Trath Rtmoval In
eluded Ttnntnl Pay&amp; E tCtr C
Tota Eltctr o No Pets

Bmokaro Only $350/Mo UOO INTERNET Soflwa 1 Techn~el
Dapoo t 740 401 8a8a or roo l'tolp 800 300 2840 ANordab o.•
TIOIIROlOQIIo
•
448-2205 Allo For Vlrg"ll
App lctllono Bt no lt.e&lt;:aplod For
Vaoy Nlco 1'MI Badroom In Country lett ng Vol C oa To Gollpo

2 bed oom house In Po tland
$300 plus IIOCt IC toaal with wood
740-&amp;43-5548

$13 000 700.;!8S.8331i

Wlndlallo 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NE\'0 YORK NEW YORK
10017

COMPUTIRSI $79 89 /MO
EASY QUAL FYING FAST
NEW 500 500 MHz CompleJo

Ta a Townhouat Apa tmtnta
Va y Spacloua 2 Bedrooms 2
Floora CA 1 112 Bath Ful V Coo
potad Adu 1 Poo &amp; Boby Poo

WWM/ OOUOfMmlt 0000

garage onc1 two atorago boJik:tlnoo
P"'-" ca 1740-992 2292

Both 2 Oaragoo 3 1/2 milia oul
SandH I Road
$149 ooo
(3041675-!1403
Mlddllporl corner ol High Stroot
6 Powoll S~HI 2 bodroom toomo

111 Will AM T llh Remove
nclud«f Tennant P.ays Electr c::
Total E ICIIIC NO Pill Non

C.llftyon

Anlhony Land Compalt'j LTD
lormall~lng

Low Mof'l!hly Pavm•nta V2K• &gt;~'
Complanii'Aimost Everyona Ap :,.
~ 1.-&amp;17 347B ElcL 330 • 4

room Apon-1 Country Sottlng
Yot Cloto To Go llpollo Woolter
Doyor SIOYI Aolrlgo tlor Provk:t

Spring Valley Grttn One Bed
room Apa tmtnta Appliances
Furnloltod Cot 1740-448-15119

100121W3fll

Ellt 80otO

,•

•

Appllclllono Being Accop!ld Fer COMPUTERS Low Or 10 Down • ,

Wo Pay t:Aill

For LANDI
Evan H II Llltld
20 500 Acrll

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down Govn t And Bank Repo 1

lwo and hall ba ho

MerchandiM

Small But Vt 't Nlct One Btd

RMI Eatate

,.., planii(Rt 331304-882 3733

room and family room two f rt
places two apa tmenta four car

~~-----------------.
540 Ml-111-.otJI
•·

for Rent

Now For PRU Mope And Fl
nonolng Into t 0% OFF Ctoh

Buyo

Homo lor 11 1 lovely len acreo In
a country 11tt1ng four Dedrooma

Apertmenta

For Homo Slloo And HunUng CaR

B80tl

Brick home n the New Haven
area Ttlplt pant windows htat
pumplcenlrol air w/lencod yard 2
mjn away from Eltm schoo

440

LOCUit Post to lilt 7Ft $2 25

Wealthy Families Untoadlng Mil
lona 01 Dollar&amp; To Help Mnlmlze

Poyrnonto To B5'1&lt;. CASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERII Coli 1 BOO
32H510EJCI29
NDT lo und money lh ough lho MONEY TO LOAN Bad Crodll
mall unt I yo_u nave nvtatiP.ttd OK Froo Appllcollon u s Ap
ttooolllrlng
pllconlt ()rjy. tol77 7BO-tt31
AR! YOU CONNICTID? lntor
nol U1110 Wonlldl $350 S800 I
WHk 1 1M 1511 8331 www obll
droomnot f

rtcommtndt that you do bua
ntll with ptoplt you know and

01 Woodl&lt;l Hill $9 BOO Oil SR
124 Lou Than 20 Mlnuloo W111

St3,000

220 Monay to Loan
And Rorlnanc ng C adll Probllma

700.2.5-577B
23 .CREII:!B,DOO
OH SR 7 Soulh Or Galllpo lo No
Roottletlonal NEEDI TLC S2 300
Down on Land Conlnlot.
lllllOI COUNTY

310 Hom• for Sale

Nlco 3 Or 4 Sldroom Ranch Wllh

$$ 4ulo Loana Personal Loans
Debt Consol dat on Mortgages

-

SR 325 5 Acroo $18 000 Will

Houu Fo Sale Newly Remo
deled Ina de and Out 91 N
Park Dr ve Ca I for Appointment
(3041B75-8834

I.OAIIIOAC

Care for one In country S840
month Mobile Honeat Non

HEAL ESTATE

cance We Suggest You Move
Faal Bocauu Th o Wn Cal 1
B77 5()t).OB34

Foom S3 ooo stao 0001
(9% Avarago Rllll

For Frao Cooootlo 1 877 449
11818

7 Lldlu To Soli Avon, 740448-3358
Ofllco Manager Full T mo With
Bohtlllo Atopontlb o For Ac

Valay Plua CaH 740-448

WORLO S BEST SECRET I AU
TOMATE NOW To Earn 15 000
A Wllk Wllh A Mouat Cllckl

PI

Local Truck Driver Noeded S!arl

n..

11"~--~-.-...;--,;,;

180 Wanted To Do

L.ocal Butlntaa 111ka Routt

Rag olor 200 Ma n Sl

Bualneta
Training

t;dr FREE lnlormallon Booklet
Phone CAMBRIOGE STATE
Utlf\'ERSITY 1-800-984-8315

lntotnoiMo~

Sa~t

140

Naod A Loon? Try Dab! Conool
dol on Sa 000 $200 000 Bad
Cro~ I 0 K Fto 1 BOO 770 00112
EJCI 2!5

2 u Ac 11 Hom111tt Orten
Townahip Gallla County Flat
SCinle CloH To GoiHpo lo Somo

Creek And Woodtd Hlfla Sur
rounded By Woodl And Farm
Land WMSol Togoltoor S2e 000
l.tnd ContraC1 Avr.lable s Acr11

www acratcncarel com Or 1 811

Scnoc 1 Churchto Doycoroo
&amp;porto Organlnllono Soli Tho
U 1 mota In Gourmet Cookll &amp;
Muff n Batter Cuatomar 61rvtce
a Slor Riling• Wo Oollvar 11
Mlo:MIIlon o t 8()0.317-40311

350 Lota l Acruge

TWo tO Acre Tracta Of Meadow

175-1245

coma Potential No E•Ptr enct
Ntctllary Fret Informal on &amp;

URGENTLY NEEDED ror plaame
dono I torRid $35 lo $45 lo 2
or 3 hOull weekly Call Sero Toe
740-592-8851
WILDLIFE JOBS To $2t 80 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEOED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL t 800 B13
351111 EXT 04211 B AM 9 P.M
7 DAYS ldo Inc
w k
or Foom Homo $599 se 000
Part Time !Fu I Time Conlael Ko~
ly 1 88B BB2 2838 www 2moro
monoy.com paucodo rowan
MEDICAL BILLING Earn heel

Columbus Som• Care Out 11
Room Board Pius Salary e 14
267 !5354

t.aee-!5823345

Provldld Muot own Ccmputlr t
800-434 5518 EJCI. 887
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmltod In

DR VERS $800 SIGN ON BQtjUS
MMEDIATE OPENINGS'·I)var
Tho Road Slorl AI 29 ~PM /All
Ml Unloading l'oy. Paroonallltd
Dlopa)ch Homo Otlan Ho lday I
Vaeotion Pay 401K /Med /Prol I
Danlal Aoolgnad 99 T2000 s
R dar Progrom 88% No Touch
~ht CALL SUMMIT TRANS
~TION 8Q0.87e.oe80 EOE
0 voro 2 Wook Pold COL Troln
ng No E•P Noodod No Mo~r
No Crodlt? No Problom Earn Up
TO $32 000 ltol Yr w /full Ben•
111 Apply on Llno AI www 01,
drlvero com Or Coli t 877 230
6002 P.A M Tlanopon

Hornomllcor LIYO In Wantod For
Olaablod Pracllclng Allornoy In

TUAHID DOWN ON
SOCIAL S&amp;CUIIITY 11817
No Foo Unlou Wo Win

Cll Clalma From Home Tra nlng , . .l!l!l!..

24-1D07

tance lmrntdlate y It You Have A

ProflllloNI
Strvlcn

2615 (2• Hro.l
FUNORAIIINO II IOOIIINQI
Up To 50'1&lt;. Commloo on Morkol
Unlquo Fundra!Oing PrO&lt;luct WHh
Top Ful Food Cha no

Void In K'f: IN CT

Send Raoumo 10 201 High

110

Anyone who would ~preclate a thoqbtful word from you!
All Valentine Hearta Will be publlahed lit the February 14th
U.ue at a cCMt of only $7 001
MUST BE PREPAID!
Pttnt your
the heart end

Cltocltn..-

230

BualnOpportunlty

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
15 30 Loeat ono $41( UK In

11

Seeking Full Time Substtutt

• Sweethearts • Moma &amp; Dade • Grandparents•
Teachers • Babysittere • Friend8

210

land Automated Mtdlctl Strvlc

Wadllf11VIr a Auct on Service
Ge~ll Ohio 740-379-21'20

Canton GlenOik 51 You Aus ntown filCh 4S

Cuylhop Falb Jcsu 161 Cant:on Cath ,SS..OT
Dayton 40 Ludlow 36
Fe c 1~ .tO Bethel Tale 39
Fonona S Wendel n .5o4 Marion Cath -40
~etown 56. Willwn•bura 41
Hanul on Ross 51 Loveland 49
Holland Spnnafir:ld 83 To Wane 67
KdnHt C.. Cor 66 M111no1 a Sondy V• 64
Lebanon 68 Wilrru~n 39

wv 1331 7&lt;40-118N707

Rick Pearson Auction Company
1~11 tlmt aucllonttr complete

H 107 162

6$

'tol

AP Top 25 men's poll

AUction

comp 111 auction &amp;trv ct Buy

71 16 124
62 147 I 5

Bellefontaine: 48 Enon Greenan 32
B ulfton SS Fl Jentun&amp;l JS
Can on Timkcn 46 All ance Marl naton 3.5
Cedarville ~4 Bethel 48
Cen erv I~ .50 Spnns Soulh 36
Central B'f"" 46 St Rita 27
C n Chriatian 32 Day Jefferson 22
Cin. Country Day 49 C n Norwood 47
Cin. Hills Chr Acad 81 Ntw Mama 29
Cin Landmark Ctv 40 C n I...oc:kllnd 37
C n. Summit Count.r)' Oty 45 Cln St Beraard
30 ~
GCWeltem Ku 1 44 A ktnlS

Wednesday s games

fn education or rolalld llold Sa~
ory blltd on trolnlno lnd ..,..,~

llolnitg~

Computer....
COli 7 llayl · - 522
904eEx1

80

I

Bt:averaeek 57 Day Chaminade Ju en..e 47
Bel atre St Jobns 69. SbMiyttde 47

Char)()tte 11 Hoosion 8 30 p m
Se1tt~1 Uah 9pm

8 M h gan..S

6

Grtl and aupervllory experience

&amp;

7 I 54 14l 14(1
21 25 4 5 51 156 151
13 H

Btchtlor t Otgrtt In education

Collar &amp;Tag on

Around Ohio

LA Lakcl'1al San Antoruo 8 p m
Ph ack:lphia 1 Dallas 8 :ID p m

•

Piusburah
NY blanden

4
I

let Ctnttr fn tht Athtnl County
Allernallvt Schoo Alternative

Mad Slu mostly

an MoOdlopaugn Auetlonoor ng

s

Alloont MOigo Eduelllonal SO&lt;v

Yellowlown Rd Area

end Flee Market

9

ttl a

Found on Yollowtown Road 11281 lt.TTN OWn lt. CGntputor? Put ft
00 Slut Helll&lt; Milt Dog &amp; Spitz To Work I SZI 78 /Hr PT /PT
Ml• Dog Both Woorlno Collaro ........ t224 www WGftt-out-of.
With No Tagl Cal Allar I PM vou~-.oorn
740-418-ltee
AVONI All Aroaol To Buy or So I
Found! Oroy/S Ivery Small Quilt ShlriOy Spears 30ololl'S-t429
Fol SmaM Dog No Collar AI foo.
Dancero Wantod Top SS 740
dland DTGolllpollo 740-i!S&amp;-tGeO
882 83B7 Wod Sat (304)B75
LOST Mlsolng In lho Cllllon lltl55
area Wht• H maayan Cat wear
lng a red collar Anawe 1 10 the DATA ENTRY Nationwide BJllno
name Katy lut IHn on Thea Sorvlco Soako A Fuii/Pa 1Tlmo
day Jan 25lh If seen or found Medical Bllllr Solary AI $46K Par
pliua call (30•1773 8059 or Year PC Required No E•ptrl
tnct Needed Will Ttaln Call 1
BB~ :J«B anytime REWARD
88H48-5724
Thl'*""'

Ch I co he Zaoe Trace 73 Wheelmbu s61
Rock H II 72 Minford 6.5

Bos on at lnd ana 7 p._m.
Wash RJ on at CLEVELAND 7 30 p m
Or ando at New York, 7 30 p m

'

SOUih Gail a ~9 Symmes Val t)' Sl OT
Ohio Valley Cbn111n 58 Cross Lanes Omsuan

22 22

NY Rangen

GIVIIWIY

Pill Lab Po.opplu 2 Main 2 Fomolll 740-Mio3to18

Around the region

Tonight s games

2 S anro d U&gt;

'\1 15
26 1:5

._77

740-5112-11W2
0!11111'1 cloth ng and houothold
lttrno $1 00 bag 11 a every
TIIUrocloy Mondey lhru Salu day

1! L I IU lll. Ia: !ia

Pb adelphI

Area non league

w th

85 Yur 0 d Company H11 Ntw
LOCIIIOftl In Ga lpolll Wt Will
FII 12 Now Poalllono No E•port
tnot Ntceaaary Management

New To '1'otj Thrift ~
t Wul Sllmlon Alhlno

Atbmtlc: Dlvlaon

ru..
New Jersey

Anticipated opening&amp;

NEWITOIIE

........,.7110

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Me gs 64 Ne sonville York 40
Albnny A e11arxlr:r 60 Well on 42
Fr:deral Hocking 61 Tnmb ~ 21

Ell1. 3!25

I Glan Paulk WII NOI Be Raeponllblt For lt.ny lila Modo By An
Ottow'Thln Myotl
Olin Pau11t
AII 'otloJ Connoctod7
1-U--1
M6Yino out ol 11111 1111 toomo &amp;
$3501100bualnau 111 lypeo ot houuhold
lomo lrUCio pon100n appllncll
www rnpretbelefyn m
new I used Items from bualntll
too many to lilt no reasonable AAI YOU CONNICT!D? lnltlr
olllf rtMIII Fob 111. 2nd 31!1 n nat Utora Wontldl S3110 $800 I
htolld building 1om 10 ? on WHk t 188 723-2553 www worlo
IIIII Route 33 In Shade OhiO 41UCCIII2000com
740-9U2o0048

NHL standmgs

Losan 68 Mane ta '6

Mtd Pros Toll FrH , 888 313

Why wall? Start Mill ng Ohio
I00-7Y.2823. ll1tnllonll711

SHOAL

6
6
8

-~-

MEDICAL BILL NO Earn Excel
lonl S S S I Procooolng Clo mo
From Homo Fu ll'lln ng Provld
ad Compulor Roqulrod Coli

or rolalld Ill d ond ...,nlllnllod
lb Illy to HI'YI II l'lllt 10Uflt tro• Coonllnator. Motlofo Do-

1 nglta tonight Call to fr11 1

Hockey

Gul po s 68 Rivr:r Vallr:y 5

C8111.aeHBHOB70rVIol

lohool Toochtr Oualltlcllllono

Continued fro111 8-1

No 18 Okllhoma 83
No 18Texaa 59

Elm AnWoo1&lt;
Ellra""""
1480-15000 Ptlfl

-

Hllp Wlntad
OLOCOWMY

g Ia In Your 4rll Cal For More

lnlormallon 1 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

Ashland 68 We$ m ns er Pa .56

II

15

Suecua Rale Toll Frtt 1 177

Great Lakes lnlercolleglale

0

l'er10111la

HERPES EVERCLR STOPS
HERPES OUTIRIAKII 88'1&lt;.

Bucks 91, Grizzlies 87

110

-AniNT!Oir"

005

At Denver Ntck Van Exel and
George McCloud made key baske15
m the final I 21 and the Nuggeta
beat Phtladelphta
Ron Mercer expected to be traded
from Denver to Orlando today had
IS pomts for the Nuggets
Allen Iverson the NBA s leadmg
scorer had 29 pomts for the 76ers
who dropped thetr thtrd stratgllt
game

1

Help Wanted

110

Nugels 83, 76en 80

TOP 25 MEN'S! BASKETBALL...

J R Raymond scored 25 pomts
and Eduardo NaJera had 18 pomts
St John s shot 47 3 percent (26 and 16 rebounds as the Sooners ( 17
for 55) and mtght have come out on 3 Btg 12 5 2) handed the VISIItng
top tf not for some awful foul shoo! Longhorns theu worst loss of the
mg (2 for 9) Barkley mtssed four season Chns Mthm had 21 pomts
free throws and Glover mtssed two and 12 rebounds for Texas ( 14-6 Btg

Mid Amerocan Conference
OHIO 94 MARSHALL 69

7

\

about and m fact ts a profound
breach of the soctal compact we hold
m such htgh regard
The players assoctatton satd 11
expects to file a gnevance over the
penalty believed to be the longest
agamst a baseball player for an
action not related to drug use smce
Lenny Randle of Texas got 30 days
m March 1977 for punching hts man
ager Frank Lucchesi
I do no1 believe 11 IS appropnate
that I should be harshly disctpllned
for my mtsgmded speech unaccom
panted by any conduct on my part
Rocker satd m a slalemenl released
by hts agents
I have prevtously
apologtzed for my unfortunate
remarks and stand bjr my apology
A gnevance would force the mat
ter before Shaym Das the spon s
new Independent arbtlrator
We have been tn consultation
w1th Mr Rocker and 11 IS our present
mtenuon to appeal srud Gene Orza
the umon s No 2 offictal Itts later

a great team rtght now They re on a
roll They can be beat but 11 s gomg
to take a great team to beat them

Ohto women's college scores

bnnsed htp that lw forced him 10
mtss three games Hts status remruns
day to-day
'nmberwohe~105, Klnp !10 ,
Bobby Jackson filhng m foC
Terrell Brandon had 17 pomts II
reboqnds and 12 asststs for his first
career tnple double as Mtnnes~
beat vtstllng Sacramento
•
Kevm Garnett had 31 pomts 12
rebounds and riven ass1sts for
Mtnnesota, which lias won 18 of 22

Glenn Robmson scored II of ht$
25 pomts m the fourth quarter w;
Milwaukee won conse~uttve road
Heat 104, Pistons 82
Jamal Mashburn had 23 potnts games for the firstume m more than
etght rebounds and stx asststs as host a month
Sam Cassell added 21 potnls an~
Mt~mt beat Detrmt to remam tn first
place
Ervm Johnson had I 0 rebounds fill'
Wtth a loss the Heat would have the Bucks
Bryant Reeves scored 22 an&lt;j
fallen out of first place m theAtlanttc
DIVISIOn for the first ume smce Nov pulled down a season htgh I 5
I 0 Instead they took a half game reboun(ls as the Gnzzhes blew an
opportumty to wm three stratght for
lead over the New York Kmcks
DetrOit s Grant Htll sat out wtth a the second ume thts season

gave St John s a 56 54 lead w1th more when the Red Storm were
1~2
3 I 0 left but that was the Red chngmg to a shm lead before Hart
O.CHESAPEAKE
12 2
60
Storm
s last field goal
turned the game around
Odl•n nc•M•1 12 or mon points II
BELPRE 30 12 (ole)-BEVERLY FT FRYF- C""ol
Great teams make plays that s
They re all semors nght now
Wineheder C n Madeira, Col Ready 14 16 { e)why
they re 18 0
Jarvts satd
Coldwller Hamler Patnck Henry 13
Barkley satd They ve been playmg
They re as good as anybody m the
together for so long and I thmk
country
they ve found theu rhythm They re

Ashland 6.5 Wes nuns er Pa 64

l

pleted today accordtng to players
mvolved sends forward Chris
Gatling and guard Tanq Abdul
Wahad pluu future first round draft
ptck to Denver for forward Ron
Mercer guard Chauncey Btllups and
fonner Mag1c first round ptck
Johnny Taylor
Hardaway took a swtpe at the
rebwlding plan saymg other players
Wtll tat~c of how a once-domt
nanttearn
gradually dtsmantled
I
understand why some
body w d come here anyway If
somebody alre¢y ts m a (good) snu
alton -JUSt because they re under
the cap and have lottery ptcks why would somebody want to come
here after I ve gone and Shaq s
gone? What does that say?
In other games 11 was Mtamt 104
Detroit
82
Mmnesota
105
Sacramento 90
Denver 83
Phtladelphta 80 and Milwaukee 92
Vancouver 87

93
74
67

Great Lakes lntercollellille

19

'The deal which could be com

137

Ken 68 W Mchgan62

10
I

rinb

7LmaCeniCach
S..O.yton Oakwood
9 WitTeD Oiamp1on

Oklahoma 83 Ttus 59

8\
10!

By RONALD BLUM
liaoa
lY:J.
lll
NEW YORK (AP) John
1 C n Sf.. Xaver 2S)
14-0
~0~
2 Tol Libbey 5
14-0
272
Rocker won t pttch In a game unttl
Cn WmonWoods
14-0
216
May I - unless the players assoct
4-Beaven:rer:k
I' I
I S6
SAkronBuche ()
Ill
1\8
atton successfully challenges the sus
6-Mansf~ekl S
12 j
130
penston baseball commtsstoner Bud
7 Can on McK nley
II 2
128
8Li....S
1)2
72
Sehg Imposed
9 Tol St Franc 1
IQ.2
1
Major League Baseball takes
IO.Cir:ve So~th
JJ 2
61
senously
tis role as an Amencan
Othen meh•lna Jl or mon points I
BIU'be:rtpn 18 12 Zanesv lie 13
3
e) E mstttuhon and the tmportant soctal
Uverpool LOGo'\N 12
responstbthty that goes wuh II,
Dlvislonll
Sehg satd Monday m tssumg the sus
n..
lY:J.
lll penston and $20 000 fine
I Woostn Tnway (17)
14-0
284
We wtll not dodge our responst
2 Dayton Coria on (8)
12 0
260
J C n PureeD Monan ($)
13 1
238 btllty srud Sehg also ordered the
4--Willard (I)
13 I
190
5 Olnuoed Folb
II 2
126 Atlanta Braves rehever to undergo
Snthen
II 2
126
sensitiVIty trammg for dtsparagmg
7 Poland Senunary
9-2
Ill
8 Perry !
10-2
87 foretgners homosexuals and mmon
lies m a magazme mtervtew
9 Navarre Falrlr:ll
10.2
68
0-Canton Cent Cath
II 3
27
Mr Rocker should understand
Tomogany Otseso
13 I
27
that
hts remarks offended practically
Othen ncelvlnc 1l or more
II
GALLIPOLIS GALLIA ACAD 2
12 Uma every element of SOCiety and brought
Shawor:e 18 13 OreenfJC d McClain 17 14dtshonor to htmself the Atlanta
lillmadll' 16 1$ Col Eastmoor Acid 12
Braves and MaJor League Baseball
DlvlslnnW
The ternble example set by Mr
lilllll
lY:J.
!II Rocker ts not what our great game ,ts
1 Akron St. V St M (25)
IS-O
3(K)
2 Jl&lt;d(Ofd a. ....! (5)
10-2
243
3 Andlay Uberty Benton

Monday nisht

MLB suspends Braves' Rocker

Division I

6-Ben...

Alabama St 62 Ark. Pine Bluff :52

"7

30

Ohio H S. boys' poll

In Penny We Still Trust and sev
eral othe)'S also di&amp;played supporting
the Suns guard
Its always sweet to beat your
old team espectally tn the first
game srud Hardaway who also had
four rebounds four aSSists and
blocked two shots m 40 mmutes
Clifford Robtnson had 28 pomts
and Jason Kidd scored 20 and had 14
asststs for tbe Suns
Darrell Armstrong had 26 pomts
and II asststs for the Magtc who
tnmmed a 25 point second half
defictt to I08 Hl§ before the Suns
put the game away
The Orlando Arena crowd of
13 677 - nearly 3 600 less than
capactty - booed Hardawp.y dunng
pregame warmups and also relished
every lime he was whtstled for a foul
or mtssed a shot
Its JUSt a ~ of the game I
couldn t do anything about 11 All I
could do was come out and help our
learn gel a vtctory Hardaway wd
In stx seasQns 1n Orlando the 28
year old guard helped the Magtc to
five playoff appearances mcludmg a
tnp to the Fmals m 1995
The trade was part of a major ros
ter overhaul destgned to free room
under the salary cap and budd a
younger more athlettc tei\Dl under
first year coach Doc Rivers
Orlando ts close to unkermg even
further wtth us roster agreemg to a
ftve player trade wtth Denver on

Musical
lnetrumenta

o Sound Cab nat $800 Call
13041675 3388
FARM SUPPI If'~
&amp; LIVE STOCK

l!pm

IOPI Laptops Mtrcl'lant Ac
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one Approved I No Uon•y

Downll Low Monlhly Paymanlo
FREE Spac II Otto~ CALL NOW
1 aae-•79-2345 (Tol -~

810 Farm Equipment
0% F nanc ng Now Ava btle On
John Dtert Balers And Mowat
Cond 110n1rt Carm challl Farm..
&amp; Lown 1 800 594 1111 Or 740

4•8 24, 2 Go II polio On o Don t
Mlu Our John Dilo 1 Oay Fel&gt;ruooyt2 !1:00AM
1853 John Dtoro eo 710 ase
177.

�•

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Tu11day, Febru8ry 1, 2000 '••

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'Penny' leads Suns past Magic 117-113 ·
I'JBA action

II
II

By The AMoclated Prna
Even the constant bomng by
MagiC fans couldn t throw Penny
Hardaway off his game an hts first
tnp back to Orlando
Hardaway traded from the Magtc
to Phoem~ last summer scored 21
potnts Monday mghtto help the Suns
beat Orlando 117 113
'The four ttme All Star booed vtr
tually every ttme he touched the ball
hit hts first three shots and went II
for 14 from the foul hne
It was emottonal at first but I
understand how the busmess goes
Hardaway satd I learned a lot of
stuff while I was here and mostly 11
was how to deal wtth a lot of thmgs
Fans are fickle I was tn that sttuauon
a lot when I was here wtth the
Magtc
Not every fan showed up to vent
theu
frustratiOn over Hardaway s btl
GOES DOWN- Milwaukee forward Scott Williams (right) goes to
ter
spht
from the Magtc the team he
the floor after cluhlng with Vancouver forward Bry•nt Fl•vu (50)
while the Bucks D-In Ham (21) defend• during Monday nights helped lead to one appearance tn the
NBA game In Vancouver, B C where the Bucks won 92-87 (AP)
NBAFmals
One fan held up a stgn declanng

Scoreboard
UC'LA 11 DAY1UN I St Bontvenlure 4 UNLV
4 DePaul 1 St:ton Hall ~ Notre Dame 2 Ill no s I
KENT Lou s 11nm Utfayet t I TuiiW! I

Basketball
Local scormg summaries
eYok

81::16::1z40

3=

4 19 18

EruyHII

Courtney Pone
Eru y Carlsoo
EnFeams

cnn fe 0 lc
Totals

~

Albany N Y J1 YaJe 69 OT

EI
J--4
0-0
0-0
22
21

Ell.
7
4
6

0

~6

2

0
0
0

0.0

0
2
0

;bl.

2

2

0
0

0

2

0-4

0.0

6
I
0
0
0
Q
11

0

Carns us OS Manha tan 9S.40T
Cen Comtec cu S1 76 Munmoulh NJ ~ 8
Fa leigh Dickinson 60 Qummp ac 49
Hartford 75 Hnl'\lard 48
Long Is and U 78 Sacred Hr:nrt 74-0T
Navy 80 W II am&amp;. Mary 72
Ptnn 68 s~ Joseph 5 6~
S ena 90 N agora 69
S F a11cs NY 93 Wagne 90
S Fr31las Pa. 84 Moun St Mary s Md 66
Syracuse 63 S John s !57
UMBC .58 Robert Motns .54

1

2
14

26
00

Il:D

U

0.

1119

40

Assists 9 Wh dach H H 3) Blodlrd shots 2
Fouls 19 RtbcMindl 2.5 (Wh lach 8) Steals 18

Newun Standal 6) Total FGs
Turnovers

South
A abama A~ 81 MVSU 74
A com S 8~ Gmnblinf S 61

ll51(2SS)

21

wer:kly l'eJUlar stuon 999 2000 pol .s fo 1be
AsstX a cd Inn (~cordi hrou,1h Jllmes of Jllll 30

East

64

Nelton"llle York (S II TVC 3 9)

£lw&lt;
E zabe h Newlun
Ash ey 'S andall
Courtney Can
Jen a Nehon
La~!yWh lah

COLUMBUS Oh o (AP) - How a state paocl
of 5pons wn ers and brolclcas m rates Oh o hi&amp;h
school boys baske bal trams n the fourth of se ~n

NCAA Dlvaslon I
men's scores

Meigs 64 NelsonvUie York 40

Appalachian S 77 Davubon 72

Be hune Coolc.maa Ill Norfolk S 82
O.attaoooaa 70 Coli of O.arlea on 68
Coppin SL 76 N Carolina A&amp;T 64

Meip (IS I TVC II I)

~yHolfhll

~ ~

Amy Hyse I
Amber Viruns

4
1

Jenn fe Shrimptin
Sha!Uion Price

6
0

Brooke W !hams
MlllJone Bratton
Ash ey Thomas

2
3

Tiffany Qualls

I
Q

Slephan e Wigal

Totab

~ ~

0

2
0
0
0
0
0

12

10

0-1
J-4

8
11

J.J
0-0
22

1:5
3

Eu Caro na ~2. Amencan U 59

Geo&lt;zi• Soothe n69 VMI67
Geo111• S 68 Mercer l3

Hamp on 87 onde. A&amp;.M .59
Jackscmv le 75
rida Atlllltic 60
Md Eu em Shore
ward 81

6-6

6
12

0-2
0-1

2

S Carollaa S 79 Morgan S1 66

2

J.:l

1

Southern M n 61 Ceo enary 47
Southern U 79 Jackson St 12
Sceraon 7.5 Ceo Florida 61
1\oy So 69 Conopl&gt;ell 64
UNC Greensboro 79 Funnan 69

South Alabama 66 Aa llllr:matJonal 62

J 15-21
64
Assists 2 Blocked sllotl 4 Foub 14
Rebounds JJ (Shrimp n 7) Steals 8 ~I FGs
2 46 ( 500) 1\lmoven 18

W Kentucky 62 New Orleans 60-0T
Wofford 81 The C•tadcl68

NBI\ standmgs

Midwest

~n

EASTERN CONFERENCE

M ChiJAD 75 N' Dl no 1 6S
Wis -Green Bay 6.5 St Bouv~:Dlure 58

AUantle Dl\'lskln

lY L r.:!.
27 16 628
26 6
24 20

20 23
20 26
7 27
14

:m

619
545

465
435
386

318

Southweal
Far West

Dr:nver 88 Ark Littlr: Rock 73
Utah 82 New Melli co 70

13 h

Wyomlns 109 UNLV 98

Centnl Division

'··································· 28 15
24 18
ro on o
24 t9
Mtlwaukee
25 20
De rot
22 22

t:LEVELAND

18 26
16 26

A anta
Cb :~go

-·-

8 31

65
57

J

556

4
4
6

m

.500

409
381

195

Ohao men's college scores
Mid American Conference

14-0

~ 191

5 W Alex twin Va S

14-0
15 1
132
12 I

142

4-Cieve VA St loseplo

II 3

(1)

169

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l'MMOrDM

,•

1ii VaHey Conference

22
2J
Monday s scores
M atntl04 De 0182
PI oen x I 7 Orlando 13
M nneso a 105 Sacramen o 90
Den e 8J Ph adelph a 80

46

M lwaukce 92 Vancou.ve 87

ally
unprece
dented to tmpose
a penalty on a
player for pure
speech
offen
stve though the
speech may be
That
coupled
wuh the magnt
tude
of the
penalty JUst as
unprecedented
makes us opll
mtsttc about the
outcome of the
appeal
Whtle
the
suspenston cov
Rocker
ers 73 days start
mg wtth the openmg of spnng trrun
mg the season doesn t sUirt unul
Apnl 3 meanmg Rocker would mtSs
the first 28 days of the season A sUS'
penstoo wtll not affect hts salary
expected to be between $200 000
and $300 000

8~530.

~

80 Loet IIICI Found

Ch.icago at Ponland 10 p m
Go den Strole a LA Clippm 10 30 p m

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

12 6 2) which shot 34 percent, a far
cry from the 57 percent 11 shot m
beatmg Oklahoma 79 66 on Jan 15

....,_...,
&amp;IJ, Ylnl-lluat

Be Paid In A&lt;Mnce

QEAQUNE. 2 • p.m

No 19 Utah 82, New Mexico 70

lttorun......,

Alex Jensen was 8-of 10 from the
field and free throw hne scored a
career high 26 pomts and grabbed 12
rebounds as the Utes ( 17 3 MWC 6
0) won theu 47th consecuttve home
game the longest current streak tn
the natiOn Lamont Long had 18
pomts forthe Lobos (II 10 MWC 3
3). who were wllhtn one when Utah
went on an II 0 run to take a 51 39
lead wtth 12 56 to play

- lllonoJay2:00p.m
,....,
10 00 • "' 8atuntoy,
Rummage Sale Grace United

Methodlat Church Second Ave
nut &amp; Cedar Street Fridav Fe

bJniY4 B30To2 30
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Ylnl 111.. lluol le Paid In
l{dwonco DMdllno 1 OOpm a.
oloy boloro tho od lo to run
1 undOJ A IIORdOJ OdiiiOR
1
1 OOpn '"""'

Marnla Boson 7pm
M nnesa11 a Wuhiag on 7 p m
Atlanll 11 New Jersey 7 30 p m
Sac amen o 11 Detroit 7 30 p m
L A Cl ppm a Phoenix 9 p m
M lwaukee 1 Denver: 9 p m
01 CIIJO at Se11tdr: 10 p m
Va.ncouvr:r at Golden Sta e 10:30 p m

The op 25 e1ms n The Auocllled PreA men s
O'llr:ge baske ball poll w tb fi1'1t;piiCCI vexes Ia
purenthe&amp;es m:ordl hrouJh Jan 30 10111 po nu
basr:d on 2S po nts for 1 fint place vote lhrooah one
po nl for a 25th place voee tnd prevtous rankiOJ
Loll

~CINNATI (65)

~

J Duke

16-2 1 !589

'

l

I

'itlralf2

I
17 I I 663

3

4 SyrocLU&lt; (2)
5 OHIOST

17-0 I 582
14 l 1392

4
8

6 Tennessee
Connec qJ

II
6

9 Anzona

18 2 1 297
15 4 I 27
15 5 I 241
174 1 190

1q Auburn

17 3 1 081

I. nd ona

15 1 I 038

11. Aonda
I.S-4
ll Oklahoma S
16 2
14 Kr:n ucky
ISS
15 K11nsu
16 4
16 Te11as
14 5
17 Tulsa
2()..2
18 Ok~ahomo
16 ~
19 u oh
16 1
20 Iowa S
18 3
11 Tefnt)lr:
14 4
22 LSlf .
16 l
2'\ Oregon
I.S ~
2.t Vandcrtl h
I -4
l"i Maryland
1-' 6
Othen nct:hl•&amp; "olt:s N C
Sou he n Cal 59 GOIWIJ&amp; 49 Nonh
Ptl due 26 St John 1 25 V rgm .a 2S

(rod 111 1111111 Ohio LICORIO
071113

938
88
812
712
72.1
687
55'S
$29
34
116

258

9
S

7

14

10
IS
16
12
11
13
18
19
24

22
70 20
119 22
Sta'e 103
Ctrol na 28
M ssoun 18

=

~

"

MaasfieldTempk: Chr 43 Evanael Chr 42
Manlllon 61 WoosterTnw1y .53
Ml Orab Westcm Brown 47 New Ril:hmond ~2
N l...ewtlbuiJ Tnld !52 Waynesfitld-Go•hen 41
Nav.u F11rleu 54 Tuscarawas VII
Spnna North 48 Fm bom 46

~I

Spnn1 NW 67 $pnna Ken oa R~dJe 61
St Cla&amp;rlvi le 67 Belmon URJon 55
Sylvan a Nonhvtew 70 Tol Bowshe ~4
Tol EltU'(IIQUel Baptist ~1 Be sv le 22
Tol Maulhll! Vo 69 Northwood 49
Tol Onawa H lis Sl Metaroora Eversretn 'i9

Trotwood Madison 60 S dncy 49
Urbana 71 S Charleston Sou~as em ~7
Verso llel 49 W M lion M on Un 011 12
W Carrolton 6) Day Meadowdnle S3
Wauseon S2 Uberty Ceu cr40

Wh ehouse W1yne 53 To! L1bbey 28
Wn ern llt Indian Creek ~9 Toron o n 20T
Zartts lie 67 Dovn .5l

Llcenaed

IBB Ohio &amp; Wool Vrglnla 304

7,73-57B5 01 :JM.n:J-5«7

wanted to Buy

AbiOIUII Top Dollor All US S
ver And Gold Colna Proofaera

157 122
57 137 124

48 129 145

WESTERN CONFERENCE
lDat

CHIInl Dl•Wan

S
Loui•
UJ 135
Ill!!
Dotro
'[~•.:: . .' ::31Jl19 27141$ 66 04I 696848 179
Nuhv lie
IJ8 159
a. CillO
18 17 6 2 44 14l 1$9

heMk Di~
21 17 6 1 6.1 1!58 135
Dallas
27 19 l 2 61 122 Ill
San Jasc
22 26 6 6 56 14.5 142
Los Anp
l2 21 7 3 54 154 14l
Allalooim
22 24 6 1 51 Ill m
Ovenimelossetl COUDIII a lou and a ~suladon
te

Pboetux

Mondor • ocorea

Anahc m 4 Bos on 1
N Y Ranaert 5 Nashville I
Dallu 2 Edmonlon I

Pi sbUI'gh 2 Allan a I 0T
Phocru~

Damondo Anllquo Jowoloy Gold

R nga P t 1930 U S Currency

5 Detro 1 3

Los A.ngeles S N Y, b an&lt;krs 2

lbnlght 1 pmes
AnD m IIIBuft'•lo 7 pm

Boston at OltiWil. 1 p m

Was ma10n at Pittsbural\. 7 30 p n
Aor do a Carolina 7:30 p m
:Yoron oat Tamp~ lily 7 30 p m
Vanc::ov 'tt at Colorado 9 p m
SO lou I .. C~Ja&lt;y 9 p m
Phoen IIi al San be 10:30 p m

Wedndday's games
Nasbvllle o N Y Islanders 7 m p m

Newlmoy•NYRansm 7l0pm

Mo-..1 • Florida 7 lO p.m
Att.la a1. o.Jiu 8 :W p m
Cbica,o lit E&amp;non oo 9 p m

Slorllno Elc lt.cqultlllono Jeweloy
MT.S C9ln Shop 15 t Socond
AYirtUI ~· 740 448 ~

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE
Remember that special10meone tid.
Valentine'• Day with a m-118e in

lY L I II lJI, Ia: !i&amp;

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~~~!n EY,0COIIOII39

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34 130 182
32 Ill 181

Hartley

tnct Coordinator and TtiCh ng

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quoiW~ oppllcant Plull oubmll
lolltr or lnlo 111 ond toumo by
Fobruory 11 2000 lo John D
Cottanzo ESC Buperlnlondont
Alltono MOigo Educollonal Sorvlco cantor 807 Alchlond Avonuo
Sullo t08 Athono OH t5701
~~ Opportunity Employi&lt;IPro-

rr.IPLOY~IE ,'H

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45788

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ltaat 18 ytara old and poauu a
nigh aehool diploma or equlva
enl 110 DO per hour Appl~al ona
can Ill oblalllld and oubmlttocl 1o
Athans County Board of MROO

BOt W Union St Alhono Oh
45701
Up To $45 000 /Yr Bll ng Solt
ware Co Needa Peop1e To Pro
ce1a Me&lt;lcal Claims From Home
Train ng Provided MUST Own A

E11y work I Excellent Payl
atmble Prod ucla At Home

lent Income Fu I Training Com
pute Requ red Call Medl Works

Toll Fr.. 1 800 4B7 55118 E•t
12170
EMERGING COMPANY
Mad cal lnau anca Billing A10la

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2301

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$50 000 Annually can t 800
281-4883 Dopt • 109

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(C._. Clooe To Home)
CaUTodayl7-7
1 800-214-0452
Reg 1190-05 127otB

lnataler "'"d Strv ce Technician
Needed Mutt Bt Exptrlenctd

Apply In Peroon AI Comlort A r
407 Th d Avonuo Gallipolis No
PloonoCallo

S25-S7Mw

www ~~fir 1...can-eam.corn
I 888-B1.1112

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f 11 Sa 11 Experience Preferred
but not nect111rr Send Ae
IUI'r)e eJo Ml1 0 Point P euant

Plolllnt WV25650

Bachelo a
By Cqrra
.,ndence Based Upon Prklr Ed
tf'~t on And snort Stud~ Courae

Go..,al C Hnlno tor Local Ofllc
os ot Homo Pay Negollablo
(304)6115-3083

People In Network Marktt ng.

Hugo Opportunity For MLM
Loadm Llleslylao In 3 Ccun
u ao Opono The US A Tronolar
P og am Roady Wo Mual Talk 1
877 811 3424
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Aval able At Affordable Rate

Sp~ng

0101

ng Pay $9 00 Hour ln1urance
Plan Uniforms Muat Havt Tank

II EndorHnoontl 740-2•5-Mt•
Magic Yearo Day Ca a Center
- 1 PI P-~ WV 21Wf

Ma..gor Rolall Jowolry Sloro
Raltll Soloo And OornP.ultr E•
~er tnce Ntotnlry Btntflta
~valloblo Apply Acqu oltlono
Fino Jowolry 151 8ocond Avo
Gelllpolls

Mom 1 Wanted Mom 1 Stty At
Homo WHh Your Fomlly. C8 I Now

URL http 1/www sec eta2auc
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YOU RE APPROVED! Cradlt

a

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ctlvatilt Pl)'roll And General
Til Prtptrat on Elctlltnl Op

portunlly For coroer Wnh Eolob
llthocl Suo nou Awllablo lnvno
dlaltly For 'fllllnlrla Salary 1111111
On EKpor onco. lt.pply Topa Fur
nltlira 181 Saconct Avortuo Gall
polla.

POSTAL JOIS To 111 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPEAI
!NCE FOR lt.PII AND EXAM
INFO CALL 1 100 813 3585
EXT 14210 8 A M t P II 7
DAYSI&lt;II.Ine

All real_,a oodvoo1l&amp;lng 1n
thll ,__lloubjoelto
lho Fodorol Fa! HOUII~ Act
of tlllltlw!11Cto milcH

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Klllogal

to I&lt;MI111H any proteronca
lmltltlcn or -~mlnotlon
baHd on r.ce color: ,_.lgk)n
111lomlllal1111ua or nallonal
ar1g n, or any Intention 10
mlka any ouch pro!Mnca
lmllltlon or diiCI'Im nation

TIIIIIIOWOpapor will ro1
ki\Owl"!t~IICCIIII

I&lt;Mirtloom- ror roallltllo
whlclo aln vlolltlon Of ttoo
low our rudlro 1,. Itt'"""
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nlormod thai alldwolingo
ldvortiHdln thll - oroiVIIIablo on an oqual
opoootun11y 111o1o

tiiJ..IIi•..•..ll11

Move From Succe11 To S gnUI

OK Consumers Financial 1 800

2475t25Ex1 !134 \lokiOH KS

SU NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Caah For Remaining Ptymenta

On Properly Soldl Morlgages
Annu t 111 Settlemenls lmme

date Ouolealll Nobody Beats
Our Pricea Nat ona Contract

Buyers BOO 490 0731 EKI 101
www natlonalconlroelbuyora com
US NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Cash Fo Remaining Paym1nts
On Prope ty So d Mortgages
Annu 1111 Settlements lmme

dale Ouoloalll Nobody Baals

Our Prices

Nat onal Cont act
Buyara 800 490 0731 Ext 101

www.nallonolcontractbtJyell.com
$2 500 V SA /MASTERCARD
UNSECUREDII Guaran!eod Ap
p ovalll Bad Crodll /No Crod 1
OKI lncludf&amp; Ful Cred t Reatora
tlon 23 Years In Bus nasa Not A

seam 11100-568 9099 EJCI. 25
$FREE CASH NOW$ From

Smolrt! (304)882 aaao
J m1 0 ywal &amp; Conatructlon
New Conatruct1on &amp; RemodeiJ

D ywa 1 Sid ng Roolo Addl
Ilona IPalnllng elc (3041874
4823 01 (304)674-01 M

Want To Takt Cart Of Stnlor

Cltiztnl ¥dndly Sunday B AM
10 PM In Your Home 740 448
2025

I

Wll Do HOUHCitanlng $8 00 An
Hour Eyenlnga And Saturdays
Havt E:iplr tnce And Rettrenc

.. 740-388-8421
FINMK:IAL

210

Bualnna
Opportunity

INOTICII
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

01 Gellpollt

ANTHONY LAND CO LTD
BOO 213-8385 For PREI Mat&gt;t
1-IRLAHO
7-114!12
Oallla Co Opon Houoo And
Ltnd Provlew Sun Jon 30
From 1 4 PM From SR 7 In

Chtoh ro Tlorn Will Onto SR 554
For U Mlao Tlorn R OniO Kygor
Cam Rd lt.t Slop Sign TUrn L
Onlc JUliO Crook Rd Go 7 01
A M o And Properly lo Woll
Ma Mid loth ltaullful Parm

Hom11 And 21 P•raele Aw•lt
Your Atvltwl Eureka Mtrabll
Rd t 1 lt.crao S20 000 Or 31 Acr

11 Wllh Barn $37 ,ooo Oalllo
Academy Water Frland y Rdga
t 51t.ctu $12 500 CUh Prlco.
llalgo Co Rutland Whlloo Hill
Rd Nleo 8 Acroo S12 000 Or 11
Acr11 $1" 000 Water Danville

Or Br ar A dQI Rd

7 Acrll

S NO DOWN! HOMES NO CRED-

Mtny Nlca Lots To Choou From

IT NEEDED! GOV T FORE
CLOSURES GUARANTEED AP
PROVAL t BOO 380 4820 EXT

2br tbo Homo w/"ltaehtd Go
rago !30 South Park Drlvo
$311 000 (304)875-51117

380

Wanted
Noad 5 Socludod Acru Wllh
Homoo to Qu ol Road Golllo
County Doodad &amp; StlfVIyod Un
dor$!2000 740-448-2317

Being Sod NOWI F nanclng A';o
able Ca Now 1 BOO 355 0024

WV Land want1d au tab t for
hunt ng No utlllllea no acctll
no problom (740}288 7248

11ENTALS

House Fo Sa 1 -4 Bedroom 3

w-

with din ng room living room and
kitchen Newt carpet and kltchtn
cabinets makla the kitchen with
loll ol
...-y lirtglol. A10 a
large lot Cute as can be Ae
duced to $33 coo Pleaae cal
Dottle Turner Realty Dottle S

1

3

Bad room•

Foree oa•d

Homos """" $199/Mo 4% Down

For Listings &amp; Payment Deta a

1100-319-3323 EJCI 1709

Full Basement Heat Pump On
1 78 Aerts In Country On State

Roulo 775 PtJI 0 0 Mclnly o
Park Aak ng $79 000 Call 740
448-8280 Or 740-441 1859
Nlco Count y Selling 2 Miles
from town 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 2
Ca Garage HeatPump on 1

Aero lt.ppllancoo Stay
351B

(304)l~B2

Nice Home Plenty of Room 3
Bedroom B lck Reduced Price
(304)273-IM85

320 Mobile Homes
for Salt
$2 ooo oo off Selected Sing o

Wid• Womes Super Low Pay
mental Oak Wood Homea Ba

bou av e Wv 1 (3041 738 7295
or 1 (304) 736-2395

2 Bedroom House S32e mo p Ul

of &amp; depooll No pots (304)675
2749
3 Bad oom House 1 112 Baths
Good Location In Ga lpolls No
Pe a Oepoalt Aaterencea Small
1 Bedroom House Furnlahed
Good Locat on In Ga lpol s No
Pets Depostt':""References 740

448 1162

4 Bed ooms 2 Bath Two Story

~atea

+Ut It es Reference Required

AC No Ooallro AI owed t 888

FLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc
torvlllo 01o o GRANO OPI~INO

24 Hou Approval Coli Toll Free
1577-8047273
CREDIT CARO UP TO $3 000
Unucurld VISA /MC Bad Crodll
Or NO Crodll 1-800-2511 8818 EJCI
otOOO

CREO T CARDS GUARANTEED
APPROVAL! No Crodll Chock
NO Socu~Jy llei!OoH St 000 Lmit

420 Mobile Homu
for Rent

Largeat Ntw Inventory In South
e n Ohio Specials On Homes
And Finane ng n Progresa Call

For Oetaia 1 888 585-0!87
Non Qual ly ng

Altumab 1

$4 000 Oown &amp; Taka Over Pay
...... 7.W.44B-3218

Home tor the HoHdaya on a Nice

LOI All Ull lias

1-{304~738

7285

Unlu nlohld total otaetrle 2 bedroom 12x84 on n ce lot n Ma
son Deposit required Phone

(304IB82 3287

Belween Athans and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob le homes

FREE DEaT CONSOLIDATION

Depos t References 740 441

1913

2 o 3 bedroom mobile home for
rent no pall 7 40-992 5858

AppUcal on W /Swrv c• Aectuct

One bedroom furnlahad apart
mtnt n M dd aport 740 982

Land Homo Pacltagoo. lt.M Aroao
AIIC-Riolto 740-4*3583.

JANITROL IIEATING ANO
COOUNO EQUIPMENT
INITALLED

,•

8308 1 800.29 -01198 _ _:: •
,;.;,;.;;..;.,;..:.::..::.;_=.::..

JET
AERATION MOTORS
•
Rl!lll ad New &amp; Robullt In Stock '
Coil Ron Evano 1 110().537 8528

PallO SWI $350 Mo No Pals

qulred 740-448-3481

Twin Towers now accept ng ap

p cal ono lo 1 BR HUO oubald
lzed apt for elderly aJid hand

capped EOH (304)675-6679

VIllage G etn Apartments 2
bedrooma total eectr1c applanc
tB furnished laundry oom facti
ties and c oae to achoo app ca
tiona aval ab 1 at oH ce 740 992

371 TOO 1 888 233-6894 Equa
Hou~ng Opportunity
MERCHANDISE

Household
Goods

Appl anc11
Reconditioned
Washers Dryera Rangea Refr
orators 90 Day Gua antee
French C ty Maytag 740 448

7795

For Sa a Reconditioned wash
era dryers and ref ge ato s
Thompsons Appl ance 3407

Jackson Avonuo (304}675-7388

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES

740-448-7803

1 Bedroom Near Arbors Nura ng

4782

$95 Whl lpoc Oryo Neo $95
Mavtag Goo Doyo $75 E act c
Range 30 $75 Sldo By Sldo Ro
friQe -tor S1aO Cotd Spol Relrlg
a ato $150 Skaggs App ancaa
76 Vine Strtet Gt I polla Ohio

740-446 7398 t 888-818-0128

530

Antique•

Buy or ull A vtrlne Anllquea
1124 East Men on SR 124 E Pomeroy 7&lt;40 992 2526 or 740 992
539 Auaa Moore owner

540 MlaQellaneous
Marchandin
SSBAD CREOIT? Got Cash
Loans To $15 000 Debl Conso I

dation To $200 000 Crodll Cards

1993 Nlaoon P ck up $3 9S5
1992 S 10 Pick up $3 895 28ft

li ave Trai~r $8 ooa Complet•
Stt or Nlw Kitchen Cabinets

$2 BOO 301on \VOOd Splltlor

-

740-992-4568

Prlmt1t1r
DlrtcTV
Frte sate! te eva em Ca 1 tor de
lalo BOO 263-2640

RESIIENTIAL HOllE OWNERS
Tappan H Eft c ency 90% Gaa
Furnaces 011 Fu naces 12 Sea~
Heat Pump I Air Cond t on ng
Systems Free 8 Yea PariS &amp; La
bor Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp;

Coo lng 1 1100-872 15867

Rona Gun Sloop 740-7oll!-8412
Set 01 Hoadllgh Cove s For A
1897 1998

Chevy

Cava er

$25 00 Only Uaod A Couple Or
Tlm8o Cal 304-n:l-5841
Waterline Spec al

314 200 PSI

$21 85 Po 100 I 200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 A Bass Com
poaoalcn Fmtnosln S oe1&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Ja&lt;:l&lt;son Ohio BOO 537 952B

Woodburner Excellent Condition
A so wood For Sa e 740 245
5236

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO

GY We F nance a Down Past
C ed 1 P ob ems OKI Even If
Tu ned Down Before Reeatab al'l

You Credltll t 800-659-0359

550

Building
Supplies

560

Pete for Sale

6 Ado able Rot we er Puppies
Tal s &amp; Dewclaws Now Taking
Deposits Males $125 Females
$150 Fleady For va enunes

740 256 9123

AKC Chocolate Lab Puppltl

G eal liamlly Dogs Raady To Go
740 367 0659
Ova 75 Tanks of F eshwater
Fish Locally Raised Parak. .tsf
Supplies F sh Tank Pet Shop
24 3 Jackson Avenue /Pt

P eaoanl (304)675 2063 Sun 1
•PM Mon-Sol 11 AM-&lt;IPM

Looking ro
emale longhair
Dachshund to b aed Please can
N.0-446--2055 leave I'Jlel&amp;agll
AKC Reglste ad M nlatur•
Dachshund 4 Fema 11 Call

(7401-245 5B98

Rottwelle Pups Ready To Go

$100 00 740-1192 3773
Thlo Year G vo A SPECIAL
•VALENTINE 'I To Mom Wh~
B chon F ae a 1 High Parenta
From South 11 Fam tv Petl 0et1v

eoy Pooolblo 740-3711-8061 740379 2699

740-992-3658 01740-949-2607

510

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?7 MMX Technology
W I Flnonco Wllh 0 Dnwn P8Sl
Crod~ PIObllmo No P - Cal

Hammond M300 0 :gan with Ltl"

Tel -

1-117 293-4082

Compl•t• DtSH NttWo k aatelllte

Homl Econom co Ul IIIIa OU!et
Locallon 1278 Mo + Ud Mltoo No
Pall 740-44828a7

oyotom brond now &amp;98 740
892 t 112 or 304 773 5305 oflor

2 Bedroom Apartment Ntw Ha
van Artl LIIVI Mtllage

COMPUTER BLOWOUn I COM
PAQ MICRON oMtchlneo Dook

(304)773-5577

Prem um Firewood Oak &amp; Aah
S50 load Fu S ze P ck Up De

1 see ats-ot28

(304)675-401Jo!

1 Btd oom wasner Orye Hook

901B

Lean Plus Secur ty Deposit Re

SOw $300 10 Tabla Saw $150
La go App oBullor Kame $400

UplnGellpot~

Huge Inventory o acount Pr cu
On Vlnv Sk rt ng Coors Wind
ow1 Anchor• Water Hitters
P umblng &amp; Electrical Partl Fur
nacu &amp; Heat Pumpa Bennetts
Mobl e Home Supp y 740 .ue

8191

3 piece llv ng room suite $8!50
Hot Po nt m c owave w th probe
$75 muat 111 to apprtclate cal

VII 1oi8B 1128-3428

•~

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

$495 1 Craftsman Aad al Arm

Now 2000 Ooublowk:to 3BR/2BA
per monlh Air &amp; Dollveoy to18B-92B-3421

Sp•cltl New 18x80 Low Down
Payment ond $268 por month
Froo A~ Cot tor qulcl E Z oppro-

••8

lac!o 13041675-1824

Cred I Corp 1-900 471 5 19 E•l
180

ee11en1 CoRd 1on $350/Mo $300

D073

.., JI8HSI.25110

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

2 Bedrooms 2 Bath Tralle Ex

$299

Factory Rtnovtted 3 Bedrooms
$499 &amp; Aoouma DekWOOd Ga ~
polio 740-448-3093

Probllmo? NHd Tunocl? Colllho

740 448 0390

Mo tgagea Rtf nanc ng And
Auto Loans Avallab a Me ld an

a,

-

lunKlu

$260-$300 740 992 2!67

Much More. Stat Package On
Markel Uutt
18 &amp; Have
Chocking Account t BOO 737

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Er11o Bad Credll Legally

R vera do Aporlmoolo In Mlddlo
por From $249 $373 Cal 740
992 5084 Equol Houa ng Opoor

Wh r pool Washer Heavy Duty
$95 G E Waaher Heavy Duty
$95 Kenmort prye Heavy Duly

28X80 $1 000 Down I&gt;BHYII'S Wf

No Upfront Feaa Bad
Cred t And Bankruptcy Acctpttd

apartmenll at V llaga Manor and

Houae And Tral e 2 Bedrooma
Each Relrtnces and Deposit Re
qulrtc{ Water And Trash Paid
700.368-11 DO

3 Bedrooms Kitchen Farn y
Room 1 Balh SunRoom Large
Fenced BaCkYard wllatge Utll ty

9211-9886

Grubb 1 Plano tun ng &amp; repairs

II You Oon 1 Co I Uo W• Borlf'
Lo,. Frtt Est ma 111 740 44&amp;

R&amp;O s Ustd Furniture Great Be
action P Iced To Se II Coma
And 8 ow,. COrner. Of Route 7
&amp; Add aon Pika We Buy Furnl
tole 7&lt;40-367-()280

Located AI 453 Add son Pike

304 736 7295

Doublowlde Repo Never Ivod In

Good Uoad Applonceo And Fur
nlluro Cll 740-448,o4038 Or 740448-!004 Anytime

Oraclouo living 1 ond 2 llldroom

$550/Uo Depot t And Aeferenc
11 Raqu red W aeman Real Es
tate Inc 740-446-3644

1981 Vonlu a 14•70 Deck 10•8

Pay Closing Costs &amp; Move In
740-446-3093

DlooctTV or"

11()1

740-448-1518

2BR House 2219 Lince n Ave
nue Pt PI $275 month $275
Oeposll No PelS (3041882 2099

New Fwnaee ::JO.t-875-631 9
Also Has Eapando Va y N ce

RC~

Hughu systema with acetal
card pay $150 &amp; up caahll Coli
Wolllt 7o40 849 3315 leave mtt

plano Or 740

New And Uaed Fu nllu e Slore
Below HOI day nn Kanauga
Good Used Beds 0 use s
Couches o nenes Etc s g sav
ngs On New Furnltu e 740 446

Largo Vaod Waltr Paid $450 00
Pus Oopos 1 Phone (7401 2Be
1399 Avalable Feb 51h 2000

P lot Program Rente a Needed

1988 Redman Danville 14x70

For aa tJl Prlmt Sta Sya em alao

FwnllhocJ 2 Roomo &amp; llelh Stoow., Downstairs C tan No Pttl
Oepooll &amp; Roloroncao Roqu rod

Washers dryara ref ge ato s
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
VIne Street Call 740 446 7398

(3041675 B436 May Leave Mea
sago

Low

IIAUTIPUL APANTMENTI AT
IUDGIT PRICEI AT JACK
ION IITATII 52 Waolwood
Dr VI lrorn $!8t 10 $370 Wllk 1o
ohop I movlao Ct I 740 •46
2588 Equal Hollllng Opponunlly

3 Bed oom 1 1 2 Story House
Ntwly ramodeled Ga age and

Counloy L~lng 3 Qr 4 Bod ooma

Call Toll-Free
l.atlU1Wia!
CONSOLIDATE BILLS

Smokaro Only a•5o/Mo
Dopooll 740 448 t585 0
448-2205 Allo ForVIoglnll

Tlornor Broklf al740-992 2888

Thitir Taxes Wrne Immediately

For Feat Aeeutta

wonted oldar

510

Sited (500 Oepoall $500 month

CONSOliDATE BILLS

1 W11htr Dryer Stove Dish
wathtr ,..tlr gerator Provldtd
Wattr And Trath Rtmoval In
eluded Ttnntnl Pay&amp; E tCtr C
Tota Eltctr o No Pets

Bmokaro Only $350/Mo UOO INTERNET Soflwa 1 Techn~el
Dapoo t 740 401 8a8a or roo l'tolp 800 300 2840 ANordab o.•
TIOIIROlOQIIo
•
448-2205 Allo For Vlrg"ll
App lctllono Bt no lt.e&lt;:aplod For
Vaoy Nlco 1'MI Badroom In Country lett ng Vol C oa To Gollpo

2 bed oom house In Po tland
$300 plus IIOCt IC toaal with wood
740-&amp;43-5548

$13 000 700.;!8S.8331i

Wlndlallo 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NE\'0 YORK NEW YORK
10017

COMPUTIRSI $79 89 /MO
EASY QUAL FYING FAST
NEW 500 500 MHz CompleJo

Ta a Townhouat Apa tmtnta
Va y Spacloua 2 Bedrooms 2
Floora CA 1 112 Bath Ful V Coo
potad Adu 1 Poo &amp; Boby Poo

WWM/ OOUOfMmlt 0000

garage onc1 two atorago boJik:tlnoo
P"'-" ca 1740-992 2292

Both 2 Oaragoo 3 1/2 milia oul
SandH I Road
$149 ooo
(3041675-!1403
Mlddllporl corner ol High Stroot
6 Powoll S~HI 2 bodroom toomo

111 Will AM T llh Remove
nclud«f Tennant P.ays Electr c::
Total E ICIIIC NO Pill Non

C.llftyon

Anlhony Land Compalt'j LTD
lormall~lng

Low Mof'l!hly Pavm•nta V2K• &gt;~'
Complanii'Aimost Everyona Ap :,.
~ 1.-&amp;17 347B ElcL 330 • 4

room Apon-1 Country Sottlng
Yot Cloto To Go llpollo Woolter
Doyor SIOYI Aolrlgo tlor Provk:t

Spring Valley Grttn One Bed
room Apa tmtnta Appliances
Furnloltod Cot 1740-448-15119

100121W3fll

Ellt 80otO

,•

•

Appllclllono Being Accop!ld Fer COMPUTERS Low Or 10 Down • ,

Wo Pay t:Aill

For LANDI
Evan H II Llltld
20 500 Acrll

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down Govn t And Bank Repo 1

lwo and hall ba ho

MerchandiM

Small But Vt 't Nlct One Btd

RMI Eatate

,.., planii(Rt 331304-882 3733

room and family room two f rt
places two apa tmenta four car

~~-----------------.
540 Ml-111-.otJI
•·

for Rent

Now For PRU Mope And Fl
nonolng Into t 0% OFF Ctoh

Buyo

Homo lor 11 1 lovely len acreo In
a country 11tt1ng four Dedrooma

Apertmenta

For Homo Slloo And HunUng CaR

B80tl

Brick home n the New Haven
area Ttlplt pant windows htat
pumplcenlrol air w/lencod yard 2
mjn away from Eltm schoo

440

LOCUit Post to lilt 7Ft $2 25

Wealthy Families Untoadlng Mil
lona 01 Dollar&amp; To Help Mnlmlze

Poyrnonto To B5'1&lt;. CASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERII Coli 1 BOO
32H510EJCI29
NDT lo und money lh ough lho MONEY TO LOAN Bad Crodll
mall unt I yo_u nave nvtatiP.ttd OK Froo Appllcollon u s Ap
ttooolllrlng
pllconlt ()rjy. tol77 7BO-tt31
AR! YOU CONNICTID? lntor
nol U1110 Wonlldl $350 S800 I
WHk 1 1M 1511 8331 www obll
droomnot f

rtcommtndt that you do bua
ntll with ptoplt you know and

01 Woodl&lt;l Hill $9 BOO Oil SR
124 Lou Than 20 Mlnuloo W111

St3,000

220 Monay to Loan
And Rorlnanc ng C adll Probllma

700.2.5-577B
23 .CREII:!B,DOO
OH SR 7 Soulh Or Galllpo lo No
Roottletlonal NEEDI TLC S2 300
Down on Land Conlnlot.
lllllOI COUNTY

310 Hom• for Sale

Nlco 3 Or 4 Sldroom Ranch Wllh

$$ 4ulo Loana Personal Loans
Debt Consol dat on Mortgages

-

SR 325 5 Acroo $18 000 Will

Houu Fo Sale Newly Remo
deled Ina de and Out 91 N
Park Dr ve Ca I for Appointment
(3041B75-8834

I.OAIIIOAC

Care for one In country S840
month Mobile Honeat Non

HEAL ESTATE

cance We Suggest You Move
Faal Bocauu Th o Wn Cal 1
B77 5()t).OB34

Foom S3 ooo stao 0001
(9% Avarago Rllll

For Frao Cooootlo 1 877 449
11818

7 Lldlu To Soli Avon, 740448-3358
Ofllco Manager Full T mo With
Bohtlllo Atopontlb o For Ac

Valay Plua CaH 740-448

WORLO S BEST SECRET I AU
TOMATE NOW To Earn 15 000
A Wllk Wllh A Mouat Cllckl

PI

Local Truck Driver Noeded S!arl

n..

11"~--~-.-...;--,;,;

180 Wanted To Do

L.ocal Butlntaa 111ka Routt

Rag olor 200 Ma n Sl

Bualneta
Training

t;dr FREE lnlormallon Booklet
Phone CAMBRIOGE STATE
Utlf\'ERSITY 1-800-984-8315

lntotnoiMo~

Sa~t

140

Naod A Loon? Try Dab! Conool
dol on Sa 000 $200 000 Bad
Cro~ I 0 K Fto 1 BOO 770 00112
EJCI 2!5

2 u Ac 11 Hom111tt Orten
Townahip Gallla County Flat
SCinle CloH To GoiHpo lo Somo

Creek And Woodtd Hlfla Sur
rounded By Woodl And Farm
Land WMSol Togoltoor S2e 000
l.tnd ContraC1 Avr.lable s Acr11

www acratcncarel com Or 1 811

Scnoc 1 Churchto Doycoroo
&amp;porto Organlnllono Soli Tho
U 1 mota In Gourmet Cookll &amp;
Muff n Batter Cuatomar 61rvtce
a Slor Riling• Wo Oollvar 11
Mlo:MIIlon o t 8()0.317-40311

350 Lota l Acruge

TWo tO Acre Tracta Of Meadow

175-1245

coma Potential No E•Ptr enct
Ntctllary Fret Informal on &amp;

URGENTLY NEEDED ror plaame
dono I torRid $35 lo $45 lo 2
or 3 hOull weekly Call Sero Toe
740-592-8851
WILDLIFE JOBS To $2t 80 /HR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEOED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL t 800 B13
351111 EXT 04211 B AM 9 P.M
7 DAYS ldo Inc
w k
or Foom Homo $599 se 000
Part Time !Fu I Time Conlael Ko~
ly 1 88B BB2 2838 www 2moro
monoy.com paucodo rowan
MEDICAL BILLING Earn heel

Columbus Som• Care Out 11
Room Board Pius Salary e 14
267 !5354

t.aee-!5823345

Provldld Muot own Ccmputlr t
800-434 5518 EJCI. 887
MEDICAL BILLING Unllmltod In

DR VERS $800 SIGN ON BQtjUS
MMEDIATE OPENINGS'·I)var
Tho Road Slorl AI 29 ~PM /All
Ml Unloading l'oy. Paroonallltd
Dlopa)ch Homo Otlan Ho lday I
Vaeotion Pay 401K /Med /Prol I
Danlal Aoolgnad 99 T2000 s
R dar Progrom 88% No Touch
~ht CALL SUMMIT TRANS
~TION 8Q0.87e.oe80 EOE
0 voro 2 Wook Pold COL Troln
ng No E•P Noodod No Mo~r
No Crodlt? No Problom Earn Up
TO $32 000 ltol Yr w /full Ben•
111 Apply on Llno AI www 01,
drlvero com Or Coli t 877 230
6002 P.A M Tlanopon

Hornomllcor LIYO In Wantod For
Olaablod Pracllclng Allornoy In

TUAHID DOWN ON
SOCIAL S&amp;CUIIITY 11817
No Foo Unlou Wo Win

Cll Clalma From Home Tra nlng , . .l!l!l!..

24-1D07

tance lmrntdlate y It You Have A

ProflllloNI
Strvlcn

2615 (2• Hro.l
FUNORAIIINO II IOOIIINQI
Up To 50'1&lt;. Commloo on Morkol
Unlquo Fundra!Oing PrO&lt;luct WHh
Top Ful Food Cha no

Void In K'f: IN CT

Send Raoumo 10 201 High

110

Anyone who would ~preclate a thoqbtful word from you!
All Valentine Hearta Will be publlahed lit the February 14th
U.ue at a cCMt of only $7 001
MUST BE PREPAID!
Pttnt your
the heart end

Cltocltn..-

230

BualnOpportunlty

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
15 30 Loeat ono $41( UK In

11

Seeking Full Time Substtutt

• Sweethearts • Moma &amp; Dade • Grandparents•
Teachers • Babysittere • Friend8

210

land Automated Mtdlctl Strvlc

Wadllf11VIr a Auct on Service
Ge~ll Ohio 740-379-21'20

Canton GlenOik 51 You Aus ntown filCh 4S

Cuylhop Falb Jcsu 161 Cant:on Cath ,SS..OT
Dayton 40 Ludlow 36
Fe c 1~ .tO Bethel Tale 39
Fonona S Wendel n .5o4 Marion Cath -40
~etown 56. Willwn•bura 41
Hanul on Ross 51 Loveland 49
Holland Spnnafir:ld 83 To Wane 67
KdnHt C.. Cor 66 M111no1 a Sondy V• 64
Lebanon 68 Wilrru~n 39

wv 1331 7&lt;40-118N707

Rick Pearson Auction Company
1~11 tlmt aucllonttr complete

H 107 162

6$

'tol

AP Top 25 men's poll

AUction

comp 111 auction &amp;trv ct Buy

71 16 124
62 147 I 5

Bellefontaine: 48 Enon Greenan 32
B ulfton SS Fl Jentun&amp;l JS
Can on Timkcn 46 All ance Marl naton 3.5
Cedarville ~4 Bethel 48
Cen erv I~ .50 Spnns Soulh 36
Central B'f"" 46 St Rita 27
C n Chriatian 32 Day Jefferson 22
Cin. Country Day 49 C n Norwood 47
Cin. Hills Chr Acad 81 Ntw Mama 29
Cin Landmark Ctv 40 C n I...oc:kllnd 37
C n. Summit Count.r)' Oty 45 Cln St Beraard
30 ~
GCWeltem Ku 1 44 A ktnlS

Wednesday s games

fn education or rolalld llold Sa~
ory blltd on trolnlno lnd ..,..,~

llolnitg~

Computer....
COli 7 llayl · - 522
904eEx1

80

I

Bt:averaeek 57 Day Chaminade Ju en..e 47
Bel atre St Jobns 69. SbMiyttde 47

Char)()tte 11 Hoosion 8 30 p m
Se1tt~1 Uah 9pm

8 M h gan..S

6

Grtl and aupervllory experience

&amp;

7 I 54 14l 14(1
21 25 4 5 51 156 151
13 H

Btchtlor t Otgrtt In education

Collar &amp;Tag on

Around Ohio

LA Lakcl'1al San Antoruo 8 p m
Ph ack:lphia 1 Dallas 8 :ID p m

•

Piusburah
NY blanden

4
I

let Ctnttr fn tht Athtnl County
Allernallvt Schoo Alternative

Mad Slu mostly

an MoOdlopaugn Auetlonoor ng

s

Alloont MOigo Eduelllonal SO&lt;v

Yellowlown Rd Area

end Flee Market

9

ttl a

Found on Yollowtown Road 11281 lt.TTN OWn lt. CGntputor? Put ft
00 Slut Helll&lt; Milt Dog &amp; Spitz To Work I SZI 78 /Hr PT /PT
Ml• Dog Both Woorlno Collaro ........ t224 www WGftt-out-of.
With No Tagl Cal Allar I PM vou~-.oorn
740-418-ltee
AVONI All Aroaol To Buy or So I
Found! Oroy/S Ivery Small Quilt ShlriOy Spears 30ololl'S-t429
Fol SmaM Dog No Collar AI foo.
Dancero Wantod Top SS 740
dland DTGolllpollo 740-i!S&amp;-tGeO
882 83B7 Wod Sat (304)B75
LOST Mlsolng In lho Cllllon lltl55
area Wht• H maayan Cat wear
lng a red collar Anawe 1 10 the DATA ENTRY Nationwide BJllno
name Katy lut IHn on Thea Sorvlco Soako A Fuii/Pa 1Tlmo
day Jan 25lh If seen or found Medical Bllllr Solary AI $46K Par
pliua call (30•1773 8059 or Year PC Required No E•ptrl
tnct Needed Will Ttaln Call 1
BB~ :J«B anytime REWARD
88H48-5724
Thl'*""'

Ch I co he Zaoe Trace 73 Wheelmbu s61
Rock H II 72 Minford 6.5

Bos on at lnd ana 7 p._m.
Wash RJ on at CLEVELAND 7 30 p m
Or ando at New York, 7 30 p m

'

SOUih Gail a ~9 Symmes Val t)' Sl OT
Ohio Valley Cbn111n 58 Cross Lanes Omsuan

22 22

NY Rangen

GIVIIWIY

Pill Lab Po.opplu 2 Main 2 Fomolll 740-Mio3to18

Around the region

Tonight s games

2 S anro d U&gt;

'\1 15
26 1:5

._77

740-5112-11W2
0!11111'1 cloth ng and houothold
lttrno $1 00 bag 11 a every
TIIUrocloy Mondey lhru Salu day

1! L I IU lll. Ia: !ia

Pb adelphI

Area non league

w th

85 Yur 0 d Company H11 Ntw
LOCIIIOftl In Ga lpolll Wt Will
FII 12 Now Poalllono No E•port
tnot Ntceaaary Management

New To '1'otj Thrift ~
t Wul Sllmlon Alhlno

Atbmtlc: Dlvlaon

ru..
New Jersey

Anticipated opening&amp;

NEWITOIIE

........,.7110

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Me gs 64 Ne sonville York 40
Albnny A e11arxlr:r 60 Well on 42
Fr:deral Hocking 61 Tnmb ~ 21

Ell1. 3!25

I Glan Paulk WII NOI Be Raeponllblt For lt.ny lila Modo By An
Ottow'Thln Myotl
Olin Pau11t
AII 'otloJ Connoctod7
1-U--1
M6Yino out ol 11111 1111 toomo &amp;
$3501100bualnau 111 lypeo ot houuhold
lomo lrUCio pon100n appllncll
www rnpretbelefyn m
new I used Items from bualntll
too many to lilt no reasonable AAI YOU CONNICT!D? lnltlr
olllf rtMIII Fob 111. 2nd 31!1 n nat Utora Wontldl S3110 $800 I
htolld building 1om 10 ? on WHk t 188 723-2553 www worlo
IIIII Route 33 In Shade OhiO 41UCCIII2000com
740-9U2o0048

NHL standmgs

Losan 68 Mane ta '6

Mtd Pros Toll FrH , 888 313

Why wall? Start Mill ng Ohio
I00-7Y.2823. ll1tnllonll711

SHOAL

6
6
8

-~-

MEDICAL BILL NO Earn Excel
lonl S S S I Procooolng Clo mo
From Homo Fu ll'lln ng Provld
ad Compulor Roqulrod Coli

or rolalld Ill d ond ...,nlllnllod
lb Illy to HI'YI II l'lllt 10Uflt tro• Coonllnator. Motlofo Do-

1 nglta tonight Call to fr11 1

Hockey

Gul po s 68 Rivr:r Vallr:y 5

C8111.aeHBHOB70rVIol

lohool Toochtr Oualltlcllllono

Continued fro111 8-1

No 18 Okllhoma 83
No 18Texaa 59

Elm AnWoo1&lt;
Ellra""""
1480-15000 Ptlfl

-

Hllp Wlntad
OLOCOWMY

g Ia In Your 4rll Cal For More

lnlormallon 1 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

Ashland 68 We$ m ns er Pa .56

II

15

Suecua Rale Toll Frtt 1 177

Great Lakes lnlercolleglale

0

l'er10111la

HERPES EVERCLR STOPS
HERPES OUTIRIAKII 88'1&lt;.

Bucks 91, Grizzlies 87

110

-AniNT!Oir"

005

At Denver Ntck Van Exel and
George McCloud made key baske15
m the final I 21 and the Nuggeta
beat Phtladelphta
Ron Mercer expected to be traded
from Denver to Orlando today had
IS pomts for the Nuggets
Allen Iverson the NBA s leadmg
scorer had 29 pomts for the 76ers
who dropped thetr thtrd stratgllt
game

1

Help Wanted

110

Nugels 83, 76en 80

TOP 25 MEN'S! BASKETBALL...

J R Raymond scored 25 pomts
and Eduardo NaJera had 18 pomts
St John s shot 47 3 percent (26 and 16 rebounds as the Sooners ( 17
for 55) and mtght have come out on 3 Btg 12 5 2) handed the VISIItng
top tf not for some awful foul shoo! Longhorns theu worst loss of the
mg (2 for 9) Barkley mtssed four season Chns Mthm had 21 pomts
free throws and Glover mtssed two and 12 rebounds for Texas ( 14-6 Btg

Mid Amerocan Conference
OHIO 94 MARSHALL 69

7

\

about and m fact ts a profound
breach of the soctal compact we hold
m such htgh regard
The players assoctatton satd 11
expects to file a gnevance over the
penalty believed to be the longest
agamst a baseball player for an
action not related to drug use smce
Lenny Randle of Texas got 30 days
m March 1977 for punching hts man
ager Frank Lucchesi
I do no1 believe 11 IS appropnate
that I should be harshly disctpllned
for my mtsgmded speech unaccom
panted by any conduct on my part
Rocker satd m a slalemenl released
by hts agents
I have prevtously
apologtzed for my unfortunate
remarks and stand bjr my apology
A gnevance would force the mat
ter before Shaym Das the spon s
new Independent arbtlrator
We have been tn consultation
w1th Mr Rocker and 11 IS our present
mtenuon to appeal srud Gene Orza
the umon s No 2 offictal Itts later

a great team rtght now They re on a
roll They can be beat but 11 s gomg
to take a great team to beat them

Ohto women's college scores

bnnsed htp that lw forced him 10
mtss three games Hts status remruns
day to-day
'nmberwohe~105, Klnp !10 ,
Bobby Jackson filhng m foC
Terrell Brandon had 17 pomts II
reboqnds and 12 asststs for his first
career tnple double as Mtnnes~
beat vtstllng Sacramento
•
Kevm Garnett had 31 pomts 12
rebounds and riven ass1sts for
Mtnnesota, which lias won 18 of 22

Glenn Robmson scored II of ht$
25 pomts m the fourth quarter w;
Milwaukee won conse~uttve road
Heat 104, Pistons 82
Jamal Mashburn had 23 potnts games for the firstume m more than
etght rebounds and stx asststs as host a month
Sam Cassell added 21 potnls an~
Mt~mt beat Detrmt to remam tn first
place
Ervm Johnson had I 0 rebounds fill'
Wtth a loss the Heat would have the Bucks
Bryant Reeves scored 22 an&lt;j
fallen out of first place m theAtlanttc
DIVISIOn for the first ume smce Nov pulled down a season htgh I 5
I 0 Instead they took a half game reboun(ls as the Gnzzhes blew an
opportumty to wm three stratght for
lead over the New York Kmcks
DetrOit s Grant Htll sat out wtth a the second ume thts season

gave St John s a 56 54 lead w1th more when the Red Storm were
1~2
3 I 0 left but that was the Red chngmg to a shm lead before Hart
O.CHESAPEAKE
12 2
60
Storm
s last field goal
turned the game around
Odl•n nc•M•1 12 or mon points II
BELPRE 30 12 (ole)-BEVERLY FT FRYF- C""ol
Great teams make plays that s
They re all semors nght now
Wineheder C n Madeira, Col Ready 14 16 { e)why
they re 18 0
Jarvts satd
Coldwller Hamler Patnck Henry 13
Barkley satd They ve been playmg
They re as good as anybody m the
together for so long and I thmk
country
they ve found theu rhythm They re

Ashland 6.5 Wes nuns er Pa 64

l

pleted today accordtng to players
mvolved sends forward Chris
Gatling and guard Tanq Abdul
Wahad pluu future first round draft
ptck to Denver for forward Ron
Mercer guard Chauncey Btllups and
fonner Mag1c first round ptck
Johnny Taylor
Hardaway took a swtpe at the
rebwlding plan saymg other players
Wtll tat~c of how a once-domt
nanttearn
gradually dtsmantled
I
understand why some
body w d come here anyway If
somebody alre¢y ts m a (good) snu
alton -JUSt because they re under
the cap and have lottery ptcks why would somebody want to come
here after I ve gone and Shaq s
gone? What does that say?
In other games 11 was Mtamt 104
Detroit
82
Mmnesota
105
Sacramento 90
Denver 83
Phtladelphta 80 and Milwaukee 92
Vancouver 87

93
74
67

Great Lakes lntercollellille

19

'The deal which could be com

137

Ken 68 W Mchgan62

10
I

rinb

7LmaCeniCach
S..O.yton Oakwood
9 WitTeD Oiamp1on

Oklahoma 83 Ttus 59

8\
10!

By RONALD BLUM
liaoa
lY:J.
lll
NEW YORK (AP) John
1 C n Sf.. Xaver 2S)
14-0
~0~
2 Tol Libbey 5
14-0
272
Rocker won t pttch In a game unttl
Cn WmonWoods
14-0
216
May I - unless the players assoct
4-Beaven:rer:k
I' I
I S6
SAkronBuche ()
Ill
1\8
atton successfully challenges the sus
6-Mansf~ekl S
12 j
130
penston baseball commtsstoner Bud
7 Can on McK nley
II 2
128
8Li....S
1)2
72
Sehg Imposed
9 Tol St Franc 1
IQ.2
1
Major League Baseball takes
IO.Cir:ve So~th
JJ 2
61
senously
tis role as an Amencan
Othen meh•lna Jl or mon points I
BIU'be:rtpn 18 12 Zanesv lie 13
3
e) E mstttuhon and the tmportant soctal
Uverpool LOGo'\N 12
responstbthty that goes wuh II,
Dlvislonll
Sehg satd Monday m tssumg the sus
n..
lY:J.
lll penston and $20 000 fine
I Woostn Tnway (17)
14-0
284
We wtll not dodge our responst
2 Dayton Coria on (8)
12 0
260
J C n PureeD Monan ($)
13 1
238 btllty srud Sehg also ordered the
4--Willard (I)
13 I
190
5 Olnuoed Folb
II 2
126 Atlanta Braves rehever to undergo
Snthen
II 2
126
sensitiVIty trammg for dtsparagmg
7 Poland Senunary
9-2
Ill
8 Perry !
10-2
87 foretgners homosexuals and mmon
lies m a magazme mtervtew
9 Navarre Falrlr:ll
10.2
68
0-Canton Cent Cath
II 3
27
Mr Rocker should understand
Tomogany Otseso
13 I
27
that
hts remarks offended practically
Othen ncelvlnc 1l or more
II
GALLIPOLIS GALLIA ACAD 2
12 Uma every element of SOCiety and brought
Shawor:e 18 13 OreenfJC d McClain 17 14dtshonor to htmself the Atlanta
lillmadll' 16 1$ Col Eastmoor Acid 12
Braves and MaJor League Baseball
DlvlslnnW
The ternble example set by Mr
lilllll
lY:J.
!II Rocker ts not what our great game ,ts
1 Akron St. V St M (25)
IS-O
3(K)
2 Jl&lt;d(Ofd a. ....! (5)
10-2
243
3 Andlay Uberty Benton

Monday nisht

MLB suspends Braves' Rocker

Division I

6-Ben...

Alabama St 62 Ark. Pine Bluff :52

"7

30

Ohio H S. boys' poll

In Penny We Still Trust and sev
eral othe)'S also di&amp;played supporting
the Suns guard
Its always sweet to beat your
old team espectally tn the first
game srud Hardaway who also had
four rebounds four aSSists and
blocked two shots m 40 mmutes
Clifford Robtnson had 28 pomts
and Jason Kidd scored 20 and had 14
asststs for tbe Suns
Darrell Armstrong had 26 pomts
and II asststs for the Magtc who
tnmmed a 25 point second half
defictt to I08 Hl§ before the Suns
put the game away
The Orlando Arena crowd of
13 677 - nearly 3 600 less than
capactty - booed Hardawp.y dunng
pregame warmups and also relished
every lime he was whtstled for a foul
or mtssed a shot
Its JUSt a ~ of the game I
couldn t do anything about 11 All I
could do was come out and help our
learn gel a vtctory Hardaway wd
In stx seasQns 1n Orlando the 28
year old guard helped the Magtc to
five playoff appearances mcludmg a
tnp to the Fmals m 1995
The trade was part of a major ros
ter overhaul destgned to free room
under the salary cap and budd a
younger more athlettc tei\Dl under
first year coach Doc Rivers
Orlando ts close to unkermg even
further wtth us roster agreemg to a
ftve player trade wtth Denver on

Musical
lnetrumenta

o Sound Cab nat $800 Call
13041675 3388
FARM SUPPI If'~
&amp; LIVE STOCK

l!pm

IOPI Laptops Mtrcl'lant Ac
coun11 Wtbt 111 Almost Every
one Approved I No Uon•y

Downll Low Monlhly Paymanlo
FREE Spac II Otto~ CALL NOW
1 aae-•79-2345 (Tol -~

810 Farm Equipment
0% F nanc ng Now Ava btle On
John Dtert Balers And Mowat
Cond 110n1rt Carm challl Farm..
&amp; Lown 1 800 594 1111 Or 740

4•8 24, 2 Go II polio On o Don t
Mlu Our John Dilo 1 Oay Fel&gt;ruooyt2 !1:00AM
1853 John Dtoro eo 710 ase
177.

�:

•
•

Pomeroy, Mldcltport, Ohio

••

I

Tu••deJ, '"*"-Y 1, aoao

810 Farm Equ~Pmet~t

ua_...

JO .. Trldor, JO 3'1t Plow, 110ft.
Gralft E..,_ wllh
JD
s..-.(7401-2!1HD11

830

PHIT.LIP

Uvwtock

ALDER

1·32 Ft. _ H o ! u _

Holda 4 HOr.. And Hoi CIIOng•
tng ROGOI U,OOO CoM 140-Sit·

I

Rod--

Bro"" 1 Whho 3 v..r Old

Pony.

RKIM,Ohlo

.,.op

&amp; Whllo Mini Golding Pony,

-

$400: v.. rllng Btlgln Golding.

Dark Sorrel While Mane l Full

. BlUe, Good looking Cob, MOO:
tatll Mortll 1e Ft. Ho!u /Stool&lt;,
~ 1 Ft 1lll. 7 Ft Wldo, 7,r:#J
Pd A•lt, 8 lug Spoke Whotilo.

I

740-848-2217'
Sizes 5' X 10
to 10' x 30'

..o.lt'l'tl

.t\.~

·~~

7~. .

...........

llNNUD IIWWIEBmBIB.INC.

7:00AM·8PM

Big Horooo, $S.800, 740·387-

840 Hay i Grein
Eor corn. 13.00 liuahel, call 740247-3012.
Strow: Bright Wire Tie Str~w 'llror
'Round Delivery l Volume Dla·

count Available . Heritage Farm.

(304)675-S724.
.......,,HOJForSoto

200 Round Batea of llrat cutting
Hay, harvllttd In 1998. Hay Ia
located at u,. Lakin Stattlf:arm,
Box 9, Ptanl Lane Road, lakin,

State 11oapltal, Rt. 62 North of
Point Pleaaanl, WV) . Hay has
been stored Inside. Average
wtlght per bale Is 900-11 00 lbo.
Hay will be aold In unltt .of 2!5

bales per person. Our personnel
and equipment will aulst In
loading. Hay 11 available for In·
apectlon, prll.. r to bid . Contact
Peraon: John Leporl, Acllng

Manager, (3041671Hl856.

Written blda will be accepted until FebruarY 11 , 2000. Btda can
be mailed to : WV Department of
Agriculture, Marketing arid De·
velopment Division, Land. Sac·
uon, P.o.~aox 160, Slatersville.
WV 28175. (Fateed bids will be
a&lt;:copted at (304)652-eo901.

TRANSPO RTATION

Public;: Notice

On a.tunllly, Ftbrulry 12,
aooo at 10:00 a.m ., tht

r•urv•• lha right to rtltCt
eny or ell blcla or to ramova
eny unit lrom the ••I• at
tillY time.
·
Art'llngementa mey be
m.cte to lnepect eny at the
llllovtlnamtd whlolaa prior
to tlta Nit by Clllllng 740-

llome National Bank .will
offar far Nit et public
euollon on the lank .,.tdng
IDIIINI follawlng vthlalu:
Frenklln Bklddor Modal

170XL
11110 Ford Renger JCLT
VINI1FTCR10T4LUB81278
'Tilt termt at the Nit era
The Home Notlanol Bank

I ;;;;;:::;:;l;n;;;M:;;•m;;o;ry;=;;;;;
II

In Lovilyf Memory
Of

Edith V, Manuel
Au,gwl29,1934
February 1, 1999

MI-2210• .
(2) 1,4,1, 1041C
•

'

•

Southern Ohio D~

&amp; CONSTRUOION

St. Rt. 7

New Roofa • Repairs

Tuppen Plalna, OH

tor
•R-tlol

• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painling • Plumbing
Free E$11mates

740-985·3813
Spr111 hYelop•tat
Speclll · i

Joseph Jacks
740-992:-2068.'

1 1/2" Water Pipe
· 841.00 per
hundred ft.

.-c-rdol
•bid.....

s.m.a Melp .... c..
eo.•r

CoD for1101elaformoU..

1,G3100 1 lTV), pd.

Public Notice
1 lt9 Annuel Flnenclel
Raport 11 ~omplote and
evellebla lor r•vlaw et tlta
alflco
of
the
Cltrk/Tre..urar.
Matgo Co. Dle)riCI Public

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On

KJ9?62

• Q 10
• 10 1 • 2
• Q J 9 6

710 Autos for Sale
CARS $100; $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND . Honda's Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·

ties. Call Nowl 800-772-7470;

EXT. 7832.

1973 Fled Plymouth Satellite 383
Motor, Automatic, Runs Great!

U.!IOO 000, 740-25&amp;-1233.

1980· 90 Honda&amp; From $29/Mo.,
Impounds! 0 Down, 24 Months 0

19.9% listings, 900-319·3323 Ext.

3901.

1984 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Mint

Condition, 740.387-71 t7.
1985 Escort, $695, 740-446·
2155.
1988 CJ7 8 Cylinder, 4 Speed,
Ham Top, $4,600, 740-245-9443.
'988 Trans·Am 350, Automli.tic,
Good Condition, $1,995. 740·
4-46-ll390.
1988 Parle Avenue, Nice Shape,

. $3.1500, 000 740,'J88-9788.
1989 Oldl Regency Broohhm,
IJ~;Cellent condition. Nice Car.
$3,900. (304177~..

1990 Geo Tractuoi, LSI, 4x4, A.C.,
5Spd., Caa:aette, LookafRuns
Good. 3ml per gallon. (304)6757126.

1991 Plymouth l.aoor RS, loaded,
107.000 Mites, $3,600 080: tl65
Toyota 4 Runner 4 wo·. Loaded,
Rough, $1 ,500 OBO. 740·448·
6962.

1992 Cavalier RIS 82K $3.195:
1991 Cavalier 84K $2,695; 1989
Cutlaas Supreme 79K $2,495; .
1989 Porulac 6000LE 4 Doors,
96K $1,795; Other Front Wheal
Drive Cars And Pick~Ups, Cook

Nqw Is rho 1/rnt (or g·r·r·r-«11.
"""' In 1/to classl(lrds

$300.00 Covwltll
$500.00 Stllrburet , .
'
Prog...ulve
top IIIMI.

II~

been a year now
•ince God caUed
you home. 11"'"'
so hard for "" lo lei

No!;~..

Clll Now for lllltllnl Ap(protwellll""

WICK'S Hfi.OU
and

EXCfiVATinq

667-nn

1992 Dodge Ram 250 Dlllel 314
ton pickup, excellent condition,
1992 Ford PrObe Gl 4 Cylinder 5 $8900, 711J.992.5072.
Speed, CD Player A/C , $3,500,
1993 F-350 Ford ' 4K4, Olesol XlT,
740-388-8888.
Automatic, PW, PL. 740·3881984 Z·34 Lumina, 59,000 8796.
Mllel: 1 Owner. (304)875-6457.
t994 GMC Jimmy, 40oor, 4·W·
1994 Gornot Color Buict&lt; Regal, 2 Drive. Loaded, High Mlleave, Ex~
Dcora, Equipped With Everything cellant Condition. $7999.
Very Good Condition, $8,150, (304167!1-7948 betlre 9PM.
Motoro. 741J.448.0103.

740·245-5008.

PontlacJGrand~AM ,

2dr.f

5tpd, Teal Green wltlnted wind·
owa, American Racing Wheals,
New Tires, C.O. Player &amp; Car
Alarm, Excellent Condition.

740

Motorcyclae

'92 Polaris 250 4-wheeler, $800
or trade l.or decent car, 740.742·

2999.

$1 . ~00.(304I773·S103 . iftor 1999 Polaris 4x4 L,ss than 500
Mllao, $5.000 Firm. Phone:
5:30PM or'- Mooaago.
(304}S76-3259, AIIM 5PM.
1998 Mul1ang 33QOO mlloo: t989
c...tt. Z-24. (304)67H1M.
. 760 Auto Parte &amp;
Acce11orln
1999 CheVy .Cavalier, White, 2
Oro, S Spd .. Am/Fm Cao11no, AI Budget Priced Transmllllons All
C, Rotr Dotrost. 1,950 mlleo. Alii&lt;· Type•. Access To Over 10,000
lng $8,250.00 Obo. 740-256-1011
Transmlaalons, CVC Jolnta, 740·
24H677.
93 CuUa11 Supreme 2 dr,
73,000mllea, roal sharp $8500.

.

.

CARS $100, $500 l UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's ToyOII'I,
Chovya, Joepo, And Sport Utili-

810

ties . Call Nowl 800·772·7470;

EXT8338.

•

(740) 99Z-3470

BORN LOSER

-nor.740-245-M15.

1993 Ford fllngor Splalh, 4 cyl, 5
ap., 90,000 mills, a•cellent condi-

779S.

:et:

·

CREDIT

I'

. ......
$1~00D.DD

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

A LOAN?
.. same Day

.

NO

1·~9008

Now lleatln8

Ext 854.

• Bad Credit OK
• Eaay.Qualllylng
• Faat Setvlce

. • Low Paymenta
• Conlldtnllal

i

111ft a D6Wipap81
ddnnld directly ..
, . . door

Calllll-21•

-- · ·

.

~~ ~

M.....~~­

E.pdp-ntPut. ·

Factory Aaihorized

C...,..JHPut. .
Dealerw. ,

·,

't

Ill(.; ..

Ne:w Homaa • Vlrilfl \

SldiQQ• Nt1w G~

•Replacement Wlndolila
•Room Additions

740-992·7643.

740-982·2529. ·

Jlms Drywall &amp; .Construction.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

IOIIIT IISSILl
COIISTRUCTIOII

HOWUD.-

mobile hotne repair and mort. For

Advertlalng.
oonllnL

7~3221 .
1990 Mazda van, good bOdy.

am/
fm CIIHite, needs trenemiMion

-

· $500, 741J.992-7111~.

,

!"- .... ,..

11p1- .nulnller 11et.c1 .,.._

· •·Homn .
•Gingll .

ESlJMATES
8111! . 44~ -

~~~~rlc1t, WV000308, 304-t75·

FREE ESTIMATES,
Calla) .

IICIWiTIIII (0.:
u

I'll

, •·z

7

.~

"

"

Houae &amp; Tr.,Uer Slteo··

FREE

Residential or commerctal wiring,
new Hrvfce or repairs. Miller 1.1·
een"d electrician . Ridenour

~•••lML•m1nn•

s.,;,..

~Complele

Stop &amp; Compere

Refrigeration

•Roojlng

B~Hr &amp; Badrlsoe

Remodeling

' I.

•

Ia not -I'WI~IIblel
.

llc:onilaDt our Mlee.-.on ··I t

1953 Dodge M·37 Military Truck, enco.(304)885-3887.
;:~~. Motor Work, 1750 ' . 840 ElectriCII end
1978 Ford Bronco 4x4, S28So,

ITUESDAY

I&amp;

CAlL NOW 1·1100-250-41)98

aa...,.

7/II/IFN

Land Clearing &amp; .'
Grading

•

Seprk Syo,._ &amp; •
Ulllitieo
· '

(740) tfWIII • I

port now while tlicy're
·
(Aus. 23-Sept. 22) li.
tO do SO. Tiley Want lo help, SO let
SOCial miller iJ. which you' VO been .
them. .
,
.
re\IIQ1Inllo·aet iavolvcd can be titanARIES (Morch 21-April 19)
. IJcd with relatiVI! ease today _if
Because othas core a l!"at deal
you'~ willin&amp;ID uy, Don't be afraid
obout you, one or two of tllml will!'" '
·of the challenge.
.
.
· playing a .biJ hand o~ your behalf ; ·.
LmRA (Sepl. 23-0&lt;:1. 23) Mako
tod1y in a motter lhat 11 of penonal ,
domesdo or family IJlbllen your top
· sipilicance to you.
1 • priorities today. becouse the resultJ
TAURUS (April 20-Ma)\ 20) A · .. ' will be "ceplionally aratifyili&amp;.
· situation that is a miahttoo IDUJh fQI' · . , You'll hive more coopel'llion thon
nn associate to handle may be placed
you thought.
.
· un your shouldero today. However, ·
SCORPIO (Oct, 74-Nov..· 22)
instet!l of ,....ntins ~is, it:l' !&gt;e 1 . . ·Don't aotdiscourqcd ir your ochcd·
·
ule appem overwhelming .and
· feather in yo• cap.
GEMINf(May 21 -June 20JYour
backed-up a bil todaY· You're in 1
thouchtfulness towards anothj;r moy · • ve,Y favor~ble cycle where the ful•
be billancid out today, so altliOIIJh I
lillment of YO!I' hopes. can be real·
deed you did in the pall did noi reop
lr.cd .
instantallCOUicotnpcnsodon.llfPUid
· SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov, 23,Dec.
, now be rewarded in ,.,..-.
·"
21) P1lce your focus today on your
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) Your ·
m•terill obj~ives, because you
noble qualities of bein&amp; • stand-up
could be extrell)ely lucky at this time·
pcnonOI'qnqueslionll&gt;le~moy
. iii reallzlftJ multiple Jalns.' Think
be called upon 111111 put to aoOd illo r· money.
&lt;
•
today. No-* yoa hlvuo ll*y
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan. 19)
&amp;lends.
+ + ·. Circumstlnccs' ~ ,oing your way
LBO (July 23-Aua. 22) ~It
today end could ~ rather lonunale
poulbly of o short duretion, your
for you IR several situations where
financial trend could like a pleulint
you hi~ a atrma. personal interest
wrn,fcrthebea&amp;iitodeyduito.., I; Doa'lbe afniclto 10 fora nullllierof
CJII!I'I killllnoa. 0o eiUI..,S'tiiiM
. @"PI•.

.. .
\

.....

., . . _ _ lor-.. T....... -

.N - 0

,

.

..
'B R W
SRW

ITES

NAUBWC

· RMIYJC

SRWAG

S R W 0

IWtPWGE

ELWVAWE

YOWYSADW
VYJCXTS

YGW

PWEI

RYDW

TU
YS

F R W lC

•

..

SRWAG

F Yo. •

WGAV . RTUUWG
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: •11 yQU step on people In this llle, you're golrig to
oome bac~ as a coctuoach.• - (Former outfielder) Wille Davis

L 0 CE RE

I

rI I I

I

.

··:'

."

U H S MU

I

PRHAC ~ ,
1-..,..;._.....,_,.........,

·r

1 1

·I always knaw that the ·mosl

. effective safety device in your car

\

lu cpp In your rear view_-- - • • ~

you deoalop lrom lllp

THESE SQUAIES

•a..IJ-..-~

~

by Lull Clmpoa

c.MbrityCiplwo=:a.•,. .,.CNollld from Ql 1 Me wbw' flmawpeaple, pul:lndPfW'Rl

~ PltNT NUMIEIED lUTEIS IN

.'Mq....., ...... ~ . . . . ..-.~

... ......

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

mo. pd.

Qi....,

:••

I

33795 Hiland Rd.

~ t!Mt'OO 1

Main·

10 lllumiiii!M

I r I I I r • f:i:l:': ~~the~~

740-742-3411
Beyu Rena

·

1

j ~omeriJy, Ohio
' t 740·992·5212

tenence- Painting, vlnVI siding,

~~- Z

&amp;:""

LEWDIR:'I

lree estlmale call Chot, 740·992·
il323.
.

·

.
..
This year's Christ(TUlS compelllion
was based on a deal in "Bridge With·
ou1 Error," by Ron Klinger (Gollaticz, 1981 ).
.
· The first question, how should the
bidding go, is very difficult to
answer! I have given my favorite
sequence, but I expect to accept oth·
er sane sequences. (Agreed, with his
ltand, West would probably enter the
auction, but that is irrelevant!) Since ·
he has two aces, I feel South should
open one·spade, not four spades. And
the two replies to four no-trump are
for regular Blackwood and Roman
Key Card Blackwood. Opposite Key
Card, North knows lhjlt his partner
has the spade queen, so he can bid
seven with confidence.
In seven spades, the basic plan is
to discard a club from hand on dum·
my 's se&lt;;ond top diamond, then to
establish a club for a heart dt scard .
However, as _is often 1he case, it pays
to attack the side suit earlier rather
than later. After winning with the diamond king, cash. the spade king, theri
take the diamond ace, discarding a
low club. Play a club to 'the ace and
a club to dummy's king. Is the suit 3·
7? .If".s9, draw anol~er, round of
'trumps with d~mmy's jack, ruff a
club, draw the mi ssing trump(s),
return to dummy with a heart to the
ace, and cash a winning club.lf clubs
split 4,.1 and no one has trumped in,
,iuff a club, cross to dummy w1th a ·
trump, ruff a club, draw the missing
·trumps, go to dummy with a heart,
and take that 13th Club. (Anythmg

·

ed cab, e cylinder, 5 apead. atr,

Ohio o4-!l780.

Pas~

,.._

7 Elwblllea

Pass
4NT
f'ass
6 • (16) All pass

High &amp; Dry
Sell-Storage

..,..._..,..__ ....;,;...,

Livingston's Basement" Water
Proofing, an battmenl repairs
done, lree lltl"'atel, lifetime
guarantee. 12yra on job e•perl~

Ea11

2•
3t

'

~

Drywall, Siding , Roolo, Addl·
Ilona, Painting, etc. (304)874·
4823or(304)674-0155.

North

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass ·

similar will be :~~,,~,~~~~) &gt;letnelllin'}

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593--667tl
Athens, Ohio 45701 '
"A

'Al!a&lt;!d_,...l
•A!!a&lt;J411J,I·- - I

•..

'

carpentry, doora, wlndowo. bothl,

803 B(ownell Avenue, Mlddlepon,

DO '1'00 f-\1'-1/~ /'.No'( 1OO..i'DW Q£11
lt{\lt:~TI#\ffi11~ .'&lt;."'lJN.L'( ta«&gt;?

Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
. Larry S.chey

CIC

Cll'f'!Ptr of equal value_,' $3500.

...

.S-tbp In And-'See

tion, $5900, 740-992-1182 or 304-

'78 CJ·7, v-e -5 tpeod Joep Rag
top, 4WD, lor nle or trade lor

P"

5112-5025 Atheni

773-SOOS.

730 VIlli &amp; +WDI

...

: 6€t:,O~lt:f, YOU f-\1'-1/E. :,0 MNJ.'( .
: ffii/~Tr-\E.NT~, IT 1-'JXlT
lw:l? TO ~roo.. I

New Construction &amp;
ReotOdeling ··Kitchen
CabineiS· Vonyl Sldmg·
. Roofs • Decks •
Free Eadmates ·

1994 Chevy 5· 10 pickup ExtendPS, PB, 120.000 mites, good condition, 14500, 740·'1'!8·71.94 or

. .

1000 Sf. "" 7icHilr!

perience All Work GulrantHd.
French C.UY Maytag, 740•.46·
Home

•

'•

.

Home
lmprovementl
BASEMENT

Qeneral

Wt4Y

William Safrenek, Attorney

WATIAPIIOOF!NO
CARS FROM UIIMO. lm· unconditional
llletlme guarantee.
pounde IRapoe. Fee. SO Down /24 Local references
furnished . EsMol. 019.9% For Uotings 1-800·
tabllohed
1975.
COl
24 Hro. (7401
319-3323 Xl!t~. .
.
· 446·0870, 1-800.287-0576. Rog·
"'ars Walllrprooftng.
720 Trucka for Sale
. 1993 Foro F·350 XLT 4X4, 7.3 U· Appliance Pa~ts And Servtce: AI
trt 011111 Crew Cab, A/C, Tilt, ,Name ·Brenda Over 25 Yeart ExCruise, Power Windows, Spray In

.

· Bulldozer Services

SE RVICES

.304-773-5840.

MY Pf(OI,.fM
,. IS EGOTISM, BUT TtlfN

Haullng-Umestone*Gravel
Sand*Topsoii"Fill Dlrt*Mulch

CARDS!

a 4-WDe

~f C&amp;.AIMS

... .

*NOCR&amp;DIT
*NO SECURITY
DEPOSITSI.
*fOOCJ6 GUAMNIIED
APPROVALl
*CREDIT UMIT OF

2 Duiii'OU!Ine
3 WWII 4 Dick and
Blecey .
J-'1 dog
40 Borechl wggle 5. City In
41
to •
8

37 -Aviv
38 AdNIIO 111C1

By Phillip Alder
.

..llllnllruPtcv"'""' """

.foe, Tun1 Sid,
Dee &amp;Joey
Family &amp; Friend.

=~

Christmas
.competition
solution

For ll'tformflllill raglll'dlng ·

Lot~e ~luooys,

West

16
26

6)

DOWN

eoun
1

lleddtr11.,.

:=r'•

Soulh

3•
5 • 15

_,
51 BpooldiJ
ST Or.uon
Alnaxpenehla
·cigar

7Ac..-

31

·ntty

lead: • Q

·c ellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

$8.00 column .Inch Weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

21 DMI- •
23 T8ll agcy.
21 Billa Woidll
28 Dried up
21 Wt.h undone
30 City In

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

You're Trelled with Rllpectl

.AUIIIR···
rtls;e your
message

• 6
6 A 8 3

WORRYIIIUI

911-1945

Lie. I aO.eo .,,....,

of ;he .Ait6'!" .
·lf!Oiclihag O.,er you. ·
We ...Us you so
~~ery mueh .sach
and 81)ery day;
You ..Ul foret~er
be in OW' hearts.

730 Vane

3

• 5 4'

Dlvorded

RotpO •

50 Y rs. Combine!;~
Experience
Honest &amp; Reliable
Free Estimates
Senior Citizens
Discount.

AT 8:30 P.M. ,
·lfl•ln St.·,
Pomeray, OH
Paying $!11J.OQ

perga.,.

made u _e asier for
w becawe of'your
CORIIanl and lrwling
fauh in God.
You heprtrwlilyf
and believintf
lhrough aU of yoW' ·
pain and suffering.
You were 1ueh an
impiration lo aU
of w who·love you
so oory dearly. We
know aU of yoW'
pain .is gone now.
Your in Hea11en
. wuh God and all

6.

6AQI098 .?2

CRBDrr
PIOILIMI???
No Cncllt • Slow Cncllt • lenkruptey

.PWMBINCI

Thursdays

.

211 W. Meln SL
Pomoray, OH 45789
(2)111c

GAW Plasdes

p!v+ldoo wllle dllpoool

I

Ubl'llry

JACIS ROOfiNG

·you go, bul you ·

'

6

II:CI0-12:00

South

Pul;lllc Notice

WV 25287 (Acro10 lrom Lakin Clleh.

l

Eaot

QJ 9 85

unpll

,,__

5
10

Ready for a cbaop1

"--·

171V'e Pup'u

• K J
• A I 3
• A K 8
•K7542

ll:oo-4:30 Weekdayt

.

"tt.won'tMII"

199•

•

.

0~:

44 ,...,_
4f , . . •• lghl
! ..... 511Wed

,, _ _ -tung

ltpllc a Clet.m T.,U
IS.W•Pipe: 3" ttvu a•, ou Pip. • Retiluletlllrlll

Houra

20 Yrs. _Exp. • Ina. Owner: Ronnie Jones

. Rtloe:attd Olvfder Gate To Hall

I

45771

13 Bilby ,.11-allron
Alii«--

740 815 3113
4" thl'\l 48" Plllllc Cutvwt In Stock
full LIM Of Walw saw.ge 1'lnka-

RC*I

740-381 0130.

1\tppll'll ......... Ohio -··-~

II. Rt. 7

21170 ...,.,.

11118'

con. Foundation BloodllMI;

U Color al
40 AcroM
12 EniptG~~ . 4f Nlcla- .a l
7 Bwltw tend'o

Jllllghll Qr

SELF STORAIE

8303, 11:00 A.M.ll&gt; 1:00 P.M.
IQIA2-0id

•

-.

------------------------------------------------- ~
ACROSS
' 42 ConclltlaM
44WIIIta~­ .,...,.,,., •
1 Twlell
lnlla.

No. 3. below.

l' ·l'l"rl'tl

1 UNsc•AMii
MOvE uribs
TO GET ANSWEI
1111111

,.

'

c

ICI'M 1.111 ANIWIIS
Graven • Liken - Salon - Plight· THINKING

My elderly aunt believed that the purpose of books
was to trap the mind into doing itl own THINKING.

..

�:

•
•

Pomeroy, Mldcltport, Ohio

••

I

Tu••deJ, '"*"-Y 1, aoao

810 Farm Equ~Pmet~t

ua_...

JO .. Trldor, JO 3'1t Plow, 110ft.
Gralft E..,_ wllh
JD
s..-.(7401-2!1HD11

830

PHIT.LIP

Uvwtock

ALDER

1·32 Ft. _ H o ! u _

Holda 4 HOr.. And Hoi CIIOng•
tng ROGOI U,OOO CoM 140-Sit·

I

Rod--

Bro"" 1 Whho 3 v..r Old

Pony.

RKIM,Ohlo

.,.op

&amp; Whllo Mini Golding Pony,

-

$400: v.. rllng Btlgln Golding.

Dark Sorrel While Mane l Full

. BlUe, Good looking Cob, MOO:
tatll Mortll 1e Ft. Ho!u /Stool&lt;,
~ 1 Ft 1lll. 7 Ft Wldo, 7,r:#J
Pd A•lt, 8 lug Spoke Whotilo.

I

740-848-2217'
Sizes 5' X 10
to 10' x 30'

..o.lt'l'tl

.t\.~

·~~

7~. .

...........

llNNUD IIWWIEBmBIB.INC.

7:00AM·8PM

Big Horooo, $S.800, 740·387-

840 Hay i Grein
Eor corn. 13.00 liuahel, call 740247-3012.
Strow: Bright Wire Tie Str~w 'llror
'Round Delivery l Volume Dla·

count Available . Heritage Farm.

(304)675-S724.
.......,,HOJForSoto

200 Round Batea of llrat cutting
Hay, harvllttd In 1998. Hay Ia
located at u,. Lakin Stattlf:arm,
Box 9, Ptanl Lane Road, lakin,

State 11oapltal, Rt. 62 North of
Point Pleaaanl, WV) . Hay has
been stored Inside. Average
wtlght per bale Is 900-11 00 lbo.
Hay will be aold In unltt .of 2!5

bales per person. Our personnel
and equipment will aulst In
loading. Hay 11 available for In·
apectlon, prll.. r to bid . Contact
Peraon: John Leporl, Acllng

Manager, (3041671Hl856.

Written blda will be accepted until FebruarY 11 , 2000. Btda can
be mailed to : WV Department of
Agriculture, Marketing arid De·
velopment Division, Land. Sac·
uon, P.o.~aox 160, Slatersville.
WV 28175. (Fateed bids will be
a&lt;:copted at (304)652-eo901.

TRANSPO RTATION

Public;: Notice

On a.tunllly, Ftbrulry 12,
aooo at 10:00 a.m ., tht

r•urv•• lha right to rtltCt
eny or ell blcla or to ramova
eny unit lrom the ••I• at
tillY time.
·
Art'llngementa mey be
m.cte to lnepect eny at the
llllovtlnamtd whlolaa prior
to tlta Nit by Clllllng 740-

llome National Bank .will
offar far Nit et public
euollon on the lank .,.tdng
IDIIINI follawlng vthlalu:
Frenklln Bklddor Modal

170XL
11110 Ford Renger JCLT
VINI1FTCR10T4LUB81278
'Tilt termt at the Nit era
The Home Notlanol Bank

I ;;;;;:::;:;l;n;;;M:;;•m;;o;ry;=;;;;;
II

In Lovilyf Memory
Of

Edith V, Manuel
Au,gwl29,1934
February 1, 1999

MI-2210• .
(2) 1,4,1, 1041C
•

'

•

Southern Ohio D~

&amp; CONSTRUOION

St. Rt. 7

New Roofa • Repairs

Tuppen Plalna, OH

tor
•R-tlol

• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
• Painling • Plumbing
Free E$11mates

740-985·3813
Spr111 hYelop•tat
Speclll · i

Joseph Jacks
740-992:-2068.'

1 1/2" Water Pipe
· 841.00 per
hundred ft.

.-c-rdol
•bid.....

s.m.a Melp .... c..
eo.•r

CoD for1101elaformoU..

1,G3100 1 lTV), pd.

Public Notice
1 lt9 Annuel Flnenclel
Raport 11 ~omplote and
evellebla lor r•vlaw et tlta
alflco
of
the
Cltrk/Tre..urar.
Matgo Co. Dle)riCI Public

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On

KJ9?62

• Q 10
• 10 1 • 2
• Q J 9 6

710 Autos for Sale
CARS $100; $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND . Honda's Toyota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·

ties. Call Nowl 800-772-7470;

EXT. 7832.

1973 Fled Plymouth Satellite 383
Motor, Automatic, Runs Great!

U.!IOO 000, 740-25&amp;-1233.

1980· 90 Honda&amp; From $29/Mo.,
Impounds! 0 Down, 24 Months 0

19.9% listings, 900-319·3323 Ext.

3901.

1984 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Mint

Condition, 740.387-71 t7.
1985 Escort, $695, 740-446·
2155.
1988 CJ7 8 Cylinder, 4 Speed,
Ham Top, $4,600, 740-245-9443.
'988 Trans·Am 350, Automli.tic,
Good Condition, $1,995. 740·
4-46-ll390.
1988 Parle Avenue, Nice Shape,

. $3.1500, 000 740,'J88-9788.
1989 Oldl Regency Broohhm,
IJ~;Cellent condition. Nice Car.
$3,900. (304177~..

1990 Geo Tractuoi, LSI, 4x4, A.C.,
5Spd., Caa:aette, LookafRuns
Good. 3ml per gallon. (304)6757126.

1991 Plymouth l.aoor RS, loaded,
107.000 Mites, $3,600 080: tl65
Toyota 4 Runner 4 wo·. Loaded,
Rough, $1 ,500 OBO. 740·448·
6962.

1992 Cavalier RIS 82K $3.195:
1991 Cavalier 84K $2,695; 1989
Cutlaas Supreme 79K $2,495; .
1989 Porulac 6000LE 4 Doors,
96K $1,795; Other Front Wheal
Drive Cars And Pick~Ups, Cook

Nqw Is rho 1/rnt (or g·r·r·r-«11.
"""' In 1/to classl(lrds

$300.00 Covwltll
$500.00 Stllrburet , .
'
Prog...ulve
top IIIMI.

II~

been a year now
•ince God caUed
you home. 11"'"'
so hard for "" lo lei

No!;~..

Clll Now for lllltllnl Ap(protwellll""

WICK'S Hfi.OU
and

EXCfiVATinq

667-nn

1992 Dodge Ram 250 Dlllel 314
ton pickup, excellent condition,
1992 Ford PrObe Gl 4 Cylinder 5 $8900, 711J.992.5072.
Speed, CD Player A/C , $3,500,
1993 F-350 Ford ' 4K4, Olesol XlT,
740-388-8888.
Automatic, PW, PL. 740·3881984 Z·34 Lumina, 59,000 8796.
Mllel: 1 Owner. (304)875-6457.
t994 GMC Jimmy, 40oor, 4·W·
1994 Gornot Color Buict&lt; Regal, 2 Drive. Loaded, High Mlleave, Ex~
Dcora, Equipped With Everything cellant Condition. $7999.
Very Good Condition, $8,150, (304167!1-7948 betlre 9PM.
Motoro. 741J.448.0103.

740·245-5008.

PontlacJGrand~AM ,

2dr.f

5tpd, Teal Green wltlnted wind·
owa, American Racing Wheals,
New Tires, C.O. Player &amp; Car
Alarm, Excellent Condition.

740

Motorcyclae

'92 Polaris 250 4-wheeler, $800
or trade l.or decent car, 740.742·

2999.

$1 . ~00.(304I773·S103 . iftor 1999 Polaris 4x4 L,ss than 500
Mllao, $5.000 Firm. Phone:
5:30PM or'- Mooaago.
(304}S76-3259, AIIM 5PM.
1998 Mul1ang 33QOO mlloo: t989
c...tt. Z-24. (304)67H1M.
. 760 Auto Parte &amp;
Acce11orln
1999 CheVy .Cavalier, White, 2
Oro, S Spd .. Am/Fm Cao11no, AI Budget Priced Transmllllons All
C, Rotr Dotrost. 1,950 mlleo. Alii&lt;· Type•. Access To Over 10,000
lng $8,250.00 Obo. 740-256-1011
Transmlaalons, CVC Jolnta, 740·
24H677.
93 CuUa11 Supreme 2 dr,
73,000mllea, roal sharp $8500.

.

.

CARS $100, $500 l UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's ToyOII'I,
Chovya, Joepo, And Sport Utili-

810

ties . Call Nowl 800·772·7470;

EXT8338.

•

(740) 99Z-3470

BORN LOSER

-nor.740-245-M15.

1993 Ford fllngor Splalh, 4 cyl, 5
ap., 90,000 mills, a•cellent condi-

779S.

:et:

·

CREDIT

I'

. ......
$1~00D.DD

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

A LOAN?
.. same Day

.

NO

1·~9008

Now lleatln8

Ext 854.

• Bad Credit OK
• Eaay.Qualllylng
• Faat Setvlce

. • Low Paymenta
• Conlldtnllal

i

111ft a D6Wipap81
ddnnld directly ..
, . . door

Calllll-21•

-- · ·

.

~~ ~

M.....~~­

E.pdp-ntPut. ·

Factory Aaihorized

C...,..JHPut. .
Dealerw. ,

·,

't

Ill(.; ..

Ne:w Homaa • Vlrilfl \

SldiQQ• Nt1w G~

•Replacement Wlndolila
•Room Additions

740-992·7643.

740-982·2529. ·

Jlms Drywall &amp; .Construction.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

IOIIIT IISSILl
COIISTRUCTIOII

HOWUD.-

mobile hotne repair and mort. For

Advertlalng.
oonllnL

7~3221 .
1990 Mazda van, good bOdy.

am/
fm CIIHite, needs trenemiMion

-

· $500, 741J.992-7111~.

,

!"- .... ,..

11p1- .nulnller 11et.c1 .,.._

· •·Homn .
•Gingll .

ESlJMATES
8111! . 44~ -

~~~~rlc1t, WV000308, 304-t75·

FREE ESTIMATES,
Calla) .

IICIWiTIIII (0.:
u

I'll

, •·z

7

.~

"

"

Houae &amp; Tr.,Uer Slteo··

FREE

Residential or commerctal wiring,
new Hrvfce or repairs. Miller 1.1·
een"d electrician . Ridenour

~•••lML•m1nn•

s.,;,..

~Complele

Stop &amp; Compere

Refrigeration

•Roojlng

B~Hr &amp; Badrlsoe

Remodeling

' I.

•

Ia not -I'WI~IIblel
.

llc:onilaDt our Mlee.-.on ··I t

1953 Dodge M·37 Military Truck, enco.(304)885-3887.
;:~~. Motor Work, 1750 ' . 840 ElectriCII end
1978 Ford Bronco 4x4, S28So,

ITUESDAY

I&amp;

CAlL NOW 1·1100-250-41)98

aa...,.

7/II/IFN

Land Clearing &amp; .'
Grading

•

Seprk Syo,._ &amp; •
Ulllitieo
· '

(740) tfWIII • I

port now while tlicy're
·
(Aus. 23-Sept. 22) li.
tO do SO. Tiley Want lo help, SO let
SOCial miller iJ. which you' VO been .
them. .
,
.
re\IIQ1Inllo·aet iavolvcd can be titanARIES (Morch 21-April 19)
. IJcd with relatiVI! ease today _if
Because othas core a l!"at deal
you'~ willin&amp;ID uy, Don't be afraid
obout you, one or two of tllml will!'" '
·of the challenge.
.
.
· playing a .biJ hand o~ your behalf ; ·.
LmRA (Sepl. 23-0&lt;:1. 23) Mako
tod1y in a motter lhat 11 of penonal ,
domesdo or family IJlbllen your top
· sipilicance to you.
1 • priorities today. becouse the resultJ
TAURUS (April 20-Ma)\ 20) A · .. ' will be "ceplionally aratifyili&amp;.
· situation that is a miahttoo IDUJh fQI' · . , You'll hive more coopel'llion thon
nn associate to handle may be placed
you thought.
.
· un your shouldero today. However, ·
SCORPIO (Oct, 74-Nov..· 22)
instet!l of ,....ntins ~is, it:l' !&gt;e 1 . . ·Don't aotdiscourqcd ir your ochcd·
·
ule appem overwhelming .and
· feather in yo• cap.
GEMINf(May 21 -June 20JYour
backed-up a bil todaY· You're in 1
thouchtfulness towards anothj;r moy · • ve,Y favor~ble cycle where the ful•
be billancid out today, so altliOIIJh I
lillment of YO!I' hopes. can be real·
deed you did in the pall did noi reop
lr.cd .
instantallCOUicotnpcnsodon.llfPUid
· SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov, 23,Dec.
, now be rewarded in ,.,..-.
·"
21) P1lce your focus today on your
CANCER (June 2 1-July 22) Your ·
m•terill obj~ives, because you
noble qualities of bein&amp; • stand-up
could be extrell)ely lucky at this time·
pcnonOI'qnqueslionll&gt;le~moy
. iii reallzlftJ multiple Jalns.' Think
be called upon 111111 put to aoOd illo r· money.
&lt;
•
today. No-* yoa hlvuo ll*y
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-lan. 19)
&amp;lends.
+ + ·. Circumstlnccs' ~ ,oing your way
LBO (July 23-Aua. 22) ~It
today end could ~ rather lonunale
poulbly of o short duretion, your
for you IR several situations where
financial trend could like a pleulint
you hi~ a atrma. personal interest
wrn,fcrthebea&amp;iitodeyduito.., I; Doa'lbe afniclto 10 fora nullllierof
CJII!I'I killllnoa. 0o eiUI..,S'tiiiM
. @"PI•.

.. .
\

.....

., . . _ _ lor-.. T....... -

.N - 0

,

.

..
'B R W
SRW

ITES

NAUBWC

· RMIYJC

SRWAG

S R W 0

IWtPWGE

ELWVAWE

YOWYSADW
VYJCXTS

YGW

PWEI

RYDW

TU
YS

F R W lC

•

..

SRWAG

F Yo. •

WGAV . RTUUWG
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: •11 yQU step on people In this llle, you're golrig to
oome bac~ as a coctuoach.• - (Former outfielder) Wille Davis

L 0 CE RE

I

rI I I

I

.

··:'

."

U H S MU

I

PRHAC ~ ,
1-..,..;._.....,_,.........,

·r

1 1

·I always knaw that the ·mosl

. effective safety device in your car

\

lu cpp In your rear view_-- - • • ~

you deoalop lrom lllp

THESE SQUAIES

•a..IJ-..-~

~

by Lull Clmpoa

c.MbrityCiplwo=:a.•,. .,.CNollld from Ql 1 Me wbw' flmawpeaple, pul:lndPfW'Rl

~ PltNT NUMIEIED lUTEIS IN

.'Mq....., ...... ~ . . . . ..-.~

... ......

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

mo. pd.

Qi....,

:••

I

33795 Hiland Rd.

~ t!Mt'OO 1

Main·

10 lllumiiii!M

I r I I I r • f:i:l:': ~~the~~

740-742-3411
Beyu Rena

·

1

j ~omeriJy, Ohio
' t 740·992·5212

tenence- Painting, vlnVI siding,

~~- Z

&amp;:""

LEWDIR:'I

lree estlmale call Chot, 740·992·
il323.
.

·

.
..
This year's Christ(TUlS compelllion
was based on a deal in "Bridge With·
ou1 Error," by Ron Klinger (Gollaticz, 1981 ).
.
· The first question, how should the
bidding go, is very difficult to
answer! I have given my favorite
sequence, but I expect to accept oth·
er sane sequences. (Agreed, with his
ltand, West would probably enter the
auction, but that is irrelevant!) Since ·
he has two aces, I feel South should
open one·spade, not four spades. And
the two replies to four no-trump are
for regular Blackwood and Roman
Key Card Blackwood. Opposite Key
Card, North knows lhjlt his partner
has the spade queen, so he can bid
seven with confidence.
In seven spades, the basic plan is
to discard a club from hand on dum·
my 's se&lt;;ond top diamond, then to
establish a club for a heart dt scard .
However, as _is often 1he case, it pays
to attack the side suit earlier rather
than later. After winning with the diamond king, cash. the spade king, theri
take the diamond ace, discarding a
low club. Play a club to 'the ace and
a club to dummy's king. Is the suit 3·
7? .If".s9, draw anol~er, round of
'trumps with d~mmy's jack, ruff a
club, draw the mi ssing trump(s),
return to dummy with a heart to the
ace, and cash a winning club.lf clubs
split 4,.1 and no one has trumped in,
,iuff a club, cross to dummy w1th a ·
trump, ruff a club, draw the missing
·trumps, go to dummy with a heart,
and take that 13th Club. (Anythmg

·

ed cab, e cylinder, 5 apead. atr,

Ohio o4-!l780.

Pas~

,.._

7 Elwblllea

Pass
4NT
f'ass
6 • (16) All pass

High &amp; Dry
Sell-Storage

..,..._..,..__ ....;,;...,

Livingston's Basement" Water
Proofing, an battmenl repairs
done, lree lltl"'atel, lifetime
guarantee. 12yra on job e•perl~

Ea11

2•
3t

'

~

Drywall, Siding , Roolo, Addl·
Ilona, Painting, etc. (304)874·
4823or(304)674-0155.

North

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass ·

similar will be :~~,,~,~~~~) &gt;letnelllin'}

750 East State Street Phone (740) 593--667tl
Athens, Ohio 45701 '
"A

'Al!a&lt;!d_,...l
•A!!a&lt;J411J,I·- - I

•..

'

carpentry, doora, wlndowo. bothl,

803 B(ownell Avenue, Mlddlepon,

DO '1'00 f-\1'-1/~ /'.No'( 1OO..i'DW Q£11
lt{\lt:~TI#\ffi11~ .'&lt;."'lJN.L'( ta«&gt;?

Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
. Larry S.chey

CIC

Cll'f'!Ptr of equal value_,' $3500.

...

.S-tbp In And-'See

tion, $5900, 740-992-1182 or 304-

'78 CJ·7, v-e -5 tpeod Joep Rag
top, 4WD, lor nle or trade lor

P"

5112-5025 Atheni

773-SOOS.

730 VIlli &amp; +WDI

...

: 6€t:,O~lt:f, YOU f-\1'-1/E. :,0 MNJ.'( .
: ffii/~Tr-\E.NT~, IT 1-'JXlT
lw:l? TO ~roo.. I

New Construction &amp;
ReotOdeling ··Kitchen
CabineiS· Vonyl Sldmg·
. Roofs • Decks •
Free Eadmates ·

1994 Chevy 5· 10 pickup ExtendPS, PB, 120.000 mites, good condition, 14500, 740·'1'!8·71.94 or

. .

1000 Sf. "" 7icHilr!

perience All Work GulrantHd.
French C.UY Maytag, 740•.46·
Home

•

'•

.

Home
lmprovementl
BASEMENT

Qeneral

Wt4Y

William Safrenek, Attorney

WATIAPIIOOF!NO
CARS FROM UIIMO. lm· unconditional
llletlme guarantee.
pounde IRapoe. Fee. SO Down /24 Local references
furnished . EsMol. 019.9% For Uotings 1-800·
tabllohed
1975.
COl
24 Hro. (7401
319-3323 Xl!t~. .
.
· 446·0870, 1-800.287-0576. Rog·
"'ars Walllrprooftng.
720 Trucka for Sale
. 1993 Foro F·350 XLT 4X4, 7.3 U· Appliance Pa~ts And Servtce: AI
trt 011111 Crew Cab, A/C, Tilt, ,Name ·Brenda Over 25 Yeart ExCruise, Power Windows, Spray In

.

· Bulldozer Services

SE RVICES

.304-773-5840.

MY Pf(OI,.fM
,. IS EGOTISM, BUT TtlfN

Haullng-Umestone*Gravel
Sand*Topsoii"Fill Dlrt*Mulch

CARDS!

a 4-WDe

~f C&amp;.AIMS

... .

*NOCR&amp;DIT
*NO SECURITY
DEPOSITSI.
*fOOCJ6 GUAMNIIED
APPROVALl
*CREDIT UMIT OF

2 Duiii'OU!Ine
3 WWII 4 Dick and
Blecey .
J-'1 dog
40 Borechl wggle 5. City In
41
to •
8

37 -Aviv
38 AdNIIO 111C1

By Phillip Alder
.

..llllnllruPtcv"'""' """

.foe, Tun1 Sid,
Dee &amp;Joey
Family &amp; Friend.

=~

Christmas
.competition
solution

For ll'tformflllill raglll'dlng ·

Lot~e ~luooys,

West

16
26

6)

DOWN

eoun
1

lleddtr11.,.

:=r'•

Soulh

3•
5 • 15

_,
51 BpooldiJ
ST Or.uon
Alnaxpenehla
·cigar

7Ac..-

31

·ntty

lead: • Q

·c ellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

$8.00 column .Inch Weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

21 DMI- •
23 T8ll agcy.
21 Billa Woidll
28 Dried up
21 Wt.h undone
30 City In

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

You're Trelled with Rllpectl

.AUIIIR···
rtls;e your
message

• 6
6 A 8 3

WORRYIIIUI

911-1945

Lie. I aO.eo .,,....,

of ;he .Ait6'!" .
·lf!Oiclihag O.,er you. ·
We ...Us you so
~~ery mueh .sach
and 81)ery day;
You ..Ul foret~er
be in OW' hearts.

730 Vane

3

• 5 4'

Dlvorded

RotpO •

50 Y rs. Combine!;~
Experience
Honest &amp; Reliable
Free Estimates
Senior Citizens
Discount.

AT 8:30 P.M. ,
·lfl•ln St.·,
Pomeray, OH
Paying $!11J.OQ

perga.,.

made u _e asier for
w becawe of'your
CORIIanl and lrwling
fauh in God.
You heprtrwlilyf
and believintf
lhrough aU of yoW' ·
pain and suffering.
You were 1ueh an
impiration lo aU
of w who·love you
so oory dearly. We
know aU of yoW'
pain .is gone now.
Your in Hea11en
. wuh God and all

6.

6AQI098 .?2

CRBDrr
PIOILIMI???
No Cncllt • Slow Cncllt • lenkruptey

.PWMBINCI

Thursdays

.

211 W. Meln SL
Pomoray, OH 45789
(2)111c

GAW Plasdes

p!v+ldoo wllle dllpoool

I

Ubl'llry

JACIS ROOfiNG

·you go, bul you ·

'

6

II:CI0-12:00

South

Pul;lllc Notice

WV 25287 (Acro10 lrom Lakin Clleh.

l

Eaot

QJ 9 85

unpll

,,__

5
10

Ready for a cbaop1

"--·

171V'e Pup'u

• K J
• A I 3
• A K 8
•K7542

ll:oo-4:30 Weekdayt

.

"tt.won'tMII"

199•

•

.

0~:

44 ,...,_
4f , . . •• lghl
! ..... 511Wed

,, _ _ -tung

ltpllc a Clet.m T.,U
IS.W•Pipe: 3" ttvu a•, ou Pip. • Retiluletlllrlll

Houra

20 Yrs. _Exp. • Ina. Owner: Ronnie Jones

. Rtloe:attd Olvfder Gate To Hall

I

45771

13 Bilby ,.11-allron
Alii«--

740 815 3113
4" thl'\l 48" Plllllc Cutvwt In Stock
full LIM Of Walw saw.ge 1'lnka-

RC*I

740-381 0130.

1\tppll'll ......... Ohio -··-~

II. Rt. 7

21170 ...,.,.

11118'

con. Foundation BloodllMI;

U Color al
40 AcroM
12 EniptG~~ . 4f Nlcla- .a l
7 Bwltw tend'o

Jllllghll Qr

SELF STORAIE

8303, 11:00 A.M.ll&gt; 1:00 P.M.
IQIA2-0id

•

-.

------------------------------------------------- ~
ACROSS
' 42 ConclltlaM
44WIIIta~­ .,...,.,,., •
1 Twlell
lnlla.

No. 3. below.

l' ·l'l"rl'tl

1 UNsc•AMii
MOvE uribs
TO GET ANSWEI
1111111

,.

'

c

ICI'M 1.111 ANIWIIS
Graven • Liken - Salon - Plight· THINKING

My elderly aunt believed that the purpose of books
was to trap the mind into doing itl own THINKING.

..

�•

.P . B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddlapo...., Ohio

Support·Your .Local
High School
Basketball Team'

TOUCH TONE TElLER
We'reAitc&gt;apHere
24Hours alloy 7 Doya a Wick

1-877-447-3617
TOU.FREE
•ACCOUNI'BALANCES

• TRANSACI'ION DETAILS
• TRANSFER FUNDS'
•MAKE LOAN PAYMENTS'
• BALANCE CHECKBOOK

1\llldlly, February 1, 2000

Cfhe ClJJicker

'Buggy
••

Stop in an&lt;J..see
.. us at
our New LOCation
• Gifts

A.VAIUBU: NOW AT•••

birBankln4-

~Farmers Bank
........, ·

&amp; Savings Company

Pomet'Dy, OH
Tuppers Plains, OH
Gallipolis, OH ~

740/882-2138
7o40/8e7-3161

74014411-2285'

• An alllhoria!ion form neediiO he a:Nni'rt'!'

Crow's Famlly
Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky
Fried Chicken

· Marauders' 1999-2000 agenda
.D.IIL
Oppqntnt

Lady Marauders'1999-2000 alate .
DilL
OM &gt;'Wit ·

Dec. 3 ......................................... :., ......................... River Valley
Dec. 7 ........................................................................... Southem
Dec. IO ................. ,................................................. at Alexander
Dec. 14....................................................................at Waterford
Dec. 17 ............................................................ Nelsonville-York
Dec. 18 ............................................. :.............. at Wheelersburg
Dec. 28.............................................................. 0allia A,(:l\demy
Jan. 4...... ~........................................................................ Eastem
Jan. 7.......... ,......................................................,.......... :... Belpre
Jan. ll...:.................:....................................................At Miller
Jan. 18............................. :.,............ :....................... ,.. at Wellston
Jan. 21 ................... :.. :.......................................... Vmton County
J8J!. 2S ....................... :................................................ atTrimble
Jan. 28 ........................................................................ Aiexander
Jan. 29................................................................. at River Valley
Feb. ! .... ........................................................... Federal Hocking
Feb. 4 ............................................... :.......... at Nelsonville-York
Feb. 11.. ................:.: ......................................:.... :.. :...... 111 Belpre
·Feb. 15 .......................................................,.................. Wellston
Feb. 18 ...................................:........................ at Vinton County

Nov. 27 .............................. :......................... ,...... at Riiii:r Valley
Nov. 29 ............................................................ at Marietta (JVs)
Dec. 2.....................................................:..... at Federal 'Hocking
Dec. 6 ....................................................................... 111 Southern
Dec. 9 ........................................................................ Alexander
Dec. 13 ....................................................................... Waterford
Dec. 16......................... .'.............................. at Nelsonville-York·
Dec. :fu......:......:......................................:.............:,..... at Eastem
Dec. 27-28 .................................. at l.og&amp;D Holiday Touniament
Jan. 6::.\. .............. .'................:....................................... at•Belprc
Jan. 8................ :.......................... :........ :.................. River Valley
.Jan. 10 .............................................................................. 1Miller
Jan .. 13 :.........................................................,............... Wtllston
Jan. 17 ........................................................ Marietta (freshmen)
Jan. 20 ............................................................. at Vmton County
Jan. 24 .......................... .'.................................................Ttlihbtc
Jan. 27 .................................................................... atAiexiinder
Jan. 3l ................................................ .'............ Nels00ville-York
Feb. 3 ..................................:............................................ Belprc
Feb.7 ...., .................................................................... 111 Wellston
FC&lt;b. m........................................:....,.................. Vmton County
Feb: ll ............................::: ...........................'................at Belpre

228 Main St. ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone
·992-5432
·Eastern 1999-2000 agenda

Teanu
We recognize your
efforts .fo be the
best you can be,
and wish y~u the .
best this season!

"The area's best selection of
Athletic footwear"

219 H. Second Ave.

Middleport

87 Mill Street
·Middleport, Oh
(beside Acquls~IOns) ·

We support our
local teams

·HARTWELL

House
Gifts
Antiques
Folk Art
100 East Main
·Historic Downtown
· Pomeroy, Ob

Drive-Tin WWow

. Cood Luelt To
All Area

• Antiques
• Candles ·.

Eastern Girls 1999-2000 alate

DilL

Opponent
Dec. 7 ................................................................ ~!'Belpre- 6 pm ·
Dec. 10 ................................ ,............. Federal Hocking 6:30pm

Dec. ll.'..................... ,.................. ,............Eastetn Pike 9:30 atn
Dec. 14...............................................................Aiexander 6 pm
Dec. 17 ........................................................... at Miller.6:30 pm
Dec. 21 .......... ,.................................... :...... at South Oallia 6 pm ·
Jan. 4:.................................................................. ,at Meigs 6 pm
Jan. 7................................. ,...... ;..................... Trimble 6:30 priie
Jan. ll ................................................... At Vinton County 6 pm .
Jan. 14.:............................................. ,.......... Waterford 6:30pm
Jan. 18 .............................................................. at Wahama 6 pm
Jan. 2l.. ....................................... ,.............. at Southem 6:30pm
Jan. 2S ...............................................:: ... Nelsonville-York 6 pm
Jan. 28 ............................................ at Federal Hocking 6:30pm
Feb. I......................,.................. :... :..................... Wellston 6 pm ·
Feb. 4.................................................................. Miller 6:30pm
Feb. 8 ..................... ,............................................. Wahama 6 pm '
Feb. ll .............. ........................................... at Trimble 6:30pm
Feb. 15 .................:................ ."........................ at Waterford,6 pm
Feb . .18 ........................ .-.............................. Southem• 6:30pm
• Senior Night
'

1-740-992-7696

IlldL

Op!!QDint

.Dec. 2 ........................................................ at Wellston-5:55pm' •
_Dec. 6...........................................................:..... Belpre 5:55pm·
Dec. 9............................................ at Federal Hocking 5:55 pm
Dec. 13 .............. ......................... :............. aiAiexander 5:55pm
I;&gt;ec. l6 ............................................................... MIIIer 5:55pm
Dec: 20 ............................................................... Mcigs S:55 pm
Dec. 27 &amp; 30 .............................. Toumamcni at Beaver Eastern
.Jim. 3 ......................................................... at South Oallia 6 pm
Jan. 6 ............................................ ,............... at Trimble.5:55 pm
Jan. 10 ................ :........ :: ...................... Vmton County 5:55 pm
Jan. 13 ... ,............................... :.... :............. al Waterford 5:55 pm
Jan. 20 ............................................................ Soulhern 5:55 pol
Jan. 24 ........................................... &amp;1 NelsonviUe~York 5:55 pm ·
Jan. 26 ................................................. :.... :..~. Soutb Gallia 6 pm
ian. 27................................................ Fedcral Hocking 5:55pm ·
Jan. 31 .............. ,............................................. at MiUer 5:55pm
Feb. _3 ..................... .'•••:...............:.....,••••••• .'..... :.Trimble 5:55pm
Feb.7 ..............................-........................... ,.Waterford• 5:55pm
Feb. 10 ....................................................... at Southern 5:55 p!ll'
• Senior:Night

Office Service·
&amp; Supply .
New Hours:
Mon-Fri 9-5 pm
Sat. 9:30 to 2 pm
•

137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh .
45760

740-992-1381
•

•

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8 OZ. JAR
JEWELRY

CLEANER

$3.00

For Use With

Gameboye

PowerSet
Southem. 1CMKI-2000 agenda
- ~

~MM~

7 ....................................................._. ........... at Meigs- 6 pm
Dec. 10 ............................................................... Miller 6:30pm
· Dec. ll ...........................,.......................... South Oailia 6:30am
Dec. 14...................................:......... :.................Belprc 6:30 inn
Dec. 17 ..................................................... at Waterford 6:30pm
Jan. 4 ........................................................ atAiexander 6:30pm .
Jan. 7.................................. ,............. Federal H!JCking 6:30 pme
Jan. 11 ................. :.................................Nelsonville -York 6 pm
Jan. 14................... ,......,............................... at Trimble 6:30pm
Jan. 15....................... .'......................................at Wahama 6 pm
Jan. 21 .......................... ~.,.............................. Eastern 6:30pm
Jan. ·:zs ..............................:...................;.. ,.: ...... at Wellston 6 pm
Jan. 28 ........................................................... at Miller 6:30pm
Feb. ! ........................:.. ,............................. Vinton County 6 pm
Feb. 4.....,...........................:.......................... Waterford 6:30pm
Feb. 5.........:..........................................at South Oallia 6:30pm
Feb. p ............'.........:..................... at Federal Hocking 6:30pm
Feb. 15 ..............................:................................... Trimble 6 pm .
, Feb. 18...... ~ .................... ~ .............................. at Eistcrn 6:30pm
J)ec.

=

· Color or Pocket

Southern Girls 1999-20oo slate
IlllL .
.
owxm•nt
Dec. 2....................... :.............. .-....................... at Vlntoo Q)unty
Dec. 6 ...... ~ .........................;······ ..;............ ~ ...................... J:.Meigs
.
Dec. 9....... ....................................................................
al"rMiller
Dec. 13.~ .... ,,.,,.. ,,,,.,~, ,,,,, ,,..,,,,,~,,,,,.,,,,, ..:.................... :... 8t~'Belprc
Dec. 16 ............... :.............................:......................... Waterford
Dec. 20 ........... ,..................................................,.....:.. Aimnder
Dec. 23 ,.. :....................................................... Wahama' ·S:SS pm
Dec. 30 ............................... :....., ......................... at SOutli Gallia
Jan. 3........................................................ 0bio V&amp;lley•Christian
Jan. 6 .............................................................at Federat Hocking
Jan. 10 .. :...................... ,..............................
at Nelson\fillc' Yort
•
Jari. J3 ................. :............................ ,.........................(.:.Trimblc
Jan. 17 ...............................................:..at Ohio Valley thristian
ian. 24 ..................................................................'... ::.!.Wcllslon
Jan. 27 ......................................·...............................:..:..... :Miller
Jan. 31 .............................................. :.....................:1[Waterford
Feb. 3.................:...................................,....• :... F~ Hockin&amp;
feb.7 ......... :............................................................ :.:.•!Trimble
Feb. lO .............. :................ :.............................. Eaafern'S:SS pm

WE SEIITYO.
FAVORITE TUCIOI

I" .. ,;

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. . Wllllama P~1a, .
Plum ...... Sapplleo,

•

Koro-San Beaten

992-6611
•Hours• Mon, Ttiur. Frl
7:00 AM-5:00 PM
Sat. Till 3:00 PM

. VILLEY lU.ER &amp;
.CO.
555

l~g~ls _r
''

Carpet

...

'.

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TO THE GYM•

.'fila lora• Wll..l Hor..•
261·H lnlctar

'B AUM ·
LUMB£8 ,

Qual

Furniture·Plus·
We ·support the
local tearntJ

Oblo .

J.

'

·16? N. 2od.Ave.
Middleport; OH 45760
"I

74U-992-7028
.
'

i
'•

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\

.•
•••

=t,·~

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