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Pornfroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl1

••nt. WY

SUnday, FebnMiry 20, 2000

Details, A3

Drought recovery meeting slated for 7 p.m. l#dnesday
BY JENIIFIR L. BvRNts
agriculture and natur:~l resources in
GALLIPOLIS - Cattle producers and Guen~y County. Little will emphasize
other interested parties are invited to the importan~ of attentive pasture manattend an educational meeting on cattle agement this spting. Fertility and soil pH
and pasture management in the post- will be a key factor in pasture reco\lery.
drought season.
This tmy be the year to consider heavThe program is scheduled for Feb. 23, ier· nitrogen applications in early spring.
beginning at 7 p.m. in the C. H. McKenzie Instead of controlling the quantiry of the
Agriculrural Center.
first cutting with split nitrogen applicaThe program will feature Fr:~ncis tions, producers who are willing to make
Fluharty and Cliff Little of Ohio State hay harvest a priority, may want to consid.
_
scientist-at---er-50::80 uruts of rutrogen per acre m early
the Ohio Agncultural_ Research and spring rather than the usual 40-unit per
Development Center . m Wooster. Dr. acre recommendation.
In .addition, this may be the year that
Fluharry will focus on cow nutrition and
h~w to manage sorne of the nutritional frost seedings have lower risk.TypicaUy. the
and , reptoducnve consequences of last success of fiost seedings is questionable;
years drought.
however, where pasrure conditions are
After _feeding more ope~ cows than very poor, the seed to soil .contact will be
usual this Winter, producers will be anxious . greater, and fiost seeding dliy be more
·
for successful rebreedmg this sp~ing. successful.
Fluharry will diScuss cow condition as it
These topics and others ·will be covered
relates to the drought_and offer suggestions at the meeting on Wednesday.The educaon getnng the cows m shape for rebreed- tiona! session is co-sponsored by the Gallia
n~g. .
.
~
.
.
County Cattlemen's Association. Light
Cliff L1ttle jlS an Eittens10n agent for refreslunents will be served. For more

PubllcN&amp;

, 1996 Mercuiy Sable, six cyHnder,
new llrn . loaded, nlee tar,
$4495; 1993 ·Aerostar, 81,000
miles, new tires, nice van, $4295;

1998 Jeep Wrangler White/Grey

· ~~:..:.=::.:.;:.:::::;::..__

This may be the year
to consider lteavier
nitrogett applications
itt early spring.
information, please caD the OSU Exten-·
. sion Office at 446-7007.
Ag news
A pesticide collection will horheld-in
GaUia County onApril5.This collection is
open to aU agricultural producers .and
homeowners for any type of pesticide. All
pesticides must be pre-registered by Man:h
17.
.
Participants will be notified of the location fOllowing registration. No unregistered pesticides will be accepted. Please
take advantage of this opportunity to dean
out barns or outlluildiJlgs of unwanted
pesticides. To obtain an application, please
caU the OSU Extension Office at 4467007,
The tobacco meeting is scheduled for
Feb. 28, beginning at 7:30 ,p.m. at South

•
Gallia High School in Mercerville. Dr.
Bob Pearce will be the featured speaker on
such production topics as weed and sucker controL The current situation and outlook will be addre;sed.
The pepper 111Mting, as l')lost know,
· was postponed until sametime after Feb.
11. We may have a; new date printed in
next Sunday's paper, and notices will be
mailed as soon as the date is set. Please
watch for detaik
Tobacco settlement applications have
been mailed again i6 ,those who did not
respond last fall, and as predicted, are causing some confusion within the tobacco
growing community. Recognizing the
bank is lacking an efficient system to check
on the statuS of your first application, these
guidelines may help in addressing the
problel')l.
.
·
·
I
A
If you filed an appllcation lpst f.ill and
have not received a check for some reason
or another,' pleoue caD the ChaseMellon
fulfillment center at 1-800-737-9472.The
operators of. this help line will either
require your 12-digit Farm Serial number

::::: ec"::.-=::

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or your Social Securiry number, so be prepared with both (and if you don't know
your farm serial number, please call the
FSA office.)
If the oper:~tor reportS that they canilot
help you and tells you to call the FSA
office, ~lease remind the operator that •iri
the state of Ohio, the only thing that .the
FSA office can do for producers in this
case, is provide producers with a farm serial-number:· N&lt;~xt;-tel~~tl1e-&lt;91M!Rtl~r--tihal:---­
you "would like· the status of your ljrst
application resean:bed, and to please route
that request to the proper individual."
If the ·Oper:~tor is still unwilling, please
caD 1;:8()().;282-1955, and ask for the Je~
department. Give the secretary your farm
se,rial number and tell her that you woidd
like to have the status of )'QUr first appliCation researched, and she will route the
request in the ·proper direction. Last, but
celjain]y not least for anyone involved ·jn
this, remember that patience is a virtue.

1987 Dodge Truck 050 85 ,000

MUea, $2,850 Or Trade For Trac-

tor, 740-256-1290.

*

Whether you.are looking for the
classic elegance of a tradHiorial
tuxedo or a dramatic,
contemporary look, you can be
assured the best quality at a
great price.
No one knows men's forms/
weer bett•r then • qu.llty
m•n's clothing store like The
Hssklns· Tenner Co.

•

*BY

carpentry, doors, wl-. bllhl,
mot;~ hOmo ropolr end 100!1. For
tree estimate call Chot, 740-992·

ap .. .90.000

mllos, oxcer(ont condl·

,lion, $5.000·, 740·992·1182 or

304-n3-5305.
1.993 GMC .sonoma. ~· Tires,
85,000 Miles, BCyl Engine. Tilt/

'*

23 or (304)e74-0 155·

SCANNING ...,; Rescue workers search Sunday for Woodrow Engle Jr. who drowned in flood waters near Middleport after the sm&lt;!ll boat he w&lt;!s in capsized. (Dave Harris photos)

,.

•
s 1n
FROM STAFF REPORTS
.
MIDDLEPORT - A Middleport
man drowned.in flood waters near Mid-·
dleport on Sunday afternoo~. after a
small boat carrying him and another
passenger capsized.
According to Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby,Woodrow Engle Jr., of
the Shady Cove area near Middleport,
and l'ete Engle, both ages unreported,
. · were traveling in the boat in flood
waters · when the boat apparently hit
some .sort of snag unden,vater and capsized.
Woodrow Engle Jr. was pronounced
dead at ·the scene by Coroner Douglas
Hunter.

·

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Your Tri-County.

· D· ·0
·2e
authorized dealer.
We're better. and we11 "'. . . . ,... it!

'

d

Plurriblng We Do All. Repairs On
Homea And Trallera, Fast Serv·
lcei740-+C1-D113.
·

1995 While Ford Explorer XLT. 4
Wheel Drive. 40oor, New Tires

840 Electrlc.illlld
Rlfrlgeratlon

and Grey. (740}-368-0406

•

~.000 miles, very sharp, lull far- -~:------1117 Toyota Tacoma. Mai'oon,
•h4, Sony CD Player, Bedllner,
Bug Guatd, Window Rates. AskIng Payoff. Call: (304}675-8638 or

(304)675-3363.
1999 Ford F-150 Extended Cab
-4 Ooora, 2,100 Miles, Excellent
Condition, $23,000 740-441·1309.
730 Vane &amp; 4-WDI

Pontiac Suntlre ·
2 dr. white 5• speed

l!oatern Laoal 8ohool
Dlalrlct will tiold a public
auction on latunl8y, Moral!

o.,...

=··

)

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high . . .Ia.•
Till
following
lilting
of the rtama that will be

Offerld:

Jeep Grand Cherokee
· Laredo, Gold Loaded.

.· Chevy G-20 conv. van
1-owner, clean and Mll18

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4x4's
......................

fStMJ

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.,.·.•.

d

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&amp;ea.vr.;duty

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Come see: 'M:ike Northup, Pet~ ~~erville, AI Du~t, Ne~l Peifer, Jande Adamson,.
. ,. . .
Joe Tillis, Larry Pierce, and John Saunders. ·
·

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" ·w.~

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NORRIS NORTRUP . DODGE · JNC~ .
..
' 252 Upper River Rd.
(740) 446-0842 or
'
't

'

I

'

I

• to(.

Ytllt'D tik@. ott:r qull.llty w111

!

Toll Free 1-800-446-0842

Or d.oma bu8io~...ss

~~----~~~~~~~~~====~
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money, .much of which will be used for
repairing and building schools, health
programs and medical research.
But finishing one major project doesn't
mtan tax cuts are next, Mottley said, noting that the Ohio Supreme Court still
could rule that Ohio needs . to help
schools more; the federal government
could bar the taxing sales via the Internet
and the economy could reverse.
Senate President ll..ichard Finan, RCincinnati, said there still might be a case
.
for a tax cut.
Finaq told The Columbus Dispatch for
a story Sunday that he prefers the current
system of granting a temporary income
tax teducticin if the state has a surplus, as

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2 sa~-.- 11,.,.. ·
Calendar
Clanifieds
Comics
Editor jab
Obituarjea
· Sports

w..ther

A6
BJ-4

B5
A3
·Bf-2. 6
A3

Lotteries

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·tarma and condition of
1997 Ford Expedition 4 wo Nil will be -110111 the
liO,OOO MilOs, Excettont Condlllon,
day 01 ... priOr to aUO!Io'•
124.500, 740-367-&lt;&gt;219.

forrnaJJce.

quickly.
it has since 1995.
Rep. Jim Jordan, R- Urbana, who with
But House Speaker Pro Tempore Ran- ·
dall Gardner, R-13owling Green, plans to others has proposed a permanent 5 perintroduce legislation increasing the per- cent reduction in the state income tax
sonal exemption on the state income tax rate, said he was encouraged that 'a larger
to S2,000 from $1,050, phased in through tax cut could be discussed.
"At a minimum, ·we· should cLit tax
2005.
· Gardner said the Legislative Budget rates by 5 percent," Jordan said. "~rankly,! .
Office calculated that increasing ·, the think we should go for something billb&gt;er
exemption, the amount of income since our economy is going so strong."
Taft said through spokesman Scott Milexempt from state taxation on an individual tax return, over five years would ·save burn that it is too soon to be talking
$655.50 for the average family of four about a major tax cut because selected
taxes were cut in the 1999-2000 budget.
with 540,000 income.
"Obviously, he'd like to be able to do
Sen. Scott Nein, R-Middletown, told
his colleagues that he is committed to see- more," Milburn said. "But there's still a lot
ing a brpad-based tax cut come to a vote of'what ifs." '

(I

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OtuQ
Plcll 3: 1-1-9; Pick 4: 3-5-9-3
Super l.oUo: 8-1+21·32-36-39
Kidlor: 6-1-S-0-5-9
\UyA.
Doily 3: 5-5-5 Doily 4: 1+2-5
C 2000 Ohio Valk:y l"ullliflhini Co.

.•

COUNTRY PUBUCIST- FOrmer Apple Grove resident i(orma Morris faces Interviewers with her
client, bluegrass music patriarch Ralph Stanley,
following Stanley's Induction Into the Grand Ole
Opry. Morris works for a family-owned · publicity
agency In Nashville. (Contributed photo)

FROM STAFF REPORTS
the locks at'f\pple Grove. They're gone
NASHVILLE - As a student at now. llut I can still remember going to
Racine High School's' Class of '57, ·sleep ·to the sound of the rushing water
Nqrma Chapman's closest brush with and of boat• locking through.
"I also have fond memori.es of minshow business was singing and hoofing
in Pomeroy's annualllig Bend Minstrel. strel director (and former Sel)tjnel editor
. But in recent years, she has worked and columnist) Bob Hoeflich taking a
elbow-to-elbow with some of the bunch of amateurs - including mY
biggest names in country mu*, ihclud- mother, my sister Frankie and me - and
ing Vince &lt;;:ill, 'Steve Wariner, Martina. whipping us into a pretty decent cast.
McBride, John Anderson, comediaO: We ·always got good reviews;".
&lt;;:led us T. Judd and bluegrass legend
. Morris is the daughter pf the late Alec
Ralph Stanley.
.
·. . and Anna Wheeler.
Afier graduating from high school, ·
Thanks largely to her efforts, Stanley
w:is recently made a member of t~e she took a job as secretary of the school
Gr:~nd Ole Opry.
of journalisn1 at Ohio University. There
Norma Morris - that's her married she. met her future husband, Edwa~d .
. name...,. 'has worked for the past ·10 Morris, who was working in the school~·
years as a publicist for The·l'ress Office, graduate program. During the next sevan agency owned by her daughter and tral years, she took classes and raised a
son-in-law, Erin and Jim DeUa Croce.
family of two daught'i{s and two sons
"I'm still very much an Ohio River . while her husband tau'ght at colleges in
girl,'' Morris says. "Our house. sat beside Ohio, Kenwcky and Pennsylvania . In

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Pe.rhaps most closely scruti~
nized is a district rating based
on 27 performance standards.
Those 27 standards include
the results of all five components (citizenship, mathemat·
ics, reading, writing and science) for the proficiency tests,
as well as the attendance nlte
and the gr:~duation rate.
The district report cards for
1999, although they included
only I 8 ratings standards, ·
included the same ratings:
"effective," ha.ving met 26 or
27 of the standa~; "continuous improve·ment," meeting I~
to 25 of the standard•, "academic watch," meeting nine t~

Pleue ... Scheol. ..... AJ

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·Apple .Grove n.ative drums for Nashville greats.

Sentinel

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l'6t'4 ·.,..... reh~!

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COLUMBU~ (AI') - Some legisla- .
tive leaders are warning their colleagues
not to get overly excited about the
prospects of tackling tax cuts in the near
future.
·
They and Gov. Dob Taft's office are a
"little nervous about approaching a tax
·cut,'~ said Rep. ). Donald Mottley, R-West
Carrollton, chairman of the House Ways
and Means Comlnittee.
Mottley urged caution from lawmakers
who say tax cuts should be next on the
Legislature's agenda now that it has
adopted a plan to spend the state's share of
the nati,onaJ tobacco settlement.
·Last week, the state adopted a ·s10.1 ·
billion spending plan for the tobac~o

lbday's

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GaiDipolis, Oh 45631

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TEAM EFFORT -Pomeroy· and Mid-·
dlei!C~rt EMS res·
cue personnel and
law enforcement
officials, as well as
county sheriff's
depUties, assisted
in the search for
Woodrow Engle Jr.
Sunday near Middleport. Engle's
boat apparently hit
some sort of snag
underwater and
capsized .'

BY BRIAN J. RIIID
SENTINEL STAFF WRITER
POMEROY -· School dis·
trict and school · building
report cards . from the OhiG
Department of Equcation will "
begin arriving in parents' mailboxes next week.
.
2000 is the , first year til~
report cards have been a
requirement of 1997's Senate
Bill 55, although they were
released in 1998 and 1999 as
"drY runs" for this year's
required cards.
,
Those report cards will
include . information designciq
to .provide parents and coni:
municy members with info{~
mation about bow well - 9r
poorly their schools are
doing.
·
Not only are the cards
informative for parents, but
they are designed to "spark
constructive dialogue aboUt
school improvement amoqg
.parents, community members
and educators,'' according to
information released by the
state education department l.S!
week.
.
The cards will provide .
extensive .statistical informa·
tion about how the districts'
students performed on the
fourth-, sixth- , ninth- and
12th-grade proficiency tem,
will include three-year statistical overviews of fourth and
ninth-grade test . results, ai1d
will also provide information
on tl)e students' attendance,
discipline, promotion ·and honors diploma recordsc
Results for each school dis'trict are then compared to
other "similar" districts based
on population, average daily
membership (enrollment) and
economic conditions, in order
to give the community a relative idea of the district's per-

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Atlmlnlll . . . . .lldlng.

IPPfOldmllely 7 . 7 -

On all 2()00 Quad cab

Ram's

leatern ·&amp;:Ileal Bohool·
Dlatrlot *Ill hold 1 public
auction on lalurclay, Marah
11, 2000 at 111:011 a.m.lltlhe
Eaatern
Local
• lllvarvlaw IIIIMntat'y
SchOOl llulldlnt plua lila
adjaoant lot equaling

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llaekatball lilllll . . . and
framee.
Boolloeeee,
~t 4 speed, S240o, 740-742- Camputar
Monltore, ·
Computa•' lottwera end
1903 Ford Conversion von Fully Menuala, CPU'e, Dlaklltle
Loaded With TV. .All Original, Ga, Cull, lfeotrlo Pane,
rage Kept, Good Condition. · Floppy Dlac Drlv.. tor
$2.1oo.oo. 740·245-9376.
. Apple Computer, POidlng·
1984 Bronco tt, V.8. . 4x.4,
Tablea, llilyiiHnta, Lab
Speed. 75.ooo mlloa. Real' Nice.4 Tabla, Llgllte; . !'rlnt•r,
lhllvlng, •lnll, ·· ltudelit
$3,200. (304)675-3624.
.
Daaka, TalephoiMr DHke,
1985 Conversion Van 150 302 Window lllnda .
Engine. Good Condlllon. $1 ,695,
Terma 111e1 oontllll- of
740-386.0104.
•, the .... Wtll be .,-.IIDIIftlld
1~8e Ford Truck 4 Whoel Drive the day ol the Mil prior to
Runa Good And 4 Wheel Drtvi · auollon. Por mara
Works Good ~aklng $2,000, 304- lnfannatlon ....... oanteot
773-15339.
D er y I
I!,
W..1,
Suparlntendlnt
•
(740)
117·
1989 S-10 Rod 4x4, Tln..d Wind- 11071. . .
ows, 81,000 Miles. Power steer·
~ng, Power Brakes, Great Shapel (2) 20, 27, (3) I, 12 4 to
740-379·2798.
.
..,
Public Notice

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Chrysler Cirrus
LXI green, V6, low

18, 2000 .. 12:00 p.m... IIMr
aua
loolltH on IIMr

'78 Ford Bronco, 351 rebulh an-

•

Chevy Lumina Z34 coupe .
red, V6 45k miles,

Pete Engle·was uninjured. ·
S0uls6y said that th~· snag could have
been a submerged mailbox,' 'but · S:lid
authorities are unsure at this time of
what the boat struck.
Two divers were on the scene to aid
in recovering Woodrow Engle's body
Soulsby said he was not certain as to
why the men were in the boat, but said
that he believes they were traveling to
Pete Engle's home. Neither · man was
wearing a life jacket, Soulsby said.
Pomeroy and Middleport EMS rescue
personnel and law enforcement ofli~ials
were on the scene, a• were law enforcement personnel from Middleport and .
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.

Some··laWmakers say tax cut not in .near future

MDQn Aooi/CD, Loaded. $16,oo0
Firm.
Financing
Available. Residential or commercial wiring,
now sorvlco or ropolrt. Mll•r t•
(304)675-1602.
c:ensed eleetrlclen . Ridenour
1997 black Chovy S-10 Stapsldo Electrical, WV00030e, 304·875·
Extended Cab, 3 door, loaded, 1786.
lngs, $12,000, 740-949-2045 or
Public No.,-740-949·2203.
. --:...:.:::::..:.:::.:-::::::...._

water

-

Cruise &amp; Air. $4,800 . . 080. anco. 1304)895-3M7.
(304)576·9991 .
Superior tlomo MalnltNince And
1995 Dodge 1500 SLT V·8 Magnum, Topper, Reese Hitch, Red

Cards out
this week·

*4&amp;•

. .A\\r:i\1\tl

. 1-740-446-0842
or 1-800-446-0842

Llv!ngston's Baaement Water
Proofing, all baaemenl repalra
dona, free tltlmatea, llfellme
guarantee. 12yrt on Job exptrl·

Single Cop)- :l5 Co:r:,

.Report

Prices Start At

lfit..v~, ~1it:i.\F

6323.

1990 Mltsublshl Mighty Max, , Jlms Drywall &amp; Conatructlon ..
New Construction &amp; Remodel/
To Go/ $3,000, 740·386-0579.
Or~wall. Siding. Root&amp;, ~ddl·
1993 Ford Rangar Si&gt;,..h, 4 cyl, 5 tiona, Painting, ilc. (3041574-

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

VrJIIHn(· &gt;0. Numbl'r 1110

· We offer an Incredible selection of distinct ·
tuxedo stYles to transform your special night
into an exceptional occasion with a stunning
presentation of class
·

•

C&amp;C General Home Maintenance- Palnllng, vinyl aiding,

Husbsnd1s, 71'uck, Wife Says Hat

Honsetown Newspaper

Horne of Quality Clothing Since 1866 ·.

$3,800. (304)675-1038.

1987 Chevy S-10. Fluna GooH.

- Melts county's

(Jennifer L Byrnes is Ga/114 County~
&amp;tmsion agent for agritult11re and na!Hml
resormrs, Ohio State University.)

1986 Chevy S-10. Rebuilt 350
engine wllh new lotake,. holly
ApplianCe Parts AM Service: .All
carb, and heads. Hooker head·
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex- .
are. Turbo 350 transmission with · perlenc• All Work Guaranteed.'
ahlh kit. Ford 9·1nch rear-end With
French City Maytag, 740·441· .
771!5.
.
.
3.50 geara, . &amp; drag slicks.

1304)675-7471.

February 2.1, 1000

The Haski-ns-Tanner Co.

Board of Educdon;
Cindy J. R"-a,
(2) 13, 20 2 te
Tre11urar

Cloth Interior. 22,000 MilOs, Still Minimum bid for the lilted
. Under Warranty, $15,000. Days: property Ia 815,000.00.
740-446·5712, Evenings: 740· Succeuful bidder will ba
1994 For Ranger XL, 79,000 446-441•.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
·
. required lo depoalt 111% of
miles, bedllner, air, nice truck,
STATE OF OHIO .
the bid the day ol the ule.
$3995: 1993 Dodge Dynaaty. alx 740 Motorcyclee. .
DEPARTMENT OF
The
board
raa1rvaa
1
tha
·
cylinder, tour door. good car
TRANSPORTATION
Honda 300 EX, $1500, 741l- right io reject all bide or any
· mes.
· '95
Columbua, Ohio
247-7100.
portion of a bid. for more
Aulland Car Sales
Ofllca of.COllh i1C1o1
Information regarding till
740-74.2-3311 or 1·888-818-980e
1993 183 Harley Davidson Blacl&lt; propeftl.. or ai'Nfllllmlnle
Lagol CoPf·Numbtr:
1998 Pontiac Tran5·4m 350 V·8 With 3,200 Milos, Asking $6,000, to VIIW , lha propertl..,
000132
.
LS..1 Corv&amp;ne Engine, Automallc 740-44e-9394.
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
pla..a contact Dlryl E.
TranSmission , Factory ChrOme
Milling Dlle: 02/0712000
Wheels; T-Tops, Fully Loaded, 1993 Suzuki 125 RM 2 Stroke, Well, ~~~n11nd1nt at
Sealed propoula will be
.
500 W1 Monsoon Stereo System $1 .200 OBO, 740·245-5018 Or (740) Ill
occaptad lrom all pra(2) 20, 27, (3) I, 12 4 to
With 10 Speakers And 12 Olac 352~5 Leave Message.
quollflad
bldd1ra 11 the
CO Changer In ll'unk Caaaone In 1998 Yamaha Warrior Excollont
HQT1C1 TO IIDDEIIS . Office of Controcta of th1
Oash, Oeap Navy Mat•lllc With
8ealed p10poaa11 wtll be Ohio Deportment of
Dark Grey Leather Interior, Any ~I (740)-«&amp;-80!50
Reasonable Oller Considered, 760
Auto Parts &amp;
reoeiWd lly the lolrcl of Tranaportatlon, Columbua
Ed1108110n 01 the lllllga Ohio, unlt.IO:OO a.m.
740-448-4548 Or 74o-446-7375.
Acc;ea•orlea
Locel 1o11oo1 Dllb lot of Wacln11doy, March 08, 2000'
HONDA'a $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE IMPOUND. Honda's royo· Budget Prlcod TranamiS&amp;Iono All ......,_,, . Ohio, at the For Improving -..qn GALIa's, Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Typos. Access To Over 10.000 Treaurw'a Office unUI1:00 233-0.00, s- ROut. 233 1n
Wednlldly. Gallla County, Ohio, In
Ulllltloa. Call Nowl 800-7.72·7470; Transmissions, CVC.Jolnts, 740· ··~·I!'· . on
245-5677.
fellnllry 23; 2000, and II accorclonco with plana and
EXT. 6336.
that 111M opanld lly the apeclflcatlona lly grading
C4RS FROM Ut/MO.' Im~ 01 aald lolrd for
SE
RVICES
and rllurlaclng with
pounds !Repos. Faa. $0 Dawn 124
(1) ~ alxty (80) aaphalt concrete.
Mos. 019.9% For Listings 1-8l)().
"The dote eat for
319·3323 X2156 ..
810
. ' Home
complotlon of IIIIa work
(BODY ONt:
. Y OR
ONE
720 Trucke for Sale
Improvements
ba •• eat forth ln·lhl
COMI'LITE
BU$.) 111111
bidding
propoul. • Plana
BMEMENT
'87 Chovy Sllver,do. 112 ton. on- :
ll*llft: •ane . · and and BpaclflciiiiOno
111 on
WATERPftOOfljQ
glne frozelkx:ked up, rnanv ama. .
1-.atlone to blddlla may
Must Milt $2500, 740-992-138e;
unconditional tllellme guarantee. be ....... at .... Ollloe ol fila In the Departmlnl of
Trenapartatlon.
Local rtftrenCta furnlahed. Ea·
1986 Ch'evy Silverado Pickup,
1abtlsh80 1975. Call 24 Hra. (7401 the nweurw, 320 E. lllln
Proctor
Good Condition. $2,850.00. 740- 446·0870, 1-800·287·0576. Rog- Su,.t. Pamaroy, Olllo 4a7ea Dlreclor of 0on1on
Trenapoitdon,
245-9376.
... WaiOrprooflng.
·
' or 11y oall!"ll 740 882 eeso Flbru~ry 13, 20, 2000 .
·a, Older 01 Molga Locel

Roundup· of county court action, A2
Eastern girls ~in sectional tourney, B 1

1Uesclw. Cloudy
Htp: 50s; \ow: 401

VALLEY AGRICpLTURE

J

1978, she earned a degree in communications via the University Without Wa!ls
program. ·soon afier, she wrote her first
book, How To Set Up A B.usiness Office;
published by Enterprise Press.
',
During the late '70s and early ·s~. :
she worked as a college textbook editor ·
and writer, specializing in compute.r science and applications. Among the sev.;tal books on this subject she authored ~r
co-authored was the widely used college
text "Introduction · to Computers and
Information Systems," published hy
MerrilL
While all this was going. on, Morris'
husband was hired a.• an editor and
writer at the Nashville bureau of Dillboard, the weekly muf ic trade magazin~.
Their oldest daughter, Erin, earned a
music business degree at Na•bville's Delmont University and then became ·a
publicist for RCA Records, where slie

" ....... Mon:b- ..... AJ

'.

•

�•

.

Monday, February 21 ,2000

Pege A2. • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

·BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Boosters raise mo~y for complex
MEDINA (AP) -Ken Woodruff didn't want to wait around for
voters to approve a bond for construction at Buckeye High School.
So the teacher started a fund-roising campaign and roised enough
money to pay for a new athletic complex.
Woodruff raised $360,000 in a little less than two years for the
7, tOO-square-foot complex, which opens Tuesday. Buckeye school
district voters rejected construction bond issues three times during
~t same period.
~: Buckeye High School .boosters join a growing roster of groups
that have moved beyond bake sales to raise money 10 pay for major
school construction projects, fulfilling a responsibility that school
districts usually have met by spending tax money. .
When costs exceeded early estimates for a new high school in
the Lorain County C!)mmunity of Avon, the school board decided
_ to..J:Irop plans-for an auditorium in the building. But a parent raised
$380,000 to enable the auditorium to be built.
·
·
The Cloverleaf district in southern Medina County had
$700,000 available in 1998 for an auxiliary gym. Community supporters raised another $1.5 million. Now the district has a four-gym
complex for practices and the community has a public recreation
center.
·
Ravenna schools us~d donations to build a $5.5 million athletic
complex and stadium. Its supporters even sold "licenses" for stadiunl scats.

Teens kill peer in robbery
CHESTERLAND (AP) -A 15-year-old shot and killed a gas
station clerk during a robbery because she could have identified
hi m, police said.
The ho~nicide was the first in about a decade in ·chesterTownship, a community in Geauga County east of Cleveland. Two other
teens also have been charged in the robbery at Clark Oil service station on Friday night.
_Wesley Pearson, 19, of Cleveland, was being held at Geauga
County Jail on charg~s of aggravated murder and aggravated robbery, police said.
. ·
The IS-year-old boy and a 17-year-old girl, both from Geauga
County, were being held in a detention center in Shalersvillc. Police
.
would nor release their names because they are minors.
Police said the three suspects were talking with clerk DanieUe
Kovacic, 19, on Friday night wheri they stepped outside. In seconds,
they hatched a plan to TDlJ the place and kill Kovacic and her 17year-old friend to keep them from identifying their attackers, police
said. ·
.·
"Tllis was an execution homicide;' said police detective Harry
Eidan.
.

Multilingual employees needed
COLUMBU~(AP) - Mohamed Bensaifi's first job in the Unit- ·

cd States might be helping to count Americans. ·
·
Bensai.fi,:an immigrant from Algeria, is among !hose applying to
be part-lime census workers.
·
·
Census workers are eager to have an applicant who speaks a 'for·
· .
.
eign language.
.
"We love to have that," said Michael Gluck, manager of o~e of
the U.S. Census Bureau offices in Columbus.
·
In addition to regular, door-to-door counting, multilingual c~n­
sus worke.rs are sent on special assignments to households where
their linguistic skills come in handy, he said.
When assembled, the census-taking corps may mirror the melting pot it is attempting to count. Hundreds of thousands of workers are needed nationally, including about 20,000 in Ohio.
"This is really the largest peacetim~ · mobilization in the United
States' history," said Don Brode, m~nager of the other Columbus
office. "We've never needed this inany employees - volunteers to do a single task other than go to war."
'
The count is especially crucial in urban areas where the bureau
estimat~s it missed 5 million people in the 1990 census, mostly poor
1~unonnes. The federal government use the figures to distribute bilhons of dollars for social, educational and other programs. ·
.
.
'

'

'

Former ~presentative dies at 92
. CINCINNATI (AP) - . · Former state Rep. Edward Schumacher
d1ed Saturday of heart failure at Hospice of Cincinnati. He was 92.
Schuma~her, a Republican who lived in suburban Springdale,
won a seat 1!1 the LegiSlature in 1964 and served one term. He then
served 28 years on ihe Hamilton County Court of Zoning Appeals.
He also' was president of the Hamilton County Board of Education
and served on the Ohio Board of Education:
Survivors include his wife, three children and two stepchildren.
, A memorial service for Schumacher is scheduled for Monday in
Sharonville at Grace Bible Presbyterian Church.

Project to make travel easier
CLEVELAND (AP) -Motorists should be able to make direct
connections between lnterst.tt~ 77 and "the Ohio Turnpike in northeastern Oh10 by late next year.
·
The turnpike awarded a C\)ntract Friday for $38.25 nulli.oh to
rework an interchange on . the border of Cuyahoga and Summit
counties.

"It will open up,.'ccess a great deal," turnpike spokeswoman
Karen Lenehan sa1d. We sxpect it to benefit commuters rhe most."
Work 1s expected to begin in March and be completed by
N~vember 2001. Traffic on the turnpike, 1-77 and ·state Route 21
w1ll be maintained at all times.
Currently, turnpike dnvers cannot directly access 1-77.
,
. Approxm1ately nuUwn drivers used the interchange last year.

t

Abuse ·of 111eclicine draws waming
CLEVELAND (AP) - A rash .of ~cn-agers hospitalized for
abusmg over-the-c~untcr cold pills and syrups to get high has
prompted he~lth offic1als to 1ssuc a statewide warning.
·
Already this year,12 teens 111 southern Ohio have been treated at
hospitals for abusing cold 1)1edications. Some apparently learned of
th~.drugs' hallucinatory effects on thl Internet.
If you get on the Web, you'U be amazed. You can find formulas
for this stuff," William Wirisley, executive director of the Staie Board
of Pharmacy told The Plain Dealer: "Parents need to know what
their, kids are doing. Unfortunately, a lot of them don't."
. The Cincinnati Drug &amp; Poison Information Center, which also ·
covers paris of northeast Ohio, issued the -alert Friday after getting ·
28 .~aU~ about abu~e of the drugs since January.
· .
It !s hkely ~hat thts ~~arp increase_in ~alls is representaiive of a'
large mcrease m. ~buse, the alert sa1d. Pharmacists, emergency
depar:_rment phySJctans, retailers, school counselors, nurses, teachers
and parents need to be aware of rhis new trend.
"Children should be warned that this drug abuse practice can be
dangerous."
.
The medicine involved is Coricidin HBP, a product that experu
stress is safe when used correctly.
.

.

·Minn. ecologist warns of
nitrogen fertilizer overuse

DEATH NOTICES

Gun vote inspired

Lawrence Jinks

first-time candidate·..

. RU_T LAND - Lawrence Jinks, Rutland, died Saturday evening at
his res1dence. Arrangements will be announced later l&gt;y Ewing Funer:11 Home, Pomeroy.

BETHEL, Minn. (AP) - . A Tilman took his own experiments
University of Minnesota ecologist on nitrogen and incorporated
is warning that the agricultural them with the brst available world
landscape could rurn ugly within population, income and consump50 years if farmers continue to tion patterns. He already had
WASHINGTON (AP) to try to energize people who
depend heavily on nitrogen fertil- found that as tl)e amount of nitroJust five Republican senators feel as srrongly as he does about
izer.
·
gen doubles, species divenity
broke party ranks bst year and gun control. He says he has spent :
David Tilman has been study- declines by 25 percent. And as
voted for background. checks of about S20,000. .
everyone who buys a firearm at a
"I'm welcome everywhere;;
ing the long-term effects of nitro- nitrogen levels continue to
gen fertilizer on plots he and col- increase, species are lost at a
gun .show or a pawn shop.
he ~xplained. "I go 10 gun shows · .
, Ronald Dickson, who makes and sporting clubs. ·I use the · leagues have !ended north of the greater, though less dramatic, rate,
Twin Cities near Bethel for nearly leveling off at declines of 40 perhis living organizing gun shows, intercom systems; we stop t:~~ery~ .·
two decades.
~-~cent_to.. 70 percent..~.--~-~~ ~__llabb!:rgasted when-the-.thing-in-the..show~nd have.-what~ ·
On 207 plots, each about 16
"The ball news is that low rates
amendinent passed and furious I call town hall meetings:•
yards square, they have measured of nitrogen are · having more
that Ohio's two senators voted .
There are other issues about
h?w plants handle varyiqg levels of impact than expected," Tilman
for it.
.
which he feels srrongly. including
Now his frustration has been the need for tax qus, ending
mtrogen, a powerful fertilizer that said.
is a key factor in how plants fare.
To get world food production
channeled into action. He's run- . abOrtion and safeguarding private
Overtime,atrendhasemerged. to double qver the p;Jst 35 years,
njng against Sen. Mike DeWine property rights, but DeWine's
As more nitrogen is applied ro farmers have had to use seven
in the March 7 Republican pri- gun-check vote is the driving
plots, progressively fewer species of times as 111~ch nitrogen as they
mary, and says he's certain there force behind the Dickson camplants survive. The ones that do are used to, effectively doubling the
arc .enough like-minded Ohio p'!ign- and the bnly islue in his
usually less-desirable, non-native amount that already comes in ·
voters that his race isn't really a . television,.conunercials.
ones such as quack ~. whi~h from the atmosphere, he said. ·
longshot.
In his ads, he calls DeWi~¥= "•
needs high doses of nitrogen to
"Our estimate is that by 2050 ,
"I say it's a shoo-in," Dickson turncoat Republican:• On the
thrive.
·
.
the use of nitrogen will quadrusaid from his Oxford, Ohio, · stump, he calls DeWine .a "rurn•
Now Tilman has t&lt;aken that pie;' he said.
·
home. "This is a big issue. The coat weasel," emphasizing the
level of inquiry a step further. As
By then, the world population
gun owners are so upset.
• point on televisiop by showing a
part of a broader effort involving is ·projected to increase by almost
"I have spoken to over De Wine-like puppet .popping·
other scientists, he has rried to SO percent,Tilman said. It also will
105,000 people so far. I've had ·· our of a jack-in-the-box to the
four people say a kind , word tune of"Pop Goes the Weasel." · :
determine what the world will become increasingly amuent,
look like 1·n 50 years a••unu'ng
1
·
·
b
·
about
Mike DeWine."
His strategy is to publi
. ·a·ze· · ·
~
resu tmg m uying power 2.4 ·
farmers continue to ~dop! · U.S. times that of today's population
DeWine isn't acting worried. DeWine's votes on gun issues tO.
agricultural methods that depend and producing a demand for twice
In the Ohio Poll taken in mid- hunters and gun collectors. He
heavily on nitrogen for high as much food, he said.
.
Janllary by the University of dUnks he can tap the votes of the
·
' Unl~ss agricultural m~ihods are
' Cincinnati, 88 percent ofRepub- . nearly 500,000 ,..Qhioans who · ,
yields.
That picture 1"sn't p•etty.
he .,;d.
· a1 adaptations
. licans
said they'd vole to re-elect hold bunting -licenses ·p.Ius a large.
•
ch ange d or tee h!1JC
him Th
"Olcygen-starved "dead zones," are made, he said, that will amount
· e crime-figh.ting former share of rhe~ 1.9 million people · .
such as the one now ,·n the Gulf of to· I hre e ·to mur
c
prosecutor
· ·was ·who voted 10 1998 a.,.;nst
ban'-· ..
times more need
1 d
hfrom Cedarville
·
..·
ill
b
·
·
gl
c
e
ecte
to
t
e
House
four
times
ning
dove
hunting
in
the
sta•e.
MeXJco, w
ecome mcreasm y •or nitrogen.
•
revalent
and
many
plants
will
d
·e
B
·
and
lieutenant
governor
once
·
Joim
Green,
who
runs
the
1
P
· ut soc1ety is not without
b c
off, while "&lt;ewer _ and le«
deSJ·r·
ili
••ore
winning
his
first
Senate
Bliss
Institute
of
Applied
Politics
~
opt1ons, T nan said. For starters,
·
able ones- will take over, he said. he recommends more efficient
term m 1994. He lost a Senate at the University of Akron, said .
The result will be less dl'verse and
election in 1992, but that was to that to win Dickson would haveways to use nitrogen, such as tim- .
·
be J b Gl
.
li .
fc
an meum nt, o n enn.
to convince people wlio aren't .
less healthy ecosystems "&lt;or plant mg
app qt10ns o 1ertilizer better
D ks
and an1"mallifce.
dd .
ic on has been working on single-issue voters that DeWine
an omg a better J·ob of removhi
· ·
1
'""
·
h
s· camp:ugn
sinceh ast summer, will vote controry to the1·r 1·nrer- ·
10 arrJve at t at cone1usion,
ing it from sewage.
h
usmg t .e venues e knows best ests on other issues.

to oppose DeWine

Jason Charles Stevens
REEDSVILLE -Jason Charles Stevens, 19, Reedsville, died Sun-

day, Feb. 20, 2000, the result of an automobile accident.
fie was born July 8, 1980, in Athens, son. of Clifford ;nd Patricia
Misner Stevens. He was employed by Total" Lawn Care in Coolville and
was a 1998 graduate of Eastern High School, Reedsville:
He is survived by two brothers, Clifford Dale Stevens II ·and Timothy, Allen Stevens, both of Reedsville; maternal grandmother, Cledyth
Misner of Coolville; several aunts and uncles.
.
.
'
Services will be held Wednesday, II a.m. at the Whi.te Funeral
_ _J,JJqnle-iin-l:ooalv.ille-wiith-bu•rial.in the Heiney-Eemetery;Reedsville.
Friends may call Tuesday, 2-4 and 77 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Woodrow W. Engle Jr.
MIDDLEPORT -Woodrow W. Engle Jr., Middleport, died Sunday as the result of a drowning accident. Arrangements will be
an11ourtced by Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport.

Laura Rhoda Newell Bechtle
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. - Laura Rhoda Newell .I;lechtle, 93, Southlide, died Friday, Feb. 18, 20QO, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
A homemaker and a member of Church of Christ in He~derson,
W.Va., she was born Feb. 28, 1906, in Southside, daughter of the late
john and Lowell Isaac Newell.
$he is survived by two sons, Robert L. Bechtle of Point Pleasant and
Pifford Z. Bechtle of Southside; a daughter, Evelyn Thon1as of Middleport; a btother, Columbus Newell of Xe.nia; several grandchildren
an&lt;;! great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Gilbert D. Bechtle on
Oct. 12, 1980; two sons, Gilbert C. and johnny R. Bechtle; a daughter,
Virgie Marie May.
.
·
Services will be held Tuesday, 2 p.m. at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant with Eugene Zopp officiating. Burial will follow in the Concord Cemetery, Henderson. ·
.
·
Friends may ~all today, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

speed, $30 plus COS1S; Jeremy W. .Eel&lt;- $30 plus costs; Paul E. Schae11er, Pine
han, Vienna, W.va., seat belt, $25 plus Grove, Pa., failure to maintain assured
costs; Angela M. PI..Sz, Charleston, clear distance, $20 plus costs; Dennis E.
W.Va., speed, $50 plus costs; Theresa M. Miler, Thoi'nville, tailure to display regisHughes, Ch01lot1e, N.C., speed, $50 plus tration, $20 plus costs; Terri L Sturgeon,
Anita Louise Callk;oat, Nitro, W.Va., costs; John Lewis· Dean, Wlllarnstown. Racine, speed, $30 plus costs; Michael S.
speed, $30 plus costs; Forest L. Quais, W.Va. , speed, $a0 plus costs; Mary Pethtel, GallipOlis, seat belt, $25 plus
N~ak, Glenview, Ill., speed, $30 plus
costs; Michael S. Angel, Gallipolis. unsafe·
Pomeroy, open container, $30 plus costs;
costs;
Forrest E. Armstrong, Charleston, ve~lcle, $20 plus costs; .Heather L.
Rickie L. Hollon; Long Bottom, speed, $30
· plus costs; William H. Howard Jr., Bidwell, W.Va., speed, S30 plus costs; Bryan T. Gandee, Spencer, W.Va., speed $qO plus
speed, $30 plus costs;·Andrew C. Beattie Alee, Dunbar, W.Va., seat belt. $15 plus costs; Gregory W. Cuii'nin\lham,
costs; Nadal Montoya, North Olmsted, . Pomeroy, speed, $30 ·plus costs; seat
II, Point Pleasant, W.Va., speed, $30 pluoi
beft. $25 plus costs; Amy M. Wilkinson,
costs; · John L. Sunle, Long Bottom, speed, $30 plus costs;
speed, $30 plus costs; Darnell J. Blanks, . · George · Tusser, Chicago, Ill., speed, Athens, speed, $qO plus costs; Heathers.
Middleport, falure to maintain control, $20 $30 plus costs; seat be~. $25 plus costs; Gerhardt, Springfield, speed, $30 plus
plus costs; Dorthy L. Parker, Pomeroy. Daniel D. Nieman, Virgir)la Beach, speed. costs; Richard· A. Maul, Parkersburg,
speed, $30 plus cost~; · Elnora Barnard, $30 plus costs; George S. Blizzard, Point speed, $30 plus costs; Pamela A. Boyd,
Reedsville, improper backing, $20 plus Pleasant, speed, S30 plus costs; Manuel Long Bottom, speed. $30 plus costs; Jerry
costs; JelL. Ross, Jackson, speed, $30 L. Hernandez. Dallas, Texas, seat belt, M. Clark, Middleport, -window tint, $20
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus COS1S; Fred· $25 plus costs; Ralph D. Gwynn, Parkers- plus costs; ·
Erik E. Metheney, Pomeroy, possesenck H_ Gerlach, Uttle Hocldng, seat belt, burg, W.va., seat beH, $25 plus costs;
Stephen A. Merritt, Industry, ·Pa., speed, sion of marijuana, $90 plus COS1S; David
$25 plus coots; Michael Dwaine Staats
G~ysville. failure to yield, $20 plus costs: $25 plus costs; Sharon K. Smith, Syra· E. Gillispie, Point Pleasant. speed, $30
failrua to transfer reglstratioo. $20 plus CYse, speed, $30 plus costs; Martin D. plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs; StanAndrew, Rutland, · seat belt, $25 plus ley Hornllton, Wanen, speed, $30 plus
costs; .
Ctrls D. Setty, Albany, seat belt, $20 costs; John H. Allen, Kenna, W.Va., seat. costs; Stephen J. Farley, New Haven, driJl[us costs; Scott M. Barrett, Langsville, belt, $25 plus costs; Carol E. Arnott, ving under the Influence, $85o plus costs,
speed, $30 plus·costs; Roban L. Boring, Coolvile, speed, $30 plus cosis; Nicholas · 10 days jail suspended to three days, 90. Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Ty N. W. FHch, Portland, seat belt, $25 plus day operator's license suspension, cine
· Johnson. faiure to control, $20 plus costs· costs; Kristina M. Flnlaw, LQilg Bonom, year probation, Jail and $550 suspended
speed, $30 plus costs; Donald E. Slons upon e¢mptetlon· of residential treatnient
KeHh Alan Andr..Ws, Lake Park,
Jr.,
Springfield, seat belt, $15 plus costs; · program; lnarked lanes, costs ·only; Denspeed, $30 plus costs; seat beft, $25 plus
· Randall T. Bauman, Voenna, W.Va., nis A. Foley, Syracuse, driving under
costs; Richard A. Fugate, Lancaster,
speed, $30 plus costs; seat 1\e~. $25 plus speed, $30 plus costs; Joseph Lee Rus- financlsl responsibility action suspension,
costs; Shawn M. Dresbach, Athens, sell, Mason, W.Va., speed, $30 pl·us costs; $250 plus coots, 30 days Jail suspended
James Ertc Burdelte, Charleston, sJH!ed, to seven days, one year probation;

Md.:

.

Springer
interested
in politics
COLUMBUS (AP) - Television talk-show host Jerry Springer,
who last year toyed with the idea
of running for the U.S. Senate seat
Mike DeWi~e•.
held by incumbent
.
says he still might give politics
another tty.
.
''I'm not going to say no' to
anything;' the former Cincinnati
mayor and unsuccessful candidate
for governor ' in 1982 told The
Columbus Dispatch.
·
"Would I one day like to be
back in?" he said. "Sure, it's always
on my mind. That's always been my
pa.sston. I never lost interest in it:'
Undet contract with the Chica• ·
go-based Jerry Springer show· for
several more years, Springer said he
probably could not run before ·
2004. That is when , first-rerm.
Republican Sen. GeorgeVoinovich .'
would be up for re~election.
· Springer, a 56-year-old Democrat, also did not rule out running in
.2006 for the seats now held by
Gov. Bob Taft and DeWine, boih
Republicans.
Springer said be could not run
against DeWine· this year becau$e
he could not break contracts that
.his highly roted daytime show has
wirh tJ.s. TV stations.

&lt;I

Walter Haggy, Rutland, no operator's
license, $100 plus costs, 10 days jai8U8- ·
pended, one year probation; no OL, $100
. plus costs, 10 days jaU SUspended, OM
year probation, 80 houra community - vice; Rebecca J. Terry, Middleport, no OL,
$200 plus costs, one year probation,
I!8YOil days jail and $100 auepended •
valid OL presented within 60 days; diSorderly conduct, $1 00 suspended, COII8,
one year probation; Martin Williams,' · ·
Racine, dlsord.erly conduct, $1 00 I1UIpended, costs, one year probation; Sari, ,
Waugh, Pomeroy, OUI, $850 plus COlla, '
30 days jail suspended to 10 days, one
year Ol. suspension, one yrw probation,
90-day -vehicle lmmobllzatlorr
·
Deanna McGrath, Coolvlte, DUI, 1850 ·
plus coats, 10 days jal suspended to'
three days, six-month OL suspension, . ~
one year probation, jail and $550 I1UI- · •
ponded upon comptetloo of l'8lldantllll
treatment progrwn; Evelyn Smallwood, ·
Langsville, no OL, $200 plus costs, three
days jail and $100 suspended upon proct
of a valid license; Nick R. Btllckbum, Long
Bottom, possess, Ohio endangered
species, $200 plus cQats, five days Ja..
suspended, one year prObatJon; ~
a wild t..key or parts thereof without a
tag, seat, or cartlflcate shOWing where the
turkey was taken or acquired, $25 plua
Costs, five days jail suspended, ona year.
probation; possess parts of a d - not
properly tagged, $50 plus costs, five days
· jal suspended, one year probation.

'

c

Supplement to:d-

'

OBITUARY
William 'Bill' Junior King

School
from PapAl

school buildings, includih.g pro- · ·.
ficiency ;:est results and general '
and financial profiles.
.Because of its placement in
the academic emergency category, Meigs Local will hold a
meeting on Feb. 29, to solicir
public "input . into the district's .
·continuous Improvement Pl'an, ' ·
a plan required by the state for .
districts in the academic emergency, academic watch and con- _..
tinuous improvement ·ca tegories.
,
The meeting, to be held in ··'
the Meigs High School cafete- · ·'
ria , will be at 7 p.m., and will· '
cover the overall goals as set"' '
forth by the state, district and ,
buildings, and will divide into' '
building-level meetings for the
high school, middle school and
the two new elementary buildings, Elementary 124 and Ele'· ·
mentafY 143.

dards, "academic watch," meeting nine to 13; and "academic
emergency;• meeting eight standards or less, .
I C.
Last year, Southern Il!ocal met
He is survived by his ,wife, Cledith J. Marks King of Middleport; 10 of the 18 standards, placing it
three daughters and sons-in-law, Mary and Donald Wh:in of Middle- just bafely in the "continuous
.
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port, TereS¥ and Scott Trussell of Pomeroy and Cindy and Anthony Improvement category.
Rowe of Pomeroy; nine grandchildren, DonaldWhan .JII, MeliaWhan,
Eastern and Meigs locals did
Cassi Whan, Anthony Rowe Jr. , Kiesha Rowe, Cheyenne Trussell, riot perform as well. Eastern was
Scot! Trussell, Autumn Trussell and Makya Trussell; two brothers, placed in the· "academic watch"
POMEROY- Earnest E. Lowe, 64,Apache Junction,Ariz., died on Franklin King and Edward King, both o(Harrisonville; several nieces category, having met six stanTuesday, Feb. 16, 2000,in Mesa, Ariz.
and nephews.
dards, and Meigs, having mel
A master electrician, he was born in Blue Creek, W.Va., and was a
In 'addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a ;on, five standards, was placed in rhe
veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps from 1953 to 1965.
William King Jr., and by three brothers, Charles, Walter and Jack King. "academic emergency" category.
Survivors include his wife, Carol Lowe; four daughters: Vickie
In addition to the districtServices will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 23, 2000, at FishMclnteer, Sandra Harrah.Vonda Lowe and Rhonda Cannon; two sons, er Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating will be the Rev. Clark Baker "'ide statistics, the report cards
Wendell Lowe ~nd David Lowe; a ·sister, Naomi Ruth Lowe; and two and burial will follow in Wells Cemetery.
· -· ·
will also include two pages of
brothers, Arlie Patrick· Lowe and Paul Gordon Lowe; and \8 grand·
Friends may call Tuesday, Feb. 22,2000, from 6"9 p,m. at the funer- figures relating to individual
children.
, al home. '
· Funeral seniices will be held on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2000 at rhe Mariposa Gardens .C hapel i'n Mesa, Ariz., and friends m:ay caU at Mesa
Funeral Care at Mariposa Gardens on Monday from 5 to 9 p.m.
Nashville, she routinely goes with
Memorial contributions may be made to Hospice Family Care,
her clients to New York and Los
5037 E. Broadway Road, Mesa, Ariz.
Angeles for special' projects. Three
years ago, she spent several days
from PageAl
on the Caribbean island of St.
.remained for 10 years.
Lucia to help promote the island's
SYRACUSE - · Addie W. Norris, 75; Syracuse, died on Monday,
BY THE AssoctATEO PRESS .
a.m.
In 1990, the Della Croce; · first ever country music festival.
The
National
Weather
Service
Fqrecast:
Feb. 21,2000 at Tampa General Hospital in Tampa, Fla.
founded The . Pr~ss Office to spe"I love music;' says Morris, '
AnnoUJ:tcemerits will be announced by the Fisher Fu.neral Home in ciali~e in music publicity..Morris "and I enjoy being around people is forecasting increasing cloudiToday... Sunny. High near 50.
Pomeroy.
Tonight .. .lncreasing clouds .
has been with the firm since the who make, such beautiful music ness for tonight as Ohio comes
Chance
of drizzle northwest.
under
the
influence
of
the
back
start. Her •on, Jason, is a song- for a living. When I first came to
Lows in the 30~.
plugger f0r a music publishing Nashville, I spent a lot of time side of a high pressure system.
Tuesday. .:Cloudy and warmer ..
A
few
sprinkles
are
likely
in
company in Nashville. Daughter being starstruck.
"My husband and daughter · western Ohio. Lows will be Highs in the upper 50s.
Rachel lives in Bowling Green
Extended forecast:
and is not · associated with the kept introducing me to people I berween 25 a~;~d 30 in the northTuesday
night .. ."Partly to mo.st-. ·
music bu1iness. The fourth child, had known only through radio east and in the 30s elsewhere.
Cloudy skies and warmer ly cloudy. Lows around 40.
Christopher, died in 1966, when and television. And I have to
Wednesday... A chance of rain.
temeratures
are expected Tuesday
Subscribe today.
he was two years old.
admit that I'm still in awe of a lot
as a· southerly flow of air contin- Highs in the lower 60s.
Morris' duties include ,"pitch- of performers.
Thursday.. :A chance of showing" stories on he~ "clients to the
"But seeing the business .side of ues across the state. There. also will
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Federal
.
entertainment media; accompa- music takes aW.y some of irs be· a few showers in the north. ers. Lows in the 40s. Highs in the.
Jonallum Silverman (The Sin·
bu~t
~uts
and
pressure
from
the
.
·
·gle ·Guy) and David Schwimnying th.e stars to major inter- . .glamour. Still, no .matter how Highs will· climb tb the mid 40s l&lt;;&gt;wer 60s·. .
insurance
indl)stry
are
to
blame
for
Friday... Mostly cloudy. Lows
mer (Friends) are old pals; they
views, television appearances and ·much business I have to deal in the n9rtheast ro the upper 50s
rhe closings of two hospitals in award shows; and secunng with, I'm alw:jys aware that it is in the southwest.
went to school together.
in .t he upper 40s. Highs in the . .
Ohio and the finandal problems reviews of their records. While show business.
High pressure over the Mid- lower 6Qs.
other hospital systems are suffer- · she does most of her work in
west on Sunday evening bro,ught
The Daily Sentinel
"And that keeps me going." ·
To get a current weather
ing, state hospital officials say.
(USPS 213·960)
clear skies for much of the state.
"All hospitals have their finanCommunity New~p.~per Holdlnp, In&lt;.
report, check the
Late evening temperatures fell to
Published every afternoon, Monday throuah
cial struggles;· Mary Yost, a spokesthe mid 20s to low 30s.
·Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
woman
for
the
Ohio
Hospital
Clouds were drifting tO the
Ohio Valley Publishlna Company. Second
Association, told The Columbus
cla!ll po5tagc paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
east in northeast· Ohio and skies
Me•ben The A.ssociated PreS&amp;, and the Ohio
. Dispatch for a story Sunday. "How .
were
clear elsewhere in the state
New5p1pcr Association. .
Lands End- 28~.
close
they
are
to
the
red
i"
s
a
movAEP29''•
overnight. Temperatures were
PO!I'MASTER: Send address cor\ections 10
Akzo - 40'1.
Ltd.- 30'!. .
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cou~ St, Pomeroy,
falling at · 5 a:m., with readings
ing target. We are increasingly . .AmTach/SBC _ 3~,
Ohio 4S769
Oak Hill Financial - 14~.
hearing
that
more
and
more
instifrom the mid ~eens iri' the north
SUBSCRIP'I10N RATES
OV.B- 32'1.
.
tutions that have been used to pos~ · Ashlan!llnc. - 30'By C.rrfer or Motor Route
to around 30 in the south.One V.allay - 29'1.
O_nc Week ...•• :·.·········· .. ···-···"·· ................. $2.0Q
itive bottom ·line, are operating AT&amp;T- 4,,.
The record high temperature
One Month ............................................ $8.70
Peoplas-16
much
closer
if
not
into
the
red."
Bank
One24~,.
for
this dare at the Columbus
One Year............... :............................$104.00 '
Premier-a'!.
Mount Sinai Medical Center in Bob Evans - 13},
SINGLE COPY PRICE
weather station was 71 degrees in
Dally ..................................................35 Cents
·Rockwell Cleveland and Bethesda Oak in BorgWarner - 31'/,.
AS:AIIIIfAUTY 1111 1.. tl,tl,tl
1997. The record low temperaSub~eribc:rs not dealrinJ to pay the carrier may
(Comlclytllnna) Kevin Spacey, Amen! Bering
RD
ShellCincinnati
have
closed
in
the
past
Champion
4~.
lUI)!
was
8
degrees
below
zero
in
remit in advanCe direct to The Daily Sentinel
Saars-28~.
on a three, six or 12 month bula. Credit will be:
two weeks. Ohio State said its four Charming Shops-. 6~.
1885. Sunset will be at 6:13p.m.
~~---~~ 1:41,tlt,1'.1, 111
Jivcn carrier.each week.
Shonay's
- 1'·
hospitals
will
lose
$35
million
this
City
Holding
12"1•
Sunrise
will be at 7;16 (Comldy) Bnl:e Wis, t.lailll!'tl Peny, Amanda Pte!
No aubscrjption by mail pcrmiued in areu
Wendy's- 16'1.
year and 0hio Health's Riverside Federal Mogul-14'1.
where home cartier service I! availa,ble.
IIANIIIIII' ~,_ tl,t1&amp;,7:11,1:41i
-worthington -:- 13'·
PYbllsher reserves the riJhl to adjust rain
and Gran! Medical Centers in Flrstar - 19'• .
(CollldyiDrln) Meg Ryan, Din Keaion, Lila KtliDw
durinathe subscripcion period. SubscriptiOn
Gannett- 63"1.
Dally stock reports are the
rate chanaes may be implemented by chanaln&amp;
Columbus lost $39.4 million last General Electric_ 125'1.
Plll:IIIUI:Il .l'l t1&amp;, 4:41, 7tl, 1:11.
4 p.m. closing quotas of the
the dutaliol or the'submi,Kion . .
)'ear.
·
31
!SillltnttlllanodSclft) 'lin Diesel, Kei1IJ Dam
previous
day's
transaction&amp;,
Th~ American H&lt;;&gt;~pital Associ- Harley Davldaon - 66" .
MAIL SVBSCRimONS
provided by Advest of Gel·
IIUAIIT UTTif ~&lt;~1:00,1:11, &amp;:Ill, 7S
ation estimates that 60 perce~
· .. K mart - 8'•
lnskle Melt• County
(F!Iylton!l!ltl Geera Dalis, Hugh laili, Mi:halj J. Fol
llpolla.
13 Wecki ................. :........................... S27.JO
the nation's hospitals will be · t
oger- 15'•
8MIW DAY 1"11:tl, tl,i1W, 721, 1:1
~ Weckl ......................, ...................... $53.82
redby
.
. . 52 -u ...........................................SI05.56
The 2003.
association said Medicare
Chase, MatX Webber

992-2156

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Doa't ml•• out on thl•· ••

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MIDDLEPORT .- William "Bill" Junior King, 52, Middleport,
died at his residence on Sunday, Feb. 20, 2000.
He wa!. born on Dec. 2, 1947, in Harrisonville, son of the late Park
Edward and Frances Ellis King. He .was a self-employed auto mechan ~

VALLEY WEATHER

Clouds _move in tonight: .

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• Appliances
• Electrical
• Piumblng
•And more

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Call Dave Harris·or Matt Haskins at 992·2156

If,..

Olr • • COIICII'II Ia all stortn Is to be
ICCIInte.
bow of •• UNr I• a story,
aU ltle oewRWOm ot (744)) 192·2155. We
wiH c•eck 7011r lnren.ttloa aad malu 1
comdloti lfwlll'rlllted.

News Dt:,.rtntentl

.

CaUSe closingS

Sentinel

~~~..=.

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11i.e mala nwmber Is 992-1155. Department

a.ttuaou.an1

Geotnt Ma.O.,r~........_.. _..,; ....Ext. 1101
News ... --._,.. ,,,_,.,_,_,........... Eat. llo:&amp; •
...............................,_....:............ or£xt.l106
OtherSerYktt

M,ertw............. ~.....- ............ Ext,J104

Chnlotloo .._.............-•••••••••_,_,....Ext.IIIIJ
CluiHIId Adi-.....- ... Ext. 1100

reimbursements will decline S4.4
•
billion for Ohio hospitals between
1
1998 and 2004. Medicare helps
cover health care for people (&gt;s and
,
over and for the disabled.
The Balanced Budget Act cut
hospital reimbursements in 1997 .
and last year a revised .act gave l 0
percent back.
But the · Medicare cuts are
cumulative, increasing · from 5.3
percent in 1998 to I 1.2 perce~;~t in
2004. They target roughly half of .
the avenge hospital's income, Yost
said.
.
Medicare cuts have hit all of
Ohio's 180 hospitals, except children's hospitals .

Business
Farm
·S

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Corpora~ons

rill

• Fiduciaries
1 Partnershl'ps
• Non-profit organiza6ons

m

618 East Main St.
1·740·992·6674

If 111 BllllliiBI ~
(TIIIIdAOittla)Ewan McGrsgor, Aihley Judd.

7:10 It t:IO DAILY
MATINEES SAT!IIIN 1:10 It 3:10

WE WILL HAVE MATINIII
TODAY, FEBRUARY 2111,
"PRESIDENT'S DAY"
All AC£8, AIL TIMES St1.00
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._OullkleMelpCounty
13 w.eu ............................................. S29.25
~ Wcekl ............................................. $56.68
52 Wccki ........................................... $109.72 ..

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POMEROY· Units ofthe Meigs County Emergency Medical

RUTLAND
6:10p.m. Saturday, Holiday Hill 1 Bob White, HMC;
4:53p.m. Sunday, Mill Street, Middleport, RobertaMeredith,VMH.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. Hospitals say
MORE LOCAL FOLKS. budget cuts

.'

Point Pleasant Register

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EMS I~ 13 weekend calls

55'·

.Gallipolis.Daily Tribune

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_Bridge to close Tuesday

48'•

The Daily Sentinel
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VFW meets n.ursclay

Addie W. Norris

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Retirement party friday

LOCAL STOCKS

WILL BE HERE FRIDAY, MARCH 17TH

• Furniture
·carpet,
•Wallpaper
• lns\lrance :.

Service recorded 13 calls' for assistance Saturday and Sunday. Units
responding included:
POMEROY - Area teens are invited this .Friday to Friday's Fun,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Food and Fellowship project at God's Neighborhood Escape for Teens,
1:02 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook Nursing Center. Middleport, John
M'ain Street, Pomeroy, 6-\0:30 p.m. Nutritional foods will be available Kearns, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
4:01 a.m. Sunday, Silver Ridge Road, Tuppers Plains, Jason Steves,
free-of-charge for snacking while teens are at the center. Non-violent
games, computer programs, pool tables and cards are available for use dead on arrival, Tuppers Plains squad assisted;
'
for po charge. The center is also open 6-10:30 p.m. on Saturday.
8:10 a.m. Sunday, state Route 124, Racine, Ruth Young, VMH, '
Racine squad assisted;
11:22 a.m. Sunday, Broadway Street, Middleport, Garnette Rife, .
VMH;
·
, ' POMEROY -An open house retirement party for EMS Director
9:19 p.m. Sunday, Abbott Road, Pomeroy, Arlee Abbott,VMH.
Robert Byer will be held Friday, l-4 p.m. at the Emergency Medical
MIDDLEPORT
Service office in Pomeroy hosted by EMS staff. All welcome.
•
2:56p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire department and squad to Shady Cove
· Road, water rescue, Woodrow Engle Jr., dead on arrival, Pete Engle,
VMH, Central Dispatch squad assisted.
POMEROY
,
:rtJP.P.ER-S-P-L-MNS--;-V-FW~Pes~ 9053;-Tuppers-Plains;-will meet6:-31-p:m:-S&lt;~turday;Pomeroy-Politrl:&gt;eplrrtment, Clrn'les SmitJr;-trcarc=- '
on Thursday at 7:30 p.m., with a name drawing.
ed at the scene.
·.
·
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RACINE
11:20 a.m. Saturday, Elmwood Terrace Apartments, Opal Cummins,
PVH;
'
POMEROY -The Ohio Department ofTransportation will close
7:09 p.m. Sarurday,VFD with boar to Antiquity, water rescue;
.
the Pomeroy Mason Bridge on Tuesday at 9 a.m. so that a beam ·u nder
I :53 p.m. Sunday, Yellow Bush Road, Kenny Shuler, treated at the . ·
the pedestrian walkway can be repaired. The bridge is expected to scene.
·
reopen sometime Tuesday after!'oon . .
REEDSVILLE
.8:42 p.m. Saturday,VFD to state Route 248, structure fire.

Morris

.2000 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION

• Hardware
• Paint ·
• Construction
. .. Blinks ' .

Friday Food, Fun and Fellowship

.

Judge O'Brien settles docket in county col.lrt
. . .
POMEROY -The following
cases were settled recently in the
Meigs County Court of Judge
Patrick H . O'Brien:

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

Eamest L Lowe

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Monday, February 21,2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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_Th~e-·D_at~·ly_S_en_ti_ne_I________________I~)~illiCtll
The Daily Sentinel

It\ E 1':" t-\

'Estutt.slid u. 1948

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-PageA4

MonMy. Febnutry :n. 2000;_•

t&lt;.t E;. P

6~T"ftN6 ~l,t-\E'-R·

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Astronauts dose out mission

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111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-G02-215&amp; • Fu: W2-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlea W. Govey
Publlaher

R. Shewn Lewla
Manqlng Editor

Chart- Hoenteh
· General Man~g~~r

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Diane Hill
Controller
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Not IDtad
OHIO VIEWS:

FOI2. AM~~ICAN?, T~\S

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1$ THE MOS'T" E)(ieN9Et?
P~I2IOP OF· ..

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WE!VE. .E-V6l HAP.

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Clinton~ eighth budget will

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The (Toledo) Blade, Feb. 12:
One thing can be said for certain about President Clinton's
eighth budget: It will suffer the fate of his prev.ious seven and not
pass intact. Before ·the ink was dry on the voluminous documenl, .
ltepublicans were snarling that there should be a larger tax cut.
. It is a perennial .cry that becomes more
hollow with each passing year. In fact the
.proposed budget inclydes tax. cuts and tax
wltat
'credits, but not enough to sattsfy Republicans.
.
Buckeye
Clinton is right on this one. We have
State
long argued that a tax cut is political win dow-dressing, and that any such reduction
is likely to be so small as to pass unnoticed•
through
most families' budgets. Anything
ctre
large enough to make a difference to average Americans would be fiscally irresponsible.
Perhaps the president understands better than the congressional.
Republican leadership that most Americans want to know what the
White House proposes for the next fiscal year, but don't much want
to hear Democrats defend it or Republicans oppose it in partisan
·f~shion. The voi.ce they wal)t to listen to, the voice they trust, is Alan
Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman. Because on the economy, when the Fed talks, people listen .

A lv(1k at

saytng.

The Columbus Dispatch, Feb: 8:
. Though democracy is the best form of government, it certainly
isn't a perfect one, as Austria has just demonstrated.
. The new coalition government there includes as a major partner
the freedom Party of Joerg Haider, whose pro-Nazi statements and
anti-immigrant xenophobia have put Europe and Erael on edge.
· To protest the formal inclusion of Haider's party in the governill&amp; coalition, the 14 other nations in the Em:opean Union have
taken steps to isolate Aumia politically.
• Some observers are warning that if the Euf?pean Union acts too
resolutely to isolate and punish Austria.• it may only inflame Austri~n nationalism and push inure voters into Hai~er's corner. ·
·
Maybe. llut inaction by the member nations might be far more
~angerous, because it could encourage similar movements throughout Europe.
The· organiZlltion cannot undo the outcome of democratic eleciions in Austria. llut it is not obligated to like that outcome, nor to
cuddle up with the government that results ..
The Marion Star, Feb. 8:
. State lawmakers made _the right decision in dropping a change in
Ohio's drunken driving laws that would require; people who refuse
a Breathalyzer test to prove their innocence. ·
·· Even the Ohio Prosecuting Attorney's Association, a group anx~
,' ipu~ to get more tools to use in criminal ca.&lt;es; called it a bad idea
'that wouldn't stand up in court if challenyed.
·
· We'll stand ~hind any law that mali:es our streets safer. But
!here's a constitutional w~y to do that -;&gt;y presu111ing innocence
first and proving guilt second.
.

TODAY IN HISTORY

~ A
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WEEDY'S VIEW:

•i tt

VJ!henfundamentals
of life·had great importance
..

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•

When we celebrate President's Day, most of
us likely remember ihose great leaders of the
first century of our country. We are far enough
removed liom their time a valid evaluation can
be made concerning their impact.
Perhaps we should go deeper and see who
led them to become the people they became.
As we do this we find the basics- the fun~
damentals1 if you will - of life .had great
importance. While parents· were the source of
this. training, It was most often .the mother
whose love, .nurture and instruction. brought
these b~•ics into the child\ life.
·
The SOil' of AugtL&lt;tine and Mary Ball Wa&lt;hington, George was home schooled and
tutored. His father died when he wa.&lt; l1 and for
five years he lived with his elder half-brother.
He rece.ived his surveyor's license from William
and Mary at age 17 and from 1788 until his
death was the college's chancellor.
When Wa.&lt;hinb'lon was leaving home to
begin what would becpme a lifelong service to
his country, he recorded the parting words of
his mother: "ltemember that God is our only
sure trust. To Him, 1 c.ommend yoi1 ... My son,
neglect 11ot the duty of secret prayer."
That he remembered that admonition was
proved time after time throughout his life. Not
only wa.~ he a humble man before his peers, as
John 'Adams ofi:en remarked, but his protection
in battle was a testimony of God's faithfulness.
At the Uattle of Monongahela, included in
student textbooks until 1934, 13raddock's company was ambushed. Nine days later, Washingion wrote to his brother John: "But by the allpowerful dispensation of Providence, I have
been protected beyond all human probability or
expectation; for 1 had four bullets throqgh my
coat, and two horses shot under me, yet escaped
unhurt, although death was leveling my com·pan ion~ on every ~ide of me:' ·
Three years earlier, Wa.&lt;hington had created a
personal prayer bo&lt;;&gt;k of. 24 pages in his field
notebook. Note the spirit of a Monday Morning prayer: "0 eternal and everlasting God, I·
presume to present myself this morning before
Thy Divine Majesty, beseeching Thee to accept

the bubble gum you ·had · taken and tell the.
clerk, 'I stole this yesterday and want to pay for
it.
.• i
" I loved you enough to stand over you fon
two hours while you cleaned your room, a jol&gt;•
that should have taken 15' minutes.
t
"I loved you enough to let you see anger, ·
. 0
disappointment and tears in my eyes. Children
must learn that their·pare11ts aren't perfect. · i_
"I loved you enough to let . you assume the
responsibility for your actions even when the~
GUEST VIE~W
· p.e ~s were so harsh they almost broke n~
.
eart.
·
·
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"Uut most of all, I loved you enough to say
o(my hi1mble and hearty thanks ... DireGt.my NO when I knew you would hate me for it . .
thoughts, word• and work; wash away my sins in Those were the most difficult battles of all. I'm
· the immaculate lllood of the Lamb, and p1,1rge glad I won them, because .in the end you won,
my heart by Thy Holy Spirit ... Daily fram~ me too. And someday when your children are o!dJ
more and more into the likeness ofThy Son, ~nough to understand the logic that motivaw~
Jesus Christ, that living ih Thy fear, and dyi11g in parent&lt;, you wilt tell them ..."
·
Thy favor, I may in Thy appoint~d time attain .
"'Wa.&lt; your Mom mean? .1 know mine was,•
the resurrection of the just unto eternal life. We had the meanest mother in the whole wid~:
llless my family, friends and kindred, and 1,mite world! While other kids ate candy for breakfa.&lt;t,
us all in ·praising and glorifying Thee in all our we had .to have cereal, egg&lt; and toast. Whc_n • .
. works." (America's God 'and Country Encyclo- others had a Pepsi and Twinkie for luncll, w_,e,
pedia .of Quotations, p. 658)
·
had to eat sandwiches. And. you can guess our
Although this Was 2~ centuries ago, it is still mother fixed us' dinner that' wasdiffe·rent fro(U1
very appropriate as a made I for us today. God's what' other kid&lt; had, too.
1 ,:
controversy with America· today is that we have
"She had to know who our friends were, an4~
lost sight of who is on the Throne. We are indif- what we were doing with them. She insisted
ferent to Him and ,the most significant index of that if we said we would be boone for an hour,,
the extent of our moral decay is our very indif- we would be gone for an hour or less. We wen:'
ference to that decay.
.
ashamed to admit it, but she had the nerve to
To bring this parent thing up to date, some- break the Child Labor Laws by t_n aking 1.16:
one ha.• written about the Meanest Mother. work. We had to wash the dishes, make the
Would these thoughts also be. useful to .oth~rs? bed•, learn to cook, vacuum the' floor, do faun"Someday when my children are old ehough dry, empty the trash and all sorts of cruel jobs. I
to understand the logic that motivates a ,parent, think she would lie awake at night thinking Qf ·
I will tell them: I .loved you enough': to ask more things. for us to do,
. ·
··
w~ere you were going, with whom, arid what . "Now that we have left home, we are doing
time you would be home.
·ou'r best to be mean parents just like Mom Was.
. "I loved you enough to insist that you save I think that is what is Wrong with the world
your money and buy a bike for y&lt;;&gt;urself even today, it just doesn't have enough mean mom&lt;'t
though we could alford to buy one for you.
Something to think about?
·;
"I loved you eno~gh II' be silent and let you
discover that your new 'best friend was a treep.
(Robert Wfrdy is a guest col111n11ist fi&gt;r O!lio 14illty.
"I loved you enough to make you go pay for Publislii11g.)
•
·•

R b
er
·Weedy

WASHINGTO.N MERRY-GO-ROUND:

BY THE ASSOCIAlED PREsS

Today is Monday, Feb. 21, the 52nd day of2000.There are 314 days
left in the year. This is Presidents Day. ··
.
· Today's Highlight in History:
' · On Feb. 21, 1965, former Ulack Muslinl leader Malcolm X, 39, was
·~hot to death in New York by assa.'sins identified a.&lt; lllack Muslims.
_. On 'thi.&lt; date: .
·
.
' in 1846, Sarah G. Bagley became the first female telegrapher, takIng charge at the newly opened telegraph office in Lowell, Mass.
· In 1866, Lucy B. Hobbs became the first woman to graduate from
a dental school, the Ohio CoDege of Dental Surgery in Cincinnati.
In 1878, the first telephone directory was i~&lt;ued, by the District
Telephone Co. of New Haven, Conn.
.
·
In 1885, the Washington Monument was dedicated.
In 1916, the World War I Battle ofVerdun began in .France.
In 1925,The New Yorker inade it• debut.
·
· In 1947, Edwin H. Land publicly demonstrated his Polaroicl Land
camera, which could produce a black-and-white ·photograph in 60
.
.
seconds.
.• In 1972, President Nixon·began his historic visit to China.
; In 1973, 'israeli fighter planes shot down a Libyan Airlines jet over
~the Sinai Desert, killing more than I 00 people.
~ . In 1975, former Attorney General John N. Mitchell and former
' !White House aides H.ll.. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman were
•~ntenced to 2 112 to 8 years in prison for their roles_in the Watergate
:cover-up.
! Today~&lt; Birthdays: . Fa•hion designer Huber! ·de Givenchy is
•Movie director Bob Rafel&lt;on is. 67. Singer Nina Simone is 67. Actress
:Rue McClanahan is 66. Actor Gary Lockwood is. 63. Actor-director
:ruchard Beymer is 61. Actor Peter McEnery is 60. Recording execu~tive David Geffen is 57. Actor Alan Rickman is 54. Actress Tyne Daly
~is 54. Tricia Nixon Cox is 54. Senator Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine)
1is 53. Rock musician Jerry Harrison (The Heads) is 51. Actor William ·
;Petersen ·is 47. Actor Kelsey Grammer is 45. Country singer Mary:chapin Carpenter is 42:Actor Jack Coleman is 42.Actor Christopher
;Atkins is 39. ltock singer Ranking Roger is 39. Actor William Bald: win 1s 37. Dlues musician Corey H~rris is 31.

••

DETROIT (AP) - The .flip-flop of the Keyes in Tuesday's GOP primary.The election and primaries not only require a message and
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - After scrutinizing threefinish between the New Hampshire and will award 58 convention delegates,· the a messenger, but they requ ire a ground game
quarten of the Earth's land area, the crew of space shuttle EndeavSouth Carolina primaries has brought a role biggest bounty to date in the 2000 campaign. - a grass- roots organization that has the
our switched off its eye to the planet th.is morning.
Today. McCain was traveling to Traverse capacity to take the energy and convert it to
reversal to the campaign styles of Republican
The astronauts finished their unprecedented Earth mapping mispresidential rivals John 'McCain and George City, Saginaw . and Ypsilanti, Mich., before votes."
sion after passing over Flinden bland, just southeast of Australia in
Exit polls in South Carolina showed that
W Bush.
heading to his home state. Arizona also was
die Tasman Sea. Next, the crew was to stow the t 97-foot radar mast.
Bush'
s claim to be a "reformer with results"
The Arizona senator, who bear the Texas holding its primary Tuesday. Bush planned to
; In nine days and six hours of mapping, the astronauts surveyed
governor decisively in New Hampsh.ire but stay in Michigan today, campaigning in had connected, and also that voters believed
4~.5 million square miles of the Earth's terrain at least twic~ DouMcCain, more than his rival, had engaged in
suffered an 11-point l&lt;lss in South Carolina, Detroit, East Lansing and Grand Rapids.
bl~ imaging is needed to create ultra precise 3-D maps of tlie planAfter a run of early, isolated primaries, the unfair attacks.
went on the attack Sunday.
et's peaks and valleys, as far north as Alaska and as far south as the
That left McCain with a tricky task of tryis
the
governor
of
a
state
campaign
has gone national en route to
"Governor
Bush
1
ti~ of South America.
•
that has the most liberal campaign contribu- "Super Tuesday." In elections on March 7, ing tO underscore his conservative credentials
·The mapping gathered enough geograph.ic data to fill 20,600
tion laws," McCain told a rally in suburban large states including California and New at the same time he was angling to undercut
compact discs.
a reformer - all the
Livonia, Mich.' "If Gevernpr Jlush . is a York will award almost 60. percent of the del- Bush's claim of
"We'd like to congratulate :you pn a Jlawless_operation of rh.i
wh.ile-upholding h.is pledg.,-tco-run-a)"''siti·ve---.,..._.,~
-reformer-I~... n-astronautt7.'' --------egates-needed-for-the"ftomination•~.--most soph.isticated mapping instrument in the universe," Mission
Bush said he supported campaign funding
Bush is airing ads in California, Wash.ing- campaign.
.
Control told the astronauts after mapping ended, just before 7 a.m.
reforms such as h.is decision to prompdy post ton, North Dakota, Virginia, Mich.igan and
Throughout Sunday, McCain ratcheted up
EST. "Th.is topograph.ic database will be a real treasure of the human
the names of his contributors on the Internet Arizona. McCain was advertising in Mich.i- his attack. ·
race for many years." .
Otherwise Bush, who attributed his South gan, Washington, California and Virginia.
Appearin&amp; on NBC's "Meet the Press," the
Scientists are getting more radar data than they had expe~ted a
Carolina· victory to a newfound aggressive·
That made Mich.igan, a classic swing state senator said Bush's record on spending comweek ago, since the ~stronauts squec~ed in an extra nine hours of
ness, reverted to a front-runner's posture of in_general election campaigns, acritical batde- pared unfavorably with President Clinton's.
mapping late Sunday and today. It will take scientists one to two . trying to ignore h.is rival and instead· lay out field in the nominating contest
'
"Spending in Texas has almost doubled,
years to go through all the materiitl the shuttle will bring back.
h.is agenda for the country.
.
To Bush's advantage. the primary will be while spending under Clinton has been
NASA and its partner, the Nationitl Imagery and Mapping
"It sounds like Senator McCain spent a lot the first contest where he enjoys the institu- increased by 20 percent," he said.
Agency, expect the maps to be the most complete and accurate ever
of time talking about me, and I wimt to spend tiona! support of a fellow Republican goverBush spokesman Ari Fleischer said spendproduced. ·
·
a lot of time talking about tlie future;· Bush nor, John Engler.
ing increased only 2 per~ent under the gci~Sf­
told reporters during a news conference in
"It helps to have a governm who is popu- nor when adjusted for inflation and a growmg
Jar and strong," Bush said. "It helps to have a population. He added · that the governor cut
. Southfield.
The.. stylistic differences came as the rwo group of friends· who we both can call upon the rate of spending growth in half - agam ·
NEW YORK (AP) - Tears streamed down Hector Montalvo's
· competed with former ambassador Alan to turn out the vote, because this is a primary adjusted for inflation and demographics.
cheeks as he w.Uted outside the Winter Gatden Theater to see the
feline musical "Cats"- yet again.
Before Sunday's. matinee, he'd already seen .the record-break.ing
show 670 times. And the show's announced closure in june- after
a record-break.ing 7,397 performances - was scratch.ing h.im up
inside.
.
1
"When I first heard the news.,l was devastated;' said Montalvo, a
Manhattan computer software salesman. "Th.is is such a sad th.ing.
but I guess all good th.ings must come to an end." •
NEW YORK (AP) In for mm;der in Albany. N.Y. They
· Marllne Danielle, who plays Bombalurina, was somber, too: Her
tnany popular police movies, the testified they thought they sa,w
ALBANY. N.Y. (AP) - On they turned their heads and prenine lives- make that over 1;000 lives - are now winding down.
..
heroes shoot their w~pcins Diallo with a gun.
the eve of a debate with Bill 'tended that they just didn't see."
· · "When we got the news there were tears, sure, and hugs;• said
Geofffey Alpert, a criminolorepeateclly and kill one bad guy
Bnclley at Harlem's Apollo TheHe said the GOP reaction Danielle, who has played the role since the show began in October
after another, making for sensa- gist who studied police shootings
acre; Vice President AI Gore rivals Texa~ Gov. George W Bush
1982. "And believe it or not, there was .lots of laughter. Somehow, "
tional action footage.
in Miami over a tO-year period,
sought to reinforce his standing and Sen. Johit McCain have said
everybody kno)IIS in their heart that noth.ing gaes forever." ·
Those fantasies, coupled with said most officers do their best
among New York's minorities in the flag issue is ·someth.ing to be.
"We brought rhe show into the new millennium," she said.
the
last year's real-life killing of an not to get into a situation where
the Democratic presidential race. resolved by South Carolinians "How much more can you really expect?"
unarmed man by four New York deadly force is required. "That's
Renewing h.is call for an end . reminded h.im of those who say
· The Andrew Lloyd Webber musical will bring down the curtain
City police officers, reinforce the true in LA, true in Chicago, true
to racial proftling by police and that A(Derica has becoiiiC color
June 25, after a nearly two decade run on Broadway.
stereotype that all officers are in Miami, ~e in New York.," sai~
passage of federal hate-crimes blind.
· By the end of its run, "Cats"- with its "Nqw and Forever:· sloAlpert, a professor at the. U nive(· .
trigger-happy.
legislation, Gore told a largely
"They use their color blind the
gan .- will have played to more than I 0 million theatergoers in
. But according to police offi~ sity of South Carolina.
'
black audience of more .than 800 way duck hunters use their duck
New York. On Broadway alone, its grosses are estimated to be more
c(als,
crime
experts
and
studies
by
.
·Indeed,
such
large
departc
a~ an Albany church Sunday .that blinds - they hide behind it and
than $380 tnillien.
The Associated Press of law ments as those in •Chicago, Lol
the Republicans who hope to hope the ducks wo~'t know what
enforcement methods, the major- Angeles and Philadelph.ia report
take the Wh.ite House are "moral- they're up to," Gore said to
ity of police officers nationwide low incidences 9f police shoot~ .
ly blind" to racial concerns. :
cheen.
never · fire&lt;their weapons during in~. But in 1998, The WashingGore, campaigning for the first
Gore and the first lady had
·cHARLESTON, WVa. (AP) - Gov. Cecil Underwood has·
their careers.
·
ton Post published- a series revealtime th.is year in New York with warm words and hugs for each
extended a state of emergency to a total of 19 counties after heavy
"Well
over
95
percent
never
'ing' the District of Columbi•
first lady and Senate ·candidate other.
weekend rains flooded homes and businesses across the state.'
here,"
said
police shot and killed more peo~
shoot
their
weapons
Hillary Rodham Clinton, never
"Her vision will make a ditferAdditional counties could be added after assessments are comNew
York
City
Police
Commispie per resident in the 1990s than
mentioned Bradley.
ence ... I ,;_ill stand up for her," he
pleted, said Tom Burns., operations director for the state office of .
sioner
How.ird
Salir.
any other large police squad. '
f
•
•
' •
The two rivals are to meet said. "No one in America is more
emergency servtces. •
·
With
41,000
officers
on
the
The series, wh.ich won a 1999
tonight at the Apollo, a Harlem · qualified to lead us than our.vice
· The declaration Sunday allows the National Guard to help clear
nation's largest police force, there Pulitzer Prize for public service,
landmark, in a 90-minute debate president," Clinton said.
roads,· deliver emergency medication or assist where emergency
were 155 incidents,last year when pmmpte,d action by city arid fed!
centering ,on urban a~d racial
After the · church appearance,
veh.icles. cannot travel. '
·
·
.
New York ·police fired · their eral officials. Poli~e Ch.ief Charlc~
issues.
Gore flew .to New York City,
· ·· As flood waters began receding Sunday, many residents forced
weapons..
Forty-two "&lt;r'd"
ouen ers
Ramsey asked the Justice DepartTheater stage hands and man- where he met S!!nday afternoOn·
fr6m their homes and businesses ·r eturned to pick through the mud
- people pursued for 'question- ment to probe,a decade of polic~
ageinent reached a ·contract with the editorial board of The
and muck. Four bodies. were found, apparently victims of fl~h
ing or arrest - were shot by shootin~ to try to restore public,
agreement Sunday, averting a Amsterdam News, an influential
flooding.
police in 1999, according to confidence, and announced .o
threatened strike that would have black-oriented newspaper whose
· Glenville was one of the hardest h.it towns viewed by si:ate offidepartment
firearms discharge sweeping retraining program foi
caused complications because endorsement he is courting.
cials. Seventy-seven homes and 55 businesses were damaged in
statistics. Officers also shoi three the entire force.
'
·both Gore and Bradley had
The three-hour church service
Gilmer County, Underwood spokesman Dan Page said.
bystanders;
none
was
killed.
'
Hubert·
Williams,
presiderit
of
was part of the annual weekend
vowed not to cross a picket line.
A team from the Federal Emergency Management Agency was
Police
k.illings
steadily the Police Foundation, 'saiil
At
the
·Wilborn
Temple
First
conference
sponsored by the state
scheduled .to arrive today in Charleston, Page·said.
from
41
in
1990
to II in retraining may be needed ill
declined
Church of God in 'Christ, the Legislature's black and Hispapic
.1999.A[ll3dou Diallo's k.illing last other cities to . prevent some
vice pre~ident lambasted the caucus. Minorities made up 15
year received · the most attention shootings that result 11om the cui ~
Republicans in impassioned percent ·of voters in New York's
and protest.
tur.ll gap between black SUSJ?ect;~
tones.
1998 election foi: governor and
. · CONCORD, N.H. (AP) - David McPhedran and Aimee Reit•
"There are those who · have the Senate.
Diallo, · an lnunigrant f~ and 'wh.ite officers.
er were spending the day skiing in an area' of Mouni Wash.ingron
· "We. need !o ·engage In 'a
West Africa, W3$ standing in the
20/20 vision _.,;ho are morally ' A big test of that minority vatc.ined the Gulf of Slides.
·
·
doorway of his apartment build- broader set of parameters that
blind
....
Some
of
those
individuing
power
will
come
in
the
state's
The name proved horribly prescient on Sunday when an
ing when four wh.ite officers in involves the culture of inner-citY
alsjust left the state ofSouth Car- March 7 primary, wh.ich is conavalanche h.it New England's h.ighest peak around 1 p.m. and swept
plainclothes approached h.im for youth," said Williams, who once
olina,"
he
said
to
laughter.
'\idered
a
major
showdown
for
tbe pair down tbe mountain, said Col. Ron Aile of the New Hampquestioning, officially putting headed the Newark, N.J., poliq'
Citing the Confederate battle Gore and Bradley, a former New
sh.ire Fish and Game Department.
.
flag that flies over the South Car- York Knicks basketball star. Both
h.im in the "offender" category. department. "We need to dra'Y
"They decided to climb up one of the gullies to sk.i down it and
They shot at h.im 41 times; 19, from savvy street officers, who
olina statehouse, Gore para- . have hude major appeals to
caused the avalanche, wh.ich swept them down the gully;' Alie said.
phrased a Bob Dylan song and minorities in their bids for the ·
bullets struck. h.im.
day after day engage t~ese young
"She was buried waist-deep, bui David was buried face down."
said, "They looked at that flag and Democratic nomination.
The officers are now on trial kids and never shoot anybody."
Reiter, of Kents Hill, Maine, climbed out and uncovered Mi:Phedran, 42, but was unable to save him, Alie said. Only Reiter, also of
Kents Hill, survived.
Anna Porter, a weather observer at the Mount Washington
Observatory, said wind gusts reached 64 mph at the summit on
Sunday afternoon .Visibility was one-sixteenth of :i mile with blowIn October, Galilco flew with.in
to ·see how much more we can 1997. F.u~~ for maneuvering is
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) ing snow and freezing fog, she said.
·
milk
.I
it."
running
low,
navigation
equip'380'
miles of lo, revealing what
NASA's
Galileo
spacecraft
expects
•
On Tuesday, the 21.-ton orbiter ment is (ailing and Galileo has nuy be the most ' active 'body in
to sweep clcis.er thap ever by
Jupiter's volcanic moon lo th.is will fly with.in 124 miles oflo in a encountered twice as much -radia- the solar system. The spacecraft
week in an encounter that engi- maneuver that will bombard the tion as it was designed to with- found more than 100 volcanoes,
. NEW YORK (AP)- Bylines seen in The NewY9rker since its
some of wh.ich spewed ~ . 700-'
neers concede could permanently probe with inunense radiation. stand.
1925 debut: F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sylvia Plath and WB. Yeats.
Engineers say the risks of ilegree lava and vented gases miles
Previous orbits near the fiery
knock out the aging probe.
Not to mention Dorothy Parker, TFmnan Capote, E.B. White,
"
Navigators have been beaming moon c!'lppled Galileo's comput- extreme maneuvers are balanced into space..
WH. Au den, Ogden Nash and James Baldwin.
by
the
potential
science
returns.
A month later, Golilco fle)'l
increasingly risky otders to max.i- er, though engineers managed to
The ghosts of such au,thors and artists help- celebrate the venera"The
possibility
that
there
is
restart
it
each
time.
m.ize
the
science
in
what
are
likewithin
186 miles of the surface. Its
ble publication's 75th anniversary, with the magazine's double-issue
going
to·
be
a
failure
is
always
Galileo then is tentatively
camera captured lava spurting
.Jy to be Oalileo's final months. It's
now on newsstands,
.
.
there:·
Erickson
said.
"We're
way~­ more than a mile high. Engineers
by
the
moon
scheduled
to
zoom
been
orbiting
the
solar
system's
. Snatches of their vivid prose and pictures dot the magazine pages
largest planet for more than four Ganymede in May and December. past warranty and we're incremen- ..,vere kept busy as the spacccrati's
under the ·headline '"Takes;• standing alongside a current offering
yean - twice as long as original- Discussions are under Y'ay about tally push.ing our luck,'but that's a computer shut down hours before
about Fidel Castro's public relations war over Elian Gonzale~.
future plans, inchtding a possible good th.ing to do.'~
closest approach.
ly planned: ·
.
· There's also an analysis of Martha Stewart which concludes she
..'
suicide
plunge
into
Jupiter's
"Th.is
is
all
gravy
at
th.is
point;'
taps into the power "of the woman who sits ·down at the table with
said Jim Erickson. Galileo's project atmosphere. '
the men, and, still in her apron, walks ~way with the ch.ips." .
Nobody expects the $1.4 bilmanager at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Jet lion probe to last forever. It is on
Propulsion Laboratory. "We've itS second extended mission since
28001 St. Rt. 7
Cheshire. Ohio '
done
the
job.
No~ we're getting completing its primary goals, in
HOUSTON (AP) - . Delta Air Unes announced an increase in
'
ticket prices during the weekend, following the lead of Continental Airlines' ·
.
Operi 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. M~F; 10 a.m. - 3 p.'m. Sat.
Both ~irlines blam~d. rising jet fuel cos~. Other .carriers ~re
Floral ·~•••,
ths aad tift It•••
expected to join in the fare h.ike, but there was no confirmation
lhOMatllakaltl·tllrows, pillows, and wall haatl•t•
Sunday.
, . '
.
34099 St. Rt 7
· · Pomeroy, Ohio
· The specific increments of Deltas ticket pnces were n~t
Jon and Carolyn Jacobs, Owners
announced, but the increases were "similar fare to those of ContiLiving Rooms By Coffee/End Tables Dining Room by
nental;' j(nny DerVin, spokeswoman for the Adanta'-based carrier, ,
$aid.
.
.
England Cordalr
Ashley
Caldwell
'
Grand Estates
· · C;,ntinental's price h.ikes, ranging from $5 to $15 one way on
Bean Station
Mission Bay.
Corlla Classics
domestic fares took effect Friday.
Futuristic
Locally Handmade Beddihg: Spring Air ·
The price increase is the second this year; bot~ were p~mpted
by Continental and blamed on fuel costs pushed liigher by tightenWashington
Items
Belcrest
M-F
ing supplies. ·

•cats' dosure news hits hard

meet fate of last seven

.

McCain goes on attack after defeat

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Bul· THE. ?ooR ~EE?
GeTTING ?OORC:I&lt;· ·

The Dally Sentinel • Page M .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

"

Remembering ·Chuck Rohb and his Super Tuesday legacy ·:;
'

WASHINGTON- Sen. Charles S. Robb,
D-Va., is the man most often hailed, or berated, as the principal architect of Super Tuesday,
that make-or-break day in March when so
many state primaries are held.
.·
.
He accomplished this as one of the ':"embers of the Democratic Leadership Council,
the organization that successfully pulled the
Bemocratic Party away. from the George
McGovern faction and moved it to the center.
In the Election of 1988, when Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis · captured the
Democratic no111ination, Robb, not yet a U.S.
senator, was a major player. Arkansas Gov. Dill
Clinton was not yet .Qn his radar screen, but
Sen. 'AI Gore Jr., 1),Tenn., and Sen. Dill
Bradley, D-N.J., were. .
Although he endorsed Tennessee Sen. AI .
Gore Jr.'s presidential . bid just before Super
Tuesday, he ac!cnowledged that his pref~ren10e
i~ still "N,unn 9f'the .abov.~· - a reference to
Sen·. Sam Nunn, D-Ga. ·,
· "A! Gore," he said, ''liafattempted to artie~
uiM.. a-, ~nes•ge for the future that has appeal
to moderates · and "onservatives... but his
record does not have the ·same appeal."
The basic problem was that most of the
delegates then were' likely to be liberal. Robb
agreed that the "super delegates" - .those
automatic delegates coming fiom the ranks·of.

Jack '' .
Anderson
&amp; Douglas
Cohn
UFS CQ.I,:UMNISTS

,,
Democr~tic

-

. •L

"I have fundamental disagreeme11t.&lt; with
him about foreign policy," Robb said. Furtho'ff
he viewed as divisive Jackson's "reintroduction
· of chm con~ciousness" imo the political arena,
but conceded that Jackson had "managed ili
ex'ci.te people.... He is dynamic and entertain. ,,
.
m~

.

~

.

·'

-

·And excitement is what it . may all come
down to. Robb described a convention as "an)
.emotional happening." And he went on to "'YJ
"Dill Bradley is a friend, but he d~esn't stim·. ulaie people emotionally." Bradley was proba-• ;
bly Robb's second choice for the presidency~
afi:er Nunn.
·
But absent Nunn and Bradley, Robb opted&gt;
for Gore, while- at the same time implying thl:i
unlikeliness of his nomination.
Rather, Gore was appa,rently expected to
act as the favorite son of the South in the brokering process- a process that Robb expected to be completed before the conventiorP
convened: "I think the dynamics will resolVe?
themselves.''..
· So .who did Robb .Xpect to win the bro-' .
kering process in that primary of 1988? Nou.i
dmdidates Nunn or Bradley? Jackmn? Gore?
·
No, Robb expected the one who won~
Micha.el Dukakis.
•1!

·governors, party lead(rs · and
members of Congress- included more conservatives than did the group chosen on Super
Tuesday.
·
. ,
But since those individuals ~accounted for
onlr 15 percent of the total delegates, it would
be virtually i!llposslble for the Democrat• to
nominate a, conservativ&lt;&gt;. So enter Gore, the
oc~asional conservative, as th.q, choice of last
resort for Robbian Democrats.
Robb .did give :the Rev: Jesse Jackson his
due:· "llarbara, J~&gt;tdan (of Texas), said, 1esse,
you've got to stop scaring pes:~ple."'
'
.
.,
And ltobb acknowledged ihat Jackson had
(Political cor,.spondmt Eleau~r Clift &lt;rmtrib~&lt;ied.
thereafter stayed away frotn• those bigQted .
remarks that "he seemed to reV'el in then, in ''' tllis srory.Jack Aud~r&gt;OII mrd Don.~las C"l"' 'I~
' 84'."
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coltmtuists for Uuif!'d ·Fcalll,rt! Syudiwrr.)
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Gore, Hillary at side, Experts, statistics say .
cops
not
trigger-happy:
·courts minority votes

I

: W.Va. extends state of emergency

Maine man dies in avalanche

.Aging spacecraft faces another dangerous encounter.
'

"'e New Yorker' celebrates 75 yean

C&amp;J Furniture ··

·Alrlnes raising ticket prices

.. 992-7508

Arthur Treachers ·.

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992·5829 ·

Chicken Club

Combo ~s2.

base

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The Daily Sentinel

MOnciiiJ, Fe.,...ry 21, 200Q

Ann pokes fun at outrageous lawsuit compilation
Dear Readers: I have long heard Cal,t&lt;&gt;rnia referred to as 'The Land of the
1 n uts and the Nuts.' I didn't believe it until
1read a list of the most outrageous lawsuits
~
tiled. compiled by a California tort-reform
~. ~
group. Here are some examples:
,.,.
A man su~d the city of San Diego and
'i:iifl . •·
it&lt; stadium beer vendors for emotional dis0\,.
•
tress suffe red when several women entered
ADVICE
the men's restroom and embarrassed him.
He said the vendors were at fau lt fo r sell--~ml! so much bee~ and Eausing-repeated us:&lt;e'-a"'l"'
te"'r-c
he,-c=a=
p c""u:::re::-:Jd....-rle e-m-g
~c-roo
-•
k. T
= h-e mugger won $24,000 for inj uries he
the restroom.
A couple su.ed a health club in Torrance received when the taXi driver pinned him
for the loss of close companionship and against a building with his cab. ,
distress atier the man had an Internet affair
A man sued his godmother alier he
. w hile off work for a disability.T he couple injured his knee when she dropped her
said the health club was to blame. bequse end of a piano she had asked him to help
the 1i1an cut his hand op a towel dispenser her move.
· .
in the men's room, and started his affair
Disneyland was sued for emotional disw hile at home recuperating.
tress suffered by · children who became
A San Francisco taxi driver was .sued upset when they saw some of the .park's

j1 Ann

LanderS

Meigs Middle School
Grade 6: Wesley Ault. Miran~
da Beha. Jos hua Bolin, Travi s
Bu tc her, Samantha Cok, Bryce
Davis, M ichael Durst, J ames
Elli s, Ashley Engle, Sarah Eskew,
Ja mes Fife, Ra chael Gardner,
C ar ita Gardner, Tyson G eorge,
An na · ' Hart).nbach ,
Adam
H ump hreys, Cody Hysell, Brittney Jacks, N at han J effers, Juli a
Jo hnso n, Jos hua Kennedy, Jacob
Ke n nedy, Taryn Lentes, Meghan
l-es lie,
Kay la
M cC arthy,
Autumn McLaughlin , Matthew .
Me adows .. Kelly · Napp e r,
Broo ke O 'Bryant , R ebec ca
R ade r, Vinda Ratcliff, Jordan
Shank. Co ry Shea, Abby Stewa rt, Ro be rt Stone , Whitney
T hoe ne, Scott Tob'in, Leonard
Vanm e t.e r, C hristophe r Van R eeth, Jos hu a Venoy, Jacob ·
Ven oy, Melia Whan, Miranda
Yo uu g'
Grade 7 : Grant Arnold ,
Em ily Ashley, Renee Bailey, Jeffrey Baughman, Jeremy Blacksto n, Eri c Bumem , Za chary
Bush , Anna Butcher. Ap ril Coppi ck , Jaso n Demoss, Justin
De M oss, Trevor D epoy, Rosan . na . D illa rd , Jodi Donohue,
Patqc k Dowell , Justine Dowler,
Peggy Duff, Jeremiah Eggers,
William Fraier, Megan Games,
William Gam es , Ashley Graham, Brandon Grover, Amber
Hand ley, Randy H art, Kayla
l cchowe r, Jos hua Johnson,
M a~lison King, Arn anda King,
M atthew Krawsczyn, Oonna
La m be rt, Cassie Lee, Ashley
. Li t c hfi eld, C hristina Maines,

Megan Mayes, Carri ~ Michael,
Margue ritte M olden, Joshua
Neutzli ng, C arl . Noel, Samantha Pierce, Katie Reed, Kimberly R eynolds, Adam Snow- ·
den ,
C hri sto pher
Trader,
Robert Curtis Varian , Dustin
Vaughm, Brooke Venoy, Cassie
Watson, Chester Wigal, Sarah
Wilkes, · Cassandra Windsor,
Natasha Wise, Jill!anne Young,
Jenniann e Young.
.
Grade 8: Jeremy Banks,J'yler
Barnes, David Boyd,Jaclyn Page
Bradbury, Nathan Bridles, Kara
Buffington, t';licole Burman ,
Alisia Burton, Nicole Butcher,
Thurien Carter, Jessica Curf. man, Jaynee Davis, Bradley
· Dent, Maegan Dodson, Jennifer
Dunn·, D evin Erlewine, Andrea
Fetty; Tyler French, Jesse Gates,
Ashley Halley, Willia111 Hawk,
Randall
Hudson , Michele
Imboden, Audrie Kope c, Sarah
Lee, · Aira
Little, Rachel
McDaniel, Jonathq McDonald,
Christina Miller, Gary Moore,
Sheena Morris, Ashley O'Brien,.
Erica Pooli;, Amanda Priddy,
R~y Ratcliff, Joshua Ray, Jessica
Rosier, Pamela Rupe, Matthew ·
Salser. J essica Smith, Angela
Smith, Miranda. Stewart, Leann
Stewart, Rya-n Stobart, Brandi
·Thomas, Carrie Walker, Jordan ·
Williams, Holley Williams,
Bryan Wilson.

...
-

Disney characters taking off their cos- organization, and receive many calls fro m calling?" To simply hang up is patendy
tumes. -and discovered the characters were members, as well as from personal friends. rude, and b ys the burden on the caller tQ
make-believe.
,.
O ccasionally, my husband answers the phone again .While the callers may need to
A software company was sued for selling phone. Sometimes, instead o f saying, learn phone etiquette. your husband needs
its disks in boxes that were 'too large.'
"Hello," and identifying heiself, the caller ·to learn some manners, too. Maybe you
T he YMCA in Santa Clara County was will simply ask," Is Jane th ere?"When that sho uld find o ut where his hostility is com•
sued for negligence for not providing a happens, my husband replies, "Yes, she ..is," ing from. I suspect it has litde to do with'
lifegu ard for its hot tub.
. and hangs up. Of course, the caller is fo rced the person who is calling. ·
A driver sued Hu ntington Beach for $60 to call again.
An alcohol problem? HoW can you help
mi.l.lion, accusing the city of ra&lt;;keteering
When I ask my husband what he is try- yourself or someone you (IJVe? "AlcO:.
after he received three speeding tickets.
ing to _prove, he rei'lies....::_Some people holism: HQw to .R~._llow to
--r he city of Simi Valley was suea To r !iii----must
taug:lit phone nunnen. This Deal with It, How to Conquer It" will
ing to maintain its property atier a boy ran means identifying you rself inunediately." give you the answers. Send a selfove_r his own finger while skateboarding While, of course, my husband is correct, I addressed,long, business-size envelope and
on a city sidewalk.
.
am embarrassed when he hangs up on my ,a check or money onler for $3.75 (thiS
Hello, Dear R eaders, are you .still chere? friends. Am I wrong about this? -CALl- includes postage and handling) to:Aicohof,
This, iS Ann talking. Is truth not stranger FORNIA DILEMMA
c/ o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chica.
'
than fction? An~ people accuse m e of
DEAR DILEMMA: You are no t go, Ill. 6061 1-0562. (In C anada.
sen&lt;il
making up letters!
wrong. Callers should alw-ays identify $4.55.) To find out more abo ut !Lnn Lan~
.
Dear Ann Landers: I am stumped by themselves. However, when they fail to do ders and read her .past columns, visit
thr
a matter involvin g · telephone etiquette. I so, the proper.response fiom the person on Creators Syndicate web page at wWw. cre~
hope you can help. I belong to a woman's the other end is; "May I tell her who is ators.com.

oe

.

Meigs M~ddle and High schools announce honor rolls
PO MER OY - H o nor rolls
fo r the second nirie-weeks
gradi ng period for the Meigs
Middle Sc hool and Meigs High
Sc ho ol have been anno unced.
St udents ma king th e honor
roll m their respective schools
arc:

••

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
T he Community Calendar is published as a free service to ~
non-profit groups wishing to announ ce meetings and special ,
events. The calendar is no t designed to promote sales or fund !
raisers of any type. Items are' printed o nly as space permits and '1
canno t be guaranteed to be printed a specifi c number of days. ::·

Puckett, Misty Pu ckett , Erin Amanda App el, Tiffany Barnes ,
Ralston, Jessica R oush , Leslie Steve Beha, Lisa Bias, Guy
Runyo n, Mary Bety Schultz, Bing,
Rob ert
Birchfield ,
Amber Snowden, Scott Taylor, M elan ie Bleyirts, Jared Bobb,
Clayton Taylor, Tara Wyatt . .
Stacey Brew e r, Ashley Burton,
Grade 11: Cara As h, WhitAmanda C oates, . Billie Dye,
ney Ashley, Zachary Bolin, Derc
rick Bolin, Thaddeus Bumga rd- Timo thy Erwin, Heather . Ferne r, Marianne Carsey, Andrew rell, Stacy Gilmore, Amber
Davis, Ni ch olas De ttwill e r, G io rdano, Ma rjorie Hal ar,
Christophe r Dodson , Ch as ity Tj ffany Harder, Lori Harris,
Fowler, · Patri cia Garey, Sandra Anita H olter, Amy Hysell , Sara
Gilkey, Matthew Grubb, Holly . !hie, Taw ny Jones, Mi chelle
Hannan, Alison Hays, Julia Kennedy, Stephanie Kopec,
Kennedy, Aa ro n
Krautt e r, C hri stopher Krawsczyn, AmanAndrea Krawsczyn , Ca rri e da Lang, Ni cholas Michael ,
Lightfoot, Bethany M cMillin, Amanda Miller, Lester Parker,
Cecil Midkiff, Beatrice MorAmbe r Perkins, Ryan Pratt ,
gan, Trina Noland, Christopher
Pickens, Shannon Price, Bradl ey Andrew Rollins, Erin Roush,
Ritterbeck, Amber R oush, Jef- Jennifer Shain, Jennifer Shrimfrey Shank , April Stitt, Kather- plin, Kyle Smiddie, Jeremiah
ine Taylor, Cassandra Thorn , Smith, Christopher Snouffer,
Robert Tobin, H eather Whal ey, Joshua Sord~n . Julie Spaun ,
Stephanie Wigal.
James Stanley, Wesley .Thoene,
Grade 12: Je pnifer Addair, Brooke,Williams.

'...

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Monday, February 21
..
POMEROY ,- Meigs Cou nty Right to Life, Monday, 7:3~
p.m . Sacred H eart Church rector's office. Speaker, Mike Azinget,
Republican candidate for Congress.
Tuesday, February 22
,.
RACINE - Racine Area Community Orga nization (RACO}
Tuesday, Star Mill Park~ 6:30 p.m. Potluck dinner.

•

POMEROY - Immunization clini~, Tu esday, 9 to 11 a:m. an 1
to 3 p.m. at the Meigs County H ealth Department. Each child to
be accompanied by parent/ legal guardian. Child's immunization
record to be presented.
·
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Wednesday, February 23
RACINE - · Racine Village Council, Wednesday, 7 p.m. at the
Municipal building.
·
•
RACINE - Southern Local Schools, parent/teac her conferences Wednesday, 4 to 7 p.m. Parents to call child's school to sched'-"
ule .conference, "
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MONDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Basketball

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Grade 9: Lindsay Bolin,
Brook B.olin, Melinda Chancey,
Ashley colwell, Kayte Davis,
Candice Fetty, Heather Friend,
Meghan Haynes; Kelly John ston, Ryan King, Michele Run yon, Emily Story, Jennifer Walker, Elizabeth Wilfong, J ennifer
Zielinski .
Grade 10: Joeline Allen ,
Amber · Elli s, Heather Fetty,
Nicholas McLaughlin, Amanda
Neece, Mindy O'Dell, Kristy

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Pasta a quick, h~althy meal

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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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on the Robert Trent .'iones Golf.Trail With 378 holes of world-class
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under the majestic magnolias after a round of golf on the Trail's
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· at The Grand- named one the best places inthe .world to stay by
Conde Nast magazine.
Come expelienc~ the Grand Hotel in Alabama-a grand resort on the Trail
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1'1&lt;1111111 " - U-loftr No. II OftlM ClouioP- II llltnolil-; •ntar dloflllllMi Grind; swlogl"'l undor 1
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Eastem upsets Waterford

WeclnMCIIIY'• achldule
Dlvlelon IV
. lit Zane Trace
Eastern v. Adena

Thuradly'e achldule
Dlvlelon II
lit Chillicothe
Meigs v. Jackson

NCAA offld~s

visit Manhall
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AI')
- The NCAA's investigation of
Marshall's athletics department
isn't expected' to be resolved until .
the fall, school. President Dan
Angd says.
NCM officials visited the uni- ·
versity this week.
"This is only a preliminary
inquiry;• Angel said Friday.
The visit. was the result of the
· school reporting unethical conduct in the athletics department
last fall.
·
"We want to make sure they
cover aU the bases:· said Keith
Spears, Marshall's vice ·president
for communications . ..,. .
Neither , Mar~hall nor the
NCM has specified the allegations, including ,which class or
players were involved•
However, a source within the
athletics department told The
Associated . Press earlier ihat an
assistant professor gave football
players and other students a study
goide during a summer class and
told thetn to read it over. The
study goide ended up being the .
, ·
actual exam.
The instructor was an assistant
professor of anatomy and physiol. ogy w~o ha5 since resi~ed, the
·source, said. 'The
instructor '~!so
I
,
wa$ a flexibility coach for the .
football team.

WinS

Kln1wlns
HIIWIIIIan Open
: . KAPOLEI, Hawaii ~J&gt;) ' lPGA Hall of Farner Betsy King
-\von for the first time in three
years and 32nd time overall Sat~rday, shooting a 2-under-par 70
~o , finish' at 204, two shots ahead
of Brandie Burton (68) in the
.
:Hawaiian Ladies Open.
; Joanne Morley (69) W&lt;lS thr~e
back, while co-second-round
leader Sally Dee [76) finished a~ .
210.
. ..,·

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SECTIONAL CELEBRATION - Eastern junior Amber Baker cuts down the net following the Eagles· 4637 sectional victory over TVC'rival Waterford Saturday.

BY DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEl CORRESPO~DENT

Vinwn Cmmty :S ]mit Pattmon

McARTHUR - Garth Fry scored with
I 5 ·seconds to go in the game, and Josh Pat- .~cored ·24·p11ints t11 t?Jfstt 2.1 .1wints
lry Meigs' Stev_c Belra t'11 lead the
terson hit a_pair of free throws with one sec·ond left to give Vin1on County a 63-60 win
l~'ikings 111 the· witJ.
over Meigs Saturday.
.
.
Meigs had outscored the Vikings 23-18 in with a 14-9 scoring advantage in the second
the period to erase a 45-37 deficit and take pe,riod. The two teams both scored 16
a 60-59 lead. But Fry scored to give the · points in the third period to give the Vikings
Vikillgs a 61-60 lead. Steve Beha missed a the . eight point advantage going into the
shot for Meigs, and Patterson was foul ed final period.
,
Patterson led all scorers with 26 points,
with one second left.
Patterson, a 6-foot-3 junior, made both Jaso!l Eberts added 13 and Mike Eberts
~ots and the Vikings had the win.
added II points. Fry had I I of his teams 26 .
Meigs (9- 1 1,'rVC 8-8) will open tourila- rebounds, Patterson added 10. The Vikings
ment play on Tuesday at South Webster · had ·12 tu~novers, five ~teals with Fry and
against McDermott Northwest game time ·Patterson getting five each and six assists
is 6: I 5.
'-'
with Jason Eberts getting three.
Vinton Co.~ my (3 - 16, TVC 3-12)
The Vikings hit 21-of-38 from the floor,
outscored Meigs 15-12 in the first period, including 5-of- 10 three-pointers. Vinton
and took a 29-21 lead into the locker room

BUFFAtO, N.Y. (AJ&gt;) Travis Young scored 21
points and Cornelius Jackson had 19 to ·(ead Marshall
tq .an 88-72 victory over
Buffalo on Saturday night.
Coupled with Eastern
Michiga_n's loss to Uowling .
Green, Marshall (18-7, 10- 6
Mid - American Conference)
clinched a first- round home
game iii the MAC tournament March 1.
Marshall, which beat Buffalo by 32 earlier this· month ·
at liome, hit 9- of- 1 1 3pllfnters in the first 10 min1
Utes.
The Thundering Herd,
which made 59 percent of
its' sl1dts iii ·the. first half,. led
by as many as 2 I points early
before Buffalo charged back
to ·close to 46- 34 at halliime.
Tamar Slay added 17
points and J.R. iVanHoose
had 14 for Marshall .
Damieri Fqster scored 22
points and Louis Campbell
and Alex Zasiliev had 10
apiece for Buffalo (5-20, 31~). .
•

LOS ANGELES (AI') - Kirk
Triplett thrust his fist tow-ard the
gray skies for a celebration long
overdue. After II years and 266
starts on the J&gt;GA Tour, he fin ally came away a winner Sunday in
the Nissan Open.
· On a wet and gloomy Rivie.ra
Country Club,. Triplett built a
three-stroke lead on the back
nine and then battled his nerves
and a few errant shots to d ose
with a 4-under 67 and a onestroke. victory over hard-charging Jesper Parnevik. .
..
Parnevik made it as difficult as
possible for Triplett by ramming
in a 25-foot •birdie putt o n the
final hole, forcing Triplett to
complete a testy par save with a
4-foot putt.
"An incredible feeling," ~e .
said. "This has been a long time
.
commg.
Triplett finished at 12-under
272 and earned $558,000 more . than he earned in all bl!t
two of his previous nine seasons
on tour.
Parnevik, . who won the Bc;&gt;b
Hope Classic four weeks ago,
birdied two of the last three
holes for a 68 that left him in
alone in second. Robin Free:man, who provided the stiffest
challenge to Tripl~tt until a
three-putt bogey on the I 7th,
was another stroke back after a
68 . .
A week after , the end of The
Streak, Tiger Woods failed to
record a top- I 0 finish in .,a
stroke-play tournament for the
first time since he tied for 18th
.in the MCI Clas~ic on April 18,
a stretch of 13 PGA Tour events.
Woods got within two ~hots of
the lead at one point early in the
round, but· closed with a l -over
72 and finished in a tie for 19th.
It was only his fifth time in his
last 36 rounds on the PGA Tour
that he failed to break par, dating
to the British Ope~ at
Carnoustie.
· "It's just a bad round," Woods
said. " I didn't really have it going
this entire week. If I would have
. put.ted a .little better, I wmdd
have been right there. But you
can't have everything."
. ·. Winning did not come easily
to the 39- year-old Triplett.
·
With a two-stroke lead going
to the 18th, he hit his drive 'into ·
the left rough on the famed,
45 I -yard closing hole and bad to
lay up some 40 yards short.

.

Vinton

Marshall
bullies·.
Buffalo

11,2000

Nissan

£

lit Aluander
Eastern 46, Waterford 37

Febnu~ry

Tripplett
•

BY ScoTT WOLR
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

ALBANY
.
Limiting
- - ---W2rerford: to-j usr-i 6-pointsi n aovs--­
the 'first three quarters,· ~he
~rvc~
Eastern Eagles rolled to a 46OhloTVC
37 Division IV Sectional
Belpre
14-2 17·2
Championship win over the
Alexander
10-6 11-10
Waterford Wildcats Saturday
Meigs
8·8 9-11
afternoon
at Alexander' High
Wellston
7-9 7-12
School. With the win, Eastern
Netsonvllle-York
6·10 6·14.
'Vinton County
3·12- 3·16
advances to the first round of
.District play at Zane Trace
. Hocking
Higl)
School near C hillicothe
1VC ALL
Wednesday, wh~re they meet
Eastern
14·2 18·2
Frankfort. Adena at 8:00 p.m.
Federal HocKing
9-7 10-8
Trimble
9·7. 10·10
Leesburg' Fairfield and Beaver
Southern
8'8 12-8
Eastern meet in the prelimiWaterford
8-8 9·9
nary district game at 6: 15.-The
Miller
0·16 0-19
two winners would meet
Slllurday'8 rMUIW
March I , at 6:15 for the disVinton County 63, Meigs 60
trict crown.
Eastern is now 10- 1 I and ·
TodiiY'• 8CMdule
Waterford finishes at 15-6.
Dlvlelon Ill SectiOIIIIII
"Defense.That was aefinitelit Rio Qrende
Federal Hocking v. South Webster
ly the key to the game;' said
Ironton v. Wellston
Eastern coach Paul Brannon:
"Our help and recover defense
1\IMdlly'e echeclule
was
excellent.
DanieUe
Dlvlelon 11 Sectlonele
at South Webster
(Spericer) really shut (Cierra)
Meigs v. Northwest
Sparling down. She had I 8 and
Rock Hill v. Vinton County
23 against us early in the year
and this time we held her to
eight"
.· south GaiU~v~l:~der
Sparling hit the first WaterWednudiiY'• achldule
ford score of the game, a three
Dlvlelon Ill Sectlor~~~l•
pointer, then only scored five
lit Rio Grande
more
the duration ofthe game
Minford v. Nelsonvllle·York
as a result of Easterns pressure,
perimeter defense.
GIRLS
Eastern · had dabbled with
. Slllurday'• rMUIW
various zone defenses early in
'Dhrtelon IV Sectlonala
the year, then the last half the

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~LABAMA'S

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The Daily Sentinel

Moncl.y.

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Today's scoreboard, Page B2
No. 1 UC falls to Temple, Page B6
Buckeyes deftat Hoosiers, Page B6

A Grand Time on the Trail

Meigs High School

Bpsil, one of 70 ·recipes in the
Pasta is a blessing for cooks in spiral-bound book, can be made
a hu rry. N o t only does it taste in 15 minutes with fresh o r dry
good, it is easy to prepare an&lt;! a pasta.
safe menu choice for the vegeSpaghetti With Lemon and
ta rians in your life.
Basil
T he basics are fre sh or dried
12 ounces spaghetti
pasta , a good olive oil and a ·
!uice of 2 lemons
couple of cans of Italian tomacup' olive oil
to es. Other kite llen staples
1 cup freshly grated Parmesho ul d include .fresh Parmesan . san cbeese
c heese and a fin e balsamic' vineSalt and freshly ground black
gar .
per,per to tasie
" Pasta offers yoil countless
/, bunch fresh basil, washed,
va ri ety t hro ugh plain but outsta nding uw m ate rials that stemmed and minced
2 tablespoons . fresh parsley,
mak e a big 'di fferenc e in flavor,"
accordi ng to Pasta: a Passion " washed and chopped
! tablespoon grated lemon
(Te n Speed_Press, $19.95) . " ...
zest
t he bette r the raw materials, the
In a large pot of salted boilbetter the outcome will taste."
ing
water, cook the spaghetti
A urhon N ina Dreyer Hensley, J im H ensley and Paul Lowe accprding to package instrucsay fres h pasta is often limited tion s until al dente. Drain .
to spag hetti , fettuccini and. · Retl(fl! the spaghetti to the pot.
tagliatclle, but dried pasta is In !(bowl or measuring cup,
fo und 'in a number pf shapes whisk together the lemon juice
an5) sizes. " In Italy," they say, and olive oil. Stir in the Parme" d rie d pasta is generally used san cheese until the sau ce is ,
w ith oil- based sauces. Hollow thi ck and creamy. Add salt and
d ried pasta shapes and spaghetti pepper to taste. Add the sauce
work well with thick, rustic to the spaghetti and gently mix.
sa uces; more deliQtte pastas are Gently stir in the basil, parsley
"bette r suited to light sauces."
and lemon zest.
Spaghetti With Lemon and
Makes 6 servings.

Inside:

Daytona Dom

County \vas 16-for- 25 at the foul line.
Ueha led the Marauders· with 23 points, J.
I~ ·Staats added I 0. Me ill' hit. 17-of-38 from
the floor, including 5- of -11 three-pointers.
Meigs was 21 -of-34 at the free throw line.
The Marauders pulled down 25 rebounds
with Nick Woods and Staats grabbing six
each . Meigs had I I turnovers, seven steals
led by Zach Meadows with three. Meadows
also had five of the maroon and gold's 15
·assists.
"We weren't ready t;, play," Marauder
coach Chris Stout said. "We went into the
game thinking that Vinton County would
lay down; but th.ey played . their hearts out
and deserved to win:We need to get focused
or we will be out of the tournament early."
Meigs will travel to South Webster Tuesday to play Northwest in sectional tournament play at 6:15, Vinton will play Rock
Hill at 8 p.m.; also at South Webster.

-·

•

••

• Jarrett Wins soo··
•

Big move lifts defending Winston .Cup
champ ~o . victory at. Daytona
DAYTONA UEAC H , Fla.
(AI') - Call him the Domina-.
t.o r of l)aytona.
Defending Winston Cup
champ Dale Jarrett won his
third Daytona 500 in eight
years, passing · su~prise contender
jqhnny Benson for the lead four
laps from the end. .
Jarrett cruised to the victory
Sunday, driving the last two of
200 laps at Daytona lnterna. tiona! Speedway. under ,caution
after Jimmy Spencer crashed on
' · ·
lap 198.
Jarrett, who won just about
everything there -Was to win in
the last week at the track, came
into th.e race with the pole and
a.• the favorite. He lived up to his
· b~ling in NASCAR's biggest ·
race.
"I would never have dreamed
when I came into this sport that
I could win this race three
tjmes," Jarrett said on Victory
Lane, where he was greered by a
burst of confetti and hugs from
his crew.
Jarrett. who now hts·23 career
victories, dominated early in a
YEAH, BABY! - Dale Jarrett lets loose ~ victory C(y Btter winning . race that lacked any drama until
. Su~ay·s Daytona 500. (~)
·

the last 50 laps. He ended up
leading for 89 laps, by far the
most.
Jarrett appeared to have every thing in hand even when be
.trailed Mark Martin midway
through the race. Just about
everyone .e xpected Jarrett !o
make his 'move any time he
wanted..
· ·
He still trailed Martin when
debris on ·the 2 I /2 - mile oval
brought out the third of six yellow flags and all the leaders pitted on lap 157.
Benson, driving a ·Pontiac, was
one of five drivers who chose to
change only two tires while
everyone else changed four.
That . put llenson, the 1996
rookie of the year who has ~et
to win a Winston Cup· nee, oU(
front and left Jarrett fifth.
.
Somehow Benson's Pontiac
was able to stay out front as: ~
pack of powerful Fords stayMc:l
close in his wake.
After former Daytona winn,er
Derrike Co pe hit the wall Qll
lap I 69, bringing out the four!h

,..... •• !»-Yienll. Flip n

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I

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•'

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Page B2 • The Dally 'Sentinel

The Dilly Sentinel • Page 83

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

TO DAY'S SCOREBOARD
•
- - 2e
5

Tolll FGo

l11e--

Waterford

8

4

o4

21 •

ly
PW - R-b
Sotu..SO, a A T.. , . , _
Dlv alon I

46

37

Ambo VanSick e
Jul Baley

Ambo Baker

2:111. il:al.
"'

fi ell.
1-4
3

CarmK 27
Ctn Colera~n El C~n Oak H Ill 58
C n Moum Not e Dame 67 C n Anderson

o
0
0

.u

D2

8

8--8

4
6
3

0

0-3
12

Ho ey Broderick

0
0

0

S aoe W son

Janot Catawey
Whiiney Ka
Tot..,
Aaalata

2

25

Becky Davis
Dar;e e Spencer

27

Robounct. 34 (Spencer t I SIM a 4 Totol
FCla 18 38 ( 474) Twnovoro 6

Chi South eo Ce Lonco n West 37

Ash ee Jones
Alana M er

o
o

0.0
0.0

4
4

Hee.he Fume

2

0

3

5

1
Q

34

Ke y Yamoor

Q

!l:Q

B
Q

Totolo

AAI8t1

12

1 Fou 1 23

t

:g

AdamBulingon

1
4
2

Zach Meadows

0

NckWood

Q
12

Total•

Au 1t1

3
0

1

Aoboundo 25

(Meadows 3)

4-4
6 7
34

9
23
7

2-4

5

H

1
eo
Foule nta

5 21-34

15 (Meadows 5

S aats 6) Steala 7

~ood

Total FGa

7 38 ( 44 7

Turnovera 1

VInton County (3 18 TVC 3 12)
il:lll. ;1:111.
fi ell.
GarthFry
t
o 37 5

l!lmt:

Na han Yates

1

0

0-0

2

Josh Patte son
ason Ebens

5
5

4
o

44
35

26
3

David Dealo a

1

0

4-4

6

Mke Ebens

TOUIII

a

18

Aae eta 6 (Eberts 3)

1

U

!5 11-25

burg L.a&amp;ae 33

l..ynchbl.&lt;g-Ctay 8 N Adams 50

11
83

Foula n/a

52

Northridge 37

Sulliven Blacl&lt; River 53 Fnlands 47
Manllon TUSiaw 63 Amman 43
Vefsai
Oay Stiv_. 19
WBr en Champion 59 PB!n8SV a Harvey

"n

42

72

WBsh f'1J on C H 77 Wi 1amspon W.S1fa

Dlvlolon IV

AsheN' C8tho ic 56 Wes Jefferson ~
Ansoo1a 53 CedaM e 48
Belial e St John
Brigeport 34
Sarin H land 78 Toronto 39

Ak Sp ng 6 can S 56 OT
Avon lake 60 Brookside 32

n

Midview 38

Sockeye Va ey 49 Cois Centennlal31
Cos Mllftln 53 Lick ng va ey 38
Cos Wa nut Ridge 42 Big W6~Lrt 23
C estwood 58 Revere 40

Day Chamlt'lade-JuNenne 70
Graham 4

Navarre Fa en 62 Jerome5Y e H Nsda e

Sperta Hlgi'IOnd 42

Reynoldsbu g 5 Westland 45
Sidney 60 Xema 33
Spr ng 5 58 Day l'l.eadowdale 40
wadsworth 39 At&lt; Cent a Hower 27
w oughby s 43 Brush 38
D vii on II
Ak E 153 Cana Fulton NW 44

Bay 52

Uma S Range 68 Campbell ,co

:ze

New lebanon Dildo 52 Natiooal T ai 30
North Umon 59 Cana Wlflehes er 3

Pickerington 47 Worth ng on K1 boume 40

25

VInton County 13 Malgo 10
t2 9 6 23 •
VInton County
15 14 6 8 •
Mllgl (V-11 TVC 11-8)
eJmt
il:lll. ;1:111.
fi ell.
JRStaats
4
0 23
0
Kye Smldde
Steve Bella

lutheran W 32
Loulovile St Thomas Aquinas 67 Leavins

Newark 52 Uppe All ngton 37
Panna 63 C e J F Rhodes 7

(Spao ng 6) SIMla 2 Toto! FG1 13 49
(265) Tumovoro 12

"'"'!!'

Usbon 54 Mlnera Rk:lge 33

Lorain Caarvlew 42 C o

N

Grove City 87 Oetawa e 59
Lewis Conte Olemangy 55 H ad DaVId
son 25
Mldpar1&lt; 48 N Royelton 44

1G-t4 37

R.t)ounda

GatM Mitlt Hawken ~ Brookfietd 39

FBirfiald 30 C n Ursu ne 27

51

Bolhll39 Miami V.ley 10
55 Bee s~n. 45
Card ngton.Uncotn 42 World HOIVH 38
Cuyaho;a His 56 lake Ridge 48
catdwel

DarM ~ 62 Powe 1Vi age Academy 2

Perla

Day Dunba 49 Day Chno "" 47

43

Geneva 60 Ash abu a 50
Hebron Lakewood 53 Cos Eastmoor ~

17

Ken
on Ridge
72 Beecllcroft
nchan lakeeo
40
London
63 Cots

ou sVI • 58 0nv • 52

Med na Buckeye 75 Warrensvil e 30

Mod no Hgh and 42 AurO&lt;a 41
MenorlakaCath
46 Madson3S
Olms 00 Fa 9 79 Orange 26
spr ng Kenton Ridge 72 Lewis- Indian
lako 40
Teays va ey 57 Cos. South 4
Ubona 44 Spr ng Shawnee 31
WashJesuit61 Tw.nsburg33
Wh ehe 51 Cots Unden 44
0 vial.., II
.6Jbany Aexander 65 Crooksville 42
AmendaCeacreek5t MoontGJead45
·~
545
rtFederaiHookng5tOT
~P • 56 ewe
'
Brookvtle
Spring NE 41
Card ngton 42 World Harvest 36
Champion 59 Pwnesvde HOlVey 42
Chesapeake 55 s Webster 51

Frank n Monroe 82 M ss sslanwa va ey

Kid on Central Ch 95 Ely .a Open Door
Leesburg
Fa rfield
60 Latham
Wes em
37
Marion
Cath
50 Suga
Grove Berne
Union

40

Mowrys own Wh eoak 67

Portsmouth

Clay 30
Ch&gt;kHivs SymmesValey ppd
Roedsv • Eastem 46 Warerto d 37
Shedyslde 53 New Ma amo as Font or 25
Tri-VIItage n Yo ow Springs 20
Tusoa awes cent Cath 56 Bowers on
Con&lt;llton Vall 35
Wetlsvtle43 s asbug.Fank n38
Wr1. ngton 61 Ubeny Unoon 46
eon erburg 74 Lick ng H01ghls 43
Worth ngton Ch del Oh o Deal lorteit
cots Academ•37 Cos TreeofUfa31
'
Ohio Boys Basketball
By Tho Aaaoclltod Prou
Wookond Rnuho

Sonurdlly o R1tullo
Toumo"*"

1romPapB1
the season perfected rts marl to ma 1 for a strong
fimsh and mce late season run
Brannon contmued Th1s wm was for Coach
Don Jackson It felt funny after all these years coach
mg With Don to not have him here on the s dehnes
We dedrc3te this game to h1m and hopefully can get
him anotl er one
Jackson the longtime Eastern vamty volleyball
mentor and ass stant softball mentor was recently
d1agnosed w th lung and bone cancer and s under
gm 1g treatments
The saymg goes you go as far as your seruors take
you Wtth semor Becky D3V s as the chauffer the
Eagles were n the drrvers ~eat Davt~ notched a
game htgh 14 pornts wh le JUn or Juh Bailey netted
12 Amber Baker etght and Spencer SIX Another
semor
AI tber VanS ckle had a couple btg steals a great
defensrve effort and three pomts
Waterford was led by Jantzan King w th mne
Sparhng eight and Kelly Hall seven
Sparhng started the game With a qutck three
pomter then Bailey retaliated wrth the first of many
basehne back door cuts Fulmer htt a free throw for
a 4 2 tall ar d then co nected on a penetratmg
dnve 6 2
Eastern then found a weakness :n the Waterford
defense that the Wrldcats could not control until the
final round Eastern would backdoor cut the weak
stde block or spnng open off the flex cut and score
at Will along the baselme Spencer was the first to
do so then
Bailey notched the first of three stratght excur
swns to first t1e the game then propel EHS to a 10
8 advantage after one rot nd Batley had e1ght of tne
first quarter p91tns
Amber VanSICkle scored a goal between two Davrs

Daytona
romPageBl

I

cautton Jarrett began to assert himself
He was SIXth on the resurt on lap 176 but qutck
ly moved up to fourth on lap 177 He followed
Mart n to thud on lap 180 and took advantage
when Martm s Ford shpped up the track m turn two
on lap 187 movmg nght onto Benson s rear
bumper
Benson stayea m front until Spencer bega a stx
ar wreck on lap 193 sendmg M1chael Walmp spm
mng 111 turn four Waltnp was htt by EUtott Sadler
and the race was slowed agam
When the green flag waved on lap 197 Jarrett
wasted no t me femtrng htgh m turn two and dn
vmg under Benson s car He powered mto the lead
on the back stra ghtaway Benson qutckly faded and
wound up 12th
Second place Jeff Burton never had a chance to
make a run on the leader as the final yellow waved
moments later
Jarrett was worned at the begmmng of rhe race
because of a fender bender wrth defendmg Daytona
500 champwn Jeff Gordon m the final practtce Sat
urday The car had sheet metal damage to :ts front
and rear but Jarrett s crew chref Todd Parrott
worked hJS magtc
I knew when he told me he could fix 1t would
we would be OK Jarrett satd
Parrott satd I have total fatth m my abilities and
those guys out here We JUSt fixed that thing

Ckogon- 74 N Befllmoro 87
CkMtto 70 Akron CcMnlry 57
OtMgo 1111 Mllbury l:rl&lt;a 51
Ollovllo 71 Lolpoic 70
Ponyob1.rg 73 AoeafonUI
Piqua 54 Tl_...,. 45

~

Dlvlalcon IV
Bethel ee Day doflonron 47

Cedarville 44 Yeikllw Spnng1 4
M SSIU nawa Velley 51 Arcaoom 52

Evorg ""88 Oolto 50

S Cherleelon SE 84 F anldln Monroe 57
Spring Cash c- 72 37
Tn \lllloge 86 Xenia Christian 34
Holmes 33

A8htabUa Edgewood 63 Jofler.on Alee 57

F-. 70

Cllnll

Flndlrly 70 Cit

s

F . - , - 56
Tltlln Cllv«&lt;55

FrtriiOf'IIRou70 -(Micll)54
A. - 1 1 3
Gallipoll1 Galtia eo GreMIIetd McClain 48
~a 86 PymatLI1ing Vall 36

-.-43

-ee.~c-.st

SyNonla Tallmlelge M

78

110

-E·---

-~55 - 3 8
S Glllo 1111 Croulonoa (W V. ) IIi OT
Sanduoky 11-1 liuron 5I
SplrloH!gNond80 Colo.Aood-00

64

~ ~--113
Froni&lt;lin 113. ~ 62

•

v

$15 f45 Po Hou I Count y 1

-. So-·

Con-j&gt;eny-

l'ooPie To Procooo Cto mo F om
Homt Tra n no Provided Muat

or

Tell -~~~

Own Computer 1 100 223 1149

A-o 67

e.t G3

Clibaonburg 77 Elmwood 72
Tlllin Columbian 85 72
GrMnevfow 81 E Clinton 50
Tot Libbey h Wind...- (Onl) Brinnon 42
Harrloon 87 Eu Central 64
T"''' 5I Millon Union 48
HaYillnd Wayne T""" 62 Btulllon n
u.- ee -.Ciolrctooleo
Hudson 44 Monition waahinglon 39
Upper Senduaky 71 Cony 51
Bel ewe 70 N.,_ 62
Hudson WRA 72 The Hrn SC:Ilool 53
liOn Wert 5I Dollance 57
Belpre 45 New Matamoras Fort Frye 38
lndlan lake 78 :"'~ 68
Van Wert Llnoolnviow 87 A. ROOO\Wy55
Beoiom!n L.ogllll.l§ .Indian Ullli.k
-lJr:ldnts_\lai._Si
·~"""'---~...,- 60 .-r.,____ _ _
Botk ns 58 DeGraff ANerside 33
Lima Cant Calh 58 A. lor.... 52
VInton Coooly 113 Meigs eo
Bowers on Conotton vall e5 Belial e S
Uma Shewnee 68 G .....,.. eo
Wllpakonota n Colch•..., 57
Johns 63
Lima Temple Ch 62 W Lllony-Solam 45
WilTon JFK 62 Mlnorll Ridge 00
Bowl ng G eon 52 Anthony Wayne 44
Loran Admlra King 56 Tot Rog«s 48
Wlnensv lie 73 Bodlo&lt;d 70
Can Con Cath 116 Youngs Youth Acad
Washington c H Mlam Trac1 84 Londcn
Loran Southv ow 78 Tot Whllmor eo
emy t9
Mad son Pialns ~ Jonatnen Akllf 5
52
Can Timken 68 Norwayne 41
Marla S 010 Marion Local 113 Spencerville
W6uoeon 1111 Poltisville 53
Can:I ngron 6 Mansfield Chrillllan 58
35
Woynodall 44 w Hotmeo 33
CedarvH e 44 Yelbw Spnngs 41
Mar1ot1a 74 John Mot&gt;11a11 ~ \Ia.) n OT
Witto-HID Clv 85 VoYng Chriallan 62
Ch cothe
Hunt ngton
Ross
98
MarKin Cath 07 Ridgemont 98
wooornora 83 Kanoas lalcoiO 47
Port!mouth Clay 65
Martins Fony 62 Steubenville 55
Worthing on Chrlshan 108 Bao&lt;lrly 71
C n. Co er&amp;ln 57 Mitfofd 4e
McMec:flen ~ lla.i Blllhop Donohue 75
Z.Onesvlle 51 Cia E 49
Bridgopon 67
C n Oak Hits 69 West Chester LM:ota
West 56
MechenK:Oburg eo Mlfonl Folrbonka 50
Miler City 84 Ayerev to !i8
c e Benedict no ee Beechwood 64
c a Heights 54 Canton Mc:Klnlev 52
Moo """ e 83 Bucl!eye Cent 40
C e Hts 54 Can McKin ey 52
Morra Ridg-e 83 Frederk:ktown 70
c a St gna us es Euclid 51
Napoleon 96 Holland Spring 81

C e VASJ 73 Young Rayon 85

C ermont NortheaS1ern 68 Blanchester 30

New KnoXVJ e 48 Sidney LetYnan 46

C yde 68 Port C nton 63

Coo Wes 70 Cots Brookhaven 63

Noi'MI k S

Paul 76 Sandusky
Obel' n 72 Lo l\ln cath 30

Co umb a 57 Avon 56
Contlnen a 68 T nora 45

PO&lt;k ns 65

Old Fort 65 Van Buren 6

Danbury 68 Fostoria S Weridel n 51

ORDINANCE NO M4
ANNUALAPPROPRIAnON
ORDINANCE
AN ORDIIANCE to mlkl
epproprtetlone for Current
Ex
nd pen-a 0
Expendlturaa of the Vllllllll
of Pomeroy State of Ohio
during thl flecef yur
ondlngDecemlllr31 2000
Stctlon
BElT
1
RESOLVED by the Council

of the VIII"&amp;. ol Pomeroy
Stile of
lo that, 10
provide for the current
oe,-tturee and
of the nld
scores as EHS went on a 6 0 run to start the second VIllage of Pomeroy during
penod thus promptmg a Waterford time out After the flecal , _ ending
Dacamblr 31 2000
liha
a Hall score at the 5 00 mark no one scored until following .....,1 111 and they
Hall hit a free throw at the 2 30 nark
1,. henby HI •Ida and
approprletotd
11 follow•
That score awakened the Eastern offense and the
Stctton 2 lihll thenr 111
Eagles went on a 6 1 tear to end the half 22 12
appropriated
form
the
Both Bailey and Baker of the B &amp; B express p eked GENERAL FUND
PROGRAM I SECURITY OF
up thelf thtrd fouls n the frame but Eastern perse
PERSONS AND PROPERTY
vered
Pollee Law Enforcement
After several early mrsses by both clubs Waterford 210 Peraonal Servlcaa
21t Selarlel/
finally scored on a King JU nper at the 6 29 mark
Wagu
$225 ooo oo
then Eastern went on a I 0-2 run after Wateford 212 Employeu
$7000000
aga n left the back door open Before Waterford Benafhe
S
M
240
uppllee
I
111rl111
could secure the entry Eastern waltted to a 32 16
$1100000
advanuge
2110 Capital Outley .. 000 00
Pollca
Law
Baker Batley and Dav s fired off three early Total
Enforcement 1310 000 00
rounds m the fourth quarter to gtve Eastern Its StrHI Ughtlng
btggest lead of 38 20 at the 5 23 mark of the final 240Supplleal Matertala
round Waterford then started send ng Eastern to the , •. ,.. ,..~............... ,.. 130 ooo oo
Total Progrem I Securny of
lme where they were subpar but able to hit JUSt
Pttreone 1 Property............
enough to stave off a late Waterford rally The clos
~........................ :.. $340 ooo oo
PROQRAM V
BASIC
est Waterford came was at e ght 45 37
UTIUTY SERVICES
Brannon added This was a great team wm
Elaclrlc Utility
everyone contnbuted Amber Baker handleed the 240 Suppllll 1 Mallrlala
press weU Amber VanSrckle and Becky (Davrs) ::":":·:::"'":·:··":':!:!:5410000
Ellctrlc UUIIty ..."'''""
stepped up as semors and Becky hit some brg free Tolll
,_,......,.,,,,_................ 14-tOO 00
throws at the end Juli (Bailey) had a great first quar
Gat Utility
ter a 1d sohd game despite bemg m foul trouble and 240 Suppllll 1 Meterlal
100 oo
Stacte Watson dtd a great JOb on the boards
Totata11 UUHiy$2,10000
I thought th1s team reaDy matured throughout Totel Program v Baalc
the season Waterford I m sure had It m for us after Utility Servloea 15,200 oo
PROQRAM VIII QENERAL
beatmg us twtce b t our guls responded This GOVERNMENT
shows the progress our gtrls have made througout Moyor and Admlnletnrtlve
Olftcaa
the season
2t0 Pa....nal S.rvlc••
Eastern hrt 18 38 from the field and was 10 for
211 S.larlet/Wag••::::::·::
24 at the hne and had 34 rebounds (DaviS 9
~~~·:"'"":""""'111 oo
Spencer 11 Barley 7) EHS had etght asSISts (Baker 212 Employu
....,.,......... $7,500 00
4) SIX turnovers four steals and 18 fouls
220 Travel Treneportatlon
$110 00
Waterford hit 13 49 from the field and was 10
240
Suppllllll
mlllrllle
for 14 at the I ne w th 25 rebounds (Sparling 6 Ful
;:""';:"·:~"":'""'"":$27,415 00
mer 5) WHS had 12 turnovers one asSISt two Tu Refunda
$5,100 00
steals and 23 fouls
To tal
Ma yo r
1
Adml-lllve ontcea _
157 710 oo
Leglelatlvo
Actlvlllu
(Council)
BtU EU1ott a two time Daytona wmner started 210 Penronal Servlcea
211 Salarlei/Wage1 ....,.......
third and fin shed third followed by Rusty Wallace
15 410.00
2t2 leneflll..
$510 oo
and Martm aU 111 Tauruses
Total Leglelatlve ActMIIII
Bobby Labonte sent to the back of the lead lap
.. 000.00
after tea nmate Tony Stewart hit one of his tires on MayoraCourt
prt road on lap 91 wound up srxth 111 a Ponttac JUSt 230 Contractual ServiCH
15 000.00
ahead of hiS brother Terry s Chevrolet and the Total Mayor 1 Court ~..........
Grand Pnx ofWard Burton
..............................,.. 11 000.00
Clerk,
Tnruunrr
Jarrett who won about $2 2 million rnclud ng a
210 ..-nalllervlcae
$1truUtOn sponsor bonus averaged !55 669 rf.ph m 211 Salarlei/Wagee_.,,.:·::
•
$17 000.00
the race slowed by 24 laps of caution Thet:e were
212 lenellll
$2 1100 oo
only n ne lead changes among seven dnvers
Totel Clerkll'Neounrr
There were fears that the 500 wbuld be a bor:ng ,......._.........,.,....::·:118 000.00
affa" after two sleepy quabf)rmg races on Thursday t..and. .ndlulldlnge
And It mdeed lacked excttement Wtth JUSt one cau- 210 Debt lllnrlcN 111100 00
Total Lande end lulldlnga
tion flag and very lude passmg through the first 132 .............................,.... 000.00
laps
Boarde and c-IHiona
County Audnor 1
1
That first yellow was brought out when Gordon' ,.,..._r
1 Fn $2,200.00
developed an ml leak and was forced to pit That Auditor of IIIII a FN
, .........._..................... 11,300 00
cost htm five laps and he wound up 34th m the 43
Solicitor
car field
230~ualht&lt;lan
The rest of the race was more eventful With the $4,100 00
strung out field ttghtened up followmg Joe Totllllollclto! 14,500 00
other Genanl Govam"**t
Nemechek s blown engme on lap t33
230 CoslbiCIUII Servlela
Martin who has never won the Daytona race fell
_
11 ooo.oo
out of sequence wtth the leaders when he h.:td to Total Other Qenerel
Gowrn1111nt
111,000 00
make an early pst stop on lap 80 because of a blis- Total
Progl'llll VII Genarel
tered tire
aov.m,..,t 1127110.00
When the rest of the leaders pttted several bps OU..r Una of F..,da
27t Tren1lera •tza 000 oo
later Martm took the lead and held offJarrett until Tolll
Other U111 of Funda
the next yellow flag allowed him to ptt With every
:""':!"""""'"':::· I12G,CIOO 00
one else He stayed out front until the stops on lap holton 3 Thai lh1r1 l:e
appropriated from lha
!57 when Benson went to the front
GEHIRAL
fUND for
I)OIIUnganclee for purpoaee

, ..,..,.,_, .....,,"."·""':112

•-file
m

Public Notice

Public Notice

not otherwlaa provldotd for
to ba axpended In
uaardanae with the
1 Section
prov 1a 1one 0
5y0140 R C the eum of
ORAND TOTAL QENEIIAL
FUND APPROPRIATION
$613 710 00
Section 4 That there be
lpproprlaled from lha
f II
I
SPECIAL
o owng
EVE
R
NUE FUNDS Street
Conetructton Melnlenance
and Repair Fund
Strlll Maintenance and
Repair Fund
Straal Maintenance and

240 Suppllee I Mlllrtale
_
$2,1124.10
210 Debt Service
112-40
li-·t St- Conatructlon 1
u·-•
Raconetructlon •111,337 00
GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL
REVENUE
FUND
APPROPRIATION
1331,153.00
Section S That there be
1 d f
h
appr:r,r•t•
rom te
folio ng DEBT SERVICE
FUNDS Building
Principal •
S4 000 00
Intel HI
12,000 00
Other
15 000 00
Total Program 111 000.00
ORAND TOTAL DEBT
SERVICE
FUN D
APPROPRIAnONS
111 000 00
Section I That there be
epproprlale I rom tha
f o II ow I n 11
cAPITAL
PRG.IECTS FUNDS
SEWERUNE
CONSTRUCnON FUND
Other Conttructlon '""'"""
~.. ,.. ,.., ...;.,,... _ 1300,000 00
Total for C-tructlon Fund
• 13110 000 00
WAliERUNI
CONSTRUCTION FUND
StetaGmrt -000.00
Total for S - Qnrnl Fund
--00000
ORAND TOTAL CAPITAL
PROJECT
FUND
APPROPRIATION

$2 Gel 148.00
And the Village Clerk 11
hereby authorized to draw
werranta on lhl Vll'._..
Tre.. urer for peymenta
from any of the foregoing
approprlatlona upon
...,alvlng pnlpll' oerlllland voucher• theralare
approvotd by the board or
on•-ra authorl•""' lly law
"'"
to eppro..,. the HIM -~ an
ordinance or reaolutlon ol
council to make th-._
txpendHu- pnMclacllhll
no warnnte ehall lie ~
or P• td f or •• 1•r1•• or
..... •-pi to paraona
•m:rloyed lly authority ot
an In eocordance with lew
or ordinance
Provldhail
further
that
t a
a ppropr I all on
lor
conllngenciH cen only lie
expandotd upon eppeal of
-thlrda vote al Counoll
lor llama of expen. .
conetttullng I Ia gal
obllgellon agel nat the
vlllege and for purpo"'
other than tholl-.cllly
o I h er
I p a c If I o
opproprletlona herein llllldlo,
SECTION
12
Thla
rtiOiuUon
aha11II like elfHt
lh
1d
II
• ear eat pero
allowed lly lew
P..HC1January3 2000
Alllet
Kathy Hepell
CERTIFICAliE
Blcllon 17011/31 A C "Ncr
appropriation IIMIItuNihltli
llac11111e affective until thecounty auditor IIIH with lhl
appropriating auth!lrtty 1
cerltncate that lha total
appropriation• form ..oh
fund 18kan togalhar wllll all
other
outalendlng
approprlellone do not
exceed auch official
llllmata or amended
olftclll eellmeta When lhl
appropriation do•• not
exceed auch olllolal
eatlmall lhl county auditor'
a hall give auch certllloatl.
forthwith upon nroelvlng
from the appropriation
luthorlty a NUIIotd aapy ol
the
1pproprlatlon
m-unr •
The 8t111 of Ohio Melgttc-ty, u
I Kathy HyeaH Clark o1 the
Vlll~~ge ol Pomeroy In Mid
c-t)'. and In whole
cllllody the Fllaa, Journnll,
and Racorda are raqulnd
by the L1we of 1111 8t1t111 of
Ohio to lie kept, do herelly
cerllly lhal the
Ann u al
Approp
Ordinance Ia tekln 1nd
copied lorm the original
Oldlnanca now on 1111 with
aald VIllage lhll the
foregoing Ordlnenoa haa
liNn compared 11y M w11tr
the Hid original end that:
the aama Ia 1 11'111 and

lleplllr

210 Pereonel s.rwo.
211 SalarltiiWIIIIH .• ~~~!'~~
~~::·::""'"::""""1101 000 oo
2121enellle
13110000
240 Suppllllll Metarlall
"":··~...,.,.,, ......., ...138 m oo
210 Debt S.Mc:4te .............
::~:·:·;"::::""~:·.. ·~:113,203 00
Total Street Malntenence
and Repair
$1118 100 00
Street CIMnlng Snow 1 Ice
Removal
2-40 Supplllll I Mlllrtall
;:~:·~:..~:~:·:·;·::::~~:13100 00
Total Bti'Mt Cleaning Snow
llceAemoval 1310000
lio Ill
f0 r
S t r •• I
Conotructlon
Maintenance and Repetr
Fund
$111000000
P R 0 Q AAM
VI
TRANSPORTAnON
State Highway and
lmp-nt Fund
240 Suppllee I Mallrtala
::":'":·::'.'"'"":":.':":"$7,211.00
Tolll StrHI Maintenance 1
Repair
17,211.00
Total lor State Hlg hway
Improvement Fund Progrem
IV Trlnaportallon
17,21100
CEMETERY FUND
PAOQAAM II
PUBLIC
HEALTH SERVICES
Cemetery 210 Pereonel
Sorvlon
211 Salarlei/WiogH • •
$7 700.00
212 Benelll8
11,300 00
240 Supptlaa I Meterllla

t2 000.00

Total Cemetery 111000.00
Totalfor~ry
, .. ,.. ,.~, .... ,,........: .. 111 000 00

Total for Cemalfry Fund
Program H Public Health
Serv
--- 111 000 00
PARKS AND RECREAnON
FUND
PROQRAM Ill
LIIIURI!
nilE AcnYmES
RIIO....UOn Progrem
2-40 SuppiiH I Meterllla :.:~:,::·:::~:- """ " U 11011;00
Total Recreation Progrem
__ $2.100 00
Total for Parka I Raci'HIIon
Fund
Progrem Ill Lelaunr Time
Act.
$2,100 oo
STAliE QRAHT FUNO
Pollee Overtime
210 Penronallenlcee
211 Salarlei/Wio;tel 1118.00
TotalS-Grant •118.00
Total for Stela Grenl Fund
-.:·.::::·:::::":.::·::· " 1118.00
OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE
FUNDS
Fire 21 o Peraonal a.vtcu
211 Salarlat/W.... .............
15100.00
2121hMftte
1110.00
240 Suppllee I Materiel•
:~::·~"·:::··· .. $71 041.00
231 Auditor F - U 100 00
TotaiOtherUHaoiFunda
:·::::.:::"''""""'"'"""$18 381.00
UUIHin
2-40 Suppllea I Metarllla
"""''"""- - .. 111173.00
231 Auditor F - -$700.00
Tol81 Other u - o1 Funde
:"::·::"'""'• S17,173.00
LAW
EN F 0 R C EM I NT
TRUST FUND
PROQAAMI SECUIIITYOF
PERSONS ANO PROPERTY
Pollee Lew Enlorc~mant
240 Supptleel Mallltall
;:"'"".''"''... 11,100.00
To tal
Po 11 ce
Law
lnlorcasnant • 15,100.00
Total for Law Enloroemanl
Fund •
15,100.00
Safaly Fund 240 Suppllee I
llalertale
$7-00
Total Safely Fusld 17 000 00
MOliOA VEHICLE LICINII
TAX I'UND
p R 0 G RAM
VI
TRANIPORTATIOfl
8tr111 Conalruotlon and
R-.uotlon

•12

-.000.00

Section 7 Thll there 11•
approprlllld form the
following ENTERPRISE
FUNDS
W- on1M
210 P....... larvlcea
211 lallriH/Wagu ..,.........
•
1147 000 00
212 htllllla
Mt 000 00
230Conlnlctual81roilcn
•••, .., .......,110 000.00
240 SuppiM I.MIIarlall
lt2G 000 00
Total oniM . . . 000 00
Pumping
2408upjollaal...,..la
-- M - lti,OOO.OO
Total Pumping 111,000.00
M-.
2-40 Suppllee IIIIIMIIIa
-"--11000.00
Tofllllllarl
1500000
Linda I lulldlnp
210 Dill! llervl- .,..,.,.,..,.,
--" -121,000 00
Total lor Water Fund
ApproprleUon

Prog,_ V leelc UtHHy
S.Mc:41
1371 000.00
Sanitary 11aM1' Fund
PROQRAM V
aASIC
llnUTY SIRVICES
oniM
240 8Uppllaa llleterlele
- " 1102,100 00
Total OHIM
1102,100.00
Total for Senltary Sewer
Fund Appropriation
Progl'llll V Beale Utility
S."ica
1102,100.00
UUIIIIee llatiOt* Fund
PROQRAM V
BASIC
UTIUTY SEIMCII
Dapoalta
Refunded
$7
00
D
Tota for Ullllllal epoelll
Fund Approprlallo,l
Program V laelo Utility
Serv
S7 000 00
GR AND
T OTAL
ENTERPRISE FUNGI
APPROPRIATION
$414,100 00
Section t Thll there Ill
appropriated from the
TRUST AND AGENCY
FUNDI.
POLicE DISAIILITY AND
PENSION I'UND
PROQRAIII SECURITY 01'
PERSONS AND PIIOPIPITY

or

lore,C:::

cort'IIOiaapy lhlnrol.

Come

Ce ebrale

~anagua

Tin!&amp;

When Feb 22 2000

5:00 PM To 8 00 Pt.1
Paid Fo By Frlonds And
~

.. or

www any 1-can-eam c:pm
-81111 8 6-1682

ARE 'IOU CONNECTED?
lntemel Usars Wan led
$350 $1100 !Nook

Are 'lllu Look ng Fo
1-8811-900-8066

RAe D WEIGHT LOSS F aa
S811]&gt;1oo l.oH 3 5 Poonds Every
W11'kl AI Seen On TV Me II

Fat 5 opa Hunge BIIOs a Eno
gyl 'Dn y S 9 95 Buy 2 I FREE
Fot.-Biockoro St 1 95 t BOO 7333:2&amp;8 www un edpharmaceutl

cal~ &lt;;am

COO'S /Croci I Carda
Shejt You America

www !rnorq«tMte net
Toys Jewel y Wood Sawlno

!\'ping G eat Pay CALL 1 800
795-o380 Ext 1201 (24 H08)

Cortlflld Nureo Aldot Rota! no
sh 111 ntermed ate care can e
West v rgln a cert f cat on re
qu ed Po nt P eaaant Center

State Route 62 Route 1 Box

326 Point Pleaoant WV 25550
EOE

c une 1 With Floor EJCpt

enct
Needed n Ga I polls A aa C8 I

~ guarl8rl)' salary ovlows
Mouagement opportunttles aval
al!lll 401Knoladcai/Dentai'Paid
vacation&amp; avaHallle 3shlfte dally.
Fle~ble achadullng Start IOU
new CIIIHI' with ual
ean 1 800-929-5753

to an appolntmen~

We look torwarrl to rneot ng yout
Mom 1 Wanted Ame ca a t t
Home Bualneaa Mama Wo k At

Homo Fee Caaaette t 688 613-

Compute iterate parson who M I
lmpu at t ansact ons and pro
duct va loue epo t ng (hou y
sa ary smok•free enYironmen
Please send rasume 10 P. 0 11oM
164 Cheohlra OH45820

c;ounte Top Kllchen Stove 2

OvaJI&amp; On Top Cab nett W It

Wortcs 740-446 2380

Con act Posltton Ava able For A
G oup Fact tato Fo A Women a
Suppo t G oup 'TWo Evenlnga A
Week And Occas onal Daytime
Seas ons At A ea Schoo s Ap
pi can s W th Know edge Of V c

lim s AOhla And Domaollc
v olenca taaues P eta ad High
School Dp oma And Soma AdO

~~ent

nol RO BOM 729 75
OH45769

Pt manant Fu

me Jobs 40-t

hlaiweek C ean Bu d nos BUF

FALO AREA Mus ve w h n 20
miles ad as of Buffa o Ma a or
Female Sh fls Ca
Nowl
(3p4)768 7290 Bob

.6J rea estate edvertlsllllfln
th s newspaper s subject to
he Fodera

FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity
!NOTICE!
DH 0 VALlEY PUBLISHING CO

ecommends thai you do bust
ne's w th peop e you know and
Nttr 10 send money th ough the
ma un I you have nves lgated

EARN $90 000 YEARlY Repa
ng NOT Rep ac ng lonp Cracks
n W ndsh elda F ee V deo t

aoo 626 8523 us Canada
www glassmechan lC.com

Appl can • May Rep y To Pa

EXCElLENT PROFITS lOG
HOME WHOLESAlERS Join
e 16klndreHooStyeaStet
ng AI $12 900 EMCIUB V8 To
o y Mr Buck t 800 321 5647
Old Time L.og Homos

5955

flO

Lost and Found
Choco a o Lab loon South Stata
On Wednesday 2

Posta Jobs $48 323 00 V Now

Hlr ng No Eicpe ence Pa d
T a n ng G[ea Benefits Cal 7
Dsyo 800-429-3680 Ext J 365

Foundl Mixed Golden Ae ever

n Rodney A ea 2 Days Ago

740-446-1500

Found Boy&amp; 1975 Class ng or
Po nt P eaaant nil a a on R ng

loll Mala Yellow lab Ch d en s
Pats P oaae ca 740 446 7084
With Any nlorma ton

0 eclo of Nuralng lntarrned ate
care facility West \1 rg n a Reg
ate ad Nurse t cenae equl ed
Min mum five yea a rul time o
equ va ent tJCpe ence and two
yea 1 exper ence nurs ng supe
v a on equ ed Send resume to
Se vlcn Box &amp;75 Point P 111
an\ WV25550

70

DRIVERS

oro C AH (304)782 2261

Yard Sale

Cannon Exp e$$

99% D ve No Touch F e gh

Oalllpolll
1r VIcinity
61J, Yonl Balta Mual

II Plld In Advlnco
nc•Qllll! 2 00 p.m
the cloy bofoNihlocf
It 1D 111n Iunday
odlllon 2 ODp.m
Frlclay Mondsoy od111on
10 00. m. Batunlty

•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
1r VIcinity

•

All Yard &amp;aiel Muat It Pakl In

Amnaa Dar:dllno I OOpm the
de~

before the ad It to run

Iunday • llondoy odlllon
1 OUpm Fflc!sly

80

WllneMmyelgs lr:'elhla3
dly=ol ~j aG00
.. , _
Cl
, oJ. I he Vlllege of
Pome: oy Mal.. Counlfl'
Ohio
(2) t4, 212 TC

Auction
and Flea Marks!

Sta I AI 34C Ml 15 Y + Exp
33e lA /4 Yr :J2J Ml 13 V 31¢
MI/2Yr 30¢ Ml 1 Y ~e Ml
16 Mos 1 v 2~ Mt 16 Mco Or
less ~a nee Or t lAo Exp $350

v

Wk Pay Ra ae Eve 6 Mon hs
Bonuses Ride P og am Pad
vacat ons Ina Avail www can
nonexp 111 com Cal Fo Dtta Is

1 800-1145-9390
DR VERS OTR Ware Jolt f A
Fam ly Firat Company Paid Tlma
At Home Pa sonal D spatch

Benet to Package l mllod Dod

cated Runs Aval ab a El)ough

Home T mo Tha The Dog StoPs

POSTAL JOBS To S 8 35 HR
NC BENEFITS NO EXPER
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
NFO CAll 1 800 81 3 3585
EXT 142t0 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS Ids nc

package Part t me hours are a ao
ava labte Please appty n person
M F 8 4 at Arcadia Nura ng Cen
te PO Bo• 5
Eao Main
St eet Coo v 1 Oh o 45723

EOE

Seamalreas Wan ad

St a ght

Substllute Yehle e Opertton 1
II l Ill roqu emeQIS anoa I om
oparat ng a van which equ rn a
egular cense to ope at ng 1
schoo bus wh eh requires a

Its Package 23 w 1 V OTR
8800-727 2868 EXT 145

Paaraon Auct on Compony

fUll t me auct onee comp tte
auct on
tervlct
L cenatd
~~~!Oh o &amp; W11 V11g1nla 304
m-j5785 Ck 3()4.773-5447

EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
Mad ca lnaurance B Ulng Allis
tance mmlk'l atety f You Have A

PC You Can Eo n $25 000 To
sso ooo Annually Ca I 1 600
a -4883 Oopu ,a;

::·:"':":'·'""::··::···••11141.00

menla Pay scale 1 $7 00 to
$10 00 pa hour depend ng on
qua neat oht Must have 2 years
drlv ng axperlence and good drlv
lng ICO d MROO txper tnce
prefer ed App cations may be
obta nld t om and submitted to

Athono Counly Boa d ol MRDD
601 w Unloo Stroot Athena OH
45701 EOE

07 People Needed For Honttt

DIET Of Tho NEW MILLENIUM
Un~ tavobty Fall R11ul a 800
715-.1053.

Doub ow do On Lol $250 Depoe
Raqu ed 304 736-7295

420 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Buy o ae R ve ne An ques
24 Eas Man on SA 24 E Porno oy 740 992 2526 o 740 992
1539 Russ Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
$$BAD CRED T? Get Cosh

Loans To $5 000 Oeb Conso
dation To $200 000 C ed Ca ds
Mo gages Ref nanc ng And
Au o Loans Ava ab e Me dan
Cred t Cop 800 47 5 9 E111

REAL ESTATE

310 Homea lor Sale

180

S NO DOWN! HOMES NO CREDT NEEDED GOV T FORE
ClOSURSS GUARANTEED AP
PROVAL 1 BOO 360 4620 EXT

(3) A S ee Bu d ngs 30•36
Was S 1 5 2 So 16 500 40R56
Waa $1 200 Set $5 980 55x 20
Was $32 900 So $ 3 900 Tom
800-392 7806

8509
2b

age

achad Ga
130 Sou h Pa k Or ve

1ba Home w A

(304)675 5697

3 Bed oom B ck Home Ooub •
Ga age large Lot F n shad
Basement Ma ntenanca Free
740-4411-8329

330 Farms for Sale

440

8 ACRES I POND

W th Beaut lu Bu d ng S te Be
h nd Pond Betwen Ga po Is &amp;
Jackson 2 Mlos Off SA 35 Land
Con ract Ava abe F ee Maps 1

740-211-0011

38R B ck Ranch w F replace 2
Fam lyRoom 1Balh Fu I Base
men t..ge Co ner Lots Central
A FellCed Backya d New Hot
Wa tt Tank New carpe fam
oom o g ta The moatat New y
efln ahed Ha dwood F oora

Apartments
for Rent

2 Weav ng Looms

0974

and 2 bedroom apartments fu
n shad and un u n shed secu y
depoall equ ed no pat1 1•0

992 2218

740 446

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Techno ogy
F nance W h 0 Down Pas
C ad Problems No Probtem Can
To Fee t-en 293-4082

W

Arbo~o

Localkm $279/Mo

Peta 740-446 2857

u

Nurslllg

t as Quia

UUIIIIa No

3BRI2BA 2 Fam y Rooms Heat

Shown by appt on y (304)882

204;

85 ac es wooded g 11 hunt ng

off Rt 33 so d Ia m houst w th
ba nllheds wa e eaervo gaal

o we pond Meigs County 740.
992 5700 $150 000
BAUNERLANO
740-441 1•ez

BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDilET PA CEB AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 W11 wood
onva I om $289 o $370 Wa k to
shop &amp; mov as ca 740 446

2568 Equa Housing Opportunity

Seen c au at Road Bast Home
S tea In 00 M 111 13 Acr11

Nood A loon? Try Dabt Conso
dation $5 000 1200 000 Bad
C odll 0 K Fee BOO 770 0092
Ext 215
PEPSI COKE FR TO lAY
SNACK AND SODA VEND NG.
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
ISSAlL CASH BUS NESS$$$
NCRESE YOUR INCOME NOW
SMAlL INVESTMENT EXCEl
LENT PROF TS t 800 731 7233

Lovefy ten ac as n a country 111
ng four bad ooma two and half
bolho lonna ~':m and famIly nx&gt;m two ft
two apan
menta four ca ga age and two
storage bu ld nga pease cal
740-992~

Cash PJICI

proved 1 800 6 7 3476 Ext 330

FOandly Rklge 15 Acre&amp; Itt 500

Molga Co Au and Wh ., HI
Rd Njco 9 Ac as $12000 0 1
Ac as S 4 ooo wate Banv Ia
SA 32~ Nco 5 Acros $16 000
wa er Ck Briar Ridge Ad 7 Acr
es$13000

23 ACIIES 421 ODD

Oft SA 7 South 01 Ga po I No

Restrictions NEEDS lilC $2 300
Down On land Controct
MEIClS COUIITY
CHEAPER THAN DIRT
8 Ac aa $5 000 tO Acras
$10 ooo 5+ Ac oa Fo $8 500
Ca Fo F 11 Maps ANTHONY
LAND CO lTD t 600-213-8365

Deb Conaol da on Mor gages
And Reflnanc I'!Q Crtd t Problema
OK Consume a F nanc al 800
247 5 25 Ext 113-' Void DH KS

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Caah For Reman ng Paymen a

$2 500 V SA MASTERCARD
UNSECURED Gue an ead Ap
p~ll Bad Croci~ /No Croci I OK

Low Mon h y Payments Y2K
Camp ant A mas Eve yone Ap

Con nues Into Wayne Na o.nal
FortS! Oft SR 140 &amp; SA 233

SS Auto loans Pe sona Loans

www na lonak:on ractbuytrs.OQm

Ba n $37 000 Ge a Academy

For Home Silas And HIOI ng Cal
Now Fo FAEE Mapa And Fl
n1nclng lnlo tO% OFF Cash
Buysl
REDUCED PRICES
20 ACRES 411 ODD
A Wooded Wth Road Thai

220 Money to Loan

Buyo a 800 490 0731 Ex 101

On Rt 160 Large t Rooms wth
Basement Gas Hee AJC One
Car Garage Wo k Shop One
Ac • L.and House Bttwun Bula
vile P ke And County Ga eges

You Don Ca Us Ws Bo h
Lose Fee Es ma as 740 446

6308

800-29 0098
JET
AERAT ON MOfOAS
Ropa rad New &amp; Aebu 1 n s OCk
Cat Ron Evans 800-537 9528

Tw n Towera now accept ng ap
p tea tono tor 1 BR HUD subs d

740-446-111159

zed apt lor tide y and handl
capped EDH (304)67!!*79

16

Col lbii-FIH
1-.tf.IIIL

JAN TROL HEATINCl AND
COOLINCl EQU PMENT
NSTALlED

wwwcountrytymt com

nclu'i}ea Fu I Crad Res o atton
No A Scam 1-eoo 860-9334 Ext

CONIOUDATE IILLB.
From $3 1:411) $150 0001
(9% f'l!iori!JI Rata)
LDANSOAC
For Fast A -

men o
888 479 2345 To
F sa)
COMPUTERS Low 0 $0 Down

$30 ooo D 8 Wth Pond 126 500
Cash Eu eke Ma abe Road tt
Acres $20 ooo Or 3 Acrea Wllh

Many N ct La a To Choose F om

EXT 803

On P ope :y Sod Mo tgages
Annu t esl St t em ants lmmt
d ate Quo eat Nobody Baa a
Our P cas Na anal Con ac

COMPUTER BlOWOUT COM
PAC Desktops L~ptops Me
chan Aocoun &amp; Webs es A
mos Eve yone App oved No
Money Down low Month v Pay

Ac 01 $19 000 Or 24 Acrao Wth
large Barns $34 000 Rio Grande

Wndlalla 847 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YOAK
10017

Paid For. By Cariof P WOo&lt;l
3952 Sllto Ro&lt;rte t 4t
Goftlpola, DH 45831

t Badroom Nea

Home Economica

Pump Can a A Ooubll Ca
Ga age Lynn 0 \It New Haven

1Wo bedroom S270/nro plus Lrt
ttas and depos t one bedroom
$225 mo Th d S eet Rae ne
Oh 740-:M7-42N

w. Ply llAIIl
for LANDI

wea thy Fam lis Un oad ng M
~n1 Of Do tara To Help Mlnlmizl
The r Ta~r:es w tt mmed atetw

U.H'LOYf,llfl f
:O EHVIC E: S
Help Wanted

R&amp;D a Used Fun u e G eat Se
eel on P cad To Se I Com•
And 8 owse Co ne Of Rou a 7
&amp; A.dd son P kt We Buy Fu n
ture 740-367 0280

667 3966

opportunity bass

$FREE CASH NOW$ From

1~~~

••st

nformed ha 81 dwe Mngt

Record P oducera And Conce l
Promotnts ntarnat www wcin.tw:

URGENlilY N~EDED o p osma
ctonort earned $35 o $45 lor 2
o 3 hours -kly Ca So a Toe
740-5112-6851

Total far Polloa Dlealllllty

740-448-3093....,

Th 11 bedroom L ncoln He ghts
Pomeroy ga aga avallab e no
pats
and dtpos t equ ed
eva abe Mach
2000 740

advertised n th 5 newspape
ara ava able on an ~ua

Appo ntment To Come To Naah

C 111 B COL w h ochool bus
pusengar &amp; air b aka ando ae

fill:~

Country L v ng 3 Oti 4 Bid ooms
Pay Clos ng ~oals &amp; Move In

01111 Co Chtlh I Near f1 VI
va ey Schools N ce Fa mhou1e
Qn 47 ACIIO $86 000 Cuh Allo
Same Area 6 Aces 112 ooo 15

MF 3 t t shill nc ucfes benefit

Ride Convan ona a That Go
Home W h You Ex:ct ent Bene

AND Got Home MOST WEE
KENDS All Aoa gnad 98 0
Nowo Sato Ito Equ ppod AI

~Evanlngo

advert sements tor real esta e
which s n vlo a on of the
aw ou reade 5 are hereby

FORECLOSED HOMES. low Or 0
Dowftt Govn t And Bank Repo s
Be ng Sod Now Fnanc no Ava I
abta Ce Now 1 BOO 355 0024

A cad a Nu s ng Cenle now ac
cep ng app ca Ions fo a ul t n:Je.

ville And Audlllon Fo Majo

M IS Pa d

Has Heat Pump Both Very GOOd
Cond on Mull Sail 740 245

$76 ()()() (740)5811-91182
Fo YOU NEED MONEY WE
NEED YOU 00% OF OUR AS
SOC ATES EARN SER OUS
MONEY FOR FREE NFO CALL
t eee 586 7896

496 co Galllpols Da y ,; lbuno
825 Th d Avenue Go po s OH
4583
AN\

Average 2500 M ea Par Weak

W h BonUIIS A

4782

Th s newspape wll not
know ngly accept

Recept on st Needed Fo Dan a
011 ca Send Resume To CLA

Ago nil CALL US TODAY Mo
nay 8 AM F 8 PM 800 873
51153
DR VERS Sra I Up To 36cpm

Recogn zes You

New And Used Fu n u 81 S o e
Be ow Ho day nn Kanauga
Good Used Beds 0 esse s
Couches 0 ne es Etc B 0 Sav
ngs On New Fu n u e 740 446

mlta IOn o d sc 1m na lon

Exl8040

Saama Hoavy Vny 740 388
9310
SINGEAIII GOSPEL CLEAN
CO\INTRY ond EASY LISTEN
lNG I Ca I t 600 469 8t64 Fo

Ba k ng I

$68M.lO

l' oven 18 Yea Log Manufactu

OancorB Wanted Top SS 740
992 8387 Wad Sat (304)875

7

Noo CIH!oldl Golt Club

740-4411-2957

make any ouch prelerence

thootfolng

AT6T" PHONE CARD ROUTE
Make S 00 000 IV
ALL CASHI Easy
loca Sles FREE nfo
800-997 9888 (24 Hs) X 710
ATaT t Cent PHONE CARD
ROUTEI Mako $100 000 + Yr
AlL CASHI Easy loca Silos
FREE Info t 800 997 9888 Ext
1155 (24 Hs)

Fair HOUSing Act

o 1968 which makes It t1ega
o adv'en se any p efarence
mltation or d scrlmlna ion
baaed on ace color re lglon
se.~e taml a status or national
origin or any ntentton to

210

t anal Educat on fT, alnlng n So
cat Sarvlcaa flequ reFf nte estecl

16 :!000 Green Co Ia B Montha
Old 740-4411-7232

FOR LEASE OA SALE 5 Vaa

0 d 2 000 Sq Fl 3 Bedroomo, 2
Batha Energy Err c ent Home

994 Lbe y &amp; 1987 Oakwood
Both 14x70 3 Bed ooms 2 Fu 1
Ba hs Now Undo P nnlng Uberty

$38 ()()()

aonne P 0 'Box 454 Ga lpo Is
OH4583

Rotlte

ooma 1 1 2 baths new Berbl
ca pet exce lent condition

(304)578 2101 or

Interview appolntmonls for

Stu!Sy Hoa Fam ea Open Their
Ho,.ta And Haarte To lnterna
tto~ Exchange StUdenta tntt
111 1qna Exchange Qoord nata a
Wo~ W th Exchange Students

nans 821 N nth SlrMt Hunt ng

1983 14•70 Skyllno 2 3 bed

to mO'It n on en ed ot

outbound taleservk:a pos tons
No experienco necoaoary
Starting wage is $8/h

New atora- ru arne and pan time
caah • 1 manage and book
kaepe Send rasumaa c o The

1Jo'!: 800-3 8 3735

TUANED DOWN ON
SOC Al SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unlou Wo Win
t-111111-582 3345

(3) t 6x60 $25-1 Po Month low
Down Paymen F 11 A 1 800
89H1n

Mobile Homo 2BR 14R70

We ara now Balling up

ASSEMBLY AT HDMEII C ails

k&gt;n

toe• Cathy 600 671 2528 or

Profaaalonal

Sarvlcea

MllltMironTollurvlcee
a pleased to announce the
Grand open ng ot Ill now Wet~
ston calli~ conle

EJ~plo e New Cultu ee Make A
Dlftfrence n You Commun ty

mbu ltd lncen ve Travtl Con

sm

230

Manage Retail Jewe y Sto e
Retail Sates And Computer E~e
~· ence Necesaa y 8ener ta
Ave ab a App y Acqu s tiona
Fine Jewe y I 51 Second Ave
nue Ga poUa.

5275

Hlgli- School&gt; And Host Fam lloo
~· non Not Pa d Expenaes Ra

(2) 4 w da $187 Po Month

Low Down Payment 1 800 691

$tOOOOOBO 7&lt;0-992 5686

304 897 2102 Or App y A1 WI

W ~ EF Founds! on Fo Fo olgn

GREE OU CKLV Bache o s
Mas • 1 Doc o a e By Co e
apondence Basad Upon PriOr Ed-

FT 888 491 9224 www WO k OU
ol your-home com

An EComme co Business?
$350 $1100 INOik

Thu odey Monday rh u saturday
90G-5 30

Schools
ln1tructlon
EARN A LEGAl COllEGE DE

6 .2

Users Needed $25 75 H PT

1-8811-50 1-8489

OuaiUy c oth ng and houaeho d
tema $1 oo bag sale eve y

150

Phone CAMBR DtlE STATE
UNIVEAS TV 800 964 6316

Are You Connectttd? lnte net

www ecomrnercenewatart.com

740-592 1842

Bualnaas
Training
Clsltllpollo c-r Cotltge
(CaiMII Clooo To Homo)
Call Todayl740-446-4367
1-1100-214-0452
Re; 190.05-12748

ucat on And Sho I Study Course

ForShartff

9 Weot Stmoon Athol\&amp;

140

Fo FREE Info ma on Book et

Dennlo Sallsl&gt;ury

New To You Thrift 8'-

HelpWantad

WLOll FE JOBS To $21 60 HR
INC BENEF TS GAME WAR
DENS SECUR TV MAN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CAll BOD 8 3
3585 Ext 1421 8 AM 9 PM
1 DAYS ldt Inc

Markelklg
$25-$7!&gt;11

Wllh ngton1 B thdoy With
~ l&lt;lndo And Suppo ora Of Dan
n a Sat obury FIN Spaghott 0 n
"' Where AM Veta Bu d ng

110

nleme
&amp;

George

Enlflloyar~ $hllnr II,Me.oo

Tol81 for Pollee Oleablllly
and
Penalon
Fund
Apft csprtlllon ..
- ,141.00
IIIWIIow-.'11 Pul)d Carnallry
TotalllallldoWIIIIIII - •
·.....,..........,........ ----.oo
Other lnd-menl Fund
....,...... Care
Tofll Other lrncMIOIOwwmllllt~nl~
17,200.00
Totel for I n d o - Fund
AIIProllrl4!llon 141 - 00
aRANb TOTAL TRUST AND
AQINCY
F U NDS
APPROPRIATION
111,1141.00
GRAND TOTAL
ALL
APPROPRIATIONS

Fu I Time Vehicle Operator 111
equlrea a C 111 B CDL w th endo semen a Mu1 have 2 yea 1
d IV net o..,.rlanco and good d lv
no eco d MRDO expe ence
p ole od Bonet to pocl&lt;oge Ap
p ca ons may be obta ned f om
and submitted o Athens County
Boa d of MROO 80 W Un on
Stroat Atllono OH 45701 EOE

LPN a
Arcadia Nurs ng Can 1 now ac
cept no appHca Onl or fu &amp; part
t me LPN 1 Must be tble to work
a 8h fts &amp; be a team p ayer Requ ed strong &amp;upeN aory sk Ia
Please apply n pe son at East
Man Stree Coolv e Ohio 740.
367.3 t511 MF6 00-4 QOp EDE

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

Public Notice

11

(24 H a) OR Ruah So f Ad
dro- Stomped Envelopo MOl
2472 B oadwoy Su to 1338 AR
New'rork NY 10025

r-==:::=::::;::==::====:-r;=:::=:::=::=::=:=.===:-r==:::=::;:;:::::=.===,====:::=::=:;::=.===
Public Notice

V dedi Rua~ Sa I Add aosod
Stomped En-.,o GICO DEPT
5 Box 1431 ANTIOCH TN
370 1 1438 Slert lrnmodlaloly
$3 000 WEEKLY Moiling 400
B ochu oo AT HOME tlua

! ~

Otmsted Fats 62 Ottawa.Giandorf 55
Ontano 81 Mansfield Sl Pete&lt; a 34

Day Ch s an 76 Be4 brook 59

12 000 WUKLYI Mo Ino 400
B ochu " Sa af•cnon Gua
IIIIIHdt Poatsgt I SLIPI&gt;Ifoi P o-

lid

Follow your
favorite teams In
the Daily Sentinel! ,.

Navar • Folrioss 70 Canal Fulton NW 56
New Bremen 7 W6yneofield-Gashen 46

HelpWented

•nmed ateFREE
Supp
Star my Call 800 489 9•77

Antca Seneca E 81 Arcadill 51
Avon Lake 58 \lermihon 30
Bay VI tage Bay 52 Cle Jolin Mlinlhell 5
Badtoro Chanet 83 louisvill&lt;l Aquonu 62

•xpan-

Eastem

Jolforaon 73 Hotaln ,...,_, 113
St Jolin I 47 Elida 38
Eutwood eo Genoa 52
Elyrle 50 Amherol 51- 47
~

"-gu!arsAma 4CI Minster 36
App e C eek W6yneda e 44 M lorlburg W

eo PonsmoLrth w 35

Cols Nol1hland 4;

fi ell.
55
9
22
7

2
2

C 8fTa Spart ng

39

Cols:Brookhaven 77 Coi!J Wes 40

Wotorford (&gt;&lt; x)

il:lll. ;1:111.
2
o
2
0

P lflCo on eo Cm Winton Woods 30
C n With ow 5~ Cbcford Talawanda 49

Eaotam -

21

MariOn Pteaaam 41 Grandv ew Hts 37
Westerv hi South 46
Miami East 70 Day North idge ~
Cuyahoga Fa rs 47 OO...erteat 33
Middletown F«Wt'k:k 47 Batavsa 43
0
Dubl n Coffman 63 Marion F ank n _
4___
6
~ Minford 55, Proctofvile F81riaod 54
0 -~ Euclid 6'176tenvile 4 t
·
-r.brai Ridgedale 52 Go ton Nontu!IOf

o-o
-~D-~ 0-0-0
D.
Q.
Q:Q
Q
11
0 10.24 41
8 Bake 4) Foula 1e

l!lmrE
Jantzen King
KelyHol

Cn

:ze

Cin - · 5 0 Rood ng
C n Wyoming 83 Cartiale 20
C1e VASJ 81 Andover Pymatvn ng Va
Colo. Reody 73 Eaot Knox 34
CoiL Sclloo for Gil1o 47 lltanon Elgin

Columbio 85 Cle 51 l\ugustl!18 52

ContOMIIe 68 Coy

E•.twn (xll}

eJmt

Chitllcotho ZaneT ace 62 Chilt\cotllo Hunt
ington Roll 35
Cin HH!o Chntllon Academy 62 Mar\8!110111

44

Ohio Glrla Blt8ketblll

Local hoop aumm1rles
Glrla Dlvlalon IV Sacllonal
Eutem 411 Wlilwlord 37
Eastern
o t2 10 u •

(Fry tt Pattonon tO) ~~T...,__ 12

2 -38 ( 553)

E""' I 111 Llllod

20 500Acrea
Collll)'tn

320 Mobile Home•
for Slle
178 14x70 mob 1 home two
bedroom IWo bath like new s t
ling on 1 1 4 ac 11 rtldy to
move nto 12&amp; ooo fl m atto 3
.,_ lvlng 100111 ..... very good

eoudltlon. StOll 7--ottaz

IOWZIW315
Anthony land eon-,any

lTD.

www OOtlltnr'IVml oom

\IAClNETIC

HEALTH

PRO

DUCTS Jewe V Shoe So es
Body Suppo t An Nausea
Bands Magne c P as a s And
SIMp Sys ems WhoJesate IReta
FeeCaaog Ca
80082
986

MOilLE HOME OWNEAS

Vlttag• G etn Apartment• 2
bodrOoma total aiOCirlc apptonc
11 Ju nlahtd laundry room facti
1111 and ctou to ochOo app lea

Huge lnven o y 0 scoun Prices
On \1 ny Sk ling Doo s W nd
owa Ancho a wa e Heate a
P umb ng &amp; E ec teal Part&amp; Fu
naces &amp; Hea Pumps Bennetts
Mob It Home Supp y 740 446
946

CLEAN HOUSE

Huskava na 257 Cha n Saw w
20 nch ba Bo h pu chased new
Excellent Cond on
$800

tlon1 ovsrlloble ot olllco 740 892
371 t TOO t 816 233- Equal

HEN TAl S

WITH THE
CLASSIFIED81

MTO Wood Sp lite 5 hp 20 ton

(304)675-7931

�P8ge B4 • The O.lly Sentinel

540

.._...,_,s

710 Autos for Sale
Mlrchandlse
1918 Cl'lllllor 2 Oooro, AutOIIIII·
New Mfttnium ~~~ Eat AJI Day lc, Auna &amp; Drivel Oreal! Low
And Melt Away, Cell Tracy AI Mllot.S1,2(10Nog.7-1-1013.
7&lt;10-&lt;WI·Ita.
ItiC Chfty · 3.1 V6, All
Old Ollk DlnlngAoom Sol. Tobie f'Q-. ex..-1 Condition. CaH
with End Leav... e Chaira, AltM 5PM, (»4lf15-8051.
Hutch, Buffet, SSOO. Neg.
199C Eagle laton, automallc,
(304)17UII25.
loaded, t~tcellent condition ,
OuMft alii Wlllrbed, U~td $61;00, "'"740-114&amp;-2181 .
. . *"-'· netct. malJ'ss, 199&gt;1 Gomel Colof BUick ~ . 2
110.1 - .11211.
Oooro, Equipped With Everything
- . n w , - OWNEIIS Very Good Condition , $8,150,
T•ppan HI Efllcloncy 80%Gas 740-245-!009.
Furnac., Oil FUmiC.I , 12 SNr
Heat Pump
Air Condlllon lng
51'- FfM e Yo• Ports &amp; La·
bor'Wamonty
HoaUng &amp;

a
a.n.-

~. 1 -IOH72-~7 .

- ·Gun

Shop, 7-40-702+112.

1996 Cavalier 2 Doors, Red , 5
Speed, Air, Sunroo l, Sharp l
$C ,900; 1996 CavaMer 2 Doora, 5
Speed, A~. $3,900: tD95 Mercury
Sable , Full Power, 14 ,200; 199.(
Ford Taurus, $3,COO ; 1989 Ford

Ranger XLT 4x4 Plci&lt;·Up, $2,950;
North. 7&lt;0-446-6865.

I'II8I,JC NOI ICtO

local time on llondey,
llerah 27, 2000 and lllen
publicly opened and ~
lloud.
1'111 conb iliA documem.,

ptone ond apHiflcatlona
may be examl- at the
above o"lce or may be
obtained upon payment ala
non·refundabte fH of $25
par HI.

1996 Mercury Sable, al• cylinder,
new tires , loaded. nice car.

GUARANTY

$37.00 Per 100; All Bran Com·
piOIIIOn Fillings In SIOdl

S4495; 1993 "-•roster, 6 ~ , 000
miles, new tires, nice van, $4295;.J~~miiiiow"t~-'li

JadtJon, ONo t-800·537-9528

mlle i, btdll nlf, air, nice tr uck.

$3995; 1993 Dodge Dynasty, alx

cyli nder, fo ur ·door, good car,

GY We Finance, ·o· Down! Pasl
Credll Problems OKII Even II
Turned Oown Belore!l Reestablish
-Your Cradltll 1-800-659·0359

Rutland Car Sales
740..742·3311 or t-888-818·9609

NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOlO· $2695.

Building
S!lpplles

Block, br6ck, sewer pipes , wind·
OWl , llnltla, etc. Claude Winters,

1998 Pontiac Trans- Am 350 V-8

LS-t Corvette Engine, Automallc
Transmission , Factory Cnrome
Wheels, T·Tops, FuiiJ Loaded,
500 wt Monsoon Stereo System
With' 10 Sp eakers And 12 Disc
Co Changer In T""!nk Cassetta In
Dash, Deep NavY\ Metallic With
Dark Grey leather Interior, Any
Rea sonable Offer Considered ,

Rio Grande, OH Call 740-245·
5121.
74()-446-.4 548 Or 740·446-7375.
580 Pets for Sale
HONDA's $tOO, $500 &amp; UP PO·
2 Adorable Roltweller Puppies ,

TaHI a Dewctaws: Females $150;

7-40-2M-9123.

AKC Pomeranian Pup, Seven
Weaks Old. Vet Checked First

Sholl. 740-256·-

·

AKC Pom•ranlan Puppy, Male,

7055.

·

Looking for female longha ir
Oachatiund to breed, P.lease call
740-446-2055 1oovo message.

570

·

Mu•lcal
lr:'strunienta ·
PIANO fOR SALE: Spinel /Con·
sole: Take On Small Payment.
Z.O Down With Good Credit See
LOcally. COlt 800-34&amp;1775.
For Sale
580
or Trade
1983 Otda, body, tires &amp; Interior
ftcelltnt, needs molar with starter on driver's aide; f989 Chevy
Gao Metro, needs trensmlsston ,
good -motor &amp; Urea, 740·742·

21138.

POtMrOy,OH
Paytng
parga...,.
$300.00 Covsr111
$500.00 Sfarburst
Progreulva top line.
· Uc. I G0-110
·

sao.oo

liCE IMPOUND. Honda's Toyo·

Ia's, Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport
UIIIUies. Cali Nowl 8Q0-772·7470;

daya llllr the actut
opening lhiNol. TIM VIllage
of Pomeroy reaervae the
right to waive any
lnfcirmotlltoa or li:l reliCt any
or oil blda.
(21 21 , 28, {31 -1 3tc

Public Notice
Tha annual flnanclll
report ol the Tuppara
Plolnl• Ch . .tl; Wlllr
otlirtct hla belli completed
ond 11 evatlobte 11 lhl
ototrtct'a . main office
tocoted at 311581 Bar 30
Road, RHCIIVIIIe, OH 45772.

{21 21

S top In A nd See

poutids /Repos. Fee. SO Down !24

Mos. Ot9.9% For Ualings 1·800·
319-3323 X2156.

• Pointing
&amp; Porch Dlcltl .

""' El1ilriiiH

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

22

Local

PSI
CONSTRUaiON

740.992·1709
gel sl,.,g by_high prkes '
Shop !he classl(lod se&lt;llon:

Must sell$2500. 740.992·t386.
1966 Chevy S·IO. Rebuilt 350

Don't

engine with new Intake, holly
carb, and heads. ·Hooker headers. Turbo 350 transmission with
shUt k.l t Ford 9-Jncl'l rear-end wlln·
3.50 gears, &amp;. drag .slicks.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

2117100 t mopd.

Mon • Frl 8:3Q • 5:00
Over 40 yre experience

DfiMIL

prooldes wute tllposat

50 Y rs. Combine d

tor
•Rtoldoollol
-c............
•Ind••trtal
Smtaa Melp oad Gollll
c . .ty
.

Expe rience
Honest &amp; Reliable
Free E stimates
Senior Citizens
Discounl

29670 Bashan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzea 5'·x 10'

Miles, $2,650 Or Tradfl For Trac·

I)IA~I'~ ~

10r. 740-256· 1290.

1990 Mitsub lshl Mighty Max ,

/

Husband's Truck, WffB Says Has
To Go/ $3.000, 740.388·0579.

.

to 10' x 30'
Hours

7:00AM ·8 PM

/

, /

St•••
• ........,, Mlferltl

• Drlvawsr

•

'

· \&gt;o iAJ 1-\Av'(
ANV t&lt;x"f~A .

(3041675-7471 .
1987 DOdge Truck oso 65,000

L a r r y Sch ey

.

•

'
•

'

• Tep Seil &amp;...... e..,.t
• Bo.oat Servlee

•Lt111t H..

u.,

Up to•ton

•

0

1993 Ford Ranger Splash, 4 eyl. 5

sp., 90,000 miles , excellent condl·
tlon , $5,000, 740· 992· 1182 or

..

02-ZI·OO

Phone (740) 593-66!1

"A Better Wa Eve

Re1dy ror 1 cblnge?

HILL'S
SElF STORAGE .

•;

.

Athens, Ohio 45701

1-888-521-0916

m~3~:iH.nil

.

6129lrn!&gt;.

JOlES'

1ruck

'

TREE SERVICE
(740) 367 -0266 • ~u~P
S -A.\t\1}
1-800-950-3359 • Gt\""'

:t~::-~·

:2 - 2J

TMAR II I TOLD YOU

LDN'T HUIT NONE !!

.
S•nsdH.,.•
Ccmstruetfon

New Construction &amp;
Reniodeling • Kltchen
Cabincls· Vinyl Siding:
Roofs • Decks • Garages
Free F;stlmates
740-742·3411 .
Bryan Reeves
www.sunBBthome.com•

Scrubbed&amp; ·
claaned
r!~r
.
. Clean &amp; Scotch ~Guard '40 • Any ·~
Normal Size Room.

2•
· ·Pass

NOW THAT

·Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
'FRANK 4 EARNEST

992-5479

NeW6 ITfM
POL.L-6:

CRBDrr PROBLEMS???
· No 'Credit • Slow tflldlt • Bankruptcy
'"" Repo • Dlvorded

IU6tl ANP '
60itf

-

STO~ ·woRRYIII!!!
!!!"!"'":'"""'

740-742·2706
740-44&amp;-;1141

'l1'!&gt; ~ ooe:.·t.Po..T·D&lt;X':&gt; wottU'&gt; .,
OUT Tl-\f:~!

&amp; Lawn

Cruise &amp; Air. $4.800. 090.
(3001576-9991 ,
1995 Dodge 1500 SLT V-6 Mag'·
num, Topper, Reese Hitch, Aad
and.Gray. (740~388-o406

1895 While FOfd Explorer XLT. 4
Wheat Drive, 4Door, New Tires,

1-800·594·1111 Or 740· Moon Root/CO, .loaded. $16.000
Firm . Flninclng
Available.
(304)675-1602.
.
ary t2, 11:00 A.M.

"46 -2C12 Gallipolis, Ohio. Don'l
Mil s Our John Deere Day Febru·

t35 Massey Ferguson Tractor

WWW.Comk:§.CDm

1997 black Chevy S-10 Stepsldt
Exten"ded CBb, 3 door, loaded,
25,000 mtle&amp;. very sharp, lull tar~

Oi11el. Good Codnlllon. $5.200
Ford Jubilee 600 W
ith End Load· lngs, $12,000, 740·949·2045 or·
er, Good Condilton, SC.100 '7CO· 740.949-2203.
441·1309.
.
Baltr. Vermeer 605C WUh E11tra
Sel Of Tenston Sprlng!l; Excellent

.

1987 Toyota TIComa. Maroon,
4x4, Sony CD Player, Bedlln:er, ,
.Bug Guard. Window Flares. Aak·

Condition. $3,000. Call 740·662· tng Peyoil. can: (304)675-6638 or ·
etl92.
(304)675-3363.
Ford 2000 Ditlll Tractor; 3600

Ford Oiesel,

4000 Ford Diesel, 9N

Ford With Bush Hog &amp; Blade,

740-:!IMHI522.
Ford 8 .N Farm Tractor, New Motor. Paint. Gardners Dream.

William Safranek, AHorney
592-5025 Athena .

1999 Ford F-150 Extended Cab,
4 Doors, 2, tOO Miles, Excellent

Condnton;$23,000 740-.441·1309.
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDa

446-2342 .
992.:.2156 ·l
675-1333 ,.

$3.200. (304)675-3624.

Athena Livestock Sales: Febru·
ary 26, 2000 AI I:00 P.M. We W~
Have A Special Springer Cow I
4 CIW Sale. All Con~glnments W&amp;l·
. come, Hauling Available. 7CO·

!102·2322, OJ 740-61J8.3531 .
-

1966 Ford Truck 4 Wheal 011,.,
Works Good Aaldng $2,000, 304·

"Your wtr. Is itlll under the anuthetlc.
and from whit I've heard, this would
be the beat time to Me her."

Runs Good And 4 Wheel Drive

773-5339.

1989 S· t0 Red 4x4. Tinted Wind·

•I

• ___ _ ...-,211101

2· 14

lng. Power Brakes, Great Shapel

Registered Angus Heifers &amp;
Bulle, Registered Polled Slmmen·
1o1 eun Red &amp; Black Umoustn Bun.
740-256-6510.

740-379-2796.

Registered Yorkahlre Boar For

lion, 1«100, 74o-742·23!13.

1111. $12S.OO.740·256-6313.
640 Hay &amp; Grain

.

-

ows, 81 ,000 Miles , Power StHr·

Hog.740-25&amp;-e51 0.

...........

~,

'78 Ford Bronco, 351 rebuilt en·
$2,500. (300)675-3824.
gino . .4 spaed, 12400, 740·742·
lnf! Hoy Ron $600.00 Hay Wall' 2tl60.
on $400.00. (740~388-1)406
1984 ·Bronco II. V.6. • 4x4. 4
Speed. 75,000 miles. Real Nice.
· 630
Livestock

BURKE'S
CARPET

S~RVICE

&amp; Scotch
Guard $40- Any
Clean

Normal Size Room.

740.7 42·2706
740.446·1141

.-~=---

i

IISSELL IUILDIIS
IIC.

New Homes ~ VInyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemenl Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing .

•

•,
:
'

f!

COMMEI(IAL and IESIDEIIJIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

1

740·992·7599 :

(304)175-5724.

. ..

CLAS81FIEDSI

~

I MONDAY
•..

·~3795 Hiland R~

E~ngs: 740-258-1565.

lf1M&lt;SPORTATION

PomerQy, Ohio :.

1997 Ford Expedition 4. WO
$24,500, 7~·367-'1219 .

..0,000 Miles, Excelem Condition,

710 Autos lor Sale
't2 Ponllac Bonneville, tour door,

axcellant condition, sharp, $&lt;1650,
740-~!1-~5 Mnlngs.

.

1998 Jeep Wrangler White /Grey
.Cloth lnterlo(; 22,000 MUes, SUN
Under Warranty, $15,00Q. Daya:
7.(0-•46·5712, Evenings ; 740·

CAAS-s00, S500 &amp; UP. POLICE 446·4418.
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota'&amp; ,
Motorcycln
Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili- 740
Ilea. Call Nowl 600·772·7470;
'95 Honda 300 EX, $1 sao. 740·
EXT. 7832.
.
2,47-7100.
1962 Ford Falcon, 2 dr., hardtop,
Colllornta car, al original. $2,500, t993 883 Harley Davidson Black
304-173-5305 -6pm.
With 3,200 Miles, Asking $6.000,
74D-446· 93~.
I1180·90 Honda&amp; From $29/Mo.. 1993 Su'zukl 125 RM 2 Stroke,
Impounds! o Down, 24 Montha 0
OBO, 740·245·5018 Or
111.9% Llatinga, 800-319-3323 Ext. $1,200
352·4605 LeaYO Massage.
31101 . .
1981 Monte Carlo, V·8 Motor,

A,.. GoOd, Good Frame. $800.00
. 740-446·9853

-·

1986 Trans-Am 350, Automatic,

Clood Condition , $·1,995. 740·

1998 Yamaha Warrior Excellent

(7401-446·6050
760 Auto Parts &amp;
Shape!

AcceAorles
Budget Priced Transmissions All
Typas , Aceta&amp; To Ov•r 10,000
Transml&amp;.l lona, CVC Joints, 7CO·

tD90 Buick Cantur.y. 6 Cylinder.
Automotie, Air, Tilt, Nic:o. Gray 4 245-5677.
Coors, Cruise. $2,300, 740·245SEnVIC ES

0337.

.

ID91 touzu Plok•Up Converlable
3111 Wtndlor Engine, C·6 Trans· 810 . Home
mllolon, 5 Slor W~oela , Color:
Improvements
While, $3,000 OBO, 140•256·
. ', IIU7. .
'
BASEMENT
WATEAPROOFIIIO
. 1D93 Grand Am 82K 13;&amp;95; Uncondltton., nrttlmt guaran111.
ltt2 Covaller A/S 14K $3, 19&amp;; Local reference• furntahtd . El·
ID91 Lumina Euro IlK S4,19&amp;; lllltio(&gt;ed 117~. COli 24 Htl. 1740}
ttl7 Mudl 101k S1 ,3t5. Cook 448·0870, 1-800·287-0578. Roo·
7~ 446 0103.
oro Walet 1&gt; oollug.

810

· Home ..

Improvements
Apt)llanco Parll 'And Service: ~II
Name Branda OWtr 2!5 Year• ·E•·
perience All Yf.o rk Gu1rantted,

French Oily Maytag, 740·•46·
7795.
.

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence· Painting, vinYl sldlng.j
carpentry, doora, windoWs, baths,.

::::.:::;::. ':rc::.~~99'! .
8323

·
Jlms construc11on
Drywall &amp; Conotruclion.
New
&amp; Remodel/
Drywall.
Siding.
"
Roots,
Addi·
lions , Palnllng, etc . (30•)67•·
4623.or (;1041674-01!55.
·
Llvlngaton'o Blaenionl Water
Proofing, all b111menl r1palrs
dono, lru olltmaseo, lllolime
~~ai:"~tll~r' Job expart·
SuperiOr Homo Molnt•nanet And·

Plumbing We Do ·AI Rtpalra On
Homes And Tri:Hera, Faat Serv·

lcei740-44HIII3.

840 Etactrlcel and
Refjf~'on

Rasklanlial or eammarolal wtrlr&gt;g,

new -~
or rwpalrl. M•ster
Llconoed
. electrician.
Rldenbur

Electrical,
wvooosoe, 304·675·
1786.

~cont~

Chief Greg Carpenter 985·3786
...

" Interested

....

740·992-521(

Tuppers Plains FO

Raming o111or 220 Kawaaakl Bayou
11ckats $10.00 !I8Ch
Drawing June 24lh at 4:30 pm

1/16100 1 mo ..Jd.

In Memory·of
Harold "Doug• ~
on his~

02/20133· 03/11199
Wife A Da~1ilhtt:r, I

ROBERT BISSELL
CO.NSlRUCTIOI
•New Homes

•GaregH
• Complete
Remod•ll!'la
. r------'::!"~~":':''"'!'::-":"-:::"'....':":~~~~~~--"':""--,
· Stop &amp; Compare
Public Notice (or Rural Water ServiCe
:: .
The Thppers Plains-Chester Water District in the pmce,ss of developing a
Prel1'm1·nary Engineering Report that will consider expansion of the ex_isting
water Distribution System.lfy.ou are in any oflh~ follow_ing townshipg'jn, Mei
or Athens Counties and interested in rural water service, you may wish l&lt;i contac
the District's main office.
.,

FREE
· ESnMATES
740-992-1871
7/22/TFN

We ask thai you compl,cte a request for ~ater fol'l!l, which Is_available at t~e main office,

or you may call and ask for otic to be• ma~led to you, or faxed. Your 1ownship trustees
" coptes.
·· 0u r ,Pho ne numbe r IS
·
. ' · a1so pave
.,H.
1-740-985-3315 or 1-800-686-3747. The collection of names s all end A' '130, 2000.

HOWAlD '·
EXCAVATING
CO~
.

......
2

' '

•

wa• r

'

.

i.

I

\,

i'

Bulldo•r &amp; ' Bodtlwe.
· · Senice•

'·

H~uae &amp; Trailer Sileo~
· · Land Clearing &amp; ':
. Grading · ;,
Septic.Syole- &amp;
. ' Utq;tiol•
1
. (7401 HJ-~1:11 v

. ·P Uft

•.......
,._.......,

AD Mabs Tra~or A
Equip.......t Parts
Fil~ory Authorized
Cue-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. IlL 7 South
45723

;,

'

,~

All rep1aeement
'

~

. parts
.,
Free Dell••iy;~
.740-742-9501,
'ToUFree. · u
tl

...

. J•

~-~
I:

Tuesday, Feb. 22. 2000 ·
In order to keep pace whh
! clwtgiq events in the coming
: year, you ..., likely to mak,e ~
' important revisions in your attt•
ltude and . philosophy. These
adjustmenb will be conslnK:Iive.
I .PISCES (Feb. 20.M,an:h 20)
. j Today conditions miaht 4:111ble
' : you to pi a clearer pic~~ne·of cer- .
•tain·fatb you've been unable to
·,. acquire until now. AA things open .
' up for you. your options will II
t well. Tryillgto p111ch up a broken
~ romance? The Astro-Oraph
t ftbtchma~r Cll1 help you under·
, stud whalto do to make the rela~ tions!Jip work. M~il .$2.7.5 to
: MIIChmlker, clo thts newspaper,
• P.O. Box 1758, Munay Hill Sta·
· H ion, New York. ~y lOIS6. .
· - ~ .ARIES &lt;Mmh 21-April 19&gt;
. Without beins Ollked, make some
1pec:if'tc compromises or conces. ~ elonstoday and you'JI be able to
~iaddenly win over a reluctant ally.
It's smart to.take the initiative in
tbl1 situatiotl .
•

":.r

RU 01GII" -., ,.

M1 C

e gs ouoty
.
Scipio, Bedford, Orang,, Ollve, Salisbury, Chester, Ubanon;
.
Sutton and Letart.
. 111'
•' 1
Athens
County ·
1
· ·
·
·
;"
.Canaan, Bern, Rome, Lodi, Carthage, and ~~· . .

..

'

All pass

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

(NOi'UNOAY CA~Si &lt;

1990 Ford Aeroatar, ~ . 0 litre 6
cylinder engine, 88,180 actual
miles, new tifes, very good condl·

10 mention, $4&amp;95. 740.742·3114.
1993 F·250 4x4, 7.3 Diesel, Stan·
dard Transmlsalon, 177,000
Miles. Must Seel $12,500 080,

Pass

· John Lowenthal, one of the
most imaginative bridge players
ever, died last December 7. He
was 61 years old. Lowenlhal ,
who was a former partner of
mine, ~as a better de~ender than
bidder or declarer (although he
was not bad in either of those.
roles). This made him virtually
unique in the game. He also spe·
cialized in unconventional open.ing leads,. as described by Henry
Bethe: " If Lowenthal leads a low
card, he· has an honor combination. If he leads an honor, it is
unsupported. And if
wants a
ruff, he leads a trump."
•
Today's deal was played on
OKbridge. Against five spades,
West cashed the heart ace and
switched to a club. After winning
with the ace, Lowenthal returned
a club.
.
South, a world. champion, ran
the spade jack, bin East won ~ith
the king and played the heart kmg,
forcing declarer to ruff in the
dummy.· Now West had to score a
trick with the spad.e nine for two
down . Was South unlucky to find
the spades like this, or did he misplay?
I think he misplayed . If
Lowenthal didn't have the spade
king, surely at ·trick three he
would have led the heart king (or
switched
to a diamond), trying lo
'
lock declarer in the dummy so
thai he couldn' 1 take the spade
finesse . _
Given that East has the spade
king, the best line is to play a diamond to dummy's king at trick
f~ur. cash the spade ace (dropping
the king), lead a spade to hand,
. and play a diamond toward the
dum1py. This minimizeS the loss
, if ~t has long diamonds, and
makes the oontract with the acru·
allayout.
·
II was a lypical imaginative
defense by Lowenthal; but, as.he
said, it shouldn't have worked.

1991 Ford Ranger.4X4 XlT, 1993
4.3 motor with 70,000 mlh,s, 5
speed, Pl •. PW, too many extras

Straw: Bright Wlrt 'rlt Straw Year
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
count Aval1able. Htrllage Farm.

I •

INT
5.

lie

L-eAP

No t;mbarra11rnent ...
You're Treated with Rnpectl
Call Now for ln~nl ADDniiVellll..

1993 GMC SonOma . New Tlnn.
65,000 MileS, 6Cyl Engine . Tllll

0% Financing Now Avtillbale On
John Deere Balers And Mower
Conditioners. Carmichael's Farm

Easl

l~aginative player
. BY PHILLIP ALDER

304-n:J-5305.

610 Farm Equipment

North

Opening lead: • A ·

HURTS II

'. AlLL&amp;L'

-

Wesl

I t

20 Yrs. Exp. • lns. Owner: Ronnie Jones ·

~

Soulh

I

f I\Hr.1 SU PPLIES
II. LIVESTOCK

A.Mwlt,to Pae"lcue PUide

" Sa l e s R e pr ese n tat t ve{

'750 East State Street

(740) 742-8888

ACROSS

ALDER

•
It

'

..'tWA litO.
Bl1RKFS -··
c..,...s
.......'\
C.H A liiiiiO...
.

$3,600.1304)675-1038.

1987 Chevy S ·t O. Runs Good.

St e v e R i ffl e

Tr1.1c k seats. car seats, h eadl1q.ers.
truck tarps . convertible &amp; vtnyl,_tops .
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle aeats,
boat covers, carpets, etc . ,

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, POIEt
Buildings, Etc.
· Free Estimates

EXT.6336.
CAAS FAOM $28/MO. lm·

'87 Chevy Silverado, 1/2 ton, engina froze/locked up, .mart; extraf!.

Outlln

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

&amp;Juthem.Ohlo D~ __fWMBirtG

While 3 months old, Will be 720 Trucks lor Sale
Small $250.00. 1740~388-8642.
Jack Russell t-.rrler pups, tails
docked, shots, wormed, 740·698·

141ln St.,

'Xt;-79;1)00 I

WANT A COMPUTER177? 'BUT

6102.
550

t;lub Blnt~o
Thuradeys
AT 8:30P.M.

Ohio 457811 un11112:00 noon

- . .9.
Wlterllnt Special: 3J4 200 PSI
$2 1.95 Per 100: 1' 200 PSI

'

*-DII;(IFiGminiY'Eiil•l

roc•'"" "'

Pomeroy •tthethe
w...
Department omce In the
llunlolpet Butldlfll et DO
Eallt llaln ltrMt P-oy.

Eoch bid
accomponted

~~ nowr

BRIDGE

Wftet IUpply IMII wiH Ill

B&amp;D Auto Sa les, Highway 160

liON EVANS ENTEIIPRIIU.• '1 99.4'or

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

s.. ted bid•· for 1111
-vucuon Die..........,..

Treadmill Brand ·New, 1125. 740·

t

•

Public NoUce

...

..

Monday, February 21 , 2000

Pomeroy, ~lddleport, Ohio

I

••

~ '.. 1

'

-

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)

Po everything within your means

to capitalize on a favorable trend
transcendins y~ur chait today.
Things are ·especially 'favorable
for your work or career 81 this
time.
GEMINI {May 21 ,June 20) If
you feel ·some bold •aetion could
improve your position pertaining
to a situation you've been. potF
derinz, today is better than to
toiiiOITOW to take that celculated
risk.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Sh~ld lll)'thing favorable develop for you today concerning a
slulral anangement you have with
· another' take immedia1c udvon.
tqe of it. lt'slikely lobe fleetmg.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 22) Have
faith iA ' )'OUr judg...t calls,
because you're ais. excepti~ly
fut thinker today IUid wtfl. be
quite pld 81 makina quick dec:isions when called for. ·
VIRGO (Aug. 2J-Sept: 22) Be
alert today for uiiUIIIII happen·
ings that could jlnliant:e your possibilities for some penonal accumulllion. Conditions look good

for you in the ma!erial realm;
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)
Don' t hide your ingenuity,
becauSe you can be ex1remely
resourceful today w.hcn needed.
Your solutions could benefit your·
self u well as others:
· SCORPIO (Oct .24-Nov. 22)
ln1crestin(lly today. it might be the
very thiqs over which you'll
have !he least amount of control
that could work 0111 the best for
you. Go with ihe now.
. SAOmAR!US (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) The potential for benefit~ 1o
occur for you today will g{Ow in
proportion to the, goodwill you ·
establish with olhers. Put oil your .
lxist smile.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
191 Your best chances for succes~
today is to be as nexible as pos·
sible, The better your on-the·.spot
adjustments are. the ~ter posi·.
tion you'll be in to win.
AQUARIUS (JIB. 20-Feb. 19)
Even if it mean~ making an abrupt
change in direction, if a way ro
imprpve somelhing importanl
occurS today, oeriously consider it.
Chances are it'll .be right.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

.

. by Luis Campos ·
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations tty famous peopkt, past and . ·
present. Each letler In lh8 cipher stands tor anolher.

·

·

Today's clue: N equals U

'KPBXOAROD

EL

IIXH

LHEFF,

IFXCPA ...

ONFHEJRHEMU.'

E H.

IIPPKL

~XMRFK

-

TAEHELZ

LYPPOZ,

APRUAM,

R , IARUEFP

Y R A F E.R B P II H .
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I do take my wort&lt; seriouslY and 1ha way to do thai Is !
not to take yoone11 too Hrloully .• - {Actorl Alan Rickman
~

;,•

•

'=~=' s~~c4llA-a£~s·

_..;.;;._ _;;;.....; -.1 lltr aAT I. PCIUAII
llltlr'&lt;~no• IeHan · .of
0 four
1e10mbled WO(do

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1believe that ar\ occasion when
vou numb one end to benefitthe
olhens commonly called a " - -

.,,_..L....,A..C""'TM_Er-I.,.,.-11

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you dev•lap .trom..., No. 3

t..tow.

PIINT NtJM&amp;(RED LUIEIS

I'

UNSCRAMII.E lETT.El$ TO

I I· I I I I I I

~

6

.,

THESE SCIUARES

Gll ANSwtR

r r r I' r I' 1.

SCIAM LOS ANSWERS .
Denude • Cigar· Bland· Vermin - AUDIENCE
1 was afraid of speaking before a group of people .
GranfiY told me that if I couldn't be a good speaker I
c6uld ~a good AUDIENCE

FEBRUARY 21

I

�•

~

•,.
•
•

Pige 86 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, O~lo

Mond8y, Febru8ry 21, 200f

·

empie upsets No. 1.'cincinnati Buckeyes burrip off H~osiers
CINCIN NATI {AP) -,. Temple be£ No. 1
C:111cinnati in all the unconventional ways Sunday,
stopping the nation's longest winning ·streak and
confusing Bearcats coach Bob Huggins.
" We did everything you're not supposed to be
.1ble to do against Temple;· Huggins said after the
No. 15 Owls beat Cincinnati 77-69."But they made
th t- shots."

.

.

Huggins looked at the statistics in amazement.
incinnati had 24 points in the paint to 12 forTem!'le; he Bearcats had twice as many points off
tu rnovers and second-chance points.

But Temple also did something nobody had done
Jgainst Cincinnati in 63 games. The Owls shot 52
percent from the field. Nobody had shot 50 percent
against Cincinnati since Alabama-Birmingham did
1t Marcn7.T91J&amp;"There were a Lot of 'big shots that broke our
hearts," said freshman DerMarr Johnson, who led
Cincinnati with 16 points.
With Mark Karcher scoring 22 of his 28 points in
the second half, Temple made the most of its usual•
ly grirry defense and rallied after Cincinnati too\&lt; a
;even-point lead, its biggest of the game.
"Coach told-me to slow down and take what they
t,'O ve me," Karcher said.
.
"He has a tendency to come off screens and just
shoot it. But today he was a little more patient," said
·Temple coach John Chaney.
"He can hit that mid-range jumper. We had to do
that to keep jt out of the Qliddle and away from the
big guy."
·
The "big guy"- Kenyon Martin had 13 points
and 10 rebounds .for Cincinnati (20-1). Pete Mickcal had 14 and Kenny Satterfield 10.
Quincy Wadley added 16 points for Temple (204). and Lynn Greer had 15, all in the first half.
Cincinnati had won 16 .in a row- tops in Division I -· and its home winning streak was ·a t 42
before Temple took .command. The Owls have won
I I in a row, the most since the 1993-94 seasol).
'They're good," Huggins said. "They beat us
roday. But if we play them again, I don't know if
they beat us again."

TOUGH "D~ - UC's Kenny Satterfield (11) closes
down Temple's Pepe Sanchez during Sunday's
game. (AP)
·

Chaney said beating Cincinnati might have been ·
good· for both teams ..Huggi11s wasn't buying that.
"Everybody keeps trying to convince me los.ses
are gi&gt;od. I'm having a hard time. with that," he sai.d.
Temple's tight, matchup zone bothered Cincinnati
all afternoon as the Owls delivered yet another blow
to the Bearcats. It was Temple that knocked Cincinnati out of the NCAA tournament in the second
round last year.
Cincinnati was unable to generate any perimeter
offense in the early going. Temple, however, had no
problems from outside.
Greet; who averages 12 points and has been
shootin~ 36 percent from long range, came off the
bench to go 5-of-5 in the first half.
But Cincinnati was not able to contain Karcher,
who scored 13 points during .a 16-8 run by Temple.
.' From that point, Wadley took over, scoring eight
points in the final three minutes.

•

· BLOOMINGTON, Ind. {AP) - Michael Redd
and the Ohio State Buckeyes muscled their way past
the Indiana Hoosiers.
Redd scored a season-high 28 points, -including
five free throws in the final two minutes, as No. 7
Ohio State held off No. 10 Indiana 82-71 in their
foul-plagued Big Ten showdown.
Redd added 10 rebounds. George Reese also had
a double-double for Ohio State with 11· points and
10 rebounds.
1
The 6-footC6 Redd said he felt confident no 'matter who Indiana used to defend him.
Jeffrey Newton, 6-9, and Dane Fife, 6-4, guarded
R edd most of the game.
Officials called 58 personals with four Buckeyes
and two- Indtana playetsfouling out. The teams
combined to shoot 87 free throws and misses proved
costly to the Hoosiers, who went into the game
leading the Big Ten ip free throw accuracy.
Indiana, which was sl)ooting nearly 90 percent,
missed 17 of 44 attempts. Kirk Haston, an 80 percent shooter, was 3-for-11.
OFF ME- OSU's Scoonle Penn (left) holds off Al.J.
· AJ. Guyton led Indiana with 27 points, becoming Guyton of Indiana during Saturday's game in Bloot!lthe fifth player in school history to scc;&gt;re 21000 lngton. (AP) .
..
. ...
.
:
points. He finished the game with 2,007.
aggressiVe all rught Long, Redd sa1d. I love 1t wtwn
Guytpn matched his career high of 11 free throws . our backs are to the wall .... It brings the best out ~f
in 12 attempts. However, he had only one point in you."
.
'· .,,
the final 13 minutes as fatigue appeared to set in.
"Ohio State was the best team that we've playCd
The victory boosted ' Ohio State (18-5, 9-3 Big this year. We played · ha.rd, really sc,rapped a~i'd
Ten) ln its bid to end Michigan State's run· for a scraped;' Indiana coach Bob Knight said. "The difthird consecutive conference championship.
·
ference, I think from our standpoint is we playe&amp;~
"This is a~ incredible win for our guys;· said Ohio · ·30 minute game and Ohio State played a 40 rniljute
State coach Jim O'Brien, whose team had .lost to gime. ... They ·really beat us pretry good in the l' t
Michigan State 83-72 on Tuesday. "We thought we I 0 minutes."
.
~
really needed to gei something back after a disapA 3-pointer by Guyton s:ave Indiana its bi~t .
pointing loss at home. In my mind, I thought this · lead of the game at 52-45 With 13:32 to play. OhiO
game had a lot of very important implications."
State charsed back to tie it at 53 on a putback ~y
The Spartans lead second-place Purdue by a half- Kyn Johnson. ·
· :
game and Ohio State took ewer sole possession of
Three consecutive 3-pointers by Brent Dat\!Y,
third place, one game behind Michigan State with who made all four of his shots from behind the a~.
four to play.
gave Ohio State a 69-63. 1ead. The Buckeyes scot¥
Indiana (18-5, 8-4) dropped into fourth .place,•two their final 11 points on free throws.
.
. :;
games behind the leader.
Scoonie Pel)n ~ontributed ~ 5 points to the viet~
"We did a great job of being physical •. being ry.
:·

•.

ft.

•

.
'

Day Sale

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

Prlc• Good tuesday, Fall. 22nd 8 Wednesday, Feb. llrd Only

NO RAINCHECKS

Tuesday

Fox scraps 'Multimillionaire' show, AS
Junior shows up at Cincy camp, 81

•

February 22, 2000

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M•lp County's
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Voluuw ~~~ Numht'r ttll

FIIIDWI

NEWs STAFF

POMEROY - . The .rainswollen Ohio River rose to about
46.4 feet in Pomeroy Monday
motning, · narrowly missing the
:flood stage of 46.6 feet.
: Water filled both. the upper
:and ·lower parking lots in
:Pomeroy, but did ·not spill OV!!r
·onto Main Street.
;, : However, the river did fill
. :backwater areas, closing roadS at
:Bowman's Run and Minersville
:in Sutton Township, along with
: Foresi Run Road ~nd Shady
· c~ve Road in Salisbury Town.ship, and state Rouie 338 at ·
Antiquiiy.
.
By Monday afternoon the
.water had fallen noti.ceably below ·
the top of the wall in the loW.r
parking lot in Pomeroy, and most
routes were clear by later that
:evening.
, In recent years, foUowing a
·devastating flash flood in ·north:ea5tern Meigs ·County in June
:1998, the Ohio River rose to 45.1
:feet. The last iime the Ohio

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Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

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Ohio Riverfalls two-tenths
short of.jlood stage at 46. 4feet
BY JIM
SENTINEL

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River flooded was on March 4,
1997, when the river crested at
50,8 feet in Pomeroy, flooding
several downtown businesses. .
A len'gthy deluge Friday contributed to the water's rise. Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service.Director Robert E. Dyer said
3.4 inches of rairi fell in Pomeroy
during the 24-hour period
encompassing Friday night and
Sa!urday morning.
Although flash flooding was
reported in several areas, closing
numerous roads, only one township, Rutland Township, reported
damage from flash• flooding, 'Dyer
said.
Byer said the state Emergency
Management Agency has not
requested. damage r~ports, but
added he sent a report to the
agency nonetheless.
One fatality was reported as a
result of flooding. .W oodrow
Engle Jr. of Middleport died Sun- .
day afternoon after a boat in
which he traveling capsized after
it apparently
"hit an underwater
,
snag.

&lt;,ingl" co 1•y . 15 (4&gt;nh

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wATER RECIDif4Q - The rising Ohio River stOJipe(! just
short of flood stage Monday mornin&amp;. In Pomeroy,. ~Iter
rose tQ 4a::ueet '-lust .shy of floOd stap at 46.6 feetbefore ~etre.attng. ~ did surrO\Ind the &amp;azebos ·In the ·
Pomeroy Patklng ldt · and prompt~ 1he removal of lamp
posts In .tile upper lot. (Charlene Hoeflich ·photo)

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POMEROY,
OHIO
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PRICES EFFECTIVE
FEB 22, 23rd, 2000 ONLY
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Toclay's

Sentinel

Paper ·ToWels

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BY JIM~
SENTINEL NEWS STI\FF

Crystal Thornton was hard at wOrk Friday, watering the more than 10,000
hardy winter pansies that she and her husband, ~. graN at their Letart
Falls greenhouses. The pansies are MlOrtg the e~lest product from
Meigs County's !llUitknlllion dollar floriculture bilslnelis, trod will be
shipped to Cincinnati and ·Louisville, Ky., beJ!mlna March 1. ·Columbus,
Dayton and other:northern sites will begin· selltrc them at the retail level
by mid-March. The flowers gtv&amp; anxtqus g8!'dener's a reason to stir up the
soil, The Thorntons said the flowers, whiQh ~ in. e dozen Colois, can
easily survive a !~inter· frost. (Brian J•.Reed phOto)
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BOUNTY

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UNITED VALLEY BILL .

'tl'l·'a-~nt renovation·

at least 2 deaths
The Ohio River continued to creep above
flood stage · and many of i~ tributaries remained
swoUen fipm a weekend of heavy rains that caused
flooding blamed in the deaths of at least two peo. pie in southern Ohio.
. The river, which passed the 52-foot flood stage
Sunday in Cincinnati, was at 54~ feet by early this
morning and Was expected crest .at 55 feet by 7
a.m., the National Weather Service said. Rivers
that 'feed the Ohio already have crested, but
remain fiUed.
.
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"We are continuing to monitor conditions, bui
with the end of the rain, the waters should be
receding over the next few days;' said Dick Kimmins, a spokesman for the .Ohio Emergency Man.agement Agency.
· A woman died Monday when she became
trapped in her submerged car in Scioto County
on a road located in a low-lying area easily flooded by water from the Scioto and Ohio rivers, said
Trooper Harold Fraley of the State . Highway
Patrol.
·
"She ha&lt;! apparently pulled around road-closed.
signs and barricades, and her car was caught in.
high water on the road," Fralefsaid.
Kimberly Riddle, 26, of Portsmouth, was pronounced dead Monday morning at the Southern
Ohio Medical Center, he said.
Riddle's three children were able to get.out of .
the car and rescue crews pulled them from the · ·
water, he said .
The children were taken to Children's Hospital

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Dailey said if the emergency room
doses it will double the amollnt of time it
POMEROY Village Council takes for e!flergency medical service peradopted a ~lution Monday night sup~ , sonnel to transport patients. Furthermore,.
porting the rehabilitation of the Village any money raised from the levy must be
Green Apartments.
retained for use inside the counry.
Council met with Doris Woda ofWoda
Bowers said nine pther counties i11
Dewlopment, Construction and Manage- Ohio have levies ,for emergency room
ment, · based in Bridgeport, and John care.
.
Kircher of the Ohio Capital Corporation.
Council President John Musser read a
·Woda plans to purchase the apartments- letter from Jim and Donna Davis of Minon Mulberry Avenue, renovate them, and ersville requesting the use of the Pomeroy
ren:utle the complex "Colonial Park:'The Parking lot on Oct: 5-7 for the Dig Bend.
.
Ohio Capiial Corp., a non-profit corpora- Sternwheel Festival.
At Musser's· suggestion, council
tion created by the State to invest· in the
presc;rvation and creation of affordable dec.~ ned and agreed to "take oiler" the feshousing, would join the Wod;ls as an equi- tival, holding it on the same days. Musser
was appointed to direct a committee th~t
ry partner in the ,purchase.
The firm will apply for Ohio Housing will be formed to organize the feSiival.
Ed Cozart of the Monkey Run neighTax Credits as a part of the rehabilitation
. project, and council's support is important ·. borhood complain'ed to council of low
.to the ~pproval ·&lt;;&gt;f those credi~, Kircher ~ 1. pressure. Another resident complaiiied of a plugged storm drain on Butsaid.
Council took no action either support- ternut Avc.nue.
· ' Council took .rio action on proposed
ing or opposing a four-mill, three-year
emergency room levy after meeting with repai~ to the . muniCipal building after
a delegation proposing th~ March 7 ballot .~iding to seek additional quotes for the
prpject.
·
issue.
~~
.
Council
.
memben
thanked
the
fire
Meeting · with council was Rhonda
Dailey, Veterans Memorial Hospital vice department and street department for
. president of nuning; . R.:Q~rt Dowers, flood-related clean~p and the police
VMH administrator; and~es Witherell, department for its assiStance alter recent
M.n
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Healthbeat ·. Internet·()ffers daily heart monitOring:
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. WASHINGTON (AP) - CongestiV!!
"This is the jN(fiiY for ch""'li \ . to, Calif:, who is using a simpler online seven studying the Chronicle. ) ;. ·· , :,
monitor, the Health Uuddy.
Plus, patients typically· wait five days to• :
2 Sadlar•- 1~ ....... .. heart failure can be really scary - oile day
disease managemt.nt -heart
Why
concentrate
first
on
·heart
failure?
·
call
. a doctor after a symptom worse"': ·
you're fine, the next you're gasping for air "
failure,
diabetes,
llitlt.ma."
It's so se\lere that studies should be able to MiUe~ laments.
. ~: •
Caltpder
as you're raced to the hospital.
.
A6
determine
fairly
quickly
whether
moniton
Doi:ton
already
ls:now
at-home
foil~-:
.
lf.only doctors could cat~h subtle early
Cl•11ifi•cb
Dr. R.-cl IIIIer, ~Ill
,
help.
· .
.
·
.
up helps:
warning signs, they potentially could stave
......, Heart lnatH~ In lac;~uonla, ~.
Copaica
B5
•Four
!llillion
Americans
have
heart
farl,
.Mercy nurses , telephoned hundreds of
olf thousands of panicked hospital visits by
Editorials
M
adjusting patients' medications before they secure W,eb site via a telephone tine. . . • . ·' u~. a number expected tp double within' patients several times a month to quiz
A) , ~
Obltuarln
Consider it· an Internet "house call!' 30 yean ~ the population ages and m9re ~em on ~ympto.ms an~ weig~~- e:-en a
worsen.
Bf-2~ 6 .. .
Sportf
This'
doctor-to-horne connection is a hot people survive heart attacks only to hw sbght weight gam suggests flUid bUildup.
Isn't examining a patient every single
Wuthtt
new. area for medical device manufactl!l'• . with a we~kened heart · that strussJes to . ' By adjusting medications and alerting doc;.
Al
day impossible? ·
.
en,. and it's. generating 'sRat inter:nt from pumP,
. . ' ton to early problems, th~ telephone pro:
Maybe not, thanlls to the Internet.
. Heilft failure costs $40 billion jn an~ gram lowered rehospitali~ations by 79 per; .
In a science fiction-sounding experi- •doctors frustrated ~ith how 'to• keep
•
ment, doeton are implanting tiny m'?~ito,. .chronically . ill patients from· \vonening at ~altb cate, two-thirds due· to t!:peated cent.
·home.
.
·
,
"
,
liospitali~ons
when
fluid
builds
up
in
Dut
it's
labor-intensive.
.
inside the hearts of 120 patients toq~ia~
OIDO .
·
t"We
beli~
it's
the
next
generation
of
pati~nts'
chests,
leaving
them
gasping,
said
So
Miller
turn.
e
d
to
the
Health
Uudd~,
.
~ m;ord every .twinge, ~4 houn.a. ·~
Pldl 3: 0-8-4; Pick 4:6-7-7-1 '
· Si! in · front. of a doctor's wireless tnps- care,~ says ~ichaeL Co~on of MedtroniJ; Dr. Maria -Rosa CoStanzo of Rush-Presby- 1made by Califor.nia-based Health Hero .
Jk• I 1.,. 5: &gt;8-9-19-24
mitter and the monitor beams the record- , Inc.. Which ~developing the experimental terian-St. Luke's Medical Center·in Chica- Network. Hook the answering · madiin'er
Chronicle s~m.
'
. . . . go.
.
.
size gadget to a· telephone line. Nurse( ~ ·
intp into a c;,mputerfordiagnosis. .
"This
is
the
future
for
·
c
hrome
disease
Worsening
heart
failun.
sneaks
up
on
questions zip through the phone line t&lt;;?
Dy spring, the study's participants. won't
have to le,- home, instead spending five mallagemen~ - . heart failure, diabetes, patients, who also may have a hard time the Health Uuddy video screen. Patien~ ·
C ~Ohio Yllk'Y Publilhinl Co. '
minutes a day beaming their Chronicle asthma;• adds Dr. Richard Miller, director strictly adhering to medication and 'diet. click a few buttons to respond to a secure
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'heart monitor's recordings to .: doctor's of the Meri:y Heart Institute in Sacramen- ·said Costan~, whose 'hospital is one of' Internet site.

Lotteri .es

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