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                  <text>Wednesday
February 2, 2000

Our View: Improve funding formula, A4
What's happening in Meigs County, A6
'Eastern boys roll to 14th straight conquest, 81

:Todq:Sunny

High: 30s; Low: 10.
~redly:

Cloudy
High: 408; Low: 30t
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Sports
Wildcats upJtt
TennuJtt V&lt;Jiunteerl :

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-Page82

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Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum e 50 , Number 167

Single Copy · 35 Cents

!.Utility company discourages the placing of signs .on poles :~
.

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.: POMEROY -Another election sea'

the nails, staples and tacks used to hold · climber strapped to each leg, the line
posters and signs on utility poles can · mechanic drives the gaff deep into the
interfere with the work ofline mechan- wood with each step he or she takes up
ics.
the pole.
"Our line mechanics often use boot
"To safely support a worker's entire
attachments called climbers to ascend weight, . the gaff m"ust bury itself deeply.
· poles,'' said Gregory Pauley, district mart.- into the pole,"·he added. "If it encounters
ager for AEP in Athens. "A climber has a a hard obstruction, such as a staple, nail
sharp steel gaff, or point, about :u1 inch- .o r tack, even the most skilled and expeand-a"half long at the bo.ttom. With a . rienced worker is in danger of fa~ing."

;son

is upon us and before long, utility
-poles with be slathered with signs asking
:us to vote for so-and-so candidate.
· But to utility workers the ~igns are
.viei.ved as a hazard.
. . As 'elections approafh, American
:Electric Power reminds residents that
posters mounted on utility poles are dangerous for electric com~any employees;·

hazards. Even a tiny hole can expose an
employee to tlie risk of electrical shocll:,
"Wr&gt; urge campaign workers and
garage sale· advertiser! not to post signs
on utility poles. Whatever the me5sage,
it's not worth endangering one of Ollf
employees,'' Pauley said, adding that it i~
illegal to post signs or posters on high ~ ·
way rights-of-way, .where many utilit):'
poles are located .

At night, it is especially difficult for
line mechanics to see obstructions on
the pole. Line mechanics sometimes
need to climb poles in the datk to restore
power.
Also, fasteners used for signs . and
posters have sharp edges that can tear
holes in the protective rubber gloves and
sleeve covers that line mechanics wear to
.Protect themselves from electric shock

·Pump

CAMPAIGN 2000

prices
.

McCain
blasts
·Bush

soar1ng~
By BRIAN J. REED

.Gore edges
. Bradl~y in

••
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• ..lio..&gt;.

Lingeri•,
ASsorted'

N.H..,

By WALTER .A. MEARS .
AP Sptelll Conwpondent
.
·Sen. John M~Cain opened the Southern fiont
in his battle for the Republican presidential nomination today, boosted by the momentum of a
startling landslide over George W. Bush in New
Hampshire. He called it "a powerful message" of
change to .come.
.
·
Vice President AI Gore edged BiD ·Bradley to
win the Democratic primary, and claimed to have
· dealt "a devastating blow" to his challenger. But
Bradley declared himself a smarter, tougher candidate for the national battle still ahead.
That strUgle began Tuesday night even before
all of New Hampshire's votes. had been counted,
as candidates deployed 'south and west for the pri-,
maries ahead.
"On to So!Jth Carolina,','·said McCain.
~·1 lilie my chances in · Delaware," Bush said.
''And South Carolina is Bush country."
Democrats get a five-week pause in primary
voting, but not in campaigning. Gore heads for
crucial California later today; Bradley is due
Thufsday. California is the biggest of the 14 state .
prizes at stalie in the Super Bowl of the jirimary ··
campaign March 7. Both also were campaigning
in New York; which votes the same day, on their
way west.
.
.
On the 1\.epublican side, Delaware is next on
Feb. 8. Bush is campaigning there, although

.

·,

Sen. John McCain Ia eurrounded by reporter&amp; and. auppcjrters following his resounding vlct~ry In ,1 Uee·
day'e New Hampel11re. praeldentlal primary; (AP photo)
·
·

We're smaFter, and better pr~pared
brieOy. McCain· is not; his strategy votes or I percent.
An AP analysis showed McCain and we're ready to ·continue the
hinges on South Carolina, which he
has said he must win. Steve Forbes, a was winning I 0 out of the'total 17 fight."
fading third in New- Hampshire, is delegates at stake Tue~ay. Bush was
At his Manchester victory rally,
competing in Delaware, too:
winning five and Forbes two.
Gore said, "This Tennessean is in the
Conservative Alan .Keyes ran
On the Democratic side, Gore end zone and it feels great, and let
fourth in. New Hampshire; Gary had 75,449 votes or 53 percent, and me tell you, we have just begun to
Bauer, who finished last, wen~ home Bradley had 68,800 votes or 47 per- fight." He promised to "cri~•cros. this
to consider his next step, which may .cent. Gore was winning 13 of the 22 continent again and again" for the
be withdrawal. · ·
delegates at stake Tuesday and • nomination and as the nominee.
With 98 percent of precincts Bradley was winning nine, the AP
Upon his before-dawn arrival at
reporting, ·McCain got I 14,047 analysis showed.
· New York's LaGuardia Airport, ·
VQtes or 49 percent; Bush had 71 ;492
"We have ma~e a remarkable approximately 200 cheering fans - ·
votes ·or 31 percent; Forbes, 29,945 turnaround but there is still a. tough .it:~cluding actor Billy llaldwin votes or U percent; Keyes, 15,078 fight ahead!' the former senator told
votes or 6 percent; and Bauer, 1,653 supporters in Manchester, N.H. "... . Pleaee Primary, Page A3

Sentinel Newe Sllllf
.
POMEROY- Gas prices iq
southeastern Ohio jumped ~ ·
average of 6 cents again last weeki .
topping the $I .40 mark for a ga1lon of regular, unleaded self-ser~
·vice gasoline.
·
That jump follows an ave~
increase of nearly seven cents pet
gallon the week ofJan. 20. . ' ,
According . to AAA of Sout4
Central Ohio, there is no relief in
sight at the pumps for motorists.~
The current outlook for gasQlin; prices is "gloomy" f9r
motorists, sine~ oil ministers lioni
the Organizatioti of Petroleuni
Exporting Companies . met Ia~
last month and signaled their
intent to· continue .restricting the
world's oil supplies well into
2000.
.
Previously OPEC had said ,it
would only restrict supplies of oil
through March.
The news of OPEC's plans tO
restrict the oil supplies aro~nd tli~
world. has caused ·oil traders fo
· push the price per barrel above
$28, the highest level in ni~e
years.
If the · commodity niarkets
maintain :i price at this level-.or
even higher - during the coming weeks, retail gas prites will
continue to increase. This may
mean that US. motorists could be
paying the highest gasoline pric~

...

ever.

According to Detsy Martinelli
of AAA in Pittsburgh, · Pa., the
previous record high price for
gasoline was reached just prior to
the GulfWar in 1990.
Mid-grade unleaded. gasoline
in southern Ohio carries an aver., .
age self-service prict .of $1.5 j;
and premium, at$ 1.60.A year ago
Pleaee- Ge1, Page A3
'

Heating assistance still available for . residents

Good
Afternoon/

r•r· ·

·'Sentinel
2 ~-- 14 Papa

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Sportl
Wuther

l otteries
0819

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Pick 3: Q-2-5; Pldr' 4: 1.0..3-4
iludra;s 5: 10-12-21-24-33

VA.

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Dilly 3: 7-7-8 Dally 4; 5-4-6-6

Allowable annu:il income for a one per- ··
POMEROY :- If the chilling cold Emergency HEAP income eligibility can be for the past tl~ree or 12
son
household . is $12,360; two people, '
weather and the 'skyrocketing cost of monthJ. Those not qualifying on three months' income are asked to
$16,590; three people, $20,820; four peo- .
home heating fuel has c~ted a heat-relatpresent
their
full12
monthJ'
income
to
see
if
eligibility
can
be
met
pie, $25,050; five people, $29,280; and six ..
ed emergency for }'I)U or your family, Gal~
on that basis. The deadline for Emergency HEAP is March 31.
people; $33,510.
lia~Meigs Community Action advises that
Households with more' than six ·memEmergency HPAP funds are still available.
.
bers should add an additional $4,230 to
The HEAP program serves the area's Those not qualifYing on three months'. gency HEAl~
The 12-month period or three-month the yearly income for each additional
neediest residents who may be on a fixed income are asked to present their full .I 2
, ber. ·
.
I
period
for the test is determined "-o&lt;Vnt the
mem
· income or among the ·working poor. It months' income to see if eligibility can be
Community Action staff is available to
helps senior citizens and families with chil- met on that basis.'J'he deadline for Emer- date of application making it po~~ible for
some
with
decrea,.ed
income
during
these
·
assist
people with Emergency HEAP and
dren avoid the choice of"heating or eat- gency HEAP is March 31 .
Regular HEAP applications at the Gallia
The Regular H EA Jl program offers months to quality later in the program.
ing," according to a CM spokesm~n.
Examples
of
_
these
types
of
situations
County
CAA One-Stop Office, 322
£mergency HEAP provides ~istance , heating assistance once per'heating season
to households that have had utilities dis- to low income households while defraying could occur· &amp;om lay-otT, strike, retire- ond Ave., Gallipolis, and the Meigs Counconnected, face the threat of disconnec- the high cost of home heating. Regular ment, disability or death of a spouse or ty Oner Stop Office, 33091 Hiland Road,
·
·
.
·
•
tion or ~'ave 10 ~ or le;s iupply of bulk · HEAP pays a portion of eligible house- household member. Docwrientation veri- l'omeroy. .
tying
incorri~
must.
be
provided
when
This
year,
the
agency
has
implemented
:
holds' winter heating bills. The amount of
fueJ . . ,
·
,
:
The · ~ allows a one-':time pay• assistance is determine.d by total household applying for HEAl' along with the appli- the appointment system to/ apply for :
Emergency HEAP. To schedule an
ment ·of\up tO,$175 per heating seasOn to income, the number of people in th~ cant's recent eleoti'ic bill. '
. The income level by household size is appointment or get additional information
~to~ or retain home, heating serVices. household ana the type of fuel ustd.
to dete~mine eligibility.These income in MeiJP County, residents should call
used
Homeownen or rent!'n may qualify if , The income guidelines for both pro· ·' their total household income is at or below grams are the same, it was re·ported. How- guidelines represent the ISO percent calcu- 992-2222 and in Gallia County, 446-6849, •
·.I 50 p,ercent of federalp.overty guidelines. ,ever, Regular HEAP requires the previous lation and are revised annually. Failure to 'For the hearing-impaired with a telecom- :
Emergency HEAP income eligibility 12 months' income while the past three provide the required docun1ents will delay m~ication device for the deaf(TDD), the ·
·number is l-800-686-1 557.
·
can 'be for the past three or 12 months. months income is acceptable for Emer- · processing ofthe application.

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ptlge A 2 • The Deily SeniiMI

Wtdn11dey,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

F.tlruary 2, 2000 .

O'Brien resolves lengthy court docket \

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
payday loaners

Au nita .Stover Duffer

Danville Church plans revival

Racine Grange meets Thursday

Rutland trustees will meet Feb. 8

Prosecutors want Eberling connection thrown ou(·

Drunken driver pleads guilty

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MORE WCAL FOLKS. MORE LOCAL

(IJSPS Ulo'NII)

Published every 1fternoon, Mcmdly l.hrouJh·
Friday, Ill eo.• Sl., Pomeroy, Ollio, by illi
Ohio Yollcy l'llblllhl"' CclmplnY· Seeood ·
clua po&amp;tap p1id 11 Pomeroy, Obio.
·
Meal"r: The Aaociatcd Prc111, and the Olllo
Ne,...,.per Aaloeiltkllt:
POSTMASTER: Scod oddral ...-ions to
The Dilly Scnllnol, II 1 ea..t St., Pomeroy,
Ohlo45769.
II)' Conloror Molo&lt;Roolo
One Wcck ..................................................$2.00
One MoniJII ................................................ $8.70

One Yeu ..•...••,. .......... ,.......................... SUM.OO
SINGU COPY PRICE

Daily ................................ :................... 35 Ccntt
Subtalbel'l not dctirina ID pi)' lhe ~NY

t .

,

remit In adviP~X dlreet to The Dally Sonlinel
ont three, six or 12l'IKHitl!i bult. Credit 'fi!U be
aivcn carrier ca:h week.
'
No aubtcrlptlon by mail permiucd in areu
where hallle carrier ICIVkle ilavallable.
hblishcr meF¥01 the riabt to adjUil i'aiCI d&amp;!r·
ina lhe aublcripdOI'I period. ~n rate
chdp moy bi impkmentcd by •llonliol 11\e
dualion oCibe wbterlptior:l.

i

. nelses from the estate taX when such a business passes to family
members.
}IB 564 (Wilson) - Permits owners of. small businesses to
. deduct up to $10,000 in business profits in deterqiining taxable per- soilal income.
· ·
'
}IB 565 (Young) - Specifies that state law does not require a
m~nicipal corporation fire chi~f or village fire prevention officer to
be:;a resident or elector of the municipal corporation, .does no·t
re~ire a township lj.re chief or fire prevention officer to.be a reside~t of the township, and does not require .a township fire district
fi~ chief, joint fire district fire chief, or fire and ·aml:!).llance district
fire chief to be a resident of the township fire district,joint fire distri~t. or fire and ambUlance district.
liB 566 (Mead) -,-: En. ~ 101. Requires diat the o,iirector ofJob
an4.family Services implement a ·statewide automated finger imaging system to pteveht an indiviclual from receiving .assistance under
mq_re than 9ne name from a Thmporary Mistance for Needy familieS P10gr:1111 or, if federal matching funds are provided, the Food ·
S~p Program and maltes an ·appropriation.
.
HB 5~7 (Krupinslfi) - Designa~es state Route 800, running
tlu(.ugh · Freeport Towmhip -in Harrison County, as the "Arthpr
'BI\dy' Milleson Memo~ Highway."
.
. tffi. _568 (Young) - Am: 5731. Exempts from the .estate tax thF
interest of a decedent in a qualifying small business.

M,UL~ONS

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. lolldelllolpCouiJ
13 Weoko ...... ., ................,:......,...............S27.30
26 -ko.............. ,................................. $l3.82 .
n w..u..............................................:StOSJii.
JIIIOIOoUidt MolpCouiJ
.
13 w..u....................:........ ., ... ,.............. $29.2$
26 w..u................................................ Sl6.111
~2 Weou ............ ................................. SI09.n

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call 111t oow11m •• (741! moms.

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Thore's 1 dlff-t kind
nationellnmn.t ~CIIIIplny rl'ht here I~ y011r hoiHtOwn. Whtn you cliiii·~00·900C0400 to al'n ·up
for ont month of lnterntt •cctss, yciu•n
two ;,anths frM , How tij,i's'a homtt~wn kl~d of thin,.

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your ' - - 1 -

of

AEP-33"1•
Akzo-42'/o
AmTech/SBC - 42'1•
Ashland 011 - 32'!o
AT&amp;T-52'!.
Bank One - 30'1.
!;lob Evan• - 15\ .
BorgWarner- 32'!.
Chemplon - 3'!.
Chermlng Shops- 7~.
City Holding -12
Federal Mogul -14"!.
Flretar - 24'•
Gannatt-70
K mart- 8"!.
Kroger- 1~.
Landa End - 34

Ltd.- 31'1.

Oak Hill Financial- 14'.1. ,.-~"J
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OVB- 321.
One Valley - 25'.1.
Paoplea ..:... 19
Premier- 8'/o
Rockwell - 49'1•
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RD Shell - 55'1.
Saara- 31'1.
Shonay•a -- 1 '!.
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Wendy'•- 18"1•
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Worthington -147/o
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Dally stock report• are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of tflt'l
previous day's tranaactlon.._
provided by Adveat of G~
II polls.

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a.r.--.
·

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::!' ~=
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recipients, was released in anticipation of time limits. that begin in
Octo\&gt;er for receiving cash assistance.
• Among i.ts finding.:
• Eighty-seven peocent of peopie who left welfare found work in
the first six months, but only 50
· percent earned .en 0ugh tu pull
themselves above the poverty level,
or an annual income of $13,133
. for a fam,ily of three. .
• Most people who left we~are
contmued .to struggle financially,
with 6Q percent paying more ·than
one-third of their income on
housing, 28 percent reporting
misse~ m~als and ·15 perce!lt
reportmg at least one cutoff of uti!ities.
.
· • More than .a fifth reported

returning to the welfare (Olls at
least once · during the six-month
period after leaving;
The report's statistics echoed
!inding~ in a stUdy released last

Prima~y

New Hampshin:, he still has
advantages over McCain. ·
Money is one, with more than
from Page A 1 .
•31 million in Bush's campaign
•
treasury to · begin the election
.
braved cold winds to gre.e t Gore, year, four- times the amount that
·
.who hopped up and down, look- McCain, the Arizoha senato.r,
ing .like a boxer ·in the . ring, .as 1. d
· '
,,a .
Bush (llso leads in · polls for
worked down a rope~ne shaking
hands.
· South Carolina's. primary; but
"We've just begun to fight!" he New Hampshire will have an
· shouted into a bullhorn before ·a impact 'tl)ere. "The comparison
11· mousine whisked him to a sh oppmg
·
has JUS
· t b egun," sal"d
Manhattan hotel for an abbreviat- · R ep. L"m dsay G ra.h aril, a M cC "!I
'
ed night's sleep.
ally in S,o uth Carolina vvho ~arne
Bush called the · outcome
north shiver with his ca!ldidate
· bump in the road in a' state on election eve.
·
k
Ia ·· th
· ...
Bush's
endorsem'en"'
10
':''e .
.,.
n9wn or P cmg em
path of front-ruriners. But. it wa~ a including from his famous parents
joltin~ one for a campai~ that didn't, help in New Hamphad · expected: no worse . than ·a 'shire, but could . prove a bigger
nartow defeat. McCain's wipeout boost in later states. All but four
·
- . o,nly presidents· 'r unning fqr Republican governors favor !Us
· · renomination h2d gained margins nominaqon, and their organiza; that wide in prior primaries tions will be at his ser\tice.
. .
' struck at Bush's . greatest advanArizona and Michigan hold
· cage, the image of ,inevitability, 'GOP primaries Feb.. 22, followed
given his toweritlg lead from the ~ Virgi~ia on Feb. 29, and. Bush
begir)ning'in na~ona!, polls.' :
•should h;lve, the· advantage 10 \he
"I' th.ink •electability iS ·a big latter two contests..
factor;• sal~ Gov. Paul CeBuci llf
;But the March 7 primati~s are
neighboring MaSsachusetts, , cam- pivotal 'to Rel.ubli_cans, , too.
I'
paigning for Bush, the· governor McCain spokesmap Dan SchniU
ofTexas. ~'Republicans th.ink nush said California will b,e "the ·single
can win in the fall:' But to keep most important decision-maker
them th.inking so, h~'s gOt to Will in the primary campaign." ·
j in the prinlari~.
.
That goes for the Democrats,
And while Bush suffered in too. Gore swamped Brac:liey near-

..,.k ,,., ..,__ - .....w.• .

'1111 .... ._ber II '"-215S. Oepel1

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have found in other states. She did
not have comp~ns from other
Ohio cities.
The report, part of a thre~-year
study of Cuyahoga County wel&amp;re

C..•woliJ N...,.perHollll_J.,

COLUMBUS (AP) - Legislative floor actions in .. the House of
Rwresentatives ·and· Senate from Tuesday, Feb. 1.
INTRODUCED IN THE SENATE
:sB 249 (Fingerhut) ..,.. Creates ari assisted living program to be
ad~nistered by th,e Department of Aging pursuant to a home a
coihmunity-based waiver granted by the U.S. Secretary of Health
an(~ Human Services; ·
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SUISCIUPI10N RATES

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:EMS units respond to four calls

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'r uesday;s. floor action detailed

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Eastern Band Boosters to meet

The Daily Sentinel

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VFW Auxiliary meeting Thursday

"To move into a job doesn't
mean Y,u move out of poverty;'
said .Judith Bird of Have a Heart
Ohio, . a statewide coalition of
agencies working with people on
public .· assistance. "The report
shows that clearly."
The report, "How Are They
Managing?", was based on i,nterviews with 198 people who left
the welfare rolls iJ;l Cuyahoga
County during the last three
months of 1998 and the first tluee
months of 1999.
During · the period that
researchers studied, 8,768 adults
and 16,213 •children left welfa"' in
Cuyahoga County.
Cara. Pasqualone, a Case Western policy analyst, said the report's
,__;...._ _ _ _ _.__···;;;;·;,
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. results match what similar studies

· ny: Use money for whatever ~AST

. ~ODUCED IN THE HOUSE
:~m 563 (Wilson) - Exempts the value of family-owned busi-

taped ·to a board. Her hands a~d
mouth also ·were covered with
tape.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Thpl'ers Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Police found the girl after 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will hold its regular meeting Thursday. 7:30p.m..
acting on suspicions raised hy
Wagner in an interview.
Court offiCials had assembled
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.
an unusually large pool o( about
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Local Band Boosters will nieet Monday
100 potential jurors this morn- · 7 p.m. in the Eastern High School band room, Boosters are to note the
ing.
change time.
·
· Fairfield County Prosecutor
David Landefeld had said he
expected jury selection to last
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
. through Friday. But Landefeld
said he believed it was possible Service recorded four calls for assistance Tuesday. Units responding
,
·
to seat an impartial jury despite included:
CENTRAL DJSPATCH
.
widespread publicity. .
12:35 p.m., Main Street, Tuppers Plains, Bill Ernst, St. Joseph's HosA psychologist told Fairfield
County Common Pleas Judge pital, Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
5:43 ,. p.m., Rutland Street, Middleport, George Sayre, Veterans
James Luse that Wagner, a twice·
Memorial
Hospital, Middleport squad assisted.
convicted sex offender, ·was
RUTLAND ·
menrally ill and mildly retarded.
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8
:16
p.m.,
Meig&gt;
Mine
31,
Danville Portal, Steve Cotterill, O'Biec
But Luse found that Wagner
was competent to stand trial ness Memorial Hospiral, Central Dispatch squad assisted.
SYRACUSE
.
beca~se he understood .t he
9:44 p.m:, Dusky Street, Phyllis Hendrix, Holzer Medical Center,
charges and could assist in his
Ceni:ral Dispatch squad assisted.
defo:nse.

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
AaiOCiated P1'818 Writer
COLUMBUS - Most people
)caving Ohio's W!'lfare rolls . are
'finding W()rk, but only half earn .
.enough to pull themselves out of
poverty, ·according to a report
· ,released Thesday.
' · Most families who left welfare .
also lost non-cash benefillj such as
food stamps or Medicaid, partly
·because they didn't understand
ot!\ey remained eligible, the report
sal d.
·
· •'fhe study, conducted by Case
Western Reserve University's
Center on Urban Poverty and
Social Change, was funded by publie and private money.

.

The Sentinel

POMEROY - Star Grange 778 and ~tar Junior Grange 878 will
meet in regular session on Saturday with a.potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
follow~d by meetin~ at 8 p,m. First-degree practice will be held. All
,
members encouraged to attend. .

I

By The AIIOCiated Pre. .
sunrise. Thursday at 7:39 a. m. ,
A weak weather disturbance
Weather forecast:
.. 1r.
will drop down across the Great
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low~,
Lakes tonight, producing snow in in the lower and mid 20s. Li~ l
northern Ohio. Accumulations west wind, increasing to 10 to ~0,
·should be about 1 inch, the mph.
·
National Weather Service said.
. Thursday.. .Mostly cloudy. jl.d
Skies will be cloudy over the chance of mow or rain showor.,
southern half of Ohio tonight but from late morning on. Bre~~ll'
no snow is likely.·
with · highs in the lower 40s.
Lows tonight will be 20-25 .
Chance
precipitation 30 pe ~-n
More snow is likely in north- cent.
· :~·
ern Ohio on Thursday, with snow
Thursday night ... Mostly -cloudy~
showers possible in the central with a chance of snow showers.
and southeast. Skies will be most- Lows near 30.
ly cloudy in the southwest.
Extended forecast:
Highs on Thursday will be 35- .. Friday.:.Partly cloudy. Highs :~
45:
the mid 4Qs.
·
. .• , c;
The record~high temperature
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
for this date at the Columbus near 30 and highs in the uppl!fi
weather station was 64 degrees in 40s.
.
••
while
the
record
low
was
1903
13
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows jn
. below zero in 195 f. Sunset the lower 30s and' highs ·in tlMb
1
. tonight will be at 5:52 p.m, and upper 40s.
·: m

Report:
People
leaving
welfare
still
struggling
~
.

Gore plans campaign
stop·with
OSU
students?
'

i

Star Grahge session set Saturday

·Potential jurors readied
for kidnapping ·case
By JOE MIUCIA
Associated Pr. ., Writer
LANCASTER Lawyers
met with a judge today to dis·cuss a possible plea agreement
by a man accused of abducting a
3-year-old girl and emombing
.her in an attic.
Jason Wagner, 24, was to have
gone on trial this morning on
charges including kidnapping,
abduction, assault and attempted
murder in ihe April 26 disappearance of 1\•hley Taggart. If
convicted of those charges, Wagner would face a maximum
penalty of life in prison without
parole.
·
Taggart_'s abduction shocked
this city, 27 m.iles southeast of
Columbus, a.nd led to an enormous search and eventual rescue
of the petite, blond girl.
On ·the fourth day. of the
search, a police detective· found
her in an attic 100 yards Jroni
her home, where she lay duct-

Chance of snow, rain -:.;
showers set Thursday~

TUPPERS PLAINS - Squa~e dancing with clogging and line
dancing will De held at the Thppers Plains VFW Saturday night, 8 to
11 p.m ., with True Country providing music and Ronnie Wood as the
caller.

DUNBAR, W.Va. - Aunita Stanley Stover Duffer, 78, Dunbar, died
Monday, Jan. 31, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, after a
lengthy illness.
The daughter of the late Opal E. and Worthy c. Stanley, she was
retired from the West Virginia Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
DANVILLE _ Revival services will be held at the Danville HoliShe was a member of the Daughters of America, the Lioness Club,
the Pocahontas Lodge and the First United Methodist Church.
ness Church, State Route 325, Feb; 14-20 at 7 p.m. each evening. Dr.
She was also preceded in death by her first husband, Samuel Arthur · Wingrove Taylor will be the evangelist, with Don and.Valerie Quales
Stover; and by two brothers, Miles C. Stanley and Howatd W. Stanley. _a nd family as song evangelists. Gary Ja~kson , pastor, invites the public.
Surviving are her· husband, Stanford Duffer;·two stepsons and a step- .
daughter: nine stepgrandchildren and s~x· step-great-grandchildren:
two brothers, Worthy Stanley Jr. of Bidwell, and Donald Stanley .of
Gallipolis; a sister, Phyllis Baker of Middleport; and several nieces and
RACINE - Racine Grange will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
nephews, and great- nieces and g~at-nephews . .·
.
. · .
grange hall.
'.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the l{eUer Funeral Home, 1236
Myers Ave., Dunbar, with, Pastor John A. Mason officiating. Burial will
be in Gr;mdview Memorial Park, Dunbar. Friends may call at the
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, 5.
funeral home from 4-8 p.m. today.
p.m . at the Rutland Fire Station.
·

.Down-and-out rockers get help

.~

OHIOVALLEYWEATHER

Square dancing set Saturday

Wright, speed, $30 plus costs; DaVId G. Keams II,
POMEROY - The following cases were plus coats;
targ~t
Carol L. Gilmore, Wettsdale, Fla.. mud flap vio- Waterford, speed, $30 plus c:oata: Mlchul S.
concluded recently in the Meigs County
lation, $20 plus coats: Cecil W. Keirns, Albany, faH· McCoy. Racine. speed, $30 plus costa; aeat beft,
CINCINNATI (AP) -Lenders in the payday advance .industry
Court of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
ure to control, $20 plus costa; Brady Gilbert Jr., $25 plus costs; Warren M. Haning, Pomeroy, fall.
aft; suing cash-strapped borrowers for triple paybacks under an
Fined were:
Cheshire, window dnl, $20 plus coats; Larry D. ure to control, $20 plus costs; Daniel A. Stone,
Ohio law designed to compensate victims of crime, consumer
Joahua A. Wllaon, Pomeroy, nat belt, $15 plus Eads, L1111caster, seat beft, $15 plus costa; Jan· Middleport, left of center, $20 plus costa: Robert '
groups said.
costs: Dewayne A. Fish.,, Middleport, speed, $30 niter S. Edwards, Ubertyvllle, Ill., speed, $50 plus D. Blankenship, Shade, speed, $30 plus costs: ,
plus
costs; seat be~. $25 plus costs; Randy A. costs; John A. Rowan, little Hocking, faUura to Mary Ann Baldwin, Parkersburg, speed, $30 plus
People who obtain short-term loans against their next paychecks
Shields,
Coolville, aeat be~. $15' plus coeit: Lan)' control, $20 plus costs; Brandon Scott Yonker, co.sts: Charles Lee Smith Jr., Pomeroy, speed,,
are being socked for the triple paybacks when the lenders sue them
R. Bailey, Chester, seat belt, $25 plus costs; New Haven, W.Va., speed, $25 plus costs; Robert $30 plus costs; Douglas K. Coen, Shade, seat
.fOr overdue debts, according to a new report by the U.S. Public
Ronald L. EIRpon, Watersford, failure to yield, $20 · E. Shalieg, Pompar Beach, Fla., speed, $25 plus belt, $25 plus costs: Darrel W. Lehman, Net·
Ihi:erest Research Group, its Ohio ~ate and the Consumer Fedplus costs; Susan M. Pierce, Charleston, W.Va., costs; Bridget D. Ritchie, Racine, seat bell, $25 sonville, seat be~ . $25 plus costs; John L Cox; ·
eration of America.
• .
.
· ·
.
speed , $30 plus cOS1S; Elizabeth Bernat, Athens, plus costs: seat beH, $15 plus costs; Robert L Nelsonville, seat batt, $25 plus costs: Jennifer A.
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Carl L. McGovern, R~chie Jr., Racine, speed, $20 plus costs; seat Mollohan, Belpre, speed, $30 plus costs; Gary W:
The consumer groups urged Ohio lawmakers to end what the
Columbia, S.C., speed, $30 plus costs; Shawn M. be~. $25 plus costs; Mary A. Baldwin, Parkers· Gilmore, Langsville, gross overload, . $500 plus
groups termed an abuse of the law. The Cincinnati Post, which
Malone, Belpre, speed, $30 plus' costs: Gtena M. burg, W.Va., ' speed, $30 plus casts; Harold costs:
.
reported last summer on operations of the payday advance industry.
Michael Allen Cleland, Rutland, speed, $30 •
Smith, Shade, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Carol L. Eu~ene Nelson, Mason, W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus
reported the groups' findings Thesday.
Fetty, Vinton, failure to control, $20 plus ~s: costs: Patricia A. Winebrenner, Westerville, plus costs: Tammy l. Clem, The Plains, speed; ..
John F. Musick, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs: $30 plus costs; Tony A, Dugan, Pomeroy, seat ·
· · The groups said a study of neady 400 such lawsuits found paycosts; Cioyse G. Worthing, Delaware, speed, $30 Barbara K. Culbertson, Athens, speed, $30 plus bell, $25 plus ·costs: failure to display valid regis· ..
day lenders being awarded three times the amount of their original
trallon, $20 plus costs; Peter H. Mitchell,
loan, 10 percent interest on damages and co11rt costs when borrow- · plus costs; Thomas L Gates II, Dresden, seat costs:
. belt, $25 plus costs;
William A. Free, Hopkinsville, Ky., speed, $30 Granville, speed, $30 plus costs; Roger N. Roush,
e'tS- give lenders checks that bounce.
Dustin L Zirkle, New Haven, W.Va., signal light plus costs; Larry E. Wagner, Marietta, speed, $30 Pembrake, Ga., speed, $30 plus costs; JQhn W:
·· The state's Civil Damages for Crime Victims law allows victims
violation, $20 plus costs; Frank Seymore Herald, plus costs; Freddie D. Perkins, Middleport, failure Hatch, Bethel Park, Pa., speed, $30 plus costs: •
Langsville, stop sign, $20 plus costs; Gerald L to control, $20 plus costs: Michele L. Draznovich, seat bell, $25 plus costs; Bruce Teang·SIIng Sov/
of theft offenses, including bad checks, to collect triple damages.
Taylor,
Jackson, mud . flap violation, $50 plus Marietta, speed, $30 plus coats; George T. Coram, Anbler; Pa., speed. $30 plus costs; David B. Herd·
State Sen. Mark Mallory. D-Cincinnati, who has conducted
costs: ovarload, $250 plus costs: John A. Hamil- Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Tara L. Haw· man, Rutland, seat beH, $25 plus costs; Dennis C:
hearings about payday loan practices, said he would look into the
ton, Dexter, seat be~. $21? plus ¢osts; Peggy Jo . ley, Pomeroy, failure to control, $20 plus costs; Clark, Pomeroy, seat bell, $25 plus coats: Jerry ..
"practice of criminal lawsuits against borrowers.
Baden, Huntington, W.Va.. speed, $30 plus costs: Richard L. Banks, Reynoldsburg, sp&amp;elj, $30 plus Lee Hall, Dublin, failure to control, $20 plus costs;'.
Rgne E. Castillo, Bloomington, Ind., speed, $30 costs: Richard L Kehh, Glouster, speed, $30 plus Rickey L. Deere Jr., unsecure load, $20 pluS::
plus costs; James H. Bailey, Greenup, Ky., speed, costs; Larry F. Cal'p8f!ter, Spencer, .vy. Va., over· COSIS:·gross overload, $262-plua 00818; Herman A•
$30 plus ·oosts: Martin C. Cremeans Jr., Stow, load, $90 plus costs; Melissa Sayor, Athens, · Lauderback, Carbon Hill, saat be~. $25 plus costs:-~
speed,
$30 plus costs: Lauren E. Anderson, speed, $30 p,lils costs; Debora~ D. Whhe, New Leonard S. Erwin, Pomeroy, seat bell, $25 plus;.
•·CLEVELAND (AP) -The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame FounPomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Alison C. Ana- Haven, speed, $30 plus costs: Wen L Chen, Gal· costs; Ch~rles F. Engtefield Jr., speed, $3P.. plus ·
dation is starting up a fund to help Rock Hall inductees or nomidell, Powell, speed, $30 plus costs; William F. Ful· llpolis, speed, $30 plus costs; Vetden Benton Llnri costs: Stacey L Brickles, Syracuse, speed, $30
nees who have bit hard times financially.
plus costs; seat beH, $~ plus costs; Joshua:
ton, Marietta, speed, $30 plus costs; Earnest M. II, Washington, W.Va., stop slg~. $20 plus costs;
James, Reynoldsburg, speed, $30 plus costs:
Harmon McLaughlin Gtyndry, Aatrock, Mich., Weaver, Albany, failure to control, $20 plus co'sts.~ ·
Suzan Evans, executive director of the New York-based foundaMatthew A. Schllly, Gahanna, speec;l, $30 plus . seat be~. $25.plus costs; Dorinda L Deem, New Charles E. Johnson, Wellston, failure to control,
tion, said Tuesday the goal is 't o make $100,000 available th.is year for
costs; Angle M. Council, Langsville, seat be~. $25 Haven, seat be~. $25 plus costs: Richard A. $20 plus costs. ·
grants to help qualified applicants. Payments could be made to third
parties who are valid creditors.
Financially strained Rock Hall inductees or nominees could
receive grants for such things as medical expenses; rent and other
.
'
bills.
Eberling w~s convicted of vehicle named Barbara Kinzel.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Infor- film.
The funding for the assistance program will come in part from
The Sheppards' son, Sam murder in the 1984 death of Kinzel, who was dating Eberling.
money raised at the annual Rock Hall' induction ceremony that will . mation about R.ichard Eberling's
Reese
Sheppard, is . rtow suing Ethel May Durkin, for whom he at the time, had worked at Dr. :·
conviction
for
killing
an
elderly
be held March 6 in New York, Evans said.
The foundation, which will administer the assistance program,
widow and his alleged ties to ·the the state of Ohio claiming his worked as . a Fare,taker. He was Sheppard's hospital and was on .
deaths of other women should father was wrongfully impris- serving ·. a life ·· sentence for . duty the..day Mrs. Sheppard died:. 1
has a 50 percent representation on the Rock Hall's board.
"If that's not ·a serial killer,) .,
be kept out. of the trW aimed at oned. To win the case, Sheppard Durkin's slaying when he died in
: "We thought it was important. to start something to help the
know what it is," Sheppard ,
1998.
don't
and
his"lawyers
will
have
to
conindigent with some of their costs. It's starting out th.is way. Then
deciding who murdered Marilyn
we'll see how it goes. We will see if we get eligible applicants;' Evans · Sheppard, prosecutors told a vince a jury th'e majority of evi- . Durkin's two. sisters, both of . attorney Terry Gilbert said after.,·
dence indicates his father. was whom knew ·r;berling, also died ticking off the list of names in.,
said.
jud~ Thesday.
.,
.. :fhe application process and those chosen to receive help wi1J. be
P(Osecutors asked Cuyahoga innocent of his mother's murder. in unusual circumstances -a nd . court Tuesday.
But Kathleen Martin, an assisSuster is hearing ljlO!jons this Sheppard susp~cts Eberling
"k!pt confidential, she said.
County Judge Ronald ·suster not
tant county prosecutor, argued;.
to allow the Eberling material week from both the Slieppard might have killed them, too.
He wants to bting . up their that none of the deaths Sheppard ,
into court during the second day legal team and county prosecuof a w.rongful imprisonment trial tors, who are defending the state. dea,ths once testimony · begins, wants to connect with Eberling .
CINCINNATI (AP) -A man accused of driving drunk into a
He plans to rule on all the along . with ano,ther woman's should be admitted aS evidence. .
for Dr. Sam Sheppard.
· None of the deaths is similar ·
,c rowd of people at . an Oktoberfest celebration downtown has
Sheppard was convicted in motions presented to ·him some- death.
One sister, Myrtle Fray, was enough to Mrs. Sheppard's beat- ,
pleaded guilty to all 18 charges against him, althou~ he says he
1954 of beating his wife to death time after the last of them is
dt&gt;es not remember the events because he was so intoxicated.
.
beaten
to death in 1962 in a ing death to .indicate that the ,
at the couple's .home in suburban argued on Friday,
.
~Michael Cowperthwaite; 25, entered his guilty pleas Thesday in
Jury selection is scheduled to crime that remains unsolved. The killer is same person. "It doesn't ,
Cleveland. He spent a decade in
J{imilton County Common Pleas Court. He could be sentenced to
other sister, Sarah ..Belle Farrow, . prove identity," she said.
.
prison, before the Supreme begin Monday.
:
The doctor always insisted•
at-~Uuch as 48 years in ·prison on the charges that included aggraSheppard believes DNA ' sam- died · in 1970 as a result of
. Court ove.rturned his convicv~d vehicular assault, feloriious assault and inducing panic. Seninjuries.
she
sustained
in
a
fall
that
a "bushy-haired. intruder"•
' tion , He was acquitted at a retri- ple$ fr.:om the crime sce11·e, sever·killed his wife in her . upstairs"
'tcliicing is scheduled for March 2.
al in . 1966 anlcf pie\}, four •years al .·alleged confessiOns and 'o ther that was: ruled acdtlental.
~!'He is mortified he caused this kind of damage," sai!i Cow~ Eberling also drove a car that bedroom, then knocked him
later.
·
evidence shows that Eberling, a
p~~thwaite's lawyer, SqJtt Cro.Well. "From the moment I met him,
The case partly inspired•'"ii'he window washer- for ·his family. in crashed .: into a tr.uck in 1956, und:JJiSciolis when' he •heard her:
h~ ·wanted to plead gUilty and go to prison.~·
•·.
Fugitive" . televisi.o n series and 1954, was Mrs. Sheppard's killer. killing a female passe.n ger ill his cries and ran to her aid.
t Prosecutors and police say Cowperthwaite's crime began around
8[p.m: on Sept.19.
.
· '
They say officers noticed him parked and revving the engine of
his"1989 Chevrolet Beretta. But police say he sped away as officers
.
.
atproached the .car.
·
·
.
teachers.
COLUMBUS (A,P)- AI Gore planned to
He was to belln the day in Nfw
· ~ :rhey say he ignored police warnings - and in one case struck
Gore's opponent for the Democratic nom~' ·
turn to Ohio and two other big states on York and travel to Los Angeles lifter
olice officer - as he turned into a crowd gathered for OktoWednesday to kick off the post-New Hampination, former New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley•.
b ifest, Cincinnati's annual street
his Ohio stop. New York, Ohio and supports forgiving college loans each year for··
. festival. ·
shire part oflris campaign for president.'
California are among the 11 states · 60,000 college students, hlgh school graduateS
The vice president planned an afternoon
lrip to Ohio State University to discuss his
.holding presidential primaries~ ~n · and mid-career professionals who certify O!S;.
education proposals with students. He was to
teachers and commit to serving in poor urbarl ..
March 7.
···
CLEVELAND (AP) -The City Council has given prebegin
the
day
in
New
York
and
travel
to
Los
or rural schools. He. also would add new Head·
linunary approval to allow residents to spend their $4,000 railroad
Angeles after his Ohio stop. New York, Ohio
Start slots for 400,000 children.
sdi1ndproofing grants on anything, including vacations.
and rural areas, plus an extra $5,000 in pay for
and
California
are
among
the
11
states
holdBradley's last trip to Ohio was Dec. 1.
. ·· ~:one lady camo to a council meeting and said, 'That's ._,y
"master teachers" who meet even higher staning
presidential
primaries
on
March
7.
.·mOney. If I want to gb to Vegas, that's my money'," Councilwoman
As a candidate, Gore has pushed for $50 dards in those areas.
. Saratha Goggins said.
He also would offer sigriing bonuses to
billion to make pre!chool universally available
The City Council voted Tuesday night to allow homeownen to
and raises up to $5,000 for public school recruit mid-career teachers from other profesNEWS.~
.use the S4,000 grants without restriction. The. council will take a
sions
and
he
favors
mandatory
testin·
g
'of
new
teachers
who
meet
certain
standards
in
poor
final vote in two ~eeks.
To subscribe, call 992·2156.
!
r .1 ·
The CSX railroad agreed to provide $2 million to soundproof
hemes along its line in .East Cleveland. Grants of $4,000 each would
go to 120 homeowners as part of a deal to allow incre~ed rail traf,fic:
••
· The agreement with t~e city, calls for most of the $2 million to
. •
;be used to create jobs and train police and firefighters for railroad
emergencies. The .rest would to go to homeowners for insulation,
storm windpws and other modifications to mufile train noise.

Watchdogs

'

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

a

r.

to

month by the Ohio Association of
Community Action Agencies that
found the number of poor Ohio
··cbildr~n is. growing even as the
number of children receiving traditional welfare payments is plunging.
Jon Allen, a spokesman for the
Department of Human Services,
. said Tuesday's rep.o rt underscores
how impo~t it is for people
. leaving welfare to understmd that
the October deadliite is only for
cash assistance.
Many ·people will remain eligiblefurfoodstamps,Medicaid,subsidized child care and other programs, he said.
The study, \0 cost $300,000
over three yean, was paid for by
Human Services, the Cuyahoga

STILL RISING - Gasoline prices In Melg1 County and arou~,
the country continua to rill. AAA announced TuHday that gas
prices In aou)heaatlm Ohio JIJmpld another 8 c1nta lhl1 wee~&lt;tn
(Brian J. Reed photo) ·
. . c2

Gas

County Board of County Commissioners and The Joyce Founda- · .
tion, a Chicago-based nonprofit
from PageA1
foundation that . works on lawthls week, the average price of
income issues.
regular unleaded gasoline was 95
cents, mid-grade· unleaded, $1.08,
ly 2-to-1 in the Iowa cauc~ses, . ~nd premium, $1.18. ·
.. but beat him only narrowly in .
New Hampshire. Bradley climbed
·Gas prices in : Meigs County
to the lead l· n the New Hamp- are right at the average. Most stations in Midclleport and Pomeroy
shire opinion polls, then slumped, are offering regular unleaded
then edged back up
d
·
gasoline at or aroun $1.40 per .
Bradley sa_id h_e has
_ the money gallon, when purchased at selfd de
h
an
ter.nunallon to wage t. e service pumps.
national contest that begms ,
. ·
.
· March 7 when· six of the 10
The pnce for prenuum gaso. biggest s~tes vote in a sihgle day. line at twO stations in Pomeroy_
"We're no longer in a sjngle were actually below the average
· phase
, state, we'r.e in the national
of die campaign;' he said. Gore
agreed. "It's a national primacy;•
h
·d
·
131
e
•
· ·
While Bradley claimed satisfaction in New Hampshire, it
prompted· him to one change•_

price, at $1.55 per gallon, self-ser., 11
vice. ,
.
.11a'
While gas prices in other are;as .
of southea~tern Ohio, includilliri
Gallipolis, are as ·much as teQ,8
cents cheaper per gaUon, AAA~~·~
Fuel Gauge survey of fuel pric.es
show area rates as much as 6 C~l)!; d ·
above the national average.
•':t~

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
To $Ubscribe, C4U992·2U6.

he challenged Gore to· weekly
debates .through March 7.
. Gore had started the debate
challenges four months ago; when
he pronounced himself the
l!nderdog and -remodeled . his
·
B ra dl. ey reb u ffie d hi m,
cam p-atgn.
but .they eventually met in eight .
forums. The vice presideht' then
demanded two debates a 'week, to:·
ds
. supplant campaign TV a .
Bradley called it a gimmick and
d h 'd t..
d ..
sai
e ..eep a vertlsmg.
Gore· said' he's willing to
debate, but renewed his demand
that the ads be dropped. He and
Bradley ate booked to · debate ·
· March 1 in Los Angeles.

li

"

.

·,T

.'

�•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ptlge A 2 • The Deily SeniiMI

Wtdn11dey,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

F.tlruary 2, 2000 .

O'Brien resolves lengthy court docket \

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
payday loaners

Au nita .Stover Duffer

Danville Church plans revival

Racine Grange meets Thursday

Rutland trustees will meet Feb. 8

Prosecutors want Eberling connection thrown ou(·

Drunken driver pleads guilty

'

.

j.
.

•_I

.

MORE WCAL FOLKS. MORE LOCAL

(IJSPS Ulo'NII)

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·
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where hallle carrier ICIVkle ilavallable.
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ina lhe aublcripdOI'I period. ~n rate
chdp moy bi impkmentcd by •llonliol 11\e
dualion oCibe wbterlptior:l.

i

. nelses from the estate taX when such a business passes to family
members.
}IB 564 (Wilson) - Permits owners of. small businesses to
. deduct up to $10,000 in business profits in deterqiining taxable per- soilal income.
· ·
'
}IB 565 (Young) - Specifies that state law does not require a
m~nicipal corporation fire chi~f or village fire prevention officer to
be:;a resident or elector of the municipal corporation, .does no·t
re~ire a township lj.re chief or fire prevention officer to.be a reside~t of the township, and does not require .a township fire district
fi~ chief, joint fire district fire chief, or fire and ·aml:!).llance district
fire chief to be a resident of the township fire district,joint fire distri~t. or fire and ambUlance district.
liB 566 (Mead) -,-: En. ~ 101. Requires diat the o,iirector ofJob
an4.family Services implement a ·statewide automated finger imaging system to pteveht an indiviclual from receiving .assistance under
mq_re than 9ne name from a Thmporary Mistance for Needy familieS P10gr:1111 or, if federal matching funds are provided, the Food ·
S~p Program and maltes an ·appropriation.
.
HB 5~7 (Krupinslfi) - Designa~es state Route 800, running
tlu(.ugh · Freeport Towmhip -in Harrison County, as the "Arthpr
'BI\dy' Milleson Memo~ Highway."
.
. tffi. _568 (Young) - Am: 5731. Exempts from the .estate tax thF
interest of a decedent in a qualifying small business.

M,UL~ONS

'
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26 w..u................................................ Sl6.111
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for ont month of lnterntt •cctss, yciu•n
two ;,anths frM , How tij,i's'a homtt~wn kl~d of thin,.

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AEP-33"1•
Akzo-42'/o
AmTech/SBC - 42'1•
Ashland 011 - 32'!o
AT&amp;T-52'!.
Bank One - 30'1.
!;lob Evan• - 15\ .
BorgWarner- 32'!.
Chemplon - 3'!.
Chermlng Shops- 7~.
City Holding -12
Federal Mogul -14"!.
Flretar - 24'•
Gannatt-70
K mart- 8"!.
Kroger- 1~.
Landa End - 34

Ltd.- 31'1.

Oak Hill Financial- 14'.1. ,.-~"J
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OVB- 321.
One Valley - 25'.1.
Paoplea ..:... 19
Premier- 8'/o
Rockwell - 49'1•
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Saara- 31'1.
Shonay•a -- 1 '!.
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Wendy'•- 18"1•
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Worthington -147/o
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Dally stock report• are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of tflt'l
previous day's tranaactlon.._
provided by Adveat of G~
II polls.

'

•

' '

_ _ .. Eat 11"

a.r.--.
·

·

::!' ~=
·

.i

recipients, was released in anticipation of time limits. that begin in
Octo\&gt;er for receiving cash assistance.
• Among i.ts finding.:
• Eighty-seven peocent of peopie who left welfare found work in
the first six months, but only 50
· percent earned .en 0ugh tu pull
themselves above the poverty level,
or an annual income of $13,133
. for a fam,ily of three. .
• Most people who left we~are
contmued .to struggle financially,
with 6Q percent paying more ·than
one-third of their income on
housing, 28 percent reporting
misse~ m~als and ·15 perce!lt
reportmg at least one cutoff of uti!ities.
.
· • More than .a fifth reported

returning to the welfare (Olls at
least once · during the six-month
period after leaving;
The report's statistics echoed
!inding~ in a stUdy released last

Prima~y

New Hampshin:, he still has
advantages over McCain. ·
Money is one, with more than
from Page A 1 .
•31 million in Bush's campaign
•
treasury to · begin the election
.
braved cold winds to gre.e t Gore, year, four- times the amount that
·
.who hopped up and down, look- McCain, the Arizoha senato.r,
ing .like a boxer ·in the . ring, .as 1. d
· '
,,a .
Bush (llso leads in · polls for
worked down a rope~ne shaking
hands.
· South Carolina's. primary; but
"We've just begun to fight!" he New Hampshire will have an
· shouted into a bullhorn before ·a impact 'tl)ere. "The comparison
11· mousine whisked him to a sh oppmg
·
has JUS
· t b egun," sal"d
Manhattan hotel for an abbreviat- · R ep. L"m dsay G ra.h aril, a M cC "!I
'
ed night's sleep.
ally in S,o uth Carolina vvho ~arne
Bush called the · outcome
north shiver with his ca!ldidate
· bump in the road in a' state on election eve.
·
k
Ia ·· th
· ...
Bush's
endorsem'en"'
10
':''e .
.,.
n9wn or P cmg em
path of front-ruriners. But. it wa~ a including from his famous parents
joltin~ one for a campai~ that didn't, help in New Hamphad · expected: no worse . than ·a 'shire, but could . prove a bigger
nartow defeat. McCain's wipeout boost in later states. All but four
·
- . o,nly presidents· 'r unning fqr Republican governors favor !Us
· · renomination h2d gained margins nominaqon, and their organiza; that wide in prior primaries tions will be at his ser\tice.
. .
' struck at Bush's . greatest advanArizona and Michigan hold
· cage, the image of ,inevitability, 'GOP primaries Feb.. 22, followed
given his toweritlg lead from the ~ Virgi~ia on Feb. 29, and. Bush
begir)ning'in na~ona!, polls.' :
•should h;lve, the· advantage 10 \he
"I' th.ink •electability iS ·a big latter two contests..
factor;• sal~ Gov. Paul CeBuci llf
;But the March 7 primati~s are
neighboring MaSsachusetts, , cam- pivotal 'to Rel.ubli_cans, , too.
I'
paigning for Bush, the· governor McCain spokesmap Dan SchniU
ofTexas. ~'Republicans th.ink nush said California will b,e "the ·single
can win in the fall:' But to keep most important decision-maker
them th.inking so, h~'s gOt to Will in the primary campaign." ·
j in the prinlari~.
.
That goes for the Democrats,
And while Bush suffered in too. Gore swamped Brac:liey near-

..,.k ,,., ..,__ - .....w.• .

'1111 .... ._ber II '"-215S. Oepel1

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have found in other states. She did
not have comp~ns from other
Ohio cities.
The report, part of a thre~-year
study of Cuyahoga County wel&amp;re

C..•woliJ N...,.perHollll_J.,

COLUMBUS (AP) - Legislative floor actions in .. the House of
Rwresentatives ·and· Senate from Tuesday, Feb. 1.
INTRODUCED IN THE SENATE
:sB 249 (Fingerhut) ..,.. Creates ari assisted living program to be
ad~nistered by th,e Department of Aging pursuant to a home a
coihmunity-based waiver granted by the U.S. Secretary of Health
an(~ Human Services; ·
·

.

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!

SUISCIUPI10N RATES

.·

:EMS units respond to four calls

.

'r uesday;s. floor action detailed

~

Eastern Band Boosters to meet

The Daily Sentinel

.

'

·~

VFW Auxiliary meeting Thursday

"To move into a job doesn't
mean Y,u move out of poverty;'
said .Judith Bird of Have a Heart
Ohio, . a statewide coalition of
agencies working with people on
public .· assistance. "The report
shows that clearly."
The report, "How Are They
Managing?", was based on i,nterviews with 198 people who left
the welfare rolls iJ;l Cuyahoga
County during the last three
months of 1998 and the first tluee
months of 1999.
During · the period that
researchers studied, 8,768 adults
and 16,213 •children left welfa"' in
Cuyahoga County.
Cara. Pasqualone, a Case Western policy analyst, said the report's
,__;...._ _ _ _ _.__···;;;;·;,
' ;;;
·-;..
· ..,
. results match what similar studies

· ny: Use money for whatever ~AST

. ~ODUCED IN THE HOUSE
:~m 563 (Wilson) - Exempts the value of family-owned busi-

taped ·to a board. Her hands a~d
mouth also ·were covered with
tape.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Thpl'ers Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Police found the girl after 9053 Ladies Auxiliary will hold its regular meeting Thursday. 7:30p.m..
acting on suspicions raised hy
Wagner in an interview.
Court offiCials had assembled
'
.
an unusually large pool o( about
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Local Band Boosters will nieet Monday
100 potential jurors this morn- · 7 p.m. in the Eastern High School band room, Boosters are to note the
ing.
change time.
·
· Fairfield County Prosecutor
David Landefeld had said he
expected jury selection to last
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
. through Friday. But Landefeld
said he believed it was possible Service recorded four calls for assistance Tuesday. Units responding
,
·
to seat an impartial jury despite included:
CENTRAL DJSPATCH
.
widespread publicity. .
12:35 p.m., Main Street, Tuppers Plains, Bill Ernst, St. Joseph's HosA psychologist told Fairfield
County Common Pleas Judge pital, Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
5:43 ,. p.m., Rutland Street, Middleport, George Sayre, Veterans
James Luse that Wagner, a twice·
Memorial
Hospital, Middleport squad assisted.
convicted sex offender, ·was
RUTLAND ·
menrally ill and mildly retarded.
'
8
:16
p.m.,
Meig&gt;
Mine
31,
Danville Portal, Steve Cotterill, O'Biec
But Luse found that Wagner
was competent to stand trial ness Memorial Hospiral, Central Dispatch squad assisted.
SYRACUSE
.
beca~se he understood .t he
9:44 p.m:, Dusky Street, Phyllis Hendrix, Holzer Medical Center,
charges and could assist in his
Ceni:ral Dispatch squad assisted.
defo:nse.

By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
AaiOCiated P1'818 Writer
COLUMBUS - Most people
)caving Ohio's W!'lfare rolls . are
'finding W()rk, but only half earn .
.enough to pull themselves out of
poverty, ·according to a report
· ,released Thesday.
' · Most families who left welfare .
also lost non-cash benefillj such as
food stamps or Medicaid, partly
·because they didn't understand
ot!\ey remained eligible, the report
sal d.
·
· •'fhe study, conducted by Case
Western Reserve University's
Center on Urban Poverty and
Social Change, was funded by publie and private money.

.

The Sentinel

POMEROY - Star Grange 778 and ~tar Junior Grange 878 will
meet in regular session on Saturday with a.potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
follow~d by meetin~ at 8 p,m. First-degree practice will be held. All
,
members encouraged to attend. .

I

By The AIIOCiated Pre. .
sunrise. Thursday at 7:39 a. m. ,
A weak weather disturbance
Weather forecast:
.. 1r.
will drop down across the Great
Tonight...Partly cloudy. Low~,
Lakes tonight, producing snow in in the lower and mid 20s. Li~ l
northern Ohio. Accumulations west wind, increasing to 10 to ~0,
·should be about 1 inch, the mph.
·
National Weather Service said.
. Thursday.. .Mostly cloudy. jl.d
Skies will be cloudy over the chance of mow or rain showor.,
southern half of Ohio tonight but from late morning on. Bre~~ll'
no snow is likely.·
with · highs in the lower 40s.
Lows tonight will be 20-25 .
Chance
precipitation 30 pe ~-n
More snow is likely in north- cent.
· :~·
ern Ohio on Thursday, with snow
Thursday night ... Mostly -cloudy~
showers possible in the central with a chance of snow showers.
and southeast. Skies will be most- Lows near 30.
ly cloudy in the southwest.
Extended forecast:
Highs on Thursday will be 35- .. Friday.:.Partly cloudy. Highs :~
45:
the mid 4Qs.
·
. .• , c;
The record~high temperature
Saturday... Partly cloudy. Lows
for this date at the Columbus near 30 and highs in the uppl!fi
weather station was 64 degrees in 40s.
.
••
while
the
record
low
was
1903
13
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows jn
. below zero in 195 f. Sunset the lower 30s and' highs ·in tlMb
1
. tonight will be at 5:52 p.m, and upper 40s.
·: m

Report:
People
leaving
welfare
still
struggling
~
.

Gore plans campaign
stop·with
OSU
students?
'

i

Star Grahge session set Saturday

·Potential jurors readied
for kidnapping ·case
By JOE MIUCIA
Associated Pr. ., Writer
LANCASTER Lawyers
met with a judge today to dis·cuss a possible plea agreement
by a man accused of abducting a
3-year-old girl and emombing
.her in an attic.
Jason Wagner, 24, was to have
gone on trial this morning on
charges including kidnapping,
abduction, assault and attempted
murder in ihe April 26 disappearance of 1\•hley Taggart. If
convicted of those charges, Wagner would face a maximum
penalty of life in prison without
parole.
·
Taggart_'s abduction shocked
this city, 27 m.iles southeast of
Columbus, a.nd led to an enormous search and eventual rescue
of the petite, blond girl.
On ·the fourth day. of the
search, a police detective· found
her in an attic 100 yards Jroni
her home, where she lay duct-

Chance of snow, rain -:.;
showers set Thursday~

TUPPERS PLAINS - Squa~e dancing with clogging and line
dancing will De held at the Thppers Plains VFW Saturday night, 8 to
11 p.m ., with True Country providing music and Ronnie Wood as the
caller.

DUNBAR, W.Va. - Aunita Stanley Stover Duffer, 78, Dunbar, died
Monday, Jan. 31, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis, after a
lengthy illness.
The daughter of the late Opal E. and Worthy c. Stanley, she was
retired from the West Virginia Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
DANVILLE _ Revival services will be held at the Danville HoliShe was a member of the Daughters of America, the Lioness Club,
the Pocahontas Lodge and the First United Methodist Church.
ness Church, State Route 325, Feb; 14-20 at 7 p.m. each evening. Dr.
She was also preceded in death by her first husband, Samuel Arthur · Wingrove Taylor will be the evangelist, with Don and.Valerie Quales
Stover; and by two brothers, Miles C. Stanley and Howatd W. Stanley. _a nd family as song evangelists. Gary Ja~kson , pastor, invites the public.
Surviving are her· husband, Stanford Duffer;·two stepsons and a step- .
daughter: nine stepgrandchildren and s~x· step-great-grandchildren:
two brothers, Worthy Stanley Jr. of Bidwell, and Donald Stanley .of
Gallipolis; a sister, Phyllis Baker of Middleport; and several nieces and
RACINE - Racine Grange will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
nephews, and great- nieces and g~at-nephews . .·
.
. · .
grange hall.
'.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in the l{eUer Funeral Home, 1236
Myers Ave., Dunbar, with, Pastor John A. Mason officiating. Burial will
be in Gr;mdview Memorial Park, Dunbar. Friends may call at the
RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, 5.
funeral home from 4-8 p.m. today.
p.m . at the Rutland Fire Station.
·

.Down-and-out rockers get help

.~

OHIOVALLEYWEATHER

Square dancing set Saturday

Wright, speed, $30 plus costs; DaVId G. Keams II,
POMEROY - The following cases were plus coats;
targ~t
Carol L. Gilmore, Wettsdale, Fla.. mud flap vio- Waterford, speed, $30 plus c:oata: Mlchul S.
concluded recently in the Meigs County
lation, $20 plus coats: Cecil W. Keirns, Albany, faH· McCoy. Racine. speed, $30 plus costa; aeat beft,
CINCINNATI (AP) -Lenders in the payday advance .industry
Court of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
ure to control, $20 plus costa; Brady Gilbert Jr., $25 plus costs; Warren M. Haning, Pomeroy, fall.
aft; suing cash-strapped borrowers for triple paybacks under an
Fined were:
Cheshire, window dnl, $20 plus coats; Larry D. ure to control, $20 plus costs; Daniel A. Stone,
Ohio law designed to compensate victims of crime, consumer
Joahua A. Wllaon, Pomeroy, nat belt, $15 plus Eads, L1111caster, seat beft, $15 plus costa; Jan· Middleport, left of center, $20 plus costa: Robert '
groups said.
costs: Dewayne A. Fish.,, Middleport, speed, $30 niter S. Edwards, Ubertyvllle, Ill., speed, $50 plus D. Blankenship, Shade, speed, $30 plus costs: ,
plus
costs; seat be~. $25 plus costs; Randy A. costs; John A. Rowan, little Hocking, faUura to Mary Ann Baldwin, Parkersburg, speed, $30 plus
People who obtain short-term loans against their next paychecks
Shields,
Coolville, aeat be~. $15' plus coeit: Lan)' control, $20 plus costs; Brandon Scott Yonker, co.sts: Charles Lee Smith Jr., Pomeroy, speed,,
are being socked for the triple paybacks when the lenders sue them
R. Bailey, Chester, seat belt, $25 plus costs; New Haven, W.Va., speed, $25 plus costs; Robert $30 plus costs; Douglas K. Coen, Shade, seat
.fOr overdue debts, according to a new report by the U.S. Public
Ronald L. EIRpon, Watersford, failure to yield, $20 · E. Shalieg, Pompar Beach, Fla., speed, $25 plus belt, $25 plus costs: Darrel W. Lehman, Net·
Ihi:erest Research Group, its Ohio ~ate and the Consumer Fedplus costs; Susan M. Pierce, Charleston, W.Va., costs; Bridget D. Ritchie, Racine, seat bell, $25 sonville, seat be~ . $25 plus costs; John L Cox; ·
eration of America.
• .
.
· ·
.
speed , $30 plus cOS1S; Elizabeth Bernat, Athens, plus costs: seat beH, $15 plus costs; Robert L Nelsonville, seat batt, $25 plus costs: Jennifer A.
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Carl L. McGovern, R~chie Jr., Racine, speed, $20 plus costs; seat Mollohan, Belpre, speed, $30 plus costs; Gary W:
The consumer groups urged Ohio lawmakers to end what the
Columbia, S.C., speed, $30 plus costs; Shawn M. be~. $25 plus costs; Mary A. Baldwin, Parkers· Gilmore, Langsville, gross overload, . $500 plus
groups termed an abuse of the law. The Cincinnati Post, which
Malone, Belpre, speed, $30 plus' costs: Gtena M. burg, W.Va., ' speed, $30 plus casts; Harold costs:
.
reported last summer on operations of the payday advance industry.
Michael Allen Cleland, Rutland, speed, $30 •
Smith, Shade, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Carol L. Eu~ene Nelson, Mason, W.Va., seat belt, $25 plus
reported the groups' findings Thesday.
Fetty, Vinton, failure to control, $20 plus ~s: costs: Patricia A. Winebrenner, Westerville, plus costs: Tammy l. Clem, The Plains, speed; ..
John F. Musick, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs: $30 plus costs; Tony A, Dugan, Pomeroy, seat ·
· · The groups said a study of neady 400 such lawsuits found paycosts; Cioyse G. Worthing, Delaware, speed, $30 Barbara K. Culbertson, Athens, speed, $30 plus bell, $25 plus ·costs: failure to display valid regis· ..
day lenders being awarded three times the amount of their original
trallon, $20 plus costs; Peter H. Mitchell,
loan, 10 percent interest on damages and co11rt costs when borrow- · plus costs; Thomas L Gates II, Dresden, seat costs:
. belt, $25 plus costs;
William A. Free, Hopkinsville, Ky., speed, $30 Granville, speed, $30 plus costs; Roger N. Roush,
e'tS- give lenders checks that bounce.
Dustin L Zirkle, New Haven, W.Va., signal light plus costs; Larry E. Wagner, Marietta, speed, $30 Pembrake, Ga., speed, $30 plus costs; JQhn W:
·· The state's Civil Damages for Crime Victims law allows victims
violation, $20 plus costs; Frank Seymore Herald, plus costs; Freddie D. Perkins, Middleport, failure Hatch, Bethel Park, Pa., speed, $30 plus costs: •
Langsville, stop sign, $20 plus costs; Gerald L to control, $20 plus costs: Michele L. Draznovich, seat bell, $25 plus costs; Bruce Teang·SIIng Sov/
of theft offenses, including bad checks, to collect triple damages.
Taylor,
Jackson, mud . flap violation, $50 plus Marietta, speed, $30 plus coats; George T. Coram, Anbler; Pa., speed. $30 plus costs; David B. Herd·
State Sen. Mark Mallory. D-Cincinnati, who has conducted
costs: ovarload, $250 plus costs: John A. Hamil- Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Tara L. Haw· man, Rutland, seat beH, $25 plus costs; Dennis C:
hearings about payday loan practices, said he would look into the
ton, Dexter, seat be~. $21? plus ¢osts; Peggy Jo . ley, Pomeroy, failure to control, $20 plus costs; Clark, Pomeroy, seat bell, $25 plus coats: Jerry ..
"practice of criminal lawsuits against borrowers.
Baden, Huntington, W.Va.. speed, $30 plus costs: Richard L. Banks, Reynoldsburg, sp&amp;elj, $30 plus Lee Hall, Dublin, failure to control, $20 plus costs;'.
Rgne E. Castillo, Bloomington, Ind., speed, $30 costs: Richard L Kehh, Glouster, speed, $30 plus Rickey L. Deere Jr., unsecure load, $20 pluS::
plus costs; James H. Bailey, Greenup, Ky., speed, costs; Larry F. Cal'p8f!ter, Spencer, .vy. Va., over· COSIS:·gross overload, $262-plua 00818; Herman A•
$30 plus ·oosts: Martin C. Cremeans Jr., Stow, load, $90 plus costs; Melissa Sayor, Athens, · Lauderback, Carbon Hill, saat be~. $25 plus costs:-~
speed,
$30 plus costs: Lauren E. Anderson, speed, $30 p,lils costs; Debora~ D. Whhe, New Leonard S. Erwin, Pomeroy, seat bell, $25 plus;.
•·CLEVELAND (AP) -The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame FounPomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Alison C. Ana- Haven, speed, $30 plus costs: Wen L Chen, Gal· costs; Ch~rles F. Engtefield Jr., speed, $3P.. plus ·
dation is starting up a fund to help Rock Hall inductees or nomidell, Powell, speed, $30 plus costs; William F. Ful· llpolis, speed, $30 plus costs; Vetden Benton Llnri costs: Stacey L Brickles, Syracuse, speed, $30
nees who have bit hard times financially.
plus costs; seat beH, $~ plus costs; Joshua:
ton, Marietta, speed, $30 plus costs; Earnest M. II, Washington, W.Va., stop slg~. $20 plus costs;
James, Reynoldsburg, speed, $30 plus costs:
Harmon McLaughlin Gtyndry, Aatrock, Mich., Weaver, Albany, failure to control, $20 plus co'sts.~ ·
Suzan Evans, executive director of the New York-based foundaMatthew A. Schllly, Gahanna, speec;l, $30 plus . seat be~. $25.plus costs; Dorinda L Deem, New Charles E. Johnson, Wellston, failure to control,
tion, said Tuesday the goal is 't o make $100,000 available th.is year for
costs; Angle M. Council, Langsville, seat be~. $25 Haven, seat be~. $25 plus costs: Richard A. $20 plus costs. ·
grants to help qualified applicants. Payments could be made to third
parties who are valid creditors.
Financially strained Rock Hall inductees or nominees could
receive grants for such things as medical expenses; rent and other
.
'
bills.
Eberling w~s convicted of vehicle named Barbara Kinzel.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Infor- film.
The funding for the assistance program will come in part from
The Sheppards' son, Sam murder in the 1984 death of Kinzel, who was dating Eberling.
money raised at the annual Rock Hall' induction ceremony that will . mation about R.ichard Eberling's
Reese
Sheppard, is . rtow suing Ethel May Durkin, for whom he at the time, had worked at Dr. :·
conviction
for
killing
an
elderly
be held March 6 in New York, Evans said.
The foundation, which will administer the assistance program,
widow and his alleged ties to ·the the state of Ohio claiming his worked as . a Fare,taker. He was Sheppard's hospital and was on .
deaths of other women should father was wrongfully impris- serving ·. a life ·· sentence for . duty the..day Mrs. Sheppard died:. 1
has a 50 percent representation on the Rock Hall's board.
"If that's not ·a serial killer,) .,
be kept out. of the trW aimed at oned. To win the case, Sheppard Durkin's slaying when he died in
: "We thought it was important. to start something to help the
know what it is," Sheppard ,
1998.
don't
and
his"lawyers
will
have
to
conindigent with some of their costs. It's starting out th.is way. Then
deciding who murdered Marilyn
we'll see how it goes. We will see if we get eligible applicants;' Evans · Sheppard, prosecutors told a vince a jury th'e majority of evi- . Durkin's two. sisters, both of . attorney Terry Gilbert said after.,·
dence indicates his father. was whom knew ·r;berling, also died ticking off the list of names in.,
said.
jud~ Thesday.
.,
.. :fhe application process and those chosen to receive help wi1J. be
P(Osecutors asked Cuyahoga innocent of his mother's murder. in unusual circumstances -a nd . court Tuesday.
But Kathleen Martin, an assisSuster is hearing ljlO!jons this Sheppard susp~cts Eberling
"k!pt confidential, she said.
County Judge Ronald ·suster not
tant county prosecutor, argued;.
to allow the Eberling material week from both the Slieppard might have killed them, too.
He wants to bting . up their that none of the deaths Sheppard ,
into court during the second day legal team and county prosecuof a w.rongful imprisonment trial tors, who are defending the state. dea,ths once testimony · begins, wants to connect with Eberling .
CINCINNATI (AP) -A man accused of driving drunk into a
He plans to rule on all the along . with ano,ther woman's should be admitted aS evidence. .
for Dr. Sam Sheppard.
· None of the deaths is similar ·
,c rowd of people at . an Oktoberfest celebration downtown has
Sheppard was convicted in motions presented to ·him some- death.
One sister, Myrtle Fray, was enough to Mrs. Sheppard's beat- ,
pleaded guilty to all 18 charges against him, althou~ he says he
1954 of beating his wife to death time after the last of them is
dt&gt;es not remember the events because he was so intoxicated.
.
beaten
to death in 1962 in a ing death to .indicate that the ,
at the couple's .home in suburban argued on Friday,
.
~Michael Cowperthwaite; 25, entered his guilty pleas Thesday in
Jury selection is scheduled to crime that remains unsolved. The killer is same person. "It doesn't ,
Cleveland. He spent a decade in
J{imilton County Common Pleas Court. He could be sentenced to
other sister, Sarah ..Belle Farrow, . prove identity," she said.
.
prison, before the Supreme begin Monday.
:
The doctor always insisted•
at-~Uuch as 48 years in ·prison on the charges that included aggraSheppard believes DNA ' sam- died · in 1970 as a result of
. Court ove.rturned his convicv~d vehicular assault, feloriious assault and inducing panic. Seninjuries.
she
sustained
in
a
fall
that
a "bushy-haired. intruder"•
' tion , He was acquitted at a retri- ple$ fr.:om the crime sce11·e, sever·killed his wife in her . upstairs"
'tcliicing is scheduled for March 2.
al in . 1966 anlcf pie\}, four •years al .·alleged confessiOns and 'o ther that was: ruled acdtlental.
~!'He is mortified he caused this kind of damage," sai!i Cow~ Eberling also drove a car that bedroom, then knocked him
later.
·
evidence shows that Eberling, a
p~~thwaite's lawyer, SqJtt Cro.Well. "From the moment I met him,
The case partly inspired•'"ii'he window washer- for ·his family. in crashed .: into a tr.uck in 1956, und:JJiSciolis when' he •heard her:
h~ ·wanted to plead gUilty and go to prison.~·
•·.
Fugitive" . televisi.o n series and 1954, was Mrs. Sheppard's killer. killing a female passe.n ger ill his cries and ran to her aid.
t Prosecutors and police say Cowperthwaite's crime began around
8[p.m: on Sept.19.
.
· '
They say officers noticed him parked and revving the engine of
his"1989 Chevrolet Beretta. But police say he sped away as officers
.
.
atproached the .car.
·
·
.
teachers.
COLUMBUS (A,P)- AI Gore planned to
He was to belln the day in Nfw
· ~ :rhey say he ignored police warnings - and in one case struck
Gore's opponent for the Democratic nom~' ·
turn to Ohio and two other big states on York and travel to Los Angeles lifter
olice officer - as he turned into a crowd gathered for OktoWednesday to kick off the post-New Hampination, former New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley•.
b ifest, Cincinnati's annual street
his Ohio stop. New York, Ohio and supports forgiving college loans each year for··
. festival. ·
shire part oflris campaign for president.'
California are among the 11 states · 60,000 college students, hlgh school graduateS
The vice president planned an afternoon
lrip to Ohio State University to discuss his
.holding presidential primaries~ ~n · and mid-career professionals who certify O!S;.
education proposals with students. He was to
teachers and commit to serving in poor urbarl ..
March 7.
···
CLEVELAND (AP) -The City Council has given prebegin
the
day
in
New
York
and
travel
to
Los
or rural schools. He. also would add new Head·
linunary approval to allow residents to spend their $4,000 railroad
Angeles after his Ohio stop. New York, Ohio
Start slots for 400,000 children.
sdi1ndproofing grants on anything, including vacations.
and rural areas, plus an extra $5,000 in pay for
and
California
are
among
the
11
states
holdBradley's last trip to Ohio was Dec. 1.
. ·· ~:one lady camo to a council meeting and said, 'That's ._,y
"master teachers" who meet even higher staning
presidential
primaries
on
March
7.
.·mOney. If I want to gb to Vegas, that's my money'," Councilwoman
As a candidate, Gore has pushed for $50 dards in those areas.
. Saratha Goggins said.
He also would offer sigriing bonuses to
billion to make pre!chool universally available
The City Council voted Tuesday night to allow homeownen to
and raises up to $5,000 for public school recruit mid-career teachers from other profesNEWS.~
.use the S4,000 grants without restriction. The. council will take a
sions
and
he
favors
mandatory
testin·
g
'of
new
teachers
who
meet
certain
standards
in
poor
final vote in two ~eeks.
To subscribe, call 992·2156.
!
r .1 ·
The CSX railroad agreed to provide $2 million to soundproof
hemes along its line in .East Cleveland. Grants of $4,000 each would
go to 120 homeowners as part of a deal to allow incre~ed rail traf,fic:
••
· The agreement with t~e city, calls for most of the $2 million to
. •
;be used to create jobs and train police and firefighters for railroad
emergencies. The .rest would to go to homeowners for insulation,
storm windpws and other modifications to mufile train noise.

Watchdogs

'

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

a

r.

to

month by the Ohio Association of
Community Action Agencies that
found the number of poor Ohio
··cbildr~n is. growing even as the
number of children receiving traditional welfare payments is plunging.
Jon Allen, a spokesman for the
Department of Human Services,
. said Tuesday's rep.o rt underscores
how impo~t it is for people
. leaving welfare to understmd that
the October deadliite is only for
cash assistance.
Many ·people will remain eligiblefurfoodstamps,Medicaid,subsidized child care and other programs, he said.
The study, \0 cost $300,000
over three yean, was paid for by
Human Services, the Cuyahoga

STILL RISING - Gasoline prices In Melg1 County and arou~,
the country continua to rill. AAA announced TuHday that gas
prices In aou)heaatlm Ohio JIJmpld another 8 c1nta lhl1 wee~&lt;tn
(Brian J. Reed photo) ·
. . c2

Gas

County Board of County Commissioners and The Joyce Founda- · .
tion, a Chicago-based nonprofit
from PageA1
foundation that . works on lawthls week, the average price of
income issues.
regular unleaded gasoline was 95
cents, mid-grade· unleaded, $1.08,
ly 2-to-1 in the Iowa cauc~ses, . ~nd premium, $1.18. ·
.. but beat him only narrowly in .
New Hampshire. Bradley climbed
·Gas prices in : Meigs County
to the lead l· n the New Hamp- are right at the average. Most stations in Midclleport and Pomeroy
shire opinion polls, then slumped, are offering regular unleaded
then edged back up
d
·
gasoline at or aroun $1.40 per .
Bradley sa_id h_e has
_ the money gallon, when purchased at selfd de
h
an
ter.nunallon to wage t. e service pumps.
national contest that begms ,
. ·
.
· March 7 when· six of the 10
The pnce for prenuum gaso. biggest s~tes vote in a sihgle day. line at twO stations in Pomeroy_
"We're no longer in a sjngle were actually below the average
· phase
, state, we'r.e in the national
of die campaign;' he said. Gore
agreed. "It's a national primacy;•
h
·d
·
131
e
•
· ·
While Bradley claimed satisfaction in New Hampshire, it
prompted· him to one change•_

price, at $1.55 per gallon, self-ser., 11
vice. ,
.
.11a'
While gas prices in other are;as .
of southea~tern Ohio, includilliri
Gallipolis, are as ·much as teQ,8
cents cheaper per gaUon, AAA~~·~
Fuel Gauge survey of fuel pric.es
show area rates as much as 6 C~l)!; d ·
above the national average.
•':t~

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
To $Ubscribe, C4U992·2U6.

he challenged Gore to· weekly
debates .through March 7.
. Gore had started the debate
challenges four months ago; when
he pronounced himself the
l!nderdog and -remodeled . his
·
B ra dl. ey reb u ffie d hi m,
cam p-atgn.
but .they eventually met in eight .
forums. The vice presideht' then
demanded two debates a 'week, to:·
ds
. supplant campaign TV a .
Bradley called it a gimmick and
d h 'd t..
d ..
sai
e ..eep a vertlsmg.
Gore· said' he's willing to
debate, but renewed his demand
that the ads be dropped. He and
Bradley ate booked to · debate ·
· March 1 in Los Angeles.

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WICin··-·'*-"~~
Page A4

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The Daily Sentinel .

gA~lfR.

I RUN THE COUNTRY.
WHAT DO 'iJU.00 ?

'£stllfl{l,/jd 1111948

111 Coun St., Pomlfoy, Ohio
740-1102-21141 • fu: 1182-21117

QI!Ea~!Wr.~
stahlerOI~se . net

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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·Our view:

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as

Perkins' view:

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.

What's really in Elian's ·best interest?
Bedrich G. fled his native Czechoslovakia,
along with his two small children, in August
1968, shortly after Soviet troops occupied his
country.
The political refugee settled in the Southern California town of Yucaipa, where his
mother and stepfather already resided.
four months after Bedrich's arrival in this
land of the free, home of the brave, he died of
terminal cancer. His ex-wife, still living in
Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia, petitioned
f0 r return of the children. The international
·custody battle ended up in Sa11, Dernardino
County Superior Court.
The trial judge concluded that the mother
was a "fit" patent. ."Thete has been rio evidence presented to this court whatsoever that
would indicate that (the mother) is a bad person or an evil person, or that she has ever
done anything other than provide adequate
food, clothing; shelter, attention for her children while she had th~m and the child sl\e has
1)0W.

"It is obvious to the court that she is an
intelligent woman;·she is neat, clean and dresses well. According to the testimony, she has a
good job. She owns and maintains an adequate home.... Her personal morals appear to
be adequate by modern slandards."
·
Yet the court did not restore the children
to their biological mother, did ' not return
them to repression in .the land of their birth.
For doing so, the court held, would be detrimental to their ":welfare and best interests."
Whi~h brings us to the international custody battle over 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez.
His mother forfeited her life last November,
fleeing repression in Castro's Cuba,'so that her
little boy could enjoy the fruits of freedom
and opportunity that the United States offers.
But this act of moth~ly love, of supreme
sacrifice, is of little consequence to DiU Clinton, to Attorney General Janet Reno or to
D~ris Meissner, commissioner of the lmmi-

Havana. .
As to the presumption tha~ family ' law is
· clearly on the side of the Cuban's boy biological father in this custody battle, well, that's
hardly unequivocal.
Indeed, were the dispute heard in a California family court, the judge might render
his or ht~ decision based on the caSe involving the Czech refugee Dedrich G. more than
a quarter-century ago.
.
The rulirig by the San Bernardino Superior Court was actually consistent with California's Family Law Act, under which the state's
gration and Naturalization Service. They aim Supreme Court affirmed in 197 4 that '.' it is no
to return the~ to Communist Cuba despite longer essential that a court, to awanl custody
. ..
to a non-parent, find the parent unfit to care
his l•te mother's /wishes.
for the child."
Young Eliat(s biological father, Juan
There is absolutely no reason to believe
that Juan Gonzalez is anything other than a
believe the Cuban .lad's life chances are infi- "fit:' parent - a _Iovin~ d•d. w_ho desperately
nitely better: ip tile United States than in Cas- destres to be reum~ed wt~h hts lm.le boy. ~ow_­
tro's Cqba are inclined to support the father's , ever, .becau~ he ts a vtrtu~ pnso~e~ m hts
right. ·
'' ·
·
homeland, bke the rest of hts 11 mtlhon ~eiDut there's just one nagging question: Why low cou_ntryme? •nd women, _returmns
hasn't Elian's dad hopped a plane or boat to young ';lhan to htm woul~ be detnmental to
Miami to state his case in person? Is he afraid. the boys welfare and best mterests. .
.
of flying? Do· boats gi e him motion sickness?
If Juan we~. free to speak ~ts nund, wt.th, Or could it be thattastro won't let him go o~t fear of reprisal fromCastros ~hugs, he JUSt
to Miami for fear that Ju•n won't come back mtght say that, much as tt pamshtm to be sepc
•t h 'II · · !'ttl El'
nd th
·u·
arated from hts beloved son, Ehan ts better off
- th• e JOI 0 1 e tan a
e mt ton or 1. .
·h
. h I . · M' · h · 1· ·
so Cuban ex-patriots who have escaped · tvmg Wtt. "':au"':' 10 lamt ~ ~n tvmg Wit
htm - hts btol&lt;&gt;g~cal father - m Havana.
F1'd I' d 0 t'1 · ·m ,
Tehs eCsP1. t c regdt . ~-. t 11.
t'ts congre'sClinton, Reno and Meissner, their allies in
e
tn on a m1ms ra on,
C
d h · rr· d · h
d' k
sional allies and its &amp;iench in the media say .. ?ogress, an t et_r ten ~ 1 ~ t e me •a. now
that . none of this matters. The campaign to ~hts.Yet, ~hey contmue to tnsiSt that famtly l~w
keep young Elian · in the .United States is ts unequtvocal. That no ma~er what th~ ctrnothing more, !hey say, than a "politically cu~tances were that broug t young Eban to
·motivated" assault on "the rule oflaw."
Ul)t~~~ S~tes,. no matter how poor, nasty,
This is just .0 much sophistry. There are bruttsh ~nd short the bf~ to whtch he would
politics on both~des of the Gonzalez custody ~ c?nstgned v:ould ~e tf returne~ to Combattle. Indeed, tile Castro regime could have mumst C:uba, hts relattves m Mtamt must surquietly negotiated .the boy's return to the . render, htm to the Castro regtme.
.
(Jo.eph Pertdu Ia 1 columnist for The
island. But instead, the Communists have been
orchestrating public demonstrations m Sin Diego Union-Tribune.)

Joseph .
PerKins

~s~'::~ ~o~:!J~n~~Ve~e th=~f t~ . ~~~

Washington Merry-Go-Round:

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I

·ay JACK ANDERSON
many was a prologul for the Pacif- !hat were put tci' the.' :icientim:
(bombs) apd the · situation
and
DOUGLAS
COHN
ic.
;
I.
Use
them
in
the
that
demanded
shock action."
Today is Wednesday, February 2, the 33rd day o£2000. Thete are ~33
WASHINGTON
The
On March 9,1945, 72,!JO?p~ is &amp;om the . ~itary poi!)t ofvie\V
Jlresident Harry Truman said,"l
day$ left in the year.
bombing
campaign
irt
Kosovo
and
·pie
died
during
one
air
l'l!i~
on
most
effective
in
bringing
about
did
not hesitate to order the use of
Today's Highlight in History:
Serbia
teignited
the
debates
about
Tol&gt;yo.ln all, during six mont)U of pron;tpt JapaneSe surtender at min~ -die bomb on military targets. I
(}n February 2, 1536, the A~tine city of Buenos Aires w~
vs.
strategic
bombing
D-29
raids , twice as many ' ciyilian imum cost to. our arme9 forces (23 ~ted to ~ve a half million boys
founded by.Pedro de Me"do~ ofSpain.
bombing.
casualties were inflicted than. had votes), ·
,
,
on our side and as nuny on the
&lt;:;ln this date:
been
suffered
by
the
Japanese
2.
Give
a
l!lilitary
demonstraother side. I never lost any
I!' 1653, New Anisterdim - now New York City -was incorpoThe5e arguarmed
forces
during
the
dntire
.
tion
in
Japan
to
be
followed
by
'over
my decision."The implication
~.
~~~
lrll848, the Treacy of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican War,
broached. dur- ' war. And this was befote · one renewed opportunity for surtender from Truman was that use of the
was.. signed.
·
·
ing World War atomic bomb destroyed !)(j,OOO, · )lefore full use of the weapon · is .bomb ' on a smaller target or as a
•
. .
II, culminating
demonstration might not have sufIn 1876, the National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs was
with the deci- people in Hiroshima (Aug. · 6, , employed (69 YOtes).
1945~
and
another
killed
40,000·in
3.
Give
,
an
ex~rimental
ficiently
shocked the Japanese ipto
formed in New Yorll;
to use the
N~
. · (Aug. 9, 1945.). 1 1 • . , demonstration in this country with su~ndering and that once the
lb 1882, Irish novelist James Joyce was born near 'Dublin.
,
atomic bomb
Admiral WiliWtt Leahy, Fhief representatiWJS of Japan .: present, tv.u bombs were used the cOstly
IIi 1897, lite destroyed the Pennsy)Vaip. state capitol ill Harrisburg: .
against civilian
military adviser'to Presidents O,:.qo- .. followed by a nelf opportunity for it:tvasion of the Japanese main
(A l)ew statehouse was dedicated on the same. si~ nine years later.) · '
~nters.
sevelt and T"!man and . p~ding: ' sur~nder before fuji ~ · qf the islands would have to go forward.
1.!' 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces fiom the Battle' of Stajinl!fold
Strategic ·bombing was the officer of the Joint Chiefs of~ ,.,..,.n is Cimpl~' P,9 votes).
There w.ts, however, another
sur~ndered in a. major viC:rory for the ~~IS i? Worl~ ~at II. .' ·
euphemisln that launched a thou- during World War II, sai4, l"rvty
4. Withhold military use of the side.Iri his book "Hii'O$hima.: 'John
1,! ' 1945, Prestdent ~~It and, B~tttsh Pnm~t Mtmster Wm~t.on , sand planes·- those 1,000 plane · own feeling was that in bein~ lfue • ~apons, but riiakC pu~ experi- Hersey quotes a S\lrviYOr, J?r. SasaCh~rchtllleft for t~e summit ·~Yalta. Wt~ Sovtet l~d~r Josef Stal,n.
raids of World,War ,11 1 designed to first to use '(the bomb) ... ~... men~!. .'aemonstrat\O!l' of th~ir . k!: "I see that they are holding a
I~ 1971, .'dt Amt? assume!:~, powet' m l1ganda,{ollowmg acoup that destroy the eneiiiy's industrial adopted the ethical standard fom~ eil'~n~ (16 YOtes).
,
trial for war criminals in Tokyo just
·
cap~city after ptecision bombing mon to the barbarians ofth¢ Dark
ousted Prestdent Milton Ob«C.
.. Maintain as secret as possible bow; I think they ought to try ~e
lb 1980, reports surfaced that the FBI .had conducted a sting (!per- proved to bC unattainablerand roo' Ages.! ~ not taught to II)~
' ~r all deY¢1opment of our n~ ,uen Who ded4ed to use lhe bomb
·atioll targe~ng memben of cln~ U$ing phony A.rab businessmen · 'costly. Atea bombipg -... another in that fashiOn; and wan can
'b e weapons ~d refrain &amp;om using and they should hang them all:'
in ~hat becanie known as "Absc:un," a codename protested by Arab- · euphemism - was t!Je substitute, won by destroying wbme ·'anCl !hem in this War (3 votes).
. Today, science has improved ~r
Am~ricans.
.
·
.
· ,.
. and )t• proved to be , devastating children:·
.-·
.
·
.
cq,ua~on
!Jlisn:presented
.the
~bllity
to employ precision bomb.
.
I~ 1.99~, . danc~r, actb~ ~d choreographer
KeUy died at his : , !n~ The height of area \lprnb- · Justification.
\\!35 SOught from. te5ults ah was h.eavil)l criticized ing, , thereby reducing coUateral
lle"!riY Htlls, Calif. home; he was 83.
.
,,
. mg Ui the European Thearzr was the lclentific~ommunity, ~ one ' by several poll piqicipants wheri (civilian) damage and relegating
Today's Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stritehis 74.ACtor Robert Man- 'the fire-bombing of Dresden" in f3C their leaders, Arthur CoJr\Rio~, , ,his actions became.lc!iown.atter the , strategic bombing to the paSt.' As
dan:o 68. Comedian Tom Smothers is fJ.Jtod: singer-guitarist Gra- 'l febnlal:y, .1?45 when 40,000 to telayed to Truni'an lht -~ Pf a . Woll'. Only 23 out of the 15Q sdef\crewman on the ' Hiroshima
ham Nash is 58. Actor Bo Hopkins is 58,TV elCIICu!ive Barry Diller is 1!XJ,OOO peoJ!Ie perished.
poll taken. , of ISO scientists tists (IS percent)' had actually ·mission exclaimed: "My God!
SB.l:ountry singer Howard ~ (The BeiWny Brothers) is 54. ' Yet ' an i~f~CSS~J~ent of strategic involved with the ~pon'i deVelc adYOC.ated /)til military use. '
What have we done?"
Ac~s Farrah Fawce~t is Sl. Model Chrq' Dr~ is 46, Actor . · bomlling . f.Qr - 1943 sho~d that 'opment: "Eighty-seven pel'(;ent ,
Army Chief ofStalfGeo!Je C.
'
Mic;hael Talbott is 45. Actlllsl Kim Zimmer if 45•. Rock mus.iciari Gerlnan morale ac11Jally improved YOted tor: .. military use."
' Marshall, who initially had reserva-.
(Jack AndlriGri and Douglle
Ro~ert DeLeo (Stone Temple Pilocs) is 34. Rode mlllician Ben 'Mize and Germah war · production
Dut did they? H~re are the live lions about use of the 119m"' later Cohn co1umn1ata for United
(Counting Crows) is 29. JUmr T-Mo ~~ Mob) il 28.
· • increased. What happened in Ger- Pl'!iOIIS conc~ing ~ryUC ~~ · told a reporter~ "We~ had ~nly two feldure Syndjcate,)
~
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qn this date in history ~ ... Bombing campaigns h~ve been.known to backfire

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5 •;

.

J

Military
spells out
gay po"cy
By ROBERT BURNS
AP MHitary WrHer
WASHINGTON - The
U.S. military services for the
first time have' spelled out for
field commanders a policy of
ensuring that troops who complain of anti-gay threats or
ha~ment are not theli)Selves
investigated.
The intent is to allow such
complaints to be aired without
fear of. being kicked out of the
service for being homosexual,
and to reirtforce the idea that
those · who . make anti-gay ·
threats will not be tolerated .
Defense Secretary William
Cohen sai~ Tuesday the new
guidelines on how to investigate anti-gay threats
incorporated in updated training
p!OgiliiliS designed to ensure
that the Clinton administration's "don't ask, don't tell~ pol- ·
icy on gays is ertforced fairly
and uniformly throughout the
services.
As a matter of policy, commanders are not to use complaints of anti-gay harassment
or threats as a teason to investigate the complaining person.
Instead the commanders are
supposed to investigate the
source of the threat or harassment.
"These plans make it very
clear ... that there is no room
for harassment or threats in the
military:' Cohen said in written sta~ment.
"Service members need to
understand that harassment for
any reason will not be tolerated, and commanders .will take
. prompt, appropriate · actions
against individuals involVed in
such behavior:' Cohen added.
The
P~ntagon
also
announced Tuesday the number of discharges from the military for being homosexual fell
to 1,034 in the fiscal year ended
Sept. 30 from 1,145 in the yearearlier period. Spokesman Kenneth Bacon said 83.5' percent of
discharges resulted from statements by service members that
· they were homosexuaL
Under the administration's
policY, gays .may serve in the
military as long as they keep
their sexual orientation. to
themselves. If they state that
they are homosel'llal, they. are
supposed to be remQVed from
the service.
.
In 1994, the first fuJI year of
"don't 3sk, don't tell;' dis- ·
charges total~d 617. They rose .
every year since until 1999.
Michelle Benecke, executive
directoi of the Servicemembers
Legal Defense Fund, welcomed
Cohen's approval of the training guidelines · but said such
guidance should have been
made available to field com- ·
. manders years ago.
"We're glad to see, finally, ·
that the secretary is taking steps
to train people," Benecke said.
She said her group has found
that most service members .
who declare their holnosexualiry, and thereby are removed
from the service, do so because
they feel threatened by an antigay enviro,.nment in their workplace.
"What is needed now is for
leaders to enforce the harassment guidelines with commitment:' Benecke said.
Cohen ii\structed the services to develop new training
guidelines in December amid
widening criticism that Clinton
administration's policy on gays
in the militaty was 'not work•
il)g. The criticism sharpened
after a court-martial in which
an Army private was convicted
of murdering a gay soldier
harassed ~th the knowledge of
his superiors. President Clinton
called the Pentagon's implementation of the administration policy" out of whack.''
Cohen also asked each of
the service's ~op civilian and
. uniformed le~ders . to issue
statements to their troOps reinf6rting th~ p~licy against
harassment of gays.
' ·

are

· · ff court agrees with school funding ·
ruling, action ~hould . be taken - soon
If one issue in Ohio sets a record in longevity for remaining unreit's school funding. Nearly six years after a .lower court dedated
the state's system for financing public schools unconstitutional - and
nine years after the original civil suit was filed - we ate still awaiting
action.
In this case, it's a matter of waiting for the
In
smaller,
Ohio Supteme Court to ~ecide the state's appeal
1
. poorer districts to Perry County Common Pleas Judge Lintop
-many here Lewis Jr.'s ruling.in DeRolph 'IS. Ohio.
Word from the justices is expected sometime
in stJuthern
later this year, .but in the meantime, schools and
Ohio- the
the Legislature continue to be at a standstill finda scilution to the problem.
'
ing
money isn't
At issue- as it has been since the 1970s- is
there, and they
the method of funding schools. Local districts
struggle altJng depend on property. taxes for the bulk of their
best as they revenue in operating schools. Since some counties, like Franklin, are w..althier in that respect
can.
than ,others, students have the best money can
buy. In smaller, poorer districts - many here in southern Ohio - the
money isn't there, and they struggle along as best as they can.
Lewis' decision challenged the property i:ax method. The state, as it did
'in the '70s, appealed the decision. The arguments for bothsicles :Ire n&lt;!W '
being weighed by justices.
"We're waiting for direction from the Ohio Supreme Court," State
Rep. John A. Carey, R-Wellston, told a Gallia County citizens commit·
tee concerned about education last ~k.
"I don't expect an}'thing will happen until then."
Obviously, one cannot hurry the judicial process as there ate rtumerous issues .involved with changing a deep-rooted system. Inevitably, the
court will advise the Legi$ture if it should 'act or not.
'
T'? its credit, the Legislature has attempted to. fix the disparity by
putting more money into education, and Gov. Bob Tan made schooling
a·priority in his recent State of the State address.To its discredit, the Legislatiue's one atlef11pt to equalize funding- placing an increase in the
sales tax on the ballot in 1998 - went down in dames.
Eilough of the past. Now for the future. There may be no one real
sol':'tion to erasing inequality in school funding. and since the people
hav~ spoken, they believe they are paying their share of their children's
education. Increasing taxes is' not. the an"""'r, especially with an administration and Legislature that isn't interested in increasing the tax burden.
l(th~ justices believe the currept funding setup is fair, the status quo
remains, as will the dissatisfaction &amp;om coalitions that think it's unf1r.
The lobbying, debate and legal challenges will continue as some sch~b
cope with diminishing resources and increasing pressure for students to
per(orm well.
'
l{owever, should the high court agree with Lewis' contention,' state
lead_!!rs have to go back to the drawing board. Don't look for it to hap.·
pen· this year, with elections looming in the· House and Senate. But
when, and if they do, lawmakers must take responsibility for whatever
plari is agreed upon and implement their proposals. .
"t don't think we'll reach a perfect solution - we may neyer be
don'!'," Carey reOected last .week.
Tflat much is true, because no solution in public policy. appeals to
everyone. But if a plan does arise that addresses the greater gOod and lifts
southern Ohio education out of its financial constraints, it will be most
welcome.

Wedneedey, Febnhlry 2, 2000

Clinton, -GOP pledge to protect Social Security
WASHIJ'.!GTON (AP) President
.Clinton and Republican leaders of Congress basked in the glory of the longest
economic expansion in. America's history
Thesday, pledging to put aside political differences to reduce the national debt and
protect Social Security.
"I think we can really get some things .
done:• Clinton exclaimed. Following suit,
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., said,
"There's a lot of neutral gromid that we
can work with the president." But Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss .,
. acknowledged the obvious:."There will be
distractions and there will be disagree-

ments."

\

Republicans said they ·were committed
to action on administration-!:&gt;acked trade
bills for China, Africa ancl the Caribbean
Basin and a $ t .6 billion ~ackage. of aid for
Colombia to t ombat illegal ·drugs.
With Congress back ip town, Clinton
sununoned the leaders- Republicans and
Democrats alike - to Ifl,.~~w prospects for
legislative action in an election year. It's a
difficult time ·for compromise, with the

two parties battling for control of Congress
and the White House. On the other hand,
neither side wants to be seen by voters as
an obstruction to politically popular initiatives.
Democrats and Republicans departed a
White House meeting still at odds over
Clinton's proposal to provide a prescription ·drug benefit under Medicare. They
also disagree over a patients' bill of rights,
gun safety legislation, raising the minimum
wage, an overhaul of campaign finance
laws and how to improve America's
schools, said House Minority Leader Dick
Gephardt, D-Mo.
" So there's a lot of disagreement:'
Gep hard~ added.
.
·
Republicans were Sl'nsitive to the symbolism of the moment, the first day of the
I 07th consecutive month of economic
growth - a milestone for which all sides
are eager to grab credit.
"I don't think the president can claim all
the glory:• Hastert sai~ after the meeting,
talking with reporters in the d~iveway. He
said Congress deserves a pat on the back,

To subscribe, call992-2156.

•'.
.~ I

too. Lott' pointed out that the good times
started during the Bush presidency in the
spring of 1991.
Most of the meeting was spent on how
to move the Caribbean Basin, Africa and
China trade bills, Lott said.
"The president made a commitment to
put his shoulder to the wheel to try to' get
this done," Lott said. "If he's not going to
get in and work hard ... it's not going to get
done."
House Majority Leader Dick Armey, RTexas. said Clinton must push reluctant
Democrats to vote for permanent normal
trade relations with China. "We're going to
have to go out and find the votes," Armey
said. "The president understood that was
his challenge." ,
"The consensus is that we need to
· schedule it as early as possible:," Armey
added.
With Congress' calendar shortened by
lawmakers' need to campaign, Clinton said
'he was "looking foi)Vard to working in
what will be a fast-paced &lt;ongressional
year." In particular, he.mentioned proposals

to pay down the debt, prolong the solven.
· cy of Social Security and bring economic
I
investment to needy urban and rural areas.
Hastert singled out some of the same
priorities. "I think paying down the debt is
very, very important and we ca n do that,"
the speaker said. C linton ' ha&lt; pledged to
offer a blueprint that would eliminate the
debt in 13 years, two years faster than a
Republican plan.
·
· ·
Picking up on the remarks by Clinton
and H astert, Lott said, "You've both already ·
referred to keeping a balanced budget, pay- ·
ing down the debt, protecting and savin g
Social Security. We need to do something .
to continue to help improve education in
America. There are some· health care areas
where we've got to work together."
Hastert said Republicans talked to Clinton about the marriage penalty tax. The
GOP is pushing a relief plan far more
ambitious than C linto n's own version, {
which would do little for couples in high-: f;:
er income brackets. "That's an important' .;
thing that we think we can work o n,"
Hastert said.

.........."""---------------:===::;:;-,'... .

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~~~~-----------------~------------~~--~~--------~~~----------------~·

The Daily Sentinel .

gA~lfR.

I RUN THE COUNTRY.
WHAT DO 'iJU.00 ?

'£stllfl{l,/jd 1111948

111 Coun St., Pomlfoy, Ohio
740-1102-21141 • fu: 1182-21117

QI!Ea~!Wr.~
stahlerOI~se . net

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ChariH w.

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·Our view:

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.r fj -;'

Inequity lingers
..

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~olved,

as

Perkins' view:

'

.

What's really in Elian's ·best interest?
Bedrich G. fled his native Czechoslovakia,
along with his two small children, in August
1968, shortly after Soviet troops occupied his
country.
The political refugee settled in the Southern California town of Yucaipa, where his
mother and stepfather already resided.
four months after Bedrich's arrival in this
land of the free, home of the brave, he died of
terminal cancer. His ex-wife, still living in
Soviet-occupied Czechoslovakia, petitioned
f0 r return of the children. The international
·custody battle ended up in Sa11, Dernardino
County Superior Court.
The trial judge concluded that the mother
was a "fit" patent. ."Thete has been rio evidence presented to this court whatsoever that
would indicate that (the mother) is a bad person or an evil person, or that she has ever
done anything other than provide adequate
food, clothing; shelter, attention for her children while she had th~m and the child sl\e has
1)0W.

"It is obvious to the court that she is an
intelligent woman;·she is neat, clean and dresses well. According to the testimony, she has a
good job. She owns and maintains an adequate home.... Her personal morals appear to
be adequate by modern slandards."
·
Yet the court did not restore the children
to their biological mother, did ' not return
them to repression in .the land of their birth.
For doing so, the court held, would be detrimental to their ":welfare and best interests."
Whi~h brings us to the international custody battle over 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez.
His mother forfeited her life last November,
fleeing repression in Castro's Cuba,'so that her
little boy could enjoy the fruits of freedom
and opportunity that the United States offers.
But this act of moth~ly love, of supreme
sacrifice, is of little consequence to DiU Clinton, to Attorney General Janet Reno or to
D~ris Meissner, commissioner of the lmmi-

Havana. .
As to the presumption tha~ family ' law is
· clearly on the side of the Cuban's boy biological father in this custody battle, well, that's
hardly unequivocal.
Indeed, were the dispute heard in a California family court, the judge might render
his or ht~ decision based on the caSe involving the Czech refugee Dedrich G. more than
a quarter-century ago.
.
The rulirig by the San Bernardino Superior Court was actually consistent with California's Family Law Act, under which the state's
gration and Naturalization Service. They aim Supreme Court affirmed in 197 4 that '.' it is no
to return the~ to Communist Cuba despite longer essential that a court, to awanl custody
. ..
to a non-parent, find the parent unfit to care
his l•te mother's /wishes.
for the child."
Young Eliat(s biological father, Juan
There is absolutely no reason to believe
that Juan Gonzalez is anything other than a
believe the Cuban .lad's life chances are infi- "fit:' parent - a _Iovin~ d•d. w_ho desperately
nitely better: ip tile United States than in Cas- destres to be reum~ed wt~h hts lm.le boy. ~ow_­
tro's Cqba are inclined to support the father's , ever, .becau~ he ts a vtrtu~ pnso~e~ m hts
right. ·
'' ·
·
homeland, bke the rest of hts 11 mtlhon ~eiDut there's just one nagging question: Why low cou_ntryme? •nd women, _returmns
hasn't Elian's dad hopped a plane or boat to young ';lhan to htm woul~ be detnmental to
Miami to state his case in person? Is he afraid. the boys welfare and best mterests. .
.
of flying? Do· boats gi e him motion sickness?
If Juan we~. free to speak ~ts nund, wt.th, Or could it be thattastro won't let him go o~t fear of reprisal fromCastros ~hugs, he JUSt
to Miami for fear that Ju•n won't come back mtght say that, much as tt pamshtm to be sepc
•t h 'II · · !'ttl El'
nd th
·u·
arated from hts beloved son, Ehan ts better off
- th• e JOI 0 1 e tan a
e mt ton or 1. .
·h
. h I . · M' · h · 1· ·
so Cuban ex-patriots who have escaped · tvmg Wtt. "':au"':' 10 lamt ~ ~n tvmg Wit
htm - hts btol&lt;&gt;g~cal father - m Havana.
F1'd I' d 0 t'1 · ·m ,
Tehs eCsP1. t c regdt . ~-. t 11.
t'ts congre'sClinton, Reno and Meissner, their allies in
e
tn on a m1ms ra on,
C
d h · rr· d · h
d' k
sional allies and its &amp;iench in the media say .. ?ogress, an t et_r ten ~ 1 ~ t e me •a. now
that . none of this matters. The campaign to ~hts.Yet, ~hey contmue to tnsiSt that famtly l~w
keep young Elian · in the .United States is ts unequtvocal. That no ma~er what th~ ctrnothing more, !hey say, than a "politically cu~tances were that broug t young Eban to
·motivated" assault on "the rule oflaw."
Ul)t~~~ S~tes,. no matter how poor, nasty,
This is just .0 much sophistry. There are bruttsh ~nd short the bf~ to whtch he would
politics on both~des of the Gonzalez custody ~ c?nstgned v:ould ~e tf returne~ to Combattle. Indeed, tile Castro regime could have mumst C:uba, hts relattves m Mtamt must surquietly negotiated .the boy's return to the . render, htm to the Castro regtme.
.
(Jo.eph Pertdu Ia 1 columnist for The
island. But instead, the Communists have been
orchestrating public demonstrations m Sin Diego Union-Tribune.)

Joseph .
PerKins

~s~'::~ ~o~:!J~n~~Ve~e th=~f t~ . ~~~

Washington Merry-Go-Round:

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I

·ay JACK ANDERSON
many was a prologul for the Pacif- !hat were put tci' the.' :icientim:
(bombs) apd the · situation
and
DOUGLAS
COHN
ic.
;
I.
Use
them
in
the
that
demanded
shock action."
Today is Wednesday, February 2, the 33rd day o£2000. Thete are ~33
WASHINGTON
The
On March 9,1945, 72,!JO?p~ is &amp;om the . ~itary poi!)t ofvie\V
Jlresident Harry Truman said,"l
day$ left in the year.
bombing
campaign
irt
Kosovo
and
·pie
died
during
one
air
l'l!i~
on
most
effective
in
bringing
about
did
not hesitate to order the use of
Today's Highlight in History:
Serbia
teignited
the
debates
about
Tol&gt;yo.ln all, during six mont)U of pron;tpt JapaneSe surtender at min~ -die bomb on military targets. I
(}n February 2, 1536, the A~tine city of Buenos Aires w~
vs.
strategic
bombing
D-29
raids , twice as many ' ciyilian imum cost to. our arme9 forces (23 ~ted to ~ve a half million boys
founded by.Pedro de Me"do~ ofSpain.
bombing.
casualties were inflicted than. had votes), ·
,
,
on our side and as nuny on the
&lt;:;ln this date:
been
suffered
by
the
Japanese
2.
Give
a
l!lilitary
demonstraother side. I never lost any
I!' 1653, New Anisterdim - now New York City -was incorpoThe5e arguarmed
forces
during
the
dntire
.
tion
in
Japan
to
be
followed
by
'over
my decision."The implication
~.
~~~
lrll848, the Treacy of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican War,
broached. dur- ' war. And this was befote · one renewed opportunity for surtender from Truman was that use of the
was.. signed.
·
·
ing World War atomic bomb destroyed !)(j,OOO, · )lefore full use of the weapon · is .bomb ' on a smaller target or as a
•
. .
II, culminating
demonstration might not have sufIn 1876, the National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs was
with the deci- people in Hiroshima (Aug. · 6, , employed (69 YOtes).
1945~
and
another
killed
40,000·in
3.
Give
,
an
ex~rimental
ficiently
shocked the Japanese ipto
formed in New Yorll;
to use the
N~
. · (Aug. 9, 1945.). 1 1 • . , demonstration in this country with su~ndering and that once the
lb 1882, Irish novelist James Joyce was born near 'Dublin.
,
atomic bomb
Admiral WiliWtt Leahy, Fhief representatiWJS of Japan .: present, tv.u bombs were used the cOstly
IIi 1897, lite destroyed the Pennsy)Vaip. state capitol ill Harrisburg: .
against civilian
military adviser'to Presidents O,:.qo- .. followed by a nelf opportunity for it:tvasion of the Japanese main
(A l)ew statehouse was dedicated on the same. si~ nine years later.) · '
~nters.
sevelt and T"!man and . p~ding: ' sur~nder before fuji ~ · qf the islands would have to go forward.
1.!' 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces fiom the Battle' of Stajinl!fold
Strategic ·bombing was the officer of the Joint Chiefs of~ ,.,..,.n is Cimpl~' P,9 votes).
There w.ts, however, another
sur~ndered in a. major viC:rory for the ~~IS i? Worl~ ~at II. .' ·
euphemisln that launched a thou- during World War II, sai4, l"rvty
4. Withhold military use of the side.Iri his book "Hii'O$hima.: 'John
1,! ' 1945, Prestdent ~~It and, B~tttsh Pnm~t Mtmster Wm~t.on , sand planes·- those 1,000 plane · own feeling was that in bein~ lfue • ~apons, but riiakC pu~ experi- Hersey quotes a S\lrviYOr, J?r. SasaCh~rchtllleft for t~e summit ·~Yalta. Wt~ Sovtet l~d~r Josef Stal,n.
raids of World,War ,11 1 designed to first to use '(the bomb) ... ~... men~!. .'aemonstrat\O!l' of th~ir . k!: "I see that they are holding a
I~ 1971, .'dt Amt? assume!:~, powet' m l1ganda,{ollowmg acoup that destroy the eneiiiy's industrial adopted the ethical standard fom~ eil'~n~ (16 YOtes).
,
trial for war criminals in Tokyo just
·
cap~city after ptecision bombing mon to the barbarians ofth¢ Dark
ousted Prestdent Milton Ob«C.
.. Maintain as secret as possible bow; I think they ought to try ~e
lb 1980, reports surfaced that the FBI .had conducted a sting (!per- proved to bC unattainablerand roo' Ages.! ~ not taught to II)~
' ~r all deY¢1opment of our n~ ,uen Who ded4ed to use lhe bomb
·atioll targe~ng memben of cln~ U$ing phony A.rab businessmen · 'costly. Atea bombipg -... another in that fashiOn; and wan can
'b e weapons ~d refrain &amp;om using and they should hang them all:'
in ~hat becanie known as "Absc:un," a codename protested by Arab- · euphemism - was t!Je substitute, won by destroying wbme ·'anCl !hem in this War (3 votes).
. Today, science has improved ~r
Am~ricans.
.
·
.
· ,.
. and )t• proved to be , devastating children:·
.-·
.
·
.
cq,ua~on
!Jlisn:presented
.the
~bllity
to employ precision bomb.
.
I~ 1.99~, . danc~r, actb~ ~d choreographer
KeUy died at his : , !n~ The height of area \lprnb- · Justification.
\\!35 SOught from. te5ults ah was h.eavil)l criticized ing, , thereby reducing coUateral
lle"!riY Htlls, Calif. home; he was 83.
.
,,
. mg Ui the European Thearzr was the lclentific~ommunity, ~ one ' by several poll piqicipants wheri (civilian) damage and relegating
Today's Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stritehis 74.ACtor Robert Man- 'the fire-bombing of Dresden" in f3C their leaders, Arthur CoJr\Rio~, , ,his actions became.lc!iown.atter the , strategic bombing to the paSt.' As
dan:o 68. Comedian Tom Smothers is fJ.Jtod: singer-guitarist Gra- 'l febnlal:y, .1?45 when 40,000 to telayed to Truni'an lht -~ Pf a . Woll'. Only 23 out of the 15Q sdef\crewman on the ' Hiroshima
ham Nash is 58. Actor Bo Hopkins is 58,TV elCIICu!ive Barry Diller is 1!XJ,OOO peoJ!Ie perished.
poll taken. , of ISO scientists tists (IS percent)' had actually ·mission exclaimed: "My God!
SB.l:ountry singer Howard ~ (The BeiWny Brothers) is 54. ' Yet ' an i~f~CSS~J~ent of strategic involved with the ~pon'i deVelc adYOC.ated /)til military use. '
What have we done?"
Ac~s Farrah Fawce~t is Sl. Model Chrq' Dr~ is 46, Actor . · bomlling . f.Qr - 1943 sho~d that 'opment: "Eighty-seven pel'(;ent ,
Army Chief ofStalfGeo!Je C.
'
Mic;hael Talbott is 45. Actlllsl Kim Zimmer if 45•. Rock mus.iciari Gerlnan morale ac11Jally improved YOted tor: .. military use."
' Marshall, who initially had reserva-.
(Jack AndlriGri and Douglle
Ro~ert DeLeo (Stone Temple Pilocs) is 34. Rode mlllician Ben 'Mize and Germah war · production
Dut did they? H~re are the live lions about use of the 119m"' later Cohn co1umn1ata for United
(Counting Crows) is 29. JUmr T-Mo ~~ Mob) il 28.
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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 5 •;

.

J

Military
spells out
gay po"cy
By ROBERT BURNS
AP MHitary WrHer
WASHINGTON - The
U.S. military services for the
first time have' spelled out for
field commanders a policy of
ensuring that troops who complain of anti-gay threats or
ha~ment are not theli)Selves
investigated.
The intent is to allow such
complaints to be aired without
fear of. being kicked out of the
service for being homosexual,
and to reirtforce the idea that
those · who . make anti-gay ·
threats will not be tolerated .
Defense Secretary William
Cohen sai~ Tuesday the new
guidelines on how to investigate anti-gay threats
incorporated in updated training
p!OgiliiliS designed to ensure
that the Clinton administration's "don't ask, don't tell~ pol- ·
icy on gays is ertforced fairly
and uniformly throughout the
services.
As a matter of policy, commanders are not to use complaints of anti-gay harassment
or threats as a teason to investigate the complaining person.
Instead the commanders are
supposed to investigate the
source of the threat or harassment.
"These plans make it very
clear ... that there is no room
for harassment or threats in the
military:' Cohen said in written sta~ment.
"Service members need to
understand that harassment for
any reason will not be tolerated, and commanders .will take
. prompt, appropriate · actions
against individuals involVed in
such behavior:' Cohen added.
The
P~ntagon
also
announced Tuesday the number of discharges from the military for being homosexual fell
to 1,034 in the fiscal year ended
Sept. 30 from 1,145 in the yearearlier period. Spokesman Kenneth Bacon said 83.5' percent of
discharges resulted from statements by service members that
· they were homosexuaL
Under the administration's
policY, gays .may serve in the
military as long as they keep
their sexual orientation. to
themselves. If they state that
they are homosel'llal, they. are
supposed to be remQVed from
the service.
.
In 1994, the first fuJI year of
"don't 3sk, don't tell;' dis- ·
charges total~d 617. They rose .
every year since until 1999.
Michelle Benecke, executive
directoi of the Servicemembers
Legal Defense Fund, welcomed
Cohen's approval of the training guidelines · but said such
guidance should have been
made available to field com- ·
. manders years ago.
"We're glad to see, finally, ·
that the secretary is taking steps
to train people," Benecke said.
She said her group has found
that most service members .
who declare their holnosexualiry, and thereby are removed
from the service, do so because
they feel threatened by an antigay enviro,.nment in their workplace.
"What is needed now is for
leaders to enforce the harassment guidelines with commitment:' Benecke said.
Cohen ii\structed the services to develop new training
guidelines in December amid
widening criticism that Clinton
administration's policy on gays
in the militaty was 'not work•
il)g. The criticism sharpened
after a court-martial in which
an Army private was convicted
of murdering a gay soldier
harassed ~th the knowledge of
his superiors. President Clinton
called the Pentagon's implementation of the administration policy" out of whack.''
Cohen also asked each of
the service's ~op civilian and
. uniformed le~ders . to issue
statements to their troOps reinf6rting th~ p~licy against
harassment of gays.
' ·

are

· · ff court agrees with school funding ·
ruling, action ~hould . be taken - soon
If one issue in Ohio sets a record in longevity for remaining unreit's school funding. Nearly six years after a .lower court dedated
the state's system for financing public schools unconstitutional - and
nine years after the original civil suit was filed - we ate still awaiting
action.
In this case, it's a matter of waiting for the
In
smaller,
Ohio Supteme Court to ~ecide the state's appeal
1
. poorer districts to Perry County Common Pleas Judge Lintop
-many here Lewis Jr.'s ruling.in DeRolph 'IS. Ohio.
Word from the justices is expected sometime
in stJuthern
later this year, .but in the meantime, schools and
Ohio- the
the Legislature continue to be at a standstill finda scilution to the problem.
'
ing
money isn't
At issue- as it has been since the 1970s- is
there, and they
the method of funding schools. Local districts
struggle altJng depend on property. taxes for the bulk of their
best as they revenue in operating schools. Since some counties, like Franklin, are w..althier in that respect
can.
than ,others, students have the best money can
buy. In smaller, poorer districts - many here in southern Ohio - the
money isn't there, and they struggle along as best as they can.
Lewis' decision challenged the property i:ax method. The state, as it did
'in the '70s, appealed the decision. The arguments for bothsicles :Ire n&lt;!W '
being weighed by justices.
"We're waiting for direction from the Ohio Supreme Court," State
Rep. John A. Carey, R-Wellston, told a Gallia County citizens commit·
tee concerned about education last ~k.
"I don't expect an}'thing will happen until then."
Obviously, one cannot hurry the judicial process as there ate rtumerous issues .involved with changing a deep-rooted system. Inevitably, the
court will advise the Legi$ture if it should 'act or not.
'
T'? its credit, the Legislature has attempted to. fix the disparity by
putting more money into education, and Gov. Bob Tan made schooling
a·priority in his recent State of the State address.To its discredit, the Legislatiue's one atlef11pt to equalize funding- placing an increase in the
sales tax on the ballot in 1998 - went down in dames.
Eilough of the past. Now for the future. There may be no one real
sol':'tion to erasing inequality in school funding. and since the people
hav~ spoken, they believe they are paying their share of their children's
education. Increasing taxes is' not. the an"""'r, especially with an administration and Legislature that isn't interested in increasing the tax burden.
l(th~ justices believe the currept funding setup is fair, the status quo
remains, as will the dissatisfaction &amp;om coalitions that think it's unf1r.
The lobbying, debate and legal challenges will continue as some sch~b
cope with diminishing resources and increasing pressure for students to
per(orm well.
'
l{owever, should the high court agree with Lewis' contention,' state
lead_!!rs have to go back to the drawing board. Don't look for it to hap.·
pen· this year, with elections looming in the· House and Senate. But
when, and if they do, lawmakers must take responsibility for whatever
plari is agreed upon and implement their proposals. .
"t don't think we'll reach a perfect solution - we may neyer be
don'!'," Carey reOected last .week.
Tflat much is true, because no solution in public policy. appeals to
everyone. But if a plan does arise that addresses the greater gOod and lifts
southern Ohio education out of its financial constraints, it will be most
welcome.

Wedneedey, Febnhlry 2, 2000

Clinton, -GOP pledge to protect Social Security
WASHIJ'.!GTON (AP) President
.Clinton and Republican leaders of Congress basked in the glory of the longest
economic expansion in. America's history
Thesday, pledging to put aside political differences to reduce the national debt and
protect Social Security.
"I think we can really get some things .
done:• Clinton exclaimed. Following suit,
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., said,
"There's a lot of neutral gromid that we
can work with the president." But Senate
Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss .,
. acknowledged the obvious:."There will be
distractions and there will be disagree-

ments."

\

Republicans said they ·were committed
to action on administration-!:&gt;acked trade
bills for China, Africa ancl the Caribbean
Basin and a $ t .6 billion ~ackage. of aid for
Colombia to t ombat illegal ·drugs.
With Congress back ip town, Clinton
sununoned the leaders- Republicans and
Democrats alike - to Ifl,.~~w prospects for
legislative action in an election year. It's a
difficult time ·for compromise, with the

two parties battling for control of Congress
and the White House. On the other hand,
neither side wants to be seen by voters as
an obstruction to politically popular initiatives.
Democrats and Republicans departed a
White House meeting still at odds over
Clinton's proposal to provide a prescription ·drug benefit under Medicare. They
also disagree over a patients' bill of rights,
gun safety legislation, raising the minimum
wage, an overhaul of campaign finance
laws and how to improve America's
schools, said House Minority Leader Dick
Gephardt, D-Mo.
" So there's a lot of disagreement:'
Gep hard~ added.
.
·
Republicans were Sl'nsitive to the symbolism of the moment, the first day of the
I 07th consecutive month of economic
growth - a milestone for which all sides
are eager to grab credit.
"I don't think the president can claim all
the glory:• Hastert sai~ after the meeting,
talking with reporters in the d~iveway. He
said Congress deserves a pat on the back,

To subscribe, call992-2156.

•'.
.~ I

too. Lott' pointed out that the good times
started during the Bush presidency in the
spring of 1991.
Most of the meeting was spent on how
to move the Caribbean Basin, Africa and
China trade bills, Lott said.
"The president made a commitment to
put his shoulder to the wheel to try to' get
this done," Lott said. "If he's not going to
get in and work hard ... it's not going to get
done."
House Majority Leader Dick Armey, RTexas. said Clinton must push reluctant
Democrats to vote for permanent normal
trade relations with China. "We're going to
have to go out and find the votes," Armey
said. "The president understood that was
his challenge." ,
"The consensus is that we need to
· schedule it as early as possible:," Armey
added.
With Congress' calendar shortened by
lawmakers' need to campaign, Clinton said
'he was "looking foi)Vard to working in
what will be a fast-paced &lt;ongressional
year." In particular, he.mentioned proposals

to pay down the debt, prolong the solven.
· cy of Social Security and bring economic
I
investment to needy urban and rural areas.
Hastert singled out some of the same
priorities. "I think paying down the debt is
very, very important and we ca n do that,"
the speaker said. C linton ' ha&lt; pledged to
offer a blueprint that would eliminate the
debt in 13 years, two years faster than a
Republican plan.
·
· ·
Picking up on the remarks by Clinton
and H astert, Lott said, "You've both already ·
referred to keeping a balanced budget, pay- ·
ing down the debt, protecting and savin g
Social Security. We need to do something .
to continue to help improve education in
America. There are some· health care areas
where we've got to work together."
Hastert said Republicans talked to Clinton about the marriage penalty tax. The
GOP is pushing a relief plan far more
ambitious than C linto n's own version, {
which would do little for couples in high-: f;:
er income brackets. "That's an important' .;
thing that we think we can work o n,"
Hastert said.

.........."""---------------:===::;:;-,'... .

.-;;;;;
~~~~=:-

EASTMAN'S

We ·Now Accept

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VISA, DIS'COVER &amp;

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TERCHARGE

a

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MORE
LOCAL FOLKS.
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\

Page 81

The Daily Sentinel

Wedneaday, February 2, 2000

Page AI

Februllry 2, 2000 ·
. Wednellday,
.

Reader thanks Ann for help ove,rcoming_suicide thoughts after -abortion{
tion many years ago, and never not wish to be found unless there
expected to hear from the ~d is a legitimate medical reason to
again, which was fine with me. I do so.
went on with my life, and was
. Dear Ann Landen: I am the
very content.
divorced .mother of two young
Then, I get this letter from a children- a 10-year-old girl by
grown man saying he was so glad my ex-husband, and a 4-year-old
he finally found me.
boy by another man. My ex-hus1
I ended up calling him, but I band is a wonderful, loving father
wish I hadn't. There have been . to our daughter.
many unpleasant complications. I
Unfortunately, 'my son's biohave no maternal feelings for this logical father will have nothing to
man. I gave up for adoption a tiny do with him, and has made it
baby, so how can I feel motherly clear that he does not wish to be
toward a 50-year-old man I don't part of the child's life.
know? Please tell "Hunted" she is
Here's , the, problem. Everyone
not alone. SORRY NOW believes Ill)' ex-husband IS the
BACK EAST
'father of both my children. They
DEAR SORRY: I have said do not understood why he is so
in the past that if both the birth attentive to my daughter and
parent and the adopted child wish ignores my son . He takes the girl
to meei each other, it's OK wi\h on trips a1;1d buys her gifts.
me.·HoWever, I ,do not encourage
La~ely, even my daughter has
hunting down someone who may begun to qu estion why her
.

u

b1:91her
not included in these he would be willing to 611 that·
outings. She has asked her father role on a part-time basis by
to buy things for the boy, and he including the
on a fevv, _.of
has obliged without comment. those father-daughter outinfi.• It
Now, she wants her brother to be would benefit the whole faniay.
part of their visi~ together.
That first . kiss, that fint '
Shoulil I level wirh .her and embrace ... Remember all thbse
explain the siruatioq' If so, how things that brought you and Y'#ir
should I do it? I necdyour advice, loved one together? Ann Landers'
Ann.- A LOVING MOTHER! new booklet, "How We Met,·~ Is
DEAR LOVING MOTH- now available. This collection~ r;.f
ER: It is obvious that, ·at some sentimental love stories will mike .
point, you must tell your daughter a terrific Valentine's Day gift tor
the true nature of the sibling reb.- that special someone. It's a pc:~ct
tionship. Ten· years of age is · not addition tQ that box of choc~tes
too young t_q give her this infor~ or bouquet offiow~rs. For a ~oj&gt;y,
mauon. It IS sad that the boys please send a self-addressed, ~ng,
biological father cannot open his . business-size envelope an'~ a
heart to 'his son. In the.long run, check or money order· for $550
he wou1d be the wiimer.
(this includes postage and hanM~~!'while, your little boy . dling) to: H~w We Met, c/o ¥n
needs a father figure. lfthere is no · Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chlca- 1
other man in the picture, ask yqur go, Ill 60611-0562 (in Cal)ada,
caring and decent exhusband if $6.50).
.

~:/i .WEDNESDAY'S

boY

~~:ffiGllllGHTS

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Ohto

&gt;.:.lllil!txander

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.

- .. ~~ern •
· · w;t;rtord
•.: 'SOuthern

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Trimble

• ,f'f(leral J-lqcklng

·:
Mlller
......

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: ·~ ~~~ 52, Federal Hocking 311
; : EaJtern 81, Wellston 81 -.. ·
• -.Southern 84, VInton County 85
• ~ ~xander 83, Miler 47
: • ~pre 85, Trimble 59
·
: : ~lle-Yprk 84, Wa1erford 52

. . ·4-·

'

•• •
Frlday"a aat.dultl
• : WelliiiDn at Alexander
~ •• TrlmbJI! at Federal Hocklng
• :.Miler at Eaatem
: - Mellli at NeleonvHie-York
· . : Belpre at VInton County ·
. Waterford at Southern

,.,.

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GIRLS

.....

-TVC-

•

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WEDNESDAY

, PQMEROY ~ Weeken~ revival, .
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Faith Valley rabernacle Church, · Local School Board, special meet·
Bailey Rlln Road, Pomeroy, · ing, 7:30 p.m., Eastern Elementary
Wednesday through Sunday, with School · Public library Conference
Elder ROben Hall .of Point Pleasant, · · Room, to discuss building projects
W. Va. as evangelist, 7 p.m. each and oiher business.
eVening. Pastor Emmett Rawson. ·

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Catholic
POMEROY - Public EmployWomen's .ttub meeting Wednesday ees Retirement, Thursday, I p.m:
with Mass to precede the meeting, . with a lunch at noon at the Senior
Hostesses Olita· Heighton and Mari- · Citizens Center.
. lyn Poulin . .
FRIDAY
PA&lt;iEVILLE - Scipio TuwriREEDSVILLE .- · Olive . Town~hip Trustees regular meeting . ship Trustees, regular session, Fri:
Wednesday, (d() p.m. at the day, 6:30p.m ai the township garage .
p.,gcvillc 'lhwn Hall.
on ~oppa ~oad.

.

ALL

11·1 14-1
7-4 8-1!
.7·6 ·10·5
6-6 7-8
4-7 5-8 ..
0·12 0-15

.·
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raaulla

~

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

ALL

11·1 13·1
7·5 . 7·7
!HI 5·i
5-7 . 5·11
4-8 6-i
2-8 2-10

Hocking

Ohio •

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sonvlll&amp;'York

"

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

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llaton
.
.. · County
. 81oonvflle-York

niC

ALL

11-1
11·1
9-3
7-8
8-5
S-9

15-1
14·2
9-8

T:
i
.
.
.HOc:ld~
' •ytterford
·. .F.jida
_ rraal i:toi:klng
slirthern
.
· , · Eastern

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.....-··--·

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7-10

. 8·9 .
6.·11 .
ALL

9·2 11-4
9-S 9-7
4-7 6-1 o
2·9 4-10
1-12 1-15
0,12 0-15

. ......

·... ·~·
_
,' . . ,.. ·- .,.. . ' ....._,. ·• -ac•..uu

· : : ·: P,tPral Hocking at Southam
• •. Wllterord at Miller
· ·: • t'llmble at·Eaatem
eat Meigs '
. · ·
• : • · . llaton at Nelaonvt
.
lie-York
::, · n County at Alekander ·
::. ",;... '
.
.

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.....
.
.. • &lt;o

Southern defeats Vinton Co.
\

ly SCOTT WOU'I!
Bentlnel CorrUpOildent

attack. It was that upbeat transition game that set t'he stage for
RACINE-Outscoring Vinton a powerful Viking offensive
County 45-24 in t'he second explosio.n.
half, th~ Racine..SOuthern TorWhen held to· a half-court
nadoes put the Vinton CountY game, the much
Vikings
Vikings out ro stormy leas in back-door cut the Tornado
posting a hard-fought 84-65 tri~ defe~ to . pieces, apif! with
umph in Tri-Valley Conference PattersOn profiting from the ·
interdivisonal play at ' Hayman passes from Zach Gill and David
gymnasium.
Dealoia out liol)t.
Southern (1 0-5, TVC 7 -5)
Southern feD to 18-8 as the
flexed its muscle in placing five · flood gates opened widely on
men in double digits, lead lby th!: offensive end for Vinton
Junior post Nick Bolin who County. Southern's Nick Bolin
scored a.double"double with 17 was putting together a goOd
points and eleven rebounds. inside game, and Chris RanBesides a super night in splitting dolph hit · a three to ta~e the
th_e seams of the Vinton County score to 18-ll. Garret Kiser,
defense, Bolin hit 11-15 free KyleNorris,andRussellReiber·
throWs overall. A trio of purple• . got on the scoring Merry~go­
clad bas,kereen hit the twelve round. as Southern hacked into
point mark~-junior Garret the lead at 21-18 by quarter's
Kiser, senior RusseU Reiber, end.
and· junior point . guard Matt
V intoq County jumped to a
Warner. Kyle Norris .added ,running start early in the second
seven; and Chris Randolph six. · canto, building up a seven point
Vinton County. (2-10, TVC leaf! before Kiser drained his
2-8) was led byJosh Patterson, · second trey to cut the· lead to
who led the Vike's with a game- . four: Gill answered with a three .
high 21 points and twelve to quickly stifle SHS rnomenrebounds to post a double~dou~ turn, then after a Viking steal,
ble for the visiton. Zach Gill . Mike Eberts drained a three and
added. 13, Garth Fri had eight, Jason Eberts hit a pair of field
and Mike Ebert$ added six.
goals as VC roUed to its biggest
"What can you say?" waS the lead 36-23.
Rees called time and righted
question Southern coach Jay
Rees posed. "You play defense, · the adjusting screws on the SHS
you win ballgames. The first half .offense. The mental tweaking
we gave up 41. points, just about resulted in a defensive stand and
ten shy of what we give up, for . offensive explosion. Southern
an entire game. . There wasn't outscored VC 17-J in the final
much defense being played, yet stretch to lead 40-39, hoWeVer,
· the lcids oveicame some bad Southern shot too soo~ on its
play .and cut' it ro one at the last shot-before-half attempt
half.
·
. ·
and Fri drove the lengt~ of the ·
"The second half was· a dif- · court to score at the buzzer to
ferent story.· We p1ayed a good regain the lead 41-10 in favor of
match-up defense the seqond Vinton County.
. half and we kept fresh players on · The second half was just the
the court. We just w,ore them reverse of the fint half olfens.ive
down:• . ·
·. , . ,;v · ,J{ "'tremors. Southern played a"
Southern fell to an - 1!-4 match-up zone and the anaco.n.:
deficit ·early as Josh Pattenon- da effect . put the 'sqlleeze on
dominated the Vinton Count}' VC's potent inside attack.
.offense. Pattenon had nine · Meanwhile, Southern was takpoints in the round as ~the Vike's. ing it , to the hole. -Southern ·
of Coach Rick Brooks played .a went .on a 23-8 run, hitting 14- . . TORNADO TRACK- Southern's Nlek Boiln (32) sweeps In for two points .a !iainat VInton County ln.
torrid run-an~ off~n.sive
Set SOUTHERN ...,; B2
the Tornadoes' 84·85. blowout of the VIkings. (Scott Wolfe photo)
·

taller

-TVC-

·edicine
while a few · may be .acquired
Quation: Can athlete's foot
directly from the· soil. In all of
these types, the infe.c ting fungus is ·
fungus be found in the neck,
_
confined
to the superficial layers ·
· scalp and ears areas? What is the ·
of the skin and does not spread to .
best treatment for it?
· Answer: We humans are sus- cause a life~ threatening systemic ·
ceptible to a number of condi- infection in those with an intact
tions that damage our skin, immune system.
including athlete's foot. Athlete's
The types offungus that cause
fopt · i$ a general term used by athlete's foot thrive on warm, .
most people to describe any rash moist .conditions.That is why this
· on the feet. There are many con~ infection.
typlcally
occurs
ditions that can caiJse a ras)l, between the fourth and fifth toes.
whjle athlete's foot· is a . specific The fungus that infects the ~kin
rash caused by a fungal infection. . of the head and neck IS usually
And, it is the most common cause subtly different m that 1t thnves
of rash on the fe~t.
·
where there is less moisture.
Athlete's foot typically involves
Despite the s~ecific_ fungus that
the skin between the toes, causing causes a skm mfecnon or the
. It to become dry, scaly and labels we 'doctors use to describe
cracked. On some occasions the it, ·s omething is needed to elimiinfec.tion may cause a moi,t, soft nate the annoying rash and persisand peeling rash instead. Though tent itch it causes: Many of the
athlete's foot is: most . common · non-prescription products that
between the toes, it can also affect are sold for athlete's foot are very
other paits of the foot. ·A fine, effective. Terbinafioe, the generjc
scaling rash or a series of small name for the most recently
· blisters along the side of the foot approved. product in .this category,
-- at the junction between the is perhaps the most effective . of
thick skin of the sole and the this group. All o['these products
thinner skin on the · side of the · are effective a~ treating m~st funfoot -- is another frequent type of gal skin infections, regar4less of
athlete's foot.
the area of the body involved.
It can occur, though, anywhere
The dilemma your question:
along the sole of thefoot. And, to poses is whether or not your rash
answer your question directly, is actually caused by a fungus. You
these kinds of fungal infections see, there are other conditions
may attack the skin of any area of that. can initially appear ·~ery
the body.
.·
much like a fungal ·. infection. ·
' When other areas .of the body . Consequently, ! suggest that you
·are involyed, though, other labels see your family doctor or a ,der. are used to describe the infection: matologist . if yo11r rash fails to ·
Most of these non~foot fungal prompdy · ·clear after using ·'
infections are commonly called terbinafine for one week. If you
"ring-worm," although the rash do have a fungal infection that
may not be . "ring" shaped and terbinafine d&lt;!esn't clear up, a lirethere certainly is no "worm" scription medicine that is taken
involved in the process. Tenia· by mouth may be necessary to
capitis is the "doctor label" for a give you relief.
fungal infecdon of the scalp;
"Family Medicine" is a
Tinea crura is on the groin and weekly column. To submit
Tenia corporis is on the trunk.
. questions, w'rite to John C. ·
' There are, actually, several spe- Wolf, D.O., Ohio Univenity
. cific types of fungus that can College of Osteopathic M:edi. infect skin. The most common cine, Groivenor Hall,'A,thens,
.ones are tralismitted from person Ohio 45701. Past columns are
to person, but ·others may be available online at www.thra~
ca~Jght from infected . animals dio.org/6n.

Basketball
BOYS

Athlete's foot fungus can
attack other areas of the body

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Inside: Kentucky upends Tennesse.e- P~~gaa2
Inside: Rocker suspension appealed- Pav• B4

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Deu Ann Landen: A while
back, you asked your . readers
which columns of yours they had
saved. I saved one on abortion,
because I had one.
Only a few people knew about
~~N LANDERS
it. The column meant so rnuch to
me because it appeared at a time
when' I desperately needed to to remind myself of why I had the
kn.o w that not' all women who abortion and how you saved me ·
have abortions are sleazy bimbos· from a life of self-destructionor trying to get out of" paying the or no life at all. Thank you for
piper" for their immoral behavior. that.
GRATEFUL
UP
I got pregnant even thot,~gh I . NORTH
was using birth controL I was livDEAR GRI\TEFUL: A ·leting in a small town where I knew ter like. yot,~n makes all the hard
no one, and felt lonely and work worthwhile.[ am grateful to
.depressed. I was not a "bad" girl. I . you for taking the time and trouwas brought up in · a religious ble tQ write. I hope all the women
home. The shame alone made me who ha-:e walked in yo!'r shoes
contemplate suicide.
. will find comfort and solace in
. Then,- there yo.u. were, Ann , a w!)at you have written.
person · I respected, one whose
Dear Ann Landers: l'd ·like
advice I had been reading since !' to comment on that letter from
\vas 10 years old. I felt like you · '.'Bunted Down in Texas." I know
understood.
·
exactly .how she feels.
:
. I will 'afways keep that column.
I also gave 'up a b~by fqr adop-

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By The Bend

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. ~~em1ent:ary

Eastern rolls to 14th straight victory

~a:yers

By SCOTT WOLFE

· ·l'fews &amp; Notes
girls ·
inviited to

· of the way the whole group played," said
Sentln.. ~~
, .
'coach Howie CaldweU. "With aU the big
EAST MEIGS ...,. Behind .' the dynamic . games we've had . we were ripe to · have
duo of
Brown aqd Josh Will, who someone come in .and knock us off, but I ·
combined for 52 points, t'he• 11th ranked cqulil tell by · our players' eyes that we
Eastern Eagles poured on the coals to . weren't going ro get beat."
whip the WeDst~n Golden Rockets of the
Brown lit up the nets in neon with a
T.V.C:s Ohio division Tuesday night by dazzling 30-point effort that saw 'the
the score of81.,61. ·
junior forward ,bit 14-17· from the field.
The interdivision win left Eastern at 14- Additionally. Brown grabbed a team high
1 overall arid was their 14th consecutive 9 rebounds in leading the Eagles to a 37victory after losing the ~ason .opener at 16 edge in that department;·
Belpre. Eastern is I 1-1 in-conference play.
Heaping praise upon his dub Caldwell
Wellston falls to 5-9 c;~~rall and S-5 in stated, '1oe Brown ·was on tonight and
the league.
·
'. . . '
'•
sparked our offensive effqrt, but we had
"I .told the ·kids tonight that this might great team · work and many outstanding
be one of the lint times that.! was proud P'!S'es.

Joe

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:; ~ermeil retires
:: :;;.::.ST. LOUIS (AP) - St. Louis ·
:: · ~ms coach Dick Vermeil
:: · ;announced ' his retirement, two
:• '
afte~ winning his 'f int Super
~v1. His· eyes filled with tean
his voice choked with emothe 63-year-oid Vermeil said
...an unbelievable feeling" [0
,,,eave as a champion.
Verm•:il ma~ a quick decision
he didn't want to be
with· the liee agency
that starts Feb. 11. He
' Je!i~ with tWo years ro gri on a
·"~oe-year, ':tY ' million contract:

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Griffey-to~Reds
CINC:INNA~I

~f

.
(AP) .Ken Gnffey Jr. ts tDded ro hts
hometown team, he'd, like the
deal to happen before the sta_rt of
'spring ·training, 'his agent said
Tuesday~
.
· li~ver, agent Brian Golddeal Mer~er,
berg said that Griffey is not
Orlando .
pressing Seattle to trade him, and .
.~:
(AP) - ' Ron MerReds general manager Jini Bowand, Chauncey Billups have
den said talks with tile Mariners
shipped off to .Orlando in a
· remain. at a standstill.
that Denver Nuggets gener- , . · The Reds broke · off, ~iscusmanager . Dan Issei insisted he
sions Dec.tt at baseball's winter
. ~nl tQ make but which, at
, meetings because the Marine~
same time, improVe!: his team.
insisted on a package of players
. NBA
approVal ro ilie
including Gold Glove ~corid
e-pl:l...et deal that sends Mercer,' ·
~aseman Pokey Reese. .
'
.a nd former Magic first..
Bowden spoke with Mariners
,::;.:i~~·~~ pick'Johnny Taylot tO
geri~ral .~r Pat Gillick last
·, fot. forward · Chris
Friday to ,e;., if Seattle~ 'pbsition
Tariq. ·Abdulhad ~hangt\:1 . fiPm _q eeember.
a · future first-round dnft ,.
He said ·the' Mariners 'll:ld not
and a)l undisclosed amount
budged and the teanu were. at
the itarne implsse. ·
' ' '
Bow4en denied a Rpott ill ·
· The~ay's New York Daily ~eWS
saying trade talks had i~tensi~ed.
"We have not talk~d ;ince Fri~' ,Bowden said. "We'vi!'"made

:~~~:!J'~~~ !to.

gaw

gu.ro

deal not dead.yet Meigs defeats

Fede·ral Hock•· ng

~0

progress training start• ifhe;s going to be
smce Dec. 11. traded.
There's . nothReds manager Jack McKeon
mg new to agrees that any ileal should be By SCOTT WOLFE
· Coach Chris Stout ·to pull one.
report."
completed before spring training Sentinel Correspondent
. out .of their bag of tricks. The
. Neither
so the trade talk doesn't disrupt
ROCK SPRINGS Meigs · Meigs .'defense completely forced
Mariners
the. clubhouse. .
defeated Federal Hocking Tues~ Federal out of its offensive
president
Griffey turned·down an eight- day night, 53-39,
.·
· 's cheme,· as Meigs took a 32~17
Chuck Arm- year, $148 million offer last sum· Meigs is now 5-9 overall and 4- halftime lead.
'
strqng
nor mer,, saying he wanted to play 6 in. the Ohio Division of the
Federal. out.cored Meigs I 0-6
Grl"- J · GiDick
closer to his home in Florida. Tri-Valley Conference. · Feder_al. · in the third frame, but the
...,, r. . returned
He'll make $8.5 million this sea- Hocking is 4c7 and 4-6.
Maraud~rs come back to ice the
phone messages Tuesday.
·
son, then become a free agent,
. Meigs was led by J.RStaats with vic!ory cake.-at.S3-39. · ·
"
The Daily News quoted
Griffey rejej:ted a trade to tho · H), Nick Wood with 15, Kyle
Overall, Meigs hit 21-of-43
sources . anonymously as saying New York Mets Iast l;&gt;eceniber, Smiddie six, Steve'"Deha four, and shots (49 percent) from the . fielcl
that Griffey was "putting · the saying he would only approve .a n.yo each from Adam Bulli!lgton overall, and 9:.for-15 stint at the .
pressure . on" the Mariners to deal with the 'R eds. He grew up · aqd Zach (vleadows,
·
.
line. Meigs · had 23 rebounds
trade him before spring training in Cincinnati ancl his father is ~ . :Federal Hocking wa.• led in (Staats 7. Bullington . 4, Behi' 4)
begins. Goldllerg deni_ed it. · ·
Reds coach.
sebring by' Den Dunfee with ten . and 11 steals (Beah 5).
.. I' .
"There's -no pressure or any~
Dowden broke off negotia- ' points, Dusty Doncl 9, and Matt
Federal hit 16-for-5 I from !he
thing Iik~ that," Goldberg said. "I tions _on Dec. 11 ~cause . the ' Quinn with six,
field overall, while hitting 5-for-8
ha'l!e to reitera~ that ifit doesn't. Madriers insist~d on gettin$ · . A potent 20-point _offensive . at the line. Federal had 32
happen, that's ·fine With Kenny. Reese, · but reviVed the trade attack paced the Ma~auden to a rebounds (Bartlett 10, Dond 10),
No one is pushing 'thir Mariners effort last week. He said Seattle's . 20-6 first peridd lead over Feder- . eight steals (Ri~hards 3) . and 18
to do tltis.lfsomet,hing happens, position hadn't changed and he al Hocking. Nick Wood andJ.l~ turnovers.
. 1; ·,
it would be best to do it before . was unwillirg to trade Reese, Staats got on the scoring card
Federal won the reserve game
it disrupm too many lives." ·
ce~ter fielder Mike Cameron ~r early and often in pacing the 57- 36 led. by Shaun Simpl(on
Goldberg said Griffey would . mmor. league shortstop TrayiS attack. .
·
with 17 and Matt Dillinger with
like ,to take care of fainily and Dawkms.
. The Meigs iable . defense again 11. Travi• Siders led Meigs with
business matten befote spring
S• JUNIOR- B4
allowed ,~he tyhrauders and 20 _points.
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"Joe's points were aU within the_offense. ter lead before the Golden Rockets left
Josh Will also cashed in on some big pass- the launching pad to score. It was five
es to post scores. I saw a very unselfish · minutes into the game at the 3:00 · m·ark
before. the Rockets hit
effort tonight."
. the scoring. col.
Will lit up the nets for 22 points, utnn.
Primarily, the Eagles benefited from
knocking down 10-for-14 from t.h e field
and going a perfect 2~of-2 at the line. He Brown and Will cuts off the offense, · but
Smith and Karr also cashed in as well.
also led the tealtl in steals with two.
Garrett Karr added nin~ points, Eric Only eight fouls were called on Eastern ,
Smith eight, 'ancl Matt Bissell and M:itt for t.he game, but four of those were . on
point guard Mat( Simpson who lost an ·
Simpson had four each. ·
abundance
of quality minutes in foul trouWellston's Drent ·Ewing paced 'the
Rockets \V.ith 26 points ..on four three ble.
pointers, while John· McDqnald added 12; · Def~nsively, Ea.•tern rail a 1-2-2 defenJosh Davis had seven, and Jamie Church sive alib'Tlment that completely shut down
the Wellston outside game in the early
seven.
See EASTERN- B2
The Eagles blitzed to a 16-0 first quar.-

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Page 81

The Daily Sentinel

Wedneaday, February 2, 2000

Page AI

Februllry 2, 2000 ·
. Wednellday,
.

Reader thanks Ann for help ove,rcoming_suicide thoughts after -abortion{
tion many years ago, and never not wish to be found unless there
expected to hear from the ~d is a legitimate medical reason to
again, which was fine with me. I do so.
went on with my life, and was
. Dear Ann Landen: I am the
very content.
divorced .mother of two young
Then, I get this letter from a children- a 10-year-old girl by
grown man saying he was so glad my ex-husband, and a 4-year-old
he finally found me.
boy by another man. My ex-hus1
I ended up calling him, but I band is a wonderful, loving father
wish I hadn't. There have been . to our daughter.
many unpleasant complications. I
Unfortunately, 'my son's biohave no maternal feelings for this logical father will have nothing to
man. I gave up for adoption a tiny do with him, and has made it
baby, so how can I feel motherly clear that he does not wish to be
toward a 50-year-old man I don't part of the child's life.
know? Please tell "Hunted" she is
Here's , the, problem. Everyone
not alone. SORRY NOW believes Ill)' ex-husband IS the
BACK EAST
'father of both my children. They
DEAR SORRY: I have said do not understood why he is so
in the past that if both the birth attentive to my daughter and
parent and the adopted child wish ignores my son . He takes the girl
to meei each other, it's OK wi\h on trips a1;1d buys her gifts.
me.·HoWever, I ,do not encourage
La~ely, even my daughter has
hunting down someone who may begun to qu estion why her
.

u

b1:91her
not included in these he would be willing to 611 that·
outings. She has asked her father role on a part-time basis by
to buy things for the boy, and he including the
on a fevv, _.of
has obliged without comment. those father-daughter outinfi.• It
Now, she wants her brother to be would benefit the whole faniay.
part of their visi~ together.
That first . kiss, that fint '
Shoulil I level wirh .her and embrace ... Remember all thbse
explain the siruatioq' If so, how things that brought you and Y'#ir
should I do it? I necdyour advice, loved one together? Ann Landers'
Ann.- A LOVING MOTHER! new booklet, "How We Met,·~ Is
DEAR LOVING MOTH- now available. This collection~ r;.f
ER: It is obvious that, ·at some sentimental love stories will mike .
point, you must tell your daughter a terrific Valentine's Day gift tor
the true nature of the sibling reb.- that special someone. It's a pc:~ct
tionship. Ten· years of age is · not addition tQ that box of choc~tes
too young t_q give her this infor~ or bouquet offiow~rs. For a ~oj&gt;y,
mauon. It IS sad that the boys please send a self-addressed, ~ng,
biological father cannot open his . business-size envelope an'~ a
heart to 'his son. In the.long run, check or money order· for $550
he wou1d be the wiimer.
(this includes postage and hanM~~!'while, your little boy . dling) to: H~w We Met, c/o ¥n
needs a father figure. lfthere is no · Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chlca- 1
other man in the picture, ask yqur go, Ill 60611-0562 (in Cal)ada,
caring and decent exhusband if $6.50).
.

~:/i .WEDNESDAY'S

boY

~~:ffiGllllGHTS

•l&lt;'f/········... -2'":

Ohto

&gt;.:.lllil!txander

. .-iiiiDn

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n County
.

- .. ~~ern •
· · w;t;rtord
•.: 'SOuthern

niC

Trimble

• ,f'f(leral J-lqcklng

·:
Mlller
......

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: ·~ ~~~ 52, Federal Hocking 311
; : EaJtern 81, Wellston 81 -.. ·
• -.Southern 84, VInton County 85
• ~ ~xander 83, Miler 47
: • ~pre 85, Trimble 59
·
: : ~lle-Yprk 84, Wa1erford 52

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•• •
Frlday"a aat.dultl
• : WelliiiDn at Alexander
~ •• TrlmbJI! at Federal Hocklng
• :.Miler at Eaatem
: - Mellli at NeleonvHie-York
· . : Belpre at VInton County ·
. Waterford at Southern

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WEDNESDAY

, PQMEROY ~ Weeken~ revival, .
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Faith Valley rabernacle Church, · Local School Board, special meet·
Bailey Rlln Road, Pomeroy, · ing, 7:30 p.m., Eastern Elementary
Wednesday through Sunday, with School · Public library Conference
Elder ROben Hall .of Point Pleasant, · · Room, to discuss building projects
W. Va. as evangelist, 7 p.m. each and oiher business.
eVening. Pastor Emmett Rawson. ·

THURSDAY
POMEROY
Catholic
POMEROY - Public EmployWomen's .ttub meeting Wednesday ees Retirement, Thursday, I p.m:
with Mass to precede the meeting, . with a lunch at noon at the Senior
Hostesses Olita· Heighton and Mari- · Citizens Center.
. lyn Poulin . .
FRIDAY
PA&lt;iEVILLE - Scipio TuwriREEDSVILLE .- · Olive . Town~hip Trustees regular meeting . ship Trustees, regular session, Fri:
Wednesday, (d() p.m. at the day, 6:30p.m ai the township garage .
p.,gcvillc 'lhwn Hall.
on ~oppa ~oad.

.

ALL

11·1 14-1
7-4 8-1!
.7·6 ·10·5
6-6 7-8
4-7 5-8 ..
0·12 0-15

.·
. llleeci.Y•
raaulla

~

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

ALL

11·1 13·1
7·5 . 7·7
!HI 5·i
5-7 . 5·11
4-8 6-i
2-8 2-10

Hocking

Ohio •

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sonvlll&amp;'York

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John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

·~

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lJ--~

.~

•
llaton
.
.. · County
. 81oonvflle-York

niC

ALL

11-1
11·1
9-3
7-8
8-5
S-9

15-1
14·2
9-8

T:
i
.
.
.HOc:ld~
' •ytterford
·. .F.jida
_ rraal i:toi:klng
slirthern
.
· , · Eastern

;Tiftllbie

.....-··--·

"""".
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7-10

. 8·9 .
6.·11 .
ALL

9·2 11-4
9-S 9-7
4-7 6-1 o
2·9 4-10
1-12 1-15
0,12 0-15

. ......

·... ·~·
_
,' . . ,.. ·- .,.. . ' ....._,. ·• -ac•..uu

· : : ·: P,tPral Hocking at Southam
• •. Wllterord at Miller
· ·: • t'llmble at·Eaatem
eat Meigs '
. · ·
• : • · . llaton at Nelaonvt
.
lie-York
::, · n County at Alekander ·
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Southern defeats Vinton Co.
\

ly SCOTT WOU'I!
Bentlnel CorrUpOildent

attack. It was that upbeat transition game that set t'he stage for
RACINE-Outscoring Vinton a powerful Viking offensive
County 45-24 in t'he second explosio.n.
half, th~ Racine..SOuthern TorWhen held to· a half-court
nadoes put the Vinton CountY game, the much
Vikings
Vikings out ro stormy leas in back-door cut the Tornado
posting a hard-fought 84-65 tri~ defe~ to . pieces, apif! with
umph in Tri-Valley Conference PattersOn profiting from the ·
interdivisonal play at ' Hayman passes from Zach Gill and David
gymnasium.
Dealoia out liol)t.
Southern (1 0-5, TVC 7 -5)
Southern feD to 18-8 as the
flexed its muscle in placing five · flood gates opened widely on
men in double digits, lead lby th!: offensive end for Vinton
Junior post Nick Bolin who County. Southern's Nick Bolin
scored a.double"double with 17 was putting together a goOd
points and eleven rebounds. inside game, and Chris RanBesides a super night in splitting dolph hit · a three to ta~e the
th_e seams of the Vinton County score to 18-ll. Garret Kiser,
defense, Bolin hit 11-15 free KyleNorris,andRussellReiber·
throWs overall. A trio of purple• . got on the scoring Merry~go­
clad bas,kereen hit the twelve round. as Southern hacked into
point mark~-junior Garret the lead at 21-18 by quarter's
Kiser, senior RusseU Reiber, end.
and· junior point . guard Matt
V intoq County jumped to a
Warner. Kyle Norris .added ,running start early in the second
seven; and Chris Randolph six. · canto, building up a seven point
Vinton County. (2-10, TVC leaf! before Kiser drained his
2-8) was led byJosh Patterson, · second trey to cut the· lead to
who led the Vike's with a game- . four: Gill answered with a three .
high 21 points and twelve to quickly stifle SHS rnomenrebounds to post a double~dou~ turn, then after a Viking steal,
ble for the visiton. Zach Gill . Mike Eberts drained a three and
added. 13, Garth Fri had eight, Jason Eberts hit a pair of field
and Mike Ebert$ added six.
goals as VC roUed to its biggest
"What can you say?" waS the lead 36-23.
Rees called time and righted
question Southern coach Jay
Rees posed. "You play defense, · the adjusting screws on the SHS
you win ballgames. The first half .offense. The mental tweaking
we gave up 41. points, just about resulted in a defensive stand and
ten shy of what we give up, for . offensive explosion. Southern
an entire game. . There wasn't outscored VC 17-J in the final
much defense being played, yet stretch to lead 40-39, hoWeVer,
· the lcids oveicame some bad Southern shot too soo~ on its
play .and cut' it ro one at the last shot-before-half attempt
half.
·
. ·
and Fri drove the lengt~ of the ·
"The second half was· a dif- · court to score at the buzzer to
ferent story.· We p1ayed a good regain the lead 41-10 in favor of
match-up defense the seqond Vinton County.
. half and we kept fresh players on · The second half was just the
the court. We just w,ore them reverse of the fint half olfens.ive
down:• . ·
·. , . ,;v · ,J{ "'tremors. Southern played a"
Southern fell to an - 1!-4 match-up zone and the anaco.n.:
deficit ·early as Josh Pattenon- da effect . put the 'sqlleeze on
dominated the Vinton Count}' VC's potent inside attack.
.offense. Pattenon had nine · Meanwhile, Southern was takpoints in the round as ~the Vike's. ing it , to the hole. -Southern ·
of Coach Rick Brooks played .a went .on a 23-8 run, hitting 14- . . TORNADO TRACK- Southern's Nlek Boiln (32) sweeps In for two points .a !iainat VInton County ln.
torrid run-an~ off~n.sive
Set SOUTHERN ...,; B2
the Tornadoes' 84·85. blowout of the VIkings. (Scott Wolfe photo)
·

taller

-TVC-

·edicine
while a few · may be .acquired
Quation: Can athlete's foot
directly from the· soil. In all of
these types, the infe.c ting fungus is ·
fungus be found in the neck,
_
confined
to the superficial layers ·
· scalp and ears areas? What is the ·
of the skin and does not spread to .
best treatment for it?
· Answer: We humans are sus- cause a life~ threatening systemic ·
ceptible to a number of condi- infection in those with an intact
tions that damage our skin, immune system.
including athlete's foot. Athlete's
The types offungus that cause
fopt · i$ a general term used by athlete's foot thrive on warm, .
most people to describe any rash moist .conditions.That is why this
· on the feet. There are many con~ infection.
typlcally
occurs
ditions that can caiJse a ras)l, between the fourth and fifth toes.
whjle athlete's foot· is a . specific The fungus that infects the ~kin
rash caused by a fungal infection. . of the head and neck IS usually
And, it is the most common cause subtly different m that 1t thnves
of rash on the fe~t.
·
where there is less moisture.
Athlete's foot typically involves
Despite the s~ecific_ fungus that
the skin between the toes, causing causes a skm mfecnon or the
. It to become dry, scaly and labels we 'doctors use to describe
cracked. On some occasions the it, ·s omething is needed to elimiinfec.tion may cause a moi,t, soft nate the annoying rash and persisand peeling rash instead. Though tent itch it causes: Many of the
athlete's foot is: most . common · non-prescription products that
between the toes, it can also affect are sold for athlete's foot are very
other paits of the foot. ·A fine, effective. Terbinafioe, the generjc
scaling rash or a series of small name for the most recently
· blisters along the side of the foot approved. product in .this category,
-- at the junction between the is perhaps the most effective . of
thick skin of the sole and the this group. All o['these products
thinner skin on the · side of the · are effective a~ treating m~st funfoot -- is another frequent type of gal skin infections, regar4less of
athlete's foot.
the area of the body involved.
It can occur, though, anywhere
The dilemma your question:
along the sole of thefoot. And, to poses is whether or not your rash
answer your question directly, is actually caused by a fungus. You
these kinds of fungal infections see, there are other conditions
may attack the skin of any area of that. can initially appear ·~ery
the body.
.·
much like a fungal ·. infection. ·
' When other areas .of the body . Consequently, ! suggest that you
·are involyed, though, other labels see your family doctor or a ,der. are used to describe the infection: matologist . if yo11r rash fails to ·
Most of these non~foot fungal prompdy · ·clear after using ·'
infections are commonly called terbinafine for one week. If you
"ring-worm," although the rash do have a fungal infection that
may not be . "ring" shaped and terbinafine d&lt;!esn't clear up, a lirethere certainly is no "worm" scription medicine that is taken
involved in the process. Tenia· by mouth may be necessary to
capitis is the "doctor label" for a give you relief.
fungal infecdon of the scalp;
"Family Medicine" is a
Tinea crura is on the groin and weekly column. To submit
Tenia corporis is on the trunk.
. questions, w'rite to John C. ·
' There are, actually, several spe- Wolf, D.O., Ohio Univenity
. cific types of fungus that can College of Osteopathic M:edi. infect skin. The most common cine, Groivenor Hall,'A,thens,
.ones are tralismitted from person Ohio 45701. Past columns are
to person, but ·others may be available online at www.thra~
ca~Jght from infected . animals dio.org/6n.

Basketball
BOYS

Athlete's foot fungus can
attack other areas of the body

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Inside: Kentucky upends Tennesse.e- P~~gaa2
Inside: Rocker suspension appealed- Pav• B4

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Deu Ann Landen: A while
back, you asked your . readers
which columns of yours they had
saved. I saved one on abortion,
because I had one.
Only a few people knew about
~~N LANDERS
it. The column meant so rnuch to
me because it appeared at a time
when' I desperately needed to to remind myself of why I had the
kn.o w that not' all women who abortion and how you saved me ·
have abortions are sleazy bimbos· from a life of self-destructionor trying to get out of" paying the or no life at all. Thank you for
piper" for their immoral behavior. that.
GRATEFUL
UP
I got pregnant even thot,~gh I . NORTH
was using birth controL I was livDEAR GRI\TEFUL: A ·leting in a small town where I knew ter like. yot,~n makes all the hard
no one, and felt lonely and work worthwhile.[ am grateful to
.depressed. I was not a "bad" girl. I . you for taking the time and trouwas brought up in · a religious ble tQ write. I hope all the women
home. The shame alone made me who ha-:e walked in yo!'r shoes
contemplate suicide.
. will find comfort and solace in
. Then,- there yo.u. were, Ann , a w!)at you have written.
person · I respected, one whose
Dear Ann Landers: l'd ·like
advice I had been reading since !' to comment on that letter from
\vas 10 years old. I felt like you · '.'Bunted Down in Texas." I know
understood.
·
exactly .how she feels.
:
. I will 'afways keep that column.
I also gave 'up a b~by fqr adop-

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By The Bend

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. ~~em1ent:ary

Eastern rolls to 14th straight victory

~a:yers

By SCOTT WOLFE

· ·l'fews &amp; Notes
girls ·
inviited to

· of the way the whole group played," said
Sentln.. ~~
, .
'coach Howie CaldweU. "With aU the big
EAST MEIGS ...,. Behind .' the dynamic . games we've had . we were ripe to · have
duo of
Brown aqd Josh Will, who someone come in .and knock us off, but I ·
combined for 52 points, t'he• 11th ranked cqulil tell by · our players' eyes that we
Eastern Eagles poured on the coals to . weren't going ro get beat."
whip the WeDst~n Golden Rockets of the
Brown lit up the nets in neon with a
T.V.C:s Ohio division Tuesday night by dazzling 30-point effort that saw 'the
the score of81.,61. ·
junior forward ,bit 14-17· from the field.
The interdivision win left Eastern at 14- Additionally. Brown grabbed a team high
1 overall arid was their 14th consecutive 9 rebounds in leading the Eagles to a 37victory after losing the ~ason .opener at 16 edge in that department;·
Belpre. Eastern is I 1-1 in-conference play.
Heaping praise upon his dub Caldwell
Wellston falls to 5-9 c;~~rall and S-5 in stated, '1oe Brown ·was on tonight and
the league.
·
'. . . '
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sparked our offensive effqrt, but we had
"I .told the ·kids tonight that this might great team · work and many outstanding
be one of the lint times that.! was proud P'!S'es.

Joe

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:; ~ermeil retires
:: :;;.::.ST. LOUIS (AP) - St. Louis ·
:: · ~ms coach Dick Vermeil
:: · ;announced ' his retirement, two
:• '
afte~ winning his 'f int Super
~v1. His· eyes filled with tean
his voice choked with emothe 63-year-oid Vermeil said
...an unbelievable feeling" [0
,,,eave as a champion.
Verm•:il ma~ a quick decision
he didn't want to be
with· the liee agency
that starts Feb. 11. He
' Je!i~ with tWo years ro gri on a
·"~oe-year, ':tY ' million contract:

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Griffey-to~Reds
CINC:INNA~I

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(AP) .Ken Gnffey Jr. ts tDded ro hts
hometown team, he'd, like the
deal to happen before the sta_rt of
'spring ·training, 'his agent said
Tuesday~
.
· li~ver, agent Brian Golddeal Mer~er,
berg said that Griffey is not
Orlando .
pressing Seattle to trade him, and .
.~:
(AP) - ' Ron MerReds general manager Jini Bowand, Chauncey Billups have
den said talks with tile Mariners
shipped off to .Orlando in a
· remain. at a standstill.
that Denver Nuggets gener- , . · The Reds broke · off, ~iscusmanager . Dan Issei insisted he
sions Dec.tt at baseball's winter
. ~nl tQ make but which, at
, meetings because the Marine~
same time, improVe!: his team.
insisted on a package of players
. NBA
approVal ro ilie
including Gold Glove ~corid
e-pl:l...et deal that sends Mercer,' ·
~aseman Pokey Reese. .
'
.a nd former Magic first..
Bowden spoke with Mariners
,::;.:i~~·~~ pick'Johnny Taylot tO
geri~ral .~r Pat Gillick last
·, fot. forward · Chris
Friday to ,e;., if Seattle~ 'pbsition
Tariq. ·Abdulhad ~hangt\:1 . fiPm _q eeember.
a · future first-round dnft ,.
He said ·the' Mariners 'll:ld not
and a)l undisclosed amount
budged and the teanu were. at
the itarne implsse. ·
' ' '
Bow4en denied a Rpott ill ·
· The~ay's New York Daily ~eWS
saying trade talks had i~tensi~ed.
"We have not talk~d ;ince Fri~' ,Bowden said. "We'vi!'"made

:~~~:!J'~~~ !to.

gaw

gu.ro

deal not dead.yet Meigs defeats

Fede·ral Hock•· ng

~0

progress training start• ifhe;s going to be
smce Dec. 11. traded.
There's . nothReds manager Jack McKeon
mg new to agrees that any ileal should be By SCOTT WOLFE
· Coach Chris Stout ·to pull one.
report."
completed before spring training Sentinel Correspondent
. out .of their bag of tricks. The
. Neither
so the trade talk doesn't disrupt
ROCK SPRINGS Meigs · Meigs .'defense completely forced
Mariners
the. clubhouse. .
defeated Federal Hocking Tues~ Federal out of its offensive
president
Griffey turned·down an eight- day night, 53-39,
.·
· 's cheme,· as Meigs took a 32~17
Chuck Arm- year, $148 million offer last sum· Meigs is now 5-9 overall and 4- halftime lead.
'
strqng
nor mer,, saying he wanted to play 6 in. the Ohio Division of the
Federal. out.cored Meigs I 0-6
Grl"- J · GiDick
closer to his home in Florida. Tri-Valley Conference. · Feder_al. · in the third frame, but the
...,, r. . returned
He'll make $8.5 million this sea- Hocking is 4c7 and 4-6.
Maraud~rs come back to ice the
phone messages Tuesday.
·
son, then become a free agent,
. Meigs was led by J.RStaats with vic!ory cake.-at.S3-39. · ·
"
The Daily News quoted
Griffey rejej:ted a trade to tho · H), Nick Wood with 15, Kyle
Overall, Meigs hit 21-of-43
sources . anonymously as saying New York Mets Iast l;&gt;eceniber, Smiddie six, Steve'"Deha four, and shots (49 percent) from the . fielcl
that Griffey was "putting · the saying he would only approve .a n.yo each from Adam Bulli!lgton overall, and 9:.for-15 stint at the .
pressure . on" the Mariners to deal with the 'R eds. He grew up · aqd Zach (vleadows,
·
.
line. Meigs · had 23 rebounds
trade him before spring training in Cincinnati ancl his father is ~ . :Federal Hocking wa.• led in (Staats 7. Bullington . 4, Behi' 4)
begins. Goldllerg deni_ed it. · ·
Reds coach.
sebring by' Den Dunfee with ten . and 11 steals (Beah 5).
.. I' .
"There's -no pressure or any~
Dowden broke off negotia- ' points, Dusty Doncl 9, and Matt
Federal hit 16-for-5 I from !he
thing Iik~ that," Goldberg said. "I tions _on Dec. 11 ~cause . the ' Quinn with six,
field overall, while hitting 5-for-8
ha'l!e to reitera~ that ifit doesn't. Madriers insist~d on gettin$ · . A potent 20-point _offensive . at the line. Federal had 32
happen, that's ·fine With Kenny. Reese, · but reviVed the trade attack paced the Ma~auden to a rebounds (Bartlett 10, Dond 10),
No one is pushing 'thir Mariners effort last week. He said Seattle's . 20-6 first peridd lead over Feder- . eight steals (Ri~hards 3) . and 18
to do tltis.lfsomet,hing happens, position hadn't changed and he al Hocking. Nick Wood andJ.l~ turnovers.
. 1; ·,
it would be best to do it before . was unwillirg to trade Reese, Staats got on the scoring card
Federal won the reserve game
it disrupm too many lives." ·
ce~ter fielder Mike Cameron ~r early and often in pacing the 57- 36 led. by Shaun Simpl(on
Goldberg said Griffey would . mmor. league shortstop TrayiS attack. .
·
with 17 and Matt Dillinger with
like ,to take care of fainily and Dawkms.
. The Meigs iable . defense again 11. Travi• Siders led Meigs with
business matten befote spring
S• JUNIOR- B4
allowed ,~he tyhrauders and 20 _points.
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"Joe's points were aU within the_offense. ter lead before the Golden Rockets left
Josh Will also cashed in on some big pass- the launching pad to score. It was five
es to post scores. I saw a very unselfish · minutes into the game at the 3:00 · m·ark
before. the Rockets hit
effort tonight."
. the scoring. col.
Will lit up the nets for 22 points, utnn.
Primarily, the Eagles benefited from
knocking down 10-for-14 from t.h e field
and going a perfect 2~of-2 at the line. He Brown and Will cuts off the offense, · but
Smith and Karr also cashed in as well.
also led the tealtl in steals with two.
Garrett Karr added nin~ points, Eric Only eight fouls were called on Eastern ,
Smith eight, 'ancl Matt Bissell and M:itt for t.he game, but four of those were . on
point guard Mat( Simpson who lost an ·
Simpson had four each. ·
abundance
of quality minutes in foul trouWellston's Drent ·Ewing paced 'the
Rockets \V.ith 26 points ..on four three ble.
pointers, while John· McDqnald added 12; · Def~nsively, Ea.•tern rail a 1-2-2 defenJosh Davis had seven, and Jamie Church sive alib'Tlment that completely shut down
the Wellston outside game in the early
seven.
See EASTERN- B2
The Eagles blitzed to a 16-0 first quar.-

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:: Pllge 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddlepol't, Ohio

. , Wldnlllll!y, February 2, 2000

Wedneaday, February 2, 2000

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL

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Resurgent Wildcats hound No. 6 Vols in SEC tilt·
'

•. By 11M WHITMIRE

,beat this team twice last year. That is incentive, so they were ready."
"Our spirit is going to be fine," Tennessee coach Jerry Green s:a!d.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Once upon a time - say, seven weeks
"This is a setback, bu t we understand Kentucky played a fiqe game
. h ..
•
ago - Kentucky was 4-4 and unraitked for the first time in nine years.
torugt. r
.
:
Coach Tubby Smith doesn't remember it.
With the win, Kentucky took over tint place in the SEC ~t, ...nd
"That's too long ago for me;' Smith said Tuesday night, after his
snapped Tennessee's six-game conference road winning strea~~ 1 :
- 14th-ranked Wildcats once again took over first pbce in the SouthKentucky has won 15 straight games at Rupp Arena, datiOg tp:last
...,. eastern Conference with an 81-68 victory over No. 6 Tennessee.
season's 47-46loss to the Volunteers.
· '
"That's too long and too far back. We're in conference play now, and
Bogans' big first half helped the Wildcats take a 36-31 halftime lead.
we're much older."
c In the second half, Tennessee scrapped to stay in the game, getting
·. Keith Bogans is one of the Wildcats (16-5, 6- 1) who has grown up
within 58-54 with 9:46 remaining. .
'
.fast.
Five 3-pointers by Yarbrough and three by Harris helped keep Ken~
The freshman guard notched a career-high 25 points against the Voltucky from turning the game.into a 'blowout.
'
•
unteers (18-3, 6-2), scoring 16 of Kentucky's lint 23 points. Bogans
P.rince, however, scored 14 points in the second half, including two
made four 3-pointen and added two steals and two assists in the best
3-pointers. One of those effectively locked the game away, 74-63, with
game of hjs brief college career.
'
3:59 remaining.
"It felt good," Bogans said. "It felt like I couldn't miss, so I kept
"Tayshaun came through in the late game and. led us through;'
'
shooting. That's what a guy dreams of, that every shot he shoots is
Tubby Smith said.
falling." .
The game ended with SEC statisbcs . turned upside-down. The
In winning 11 ·of12 going into the Tennessee game, the Wildcats had
league's worst 3-point shooting team, Kentucky, went 10-of-21 from
depended largely on consistent scoring from center Jamaal Magloire,
beyond the arc, while the top long distance team, Tennessee, went just
who had reached double figures in 15 straight games.
10-of-27.
Though Magloire 's matchup with Tennessee center C.J. Black The Wildcats, who were outrebounded in both losses to Tennessee
who labeled him a "dirty player" in the preseason- was the focus of
last season, held a dear ,advantage on the hoards, 40-33. ·
·pregame attention, neither big man was much of a factorThesday. Each
And !hey got an assist from a raucous Rupp ·Arena crowd, which
.had to sit long stretches because offoul ttouble, and each finished with
chanted "over-rated" as the clock ran down on the Kentucky win.
No. 8 Michigan St. 82, Michigan 82
just two points.
With Bogaru stepping up, Tayshaun Prince scorif\g 17 and grabbing
Morris Peterson had 32 points and 10 rebounds t&lt;? lead the visiting
Spartans. (16-5, 7~1 Big Ten) to their fourth straight win. Freshman
six rebounds and point guard Saul Smith contributing 12 points, six
rebounds and five assists, Kentucky didn't need Magloire.
LaVell Blanchard had 16 points for the Wolverines (12-6, 3-4), who
"All our guys are growing, maturing, they're feeling more comfortlost their third straight. They found out just before warmups that freshable with each other;' Tubby Smith said. "(Bogans) was open because
man and leading scorer Jamal Crawford that the NCAA was investiof the other players doing other things for him to get his shots."
gating his living arrangements before enrolling at Michigan.
No.
21 Temple 75, M11aachuaetta 48
"This is a real confidence-booster;' Bogans said. "We know we can't
Mark Karcher scored 17 points for the Owls (15-4, 8-1 Atlantic 10),
• just depend on Jamaal. We all have to play our role.''
.
who
came into the game No. 1 in the nation in defense at.53.5 points
BOffiED UP - Kentucky's Tayahaun Prince (riGht) holdi Ten·
Vincent Yarbrough scored 17 points and Tony Harris added 16 for
nea-·a.lalah
VIctor
In
check
during
last
night'•
Top
25
encounter
per game. Monty Mack had 14 points for the Minutemen (11- 9, 5-3),
Tennessee, while Isiah Victor had 12 points and 10 rebounds. ·
Ky.
The
Wlldceta,
rated
14th
In
the
lltii.AP
poll,
upaet
In
Lexlngi!Jil,
who
were· held to their lowes~ output of the season.and suffered their
"I'feel they had a little more emotion tonight;'Yarbrough said. "We
the No. 6 Volunteera 81-611 at Rupp Arena. (AP)
worst loss in the Mullins Center, which opened in 1993.
'
.

AP Spcll18 Writer

Dr R.B. PAU.STROM
ST. LOUIS (AP) Dick
Vermeil's retirement plans don't
' r
center around sitting in a rocking
~hair all day surrounded by ·his
grandkids.
"l'd like to try to get a job in
television again and finish out a
couple year.; in broadcasting,"
Vermeil said Tuesday after
'. •&gt; nnounc;ing he is leaving the St.
••• w

COLUMBUS
Meghan 17 points. Halley handed out a
Kolcun poured in 20 points to game-high nine assists.
lead. Rio Grande to an 81-70 vicFormer Southern star Renee
tory ovet Ohio Dominican in Turley knocked down 5-of-11.
AMC play last night.
field goal attempts and edned the
Rio Grande (18-7, AMC 12- night with 12 points.
. 2) snapped a three-game losing
Erika Englund led Ohio
skid with the win.
,
Dominican (19-6, AMC 11-2)
Kolcun drilled 5-of-8 three- with 19 points. Julie Mueller
.• point attempts and was 7-for-12 · added 15 points and 12 rebounds.
•; overall from the field.
Welage had 10 points. .
••~l · Karley Mohler scored l9 Michelle
Rio Grande trailed 35-33 at
.~ points, hitting 5-of-10 field ~al the half, but outscored ODC 48;~ attempts and 9cof-1 0 foul shots. 35 in the second peritid to collect
·• She had 12 rebounds.
· the win.
'•
;
Misti Halley connected on 9. Rio Grande hosts Malone Sat:~ of-10' free throws, finishing with · urday at 3 p.m.

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Portlmd Jt ,..,.,..York , 7::ll'l p.111.
Philaddphi1 at Houston. 11:30 p.n1.
lbrcmtu at San Antonio, 1:30 p.m.
Chnlot...- n DaH1i. IJ(I V·l"·
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South.. •t Divillon

fum

II!

Jl.

FII'II&lt;IJ ....

w~.-.~,.,~"'1' .

l;,1-rnhB~

J
t1

.1

(,3

159

Iy ,

u

I

31 1.1')

rq .,

127
147

~

311
_\J

lH

IM7

-·-

~

.i1

Ill

J~l

:!1' L I

1!:[
11

I"

I~

Ill
34
J::!

... II

JJ

T~ mJU Jl~·

'-tl.tou.t

L I RI 81.. llf. .ll.,\
I!

... .... ._l'!
, ....:!4
... JI

(,
t,

CO NFE~ c;Ji
Cerur•l Divhlon
,.

Division U
~

;_

1~- 1
I lo-ll
1J . tt

-'· l'ub.nJ S..'lnltul)· ..... , .
5~Ct)l. H~nlq

I '.j1 .
(J) ........................... .. 15· 1

11-LANt.:ASTEk FAIRFJELil UN 1t1N I !i- 1
7-Wm;n,-JtiwrVlc" ..
. ... I i - I
~-WiUnll ......................... ... , ............ lt-2

f

:r..m

.e:u.

I IV• '
l~.l

Ctu,·~·u

1.\1
1~r.
lt17

Cul ur~llu

~ .l

J,

( IJ

Oivirion lfl

:rum

_W:1.
·1-Diuffion (12) .............,.............._ ..... lfi-(1
l-S. Eurlid ll&lt;'(l;iu1 (fl) .. ........................ 14-1
3 -Air:Nn Ma1 1C h~ \'l" (1) ...................... H - 1
4-'Wmillci.......................... : ..... ___ ,_ .14· 1

Southwest

Cem. CJkbhurr11 6J, MidwesMn St. (,II
H1tdin·Si mmom 61, Mr Murr1· 38' .
NE O klahoma 5t}olul Drown -45
Trinit r,Tt•:o17 -l, H ••11dri~ !17

5-;BEVEIUY Ft. FRYE (1l '""""'""" .... 14_· 1
6-CUKU\\11 !'w'imU E .... .......... ,.... ......... ll-.;
7-C in . Hillt C t"!r, ltr~ll.............. .,.,: .. _Il-l

FarW,st

K"""" 7~ . C:nlnr.odo ro6

fu

2n2
IRB
1-H

12R
!!WI
82
(~~

Ohio H.S. boy•' scores
DlviJion IV

Alban)' "kxantk-r 6.\, H ~mlock Miller 47
Ash~'ill~ Te"'" V:tii .-S.l,Lop1 E!tn -18

-l·lkrlin Hiltud (18) ..

0.-.-mr

1-Battom Hopro~U-Lolllion (.) ...... - .... 13 -1

IB2

J-O~Iphol

161
152%

· lklprt '5. Gku~.-rTrit,hk SIJ
Fori ft)'f 6\1, Shenntdoah 56
C'an;l Wincl-nler 7J, Uborn-CarroiJ !.5
Ch~&amp;otp&lt;'ak.- 9:!, South Point (,:!
Galllpolk 7~ .A th.:m 61

....
. ...... 16-{1

St.JcHm's ...............................15-0

4-DIInilk- ........... .,............... ...... .. :......... 15.(1
S-N. I\obiiiKin Col. Cro~wftXd.... .... .....,.ll-1 ,

6-Bellllll.' SJ,John ................................. B -1 '
7-Brdford CliltiCI .................... ,........... .11- -1
S·Cohwnlmna C11:.nicw...................... 13-1
9-Hanlkt- Patrkk Htnr•,. ..................... IJ-3

lJIIl"Jittr Fairfield Uni on 31. t;:irck~ill~ S5
lat~~:-..r r F'a~r 63. Mill.-upon 5)
LOjCan 5 \, C h eshi~ Ri 11:rVaUtV 31
Ndwmillt· York 64. Wuffiord 53
N.·w Albitny 57, Be me Union 41

flo1
11

118
IIJ

72
~9

I O.S~:~Mq··ii·; ·;~··p;i~~~ll-~tthin~~~~

Pul:enburg, W.'h., S. 65, Vhtt~t Wurcn H
Puu•t:my Meigs _U, S!L"~" Fo:-d. Hock 1'l
Procrorville Faitllnd 5~. S. Gallia 4:Z

(,
t.

..

Ea. j!f liA
711

Ufl

llrJ

I

t.\1

17'J

I\ ~

:!

4M 1.\11
H I ~)

~-

1 ~'1
I ~'I

NortbWIIIt 'Divl.toa '
:!1' L Z 1!:[ 1'u. llE
...........:!f• Jfl
7
1
f~l I.:J7
......... 17 ll U 7
5t IJ I
.l .l H
'!; ~
S.\ 12~
... ,.. U Jt, Ill (, , -It• 11\1

,

E&lt;lmoutt&gt;U
C:·l~or y

V;onnl\l1\' r ,

.

Pacific Dtlli•loo

llA
\,1(,
l.l~

1541
HJ _

'

:!1' L ' l: ILZ 1'u. 1i! liA
l'hll11nL~ .... , ...., .....19
17 li
I
6S .IS? 1.'5
Dall~, · .... :.,.,. ..· ...17 1'-l
5 i
f&gt;l , 1:!1 I IJ

8-1-klth ........... :..................................... 1 ~ -2
' ~·J
'J ~ Milford C1r. Falrbanb .... ,............... 13-l
.'o6
10-Cal. R..cad)· .... ................ ................_\:l:-3
!5
Otbm rwceTri111 1:: « rnon poiats: 11 -I)O')io.':IIO\\"u
C hippt!\Yll 18. 1:l: (tir)-Ctn. ~min11, Cl~ . Villa Ant;o•b·S!.
juk-ph 15. 1 4 -W..u~eon U. 1S- W..)·ltnliUr ll.

·~

1~

. ..

lUm

Tri11i1}' C:hrl:ttl.Ju 71 , Sr . fr.uwi1. IIL t.l ,
Wh c•ltun. lll. foil , E1ml-mnl 4.1

14

__;I

l'J 17 , l.
............. .. 1~ :!7 (,

lU!n

~1

...... \~

]),•11U11
N"-"h\"dlo.·

I 51

9,CanBdJ .. ,.,
, ____ , ___ . l.l-'~
_\(,
, HI-Cuplt1"
'...............
.. . . l.l-2
n
Othtn rec.ivi• U Of mort poinll! 11 C IR.!:LE\I ILLE lfo 1::!-.lt-lk-BOIIAn·il B 1.\ -0itn'"'ll F1 lb 1_
1

· ·\

S1. L'"'"

Christian U :l~olllptll~ r 11

Sm Jo&gt;.; . ....................22 H
t. 7 57 145' HJ
Lni AIII(t'k, .................ll ll , i ' l
51f J54 , 14!&gt;
-A ... Iu· in• ........... ..... .::!2 :!:.. ,- 7 1 • il IJ) U 7
Owr!lnlr los!~&lt;:~ COI.Ul1 IJ' luti 1nd 1 qul,lliontk.
Thelda)''a scares
Atllh&lt;'lll1 l. 8t&lt;ltJio 1~tir
'

n,,.,..,l ~- n.u.u ~ - ~i~

,

l' ittsbul):h J, \Y.uhln1J10n 2
C:INIIn ~

4, Flon (b 1

Toromo s.:r~lilJll lb~· l
Colorado J ,VatKolll'l:r I

o

St. l uuii i, Calguy 4-0T l
l'h{l(nb; I . San j ot&lt;' U-OT

'•

Thnldtt'l ~m••

'

'r

Nad11"ilk ~~ N.Y. isbtidtn,7: p.m. .,.
Ntw Jo-·r.ry ~~N. Y. IU"I&gt;'" " l J O 1'•m.
Mooti'\'JI at Aoriila, 7:lU p.on.
' '
AI IJma n Daii:K, IUO )).nt.
Chil::asu 11 Ednl&lt;JIIIon, 9 1uu
Toronro

~•

,

'1,,,,

Thunday'l pmH

UOS!on, 7 p.m. '
·
Otuw• l l lluffaJ.. •. 7 Ju n,
Cam1in~ 11 WO!Shinij!Oil, 7jl.ll1.
N~lll'ill\• al New Jcrt..')', 7;.~0 p.m.
A11ahci m ar PhibddphiJ, 7:10 1'-"'
N.Y. lda nd~n ar l'i llll\urgh, 7:.l0 p.m.

;J

•• '

N .Y. ~Jill!t"' .11 AtL\ntJ, 7:J0 p.m.

Mllllln"lln T:amp1 D.i)", 7:30p.m.
~~~ jolt ar Color.~do, 9 v.m.

•

..,
'•

..

Announces Our 1999 Medical Staff ,A dditions

,. ,

•,

·•

'

SOUTHERN

"'

5'

lkwwil , ............... , 11
Uu!f~lo' . .:
.... ~u
M1ultn·1l
17

7.\
5U

1- U.I)'IUU ( :-j {1'5} ....... ...,.... . •
2-Mo·tlin•I\JL.-1"-"'' (2) . .
:t-1-\'lltl'&lt;'r••ll•: fi-il\\'"..1 [,1} . .

''

Sh4wun St. loll. Urbm.1 Stl
SC . Mll) 'l, Mtc h. 61, Kahmuuo 51
St Nnrh:n 5FI, Ilipnn i l

' &lt;:om·Urd S2. Ohl., Y•lky' 1'1 ·

4
(,

&amp;
~
147 I I 5

Toromu ............. ...... ..'111

Ochers ,.c•Mn1 ll or more poin11: 11· Tnl. {',•ut
&lt;:•th. 2'). ll-l'ar1114 Ht&gt;. H.~ 1· N~u"· ]n I' ((id-["&lt; n Mo.llh,·r
t&gt;t' -"•'11."\; lkliJtk' &lt;' 1~ . l.'i- y, \u. ll•••\\lnun I!
'
. I

· ' 1Dm

RIO GllANU.E lii.Ohio \)ominkln 111

Mus. 72, FhdJbnQ! St. 511
UutMo St. 73, (i&lt;'t ~'(J St. 72 ·

~l

13
"

f&lt;l
3.4

WESTERN

H"!'&lt;' t.5, Ohwt fi
L.llo.,• for,•!r r.1 l ~l\'11.1 ll' t -''l
·
, M~ltltiC 70. M~ulu V..·rn1.111 Nu•n.·lk' ii
N11rrh Ct•tUtJI 'J7, llt' tk•Jinmo.'.lll. ~~
Olriu \\1.-.l-,.om (.tt, Ko.'upm !141
( Jurlt t:hrisl:tJII N, &lt;:&lt;'Ill. Utbk (oil

112. Ncw Ero~LmJ Cull. 13
5f&gt;, Wb,:,l(lt1, M~•· 52 .

hirfidU ll, lon~ (&gt;II
H~wrfo'ni 72, Urlinut (,()

t7

. 1~ - !

I

Om"'.l

1 5~

, . .

.11

'l
'

151·

1.\J

111-t :k. E.T,·rh .. ............ .......

.-..n'1:~ ......-u·. _,.,

n

lUm

flo

... 1)-11

•J. W-~~.),,.nniJ ...

N .V. Ilol'll;tn.. ,..... ·' ~--22
l'utsburgh....... ...........
NY hbndo.•n ......... 0

~~ ~

11.\

J.\lkkt-flllt;IUfl ..... ..................... If•- I

14-lkl\\'1'\'!'l'tk..................... .. . .. .

{:,·mr•l St ., ( )hlu M'i, WiJI..·rf""'•· (,_j
\)Jkuu S1. (,7. \)JkiiU Wt'1-io.'}'JII !i:O

U tid.:•·w~r rr.

Mhmi .U Rou-on, 7 p.m.
Minnnou 11 Wuhinjt1oll, 7 p.on.
'-tlant111 Nt\1" ~""); 7:.10 p.m.
5llcr.ll~i110 a Detmit, 7:.\0 p m.
L.A. Clip~n at l'h~uiS, ~ p.m.
Mikl'llulwt 11 l&gt;tnw r, 9 V·'"
C hit~ at Scmk, HI p.nl.
V.mcciU\"Cr u Goldrn Stur. IO:JU p.n1.

...

0

n

PDnl.m~?'J.ChingoHI , '
•
G(lkletl 5tut 101, LA . ( ;llpJlt'n 71i

65

8
(,

.25ft
.2.\R'

Houston 9'1, Charlottt 1\.l 1

Bot

0-0
1-J

.581

ll~ll$0n

(o4

lti L WlltiUCt 7}

l),· ni ~.m7:!:.0h.- o l"'

n

:i~Gmw &lt;:n~· {I) .. ... , .................... fh -1
'·· Man,ridJ~r................. ...
1~ -11
7- TMrn\otMi·M~dbou (I), .• ...
.. .. I t. -&lt; 1

Sf, ~li

,tIS

PhUaddphb...........,.... ~

Nllflhf-M~

11,..11
lfo-11

(I)............

4-Cul ntuukh.n·n........ ..............

~~

"ll,:;l t•t~ n~.lll M . (ifllmdl 41\
l!mr '( :litl' 511, W~)" llol, Nd•. 17

East

Amho.·~

H tMIO.\;r

~Jo:JkY ..................:f

'

1-M:..nn (1'.1) .......... . .. ...... ... .

!·l"l c ,.I_IINI

'

. Nono.co nferi nce

,,(,',.,

'

Oivillon· I

Midwest

St .. &lt;'lhiu r.tl ,WiJtl..· rlin~o·,· r,5

,,'

S1u Antunlo 1115, L.A. Ukm ~I '

Semi.- 104, Uhh 96

~

~

.75&lt;i

l!l);

:~am

T•ll•dq:;. 7'J . IMiu\\'u m
UNt :-(:r,·,·JII~''" 7~. W. ~ : ~mhu~ fo5
VlfJtlniJ Umuu n . Sh~''' 57
w~.hlnJIUU &amp; h~ M. H.~uJulph- M •
\\1ill'-lt&lt;ll-o;;Jk•m 7,t, f~~\'ll o"\1 11,· S1. (,7

WJhh,1n

.women's scores

Ti.lelclly'l scores

, 5)

6-8 '

-''""
_f,lll

Gn1&amp;, .5t~tc ,

110

5-10

17

N~z:tnotl&lt;' 1!11

NCAA Division I

"

COLU MIJUS, Otlio (API - How ~ ttat•• p.ton&lt;'l u( tpOru
•.-ritL-n md ~nu:n ru\""1. Ohio h'llh od.,.Jigirlo hro~tl,.ll
. to:-an• illl lhol iOunh of Ji., \\Wkt)' Tl:gHIU·.c",IOU l'I?'J-2(/IIU
pol II (or fllr AAO:ttitt.•J PrtU (rt'f"uM l~rotJF,h pnw~ nf Jlt'-

S-a •

0\i,~

)ii , /1111:11~111"-'S f&lt;2 ,VII~il1i,o

{ : • .._. ~ ~''ll."t\\"

11 ',

&amp;:1.

l'h01.·ni~ ................................... :.l:'i
L.A. C~ipp.:n: .... .. ... .................... )I

•

7~.

c,-,,._r~l

II

I~I

1r,
IS
.H

Sx r.an~nu1

2

0
I
0
,\

American Mideast Conference

.7',,.'

.\I

"'
................... .... H

'

Ohio men's coHege scores

Tllli11

Adudc Dl11illoa

Ohio H .S. girls' poD

Momn Mo.1hutllll n. S. Virftil1ia :!I
N (' Ct•n•ul l-(JnhtK&lt;-&gt;11 C. 5milh ll
l'•lm lh·o,-hAtliuu" )'), FlutiJ~ Mt' lltllfi.Ll
l'r~·iif.• t 71 . ~~ - And"·w·, ~I
(Ju,.,.,,., N.L IIi Muum

Plc:lfk Divilic:m

:ram
LA. L;.k..·n

Lon~l!U!.IIIu, Lcri · M(R~,-

Crdr;huHI 70.0T

lUll (;)~_AN I&gt;E III(Ohiu U ..u'liuinn
Slu"1,,.,. St. 111.:!. U rh1n~ 1'J

....... :.......... .. , ................. 1•• lV Ito
........'.... , ...... ...... l~ 17
i)&lt;'l llo\.'1,. ............................ ... :.,. ... 21 1 12
HU~*IIIt : ............................., .... Ill
:!7
U1lln ... .... ......... ~......................... 17 21

',,

0
, B
~

.UI\

BASTEP.N CPNFERENCE

Li\'illplllll&lt;' fl7 , Sl. P~111'1 5H

7
111''

'

,

S.:. 67..t:lf

Lo·r 7U, Uui&lt;m , K)'. (oil

MidWtrSt

SC. ~2, MichiJPII (J
Tulc-.,_ko 71, Mbmi.&lt;Ohiu (i\

1(,

0 •

0

~· :

Minno,..,_M~

....

l&gt;r~L.- 7.&amp;,
Mkhi~u

,.,,.,

~

:!1'

""'""1•• ................: ........,~ . ~')

J.(,
J.4
0-0

n

"

WESTERN CONFERENCE

IR&lt;iana '.19, Dnslon 96
C(EVELAND 1\l, Wnhiugmn ~~~~
Otbnd{l ?6. N•"'-' York n

16 '-

•

Souoh

Udmom Abb..-y 87 •.Banon 76

South

I ll',

70 , 'n~

Catnpbo,ol~\'ill.i li4,Tt.mlyJ,-ania 57 .
Ch.!rkiaun Sol.ltb..rn %, Winthrop 4.5
IJwidwu 115 , ETSU 77
Elinhrlh &lt;.:it)· Sf 71,l~"i&lt;· St. t.
F~ 7:1, W. Mkhlf!Jn 5(,
Fur1Valley St._ 81, M~tms hi'OY.,, 4r,
Ko·11111d1.)' S.. 7i. Lanr t.ll
lSU 1&gt;7,Co.'IIR'I1U)' 30
,ld~·'• 1)~"· -0wl,'ll 76,1)•Jk~gr~ (,3

Kr.'IUIIdt)• lll,Tftlt...._.. (.ti
ut..mr M, H~ t&gt;oim r. .,
Mlmu fi•t Pi1ttbur'h til)
~,·ull•'*' St. 77, Mu~ Sa. 15

M.rluu,• 'JI. Mo1111tVt•rnOII

15

8

'
7' •

, (,~)

l !j
1?

( ; hK:~I(Cl ... , .................._"'"""'""''"'""' jl

U t~ h

So•tbtna

Nt(k Botia ............................. ,)

·21

,-t47
..lsr,

hldb•J .... ~ ................................l\1
Cluriunt· ................................... ..:!~
lbroma ..............,.-................. :,. :2~
M1k1'111kl.~ ................ ~ ........_., ...... 2:0
n~·truh ......... ....... ;.. ;............... ......22
~ : LEVEL.-'\NU ...... , ..................... 1'J
Ad~,K ~

Bfknonr

Stton H&amp;JIIt! , PI'O'Iiid.-no:r f&gt;7
Tt'111p~1" 75. Muuctluwtn '*II

.]

Hockey

.

NHL standings'

1011a 'n,MulKM

:!~

~(,

C.•aal Dhrbi(ln

. :O.t

- -- .... ....

,S:/:.nYatn ...... '/ .................. \ . ·
.....

OtLuUo ...................................... .~!

.

Wi~b:l Smi•h 69, Hobm
Willama 67, Sm,uh 46
....

Fordlum 92, R.hodc hllnd 68
GtorQ;•'iown r.t, LouiJ&lt;'ille 5?

.61ft
.f.O!'i

=~~~:::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::5~ i~

&amp;

10

.

&amp;:1.

16
17

' 16

--

JoihPatttiP1 .......................... ~
~(:iJI ....................... ,...•,.... 2

£

Nl-...Yor-1.: ............................. .J.(o

:ram

23 :!2 •

'l

Adudc Olvlllon

VintOn County 8+, Souther~ 65

Vin1011 Coumy ..........................18 21

Wnt6rld St. 55, .Maa. Colk~ 46

NCAA Division I
men's scores
·&amp;u

EI

.JMS.

3 5-.41

•'

atat~dinga

5-5

I

.

110

5

0--0

I

o-o

0

:r....
.
l[
Mll11"i .. - ..................................... .l7

.\'J

2-2
11-U

....

;J; , ~dun 8u1Mngcon - ..................19
J.
. . • 1 '!bull

, ,., , ,

0

......................... 11

,SJ M~ ............................... .

~ !-&lt;,. '

t -J
0-0 .

(I

:_: :~~ ~~~-~·:::~:::::::::::::::::::~~
(•' •V Kylc
1

u
!

¥

......

.

J-J

0

\)~n Whilllt~ h ........................ l

JP Su&lt;~ts

1,\ '"

n

.. ,;,,.~Whlwm .........................i~

-· ....
"""

(o

II

.ct''"'r' •1\)'111 Grbnm ........................... l
Stt"T RM.-h~n.k ........................tl

.

...·'"

0-11
11-11

11 •

~tJ

Logm Dmlc11. ................ ,........ 1

;

' :!-4
l-2
0

111

Hocklnt

ea..
. ................................
'""'~
N . IJUIII&lt;'~
,

"

10

n

l·4
1·1

I

BASTEP.N CONFERENCE

81
ti l

Melp 53. Federal HockinJl9
t=.'\kt!l Ho" kln.: .•. _.
.......... .f,
M ,•l~:~ ............... ............... .'.........211

.

NBA

Eut.. a. IJ,W.U.ton 61

, "-~ ' ' 1 t

I
D

5:.~~:~ : : : : : : : : : : 1'
.......
"

.:_.. Local scoring iUmmaries

....... """""'

.

A Rams spokesman said Martz
would postpone sur~ry and hold
a news co~feren~e. •. •
.
Vermeil's voice broke ofien and
tears flowed freely at 'T~'s
news conference: attend~~ several j:&gt;layers, assisbnt coaches and
personnel
director
Charley
Armey Team presidentJohn, Sbaw
introduced Vermeil, referriitg to
him as "Champ."

Scoreboard

...n11

Southern ...................................21

Vaug
been n
grocery business ..
throughout the last 00 years and we would like to take
this time to saj thank you to our valued customers. We are
proud to be locally owned and operated 'and look forward ·
to serving your needs througtout the next century.

had a couple of 20-minute con- few people in this profession get
The decision elevates offensive
venations on retirement
· this opportunity."
coordinator Mike Martz to coach.
~ one Monday and the
Carol Vermeil, who The Jilarru signed Martz, who
other Tuesday morning.
attended the news con- directed the r:-JFL's top-rated
Vermeil
got out
ference, did not contra- offense (33 points a game), to a
because he realized it's
diet her husband. .
two-~ar contract in January that
impossible to top a Super
· " It was his decision;• aSSured he would inherit Vermeil's
Bowl victory as an exit.
she said. "There's a time job.
"I think the time is
for everything. But the
· Martz, scheduled to undergo
right,"Vermeil uid in an
wont thing is overstaying surgery today for a neck problem,
emotional farewell ."Very
~mell
your time, isn't it?"
didn't attend the news conference.

Louis Rams. "Carol's not real
.excited about that."
Vermeil and his wife celebrated
their 44th anJlivenary rwo days
before the Rams beat the
Tennessee Titans 23-16 in the
Super Bowl, and during the
buildup, much was made of Carol
Vermeil's statement that her busband has nothing to p~. But
Vermeil said he and his Wife only

~

:;

Redwomen roll past
Ohio Dominican 81-70
'

The Dally Sentinel • .,.. B 3

~Vermeil steps down i~. wak~ · of Rams' Super Bowl triumph

.v

.: ...........................................................................................................................................................
''

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

continued from B 1

IS flee throws in the third round ..
(Bolin 2), 20 turnovers, 18 steals •11d
Southern took its biggest lead to 23 fouls.
that p'?int when Russell Reiber go a
Vinton County had a 23-for-53
break-away attempt of!' a steal and shooting effort overall, going 2-of-5
slam-dunked it to bring the local at the ttty mark and going 21~for-48
crowd to a standing ovation. Reiber on twos. Vinton County ha,d ·38
made the fi:ee throw as well to put rebounds (Patterson 12), ten assists
the 6nai nail in the Viking coffin. (M. Eberts 4, Jason Eberl! 4), 2J ,
The frame ended 62-49, then South- turnovers, 13 s.teals (Patterson 3) ·and
ern gradually pulled awa~ to the 84- 30 fouls.
65 victory.
Vinton County won the reserve
Southern hit 35-of-48 at the line, ·game 50-36 led by Shade Hundey
hilling 14-for-20 in the 6nai round. with 11, Dean Dunlap 9; and BranKyle Norris was perfect for the game don Norton 8. ·Southern was IOd by .
at 6-6, while Warner broke his 18- Dally Hill with 9, Michael Ball
for-18 stttak, but hit 5-of-6 in a 23- seven, and Justin Connolly six.
of-24 effort in his last five games.
Southern hosts Waterford Friday
Bolin was 5-for-6 in the final round. in an important Tri-Valley Conf~r­
Southern hit 17-of-43 twos, 5-of- ence game.
19 threes and was 22-for-62 overall, · Between games, the 1980 South, .
while hilling 35-of-48 at the line. ern High School State Semi-finalist
The Tornadoes had 39 rebounds basketball team will be honored.
@olin II, Kiser 6), had seven assists

.·..................................................

FEBRUARY 3rd, 4th, 5th
FRESH PORK STEAK :•
BROUGHTONS
ORWESTERN
: COTTAGE CHEESE
STYLE RIBS
••

c
I

••

EASTERN

..•.
•'

.•
••

continued from B1

·: .going. The Eagles rolled to a 22-8 three points at the three minute m~rk
; first period lead, then fueled the fire of the fourth quarter, when the
:: with 21 more poincs in the second score stood 75-54.
·
: · round to lead 43-30 at the half. ·
The final was a formality as East;
WellstOn went on a small run to ern soa..P on to the giant 81-61
;. challen~ and cut the margin to its win.
• lowest point at 35-28 at the 2:45
~stern hit 36-of-68 overall,
• mark of the second quarter, but Eaot- while going 6· of-9 at the line. East; ern repelled the effort, ruftling their ern had a 37-16 rebounding ed~
feathen' to take a stand just short of (Brow11 9, Simpson 8). The Eagles
;• the half.
·
had four steals (Will 2), eight
·~ Wellston's John McDonald had all turnoven, 13 wises (Bissdl 4) and
;· twelve of his points in the first half eight fouls.
and provided. the main spark for the · Welliton was 23-of-55 overall,
_; Rockets. The Eagles drew up a little including 10-for-26 from three~ box and one defense for the sharp- point ran~. The Rockecs were 5~ shooter,and with a super effort from
for-6 at tile foul line with 16
• Matt Bissell and the man guarding ' rebounds (McDonald 4, ¥oung 4).
.; McDonald, the ·talented gi.ard was The Rockets had three steals
;' held scoreless for the half.
(McDonald 2), 15 t:urnovers, 15 ·
·: "Mait Bissell did a super job on assiSts (Church 6) and 12 fouls.
:. McDonald," ~aid CaldweU. "Matt
Eastern won the reserve contest
•; stu~k to him like glue and kept the with another balanced ef!'orr, 41-33.
~ ball out of his hands, then we put The Eaglettes were led by Josh .Kehl
• Garrett (Karr) on him and he too did and Bradley Brannon with nine
: a great job."
'
. each, while Joey. Marcinko and Chris
;
Eostem powered on to a 61-44 Lyons both had eia!tt. J. Jackson and
; thitd quarter lead. Eric Smith man- R. Branc!ay were credited with 10 .
'. aged his usual good game inside, each for Wellston.
.
,: while Karr continued to excel' on the
. Eastern hosts Miller Friday at
• perimeter with three three-pointers. Eaatern.
: · Eastern's.biggest lead was . twenty·

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:: Pllge 8 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddlepol't, Ohio

. , Wldnlllll!y, February 2, 2000

Wedneaday, February 2, 2000

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL

.
'

I•

Resurgent Wildcats hound No. 6 Vols in SEC tilt·
'

•. By 11M WHITMIRE

,beat this team twice last year. That is incentive, so they were ready."
"Our spirit is going to be fine," Tennessee coach Jerry Green s:a!d.
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Once upon a time - say, seven weeks
"This is a setback, bu t we understand Kentucky played a fiqe game
. h ..
•
ago - Kentucky was 4-4 and unraitked for the first time in nine years.
torugt. r
.
:
Coach Tubby Smith doesn't remember it.
With the win, Kentucky took over tint place in the SEC ~t, ...nd
"That's too long ago for me;' Smith said Tuesday night, after his
snapped Tennessee's six-game conference road winning strea~~ 1 :
- 14th-ranked Wildcats once again took over first pbce in the SouthKentucky has won 15 straight games at Rupp Arena, datiOg tp:last
...,. eastern Conference with an 81-68 victory over No. 6 Tennessee.
season's 47-46loss to the Volunteers.
· '
"That's too long and too far back. We're in conference play now, and
Bogans' big first half helped the Wildcats take a 36-31 halftime lead.
we're much older."
c In the second half, Tennessee scrapped to stay in the game, getting
·. Keith Bogans is one of the Wildcats (16-5, 6- 1) who has grown up
within 58-54 with 9:46 remaining. .
'
.fast.
Five 3-pointers by Yarbrough and three by Harris helped keep Ken~
The freshman guard notched a career-high 25 points against the Voltucky from turning the game.into a 'blowout.
'
•
unteers (18-3, 6-2), scoring 16 of Kentucky's lint 23 points. Bogans
P.rince, however, scored 14 points in the second half, including two
made four 3-pointen and added two steals and two assists in the best
3-pointers. One of those effectively locked the game away, 74-63, with
game of hjs brief college career.
'
3:59 remaining.
"It felt good," Bogans said. "It felt like I couldn't miss, so I kept
"Tayshaun came through in the late game and. led us through;'
'
shooting. That's what a guy dreams of, that every shot he shoots is
Tubby Smith said.
falling." .
The game ended with SEC statisbcs . turned upside-down. The
In winning 11 ·of12 going into the Tennessee game, the Wildcats had
league's worst 3-point shooting team, Kentucky, went 10-of-21 from
depended largely on consistent scoring from center Jamaal Magloire,
beyond the arc, while the top long distance team, Tennessee, went just
who had reached double figures in 15 straight games.
10-of-27.
Though Magloire 's matchup with Tennessee center C.J. Black The Wildcats, who were outrebounded in both losses to Tennessee
who labeled him a "dirty player" in the preseason- was the focus of
last season, held a dear ,advantage on the hoards, 40-33. ·
·pregame attention, neither big man was much of a factorThesday. Each
And !hey got an assist from a raucous Rupp ·Arena crowd, which
.had to sit long stretches because offoul ttouble, and each finished with
chanted "over-rated" as the clock ran down on the Kentucky win.
No. 8 Michigan St. 82, Michigan 82
just two points.
With Bogaru stepping up, Tayshaun Prince scorif\g 17 and grabbing
Morris Peterson had 32 points and 10 rebounds t&lt;? lead the visiting
Spartans. (16-5, 7~1 Big Ten) to their fourth straight win. Freshman
six rebounds and point guard Saul Smith contributing 12 points, six
rebounds and five assists, Kentucky didn't need Magloire.
LaVell Blanchard had 16 points for the Wolverines (12-6, 3-4), who
"All our guys are growing, maturing, they're feeling more comfortlost their third straight. They found out just before warmups that freshable with each other;' Tubby Smith said. "(Bogans) was open because
man and leading scorer Jamal Crawford that the NCAA was investiof the other players doing other things for him to get his shots."
gating his living arrangements before enrolling at Michigan.
No.
21 Temple 75, M11aachuaetta 48
"This is a real confidence-booster;' Bogans said. "We know we can't
Mark Karcher scored 17 points for the Owls (15-4, 8-1 Atlantic 10),
• just depend on Jamaal. We all have to play our role.''
.
who
came into the game No. 1 in the nation in defense at.53.5 points
BOffiED UP - Kentucky's Tayahaun Prince (riGht) holdi Ten·
Vincent Yarbrough scored 17 points and Tony Harris added 16 for
nea-·a.lalah
VIctor
In
check
during
last
night'•
Top
25
encounter
per game. Monty Mack had 14 points for the Minutemen (11- 9, 5-3),
Tennessee, while Isiah Victor had 12 points and 10 rebounds. ·
Ky.
The
Wlldceta,
rated
14th
In
the
lltii.AP
poll,
upaet
In
Lexlngi!Jil,
who
were· held to their lowes~ output of the season.and suffered their
"I'feel they had a little more emotion tonight;'Yarbrough said. "We
the No. 6 Volunteera 81-611 at Rupp Arena. (AP)
worst loss in the Mullins Center, which opened in 1993.
'
.

AP Spcll18 Writer

Dr R.B. PAU.STROM
ST. LOUIS (AP) Dick
Vermeil's retirement plans don't
' r
center around sitting in a rocking
~hair all day surrounded by ·his
grandkids.
"l'd like to try to get a job in
television again and finish out a
couple year.; in broadcasting,"
Vermeil said Tuesday after
'. •&gt; nnounc;ing he is leaving the St.
••• w

COLUMBUS
Meghan 17 points. Halley handed out a
Kolcun poured in 20 points to game-high nine assists.
lead. Rio Grande to an 81-70 vicFormer Southern star Renee
tory ovet Ohio Dominican in Turley knocked down 5-of-11.
AMC play last night.
field goal attempts and edned the
Rio Grande (18-7, AMC 12- night with 12 points.
. 2) snapped a three-game losing
Erika Englund led Ohio
skid with the win.
,
Dominican (19-6, AMC 11-2)
Kolcun drilled 5-of-8 three- with 19 points. Julie Mueller
.• point attempts and was 7-for-12 · added 15 points and 12 rebounds.
•; overall from the field.
Welage had 10 points. .
••~l · Karley Mohler scored l9 Michelle
Rio Grande trailed 35-33 at
.~ points, hitting 5-of-10 field ~al the half, but outscored ODC 48;~ attempts and 9cof-1 0 foul shots. 35 in the second peritid to collect
·• She had 12 rebounds.
· the win.
'•
;
Misti Halley connected on 9. Rio Grande hosts Malone Sat:~ of-10' free throws, finishing with · urday at 3 p.m.

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8-1-klth ........... :..................................... 1 ~ -2
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Otbm rwceTri111 1:: « rnon poiats: 11 -I)O')io.':IIO\\"u
C hippt!\Yll 18. 1:l: (tir)-Ctn. ~min11, Cl~ . Villa Ant;o•b·S!.
juk-ph 15. 1 4 -W..u~eon U. 1S- W..)·ltnliUr ll.

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Tri11i1}' C:hrl:ttl.Ju 71 , Sr . fr.uwi1. IIL t.l ,
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Christian U :l~olllptll~ r 11

Sm Jo&gt;.; . ....................22 H
t. 7 57 145' HJ
Lni AIII(t'k, .................ll ll , i ' l
51f J54 , 14!&gt;
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Owr!lnlr los!~&lt;:~ COI.Ul1 IJ' luti 1nd 1 qul,lliontk.
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Atllh&lt;'lll1 l. 8t&lt;ltJio 1~tir
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l' ittsbul):h J, \Y.uhln1J10n 2
C:INIIn ~

4, Flon (b 1

Toromo s.:r~lilJll lb~· l
Colorado J ,VatKolll'l:r I

o

St. l uuii i, Calguy 4-0T l
l'h{l(nb; I . San j ot&lt;' U-OT

'•

Thnldtt'l ~m••

'

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Nad11"ilk ~~ N.Y. isbtidtn,7: p.m. .,.
Ntw Jo-·r.ry ~~N. Y. IU"I&gt;'" " l J O 1'•m.
Mooti'\'JI at Aoriila, 7:lU p.on.
' '
AI IJma n Daii:K, IUO )).nt.
Chil::asu 11 Ednl&lt;JIIIon, 9 1uu
Toronro

~•

,

'1,,,,

Thunday'l pmH

UOS!on, 7 p.m. '
·
Otuw• l l lluffaJ.. •. 7 Ju n,
Cam1in~ 11 WO!Shinij!Oil, 7jl.ll1.
N~lll'ill\• al New Jcrt..')', 7;.~0 p.m.
A11ahci m ar PhibddphiJ, 7:10 1'-"'
N.Y. lda nd~n ar l'i llll\urgh, 7:.l0 p.m.

;J

•• '

N .Y. ~Jill!t"' .11 AtL\ntJ, 7:J0 p.m.

Mllllln"lln T:amp1 D.i)", 7:30p.m.
~~~ jolt ar Color.~do, 9 v.m.

•

..,
'•

..

Announces Our 1999 Medical Staff ,A dditions

,. ,

•,

·•

'

SOUTHERN

"'

5'

lkwwil , ............... , 11
Uu!f~lo' . .:
.... ~u
M1ultn·1l
17

7.\
5U

1- U.I)'IUU ( :-j {1'5} ....... ...,.... . •
2-Mo·tlin•I\JL.-1"-"'' (2) . .
:t-1-\'lltl'&lt;'r••ll•: fi-il\\'"..1 [,1} . .

''

Sh4wun St. loll. Urbm.1 Stl
SC . Mll) 'l, Mtc h. 61, Kahmuuo 51
St Nnrh:n 5FI, Ilipnn i l

' &lt;:om·Urd S2. Ohl., Y•lky' 1'1 ·

4
(,

&amp;
~
147 I I 5

Toromu ............. ...... ..'111

Ochers ,.c•Mn1 ll or more poin11: 11· Tnl. {',•ut
&lt;:•th. 2'). ll-l'ar1114 Ht&gt;. H.~ 1· N~u"· ]n I' ((id-["&lt; n Mo.llh,·r
t&gt;t' -"•'11."\; lkliJtk' &lt;' 1~ . l.'i- y, \u. ll•••\\lnun I!
'
. I

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RIO GllANU.E lii.Ohio \)ominkln 111

Mus. 72, FhdJbnQ! St. 511
UutMo St. 73, (i&lt;'t ~'(J St. 72 ·

~l

13
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f&lt;l
3.4

WESTERN

H"!'&lt;' t.5, Ohwt fi
L.llo.,• for,•!r r.1 l ~l\'11.1 ll' t -''l
·
, M~ltltiC 70. M~ulu V..·rn1.111 Nu•n.·lk' ii
N11rrh Ct•tUtJI 'J7, llt' tk•Jinmo.'.lll. ~~
Olriu \\1.-.l-,.om (.tt, Ko.'upm !141
( Jurlt t:hrisl:tJII N, &lt;:&lt;'Ill. Utbk (oil

112. Ncw Ero~LmJ Cull. 13
5f&gt;, Wb,:,l(lt1, M~•· 52 .

hirfidU ll, lon~ (&gt;II
H~wrfo'ni 72, Urlinut (,()

t7

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Om"'.l

1 5~

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151·

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flo

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•J. W-~~.),,.nniJ ...

N .V. Ilol'll;tn.. ,..... ·' ~--22
l'utsburgh....... ...........
NY hbndo.•n ......... 0

~~ ~

11.\

J.\lkkt-flllt;IUfl ..... ..................... If•- I

14-lkl\\'1'\'!'l'tk..................... .. . .. .

{:,·mr•l St ., ( )hlu M'i, WiJI..·rf""'•· (,_j
\)Jkuu S1. (,7. \)JkiiU Wt'1-io.'}'JII !i:O

U tid.:•·w~r rr.

Mhmi .U Rou-on, 7 p.m.
Minnnou 11 Wuhinjt1oll, 7 p.on.
'-tlant111 Nt\1" ~""); 7:.10 p.m.
5llcr.ll~i110 a Detmit, 7:.\0 p m.
L.A. Clip~n at l'h~uiS, ~ p.m.
Mikl'llulwt 11 l&gt;tnw r, 9 V·'"
C hit~ at Scmk, HI p.nl.
V.mcciU\"Cr u Goldrn Stur. IO:JU p.n1.

...

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PDnl.m~?'J.ChingoHI , '
•
G(lkletl 5tut 101, LA . ( ;llpJlt'n 71i

65

8
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Houston 9'1, Charlottt 1\.l 1

Bot

0-0
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.581

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lti L WlltiUCt 7}

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Sf, ~li

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Nllflhf-M~

11,..11
lfo-11

(I)............

4-Cul ntuukh.n·n........ ..............

~~

"ll,:;l t•t~ n~.lll M . (ifllmdl 41\
l!mr '( :litl' 511, W~)" llol, Nd•. 17

East

Amho.·~

H tMIO.\;r

~Jo:JkY ..................:f

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1-M:..nn (1'.1) .......... . .. ...... ... .

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Oivillon· I

Midwest

St .. &lt;'lhiu r.tl ,WiJtl..· rlin~o·,· r,5

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S1u Antunlo 1115, L.A. Ukm ~I '

Semi.- 104, Uhh 96

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UNt :-(:r,·,·JII~''" 7~. W. ~ : ~mhu~ fo5
VlfJtlniJ Umuu n . Sh~''' 57
w~.hlnJIUU &amp; h~ M. H.~uJulph- M •
\\1ill'-lt&lt;ll-o;;Jk•m 7,t, f~~\'ll o"\1 11,· S1. (,7

WJhh,1n

.women's scores

Ti.lelclly'l scores

, 5)

6-8 '

-''""
_f,lll

Gn1&amp;, .5t~tc ,

110

5-10

17

N~z:tnotl&lt;' 1!11

NCAA Division I

"

COLU MIJUS, Otlio (API - How ~ ttat•• p.ton&lt;'l u( tpOru
•.-ritL-n md ~nu:n ru\""1. Ohio h'llh od.,.Jigirlo hro~tl,.ll
. to:-an• illl lhol iOunh of Ji., \\Wkt)' Tl:gHIU·.c",IOU l'I?'J-2(/IIU
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{ : • .._. ~ ~''ll."t\\"

11 ',

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L.A. C~ipp.:n: .... .. ... .................... )I

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c,-,,._r~l

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IS
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Sx r.an~nu1

2

0
I
0
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American Mideast Conference

.7',,.'

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................... .... H

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Ohio men's coHege scores

Tllli11

Adudc Dl11illoa

Ohio H .S. girls' poD

Momn Mo.1hutllll n. S. Virftil1ia :!I
N (' Ct•n•ul l-(JnhtK&lt;-&gt;11 C. 5milh ll
l'•lm lh·o,-hAtliuu" )'), FlutiJ~ Mt' lltllfi.Ll
l'r~·iif.• t 71 . ~~ - And"·w·, ~I
(Ju,.,.,,., N.L IIi Muum

Plc:lfk Divilic:m

:ram
LA. L;.k..·n

Lon~l!U!.IIIu, Lcri · M(R~,-

Crdr;huHI 70.0T

lUll (;)~_AN I&gt;E III(Ohiu U ..u'liuinn
Slu"1,,.,. St. 111.:!. U rh1n~ 1'J

....... :.......... .. , ................. 1•• lV Ito
........'.... , ...... ...... l~ 17
i)&lt;'l llo\.'1,. ............................ ... :.,. ... 21 1 12
HU~*IIIt : ............................., .... Ill
:!7
U1lln ... .... ......... ~......................... 17 21

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~

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BASTEP.N CPNFERENCE

Li\'illplllll&lt;' fl7 , Sl. P~111'1 5H

7
111''

'

,

S.:. 67..t:lf

Lo·r 7U, Uui&lt;m , K)'. (oil

MidWtrSt

SC. ~2, MichiJPII (J
Tulc-.,_ko 71, Mbmi.&lt;Ohiu (i\

1(,

0 •

0

~· :

Minno,..,_M~

....

l&gt;r~L.- 7.&amp;,
Mkhi~u

,.,,.,

~

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J.(,
J.4
0-0

n

"

WESTERN CONFERENCE

IR&lt;iana '.19, Dnslon 96
C(EVELAND 1\l, Wnhiugmn ~~~~
Otbnd{l ?6. N•"'-' York n

16 '-

•

Souoh

Udmom Abb..-y 87 •.Banon 76

South

I ll',

70 , 'n~

Catnpbo,ol~\'ill.i li4,Tt.mlyJ,-ania 57 .
Ch.!rkiaun Sol.ltb..rn %, Winthrop 4.5
IJwidwu 115 , ETSU 77
Elinhrlh &lt;.:it)· Sf 71,l~"i&lt;· St. t.
F~ 7:1, W. Mkhlf!Jn 5(,
Fur1Valley St._ 81, M~tms hi'OY.,, 4r,
Ko·11111d1.)' S.. 7i. Lanr t.ll
lSU 1&gt;7,Co.'IIR'I1U)' 30
,ld~·'• 1)~"· -0wl,'ll 76,1)•Jk~gr~ (,3

Kr.'IUIIdt)• lll,Tftlt...._.. (.ti
ut..mr M, H~ t&gt;oim r. .,
Mlmu fi•t Pi1ttbur'h til)
~,·ull•'*' St. 77, Mu~ Sa. 15

M.rluu,• 'JI. Mo1111tVt•rnOII

15

8

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So•tbtna

Nt(k Botia ............................. ,)

·21

,-t47
..lsr,

hldb•J .... ~ ................................l\1
Cluriunt· ................................... ..:!~
lbroma ..............,.-................. :,. :2~
M1k1'111kl.~ ................ ~ ........_., ...... 2:0
n~·truh ......... ....... ;.. ;............... ......22
~ : LEVEL.-'\NU ...... , ..................... 1'J
Ad~,K ~

Bfknonr

Stton H&amp;JIIt! , PI'O'Iiid.-no:r f&gt;7
Tt'111p~1" 75. Muuctluwtn '*II

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Hockey

.

NHL standings'

1011a 'n,MulKM

:!~

~(,

C.•aal Dhrbi(ln

. :O.t

- -- .... ....

,S:/:.nYatn ...... '/ .................. \ . ·
.....

OtLuUo ...................................... .~!

.

Wi~b:l Smi•h 69, Hobm
Willama 67, Sm,uh 46
....

Fordlum 92, R.hodc hllnd 68
GtorQ;•'iown r.t, LouiJ&lt;'ille 5?

.61ft
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=~~~:::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::5~ i~

&amp;

10

.

&amp;:1.

16
17

' 16

--

JoihPatttiP1 .......................... ~
~(:iJI ....................... ,...•,.... 2

£

Nl-...Yor-1.: ............................. .J.(o

:ram

23 :!2 •

'l

Adudc Olvlllon

VintOn County 8+, Souther~ 65

Vin1011 Coumy ..........................18 21

Wnt6rld St. 55, .Maa. Colk~ 46

NCAA Division I
men's scores
·&amp;u

EI

.JMS.

3 5-.41

•'

atat~dinga

5-5

I

.

110

5

0--0

I

o-o

0

:r....
.
l[
Mll11"i .. - ..................................... .l7

.\'J

2-2
11-U

....

;J; , ~dun 8u1Mngcon - ..................19
J.
. . • 1 '!bull

, ,., , ,

0

......................... 11

,SJ M~ ............................... .

~ !-&lt;,. '

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0-0 .

(I

:_: :~~ ~~~-~·:::~:::::::::::::::::::~~
(•' •V Kylc
1

u
!

¥

......

.

J-J

0

\)~n Whilllt~ h ........................ l

JP Su&lt;~ts

1,\ '"

n

.. ,;,,.~Whlwm .........................i~

-· ....
"""

(o

II

.ct''"'r' •1\)'111 Grbnm ........................... l
Stt"T RM.-h~n.k ........................tl

.

...·'"

0-11
11-11

11 •

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Logm Dmlc11. ................ ,........ 1

;

' :!-4
l-2
0

111

Hocklnt

ea..
. ................................
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N . IJUIII&lt;'~
,

"

10

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l·4
1·1

I

BASTEP.N CONFERENCE

81
ti l

Melp 53. Federal HockinJl9
t=.'\kt!l Ho" kln.: .•. _.
.......... .f,
M ,•l~:~ ............... ............... .'.........211

.

NBA

Eut.. a. IJ,W.U.ton 61

, "-~ ' ' 1 t

I
D

5:.~~:~ : : : : : : : : : : 1'
.......
"

.:_.. Local scoring iUmmaries

....... """""'

.

A Rams spokesman said Martz
would postpone sur~ry and hold
a news co~feren~e. •. •
.
Vermeil's voice broke ofien and
tears flowed freely at 'T~'s
news conference: attend~~ several j:&gt;layers, assisbnt coaches and
personnel
director
Charley
Armey Team presidentJohn, Sbaw
introduced Vermeil, referriitg to
him as "Champ."

Scoreboard

...n11

Southern ...................................21

Vaug
been n
grocery business ..
throughout the last 00 years and we would like to take
this time to saj thank you to our valued customers. We are
proud to be locally owned and operated 'and look forward ·
to serving your needs througtout the next century.

had a couple of 20-minute con- few people in this profession get
The decision elevates offensive
venations on retirement
· this opportunity."
coordinator Mike Martz to coach.
~ one Monday and the
Carol Vermeil, who The Jilarru signed Martz, who
other Tuesday morning.
attended the news con- directed the r:-JFL's top-rated
Vermeil
got out
ference, did not contra- offense (33 points a game), to a
because he realized it's
diet her husband. .
two-~ar contract in January that
impossible to top a Super
· " It was his decision;• aSSured he would inherit Vermeil's
Bowl victory as an exit.
she said. "There's a time job.
"I think the time is
for everything. But the
· Martz, scheduled to undergo
right,"Vermeil uid in an
wont thing is overstaying surgery today for a neck problem,
emotional farewell ."Very
~mell
your time, isn't it?"
didn't attend the news conference.

Louis Rams. "Carol's not real
.excited about that."
Vermeil and his wife celebrated
their 44th anJlivenary rwo days
before the Rams beat the
Tennessee Titans 23-16 in the
Super Bowl, and during the
buildup, much was made of Carol
Vermeil's statement that her busband has nothing to p~. But
Vermeil said he and his Wife only

~

:;

Redwomen roll past
Ohio Dominican 81-70
'

The Dally Sentinel • .,.. B 3

~Vermeil steps down i~. wak~ · of Rams' Super Bowl triumph

.v

.: ...........................................................................................................................................................
''

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

continued from B 1

IS flee throws in the third round ..
(Bolin 2), 20 turnovers, 18 steals •11d
Southern took its biggest lead to 23 fouls.
that p'?int when Russell Reiber go a
Vinton County had a 23-for-53
break-away attempt of!' a steal and shooting effort overall, going 2-of-5
slam-dunked it to bring the local at the ttty mark and going 21~for-48
crowd to a standing ovation. Reiber on twos. Vinton County ha,d ·38
made the fi:ee throw as well to put rebounds (Patterson 12), ten assists
the 6nai nail in the Viking coffin. (M. Eberts 4, Jason Eberl! 4), 2J ,
The frame ended 62-49, then South- turnovers, 13 s.teals (Patterson 3) ·and
ern gradually pulled awa~ to the 84- 30 fouls.
65 victory.
Vinton County won the reserve
Southern hit 35-of-48 at the line, ·game 50-36 led by Shade Hundey
hilling 14-for-20 in the 6nai round. with 11, Dean Dunlap 9; and BranKyle Norris was perfect for the game don Norton 8. ·Southern was IOd by .
at 6-6, while Warner broke his 18- Dally Hill with 9, Michael Ball
for-18 stttak, but hit 5-of-6 in a 23- seven, and Justin Connolly six.
of-24 effort in his last five games.
Southern hosts Waterford Friday
Bolin was 5-for-6 in the final round. in an important Tri-Valley Conf~r­
Southern hit 17-of-43 twos, 5-of- ence game.
19 threes and was 22-for-62 overall, · Between games, the 1980 South, .
while hilling 35-of-48 at the line. ern High School State Semi-finalist
The Tornadoes had 39 rebounds basketball team will be honored.
@olin II, Kiser 6), had seven assists

.·..................................................

FEBRUARY 3rd, 4th, 5th
FRESH PORK STEAK :•
BROUGHTONS
ORWESTERN
: COTTAGE CHEESE
STYLE RIBS
••

c
I

••

EASTERN

..•.
•'

.•
••

continued from B1

·: .going. The Eagles rolled to a 22-8 three points at the three minute m~rk
; first period lead, then fueled the fire of the fourth quarter, when the
:: with 21 more poincs in the second score stood 75-54.
·
: · round to lead 43-30 at the half. ·
The final was a formality as East;
WellstOn went on a small run to ern soa..P on to the giant 81-61
;. challen~ and cut the margin to its win.
• lowest point at 35-28 at the 2:45
~stern hit 36-of-68 overall,
• mark of the second quarter, but Eaot- while going 6· of-9 at the line. East; ern repelled the effort, ruftling their ern had a 37-16 rebounding ed~
feathen' to take a stand just short of (Brow11 9, Simpson 8). The Eagles
;• the half.
·
had four steals (Will 2), eight
·~ Wellston's John McDonald had all turnoven, 13 wises (Bissdl 4) and
;· twelve of his points in the first half eight fouls.
and provided. the main spark for the · Welliton was 23-of-55 overall,
_; Rockets. The Eagles drew up a little including 10-for-26 from three~ box and one defense for the sharp- point ran~. The Rockecs were 5~ shooter,and with a super effort from
for-6 at tile foul line with 16
• Matt Bissell and the man guarding ' rebounds (McDonald 4, ¥oung 4).
.; McDonald, the ·talented gi.ard was The Rockets had three steals
;' held scoreless for the half.
(McDonald 2), 15 t:urnovers, 15 ·
·: "Mait Bissell did a super job on assiSts (Church 6) and 12 fouls.
:. McDonald," ~aid CaldweU. "Matt
Eastern won the reserve contest
•; stu~k to him like glue and kept the with another balanced ef!'orr, 41-33.
~ ball out of his hands, then we put The Eaglettes were led by Josh .Kehl
• Garrett (Karr) on him and he too did and Bradley Brannon with nine
: a great job."
'
. each, while Joey. Marcinko and Chris
;
Eostem powered on to a 61-44 Lyons both had eia!tt. J. Jackson and
; thitd quarter lead. Eric Smith man- R. Branc!ay were credited with 10 .
'. aged his usual good game inside, each for Wellston.
.
,: while Karr continued to excel' on the
. Eastern hosts Miller Friday at
• perimeter with three three-pointers. Eaatern.
: · Eastern's.biggest lead was . twenty·

&lt;

FRESH JONAGOLD
APPLES

_C

'

•••
••
••
•••
••
•••
•

2/$

'

ROUNDYS FROZEN
ORANGE JUICE .

Tonia A.sh, MD
!Ff.tmily Proctice

••
•••
••
••
••
•••
:•

CRISCO
VEGETABLE OIL

'

Phsical Medicine. &amp; !f.e hab
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·'

Jamal
HathlO.d,'
DO
'
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Obstetrics/Gynecowgy

\

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•
.,

r •

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$1 99

.'

•

\

·"

Em Hughes, MD
Urge'f'. Care

A.nne Hynes, MD
Urgent Care

Ajay KottapaUi, MD
, Urgent Care '

Ann Losch, DO
·Family Practice

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IACH .

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aonLI

WHOLE ROTISSERIE
CHICKENS

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(740) 992-34'71 '
·.

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John G. Horton, 1)0 ,
Emergency Medicine '·

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27$'

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16
CAN :•

PUMPKIN PIES

Chandraseka~,

CAN ~

c oz. 2/$

FRESH BAKED

Kilori

4601

-2401

3 LB. ••
BAG :

.'

•

••~
•••

ROUNDYS
TOMATO JUICE ·

c

:

'.

r

.

I

. ~rio McYreher, DO
F,unily Proclice/Urgent Care

,,
'

•
''

•

)

'
'

\

SanJpal Mpvi, MD
Internal Medicine/

•

Cho~ry

·

Rayani, MD
Internal Medicine

.

'

,

;

,

�•

•'
P8ge B 4 • The o.lly SIS 1Unel

Wedneldly, Februery 2, 2cJoo,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~

The Dally Sentinel • P•ge B 5

MLB pla.y ers' association appeals Rocker suspens1an :~
'

'

•

•

I

r.

...

•

'
t
~
if
miss the first 28 flays .of the season. A sus~ • •
will not affect his salary, expected to be betwe~
$200,000 and $300,000.
..
· " It is literally unprecedented to imJ&gt;ose a penaf.
ty on a player for pure speech, offensive thought
speech may be," said Gene Orza, the union's No.
official. "That, coupled with the magnitude oft~·
penalty, just as unprecedented, makes us optimht~'
about the outcome of the appeal ."
,
:'
Rocker, 25, will be allowed to go to extend~~
spring training starting Apr;ll 3. andilpitch in
minor leagues.during the firn month of the JeoiSOA'~~
If the suspension is not shortened, he would ""'un~1
for a May 1 game at Los Angeles.

'

NEW YO~ (AP) - The players' association Selig said Monday in issuing the suspension and
6led a grievance Tyesday to overturn John Rock$20,000 fine.
er's suspension, a ban scheduled to last through . . "We will not dodge our responsibility," said
May 1.
·
Selig, who also ordered the Atlanta Braves reliever
"The discipline is withOilt just cause:· the union to undergo .sensitivity training for disparaging forsaid in a letter sent to the\ commissioner's offic e . eigne rs, homosexuals and minorities in a magazine
The grievance said arbitrator Shyam Das " should interview.
rescind the discipline."
,
" Mr. Rocker should understand tlut his . remarks
It is unclear when a hearing will be scheduled. offended practically every element of society and
Many suspensions by baseball conunissioners have broughr dishonor to himself, the Atlanta Braves
been overturned or shortened.
and Major League Baseball. The terrible, example
"Major League Baseball takes seriously its role as set by Mr. Rocker is · not what our great game is
an American institution .and the ·important social about and, in fact, is a profound breach 'of the social
responsibiliry that goes with it," conunissioner Bud compact we hold in such high regard."

•

The penalty is believed to be the longe1t against
a baseball player for an action not related to drug
use since Lenny Randle of Texas got .30 days in
March 1977 for punching 11\s manager, Frank Lucchesi.
" I do not believe it is appropriate that I should
be harshly disciplined for my misguided speech
unaccompailied by any conduct on my patt,"
Rocker said in a statement released by his agents.
"I have previously apologized for my unfortunate
tetharks and stand by my apology."
.
Wilile the suspension covers 73 , days starting
with the opening of spring training, the season
doesn't start until April 3, meaning Rocker WO\Ild

110

HIIIPII • EVIIICLII STOPS
IIIIIPEI OUTIRIAKSI 96%
Soccen Rote. Toll Free: t ·677·
EyEIICLR Info: www.-.eom
IIAS'rEC"IOMY SU!l911eo At Littlo
' Or No Cool. We BINMedloare Or
VO.. lnourance Direct. Get 2 Now

Bras, . Proatheeuea. Every Six

START

HOT STOVE NOTES

P0 WElL'S
......,

Mondarthru

continued from '81
Any tr~de would involve a
n11mber of Reds minor league
prospects.
.
"I don't mind giving up
one quality guy, but let's
limit it to one quality guyand
some extra players," Bowden
said.
.
The Daily News reported
that the Mariners were interested
in
reliever
Scott
Williamson, the NL rookie of
the y~ar.
The Mariners also would
h~ve to include some money
to , oover . part of Griffey's
$8.S m'illion salary. The
Reds' payroll will be around
$40 million this season, and
they don't want to add to it
significantly.
If the Reds ern 't .trade for
Griffey, they will try to ~ign
him as a free agent after the
seas\)11,. Bowden said.

.,.

••: eoo.76e·2823, extensiOn 6178,

:: 30 Anno\lncernents

.•·· -~==~---ADOPTION
' Hoppll~

• And A Secure Future. Please CaH
· Tt.,IIOrDave
· 1--213-0477

•Ct'othlng &amp; Good Toys &amp; Olhor

~ llems

or will Sale on consign·
• mtnl tor you, (304)570.2842.

: l'~len Pauli. WIU NOt Be Roopon·
• olblo For Any Bms Made By An·
.• yone Otlor Than Myself,
·
Glen Pa!Mk

SNYDER OF~

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

BERLIN
POTATO
·cHIPS
•

•

.. Items. $1.00 bag sale avery
" Th.ursday, Monday thru Saturday

• 9:00.5:30.

•

; 40
Giveaway
~· ~4~Q~R~7~8~x~1~~~B~u~ck~s~ho~t~T~I-ra-o.
~ (30418(5-7~. C.P after 3:30PM.

2/$

·' 5 pl4)plos, 8 wl&lt;a: old, Liob &amp; Glr·
~.man Shepherd mixed, 740·992·
·.. 3516. .

~

,,
4

OZ.

99¢

B con ••••••••••~ ••.

~

,;

j,urary 4: 8:30 To 2:30

·Pomflroy,
' Middleport
• Vlclnlly
"'II Yllnl Balta Mutt 8a Paid In
!'1\11-ca. lletdHI\I: 1:OOpm tho
'!litJ btloro liM ad Ia to ru~,
;;BundlJ a MondtJ •~Ilion·
'11:OOpm '"""'·
rto
, Auction
•
•
c

~

•.
~)Ill MoOdlapaugh Auctioneering·
'

,.complete auction service. Buy
ell .. ta,tea. Ohio llctnll

,.

·'J/iedemeytr's

1

NEW YORK JEW

Donuts ..............~:::z-

Toast

STOKELY'S OR ·,. PE.AK PINTO
LIIBY'S J
BEANS ..
VEGETABLES
,

VAA

3/$

I

14.5-15

oz.

DOMINO ·~·

:eo

.SUGAR ·.

.. .,.: 9c

4LBS ·

s'Las

'

EGGS ·

$1''

2/$

~

·

•

•·.

' .

·.

I

. •.

W111tecl .t o Buy

oolule

~~:~~

.

February It, 2000 to John D.
Costanzo. ESC Superintendant,
Athens-~elga Educational Serv~
~ Cen1er, 507 Richland Ave~e.

Suite 108. Alhans, OH 45701.
Equal Opporlunlty Employer/Providor.
Are 'r'ou Connected?

tkllp Wanted ·

I

I

, 00 'WE'Ei&lt;LYI Mailing 400
pc~urtol Satlolactlbn Guar·
lt!tdl PoiiOgt &amp; SuppiiOB Pro·
d'odl Rush Seii·Addroosad
llla"'P:od Envetopel lllCO, DEPT
'i, Box &gt;1436, ANTIOCH, TN.
!1701 Hlstl. Start hnmedately.

i

·14s.ooo

fYiar /Potential! Doctor•
Jeed Paoptet Process ~edlcal
'flalms Frqtn Home, We Train.

·r;.\JST Owri Computer. 888·332·
!1015 Exl1700 lOaMy.

' Win A
BANKROLL
.Thla·week
.
.
·Powell's Su
Value

laoo WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN

io&amp;SI PROC!SSING .GOVERN"'ENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERI·
·:INCE NEoESSARYt 124 Hr.
8acordod MeiNgt) 1-800'854·
~ Ext IS04fJ. I
'
WE~KLY . POTENTIAL

'

aeoo ·
lomplttl Simple Goyernm1nt

Parma ,AI Hom•• No Ewperl•nce
ijoceooar~. CALL TOLL FREE •

· lr~-3Sei ~. 2101' $34.00

~fee'

Free Cashl

Office Mtnager, Full· Tlma With
Benefits. Ruponalblt For Ac counts

Pa~ab~.

Account• Re

I·880.900-8065

www Jrmrovedll1e net

No.

DATA ENTRY • Nallonwlde BIIHng
Service Seaka A Full/Part Tl.me

Modlcal Biller. Selary AI $46K Par
Year. PC Required. No Expert·
ence Needed Will Train. Call 1·

' 611&amp;-1146-5724

'

DENTAL BfLLER SU ·$45 /Hr
Dental BlUing sonware Company
Needa People To .Process Medl·
cal Claims From Home. Training
Provided. Must Own Compul8r. 1·

OWn A COinjlu!Ot1
Put It To Wor'ld

Freight CALL SUMMIT TRANS·
PORTATKlN i101).878.Q680 EOE.
Drivers: 2 Week Paid COL Train·
lng. No Exp. Noedod. No Money,
~o

Credit? No Problem! Earn Up

To $32,000 /tat Yr. W /Full Bono·
flto. Apply On ·Line At: www.olr·
dolvoro.com Or Call 1-877·230·
11002 P.A:M. Transport
Eaoy Workl Excellent Payl Ao·
aemble Producll At Homa. Call
Toll Free 1·800·467·5566 Ext.
12170.

l-886·881-l!7!10

www !'OQ[)frytbatafyn oom

Installer And Service Technician

Nooded. Must Bt Exporlonced.
Apply In Parson At Comfort ~lr,
· 407 Third Avenue, QaiNpollo. No
Phone Cal•.
Internal MerkeUng
125-S7Mv

www.any-1-ean-eam.com

I,aaa.a10.1 662

Local Business seeks Route
Sale• Peraon. Excallenl Bene~
fha. Satea Experience Pre~erred,
bul not necesaary. Se.nd Re·
aume: c/o ML 10, Point Pleasant

Roglo(or, 200 Main St, Pt.
Plaasan~ WV 25!550.

PIT TECH Supporl " $$$ . Wind·

ows. Mac, Hardware, Software All
Areas. 24 Hrs 17 Day1. www.Go·
F"U&lt;.com (Code I I 3). Llmltodt
Part-Time Position available. Ap·

ply In P11oon at Kipling Shoo
Co., AI. 2. 8)1&gt;011. Pl. Pleasant

'•

Drywall, Siding, Roolo, Addl·
'Ilona, PalnUng, etc. (304)874·
4823"' (:104)874-01!55. '
Plano lallona In my hOmo, begin·
caii74Q.992·!1493. .

Want To Take Care Or Senior

Cltlzano MOnday ·Sundlly 8 A.M.·
10 P.M . In Your Home, 140·4•e-

2025

WUI Oo Housecleaning $6.00

Able To Make Decisions, Want A
Permanent Job, Work Well With
People And Possess Exceptional

Rooting Skills (3-Tab, DomenJion·
ol, Slnglo Ply RubbO!, Tin). Wo
Are An EolobUohod Company,
Tho Work Is Local, Pay ts Good,

An'

ttoUr, EvenJnga And Sa1urday1,·
Ha\le Experience And Reterenc·

... 740.388-11421.

FINANCIAL

210

CONIOUDATli IIU.S.
fn&gt;m 13.000 ·SI !10,0001

Pay Closing Cotta &amp;.Move ln .
740-446-3093.

LOANS O.A.C.
For Fast Reoults,
Call Toii-Ftot
1-IIUIWI56.

OoUI)Itwidf On Lot $2!10 lleposH
Roqulrod, 304·736-7295.

CONSOUO~TE

BILLS. Low

Rates. No Upfront Feu. Bad

Crodlt

~nd

Bankrupioy Accopled.

2• Hour Approval. Call Toll FrH:

H77-80H273.

CREDIT CARD UP TO $3,000.
Unooculed VISA /MC. Bad Credit
~ Creel~. 1-800.2§881 6 Ext.
CREDIT .CARDSI GUARANTEED
APPROVAL! No Credit Chock.
No Security Deposit. $1 ,ooo UmH

MONEY TO LOAN . Bad Cradlt
OK. Free Appllcauon. U.S. Ap·
pilcants on~. 1·677-780·1938.
OYER YOU HEAD IN OEBT???
Do You Need More Breathing
Floom??? Debt Consolidation, No

Qualllylnglll FREE cp~SULTA­
TION CALL 1-800.558·1648 Ext.

AT&amp;T - MCI - BP~INT What's
Tho Big ~eret? Work 5 Hre Nlk.
Ma~o '52K ·$125K /Yr. Eaoyt
FREE lniOI 1·800·997-9888 E•.t
1155 (24 H,.) .

ai·Non PJOIIt c....,.ny.

230

RECEPTIONIST
The Arlwar E)e Canter in Pl.
Pleasent lsloo~ng lor an olllco
-lionlst. Must be lrltndty and
oulgotng . Full time pooltion.
Provlouootcptrlenca In madlul
office halpf!J, but not ,_,aery.
Pleaae send

res~~ne

to OlH' main

~-Ere eon~
1100 Llloyollt Avtnue •

Moundlvlllt, WY 211041

MacMIHan'a 1·80Q.3&amp;,7-40 39. '

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /Sst?
No Fee Unlo.. We Wlnl

'plllit_______
I

RttldtnpoM_.r
Assisted LMnQ
We Are Oponliig A N.W Ll·
conood Aoslatod Living Com·
munlly In GalllpoU~. Ohio. ,Our
Inns Ara LUXUIIOUI, Bul Alford·
able. And Will Provldo A Quality
Of Care And Accommodations

That WIU Be Unparalleled In Tho
Industry. Poaltion ReQUirtl Out·
standing Interpersonal And Com-

munlcauon SkUll, Wllh SlrQng
.._,.hip QuaHtioa.
II You Have· Buslnoso And /Or
Health Care Management Expert-

once, wo ONor Anracllvo Salary
With Compreh•nllve Benefits.

lo advertise "any preler&amp;nce,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, cdor, religion,
S8)( familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,

MAKE ONE MILLION People To
Sand You $2.001 LEARN MY
EASY METHODI Guaranleed · II
Wolk8. Rush $5.00 + LE~SE:
Starling, 135 Amheral St -20, Amhor&amp;t, NH 03031 hHp://oterlingll·

llmltatiQn or dlscrtmlnaUon.-

'

MEDICAL BILLER $15 ·$45/Hr. .
Medical Bl~ng SOftware COmpany
Needs People To Process Mtdl·

cal Clalmo F1on1 Homo. Training
Provided. Must Own Computer. 1·
f!00.434·5!i t 6 El&lt;l. 61!7.

/COKE \,IFRITO LAY
AND SODA VENDING
BE YOUR OWN BOSS.
CASH BUSINESS$$$ .

~Bf.if~FN~~~~~~~~~x~~~~

801 W. Union St. Athens, Oh
45701.

WILDUFE JOBS To $21.80 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS, SECURITY, MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. AND
EXAM IN~O. ·cALL 1,600·813·
~585, EXT 14211. 8 A.M. ·9 P.M.
7 DAYS Ida, loo.
Work From Homo $599 ·$6,000
' Part·Time fFUII·Time

Co~tact

ICelo

ty. 1-888·882-2838, wwr'.2"10rt·
money.com pasacode: rowan.
MEDICAL BILLING . Earn E•col·
Iant Income. Full Training. Com-

LENT PROFITS 1-800·731-7233
EXT.503.
$tart Your Business Today...

Primo Shopping Center. Space
Available At Affordable Rata.
Spring Valla)' Plaza, Call 74o.448·
0101'
WORLD'S BEST SECRETIII AU.
TOMATE NOW... To "arn $5,000
A Wook Wlih A Mouse Cllckt

ZIG ·ZIGLAR GOES MLMI ;Look·
lng Fo;. Leaders Who Want To
Move From Success To Signlfl·
canoe• We Suggest You Mo\le

On Property Soldt Morlgagul
Annultlesl Seltlemantsl Immediate Quotaalll "Nobody Beats
Our Prices.·. National Contract

US I'IEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payment•
On·' Proparty Soldl Mortgagul
Annuities! Settlef11entat lmme·

140

8509.

•

2br, tba Homo

Ga·

Col Ryan

6001213-8365
Anlhony Land Company. LTD.
WV Land wanted, suitable for
hunting. No uUIItlts, no access,
no~Koblem.

(740)288·7248.

RENTAL S
Houses lor Rent
Foreclosed

FORECLOSED HOMES. Low Or 0
Downt Govn't And Bank Repo's
Bolng Sold Nowt ·financing Avoll·
able. Call Nowl 1-800-355·0024,
Exl8040.

Home tor ule: lovely ten acr11 in
a country: aenlng, four bedrooms.
two and hall baths, formaf living
room and family ra:om, two fire·
places, two apartments, tour car

garage and two aloroge bulldlngo.
p - call 741).992·2292.
Mlddklport- corner ol High SlrHl
&amp; Powall Strtat. 2 bedroom hoJJW
wllh dining room, living room and
kitchen. Newer carpot and kllt:llan
cabinets makes tht

kll~hen

ducod to $33,000. Please call
l\Jrner,- at 740·992·2686.

. House For Sale. Newly Remo-

deled Inside and Out. 191 N.

Nice Counlry .Selling, 2 Miles
from town. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. 2
Car Garage. HeatPump, on 1
Acre. Appliances Slay. (3041882·
3518.
Nice Home, Plenty or Room, .3
Bedroom, Brick. Reduced Price.

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Smdc.
Call Ron Evans, t-800-537·9528.,
.
' .

.

on contract with good references.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
On VInyl

New Small vanities. While, $~5
each, Top and Bottom, AutomoL'

bile Paint $25 gal. (304)175·

4004.

..

Prtmeatlr
DlrocTV
Free sateQile system. Call for Cl•

pllcanono f"' t BR. HUD aubsld·

laits. 800·263-2640.
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS •
Tappan HI Efficiency 9011: Gao
Furnaces, 011 Furnaces, 12 SNr 1
Heat Pump I Air Conditioning
SyStems Free I Year Parts I la!-

3711 TOO 1-688·233-6694. Equal
Houolng Opportunity

bor Warranty Sennens Heeling
Cooling, 1·80Q.872·5987.
·

MERCHANDISE

Goods
Appliances;
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Retrl·
grators. 90 Day Guarantee!

Blaze Kl~g Woodburner Wu"Bklwar, Exoolillnt Condition, $42!1,

080, 740-446-6862.

Woodburner Excellent Condltton, ·
Also Wood For Sale. 740·2455236.
•

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78

Vine Slroat, Can 740·446·7391,
1·686-l!l8.0129.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance,

$95; Kenmore Dryer, Heavy Duty,
$95: Whirlpool Dryer Nice $95;

Your C1odllll 1·80CHl59-0359.

550

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·24,5.·
5121 .

560

Range 30' $75: Side Sy Skit Ro·
klgorator St 50: Cold Spot Rolrlg·
orator $1 50; Skoggs Appllanc•a.
76 VIne Slroel, (laUipolls, Ohio
7-7398, 1·611&amp;-810.0128.

Buy or

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Unlurnlshed, total electric,' 2 bed·
room, 1211.64, on nice lot In Ma·
son . Deposit required. Phone

2 Bedrooma. 2 Bath Trailer, Ex·
eollent coodltlon $350/Mo., $300
DeposJt, Reterences. 740·441-

1913.

8 Adorable Rottweller Puppies,

Doposlts Matas: $125; Fomalao
$1 50; Ready For Valonuno'sl ·
740·258-91 23.
AKC Chocoloia Lab Pupplo&amp;,
G1oat Family Dogs, Roady To Go,
740·36HI659.

Riverine Antiques,

1124 Eaot Main on SA 124 E. Po·
. moroy. 740-992·252e or 740·992·
1539. Russ Moore, owner.

AKC registered Chinese Shar·Pel

pupplas. lots of wrinkles. $300,
740·949·2128.

540 Miscellaneous

Looking for lemale longhair
Dachshund to breed, Please call

Merchandise
UBAD CREDIT? Gol Cash
Loans To $5,000. Dabt Consoli·
dation To $200,000. Credit Cardl,
Mortgages, Refinancing And
I Auto Loans Available. Meridian

Credll Corp. 1·100·471-51 19 Ext.
1180.

Pets lor ·Sele

Talla &amp; Dewclaws. Now Taking

Antlquta

sell.

Bulldlr\g
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc. Claude Wlntara,

Maytag Gas Cryer 175; Electrlo

530

~

740·446·20551orMI IYW!oaago. ~ ~ ··
Pu11brad Slb,rlan Husky pup·
pies. 3 males, 2 1ema.les, blaok &amp;
whlta &amp; sillier, bJt,le eyes, masks,
wormed, love kids, very nice,
$130 oacfl, caU740-992·5t 44. ,.

This Year Give A BPECI-.L .
•VALENTINE¥. To Mom: White ,

3 BedroOm Trall&amp;r For Rant, NO

1993 .Niuan/Pick·up, $G,8U.;
1992 S.tO/PICk·up, $3,896.; 28H
Travel Tralltr $0,000.:. Compteta
Set of Now Kllchtn Cabinets
S2,BOO: 30ton Wood Splitter

570

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Unlur-

Saw, $300; tO' Ttble Saw $150:
Largo ApploBunar Ktttla , $400.
(304)675-4004.
3 pleca llvlnQ room suite, $650;
Hot Point mlcrowa11e with Probe,
$75: must see to appreciate, call

Hammond M300 Organ wHI'I Lll·

2 or 3 badroom moblla homo lor
renl, no pets, 740·992·5858.
Pets. In Rio Grande, ~40· 379·
2720 Aller6 ·P.M.
nlshod, Cora Mill Road, Gallipolis,
Free Gas Heat, No Pets , Deposit

Required. 740.245-5622.

$495; 1-· Craftsman Radial Arm

Bichon Friae 9·11· Hlgh P~rlnls

From Soulh, II Family Poll Otllv·
ory Pooslblo. 740·379-9081, 7~0.
379-2699. '
Musical
lnstrumer\ta 1 '

lie So'Und Cabinet. $600. CtU
(304)67!-3388.
,1 ,

.'

740.992·3656 or 74CHl49-2607.

440

Apartments
· fOr R1111t

t •I" :1 bedroom tplnments. fur·
nllhld anti unlurnt1hed, eecurtty

depollt requlrod, no polo, 7•0·
992·1!218. .

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Finance Wllh .oo• Down. Pliol
c- Probltmo, No Probltm. CaN
lbiiFreo t.an·293-4082.
Qompltlt DISH NtiW()(k selellto
ayatem, brand

n~ 1

$98, 740·

t BljiJoom Waiht'r Dryer Hook·· 992' 1182 or 304·773·530~ alter

Up In QaltlpOibl, 7-7903.

lpm.

1 Badroom, Near Arbor's Nursing
Home, Economical Ullli11es. Quill
LocatiOn, $279/Mo.. + UUIIUes, No

COMPUTER BLOWDUTUI COM·
PAQ MfCRQN eMachlno&amp;t Desk·

Pots. 74().446·?957.
2 Bedroom Apartment, New Ha~
ven Area. Leave Me11age.

(304J773-55n.

•

lops, Laptops, Merchant ·Ac·
counts. Websltel Almost Every.one Approvadll No .Money

Oownll Low Monlhly Ptyhntoll
FREE Specltl ottert CALL NOWt
I.fi88.479-2:M5 (TOI Ftot)

'
/

",

'

FARM SUPPI I[S
&amp; LIVESTO CK

610

Farm Equipment

·

O% Financing Now Aval~alt
~i
John Deer• Belerl And Mo.-~ •
Condlllonera. Carmlch:HI'• Farm•
&amp; Lawn t-800·594·11 It Or 740•

Job

446·24 t 2 Gampotlo, Ohio. Don'i
Miss Our John O..e Day Foiliu·

aryti2,11:00A.M.

t 953 John Oeoro
tn4.

I
,,

DoWn! Paat ,

Turned DOwn Beforalf Reestablish ·

ture• 740-367-11280.

Pilot Program, Renter&amp; Needed,

•o•

Crodll Problems OKII Evan II ·

Oood Used Beds, Dreasers,
Couches.• Dinettes, Etc. Blg SavIngs On New Furniture. 740·4413·

Whirlpool Washer Heavy Duty
$95; G.E Washer Heavy Duty

420

•.

.waterline Special: 314 200 FISt
$21.95 Par 100; 1' 200 PSI
French CUy Maytag. 740·446· 137.00 Por tOO; All Bra11 Com·
pre10kln Amngo rn SUlek
n95.
• RON EVAN&amp; ENTERPRISES
For Sale : Reconditioned waan- Jackson, ONQ, 1-800.537-9529

304·736-7295.

-·

~

Ron's Gun Shop, 741).742-8412 . .
1
~at Of Headlight. Covoro For A ,
1997·1999 Chevy Cavalier.
$25.00. Only Uoed A Couple Ql
Times. Cal 304-n3-584t.

Household

R&amp;D's Used Furniture Great Se·
!action, Priced To Sell! ·comt
A.nd Browse.• Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike, ·we Buy Furni-

3 Bodroomo, Kltchtn·Famlly
Room. 1 Bath, SunRoom. Large
Ftncad BackYard w/Largo Utllly
Shod. $~00 Dopoo\t. $500 mont~
+UUtltloo/Rtlaronct ~oqulrod.
(304)675-8438. May Leave Moo·

~-~,

$50 Load, Full Size Plck·Up, Do·
livered, 740.992-4568.

Twin Towers now accepting ap·

510.

.J

Premium Firewood , Oak &amp; Ash

Furnished, Cal1740·448-t599.

House And Trailer, 2 Bedrooms
Each. Retrences anct Deposit R•
quirtd. Water And Trash Paid.

304·736-7295.

Doors, Wind·

740-441·1982.

Spring Valley Green One Bed·
room · Apartments, Appliances

4782.

Pilot PrOgram, Renters Needed,

S~lrllng,

New Mlllenlum Dietl Eat All Day
And Melt Away, Call TracYt .At

ment In Mlddlaporl. 740·992·
9191.

448·1162.

741).386- It 00'

..

Mobile Home ·Supply, 740·4.• 8· 1
9416.

And Used Furniture Store
Good Loeallon In Gallipolis, No · New
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga.

Pets, Deposit, References: Small
1 Bedroom House, Furnlahatt,
Good Location In Galllpolla, No
Pets, Deposit, Rer•rences, 740..

.

Huge Inventory, Discount Prices:

One bedroom furnished apart-

GOdD USED APPLIANCES

BeiWeen Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile home,,
$261).$300, 741).992-2167. '

as Slay. Broad Run Road, Letart,
Asking $60.000.(3041862·3516.

JET
AERATION MOTQRS

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Waler
Sewage, Trash. 5315/Mo., 740·
448-0008.

2 bedroom house In Pomeroy,

Nice 3' Or 4 Bodrciom Ranch Wtth

on 1 Acre. Heai·Pump; AppllanC·

'If You Don't Call Us WI 8oth '
Lose. • Free Estimates! no-4488308, t-600·29HI098.

Pels. (304)e7H162.

Jackson Aw111», (304)875-73118.

(304)662·3267.

'

COOUNQ EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED

· ows, Anchors, Wafer: Heat•ra,
Nice Ground-Floor, 2BR, WID Plumbing &amp; Eleenicat Parts, FurHook-up. Reference, Deposit. No naces &amp; Heat Pumps. Benn,tle

74Q.II43-554e.

Pirie OrNe. Call lor Appointrrient

(304)87H834. '

JANITROL HEAT1NO AND

dop. &amp;lol., 741).992·01 85.

ers, dryers and refrigerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

3 Bedroom House 1 1/2.8aths,

noar planii(RI, 33)304-~·3733.

Problamo? Nood Tuned? CaU lho

plano Dr. 740-446-4525

N. 4th Ave., Middleport, 2 room
efficiency, utlllllts paid, no pels,

2 bedroom house in Portland,
$300 plus etectr~. heal wllh wood,

$38,000. (304)87!-5697.
pump/central air wllor-:td yard. 2

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs.

740.446-0390.

·

no pets, 740·698· 7244.

min. away from Elem. school,

448-1004 Anytime.

VIllage Green Apartments· 2
bedrooms, total electric. applianc·
es furnished, laundry room faclll·
ties and close to school, applications available at offk:tt, 740-992·

rage; 130 South Park Drive.
Brick home In the New Haven
araa. Trip,. pant wlndQws. heat

Good Used. Appliances And ' Fu(nlturo, Cal 74!1-446-4039. Or 740-

capped. EOH. (30')675'1i679.

$300 monlh plus deposit, will sell
wiAUache~

740.992·2143 or 740-992-6373.

ized apt. tor elderly and hand!·

We Pay CAlli!
For LANDI
Even If lis Usted
20 ·500 Acras

600·319·3323 E•t 1709.

Homee for Sale

Bullnees
dlate Quoleoltt 'Nobody Boolo (304 )273-11485.
Training
Local Truck Driller Noodod. Start·
Our Prlcea: National Contract'
lng Pa~ $9.00 Ho~r. Insurance
Oalilpolto ca-r College .
Buyers 800·490·0731 Ext. tOt 320 Mobile Homes
Plan, Unl(orma. M~st Ha,vo Tank·
(Ca'"" Close To Homo)
· www.~.com
for Sale
or encrorsementa. 741).2~5·5514.
Ca1Toda)'l740-44e-43117,
$2,500 .VISA /MASTERCARD 12x88 2 B~roomo, 1 1/2 Batha,
Magic V.a11 Day Care Conlor .
1·800-214-0452,
~NSECUREDII GIUirantoad Ap·
All Ntw Carpel, SOmo ApptlancM
Seeking Full Time SubaUhlto. _ _,._;.;Rog=191H&gt;5-~;,;;.;1.;;;27;..4.;;;B;..._ ·,;.._
•
provalll. Bad Credit, /No Crtdll Stoy,
$9,11815, 741).24!-9373.
send Rtoul!l• to: . 201 ' High 150
Schools
OKt lrlct~s Full Crodlt RtiiOrl·
· StiMt. pt, Ploalant, WV 2!5550.
lion. 23 '!lslrt In BUalno11. Not A '14' Wide. 1500 bown, St82 Par
lnatructlon
Scam. 1-1100586 9099. Ext.25.
Month. 1·800·891·8777; 18.00
·Manager RttaU Jewelry Store,
$500 Down, $283 Per Month,
Retail Sal11 And Computer Ex· EARN A LEGAL CQLLEGE DE· $FREE CASH NOW$ F1om
Free Air, 1-800·691 ·6777; Double·
perlence Necessary. Benefits GREE QUICKLY, , Bachelora, Wealthy Families Unloading MilWldf, 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, $1000
Available. Appfy: Acquisitions Masters. Doctorate, By Cdtre· lions or Dollars. To Help Mlrimlze
Down, $262 Per Month, 1-800·
Fine Jewelry, 151 Second Ave- apondence Based Upon Prior Ed- Their Taxes. Write Immediately:
nue. Golipolil.
ucaUon And Short Slud~ Course. Wlndlallo, 847·A SECOND AVE., 69t.em.
FREE Information Booklal 1350, NEW YORK, NEW YORK
1981 Ytnlura, 14x70, ·Dock IO.S.
Nted 7 Ladllo To Sell Awn, 740· 'For
Phone CAMBRIDGE . STATE 10017.
New FIIIIIICO. 300-e7H318.
441!·3358.
UNIVERSITY HJ0CH184·8318.

1----------------

Homaalle, Quiet Road, Oallia

' County, Deeded &amp; Surveyed, Un·
dar $12,000, 740.448-2317.

Homlls From $199/Mo., 4o/. Down

Fast Because This WilL. Call: t • · Full Basement. Heat Pump On
677·5()().()834.
1. 78 Acres In Country On State
Roule 775, Pul o.o. Mcln,tyra
220 Money to Loan ·
Park. Asking $79,QOO. Call 740·
448 1280, Or 741).44 H659.
$1$ NEED CASH?? WE 'pay 3 BodJOOm. 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage,
Cash For Ramalnlrig Payments

Need 5 Secluded Acres With'

For Listings &amp; Payment Details,

Dottle Tutner Realty, Cottle S.

puter Required. Call Mtdl Works Buyora 800·49D·~73t E•t. 101
Toii·Free 800· 540·6333 Ext.. www.nationalcontratlbuyers.tom
~301 .

REAL ESTATE

YOU'RE APPROVED! Credit
f!00.577-4348.

Real Estate
Wanted

1 . ·3 Bedrooms

ctll.com/opocia168300 .

Carda I Loans, Regardllll Of
Your Current CrediU fn 24 Hours.

Land, Will Sell Together $26,000.

Land Contract Available. 5 Acres

IJ!IIi!l!lll!!!l'!llf!!l!l!llllllllll...ll!1! 410

with
1011 Ql wlndowo vory bright Allo a
large lot. Cute as can be. Re·

URL: hllp:lfwww.seereta2auc·

Two 10 Ac;; Tracts Ot Meadow,
Creek And Wooded Hills, Sur·
rounded By Woods And Farm

tar$ avallab~ on an equal
opportunity baSis.

S NO OOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDED! GOV'T FORE·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED APPROVAL! 1·800·360-4820 EXT

People In Network Marketing.
Huga Opportunlly For t-~Lt,.
Loaders. Lllootyloa tn 13 Coun·
lrlos. Opens The· U.S.A. Tranolor•
P1011ram Roady, We Must Talk. 1·
877·81 1·3424.
www.dunro·
bln.corwtnlnl .

Modern 1 Bedroort' Apartment,

lnlonnedlt1alalldweUingo
advertised In lhlll newspaper

fend Automated Medical Servlc-

Substitute Bus Dnver· M..t be at

Athena County Board or MRDD

law. Our readers are hereby

310

ville And Audition For Major
Record Producers And Concert
Promotre&amp;.lnternet www.rteln.ac

ant. s1o:oo per ~ur. Applications
can be obtained and IUbmltlod 10:

which Is in violation or the

CD·ROM. lnvollmonl $4.995 •
$8,995 . Financing Available. Is·

No~ A Loan? Try Dobt Consoli·
daUon. $5,000 • $200,000. Bad
Credit O.K. Feo. 1·6Q0.770·0092,
EICL215.

Scenic, Close To GaiUpoHs, SOma
Restrictions, 740-245·5778.

www couotrytyma com.

adYerttsamentstor real estate

MEDICAL BILLING. Unllmtted In·

PEPSI
SNACK
ROUTE.
$$$ALL

least 18 YH.I'I old and PQI'H II I
high school diploma or equlval·

Thlo newspaper will not
k!jowlngly ~Ill

come Potential. No ,Experience
Necessary. Free ln.tormallon &amp;

os. lni:. 800·322·1139, Ext 050.
VOid In KY. IN, CT.

port From $249·$373. Can 740·
992·5064. Equal. Housing OppOI·.
tunltles.

360

or 1968 which makes it Illegal

Fretler beef, grain fed, 11 .57 per
lb. hanging WI.. Includes cut wrap,

Oppo.rtunlty.

2.44 Acres, Homesite, Green
Township, Gallla County, Fl.at,

Of Gaiii&gt;OIIa.
ANTHONY LAND CO., LTD, I·
800-213-8385 For FREE Maps,
All r&amp;llllllate advertising In
this newSpaper 11 subleCIIo
the Federal Fair Housing Acl:

-·

mants, home &amp; trailer rantata,
740-992-451'4, apartments &amp;\lall·
able, lumlshed &amp; unfurnished .

Farms for Sale

01 Woodad Hills $9,500. Oft SA
124, leas Tnan 20 Minutes West

1

2588. Equal Housing

·

Wolfle, 740·949·331 5 leave mea·

5TO 10ACAII
Between Gallipolis &amp; Jackson.
Fl.mishad. 2 Rooms &amp; Battt ShOw· ·
Near Thurman. Beautiful Rolling
er, Downstairs, Clean, ,No Peta,
Meadows, Wllh lota Of Road
Frontage. Prices Slart AI $12.500. . Deposit &amp; References Required;
740-446-1519.
(
land Contfacts ~vallable. Free
Maps. ANTHONY LAND CO., Gracious ll\llng. 1 and 2 bedroom
LTD t·f!00.2t3'8365.
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middlt·
350 lota &amp; Acreage

••l

1-888-1582·3345

International Company StaKing
Dynamic Individuals For E·Com·
merce Salas. Flexible Hours I Un-- ·
limited ·Income. 1·88~ 7"'·4103,
www.fHOurcea-r·oollmlttd.oom

nandai2000.com.2.html

(No Pllone Caito PteaM).

330

For sale· Prime Star S~stem also
wanted older RCA OirectTY. or
Hugh's systems with access
card, pay $150 &amp; up caohtll Call

~!"•Dk~ra

Chrlaly'o Family Living, apart·

23 ACRES 121,000
Oft SR 7 Soulh 01 Clalllpotlo. No
Rostrlctlonal NEEDS TLC.,$2,300
Down on Land COntrect
MEIGS COUNTY

Schools ·Churches ·Daycarea •
Muffin Batter. Customer Service:
•5 Star Rating• we Deliver II .

738-,1409,

Professional
$ervlces

Delall Ortanled. Able To Work In·
dopondonlly As WeH AI Port Of 87!-1245.
AToam. Full Stnam Package In· lrinovative Fundral&amp;ing Ideas.

Sporta Organlzauona, SoU Tho
UUfmalo In Gourmal ·Cookfo &amp;

Ont~ At Oakwood
Barboursvlllt,~304·

Firewood For Sate, $40 A Face
Cord, C~I74Q.3!18·91148.

wuher, Refrigerator Provided .
Water And Trash Removal Included. Tennant Pays Electric ~
I Eleclrlc. No Pats , Non-

shop &amp; mo\lles. Call 740--446·

33 www.anewhorlzon.org Ll·
censed, Bonded, 1naured. Nation·

ployme~t Rotoronces To: Planned
Paranlhood 01 Southeast Ohio,
398 Richland ' Avenue, At~ ens
0H 45701 Closing Date Ia Febru·
ary 18, 2000. EQE IESP

111. Washer IOryer. Sto\11, Dish·

$499 Down ,
Homes In

Almoll Evttryono Ap·

P'O'ed. t.eoo.er7·347e Ext. m.

COMPUTERS! $79 -18 /MO.
EASY OUAUFYINGI FAST,
NEW 500 ,600 MHz . Comptoto
INTERNET, SoltwaJt, Tochnk:al
Help, 800.300·2840, Atfordablo
lncl..r.d. Tennant Ptyo Etoclrlc • Techrok&gt;glos.
Total Ela~trl c. No Pets. NonSmokers Only. $350/Mo .• $300 Flrowood $140 Dump T)'Ul;k Lood,
Oeposll, 740-4-46-958!5 Or 740· 140.379-2756.
440.2205 Ask For Vlr!inla. '
Firewood For Salt, $40 A Load ,.
Applications Being Accel)ted For Heap Accepted, $90 Cord, 1989
Very Nice Two Bedroom In Coun· Ctvallor $400 DBO, 74D·2~8· .
try SeHing, Ytl Close To GaiUpo· 6663.

CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Sa'~ CradU Legally.
Fr.Oinlo. 888'1i59-2560.

All CredH Risks. 7-3583.

Low Monthly Payments. Y2K

room Apartment. country Sanlng .
Yet Close To Gampona. washer 1
Dryer, Stove, Refrigel'ltor Provld·
ed . Water AnCI Trash Removal

Put YoU Tax Relund To Work,

POSTAL JOBS To $18.35/HR.
INC. 'BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
·ENCE. ' FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO. CALL I ·800·81 3·3585,
EXT 14210. 8 A.M. · $ P.M ., 7
DAYS Ids. Inc. i

eluding 401K Ratlramant Plan .
sand Resume And Three Em·

t Len $299/Mo., Includes Lot,
3(14.736-735.

Co~Uant

Checking Account. 1·600·737·
0073.

Paymanls .To ' 65% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Can 1-800·
328·8510 Ext. 29.

Unique. Funclralalng Product Wltl'l
Top
Fast
Food
Chains . .
www.scratchcard.com Or 1·888·

Aasumabl•.

$4,000 Down ~ Take Over Pay·
JTentl. 7-321,8. .

7-ttlM.
ApplluUona Being Acoopl~ For
Sman. aut vor~ Nlco Ono Bod·

No-

anctl,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $219 to $370. Walk 10

INOTICEI ·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
For A Good, Stobie Job • Ploaoo recommendt that you do busl·
Submit YOUR RESUME To 1403 n111 with people you know, and
Eaolern Avo., Galllpolia, OH NOT to send money l~rough the
mall until you hava Investigated
45&amp;31, Attn: Foreman Poalllon1 ,.
tho ottonng.
Postal Joba $48,323.00 Yr. Now
Hiring ·No Experl•nce ·Paid ARE YOU CONNECTED? lnler·
Training ·Great Benellls, Call 7 not Users Wanted! $350 ·$800 I
Week 1-888-858·9336 www.ebiZ·
Days 800~29·36e0 EICL J·365

PUNDRAIBING 18 BOOIUNQI
Up To 50% Commission. Market

Non-Qualifying

COMPUTERS · Low Or $0 Dowr1.

Land Home Packages. All Areas.

·Much More Best Package on
Market. ~ust Be 18 &amp; Hav~

Application W !Service. Reduce

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17.21 /Hr. AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
Guaral)leed Hire.- For Application 15 ·30 Locallono. $4K ·S9K In·
And Exam lnlo!metlon Ceil 8 A.M. vestment. Excellent Income!!
• 9 P.M. M·F 1-686·898·5627 Ext. Finance Avalla~te . 1-800·38~·
2615 • (24 HrS.) •
24-1001.

Largest New Inventory In South·
ern Ohio. Speclal1 On Homes
And financing In Progre11. Call
For Oolalla, H8H65.0187.

D.._ llopoott RaquiNd , Reier·

Fact6ry Renov,ted 3 Bedrooms,.
5499 &amp; Assume. Oakwood, Galli·
polo, 7-3093.

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

dream.net

fLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc·
torviKa, bhiO: ORAND OPENING

Mlecelleneous
Merch-andise

2 Bodroo,., Gallpotlo, 13215/Mo.•

Only, $450/Mo ., $400
Deposit, 740·446·9565 Or 74P·
448-2205. Ask For VIrginia.

Business
·Opportunity

Bonuses Paid. Jl You Are Looking

1888 Rodmon DanvUio 14•70
Aloo Hu Exponclo , Vtr~ Nlct,
$13,000,740381 833S.

Counb'y Uvlng 3 Or 4 Badtoomo,

(9% Altolagt RMo).

540

Apartments
.f« Rent

'•

)

'

OK. Conoumoro Flna&lt;Jilol HOO·
247-6125 Ext. I 134. VotiiOH, KS.

Srr&lt;&gt;Mr. (30')882-3880.

PosiUon Available : ROOFING
FOREMAN. Musl Be Talented,

•

. . '.:

Debt Conaolldatlon, Mortgag11
And Rtltntnclng. c- P-.

300-e75-19S7.

-

iJp To $45,000' /Yr. Billing Soft·
ware Co. Needa People To Pro·
coso Medlcil Clalma From Home.
EMERGING COMPAN¥ NEEDS Training Provldad. MUST pwn A
Medical Insurance Billing Aasls· ., Computor. Catl 7 Days t.fl88.522·
lance Immediately. II You Hove A 9048 Ext. 816.
PC You Can Earn .$25,000 To URGENTLY NEEDED lOr plasma
$50.000 Annually. Call 1-800· donora. earned $35 to $45 for 2
291-16113 Dapt. I 109.
or 3 hours weekly. Call Sera·Tec,
Homemak1r: Live ln. Wanted For 741).592-6651.

Room, Board Pluo Salary. 614·
217-5354.

GtorQill Portable Sliwmlll1 don't
ha!J jOUr logs to 1t1o mil )uot cal

ners and adults; also teach
chording and tranapoalng. If In·

$25 ·$75 /Hr. PT 1FT

Please Mall ~flume With Salary
800-223-t 149 Ext. 460.
Raqulromenlo To CHANCELLOR
DRIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS HEALTH PARTNERS, c/o "alii·
• IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Over. polls, 65 E Stoll Street, Sullo 200,
1
lho Road Start AI 29 CPM /All Columbus, OH 43215.
Ml Unloading Pay. Peroonalizod SINQ!RSI GOSPEL, CLIAN
Dlapalch, Homo Often, Holiday I COUNTRY, tnd EASY LISTEN·
Vacation Pay, 40\K /Mod ""'"· I INOI Call 1-600·469·8184 For
Denial, Assigned '99 T2000's Appointment To Come To Nash;
Rider Program 98% No ·Touch

'

Jlma Drywall &amp; construction .
Ne~ Conatructlon &amp; Remodel!

AVONI AU Areaal :ro Buy or Sell.
Shirley Speare, 304-67!-1429.
Hours, Enjoy Unllmllod Earnlnga.
(304)347-8838.

U Auto Loana, Personal Loans,

(30'11115-3013.

portunlty For Caroar Wllh Estab·
llsh~ Buolneos. Available lmme·
dlately For Ttllnlng. Salary Baaecl
On Experience. Apply Tope Fur·
ntture, 151 Second ~111111uo. Galli·

oH&lt;:a: ATTN: Qlna WI moCk

Avon Products: Stan your own InHome Buslneaa. Work Flexible

Glnot11l Cleaning tor Loc11 Offlc·
•• 01 Home. Pay NegoUable.

Care for one In country $840
month . Mobile, Honest, Non·

nlng Agency Seeking A Fuii·Timo

An E.COmmerce Business? ·
$3!10 ·$800 Nleak

220 Money to loan

celvable, Payroll And General
Tax Preparallon. Excel'-nt Op·

Secretary. 50 wpm Reql!lred.
Computer Experience A Must.

4sucoess2000.Com

180 Wanted To Do

4

Pri\late, Non-Profit Family Plan·

Disabled Practicing Attorney In
Columbus. Some Care Dullea.

t '.1fluwr.1ENT
SERVICES

.$200

DOZEN

'

Tgp Dollar: All U.S. Sit•
r And Gold Coins. Prooloeto.
amonda, Antiquo Jewelry, Gold
il'llnga, Pro·l930 v.s. currency,
:~1ortlng, Elc. Acq&lt;JIIIIIons JOW&lt;IIry
~1 M.T.S. Coin Shop, t 5 t Second
;- . . . Qaltlpotla, 7-2642.

1.
3

FRESH LARGE.

Auction Servlee,

'llalllpOIIs, OhiO 74().379·2720.

.

,:..... $).69

•

'

Margar1ne .••••••••••••• . · .I
..UNJTED VA~LEY .EL~ ~~ -••·.•.•-..1 $, 99
Cottage Ch••••·~~~·. . .. -.
DAIRY
..
$:.
.
. Flaaes
.... •••
c24 , 2/$4. '
99
Corn
:~..
· . · Ice Cream •••••••••••
.
DOLLY:. .DISOI VARIETY PK
2/$3'
/

wv 1338, 741).992·9707.

; n:i-57850r:J04.773-5447.

$--1·~~··· 3/S ·J ·

ua'tftav5QTS

'

~RICk Pearson ~ction Company,
~:;full ,time auctlonter, cornplete
. "JIUCtlon
service. Llcenaed
't86,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

.;

SINGLERO

aild Flea MBrket

•

JOWELS

=.' 2/$ .,

..

•
!:.,...

SO DRI
PAPER

BLUE BONNE! STICK 111101 LO~

Anticipated opentn_gs with the
Athan~·Melga Educational Serv·
Ice Center In the Athens County
Alternative SchooL Alternative
School Ttecher; Qualifications:
Bachelor's Degree In education
or re~ted field and demonstrated
ability to serve at-risk ~uth . ProSJI'8m Coordinator: Master's Oe·
gree and supervisory experience
In education or related field. Sal·
ary based on training and ex~rl~
ence. Coordinator a.nd Teaching
positions may be combined for
qualified applicant. Please submit
letter of Interest and resume by

· 992-6387. Wad·Sat (304)675·
5955.
.

Sale: Grace United
•Methodist Church, Second Ave·
...nue &amp; Ced•r Street, Friday Fe·

•

'

6049 E•L3125.

·Dancers Wanted Top$$.

~·Rummage

(ASSTVAR)

'

MEDICAL BILUNG. Earn Excel·
lent S S $ I Processing Claims
From Homo. Full Training Provld·

youroholne.c:om

.1111 diJ
toto 1111.11!111doy
odlllon • 2:110 P.ll.
Friday. llondty odltlon
- 10:00 a.m. Selu(doy.

...

$1''
lb.

·Yard Sale

lltiVtw,...,

' 41 oz...

'

,

ATTN: Own A Computer? Put It
To Wor~l 12&amp; ·75 /Hr. PT /FT
881-481-8224 www.work-out-ol-

DftD' !HE: 2:00 p.m.

011· -

10
·Potatoes••.••.••,,' ••••••

sltlon Apply Wll~ln AI 360 Colo·
ntal Drive, Bldwoll, OH.
·

Ate You loQklng For

Gallipolis
••
&amp; Vlclnlly
,;..._~:::::-:::::-:::-::::::---.
~
61.1. 'llud SetH Mull
"
Ba Pold In Advo-.

CRI .

''

I

'

For Those Interested In The Po·

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter·
nat Users Wantedl $350 ·$800 I
w..k t.e88·723-2553 www.work·

:!78
•

2/$

GENUINE ·# I

able.

•,Pe.ap•· t'II{O male, 0111 female, 8
~wleka old, mother Doberman.

"'-1959.

KUFT 1.201.
ORIG. VELYEETA ·
SHELLS ORI4

3
3
C
·Quarters •••••••••••~~ · ·
•

Coding. MediCal Records Spe·
clallzed Training Is Also Dt~slr­

ASSEMBLY AT HOME II. Crafts,
;;.:o·und On "Attlow.lown Road 1125/ Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,
•·.OO: Blua Healer Mix Dog &amp; Spitz 'fi'plng ... Great Payl CALL 1·800·
•.-Mix Dog, Both Wearing Collars, · 79!-0380 e.t. 1201 (24 Hre).
~Hh No Tags, Con Altar 6 P.M.

DELUXE MAC &amp;:
CHEESE DINNER

$ 59

Ho~ Senior Caro Canter Ia Now
Accepting Appl&lt;:atiOno For Mod·
leal Rooo1ds Clerk. Qualllled Appllcarno Mus1 Have K.-odQo or
Medical Terminology And 100·9

~60 · Lost and Found

CHEETOS
REG. $1.48 6.5

For Fret Clllfttt, t · 877·449·
9915.

2. MEDK:AL RECORDS CLERK

E0E

Wanted

pols.

:•Pari Lab Puppies. 2 Males. 2 fe.

'"740·~9-2927 or 741).949-30114.

..

FISCHER'S S~ICED

~E

'((~Ish Color B.eaded Rosary. Own...,.,, please coma In &amp; pick up at
;;Fox's Pizza.

Steak •••••••••••••~.
••

"Hiphly SkHied In The Art Of Car·

::,
:.; ~ou::n::::d-:a~t·-;Fo::x:::.,:-:P:::Iz::z::-a-::D:::o::n:~R:':e::"d·

$
FRESH CENTER CUT
$179
.Pork Chops ••••• J~. . · · P1zzas ··········"''• •• .
FRESH PORI CUBED $179
TO~Y'S P~PPERONI SC:HOOL

Person To Vlaw Our Beautiful
F~ Pof'lblnoil.
Holzer Senior Care Center Is

lntornel Users Wantedl
$3!10 ·SBOO Nleek
1·886-88HI7!10 •
www lllOOI't!halalll! (i(}[[)

. 'males. 7-3)49.

· Lit.

'

PleaM Send Rftume To Rhonda
Coo FIN , DON At 380 ColOnial
Olivo, Bidwell, OH Or Apply In

'~--~~------~~­

2·

'

Cited To C1ring For The Elderly

·.'J:Iawed, Fixed, House Pall 740·
446·3587 8 A.M. ·3 P.M.

Steak ••••••~••••••••••
KAHN'S
$
•
I .
·
J59
W1ener
s••••••••••••••
'

Hoiar
Conlor
AccepUng Appllullona
For..RN'o.
If You Art Energetic And Dedi·

-.'Cinnamon Color Female Cat, De·

199
Rump Roast ••••••• ~••
USDA BEEF CUBED
Lit. $,
39

'

Newli&gt; 'r'ou Thrift Shoppo

9.Wosl Stimson, Aillena
•
741).592·11142
: auallty ctolhlng and household

20 OZ. REG. ot•·'~•Y:-11

$

USDA BEEF eoNELESS

-co..

Help

Mom'a Wanlfii Mom'a Stay At
With 'r'our Fomlly. Cal Now

"' Consignment Shop Opening
•: soon on Route 2/Ciose ta the, ad , Computer Required. Call
.Locke. Will buy your Clean Medi· Ptoa Toll Free. t-868·313·

CredH Carda

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANIITIEJ
PRICES GOOD THRU FEB. 5, 2000

CHICKEN LEG

Mlrrlad Couple WHI Prg.

; vide Vour Newborn With Love

$ 99':

IAM-IOPM
~~ SECOID ST.
Accepts

.;fnlormatlon . 1·809·ROMANCE,
. -:----'· c:.ext_..:. 9735..;.:·•. Wh~ wall? Slarl meeting Ohio
; olngloo tonight. Coli toll I reo t •

24 pkc•lte

Stargell undergoes ·
minor surgery

JUNIOR

TONIGHT!

;• drts In Your Area. Call For More

·PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
.PRODUCTS-_

nORE HOURS

CINCINNATI (AP) - · Tl;le
Cincinnati Reds signed righthanded pitchers Javier Martinez
and Willis Roberts to minorleague contracts Tuesday and
invited both of them to spring
training.
The Reds now !\ave 69 players due ir camp, including 36
pitchers.
Martinez, who turns 23 on
Saturday1. played in Pittsburgh's
farm system last year, going 0-0
with a 5 .00 earned run average
in , 16 relief appearances for
Class A Hickory and Double-A ·
·Altoona.
. Roberts, 24, ~pent most oflast
season . with Detroit's Triple-A
farm club in Toledo, going 5-8
with .a 6.26 ERA in 31 games,
including. 12 starts. He made his
major league
debut
with
Detroit on July 2 at Minnesota,
his only appearance for the
Tigers. ·

PITTSBURGH
(AP)
Pittsburgh
Pirates
special
assistant Willie Stargell, who
hasn't returned to work since
being hospitalized in the fall,
recently underwent surgery in
Wilmington, N.C.
Pirates
general
manager
Cam Bonifay issued a statement Tuesday saying the
, surgery
was
minor
and
Stargell was
expected
at
spring training later this
month. .
.
· The' Pirates did not' disclose
the nature . of the surgery.
Stargell usually spends most of
the off-season at his Wilmington home.
Stargell was hospitalized in
October for three weeks, but
the Pirates .said his condition
was not life-threatening.
Stargell has undergone dialysis for several years, and he
required dialysis and had
blood work while being hospitalized last year. Dialysis
eliminates impurities from 'the
blood during kidney f~ilure.
Although Stargell has not
returned to his job as a special
assistant to Bonifay, he · has
made several public appearances jthis winter and was to
have appeared at the Pirates'
fan fest this weekend.
The Hall of Fame outfielder
.owns the Pirates' record for
career home runs with 475.
He was the National League
co-MVP while leading the '
Pirates to the 1979 ' World
Series
championship
a .nd
starred for the Pirates' 1971
Wodd Seri~s winners.

DATING

Han Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·

•

Wanted

1. IIECIISTliiiED-

Monlho. FREE Shipping. 1-800.
755,7880.

Reds sign pitchers
to minor league .
deals

Help

I"

,

eo,

· ~

740.211!1·. ,

�•

•'
P8ge B 4 • The o.lly SIS 1Unel

Wedneldly, Februery 2, 2cJoo,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~

The Dally Sentinel • P•ge B 5

MLB pla.y ers' association appeals Rocker suspens1an :~
'

'

•

•

I

r.

...

•

'
t
~
if
miss the first 28 flays .of the season. A sus~ • •
will not affect his salary, expected to be betwe~
$200,000 and $300,000.
..
· " It is literally unprecedented to imJ&gt;ose a penaf.
ty on a player for pure speech, offensive thought
speech may be," said Gene Orza, the union's No.
official. "That, coupled with the magnitude oft~·
penalty, just as unprecedented, makes us optimht~'
about the outcome of the appeal ."
,
:'
Rocker, 25, will be allowed to go to extend~~
spring training starting Apr;ll 3. andilpitch in
minor leagues.during the firn month of the JeoiSOA'~~
If the suspension is not shortened, he would ""'un~1
for a May 1 game at Los Angeles.

'

NEW YO~ (AP) - The players' association Selig said Monday in issuing the suspension and
6led a grievance Tyesday to overturn John Rock$20,000 fine.
er's suspension, a ban scheduled to last through . . "We will not dodge our responsibility," said
May 1.
·
Selig, who also ordered the Atlanta Braves reliever
"The discipline is withOilt just cause:· the union to undergo .sensitivity training for disparaging forsaid in a letter sent to the\ commissioner's offic e . eigne rs, homosexuals and minorities in a magazine
The grievance said arbitrator Shyam Das " should interview.
rescind the discipline."
,
" Mr. Rocker should understand tlut his . remarks
It is unclear when a hearing will be scheduled. offended practically every element of society and
Many suspensions by baseball conunissioners have broughr dishonor to himself, the Atlanta Braves
been overturned or shortened.
and Major League Baseball. The terrible, example
"Major League Baseball takes seriously its role as set by Mr. Rocker is · not what our great game is
an American institution .and the ·important social about and, in fact, is a profound breach 'of the social
responsibiliry that goes with it," conunissioner Bud compact we hold in such high regard."

•

The penalty is believed to be the longe1t against
a baseball player for an action not related to drug
use since Lenny Randle of Texas got .30 days in
March 1977 for punching 11\s manager, Frank Lucchesi.
" I do not believe it is appropriate that I should
be harshly disciplined for my misguided speech
unaccompailied by any conduct on my patt,"
Rocker said in a statement released by his agents.
"I have previously apologized for my unfortunate
tetharks and stand by my apology."
.
Wilile the suspension covers 73 , days starting
with the opening of spring training, the season
doesn't start until April 3, meaning Rocker WO\Ild

110

HIIIPII • EVIIICLII STOPS
IIIIIPEI OUTIRIAKSI 96%
Soccen Rote. Toll Free: t ·677·
EyEIICLR Info: www.-.eom
IIAS'rEC"IOMY SU!l911eo At Littlo
' Or No Cool. We BINMedloare Or
VO.. lnourance Direct. Get 2 Now

Bras, . Proatheeuea. Every Six

START

HOT STOVE NOTES

P0 WElL'S
......,

Mondarthru

continued from '81
Any tr~de would involve a
n11mber of Reds minor league
prospects.
.
"I don't mind giving up
one quality guy, but let's
limit it to one quality guyand
some extra players," Bowden
said.
.
The Daily News reported
that the Mariners were interested
in
reliever
Scott
Williamson, the NL rookie of
the y~ar.
The Mariners also would
h~ve to include some money
to , oover . part of Griffey's
$8.S m'illion salary. The
Reds' payroll will be around
$40 million this season, and
they don't want to add to it
significantly.
If the Reds ern 't .trade for
Griffey, they will try to ~ign
him as a free agent after the
seas\)11,. Bowden said.

.,.

••: eoo.76e·2823, extensiOn 6178,

:: 30 Anno\lncernents

.•·· -~==~---ADOPTION
' Hoppll~

• And A Secure Future. Please CaH
· Tt.,IIOrDave
· 1--213-0477

•Ct'othlng &amp; Good Toys &amp; Olhor

~ llems

or will Sale on consign·
• mtnl tor you, (304)570.2842.

: l'~len Pauli. WIU NOt Be Roopon·
• olblo For Any Bms Made By An·
.• yone Otlor Than Myself,
·
Glen Pa!Mk

SNYDER OF~

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

BERLIN
POTATO
·cHIPS
•

•

.. Items. $1.00 bag sale avery
" Th.ursday, Monday thru Saturday

• 9:00.5:30.

•

; 40
Giveaway
~· ~4~Q~R~7~8~x~1~~~B~u~ck~s~ho~t~T~I-ra-o.
~ (30418(5-7~. C.P after 3:30PM.

2/$

·' 5 pl4)plos, 8 wl&lt;a: old, Liob &amp; Glr·
~.man Shepherd mixed, 740·992·
·.. 3516. .

~

,,
4

OZ.

99¢

B con ••••••••••~ ••.

~

,;

j,urary 4: 8:30 To 2:30

·Pomflroy,
' Middleport
• Vlclnlly
"'II Yllnl Balta Mutt 8a Paid In
!'1\11-ca. lletdHI\I: 1:OOpm tho
'!litJ btloro liM ad Ia to ru~,
;;BundlJ a MondtJ •~Ilion·
'11:OOpm '"""'·
rto
, Auction
•
•
c

~

•.
~)Ill MoOdlapaugh Auctioneering·
'

,.complete auction service. Buy
ell .. ta,tea. Ohio llctnll

,.

·'J/iedemeytr's

1

NEW YORK JEW

Donuts ..............~:::z-

Toast

STOKELY'S OR ·,. PE.AK PINTO
LIIBY'S J
BEANS ..
VEGETABLES
,

VAA

3/$

I

14.5-15

oz.

DOMINO ·~·

:eo

.SUGAR ·.

.. .,.: 9c

4LBS ·

s'Las

'

EGGS ·

$1''

2/$

~

·

•

•·.

' .

·.

I

. •.

W111tecl .t o Buy

oolule

~~:~~

.

February It, 2000 to John D.
Costanzo. ESC Superintendant,
Athens-~elga Educational Serv~
~ Cen1er, 507 Richland Ave~e.

Suite 108. Alhans, OH 45701.
Equal Opporlunlty Employer/Providor.
Are 'r'ou Connected?

tkllp Wanted ·

I

I

, 00 'WE'Ei&lt;LYI Mailing 400
pc~urtol Satlolactlbn Guar·
lt!tdl PoiiOgt &amp; SuppiiOB Pro·
d'odl Rush Seii·Addroosad
llla"'P:od Envetopel lllCO, DEPT
'i, Box &gt;1436, ANTIOCH, TN.
!1701 Hlstl. Start hnmedately.

i

·14s.ooo

fYiar /Potential! Doctor•
Jeed Paoptet Process ~edlcal
'flalms Frqtn Home, We Train.

·r;.\JST Owri Computer. 888·332·
!1015 Exl1700 lOaMy.

' Win A
BANKROLL
.Thla·week
.
.
·Powell's Su
Value

laoo WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN

io&amp;SI PROC!SSING .GOVERN"'ENT REFUNDS. NO EXPERI·
·:INCE NEoESSARYt 124 Hr.
8acordod MeiNgt) 1-800'854·
~ Ext IS04fJ. I
'
WE~KLY . POTENTIAL

'

aeoo ·
lomplttl Simple Goyernm1nt

Parma ,AI Hom•• No Ewperl•nce
ijoceooar~. CALL TOLL FREE •

· lr~-3Sei ~. 2101' $34.00

~fee'

Free Cashl

Office Mtnager, Full· Tlma With
Benefits. Ruponalblt For Ac counts

Pa~ab~.

Account• Re

I·880.900-8065

www Jrmrovedll1e net

No.

DATA ENTRY • Nallonwlde BIIHng
Service Seaka A Full/Part Tl.me

Modlcal Biller. Selary AI $46K Par
Year. PC Required. No Expert·
ence Needed Will Train. Call 1·

' 611&amp;-1146-5724

'

DENTAL BfLLER SU ·$45 /Hr
Dental BlUing sonware Company
Needa People To .Process Medl·
cal Claims From Home. Training
Provided. Must Own Compul8r. 1·

OWn A COinjlu!Ot1
Put It To Wor'ld

Freight CALL SUMMIT TRANS·
PORTATKlN i101).878.Q680 EOE.
Drivers: 2 Week Paid COL Train·
lng. No Exp. Noedod. No Money,
~o

Credit? No Problem! Earn Up

To $32,000 /tat Yr. W /Full Bono·
flto. Apply On ·Line At: www.olr·
dolvoro.com Or Call 1-877·230·
11002 P.A:M. Transport
Eaoy Workl Excellent Payl Ao·
aemble Producll At Homa. Call
Toll Free 1·800·467·5566 Ext.
12170.

l-886·881-l!7!10

www !'OQ[)frytbatafyn oom

Installer And Service Technician

Nooded. Must Bt Exporlonced.
Apply In Parson At Comfort ~lr,
· 407 Third Avenue, QaiNpollo. No
Phone Cal•.
Internal MerkeUng
125-S7Mv

www.any-1-ean-eam.com

I,aaa.a10.1 662

Local Business seeks Route
Sale• Peraon. Excallenl Bene~
fha. Satea Experience Pre~erred,
bul not necesaary. Se.nd Re·
aume: c/o ML 10, Point Pleasant

Roglo(or, 200 Main St, Pt.
Plaasan~ WV 25!550.

PIT TECH Supporl " $$$ . Wind·

ows. Mac, Hardware, Software All
Areas. 24 Hrs 17 Day1. www.Go·
F"U&lt;.com (Code I I 3). Llmltodt
Part-Time Position available. Ap·

ply In P11oon at Kipling Shoo
Co., AI. 2. 8)1&gt;011. Pl. Pleasant

'•

Drywall, Siding, Roolo, Addl·
'Ilona, PalnUng, etc. (304)874·
4823"' (:104)874-01!55. '
Plano lallona In my hOmo, begin·
caii74Q.992·!1493. .

Want To Take Care Or Senior

Cltlzano MOnday ·Sundlly 8 A.M.·
10 P.M . In Your Home, 140·4•e-

2025

WUI Oo Housecleaning $6.00

Able To Make Decisions, Want A
Permanent Job, Work Well With
People And Possess Exceptional

Rooting Skills (3-Tab, DomenJion·
ol, Slnglo Ply RubbO!, Tin). Wo
Are An EolobUohod Company,
Tho Work Is Local, Pay ts Good,

An'

ttoUr, EvenJnga And Sa1urday1,·
Ha\le Experience And Reterenc·

... 740.388-11421.

FINANCIAL

210

CONIOUDATli IIU.S.
fn&gt;m 13.000 ·SI !10,0001

Pay Closing Cotta &amp;.Move ln .
740-446-3093.

LOANS O.A.C.
For Fast Reoults,
Call Toii-Ftot
1-IIUIWI56.

OoUI)Itwidf On Lot $2!10 lleposH
Roqulrod, 304·736-7295.

CONSOUO~TE

BILLS. Low

Rates. No Upfront Feu. Bad

Crodlt

~nd

Bankrupioy Accopled.

2• Hour Approval. Call Toll FrH:

H77-80H273.

CREDIT CARD UP TO $3,000.
Unooculed VISA /MC. Bad Credit
~ Creel~. 1-800.2§881 6 Ext.
CREDIT .CARDSI GUARANTEED
APPROVAL! No Credit Chock.
No Security Deposit. $1 ,ooo UmH

MONEY TO LOAN . Bad Cradlt
OK. Free Appllcauon. U.S. Ap·
pilcants on~. 1·677-780·1938.
OYER YOU HEAD IN OEBT???
Do You Need More Breathing
Floom??? Debt Consolidation, No

Qualllylnglll FREE cp~SULTA­
TION CALL 1-800.558·1648 Ext.

AT&amp;T - MCI - BP~INT What's
Tho Big ~eret? Work 5 Hre Nlk.
Ma~o '52K ·$125K /Yr. Eaoyt
FREE lniOI 1·800·997-9888 E•.t
1155 (24 H,.) .

ai·Non PJOIIt c....,.ny.

230

RECEPTIONIST
The Arlwar E)e Canter in Pl.
Pleasent lsloo~ng lor an olllco
-lionlst. Must be lrltndty and
oulgotng . Full time pooltion.
Provlouootcptrlenca In madlul
office halpf!J, but not ,_,aery.
Pleaae send

res~~ne

to OlH' main

~-Ere eon~
1100 Llloyollt Avtnue •

Moundlvlllt, WY 211041

MacMIHan'a 1·80Q.3&amp;,7-40 39. '

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /Sst?
No Fee Unlo.. We Wlnl

'plllit_______
I

RttldtnpoM_.r
Assisted LMnQ
We Are Oponliig A N.W Ll·
conood Aoslatod Living Com·
munlly In GalllpoU~. Ohio. ,Our
Inns Ara LUXUIIOUI, Bul Alford·
able. And Will Provldo A Quality
Of Care And Accommodations

That WIU Be Unparalleled In Tho
Industry. Poaltion ReQUirtl Out·
standing Interpersonal And Com-

munlcauon SkUll, Wllh SlrQng
.._,.hip QuaHtioa.
II You Have· Buslnoso And /Or
Health Care Management Expert-

once, wo ONor Anracllvo Salary
With Compreh•nllve Benefits.

lo advertise "any preler&amp;nce,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, cdor, religion,
S8)( familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,

MAKE ONE MILLION People To
Sand You $2.001 LEARN MY
EASY METHODI Guaranleed · II
Wolk8. Rush $5.00 + LE~SE:
Starling, 135 Amheral St -20, Amhor&amp;t, NH 03031 hHp://oterlingll·

llmltatiQn or dlscrtmlnaUon.-

'

MEDICAL BILLER $15 ·$45/Hr. .
Medical Bl~ng SOftware COmpany
Needs People To Process Mtdl·

cal Clalmo F1on1 Homo. Training
Provided. Must Own Computer. 1·
f!00.434·5!i t 6 El&lt;l. 61!7.

/COKE \,IFRITO LAY
AND SODA VENDING
BE YOUR OWN BOSS.
CASH BUSINESS$$$ .

~Bf.if~FN~~~~~~~~~x~~~~

801 W. Union St. Athens, Oh
45701.

WILDUFE JOBS To $21.80 /HR.
INC. BENEFITS. GAME WAR·
DENS, SECURITY, MAIN·
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS. NO
EXP NEEDED. FOR APP. AND
EXAM IN~O. ·cALL 1,600·813·
~585, EXT 14211. 8 A.M. ·9 P.M.
7 DAYS Ida, loo.
Work From Homo $599 ·$6,000
' Part·Time fFUII·Time

Co~tact

ICelo

ty. 1-888·882-2838, wwr'.2"10rt·
money.com pasacode: rowan.
MEDICAL BILLING . Earn E•col·
Iant Income. Full Training. Com-

LENT PROFITS 1-800·731-7233
EXT.503.
$tart Your Business Today...

Primo Shopping Center. Space
Available At Affordable Rata.
Spring Valla)' Plaza, Call 74o.448·
0101'
WORLD'S BEST SECRETIII AU.
TOMATE NOW... To "arn $5,000
A Wook Wlih A Mouse Cllckt

ZIG ·ZIGLAR GOES MLMI ;Look·
lng Fo;. Leaders Who Want To
Move From Success To Signlfl·
canoe• We Suggest You Mo\le

On Property Soldt Morlgagul
Annultlesl Seltlemantsl Immediate Quotaalll "Nobody Beats
Our Prices.·. National Contract

US I'IEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Remaining Payment•
On·' Proparty Soldl Mortgagul
Annuities! Settlef11entat lmme·

140

8509.

•

2br, tba Homo

Ga·

Col Ryan

6001213-8365
Anlhony Land Company. LTD.
WV Land wanted, suitable for
hunting. No uUIItlts, no access,
no~Koblem.

(740)288·7248.

RENTAL S
Houses lor Rent
Foreclosed

FORECLOSED HOMES. Low Or 0
Downt Govn't And Bank Repo's
Bolng Sold Nowt ·financing Avoll·
able. Call Nowl 1-800-355·0024,
Exl8040.

Home tor ule: lovely ten acr11 in
a country: aenlng, four bedrooms.
two and hall baths, formaf living
room and family ra:om, two fire·
places, two apartments, tour car

garage and two aloroge bulldlngo.
p - call 741).992·2292.
Mlddklport- corner ol High SlrHl
&amp; Powall Strtat. 2 bedroom hoJJW
wllh dining room, living room and
kitchen. Newer carpot and kllt:llan
cabinets makes tht

kll~hen

ducod to $33,000. Please call
l\Jrner,- at 740·992·2686.

. House For Sale. Newly Remo-

deled Inside and Out. 191 N.

Nice Counlry .Selling, 2 Miles
from town. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. 2
Car Garage. HeatPump, on 1
Acre. Appliances Slay. (3041882·
3518.
Nice Home, Plenty or Room, .3
Bedroom, Brick. Reduced Price.

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Smdc.
Call Ron Evans, t-800-537·9528.,
.
' .

.

on contract with good references.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
On VInyl

New Small vanities. While, $~5
each, Top and Bottom, AutomoL'

bile Paint $25 gal. (304)175·

4004.

..

Prtmeatlr
DlrocTV
Free sateQile system. Call for Cl•

pllcanono f"' t BR. HUD aubsld·

laits. 800·263-2640.
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS •
Tappan HI Efficiency 9011: Gao
Furnaces, 011 Furnaces, 12 SNr 1
Heat Pump I Air Conditioning
SyStems Free I Year Parts I la!-

3711 TOO 1-688·233-6694. Equal
Houolng Opportunity

bor Warranty Sennens Heeling
Cooling, 1·80Q.872·5987.
·

MERCHANDISE

Goods
Appliances;
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Retrl·
grators. 90 Day Guarantee!

Blaze Kl~g Woodburner Wu"Bklwar, Exoolillnt Condition, $42!1,

080, 740-446-6862.

Woodburner Excellent Condltton, ·
Also Wood For Sale. 740·2455236.
•

Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78

Vine Slroat, Can 740·446·7391,
1·686-l!l8.0129.

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO·
GY We Finance,

$95; Kenmore Dryer, Heavy Duty,
$95: Whirlpool Dryer Nice $95;

Your C1odllll 1·80CHl59-0359.

550

Rio Grande, OH Call 740·24,5.·
5121 .

560

Range 30' $75: Side Sy Skit Ro·
klgorator St 50: Cold Spot Rolrlg·
orator $1 50; Skoggs Appllanc•a.
76 VIne Slroel, (laUipolls, Ohio
7-7398, 1·611&amp;-810.0128.

Buy or

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Unlurnlshed, total electric,' 2 bed·
room, 1211.64, on nice lot In Ma·
son . Deposit required. Phone

2 Bedrooma. 2 Bath Trailer, Ex·
eollent coodltlon $350/Mo., $300
DeposJt, Reterences. 740·441-

1913.

8 Adorable Rottweller Puppies,

Doposlts Matas: $125; Fomalao
$1 50; Ready For Valonuno'sl ·
740·258-91 23.
AKC Chocoloia Lab Pupplo&amp;,
G1oat Family Dogs, Roady To Go,
740·36HI659.

Riverine Antiques,

1124 Eaot Main on SA 124 E. Po·
. moroy. 740-992·252e or 740·992·
1539. Russ Moore, owner.

AKC registered Chinese Shar·Pel

pupplas. lots of wrinkles. $300,
740·949·2128.

540 Miscellaneous

Looking for lemale longhair
Dachshund to breed, Please call

Merchandise
UBAD CREDIT? Gol Cash
Loans To $5,000. Dabt Consoli·
dation To $200,000. Credit Cardl,
Mortgages, Refinancing And
I Auto Loans Available. Meridian

Credll Corp. 1·100·471-51 19 Ext.
1180.

Pets lor ·Sele

Talla &amp; Dewclaws. Now Taking

Antlquta

sell.

Bulldlr\g
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc. Claude Wlntara,

Maytag Gas Cryer 175; Electrlo

530

~

740·446·20551orMI IYW!oaago. ~ ~ ··
Pu11brad Slb,rlan Husky pup·
pies. 3 males, 2 1ema.les, blaok &amp;
whlta &amp; sillier, bJt,le eyes, masks,
wormed, love kids, very nice,
$130 oacfl, caU740-992·5t 44. ,.

This Year Give A BPECI-.L .
•VALENTINE¥. To Mom: White ,

3 BedroOm Trall&amp;r For Rant, NO

1993 .Niuan/Pick·up, $G,8U.;
1992 S.tO/PICk·up, $3,896.; 28H
Travel Tralltr $0,000.:. Compteta
Set of Now Kllchtn Cabinets
S2,BOO: 30ton Wood Splitter

570

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Unlur-

Saw, $300; tO' Ttble Saw $150:
Largo ApploBunar Ktttla , $400.
(304)675-4004.
3 pleca llvlnQ room suite, $650;
Hot Point mlcrowa11e with Probe,
$75: must see to appreciate, call

Hammond M300 Organ wHI'I Lll·

2 or 3 badroom moblla homo lor
renl, no pets, 740·992·5858.
Pets. In Rio Grande, ~40· 379·
2720 Aller6 ·P.M.
nlshod, Cora Mill Road, Gallipolis,
Free Gas Heat, No Pets , Deposit

Required. 740.245-5622.

$495; 1-· Craftsman Radial Arm

Bichon Friae 9·11· Hlgh P~rlnls

From Soulh, II Family Poll Otllv·
ory Pooslblo. 740·379-9081, 7~0.
379-2699. '
Musical
lnstrumer\ta 1 '

lie So'Und Cabinet. $600. CtU
(304)67!-3388.
,1 ,

.'

740.992·3656 or 74CHl49-2607.

440

Apartments
· fOr R1111t

t •I" :1 bedroom tplnments. fur·
nllhld anti unlurnt1hed, eecurtty

depollt requlrod, no polo, 7•0·
992·1!218. .

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Finance Wllh .oo• Down. Pliol
c- Probltmo, No Probltm. CaN
lbiiFreo t.an·293-4082.
Qompltlt DISH NtiW()(k selellto
ayatem, brand

n~ 1

$98, 740·

t BljiJoom Waiht'r Dryer Hook·· 992' 1182 or 304·773·530~ alter

Up In QaltlpOibl, 7-7903.

lpm.

1 Badroom, Near Arbor's Nursing
Home, Economical Ullli11es. Quill
LocatiOn, $279/Mo.. + UUIIUes, No

COMPUTER BLOWDUTUI COM·
PAQ MfCRQN eMachlno&amp;t Desk·

Pots. 74().446·?957.
2 Bedroom Apartment, New Ha~
ven Area. Leave Me11age.

(304J773-55n.

•

lops, Laptops, Merchant ·Ac·
counts. Websltel Almost Every.one Approvadll No .Money

Oownll Low Monlhly Ptyhntoll
FREE Specltl ottert CALL NOWt
I.fi88.479-2:M5 (TOI Ftot)

'
/

",

'

FARM SUPPI I[S
&amp; LIVESTO CK

610

Farm Equipment

·

O% Financing Now Aval~alt
~i
John Deer• Belerl And Mo.-~ •
Condlllonera. Carmlch:HI'• Farm•
&amp; Lawn t-800·594·11 It Or 740•

Job

446·24 t 2 Gampotlo, Ohio. Don'i
Miss Our John O..e Day Foiliu·

aryti2,11:00A.M.

t 953 John Oeoro
tn4.

I
,,

DoWn! Paat ,

Turned DOwn Beforalf Reestablish ·

ture• 740-367-11280.

Pilot Program, Renter&amp; Needed,

•o•

Crodll Problems OKII Evan II ·

Oood Used Beds, Dreasers,
Couches.• Dinettes, Etc. Blg SavIngs On New Furniture. 740·4413·

Whirlpool Washer Heavy Duty
$95; G.E Washer Heavy Duty

420

•.

.waterline Special: 314 200 FISt
$21.95 Par 100; 1' 200 PSI
French CUy Maytag. 740·446· 137.00 Por tOO; All Bra11 Com·
pre10kln Amngo rn SUlek
n95.
• RON EVAN&amp; ENTERPRISES
For Sale : Reconditioned waan- Jackson, ONQ, 1-800.537-9529

304·736-7295.

-·

~

Ron's Gun Shop, 741).742-8412 . .
1
~at Of Headlight. Covoro For A ,
1997·1999 Chevy Cavalier.
$25.00. Only Uoed A Couple Ql
Times. Cal 304-n3-584t.

Household

R&amp;D's Used Furniture Great Se·
!action, Priced To Sell! ·comt
A.nd Browse.• Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addison Pike, ·we Buy Furni-

3 Bodroomo, Kltchtn·Famlly
Room. 1 Bath, SunRoom. Large
Ftncad BackYard w/Largo Utllly
Shod. $~00 Dopoo\t. $500 mont~
+UUtltloo/Rtlaronct ~oqulrod.
(304)675-8438. May Leave Moo·

~-~,

$50 Load, Full Size Plck·Up, Do·
livered, 740.992-4568.

Twin Towers now accepting ap·

510.

.J

Premium Firewood , Oak &amp; Ash

Furnished, Cal1740·448-t599.

House And Trailer, 2 Bedrooms
Each. Retrences anct Deposit R•
quirtd. Water And Trash Paid.

304·736-7295.

Doors, Wind·

740-441·1982.

Spring Valley Green One Bed·
room · Apartments, Appliances

4782.

Pilot PrOgram, Renters Needed,

S~lrllng,

New Mlllenlum Dietl Eat All Day
And Melt Away, Call TracYt .At

ment In Mlddlaporl. 740·992·
9191.

448·1162.

741).386- It 00'

..

Mobile Home ·Supply, 740·4.• 8· 1
9416.

And Used Furniture Store
Good Loeallon In Gallipolis, No · New
Below Holiday Inn Kanauga.

Pets, Deposit, References: Small
1 Bedroom House, Furnlahatt,
Good Location In Galllpolla, No
Pets, Deposit, Rer•rences, 740..

.

Huge Inventory, Discount Prices:

One bedroom furnished apart-

GOdD USED APPLIANCES

BeiWeen Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile home,,
$261).$300, 741).992-2167. '

as Slay. Broad Run Road, Letart,
Asking $60.000.(3041862·3516.

JET
AERATION MOTQRS

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Waler
Sewage, Trash. 5315/Mo., 740·
448-0008.

2 bedroom house In Pomeroy,

Nice 3' Or 4 Bodrciom Ranch Wtth

on 1 Acre. Heai·Pump; AppllanC·

'If You Don't Call Us WI 8oth '
Lose. • Free Estimates! no-4488308, t-600·29HI098.

Pels. (304)e7H162.

Jackson Aw111», (304)875-73118.

(304)662·3267.

'

COOUNQ EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED

· ows, Anchors, Wafer: Heat•ra,
Nice Ground-Floor, 2BR, WID Plumbing &amp; Eleenicat Parts, FurHook-up. Reference, Deposit. No naces &amp; Heat Pumps. Benn,tle

74Q.II43-554e.

Pirie OrNe. Call lor Appointrrient

(304)87H834. '

JANITROL HEAT1NO AND

dop. &amp;lol., 741).992·01 85.

ers, dryers and refrigerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

3 Bedroom House 1 1/2.8aths,

noar planii(RI, 33)304-~·3733.

Problamo? Nood Tuned? CaU lho

plano Dr. 740-446-4525

N. 4th Ave., Middleport, 2 room
efficiency, utlllllts paid, no pels,

2 bedroom house in Portland,
$300 plus etectr~. heal wllh wood,

$38,000. (304)87!-5697.
pump/central air wllor-:td yard. 2

Grubb's Piano- tuning &amp; repairs.

740.446-0390.

·

no pets, 740·698· 7244.

min. away from Elem. school,

448-1004 Anytime.

VIllage Green Apartments· 2
bedrooms, total electric. applianc·
es furnished, laundry room faclll·
ties and close to school, applications available at offk:tt, 740-992·

rage; 130 South Park Drive.
Brick home In the New Haven
araa. Trip,. pant wlndQws. heat

Good Used. Appliances And ' Fu(nlturo, Cal 74!1-446-4039. Or 740-

capped. EOH. (30')675'1i679.

$300 monlh plus deposit, will sell
wiAUache~

740.992·2143 or 740-992-6373.

ized apt. tor elderly and hand!·

We Pay CAlli!
For LANDI
Even If lis Usted
20 ·500 Acras

600·319·3323 E•t 1709.

Homee for Sale

Bullnees
dlate Quoleoltt 'Nobody Boolo (304 )273-11485.
Training
Local Truck Driller Noodod. Start·
Our Prlcea: National Contract'
lng Pa~ $9.00 Ho~r. Insurance
Oalilpolto ca-r College .
Buyers 800·490·0731 Ext. tOt 320 Mobile Homes
Plan, Unl(orma. M~st Ha,vo Tank·
(Ca'"" Close To Homo)
· www.~.com
for Sale
or encrorsementa. 741).2~5·5514.
Ca1Toda)'l740-44e-43117,
$2,500 .VISA /MASTERCARD 12x88 2 B~roomo, 1 1/2 Batha,
Magic V.a11 Day Care Conlor .
1·800-214-0452,
~NSECUREDII GIUirantoad Ap·
All Ntw Carpel, SOmo ApptlancM
Seeking Full Time SubaUhlto. _ _,._;.;Rog=191H&gt;5-~;,;;.;1.;;;27;..4.;;;B;..._ ·,;.._
•
provalll. Bad Credit, /No Crtdll Stoy,
$9,11815, 741).24!-9373.
send Rtoul!l• to: . 201 ' High 150
Schools
OKt lrlct~s Full Crodlt RtiiOrl·
· StiMt. pt, Ploalant, WV 2!5550.
lion. 23 '!lslrt In BUalno11. Not A '14' Wide. 1500 bown, St82 Par
lnatructlon
Scam. 1-1100586 9099. Ext.25.
Month. 1·800·891·8777; 18.00
·Manager RttaU Jewelry Store,
$500 Down, $283 Per Month,
Retail Sal11 And Computer Ex· EARN A LEGAL CQLLEGE DE· $FREE CASH NOW$ F1om
Free Air, 1-800·691 ·6777; Double·
perlence Necessary. Benefits GREE QUICKLY, , Bachelora, Wealthy Families Unloading MilWldf, 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, $1000
Available. Appfy: Acquisitions Masters. Doctorate, By Cdtre· lions or Dollars. To Help Mlrimlze
Down, $262 Per Month, 1-800·
Fine Jewelry, 151 Second Ave- apondence Based Upon Prior Ed- Their Taxes. Write Immediately:
nue. Golipolil.
ucaUon And Short Slud~ Course. Wlndlallo, 847·A SECOND AVE., 69t.em.
FREE Information Booklal 1350, NEW YORK, NEW YORK
1981 Ytnlura, 14x70, ·Dock IO.S.
Nted 7 Ladllo To Sell Awn, 740· 'For
Phone CAMBRIDGE . STATE 10017.
New FIIIIIICO. 300-e7H318.
441!·3358.
UNIVERSITY HJ0CH184·8318.

1----------------

Homaalle, Quiet Road, Oallia

' County, Deeded &amp; Surveyed, Un·
dar $12,000, 740.448-2317.

Homlls From $199/Mo., 4o/. Down

Fast Because This WilL. Call: t • · Full Basement. Heat Pump On
677·5()().()834.
1. 78 Acres In Country On State
Roule 775, Pul o.o. Mcln,tyra
220 Money to Loan ·
Park. Asking $79,QOO. Call 740·
448 1280, Or 741).44 H659.
$1$ NEED CASH?? WE 'pay 3 BodJOOm. 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage,
Cash For Ramalnlrig Payments

Need 5 Secluded Acres With'

For Listings &amp; Payment Details,

Dottle Tutner Realty, Cottle S.

puter Required. Call Mtdl Works Buyora 800·49D·~73t E•t. 101
Toii·Free 800· 540·6333 Ext.. www.nationalcontratlbuyers.tom
~301 .

REAL ESTATE

YOU'RE APPROVED! Credit
f!00.577-4348.

Real Estate
Wanted

1 . ·3 Bedrooms

ctll.com/opocia168300 .

Carda I Loans, Regardllll Of
Your Current CrediU fn 24 Hours.

Land, Will Sell Together $26,000.

Land Contract Available. 5 Acres

IJ!IIi!l!lll!!!l'!llf!!l!l!llllllllll...ll!1! 410

with
1011 Ql wlndowo vory bright Allo a
large lot. Cute as can be. Re·

URL: hllp:lfwww.seereta2auc·

Two 10 Ac;; Tracts Ot Meadow,
Creek And Wooded Hills, Sur·
rounded By Woods And Farm

tar$ avallab~ on an equal
opportunity baSis.

S NO OOWNI HOMES NO CRED·
IT NEEDED! GOV'T FORE·
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED APPROVAL! 1·800·360-4820 EXT

People In Network Marketing.
Huga Opportunlly For t-~Lt,.
Loaders. Lllootyloa tn 13 Coun·
lrlos. Opens The· U.S.A. Tranolor•
P1011ram Roady, We Must Talk. 1·
877·81 1·3424.
www.dunro·
bln.corwtnlnl .

Modern 1 Bedroort' Apartment,

lnlonnedlt1alalldweUingo
advertised In lhlll newspaper

fend Automated Medical Servlc-

Substitute Bus Dnver· M..t be at

Athena County Board or MRDD

law. Our readers are hereby

310

ville And Audition For Major
Record Producers And Concert
Promotre&amp;.lnternet www.rteln.ac

ant. s1o:oo per ~ur. Applications
can be obtained and IUbmltlod 10:

which Is in violation or the

CD·ROM. lnvollmonl $4.995 •
$8,995 . Financing Available. Is·

No~ A Loan? Try Dobt Consoli·
daUon. $5,000 • $200,000. Bad
Credit O.K. Feo. 1·6Q0.770·0092,
EICL215.

Scenic, Close To GaiUpoHs, SOma
Restrictions, 740-245·5778.

www couotrytyma com.

adYerttsamentstor real estate

MEDICAL BILLING. Unllmtted In·

PEPSI
SNACK
ROUTE.
$$$ALL

least 18 YH.I'I old and PQI'H II I
high school diploma or equlval·

Thlo newspaper will not
k!jowlngly ~Ill

come Potential. No ,Experience
Necessary. Free ln.tormallon &amp;

os. lni:. 800·322·1139, Ext 050.
VOid In KY. IN, CT.

port From $249·$373. Can 740·
992·5064. Equal. Housing OppOI·.
tunltles.

360

or 1968 which makes it Illegal

Fretler beef, grain fed, 11 .57 per
lb. hanging WI.. Includes cut wrap,

Oppo.rtunlty.

2.44 Acres, Homesite, Green
Township, Gallla County, Fl.at,

Of Gaiii&gt;OIIa.
ANTHONY LAND CO., LTD, I·
800-213-8385 For FREE Maps,
All r&amp;llllllate advertising In
this newSpaper 11 subleCIIo
the Federal Fair Housing Acl:

-·

mants, home &amp; trailer rantata,
740-992-451'4, apartments &amp;\lall·
able, lumlshed &amp; unfurnished .

Farms for Sale

01 Woodad Hills $9,500. Oft SA
124, leas Tnan 20 Minutes West

1

2588. Equal Housing

·

Wolfle, 740·949·331 5 leave mea·

5TO 10ACAII
Between Gallipolis &amp; Jackson.
Fl.mishad. 2 Rooms &amp; Battt ShOw· ·
Near Thurman. Beautiful Rolling
er, Downstairs, Clean, ,No Peta,
Meadows, Wllh lota Of Road
Frontage. Prices Slart AI $12.500. . Deposit &amp; References Required;
740-446-1519.
(
land Contfacts ~vallable. Free
Maps. ANTHONY LAND CO., Gracious ll\llng. 1 and 2 bedroom
LTD t·f!00.2t3'8365.
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middlt·
350 lota &amp; Acreage

••l

1-888-1582·3345

International Company StaKing
Dynamic Individuals For E·Com·
merce Salas. Flexible Hours I Un-- ·
limited ·Income. 1·88~ 7"'·4103,
www.fHOurcea-r·oollmlttd.oom

nandai2000.com.2.html

(No Pllone Caito PteaM).

330

For sale· Prime Star S~stem also
wanted older RCA OirectTY. or
Hugh's systems with access
card, pay $150 &amp; up caohtll Call

~!"•Dk~ra

Chrlaly'o Family Living, apart·

23 ACRES 121,000
Oft SR 7 Soulh 01 Clalllpotlo. No
Rostrlctlonal NEEDS TLC.,$2,300
Down on Land COntrect
MEIGS COUNTY

Schools ·Churches ·Daycarea •
Muffin Batter. Customer Service:
•5 Star Rating• we Deliver II .

738-,1409,

Professional
$ervlces

Delall Ortanled. Able To Work In·
dopondonlly As WeH AI Port Of 87!-1245.
AToam. Full Stnam Package In· lrinovative Fundral&amp;ing Ideas.

Sporta Organlzauona, SoU Tho
UUfmalo In Gourmal ·Cookfo &amp;

Ont~ At Oakwood
Barboursvlllt,~304·

Firewood For Sate, $40 A Face
Cord, C~I74Q.3!18·91148.

wuher, Refrigerator Provided .
Water And Trash Removal Included. Tennant Pays Electric ~
I Eleclrlc. No Pats , Non-

shop &amp; mo\lles. Call 740--446·

33 www.anewhorlzon.org Ll·
censed, Bonded, 1naured. Nation·

ployme~t Rotoronces To: Planned
Paranlhood 01 Southeast Ohio,
398 Richland ' Avenue, At~ ens
0H 45701 Closing Date Ia Febru·
ary 18, 2000. EQE IESP

111. Washer IOryer. Sto\11, Dish·

$499 Down ,
Homes In

Almoll Evttryono Ap·

P'O'ed. t.eoo.er7·347e Ext. m.

COMPUTERS! $79 -18 /MO.
EASY OUAUFYINGI FAST,
NEW 500 ,600 MHz . Comptoto
INTERNET, SoltwaJt, Tochnk:al
Help, 800.300·2840, Atfordablo
lncl..r.d. Tennant Ptyo Etoclrlc • Techrok&gt;glos.
Total Ela~trl c. No Pets. NonSmokers Only. $350/Mo .• $300 Flrowood $140 Dump T)'Ul;k Lood,
Oeposll, 740-4-46-958!5 Or 740· 140.379-2756.
440.2205 Ask For Vlr!inla. '
Firewood For Salt, $40 A Load ,.
Applications Being Accel)ted For Heap Accepted, $90 Cord, 1989
Very Nice Two Bedroom In Coun· Ctvallor $400 DBO, 74D·2~8· .
try SeHing, Ytl Close To GaiUpo· 6663.

CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Sa'~ CradU Legally.
Fr.Oinlo. 888'1i59-2560.

All CredH Risks. 7-3583.

Low Monthly Payments. Y2K

room Apartment. country Sanlng .
Yet Close To Gampona. washer 1
Dryer, Stove, Refrigel'ltor Provld·
ed . Water AnCI Trash Removal

Put YoU Tax Relund To Work,

POSTAL JOBS To $18.35/HR.
INC. 'BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
·ENCE. ' FOR APP. AND EXAM
INFO. CALL I ·800·81 3·3585,
EXT 14210. 8 A.M. · $ P.M ., 7
DAYS Ids. Inc. i

eluding 401K Ratlramant Plan .
sand Resume And Three Em·

t Len $299/Mo., Includes Lot,
3(14.736-735.

Co~Uant

Checking Account. 1·600·737·
0073.

Paymanls .To ' 65% IICASH IN·
CENTIVE OFFERII Can 1-800·
328·8510 Ext. 29.

Unique. Funclralalng Product Wltl'l
Top
Fast
Food
Chains . .
www.scratchcard.com Or 1·888·

Aasumabl•.

$4,000 Down ~ Take Over Pay·
JTentl. 7-321,8. .

7-ttlM.
ApplluUona Being Acoopl~ For
Sman. aut vor~ Nlco Ono Bod·

No-

anctl,

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $219 to $370. Walk 10

INOTICEI ·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
For A Good, Stobie Job • Ploaoo recommendt that you do busl·
Submit YOUR RESUME To 1403 n111 with people you know, and
Eaolern Avo., Galllpolia, OH NOT to send money l~rough the
mall until you hava Investigated
45&amp;31, Attn: Foreman Poalllon1 ,.
tho ottonng.
Postal Joba $48,323.00 Yr. Now
Hiring ·No Experl•nce ·Paid ARE YOU CONNECTED? lnler·
Training ·Great Benellls, Call 7 not Users Wanted! $350 ·$800 I
Week 1-888-858·9336 www.ebiZ·
Days 800~29·36e0 EICL J·365

PUNDRAIBING 18 BOOIUNQI
Up To 50% Commission. Market

Non-Qualifying

COMPUTERS · Low Or $0 Dowr1.

Land Home Packages. All Areas.

·Much More Best Package on
Market. ~ust Be 18 &amp; Hav~

Application W !Service. Reduce

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17.21 /Hr. AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
Guaral)leed Hire.- For Application 15 ·30 Locallono. $4K ·S9K In·
And Exam lnlo!metlon Ceil 8 A.M. vestment. Excellent Income!!
• 9 P.M. M·F 1-686·898·5627 Ext. Finance Avalla~te . 1-800·38~·
2615 • (24 HrS.) •
24-1001.

Largest New Inventory In South·
ern Ohio. Speclal1 On Homes
And financing In Progre11. Call
For Oolalla, H8H65.0187.

D.._ llopoott RaquiNd , Reier·

Fact6ry Renov,ted 3 Bedrooms,.
5499 &amp; Assume. Oakwood, Galli·
polo, 7-3093.

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

dream.net

fLEETWOOD HOMES Of Proc·
torviKa, bhiO: ORAND OPENING

Mlecelleneous
Merch-andise

2 Bodroo,., Gallpotlo, 13215/Mo.•

Only, $450/Mo ., $400
Deposit, 740·446·9565 Or 74P·
448-2205. Ask For VIrginia.

Business
·Opportunity

Bonuses Paid. Jl You Are Looking

1888 Rodmon DanvUio 14•70
Aloo Hu Exponclo , Vtr~ Nlct,
$13,000,740381 833S.

Counb'y Uvlng 3 Or 4 Badtoomo,

(9% Altolagt RMo).

540

Apartments
.f« Rent

'•

)

'

OK. Conoumoro Flna&lt;Jilol HOO·
247-6125 Ext. I 134. VotiiOH, KS.

Srr&lt;&gt;Mr. (30')882-3880.

PosiUon Available : ROOFING
FOREMAN. Musl Be Talented,

•

. . '.:

Debt Conaolldatlon, Mortgag11
And Rtltntnclng. c- P-.

300-e75-19S7.

-

iJp To $45,000' /Yr. Billing Soft·
ware Co. Needa People To Pro·
coso Medlcil Clalma From Home.
EMERGING COMPAN¥ NEEDS Training Provldad. MUST pwn A
Medical Insurance Billing Aasls· ., Computor. Catl 7 Days t.fl88.522·
lance Immediately. II You Hove A 9048 Ext. 816.
PC You Can Earn .$25,000 To URGENTLY NEEDED lOr plasma
$50.000 Annually. Call 1-800· donora. earned $35 to $45 for 2
291-16113 Dapt. I 109.
or 3 hours weekly. Call Sera·Tec,
Homemak1r: Live ln. Wanted For 741).592-6651.

Room, Board Pluo Salary. 614·
217-5354.

GtorQill Portable Sliwmlll1 don't
ha!J jOUr logs to 1t1o mil )uot cal

ners and adults; also teach
chording and tranapoalng. If In·

$25 ·$75 /Hr. PT 1FT

Please Mall ~flume With Salary
800-223-t 149 Ext. 460.
Raqulromenlo To CHANCELLOR
DRIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS HEALTH PARTNERS, c/o "alii·
• IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Over. polls, 65 E Stoll Street, Sullo 200,
1
lho Road Start AI 29 CPM /All Columbus, OH 43215.
Ml Unloading Pay. Peroonalizod SINQ!RSI GOSPEL, CLIAN
Dlapalch, Homo Often, Holiday I COUNTRY, tnd EASY LISTEN·
Vacation Pay, 40\K /Mod ""'"· I INOI Call 1-600·469·8184 For
Denial, Assigned '99 T2000's Appointment To Come To Nash;
Rider Program 98% No ·Touch

'

Jlma Drywall &amp; construction .
Ne~ Conatructlon &amp; Remodel!

AVONI AU Areaal :ro Buy or Sell.
Shirley Speare, 304-67!-1429.
Hours, Enjoy Unllmllod Earnlnga.
(304)347-8838.

U Auto Loana, Personal Loans,

(30'11115-3013.

portunlty For Caroar Wllh Estab·
llsh~ Buolneos. Available lmme·
dlately For Ttllnlng. Salary Baaecl
On Experience. Apply Tope Fur·
ntture, 151 Second ~111111uo. Galli·

oH&lt;:a: ATTN: Qlna WI moCk

Avon Products: Stan your own InHome Buslneaa. Work Flexible

Glnot11l Cleaning tor Loc11 Offlc·
•• 01 Home. Pay NegoUable.

Care for one In country $840
month . Mobile, Honest, Non·

nlng Agency Seeking A Fuii·Timo

An E.COmmerce Business? ·
$3!10 ·$800 Nleak

220 Money to loan

celvable, Payroll And General
Tax Preparallon. Excel'-nt Op·

Secretary. 50 wpm Reql!lred.
Computer Experience A Must.

4sucoess2000.Com

180 Wanted To Do

4

Pri\late, Non-Profit Family Plan·

Disabled Practicing Attorney In
Columbus. Some Care Dullea.

t '.1fluwr.1ENT
SERVICES

.$200

DOZEN

'

Tgp Dollar: All U.S. Sit•
r And Gold Coins. Prooloeto.
amonda, Antiquo Jewelry, Gold
il'llnga, Pro·l930 v.s. currency,
:~1ortlng, Elc. Acq&lt;JIIIIIons JOW&lt;IIry
~1 M.T.S. Coin Shop, t 5 t Second
;- . . . Qaltlpotla, 7-2642.

1.
3

FRESH LARGE.

Auction Servlee,

'llalllpOIIs, OhiO 74().379·2720.

.

,:..... $).69

•

'

Margar1ne .••••••••••••• . · .I
..UNJTED VA~LEY .EL~ ~~ -••·.•.•-..1 $, 99
Cottage Ch••••·~~~·. . .. -.
DAIRY
..
$:.
.
. Flaaes
.... •••
c24 , 2/$4. '
99
Corn
:~..
· . · Ice Cream •••••••••••
.
DOLLY:. .DISOI VARIETY PK
2/$3'
/

wv 1338, 741).992·9707.

; n:i-57850r:J04.773-5447.

$--1·~~··· 3/S ·J ·

ua'tftav5QTS

'

~RICk Pearson ~ction Company,
~:;full ,time auctlonter, cornplete
. "JIUCtlon
service. Llcenaed
't86,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

.;

SINGLERO

aild Flea MBrket

•

JOWELS

=.' 2/$ .,

..

•
!:.,...

SO DRI
PAPER

BLUE BONNE! STICK 111101 LO~

Anticipated opentn_gs with the
Athan~·Melga Educational Serv·
Ice Center In the Athens County
Alternative SchooL Alternative
School Ttecher; Qualifications:
Bachelor's Degree In education
or re~ted field and demonstrated
ability to serve at-risk ~uth . ProSJI'8m Coordinator: Master's Oe·
gree and supervisory experience
In education or related field. Sal·
ary based on training and ex~rl~
ence. Coordinator a.nd Teaching
positions may be combined for
qualified applicant. Please submit
letter of Interest and resume by

· 992-6387. Wad·Sat (304)675·
5955.
.

Sale: Grace United
•Methodist Church, Second Ave·
...nue &amp; Ced•r Street, Friday Fe·

•

'

6049 E•L3125.

·Dancers Wanted Top$$.

~·Rummage

(ASSTVAR)

'

MEDICAL BILUNG. Earn Excel·
lent S S $ I Processing Claims
From Homo. Full Training Provld·

youroholne.c:om

.1111 diJ
toto 1111.11!111doy
odlllon • 2:110 P.ll.
Friday. llondty odltlon
- 10:00 a.m. Selu(doy.

...

$1''
lb.

·Yard Sale

lltiVtw,...,

' 41 oz...

'

,

ATTN: Own A Computer? Put It
To Wor~l 12&amp; ·75 /Hr. PT /FT
881-481-8224 www.work-out-ol-

DftD' !HE: 2:00 p.m.

011· -

10
·Potatoes••.••.••,,' ••••••

sltlon Apply Wll~ln AI 360 Colo·
ntal Drive, Bldwoll, OH.
·

Ate You loQklng For

Gallipolis
••
&amp; Vlclnlly
,;..._~:::::-:::::-:::-::::::---.
~
61.1. 'llud SetH Mull
"
Ba Pold In Advo-.

CRI .

''

I

'

For Those Interested In The Po·

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter·
nat Users Wantedl $350 ·$800 I
w..k t.e88·723-2553 www.work·

:!78
•

2/$

GENUINE ·# I

able.

•,Pe.ap•· t'II{O male, 0111 female, 8
~wleka old, mother Doberman.

"'-1959.

KUFT 1.201.
ORIG. VELYEETA ·
SHELLS ORI4

3
3
C
·Quarters •••••••••••~~ · ·
•

Coding. MediCal Records Spe·
clallzed Training Is Also Dt~slr­

ASSEMBLY AT HOME II. Crafts,
;;.:o·und On "Attlow.lown Road 1125/ Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,
•·.OO: Blua Healer Mix Dog &amp; Spitz 'fi'plng ... Great Payl CALL 1·800·
•.-Mix Dog, Both Wearing Collars, · 79!-0380 e.t. 1201 (24 Hre).
~Hh No Tags, Con Altar 6 P.M.

DELUXE MAC &amp;:
CHEESE DINNER

$ 59

Ho~ Senior Caro Canter Ia Now
Accepting Appl&lt;:atiOno For Mod·
leal Rooo1ds Clerk. Qualllled Appllcarno Mus1 Have K.-odQo or
Medical Terminology And 100·9

~60 · Lost and Found

CHEETOS
REG. $1.48 6.5

For Fret Clllfttt, t · 877·449·
9915.

2. MEDK:AL RECORDS CLERK

E0E

Wanted

pols.

:•Pari Lab Puppies. 2 Males. 2 fe.

'"740·~9-2927 or 741).949-30114.

..

FISCHER'S S~ICED

~E

'((~Ish Color B.eaded Rosary. Own...,.,, please coma In &amp; pick up at
;;Fox's Pizza.

Steak •••••••••••••~.
••

"Hiphly SkHied In The Art Of Car·

::,
:.; ~ou::n::::d-:a~t·-;Fo::x:::.,:-:P:::Iz::z::-a-::D:::o::n:~R:':e::"d·

$
FRESH CENTER CUT
$179
.Pork Chops ••••• J~. . · · P1zzas ··········"''• •• .
FRESH PORI CUBED $179
TO~Y'S P~PPERONI SC:HOOL

Person To Vlaw Our Beautiful
F~ Pof'lblnoil.
Holzer Senior Care Center Is

lntornel Users Wantedl
$3!10 ·SBOO Nleek
1·886-88HI7!10 •
www lllOOI't!halalll! (i(}[[)

. 'males. 7-3)49.

· Lit.

'

PleaM Send Rftume To Rhonda
Coo FIN , DON At 380 ColOnial
Olivo, Bidwell, OH Or Apply In

'~--~~------~~­

2·

'

Cited To C1ring For The Elderly

·.'J:Iawed, Fixed, House Pall 740·
446·3587 8 A.M. ·3 P.M.

Steak ••••••~••••••••••
KAHN'S
$
•
I .
·
J59
W1ener
s••••••••••••••
'

Hoiar
Conlor
AccepUng Appllullona
For..RN'o.
If You Art Energetic And Dedi·

-.'Cinnamon Color Female Cat, De·

199
Rump Roast ••••••• ~••
USDA BEEF CUBED
Lit. $,
39

'

Newli&gt; 'r'ou Thrift Shoppo

9.Wosl Stimson, Aillena
•
741).592·11142
: auallty ctolhlng and household

20 OZ. REG. ot•·'~•Y:-11

$

USDA BEEF eoNELESS

-co..

Help

Mom'a Wanlfii Mom'a Stay At
With 'r'our Fomlly. Cal Now

"' Consignment Shop Opening
•: soon on Route 2/Ciose ta the, ad , Computer Required. Call
.Locke. Will buy your Clean Medi· Ptoa Toll Free. t-868·313·

CredH Carda

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANIITIEJ
PRICES GOOD THRU FEB. 5, 2000

CHICKEN LEG

Mlrrlad Couple WHI Prg.

; vide Vour Newborn With Love

$ 99':

IAM-IOPM
~~ SECOID ST.
Accepts

.;fnlormatlon . 1·809·ROMANCE,
. -:----'· c:.ext_..:. 9735..;.:·•. Wh~ wall? Slarl meeting Ohio
; olngloo tonight. Coli toll I reo t •

24 pkc•lte

Stargell undergoes ·
minor surgery

JUNIOR

TONIGHT!

;• drts In Your Area. Call For More

·PEPSI &amp;
MT. DEW
.PRODUCTS-_

nORE HOURS

CINCINNATI (AP) - · Tl;le
Cincinnati Reds signed righthanded pitchers Javier Martinez
and Willis Roberts to minorleague contracts Tuesday and
invited both of them to spring
training.
The Reds now !\ave 69 players due ir camp, including 36
pitchers.
Martinez, who turns 23 on
Saturday1. played in Pittsburgh's
farm system last year, going 0-0
with a 5 .00 earned run average
in , 16 relief appearances for
Class A Hickory and Double-A ·
·Altoona.
. Roberts, 24, ~pent most oflast
season . with Detroit's Triple-A
farm club in Toledo, going 5-8
with .a 6.26 ERA in 31 games,
including. 12 starts. He made his
major league
debut
with
Detroit on July 2 at Minnesota,
his only appearance for the
Tigers. ·

PITTSBURGH
(AP)
Pittsburgh
Pirates
special
assistant Willie Stargell, who
hasn't returned to work since
being hospitalized in the fall,
recently underwent surgery in
Wilmington, N.C.
Pirates
general
manager
Cam Bonifay issued a statement Tuesday saying the
, surgery
was
minor
and
Stargell was
expected
at
spring training later this
month. .
.
· The' Pirates did not' disclose
the nature . of the surgery.
Stargell usually spends most of
the off-season at his Wilmington home.
Stargell was hospitalized in
October for three weeks, but
the Pirates .said his condition
was not life-threatening.
Stargell has undergone dialysis for several years, and he
required dialysis and had
blood work while being hospitalized last year. Dialysis
eliminates impurities from 'the
blood during kidney f~ilure.
Although Stargell has not
returned to his job as a special
assistant to Bonifay, he · has
made several public appearances jthis winter and was to
have appeared at the Pirates'
fan fest this weekend.
The Hall of Fame outfielder
.owns the Pirates' record for
career home runs with 475.
He was the National League
co-MVP while leading the '
Pirates to the 1979 ' World
Series
championship
a .nd
starred for the Pirates' 1971
Wodd Seri~s winners.

DATING

Han Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·

•

Wanted

1. IIECIISTliiiED-

Monlho. FREE Shipping. 1-800.
755,7880.

Reds sign pitchers
to minor league .
deals

Help

I"

,

eo,

· ~

740.211!1·. ,

�Poge B 6 • !he Daily S,ntinei
630

•

...w.dnllcMy,
~·

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor"., Ohio

'

.
The Dally Sentinel • Ptge B 7

2,2000

L111ntock

NEA Cro••word
. Puzzle

Trail HOlliS For SM. Starttng At

$1 ,000, 7&lt;0-381 1!04.

PHILLIP
ALDER

AOHA. 2 Old Aod,Roon S1Ud
Colt, Foundation Bloodllnll;
Brown &amp; White 3 Year 'Old Pony,
7o10-318-t130.

I L'l

8Uoclc &amp; Wh"o Mini Golding PQnv,
$400; Yearling Bolgln Golding ,

SELF ITORAIE

Oarlt Sorrel While Mane &amp;. Full
Blue. Good looking Colt, $800:
1999 Moniz 18 Ft. HorM ISiock,
Comb. 1 Fl. Till, 7 A. Wldl, 7,tm

21170....-n

Ro.cl

Raclnt,Ohlo

Pd A•lo, I lug Spoke Whnlt,
Relocated Olvfdtr Gate To Hall

Big H9rot1, $5,600, 740·367-

Advertise your
.message

7Q60.

Butcher Hog 740-~510.

640 • Hay &amp; Grain

(7&gt;10) 367-0266 •
1-800·950·3359
Gt.rP··-

Slat 5' X 10'

·""~

$8.00 column Inch w.ekdaya
$10.00 column Inch Sundaya

Slraw: Br~t Wlrt Tie suaw Year
•Round Delivery &amp; Volume 01&amp;·
.count Available . Heritage Farm.

417'71
740141-2217

to 10' x 30'

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: RoMie Jones

7:00AM ·I PM

'

.

1' 11 a ...... 01110
740 085 3813
•• thru ... PIMIIc CUlvert In tiiiiDk .
full Une Of Water SlOI'IIII Tlr:l• •
s.ptlc, Clatern 1'lnb
, ...,.. Pipe: 3" lhru a·, o.. Pipe • Alii•
Open:

..

.

....

0:00...12:00

St. Rt. 7

Tuppea1 Plalu, OH

Repo • Dlvotded

200 Round Bales of first cutting

Hay, harvnted In l 998. Hay Is
located at tha lakin State Farm,
Box 9, Plant lane Aoad, lakin,
WY 25287 {.Across from Lak in
State Hospital, Rt. 62 North of

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters

.,,....-.

• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
. Free Estimates

Point Pleasant, WV ). Hay has
bean stored Inside. Average

weight per bale Is. 900· 1tOO lbs.
Hay will ba sold In unl1a of 25
bales per person. Our personnel
and equipment will aaslat In
loading. Hay Is available tor In·
spectlon, prior to bid . Contact
Person : John leport, Acting

.

Joseph Jacks

IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota 's,

Progreaal\18 top llna.

Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·
ties . Call Nowl 800·772 -7470 :

..·'

-·
e..,

~

'

t 973 Red Plymouth Satelllle 383
Motor, Auto"matlc, Runs Great!

Haullng*Umestone*Gravel
Sand*Tqp$0.11*F111 Dirt*Mulch
"'Bulldozer Ser~~ICes· .
\

$2,500 OBO, 740-256-1233.

,,

1980·90 Hondas Frpm $29/Mo .• ·

446-2342
992-2156

3901.
1984 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Mint
Condition, 740--367-7117.
·

1985 Escort , $695, 740·448·

2155.
1986 CJ7 6 Cylinder, 4 Speed,

Hald Top, S4.eoo. 740-245-9443 . .

1986 Trans-Am 350, Automatic,
Good Condition. $1,99!5 . 740·
44&lt;Hl390.

•

.,

,.

•,

I

\

.)

Cellular ·
·Jeff
Warner Ins.
.'

(740)

~-3470.

'

r

992-5479

$3.500, OBO 740-368-9788.

$3,9()0.(304)773-5840.
1990 Gao Tracker, LSI, 4x4, A.C.,
5Spd ., Caasette, Looks/Runs
Good. 3ml per gaiJon. (304)675-

. 1991 PlymoUth Laser ·RS, Loaded,
107,000 Miles, $3,600 OBO; 1985

.

In And See ·~~• •
Steve Riffle ..,:,
es Representative:
larry Schey

Stop

Call .l'or _..loftrl'mo!loe

S..lftJ1 Y'ou'III11Mfln ll'lr

992·93~

Clclu•f~td S"t'DI'I

t992 Cavalier A/S 82K $3, 1_95;

o,·tumr

. Public S.lt and Auction

1993 Che~y Cavall9r, 81K, good
condition &amp; gas mileage. $2800,

740·985-3505. .

Now ;, rht timt for 1-r-r-r-8l
buys in rht clossi(ieds

730 Vena &amp; 4-WDI

OUTS ANDING 2 PAY AU.CTION
· FRIDA.T, FEBRUARY 4, 51~~ PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 4100 PM
LEMLEY'• AUCTION BARN

1996 Jup Chorokoe Spor1, 4 dr.,
auto, alr, amlfm cassette, , crulle.

.t' r;,.;;.;.;.;;...
BIG NATE
_____...,

I
t

. '~~-':"

rr-

,.

1992 DOdge

' · 740·3BS·0823 (Hbme) or 74i)·24!t-9866, !Barn)

11om 280 Diesel 314

ton pickup, oacjlleol condition,
I89QO, 740. 5012.

1993 F-3110 414, DIIHI XLT,
AutomoHc, ,W, Pl, 140· 366·
17116.
1994 QMC Jimmy, 4Door, .4·WDrive. I:Ooclod. High· Mlloogo, Ell·
collont
c:iondl11on. · $7999.

(3041171-'IM--.

Lemler· , .;

840 l!lic:trlcltl and
A_,rigtfatlon
Realdtnflll or co'mrMrclll wiring:,
111w aervlce ar repairs. M11ter U·

censed eleclrlolln. Ridenour
Elec:lrlcal, WV0003061 304-87~-

B.J.
. Bow..,..
·,DIDidtlllltf

17118.

'

•uo. . .d 8lld Bonllllllb'...._ Of 0~" , ···
. .. C.ltlll-(·~~ . .. .. ~· Food . ' ,,
'."Not .......!l,-ble For loal.t.,,.Of I.Ht Pr'DPIPQ~

·,
. I'

'

~·

'

•

1.

3NT

,;:r.ce_
8 Nervenetwurk

II~

11 Scramble Ill
21 StomiCh

22;:
11idlell
23

:::r:-o··

24UMyour-.
25 lrlforiMIIon

Paas

a=.t.-·28 social m1e111

All pass

zecioollnrmty

30 Church plr1 ·
Belalum

37P......e

38=.
- .a.

41
Anthony
42 Atllntlon!IC'Iing
aound

1:

lanaHW8paper
Ullni..S dlnctly·ta

33795 Hilan4, Rd.
Porrtf!roy, Ohio

,..., daol

740-992-5212

Call 112-11•

1ho chuckle .quottd

. 'by filling In tho milling "'lrds
lram ...P No. 3 below.

you develop

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

sci&amp;M Lm ANSWIU

Creole ~ Humus -Parch - Wilder· MIRROR
I always knew thallhe mosl effective safely device .in
your car is a cop in your rear 11iew MIRROR.

I WEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY21

, . !til •••

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
. Pomoror, OhtO
22
l.Otal

;- '•
,,

Ql '

..............
~.
Now Consjruction &amp; '
, Rcmodding , Kitc~cn
·Cabinets· Vl.,Yl,Sid,ngRoofa • Deets - Oaraacs

Free Esllmatet
7~742-3411 ,.

.

Bryu~ec

Www

'

•

~~:!UJ1r..~~

·' !'leW Ho"*'/ V]OY\

·

• Replacement Wlndoiva
• Flqom Addition~ ·n·
. : • Roollrig , ;t&gt;£

·&lt;OMM~nU51DiimM· ·
FREE ESTIMATES'' '

7"·9·~·7S~J­

(NO 8Undily t.IJI)i•i.

' 'Thursday, Feb. 3. 2000
·
~ · : ~nthe year ahead, you will be giv·
~n niore opportUnities !han usual.
Jiowever, ~(!hough !his is good, you
jnll'lt 'not ·sc8tter your fon:es in such
a way !hal none will be realized.
I ~QI1JARIUS (Jan. 20-~d!. 19)
pxtggerating you_r acco~pbs~ments
jlut:of feelings of msecunty wt~l only
· erurcerbaie your. thoughts of tnadep y. DOn'·t succlimb to lhese urge~.
.Rnow
to look for roman« and
~011'11 find it. The Astro-Graph
M!!tchmaker instantly reveals which
,,iJis arc . rOnltuitically perfect for
'tQu. ,Mai( $2.73 t\) Matohmaker, c/o
hl!l'newspaper,.P,O. Box 1758, Mur~~ Hill S,tiltio~. · New York, NY
0136.
'
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) How
~ou .han41e your financie,l or colt)·
Jllen:ial .affairs loday must be care·
.flllly analyzed frrst. If you get care·
-less.. gains could quickly be replaced
· b•y'loses.
, ·
.
I

where'

IOIEIT ISSILl'

&lt;O.,Pmotl·

. StOp • eonq,.r.
_ FAEI!

I

unMAns
IIIII U73:

,.

·'A
..
1. 'W='~
.

Sldll\ll • New Gar'll8,&amp;

"

..,

\'

10 Troplalll fruit
11-.
1ZArtdlco

By Phillip Alder
43"~ve-First, the answers to the supplementary lie-breaker qiteslions in .tne
44 Run
45Exon:lae
Christmas competition:
3. Dummy hasA-J-9, you have K47~,_
5-4 in hand. Whal is the name of the L..-+-+--1-488ellevl-not
play when, needing three lriclcs from 1...-1--l--1--1--1-48W-out
the suit, you start with dummy'sjack?
110 Wound
It is a backward finesse. It is normally 1..-+-+-+-lf-+-mer1l
UZin&gt;
against the odds because it requires 1..-l.-.1-.o.L.....J'-..L..M ·ca1. boa
two cards to be well placed·- !he 10
and queen ·· rather than only one card
·- the queen -- for the normal finesse.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
4. What are probably represent•·
by Luis Campoa
lions of Charles VII of France;
Callbrity ~ ~··· ... CNIMd lfOm quouionl bY tlmciUI ~. putllld PNMI"'
"""
1 n 1 W - - I o l - . 7....y'o-, E - G
Charlemagne, Emperor of the Franks;
Julius Caesar; and Alexander, the
Greek Emperor? Our deck of cards is
p I
ZMO
p I
PNFADZJLZ
' 8 M J Z
derived from one developed in
France. In that deck, these were the
p I
Y K I Z,
F J IZ
ZMG
FDGIGLZ.
· representations of the kings of
spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs,
RLA817'
BMA
XKZKDG ...
ZMG
respectively.
5. Bokk, Juvenia, Millwarkey,
ZPZA
JSZAD)
XPCN
(NGWPSJL
Moscilo, No Name, and Saftle Spade
-·which' one is not a bidding system?
' EKPUJD
Millwarkey. Bokk and Saffle Spade
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The most gifted membenl ollhe human apecleo ·are
at
their creative bast when IIIey cannot have tl1elr way.'- Eric Hoff.er .
come from Sweden; Juvenia and No
Name are Polish; and Moscito, which
slarted by stinging opponents in AusWOlD
trali'a, was developed by two New
I&amp; ill
Zealanders.
'
'
l~hotl loy CLAY I . POlLAN
6. What is the leading of an
O four
R-ranoo ltrrers of lilo
unsupported high honor card to cre·OCTOmbltd words below ra .fonn lour tlmplt _,ell. kl~
ate an entry in partner's hand called?
, A Deschapelles Coup, named afler
L I CC E I
Guillaume of that ilk, who was a top
1
r:::::::====:::::::~ ' whist player:
.
.
.1 I I
I
Here is an example of the
Deschapelles Coup. Defending
PL E0 E
against three no-trump, East wins the
first two !ricks with his heart h9nors.
Now there is only one lead to defeat
tl\e contract: the club king.
Where is West's entry? As South
NUOAT
OuQte from a famous director
is marked wilh the spade ace from his
"The
fool cannot be a good actor,
inilial respon &lt;c, West's only potential .
but
a
good actor can • • - the " .. -.'
in-card is the club quc:en.

High, &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
.. .

'
/

• Donllly
7 lllerk af

1.-.L.-.I..-L.-L.-L.- J

. At~J~o'dlllnu

.J

3
41nc111'apl.5-def,.._

1-.,.,,,. . . . ,. ,--.-,--r,,r-r,~ Q Complo1t

•G•M~•• ·

.

-··tch
=e.-lnb..

2 PaF w

.--...,F_,I,....D,....,...O""'M,...,Y.,..._..,,

·--·~ ,.,
~
&lt;comP'* '

.

OWner: Nick Carsori ·
u•Th!s Ia one of the be~t s8.ies ~ha~ had In monthslll
' '
There Is trqly' so~ethlng for everyone... · ·
"'I •
. "Statementa made .s ay of sale take precedence over printed matter!

•·''

/

·'

DOWN

Christmas
solutions II

cqWc;;!:[

· . AuotlonMr~ :Le.ue 'A•

Pass

Now. Ren~

•)I•

1911 Ford Broneo ~M4. $2850,
740-f48i~1 . '
'

(ttllowcornI alorlor)

,_

r 1 1 r .!

"A Better

8580 ST; RT. 588 {OLD RT. 351. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.:

a--on

;""*'*

r

CLICK!

750 ~~ State Street
IAl~~ens, Ohio 45701

•••awner has Commissioned us to sell contents of Olcj.er Metg
County
Horne preVIously occupied by the late Mary Vlrgtnta Carson,
Doors, Equipped With EVerything
ReUred School Teacher and AVId Local and Ohio Historian ... ,
·
Very Good Condition , $8,150,
lilt, pw, pl. 4x4, roof rack , tinted
741).245-5009.
windOws, 740-962-2143, 740-992••FRIDAY, PEBRUARY &gt;&amp;, 5:30 PIP•
6373,
.
1994 PontlactGrand-AM, 2dr.l
Boston rocker, sm. painted cupbOard, S!fl. one drawer
5spd, Teal Green w/tlnted wind·
Motorcycles
trunks, oak dresser (painted), 48" round oak table, plank bot~o
ows, American Racing Wheels, 740
New Tires, C.O. Player &amp; Car '92 Polarlo 250 4·whuler, 1800
chairs, small tables &amp; stands, treadle sewing machine, cast Iron floo
·Alarm, Exceuent Condltlqn.
trade ,tor decent car, ·740·7•2·
ll!ptpil! kitchen cabinet. w/stencUed glass .. prim. bucket bench, sev.
14.200.( 304)773· 5103
al1ar or
2999.
Tup~Pialn•Che.,. " pcs:-·orrur~ture In ~as . found" cond.,such as: quUt fralnes. o~d \ ~hatr
5:30PM or Leave Message.
WataraaDialsRitl,__ &amp;' rockers, ":fS" Hoosier baae (oak),' sm. · washstand, 2 ·· Oa
1999 Polaris
leas than 500
1995 CheVy Corelca 3.1 litre V·
3tiiMI1 r OH
30 01111
' board s, jeUy cup-b oar.d ~ . Iots O•~ · pictures,
.
Miles. $5,000 firm , Phone:
Rttdwllla
cup
prints . an d, VI. c t or
6, Beautiful Car, A/C, Power (304)57e.3259, Aftor 5PM.
41172
Windows &amp; Doortocka, Asking
als.a315
frames. 1909 rallrolld map, SUver plate flah&lt;(are,. blue ·&amp; :whlte swlr
$1,000, 740-388·8210.
Rapol'18
coffee pot. butter molds, coffee gr~der, edgemont &amp; pennant s:racke
760 Auto Parta &amp;
11
blln Ro1111 ,
ttna, other ' .adv. ttns, Datsy mQdel 1000 fiB Oun In ortg. box,
1996 Mustang 33000 ml•a: 1989
Acccra10rlee
Cavalier l-24. (304)e7!5-4154.
C~=··
OH
432~5
,~·s, quilts, 15 pea. childs tea set (ttn), embr.older
Budge1 Prfced ltanamlulons All
e
.
R
aporla
lin
.
,
.
dill.
Lamp, ou Iampi!, dresser lamps, ,stoneware jugs, jar
1999, Chevy Cavalier, Whl1e, 2 Types, Acceu To Over 10,000
405
Drs, 5 Spd., Am/Fm CaoMHe, AI Transmlsalona. eve Joints, 740c':r1...!.':-:v·
=
IIIOI
&amp; bowls, Jn!lk· bottles, COurttrr antiq~ea, kitchen Items, DepreSS!O
C, Rear Defroai, 1,950 mt~~Js. Ask· 245-5617.
The Tuppera Plaine· glass, sev. bOxes of old glassware and iilahes. old plcturea and prints,
lng $8,250.00 Obo. 740-25e-1011
Cheater
Water Dletrlct boxes of pld books and magazines, McGuffey readers, 1964 St: Lout
790
Campers &amp;
93 Cutlass Suprem• 2 dr,
mervaa
the
right to reject Cardinal's . baruier, pony saddle, apple butter kettle, Un ·types, Oper
MotorHomet
13,000mllos, real oharp $6500.
.
eny
and
all
Bide or to glasses. sewing notions. small schooL bells, other items not lis
304-773-5840.
1973 Dodge motor home, full
. lncrca•• or dtcreaee or yet
· --.
·
·
hot Wlltr, stove, oven
omit ony Item or lteme .
""
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE bathroom,
refrigerator, good condition, 740:
ond/or award to lilt l-et
•• SATURDAY, PBBRUARY -iS, &gt;&amp;:00 Plr•
IMPOUND. Honda'S Toyota's,
end _beet BIDDER. Eech
·
'
,
Ch&amp;vys, Jeeps, And Sporl Utili· 992-2143, 74Q-992.6373.
propoNI muet contain 1111 Blanket box (Oovetatled.. hand fprged , ~WE, , ·Early ·1800 s), fan
ties. Call Now! 800·172·7470;
S ERVI CES
EXT.6336.
full name of wwy per;on or oak drop front secretary, sq. oak pedestal .table w /5 ' )eaves. o
company
lnttrtlted In ttie washstapc;l (serp. frQnt &amp; towel !&gt;IUJ,, Jllllnted ~rner cupboard, wtcke
CARS FROII $29/110. lm·
••me. The TlfP)Ie!C Plallll· r'?Cker, Vl~tprlan parlor ch&amp;p',' 1930's: ward~o~ , 2 ohlc· dressera.
pounds /Repos. Fee. so .Down 124 810
Home
Cheater Woter . Dletrlct . hlghlloy Cherry · work:· table · oak drop front desk wt(h matchln
Mos. 019.9% For Ulllngs 1-800-'
lmprov..;.-tl
,...rvas 1111 right to Wlllve
'
. d'
·
31Q.3323X2156.
-~-.;....---·..:...;,"
...
;,;,:.:'.:..._
any lnformallllee or bookshelf, sm. oak sldeboar !. 3 fancy )lress back chairs, splnnln
lrNgularltlealn11118kf!llnll. wheel, oak rocker, oak washa~d. ntcc upholatered settee, nice ol
720 TI'1JCkl lor Slle
.
WA==Byordlrof1111'11.1ppete market basket. sesstons mantle clock ·w/pUiari ahd claw. Jeromes
1986 Dodge 1f2ton Pick-up. UncondltiOftal lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnlahed . EaPIIJn~heallr w.ter Darrow tall clock, 2 GreensbOro, pa . .stone j~s. Rosevllle 1· Weller an
000
II
S
. 64. m as, lanl 6, Au1o, AIC, 1abllohod 1975. Gall 24 Hra. 1740)
AMIFM Coli. Cuo1om Slrlping 446 -Q 870 , HQ0-287_0578 . R~­
~ Hull art pottery; yard long floral print, FU dogs on Alabaster, c;:ostum
4111 dey of Ja":; eweliy ft:om 20's &amp; 30's, 2 .s ets of collector plates (Gone Wlth Th
Pkg. Vary nice truck . $2,800
-•
Thl12
080, Partial trades considered. ~ WlttrpfOOtlng.
(1)28 (2) 2 1 3 tc
WJnd, Norman RockWell), beaded purse ·&amp; -pin cushion, hat pins,
(304)671H1859.
'
' ·
VIntage clothing (ChUds and· AdultS), old fountain pens, Vlctort ,
1993 Fold F·3SO XlT 4•4. 7.3 U·
Happy
Ad
photo album, cast Iron union bank, ·castor set, Amethyst &amp; Crys
tre Dtesel Crew Cab, AfC. Tilt,
Oruloo, Powtr Window&amp;, Spray ln.
rfume set, 1910 cal~:ndar plate (StansbJ.try Drug, Middleport, Oh,lo), .
Sed11nor, 74Q!:MH115. , ·
ow blue'. hand~nted bow~i (Oe,rman)~ Homer ~ughiiri Nautllu
· Eggsh~l (Shauv .Tulip, 1~ P.lace set~. Ironstone pitcher &amp; bowl,
1993 Foid Ranger Splaoh, 4 cYI. 5
sp., 90,tm rnlln, o... uonl C01111" C&amp;C General Home Main·
~ral pes, &lt;iirDepresalon Gllll!s. large amount of coUecuble an
lion, $5800, 7&lt;0-992-1182 or 304, tenonco· Painting, !lnyl siding,
.
antique
il;las&amp;Ware. •bon.a ld Duck" bakelite pencli , sharJ)ener, bes
carpon1ry,
dooro,
wlndOwo,
11111111,
773-5305,
1\ome ilplllr and mont. Far
selection · of paj)er ·goods ever sold ·' to Include Local, Military, . Black,
1994 Cr.wj S· 10 pickup Ex1ond- !roo ootlrnott coN Chol, 740.982·
lctorlan .&amp;. Holiday post cards from early 1900's, 1907 Kyger M.E.
ed cab, e cyHndor. 5 spied. air, 6323.
Churc;h calendiU, Hlatbrlcal fbmd Atlas (1883), outstanding library o
PS, PB, 120,tm - s , good co,..
dillon, $4500, 7~0·~~6.7194 or Jlma Drywall &amp; Conllructlon.
old books. Metgs, Oallta and ,Ohio HistOry:, CIVIl War, Kennedy, Novels, .
New Con1trucUon &amp; Remodlll
ChUdren's
Booka, l.ocal Advel'Uslng Paper Goods, very good selectlo
Drywall,
Siding,
Roofs,
Addl7~--·
11ono, Pointing, tic. (304)874•
of shQWCase smalls too numerous to lis~. 1..
·
,"
730.. Vent 6 4-WDe
-4123 or (304)874-0155,
'
'
., ..
1994 Gamel Color BUick Reg81, 2

lu:lt16l£ N50UT
P«., AAY..U..i?

i

1991 Cavalier 64K $2.695; 1969
Cullass Supreme 79K $2,495;

Qoo6.for

Ill

• to

- '::~::' S@\\4tllA-~'E~s·

c-ry

,,.

Toyota 4 Runner· 4 WO, loaded,
Rough, $1 ,500 OBO, 740·446-

1992 Ford Probe GL 4 Cylinder 5
Speed, CO Player AIC, $3,500,
740-388-8866.

e,\[f..ft.Y Y~ !

N.L, WAA.I~
&amp;.INC.&gt;

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

· oC~
. •lat bioi
So..... Melpuot.GIIIIo

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
'
BIDS
Stplrtlt a.. ltd Bide for
the P•lllllng of our 200,000
gallon tlev81ad atorage tonk
on Succaaa. Road . will be
· received by the Tup~
Plelna,Chnter W81.r
Dlatrlct 81 the omce located
II 31581 BIT, 30 Rood,
RHdavllla, Ohio 48772,
until 10:00 o'cloak a.m.
'(local time,) February 1~.
2000, end then at Mid office
publicly opened and r..d
11
~ud. c~py of the
apeclflcatlona moy be
obtlllnacllrom:
..

! YOO

,..I&lt;Jf\'( N!£. YOU 50 OOtJI'H ~ ·

prot Ideo wute dilpoool

7126.

1989 Pontiac 8000LE 4 Oot;na,
96K $1 ,795; Other Front Wheel
Drive Cars And Pick-Ups, Cook
. Molors, 74Q-448.0103.
.

..
.,
000'1 TW. If'£. 'COU~ Fll:E.mtiC&gt;

Southern Ohlo D~

675~1333

1_989 Olds Regency Brougham ,
excellent condition. Nice Car.

LOSER

.,~T '(~
.oo TH ~

Ready lor a cllaaae?

1988 Park A"Venue, Nice Shape,

6962.

I

EXCAVfiTinG

IOQ.IO

0
19.9% Listings. 600-319·3323 Elct

AUNT LOWIIZY II . J-Jo-fi.

· and

EXT. 7632.

lmpounclsl 0 Down. 24 Months

~

,. .

...._
Cald,....l
.-

m-

31 Rtverln

I'M HOMe FROM SCHOOL,

•
••

!

..

\

......

__.,

Discount
•91Z-7945

sscio.oo Btarburat

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POliCE

.

'It'

~~~~

Ope~ing lead: • 6

50 Yrs. Combined
Experience
Ho.nest &amp; Reliable
Free Estimates
Senior Citizens

Main St.,
f"omeroy,OH
, Piylng $80.00
1*1111'¥
$300.00 Coverlll'

710 Autoa lor Sale .

J

PWMBIHG

ATI:30 P.M.

TRANSPORTATION

INT

,

~·

•

,
-

C111 ~for lnetant Approvallt'&gt;f

hunmedft.

Eagl•
. Club Bingo On .
Thursdays

WV 26175. (Fned bids will be
aa:eptod al (304)652-60110).

/

'•

No~ ..

51 a.wart
A Quinn II

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
. South ' Weat Nortl1 ENI

't

Yciu're TrNted wllh Reepectl

,/.

$41.00per .

Manager, (304)675.0S56.
Wl'ltten bids will be accepted un·
Ill February n , 2000. Blda can
be mailed to; WV Department- ol
Agriculture , Marketing and De·
velopment Olvlslgn , land Sac·
lion, P.O. Box 160, Sistersville,

,.,... ,

I

. ....

40C..Ior

• 10 7 2
• 10 8 7
• J 10 8 7

•

27 Conb IIIDt
32Fobll......,
33 Chicle '*34-MCI. 311 a.... q-'Z
•

• AQ 3

••

WDRRYIIIU!

STOP]

i

1 1/2"
Water PI~
.
\

.740-992·2068·

I

e.,_~~rup~ey

740-985-3813
prllf hnl•p••••

21 .,.,....11111111 23
Miliftia

South

J~•FII•-

47U..achllr

ST Dun alit

20......_

. • 9 6 52
• AQ
o K32
• K8 43

·-............
~~~~:.:r

ling

II

11 Tamp. unit

Eaot

CIIDrr
PIOBLIMI???
No Crdl • Slow er.dlt •

G"W Pludes

._from ..
.......

17 Did

• K J 10 7
• K3
tAQJ94
• A9

,304)675-5124.
Surpluo ~ FO&lt;-

7

18

II:CI0-4:30 Wllltd8ya

ADWQO-SVSIBUIC

1 Uil Willi ellot1

13 IICullll
14w.15 Cot kd

at. Rt. 7

Hou,.

ACROSS

'

/

.

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\

'

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be
careful today not to put yourself inc
VIRGO (Au'g. 23-Sept. 22) Try to
the minority because of opinions ' go il alone today. Relying on friends
about which you feel strongly. If you or associates to come through for you
see the majority disagrees, drop the. might not work out as you hoped,
subject before it impairs your image. because ihey'll have !heir own probTAURUS (April 20-May 20) .lems to handle. .
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It might
There's a chance today that you
could have a tendency tQ overest1- be wise ro take a hard look at your
mate your position and underestimate own behavior today if the entire
the size of the problem with which world has appeared to be out of step
you're dealing. Be reahst1c. .
. wilh your cadence. Maybe it's you
GEMINI (May. +I-June 20) Thts who has to get in sync.
is qne of those peculiar d~ys whe~
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
you might be better off domg bus1- might have to make a choice 1oday as
ness · with someone new who could to what Is more important to you,
offer a .fresh product or approach your material affairs or your personrather than settling for old standbys. al relationships. Choose realistically,
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
SAGmARIUS ·(Nov. 23-Dec. you' re going 10 best another tpday1 21) Any gambles you wish 10 .take
you've got 10 be smarter pn!l more today must be in proportion to whDt
creative than f!1e other guy. Don'! .you hope to gain, .or el": bjg ri~ks .
count too heavily on y~ur luck and could incur big losses. It's tmperatrve
good looks to get you by.
you know .what you're getting i~to.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) To save
CAPRICORN (Dec. ~2-Jatf.l9)
yourself from suffering any new A~lhough generally you re a rather
lui!IJls today, icview your old play fne~dly and tolef'!lnl .pe~on, 1oday
bOOii first to see how lhings worked you could. h~ve a~ mchnatron to walk
out previously wheri you dealt wirh 81'ound wrth. a chrp on. your shoulder.
" 'I ar st'tu au'on • ·
Someone Will knock 11 off.
• ·
a .slmt
' .

.,

.,

�Poge B 6 • !he Daily S,ntinei
630

•

...w.dnllcMy,
~·

Pomeroy, Mlddlepor"., Ohio

'

.
The Dally Sentinel • Ptge B 7

2,2000

L111ntock

NEA Cro••word
. Puzzle

Trail HOlliS For SM. Starttng At

$1 ,000, 7&lt;0-381 1!04.

PHILLIP
ALDER

AOHA. 2 Old Aod,Roon S1Ud
Colt, Foundation Bloodllnll;
Brown &amp; White 3 Year 'Old Pony,
7o10-318-t130.

I L'l

8Uoclc &amp; Wh"o Mini Golding PQnv,
$400; Yearling Bolgln Golding ,

SELF ITORAIE

Oarlt Sorrel While Mane &amp;. Full
Blue. Good looking Colt, $800:
1999 Moniz 18 Ft. HorM ISiock,
Comb. 1 Fl. Till, 7 A. Wldl, 7,tm

21170....-n

Ro.cl

Raclnt,Ohlo

Pd A•lo, I lug Spoke Whnlt,
Relocated Olvfdtr Gate To Hall

Big H9rot1, $5,600, 740·367-

Advertise your
.message

7Q60.

Butcher Hog 740-~510.

640 • Hay &amp; Grain

(7&gt;10) 367-0266 •
1-800·950·3359
Gt.rP··-

Slat 5' X 10'

·""~

$8.00 column Inch w.ekdaya
$10.00 column Inch Sundaya

Slraw: Br~t Wlrt Tie suaw Year
•Round Delivery &amp; Volume 01&amp;·
.count Available . Heritage Farm.

417'71
740141-2217

to 10' x 30'

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: RoMie Jones

7:00AM ·I PM

'

.

1' 11 a ...... 01110
740 085 3813
•• thru ... PIMIIc CUlvert In tiiiiDk .
full Une Of Water SlOI'IIII Tlr:l• •
s.ptlc, Clatern 1'lnb
, ...,.. Pipe: 3" lhru a·, o.. Pipe • Alii•
Open:

..

.

....

0:00...12:00

St. Rt. 7

Tuppea1 Plalu, OH

Repo • Dlvotded

200 Round Bales of first cutting

Hay, harvnted In l 998. Hay Is
located at tha lakin State Farm,
Box 9, Plant lane Aoad, lakin,
WY 25287 {.Across from Lak in
State Hospital, Rt. 62 North of

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters

.,,....-.

• Siding • Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing
. Free Estimates

Point Pleasant, WV ). Hay has
bean stored Inside. Average

weight per bale Is. 900· 1tOO lbs.
Hay will ba sold In unl1a of 25
bales per person. Our personnel
and equipment will aaslat In
loading. Hay Is available tor In·
spectlon, prior to bid . Contact
Person : John leport, Acting

.

Joseph Jacks

IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota 's,

Progreaal\18 top llna.

Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·
ties . Call Nowl 800·772 -7470 :

..·'

-·
e..,

~

'

t 973 Red Plymouth Satelllle 383
Motor, Auto"matlc, Runs Great!

Haullng*Umestone*Gravel
Sand*Tqp$0.11*F111 Dirt*Mulch
"'Bulldozer Ser~~ICes· .
\

$2,500 OBO, 740-256-1233.

,,

1980·90 Hondas Frpm $29/Mo .• ·

446-2342
992-2156

3901.
1984 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Mint
Condition, 740--367-7117.
·

1985 Escort , $695, 740·448·

2155.
1986 CJ7 6 Cylinder, 4 Speed,

Hald Top, S4.eoo. 740-245-9443 . .

1986 Trans-Am 350, Automatic,
Good Condition. $1,99!5 . 740·
44&lt;Hl390.

•

.,

,.

•,

I

\

.)

Cellular ·
·Jeff
Warner Ins.
.'

(740)

~-3470.

'

r

992-5479

$3.500, OBO 740-368-9788.

$3,9()0.(304)773-5840.
1990 Gao Tracker, LSI, 4x4, A.C.,
5Spd ., Caasette, Looks/Runs
Good. 3ml per gaiJon. (304)675-

. 1991 PlymoUth Laser ·RS, Loaded,
107,000 Miles, $3,600 OBO; 1985

.

In And See ·~~• •
Steve Riffle ..,:,
es Representative:
larry Schey

Stop

Call .l'or _..loftrl'mo!loe

S..lftJ1 Y'ou'III11Mfln ll'lr

992·93~

Clclu•f~td S"t'DI'I

t992 Cavalier A/S 82K $3, 1_95;

o,·tumr

. Public S.lt and Auction

1993 Che~y Cavall9r, 81K, good
condition &amp; gas mileage. $2800,

740·985-3505. .

Now ;, rht timt for 1-r-r-r-8l
buys in rht clossi(ieds

730 Vena &amp; 4-WDI

OUTS ANDING 2 PAY AU.CTION
· FRIDA.T, FEBRUARY 4, 51~~ PM
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 4100 PM
LEMLEY'• AUCTION BARN

1996 Jup Chorokoe Spor1, 4 dr.,
auto, alr, amlfm cassette, , crulle.

.t' r;,.;;.;.;.;;...
BIG NATE
_____...,

I
t

. '~~-':"

rr-

,.

1992 DOdge

' · 740·3BS·0823 (Hbme) or 74i)·24!t-9866, !Barn)

11om 280 Diesel 314

ton pickup, oacjlleol condition,
I89QO, 740. 5012.

1993 F-3110 414, DIIHI XLT,
AutomoHc, ,W, Pl, 140· 366·
17116.
1994 QMC Jimmy, 4Door, .4·WDrive. I:Ooclod. High· Mlloogo, Ell·
collont
c:iondl11on. · $7999.

(3041171-'IM--.

Lemler· , .;

840 l!lic:trlcltl and
A_,rigtfatlon
Realdtnflll or co'mrMrclll wiring:,
111w aervlce ar repairs. M11ter U·

censed eleclrlolln. Ridenour
Elec:lrlcal, WV0003061 304-87~-

B.J.
. Bow..,..
·,DIDidtlllltf

17118.

'

•uo. . .d 8lld Bonllllllb'...._ Of 0~" , ···
. .. C.ltlll-(·~~ . .. .. ~· Food . ' ,,
'."Not .......!l,-ble For loal.t.,,.Of I.Ht Pr'DPIPQ~

·,
. I'

'

~·

'

•

1.

3NT

,;:r.ce_
8 Nervenetwurk

II~

11 Scramble Ill
21 StomiCh

22;:
11idlell
23

:::r:-o··

24UMyour-.
25 lrlforiMIIon

Paas

a=.t.-·28 social m1e111

All pass

zecioollnrmty

30 Church plr1 ·
Belalum

37P......e

38=.
- .a.

41
Anthony
42 Atllntlon!IC'Iing
aound

1:

lanaHW8paper
Ullni..S dlnctly·ta

33795 Hilan4, Rd.
Porrtf!roy, Ohio

,..., daol

740-992-5212

Call 112-11•

1ho chuckle .quottd

. 'by filling In tho milling "'lrds
lram ...P No. 3 below.

you develop

UNSCRAMBlE LETTERS
FOR ANSWER

sci&amp;M Lm ANSWIU

Creole ~ Humus -Parch - Wilder· MIRROR
I always knew thallhe mosl effective safely device .in
your car is a cop in your rear 11iew MIRROR.

I WEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY21

, . !til •••

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
. Pomoror, OhtO
22
l.Otal

;- '•
,,

Ql '

..............
~.
Now Consjruction &amp; '
, Rcmodding , Kitc~cn
·Cabinets· Vl.,Yl,Sid,ngRoofa • Deets - Oaraacs

Free Esllmatet
7~742-3411 ,.

.

Bryu~ec

Www

'

•

~~:!UJ1r..~~

·' !'leW Ho"*'/ V]OY\

·

• Replacement Wlndoiva
• Flqom Addition~ ·n·
. : • Roollrig , ;t&gt;£

·&lt;OMM~nU51DiimM· ·
FREE ESTIMATES'' '

7"·9·~·7S~J­

(NO 8Undily t.IJI)i•i.

' 'Thursday, Feb. 3. 2000
·
~ · : ~nthe year ahead, you will be giv·
~n niore opportUnities !han usual.
Jiowever, ~(!hough !his is good, you
jnll'lt 'not ·sc8tter your fon:es in such
a way !hal none will be realized.
I ~QI1JARIUS (Jan. 20-~d!. 19)
pxtggerating you_r acco~pbs~ments
jlut:of feelings of msecunty wt~l only
· erurcerbaie your. thoughts of tnadep y. DOn'·t succlimb to lhese urge~.
.Rnow
to look for roman« and
~011'11 find it. The Astro-Graph
M!!tchmaker instantly reveals which
,,iJis arc . rOnltuitically perfect for
'tQu. ,Mai( $2.73 t\) Matohmaker, c/o
hl!l'newspaper,.P,O. Box 1758, Mur~~ Hill S,tiltio~. · New York, NY
0136.
'
.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mareh 20) How
~ou .han41e your financie,l or colt)·
Jllen:ial .affairs loday must be care·
.flllly analyzed frrst. If you get care·
-less.. gains could quickly be replaced
· b•y'loses.
, ·
.
I

where'

IOIEIT ISSILl'

&lt;O.,Pmotl·

. StOp • eonq,.r.
_ FAEI!

I

unMAns
IIIII U73:

,.

·'A
..
1. 'W='~
.

Sldll\ll • New Gar'll8,&amp;

"

..,

\'

10 Troplalll fruit
11-.
1ZArtdlco

By Phillip Alder
43"~ve-First, the answers to the supplementary lie-breaker qiteslions in .tne
44 Run
45Exon:lae
Christmas competition:
3. Dummy hasA-J-9, you have K47~,_
5-4 in hand. Whal is the name of the L..-+-+--1-488ellevl-not
play when, needing three lriclcs from 1...-1--l--1--1--1-48W-out
the suit, you start with dummy'sjack?
110 Wound
It is a backward finesse. It is normally 1..-+-+-+-lf-+-mer1l
UZin&gt;
against the odds because it requires 1..-l.-.1-.o.L.....J'-..L..M ·ca1. boa
two cards to be well placed·- !he 10
and queen ·· rather than only one card
·- the queen -- for the normal finesse.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
4. What are probably represent•·
by Luis Campoa
lions of Charles VII of France;
Callbrity ~ ~··· ... CNIMd lfOm quouionl bY tlmciUI ~. putllld PNMI"'
"""
1 n 1 W - - I o l - . 7....y'o-, E - G
Charlemagne, Emperor of the Franks;
Julius Caesar; and Alexander, the
Greek Emperor? Our deck of cards is
p I
ZMO
p I
PNFADZJLZ
' 8 M J Z
derived from one developed in
France. In that deck, these were the
p I
Y K I Z,
F J IZ
ZMG
FDGIGLZ.
· representations of the kings of
spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs,
RLA817'
BMA
XKZKDG ...
ZMG
respectively.
5. Bokk, Juvenia, Millwarkey,
ZPZA
JSZAD)
XPCN
(NGWPSJL
Moscilo, No Name, and Saftle Spade
-·which' one is not a bidding system?
' EKPUJD
Millwarkey. Bokk and Saffle Spade
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The most gifted membenl ollhe human apecleo ·are
at
their creative bast when IIIey cannot have tl1elr way.'- Eric Hoff.er .
come from Sweden; Juvenia and No
Name are Polish; and Moscito, which
slarted by stinging opponents in AusWOlD
trali'a, was developed by two New
I&amp; ill
Zealanders.
'
'
l~hotl loy CLAY I . POlLAN
6. What is the leading of an
O four
R-ranoo ltrrers of lilo
unsupported high honor card to cre·OCTOmbltd words below ra .fonn lour tlmplt _,ell. kl~
ate an entry in partner's hand called?
, A Deschapelles Coup, named afler
L I CC E I
Guillaume of that ilk, who was a top
1
r:::::::====:::::::~ ' whist player:
.
.
.1 I I
I
Here is an example of the
Deschapelles Coup. Defending
PL E0 E
against three no-trump, East wins the
first two !ricks with his heart h9nors.
Now there is only one lead to defeat
tl\e contract: the club king.
Where is West's entry? As South
NUOAT
OuQte from a famous director
is marked wilh the spade ace from his
"The
fool cannot be a good actor,
inilial respon &lt;c, West's only potential .
but
a
good actor can • • - the " .. -.'
in-card is the club quc:en.

High, &amp; Dry
Self-Storage
.. .

'
/

• Donllly
7 lllerk af

1.-.L.-.I..-L.-L.-L.- J

. At~J~o'dlllnu

.J

3
41nc111'apl.5-def,.._

1-.,.,,,. . . . ,. ,--.-,--r,,r-r,~ Q Complo1t

•G•M~•• ·

.

-··tch
=e.-lnb..

2 PaF w

.--...,F_,I,....D,....,...O""'M,...,Y.,..._..,,

·--·~ ,.,
~
&lt;comP'* '

.

OWner: Nick Carsori ·
u•Th!s Ia one of the be~t s8.ies ~ha~ had In monthslll
' '
There Is trqly' so~ethlng for everyone... · ·
"'I •
. "Statementa made .s ay of sale take precedence over printed matter!

•·''

/

·'

DOWN

Christmas
solutions II

cqWc;;!:[

· . AuotlonMr~ :Le.ue 'A•

Pass

Now. Ren~

•)I•

1911 Ford Broneo ~M4. $2850,
740-f48i~1 . '
'

(ttllowcornI alorlor)

,_

r 1 1 r .!

"A Better

8580 ST; RT. 588 {OLD RT. 351. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.:

a--on

;""*'*

r

CLICK!

750 ~~ State Street
IAl~~ens, Ohio 45701

•••awner has Commissioned us to sell contents of Olcj.er Metg
County
Horne preVIously occupied by the late Mary Vlrgtnta Carson,
Doors, Equipped With EVerything
ReUred School Teacher and AVId Local and Ohio Historian ... ,
·
Very Good Condition , $8,150,
lilt, pw, pl. 4x4, roof rack , tinted
741).245-5009.
windOws, 740-962-2143, 740-992••FRIDAY, PEBRUARY &gt;&amp;, 5:30 PIP•
6373,
.
1994 PontlactGrand-AM, 2dr.l
Boston rocker, sm. painted cupbOard, S!fl. one drawer
5spd, Teal Green w/tlnted wind·
Motorcycles
trunks, oak dresser (painted), 48" round oak table, plank bot~o
ows, American Racing Wheels, 740
New Tires, C.O. Player &amp; Car '92 Polarlo 250 4·whuler, 1800
chairs, small tables &amp; stands, treadle sewing machine, cast Iron floo
·Alarm, Exceuent Condltlqn.
trade ,tor decent car, ·740·7•2·
ll!ptpil! kitchen cabinet. w/stencUed glass .. prim. bucket bench, sev.
14.200.( 304)773· 5103
al1ar or
2999.
Tup~Pialn•Che.,. " pcs:-·orrur~ture In ~as . found" cond.,such as: quUt fralnes. o~d \ ~hatr
5:30PM or Leave Message.
WataraaDialsRitl,__ &amp;' rockers, ":fS" Hoosier baae (oak),' sm. · washstand, 2 ·· Oa
1999 Polaris
leas than 500
1995 CheVy Corelca 3.1 litre V·
3tiiMI1 r OH
30 01111
' board s, jeUy cup-b oar.d ~ . Iots O•~ · pictures,
.
Miles. $5,000 firm , Phone:
Rttdwllla
cup
prints . an d, VI. c t or
6, Beautiful Car, A/C, Power (304)57e.3259, Aftor 5PM.
41172
Windows &amp; Doortocka, Asking
als.a315
frames. 1909 rallrolld map, SUver plate flah&lt;(are,. blue ·&amp; :whlte swlr
$1,000, 740-388·8210.
Rapol'18
coffee pot. butter molds, coffee gr~der, edgemont &amp; pennant s:racke
760 Auto Parta &amp;
11
blln Ro1111 ,
ttna, other ' .adv. ttns, Datsy mQdel 1000 fiB Oun In ortg. box,
1996 Mustang 33000 ml•a: 1989
Acccra10rlee
Cavalier l-24. (304)e7!5-4154.
C~=··
OH
432~5
,~·s, quilts, 15 pea. childs tea set (ttn), embr.older
Budge1 Prfced ltanamlulons All
e
.
R
aporla
lin
.
,
.
dill.
Lamp, ou Iampi!, dresser lamps, ,stoneware jugs, jar
1999, Chevy Cavalier, Whl1e, 2 Types, Acceu To Over 10,000
405
Drs, 5 Spd., Am/Fm CaoMHe, AI Transmlsalona. eve Joints, 740c':r1...!.':-:v·
=
IIIOI
&amp; bowls, Jn!lk· bottles, COurttrr antiq~ea, kitchen Items, DepreSS!O
C, Rear Defroai, 1,950 mt~~Js. Ask· 245-5617.
The Tuppera Plaine· glass, sev. bOxes of old glassware and iilahes. old plcturea and prints,
lng $8,250.00 Obo. 740-25e-1011
Cheater
Water Dletrlct boxes of pld books and magazines, McGuffey readers, 1964 St: Lout
790
Campers &amp;
93 Cutlass Suprem• 2 dr,
mervaa
the
right to reject Cardinal's . baruier, pony saddle, apple butter kettle, Un ·types, Oper
MotorHomet
13,000mllos, real oharp $6500.
.
eny
and
all
Bide or to glasses. sewing notions. small schooL bells, other items not lis
304-773-5840.
1973 Dodge motor home, full
. lncrca•• or dtcreaee or yet
· --.
·
·
hot Wlltr, stove, oven
omit ony Item or lteme .
""
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE bathroom,
refrigerator, good condition, 740:
ond/or award to lilt l-et
•• SATURDAY, PBBRUARY -iS, &gt;&amp;:00 Plr•
IMPOUND. Honda'S Toyota's,
end _beet BIDDER. Eech
·
'
,
Ch&amp;vys, Jeeps, And Sporl Utili· 992-2143, 74Q-992.6373.
propoNI muet contain 1111 Blanket box (Oovetatled.. hand fprged , ~WE, , ·Early ·1800 s), fan
ties. Call Now! 800·172·7470;
S ERVI CES
EXT.6336.
full name of wwy per;on or oak drop front secretary, sq. oak pedestal .table w /5 ' )eaves. o
company
lnttrtlted In ttie washstapc;l (serp. frQnt &amp; towel !&gt;IUJ,, Jllllnted ~rner cupboard, wtcke
CARS FROII $29/110. lm·
••me. The TlfP)Ie!C Plallll· r'?Cker, Vl~tprlan parlor ch&amp;p',' 1930's: ward~o~ , 2 ohlc· dressera.
pounds /Repos. Fee. so .Down 124 810
Home
Cheater Woter . Dletrlct . hlghlloy Cherry · work:· table · oak drop front desk wt(h matchln
Mos. 019.9% For Ulllngs 1-800-'
lmprov..;.-tl
,...rvas 1111 right to Wlllve
'
. d'
·
31Q.3323X2156.
-~-.;....---·..:...;,"
...
;,;,:.:'.:..._
any lnformallllee or bookshelf, sm. oak sldeboar !. 3 fancy )lress back chairs, splnnln
lrNgularltlealn11118kf!llnll. wheel, oak rocker, oak washa~d. ntcc upholatered settee, nice ol
720 TI'1JCkl lor Slle
.
WA==Byordlrof1111'11.1ppete market basket. sesstons mantle clock ·w/pUiari ahd claw. Jeromes
1986 Dodge 1f2ton Pick-up. UncondltiOftal lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnlahed . EaPIIJn~heallr w.ter Darrow tall clock, 2 GreensbOro, pa . .stone j~s. Rosevllle 1· Weller an
000
II
S
. 64. m as, lanl 6, Au1o, AIC, 1abllohod 1975. Gall 24 Hra. 1740)
AMIFM Coli. Cuo1om Slrlping 446 -Q 870 , HQ0-287_0578 . R~­
~ Hull art pottery; yard long floral print, FU dogs on Alabaster, c;:ostum
4111 dey of Ja":; eweliy ft:om 20's &amp; 30's, 2 .s ets of collector plates (Gone Wlth Th
Pkg. Vary nice truck . $2,800
-•
Thl12
080, Partial trades considered. ~ WlttrpfOOtlng.
(1)28 (2) 2 1 3 tc
WJnd, Norman RockWell), beaded purse ·&amp; -pin cushion, hat pins,
(304)671H1859.
'
' ·
VIntage clothing (ChUds and· AdultS), old fountain pens, Vlctort ,
1993 Fold F·3SO XlT 4•4. 7.3 U·
Happy
Ad
photo album, cast Iron union bank, ·castor set, Amethyst &amp; Crys
tre Dtesel Crew Cab, AfC. Tilt,
Oruloo, Powtr Window&amp;, Spray ln.
rfume set, 1910 cal~:ndar plate (StansbJ.try Drug, Middleport, Oh,lo), .
Sed11nor, 74Q!:MH115. , ·
ow blue'. hand~nted bow~i (Oe,rman)~ Homer ~ughiiri Nautllu
· Eggsh~l (Shauv .Tulip, 1~ P.lace set~. Ironstone pitcher &amp; bowl,
1993 Foid Ranger Splaoh, 4 cYI. 5
sp., 90,tm rnlln, o... uonl C01111" C&amp;C General Home Main·
~ral pes, &lt;iirDepresalon Gllll!s. large amount of coUecuble an
lion, $5800, 7&lt;0-992-1182 or 304, tenonco· Painting, !lnyl siding,
.
antique
il;las&amp;Ware. •bon.a ld Duck" bakelite pencli , sharJ)ener, bes
carpon1ry,
dooro,
wlndOwo,
11111111,
773-5305,
1\ome ilplllr and mont. Far
selection · of paj)er ·goods ever sold ·' to Include Local, Military, . Black,
1994 Cr.wj S· 10 pickup Ex1ond- !roo ootlrnott coN Chol, 740.982·
lctorlan .&amp;. Holiday post cards from early 1900's, 1907 Kyger M.E.
ed cab, e cyHndor. 5 spied. air, 6323.
Churc;h calendiU, Hlatbrlcal fbmd Atlas (1883), outstanding library o
PS, PB, 120,tm - s , good co,..
dillon, $4500, 7~0·~~6.7194 or Jlma Drywall &amp; Conllructlon.
old books. Metgs, Oallta and ,Ohio HistOry:, CIVIl War, Kennedy, Novels, .
New Con1trucUon &amp; Remodlll
ChUdren's
Booka, l.ocal Advel'Uslng Paper Goods, very good selectlo
Drywall,
Siding,
Roofs,
Addl7~--·
11ono, Pointing, tic. (304)874•
of shQWCase smalls too numerous to lis~. 1..
·
,"
730.. Vent 6 4-WDe
-4123 or (304)874-0155,
'
'
., ..
1994 Gamel Color BUick Reg81, 2

lu:lt16l£ N50UT
P«., AAY..U..i?

i

1991 Cavalier 64K $2.695; 1969
Cullass Supreme 79K $2,495;

Qoo6.for

Ill

• to

- '::~::' S@\\4tllA-~'E~s·

c-ry

,,.

Toyota 4 Runner· 4 WO, loaded,
Rough, $1 ,500 OBO, 740·446-

1992 Ford Probe GL 4 Cylinder 5
Speed, CO Player AIC, $3,500,
740-388-8866.

e,\[f..ft.Y Y~ !

N.L, WAA.I~
&amp;.INC.&gt;

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

· oC~
. •lat bioi
So..... Melpuot.GIIIIo

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
'
BIDS
Stplrtlt a.. ltd Bide for
the P•lllllng of our 200,000
gallon tlev81ad atorage tonk
on Succaaa. Road . will be
· received by the Tup~
Plelna,Chnter W81.r
Dlatrlct 81 the omce located
II 31581 BIT, 30 Rood,
RHdavllla, Ohio 48772,
until 10:00 o'cloak a.m.
'(local time,) February 1~.
2000, end then at Mid office
publicly opened and r..d
11
~ud. c~py of the
apeclflcatlona moy be
obtlllnacllrom:
..

! YOO

,..I&lt;Jf\'( N!£. YOU 50 OOtJI'H ~ ·

prot Ideo wute dilpoool

7126.

1989 Pontiac 8000LE 4 Oot;na,
96K $1 ,795; Other Front Wheel
Drive Cars And Pick-Ups, Cook
. Molors, 74Q-448.0103.
.

..
.,
000'1 TW. If'£. 'COU~ Fll:E.mtiC&gt;

Southern Ohlo D~

675~1333

1_989 Olds Regency Brougham ,
excellent condition. Nice Car.

LOSER

.,~T '(~
.oo TH ~

Ready lor a cllaaae?

1988 Park A"Venue, Nice Shape,

6962.

I

EXCAVfiTinG

IOQ.IO

0
19.9% Listings. 600-319·3323 Elct

AUNT LOWIIZY II . J-Jo-fi.

· and

EXT. 7632.

lmpounclsl 0 Down. 24 Months

~

,. .

...._
Cald,....l
.-

m-

31 Rtverln

I'M HOMe FROM SCHOOL,

•
••

!

..

\

......

__.,

Discount
•91Z-7945

sscio.oo Btarburat

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POliCE

.

'It'

~~~~

Ope~ing lead: • 6

50 Yrs. Combined
Experience
Ho.nest &amp; Reliable
Free Estimates
Senior Citizens

Main St.,
f"omeroy,OH
, Piylng $80.00
1*1111'¥
$300.00 Coverlll'

710 Autoa lor Sale .

J

PWMBIHG

ATI:30 P.M.

TRANSPORTATION

INT

,

~·

•

,
-

C111 ~for lnetant Approvallt'&gt;f

hunmedft.

Eagl•
. Club Bingo On .
Thursdays

WV 26175. (Fned bids will be
aa:eptod al (304)652-60110).

/

'•

No~ ..

51 a.wart
A Quinn II

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
. South ' Weat Nortl1 ENI

't

Yciu're TrNted wllh Reepectl

,/.

$41.00per .

Manager, (304)675.0S56.
Wl'ltten bids will be accepted un·
Ill February n , 2000. Blda can
be mailed to; WV Department- ol
Agriculture , Marketing and De·
velopment Olvlslgn , land Sac·
lion, P.O. Box 160, Sistersville,

,.,... ,

I

. ....

40C..Ior

• 10 7 2
• 10 8 7
• J 10 8 7

•

27 Conb IIIDt
32Fobll......,
33 Chicle '*34-MCI. 311 a.... q-'Z
•

• AQ 3

••

WDRRYIIIU!

STOP]

i

1 1/2"
Water PI~
.
\

.740-992·2068·

I

e.,_~~rup~ey

740-985-3813
prllf hnl•p••••

21 .,.,....11111111 23
Miliftia

South

J~•FII•-

47U..achllr

ST Dun alit

20......_

. • 9 6 52
• AQ
o K32
• K8 43

·-............
~~~~:.:r

ling

II

11 Tamp. unit

Eaot

CIIDrr
PIOBLIMI???
No Crdl • Slow er.dlt •

G"W Pludes

._from ..
.......

17 Did

• K J 10 7
• K3
tAQJ94
• A9

,304)675-5124.
Surpluo ~ FO&lt;-

7

18

II:CI0-4:30 Wllltd8ya

ADWQO-SVSIBUIC

1 Uil Willi ellot1

13 IICullll
14w.15 Cot kd

at. Rt. 7

Hou,.

ACROSS

'

/

.

'

\

'

ARIES (March 21-April 19) Be
careful today not to put yourself inc
VIRGO (Au'g. 23-Sept. 22) Try to
the minority because of opinions ' go il alone today. Relying on friends
about which you feel strongly. If you or associates to come through for you
see the majority disagrees, drop the. might not work out as you hoped,
subject before it impairs your image. because ihey'll have !heir own probTAURUS (April 20-May 20) .lems to handle. .
LIBRA(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It might
There's a chance today that you
could have a tendency tQ overest1- be wise ro take a hard look at your
mate your position and underestimate own behavior today if the entire
the size of the problem with which world has appeared to be out of step
you're dealing. Be reahst1c. .
. wilh your cadence. Maybe it's you
GEMINI (May. +I-June 20) Thts who has to get in sync.
is qne of those peculiar d~ys whe~
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
you might be better off domg bus1- might have to make a choice 1oday as
ness · with someone new who could to what Is more important to you,
offer a .fresh product or approach your material affairs or your personrather than settling for old standbys. al relationships. Choose realistically,
CANCER (June 21-July 22) If
SAGmARIUS ·(Nov. 23-Dec. you' re going 10 best another tpday1 21) Any gambles you wish 10 .take
you've got 10 be smarter pn!l more today must be in proportion to whDt
creative than f!1e other guy. Don'! .you hope to gain, .or el": bjg ri~ks .
count too heavily on y~ur luck and could incur big losses. It's tmperatrve
good looks to get you by.
you know .what you're getting i~to.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) To save
CAPRICORN (Dec. ~2-Jatf.l9)
yourself from suffering any new A~lhough generally you re a rather
lui!IJls today, icview your old play fne~dly and tolef'!lnl .pe~on, 1oday
bOOii first to see how lhings worked you could. h~ve a~ mchnatron to walk
out previously wheri you dealt wirh 81'ound wrth. a chrp on. your shoulder.
" 'I ar st'tu au'on • ·
Someone Will knock 11 off.
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a .slmt
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!'-~~!ge~B~8~·~.The~~D~~~~~-!S~en~U~~~----~----------------------------!P~~~m~-~~~¥~·~M~~~~~~,O~h~~~-------------------------W~~~n~l~l~dl!¥~,!~~~~~2~,!~~~~4~,~

NATIONAL BRIEFS
Friends, family grieve for vicdms
PORT HUENEME, Calif. (AP) - Se:u:clt boats bobbed across
the choppy and chilly Pacific early today as friends and relatives of
those aboardAI:ukaAirlines Flight 261 waited in an anguished vigil.
Coast Guard and Navy ships combed a debris field I 0 miles offshore overnight, looking for survivors and dues to why the plane
nose-dived into the ocean on Monday afternoon. Eighty-eight people were aboard; no survivors have been found in the 59-degree
water.
Coast Guard officials have not declared the search hopeless, but
conceded they were racing the clock.
"The challenge is lime, as time ticks off, risks go up;' Coast
Guard Vice Adm. Tom Collins said Tuesday.
· Searchers have found the bodies of a man, two women and an
Infant among the human. remains, pie~es of wreckage and personal
items scattered across the fuel-soaked Water. Relatives of the missing, from Washington to California, shared their griefTuesday; some
have come here.-to be near the crash site, and another 50 have.gathered at a hotel near Los Angeles International Airport.
. "·We want' to make sure everyone knows that it would make my
dad happy to see how many people saw him as a father, a brother
and a friend," said Fred Thompson, 24, the son of Capt. Ted ThompSc;!n. '.'And our liearis and thoughts are with the families of the Alaska employees and passengers."
·
The MD-83 jetliner was headed from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to
San Francisco apd Seattle. It plunged into the sea after the pilot .
reported problems with the horizont:il stabilizer, a wing-like structure on the tail that controls the pitch of the aircraft's ~ose.

Wanted: a few good volunteers MOUNf PLEASANT, Pa. (AP)- Walter "Frosty" Forys may
not be able to hoist a 100-pound ladder anymore, but he can still
throw on a fireman's .hat and hook a hose to a hydrant.
At 88, the retired coal miner is the oldest volunteer firefighter in
Mount Pleasant, a community that still needs his more than 50 yean
of experience battling blazes.
Mount Pleasant isn't alone. The state has lost about half-of its volunteer firefighters in the past five years, part of a nationwide
decline.
·
·
"It used to be we always had plenty of firefighters in the hopper,"
Forys said. "But now there. are a lot of volunteer companies think- •
. ing of folding up. Nobody wants to do this anymore." .
Ac~ording to the National Fire Protection Association, the
na~on's volunteer force dropped 13 percent from 1983 to 1991, to
771,800 firefighten. That increased to 838,000 in 1995, but dropped
again to 804,200 by 1998.

Silicon Valley no l()nger scroogish
. SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -· High tech entrepreneurs are finally
shaking their stingy reputation, giving away their Silicon Valley millions at an unprecedented rate.
Recent high profile donations - including .billions for education and health care from Mic':"soft Corp.'s Bill arid f1elinda Gates,
$150 million to Stanford Umverstty from Netscape founder Ji1n
Clark and another $100 million to the University of Mississippi
from former Netscape CEO Jim Barksdale - are setting examples
for young high tech entrepreneurs.
"Many of these young people are very idealistic, but until recently ·they've had few examples of how to give;' said Petet Hero, who
heads the nonprofit Community Foundation Silicon Valley. "Now
we're seeing them applying the same creativity they used to build
their businesses to charitable giving."
·.
The foundation received more than $75 million in cash. and
stock gifts between July 1 and D,ec. 31 last year, an all-time high in
the organization's 45-year history. It expects donations to double
this year.
·

Fed ready another interest rate hike .~~~
&gt;

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal
Reserve is ready to bump up interest r:ates for
a fourth time since June in an effort to rein in
the nation's economy, which has been growing
at a breakneck pace, private economists
believe.
Ever since the Fed took a pals on raising
rate• in December to avoid stress during the
Y2K computer date change, most economists
-· citing continuing strong economic growth
- have been predicting that the central bank
would boost rates to help keep inflation under
control. Most expect a quarter of a percentage
point.
When Fed ·Chairman Alan Greenspan
raised new worries about inflation in a speech
last month, many economis~ took that as yet
another signal that a rate increase would be
forthcoming.
The Fedetal Open Market Committee,
comprising members of the Fed board in
Washington and the presidents of the Fed's 12 ·
regional banks, began a two-day meetingTuesday to review interest rate policy. A midafternoon announcement of their necision was
expected today, with ffnar\cial markets eagerly
awaiting the outcome.

Stocks rose Tuesday amid a growing sense
that despite rising interest rates, which can cut
into corporate profits, most U.S. companies
will post strong eunings growth throughout
the year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
closed up 100.52 points at 11,041 .05.
"The story that the Fed has been telling
over the last month is that we think growth is
too strong and could produce inflation. We
don't see a likelihood that it will slow on its
own, so we need to raise rates:· said Tim
O'Neill, chief economist for the Bank of
Montreal and Harris Bank. "That message is
coming across loud and clear."
The economy grew at a sizzling 5.8 percent
annual rate in the last three months of the year
and by 4 perceqt for all of 1999. That growth
has pushed down the nation's unemployment
rate to 4.1 percent, the lowest level in 30 yean.
Many analysts believe a further dip to 4 percent will be reflected in January's employment
report Friday.
With the economy growing so fast,
employen are having trouble finding scarce
workers to fill job openings. Thus, they are
wooing them with higher wages and benefits,
increasipg the costs o( doing business to the

•

point that economists and memben of the Fe•f:
fear a sharp run-up in prices.
:::
Consumer prices have remained well~~~
behaved so far, but wages and benefits. as mea:-,!~
sured by the Labor Department's cloself, ~
watched employment cost index,surged in the;&gt;
fourth quarter, touching off fear about i~,,
tion and causing the stock market to· plqn~ ;
when the report was released last week.
'
Some economists believe there could be ~ ;
total of four rate increases, beginning at to.:4Y's
meeting, of a quarter-point apiece by the erl!;:.
of June.
· • ··
"I think it will be pretty clear that the Fed ;,
will view inflation as a ~erious risk going f9r.:..·
ward:' said William Cheney, chief econon\ist-:
for John Hancock, referring to the Fed's ne~~­
policy. starting 'today, of comriwnicating !itt.:
outloo~ for the _economy ~fter every. marlteti
comnuttee meeung.
; -:;
The Fed raised crucial interest rates three ~
times last year by a quarter-point each inJun~ :
August and November. A fourth quarter-poi~JL;
incre:ue would push the centr:al bank's targc:t~
for the feder:al funds rate - the interest ball~t
charge on overnight loans ~ to '5.75 perc~ri '·
from 5.50.
·. :t~

. WASHINGTON (AP)
Construction spending surged 2
percent in December to an alltime high level, pushing the
amount of mopey spent on :;inglefamily homes to a monthly record.
The Commerce Department
reported today that spending J;OSe
to a record seasonally adJusted
annual rate of$730.3 billion. That
followed a · revised 2 percent
increase in November helped out
by better-than-usual ~ather.
December's performance w:ts
much stron~r than many analysts
expected. They were predicted that
construction would fall by 0.3 percent in December.
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For the year, construction
spending rose 6 pen:ent, following
. an increaSe of7.6 percent in 1998.
The Federal Reserve today
begins a two-day meeting cl1at
many economists believe will end
Wednesday with the central bank
deciding to boost interest rates in
an effort to slow the red-hot economy and keep inflation from escalating.
·
The central bank raised interest
tales three times last year by a quarter of a percentage point ·a piece, a
move that made borrowing more
expensive for consumers and businesses.
Despite those three rate increas-

es, economists belie~e .the econo- to a. seasonally adjusted annual ra~·;
my -contin\leS to grow at a rapid ·o f $175.7 billion in December, ~:;
pace that they fear could· trigger record monthly high.
: :
inflation. In the last three months
Spending wa5 up nearly acrob:
of 1999, the economy grew at a file board with'sharp gairiS report.:: ~
sizzling 5.8 percent annual rate and ed for housing, schQols and hif1Z:
grew by 4 pen:ent for the entire ways.
·
'· •
year.
.
1·
·
The. value of all private conThe robust growth .haS given struction projects iose 0. 7 percent
the economy lots of momentum to an 'annual rate of$554.5 biJ1ion.:
heading intq the new year and in December.
'
bodes for continuing strength in
For . all residential projec~,::
the nation's economic el!pansion, spending rose 1.5 percent to a ~- ·
which today sets a record 107 sonally adjusted annual rate o( :
months of uninterrupted growth.
$330.5 billion, also a monthly ·
The
consrru·ction
report record. Spending on single-family ·
showed that spending on all gov- homes increased by 2.7 percent tO ·
ernment projects rose 6.2 percent a record rate of$222.2 billion.
·

Methodists investigate pastors who .
presided over lesbian ceremony

.

· Residents fueding over ferry

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bail.

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Queens Supreme Court Justice
Seymour Rotker approved the
a~rangement at a bail hearing Tuesday for Carmine Agnello.
. Victoria Gotti testified she
eJ_~pects a sizable payment soon
fWm CIOWil Books for "The Senator's ·Daughter" and. 'Til Be
watching You."
· . .
, Her father, who once headed
the Gambino crime family, is now
se~ng life in a fedetal prison f~r
murder and other crimes.
She had previously posted her
'-' million Long Island maruion as
collateral· for bailing her brother,
john 'Junior" Gotti, out ofjail.

•
Tuesday or any evidence of animosity among participants at the
hearing in the. sanctuary Qf the
Community Unite&lt;! Methodist
Church of Fairfield.
"We are in a church process.
That is why we chose a sanctuary
for the hearings;' said the Rev.
Ronald Swisher of Oakland,
chairman of the investigativ~ committee." In the spirit of the United
Methodist tr:adition, we . will ·...
address iSsues of scripture, tradition, reason and experience as they
relate to this case."
Fado said he found the hearings.
enlightening.
"It's· a feeling of fami!y getting
together, looking at this division
and saying, 'What are we going to
do about it?"' he said. "It's like a
poston' school with distinguished
scholars. I've taken notes for future
sermons."

.High; 40s; Low: 301

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friday: Cloudy .
High: 30s; Low: 20s

Spo•·ts

Buckeyes su"'ive
Btidgers sCtJTe
-Page 81

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Meigs County's
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Homdown Newspaper

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Mi1idlt&gt;porrt • Pom~toy, Ohro

''"'"'" ··•' N'""t'P' ''·"

:- o.o,t t~ ~~ ,,, f,.

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: RACINE - Teachen at Portland and ilar, at s~ Elementary, ~hildren
:Syracuse elementary schools now have whose behavior· merits detention will first
.: expanded discipline options with the addi- be' given noontime detentions which are
:tion of after-school detention:
are held Tuesday, Wednesday and Thunday.
Any student accumulating more than 10
. The Southern Local Board of Educa:lion. meeting in ~pecial session Monday 'detentions will then recei\ie an after. :night, approved the addition of aftet- school detention.
After-school detentions will be held ·
·school detention at the schools.
: -While polici!'l 'at both schools are sim- fiom· 3:15-4:15 p.m. on Wednesday of
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every week, and parents will be notified by to rebid for brick .for the new elementary
mail of their child's assignment to after- school' since the earlier bid of$38,350 was
more than 10 percent above the bid es'tischool detention .
.
Students. will be assigned an additional mate ofS~S.OOO.
Dids for construction of the elementary
afier-sthool detention upon their 16th
deteniion, and their parents or guaroians · school building and for renovations and
will be required to attend a conference at additions . to the high school will be
opened Feb. t-0' at 4 p.m. at the high
school.
In other busines•, the board also ag,-eed · school.

session. · ·

COLUMllUS (AI') - A state
law that sets minimum qualifications for county .sheriff candidates
is constitutional, a federal judge has
ruled in one of several ·challenges
to the training requirements.
The law has forced two sheriffs
and atleast 11 other candiilates for
sheriff in eight counties off' the ballot in the March 7 primary.
Everysheriff
"It .
t
. candidate
is
·
IS flO
required
to NflreasoHable.
have a peace . to re~~ire
offi~~r certificandidatb
. care ab )e'a~t fQ iltc t- i t ;
' til~ ~ ..Jilf.......l.' , '""" ,.. .. ' •
· l;w" •enfq;ce- of•neri ..
ment experi
dbtiiln · tht
ence . and .at certificate of
least two years
·
of supervisory
trainiflg
experience.
prior to
"Ohio has being placed
an important ...
on the bat-

REI!D

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Plans for a veterans medical service facility in
Pomeroy, to be opened by the U.S.
Department ofVeterans Affairs, have
taken local officials by surprise.
The VA has requested publication ·
· of a notice to bidders in The Daily ·
Sentinel, for 1,509 to 2,000 square
feet of space for a field service center .
within the Village of Pomeroy. ,
On Wednesday, the Meigs County
Commissioncn received official ·.~on­
. · .fir.mation from the. VA -~ffice' 'i'ii'
Chilli.c othe that the facili~y'"-ould be
located h.ere. • ·. 1· • "· - '!
Max Cal~: 'direc.tor of the Veterans .
Services office in -l'omeroy, said
Wednesday that he knew of no plans
to locate such an office here,
although he knew tha! a. similar facilities was being considered for Jackson County.
Cale said he understood. that such
facilities would provide routine med- ·
ical services to veterans, although
those s'ervices would not be as extensi~e· as the services offered through
the outpatient clinic operated by the
VA in Athens.
A spokesman for U.S. 11..ep. Ted
Strickland,
D"Lucasville,
said
Wednesday that the VA had informed
Strickland's office that the facility
would likely offer services "two or
three days a week."
However, Cale said ihat ·such a
facility ....;ould be of great service to
local veterans, who now travel either
to the Athens office or to the VA &lt;
Medical Center in Chillicothe. ··
Veterans who u5ed the facility
might expect routine examinations: ' ,
the dispensing of prescripti_ons and · ·
other routine procedures.
"We would like to have ~ facili~y .
like this, but we hav~n't heard anything about it," Cale said. "It would
be a very good thing for us." , · ··
After' l~arning .of the VA 's__ inte\)-'

Filters.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,

W.VA.

to

interest

SitE RIEVIEW - M!ligs County Com'"issioners Mick Davenport and Jeffrey Thornton, and Meigs County Economic Development DireCtor Perry. Vl!r~ildoe. e~amine the former OBES building _In Pomeroy. Tile building will be il(oposed for use as the
site·of a VA ·field service center to be opened In Pomeroy (Brian J. Reed photo)
·
,~·:."'"

tiops, Meigs County Commissioners
Mi~~ Davenport and Jeffrey Thornton'~oined Economic Development
Director Perry Varnadoe Wednesday
afterhoon to look at possible sites for
· ·- · · .
thejtllcility. ·
"\Fhis is a good service that people
here ,will really appreciate," Varnadoe .
said · 1\0ting that the facility could ,
also ing people into the com~uhi- ·
ty . ' might O!herwis~ not tQme tO i
the · meroy area.
'
He said that the economic ·developme.nt ·!'fffice and the county commiss~q!)en .'Yill,work cl'lsely wi~h the
VA as,~ ites ~-re :onsidered. . . \

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"We. plan to work actively with
and has been the home of several
the VA outreach staff to help them
public agencies, including the Ohio
Uureau of Employment Services;
locate sites which may be. most suitable 'for their needs, and to assist
economic development, grants ·
them in any other way that may be
administration and litter control and
n~c.e~ary as they prepare · to local~ · ' recycling.
.
· . ',
here,"Varnadoe added.
· The county leased the building for .
Varnadoe and the commissioners
several years.
looked at two specific ·sites.Wednes- . ·
. Those sites were quickly viewed ·
day: the former office~ bfDr. Thomas ' Wednesday because ,they ~l.;&gt;sely .
Spencer on North Second Ave~ue in' · m:itch spec-ifications set forth by the .
Middleport, and the former county
· VA. Private property· owners will be '
office annex at State Route 7 a'nd
. ·solicited· for bids in the legal notice
Union • Avenue. just ·outside of
to run in Friday's eqition of The
Pomeroy.
''
Daily Se~tinel an~ 11\i(, weekend's
·. · Tll¢ latter is owned by Jay Hali;
Sunday Ttmes-Sentmel.

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United Way eXceedS.campaign gOal ,Sentifiel
I

Today's .

.. Surress
mone.·yfior

. Wondar1ul opportunities are available In Tom P!l(len Country.
. We are expanding our facUlties and . nee~ more sales people.
No experience Is required, only a willingness to learn,
··
.work as a team and have a strong lnlllallve. .

··Excellent Payll*lt Plan . • Great Benefltll ~-......,.
• Work AI The 11 Dellenhlp
·'

Tom Peden
. Country
.

1-800.822·0417 • 344-5947

.

475 South Church Street
. • Ripley, WV

.Urgent t;are Center
90 Jackson
Pike
. .
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-5287

Holzer .Clinic Jackson
25 S. Street
J a~~on, Ohio
.,

&amp;I

286-641?:
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movo

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means
·
excited .allout that;' added Tom Judy, the 'I&lt;X:al Agency, Holzer 1-!ospice, · ' "I{is go~"g'
u.•
r '-UW's via president.
.
Retired Senior Volunteer
to allow us
.
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cha.n'ft'es
·. ·
Judy attrib11ted the· incre~ ill ti)ndi11g to PI:O(!Dm. Ohio Girl SC!&gt;Ut .
to.p1;o11ide·' .
additional donors, and pointed oui'UWhad set ·council, 'Serenity House
'f10re fund•
·
·
the soai.1.at $10,9()() lower !fla~' in previous and Woodlarad Centen.
.• _.
. BY'KmN Kmv
yeari.'Thf~ UW not on!y topped ihat goal but.
"We want to 'thank all of ingfor agen-·
: .'
OVP NEWS EDITOR
exceededt}is prior large$ . amount i)as ldt the . the contributors, on behalf · des we.S14P·
: ~ GALLiliOLIS - United W'lfY. of Gallia org~nizarigp !'ecstatic;·~. ad4ed. .. . ·
of our board,.for their help,
. p~t; so.
Cqunty set its 1999 campaign goal a tad lower . U'W fonds are raised locaUy and go to sup- and pr:J)an Whiteley for
we're re~lly ·.
taA! · year, believing it was a more realistic por~ local organizations that serve diverse needs. · serving as our campaign ·excited 4bout
amoupt to meet.
. The campaign started ira Septenibc;r and ended · ·coo~inator,"Judy said.
that;" · r
To the surprise of the volunteers who staff' in DecellJber,,J&gt;urdum said. •
. Judy ~!so expressed

the a~nual. fund-;-oising end~avor,_ t~e goa,! was
. F~feeded, meanmg a dozen Galli~ County
OllPnizations supported by UW wtU see an
· creao;e
· ln
· fit n,d'tng.·
'' J.Q.
.· '
,.
• ;UW puUed in $125,268.40 in don~tions !iom
individual~ and businesses after setting a goal of
$ !15,000, i-eported &lt;,::hristophl!r l'urdum, the
group's tre311 urer.
· ~It's going to allow us to provid~ more fund~ng f~r' agen~ies we support, so we're· nia)ly·
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Judge ·says
sheriff
standards
are OK

LJcal offidals ..
·surprised by
announcement
BY BRIAN J.

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The board also approved establishing an
inclusion special education cia." at Syracuse Elementary School and accepted a
perfoqnance incentive grant for P5,1 08.
The board then retired into executive
session to discuss personnel matters,
including the superintende,ot'l e.valuation.
No action was ·taken after the&lt; executive

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sPom

Urgent Care Center:

C.ll To Schecflile An Interv.lew:

;&lt;~ l'&lt;'·"t'

!Southern ·Local school ·board OKs after-school detentions

of Furnace·

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Thursday

Tax preparation guide inside today
What's happening in Meigs County, AS
Eastern girls down South Gallia, ~ 1

.Today: Cloudy

Don't Neglect
Yotir Furnace,
Check Your
Filters
.Regularly.
We Carry
Several Kinds

Gatti's daughter
bails out hubby .
' NEW YORK (AP) - John
Gotti's son-in-law was freed from
j~ihafter his wife, best-selling noVelist Victoria Gotti, pledged
$120,000 in pending royalties to
pay the -premium on his $2 million

•

Febru•ry ,, 2000

•Holzer Clinic

t ·

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Construction sPending surgSs in Decembe~

FAIRFIELD, Calif. (AP) - A
"It.was very stressful
lesbian couple whose union was
being in two different
· blessed by dozens ·of United
closets. Now we're not in
Methc;&gt;dist Church ministers told
any closet!'
church investigators · that the pastors .should be pr:aised, not punEllie Charlton
ished.
A seven-member panel began mony but only 67 were named in
hearings Tuesday to consider the formal complaint because the
whether to charge the ministers othen were from churches outside
with violating church law. They of the jurisdicti~n of the Califorcould face removal from the cler- nia-Northern Nevada . United
gy iffound guilty at a church trial. Methodist Conference, which
."Now we. share our church life convened the investigative com. BOSTON (AP) - The city of New Bedford is across miles of
with the gay community im.d·share mittee.
Atlantic Ocean from the tony islands of Martha's Vineyaro and Nanour gay life with the church:' said
· Never before have so many
tucket and has seen little. of their prosperity.
·
·
Ellie Charlton, whose marriage to ministers faced the possibility of a
·_ While the rich, famous and tourists flock to the scenic islands and
Jeanne Barnett was blessed in Jan- charge of disobedience. In the
pump money into their economies, working-class New Bedford is
uary 1999. "It was very stressful ·past, two Methodist ministers have
struggling.
being in two different closets. been disciplined for officiating at
T~e former whaling port working toward revitalization supports
Now we're not iQ any closet."
same-sex weddings.
state legislation that would create year-round ferry service for comThe
Rev.
Donald
Fado
perc
While the issue has sharply
muters and freight between the town and the islands.
formed
the
ceremony
-for
the
two
divided the Methodist Church,
About 100 residents of the iSlands were in Boston on.Tuesday to •
women
before
1,500
guests
at"the
there were no demon'strations
lobby against the bill. They say it would create even more traffic and .
Sacramento Convention Center.
force the profitable ferry service from Cape Cod io the islands to subHe has not been disciplined.
sidize losses incurred by the much longer trip .fiom New Bedford.
Fado· compared the ceremony ·
"We want to -control our destiny;· said Robert. M. Sawyer, a
to an act of civil disobedience, ·
Martha's Vineyaro commissioner. "Our island is at risk because of the
which his church has long supgrowth that has taken place.''
potted for civil rights and anti-war
The 'Woods Hole, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket Steamship
causes. He said he wants a trial to
Authority has ferried goods and passengers for 40 years between
force
the church to face the needs
Woods Hole and Hyannis on Cape Cod to Martha's Vineyard and
of gay memben.
~antucket. The islanders. like to point out the authority is the only
The committee was expected
publicly run ferry service in the country that makes a profit and doesto
decide next week whether to
p't require government subsidies.
· .
,
.
bring formal ·charges before a
. New Bedford was a member of the authority until 1960, when the
national Methodist conference
run was canceled because of unreliable service. .
when it meets in Cleveland in
:.: · Supporters of a New Bedford ferry ilay it would not only reduce
both freight and passenger prices by providing competition, but would
May.
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Ninety-twO other Methodist
alleviate traffic in Woods Hole and Hyannis during the summer.
ministeci attended last year's c~
.

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2 Sections :- 12 Pagu j

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Contri~tions. ~ame p?t ,&lt;?~ly ~?' corpora~e appl'!ciation 10 Gary Kil'·II''
Tom JUdy, 111•
··
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p ::!0011 Ohio Vallry P'~l~ithi11H Co.

. in

lot!'
a.uuring that its
top
lawu.s. blatrlet
enforcement
Judge Joltph P.
officers possess .
Klnnury
the minimum
qualifications necessary to enforce
and uphold the laws of the state of
Ohio;' U.S. Di~trict Judge Joseph I~
Kinneary wrote in· his decision
Tuesday.
"It ·is not unreasonable to
require candidates for the office of
sheriff' to obtain the certificate .of
training prior to being placed on
the ballot."
The ruling came in a lawsuit
filed Nov.· 1 by samuel Cicchino,
who is chief U.S. deputy marshal
for central and southern Ohio and
wants to r .un for Fairfield sheriff'.
Cicchino, 55, of Lancaster, ·said
· he should be allowed on the ballot, ·
even though he does not have a
peace officer certificate, because he
has been in the U.S. Marshal's Service for more than 28 yean and has
military experience with the
Marine Corps.
·
He said the law deprives him of
his constitutional rights. of free
speech, assembly and due process.
Dut Kinneary . said Cicchino
lacks experience in traffic· enforcement, domestic disputes, child
abu.se and other subjects that are .
covered in peace officert' training.
Cic~hino's attorney Kevin R.
Conners said he wo.uld review the
opinion and decide whether to
appeal.
·"This is an important decision
for us:· As-sistant State Attorney
Arthur J. Marziale Jr. said. "It bol•
sters our argument in any other
federal or state case where the
statute is chall~nged."
' .
Although the law took effect
three yean ago, it is becoming an
issue now because this is the lint ·
,\ election .year for sheriffi.
• 1Wo other wi&gt;uld-be candidates ·
-Rick Landis of Morrow County · :ind Mark W~lfe of Del~ware
County ~ have asked the Ohio
Supreme Court to, order elections
boank in those counties to put ·
them on the. baliot.
·

.

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