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Fi8ge A10 • The o.Hy S•lllnet

Tuesday

Pomeroy, Middleport,.Ohio

.Packers, Panthers fall
shon
of
pJayo~s;
.
C
pwboys
get
berth:
.
with the Giants, Carolina needed to earned the last spot in tbe AFC.
win by 18 IliON points than .Green Seattle won the · AFC West in a
Bay, and with the coaches getting tiebreaker with Kansas City after
updates on the sideline, the points winning both of their meetings.
came in bunches as the teams kept
That set up next weekend's first
throwing the ball to the end.
round of playoffs, with Buffalo at
Carolina boat defenseless New Tennessee and Detroit at Washington
Orleans 4.5-13, end Green Bay on Slllwday, and Dallas at Minnesola
poured it on Arizona. too, winning and Miami a1 Sealtle on Sunday. St.
49-24 to finisb with an It-point · Louis and Tampa Bay in the NFC
advantag~ in
the differential and Indianapolis and Jacksonville in
tiebreaker. But when Dallas won a the AFC have byes.
·
few hours later and won the tiebreakIn other games Sunday, it was
er on better conference record, lhe New England ' 20, Baltimore 3;
point differential became moot.
Jacksonville 24, Cincinnati 7;
."We had our chances and didn't MinnesOUI 24, Detroit 17; Buffalo
makct the most of them," said Brett 31, Indianapolis
Favre, who passed the 4,000-yard 6; Tampa Bay 20,
passing milestone for the season for Chicag,o
6;
the third time. "I think everyone philad~lphia 38,
should be aware·of that.!'
St. Louis 31; San
~'I'm disapPbinted that we didn't Diego 12, Denver
get the help we needed today from 6; and Tennessee 47, Pittsburgh 36.
thi\Giants," said Packers coach Ray
Jets 19, Seahawks 9
RhOdes, who was reportedly fired
Seattle's coaches and players
after tbe game. "It's ·tough to have gathered around a television set in a
your season end 'the way it has, trainer 's room to root for Oakland
watching Dallas win a game on tele- _after the Seahawks lost, antl they
vision. But we have no one to blame looked like winners when Kansas
but ourselves- we got in this situa- . City lost to the Raiders .
tion.by not taking advantage of some
Curtis Martin gained 158 of his
.opportunities we had earlier this sea- 203 total"yards on the ground and
son."
scored the only touchdown of the
In the AFC, wins by Kansas City' game. He also set the Jets'· single(9-7) and Seattle (9-7) would have season rushing record.
eliminated Miami (9-7), but neither
Raiders 41, Chiefs 38·0T .
the Seahawks nor the Chiefs could
Fonner Kansas City quarterback
do it. Seaule lost 19-9 to the New Rich Gannon brought the Raiders (8York Jets and the Chiefs blew &gt;1 17-0 8) b~c.k from a 17:0 deficit to kn.ock
lead before losing 41-18 in overtime the Chiefs out of the playoff. Gannon
to Oakland.
was 2.5-for-47 for l24 yards and
Miami loSt 21-10 to NFC East three touchdowns as the Raiders won
champion Washington (10-6), but ·in K;msas City forthe first time in II

By The AUoc!MH p,...

· Green Bay and Carolina needed to
win, and win big, to have a chance to
get into the NI.'L pllyoffs. They did
just that, but still didn't reach the
postseason.
Kansas City and Seattle needed to
win by any score, and neilher was
able to pull it off Sunday, giving a
playoff spot to Miami, another team
that lost on the final weekend of the
regular season.
Dallas and the New York Giants
n«ded to win, .too, and since they
were playing each other, it would
have been fitting in this wacky season if they had tied. But the
Cowboys held on in the final quarter
to claim the last o,f the 12 postseason
spots Sunday.
Dallas · and Detroit are the fourth
•and fifth·8-8 teams to reach the playoffs, and while none of the previous
three has won a game, the Cowboys
see no reason why they can't change
that trend Sunday at Mmnesota.
"I thought today was the first sign
of .a team actually tryi~g to come
together," sa.id the Cowboys ' Emmitt
Smith, who ran for 122 yards in the
26- 18 victory over the Giants. "I
1hink we have sometljing to build on
and be confident about."
. Only Dallas controlied tts own
playoff fate in the NFC, and .because
the 'Cowboys and Giants played a
lat e-atternoo~ game, Green Bay and
Carolina haJ to proceed as if Dallas
would lose.
So they engaged in a shootout
remmtscent of what colleges try to
do when they want to impress poll~lers. Under a possible tiebreaker

offensive 'linemen (Tony Boselli and
Kun Wlli'ner joined Daa .Marino
loe Nedney kicked 1 3~,:ter to Leon Sein:y lea~ lhe pme wiih as the only. quarterbacks wilh 40
win the game ill overtiMt
kick· injuria.
·«Nehdoll&lt;ll passes in a season and
ins a 38-yarder to tie it with 45 ioeJilamy Smith hid 14 catches to Marshall Paulk broke Barry Sanders'
·Onds left.
malcll Marvin Harrison's NFL bish toaal yardage record, but St. Lo11is
Cowboys z.i, Glula II
this _.on. Smith and Keenan (13-3) turned the ball o- seven
Jason Tucker turned a short catch McCardell combined for 273 yards times to open the door for
into a 90-yard toucb!~own, Raghib receivina. ·
Philldelphia (.5-11 ).
Ismail caught a 4-yarcj touchdown
nt.. 47, Steelen 36
.
Donovan McNabb.threw the deci-:
pass and Eddie Mumy kicked fow · Tennessee, ~hose: 13-3 record 1s sive · five-yard touchdown pass 10·
fi~ld goals for the Co~boys, who fin- the~ f~ a Wild-card team, scored · Chad Lewis with IO:'SS left, endiqg
ished 7·1 at home and 1-7 on the 17 pomts an barely. a mmute of the the Rams' seven-game winning '
road.
second quarter. The TIUins defense streak
Packers 49, Cardlnalll&lt;t
generated 16 points and set up aneth·
·
•
Dorsey Levens ran for four touch· er score against Pittsbutsh (6-10).·
Patriots 20• Raveu 3
..
downs and rookie Basil Mitchell ·
• . .
31, Colts 6
.
Troy Bro~ had three long kick
returned a kickoff
Rob Johnson, Doug Flutic's back- returns to lead New England (8-8).
88 ~ards · for a up for IS ·games, was 24-of-32 for
The Patriots' won just two of their
score
against 287 yards and lhrew two touchdown last eight games after. starting tile
Arizona (6·10), passes for Buffalo (11·5). 1
season 6-2. The Ravens also fmishoo
which got 396
The Bill~ had a season-high 419 8-8 with wins in four of their last five
yards
passing offensive yards as the Colts (13-3) games. •
"
from Jake Plummer. But he also had had their 11-game winning streak
Redsldas 21, DolpJdns 10
three interceptions. '
snapped.
'·
The l'osses by Seattle and Kansas
Panthers 45, Saiats 13
Buccaneers 20, Bears 6 ·
City put Miami in the playoffs, endCarolina (8-8) won six of nine to
Mike Alstott ran for a touchdown ing any suspense over whether this
finish its first seaso~ under coach and Jacquez Green caught 10 passes would be Dan Marino's last game as
George Seifert, but the Pan!hers still ' for 113 yards as Tampa Bay (II -~) a player and-or Jimmy Johnson's last
came up short qf qualifying for a won. its first NFC Central title since game as coac h.
•
wild-card spot. .
1981.
•
.
Carolina, trying to overtake Green
Vlkinas 14, Lions 17
For Washington, the ·game
Bay in point-differential, threw on
Randy Moss caught five passes became meaningless when Tampa
nearly every play i9 the fourth quar- for 151 yards and a touChdown for Bay's victory 1lver Chica~o was
ter, an4 New Orleans'(3-13) did. the Minnesota (10-6), which knocked flashed on the scoreboard seconds
same, well aware of the Panthers' Detroit into the sixth seeding posi- ·before the coin toss. The Buccaneers
. desperate need to wi n big.
tion.
·
. .
.got the NFC bye.
Jaguars ·24, Bengals 7
Lions quarterback Charlie Batch
Chargers lZ, Broncos 6
Jacksonville wrapped up the top reinjured his broken right thumb and
The Broncos ended their first seaseed in the AFC as Jay Fiedler, filling was replaced by Gus Frerotte just son since ·1982 without loh~· .Eiway
in for Mark Brunell, was 28-of-39 before halftitpe. His status for the at6-l 0, I"" i".IJM·Atl(: West. Rooki~ ·
for 317 ~~rds and a touchdo~n:
wil~·carcJ playoff roun~ nex! weelj: is .tfwiall!ll1il!(:l(! 'fe.,maine Fazande ran
But
w1th
Brunell
already
InJUred,
uncertam.
·
·&gt;
. ftfor _lgj yards. and a touchdown fo~
1
the Jaguars · (14·2) saw Pro Bowl , ' EJilles 38, Jtllnu 31
• ·' the Chargers (8-8),

By The .Associated Preu .
·ar~und," UNLV coach Bil! Bay)lo~
. Cmcmnau has. had some 1mpr~s- . satd. .
.
~· .
SJve numbers thiS, season, st!'rtlng, -· &lt;Anct--tt started rl$hl away as
woth a rankmg that s been as higb as Ke.nyon MDI'!'" ;;cor~ the first seven
No. I and no lower than No.4.
pomts of Cmcmnatt s 11-0 run to
The Bearcats (12-1) topped the open the game. UNLV tried to run
100-point ~ark for the first ttme in ·a ~ith the Bearcats and the 1~ c~:
106-66 VIctory over UNLV on · ttnued to grow~ they scored tns1de
Sunday. And there were plenty of and from the penmeter.
other numbers for the~ to ~row ?ver. · .Center Kenyon Martin had 21
Thtrd-ranked Cmcmnatt dommat- pomts, s1x .rebounds and s1x blocks m
ed the boards 51 -33, had I~ bl~ed on!y 20 mm~te~ and M1cj(eal had 16
shots, forced 23 turnovers, mcludmg pomts and moe rebounds. Freshman
seven on steals, and w~nt 8-~or-10 DerMarr Johnson hod . ~hings :under
from three-pomt range m .taking a control from the outside w1th 22
23-point halftime lead.
points.
.
.
"We're really playing as a team,"
"They played us zone for about
forward Pete. Mickeal said. "When 30 m!nutes l~t year," c~ach Bob
guys are making the elltra pass and Huggms
satd,
refernng
to
penetrating and rejiounding too, we Cincinnati's. 13-pPint victory at the
can't be 'stopped." • · .
Las Vegas Shootout. ."1 thought they
At least hot by the Ru~nm ' Rebels would play more zone· th1s year. I
(8-3).
, think this is th~ hardest we've played
, . .
"Our guys-tril'(l to go up ~ng . ·for4!l"'!aute •. "
and JUSt got manhandled, pushed •·'t'revOr , ' fell UNLV--wtth )8

......... :............... l
Holley Brod&lt;ri&lt;k. ....... ......... 0
S.. Muafteld ... . ..... .0
Janet Calloway .................... 0:
~w

Ba s k etball

Local scoring summartes

Tota11

so

Lyon s
• Heather Om ley .
SiaL}

l'lwl:

60

ll1ige u ~ B.~rne~

2-3

2

Amy l.ce
Sarah Btauer .
Totals
..

0-0

1

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l

()..0

2-3

IS
12

Rachel W~ugh

OoO

1·2

9

~Totals

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0.0
0-0
0.0
0.0
0-0

2-7

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Mslsas: \4 (White 4). FIMillt2S. FIMIIW Gill:

Eastern 75, Federal Hocldn145
4!1
Eastern ........................20 21 18 th 7~

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0
0
0

2

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1-2

2·5
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0-2

0..0 ,

6

0-2
0 - 0-4

5

O~Karr

. ... " ... .Z:ul.
. 0 ,

.............. .... J

,Matt Ri utll., .... . .. ... 2
Joe Brown .............. ........7
Joey Marcmt.G . . .. . . 0
Josh Will ..... ................. 2
·Chm Lyons .. . . .
0
Man Stmpson ... . ..... ..... 0
Chad Nelson . .. .. , 3
Eric Smi 1b .................... 1
~

Tolals ·

·

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0

1

l

0

..0

0-1
6-6

0

4-5
0.0

18
0
8

2-2
8·8
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2

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Q

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10

6

I 24.J41 . 75

Fouh: 18 Roboo'!'lo: 31 (Wi117). - : ll.;tbW ·
FGs: 15·4.~ U63). "''wnnmn: 1$.
,

Be~yer Eutem '65, Euler'! 4'i

Ells1em ... · .1... .... . ... • 1 1.\ 10 19..
Ben\•tr Ens1em ...........:...... 10 I.S. 10 20 •

lletdtvlle Eutem (2·7)
Z:ul. ;J,tt. ~l
Amber Van Sicklrc .. . .. ,... .0
0
Whitney KaTT •. , ....... .0
0
0.0
.l-4
Danlclh: Spencer ............. .5 • 0
Juli Hatley . . . ..... .... ... $
0
4-5

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65

_

• Becky Davit . .. ..................4
Amber Baker .......... ....... S

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Sa Antonio ..................... , .21
Ul.lh ........., ., ................. 18
Denm ................................ 15
M111nuo1a . . ............... 13
HoultOn .... ........................... to

~~
0
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14

a

11

Akron 73. W. Michigan 62

I Ban St. 75, N Illinois 67

10 .677
10

64J

13

536

14

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lOO

~2

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l .A l.oken .... ..... .. ....... 25

fonland... ... .................... 22

S~eranaento ................. ..,...... 11

Phoenix ....

L....

.... •

207 .

..'

5 .83}
7 .759

' jO · .630
. ... , .18
1 • 621

Seattk .......................... ...... II 12 .600
L.A. Cll(l(ltn .. .. ........... 9 20 ljO'
OollknSiate :......................... 6 23 207

CiDCinn.u 106,llNLV 66 '
Evansville 84, Wichiia St 55

•....

14

1Cent61, Miami, Ohio 57-0T-Mwqueuc 6S, Xavier 63
M1cbts;an 87, Colorado St 80
·N.Iowa 17, Crciahtob 75
.
Notre Dame
Loyola Marymount S1
Oakland, Mich 60, Nonliweste.m 41 ·
S. Dhno1s 62, SE M1uoun S I
SW Misrour:l St 71, Saim Louis 62
Tokdo 80, Cent Michi&amp;M 57

2'1

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SMU 68, New Mextco St. !i9
Tcus 90, Hou~o• 80

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F1rWt11

Sunday's KOre

Tllllipt's giune1

'NCAA Division I
women's s~ores · ·

CLEVELAND a Botton. 7 p.m.
Go~n State at Wuhinpon, 1 p m.
Milwaukee • Pblladllphla, 7 p.m.
Detroit nl Orlalido; 7·l0 p m.
Portland at Od~:11o. 8:30p.m.
Denvei at Utah, 9 p.m

Ioiii.

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S..tti"Mtll

S.:rllfllftllo a CLEVELAND. 7 .~ p m.
AIIJJICI at Milwaukee, 8 p m'

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Rockhllnc 76. lncllnlMI Wor'd 7-4
trinity. Tex¥ 79. Hendrb, 62

.

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F•rWett
Nco,y Mex.ico 65. Oral Robem 48

·. ·~

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COllege bowl action

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84 • J 97

3

3

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48 115

7 0 ~7 · 94'
7 I l4 88
~ · '3 2:8 tOO '
4 3 23 82

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UMtt! Bowl

. O.lborlt Bowl
O.O.po 18. Punltte 25. OT ,

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CGIUII-..1
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Mianolll. Oocqlo Todl I)
.
(!III'UIIftl

Mldllpo- 37. Floridll4

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101
101
128
138

5
6

17

2
2

35

101 114 1·
111

JO t06

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5 I 40 91 109 ·
9 S 40 100 108 .
7 ' 3 lot 9.S 112

..

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A.Ianla Mlulfalo,. 7,p.m.
Monaaiii,W-....1 p.m.
Bollon M N.Y blandm. 7 :~ P.m.
Oriawa II CII'Oiinill1l30 p m.
·
l'ttoenill at Detroit. 7:30 p.m.
Los A.•aetesat: Sr! l.oui1. 8 p.m

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to now ere?'

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' tpur·lsne ·
on W. Vs. sld,, only twolane route on Ohio side
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· By MATT McCARTNEY

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SpecJal.\0 The Dally Sentinel

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· · RAVEN$WOOD, W.Va. -The ribbon dedicat·
big,the Wiltllm S..'Ritchie Jr. B!ldge was cut Oct. 31,
1981 bY. thon•Gov. Jay Rocke(eller. , .
·
Tr~ftkfloyt~ shortly ,tter aeroesthe bridge just
outside of Ravww~. The b~dge thit broke the
lonpst stretch along the Ohio !liver without a bridge
-some 60 miles - took four years tp complete but
had been in.the wo.rks for much longer.
Vl
The first, talk pf having a bridge between"'bhio
and West Virginia ncar or at Ravenswood began in
1928. It was not until the 1960s; however, the dream
would receive.any kinll.,of substantialJ!rodding for- ·
ward.
.
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·
Paul• Moore became mayor of Ravenswood in ·
July 1965: In lg66,· he ,formed a commitlee to do
somo-.in-&lt;tepth studying into the possibility of turning the dream into ateility.
. ·•
The committee first met May S, 1966. Howard
Brownlee of Kaiser Aluminum chai!'l'~ the oommit·
_tee until his retirement in 1978. Davi4 Karr sei:Ved as
the ~mmittee's seerelat)'. l Othe~ oommittee members included Paul Bel!, Fostcr 'Seaman, Bob Park,
"Sub'r Hartley, Bill Caldwell, Carmef'Robi!ISOII, Joe
Huh and Michael McCann. A poyp of interQted
'Ohioans later joined the eominitlet. iJ'he Ohio group

r

RAcO.revieWs·1999.
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~ RACINE - The Racine Arel:.. Jnr~bns:
'·
(;ommunity Organlza!ion fCC:CD~~~t' -.. $200'f0i'limestone for the Stlf
reviewed its activities and ~- ' Mill Park r&amp;rking Lot and Road. plishments for I 999. •.
• ·• ••:way; . ~ i 't
. . ,
; During the year, the' aroup mille _ . ' $350 fOr Ooor .mats for the
·(honetary disbli~oments :&gt; totalina · ~uthern Hip.' School refinished
$.5,9.50, includinp&lt;:holtnhips lind IYII1 ~; ~,
Cf•p'ftec!s
'H
donation5. The group prcaented·fOur . • S:ZOO'•fbt July 4 Celebration
· SSOO ~holarshiPI; to So~.them Hip ,~ eateriiiinmen~ .
· ·
. $chool senlon ahd SpOOsOnid tlie ' ~ $200 for. the Fall Festival staae
annual RAOO Flow~r .F~stlvtiJ, . cntcnainm..U: ·
·
·
'• $3QQ tOWard the i_.lation.of
,q11een ·contest and parade 'with tloat
Mzcs totalinJ $100. · '
the jloor In tho Oou MIIVR&amp;Cine
Watber
'
3.
· RACO also sponsored the an~ual Musoum.buildina:
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'•·
Froa Jumping Conlcll at the Jl!ly 4
.·! W ' toward ·tho irillallation of
celebration with pri~ tolllln&amp; $300 '.wi~~ '111d plan( 'tor the witer
'· '
. wbeel for. tbe C~ Mill!Racl~~C
·. in two qe Jlllupa. ·
·. · 1\vo drop-off collections of Museum buildina; 'I , r '
Wll2
...
eanried food ancJ moneiary ,&amp;ifli
~ $1,000 for the RaciRCI' River
Pick
3:
9·9.0;
Pick
4J
4-9;24
were aiven .. to tho Melp :Plll!lty Bank Project Fund;
·
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, llooelw)'e 5: 16-1'7·19-34-37 ,
United Meih_odiat Goopettlive . • $20010' th~ Racine PirePepll't·
'' .
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' Plirish Food .Panlry. In addliion; the ment Auxiliary; '
lY.YA
.
pup sponsored tbe ~ual Holiday
. • $100 to the Melp ~ve
Dilli 3: 2·5·7; Dally 41 2·8-8-2
Home ,~rltina Contilt. with•&lt; hris.li Food Pantry; ·
.·
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. prlaea '9ta!ing $100 and poinsettl• · • $100 for fruit and can4y 1re111
r fottliej~pa. .
""''f.
t1
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ol"-awovanfrFdl'b'.fu
. The 1f11~P also ~ tbe fol.~·
,P\1111,~ RACO, ~ ~ "'a;..,.-;__...;...,;;..._..•_ _.

,• :JI

~unn.er studies showed an average of
pie ~rossed .the ¥.~n bridge each· day.
,crossing the Parkersburg Toll Bridge. Hi!lt&lt;&gt;rical
accounts of the bridge's planning note the project
would ha,ve carried a price tag of $6 million had it
been built in 1966. The actual C\)St of the project in ·
1981 was more than $18 million. · ·
Many ideas were forrnulated 'about what type of
• structure should be oonstructed. Most favored a toll
bridge. Experts said the bridge would lose money for
the first five;years in operation,,.woufd break even
after.IO Yc:!'l!• and pay.for ltself,at the 20-year mark.
After all the studies were conducted and years of
lalking, the idea's importance dwindled away. It was
only after Gov. Arch Moore took an interest in· fulfilling the dream did the prQject begin ·to look like a
possibility.
Moore, and his Slate Road Commissioner was led by Racine Mayor Ernest Wingett .
In 1966 the first studies were done on the bridge. Ravenswood resident William S. Ritchie Jr. Industry was one oLthe leading forces behind the favored the idea' of a free bridge at Ravenswood,
road sludy. Kaiser Aluminum carried a great deal of rather than ·a toll'bridge.
So, on May 20, 1976, the official announcement
power and weight at the time, especially in West Virwas
made by Moore and Ohio Gov. James Rhodes'
ginia. Th·e studies focused on th~ some 3,450.
tha!
they had reached an agreement to build three
employees at the Ravenswood Plant. They found
that only 54 percent of the plant's employees actual- bridges across lhc Ohio River. One bridge would be
ly lived in Jackson County. A small group Jived in at Ravenswood, one 1!1 Moundsville, and one at
Mason, but it was discdvered almost 25 percent of Wheeling...The three bridges carried a combined
the ,plant's employees lived across th.e river in Ohio. price lag of more than $66 million.
Ttlose worl&lt;:els, in order to get to work, had to take " The actual work .on the structure began less than
the ferry across the river at ,Ravenswood (when it a·full year later. The project was slated in four phas·
¥(IS operational), or drive to Mason or to ParKers· es of construction. Phase one inv!Jived the construe·
. lion of.the ·river piers. The cOntract was awarded to
burg to cross the river.
.
.
The· Mason bridge was about 30 miles south, W. P. Dickerson of Youngstown. That phase began
while the brid..Ke at Parkersburg was just as far to the
north. That equated to as many as 120 out-of-the·
Please arldga, Page 3

PcNyt.o!f, ~- (;; .

l .ollcrin

, ·, ~ ~t'spma
New Ieney • Onlwa.2 p.m.
Buffalo 11 Toron10, 7 ~30 p.m,
,
St., Louis Dl N.Y. R_.lft1. 71l0 p m.
Los Anaelts 11 D,.ttao.I·JO p m.
Edmontoa II Co&amp;otldo. 9 p nt
'

-

l~~~i~ II somethina we noed to do,; Musser siid.

'

47 1~1 108
46 119 102
· 44 93 ·01
42 116 107
41 96 94
a 10M and a rcaulllion
'

4 3
.. 0
~
I
6 2
4 I

Nuhvllle J. Sonltlle 2 · ' · Florida 7, 1impo Boy 5
C.Oiina4, AilantAl r;..
• New Jeney :Z, Bo!Moa 2-tie
Buffalo 8, TorOruo I
St. Louis I. Washiaata. l·tie
Edmomon '· 'Phorftil 4

I

'

,, - ,. '
. POMEROY - P!lllleroy. Villago !):&gt;unci/ kicked
off a new ceqtury Monday night with a new mtyor a!
the·he.lm, anCI promptly ibolished a .long~ng .tra- •
aition. ~
' '
•.
.... ., ..... i
:·. At ·th~ prompting gf newly-sea.ed MaYor Joli~, W.· •
Blaeltnlf, council iii'J'I'OYed; hirini· a maptratc to pre'" !iide. elver Cllies thlt would ordiDarily be · ~eai'CI in

'

Dtrilion
.. ........ 18 16 '4 1 41 106 102

. 'lloalda1'•

'

hntlnel N.We Staff

.

I Bl ~ Ill 1i4
4 I 5.\. 1&lt;10 ~ ·
5 0 49' 113 80

CaiJII')' 4, Vtncouver 2 ·
. PitllbutJ;h 4. Detroit 3 '
' N.Y RDnaen 2, M~ 2-ht
• San Jose 4, Chi(!LlJO I
~

Colorado 62. - . . eon.,. 28

•..

91'

Philldelphla4, N.Y. IIIinden I

BoWl

Saturclay'l ..,..a

.

38 97 106

I

Sun...,'• KOres

.

Frlilay•l scoree

Sou~ Mluialppl 3, Colorado State
.~· ·
·
lntll~deeeao.l
~ ~ \ ~lt.lisllppi 17.
lhoma lS.
~

'

1\Jon~~na 8t.·BIIIInp ThU"'-'.wnt-dulmpknblp

.

. Tllllipl'l reolaMUIOn dootr
~ flo!&gt;&lt;!"" "Atl.,.., 9 p.m.
.
. . .

.'

"

89
99

Saturday's SCOftl

S..llowl

"

Sa1urday 's tournaments

I '

• ·.

Colotlldo.

Oreton'24, M•~ 20

·

90

WESTERNCONFERENCE

son1 ........ .............. 20 19
PhOellill :... ' ...... ... ,.21 13
Dallat .. ,................. 19 l5
WAnaetes ..., ,,: 17 I~
Anttltolta ............... 18 17 ·
Overtime Josset couht u
tic.
·

.

hJ\'WiJii ......

S1anfOJd 8l ta\orado 48

••1 ........

'

.'

New ~exl(o 54 .~. N, ArjiOM 40 •,
Pacific 69, UNLV ~
~
• Ptpperdii'IIL: ~5. Tulu. .SI . •
•POrtland 6S P(ldland St ol7
San Pieao 71. UC ln'ine 64-o'r
San FrantiscO 66. OreJoa 60

-

Carolina ............... l5 16
Wuh· tOO
13 16
Tam
10 21
Atl1~a ~-~ ::,. .. :: ...:. 8 2!

,

. '.
'

iiy JIM FREEMAN ,.

.

.,

anymore.

Cmcnl Dtrilion ,

~

!"'Y.I!.....

.52 116
45 100
.18 97

Southall Dlvhlon
Aorlda .....• '\ ...... 21 1.'\

CIIIJIY ................... I7 17
EdlaoDion ............ 13 17
Va.couver '···· ..... .12 .18

N Colonodo 67. Nonh Dokooa 66

OklahOA'tll City 81 . TeXI\l Luthrrnn. ~7

5• A.-nlo It MiMIIOtal 8 p.m.
, .SiJoult 11 HOiuton. B·~ p,m
C!hatlonc 11 ""-ix. 9 p.m.
Dallu 11 De:liver. 9 p.1ft. •
~ ~ · l.altm II L.A. CliP!"", 10:30 p.m.

1

Y'&lt;Uot:ltod

7

.5

5

Momre111 ,.......
... 12 21
•

341

.

"

'

Ill

22

I 51 121 89
2 49 112 9.3 ,
5 42 12.' 107
J .\4 9.~ 1l»
0 2.1 74 II~

,
Northeast Dlvlslon
, T0t011to ... . .. . 23 12 4 2
Onawa ................ 19 12 6 I
HulTalo .
.. -~ 16 17 5 I
Bonon .. ,..... ....... JJ 16 10· 2

Dl~

· 1~llndlli1 divitton hUe

l!o,se

Bcthune·Cook11,1R1n 61 . Md -Ea.Jiem Shore ~9
S Nuarene 79. Xnrier. NO 62

.

I

w...,.

272

L I Bl f'll. Ill 1iA

II 6
12 5
17 . J

t.St Looit ........ " ·· ..... ,13 l o 813 ~26 242 , lba. ·
lY L
Can&gt;Hu .......:. .................... :a L :O .lOO· 421 381
Doaoit., ...........25 10
At-.....,........................411. 0 .267 251 3~1 . St. Loub ..:.............22 , II
S..FfWIIC0 .,..., .......... :.. :411 0.267 flM · 4)9
NUhYille .....: .... .14 20
New QdJooDO......................J ll o .t88 260 434 · au..,., .................. 11 22

Idaho 70. Ore6on St 66
.
Mon.,tllfla 66.
St. 64
Mon1ana St1 71. Air Force ..~ ~ ·

Eul
Pittsburs;h 62, puqtJeSne 57
l

-••~

0 .625 441.~· 377
0 500 3S2 'Z76
0 .438 299. 358
0 375 245 .\82
0 J I3 272 ,357

, • ...,
aa..:
11 • O , •• ~o 235
l • oampl - T ... ........ ., ..... ,,
'
.,
)'~Mi~....... ..,. · . JO 6 0 62j 399 J35
~:8':;:1 ·::· .. :::.. · ::: .. ·:·: · : ::: : -~ ~;~ ~i

Cal St ·Fullerton 86. S., Joa St: 77 f
Ao. lnterllllllonlll2. Wuhineton 6;8

SjttUtday's acllon

'·

--

.

Nardi Texu 59. 5o¥1h Allbmll50
Rockhurst69, Tt~-.• LUtheran Sl
' South .Fiorida 73. KOU..oo'6l 11 •

lY L I f'll. lf 1!t1.

»:

Philadelphia .... ... 22
NcwJersey.
. 21
Pitttburgh ............. 17
N.'Y Rangers ... ,. 12
N.Y. Islanders ....... 9

Ctnt'rtl Dlwlllon

'.

.

Allantle DMst,n

1lul

.

lutern DlvllkiR

ll-WashinJion ...... ....... ,;... 10 6
¢·Dallu ~•. 1-...... 1 • .., • • • 8 8
N.Y. OiODij ............... .........7 9
Arizona. . . ..... ... ... . ..6 10
Phlladetphla .................. 5 II

'

Baylar 64 , l...ouislana-~)'ttfle S6

...

'

.. . ' 'l'o!ndaf'• aamu
P""'ond II\ Toromo. 1 p.m.
Ne,.Jerpey ltlljtdl- 7 p.m.
Bosto)l'at New York. 7. ~ p.m.
VaftcouV« vs. Miami, 7·.30 p.m

,

.

,

OHIO 73, ~ent. MiCbiaan 61
S Dakota St. 110, Momlnp~ 54
SW MtnnefO(a 64, ~a. Sc.P. !17
Winona Sr. 80~ W1yne,. Neb. 63

Montana 78, Rocky Mountain .53
New Mellico 78, WuhinJWn 52
Portland St 76, Thxu A&amp;M-Corpus Christi 64
San Di_eso St. 74. Hiah Point 63

Mtami Ill,, Orlando IO..l..OT

~· ~

· noil

,

No!R Dome 75.-M'!'I.tlene 60

CS Nonhrid&amp;• 94, Cal Poly-SLO 86
California 9S, O.vidaon B7
1

u~

-·-

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Cllicqo ... ~;·· ·; ·· ..............610 0 .J15

Iowa 82. Indiana 68
Iowa St 62. Te~~:u Tech 37
Kalamazoo 67, C~hqe 53
Kanns 81, Arizona St 65
,
Kent82, Bowli•g Greta 61 · •
Michigan 77, MiDne~ota 33
MtchiJan St 62, Ohio St 50
Minn!-Morris 70. Minn...Croobloa 61
N. Dakota St. 86, Nebruk.a-OnWttl7l
· N.C. Chul ... 60.. Solnt LouiJ 58 1
Northern St , S D. 110, Moolfleltd Sl 51

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Oakland ....... ......................8 I 0 .500 3911 329
Denver . .,,..: .... ,.............6 IQ 1l .37' 314 .\18

g

E. Illinols 72 •.Wis.-Publdl 67
E Miehism66, MARSHAU. j7
Illinois 82. GeO!JII 6S
Illinois St. 59, S. lltinois •1 .

!Qwo St. 84, Muus St. 53

217 437

Weshm Dlvldon
x-Stanle ................. 9 7 .0 .56] 3\8 298
KIWU Ctty ........., ......... 9 7 0 .!i6J 390 322
San Diego .. . .
. ......8 8 0 .500 269 316

1

Drake 78, N Iowa 69

,

. 12~

,.

NUL standings .

Puuburah .................610 0 .J7S 317 320

..

Mayor ,wo-n't
hear·cases ··'

I

(11-0), 8

Hockey

o 500 m m

CLEVELAND .. .............. 2 14 0

'

Te~h

p m (ABC) •

CINCINNATI ......: ..... .... 4 12 0 .250 283 460

DePaul 83. 111.-Chlc.,. ill, lOt'

BowHng.GI&lt;t:n 8~. MARSHALL64

I

20
o.tlu ... ............:... .. . ..... .9 21
............................. .... 6 2J

6

Auists: 8 (Btssell. BroWn 3). Blotktd' lltott; 0.

'

..

18 • .379

BohltMr&lt; ..... ............... :... 8 8

Mklwtll 1
Akron 83. Nttgara 79
· ·
Augustana,S.D. 76, South Dakota 59
Ball St n, Miami, Ohio 6.5
Cretghton 71, Bradley 6S
Dayton 84, Loyola, Jll 74 .

Mldw~

,

17 .414

lY L .'fa.

•s

0
0
0

.511

MldwootDtrittlon

0

IT &amp;

o.o ·

.

llut.

7

J.:l l)

4-17

13 ..567
14

Supr Bowl, New Orlea{'d

Florida State (11-0) vs Virs1nip.

.4

POMEROY

.. Blaettnar said,cquncil f)to~ld .illso consider raising
fines, m.l!ing them similar to olber c:Onjtilunitiu and
counues.
... ·
· .' In otber.business, council shot dbwft a reques.t by
.Biaettnar to keep the downtown park,ing meters
bagged for an additio!lfl three monihs.
: "The only reason to have parking meters in
P(lmeroy is to keep traffic movina.". said Blaettnar,
· ,o,yho proPosed thai the meie!l be hooded uritil M~rch
30, pendi~g the outcome of a Ma~&lt;:h · 1S downtown
survey.
'
/
. Parking meters have lang been a subject of debate
in tho downtown area. However, the topic .pin l'OIC•
to the surf!ICC following the announcemedt·that a rtcw
Wal-Mart store would be constructed ig ncighll?!!nJ
Mason, W.va. . .
,
. ,. ,
Supporters of the parking meters AY_' they ~~~ ·
traffic 111ovina in the downtownllrca by discilurtllna
lent-term parking, while meter Qpponents S!IY. meters ,
encourage people to shop clsew~re, who~ parking i.s
free.
· ·,
· ~- · · ·
. ·.Councilman Dave Ballard diilgreed with Slaettnar 's suggestion.
· ·. · '
· ·· '~--l
"I don't think it'll· work. I don't think it's a &amp;ood
Idea,• he said.
·

1\itsday

CeMt:ll DlvWon
ll-JacklonYtlje .......... ,.... 14 2 0 .875 396 211
y-lennenee ..
.
13 ·3 0 813 l92 324

Catllwba 70. Uvingstone 47
Clemson 75. N C -As~vtl!.e 56
Francis Marion 92, S C -Aiken 74 '
Georgta Collegt: 82, Al'lll!llrong Atlantic: 78
Georgta Southern 68. Wofford 6~ ,
Jame s Mndtson 89, Rider 75 • .~
louts\'tlle 65, Ctncinnau S6
i •
Mempht5 65, UAB 64
• Miami 64. Temple 44
Mlsstsstppt 72, Tenneuee Tecb ~
New Hnvcn 74, St Uo 58
North Honda 90, Clayton Sr. 55
South Caro1ina 62, GeorJe Mason 48
.Vanderb1lt 73. W. Kenl\l~;ky 57
Vn1in.ia Tech 66, Radford 42 ;
•

229

-PageS

•

·

This week's slate

y-Miami .. .. . .... . .... 9 1 0 S6) .126 JJ6
NY. Jets ....................... 8 8 0 .500 ~08 309
New Englan4 ,. ... ! _. ... 8 8 0 .!100 299 .284

S.Uih

Tennecsee 72, Radford 46
UTEP 88, Aa. lnternational 81
VilJinia89, Dartmouth ~

,Qtli(ito ...,,........................... 2 25 .074

6

4
4
12
0

Eut
Drexel 76 Northeastern 67
Ft~irlr,igtJ D1ckinson 72. Buffalo .S7
Fordham 71 Provtdence 67
Georgetown 6.\, James Madtson 48
Hofma 7-1, Bos1on U 46
MohM: 72. Delaware 68
Manhaunn 69, Army 49
St. Bomwenture 84, Ntagnra 71
Towson 73, New Hampshire 66
Vcrmom78, Hlln'nrd 71
South
A11bum 100, Stony Brook 4S
D11ke 96, W1lham &amp; Mary .5~
Georgia Tech 7!1, Lafayette 64
Lou•stann-Lnfayelte 71 , S1ena 54
Muyland 100. Coas1al Carolion 48
Mercer 82, N G.-Asheville 73
MississiP:pi 89, Birmingham·Southem 48
North ~llrOllna 86, Howard 53

WESTERN CONFERENCE

I

U.

'5 I

'

.

&amp;

I}()

7•11

.W L I•r.to. lf .fA

.. . JJ . 3 0 813 423 'jjJ

y-Buff,.to ........ ..... ..... ,.. II 5 0 .688 32Q

Liberty 69, WeSt Vira:inm 57
Loyola. Md 69, fona 51
Maine 74. Towson 62
M ertyh ur.~t 105. Columb111 l)mon 29
N()rtheastem 61, Hofstra 47
Penn 91 Bucknell 73
Penn St 114. Nonhwestern 49
Providence 7-1. Prmceton 59
Richmond 7?l Albany. N Y. 6l
Rutgen 66, Ma.uachusctts :U
S1. Bonaventure 8J. Sieno. 69
St Mtch~l s 79, Mass -Lowell 70
St Pewr's 60. Manhanan .19

· Sunday's action

CenttOIDlrilaclau ...:........... ,............ ..:.. 20 9. .690
Chorlode.. .. . ... . . ..18 II 621

CLEVELAND ........ ............ ,ll

· Aulsts: 9 lloektil: sllot•: 0 Fouls: 20
Rtb.und1: 19 (Dunfee 5) Steals: 4. Total FG1: 18S!i (327) 1\trnowtn: 16

-Jbshltt:hl

'

Ftdel'lll Hacklna

Z:ul. l:i&amp;

4

u

9 .690
New York . ,.,...,., - . . . .. 18 12 600
)'lttlodttlphla ...................... 17 15 531
Orlaado . . . .
. . ... 1.5 I5 500
Bo11on ....................... ... 12 16 429
New Jersey .. .:. , .. ..... 12 18 400
.Wutiin~ton .... .................... 10 20 .333

~J.. ..ta .................... ~...· II

.

Bnan Poston .. . . . 1
Dan Whttlatch........ , ....... !
Steve Rachatds . . . ... .2
Ben Dunfee .. ........_. ... ...6
Buddy Dunfee ... .. . . 0
Mau Quinn : .. ................. 0
LogaR . ........ , 2
Ryan Grimm ....................0
S~ty Gilchrist ..... , ....... .l
Toaall
· . 13

u

Q

.

ll-lodtan.apohs . .

Drexel 60. Bostl'ln U 59

Utnh 7~ S Utnh 56

· lY L r.t.

Mtlwau.kft .............. ........ 17
Detroit·........\.. , .......... 15

Federal Hocking . ... .,.. !i 17 IL 12•

elml:

0
0

ruin
•1

•

Hometo~ Newspap~r

FIHUBowl

Nebras,ka Jl, Tennes~ 21

Eattern DlviMn

r

6l Rose-Hulman .S3

S101day's·score

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Falcons SOII1' post
hopkss 49ers

·a t

Blaettnar- who had held mayor's coun
term- said he wauld not hold court
"or the t,t,onday 'after that. •
.
_
At
J'~!CQ~nmendalion, i!f COpncil Presidenr John
Musser, council agreed to hire Pomeroy,al!o~ Scott
· ~ell 'for SSOO per month on a month-by-month

' Michigan J5i Alabama 34, OT,

NFL staDcUDp

Y2K,

••

.can,,'* .
InSurance
for. Needless
-tosay,l do
. not want to
·: hold mo.yor's
\ CoNrt;'' ·

The Green Bay Packers fired first,
year coach Ray Rhodes and his
entire staff after the team failed to
m~e the playoffs for the first timC:
in seven years, The AssoCiated'·
Press learned.
l'lSPN first reported the firingil;
.confirmed to the AP !ry.~ · soUrce
close· to .the 'teattl \ vho spoke on
condition of anonymity. The
source said the -' Packers . will
announce the firings at a ptess·
conference later today.'

OnnpBowl

Euc

Far Wut

Toronco .......................... 17 12 ,586

Haner 5) Steals: II (H Haner 3)Thtal FCr. 23-:40
(57 S%). Tumovel"': 19

·

0
0

We~ d!Jne preparing for

you

ltuiohwl

Appalacluan SL 83, Navy 74
Buffalo 77. CaniSIUS 68
Connecutut 90,~ Louistana Teth 6)
Danmouth 63. Hartford 62
Delawpre 7S, New Hampshire 56

Southwttt

Mian&gt; ..... .................... 20

H Haner. Rebound!~: 3:2 (Jphnson 9, H."Haner 6, T

·

0

S N11.2nre01: 85. Frtends 52
Tnmty Texas 76. Hendri x 62

o.o

0
0
19
2
0
7

Allantlc Division

·a ·
60'
.

·

0

0
0
0
I
0

&amp;wa~

EASTERN CONFERENCE

8
6
4
4
l
0

0..5

0

n

.

GlreEN BAY, Wis. (AP) -

Wbco!Uin 17, Stanford 9

Sunday's actiOn

Mid"t~t

J-4
0-0
0-0
J.4
0-Z
0,0

'

Sports

•

Page 4'
How to take care ofT·s!lirts, Pages
.
Eastern girls topple South ~allia, Page 6

mayor's .court. · · · .. n 1 ·\
;:
•
• .t
; Blaettnar, who psked that tbe.village llOIISider liir:
jog a magistrate, said h_p would not hold mliyor's~rt
· in the wake of recent lawsuili allcslna !bat mayon are
billed in favor o{ officers wridna dcke!l, an~ lillY bo
pe,..Onally liable for darnagea resulting ·from civU· '
actions.
~·
. , t :
·
"That is a liability you
"That is 'a can't buy insur~ for,"
Blaettnar said. "Needless to.
·.liabiUty
"ny,' I do not ' w~l to hold·
b
miyor ·~"Court.,;
' ·• ·
UJ
Bl.ettnar· iaid he wanted•
council 'to .hire ·a magistrate, .
but" added that he wanted
·council• 10 make the deei-.
sion. ·
.
.
· "I will itot appoint a m~~a·
istrate," he said. "
I
Mayor's oourt is erie1ralh
held on
. seCC)nd ,
fourth
of

Packers.flra
Rhodes· . staff

Montnna St·Billlngs 70, Meu, Colo. !i9
Tlllrd ptOmdron St 79, Rocky Mountain 61

· South
Betfluoe·Coolman 64, Md -Eastern Shore 52
DePauw 56. Cemre 48

IT flL

3

with seven bl~cks for the Longhorn~
(8-3), who used a 14-4 run to take a
71-61 lead w1th 7:19 to play.
Freshman forward GeorgO: Williams
had 23
and. 12 rebounds for.
the
(6-7).

.

, Saturday's adion

NBA standings

f'll.

Holly Hatler .... ... ... S-9
Ashley Ctlfdwell ..... 4-5
Sarah Wngh!
2·3
Angle Johnson . .. ... 2·3
Tanya Haner .
2-4
S1ephame Evantch
1-2
Cand1 te Mooney .. .. ... 0.1
Tracy Cheney .
~ . Q:.2

e

AuhU: nla Blkktd shots: p/u. Fouls: nla
Rebo•nds: nla Steals: nla Total FGs: nla
Tll.-.oven: rria

-•-

South Gallia Rebtls {1·1)
J:lmr
~ ~
IT
S!ocy Wh1te , ,
\.1
().0' ' 9-18

~· ~

Nikki Tlcken ..... ............... .1
Totals
.13

Assists: n/tl Blocked shob: nln Fouls: n/o
R~buunds: n/u Steals: nfa Total FGs; nip..
Thmo\'trs: n/n

4-5

9-t.c

Ell!ttm C5-4i)

Cindy Leach . .. .. . .S
1\manda Waher .......... ... , .0
Kelly Roberts . .
.
0
Braridt Southworth.... .... .8
Tabby King . . .. . ..
I
JCsUcaOsbome,...........0
Bobbt Cratg
. . . 2
Shannlt Hacker ........ .. ....0
Ashley Fox ... J, ... . • • • 0

.50

14-ll

B~wtr

.

['I flL
2-3
22
2-4
10
\-6
!I
l-10
5
1-4
.\

K:111 Cummins
Tanunr Fryar
Ktm lhle
...... ....... :..... .

Q

~

10 .

Auburn made II three-pointers, high 21 ppints and 10 rebounds for
shot 52 ~rcent from the fiel~. had a th~ T.ar Heels (9-4), who opened the
48-31 rebound advantage, forced 19 sccqnd half with a 25-3 run in ending
turnovers and hell! the Seawolves (2- a two' game losing streak.
13) to 27 percent shooung.
Reggie Morris ·scored 17 points
No.9DIIke96
for·thevisitingBison(0'9).
William &amp; Mary SS
No. 14 Maeyllllld 100
Freshman Carlos Boozer scored a
Coastal Carolina 48
season-high 28
Juan Dixon had 18 poiniS and 10
points and senior rebounds for the Terrapins ( 11·2),
.c~ris Carra well . who cruised to lheir 72nd straight
added 20 lis the non-conference home victory.
Blue Devils (9-2)
Brandon Newby had 13 points for
won their 42nd the Chanticleers (2-9), wbo missec;l
straight . home their first nine shots and had six
game
and tumov~rs in falling behind 16-0.
improved their record in Cameron No. 111 Tern=iee 72, Radford 46
Indoor Stadium to 600-135.
· Marcus Haislip and Jon, Higgins
Scotty Scott had 15 points for the 1\ad II W~nts . each 'as the Volunteers
Tribe (5-5), who have lost 15 straight C.U·'r) "!WJO 10 playe;:.. scQ~e ' in ~
ti'Ves to Duke, the last eight by· at . home rout. Rian Evereu 'scored 15
least 23 pomts.
•r. poiniJ·for the Highlanders (4-6).
No. 13 North Carolina 86
i
~o.18 ~ 90, Wouitoa 80
Qpward53 . _
, ...,Duis. Mihm had 2,0 points, H ·
Brendan 'Haywood had a 'season· relliltJiidi&gt;Ud tidll his schoOl record
.

NCAA DivisigQ I
meJl'S SCOres

0

0.0

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6 10 ll 19 ..
1012 623·

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0

Our Vuw:

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3

0.0

Aulsts: ,9. Blocked shots: 0 Fouls: 8
ltlbeunda: 29 (Davis 9). Sleals: 2. 'lbtal FGs1 2().
56 ( ~57) 1\lmoven: 13

South Gallia 60, Southern SO
Southern ,
Sooth Gall to

1-2

points .but' n~ Runnin ' Rebel had ·as ·
,tough a gam.e a~ · ~enter Kaspars
Kambala, their leadmg scorer and
reboundcr.
Kambala, who averages 20.6
points and 9.4 rebounds, rarely got
the ball and finished with '10 points
and three rebounds m 23 mmutes.
In other games
involving ·ranked
teams Sunday, 11
was: _No.
4
Aubu,m . · I 00,
Stony Brook 45;
No. 9 Duke 96,
William &amp; Mary
~5; No. 13 North Carolina 86,
Howard University 53; "!o. 14
Maryland 100, Coastal Carolina 48;
No. 16 Tennessee 72, Radford 46;
and No. I 8 Texas 90, Houston 80.
No.4 Auburn 1110, Stony Brook 45
· Chris Porter scored 15 points to
!cad t!!e .Tigers (12·1) in their 23rd,
consccubve home victory.

J•nuary 4, 2000

tries.

No.3 ,Cincinn~tJ whips UNLV;·-Auburn, North·-c ·a rolina also win ·

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1999: YEAR IN REVIEW

.Prid.dy gets 8 years o~ pot charge ·
(l;dltor'• note: '!'he following
. 11 the - ~ond In I lhi'H part
Hrle• looking bllck It the newa
of1• •)

MAY .
May 3 - ~iddleport plans for a
neighborbojld watch program.
.,Becky Johnson and Dwight Icenhower were cro.wned Meigs prom
king and queen.
.
May '4 - Pomeroy reconsiders
re-Cstablishing a police auxiliary .
May 7 - National Day of Pray
lllll)cts several ·hilndred people to
tho observan~=t held in front of lhe
Meigs County Gourthouse.
May 9 - Tentative plans made
earlier to give a facelift io ll)e Meigs
County courthouse are postponed
until' 2000 due to a lack of inoney.
· May 10 - Gospel ainaer Squire
Parsons presents con~=trt at the
amphit~eater down by the .riycr.
May 11 - 1\venty-one I!CteS is
·secured ·aJona the Ohio .River in
1\acine for develojlmenl of ;a boat
ramp by the Ohio Pivislon of
Wildli~.

1:

. May 12 - Rutland Council :
decides to develop a new park in
Rutlaml in celebration 'of the com·
muniiy's.bicentennial.
May 13 '--Judge Fred W. Crow
Ill denies a motion filed by residents .
of Tuppeis Plains asking that the
board members of Regional Sewer
Disliiet be removed and the activities of the bOard be reviewed.
May 14 ..:.. ShopKo Stores,~'lnc.
buys the Pamida Holdings Corp.
which operates a. store on. Laurel
Cliff in Meigs County.
May 16 - Inventory of items
alleged! y owned by Fred Priddy is
seized during an ongoing Meigs
Couniy drug case.
May 17 - New firehouse at
Racine is dedicated during ribbbncutting ceremony.
.
•.
. May l8 ' - Fred Priddy pleads
guilty to ,felony ·marijuana P\)Ssession. Btidget Vaughan and Tricia
Davis are announced as top scholar.;
at Meigs Hi~h· ~hool.
May 19 - Jesse Clayton Little
and Kara Ruth King are named vale-

dictorian and salutatorian respec•
lively of Southern Class of 1999.
May 20 Stephanie Evans is
named valedicforian and John Prof1
fitt, ·salutatorian of Eastern · High
School.
•
May 23 -The Coalition Against
Superfluous Highways (CASH) file~
sui\ to stop U.S. 33 project approval,
May 24 -,. Fred Priddy of Rur;
land is sentc.nced to eight years i~
jail and fined $15,000 on a felony
charge of possession of marijuana. .
May 25 ......,.Fundiqg is secured tO
help Meigs County artisans form a
guild and market their works around
the nation.
'
.
May 26 :... Markers along the '
route of Morgan's Raid. across
Meigs County
. .. during the Civil , War:
are dedicated.
May 28 - Racine's Erica Arnott
'Is crowned 1999 Miss Ohio River in
pageant ceremonies held at Marietta
College.

PI•• 111 RIYI4Iw, Page. 3

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~-

~assing of the torch

Noflces--

from Page
- . 1

·Terry B.renten Myers Sr.

®Eastern High Sc_h ool.com
Christmas wish list that was By KIM GODWIN
Students at Eastern were early 'in
1999 in making their Christmas lists.
At Eastern, a vehicle was, by far,
. the most-wanted gift. Also, students
said they· wanted clothing, four-.
wheelers , and, there was a good
showing for no homewod&lt;! There
was only one request for world peace
.
- f~om Aaron Schaekel,.
But others did request selfless acts
of kindness. Senior Barbara Smith
. , felt sharing and giving were the
most important things, and Junior
Billy Jo Welsh 'thought that beirig
with family is very important. .
Semor R?btn Bamnger satd she
would have hked for e~ery?ne to
thm~ about the true meanmg of
Christmas, and Sophomore Enn GerardJUSI 'wanted everyone to get·what

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teacher Janke Wchcr,.,;aid that they·
they want.
•
·The most suggested gifts forst~- sim'ply wantcJ w he happy and
dents to give to other students were healthy. Junior English tcac~r Chad
things ·from Bath and Body Works, Griffith said he would like a new
house, and Special Education teacher
and channs.
Our faculiy · had their own ideas Diane Wolfe said thai she would just·
about Christmas. Guidance Coon- wanted to have her new house fin~
sel&lt;&gt;r John Redovian and Principal ished.
Rick Edwards wanted to have their
families home for Christmas, Mr.
Last, bot nbtleast, French Teacher
Edwards would also have liked to Rita Williams said that she wanted
take time to remember famiJy·mem - her own parking places- a w·ish that
b ·h h
d
Th b · most of. the seniors can. sympathize
ers w o ave-passe on. e ustness and accpunling teacher, Sheryl 'Yith.
·'
Roush , would have liked to see all
It's obvious that some teachers and
"A's" in her cl;tsses ~some of the .·· students .wanted the sanie things for
students would like for her to remem: · Christmas. There were a.wide variety
ber this wish when she grades their • of desires for the h.olidays1 'from
, tests!
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,
• health and happiness, to material
- The math. ·and science teacher, gain, but surely; everypne enjoyed·
John Taylor, and Hom.e ECPiiomics . ·celebrating the holidays.
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NEW INDUCTEES - These E•stem
High School students were recently
Inducted Into the National Honor Society,
at ceremonl•s held last month. They are,
from left, Josh Will, Amber Church,
.
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Jqey Taylor, Kim Godwin, Clnda Clifford
and Kr.isten Chevalier. Back, Juli Bailey,
Josh .Clark, Steve Weeks, Matt Caldwell
and Wes Crow.

Priv~te

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ner Dr. Stanley Prusiner, General forum space, .a sunken area sur-'
Asaociated Preaa Writer
Mills chairman Stephen W. Sanger rounded by steps, which can be used
· CINCINNATI-Ratherthari wait and Broadway produc~r Richard for speeches, group discussions or
and hope for voter approval of a tax Steiner, to pay for art classrooms and even Lego-building contests.
le_vy, the adminisu-ation at .Walnut science labs:
There is also an innovative "envi·Hills High School called on alumni
'Alumni were told classrooms ronmental courtyard" featuring rock
pf the century-old city school for · were getting way too cramped in the and soil beds i~tended ror hands-on·
·money to build an addition for arts . school's·mait\ building, in use since . experiments in geology, -biology;.
and science clas&amp;es. ·
'"'
1931. 'Oesk··chairs were pushed up zoology, chemistry and physics. SciThe $I 0 million wing opened in against each other.
enlist-consultants who suggested the
'mid-October. Alumni have pledged
• "My knees were up by the other ·· design of the courtyard and irrigate11
'$8.2 million toward· the project and person's elbows," said Joe Bartlett, a beds envision experi,ments including
ANGEL .T.REE Mem~ra of the chasing glfta for a needy Meigs CountY
'the administratidri expects to raise $2 . senior studyitig biology and environ- plantings, water filtration and stream
· National Honor Society,at Eutern High f•mlly. Pictured with their gifts are NHS
million more for long-term. maiQte- mental science.
.
· flow. . .
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,
niince of lhe addition. ·
. Expansion needs clearly would
Other · sch.ools ·also have tried
School participated In the Department of members.
.~,
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t•·
... : With the state's system of educa- not have been met by whatever share appealing to alumni or community
Human Services' Angel Tree project, pur·
....
tiona! funding enmeshed in a long the school might receive of any city- and business leaders to pay for addi'court battle, some public schools wide tax levy that voters approve, !Ions or renovations
. •
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around Ohio are going far beyond the said Debbie Heldman, executive ' r~-"----:----:---:---~--:---- --:------~---;-:---~----~-.:._--.....,.---'--_::~
~~~ bakc,salc alll'roach .in _
try.in&amp;.IQ · director of the school '-s alumni foun"!s~ n'i?ney, ll"vately ,for imRro~ · dation.
,.
'lnents.•.
"We have 84 schools in this dis'
: · Not aU have been successful li~e trict. Buildings are falling down," she
-:!Valnut Htlls, whtcli has a long h1s- said. "There's $700 million worth of
'
~cy- as a school that attracts academic needs in 'Cincinnati."
.:achtevers from around the city with
The addition provides 'amenities
:~n enriched curriculum,
such, as d:irkn,&gt;oms for photography ·
•
-: \he school reached out to gradu- classes - which also' include newer
ates, including 19?7 Nobel Prize win- digital methOds. There is an open

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If this is who you call whe~ you: need a fourth·•••

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William Righthouse . · ··

. Clyde Joseph Gilliand

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·Mary El_
iza.beth .-Carr

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Pome(oy .

RACO

Sentinel

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you ne.ed to hit The Trail.
FREEZING over a putt isn't just an· expressio~. Unl,ess you head
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BROUGHT CHEER - Members of the FCC LA club at Eaet•.
: em High School are pictured whh some cit the youngsters at
, the Gallla County Children's Home, who were given a Merry
; Christmas party, courtesy of the students. ·
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:rail. The word ha&amp; gotten around in Cold Gountry that the'
beautiful courses, the nice' weather
and the low rates
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_FCCLA ~pread cheer
i" pver holiday to kids ·

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Jones Cbif

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. Alabama are no0ing to sneeze at. ·And .while we ~n't

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2-night golf and ~btel paci&amp;ges as low as $162.

By MELISSA BARRINGER

. .
:· The Family; Careers and Community Leaders of America: formerly the t
f'HAIHERO ·group at Eastern High School, spread joy not only to peopl_e ,
~o ,can ha~e Christmas, but also to the young people at _the Children's Home
m Galhpohs.
.
·
•
; , During the recently-completed holiday season, students from the FCCL:A. ·
t)ied to ~pr:ead good tidings to the less fof\u~ Th~ FCCLA has be~n spread'71&amp; the JOY of Chnstmas at the Children's Home for almost 20 years.
• ~ch year, the organization gives toys and gifts to children who won't have
C::,hnstmas with their families. The manager of the home sends a list to the
~CCLA and the.members pick a name and buy a gift for the child.
! The FCCLA plans a party for the children and takes snacks. While they
oat, the members talk to and get to know the ahiJdren'at the home. By the .
t)me t(Je members leave, they have made .frienlfs who have touched their .
~earts and warmed their souls. Giving Clitisfmas' t6 a child.gives tlte FCCLA '
members· a wann feeling inside! . .
• •
; This is very i_~portant to the stud~flts, b:eP~\lfO they feel the n.;.d to and .
1an~facnon of giVIng a child a merry Christmas. The students like to see the ·
' children's faces ~nd to see how they react. It gives us happiness to see the
smtles on ,the children's faces.
· r

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ALABAMA'S

-R.QBER.T
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Protect. the iqgrtant

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Call 1·800-949-4444 for infonnation abmlt our 3-day/
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By

~y JOH.N NOLAN'

.

JUNE
June 2 - Meigs County Commis- ·
sioners
discuss asking voters for a
~INT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Terry Bretiten Myers Sr., 36, Point .Pieassales
tax
increase to stabilize county
11!1!, dted Saturday, Jan. 1, 2000 at his residence.
government.
Born July 8, 1963 in Mason County, W.Va., so,n of the late Herbert E. ana
June 3 - Angela Teaford of
Marcella Neal Myers, he was a truck dri•er for Myers Paving in Henderson,
Pomeroy was killed in an early mornW.Va.
.
.
ing
accident in Mason County.
Surviving _are a son, Terr:Y Br~nten Myers Jr. of Point Pleasant; a daugh_
June
4 - Millenni_al Crusade ·for
ter, Chatel Ntchole Myers of Pomt Pleasant; three brothers, Herbie (Mary)
Christ
held
at Meigs High School.
Myers and Larry (Kimberly) Myers, both of Henderson, and Eric' (Mary)
attracts
hundreds
of worshippers.
Myers of Apple ·Grove, W.Va.; and a sisler, Shirley DiaQe Taylor of Chesa.
June
6
-Another
archaeological
peake.
.
.
survey of the Portland area is con· He v:as •is&lt;? preceded in death by a sister, Cathy -Lee Myers.
.
ducted to look for tell-tale signs of
. Sery1ces _wtll be I p.m. Wednesday in the Deal Funeral Home, Point
Civil War combat.
·
Pleasant, With the Rev. Lee Baird officiating. Burial will be in the Beale
June
13Heath
United
Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove. Friends may call at the funeral heine from
MethodiSt
' Church celebrates 150
6-8 tonight.
1
years in Middleport.
.,
June 15 - Sandy lannarelli
assumes Middleport mayor's post following resignation of Dewey "Mack" '
~
•
Horton who suffered a stroke.
.
AUGUST
· - ·•
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June
20
Middleport
Village
POMEROY - William Righlhouse, 83, Pomeroy, died Moriday, Jan. 3, '
Aug. 1 '-EPA official urges Mid'!
-Council'
decides
to
seek
$455,000
in
.
' 2000 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
·
grant and loan funds for improvement tlleport. to take . some action &lt;i~
· Arrangements will be announced later by the Fisher Fune·ral' Home.
improving water quality in the v!~
NEW SYRACUSE MAYOR - Larry Lavender, right, was sworn In . to the sewage.system.
!age.
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Thursday n.l ght as Syracuse's new mayor. Lavender, a lifelong · June 26 - United Plant ~verli, a
Aug:
3
Pomeroy
Cou~ctl
. resident of the village, has served on . council for alx yeartl, 380 acre botanical sanctuary in Qtral at:Cepts $204,000 paving project, tif
Including four years as council president. He Ia also an Inactive Rutland Township, is dedicated.
June 27 - A new contract Mulberry, Union, Butternut Ave. anD
member of the Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department He Ia shown
:•
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BELPRE- Clyde Joseph "Joe" Gilliand, 80, Belpre, died Monday, Jan. being sworn In by out-going Mayor George Connolly. Lavender's between the Meigs County Commis- Lasley Street.
Aug.
4
_,.Teddy
Carpenter
is
co~
3, 2000 i~ St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
first Q'leetlng as mayor will be at 7 p.m. Thursday at.the munlcl· sioneiS and the Ohio Department of victed of manslaughter. He was dn~
Human Services is signed' as a step to
He was born in Meigs County, son of the late Clyde 0 . and Ruby Smith pal building. ·
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·
put welfare recipients· into paying ying the car at the time of the'acciderit
?illiand. He retired from Stevens Construction Co. after 35 yea IS of service.
in which Jennifer Sellers was ·convictjobs.
and was a member of Labc;&gt;rers Union Local 1085 in Parkersburg. .
ed.
. June 22 - Pomeroy Viliage
: He was a U.s'. Army veteran or World War II, and a member of t~e Little
Aug. ·8 - Judy King is named
Council
accepts a bid of a $1.1 n\il- ·
tlocking Church of Christ.
lion to extend the sewer line 'from new Meigs· County ·recorder by· th e
• He is survived by his wife o( 53 years; Dorothy Frazier Gilliand; five
Legion Terrace·to the Middleport cor· Meigs County Republican Central
a~ughters and three sons-in-law, Mary Jo Gilliand, and Sandra and Kevin
Commi« e.
,.•.
poration line.
$immons, all of Belpre, Brenda .and Roger Miller of Dayton, Debrah and
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Aug.
9
-&amp;ott
Smith,
D.O.
'ij
Randall Stevens of Marietta, and Kathy Gilliand Schaffer of Mineral Wells,
appointed to the Meigs cOunty Board
JULY
• ~.Va.; two SO:ns and daughters-in-law, Roger and Karen Gilliand of
s~id. Highs will be 2S-35.
·'
The Associated Press
July 1 - Judge Fred,W. Crow III of Health.
McCook, Neb., and Ronald and Melanie Gilliand ·ofVincent; 14 grandchil- . After getting a taste of spring·,
· The record-high temperature for
4ren and a great-l!randchild; two brolh~rs aild a sister-in-law, Altpn and Ohioans are being jolted back to real- this date at the Columbus weather files ah order halting the &amp;ale of items · Aug. 10•- Meigs Local voters -~­
decide bond/levy issue in Novemb4
~arge Gilliand of Salt Lake City. and Ottie Gilliand of Kansas; a sister, Gar. ity with the return of winter weather. · station was 67 degrees in 1997 while confiscated from Fred M. Priddy, to finance construction of three ne*
. ael Greenlaw of Florida; and niany nieces and nephews.
· This morning's lows in the 50s the record low was 10 below zero in Rutland, imprisoned on a charge of schools.
.
,
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: He was also preceded in death by three brothers and four sisters.
were also to be today's highs. The 1879. Sunset tonight will ~ at 5:20 possession of marijuana.
Aug.
15
Historical
mural
'!)II
.
July 8 - Tuppers Plains residents
: Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesd~y in the Leavitt Funeral Home, Belpre, merCl!rY was to begin a plunge that p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:54
City
National
Bank
building
is
dedf.
appear before the Meigs Commiswith Evangelist Stephen Fuchs officiating. Burial will be in the Rockland would bottom out in lhe teens and . a.m.
. .
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2-4 and 7-;9 p.m., low 20s tonight.
sioners
lo state their concerns about cated by P,omeroy village.
'
Weather forecast:
Aug. 16 - Meigs County Fiilr
the
operation
of
the
Regional
Sewer
~nd until the time of the servi.ct:S on Wedpesday.
The springlike weather on Mon- . Tonight...Cioudy with a chance
opens with Julie Spaun bei_qg
:day included mild temperatures, of snow showers. Lows in the mid System. July 9 - Water ·samples in Mid- crowned junior fair queen and K!lylil
heavy r~ins, thunderstQnns and even 20s. Northwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
•
dleport ·show contamination levels Salser and Rusty. Carnahan being
Chance of snow 40 percent.
.
a-rare January tornado watch. .
1
' named Meigs County's Little Miss ~
Wednesday... Becoming mostly ,increasing.
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Rainfall . amounts of from 2 to
and Mister.
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July
11
....,yeterans
groups
meet
: · POME&amp;OY- ~ary Elizabeth Cart, 99, Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Jan. 4, more the 5 inches caused flash flood- sunny: Colder with highs in the
Aug.
24
Middleport
pool
clos&lt;;:;
with
Meigs
Commissioners
to
discuss2000 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.·
'
ing of some rural roads and city lower 30s.
She was born Sept. 12, 1900 in Alfred, daughter of the late Lycurgus and ' Streets, especially in so~thern Ohio: · Wednesday night... Partly cloudy . . design for a propo'sed monument hon- · due to lack of patronage .and tl]i:
financial strain on village finances .. :
onng veterans.
.
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Jenny O'Brien Guthrie. She was a homemaker and'a member of the Orange Numeious stfeets w.ere ul)der water !j&gt;ws in the lower 20s.
Aug. 25- Meigs CommissioneiS
July
12
·
Dr
...
Hogh
H.
Davis,
Christian Church, l..ottridge,.
Extended forecast:
for awhile ·in Cincinnati.
who
donated
his
family
home
to
the
apply
for $445,0\)0 in state eapit~l
She is survived by a son, Willial!.' Carr of Reedsville; a daoghter, Thelma
'I:hursday ...Partly cloudy. Highs
.· With colder temperatures, linger- ·
funds
for major restoration of the
Meigs
County
Library,
is
honored
Mae Whitr of Long Bottom; and 14 grandchildren, 31 great-grandchildren ing rain will turn to snow showers in the upper 40s. .
•,
and three greal-great-grandchildien. ·
·
· Friday ... Mostly 'Cloudy. A chance with a rec&lt;;ption by the library staff. Meigs County Courthouse. ·
and flurries tonight and Wednesday,
·
Aug.
29
·
Meigs
County
opens
a
The
·
house
is
located
on.
the
lot
adjaShe was preceded in death by her husband, Jewell Carr; a son, Charles the National Weather Service said.
. of showers .iri_ the morning. Lows in
for
homeless
men.
shelter
cent
to
the
library.
·
Carr; a granddaughter, Kimberly Carr; and a great-grandson, Jeffrey. Allen
Little or no snow accumulation is the mid-30s and highs in midc40s.
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.White.
·
likely· except in extreme northeast
j Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Thursday in the Orange Christian Ohio, whero 1, 2 inches is possible.
decision based on the applications
Cemetery. Friends may call at the White Funeral Home, Coolville, from 6. It will become mostly sunny west
and a recommendation by Ander:8 p.m. Wednesday_.
and south on Wednesday, forecasters
son.
Said Blaettn~r. "The position has · 1-'~~~
from Page 1
been
filled, it can't be undone."
The group also purchased seven by manning the Meigs County Fair
Members
of the same group also
"Welcome to Racine" banners for Ticket Gates.
A motion to leave the metersjn griped about the condition of streets
RACO members expressed their . place passed, with council members
$50(); six purple-and-gold flags
in the Monkey Run neighborhood,
appreciation
to the community for Ballard, Larry Wehrung and Bryan.
from Page 1
which are displayed in the village
which is un'dergo,lng a .sewer line
for ballgames; and three cases of its generosity a'nd surport i~ making S~ank voting to keeJ&gt; the me\ers, replacement' project, and of the
:for Santa to distribute at "Christmas
supplies, paper towels, and other its e'ndeavors successful. ·
George Wright and ~usser voting ' street department's apparent reluc.·in the Park"·
The civic group originated_i'n Jan- · to bag them until March 30.
items for Star Mill Park.
tance to plow snow off the streets in
• Paid a third of the electric bil! at
New Councilman Victor Young that part of the village.
Funds were raised from ques, uary 1993, and meetings are at 6:30
Star Mill Park for use in festivals yearly yard sales, the food booth at p'.m ..ori the fourth Tuesday of each III abstained, saying he did not
Anderson said the residents were
and celebrations.
special e.vents including the flower . month at the American Legion Hall. have enough · information on the told before work began that the
· subject to make an informed deci - streets would b.e torn up. He said he
festival, July 4 and fall festival and New members are welcome.
sion.
would have !he contractor look at
To get a currentwe~ther
C~uncil also met with a contin· problem areas to make - the mad~
report, check the
Ohio was backing out of its end.of the gent colllplaining · about council's passable.
·
deal. ·
decision last month to ~ire an assisCouncil also discussed conductOhio
officials,
however, tant for Village Administrator John ing renovations to village hall,
announced in mid-summer 1981 that Anderson. More specifically, they including repairing rotting window
from Page
the money was available after all, but questioned why council did not frames and masonry work· on the
no expecteq start date was given. Ohio promote current employee Shannon outside of the buiiding. Musser said
on May 16, 1977 and was \'{lmpleted originally agreed to a simple widening
Spaun to the po~iti.on.
, he would check and see '{any grant
(~':'.;:3-MO)
Dec. 20, 1977. Thelotal cost of phase arid resurfacing of State Route 338,
Commuttlt)'
per Holdlnp. Inc.
They also questioned "council's funds were available to repair the
one Was $1,950,780.
but the Pomeroy Chamber of Com·hiring a non-resident to the 'posi- building.
Publishflt evrry lfternodh. Monday lhrouah
Phase two of the constru~Hon
Council also met in executive
Fridoy, ttt Court St., p, .• ,,oy, Ohi,o. by the 'involved ihe building of the approach merce did not accept that proposal. tion.
Ohio \lolky Publiotlina r·""t""Y· Se&lt;ond duo
The Chamber pushed for plans . for
\Ill
Musser said co unci I received ses~ion to discuss personnel , and
C:t~~ =:r;.;•~;;;_ ond ohc Ohio ~ ~~ bridgfe on the -Ohio side, and the completion of the previously short- four or five applications for the legal matters.
iblll) Ton Hris, Palitia Clallson, MdlaeiiMI:an
.
t&lt;lcwspol"' Aooocillion.
Ut tng o the land piers in Ohio. lived proposal to build a four-lane
Also present were Clerk Kathy
l'ollm-n Send oo!d"" oonecotons to The
That portion was done by the Carl M. highway 10 conneCt Route 33 and 7 to position, .which was advertised in
Hysell
and Fire Chief Chris Shank.
The Daily Sentinel, and made 'its
Dally s.,.;,t, Ill Court St., l'omeroy. Ohio Geupel Co. of Columbus. The ldlal
45'/0.
.
the bridge.
SUBSCRIPTION.RATES
cost of phase two was $1,563,700.
Th~ talk of the next steps to finally
Jl•' Conler or MD19r lloule
That portt'on began Apn'l 18, 1979, complete the -pro;ected 'rour-lane link. .·
One ~ell: •••.••- .........................sz.oo
· and was comp
·
I ted Au ·13 980
'
one Momb ................................$8.70
e
g. • 1 · ·
between Charleston and Columbus
one You................................... StOI.OO
. P~ase three GJf the projeci took are only now taking place. The
SINGLE
COPY
PRICE
exactly
17 months to comple· te and · Athens-to-Darwin ·section of the fourOoit
· 35 Cents
Subtcrl~.;·;;;;;·~i;i;;;·;;;·p;;;;w·;,.ie,.,., involved ,the building of the West Vir- lane is undergoing much debate. The
David CWJSidy, son of actors
"mit In odv•eo dtm:llo 'I'M Dill, Stnlnl""
giqia_approaches, and the placing of .
·
r
k h
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Evelyn Ward and Jack Cassidy,
h "' Vi , . ,
• lh,., six •• tz - " - · CndK witt bt . d .
project to tll I e two state captta s
1an p1ers on I e .. est ' trgtnoa stde of likely will take 30 years to finally
is the stepson of actress Shirley
..... canitr eoc11 ..... t.
Jones and the half brother of
1&lt;o oubocriplton by mall ponnllled io .... . ; the river, That . phase began shortly complete.
'
whae - . conieo -leo tuvllloble.
' began,
Shaun Cassidy.
·
Publitller iaer~&lt;.. .., dJII! 1o....., ntt1 duo· ' before' work on Ihe Oh'lO stde
When the bridge was. finished, the
. ~ ou mw ha~e· the option of Prot:ecttng your fa~,nily mem~rs
toi tho .-.tprion ptdoil. S.llocrlprlooi '"' on Jan. 3, .1979. The project was com- J.2•mile str~cture was built wiih
::l'ltre""~ by chonp,.llie pleted, however; two ~o~ths before 11,304,251 pounds of &lt;Siructoral steel,
' - ' or a business partner with low·cost
c
the Oh10 work was finoshed. Stevens 1,047,807 pounds of reinforcing steel,
Excavating of South Charleston · h~n- .. 9,241 cubic yards of substructure condied the West Virginia portion of ttie crete, and 3,201 cubic yards of superI0- ci: 20-Yeat le\.el tenn life
work at a cost of $2,011,810.
structure concrete. The total cost after
101 Off((( Will OPEN AT
.· The fourth and final phase was the completion stood at $18,619,472.
insura11ce from Auto-Owners ·
6:30 Pill fOil MNING SHOWS
longest phase, and took more than two
Ravenswood planned a full day of
12:30 PM FOR MAnNIE$
. years to complete. The superstructure a~tivities to celebrate the · bridge's
· .work _,was done by Bristol Steel' and opening. Singing and entertainment
Insurance O:&gt;mpany. Call us for more
Ironworks of Bristol, Va. The final was . provided free all day long at
Reader Services
phase was started on Sept. 27, 1979 "Riverfront Park. Free hot dogs and
deni~s and a competitive propo;al:
while the wort&lt;- on the approaches in beverages were served. There . was
Correction Polley
each state was being compl~ted . That even free shuttle bus service from the
On .,.,. co-n Ill oil llorlu Is lo be
phase was completed one day ahead Ravenswood Shopping Plaza to the
a«•nte. ir
lulow, or i1 error II •
... park so people couid park their cars in
11..,, C8lt the oeworeom ot (740) 99:Z.. of schedule on Oct. 30, 1981.
2155' We wiU dlcck JHr ldo1111ollool · Th~ project that seemed so won· town.
.Aum-Ownen 11uurtu1t:e
L)1e Home Car Business
oool•ollllocouoclloollhornoted. ·
•derful to most was not without its
On hand for the ceremony were
7!iill&gt;11.6tl.illoo4•
share of un~xpected doubt, however. ' RockefelLer, who cut ·the ribbon, and
Newa,Oepartmente ·
The doubt surfaced when Ohio Reps. Jennings Randolph and
n. "'"'" ••-• fl. m-2155. O.pon· announced, in la'e 1980; thai it had no ' Clarence Miller.
11e1t extaslo11 •re= ·
Gnirol Moo. .c......,................£•1- 1101 availabl e funds to widen State Route , The bridge that had started out as a
New• .............................................Elol.l10~ 338 as had been pledged earlier. This dream as early as 1928 finally became
214 Eaol Main ' '
. or EloL UN was bad news for those living in a solid fulfilled reality .on that SatorPo,...roy
Meigs County, and for the entire pro· day' in .October 1981. It was a project
992-6687 .
Other Servlcea
ject. West Virginia had recently com- that took four years to c6mplete. It
AdYertllloo .................. ,...........:....Ext.' 1114 ' Jl\eted the four-lane connector road was a' small part of a much larger proCl~nlotloto ......................:.........E•I· 1103
,'
Cloallled Ad&amp; ....................,:.......EJtL liDO f~'l'. 1-77 to t'he bripge, and it seemed ject that is still years from completion.

Springlike c_
o nditioris
yi_el~ to snow showers .

1110ney adds .class
to lstrappe·
d
s~hool
district
.

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July I+- Rep. John Carey talks
to t~e Meig:; . County Chamber of
Commetce on the rural job creation
initiation between the Ohio D partment of Devdopment and the Human ·
Services Department.
.
July 15 - Pomeroy Merchan.ts
discuss effect on their business as a
result of the new Wal-Mar:t to be built
in Mason, W. Va. Mason.
July 18 - Emmogene Hamilton
retires after 17 years as Meigs County recorder.
•
July 19 - Buffington Island Civil
War
re-enactment
draws
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.
. hundreds oJ,,;
re-enactors and spectators.
July 20 - Meigs 'Commissionerj
award contract to Rose Excavation t.:
extend water service into the Dex(il(
area.
··
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July 23 - · Commissioners .fa~
$449,000 deficit for 2000 and agai~
consider a sales tax ballot issue.
· July 28 - Meigs Local Board 9J
Education apprpves a new negotiate«
agreement with members of OAPSS

Review .

TuHclay, J•nu•ry.4, 2000 -

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The Dally-Sentinel• Page A 3 .~ '

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f'llleM -

Co1J!Inentary·

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Dear
Antl
Landers: I have
been married to
"Rick" for · 25
years. When we
first
married,
Rick's mother
.__......., welcomed me
into the family and gave me a lot of
attention.
': I enjoyed It initially, but soon, it
became smothering. She 'often came
into our home while we were at
work, and would clean the refrigerator, rearrange the fumirure, set aside.
. i1¢ms to be given away, straighten
6~1 my lingerie drawers, and replace
my husband's underwear. · She also
' 'went through our mail.
'
: . We were nice about it. and said
~Ill didn't need to work so hard but
!flat made no difference. She tri~d to

111. Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1102-2158 • Fu: 1102-21157

Community Newapap~r Holdings, In~.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

I

Dtfne Hill
Controller

Lttt.n to II,. .Jitot-,.. w.l.cCHN•. 71.j •bU H hu.llllllf J8fJ won&amp;. AU t.hm _,. •llbftd
lo flliilhtf Mil,.,.. IN lif•M •114 Jltdwi•Mtlnu•N ,ft.,luJifr
llruiJIIM l.u.n will
"' p11~.1Alm slwNII llr 111 JtHNIIAitr, tlllirft,;,l Wuu, 1101 ,-f'Jtllfolidll.
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TA. o,H.UOIIS r.rpnufl/ br dw ~w,..,. hlow.,. 11M coiUND., of tJ&amp;. Oltio v.u., 1'116/Uitbtl
Co.,_ ellltwWl ~ u•l.u ot•II"Wisr •otH.
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Our view:

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do household chores or be given
curfews, and that ibey should "enjoy
their childhood." Of course the children think she is wonderful.
When we tell Moni .to please
knock it off, she claims she is having
chest pains and can't take the stress.
Is there a solution to this'problem:oh
are we .. TRAPPED IN D.C.
DEAR D.C.: Rick's mother has
been in control for 25 years. You and
Rick are going to need counseling to
learn how to deal with her, because
it is apparent that you have been
unable to do it on your own . She is
wily, shrewd and manipulative .
Please get some professional help
on a contin ual basis, hecause Grand·
rna is going to fight ,you ~very inch ,
of the.~ay: Be prepared,
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
married for 22 years and have three

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Reunion held for- URG GEMS program

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j. Local preparedness for Y2K
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-effects deserving of praise

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give us money, but we told her we
wanted lhe pride of our own hard
work. She then bought us gifts we
·
could not return ,
After tolerating this for too many
years, !told her it was impolite to go
through another person's dresser
drawers and closets and that we valued our privacy. She was hurt, and
claimed we didn't love her or need
her anymore.
Since then , she no longer visits us
or allows us to take her outto dinner.
The only time we see her is when
she comes to visit the grandchildren. ,
Ann, the children are teenagers ·
now, and my mother-in-law spoils
them rotten. She gives therri money
and gifts, dges their homework.
buys them cars, and takes their side
in all arguments.
She says they should noo have to

'

: Just minutes after the clock struck midnight, the ball had descended
:in' Times Square and the world entered a new millennium; it could be
:said with some confidence t)le end had not COf11e- and wasnlt likely to
•
: artytime soon. ·
·
' The transition from i 999 into 2000 did not see nuclear missiles criss••crossi_ng the skies, planes crashing into our back yards and every civi; lized.nation on Earth plunged into eternal darkness, as the worst predic- ,
: lions of the Y21_( Buj! claime~ ~as po;;sible..
.
.
. • After absorbmg these facts Wtlh rehef, restdents of Galha, Metgs and
:Mason counties also could take some satisfaction in knowing plllns
:developed by iocal officials to cope .with disaster of some kin(! did noi
:have to be implemented.
cious to my successor during the transition
And although warnings are still By JOSEPH PERKINS
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voiced that we're not out of the woods
So_ we closed the books on 1999. And wh~l between our two administrations - even if he
'~
· ·
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kn
h · · . headhne:; the year gave us. In January, the prest· happens to be a Republican.
.yet, tl ts comfortmg. to. 0~ a~I onlt~s dent was tried by the Senate for impeachment (an
Hillary Rodham Clinton: T~ refrain from blamwere _.ready ~o take actton tf. glitches m ignomi'ny which he shares with only qne previous ing a "vast right' wing conspiracy" in the. event
our mcreasmfo\IY ~mpute~t~d world occupant of the nation's highest office).
New York state voters decline to elect me to the
In March,- NATO went to . war . agai~st U.S. Senate. To apologize to Gennifer Flowers,
caused havoc tf 1!'8l'Stve m~m~rames and .
personal hard dnves malfuncttoned.
Yugoslavia (its first military operation against a Paula Jones, Monica Lewinsky and all those other
At the region's 911 and emergenqy sovereign co.untry) after lhe g0&gt;1ernment of Slobo- women I a\'('used Qf lying about my husb;~nd. ·
Vice President AI Gore: To stop claiming to be
centers, officials and staffers monitored dan Milosevic refused to sign the Kosovo .peace
"saddened,
sickened and ashamed" of Bill Clin·
the situation.and were prepared t_o act if agreement; : .
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. . . .
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ton's
misconduct
in office, while also insisting
utilities failed and hazards arose. Those
In Apnl, two !een-agers m Ltttleton, ·Colo.•
preparations were, in some cases,. years. shot and killed 12. of .their classmates and one that he is "one of our gl'l'atest_presidents. " To not
in the making after the first hints of a l~och~r at Columbme t:I•gh School .. In May, ~he even thinlc-about raising campaign ti,nance reform
technological breakdown caused by btparttsan Cox . Comm•ttee reported that Chona 'as an issue given the illegal donations I helped
·
h
'II
·
had stolen secrets to many of the nuclear weapons raise during lhe last presidential election. To not
entry mlo t e new mt enmum were sug- me
· th u•.
s arscnal . _
allow my race for the White House to be hijacked ·
.
ges
·
In July, John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife and his by the usual Democratic special interests - big
~an
.0
local_ level, the _concerns were ·sister-in-law died in a plane crash en route to labor, the teacher unions, trial lawyers and envi- .
not so-much wtlh the accidental launch- Martha's Vineyard.
· ronmentalists.
·
Geori;e W. Bush: To be the first Republican·
ing of warheads, or the unleashing of the furies, .as the late, (l\ffiented
In September, NASA lost touch with its $125
presidential candidate to t'!'IY compete for the
Fox TV series "Millennium" prop&lt;ised . ll .was a question of helping peo-- million Mars Climate Obseryer.
pie survive if sources of energy, fuel and food were crippled, however
In .October, the stock market declined. 630.05 minority vote. To keep peace between my part(s
.
temporarily, by computer failures.
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points (5.9 percent) during a on~:we_ek stretch, the 'conservative and moderate wings.
sen.
John
McCain
:
To
acknowlcdg~
that I am
The fact that plans were in place to meet emergencies effectively and largest weekly pomt decrease.'" ~tstory and lhe
exploiting
the
very
campaign
finance
rules
I have
swiftly deseiVes our appredation, even if it appears at this point they largest weekly percentage dechne _tn tO y_ears.
weren 'I needed. Needed or not, having a response of some kind is a trib_In December, the Do~ Jones mdustnal a~er- .criticized by transferring $2 million in cash left
over from my last Senate campaign to my presiute to long-range planning by officials and the 'community.
ages roared to a record htgh. . .
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So now ot's on to the new year (and decade and dential campaign (effectively enabling atleast250
.
, These preparat.tons pro~e that tn a? age ?fwtd.esprea~dtstrust of gov- century and millennium). And we can lhink of no of my backers to double the legally , allowable
ernment, the fact tt c~ asstst peo~le m pertlous ltmes g!ves us assurance better way to get 2000 off to a good start than to $1,000 contribution to my presidential war chest).
our-tax dollars are betng spent wtsely. Although the In-state area expe- propose the following resolutions to the following
• Steve Forbes, Gary Bauer, Alan Keyes: To get
rienced balmy weather for late December this past weekend, conditions news-makers:
'
elected to a lower office (governor; senator, reprecould have gone in the opposite direction. Given that, a .family facing
President Bill Clinton: To disabuse myself of sentative, mayor, city councilman, school board)~
-the failure'of its l!eating source, w!ller and basic comforts would find aid · the cockeyed notion that my impeachment was an· before presuming to run for pres.idenl ag~in :
Chinese President Jiang Zemen: To make i(
from e~rgency crews most welcome.
"honor" (as I told a national television audience)
: This kind·of help has been seen in the past when severe snowstorms, because it gave me ·an opportunity to defend the . easier for free·lrade advocates' in the United States
frigid conditions and flooding have put our neigh~ors in danger. The Cqnstitution. To make 2000 ~he one (and only) to make the case both for permanent norm al trade
work of police, firefighters, EMS personnel and the National Guard in scandal-free year of my p_restdency. To be gra· reJations (formerly most favored nation) status
gettillg citizens struck by disaster into a safer environment, by evacua.
tion or simply supplying the.m with simple things like fool! and blankets: Wash~ngton
has become normal procedure he[e. , .
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HAPP'f N~ '/EAR

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RIO GRANDE · , Hogh
school gorls participating in the
1999 Girls Emerging in Mathe·
matics and Science Program
(GEMS) at the University of
Roo Grande and the Rio Grande
Community College held a holi day get-together on the Rio
Grande campus on Saturday, ·
December II . Hattie Taylor,
MS,W, assistant profes'sor of
social work, · was the guest
speaker:

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GEMS is a su mmer enrichment program for girls in Galli a.
Meigs, Jackson and Vinton
Counties. Participants do chemis try, environmental science,
physics; piology and ,computer
science laboratory activities · as
well as problem-solving · and
hand~-6n-activities in mat he·
matics. Last summer 51 girls
participated in the program
whi t h was spon sored by the
RGK Foundation .

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Perkins' view:

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The Summer 2000 pEMS
proghm, directed by University
of Rio Grande mathematics pro·
fessors Pushpa Agashe, Ph .D. ,
and Barbara Hatfield, Ph .D.; is
open oo interested girls entering
the 9th . I Ooh , or lith grades in
the fair of 2000. For'more in for·
mation contact the Unfversity of
Rio
Grande
Mat hematics
Department at 1-800-282-720 I'
extension 7247, or e-m·ail:
mathematics.rio.edu .

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Some suggestions for New Year's resolutions

The fact this
kind of help is
available, and
people are will-.
ing to face the ·
risk and just do
.it is something
for which we all
be thankful. .

with my country, as well as World Trade Organi·
zation membership, by renou'\cing the · unfair .
trade practices that have enabled' us to rack up a,
$6.0 billion trade surplus at U.S. expense.
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, Senate Majori·
ty Leader Trent LoU: To dispr.ove the cynics ivho:
say that Congress Will undertake no meaningful:
.
legislation during an election year.
House Minority Leader Richard Gepl!ardt,:
Senate Minority leader Tom Daschle: To resist the · temptation to play the obstructionist role ali: ·
year in hopes of regaining control of Congress.
Federal Reserve Chairm311 Alan Greenspan: To '
stay the course-in fine-tuning the U.S. economy;
after all, I can't argue with success (low unemployment, low inflation, low interest rates, rising
productivity and healthy growth in the nation's '
gross domestic product). ·
Assistant 'Attorney . Gener~l Joel Klein, ·
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates: To sit down ,
together over a·cup of latte; without our battalions
of· lawyers, and work out an amicable, reasonabl~
setllemenl of the gov·ernment's antitrust. suit
,
against the software giant.
Pete Rose: To stop pretending to be some sort
of martyr because I have .been denied _admission to
baseball's Hall of Fame, given my repeated
denials that I bel on baseball, despite overwhelm·
ing evidence to the contrary. .
Chris Ofili: To find some other way to mak~ a
name for myself in the art world .than to create
works deliberately intended to offend, like my
pain~ing "The Holy Virgin Mary," which I de&lt;:orated with elephant dung.
Ronald Reagan: To ride off peacefully into the
sunset of my life.
·
(Joeeph Perkins Is a columnist for The San
Diego Union-Tribune.)
' ·

. Had there been major problems caused by' Y2K, it's a safe bet offi~
.
cials and citizens alike would have rallied to put things back into plfice. •
That they had a plan to work from is a further relief t.o those of us who By JACK At!!DERSON
·
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aRd
DOUGLAS
COHN
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know how nature, and not just a techno-catastrophe, can make us ·all ' WASHINGTON _ The Internet. is one of lhe.
vulnerable.
·
·
great innovations of the century, but it may be comPlanning for the worst is one of those things we don 'I like. to tilink ing with a sufprising political price. Internet voting
about. But we can all take comfort in knowing disaster relief plans and and polling could democratize our pOlitics, but,not
' volunteerism, even if .there is never a &lt;;all to use them, are in place when .. necessarily forth~ better. •
.
.
· the going gets tough.
Our Founding Fathers feared the tyranny of lhe
majority, which is why they established a republic.
. ralher than a demoeracy and incorporated safe·
guards into lhe Consti!Uiion. Chief among these
WB$ the Bill of Riglits, which was intended to pro·
teci the ultimate minority- the individual- from
By The Associated .Press '
that tyrannical majprity. Yet, as politics becomes
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 4, the fourth day of 2000. There are 362 days left increasingly poll-driven and voting becomes more
in the year.
widespread, that majority will'become stronger and
· · Today's Highlight in History:
·
·
·
stronge~ ·
,
·
· On Jan . 4, 1965, President Johnson outlined the goals of his "Oteat Soci· ~ Many of the most Important decisiOfiS made by
ety" in his State of the Union Address. ·
·
our elected officials did not have public approval at
On this date:
the lime they were deCided. When President Harry
tn· 1809, Louis Braille, i~venlor of a reading system for'the blinil, wail 1\-uman 's European Recovery Program, known as
born in Coupvray, Franc~.
·
.
In 1821, Elizabeth Ann Seton, who would be the -first native-hom American saint, died in Emmitsburg, Md.
In 1885, Dr. William W. Grant of DavenP?rt, Iowa, performed what is _
.

On this.date in history •••

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Now, with the a'ilvent of the Interne~ and thelhe Marshall Plan, was implemented.in 1948, only ·
15 pereent of the American electorate approved, yet likelihood that voting by Internet wiil btcome ·a
it resurrectec;l Europe. It set a stan'dard for treating reality, a higher percentage of the population will he
defeated enemies that the world had not previous)y exercising the right to cast a ballot. Indeed, jt -!s
y.oitnessed and established the United States as a often said -that it is more than a right; it is a respontrue beacon for peace and -prosperity in the midst of sibility. But is it? More probably, when voting is
global devastation.'
made so simple, more and m0re uninformed citi•
Other equally unpopular decisions of nol,e zens will participate, deteriorating that enlightened
include the purchase of Alaska, the pre-World War base deemed so critical for the selection of wise
II draft and integratipn of the anned forces. These representaiives,
were cour~geous decisions rriade by elected offiEven m0re disturbing will be the Internet's
dais who understood they had been sent to Washimpact on the day-to-day decision-making process
ington for their wisdom rather_than their obedience.
as
presidents, senators and representatives conduct
. · Allhough our system of government assumed
the existence of an enlightened electorate, the pub· instant Internet polls and rely U!X!R them when vot-,
'lie, as the Founding Falhe!S realized, would never ing: This will have the effect of changing our reput)..;
be fully engaged -in the , daily decision-m,aking Iii!' into a democracy, in which every individ.....
process. Citizens . were expected to display that votes cin every issue. lt.would tie an Internet forrnq..:
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enlightenment at the ballot bOx and then go about , Ia for political disaster.
(Jeck Anderton and Douglaa Cohn a~
their lives, leaving to their elected repreSentatives
columnists for United Featura SVf!dlcate.) :;
the responsibility of day-to-day governing.

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pollution. So, I think if. the EPA. is gestapos and tyrants. Well, next time
, going do something about pollution, you go. to work, look around you.
Go8 bless it
·
Big business doesn't truly want a
The fact is, the cancer rate in the clean and safe environ!nent for us all ·
Ohio River Valley is one of the pigh· to live in. They only care about the
~st cancer rates in the United Slates. bottom line.
·
We hav.e several .pollution-spewing
Well, maybe the bottom line
factories and plpn(S in our back should ·change. The bottom ,line
·yard. Gavin Power Plant put in shoul'd be the air we breathe, the
scrubbCrs to clean theJoxic fumes, . water we drink, the natural ,wildlife
· but I don't think that's working too that surrounds us, and most impor· ·
welL We are ~till .gellinl:l pollution, tantly, the lives of ourselves and
and lots of it So, if the New Eng· future generations.
land slates are the only ones who are
The truth· is. there are so many.
· going to complain, I say go for it. · • alternate forms of energy oul there,
RogeFS, you liken the EPA to that we all could.live in clean world..

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There is geothermal power, hydrq ·
power, wind, solar power and man~ :
'more. All these sources of power art ·:
abundantly better for our environi ·
ment.
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Nothing will change until w( .:
start sJieaking up. We need to tell ·.
these companies we are tired of liv; '.
ing in a polluted ~orld. We need tc,:
tell them to provide us these .alter· :
nate forms of energy at an afford-·
able price.
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When ive start speaking up, lheS&lt; :.
companies will start to change.
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Ne~bylaws
POMEROY - A new set of
by-laws to comply with House
Bill 674 passed in the last session
of the legislature, has been
approved by the .Ohio Valley Area
Libraries (OVAL) Board of
Trusoees.
The legislation changes OVAL
from a public libra,.Y organization
.. to a multi-type library organiza. tion and Jllandates representation
on the Board for school, academic and other types of libraries in
the region.
The new by-laws frame a new
structure for OVAL Over time,
· as the other types of liEraries in
the region join the organization,
they will reshape the organization
to meet the wider needs of the
new members, said Eric Anderson, director. Tliis growlh will
maintain OVAL's ability to aid all

adopted by OVAL
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libraries to se rve their use rs in the
· next century.
In other business: .
.
- tlie Board.approve&lt;!. a State
Library tran sfer request niadc by
director and recommended by the
Librarians' Advisory Committee .
Anderson's proposal is to add
another web server to the OVAL
hardware configuration which
suppor.ts the web sites of the
member libraries. ·since Juiy.
OVAL servers have handled more
than I .5 million hits. The' new
server will provide space to support the growth of ·member
.·library web sites. ·
·
• .- reviewed plans for several
· upcoming trustee events. The
annual meeting will be conduct('d
in January, OVAL will host an
OPLIN Filtering WorkshOJl at the
Northside Branch of the Chilli-

Ti~e
BY BECKY
BAER
Meigs
County
EXtension

Agent
REUNION HELD • Pictured from left, front - Lesko, Stacev White. Third Row: Sheila
· row: Krystal Pennington, Bethany Elliot, Cook, Crystal! Cottrill, Shannon Rankin,
. Tracl Eddie. Second row: Andrea Neff; Jennv Abby Jones, Stephanie Evanlch, Julia ·aooth,
• . Whlf~· Sarah Gibson, Allison. Heddon, Hlllar~· .Amanda Wilcox.

-------- Community Calendar---· · The Cornmunily Calen~ar is pub- . mcnt, T~csday, I to 7 p.m;, Meigs
lished as a free service to non-profit Multipurp ose Center. Pomeroy.
groups wishing to announce meet- Take immunization record. Each
ings and special events. The calen- children to be accompanied by par.. dar is not.designed to promote sales ent or guardian. , .
or fund raisers of any type, Items are
printed only as space permits and . WEDNESDAY
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
MIDDLEPORT - The Midm especific number of days.
port Literary Club, i p.m Wednesday. ~ orn e of Jeanene Thomas. Pat
·. TUESDAY
" Holter to review ''Stra'1o'berries in
' MASON - Cancer Support the Sea: by Elisabeth Ogilvie. AnnuGroup will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. al al business meeJing with election of
the . Mason United · Meohodist officers.
·
Church. All area cancer patients ,
families and caregivers are invited. · THURSDAY '
POMEROY
Alcoholic s
POMEROY - Immuni zation Anonymous open meeting, 7 p.m.
clinic, Meigs Cpunty Health Depart.. · Thursday, Sacred Heart Catholic

r

mlhe and J!,oss County Public
l:ibrary in February, and use the
regularly scheduled meeting date
in March ·oo co nduct' a dinner
meeting regard ing library certificati on proposals being discussed
in lhe library c-ommunity.
OVAL is a cooperative region- :
al library sysoem chartered by the
Stale of Ohio in 1973. Its mission
is to provide con.tinuing · educalion, resoUrce sharing and innovative ·services to·and foster cooperative efforts among libraries in
the southern Ohio counties of
Athens.-Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs. ·Pike, · Ross , Scioto and
Vinton.
.
Wanda Eblin serves . on the
OVAL Board and is a represenla·
tive of Meigs County District
Public Library.

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Church, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
POMEROY
friday's Fun
Food and fellowship project at
God's NeighborhQod Escape for
Teens. Nutritional food s fre e, nonviolent games, computer programs;
cards. p.OOI avai lable. Located Main
Street, Pomeroy. Center opens at 6
p.m. and closes at 1030 p.m . on Friday· and Saturday nights.
SATURDAY
CHESTER- Chester Township
Board of Trustees, year-end meting.
Chester townhall, Saturday; 8 a.m.
Organizational ·meeting to follow.

Family and
Consumer

Out For Tips

ment become s~oner 'and wider, so.
it doesn't fit as well as it did before
it was washed.
Examine the garmei11 to see that
the fabric is cut on the grain. Side
seams should 'not' be twi sted to the
front or back. Some shirts won 't
have side seams, In this case, si nce
seams can't serve as a gu,ide , make

Another factor that should be
considered when buying T-shirtS is
how the garment is constructed.
Look for smooth and even neck
bands , sleeve edges and hems .
Shou-lder seams should be rein forced I'?_ preserve the garment's
shape . Scrged or ·overcast. seams
allow stretchiness, while giving a
smooth look. The neckband should
be resilietlt enpugh to go over the
head, but then return to its initial
shape ..
'
Launder the shirt according to
the instruction~ dn the labeL If there
is an iron-?_!1 transfer, the shirt may
oieed to be washed inside out. Special trims may require special laun"
dering procedures. Make sure these
special features are sturdy.
Shins in deep, rich colors may be
washed se parately in cold water and
dried flat; whereas, while or gray ,
shirts may be washed in. hoi or
warm water and dried iq the dryer.
Before buying, ory on the shirt to · .,
check the fit Sizes vary greatly
from one manufacturer to another:
Ohoose .onc that has plenty of room
across ohc ~ boulders and in the ·

sure that the vertical loops are perpf!ndicplar to ,the lower hem.
· The' permanent care ' label ·will
Sclencei/Cornmunlty Develop·
ment
·
' tell which fibers . were used in ·the
production of the shirt Colton is
One ·garment th ai almost cvc.ry- most often' u~cd because it is
one· owns is a T-shirl. No longer absorbent and comfo roablc .
worn only as undergarments , TIf the T-shirt is made of IOOo/r
shirts have become a fashion-,trend. cotton, it will probably shrink,
They can be seen on people of all unless a special finish has been
ages, shapes and sizes. The shirts added to it Those that are 50o/c colcan come in ·a wide variety of styles, ton/50o/c polyesoer or simi Jar pro•
coloni, trims and prices. ·
,
portions may not ~ brink as much as
Do you know what you should those labeled as beink all cai ton .
The .polyester not only 'helps reduce
look for when selecting aT-shirt?
When purchasing a T-shirt, be shrinkage, byt also inhi'bits wrinsure to check for good quality. Will kles. · · .
Without shrink-resistant treat1it keep its shape after washing?
Check t~e appearance of the knitted ment s, some shirts may shrink us
' loops . If the::._ are plump and round - much as five percent. This means
ed, they woll have a.,grealer chance that you should buy a large r size to
of retaining lhc shape of ohe shiro.
compensate for it Even with some sleeves.
If the loops arc pulled and shrink-resistant finishes, the shirt
By carefully selecting and caring
.stretched, then they spring back to may still decrease in size . Read the for a T-shirl, you dm !{}crease its
their original rounded shape after label carefully to know if a larger wearability and use for a long time.
laundering. This can make the gar- size may be needed.
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Bening to take brea~ fr.om acting .to be w.ith children
1 - - - - - - - - . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·Annette
NEW YORK (AP) - Pregnant ed ...
in "Ibsen 's Hedda Ga~ler."
Moni'ca Lewinsky tells Larry King she's moving on with her life

' WASHINGTON (AP) - Focus- . mer White House intern said she
ing on her new role as a weight-loss 'bears some responsibility for what
·spokeswoman, Moni ca Lewinsky happened to Clinton, but now wants
said she hopes her involvement in to put that part of her life behind her.
· the scandal that led to President
Lewinsky, 26, steered away from
Clinton's
impeachment
tri al questions concerning her feelings
becomes a-shrinking historical fool - about former friend Linda Tripp, but
note.
did mention first lady Hillary Clin·
In an appearance Monday on ton ,
··
CNN's "Larry King Live," the for"l have a lot of P"jSOnal remor~e

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for what she's gone through and I'm
sure what their daughter, what
Chelsea has gone through," she said.
w~@ asked about her lawyers
and her remaining legal bills,
Lewinsky became visibly uncom·
fortable, but said she was thankful
for their work to obtain her immunl'·
ty.

with. her fourth child, Annette Ben·
ing has decided·to take a break from
acting . .
The star of '"American Jioouty"
told More· magazine that pregnancy
suits her well.
"I feel ellhilarated," she said in
its February issue. "Kind of liberal~
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TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS

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1n order to vote In the March 7, 2000 Primary Election yo1,1 must be registered
· ·
. . by February 7, 2000. · • ·
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at he·board on Election Day by
. changing your address (If you have moved within the .county) or Jflyou have
. changed your name, by updating your registration by February 7, 2000.
The board of elections
be C)pen the following additional hours for your
..
. convenience:
January 18-January 11: 8:00a.m. tlll4:30 p.m.
January 24-January 28: 8:00 a.m ..till 4:30 p.m.
.Jan·uary 31·February 4: 8:00 a;m. till 4:30 p.m.
. · · February 7: 8:00 a.r:n. •Ill 4:30 p.m.
,. .
You may also register .-t the following loc~tlons: Meigs County Department
of H"'mans Servlcie, Meigs County Wic Office, Bureau of·Motor
Vehicles, Board of MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library, Middleport Public Library,
· Raclrie l'ubllc Library, Meigs County Treasurer's O.fflce, and alt area high
· ·
schodls. · · .
. . ·
For any additional information, call ~-2697, stop by our office at 112
.
..
Mulbe.,Y Avenue; Po~eroy, Ohio.
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The
Bening, who is married to Wao:ren · movie "What Planet Are You:
Beatty, said her de ~ision to take at From?" was next. and is due out this
least I 1/2 years off from acting spring.
comes on the heels of an intense
''I was. just ·ov.eracled, ,, Bening .
year.
.
.
sa id. " If I had to come up with one
After fini shing "American Beau- more emotional moment, I was
ty '' she headed immediately to Los 1going t? kill myself.' '
Angeles for a month of s ta~e work

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Are You A Resident of Meigs County?·

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Sticking,up .for the Environmental Prote~1on . gency ;:

In 1896, Utah was admitted as the 45th state.
·· In 1948, Britain granted independence to Burma.
Dear EditQr:
In 1951, during the Korean conflict, North .Korean and Communist Chi· :· I'm writing in response to Lowell
nese forces captured ihe city of SeouL
Rogets,'-letter wrote1aboutthe" EnviIn 1960, French author Albert Camus died in an automobile accident at ronmental Protection Agency. · ·
age 46.
·
. R'ogei-s. you call this action "the
In 1965, poet T.S. Eliot died in London at age 76.
'Enviro~mental Protection Agency's
In 1974, President Nixon refused to hand over tape recordings and'docu· latest 'dog'·and pony show.' " You
ments subpoenaed by -the .Senate Watergate Committee.
'
say it is comical New York and
In ]987, ·An Amtrak train bound .from Washington to Boston collided Connecticut are jumpi~g ·on· the
with Conrail engines approaching from a side track in Chase, Md., ki_lling .16 bandwagon. ·
· ._: .
people. •
,·
1 feel sorry for y~u, tf yoo find
Today's Birthdays: Actress Jane Wyman is 86. ActresS Barbara .Rush is the environment comtcat I do agree
73. Football Hall of Fame coach Don Shula is 70. Former heavyweight box· we are nollhe main reason for New
ing champion Floyd Patterson is 65. A'l:tress Dyan Cannon is 63. Ope'ra .. York's pOllution problems. Howe~singer ·Grac,e Bumbry is 63. Maureen 'Reagan is S9. Country singer Kathy :ell it is clear n~y around here'$,
Forester (The Forester Sisters) is 45. Actress Ann Magnuson is 44:
.aoing to do ~yth!llf a~ut our own

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Our -readers' Vl·ew
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~!i~v~a~~i~:~e.been the fi~l appehdectomy; the patient was,. ~2,ye~r-old

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In-ternet m_..'ay .hav
-.e SU_rpn
-·s·ng
p·olt't··1cal .· pr1·c9. ·
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'fhefa~•:thiskindofhelpisavailable,andpeoplearewillingloflll=t

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Merry-Go-Round:

lher'is~andjustdoilissomelhingforwhichweaucanbelhankful.

children. My husband · and I love still dream about i't every night, even to cope with the. hand life has dealt
them dearly, and they know it. though I know it meant nothing to them. I urge you lo seek this kind of
Unfortunately, my husband and I do him.
•
assistance.
A marriage counselor won 't help,
not love each other, and never have.
For openers, it might help lf
I don 't know why we married.
because there is no love to recapture. you'd get out of the guest room and
"Cliff' and I have been in this ·Cliff once told me I was the ugliest try to thaw him out a little. Th41
loveless arrangement since the wed· woman he had ever seen . I am no would be a good place to start.
ding, and we haven't had sex for the ' beauty, but I do try to look pice a~d
I have trouble sleeping at night
last 10'- years. He was never very keep my figure in good shape.
and don 't want to get involved in a
good at it The sex part doesn 't bothI'm only 47, Ann, and don 't want ;_ novel~ :A Collection of My Favorite
er me. 1 ~ctually prefer it this way. to wait forever to find love and hap-., Gems of the Day"' is the perfect bedI've been s)e~ping in the guest room piness. I am utterly miserable, and stand mate. Send a self-addressed.
because Cliff snores and I need my don 't know what to dp. Please , long, business-size· envelope and a
rest.
please, give· ·me some advice. .. check or money order for $5.25 (this.
Divorce is not an option right STUCK FOREVER IN KEN- includes postage and handling) to:
now .. I simply cannot afford to be a TUCKY
. Collection; c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
single mother with three children:
DEAR KENTUCKY: Ypu need . Box, I-1~62 , Chicago, IlL 60611 ·
·we barely manage our mortgage · outside help. ¥our notion that mar- 0562 (In Canada, $6.25). To find out
payments, and have no savings. I am riage coun.seling ~ an "recapture more about Ann Landers and read
envious of my friends.. who seem to love"· is a false one. Ca,unseling can, her past columns. visit the Creators
be happtly married. On my birthday, · however help people mend the bro- S§bdicate web page at www.crea male fri~nd gave me a hug, a~d I kerl pieces iri relatignships and ,learn ators.com .
I

\Safe, not sorry
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The Dally Sentinel • Paige A 5

.~anipulative mom h~s been controlling family too-- long - can she ~e stopp~d?

- T.stufisfwf tn 1948

.Charlan• Hoeflich1
General Managa'r

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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The Daily Sentinel

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing E!mor

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file~, JanU81Y 4, 200P

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CONGRATULATES

"'.~

Pat Hill and Marshall McCorkle ·

for their outstanding sales ·
performance in DECEMQER
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· Hill and McCorkle ·
sat•• collllultent · have shoW.n exceptional personal
effort and professionalism in .their automotive
careers.
This commitment
is appreciated by ~hejr.
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mq,ny loyp,l. customers and the Turnpike family.
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&lt;3t.A..LLIPC&gt;LIS

URNPIKE

195 UPPER IIYEI IOU .

rfrij+&gt;
Mercur

7&amp;0·

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Pagett

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

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Tue.ct.y, JMUIIfY 4, ~ :
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Inside: T,oday'S scoreboard- Pave 1o'
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TUESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS

Falcons hold·on to beat·49ers·~~

ANN(J JI ICf 1•1E t, TS

KIT 'N' CARL VLE ® by Larry Wright

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Persona..

Eastern defeats
South Gallia
MERCERVILLE - Desp1te a
slow start, the Eastern ,llagles ralhed
' to cla1m a 74-61 non-league wm over
South Galhll Monday mght 1n Mercerville
Eastern.(2-7) placed four g~rls m
double figures, Jed by JUnior .point
ft.Uard Amber Baker's 23 pomts and
JUmor Juh Bailey 's 21 pomts Amber
Van ,Stckle and Becky Dav1s had II
pom! each
Stacy Wh1te had 22 for South
Gal ha wh1le Rachel Waugh added
18
Eastern hit 19-of-43 two-pointers,
3-7 thrcc-pomters, was 27-for-38 at
the hne Eastern had 28 rebou
ed
by Dav1s w1th e1ght and Bai y
seven The Lady Eagles had te
asSISts (Baker 3, Dav1s 3), four steals
(Spencer 2, Baker 2), and SIX
turnovers

South Galha(l-8), wh1ch was 22of-51 overall from the field, made 17
of 39 twq-pouiters and 5-of-12 threepomters The Rebels had 23
rebounds (Waugh had mne), 13
ass1sts (Wh1te had five), SIX steals
(Holly .md l''anya Haner hatl two
eac~ ) and 13 turnovers
Eastern won the reserve game 3213 led by Janet Calaway and Sara
Mansfield w1th e1ght each and Holly
Brodenck w1th SIX Heather Temple
had four for South Galli a
Eastern goes to Tnmble Thursd,Jy
South Galha hostS&gt; Symmes Valley Thursday

Southern falls to Ohio
Valley Christian
RACINE ·_ Oh1o Valley Chnsttan rallied late m the game to ~la1m
a 66-55 non-league gtrls' basketball
contest over Southern

tn

Racme

Mo 0 day mght
Southern JUmped to an early
- lead, but by the end of the first penod OVCS erased the def1c1t and lead
18-14 Southern fell behmd as much
as e1ght pomts m the f1rst half, but
behmd a 16-pomt f~rst half from
Kat1 Cummms came back to 29-28
at the mlt:rm1sslan
Southern stayed close with tis
best effort of the year, but tra1led
43-38 after three quarters, then
OVCS poured 11 on for a 66-55 wm
late m the game
Cummms had 22 pomts, followed by Heather Dalley's 10,
Chelsa Gooch led OVCS with 24
pomts, while Abby Meyn had 13
and Tessa Haggerty had 12
Southern (1 7) h11 26 of-62 f1eld
goal attempts and flmshed 3-for-10
at the tout line The Lady Tornadoes
hauled m 4) rebounds (Dalley 14,
Brauer 10) SHS had 27 turnovers,
SIX steals, 11 ass1sts and 21 fouls
• OVCS (7 0) h11 26-of 51 field
goal attempts and 13-of-22 foul
shots I he Defenders grabbed 22 '
rebounds, had 11 turnovers, nme

steals, three ass1sts and 13 fouls
Southern won the reserve game
49-28 led by Bngette Barnes w1th
15, Rachel Chapman w1th 12, Amy
Lee w1th 12 and Tara Ptckens with
SIX
Tessa Haggerty had seven for

son

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"I thmk that (Walker's game) 1s as good as
11 gets from a power forward, for the whole
year of maybe h1s whole career," coach R1ck
P1tmo sa1d after Walker had 32 pmnts and 13
rebounds m the Celllcs' 105-98 wm over
Qeveland Monday mght
Walker was 8-of-18 from the floor and
made 16 of 18 free throws en route to h•s seventh straight effort w1lh 20-plus pomts
"When you go to the hne 18 limes as a
power forward, 11 ep1IOm1zes a power forward's JOb," P1tmo sa1d "He passed at cntJcal SituatiOns, especially when he gat doubleteamed He's leammg He's a bnght man I
thmk he totally understands his job."
II was the Celtics' inaugurai'garne on their

Roselli out with torn
ACL in right knee
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) Pro Bowl tackle Tony Boselli of
Jacksonv•lle was d1agnosed w1th a
' torn antenor eructate hgament1n h1s
nght knee today and v111l m1ss the
playoffs.
Bosel11, cons1dered one of the
NFL's top offens1ve hnemen, went
down Without contact on a runmng
play Sunday m the thnd quarter of
Jacksonville 's 24-7 VIctory over the
Cmc1 nnat1 Ben gals
• An MRl revealed that he had
torn the ligament The normal
recovery pertod IS about Seven
months
With Boselh out of the lineup,
Ben Coleman w11J hkely move from
guard to left tackle for the playoffs
Head coach Tom Coughhn sa1d
the inJury obviously put a damper
on the Jaguars v1ctory Sunday,
which gave them thetr second
: straight d1vJs1on title, home-field
• advantage through the playoffs and
; the NFL's best record at 14-2.

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EARLYPAY l~11Ce70036
230 Proleaalonal

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by Jim Unger'
Round 81111 ol Goo&lt;l Mixed Hay
$1500oach COl (740)-387-5502

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7o40-245-5n6
20ACRES
SR 7 South 01 Gallipolis SA

Roaklctlons
011

TRANSPORTATION

71 0 Auto• for Sale
I NO IJOW!'II NO CRECIT NEED·
EO! GOY T FORECLOSURES !
GUARANTEEC APPROVAL! 1·

218 &amp; NeighborhOod Road Area
Rough &amp; Wooded . Road Cut In '

NEECS TLC, SlngiOwklta AI~
S2 300 Cown

MEICJ!I COUHT'I

Services

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TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fte Unless We Wlnl
1 eaa 582-3345

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600-360-4620 EXT 8509

Up To 17 Aere Tracll For Fiecreation Or Aea ldentla1 Ofl SR
124 20 Minutes From Alo
Grande S9 500 +. $950 Down
Land Contra ct Avallible AN ·

CARS $100

THONV LANC CO LTC 1 800
213-8365 Fot FREE Maps

360

1985. Alta Romeo SJl'der convert·

Real Estale
Wenled

lble 5 speed eJCcauent condition

$8900, 740 992·2529 or 132 Sui·
ternut, Pomeroy
1986 Trans Am 350 Automatic .
Good Condition $2,200 740·

ForLANCI

44&amp;-0390

C.IIRyan

away!

110

Help Wanted

150

CerUfied Nurse Aida Training
Clau Apply Point Pleaunt
Center Genest&amp; Etdercare, State
Route 62 Route 1 Sox 326 ,

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AmeriC/alms

ENTRY

FT JPT Medical Billers Up

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PC

Required

No

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perlance Needed Will Train Call
lllll Free 1 877-124·2600
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291,4883 COpl ' 109

ON THE FLY- Atlanta speed merchant Tim Dwight (83) rune away from the 4eer delenaeln the ae..,
son finale of Monday Night Football at the Georgia Dome. (AP) •

new parquet floor
trymg to be ins1de as
Boston ret1red. its
much as poss1ble "
fabled floor, which CELriCS 1115, C'A\'S 9X
Shawn Kemp, who
was 1n place for all of
paced the Cavaliers with
the organization's 16 NBA titles, after 1ts final 23 points, was 1mpressed by Walker's 1051de
game of 1999, Dec 22 against Atlanta The play
new floor IS a rephca of the old one that the
"He's learnmg, l ·don'tlhmk he made too
Celt1cs played on for 50 seasons
many baskets, but he kept gomg to the hne,"
After opemng a 13-poml lead early m the Kemp sa1d " He 's stickmg to h1s game plan
fourth quarter, Boston saw liS lead sliced to of drawing fouls. He's more aggress1ve than
two before Walker passed to Kenny Anderson when we last saw him. "
for an open JUmper that made 11 98-94 with
Paul P1erce had 17 pomts and Anderson 16
JUSt under three mmutes left The Celttcs were for the Ctlt•cs. Adnan Gnffin and Vltaly
never threatened the rest of the way.
Potapenko added 12 pomts each as Boston's
" We went back to our bread-and-butter," starters scored all but t 6 of the team's pomts.
Walker said. "I went ins1de and they double·
Lamond Murray equaled h1s season h•gh
teamed me Witb me gomg to the basket, With 22 pomts for Cleveland
we 're playing good halfcourt basketball .
Clev~land took a 72-70 lead on Murray 's
That's what we need to improve on. I'm Jllst dunk with 5 17 left m the th1rd quarter before

UConn
posts easy
victory

17693, wv 1338, 740-988-26.1!3

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) ~
Connecticut coach Jim Calhoun
saw only half of the second-ranked
Husk1es' latest victory. He saw
enough
Desp1te being forced to the locker room at halftime because of a
stomach virus, Calhoun was able to
assess the Huskies (10· 1) after then
I Oth straight win, 83-56 over
Sacred Heart on Monday night.
JUKE·N.JIVE- UConn'e Khalld EI·Amln (42) hid 13 points In
"This team has gotten all(ful lhe Hueklea• 83·56 blowoul of Sacred Heart. (AP) '
good by playing with a sense of
'purpose. That was JUSt a little bit
the sciiSOII We wanted •to hit our to St. John's on Wednesday 11ight
lacking. We rely on pass1on," he
, peak nghl 10 conference play, and
DeVeren Johnson led Sacred
said.
that's what we're starting to do," he Heart with 14 points, and MartJus
Albert Mouring had 15 pomts
said.
,
Kovaliukas added 13.
for ConnectJcut, wh1le Khalid ElIn the only other game mvolving
The victory was Calhoun's
Amin had all of h1s l3 In the sec- a ranked team on Monday, No 20
\OOth
in the Hartford Civic Center.
ond half tn what CalhouJllo;rmed a bklahoma beat Lamar 67-63.
Associate coach Dave U:itao took
"workmanhke" effort
Mouring, the Huskies' biggest over in the second half as he did fdr
"Everythmg we d1d, we d1d OK threat from the penmeter, had four
the two games Calhoun missed last
I wanted to sec us pull away a btl
3-pointers, three m the first half 1 season because. of stomach probmore," he sa1d.
The game was the second
El-Amin said the Huskies arc ,traigbt agamst a B1g East oppo- lems - an early season victory
over Hartford and an NCAA first striving for consistency as Big East nent for Sacred Heart (1 -8), wh1ch
round game a)lainst Texas-San
play approaches.
..is in its first year as a Div•s•on I Anfonio.
"We're gomg mto the heart of
program. The P10neers lost 95-66

lasl one
Followmg a 24-71oss to Jacksonville

on Sunday, runmng baCk Corey D1llon

'

w1th a swollen knee and afteJWard sail!
he wanted out.
•
'
"ThiS has nothmg to do w1th my
teammates, the city, the fans or me not
gettmg the ball enough,'" sa1d DIIJQn 1
who rushed for 1,200 yards th1s season.

demanded out, quarterback Je{r Blake

" ll's personal, thmgs I've been through

embraced free agency and rece1ver Carl

durmg my three years here. I JUSt don't
want to go through that anymore."
One problem: He can't leave. The Bengals can keep Dillon by matchmg any
offer he receiVes as a restncted free
agent, and they have no plans fo Jet him

P1ckens remamed an expensive pam m
the roster
At the start of a new m1llenmum, the

NJ'L's most forlorn franchise has a cr1p·
phng Y2L problem. It's tosmg games,
Josmg players, Jos)ng hope
"The fm1t thmg that has to happen
around here as we have to 1ry to get as
much negat•yaty out or our Ofgamzat•on

as we JX!SSibly can and replace 11 w1th
pos111ve th•np,·• coach Bruce Coslet

sa1d Monda'y
The Bengals lost 107 games in the
'90s, an NFL re,cord ThCJt first toss of
2000 left them 4-12 m a season that
ended Wl)h Coslet trymg to put out one
brush fire a(ter another

Blake played hiS fmat game as a Bengal on Sunday and headed for free
agency and a chance to stall somewhere
else Akll1 Sm1th w1ll take over nexl sea·

son
. The b1gger queshon IDVQives D11lon ,

who IS arguably the BenaaJs' m~t valuable player He sat out Sunday's game

go.

~

Dillon "s only option would be to hold
out like P1ckens d1d last year. The
moody receover fmally• relented JUsl
befo~ the start of the season and got a
five-year contract out of the Bengals.
'Then, when general m~nager Mtko
•Brown said Jasl week that Coslet would
be rela)ned for the 2000 season, P1cke111
publicly questioned the move.
;:
Costet said MQnday that the recc1v•
cr 's lona;-term conlract limtts what ca•
I be done with h1m next seuqn Askocl It
he can hve WJih P1ekens for ~nother se~
son, Coslet sa1d, "Can 11 What are my
ch01ces? I realize I have to put up wk~
h1m and I'm sure he put up w~h me aJt
week If we wm, thai changes thin...
He 's tiled of losing,Just as lam."
New rlullenmum, same problems ~
'
•

-

''

Home Health Care of Soulheast
Ohio Inc , now tllriN~ Director ot
Nursing and Register Nurses can
1·7'9-667·6010 Monday thru Fri-

$100 Par Hour Homeworkers
Neededl L:arge AdvarUelng Firm
Pays $4 r.or ,:very Volee· Mail

day

tyday In Your Spare Time Umitad

8-1

Live-In Caretaker for ejdarly
woman In Mt Alto Patient bath·
lng meal preparation, and light
hOulekeeping required Room
anp board ~nd small wage Rer~
erenctl required Call collect

(•t9)884-04t2 anor 6PM

~eat

with

Space 1-1188 749 0907 (24 Hrs)
IHOTICEI
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO

recommends that you do busi
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough the
mall unUI you have lnvastrgated

the ollerlng

Part-time receptionist. must be
personable, have telephone

ski/a, able tc

Relrleved Malis $400 $500 Eve

the put;lc

1st MONTH FREEl/ NEW lnler
net Strvlcel GUARANTEED Lo·
cal Or TOLL FREE Ac cess ll
$19 95 Per Month Un limited
Usage Representatives WANT-

Flee. Market lnsld~ HArtford Qom·
mumty Building each Saturday
beglnnmg January 8 9am-? For
1nfo call 304 895 3474 evenings

and handle general office dut1ea,
Pomeroy area Send resume to·

Cally Santino/ PO Box 729·89,

Pomarov, Oh 45769

EO/I High Payouls Wllh High DE
MANCSII CALLI-888·589 6014

Wedemeyer s Auction Service

MECICAL BilliNG Earn Excel-

A

G'alllpol s On~ 7o40-379-2720

90 Wanted to Buy
Absoluts Top Collar All US Sll
...Wr And Gold Coms Proofsats,
Qiarponds Antique Jewelry, Gold
FHngs Pre 1930 U S Currency
Sterling Etc Acquisitions Jewelry

;M TS

Coin Shop, 151 Second
G II I 740 448-2842

EMPL OYMENT
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~.ooo

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B1ochuresl Satisfaction Guar'ntaedl Postage &amp; Slfpplles ProVlded! Rush Self·Addressad
Stamped Envelope! G!CO, DEPT

Person to assist with milking &amp;
general farm work on local dairy
Respond wlbrlet resume + 3 ref·

5 Sox 1438, ANTIOCH, TN erences to MLOQ Point Pleasant
:'J7:..;0:.1:..:
.;1·:..:1438
=.:S.:Ia_rt_tm_med
__la_l8..:1y'--"l ReglsJer 200 Main Street, Point
$45 000 /Year /Pote ntlall Doctors
Need PeOple! Process Medical
C:::ialms From Home, We Train

Y2K bug plagued
CINCINNATI (AP) - The CindnnatJ Bengals have staned the new decade
the way they spent vutually all of the

Aucllen
and Flea Market

Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering·
complete aucllon service Buy
and sell estates Oh10 license

Boston closed the penod w1th a 17-6 run.
After Murray's basket, Walker keyed an 8-Ct
run w1th two free throws, a layup and made a
pass to Potapenko for a short jumper
•
The Cclt1cs pushed then lead to 93-80 on·
Walker 's two free throws 2 39 mto the final
quarter, but Cleveland scored 14 of the ne~t
17 pomts to make 11 96-94
Anderson 's Jllmper and Danny Fortson's
free throw gave 13&lt;&gt;ston a 99-94 edge, a!ll!,
Cleveland got no cl~r than four pgmts i~­
the fmal two mtnutes. Onffin helped sea( i ~
with a patr of free throws and a breakaw{ly.;
dunk I 0 seconds apart.
Ten seconds after the opemng tap, the
game was delayed for 21 mmutes due to· a
power outage caused by a surge from an out.
age on a high-voltage line approximately 40
miles away in Mlllbury, Mass
'

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Postal Jobs $'8 323 00 Yr Now
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REAL ESTATE

310 Homes lor Sale
COUNTII't HOME
Near Alo Grande 2 BR 1 1/2
Baths ~ull Basement New Septic
System Excellent Condition. Brick
&amp; Vinyl BI·Level Has Barn &amp;
Several Outbuildings County
Water, Great Buy $87 200 Call
For Appointment 1·800·213·

8365

For Sale Or Rent 2 Bedrooms, 1
Bath Newly Carpeted Full Base
ment, Finished Attic City Schools
Low Main.lenance Quiet Neigh·

borhood $40 000 $400/Mo Plus
Available Febru·

ary 15111 Caii74Q-441.0777
FORECLOSED HOMES low Or &lt;l
Down! Govn t And Bank R8po s
Being Sold Now! Flnanc1ng Avail

ablo Call Nowl 1·800·355·0024
Exl 8040
HOMES FROM $1 t1 30 /Mo. I 3 BR Aapoa /Foreclosures, Feel
For Listings/ Paymen
1 800-71 9-300"1 X1185
Nice Home, Plenty of Room 3
Bedroom Brick Reduced Price

(304)273 9485

House And Trailer 2 Bedrooms
Each Relrences and Deposit Required Water And Trash Paid
740-388·1100

~~

448-1142

•

STOP RENTING!!/ OWN For
LESSI NO MQNEV COWNI Credit
Needed! Guaranleed Approval!

·355·0029 Ext

2 Bedroom Trailer In smell trauer
Park Deposit and ReferenCe Re·

quWedl ~(7~1104

2 Bedrooms $300/Mo • Electric

No Peta llopostt 7o40-36Hltit1

2 Bedrooms In Kanauga, Beaull·
ful Alver VIew No Pels 740-441 ·

0181

440

3 0 Mobllll11omes

1974 12x60 all electric. washer,
dryer refrigerator oven curtains,
couch and chair two window air
conditioners, in Portland, ready to

mow $3500 740 843 5310 daya
or 7o40-843-5 t47 evenings

1986 Overland 14x70ft 2-Bedrooms. 1 large Bath with Garden
Tub, Stove &amp; Refrlg Central Air,
Ex.cel Condiflon $15,500.00
(740)-441~988

Household

Apartments
lor Rent

1 ~nd 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed Snd unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

992 2218

1 Bedroom, Near Arbor's Nursing
Home, Economical Utilities Quilt

local/on S279Jiolo • Uut ll~o. No
Pel8 740-448-2957

1 Bedroom. Wat8r, Cable Rub·
blsh Ftubbish Removal Included
You Pay electric $:140 97400-

448-1785

2 bedroom apartment {i:town-

stairs) 1250 per month plus utili·
ties &amp; ~oposlt Thlld Slroet,
Roctna, 740 247-4292

tor rent in PoiT!;Broy: no
ptlll, 740-992·5858 ..

388·81l35

Chri1ty a Family L.tvlng, apar.t·
manta, home &amp; trailer rental1,

ment $175 par mo. Free Alr. Free

Skirt, t-800-691-6777
Hew 16 Wide, 4BR/2BA, low

do"'n payment, only $245 per
mo Free Al t. Free Skirt 1 800

601-6777

R'epos. Single &amp; DoubleWide 1

8ll8·928·9896

Single Wide Clearance S9 99
Faxe d Rate Save Thouunde
Hurry - Wont Lastl Only C Oak

wood ·GallipoliS

740·446·3093
l'No older mob•lo homos In coun-

try remoclelld, nice &amp; clean with
back pOl'dh each has two bed·
rooma beth, refrigerator ana

-'--

'"""· on 3 ocru, IIYO t' •une and

r1l!ll tllo Olhlr, $38,000 ~ 741).992·5264

ID ap·

...
I

1304)675-3354
1995 Ford f. 250 Exlended Cab

4 WD Turbo, Ojeset, PW POL

5th Wheel (740) 256-1094

1$97 Ford Ranger XLT V-6, auto
blue, amlfm cassetta bedllner
aluminum wheels, alr left front
wheAl damage 42 284 miles, ask-

Ing $4750 740 992 1506 days

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Ford F·Serles Pickups Came 011
bt A 1999 F-350 SuperOuty Ex-

Washers, drye fs i efrigerators
ranges Skaggs App liances 76
VIne Street Call 740 44$-7398
1-898-818-0128

cellent Condition! $150 Call 740
446-4548, 740-448-7375
Two 12 Kicker Subwoofer
Speakers/in a bo:.c Rockford

530

FosgaJe Punch·250 Amplifier &amp; Rebuilt Engine 13 000 (304)675Autotek 200 watt amphller ·$500 I 2897
OBO (304}675·7196
Wanted to buy Nativity set must 730 Vans a 4·WDs

Antiques

Buy or san Riverine Antiques

1124 East Main on SR 124 E flo.
meroy 740·992~252 6 , 740·992·
1539 Russ Moore, owner hnp II

be complete me size set , 740
992 2328

lls-your·buslneu'cOIWrlwrliie/
540 Mllcellaneou•~
MarchandiH
$SBAO CREDIT? Get Ouh
Loana To $5,000 Cebt Conaoll·
dation To $200,000 Credit Cards,

waterline Spoctal 314 200 PSI
$21 95 Par 100, t• 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100. All Brass Com·
priBBIOn Attlngaln SIOCk
RDN EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio, 1-81J0.537·9528 •

Mortgages, Refinanc ing And
Auto Loans Available Meridian

Buying DTV systems with access
cards J!t~2548

?;:gu Corp 1-800·471·511~ Exl

550

Building

' ' WATERLESS cooKwARE"

· Supplies

Home O,monatratlon K(nd High·
est Quality • American Made
NOT Korean Normally, SI 500,

Block brick, sewer pipes wind·
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande, OH Call 7-40·245·

5a/Nng, S695

1-800-421·7267

2 Bunk Beds With Manresses &amp;
Sheets, !.!Ike N'ew 12 Foot Boat

•
Complt'- DISH Network satellite

740·992·4514 apartments avat~ syotam brand now, $149 lnslalled
able, luri1\Shtd 6 unturntlhe&lt;!
!ret 740·992 I 182 or 304-773
5~afler6pm

5121

Framing Lumber, 2-6 2·8, 2·1 o 2·
Treated Posts, Truass 28 Ft

I·~~~20%~~oo~t74~Q.~44~1.0~2~7!9~
560

740 949 26 44 e11enlngs &amp; weekends
GMC 1989 S1erra Full Pkg 2
Wheel Drive 1/.2Ton $4 700
1982 300 SO Mercedes Auto ,
Full Pkg Turbo 5 Cyl Newly

1987 S 10 Blazer Tahoe 4
Wheat Dri11e New Tires, Exct l·
lent Condition 124 000 miles

$4100 13041882·3613

Must Selll 1996 Dodge Mini Vqn
like new 34000 miles Loaded
cruise control, factory tinted
windows air cond W1ll seat 7/8
Will sell lor less than pay oil

304 773-5162

740

Motorcycles

1982 Harley Davidson Sportster

1100 $6 000 OBO 740 256-«JJ8
Belwoen 6 10 PM
1997

350 Yamaha Banshee,

like Now S3 000
(3041882-2286
,

OBO

SERVI CES

Peta for Sale

AKC registered Chinese Shar·Pel

810

puppl ... tots of wrinkles $300
740-949-2126

Fish Birds. Pond Supplies
Sun 1·4PM, Mon -sat 11 AM·
6PM Fish Tank/Pet ShOp 2'13
Jad&lt;.son Avenue/Point Pleasant

(304)675-2063

Home
lmprovemenls
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime gua.rantea
Loca l references lurnlshad Es-

labllahed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (1401
446 0670 I 600 287-0576 Rog
era Waterp.-ooflng

Aea.tatered Waimeraner Pups To

good homea $300 00 (740) 446
4412

Countryside Apartments . Nice 2
l!edroome, 1 Bath, C/ A, WID
$365JMo • House Slza 2 Bad·

570

roo1111, ~ eaths, $'135/Mo , 1-888~21

~

• 741).44&amp;-1519

Furnished Efficiency Apartment ,

new will etll $850 00 (740)-379-

2601
Grubb a Plano- luning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

All Utllltlea Paid Share Bot~, plano Or 740-446 4525 '
$195/Mo 919 Second Avo.,.e,
JANrrROL HEATING AND
Gallipotla 741).446-3945
COOUNO EOWPMENT
Garage Apt In Town Plenty ot
Storage, One large Bedroom,
Cenlral AIC~Furnanee Anact~ed
Garage wJdoor opener Cau
(7401·•~55 Iller 5pm 1$350 oo
Clidlt Aotenmce and Dt~ Ro·

CN&lt;tdl

Gracious ltving 1 and 2 badraom

apartmonto al Village Manor ond

Musical
lnetrumenla

New Gibson Night Hawk electric
Guitar with Case Cost $1 t99

Fumilhld 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Shower. Downstal11, Clean' No Pet8,
Oeposll &amp; Relerencea Rec(ulred.

1NSTA~LEO

'II You Dop't Cl/1 Us Wo Both
LoSB • Free Estimates I 740 446

83011, 1-801),29t.()098.

AER;t;n~~S

Rapalred, New &amp; Rot&gt;ultt In ~­
Cal Ron Evano t-800-1537 9526

Riverside Apartments In MtdOI•

port From $249 $373 Call 140· King Wood Bur.ner with Blowlr
912·6064 EqUal Houll"!! OppOrl $tOO 00 Whofo Houoo Water
'titer and Softener $200 110
lllniliH
(740)-388-9t43
Mo~rn 1 Bedroom Apertment,
740-446-0390
•
ACQI,lPUTER???? BUT
CASHt? Mlllt Technology
Ftnonco WMh •o• Down/ Paot
CrtdM Problems OKII Evtn 11

c-

-..n Roollltllittth

WCrtdltll~ ~

\I

t990 Model Ford Range r '
Wheel Drive. Automatic Trans
1\llsslon
Good
Condlllon

Movel Selling Fo~ Balance
1·800-211·9594 X·15
Iaila.all - Fits 1998 And Newer

Jact&lt;soo A\l8rlUO, (3041675-7388

lllmtd

Call Toll

Ftae1.eiJo.487·51588 Ext 11577

17401448-8044

8:l&amp;o4052
STEEL BUILDINGS '· 5 ONLYI
25X30, 30X40 2) 45X90

For Sale Reconditioned wash·
ers dryers and refrlgetators
Thompsons Appl iance 3407

Home for the,. Holidays on a Nice

lot All UI IIH~s 1 (304)-736 7295
New a Wide low down pay-

1976 tnt 1BOOS Tractor Outfil,
New Tire s Asking $2 500 oo

Services, Inc Toll Free 1·888·

Frehch City Maytag, 740·446·
.Jm
.l
,,

Heavy Duty Car Dolly

720 Trucks lor Sale

CONSULTATION Sonellt Team

Appliances
Reconditioned
Washers Dryers, Ranges Rlfrl·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!

• BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Wltn Trailer Trailing Motor Sat·
SUCGET PRICES AT JACKSON tory Flllll Finder 740-368 1722
92 Clayton 16:.c80, 3 Bedrooms,
ESTATES 52 woetwood Drive
Heat Pump Good Condition
$279 to $358 Walk to ohop l.ci;;.;F,;o,ods, Spices Candles,
$16,000 00 OBO (740)·256·1618 &amp;trommovies
Call 7'0·448·2511
Buttar, Trail Bologna,
(740)·256-1252
775
Bulk Fooda '51811 S• R 775,
Equa tHousl~"--~·"""
... ..,....,. .....,
P,lrlot
Double Wide Set-Up In The

Qn.e

$400 00 1985 GMC S 10 Plek up
Runs Good $800 00 (740) 446
1765

Claim Dented? We Specialize In
Appeals And Hearings FREE

Goods

1

80Q.319 3323 X2.158

once1 {740) 367-7560 (740)·3877671
SOCIAL SECURITY CISABILrrY

1

EYBrgreen C8H 740-446 2S85

CARS FROM $291MO Buy Po·
lice Impounds JAepos Fee For
Listings /Payment Oetall Call 1·

Snow Plow to Fit Cub Cad81 AI
dlgn Lawn Mover Like new, used

MERCHANDISE

Toyota s

6336

Six Pant! Opor • 24• x 79 314•

$15 COli 740-446 4548 741).446
7375

Honda s

Joepo, And S,ort Utttllles CALL
NOW II 1 800 772 7470 EXT

CoolinQ, 1-80().872-5967
Ron's Gun Shop 7&gt;4().742-&amp;&lt;12

Houalng Oppprtunlly

$260·1300 740·992·2167

pounds

Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systema Free 8 Year Parts &amp; La·
bor Warranty Bennens Healing &amp;

TOO 1·686 233·6 4 Equal

510

740-992 9219
CARS $100 ·$500 Pollee lm·
~00

740 36Hl622
RESOENnALHOMEOWNERS

VIllage Green Apart=ta
· 2
bedroom&amp; total electric
•
es furnished laundry~m
•
ties and to sc;hool, ap lcatlons
2-3711
available at oftlce 7

420 Mobile HOI!IH
tor Rent

82 maroon 4 dr car runs great

Refrigerator Works Good $100.
Electric Range $30 WorkS Good.

992·7806

Three bedroom all electric ranch
home with attached garage
fenc ed back yard , large lot, at
Meadow Land Eslates, Pt Pleasant, $600 month plue referencea
and qeposll 304-824-2480

74Q.446-45480r740 448-7375

263-2640

dleport, all utltllies paid $325 per

Pilo t Program, flenters Needed
304·731)-7295
I

Trunk Cassette Player In Da&amp;h
Dark Blue Metallic Paint Dark
Gray Leather Interior Will Ta~e
Pavyoff Or Reasonable Offer CBII

Prlmtatarl OlrecTV, "Christmas
Giveaway• Limited supply 800-

month plus $100 deposit, 74~

2 Bdrms Off Slate Roule 160 At

bwner Says Sell Brlng Offers For
Th1s Beautllul 4 Bedrooms 2 112
Bath Home SlUing On The Ohio
Ri ver Huge Country Kitchen
Peachlree Windows, New Re
duced Pr1ce $208 000 Even, Dot
tie 740 886 7325

-

Two bedroom apartment In Mid·

qwred (304)615·3469, alter 5PM

Speakers 12 Cisc CO Changer In

5891 '

Twin Towers now accepting ap·
pllcattons for 1 BR HUD subsidized apt tor elderly and handl·
capped EOH 1304J675-8e19

Newly Remodeled 2BR Unfur·
nlshed House for Rent New HI·
ven area Oepo$ltllileference Re-

T·Tops Fully Loaded, 500 Watt

Monsoon Stereo System With 10

Plaid sofa and love seat $125
Jerry chair $10, Hardwick gas
and wood stove, $500, 740·992·

Fumllhed C811740-446-t!l99

.

Betwelf\ Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile nomes,

7otl-441-1982

Spring Valley Green One B•droom Apartments, Appliances

House For rent, $350 oo per
month 3 relrences required 740-

Pontiac Trans Am ~ 350 V·
8 LS·1 Engine Automatlc- Trlns·
mission, Factory Chrome Wheels,

i eae

Naw Mlllentum Dietl .eat All Day

Sewage Traah, $315/Mo, 740·
446-0008
'
One bedroom furnished apartment ) n Middleport 740·992·

1997 Camaro loaded with extras,
45 000 miles 740-66~

And Melt Away, Call Tracy AI

West 2 Bedroom Townnoua•
Includes Water
Apartmentq

0006

1508 days or 740-949·2544

evenings and weekendll

9418.

Now Taking Applications- 35

3 13edrooma. 2 Bath House, Ga·
rage &amp; Basement Hud Approved!
11 Texas Ad Call (740)·448·

Apartmer.~t

'

ilibyalttor noodoa 2·3 diYI ~or
lifllk In our home on Side HIHid ,
Rill/and; 740-742·22!17

Equipped Kitchen, Large Yard,
Deposit &amp; References $500/Mo ,
7&gt;4().446-4794

1988 Redman Danville 14x70
Also Has Expando Very Nice,
New Heat Pump $14,000 740 ·

,

Spoa,. 304-e75 1428

bllllla

13041675-4975

tOO 00 (740)-446·1765

1995 Camara V·6 automatic
custom show car custom wheels
and dash black 71 167 mlles,
minor front damage, runs and
dnves asking $5400 740 992

Huge Inventory Discount Prices
On Vinyl Sklrllng Doors Wind
ows, Anchors, Water Heatera,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts Fur
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Benneus
Mobile Mome Supply, 740-446

1 Bedroom, Very Clean $225 per
month Call evenings or ltave

Nice 2BR apartment with garage
Mason $300 + ulllltiea &amp; eecuri·
ly depotlt (3041675-1911

International Company Sseklng
Oynamlo Jndlvlduals For E Com
merce Saies Flel(lble Hours 1 Un·
limited Income 1 888 474 4703
www resource5-r·unllmltad com

$8,995 Financing Available Island Automated Medical Servlc·

MOBILE·HOME OWNERS

3 Bedrooma, 2 Batns, Hardwood
Floors Some Carpet Fully

2 Bedrooms Gallipolis. $325/Mo,
Damage Deposit Required, Ae1arences No Pets 740-448-1066

Guaranteed Hire For Application es Inc 800·3~·1139, Exl 050
HOO 968 3599 Ext 2801 $34 00 Md Exam lnl«mation Cat! 8 AM Void In KY IN, CT
R~llmdabto Fee
- 9 PM M-F 1·888·898·5827 Exl Need A Lqan? Try Debt Consoli·
241007
) 0
AQVERTISING
dation $5 ooo - $200 ooo Bad
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
Credit 0 K Fee 1-800-770·0092,
Retail sates clerk In P&lt;lrntroy
Ell 215
be
able
to
work
some
Sun
must
I( ' !for Well Established Local Co
days and evenings 34 houra or
§ERVING TRI·COUN'rl AREA
more per week Send raaume clo PEPSI /COKE /FRITO LAY
AND SODA VENCING
The Cally Sentinel PO Box 729· SNACK
t••Musr /'lave good Convnunk:allon
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
84, Pomeroy OhiO 45769
1
sk:lns
SSSALL CASH BUSINESS$$$
INCRESE VOUR INCOME NOW!
1 ' Musl haWI good ""'ylng facord
Salas
Position
For
a
Setf
Mot~at·
1
_., &amp; Provide own Transporta11on
SMALL
INVESTMENT /EXCEL·
ed
And
Personable
Individual
18 •Must haVe ablll~ to be a TEAM
LENT PROFITS 1·800·731-7233
t.~anagerlat s~tl Pltlerred No AI·
Ext 103
"
player
coho! And Drug Dependency
Send Reaume To P 0 Box 33
Send Resume to
Gat/, Oh 45831
'
Galllpollo daily Tribuna
220 Money lo Loan
WILCLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR
~ RE AUvoHislng Sates Rap
• 1 l
Pe
l
$s
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
""u o oana,
raooa 1 oana.
t 1••
825 Third AVenue '
Debt
Conaofldallon,
Mortgagta
DENS,
SECURITY,
MAIN·
• , Gall&gt;olls, OH 45831
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS N" And Rollnaneing CFI((It P-ma
ASSEMBLY AT HOM'EII Crafts, EXP NEECEC FOR APP ANC OK Conawnaro Flnonclat t aooTOys, Jewelry Wood Sewing,
EXAM INFQ. CALL 1·800·813· 247-512HXI. 1134 \/Old OH, KS.
ll/Ping Groat Pay/ CALI.o 1·800· 3585 EXT t'l211 8 AM ·9 PM
f9}0380 Ed 1201124 Hra)
7 CAVS Ids oo '
!WONt Att Areas! To Buy or Sett,
~loy

(304)875-2749

1994 Clayton "x65 It All elec·
trl&lt;:. 2 bedrooms Very nice
$11,000 (3041882·2662

380·261 5 · (24 Hro I

992·6951 deposit and reflrtnces

1994 Tauru s Wagon Runs Good.

$1

7&gt;4().~11-0805

meroy 6 Middleport Cat! 740
raqulred

2 Bedrool'l'l House Reference}
Dep.oslt No Pets $325 a month

cellent Income • ALL CASH!
100% Finance Available 1 800-

Needs People To Proceaa Medl·
cal Claims From Home Training
Provided Mutt Own Computer 1·

JOBS Up To $17 21/Hr

Ut1IIUes Paid No Pets! (740)·2455893

spoad.,C 0 Player A/C $3000
080 (3041675-6693

Merchandlae
Firewood for salt, $25 truckload

Informed that all dwellings

CAll N
811

ngo 98 000 miles $2,795 COOK
MOTORS 1740 )-446~103

540 Miscellaneous

Nice 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apar1mtnts,
AJC equipped kltchen1, In Po-

advertlled in this newspaper
are available on an equal

Country No Payments For 90
POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR fi00.434·SS18 EXI 887
Days Only 0 Oakwood ·GalttpoINC BENEFITS NO EXPERt· MECICAL BilliNG Unlimited In- lls 7&gt;4().448-3093
ENCE FOR APP ANC EXAM come ,Potential No Experience
DoubteWido, 3SR/2BA only
INFO CAll l-800·813·3685 ,
Free Information &amp;
$287 per mo w/Low down payEXT 14210 8 AM ·9 PM, 7 Neceasary
CD·ROM
Investment
$4,996
CAVS Ids. Inc
ment Free Air H-9Hm
~STAL

1 or 2 Badroom Near Wal-Mart
Flaferancas Deposit Required

for Sale
CASH! CASH! CASH! This Is Not
AJob $5,000 Req Worl&lt; 5 Hrs I
00 oil Saloc(ed Single
Wk Free Info 1 800·997 9886 $2,000
Wide Homes Super Low PayExt 1155 (24 Hrs)
ments! Oak Wood Homed, BarARE YOU CONNEt!TED? lnler- boursvdle Wv 1-(3041-736·7295
net Ussrs Wanted! S350 $600 I or 1·(304)-736 2395

Tralnfng ·Groat Benefits Cat/ 7 MECICAL BILLER $15 $46 IHr
Medical B/Ning Sollware Company
Cays 1100-429-3660 Ext J'385
J

410 Houaealor Rani

Aparlmants
for Rent

...._

$2!50 Deposit

84 000

1994 Cavalier 2 door ~ cyt • !i

440

2 or 3 bedroom houM In Po~r­
ay, no pets, 740..992-5858

Handyman Service. 740 256·

R/S

miles $3 295 00 1991 S 10 Dura·

"'"'- bollom's dropped out of
1he martc.t. I've lost 18 bucks.''

RE~HA LS

advertisements tor real estate
wh1ch Is In violation of the
law Our readers are hereby

304&lt;675-1957

Local teacher wiU do after school
tutoring and evening baby sltUng

$3 995 1992 Cavalier

W'ttW 0011ntrytyme r.pm

knowingly accept

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the mill lust call

80().223-1149 Ext 460
6120
DRIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS Home Care for 1, Non Smoker &amp;
IMMECIATE OPENINGS Over
Orlnk81 Honest ~ &amp; Mobile,
Tho Road Start At 29 CPM /All Non
Ml ynloadlng Pay. Peraonallzad Reasonable (3041882·3880
Dlapatch, Home Onon Holiday I Jlms Drywall I Construction
VOCOtiOn ,Pey 401K /Med /Prot I New Construction &amp; Remodel/
Dental Anlgnad ' 99 T2000's
Crywall, Siding Roots, Addl
Rider Program 98% No ·Touch
lions, Painting, etc (304)674·
Fralghl CALL SUMMIT TRANS- &lt;1823 or (304)67'.0155
PORTATION 1100-876-0680 EO£

1991 lumina Euro 88,000 miles

10012t3-13&amp;15

Anthony land Company LTD

This newspaper wilt not

oppo~unlly

UP POLICE

Ext 7832

Even If Its Listed
20 500 ACf8s
All real estate adverttslng In
this newspaper Is subJect: to
the Federal Fair Housing Ac1
of 1e68 which makes it 1II8Qal
to advertise "any preference
Hmhatton or discrimination
based on race, color religion,
sex famiMal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such prefentnce,
limitation or discrimination""

$500 6

,

IMPOUND HOnda 1 Toyota I
Chevys Jeeps And Sport Utlll·
lias Call Now! 800•772·7470

WoPoyCA&amp;II

ovc

Oh10 Valley Christian hosts
Wahama next Monday.
Southern goes to Federal H&lt;fk·
1ng Thursday
.

2 •• Acrtl Homeellt, Green
Township, Gallla County Flat
Scenlc Close To Gallipolis Some

No Office VIsit Necessary Up To
$500 rnstanuy Toii·Free 1·177·

·walker's 32 leads Celtics past Cleveland
BOSWN (AP) - Antome Walker played
hke the Boston ~Illes wanted h•m to all sea-

FREE .DEST CON SOL/CATION

CENTIVE OFFERII Call 1·800·
328-8510 Ell 29
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY??

By PAUL NEWBERRY

$20 million over the salary cap,
ATLANTA(AP)-Too bad the now must dec1dt 1f they can afford
season had to end Tim Dwight R1ce and quarterback Steve
was JUSt hitting h1s stride
Young, who m1ssed most of the
Hampered by inJunes and t~e season following another concusbur\len of replacing Tony Martm, sian
Dw1ght needed mosl of the year to
" I siiiJ feel I can help th1s team
find h1s mcl\e w1th the Atlanta Fal- out and I can make b•g plays,'"
cons On Monday mght, he gave a R1ce sa~d " I'm sure Steve - he
tantahzmg glimpse of his poten- doesn't want to go out on th1s note
bal
also We JUSt want to come back,
The dJmmutJve receiver caught tu[n thts thmg around and be the
seven passes for 162 yards, includ- 49ers of old "
mg two touchdowns, and returned
Chns Chandler took advantage
a punt 70 yards for another score of the league's worst-rated pass
as · the Falcons closed the NFL's defense to throw for 306 yards and
regular season with a 34-29 v1cto- three touchdowns, helpmgthe Fairy over the San Francisco 49ers
cons snap a tO-game losmg streak
"He has gotten better and bet- on Monday mght
ter," coach Dan Reeves said
Atlanta (5-11) won its final two
As a rookie, Dwight thrilled games - the team's only wmning
fans w1th his kamikaze style of streak of the se~ - but still
relurmng kicks He expected to equaled the 1990 D!nver Broncos
take on more receivtng dut1es thiS for the worst record tn a post,season after the Falcons released Super Bowl year Both teams were
Martm, but inJuries were a h•ll- coached by Reeves.
ce m traimng camp and during
' San Francisco, a perennial
the season.
powerhouse gone shocktngly bad
"It's a learning process," said s1nce Young was knocked out in
Dwight, whose 241 all-purpose Week 3, dropped II of Its last 12
yards were the third-highest in for the team's worst fintsh smce a
Falconij, history "To be a good 2-14 mark m 1979. The only vJctoreceivef in this league, you have to ry during that span was a 26-7 trido it in the games You have to do umpli over the Falcons
n during crunch time "
The 49ers can console themHe can take a lesson from 37- selves w1th the No 3 ptck m the
year-old Jerry R1ce, who showed draft The Falcons d•dn 't have to
he's not washed up In what mtght worry about draft ramtflcations,
have been h1s final game w1th the having traded then top p1ck in
49ers, Rtce had s1x recept10ns for ' 2000 to Baltimore for a second143 yards and even drew applause rounder m 1999, wh1ch was used
from Falcons defenstve back Ray to take reserve tight end Regg•e
Buchanan after a 62-yard reeep- Kelly The Ravens w11l pick No. 5
tion.
tn place of Atlanta
"I think he can sttll play,"
The Falcons were leadmg JUSt
Buchanan said. "If they're not 10-7 when Dw•ght took a punt at
gomg to keep him, I' ll try to. his own 30, broke free m front of,
recruit him for the Falcons."
the San Francisco bench, cut back
The 49ers (4-12) fell behind 3~· toward the middle of the field and
7, but showed a bJt of pnde in their outraced Randy Krik w1thou1
worst season since 1979, sconng bemg touched, reaching the end
three second-half touchdowns to zone wnh just 12 seconds remammake it close Although the Fal- ing m the tfrst half
Dw1ght struck• again for a 60cons recovered ar\ onside kick
with 2·45 remaining, they still had yard touchdown reception to put
to bat down Jeff Garcia's despera- the Falcons ahead 31-7 m the third
lion pass in the end zone to pre- •• quarter Cornerback Darnell Walkserve the victory
er grabbed the receiver at the hne,
"We made 11 exe~ting, dtdn't drawmg a flag but falling to slow
we0 " Atlanta waach Dan Reeves Dwtght, who haUled m the pass
sa1d "When you have control of a between two defenders at the San
game bke that, you shouldn't let Francisco 35 and stiff-armed Lee
Woodall on the way to the end
the other team back m 11 "
The 49ers, projected to be some zone.

350 Lots

Application W IS,rvlee Reduct
Payments To 8!5% !!CASH IN

Herpes '" EverCLR Stops Htrptl
Outbreaks! 96o/. Success Rate
Free 1 877 EVERCLR Info

HERMAN~

a Acreage

220 Money lo Loan

•

App liance Parts f.nd Service All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perl&amp;nce All Work Guaranteed

French City Maytag. 740 446·
l1795

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenance Painting vinyl siding
carpentry doors windows, baths
~ home repair and more For
frH estimate call Chat 740 992

6323

I

,

------'---"--(

FARM SUPP LI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
J20 Ditch Witch Trencher Ask

lng $1600 00 (740)·446-8044

630

Uveatock

For Sale 3·2 Year otd Fllllet
Green Broke 1740) 367 0512 or

(7401-441·5502

Livin gston a Ba&amp;flment Weter
Proofing, all base ment repairs
done, tree estimates lifeti me
guara ntee, 12yrs on job experi-

ence

13041895-3887

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration
Residential or COII'Imarcial wiring,
new service or repairs Master Ll· •
censed eleclrlclan Ridenour

Etoclrlcal WV000308, 304 675
1786

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POSmONS NOW 'AV

IRONJ END SPlCIAUSTS

•

a

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'
Turnpike of Galllpolla
Opportunity Einpleyal .
'

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lo

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11170 lnhan Road

.

Racine, Ohio 45771

Sizes 5' x 10'
to.10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8 PM ·

New Construction &amp; Remodeling • Kitchen C~binets
Vinyqiiding· Roofs : Decks • Garages ·

Free Estimates
740-74i-3·411

1-lE'S L&lt;,JRITIIJG A~
CN R:miEJ.J RXtc-r'

Bryaa Reeves
www.sunsethome.com

. A &amp; D Auto Up o stery • P us, Inc

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l7401 882-110,1
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OP

Rutland, Ohio
'
Truck seats. car seat~. headliners,
truck t!llJls. convertible &amp; vinyl tops.
four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats.
'
boat covers, carpets, etc. ·
·
Mon - Frl 8:30 • 5:00 ·
Over 40 yrs e,(perlence .

'I

.

CON(RETE
CONNEOION
Quality [)riveways,
Sidewalks, Patios-·
Com'plete Garages:
masonary/Wood"'
. , 25 yrs experience
·
Free"Estimates

.,·.,, ~REE .

ESnMATES

'740-742-S015
B77-353-72221toll hee)

985-44n

•

vo

c

Phillip Cooke oka ·
Phillip G. Cooke, otalo
Dofondoota
Court of Common Ploao, '
Molga County, Ohio
In purauanco of on Order
of Solo to ma dlro.ctld from
11ld Court In the above
ontHitd action, I wlllaxpooe
to oolo at public auction on
tho front, Court
atopa ofHoule
tha Melgo
County
on
,Frldoy, 4th February, 1999
at 10:00 A.M. of aald day,
tho following doocrlbod roal
oototo:
In tho Townohlp County ol
:,••~ of Ch:otor ·~:_~~~~~~
o, an doocr
••
followo, to wit:
Situated
In
Choottr
Townohlp, Molgo County,
Sbllo o1 Oh!o and being In
Section 5, Town 2 North,
RAnge 13, Wool altho Ohio
Company'o Purchooo .and
being described ao followo:
Bog)nnlng ot a point South
25 Rodo (412.5 foot) and
North 891 59' 42" Wool
1048.07 feat and SOuth s•
42' 11" Etot 191.4 loot and
· South 7' 29" Wool 64 fOil
and South 4' 08' Weal 121
foot ond South 7" 45' Eoot
50 feet and South' 12' 15'
(Wool 325 foot from )ha mid
point of oald Section 5
North Lint, told point of
beginning being marked b\'
an Iron pin; thence South
12' 15') Wool 125 'foot to an

1

F~¥'"-'===""!i1

, .

YOU

Af.lr&gt; ovtrcn You
fC['IOW wtMT T'tteY ~AY
ove~

AIOUT
(,OPiiS.

~ &lt;..00{;,

P,omtroy, Ohio

-_-......L. '

+

......

'fl.oer&amp; 'Backht&gt;e
......

Se"'ice• ,
House &amp; Trailer Sites ·

Cgnia.ancl
Clt)Ck Us,.Out

. Saturday• 10 to 2

(J40) 9t2-31JI

.Clo•od Sunda

TRUCKING

CAR SALES

Hauling
Limestone &amp;.Gravel

Good Clean Cars

DIPOYSA8

PUft ·

AD ~aloeoi T~ct~~ &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IHPam
Dea1e:n.

S•

We·WIIIO.a/

740·742-3311
1·888·816·9609

NOW

Homes •,Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

.. New

Pomeroy Eaglea ·
Club Bingo On

JA KS ~OOFJNG
l CONSTRUOION

Th~radays .

' J'U;30 P.M.

.' ~~~In st,,
·Pomeroy, OH
Paylng$$0.00

Pettieme·

$300.00 Coverall
$50!1.® .S la""""'t

Progrilal~ top'llne.

Uc. t ·oo-so

,tN_

•

.....,
• Re11'0 " '" ·

'

•

0

New R~fs • ~!!pairs
• Coating • Qutters
. • Siding • Oryyiall
• Painting • P1tJrnblng
Free Estimates

-joseph Jacka
7'10-992-2068
t103100 t mo. pd~

9 Ear (comb.
form)
10 Give on
8CCOUnlol
11
12 Otnn•n

:l

.,

·•
o•
••
•

....,ort

22 Lookld.t

Pus
AIJ 'paas

.

nxoc~~y

24 Sick •
'
28 -nxe
28 Pekoooncl
Earl Grey
,
30 Securocl
•
34 In abu,._ •
35 Puzzling
:

quaatlon .

38 Gloomy

31 E119 on

;

, ••

.

39 l;xttaelld (I
tooth)
400-nly
42Grotu
44.-:Mt

I

My second top wo111an player Is J....-+-4-'
someone I 'believe doesn't get
credit she deserves: Jacqul Mltehelli: " b-+-+--lf-+-+~
4t Sun. epooch ·
50 Unclhilded
.
She _Is nalurally merved.and'appeara k+-+--1--'+-+52 "--t
~
difficull to 11!1 to tnow. Yet olicie yilu
"'-"--'-...1.....1"-"--' , 53 Flttlwoocl-,...
become a friend of hera, you dlSCOYl!r a L.;.J.....I....I-.L-..1....
.
•
.. dellghlful;: warm person: Away from · '
the bridge table, she loves dop ud Ia ·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
an excellent cook. AI the bridle table,
by Lula Campos
she Ia quietly lethal, ma!tJng very few
Celebrity Ciphlr cryptooran'\1
erul:ed trom quotaUOns by 1amou1 people. past and present
mistakes and concentrallrta as weD u
E.ct~ lenetin lhe ciptler alanda tor another. Today'l Clu.: U equals-P
anyone. Jacqui has won four world
team titles; and lhe World Women's
Pairs In 1986 wilh oAmalya Kearse.
• p .a p
C . UACHX
IN G
XEXM
T X X.
·Through 1993, she had the best life·
lime record of any woman player In
R \. c R
I R ZCT
ABFX
ANNFT
world champloMhl)lll. ,
In this deal !tom the ·es•women's
J a B A R K. G T R .R N XDKNI? ...
Pairs .In Bal Harbour, Fla., J&amp;CijUI and
Amalya collected 109 matdtpollila otit
w c B o x ANNFT RLICR
Z CI . ' •~

,

OH, Tl.l\~ L~T
ofliO.
.•
' l!lt-1'\FOK 11-(;, .
Against two spades, West atarted
z B A A MNSXMT
with
two
rounds
of
duba,
Eul
wlnninl
IT'~~'(OU I
PREVIOU_
S SOLUTION: "In Illinois the capacity -for greatness is as limitless as
and. correctly switching 1o her singlethe sweep ol its unending cornfields.· - Clyde Brion Davis
.
ton diamond. However, after a dla·
mond to the ace and a diamond ruff, ·
East erred. If she had returned a
trump, the con~ woutd have failed ·
be~ause declarer would have eventual- .
ly losl a heart trick. Ye! Eut under·
ICR~·~ fa a If......... ol Halllilnl ... u..· UniiM II-'" _,.. Cl!llda an1 IIN•I'I1,.Y
,ol
J .W. . . . . . . . . ~. OIOOOifllllll:t.M .... ~UMdtllll ......... '
otandably led lhe club klnll GlviDI
. them no :ncond chance, Ja~;qul rulfed
with lhe spade jack. cubed' the spade
· a~e, and gave Ea81"her trump trick. AI
. [9~~~[8~[9=~ · ~ AACK 1
8
'!r~~~~~~~~- arulf-and·dleeard,
club .retum .,o~ld have con~ed
•
1!
Eut tried the heart
llx.
West wa• marked ·w)th the he•rt
~@~~[!B~~~RACK2
king beat- ·.:.it 'hact·)II'Oduced nine
points, )tet hailn't open'ed lhe.blddlng.
So, Jjtcqul put in the heart nine. nr ahe ·
had played the .jack or queen, Weal
[!BE8~ ~
IB~~...;..
;w:.,
would have -ducked her king.) When
tile nine forced oul the king, J~~equl · ·' '

.

DDDODDD

.

.: ooooooo '·.
. [§][!JITi]~~~~
. PAR ,ICOREIJ0.140

. by JUDD.' '

C
0

• CONCRETE • ,BACKHOE SERVICES

~-

•

~S~NRY

~· FR~ ESTIMATES••:··-... FULLY INSURED
.

E
v',

. . ·.

Brian Mo......., I 11ncln•, O~iq ,(7~) 985-!948
0

~

•

'

.

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bafM.......,.

M
A.

t..

C~i- .IUIIO'IBOUmONTOMOAAOW

...,.,...,....lyncbat,

h..

'

'.

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R'

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"\"tm
'

•swus

Yflllow • Width • Swept · Justly. DO it WELL ,

A famous orator once said: "Don't scorn the man who
earn~ his living with his hands. He needs a good minq to
· DO ltwE~L.·
·.
·
·
.

•

••

RACKO

I'OIIR RACKTOTAL _

0..--

o•

0
N

j,

RESIDENTIAU///11////COMMERCIAL

. .

.

S

• BOBCAT SERVICES

·o

~LIMIT:IOIIII. DIAECTlONI: Milt. • 1o 1 . . . word.tram 1t1t llftlflln MCt1 mw. M:1 ,
.... at flld'l ward,~~ &lt;h:Monlet ,...., 7......... glt so.
JICW
U.... •lnY .... IWYI no pa1rt Vlb. AI·.uti'• WOfdl·
. . k1 n.t callll 9c::rtlbt* ......,. DldiOnlrQo (Miiilar: ·;; I r) nt OSW

.

PIB CONTRACTORS, INC• .

D'
D
D

DDDODDD .

0

claimed.

20 Yrs: Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Pones

..
'

WICK'S "flliUnG ·.
•
Cllld
~CfiVATI~t?

FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sunday Calls)

.,

1V~o' otVo

ITiJ

...__L,.

(740) 367·0266 ·
C,\l)lt\9
1·800·950·3359 · ' "'1, 11cl\niJ.

·lOP.

C~II&lt;W. lllii!SIDINTIAL

740·992·7643

.'

•

•Replacement Windows
•Room Additions
.•f.lo&lt;fling, .
~

,•..,....

Rt. 7 SoCifh
CHMU., OH 41m3
1001) Sf.

~TEP ~CK ,..ilt,

WI'-TCH . THE Fllt.E· .
WOR.K5, ('.AN(,! THEY
~WIM!THEY SQUIRM!
THEY DO I'LtP5! THEY ...

R

BISSELL IUILDIRS,
.
INC.

8 Suptrttllvl

-cou- . •••

DODD DOD

,.

~

RUTLAND ·

7 . .nd mollonl .

COrn!*~ pl.

5

:

·-··

t;:;"DUll"

4

~!£8~

503 MHI Strat!l
Middleport, Ohio

Ulililieo

SAYRE

~TK:JN:)(

S..llgaln Outlet

Septic Syolenu &amp;

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

.,

usT

· Thrift •tore .

Hours :.
Mon·&amp; The 9 to 3
Closed Wedneedaya
Thur8 &amp; Fri 9 to 3

·~:;" .'

3 FMMCh

.

.·

·of

OF to\ai '&lt;ENG .

22 yn. Local

~11199, TFN

'

.

Haullng*,Utne&amp;!gn~*Gravei

Sand*ToPI91l*FIII Dllt'Mulcb
,. · BulldOzer Services

'.(740) ~..3470

.

.-~ . 'ASTRO·OR_APH

:

,.

"

Cellular
:·J~ff· War.ner Ins"
-992.·5479

11

Stop lri' Ali d.· ·see '

· Steve/ Riffle ' '
'
Sa. l~_s 1 Representative

, Larry ,.s~~ey
'

. .rti.

"";'_~'!'"

~"stak Stre.et

'

.

"A

·'
'.

' Phone

11\m.ena,Obio 45?01 . ·

.....:.__

T~tM ~E­

PitOI&gt;U(..I('I6 T~EI't'l~fLVfS

992·6215

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

__

ttAVf

"'

g

DOWN

r

..........

You'ra ,..,lied with f'fl•fM!ctl

·.

PJUiB

• 2. .

'

tho Union

By Phillip Alder

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•

P1118

. 20

:

=::e-

Quiet and eff~e

• Dlvorded

.~ RatiO

.

HOWARD
EiCAVATING CO.

57

...

,.....,.

Opening lead: • A

Ciecllt • SlOW Cradll • ltllnkruptcy

•PIIIo l PORh Dtcka

•• " l " • . IT.
II

1•

WORRYINI!!!
.
N'o !mblmleament...

740·742·2131 '

- _.

••• ,.1 ....•1••.c-

..W.C.o """""'••&gt;:STEMS.INC, 9:00.12!oct Sat:ukblv

•VInyl Skiing • Pllntlng

H

!ef-H !
1=-+l~

I
Vulnerable: North·Soutb
Dealer: West ,
Soullt
Weal Norih Eul ,

'

,Open;
,
' .9:00-4:30 .WHI'dljys

·Electrical·
Plumlllng
•lloallng • I!UIIIrl

740-992-S2i2

loltr dlak
28 Abomlntlllt

-

• 9 4

•~ ·

II CMIIIrod
II Cut.o ......

.
32 Coni ' :1ta

10 3

~~ :

Tuppere Pl•lne. Ohio 45783

ofltwGngM

Fund to the
Fund for
tho opor~ll!ln of currant
,,.,...,...,
,
.. , , ,,
Tblo rooolutlon lo, •doom
tn e,..flencY
du~~=~~..~~~ ;~;::;;:~;~==!
·fundi
for current
PASSED: Dac. 20
K •••h y
y a • I J.,
• sewing Machine &amp;
Cltrii/Trooauror .. ' ·· ' . .. Vaccuum Cleaner
Frank A. Vaughan, Mtyor
·
John F. Mu-r, Prllldont
.
Repllra
(12) 28 (1,) 4, 2TC ,,.,., , ;~
.:Wull!lke llouse calls
,'I • 1 ·
'.'~11 1 ,, ·.
:__ .. !
·
11n;;· ., !'lloi.:..O-....O:.:..:.:.:.:.o.;Ji:L!..=i

+K

...
, ......- . -

14 •·•·
A - . Dohl

31 Elortry

• Q J 9

74CI.:ea5-38t 3
• 4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
. Full Une Of.Water Storage Tanka •
Septic &amp; Clatern Tanka
ISe•wer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Rti~UIEitorlil

•Rooln additions • Rtmocitllng

FIN flifiMin .

• KJ 10 6'52

.
...
,n
.._ID

411wire"43 Will I Ill
41 Anclant liniN
41 .to• It LuplnO
47 Alltor.GIMgar
41 Child oh
.
. . friend,

tllltll8llo
21 Clraltt porto
23 ~tor

7:1 Shawler
· 21 Fuaa

• 4

•AJ943

PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

YOIIII'S
CAIPEIITEI SIIIVI'CI

3179S:Hilwid
Rd.
,I'
·'
.'
Pomeroy, Ohio

• A7

• 10 8 6

1

·at =•pin,

.._..

•KQ2

Wlillam Safra11ek, Attorney

SL At. 7 I

· ••=•tun
ao v....
....... .
«

• 7 5
9 K ~ 2
•A98752

'

lndudt a taf. a l!iust1 dothts, and hou!thold gaods. You !houW dlrtd .,, ·
qlltllloftlrtgard"~~g llankruplty 1o an a1lolllly lttlort pranodng. _

· For information regarding
Banl&lt;ruptcy contact: · ·

-

N
• 10 a e
• A 7 5."4
• QJ e
• Q 8 3 .
Eul

South

,., relltvt o ~of tln.tdol 1 \allonllnlmngt a lair lllslrlliation
llllfiiii!IOIII tttdllon. Aponon going lhrootglo bonkrupt!Y 111GY ...-ltiiG\!Cil
lflliii'I1Y, k,_, as 'oxempr ,prOjllfly, for his or her pononal 1111. ,This
1

40 742-8888' .

Lo

Weal

.

211W11 mel. pd.

CONSTRUCTION
Winter, So Don'd
Put
Thoee .

'

I

. 740;949-2217

•

11 Cui

12 wdl.)
14 Think Wll Of
15 Lift out
Ll
h 101 . .
11 In 1
1.. ·
17 WI ddlng Jllll

WflfORM£

' .... StqP, &amp; compare

0

1 . . Ill II
7 ..,...

ti .... My

Remodeling

Iron o18ko; (tllence South
llr Sf' 46" Wut $5.2 1ft! to
on Iron ol8ko; thence South
e9 22' 55" Eoot2CIO.a feet to
an Iron otako) cro..lng an
Iron · otako at 125.1 mt;·
thonco North 87" 42' 31."
Eaot ~33.es !ott to an Iron
olatlut, thonco t-lorth 141 34'
14" Woat 214,02 flit to tho
point ortHtglnnlng, conuil""
lng 1.03 acroo, more or 1....
Current Owner• Namo:
Deborah K. Cooke
Property Addra11: 43275
Frank 'Road, Pomeroy~ ott · ·
457611
Pormtnent Parcel No. IJ3.
0Ge28.000
Proparty Appralald For:
$40,000.00
forma of Solo: . Cooh,
f.:."~J• ~old ,oj looo
. • o :tho oPP•aloed
Volua . . f1,000.00- dilwri on
day of oalo, caoh or cortl·
fled check, belenco duo
upon confirmation of ealo.
Jomoo M. Sauloby, Shariff
Mtlgo County, Ohio
Denn.. Rtlmtr Co., LP.A.
By: Donnlo Rolmor (Reg.
10031109)
'
Adom
L.
Grooo(Rog.
10055392)
.
Attomov.o for Pltlntlfl
P.O. Box 968,- Ravenno
Rd.
.
Twlnoburlt, OH 44087
425-4201 ,
1(4)(11)

c., ...
a.:•£.
40....,.......,.
• '

ACIIOII

PHILLIP

IIILL'I

•Garage•
•
•Complete

Shtrlll'o Solo, Rool Eototo
C110 Number Ill CV 042
Aurora Loan Sorvlcu, Inc.
Plalntlll

The Dilly Santlne.l • Page At

Clnn.v.

·N-Homu

Public Ndtlce

January 4, 2000

pla&lt;e an ad Call992·2156

To

YOUI

Public Notice

~aaday,

January 4, 2000 . ~

ALDER

At .Turriplke we~ve
eatablfihect a 27
. year reputation of
honesty, Integrity .
and outstanding ·
customer. 84fr:vlcabefore and after the
•a•e. If yo~.J would.
. " like to b'eCorne
member of the
Turnpike -:=Am~ly or
· would llk6 more .
Information about
· the available
..
.
positions, stop by
today and ask f9r
James Thcimas ·
·

. C&gt;

0

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio

• 110 to!elp WI'*CI

MID OlildVALLEY'S
LEADING AUTOMOTIVE
RETAILER·
TURNPIKE FORD
•UNCOLN MERCURY
has openings tor .
the following

•

•

'

: Page A 8 • Ttte Dally Sentinel

•

-.

•

•

With the recent 10,000+ sq. ft.
addition and lhe IIIOdemlzllloo
oflhe

•

1

(740) 593-667.1
••

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6n9/mo.

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Wednesday
,

Weather

Thuredey: Sunny
tflgh: 40a; Low:

*

t1licaeo .•.... ,...................,....... 2 l6 .071

3, KENT .J. L..ouisviUe J. SMU l..
MARSHALL 2, Vllldefbik l.

-·-

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.

WESttRN CONFEUNCE

Local scoring sumquaries

1'-.

San Aruonid ........-.................. 21

Dea11er .................................. l5
* MiiiDCIOUI ............................. IJ
74 • Hculton ............................... 10
61
Dallu ........... ........................... 9
Vancouvc:r ......•..........:_ ............ 6

Qloarur~Ull

l!aJtem ....... ,., .......................7 26 22 19 •
Sou lhGallia ............... .., ..~ .. l4 l8 18 II a

E..atn (l-'7)

Amber Bak~r ........... \...............6 • 2' S-.5 23
Juli Bailey ................................6
0 9--ll
21
Beet)I Davis .......................... ..3
I 2...4
II
AmberVanSicUe..................... l · 0 9· 1-'
11
Danielle Spencer ..................... 3
0 2.-2·
8
Whitney Karr ...
.............Q Q ~ ' Q
19-!-43 3-7 27-31 74
Totals

-·-l:al. :I.a.

l:llu:O!

S-1 2
0-0
()..0
().()

0-0
0-0

0-0
0.0
().0

Sornh Wolh' ....................!U ·1&lt;!1

Totals

u;
6

.

.4
4

I
0

0-0
0-0

Q

a ••

~

· 17·39 5·1212·17

61

i\.s§ isls: I3 (While 5). Fouls: 28. Fouled' out:
Cardwell. C~ney. H Hallt"r &amp;. Johnson. Rebounds:
23 (Wallgh 9J. St.eals: 6 (H. Halllir &amp;: T. Hanar 2
~:ac h ) . Totaii-"Gs: 1~5 1 (.W.2%). Thrnoven: l.l

~Valley Christian· 66
Southern 55

OhioVnlleyChri stian ....... l 8 11 14 23=
Soulhl•rn
.... 14 14 IQ 17 ==

66

5~ '.

Ohlo Valle~ Christl1n Dtrendus

.

fla.w

Chelso Gooch,
, Abb)' Mcyn.....

:to~.
... ll .. ... 9
0

lcllL

£I I'lL
6-9

Q ·

Tot~ls

1 13·21

25

o·

Cununins........................ ll
Henther Daiiey....................... :.4
Sarah Brauer ............................4
Tlinuny Fryar ....... .'................... )
Kim lh le............
.. .......... .3
·Stacy l yom ....
.. .......... 1
Totals
l6

0
0

0-1
2-6

0
0
0

1-2

0

0-1

oJ~

Golden State at Philadelphia, 7 .p.m.
Yant'ouo,.le('al Otlando, 7:30 p.m.
Detroit at Atlllnta, 7:30p.m. ·
Charlotte at Utnh. 8 p.m.
S e;~tt le nt Snn Antoni o, 8JO p.m.
Washin¥ton at Oiicago, 8:30, p.m. , · .
L...A. Chppeu at L.A. Lnkers, 10:30 p.m.

5. Ariz?nl .. .".................. ,........... ,.ll·2
6. FIOJ1da .................................... ll -l
7. SyrawSe ...................................9-0
8. Duke ........................................9"2
9- Kansas ................................... I0- 2

"

NBAstandings

.·

llim.
.!!: L ll:l.
Mmmi ................. ............. 20 9 .690
Ne_w York :............................ 18 fl .600

,•

,

I

n ,

.

, ..

'li'o~~it '

' " '

1,270
l,l64

.

Far West ·

..... ................. ,.~

East

To

Pt,nA · 46
""f'':" ..
0.;..u

, 12. ~~land r .•:, .. , ............, It,~·· .'rl . .'~fC~: ..Grivo gj, 1;,.."
71
1.3- OH OSJ; .. ....,.: .................... , .~2 ')92 ·tt~(S' -.f -.. Medaar Even 65, iolul Jay S2
lill
14. N.,m Carollna ...........J......... ,,!I-4 7!3 •I ll
•QIIe&lt;i, .Coli 58 M N y •!
:~·'be~=ee .. J ........... .. ~ ....... .... Il-1 ~ 136 •16• •'·~Shippe~ri 67 1 s~~ 4·5

l!i

t.J.

lndiana.

...':.. :..................... 20

"Chnrloue_....
. .............. 18
TorontCJ ....................:............ 17
Milwauk:ee ............................ l7
Delrdl t .................................. l6
. CLEVELAND .... .... ............ 12
Atllmta .................................. 11

9
II
12
14
14
18
18

"'' •·.

.690

_ •

24! UCLA ..............: ..................... ,8·2 ~~4

.621
..586
..548
.533
.400
.379

2
3
.4
4~ .
81/,
9

25. Kenwcky ...................... ,......... S-4 213
Ot~rs rutl"ina "oCn: Tempk. 219 1\ilane 69
Web Forca\ 56, Si. JOhn'• 5l, N.c: State
Miui. . . 38, Gonuga 26, OregQa l$, XAVIER
(0Hl0) 211 Ball St. 17, Wisconsin 11. MiC:hipn 12.
San ~isoo tO, low~!' &amp;:.·6, VlUanoYa6; DAYI'ON

·'13

so:

Barry 69, DowlinJ 3•

\

WI.I&amp;lt:fA

·o

423
320
326
308
l99

I~ ~ Rt; ~ ~

Seminoles roll to title

"

·

396 211

y·'ICn- .............. ,.......1) 3 0 ,813 392 Ji4

.

Miniuippi St. 90, Pepperdil\c: 80

BaJtimore ........................... .JI. 8 o .SOO 324 271

Pacific l..ud~ran 58. Pomona·Pitztr 37
S. Oregon 74, Cascade S4
UC Sama·Barbata 75, Ncbra.'!lka 66

CIN . N.ATI ....................4 12 0 . 2~0 283 460
CLE ELAND ................. ... 2 14 0 .12! l17 437

ODOT invites
dissidents
back into fold
.

·

!'4 '

Tonipt's games

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Wedoesday'_s games
.

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.•

· members . of the
Sqperribcius,lighways.lnd
the pmha of the
eye . Forest Council,
to the potential to
they claimed \vas
· ~on .in popOoed
proceeding With Route 33, while Ill ,widen the road from two to four lanes..:
Celona said .Alternative No: 4 is
the same tim~ the committee w~&amp;sup­
fav~ by ODOT. II is 14.16 miles •
posed to be reviewing the project.
• At the lime he resigned, For8n said long and wOiild cost an eatimlllcd
the "funds have been so irrevocably $90.9 million for sa two-lane super
committed .by 0001' 11)11 the (Oii· highway. The most expensive esti· ,
'
HoldM 46-N In the Sugar Bowl In N- zens Allvisory Committee) cannot mate is for Alternative 3, II $108.9 ,
'
· '
conceivably have arly meaningful million.
photo) Detalts•.Pagd Bl. ·
.

..

"'r

•.

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425 ~wn and Garden ,Tractor

.,

• 20/lp,l,o!Twin, liquitf.:coo/ed engine
.~ 54-inch mower deck.

' '

LX25S·l.awn Tractor
• 15 hp • ·42-inch convertible moufer dt!ck

·'

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.. nettonel chemplonll)lp trophy 1\JHdey ett.r tile

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'$149."'Mltnll* ScM $1,300
.

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-G1225 Lawn atitt' Gardtn·Trlictor . ,~ "'
• I 5-hp t~42-indr criRVelri/k /TlfJWeT deck
&lt;~
• Automaiii: tronsmisiion ;· " '

..

S72 Per Month* Save $300
. ...

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Savings are so big at your John Dee!'!! dealer~s store, there's never been ·
a·better.ti'tn~ to cut _a deal. AI!d with Same-~ash untii 'Jurie 2000*, you'll
..t

: · ,1,0

~· .

I.

,.

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No

. -.f ,

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'elljoy the biggest C\JtS of the season long before. the gr~s begins tQ grow.
,So don't wait .for it to·green up. See your Joh\} 'Deere dealer t9day
because the offers, end Febrttary 29, .2~.
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www.deere.com

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·$80DFF

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Now$419

!

99·594A· H/B

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JA60 Walltllehind Mower
·
· • 6 hp,,• 2I-inch cast· ·
aluminum ~eck

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Beegl.e announc~s:"bl·a :ror :sheriff;s ·seat
o

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RACINE ...,.. Robert E. Beegle, Racin,e,
announced Tuesday hi&amp; candidacy for the Republican nomination 'for Meif!$ County sheriff..·
Beegle retired laSt month as a full-time deputy,
with more than.31 years of service. He begail his
law enforcement career under then-Sheriff Robert
c. Hartcnbach and laaer served as chief deputy
sheriff ul)dcr Jame5 Proffitt and James Soulsby.
Bcegle.il a Meigs COOnty native and a 1958
graduate · of Racine High .School. He later
received a master's ,de&amp;!;ee In educatioR with
course work 111 . Ohio. Univttsity, atld reccndy
r-etired as principal, at Sy.racl.se Elementary
SChool with 41 yeluS of service: • ..
' • ·
· He is a member of the Mid!lle'por\-Pomeroy
Rolary Oub, member. and past president of
Pome1py· Racine Masonic Lodge, former mem·
~r and past mis~r of Racine Cirange, member of

• Automatic tronsmission

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' wh0
•. ""Th'
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Florida State UnlverlltY coach. Bobby. Bowcltn hold

$61 Per Mad* Save S250

-

ATHENS - Four members of the . input in the 'higllway selection
Route 33 Citizens Advisory Commit· Process."
-:
tee who walked out .()f a Dec. 13
At Monday's meeting at the Ohio
meeting in Pomeroy and resi~ University Inn in Athens, committee
were invited.back into the fold
\
membeli stressed the neal for inpul
'By a unanimous vote Monday, .the .from all factions.
remaining committee members, with
. ·~We miss the inpu! from thC envi·
. ·support from David Celona, Ohio ronmentalists," said .' Steve Stolj of
Department of Transportation chief of Pomeroy. "I am pro-road, but I want
staff, asked that the diSsidents return. to hear the Olher side."
Those who walked our were 1im
Foran·said Tuesday he will consid·
Foran, Matt Peters, Sue ZIDo and er returning, but only if the group will
Todd Acheson. Th~y resigned for · seriously consider the various altema,what they termed "a fundamentally dves for the highway project.
flawed" planning process.
•
He said Monday's vote might be a ·
The Stw. Transportalion ReView show of good faith,. but he could ncit
Advisory Council established lhe ·say if he will return until he kn&lt;:tws
advisory C!)mmittee in August in more about the committee's stance.
response to. public criticism · of the
Celona said the committee will
meet ln four weeks to study its find· ·
proposed alignment.
The committee was to review all ings before presenting them to the ·
·~lisonable alternatives" to I~ pro- TRAC. 0001' has hired a consultant
posed construction as required ·by the firm to make recommendations.
National Environmental Policy Act.
He said, ''Thill body is not a failure . ·
The. resigni~g members, however, becauSe some peopl~ ha~ left."
have ~d that since July, ODOT has
At the opening of tile meeting, 1im .
cOntinued to spend more thlll\ $1 mil- . Hill of Ol)()l's Office of Environ· ·.
lion on its .,eferred alignment for a mental ScrVi&lt;:el. praentecf an hournew 1'Qad between Athen5 and Dar· . long !e'li~w of .fiiidiqp l!ld rec:om- .
thus far. ·
.win. This is
miUion
spentprio{_to

..

· Atlanta at Buffalo, 1 p.m
Momreal at Washington, 7 p m
Bo1ton at N Y. I• landers, 7.30 p.m.
Ottawa 111 Carolina, ?:30 p.m.
Pboenix at' Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Los A~ge leut St. Loui s, 8 p.m.

.

·. ~-

'

St Louis_,5, ~ - Y. Rangers 2
Toronto 6. Buffalo 2
Dallas 4, Los Angeles I
.Edman10n 2, Colorado 2 · ti~

Toronto al N.Y:'Rangers, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.
Nashville at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Calgary at Colorado, 9 p.m. ·
San Jose lit EdmOnton, 9 p.m,
Tampa Bay at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
· F'lorida. at A~im. 1~ : 30 p.m.

.·

'

1'

Monday's scores

New Jersey 4, Ottawa 3-0T

Pit~ ...........................6 10 0 .37! 317 )20 .

0a;

Ceam:6~, ROIC· ulman5~8
Coastal Carolina 91 , Newberry 4~
Coftpin St~ ~· Dcl,ware St. ·60
· De: taSt 86, Touga 00~2
~ 79, Mlf')'lutd 61
nvrida ~I . Wis.·Green Bay 47

Automatic tronsmis5ion

ROUTE33CONNECfOR

•

...

I

Single Copy. 35 Cents

rarlnr Divi'lon '
•
San· Jo~e .................. 20 19. 4 3 47 .121 108
PhOf=ni• .................. 21 1.1 4 0 46 11 9 102
Dollus ................ ,.... 20 I ~· 5 I ~6 97 92
LosAngeleL.,........ 11 15 6 2 42 Jl7 Ill
,&amp;;naheim .................I S 11 4: I 41 J% 94
Overtime losses count as a loslt and a regulation
ue. ·
I

.\B
229
.\36
309
284

....................
r: .........:.....................

'f . . . .

.. ····""""'" .....

·.

Wettem Di~lsion
.
li·Seattle ..............................9 1 0 .S63 338 298
KaosasCity .... .................:.9 1 o .563 390 m
Athen• 70, Pl. PleuantW.V..l9
·
• 5aJl~
'
............. ,........... .8 8 0 .SOC 26~ 316
Beallsville ~1 : Suahsvil~ ShetJan:dOab ~ ~ •Jt~
.. ... ...................... ... &amp; 8 0 ,SOD 390 329
Be11iVIJI:! 64. 8\Wyrua.SI
- '
....,,(·'
, ~................................610 0 .315 314 31 8
Belmont Union 53, Martins feny 47 · .. · ... · .. ~
~
-•· Q
Botkin• ~~.Miami E. !I
..... : . "'". N •"'rONAL CONFEREN.CE
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 56, Bamclville 26
'•
J'U
•
Campbell .S l •.Yciu.. Wilson 4S.OT
·
Euttm Di•llion
.
Cedarville 42, Yellow Spriag1 29 · ·.
·' , Ilia
· "-!.~,- , ·
.W. L I fiL ft. fA
ChesapeakeS8,·FruklinFuuceGrecnS4 ¥1 x~W~101\ ................... 10 6 0 .625 443 377
Cin. Hills 'Christ.Acodo,.y77,Undmast&lt;CIIDI4, k~
8 8 0 .SOC 3~2 l76
35
-. .• , -~--~-)·l,-/1.... -i~ ,.,\.y" ... ot.~-: ~~
7 9 o_.438 299 358
· Cin. Nonb College Hi1166, )..,lim.;. )7 ·w ~01 .,.. ,....:.....................6 10 0 .37! 24! 382
Cln. Pur.... IWai.an4~ Bar~~~vta-;;-Jo:. '""" . . .Philadc
. ~a ................,....... 5 u o .3\3, 272 357
...'
"' ,y ,,,,
.,.,." • t""-"'
... (tl
,.
Cin. Seven 'lls37,St. -Bem•d31 .. • · •
. · ~ (A
101 bloo
Cin . Sunvnit Co~~ Day !2, ~in. 'country
X:~· ~a~ ..~;.: .....~~~ .. II"~! 0 ..688 270 235
43
Columbiana !7.".Lowellville 30
· y-MumeaDII:.................... .IO 6 0 .6~ 399 33~
Cort1atJd Lakeview 47, l.abrae 32
y·Detroit ,\........................... 8 8 ()o .300 322 323
Crooksvi\le 18, Heihklek Miller 32
~n Bay ·;.............. .......... 8 8 0 ..500 357 .141
. Danbury 47 ,i()rtawa Hills 46 .
. Qi'*'o ···"W'\1 """ ' '"' ..... .. ..6 10 0 .375 272 341

1~
.
rm St.. ....................... tO. I ,107- II
Slippery Rock 83, Bloomsburg 74
..545 ~ 4
17. Texu .... .......... .........................8-3 518
II ...
~tonebillSl FranklinPierce6S
O&lt;Jando ...................... ........... l! 16 .484
6
18. U.... ................................ .. 11·2 ~txl 21 , • Yale 85·
73
Boston ........ ,....... ,..... .......... 13 16 .448
7
19. Dliiaois ..... :.... :....................... ,\S.3 ~ - 20 ~ wi,
·'
yctle ..
·
~wJerse)' .......................,. .. l2 18 .400 •. 811.
20.~~·...... :...................... 11-1 t&gt;· ~3l~
\11~• • ·;y.t-~··"· .. ., SOuth
Washin gton .................... ..... II 20 .355
10. . ~ 4i .:~r·ww; ·~·} ·· · ·
l2-~~-16
~ ~·· ....,N '~~'·"·'
~
.
'21. Tll.u .. ~ ............. .................. U-1 -.~,3 J · ~~- '""Ala~ St. 12, MVSU 61
.
Central Dl"lsion
· 23. DePttul .............................. ~l - • 21j;
2-l ~ ·
1t~-Pioc Bluff 55, Alabama A&amp;M"

Phtladelphta ........................ . 18

....,.. ,

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Clolioa67.~1111fieldss
~-87

,·.

FarWest

',

Ade!Jihi83.Concordi.;N.Y. 60
Biri&amp;hamlon 87. Millmvill~ 45
B ..., C lie 66 H I C o1 4l
u:'.wn60~~j,~,J' ·'

''• '

South~....

..

scores

•.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

ta£.·

~ ·lndillllapolis ......... :........ , l3 3 0-.81 3
George Washib&amp;ton 8lyAf'kb!MII 71 .. ,
y-Buffalo ..... :.................... 11 5 0 .688
,Henderson St. 72: MollCYallo 66
· Oklahoma ~1. 17, Texas A.&amp;.M·Corpus Chri1ti 40 ·y:·Miami ..............................9 1 0 .563
N.Y. Jets ..................... \....... 8, 8 0 .SOO
Rice 60,~Te~~oas A&amp;M !i7 .
New Enjlond ......................8 8 0 .SOC
SE Mi ssouri 80, Ark.·Little ROck 78-0T
. •'
Teus WesleyWJ74, Ouachita 12·0T
Central DI~Won
Trin~ty. Tex.:~s ~. Rhodes 48
x·Jacboovine ........ - ...... L. I4 2
.875

Boise St. 67. Portland 55 .
Montana St. IQ1, Rocky Moontai.h 71
.o- Pcpperdinc 8~. Lehidl38 .
.
• San Fraocisc:o 7S, Wi.._-Greeli Bay..48
San Jose St. 71 , Nm ~ Dan'l( : Calif. 64
WyomiD8 89, Idaho St. 8J

,.l. . ·· ..... · ~! I,Q6Qm·;,,...nto ·

~~· ....
1101 ;··'""""''"
'

. ...J~

Football
NFL standings ..

• Southwest

·

Hometown New11paper

-·-

Cen1enary 59, SW Texas 56
OklaHoma 67, Ln.mar 6:\
· TCU l.\4, Nonh 'reJi as 91
Tcxns'Tec-h 82, Prl\lrie View 61
~ua·Pan )Americnn
Rke 62

5
6
7
9

-

r

n:

1,420
1.374
l,307

Meip ·co~ty's

,,

.,.

.

1

l\1jdwest

...

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1

Chica_Jo St 74, W.· UliQOis 61
De1ro116S. E: Kentucky Sl
Drake 64. Ill-Chicago 60
•
Loyola. Ill. 69. Oaklnnd, Mich. 60 ·
11. . Purd~ 95, J'f{urro'y St. !i7
\i.
* UMKC 63. ValpnralsoA9
Wrip Sl. 61t l'ennme&lt;: St. 5.1

2. ConDetticul (5) .........................9·1 1,661 '. 1 2 · ·
,
1. CINCINNATI o&gt; ................. 12·1 1.•1z ., . 3, ., women s
4. Aubum ................................ ,... J-2· 1 1,48:.:
4

2

0 3·l0

~·

Lui

9
0,· 6
0
.6

Atlantu: DlvliiOn

Portlaiid at Toronto, 7 p:m.
·
New Jersey ar Indiana, 1 p.m.
Boston at New York. 7:30p.m.
VanCouver vs. Miami, 7:JO p.m.
S ~~enment o at CLEVELAND, 7: JO p.m.
· Atlanti:l at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
Snn Antonio at ·Minnesotll. '8 p.rq
.. Sea11le at Houlton, 8:.' 0 p.m.
C1111rlone ot Phoenix. 9 p.m,
DallllS at Denver, 9 p.m.
·
L.A. L.akers at L.A. Cli ppers. 10:30 p.m.

-PageB1

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al

Volume 50, Number 147

·NIJL standings

1

rum
W:L· &amp; wm
1. staoforo (62) .........,................ u.o 1,738
1
NCAA Division I

22
10

EASTERN CONFEREN€E

Tonight's games

e

Hockey

1

1

66

Souihern (1•1)
~~i

Sea,_;

Alabama A&amp;M 73, Att..•Pirte Bluff 57
Alobama St. 64. MVSU S9
• .
Alcorn St. 97, Grambling St. 71
•4
Appalachian S1. 82. 1be 01adel 48'
Coli. of Charleston 70, ETS U 53
Coppin St. 77. Delawlre St 73-20T
Floridii A&amp;M 68 Md.·Eastetn Shore 55
Gewje Mason 69. l!Pnell 58
Qeoraia Southe~urman 77
HIUtlJMon 82, N. CarolioaA&amp;T 7Y
Jacbonville St. 82, Jacksonville 73 .
· Louisville 81, Tul~U"~C 70
' Memphis 76, Arkansu Ji
New Orleans 62, McNeese St. 60
Old Dominion 82, Georze Wruhing10 n 7.5
S. Carolina St. 84, Norfolk St. 79.
SE Covisiana 66, Loyola. NO 42
·
South Aorida 91, Morg11n St. :B
Southern U. 65 , Jackson St. 56
Te~Wo.· ~·brtin 64, Butler ~ 2
~;r~oJinp 15. ~attanooga ~8 .

'The top 25 teatns in TheAnocinted Press' men's
college basketball poll. with first-place votes in
parenth&lt;-Jts. records through Jan. 2, total points
based on 25 poi}lls !Or a fint·place vote through one
poim for a 25th-Place vote and ~ious rltnkift~: ·

l

Kaltda 51, Crestview 49
Monday's regular-~~eason finale
Keftlon Ridae 74, SpriDJ. S. 65
Alllllll l4. San Francisco 29
Wayette Aik':n E. 49, Wa)'GeSfield 43
. Lot.wood·.S Sbctidon 39
.
• New Orleans fj6, SE Loui.liau 56
Usbon
Local ! I, \'... Oioney 37
Noriolk. St j6, S. C.-ollftl Sl. 48
Lopn 54, Vlacent w..... ~3
Nonh Georgia 80 Berry 64
Mutua Uescwood !!i9J. Roolilown 48
Nonhweslei'D St. 73 MtNccae St 58
Mlri1 Sltln MlriM 6L. LCC 49
'
Oakland, Mi ch. 80, Morehe.dSt. 71
Mllietta 62. Cbeshire Riv-er Val. 44
Ohio Wesleyan 76. Thomai More 60
Metamora E~ 56, Hilltop 47
Rollins 7!i, WiQpte 58
Moploro 50; ....Reid 47
•
EASTERN CONFERENCE
.Tenftl:!ssee 113. Old Dominion SS .
N. L&lt;wilblq Triad !8. S!ri"'- N........., 40
Atlahllc Dlvlston
•
Tulane 91 , Southena Miss.
New C•lisle Tecunuch Sl, Fairborn 37
lUo.
.!!: I. I BI Do. lif liA '
· Virginia 83, Geargla Tech 70
New Phil. TuJCanw• Ouh . .f'. Strubut&amp; 29 '
NeW :ersey ........ ~ ... 22 12 !i 2 51 '116 96 r
Waite F;om t 64, Aoridi St. 59
. Ohio Val. a.Htian 66, Racine: Soulhern 55
Philadelpl}ia............ 22- II 6 . I 51 121 • 89,
Peden City, W.Va. 41, New Matamoru Frontier Piusburah ............... l7 17 3 5 42 123 107
44 .
,.
N.Y. Rangen ......... 12 19 7 3 34 95 Il l
Midwest'
Peninsula Woodridge 64, Oureti.svillt 40
N.Y. lslanders ........... 9 22 5 0 23 14 11:5•
Auguscana.S.D. 93. Mqmingskle 60
' Raverina Southeast SO, Windham 45
.; .
Baldwin·Wallace'81, Case Reserve 63
Raylaad Buckeye Local 46, M~:~adowbrook 43
Nvrtheast Divlslon
Capital 86; WitteRs 72
Rced$ville Eulem 74, South Oallia 61
~ nt. Missouri 18, Pittsbu.rl St. SJ
Tnf9 nto .................. 2.4 · 12 4 2 5~ t 22
Rock Hi1166. McDemon Nonhwest 63.
Empol'ia ,St. 74 Mis50Uri Wntera 42
Ouawa .................... l9 13 6 2 46 \OJ
Roc kford Park.way ~11. ~th A,da ms 50.01'
EvnrtSv ille 72, Indiana St. 65
· Buffalo :
...... 16 18 5 I J8 99
Salem
49.,
Beloit
West
Bn.nch
46
Gmt'e 56, Indiana Tech 51
,
Bmtoo .................. D 16 10 2 38 97
Shndyside
6.5.
Woodsfield
Monre
Cent.28
Hen~ri" 79, Southweitem, Texas 64
Montreal ...,.~
.... 12 ~ I 5 I • 30 84
Springboro 73, Middletown Fenwick ~ I
Hillsdale 78. St. Joseph 's, Ind. 69 ·
St.
Ausustinc
49
Cle.
Lutheran
West
4!i
. lnd.·Pur.·lndpls. 101, Clevelaad St. 72
Southeast DMslon
St Oairsville ~9. lkllaire 47
Mioo,.l&gt;uiuth 74, Bemidji St. 57
rlorida .'...., ......... _,_,2 1 IJ ~ -. 3 48 115' 9!
Tol. Maumee ,Val . ~7 . Emmanuael49
MiMI St. 8 ~ : Huron '74
Caroli na .................. rs 16 7 0 .'\7 94 102
. ToiedOCh,-isdan 61 .·0reaon Snilch 48
Missoo ri·Rtlila 84. Mlisouri Soothem 68
Was h inJ ton ~ ........ :. 1 ~ 16 7
1 .\4 88 10 \
"\ TOfonto 44. Steubenville: Ca th. Cent. 31 .
Nonh 'onkola IOJ. Nebrash.QmaOO 12
Tnmpa Bl\y ... ~., ...... IO 21 5 :'\ 28 \00 128
.~n Cham~on 6'2. Newlon 'Falls .50
Northern S1., S.D. 87. Minn.-CrookstoiiA3
Atlant.rt ...................... 8 25 4 ·' 23 82 US
Walerford 36. 8elpre 3~
•
'
Peru 51. 67, Hastin&amp;l ~0
Welhburg
8Jook
51
,
Richmund
Ed
iJon
54
S. Dak01a St. 80, S011th Oak'* 76 ·
. ~ESTERN .CONFERENCE .
WellsVill~ 62. Lisbon Dnvid Anderson '47
SW Minfltltota.75 , Winona St. 69 ~ '"
Central Dh·ision
You.
Mooney
5.
1
,
WIU'ren
Ketlnc:dy
40
SW MiJSouri Sc. 64. Wichita St.' 54. .
,•
You. Ra~n 70. Mathews ~8 '
St; Francis, Ind. 90, 5paldi1J1-$'),
St. l}lomn$, Minn. §6. .St. Olaf ~t
~-· 1
St. Loui s ............... 23 II S 0 51 11 8 .8...,
.
Sterling 71, Miuowi 8aprist58 ~;:.
1. 1
NMhville ....,.......... I~ 10 5 2 l~ 101 114
Trumaa St. 63, WashbumliO
:&lt; .,..I
Chicawo .................. l'l 22 6 2 .~0 · 106 121Valparaiso 66. UMKC 65
W. Illinois 66 r thkago St. 50
"' '·
Northwesl Oi,·lslon
Wayne. Neb. S9. Concordia. StP. .58
Colorndo ................. l8 16 5 1 r 42 108
Wi.s ·CHhkosh 8S, Beloit 36
Edn&gt;ontoo .... ,, ....,.... n 17"10 ~ 41 102 II&lt;'
Wi J:-WtUtcwatel' 6..'\, ChicaiO 46 ...
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
.
..\
Cal gary .. :................. l7· 17 51 1. 40 91 109.
......_ __.~
Eastern 01..-lston
Vanl.'ouvtr ............ ,12 IS ,; 7 J , J4 95 Ill

•

•

•

·-

'

.

...

Hebroo !Mewood .... Shoridoo ) 9

South

AP Top 25 men's ~II

24

0 · 1· 1 lJ
I .. I ·~ ' 12
0 2-3
8
0 . 2-5
4
0 1- 1
3

6
Tessn~ Hnggerty .
.. ... 4
Alyssa Zirille .....
...:.... .J
Va lerie: Taylor.... ....
.. ....... 1
l au ra Pollard ...... ,: ........... L ... I
Courtney Gooch ......................! ·
.c . .....

14

.m

. Wednesday's gantes

!lwu:W: Wall

11 'h

12 0 .2~ l9S 4!53
New Orte.........................3 n o .188 28l •34
X· WOD divilion title
~. •
t ..quahfted for playoffs

Hw- 6!. You. l.ibeny • 3

Browa 55, Holy Cum 5J
Connecticu1 83, Sacred Heort·S6
Navy72, UMB C~ l .
Rider 83, Canisius 69
I
St. John 's 82, Pittsburgh ~8
Wqner 71 . Albany: N.Y. 66

10 ~

S.nFra~Kill.'! o .,;.~ ................ ~

Hlllllibol RiV&lt;r 70, Coldwell n

East

Bosrol:l 10.5, CI..£VELAND 98
Wa5hinaton 99, Golden S1a1e 87
.Philadelphia -124. Milwaukee 120--0T
Oetroit 1111. Orlando 106
Ponland 18, Chicqo 6~
Utah 109 1 lle'n~ 89

E[ &amp;
5-5 22
4---5
2-S
6
0

~

61

14

Mond~y'.s Rores

. .

0
0
1-2

-'17

14 .48Z
. 20 .3) 3
21 .JOO
29 .207

s"'"""""' ...........................

South G~Uia Rebell (1...1)

Staey Wh,ite ...................... :.. .I·S
. Rac~e1Wau_&amp;h ....................1· 1J
AngJe·Johnson............. ."!....... 2-2
Holl y ~;&amp;a n ~ ...................... 3-6
Ashley Canlweil.. ......... ........l-4
Tanya Haner ......................... 2·4
Candice Mooney ..................0..1
Tracy Che ney .......................0.1
Steph:mie Evanich .......... :..0.1

I

Ponlond ............................. 23 7 .167
11 10 .630
Pho!elli.a ............. .'.....~ ............. l8 II .621
Satd0 ................................... 18 12 .600
I L.A Cllppen ..........................9 20 .3 10
Go!~ Sta~e ........................... 6 24 .200 .

Fouh : 16. ThUll FGs: 22-SO(441ii).
.

men's scores

.617

w....... -

I ·

'

.&amp;slim downs
Meigs 54-42

·Family Medicine: Examining canceF; Page A5

x-st l....ouis .....•................•. ll ) 0 .Ill !126 lAl
c.rou.............., ...... ,.........8 8 o .sea 421 J81
"'tlarua ._,; ............. ,........... !! II 0 .3 13 215 310

Fo)'OIIOY!IIo 75,
~"-'· ' ,
Fredericlaowll6l,
.......~....... 3'
Gllllpo8o 85, J..UO.
O..Way ~ . Ntwc.omentowa 38

NCAA Division I

{il

.m

10

Paclftc Di"lakln ·
L.A. Lal&lt;m .......................... 2! !

£I &amp;

. Z$1. :I.a.

flam

10

u.... ............, ....................... l9

Eastern 74, Soulh GaUia 61

Eut~m

' W L fss.

...

~

Sports

COmmission approves budget, Page A3
Our V&amp;eW: So long, Charlie Brown, Page A4

Tccf y: Cloudy
High: 308; Low: 2o.

Basketball

......_, 1, 2000

posts

I

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•·,•

;\

'

,

Nicodemus files-for court clerk.

'

REEDSVILLE - Betsy- Herald
Nicodemus, Rc:odsville, is announcing
her intention to seck the Democratic
Party nominllion for Meigs County
Oerk of Courts. '
·
· She is a 1982 .gradual~; of Meigs ·
High School and has resided in Meigs
County a total of 32 years. ,
She has also lived in Bradley, Ill.,
and Piketon. She attended ~bury Col·
lege_in Wilmore, Ky.. and received an
associalo's degree from Hocking Col·
lege.
, Her ·parenfs are Mary Jane Talbott
ofTu~rs Plains, aad Frank Herald Jr.
of Middleport.
.
She considers h,!lrself a "people per·
son" and views the clerk of courts
office as an opportunity to serve ·the

lhe ' ~ ~li't_· Catholic spent half my life· in service to the ~idents of
aturdt, served 14 years on Meip County as a full-time deputy sheriff. I have
'the M,igl County Board of been involved in almost all aspects of the opera·
~lb. was a former mem: tion of the sheriff's office (civil, as well as the
ber arid ot!icer of the Racine . criminal part).
·
Fire Department and a found· ·
"I hold the office of sheriff in high regard and
ing member of the Racine I unde1111nd its importance and place in our
' liiilcaFICY Squad, and a 19- demOcratic form of govemmen~" he continued.
.year rneinber of Racine· Vii· "I iun interes.led in Meigs County- it's my home
IIIF Council.
- ,and its residents. I am running for the position
' ~e cited the follow~ng of county slleriff- not running againsl'anyone!"
\k. ~rna that he · would
Beegle is married10 .the former Jane Gilmore
'·
,
~d~!, if electdd• sheriff: • Taylot and they have three adult children: Kim,
·supervision o( employees IIIII would, impove director of communications for the Republican
cfficiencj, morale, and develop an altitude of National Committee; Kelly, ope..-ions. manager
being of belp and assiatance to .the.reSidents; and for Toyota West; and Kerri, graphics de~ent
prudent spending of the ~nl budget.
for the.Mansfield News J&lt;;&gt;Umal and Marion Star
"I want to be your sheriff;'' BcCgle said. "I've·· newspapers:
•

CoUins, · . ·('

Cammarata· ·

'

.

Good

~.

'

Afternoon! ·
.&lt;

• Today's ·

. . '

· taxpayeJS
of'.
Meip
Counly.,
She .believes that
.prompt and cour·
· teous service is the
key . to ·any sue- ·
cessful
office,
whelber it is a
aovemmcnl
.
ljiCncy or a private ·
sector business. · ~Nicodemue
If elected, si!C::
intends ,to .arran~ ·:
the scheduling to allow ·for ope'n hou11 ~·
more convenient to those needing ti.:: ·
visit t.he title office.
.
·
: .:
She resides near Reedsville with her:
husband, Roger; and their 4-year-old :·
~ughler, Mallory.
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1999: YEAR IN REVIEW .

·BOnd issue for 3 new schools approved/
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.. NO\TFjMBER .
~ ::
' Nov. 2 ~Mary Lynd is nominal· ·
: RAONE -· ·Bob tomns ~ Ron ·
'
Oct.17-SacredHeartCalholic ed for Poetofthe ,Yearby the Inter· :
looking .blck 1!1 the MWI ot . Hoeflich;.dic~ at his home. He was ,
&lt;ltnn!arua were rwl~ as presi·
l Scdlon -lZ .....
1111.) ' '
"
· perhape best known as writer of the . Church celebrates Jubilee Mass.
· aatiQrlal Society of Poets and trav· ,.
dent and vioe .presidcd~ ~ely,
popular
"Bcatof
the
Bend"
column.
.
Oct..
19
-.
Old
Sugar
Run
eledJO.Wuhington D.C., whet'll she
of the Southern Local Board of Edu·
''
·
,
SEPrEMBER
SCpt.
28
County
Commis·
Schoo!
•
Buildi.
n
g
in
Pomeroy
'
is
was
initiated into 1the Society of ..
Qlendar
i;8fjon during that ' group's annual ·
Sept.' 3. - Law enforcement sion~rs set mee~ng to di~cuss, Sal.• demolished.
.
Pocls as an International Poet of ,
'9rpnizallonal meeting Monday
CIIMifteds
B3:f
agencies
·report
peisistcnt
drought
urdily
courthouse
hours.
.
Oct.
21
Meigs
County
Route
Merit:
· '
. night . .
'
B5
.Comlq
is
assisting
office(S
in
war
on
drup
·
·
·
/
·
·
3:1
Corridor
Campaign
Committee
Nov.
3.
Meigs Local voters :
· The board also appointed bolrd
Editorials
by making it tuier for spotteri t()
OCI'OBER
forms to support construction of approve ·3.95 mill bond/levy issue :
Rllllllbor Dqug Utile to serve as lea- ·
find
marijuana
plants.
..
,
Oct.
3-~
Probe
of
possible
voter
U.S, 33 from Athens to Darwin.
for construclion of three new ·
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.U
. i_aWM liaison to the. Ohio Sdlool
·
'
·
Sept.
5
Judge
.Fred
W.
Crow
fraud
in
Lebanon
and
Letart
lo.
w
n·
Oct.
22
....:...
United
Fund
kicks
off
schools
in the district.
. :'
, Belrd Association.
.
ui:a, 6 ·
.Ill
asks
proseculoJS
-to
provide
a
shipe
is
launched
due
lo
large
num.
ils
2000
furKI-raising
camf!aign.
Nov.
4
.;_Nine
people
arr~tCd
in
.:
~ 1hc boird appOTCCI 'the pwthre
A3
:,
1
detailed,
videotaped
inventory
of
ber
of
abiienhl&amp;
billota
in
those
two
..
Oct.
24
Po!fleroy'a
St$;YC
.'raids
of
suspected
Pomeroy
area
:
of,tllw rd!Qol bu{for $$6, U¥)1'nlm
.JOOCII aelzecl ftolll" Fred ~&lt;ldy. ._ prec;lncts. No actlon folloWs.
Story named Melp CountY.'• 1999 drujl houses w.ere indicted by the ·
DINBul._,~ ... Tho . .
Ch1rlea
W.
Oovey
il
named
to
.
Oct.
5'
Work
'be&amp;inil.
oh
Penon .of lhe Year;
·..
· pd jury.
. . ·. :
bull Will m ' 19( .~ Tltonla liQdy on
replace
Robert
'L.
Wingett
as
pub·.
Pomeroy
street
pavinJ
projects:
Oct.
25
Construction
pn
Nov.
S
Rose
Arin
Jenkins
:
a FRIPI!iller ~-. .
.
.,
Usher
of
.Ohio
Valley ~ Publishing
The.'
co'n~uitlng
firm
·
'
of
Southern
Elementary
Scllool
begins
kllled
ld
an
auto
accident
in
Suttoil.
;
'11le bolrclallll ~ a l'tiiOiuCQmpany newsJIIIpelll.
• McCormick, TaylOr&amp;, Alloclates is . 'with worke111 · from Anco Minin~ Township.
;
tkitl wlina for a brick procumnent
•
·Sept.
8
-"
Mel.,.
County
·
Com·
.Ricked
to
s'tudy
.work
done
10 far on · ·co., Belmont, atartina work on ..:
Nov.
8
Plana
·are
announoed
;
bid ~·• for the ~lemcnlai)o dchool
missionen
endolse
creation
of
a
u.s.
33
ffOIIJ
Athena
to
DIIWin.
'
nqw
ptll'kiilalot,
~y
FeCney-Bcnnett
Post
128,
Ameri·
~.
. btlildlnl project. '
.
,M eip Coun~y &amp;roup to :promote . Oct •. 6 ·- Ground ia offi~ially
Ocf. 26 ...., Area lawmen claim · can Lc&amp;lon, for restoring . t!'e all· ::,
Ia J1C!1IIIIMI 11111!111. the ~ 1 ,
,
conatruction
of
U.S.
,.
33
from
b(Qken
on
the
Southern
l!le!llllltary
auticcsa
in ·ahuttina ,down two ' wm memorial in Middleport.
.,
K -1 di¥JUijnlllonofA1111alip
. Athens to O..Win,. · ' ' · · • School Pfojectln Racine.
.
-Pomeroy..area dru&amp;hoilles.
N(lv. 10- Public hcsrin1 held -·
• Eptuollball Olllldt. · . • ·
Sept. ,11 - Laraine LawiQII
01:1. 11-CounttCon\mission.' · Slate Development Director C. fordesip ·inputon theplinned new ·
tlllelinp Will b6 Wei "'e
o
l999oltj,
v.ut1
!'I
Ill
'~•
tb:
n~
,
111911
Rldne
Pall
Featlval
era
conaider offenng additional Lee Jo.hnaOn tou11 Meip industrial
·
1
fe)UIIh
of . . ~ 1P.rli:t
t
'------;;;....;.':..·;·' -...1 Queen. .
.. ' '
TueSday cvenin&amp;houllllit the c:our- sites. •
PI 18M- Rft1e•,
Plige 3 . .~
~ the hip school In ~no.
, ·
.

·Sentbtel

,·

note: The following,
Sept. 17- Long-time columnist thouse in an·cff&lt;irt to serve working
'- .._. laet In e lhrefopart Mrl" ' · and newspaper editor Robert .K. citizens.
.
, , .(EdHOI'..

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